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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
r---

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Local news briefs... ---. Rough weather. hits Texas
Continued from page 1

By United Press lnternallonal
Warm, humid air streaming
north from the Gulf of Mexico
combined with fierce winds to
trigger a number of tornadoes
over the Plains. the National
Weather Service reported
Wednesday.
There were 16 reports of

Brown sentenced on charges
James M. Brown was sentenced to8 tol5yearsina state penal
institution on .charges of felonious assault when he appeared
late Tuesday morning before Judge Fi'ed W. Crow Ill In the
Me igs County Common Pleas Court.
Brown was originally indicted for attempted murder tn
co nnection with an Incident on Aprll23 In which Brown, using a
knife. did cause or attempted to cause bodlly Injury to Dennis
Tillis. A written plea of guilty to a reduced charge of felonious
aggravated assa ult was entered by Brown when he appeared In
the court on May 30.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis-&amp; Loewl

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Is Investigating a
reported breaking and entering of a residence on Gold Ridge.
James and Carol McKenzie, Cleveland, own a mobile home on
Go ld Ridge and have reported that sometime during the week,
the trailer was entered. A 30-30 rifle and a Mossberg rifle were
ta ken from the residence, the sheriff's department reports.
Entry was made through a rear window .
The department Is also Investigating the theft of a 10-speed
bicycle from a carport at the Sroufe f1lSldence on Bowles Road,
at Dexter. The stolen Huffy 10-speed Is sliver and red and was
taken sometime Sunday night.

Am Electric Power ............. 27'!4
AT&amp;T .................................. 36
Ashland 011 ..: .................... .41\7
Bob Evans .... , ..................... , 15
Charming Shoppes ... ........... . 17
City Holding Co .................. 16)18
Federal Mogui.. .. " .............. 56Ji
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .................55Ji
Heck's ....... , ......................... Ji
Key Centurion .. ~ ................ .l3Y.
Lands' End ......................... 28~
Limited Inc ........................ 32~
Multimedia Inc ........ ........... 99~
Rax Restaurants ........ .......... 2'!-f
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... ... 18 ·
Shoney's Inc ................ :...... ny.
Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 5Y,
Worthington lnd ................. 21 Yo
(Umlted Inc. Is ex dividend
today)

EMS has ttro calls Tuesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services' units answered
two calls for assistance on Tuesday.
At 10:49 a.m., the Pomeroy unit went to Crew Road for Linda
Foreman who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 7:05p.m. went to Meigs Mine No.2 for Marc French,
also taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Thoren honored for achievement

Five fined in Pomeroy court
Five were fined and three others forfeited bonds In the court of
Poll)eroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Robert Riffle. Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
destruction of property; Rick' Laudern;ollt, Pomeroy. $100 and
costs. destruction of property; Danny Darst, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, passing on a double yellow line; Jeff Gilkey, Middleport,
$63 and costs, sque·a ling tires; and John Casto, Pomeroy, $63
and costs. disorderly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were David Dillard, Racine, $113, public
intoxication; Charles Dobias, Jr., Leetsville, Pa. , $43, lllegal
left turn; and Virginia Davis, Racine, ·$43, assured clear
distance.
·

woman fined on tUXJ charges
'
Sharon A. Whitlow, Cheshire,
was fined on two charges, DWI
and no operator's license, when she appeared In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
On the OWl charge she was flned$425andcostsand sentenced
to three days In jail. and on the no operator's license charge she
was fined $50 and costs.
..
.
Others fined In the court were Jerry Uribe, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs. expired operator's permit; Lanny Ross, Portland, $10
and costs, squealing tires; Elmer F. Harmon, Rutland, $15 and
costs, speeding; Waldon E. Roush, Letart, W. Va.,$10andcosts,
assured clear distance; Tammy R. Kennedy, Langsville, $50
and costs, no driver's license; and Andrew Wachtel,
Huntington. W.Va .. $19 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds in the court were Larry Sigler, Rutland,
$450, on OWl; and Melinda K. Custer, Middleport, $42, speeding.

Eva J. Wilson. 88, of 812 41st
St .. Vienna, W. Va.,diedTuesday
at the Parkvlew Health Care
Center in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born in Ritchie County, a
daughter of the late Frank and
Maude Clayton Pritchard, she
was a homemaker and a member
of the St. John United Methodist
Church in Vienna where she had
been a Stj,nday school teacher.
She is survived by a son and
daughter-in-law, the Rev. Larry
E. and. Donna Jones Wilson,
Vienna, and a son, Frank M.
Wilson. address unknown; one
sister , Nellie McCubbins of Jef·
ferson City. Tenn.; three grandsons. Robert A. Wilson, Vienna;
James Jones. Jacksonvllle.Fia.;
and Randall Wilson, Missouri;

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Danny
Barrett, Dexter; Carol Wines,
Shade; Mat thew Thompson, Racine; Bette Morrissey,
Middleport.
·
Tuesday discharges - Evelyn
Spencer, Keith Musser, Robert
Hoover, William Reeves.

Bank One, Athens, N.A .. has
filed a foreclosure action in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Herbert B. M!ller.
Tuppers Plains; Monna J .
M!ller, Tuppers Plains; Darrin
Shane Sargent, Tuppers Pia fils;
and Charleen G. Sargent,
Tuppers Plains, et al.
Beneficial Mortgage Company ·
of Ohio has been granted judgment of $25,090.96 in a foreclsoure action against Dewayne
G. Stutler, eta!.
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company has been granted from
Ricky J. Morris, et al, $11,827.27
due on a promissory note tor
property.
Finally, an action by Marilyn
K. Goodnlte against Meigs Local
School District, Board of Educaton, et al, has been dismissed.

Lieences issued
•

Marriage licenses' have ~n
Issued In Meigs Cou111Y Probate
Court to David Ray Lupardls, 28,
Sandyville, W.Va., and Kelly
Denlese Webb, 23, Sandyville,
w.va.; Jack Maynard Braley
Jr.. 25, Mason, W.Va., and
Dreama Sue Bentz,19, Pomeroy.

File for divorce
Shirley A. Follrod, Rutland,
has flied In Meigs County Common Pleas Court for a divorce
trom Jack E. l"ollrod, Pomeroy.
Terri Lynn .Penhorwood, Mid·
dleport, and Frederick Eueene
Penhorwood, Middleport, have.
tll~d for a dlsiolullOn of thejr

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe.,

Gallpolls
446-1699
·
lOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

PH.

Insurance:

:

'

7231
8-9-26-28-30-41
Kicker 794688

Carlisle~ D.D.S.
Announces The Opening Of

Family Dental Care

•
No.24

Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursd~y. June 8, 1989

- Patient Scheduling Now Available With Appointments
Beginning June 12, 1989
•· ·
Phone 675-1932 Between-The Hours Of 10 am.-2 pm

"-""

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
With a bid of $127,500, Banks
Construction Company, of Middleport, has been awarded the
contract to Install an elevator in
the Meigs County Courthouse.
Meigs County Commissioners
made the announcement during
Wednesday's regular meeting.
Larry Banks, company owner,
signed a notice of award of the
contract. The final contract wlll
be signed as soon as all necessary
documents related to the job,
such 1\s bond Insurance and
workers' compensation, have
been received by the

.

2-1988 FORD FACTORY SALE CARS
$ .
FORD TEMPOS 4DOOR--······....... WAS $9295 NOW 7 89 5
1987 V~6. AUTO., AIR, P.S., P.W., P.D.L
.
S849
FORD THUNDERBIRD .............. WAS $10,900 JtOW.
, 19 78 AUTO., 4CYC., TIA'IBO, ~OAD~D
. ,. $
PONTIAC SUN BIRD GT ....,_.... WAS 51995 NOW 70 9 5

5

JUANrl'A TO DOCK SATURDAY - The
.Juanita wUI be docked In Pomeroy ud open to
vlsftononSaturd&amp;Jfrom 10 a.m. totp.m.1111 part
of HerMare Weekend activities. Tbe aternwbeeler

Rep-lo18tlve
... Clio. 411U .
Pil .•,./II2·14'N .... I,41tn-2477
Cl_, ,.~2,·MM

.

tl~
'I!'*~~

II I

0

atlll works on tbe Oblo River • one ol the AEP
River Transportation Division'• harbOr vessels at
lbe company's facility In Lakin, W.Va.

been sentenced to death row ous," said Sen. Eugene Bransince 1982. Ohio has not executed stool, D-Ullea. "The government
a prisoner since March 15, 1963.
must carry out the sentence, not
The b!ll, sponsored by Rep. the next of kln."
Ron Mottl, D-Parma, keeps
A second amendment brought
electrocution, but would allow a
on the floor came from Sen.
prisoner to choose his method of Charles Heney, R-Chardon, that
execution. II the lethal injection would take away the choice and
method Is found unconstitu- make lethal· Injection the only
choice "to make the law more
tional, the electrocution method
certain to execution."
·
would still stand.
Sen. Gary . Suhadolnlk, R"I would challenge It as cruel
Parma · Heights, attempted to and unusual punishment to allow
amend the bill by allOwing the a person to choose his way of
victim's family to· choose the deaih," Henry said.
He had offered that same
method of execu lion and added ·
amendment In the Senate. Judideath by tiring squad and hangciary Committee last month, but
ing as other choiCes.
It failed to gain a majority vote.
"When do we give the ·guilty
Both amendments were departy a choice of penalty?" he
asked. "We're talking about feated by voice vote.
Sen. Richard Finan, Rsavage, brutal murderers, someC!nclnnatl, urged d.ereat of the
one who has stabbed his victim
blll since the death penalty bill of
many times, and then we give
1981
hatl not been used. ·
them a break to let them choose
'"We
stand here in June of1989
their penalty?
talking about executions," he
"What choice did the victim
have?" hi' asked.
.Continued on page 16
"The amendment ls 'outrage-

Taft names
•
runnmg
mate

-Local news briefs
Plants await trord from Bush
A proposed acid rain reducatlon plan In Washington, call!ng
for 20 power plants around the nation to cleanup, wlll cost both
money and jobs, according to a spokesman for American
Electric Power.
Gavin Power Plant Is one of the four subaldlarles of the
Columbus-based American Electric Power &lt;;ompany and one of
six In Ohio that will be effected by the plan. Ohio Valley
Electric's Kyger Creek Power Plant also wlll be affected by the
plan.
According to AEP lnformatloh manager Du'a ne Zumbrunn,
plant owners are on hold until President Bush reveals hls plan.
· At that time. AEP plants wlll be forced to either switch to low
sulfur coal or Install scrubbers.
If Gavin switches to low sulfur coal, coal-mining jobs will be
cut and the costfor the coal wlll increase costs for the company.
By Installing scrubbers, coal-mining Jobs will be more secure
but the cost of the scrubbers will have a ripple effect to the

tirir

Sp.,lll 01 Tks Ws1k/
CHUCKWAGON
$114

customers.

,.

Don't forget to register for 4 Ticketa to be given' away to~ the Cincinnati Red• VI. Lo1 Angela• Dodgal'l Saturday, June 24. 1989 at RIverfront Stadium •
Tickets will be dr.wn on Monday, June 19, 1989 at 12:00 Noon.
No purchaM neoeu•ry-Need not be pr...nt to win.

WITH FRIIS••••"sl.69

ADOLPH'S DA

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
The Ohio Senate voted Wednesd·aY' to allow inmates on death
row to choose lethal Injection
over electrocu tlon as a method of
execution.
·
The 19-12 vote culminated a
debate during whiCh members
defeated two proposed amendments. The blll, which had been
approved ln the House, was sent
to Gov. Richard Celeste's office.
A spokesman said It has not
been determined what the governor will do. "It looks llke we may
Implement th'e 10-day ruhi," said
Reuven Carlyle, Celeste's a's slst·
ant press secretary. Under that
rule, the bill would become law
after 10 days without the governor's signature.
.
The House, meanwhile, defeated ·a Senate-passed bill forbidding motorists to wear stereo
headsets while driving. The vote
was -59-37.
. Ohio's death penalty. law approved ln/ 1981 has not been
enforced. and 94 inmates have

1986 AUTO. TRANS., AIR (OND.
BRONCO II WAGON 4X4 ..... WAS Sl995 Now$789.5
1986 Y·6, 5 SPEED, AIR
BLAZER S-1 0 414 ........-.............. WAS Sl995 NOW$7995
1986 6 CY(., 4SPEED TRANS. .
FORD-150 414 ............................_.WAS Sl995 NOW$7495
1985 LOADED
FORD CUSTOMIZED VAN ..~. WAS S12,500 NOw$11,800
1985 S-1 Ov-6, 5 SPEED TRANS., AIR
CHEVROLET BLAZER ....·-····-"""' WAS S7995 NOW$6895

102 W. 2nd at.. -

VAWY•

•

2 Sectiono, t 6 Pagoo

26 Centl

A Muttknedi• Inc. NewiiJaper

Banks Construction.
is awarded contract
for courthouse project

paying. Call a Nationwide
agent today IO&lt; details.

JEFFREY J. WARNER

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low In
· 608. Chance of rain 5I
l.eJ•ceJot. Friday, high In mid llh.
J;to.an..ee of rain 70 percent.

•

Our complete coverage may
cost less than yqu're now .

marJ'I.q:~.

.,

Pick 4

Michael B.

2924 Jackson Avenue

.

117

Page 4

Paying
too much
for too little?

?

••

Pick 3

Super Lotto

1985 LOADED
CROWN VICTORIA WAGON ..... WASSI995 NOW $7095
1986 OLDS 2DOOR, 4 eve.. AUTO. TRANs.. AIR
CUTLASS CIERA BROUGHAM....WAS Sl995 NOW $5 8 9 5
_19864DOOR
$
.
PLYMOUTH HORIZON ................ WAS $4295. NOW 2 99 5

Car
•

, $ ...~...""-==t&lt;t.' ··'·

Bake and yard sale
A bake saie and yard sale, ·
sponsored by VFW Post 9053 and
auxiliary, will be held Saturday
starting at 8: 30 a.m., on the tot
across from the Farmers Bank
and Savings Company In
Tuppers Plains.
Dinner Saturday
Baked chiCken and dressing
dinners will be served Saturday,
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., at the
Mason Fire Department. The

Ohio ~ttery

Cincinnati•
regams
top
spot in West

dinner Is sponsored by the Mason
Ladies Auxiliary. For delivery,
call 304-773-5832.
FatbeMOD banquet
The Pomeroy Church of Christ,
212 West Main St., will be holding
a father-son banquet on June 15
at 6 p.m. In the church &gt;lloclal
room. Pat Thoma will be carryIng out a patriotic theme In the
'd ecorations. Betty Spenser,
Jenny Whitlatch, Martha Hof·
!man and ' Ll nda Laudermllt will
_be In charge of the men_u.

:Ohio Senate approves ~ethal
.ir.ljt1ction method _.o f exec~.tion

The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment reports that · nine fire
alarms were answered during
May. Four were In-town and five
were out-of-town calls. Of the
total, two were structure fires;
four were vehicle fires or vehicle
accidents; and three were mut·
ual aid calls. Fire Department
members worked a total of 202
hours and drove vehicles a total
of 286 miles.

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
.GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

:

'

'~?

·· r:==t=========~---------------r~~~~~~~~--~-----------r~-------------r--~;-~'~-~----~

Pomeroy has nine
ftre alarms in May

one granddaughter, Kyle Ann
McCartney, Wash!ngton,W. Va.;
and one niece, Helen Wilson,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
~he was preceded In death by
her parents, her husband, W. S.
Wilson in 1957, and two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m Friday at the WhiteEthridge Funeral Home, 125 Lee
St., B~lpre, with the Rev. Don
Matheny and the Rev. Larrr
Wilson officiating. Burial will be
In Evergreen Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m . on
Thursday .

¢

Meigs announcements

.

Foreclosure action
fded in Meigs court

--Area deaths--Eva Wilson

A tornado near Odessa, Texas,
Injured six people, twisted poles
and signs and overturned a
tractor trailer. Tornadoes were
spawned by severe thunder·storms Tuesday evening ne!lr
Cheyenne and · Elk City, Okla .,
and near Lipscomb, Texas.
Earlier, rain and thunderstorms were scattered along the
Atlantic Seaboard and Gulf coast
with more of the same forecast
for the next few days, the NWS
said.
An afternoon tornado struck
Clearwater, Fla., damaging
trees, power lines and some
. private property.
Rain was widespread over
New England and showers were
scattered across the mid·
Atlantic states.
Severe thunderstorms deve·
loped over northwest Oklahoma,
_producing dime-sized hall.

Stocks

B &amp; E probed by deputies

Eric Allen Thoren, Racine, was recently honored at The Ohio
State University Agricultural .Technical Institutes annual
student recognition banquet for academic achievement.
A major in landscape constrqctlon and contracting, Thoren Is
a gra duate of Southern Locai High School.
While at OSU-ATI, he received the Kibble Award and the
Arboi'tech-TIIford Scholarship. He Is vice president of the
Studeht Senate, a member of the Student Affairs, ATI
Landscape Club, and the Community Association Board.
Thoren will complete an Internship In Urban Forestry for a
seco nd major and will accept a position with Davey Tree.
The outstanding students recognl2ed by the college are
chosen because of their high academic achievements,
community involvement and leadership qualities.

tornadoes late Tuesday over the
central and southern Plains,
weather ofliclals said.

Wednesday. June 7. 1989

. . '•

"Either way there will be an enormous expense which will
cost everybody," Zumbrunn sal d.
AEP doesn't know what changes !I will make until word
1
' comes .from Washington on Bush's plans, which are expected to
be relealied Monday.

Plumroor lawsuit in fifth day
The S12·mllllon lawsuit of Maxine Plummer, Wellston,
former GaiHa-Jackson·Melga mental health director. aealnst
the OhiO Qepartment of Health, Ia In Ill tlflh day today In U.S.
District Cdurt. Columbus.
The Jury of three men and five women was seated lut Friday
to b.- the cue befOre Fetlerlll Magistrate Terry Kemp.
Plummer Is aulng 'the former Galllll-Jackson-Melga mental
health board and the bOards of commllalonera lor Gallla,
Jacklon and Melp counties tor $2-mWion In compensatory
damaJ!S and SlQ·mWion ln pullltlve damages. She wants ber
I old Job bllck with l,u ll back pay and all benellts, &amp;110 attorney
Continued on page 16

a...;..,~------""'!"--------..,;,;;-;..1
.

'.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Saying she Is "the best person I
could find," Republlcan gubernatorial hopeful Robert Taft II of
Cincinnati announced Wednesday that his running mate in 1990
will be Franklin County Commissioner Dorothy Teater.
Teater, 59, a former Columbus
councllwoman, thus becomes the
first announced candidate for
lieutenant governor. Her husband, Robert, former state director of natual resources, ran
unsuccessfully for lieutenant
governor In 1982.
ln making his announcement
at Franklin County Republican
headquarters, Taft conceded
Teater will enhance his chances
of gaining the pivotal partY
endonement ln the county
aeai01t Mayor George Volnovich
of Cleveland, the only other
officially declared candidate for
the GOP eubernatorlal
nomination.
"Dorothy Is an exceptional
woman .. ," Taft told cheering
supporters aportlng buttons that
said: "TNT They're
Dynamite."
"Dorothy Ia a hlihly reapected
leader, not Just In Franklin
County but thr0111hout Ohio,"
said Taft, a Hamilton County
commllaloner. "She Ia tmiDently
welJ..qpallfild to lerVI! u IOWI'•
nor Ill he!: OWl\ Nbt. lhould tlt.il.t

"GccUIDII...,r ~1.1e:

.

Township Road 333 where a new
shaft ls being drilled. Blasting
will take place from sunrise to
sunset according to the notification from the company.
The commissioners approved
bond for Patt'icia L. Wolf as a
deputy clerk of Meigs County
Kim Shields, Meigs County's Court, replacing an employee
who resigned recently. The posidirector of development, met
tion is part-time at present bulls
briefly with the commissioners
expected to become full-time
to review a few specific matters
within the next few weeks.
regarding draw down of funds for
Finally, since no one attended
the elevator project .
the
publiC hearing on the request
Clerk Mary Hobstetter reported that Southern Ohio Coal ., from JayMar Coal Company to
apply salt brine as dust control,
Company wlll be surface bias ting
June 5·16 In an area off Salem. the request was approved.
commissioners.
Banks expects to start construction just as soon as the final
contract is signed. The company
has 180 days from the time the
contracns signed to complete the
project.

Landfill prices topic ·
By NANCY YOACHAM
that the surcharges will be paid the county. When the surcharges
Senlinel News Staff
"In addition to" regular landfill go Into effect, haulers will again
As required by new state law- dumping fees. For example, If a have to raise their fees . Base
House Bill 592 - the Athens, hauler brings seven tons of solid dumping fees are also llkely to
GaiHa, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs waste to a facility to dump, and It keep· going up since actual
and VInton Solid Waste Manage- costs $25 to dump the seven tons, landfill operation ls more expenment Polley_ Committee has · an additional $7 ($1 per ton sive under the guidelines of the
adopted a surcharge on refuse surcharge) will be required. The new state law. For example,
dlsposalln landfills located In the $7 which is collected goes di·
landfills must now be lined with
six-county district. The sur- rectly Into the six-county district an expensive, heavy guage
charges are necessary to raise for various district expenses, plastic.
money to pay for services of legal such as the hiring of consultants,
With the dominci effect, Incounsel and professional consul- attorneys and engineers, which creased costs will pass from the
tants to develop a solid waste ls required by the new state law. landfill, to the hauler, to the
managment plan for the distriCL
As explained by the ..commls- customer on the hauler's route.
The management plan Is man- sloners, when the Meigs County Tile Meigs County Commissiondated by the new law and must be Landfill closed, local trash haul· ers anticipate the monthly cost to
submitted to the Ohio Environ- ers had to raise fees to compen- the customer could go as high as
mental .. Protection Agency by sate for travel to landfills outside · $20 over the next few years.
June 24, 1990. The Meigs County
Commissioners discussed the
newly adopted surcharge rates in
Wednesd~y·s meeting.
·
According to notlftcatlon from
Sara Hendrlcker, chairman of
the solid waste management
committee, a resolution confirm·
NARITA, Japan (UPI) Beijing University.
ing the fee schedule was adopted
Yan-ju Mann, 36, the wife of a
following a public hearing · on AmeriCans on the first U.S.chartered
plane
out
of
Beijing
U.S.
Embassy economic officer,
Tuesday, May 30, In Athens. The
arrived
said,
In
TokYo
Thursday
with
"I could hear machine-gun
surcharges, or Upping fees, for
tales
of
chaos
that
one
American
shots."
,
disposal at facilities within the
last
days
of
the
"I
was
terrified.
My
husband
compared
to
the
slx-rounty district, follow a $1-$2was not home and the two kids
U.S. presence In Vietnam.
$3 outline as follows.
were
screaming. "
.
The
State
Department
char·
Disposal of waste generated
Paul
Ryberg,
37,
a
lawyer
from
tered
three
flights
to
evacuate
"in the six-county district" will
American citizens Thursday, a Washington who was In Beijing to
cost a $1 per ton surcharge.
day
a Iter Chinese troops opened deliver a lecture on trade law
D!~posal of waste generated
fire
on
the diplomatic compound which was never made, said "It
"outside the boundaries of the
where
families of American is like the last days of Vietnam."
six-county district but Inside the
Embassy
officials live.
The American Embassy offistate'' will cost $2 per ton.
"On
Wednesday
morning
the
cials
in Beijing until Tuesday
Disposal of waste generated
gunfire
only
suggested
that Its citizens
started,"
said
Theron
"outside Ohio" wlll cost $3 per
24,
of
San
Marino,
Stanford,
leave
the
capitaL
But on Wedneston.
day,
they
told
Americans
to leave
Calif.
"We
just
heard
a
lotofflre
By Aug. 7, the boards of county
immediately
for
their
own ·
-hundreds
of
shots
lasting
about
commissioners and the legislasafety.
half
an
hour.
tive authority of each municipal
"We were told troops were
"Our cook went out to get
corporation and township In the
coming
into
the
compound
and
vegetables,
and when he came
six counties shall by ordinance or
·back
we
were
gone," said Ann
finally
a
man
from
the
embassy
resolution, approve or disapcame and said, 'Put on some Lelde, 47, of Auburn,. N.Y., the
prove the fees.
The Meigs Commissioners dis- shoes, we are going,"' said wife of an embassy official. •'We
cussed the fees briefly, noting Stanford, who was a student at had to leave our sick cat behind.'' ··

Americans arrive in
Japan; tell of horror

Mason delegation in Alabama to
·view paper pulp mill operations
By CHARLES A. MASON

OVPStafT
. HUNTINGTON,

W.Va.

-

Mason CoWUy's three commissiOIIClll, the Point Pleasant mayoc,
and the president of the county
development authority were part of
a 11-member swe delegation
whlcb lraveled by plane from hen:
to Alabuna 'lbulllday to view a
paper pull! mill owned by a company looking at Muon County for
• porenlill $1.1 billion
. '
The delqatim wu ~pee­
ted ID diJcuss with Alabuna community leaden lbe impact the paper
PUlP mill hu had on the Monroe
CoUnty, Ala., economy the past

decide

:JZ;

I

Thole on the guest list for
Grove Pulp Co., Inc:, a 111b · ·

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Commentary
The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

!Sim~ r-r"...u--ro,...._c:l,.=o

.

~v

ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WIDTEBEAD
Assistant Puhllsher/ControUer
A MEMBER of The II ooocla1 1!d Prftlll, Inland Dally PraiA A~~~&amp;
dation aud the Amerlcaa Newspaper Publlllhera AModatloa.
LETTERS OF OPINION are weieome. 'lbey ••ould be leoolbul SGG
words IOOJ. AU IMiers are oubJecl to edUIDJIIIId mall be olpool ,.._
naine, addreos ud lelephone namber. No anolpoollellero wW be pab118bed. Leiters ohould be Ia pod laote, addreoomrt..- . aol persoaalt·
lies.

Khomeini's successor
:may be no better

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By LEON DANIEL ·
UPI Seaior Editor
WASHINGTON
They buried Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini in Tehran Tuesday near the martyred children he
dispatched in sacrificial human waves in his unwinnable war with
Iraq.
Even in death, Khomelni used his will to call God's curse on his
enemies, among them the United States, 52 of whose diplomats he
held hostage lor more than a year.
Few Americans had heard of Khomeini a decade ago when he
returned triumphantly from exile in France at the head of an Islamic
fundamentalist revolution that ousted the authoritarian shah.
Some of us who were in Iran as reporters during that turbulent
upheaval saw promise in Khomeini's ascension.
We had seen the evidence of torture by the shah's secret pollee and
were ready to believe that any new · government would be an
improvement.
But as soon as Khomeini came to power he began killing his own
people.
The United Nations estimates 7,000 were killed by firing squad,
hanging, burning and ·stoning. Many more were imprisoned and
tortured.
Khomeini supported terrorist factions that still hold nine
Americans hostage In Lebanon.
In his dispute with Saudi Arabia, Khomeini's agents attacke&lt;)
Islam's holiest shrines in Mecca.
Khomeini ordered British novelist Salman Rushdie killed for
writing a novel he thought blasphemous.
Walling throngs in Iran mourned Khomeini's death, while millions
elsewhere found hope in his passing.
~ut experience should teach us that the regime that succeeds
Khomeini"s may be no better and conceivably could be even worse.
President Hojatolisiam Ali Khamenei has replaced Khomeini as
supreme religious leader but his apppointmelll evidently is a stopgap
measure until presidential elections are held on Aug. 18.
Ralph Joseph. a UPI correspondent in Athens who has lived in
Tehran and who keeps a close watch on Iranian political
developments. believes the real power is held by Majlis (parliament)
speaker Akbar Hashemi·Rafsanjani and Khomeini's son, Ahmad.
Khamenei himself has indicated his presidency is temporary.
Rafsanjani. who appears at this stage to betheonlycandidate In the
election set for Aug. 18, is seen as likely to take Khamenei's post as
president.
Joseph said it Is unclear at this stage who controls the armed forces.
Khomeini was supreme commander of the armed forces, which
included the regular army and the paramilitary revolutionary
guards. But a year ago the ayatollah appointed Rafsanjani deputy
commander-in-chief, giving him day-to-day control of military

.

a~~

Ahmad Khomelni. considered a rival to Ralsanjant. is likely to
wield ideological power as the official interpreter of his father's
' philosophical legacy.
The ayatollah's death creates a leadership vacuum at a time when
Iran's economy has been shattered by its war with Iraq. The shooting
has stopped but a peace agreement is not in sight.
President Bush said Khamenel should use his influence to gain
release of American hostages In Lebanon If he wants to improve
relations with the United States .
Associated Press newsman Terry Anderson, the longest-held
hostage. has been a prisoner for lour years.
Islam. a truly great religion, provides the eloquence the new
. leadership of Iran can use to justify freeing this decent man and the
other innocent hostages now- "in the name of God, the Merciful. the
Compassionate."

Letters to the editor
Supreme Court decision due soon
Dear Editor:
Soon, the Supreme Court will
make Its decision on abortion.
I feel its our duty and obliga·
lion, as Christians and followers
of Christ Jesus, to start a prayer
chain across our county, state,
and nation, ;~sklng that the
Judges of the Supreme Court of
America will be under the direct
Influence of Jesus Christ and will
be ·guided by Him In making their
decisions on the lite or death of
many millions of American un·
born citizens.
Christians in Meigs County and
surrounding areas are urged to
bring this Issue befoe the throne
of God so that lie will know we

are against this terrible national
sin.
Churches are urged to accept
this challenge and spread the
word, not only in Meigs County
also Into other counties until the
prayer chain Is acroes Ohl9 and
the United States of America.
If you Christians want a copy to
send to friends, churches, or
other newpapers, please feel tree
to copy this ·Or write to me and
ask for a copy.
Sincerely
Greta Suttle
33550 Perry Rd.
Long Bottom, Ohio
45743

Today in history
'

By United Pr- lnleraattonal
Today is Thursday, June 8, the 159th day of 1989 with 206 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Saturn.
The evenmg stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
"Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
German composer Robert Schumann in 1810, architect Frank Lloyd
Wright In 1869, British ge!19tiCist Francis Crick, who helped
determine the "double helix'' structJU'I!ofDNA, in 1916 (age 72), actor
Robert Preston In 1918, first lady Barbara Bush, In 1925 (aae 64),
comedian JOjlll Rivers In 1933 (age 56), actor James Darren and
baleball areat Lou Brock, both In 1936 (age 53), and singer Nancy
Sinatra In lMO caae 49).

On this date In hl8tory:
In 18ll, Tennessee seceded from the Union to join the Confederacy.
In • • Ivea McGaftney of Chicago obtained a patent for a
"sweepiq mac,11ble," the flnt vacuwn cleaner.
In 19115. lilt Ulltted Natloltl said worsening famine In 19 African
natlolll W01IId claim ten1 of mUIIo111 of lives detplte maaslve

tnteraauaeil ald.

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Narcs

~k

WASHINGTON - In a land
crippled by drugs and terrorized
by dealers·, Americaltl have only
the pollee standing between them
and armed street punks. NarcotIcs officers risk their lives dally
In Belrut·llke neighborhOods
where crack Is the biggest cash
product and human life is the
down payment.
The enemy Is without compassion. It Is· no exaggeration to say
that many would just as soon kill
a person as swat a fiy.
Some of the drug fighters
operate undercover and must
remain nameless due to the
constant danger of discovery.
Many have been killed In action
and their stories can be told only
by their survivors. A few can be
recogniZed openly, like Officer
Robert Yzquierdo.
Because the drug scourge has
spread from the inner cities to
the smaller towns of America,

Thursday. June 8, 1989

Pege-2-The Daly Sullnel
P01n11oy-M!M1port. Ohio
Thunday, June a. 1889

Ohio fishing report

Lake Rupert catfish
prefer chicken livers

lives daily__Jac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_a_nd_D_a_le_~_a_n__A_tt_a
Yz.quterdo went ·ullderllfOIIIICI in dealer In desolate area outside
Redlands, Calif. He arew "his Mentone wben the wary dealer
disguise - long black hair with a suddenly drew a .38 revolver and
moustache and beard to match. accused Yzqulerdo of being a
He even pierced his ears for the narc. Agalh, the officer talked his
way out of a fix.
right hint of recklessness.
A heroin dealer tried to make
Yzqulerdo left his wife and two
Yzqulerdo
lliject druas as proof
young so111 safely in Texas while
that
he
wasn't
a cop. The officer
he posed 24 hours a day as a
put
on
another
convincing
perfordrug-dealing outlaw biker on the
mance
and
satisfied
the
dealer
prowl in and around Redlands.
He took on the look, the lingo and without Injecting the drug.
In his undercover role, Yz·
the swagger of the biker.
A methamphetamine dealer, qulerdo put hill life on the line
high on his owl\ product, aimed a without the usual support of
rifie at Yzqulerdoand threatened backup officers. Only 10 people
to pull the trigger dUring a drug knew his true identity, and be
buy In a Yucaipa motel. Eve· was repeatedly roustlid by local
ryone In the room scrambled for pollee.
All told, Yzqulerdo spend nine
safety exceP,t the target, Yz·
harrowing
months living by his
qulerdo, . who stood his around
wits
before
he cropped his long
talked tbe addict Into putting the
.hair,
shaved
his beard and put on
gun down.
a pollee uniform. He had made
Another time, Yzqulerdo was more than 200 narcotics buys
riding with a dangerous drug . which led to the arrest of 75

· By Ualled Press Interaatlonal · shoreline cover.
Here is the weekly Ohio fishing
Northwest ·
report, from the Ohio Division of
Findlay reservoirs 1 and 2 Wildlife. For information on
Smallmouth bass fishing is good
lakes or streams not listed in the
right now at No. 1 with fish
weekly reports, call 614481-6342.
averaging 14 to 16 Inches in size.
,
Southeast
Jig balls. crankbaits and sonars
Lake Rupert -Walleye can be
fished along the riprap shoreline
caught by trolling or drift fishing
are the best fish teasers. Some
in the creek channel areas of this walleyes are being caught at both
southern VInton County lake,
reservoirs In 20 to 25 feet of water
located. off S.R. 93 between by trolling and drift fishing.
Wellston and McArthur. Channel Crappies can be found around the
catllsh are showing a hearty intake and outlet structures. At
appetite for nlg'htcrawiers and
No. 2, 'tunker·slze channel catfish
chicken livers fished along the in the 10 to 12 pound range are
bottom near the dam area. The being caught · in 20 to 25 feet of
channel cats are averaging 14 to water. Stinkbaits such as Catfish
16 inches in siZe.
Charlie, globs of nlghtcrawlers
Lal\e Snowden- Largemouth and cut shad ar!' the best bait
bass have tuned in to buzzbaits offerings. Largemouth bass In
and are being tricked by artlfi·
the 18· to 21-inch nnge are failing
clai nightcrawlers. Fish near for jigs with twist~rs fished along
weedbeds and in the bays. There the southeast shoreline. Wiggle
is a 15-i!lch mlnbnum lenglh lbnit warts, Hot 'N Tots and night·
here for largemouth bass. Chan· crawler harnesses drifted during
nel cats are taking swipes at the early evening hours also are
chicken livers and nlghtcrawiers enticing bass to strike.
in the dam area and where feeder
Northeast
streams enter the lake.
Portage Lakes - Anglers
Southwest
using redworms and maggots
Rocky Fork Lake - Crappies are catching good-sized biuegllis
are taking minnows fished in two and crappies. Anglers should tJe
to 10 feet of water. muegills are · concentrating their efforts in
dining on red worms and wax shallow areas near brushpiles
worms. Most areas of the lake and submerged stumps. Bait use
offer good pan fish opportunities, on small hooks· fished beneath a
including tbe dock area, shore· bobber is the preferred panflsh
line area and below the dam.
method.
Great Miami River- Channel
Highlandtown Lake - This
catfish averaging 18 inches are small Columbiana County lake
being caught near Triangle Park offers good fishing for black
In Dayton and the West Carrol- crappies in the seven· to 10-lncb
lton Dam. Anglers here are category. These fish are often
fishing off the bottom and using found near abundant piles of
nigbtcrawiers and doughbaiis. sunken Christmas trees, brush·
Smallmouth bass averaging 11 piles and an old trestle bridge
inches are being caught through· located in the middle of the lake,
out the day at various depths by directly west of the central boat
aniers using soft craws, minnows ramp. Largemouth bass up to
and spinners · near the QP&amp;L eight pounds als.o can be caught
Dam and Monument Dam.
. here, but most are iii the eight· to ·
Central
. 12-incb range. ·
Hoover Reservoir - Channel
Lake Erie
catfish In the three· to sl.x-pound
Walleyes are being caught in
range are being ca~ght by the reef and Island areas, in the
anglers using soft craws near the Toledo shipping channel and the
first and second bridges and near West Sister ahd Canadian lines.
rocky areas. Walleyes also can Anglers are using weighted
be found near both bridges, while spinners tipped with night·
crappies up to 12 inches are being crawlers in 15 to 30 feet of water.
caught on minnows throughout Some anglers are finding success
the reservoir. Some yearling by trolling· deep-diving lures. In
saugeyes measuring eight inches the central basin east of Huron,
are feeding on crappie minnows. walleyes averaging 17 to 18
inches are being caught by
Kiser Lake - Anglers ·can find
anglers
using planer boards and
an excellent bluegiii population
downriggers
equipped with
in and around shoreline cover
and offshore brushpUes. Fly flutter-type spoons and dipsy
rodding with poppers around divers. Anglers also are doublevegetation is favored by local luring for walleyes In the central
anglers. A good population of basin by using spoons on top and
largemouth bass in the 12 to 18 trailing plugs on bottom. Walleye
Inch range can be found along the fishing Is best at 40 l.o 60 foot
edges of vegetation and near depths near Mentor.

dealen.
.~Is experience was typical of
the thousands of anonymous
drugbusters who are fighting 11
guerUia war against drui aanas.
They are quick to IdentifY their
No. 1 enemy - not the street
dealer with' a gun, bUt the drug
user whose money finances till!
killing.
The drugbusters have another
enemy - bureaucrats who
squander the money that Conaress has approprta~ to com·
bat drugs. That money 18 desper;
ately needed by the combatants
who are short of people and
firepower to battle· the ·multi·
billion-dollar cocaine cartels.
But the bureaucrats keep much
of the money to "study" the drug
problems. Ask the officers on the
street. They wUl tell you they
don't need another survey. They
need weapons and numbers to
match the drug dealers.

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Capital ethics saga: more to come
WASHINGTON (NEA)- The
unexpected termination of the
political careers of the first· and
third-ranking 'Democrats In
House of Representatives is only
the beginning of a saga likeiy to
continue at least through the 1990
congressional elections.
But nobody knows how voters
in 435 separate congressional
dis trlcts wlll react to the recent
events and to future developments that could force the
resignations of other legislators
accused, if not convicted, of
ethical misconduct.
There is considerable validity
to the Republican argument that
the problem Is systemic and
directly linked to th'e Democrats'
control of the House for 34
consecutive years. That approaches the "absolute power"
that, Lord Acton warned more
than a. century ago, "corrupts
absolutely."
But only a small fraction of
lawmakers - Democrats or
Republicans - have engaged lri
any activity that would make
them susceptible to either resignation in dill grace or defeat in an
election In which ethical wrong·
doing Is the central issue.
Nevertheless, many rightfully
fear an increasingly ugly purge

Wo~ld

comme~~tatoratavordrugtesttng

In their own ranb?
In my experience, the aDJwer
Is no. The predletable excue:
Athletes have a "speclal" respo•lbUlty aa role modell to
stay cle&amp;JI. It' 1 an appnliJia
theOrY, admlttediy, except for
,....,...

•

aectslon of the Rep-. Tony Coelho,
D-Calif., to resign as a distUrbing
number of allegations of im·
proper conduct qn his part· were
beginning to accumulate.
But recent actions cannot
ptedlct the ethics committee's
future posture because its
members serve only for two
terms, then are rotated off and
replaced by others.
Moreover, the committee's
chairman, Rep. Julian Dixon,
D·Callf., and several other
members already are serving
beyond the expiration of their
terms
to conclude the Wright
In great measure, the legislators have themselves to blame case. When they depart (presum·
because they have long resisted ably very soon) the committee's
serious enforcement of tough composition and leadership will
ethical standards, preferring In- change.
The current catharsis could
stead a system that rovers up,
ignores and justifies abuses prove beneficial to the Demomore often than It punishes !bern. crats, Conaress and the nation if
·Now, they must deal with de- the new House leadership moves
cades of accumulated swiftly and decisively to fashion
revised standards of conduct that
grievances.
The ethics committee has deal with everything from phony
belatedly displayed an unprece- honoraria to the . scandalous
dented determination to deal lnfiuence of campaign contrlbu·
tors In the legislative process.
appropria~ly with members'
Legislators, particularly those
transaressloM, most notably In
the case of House Speaker James . accu$ed of etblcal lapses, are
constantly complaining that the
Wright, a Texas Democrat
That new-found aggressive· line delineating proper behavior ·
ness probably contributed to the

you take ·drug test at

Mark Twain could strip away
sanctbnony with a 'surgeon's
skill. "To do good Is noble," he
remarked. "To teach others to do
good is nobler, and no trouble."
With Mark Twain's wlsdome In
mind, I've developed a habit of
confronting people who reeom·
mended random drug testing for
workers In various occupations.
Some writers and broadcasters,
for example, routinely berate
profe11lonal and collqe sports
otftdall for not ferrettng out
every athlete who u - recreatonal drup (u oppc sed to steroldl,
which truly are a problem unique
to aporta) • But do thole ~arne

--

fueled by · political recriminations, hyperactive media cover·
age and an a·ntl-lncumbent
frenzy within ' the electorate.
Indeed, some of those ·excesses
are already apparent.
"We have entered an era of
ethical McCarthylsm. It doesn't
matter what's proven. It's the
allegation that counts," says
Rep. · Thomas Downey, D-N.Y.
"Ail you need do Is say there's a
question or Imply something
wrong and it takes on a life of Its
own. It's gu lit by innuendo."

Poruaoy-Midcleport. Ohio

Robert Walters.,
Is ceaselessly shifting, beyond

their ·knowledge or control. But
they are not&lt;irlously reluctant to
establish their own reall8tlc and
respectable standards.
That applies to members of
both parties. As House Democrats are quick to note, on the
same day that Coelho res)Jned
under fire, Rep. Donald Lukens,
R·Ohlo, was convicted of contri·
buttng to the delinquency of a
16-year-oid- girl with whom he
had sexual relations." ·· . .
·'
That may be a different type or
transgression, but It hardly In·
spires voters' confidence In theiJ
elected representatives.
.a

Majors
By UnJkod l"rf'tllllntfl'•tlolal
AMERICAN I...EAGUE

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Pltllblca. 11 PIIIWelpllla. 1:11
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NIIW Y•rll f Duhl t-t) at Cllhp
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LPG.

...,;,..._....._ _ Sports b r i e &amp; - - - - MJHellaneoua
.
Youna Cheer leaders of ~erlca
Chicago Attorney General Nell ot Antioch, Ill. - ot violating
HarUaan Wednesday sued an Dllnols' Consumer Fraud and ·
Indiana cheerleader uniform Deceptive Business Practices
company for &gt;allegedly falling to Act. Harttaan said his office had
fill orders for acbools nationwide- received ~1 complaints from
. Hartta•n accused Cheerleaders . Junior and senior high school
USA of
Ind.- formerly districts lhrOUihout thecotqttry .

..

ao.ben.

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REDUCED

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,,

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0/2 • " "

Oblo.

percent in the Eastern Conference final against Chicago. The
defense, which has not allowed
an opponent to score 100 points in
a playoff game, is a constant.
" It takes a lot of pressure off us
when the offense is on," said
Rodman, Detroit's top &lt;)efender .
"We know our defense Is going to
be there."
Daly, a pesslsmlst by nature,
expects better performances
from Worthy and Johnson.
''The home court doesn't mean
a thing.'' he said. "You have got
to keep playing hard. We seein to
be a team that can't stand
prosperity. I ex~o&gt;ct Los Angeles
to play its best game of the series
on Thursday."
Riley, a motivator by nature,
expects the same.
"What we are is a champion·
ship team," he said. "What we
were (Thursday) nigtit was •
something else. We've got to pick
it up spirit-wise and effort-wise.
You have got to want to play the
opposition more than they want
to play you."
·
·

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ldc.Rr Paull:lckert .... nOM taclde PM

One c bange the coach is
pondering is starling Tony
Campbell in place of Byron Scott,
who will miss Game 2 with a
slightly torn hamstring. Michael
Cooper started in Gamel, but he
may be more comfortable com·
lng off the bench.
Campbell, a former No, 1 pick
of the Pistons, started twice in
December when Scott sprained
an ankle.

For the Pistons, Coach Chuck
Daly reported that Vinnie Johnson and Dennis Rodman did not
practice Wednesday .and Isiah
Thomas was lbnited to passing
drllis. Johnson sprained an ankle
in the fourth quarter Tuesday,
Rodman has been bothered by a
bad back and Thomas a pulled
hamstring. Ail are expected to
play in Game 2.
The Job at hand Is simple for
the Pistons: prepare for an
aU-out assa.uit.
The backcourt of Thomas,
Johnson and Joe Dumars com·
bined for 29 of 46 shooting and 65
points to pace Detroit. The three
guards repeatedly caught the
Lakers between defenses and
were able to take a step back and
can a jumper or get the first step
and drive to the basket.
"We are a guard-oriented
team, " Daly said. "When two
play well we look good, when one
plays good we struggle and when
three play bad we lose."
At times, the backcourt is
erratic, having shot Just 39

was ready to make his maiden
start last July but McGaughey .
decided Romero was a bit too
aggressive to suit the colt.
Romero had ridden Easy
Goer's full · sister, Cadiliacing,
and the match had not been a
good one.
"She had one short run and
needed somebody who could save
it," McGaughey said. ''I'm going
along with Easy Goer thinking he
needed the same thing. I thought
Day would be more patient on
him."
He was -once to a fault. Many
blamed Day for Easy Goer's 1
1·4·iength loss to Is It True in the
Breeders' Cup Juvenile last Nov.
5, saying he allowed the colt to
fail too far behind early. Easy
Goer was seventh and 7 3-4
lengths back after the first
quarter mile.

ELMONT, N.Y. (UPI)- At 3
a.m. in California the morning
after the Preakness. Lafflt Pin·
cay's agent got up to phone Easy
Goer's trainer. Sbug
McGaughey, In Baltimore.
Alter watching Pat Day ride
favored Easy Goer to his second
straight loss to Sunday Silence,
Pincay's agent, Tony Matos.
decided McGaughey just might
be looking for a new jockey to
ride his 2-year·old champion in
Saturday's Belmont Stakes.
''He said if I was anticipating a
change, be wanted to throw his
hat In the ring," McGaughey
said. "He was justdoinghlsjob.''
McGaughey told Matos he
would be sticking with Day, a
decision people have been ques·
ttoning ever since.
The letters and phone calls
have been arriving at the rate of
two each per day. Some folks
suggest Pincay; others Angel
Cordj!ro- anybody but Day.
''Providing you ride Day in the
Belmont, you will get another
second or lower," ~d one
typical letter. "The difference in
these two fine horses is the
jockeys."
McGaughey understands how
they feel.
"I can't say I won't consider it
(a change) In the future," be
said. "But I think it's unfair to
judge someone off one ride. I'm
not one if soiexbing goes wtong to
jump up and blame the rider.
''On the other hand, if it comes
down to me and the rider, the
rider's going to have to go."
In other words, if Day makes
any bad moves Saturday,
McGaughey may be ready to talk
with Matos or Cordero's agent,
Kevin Lyons, about Easy Goer's
late-summer and autumn races.
For now, however,
McGaughey is willing to give
Day the benefit of the doubt.
"I have all the confidence in
the world in him," McGaughey
said Wednesday. "When you put
a jock up there, you're the one
who's most responsible. That's
what it's ali about. I mean, Pat
didn't come around asking to ride
the horse; I asked him. If anyone
made a mistake, it's me. A
trainer's ·supposed to have confi·
denee in who he puts up there."
Randy Romero was McGaugh·
ey's No. 1 rider when Easy Goer

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ltsh we did not. It is not the time to
make rash changes, I believewe
just have to do things a little bit
better."
That admonishment applies to
the entire team, but Riley pin·
pointed two starters whose play
must improve In Game 2 league MVP Magic Johnson and ·
last year's playoff MVP James
Worthy .
Each scored 17 points to lead
the. Lakers, but Riley said their
effort was lacking.
"We need a Uttl!! more production from them," he said. "Magic
is the epitome of the team player
but he bas to be a little more
aggressive. He and James had
subpar games.''

McGaughey sticking
with jockey, for now

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AUBURN HILLS. Mich. (UPI)
- Pat Riley counts perspective
among the many advantages of
owning an almost permanent
pass to the NBA finals.
The Los Angeles Laker&amp; coach
said Wednesday he will make no
major changes after the Detroit .
Pistons defeated the two-lime
defending champions 109-97 In
Game 1.
Game 2 Is Thursday night (9
p.m. EDT). The best-of-seven
series switches to Los Angeles
for Games 3 and 4, and, if
necessary, 5.
Riley Is In the finals for the
seventh lime in his eight-year
coaching career, and his team
has lost the opening game four
times. Of the previous three
Game 1 losses, Riley's teams
twice have gone on to win the
title.
Included in that was last year's
opening loss to the Pistons at the
Forum. That, .too, was a 12-point
defeat, 105-93.
"We were a hell of a lot more
disappointed last year when we
lost at home," Riley said. ·"we
are looking forward to playing a
much better game on Thursday. I
thought what we tried toaccomp· ·

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wife to a third party may he COIIIIcJI.
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eacb, provided both ·~ coo.nt
to sucll division.
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Playoff resuhs

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proaram?
the fact that journalists are role bang-up stralptaway. rDdeed,
No.
·
,
models, too, if to .a far more · be thinks buslnetl should "make
Berkowitz seemed a little ua-,
modest extent. If you doubt my clear to every employee that
word, check out the bulging every day at work he or she may comfortable with this line of&gt;
questlonlna. Be went on to uy'
communications school at your be tested."
In
an
analogy
more
apt
than
he
·
that Herltare really doeln' t have.
nearest coUege campus.
au
official poaltlon on q ;
may
realize,
DuPont
cltea
the
Journalists are hardly the only
Navy'
a
proaram
Dr
ralldom
clnlg
testing
despite Feulner'• artlcle, l
do-gooders blind to · a double
tes
tlng
aa
a
model
'
(In
the
Navy,
and
that
many o1 Its employees
standard. In recent weeks I've
"take
the
libertarian view" o1;
twice received arttclea from the everyone submit• three .tlmel a
such
tests.
In other words, they;
year,
without
notice).
He'bu
no
Herltaae Foundation recom·
qualml,
apparently,
about
treat·
believe
that
re1pect tor a :
mendtnc random drug testlnl. In
an article for Kerllale'l Polley Ina civilian employees like worker's dlplty and privacy
su~ the employer's inter· •
,
ReovleW, Dr: Roller! L. DuPont servicemen.
Sulpecltng that a few people e1t In ferrettnc out the odd *IIi
urpl "any orpnlzatloll wtth
ernployeel ullller the ap of .0 uDder 40 work tor Herlta1e, 1 user before hll performance ;
•
(to) think serlotllly about tattna . naturally wondered It tbetounda· betraya 1111 habit anyway.
Whlcb,
of
coune,
Is
precisely
tlon
merely
taqbt
otherl
to
do
111 pe1-•lfor drill abule." .
good, or did pod ltlelt. So I put the poiDt. At the lnciMtlual level;
DuPont at1m1t1 drill testiD&amp; at the question to Herb Bertwwltz, moat of Ul would 1'81811! our
WQI'k II not popular With thou Herttaae vice prelident: Does employer treattna u1 aa polllble • ·
wbo IIIWit lllb~t. '"l'be tecbnol· the foundation lelt Ita employeel felona. For aome o1 us, bowl4 ...
req1llral lll'llle,.. be llfl'ltes,
It Is no trouble at all to \11'111 a
~lllllltuce moat people are not fordrup?
crackdoWn In~ proteullml
No.
It doela't.
.
~ to 11\'1111 Ulelr em·
Tben doel Herttaae have any - tar from the IBDctuary of eur:
ployerl... But DuPoat woald
_planl
to Initiate a drul·lllltlni own unmolllted llvn.
have us sbuc• this outdated
.;.
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M .4141

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M'NI

Sc-MIIf'

· Gift tu
Any citizen or resident allen
gilts to any ooe penoD eaceed no.ooe
within a caleadar year wiD be liable
for payment of a lift tu, at l'lteo d&amp;termiDed under the' UD!fled fllltlte and
lift tu acbedute. aut tax retlll'lll
filed on aa annual bull and ordlnarlljo
are due by April 10 of tile foUowln&amp;
year. Glfta made by a ~Uibud ani

work?_·_ca_rro~u;

a

· The Daily Sentinel Page 3

'

~
~

�·'

Thu(lday, June 8. 1989

Reds regain first place after
12-5 win; Astros top Padres
CINCINNATI IUPI) - After
San Francisco's Kevin Mitchell
belted three home runs Tuesday
night, Cincinnati's Paul O'Neill
decided to check out Mitchell's
~ats before Wednesday night's
game.
"I wanted to see what those
home run bats looked like," said
O'Neill. "I picked one up and
maybe something rubbed off."
Indeed, maybe some of that
Mitchell magic worked its way
out of Mitchell's bat and onto
O'Neill's hands because while
Mitchell went hitless Wednesday
night, O'Nelll hit two home runs,
one a grand siam, and drove In a
career-high six runs to power the
Reds to a 12·5 rout of the Giants.
"It's special to have a night
like that and it felt great," said
O'Neill. "But it was just one
game. If I could tell you how I'm
hitting now, I'd write It down so I
could remember It in the future.
This game Is too hard to say,
'Hey. I've got it- all down."'
The Reds mounted a 13-hlt
attack against the Giants, with
· O'Neill and Todd Benzinger
collecting three hits each and
Barry Larkin, Chris Sabo and
pitcher Rick Mahler adding two
apiece.
"They've got an explosive
baliclub," said Giants' manager
Roger Craig. "They can throw
four or five runs up there in a
hurry. They've got so many good

.. "

...
-.

Edwards
hungry
for NBA
title ring
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. !UPI)
- A move by Detroit Coach
Chuck Daly to increase reserve
center James Edwards' playing
time in the playoffs has resulted
in a new offensive threat for the
Pistons~.

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The Hoot-1 Edwards has
scored in double figures in four
straight games. including 15 In
Game 1 of the NBA finals
Tuesday against the Los Angeles
Lakers. Over the last four
contests, he has averaged 12.8
points. up from his regular·
season scoring average of 7.3
points.
"James Edwards is a big
reason why we're In the Finals,"
said Daly who . decided on the
strategy change prior to Game
Two of the Eastern Conference
Finals against Chicago. "He
came through for us against
Chicago and he's got a good start
against the Lakers.
"We're going to him a little bit
more. Because of matchups and
switches. we can get him to the
low post and get him isolated. get
him some shots. He's very
effective that way."
At the start of the playoffs It
looked as If Edwards, 33. would
see limited playing time. He
entered postseason action strug·
gling offensively and starting
center Bill Lalmbeer was at the
top of his game.
But against the Bulls. Lalm· .
beer had problems against Chi·
cago's bigger lineup. The call
then went to Edwards. a 12-year
veteran.
"I'm glad that I'm able to
contribute." Edwards said. "It's
tough when you're sitting on the
bench, but you just bave to play
your role. We have a great team
here. When Lalmbeer is hitting
Ishots). he's going to be on the
floor. I just play my minutes
when they come."
Those minutes may continue to
Increase. Edwards played 25
Tuesday and was Instrumental In
getting Los Angeles center Ka~
reem Abdul~Jabbar in early foul
trouble.
''It's Finals time, that's the
bottom line," he said. "It's time
to play well. Everything Is
clicking for me right now. We're
running a few more plays for me,
getting me more offensively
Involved in the game.
"You've got to play all out
when It's the Finals because you
never know .when you 'li get in
t.hls situation again. It's a hard ,
road to get to the Finals."
Edwards definitely knows
about the hard road, playing for
Phoenix when a drug scandal
shadowed the Suus a few years
ago. He was traded to Detroit last
season for Ron Moore and a
aecond·I'OIIIId pick In the 1991
NBADran .
"Wben you're In a situation
IVbeft you're lo8lng a lot of ball
pmes In Phoenix, then one day
,.au're on a championship team
and you're able to contribute, It
feels 10011. '' Edwards said.
'11'1 IOOd maklni It to the
.Finalll but lt'l p-eat to ret tbe
rlnl
the tlnpr," be said.
''TIIat'adleiiiOitlmJ trnttbiD&amp;

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....... tile""'"

hitters that when rwo or three are
In a slump, they can still score
runs."
Mahler, 8-5, permitted 10 hits
In pitching his fifth complete
game of the ·season. The righthander struck out four and
walked one.
Allee Hammaker, 5-4, making
only his third start of the year,
was shelled for seven hits and six
runs In 11-3 Innings.
"Hammaker was throwing in·
stead of pitching," said Craig.
·'He was up with everything. He
was overthrowing."
The Reds sent nine batters to
the plate In a six-run second
Inning. With one out, Cincinnati
loaded the bases on three
stral~ht singles by Mahler, Sabo
and Benzinger. Larkin doubled In
Mahler and Sabo to chase Hammaker. Jeff Brantley intentionally walked Eric Davis to re-load
the bases.' After Rolando Roomes
flied out, O'Nelll belted a grand
slam homer to right, the first
grand slam of his career, to give
the Reds an 8-3 lead.
"I knew It was out when I hit It,
but I didn't realize the bases had
been_ loaded until I rounded
second base," said O'Neill. "I
said to myself, 'Hey, grand
slam.···
Candy Maldtmado homered to
right-center, his fourth of the
season, In the fourth to trim
Cincinnati's lead to 8-4.
O'Nelll's second J:tomer of the
game and ninth of the year, a solo
shot In the fifth, upped the Reds'
tnargin to 9-4.
·
Two San Francisco errors in
the sixth helped the Reds score
three more times for a 12-4 lead.
Benzinger singled and Davis
walked to chase Brantley. Goose
Gossage's wild pickoff throw to
second en a bled the runners to
move up to third and second.
Shortstop Jose Uribe's fielding
· error on Bo Dlaz' ground ball
permitted Benzinger to soore.
Lenny Harris then singled In
Davis and O'Neill.
•'I don't like to see those kind of
errors because at that point It
was 9·4 and we were still in the
ballgame," said Craig.
The only run the Giants got
after that was in the ninth when
Terry Kennedy doubled and
scored on Greg L!tto~s single.
In the second Inning, Kennedy
homered to right, his fourth ofthe
year, to give the Giants a 3-2lead.
San Francisco grabbed a 2·0
advantage In the first when
Cincinnati's strategy to Intentionally walk home run threat
Mitchell backfired. Robby
Thompson doubled and Mitchell,
who belted three homers against
the Reds Tuesday night, was
Intentionally walked. Ernest
Riles followed with a 2-run

•
Wichita State trips FSU 7-4 10
College World Series

year."
The Planters is the only LPGA
event that employs a modified
Stableford scoring system. Players are awarded three points a
hole for making birdies, five for
eagles and eight for doubleeagles . One point is subtracted
per hole for bogeys and three for
double·bogeys or higher. Pars
are worth no points.
The 144~player field will be cut
to 72 after Friday's play. and 36
players will survive Saturday's
round to chase the $62,500 first
prize Sunday. The tournament
purse Is $400,000.
Nause, an ll·year non·wlnner
on the LPGA circuit until her
Planters victory in 1988, says the
Stableford format helped her
mental approach last year .
"With the weight the format
puts on birdies and eagles, you
want to shoot for the pin on every
hole," Nause said. "For 11 years,
1 had just been trying to get II
close but last year! found myself'
trying to make every shot I hit,
even If I was 200.yards away. It
made a big difference for me."
Naulll!'s 14 points In the final

.
•

Riverfront Ramblings: ·

Giants_' Mitchell ahead of HR
pace set by Ruth and Maris .
---

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the team but I need the support of
the fans, the community. the
corporate community and the
media. Suppose we have a 9· 7 or
10·6 season and attendance
doesn't Increase? This Is my
town, this is where I hope to live
the rest of my life, but I say to
myself, 'Hugh, prepare yourself

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The Buccaneers sold out 72,000·
seat Tampa Stadium during the
1979 season. when the club played
host to the NFC championship
game in just Its fourth year of
play. Culverhouse emphasized
his proposal merely offered
"protection" if local ran l~~oterest
doesn't Increase dramatically
during a winning season.
The club remains under lease
with Tampa Stadium untll 1996
and no substantive talks have
been held between Culverhouse
and Orlando officials. The
Tampa Sports Authority whose permission would be ne·
cessary before Culverhouse's
plan is Implemented -estimates
it would lose approximately ·
$500,000 annually If the Buccaneers play just five regular·
season games In Tampa. The
TSA and the Buccaneers recently
opened negotiations on establish·
ing another lO·year option lease,
running until 2006.
"Is this a ploy In negotiations?
1 don't think I am." Culverhouse
said. •'I'm not planning on selling

..I'M BACK

1!z.
2~z.
3!~al .

The Shockers stretched their
lead to 2·0 In the third. Audley
again led off with a walk,
advanced to second on l\ groun~
dout and scored on Wedge's
double.
Wichita State added a run

... do something less than moving
the team.'"
Culverhouse. an expert tax
attorney wiio bought the fran· ·
chlse for $16 million In 1974, said
the club Is losing money. He said .
he could weather the team's
current financial burden but was
concerned a bout !u lure losses. ~

SAFE AT SECOND - Florida State's Rob
Bargas slides safely Into second base before
Wichita State's Pat Peares can make the tagln

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Seminoles' first hit with a bunt
single, stole second and continued to third when shortstop
Meares mishandled the throw .
Rocky Rau then hit a grounder
that Meares misplayed for an
error, allowing Gilliland to score.

Wednesday night's College World Series game.
The Shockers beat the Seminoles 7-4. (UP!)

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without benefit of a hit In the
fourth. Dreifort walked, stole
second, went on to third on a
throwing error by catcher Pedro
Grlfol and scored on a wlld pitch.
Florida State pulled within 3-1
In the fifth. Gilliland got the

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--Sports briefs-Horse Racing
Thomas Dexter's No Nukes
colt, Dexter Nukes, was Installed
as the 2-1 favorite for Friday
night's $500,000 New Jersey Clas·
slc•Final for Jersey·sired 3·year~
old pacing colts at the Meadowlands In \'asl Rutherford, N.J.
The race Is the richest of the year
to date In the United States.

Gar Flnnvold, 10-4, gave up a
single to Audley before being
removed. Ricky Kimball came
on and allOwed an infield single to
Forbes. Mike McDonald followed
with a bunt single In which
Kimball slipped on the Infield
grass and the game was delayed.
"If I just wanted to go to first
right off the bat, I would have
made the play," Kimball said. "I
wanted to go to third (for a
forceout), then I turned to first

and slipped. If I went to first, I
think I would have made (the
play)."
The bases were reloaded after
Wedge's single, and Pat Meares
and Todd Dreifort added sacrl·
flee flies to increase the lead to
7-3.
Florida State pulled within 7-4
in the bottom of the eighth on
singles by Rpb Bargas, Buddy
Cribb and Brian Gilliland.
The Seminoles had lied the
game with two runs In the sixth.
Bargas and Cribb stroked backto-hack doubles to chase starter
Charlie Glaudrone. Bluma relieved and gave up consecutive
Infield singles to load the bases.
Gilliland followed with a sacrifice fly.
Wichita State took a 1·0 lead in
the first Inning. Audley opened
the game with a walk, went to
second on a wnd pitch, advanced
to third on an Infield single by
McDonald and scored on a
groundout by Wedge.

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TAMPA, Fla. !UPI) - The
Tampa Bay Buccaneers face a
"tremendous competitive dlsad·
vantage" In 'revenue base, said
owner Hugh Culverhouse Wed·
nesday in explaining his prop6sal
to shift three games from Tampa
Stadium to Orlando beginning in
1990.
Buccaneer fans have flooded
radio talk shows with complaints
since reports of Culverhouse's
plan became publlc earlier in the
week. prompting a news confer·
ence Wednesday at club head·
quarters. Pointing to declining
attendance figures. and sluggish
support for the rental of luxury
boxes at Tampa Stadium,
Culverhouse reiterated his lnten·
Uon of broadening fan interest in
th1e Buccaneers -who have won
just 21 of 95 games since 1983. ·
"When I'm running 10 to 15
million dollars a year behind
Miami, New Orleans and Hous·
ton, I have to do something to
make this a viable franchise."
said Culverhouse, who expressed .
disappointment at the average
level of attendance (53,448) per
game In the club's 13-year
history. "It's not true the Bucca~
neers · are moving from the
Tampa Bay area. As an alterna·
tlve, I've been considering for
two years how we can broaden
our base of support. Having
32,000 hard·core fans isn't gonna
make the ballclub viable. We
face a tremendous competitive
disadvantage from a revenue

.•

round last year were enough to
hold olf runners-up Debbie Massey and Judy Dickinson.
The victory sparked Nause to
her best season as a professional.
Her $138,490 in earnings last year
was almost double her output in
her previous best season.
It carried over earlier this year
when Nause recorded four top·lO
finishes . But she's struggled
lately. placing out of the top 40 In
h~" last four starts.
·
'After you "play well for a
while, you get a little more
frustrated when you don't play as
well," Nause said. ''I just need to
make some putts, and I'll get
turned around."
Aside from Nause, other favorItes this year are Nancy Lopez,
the current leading money
winner on the LPGA tour; Pat
Bradley, the tournament hostess
who has 23 career victories; and
Ayako Okamoto. who won the
Corning Classic rwo weeks ago.
Last year, Okamoto's 53 points
led the field for the week, but she
managed only 12 in the final
round to finish fourth .

head out and get a piece of the
ball," said Wedge, who drove in
four runs on the night. "I
misjudged the fastball a little,
but I got the bat out and It
dropped ln."
Jeff Bluma. 3-0, pitched two
Innings of relief tor the victory,
giving up one run and four hits,
striking out one and walking
none. Jim Newlln went the final
two Innings, striking outtour, for
his school-record 18th save and
third of the CWS.

Tampa Bay may play some
games in Orlando this fall

.

Michael B. Carlisle, D..D.S.
2924 Jackson Avenue

OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) - A
56-minute rain delay couldn't
cool down Eric Wedge.
The Wichita State catcher
stroked a two-run single upon
resumption of play Wednesday
night, breaking a tie and helping
keep the Shockers alive In the
College World Series with a H
victory over Florida State.
The Shockers and Seminoles
will meet again Friday, with the
winner going to Saturday's na·
tiona! championship game.
The game was tied 3·3 In the
eighth when a steady rain and
wet grounds forced the game to
be delayed with the bases loaded
and nobody out.
"I just tried not to think about
II," said Wedge, the next scheduled hitter. "I wanted to treat It
like any other situation."
When play . resumed, Wedge
took .a strike before poking a
single to center to score Jim
Audley and P.J. Forbes.
"I just tried to throw. the bat

double.
Cincinnati tied It 2-2 In the
bottom of the first. ·The Reds
loaded the bases with one out on
singles by Sabo and Larkin and a
walk to Davis. Sabo scored on a
fielder's choice ground ball by
Roomes, with Larkin forced out
at third. O'Neill singled In Davis.
•
Dodgers S Bravea 4
National League batters, beware - not all Is lost with
•
Fernando Valenzuela.
Valenzuela, -1-5, surrendered
nine hits over 6 1-3 Innings,
striking out two and walking four
in leading the Los Angeles
Dodgers to a 5-4 victory over the
Atlanta Braves. In addition, he
drove ·In two runs to help his
•
cause.
Ricky Horton and Alejandro
'
Pena followed Valenzuela before
Jay Howell notched his 11th save
"
with 2 1-3 Innings of hitless ball.
•
Elsewhel'l! .In the NL, New
•
York drubbed Chicago ~0·5, St.
"
Louis downed Montreal 5·2, Phi·
•••
!adelphia edged Pittsburgh 7·5,
.
and Houston nipped Atlanta 3·2.
Mets 10, Cubs 5
At Chicago, Kevin McReynolds
hit a tie-breaking, three- run •
homer to highlight a five-run fifth
••
Inning and Howard Johnson
"
added a solo homer to power New
•
'(ork. Dwight Gooden, 7-2, al· ·
"
lowed five runs and seven hits in
•
five innings to improve his
•
career record to 17-3 against
Chicago. Rick Agullera yielded
two hits over four innings for his
fourth save. Rick Sutcliffe fell to
night's game ID Cincinnati. O'NeW llomered
BELTS GRAND SLAM- Reds third base coach
7·4.
again In the fifth aad finished the game with alx
Dave Bristol congratulatell Paul O'NeiU after
Cardinals 5, Expos 2
RBI&amp;, powering the Reds to a.l:I-D trlumpll. (UPI)
O'NeiU belted a second-lnlllng graad slam off
At Montreal, Tom Brunansky
Giant&amp; reliever left Brantley Ia Wednesday
smashed a solo homer and drove
In three runs to spark St. Louis.
1
Ken Hill, 3-4, pitched 51-3lnnings
for the victory. He gave up two
unearned runs, six hits, allowed
five walks and struck out .five.
Ken Dayley pitched the ninth for
his third save. Mark Langston,
1-1, took the loss.
PhWes 7, Pirates 5
At Philadelphia, Curt Ford
•
singled with the bases loaded to
After the game, Mahler was
By
RICK
VANSANT
score one run and Darren Daulasked:
"What seemed to be their
Barry
Larkin
has
enjoyed
a
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ahead
ton doubled home two more in the
productive
past
couple
of
nights
problem?"
eighth to fuel the Phlllies over the ' of the Babe! San Francisco
at the plate.
Replied Mal!ler, "Their hitPirates, who have lost six in a slugger Kevin Mitchell Is on a
In
Tuesday
night's
doubleters,
mainly."
row. Jeff Parrett. 2·2, won in home run·hlttlng pace ahead of
'
header
against
the
Giants,
Lar·
relief and Steve Bedrosian fin- both Babe Ruth's and Roger
Skeeter Barnes' yo-yo flirtakin went 6-for-9, and lifted his
Ished to earn his sixth save. Bob Marls' record·setting home run
tion
with the major leagues Is on
season
average
to
.354,
bestln
the
Kipper fell to 0·3. Barry Bonds seasons.
the
upswing
again.
National
League.
When!lthe Babe hit 60 home
homered twice for Pittsburgh. ·
Larkin was 2-for-5 Wednesday
~ Barnes, 32, Is In his 12th year of
runs in a 154-gameseason in1927,
Astros 3, Padres 2
professional
basellall. He's spent
night
against
San
Francisco,
he
hit
his
22nd
home
run
on
June
At .Houston, Glenn Davis
the
giving
him
a
two-night
total
of
gteat
majorltr
of his career
16
and
his
23rd
on
June
22.
tripled home the tying run and
in
the
minor
leagues,
su~aclng
8-for-14.
After
Wednesday
night,
When Maris belted 61 homers
Terry Puhl drove home the
every
once
In
a
while
In the
.355.
his
season
average
was
winning run with a double In a In a 162-game season in 1961, he
majors,
only
to
quickly
sink
two-run sixth inning. Mike Scott, hit No. 22 on June 14 and No.23on
again.
Reds' pitcher Rick Mahler got
10·3, allowed severi hits In seven June 17.
Barnes Is now up again, tor the
off
to a rocky start Wednesday
Mitchell
belted
No.
22
on
June
innings to win for the third time
time this season, with the
second
In six days. Dave Smith finished 6, which put him 10 days ahead of night, giving up four hits and
Reds.
for his 11th save as the Astros the Babe's pace and eight days three runs In the first two
innings.
won for the 12th time in 13 games. ahead of Marls' pace.
Walt Terrell, 4·7, took the loss.

Nause to defend Planters title
HIGH POINT, N.C.- Now that
Martha Nause has experienced
becoming a champion, she'd like
to become an experienced defender on the LPGA Tour.
"I need to defend at more
tournaments." said the 34·yearold Nause , who this week will
defend In the r· Planters Pat
Bradley International at Willow
Creek Golf Club. "I think that's a
lot more fun. If nothing else, it
means you've won the previous

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

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�'
.Paga 6-The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

·A's nip Twins; regain West Division lead
By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
It's taken a true team effort to
compensate for the loss of
Oakland Athletics bullpen ace
Dennis Eckersley.
After starter Bob Welch, pitch·
lng with only three days rest, was
pulled in the seventh Inning,
Gene Nelson. Rick Honeycutt
and Todd Burns provided relief
help Wednesday in the A's 3-2
victory over the Minnesota
Twins.
Nelson threw 1 1-3 hitless
Innings, Honeycutt allowed one
run In the ninth and Burns got the
final out with a strikeout for his
third save.
"I don't manage any differ·
ently," said A's Manager Tony
LaRussa. "I know we don't have
Eckersley, but we ·have a solid
bullpen and they knew they have
to get the pressure out."

, I

•,

Welch, now 8·4, gave up six hits throws a lot of changeups, so I
In the National League, It was:
in 6 1·3 innings, while Larry I laid off the fastball and was NewYorklO,Chlcago5; St.LOuis
Arndt's first major-league hit looking for one. But even then, he 5, Montreal 2; Phliadelphla 7,
triggered the three-r.un fifth almost broke my bat in half. "
Pittsburgh 5; Cincinnati 12, San
inning that decided the game.
Stan Javier sacrificed Arndt to Francisco 5; Los Angeles 5,
Frank Viola, who won 24 second and Mike Gallego Atlanta 4; and Houston 3, San
games last year, took the loss to reached base on an error by third · Diego 2.
baseman Gary Gaetti. Tony
mue Jays 4, Bl'!!wers 2 .
fall to 4·8 this time around.
At Toronto, John Ceruttl scat·
"You are aware of youropposl· Phllllps singled to le!t, scoring
lion when you are pitching Arndt, and one out later, Dave tered eleven hits and Ernie Whitt
against a great pitcher like Henderson singled to right, sror· drove In three runs In the first
VIola," Welch. said, "but my ing Gallego. PhllUps took third on major league game played In·
focus Is not on who 1'm pitching the bit and scored what proved to doors and out as rain forced the
against but on · his team's be the winning run on a wild Sky Dome roof to be closed In the
pitch.
siXth Inning. Cerutti, 3·3, struck
offense."
out one and walked none In his
"!'hal
first
hit
Is
great
but
first
complete game of the
Arndt, playing In his second
season. Chris Boslo, 6·4, took the
major-league game, replaced when I got on I wanted to score
loss.
Eckersley on the roster and led and that was even more exclt·
Red Sox 6, Tigers I
off the decisive fifth with his first lng." said Arndt. "Yesterday, I
At Detroit, Wade Boggs tripled
was real nervous but today I was
major-league hit.
home one run and scored another
''It was really special getting really calm and ·· saw some
Carlos
Quintana delivered a
pitches
I
can
hit."
my first hit off as great a pitcher
Viola,
last
years
Cy
Young
two-run,
pinch· hit single leading
as Frank Viola," Arndt said. "I
award
winner,
can
ldimtity
with
Detroit.
John Dopson, 6·4,
was told by our coaches that he
pitched three-hit ball over seven
some breaks.
"The kid (Arndt) got a broken Innings for the win. Doyle Alex·
bat hit and then Henderson ander, 4-6, was the loser . .
reached out and got,a hit and that
While Sox 8, Rangers 4
set up the breaks," VIola said.
At Arlington, Texas, Ozzle
"You've got to keep plugging.
Guillen's RBI infield single
Last year 1 won 24 and got a Iota! scored Ivan Calderon and broke
breaks. This year they're going a ·44 tie In the eighth inning and
the other way. "
the White Sox pounded out 15 hits.
The Twins drew within a run in Ken Patterson, 3-0, pitched 1·3 of
the ninth. Bush hit ·a one-out an Inning In relief for the win and
single off Honeycutt but was Bobby Thigpen pitched two in·
nings to 'notch his lOth save.
forced at second by Larkin.
Larkin took second on Newman's Ceclllo Guan te, 3·3, suffered the
Infield out and scored on Brian loss.
Harper's single to left. Burns
Royals 9, Mariners 6.
At SeatUe, l:{evln Seltzer, Kurt
struck out Wally Backman to end
the game.
·
StUiwell and Brad WeHman each
A's catcher Terry Steinbach collected three bits leading an
said, "Sure, we miSs Eckersley 18-hlt Kansas City attack. Mark
but the bullpen Is doing the job Gubicza, 6·4, yielded 12 hits over
that they're called on. They're eight innings In Improving to 9·3
getting the ouis they have to lifetime against Seattle. Bill
Swift, 2-2, was the loser.
get."
Oakland pitchers have now
Indians l, Angels 0
surrendered only four runs In
At Anaheim, Calif., GregSwln·
five games.
dell !Ired a two-hit shutout and
Elsewhere In the AL, Toronto rookie Luis Medina homered in
topped Milwaukee 4·2,- Bos1Dn the seventh Inning for Cleveland.
clubbed Detroit 6·1, Chicago Swlndeii, 7-1, yielded an Infield
downed Texas 6·4, I&lt;ansas City single by Devon White In the
outscored Seattle 9-6 and Cleve· fourth and a single by Wally
land nipped California 1'0. Balli· Joyner In the fifth and no Angel
more atNewYorkwas postponed got past first base. Chuck Finley
fell to 7-4.
by rain.

Hanover Westchester
Classic begins today
OUSTS WILANDER- Russian Andrei Chesnokov concentrates
on retul'lllnl a voDey to Sweden's Mats Wllander . In their
quarterfinal match of the French Open Wednesday In Paris.
Chesnokov defeated Wllander IH, fHJ, 7-~. (REUTER)

Wilander ousted in
French Open tourney
'

1

. I

: PARIS (UPI) - .Mats WI·
to play very well."
lander, bedeviled by poor play
Chesnokov has never played
this year, lost in straight sets Chang, the 15th seed, who ousted
Wednesday to Andrei Chesnokov top seed Ivan Lend! in the fourth
of: the Soviet Union In the round.
quarterfinals of the French
Chang used the same games·
Open.
manshlp against Agenor as he
: Chesnokov ousted the defend· did against Lend! to become the
lng champion 64, 6·0, 7·5 from the youngest male to reach a Grand
$4.5 million tournament. In the Slam semifinal in more than 50
semifinals, the Soviet will face years.
Michael Chang, 17, who scored a
There was no underhand serve,
6·'4, 2·6, 6·4, 7-6 (8-6) triumph over but he used his trick of walking in
Hal II' s Ronald Agenor.
front the baseline to receive In
Far more expected partie!· the ninth game of the fourth set.
pants. grass-court rivals Boris It had the desired effect of
Becker and Stefan Edberg, ad· · breaking Agenor's concentra·
vanced to Friday's semifinals.
tion, and Chang got the break for
· rn Thursday's women's semifl· 5-4. The Haitian tried the same
nals, Stef!i,Graf, ranked No. lin maneuver and broke back.
the world,faces Monica Seles, 15,
''Whe~ Ronald did that, It was
of Yugoslavia, and American like 'you do that to me I'll do that
¥ary Joe Fernandez plays to you,'" Chang said. "I've been
Spain's Arantxa Sanchez.
In that situation before. I was
" Wllander was seeded fourth
trying to concentrate and not to
after a poor start to 1989 .. The let the crowd bother me.''
Swede, who advanced to but the
At 6·5 in the fourth, Chang
second round of the Australian missed two match points, the
Open, looked lackluster against first When Agenor beat him with
Chesnokov, squandering four set a lob after bringing him to the net
points In the third set.
with a drop shot. On his next
· "l thought I had a chance when opportunity, Chang put an easy
I came back In the third," said forehand Into the net and Agenor
Wllander, who led 3·0 in the final
took the set to 6-6.
set. "l did feel much more
Chang won the tie-breaker 8·6,
determined after the second set.
wrapping up the 3-hour, 10·
1 thought! could win. Then,lfyou minute match on his third match
have 5-3. 40·0, you should win the point.
set.,
"! tried to stay calm, espe·
: Chesnokov, who won clay- clally In the fourth set," Chang
court tournaments in Nice and said. "!tried notto paniC and just
M,unlch this spring, wasn't ex· to play each point."
pectlng such an easy ride.
Thl! Placentia, Calif., teenager
said the 45-minute rain delay at
"It was a big surprise for me,"
the start of the third set gave him
he said: "l had good concentra·
chance to get his bearings after
a
tlon and a lot of patte11ce. I was
dropping
the second set. '· ~..
also a little lucky. When I won the
"It
enabled
me time to think
~cond lei 6-0, 1 thought It was a
and
to
realize
what
was going on
very bizarre score. I lost my
there,''
he
said.
·
out
concentration and Mats started

,

•

HARRISON, N.Y. (UP!) -It
Is difficult to think of a tournament with $1 million as bait
strictly lh terms of being a
tune-up.
Yet, this Is the .role the
Manufacturers Hanover Westchester Classic assumes for a
number of top golfers, Including
Seve Ballesteros, top money·
winner Tom Kite, Greg Norman
and Curtis Strange. who will
defend his U.S. Open crown next
week.
Payne Stewar,t, Fred Couples
and Scott Hoch, who rank third,
fourth and fifth on the current
money list, also are entered for
the 23rd edition of the Westches·
ter, which begins Its four-day run
Thursday at the par-71, 6,779·
yard Westche~ter Country Club.
The purse this year has been
increased $300,000 to $1 million,
with the winner earning $180,000.
Ballesteros, who has won five
major championships but not the
U.S. Open, has more reason than
the others to perform well this
week. Since he Is not an official
PGA member, the 32-year-old
Spaniard is limited In his U.S.
appearances to five tournaments
a year., excluding the U.S. Open
and Masters .
J'he Westchester thus will be
his last regular tournament In
the United States for 1989, a
situation that displeases him

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Picnic highlights meeting

tJiA chapter stages
. annual golf scramble
. By JSOB HOEFLICH
Surely, by June 15th the
weather will be stralghtelled
around.
At least.
members of the
Meigs Chapter
of the American
Heart Assocla·.
tlon are hoping
so since they
will be staging their annual golf
tournament at the Jay Mar Golf
Course on that date.
·
The tourney, a scramble, will
begin at 1 p.m. with a steak
dinner to be served to the players
at the conclusion of the event. On
Wednesday preceding the tour·
nament, calcutta will be held at 8
p.m. with refreshments to be
served.
Entry fee this year Is $50 and
I'm sure you can register at the
golf club. By the way, Turnpike
Ford Is offering a new car for a
hole·ln·one on number 9.

SWINDELL FIRES TWO.HmER - Indians pitcher Gl'!!f
Swindell fires a pitch to the plate aplnst the California Angels h!
Wednesday night's game In Anaheim. Swindell struck oat nine Ia
tossing his two-hiller, which led the Tribe to a 1·0 victory, bo08tlnr
his I'!!COrd to 7-~. (UPI)

Selects Kent State
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Myron
Walker of Aliquippa, Pa., has
signed a basketball letter-of·
Intent with Kent State Univer·
sity, becoming the fourth player
to join Coach Jim McDonald's
Golden F1ashes this spring.
Tlie 6·fool4 Walker averaged
24.4 points and 9.1 rebounds per
game ihe past season and shot 52
percent from the field and ' 75
percent from the free throw line.
"We think he's a talented
player, " McDonald said. "We'll
see how quickly he makes the
adjustment to Division I
basketball."
Walker joins Doug Carr of
Arlirtgton Heights, Ill.. Gregg
Darbyshire of Middletown and
Greg Hoiman of Oak Harbor as
Kent State stgnees.

If you've ever wanted to visit a
coal rnlne, now's your chance.
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce, is getting together a
group to go to the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. for a tour. If you're
interested contact the chamber
office or see Bruce Reed. A date
and time for the tour will be set
after the tour group Is formed.

Also coming up this month on June 29 -will be a concert by
the Ohio University Communi·
verslty Band In Pomeroy. The
concert, according to present
plans. will be held on Court St.

ANNIVERSARY
Rou and Marie Norris, formerly of
Syracuse, residents of Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing aad Rehablll·
tatlon Center, recently celebrated their 68th wedding anniversary
with famUy and friends.

UMW. progam deals with stress
"Busy Women-Dealing With
Ohlinger told about the "Em·
Stress" was the ,Utle of the played," and Dorothy Long exprogram presented at the recent plalned the "Caregiver."
meeting of the Enterprise United
A discussion on time manageMethodist Women when the ment, settlng priorities, and
group met at the home of Jenny using quality time followed the .
Warth, with Ann Sisson as program . Prayers were given by
leader.
Mrs. Sisson.
The meeting opened wtth
Mrs . Runnel presided at the
members singing " Take Time to ' business meeting in which such
be Holy." Scripture readings . topics as layt?tte kits for the
Included Proverbs 31. Psalms Festival of Sharing, Bible school
25:16-18, Philllpians 2:1-4, and on June 12-16, and family night,
4: 11·13.
were discussed.
·
f.our categories of women
Attending with those already
we~e given with Frankie Runnel
mentioned were Sara Dlll, Amy
presenting "Homemaker," Warth, Becky Baer, and Brenna
Agnes Dixon presenting the and Clare Sisson.
"Super Grandmother." Carol

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9 WEllS-EASY SUMMER SESSION
18 CUSSES"•• $3800 IE~~~E~~'!:AY
CLASS n•: MON. 7:30P.M. and THUIS. 6:00 P.M.
·
INSTRUCTOR: Joy King - 992-3794
ASST. INSTRUCTOR: Jeannie Owen - 992-8893

AT CAIUTON SCHOOL, SYRACUSE, OHIO

Join Us In an International Celebration
Enjoy lhe Van Cliburn InternatiOnal Piano Competition on "Victory at the Keyboard". Sunday
afternoons on your Fine Arts radio station. Made possible by Mobil Corporation and Tandy
Corporation/Radio Shack. Check local listings ..

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Henry Werry, former 'long·
time Pomeroy Pollee Offici!!',
and a former Pomeroy VIllage
Councilman, has been dis·
charg~· from the hospital and Is
a patient at the Darst Rest Home
on Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

•

Heritage Weekend Is moving In
and a number of activities will be
taking place at the Meigs County
Museum on Buttern)lt Ave.,
Pomeroy, and about the com- .
munlty this weekend In conjunc·
tlon with the annual observance
which Is staged by the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society.
he society has arranged
agal!l for Myron Duffield to be on
hand with his callope and beau ti·
ful red circus wagon so that, In
Itself. Is a real attraction.

WAINER

A. COOLING

915-4222
CHEml, OHIO

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Reedsville
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest White·
head visited with Mrs. Jean
Frydman and daughter, Sarah,
at Evanston, Dl., where they
attended a musical program at
the scb'ool where Sarah Is a
·
student.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens
and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Balderson
visited with Mrs. Kathryn Die~
at Belpre. o'it Sunday. Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Long. Belpre, were also
present. Long was honored with a
birthday celebration.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith
and family, of Kent, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Grant Smith. Other
visitors at the Smith home were
Mrs. Lucille Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
John Smith and famUy, and Mr.
and· Mrs. Terry Smith, and
•
daughter.
Mrs. Hazel Balderson, Vienna;
W.Va.. visited l'!!cently with Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson.
Eddie and Matthew Hensch,
Canton, recently spent a few
days with their grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs:ErnestWhltehead.
Villtlna Mrs. Lana Chevalier
recently were Garret Chevalier
and family, Fredericktown; Mr.
and Mn. Guy Spencer, Tuppers
PlalJII; Mrs. Roy Reed ~nd
family, Tuppers Plat111; and ·
Zenith Chevalier aad famtlf of
Belpre.
1\lr. and Mrs. Terry Huffman
and famDy, Lolli Bottom Road,
vllltad recently with her parents,
Mr. a tid Mrs. JoliD Het:rer.
t

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Pleasant. friendly Eliza beth
Flck - you will remember her
from her many years of service
at the Hartley and Bennett Shoe
Store and later, Hartley's, will
mark her 80th birthday on June
14. Elizabeth stlll resides on W.
Main In Pomeroy.

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Thank yous were extended
from the social committee and
service committee .. and Janet
Peavely thanked those who par~
tlclpated In the sale of fair ads ,
Sandy Hanning will receive the
Ohio River Bear.
Mrs. Grueser reported she had
not yet received word as to the
arrival date of Eleanor Knight's
memoriaL A decision had not
been made as to when the
presentation of the memorial will
be made.
Mrs. Atkins encouraged the
members to wear their achievement bands and presented the
officers and committee chairper·
sons a star for the bands.
Charlotte ·Hanning presented
perfect attendance awards to
Mrs. Atkins, Kathy Johnson,
Jackie Hoover. Kay Logan,
Sharon Pratt, and Barb Welsh ..

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Bob Houdashelt of Pomeroy
has undergone major surgery at
University Hospital in Columbus
and will be confined there for the
next week or so. Cards can be
sent to Room 720, Rhodes Hall.

A picnic highlighted the last
meeting of the year for members
at XI Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, when the
group met at the home of Gayle
·
Roush, with 21 attending.
Carolyn -Grueser read the
qualifications for membership in
the Envoy Program which In·
eluded a $15 lifetime member·
·s hip fee, a pin. a membership
card, and a certificate. It was
decided to submit A.R. Knight as
a member.
Kay Atkins pointed out'that the
latest issue of "The Torch" had
several interesting articles per·
taining to the various offices held
and guidelines as to fulfilling the
duties of those offices .
~embers were appointed to
the various committees for the
1989·90 year.

NE

WHY YOU SHOULD ·
INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH OR
ONE YEAR C.D.
NOW!

............. .,.....,'

Where else but Pomeroy can
you take a shower while caliope
music, which seems to float to the
hills, drifts through the bathroom
window?

Mr. and Mrs. Tliomas Ables
have returned to their Pomeroy
home after attending tbe 288th
And now the deluge of televi·
commencement at Yale Univer·
slon reruns. But do keep smiling.
slty In New Haven, Conn.
Their granddaughter, Carolee
Montanez, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Agusten Montanez of
Puerto Rico, received her bachelor of arts degree In philospophy
and pre-law during the
ceremonies.
.
Carolee's parents and family
of Puerto Rico, and their son.
Todd, who attends Marquette
University In Milwaukee, Wise.,
joined Mr. and Mrs. Ables at the
New York Kennedy Airport and
the entire group traveled by van
to New Haven for the
commencement.
While there, the group also
took a motor trip to Boston.
Mass., New Jersey ·and 'Rhode .
Island where they visited rela·
lives and friends .
Mr. and Mrs. Montanez and
family went on to Niagara Falls
and Canada before returning to '
'Dfndy®
their home In Puerto Rico.

FlEE DELIYEIY IN THE
FOLLOWING AliAS:
MIDDLEPORT, FO.ROY, IRADIUIY, MINERSVILLE,
'
RUTLAND,
SYRACUSE, MASON, W.VA. .

Thursday, June 8, 1989

Beat of the Bend

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WI HAVE A VARIETY MENU SURE TO

'•

Immensely . .
. "It never. has 1Jeen right, and It
never wtll be,'' Ballesteros said
Toledo rare resubs
of the excl uslonary rule. "When I
talk to 'players on the board
committee they say, 'We want to
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - B.T.
see you play here.' But when a
Smoke, l&gt;ertect Point, Florida
vote comes to the table, everyb·
Power and Letters From Hill
ody says no. Why is that?''
posted victories Wednesday
· With his chances to earn night as Raceway Park hosted
American doilars · so limited, Grand Circuit racing for 2-year·
Ballesteros has made the most of old filly trotters.
his opportunities atWestchester,
B.T. Smoke captured the third
earning $279,050 In four previous race with a time of 2: 00 4·5,
appearances. He has won the beating out Intent and Stella
tournament twice, ·and In 1987 · Dallas.
lost out In a playoff t&lt;i J.C. Snead.
In the fifth race, Perfect Point
"It's a difficult. course, · but· a cove~ed the mile in 2:04 1·5 to
fair one," he said. "It Is .o ne of 1. finish ahead 'of Complex Rmid
about 10 courses where I finish In 1 and Hey Macho Angel. .
the top five. There Is no question I · F1orlda Power took the seventh
feel more comfortable on some \ race In 2.03 4-5. Keysione Avery
courses."
·, was second and Corporate came
With Its tight fairways, high In third.
rough and fast. slick greens. · Letters From Hilt bested To·
Westchester plays like an Open tally ImpreSsed and Voltron
course, and Ballesteros agreed Hanover to win the lOth race In
that it provided good preparation 2:03 4·5,
for the Open, which will be
Wednesday night's crowd of
played next week at Oak Hill . 2,724 wagered $285,987.
Country Club near Rochester,
N.Y.
"It's Important to play well
this week because It helps you
pick up confidence for the Open,"
Ballesteros said. "You have to be
a good Iron player on this course.
You have to play just about every
club In your bag. and that's very
good prepara lion."

If YOI 1011'1 IIIII A PIBC.IIOI m1a, WI
WI.L .IIYII AllnUJI • ._
FBI 011 A

.MilWAY TAVIIN

n. 143 I

The Daily .Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

..... .....

~--­
.... , ... 'dlllng.

�Thursday. Jut:NJ 8, 1989

Porro&amp;oy-Middeport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Co1'f!munity calendar
group will be taking homemade
lee cream orders through Sunday. The prtce Is $2.50 a quart;
and flavors Include strawberry,
orange, lemon, pineapple, banana , vanilla, and chocolate. To
order call 949-2805. All proceeds
RUTLAND -The Zlon Churclj__ wlll go toward church
Improvements.
of Ciu'ist Is having a two week
Vacation Bible School each
FRIDAY
morning from 9-11: 30 a.m.
POMEROY - The Trinity
through June 16 lor ages two
Church of Pomeroy wlll sponsor
through hlgh school.
·
an Ice cream social on Friday
!tom 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. Eight
RACINE - Vacation Bible
flavors of lee cream, sandSchool will be held at the Racine
wiches, desserts , chicken and
United Methodist Church
noodles, potato salad, cole slaw.
through Friday from 9-11 a.m.
and baked beans will be avlaladaily. All children. pre-school
ble. To order quarts of Ice cream
through junior hlgh are welcome.
call 992-3222, 992-3777, or
992-5480.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Alcohollcs Anonymous and AlROCK SPRINGS Mary
Anon will meet Thursday at 7
Shrine
No.
37,
White
Shrine
of
p.m. at theSacredHeartCatholic
Jerusalem. wlll hold a regular
Church.
meeting on Friday, at 7:30p.m .•
at the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
RACINE~ The Morris Chapel
on Racine-Portland Road, wlll be · Potluck refreshments wlll be
served.
having revival on Tl)ursday.
Friday and Saturday at 7. p.m.
REEDSVILLE - A represenThere wlll be special singing by
tative of ,the Golden Buckeye
Dan Hayman and the Faith Trlo.
Card will be at the Reedsville
The Rev. David Curlnian·lnvites
Fire Department on Friday from
the publiC .
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. · Persons may
;tlso sign up 'for a card at the
POMEROY - The bi-monthly
Pomeroy Library and the Senior
meeting of the public employees
Citizens Center each weekday
retirees will meet at 1 p.m. on
from 10 a.m. to......3 p.m.
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
(;enter In Pomeroy. The guest
POMEROY - The will .be a
sj:Jeakers will be Scott . Lucas,
free blood pressure clinic at Rite
administrator at Veterans MemAld on Friday from 9 a.m. to 5
orial Hospital, Dlck Huffer, ex'
'p.m.
tended care administrator of
VMH. Mark Murphey, administrator at Overbrook Center In
LONGBO'I'TOM -The Return
Middleport. and Bill Bias. adminJonathan Meigs Chapter DaughIstrator of Amerlc;are-Pomeroy.
ters of the American Revolution
wlll'meet Friday at the Hackett
POME_ROY - The Trinity
cabin ln Long Bottom at 6 p.m.
Church of Pomeroy wlll sponsor
rather than at noon originally
an Ice cream social on Thursday
planned. The program wlll be
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eight
presented by Mrs. John Rose.
flavors of lee cream, _ sandHostesses will be Mrs. George
wiches, desserts, chicken and
Hackett Jr., Mrs. Robert Ashley.
noodles, potato salad, cole slaw,
Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mrs. Lawand ~laked beans will be availarence Smith, and Mrs, Linda
ble. To order quarts oflce cream
Patterson. The hostesses will
cal1992-3222, 992-3777, or992-5480.
provide the meat and beverage.
Invited ·guests are welcome.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
--Springs Grange will be having a
MIDDLEPORT -The Rejoicpotluck dinner on Thursday at
lng Life Christian SchOol wlll be
6: 30 p;m. at the Grange Hall. The
having a garage sale on Friday
Hemlock Grove Grange will from 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. at the
visit. The meeting wlll be at 8 corner of North Second and
1
p.m. (
Rutland In downtown
--Middleport.
CHESTER- The Shade River
--POMEROY :.... Round and
Lodge 453 will meet at 8 p.m. on
Thursday at Chester. All masons
sq1,1are dancing will be featured
are welcome.
Friday. 8 to 11 p.m .. at the
--Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center. .
RACINE -TheR.L.D.S. youth
·

THURSDAY
· RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held through
Friday from 9-11:30 a.m. at the
Racine First Baptist Church for
ages two through high school.

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TROOPS PATROL SmEETS- Chinese People's Liberation
Army troops, wearing white gloves, patrol the _streets of BeiJing
with automatic weapons today. There were no reports of any

shooting from various trucks like this patroUini throuiboot the
city. (REUTER)

lnlbRoll

• Top-FIIIIIg ·

....

• Pturllol
. UIIIIMII.allrlcllld
.

Foreigners scramble to flee troubled China
sies 'buying large quantities and
black-marketeering. And we
can't get any of .our containers
out of port to replace our
supply .".
At Beijing's Capital Airport,
large, unruly crowds of Chinese
jammed the domestic ticket
window, scuffling and shouting
as they pushed forward In thick
knots to demand reservations to
get out of the clty. Many
domestic flights were canceled.
" I was here first." a young
man shouted at a middle-aged
woman as he elbowed her aside
to ram his way to the window.
The International departures
lobby was crowded but less
frenzied as anxious passengers
walled at special ticket counters
to hear their names called from
waiting lists.
''Thank God... exclaimed an
American teacher when told she
could board a Un !ted Airlines
flight ari hour later. ·
Hundreds of people camped
out on luggage or on the floor,

BEIJING (UP!) - American
families were ordered to flee
Beijing, Chinese fought for air
tickets and a hotel barred outsld·
ers from the city's only foreign
supermarket as people
scrambled to get out or prepare
for a looming mllltary conflict.
Foreign missions stepped up
the exodus of their nationals
from the Chinese capital Wednesday. gathering ·famUies a t embassy compounds, rtinnlng air·
port bus convoys and arranging
special flights to move people
out.
U.S. Ambassador James Lilley
ordered dependents of American
diplomats evacuated. Most fled
their apartments in a diplomatic
housing compound after Chinese
tro_ops sprayed one of the buildings with automatic weapons flre·
Wednesday morning. The embassy was housing them temporarily in local hotels.
Foreigners who planned to
stay joined Chinese in panicbuying of food and other essential.
supplies. But many shops were
closed. shortages were spreading and gasoline was scarce.
Scattered minor looting was
reported overnight.
The Hollday Inn Lido Hotel.
which houses Beijing's only
Western-style supermarket .and
delicatessen. closed the facility
to anyone not a guest or a
resident of adjacent apartments
owned by the hotel, outraging
other foreign residents who have
long been customers.
The stores were the last major
ones carrying foreign goods that
remained open.
"Our flrst priority ls our guests
and residents ... said HoUday Inn
spokeswoman Irene Park .
"We've had people fro111 em bas-

The amendment asked the
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate passed a $3.3 billion Senate Finance Committee by
emergency spending bill after September to consider reducing
rejecting an atte'mpt to delay the extra premiums, to consider
implementing parts of the new delaying beneflts that have not
catastrophic illness law that yet been implemented and to
have not taken effect; i ncl ud lng consider making particlpallon in
new premium payments by se·· the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 optional.
nlor citizens.
On a 51-49 vote, the Senate
· The Senate passed the " dlre
emergency" spending bill by rejected a move to table the
voice vote Wednesday, sending lt compromise amendment on the
io a conference committee with catastrophic lllness law, · spon·
the House, which last month sored by leaders of both parties
approved Its own $3.7 billlon and by the chairman and ranking
Republlcan 'of the finance comversion of the spending blll.
The Senate · action set up a mittee. The amendment Itself
showdown with the House over then passed. on a voice vote, as
Several provisions, including the did the bill to which lt was
House approval of $822 mlllion In attached.
anti-drug funding that ls absent
Passage of the compromise
from the Senate version.
amendment prevented a vote on
. Last week. the Senate rejected a tougher amendment by Sens. ·
several attempts to add anti- John McCain. R-A;lz .. and Orrin
drug money, which is opposed by Hatch, R-Utah, who sought to
the White House. The adminis- delay for a year most benefits
tration originally wanted only a and costs of the · catastrophic
$2.2 billlon emergency spending illness law that were to take
measure for the rest of the effect later.
current fiscal year. which ends
The McCain-Hatch amend·
Sept. 30.
ment would have delayed collecIn rejecting the one-year delay tion of the supplemental preln· catastrophic lllness beneflts mium to be Imposed oJi senior
and premium payments, the citizens who pay at least $150 a
Senate Instead passed a com- year In federal Jncome taxes.
promise "sense of the Senate" Poorer senior citizens who pay
amendment urging study of the less than $150 a year or who pay
problems in the catastrophic no federal Income tax would not
Ulness law rather than postpon· have to pay the supplemental
lng implementation.
premium

ATHENS UVFSTOCK SALES
Juoe S, 1989

Catth!PriOM:Feeder Steers: *500 1118.
BO.DG-111.00; $08-700 lbo. 6Ut-BI.OO:
Feed..- Hollers: -1500 lbo. 7UI·181.UO:
110-7041 lbo. 60.118-77.81; Feed'" Bulls:
318-1110 lbo. 77.00-108.01; - - lbo. 112.00~,ll.lt; 81aupler Buill over 1110 ••·
IUNUI.
Slaap&amp;er Caws: UlOt&amp;les &amp;a.IJt.IG.OOj

6 . Cutten: J8.tl47.•. 8DrlniEI'

Cow• Br &amp;he Head: w .......ao.oo; COw and
call poln by lbe b...: 118UD-7111.00; Veol
Caheo: 111.111-llLIII; 11111&gt;7 Calvoo By lhe
BeO&lt;I lf.OMI.II; 11111&gt;7 Colveo by lhe
l'otlod: 71.18-141.111.
Jlol Prl-: Barr.,.. 011d Gille tlo-ztO
lbo.; tUD-tUO; Butcher SOwo: 32.111IUI; Pip 1&gt;7 h...a: lt.UG-41.01.
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Slleep •d Goats: Goa&amp;:• By the Head:

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GALLIPOLI! SrocKY ARDII
M.ayf7, . . .
Tr•di·F~eder Cattle t&amp;e..t,, Veal
Calveollleody, llulch"' Cowo . ...,..

Metllm Frame 16 2 steen:

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man sald.
About 1,000 of the 3,000member Japanese community
left Beijing before las I weekend's
violence, and the Tokyo government was sending special planes
to evacuate anyone else wishing
to go home.
·
Nearly 60 dependents of British
diplomats were leaving on a
late-night special British Airways flight to Hong Kong. The
British Embassy said lt was
keeping a sial! of 40 in Beljlng.
The Australian Embassy was
maintaining a skeleton staff of
15, while dependents huddled at
the airport awaiting a special
QaJitaS flight.

$5995

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1432

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INGELS FU

106 N. 2ND
-DUPORT

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"2·2635
1·100-426·5511

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701 SECOND ~Vt
GAWPOUS
446-101~

' baby pageant
PlC' kens COffipeteS Ill
Lyndsee LaDonna Pickens.
five month old daughter of
Tammy and Terry Pickens,
South Zanesville. competed in
t!Je ~ ·America's Most Beautiful
Baby" pageant held recently In
Newark.
She won top honors ln model·
lng. sleepwear. babY portfolio
contest. and cutest picture contest. She also won first runner up
ln the beauty category.
Along wlth trophies and sptln
banners for each category. she
also won a sterling silver pend·
ant, "America's Most Beautiful
Baby" t·shlrt, two stuffed animals, and all entry fees paid for the
televised Grand National Page- _
anl held ln October at the
Richfield Collseum Holidome In
Richfield .
The child Is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Schoonover. Rutland, and Larry
Pickens. Pomeroy. She is the
great granddaughter of Bonnie
Miller. Middleport. Marjorie
Wilt and the late Tip Wilt.

Senate passes emergency
$3.3 billion spending bill

Livestock report

ea....

including several tour groups
whose Itineraries were scrubbed.
"Our group has ~n waiting
here for two days," said Nlsslda
Tam ·of Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia, as he sat on a large suitcase
and plunged·. cho~&gt;Sticks Into a
take-outrlce box. "We hardly got
to see anything ln Beijing. We
still don't have confirmed
reservations."
Jarto Luotola of Helsinki,
finland , also Sitting on a SUit•
case. safd he arrived last week
for a medical Instruments sales
convention but the event was
postponed.
"We're trying to change our
return tickets," he sal d. ''But we
have no Idea when we can leave."
Many embassies have urged
their. nationals to leave China.
According to emi1assy offlclals,
more than 200 Canadians have
departed, about 350 West Germans were leaving, and 55
French diplomatic dependents
flew out Wednesday.
"A lot of people have already
left." a French Embassy spokes-

__

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CHEVY CORSICA

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$6,999

$7,999
..

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25 Grand Prix1 •
$1.500 Rebate M
20 Bonnevilles ·
$1.000 Rebate M

2.9% Financing

' 15 Grand AMI •
SI,O!JO Reblte M

2.9% F1111nclng

50

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1989 .
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CIERA~Y
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Only

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84 MONTH FINANCING

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HRI.P FIUPI'ORT IU I'I.RY'!!
.JULY 4TH CRLF:DilATIUNI
REO!STER TO- THIS 11-10 TRUCK
TO IE GIVEN AWAY JULY 4Tltl

. ••

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· CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE •·PONTIAC • BUICK • GEO DEALER!
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•

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'

Unique handmade itenis wlll
be lor sale In the craft show to be
staged Saturday on Court Street
In Pomeroy as a pari of Heritage
Weekend activities.
A wide range of craft Items are
expected to be for. sale Including
Items made of fabric, wood and
- stained glass, cera mlcs, baskets.
flowers, and miscellaneous
itl!ms. Along with local crafts·
men, several from out of the
country are expected to display.
Other activities to take place in
the downtown wlll Include a
pineWood derby by Pomeroy Boy
&gt;cout Pack 249 In the mlnl park

It was announced lbat a family
picnic will be beld sometime in
June lor members of the Reedsville Fellowship Nazarene
Womens Mlnlsterles Society
when the group met recently at
the home of 1\obln ·Putman with
Tam! and Linda Putman as

co-boatesll!l.
The meeth!i opened with

prayer by CAthy Mu1er1, who

Cow/Coli

al10 had devotlona by readlni a
poe111. "Ate You . Llatenlni
Lonlr' IUid the SerenitY Pr&amp;f'r.
Barbara M1Uter1 react cllapler
15, verse tteYeD ot the
bllllk .ol.•
I

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Rhoda Hall reported on May
Fellowship Day held at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
and St&gt;Onsored by the Church
Women United, when members
of the B.H. Sandborn Missionary
Society met recently.
Sarah Fowler presided at the
meeting whicll opened wlth
prayer by Sarah Owen. Oevotlons were given by June Kloes
by reading Corinthians I, the
thtrdchapter.Shealsoreadfrom
the book "Streams In the Desert." The love gift dedication.
entitled "Today's Travelers"
was given by Beulah White.
Kay Goebel will be remembered on her birthday as will two
residents of the Meigs Counly
Infirmary.
The Rlo Grande Association
Mens and Womens meeting will
be held on Thursday. The annual
women's picnic will be held at the
Bob Evans shelter bouse on July
12. The potluck picniC will be held
Aug. 1 at 6 p.m at the hOme of
Mrs. Kloes.
The meeting closed wlth a
circle of prayer.
-·

Others attending with those
already mentioned were Elizabeth Slaven, Elizabeth Searles.
Sharron Seddon. Margaret Bailey. Helen Bodlmer. Caryl Cook,
Gwinne White, Phyllls Skinner.
Lllllan Demosky. and Freda
Edwards.

on Court Street, clogging by the
Shady River Shufflers on Court
Street between 2 and 2:30 p.m .,
and displays of memorabilia In
business windows.
The Juanita, AEP's last work·
ing sternwheeler. wlll be docked
at the Pomeroy levee. Tours will
be available from 10a.m to4 p.m
on Saturday.
Several activities will also be
taking place at the Meigs Museum on Butternut Ave. where
displays and entertainment wlll
be featured both Saturday and
Sunday.

WAS

•995

coupon.

co-bolli!Sa.

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•1&amp;,111

1987 cadillac Sedan Deville
4

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door._- Y-1 .... _ , olr

•Pl. ..a, PW, Pl.

WAS

*13,495

11-. cilioo
NOW

1986 Chev cavalier
WAS

.....,'S GIAIIIY SIOI StOll

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,.._; _ _ _ _ _

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-:------~...1

....
NOW

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NOW

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selected Soft Spots. •

SHOES

1984 Dodge P/U

'400

*16,995

This coupon entitles you to $10
off the reaul1r purchlst price of

.

Mrs. Finley who always has
available quantities of printed
Information from the Alzheimer's Association for anyone
who ls ln teres ted.
Employed at Kingsbury Home
Sales ln Belpre. . Mrs. Finley
volunteers her time as an Alzheimer's support group leader .

PB,AIIfllrllflo, - -

WAS

AT
STORE NAME

I

RECOGNIZED - Shirley
F1nley displays a certificate of
appreciation from the Alzhel·
mer's Disease Assocaltlon,
Columbus Chapter. lt ·was
presented to her In apprecla·
lion lor her volunteer work In
support groups lor families
and friends of victims.

___...., ____ _

Only one coupon per
per visit. V1lid

l

,_

StOdi 114171, 4 door, oodlll, """' 11111, Y-1
q,--,llroanf..--.PB.PB.PW.PB.Pl.
II -~cnioo ......_ AII.Fll - . llpl,

·--------------------------~

The "soft sell"

...

- · 40111111.2 ~- lnn-lihe.4 qt.

I
I
I
I
I

..

Church wlll be having Vacation
Bible School June 12-16 from 9
a.m. tol2noon. Thethemewlllbe
"Sonseeker Safari. Searching to
Know God."
Vacation Bible School wlltbeat
the Silver Run Baptist Church
from June19-23from6-8p.m. The
The Pomer 0 y Church of Christ Sliver Run Baptls t Church ls
wlll be having Vacation Bible
located in Cheshire.
School the week of June 25-29.
The Asbury United MetjlOdlst
from 6:30-8: 30 p.m. The theme ls
Church
in Syracuse wlll be
"Jesus, Joy Forever ... All chlldren of the area, kindergarten holding Vacation ·Bible School
through 12th grade, are Invited to the week of June 12-16 from
attend. There wlll be clowns. 9-11:30 a.m. The Bible school \S
refreshments. crafts. fellowship. opened to the public.
The Enterprise ·united Methofun , and Bible lessons everyday .
dist Church will be having
The Middleport First Baptist Vacation Bible School the week
· of June 12-16 from 9-11:30 a.m.

•7995

John.
There were 41 shut-In calls
made and cards were signed lor
those on the sick list. There was
also a white elephant aale.
Those attending besides those
named above were Wendy Wll·
fong, Sue Douglaa, Lisa Putman.
Sue Suttle, Marlene Putman, and
Carol Kanawallky.
Tilt lll!llil rqular meetln&amp; wlll
· be the first ThUI'Iday Ill September with Barbara Muleraas
h(ISiell and Cathy Muliers as

~

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

~=---

What a beautilul incentive for trying and buying a
new pair of Soft Spots.~ The leather casuals
that take comfort and fashion seriously. Just bring
this coupon in, pick out your favorite style and save
$00.1t's the softest sell in town.

S10 OFF

L'

Officers were elected for next
year when members of the
Harrlsonvllle Past Matrons met
at the home of Stella Atkins.
New officers are Gracie Wllson, president; Pauline Atkins.
vice-president; and Pearl Canaday. secretarytreasurer.
Roll call was answered wlth
members naming a favorite trlp.
'A picnic is pl11nned for July 25
at 6 p.m. at the home of Betty
Bishop. A rummage sale was set
for Aug. 3 and 4 at the George
Avanell residence.
Goldie Reed, president for the
past two years was thanked for
her service to the group. Games
were played by the 12 members
and one guest ln attendance.

We have
to be soft
to
offer
this!

Middleport, and . Mr. and Mrs. S.G. Pickens. Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Pickens have two
other chlldren, Jill, age 11, and
Terry. age 10.

i

Bible schools slated

1979 Honda Civic
LYNDSEE PICKENS

•

Officers eleaed

Society to h_old picnic

Cller.t(prlmo ts.N-IILMI Bo.lam

..~c-.. m.-.o;

Shirley Finley of Pomeroy was
recently presented a ce rtifica te
of appreciation by the Alzbelmer's Assocation, Columbus
Chapter: in recognition of her
· volunteer. work with families of
patients having the disease.
The presentation was made at
a recognition program held at the
Worthington Hllls Country Club
by Carl F. Wlffenbach. vice
president. The cerilflcate bears
the signature of Association
President George Paulson. neurologist at Ohlo State Unlversltv.
Mrs. Finley's Interes t ln the
problem of Alzheimer patients
was lntenslfied when · her own
mother, Bertha. starting showIng signs of the disease In 1976.
She Is now ln a nursing home.
Besides speaking at various
organizations Mrs. Finley works
wlth patients and their fl\fllllies
at three area nursing home. She
also recently dld a segment on
WOUB entitled "For the Love of
Bertha. "
Currently she Is meeting wlth
others who face the problem
either as family members or
caregivers on the flrst Tuesday
of each month at Overbrook
·center. Page St. , Middleport.
The meetings are open to the
public and given an opportunity
for those coping with the problem
to share problems and feellngs.
"Sometimes just being able to
talk about your problems makes
you feel better.'' commented

Report given on fellowship day

Craft show set for heritage days

•
f()~ ~ , .. l~\\tt\

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

fTI!fii . . . IJI

Music will be by the True ' Information may be obtained by
Country Ramblers. The public Is calllng (614) 378-6406.
welcome. Those coming should
bring snac~ .
MIDDLEPORT - Overbrook
Center will lie putting on a style
SATURDAY
show with dresses from-1886-1950
POMEROY .- The Pomeroy
lor the public on Saturday at 2
Cub Scout Pac 2~9 will be having p.m. In co-operation with the
a bake sale and mock Pinewood
Meigs County Museum and Her- ·
Derby in the mini park beside the itage Weekend.
Sundry store on Saturday at 9
a.m. Cars will be provided and
MASON, W.VA. - There wlll
the publlc Is lnvlted to attend and
be a baked chicken and dressing
see the displays.
dinner at the Mason Flre Oepart'ment on Saturday from 11 a.m to
PORTLAND - The Hazel
5 p.m. sponsored by the Mason
Community Church will be hav· Ladies Auxiliary. For dellvery ,
lng a hymn slng on Saturday call (304) 773-5832.
featuring the "Free Gospel Sin·
gers" and speaker Sammy
TUPPERS PLAINS - There
Anderson.
wlll be a bake and yard sale
sponsored by the V.F.W. Post
DARWIN- The Modern Wood- 9053 and Auxiliary, on Saturday
men of America Camp 7230 will beginning at 8: 30 a.m . on the lot
be having a potluck on Saturday across from the Farmer's Bank
at 6:30 p.m. af the Southbound
in Tuppers Plains.
State Park on U.S 33 near
Darwin. Members are asked to
SUNDAY
bring a covered dlsh. The public
REEDSVILLE ;_ There will be
Is Invited.
a class D &amp; E State Quallfler
Men's Slow Pitch Softball TourMIDDLEPORT- The Rejoicnament on Sunday at Reedsville.
ing Life Christian SchOol wlll be The cost Is 575 plus two'softballs.
having a garage sale on Saturday More information may be obfrom 10 a .m. to 3 p.m . at the -tained by calling (614) 378-6406.
comer of North Second and
Rutland ln downtown
REEDSVILLE -There wlll be
Middleport.
USSSA Class 'E State Qualifier
Softball Tournament on Sunday
MIDDLEPORT - The Rejoicat Eastern Hlgh School. Cost is
Ing Life Christian Shcool will be $75 plus two softballs. More
having a car wash on Saturday
Information may be obtained by
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Gas calllng (614) 378-6406.
Plus Store ln Mltldleport. The
price Is $3.
RACINE - The Racine F!rst
Baptist Church wlll hold evange·
REEDSVILLE -Therewlllbe line revival meetings Sunday
a class D &amp; E State Qualifier through Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Men's Slow Pitch Softball Tour- The evangelist wlll be Dr. James
nament on Saturday at Reeds- Pennington, of Charlotte, N.C.
ville. The cost ls $75 plus two There wlll also be Bible study
softballs. More Information may each morning at 10 a.m.
· be obtained by calling (614)
· CHESTER -The annual E .R.
378-6406.
Hollon famlly reunion wlll be
REEDSVILLE - There will be held Sunday at 12: 30 p.m. at the
USSSA Class E State Qualifier Chester Fire House with a basket
Softball Tournament on Saturdinner. Those auendlng are
day at Eastern Hlgh School. Cost asked to bring their own table
is $75 plus twB softballs. More · service.

·Finley gets certificate
for Alzheimer's work

'9995

1986 Olds Calais
11711111, """ .... 4cyl q .,llcioly ..
·
·
PS,PB,1111-.CIIilo""'IOI,AMI
Fll-. 1111110 1lpt.

WAS

*7495

NOW

••••

�Thursday. June 8. 1 989

Pomaloy-Midcleport. Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

TlKndey. June B. 1989

'

Meigs students named for OU scholarships Mothers, Memorial Day
Numerous scholarships have
been awarded to Meigs , County
students at Ohio Umverslty for
the 1989-.90 school year, accord·
lng to a lisllng received from the
school this week.
The recipients are Ronald
Todd Clay, Chester, Kibble Foun·
dation; Melissa Aim Calaway,
Coolvllle, Kibble Foundation.
Ohio Academic and Dean's SCho·
iarshlps; John Alan Coen, Coolville. Dave Diles SCholarship;
Jill Kristina Ethridge, Coolville,
Dean's Scholarship; Diana
Marie Bissell, Long Bottom.
Kibble Foundation; Amy D.
Louks. Long Bottom. Kibble;
Al len Glen Arnott, Middleport,
Kibble; George Randall Bunce,
Middleport, Kibble.
Phillip Jay Harris. Middleport,
Kibble; Ada Louise King, Mid·
dleport. Kibble; Ella beth Nadine
Mei~r. Middleport. Manasseh
Cutler Scholarship and Kibble;
Jeffrey Todd Nelson, Kibble;
Terri Marie Roush. Middleport.
Kibble; Mark . Randall Smith,
Middleport, Kibble and Dean's
SCholarships; Katheryn Eliza·
beth Thomas, Kibble; ·Melissa
Lynn Woods. Middleport, Kibble.
Jeffrey Jon Arnold, Pomeroy,
-· Kibble and Dean's SCholarships;
I
Kimberly Faye Calvert, 0. U.
'•. Grant and Kibble;' Charles Eugene Carson, Jr., Pomeroy,

Trustee's Outstanding SCholar
Award and Kibble; Marty Lee
Cline. Pomeroy, Kibble Founda·
tion and Dean's SCholarships;
Chad Allen Cook, Pomeroy,
Kibble.
, Marc Anthony Corsi, Pomeroy, Kibble; Jason · Lawrence
Dodson, Pomeroy, Kibble; Sean
Russell Dodson, Pomeroy, Kibble; Rex Scot! Haggy, Pomeroy,
Kibble; Rhonda Gomez Haggy,
Pomeroy, Kibble; Darren Eugene Hayes . Pomeroy, Kibble;
Krlstan Renee Heines, Pomeroy,
Manasseh Cutler, James T. Shipman, Kibble; Deanna Dawn
Henderson, Pomeroy, Kibble.
Laura L. Horsley , Pomeroy,
Kibble; Christopher Scott
Kennedy , Pomeroy, Kibble;
Wend! Marie Kloes, Pomeroy ,
Kibble; Larissa Lee Long, Pome·
roy, Kibble and Dean's SCholar·
shiP!: Judith L. Mees. Pomeroy,
Kibble and Dean's SCholarships;
Steven Alan Musser, Pomeroy ,
James D. Euler Memorial and
Kibble Foundation scholarships;
Diana Sue Phillips, Pomeroy ,
Kibble; Larry SCott Powell,
Pomeroy, Kibble.
Todd Keith Powell, Pomeroy,
Kibble; Scott A. Pullins, Kibble;
Angela Kaye Sloan, Pomeroy,
Kibble; Timothy Wayne Sloan,
Kibble; Jennifer Leigh Swartz,

Pomeroy, Kibble and Dean's
Scholarships; Monica Layne
Turner, James D. Euler MemorIal and Kibble SCholarships;
Richard Allen Vance, Pomeroy,
Kibble; Michael Arthur Weber,
Pomeroy, Kibble and Ben Manley Scholarships; Jackie Ryan
Welker, Pomeroy, Kibble.
Frederick Eugene Werry,
Pomeroy, Kibble; Susan Renee
Young. Pomeroy, Kibble; Lori
Richelle Adams·, Racine, Kibble;
Jennifer Jayne Arnold, Racine,
Kibble and Dean's Scholarships;
Christopher William Baer, Ra·
cine, Kibble; Jimmy Lee Freeman, Racine, Kibble; Debbie
Lynn Holter, Kibble; Tammy
Dawn Holter, Racine, Kibble, C.
Paul and Beth K. Stocker
SCholarships.
Ronald G. Jacobs II, Ohio
Academic SchOlarship; Veronica Provo, Kibble; Rachel Laura
Reiber, Racine, Kibble, Oho
Academic and Dean's SCholar·
ships; Donald Andrew Riffle.
Racine, Kibble; Susan Elayne
Roessler, Racine, Julia F.
Jolliffe-Woods Memorial Scho·
larship; Melanie Lynn Van Me·
ter, Racine; Ben Manley
Scholarship.
.
Dixie Kay Wolfe, Racine, Mary
Ann Healy Memorial and Kibble;
Duane Bruce Wolfe, Jr., Kibble;
Phillip Daniel Wolfe. Racine,

Kibble; Robyn Gall Barnett,
Kibble; Todd Allen Wilson,
Reedsville , Kibble; Angela
Yvonne Young, Reedsvllle. Kibble; Jaymes Parker Carpenter,
Rutland, Kibble, Ohio Academic
SCholarships.
David Scott Edmonds. Ru·
tland, Kibble: Sharon R. .Lucas
Edmonds, Rutland, Dean's SCholarship; Lisa . .Gall Miller, Ru·
tland, Kibble Foundation; Chad
Thomas Williams, Rutland, Kibble; Teresa M. Pratt Fields. 0.
U. Grant, Kibble, and Dean's
Scholarships; Sandy K. Hoyt,
Shade. . Kibble; Kevin Victor
King, Shad~ . Kibble and Dr.
James H. and Nellie Rowley
Jewell scholarships; Nick An·
drew King, Shade, Kibble; ,
Brenda Susan Sinclair, Shade,
Kibble; Robert Bruce Ziglar,
Shade, 0. U. Grant; Shawn
William Arnott, Syracuse, Kibble; Tracie Rae Hubbard, Syracuse, Kibble.
Kimberly M. Maynard, Syra·
cuse, Kibble; Kristen Deanne
Pape. Syracuse, Kibble; Shannon Kay Slavin, Syracuse, Kibble; Timothy Robert Dorst,
Tuppers Plains, Kibble; Tam~y
Kay Kennedy, Tuppers Plains,
Kibble; Jack! Urue Malitzskl,
Tuppers Plains, Kibble; and
Franklin Ray Smith, Tuppers
Plains, Kibble.

6: 30p.m. at the Forked Run State
Park.
Hostesses for the meetlngwere
Mrs. Delores Frank and Mrs.
Betty Boggs who served a buffet
dinner. The door prize went to
Mrs. Cathy Spencer.
Attending with those mentioned above were Mrs. Margaret
Grossnickle, Mrs. Opal Harris,
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, Mrs.
Gladys Thomas, Mrs : Nola
Young, and Janeaspencer.

Chapman to graduate
Tammy K. Chapman, Long
Bottom, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Smith, Racine, will
graduate from Ohio University
on Saturday with a degree in
elementary education ..
Mrs. Chapman resides in Long
Bottom with her husband, C.T.
Chapman, and daughter,
Rachal.
Commencement exercises will
be at 10 a.m. at the Convocation
·
Center In Atbena.

By .Jobn C. Wolf,' D .0.
AAOchote Prof-r of Famll)'

Mecllcllle
Oblo Unlvenl&amp;y CoUe1e of 01*publc Medicine
Queetlon: I always read about
.. so many drownlngs each
summer. Could you give your
readers a few tips on water
safety?
Anllwer: Thanks for this good
suggestion. I know tha:t many of
us thought that summer was
never going to get here with our
long winter that extended Into
· • · ;May. But, now that warm
weather has finally arrived, It's
time to start thinking about
water sports such as swimming,
diving and water skiing. With
just a .little bit of care, we can
help make sure that accidents
don't mar our summertime fun.
One of the more serious water•
related lnjilrles Is paralysis due
to·injl!r)' of the spinal cord and
neck. This type of Injury Is seen
In people who dive into shallow
water. The easiest way to prevent this kind of accident Is to
familiarize yourself with the
area you're diving in. It's a good
::, , Idea to carefully go feet first into
:::: the water before your first dive.
,;,. That way, you'll know the water

.

'.

il ".

A combination family night
and going away reception was
held by the Enterprise United
Methodist Church and Sunday
school for the Rev . Mel Franklin.
,
Grace was given by Sara Dill
and a program followed the
&gt;~ dinner.
.. The congregation sang "Foot·
prints of Jesus." and a prayer
was glvep by Becky Baer.
The adult choir sang " The
Family
Choir members
'r includedof God."
Debbie and Kelley
' Grueser, Joyce Davis, Emma

·

.

..'
'
:

.,•, ·
:·
::•

Famt

Lou Davis, :Jenny Warth, Fran·
kie Runnel, and Mrs. Baer.
A responsive reading, "Chris·
tian Ministry," was followed by
two poems, "What is a Friend?"
and "Keeping Your Mouth Shur"
by Delores Will.
The children's choir, Kelley,
Tara, and Danielie Grueser .
Annie Jessie. Cindy Roush, Cynthia Cotterill, Amy Warth. and
Frankie Runnel, sang ''The_
Grumblers. "
A family tree was given to Rev.
Franklin by the congregation

Who sang ''Blessed be the Tie
that Binds."
The benediction was given by
Rev. Franklin.
Others attending were Danny
Grueser, Jim Will, Mary
Starcher, Frances Carleton, Dorothy Long, Dorothy Clark, Sue
Roush , Patsy and Trisha
Warner, Karyn , Dale and Chris
Davis. Ann and Bill Carswell, Ed
Baer, Helen Davis, Elizabeth
Davis, Agnes Dixon, Paula -and
Jason Hall, Ruby Frick, Erica
Roble. and Sara Pullins .

sponsors outdoor music shows

June marks the beginning of
summer when warmer weather
draws people out of doors. The
Bob Evans Farm offers an
opportunity to enjoy the sunshine
at two dys of outdoor music June
17 and18, 1989, as thellthAnnual
Country Music Convention
swings Into gear at the Farm In
Rio Grande, Ohio.
Visitors to this lively event wUI
see some of the region's finest
musicians compete for a total C)f
$2,000 In prize money. Prelim!·
nary contests begin at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday; the stage Is open
beforehand for any competitor or
visitor wishing to play.
The Farm opens at 8:30a.m.,
and admission to both the Farm

and the Country MusiC Convention Is free.
Registration for the weekend
competition Is 9 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Saturday; competitors' entry fees are $2 per event and $5
per band. Categories Include
flattop guitars, banjos, fiddles
and mandolins. Competing
bands will offer both vocal and
Instrumental selections for judg·
lng. Competition is open to all
ages.
An enclosed shelter bouse Is
available Saturday for jam ses·
slons after the competition, and a
square dance will be held from 8
p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday.
Sunday that stage wbl again be
open before noon for playing, and

cloggers are welcome to join the
musicians on stage at 12:30 p.m.
. The Bob Evans Farm Is open
dally from 8: 30 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
and offers horseback riding,
canoeing, and weekend wagon
tours that leave hC)urly from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
For more Information on ihe
Country Music Convention, or
the Farm, write: The Bob Evans
Farm, Route 35, P .0. Box 330,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, or call
614-245-5305.
Patrick Henry addressed the Vir·
ginia convention on March 23, 1775;

..
'•,

•'

!:::.

Scholarships available
Applications for Ca.r leton
Memorial SCholarships are now
available fr001 John Usle, secretary, Carleton College Board of
Trustees.
Only residents of Syracuse are
eligible for the scholarships.
Applications are to be completed
and returned to Lisle before June
19.

Contest scheduled
The friendly gold jeweiry: mony different colors of gold
· from the Black Hills of South Dakota. together in harmony.
The theme: the bounty and blessings of this great land
symbolized by the harvest. grope clusters &amp; leaves and
flowers. Accented with genuine diamonds.

The Rutland Fire Department
will be having a pie baking and
cake decoration contest at the
annual fourth of July
celebration.
Pies can be of any kind with
first place receiving $25. second
place. $15, and third place, $10.
The pies must be In a throw away
container.
·
The cake decorating theme is
"Patriotic." First place will
receive $50, second place, $25,
and third place. $15.

Sensible prlcN mpde pou/ble by group buying.

Salon to have potluck
The potluck picnic ol the Meigs
County Salon 710 has been
rescheduled for June 26 at the
Roadside Park on Rt. 33 at 6 p.m.
Meat is to furnished by the Salon.

SAVE ON QUALITY SERTA·
BEDDING
.

sa aoct

REG. $99.00

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$104°
REG. $119.00

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Father'• Day Su••ay, June 18thl
FOR ALL OF YOUR FATHER'S DAY
GIFT NEEDS SEE US TODAY•••
'

.

•CARDS
•COLOGNES

•WATCHES
•AnER SHAVE

PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE!

Larry R. Carr and Susan K.
Carr, 3.46A, to Gary L. Carr,
Columbia.
Ellen Elizabeth Gibbs, dec'd,
affld, to Charles Strauss Gibbs,
dec'd, by exec., Salisbury.
Ellen Elizabeth Gibbs, dec'd,
affld, to Charles Strauss Gibbs,
dec'd, by exec., Sutton/Lebanon.

Ill.

l

•

Michael Martin was honored
til, recel)tly with a graduation cele·
,::-_ bration dinner at the home of his
' '" Parents. Pat and Hugh Martin,
;!l•Reedsville.
;::· Dinner guests included Mat1:: thew Ml!ftin, Grant and Erika
' " aoring, Phyllis Hetzer and Mil·
' ••
'" chen Barringer-, of Reedsville;
::: · Janet, Lisa and Brian Hoffman.
!!' and Lisa Driggs, of Long Bot' " tom; and Edith Erdman, of
" Belpre.
~! ·
Martin graduated third In his
I' class from Eastern High School.
II He has been employed by the
•p Volvo Corporation, Dublin. Va.,
"'
:j and will start the winter quarter
: - at GMI Engineering and Man:: agement Institute, Flint, Mich., .
,.
,. as a co-op student.

Jeny BGker
Amertoa•s Malter Gardener

MICHAEL MARTIN

!'

[-People
in; the news..
By WILLIAM C. TROTf
the Democratic National ConUnited Presa International
vention. "Ms. Wilson and her
;r THE SENATOR FROM family have pursued a consistent
•:, MAYBERRY?: Andy Griffith
strategy of seeking an enormous ·
has played a sheriff and a lawyer
amount of money from the
~: i on television but he doesn 't want
defendant, Robert Lowe," the
:!: to be a senator In real life. Some dismissal motion said. "She b{ls
::. North Carolina politicians have
sought to coerce the defendant
' " been urging him to run as a
into making such a payment by
;;. Democra,t against Sen. Je~~se
lmpllcity threatening him with
J&lt;, Helms, R-N.C., but, while at
adverse publicity deemed delri·
~~ home Tu_
esday in Manteo, N.C ..
mental to his career as a film
Griffith caned state Sen. Marc
actor.''
Bllllniclll to squelch rumors that
DUKE FACES THE PAST:
S he was· considering the race.
David Duke, the former Ku Klux
..,-:'Andy told me, 'I'm an actor.
Klan leader now servipg in the
:;: That's aU I've ever known and aU
Louisiana Legislature, was con·
,..,. t•ve ever done,"' Basnight said.
fronted by an angry woman who
"He said he wasn't interested in
said she· was ~ survivor of the
running for anything and was
Nazi Holocaust. Duke, who until
~ surprised · anyone would want
recently had been selling an
hlgl to." State Sen. Jim Ezzell,
audio ta'pe on Wl\ich he dlsc?ssed
~ who first suggested Griffith as 'a
the "hOlocaust myth," was spot:: candidate In April, Isn't sure
ted by the woman as he walked
'- . Griffith Is i'eaUy out of - the · through the Capitol at the open:t· running. "I think he really wants
ing of a photo exhibit portraying
"' It and he's just playing hard to
Nazi attrocltles. "I asked him, 'I
="get," Ezzell said. Griffith, who Is
thought you said this never
~ on summer vacation from "Mahappened,"' said the woman,
~- tlock," campaigned on behalf of
who bore a numbered tat too on
.. Jim Hunt when he ran unsucessher forearm . ''He didn't say
\:: · fully against Helms In 1984.
anything, he just kept looking at
,.., KILLER CURSES THE
the picture. I asked him again ...
: KING: Jerry Lee Lewis's manHe said, 'I never said" that."'
~- ager Is quitting becaUIIE! Lewis
Witnesses said the woman then
.,. 'blasphemed Elvis Pre~~ley in a
shoved Duke and he later ex::: recent magazine article. "It was
plained the Incident by saying:
~ the final straw," Jerry Schi!Hng,
"Somebody did come up to me
·~ Lewis's manager and a -former
and say something and I said I
"~ Presley.confidant,
. told The Memthought It was horrible." Asked
,. ·phis Commercial Appeal. "I
about Jewish accounts of the
~ guess there was a jealousy there .
Holocaust, Duke told reporters,
: I think It's a shame because
"I think there Is reason to
" Jerry Lee Is a great artist
ques lion certain aspects."
: hllhself. But there's nobody who
GLIMPSES: The guest list for
:.• ~an top ElvlsPresley."Schllllng,
the White House dinner In honor
::: who still works for the Presley
of Pakistani Prime Minister
:.i eState as creative affairs dlrec· Benazlr Bbutto Included singer
• tor, was angered by a story In
Andy Williams, Malcokn Forbea,
: Fame magazine In which Lewis
David and Jnlle Elaeallower,
: . called Presley a dummy who
ABC's Pe&amp;er JeaalDp, ex-Dallas
• · wasted his talent and said his
Cowboys coach Tom Laadry,
~ "backbone was made of jelly."
New York Mets owner Nelaon
Doubleday,
vlollnlst lbllu Perl~ LOWE St!IT: Rob Lowe's
1111111
and
designer
Araold Scaul
~ lawyers now have officially de.
..
&amp;&amp;Z)'
Oeboune
can scratch
" nounced the sex tape suit against
Md.-,
off
his
tour caEaston,
I"· the actor asanextortlonattempt.
lendar. Wlcoinlco County off!·
~Lowe's lawyers flied a motion In
clals
voted 4·1 Tuesday nl&amp;ht to
t:,.Atlanta saying Leu Arlene
cancel
his June 14 concert
~ Wlllon, mother of Lena Jan
because
·
of complalntl about
!:t•l'anens. tried to get u much as
Ozzy's
stage
antics and lyrics.
:1 eDO,OOO from Lowe. Wilson In·
:\(Mead has filed suit accuslDg
Lowe of enticing her daughter,
C who was 16 at the time, to have
• !IIIX with another woman while
The RaCine First Baptist
Lowe videotaped them In his
~ hotel room last summer during
Church w-Ill be having evangeline
.
revival meetings from June 11·15
at 7: 30 p.m. There will be Bible
study each morning at 10 a.m.
~
The evangelist will be Dr. James
1:: Nettle BQyer of Lincoln Penninglon from Charlotte, N.C.
t,.He!etlls, Pomeroy, suffered a
"'1Jelrt attack on Memorial Day
sla~ed
::;i,fbUe v!81Ung her son and
.:,ataugbter-ln-law In McConnel&amp;·
The Rock Sprlnp Grange will
~!e- She 1.1 currently eoatt.necl to
be
having a potluck d!Mer on
~.l:lelhllda Hcilpltal in Zanesville,
Thursday
at 6: 30 p.m. at the
~~tllouab It Ia anUclpete4 that on
Grange
hall.
The Hemlock Grove
~ lbe will be ITIItllferred to
Grange
will
vlalt. The meeting
::::;klverlllde Hospital In Columbus
will
be
a
8
p.m.
··1o~l aarpry.

1.57

1.97

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2x1ZX12" Pallo Blocks

Add beauty to your land·
scope. SQ.Ib. •

Perfect for patio, walkways,
and landscaping.

'Netwt .

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YOUR
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Concrete or Mortar Mix
Easy to use. Just odd water.
Many uses for around the
home.

1.97

Play Sand
SQ.Ib. • Ploy sand Is perfect
for sand boxes and garden
use.

If

TWIN EACH PIECE

..

Clifford L. Adams and Judith
D. Adams, to parcels, Michael
Criss and Karen Criss, Olive.
Mary L. Meredith, DeWayne
Stutler and Martha Stutler, sheriff's deed, to Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Orange.

''!

SERTA
PREMIER COMFORT

I

Pandora E. Collins, parcel, to
Jerry w. Davenport and Gail
Davenport, Salisbury.
Ruth Gosney, Ruth Gosney
Betzlng and Don L. Belzlng, lot
33, pt. lots 34 and 36, to Shelly
White, Middleport VIllage.

::

'•,

'

John L. Mora, pt. lots, to
Raymond F. Jewell and Judy
Ann Jewell, Pomeroy Village.
Frank E. Dodderer and Elsie
D. Dodderer, tract, to MontieR.
Sanders and Lola F. Saunders,
Olive.
Mildred Mlller, .96 A, to
Charley D. Smith and Naomi G,
Smith, SaliBbury.
Paul S. Robinson and Alice F .
Robinson, pt. lots 19 and 20, to
Charles D. Wilson and Yvonne
Wilson, Middleport Vlllage.
Gertrude Hall, dec' d, cert. of
trans., Nancy Martin and Wll·
!tam Jr. Hackworth, Letart.
W.B. Cross, dec'd, · Hettie S.
Cros$, dec'd, Affidavit, Ruth
Simpson, Meigs.
Marshall Roush, Deborah V.
Roush, Terry Roush and Jacqueline J . Roush, lot 640, to Jack L.
Ritchie, Racine Vlllage.
•
Jimmy C. Caldwell and Sally
A. Caldwell, 7.69A., to Howard B.
Caldwell, Jr. and Marvene Y.
Caldwell, Orange.
Dewayne Stutler, Martha

Stutler and Mary L. Meredith,
Sheriff's deed, to Bank One,
Athens, N.A., Sutlon.
Roger Allen Abbott and Susan
Elaine Abbott, 1.48 A, to David
Stewart and Jane Stewart,
Beford.

,
",,,

SAVE 200fo

.

'...·,,.

CompUed By:
Emmopae Holstein Coup
Recorder, Melp Coullly, Oblo
CourtHouse

"'

death."

I

possible. A paramedic, lifeguard, physician or other trained
person should administer the
CPR as soon as the victim can be
placed In a flotation device or on
a dry surface. It Is Important that
you continue the CPR untU you
can get the viCtim to a hospital
emergency room, which should
be done as soon as possl)lle.
In these situations there Is no
alternative for life-giving CPR.
This Is why I think all adults
shou1d be trained' in 11. If you
don't know basic CPR, I'd
suggest you contact your local
American Heart Association
chapter for Information about
courses In your area.
There Is reason to be guardedly
optimistic about the survival of
drowning victims who are
rescued alive. In one study, eight
of 11 adult victims who were
comatose upon arrival to tbe
emergency room sui'VIved with
apparently normal brain
function.
"FamUy Medicine" 18 a weekly
columa. To aubmU queatlons,
write to Jolin C. Wolf, D.O., Oblo
University Collese of Osleopa·
tblc · Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Alheas, Oblo t5701.

•

he said, "Give me liberty or give me

PRESCRIPTION SHOP OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

level and yoil' Ufind out about any agalltst the walls of the slide.
dangerous objects under the
The best way to avoid water
surface that can't be seen from accidents of all types Is through
the shore. Also, remember that the use of simple common sense.
tbe water levels In familiar lakes Don't horse around on a water
and streams can change from slide. Don't venture Into unfamllday to day and from season to lar water alone. Don't take
season.
chances, and never drink alcohol
There are about 100 scuba before going Into the water.
diving deaths In the United States
Queetlon: What should I do If I
each year. Most of them result See someone drowning?
from Injuries that were caused · Anllwer: Drowning Is the third
by panic. This Is especially true
leading cause of accidental death
among Inexperienced scuba dlv· · In the United States. Each year,
ers. For this reason, the best about 7,000 Americans drown.
safeillard Is never to scuba dive The circumstances of these ·
alone - use the buddy system deaths vary considerably, but
Instead.
·
certain types of drowning ace!·
dents occur the most frequently. .
Accidents at water slides ac- Included In this category are
count for the largest share of backyard swimming pool ace!·
amusement park injuries. About dents Involving young children, .
3,000 water slldelnjurles are seen sudden deaths of experienced
In American emergency rooms swimmers who take In too much
air by hyperventilation before
each year. Bruises and lacera·
attempting underwater longlions. are the most common
ailments, although a large distance swims, and ·accidents
number of more serious ace!·
involving swimmers and boaters
dents have been reported. Some
who have been drinKing alcohol.
sllde operators have Initiated
1n rescuing a drowning person.
rules requiring ·sliders to wear
time Is of the essence. I the
helmets, thus reducing the probvictim has stopped breathing,
ability of head Injuries. StU!,
cardiopulmonary resuscitation,
many of the injuries are caused
or CPR, should begin as soon as
by people landing on their backs
or buttocks or being thrown

Meigs County land transfers

m::Graduation dinner honors Martin
~~

Family night, going away reception held

The Deily Sentinei'-Page 11

Water safety· tip_s to prevent drownings

tops garden club meeting

Mrs. Grace Weber presented
the devotions using Mother's Day
and Memorial Day as her topics
at the May meeting of the
Riverview Garden Club held at
the Reedsville Church of Christ.
Roll call was answered by
members and guests giving a
remembrance of their mothers.
Cards were signed lor several
people.
The cem~tery project was
discussed and It was reported
that the project was completed.
A thank-you note was read
from Mrs. Ella Osborne for the
gifts she received while In the
hospital.
Mrs. Marlene Putman appointed the program committee
with Mrs. JaniCe Young as
chairman. Other serving are
Mrs. Nancy Wachter, Mrs. Janet
Connolly, Mrs. Ruth Ann Balder·
son, and Mrs. Mary Allee Btse.
The club also voted to have the
same officers for the next year.
Plans were made to have a
family cook-out on June 22 at

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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and for vegetables, tomatoes,
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Controls many destructive
Insects. 8 oz. •
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10 kill Qllts, Ileal, Hotca.111-tb.' •...,..,_
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�-- - Page

Porn&amp;~ oy-Middeport.

12-lhe Daily Sentinll

Ttiundav. June 8, 1989

Ohio

June 8, 1

Health club hears reports

GRADUATES - Graduation ceremonies for these children
completln1 klndergar~n at the Rejoicing Ufe ChrlllUan Sebool
were held recently. Pictured wllh their teacher, Beverly Rope, are
left to right, front, Debby Searl&amp;, Benjamin Call, Isaiah Kebler,
Tara Boothe, Jenny LAn1, Caleb Jones, and Zachary Boiln, and

second row, Brandon Werry, Rose Sehrock, Alicia Kersey, Adam
Buillngton, Budd Smith, Chasidl Biggs, and Marjorie Bratton.
New students are now being registered for the 198&amp;-90 school year
and additional lnlormatlon may be obtained by calling 992-6249.

Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Nancy
and Hannah Woolard attended
the graduation of Mrs. Wallace's
. granddaughter. Alison Wallace
at Bloom Carroll High School In
Carroll, In which 154 students
graduated.
'
Miss Wallace. daughter ol Mr.
and Mrs. Alan Wallace, was
secretary of the class. and she
also gave the benediction at the
close of the service. A reception
followed at the home ol Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace.
Miss Wal-lace Is enrolled In a
business college In Ce~Jumbus ..

mental Impairment, or death.
A recent study In Seattle
Indicates that bicycle helmets
prevent most head Injuries.
"I've never seen a head Injured
child who was wearing a
helmet,''•said Dr. Dennis Johnson, a neurosurgeon at Chlldren•'s Hospital Natlonai .Medlcal
Center In Washington, D.C.Johnson says about 15 percent of the
head Injuries he sees are from
bicycle accidents.
Bike helmets are critical
safety equipment because a child
need only lall from a height of 2
feet and hit his or her head to
suffer traumatic brain Injury. A
cyclist riding at only 20 mph (an
average speed lor young cy·
cllsts) can be killed by hitting
their head on a hard surface.
To ftnd the right size helmet for
your chUd, you need to select one
that Is not too tight and doesn't
slide around on the head. Try the
helmet on before purchasing lt.
Most helmets come with different sized loam pads which can be
Inserted to make the helmet fit
better. For el!'ample, you can add
thicker pads to tbe sides and
thinner pads to the front and back

If your child's head Is narrow.
A helmet that fits well should
sit level and not rock back or
lorth or from side to side. Most
helmets have adjustable straps
to help you get the helmet level
and just tight enough.
To be effective, a helmet must
be worn by your child everytlme
he or she rides a bicycle.
Here are some tips to get your
child to wear a helmet: Jet you
child pick out the helmet; always
Insist your child wear the
helmet; when you ride together,
wear you own helmet; praise and
reward each time your child
wears their helmet; begin the
helmet habit with the first
tricycle;· encourage other par·
ents to buy helmets.
Children under 14 are most at
risk for Injury as a result of tbelr
behavior In situations:
Rideout- This term describes
the behavior or a child who rides
out Into the street without llrst
looking to see If a motor vehicle Is
approaching and If It Is safe to
enter the street. This typically
occurs In residential or com mer·
clal areas as a child enters the
street from a driveway, alley, or

.'Symptoms' become faaors to illnesses
Dear Readers: A while back I
recommended a book by Dr.
lsadore Rosenfeld. It Is called
"Second Opinion." Dozens ol
readers wrote to thank me. Dr.
Rosenfeld has written another
book that belongs In every home.
It Is called "Symptoms."
This Is a head-to-toe examination of the aches and pains and
other distress signals we all get
from time to time. It offers
easy·Jo.understand advice on
how to Interpret your body's
warning signals. It puts them In
proper perspective, and It tells
you when you should call a
doctor.
"Symptoms" gives you ·a close
look at the factors that make you
susceptible to Ulness - ,genetics,
age, sex, race and sexual prefer·
ence. It tells you what pain
means In every partolyourbody,
from head to toe. It discusses

E1!::~!1 ". ~!~:~rv

Noon.

Out..,..
2 ...
lvtt.ct, OL

1-614-992·3564

CAU 742-2772

,_.., Mil, Co. lhl. 352

43020 st. Rt. 124

Str..t

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

•m n. SYUCIISI
992-7611

or ltL "'9-2160
NO SUfiDAY

5·25-'19-tfw

IUS.SS

1.

14tlll .... St.

flaa-, W. Va.
Wo Buy Aluminum
ca,.. Gl••· a......

·-··and ...

Ann

400 mg.

Landers

NOW

89&lt;

$2 19

..SJ 599

•

1oo .

Pkg. of 10 .........51 65

I

•••
•
••
•

••
'
••

---·---- --·- ---Or~~n W•" '"""' tl I

•'

1919

,.'"".,-, Oh.

FREE ESTIMATES

•·

Call 992-2772

5·25-'89-1110.

2·3·1frl

ALLEN'S
HAULING
1600 GALLON
WATEl SEIYICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
Dill HAULED
992-52

&lt;

'

~------------------~~'

.

••

.•

Our experienced rapid growth of the
area's newesr Skilled Lo_ng Term Care '
Facility has created real opportunity
for RN'S, LPN'S and NURSING
ASSIST ANTS to become a part of a
responsive, well managed health care
delivery ream.
.i"'

FOR
SALE
3 Styles

'

and

Yam..,. Sills

Come visir, ralk to us about your
experience, and ler us show you that
nor all Nursing f{omes are alike.

WOOOEN BUILDINGS

Stop by for an interview or phone
Nancy VanMeter ar (614) 992-6472.

-·

•

Excellent
Selection of

•

..
•

,..I

1

USDA Chob,

T·Bone, N.l StriDor 1 m:r:PftE1
1
~re!'n. 1 Rlbeye Dinner - s1.10
OH 11
wiltt babd
:c"
AQirtl

.

pololo
...,....,
C:...._.,_..,.. ,..,..C..,.,.
.. ....... ....
..........
ILUI41

inclvdtunlrti
~

111

'

........

illlll,.

I , illlc
~

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

-~-------

ifa.
witt!
••••pu:

Lorge Supply of Bakft
WoiiVIng SuppiiM
Sign up now lot- ll'•kM
WolvlngCIMIM

EOE

OPEIIIIOST SATURDAYS
10:00 11L 5:00

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Moy ~II. 1181, In tho

Meigl County Probate
Coto No. 212111,
T.,.. D. LIComb. E._,·

Court.

Coun

St..

Atheno.

OH .

outrllc
of-tho.,_
of Joom•
41701,
oppoln1od
e..
D. LICornb. d-aod. IMo
of P. o. Box 123. Tu_.
Pl•n•. Ohio 4&amp;713.
· Robert E. a .....
Probelo Judge
...... K. N•oolrood. c..k
1111 1. 8. 11. 3tc

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FldbAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY
POUCIES
•Adl outlfdt Mtigl. OMU1 Of' MHon count!• must be pre·
pold.
•ReCIIN t.IO cfttcounl tor adl petd In ldvanoa.
Ghre~W~Y

•-••ot
.., ,.... "'""'""""

-·

.,... fourtd . . u-. tl WOf'dt wiH be

...
•,tUn
. . ot ld ler no
.. oil•
o~P~~a~ ,.,.,, it double prloe of td cost.

.

,

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

992-6472

JOFrM ... -

GAWPOUS
....,.. amr IL

Parts &amp; Strvlct On
.'AIMakts

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

.......... II ftll I liP I ..... fof •ror•ett ... tim der. tChec:lt
for •ortllrlt d., H ruM In piPilfl . Call before 2 :00p.m .

d• lfl• .......~

~

m•e con.CUon.

IDA'tl

10DAYS

11.00

11:t.OO

1a•.oo

11:1.00
111.00

t11.oo

'"""""'""·-··

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

16-JI WOIIOI

17.00
110.00

111.00

111.00

BOGGS

SALES I SIRVICI
I. S. lr. SO UST
GIIYSVUI, OliO
614-662-3121

A!lthorlaed John
D-e. N - Hollond,
Buoh Hog Form
Equpmon1Deol•.

,.,. .....
~

Roger Hysell
· G
arage

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alee Tr••••laela•
PH. 992·5682
or 9CJ2-7121

MAmN'S

tt. 124, P - . y Ohia

4-25·1fn

Por HIALTH

INIUIIAJICI oall:

J. WARNER
I . . ISDITAnVE
... 6 i &lt;1-992-5479
614-9tl-2477

a....

1·100-411-JUS

..._____

ftfr'"-

-·--

NIASE Certified Mech..lc

fnllii11VII11~111

Str... s•e: DHnle Dr.. Thurt.,

S·:r v 1c1:~

Oolr Dr., 'riciOI' • Sot.. II:OD3:00, kld'oclut- hou-cl

4 _.., ...d ...., 3 mi. btl-

5-25- '88-lfn

town on At. 7 . leturdllt onlY.
lolrr
10 opel., blco. 6

lt.,"

drW~~•dr.,..,ete.

.......Pomeroy__ .. _____ __
Middleport
. &amp; Vicinity

tar e t.JMv eciUIHrMI

,..on

Phvlld••• otflca. ec. blnillta,.
no thfft wortc. •Piv In
to
Medlclll PI••· 203 Jaaban
Plko. - - 1:30.1:00p.m.

WANTED: PrlvMe. homea to
prwlde . . tvPt fotter c••
torecklfttwh:htmOIIoneldiNbMhl•. llrolmllu-/ t20 por
c&amp;.,. Mutt H w•ng to complr
with 8toto Oopt. of - o l
Htth h lctnSur'IIIM't • to work
In conJunction with ment..
httlth tr'ell"*" tMm. For more
info. conl8ct l•blr• COil. CoorclnotOt,
nlty Suppon
Sonr-. WDodl.,d C...oro.
lrrc .• 412VIntorrPiko.Golllt&gt;oll.
OH 41831; 114-446-IISOO.

eom...

38&amp; P•k St., Mldcleport. June
lth .,d 10th. 9:00. Clotlrkr11 llbVallt• In our home for 2
month oldtOft.M .f. 7 a.m.-4:30
boll¥ ...... lutnlturo.
p.m. Mell

(Subjocl to Chongt
Wi111oul Notice I
CUAN AlUMINUM
SHEETS - ..... .......... 52' 1~
CUAN AlUMINUM
'
CAST-...- ................ 40 1 1~
AlUMINUM
RVERAGE CANS ..... 50&lt;111.
IRONY

SHEET ............ s• 1o 30• lb.

IRONY CAST_., 3• •• 20• lb.
5T AINUS$ .............. 20&lt; IlL

992-5114

O.Urah lt.. ..,..... u......
1~4:00. Tlruro., F~.. Junolth
•d lth. Fwnltura ... lqu..
....... Homelnt•lora. blarcla
boll. Witch olgno.

lttter of

lobvolttlr N - Rt. 4 8011

Clotlrkrg. lrlarcl-. tov~o mile:.
Fry rooldon00011Countyftd. 21,
- 1 to Sollotrurv El.,... orv
llc!lool. Fri-. J ~mo lth 6Sp.m. loturdO¥ Juno 10th 9 ·
4p.m.
Y•d ...alnahla Furnbre.131

Mil
lt .. Vlr~glrlle. June 4-8.

... -

AIIIII I II Ill. I~ 1111'111'

1WofMrii-.Juno1D-11. I~
1-doltotl " " ' - O..oga
At. 7. T r - o - g m - •
1171 luzukl XL 780
motorevcte.

m•.t•. Done

992·6872

•·S-'19-1 mo.

llew.-.ILWrllt_.

ROOFING
NEW - IIP.AII
Guttari
Downepoute
Gutter Clunlng

Wlll:r . . •perienced In find
dining. bwt•dlr. ldtdltn h.. p.
Ht up lll'ld brlllllt down,. ba'tquet
.._,_....01 pr. . ., ... Clll 304

e711-3813; 10:00 til 1:00.

Ladr toNveln and..-etDr *~•IV

lodr with ..... lrou-ork In
•ch.nge tot good home and
tmelltllav. Mull twwer.twwr
304-876-11811.

far

Fornlly O...ol Coro h• 1 or 2
rlrrr 0 woolc opening I llontll
Hyglonllt Doyo •d lrouro _ ,
fl•tie. To Inquire
c..l

p4-•

304-176-1932 ...._
tho
houro of 10:00ond 2:00PM.

Family Oentel1 C.re h• • llll
tlrM optnino for poel!lon of

o.nt•l ........ ex,.ienoe

ont, pl-. To inquire pl . . .
coll304-17.. 1132bolw_,tho
houro of 10:001nd 2:00PM .

12

Slt(itions

Wanted

~·814-H&amp;-1871.

Wlntlll: t..d¥ tolwewlthmetl l
huobond 11111 out of lfrioon. Coli
114-446-1497. oftw 1:00 p.m.
MalnttlllnCI ,_.on wlntld to
llv, kt tar 1p.,..ment compl•.
Coli 304-176-1104.

HVAC lnllol• wontod lmmoclll.. Mutt be 1bl1 to work
UNUI*'IIIIId, lend I'IIUIM &amp;
oolory - l r - o t o:IOilClA
200. c/o Gollp. . Dolly Tril&gt;
UIIL IJI11*d Aw., 1Jo81p.
Dhlo 41131.

.,ell.,

l - Counlry Rode tJOUPlng 1 ,....,, kooboord
......... mudod-. lf Int..
. . . 814-. . . . .2.

We c... tor .. _., and henci-

CIP,_. In our horne. 28 y. .a
LPN on clfl. Low

•perllnce.

lnoomo homo. C.H ,114-H21173 1ft• 7:00p.m. for more

lnfornwtlon.

Room iDr •ld.lv man or wom.n

• Eh Home. Ctrt tor .tdtrty
..d h.. dlcoppod. 114-99211173.

16

Schoo Ia

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOW1
SOUTHEAIITERN IU81NESS
COUEGE. 121 Jodco.., Pike.
Col 814-4411-4317. Reg. No.
lllo11·10MI.

---------------1
18 Wanted to Do

by

c.w. Dovloon. Plu-g •
T••olrlng: Col 114-446-0111
d • l p.m.

Wll ....... In"" homo. ll&lt;t•on.tlf•
fl41f•ancea
.,.n
..
lllo.AI _ _
_ __
Coll
I 14-2411-1711.

ret•.

-

do ilwM: Col 114-448-

7413.

All MAKES AND
IIOOEIS

2221ast . .
POMIIOY, OH.

Penon to operate photo- I n g ... In locol
rtii.U bualn ... a.,d rautM to
Boa 8 I , a/ o Pt. PleMint
Regld•. 200 Meln St.. Pt.
"-.... wv 21880.

c••

SWEEPER REPAIR

FUIIIITUIE
and MOlE

1 little •tn1
mo_,7 Or would you Ike to
h.,e 1 c.•7 Either w.., A\101'1
can help you bet hi belt you c.-t
bolll Coli -llyn w. ..... 30 ..
882-2841.

at tldtrJv bed
Wll tae
p_• ..,., In "" home. e •. • ref.

Wotor Nnoo6 drolnogo &lt;I! oliN •
MOII.,Y

J..c went to . .n

147, Golllpoll. OH 45831.

-rldg-.e.r•
,. .,. ••

Hugo!\\ . . . -'hofi .H .1. on
rlglrt. Clftllno. -~ o1
klndo of • - Tlru....,. .,d
Fttrlrrr. 8:3().&amp;:00.

3 Announcements

,.,_ence.

lntrodUctlon•phonoror.-to:

June lth tnd lth. '.4 . . . ofl4
lane33 onCo. Ret. 11. Adult.nd
chlldr• c:lotlrkra 11 1no11 bJ ....
de. bla,ate chid
A.n .. d
mile.

Located Off Bypa11
At Jet. of Rt1. 7 &amp;
143. Pomeroy. Oh•

Hlt· 'H -tln

AVON. AI ...... Clll Mari.. · n
.--,
Wow• 304-882· 2141.
AVON ell or- II Shit I., Spoor,
304-17&amp;-1428.

1-7 Aaroa tram
Mlnk't Auto .... : OH Rt. 31.

At. 31, RloOrondo.JIOIII. 10.

Cenified l icensed Shop

_...., • • DDU Jmn •Ia or other

a...

Hugo 4 l..,lly ,_d orolo: On otd

CALl 992-6756

Errporl.,cod Toloplrono Solido
tara. Pref• •Piriance wilh

_2&lt;*1
__
• -------

nlden

Repeira

ON . lt.
Jackl.,, Ohio 41740 or call
814-286-SOH.

Uood furr~tln ., d houoohold
oppHonCM. Phono 814-742·

II••·

'M ost FOftign 1nd
Doma.tic Vehicl•
A / C Service
All M .. or • Minor

s.nd rtiUme or
.-v_..
Gail RlrWIIn a.
Rt. 13. lox 8818.

•~ana

call for ....

red.

3 ftmllv y~rd •lie: lth houll
p . . t T.. l l Rd . on 188.
Thui'Odov·FriciOI'.
Fri..

tullion Nlmblrtment. Pay b•ed

r... ed work. Mud need to
work. bl rllabfe end hiW a
Plelllnt P•tonMitv. Right .,....
ton wil recMe high comml•
Junll Ctr1 wtth or wtthout tlontandhourt, ~· Houralto
motors. ·CIII Llrr; Livlft;' 114a I p.m.• 4nlahttptrWMk.Le.., e
"9303.
n..,e ..d phone no. on anawer·
_38 r _ _ _ _ _ _ __
llngoorvk:o,l14-992-7711 .

Ill• &amp;lenin

~=::5i;,iiii:;:!~:!:=~
n

,..,.oy,

I • .IJO
lliltlllltltrMftiii&amp;IIM-.Irto. . . . . . 8kGA.....

1 MONTH

•• •110• -ow•

so2 w. '"
stnot
Ololo 45769

RATES
0-11 WOIIDI 1.. ftWOIIDI
1 DAY
14.00
11.00
3DAYI
11.00
11.00

Monday-Friday

Ml.-tlend of Jaclcton · h• R.Nfulltir1'M
end pert dme. Fringe ._... • •
ln'*'do Mlldlcol. LHolnou,..,,..
hollciOI', lick poy; 100 P•r:ont

on

J._ 8. 9. 10. 9-5. 421 Fourth 11 Help Wanted
A.... Konergo. Tovo. c l o t h N . I - - - - - - - - tawnmowert.-aolorT .V.• phone,
3 - ·· bollo, blovclo •
VISAI MASTI!RCAAD
furniture.
US CHARGE O..rln'l.t r•
3 f..,.lly y•d 1al11: lul.,lle u-11•• of crtdll mlng. ~
Town HouH. clotting II tiiA now I 21 3· 821·1101. ext.
U2824.
tu~are. homelnthr, tooll
blatct&amp; Thurt.June8, thru8at.
FIA~tlmomodlcoll.llory . .1&gt;
June 10. I 1 .m. to I p.m.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

Paying today
May 31, 1989

GEARY
• PAINT and
BODY SHOP

Wanted To Buv

Furniture and appiiiiiCII b¥ the
piece of entire houllhald. F.lr
prao bolngpold. Co! 814-44&amp;3111.
MuN&gt;O..ogo IItie. JUM 8 · 8, w.,tod to buy • . . , _ ....,.._
8AM-4PM, •b¥ r:lotlwo. Home
Interior , Felrtlald Acre• · Coli I14-24 .. 1M127.
c........, Rd.
Oblong. or•blaroundpool. with
13Locun8t.• W.d.. Thur1.. Fri .• • ••d fltw. C.l 114-379Fw-nltuN, hou .. pllftlt.IPPII~ 2108. or 114-378-2104.
c•. dlahet, 1ter10. books. Uttd t.uNture bV the piece or
entire houllhold lito ttiKng.
Fri . • Bot.. J..,ol. 10. Rt 114. 814-742·2451.
112 mH• ~~~~ Eno.
Cult•
Moving &amp;lie. Blctoom suit. PN18.0 quilt. Any mndltknL
furniture, mite., 109 Mtbtfene Cath
Call 114-112·1117
Dt., F~... Sot., Sun.
0111 112·2481 .

a....

• / 6 / 89/ 1;fn

992·5335-915·3561
5-4·8!1-1 mo.

-------Giilliiiolii! ... --· ....

arick
8 I •nt 110• ~-•1
-·~
It
houMi lett.
June
10th.
9·3:30. VARIETYIIIoln/ lhlno..

BILL SLACK
9CJ2-2269

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

We Service All Makes

Me1111 Loc,. llcftoal Diltrkl it
...._lng~ppMOitio.. far .m.titvte bu1 drllf.., ContiCit Rog•

&amp; Vicinity

VISA · MASTEACHAAGE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8·7
Sat . 9-&amp;
Cloud Sunday

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

5-21-'lt-1 ...

-...on, OHIO

333 PAGE S1IIET

c/o D..lcl w.....
AttiHM\' It ~. 8 North

for the
. Ladles

178

BASICO WEAVE

trtx.

~ -'

IY AN SERVICE CENIEI

111-COUNTY
RECYCLING

HOURS: 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

THE

Public N otlce

Swimwear·
By JANTZEN
and CATALIIA

YARDMAN MOWIIS

•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

SEARS IN MIIDIEPOIJ
614

••

•

•Washers •D ryers
•Range •F reezers

Lo11 and Found

ECHO SAWS &amp; 111MMERS
OREGON lARS, CHAINS

DEAD DR AUYE

Built On Yow Lot
ON SAlE NOW AT

(

'

WANTED

n.lnlng. Repr ...m Numblr one
be..ty CO~f'l'!t· Avon. Ask
obout frM gttt. 614-892· 71 80.

TOP CAIIH plld"" 1183modll
, and newer u • c•s. Smith
' lulc*-Pontlec. 1811 Ee••n
Avo.. llolllpolo. Col 114-446221
Ll•lng • Glblrotown
2.
Rei. ttOI. R-•d. CoR 304- -:Com-pl-:ot-o':"hou-ooi1':'IO-I:':do-of~_,-:,-:-,.
882· 3388.
turo 6 111tlquoo. Aloo wood •
co.. hMI••· Sweln' 1 Furniture
•
A uctloO\ 1hlrd • Dive,
7
Yard Sale
614-448-3111.

"DOC" VAUGHN

550 PAGE ST~EET
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

.•,

Just In Time for the Beach or Pool

3

No -~l..ot n-=-Mry. F rBB

1988. Phono(614) 74:1-2880.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

•

••

ft..-elll
II . Ph.
IJw•• IM 11:01 ' ·"'- 111ft tun .

,,.... .., s.me~~

.I

DISCOUNT PRICES ON All MODELS
MEIGS
M~~~~I~S~!~ _ 64116
33407 SmHh
RidgeOFFICE
Rd .. long

Public Sale
8r Auction

8

A ...... PtY1.5per hour. See
A.R . Knlglw. 118 Llnooln Rd .,
Po-ov. Ohio.

Holm.n. Oirldor of Tr.n~port8·
tion.. no ittw thin June 11

SYRACUSt OHIO

11 Help Wanted

Met•evfh. .. .

,

• ·-s.nrJt' .Garno

U -·

pnm teld: frOm nwmotY.

ttplacom..t Windows
llowo lmvlotlon
Storm lloors &amp;
Wiltdows

a•., 111 '"tole •u.oo

.. 1
5 U. 15HEH L0H1E PRICES GOOD
Pharr1'U'Y
_THIOUGH
MONDAY,
IC~nl'lf!fh
rh
at••• """" R .rh~
.
H••t
JdE 12,
•• ....., 10:00 · ·'"· ,. 4:00 • ...-.
,,. FSCturnoNI
rtt. 112 28"

1 f . M•ln

.

lamtr I* llinJIItllioll.
We ray •so.oo l'or Some

---- --~=-:--·-,==-

.n.

SIN.I.I. h4S P.M. '

2 H.D. FREE with COUJ10!1111d .
pvn:hll!l of mill. H.c. Pack."
Ill- Limit I j»Upon per cus-

I

XD 7500

Mastic - Corlaintotellll
Vinyl Siding
Stolllloa Gullor

1-S.LL 6145 P.M.
IOOIPIIZI

SUW..NII.,...ancl

I - · · 4 mil•. 1 ,..,.... coli
304-87&amp;-1717.

6

EVENINGS

IMSULATION

YAftD BALE
lat., .lune10
20 11 Jolf. .on lhrtl.
LMnmo-o. Toole. Clotlrkr 11
looka. Meaaln•. Mlle. h..,.,

Found: One Bovina Write to;
P.O . lore 7HZ. Pom•ov. Ohio.
Ollte Mortptton,. whln klet. and
whit • • iolt ln.
LArll: y 0111111 f - o llooglo.

4-16-86-Hn

PROCESSING
TYP.WRITER

Fridor 11-&amp;-2311 Llnooln Ave..

LPNpa.~ ~.. av.. .Wa

NO SUNDAY CALLS

J&amp;L

Yord lltla 403 24th ltr-

Ntw location:
161 North Socond
Midtlloporl, Ohio 4SUO

GENERAl CONTRACTOIIS
11·1 &amp;.'188-tfnill

Day ar Night

224 E. MAIN ST.
982-9978

•

·
skltt-. 304-e?&amp;-1717. •

•FIREwoeo

915-4141

or Its. 949-2860

BINGO
POMIIOY -EAGLES
CIR

••

BECTON-DKKINSON

lox of

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

PH; 949·2101

t.far .,..... eo1111 ,._ 44 a-

2118•

.-.."""'11' I

WORD

INSUUN SYRiNGES
AND NEEDLES

100's

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING 8r REPAIRS

"At Reasonable Prices"

Middleport, Ohio

•

w..

3117/ 88 tin

CHESTEI, OHIO

&amp; Vicinity

l-----;..l·;..ll_·'l8;.;..;·tfn;..·~l lllneno, 304-1711-17211.

MARCUM

CUSTOM IUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-2196

U-100 DISPOSABLE

EXTRA STRENGTH
ACETAMINOPHEN

· ;9~ R7X7~
North of
33
•r-roy, Ohi0 .

949-2969

BISSELL
BUILDERS

...... 'Pt.PTiiaunf .....

:':in.Pio.-. wv. CMoollod"
::-:-::-::-:---- - Yord Solo: 1 ,_..,Fri.. • Sot ..
F- kh ..... Coil 814-388· 12W. AndoroonSt. MMon.8-1
8821.
" loto ofStutl" Roln - -·

Rt.

' tfn

and
heater cwts. Wt can
also add boll and rod
out radiators. Wt also
r.,air GasTIIIU.

For Temporary Relief of Minor Skin Irritation•.
Itching and Rashe1.

1

BOB CINNINGHAM-ow-

992-2621 .or 992-6944

61A-OIU7

'12 OZ. by Major

TYCAPS or
TV CAPLETS

SYRACUSE

SEARS .. MIIDIEPOIT

PAT IILL FOlD

NOW

TEMPSTI.~1 ·
BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

'

ON SALE NOW AT

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

HYDROCORTISONE CREAM

':

RISIDINTIM &amp; COMMaOil

304-675-3161

COI't

•Heat Pumps

ProfeuiHallnstallation
FREE ESTIMATES

Copp• ond Moro
IIOit•.fll~ ' •·6 ,_

....__ _..w;o
•· •

•Central Air

'. -

"' 388 -223 3.

=':"=.tc.::'~~~o~l!

•High Efficiency
Gas

&lt;L

.I

NOW OPEN FOI

TIMEX WATCHES
30°/o' Off

~

'

Help Wanted

homo on left.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
:Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy.

CHAIN UNII FENCES

PUIUC
IECYCUfiG

11

. Rentals

SALE&amp; &amp; SERVICE

11

Yard Sale

::.::"J':"'!',!~ ~~tofP1,:'~ 1 !:"'..::;!rl. Sot.

•Mobile Home

::r '(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
z 417 Second Avenue. Box 1213

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

WOmen' • • altll ctotl*lg. wr·

•
Parta
•Mobile Home

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

-

PH. 949·2101

SINCE: 1969

;

7

~:t,-rt::.lri~""'•e~~.. ................................ ..

MOBILE
HOME PARK

PLUMBING

~

Ntw"-lullt
"Fraa Eatlmataa"

•VINYL II_D ING. ftOOANQ
otMI!fAL .UILDINGI
..
•NIWHOMQ

COMPLETE STOCK

REG. SJ.39

Television
·Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senric&amp;l
~ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•EXTENIN'I ftiMODIUNO

(~~.~! BARS NOW 3 FOR 9 5c

0.50fo

89 1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

DWNII: GI£G I. IOIISH
•'t•
GENERAl.
•' '
COIITRACTORS
RESIDEIIT IAL
COlliER CIA!.
-•CUSTOM IUTCHENI • IATHI

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

$119

GO THE EXTRA MILE.....
992-6110
POMEROY,
OHIO
5-I0· • mo.
WE

5-24-n- lma.

&amp;· 11 · 1 mo. pd.

SAY•I-lllloM

5 oz.

A Great ( omb'Ina t'Jon"Quality and Reasonable Prices"·

7:00p.m.

Po•eroy, Ohio 45769

20 Ynrs Experience

Hymn sing slated

TOOTHPASTE

•NEW HOMES oSIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

"FlEE lllANT"

Harry Leffle

.

GREG lAlLEY

==~~~~~':~.

·w' Fl• A.. ttl Alf•l•t"

An outing at the Blenko Glass
.Factory highlighted the last
meeting for the summer of the
Middleport Literary Club.
The club enjoyed a luncheon at
the Colonel Restaurant In Milton,
then preceded with th~ tour of the
glass I actor)'.
One guest, Mrs. Don Mullen,
was present. The lall meetings
will begin the llrst of October.

GLEEM

Giveaway

4

K and J CONSTRUCTION

ANGIE'S
GUEIIHOUSE
IUDII 1ASIIE1S ss.oo
FLUS Mia •.., Up ss.oo

Plumbing • Plaatar

SWISHER-LOHSE

curb In the middle of the block.
Children under 8-years old are
most at risk from this behavior.
Sudden Swerve- Young bicyclists often make turns without
signaling or looking In front or
behind them for oncoming tral·
fie. Young bicyclists must learn
to look for oncoming traffic and
yield to It before turning, and to
use the proper hand signal to
alert motorists of his or. her
Intention..
Wrong-Way Riding - Riding
against the flow of traffic Is one ol
the most ·Important .causes of
bike Injuries from collisions with
motor vehicles. Few people real·
lze that II Is against the law In
ever/ state.
- When bicyclists ~Ide In unel!'pected locations It Is very likely
that mo1orlsts wUJ not see them,
or wUJ see them too late to avoid a
collision. There Is simply no good
reason for riding against the flow
of tr~fflc.
Did you know that: you can get
additional Information about the
National SAFE KIDS Campaign
by writing to: National SAFE
KIDS Campaign, 111 Michigan
Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C.
20011.

Jumps and swelling rn various years ago, when " John" was a
parts of the body, what It means teenager. he fathered a child. He
when blood appears, Indigestion, was willing to marry the girl, but
ANN LANDERS
fever, Insomnia, nerves , selz· her parents Insist~ she puf the
... 1989.......... .
1'ime. Syndlat~
ures, hallucinations, numbness, child up for adoption.
Creaton s,ndlelle
fainting, .tremors and memory
Years later, his daughter beo
·
loss.
came Inquisitive about her.
Do you want to know more "real" father. When she found , not complain.
about blood pressure, what It him, Donna was 28 and married.
r cannot-convey thedepthorthe
means when It Is too high or too
There were frequent phone
loss
I feel. I know some of the
low? What does It mean when you calls, sometimes three In one
In my heart wUI lessen In
pain
have buzzing or ringing In the day. Donna was a thousand miles
time,
but for now I am ears? Does chronic thirstiness away. Then the -visits began.
Devastated
In Pougbkeepsle
mean too much sugar, too much Soon It was once a month. John's
Dear Devulated: You can be
salt or something else?
·relationship with our two childThe price of "Symptoms" Is ren (my children, his stepchild· sure my advice on this Issue wUI
only $19.95. The publisher Is ren) began to_deteriorate. John not change.
Simon and Schuster. This could and I began to quarrel.
be the best Investment you ever
Donna left her husband and
made.
moved with her two children five
Dear Alia LaDders: Today r blocks from us. John and Donna
had to make the decision to became Inseparable. He lndivorce my husband, whom r still lormed me that he had to visit her
love with all my heart.
and her children every evening
What happened? Thirty-lour and that I had better accept It and

CAN Do
MAINTENANCE
CO.

Pelolt

.The many dangers of kids riding bicycles
School's out for Summer· This
also means that young children
wUI be riding bikes and playing
outdoors. This week's "In the Spotlight" shares · 5ome Ideas
from Sharon Burgess Selling,
State Speclallst·Famlly Re·
source Management.
Most parents don't _give It a
second thought when their kids
htlad out the door to ride their
_ . bikes around the neighborhood.
Although bike riding seemed safe
enough when parents were kids,
" today's riding environment Is
much more dangerous.
Without proper safety equip.
ment, children can be seriously
Injured or even killed just riding
around their own nelgbborbood.
Every day a child Is killed In a
bike accident, and 10,000 are
taken to emergency rooms lor
Injuries received In such
accidents.
Head Injuries account- for
three·fourths of bike-related
deaths. Ori In seven chUdren
under age 15 suffers a head_
Injury In a bike crash.
A third of the head Injuries due
to bike accidents are traumatic
and can result In physical or

r

Club visits faCtOry

•

s -.

•·

13

The

~;=:::==;m=u~s~•=n:rr.e=s=s===e::::t::::::::::•c===e=s:;r:.:=::::::::::j ~".:.-:. 1·=.:~:"':::

" Molher·Worth. "
" Beware or Bees'' by Lenora
The sick committee reported
Leifheit, "Don' t Crush Those
Pills" by Nancy Mor ris, •'News thai Francis Goegleln and Louise
About the Norwalk VIrus" by Radlord were having some
health problems. Get well cards
Dorothy Jelfers, and "Lyme
Disease" by Agnes Nixon were were sent to Cliff and Mildred
reports that made up the pro- Jacobs and Walter Morris. Symgram of the recent meeting of the · pathy cards were sent to RoUin
Rock Springs Better Health Club a nd Walter Morris lor the death
went the group met at the home or their father.
It was voted to donate money to
of Louise Bearhs with seven
the
Special Olympics and the
members at lending.
Cancer
SQclety.
Mrs. Leifheit presided at the
A
contest
was conducted by
meeting whiCh opened with
members t ecltlng . the Lord's Trecle Abbott with Mrs. Morris
and Mrs. Bearhs as winners.
Prayer and pledge to the flag.
The club will have a potluck
Devotions were given by Mrs.
picnic In the church basement on
Mor ris with readings of " Something of the Devine," "Give a . June 15.
Red Rose to Your Mother," and

Personal notes

B

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-2107.-~ow ... colll14-3711WM • • tor II~ mtt~ or
·
- In ""
814-117M0211'1¥11il
... -

A-......... -

Cuowonllr~'!!'-ID•

far~~--=:""'~:

oroe.11/2 ,_ald. Gh
••
to ...- homo. Col 114--.

-·lldtl4221.

·-ft

l'ound: holrod.
.......Collco.
Vldnltr- 01
llloanom Dr. Ma

CIM kilt- to -

ho-

- · - 111-14)-11448.
IUtt- I old. Lilt•

-·

-

ZOio/ollllllp..

121 '11*d Aw..

·- A I aolof •10•
7
will..
old - •· Col
114--1711.

1nlrlod. I

....

, _ _ _M.!r lloo=... Glo

Coi114-WJ.

"""'Pt'PJiiiliiiif"'"
&amp; VIcinity
-lrrtllltl• J-11-10. lrtolc
Hcru•'l-4 ml, oflllt. 17 on Co.

10111-11

,_

Trlliu""'

Ill. OH

OOYIIINMINT JO.I

.,...,.._~r=,r.;.a

t:'l...............

1111•

....... Hogging. , ............
lloolno • •· Coli • 114-141.
2177.
Wll do ollcl Job!, _['ltd wOttt.
- - 1 1 0 . ... _horn.

t14-MI-Mtlt.

�· , Page 14- The DRily Sentinel

23

ih

LAFF·A·DAY

Service•

Houaehold

Goode 54 Mile. MerahandiH

County .......... Inc. Good

. , _ lollool. Jr. High .,d

n.-: lUIIe

ftiiiUkWIMila. . . . . IPPfOV'Id.

ea.oo .. - . s.-owllbo
ln-C-Toddl-.
114-M.20N or 114--

2121.

=·-

Cnot -ol.

..... _

7:111.

•om

HomaforSale

8of• ond ch.,. Priood .
UN to fl81. To .. • flO ond
up to f121. Hldo-o.- •:110
to 1111. R•• . . eue to
f~l. Lompo f21 to n21.
D - ftOiondupto ,.,._
- d - · w-1 ...... 1211 ta
' ' "· Oook f141 up• f3'11.
...,_MOOondup,llunkaornpleM W .... b
II 1211
ond up to 4381. 1x11v 1110. Mollo
orlrox-

For Solo: ll br., 2 ftrooltllflll&amp; pool A-C/..1,100.
A.otio Ro• ! - o ....... Col
30 .. 17.110" ... :IM-171J.
113211.

•.

--011.
__.,.._

VInton: Totol¥
houll on one

2 br.,
21.100 . . . . 'liP... _ 1ft.

........,

.-a Appralled

In
""' .....
......
f21- .100. ....Cooh
prioo.

u"ooo ._. ..-

wtoh
dawn,.....n. Clplble-....
ootod ... _

...

Oftlr. Col

"I'd like you to meet my
3 bo*oom hou•.1\'J otorl• on
bitter half."
Rt. 7 t o - fDr 3 -....
...... Col 114-112· 1132 for t~=~~~~;;~;::-r-;;:~;:::~;=.==:1
.................
41 HDIYMII for Rent
44 A~ent
lv -'*· 411 Unooln lt..
r R·····-2..

Midclaporl. 3 - - ond
bollwOOff\ l•to lltlng room. I br.. AC, fonoo 2 .......
..... ...... ..... ldt· a./ t3IO mo. C.l :104-1'71110..
chOf\ don wth holf.lral"
enaloHd au~ • •
2 U ho- f271/-mo. CIH
oh ....k ..... 2 ...... Coli • 14-112·2481 fDr 11 .. 4*3112.
L.-go 2 IR houoo. ...... on
A.... f210/ mo. pkoo
"-" on Unooln ifll I roorno looond C.ll1
.. 4*23811.
ond bol" nloo ooctlof\ 2 otory.

Furniohod opt.. 1 br.. •zoo.
Utlltloo
243 Jockoon Pit.
Oolllpollo. coli 11.. 44. . . . .

II••
b••

·--·
~

"'"

1ltcl'eofd... leul. c.l

,.cl.

.tt•7 p.m.

-IL

No-

2 br.. utllly room. MC.
loootlon. AC.
lo'"'rlly
Oopoolt. Coli 114-. . . 1117.

114-NJ-3270.
UpM•ft. uniJr'*Md -..

,

c.-

polool. utlltl• oold no polo. Col
114-4*1831 - -. . . .
p.m.

-...

Nndl. m t rtwDOII
od . .lof\ In fliO'o; EIC. Ccoul.
COI304-171J. 7.31. ofl•lp.m.

3 br.,

Furnlohod oflldonlll' opt, AI
utlltl• pold lhwo •h/1171.
811 S.cOndAw., CIIII14-44138U

3 br .. old houoo. Ooltla eom ...
point Rd .• Loc.led on 30

.cr-.

wkh pond • ou...,l..,go. EX·
TREMELY LOW IIEHT. Conloel
I 14~112- 1312 . Gre1t for

..,.,mom 11•••

2 BA. furnll hid or eeml·
lurniohod
In qu ..
ntlahborhood. One c•
wltll •tanwtlc •or DIN"•·

h-mon.

,..., _.,..... 1221 DUO ......

F..

tla c.1 et4-4*n211.

For
- · T- bo*oom
PomwO¥.
boo-.ho10

p . - lonlorCtlronDiooount.

c..., ..112-230..

-

Hou•..,onlngo
lor In
- 114-· Ohio.
COl
qntw.

MoblleHome1
for Sale

.•' Mty lpodoi/No ..,.m_ -~

Nee seoond toor IP8'tlnlllt h

2148.

O.Uipolll. one or two , . . . - .

l.OI*'rnlohocl loll¥ . ..,...... No
Ins~ p•a. O.a11t rlqU .. .t.
Coiii1 .. 182-3CIIO.

... •-' ., •• - A. fDr llldl
• 11..... :1002. or ooH 11 ..

Hou11 for renL Frauil Jon&amp;
304-17.1720.

1 br.. opt., 231 t1rot "'o./1171
mo. ..,, diD011t. lui. No .,.rL
Coli ......... 4821

Point Pl. .n

112-3101aft• 1:00 p.m.

• • B..n.ttl

Addttlof\
2 - - houoo.
loll
.................
llnklonoo.

.....,., on onr Mobllo
• •' H-• puroh•odln Mow. Fnn"'
" -or
-30•182-2401.
- """"'· 31) ..
1711-8140
Ho..,.. CoM 114- .....

;:=.=•

.... - 2 1....
, • ,....... ...... 2b... - . .... .... ...
_. -CoM 114-44a-1114of·
, t•llll-m.

• ' Tr.-• ,_ .... • rMI: Ant:lllue
....... tolllo tor Coli
, , 11 .. ~0127 all• 2 p.m.

II..,

· · 1171 lhulta, 14x 10. with
, · 14xl0 odd Of\
In 1tl7. 3
br.. 2 bollw. LR, FR. K i t l!llood bur-. rol.. •
..... ,..CI In ov...._. micro...,._

0111

move or ..., on

ldt-

Polnt-ont•oo3-LR , bol" booclnlng rOOff\ -llv ............
onoo Homootood llooflv, 310•
17f.N40 or 30•182-2.01.

Pertl.. tm•twd iln JtH...,.

42 Mobile H D11181

for Rent

1171 14xl0, 2 ....... h...
cabln•e. mu81 be ft'tCJWil.
Priood for quid&lt; Nlo/fi,IOO.
COII1 .. 387·711._

Full¥ tlrniohod v•ov• opt. AI
utllll• ,.d •oopt oloelrlclly.
-IV rodooorotld • .,_,r•od.
Oop. Alooll-oorntiOI•. Col
11 .. 4*1111. or ., .. ..._
. .10.

1171 121110 Ulrorty. Ooclc.
.. f3IOO. Oood caftdl.
lion. 11 .. N2-M07.
12 • 10 Mo..• Home. lront
, - . olroond .. 314-olond
Coll310 ..17..1138.
·
121181 Tn11 ..2 br.. 2 olr oond ..

. *'-·good
p . . -hod
u- plnnlna
cand. . ..,
rlgltt.

2 11R. Dopoolt _.~od. In
Pbrtw. Col ,, .. ,... tiO._

33

...

FannsforSale

For s•o: Uocr•m-. 11

ecr• of wooded • • H•• nnl

- •· hool&gt;up, """lc tanll.
Ill_. tap Rd. 4 mL. from
. Qolllpok c.ll 11 .. 44.2101.
Countrydr......m-3br ..
2 ~Ia onivl e24,91111 • up.
looourmodoi.Cd1·11•N•
7311 .

36 Loti 8l Acreage

1
2·1 ..... opt., In
furn .. hed Cel 3016-17&amp;- 1172.
.tl•lp.m.

'!pleodn

2 tNetc. tlrtl

•lr•

13-11:21. Colll14-387-7141 .

41 ocra W..ll Pon Rd. Col
. ,.... ~ 7384 ..........

= •-•

Aften "-"1111 one • • loti
w•h"'•*.,......
pubtlcwlt•.

Jr. 304-17•

FurMhld b•emll'd 1Pirtmlnt.

Two train for rent. ,..• .,eel.
304-171-1071.

Bulolllofllr 1 or21411o. 1110.
mont!\ 11 utili• po14 c.n
11 .. 882-21U

.. Mo ... horM fur rtnt, 2 t.draamo. lond Hll Rood. 30..
17.3134.

'

lng ..,.. . . . . . Nellnw with

purch•o. llog. prioo f211. AI
--Dlnottoi...Tollloond4chllro
11. .. Reg. 1248. o- ~
wood cln.,o cholro. poddod or
unpool&lt;lod. ...,... ot 418.N .

'-rov MOIIoCIInnor. ollnotruIIOQ.OO . . . It
304-N2·2011 .

58

Fnllt

8t Vegetllblel

-do.

ltr....,rln- plall your own.
C•ll Cleud• Winten, Afo

OH 114-241J.I121.

11r-.1oo. You pldl 0. -lclc. I o.m.·l p.m. Tovlofo
lorry Potoh. Kerr Rd. CoH
11 ...... 1182 or 114-2...
1171.
............: ......... 2 mi.,

loulllot -Hovonwv....
l.OIIon Comp Oround. PldlM
Mon.... J - "" . .1 304112·2237.

.....

Oaod .. _

1711-8171.

Bullclng Mot. . .
lltodl. brick. _ . . DID-. wln- L lint.• Ito. CltiJ• Wlft.

Rio OrMdlt, OH. C.l

114-2••1121.

,

Petl for Sale
Groom and Supptv Shop.P..
Grooming. All br•d• ... All
otyloo. lomo PWt Food
Julio Webb Ph. 11 .. 4*0231. 10 vr. old ponv wllh HCiclo.
wlh ld• CoH 30 .. 17&amp;Drogonwynct Cottorv Konno!. Oood
1143ofl•l.
,_.._. mdll~m•••dHim•
•.,... llltteftl. Chaw null ......

vloo CoHI1 ..... lll44olt•7
P.M.

84

Hey 8t Grain

1817 Ch.,.,. 2 dr. hwdtop.
Tll'ldlm •I• lowboy t•l•, C.ll

30 .. 171J.I7...

18 Pontloo lAMont. boclr ond
l!lotor good ooncl., 411 onglna
400 turbo t - . outo.. Coli
30 .........

rat.::,·ili.'"" II¥ lodrl Col
1171 ch-· •• 310 .......
loelory. 4opd.. - - l o " 111
old 1tylo ro!lvo w-o.
41,100. 1173 Com•o Z·28,
283 •gina

..tomMie.

tra9 r••cl old

poeiiNe
r.tfya

fty ..

wh. . ft,OOO COl 30 .. 18&amp;.
3033.

72

81

rapolr,

.,..L

ill I I I

4f Hornee for Rent

Chouy 810. EXIond cob. Ex.
CCOid. Laodocl Col 114-317·
0441 .

20 ,_ oom . ofllllo on lonlh
llorvloo Porto or-. wlhtNo
od tM July 1. 1118. WVo
30 .. 17.21111 Phlo 11......

-.
,.... ...............
lito·-.--.-....
=

I'UIIMniM 12

CARTER'S PWM.NO

71

u.............._

:r.-

...,
•111 auDn.:. , ...... , .,.,

~ts-11111, 1

......... '"·~·-,.....·
N

-

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

_ , c.lll14--ltll.

e ()) a-n

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Boata81d
Motort for Bale

17tt . . . . .d . . . . . . . . . ..
71 ...........
...
1710.10
.......
..... ~ ...... 11!1
4 .·.

- - . . . . . . . . . . . . NM

,.:;•.;:•.;:L..;.:.
....
.:...:..,..;.::,.:11.;:•:.:•:...._ _

r

1111

HOPE 1 NEVER

ANDHEATINO

GrET 1J::I&amp;' 61CK .

e

a
e

.lllllllmeYMk

O!wNngNewa
IIJ ,._
10:00(1) MOVE: Y- Choalln'
RiNMI (NRI (2:00)

no..in.

10:30(l) MaltlrjiiUI
Conlronlecl with lhe tru111,
Gorae takaa desperate
melllurtf 10 IIICIJ)e. D
(f) Dlf......t ~larry
Groce

Electrical
8t Refrigeration
or CIUIImftal

ellll~~~may

Mlhr
New CounliY
11:00 ()) MOVII: The Lui Aide Of
1be Dalton Gang (NRI (3:00)

a

wlr-

ln~-- or .........
Llcenlld elea:rld•. Ridenour
Eloelrl... 30•171J.1711.

86

G_,.al H111llng

*"'"when

""·----·

- • z.ooo .. 4.ooo..., ...
.,, ........ I!Oolt. - . -

Clll 310 .. 17.. 2111.

OPhOI~t-v

.. __

Mcwue(eU,......,.. ..,._,

--

u~.,..,.-

111 Col
aa •·171·4~r.14II '"'
troo

ln · -

ea

...

1111

EAST
.QJ 103
.96
• QJ 6 6
.Q 10 7

SOUTH
.987 5 42
.743
110

Unnatural
procedure

.AK 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soulb

West

Nortll
I NT

Ea11

Pass

All. pass

Opening lead : • Q

1...--------- --.;.J
clubs and.cinifinue by cashing the·ace
of clubs. Then he ca n le ad up to dummy's diamond king. West wins the ace
but cannot take a club trick. When
W~t coolinues with a heart, declarer
wtns m dummy, plays king of diamonds shedding a club, and then ruffs
a club. He can now return to dummy
With ~e other high spade to get rid of
hiS lostng heart on a good club.
It seems unnatural to set up a club
trick for the defense before leading up
to the king of diamonds, but that is the
only way the contract can be made.

---·- - -

CROSSWORD
b1 THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Aasall
1 Desl
8 Perched
or
Lucie
9 Extant
10 Separate
12 Ship

2 "Esaays
of-

13 Cltv

3 Tendon

4Eden

In rraq

evictee .
5Wood

1&amp;New

Guinea
town

aCt

18 Floor Item
18 Mutt

191ndlte
21 Sailor
22Colorado
Indian
23Senora's
title
24 BIIHard

7 Air-to-air
mlsalle

(abbr.)

I f:arm
machine
11 Absentee
14 Bedeck
17Had

shot
27 Borgnlne
role
21"Vi811 d'
•
21 Chinchilla
30 TheSsalian
mounlaln
31 Social
cla11
33 Ending for
gun or run

34Poem
35 Slice off

31Wetcome

40

word

..........

.~no

42
43Soulhem
"potalo"

441950'8

. (J)Lighttr . . . Of 8porta

11onllhlp work. Mall $2 lo Malchmak•,
P.O. Box 91428, Cl!rvelond OH ... 1013428.
'
CAt«:EII (...... 11-.luiJ 12) Bualnooa
BERNICE
and finance are 1ho 1wo . , . . - . ,
you· are Ukaly lo be lho moot effec1tve
BEpEOSOL loday,
_ , 111ough what you do now
may nol yield a return 1111111 alatar dale.
IJIO (.I!IIJ 211-Aua. a) You l!lighl be ••lremaly ~'today where your hopeful
expectallonll- -ned. You could
r
IMinefH In two waye from a pajr of nial1eralhalore ~I related.
VIRCIO lAue. a lapt.a) 1011... ~
IU
will Wir
-, •Win you lhe reepect of your
~
you do llilngllor
,... I, , _
O!Mrl. you'Ddo 10 In wa,.lhllt do not
C81111ttentlln to youi'Mit, ~ M'nl you
1
tlleapollfllhl.
In the,.., llheacl you w11 ga1n
~ (lapi.D-Qet..) F-wiR be
Will..................,
partll I pIC~ of JOW-olp~ilolla today be- - . . . . . . . . . . I . . . . ....,.: Ny'l ........, know
, _.

1

Wottoroon' o Wotor Houlll'D

--

• ()) Cll • Cll

.

87

n~~,

recreates major news
stories, locullng on 1118
e1or1as behind lfle heedllnes,
In I Mlmlell blend with
8C1Ual1oo1age ollhe evanls.

..... .77.

Allldlntlllf

VldeoCoo

10:00 ()) 700 Club
&lt;2J 01 L.A. Law Kuzak
repreeenls lhe ownlll' of a
nudill colony. (~1;1
&lt;ZJ Newlwalclt ~
(f) Under Fire Tills program

Ollf..'r Ohio
Phono 1143811 or 11 ..

84

•a:a N8A ........... 1;1

0 Lany King Llvel
I[J T'huroday Night l'lghla
1:30 &lt;2J 01 Dear John John
· pions 10 fix up Kale with
Ralph, but ftnda hlmee~
seduced. CA) 0

Cor. Fourth ond Plno

orJ_on
.l
of
......... ._
. ,-.00.....,
. _ fr-.
-104-171J.4110.

o.............
11,1W·Ipo.--·•:lll.
•..!11- ......1........

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

Hanll Wllftalma Jr. 11to1y (NRI
(2:00) '
8:310 e ()) 01 Day bf D1y
Members of Brady Bunch
guas1·11ar as Floss dreams
of Ideal family. (R) 1;1
1:00
01
Cliff's
affair with his poalsllralnee
could coa1 him his lOb. (Fill;!
(lJ (f) ..,.. yl When ..
up, Bral ftooa England and
IUms to Simeon lor htlp. l;l

FROM THAI It
YO'RE FIXIN' TO
IRIAK YOII!
NI!CKll

It Heating

Tuno .._ on ATY'o Md • • •

200 IX.1117.
,.,.. - · ·
..............

aNalll'lth-

.:015 ()) MOVIE: Living Proof: 1be

•liT DOWN

Plumbing

11e2 Y""'oh&amp; 1100 MAlUM.

1171 H.D. lpolt-. Fot lob
Tonlco. low...._ ... ............. over 41100. In
. . . _ ......... _.21H.
COl 11 .... 2-~11.

rr

-

!_.-Aioa.bw...,-1-·
.......... _ . _ ...... Mty

AUCfiON •

Aea..rr

'llod••:.t.:

.._.

IWAIN

TAlt::IIJG lO A LAI.UY£R

Wollpop•lng. piolntlng. llo•onolllo
""•·_._..
Quollty C•l
lor lroo
114-38•
8021 or 114-317·7111.

II~ :IICvoloU-. 7mloioouth

··---···

I'M · caJSIDt.RIU:.

c•pom•.

Coli 11 ..... 7401.

. _ _ Porina 2 ~m•o.
42000. Coli 1 ....... 3373.

Biography: 1be Royale
Come behind the gales of
Buckingham Palace lor an
lnteneely pareonaiiOok allhe
world'a moll publicized
lamlly. (2:00)
IIJ Prlm•Niws
IHI MOVIE: . _ Ubofly
(PO) (2:00)
llJ Munier, llloe Wn&gt;tw

Jlm' oOddJobo.lu-olclnl
P*'11ng. roallna
buRclngo. F.. oot-o. Cll
114-37.. 2411.

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

I'

•llll una..-zecr

137· 1121. ·

82

w..

bomb.

"l

Ron'xTV llorvloo
lonlholoo..,lolng~
brondoH_..., ... _
op-oo rapolro W.Vo 30 ..
li18-23980hlo 11 ...... 24,..

lmm_._.

e

Ill • Ill 41 Hoara 1;1

on·d ouppll&amp; Pldl

dlopoool. ...........

it.• IIIII

C!l Collage 8aeebaH

IWEI!PI!IIond -lngm ....lno

_

fill II

bargained for as a guest on

a TV show. (RJ C

IAII!III£NT
WATBIPIIDOFINCI
l.Oioo_lo. . llttlmo ., ....
'""· 1.oco1 r•on- vniohod.
Froo - - - dor
Col orooloel
nlgltt.
1·114-237·0411.
ft o a '• r I ' I ·• • ·• m • n· t
Wot•prooflna

117&amp; lhort FOf'd y.,, ora.twe~Mt rnM.. al. ~ motor
mount • fr ... out pkovo/ 1300.

1884 Y. . oho Vlrogo. ·700 c~
3100 mHa
oonclltlof\ 11800 0111 ,, .....
3481.

?

.K9

·· QJI062
.• A7 54 32
. • J5

When the declarer is confronted
with particularly nasty distributioo,
he may be forced to play in an unnatural manner. Had South caught a par·
llcularly bad dummy, he might have
had little play lor lour spades, but a
six-card ·major suit plus an A-K on the ·
side is enough to gamble the game. ·
And dummy was quite adequate.
Declarer took the ace of bearts and
immediately cashed the ace of spades.
Whl!ll West showed out, declarer bad
to hope for good fortune someplace
other than in trumps. So declarer
played a club hack to his king and led
the 10 of diamonds. West won the ace
continued with the jack of hearts
to dummy's king. The king of dla·tnonds allowed South to sbed his losing
heart, but he still had to lose two more
tricks and a club.
To make the contract, declarer
must come to his hand with the king of

w-

good

T•oT_ _ .._monto·2

Fum. ADL n•t ta Lltnrv
- · . A.C. llol. roq'od.
........ ""1 Col

L

...-J:ll&gt;'""~~ MACtf I NE

1-8·81

+9 86 43

WEST

Ill c ........
11J Night Court

Manhattan ProjeciiCIIntt1118
race 10 complete lhe atomic

Rot., or D8ble tool ...'""
Moot-0 oomplolodo-•dor·
Pump . . . •d ....... 30..
1811-3102

74 Motorcycles

NORTH

.AK6
.AKS

By James Jacoby

• Crool&lt; And ChaM
7:35(1) Andy Qrlfftlh
1:00 e ()) 01 Colby Sloow Clair
gels more 1han she

Home
lmprovementl

Put- Counly. 27 ocr&amp; brldl llr., 1 1/2 bolla CA., dloo
_., ho- :llx1310 horoo

P..,.. pool, lllorground.
- c..
IIILOOO
-~~~~~· Mo· - · · - · . t-lnclu....
,..,,,..,._.
.....
~- , . - · CoH
~.- ....- ......... lA 114-317·
7110.
71 . . . . 7.41 . . . . · · - · ·
.._odonRo'*CaotleRd.(Co
17 . . . . . . . . . · - · ·. .
• 1111. 310 • Alloudd,.. c -. .
,... ...... aM-171-3110
• • or Pr., 1:110 ,. 4:00.

~OWING

Tnu:kl for Sale

win--

BRIDGE

181Af..t.Jetle0op-•

a

r.tty Troo TrimminG r. ._ .. Col 30..17.1331.

Low mB-. oxoolont oond. Wind

. E. O. H.

VJO"'-P )'bU Pt..WE
S'IT IN T',.,i

documentary footage
heklhlana 1118 magical
reaDsm of Blllhop. (NR) Q
Cfl 11MI
At
Tlie

lloptlcTonkPumolnlt-.Ool·
llo Co. RON IVAN'S !NTEII·
I'II.EI. J-on. OH 1 · -

wet•.

Jr ,Ill:, [1111 l,d IIIII

"

(I) ABC 'llourodtly
Night Bill belt
&lt;Zl Yolcoe Y!Pint Exotic

1810 TO¥.,. Colle&amp; outo. olr,
tood oond. , .. I:IM-171J.I132.

for • • or t ...... 1'224 S.oond
Avo., -lpalo, oft• 4:30 p.m.

49

.

f(fAPY fD~ Youfl TEST,
CArTAIN ILIGtl • · .

around lhe globe are
featured. (NAJ
(I) Enbiitlllnment Tonight
. (0:30)
eCil USA TOday
tlwld'l 1;1

• -1

1he hostess, a guest IUrned to another and sighed "When
'
flatterers meet, the devil goes to ·DINNER."

JAMES
JACOBY

aa well aa racing news from

(i)

1711-3011 .

18M luzuld lmrudor. 7011-CC.
V · - ollolt ..,.. 4.000 mi.,
" ' * • --coll1 .. 24f.IOK
E
1182 Kow-1 ....r .. 710

,.._.,WI.

W~Ff , A&amp;.L

1971 louthwlnd 21 fl.. Motor
Homo lVII¥ l o - Coli 30417.21 n. to go, ..c..
oond.

4*028..

Buy or Soil Rlv_..t Antiquo&amp;
1 124 E. S.oot. Pomoror.
Haure: M,T ,W 10a.m. to 1p. m .•
Counlry Mobile Hom• .._,., lu"*v 1 ta lp.m. 11 .. 1t2Rout• 33. North of Pomwoy. 2121.
LA&gt;to. ront•. portL 111-. Col
, ... 11~7479.
Two tr.. • 111t1. ...,. •d - - - - " - - - - ' - - -furnllhad.
:IM-87a.1071.

/

up ond dolvory, Dm Y""um
1171 Tr•• Am, ac mnd. PI,
PB, AM-FM ._. . . . AC. Milo Cteaner. one half nclle
.....- . . good tir&amp; 30.. . Ooor110 Cnook Rd. CoN 11

1173 C.tlflne Po•lac. exc.

bv fd l~ng In the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

(J) llpMdwMk Hlghllghls of
the past week' a 1u1o races

18!111 ...,.ty EJoo, oond., 11 ft.
....... pooplo. 30 ..17. . . . .

1118 Han do CR -10 nono good.
.... , ..... 7401.

64 Mile. Marchandlee

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDO!T ,RICO AT JACK·
IDN EITATEI. 131 ........
Ptk• from 1112 a mo. w.. to
ond ........ ,, ....._

1871 M..,ong 11 / 0410. Coli
30 .. 171J.2141.

7401.

48 Sp- for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

eon

1812 eom • ., 310 v.s. .....
motlc./e2400, bol- 7 :304:00p.m.. 304-171J.1178.

1877 OMC.

o.. •.

AllaT,.Y•.,..,. AI hooll--..1.
CAll eft• 2p.m. 304-7731111. Maeon wv.

1173 11 ft.. . . . . 8ootty
....,._ Comp•- tQur,
.. · • . Nglot/11800. Col
114---

motor, • tr. .rrilllon. bent
A·tr. .e~ezoo. eon ., ......

· - ....... 30..

liMPing roorne wllh cool*lg.

2401.

w•

83

3132 olt• 1:00 p.m.

Iuper elnglewet•bed.l dr8ww
p•d•lll. 3 pedded relle.
1200.00. Phono 304-171·

11n blu• Z21 Cam•o. E~e•
lont oo-lo~ eon ,,.. 7422171.

FOR 8AI.E: 1971 Ch"'otto
4-IIICI.. AC 4800. COI304-171J.
1721.

66 Buldlng Supplies

llrL

1870 RolmCornp•22 fl. , with
undn •I• roof olr. f1100.
CoM 11 .. 311J.I711.

fiOO.

0

· Barrel - Wrung - Yodel - Triune - DINNER
AHer many lengthy and flattering loasts made in honor of

a Top Corel
7:05 (J) Andy Clrlfftlh
7:30 e &lt;2J Family Feud

1881-oMorCilrvCougtr .. .
L- ml-o loodod. f10,100.
CoR 11 .. 112-2712.

1178 Muoton..

is

IIJMo...,...

79 Motor. Honwe
8t Campert

1871 Dodao Dlplomot. 318
motar, bl.-. he • !Ill Narth
4tl\ Mldcloport

I I" I I I

"I'm afraid of asking a girl
out," sighed the teen. " she
may turn me down." His
grandpa replied, " The most
common human ailmant
having - - ."
.Com!ll~te rhe ,chuckle quoted

PRI NT NUMBERED

Ill • Ill 01 Wholl Of

1178 oh..,ylmp• 4 dr.. ~ .
Pl. P·F.AC. AT, V.O.ooncltlof\
~~ -mi.. .c•l 11 .. 44•

1184 F...-cl 17,000 rr'il•.
2.2 L onglna 1 opood. ......... 14100. Coli ., ..
1811-3373 or 11.. 1811-4111.

:·
··

SCIIAIM.ETS ANSWERS

lhc:Nell/ .........

IIJ Cholra
I[J Miami VIce

oodl•

:r•-

(lJ (f)

1871 Llnooln Contlnont• M•k
4*3817.
..

1187 Lo e.on Coupo Turbo.
oton•d oNit. loodod.
lh•p. .... 742-2021.

I. I. .I&amp; I.

I

New Country

"-"'C
.llll
WKIIP In Cincinnati

e-.

.

lETTER S IN SQUARES

...._

... 178-2220 "' .

30.. 17.1718. : .

', ....z.7831.

on...,.,

•

1171 AMC Har- 304 V-1:
-...-olnod. 1101'/' d a p lllor... ldonglno·--or.
·
- n-..·241J....._
011 114241-1121
or 11

ton-.

o-.

Coli

j

rlt;--;:--;;.:.,.:.....::;....::..,..-1
L0 TTUE I

e ())PM Maga11111
(J)IIporlaCenW (0:30)
w e(l) eu....... Altair

rv. Coii1 .. 4*4N8. orl1 ..

•It•

I plooo pi - P· E-'lom
...-len. 13100. Col 114-112·
139• oft• 1 :00 p.m.

-

3

s. 0 .U X E E

8:35 ()) Carolllumett .
7:011 ()) MOYIE: 1be Lall Ride Of
Tha Dillon 0Mg (NR) (3:00)

typoo ...... ,trono-no for

Rotory plow, 4ft, -lrlodo•
rototffler for walll· behlnd lbeaiNuo ... Plc:kyaur(IIWft. No
_ . . , -or. Col, ......2- - - . - ...........71
~ I mM• dow'n Rt. 7 from
y, prlco o•o • 1114.
GltlfpoUa Cel 114-21•10•.
loo•fl.ll olro 14t.Ill. au- 3wln- olr oondltlo.- 7000 I -;::~:..:...:...:.:...;:..:...:..=.:..:=:..
. ,•. King f88, l"'*loo139. 811
lrol&gt;v m - 421.81.
• BTU'o to 8700 BfU'o coli Pldl your own • - - 11 .. 112·1011.
Hu-ll'o ltrow= Flolcl
Mon.-Fri. lAM to
.
Compllle line of aile dnlng
bob¥
hllh
choir.
E.,...
W..odon
room furnituN" (prtat.ck o*
condition. 20. ·114-112-ch-. rol t'OP dook Curio lent
.
cablneu-curved gl•• front 7178.
I dill I SII[IIJIII'~
4278.
1171
Ford~
311
outG
.~ li VI! c. IIJI:h
Trod.. lnoTokon.
Pl. PB. do• not burn ol.
t~&amp; fBOO.
a..g~ •lleatlon al •PII1 pem. A - now
I• 1 Z. IDw .a/INIO. Mallohln 117t • opood F... X-18 ,. ..d
Furniture, At. 7North0olllpollo. top or oonv.t. good tlr-. - l i t 81 Farm Equipment
....... obout1.,.. ... ' " 0HI1 .. 44a-7..._
goo . . k ol-odl. f400. 1871
Pinto. opood. 4 orL. ......... 33 HP MF ~. f ~
PICKENII'URNITURE
good lrc!dr. 1300. 1141 Dodto
•• r ·-or. wllh I
N-/UHCI
4 dr. 3 0pooo1. tood boclr. NftO fl.. flnlohodOI-/44781. 174
Houoohold lo... hlnll 1/ 2 mi.
oxooH- - bo run. -__ , ~· .....
In!' I -.mplow.lfL
- • • with 3 -Jaorlcho 11c1. "' - . . . wv·
.
.1304-17.. 1410.
•
• ...,. . .lll'_crod.f8000 • lllc.ln1'1·r---·/17391..
1188 oodl 1tut tNCtor, NM f t . . - - •
'"
good.goodrublror, - t o - w llnonoo. CoR 11 ..
OE ..tomMie w.t. H•rvllt · onddloctNooprlna •~OliO . 21 • 1122.
gold/til; GE w••h•r
whlte/181; .M et•• 1871 lnt•notlo. . . . bulon- 3020 JD Troelor wtlh 7 fl. 107
WMMr/t171: Kwunorew.ehlr 381 outo.. vory tood onglno. JD pu .. typo ,_r/fBIIO:
mi-. OOod 2010 JD T. .or. now
• dryer
lko now/.:JOO: 11.000fOrorigin•
p- u or blaalr truck.
-..
Whirlpool - 0 - • dryor ...: engine
Aloalolr 11.1tlr-. flOO.DBO. Cnow ,...nt. With JD Clul'*'
Ilk• ,..../1300; KHmor• dryer 18
-/f8310.
Dw...
.
78 Plvmouth Arr-, Oood wll llnonco.
Coli 114-28
whlto/4H: 30" olootrlc noneo
bodr. ........... ollor. 112.2.
CD pp•rton•/111; II'.
- now 1• ,., .. 30 lnoh ::-:-"7"~:-:-·--­
r.,ge/,71; 30" •• r.np, A
ar NO. f140. CoH 11 .. 112- O..bo
vroon/181. Coli 11•·•4• 1 LP
1132..,tlmoupta1 1 :00p.m.
rn Ford 3 Pt. pldl-up
..a.. .......
fDr ratcdl.. Cal
7388. UP!* Rlv• Rd.
IOIIon Hot Tub for ..... 114-37.2411.
PICKENS I'URNITURE
12100. 114-112-7387.
1041nt'l-or wlh 2411nt'l
Now/UNCI
round btlw/fllllll NH Hoylp•clel : new 4 drewer
lllno/HIII: , _ 1c1oo pu .. typo
choot/f88. 2 pc. ..... nlle/1711: NH 1q_u•r•
•'*-11219. Dinnltt• c:h ...l.
bol•/ ...1&lt; .U lnt'l Dloool
clnnett• ..... ltarting . . . 31.
- o r with lnt'l hor _ ...
MMy more hema. 112 mile out
Uoner, lnt'144lqUire bll•wfth
Jorl.... Rd. Pt. P I - WV
pu .. ._roko/MIIO.Colllt..
coll30... ,... ~.
.
21.112.2.
Uood applon- Woohort. drv· Don't melle • move w•hout u&amp;' ::3;;;;.ol~l:.o::t:.ool_o_r_ch_bu_ll_dl_n_-.
...,lltll'lltort. mlcrow.ve DWM. Klin'e AppllenCI,
con U·Houl. 30•1711-7421.
eldol. 1&gt;18 - · vr•
217 E. 2nd lt., Pam•oy. f.or llle: Pick vaur own ltr......._
_qu_lolt dlltv~. 40.44
114· Sit2·1331 or 114-BIIJ. - 1
·~ ... 400. fiUIO: 40!&lt;12
3111.
f14.700. .. 1110:
Mon thru F~ . ..8.
10x1 1 2 f22. 700 • .....;
f14.8110. Col (11411. . 31001 .
'"'* w.-.r..a 23.11...,.

M-- •

a

IUDOET TRANIMIISION·
Uood • - l i t all typoo.
w..~~~~y-30 clovo. Prl- •11•
up. Uood • robull corwMtera. ~Wadlrtl dutch•

I

CYOED

L-::::1::=
1" :::1:::
· I~

7

(f) 3:2·1 Contact 1;1
111 ea Cll8 NeWt
ellll Love ear•. _
Ill 8how8lz Toclly
iiJ WKRP In Clnclnftltl

••- Acceeeorles

HITFLY

L.-I.._1.,,_1.,,_1.,,_1.,,....J.

&lt;Zl lloclr Electric

_.....,..... cvcJaiM..I

181. Col 11 .. 317·-

A horoO . -..... Col
114-44a-2788.
Solid a* gron-• llladoo
otartlngot f'fiii.Aioawolm-•olo'*"ond.,n-...
AI hond modo. Cill 11.. 74Z.
3111.

~ lporiiii.Golt (0:30)
e (I) ABC .._ 1;1

Auto Parte

71 Auto '1 FDr Sale

1
nltrumentl

1141/_,, Captolno bod t17._
AI bedroom
r-*aced.

Roo . . for - · - or month. ;;
,.3.--A..-"'I;----8urtlng ot • 120 o mo. Oollo 6
nt quH
Hotoi-114-. .11-HIO.

ec:r-.
,.,li04-I71J.II.O
•.,._ HDm••
A1*v.
or 304-112·

78

I
I

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

(i)

•

low to form four olmplo ""'"'•

.

l!xpre"

1:310e&lt;2J 01 NBC Nlgl11ly Newa

::;:::::::;:========!.1_;;;--..-=.....,-:---

t~0~1~1ft~by~N;EA.~I~"~·
&amp;7
Mlllicll

lnternetloMI l.wn mowera.

8WIMMINOP00 . . . 11ee
lootthoh. . wlthohuto1h31
FlnMdng w.IM!Ie.
pool Huge deak. fwla~. tltw, •
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-oorn

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

Television
•
Viewing

Boata Md
l't'lotort for Sale

ol'*•-

LAYNE'S I'UIINITUM

31

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KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriabt

uood appl•- MdT.V. N1o. Wll. .
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lot. ,, ....... , . . .. 127 llrd. ""'"'" ........ 1100-....
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Thu,.day, June 8. 1989

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men! Is ••cepllonally keen and It's no1

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look exlremaly la-.blo lor you 10ilay
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f11811d umuch llmeu poulbtewlth 1he'
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.

Page-16-The Daily ~inel

Pomeroy-Midtlaport. Ohio

Thul'ldlly. June 8. 1989

-

.---Local news briefs... - - . Ohio Senate...
Continued from page 1
fee's arid courts cost.
•
The !lrst witness called to testify for Plummer was a former
Ga111polis resident, Mary Lou King. whose testimony ended
Tuesday alter a day and a half on the witness stand .
Former Gallla County commission Paul D. Niday and former
mental health board member John Rice. have also testlfled.
Plummer was employed as executive of the G-J-M mental
health board in August of 1971 and removed from of(ice Sep\. 16,
1983 alter a three day hearing by a review group appointed by
the state mental health director. ·
The tria l is expected to last 10 days.

Pair transported to prison
Meigs County Sheri!! James M. Soulsby and special deputy
Pat Souls by, on Wednesday , transported James M: Brown, 35,
Middleport, and William "Zeke" Collins, Racine, to the Orient
Co rrectional Facility Reception Center to begin serving their
sentences Imposed recently by the Meigs Court of Common
Pleas.
In another matter. Joe W. Nuzum, 24, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
was arrested on Tuesday on an indictment charging forger y.
Nuzum will be appearing In common pleas court.

EMS has seven Thursday calls .
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered seven calls on Wednesday.
At 1:53 a.m., Middleport went to Oliver St. for Julia Boyles
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 2:20 a.m. was called to Meigs Mine No. 1 for
Merrill George, also' taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 6:25
p.m .. Rutland went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Darrell Owsley to
Holzer Mecllcal Cente.r.
•
Pomeroy at 8:58p.m. went to Wes t Main St . for Jim Michael
. who was transported to Veterans Memorial .Hospltal
Middleport was called at 9:07 . p.m. to .the Rlverslcle
Apartments for Barbara Boling who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 9: 27 p.m . went to the Maples Apartments for
VIrginia Phalln to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Mldclleport went at 10: 20 p.m. to Lincoln St. for Robbie Clonch
who was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
·

said. "The bllll sponsored in 1981
still hasn't been put into ef!eet
yet."
,Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
chalnnan oltheSenateJudlclary
Committee, said he oppossed the
bill because the fear of lethal
injection was not a deterrent to
crime.
"The presence of the chali Is
more of a deterrent than the
lethal injection," said Pfeifer.
2:'ho had opposed the bill in

committee.
Sen. Robert W. Ney, RBarnesville, said he feared that
clianglng the method of execution would open the doors for an
attorney to find another way to
appeal a~d prevent executions.
Senators also defeated a bill
that would remove res trlctions
place on the use of natural gas or
synthetic natural gas for outdoor
lighting. The restrictions were
put Into effect during the energy
crisis In the mid 1970s.

CLEVELAND tUPI)- There
was one jackpot-winning ticket
sold for Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednedsay night, makIng the holder eligible to claim
the $3 million prize.
The name of the winner will be
announced · after the winning :

• .
tlcl!et is redeemed, a lottery
commission spokesman said
Thursday. The winning numbers
were 8, 9, 26, 28, 30 and 41.
Tbe prize will be. paid In 20 _
annual Installments of $120,000
after mandatory federal taxes.

Weather

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmHb
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ........... 27~
AT&amp;T ............................... 36'&gt;(.
Ashland 011 ........................ 42
Bob Evans .......................... 15
Charming Shoppes ............ 16¥,
City Holding Co ... , ........ .... 16~
Feqeral Mogul... ........ :.:.... 56¥,
Goodyear T&amp;R : ............ ;..... 56
Heck's ................................ %
Key Centurion .. .. ............ .. 13'4
Lands' Encl ...... .. ............... 28'4
Limited Inc ......... ........ ..... 32lt
Multimedia Inc ................. 100¥,
Rax Restaurants .. .. .. ....... .... 23A
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... ...... 18'4
Shoney's Inc ............. , ....... lllt
Wendy's Intl. :...................... 6
Worthington Ind ............... 22'4
(Charming Shoppes regular
quarterly $.03 dividend payable
July 17; shareholders of record
oo·June 19)

Ohio I..nttery
Pick 3

108-105

226

Pick 4
4052

Page 4

In addition to· the jackpot
winner, 77 players picked five of
the ,numbers to win $1,000 each,
and' 4,464 players chose four of
tbe numbers to -w ln-$75 apiece.
Ticket sales tota)(d $3,283,360
and the total prize· PaYOUt was

By UnHecl Press International
Soutb Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms ~ Lows wlll be between 60 $3,411,800.
and 65. Light and variable winds.
In the accompanying Kicker
"I'he supply of natural gas Is Chance of rain 50 percent.
game,
there also was one winner
plentiful and the restrictions
Friday: Showers likely, with a of the $100,000 grand prize. The
should be limited," said Sen. Ben chance of thunderstorms. Highs
wln~r Kicker combination was
Gaeth, R-Deflance.
will be near 85. Chance or rain 70 794688.
But Branstool said lifting the percent.
,
In addition to the one ticket
restrictions would be a waste of a
· Ohio's Exlended Forecast
that
had the six Kicker numbers
natural resource and that "we'd ·
Salurday tbrourb Monday
In
order,
four players had thebe doing future generations an
Fair Saturday and Sunday, first live, which pays ~.QOO; 48
injustice."
with a chance or showers and
Senators votecl 17-14 against thunde~storms Mooday . Highs had the first four, which !IBYS
lifting the restrictions, but at the will be between 75 and 85. Ear Jy $1,000; 498 had the first three, .
end of the session, Gaeth movecl morning lows will be between 55 which pays $100; and 5,065 had
the first tWo, which pays $10.
for a reconsideration of the bill and 65.
and left it pending on the
calenclar.
continued from page 1

Stocks

Pistons win
Game Two,

One person ha~ winning lotto ticket

Continued from page 1

•

•

•

Vol.40. No.25

June

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesclay admlssslons
Rose Bowen, Coolville; VIrginia
Phalln, Pomeroy; Barbara BolIng, Middleport. ·
Wednesday discharges - Audrey McQuaid, Stephanie Nuzum,
Bette Morrissey.

tee

Biggs, president of the
Monroe CoiUity' Commission;
lyle McClure, Charles McCorvey,
Silas Tucker, and Alex Roberts,
Monroe CoWity Commissionen;
Also, Charles Dett, Monroe
County rax collector; Fonda ~elton, tax assessor; Shall Dunmng,
chairman .o f the Monroeville Industrial Development Board: Melin FoWcel president of Monrot!
v
•

car-

Colwell; ancl· In another case,
$1,213.96 from Samuel A. Gibbs.
FIJially, a case lnvolv1ng the
Household Finance Corporation
versusGeneandSharonWisehas
been cllsmlssed.
Flies !Or dissolution
Sharon F . Drasko and Joseph
E . Drasko Jr., both of Racine,
have filed for a dissolution of
their marriage In the .Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.

--Area deaths--Isabel Wilson
Former Racine resident ,
Isabel Bentz Wilson, of Columbus. died Wednesday. She was a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bentz:
Surviving are two sons and
daughters-in-law, Jerry and VIrginia Wilson and Paul and
· Tamara Wilson, of Columbus;
three granddaughters, one
grandson and three great grandchildren. Local relatives are
nephews. Paul and Brooks
Sayre, both of Syracuse.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, two brothers and
seven sisters.
Graveside services will be
Friday, 11 a .m., at the Plants
Cemetery, Letart Fails, with
Rev. Roger Grace officiating.

Donald Simon
'

Donaicl A. Simon, 56, of Columbus, died Tuesday at Riverside
Hospital.
Mr. Simon was a son of the late
George M. Sr. ancl Madallne

Farhat Simon. He was a veteran
of the Korean War.
Survivors include his wife,
Yvonne Simon; two daughters
and sons-In-law, Cheryl and
Douglas Goclard and Debbie ancl
John Sheppard; a son, Donald S.
Simon; four brothers and s.! stersin-law. Joseph and Mary Simon,
Charles and Marion Simon, Fred
and Peggy Simon, and of Pomeroy, Paul and Allie Simon;
another brother, Thomas J .
Simon; a sister-in-law and
brother-in-law, Theresa and
George Fares; and numerous
nieces ancl nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In . death by a
brother, George M. Simon Jr.
Funeral Mass will be 10 a .m .
Friday at St . Timothy's Catholic
Church, 1088 Thomas Roacl,
Columbus. Burial will be in
Resurrection Cemetery. Friends
may call at the John Quint and
Sons Funeral Home, 1177 W.
Fifth Ave .. Columbus, on Thurs·
day from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Prayer service will be at 8: 30
p.m. Thursday.

2 Sections, 14 Pages
25 Cents
A Muttimedia Inc. N&amp;WIP&amp;Par

1989 .

'Odor' missing at wood

CoWity Chamber of Commerce;
Tom Tippy, vice presidenl-miU
manager, Alabama River Pulp;
Robert Frese. executive vice president, Alabama River Woodlands;
and Brian Rundle, vice president,
·P&amp;W Alabama River Newsprint.
C
. ,..._
'
onsltllclion '-;"· '
?Jte dele$Bnon ~as expected 10 .
amv~ back an Huntington Tlnarsday
evenmg.

pulp plant in Alabma
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStalf
MONROEVILLE, Ala. - You
couldn't smeU that "horrendous
odor'' that everybody says you do
when you enter a wood pulp plant.
You had 10 practically walk right up
to the machinety on site before
your nose detected anything that
stank.

Meigs Court news
In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, the Motorists
Mutual Insurance Company, In
care of Kriner and Peters Co..
L.P.A., Columbus, Is seeking
$4,594.14 from Leonard G. Paden,
Memphis. Tenn.
·
Sherman White has · been
awarded $2,300 from Kathy L.
Pierce In a default judgment.
The Farmers Bank and Savlngs Company has been awarded
$1.671.24 from Dean. and Alina

•

Mason group finds

Mason ...

Otha

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
upper 50s. Salurday,
sunny. Higbs In mid 70s.

Analysis

1989 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE CLASSIC
BROUGHAM

CAPRICE STA. WGN.
.
List
Discount -1,250.
Rebate -750

"LOADED"

#1199
3 IN STOCK

9 PASSENGER
Lilt 517,918
Discount -1 ,200

$)7

NOW

Cauette. Defogger

ust •13,273

Discount -600
Rlbtite -1,000

$9 973

NOW

Three injured in two Meigs mishaps

1989 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

Ust $11,173
Discount -600
Rebate -600

Auto .• Air. PS. PB.

VIEW PAPER CU1TING· MACHmES - A machine In Claiborne, Ala., wood pulp plant
porUon of the Mason County area cielagalion Is · Thursday afternoon.
show~ above viewing a huge paper culling

718

1989 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER
#1091

...... ..,

#1261

NOW

#1133
Auto, Air, Oefoaaer.
Cauette, V-8 • "More

1989
S-10 TAHOE

S-10

Lilt $10,431

List 58,329
Rebate -500
Discount -500

NOW

•

#1248

'" $7 329

$9 1 1

1989 CHEVROLET FULL SIZE
CONVERSION VAN
3ft. :roN
360 V-8 ENGINE

STARTING AT

61N

$17 900

STOCK

$11,118
Discount -600
Rebate -1 .000
List

NOW - $)

~
6 IN STOCK

18

List 116,898
Discount -1,000 '

Rebate -1,500

Slater was listecl In poor
condition this •morning, a hospital spokesperson said, •while
Beaver was listed in satisfactory
condition. Cleland, driver of th'e
stationwagon. was not lnjurecl.
The accident is still under
investigation. the patrol saicl.
According to the patrol, neither
Slater nor Beaver was wearing a
helmet .
The other motorcycle-car accident occurred at 12:15 p.m.

Thursday in Letart Township on
TR. 96, 0.9 of a mile north of TR.
96.
Troopers said a 1986 Honda-250
riclden by Chad A. Wolfe, 18,
Racine, ·went left and collldecl
h~ad-on with a car driven by
John D. Roush, 28, R11clne.
Damage was moderate to the car
and minor to the motorcycle.
Wolfe was airlifted by a LifeFlight helicopter to Grant Hospl·
tal's Trauma Center at Columbus. His condition was reported
as satisfactory this morning, a
hospital spokesperson said.
The acciclent ts still under
investigation.

1989 OLDSMOBIE
CUTLASS CIERA

198C) CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
$26,440

.-3,000

$23,440

.. _.
_,

List 514,736
Discount -1,000
Rebate -1,000

NOW - S12

...

Another letter protesting the
noise from the Philip Sporn Plant
floating across the river to the
villagE&gt; of Racine will be sent to
the plant management, It was
decided at a meeting of Racine
VIllage Council Monday night.
It was reported that there is a
new manager at the plant and the
clerk was authorized to direct a
letter to him as a reminder of an
earlier complaint lodged with the
company .
Maypr Frank Cleland reported
that he has received an answer
from the Bureau of Workers
Compensation as how to calculate the rate charges, noting that

.

~----=--'

~

·~--

•

#1137

736
DELTA 81
List

#1216

Reba tit
Discount

NOW

117,256
-1,000
-1.500

. $14,756

1989 CADILLAC
BROUGHAM
List S29,601
Discount -3,000

S26,601

a

WOOD PULP PLANT FLUME- This flume conveys water for
transporting logo from nearby river In Claiborne, Ala., for the
wood pulp plant In thai area. AMason Countydelegalion loured the
facility Thursday afternoon. (Charles Mason photos)

Council pro-tests plant noise again

S16,700

S1 398

List
Discount

was also injured. Slater and
Hudson; were flown by LifeFlight helicopter to Grant Hospital Trauma Center at Columbus.

AS LOW AS

1989 OLDSMOBILE .
CUTLA.SS SUPREME

NOW

Three men were Injured Thursday in two separate motorcycle
accidents In Meigs County according to the Gailla-Meigs Post.
State Highway Patrol.
Robin Slater, 27. Dexter. was
. "· in]ufed when his 1973 Kawasaki 900 went left of center and
collided head-on with a 1977
Dodge statlonwagon driven by
Jack D. Cleland, 42. Micldleport.
The accident occurred at 3:12
p.m. Thursday on CR. 4, 0.7 of a
mile west of CR. 10. In Salem
Township. There was heavy
· damage to both vehicles.
A passenger on the motorcy cle. Mike A. Hudson. 16. Dexter ,

_1989 CHEVROLET
ASTRO VANS

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CALAIS

#1161

Rebate -760
Discount· -660

#1347

The workers make on an average
of $10 bucks an hour and the
county tax base has just about
, tripled since Parsons &amp; Whittemore
of London came to town here about
17 years ago. They buy the wood
locally, so the plant here has given
the Monroe County economy a
double boost in purse strings .
The natives like the company,
what it stancls for and what it can
do for them in the future, especially
when a $400 · million newsprint
plant SlartS up a year from now and
the company finishes building a
second wood pulp plant right next
to the first Ill cost of $700 million.
Monroe County, Alabama, is
· only sli!lht!Y smaller than Mason
County m population, although it's
Alabama's eighth-largest county
with more than 900 square miles,
and MonroeviUe, the county seat, is
only slightly larger than Point
Pleasant. The dozen Mason
Countians who lrllveled to MonroeviUe Thursday could have been
loolcing in. a mirror as similarity afContlnued on page 10

APPEARANCE IMPROVED - Through the
·combined efforiB of members of lbe Community
Builders Club of lbe Reedsville-Long Bottom
area, the Olive Township Trustees and donations

from private Individuals, a new alp baa been
lutalled and new low-lying shrubs have been
planted at the Reedsville Cemetery.

'

#1203

Cemetery's appearance . improved
by community builders organization
By NANCY VOACHAM
SenUnel New• Staff
As In other of Meigs County's
small communities. when civicminded residents In the
Reedsville-Long Bottom area see
a need, they set out to meet that
need.
Members of the Community
Builders Club of the ReedsvilleLong Bottom are~ became con. cerned when overgrown evergreens at • the Reedsville
Cemetery became a traffic hazard. Motorists had to nose their
vehicles out onto the highway
from the cemetery, explains a
CBC member, because they
couldn't see around the
evergreens.
So the CBC decided to sponsor
a project to remove the old
evergreens and replace ....rith

new. Form letters were mailed
out to families, both In the local
area and outside the local area,
with burial plots at the cemetery.
Approximately 75 people responded with private donations
that amounted to a total of $2,000
for cemetery Improvements.
Through the cooperation of the
Ollve Township Tru1~. the
$2,000 was stretched to do the
most aoqd It could. The trustees
removed the old, overgrown
plantlnp, and prepafed the
ground for the planune of the new
ev~rgreeps. Tbe trustees also
removed a11 aelng storaee buildIng, plan~ new grass on the
site. and Improved tbe driveway
of the cemetery. with limestone.
·A new stone-based redwood
marker was alao made (l!lllalble

with proceeds from the donations. It was Installed among the
65 new plantings which Included
miniature barberry, euonymus
and other low-lying shrubs.
The project apparently · just
grew and grew. And the difference In appearance at the cemetery Is quite noUclble to those
wbo live In the area and see the
cemetery most often.
With a little money that's left
over frcm the f1111d drive, the
CBC Is al10 havtne the flaepole at
the cemetery painted, and a new
flag wlll be obtained and floWn on
special occaalona. .
But the cemetery Ia not the only
project that CBC baa unclertaken
reeently. Tbe Installation of a
second m81\lrer (to replace one
'
·Centlnued on pqe 10

Woomer to
die in chair
next week
A former resident of Point
Pleasant and Huntington. W.Va
Is scheduled to die next week In
the electric chair at Columbia.
S.C .. after the South Carolina
State Supreme Court denied an
appeal Thursday .
Ronald Raymond " Rusty"
Woomer, 34, wlli be executed for
the February 1979 shotgun killing
of Delia Louise Sellers of Georgetown, S.C.
The execution has been set for 1
a.m. Friday. June 16.
Woomer has been on trial
several times In the past decade
and a J&gt;revlous death sentence
against him was reversed.
The last person to be executed
In South Carolina was James T.
Roach, on Jan. 10, 1970.
U Woomer is executed, he
would be the third person In
South Carolina to be put to death
since the U. S. Supreme Court
reinstated the death penalty In
1976.
Now the court hu been, petitioned to change Woomer's death
sentence to life In prison, order a
new sen tenctng trial.or wapone
the execution until the ·outcome
· of other pending cases against
WQO!Iler.

the village is on a "shared
liability' ' with all villages of
similar size In the state.
It was also noted that the tax
commissioner has Issued the tax
exemption certificate for the
Nease property which was recently acquired by the village. A
tax exemption application from
the five acres purchased- from
Junior Salser will have to be filed
by Oct. 1, Clerk Jane Beegle
reported.
Council rejected the proposal
from Dr. Harold Brown regarding acceptance of a water line
and hydrant to Elwood Terrace
Apartments. Accorolng to the

~Jerk. the Council decided "It
would not be In the best public
Interest to accept the easement. " •
However, Mayor Cleland will
meet with the Board of Public ·
Affairs to secure their opinion on :
the proposal.
Several items needed by the ,
s treet department were approved for purchase. It was noted
that a number of reslclents are
putting limbs and grass clippings
In the ditches ancl Council
warneq that there Is an ordinance prohibiting this.
Councilman Henry Bentz was
authorized to get an estimate for
(Continued on page lO)

Local news briefs
Marijuana confiscated by sheriff
Charges of growing marijuana are pending against Chris
Capehart, 26, of Mldclleport. Meigs Counly Deputy Sheriff
Jlmmer Soulsby reports.
Deputy Soulsby reported that about 9 a.m. Friday he was
joined by Deputies Dqn Snider and Mark Boyd. a nd Middleporl
Chief of Police Sid Little for a search of the second floor
apartment of Capehart on Laurel St. where several mar ijuana
plants were found.
Capehart gave consent to 1he officials for the search. Deputy
Soulsby said .
The plants were reportedly in the windows of the aparlment
and visible from the street although an attempt was made to
remove them and conceal the plants. the deputy reported.

Flag reported stolen
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that his
department has been notified that an American flag has been
stolen from the Temple ~ernetery In Columbia Township.
Anyone with lnforma~lon regarding this theft Is asked to.
contact the sheriffs office. Information will be kept
confidentiaL

Pinewood Derby set Saturday
There's the Kentucky Derby, the Brown Derby. the Soapbox
Derby, and then there's the Pinewood Derby. which Is wbat's
happening this Saturday In Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Scout Troop 249 will hold a Pinewood DerbY. on
Saturday at the Court Street mini-park. and anyone who would
like to give Pinewood Derby a try, may do so for a quarwr. A
track wlll be set up on which wooden cars, mad£' by the scouts.
will run. The cars are moved only by gravity and a whole lot of
~ heerlng from the respective car builders. Allin all. it makes for
Continued on paee 10

-

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