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Pomauv-Milicllport. Ohio

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'

·PLEASER
10 POUND
·MEAT
SALE

We Reserve The Riehl To

Limit Quantitie~

.

_ .. - . ~TORE HOURS
·Monday thru Sunday
8 At"·10 PM

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose;
Giants take
over top spot

Pick3 '
140
Pick 4
7416
Super Lotto
4-l 0.14-19-25-44
Kicker 299077

Page 6

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BACON

298 SECOND ST..
POMEROY, OH;

Low In mid 40s. Chance ol rain
80 percent. Friday, high In mid
~Os. Chance ol rain Is 60 percent.

10 LB. PICG.

PRICES EFFECnYE SUN., MAY 7 THRU SAT., MAY 13, 1989

Vol.40, No.&amp;

Co

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, May 11. 1989

r hted 1989

2 Sect tons. 1 6 Pages. · 26 Centt
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Meigs fit·m gets grant; to expand operatiOns
CHICKEN
LIVERS
.U.S.D.A. CHOICE

10 LB. PICG.

$ 89

.

$ 90
T-Bone Steak •••• ~~. 3
GUNNOE'S OAK RIDGE
CHICKEN lEG
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.
89&lt;·
Sa usage ••••••••••••• ~.. . .
LB

By NANCY YOACHAM
announcethata$65,000CommunSeaiiDel New• Staff
ity Develop1flentBiockGranthas
Ohio Director of Development been awarded to Meigs County to
David J. Baker announced some help Twin City Machine and
good news during his Wednesday
Welding Company expand Its
afternoon appearance In Pome- operation.
·
roy. Baker, who Is currently
Of the block grant fqnds to
Involved In a week-long trip Twin City Machine and Welding,
through several counties in Ap- $601000 will be loaned to the
palachian Ohio, scheduled his company at six percent Interest
visit to Pomeroy to present the for the next 15' years. The
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com- . remaining $5,000 goes to the
merce with .a check for a $5.000 county for administrative purtourism grant' from the Depart·
poses, Baker said.
ment of Development.
·'ljhe block grant funding, comHowever, Baker also took the
blned with other funding sources,
Including the Meigs County Reo~=~~~w~h~lle~ln
to

volvlng Loan Fund and a loan
from Noble County of revolving
loan funds which that county was
unable to spend, Will enable Twin
City Machine and Welding Com·
pany owner, Robert M. (Mike)
Haley, to expand his market Into
the radiator, gas and specialty
trailer areas. Expansion of the
company will help create five
jobs and retain six.
Theuseofrevolvlngloanfunds
from Noble County was arranged
by Kim Shields, Meigs County's
director of development.
Director Baker dutlng Wednesday's presentation, and

QUARTERS

HORMEL

Pepperoni .•••••• :;.~z~ •• 99&lt;

10 LB. PKG.

CAROLINA PRIZE

Bacon
................
~~ ••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$11 9
Chuck Roast •••••••.
.
BONELESS .
$.1· 79
Rump Roast ••••••·•••
SUPERIOR
$1 29
Lunch Meats ••••L:.•••

ASSORTED

PORK
CHOPS

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PORK
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10 LB. PKG.

Frank1e W1eners •.•• ·

90

$

COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE .
RIBS·
10 LB. PKG.

90

U.S. NO. 1 ·RUSSET

$299
$
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
15 LB.

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ......... ~... Sl s~
PARKAY QUAR!ERS

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Margar•ne ••••o:-.~:•• 2

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lillllt I Ptr c..,_ .._ Ooolw At

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BATH TISSUE

LEMONADE

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*• Sit. .., n. ""
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- - ·-

,....;- Local news briefs--

WHITING
· FISH

Reveal cause of man's death
Respiratory arrest due to drug and alcohol Intoxication has
been listed as the cause of the April 28 death of Kenneth D.
Breeding, 36, of Middleport.
That was the ruling of Dr. Ray Pickens, coroner, according to
a report on the Incident from the depar1ment of Meigs County
Sheriff James Soulsby.
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Little reported that he was called
to the Friendly Tavern at 3:11 p.m. on April 28 when an
employee · and some patrons became cOncerned a,bout the
condition of Breeding.
Chief Uttle said the employee told him Breeding had been
silting at the bar, appeared to have passed out, and was moved
to a booth. About 15 minutes later fvhen Breeding failed to
respond to some efforts by another person to rally him, the
Middleport Emergency Squad was alerted and the ppllce
called.
,
Breeding was taken' to Veterans J11emorlal Hospital by the
EMS where he was pronounced dead on arrival.
No local funeral services were held'. It was reported that the
body was taken to Kentucky for burial.

10 LB. PKG.

90
COIIIIIY miS

-

Area' Development Committee.
Eliason also reported at Wed·
nes!lay nights meeting In the
New Haven City Hall Building,
that the new state representative
In Ohio is very supportive of the
venture, but that the Med for
eslabllshing a strong case Is
extremely important.
George Nichols and Frank Lee,
Mason County Development Au-

McDonald home leveled by fire

4 ROLL
7,

By JULIE E. DW..ON
Seatlnel News Staff
The director of the Public
Utilities Commission Is ready to
have a public hearing at any time
regarding the establishment of
toll free calls between 773, 882,
and 992 excha.nges In Meigs and
Mason counties, according to
Lenny Eliason, who is in charge
of that committee for the Bend

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6401

..

GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PICG.

90

AIDS bill

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))
State senators, sailing uneasily
in uncharted waters, Wednesday
adopted a comprehensive bill
setting guidelines for testing for
acquired Immune deficiency syndrome and requiring positive test
results to be reported to health
authorities.
The bill, described by its
author, Sen. David Hobson, R·
Springfield, as the most compre·
hj!nslve AIDS measure In the
nation, also requires the Ohio
Department of Health to es tabthorlly, have prepared a draft Ush programs to counsel and
which outlines tt\e needs that the treat AIDS victims, educate the
Bend Area feels are important publiC, and survey the population
for the establishment of the toll to prevent further spread of the
free access between the Incurable disease.
communities.
The bill, a product of more than
EXPANSION PLANNED- A $6$,000 Community Development
In regard to a bend area two years of study, was sent to
Block
Grant from the Ohio Deparlment of Development will
festival, It was noted that an the House on a 22·8 vote, but not
enable Robert M. (Mike) Haley, at left, to expand ltls business at
"umbrella effect" might be most before skeptical senators dealt a
the TWin Clly Machine and Welding Company. Congr(Uulatlng
successful. To carry this idea out blow to AIDS victims by ellml·
Haley
on his successful grant application Is David J. Bat.er,
would mean having one event In natlng language that would have
director
of the Ohio Department of Development. Baker vllllled
Mason on one weekend, the next given them handicapped status
Pomeroy
Wednesday where he announced the grant for Twin City
event In Pomeroy on another and forbidden discrimination in
Machine
and
Welding.
weekend, until all the communi· the areas of employment and
ties In the area have had a housing.
particu tar event.
Sponsors of the amendment
In order to maxl'llize public .. that passed, 16·14, claimed the "We have the most comprehen- the Division of Communicable
awareness, the group has chosen handicapped provisions would . sive piece of legislatiOn of Its type Disease at the Ohio Department
a new name for the organization. create ." a lawsuit waiting to in the nation," he said.
of Health. "It's a step In the right
The group will now be known as happen," and would wreak havoc
"We're glad It passed as It
direction."
the Association of Communities with employers, schools and did," agreed Ellen Abraham of
Under the bill, Halpin's agency
Together, or A.C.T. A committee others bound by state and federal
Catholic Charities In Cleveland,
would be required to develop risk
is now working on a graphic to go equal opportunity laws.
representing Ohio Action on
reduction and educational proalong with the new acronym.
Hobson said he would seek AIDS, a coalition of more than
grams, regional outpatient treat·
The group Is working on restoration of the language In the 60 organizations.
ment programs, pllot programs
promoting Itself through radio, House, but would not try to
for
long-term care, a confidential
"We're happy the bill passed,"
newspaper, newletters, and pos· dictate the terms of the bill there. said
partner
notification system.
Dr. Thomas Halpin, chief of
slbly television, and the development of an eye catching logo and
graphic will help to associate the
prganlzatlon .wtth the public.
Becky Stein reported that the
recent highway development
meeting was a success. She noted
that the people really want the
Rew four lane highway. Three
corridors have been proposed but
corridor one Is the only one that
·would really benefit the bend
area, she said. The communities
of the ~nd area have to make It
known that easy access to
whichever of the · corridors
chosen Ia the Intended goal, It
was emphasized.
. The posllbllity of coordinating
a Bend Area craft cooperative
for both sides of the river was
also discussed, With examples
noted of the Middleton Doll
Factory and the Oltlo Valley
Bear Factory, The fonnatlon of a
craft cooperative would not only ·
bring money Into tile area, It
8tJIINBII TO GROW- I'IYe- J• will be
might also create a tow1am bue
arrntel lllil1 Ill J•
wll• Twill Clt7
for the community.
Vg'~p
lllil1
.......
ClompuJ
...... Ia
Thenextmeetlngoftbeorganl..........
,.,
..............
elaltJ~IIr
zatlonwlll be June 14at 7p.m. at
areM. All~-~ came Wedttet«&gt;J tram
the Farmer' I Bank In Pomer()y.

·hearing on to-1 free .phone .call issue

I

Ice Cream
Snack Cakes •••••••••
. d '
'$159
.Ga't ora
e •••••••••••••

Development, was presented the U,OOO check late
Wednesday afternoon. Powell, along with Jolynn
Bollier Buller, at left, chair of the Public Ulllltles
Commlulon of Ohio, and State Rep. Mary Abel,
who took over In the legislature when Butler was
appointed to the PUCO, discuss their hopes for the
local area.

__ _

·puco directqr ready to hold public

GROUND
BEEF

PKG. OF 12

TIDE DETERGENT

APPRECIATIVE
- Mary
P~~!1,re~~;:':;
Pomeroy
chamber member,
Is m11sl
of
of a 15,000 Jl'&amp;llt to the Pomeroy
Commeree to develop a toari8m
on
Powell, who submiUed the grant
of
behalf of chamber to the Ohio

L1

DAIRY LANE

DE Bill

southeastern Ohio area and has
and Mary Abel, who replaced
1nstructed development depart·
Butler as state representative
ment personnel to pay particular
when Butler was appointed to the
attention to southeastern Ohio, It
PUCO. Chamber member Mary
Is a fact that recent "pr,oject
Po"(ell, who submitted the grant
proposals coming out of souproposal on behalf of the
theastern Ohio are as good as
chamber, accepted the check
project proposals from therestof
which will be used to produce a
the state."
four-color brochure to promote
Another significant change in
the historic and scenic natural
thedevelopmentdepartmenthas
resources of the Pomeroy area.
beentheexpanslonoftheGoverBaker's entourage also innor's Office of Appalachia, which
cluded Randy Runyon, director
was created by the legislature In
of the Governor's Office of
November 1986, from one em·
Appalachia; Dennis Mlngyar,
ployee to four employees.
assistant director of the Office of
Also, Jacqueline Souel, assistAppalachia; and other depart·
ant director of the development
ment of development staff
department, was appointed spe·
members.
ciflcally to focus on the nee~s of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
distressed areas of Ohio.
Seyler; Meigs County Commis·
"As I travel across Appalastoners Manning Roush, Richard
chla," Baker said, "I see strong
Jones and David Koblentz;
examples of economic develop·
Meigs Development Director
ment projects that have stimuKim Shields and several · Pomelated growth in the region. By
roy Chamber officers and
continuing to reassess the area's
members were also present for
needs, state and local governyesterday's activities, along with
ments can identify opportunities
Ted Reed and Paul Kloes from
to further expand development · the Farmers Bank and Savings
activities/' ·
Company, and Mike and Vicki
The $5,000 tourism marketing Haley. rpresenllng Twin City
check to the Pomeroy Area
Machine and Welding Company.
Chamber of Commerce was
Bruce Reed, Pomeroy
'presented by Jolynn Boster
chamber president, conducted
Butler, chair of the Public
yesterday's activities.
Utilities Commission of Ohio,

Senate
app~«:Jl7e~_ ~·-·-

99(

·

Shields, following the presenta·
lion, both commended the
Farmers Bank and Savings Com·
pa 0 y, especially Ted Reed and
Paul Kloes, for their significant
role In the Twin City project.
Speaking before Several Po me·
roy VIllage and Meigs County
of!lclals Wednesday afternoon,
Baker reaffirmed his commit·
ment "to strengthen the Appal·
achlan economy'' and reported
on the "changes In thinking'' that
have taken place within the
Department of Development In
the past year or so.
Baker took over as head of the
development department in July
1987. In April 1988, he made his
first trip through Appalachian
Ohio and whlle speaking in
Pomeroy, pledged to make
changes at the state level that
would benefit the counties of
southeastern Ohio. Those
changes, which Baker reported,
Included policy changes to channel a larger percentage of all
available grant dollars into this
area. A revision of the state's
formula to allocate Community
Development Block Grant funds
Into southeastern Ohio was also
mentioned In particular.
Baker was however, quick to
point out that although he is
empathetic to the' needs of the ·

The McDonald residence located on G~over Road at Cheshire
was destroyed by fire Wedneday night.
Middleport firemen were called to ihe scene at 9:53p.m. but
the one story frame house was engulfed In names when they
arrlvi!d. Also on the scene was ihe Gallipolis Fire Department.
The fire remains under Investigation, according to a
spoksman from the Middleport depar1ment. Tllere was no
lnfonnation available on the cause of the lire, the owners ofthe
house, or whether contents were ~troyed late Thunday
·
morning.·
.•

Thefts reported to sheriff
The theft of four sections of aluminum scaffolding and planks
from American Painting at Hoblon Ia uDder Investigation by
the Melp County Sheriff's Department.
'
· According to the report, the lncl4ent occulTed sometime
(Continued on page 16)

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Commeritary _

Page 2-The Daily Santin~ ~
Pomaoy-MicUepOr!, Ohio
Thursday, May 11, 1989
.

.

A small step in the

_The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJG8-MAI!ON.AREA
g~

~w

""-'. . . . . . . . . . .=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

CHARLENE ROEFUCH

·

General Maaager

PAT WIDTEREAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
i

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sllould be tess than 300
words long. Alllellers are subJect to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number, No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personali-

ties.

·

Today in history
By UnHed Press International
Today Is Thursday, May 11, the 131st day of 1999 with 234 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning star Is Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and. Jupiter.
Tho!!" born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
Ottmar Mergenthaler, Inventor of the Linotype typeSetting machlne,
In 1854, songwriter Irving Berlin In 1888 (age ·101). dancerchoreographer Martha Graham In 1893 (age 96•. Spanish surrealist
painter SalvadorDallln 1904, comic actor Phil Slivers lnl912, satirist
Mort Sahlin 1927 (age 62) , and actor·Doug McClure In 1938 (age 51) .
I

.

On this date In history:
In 1910, Glacier National Park in Montana was created by an act of
Congress.
In 1928, the first regularly scheduled television programs were
begun by station WGY In Schenectady, N.Y .
In 1983, President Reagan pardoned Eugenio Martinez, one of tour
Cuban·Amerlcans convicted ln the 1972 Watergate burglary.
Martinez and former President Richard Nixon were the only
Watergate figures so pardoned.
'
In 1987, Emmanuel VI tria died In Marseilles In southern France at
the age of 67, 18 years after receiving a transplanted human heart. He
was the longest-surviving heart transplant patient.

This year Congressional debate over the federal)?udget has
been mercifully spared the part!·
san lnflgh(lng and stalemate that
usually accompanies lt. That Is
. because President Bush and
Congress were able to sit down
and hammer out a compromise
on the budget last month. As a
result of that compromise, Con·
· gress has been able to act upon
the budget In a timely fashion
this year.
In .fact, last week both · the
House and Senate adopted separate budget resolutions that were
In line with the White House/Congresstonal budget agreement. As
approved by the House, the s1 :17
trllllon budget for ·F Y 1990 wou. ld
result In a $99.7 billion federal
deficit.
That deficit figure Is slightly
below the deflcll target of $lOO
·
bllllo f
n or FY 1990 that Is set by
the Gramm-Rudman law and
represents a reduction In the
deficit .of about $27.7 billion. The
budget would achieve this deficit
reduction through a balanced
package of spending reductions
and modest revenue additions.
. The largest ,elements of the
budget on the spending side are

,.:·•

cancausehealthproblems(won·
drous revelation!) and birth
defects.
•
Forget the adage "Buyer beware." Modern legal prinCiples
and consumerist teachings deem
the buyer an Invincible Idiot
Incapable of the most rudlmen·
tary assessments lnvolvlngt'lsk
or responsibility. Last year, a
cigarette man\lfacturer was assessed $400,000 on behalf of a
woman who smoked like a
chimney for decades before
dying of cancer. If such rulings
against tobacco companies multlply, distillers and brewers are
probably In line for similar
treatment.
If nothing else, though, verdiets against distillers will expose In stark relief the contradlc·

Miller ,

'

and their recipients would receive their normal cost of living
adJustments: It should be noted
that Congress can do little about
one of the largest elements of
federal spending; that being the
Interest on the national debt.
That by Itself comprises 15.5% of
total budget outlays and Is
expected to run $181 blll,on In the
next fiscal year.
As for the domestic discretion·
ary spending programs, the
budget would Increase their
funding by $3.6 billion over
lnfiatlon overall with Increases

Americans Employment, Handicapped Education and programs
defense and entitlement pro- for the homeless would receive
grams, and the budget resolution what they received last year plus
seeks to bring both of these under a marginal Increase to cover
better control. For defense Inflation. The President's crime
spending the budget calls for Initiative would be fuUy funded
$299.2 billion In FY 1990, which Is by the budget and funds would
essentially the same that Is being also be provided for ongoing
spent on defense this fiscal year. programs to tight Illegal drug
Spending on such entitlement use. Funding to treat and combat
programs as farm price supports the spread of AIDS would receive
would likewise not keep pace · about $1.9 billion overall.
The budget Is a little more
with lnfiatton In FY 1990 and
therefore would be reduced In vague on where It's $14.2 billion
real terms.
Social Security and other fed- In Increased revenues will come
from. The budget seeks to raise
era! retirement programs would $.5 billion In newrevenue from an
rel!laln unchanged by the budget tn&lt;'r~•""&lt;' tax compliance tnltla-

ttonsofmOderntortlaw.Modest
consumption of liquor Is, after
all, not only enJoyable but
harmless. Yet so long as liquor Is
sold, some people will drink too
much of lt. The only way
(theoretically) to save such
people Is to banish alcohol
altogether- a stunt that was
tried earlier this century without
success.
In short, although alcohol
cannot be made sate, most of us
agree It stlll should be sold. To
hold a dlstlller responsible for the
damage Its product causes Is like ·
citing bicycle-makers tor the
broken bones some children
suffer while learning to ride.
The main effects of such
lawsuits are certain: The only
winners, besides a few lucky

live, $2.7 billion In Increased user
fees, $5.7 billion In assest sales,
and $5.3 billion In unsPecified
changes to the tax law. How.ever,
It leaves these latter changes to
the discretion of the Congres·
slonal tax writing committees.
In summary, while the budget
resolution must still go to a
conference committee before It
Is finally approved, the final
outcome of the process Is most
likely to reflect what has been
outlined above.

are

Theretore, those who
lookIng for bold new Initiatives to
bring the deficit rapidly under
control are ji'Oing to be dlsappointed by thiS package. Person·
ally, I tel t the budget fell short In
Its effort to significantly address
the federal government's contln·
ulng practice of deficit spending,
and It was for this reason that I
voted against it. However, the
budget does· at least represent a
small step In the direction of
deficit reduction.

-

~~::st

plaintiffs who snap up huge
awards, will be the lawyers and
legal functionaries who staff both
sides In the Inevitably long and
complicated trials.
Virtually everyone else mean·
while, will lose: the man~facturers, because of the difficulty In
setting prices gtven unknown
future liability; and consumers,
because of the higher prices for a
six-pack or bottle of wine that
will Inevitably result.

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meroy, Oblo, by the Ohlo Valley Pub-

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•NICE SELECTION OF
SILKS, BASKETS, ETC.
•WE HAVE A NEW LINE OF
WOOD GIFT IDEAS
•MOTHER'S DAY CARQS

..

to
1be DillY Seollilel.
Ill O&gt;urt
POinMAS1ER:
-- St.,
...
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REGISTER TO WINI ... Our exolullve DISTRICTIVE SILKS room accent. Thie graceful lit
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128.11 V81ua. No pvrolle- MOellery- entryXblanka 11111Hable1t our ltore.lt'a yourt
10 regilt• It ow etore TODA VI

DIAWIII TO IIIIILD IATURDAY, MAY II, 1989,.1:00 P.M.

..
..

.Pirate$ trade
Oberkfell to
San Francisco

SJ3,397.

n·•

is wo1 tb.a·great deal

when

r

to

SJ V,942

516,88

$1_1,42

$8,987

tradeup

$8,996

t

-lirn

tf11,963:

S8,99

.:.=
II.:....:

=

Maybe _
more

......

The Sportina

.7,4

News. Lemieux

received 120 of 309 vote1 cut. Lo1
Anaelea caaulr Wayne Gretzky
wu ......S (10&amp;1 and ·Detroit

center 8tfve Yzemlltl tll1rd (73).
JlriU

al

Yorll

PI•• "'''' "''" Slit /du•l

·PIESCIIPTION SHOP
992...69

WIIIJI ................

· · · · · - · · - · ·. . - ·. .- . . . . . . .

unplayable. The rest of the golf . said his top five would Include
Faldo, "to sit down ·and. watch , 14th Memorial, betng played two
coune Is great. The tees, greens "Seve (Ballesteros), (Greg) Nor(ori television) . Now that they've weeks earlier than last year, Is
and bunker.s are holding up man, (Sandy) Lyle, myself and
seen II, more people want to try $160,000, with $9&lt;1,000 going for
II\4Ybe~1ill'Pfell8redtobattle
pretty well.
Curtis (Strange) ," the defending
lt. "
,
second · place and $60,440 for .
"It's a areat golf course," said Me mort a 1 Tour name n t
First prize money In this year's t~lrd.
tbe cool, w1ac1y ud l'llliY Clad!·
tlclna Jllrely for Tbul'ldey'l llnt
Faldo, ".but every hole Is playing champion.
roUDd of the the u DIIUion
four or maybe five clubs longer
Ballesteros Is from Spain, .
Memorial Tournament,
than they did during the Ryder Norman from Australia, Lyle
Tbe alrudy·lllll)' · Mulrtleld
Cup."
and Faldo from Great Britain
Vlllqe Golf Club Coline could
The 31-year-old Faldo's British and Strange from the u.S.
·
Open and Ml,sters ·wiN have
Among that group, only Balles·
receive more raln TllundQ,
brisk Wtnda, and temperaturei
vaulted him up among the elite of terQS Is missing from the largest·
no htper tbaD the mid 1101.
the golfing world, now being ever Memorial field of 117.
''We're juat Died~ It," Faldo
dominated by International
In the field . also are all 11
said when ulll!d It the weather
players.
former champions, Including
Asked to list the top five two-time winners Hale Irwin and
ml&amp;ht live him Ill eap. '1t Vlllqe. ·
doesn't chten us ott 10 much.
"Tile tatnrays are Juat about
players In the ·world In order, Jack Nicklaus, the host pro, and
It's just tbe way ot Ute on the playlble," Faldo said, asaesslng Faldo declined, saying "I don't the top 45 players on this year's
European Tour.
· ,·
tbecoadltlllnotthecourae. "Uwe believe there' s an order."
PGA money list, led by No.1 Tom
, "Uyougooutexpecltna:lttobe. get any more rain, they'll be
But, In no particular order, he Kite and No . 2 Mark
Calcavecchla.
.
Faldo credits the European
"golf explosion" to Its 1~85 Ryder
Cup win over the Americans,
helped along by Its repeat two
'-.
'
~'·
.
years
later. ·
INDIANAPoLIS (UPI) - Tlit! . ous" driving below the white line · Some days you write good and
"It's
. a new event to the
U.S. Auto Club modified ~. dui1na the race would be· some days you don't."
non-golfing general public," said
Unser's lap was the fifth
controversial "white line" .rule peaallred.
Allo, drtvera will be required fastest for the month. The four
Wednesday at the ·lndllnapons
to
lulve two wheels above the line fastest speeds were posted MonMotor Speedway as drivers
durtna
quallfl~tllln attempti. U
day when defending champion
lalled to match the apieda
the
rl&amp;bt
Urea
dip
below
the
line,
Rick Mears completed the 2
clocked ID the lnltlal daya of
the
driver
will
be
Ull!lsed
an
~-mile oval In an unofficial
praeuce.
lllcomplete
attempt,
Binford
record
225.733 mph. Track reTom Binford, USAC'I cblef
said.
cords
can
be set only during
· . steward at the apeedw1y, an"Looking
at
It
frcm
an
otftclatqualifications
or the race.
IIOIIIII:ed lfter the l)raetlce that
1111
~t
of
view
as
well
u
the
Also.ln
the
final
minutes of the
••continuous" driY1ng below U.
white ntety line at the illllde t1f drlvl!ra' poiDtofvtew, we cam!! to session, Emerson Flttipaldl ran
the conclusion It was best to his Penske-Chevrolet 223.048
the trick would result In a
1989 CADILUC EL DORADO
1988 CADILUC SEDAN DEVILLE
empbaslze
the tact that that's a mph and Mario A.ndrettl took his
one-lap or bleck·flal peUlty. 1
Binford had said Monday any aafety lane on the race track, but . Lola -Chevrolet 222.551 mph.
to ~lze the tact that there
Also running over 220 mph
driver would be pen~lad for
are
ace~
It
will
be
used
(for
Wednesday
were Jim Crawford,
taking his ell' completely below
racine),"
BIJiford
laid.
.
Michael
AndretU,
Danny Suntthe liJie - wbklb 11 15 r-t tram
Four-tlme
Indianapolis
1100
van,
Bobby
Rahal
and
Mears.
the Infield puaiD the comers clwnpiOn
AI
Unser
Sr.
said
Three-time
USAC
sprint
car
durina cjuallftcatlona or the race.
Blnlbrd had Aid the lalleilllide clrlveta had not prt!ISured BID- champion Steve Butler suffered
the IIDe was meaDt u 1 l&amp;fety 'foilS to change the rule, but that the flrstcrashtorthemonth. The
rookie driver spun Into the
lane and should not be Uled tor be was .bappy tor the change.
''You 11Jie to have an open field. outside wall In tur.n 4, then slid
racing. However, drlvera
WAS 523,999
WAS S19,995
The white Une 1s there tot a lntothetnsidewallandstoppedln
roundly crltJclzed the rule beNOW
reuon,"
Unser
old.
"If
aomethe
pit
entrance
lane.
cause the lane hu been used tor
.
Butler suffered a broken colpassing tbrOUihout the 73-)'1!11' , ·t hllilhappens, you •ve gotto have larboile
In the crash, but said he
1989 OLDS CuTLASS SUPREME
1989 OLDS. DELTA 88
•
·hlltory of the race.
.
someplace to go."
Unser.
who
last
won
at
Indy
still
expects
to
qualify
for
the
In announclq the rule modlfl· ·
cation, Binford l&amp;ld dr!Yers can two y~ars aao. pas~ tjle top May 28 race.
"The doctor says that he can
use the safety lane for pasalna cir d~'s top speed of 223.380 mph
with
Jess
than
five
minutes
make
a brace for It and talltlll
f!Vadlng crubes, but "contlnuremaining In tbe practice up," said Butler, who~ right
arm was In a sUng. "I've waited
session.
''W
1 try! t 0 k mywholelltetorunthlsraceand
e were ust
ng rna e I'm not going to let something'·
sure the car work~ for (qualityIna) Saturday and It worked like this stop me."
welL" sateS· Un~!~!r, who drove a
Butler's · 1987 l..ola-Cosworth
Chevrolet-powered Penske chas- sustained extensive right side
sts. "You always hope, that you damage, but team owner Jeff
NOW
NOW
can sQu,eeze a little bltmore from stoops said he has a !!Ocond
It,
just like writing, tan't It? entry.
CHEVROLET CAVALIER
CHEV. CELEBRITY EUI~ SPORT
· PrrT$BIJRG~ (UPl. - The
' .
l:&gt;tttabllrlh Pirates Wednelday ·
lraded veteran lnttelder Ken
Oberkfell to the San Francisco
Giants for minOr league pitcher
Roger Samuelll.
Samuels, a len-hander, hu
':been witb the Giants•· Clus
. ~'"l'rlple-A atnllate In Phoe~Lx all
.-season.
1:: A Ptrat.e spokesman said Slit muels was betna: aallped to the
WAS S11,995
91495
· bnaJor league r~. bu\ would
NOW
WAS $
NOW
{ be shipped to Pittsburgh's
~Triple-A atftllate In Buffalo as
1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA
1988 MERCURY COUGAR LS
:soon a~ there Is room on the
~Bisons' roster.
. ·
&gt; The asslpment of Samuels to
Buffalo would leave ail open spot
~on the Pirates' . roster, but the
~team . hopes to activate center
; tlelder Andy Van Slyke oft the
• dlaab~lltt sometime this week.
~ Obel'~etJ, 32, hit .125 wltli two
, RBI anq; no home I'UIII In 14
t games with Plttsburgh. He
WAS •9,595
· '·started two eliDes at second base
NOW
and nine at fltst. He was 0 for 2 as
•. a pinch bitter.
,
1987 CHEVIOLET
1987
~ Samuels, 28, was 0.3 with two
~saves and an ea~ned run average
Get rid of your old rider and
•of 9.00 In 14 appearances· with
ricelve
a generous trade
~Phoenix.
·
allowance• toward your purchase of a Snapper at regular
retail price. With a Snapper
{ · Sports briefs
you
'II get the dependability
.
you've
always wanted. Make
•
Football
.
a trade with your dealer
• Freshman tailback Chuck
today. Ollar ends soon.
;webb of Ten-IIH IIIIChedllted
.
.
· Not IQOI : IOie on modet 2SOI8
:ror arralpunent later this month
WAS$10,500
WAS S11,900
ron charges he forpcl and cas bed
NOW
NOW
. a check made out to a former
teammate .... Former Oklahoma
1917 CHEVIOIET SPEmUM
~ player Jerry Pll'ks pleaded no
;contest In Norman, Okll., to a
I
felony charge of shooting with
. •Intent to kill former teammate
:Zarak Peters. The judge rejected
'Parks' request for a deterred
.'sentence and offer of resatutlon.
... In NFL exhlbltlon games Aug.
· 6, the Clevelancl Browllll will play
Calh in on lhlt old ma\'181' na.v when
,the Plilladelphla Eaeles In Lonyou buy a 4 or I 1111 walk rrtcMWr at
regullr reta1 price. !'rom 111rt to finish
don and ·lhe San Francllco &amp;n
you Clllt )!lit 1 " I l l * ut.lal trade In
·WAS S7,ft5
will p1ay the Lol Aqeles Rami
WAS*6,i95
Ill~ niiiOawlllble on oth.- wlllk
·In Tokyo.
NOW
moo uart. Olfarl and 10011.
Pittsburgh center Marto Le1915 FOlD UNGIR 414
mieux wullllll8d MVP In a vote
by NHL pllyers conducted by

orr

,-~ kold mower

MAY SA \liNGS

A-oiM-eollo,Jac.

f!Vf!ey day and you get
cbe! 11 il
wben It' a not. )iou'rf
not plq to plly vwry welL"
Faldo d! crlbed•. the weather
clllrlqWetnday's'flllll,l day of
practice u "IIOt a nice day, but
pretty cl~ to a nonnal" one on
tbe Europelll Tour:
'
Flldo, who aiiO 'fOD the 1981
Brttlall Open; II pllylna·ln only
h_. second Memorial Tourna·
,Jiie!lt. bllt helped lead the EuropeiJI teiiD to victory over the
United St1tes In the 1987 Ryder
Cup Matches at Mulrfleld
1111111)'

. Don't Miss •• ~ •• Jim Cobb's
Shower of Savings! .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LM·212P

'
:

DUBLIN, Oblo (UPI)- Mu·
ters champiOn NICk Faldo feell
he and otber Europelll ·ptayen

USA C modifies 'white line' rule

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

The Daily Sentinel'

:
·
·

.Muirfield goH cot••·se soaked; more rain .expected tOday ·

.

In some programs and reductiOIUJ In others. Funding would be
Increased over Inflation for cer·
taln priorities and lnlflattves of
the President such as science and
education programs. The budget
would also Increase funding for a
so-called "children's package"
of programs favored by the
Congressional leadership such as
Child Care, Head Start and the
Women ' s Infant Children
Program.
Other low-Income programs
such as Child Nutrition, Older

A toast to personal .responsibility
At least three things can be
assumed about a :woman who
drinks up to half a fifth of liquor a
day while ·pregnant:
A) She Is, quite likely, a
problem drinker;
B) She Is untorgtveably trresponslble; and
C)Shelstoblamelfherbabyls
born mentally retarded or
.maltormed.
But will we make these same
assumptions In 10 or 15 years?
Perhaps not. The tide of change
In public attitudes toward personal responsibility has begun to
lap, ever so lightly, at the toes of
distillers and brewers, too.
Not long ago, for example, a
woinan In Seattle who admitted
to consuming up to half a fifth of
bourbon a day sued James B.
Beam Dlstlllery Co. after her
child was born defective. She
claimed' the distiller should have
provided Ia bels warning that
alcohol can cause birth defects.
Whatever the outcome of her
case, It Is probably only a matter
of time before a jury orders a
distiller or brewer to pay damages to someone whose liver,
brain or baby has been damaged
by too much drink. The legal
ground has been softened for
such a verdict; corporate defendants with deep pockets are
considered fair game for damages no matter how scrU:pulously
they follow established standards of manufacturing and marketing behavior.
Even Congress has done Its ·
part to alter public attitudes.
Startlnr;later this year, a law wlll
require labels on all beer, wine or
hard liquor war!'lng that al~hol

Con. .

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3 ·

Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

'Th&amp;nclly, Mey 11. 1988

j

.J
~ ~-_,._...._

__ ____ -· ___..,._
.........

•

_......._

........

·271 ·• om •011 . .upon, OHIO
~-----

_ ____
_.....

.....,-~

J'im.' Cobb

Chevrolff'.OldlmobUe
Cadmae "' Geo IDe.

�..

.•

.·.

;

'

' .

'
. '

.' .

'

'

. .··

...

.

'

~ ~ Toronto rallies · to · ed~ · Seattle
3~2; . 'Ind-iCllls
3~2 . contest. .

•

.

' '

' ., t

..
•"

,'

•
,.

.

,

,...
; ;
' ·
J
•
•

::

.·,•

•· •

..
~

..,.

.;:;•.
:~ :

.

·"';: .

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UP!) : . Syracuse basketball star Derrick
; · · Coleman ended months of specu. : · · latlon Wednesday, saying he will
': bypass the NBA draft and
; • ' remain In school for his sen,ior
;;
year.
.•
"I have talked to my team·
·; : mates, coaches, friends and my
: · famUy. and feel that It Is In my
·: best Interest to remain at Syra;. cuse," Coleman said In a state·
:· ment released by the university.
• .- Coleman, who was not avalla~ .. ble for comment, was scheduled
• .. to finish his final exams Wednes·
;
day and was expected to return
·: ·- home to Detroit.
"I have no doubt lt was the
•: right decision," Coach Jim Bo·
; ehelm said. "But I also have no
' 'doubt that Derrick could have
; • gone In the first round In a good
:: position."
•
Boehelm said the 6-foot-9 for·
" ward probably would have been
•'
drafted In the top 10, possibly as
• high as fifth.
-·
"My feeling Is that he wants to
;: . be the best player In the country,
• and that's why he Is coming
• back," he said.
Coleman, who played center
against his wlahes much of last ·
·· season, averaged 16.9 points and·
~ 1U rebounds per game as the
,· Orpgemen compUed a 30-8
~
record and advanced ' to the
.~ Midwelt Regional final. He was a
· llei.'Oad·team All-America.
'1 tlllnlc In a lot of respects
Derrick Coleman waa the belt
· p11ytr ID tile country Jut year,"
.' 'lloebtJm Ald.
~·r•n boldl tcbool career

American League MVP Jose
Canseco of the Oakland Athlet·
lcs, unable to swing a bat
effectively since March 7, underwent sui'Jiery on his left hand
Wednesday and will be sidelined
until after the All-Star break.
Canseco bad a small piece of
bone removed from his hand
during 1-hour, 45-mlnule opera·
tlon. Doctors said the procedure
appeared to be a complete .
success.
"He can expect to play ball In
six to eight weeks," said A's
physician Allan Pont. "He should
be ready around the time of the
All·Star game, although there Is
more to coming back than being
ready to swing." ·
Children's Hospital spokeswoman Ann Heglln said Canseco
was tully anesthetized for the
delicate surgery, which was
perfonned by hand specialist
William Green and team orthepe·
dist Dr. Rick Best.
·
Can~co. 24, Initially Injured
himself March 7 and relnjured
himself March 22. X-rays showed
a stress frac~ure to the hamate
bone, one of several small bones
In tbe heel of t)le hand just above
the wrist.
Doctors said a "book" on the
top ofthe three-quarter Inch bone ·
was removed. The book con··
talned the fracture.

..

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1989 FORD TEMPO

N"' Y•rlll, Oaela. . lt

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

111 "-•I.I•Diepl

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.t.o•

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........--··---

..

'5995

.,...telllllei. . IIJ...ILaape ..r

,..,

..,.. .. ...... .. ... Amerte•

1986 FORD
CROWN \'ICTORIA

--•CA.U) •
..:...
~
Olttrlfell • 1M Jl'rucUM r.r ml_..

"'-

''.

Ll C . - (CL\) -

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NOW

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1986 FORD TAURUS

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WAS

• • • • • '12,995 •

1984 FORD TEMPO

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HOW
WAS

1985 DODGE

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ltlc:t. • .,.,.

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1984 MERCURY LYNX

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cr.,01--. 1!-C. ,O.all

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1989 FORD ESCORT

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'1986
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MWI!F' REBOUND - Sea&amp;tle'l Na&amp;e McMIIIIII (10) m'-- tile
rebolmll u lie Ia belli by tile Labn' Jlareem AbduhJabbar (33)
dllriDI tile flnt perllld of WeaeadiQ' ailllt's NBA playoff came In ·
;&amp;lie ForumlD lnpewood, Call. Tile Laken WOD IJ0.108. (UPI)

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:fo r war d Te r r y ~lim~ lncil · . ·
(sprained right ankle tendon).
· ·•
and ·swlngman Paul Pressey '· ''• ·
(dislocated shoulder) . ·
At Inglewood, Calif.. James
Worthy scored aO points and A.C.
Green had 14 of his 16 In lhf!' '.,
Lakers' torrid third quarter,. , .
Green had 7 points and WorthY. 6 .
In the 16-2 third-period burst that ·:·
blew the game open and-helped ' '.
the two-time defending cham• ·
pions boost their winning stre.alc , ..
to a season-high 10 gBD)es, .. ,·
Including 5-0 In the playoffs, . :, '·
...We playe~ exceptiOnally well·
and we ·Sustained It," Los An- · ·
geles Coach Pat Riley said;,.· :.
. "(The.Lakers) still want to win: . .
It's an understatement, bu,t '. ·
they're showing how much the · :·:
Conttnuea on page 6 . . · :

'·

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P1. PLEASANT, WY•

triumph

•

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"Come Rock and Roll The Weekend Away"

..

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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)

ForsafedrivinguseNAJil. Thh!lar
Wipers. They'll keep )WI' windshield
clean and stresldess in rain and snow.
(#6().1377, 1(77,1577, 1677, 1877).

.

1·

Canseco undergoes
hand surgery

EARLY BIRD DINNER
SPECIALS
15 p.m. · 7 n.m.

·.·

the . go and ad~ four tree throws In
· .
t!le final 11 seconds. Lalmbeer
. ln ·each of their !oui": playolf .led the Pistons with 19.polnts and
games, tile P!sto~a li,ave had one ·. 17 rebounds.
.
stellar defensive · periOd to key
" .If people think Detroit's o.f·
their · vt~orlel. Detroit swept tense Is bad, then that' s the way
Boston. In three game&amp; 1n the first It's going to be In the playoffs, "
. round, holding the Celtlcs to less Milwaukee Coach Del Harris
than 100 Points In each game, salt!. "It's going . to be rough,
Including one quarter ofless than tough and knocli 'em on your butt
15 points In each. The Bucks got basketball."
more of the same.
Detroit was rusty. es pecially In
"I was pretty worried," ee, · the first half, because of an
troll guard Islah Thomas said of · eight-day layoff.
·
the ftrst-half deficit. "I knew we.
Game 2 Is Friday night at the .
· couldn't do It offensively, so 1 Palace In Auburn Hills, Mich .,
decided to pick up my guy before the best of seven Eastern ·
tullcourt. We had to pick It up · Conference semifinal shifts to
defensively.';
·Milwaukee for games Sunday
Bill Lalmbeer put Detroit and Monday.
ahead of Milwaukee with an
In Game 2, Milwaukee Is
18-foot jumper with 57 seconds to expected to again play without

130-tOs

t.Juilfl

· superSonics. "'. . .

playoffs while the 41• Angeles·
Lakers are l:llowlng opponents ·
. away :with t~r lllah·flylng
offense.
.
The latest defeMive stand for
' (be Pta toM came Wednesday·
when Detroit held Milwaukee to
11 points In the fourth quarter to
overcome a 13-polnt first· half
deficit. The result was an 85·80
victory over the Bucks In Game 1
of thetr second·round aeries.
· Tbe Lakers, who used a 16-4
. thtrd·quarter burst to race to
thelrll:J..l02Game1 victory over
· Seatlle, led 77-'Swltb4:30leftln
. the third quarter Wednesday
night before assum~ contronn

.'

TOURNEY RUNNEJl.VP - The Soutbem
Julllor Hlp pr)l' 'buketball team recently
completed Ita u the flnt runnel'-up ID the
Waterloo Toumament. Kneeltnc are (lrR) Amy
MIJII, Mary ~ · Wo)fe, Allpe Swll•· Cllrlllty

DJ. Ught and S..n.. Sho*

SANDHILL ROAD

..

The Detroit Plstoi)UJ".erelylng

· THURSDAY, MAY
Paul Doefinger
FRIDAY, MAY 12 &amp; .SATURDAY, MAY U
"Celebrations" 9:30 P·•··1:30 a.na.
PRIZES GIVEN FOR THE
MOST AUTHENIC OLDIES
OUTFIT ON 6/ 12 8o 15/13

..

· im pretl8ure defenae to win In the

FIRESIDE INN

Coleman to
·'"·'
;~ remam at
f Syracuse

.

o

. VPI8pona Wt._

By TOM WITHERS

..

I'

· B710E ii.Luzi'i

..••

'

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·:Pistons,:lake~ .·eap-ure playo(f victories··.

.,,•
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.The

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Kansas City edged Clev.ela:nd Jl.-2. · stroked· a o~-out ~~ single In
~WrHer
· TexasatNewYork,MI-otaat ·the ninth to cap a three-run
For the thtrd time this season, Boston and Oakland at Baltimore Inning, snapping thj! Angels' ·
the Toronto Plue\Jay ~ played the were postponed beQause of rain. six-game winning. streak. After ·
role of spoUers; ending yet
ln the National League, It was: · loading the bases aga~t Bryan
another pitcher's no-hit bid Wed· . New York 11. CinCinnati 4; San Harvey ,1-1, Matt Nokes' doubled
nesday. This time, however, the ' F,'ranclsco 4, Chicago 3; St. Louts to tie the score. Moreland fol·
culprit was somebody other than 3, San Diego 1; and Montreal10, lowed with a drive to left over a
Nelson Llrlano.
Houston 1. Los Angeles at Pitts- drawn-In outfield and made a
Mark Langston of Seattle burgh and Atlanta at Phlladel- winner of relieVer Guillermo
Hernandez, 1·0.
fllrted with a 110-hltter until the phta were rained out.
Reyala S. Ind.._ 2
ninth Inning, but not only lost his
While Sox 12, Brewers 2 .
At Kansas City, Willie Wilson
no-hitter but also the ballgame as
AI Milwaukee, Ron Karkovlce
tbe Blue Jays rallled wltb three paced a 16-hll attack with a ripped a single off the leg of
runs In the ninth to edge the homer and four ·RBI and Melldo Cleveland's John Farrell In the
Mariners 3·2.
Perez took a shutout Into the seventh Inning to drive tn Rey
Earner In the. season, Llrtano seventh Inning and Improved to Palacios from third with the
broke up no-hit bids by Nolan 2-3. Perez allowed six hits In 61·3 winning run. Jeff Montgomery,
Ryan of Texas and by Calltor· Innings. Ted Higuera, making his 3·2, P.ltched two perfect lnnlnp In
nla's Kirk McCaskUlln the ninth second start following rebablllta· reltef for the win. Steve Farr
Inning. This time It was pinch ' tlon from back surgery In JaliU· pItched the ninth and picked up
his seventh sav.e In as many
hitter Tom Lawless, who led oft ary, fell to 0-2.
opportunities. Farrell, 2·2, took
the ninth with a bloop single to
Tigers 3, AIIJela 2
left that ended Langston's bid.
At Detroit, Keith Moreland the loss.
''I wasn't upset, to tell you the
truth, !just knew It was a 2.0 ball
game and I had a perfect game, ••
explained Langston, who fell to
4-4. "I 'm pretty dazed at the
moment. To go from a no-hitter
to a loss Is something I haven't
experienced.' •
Entering the ninth, only an
error by shortstop Omar Vlzquel
stood between Langston and a .
perfect game.
..
In the ninth, Lawless batted for
'Lloyd Moseby and blooped a
single Into shallOw left. With one,
out, Bob Brenly plnch·bltfor Rob
Ducey and doubled home
Lawless.
Junior Felix then singled up
the middle, tying the score and
cbaslng Langston. Felix took
second on the throw to t!le plate.
One out later, Mike Schooler
Intentionally walked Tony Fer·
nandez but George Bell, returnIng from a two-game suspension,
blooped a single to left.
Toronto starter Jimmy Key,
3-2, allOwed nine hits to get the
win.
"It was just a fastball he was
trying to throw by me," Lawless·
said of hiS single. "I was just
trying to hit It somewhere."
'.'I just wanted three outs as
quickly as possible," lamented
Langston,1-611fetlme against the
Blue Jays In Toronto. "I figured
he was coming off the bench cold.
I got a fastball up and he 'hit lt.
STOPS DOUBLE PlAY- Milwaukee' a Paul Molitor(') rolla
I'm not very pleased."
upo~lde down lnlo Chicago While Sox second bueman Fred
Seatlle had taken a 1·0 lead In
Manrique, preventing a double play ID the tblrd llllllnl of
the fifth when Harold Reynolds
· Wednesday nlpt'a came In Milwaukee. MoUtor lbnped lllglltly
doubled, advanced to third on a
baek 1o the duput after belq erued on the play. Tile Willie Sox
passed ball and scored on a single
won 1Z.Z. (UPI)
bY Henry Cotto. Reynolds has hit
safely In 15 straight games.
Dave Vaile's fourth home run
In the sixth upped the Seattle lead
to 2·0.
APPEAliNG
Elsewhere In the AL, Chicago
demoliShed Milwaukee 12-2, De·
11-9:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m.
troll nipped California 3·2 and

'• t

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AEROSTAR
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1986 FORD F-250

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�,., • • The

Cardinals
; Mets
crush Cincinnati· Reds, ll-4
By JUJU KENNEDY DAY
1JPI8port. Writer
Tom BI"UIIallsky llled his
lulowlqe of Walt Terrell's
pltchillg to rip a homer off Terrell
aDd break open . a tie game
Wednesday night.
'1 probably know him better
than anyone In the ballpark,"
BniDaDak)fsald atter his two-run
homer In · the seventh Inning
broke a 1-1 tie and lifted the St.
Loula Cardinals to a 3-1 victory
_over Terrell and the San Diego
Padres.
Combined with the effort of Joe
MqraDe, 3-2, who allowed only
two hlta In 8 2-3 Innings, 't he
Cardinali remained In a firstplace tie with the N~ York Meta
In the National Leque East.
Brunansky, who watched the
former Detroit pitcher for three
years In the American Leque
while with MIIUielota, said he has
a eood Idea of how Terrell
pitches.
- "He throws his fasthall to set
up his breaking ball, ••Brunansky
said. "He jammed me twice with
his breakillg ball earlier In the
game and maybe be thoilght 1
was looklne for thl! breaking ball.
But he threw another fastball and
I hit It welL"
The homer, Brunansky's
fourth of the year, came after
Milt Thompson's leadoff single In
the seventh. Brunansky then hit
Terrell's first pitch over the
left-field wall.
"Bruno's a great hitter," said
Terrell, 3-4. "I threw him the
same pitch twice before, but this
time he adjusted. If you get the
ball up on him, .he'll l_llt It out."
Mqrane held the Padres hit·
leu for 6 1-3 Innings before .
Carmelo Martinez ripped an RBI
double down the left-field line,
scoring Tony Gwynn.
·M agrane· struck out a career·
high eight batters and walked
five before glvlllg ,way to Todd
Worrell, who ·ptnch-hltter Marvell Wynne to pick up his sixth
save.
Jack Clark's two-out single In
,the ninth was tlie only other hit or
Magrane, who then walked Mark
Parent, promptln&amp; his exit.

Pistons...

l

I'

Continued from page 5
want to win and move on
(towards a third NBA straight
title)."
A run of 8 unanswered points
ended In typical Laker fashion·a dunk oft the break. Byron Scott,
who had 16 point~. stole a pass
and fed Magic Johnson, who fed ·
Worthy for a spectacular jam.
John Lucas scored for Seattle,
but the Lakers ripped orr 10 more
points In a row, Green muscling
Inside for a 3-point play ·and
. Michael Cooper delivering his
second 3-polnter of the game In
the spree.
Los Angeles, which outscored
Seattle 32-19 In the perlood, led
95-72 entering the fourth quarter
and coasted
there . .
•'It seemed like we were just In
awe," Sonlcs Coach Bernie Blck·
ersta'ff said. "The safest thing to
say Is mostofusgotoutofitallve.
They just had a supreme effort."
The Sonics have lost 10 straight
times to the Lakers in the
postseason dating to 1980. The
series shirts to Seattle for Games
3 and 4 Friday night and Sunday.
That, at least, gives the Sonics
hope. TheybeattheLakerstwoof
tllree times during the season at
lhe 'C'oUseum.
In Thursday's games, the New
York Knleks play !lost to Michael
Jordan and the Chicago Bulls and
Phoenix Is at Golden State.
The Bulls surprised the Knlcks
in overtime at Madison Square
Garden Tuesday to win Game 1.
Jordan came alive In the final
period and overtime to score 17 of
his 34 points. New York will be
counting on better performances
from center Patrick Ewing and
power forwaro;J Charles Oakley In
Game2.
"It was just a terrible night,"
Oakley said. "Thursday night
will be 100 percent better."
The Phoenix-Golden State serIes shlfta to Oakland. Calif., for
Gallll!l 3 and 4 with each team
llaviDa a victory .

rrom

•

spOrt. briefs
.

lla:..,

Heavyweight Renaldo Snipes
will flpt Manuel Oay De AI·
melcla of Brazil Thuraclay nliht
Ia New York. Snipes, who
laiOCked down Larry Holmes
· bllln
a 1981 title I fight,
at Mike ~- ...
former Ulbt bea-

.llllll'"'

=-:

The Daily Sefltinel

By The Bend
I

Magrane was disappointed land at Baltimore were rained
about not finishing, but said he out.
Mels 11, BeciiJ f
was happy to be getting his
strength back.
At Cincinnati Keith Hernandez
San DiegO's only ·run was singled twice and drove In two
unearned. TollY. Gwynn led off runs In a six-run sixth Inning and
the seventh by reaching on ali Howard Johnson and Barry
error by Ozzle Smith and stole Lyons homered, fueling New
second as Jack Clark struck out. York. The Reds made three
MarUnez then broke Magrane's errors In the sixth Inning. Ron
no-hit bid with his double, scoring Darling, 2-3, permitted .seven hits
Gwynn to tie the game 1-1.
and tour I'IIIUI before Rick AgutiThe Cardinals took a 1-0 lead In era hurled the final three Innings
the fourth when Terry Pendleton for hla first career save. Tom
tripled with one out aDd scored Browning, 3-3, took the loss. •
when Pedro Guerrerro hit a pop
·
Glaata 4,
3
foul down the rlght·fleld'Jinethat
At Chicago Donell Nixon
second baseman Roberto scoredthego-abead runona balk
Alomar caught with his .back to by Mitch ,Williams,. giving the
the Infield. His throw home was . Giants their fourth straight vic·
too late to catch Pendleton.
IQI'Y over !be Cubs. Mike LaCoss, ·
"When you're gomg good; you 2-3, picked up the win In relief.
get a sacrifice fly like Guerrer-· Crai11 Lefferts earned his sixth
ro's," said Padri!S Mana1er Jack save. -Mitch WIIUams, 0-2, reMcKeon, whose club dropped lleved and took the Joss.
uDder the .500 mark al17·18.
Ex..- 11, Aatr. 1
''But when you're playing bad
At Houston, Tom Foley collike us, . you don't seem to do lected four hits, Including three
anything right,"
doubles, and three RBI and Dave
Elsewhere In the NL, New Martinez doubled and tripled
York crushed CinCinnati 11-4, during an eight-run Montreal
San Francisco rallted past Chi· second Inning. Bryn Smith, 3-1,
cago 4-3 and Montreal ham· retired 20 of the last 22 Astros he
meredHouston 10-1. Los Angeles faced. Jim Clancy, 1-3, lasted
at Pittsburgh and Atlanta at only 11:3 Innings. In the sixth,
Philadelphia were rained out.
Montreal's Spike Owen charged
In the American League It . · the mound after Larry Andersen
was: Toronto 3, Seattle 2; Mil· - narrowly missed his, head with a
waukee 12, Chicago 2; Detroit 3, ' pitch. ·Owen, Tim Raines and
Calltornla 2; and Kansas Clty3, WaiiaceJohnsonofMontrealand
Cleveland 2. Texas at New York, Houstoh Coach Ed Ott were all
Minnesota at Boston and Oak- ejected.

Thursday. May 11. 1989
Page 7..

• '4

Meigs School repon

,,

eu•

GRIFFEY HITS DIRT - The ,Reds' Ken
Griffey chillies bard lato secoiad base to break up
1111 a&amp;lempted double play by lilets secolld 1aeker .

Tim Teufel Ia the third J.U.Ing of Wednsday
aJclll's aame In Claclaaall. The Meta woa IH.
(VPI)

Kennedy honored at shower

which Is being submitted to
By Supt. James Carpenter
Meigs Local School District Washlngton for approval which,
Superintendent James Carpen- If received, will give us equipter, In his final column for the ment for vocational prolfl'ams
1988-89 scliool year reflects on and a computer laboratory. If
how thln11s a:re In the system as receive!!, we would hope to
become Involved in adult educa·
the year closes.
"As this school year draws to a tlon training.
"The Board Is looking at
close, we can reflect on 1988-89
and look at what took place In having a management company
take over the operation of our
Meigs Local.
''We had a lot of different cafeterias. The purpose of this
people tell us where we are In would be to save money through
terms of OJir school programs purchasing and through inand our facilities. We were creased participation In our
inspected by the State Depart· cafeterias.
"All of these things have
ment of Education in rela lion to
happened
to show us just where
our meeung the minimum standwe are, and In which direction we
ards of the Department._
"We also were Inspected by the should go to bring about better
department of food services In educational opportunities for our
our cafeterias and the bOard has sTudents. We wlii be making
requested an analysis be done of some other decisions In the
our buildings In relation to the coming year based on what we
educational program required have learned.
"Our people have also worked
by the state. This analysis will
together very well this year. We
hopefully be done this summer.
''The school also looked at our have tried to emphasize the
own educational pros:ram educational program and bOth
through committees which have certified and non-certified permet and which will be making sonnel have worked with the
.~mmendatlons for the coming same attitude. Our sincere
school year. These recommenda- thanks to those who have helped
tions wlll address our reading and contributed.
"To our seniors, we hope that
program, our testing program, ·
and how wewlll provide-Interven- your preparation for what Is
tion for students which have not beginning for you has been
met the competencies as re- enough to get you started, an that
you never stop learning. (Jood
quired by the state department.
luck, and our best wishes for the
"We have made application for
future.
a new vocational program to
"And to our students who will
enable us to meet the requirebe returning and to their parents
ments of a comprehensive high we give our bes twlshes for a good
school ..
summer. We look forward to an
•we have applied for a grant even better year next year.

A layette shower was held rt~;-Darla Staats, Karen Walk'er
recenily for Darla Kennedy at
and Jennifer, Debbie Davis,
the- Pomeroy United Methodist Paula Chancey and Mindy. Kim
Church hosted by Diana WilliamOliphant, Linda Fisher, Rita
son, Cherie Wiliiamsoh, and Hamm, Martha Struble. Marge
··
Donna Williamson.
Reuter, Gertrude Mitchell. Jo
A teddy bear theme in pink and
Dunn and Jehnlfer, Faye Wilder·
blue_ was carried out, and a
muth, Patti Struble and Erin,
corsage made of pink, blue, and Jackie Hllderbran, Ruth Moore,
yellow lace anklets by Charlotte Jeannie Taylor, Jennifer Taylor;
Willford was presented to Mrs. Gerry Lightfoot, Suzie Will,
Kennedy.
· Gloria VanReeth. and Cathy
Retreshmems of nuts, cake,
Reed .
chips. and punch were served.
Sending gifts were Mrytls.
and games were played with Parker. Marion Ebersbach. ·
prizes going to Betfy Baronlck. Patty Taylor. Edna Schoenleb,
Dorothy Downie, Mrs. Ke11nedy. Vicki Williamson, Susart Clark, ·
and Mabel Halfhill.
Evelyn Lucke, the Racine Ele- ·
Attending the shower with mentary staff. June Eichinger.
those mentioned abOve were Martha Hoover, and Dave and
Clarice Kennedy, Caitlin Willi- Audrey Slater.
amson, Jane Williams, Jan Nor-

MOTHER'S DAY SALE
DEDI()ATION- Rev. Sam Basye, Jr. Is seen here In froat ofthe
new fellowship hall a&amp; lhe Rutland Church of the Nazarene. The
hall was dedicated on April 16 In honor of long time members
Arnold and Mildred Gra!e. The building was constructed at a cost
of about $80,800 and Is now debt free.lt contains abOut 2,520 square
feet with full klichen, restrooms, bedroom, and seating for
approximately 250 people. Morton Builders, Inc. was the
contractor 1111d Larry Haynes, of Custom Bulldiag Products, did
the Interior work.

A film "Nature's Masterpiece,
Vancoover, Canada" shown by
Ruth Powers, librarian, was the
feature of the recent meeting of
the Middleport Amateur GardenHotline is available by phoning
ers Club.
'
CRISISLINE: Gallia, 446-5554;
The meeting, held at the home
Meigs/ Jackson, 1-800-252-5554. · of Jean Moore. · assisted by
Learn the facts abOut AIDs,
Katherine Hysell, followed a
know how to protect yourself and
covered dish dinner.
your family, and share this
Marge F'!!tty presided at the
knowledge with others. Educat- . meeting In which Elizabeth Burlng ourselves Is essential to
kelt reported on the March
preventing the spread of the
meeting and. Mrs. Moore gave
AIDs virus. "Ohio Working Tothe treasurer's report.
gether To Prevent AIDs".

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Lenora Leifheit took members
blood pressure at the - recent .
meeting of the Rock Springs
Better Health Club at the home
Helen Blackston.
The meeting opened with Mrs.
Leifheit, president, leading the

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T-reasurers",

and

"Forever

April." The last meetings min~
utes were read, the treasurer's
report was given, and dues were
collected.
Gold Ribbon Day In support of
The mother daughter banquet
Eldercare will be observed In ' will be held In the church
Meigs County on May 16 .
basement on Friday.
Plans for the day at the SeniOr.
Winners in Phylis Skinner's
Citizens Center will include re- contest were Mary Showalter
coghitlon of Meigs Countlans 90 ·a nd Mrs. Blackston.
and over, with the oldest male
The next meeting will be at the
and female resident to be pres- , home of Louise Bearhs on May
ented gifts at a dinner at the 18. Mrs. Blackston will have the
Center.
program and Trecle AbbOt will
There will be entertainment. have the contest.
Meigs seniors are encouraged to
Other members present were
wear gold ribbons all during May Francis Geogleln, , Buena
which is Older Americans Month Grueser, VIolet Hysell, Dorothy
to show that they support an Jeffers. and Ann Mash.
expanded Eldercare program.

TC-1002 By
f'!adlo Shack"

lave
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group In the Lord's Prayer ,a nd
pledge to the flag. Devotions
were given by Nancy Morris who
read "Cup of Spring", "Prlzeless

, Off!cers for the1989-90 school
year were llistalled at the recent
meeting of the Riverview PTO,
and are as follows, Sue Douglas,
president; Cindy Mayle, vice
president; Pill Hayman, secre·
tary; and Nancy Larkins,
treasurer.
The "Art Fair" was displayed
throughout the gym and winners
are, from the first grade, Derek
Holsinger, first; Cassie Rose,
second; and Lori Harris, third.
Winners in the second grade
Christa Circle, tlrst; Shane
Church, second; and Dustin
Mlllhone, third. Third grade
winners Include James Adams,
first; Brian Criss, second; and
Jason Richards, third.
Winners from the fourth grade
are David Criss, nrst; Hope
Decker, second; and Rocky
Hupp, third. Fifth grade winners
are Jim Starcher, first; Crystal
Morris, second; and Eric Lar-

klns, third. Sixth grade winners
Include Darlene Good, first;
Brandy Barber, second; and
April Smith. third.

GALLIPOLIS

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Mrs. Moore read "Tulips of
Trust" from "Fiowersoflnsplratton from God's Garden."
Mrs. Burkett, Gladys Cumlngs, Bernice Durst, and Iva
Powell reported on the spring
regional meeting that was held In
Nelsonville. The club provided
cakes and coffee for the meeting.
Mrs. Moore Jed the group in a
memorial service and prayer in
memory of Erma Smith, who
was. an active and faithful
member as well as former
president of the club.

OFF

ALL WOMEN'S FOOTWEAR

Amateur Gardeners have meeting

AIDS awareness week conducted
In conjunction with the Ohio
Department of Mental Health,
Woodland Centers. Inc. recognizes May 8-14 as AIDS Awareness Week Ia Ohio.
Woodland Centers is a source
of supportive therapy and appropriate ~terral to PWA's,
people with AIDs, or ARC, AIDs
related complex.
Information on local support
groups ,and-the Statewide AIDS

20°/o

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MIDDLEPORT • 992-5627

POMEROY

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TO ALL "MOMS" IN THE AREA.

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For Each Mom Who Stops In
Friday and Saturday and Test
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THANKS FOR ALL

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TREAT MOM TO THE BEST
FROM CLARK'S.

''

�RYAN HARPER
'

Boys State participants named
Jim Durst, son of Ed and Ruth ;
Durst, Middleport, and Ryan
Harper, son of Guy and Carroll ,
Ann Harper, Middleport, have
been selected by the Feeney
Benn!!tt Post128ot the American
Legion to attend Buckeye Boys
State at Bowling Green Unlver·
slty, June 17-25.
Durst, a junior at Meigs High
School, participates In varsity
football and track and at tends
the Bradford Church of Christ.
Harper, also a junior at Meigs

High School, is active in National

i Honor Society, and French Club.

He received the Academic Excel·
lence Award In 1987 and 1988, and
. Is a member l;)f the Middleport
Presbyterian Church. His inter· ·
ests Include reading, collecting
baseball cards, playing video
games, and camping.
The State Government Day·
will see over 20 government
offices represented to work with
the young men serving In the
various Boys State offices.

Yost birth .being announced
Chuck and Nita Yost are Alfred aild Grace· Rusche!,
announcing the birth of a son, Pomeroy. Maternal great grandStephen Eugene, on March 10 at parents are Mrs .. Carson Hayes,
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
Syracuse, and Albert P. Ruschel,
The Infant weighed six pounds, Sr., Palm Bay, Fla.
14 ounces and was 19~ Inches
Paternal grandparents are
· long.
Gene and Mary K. Yost, Syra·
The Yosts also have a two year .cuse. Paternal great grand·
old son, Carson Edward,
mother Is Mrs. Edward Foster,
Maternal grandparents are Pomeroy.

Modern Woodmen plan meeting
Modern Woodmen of America
Camp 7230 Is sponsoring a
•potluck dinner on Saturday at 7
p.m. at the Modern Woodmen
Hall In Burlingham. Betty Mil·
hoan will speak on the early
history .a nd veterans of the area.
There will also be a special
Mother's Day recognition and
each mother present will receive
a flower. A drawing will also be
held for a family door prize.
Everyone Is to bring a covered

Lodge to meet
Shade River Lodge No. 453,
Chester, wlll hold a regular
meeting · at 8 p.m. on Thursday.
All master masons are Invited to
attend. Refreshments will be
served.

dish. The camp will furnish the
meat, tossed salad, roils anp
coffee. Admission Is free and
l(llests are welcome.

By .Jobn C. WoH, D.O.
Aseoola&amp;e Prof-• of FamUy
Medicine
Oblo Unlvel'llly CoBe1e of O.teopaihlc Medlcble . .
Queltlon: I do a great ileal of
cooking and baking for my
family. Over the past several
weeks my shoulder has aotten so
sore that I have had trouble
reaching up to get things from
my cabinets. My doctor told me
that 1 have bursitis. What is
bursitis?
Auwer: My medical diction·
ary defines bursitis as an lnfiam·
matlon or a sacllke bodily cavity
called a "bursa." But, ithlnkyou
might want a little more
explanation.
First, 111 give you some
background on how muscles and
bones work together. As you are
probably aware, the bones of the
body are moved by muscles. One
end of a muscle is attached to a
bone and the other end is se&lt;;ured
to tough fibrous connective tissue
called a tendon, which passes
over the joint and Is embedded In
the bone on the other side. When
the muscle contracts, II puns on
the tendon which then pulls the
bones closer together by making
motion at the Joint. The tendons
are pulled back and forth over
the Joint every time there is

movement.
Now, I want you to picture a
rope thrown up over a small tree
limb. Pull back and forth on the
ends of the rope. After several
hours of tbla exercise the rope
will wear out or the tree limb will
wear througb. Wby didn't the
tendons running over your elbows we(ll' out while you were
doing this? Because, unlike a the
tree limb, your elbow has a
bursa.
Where a tendon passes over a
joint, the tendon Ia surrounded by
a loose cyilnder ot tissue, what
my medical . dictionary called a
"sacllke cavity." Thla, of course,
Is a bursa.lt normally produces a
small amount of fluid which IIC!s
as a lubricant that protects the
tendon from wearlngoutandalso

Leading Creek Conservancy

· Rutland, will hold Its regular
monthly meeting Friday at 9
The Word · of Life Church, a.m.
Burlingham, will be having weekend revival services Friday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. each
night. The evangelist will be
Leola Mae Johnson. Everyone
welcome.
Revival services will continue
through Sunday evening at the
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union. Herman Stewart is the speaker and there will
be special singing each evening
by Wally Halet. Services begin at
7 p.m. arid the public Is Invited to
attend.

about my bursitis?
Auwer: Treating bursitis requires a delicate balance between ·use of the )oint and rest.
Protecting your shoulder will
eventually reduce the dlscom·
fort, but you will also Jose some of
the normal motion. Strenuous
use ot the shoulder will only
Increase the bursitis. Frequent
stretching motions of the
shoulder wlthout strain are essential for recovery. Heat, mas·
sage, and tither physical therapy
measures - Including osteopa·
thlc manipulative treatment can promote healing. Medications which reduce Inflammation
are frequently prescribed.
Bursitis usually responds well
to treatment, but recovery
doesn't happen overnight.

By BOB HOEFLICH
burg. Tim Is the son of Doris and
Since the weekend weather and ' Ed lhle who reside In the Racine
especially Sunday was such a area.
jolt, I was con·
cerned about
You probably have heard of
upriver
Swan Dance - but never Swan
crop. Our econ·
Ganz.
amy Is
Well- Swan Ganz is the name
enough and
given to a new medical procedon't need
dure In which an In !ravenous
problems.
catheter Is Introduced lnf,o the
One of the upriver planters, heart to obtain pres sure readings
however, Jim AdaiJII says - not In the heart chambers. It Is then
to worry. The tomatoes survived used for continuous monitoring
the weekend and It even looks of the left heart function In
like this year's crop may be patients who have had acure
ready for harvest a bit earlier heart attacks to assess lung
than usual - and that's good status· and fluid balance In the
since early to market Is a happier presence or shock or to provide
economic situation.
treatment guidelines for
So - the blggle now, as I patients.
understand It, is the development
Veterans Memorial Hospital is
of somedecentgrowlngweil.ther. getting prepared to. put Swan
Jim reports the plants are In Ganz Into operation In Its Special
bloom and small tomatoes are ·care Unit using new state-of-theforming. So If we can just get .art cardiac monitors.
·
that rain turned off - and some
The program Is definitely not
warm sunshine. Some home 'r eady to fly yet but staff
grown tomatoes would go well members are getting Into the
wouldn't they?
preliminary training preparatory for the program's takeoff.
Now while we're on the subject
Recently, a hands-on clinical
of the miracle of growth, a reader was held at Mt. Carmel Hospital
advises ine that the yellow In Columbus on the program and
blooms which helped create the representing the local hospital at
attractive floral picture on the the session were Margaret Holm, ·
Charles Yost farm In the Nease Barb Gilland, Sandy Sergent,
· Settlement area are turnips and Kyle Woods, Ginger Pratt, Kay
not mustard. The first perseiri Cullums, Sharon Michael, Barb
reported mustard - the second Ear 1, Rae Gwlazdowsky, Rhonda
one swears the _ blooms are bailey, Sue Zirkle, Bonnie Smith, ·
· turnips. Whatever -Just as long Vanessa Sidwell, Lynda Fraley,
as the view Is good.
carol Adams, Betsy Molden and
Tl na Neigler.
Tim lhle, who has been employed at Valley Lumber In ' Jo's Gift Shop In upper SyraMiddleport, has gone to Harris- cuse Isn't closing as planned
burg, Pa., where he Is to become after alL Jo says she is going to
a railroad engineer.
~eep the shop operating but wm
not
be stocking the usual gifts but
Quite a loss there since persoInstead
will be promoting
nable Tim Is such a talent In the
construction business. Over the concrete statues, fountains, birdyears, I've heard , nothing b)Jt . baths and that type thing. Many
praise for his work by people who home businesses do have a way
employed him to do their build- of surviving these days. ·
Ing and remodeling.
· How's your · sinus trouble,
Tim's family Is remaining In
Meigs County until school Is o~t Bunky? Makes 11 tough to keep
· and then will move to Hanis· smiling, huh!

Pediatrics

•'

Infant, Children
&amp;

Adolescent Medicine
Now Seeing New Patients

Mary Napper, 3.479 A.. to
Terry Delane Napper and Sandy
Kay Napper, Salem.
Rebecca A, Ward, pt. lot 3, to
Ronald Edward Freeman,
Sutton.
Clifford D. Hill and Paullne
Hlll, 13.23 A., to David W. Fox
and Ruth Ann Fox, Letart.
Robert L. Reed and Carlotta
Reed, tracts, to Russell C.
Parker and Tina R. Parker,
Olive.

Dis trlct, 34481 Corn Hollow Road,

T ~matoes surviving

Dr. Victor Hochman ·

land transfers

Meeting set

provides a little bit of padding
over the hard bone,
When a bursa Is Injured from
trauma, overuse, or 11Jness, It
becomes swollen and Inflamed.
This produces pain every time
the part Is moved because the
tendon presses on the Inflamed
bursa.
The shoulder blade, collarbone, and upper arm bone all
form part of the shoulder joint.
There are many muscles, and
therefore many tendons and
bursae (the plural of bursa),
Involved In the simple motion of
reaching up to get something
from your kitchen cabinet. lnfiammatlon In one or more of the
shoulder's ~ursae Is the cause of
·your pain.
Queatlon: What can be done

Call

(304) 675-5220
For An Appointment
Monday throtigh Friday
9 a.m. • 5 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Suite 118

PLEASANT VALLEY H()SPITAL
The .fomi/y of professionals

Revival set

Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

School queen
announced
Karen Htmsley, daughter of
Ann HeiJIIley of Syracuse, was
cr~ spring quuen at l'duskln·
giiip .GOiieire_'s ,Parents Weekend ·In Aprl'l'. - ·
A senior majoring In business
with minors In economics and
mat))ematlcs, she Is a member of
Delta Club and Is resident
director of Kelley Hall.

OHIO.VALLEY ftRI

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STEEL BEI.T.ID JIADLU.S
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P235!75R15XL..........'61.21

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Use for parching bare
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TIGAR Pl65/80Rl3 ............$26.95

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flowers . trees. vegetables. sh rubc:o. REG . 2.79

•Mrs. WUbur Parker was In·
formed of the death of her cousin,
Blanche Hervert, Ravenna, Neb.
Mrs. Parker visited Mrs. Hervert and family In 1987.

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YOU'U UIE OR mLESJI
Y.OU'U LOVE OUI PRICESII

•COUPON•

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-·

A pizza party was given for
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary by the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi on
Tuesday evening at the
Infirmary.
Due to the fact that the April29
golf tournament was rained out,
the !l"OUP discussed the possibilIty of rescheduling the tournament for sometime In the fall.
Theresa Kennedy, president,
read a thank you note from
Charlene Hoefilch, group sponsor, for the gift presented to h~r
on Founder's Day.
It was decided to have instal Ia·
tlon of officers at the picnic that
w111 be held on May 23. Members
are to meet at home of Mrs.
Kennedy In Middleport at 6: 15
and bring a lawn chair:

Recliner or Swivel Rocker.
Beautiful Fabrics. lifetime
mechanism warranty.

-------------~--------------~

SILVII .DG. PLAZA-GAWPOUS, OHIO

.'

Ohio Eta Phi meets

Alfred notes

!
'I
I

AND

UYE
HANGING

GalUa County. The chapter asks
that any descendants of the
family attend the ceremonies.
Chapter officers' conference
has been set tor 6:30p.m., June 1,
at the Lewis Family Restaurant,
Oak Hill, at which lime programs
for next year will be discussed.
The next meeting will be held
at the Meigs County Museum on
May 25. At this l[me, the chapter
will present the S.A.R. good
citizenship medal, the S.A.R. law
enforcel)1ent medal, and the
Eagle Scout Scholarship winner-

r---------------~------------,

2 LB. QARDEN BUILDER

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•B.F. Goodrich •Unlroyai•Michelen
•We Do Bandag Truck Fire Rtcapplng
871J.IJ332 GALUPOLIS FERRY, WV
HOURS: Ill- ft'ldly, 8 1.111... p.m.; Sllufdar,·l UL-2 p.m.

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Bedding
Plants

All Prices Include Mounting &amp; Balancfng

OHIO.

3.29

Earnle . Wells was honored
Sunday on his 83rd birthday with
a surprise party at the Wells
family reunion held at the old
American Legion Hall In
Middleport.
Wells' children and grand·
children presented him with a
reclining chair.
A dinner with birthday cake
was served to Don and Maxine
Wells, Bill and Violet Wells and
· family, Donald and Cathy Wells
and family, RUTH Ann Greaves,
Michael Ray, Jetf and Judy
Wells and family, Maxwell
Wells, Judy Davis, Matthew and
Judy Wells and family, Sue
Metzger and family, Karen Mor·
rts, Ernie and Pat Metzger and
family, Johnnie Metzger and
family, Christina· Lewis, Kitty
Darst and family, John and
Katheryn Metzger, Enoch and
Mary Jane Staats, Melody and
Danny Redman, Terry and
Donna Scaggs and tamlly, T.J. ·
and Jeremy Rowley, Ruth Pis·
teJU, and Linda Seaver.

Fr• Delivery to Middleport, Pome,.y,
Bradbury, Mlnonvlle, lutland, Syracuse,·
and Mason, W.Va.
If you feel you have boo~ paying too 111uch for
your proicrlptlons, give u~ a call. We wll quote
you prlcoslll

•

MULCH

STARTER FERTILIZER
Covers 5.000 square feet.

reunion held

'

DECORATIVE
PINE BAR~

60,000 Mile Limited Warranty,
Free Road Hazard XT120
Lowest Price Around - Stop &amp; Save

Wells birthday,

president, was the attempted ented on some topic of the
rescue of Mar.quls and Madame American Revolution and then
de Lafayette by Americans dur- relate 11 to today, were Chris- ·
Ing the Reign of Terror In topher Broyles, first place;
Heather · Swain, second place;
France.
Plans were made for the .both of GaiUa Academy High
annual presentation of the S.A.R. SchooL Due to a conf11ct In the
medals to- the outstanding stu- winner's schedule, Swain w111
dent of Reserve Officers Train- represent the chapter at the state
Ing Corps at Rio Grande College finals in Cincinnati.
June 3 was set for the chapter
and to two students at Ohio
to mark two graves of American
University,
Winners In the Douglass G. · Revolutionary veterans . Those
High · Oration Contest, which are Moses Russell and Charles 1
•· requires that a speech be pres- Russell, who aFe both burled In

;A welcome was given to new
member Mlstle Grueser.
, !MI!mbers attending, wUltthose
already mentioned, were Sandy ·
Patterson, Wanda Patterson,
JoAnn Grady, Jean Johnson, and
S~errl Grady.

•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescriptio" Prices
•Quality Prescription ~rugs
•Full Line of Generics Available
ellost Insurance Carries Accepted

h .... l/11/lt

2.99

The tOOth annlver sary of the
founding of the National Society
Sons of the American Revolution
and the Ohio Society S.A.R. was
observed when the Ewings Chapter of the S.A.R. held Its regular
meeting at the Meigs County
Museum.
The program for the. evening,
given by Keith Ashley, chapter

meets

At The Prescription Shop
'&gt;Prescriptions Are; Our Business!

6,000 SQ. n ..... REG. oj,99 _ ..,.. SAL£ 7.99
10,000 SQ. n..... R(G. 21.99-.... SAU 17.99
15,000 SQ fT ....... REG. 29.99-..... SAL£ 23.99

.

KAREN HEMSLEY

'

TURF BUILDER

The Daily Sentinei-'Page-9

Revolutionary War grave markers planned

0

Auxi~ary

Plans for inaklng lee cream for
Memorial Day were discussed
when the Raclile Volunteer Fire
Dapartment Ladles Auxiliary
met recently.
.
The meeting opened with
pledge to the flag and the "Lord's
Prayer."
The resignation of Ann Layne
as presldertt and member was
read and accepted. Alana Butler
was named president and Emma
Lyons was elected vice
president.

RDIINCTON JIAJUCSJIAN AU SEAsoN

P155/80R13..............'38.41
P165/80R13..............'39.63
P175/80R13..............142.70
P185/80R13..............143.10
P185J75R14..............144.21
P195175R14..............146.21
P205175R14..............148.65

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beqt of the bend

Bursitis and the family cook

Family medicine

JIM DURST

Tbursdlly, May 11. 1989

Thursday, May 11, 1989

Poma-oy-Middlaport. Ohio

•

l·

,.·- -

..

*90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH

CHECK OUT OUR GIFT ITEMS
BEAUTIFUL BASKETS IN ALL SHAPES &amp;
SIZES. NEW VALENTINE FIGURINES,
SILl FLOWERS, DOLLS, WALL
HANGINGS, PICTURES, ASSORTED
WOODCRAFTS.

�•

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Some things.
don't change

'

Thursday, May 11. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Ann

.

age
ggc

159

Thill teller does nel compute
Thompson smoked on and off
SPRINGFIELD, UJ. (UPI) beginning at age 23. But he
It Is riot unusual for Gov. James stopped, he said, on May 13, 1971
R. Thompson to get letters on at 1:30 p.m.
various topics - as the state's
chief executive, he gets them all
Boxer, IRS 11ellle dlllpule
the time.
But recently he recetved a
MIAMI (UPI) -Middleweight
rather unusual letter·, one asking
boxing champiOn Roberto Duran
him to oppose one of his own
agreed to settle his $1.54 million
bout with the Internal Revenue
programs.
Service, and a federal judge gave
P)lll!p Morris U.S.A., the larg·
both parties abouteliht weeks to
est cigarette manufacturer In the
work out their differences.
country, sent a computer·
generated letrer to the governor
Duran was In U.S. District
asking him to actively fight
Court
Wednesday bflrause he had
against a proposal to !!early
double llllnols cigarette tax . kept about $1.54 mUJion the IRS
had mistakenly overpaid him In
from 20 cents per pack to 38 cents
per pack - a plan Thompson
another settlement. His lawyers
and procesutors work~!&lt;! out an
proposed himself.
The two-page letter was ad·
ajfreement about '20 . mll!utes
dressed to Mr. Thompson as a
prior to his appearance before
private citizen, but was sent to
U.S. District Judie Stanley Mar·
his Chicago office
cus, attorney Jan Neiman said.
"We need your help to prevent
an excessive tax Increase for
''In effect, all we did today was
smokers from becoming Jaw "
say. 'Give us eight weeks and
said the Jetter signed by Patrlcla
we'll have It all squared away."'
Wilson, the company's regional
Neiman said.
manager for government affairs.
Duran did not speak during the
The tetter warned of tlie dire
hearing and declined comment
afterwards.
conaeql~E!nces of allowing the
The IRS actually overpaid the
clgarel!e tax Increase tn become
Jaw, Including the Joss of thou·
Panamanian-born Miami res!·
sands of jobs In the state.
dent by nearlY $3 million. But In
Steven Weiss, manager of
November and December. Du·
ran received three IRS checks
media relations for Philip Mor·
rls, said Thompson received the
totaling more than $3 million,
let!er because be Is on the
al tholigh the agency 'only owed
mailing list for the company's
him about $60,000.
magazine, which primarily Is
mailed to smokers. Weiss said he
Duran cashed two checks
did not know how Thompson, a
worth a combined $1.6 million,
non-smoker, got on the mailing
but sent back a third one for $1.4
·
list.
million, Neiman said.

The government sued Duran,
who Is 85·7 with 59 knockouts, for
$1.54 mUJion from the checks be
cashed. Wednesday's hearing

THE CENTRAL TRUST

SPECIAL
1

-6 MONTH
CERTIFICATE O.F
DEPOSIT
'

Substantial Penalty for Earty Withdrawal

,

ANNUAL
YIELD

RATE 8.75°/o-9.11 °/o
13,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
OF

SOUTH~ASTERN

OHIO, N.A.

The Bank That Makes Things Happen
. GALLIPOLIS

. MIDDLEPORT

446-0902

992-6661

Member FDIC
., .

ggc

79(:

1!!
--

Oil Filters

ACion-Rnlslor
Spllll Plugs .

U1Tih2

Umil16

Purol.tor

was scheduled to clear the air.
Marcus scheduled another hear·
log for Aug. 8 to check on the
progress of the settlement.

POTTING SOIL (401) ...................2.49 .................S'f.99
·TOP SOIL (4ot) ······················-·····2.19......- .....••..s1.99
PEAT HUMUS (401)......................2.19.......~ .......}1.99
COW MANURE (40t)..- ................2.39................s1.99

Solder Seal
Liquid Wrench

..
NUGGE IS (3 FT.') ..... - .....................3.49...............s2.99

PINI 8 lB

HHl6
MIU llollllt
•11 &amp;NIIl

'"""

ggc

2 ~1

--

.177 .

~8Piugs

Umit2

• T18-16

FIOm

..... 1.......

499

1~~

895

111111 lllnc:e

2~0!

295

From

MBII

Tw .....

carwu
liquid or

lc

MINI NUGGETS (3 FT.').................3.49...............s2.99
MULCH (3 FT.')......~.........;.............. -3.49...............s2.99
CYPRESS MULCH {iZ cu.
.49

Solder Seal
lllliden:oatll1g

ACRnistor

Pinlatar
Air Filters

411 ROUND SINGLE POTS
NEW GUINEA IMPATIENS
CUTI1NG GERANIUMS
NON-STOP BEGONIAS

4!!.

paste

s•s
..........
FIOm

REG.

Armor All
Prottclant

'1.98

SALE

$1 59

MIX OR MATCH

14INAFLAT
520.00
•

199
Speru

I

MeV 11, 1989

Quirks in the n e w s - - - - - - - - -

Dear Ann Landers: I'm a
15-year·old girl who has something to say to kids my age.
My parents do not allow me to
go to parties where liquor Is - as well as every other
served. My Instructions are, " If welght·loss program. - My
Name Is Lepon
you see liquor, come home."
Dear Lepon: No · comment
Three weeks ago, I was at a
party where they served wine other than thank you for writing.
coolers. I had never seen one
Dear Ann Landen: My fiance
before and I asked what was In it. and I have been Jiving together
I was told II was fruit pun&lt;:h and . for two years. our wedding date
soda . I didn't see any In the has been set for April, 1990. I
house. Now, after reading an want It to be perfect so I'm
article In the Washington Post by planning way In advance so that
Catherine O'Neill, I know the there won't be any last-minute .
truth. I'd like to share this craziness. I've already put down
Information with other a $600 deposit on my wedding
gown
teenagers.
The average wine cooler con·
L . t ight "DI k"
as n
c
really be·
talns about 6 percent alcohol.
~~~angry.
He
said
I
should do
This Is 50 percent more alcohol'
I
want
because
he
e.ver
than you will find In a beer. Wine
doesn
t
want
to
hear
any
more
has a much higher alcohol
about th,e wedding. I don't
content, about 10 to 14 percent.
believe
I ve ever seen him so
But wine Is usually served In
upset.
I
was shocked when he
smaller glasses than beer. Most
said
If
I
mention
the wedding one
wine coolers come In 12-ounce ·
more
time,
he
will
give me the
bottles. A person who drinks two
$600
that
I
paid
for
the
gown and
wine coolers gets more alcohol
no
ceremony·
there
will
be
than a person who has two
Please help me. - Hurling In
etasses of wine.
Wine coolers can be dangerous Houston
because they don't taste like
alcohol. They taste more like . Dear Houston: Your high·
fruit punch. You could drink two voltage enthusiasm Is probably
getting on the illY'S nerves. Cool
or three without realizing that
it. Meanwhile, you and· your
you are getting very drun)&lt;. Kids
fiance need to have a heart-towho get drunk could find them·
heart talk. He may be havlnt
selves In a pack o( trouble. premarital jitters. Then again,
· Mary J. (Geol'Jelown)
Dear Mary: When I was In high he may really want out. The only
school they called It "pink way to tell for sure Is to give him
lightning." The more things every opportunity to call the
change the more they remain the wedding off and
. see If he takes it.
same. Thanks for the wake-up
call. A letter from you can do a lot
more good than anything I might
say.
Dear Ann Landen: "Mary
Jane" and "John" recently gave
me my first grandchild. M.J.
went nuts finding the right
formula. Then she tried · every
bottle on the market to get the
best one. The baby clothes and
toys cost a fortune. But that's
their business and their money.
My other daughter says, "Ma,
keep your mouth shut."
Valvoll11
Ann, my reason for writing Is
1OW30 Motor 011
Clifarettes. M.J. and John are
umn12
chain smokers. Their beautiful
little child, with all those fancy
clothes, washed In just the right
soap, bathed every day In just the
right shampoo, lotions and
powders, Is put to bed In a
Valvoline
beautiful room with white furnl·
ture and organdy curtains that
10W40 or 5W30
stink to high heaven of cigarette
Molar Oil
smoke. And I mean stink. The
Umh12
child sleeps In cigarette smoke. .
She Is fed In cigarette smoke. She
goes for a drive In a car filled
with smoke.
I get so mad my blood bolls.
That little baby's lungs will be
black by the time she's In junior
high. I have sent them several·
newspaper and magazine artl·
cles and some of your columns on
the hazards of secondhand
smoke. They say It's a lot of
baloney. Please, tell me what I
can do to help that baby. -Gram
In Indiana
Dear Gram: Take your daugh·
ter's advice. After all that has
been said and written about the
dangers of secondhand smoke, if
It hasn't made an Impression,
nothing you can say will make a
Bars Leaks
difference.
You might ask the child's
6oz.
pediatrician to speak to the
IIA-6
mother. Maybe a word from a
professional, a non-relative,
might made a dent. GoOd luck.
Dear Ann Landers: When I saw
that Jetter from , the mother
whose daughter was overweight
I knew I had to write my first
letter to Ann Landers. ·
I, too, was a fat child. My
mother and other relatives were
constantly giving me the mes·
sage that I . was not acceptable
the way I was and If I were thin
they would !Ike ine better.
Too onen I heard, "You have
such a pretty face. If only you
would Jose a ·!IItle weight ·you
would be beautiful!" And, "Still
job-hunting? Employers always
favor the women who are thin."
Lately I've had several people
suggest that I look Into !lposuc·
tlon. They don't realize how they
Engine Paint
hurt my feelings.
Ever since I can remember,
people have watched every lnor·
sel of food I put Into my mouth.
They have said rude things, such
as, "Do you really need that?"
·and "You can't still be hungry! "
Little do they know that these
comments send me straight to
· the bakery where I buy a load of
pastries so I can pig out and show
them that I don't care what they
tblnk. I have bujlt a fortrels of fat
around me to pretect my.elf
from thOle cruel cracks.
I apeak for mUIIo111 of over·
weiiJbt people wben I say,
"PI-lay oft. WekDOWhowwe
look. U you eaa't accept and love
us !be way we are, we don't want
)'J).ur Jqve.''
'l'llallk you, Ann, for allowlq
· JQ,e to ay IGIDethiDg that lW
· beelllllllll)' mbldtormany )'ell'l.

· AllciP' FAUdoD'ttellmeallout
Wellllt Watellers or Over•tera
AlloayiiiOIII. l know about them

Thlftday,

'

Aom

399
SJAIT
,,
199

25

Qlllllllr
....... hrden
lantry

Oltllts

3995

Aom

ITMT

llllllllllltl
GA 11 POUI
209 Upper RlYer Aolld
(614) +46·4103

•

95

•

'

Peaturlnl

BOB'S MARKET SPECIALTY!
NEW GUINEA HYBRID IMPATIENS
"As Pretty As Ever"

HANGING BASKETS IN 14 SPECTACULAR COLORS
Also
•Fuchsias
•Boston Ferns
•Petunias
•Non-Stop Begonias
. •Geraniums
and Many Other Baskets

PLANT SALE
..Area's Best Selection
Of The Freshest And
.H ealthiest Plants"

MARKET PACK
REG. 11.50
SALE PRICE

--~-----------------------

OTHER RETAD,

$1.29

LOCATIONS
'

FULL MARKET FLAT

*Charleston Fa• mers Market ·
*Cross Lanes Kroger's L~
*Parkersburg • Rt. 95 W•t

. · REG. s1 0.00
SALE PRICE

'$8.99

�..
Paga

12-The

lottO jackpot

i'. .. .

~

-

• .,

-

--·-..

--

~-·----. ~

........

_·--· ·-

----Uvestock sales~---ATHENS UVI!STOC&amp; 8ALB8
\ Mql,ll.
\
Cattle Priem: Feel• steen: . , . .
lt.. 11..111.11; -"Ill .... U.INI.H;
Feed• . .u.... - 117.1N&amp;.H;

-

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

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

-lllo...............,............11.-.11
-~•Cowo:

tJtllltlN 14.11-JUI; Cuoer/Catter · ·
a.tt-n.H; unt ...,...,. ..............
S'l.lt4o_, Riill- up tol(ll.

-···= '

UtUIUee. 11...11.11; Caaaer/C•tter

17........

Veotcat. .:

.'
Plan ooncert

REEDSVILLE-The Eastern
: Local School District wlll be
. . performing Its annual spring
: : concert on Friday evening at
· · 7:30, In the Eastern' High School
gymnasium. Admission Is free
•~ . and refreshments will be served.

CitJ,ifi.ed pase• cover the
following teleEhone exchangea. ..
•
-CouMv .
• .. c -~··...'!!~--•
A-Co41ol14
-Codol14
--

..,._=.o-

C~ole:.prlme

U.ft.ltl.ll; llledlam
·
llorlq.. Cowo: 411.-.110; Cow/Coli

:.~::::-

181.•

))J ~-

...

................................-.

I

GEARY .

•

CAmR'S·
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

••

992-6282

•

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport,

IODY SHOP
550 PAGI MIE1
IIDDlEPO", OliO

•

•

OPEN

'•

0-11 WOIIOI tB-:11 WOROS 2a.31 WOIIOS
1 DAY
e4.00
fii.OO
17.00
3 DAYS
11.00
ti,OO
no.OO
8 DAYS
11.00
t13.00
1111.00
10 DAYS
11100
U1.00
121.00
1 ~~NTH
U:S.OO
111 .00
180.00
toraon...,.wn~nl.bro..,.updw•-bloh.,...

. ..........

by

Stop In And
See Us For
Your Gifts

ORDINANCE NO. 1208·18
An Orclnanco to Embllotr
rot• for Com-'""¥ Sorv.._
and Loll.
Ba it O&lt;dolned by tho
Council af tho Vllogo of
Mlddloport .. followa:
SEC. I. Tltot Choptor113
of the Middleport Codified

Ordln1nce• 1hell be
omenclod to 1'1111 11 followo:

For That

113.01 GRAVE OPENING CHARGES
,
.
Tho price of opening ond
llloolng af - - In tho
VIles• comotoriel ohall be
11 folowo:
'
Inch•
Foe
Boby ........... 30xl0 t76.00
Chlld ........... 30x67 100.00
Youth .......... 31x82 200.00
Adult ....... ,...Oxll 210.00
Thoro will be 1 chorgo of
•10.00 lor tho burlol of

Special

Mom.
.ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

.......

Thwe wMI be no edded

chorr lor -lkend or hoi~
dayburlolo.
Wolforo or county burlolo
lor lnjligont poroono wll be
On• hundred dollen
1*100.00).
113.02 COST OF LOTS;
PORTION USED ~OR PER·

- · · "GrNnhoun
l •tl s
Hubbanl!s

992-5776
:·.,.__S:,:Y:.:IA:::.C:::US:::E,..:O:.::HI::.:O:....__.

·'

PETUAL CARE.
.
1•1 Y...ly lot care 111111 be
flfl.., 1*111.00) por Y-·
(b) Tho loto In tho
Rivervtew Cerraetery 1nd
Mldcloport Hill CamOIOfV
wiU be prlaocl ot ftvo
doRon 1..00.001: hllf lot~
It ~~~- hunclrod doll...
11300.00(, both of which
wRI lnaludo ptrpOtull ewe.
(C) Tho oum of one
hundred dollwo (t100.00l
derived from tho oalo of each
lot lholl be placed In tho
PerpotiNII Coro Trull Fund .
end u•d for thi• purpo~e,

hu-

o'i%' Conw oton• •• jlricod,

ot tho cumnt' prlco rote a~d
perpotull o.e markoro lor
MCh comotory are prlcod ot
tho curront l'flce •ato.
Soc. II. Thlt Orclnanco
111111 tako ond be In
foiCefrom ond -Juno1,
1881.
P••d tho 8th dey af
May. 1811
AIIIOt: John P. Bu..

CIOflc

Doway M. Harton
Pnoldont of Council
fl)11.182tc

.·

1•.• · . • . • • . ',1

!) .•. • •• · '

MOlTGAGE

WANTED

IEDUcnON

DEAD 01 AUVE
•

..

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICI
99J-SJ35--915-J5.1

Public Sale
•Auction

We Service All M1k•
5-4-19-1 ...

••
•

HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
FRIDAY, MAY 12-6:30 P.M. ·
.HOUSE ON liT. 50-5 Mi. Wilt of Albanr
COMPUTE ISTAfE fiOM LADY Ill AIIANY IKINI\Y
(110VBIIHTO liST HOME INa1111 WIIWoolill
30" Gas range (white), Refrigerator (whfte), small dinette
wnh 2 chairs, nice couch, occasional chairs, coffee table and
end table to match, another living room sune, color TV,
stereo in cabinet, bookshelves, Maylag wringer washer, elec·
tric dryer, small knchen appliances,'linens, sheets and pillow
Cllses, pots and Pins. utensils, han~ loots, 2 lawn mowers,
uti~y heater, lamps, pillows, )land tools, collection ol dogs
(approx. 3QO), lots ol crafts and uaft PillS. rues, boxes of old
boolls plus boxes of PIPe!backs, misc. too numerous to m.en·
lion, nice chHd's tricycle and wagon.

COME EAILY AfD LOOK IIITD IIUMEIIOUS ITEMS
hfrniiRiants Aw'llllll1
TERMS: Cal~ or ChiCk with I.D.
AUCnONEEII: RODNEY ltOWEIIY
691-7231 ... 594-3710

SYSTEM:

•Waahel'l •D rysr1
•Range •Frett1er1
•RIIfrlgeretora
"Must II Repalraltle"

CLI=IS.SIFIED ~DS.
8

BASin WEAVE

Seve thousands on
existinJ mortpp.
No refmancin&amp;. A

MlirtPJe Consultant

Service · ·
Call 1-100-422·9010
Ext. 4051
4-11·1 010.

•VINYL IIJING

--

GREENHOUSE

HAND WOVEN
BASKETS
Lorge Supply of Bookot

Woovlng Supptloo
Sign up naw lor Bulult
WtiVIngCioo-

OPEN lOST SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00

Pliii.IIOMI ·OWIB

992-6855

'

oALUMINUM 81DINO

•

IE~IOI .

-.

•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

can r. . and 1'1·
cerl reclatarl IIIII
heoter ,..... w. Cflll
aho ocid lloll and r1NI
eut radlatarl. We also
Wa

•

"'

.-...
~
~

~

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT -6:00 P.M.

Sl.5Q DOZ.

...,., Ohio
CIJNSIGIIMNTS WacOME

Paulins Hill, Ca. Rd. 352
Oft Dlpat SIIHI
Rutl1nd, Ohio

CALL 742-2772

GaiT.....

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

...

....

CAll DO
IIAIIttENANCE

OHIO RIVER
GROUNDS
1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Housekeepine Room

Plumbing • Pl-r
Fleplir • Painting
Eloctrlc:ll • Cerpen1ry
............ •r.•l•t"

r.-r

812-2188 .
Middleport,

PH. 304-421-7!45

Homo Do-otlng Ot&gt;., Houoo.

ft-·

NIASE c.tllliid

TUXEDO RENTAL

"DOC" VAUGHN
c.tllled U-lhop
1·21·'11-tln

· 1Dipandlble ltesrinc Aid Sills &amp; !ton•i""'

CJ ·HaariRI EYIIUitions for All Aps

FABRIC SHOP
WEST MAIN
POMEROY
92-2284

_a::z

110

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·

. Ucensed CHnical Audioloeist

.

~ ~614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue. Bclal 1213

-

Glllipolis, Olio 45631
or

.

at

Vtt1r1ns l1111orial Hosplt•l
:Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy, Ohio

NO-Y

''

MOIILJ
Ha.l PAll

Summer With
Cantral Air!

,

1911-14x70'
MOilLE HOME

Hllrrls-Uie. MSOO CUlL

.

•MObile Horrie
PertJ
.
,eMoblle Home
Rantala
•l.ot Rental•

992-7479

' lt. JJ ...... of

U.S. SPRINT

llew•dLWrltllef

ROOFING

A-rlca'1 IIIIOiy 1OO"'Io Filler O_Ptk Long
list- lletw....
COlliNG TO IllS AliA SOOflll

NEW- IEPAII
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Part Tlma Job Whh N-ork 2000
In Netwolk Marketing
Cott '1 9400 (Includes tnolning • meterillll)
BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTAT~

For mort info writ"

Scott Anderson
P. 0. lox 337

· CALL 992·5114

1,000 GALLONS

·1939 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

l989 FORD THUNDERBIRD

POOLS. WELLS
,.

'

'

- l,.-

. CISTERNS

Call Anytime
•-211· '18·1

•• S, II, SO lAST
IIYSVILI, 0110
"4·662-3121

.'

$11 19 85 00 AFTEI CASH IACI
•Current Red Clearcoat Met.
•Currant Red .Cloth SIB Seats
•3.0L EFI V8 engine
•Automatic Overdrive Trans.
•Front Ucanse Pllte Bracket
•P205/70R14 BSW
•Rear Window Defroster
•Manual Air Conditioning
•Finned Wheel Covers
•Ciearcoat Paint

1989 FORD TEMPO 2 DR. GL

·

• 19 !Jhu~c£~1s~~JYIIH CASH IDAIES . ..

•1989~T~ ~~'~D~~eden

. •Cry.tal Blua Cleercoet Met.
•Shadow Bl11e C/V Bucket Seats
•Preferrad Equipment Pkg. 161
•Duel Electric ,.emote Mirrors
•Bright Window Moldlngl
'
•Electronic AM/FM Stnreo W/Ce88ette
•Tit Steering Wheel •Speed Control
•Illuminated Entry Sy.twn
•Pow• Lock Group
•8·Wey Pow• Drlv•'• Seat
•8·Wey Power Peuenger ·Sut
•Styled Road Wheel Covers •Rear Window Defroster
•Luxury Ught/Convenle"ce Group
o3;8L EFI V8 Enalne
·
·
•Front Llcenie Prate Bracket
·
•Automatic 0/D Trensmi11ion '
ofi20II/70R 111 SSW Tire•
•Bright Window Moldlng1-Credlt
•Remote Fuel, Door Not ln.talled
•Cieercoet Paint

•Oxford White
•Shadow Blue C/V Split Bench Sts.
•Oxford White
•Reer Half Vinyl Roof
•5.0L EFI V8 Engine
•F ront Ucan.. Plate Bracket
•Auto Overdrive Trenamlulon
•P216170RX16 WSW Tires
•Tilt Steering Wheel
•Speed Control .
•Front/Rear Bumper Guards
•Rear Window Dilfro.t• ·

1989 FORD PROBE GL

1989 FORD ESCORT

Roger Hysell
Garage

•

II. 124, P-.y Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al11 Tr••••leelee
PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

.

'

....,.,. ......
,.......-

EqupmentDeelor.

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

I

OPDI 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

Paying today
April 11, 1919
(Mj'oct 'to

#1

'

$8 99 500 AFTEI CASH IACI '"'
•1989 Tempo GL 2 Door Sedan
•Oxford White
'
•Scarlet Red C/V Bkt. Seats
•Special Value Pkg. 228 ·
•Manuel Control Air Conditioner
•Pownr Lock Group
•Dual Electric Control Mirrors
•Tilt Steering Wheel
•Rear Window Dllfro.ter
•Light Group
•2.3 L EFI HSC 4 Cyl. Engine
•&amp;·Speed Manual Traniaxle
•P1811170R14 SSW Tlrea

•1989 f»robe
•Dalk Shadow Blue Metllllc CC ''-Medium O,.y C/V Budcet S.ts
•Preferred Equipment Pkg. 2111 ·
•lntfll'Yal Wipers
•Tilt Steering Column end Cluat•
•Dual Eleoblo Remote MlrrOI'I
•Tinted Gla18 •Light Group
o&amp;lecblc RNr Window Defrott•
•2.2L EFI 14 I.O.H.C. Engine

sr

!.5;:=~iaou:nd

IIONY

SIBT _ ......... S•

to 30• ..

IIONY Ust •• 3• to 20• "st AINUSS __ ... _ ....20• Ill.
.~

NO·OWS AT PllSENT

,,

992-5114

Loc.ted Off 8ypu1
At Jet. of Flte. 7 8o
143, PomeroY. Oh.

1-12-"St·tln

S682JOO.ana CASH IACI

.

. •Bftliili Retl

· · ,. lAY'S
BEAutY SALON

'

SYIACUSE

2 a.11y ldtt- 7 wlco. old. Ono
lo dolk aii•COolllfW. thoot .... II
• blodc ....... ... 814-24514414.
ll doll'• 1 mol• 1111111'1· 1 ,.......
2 ,,.. old. Both good wlih lcfdo.
Coll114-2111-1131.
Coppo. No. . leoglo. fomolo.

~ .... ..,.Coli

814-742-2188.

411ndl ~ rii'IQitO giviiWIY•

814·182·1728. Working
oon&amp;lllon.

Oh.

992-2621 or 992-6944

FOR
SAlE

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

3 Styln
and

CHESTER, OHIO
INSTALLATION A. SEIYia OF HilL
ENEIGY IFFIGEIT HEAT PI.S, All
CONDITIONING AND 95~ EmCIINT
FUINACE.
•
985-4222

BINGO
POIIIIOY-IAGUS

CLUI

22• E. MAIN IT.
812·1178

1111115. LL 6145 P.M.
S... U.l1U P.M. i
110011'1111
.

2 H.D. FIEhlhcouJIIIMdl .

. . . OIIIIIIL H.C. Peck·
·111. Until- I o:oipon J11r cu•·
, _ I* blllf) •rlon.

WohwiSO.OOP• Gomo
0..110 ........ ,.00
Uc. IOGS.tr

a-o

H·ll ,

•SHRUB lo TREE
TRIM and · REMOVAL
•UGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•LL SUCI
992-2269'

EVa•os

Vario111

Si111

WOODEN IUilDINGS
Built On Yaur lat
ON SAlE NOW AT

SEARS 11 ..uPOii .

11111101-EXTDIOI

FREE ES~IMATES
Tall• tt. peln ellf af
pallltl... bt lite tltl

It fer yn.

VDY IWOitAI&amp;I
HAVIIIPI.IICI

10

61

l..ee11 Murphey

aPUBLfC
"-'•te•.

MAICUM

CMSTD, OliO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•Kil"CHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG • REPAIRS

P110N1 DAY 01 m.tGS .

•

915-4141

GIIIUl CONTUCTOIS

HOMES I $MAGES

Quality
Stone Company

RELATIONS
1011 Hlp 81Po.,..,., Ohle U769
Pholl01614) /)91-1911

Prkll"

PH. 949-2101
or IlL 94i1·2160
Darer,_..
NO SUNOAY CAllS

Pultllc Notice

J.WA. .
IB'IISBnAftVI
,.,
..... s_

,._.,, Ohio 4576t
""· 6i4-992-1479
"'-"2-2477

...

a.~

1·10{1.4JJ-UU

com• of lhlrd Aw.

&amp;

01

lllruct

St. awn. clolm ot Triillu10
olfloo.
•
,

Loot: Dop, ROWird oflwiid. 1
Ftmlle ;lyr11. •1 mlle1 yr. Red
• Whi!oB-•. Loot-8udcrldgo
.... Coli 8f4-4441-7108.

LOST hub &lt;11' Ford In Point
, _ ..... 304-875-t723.

7

Wtnt8d to buy : Toblcoo poun-

clogo. Coli S14-448-1437 o•
44.1211.

oloo--

Wllbollyol In "" ..._

Lawn mowlna _.... Coli
514-388-8142 oflwl p.m.
Lawn wortc •d light hiLINng,
nottMa to bla or tmd. Clfl

Mowing ....... 304-875-2844
ellloltw 8~o.

QuUto

,... 1140 lfUIIto. A.., oondlllon.
Cooh oold. Coli 814-912-1157
... 114-1582-24411 .

Will do bob\&lt; - a In mr homo
Ill sifts. 304-t7S..11.

FllldiiLiol
iiiiiJillYIIII:nt
21

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAIWLE

•Artll• • S.L 50

3 Mile last ef
PH •. 596-4756

or 992-6637.
4-14-... , mo.

::::i:= :::::

Help Wanted

EARN MONEl' Rol&lt;lng boobl
•30.0001'11• Income potentlol. Oet.U.. 111 805-887-8000
Ext. Y-10111.

114-&lt;14e.7414.
·2 112m1.

..,.,4,-eom....., ..

clil•---·

·

' ....... '"""" onfv, 9-4. loti

of

Frt.. Itt .. Sun.. Mtn. Wom•' 1.
Chlldr•n• clothing, ml1c .,
g~....,.. IOmt nM. Cltr •
tom.,..
Port• Rd. Off 180
Wotah lor IIIII"L
..

······:p(;-merov...........
Middlepl)rt
8r. Vicinity
·-·······-···-·······--···········

Moy 13th .,d 14th. Second
houM p... carpcntfon in ,_._
-Antfqu............ ....

thlnca ...- . - .... .
Tltr• ,_... 01•111• ..... 2
ml• up HYMI Run 1t Stwtlrt•a
... Mer , 1th .. d 12tl\
t:qo.5:ao.

Bolo: 1407 Cod• St.
Mt Abiook
Thun. a
Fri. Moy 11. 12. ....

Y•d Solo. - - • Pl•t
-ndo. Thu•o. Fd. Bat. I:OO,.

do bu1tn.. ...tth p-.1• you

ltlmp toK . 8. EnttrpriiM,P.O .

Couple to lv•ln &amp; •

miint•

nenct wotk on Apt. Compl-..
Cell 304-175-5104 01 3048711-5381.
D.,. to NCent apantkln owerthe
ro.cl drltt.. era n.ec~H for
lnlolmotlon cell LlfiV It D1nlel
E. Nttdl InC. Columbus OH.

1-800-548·1171.

811• tnd c:uttomer ;el•lons
p.-.on for .,_. tu•ln-. F.JItlml po~ltlon. Mutt be ••Hable
lllUrdlp Md

10m11 evening~ •

Send , _ to.OoHipollo Oolly
Trllllno. lox CLA 193. 825
Thl•d A_,o, Clllllpollo, " 0 H
41831.
Wlnt .. : u.tureolcMrwOI'TW1 to

........ with oldtrlr lomolo.
Non-emotltr. tKDMienct htlplJI Col 114-44.. 8727.
MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELOR. EmtrQiftCIJ Serv-/ln-

tak, PotiUon .v-'lllble with
comrruntty m.ntlil health cen-

t•.

lntllke weluatlorl tnd ahDrtt.rm Qilil ~terwntktn ••prlmlry foo.tt with 1 small ongoing

cu•ld. Require . Milt .. d•

ar• In mental hMh:h llld.

twO

,,.,., exDM"Ience pr.t•rad •
fl•lbltty In •nlc houn with
etwed on Cllll rotation. EJCellll!nt
bentllt wtth ' Mblr.. Ill¥• and

cornpellttlfe"'"'· hndriiUJ'M
to Don LlufertWIIw. Horllant:
1he CounHing Cent•. 822
Front Street. Mlrllltl, OH
441750. EOE.

v•••
cau ...Ung•IM'i8R01pr•
flrrMI. EJCelllnt b.n.tttt tnd

GOVERNMENT JOBS
f11.040.·fll.230
Now
hl•lna- Col 111 805-187·8000
Ext. R·IIOIIor cu&lt;rtnt lod•ol

y-.

GOVERNMENT JOBS

f1t.Q40.•5t.230 - · Now
hl•lng. Col (1) 805-887-8000
Ext. R-980&amp; for currw feeler ..
1111.
Pan time ftoor penon tt Am•t--

CII'eof Pomtre~y. MuM be 1bl1t0

...... lnd .. _ 20 hou ..
p•week. Pl. . epiCikupapplattlonl•t Am~c.re rJf Pam•Dif·

-In-.,.Ill'_

Someone to b•br•l eveninga.
Muot lit r.......lblo 1nd h••
F01 -motion, coli
I 14-742·2214.

Nood
in flvncuooln
my ho,nM. Col 81"-1182-8132
bttore 11 :00111d Ill• 8:00p.m.
Babvaltt• In our hom1 btaln..,g In lolo lluguot. Mon.·l'ri.
7 :30-3:30. For two chlldr..
111• 5 •d 2. Send ltnn of
int..et or ...umt to The DeHv
Sontlnol. ... 7298 • .......oy.
Dhlo. 417158.

J ... Wlftt to
a little ~Ira
morwt? Or would you lk• to
'-• • _.. .1EtU• w.y A..on
c• hllp va. bettw bllt youctn
belli Col Morllyn w..... 304112-214&amp;.

0011!11-NT JOIII -

hl&lt;lna 1n Y""' • • both oldllod
.,d unMII... Far 1 Hit at Jot.

• - · High pt.-tl• roll:~

our

g•owth ln..,ot'Y. Co 303-71S.
3ZOO•t. 2403.

Own your own IPP•• or ~·

etore, choose ffom: JIM•

Sport•we•r. Ladl•. Men'e,
Chii • .,_MIIt•nlty, Lar........
Pethe. DanCWit•·AM-olllc. Iridal, Llna-1• or k0111cwl•
ltora Add color .. .,..._ .... d
. . . . , llzCIIIbornt. Hoolthl•.
Chaus. Lte. 8t Mlohlla For-•.

Bualo llo¥. ltvL Comp a..,,or~y

o-"

HIO, 0'11onlcolly
Lucia
ov• :Z.OOO ut'-a Or *1191
ORI price

ct.lgn•, mulltf dw

prldng diiQNnl or hmly '...,o

ltort. "Retel Pf'lc* unbtllwMIIa
for top qullllly lho•

nor..._.,

-Ia

priced ..om *19to ,., w. 210

...... 210011Y ... 118.10010
.21.800: lnw.,.ooy.
filtur-.
pll'ld op. . .
etc. can optn 11 d_.., Mr.
Schnll,._ 14071318-HO&amp;

alrf••

Real b:latc
31

Hdmea for Sal&amp;

BRHiliL _ . _ btldi-Wiyl
colonlol 3 IR. 2 loti, - ·
.,..... qullty bu •.•• d.....
,locotlon. Coli S14-44.1111.
By--. Nlct41•. 1 1(li1Nitl\
l•liofomly ............ clnlng
•oom. ...... out bu ..........
front pariCh. aancnte.We.lartl

lot. · ..........
School,
Rt. 141.10011
n l;lalticw

hood. ee2.100. fmnwlll•.oa-

"'"""""· eo11 st4-44a.IDa
Very lttractNI brick 4

btdroafn.

2 boll\ r. .lly ooom with • •
pl .... fo•mol dining. ...........
room. 30 ft. cullom o*ldtdten
collin..._ ook woodw...._ flnllh
b•ament. 2 c•
lwei
ltndiCIP«&lt; lot. 4 ml-• from
- . . Hoopltol off R~ HA&gt;rt-ook ............ Col
814-&lt;Ua.4189.

g.....

Delu••
3 lr. hou11 for lila
Ow- flnon... Col 304-875-

1104

•

AmNTION: OOVERNIUNT
HOMEBI F10m t1.00. Ropao.
T•• Propeny. Fereclotur...
ll.olloblo Your ~~-• Col lllofundobltl 1-518·451·3141
EXT. H11781o• lotlnto.
4tcr•. hou••d•mlll ......
2 mil• from Vlnt'"'- Ohio.
llolllng choop. Col 114-311-

:

br.:

.... qu.. oou..,.
lllblnY .... -

n-11111 ..

Coli OoYO I14·SII-7117
wsnlnga.

··-· ....._-,..
o-.

Ro'*tl)llnio
Cuot.., bult.
1 GWIW' homt on ._....... 3
- - 8 b e - 21'111ot.. l

:of

onci-.ollcotlon.ooll 1-S111-3a:t-

llfOUnd pool. . - . loto
extt'8e. PriCed to ... For mint
lnformltlon. cafl 114-el2·
3284.

loactlclon. Nnt boot!\ 151.00

Old.-

8711-44173.

lo'"'ed In
t•·Twp. 1

2827 ioot. F1411.

·

"'w:-.,-,.,.~P-:---.,-,d-d:-oclc-:-:-....,-:,cto.-:­

Ollldr wcok - • • ro. .,.,..
l'flot• •d dodchondo.
2411-SIM.

Wanted

---=Miv12. ,,, ... 24 Hll. DAY CARE. ...........
-'Natured ,tli,4tlrH. Llrt•
Pint rift Glf llteaooon from --with
_,.......,., Cllty
LOwwRiw•lld·

Wantld To luy

lmom-nol Motel. a ..clng
Men1uflcturer ttltctlng
buldlr-dlill• In lOIN open

Muot Boll: St&gt;lh .... '1' 4
2
1/2 b•l\ . , . _ . . . . .
POV&amp; out bulolng, I t,12
lllltlng.

;1;;2~:::;S;;It;;:u:a::;tlo;::n::;a==

i

1000 Wolff lkrnboclo. Toning
Tabl•. Comm•dti·Homt TM·
nlng Btdl. Stve to 150 P«Cilnl .
Ptlc. from •249. laii\Pt·
LotJone·Acc ..torl•. Celtod.,.
Fret color ctlllo• 1·8CJ0.221IZ9210HOI7DI

AVON 1111--IISitlrlw Spo•o.
304-175-1429.

-.or•.

Ohio .... - -..........
104-77).1711 '
'

goociNIII. EIIU._ . . . ..,.

condhlon. lnt••ttd partltJ
o~ly. Coli 114-245-5388.
.

1171cw 31•9134.

Ohio. Moi!Dftlllhllo. Alogh.,d lllnMtw ,.._ 1·10Q.

............... on.LiaMHdlll

frlr'leh... riCip • . ' 10 v•••

AVON· AI • - · Coli Mlrllyn
WoMr 3o4-IS2·2841.

Public Sele
a. Auction

Ch-lon lluo·

Good f..,lly '"''"'-· E -

llahed pir11 shop. Welt·known

oommunltymtntalhMIIh&lt;*'t•

8

W.Va. -

lrnovv. • d NOT to lll'ld mon~rt
UrouW"t the mil untlyou t.e
lnv...lgllt.t t fw off•lng.

to prc:Mdeouq,adwnt counseling
to ..........1.. 11'0001.
ond fomll•. Moll.,. dollfot In
mWII hellth leld rlll"lred. two

wook. Advonoo Ololgn, 304-

f--.
..................
114-248-8111.

217211-21121.

Boo 5157·VT, Hllloldo. NJ
07201.

180 ... 100

1:00, .,_.,dmloaM-.
..... 11S , _ t St..
lllu- Mer 11 Jr. . . l.,o.
'""'1 Nlll. podo bllndl. mil•

ColAuatJo.
n•.U-•B-IR
lilt• ot Ohio: llquldoolo..,

Box 2521-0T, HurM:inatOI\ WV

INOTICEI
THE 0 ..0 VIILLEV PUILIIIf.
IN(l CO . ,_mm.,clo tllot you

- k ""'" ..._

••n

·-----·Pf·Pleaaant······

...... N.. d ho.-orka-o. dlltrlbutors. a. whol111ltre
dkoc:tC&gt;fY. Sond S.~.S.E , P. 0 .

pr..,.-lng m811. lnformttlon .-:ld

-d . . . . ....

alot............
4 opel, -.-GM - ·
Tum-•bla
1870_.....
3 - ·eon
·
Slnllll'
_..,.

. Buaineu
Opportunity

EXCELLENT PAYI Homo·
wor'-• l'lllded av. 71 com-

compllttlvelllary.ltndr-.une
to Poul Sh..,wp. Horil-:
lhe Counllllno Cent.-, Inc..
122
F,_
48l80.
EO E.St.,
, - · - · OH

S ......... Mov t2&amp; 118-1. Rt.
141. J'll LoOnndo Blvd, lebr

......

nlblt ret-. Rllf•eno~~ wll•
blo. Alog-.
Col
S14-2411-5781.

1nytlme 304-1?11-:7831 cw 87117170.

OUTPATIENT COUNSELOR.
Th_..t po-n ovllloblowHh

Yard Sale

.......G"aflii)Oiis··--......
, 8r. Vicinity

11·11.. '11t-...

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

IIIIIRIItll

Koyo found 'lhu,.. oftormon

····-··-·········-··-···-·······-01&lt;:
•ktn.

BISSELL
BUilDIIS
"At

8 Loet end Found .

&amp; Vicinity

4/lta8/""'

Cum.JUIT

992-2156

DAY 01 EY.fiiG

614-992-2171

LINDA'S
PAINTING

......, •d ........... lid. 814112-7020.

1101 C-NUAII-Ow-

A Gr111t Comblnation"Quality ond R111sonallle Prices"
WE GO TilE EX'Dl MILE-••
992-6110 .

169 fll. Jad

'

1Jucket1
•1.1L EFI 4 CyHncter Engine
o4-8peed Manuel 0/D Tranaexle
•P171/70RX14 IIW Tlree
•AM/FM 4
Stereo Redlo

ldtt-.

2 t.ma• o.llaa
twits.
old. Col 114-4441-7732.

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOUNG

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

NOW THIIU JUNE I 0

·

•Front Ucen.. Plate IIIICiket

3 -.111 mol~ 8wlco. old. To
goodhomeorfwm. Wll btmort
.. from. Coli 814-25(1.
1713ofl• 4 P.M.

·········--················-······

GIEG BAILEY

ANY PERM

oMeiMum GN¥ C/V VB

'

111'tUred.

'

I and ·J CONSTIUCnON

10°/o OFF

•EIICIOr.t Pony 2-0oor Hatchback

BNCket

1

(OI'PIII •••••~.•1.00 ...

SIIEn ---·-··· sz• ...
CIUJI ALUIINUM
. an_
................ 40t.

· ·

eSpeed C~ntrol

Oo•to Witlooot

Notal

#2 (OfPp__. ___ ....
CLEAN AIUIUNUM

'.

'

S11 63••
AnRCaliiACI(
(I' 2-boor H"itall&amp;ic .

mo.

.

4-25·1fn

\. . ::-.::CANS --·50' "-

'

John

AU1hor~

'

,.'

.

•High Efficiency
Gaa
•Central Air
•Heat Pumps

BOGGS

992-2371
'

4 cutt kltt- to glv-oy. Coli
114-378-2281.

OoaendcM foundonS.U.,Run

SAUS I SIIYICI

Dewe. New Holland,
Buoh Hog Firm

Wanttdtobuy:Junke~nwtthor

without motOtO. Coli Rlchlld
Goo•ao. 114-38. BOK

11

lloiid, Coli 814-912-111lllifl•
4:00 ~.m .
•

4-25-'llt-l•e.

WATER
SERVICE

1M

St:rvu;es

..._Good componlon. houoo-

UVING ON A
IUDGO?
Beat Tha Htat This

c-.

fur ........ Mertln WI d~tn~Yer.

Glve~way

Young *'*'filii C8t to good

,

3 BR, 2 bltll, lllillll tub.
Nice llo1111. located n•

1989 FORD TAURUS .

4

Moch~nlc

TIIIYision Listenlnc DeYicts

AT THE

Fridor;onda--Moy12.13.
10..m.- 8p.m. 2 ml• from
...,~• on IR 325. 8th piece
on r • Glori• 01•. 81.._ 1.u.
20.

CAU 992·6756

l·t1·1 mo. Pd.

"Free E.tlm.tes"

.

AUCIIOIIB

11r.t of giving Mom tht llmt
aid thing? T'Y on origlnol.
h•dm.S. aHt from Clrot'l
Counlrt Crofio. 114-7·2·;!4e4.

Oomootlc Vohld•
A/Citrv'ae
All Mojor • Mln01

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9
1-814·992-31&amp;4

4-1'-1 .... pd.

ohlp or pooolblo ,.otlonohlp.
............. 0. s .. 74. Point
,._..... wv. 21110.

compl••

Pllnt Mica. 0t10UI I yr&amp; •pe.
ri•ca. E~• fr• of cft•oe.
Coli 814-387-0401.
·

SYUCUSf, 01110

43020 St. lt. 124

614-949-2526

814-2411-1112.

Molt Fore!• end

H1rry Llff 1
20 Yaars Experience

By Day, WHk, Month

.... 41, 11'10'". t70 .... -

trfm pof ·t..W ledv tor trltn6-

PATRICK lt. I.OSSO

VAUGHN'S
AUTO ....-. DIESEL
SERVICE

co.

. . .... eutOI,.

HOWE'S GlOVE PAIK

. 4-1-ft-1 ....

?.igl

Antlqu•. furntture. tp

,.iCHNII: Dlvoro~ white mlfe.

13
18 Wanted to Do

Wanted To Buy

Wll buy or _....

WotwMn•••oln_,....,• •
"IC
J ~lftlla. Done l:rf
c.w. O.VIoon. Pkt.-.g •
T... ~ng. Coli 114-&lt;14e.Jt58
aft• I p.m.

5-11 · 1 - · pd.

. PH. 949-1101
PAI-...fOID I .........9-2160

•

••

Baskets '6.00
flitS 56.00

Herbs &amp; Everlasti111s

NOW OPEN
CAMP

P,UBUC
AUCnON

AN~IE'S

"-•·88-1 mo.

'

Public N otlce

N~lce

THE

•
•

•

Public

1:30··6!00

•

117--...
••• Wtat

:Zl:IC
...........................n.IW"I.II.
Pip
Rood: 44.1t4oWD

9

3 Announcements

•
''

---- ••• Retult• Ftlf

ILMM

Bulclltrlowc

The Daily
A111111 u nr:r:nrr:111,

•

::.::-.~·u;···;;;o.······ll.-lt

Baby c.~v..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•
•

·e The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

- · " ' · ...........................ln.INI.II
...................................11..
-••"'· .......... ,................11.11-n.•

eon..

.

-

••

C assi ie

- ·............,.................11.-.11
- ·............................. .'11.-11
- - - ...........................117. •'11.11
...............................117. •11..
- · - ...............................11.11
•·•al'rameJAIRetW.:

.
•..-•---=
lt

Compl.te Une of Vegetable
• Bedding Pienta. Aulus
• Fruit Tr-. G•enlums.
Hanging Beekets, Shrubbery
andTr-.
OPIII IAI.Y 9 All TO S PM

-- .

•

-·-It;
,
.
.
.
.
.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......
M.-··· '
•ue

NOW OPEN FOR
SPIIIIG SEASON

--- .,. ___._...,._ .. .

11,1989

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
jackpot went unclaimed In Ohio's
Super Lotto drawing Wednesday
night, increasing the top prize to - - 1111.
- · ·Slou.......
· 11...11.11;
.,.. ......
..
$6 mliUon tor Saturday's game. • 81.11;
Bulla. ....
Jbo.
None ot the tickets sold for the
1!1.......... Cewa: UttiMI• 41.11-JUI;
midweek drawing listed the six Cua~n A Cultltn: JI.'JI.It.M. s.rt111•
, •. winning numbers of 4, 10, 14, 19, eo.. By lbeBeod: - - . 1 1 ; &lt;A.. ud
call pain by llle ~-= - - . H ; Vool
·• 25 and 44, a lottery commission Coh-ee:
71.. .111.11: Baby Calveo By llle
spokesman said 'l'hursday. Th~ Bead ~.11-1111.11: Baby Cotveo by Ill•
I'Gullll: ............
jackpot was worth $3 mllllon.
· Her Prlcoo: Barr""• ud GUll
· · However, 129 players picked .... 1 11.11; - b... SOwo: ••-.71;
.. Jo..., 18.11: ,...,... Pip by
five of the numbers to Win $1,000 Bule~
b... : IUNUI.
· each, and 7,391 players selected
Sheep: llaap&amp;er lllmbo: 17...21.110;
four of the numbers, winning $75 Feed• Lambl: M...1t.ll; Gaa&amp;a B7 tile
Beod: 7.~1.11.
• apiece.
Ticket sales totaled $3,495,982
GALLIPOLIIIIITIICilY ABIIS
while the total prize payout was
Mayi,U.
$683,325.
T r - F • - cattle oleady: Veal
The $100,000 grand prize In the Colveo SleadJ; .Bale~• C.wa l ....
accompanying Kicker game also Lewer.
Me•m Frame 16 218ieera:
went unclaimed. The winning
- · · · .............................101.10
lla ........................ ,.....10-IIUO
·Kicker combination was 29jl077.
There were three tickets th~
• listed the first five Kicker
• numbers In order, making them
worth $5,000 each; 53 had the first
four, which pays $1,000; 533 had
the first .three, which pays $100·

.

•

Sentinel

one claims

'

....._

••

Col 114-&lt;14e.- ....
-II.IIL·10p.m.

hom~

with 1
led
:'lc
CCOinty, Cllotoom wtt"h 2 or 3
IGI'Iaf

llt*oom poooiblllol. llloulot+oJ,
atorm wlndowl and cloora.

• 15,000, flrm.ltrlouolnauloloo
ontv. Phone 114-M7·870.hf·

, ••:oo.

...

Hou• far .... 2 beclroqq.
aoriW'Iot. lyncat1.. Ohio. alole
.. 111.000. 114-182110•.

"''*"·

Homo on Lincoln- 1....,.
.. d .................. 2
opproo. 1ooroof-1Md.Qoll
114-112-3270.
•

�'

.

....,

,

. - • • 'll"""

Sa 1ti1el

32 MObile Hom~~

56 BuRdlng Suppllla

LAFF-A-DAY

for Sell

76

IlT N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wrltlll

12ll'JO. ...... 2 til ...... win-o.
u
7 1nnlna " " -

::r.,.. -

""" *" ......

~--·-~

•

Auto Peru
a. Acceeeorles

Viewing
•

tvr.•·

w.,.....,.

114--110:1.

_

lJsad •

"UP.•

.......

a..,.an_,,_...,.,

..
w-

PWilen Md 81.-n•elnd
Him•
0-"'"V"d
Cotter¥ ,._"
...
,.,., ldttena. Chaw •stud _...
•' ' - Colll14-•••31•• oft• 7

P.M.

,....·

,

....

Puro-llrod whko O.m., Sh•
ph«d pupploa Coli 814-3888714. • .

12ll10 1 llr.. nl•/ 12110 mo..
.... utlllloo .......~~. .... flo
onlw, no p - Cool 114-44•
43t:l.
' •

-· - -..........

2 - - furnllhod. · wool\«
""d doyor, • · UIIO
moowh
2 be*oom. Nlw ,r oot. 3 ,.,, utlkloo .,d .........
CIR
paroha -oddoclrOOft\ gl. . . , ....2-7471.

Voi¥ ....... -c111on. 1 mle off
2... 011 ....... "'od. - n d
·- · •lol.llolgo•d .........
:,.71 ..,..... rillollo . , ..l'O Wllh 71121 ..... do.
·304-enl141.
.
: 1183 T..,mph -IIIIo· homo
141110, z - - 1\ol.bllh&amp;
odd
h.. pump. dock •

0"

nnt.,

...... . - . Wotlw-~. . .
IIIP on
a. an Ohio ~••

111. 7, 114-387· 71211 or 204-

' 17&amp;2047.

'*

rom.--·

1'wolnll . . fot
304-17.1071.

44

WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT
ABOI.!T THE HAPPY JACK 3·X
FLEA COLI.AR?n IT WORKSIII
Contlllns NO -vnthltlc PVret-IIIDWILLCAIIHF!EDJ
D NORTH PRODUCE .

Offla. s.-. .,...,.• ., albori
to be remodlll..
·-fonol buldlng. -~

._ntawn

for .mplo,.• &amp; eHena. Win
build to ouk. Coli 114-0e.M.
~

AKC Rog'oocf. Coclc•lp.,lol
pupa/*150 etch. FtJI..bloadld
un-Nglotorod Chow : • 1 0 0
&amp;oh. Call ll4-31.
·
Holllh-Apoop.o-fotulo.
Coli 114-318-8102:
One reglsfa!red mal!l .Brttteny
lip_,;of. 1 yr. ald./1711. Coli
114-2111·1114.
· , •..

t271/mo. CommOrdollot wkh
buldlng. - - &amp;d . . . . .
mora Contact owner JtMtt
Go«~~ 011-111: 114-881-4340
.. 114-44.1758.

Apartment
for Rent

IE'AUTIRIL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGE!' PIIICEs AT JACK·
ION ESTATES. 831 JodooCNI
Pill• from *182 • mo. Wllk to
.....
114-28... ..d
E.O. """'...
H.

49

Buy or Soli. Rht«&lt;no Al\tlqUOio
1124 E. M• St;eet. Pom ..oy.
Haurs: M.T.W 10a.m. to lp.m.,
'""""' 1 lo lp.m. 114-892·
211H.
'

Forleeee

64 Mlsc. Merohandise

FermeforSell
SWIMMING POOLS ~1181
Early lllrd oooclol on U poolo.
Hugo 18a3l pool. hugo dooclo.
fanaL fitt• • wan w;ty , ln_.l ..
tJon • ftnanain_giMIHibla. C1ll
24 In: 1· 8G0-34.0141- .

' 41 . . . old. hou• 4 .....
hoalt-.,. 11 mi. Iouth on lit.
"121.000. Coli 114-817·

.luo.

·34

.

Bualnea
BuHdlngs

,..,. rlrll 2 - -

F,.nfiliod ofllcl•~¥· 107 loccmd A.... GiMfo&gt;olo, fUIO.
lh•obotfl. Col114-441,4411
aft• 7P.M. , ,
'
. Oftloe luldn•-. . . 1111111 n_.
. - o t - • In Oollp- IA•o
or lluy. Coli 114-44•0144.

,36 Lota. Acreage

Furn. Apt. nllct to Lib'ery
porlclng I A.C . Rot. ricr'll!l
IUkllllo for 1 -OIL Cool
114--0338.
Gorogo lpl. 3 tlrn'od. toomo I
botll. ,_h«, dryor. olr.
"" ..... flo!.• l)op. OOif'Od. Cool
114-44111118.
.

d-.

2 wa at d ..,...,loti. Allorc.lm•tlv 2 _. .. e.ch. O..f Whit•
.... Col 114-24.-11 oft•
1:20P.M.

1.02 _._ 1 mlo off 141 In
Cont.....,. Coli· 114--1419
oft« I I'.M.

l!lllcl.. ._ ..... ldoool .... 1
p.-.on, mOble home IMiaw
town ""
. •ooldng ,., •• CA J
ho._ Rot. Coll14--0338.;tl

funlohod

moblo ho- t11S.OO monlh
'*'' utHia w11 · Hucl
304-1711-1112 or 17•1100.

'Nhaelc::halr•rww or uaad. 3
whoolod oloctrlc ICOOI«&lt;. Call
Rou•s MeiiC81, 1&amp;oo-aaeZ104.
For lela· Conc:rlltt •d ptlltic
- l c EM leo. AI · A ON

EVANS ENTERI'IIIIES. Joclcoon. DH. 1,1CJ0.137-8128.

61 Housahold GDDds

WHITE"&amp; METAL DETECTORS
flanAiilon, 12_1 08aoondA.,..•
Oolllpollo, Ohio. 114-441·
4338.
.

VI'RA RIRMTURE
• APPUANCES
At. 1411nComonory. 11 4m! . ..,
Unaaln Ma O..an ' 7 d.,t '
w - 9AM·IPM. Coli lor IPP'·
A- houoo 114--3151.

*"'•

"'"lood.

"r"'"hod ...........

•ett.

GrMO QIWIIIe .Niktg _. swln.i!
, _ . , . ooncltlon. Rog. 111
tor t30. • Oreoo car ...t. up to
28 II. E_.,. condllon. 120,
Coli 114-319-2114 or 114379-2412.

-· -··-

F""'"hod two

41 · H - for Rent

bodroom lpl.
12110.00 ptJo oloi:trla. colll041713f00.

3 b o · -I ful
- ·_,.,
·-·~ gooc!
-loft,
mil•
Pt&gt;lnl

-

f l ! - 104-8711071.
Nloo Z llr....... _ . In dulllei

--.-lit.C•l*elt200
- · pold. Col 114-24.
11118.

-

. . .- . luflr _,...

z bodroomo. 2 both&amp; ... ohl*on. lo. . od Hortfotcl WVo.
1300.00 """"" ol . . . ,.
pokl. ror. .... d
t110.00 dopook.-~304-11•
3400

r-

lmol 2 Ill ..... "" 218.
t171/mo. '*'o cllpoolt. Col
114-44-11187 or 304-17•
14IOO... fotlllcih.

2 -Corpolocl
Nloo.......
oottloig...
IAu"*r
, ....,. ....-.. Col 114112-3111. !OH.
.

..... - .,..bedroom.
fur. . hod 3 nla..
.......
o1-. Nloo fot ooilplo. No .,..._
..... . . . . . . . Col 114--

Groaloui .,lng. 1 •d 2 bodroom IP.-tmants at VIlli•
- o r .,d I l l • - A-·
m..ro In Mld•
From
.,.2. Coll14-. .llo7717. '

2143.

I or 4 llr., homo In -

or

-'*'·p.m.- -114-24·-·Col
oil•,

ho- "" ..o: •• - . . Col 114--1122
oll•lp,m,

..,oot.

1 bodroomopt • ..,..,. e221
molltf\ dopool roqulrod. 114112-1118.

Fumliihod. 3 . - ..........

lht floor• ....,. . _.,.,., no

- · c;olli4-f*228S
21r 1-aiCit-v•hod.
U71. P« - h '*'o dopoot.

Coll14-.l-1171

71 Auto's For Sale

.
•
· ,
f
1888 32 F~ Coprl irwol !roll•·

ConturyS[)(OVI!'Ior3p).lroct~

. 1880
'
Pt&gt;noioc '""blrci St.,~
, •.d, 1700. lob poLo,. At.

/Ut, nrlrfg.,
· m
i . . -..
front
kldl•· wMh'
booth.
tiH

1114 Foomoll Cub Tf"'"or. •2
Inch bolly mower. hydroullc,
Qood oondiUon. •1300. 010 .
CIII814-74:Z.2142.
Ford 132 boll• 12.210.00.

Grovlty bed 1278.00. Two row

rNr outtiYatora 1200.00. All •a·
cond. 30+171-2133.
Ho118ld 7 1t. hoyblno. Gohl
IIGrlndormlaorboth.,c.cond.
304-27~4211. • .
.

62 Wanted to Buy
W111t

to bw: Used .Mobil a

homoo. Coli 114-""•01711.

l ALWA'{S Tl.tOUGiolT Tl.tE .
TABLECLOTH WENT UNDER
TI-lE DINNER ..

p

complete 143.2&amp;.

Cowo- 111 Chi., a 1111 An~o.
3 pure brad white Glrman 191 - - Llmoualn buH. o......
Shl[lfoord pupo, •100,00 molo, food•. boclo)oao. bobcoE. oriac.
171.00 female. 114-'742-291!1 304-7311-7198. .
or 742-3100.
AKC r,lot- Mlnoturo Docl&gt;
ohuM. f~olo. 304-1712271
boloro 11:00 PM oft• coli
171-1140 oft• 1:00 PM.

Tr diiSIIIII talillll

Musical .1

PIANO FOR SALE. WAI'jTED:
R•pons lble P,-rtv to IISUmt
llmllll monthly p8ymen1S. a••
Locolly . Coli 1·1011-211-4210.
Individual gu .. r l. .ons. be-

glnnera. •Jous iJ'Itlrflt. lnllo•illoo Muolc. 114-44.!1187.
Jeff Wamslll'f JMtNctar, 1144411107.7. Llmkod o..,lnp.

..........

71 Auto's For Sale
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;
noo. FOf'.. Merced•. Corwtt• Ctt.lys. Surplus . Buyers Guide . f11
805-117·1000Eat. S· 1P189.

al• from

'

.

Fruit
8o Vegetables

your •raa.

tiOO. Coli 114-24.11211111•
5 P.M.

1978 01• Cut!. . 8raugiiMI.
Vrt Goad Conditio ft. Sh•p01r.
Coli 814-44.2114.

Two Pom«~r~l., · pupploo. 1
molo 111d 1 t-o. 7 - • old.
1100.00 oocll. Coli Ill• 4:00
I'M. 304-882-3110.

1173 Codllloo Sodon Oo11111•
84.000 mil•. All pow.r, ell·

Stipplie~

&amp; livt:olut;k

COFFE~ ~ eJf lw.lD 1

1977 Ford ohoot bod v-a. .,, ..
lots of ~~etres. •2. 500. ffrm.
304-17.7881.

1971Ford F·210 plllkvp. 1980
Ho"dtpr..,do. Pho"o304- 77~
1843.
.
.

1978Fordlroou.,. Cuatorrizod.
118 •to. &lt;;111 11•112-1223 or
114-742-}1101. VM 147 5r 304- 87 e77 Dodgoi
.
.
,
5301

74

Mot11rcycles,

19821uzukl 110 )unlor mororoy·
do./UOO firm. Col 114-~
7710 oft• I P.M.
1975 Hondo XL-260. Muot
eel/ l375 or t.t oH•. 1142411-9117. ·

-D-frt-.f&gt;lll-o_S_uz_v_ld_.·R_M_2_1_0-.,-.....
- :,,
font
ccmd.
Front
dloc
r.ok•
I
male oontral. nM' tlra ...,,
- · coolod. Coli 814-m•llllll&amp; c.n 114-448-0177.
1304
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;
dM from f100. F -. Moo· 1180 HondO XR-100 ,Molly
cedea. CONalt•. Chwys. Sur- •trea. good ciond. Clll 114'
plus . Buyers Guide t1) 4410141 oftor I p.m.
80.117·1000 Eat.l-10189.
1987ICXIO Kowooold MotoroyVooy good oo"clt1011. CAl
1871 Mor"'ry Mon•c:h. 4 •· do.
or
laMed. Excellent condition. 114-882-1110
814-112·1081· .....
lnd
I 1100. Coli 814--1093.

---··

tn.

-door•

Buick 1111 \.OBor.a PI, PW.
PL. AC. TW. CC, AM / FM - .. 198,1 YomolloiiO cyd&amp; / CoNotto. 111.100. Coli 114- off•. 304-17.1473
44.1418.
1874 Kow-1 900. t700. 00.
14 Doyt.,.. f2700. II ....... 1873 y..,ollo 210. f1IO. OO.
Fuaga. *2000. For •leortred&amp; l'hOno 304-17.~1.
Colll14-21•1270.
1911flol•lo 2110. fpurw-•
1174 Plymouth y.,, 1981 4a4. 304-17·H~3.
a.
...... Priood lowir.
Coll814.
318-8102.

76

1187 Monto Corio ouponpon.
l~nd¥- 301 high oulput
an a. 21.CJO(Imla/11D. IOO.
C IM-IIIIH8.

Boeta and
Motors for .Sale

s;,,

. ·. .

$~~y

(J)

liM LATE, Jf?NIE

lpaadWaak·Hlghllghts of

IEE18rtUirnent Tonlglrt

Heroes (T)
(JJ
(JJ Urrcla-

e

F-naa Peoplt get

taa. LoCII r-'••081 tJrnilhacL

aeparated trom their money

1-114-237-0488. dOJ or nlghL
Rogersl•sement

of people unaware of the
cash, prqperty, etc. IIIII Ia
rl!lh1fully lhlll,., INRI .

In 'bizarre waya. See stories

Wtt.-p~ooflnt

,

ail VoiCH • Villon1 Actresa
Jane Alexander reads Emily
l)lcklnaoni§:'a and

lette... (NR)
(!) 1Jrl W

AI

War The
arltllh at home try to cope
with German air attacks and

.....,. !ill~ """'otnct.-•to. Go!- .
h ·eo. RON EVA~&amp; "ENTEII·
I'IIISES. Jooko..,, OH 1-1011131·8!12&amp;

shortages.
111 eo"' Houri Q
•10 MOVIE: , _ ...., (PO)
(1:45)

Allnbow Pelnt•. A'l Work iJ'•
r - , lnt- •d ntootor.
~off 114-. . 2-23418.
·

..

Q
0 Murder', lhe W11111
(R)I1:48)

Ill Nnln... Now
1:011 (JJ MIA BellcetiNIN
1:30 eiJl Gl&gt; 22T 1;1 .

!)) luiO Racing A Race lor

a•••

Heroes (T)

c•-:

I:OOeiJl

GI)C...... Ma~~
llllnda Sam to Mexico """

makes his move on Rello!q)a.

wLev
elll

•a

llio"'oTV l«v!Ot. ....olfllngln.
Z...ith
.-vl*lgm~ att...
br.,dl, Houn c .... lito .,,..
II&gt;PII81CO fliP ..... W.Vo 30467.21180hlo 114-44.2414.

MORK MEEKLE AND

20 p .. ·_.., off eale on Z..trh
l«vlco. Porto or lobor w!th thlo
od. Ill July 1, 1188. WVo
304-17.2318 Ohio 114-24114.

Blalle and Sable come lace
to lace with deeth. Q

'eN THIS CI6.Y IN HrSit::JkY, IN 214A.D.,

II

Fl.AVIU'5 s.oJ&lt;roRIUS INVE:NTED
n-11:0 NCN- 'OHRINKABL.Ei TOGA.

Ill

WHEN HE WORE: ITAF IER ONE.
WASHING-, He WA6 ..o.J&lt;RESTE;D

CARTER'S P.WMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •d .-...
Gollp olio. Ohio
Pho"o 114-448-3181 or 8.14441-4477.

Information on Stinnes. D

Electrical
• 8o Refrigeration

ge =::::
John

Plglrla

8:30

(J) Ill) Dear

VlclaoCourr1rJ

10:00 ()) TOO Club

e (J)
l1l

·

eCil~llawalpeclel

The Nltlonal Cholesterol
Teate

5KINT/I

GAME?

.

~J:'C· !L...... (0:30)

THAT'S YORE .
PAW'S WAY OF
SAYIN' HE WAS

AT TH' CARO

•

Ill) L.A. lllw Sifuentes

represents a Mexican beer

·

5USIIR DOODI..E II

Kill&lt;

mllc11 hla mcive on a widow,
but his 10 call John lor help.

i
HOW OlD YE MAKE OUT

84

MvllarYI Werner
rrom East Berlin with

111 e c eqrra~ur wrren
Justice falls. a ra!ll victim's
husband ~· altar the
attackers. !;I

FOR INDCCENT EXFOSURE."

'

Plumbing
8o H81tlng

(!)

retums

\

82

Nlgld Thrrncllt

DrMe1J Alaxls,

(JJ

Ill Nft-tch 1;1

(!) Undalllie
llll
Gl Knolll.entllng
F11r and resentment begin

e

GoiiiP . . Eioclriol«vlco. Ellct·
ric motor
servia..
Automotive 'olo«rlc riPOir. A~
t.Mton.gari••on • mrt ...
87 Plnolt. 114--2382.

•I• •

10 dor'r*'ate Abby and Ted's

love~ 11111
eo

ASTRO-ORAPH

-...,_-Ph.

BERNICE
BElJEOSOL

.J.JWor•e.,rtoo.lwt"""'"'
114-

l ... NU

.

R I II -wells.
· l«vfoo.
I"!!fo.
olaterns,
Jmmtdf••
1.000or 2.000golloNdollvory.
Coll30.. 17e,U70. .

II
and not -of--. You,. rather 1han on rrre Flffort and In·
conven-.
It will mike the row you
corrkl be much _,...,., .
LIO ( - a II.. •1 Don't rwty on
IICIIIMIII (.left. ID-I'alt. 111 Thanllt a
people today who ........ you . .....,.IIIey.,. apt tore- ~--be -1chld In I .
.cllvlty lodliY. II your

W..t~"' 1 Water H•ullng.

R•oo-o r -......_ dfl.
- - 2.000 10 4.000 ..... .
lty.
- - · wollo.....
Col 304-171211t.

87

M.

H. Aepllr

Upholstery

ICORPIO (OcL 24 Nov. 22) Don'! aiMmpt1o paddle your own wereetoday,
tlonthlp work. Mil S2 10 Ma1Chmakar. lreoarEM 11 IQolcl like olhenr can do a
P.O. lox 81428, ct..elond, OH 44101- nrore efiiEcll.. job lor you than you can
do lor yourHit. Gel ou1 ol your own
3428.
0 . _ (..., 11-.!uM 20) u you're way.
·
oomewtrat undleclplned Md free and BAGmAIIIUI (Nov. 23-Dio. 21) Adeaay going today, your behovlor will be jllllllll011 mil' be called lor IOday In an
FICOipiAble 10 your lrlendl, but IIIII 18 arrengamant you ha.. wl1h a cl- uno1 1ct1y to be true of co-workn. Try . IOcllta. Don'1""'",attemp1to hold QUI
!Of I one-lldad deal.
to gllln
-ovtEI.
CANCIII (olune 31......, 23) you fell CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lln. 11) In any
Inclined 10 Uike ftniiiCial rlllca todliY. It'a work you're required 10 perform at this
bel1 you gable on your own ~ tlrne, tocua more on the rewerda you'll

"'*

l'otrldoo Wll• Houlloglorvloo,
1.000 or 2.000 a•. doiiYIII.._
phono 304-17.2311 or 114441-4011.

88

Cllrlcl Mannert' 101
IOCIIIlte crowd. Q

~

(!)Sign Off

eo LoM CoioiNIIorl
I~Dne,tlnl
aIIJ· Honey
.. aa1111'1

O ...... VIOI

•YauCan·llaa.r

Pill per ~onn-. On 1hl other
hand, you 0111 tlroM who -

looewllh-

pr- Iller kelp their word. .
IIIIha,.., ahad you mil' t l - I rather' VIMO(-a l1pl .,BevwycarefuiiOtlll' lltll you llo not .,.... 11 you li1 which you
diiiiCult COUI'M. but It Will Ill 1hl r1gh1
llde,
one. You Will Ilk• pride In your ICihllvl are1rylng to proniOII.-nelhlng ot ota· · .lac* Hka It only hll a
nlflcarrcl.
T1ra
lint
dell
you
put logeth- 'don't be cw lved bythll perception. A
rrienttlnd llci'E obltaDII ~ - - ar 18 Rielly 1o be your .,..,_ .
·liM!' lnlng It IIKIUI to llllka en
Will bel CIMM*-bulldlr.
TAURUI
M 1 . ) Aloronmrreoethll ilng UIIIA (_.,lloOot. •I aom.,. you .,.,.,_.
goqd oould toCIIY thiOU(III • par- lib may- to you today wHh anln- . 1. . - . (IIINII31-Aplll 11) You oould
liOn who 18 prU ,_ lndlbltd 10 you. K tftlllna bErlin
~- Ewn , be llary IIICicy today In 11t1r1110n1 11181
may not lieu. tet11 Pill-' lndU1111
thrJUIIIIi IOUndl good, II might lllw181 ' hlvl IOCIIIII - - . but you mlglr1
to you, but MWild bealllrt. Trying 10 at IIIII to ivald OOI'IIII\IEclll er- · not Ill • lorlunlta In mlltlrl IIIII .,.,
qete11 up alrrQIIIn r orr•IOI'I Tlra Altro-· rangernan11 Willi frllndt.
,ot 1 mll.,._k: nature.
' '
.

c.-•

It'

•f

.

e f. Gl) Tonlgllt lllow

Iii-

peat

.MtJ11.-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Vagrant
·
3 Egg-shaped
4 Ob tributary
poorly)
5 Recluse
II Word with
8 Vigor
9 Hang out
whisper
10 Alp
7 Air (prefix)
12 Subside
B Book's.
13 Jargon
· beglnmng
15 Nonsense 11 Turn
(sll
14 Fortunetelling card
18 Coffee cup
18 Greek
· 17 Sho·
28 Growth
letter ·
shonean 71 Feud
19 Select
20 Belated
between
grour
23 Author,
rival mobs
21 Scul
Sarah
29 Oolong
22 Feasted
-Jewett 31 Short
23 Aware (st.) 24 Lion; e.g.
essay
. 24 Moislen
Declare 32 Cliched
meal
27Welcome
28 This (Sp.)
29Tawny
30 Meek .
-lamb
31 Belief
33 Movie
scenery
34 Virago
35 Brown kiwi
· 38 Cease-fire
40Give up
42 LondoR..
alreetcar" J

.-

.•.

31 Roman
poet
37 Elheraal
31 Raven's
cry
41 Peer
Gynt's
molher

•

,

43 Up and

DOWN

1 Scorch

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Hert!'s how to work It:

........ e &lt;JJ a e a

1111)1

8KIO

CROSSWORD

1111

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

11:00 eiJl l1l

:ll-=~
IIlCIIIIOnOnt

.J(SU

+lli7 u
.. Declarer play ed the queen of ell• · • • ,
moods from dummy and ducked wben
SOUTII
·"
+AQ7
East played the king. He played low Ol
•Qas
the return of the 10, but West overtook
. 8A87
·with the jack and cleared the suit.
. • AQH
South then banked the success of the
contract on the favorable location of
Vulnerable: Botb
tbe· king of clubs and a normal club
Dealer: South
•split. He cashed A·Q of spades and two
Nor.. Eoot
more spades, then led dummy's ID of - •
clubs and pasaed it. Next be played a
P181
club baj:k to bill jack. Alas, West Pass
Pass
showed out, and declarer wilsleft witlr Pass
only eight tricks. Was tbere any reme- Pass 1
dy for this 118d state of affain?
Opening lead: • 4
A competent defender is accustomed lO giving correct count wbeD
partner may need to know wben to
take a key card in a side-suit. Suppose that West holds one spade or five
declarer were to atlack the play ol to- spadea, declarer could auume llrnie
day's band by leadi"' the queen of and overtake lbe q - with rhrmmf's
spadea from bls band after be bad won kinK. He now plays clulls as befere, but
the ace of diamonds. West would fol- after willnlnl the IMICOIId club be plajs
low with the four, and declarer could ace 'and a spade to the jack, cashes lbe
well aisume that this lowest card last spade and tatea another cllb fl.
would be showing an odd number of ~ for nine tridrs.
·
cards in the suit. (It is standard to start Sure, a defender could cross South
an echo or high-low with an eveir num- up by Dot giving true count, but that' is
ber of cards.) Since it Is quite unlikely not likely ID bappen.

IIINnlc-ttrr

11:30

EAST
+IOU

•a J,\10 7 2
86 0

(!) Dl"-11 ~Glitch
In Thl SyaMm

Graph Matcllmrrkar can help you to un·
dara1and whet 10 do to make 1hl rllla·

I WI!ST
! +96t

46iJ::,r

II)IIII*'I•n n...
Oorw ..... hlnrllll wHh

General Hauling

+QS

about
44 Paslura

IIJ lvenlng ......
IIIINewa
10:20 (J) Ieinen Glrnll
10:10(JJ MIA ..........

86

~.~-

. ACROSS
1 - up
(perform

til PwllueNewa .
1111 MOVIE: Running 8cartcl

Remodllln g. nMt.llddldone.
~nd dadcs. F,..
Eotlmoroo. Cool 304-19.3421.•

. ..

+IOUZ

By Jame1 J a•-·
._y

1111 Night Coull
Ill Cloak end Chill
T:atl (J) lanfonl l Son
1:00 ()) MOVIE: Mode For Each
Oilier (NR)~~
G1&gt;
Show D ·
!)) lllito Racing A Race lor

Clll · oollecl:

NORTH
+KJSZ

The opponents
can help

oc-~~r~

Unconcltloftll '"-'~~~~' .IJI• .,.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used •
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, , ·.apo~trophes, the length and formation ol the words art! 111 :
hints. Each day the code letters tre different.
·
CRVPTOQOOTE

5-U
CKS

SK t WV

KNX

OR

.N,.KBR

FWNV

EBRS

FR

SK

FR

wv

SK

HGKT

11:411)) Cl 118

SK

KBSHGKT

BCFWNV

· v.:::
£Sr5r~

,_; ,M . H .

E B CH

.

Y•••••••"• c:a,........ rnE v~e.'t;
WHO HAS NOT WEPT IS AMVAGE. Ale

MAN .WHO WILL NOT. IAtJGK IS K )OiQLllt!iiiil GEORGE SANTAYANA
~-

...•

MoiONXlKKX.

11:110CiliiOVII: ~ l'or .....
OIW~II)
....._

•

GOXOMB-

• C11181111111 .CMM
.

..

.JPt

IIIIA·'~IQ

... rM AFRAEP MOST

•·••

BRIDGE

e&lt;JJ USA Today

BASEMENT
WAT1!11PROOI'INO

ports.

I I I I I I WITH I I I· I
under control, but not before the building had burned to the
GROUNDI"

featured . (NA)

(JJ

by tilling in the miSsing WOfds
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWERS

1hl pelt _.. .• auto races
as wol aa racing news IIOfll
around the globe are

$Pil.L.EI&gt;
ITS LOAf&gt; DF vfa.c~o
oN Tfff FRffWP.Y ANI&gt;
l: G'OT STtiCfc;. IN TAAFFIC::.

0

Indigo - Angty - Tinge - Cuddle - G~OUND
·
Noted. in a small-town paprll': "The !Ire was qurckly brought

7:30 eiJl Femlly FIEld

IAII IOAT LIOUIDATIDN 28

Hvdr• 1porta. ,._rlaed from
12198.'-•-gC... mbuo. 114-ii48-UOO.

.

Cll NIWI

8TopCinl
T:OII (J) Airdy Otlfll1lr

Home

e~thn••·

L-L-L-.J'-.J--J.

Q

OMIIIIIIIYice

BOAT REPAIII. Morlllry Mor·
cruiser. Speclllltt Factory
lrolnocl MoM• lir'vlcfo. Proof-

lion Mo..e M .... • . . . . •
Gollftrollo loot C.,f&gt; Cal 11421. . .71.
'

Newt

iiJl Monaylne
1111 CMaN

..

197ih&gt;fd F 1110, 421.,gll1t.
Hoii.,.C.rb, Okomnloilclka hiood·
... rww •hJust. '•lll.tltt Mdo
tr-milsion. RM loor lf1Ht,
12.20000. 304-1711131.

L-

.I))

Free

1'1
1
. . . .

.

" I I' I I I

,~~Ill) Wlrlal 01
e tlD Tlrrila'l Caonpany

1914 Ford hlllf ton .t.nclad
shift with aver ••• 30~87,8-

711111.

e0

I

"We can't accept the new

nounced the boss, ":anyone
willing to move there has to
. L,,,.,V.:....;Or,~M,E:... .:Er-:.:R'T"'"-11· have something - with -."
Complete ~~ chuckle quoted

Ill (!) MacNeil/ Llhm
NniiiOul:

1971 Cfoooly, "'~' I[OOd. / 83110. ·
Colll14--1031.

fhnc:ltera Rad, Mo. cruiM. dlt.
I 21100. CAl 114;NI21211.

·. .

sr;:

1977GMCTri·oala 151t.. olum.
bod. Wfl ool Wlh/wfthout boci
Call 814-25.1321 oft.- Bpm.

~-- co"dMion. 1978 Ford

I

f

t--+.H:-=rErC:.....,:-;K-'OT--1 • applicant for the job at our
15~
~ northern most branch," an.

e (J) PM M...zkra
~
Att.lr

72

~'!.~f:'t..~l~~e.... c..,~

·

T:OO()) our HouH

1102)142: 1011 . , 2iloe.

191Uub«u 4W.D.. 4clr., A.C.

AM / FM .·· ExceiiW condtion.
...10. Col 114--4141' 11,

1983 Sholl!¥ Ch•v«· oiYoo I
blue. Rad• dlttctor. C.N 8144414431 or 814-H•1212.

r irllt

PICK!! AU. 1llOf£

Gr• work ct~r. Goodcoi'Mitlon.

Tomato stale• t11.00 per 100.
ao., pol• f12.00 per 100.
304-17.1174.

1-:...:..:::::::::=-.....:--__

5U~! AOO .x,w.) VALOOZ

improvements

For Info cell

:'2~ Coidact Q

I. I I

"l

. 111'1. ·

11J 8holllllla Today
1111 WKIIP In Cincinnati
OCI-I!xpteu
8NewCounl!y
8:311 (I) One Dey lot A Time

~ ••. A T~UCf&lt;

81

Ill) NBC Nightly

lz

e tlD WKIIP In Clnclnllllll

11'78 01111 Dnoog&amp; good wook 1873 23ft. Holldoy R-bl«.
c• or t .... ..,.. first c•. Self CDntlln... •:t100. C.ll
IIIOO.Oo. oolll\4--2313or 't14-112-7471.
44.3831 . · .
.
vw C.mp•. st..,. 11va. EJIHI·
1971 Ch..,otto. good cond, ,4 lont '"'"dlllol\ Air, otorr•ci
~";': AC. tiOO.OO. 304-1711- IH9.?J. CAII114-849&lt;21iH.
. .18BI Pollmlno TXL told·- ·
'711 Bucfi flkYI•k tiiOO.OO. •-...-. 304-1711-3778.
Call oft• 8:00 PM, 304-17114S .19.
1178,VIInoblllo. 24ft. oloopo 8,
lir con d. fuFMCt. tlac:trlc glhr
'71 ThuM«blrd. good cond. otor, U . 41~. 00 . 304-&amp;,7.11-'
notd b-.. odlclnod. '11100.00. 4480.
Phone 304-81.2117 or 1152818.

t• I p.m. or onWMkendt.

Sw• po•to plants end tom~ to
pl11111 for oolo. Coli 814-742·
2220 ar 114&gt;742-2n3.

(!)

ill

bOIII. bo.,1ftlll'l'IIO. Coli
143 114- . . 2· 2411.
" CHOIIOoko OH, 114· 8841321.
.
1882 CMI«o Z•21. V·B .,t.,.
mOIIC. O&gt;Cc. cond. Call 304-1711- For Solo: Comp•. 211th Hollclor
3183.
'
Rombl• Col 114-21.1611.

Buy Govotn- .,d
.......0 ,..,, . . . f&lt;om 1100.00.
Fordl. Ch-va. Corwtt•. etc. In

§())

be-

.~3 -;..E..:.:Nr-;D::...,rU..:Gr-11 !

OlllporD TrMa

· ill=a. . .

1870 Dcdgo Doot Cuotom111.000 orlll. mla Nno good.

.F&lt;&gt;&lt; Sale: 1981.Pontloe Grond
AM loodtd '81100 ftrm Coli
114-441-7711 oft• I P.M .

58

1:30

1981 Chry.t l'r Le B1r0n
111, 888.00. 304-171-4480.

,03 . Livestock

lloanlwd: • lllelrll'l

1:05 (JJ Allee

61 Farm Equtpmen
·
t
hook-1.111/ 11211. Col 614-44.
7732.

!))

Schemer breaks hie promise
to Stacy when Ire'a In charge
of etelton. Q
· (!) Rlltllng Rainbow Q .
etlD"-Dar•
1111 F_. ()( Lh
!IJI... Ra

whelletlf CDnt81nad.
~~C&gt;~IHI~by~NEA~.I~~·::~~~~;:~;~~~~~~ long.
1871 lth
Modol8wluColonllj'
. 10' .
Cllll 814-317 7411

20 top quollty oogloE- pallod
h«olord-o with 318Chl81no
AKC Rog;ot- Coclc• Sp• aosead uJv• Grelt baldedub
nlela. 2 ma111. Chempegne coli pot-lof. Coli 114-441color. Coli 114-. . 2·3005 be- 2101.
fore noan or aft• 5:00p.m.
Elldna Umouoln Bolo: Rog'td
3 Angore Rabbits. t2Cr. each. 2 Umoualn oows wtlh ctlv-. brad
Lop-Earred. e10. aech. Pad~ cows.
hert. . • ttrvlca ega
loog 21 loto. Solo 01 :
grMd. 814 · 882~ 51815 ••~ly bullo •
Oolllpo
Uv•odl Co.. 52
momlnp or lata •enlnp.
VInton St., Golipolfo. OH Moy
· l'loh TMk. 2413 Jockoon A,., 21,18SB1:00p.m.Auc11on• :
Pomt Plo-.~ 104-171-2013. Tommt Joe ltMart. For Info. a·
10 golaot up 114-19 1111d 10 gol cotolo~ coli 114-211.1187.

Instruments

8-

II• N- Wlnl A!::l::il

PuPpi•.

born ,._dt 10. Mottwr
"' Lollr- •d "' _....,
Sp•ial, Fet._ Garm~n Sh~
phlrd. HIVI been wormed. Only
good ho""'s need Inquire .
111.00 -·Call 1-441-0110.

67

4 dr. ch~ •44.91. I - of
- · ot
F,.,.hod ollld•qr. f1110. uti- bunk
ln'*'dlng
boddlne
Ful. 1171
' oln
It!• ,.,d., - · bolh, 701 4th nwtbw· t41. II. Ou.. sbe
AliO. Gollp... Cool ' I 14-44. rnattrMI·t71, tw+n m.UrMt,
441llfl!lf 7 PM. 1
•11-e stt. Mfttr. . .
b;'
.,,,..... Vlurrh• bod- Cooklria Efoc, otcwo, Call I142 llr., . . .,..,. II Rio 0111!1d&amp; ............ Colloo .. d 44.7Ga . ·
Londfot•o. Ono•••o-•m lrOftt pard! 1 prlloto
I and tlllll•t71 • • • PMided
- d ._,..., Coli 1114- yord. Col 114-211.1402.
lentwolod rookar· 119.11, Jom Dooro 'Doao. t-.v
troll•. '1114 - d t plclc·up, I
· · · - oft• 1:00 p.m.
- ...
- dodc
111.11.
I room .......... 2 both&amp; ' dinldlofro.t
. ....
....
prlvMa llltranc:a Plnl.., llr- ckodot hutdl). _ . . , K"dl., Coli 114-319-2111.
'
810 Flm Avo. Dop. I chofro.t18.11 .......otv .....
rio
coblnoto·
1279.
8
OFAS:
,.,_ -~eon 114-441- v.......... .,....dchllr- Pl. . fDr llle. w.ntad: ....pon1078.
.
olblo~.-ty to ...,,.. smel
v................n. . mo"
............ 8oo ~colly.
Aollt- .... buldlng lote. lmol
t248. I , _ wood group, Coli
AI
1- Q-2B8-4210.
mobil hiMMI .-mtfted, public prllll&amp; _lor..,opnon 111 1388, Vougll., --1241.
......... Ctydo .... ...... Coli 114-44. TIIADE-INS TAKEN. .
- . boddlng Flforoto. hMit
- · · priJr. 304-17.2338.
33&amp;8.
.
Horr•l'• lorgoln Houoo. F.- lng ...Uia. '-rvHIHFerma.-.d
11w• 4earetreatL aiiiOIO•• Nlao oltld.,qr tot for 2p. .,.. lure. g l - o . gilt Momo 1 OrrMnhou-. From Racin&amp; first
hou• on right plltRedneLockl
Coin llldgo . .d OutwMo llood.
ll*d A... In Gollpollo. G• mloc. Jlcloo"" St. In ~ .... lAt. 338).
pOIIMIII OW',_ finlftcing. 30+ ""
IPPII81• . . . p.. lf180 mo. Houro: Mo"clor·Thurodty 10·1,
4111878.
Coli Ride 114-44.2002 or Frld&lt;ov • .......... 1o- 7.
,..,. Solo: Rolrl- from
114- . .2-31101 oft•II:OO p,·m.
mobile home. Allo •tique
-··CaN 114-.. 2-21121.
36 R811 E.rate
F,.n. Apl. 1 llr., 1221 "'
. 1111•
..W. • • Saaand Ave. GalllpoWanted
so. . Corpot·. . . ._ .. flO,
llo, 114--4411111• 7 p.m.
dryor. tiO, Goo h-.glng
holl•. •30• .,.. o l - l c F,.n.
Ellld.,c;
/
1171.
utiMI•
· II. CAI814-1148-21211.
IJOVEIINMEIVT HQME81 From pold. 701 1411\ Gollpollo. 014U.OO tu .~For-- 44.4411 oft•7 p.m.
T o - bote lot loooa MOigo
11-T•
...
Countv. 114-. .2-IIU
~-- .. 1.·31.'733-1014
Eat G2732A to..-llotlngol

m•

Boby oobblto 5 wfco, old. Fomoolld colora./ t4ooch. Coli 814441-41110.

/Jittl.

\f...'!l e &lt;Jl Ill e D

' llii'loln1na Time llalloo'l

Holldoo Rombl• 21 tt .. oW
oontofllod. of- 8. •2100. Itt.
81-oft •m1num boll. c.n
114--701t.

~~

l

~

!:f!' -

79 Motors Homes
8o Cempere
'
· f -11 ~

II

Epltodll

4-18 lnilh olorOEN oport
wlth MW P231- 71 ,_~I w.s.w.
tl••· lor Dodgo. 304-17&amp;,
1884.

Groom •d IUP[IIV \Jh0p-P8t
Grooming. All brOO'dt ... AII
otytoo. lomo ""' Food Dool•.
...UoWobb fh . 114-441-0231.

WI R A N D

1:00 CJl llrrnlrnu: Thti Loet

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Thul'lday, May 11, 1989

Ohio

The Daily Sa 1ti1ei- Page 15

PomeroyOhio.
.
. Middleport.
.

1989

14-The

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�'

· ; Page . 16-'-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pometov-MidcllpOI't. ohiO

Gnduation Friday

.··_ .· . · ,Lical news briefs... .- - - Stocks
CQntlnued from page 1'
:... -~~n May3 'a nd 8. A hole had been cutin the fence on the rear
. ·skle b~ tile property to gain entrance.
. · ~ ~s!terlff's departmen\ Is also Investigating a report of ah
. · a.d~.nt .whlell occurred at 6: 10a.m. Wedne_sday 'on State RDute
. )~e~st··of the Intersection of County Road 28. Glenn Stout.
.Cbesbi!r,was.travellng westonSR248whena deer ran from the
le~ . ~Ide ·.and. struck the windshield of his 1984 Chevrolet , The
., : '
- ran• fr9lli the scene. There was moderate damage to the
- . . d~
veh!cl~ .. ,&gt;
..
·
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;. $ptifig.. Concert sklted Friday
.

Am Electric Power ............. 26~
AT&amp;T ..... ~ .................. .. .......33%
Ashland 011 ........................ 41 ~
Bob Evans .......................... 15~
Charming Shoppes .............. 16~
City Holding Co ............. :.... 16~
Federal Mogul... ................. 52~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ .. ...... 51
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion ....................12~
Lands' End .. .. :....................30\l
I.,lmlted Inc .. ............ .......... 29~
Multimedia lite ...................94~
Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... .. .... 16~
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8~
Wendy's lnt1 ........................ 5~
Worthington Ind ........ .... .....20~

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· · ·. ·:·.: · · Ti1~ ~ j&gt;a$ter~ Local School District will he performing Its
··.spring ~ncert on Friday evening at 7:30p.m. In the high school .
gymnasium.. · ·
'
&lt; ·. Al,ong with the high school concert band, the fourth grade
recorders, and fjfth and sixth grade bands from TuppersPlaln.s,
Chester, and Riverview wlll also perform.
, . The. rerorder group wlll perform a selection of chllllren's
songs. The fifth grade will perform " America March" and "Mr.
Fu Goes Blue" , and t)le sixth grade wlll perform "Fanfare and
Promenade"., "Nadia's Theme", and "Fat Cat Goes Disco."
ro conclude tile concert the junior and senior high concert
band wllr perform "Overture for Winds", "Marceau Sympno. nlque" featuring trombone soloist David Rice, ''A Sante
Cecilia", . and a selection from Andrew Uoyd Weber's
"Phantom of the Opera."
The concert wi\1 be under the direction of Mr. William Hall,
'
director of bands In the Eastern Local District.
Ad':lllsslon In free to the public and following the concert
re!teshments wlll he served.
' .

Dorset E. Mlller, age 72, 112
Pine Lane, Barnesville, formerly
of Chester, died Wednesday
evening In Barnesville Memorial
Hospital.
Born In Sumner, he was the son
of the late Eber and Elsie Carsey
Mlller. He served In the U.S.
Army and was
lifetime
member and former chief of the
Chester Fire Department.
He Is survived by two son.s,
Keith Mlller, Barnesville, and
Gary Mlller, Marietta; two sisters, Ruth Lemon, Belpre, and
Lola Ziegler, Cambridge; and
four grandchildren.
Other than hts ·parents he was
preceded In death by four brothers and two sisters.
Services will be Sl!(urday, 1
p.m'. at White's Funeral Home in
Coolville, wltll burial In Cherry
Ridge Cemetery. Friends may ·
call at the funeral home anytime
after 3 p.m 'on Friday.
•

a

•

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

MAY

MAY

12th

13th

RC
PRODUCTS~-

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• Pooo&gt;~• Brlltn
• AMif'M SKIM

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$6 '999

12, 1989

~.S599cASE

·;~

•Combinations Pots

•Large Rose Bushes
•Rhododendrons
•Shrubs and Fruit
·
Trees
•Fresh Produce

(foil Wrapped)

liFiower Filled Porch
Boxes
•Grape Vines
~Strawberry Plants
•Sweet Potato Plants

•Memorial Day
Flowers

'
of the victims
Thursday nllfhl's mock disaster staged In
" Pomeroy as ·a part of the annual trl-county event.
This patient had an amputated arm and was

MAIN STREET MARKET &amp; GREENHOUSE

as he lay outside
emergency entrance at· Veterans Memorial
Hospltat. Lending comfort wbUe getting help to
move the victim Is Don Be·egle, hospital safety
director.

INTRODUCING
YOUR

'

'

1989 CONVERSION VANS
SO IN STOCK!
QUALITY AND LOW PRICES!

•4

Conc~i ~tllll nl

·P.-I.Joo.o~ll&gt;

ASTRO
CONVERSION
VAN

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• l'a•cr Doer Ll:l:k,
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NOW

ONLy

\ISKP · \20.llltl

WE DON'T HAVE JUST ONE OR 1WO VEHICLES SALE PRICED.

. 5QQ

2.9l.'(,Jic-l,

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CARS WE HAVE TRUCKS, .
PRICED
ANDYAN$
It·

Mooey '

TO SELUI

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1 10 ( • \ •
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CELEIRtT!

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Clarification

COMFORT ASSURED DEALERS:
"

MiddlepOrt

''

By MARGARET CALDWELL
OVP News Staff
Reflecting Panama's fraudtainted election, former- ·
President Jimmy Carter, at a
Emergency Medical Services as the annual mock
CONFERs WITH DEPUTIES - Sheriff lames
news conference Thursday at
disaster was staged In . Pomeroy Thursday
Soulllby ud several of his deputies confer with
Ohio University, Athens. ex·
evenlnfl'.
Bob Byer, director of the Meigs County
pressed his support of President
Bush's action and his support of
the Panamanian !JeOple to keep
''their first taste of freedom."
"It was a good move on his
.
'
part," Carter said of Bush's 1,800
troop brigade. It was a small
force, and not belligerent move.
Carter said Bush's "moderate
James Soulsby was on band to response" was beyond his adVeterans Memorial Hospital
mass emergency occur.
vice, but within the boundaries of
was swamped with patients
Sf!me of the patients arrived at get experience in traffic control · Bush's alternatives.
"I:hursday evening when some 15
Veterans Memorial Hospital via and hospital personnel hustled
Carter said the best action the
re~tdents became lll and Injured
prlva.te vehicles while others through their paces to provide United States can lake IS joining
as the result of a spUI of
came In an emerg~ncy services relief for the victims of the spill. the other countries in the hemishydrochloric acid.
vehicle, two at a time. Patients
phere In supportin&amp; the Panama
· Actually, It was all pretend
were realistic In their roles.
people.
since the chemical spUI was the
Some moaned. groaned and
"It will lake military force to
start of the annual mock disaster
gasped for air. At least two of the
The $65,000 Community Devel· get (Gen. Manuel Antonio) Nosiftged in the trl-county area to
mock dtsa~~ter victims were in opment Block Grant announced riega out of the country, but not
give heal thcare people including
critical' condition while the re- Wednesday by Ohio Department from us. We would he condemned
hOSpital and emergency squad
mainder suffered from minor to of Development Director David If we tried to• overcome him,"
personnel as well as law enforce- , moderate problems.
'
J. Baker has, according to .a Carter said.
·ment officials some training In
The department of Sheriff department of develQpment
"Let the Panama people take
how to !unction should an actual ,
press release, " been awarded to care of It, with aid from the
Meigs County to help Twin City nations In this hemiSphere. We
Machine and Weldlng·Company want to get rid of that crooked
expand Its market into the diCtator, but we must show our
radiator, gas and speciality respect of the Panama people
trailer areas."
and let them handle their own
The Meigs County Board of Education conducted the
Funding from the Farr:ners. affairs," Carter said.
following items of business when they met Tuesday evening in
Bank and Savings Company and
"We should acknowledge 'the
regular session.
the Meigs ,county and Noble winner aa the pretldent-elect.
-Accepted James Stacy's resignation as a teacher's aide in
County Revolving Loan Funds Other countrlea will also endorse
the adult baste education program.
are to he combined with money of the president-elect."
-"Approved the operation of the seat belt satety center for the
RDbel't M. (Mike) Haley, to
Carter said he met with No191!8·89 school year. ·
enable Haley to purchase the riega to try to convince him to
.
-Approved Dr. James Wltherelli!Dd Dr. Wilma Mansfield, of
bUsiness from current owner, honor the election, bu I Noriega
' Meigs Health Services, Pomeroy; Dr. John Ridgway, Pomeroy,
Bill Miller. Haley Is currently an waa sllrpriled at the outmme. He
and l&gt;r. Douglas Hunter, Racine, to atve school bus drivers'
employer of Miller's. Melp said Noriega probably expected
medical examinations for the 1988-811scbool year.
County Commissioner Mannln&amp; at leaat a five percent loll.
-Approved the 1988-89 calendar for county office emp)oyees.
RDush reports that the transfer rl.
•'But the people reJected him at
-Approved the payment of billa, the treaaurer's financial
ownership from Miller to Baley least 75 percent, three to one,
report and the minutes of the AprU meeting.
has not yet taken ~ce. .
maybe even four to one," Carter
Present for Tuesday's meeting were Superintendent John D.
As for the $65,
grant, ac- II&amp;!d.
Riebel Sr., and all board members, President Harold Roush,
cordllli to the department of
"Noriega could have honored
Oris Smith, Harold Lohse, Robert Burdette and Virgil King.
development press release, the election· and been a hero. I
"$60,000 of the COBG will be thll!k lie CODIIdered that. But It
lQaned to the company at six became apparent he decided to
percent Interest for the next15 s"al the balloll and brlllg fraud
'
One driver was cited in a two-car accident at 7:20 a.m.
yeara; the remallltng ts.ooo Ia to the alectSoD Nlllltl."
Thursday, In Meigs C&lt;lunty, on US 33, 0.8 of a mue west of
available to the county for
Carter A1d Noriega was "unContinued on page 10
administrative purposes."
'jrpable of a«eptlng the premise

Veterans Memorial ~swamped'
with 15 disaster drill patients

Fonman.6 Allbalt llaallng • Caallng
'

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992-5321

'fl

Local news briefs-----1
County board approves measures

Driver cited after accident

.•

By NANCY YOACHAM
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
At the request of the Olive and
· Orange Township Trustees, the
Meigs County Commissioners
will he tnttlatlng necessary legal
procedures to establish a sewerage district in Tuppers Plains.
Establishment of a sewerage
district must take place before
Tuppers Plains can qualify for
any type of !lnanctal assistance
to construct a proposed centralized sewage system within the
community.
Ollve Trustees Joe Lance and
Paul IJfe, and Orange Trustees
Wilbur Robln.sonand Jim Watson
attended Wednesday's meeting
of the comU~lssloners to discuss
formation of the. sewerage district and to present IEitters
formally requesting the
formation.
At this time, the understanding
of the trustees and the commissioners Is that the "affected
area" of the community, wptch
would 1fall under jurtsdlcltlon of a
sewerage district, lies "within a
one-half mile radius of the
Tuppers Plains caution lights."
Clarification or what areas of
the community comprise the
affected area will he obtained as
soon as possible.
Although neither the trustees
nor the commissioners are clear
at this time as to who appoints
members to the sewerage dis·
trlct board, whoever makes the

appointments will be looking for
interested people who will be
wllllng to commit their time and
energies to the volunteer
positions.
·
The trustees believe there are
several "concerned citizens" in
Tuppers Plains who may be
willing to serve on the boa rd.
The extent of authority of the
sewerage district board was also
questioned by the trustees. AI·
though they aren't sure, the
commissioners think that once
the sewerage district is established, the ".affected area" in the
community wtn come under the
control of the sewerage district
board, especially since the board
Is "dealing with the health,
safety and welfare of the community," said Commissioner Richard Jones .
It was pointed out by Jones that
' 'there is no cheap way'' to do the
work that needs to be done in
Tuppers Plains. Even with the
maximum amount of grants that
might be available, but are not
guaranteed, ''it wlll he expensive
to the local community," Jones
said . .

The trustees reported that
some residents In Tuppers Plains
have upgraded their sewage
systems to eliminate problems.
These residents understand,
trustees said, that their upgraded systems wlll not comply
with Ohio Environmental Protection Agency requirements once a

centralized system is put In
place. But unless a system is
constructed to eliminate all sewage disposal problems within
Tuppers Plains' affected area,
an EPA building ban on new
construct'lon will coJJtlnue in the
Meigs County community.
"Just don't expect a miracle
overnight," cautioned Commls·
stoner Jones, in regard to the
formation of the requested district. "These things take time,
but at least we've taken the !lrst

step."

At the request of Michael
Swisher, director of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services, the commissioners
okayed re-advertistng for o!flce
space for the Department of
Human Services which is now
located at 175 Race St. in
Middleport.
The commissioners also
okayed a new contract with
Brinks for food stamp storage
and delivery. Costs for Brinks'
services wlll increase from
$162.75 for storage and $16.50 per
delivery trip, to $177 .13 storage
and $17.99 delivery.
Commissioner Manning Roush
reported that smoke detectors
have been Installed at the county
jail, and that a fire door must still
be Installed and an old door
blocked up, to fullflll requests
lrom the state fire marshall.
Charlie Barrett and Mary
Continued on page 10

Carter supports President Bush's
• •
action in current Panamh crlSlS

·1'1&gt;-Wuolo,...,

. . . . ,-

1989

• •

2 Sectlona. 14

CODlDllSSIODers take
r~rst step to establish
new sewerage district

L•.cated Just Below Foodland In Pomeroy
992-6036

.

'

Low In mid 40s toalr;bt. Chance
50 percent. Saturday, hlfl'h
mid 60s. Chance of ratn 50

•

FLATS- $775
HANGING BASKETS
POmNG SOIL
MULCH - ONION SETS
BULK GARDEN SEED

mttJ.mm·mnmmm.
·-

496
Pick 4

LARGE SRECTION OF
BIRD BATHS, CLAY POTS
AND LAWN ORNAMENTS

Clarification

IIJI'YWLL Lt&gt;\f 1M!

Pi~k3

Vol.40. No.e

The Jason Bush of Middleport
who was fined on three charges in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night, ts
Shariab is tbe lesat code of Islam, not Jason E . Bush, 19, son of
much as the the Talmud is to Celeste Coates of Middleport,
Jud.alsm.
who attends college in Day(on.

.

Ohio Lottery

3

Nine calls were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emer· .
gency Me&lt;flcal· Service
1
Wednesday.
At 1:29 a.m the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine 2 for Robert
McCall who was· taken to O'Bieness Hospital 'in Athens; at 5:06
a.m. the J)yracuse unit went to
Yellow Bush Road for Mona Lisa
Haynes who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
12: 23 p.m the Rutland unit took
Lucretia Brooks from State
~oute 689 to O'Bieness Hospital.
At 2: 30 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
was called to the Pomeroy Cliffs
for Herbert Clower wh!l was
treated but not transported. The
Rutland unit transported Lucille
Lambert from her Dye Road
home to !he Holzer Medical
Center at 4: 56 p.m. and at 9: 11
· p.m. the Rutland squad wert to
Mine 2 for John Hager who was
taken to Holzer.
At 9: 32 p.m. the Middleport
unit went to Riverview Drive for
Mamie Sauger who was taken to
Veterans, and at 10:57 p.m. the
Pomery unit transported Travis
Good from Mulberry Ave. to ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Dorsel Miller

Zeollerleads
play
one stroke

2754

calls Wednesday

•

Belva M. Elliott, 83, ESR,
Galllpolls (Chambersburg community), died Wednesday after·
noon at Holzer Medical Center.
A homemaker and lifelong
resident o! Gallla County, she
was born on Jan. 30, 1906ln Ohio
Township, daughter of the late
Emory and Stella (Cox) Johnson.
. She a.t tended Mt. Zion Baptist
Church.
Preceding her in death were
her husband, Homer EIJlott,
whom she married on June 12,
192G in Gallipolis, two sisters and
one brother.
Suivlvors Include three sisters, Mrs. Grace Shaffer, Mrs.
Annie Shaw and Mrs. Goldie
Stbiey; · all of Gallipolis; a
brother, James Johnson of Co·
lwnbus; and several nieces and
nephews:
·
Services will be Sunday at 2
p.m . at Cremeens Funeral
Chapel. The Rev. Bruce Unroe
will o!flclate. Burial will he lnMt.
Zion Cemetery.
Friends may call the chapel
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
fro!ll 7 to 9 p.m.

A dance will be held at the
AmeriCan le&amp;lon hall in Ru dand
Friday night starting at 8 p.m
Price IS $2 a person. MusiC will he
songs of the fifties and the sixties.
The dance is sponsored by the
American Legion and the Ru ·
!land Fire Department.

EMS has nine

- -·Area deaths-Belva Elliott

Plan dance

Hospital news

Commencement exercises for
the Southern Local Klnderpr ten ,
Veterus Memortal
will be held Friday evening at the
Admitted: Mamie Swauger,
Southern Junior Hl&amp;h School Middleport.
&amp;Ymnaslum. Graduation exerDischarged: Carol Rhodes,
cises will start a! 7: 30 p.m. The M11hel Brlckles, Goldie Hendren,
evening's speaker will be John Mattie Warner, VIctoria Lehew,
Costanzo, Meigs County Eiemen· and John DeMoss.
tary Supervisor.

Dally s&amp;ock prrlces
(As of 10: SO Lm.)
Bryce ud Mark SmKh
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewl

1

Thursday, May 11, 1989

'

-

that the people are not strongly
behind him."
When he met with Noriega
later, Carter said he tried to get
Noriega to accept defeat because
the elecilon showed overwhelm·
ing rejection. But Noriega decided on poUtlcal suicide.
"This Is the first dictator
stupid enough to allow an elec·
tlon tn his country," Carter said.
''It was poUttcal suicide. Now the
whole world knows that threefourths of his people rejected
him," Carter said.
"Now Panama politics are in
turmoU and the people of Pa·

nama have condemned Noriega.
But Panamanians don't stand
alone. Three-fourths of the population share the rejection."
Guessing an approximately 80 ·
percent turnout Carter said, "!
was very pleased at the extraordinary turnout of the voters."
Carter also said there was no
danger to the Panama Canal,
that the two· baste rights are
continued to be enforce: defend·
lng the canal and putting u.s.
ships at the head of the line.
The United States has· 'not just
a right, but a duty" to protect Its
'Interest In Panama.

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