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                  <text>Monday, June 5. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclepot1. Ohio

Sentinel

1G-The

Beat of the Bend

Pest House existed
Well, you could have fooled me. · former students.
Maxine Little says last year 's
Pomeroy many years ago DID
event
was great- but this year,
have a Pest House.
plans
are to make the reunion
Margaret
better.
Should work. since
even
Parker,
many times.lt seems, old friends
dent of
are the best friends. after. all.
Meigs Cnunll"
Pioneerand
Thanks to those of you who
toricai Society,
caring since
have been so
not only verifies
learning about my recent prob·
this but sent
along ,a reproduction from a !em. I appreciate that. However,
newspaper which refers to the things look good so - not to
worry . So make my day- Keep
Pest House.
It seems that the Pest House
Smiling.
was a place where people with
contagious diseases, such as
cholera or smallpox. were taken
and confined. They were cared
for until they got well or died. The
Pest House which was out
Naylor's Run and was Isolated
from the general public. Sound
like a great place?
Margaret states that several
references were made to the Pest
House)n newsR3pers of the late
1800's.
A newspaper account from a
newspaper dated March 5, 1882.
relates that a man got off the
steamer Potomac claiming that
he felt ill. After standing and
sitting about In various places for
a few hours. It was decided that
he had smallpox.
Smallpox at the time was a
dreaded disease and much excitement followed the diagnosis.
The man was driven up to the
base of the courthouse monu·
ment and madetostay there until ·
matters were arranged by the
health officer. Judge Stanberry,
and the man was then taken to
the Pest House by Deputy Mar·
shal William Tucker.

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE -Olive Township Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30p.m .. at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
MIDDLEPORT - The Mon·
day .meeting of the Middleport
Garden Club has been cancelled
until further notice.
POMEROY -The Meigs Band
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. on
Monday In the high school band
room.
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township trustees will meet

Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Syracuse municipal building.
CHESHIRE -The next meeting of the Women Alive! will be
Monday at the Kyger Creek
ci ubhouse. The theme will be
victories, vacations, valentines,
and vegetables. Bring snapshots
of a local vacation spot recently
visited. All women are encouraged to attend.
RACINE - The Racine Chap·
ter 134, Order of the Eastern Star
will be holding it's annual inspection on Monday at 7: 30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

Members of the Racine Chapter
are asked to bring salad or
sandwiches.

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RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held Monday
through Friday from 9-11: 30 a.m.
at the Racine First Baptls t
Church for ages two through high
school.
RUTLAND -The Zion Church
of Christ Is planning a two week
Vacation Bible School each
morning from 9-11:30 a.m. beginning Monday through June 16 for
ages two through high school.

RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Church on
Monday through Friday from
9-11 a .m. dally. All children
preschool through junior high
are welcome.

Page4

80.

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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statebou.oe Reporter
COLUMBUS Stronglysupported legislation regulating
lobbyists and limiting campaign
contributions will start on Its
journey In the Ohio General
Assembly this week.
Both bills are the work of
House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr ..
D·Wheelersburg. who rarely Introduces legislation. When he
does. It usually passes.
.
;!'he Speaker said M hopes both
blus clear the Legislature before·
summer adjournment. antiCIpated In about five weeks.
A Senate-House conference
committee Is expected to begin
sorting out a list or differences
over the state's $26.3 bllllon
budget for 1990-91 after the House
formally rejects the Senate ver·
slon Tuesday.
The House convenes Tuesday
at 11 a.m. to vote on a bill
prohibiting minors from selling
or buying a motor vehicle with· .
out parental authorization.
Riffe has become concerned
about the high cost of election
campaigns and the Influence of
lobbyists on the state Controlling
Board. a legislative body which
has oversight of state agency
spending and administration
contracts and state assistance
for business ventures.
The two bills .are to be heard
Thursday In the House Ethics
and Standards Committee. Riffe
Is not expected to present either
bill. That will be done by Rep . .
Judy Sheerer. D-Shaker Heights,
who Is the spon!jOr of the
contribution limits. Riffe Is listed
as chief sponsor of the lobbying
bill.

Another former resident, Cha·
rles Cassell III. Pickerington,
has some serious problems.
Charles was seriously Injured In
an auto accident Tuesday evening and underwent surgery for
He has been
seven Murs.
confined to the ICU Unit. Cards ·
can be sent to Riverside Methodist Hospital In Columbus.

Rep. Barney Quilter, DToledo, will bring to the Ethics
and Standards Committee Gov.
Richard Celeste's proposal requiring people who lobby executive agencies to register with the
state and file financial disclosure
statements.
Currently, only lobbyists workIng the Legislature must
regtster. ,
Riffe's bill applles those regulations to lobbyis(4 who work the
Controlling Bdatd. It also requires detailed reporting by all
lobbyls ts of any gifts of more
than $25, honoraria, expenses,
campaign contrlbu tlons to
members of the General Assembly or the executive branch.
Rifle's bill also would require
lobbyists to file a statement
within 10 days after beg!Ming to
influence a specific Item of
legislation indicating whether
the lobbyist supports It, opposes
it or wants It amended.
Existing law requires lobbyls ts
to report any amount over $150

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Repub·
llcan Hamilton County Commls·
stoner Robert Taft, a member of
one of Ohio's most polltically
powerful families, announced
Monday he is a candidate for
governor next year.
Taft's father and grandfather
were U.S. senators and his
great-grandfather, William Howard Taft. was president of the
United States.
Taft was former Gov. James
Rhodes' running mate for lieut-

Middleport man hurt in wreck
looking at one big reason. Auto theft. The number
of auto thefts has gone up 32% in the last lO years.
And the average value of those thefts has gone
up 181%.
. With the~alue of cars going up, a professional ,
thtef can easily steal over $50,000 worth of vehicles
in a single night And guess whose premiums pay

Plans for summer activities
were discussed when members
of the Golden Rule Class held
their recent meeting at Pale's In
Gallipolis.
There were nine members
present and Manning Kloes and
Rev. Jim Seddon gave the
blessing before the meal. ·
After eating the group discussed possible summer actlvl·
ties such as miniature go!!,
horseback riding, going to Old
Man's Cave. or boating.
, .., Others attending were John
and Glenn Riebel, Dale Walburn,
Jean ThoJllas, Sharon Seddon,
June Kloes, and Rosanna
Manley.

for replacing those cars? If you feel a pain in your
walle~ you guessed right
At State Fann, we believe that ways must be
found to keep these thieves from forcing premiums
to go up. That's why we work closely with the
National Auto Theft Bureau to help stop car thieves,
throw them in jail, and recover the cars they stole.
And why we started a pilot program to etch vehicle

Carroll W. Johnson, 58, Middleport, suffered a minor visible
injury but was not Immediately treated, after a one car accident'
at 6:50p.m. Monday on SR. 124. O.lofamUewestofmUe-post15,
near Rutland. according to the Melgs-Gallla Post, State
Highway Patrol,
.
Troopers said Johnson was west bound. when he lost control
and his car went off the road Into a ditch. Damage was
moderate. There was no citation.
The patrol Investigated another Meigs County accident at
9:45 p.m .. Monday on SR. 7, 0.3 of a mile north of the
Ga!Ua-Melgs County line, Troopers said a car driven by Carolyn
R. Barnette. 38, Jackson, struck and kUleda deer. Damage was
moderate. No one was Injured.

identification numbers on key parts of theftprone car models.
State Farm is there, every day. Finding more
ways to help protect our policyholders from ·
the causes of rising premiums. So we can keep
insurance affordable.

'

LEI'S FIGHT
TIE REAL STATI PARM
COS IS
OF

Heritage Day activities planned

INSUIANCI

Wolf Pen Notes

Stale Fann Mutual AUIOIIIObilelnsurance Compony
Home Office: BloomlnJIIon. Illinois

Mr. and Mn. Jeff Bole of
Stockport -re weekend visitors
of Mrs. J.R. Murphy and Iva
Job!ISoll.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
wert wetkelld vll!ton of Mrs.
011111!1 Werley, Stacy,andDanlel
ot ~lela, W.Va.
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A Heritage Day celebration has been plann~td for Saturday
from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
According to Mark Murphey, allminlstrator, activities will
Include a claulc car display rally to take place on the Paee
Street parking area of the ·center at 1 p.m. Pardclpantl who
display their classic cars will receive a commemorative coffee
· mug.
At 2 p.m. In the dining room of the Center there will be a
vlntarre 111uslc presentation and fuhlon show. The show will
Include models outfitted In vlntaee clothing provided by the
Melp Muaeum In conjunction wltlllts planned Meigs County
!{erltage Days, also taking place this weekend.
Antique furniture will also be on display during the
pfeii!Dtatlon and turn-of-the-century retresjlmenta will be
served to those attending durlni the afternoon.
QueBdona concernJnrr participation In the actlvltle&amp; may be
directed to Murphey at 992-M'I'l.
Ccmtiuued on pap 10

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
''No tickets. No fines."
That was the outcome of
Monday night's Pomeroy Village
Council meeting. A delegation of
over 50 Pomeroy residents at·
te11ded Monday night's meeting
and voiced &lt;;&gt;pposlt ton to the
issuance of tickets for parking on
sidewalks. Pomeroy Police have
been issuing such tickets since
Friday. For two weeks prior, the
pollee issued warnings for sidewalk parking.
After lengthy discussion, Council passed a motion to suspend
section 351.03A of village ord Inance 351, which prohibits sidewalk parking. In addition, any
tickets which were Issued since

~~~~~d:tc~t~~~/;~fnt~~ t~

Taft announces governor candidacy

-Weal news briefs___,
Why do insurance premiums go up? You're

1 Section, 10 Pog110 25 Conti
A MuttimMil Inc. NewiP•Per

mayor, "that's not what th~
ordinance says." Seyler recalled
Rizer questioning, 'don't we have
an ordinance to prevent parking
on the sidewalks?' Seyler said he
told Rizer that such an ordinance
did exist; that It must be applied
to everyone and he would begin
enforcing it.
Wehrung and Rizer main·
talned that their yes votes - to
enforce no parking on sidewalks ·
- were based upon their under·
standing of the discussion which
preceded the vote. On the other
hand, Council members Betty
Baronick and Bill Young, who at
the last meeting voted no on the
opposition to the enforcement of no parking on sidewalks
motion to enforce, said they
within the village.
understood that the ordinance
would be enforced village-wide.
"The way I heard It," said
Fridaywillbevoidedandany$5
,. Young. "There would be no ,
1
exceptions, and that's Why I
~.
future. Council is to set up a voted no.'' Baronlck agreed with
ney, D-Cleveland, and Thomas committee or council members Young's statement.
spent on a legislator, but does not
"That's what the mayor said
Johnson, R-Cambridge; and and ·concerned Pomeroy restrequire disclosure of the Item
dents,
business
people
and
lobbied or the position of the sens.. Theodore G ray • R· clergy, to determine where side- he was going to do after we had
.our vote," said Rizer. "A wheel
lobbyist.
'
Columbus; Robert Ney • R- walk parking should be prohi· on the sidewalk will gel a ticket
The Sheerer bill limits contriBarnesville: and William bited. Once the committee has was what the mayor said," Rizer
butions by Individuals, pollllcal
Bowen, D-Cinclnnati.
determined where sidewalk added.
action committees, parties and
Larry Hoover, vice president parking is allowed or not al·
"You should have known the
caucuses to legislative and stateof the Ohio. Power Co., Canton, lowed. Council may then write a night of the meeting that this
wide candidates.
will head a list of witnesses
testifying before the Senate new section to the existing would cause problems," said
AI though there Is no difference
In the Senate and House spending . ways and Means Committee ordinance. or write a whole new Seyler. "I knew this would cause
levels In the budget, a number of Tuesday afternoon on legislation ~~~s~!~yce, whichever IS problems but Council didn't do
anything about lt.''
,
non-monetary .differences could
1 ':t!\!t,\?Jl&amp;t t.~ •-electrto...
...
~:~~~~:s.
It
was
Mayor
Richard
Seyler
"B\11."
countered
Wehrung,
cause probleml. ' ll'l addition,
who suggested that enforcement "That's because we didn't think
House Democrats are expected
the no sidewalk parking be you were going to go out and do
of
The House-passed legislation
to insist that cuts In human
.
eliminated.
The mayor said he this kind of thing. There ate
services and aging programs be is an attempt to limit the
knew
I
here
would be problems places in Pomeroy where you
expansion of municipal electric
restored.
when
Council
voted at the last can't park·on the street or you're
Flnancla I officials are ex- companies into areas traditionregular
meeting
to enforce the going to get sldeawlped.''
peeled to Issue enhanced revenue ally served by Investor-owned
The
mayor
recounted
ordinance.
"That's right," said the
projections, meaning the Senate utUities.
his
understanding
or
how
the
no
mayor.
"But if you apply the
The Senate Highways ~d
Republicans will try to cushion
parking
on
the
sidewalks
situa·
ordinance
to one person, you
the state's savings account and Transportation Committee Will
tlon
came
to
be
at
the
last
it to everyone. "
have
to
apply
add some more money for start hearings · Tuesday afft!t- meeting.
"But
you
have
to exercise
education.
noon on the House-passed 52.7
However,
Council
President
some
common
sense
too," said
Serving on the conference billion transportal ion appropriaLarry
Wehrung
and
Councilman
,
Wehrung.
committee will be Rep. William tion for 1990-91. That bill Is aimed
Franklin Rizer did not re''The
ordinance
doesn't
have
Hlnlg. D-New Philadelphia. at June 30 clearance, when the member the discussion at the last
any common sense," answered ·
chairman; Reps. Patrick Swee- new fiscal period begins.
meeting, which led to a motion to Seyler. "The ordinance says yuu
enforce no parking on sidewalks. will or you won't."
the same way as the mayor.
Presented to Council were
The motion to enforce was petitions bearing signatures of
made at the last meeting by Pomeroy residents who oppose
Rizer
and seconded by Wehrung. the enforcement of no parking on
enant governor In 1986, but the
he said. "Leadership that underBut,
explained Wehrung, he sidewalks. Many residents at the
two were defeated by Demostands the difference between
cratic Gov. Richard Celeste and
right and wrong. Leadership that understood Rizer, in the discus- meeting also joined in the discusLt. Gov. Paul Leonard.
will stop the crippling pattern of sion process. to mean that If a sion to. voice for the record, their
While Celeste cannot seek
corruption that Ohioans have vehicle blocking the sidewalk opposition to such enforcement.
re-election in 1990, no Democrats
suffered at the hands of the prevented pedestrians from Some stated It was their feeling
passing by iwo abreast, then the that some members of Council
have yet officially announced
Celeste administration.
driver
of that vehicle was In were not trying· to protect the
"Multi-million dollar, unbid
their candidacy. Republican
violation
of the ordinance and a best interests ·of the cltl~ens of
Cleveland Mayor George Voinostate contracts going to .wellticket
should
be issued.
vich announced earlier. Two
Pomeroy. "And that's going to be
connected cronies. Theft in ofRizer
agreed
with Wehrung remembered at election time,"
other Republicans. Rep. Michael
flee. The first cabinet member to
DeWine of Cedarville and state
be convicted of a felony and sent regarding the discusslo.n which said one woman.
Sen. Paul Pfeifer of Bucyrus.
to prison. And an assembly of preceded the motion.
Continued on page 10
But as pointed out by the
have said they inten(! to be
other statewide office holders candidates.
from attorney general to auditor
Many of Taft's statements
- sitting on their hands as the
Monday were similar to those he
coruptlon continues.
made on the campaign trail three
"Oh~oans cannot be fooled,"
years ago- boasting that he and
continued Taft. "Year1after year
his family stand for honest
they read their newspapers and
government and contending that
watch their televisions and
Celeste doesn't.
wonder why. Why can't we have
"I am proud to be part of the
honest government In Ohio? Why
BEIJING (UPI) - Artillery blockades of commandeered
family who has served Ohio for
can't ethical standards and per- fire resounded In southern Beij- public b~ses. foreigners in those
more than 100 years and whose
sonal Integrity be hallmarks of ing Tuesday as confusion reigned cities reported.
name stands for Integrity and
the next administration?
"People are In a state of shock
over an apparent confrontation
common sense in government,"
"The answer Is that they can be looming among Chinese army and sadness" over the Beijing
said Taft. •'I believe In clean,
and must be. And In the Taft units. The military warned for- ' violence, an American working
honest government. That's what
administration, they will be. You elgners they would be shot for In Shenyang said.
I learned lr0f!1 the example of
have my word on it. I Intend to photographing army units on city
The southwest city of Chengdu
William Howard Taft, my great·
restore pride In Ohio and trust In streets.
was quieter after rioters set fires
grandfather. and It's what I
state government.
Protesters threw rocks at and looted buildings Monday.
learned from my grandfather
''I will work wllh the legllla· m llltary 1eeps and burned buses Americans and other foreigners
and father, who represented Ohio
lure to rewrite the book on ethics in parts or Beijing, but the city had taken refuge In the U.S.
In the U.S. Senate."
In government. Tougher report- quieted somewhat after two days Consulate at tbe Jlnjlang Hotel,
With that, Taft launched into
Ing requirements for elected of fighting between soldiers and whose• lobby was "a shambles"
an attack on "corruption'' in the
officials and special Interests civilians followlnll the brutal after looting. a U.S. diplomat
Celeste administration.
· and limits on campaign contribu· military suppression Sunday of said.
,
·
lions
will
just
be
the
beginning.
In Beijing. troops and tanks
''It Is time to bring a new era of
the student-led democracy
from al least fot1r army groups
leadership to Ohio government,"
movement.
•
Scattered claah11 were re- poised at blockades on major
ported, but It waa not always roadways, allowlq some clvclear Who the parti!!lpanta were. lllalf traffic to pass alter thoi
because of the Involvement or a The city has beell t1.Ser marUal rouah aearchea.
William O'Dell (Zeke) Collins
The deploy~~WDtl took up aplaw sinCe May 20, but II bu only
firearm, the lnvoluntr&amp;ry mansappearing In Meigs County Comparently
defeaatve politlons on
laughter charge Is nonbeen enforced Iince Saturday
mon Pleas Court late Tuelday
ai'QIIIId the goVI!f'naccess
roads
probational,
ntghr when trooPs moved In to
morning was sentenced to10to25
oust prCHiemocracy protesters ment headquarters In the city
years on a chtll'lf! of lnvoluntsry
camped In central 'MaDanmen center.
The original Indictment
manalauabter with three addl·
Tank brig.- were poiHioDecl ·
Square.
against CollinS was all in connectiona! years on the gun speclflca·
at
key flyowr lllll!rsectlona ·on
with
tbe
March
26
shooting
tion
tlon charge.
Oemonitratlona contlallld Ill
the
eut alld we&amp;t a1t111 of
death
of
ColUns'
uncle,
VIrgil
The charge from aggravated
several other cltill. Abo11t 30,000
Chanpn
A,_, the maJor
. murder was reduced to Involun- ColllnB. The shooting Incident people protested at city bill In
eut-weat
arte1'7.
wbel'l! It meets
tary manalauabter with the gun occurred at the Tim Davidson northern
~tu·
malll
aortll-ltitlb
hqhwaya,
s peclflcatlon In the court on May resldef~Ce on Dark Hollow Road,
dent protester• In Sh
I bd
Trafllc
waa
n1Wnwly
llt!ht.
30. n-waa earlier 'rioted tluit Pomeroy.
ijanJing paralyzed trl
With

'r;
·
b
•lls
h
d
Oh
•
A
bl
d
.ea
to ssem y auen a
.R '-J.. .e l
~

Class discusses
summer activities

•

Council delays
parking issue

RESIDENTS VOICE OPPOSITION TO SIDEWALK PARKING
ORDINANCE - More than 50 concemed Pomeroy realdents
.c rowded Into Monday nlgllt's Pomeroy VIBage Council meeting to

Last year someone tame up
with the idea of holding a reunion
for students of the former Sliver
Run Grade School.
Well - It went over with a
bang. Lots of people attended and
enjoyed getting together and
talking about the good old days In
addition to sharing photos.
In fact, It all went so well that
another reunion has been scheduled for this year and will be
held on the school ground flat.
The reunion will be from 1 to 4
p.m. on July 2. All ·former
students and teachers are cordially invited to attend. However, don't forget to take along
your own lawn chair and any
ohoto~ vou can to share with

Clear lonlrht. Low In mid 50s.
mostly sunny. High

0924

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. June 6. 1989

And who doesn't 'remember
pleasant Vera Beegle's · big
smile? A retired Racine bank
official. Vera will be marking her
93rd birthday on Thursday. June
8. She enjoys hearing from
friends. Cards will reach her at
P.O. Box 132. Racine.

... _ , - - ·

592

RUTLAND - There will be a
publiC hearing at the Rutland
Civic Center on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
to discuss plans for the waste
faclltttes in Rutland.

Former Meigs resident, Clayton F. Tubbs will be observing his
99th birthday this week. He was
born In the Burlingham area and
had a twin brother. the late
Payton Tubbs. Cards can be sent
to Clayton at 601 Weber Ave ..
Akron. Ohio 44303.

f. ~-

Pick 3 .
Pick 4

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Board of
Public Affairs will meet Tuesday
night In Syracuse at 7 p.m.

A nice outing for Jay and
Madeline Pendleton of Radcliff
over Mother's Day weekend.
They spent the weekend In
Crystal Lake. 111 .. visiting rela·
Uves and attended a surprise
birthday party for George Brick·
les given by his daughters, Joyce
Romines and Elaine Justice.
There was a catered dinner.
birthday cake and the best part
was that Jay entertained at the
piano for the party.

·- .

Ohio Lottery

SkyDome
•
opens tn
Toronto

Community calendar

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Tension, confusion
reign in Beijing

Collins sentenced on two charges

Sbenyana,:;

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The · Daily Sentinel
Ill Coon Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTEU:STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON UEA

~lb

q,v ,.,...._,._.....,..,....._=·-

!Sim~

ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publlaber

General Manacer
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlaher/CoatroUer

A MEMBER of 'Die AModll&amp;ed Preu, Jal•d DIIIJy PnuAIIOdllllloa ... the AnMrican Newspaper Publllben A-oo!"*'an
LETTERS OFOPINJON are welcome. They lllould be lou IliuM
,.,,... loooJ. U lelloro iore aubjecl to Hltlaraad m8111 1M olp.. wllb
ume, ~- aad lelepboae a•mber. No u.....,ed 1 - . wiD be pubHaloed. Lellera llllould be In pod tule, oddrMalioclu-, DOI-DIIII ....

The best theater is
in the Ohio Senate
By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Some of the best theater In Ohio Is found In the state
Senate. and the performances there recently have been worthy of
rave Broadway reviews. perhaps Tony nominations.
Majority Republicans and minority Democrats jockey every two
years for control of the Senate. which changes more often than the
House .across the Statehouse rotunda . . ·
~n recent years. Republicans have had the upper hand. mainly by
promising to fight taxes and spend more money for that top-priority
Item -education.
Democrats have been saddled with their own governor's penchant
for raising taxes to the point that. on election night In 1988. Senate
Democratic Leader Harry Meshel of Youngstown. consigned to the
minority for the third session in a row, announced the Democrats
would not vote for any taxes.
In addition. the Democrats have wisely decided they will need their
own Issues for the 1990 Senate elections. so they are working on them.
Recently. Sen. Paul Pfeifer. R-Bucyrus. brought an anti-drug bill
out onto the-floor. Normally, these bills are carefully constructed In
committee to satisfy everyone - prosecutors, civil libertarians,
judges. This one was worked on for 18 months.
·
But one of the issues the Democrats plan to use In the 1990campaign
Is a "war on drugs." and Sen. Michael White. D-Cieveland. emerged
with a packet of amendments to strengthen the Pfeifer bilL
White proposed tacking on penalties of upto25and30extra years on
the prison sentences for drug pushers. His amendments declared war
on "crack" houses.
Despite the carefully balanced bill. the GOP could harCJly reject
these amendments. or they would be characterized in future
campaigns as being soft on drugs. So they voted for them. leaving the
House to sort through the wreckage later.
Next came the budget. and even betler theatrical performances'.
Meshel sprung a hastily assembled proposal to take $50 million out
of the state's savings account. create a new stale drug czar. establish
nine new ''drug courts'' with prosecutors and judges to put pushers In
ja II. and build two new prisons to accommodate them.
The Republicans were presented with a problem. There was plenty
·: of money, but if they allowed the amendmeqt, the Democrats would
:·: score points . If the GOP defeated II. they would be characterized
·. • during the next campaign as soft on drugs.
So what did they do? They offered their own substitute. calling for a
. study committee to decide by the end of the year whether the new
.
drug courts and drug czar have merit.
"There's no reason for delay." chided assistant Senate Minority
Leader Neal Zimmers Jr .. D-Dayton. as a fUm crew hired by the
Democratic caucus made footage for use In future campaigns.
"For us to appoint a group of four or five of us to be sitting around
listening to what we already know (that drugs are a problem~ Is the
height of hypocrisy."
There was more theater.
Sen. Cooper Snyder. R-Hitisboro. declared that the Senate's
appropriation for ·Schools represented "major reform" and would
"lead us to victory In our war on Illiteracy and the hlghdropout rate,"
when in fact the amount is far short of what educators say Is needed.
On the other hand, Meshel accused the Republicans of "some
degree of mean-spiritedness" for their welfare appropriation - up
12.4 percent from the current amount - and for "senior cltlzen
abuse" in a budget for the Ohio Department of Aging which doubles
,
the current $35 million figure .
When the cameras were turned off after seven hours of rhetoric, six
Democrats ended up voting for the budget - the first bipartisan
budget vote In the Senate since 1982.
The footlights will come up again soon. This engagement runs
through mld:July.

'•

••

Berry~s

World

Page-2-:-The Oeily Sentinel
Pomeroy....:Middlllport. Ohio
Tueeday. June 6. 1989

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

chance If the Importer has
something to hide.
Our associate Stewart Harris
has obtained an audit from the
The news from the foreign
files of the USDA Inspector suppliers Is not reassuring. The
general, which reveals there Is , Inspector general found that
no jtllarantee that tile USDA testing ol meat from the five top
always knows when Imported foreign suppliers does not always
meats enter the country.
meet USDA standards. More
Lester Crawford, director of than 85 percent of the 2.~ billion
the Food Safety Inspection Ser- pounds of meat Imported by the
vice, blames the Customs Ser- United States In 1987 came from
vice. But the auditors blame those five countries.
Crawford's agency. His agency
At the time o!tbe Investigation,
Is supposed to ensure that Im- Argentina and Denmark didn't
ported meats can pass the same even test the cooked meat they
tests applied to home-p'own sent to the United State. to
meats. 1f Crawford and the . determine that It wasn't mixed
Customs Service have a failure to with horse meat, rancid scraps
communicate, It Is Crawford's or Inedible parts such as testiresponsibility to bridge the gap. cles. Denmark . has since begun
'
.
testing to verify the species of
But while · the two agencies animal and-Argentina j~~Ul soon
bicker about who Is to blame, begin species testing too.
millions of pounds of Imported
Argentina cild little or no
meat has sailed through un· testing for two dangerous drugs
checked. The USDA Inspector - albendazole and lvermectln.
general also faults Crawford's When Argeatlna did tests, the
agency for retustng to trace · meat was not selected by acwhere that meat has gone.
cepted random sampling
Sources tell us that Crawford methods.
·
was apoplectic when he first
Denmark did not test for
heard the results of the critical chloramphenicol, which Is
audit.
·
banned In the United States, or

for driJiS that control parasites.
Danlab authorities said there
was no need for the tests because
chloramp'*'icol Is llle&amp;al there
and anti-parasltics are under
strict control.
Federal Investigators found
little testiD&amp; was done for 149
drugs banned from use In the
United States, but widely used In
the five exportlllg countriea.
MDIII or the drugs are fed to cattle
and swill only tntermtttently, but
the auditors said the ·USDA
should Instal on thetestlanyway.
Auatralla, Denmark, Arlen.tlna and New Ze~1111d ail treat
turkeys with dlmetrldazole, a
drui banned In the pntted State.s.
But little or no testinlla done for
that dfUI on meat oent to
American consumers.
· The USDA hu asked for
additional testing tor soml!
drup, but wlll let other procedures slide. Accordtn1 to an
offtclal FSIS l'eiJIOI*! to , the
audit, thoae foreign test methods
may not be the same as tests used
In the United States, but they
achieve the same results.

"

-

. .,

. ''
. -~·\
I
J
'

f

.

~

...

\

••

•I

I

INti

~~~

Nl A,

1111

third base In the tbe fifth Inning ofthe tint game of
Monday ni1ht's doubleheader In Atlanta. Dodger
pltcber Ramon Martinez started the play by
bunting out to first. The Dodgers swept the
doubleheader. (UPI)

Orioles draft LSU pitcher

Chang upsets Lendl
in French Open play

What the China pattern shows._Be_n_~_at_te_nb_er.::::.....g
In China, the massed students
carried a replica of the Statue or
Liberty, quoted Thomas Jefferson, and demanded democracy.
At the same time, In ·political
salons, It was being said that
America Is losing the public
relations offensive because
George BUsh Is a stand-patter
while Mikhail Gorbachev Is a
public-relations wizard In the
great media contest of Ideas.
Can both of these situations be
simultaneously correct?
No. Trust the verdict of the kids
with the Liberty Lady In the
street, not the pundits who cite
polls about how very popular
Gorby Is .In Europe. Gorbachev Is
popular precisely because AmerIca and the West are winning the
contest. Gorbachev Is saying that
totalitarianism Is a dlsaoter and
that democracy Is wonderful. If
memory serves, that Is the point
that the United States has been

making for many decades. It
Gorbachev now agrees, he's
plenty popular with me, too.
So much or this Is so new and so
untested that It makes Bush's
cautious attitude· quite wise.
Anyone who claims to know what
will happen regarding the democracy wave In the communist
countries doesn't understand the
situation.
I recently heard a leading East
European scholar describe what
Is taking place In Hungary as
"the purposeful dismantlement
of a communist government, by a
communist government.'' Indeed, It the Hungarian government Is to be believed, It Is
possible that within a year It wUI
hold true multiparty democratic
elections. A tew years ago survey
research conducted by Radio
Free Europe showed that If a real
election were held In Hungary,
the commu nlst party would get

less than 10 percent or the vote!
Will such an election be beld?
Will the communist party successfully make radical changes
to gain popular appeal? Would
the Soviets live with a noncommunist victory or try to
reverse It? If a new free HungarIan government should choose to
secede from the Warsaw Pact,
what would the Soviets do then?
We do not know the answers to
these questions, nor the answers
to similar ones at almost every
spot In our adversary's.empire.
In the Baltics, the Ukraine,
Poland, the cry tor democracy Is
now heard, but we do not know It
It wlll be heeded. It Is easy to
demand a bold, new, active
policy from President Bush. But
when a pot,e nttal tidal wave may
be transforming the terrain upon
wJIIch policy would be made,
such a call Is naive.
The video trendlness of the

story makes It yet bigger. Because television Ia everywhere,
and satellites send pictures everywhere, the pictures or democracy are everywhere. Democracy Is contagious. People who
see it and don't have It, want lt.
And people who do have It and see
It being dented elsewhere, 'want
their governments to" get tough
with the governmentl that are
doing the denying. If that thoulbt
Isn't troublinl Nicaraguan dictator Daniel Ortega as he contemplates the Nicaraguan elections
next February, then Orlela Is not
only a communist thug, but also a
dope.
As recent events tend to reveal,
the world Is spinning In our
direction, replete with replicas of
the Statue of Liberty In recently
totalitarian China. For the time
being, Bush's response Is the
right one: Let It keep oplnnlng
our way.

To some,·the best wage is no wage

-

GRIFFIN CI\UGHT IN RUNDOWN- Braves
second baseman Jeff Treadway (right) leaps to
· make the ta1 on the Dodgen' Alfredo Griffin as
GrUlla 18 cau1ht In a rundown between seoond and

By MIKE TULLY
. delphia taking Jeff Jackson of
UPI National Baseball Writer
Simeon High School In Chicago,
NEW YORK -The Baltimore
Texas grabbing cent,e r fielder
Orioles, shrugging off his shaky
Donald Harris of Texas Tee!\,
outing In the College World
and St. Louis choosing Paul
Series, Monday selected LSU
Coleman of Frankston (Texas~
right-hander Ben McDona1d as
High School.
the top pick In baseball's amaMcDonald became the first of
teur draft .
14 college players taken in the
In a draft conducted by confer- first round. Three came from
ence call Into the CommissionFresno State. Eight pitchers,
er's office. the Orioles surprised four catchers. eight outfielders
virtually no one with their and five infielders went. One
selection of McDonald, even
player Is considered a third
though he suffere·d a 5-2 loss to baseman-outfielder.
Miami Saturday. Never had a
Only first-round picks are
first-place team owned the top made public on the first day of
overall pick In the June draft. ·
the three-day draft. Others be·
McDonald. 21. an Olympic gold come public a week after the
medalist, is considered capable draft's completion, and then only
of pitching In the majors now. in alphabetical order. Rights for
which adds depth to an OriOle more than 1,500 players are at
team · currently leading the stake.
American League East. He
stal)ds 6-foot-7. and owns a 14-3
The Chicago White Sox used
record for LSU.
the seventh pick to grab the first
Picking second, Atlanta chose Infielder of the day. Frank
Tyler Houston. a catcher from Thomas or Auburn. The Cubs
Las Vegas Valley High School, ·followed by picking outfielder
Las Vegas. Nev. Seattle picked Earl Cunningham of Lancaster
thltd and tabbed right-hander' (S.C.) High School. California
Roger Salkeld of Saugus (Calif.) ' then selected the only left-bander
High School. The next three clubs of .the first round. Kyle Abbott of
went for ou1flelders. with Phila- Long Beach State. Montreal

'

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Let's
take a trip back In ttme for a
make-believe historical experlence that exposes the fraudulence of the leading argument
made by opponents of a modest
Increase In tbe minimum wage.
It's 1862, and President Abraham Lincoln has decided to delay
Issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, an historic document
designed to tree all slaves ill the
Confederacy. Instead, he wants
the slaves to be paid for their
work, UDder terms of the country's first minimum--wage law.
ToJIIvethealavesameuureof
dlplty and a ~m of ftnaaclalsecurtty, theprsldentwants
astatute that wW parolee they
will receive at iealt lO centl an
hour for tbe1r labor - but
ltn!IIUOUI objecttolll are rectatered by Plantation Owners 1111d
SIIMI Holders, a powerful interett II'OIIP.
"Whlla paying these people

may appear to be a noble
gesture," explains a POSH spokesman, "It wUIIorce all slave
owners to reconsider their employment arrangements. Many
wUI conclude that they cannot
afford to maintain their work
force at Its current size and wlll
·then dismiss large numbers of
slaves.:•
Appalled by the possibility that
his generous gesture might produce unemployment within the
ranks ol the country's slnves,
Uncoln counterpropoll!l an even
smaller minimum wage of 5
centa per hour.
Aaaln, POSH registers strenuous objection&amp;. "At any wage
lml," It inllltl, "some employen will make ratloDal ecoDOJDic
decisions toreducethenwnberof
people working for them because
of COlt C!OIIIIderatlolll. The only

~derally

opposition to the
mandated minimum wage Is carried
to Its m011t absurd extreme.
There Is no wage level too low for
some short-sighted (If not meanspirited) employers to complain
that It will force them to lay off
workers.

approved legislation calling lor
an Increase to $4.55 per hour,
while President Bush proposes a
hike a $4.25 per hour. Both plans
would be phased In aver a
three-year period and would not
become fully effective until1992.
Tbe president's formulation
also Includes a "tralntna wage,"
equivalent to 80 percent of the
minimum wage, which employers could pay workera during
their first alx montha oa the job.
To accommodate .the White
Houae, Conjp'l!lo Included a aimDar pi'IIYIIIon In Its measure but
limited itl duration to fO days.

I

The Issue Is topical because
Congress .and the White House
are rapidly approaching a confrontation over disparate proposala to Increase the mlnlmum
wage tor the first time since the
bellllnllii of 1981, when It wu
ralaad to the current '-1.35 per
hour.
During the alm011t 8% yean
that have ensued, the COlt of
liVing hu IDcreaoed 40 percent
and avera1e hourly ·wqes have
rlaen 36 percent. If tbe mlnlm.u m
wage had been adjusted to
maintain Ita purchuinl power, It
waytqa~~uremlldmumemployment II to pay people IIOtJdlll." · already would be $UO per hour.
Tbll Ill what happetll when
Both houlel or CoJ181'811 have

•

Walters

I

But the "trainlnl wap" llelna
pushed by the Buoh admlnlltratlon and the bualnesa community
bu little or notlllq to do with
tralnlq new workera. It Is,
Instead, a loopbole that would
trtve employer• an excuse for
paytn• sub-minimum Wlll!ll. '

,,

uauy :'Sentinei-Page-3

Cubs rout Mets; Giants edge
Reds 11-8; Dodgers win pair

Imported beef often not tested
WASRINGTON - Shoppers in
supermarket produce sections
' have to think twice before buying
fruit that may be tainted with
unwanted chemicals. Now federal auditors have uncovered a
far more widespread danier In
the meat department.
The top five Importers of meat
to the United States- Argentina,
Australia, Canada, Denmark
and New Zealand- don'talways.
test their beef and pork for drugs
banned In the United States.
Some of the drugs have been
outlawed for healtll reasons.
'J11e Agriculture Department
compounds the danger by using
spotty Inspection methods when
the meat arrives In .the United
States. Customs Service records
show that 163 million pounda of
meat were Imported Into the
United States In 1987 Without the
knowledge of the USDA's Food
Safety Inspection Service.
Whose fault Is It? The USDA
counts on the Customs Service to
tell It when foreign meat arrives,
but that doesn't always happen.
In some ports, Customs officials
accept the promise that the
Importer will voluntarily submit
the meat to USDA Inspection. Fat

t ne

PARIS (UPI) Michael
Chang. fighting cramps as well
as the world's best pl@yer.
,. overcame a two-set deficit Monday to knock top seed Ivan Lend!
out of the $4.5 million French
Open tennis championships.
Chang s·tunned Lendl. 4-6. 4-6.
6-3. 6-3. 6-3. and at 17 years and
three months he Is the younges I
player to reach the quarterfinals
at Roland Garros. Jt marks his
first appearance In the quar lers
of a Grand Slam tournament.
Lend! admitted that playing in
. Chang's condition was "almost
Impossible." and he had nothing
but praise for his young
opponent.
The match lasted four hours
and 38 minutes. and Chang said
he started to cramp as early as
the third set. It wasn't until the
fifth. tro'wever .. that his distress
became obvious.
The entire rilatch was charac·
terlzed by long, hypnotic rallies,
ending as often In an error by one
player as with, a winner by the
other.
Lend! let slip two set points at
5-3 in the first. but Chang needed
six break points to fore~ the ninth
game. Lend!, though, took the set
and followed by winning the
second set by an Identical 6-4
. score.
Lend!. the top ,s eeJ who had
hoped to complete the second leg
of the Grand Slam In Paris.
started making mistakes In the
third set and Chang surprised
him and the crowd by drawing
even.
In the fifth set, Chang walked
in circles to ease. the leg ·cramps
Jnstead of sitting down at the
change of ends. and he began to
hit 'high, soft shots ' to save' his
strength.
"In I he fifth set, the mental
factor was no longer In play,"
Chang said. "I was juat trying to
stay In each point al\d 10 (pr It
when I coulll. At abe llofnt I
thought I could no lonrer J10 on. I
said my prayer and Ute cram,.
went away a little."
Chang used clever tactics to
make up for his lou ol power.
Trailing 15-30 on his serve In the
eilhth game of the last set, he
used an underhand serw'tocatch
Lend! off guard and went on to
aave the came.
·

"If 1 were to play real long

closed the top 10 by tabbing
catcher Charles Johnson of Westwood High School of Fort Pierce,
Fla.
The entire first round took
scarcely 20 minutes and began
only after some consternation
caused by Boise of the Northwest
League. Boise exercised an option to participate, a decision·
that did not affect the early
rounds. Stili. several clubs on the
con,terence call questioned
Boise's move.
Cleveland picked 11th and
chose third baseman-outfielder
Cal Murray of White HighSchool
In Dallas, Houston went with
right-hander Jeff Juden of Salem
(Mass.) High, and Kansas City
grabbed catcher Brent Mayne of
Cal Stale Fullerton.
College players dominated the
second hall of the first round.
accounting for nine of 13 picks.
San Francisco took outfielder
Steve Hosey of Fresno State.
Then came two picks resulting
from last winter's free agent
slgnlngs. The Dodgers, as compensatlon'for' the Yankees' sign~
lng of Steve Sax, 1fent with
right -hander Klkl Jones of Hillsborough High School in Tampa.
Boston. which lost Bruce Hurst to
San Diego, used the Padres' slot
to name outfielder Greg Blosser
of Sarasota (Fla.) High School.
Milwaukee, picking 17th, took
right-hander Cal Eldred of the
University Qf Iowa before Pitts·
burgh and Toronto took the first
two shortstops of the draft. The
Pirates went with Willie Green of
Jones County (Ga.) High School
and the Blue Jays named Eddie
Zosky of Fresno"State.
Cincinlljlll' selected University
of Texas outfielder Scott Bryant,
Detroit tabbed Santa Clara University right -hander Greg Gohr,
and the Dodgers took Fresno
State outfielder Tom Goodwin.
The rest of the round' went this
way: Boston. Maurice Vaughn, a
first baseman from Seton Hall;
Mets. University of Arizona
catcher Alan Zinter; Minnesota,
Texas A&amp;M shortstop Chuck
Knoblauch. and Seattle, righthander Scott Burrell of Hamden
tConn . ~ High. The Mariners used
Oakland's pick for the signing of
Mike Moore.

rallies with Ivan I would have
lost. He would ·move me around
from side to side," Changsaldl "l
think when I do that (surprise
tactics} II makes my opponent
think a little. Sometimes I get
people to miss their second
service. I just tried to do
whatever I could to win as many
points as possible.
"I'm just thankful the lord
brought me through."
As Lend! served on the first
match point, faulting on his first
serve, Chang moved suddenly up
to the service line to receive.
Lend! served another fault and
the four hour. 38 minute match
was over.
Lend! said II was more the
crowd's reaction than Chang's
unorthodox movement that pre·
cipltated the fault.
"What was more disrupting
was the attitude of the public,
since they took a lot of time to
calm down." Lend! said . "As for
the underhand, he had cramps
and probably had problems serving. He was just looking for \fays
to k~p his serve."
Two other players. Haiti's
R01\ald Agenor and ·Soviet Andrei
Chesnokov. also came back from
two sets down to reach the
It's the
quarters.
OIIJII• et·ns
Agenor beat Spanish qualifier
Ntq
... packSergi Bruguera 2-6, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1,
aglld protection
6-2, andChesnokov 4efeated
1br ret&amp;U lnm'll8,
American Jim Courier, 2-6, 3-6,
7-6 (7-3)' 6-2. 7-5.
Qft'loas ,U~AUA~
-"·-"-• :.
Defending champion Mats WI·
ap&amp;l'l;meDta, drug .
lander. lie fourth
ad·
81mpltf!e! ' .
vanced tJ!t¥ut locldetlt to tbf
1.n oonteut, OCIIl·
quarterfiJ*ls,. beat1n1 American
ftDient
In format
Lawson DullCan, 7-5, 6-3, 6-2.
Courier. who ousted firth&amp;DdVW7~
able.
.
seeded compatriot Andre Agassl
In a third round match that ended
Sunday, said he felt the aftereffects of that match.
"I think It was more of an
emotional letdown today, com lng
118
.IJ# sueh a biB win yesterday,"
said Courier, adding that the fact
~
he had to play three days In a row
also might have artected him.
._,
He said be also had a problem
with five-set matcbee.
"I'hls II my third time to play a
- Ja .tueo
fifth set. I've been broken at
I •1 U
four-all every time. That'• just a
_ . _11 , . . _
hurdlelhavetoovercome,'"sald ·
the 18-year-old Floridian.
1---~--.;....---.a

By ROBERT J. MURPHY
Innings. Reliever Terry Leach
UP! Sports Writer
was tagged for eight more runs In
Rookie Dwight Smith had the
four innings .
~tnd of day Monday he used to
With the victory, the Cubs
dream aboui.
Increased their first-place lead In
Smith, subbing for the Injured the Natlonal League Eas 1 to two
Andre Dawson In right field, , games over Montreal, which lost
went 3 for 4 for his first-career to St. Louis, and 2 Y.; games over
three-hit game. leading the Chi· the Mets. who are In town for
cago Cubs to a 15-3 rout over the three more ~ames.
New York Mets.
'
Manager Dave Johnson said
Smith, recalled May l from · his team wol&gt;!d have to shake off
Class AAA Iowa. had a single.
the lopsided defeat.
double and his first major-league
"The Cubs were aggressive
home run. a three-run shot In the with the bat and the way they
first Inning. He also walked and
played In their ballpark," said
scored three runs.
Johnson. whose team beat Chi"This was not just one of the cago three out of four In Shea
biggest games, of my major- Stadium earlier this year.
league career but my whole
The 15-run outburst was the
career." said the 25-year-old.
most by the Cubs since they
who was playing in only his 23rd scored 22 against Houston on
big-league game and is now June 3, 1987. The Mets had not
battipg .348.
allowed that many runs since the
"The Mets were one of the Phlllies beat them 26-7 on June
biggest team's I've always ad- 11. 1985.
mired as a kid. The Cubs were
Elsewhere in the NL. St. Louis
one of the teams I wanted to play nipped Montreal 5-4, San Franwith and be a part of In beating cisco topped Ctnclnnatill-8, San
the Mets one day . r got my wish Diego bombed Houston 10-2, Los
tonight."
Angeles swept a pair from
Smith had a cha'!lce to hit for Atlanta, 7-0 and 5-2 and Pittsthe cycle when he came to bat in burgh and Philadelphia played to
the eighth inning but grounded a 3-3 lie before the game was
out to first.
called by rain after eight innings.
"I wasn't. even thinking·about
Cardinals 5, Expos 4
it until everybody In the dugout
At Montreal, Milt Thompson
started saying, 'Get a triple. Get hit a three-run homer and Tom
a triple.'" Smith said. "It would Brunansky a ·two-run shot to
have been real nice, but as II power St. Louis. Jose · DeLeon,
. turned out, I was real pleased 7-3. scattered three hits over 61·3
with the night I had. "
innings and matched his career
Greg Maddux, 5-5, won his high with 10 strikeouts. John
fourth straight decision. allowing Costello pitched the ninth for his
two runs on four hils In five first save. Bryn Smith, 5·2, took
innings. He was pulled for a the Joss .
pinch-hitter in the fifth as a
Giants 11, Reds 8
precautionary measure after
AI Cincinnati, Scott Garrelts,
taking a groundball orr his left 4-1, yielded seven hits over eight
calf. He Is not expected to miss a innings and S~n Francisco colstart.
lected 15 hits to retake first place.
"It's nice t.o have 15 runs in the NL West. Jose Uribe
behind you," said Maddux. who homered and Kevin Mitchell,
lowered his ERA to 3.09. "You Tracy Jones and Candy Maldocan pitch bad and still wi.n."
, nado each drove In two runs for
Steve Wilson, Pat Perry and
the Giants. Jose Rljo, ·5-2, lasted
Jeff Plco finished for Chicago. only 3 1-3 innings.
which pounded out 13 hils to snap
Padres 10 , Astros 2
the Mets' four-game winning
At Houston, Tony Gwynn went
streak. Mitch Webster had his 4 for 5 and Ed Whitson allowed
third home run In as many games five hits over eight Innings as the
to go with a single. a walk and Padres ended Houston's 10-game
three runs scored.
winning streak. Whitson. 9-2,
David Cone. 3-5, a 20-game notched his seventh straight
winner last season, picked up his victory. walking one and striking
third consecu live loss after being out five. Jack Clark hit his
shelled for seven runs in two-plus seventh ~orner for · San Diego.

Mark Portugal fell to 0·1.
Dodgers 7, Braves 0
lsl1ame
Dodgers 5, Braves 2
2nd game
At Atlanta. Kirk Gibson ripped
a two-run; Inside-the-park homer
and John Shelby added a two-run
shot to lead Los Angeles In the
nightcap. Tim Leary, 4-4, hurled
two-hit ball over three Innings of
relief and Jay Howell notched his
lOth save. The loss went to John
Smeltz. 7-4.
In the first game, rookie
Ramon Martinez, making his
first appearance of the season,
fired a six-hitter for his first
major-league shutout'. Martinez,
1-0, struck outacareer-highelght
- including five In a row- and
walked on!Yfn gaining his first
career ,6mplete game. Pete
Smith slipped to 1-8.

~he

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:-'
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Pom~WC&gt;y-Middleport,

Ohio

Tuesday, June 8, 1989

By The

SkyDome opens; Blue Jays
lose, 5-3; Indians top Angels
- By TOtti WITHERS
UPISpons Writer
The SkyDome In Toronto fea·
lures a retractable roof, a hotel, a
nightclub, and a McDonald's.
And they play baseball there, too.
After much fanfare, baseball's
newest ball park - The SkyDome - opened Monday night
and led by Glenn Bragp' two-run
homer and Gary Sheffield's two
RBI the Milwaukee Brewers
spoiled the Blue Jays debut In
their new nest with a 5-3 vlcfory
over Toronto.
A crowd of 48,378 - the largest
ever to watch a game In Toronto
- saw the Brewers snap Tor&lt;into's three-game winning streak.
Don August, 5-6, worked 5 1·3
Innings for the victory, allowing
two· runs on six hits and three
walks. Dan Plesac pitched the
final 1 2·3 Innings for his 13th
save.
Jimmy Key, 6-4 took the loss.
He allowed five runs on eight hits
while going the distance for the
fourth time this season.
'The facility received praise
from the players and managers.
"We didn't have a complaint
all night. We didn't have anyone
come back to the dugout with a
complaint," said Toronto Man·
ager Clto Gaston. "I think It's a
fair park. We'll have to see what
happens when the roof Is closed,
see If It's a different park."
Milwaukee opened a 1-0 lead In
the first when Paul Molitor
became the first player to collect
a hit and score In the SkyDome.
Molitor led off the game by lining
Key's third pitch to left-center
for a double, went to third on a
sacrifice fly and scored on
Sheffleldts groundout.
Toronto took a 2-1 lead In the
second when Fred McGriff
slugged his 13th homer of the
season, a two-run blast. August
walked George Bell to lead off

SAX SCORES - 8altlmore catcher Mickey to slide ln to score the Yankees' run In the third
Tettleton can't hold onta the ball as It bounces off .Inning of Monday night's game In New York. The
·his helmet, allowing New York Yankee Steve Sax Orioles won 16-3. (UPI)

NBA playoffs resume in Michigan
AUBURN HILLS. Mich. CUP I)
- Byron Scott, the Los Angeles
Lakers guard enjoying the best
playoffs of his career, stained a
hamstring ln practice Monday
and may miss Game 1 of the NBA
final s against the . Detroit
Pistons.
Scott strained his left hamst·
ring going for a rebound. He ls
listed as questionable and will be
examined Tuesday morning to
determine his status for the
. opener df the best-of-seven series
that night.
Scott is averaging 19.6 points in
the playoffs and hlt 57.8 percent
from the floor against Phoenix.
Los Angeles swept Its way Into
the final with 11 straight postseason victories.
The Lakers are seeking a third
straight NBA title. one that
would leave no doubt a bout their
status as one of. the greatest
'teams to play the game.
Detroit, meanwhile. is at·
temp.tlng to avenge It~ loss In last

year's finals and this season
He won't, however, dwell on
posted the best record in the the past.
league to secure the homecourt
"I have already had a chance
advantage throughout the · to deal with all of that," hesaldof
playoffs.
playing ln hls last final. "The
The teams meet at the Palace foremost thing ln my mind ls I
ln Auburn Hills Tuesday night at just want to play well."
9 p.m. EST. Game21sThursday.
The Pistons are determined to
The Lakers have dominated show
last year's seven-game
the decade. They are playing In championship series loss to Los
the final for the eighth time.
having won five crowns. Los Angeles was a fluke. But for
bad breaks they think they
Angeles is coming off back-to· some
would be defending league
back champkmshlps 11987-88). champions.
the first NBA team to repeat
"We were in position towln the
since the 1969 Boston Celtics.
sixth
game and came back to be
Should they win a third straight in position
to win the seventh
title, the Lakers will become only
game,"
sald
Detroit Coach
the third team to accomplish that
Daly. "We could have won
IE&gt;at. The last team was the Chuck
the second game. But the bottom
Celtlcs. who won eight champion- line Is that we didn't and they did
ships In a row from 1959·66.
they are the defending
Thls trip to the finals also and
champions."
,
marks the last lor one of the
"To
be
champions
you
have to
game's greatest players, Ka·
be
good
and
you
have
to
also be
reem Abdul·Jabbar. The42-yeat- lucky," said Detroit's Islab
Tho·
old center Is playing In his 20th mas, whO practiced Tuesday
and final season.
despite a strained right hamst·
ring. "Weweregoodlastyearbut
we were not lucky. Hopefully,
this y.e ar we will be a little more
lucky:"
•
The two teams enter the final
with basically the same rosters
Transadions
from last June. But there are
slight differences and such subMend-,y'!li ~JIOrtli Trii.O!IIlf'llnll!l
BWII' hall
tleties· could prove the
Ro,.,ton - PlllCII'd M't."Ond haliol•mlln
dlfferE&gt;nce.
MIU'I)' liar rru on thr ~.l ·d IO'dlsa hlt&gt;d 11"1:
rt•t·ltiiPd l•ftt... dtot l.uioo Rh.- t•tll fr om
The most · notable change for
l'awhack('( of thl' lntt&gt;rntUioNtl lla«Ut'
Detrolt·ls
Mark Aguirre replac! A..o\.-\ ).
fhk · ~t·o INL) - st_...d plh·hf'r Rid•
Ing
Adrian
Dantley .
Su td lfft• to a twn- )'l'arconlrat.t nlf'nllion

Scoreboard ...
Majors
By UnliPd PrP!is lnlf'riBiklnol
AM ..: RU' AI'Ii LE ,\GU E
East

M' ' L rrt .

Ralllmon•
flt'H'IIUid

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:11 't2 .51'$ 2i '!8 .ttl '

Ro~ton

21 •2'7 .-1111

li h

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!2 l.1 AIUI 10

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Mlhn•u ..•t•

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Yit'!!l l
f ltllft)rniM

3!', 19 .I-Ii! -

Oakland

:IS 20 .liU :l'l 23 -~2 3 '·'.1
30 , .. .:1.'141 5
:!6 :!9 .473 9 1 ~
:!7 31 .-tH HI

Kanlill" Cit y
r~ · 'u'"~

Mln!ll'liota
S••ttllk•
('hlt'lli(O

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sR .an 16

R('S ull~

Ualllmol'l' 15, l'lil'll' York 3
MII""Hulw·r ;), Toronlo :1
But~hln S, Dtot roit '!
'ff'.U li -1, Oll~u,;o 'l

,\'llnll'SOC:l 'l. Oidtland I
K~tn,;w.; nt." !'» , S.t• ~tHk· :I, 13

lnnln~

Tue.ociiiY's GamC~t
Ralllmnn· l~t:hmldi iJ-.1 ) al Nf'll' \ 'ork
rt .aPulnl $--1 ] , 7 : 35 p.m .
Mllwaull•t• (Hipra PH al Tol'flft(O
rnllnaji.'LIII H 11, '7::JS p .m .
U.•stun ( Prk•f' fl..OJ allh&gt;l roll ISc hw~&amp; tM•
ll· OJ , ': ~ ~~~p . m .
'
('hkaa;o ( Pt"tez 3-&amp;) at Tf'~t!tH IBrowo ~ ­
~ ); 11 : 3$ p.m .
Mlni'I" No&amp;a. (t\nder!Win i-3) at Oakland
!Muon' ~I . IO: ns p .m .
Kttu t&amp;.'i City Crlarkr t-Il at ~f'.lllltlf'
r Banldtr. ad ~-11 . 10:15 p.m .
C'll"·t•lmnd (\'f'tt ~·3l at C•l•ornhl
(Pt'lry 1-Dl . 11:35 p.m.
Wt&gt;...!ldiQ'', Gamt'fO
Ballnton' At Nt&gt;W l 'ork, nl,(tll
Mllwauk£'r at Toronlo, nl~
Ru11ton at O.troll , nlpt
Chk~o 1111 Tna.,., nl~
Mlnti'IUlhtal 011kland, ni,M
Han~ City al S..llUk&gt;•.nllbl
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CGia\I'IHJ.tJ, 1t. p.m..
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from Tuuonof
t!\A.o\) .
Mo•no:&amp;~ RPcallt"d plh.:h.-r Br~ I
Glcii'On from llldii&gt;INipoM"' of thl• Am1•tl·
t all M "odalloniAAAt ; ll.'llliJnC"dpltt•ht•r
MIU'k Gdner to lnclaMpollli,
Nt•w \ ' ork CNL) - Plac!f'dlnlf'llk'rTim
Tf'Uff'l on thr IWav dl~~abiPd lilll; (' allt•d
up ll!ftMdrr olt&gt;ff M~IUII~ from Tldf&gt;.
watf'r ollhf'lnlt&gt;r raUonallA'UUC' t•\Ai\ ),
BaskPtball
OrblndO- Namrd Erlr Dt-nnht vldf'()
t:oUt•JV
Aut&gt;eln PI'U)' - ~amt• d Ton.v Collins
II.'IMMW.nt haookt&gt;lhallt·oat·h.
~ Duqlll'lillt; - ·Naunrd RNifl' Ot•\lariW')'
lolinRWII'III'IIIII~hall

l'OiiCh.
Hotkry
N\' I~ lilndt"''!l- Goalk-ndi•r Billy Smith
rtotlrt•d,.... III.Pt"d ll muiU-yto.ar t-onlract
"" .-oaltf' ....... t•oada .
NIIA. Pl~tyoll"
Co ~~Rl'l' FIMh1
lk&gt;!lt~f..'iWt-n
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(O.i roll wtn11 ""if'-N 4·'t)
M~

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Mll.Y 23 - Bet Nil Ill. Cllleal(o II
Mil,)' 27- ()lk&amp;J&amp; ft, Oft roll 1'7
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MQ SJ - o.-t1'911 ~.Cit leap HS
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WI"Mkrn Collff'l'nl'f'
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(Li\ Lalt"11 wllatJ MHIII"tt.f.ll
MIIY 2G - LA l.akt&gt;I'R 12'1, P:hoenb:
May 1?3 - · LA Lallf'r!t 101, Phoenix
Mqy ~ - lA Lakf'rs 110, PhOf'nb:
Ma,v 2!1 - LA L~tkf'n 12'!, PhOPnb;

p.m .
Ju .. 1:1 - Del r-oll at LA Laltprs, t p.m .
x·.fu_. II- Delrvli at LA Lalr;rra, I
p.m .
111-.h II" Ill - lA Lakffllal Dft rok, 3: It

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p.m.

ll •lf _.c ~•r7

American

t.e.,...

BaiU.~ a1 New Y11rk. i:IS p.m .
Mll-uket" a1 Torollllo, '7: 31p.m.

...._IIIDetNII,i:llp.m.

Cillk... at Texu, llrU P,ID.

•••- aa ouu., 11:11 p .m .
11.-- a&amp;J .alu&amp;U., II:M
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New l'I"U Clllcqll. t:•p.m.

I. awi-

LOTS OF NICE PLANT$ TO
CHOOSE FROM
REG. 17.00
$
BEDDING AND VEGETABLES FLATS •••••• 375
lEG. •s.so
$
HANGING BASKETS .............................. 375

a•uo

.....
.... _

..

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

DetreM, 1 p.m .

-

.......III'I! . . . . . . . . . . . .J. . . . . ..

••~-•u-·~·-

t'

TYESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Board of
Public Affairs will meet Tuesday
night ln Syracuse at 7 p.m.
RUTLAND - There will bE&gt; a
public hearing at the Ru .tland
Civic Center on Tuesday at 7p.m.
to discuss plans lor the waste
facilities In Rutland.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held through
Friday from 9-11:30 a.m. at the
Racine First Baptist Church lor
ages two through hlgh school.

HEAnNG A. CODUNG
915-4221
CHISID, 01110

'

'

SYUQISI- "I·J776
;

RACINE
The Morris
Chapel, RaCine-Portland Road,
will be having revival on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7
p.m. There will be special
singing and the Rev. David
Curfman Invites the public.

l

WHERE WAS IT?- Amo!'g Paul Voss's coUectlon of nearly 200
pictures of early Pomeroy Is this one which he has been unable to
Identify or to determine the exact location. Old· timers who mi~ht

UMW program brings economzc awareness
"Good News to the Poor" was
the title Of the program pres·
en ted by Mrs. Ethel Orr and Mrs.
Bennie Landers at the recent
meeting of the Chester United
Methodist Women.
The purpose of the program
was to develop an increasing
appreciation lor the biblical
witness to economic justice and
to challenge United Methodist
Women to become more deeply
involved in working lor economic
justice.

Dear Ann Landen: I was a
battered wife and dldn' t know lt.
I told myself he didn't mean It,
that he had been under a lot of
stress. He had always been
domineering but never violent.
We had four kids, a nice house
and looked 111\:e the perfect
all-American family. We were
married 20 years before he put
me In the hospital.
I had seen battering on
Batterers are portrayed as bullies. This Is not always the case.
Batterers can be ordinary, everyday husbands and fathers, not
monsters or wlld-eyed crazies.
Battered women are simply
wives and mothers who are
trying their darndest to keep
their family together. These men
can be romantic and charming.
They are the world's best con
artists. When the neighbors
would call the pollee, my husband was calm and congenial.
He'd say. In a joking manner,
''See how crazy she Is!" I began
to think that I really was.
The story is always the same.
He says It's his money and his

'':"-~----

'

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

....

_...- -

·---,·----~-- -·--

raises hopes. or crushes th em . It
brings cooperation with others.
or sets people at odds. The
economic policies and practi ces
off this nation are the key in the
creation of a just society .
The scripture re ad was Luke.
chapter four. verses 16-19.
The group sang "Stand Up. '
Stand Up for Jesus" with Betty .
Lou Dean as pianist.
Mrs. Orr read "Happy Are
Those That are Concerned for th e
Poor." and " Help Carry One
Another's Burdens" from th e

Upper Room .
The program closed wlth the
group sa ying the Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer presided
at the business meeting with 11
members present and eight sick ·
and shut -in calls reported.
The picnic will be at the home
of Janet Eblin on July 6 at noon.
The welcome back breakfastln
June 25at 7:45a.m. Amotion was
made and carried that the group
buy the food for the breakfast.
,Egg casserole. fruit. sweet rolls,
juice. and coffee will be served.

stranger would have the nerve to
ask such personal questions, but
it kept happening over and over.
Now when people ask, "What Is
he?" I reply, "He's a human .
being," and walk away . When
someone asks, "Is he adopted?"
I reply, "~re you adopted?" The
clod finally gets the message and
moves on.
We worry about the day when
our son will be old enough to
understand these inquiries.
Please tell your readers how
damaging lt ls lor a chlld to
repeatedly hear that be Is "dif·
ferent." - Colorado Couple
Dear Colorado: You made the
point In a way that I never could.
Thanks, on behalf of all adoptive
parents who are fighting the
same battle. I'm glad you wrote.
IJ alcohol ruininJlyour lijP or rhP
of a loved one? ..Alcoholism:

lif~

Shrine meeting slated
Mary Shrine No. 37. White
Shrin&lt;&gt; of Jerusalem. wlll hold a
regular meeting Frida y. 7:30
p.m .. at the RockSprings Grange
Hall. Potluck re fre shments will
be served.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

••1989, l..- 4nllll'rl•
Tlmn Syndlt!Mr and
Crulon Synd.lrMr

How ro Recogni.e It . How to Deal
With ft. How to Conquer It .. can
turn thinp around. Send a self·
addre~&amp;ed. long bu.sine•a·tize enve·
lope and a check armoneyorder for
$3.65 (thi• include• po•taKe and
hondlin!() to: Alcohol, · c/ o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box I 1562. Chicago,
'''- 6061/.0.562.

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

446 4524

-------- -

: :: .

MH'M-.J.-1
AU. . . . . u.-

OES marrons ro meet.
Past Matrons of Middleport's
Evangeline Chapter 172. Order of
Eastern Star, wilt meet Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., at the home of Bessie
King.

At The Prescription Shop
Prescription Are Our Business!
•Fast Service I Low Prescription Prices
•Quality Prescription Drugs
•Fun Line of Generics Available
. .ost Insurance Carries Accepted

FlEE DEUYEIY IN THE
FOLLOWING AliAS:
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, IRADIIIIY, MINERSVILLE,
RUTlAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W. Yl.
(ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3:00P.M.)

. FilE.DEUVDY ON ALL PIISCIIPnONS '
If YOIIOII'I- A~ RUII, WI
WU IIUVII AIYIIIIJI • M DOll · - 01 A

PIESCIIPnON SHOP
'

_

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

ss.eo••••-·

- · - ·- · - V It•t.·lUGIIL OliO
A - ..&amp;Ill - I I

'-------•COUPONI-------

Economic activity ln the lac·
tory, field, officE', or shop feeds
lammes. and anxieties. It exer·
cises ·talents . or wastes them . Tt

house. If she were a good wile
and mother, there would be no
problem. Because most women
want to be good wives and
mothers they think maybe he's
right, so they try harder and
harder. Things get worse and
worse.
·
There Is no solution for a
battered woman except to get
out. "Where can I go?" you ask.
Look . In the phone book lor a
crlsls line number. CALL! You
can be anonymous. There Is help
for you, legal, financial and
emotional.
I know this letter Is long, Ann.
Maybe you can cut It so It will fit
Into your space. It ls terribly
Important that you get the
message across to these women.
I went through plenty of hell
before I found the courage to
leave.
I am now divorced, graduating
from college this June and
planning to do my doctoral thesis
on domestic violence. I am living
proof that life can get better, but
you must get help. - Ex·
Battered Wile from Sacramento
Dear Ex-Battered Wife Future
Ph. D.: Thanks for a splendid
letter. What you've done with
your life should give others hope
and courage. Bravo!!!!
•
Larissa Lee Long. daughter of
Dear Ann Lander8: These days
Roy and Maida Long. Pomeroy. many couples are adopting ml·
has received an Ohio University norlty babies. Of course, these
Dean's Scholarship in sports little ones do not reseJTlble their
medicine .
adoptive parents. The problem I
·
Long. with a 3.R accumlative am writing about needs the
grade point average. was · exposure that your column can
awarded the scholarship by the give.
University Scholarship Commit·
My husband and I adopted a
tee in recognition of her high Korean child. It doesn't matter Jf
academ lc a chlevement and dem- we are In a supermarket, shoponstrated talent.
ping mall or on the street- total
As a scholarship recipient. strangers come right up to us and
Long ls req~ired to earn al least say, "Oh, how cute. Is he
16 hours per quarter and main- adopted?" Or, worse yet, "What
tain a grade point average of 3.0 Is he?l'
At first I was shocked that a
or above.

SUPER SUMMER SA~IN8SI
·sHORTS SBS. TANK TOPS
LADIES SUITS
RACINE DEPAnMENT STOlE

The program noted that eco·
nomic life raises important social and moral questions foreacn
person and society as a whole.
Like famUy life, economic life is
one of the chief areas where faith
is lived out . love of neighbors is
expressed . temptation In con·
fronted, God' s design Is fulfllled.
· and holiness Is achieved·.

Only solution for battered women: get out

LonR to receit. e
dean :r .rcholar.rhip

POMEROY -The bi-monthly
meeting of the public employees
retirees wlll meet at 1 p.m. on
RUTLAND - There will be a Thursday at the Senior Citizens
public hearing at the Rutland Center in Pomeroy . The guest
· ClvlcCenteronTuesdayat7p.m. speakers will be Scott Lucas,
to discuss plans for the waste administrator at Veterans Memfacilities ln Rutland.
orial Hospital, Dick Huffer, extended care administrator of
The Ladles Auxlllary of the VMH, Mark Murphey, admlnls·
f'ratE&gt;rnal Order ol Eagles 2171, trstor at Overbrook Center in
wlU meet Tuesday at 8 P·!ll· Middleport, and Bill Bias, admln·
Members are asked to .b ring 11. lstrator of Americare-Pomeroy.
covered dish for the potluck.
POMEROY - The Trinity
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- Church of Pomeroy will spo1110r
port Alzhelmers Support Group an Ice cream social on Thursday
will meet Tuesday at 3 p.m. at from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., and
Overbrook Center. The public ls Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
llivlted to attend.
Elllht flavors of Ice cream,
sandwiches, desaerts, chicken
POMEROY - The Explorer and noodles, potato Iliad, cole ·
Post of the MelliS County She- slaw, and baked beans will be
riff's Department will meet available. To order quarts of Ice
Tuelday at 4 p.m. ln the Common cream call 992-3222, 992·3777, or
Pleas Court Room. Anyone Inter· 992·54811.

recognize the picture and be able to provide the lnfonnallon are
asked to call Ed Voss, Welchtown Hlll, Minersville.

•

rv.

MIDDLEPORT- The regular
meeting of the Middleport Lodge
363 F and AM will be Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be
served following the meeting.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Pomeroy Lodge 164 will hold It's
regular meeting at the Middleport Temple on Wednesday at
7:30p.m. All master masons are
welcome and refreshments wlll
be served.

RACINE. - Vacation Bible
School wlll be held at the Racine
United ME&gt;thodlst Church. on
through Friday from 9·11 a.m.
dally. All children preschool
through junior high are welcome.

BeiiOM Ia oll'eriDf a REE ELECTRONIC HEARING TEST.

I

ested in jolnlngtbeExplOrerPost
Is welcome.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Alcoholics Anonymous and AI·
Anon will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at theSacredHeartCathollc
Church,

tMy hr I . . Ill. . 11ST. (-hi wftlt CI.IR for ted.
Cll Ttl F,.. NUitllar 1-100·614·5265 fw ~1At:a6111 11alllt.-t

HDIAID'S

helps If you visually explore
businesses betore you stand
aimlessly lor a half hour or so to
see If in some secluded spot,
there Is a llttlesign which advises
you to take a number. Ifyou'reon
your toes and the peoplP ahead or
you don't have big problems you
can reduce the waiting game
time simply by taking a number.
Of course, we are a rural area
and not too many ol our businesses go for this take a number
system. This leaves you on the
honor system and thls, too, can
be disastrous . Like at the barber
shop or at the gas s tatlon. lf
you're not too swift you can
easily lose track of your turn.
Heaven help you. If you erroneously move ln out oft urn. There's
no forgiving. You, my friend.
have committed a cardinal sin,
When you realize your mistake,
- and someone will manage to
point it out to you and probably
not too polltely- you make you~
exit feeling as though you de·
serve to be on death row.
Of cour~. lf you're not biologically equipped to hand)e the
waiting game in the first place,
lift&gt; is going to be tough because
no matter what the clrcumstan·
ces. chances are you'rE&gt; automatIcally in the game. Perhaps.
you'll get lucky and through
some miracle a biological adjus't·
mE&gt;nt will come forth to enable
you to better handle the game.
There are exceptions to a II
rules and these exceptions are
disturbing to our programmed
waiting game attitude. I mean,
what do you do If suddenly you
find there's no line and no
waiting? Rest assured that It will
happen and always just at a time
when you really . need a little
waiting time to make that final
decision on the business at hand.
Personally, I'm happy to be
among the multitudes which play
the game, day in and day out.
And do you know what I'm
waiting lor? For you to keep
smlllng. of ·c ourse.

RUTLAND- The Zion Church
of Christ Is having a two week
Vacation Bible School each
morning from 9-11:30 a.m.
through June 16 lor ~ges two
through high school.

SYRACUSE - The Board of
PubliC Affairs wlll meet Tuesday
night In Syracuse at 7 p.m.

WAINER

"Beltone had the
answer to
my bearing
problem ... flnd out
U they can
help you too!"

Page-5

Community calendar

DL JOliN H. .alWAY'S OFFKE
224 WIIIAII- FMIOY
11111SDAY, ... I
9100 A.M. TO 12100 NOON
UMWA Are UAW FIOVIDEI
S. t.b EM1 Altlrt't .... - tltlt tilt IIIIa• Haarilltl AW s,nltllt

4

.... - ..•• ••- ..... 7,111 ....
._........_aiOael..aLI:IIp.m.

LA Laknul

Soccer
The Albany Capitals look over
first place In the American
Soccer League with two shutouts
over the weekend.

UTSALE

. . . . . . . . . . .W.III, ':• ,.m.

NBAP1_.,

By BOP HOEFLICH
You walt to be born and you
walt to dle.
And between
those two events
Is a heck of a lot
of waiting time.
In thIs age of
state-of·the art
equipment and
space travel. we
still cling to age-old walling
game- In fact. life Is a walling
game. It's like the common cold.
I'm afraid -It's hE&gt;re to stay.
You walt for your spouse; you
walt for your friend; you walt lor
your boss; you walt for the dog;
you walt for traffic; you walt In
the grocery; the bank; the
doctor's office; the dry goods
store; and you walt for a cha11ge
In the weather. a change of the
seasons. quit ling time, vacation,
pay day, and lor ships that never
come ln.
There ls an endless list of
categories in the walling game,
to say the least.
Remember whE&gt;n you used to
walt for thE&gt; mailman because
that's how your ship was com.lng
in? The odds are a little better .
now - the mall person still ls
right ln there as you anticipate
that word of great rewards out of
the blue but you now have
additional prospects like the
lottery to roll you ln wads of
monE&gt;y which. as we all know.
brings much. much happiness.
I know I don't have to tell youbecause you're a veteran walter
- that there are many kinds of
walling. There's the standing In
the llne walling; thE&gt; sitting down
walling; the worry walling and
this can be done ln any physical
position; the service station and
service man walling and waiting
ln general which covers a multi·
tude of time spans.
Don't be discouraged though.
Some businesses do know that
life Is a waiting g;~meand they're
trying to help you through this
with a take a number system . It

~~fivt

-Sports briefs-

Tuesday, June 6, 1989

•

Playing the waiting
game: life and death

EDDIE ALBERT FOR BELTONE

....... fllillb. - c.llep Wartd ~~~­

IIIJ':........... Pll*delpllla, ltlllll

' ' 1M AI-M Atlolllo, ol...

Swimming lessons
now available

.Jullt' i - lA Laker11 .. Dtotroit, I p .m.
.lu•lt - lA Lakerl al !Htrol, I p.m .
.Ju• It - DeeroU al LA Lakcrs, S::ta

..........._. ,:.... .

,1......

N.,. Y11rk .. Cllileap
8.. Praad~N a&amp; Qsrla.IL

118
IS
117
117

BELMONT, N.Y. (UPI) Sunday Silence came from off the
pace to win the Kentucky Derby
and Preakness Stakes, but
trainer Charlie Whittingham Is
prepared to let hhh try to
complete his Triple Crown sweep
Saturday by running on the lead
of the Belmont.
Whittingham may have no
choice.
The probable field of 10 3-yearokls for the mile-and-a-half classic Is without a speed demon or
rabbit to set the pace.
Six of the horses are classic
late-closers. A seventh, Le Voyageur, ls a question mark; shipping Tuesllay from Europe, the
colt has just one victory and a
bunch of off-the-board finishes In
six career races · of minor
Importance.
The rest - Sunday Silence,
Easy Goer and Triple Buck- are
what modern trainers call "tacll·
cal speed horses." That means
they have tbespeedtorunnearor
on the front but the patience to
save it for a strategic move from
mid-pack. ·Of the three, Sunday
Interested individuals may Silence appears to be the fastest.
"He's easy to rate," Whit·
sign up for summer swimming
lessons at the Middleport Munlcl· tlngham said Monday, "but It
pal Pool untll Friday.
looks like he's got the most speed
The pool Is open from noon to 5 In the race. He can go (the first
p.m . dally . Classes offered were quarter and half mile) ln: 21 and
beginner. advanced beginner, :44. but I don't want him doing
Intermediate and swimmer 1Ad· that going a distance of a
vanced Session I - Basic Llle· mile-and-a-half.
saving and Water Safety, and ·
"A good many horses have won
Session 11 - Advanced Lifesav- this race on the lead," Whit·
ing and Water Safety).
tingham added, explaining why
Cornell new Instructor
he wouldn't be upset If jockey Pat
Scott E. Cornell of Athens, a Valenzuela took Sunday Silence
student at Ohio State University to the front out of the gate.
and a member of the Ohio State "Secretariat was right up there
water polo team. was named the from the start."
head lifeguard and swimming
So W!!re Conquistador Clelo In
instructor at the pool. Assisting 1982, Swale In 1984 and Danzig
Cornell wlth lifeguard dulles and Cpnnectlon In 1986.
lessons ·will be Chris Becker,
"Off! he papers, I don'tsee any
Amy Epple, Tommy Lane. Elise other pacesetter (besides SunMPier. Amy Rouse and · Tracl day Silence) off-hand," Whit·
Wolfe.
tlngham said, "but Y.OU never

;I

Be~d

Beat of the Bend

and McGriff drllled the next
improved to 9-1 and Baltimore
pitch over the 375-foot mark in took advantage of six errors to
lert-center.
score 12 unearned runs In posting
Milwaukee evened the score In their eighth victory In a row.
the third on Yount's sacrifice Oy. Steve Finley belted a grand slam
The Brewers' took a 4·2lead in andMlckeyTettletoncrackedhls
the fourth on Braggs'lOth homer. ·-14th home run for Baltimore.
Rob Deer singled and Braggs which needed only nine hits.
drove Key's 1·2 pitch over the
Reel Sox 5, Tlpn %.
left-field fence.
"
At Detroit, Mike Greenwell
Mllwaukee stretched Its mar· rocketed a 460-foot home .run In
gin to 5-2 in lheflfthonSbeffleld's the flrst'lnnlngand drove In three
RBI sln111e.
runs to help Roger Oemena, 6-4,
Toronto starter Jl~my Key win for the first time In four
said the park reminded him of . starts, spolllng the return of
Kansas City's Royals Stadium, Tigers Manager Sparky Ander·
but wasn't that different from son. The victory broke a tbreeExhibition Stadium.
ll&amp;me Boston losing streak and
"It's artificial turf, so balls on extended Detrolfs losing streak
the ground are going to be the to five games.
·
same," Key said. "Balls In the
Raaprs 4, Wblte Sox !
air are going to he more forgivAt Arllnlll~n. Texas. triples by
Ing. They hit some balls tonight Julio Franco and Ruben Sierra
'that would he out of Exhibition produced two runs to lilt
Stadium."
Ran11ers. Bobby Witt Improved
"It's a very fair park," said to 5·5 and Jeff Russell recorded
Milwaukee Manager Tom Tre- his 11th save. Greg Hibbard, Il-l,
belhorn. "If you make a mistake lost In his second major-league
It's going to get out. If you don't start.
quite get all of·the ball, It won't."
Twins %, Albletlcs 1
'This Is probably one of the
At Oakland, AI Newman dell·
most unreal facilities," Braggs vered a two-run single and
said. "It has everything, McDo- Francisco Oliveras, making only
nald's, give me a break."
his fourth major-league start,
Elsewhere In the· American scattered six bits over 7 2-3
League, Baltimore pounded New Innings to lift Minnesota. OliveYork 16·3, Boston stopped Detroit ras Improved to 3-:b. Jeff Reardon
5-2, Texu ·e dged Chicago 4·2, earned his ninth save. Oakland
Minnesota nipped pal\land 2-1. starter Curt Young, 2·5, pitched a
Cleveland topped California 7·3;
complete game.
·
and Kansas City downed Seattle .
IDdlaaa 7, Anre.. 3
5-3 In 13 innings.
At Anaheim, Calif., Bud Black
In the National League,lt was:
fired a slx·hltter lind Cory Snyder
Los Angeles 7-0 and 5-2 over hit a three- run home run to a
Atlanta In a double-header; St. 12-hlt Cleveland attack. Black
Louis 5, Montreal 4; San FFran- Improved to 5·6. Mike Witt, 3-6,
clsco 11. Clnclnnatl8; Cblcago15, was shelled for seven runs and
New York 3; San Diego 10, seven hits - Including three
Houston 2; and Pittsburgh 3, home runs -In 41-3lnlnniiS and
Philadelphia 3, called by rain has now yielded 15 homers In 81
after 8 Innings.
2-3 Innings.
·
Orioles 16, Yankees 3
Royals S, MariDers 3
At New York. Jeff Ballard 13 lnnlap
At Seattle. Matt Winters and
Mike Macfarlane stroked runscoring sl ngles In the top of the
13th Inning and Tom Gordon, 6-2,
threw three lnnlniiS of shutout
relief. Tom Nledenfuer, 0-2, took
know what's going to happen the loss.
when they open the gate. They
might all go to the front, and then
It gets occupied."
Shug McGaughey. trainer of
Derby-Preakness runner-up
Easy Goer. also expects Sunday
Silence to take the lead, but says
there's a chance Easy Goer will
do so Instead.
"I don't really want to be on the
lead," McGaughey said, "but If
he happens to Inherit It from
Sunday Silence, that would be OK
too.,.
Asked If he thought Sunday
Silence would be tougher to beat
on the lead, McGaughey shook
his head.
"What people forget Is It's not
whether you're on the lead that
IDataiiA
matters," he said. "It's how fast
BeD 711AC Ceatral
he'J going that's Important."
Air Coadltloner
The trainers Of the late-ciQ~;ers
have said they're worried that
Sunday Silence will set such a
V' 12 S.E.E.R.
slow early pace that no one will
V' TOP EFFICIENCY
be able to catch him, but
McGaughey doesn't sharE&gt; their
V' GREATER ENERGY
concern.
SAVINGS
"He ain't going (the first half
mlle) In :50 or: 51," McGaughey
V'WYEARCOMP~R
said. •'If he does, he won't be on
WARRANTY
the lead: If he goes :50 or: 51, he'll
be about fifth."
The 712AC is ReD's most
Billy Badgett, trainer of late·
powerful, III05t efficient cebtral ai'
closing Fire Maker, the probable
third choice, hopes McGaughey
conditionet It will keep )'OW' family
Is right.
comfortable and give you yean ci
"It Sunday Silence goes to the
enet1IY savinQs.
lead and slows It down, It's going
,to make It tough on all the horses
-:---.___ I '
that come from behind," Badgett
-,..- .
said. "l'dhatetoseesomeoneget
: 49."

Sunday Silence may be
forced to iake Belmont lead

NBA. Fl~~~aiM
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$

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l&gt;lan FrandM.'O
Clndnnall
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·-

The Daily Sentinel

992-6669
271 North
Second

MWdleport,
Oha.

�..

.... ........... . . . . .. __ .,.,., . ..... . .
' ~-.

Paga 6-The Daily Sa ltiuel

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'

Video Review
.·

all m'e mbers.
The civic committee reported
that the nowers had been planted
In the Memoria l Park In lower
Rutland .
Mrs. Woodard, Neva Nicholson, Pearl Canaday, Stella At·
klns, Ruby Diehl. Ann Elizabeth
Turner, Brenda Diehl, Pauline
Atkins. and Mrs. Denison all
attended thE' &lt;'Ouny meeting In
Pomeroy.
A letter was read from the
Rutland Fire Department asking

"There Isn't rope enough."
It has a cute aud very promls·
' a
Recently l was asked by
lng premise. Hero goes out for
friend of mine how one goes revenge on a major league crook
about becoming a video critic or by the name of Mr. Big who has
as they call us a video journalist. ' sold his brother so many gold
I told her that you just have to sit chains that he has died of 0 G or
through movies and tell what you over-gold. For the un-Informed
think of them, carefully editing that Is whe11 you get so many gold
your responses so that you .don't chains that you not only look like
end up losing your audience or a refugee from nrrany's but you
becoming the next thing to an alto end up crushed under the
educated Idiot. Sometimes It can weight. Did I mention that this Is
be a lot- of fun wllen you get a a comedy? Actually you could
chance to.aee a really great tum.
call this a satire, because that Is
But then there Is one like the what the writer, Keenan Ivory
subject of our current offering.
Wayans, set out to do.
What can I say about a film
I'M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA
called I'M GONNA GIT YOU Is supposed to be a spoof of the
SUCKA that can do It justice. To 70's Black Action tllms such as
quote from Ambrose Bierce; Shaft and Superfiy but ends up

the club to participate In the
fourth of July celebration.
Pauline Atkins and Mrs. Nl·
cholson had arra ngeme nts made
with Irises.
·
For th e program, Stella Atkins
r ead an article entitled "Container Gardening for Low Main·
tenance" which stated that If
time and space are limited one
should try container gardening.
Special containers can be purchased that are designed with a
self watering system, wick, and
one gallon water resevoir.

reminding you of such ham·
handed and bizarre fare as Plan
Nine From Outer Space. It dies a
slow and painful joke's death. It
could have been funny and witty
and charming and every tiny bit
of a great movie but for some odd
undefinable reason It dUcks clown
In a corner and dies of shyness
and ODJ or overdone jokes.
Allow me to give you a sample.
Two thugs vlctlmzlng the hero's
mother and glr Ifrlend are told
that they have a choice between
the stairs and the window and so
!bey fall down them. Funny the
first time but when It Is trotted
out a few minutes later It starts
showing Its age but after about
four times It becomes ready for
social security.

--~--B

Know God."
Vacation Bible School will be
held June 12·16, from 9 a .m . to
noou. at the Middleport First
Baptist Church. 6th and Palmer
Streets. All . children are
welcome.

The Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be having Vacation Bible
Vacation Bible School will beat
School the week of June 25-29, the Silver Run Baptist Church
from 6: 30-8: 30 p.m. The theme Is from June 19-23 from 6·8 p.m. The
' ," Jesus, Joy Forever. " Ali child· Sliver Run Baptist Church Is
ren of the area, klndergarden located ln'Cheshlre.
through 12th grade, are Invited io
attend. There will be clowns. ·
The Racine First Baptist
refreshments, crafts, fellowship. Church will be having evangeline
fun. and Bible lessons everyday. revival meetings from June
11-15 at 7:30p.m . There will be
The Middleport First BapUst Bible study each morning at 10
Church will be having Vacation a.m. The evangelist will be Dr.
Bible School June 12-16 from 9 James Pennington from Chara.m. to noon. The theme will be lotte. N.C.
"Sonseeker Safari, S!'archlng to

$ io

--People in the news-By WILLIAM C. TRO'M'
United Press Inlernatloaal
MAN OF THE. WHITE
· HOUSE: Humorist Roy Blount
,Jr. says he took a tour of the
White House as part of his
research for his first novel,
"First Hubby," the story the
country's first woman president
and her husband. " I dldn' t like
the White House very much."
Blount said at the American
· Booksellers Association conven·
lion In Washington. "For one
thing, the thing was fuU of
pictures of Ronald Reagan, lots
of pictures of Ronald Reagan."
MAN OF THE WHITE
HOUSE, PART 2: Maybe Rosa·
lynn Carter has read ari advance
copy of Roy Blount Jr.'s book.
She spoke Sunday to the graduates of The Oakland School In
Pittsburgh and told them, "Don't
set any llmlts,on yourself. Maybe
one of you will be pn!slden t some
day ... Maybe one of yqu will be
first lady. Or. maybe one of you
young men will be tint spouse."
Mrs. Carter's nephew, Kevin
CllriRopher Smlflt. was one of
the 19 students graduaUng from
" the private achool.
STUDY OF THE DEAD: The
College of Musical Knowledge
m lght be lntereated to learn that
the UnJYerlllty ot Nol1b Carolina
at Greeuboro II ofterlnc a atucly
ot Deadttldl, tile loyal, t1e dyed
ot tile Gratdll Dead.
'

I

*'IIIII•
. Socii*IJ

piU•IOI' .... lila

· Post meeting sec ,
The Explorer Poat or the MeJas
Count)'~ Department will
meet 'nl••lf at ~ p.m. In the

Coll'tlllan PlJU Court Room.
_..., ~ Ia jointna tbe
. . . . ~t .I I. welcomecl 10

Adams, 36, has concluded that
Deadheads are an American
subculture worthy of research
and study . Her summer students
will have three weeks of classroom work and then board a bus
to follow the Grateful Dead to
eight concerts. Afterward they
will write papers on their obser·
vatlons of the Deadheads. Stu·
dents will have Inspiration In
knowing that their work Will not
go unnoticed. "The group's publl·
clst has assured me he and Jerry
Garela (the Dead's lead guila·
rlst) will read !be five best
papers of the class," she said.
Adams Insists her course Is not
just an opportunity for students
to get a grade while listening to
rock 'n' roll. "I'm Interested In
the Deadheads, not the Dead,"
she said. "How do their beliefs
and their values and the rules
they live by dltter from the
mainstream American
culture?''
ROONEY TVNE FOR VIC·
TIM: Mlell:e, Be DMJ's thoughts
are with tbe )'OUDII woman wbo II
recoverlag from a savage gang
attack In New York's Central
Park In April. Rooney. who has a
variety show on tour with Dou.ld
O'Collller, II helpln&amp; ralae money
for her truat fun and Is as kin&amp; hill
collequea to do the same.

The Melli County Cooperative
Parltdl,1lfOmdor St., Pomeroy,
wllllpOIIIOI' free clothing days on
'l'uftdalr, Wednesday and Thunday tram 9:30a.m. 10 3 p.m. each
day. A good ielectlon or men's,
women'a and chlldrea'a clothlnc
11 available. For more lntorma·

Does this rum bave anything
good about It to $ave II ftom the
pUe of mediocre movies that It

aeema to be headed for? Actu·

· ally, Ye•, It does. A sparldy and
catchy theme song and a marve·
loua bit of acting on the part of
Bernie Casey who plays an
old-style hero who recruits one of
the roughest looklne band of
crime fl&amp;hters to rid the city of
Anygbetto, USA or the sinister
acourge or Mr. Big.
I'M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA
runs for 89 minutes and sports an
R ratin&amp; tor language. It Is a good
movie but It could have been
better.
Next month, lYe' II take a look at
a new slasher movie from Roger
Corman.

4

'·

.

The bi-monthly meeting ofthe
public employees retirees will
meet at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy.
The guest speakers will be
Scott Lucas. administrator of
Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Dick Huffer. extended care admlnlstrator or Veterans Memorlal Hospital: Mark Murphey .
administrator of the Overbrook
Center Inc .. Middleport; and Bill
Bias. administrator of the
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
Center.
.
Virgil Brown. pres1dent of
PERI, urges members and gu ests to attend.

Racine revival set
Morris Chapel Church, Racine,
wlll have revival services on
Thursday . Friday and Saturday
with Rev. David Curfman. The
church Is located on RacinePortland Road, County Road 35.
Services will start at 7 p.m. each
evening. Everyone welcome.

Group accepting
ice cream orders
The R .L.D.S. youth group will
be taking homemade Ice cream
orders. To order call 949-2805.
The price Is $2.50 per quart and
flavors available are strawberry, orange,lemon. pineapple,
banana, vanilla, and chocolate.
All proceeds will go toward
church Improvements.

Mcl..aughlins visit
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
McLaughlin have returned from
St. Clairsville where they went
especially to attend the gradua·
tlon of their grandson. Robbie
Howells, from St. Qalrsvtlle
High School. He plans to enter
Ohio State University In the fall,
attending under a ROTC scholarship. Returning to Pomeroy with
the McLaughlins for a two week
vi.s ll was Kacy Howells.

Employee honored
Meigs County's Naomi Lowe
who Is employed as a switchboard operator at O'Bieness
Hospital. Athens, was given a
special commendation at lhe
recent annual meeting of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency MedIcal Servces. Inc. held at the
Quality Inn in Nelsonville.
She along with Neal Cooper. of
Oak Hill, were given the commendations for actions taken In
giving emergency telephone In·
structions In CPR to the family of
a heart ·attack victim while the
ambulance was enroute to the
site.

DAR to meet
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter Daughters of the Amerl·
can Revolution will meet Friday
at 6 p.m. at the Hackett cabin in
Long Bottom. The program will
be pn!sented by Mrs. John·Rose.
Hostesses will be Mrs. George
·Hackett Jr., Mrs. Robert Ashley,
Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mrs. Law·
renee Smith, and Mrs. Linda
Patterson.. Guests 'may be
Invited.
· ·

- Patient

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY a A;M, to S P.M.
a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Ma ternal grandparents are
Charles and Betty Spaun, Ra·
elm:&lt;. Paternal grand1&gt;3rents are
Frank and Lora Mae Imboden.
Syracuse.
Za~ hery received many gifts
from his grandparents. other
relatives, and friends.

•Adl outtide Meig~ , G.tlia or M•ton counties m1.1st be pr•
pol d.
•Receive t .IO discount for 1dl pild ir. 1d\ltnce.
•Free .ds - Gfve~ M'ld Fot~nd 1ds und•11wordl will be
run 3 d1uet no chwge.
•Price olld. for all C:IPitel IIUtn is dot~ble price of 1d cost.
•7 point line type only uMd.
•s.,.tiftel Is not ,..ponsible tor •rOfl after first diJtl . (Chedt
for errors fint dl¥ ad rt~nl in ptper) . Cell before 2 :00p.m.
d~tt aft• publlcMion to mike correction .
•Ad• ttwl mu.t be p11id In advlnCIIatll
Ctrd of Thtnkli
Happy Adl
In Memorlem
Y•d S.J•

'

•

slons. i!'he wor kshops range from
developing assertive behavior to
understanding barriers to good
liste ning.
The 4-Her's will also hold a
debate June 16 In the House of
Representatives ' chambers In
the Ohio Statehouse on whether
Ohio High schoolers should pass
a competency examination to
graduate ..
Congress' re creation opportunltlt es include tours of Columbus
and the Ohio State Unlversll y
campus. a 1 barbecue and a
concert by the Ohio State Pep
Band. The teens will also visit·the
"Son of Heaven" Imperial Arts
of Chln,a exhibit In Columbus arid
a show at the Ohio Theater.
While In Columbus. the4-Her 's
will stay at Ohio State dormitories and use campus facilities .

Hymn sing slated
The Hazel Community Church
will be having a hymn sing on
Saturday featuring the "Free
Gospel Singers" and guest
speaker Sammy Anderson.

Auxiliary to meet
The Ladles Auxiliary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles 2171'
will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m .
Members are asked to bring a
covered dish for the potluck.

. Weekend visitors of Ernma
Fox were here son, the Rev.
Robert W. Miller, hlilwlfe, Mary,
and son. Scott, of Columbus. A11o
visltin&amp; waa Mrs: Fox's daughter, Ruth Douglas of Guysville.

·

Point Plea""'t

Now AntlaNt With Appointmatta
Jane 1811

'11 Help Wanted

..... "Gallipolis..........
&amp; Vicinity

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 ,00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
- 2:00P.M . TUESDAY
- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2 o00 P.M. THURSDAY
- 2 o00 P.M. FRIOAY

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
M411gs County
1\ree Code 814

Muon Co .• WV
Are• Code 304

4•8- Gtlllpq,lit

992- Middleport

876-Pt. Pl•uant

388- VInton
241- AIO Grande
211-Guytn Ditt.
143-llrtblt Oitt.

Pom•oY
8815- Ch•ter
e•3-Portllnd
247- Lettrt Ftllt
949 - Recine

468-Leon .
67&amp;-Apple Grove

'3 67- Ch•hire

n3-Meton
882- New Heven
895- letart
937- Buffslo

742 - Rutl.,.d
687- CootvMie

379 - Wtlnut

Get Reeulte faet
1

J&amp;l

$33.00

Announcements

-

$7 ,00

$10 ,00
$16 .00
$26 .00

$60 .00

Gas
~antral Air

6- Lott and Found
7- V•d Stls (ptid lA ednn~;:e)
8- Public Stfe &amp; Auction
9- Wtnted to Buv

58 - Pett lor S.ht

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING
SYIACUSE
101 CUNNIIIGIIAII-Ow992·2621 or 9CJ2-6944

Fmn Supplies
&amp; L1veslock

1 1 - HelD Wtntlld
12- Siluatlon Wsnted

13- lnturance

61 62636465-

14 - Bt~tinlllt

Trsining
15- Schools &amp; Instruction
16- Atdio, TV a. CB Re,,.ir

17- Misc..tanaout

Farm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
livetloch
Hty &amp; Grtin
Seed &amp; Fertilizer

'WoRD .

PROCESSING
TYPEWRITER

Re~l
31 3233343536-

Sale
72 - Tr llcks for Stle
73 - Vana &amp; 4 WO 'a
74- Motorcycl•
7&amp;- Botts &amp; Motors for Stle
78- Auto Ptrts &amp; Acc•IOfi•
77 ~- Auto Repair
78- Camping Equipment
'
79- Campera • Motor H~mM

Homet lor Sele
Mobile Hom" for Sele
Farms tor Sale
Butln•• Building_•
Lou &amp;: Acreage
Real Estlte Wanted

1;®18111

D

•.,.......,t W!Mows
t.ulatian
St- hors &amp;

•wn

'-•-ws
W...

FREE ESTIMATES

Call992-2772

949-2168

FREE ESTIM~TES

5-25-'19-1 mo.

'M
..

We can repair and r•·
,.... radiators and
hlatl!' cort1. We can
aha acid bail and rod
aut radiators. Wt alta
rtpOir Gal Tanlts.

,,.,

CIIESIEI, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

RESI0£11TIAl

"At Rtosonable Pricts"

toCUITOM ICITCHENI. IATHI

PH.949-2801
or le1. 949-2860

•£XTENIIYE REMODEI..INQ
•VINYLIIDING • .,_OOFINO

.UETAL IUK.OtNOI
eN!W HOMES
SINCE 1969

992·7611

Ohio

5-25-'19·1111

1-13·11•

Far HI!ALTH

•VINYL StDlN9
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

INSURAIICI call:

JEFFERY J. WARNER
REPIESENU11YE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

S02 W. 2nd StrHI
,._..,, Ohio

ur.•

.g.

Ph. 6 14-992·S479~~
614-992-2477
Claims:
1-I00-421·3S3S

....... llult
"FrH E1tlmet•"

NO SUNDAYCAUS
·1 .

:::='

~ ••11 ~IIW:f t1 till~.

5-4·19·1 mo.

etAURDADC
fll Jll·

6 -4·89-1 mo.

SWEEPER REPAIR

I
I
I

I

BINGO

POMEIOY .OGLES

CLUI

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976

I THUIS. E.L 6:45 p.M.
U. h45 P.M.
I •SUN.DOOI
PIIZE

MODELS

MAlliN'S
FUINITUIE
and MOlE

222 East ...n

POMEROY, OH.
CJ92-6172
6-5-'19·1 mo.

I

I
I
I

1

1

. ~~~
e&amp;~~enh
Our experienced rapid growth of the
area's ne'\Yest Skilled Long Term Care ·
Facility has created real opportunity
for RN'S, LPN'S and NURSING
ASSISTANTS ·co become a part of a
responsive, well managed health care
delivery team.
Come visit, talk to us about your
experience, and let us show you that
riot all Nursing Homes are alike.
Stop by .for an interview or phone
Nancy VanMeter at (614) 992-6472.

THE CENTRAL TRIBI'C0\18\NY
Ill PAll Sibil
.DIUPOII, 0110
Hl-6472

EO£

Rt. 124,

I

·'- '

,

A Great Combination. "Quality and Reasonable Prices"~
WE GO THE EXTRA MILE.....
992·6810

I
I

1

EAGU RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Til-COUNTY
IE CYCLING

YAIGMAN MOWDS
ECHO SAWS &amp; - I S
OIEGOH IAIS, CIWNS

,......

RYAN SIIVICE CENTEI

Paying today
May .~31, 1989

HOURS: Mon. -Fri. 9· 7
Sol. 9·11

C~t to

949-2969

SPREAD

DIIT HAUUD
CJCJ2-5275

Mott Forelgn .•nd
Oom.-tic Vehid•
A/ C Service
All Mtior • Minor
AepPt
NIASE C_.Hied Machtnic

Clll 992·6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
C«tlfllld Licented Shop

5-17·1111

COUNTRY
MOIII.J
HOME PAll
•MobiJe HOm.'.

Pen.

··Mobile Hilme
Rentale
•Lot Rental•

1·21·'81-tln

"orth

1-U·'It-1111

CllAN ~ 'IMINIIM
SIIETS ................... S2' Ill.
CllAN ALUMINUM
CAST ....................... 40&lt; Ill.

ALUIIINUM
RVIUGI CANS ..... SO&lt; til.
IIONY
SIIET ............. 5&lt; td 30&lt; ..

BODY SHOP
.oDlEPORT, OHIO ,
HOUIS: 9 A:.M.·6 P.M.
la~frillly '
5-22-'D-t-.

Moving late: June 5-10. Brick
- . . e.4 mi.. off Rt. 87 on Co.
eo IOunv•ol

keeping • hastlhoate••c•hl•. Apptf in P•lon. No
phone Clflt pl. .•

,_._
tl,... lPNfDr mlmlatt reUef
_.., • . c ••• ,..._ .... ,148.
o.mo-8el•. frtd.,l. SllturU,a, tep•hour.Call304-171594711.
Naw e~t:C8Pf:lng lppiiCitiont fat
t.ll-tlml or p . .· tlme emplovment. Appty.,. p. .on: Lorobl'a.

--11&amp;.4.
Melnt.,tnce p . .on wned t o
live In fDr . . . mn oampt•.

Colt 304-S7ti-S10._

HVAC l"at•l• w.rted lmmedMetv. Muet be 1bl1 to work

unsupervlted. lend ,..ume •
•elll'f JtqU6remnt to: Box CLA
200, c/ o G•lllpoUa Dtly Trlb-

uno. l:ztl Third o\w .. Ooltpollo,
Olllo olle31 .

GOVERNMENT JOBS
111, 040-1811,230 y. .. N&lt;tw
hlrlntJ- CoM (11 101-8117· 8000
bt. 111·1105 for ~rr..e: r.cw•

lilt.

9

Wanted To Buy

TOPCAIHp.dkw19S3modot
"''" Qolllpallo. Col 114-441-

2212.

Junto Coro ,.. h or without
moton. Colt l.ony llviiY 114388-9:103.

Won1od lo 1..Y, Uood Mollllo
11&lt;&gt;...._ coiiS14-44e-017S.

Uoill tlrn!luoo by tho pl- or
entire houllhold lllto telling.
S14-742·241e.
Oulltt

Pre 1140 •••- Any concltlon.

Cooh DlicL eon B14-"2-eSII7
or 11~SII2-2Ae1 .

11

Halp Wllntecl

VISo\IMMTERCMD
Ul CHMOE ... -

r•
..
cl••
of credit ,_.g. Clll
nowl 213· 121· 980t. e•t.
U:ztl24.

•LIGHT HAULING

3 Amouncements

,............... I.Oiaoynlolon for

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS ·

nttlt....

Wotwlln•• .-llnllll,..dl••
NOeiiMY
Dane tw

c.w.

Dovloon. Pktmblng '
Trwuol. .!&gt; Colt 814--.81111
eft• I p.m.

4

Giveaway

d•••

Lack the skill? \Ne trlln p«tple
fDr the to• • machinllltt In our
mechlne technalagr pragr.n..
No•l¥ .... ,.,.,a.ot olin d. my,
from cornftlk• 10 turbin•. It
made elthM' ualftg machlnetooll
or using meeNnt made wlh
meehlne tooll. In the miChlne
taahnolotw progr.m you will
l. .nta. ~u•v•iDuttypaof

mac:hln-v tuch • : Ill he. drHI
pr•~o milling mtchlnt. grinclng
mechine ~nd punch pr111- We
h.,eev•l~ ofllndingtource.
•lleble fOr .. glbleiPpiiC81ta.
C. II t t.Adult Edu-lo"Cent.,._
n•countv JV s "' 114-711~
31511
14. lumm• quirt•
boglno July 10th

•t.

F.. tlmo «pori.,Oid lor MoicL
Cat! 114-992--9101 .... noon..
o\ loltor•. l'oyo 11 ,..- hour. 1oe
A.R. Knight. 1 1S Llna&gt;ln lid .,

No •peri.,ce necttt!WY- Free
tre6ning. Aepr•~n~ Number one
beeutv CO~fMI!I· Avon. Atk

ollklng •pllcotloM lor outlot&gt;
tute but drtv..-.. ContMI Rolle
Holm.,, Dlrettor ofTrentpG(I•
ttof\ no let• thin June 13.
11118. l'hono (e1oll 742-2990.
H...l.,d of

JeckaG~

ha, AN·

LPN potltiDNIW.. IIbl&amp; t..ltlrne
•d pert tim• Frin. . bendtt
indudt MtdiCII. LHelntu,..ce:

holldlo. old&lt; POll: 100 P« ....

tullon relmbenment. Pey bee eel
on •.,_.enaa led r.ume or
col fDr lnt..,.low, OoM -llno.
DN, St. Rt. 83, lea .....
JICbon. Ohio 41740 or elM
S14· 211- so 211.

.All·-·

o\VON •
CoH Morllyn
w
•.,. :10._812-2148.

••n
h..-e • ..--1' Either w., Avon
ca. http you bet he Mit 11ou c.-.
belli Col Mot-llyn Wo••· .,._
812-2148.
JUit wtnt to
1 little •tre
monw? Or would you Ike to

Store M•lllll•; Pr•..t nwt·
.... Nlo•lne wlh the mm-

mom-•

Hl-'8&amp;-tfn

MOVAL

Ordtrll-. Mechlnlttt. Office
- - .,d Wol-. Roglotw
now fDr
botglnning Jutv
10th. Cal Tr~CoumyVo~ktnel
Act.llt Cent• et: 114-713-3111
ext. 14. A vari.., of lndng
tourcet to pey for training ••
tvahbl• for thoee eligible.

•-'•nltv

hw&lt;M~or•buldng
procllct knawlegewlth
• Pt~DP~e arleni:Jd •owtll co.

.. pp~~.

992-5114

Alllllllllll.lc 1111'111 ',

Mafnttna'IOI!I

PIII'I· Outot.,dng
to mltdt your ,.... rNnege-

S1 I VII I':

&amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·

ln~strill

Wanted to buy • eblcco pfenta.
Collt14-241-Btl27.

111111111'11111'11'

•SHRUB

nld .. t ,

-koro. NurolnaA--ond

snd n•er u.-1 c ... 8mlth obout "'" r;so. 114-ft:l-7110.
luidi·P'ontltc,: 1111 Eell.m Molgo Locot School Dlotrld lo

ST AII&amp;ESS ................ 20 1 tto.

143, Pomerov, Oh.

Carpent•t. Coem.

toloalltt.- ONnlfled Medical
WDri:ft, Elecrrld~nt. FoodS.·
vi~ Work... E 1..-roniCII Tee~

Pom•ov. Ohio.

IIONY CAST ... 3&lt; to 20&lt; Ill.

WANTED
DEAD 01 AUVE
•Wuher1 •Dtyers
•Range •Fraezars

•Refrlgerlltorl
"Must .. ..,.,.....

lEN'S APPUAN(E
We Service All Mak•
5-4-1!1-1

ANGIE'S
GBENIIOISE

o

tlly ~~~~~­

c_...;. ....~n .. - . .......

•P.·

We. s-4 yrL
m•aging
poop!&amp; good lttonl ion to dotol
quoltl• .... d.
Mun be able to rMOIIe In
8p.,.,., WV. 0 - bonoftto •
lna&gt;mo potonllol. o\pplr todoy
bv ,...,... to: L C . 11en
Herchlft. Pr•ldlnt. Herdman
Ho- Cont.._ P . 0 . I'* 189,
....... VfY. 2S27&amp;

• ,_,hlp

Per•o" to opente photoprOC*elng ..ulpment ln 100111
relal bueln ... a.td retUrne to
101 8 I, c/o ,.., Pl . . ..,.
......... ZOO Main St. , Pt.
,._.,._ VfY 21110.

pt.,elal.,·s offlo&amp; •c. beniii:L
no ohl1l worlc. -II' In - t o

-Rtto. ...
"-· 203 Jo .....
bot; ,., 1:30 ••~op.m.

12

Situations

Wanted

CRUll! IHIPI '*Ina oK
poall:lona. loth ..... au~
ok••· For lnlot, ..,1 lttl-77tl1107. h1. HBIIS.

Strnllew~n,

. "flEE PlAIR'"
....... 7:G0poll.

Pw••••C...MIU
Chrt
SfNII J ..
~~~~

...

WI DO

I.S.IIf. IIIWY

Plumbing • Ptaetw

Autlllrlsed Johll

o.er.. New Htlllncl,
luiiiJHoghrm

EcluprMftt o.~•.

...... .
w.........
-~

1····

• J*'lenoe. LPN on CIM, Lowln&lt;Dmo ho- Colt 114-182·
1173 8ft• 7:0Dp. m. for more
intonMtlon.
·

Statict,

MAIIIIBAJKE

llml&amp;l, . . .
614·662-1121

We c•e for elder~¥' lnd hll'l ...
cappod In our ho- 21 y -

1231.

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

IOGGS

SAW &amp; sa¥1C1

I -~ I wb. otcL - l y
lllllk • whlo. Col 1,4-21511-

IEAUIIII IASIETS ss.oo
flATS • •.. u, •s.oo

"'"====-~I
,..
-

GEARY
PAINT CQHI

Holl- Inn In O.llpolll now
- " ' · · p l... lo ...........

41 1/IBi tln

992·7479

lt. Sl
ef
Po1111ray, Ohio ,

Chango

Without Nalilel

3117188 tin

Located Off Bypu1
At Jet. of Rts. 7 •

SYUCUS(, OliO

Attic l•le: IJ ftm!lf carnw 4th•
Rollins. N.wHnm,.Junel• 7 .

CJAM·7PM

VISA· MASTER CHARGE

..... ---------~•:

ALLEN'S
HAULING

&amp; .Vicinity

OPEN 7 DAYS

Parts &amp; S.wlct On

4-25-tfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

.......f't.PTeasant·----·

Comploto llouooholdl Dl tnnJ.
tUN • onticl&lt;*- o\loo wood •
coli ,._.. .. 1..-in'1 FwnlluN
• o\uotloO\ 1111rd • Olvo,
114-4441-311&amp;.

Alto Tr••••lttlo•

or 992-7121

2-l-~n

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

·AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

'I Onr
I .

1 U&lt; #001 -32

11 · HFIIB· Hn

Pomerey Ohio

PH. 992·5682

550 PAGE stREET

The Bat* 11uJ Mtie '1'hin&amp;s ~

Roger Hysell
Garage

1 111. li11H 1. coupon per cus- 1
1 tamer per bini) sesston.
1
110 hopto 165.00
hr Gomo

Reference•

Cloooct Sundoy

'I
I 2 H.D. FREE w~h coupon and I
I pun:hae ol min. H.C. l'lcll· I

w. Pay •so.oo '• Game

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

All MAlES AND

1600 GALLON
WATER SEniCE
UMESIONE

•

..

1

·

CJCJ2·6155

4·16·86-tfn

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

llne33onCo . Rd. 18.Adultend
chil*en ctothlng. 11 lnllh bilft·
cle. bicycle chid c•rilr teet.
A•rlend cartridg-. tl)y1. .milc.

GIEG BAILEY

PlM •110111 • OWNII

Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

.. 10· SY. SYIACIIII

992-2198

June 8th end 9th. '.4 mile off 4

K and J CONSTRUCTION

10:00 'TIL 5:00

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

GENERAL
COIITIACTORS

5394 oft or 1:00 p.m.

985-4141

OPEN lOST SATURO~YS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

I ploco pM llfOUP· E-ont
a&gt;odtlon. UOO. CoiiS14-992·

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Weoving Supplleo
Sign up n- tor Bukot
weoving Clooo•

o. .

COIIERCIAL

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport~

'

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Churcft St .• 8yrecu1e. Litl•'._
8:00-4:00. Thura.. Fri.,June8th
end 81h. FurrWture. nlquee.
dllt.s. Home lnteriorl, blcvd•.
boot. Wotdlo. . ..

MARCUM

HAND WOVEN
BASKETS
Large Supply of Bookot

SEARS IN MIODIIPOIT
614-992-217a

JIWNa. GIEG I. IOU!H

.. -----pc;·merov.......... ·

3M Pork St., Mlddt-'· Juno
llh •d 10th.
C1othln•
bib¥ ...,,, furniture. · ·

THE
BASKO WEAVE

FOR
SALE

luill On YoiW Lot
ON SALE NOW AT

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

turntture. Mtc.• 109 Mtbeltne
Or.• Fri., • Set .• Bun.

HlfTit' . Murray Hill RcL .Brad·
burv. Tueedlf Md W..•dly•
June I end 7. R•n c.noh.

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

WOODEN BUILDINGS

5-31·'8!1-1 mo. pel

RADIATOR '
SER"ICE

-

3 Styln
and
Varitus Siztl

Gutters
ownspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Soamlou Guttor ·

13 Loeust8t., W.cl- , Thurt.• Fri.,
Furnitu,., 'hau• plllds,.tppllsnc•. dll hit, tlereo, books.
clothoo. mloc.

Nlled •P. aon ..ll• plperum•
with 1ame knowledge of lllld:rlcll wiring. Mutt 1M llbleto work
out of town cluing the wNic.
Coli l14-2e8-IOM oftw ep.m;

Mec:h•l~.

81 --Homelmprovementt
82 - Piumbing &amp; He•ing
83- E•c.,ttlng
84- Eiarictl &amp; Rtfrig••tion
8&amp; - 0antnl H1ullng
Its - Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholaterv

49-For Le••

NEW - IEPAII

Feirfield Acre•·

lobyoltwNiodod.Rt. oll'*
147. Qolltpollo, OH 4SI31.

Job hunting! • okll? we
trllin people for }OM • Auto

Services

Houtet for Rent
MobileHom• for Rent
Farma for Rent
Aplrtment for Rent
Furnished Rooms
Spec:e for Rent
Wen1ed to Rent
48-Equipment fOf Rent

.

Interior.

c... .,.. Rd .

•:ao.

41 42 434446 48 47 -

'

a.l&amp; Junt 1·8,
MM-4PM, loby dot'-. Homo

SIGN'. niL rwcalanel
print lUI frOM ..-y.

71 - At~totlor

Eslole

Pi. P t - • Vlcinlly: Cominl
bla y.rd ..... Fri .• June tlh• .m. •• I p.m.. a.t.. June
101tt-l•.m.1111 p.m. etCh•l•

XD7500

Transporl ~lion

22 - Montti to loen
23 - Profeuion•l Servicet

C.rpon: s.le= 117 Woocland
Dr.,Junel. l , 7 .Mondllr,Tu.t.,
1·3. Wtod.. 1-l Clift~ toad
ct- clolhoo. Loto ol fiOCI'hl.

-Ina Solo. Bodtoom oult.

18 - Wented To Do

21 - 8utin•• Opportunit"

e. 7,

Muiii-Gar-s~~e

67 - Mulic:allnatrum~nti

58 - Fr uitt &amp; Vtget•bl•
59- For Stle Of Trade

Employmenl
Serv11:es

Y•d Solo:'" bocll Junes.
M 123 Fourth A... . tots.

lnodgrlioo Trilllllo lid. off Rt.
$2, It bowing lllttt . furnltUNI,
mo'IIWIU, weter bed, bib¥
clothoo, .... "' ........!&gt;

•Heat Pumps

53- AnHquet
!4- Misc . Marchandite
51- Building St~ppll•

4- Giv. .wty
5- Htppy Ada

nk~«~nap~e~mOwt~

Moving 881e: Diahwll,.,_, - of
w.lghtL • linch. cr8ftl:man. 5
driW., tool chelt. Cltl 114-446-08111.

•H igh Efficiency

51 - Hootehold Goodl
12- Sponing Goods

3- Annouc:ements

ROOFING

Mastic - Cortaintltdfl
Vinyl Siding

417 Second AvltlUs, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
· or at
Vetarans Memorial HOSI&gt;ital
Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy,

Merch~nd1se

1 - Ctrd ol Thtnkt
2- ln Memory

H~twin-d L~ Wrlt,.t

INSULATION

or 1-. ..9.Ja6o .

'

21· 38 WORDS

$8.00
$13 .00
621 .00
$51 .00

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
'(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

z

Business
Services
r---------.. .

PH. 949·2101

· -..... 'J .. ......., _.. ,..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

11-25WORD&amp;
S6 .00

lih61114811

ence Henderson were Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Wood, Zanesville: and
Ruth and Charlo?s Knowles, Dalton. Mr. and Mrs. Knowles were
former re'achers In the Eastern
District
Recent visitors'of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Spencer were Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Spence~. TUppers
Plains; and Eunice and Norman
Midkiff who were returning to
their summer· horne from
Florida.
·
The Alfred Church held It's
annual ramlly dinner on Sunday.
Rev. D(\n Archer asked the
blessing. Florence Spencer con·
ducted a drawing for door prizes
and gave everyone balloons.
Food was taken to community
shut-Ins. Others present wer
Marilyn and Lee Ann Robinson.
Lori Ritchie, Doris and Lloyd
Dllllnger. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Brooks and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Henderson, Nina Robinson, Clara FoUrod. Sarah
Caldwell, Mrs . Don Archer, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Spencer. Kirk.
Danlelle, and Tiffany, Tim and
Richard Spencer. and Nellie
Parker. ·

If you've been
is available for a
holding back wait·
limited time only.
ing for a great rate,
For more inlor·
this is it. But you've
mation contact
got to act fast.
your nearest
T~is offer from
Central '(rust office •
Central Trust
• ... , lj Ill 446 0912
............ 992-6661

64.00
f5 .00
$8. 00
$13.00

L:j
:z::

llbr•llt• needed b I yr. old
boy. " . . . . . _ reqw.t.t. Cal
114-441-7t11 _ , . , 8 :30 a
S:OO. o\ltor 1 :30· 114-44S·
2311.
lebyallt• In our hame for 2
montholdson.M -F, 7e.m.· 4:30
p.m. MIN ,.,• . , . lttt• of

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Rat• are tor contecutive runs, broken up d.,, will bech•ged
for each d., ••
tdt.

•A cleuifled ectvertJHment pieced in The Daily Sentinel (except - e'tulfl-.1 dlspl8y, Butintls C1rd and legel notlcel)
will also sppeiN' In the Pt. Plt•enl Aegil.t•r end the GtlllCOPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY Po\PER
WEDNESDo\Y PAPER
l)IURSDo\Y PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Columbus: Mike McDaniel and
his wife. Margie, Hebron: Mark
Greatorex, &amp;on of the hostess.
and Hobart and E velyn Young.
Sidney . Helen Flck, Columbus. a
siste r-In-law. wa s unable to
attend .
Miss Flck spent several days In
Groveport with her sister.

WHY YOU SHOULD
INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH OR
ONE YEAR C~D.
NOWI

0- t&amp; WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
I MONTH

polls Dslly Tribune. r..ching over 18.000 hom•-

I

•

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 7

'• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

The annual Vineyard family
reuniOn will be held Sunday al the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. All relatives and frlenda
are Invited. A basket dinner will
be ~erved at noon.

Family Dental Care

2924 JackiiOJl Avenue

-~---·-·----~

I
list1nine Devices
Dependable Hurin1 Aid ~les &amp; Sel'l•ical

Family reunion set

ADnouneea'l'he OpeniDI or

----- - - - - ·

Business Services -7 __v._,d_sa_.._

Five ·members named to
take part in 4-H Congress

Clarification

Personals

~-

Tueeday, June 6, 1989

----Alfred news--___;.

JOSHUA SPIRES

!'---" ... - - - - -

At this party he was served Ice
cream cake, and when his uncle
comes home from the navy, there
will be a bigger party .

Ruby Burk e, Michell e
Laughery. Melissa Neutzllng.
Brent Rose and' Chris tine
Schultz. )Vfelgs County 4-H
members, havo? been chosen to
take part In the 72nd Ohio 4·H
Cong r ess . June 14 -16 , in
Columbus.
According to Cindy Olive ri.
Meigs County 4-H extension
a gent . . Burke a.nd Schultz a r e
from the Country Bumpkins 4· H
Club. l.aughery is from the
Alfred Angels 4-H Club. Neutzllng from the Phantom's 4·H
Club a nd Rose from ·the Country
·
Boys 4-H Club.
Ohlo4·HCongressmtxes workshops and recreation for 500
· teens who have excelled as 4-H
Joshua Spires. son of John and
leaders . This year's workshops
Angela Spires. recently cele- focus on building self-es teem and ·
brated his first birthday with a
learning to make tough decipar)y at his home In Rutland·.
A Mickey Mouse cake was
served to Pat Harmon, Raymond
and Lucille Lambert. Jlnnle.
Elizabeth Flck of Pomeroy
Charles. Rita. Brian. and Charue
was given a surprise party
Williamson. Kathy Rush , Ray,
recently in observance of her
Juanita ·and Denise Lambers.
8()th
birthday . June 14. at the ,
Doug, Shirley . and Christopher
home
of her sister, Frances
Lambert, Gary. Ramona.
Greatorex.
Groveport.
Brenda, Gary Dean, and Arron
·
Attending
were her brother.
Davis, Scott, and Zachary Gray .
Floyd
McDaniel
and his wife,
Jennifer Stiltner. Bob, Co teen.
Jerry,
and
Krlstl
McDaniel and
Robert, Bobl Jo, Cheryl, and
her
fiance,
George
Coogle. all of
Amy Davis, Anita Hajluandl,
Roger and Sandy Smith, and
Arlene Davis.
Those unable to attend but
sending gifts were Robert HarSunday school ·a ttendance wa s
mon. Donna Jones, and Moham23, church attendance was 23.
mad Hajluandl.
Church visitors wer e Bertha
Wood. Zanesville; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Steve Follrod and Kaltlaln.
Athens; and Carol Van Meter .
Renee Young, recipient of a
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks are
$300 scholarship from the Ru - announcing (he birth of their first .
tland Alumni Association. Is the
grandson, Aaron, to Mr. and Mrs .
· daughter of Diane Young, Pome- Kevin Brooks , Columbus.
roy. and Ron Young. Zanesville.
Charles Caldwell, Cassie and
A graduate of Meigs High School Crlssy. Columbus. were recent
she was editor of the yearbook,
guests of Sarah Caldwell .
active In volleybl)ll, softball and
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clarthe Chorallers. and a member of
the National Honor Society.

•

·.

~

C!J Hearinc Evaluations For All Ages

ZACHERY IMBODEN

llaJ, c!lJ, tbe pailu oftlce at

llf.Tt)O;

...

' ~-

Zachery Franklin Imboden,
son of Tim and Joy Imboden,
Syracuse, ce lebrated his first
birthday on June 1.

Mrs . Nicholson read an article
entitled "Potluck-20 Allin One. "
It noted to make sure drainage
holes are In the container, and to
combine different flowers In
single large pots. Plants should
be arranged In top soil In the
position wanted before ' being
planted.
Mrs. Turner presented some
hints on ·container gardening,
which Included placlJ!8lj piece of
watering hose horizontally In
clay pots to allow for expansion
and keep the pots from cracking.

Micha&amp;B. Ca.rJiste, D.D.S.

Oothing day sec

-~

Party celebrates 80th birthday ·

Art exhibit entries being accepted P.ERI to .meet
oils, watercolors, acrylics, graphlcs, sculpture, ceramics, fibers and photography. Entrants
must designate "amateur" or
"professional" status. Each en·
try must be accompanied bY a$4
tee, with a limit of four entries
per artist. Each work must have
a sale price or an Insurance
value. One piece per artist may
be designated "not fo
1 ..
Best of Show Is awa;d!':. 11 1
both the amateur and profes~
slonal divisions.
During the 1988 competetlve
exhibit, 23 purchase awards were
selected. For further lnformalion, contact The French Art
Colony, Box 472, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, or call (614) 446-3834. The
exhibit Is sponsored by the
Central Trust Co.

.... .

lmbodens celebrate first birthday

• hda1.1/ 0 bserved. ----'trt
'J

.; Bible schools slated

The 21 annual Art In the Park
and Jurled Gallery exhibit, Is
part of River Recreation Fest!·
val. Entries are belag accepted
June 10 and.12 from 1-5 p.m. at
the French Art Colony, 530 First
. Avenue In Gallipolis. Entry
· forms are available at both the
French Art Colony and the Ohio
Valley VIsitors' Center, 45 State
Street.
The French Art Colony Is a
Regional Multi-Arts Center serv·
lng Southeastern Ohio, and parts
of West VIrginia and Kentucky.
Selected works will be exhibited
In the galleries tor the ·month of
July. All works wUI be displayed
ln theCityParkJuly4,durlngthe
River Recreation Festival.
Items accepted for display
Include but are not limited to:

.. . ... .

'

Tuaeday, June 6, 1989

Becoming a video critic

By Jeff HUteu7

The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church. Salem St., Rutland. will
be having Vacation Bible School
June 12-16 from 6-8 p.m . Classes
will be for ages nursery through
teenage. The public Is Invited to
participate.

.

Pomatoy-Mkttllaport, Ohio

Rutland Garden Club elects new.officers
Officers for 1989-90 were
elected when members of the
Rutland Garde n Club m et recently at the home of Pauline
Atkins.
NE'~ officers are Pauline At·
klns. president: Dorothy Woo• dard, vice president; Marcia
Denison. secretary: and Margaret Belle Weber. treasurer.
Devotions of scripture readIngs and a poem entitled " Walk
Gently'" were givE'n by Pauline
Atkinson. and followed by prayer
and the creed collect in unison by

--

co.

· Rep~lr • Painting
EIMtrlceJI • Ctrpentty

"WtftJA..... ~IW•(
IIIITJ llfftt

20 Y•rs Eutritnce
43020 St, it 124
Pomeror. Ofllo 45769

1-814-182-3il4

a - t1·1 .... Jill.

Schools

Nn.--

Wo-............

loul *- ..._..., ••••
lllou-·
· - Col··
_._,
..
_._.:-2~21-:S._
·_~-:-::'~

-:-:
Hoy·-··-lo--114
1111. o1 Coni- • Mollllo

n-.

lrwtrucdon

Pood •

..,.,............,
lltotorto !Ioiii In
Metlotto.

DH.I_..,.,._

-Notll.
- ...
P.Od-10Lifllfllt0
. IIIII 7t1Mirlotto.

OH 41110.

IIE·TIIo\IN NOW!
SOUTH!MTIIIN IUSINEIS
COU.EGI. l:lt 'Jodlolrl I'Moa

Coli 1t'-44e-4317. llltJ- No.
11-tl-10118.

- """"·
-:-:--:---:--:::-:---=-~­
~
;.~tw,-Colts1-. r:.. .&amp;.
l~~ ,_
i Lott
Found
'"' ktn••· Coft .,.. _

Horold

. .

end

Leot: -

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

-·~~.... IIIIo·
~lir.iM-'m-4 •

_
----

.... -Lt-£rWi
.. .

Leot: , ....
It

--·

18 Wanted to Do

-

•

-

Col 114-441-

�I

Page-S The Daily Sentinel

--

LAFF-A-DAv··

18 Wanted to Do

45 Sp- for Rant

For L•ae

Lot-""·--

nlng . . . . S.Ve to SO 1*1*'11.
Prloet from *249. Um~DJ·

---·
-

'1

.. ~ ---

_ .s~

"Miss Wanluck, reach out
and touch Edward Clydesdale, clasS Of '54."

Profealonal
Sarvk:ea

lllotorlc

for -

FO&lt; IIIIo • Concr... ond PIMIIc
ooptlc lonlct. AM tlllt. RON
1!1/ANS !NTERI'RIIY, Joel&lt;·
oon. OH. 1-1100·137· 81211.

mobl1

•

I

Colt
.
Fr• color c.tllog. 1-100-22
1211210H017DI

2 _

tto~n~.

_,

~nllllld

naa.oo month

St••

-

town av.-tooldng

""' lolo: 3 br., 2 flrool........ pool, A-C/eiii,IOO,
A4ne "'" Eltlte brok•. Cel

304-171-1104. or 304-171113211.

OWNER ANXIOUS-MUST
SELUI Tlw• btit'oom n..,~

r_dol .. oolonlol. u - 2nd
...... Celt fDr •p•m.~
(I 141 441-2217.

-.

41

Homes for Rent

Nice 2 br. , c•rpetld, no
ptt.J t271 mo.. depostt ,._
quiNd. Coli 114-441-4222 t..
• - 9tin 11 p.m.

Hou• fDr ront 1 BR conoao.
llrnllhld. In •~· N!Wcl-.
Nlco lor oouolo. No Plio. ""· I
dop. C.oK 81oi-44.. 2143.
For ..... 4 BR daubiMide In

3.t.tOom hou-. 1¥.1: ltaritl on
Rl. 7 to tNde far 3 Mctoom
trol • • Col 114-892-1332 for

country near Alo Qrendfl.
Southwllt•n ldtool dlltric:t.
Coli 814-2411-&amp;188.

3-oomllrldo-w-hllrgo
lot. MldW.,Drlllo. -Hov...
Good oond. 304-773-1811.

Ch•hlro. 31&gt;r.. 2 btlho.ltrgol«
rtw• front. C.A . •I .tNblc.
Depoall • rol. ._lrod. Col
703-381-1108, or 114-317·
7117.

.........

a. h. '3
truM .....

2 atary hDrM. 8 room~.

3

-oom.

FOR SALE OR RENT
2'n both, 2 .....

houN In

.... d • •

ow,_

fln.noJn• phone 304-17124.14.
3 br..

od•lo~

rwu:h. merdowbrook

In UO'a E&gt;e. Conei
Colt 304-171-7438. oft• I p.m.

3 br. , AC, fin... 2

- 1 1310 mo.
1104.

c.n

lrei•

304-871-

rW•. CA •

he • . llof. C.oU14-441-03311
·F. ,-~~
, _ _ olllol .,.,... e110, ~r
••• pilei,
701 4th
A110. Ooll!lollo. Col 114-4414411111•7P.M.

-·J&gt;•II.

FuriL Apo. 1 br., 12.21. uti- I•
..,lei 938 llcond A... OoiiiPolit, 11+441-441111r• 7 p.m.
FIWIL EtRol.,o(./ e1711. utnl•
plld. 101 14tl\ a ......... 114441-441&amp; oR• 7 p.m.
Furnltllld 3 rm, ....._.,111 ._
pold. 94Loculll 1210 mo. 171.
clop. COl 11+44.. 134.0, «
114-44.. :1170.

51 Houeehold Goods

:w~:NITURE

uMd lltPiilne* •d T.V . ....

Op.,IA.M. tcSP.M. Montlwu
1119 127 3rd.
....
. , ......
A
... Oollp
... OH. •
GOOD USED AP,UANCI!S
W•ho:a dly- .... ._.,,_
r1noea. lk•tll Appll•on.
Upp• Rlww
*ldl Ito•
Croot Motol. 814-441-7391.

Rd.

LAYNE 'I FURNITURE
8of• ond oh.o prlcld from
1381 to 1188. Tolil• flO ond
up to 1121. Hldl-1..,.. UIO

~&amp;t~ld= t~~2~~

Dln~~t•e10tlllduptot4.1&amp;

- d bllilo w·l .., . . e211 to
1711. 0.- 1148 up to 1371.
llutah• MOO.,dup.buacomploto w-mott•
e211a
F•nllllld 3 . -. 8 bill\ .,d up to 1311. 1111rr.,....... d - .._ _ luhllfo
•110. M.nr-orbaa ....-tn11
tor ona Rll. I Dop. -~ocl 'lll ar tvwln •78. firm •lit. •d
Colll14-44.. 1&amp;18.
181. Ouotn 1278 • up.
1310. 4 ..........
Un1ur. . hldu.,..... IPiftment. ICing
Ouri ... I, . . . 10 .. ..
2BR'a 322T"'dAw. Nop.ra. ..
.., . . . , , _ • • • f41.
Coli 114-4.41-374.1 or 11+ Bod l r - e21, Qu-lin
2111-1801
t31 I ldng ..... 110. Oood

2 Br IPirtment for rent. C••
114-441-3341.

2 BR homo, 127&amp;/mo. Coli
814-44.. 3112.

____

.,dup to Ill.

-·•Rd.

.-d.

1

l

r......

---

•lr.

1..

711 moble home. 12l45 leal
IIICiric. 2 bt«oorn ..., good
cond, und•rpenning ,
14.100.00. 304-17Ji.A71.

11177 Qovornor 121111. two
blli'oorn. AC. lll•al•o u-,_,ning. 1llclng window. good
oond. c_. • • Dn:Mc 119 rented
1ot 1n Horldnon. e8.aoo.oo.
Coll304-171-3862.
fofllll&lt; 1881Sc:t-..llz, , .. ~
3 br.. oentral elr, urwJerpinning.
n.w c.p-. ac. cond.. Cllll
30+171-41U.
1182 Hond• . 7&amp;0. very
nlco/ UIO. Coli 304· 171·
11412.
12 Jl 10 Mobile Home. front
pordl. • oond .. 314•aeland.

c • 304-1711-11 31.

33

Rt. 1A1. Cent...,.. 1/ 4mleon
Lincoln VI'Ro
Plllo. Mon.
..... MM·
Furniture
IPM , Sun. 12·1. 114-4413118.

SWIMMING POOLSt1111
•otthlhootw-hohugo18a31
pool, Hugo ..... Ill• 1
~!.'-· .CoM 24 In: 1·111J0.
..
--

d-•.

, .,

tar

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§g~
71 Auto's Far 8•18

Muelc•l
ln..rumantl
••

--or.
.._ld

-"'111-

10 1n.. •Ill• wllh ei 2
HD, &amp; c•-lilmol171. C.oJ
114-4411--.
71 •~p.up . . .· ,.. t2so.,

Mccu•octt ch-.a.w, •1 2&amp;.

=-•

Co11114-38.. 88211.

Solid ollk •
cloob
lltMing.
. Alloond
m.mte ctocka.nd.,ncablnM
An hond modo. CIH 114-742·
3111.

158

Frult

S.. Vegetables

• tr.wblrr..._ pi ~

your own.

Coli Cloudl Wlntoro, Rio
Or.,dl. OH 11+241-1121.

1.m.-l p.ll'l. Teylor'a
Korr Ad. Col
814-4.4.1·1112 Of 114-2411171.
Hav,~n

o....

wv..._.

882·2237.

D S Do-. Good co ....lon.

tloiL
Col
114-742·2122.- ""•·

10.000 llfu w co-lo-.
12.211. EIICIIrlc hod!le ......,_,
uo. 1e 11. -mlno pool
...... uo. &amp;14-811-4418.

Plak

price on Interior Md ext«ior
Pltt.,rgh Pllnta. You work too

your own • . - . . ,....

-.·F~.tAMto

Potlll1: 12ecr•m.-clow', 15
.ar• of woodtd • • H11 ruf'll
- · llooloup, - l c Ionic,
lll.alc top Rd. 4 mi. , from
Gllll!lollo. Col 114-44.. 2101.
I

1981 Soony Exc. cond.. II ft.
plugo. •poopll. 304-171-,.28.

._,.lllp. .

..
...---.
=
•-I
-d
C.oJLI14I I J . - Ill• 1:00 p.m.
AlfltOII

I

~

-tedToluy:To-Pina
Colll1+44•4118.

SuMdlng Mollri•
Blo'*, llrioll. - • pip-. win.. llnttlt. ••. c ...... Win.... Rio Orondo. OH. Col
814-2411-1121 .

Pats for Sale

f1 . . . -

'

•-~•
[llllt. . . . . ..

_!,".!~'!.:'~-··

~

1177 OMC.

=~

1

win--=

-:;;;::::::;::;::::;:;::;::==:
I A·"-eiUOO.
motor, • trant,...iof\
:;:;
c.- 114-44163

Lw~

i

e

(POI(2:00)
OPIIauaMewe
11mo To C.re

lHAr'S fCR ~ 10
KkJO.IJ AtJD (,OJ
lO FIIJDOOI

lfi~Y
A~lO

PARA~IA

lhlde lrtlll,. . , . ". . .

t,.., •

Plltty Tr• Trlm~g.

-·U\'

73

V•naS.. 4W.D.

10 yr. old pony wllh _,,..,
GOod w-h lddl. C.oM 304-171- 73 VW ¥10. t.1100 or - · for
11143 oft• &amp;.
plolorp~
of oquolvoluo. Col
114-38.. 1142.

""'*

a. Grain

MotOrcycles

2 BR, 1111&gt;0111 ,__ld. In
....... Col 114-388-8104.

.rump

Rotlry

IMAI:iiNe, H~ WE

or cllllll• tool lt'lling

ARE
HeMe Aa::M ecHOOL. ...

- - .....,.......... d...
Pump sal•· .,d ..vioa 304

1111-3802

AN~

IN OI.LIFORNIA,

THE KID5ARE AU..
OUT 10 L..L.INCM.

I HeARD 'THEY~
PJ&lt;ETTY WEIRDOUT 'THERE.

Ron' oTV ..,.lot. IPIOI~IIInoln
ltn•hollo
brondl.
H
- -W.Vo
•• •
oppN.,co
r..,304171-23880hlo .14-441-248~

-loin•-,..,.

2 be*aa,tt furNihed trill• for

converge 1o make Michael
reevalulle hla religioUs
beliefs. (R)Q
(!) lnd1how On: TPIII'Iintfly
How 10 lead 1 familyor lrlend to hofp lnd .,..1111.

THANKY,
8UFORT--

HOW ABOUT

A LEETLE

UH••JE5T

CHAW,
SNUFFY?

;Rb
IIJE~w•

A 5ECONT

IRI HIWI
10:20 ()) MOVIE: The lan!IMt DIJ

Electrical
Refrigeration

,,

•••

304-1711-1071.

815

11 :DD (JJ Remlngllltt IIMII
• (J) Ill • (J)

General H.l llllng

Dll•d Wot• a.v1oo: · l'ooll.
Cltt•111. Woltl. Dlllllory A,..
tlmo. Coli 11+o14.1-74.04-No

..ndlrcollt.

BERNICE
BEllE OSOL

I

JJaa::Jii-h.;~...,;;;.;.;:~si;..;,..;;;.;;;,.;;,;.

Al*'tlnent
for Rent

,............. - · I'll. 114-

241-82111.

R•AW•ora.vloo.Poole,
ollt1rna, we111. lmmedllt•
1,000 • 2.000DIIonad...,_,..
CIII304-J71-U70.

w•

. . . . 1.

-Idol Wit or H.,llng lllrvloo.

-____

--oltt•M1.oooor
::.ooo ... dllltori•. ........

J04-17t-2J11 or 114-4.4.•

....,......

W11tttr1on'• Water H1ullng.

48 S!*e tor Rent

- - z.ooo .. 4,000...,_
(!y. ........ - - ....
C.oM 304-171'2111.
•

I.Gio•oiiMelnO.-Molilo llorM l'lrk C.oM I 14o14.1-CIIS4.. 11+441-IMI.

87

"Ia
or
take ttme-:.pae photogr•phs to show that
thts nne actullly mo-?"
~--~-r ---~

hpO

--lhln ............. pa.

wa, liul you're not .,. to .to 100 wll

which signs are romantically perttiCI lor business llluatlon y011're dllpleaoed
y011. Mall $2 to Molchmuer, c/o lhla wllh . ll can dallnllel)l be Improved upon,
· - p ' 0 . Box.
61428 ' c - --·
d ' so starl
mulng odj. .tmen!S.
newap..,.-..
OH 44.101-3-428.
CA .......OIIN (Deo. - . 11) PortCANCeR ,.....,. 21-.luiJ 221 Try no! to nerllhip .,..,Jget,,.,ta should work out
.,.,...., !ocley ~ ~hlng doeon'l go very- lor you lodey, ~lily H you
eaoctly tho way you won! H. You can IIHI oro loomed up wllh an lndlvldull who Ia
conlrol ....,II In olhera. jull don'! be ...., more omblllouo IJICI. enwgollc
100 lorcelul.
!hen you .
UIO (""" :IJ.Aug. 22) To b1 on !he oale AQUAIIIUI (oiM. . . , . 11) V011 mtghl
sldeloday,ll'o bell nol 10 dllcull your not gel on Ntly lllr1 lodey Whore your
CII'Mr lnlonllona wllh 100 m11ny people. work Ia concernod, ltld o b _ .
SOIMOIII who mey feel .......,odowod mlghl lhlnk you're 1-odol- oboul
by you mlghf 1ry lo trip you up.
y011r charM, bul by onemoon you'lllllp
- A ( &amp; - ....... lPI) Condllloneln lnlo
IJid make up lor loti 111111.
·~_ qulle
_,...
•1 .
look
hopolul lor you lo- I'IICII (.....
..-. 10 M all 10) A 1111111
dey, eo 111 op!lmii1Pcrogardlng 1111 0111- trlenllly compollllon todey wiH hove •
come of yow 1111lohll•-•· T1llnll poe~. ta-.ble e11ect upon y o w -· .a .
llv8, do yow blel expect 1111 If you Cllllllr up e tonn1e match or e goll
.....ttl
; pmll.
...U(..... D-Oot.lPI)inCIIIfopelldN .u.ti (lllnll :H•Ajltl 11) Two mal•
~ Podly don'! Ill yourMII 1. . you . _ tallllllo tlnlfa IO your
Ill
Ply your cppalllult. You' re oaiWICIIaro- 1111 cornplllld todey H
1111 - wltlllhl odell
In yow fa- you._~~~~- 1111 Clo 10. l'oi IIIII 111vor, not lhom.
dhlonll Pill&gt; Ill-~ IJid do what

a-r

t-

_,

..

,,

......

•o 1111

1D 110111111•
tiiiiOINfiT aa ••

11:30·e:::c.(0:30)

!D TIIIJ . , _ . , Joumll

=~::-·•Q

::;::
a\•':...
. . . . . . . . . . JUngle

Ill exlillllllf IIMIII. . Ioday
lng your .,.._.. ..,.. .... or - ·
tlonl. Yeu'l not lecll!ldea nor the"*-'
,,,. to Pill your tllaufii:Ginlo ICifcn.

. . .....

~Ftonl ...... Plottdl (1l

!(;~~Tonight
Ill!!!!!!!! Rill
ali

w

111.~

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

L~

I

+Jt064

SOUTH
.AK87 2
.AKJ 5
• Q8

•sa

:~~~~SIS,

- and
Novak
45 Color
48 Vacation

·- . "

•

.

'•

.
..

..
"
'

••

•..
hr+--1--

s""

47 Mary
Baker-

•

DOWN
1 Gullel
Ill

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 15 used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophea, the lencth lind formation of lhe words are all
hlht.. Each dly the codlletten ere different.

XBU'M

ZOOHTM

VMSZUQH

WHU.

MPZM

ZYY

SJXHV

'

•
'
•

..

CIIYPTOQUOTE

• CIMit And a..
ti:OO (J) . . , . , 1111 .... ...., 2

illltilil L •

tA7642

'

Mldnlll, Plitt 1

o ;;"iii;'n

tKQ93

20wn
3 St . erossing
4 Stupid
5 Aushdie's
"The Verses"
6 Scenl
7 Deslifly
8 Consteilallon
Ya1terdey'1 Anewer
9 Elec.
20 De Niro's 34 Condition
unit
'The 35 Wedding
10 Tea
Hunter"
symbol
variety 21 Malleable 36 Small lake
16 LiHie
22 Region
37 Ne!Vous
Theodore 23 Seedless 38 Golf term
17 Expensive plant
39- espril
18 Diminish 25 Endure
40 Timorese
19 llalian
27 Sports
coin
bell
fan's shout41 Lamentable

IIJ--.YauCeniiAIPir

lll
Ill

•a

DAILYCRYPTOQUOII!B-Here'•l:ow to worl: It:

• ® AreiiiiC Hall

In-- ,....,. ".. . .. . ....

=O=~::::;·:::..A= =-~-51 JIO)Voulhould

you lookl llle H will lll'lllllvlallll. YOII
I - t l l f l l olhorl-'1 feel·-- llhould blgln IO - llgne of lmpON
or Mlllilf1, ~ while to look lor 1111111 u of1oc1ey.
r-ICI IINI' 1'!'11'1 llltd ll ,.,. ~ IAQITTAIIUI (llw. D D11 111 Ocn'l
GraiiPI .......... .... -Ply ....... Ill IllY I'IION lime fiC Ply '"!!"d)nll a

11W....,L1D...... o....aool
11+171oll0&amp;

--------

Yow fln-1 proepecla look ralhlr on·
coureglnglor 1111~ . . , .. Vou will

liking ft..-11.....
'
UfliiC*f21 . . . .,"-'llloUgh
you . . . .II)' 10 Ill rather OQriCirnod loday reglfdlno whllhlr or not you'l gel
whit' I ...... ,ou, you'IIIIM do thlnglln

Upholatary

(3:00)
10:30!D A l1l1ch lor Ttmo Follow
._..,. aimpll making of a
· quilt grew Into on
lntemallonllf gnlun of
friendShip betua., ..
WOJormliiiWitnn .
and rnolhera of Arnlrlcl 1nd
1hl Sovlel Union. (1 :00)

•ellll~tatner
..... c_,

lnJI oorvloo or NP*•·
L l - eiiCirlclon. Rlclonour
!l.,.rlcol. 304-171- 178&amp;

Two tral . . tor rent. ,.,.,.,011,

c..

e(!) (I)•••••tel•
lilrtyiDIMihlng Evenla

Allidlntlll or aornmerll• wlr- ··· '

rent. For mor1 infDrmltlon. cell
114-89Z.2173.

hla pOpufiJ' hits •• well as
selections from hla new
album, Stranger ·Thlngl H1ve

Bltr_, Frlende

Plumbing
a. H•tlng

a.

spoclalleaiUrn Ronnie
Mlloap pwformlng mony of

K..., as

t'*

82

In

Hlj)p8nld.
10:00 (J) 700 Club
•(J)
llldllgllt
prolosla rich man's
11011 gllflng I lenllnl
punishment. (R) Q
(I) Optlh WllifleJ JUII

20 pe '*It off nl• on .z.n II: h
lltvm PMt8 011 lllbDr w•h

84

~-

a

• Ronnie MIIIIIP' lack
Homa Apfn Thl8 concert

MORK MEEKLE AND

r - 1 . CoH 304-171-1331.

;;::::::;;;::::;:;::::;:== .

I

l&gt;lillijlpine

a

CARTER'S PWMIINO
AND HEATING
Cor. FourthlndPine
.,
GoiiPollo. Ohio
Phonel14-....&amp;3888 or 11.., 11•
4.41-4477.
'

_._,. ....

ACROSS
1 African
lake
5 Heliacal
10 Yearn
11 Venerale
12 Refuge
13 Add up
14 Wonder
15 Julie
Andrews
film
17 "Giani"
star
18 Caprice
21 Unscathed
24 Expand
26 Mountain
nymph
28 Framework
29- out
(delect)
31 Biblical
mountain
32 Beach
goer's
goal
33 Stallone
film
35 Budget
Item
311 Cosset
39 Fonl

breaks hit dlle. IR) !;I

whom Tuttle Ionge to have
... choir.

ld. •• July 1, , .... wv.
30+17.. bil8 Ohio S14-4412414.
.

74

-·

conaole Crylllal; Booker

•.30. (I)t&gt;elrfendl
• (I) 1'1111t Moe
a young !hill

TrM • stump NmO\fal muldt.

l'"'

;·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Rosunno and Jackie

Ptot•••

U3

everyone would agree that Italian ex·
pert Primo Levi deserved t~e award
Vulnerable: Neither
for best defensive play. (He was East.)
Dealer: South
U the bidding seems unusual, you
West
Norl~
Eul
should Wldentand that North's one- Soot~
Pass
!NT
Pass
no-trump response was forcing lor one : •
Pass
3•
Pass
round.
l\11 pass
To be fair, imagine yourself as de· 4 •
clarer in four spades. Blot out the
Opening lead: + K
East-West hands from your mind and
follow the play. West takes the king of
clubs and plays a second club to East's
ace. East now returns the six of
hearts. You win tbe ace of hearts and
lay down the ace of spades. West plays · but leading up to the 10 is reasonable '
the four and East plays the queen. insurance to guarantee your contract. "
What now? If you play a seeond high And the game is rubber bridge, for despade and it turns out that East had cent stakes.
only the singleton queen of spades, you So declarer played a low spade.
will lose two spade tricks and be set, West won the doubleton jack of spades
And what if you lead a spade up to the and played back a heart. Primo Levi
18? H West is left with the J-9·5, he took the setting trick by ruffin1 with :
will be able to take only one spade the nine of spades. Bravo! To us bridle
trick. Of course you will lose an over· players, the perfonnance equaled that
trick when East holds the Q-J alone, of Caruso at La Scala.

Ill .Ill
Q:) (!)

EAST

.Q9 5

CROSSWORD

a

·flNRI (2:00)

11'7B lhort Ford v.,, cr•vtiiVM m.t.lll. hMcll mator

ATTENTION H - Ow-o. 11114 Ford Ill
c ... E~e
Point Plio It oonylng - . Well drlllno ria nM" o1bl1 end
Pllnt Plut, 2411 Jecbon bit. good oond, 30+17.. 2181.
A....,o. Point P - ..... ,.
304-171-4.014.

Hav

Bubba'a neplllw
lnadvertencltnoaa
crime. (R)

iiJ , . , King U..l
II MOVIP!: DeCipliDnl, Pett

.lwuiJI. - d In I Don' I Un dlo
...... coli • , .. 441- 814.1.

71 Jeop CJ7, Y· I. Z.opood.
· 21 - • of h., In Rutlond. for - .. ccnd. • - 304-171.... or wll tlllle on• ...lll.
fS3111
out . . d bolo. 11+14.3-111

304-111-10711.

·

C (2:00)

government claim&amp;
Ferdlnnand Marcos
plundered 111o nation.

lfii!E - · g h.,. Coli 814:118-8814.

-· ......=----•.

1111y G - srrac:-

CruHde
® MOVIP!: Swalt Ullllrly

Home
Improvements

.J

2•

examines 1t1o 11rly 11age1 of

74.0e.

1-Holttoln Holt•. frlh In 30 mount • fr•out lllulllt300.
CoH 114-441-74.011. '
dllfl. Col 81 .. 21 .. 14.02.

154

1Wi - ·

(I) .(I) Wlto'l ltlollcM?
Angell's anUca a! Tony'a
college lrl!_pany land lhlm
in jail. (R) Q _
!D (!) Nov1l Thla progr1m

the revoiiJIIon In IIJrgory. (NRI

TNckl for Sale

72

n . • • •.,.• ....,.,

,. _

CNRI (2:00)

.. .IDNIIAialll_....

Coli 114-31 .. - 1.

-··-··-~
I 1+.,_ 7110.

MY OpTIONS

buNdn._ F,_ oot-o. CoN
114-37.. 241&amp;

2 br.. In oounby, .,., ... w,
stove, Nfrlg.. w.t• • 1ruh
pold/ 1111 mo. tiiO/ dopooll.

.,.. 1 1/Z bo:lw. CA., ....

-c..-.
....... •. ,........
........
-·-·,·,
...
r:o:=...,,.,r=
..·-

-

7:35 (I) Mljor Llllglll . ...,..
1:011 (JJ MOVIE: The llble, Pll11 2

~&amp;. ....bel

of&gt;EN.

-.. -g . ,. ...

polei / e22&amp; mo. 1200/dopooll.
Coli 114-31.. 8181.

'··---"--·2
....................
=
.--·••,.-c
,..... """,....
--···
. ...._
. ......
=.r:.o;.r;t...-_etr... ..
'\1111

~IP

Each year the International Bridg"l

tries 10 clear name ol man
convlctod of wife's murder.

THINJc :t'P ~THEil.

WEST

Press Association confers awards for
plays deemed to be the best of the year
in their particular category. AI limes
the awards can be disputed, butltblnk

e&lt;2l liS Mllacll Molloclf

JUT :t

.H

NORTH
H ·ll
.1063
.Q84
t A K? 52
10

.IH732

By James jaeoby

lUI ClouftN
1B Night Cour1
• Crook Atld ChiN

Jlm'o OddJobl. Bundick olein o

1988 Unu-.1 World look En..,... oodlo'o.lrnporioi. CoH 304171--4.102.

55 Building Supplies

Q

Cool l8lchor urgnlhl klda
Vlelnam ww
p!Oieat. (R) Q
t:OO • (J) liS In 1111 IIMt of 1111
Nlghl VlrgH's nieco and

62 Wanted to Buy

.-ewe.

.... lllldng .....

.......

•o
e® M'r\'.*H

to organize a

10 ft.
door wlh
windows l
h•ctMrl/•71.
coli 304-773-8184.

VCR. lttriO, ellexc. cond. C.l
304-1711-3292.

Prize-winning
defense

Ill ~Wiwtrl Tonight
(11'.30)
• (J) UIA Tlldly
Ill
1111 J4JellilaJIIpetllnl1'11,rt~

COu tldown

For llle: PI«* ycu awn ltr_..
- -· H-··I'WNiylllld.
1hru Fri. 8·8.

dr.... chllt.

BRIDGE

IIJ Munllr,
w• .....,.. Now .
1:30 Cll .Ill Till Wonder y..,.

•so

T.v.,

TOGETHER."

•o
IRI MOVIE: The FIMI

8300 . .1. .... UNt for I
John Owe dol• or end
lotdor. Coli 304-1711-4108.

3 br., In courmy,
N'frig. ,
dlah ' wa1tw, wet• &amp; 1ruh

Jr. 10+171-

011e .C.• kn

(liMon••••
·
a a-a

~?ht&gt;'....,/ GOOC&gt;,

J''"'

Ahar an argument with his wile, I oVerheard my neighbor
mutter, "The greatest of all ar1s is the an of learning to live

.'1£;8p In Clnclnnall

Dozer•. lotftra. BeckhoH.
llobcol. Towmotor, Lot tnrc11.
Dump truc11. C.oftlo. Hunclnglon.
w.v•. 304-731-7181 .......
Sunct.r.

Nice 3 br.. fur•hld. 1•11
w-rd. / t210. Nop•l. 41/2ml ..
out 141. Coli 814-441-8031.

IEAIITIRI l APARTMEiilrl AT
IUDOI!r PIIICII AT 'JACK·
ION aTATa, 1:11 .loeb.,
Pille hrn •112 1 mo.
to
• .... . .. d - - S14-4412N8. E. O.H .

Mart... I

'- •o G WliHI or

Evo&amp;.UTION S'OUNI&gt;J

·~·~· I. I I I I I I I THAN I I I
SClr\M.LETS ANSWERS
Gibbon - Fatty - Rhyme - Pepper- TOGETHER

Newlllour

Don't m•• 1 move wllhout us.
Coli U·HouL 30+171- 7U1.

WOO&lt;IJ-•

.

!D (!) MllciiiH/ Lllnr

1871Sout-d 21 fl .. Motor
H-· full\' l o - Coli 311+
171-2121, ....,.. to go, • •..

51 .Farm Equipment

...
'"' "
n -..,L=:t-·""
ld 2.201- Jockton
Aw. , _ 30+1711- 7147.
&amp;..-tdfDr•• Oneto••••ln

•IM
Ill .Ill Cu- Altair

7:115 ()) Andr Orlfftlh
7:30. (J) ,...., Feud

1188 blle 221 C.orn•o. E 1_, ..... lolL Col 114-742217&amp;-

81

A PRNT NUMBERED 11
~LETTERS

.IIJ Mllml Ylcl
.TopCenl

1871NomldC.omp•21 fl. tully
alii oanl81n.t. TV .m..e and
owning 304-773-1008.

1tl4 FhiJird. 17,000 mil-.
iU L .,gino. &amp; opoocl good
oon,.lon. 14.100. COli 1149811-3373•114-911-•11&amp;

Comp lere tho chuckl e quoted
·l--.1..-.1..-.1..-.&amp;..-.&amp;..__,
by filling in lhe missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

.(J) PM ¥11

8"'-"'·

.·

A young boy watched the
piano tuner race through the
scales with nary a mistake.
Perplexed, lhe boy asked,
~~youhavamore-than

h,,....,,.:-rl-rl--r:lg.-TI
.-11e
I

7:80 (J) Out Ploae

1. 70 Rolm c..p. 22 .... with
..,c!om alo. •oot • · euoo.
Colll1+:11 .. 1711.

-·

GETS 0 I

Ill WKRP In ClnclnMtt
RNtwCou
'''
... ())
Clinlf ...._

*•

27

.Ill Me NeweQ

(f)N·!Co-Q
. . . IDCBINeWa

ho:d to polnl wltll ~dllng leta
Pllilnt Plu1. 2411Jacklon Ave.•
3114-175-4.014..

Nice 14x81 moble honw for
r -. No p•a C.oH 11._44..
914.7.

44

9

(!) llody I!IIC!IIc

,

1988 Chill'/ Corwlco. 23.000
ml• Cal ..,.1m&amp; 114-882A70.

B111lness
Buildings

311 Loti i Ac1811ge

304-171-11U,

181&amp;8.u n8u.,ci•AMotor
H-o.
fl., AC
2000 ... uol ..... Muot bo
0-. 814-992·73211.

1817 U llron Coupa T•bD.
II. . . ..,do:d ohlll.• loodocl
. . . p. 114-742-2021.
,\ , I 11! 1 ~ilJLf,

1:30. (J) liS NBC Nlgltlly Newa

TO CAMP...

luvln,,,..
....... tor
14-37.. 2220 or '

typoo.
p - Coli

1iS2 Dodge DIPiomot 4 door.
-111dllr. 11110rondFury,
4 door. - · olr. 114-89214.71 Of 114-892-7071.

.

: ,., I \itiJIIII•

IF l-IE'S 601N6

1182 23ft. Yol-otono Mol«
Hqme. A1tt conditioner, Yll'f'
............ lolL 114-1111-:1187.

Hua ... l' • l t r . - = Fl .. d.

R - h~ch rocolvor b olio. Fltt
7~2~2;;~-· en. CoN

hint • • now going on 8t Paint
Pluo. 20 , . off regul•

ll'tl.

I:III(J)Affce

IUDOET TRANIM11810N ·
Ulld • robUIM Ill typeo.
- ....... 30d.,o. Prl• •89•
up. Uttd • robUII lor..l
c o - - -dtrd clutp r - ~~~-I CVC!o-11

1t84. 1 - PS, PI, c opel. ,
Toh ov• ,.,.,_o. 1177
· ClriaiUDO. Col 114241-1022.
11?e D - Ch•a-. 1200.
CIII14-4Q.I34:t

SIR, ASK I-IlM

S.. Ac:ceuoriel .

79 Motors HomM
a. Campara

lorry Potch.

~
nd........ g
MondiV. June lttt. •• 304-

!-.. . . .

1--rM_,UI:"D"--r-H_,Ir--ll ,.
1

• «!! ~ J:otlfii!CIIon.
iiJ lllowllti Tlldly

d....

pldl. I

Union

56

I I'

·=

.(J) . .

I
I Ir

LAWGEN

IBP-·Oftb ' .
IIJ C.rllon l!llpre11

Auto Parts

4 cllr- oport with
n11111 P23IR11, W.I .W.
for
dodp Col 304-171-8814.

ltaawbeu•. You ph* or wt

Iouth of Naw

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1877 lui'* Rogol.

1888foidT.,ru•L, cloon, outo.
PI/PI, AMIFM/. .a,• crulto.
AC, 1111 N.._, ~cob
lllclt-up. C.oM 11+381• or
114-38.. 1240.
ll?e Hondo Ao:-:d LX. HI. &amp;
opel., wll m-llnod. O&amp;lrl
11.000. Col 11+44134.17.

llnl-lli: _ , ... 2 mi.,

3wln-okcondlllon0ro.7000
ITU ' o 10 9700 llfU'I ull
114-892·1011.

76

. Inc,

157

SUMMER SC~OOL , CI-IUCK!
THE~ JUST TOLD ME I I-lAVE
TO 60 TO SUMMER SCI-IOOL!
CAN '(()() 8ELIEVE IT?!

llfl.'lhundorlllrdw-h 10 "'
Jahneon •dt.tl'8ilw. Nwr tap.
11+742· 2178 or 114-742·
2101

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c......
Muoio. 114-441-0117,
1111, both good oond. 1 8A Jolt -loy
114Chwral• dump truc11. C-10. 441-1077.
Ctlll14-441-21•1 .

, 14.8

PIUIII

!D !,Oitt Ago I fir A~ Q
(!) l!llldlnO "--llbow Q

For flint. F..n.. hld 2 bectoom
moblo llo-. Coli 11 .. 892·
1038.

Farms for Sale

34

-lnll., t89.
-27··--~~~-""

to cho-trom.

Ill

Gil HIWI

;",'t
MIICtlon of ._.oom •It•
miUI ceblnllil. h... bo•da t30

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IIII-I• pold. 701 Four1h A.... !PP- cr..-. 3 Ml• out
wMk-enda.
Oollpollo. . . . . , ... 44.. 4411
0p., tA.M. to I
tAro• 2 lA hou-. lo•ed on ,...,..._....:.....
Itt• 7 p.m.
AI brldo homo. 3 br.. 1 1/2 SecOnd
,.M , Mon. lllnr Sot. 11+441A\11.,
•210/
mo.
plu1
032.2.
balhl. 1 1/2
wllh t.n on
· Furnlollld opt.. 1 br.. 1221.
S.. ••Ill Rd. Coli 304-1711- dtpooll. Coli I, +441-23110.
1111···
pilei
243
.............
7332.
v•1., Fwnll:uN
Un~-hld. Corp.. kllch ..
Oolll!lolll. ... 114-441-44,. Nlw lftd uud tunllu,. end
ttow. nice end de.\. no lnlkll eft•7 p.m.
oppllorl-. Col 114-441-7172.
ptta. Deposit end r.t•enoe
Houra .,,,
32 Mobile Homaa
roqulrld. &amp;14-892·30110.
2 br.. utllly room. ...
\'I'Ro '
for S•le
loDition. AC. No p... lecurlty
Fumltu,. I Appll.,_
3 - - f•rnllou•. eaeo. Dopoolt Col I 14'441-11 17.
·Rt. 141 I C.ont.,ory, 1/4mlle
P• month. lnc*lct. udltl• Md
on Lin !Din P•o. Mon.·lot. 9-1,
~~ppl•tw&amp;. R.t•.,.,_ needed.
12x10. 3 br., 2 liM b•ho. now
Upst•b. unl.lrnkhed apt., ~­ . . n.. 12··· o,.. .... ..,.,,.
c•pel. Houu type windtJw&amp; Cllll14-892·1318.
untl IPM tor eppotntrnMt•lo
P•ed. u1111•
no~&amp; C1l
u-Dinnlng Pri. . . .r quick
alvo uo • coli. ·a14-441-3111.
114-441-1137
-.....
-~ i!08t.. IMObHeHom•P.k.
: UiOo/,.
Rt. ·
2, for
10 Milo
Crook Rd. mo..
Col p.m.
814-441-1102.
Top qUIIity It low 0011 pri*.
304-8811-3108.
Furnllllld
lltldon""
opt
AN
Moy 8poci.VNo Po¥m.,., ~n
ut•-•• pilei . . . . bo:IV e17a. Flnonclng ovollolllo.
Al$!rt on Wt¥ , . . Mobile Modern 3 br., 2 btlllt. ••· 919SocondA .... col111+441Homtpurdl•td lnMiy. F..,ch conei , llldlllrry Rd. , Mid•• 3841.
v..
10'111 .nd ........
C11v Mobile Home~. C•ll &amp;14- part. OH. ••1304-171-3134.
• • , Reg.t1200. Frwm..-ch.-e34.0. .
2 lA , furnllhed or lentl· ing wei "'•• redln• wllh
turnlthtd ,.. .. m.,. In qultt purch•o. !!.g. prloo t2118. AI
42
Mobile
Hames
Muot ooll 1884 Nuta.o Mobile
Miahborhood. One ce v-av•
Homa .. lim. Oll'lt. M. good
for Rant
wtlh aat..-lc door o,Mne.
lo ... lo.. Col 114-44.. 6421
F. . . . .p.oc1 12.21. l)luo Ulll- Dinlttl Soi•Toblo llld 4 ch . .
lift• I p.m .. ,or ~~tVth'ne on
tl•. Col 114-441-7728.
114.8. Roa. 124.8. o - 4.00
wook-.
wood din lite Clh•&amp; padded Of
Fully turnllhod a•ODt opt. AI
unpoddocl .-lng .. e19.91.
u11ttl• plld IXCip1 lle«rldty,
'fiooonUktt nlcelo•iol\ 1 hr., Newly tedeoor•_. &amp; ctprMed.
edded on FA w / flriDI.:a 112 Dop. Alto 3 btit'oomulll•. Coli
ledJ.Heavy duty bunk a..
ecr• IDI:. New Mpl lc IIYst"IIITI. 114-4.4.
1148/oot. C.optolno bod 1174.
Aoldna/11 0, 0011. Coli 814- 111110. .. 811&amp;8, or 81._44..
AM btdroom eutl• reduced.
4411-0111&amp;
2br .. turnll- Dop. IRif. 112
Mott- • ll prlco olio •
1Ill Redmon IICIIollll 28x68, mi.
I••Flll tin 14.8.91. Ou. .
of Port• on Y4. Clll
3 br., 2 bah. cent.
lft.llt be 114-3811-9113.
17&amp;, Klngt99, Bunkl• e38.91,
'&gt;
moved. Coli 114-441-81i841f·
bobr _ , , _ .211.91.
1 bectoom t.rnilhed
t• I p.m.
2 br., furn'ed. ciHn a qui«. tl• pillet. r • .,. .
Compl.,. llno of o• dining
overlooking the Ohio River. 304-171-2722.
Trele for •I• 01 rent: AntiQue C1ble
T.V. 1¥111tble. Foet•'1
~QIItuN ( p r - otk
dinning _t.tlle for · •Ia. e.n Moble Homo Pori&lt;. Coli I 14- In MldciiPort. 2 -...oam t..rmolnl. il&gt;l ,., ak c...1o
814-441-0127 oltor 2 p.m.
441-1102.
,.llld opt, dopoo• ond ..t•· cablnet:•curved gl•• front
..... 304-112-2111.
U78.
1991
70. 2 btli'oomVICioTrede-lntTH•
rilft. AI .. ectric. Prioed upon 14x70 3 Br, 11h b.th. total .. ec. Ono br.. tur,.llld opt., 4.02
CA. ho• pump. Coli 114-211lnopoctlon~. 304-882·34&amp;1.
22nd St., Clll30+87&amp;-2130.
1911 liter 6pm.

m"•

1

.(2)

!piiDdll

wo••
IAMI

fiAT tAlLY

M

TUES.. JUNE 8
EVENING

2HPv. .lcolpump,20goL.,Ic,

.,...,.,

Hames for Sale

304-171-44e4.

Television
Viewing
M

AIR COMPREIIORS
C.onlpbtl "-told USA

Hud.
304-171-1112. •171-:1100.

pluo utMI&amp; wtl -

AUCTION
12
Sum"* SollooL Jr. High ond
Olin lt., o•111o111.
Hlgh-olotudonto.JIMie12 · 1-;;:;=;::::;:;;;:::;:::::=,..=========i NIW · Ipo.wooderouJ&gt; ··U:II.
Ju1r 7. 2 llouro • d.,. Tho 4.01 36 R-l E•-+e
U.lng ..., ..-tle•MSI.
haur progrem •• ...44 A rtment
IWtk " - wll:h .._...... 1248.
roqu-...-a 8tlte opprowod.
W•ntad
piP
Full olu mott.- 6 tou-lon
ti.OO 111 hour. S!u-o wll bo
for Rant
otlrtlnlt U9. Rlclln• -lnlt
In II'OIIPI- ContiCI Toddllnll.
• •·
114· M9-2011 or 114-949· W.,lod to buY« ltlta Rlv..
U8EI). lido. • • _ . , - 2.1211
~k pr"t**V. cloll IO P~ Furn. A~. n.,t 11J Llbrory 0 u1t D11~ ~
•
.
Pl-.... -~-11 30•17•
••••,
ldn
A
C
Rll
-'
- ofgor-o·-·•
~ ~P• .,,
· ·
· r.., od. oomplotollno
~mltu,..
IRorl.
8uhblo lor 1 ,..... CoK NEW· - - U&amp;
114-44.. 0331.
-llllooto Ill • up. (&amp;loll•
Efllcl- opt. Ide~ lor 1 toft too. I Coli 114-441-3111.
PftOI\ moble home b11ow Coumy Appll~n-. Ina. Good

z c• o•eoa

Bom anc1
Motore for 8•1e

The Daily Sentinei- Paga.- 9 .

I:GO (J) lltlnenu: Till Loll

Wh...Gh.r.,_ or UM. 3
wlwolld llartc C.oM
Rcgoro Mooi ..L 1100.11•
2104.

3 br.. un\Jrriollld opt., l.n
homo. No• CIIY Pork.
St... • rllrl:u 1271 mo.. 1
yr-1....... 21.
Dop. - - ··
Colll14-44..

1
r

1000 Wallf S u -. Toning
T•bl•· Camm•dii-Home Tlft-

tot~o

71

154 .MIIc. Marchlndlu

do bu•ln- wfth ,.,.... you
know. and NOT to ..-.dmon.v
ttvough thl mil unll yau h.,•
lrwM'-ed t ~ off«lng.
'

I

KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Lury Wn•ht

·-·

INOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LI8HING CO . ...,,..,..... th• you

31

i53

Pomarov- Midclaport, Ohio

- l d 10 lw: Old f.,W
__..,ohlnoCibln .. oltoo
-.-v·d•k. Col • , ..24..

BUiineU
Opportunity

23

Tuesday. June 6, 1989

T,..•ls-oe3rwl• ._.town 8uv or 111. Rlw'lrine An1:'11 II Old V. At. 2 .,d 12. 1 124 ! . Moln ltr. ., ,.,.....,.
30+171-324.8
Haun: M.T .W 101.m. tD lp.m. •
.. ..., 1 to lp.m. 114-812·
2.121.

49

IIII.JIIci.JI

21

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

KSBW

..

ZUX SHWHWG-HS
WHU

Z S H

VMSZUQH.-SISG.IU
WBSQ~U
Ynllt.lf'l Cafll,. 1 1111 HAVING CHI DReJUS .

LIKE HAVING A ac:..ING N.LEY -*'AU ED IN
YOUR BRAIN. - MAfmN MUU.

..
••

•

�. .. -

......... _..

..

.·
Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

:-•

Pomeloy-Midcleport, Ohio

Tuuday, June 8, 1989 :: .

\

.

~

- -.Area deaths-- r - - - Local news briefs ...
Richard (Rick) Sellers. 19. or
State Route 338. near Racine.
died Monday at Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital or cancer following
a long Illness.
Born on 'March 22, 1970, at
Galllpolls. he was the son of
Gilbert Sellers of Llzbon and
Joan (JonO Boyd Sellers, Ra·
cine. He was a 1988 graduate of
Southern Local High School, and
was affiliated with the Baptist
Church.
Besides his parents. he Is
survived by a "special parent",
Warren Calaway, Racine, his
maternal grandmother. Marte
Boyd. Syracuse; paternal grand·
mothers, Mary Schoonover, East
Liverpool. and Yvonne Sellers.
Pomeroy; and a maternal greaRICHARD SELlERS
trandmother. Rose Brown.
Syracuse.
Also surviving are several
He was preceded In death by
aunts and uncles Including Kathy his parents. a son, Kenneth
and Rod Sayre, Tiskilwa. Til; Taylor, and two halt-brothers.
Larry and Dale Houston, BowMr. Taylor was a veteran of the
·take. N. H.; Howard and Pam U.S. Army. World War II and the
Houston, Glendale. Calif. Debille Korean Confilct, arid a member
and Carroll Cleland, Middleport, of the .Meigs County 53 Chapter.
and a great uncle, Orville Brown. Disabled American Veterans. He
Syracuse.
. belonged to the SL Joseph
He was preceded In death by Catholic Church, Mason, W. Va.
his maternal grandfather. John and was a member or the Kn lghts
F. · Boyd, and paternal grand- of Columbus·. Mason · County
lather. Edwin Sellers.
Counsel.
Funeral services will be held
Friends may call at the Ewing
on Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Funeral Home, Pomeroy, toRacine United Methodist night (Tuesday) from 7 to 9 p.m.
Church. The Rev. Roger Grace Private graveside services will
will officiate and burial will be In be held at the St. Joseph Catholic
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends Cemetery with the Rev. Andrew
may call at the Ewing Funeral Holman officiating.
Home from 2 to4 and 7to9p.m on
Wednesday . .

'•

I

Maey Walker
Mary Jeanne Walker, 72, of
GaiUpolls, died Monday at University Hospitals In Columbus.
Born Sept. 5. 1916 In Rio
Grande . .she was the daugllter of
the late Dr. William E. and Nell
(Wood) Howell.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, James D. Walker,
on Jan. 18, 1977, whom she
married Jan. 14, 1937.
She attended the St. Aloysius ·
School For Girls In New Lexington, Ohio, and graduated from
Capital ~nlverslty In Columbus.

Carrie E. Townsend. 80. of
Wilkesville, died Monday at Four
Winds Nursing FacUlty In Jack·
son. following an extended
illness.
Born Feb. 23, 1909 In Meigs
County. she was the daughter of
the late Jacob and Mary Ann
!Thomas! Phillips.
Also preceding her In death
were her first husband, Artie E.
Williams In 1959; her second
husband, Frank Townsend in
1981; step-father. George Saxton; four brothers; and two
sisters.
She taught· music In the Gallla
She Is survived by one son, County schools for a short time.
Marvin Williams of Columbus;
She and Mrs. Nancy Reed
• two daughters, Ruth Ann Becker established the First Community
of Wilkesville. and Betty Jean Nursery School of the PresbyterCarpenter of McArthur; 13 Ian Church and operated the
grandchildren: 16 great - nursery for 15 years.
grandchildren; one great-greatShe also taught at Guiding
grandchild; one ste.p- Hand:School.
grandchild; one brother, Sta.nley
In 1972 she became Director of
Phillips of . Logan, Ohio: one Vounteer Services at Holzer
sister. Marie Smith of Hamden. Medical Center . . which she held
Ohio; and ·several nelces and for 10 years.
nephews.
While director, she was a
Services will be Wednesday .11 member of the American Assoela.m. at the McCoy-Moore Fun- atlon of Directors of Volunteer
eral Home In Vinton. with the Services and the Ohio Directors
Rev. Robert Steele and the Rev. of Volunteer Services.
Olan Harvey. Burial will be In the
Castor Cemetery .
She served as past president of
Friends may call today. 2 to 4 the Thursday Club and the
p.m. and 7 to9 p.m. at the funeral Gallipolis Ladles Golf Associahome.
tion. She was also a member of
the First Presbyterian Church,
where she served as a deacon.
John Taylor
Also preceding her In death
John W. Taylor. Sr .. 73, of were two brothers. Judge John
Maple St., Mason. W. Va., died W. Howell and Harry Howell.
She Is survived by one son,
Sunday at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital following an extended James Howell Walker. one
granddaughter, Elizabeth
HI ness.
He was a retired maintenance Walker and one grandson. James
foreman at Philip Sporn Power B. Walker. all of Gallipolis.
Services will be Thursday, 2
Plant. Born on Aug. 20, 1915. at
p.m.
at the First Presbyterian
Weston, W.Va., he was the son of
51 State St. Gallipolis.
Church,
Guy Taylor and Ella Wllbu rn
with Interim Pastor, the Rev.
Taylor.
He Is survived by his wife, Jean Robert Kyser. Burial will be In
the Mound Hill Cemetery.
Henry Taylor, Mason, W. Va.;
Friends may call Wednesday, 7
two sons. John W. Taylor, Jr.,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; and to 9 p.m. at the McCoy-Moore
Michael A. Taylor, Sr., New Funeral Home Wetherholt
Haven. W. Va.; a sister, Soph- Chapel In Gallipolis.
In . lieu of flowers, donations
!rona York, Buckhannon, W.
Va.; a half-brother, Guy L. may be made to the Presbyterian
Taylor, Cleveland: two half· Church organ fund.
Pallbearers will be Warren
sisters, Barbara Allen Taylor,
Sheets,
James O'Brien, TheorBaltimore. Md .. and Mary, address unknown; and his step- dor Reed. Dr. George Davis,
mother. Reba Taylor, Weston, Charles Adkins, and Dr. Oscar
W. Va. Also surviving are eight Clark. Honorary pallbearers will
grandchildren, and two great- be General George Bush and
John Halliday.
grandchildren.

Syracuse wol11(ln horwred
Karen B. Hemsley, Syracuse, has been selected for Inclusion
In the 1988 edition of Outs landing Young Women of America.
Now in Its 24th )'ear, the OYWA program Is designed to honor
and encourage exceptional young women between the ages of 21
and 36 who have distinguished themselves In many fields of
endeavor, such as service to community, professional
leadership, academic achievement, business advancement,
cultural accomplishments, and civic and political
participation.

EMS has four Monday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered four
calls on Monday.
Three of Monday's calls were answered by the Rutland unit.
which at 5:48a.m. was called to County Road 45 tor Bill Garnes
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 12:02 p.m., Rutland
went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Dave Davis who was transported to
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, and at 3:15p.m.. Rutland went to
Salem Center tor Hugh Tllompson who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 8: 20 p.m. went to 24 Railroad St. for Betty·
Taylor who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

hard on the aeneral public," ·:
continued tbe man after Weh- : •
rung answered the question. :: •
"You guys are just doing this for ·:
spite."
·•
Wehrung and Rizer explained ;::
that It was not oat of spite that · :
any actions were taken, butoutof :concern for pedes trlans.
::
All residents who wished to :.;
speak were given the "opportunity.
~:
Council tllen unanimously , ·
passed the motion to suspend the ~:
no parking on sidewalks secllon i;
of the ordinance, to void tickets :::
which have been Issued and to ' ·
refun!l fines . which have been :.;
paid.
••
Anyone wishing to pick up a ;;
refund should stop by the village -:·
hall personally to pick up a :·· '
refund check which Clerk· ;:
-Treasurer Jane Walton wllt..:;have to write. Or, said Walton, "..
checks can be mailed If vRiage v
hall has the correct address of!;:
the person. to whom the refund :should go.
•r
..
•

drawing with the numbers 13,17, ~&gt;
22. 25, 32 and 43.
-:
Only three jackpots In the ::~ :
twice-weekly game have beeb j
won since April 22 and all three ~&gt;
jackpots have been for $15 -;;
million.
.•
Lawrenc~ Rol!nce of Cleveland .:;
won $15 million In the May 6 :;:
drawing and Mike Woodford, an ·•::
assistant football coach at the ·::.,
University of Akron, won $1P ..
million In the May 20 drawing. -~:·
The largest single· ticket :;-·
.winner In Super Lotto history ,: :
was Walter ' Morgan of Center- :~ ·
ville. Ind.
'~"

Unemployed Euclid couple wjn jackpot~

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis .r. Loewi

Veteran• Memorial
Monday a\lmlsslons - Nancy
Jeffers. Pomeroy; Helena Daniels, Pomero; Thomas Fellure,
Middleport; Audrey McQuaid,
Pomeroy; Thurston Stone, Mid·
dleport; Julie Lockard, Wellston; Helen Harris. Syracuse;
Betty Taylor, Middleport; Hugh
Thompson. Langsville.
Monday discharges -Charles
Heck, Robert Rhodes. Hannah
VanMeter. Rick Laudermllt.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
Euclid couple who have not
worked for six years were the
winners of the third $15 million
Ohio Lottery jackpot In less than
one month. ·
Ohio Lottery officials said
Monday Rita, 42, and Edward
Stein Jr.. 47, will receive 20
annual payments of $600,000,
after mandatory federal withholding taxes.
The family or five has t;Jeen on
public assistance since Edward
Stein was laid of six years ago.
Rita and Edward Stein had the
only ticket sold for Saturday's

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ...... .. ....... ................ ..35~
Ashland on :....................... 42\i
Bob Evans ............... ....... .. .. 14l's
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
City Holding Co .... ..............16%
Federal Mogul. .................. .56%
Goodyear T&amp;R .... :............ ..56%
Heck's ............. ....... ............. %
Key Centurion .................... 13%
Lands' End .. .............. .......... 29
Limited Inc ........................ 34\i
Multimedia Inc .................... 96
Rax Restaurants ....................3
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .. 18
Shoney's Inc ....................... ll%
Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 5')1
Worthington Ifld ................. 21~

Weather
By United Press International ·
Soulh Central Oblo
Tonight: Mostly clear. with the
a low beween 55 and 60. Light and
variable winds.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny,
with the highs near 80.

l .

Meigs area announcements .~~
Meet tonlgbt
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star,.will met at 7:30
tonight (Tuesday) at the Chester

•

•

Hall. Members are to wear :
chapter dresses. A 50 year ·..
•
member will be honored.
•

t

'

•
'

..•

'

..

•

•

l

•'

••
•

•
....

ry

....1
.,
.
'

..,

and pour qn a generous sauce of
discounts on travel, entertainment,
dining and lodging. Garnish with a
free registered key ring, and you
have it. The most delicious checking
account in town. The Club. Stop by
any pf our convenient offices today
and.order it
for yourself.

l

\
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·~

COME ON IN! THE WATER'S FINE! According to seven year-old Jessica Barber and
nlae year-old 1\landy Buchanan, the best place to
be on a hoi day In June Is In a backyard swimming
pool at rrandma's house. Graudma Is Freda

Point

___

Maon
773-5514

Point Pl1818nt
875-1121

I

i ~~

{!

l

.!
J

..uchanan, of Route :148, LAing Bottom. Eve·n with
a plastic blow-up shark- eight feet In lengthtaking up rnucb or lhe room In the pool which Is 12
feet diameter, the girls are still having a great
lime.
·

Pomeroy -c ouncil discusses
financial matters, other items
'

By NANCY YOAOHAM
Sentinel News staff
Pomeroy's finances were discussed by councllmembers In
Monday night's regular Pomeroy Village Council meeting.
Much &lt;lisciJsslon centered
around a large bill for weed killer
and related products, and ftout
proper authorization for purchase orders. It was also reported that the village street
department has had some expensive equipment stolen. Including
lawnmowers. If equipment Is
stolen It must be replaced, which
Is an expensive proposltl\ln lor
the village budget.
Brought to light by Councilman
Larry Wehrung was a complaint
of a Pomeroy pollee car Ira vellng
at a high rate of speed through
the village. Although the car was
using lights and siren, It reportedly surprised the driver of
another vehicle, causing that
driver to go off the side or the
road.
Wehrung said that recently, he
personally saw one of the village
cruisers traveling from Pomeroy
toward Middleport at a high rate
of speed, and although the reason
tor the hurry was probably
legitimate, Wehrung felt the
speed was excessive for safety

purposes.
Mayor Richard Seyler agreed
that for their own safety, as well
as for the · safety of other
motorists, patrolmen should
keep their vehicles at reasonable
speeds. "These old cruisers
won't take that kind of treatment," Seyler said.

Sandwich Shop. Pomeroy is then
to be reimbursed by the developer of the two businesses. This
matter was agreed upon at the
time the two businesses began In
Pomeroy.
It was reported that repairs to
potholes In several Pomeroy
streets will begin as sooflo as the
weather clears long enough to
Also In regard to the pollee make repairs possible. ll repairs
department, Councilman Bruce are made prematurely, they
Reed reported that he has won't last.
Sites In the village where
received favorable comments
from residents about pollee offic- drainage from old coal mines Is a
ers walking beats for a couple problem were mentioned. Mayor
hours each shift.
Seyler said that the Ohio DepartCouncil has received and wHI ment of Natural Resources'
be reviewing a copy of Blue Division of Mine Reclamation Is
Streak Cab Company's financial aware of most of the sites and
statement. Council requested the already has some sites on It's
financial statement before re- repair schedule.
leaslngJunds to pay Pomeroy's
It was decided to purchase
share of local monies which are from Middleport Trophies, a
required as part of Blue Streak's plaque to commemorate
funding process. Middleport VIl- "Kerm's Corner" on which stood
lage, which administers the state New York Clothing House which
grants which allow Blue Streak was operated for many years by
to operate, provided the financial the late Kermit Walton. Cost of
the plaque, which will be set In
statement to Pomeroy.
concrete
on the sidewalk, Is $318,
Council a)l thorlzed Attorney
reported
Councilman Reed.
Pat O'Brien to ~raw up legal
Finally, council accepted the
documents through which Pomeroy will pay Middleport $1,200 a mayor's report of $3,054 lor fines
year to provide sewage service to and fees collected during the
Domino's Pizza and the Subway month of May.

,--Local news briefs---w
No one huri in Tuesday mishaps

•c

The Melp·Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol cited both
drivers. In an accident at 12: 15 p.m. Tuesday on US 38 at the
lntersectloJ\ of SR. 681, at Darwin. No one was Injured.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven ey James Robson, 73, or
Pomeroy, pulled from SR. 681, onto US 3:1, and collided with a
car driven by Wesley D. Preast, 21, Albany, Ohio. Dainagewas
minor to both vehicles.
,.
The patrol cited Robaon for failure to yield the right of way.
Both drivers were cited for not wearing a ·seat belt.
An I!Ccldent that occurred at 8 p,m. Tuesday on SR.l24, near
milepost 116, In Olive Township, Is sUII under lnvestlptlon.
Troopers iald Dorman V. Reed, 116, Reedsville, attempted to
pall Rodney Spears, 17. Rt. 1, CooMIIe, just as Spears
attempted to turn Into a driveway and the vehlcls coUlded with
minor damaae to botb vehicles. No one. was Injured.

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House sets stage for
conference on budget

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773

Ohio, Wednesday, June 7. 1989

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It was noted by residents that
In some areas of Pomeroy. If
parking on sidewalks were not
allowed. "residents w.ould have
to park a mile away tram their
homes." It was also pointed out
that some residents sutler from
illness or disabilities and must
have their vehicles In close
proximity to their homes.
It was the opinion of several
·residents that the ordinance In
questiOn. which was passed in the
1940's, Is no longer applicable
since it was passed at a lime
when there were fewer vehicles
In use.
One man questioned exactly
what areas of the village were
discussed at the last meeting
when It was decided that sidewalk parking should be
eliminated.
Councilman Wehrung said "It
was mainly In front of the
sheriff's department and In front
of Cleland Realty Company"
which were discussed.
"You fellows
are making It
.

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Continued from page 1

ruehard Sellers

Can-ie Townsend

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ConUINed tram page 1

Reception planned for Rep. Abel
A .receptiOII for State Representative Mary Jane Abel
(D·Athens}.wUI be belli at 7 p.m. Friday In tbe James A. Rhodes
Student Community Center at Rio Grande College. RepresentatJq Atbenl, Galua and Melp counties In the 94th Ohio HoUle
Olltrlet, Abel•vu appoJJilled to replace Jolynn Boster Butler,
who wu named chairperson ot the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohto.
&lt;&amp;l.!lil.l)led on paae 1,2

NewHIIven
882-2135

_....__.....__
I

•

'

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS The Ohio
House of Representatives set the
stage Tuesday for conference
committee negotiations with the
Senate on the $26.3 billion slate
budget, rejecting the Senate
version, 59-38.
"We're going to coine back
here with a better budget for you
when It's all said and done," Rep.
William Hlnig, 0-New Philadelphia, chairman of the House
Finance Committee, assured his
colleagues.
Minority Republicans, voting
as a bloc, supported the Senate's
Republican-written version, but
they were outnumbered.
Hlnlg said the Democrats were
most distressed by Senate reductions of $10 million for development, $36mllllon lor the Environmental Protection Agency. $29
million for human services, $13.5
million for the aging, $30 million
for new state employee pay
classifications and $30 million in
the ending fund balance.
The six conferees, with Hlnlg
as chairman, may begin late
Wednesday to enumerate the
differences between the Senate
and House. Lawmakers have
until July 1 to enact the new
budget.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe
Jr. , D-Wheelersburg, told repor ters at an Impromptu news
conference:
-Democrats want to restore
Senate cuts made In Houseapproved appropriations for eldercare and aging programs.
"They made some drastic cuts
there and we're going to take a
serlous look at them," he said.
-If there are extra revenues,
as now estimated by the .state
Office of .Budget and Management, the Democrats will. try to
add money to the state's savings
account and will consider a
Senate Democratic proposal to
declare a "war on drugs'' at the
state level.
-He will not allow any Item to
remain in the budget that does
not Involve an appropriation. He
specifically referred to an
amendment Inserted in the Senate relating to high school
soccer and said It wiU be "out of
thert\'."
The latter provision forbids
local boards of education to
prevent high school students
from playing a sport of their
choice out of season, as tong as·lt
does not conflict with a school
activity.
"That should be taken up In a
separate bill." said Riffe. The
matter already Is In a bill being
heard In the Senate Education
Committee. The sponsor. Sen.
. Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton,
Inserted It in the budget In Senate
Finance Committee.
·
"I think In many ways, the
Senate has acted responsibly,"

House Bill :closes loophole
Amended House Bi1127 closes a
loophole in Ohio law and allows
the state's electric suppllers to
plan properly for the future, L. R.
Hoover, vice president of Ohio
Power Company, stated
Tuesday.
Hoover's t~stlmony before the
Ohio Senate Ways and Means
Committee during hearings on
the bill In Columbus made the
following points:
-Ohio law exclusively allows
municipal electric systems to
expand Into the certified territories of tbe other electric suppliers In the state. This bill "would
merely ex tl!nd the territorial
cerUtlcatlon requirements, outside of the municipal corporationa, to municipal electric systems that do not own surplus
capacity from their own general·
lng facilities."
Further, he aald, "any municipality would continue to be able
to operate unrestricted lulde the
munlctpallty _and 111 . areaa .U .
alreadY serves outside the mu-

nielpallty. Those municipalities
with surplus generating capacity
will not be affected" by passage
of Amended H. B. 27.
-This Is an Issue of fairness.
Other electric companies in the
state are obligated to serve all of
the customers within their certl·
fled territories, as established Qy
H. B. 577 In 1978. While other
electric comp~nies are restricted by terrltorlat.boundarles,
municipally operated companies
are free to select their customers
outside or the municipal
boundaries.
-U municipalities are allowed
to expand ou tslde their corporate
limits, It becomes difficult to
plan for the generation, trans·mlsalon and distributiOn facilities that will be required In the
future when certified territories
may. or may notbeeatenawayby
an unregulated and unrestricted
supplier. 1
-Wlthollt passage or Amended
H. B. 27, a social burden will be
'Increased for Ohio's consumers.

Hlnlg told his House colleagues .
"They've sent over a balanced
budget," he said, noting that In
terms of dollars spent, there Is
less than $10 million difference
between the Senate and House
versions.
"They found a way to cut out
the 1tobacco and alcohol) taxes
and come back. with the same
figures," said Hlnig. "I'd like to
ask your concurrence (In Senate
changes) but I can't. There are
some things we have to take a
close look at."
Although the Senate used a $174
million boost In the state's
revenue estimates to eliminate
th~ taxes. Hlnlg said "they didn't
use mirrors" to balance the
budget. •'They actually took
m 0 ney." he said, listing the cuts.
But Republican leaders
praised the Senate version lor
eliminating the taxes and providIng Increases In basic state
assistance to 200 school districts
that would not otherwise have
received increases.
"I believe thaI this blU is
probably going to be the best bnt

we see in this budget process,"
said Rep . Thomas Johnson, RCambrldge, referring to the
version that cleared the Senate
last week.
Both Johnson and Rep. JoAnn
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, the
minority whip, said if revenue
projections are increased, a
Supplemental bill could be
passed. although they recommended that themoneybesaved.
"Let's don't let it burn a hole in
our pocket." said Davidson.
The House passed unanimously and sentto the Senate a bill
prohibiting minors from buying
or selling motor vehicles without
authorization from a parent or
· guardian.
'
Rep. Robert Doyl e. RBeavercreek, said a woman in
his district said her 14-year-old
·son titled a vehicle in his name
for a 17-year-old fr iend who did
not want to pay fo r Insurance on
the car .
1 The House adjourn ed until
· Wednesday at 1:30 p.m., when
the Senate will also reconvene.

U. S. dependents are
ordered leave Beijing
BEIJING (UPI) - Troops
building In a walled compound
occupying central Beijing exwhere members of the U.S.
panded their defenses around the
mission, other diplomats and
seat of national power Wednesforeign journalists and businessday, and soldiers shot up a U.S.
·
men reside.
diplomatic apartment building
but caused no injuries. The U.S.
Fo.relgn witnesses said the
ambassador ordered an evacuatroops fired after a sniper on the
tion of diplomatic dependents in
roof of a building shot dead a
an apparent reaction to the
soldier stationed with others
incident.
near 20 tanks deployed on an ·
In another outbreak of violence
overpass In front of the complex.
. Jess than a mOe away. patrolling
Bu'Uets tore Into the high-rise,
troops outstde a major tourist
smashing numerous windows,
hotel shot dead four people,
but no one was wounded. Ofllcers
including a junior high school
then slatloned soldiers with as- ·
student cycling to class, Chinese
sault rifles around the entire
witnesses said . They said it was
compound, sealing its exits and
not evident why the soldiers
trapping occupants Inside.
fired.
• Conservative Premier Ll Peng
Fred Krug, chief of security at
and two other hard-line leaders the U.S. Embassy, said his
re-emerged in the official news children were In a room of his
media for the first time since . seventh floor a par trnent when
troops and tanks Invaded the city bullets shattered the windows.
last weekend to crush the peace- He said his Chinese maid threw
ful pro-democracy movement, her body over the cfiildren to
Indicating they were In charge of protect them . .
"They shot up every apartthe military force struggling to
control a citywide Insurrection ment in the building," he said.
The U.S. Embassy ordered an
ignited by the brutal crackflown.
emergency
evacuation of staff
Just after noon, soldiers posted
on Changan Avenue, which cuts members and dependents from
through downtown, unleashed the compound, but soldiers
volleys of automatic weapons blocked three vans sent over to
fire a( an ll-story apartment pick them up.

Highway construction
expediter is proposed ·
Pfeifer said the expediter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R· would hold a public meeting once
Bucyrus, proposed Tuesday the a week to review a given highway
establishment of an Ohio High- project with representatives of
way Construction Expediter to the state attorney general. conride herd on key highway con- tractors, the Ohio Department of
struction projects around the TrB,nspottatlon. labor unions and
local officials . .Problems would
state.
Pfeifer told a press conference be discussed and solved.
Pfeifer's amendment also calls
that interstate projects take too
for
ODOT to maximize the
long, creating bottlenecks for
Impatient motorists and result- number of contractors on a job to
take advantage of available
Ing In accidents.
The senator sald ' he will offer , labor, and· to limit the number of
an amendment to the state lane mUes being paved at one
.
highway budget, now under time.
"By concentrating our constudy In the Senate Highways
and Transportation Committee, stJ'U!:UOri ettor" on smaller :
requiring the governor to appoint stretches or pavement, working .
d!Ugently to complete an area :
a Cabinet-level expediter.
He said former Gov. James before moving ·on to the next. we ·
Rhodes In the 1960s appointed should be able to minimize :
Ohio Turnpike Commission motorial Inconvenience, which In :
Chairman James SbocknesiY to turn will help save lives," said ·
.
·
expedite the completion of Inter· tbe senator.
Pfeifer also proposed that ·
state 71.
''The concept Is the same now consracton work around tbe
as It was then," Pfeifer said. clock, IeVen days a week, where .
"Find a no-nonsense Individual polllble. "It would cost more .
who will get tbe job done safely, money,"·he&amp;ald, "butlt's vitalto ·
quickly and efficiently."
· our economy and vital to our ·
safety."

--

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