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                  <text>Page-0-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

School administrators attend
stress management seminar
RIO GRANDE - School administrators from th e Gallipolis
City. Jackson City, VInton
County and Cailia -Ja cksonVinton Joint Vocational School
Districts attended a s tress management seminar he ld Monday
at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The seminar, pre sen ted by
Linda Bird of the JVSD's Adult
Services Department. covered
stress awareness. s tress assess·
men! and stress man agement.
The seminar was co ndu cted
using a variety of teac hing
techniques. including lect ure.
discussion and videotapes. Active participation by the atten-

'

By Constance Whlie
GalllaSWCD

·

GALLIPOLIS - This is a
reminder for those enrolled in the
MFR Control program for
1986/87. This is your second year
to do maintenance on the area
that was Initially treated in the
fall of 1986 or the spring of 1987 _
Also, if your were approved for
this year you need to complete
your Initial treatment.
You need to complete this
treatment by June 15. When this
Is completed, pleas., notlly the
District office stall. Field visits
wUI ,be made by Bill Wilson,
District Technician. Following
that, the final 25% of the cost-

share amount will be paid.
Hopefully, you can see SQme
major progress for your efforts
so far. This is an aspect of your
farm management that needs
attention every year. It Is easier
to treat these plants either with
your mower, front-end loader, or
chemicals when they are small.
When we let things go too long
It becomes a major Job rather
that a small maintenance chore.
One o'! the major problems
with this plant Is the seeds can
remain dormant In the ground
for a number of years. So,
repeated treatment is needed. It
seems a never ending battle, but
II is a war that must be waged.

Grass suffering from cool, wet weather
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPli Kentucky bluegrass. perennial
rye grass and fine fescue all may
be affected by diseases that
thrive in the cool rains that have
plagued Ohio this spring, says a
plant . pathologjst at the Ohio
State University.
Some homeowners may find
spots that need reseeding this
fall. s~ys William Shane.
·
Leaf spot a·nd striped smut
may attack some varieties of
Kentucky bluegrass. Shane says.
Red thread may arrack nearly all
varieties of perennial rye grass
and fine fescue. he adds.
"Loss from leaf spot .and
striped smut can tie appreciable
- 10 tiercent or more. " Shane
says. "Red thread ma y weaken
that much turf. too. Affected
lawns can look bad for months.
Owners may have to reseed in the
fall if the plants don ' t s urvive,
but that depend s on the
weather."
The best weather to hope fo r is
warm. but not too warm. with
thorough but infrequent rainfall.
Shane says. If the weather
becomes too hot and dry , the
effects of the diseases will show

up !Y!Ore, he says.
"Some turf still has a poor root
sys tem from last year's
drought." Shane says. "Coupled
with an·excess of fungal colonization from the recent cool. wet
w·e ather, some plants won't
survive."
Homeowners can look for signs
of the disease and, if needed.
apply the appropriate fungicide,
Shane says. The Ohio State Plant
and Pest Diagnostic Clinic and
county agents with the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service
can help with the diagnosis. But
homeowners should refrain from
applying excess fertilizer at this
point.
"Loading on !he nitrogen
would just aggravagte prob·
I ems," Shane says.

By Wendell Tope
SCS Earth Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - The Rufoussided Towhee Is found. mostly in
brushy hillsides, heavy undergrowth, wood margins and hedge
rows.
The difference In coloration In
mates Is enough to confuse even
the most experienced bird
watchers tot there is an extreme
difference In the colors of the
male and female.
·
'l:he Towhee presents an example of Se)&lt;ual Dimorphism. MeanIng a difference In the feathered
coat of birds or hairy coat of
animals of the same species.
In this case the plwnage ts
totally different between the
male and female. The male has
very bright black colored head,
back and talL The mid-section Is
pale red wllh white breasts and
underneath of Its tall.
Frequently, the female To-

a

whee is totally dltterent from.the
male by having a rufous colora·
!ion, meaning even a mud color.
In the bird kingdom the male is
the most colorful, where as the
female lacks this distinction.
This specie of birds prefers
brushy grbwth for their habitat.
Their special nesting places are
In lower branches o~e
ground under bushes. The nest Is
made up of mostly broken plec~
of weed stern, dead grass and
· moss. They lay from three to five
eggs. The eggs are white or
sometimes pinkish white and
sometimes evenly dotted with
reddish brown spots.
The mother bird i$ a close
setter. If approached she will sit
tight untU your are within a step
or two.
Both parents Jeed and take
care of the young, usually the
young fledge before they are
fully grown and follow the parent

makes their appearance lri January or February, for this is thefr·
winter migration territory whilethey spend most of their time'
around the Great Lakes area anJI
Canada as far north as the
Hudson Bay.
The normal flight of this specie.
is short. The tall Is fanned to show:
the wide white corners and flapsup and down as If It were hln~d:
at tbebase. thusglvingtheblrda'
broken-back appe~rance.
Watch you . winter feederS:
closely for the strange bird yousee mlgbt be a Towhee. They ari
confused with Robins and Oriole(
but, If you see a red eyeball, Itsdefinitely a Rufous-sided:
Towhee.

to·new feeding grounds.
They get their name !rom the
resourding call they make. Tow·
Hee. a call that can be heard for
quite a distance. For the birder ·
who wants to get a picture. The
Identification marks are the Iris
of the adult Is blood red, the
rufous sides and white belly and a
long rounded tall with white
edges on both sides.
The TOwhee 1s most commonly
the farmer and gardeners best
friend because their choice food
is insects. especially the alfalfa
weevil .. They feed mostly at late
evenings, mbon Ut nights and
early inornlngs. Therefore, they
are seldom seen In day light
hours.
Thesl! species are common
throughout Ute entire U.S., however they are called by other
.n ames, the colorations are somewhat different and feeding and
living habits are different. The
species common to our area,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
earlier this spring may have to
Delayed planting may actually apply additional herbicides to get
help farmers with their weed the late-season weed control they .
control this year.
need, Loux says. A second
Mark Loux. weed specialist at application may do the trick, but
the Ohio State University. says be careful that your tota l chemithe firs !'flush of weed problems cal use doesn't add up to more
will be over by the time farmers
than is recommended In one
get· their corn and soybeans year. Some herbicides also have
planted. And the delay helps
reduce herbicide carryqver from
last year.
"Improved weed control is one ·
thing farmers do get from having
to plant late," Loux says. "We
How to
can take that. first wave of weeds
secure
out with a burndown herbicide or
with tillage before we plant. The
yourself and
crops' foliage forms a canopy
much faster on late planting, so
your craft.
that shades out some of our later
weed problems."

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1 Section, 10 Pagn

June 12, 1989

WEEKEND HIGHLIGHT - Myron Duffield
entertaining on his calliope was a highlight of the
Heritage Weekend activities. Duffield, who has

appeared here several time In past years as a part
of the museum festivities, entertained ·both
Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

A

26 Cents

Inc. Newspaper

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Everything from th e calliope
music which signaled the start of
Heritage Weekend at the Meigs
Museum on Saturday to the
country·costumed cloggers who
closed the Sunday entertainment
was thoroughly enjoyed by the
crowds which turned out for the
fesrtvltles.
···Margaret- Pa~ker, president-of,
the Meigs County 'Pioneer and
Historical . Society. ddscrlbed
Heritage Weekend as "very
successfu!. :•
.
She said that more than 300
registered at the museum on the
two days, and that about twice
that many who came for the
entertainment. car show, games
and refreshments, held across
the street dldn' t make It Into the
museum to register.
" History Along the River'· was
the theme of Heritage Weekend
activities headed by the Rev.
Wllllam Mlddleswarth . ·
Fishing as a part of that history
was an emphasis and there were
numerous displays and demonstrations during th e two days.
Among the demonstrators were
Vic Brown of Minersville who
reflected on his years as a youth
fishing along the banks of the
Ohio River and then demon·
strated how to make a net from
twine and how to handle a!ratline
and hooks. After that Keith
Woods demonstrated the right
way to filet a fish, using llve''lsh
which had 'been caught In the
Ohio and brought in especially
for the demonstration.
The AEP sternwheeler, JuanIta. was at the Pomeroy levee for
Informal tours. and in the theatre
at 't he museum. videos were
shown or Ohio fish and the early
steamboats on the Ohio River.
Fishing lures dating from the
l920's were exhibited by Russ
Moore. there were mounted ftsh
by Ron Hawkins. modern supplies .for fishing by Jeff's Carry
Out and Bait Shop, and a dlsplqy.
of trlbu tary fish by the Meigs
County Wildlife Division.
The afternoons were kept
llvely with Myron Duffield on the

f::~~~.;n~~~~ ~~~~~~:.: 0a~~

Denver Rice and Instruments.
along with the Shady River
Shu!flers who took to the street to
demonstrate clogging. ·
Attracting lots of attention on
Sunday afternoon was the old
time car show sponsored by the
Ole Car Club of Gallipolis. Youth
enjoyed a casting derby and
remote control car contests and
prizes wer~ awarded In num~r­
ous events.
And, of course, there was
plenty of good food.
Downtown 'under sponsorship
of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. Court Street was
blacked off for craftsmen to
diSplay their homemade articles.
Even Overbrook Center In
Middleport got In on the. activities Saturday with a atyleahowof
vintaae clothing •nd acla~slcc•r
display.

WASHINGTON - President
Bush proposed major changes in
federal clean-air laws Monday,
calling for a 50 percent reduction
in acid rain emissions and tighter
car exha~st restrictions and a
crash program to develop
"clean-fuel" vehicles to cut urban ozone smog.
Bush. fulfilling a muchpublicized campaign promise.
said his plan would address acid
rain by requiring coal-fired
power plants to cut sulfur dioxide

emissions by 10 milUon tons and
nitrogen oxide emissions by 2
million tons by the year 2000.
The acid rain plan is expected
to cost utilities an estimated $7 .3
billion. representing a poten!lal2 .
percent increase In the nation's
current $160 billion electricity
bilL
For urban ozone smog - the
nation's worst air poUutlon problem - the president proposed to
require au tomakers to reduce
car exhaust emissions by 40

percent and also recommended
an ambitious program to put 1
million cars on the road by 1997
that can utilize clean-burning
alternative fuels such as
methanol.
Under the president's plan. the
1 million alternative-fuel cars
would be required In the nine
most polluted urban areas- Los
Angeles, Houston, New York
City, Milwaukee. Baltimore. Philadelphia. greater Connecticut,
San Diego and Chicago.

Phil Dirt and Dozers to perfonn
in Pomeroy ~n Fourth of July

.Heritage
7
W eekend
successful

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
WITH APPROVED ClmiT
NO DOWN PAYMENT

I.Al\BERT INSUUNCE AGENCY

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Put a "Q'' rider tO the leiiM yOur G....ty

. 1:30 AM-•:30 PM

RT, OHIO

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Kicker 016279

Low In mid 60s tonight. Chance
of rain 60 percent. Tuesday,
Chance of rain 70 percent.

President
s or
50 percent reduction
in acid rain emissions:

• Uoo both honda lor- oporotlonl.

Monday thru Friday

out for some crops. And !herr''
not much farmers can do extt ·p!
to hope weather conditions
change.
"Many farmers feel they're
out of control," says Kathryn
Beckham. "They're worried
about finances. They're worried
about plan tin g.

Page 6

• AlauiNIPHd In any gMr.
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BUSINESS HOURS:

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011Yefy'a ''G" Set'i• ridetl g!Wyou the

J)I1CiiiOn of al111Uf- with 1110l1:·1110i&gt;of~ltlnlmllllon.

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Boat
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from
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Piek 3
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dates after which use will affect
next year's crop, he says.
Wet fields also make it harder
to Incorporate herbicides Into the
soli. Farmers who try may end
up with streaky weed control.
Loux recommends using •
surface-applied herbicides when
It's too wet to get unllorm
Incorporation.

,,L

Loux says qulcker-maturlt)g
crops may shade out weeds, but
they also mean farmers must
time late applications of postemergence her.blcldes. But apply
these chemicals before the crop's
canopy closes. he says.
The longer walt to plant also
means . fewer problems with
herbicide leftover from last
year's drought. Northwestern
Ohio may not have all of Its
carryover problems gone yet,.
Loux says, but · the concern
should be less.
Wet fields mean some problems for weed control. Farmers
who put on pre-plant herbicides

Ohio Lottery

Thi-*OfltAs
lhlveWitb
Hvdlostatlc

Wet weather could h~lp control ·weeds

Weather's different; stress is the ~me .
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPIJ Farmers may be experiencing
the same kind of stress they did
during the drought last year,
says a family llfe specialist at·
Ohio State University.
Heavy rainfall and wet fields
have prevented manycropsfrom
being planted and time Is running

Newsome
visit big
success

Rufous-sided T()whees found in various locations

dees was emphasized. and each
person developed an Individual
stress management plan at the
completion of the seminar .
The seminar is available to
area businesses as part •of the
Adult Services' Business and ·
Educational Partnership pro-.
gram . This program provides
training to area businesses in
"Stress Management,'' "'l'lme
Management," "Business Com·
munications" and "Computers."
Organizations interested In
co ntracting for seminars
through this program should
contact Adult Services at 2455336.

MFRC enrollees must
complete treatment June 15

June 11, 19e9:

By NANCY YOACHAM
. Sentinel News Staff
It's less ihan a month before
the big Fourth of July concert
being sponsored by the Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce and
featuring Phil Dirt &lt;jnd the
Dozers.
The concert Is scheduled for 9
p.m. on July 4 at the Meigs
Football Field in Pomeroy.
Tickets - $7 each - are on sale
now from members of the
chamber.
'
.: ,The ))Qzers, a Golumbus Qased
· oldies review, have achieved
great popularity throughOut the
Midwest.

·UNIQUE GUITAR- Using his "toilet seat" guitar, Denver Rice
presented a lively set of old favorites for those allendlng activities
of Heritage Weekend at Ute museum.
·

F eaturmg strong vocal harmonies. !he group transports ther
audiences back to the days of
saddle shoes. poodle skirts. pony
tails and rolled· UP tee shirt
s le'eves.
Their musical style appeals to
people of all ages as they present
the sounds of old favorites
Including the Platters. Dian.
Elvis. the Beach Boys. the Four
Seasons and many more.
The Dozers have performed at
over 200 shows this past year.
travellilg as far away as Arizona.
Colorado. Georgia. Florida and
New York for diverse groups
such as charitable organizations.
national conventions. fairs and

Four hurt in wreck
near Long Bottom
Four residents of the Pomeroy- ambulance to Veterans MemorMiddleport area were injured In ial HospitaL They received treat.a one-car accident Sunday at 3: 10 ment there before being tran.s·
p.m. In Olive Township on SR 248, !erred to Holzer Medical Center.
5.7 miles west of the junctlo'n of ' Ogdin was admitted for treatSR 124. near Long Bottom, ment of a concussion, bruises and
according to the Gallla-Meigs cuts. At last report he was listed
Post of the State Highway Patrol. in stable condition, as was Smith.
Two passengers. Darrell G. who was admitted for treatment
Michael. 17, of 707 Oliver St .. of multiple trauma .
Ogdln, driving a 1983 Dodge
Middleport. and James C. MICharger,
was traV(•IIng west
chael. 26, of 32880 Rose Hill Rd ..
car
went off ·the right
when
the
Pomeroy. were taken to Grant
side
of
the
road.
Ogdln got back
Hospital In Columbus by Lifeon
the
road,
but
later
went off the
Flight. At last report Darrell
left
side
of
the
road.
hitting a
Michael, who was placed In the
Intensive care unit. was listed In guardrail and a tree. The Impact
critical condition. James MI- threw Ogdln and Smith, who
chael, who was sent to the were not wearlilg seat belts. out
trauma unit. was listed in satis- of the car. However. the two
Michaels. who also were not
factory condition.
wearing seat belts. remained In
The driver. Scott A. Ogdln. 16, the car until rescued by
of 32832 Rose Hill Rd .. Pomeroy, paramedics.
Ogdln Was cited for !allure to
and another passenger, Charles
L. Smith, 16. of 32588 Rose Hill control and not wearing a seat
Rd., Pomeroy, were taken by belt.

CRAFTS GALORE- Whether you were looking for handcrafted
hasketo, decorated buckets. or just beautiful home decorations
and fumlshlngs, you could find II all in the Court Street :•malt" on
Heritage weeken~. There was a good tumout of crafts makers In
lown and business was brisk at times.

Conference committee
to start on budget
COLUMBUS - A joint SenateHousE:&gt; conference comm lttee
negotiating the terms of the $26.3
billion state budget for fiscal
1990-91 will meet for Ute first ttme
Tuesday, with visions of evf!n
more money to spend.
Legislative leaders and fiscal
experts will meet privately Mon· ·
day with Gov. Richard Celeste, ·
and are expected to learn the size
of Increased revenue estimates
for the next two years. Guesses
run from $200 mUllan to $400
mUllen.
Senate RepubliCan leaders
have said they want education to
get much of the windfall, with
some being reserved for the
"rainy day"' fund.
House Speaker Vernal RIHe
Jr., -D·Wheelersbtug. told reporters laot week he also thinks
some of the extra money should
be hel~ back as a hedge a~alnst .

hard economic times. Riffe said
the House Democrats want to
restore some cuts the Senate
made In human services and
eldercar~ programs.
The House reconvenes at 11
a.m. Tuesday and the Senate at
1:30 p.m.
Legislation extending the cer·
tlflcate of need program for
another two years will receive a
vote In the House Tuesday.
The CON program, which
expires June 30, Is a two-year
moratorium on the purchase by
hospitals and other health care
facilities of expensive and dupllca ttve equipment and pa !lent care
space without specific approval
of the Ohio Department of
Health.
The Celeste adminiStration has
lmpoeed the moratorium as a·
way of holding down health care
cost l~ases.
·'
· ·

PRR. DIRT AND THE DOU:RS

festivals . :some of the charitable
organizations for which the Dozers have performed include
United Way, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, Easter Seals
and the Children's Hospital
Organization.
The group has made frequent
appearances on telethons and
has participated in many celetJ.
rit y fund raising events. The
theme song for the Easter Seals
telethon was written and performed by the Dozers.
Their list of convention credits
continues to grow from the
Michigan and Ohio Association of
Realtors. GTE, Cosmopolitan
Magazine and the Georgia State
Department of Labor. For four
years. the Dozers have entertained at the New York City
Ballet Fund Raiser at Lincoln
Center. as well as at the Mackinaw Island Yacht Races and the
Columbus 500.
In addition. the Dozers have
openec;t for the Beach Boys at
Legend Valley near Buckeye
Lake, as well as written and
performed the "Happy Birthday
P . M. Magazine" jingle used
nationwide.
This past summer. the Dozers
entertained audiences at over 6-'i
stat&lt;' and county fairs and
fes rivals In a five -state area
Including the Ohio and West
Vlrglna State Fairs .
A chamber spokesman said,
"The enthusiasm of Phil Dirt and
the Dozers Is contagious. So If
your musical roots go back to the
late 50's and early 60's .. or if you
want to show the youth of Meigs
County and the rest of America
how to have a great time without
drugs and alcohol and earpiercing decibel levels. come to
their concert In Pomeroy on the
Fourth of July. You're sure to get·
your money's worth .

�June 12, 1

. .• .

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

~lb

ts:m~ "'-''--r•,..,...,=·~
qjv
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publl&amp;her/ CoutroUer
A MEMBER of ibe AIIOCiated Press, IDiaud Dally l'rells AIIIO"
da&amp;loo and the AmerlcaD Newspaper Publllbera AMoclatlou.
. LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. "nleyobouldbe leoolbaaiiO
words lonJ. AU letlen are oubject to edlllaJ aad mout be olped with
name, addreos and lelepllooe number. No unolped letlero wW be published. Letters obould be In JOOd lute, addresiiDcls•-· not perooiUIII·
ties.

Taft accelerates pace
in 1990 governor's race
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - It's still 11 months unt!l the 1990 gubernatorial
primary election. but Hamilton County Commissioner Robert Taft II
is out of the starting gate unusually quickly In pursuit of the
Republican nomination.
Taft, 47. whose political heritage In Ohio is legend. chose his
running mate last week - I he earliest any candidate has done that
since tandem governor-lieutenant governor elections bega[\ In Ohio In
.

J~&amp;

Tall's running mate is Franklin County Commissioner Dorothy
Teater. who is popular on the ballot In the capital city but little known
elsewhere.
Teater will not be the first woman to run for lieutenant governor.
Former House Speaker Charles Kurfess of Bowling Green chose
Lucille Ford of Ashland as his running mate In 1978. And Montgomery
County Recorder Vicki Pegg · ran with stale Sen. Paul Pfeifer.
R·Bucyrus. in 1986.
Teater Is not ev&lt;o'n the firs I member of her family IO run for high
state office. Her husband, former slale nalural resources director
Robert Teater , ran unsuccessfully for the Republican gubernalorial
nomination in 1982.
Most political observers b&lt;o'lieve Dorothy Teater will help Taft
considerably in Franklin County, which could deliver the pivotal
votes , particularly in the primary election.
Teater mosl" certainly will help Taft in securing a pre-primary
endorsement from the Franklin County Republican party. Listing on
the party's 'late cards virtually guarantees a win in the county.
But the most important factor in Taft's selection of a running mate
Is that he chose one early.
Party chieftains are trying to discourage a primary fight for
governor. They are attempting to slate good Republican candidates
for the undercard on the· sta lewide tickel.
Leaders have made overtures to Taft. trying to g€'1 him to run for
secretary of state or auditor or attorney general while Cleveland
Mayor George Voinovich heads th&lt;o' licket for governor.
That Taft · has a running mate shows he is committed to the
governor's race. Party leaders w!li have to turn their attention
elsewhere to fill th e slate.
More important . Taft can now convince Republican contributors he
is for real. and he must challenge Voinovich in attracllng donors if he
is to Compete in th&lt;o' governor's race.
Taft most likely will appeal to conservative Republicans. This
means Voinovich probably will lean toward a conservallve running
mate, possibly also a woman. from Franklin County or south toward
Clncinnali for grographical balance.
Taft , though regarded as sharp intellectually , is trying to escape his
re putation of a colorl&lt;o'ss·. boring campaigner. His choice of Teater
may help in this regard . Their campaign slogan is: "TNT- They're
Dynamite."

~gers

knock ·Reds from
firSt place with 3-1 triumph

Pigs 2-TM Dellt • • • •
Pomeloy-Mid:Rsport. Ohio
Monday, June 12, 1989

..........

Neighbors unite to battle drug .trade
WASHINGTON - Just 13
blocks from the Supreme Court,
almost In the shadow or · the
Capitol dome, ordinary people
are trying to put one of northeast
Washington's oldest drug
markets out of business.
It Is a qutetconOict, overlooked
by the networks and newspapers
that scurry from one bloody
skirmish to the next In the
nation's capital. But there Is one
thing that sets this battle apart
from the rest of the action at the
front - the good guys are
winning.
Last winter, the neighborhood
around Constitution Avenue and
Warren Street was labeled as one
of Washington's 91 open·alr drug
markets. The neighbors couldn't
just lock their doors and dismiss
wl!at was happening on the
streets. The local "dope boys,"
as the neighbors call them,
threatened residents who would
not buy drugs. One terrified
couple barely escaped the gun·
!Ire of a drug dealer who shot
ove,r1their heads at a target down
the street.
Black and white residents were
prisoners In their own homes
while their streets were patrolled
by arrogant thugs who cons!·
dered It their right to peddle
crack and PCP.
Butthlngs·have changed, and It
has nothing to do with promises
for more jall space, raids by

Drug Enforcement Agency or the
rhetoric of drug czar William
Bennett.
The drug trade has fallen off
because the neighbors made It
happen. Our associate Stewart
Harris lives In the area and has
seen-ilrst hand how It was done.
The hub or the market was a
crack house on Warren Street. A
falllng savings and loan In
Maryland abandoned the buildIng. The first buzzards to land on
any abandoned buU!IIng In Wa·
sblngton are crack dealers.
Clients with Ucense plates from
Washington, D.C., VIrginia and
Maryland made up a steady
stteam of business.
Pollee raided the crack house
several times, but It was reo-pened tor bu~lness after the
patrol cars pulled away. Far
from fearing authority, the hoods
seemed to revel In eluding
Washington's finest. Out on the
streets, these dealers refused 'to
disperse even when pollee told
them to move along.
Finally a neighbor, with the
help of some friends, bought the
bulldlng and boarded up the
windows and doors. The smalltime entrepreneurs spent weekends sweeping out the syringes
and other drug paraphernalia:
With a fresh coat of paint, the
house was sold at a profit, closing
·one center of operations for drug

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

!!lervlce.

-

·

Tbe neighbors, fed up with the
stench of crime, have dented the
once-prolific drug market on
their streets. In the meutlme,
they . have learned they cannot
rely on the city or the federal
government for much help. Sev·
eral residents are IIIII waiting for
Mayorl Marlon Barry to make
good _on his promise to meet with
them.
After two petitions to tbt~
mayor went unaiUiwered, several resiCieats controuted him at
'a citizens' meeting In another
part of to)Vn. Barry promised he
would call tbenextday. That was
In Februlry. Some 0! the neigh·
bors are making room !or the
possibility that Barry may not be
a maa or his word.
Meanwhile. drug trafficking Is
on the rise In an adjacent
neighborhood. There have been
two drug-related murders Ia as
many months. Pollee liken drug
traffic to a tube of toothpaste you squeeze It out of one place
and It oozes ,l!fto another.

I

I

I

Dear Editor:
Here Is an update on the lost
mare!
After hours on the phone to all
parties concerned, I finally got
exact time and dates:
April 18, Horse found four
mlles from our home on Titus Rd.
Sheriff's office called at 5:08p.m.
They In turn called Wayne
Roseberry, the Dog Warden.
April 19, horse taken io Wayne
Roseberry by Henry Eblin at
$2.50 per mile, total $25. ·
April 20, 1 p.m. Vet !rom
Albany checked horse. $35. 6 p.m.
A deputy on Briar Ridge Rd. was
Informed of lost hOrse.
Aprll21, 7:30a.m. My husband
reported the horse missing to
Sheriffs Dept.
· · April 24, A concerned citizen
called us in the evening. Took
until 11 p.m. to locate horse,
Humane Society had her.
Aprll 25, 9:30 a.m. We picked
liP the horse. Charged $35 Board
and $15 Brushes and Salt.
· As you can see the Sheriff's
Dept. knew of the horse on
Tuesday evening. On both occa·
slons when we talked to the
Sheriff's Dept .. they never once
told us they had taken a report!
: We have spoken face to face
with Sheriff Soulsby on the
matter. We submitted a letter In
detail of all the facts, dates and
times. He smiled and apologized
and told us about their policies.
We were glad to hear about the
Department policies, but we
could have saved $30 had we been
told over ihe phone when we
reported the horse missing; not
to mention that S10 of that bill
should have never been charged,
as Mr. Roleberry aaw the ad for
the Jolt bone Sunday, April 23,
and be did ·not call ua. Mrs.
Roleben'Y palld that 1111'11 on to
me wbelln picked up tile borse.
No oae blltvtn tried to txplaln
tile ~tor not calllq 111!

The bottom line was we felt
that $30 of the board bill and $15
on the brushes and salt was due
back to us by the Sheriffs Dept.
We asked them to Jet us know
something within 10 days.
After 13 days had passed we
called the Sheriffs Dept. and
asked Sheriff Soulsby what they
intended to do about the money.
He referred us to Steve Story,
Prosecuting Attorney. I tried for
4 days to get an answer to my
question, "Was the Sheriffs
Dept. going to refund any of my
money?" For 4 days they promIsed me he (Story) would call
back.
Finally the afternoon of the 4th
day the investigator agreed to
talk to me! I learned !rom him
that the Sheriff's Dept. was not
going to reimburse the $30 board
bill. During our conversation he
just happened to suggest that I
certainly wasn't scoring points
with the Sheriffs Dept.
In the meantime the Humane
Society saw fit to reimburse the
$15 on the brushes and salt. To
them I say "Thank You", It Is
appreciated.
So If you call the Sheriff's Dept.
to report anything lost or stolen,
you best Interrogate them on
their policies. That Is another
thing we were told by the
Investigator, we should have
asked the Sheriff's Dept. how
they were going to handle the
report. So, I would not assume
tbat the Sheriff's Department Is
going to help.
It might depend on the points
you've scored!
'I'be mare Is dolq tiDe, gaining
weight and produced a nne colt
on Memorial Day. All thll after
Mr. Roll! berry tried to convince
my bu1b1Dd that tile mare
probably wouldn't make It; that
It WOilld die. "nlla wu befoee we
picked up tile borae tram tbem.
Carol J. CI'OII

rfoday in history

•

Today Is Monday, June 12, the 163rd day of1989wlth 202 to follow.
The moan 11 nearly new.
•

..

natlpltcbersandputanendtothe come Is not trying to be too line.··
Leary surrendered a first f9ur-game winning streak.
Inning home run to Todd Benzin·
• An alert Dodger delense also
caught speedster Eric Davis In a ger for the Reds' only run. The
home run over the rlght -center
seventh Inning double play .
field
wall was the fourth of the
·~e had a great defense
year
for
Benzinger.
today," Leary said. " You don't
The
Dodgers
took the ' lead in
figure to double Davis up- that
the
thlrd
..
Gibson
drew a one-oul
wa$ a big play. I've been
walk
and
advanced
to third on a
frustrated lately, but today was
single
by
Randolph.
On the play.
very pleasing... .
to second on
Randolph
continued
All four Dodger hits came off
Scott Scudder, 0·1, who' was the throw to the Infield.
After Eddie Murray was
making only his second majorleague start. The righl·hander walked lnrentional!y to load the
allowed lhree runs on four hits bases. Davis blooped his two-run
while walking six in his four-plus single behind shortstop.
·Los Angeles made it 3-1 in the
Innings.
·
.
.
· "I didn't think I pitched that fourth inning. Alfredo Griffin led
badly," Scudder said. "I just off with a single and was
didn 't throw the pitches I wanted sacrificed to second by Leary.
to. l gave the hitters too much ·Griffin took third on Gibson's
credit. I wasn't nervous. One of · deep fly to center before scoring
the _barriers I'll have to over· on a single to left by Randolph .
R~'

Indians lose chance to gain
grou~d in . AL East title race
CLEVELAND cUP II - The
three of those guys have good objective Is to handle the pitchers
Cleveland Indians apparently
arms. I like Harris' and John· well and call a good game."
Although the Indians fell two
adhere to the old adage that
son's stuff and Holman knows
games
under .500, they continue
. how to pitch."
youth must be Served.
The . ln.dlansr•. veteran ,Jef.
Holman was clinging to a 2-1 to plod along In second place In
REACH FOR BALL - Detroit's lslah Thomas . Game at Inglewood, Calli. The Pistons held on to
thander Bud Black delivered a
lead In the sixth when Seattle the American League East with
win, 114-110, and take a 3-0 lead In the series.
pusses In between Los Angeles' James
(center)
belt-high fast ball to the Seattle
erupted for four runs. Jay the second-worst offensive team
(UP!)
Worthy
(left)
and
Tony
Campbell
in
third
quarter
Mariners! 25-year-old rookie
Buhner reached on an error and In the· league. The second and
play
of
Sunday's
NBA
Game
3
Championship
catcher Bill McGuire that had
with one out Omar Vlsquel third innings were typical for the
dinner written all o""r it.
singled to set the table for Indians.
.
In the third Joel Skinner was on
McGuire.
McGuire hit it over lhe center·
secor.d llase wjth one out when
.
field fence for a three-run homer
In the sixth lnnliJg •. Siin.day to ·,_, "I' wasn't swinging for the Odlbbe ' McDowell singled to
break open a&gt;tilth.., game and
fences," said McGuire. "It hap- center. Skinner was held up at
carry •' tffe .Mariners past the pened that he got a fast ball up third base and McDowell was
Indians I&gt;·~· ., '
, and I hit II with the good part of thrown out at second trying for a
It was McGu~·s llrst career
the bat. Wlththewlndblowlngln, double.
.
.
'
home ruil ,andi&gt;ame in his 26th I didn't know lfl gotenoughoflt: · As a result, O'Brien's home run
13 of his 17 points in the !ina I play. But Abdui-Jabbar hit two
major 'IE'ague at b~t. ·
'
"As I turned for first base it was a came as the leadoff hitter -in the
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPll quarter as the Pistons once again free throws and James Worthy.
The Marlliers._w!Jo h~ye eight big thrill for me seeing he ball fourth Inning. In the same inning Where Magic Johnson or Byron
employed a blistering backcourt who had 26 points. sank a long
Joe Carter singled and Mark Scott may have been, stood Los
rookies on titelr roster: I he mo$t· disappear. I'll never forget it."
attack to down lhe two-time jumper as the 24-second clock
in the ; majors, grew up' fast
· At the risk of implicating Salas doubled, but Carter was Angeles rookie David Rivers
expired lo bring Los Angeles
defending NBA champions.
durlngt,heweeken4.1iiGJiive!Nia. himself In a · messy gambling caught stealing on a pltchout. about to attempt a potential
Despite a gallant effort by within a point with o5 seconds
Rookie r.lgh\•han.der Brian Hoi· scandal, ,McGuire revealed that Carter stopped halfway to second game-tying 3-pointer wltll the
42-year-old Los Angeles captain .remaining.
man. 24 ..wenl"52·31nnlngs far his ·- lie .made a bel with designated and·was out trying to dive back to clock running down.
Kareem Abdul -Jabbar- who set
first 1A'r)\l!rfc'n t:eatue vl'ctory. ·hitter Jeff LeOnard during bat- first.
Joe Dumars was there. too.
a
season-high with 24 points and
the
play
was
a
After
scoring
21
of
his
31
points
in
McGuire
said
Hoimall': ~--1 for Seattle, had a 1·2 ling practice.
The Daily Sentinel
tied another with 13 rebounds record with ·-Montreal before ·
"He said that I had never hit a mistake- not on Carter's part, the third quarter. the Detroit
the
Pistons
moved
with!
a
.guard blocked Rivers' jumper
being tr'ad'~ ~l\'lay 25 -tn' lhe deal · home run in batdng practice. He but on the Mariners .
(USPS 1411-HO)
victory of their first NBA title.
''There was some·confuslon," from the corner with about seven
!or Mark L'lln~lo,n:: · ·, _1 · , . · bet me dJljner that I couldn't hit
A Dlvl&amp;loa of Mulllmedla. lac.
Gene Harn"s&gt;24o,, whoatsocame · one out," said McGuire. ·
said McGuire. "Holman doesn't seconds. left, sealing a 114-110
Johnson. who strained· his left
Published every arternoop , Monday
in thaf lrade'.'- went 3 1·3 Innings · 1t never was clarified If his know our signs yet. We guessed triumph Sunday that pushed the hamstring in Game 2. played
tllnugh Friday, Ul Court St., Po·
for his'flrst major league S&amp;ve.
decisive home run wins dinner. that Carter would be going on Pistons to within a victory of a only the opening five minutes.
meroy, Ohio, by t he Ohio Valley Pub1\s h.\ng Company/Multimedia, lnc..
Satul'l!,ay night Randy John· but II did win the game and the that pitch. It wasn't supposed to sweep or the Lakers in the NBA
And Scott, Los Angeles' other
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·21:;6. Se·
be a pltchout. He was supposed to Finals.
son . .tl)e tlilid rookie llitcher the ·series 2-1 for Seattle.
starting guard, missed his third
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
' "I didn' t think (Rivers) was. straight game with a similar
Marineh 38talned In .the 'sa-me
It also overshadowed a four· hit . hold the ball."
Ohio.
''That dldn' t cost us the their first option, " said Dumars. injury.
deal. b~\Oiij;~tO ril!ite lits· ' performallce by Indians' first
.
Member: United' Press International, ·
recoril ·t6-3:tl. ·
baseman Pete O'Brle~. who hit game," said Edwards. "As us- " l let him go but I knew I had
lnland Dally Press Association and the
Said Johnson : "l couldn't do
"They dlil one heck of a ·job of his ninth home run, a double and ual. we had our chances. We hit Umt to get to him. "
Ohio
Newspaper AssoclaUon. National
anything. That's what makes it
Advertising
Representative, Branham
the
ball
hard
but
right
at
Rivers.
who
scored
6
points
in
scoutln,tt. to ~orne
with those two singles.
so tough . You play the whole
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue,
people."
11
minutes
he
played
only
three RUthets. " ·
"As great as the home run
New York, New York 10017.
season to get to the championship
manager Doc
fell," said McGuire. ·:my main
seven in the previous three series and then you can' t play. My heart
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
- admitted being placed in that
hurts more than l'QY hamstring,"
to The Dally Sentinel, lll Court St ..
particular situation as a result of
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~.
The Pistons now are on the
Injuries to Johnson and Scott was
brink of completing the first
SUBSCDIPTION RATES
unusual.
By Carrier or Motor Route
sweep in the finals since 1983.
"It felt great, bu"t I haven't
One Week ........ .. ., .......................$1.40
when Philadelphia downed lhe
One Month ......... .... ...... .. .. .... .. .... $6.10 ,
been in very many of those this
Te,.,.olll Mil- llr'«". llllfl
Lakers. They can close out lhe
One Year ............. ....., .............. 172.80
Qrwlllll• .. , ..lc..........
year," he said. "But it didn't
o............ ,..n,..alp.
se ries and ave nge last year's
SINGLE COPY
bother me."
C•d *'nlll• 111 T,... , •IIIIi
PRICE
seven-game loss to the Lakers
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP[) •
Dally ................. .. ........ .. ....... 25 Cents
Islah Thomas contrlbu ted 26 Tuesday night in Game 4 at the
J ,;...•
NATIONAL
LEAGllE
Thomas Hearns spent the day
" ' I. 'Fti. Gl
Bu.lllmon•
3't 241 .5U Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
before the biggest fight of his life. · points and Vinnie Johnson added
Forum.
n,.,,,., ....
" ' L P\•1 . GB
:!1 :u ..&amp;113 ..
rler may remit in advance direct 10
:D n JIM O.lu.." We are goingtocome out for it
Sra· \ 'ark
a Monday night showdown
a :tl .t)q •
The Dally Sentlnel"on a3, 6 or 12 month
u
:!I
.li-IM
Ma•ft'lll
Mlbnaalrt•
u st .ns "' •
basts. t:;redlt wUI be gtvencarr!Er ea~h
as iflt wereGame7."saldVlnnle
against Ray Leonard. receiving Toledo race resuhs
Sl !Ill .:117 '!
$ . &amp;.~
'!711 •.&amp;M$
llo"ton
week.
:tl • .HI! :l• t
l'i•w \'ark
Johnson.. ·:The Lakers will no I
Tftrnlllo
• :u .ua 7
briefings
of
his
brother's
arrest
·u u .ali •
Ptl&amp;arwtt.
·u :st •.att 1
No subscriptions by mall permitted in
for murder back horne. ·
!I Jj .Ja II
TOLEDO. Ohio IUPil -Two die. They . haven' t won as many
Plllladl'l.... 11
w~t
areas where home carrier service is
" 'ft'l
Oakltnd
4R :!:1 .Ill world
championships
in
the
'80s
Hearns,
the
30-year-old
chalfans at the Toledo Raceway Park
:nu.mavailable.
('allhr"*
:11 ~~ .111 :t
H••
..
ss n ~ 1
lenger for Leonard's World Boxn.;llt.-tl
hit the twln-trifecta that had built by quit tlng."
Kan_..h,
•· • :u .lit 3' ·•
aN .1111 I
·Han F'raadM'O
Mall S..blcrtplioo&amp;
T1&gt;):.,. ·
IS :7 .lM 11 t
No team has ever rallied from
Ing Council super middleweight
to $200,500 Sunday night.
'II .11 .JIG 7
ln•lde Melp Coeaty
St · ~lk-, . ~
, .. , .SI , 13 .~':1 ,,
Lmo
All ..... "'
a
3·0
deficit
in
the
playoffs.
A
•
~
....
M
title, was told late Saturday night
·s.. PI.-.
The two unidentified bettors
Mlnftel.l
til II ..ftii 111"
13 Weeks ............... ....... ............. $19.24
,. :n .. lt•'t
Alilll!ta
( 'hlt•llio,l .
oh .,u M ..U5 ll'!
26 Weeks ........................... .. ..... $37.96
sweep
would
be
only
the
fifth
in
Hearns
was
taken
that
Henry
wlll
share
the
jackpol.
They
Slllwti•"•&amp;H•I•
SatunliO'jj ...... '
'
52 Weeks .... .. ............................ $74.36
ri!Min..,ll. ..... Allpii'IO I
Into custody after a woman was
~'I roll! II, Torlllllol&amp;
·
correctly picked the first three the 43-year history of the finals .
Outaide Melp County
Naill Frllllll"hhc... I, M•IMf'!'QI
Be11iot1 lkNI'W \'ork II
twice
Vinnie
Johnson
scored
shot dead in the boxer's home finishers in the sixth race and the
13 Weeks ... .. .................. .... .. .... . $20.11!
Kl. Lolli• .. fhka .. I
~· J.atJti.S. n"'•laad i
26 Weeks , .. ............ .. ........ ... ...... $40.30
around an offensive foul by the
Pk11Dnallf. "'"" l'ork :t
near Detroit.
.
Mtm• ..,.. a: JWtllne,. 1
first four in the eighth race.
52 Weeks ........... ...... ................. $75.40
Mellll'\'1111 ................. 1
. ~I_..OIIl II. flll-.oqoll
)•
"''1On Sunday, whlle Hearns was
The sixth race finishers were Lakers' A.C. Green to hand
Ha•lllon I, AI IIi:-.. I
lan~ ('tl,) · I. ('ifilenlal
. . . . .11 . . , .. . .
sequestered in his Caesars PaDilldltold I. Tf'QII It
.
the 6-8-3 combination of Twilight · Detroit a Hl9-104 lead wllh 2:09 to
Nrw Varl&amp;l. FII .... IWII I
"-.. .,.....,..jj '
lace
hotel
suite
with
managerDuchy,
Wildwood Tilda and High
Mollln&gt;.a'l' ................. 't
TofGIIIo ~. lh-iftll t
MI. to••II. CIIk... 1
s..... ,........ Bnl.. t. bi
trainer
Emanuel
Steward,
Henry
Point
Chu
Chu. while In the
JID ... H II, Al; ...ta I
!lii'W \ 'ork M, a.la~t.'2, :! ..
Hearns
was
detained
at
the
lA• ..,._....,. s. n ......u 1.
eighth race. the top four made up
S.Olillk• I, O..wl ... l
Manl'rdrilll• I.M•IM••IIIII, It._.~
Mllwalllf't :1, lllli111Mn- I
South!leld.
Mich
..
pollee
on
an
the 4-9-8·2 combination of Swain.
. . . ..,·~ CIIIRlf'l'
'
t a
MI. ..... (T...-, .._., al Ok·"''O
open murder charge.
Ozark Marina. Climactic. and
v·:"'~~~~ ''~··~Olllrace
( 'a ll.. rlllll
~~••'f-l).t:w,.m .
I
~"' \'o .. (Go•• 7·tl .a Pllblh.l1lll
Neither Hearns nor Steward Hickory Kid.
SPECIALIST
The featured races were two
(8mllf1' .. a,, 1':~.cr··
would comment on the incident
ct.rl..alfM
N)IIILoJt ... piN
.-:
Sunday. Hearns' publicist. divisions of the Ohio Sires Stakes
Jackie Kallen, said Hearns and for 4- and 5-year-old trotters .
nw... • N..- YML •IJitl
...'!"oWflllalll'll-·~ .....
Steward had a security guard Sharon Kostura drove Common
•.
outside their hotel suite and were Sense to vict'ory in 1: 57 4-5 in the
Mtlllr.llll II MI. ·'lA • • 111 ...
('.......iliiii•Dif'llt.IIPI
not taking calls. She said Hearns first divisiOn and Don Odywer
i\l ..... lllll•ll'ruc'l.... ll....
was being updated on the sltua· drove Independent Blaze to vic...... llllM -~.........
tory In 1:59 2·5 In the second
tlon at home.
division.
Henry Hearns, 22, Is the
The crowd of 2,632 wagered
youngest of Thomas Hear~!~' four
$320,902.
brothers and four sisters.

Pistons move step closer to
•
NBA title after 114-110 WID

a

Heams to
face Leonard
this· evening

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Letters to the editor
Update .on the mare issue

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LOS ANGEU:S , tUPll - I t was only a ;: bldbper behind
shorts lop. but to Mike Davis It ..
was as good as a line drive to the
wall. ,
.
Besld~ bringing home the firs I
two 'Dodger runs to carry Los
Angeles to a 3·1 triumph Sunday
over ClnclflliBtl, ' Davis's third
Inning"single was O!IIY the second
in 32 at-tiats' and pu( an end to 23
scorel~s Dodger Innings in consecutM&gt; five-hitters by etncifl·
nat! plYchers Jose Rljo arid Tom
Browning.
"When we lett on the reretit
road ti·tp, I was swinging the bat
pretty' well." Davis sa'id. '"to not ·
have anything to show for it was
pretty frustrating. To me that
ball had eyes on." •
The hll. whlch 'brr)ughfln Kirk
Gibson and Willie Randolph.
snapped a strln~t . of 25 consecu·
live shutout innings by Clncln·

and share share tbj! Information
with the vice squad. Another plan
Is In the worlcs to turn In the
names or dealers to the 31ency
that they fear more than the
pollee - the Internal Revenue

dealers.
The next step was to sever their
lines of communication. Washington dealers, like thole In
other major cities, use beepers to
keep In touch with their clientele.
The beeper goes off and the
dealer heads to the nearest pay
phone to arrange the drOp-off. On
some Saturday nights, dealers
waited -In lineil to use pay phones
In the neighborhood.
The residents made several
appeals to have the phones
removed, but the Chesapeake
and Potomac Telephone Co. was
slow to act unto- one neighbor,
who works for the federal gcivern·
ment, pulled the right political
string. .
Even with the telephones gone, .
the dealers still owned the
streets. In the winter, they posted
lookouts on strategic corners to
direct traffic Into the dark alleys
and vacant .Jots. They use um·
brellas and rain gear In ·bad
weather.
EpithetS and rocks have been
thrown at the neighborhood pa·
trois, but they continue their
nightly walks, and their numbers
are slowly growing.
'
Other neighbors organized an
Intelligence network to Jearn the
names of dealers and customers

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Mike Schmidt was crying for
I was pu ttlng the finishing
touches on a long Memorial Day
weekend, cleaning pop cans and
Frlto sacks from the car and
washing a load of clothes for
work the next day.
In the backgrpund . the 10
o'clock news droned Its familiar,
proportlonall quotes of happy
chatter and serious pronounce·
ments. The sports segment followed, and the pleasant sportscaster took his turn with bits of
crowd noise and cracking bats.
Then a sound emerged from
the television so odd I stopped
Instantly and put down the basket
of clothes I was carrying. I
turned to the screen and saw a
large man standing at a podium,
trying to speak; after a lew
choked syllables that rose In
pitch the harder he tried to get
them out, I realized he was

........

us_
; _o_ve_rst_re__.et"

crying. Next, I realized the man
Schmidt may have believed he
was Mike Schmidt, ·f amous third
was singing his swan song for
baseman for the Philadelphia
himself only, but my heart sang
Phlllles.
along; I Imagine hundreds of
I stood unable io move as he
thousands of us all over the
continued, as if someone had
nation joined in, both baseball
grabbed me by the chest and
fans and non-fans alike. Mike
squeezed. I was both horrified . Schmidt Is about my age, 39, born
and awed at witnessing this
smack·dab In the middle or the
private moment, this ultimate
baby boom; he started his major
and complete act of grief. "I left · league career "when I was a
Dayton, Ohto, with two bad knees
junior In college.
and a dream of becoming a
And although only a small knot
baseball player," Schmidt
of us !ace the loss of our jobs
struggled on, announcing his
when our bodies pass their peak
retirement from baseball. "I . physically, as do professional
thank God It came true." By that
athletes like Mike Schmidt, we
time his voice had reached the
.are stUJ coming to understand
tenor and eadence of a little boy
what he learned so palntuUy this
trying to get out what had
.season: Some things we Jove with
happened on the playground,
all our hearts wUI slip forever
before breaking down In sobs. By
!rom our grasp, ~or no other
then, I was crying, too.
reason than the passing of years.
"I always said that when I

couldn't live up to (my own)
standards ·I would retire," the
10-tlme GOld Glove third .baseman said. "I no longer have the
skills needed to make adjust· ·
ments at the plate to hit or to
malle some plays In the field and
run the bases."
Yeah, Mike, . I know. Me,
either.
I wlll always remember Mike
Schmidt as a heck of a ball·
player, but I will probably
remember him most fondly for
that 1J10111ent Memorial Day
evening at the podium. I don't
know how he feels now about
letting the world t1ee him sob; our
culture bas always tried to deny
men this natural expre111on of
grief, and most of the men I Jmow
are hard on· themselves to the
point of cruelty If they break the
taboo.

The washing of the spears ___J:r't_"lli_am_R_u_sh_er
I

Historians, borrowing and chose, from among the 691nstsn- ·'"Meese,'' t•Tower," "North," that's all. High· minded political
slightly modifying a famous ces of apparent misconduct spec- "No..•~r." and "Bark" (to
-~
purges, like revolutions, tend to
remark about Charles I of Ified by the House Ethics Com· whiCh,
If there'd IJilen room, he wtud up devouring their own
England. may someday say of mlttee, a handful that lent could have added "Donovan," children.
Speaker Wright that' nothing In . themselves to breezy, over·
"Deaver," and ltGinsbur-''),.
a
Is It time, though, to calla bait?
hll public 111e became him like slmpll11ecl responses.
baa finally pluqed one knife, Not, certaintY, untn Speaker
the Jeavlll&amp;lt,
But when, hll voice rising In labeled "Wright," Into the back Wright, ConiJI'essman Coelho,
Having trained and pra~Jced anger, be brought his sympath~· of the Democratic donkey. Whe- ud perbapa some of tbelr
aa a lawyer myllelf, ud acquired er1 to their feet with a r~DC~ng reUpob the donkey 1ur111 and colleques, have flnilhed underCOIIIIderable experlllBce In the declaration that "thll mindless •-·•- lweet"', "Doa't YIN -............
Y
·--dry-eyed andlfletlc:u· "
black arta of public 1pealllq, let caJIIIIballlm bll .aot to 1top thlllk n're .~ttng :£ llttle , ICI'IItl,lly of the Jultlce .
me acknowledp that I wu ttt.e'1 been eftOIIIb otlt.'' It wu carried away?
'
.[)epartJneJit and tile FBI
tmpre~Hd. and wen .mtermlt·
lmpoulble to doubt tile man'•
No, we are not cettlnl carftld
Up to nbw atteatloa
fo. :
tentl)'moved, bytheeloqueeeetft 11Dcerlty. He bll leanlad, the away. The loD&amp; buildup of na· cuaec! . Qq wheUter 111e1e men
the speaker' 1 valedictory ad· hard way, that ill polltlca tbe tiona! concentration 011 ~...-- ,"! vtolatatol'llles pt·the BoUIII! _ a
dreu to the House of kDives throwllat 011e'1 foes have tlon of ethics In polltlcl, be&amp;ID- tlet'IOIII matter, but-DOt 1n ltlelf a
Repr.-tatlvea.
a nuty bablt of turnlDi. en route, nlqwltb Watergateandeeprly • er~,Butlttuc:arl!elyeoncelv· :
Not that be III8JI8Ied to 1ur· Into J!oomerup.
fueled by the media aad the able that !bey CCI\Ild be plldly of
mouat, more than bltermlt·
A cartoon by Mike Shelton of Coqres~lonal Democrats ever tblt. mUdold I'Jill vlolatkma '
tentl)', hlllll!l'loua weai!Ju•• u
the Oranp County (Callt.) Rea· Iince u am~ of deltroylqor tJilot btvtlnlpllcltly admltt8d by
u cntor. The l)'lltbetlc 11'111 wu later 11111111 1IP the key pobat at !aut darDqlq ~ · ·••!Pile -and yet not bave
stU! there. '111e YOCIII quawr brUIIaatly. Tbe RepvbllllBII .... pz•ldeatl, II 1101r roundiiiJ OUt ~IOtltbatareproperly
appeared on cue, aa 1tyl1Md a• pballt, with a whole array of Ill .-vleet to tile utiDD by detJiltcl u I!.I'IIMI
·
an opera
tremolo. He knlvea Ia Its back labeled pbblln&amp; a tew Democratl

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amaer'•

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HEAT PUMP

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- .,....,'Mo

Shockers win College

OMAHA,-Neb. IUPil- Enter·
lng the C6Jtege. World Si!rteS. the
Wichita -state Shockers lOOked
more like victims than
conquerer.s. .
Injuries IQ.I!V.liQfthelrregulars
reduce?. their, . rQ!Iter to just 11
field ptayers. Over the course of '
the toum•ment, foUF more
played lhro'!ll'h various Injuries.

orld Series

But a funny thing happened on
the way to elimination . .(1 never
took place.
. Instead, the Sbocke~:s rode the
pitch!ns of Greg Brummett and
Jim Newlin and the hlltlna of
Eric Wedge and Pat Meares to
Whl the .national cbamplanlblp.
beating Texas 5-3 In Saturday's
final .'

Efficiency and
.High Quality

Make This
One of

c:!~ S3.2 5
biNNER ROU.S

Our

Best Buys.
•· coQU~G

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Monday, June 12. 1989

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Monday. June 12. 1989

The Daily Sentinel- Page 5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-----Harrisonville news-----

Area TOPS chapter
members ·recognized
,

.,

CASTING DERBY -These young$ters partie I· '
paled in Saturday's casting derby as part of the
Heritage Weekend events held at the Meigs

atUre literally stopped tile traffic while they
clogged through a half-d02e11 or so country pieces
on Butternut Ave. ln front oftbe Mu~eum.

DANCING IN THE STREET - A highlight of
Heritage Weekend festivities on Sunday after·
noon was street dancing by the Shady River
Shufflers. The dancers In appropriate Appalachia

.

County Museum. The winner In the 11 year old age
group was Karyn Thompson, and In the 8-9 year
old ~oup the winner was Jtachel Ashley.

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Several members ol Ohio
TOPS ~70 , the Pomeroy chapte r
ol the Taking 01! Pounds Sensl·
bly weight loss group, recently
attended the Area Recognition
Day held in Zanesville with 104
chapters of the 111 registered
chapters in attendance. A total
weight loss of 17.707 po\!nds. or
170 and.one quarter pounds per
chapter. was reported.
Kay Sage. area coordinator.
welcomed the different chapters,
and Beverly Nickells. 1987 queen
who lost 103 and a half pounds.
spoke of what It took to Jose her
weight . cidng determination,
proper food. exercise. and encouragement by others as her
success.
Officers of each club were
noted and for Pomeroy 570
Include Lennie B. AJslilre ,
leader; Peggy VIning, assistant
leader; Ola St. Clair, secretary;
VIrginia Dean, treasurer; Mary
Mardn, weight recorder; and
Julia Hysell, assistant weight
.r
recorder.
After recognition of ·officers.
those attending were entertained
by the baggy clothes parade, the
joke telling Middletown Ralslnettes. and "'Miss Lotta Guts."
who made fun of herself about
her own weight. Evelyn Roltr ol
Day ton was the winner of the
song contest.
Following the entertainment,
.. several awards were given to the
members of the various chapters. Peggy VIning won TOPS
Angel from that group and she
was presented a.n angel pin.
Mary ·Martin was named the
newest KOPS In Meigs County In
addldon to being chapter Queen
and she received a ribbon, a
graduate hat with gold ribbon, a
gokl crown. gold rose. and a
plilque for losing 10 pounds In
three months, A loss of 674

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MANEUVERABILITY - One of the events for
Heritage Weekend at the Meigs Museum was the
remote control car and truck manerverabiHty
contest. Winning In the over age 16category were,

•:J\.

left to rlglh, Kevin Van Maire, second; Tim Durst,
first; a.nd Ray Redman, third. Winners in the
under age 16 category were Brent Rose, Chuck
Parker, and Chris Parker.
·

HANDMADE DOLL HOUSE - Little Chasatle
Hollon of Chester was fascinated with the doD .
houses handmade by Delmar Hamm of South
Webstet, a native Meigs Countlan. Retired from
the postal service for six years, Hamm and his

CAR SHOW WINNERS - TheSt' participants In Sunday's Old
Tim~ Car Show, held at the Meigs Museum, were presented
trophies by the Ole Car Club of GaiUpoUs. Front row, 1-r, Dennis

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:QY.
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Copeland, Steven Smith, Larry Hootottle, BrentWhaley,andKelth
Darst. Back row ,1-r, Kevin VanMatre, Dav. All""' Dale Ch~Wnell,
Dick McDonald, and Roy Miller.
• •

---Herbalists meer--Connie Hill gave Ideas on using
Quikrete mix for markers and
ste pping stones In a gard en whe n
members of the River Valley
Herbalist s met recently at the
home of Janet Theiss.
.
Ann Kelly gave the herb of the
month report on marjoram. a
herb used for wreaths and
wedding and funeral arrange-

I

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• RUTLAND

MONDAY
RUTLAND- The Zion Church
of Christ Is having a Vacation
Bible School each morning from
9-11 :30 a.m. through Friday for
ages two through high school.

•

RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will be having a
revival Sunday through Thursday at • 7;;lp p.m. ntghlly. Dr.
James Pennington of Charlotte.
N.C. will be the evangelist. There
will also be Bible study each
morning at 10 a.m.

- The Rutland
Fire Department will be having a
pie baking and cake decoration
contesf 'at the annual fourth of ;
July celebration.'''"'"' •
Pies can be of any kind with
first place receiving $2&gt;. second .
A big event for Heritage
Weekend at the Meigs County
place. $15, and third · plilce, $10.
Museum was the Old Time Car The pies must be In .~ throw away
Show held on Sunday. .
container,.
• •
The show was sponsored by the
The cake decorating theme Is ;
Ole Car Club of GalllpoUs and the · '"Patriotic.'" First place will
group presented trophies to 10 of
rt&gt;celve $50. second pillce, $2&gt;. •
the 18 entries.
.'
and third place. $15.
Receiving· trophies were Gene
Whaley of Darwin, with his 1969
Chevelle; Roy Miller of Pomeroy. with a 1928Studebaker; Dale
· Channell of ,The Plains. who ·
entered his 1949 Buick; Dick
McDonald of NelsOnville received a trophy for his 1938
Chevy; Kevin VanMatre of
Pomeroy won with his 1967
Camaro; Larry Hostottle of
Little Hocking received a trophy
for his 1962 Chevy Impala; Keith
Darst of Pomeroy with his 1963
Thunderbird received a I rophy;
Dennis Copeland of Vincent, and
his 1969 Chevy · Nova; Steven
COMPLETE PAYROLL
Smith of Tuppers Plains received
PROCESSING AND
a trophy for his 1971 Ford Forlno;
PAYROLL
CHECK WRITING.
and Dave Allen of Albany won
KAIL A. IIEIL_ER II, CPA
with his 1962 Pontiac Tempest.

calendar

HARRISONVILLE -TheHar·
risonvllle Senior Citizens Is sponsoring a free blood pressure
clinic on Tuesday at the townhOuse. from 10 a.m. to noon. The
public Is urged to take advantage
of this offer.

POMEROY - The Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
hold It's annual vacation Bible
school Monday through Friday
from 9-11 :30 a .m.

REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. In the high school
band room.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- . CHESTER - The Chester
port First Bapus~ Church will be Township trustees .will meet
havlng-~.vacatlon · Bible schOol TUesday at 7:30 p:m . at the town
Monday through 'Friday from 9 hall.
a.m to noon.
--I
RUTLAND - There will be a
RUTLAND - The Rutland regular Rutland VIllage council
Freewill Baptist Church will be meeting .a t 7 p.m. on Tuesday.

.

611 L Moln St., P-ay, Oh.

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the future, call:

ONE OFTHEBEST-Thls car, a
Whaley of Darwin, was one of thr cars that .,.,,..
sunday's Old Time ear Show held at the Meigs Museum In
conjunction with Heritage Weekend., Pictured with the car Is
Whaley's son, Brent.

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JEFFREY J. WARNER
RepreHnt11ive

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Ph. 11"H2-14'BIIot. 114·HI-2477
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992-2124

DILES HEARING CENJER.

~ 'TIIDuMndi'H/* Who Care.

302 W. Znd St..
Pomeroy, Oh. 41719

DOMINO'S
PillA
DIUYBS

SEE US EACH
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BILL DILES

CAREl

TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday, 12 noon, at Main
Street Pizza. All members are
urged to attend.
'

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles
Auxiliary wlll·meet at the hall on
Butternut Avenue at 7 p.m. on
Monday.

for now and In

During all of 1989 we are eel·•
ebrating our 40th year at bringing better hear1ng to our ·
friends-clients. It is gratifying
to kno1111 that we have dewel- •·
oped a reputation .for integrity ·
. and dependability. We were
h..-e yesterday, expect to be
here tomorrow; and our abli~a­
tion to you is to be available
(ewery day I as you need us, with ,
the mast up·to-date technolo·
gy that is to be found. Hearing
..-oblem? H10ring aid ..-oblem?
'Call the reliable ones - WE

SYRACUSE - The Asbury
United Methodist Church will be
having vacation Bible school
Monday through Friday from
9-11:30 , a.l)l. Th~ PUb)iC . Is
Invited to participate.

992-7270

·Protect ·the ·full value

Mrs. Mar y Woogard. Mrs.
E unice Chase. and Mr. and Mrs·.
Harold Ball. all of Columbus,
were recent visitor s of Mrs .
Frances Yo ung.
Mr. and Mrs. R.D. Cha pman.
Silver Springs. Md. , visited
Stella Atk ins and Ruby Di ehl.
They attended th e Sci pio alumn i
reunion of Mrs. Cha pman's
c lass.

holding vacation Bible school
Monday through Friday from
6-8 p.m. Classes will be for
nursery through teenage. The
public Is Invited to participated.

KElLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

Navaasa lies between Jamaica and
Haiti, coverin( about 2 square miles.
It Is reserved by the United States for
a llghtboue and Is unlnbablted.

POMEROY The Meigs
County Boar&lt;! of Elections will
hold It's replar monthly meetIng on Monday at 4:30p.m.

Auxiliary plans for trip

of your home

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ments. The sweet variety is used
In cooking and belongs to the
mint family.
It was reported that the herb
garden is completed at the
historical Log House in the
Ravenswood Park. It was also
noted that edible flowers and
leaves should be picked early In
the dav

Contest slated

.

as

~~r!UJZUnity

wife, Jean, travel from craft ahow to craft ahow ,
all summer long seiUag hi~ many woodwork
creations and ihe jewelry sbe makes. Ch•le Is
the six year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rick
HoUon.

Old Time
Car .show
presented·

pounds for the chapter a nd the
county queens was reported.
This years first place queen lost
101 pounds and we nt from a size
44 to a size 10.
Teresa Wood of Pomer oy 570
won for weight reCQrders perfect
resume reports for timeliness
and neatness. Lennie B. Alshlre
accepted the award in Wood's
absence. Bernice Durst received
a miniature wishing well for
meeting her pledge of losing five
pounds.
The weight countdown began
with all members standing and
those standing the longest lost
the most weight. Pomeroy 570
member. Pearl Knapp. was the
sixth person standing, with 95
pounds lost.
, TOPS - Mary MarUn, left, was named newest KOPS In Meigs
•
County as well as chapter 570 queen, at the recent Area
!\'!aida Long was the first place
Recognition Day of the weight loss group. Maida Long, right, was
winner In the pester coqtest. and
.the flrat place winner In the poster contest fQr A.R.D. and was
Llnnle B. Alshlre was recogrllzed
· reinstated as 11 KOPS member for her loss of 25 pounds.
a KIW. KOPS honored on ·
stage. from Pomeroy 570 were
Mary Martin. Maida Long. VIrginia Smith. Ola St. Clair, Julia
Hysell, and Pe·a rl Knapp. Mary
Plans for a trip and dinner out rans and wives from seven states
Mardn graduated and was for July Instead of the regular were In attendance .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold · Newell
seated on stage with the other meeting were made at the recent
graduates who' recited the TOPS meeting of the fireman's auxll- spent a we ek In Myrtle Beach
pledge. ·
·
lary . Prayer and pledge to the with the ir childre n and their
All KOPS present formed a flag opened the meeting. New
families.
Mrs. Alice Bumpass. Char~lrcle around the auditorium and
committees were named for the
mine
and Dana . Blytheville.
after a brief ceremony went Into year. Dues and money for cards
Ark.,
spent
a week with her
the audien'c e and picked someone were collected. Bills were paid
·
they would llke t,o s.ee become a and several cards ' were signed mother Cleo Smith .
Mr. and Mrs. Spence Tederlck,
KOPS next year. Mary Martin for the sick. Margaret Christy
picked Peggy VIning and pres- and Opal Wickham served home- Old Washington. visited on Memented her with a rosebud after . made tee cream and cake to orial Day with Opal Wickham.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy R. Allen.
which she was escorted onto the . ~usan Clelan. Opal Hollon. Erma
stage.
Cleland. Ethel Orr, Bonnie Land- Katie and Bobby , Greenwood,
Other Pomeroy 570 members ers. Dorothy Hawk. Becky Ed- Ind ., spent Memorial weekend
present were Mary Roush. Nellie · wards. Paula Wood. Inzy Newell. with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Laura Jean Eichinger. Jeff
Grover. Juanita Humphreys. Clarice Allen. Chelsey Wood. and
Bonnie Johnston, Phyllis Drey- Chasat le Hollon. Members who and Phyllis Horton. Worthinghel. and Sylvia Neece.
are going on the trip ln July are to ton; and Susie Eichinger and
Next year's A.R.D. meeting meet at the firehouse at 1 p.m . on Patty Lynn Dick, Pickerington;
spent Memorial weekend with
July 5.
will be held at Grove City on April
28.
Mr. and Mrs . Clayton Allen Opal Eichinger .
Cletus Allen, Columbus, spent
recently attended the reunion of
the Headquarters Company of the night recently wltb Mr . and
the 40th Infantry Division held In Mrs. Clayton Allen. and attended
. Springfield. Twent-flve vete- . tbe alumni banquet.

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Price. of
Otway. were weekend visitors of
Mrs. Louise Eshelma n.
Mrs. E leanor Updegraff. of
Birmingham, Ala.. spen I a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mr. and Mr.s Babe Wh aley.
Clearwater . Fla., visited Mrs.
Lola Clark a nd Mrs. Francis
Alkire recently.

ii ..

••

Meigs County
1-800-344·3331

I

Gallla &amp;Mason County

875-3388

Nato

.wo.o.c.,..,..

e _ . , . .. ..,.,.1M o.a eoro.

-IUPOU, OHIO
NOUI SICOND AVENUE

..
Annut l yield complied by compoundq dilly. lltk• •ubject to chtnae. IRAa tlflnot be died to qualify kx- Bb Max. Subecant611 peMtty far evly wtchdrtMI on CD..
If balanct r.u. !Kiow qutllfyklc dq:K»tt, • monthly ICTvtce thii'F wtll be ... ued on your Blue Mtll chedd.. acrount. Cftdlt .,.vkatubtect"" IPPf'0¥11•

· ~~--------------------~----~----~
••

�Pea• 6-The Daly Sentinel

Pomaioy

Monday. June 12. 1989

MiddiBport, Ohio

June 12, 1989

- Newsoine tells Eastern Boosters 'what it takes· to win'
...
"'

,

By DAVE HARRIS

Cleveland Brown all-pro tight
~end Ozzie Newsome was the
featured speaker at a fund
"· · · rasing dinner sponsored by the
.• . , Eastern Athletic Boosters Satur:; ~ day evelng before a large crowd
at Eastern High SChool.
The dinner was opened by Wes
~ ~ Arbaugh president on the East·
.···
ern Athletic Boosters and a
·prayer by Rev. Don Archer. Bill
: .:. Francis vice-president or East·
ern Athletic Boosters Introduced
;. :· the Master Qf Ceremonies sports·
•-.. caster and au thor Dave Diles.
.
Diles In his Introduction talked
~ '· • about a mutual friend of both

""' ....
- :-:
·•
'

.

"

..

Newsome and him the late Paul
"Bear" Bryant, former coach of
the Alabama Crimson Tide and
how so much or the legendary
coach Is seen In Newsome. Diles
pointed out that Newsome is
active In the Fellowship or
Christian Athletes. Big Brothers,
and Athletes in Action. ·
·
·
Newsome talked about what it
takes to be a winner. "The
number one thing Is to get your
education." · Newsome stressed
that "once I retire from fOotball
after some 20 years In the game.
that one pass I caught or that one
touchdown I scored will not be

~

Important anymore,: because the
corporations that I go to about a
job are going to be interested in
my high school and college
ej)ucations . .
"The number two thing in
takes to be a 'winner," according
to Newsome, "Is being able to
deal with peer pressure. "When I
talk about peer pressure, there Is
no way I can get away from
talking about drug and alcohol
abuse, Newsome went on to talk
about two ex-teammates. the late
Don Rodgers and Chip Banks.
Rodgers was one or the top
defensive backs In the game

dead-end street. " Newsome
stated. "Yotl have to deal with
peer pressure.
''The third thing It takes to be a
winner Is persevj!rance. If you
are going to be a success In life,
you are going to be up agains-t
some ·really tough times. Don't

when he died of a drug overdose
after only a few years of
stardom . Banks was an all-pro
linebacker with the Browns before he was traded to the
Chargers three years ago, he Is
currently s_ervlng a jail term for
possession of drugs. "Drugs it/ a

B siiless Services

·---------- '

be a qutiter. Quitting Is the
'easiest thing to do. A winner Is
someone who gives the best
effort at everything."
Newsome closed the dinner by
answering questions from the
crowd. Closing remarks were
given by Diles and Francis.

BINGO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

I'OMIIOY-UGUS

CLII

224 E. MAIN ST.
892-$978

&lt;USTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Yllills. LL ... , P.M.
SIN. LL 1:45 -P.M. I
1001 Pllll
2 H.D. FIE£ llith COUJIOII•d I
Plitt~- Ofllln. H.C. Paci... u.. I coupon Jllf cus-

liTE AID PHARMAC/SrS
FILL OVER .

"At ._...... Prices"

PH. 9C.·2101

'r

...

60MILLION
PRESCRIPTIONS'ANIUALLY

Lie. 1005-3

Gomo

Roger Hysell
Garage

3 Styles

. LET US PRICEYDUR NEXT'PRESCRIPTION

II. 124, Pa-oy Ohio

and
Various Sizes

ON SAlE NOW AT

•

SEARS 1H MIDDIIPOIT

••:

'

.I

...

·•'

'-~~::~~n

Strawflown, Stattn,
Wildflowers Mil ......
"fl&amp; PUNT"
"""" • 7.00 p.m.

-c\IITOM ICI!'CHINI a IATU
.O:T!NIIYIIIEMOHUNO
•YINYLSIDINQ a IIOOPING
...IrA&amp;. IULOINQ&amp;

CLEVELAND Brown All-Pro light end Ozzle

eN!WNOMU
SINCE 1069

IMtloiool, OIL

DillY

CAU 742-2772

'

n. SUACIISI

992·7611

5-24-19- 1110.

· CAN DO
MAINTENANCE

E .Molft

.

..

'

992-2269
NEW USTiiG--' PliMEROY
- A2 SI~JY home with al•!ll!
let big kitchen, 3 bedrooms.
Bait-in china cabinS; nice
decl&lt; in back. and 1 pill basement. JUST $25,000.00.

'

••

.....•

l

•

•:' '
,.

.. .

1.. I' • •

,.

.

'

CLEVELAND BROWN All·
Pro tight-end Ozzle Newsome
talks to the crowd during a
fund . raising dinner at Easter
High School Saturday night.

.,. ,,,.

RAID
ANT &amp; RIM&amp;II
KIUER
11 oz.

COPPERTONE
SUNBUJCK
. UITION

TREAJS
24'S

SPF #25-4 OZ.

l

L

ll

. .....
'

~

I

I

Chang first American in 34
. years to captureFrench Open
.

·. ..
PARIS iUPH Michael
,; : Chang, poised and strong, became possibly the youngest
men's tltllst In Grand Slam
· : history Sunday. outlasting Swed·
.. en's Stefan Edberg to win the
French Open In live sets.
Chang, 17. of Placentia. Calif..
·also became the ·first American
: _: to capture the men's trophy In 34
.. · years, prevailing 6·1. 3-6. 4·6. 6-4.
·· 6·2. Chang entered as the 15th
seed. Edber.g as the 1hlrd.
.
"These are two weeks I'm
'":.·· going to remember for the rest of
my life." said Chang, who
· • collected $291.752.
;.-; Rodney Heath was 17 when he
; : won the 1905 Australian Open.
·- but his exact date of birth Is not
· known. so he could have been a
:-: . month or two younger than
"' • Chang. Chang was born Feb. 22.
./' ·· making him 17 years, three
· months and 20 days old.
-:', · Larlsa Savchenko and Natalia
: ·, Zvereva of the Soviet Union won
-· · the women's doubles title with a
6-4. 6·4 victory over West Ger... • many's Steff! Graf and Argent!·
:~ ;; na's Gabriela Sabatini.

.&gt;

.... :
_

"I didn't think I could Win this
all." said Chang. "l just came
.:. In and trfed to do my best."
Chang continued the ner_veless
1 , play that carried him through the
· . • tournament, drilling sharply
· ; angled winners whenever possl·
: ble and shifting tactics to meet
every situation. He committed a
· .: remarkably low 27 unforced
'· · errors. Edberg totaled 68.
" · Tbewome~~'a tltlewasalsowon
:: by a 17-year'llld, ~ntxa San• · chez toppling top seed Steff! Gtaf
; In three seta OD Saturday.
In the fourth set; Chang
: dropped his first .ervice game,
, but EdberJ couldn't keep the
·- preaaure on.
"Durlq the fourth set I was
• .AIWD dial break," Cbaq said. "I
• -ftally t~bt tbe match was

•c · ·pt

. ..--

..... IPOIW."

Chang, ranked 19th in the
world, could offer no explanation
tor his comeback. other than "I'
just tried to hang In there."
Chang forced the fifth set by
breaking Edberg's serve in the
lOth game of the fourth set. the
Swede netting a backhand approach. Edberg squandered 10
break-point opportunities .In the
fourth set.
"That's where the match
started to slip away from me,"
Edberg admitted.
Edberg seemed to wilt under
the humidity in the fifth set,
misplaying some balls and struggling with his footwork.
''I just got a lot of lucky breaks
In the end," Chang said after the
three hour. 41-minute match.
Chang stunned the tennis world
earlier In the tournament by
defeating world No. !Ivan Lend!
In live sets In the quarterfinals.
"I want to congratulate Mike
for playing a great match,"
Edberg said after receiving the
runner-up trophy.
At 15·40, Chang won his first
match-point opportunlty when
Edberg netted a forehand approach. Chang. who said break·
tng the American drought was "a
dream" then held his lists aloft In
triumph.
In his acceptance speech to the
crowd of more than 17,000,.Chang
said. "God bless everybody, and
especially those In China."

.,,
BAYER

CLDSE•UI'

TOIITHI'ASTE '
6.4
SPORTSCASTER and author Dave Diles was the
Master of Ceremonies at Saturday night's · lund raising
dinner featuring Cleveland
Brown All-Pro light end Ozzle
Newsome at Eastern High
School

-Sports briefsBoxing
Thailand's World Boxing Association strawwelght champion
Napa Klalwanchal retained his
title by stopping Japanese challenger Hi rokl loka in the IJ th
round of their scheduled 12-round
title bout at Osaka. Japan.
Referee Martin Denkln of the
United States stopped the fight
1: 12 seconds into the IJ th.
Cycling
Laurent Fignon of France won
the 72nd Tour of Italy cycle race.
the second most Important in the
world of cycling after the Tour de
France. Fignon was followed by
Flavlo Glupponl of Italy and
Andrew Hampsten cit the United
States. The three-week race
began May 21 In Taormina.
Sicily. and ended at Florence.
Flgnon completed the Tour of
Italy In 93 hours. 30 minutes and
16 seconds. •

Pomeroy Senior .Citizen Center
1:00-5:30

·

IIOW OPEN FOR
IISIMSS

ralllllir and rt·

and
heater CD!'-. Wa can
*o add boil and racJ
out radlatDI's. Wa also
rlptlir Gas Tanks.
Clll'l

14th IMalstSt.
· Point Pleesallt, W.Va.
Wo Buy Aluminum
Cant. Ol••· Br••·

oz.

'

I

..

r .

MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful
Colonial ~ome! Level lol, 2
car gar age. has ornate trim,
attic studio w/skylight. Well
insulated.
REDUCED .
$49,900.00. OWNER WANTS
AN OFFER! ·

I.

1110'S

SAVINGS EVERYDAY ON

CHESTER- Approx. 1 acre
lot wllh 12x60, 3 bedroom
mobile home. 20'x48' gar·
age w~h workshop. Call for
Appointment. $11,500.00.

COCA-COLA PRODUCTS
AT RITE AID

MIDDLEPORT

3 LITER BDnLE

-

992-6191 .

TIHIU JUIIf

.

We hlwe ilu)'lrs lor lllp
Coutrtr Proptttr. Ust wHh
us lor baat mub.

4/89C

PllllniiG
•HATB
•T·SHIRTS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS.
ORGANIZATIONS

985-4300
' CHESTII
6·9-'19-tto

PAT HILL FORD

992-2198
Middleport,

R-.,.irl
NIASE Certifiad Machenic

949-2168

CALL 992·6756

5-31-'19-1 mo.

For HEALTH

IJEFFERl J. WARNER

.....

RITE
A ID

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

, Pem•oy, Ohio 45769

OUAifTITifl •

•I

RITE liD DISCOUNt PHARMACY

•

•
I

306 EAST MARt STilET
•
POMEROY I OHIO
PHARMACY PHONEJ 992·2586

l

· - - -------------------~--'--'--------"~~-'---j
I

•

992-5275

On 209 lain Sl ..
Belpre, Ohio.
Stainless sleet 3 bowl sink
on legs, glass showcase, 3
counters, cookie jar, garden
tools, glassware. macrame
cord, toy~ turn rack, clothes
rack, small china cabinet,
banks, saw, coffee pot,
chainsaws, chair~ 5 bins,
radios. rocking horse, CB radio, small copier, macrame
flower holders, tarps. slide
boxes, file boxes, wall mirron. coli hengers, lots of
arts &amp; craft supplies, plus
lots more merch111dise un·
known till sale lime.
Petrick H. Blosser, ·
Auctlonttl
Evelyn Cllurclt, Owner
Ter11s: Cllh or Ctttclt
Ph. 304-1163-1895
or 421-7245

•lhe Area's

w-

tttn ... to tfv1 -IV· I
otct. Vory pt0¥1ut. Colt 814-84112893.

Pu-

-·__

•'-•-~ eh..ct• .....,.
.
•1 2,0110 ctl•act. . of"*'*'¥·
llnHrt, llledl _._ DOf!Y, di&amp;Me WUIIeieetive

"""*"

·~~~ •f
OOff•lon.
•
11-fll...-lllctronk: dlcdon.-y chKb ·~
1 ofli.OOO
··
•OtNr
tublt• lndu.
w..-: ...... .....

....

Ootct.o
sp;tn.., ...
.,,..

Lib ........
ftot .... 3 ••
..-.,d1mtlo.CII304-8813111.

Pupplel. One II lordlr Colli&amp;
to lhoplwcf.Coltio mill.
F.... ll.. 4 months old. CaH
lt4-H2·201&amp; .

-

-·""'·
.....hllr
kilt. . 10
IIOod homo.
Cltt. . 114-912·
71174.

·--

..WorciU_.... Auto

I~

• • wor• cor·

.Unq. _.,.to-load ConC'Int

C•..n•

and

~:t!'!'I!YII,":J;;. .. ~ S.l~ c~on• .
~r"" in1 , .. 011.
;lfOC,ISOI'I,

l1b¥1_..• went_. in m, horn&amp;
Full tlnM for Summ• ont,.

IXI*itnCI. LPN on ell I. Low
Income homa. CAl 614-99~
8873 lfter 7 :00p.m. for more

pi-•

Would prft ref..
c•
• 14-...... 13!10. 1ft• 5. 114......2470.

iror•

Call 992-2772

mo.

DtSCOU.NT PRICES ON ALL MODELS

.

.

MEIGS OFFICE MACHINES

Smilh Ridge Rd ..

long Bottom

843-1486
1-17·1

•High Efficiency
Gas
•Centr al Air
•Heat Pumps

THE
BASin WEAVE

BOB'S H.ATING &amp; COOLING
SYRACUSE

101 CIIIIIIIIIOIIUI·Owntr

992-2621 or

99~t.641JU

SWEEPER REPAIR

Listenin1 Devices
Huring Aid Sales &amp; Service!
CJ Hearinl Evalua)ions For All A1es

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

z

-

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

•· A Great (onibinalion"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO - Eml •u..:..
992-6110

8

POn·tlmo LPN n - o t Midd•on EJttt• working wtth
Otriotrl.._
MR Clldw_..lftCl.
- - - II
hrs
.• • wk. • ..,..,
com.:~:

Dortht H•rpw, M•diCII

Caordln•or. 814-441-71U

Doa't Taka It So H•r•
- 40 l111't Fatal!
Lovt,
Mt B•ll &amp; Dl•l

Yard Sale

7

WANTED
DEAD 01 AUVE

Wod., 3rd hou• P., J...,bo.
ClniiiiiiY:
h.,d111ct.o
loolt. clothing. 1o1o ol goodioo.

••to.

:;:::::~:;;;::::;;:;:;:;::::=
~
8
Public Sale

a. Auction

•Washers •D ryera
•Range •F reezera
•Refrigerators
"Mull It Repairable"

Cltl 114-317-

.

We c•• for II dirt¥' 11"1 d hmdi-

CIP5Md In our homa Zl .,..,.

infornwtlon.

Schools

.1 5

lnatruction

RE·TRAtN NDWt
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUfGE. 528 Jo... on Pika
Cel lt4-44fl.4357. Rog. No.
111-11·101118 .

Wit do lowno: CoM 614-4417463.
.;_:..;__ _ _ _ __
Wit mow tow.._ ctii514-37S.

2807.

Wll WI lor tldlrt;' men or
In my home. S14-867M02Mytlme.

WGI'I'IIn

tfyoutnJo\r 1 chlll ..oeworkJng
with peOple &amp; WMklnd houra.
takathetn.toreed1'*td. Thlt
It for 1 20-hr pooltton In o
oommu'*v areup home for
.,..,..wlth...,tlo-tlolttl!tl•too In Gellpotlo. Hoo: 8
a.m..·lp.m., l.t/lun: 2·hour
~tt ftlff mMtlntJ or •
otMrwl•• ech•dulad. High
lohoot dtgr-. wtld .........
lla.nte a CJDod clrtw lng riOOrcl
good oommunlc•Uon • orgll"'lzatk)n tldlll. puftCtull. &amp; ditto
worlltl pert rtf t t..n require.t
working wtth pM~one wllh
m•ll r«•ctltlon • d• . , .
m.WII ••bill I• pre~..,ed, but
not roquir.t. ltiOIV: 1421/lr..
lo . - . 8ioll/V10otlon/Nfo in-

Bruah Hogging. In .-d lrOUnd
Roctno ••· c.on &amp;14-9482177.

dO odd Jobt. _'!l'rd worto.
e*n1ina. •c. tl. OOptr hour.
114-!148-24&amp;3.

Wit

R..llble hou• Pl6nt•. ve"ltl to
ptlnthomo•lorlon. 304-7731477.

frtl.llll. ldl

..p..

lend ,.....,...
to Cooltil lllcw, luolclll'l Com..,nllylerviooo. P.o. a..

1uiW'I• ._. .....

~,--::--;--.,..,...--

21

BUI_
i neu

Oppo. rtunity

eo"
De-•

Horlld DltOIIch Newopep•
Cerrl• needed. Dlltvtry ar•
ln&lt;*lclto. Rl. 7 (C,_n Clr; •
GtHipotlt, Rs. t4t.l53.. 218.
to M•u.v•~ Muat: h111e rill•
W• tr8tepcwt8tion a ct.l:llnd•

tNOTICI!I
1HE OliO VALLEY PUILtSHING CO. NCIImrftll't. 11tll you
do tulln- with p_,l• you
know. Wid NOT to .,.d mo,.,-

throuah thl m .. untl you h.,e
lrwlltlglttd tM off•lng. . .

t.lo...ttO..oM•••:tt04-12128:tiO.

Love ctoll•1 _ _.,.tho
n.,.ott party pt., _ . _ Inti
Fun job wtlh hrol No
oolocxtng or dltlv-al Col
lt4-24fl.l313 todlll' lor .,
lntii'VIow. ·

Broke? Work own lwa., •• •
d.,.onltrltor for the nfiW
Uoyd's ,.-tv r.--1 No lnv•·
Fun job! r• • IOOidt. No
t~•l"!~rino or cottollllngt Alto
booking ...... ell llei1y Cor·

....,. •. 114-241-l:lf:\ "'"""'
GOVEIINMENT JOIS
•11.~118.230 yeow. hlltng. Cll (11 80!1-U?-1000
En "·MOl fDr c:urr ... facllrll

tltt:

Hornee for Sale

31

..... -

. . ._

1/2 ' " '

tot._11!!•'11• Jlll'od rd. 1&amp; min.

............211-1200.

20'o. Cll 6 t4.

Vlnt101: Tolltly -dtl.t. 2 bl ..
t.ou11 on one ~• A ppr*..t

2e.eoo. Mltor IPPIIna. lncludod•o,_ . ..,...curtllno.

_..· In
t21,100.
Clth
....
hot ........
-·
124,000 ,.... - - with
down p.,mn. C.,tllle lnl•
... eel buyero ... ....... Col
I 1~3111-1482.
'
3ml.. lromt_,, 3bl.. 2Who.
home. 1 112 ec:r• m/1 24x32,

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335-915-3561
We Service All Mokao
S-4-89-1 mo.

Homo Pork.
7431.

Prl• Mobile

Joolcoon. Oh 4&amp;140.
tor oppttclnlo: 1-1 .. 11. Equot
opportunlly ..,plaror.

tor bel'-on&amp;

A.. "' o•ogel Mli.OOO. C.OH
~~~~4246.

.0M!l
For

1111~

9

Wanted To Buy

or 114-441-

3 br., 2

o•oga pool.

firepl~ee.

A-C/. .8,500.

A.On• • • !.a.te broils(. clll
304-171-5104. or 304.871-

11321.

TOPCAIHptldfor 1113010dlt

111-COUhif
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS

Su1an K. Ma1h
Pallln1

LOll. 13 lnCih IP'fO tiN .,d
whHI btluA• Oilt Onwe 1nd
.......... Colt lt~H:Z.2787.

PltioSII•:I-12· 18.'*'/INn&amp;
3mL, ~etHoll•on110.wetch

Heppy Ade

H•••v Blrth••v

t211. _ . d for Ntvm of biWCII
found . . .d of 4 ,.....
Mtlgo High J1111e 4. 114-H:Z.
1201.

2 mL. oft Rt. 7. on Bull•••
AddiOon 1141 .. Sot.. 8-3. Sun..
Mon.. Tu• .. 8-1.

6·5-'19-1 mo.

or at

GIEG BAILEY

•• ....._. Colt :10~171- 7ll74.

8t Vicinity

POMEIOYI OH.
992-6872

Veterans Memorial Hospital

K and J CONSTRUCTION

-\l!llod..

.......G.allipolis ..........

222 East Main

446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
AvllltHI, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Mulberry Hets. Pomeroy, Ohio

HIIIIVEY II MtiiiNO:Hound. brown &amp; while. Rodnt¥

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

mo.

Dependa~le

:c

Lon or Stolen: 3 yr .• old f~mll•
Shoplwd. 11-* • - · Wowtnv
ftMooll•. Yi..,lr; al Mt. Clrmtl
• no11 •tctoe ""·Col 114-241113!1. oft• 4 p.m.

·
- l~dto Shopping PI••
PwklngLDt .,... K~ lnshilor
out. Con -Ill' ootor• omount

P• •!tONI • OWIB

Mts.

P!ko II. Kon., go OtMipollo.
Evontno Cook .,.,,. In poroon.
No phon• Cilia.

Lot for R-.t : ...

U.rge Supply of looket
Weaving Suppll•
Sign up now for Buket

10:00 'Til5•00

Hon• llct; to lv•ln for co.•
tlaht hou-ork. colt 814-441-

Help w..tod: Hatidlr h.,, 450

Malnt.,8'101 pWion wlftted to
llvo
In lor opt. oomptec. Col
304-17!1-&amp;104

.... colt ....... , 4-248-1375.

OPEN MOST SATURDAYS

Wanted

114-241-8781.

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

WNvingCIMIM

Situations

'Mil blllyslt In my hoM Reao1'1111111• l'ltel. Rlfw_..CII wll•
blo. ........,.. _ _ _ Cltl

FA EE ESTIMATES

~;;::~

H~~rlll St... Hause nQW wlclng
tppiiOII~na.

1B Wanted to Do

Vinyl Silling
StanMu GuttH
Rttllacemaat Wlnclows
llown IMulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

51taN, edit. ~ ..:1
print trn1 from flllfl10tY·

wv 25150.

12

Mastic - Certalot.,.l!&gt;

XD7SOO

P!-ont.

W1nted: En•a-ic::. pepla ar·
IMted. t..m m.mblr/DENTAL
HYOIENt8T to join '"" prectlco
lui 01 J1111·llmo. MUll bo
---~to Pf'8CIIOIIn thlltlt•
of OH .. hp. holptot but ·nol
roq'd. -lnttoworlo.,.cf.Stnd
us your .-ume to I • cl1 201
cl o Gelipotlt Dolly Tribuno 82'
Third lAw .. Gllllpolle OH
461341.

INSULATION

WORD
PROCISSING
TYPIWRITER

asr_

2282.

....

c_....
an a - - ,
..................

of,.,,..

..

F...... •d . . . P•OWiaot
ho-.F....,ti.OO.IIepoo.Tu
" ' - " ' · ,., _ _ Awtt•

btl ......... Coli _ _ ,._

1·11·411-M41 1 ... H tl22
follotlntt.

.. - - ·a-.......
Un- llld
....
•••IPort.

ltot"'-n. . . . . . . .......
,. . . . . . ...... trlt-

="='a:"
...-.
.......
. . . . k-=~aij

AUI-

!lilT _,_...;.s• to so• ..
IIONY CASY •• 3• to 20• ..

, _ _ hou•• w...-

Ju'* Cora w1e• or wl&lt;hout
- · Coli ......, U.ll¥ 114-

.. 40• ,..

.OilY

I 14-4411-007ll.

• o....

u,

•viiAGr CANS -·· 501 ,._

Home For loto: 3 lo.. home
cent.e lir. ga h... lo~ed on
!•I' lot IPPraa. 2 mL . w.t of
- · ... lt. Rt. 31. Col

Rt. 7 to tiOdo fol 3 boctroom
lrol•. Coli . .~. .2-1332 for
_.. 1pp I otu:u:t.

--!1.

ISftjact lo Cha19
Witltcout Notice)
CUAN AUIIINUI
ClEAN AIU.AIM

luidt-Ponttoo. 1111 l!ootom
Aw.. Otlllpclt. Colt I 14-......

............
11........3111.

Paying today
May 31, 1989
SIIEE1S - - - -.. 52•

and n•• ullld o..._ lmlt"

ant~ Atao wood •

9AJI-7PM

Classified

01 col

J&amp;L

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Tuesday Evening
June 13
At 5:30 P.M.

OH 4&amp;701,

5-17-tfn

GENEIAL CONTIAOORS
Refarenceo
t1-1&amp;-'88-tfn

MARTIN'S
.FURNITURE
and MORE

••• •...,••••••

,.

WATER SEIVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIIT HAULE~

a. Auction

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

'

ALLEN'S
HAULING

AU MAKES AND
MODElS

Public Sale

honw.
Pit Bull.

114-143-1421.

"Free Eatlmat11"

8

rod

I. c/o Pt. Ple•ll'lt
Retlit1w. 200 !111111 81., Pt.

801; I

1

I 14-18!U074 wootul~t~t 8-5.

17 month old St&gt;ta. Sp.,od.
.,.,,. 11~H2-7471.
FnNt puppl.. to

to oper•t• photo-

m....

Alhono

Giveaway

Gorman lhoplw

hr~on

pr.-.lng .......... in .....
rlltlll bu1in1U. ltend ...,me to

UCENSEO SOCIAL WOIIKER
Eohoint Mo-o R•ldlnlltl
Coni•, • ICF-MR fiCIIr; It
foollint to Ill • podlon of
Ilea eel •OCIW wor• wt.
both atM• a fedlrtf
requirll'l'lefttl. thol• qutlfiCIIIoM MUll In'*' cit 0 bociMton

r-..me • ref. to Echoing MI ..
dawt. 319 Wilt Union St.

tltitm:

l·I00-42t-3S35

cotii1~441-IIZ2.

tn«t peny should ••d

Plo. 614-992-1479
log. 614-992-2417

985-4141

....

NO SUNDAY

4

1600 GALLON

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING S. REPAIRS

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

Mar.kttplact

•

112-2145.

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

AIIIi 11 un" e1111:111 s

REPIESEHT AllY£
302 W. 2nd Strut

CHESTD, OHIO

INIULATION

PH, 949-2101
or Its. "9·2860

"DOC" VAUGHN

Certified liCW~ ..d Shop
5 -2!-'88-tfn

304·675-3161

•BLOWN IN

...

SYIACUSf, OHIO

Far ..,, lnfornsa tloll

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

•
••

belli Cllt .lynW.., •• :104-

S.-tu~

FREE ESTIMATES

MARCUM

33407

Number 1
r1. r•l • l r f - - TJtf lllllHT TD

Demo-Sal•. Frtd_,.l.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

GuttBrs
Downspoute

11011.-PII• 9 -·6 PM
SAT.: I -12 lloon

NElli LISTINGS NEEDED -

Small .1!fa OL \109•

rz

.

Jtlll Trussell ..... 94&amp;-2610
DoHit Turtter ..... 992-5692
Jo Hill .............. 985-4486
Olllct................ 992-2259

All YARI£TIES

• I'IUUI fiFECTIVl Jf/tiE

GOOD

STREET - This nice II!
story home features 3-4
bedrooms, modern kitchen
wth dining bar, storms &amp;
many other features. includes trailer lot. Call lor ap.
poinlment.
$25.500.00.
PRICE REOUCEIJ'r
·
Henry £. Cleilitd · •

HERR'S SNACKS

h ... I _... . ., Eltt. .WIIV .Awn
Cll'l hllpyoubatMa..tycuc-.

f'utl.timem ... cotl*•orv....,.
nld~~t 1Dr 1 l.tlr -.uiNed
Phrt•lci•'• ofla... •c. Wtillt1.
no lhifl work. •pt, In ,..an to
Mediool
203 J .......
Flk• ~~~~- t:30.5:00p.m.

AH..,tlon Muslc:l.-sl Lac..
CDUntry "o-*: poup n•clngl
•••• kerbo•d .- dl ar •••
ou tt• muc~.c~-. It lnt•-.tld.

NEW- REPAIR

Coppar end More

cm011 SCIIEII

POMEIOY - 2 lots with pos~bilities. Septic and elec.
avaiabfe. Lots of shade lrees.
$2.500.00.

MIDDLEPORT - 6.09 Beautiful Country Acres close to
town. 3 bedroom Mobile
Home, small bam, and hoo-·
kups lor a 2nd mobile home.
$21,900.00.

· ~------------------~
You'll Feel GREAT
When You Give Blood
thru
Red Cross Bloodrnobile
Wednesday, June 14

TABI.EJ$

•
''
I
'
I

VISAIMASTERCAIID '
Ul CHIIIIGE -~~~~- r•
IJirdl•• of crtclt t•tne. Clll
nowt 213·125·1805. u1.
U2124.

Molt Foreign 1nd
DomeMic \lehid•
A/ C Serv;ce
All M.;or &amp; MinCM"

. ROOFING

MY·T·SHOP

POMEROY- 2 story lrame
house with 2 bedrooms and
bath, with wood floors and
some vinyl covering. ASK·
lNG $6,000.00.

I

· ANSWERS QUESTION - Ozzle Newsome answers a question
from the crowd during Saturday night's lund raising dinner at
Eastern High School

5-1 1'-1 mo. pd.

NEW LISTING - SMITH
ROAD - Approx. 35 acres
ol vacant ground, with a 51o
10 acre hayfield and the rest
in woods. Approx. 1500 ft. ol
Road Frontage.
JUST
$16,900.00.

-

'

'·

FLA • MIR•ICE
FREEZER

~· .

43020 St. Rt. 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1-614-992-3564

HYSELL RUN- Really nice
11nch w~h 1 gorgeous kil·
chen, huge family room, big
living room with fireplace,
plus a trailer hookup. All
quiet and peaceful on approx. 20 acres. $49,900.00.
Tanning bed and supplies
may also be purchased.

-('

Just w.m to ••n • little ettre
moMtf? Or would ¥01.1 Ike to

HVAC ln.tal• WMI.t lm.,...
d.t.,, Murt H 1bla to work
uneupervil«&lt;. Stnd •u• a
Milt¥ -.ulremnuo:loxCLA
200. o/o Gtltlpotlo Dotty TribOnt. 825 llllrd Avo .. OlltipoNt.
Ohto 45131.

1-13-'ll·lfn

PUBUC
IECYCUNG

Harry Leffle
20 Yurs hperience

POMEROY. OH.

,,I '

Help Wanted

Pt••·

INSURANCE call:

Plumbing • Pl11t1r
Repair • Painting
Electrical • Carpentry
"Wt fl1 Al•ttt Alftltlot"

-

..

992-2269
EVENINGS

11

Help Wanted

AVON · AI • -· C.l M..,n
WI•• 304-D2-2e41.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE ·

1·8·'88'tln

Newsome signs autographs for some young
Brown Fans alter Saturday night's dinner.

co.

·-

3/17/18 tin

DWIIa. GIEG

hulaa-Ce.IW.ISI
O.t Dop.t StrMI I a

. · ...
...

BILL SLACK

..... &amp;

It. 33 llertll of
P-aroy, Ohio

CONSTIUCnON

IUinll Will$ IS.OO
FLAYS llht 'n Up 15.00

,,_,

•FIREWOOD

hr•l1•tt••t

992-7479

ROUSH

ANGIE'S
, GIEINIIOUSE

.. ,.... .

Rome

Sot. 9·6
Ctoaed Sunday
949-2969

4-25-tfn

0

•

•LIGHT HAULING

IUYSVIll, OliO
614-662-3121
' Authorllad John
D-•· N- Hotl.,..d,
Buah Hog Farm
Equpment o..tor.

4 / 1 / 88/tfn

•Mobile HomePerta
•Mobile
RantII a
•Lot Rentals

AI .....

or 992-7121

614-992-2171

•

SAUS &amp; SDYICE
u.s. n. so un

11

I I IIJI"I''"'III
,)I;/ v 11 , 1' '

~\UtM1hour. CI1304-171-

YAIDMAN MOWas
ECHO SAWS &amp; Til-IS
OIEGON IAIS, CHAINS

•

,,

BOGGS

61

MOBILJ
HOME PARK

VISA· MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7

•

. ON SALE NOW AT
SEARS Ill MIDDIIPORT

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Alte TrlltMittle•
PH. 992-5682

luilt On , _ lot

•
•

FIIEI ESTIMATES

IISIDINTIA &amp; tO-OAL

. IUStNESS PIIONI
.. 141 992-6550
,IIStDINU PHONE
16141

WOODEN IUILDINGS

".

'

'iofmi-llnstallation

YourPhon1
C1.ble BUio Here

RYAll SIIVICE CEIIIIR
• - &amp; Servlct On

•
.,

•

.I

We c...y Flo'*'tl luppll•

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

'

•

•SHRUB S. TREE
TRIM end REMOVAL

7

Howard L WrltiHI

SALE

•

1

'I

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NO SUNDAY·

2·S.I!tl

•

Now IGcalion:
161 North Soctld
M'dJI •• rt. Ohlt 45760

Day Dl' Night

FOR

........

PI.UMIJNG &amp; YUIIIIr.l

The Daily

Business Services

(HAIN UNK FEN&lt;ES

or 111. 949·2160

, _ ,... bil!l) 1111!011.
Wo r., •so.oo '• Gonoo
o•., I 10 Pooplo •uoo

..

,,

Ohio

=

..... Cltl 14-lla.

"S~
:r:.' ~.:.:.:
..

11~7U.

SfAIIIISS -·---10' ...

992-5 14.

I..DcB.cl Off
At
of flltL
t

I

'

• tor
.

�1989
Vollovf ..Mure
,._. •d uNd tlrnltu,. lnd
........ _ Coii14-441-717Z.
Houn .. l .

"'----~---- .

lio•1 riding-. 11 H.P. 42
Inch lilt. UIO. CoM 114-441:1714.

-

........... ......··-·

-

_...,

~

-· -·,.

...._,.17 Lon ....

wtlh -

II' I " : .

y;v

....., 31 hp - w l h •

- -...............
Ia.. .
,_,

1 - old.oo.,...wlh-~

Television
Viewing

llnotni•..,•-•AIIn- ·•
-oon*lon Cei:II .. IIJ.Z7'70. .~·

- · · - - pod/ .71. Col
114-3111-1107.

1:00 (J) lolwlu: 'l1le Loot
lplndn
• CJl (I) • Cll • • a
(J) Ia Jw... l 11nbl"1
Of.,_,._
Ill,._ Of Choice
(!) lin ding IIIIIIIMwl;l

t

.......
=..:.:--.:::.."= i
-MOIII,J lrlno. Iliad • •
0 nrall•• C"'- Cell 114- :

..:,-11
....
22__
11._
' ,~;..,.--,40"':"':'hor•• :
.....,.,
m•c
.......
10 wRh
p _._ _ .,.,_,.top

..

I

Roddng Clltlr. -

·-

.. d

.---Ia•'
114-2411-1218.oil

-·

COl
'

lld•ly· lld• refrlgN•tor.
_ . . , t l r.I 14-7UZ1107.

Cornploto lno of Olk clnlng

=:o;:,o';:":::;:a.o;:
ForSeJeorTrade
price "" lntorlor end _ , _
Pittobur.,_LYOUworktoo
h•dto-wlh _ _ g_ Jolor Duro A f'tmn
Point PlirL 2411 Joclloon AW.. Trocrtor. Cnto ~mpllll •• Col
304-171o4014.
I 1.. 812·11010 ell• 1:00 p.m.

.............. "' . ., . , pom.
1x12. low weeo., Mollohon
FurnltuNo lit. 7North0oHipollo.
DH I 14-441-7444.

66

BuMding

S upplie1

' ' I ill
1\

lbl-ld ......... 1/2ml..
Jorrloho lid. Pt. - - wv.
... 304-1711-1410. '

71

Auto'• ForSele

lulling Mot•l•
....... brldl. plpoo, -LHntolo. ota.C-·toro. Rio Clnndo, DH. Cll

~

I

ll J I

I

[, I

114-44111312.

for Sale

•

ltal.mMit. Ju1t r.model ....
dry ............,....

w......

·

tor. In Pom•CII'· 114-14&amp;-21121
or e14-,.J.Z84&amp;.

12.70. 3 br.. 2 .......... ..... - - typo Win-~
u..-JIInnlna P~- tor quldl
..... ,__.sMollleH.ne .......
II 4-4411-1102.

2 br., homo Mt. V.non Ave..
Prwl• ..,...,._ no pllo/t:IIO,
,.. mo., ..,1 dopoolt. COl
304-171-21171
2 or 3 II'.. homo . , . _ •

a•oo•

No p•o. CtH 304-17113431, or 30 .. 1711-3030.

Fu"*hod 3 rmo.. II botll.
ultfllh; ciMn. no_jJitl. lull•bl•
far Rot. II Dip. -~od.
Ctll 11 .. 4411-1111.

u:; ,.. ....... ------------------ ·.

p.m.

n... tor ••• or_, AntiQ.. 42

cloning ttlllo tor .... COil
I 14-4411-0127 ottor 2 p.m.

Mobile Home•
for Rent

2 BR. lurl'lilhld or aeml-'

. '""-··· .
. . . ......Ina·-.. . ._..
1'111¥ ..rnllhod g.-ogo

1171 ElaOno. 1411711. 2 br., 1

81 .. 4411-1111. or 11 .. 4411-

. . . 7p.m.

1111 _...,._

,.,'liD wn Ex-

pondo. lot.
.....
- - ••
ronlld
Coll14-2411-1211.

11111411711. 2blct-VIdo~... AI ,__14 .Prlood upon
lno-lononl¥. 304-112-HU
. . . . . . . . . . with . . . .. ,
- · I n Lobonon T-NNp.

w-

no. oao. oo.

Forty-- - ·
oil loll Run. -bury
T-noi!ID. • •• ooo.oo. Coli
111111y
=-~112-2720 or 11 ..

o·..... • c-

c-

1171 121110 lllrorty. Dodo.
· .,
· ....
UIOO.
Goad GDndillon.
2-3107.

. . _ -..-.. ·-o.

1178 Windler. 1411:711. u""•

Muot bo movod. 114-9121311.
121111, 2-oom.OoodCDndltlan. COl I 14-.. 2-1111. .

12 • 10 Moblo Horn• lrOftl
, ...... tlroond.. 314-olond.
Col 30 .. 17"'e131!-

open•.
1'111¥ . ., - . 1221. olut utll-

opt. AI
utllloopold•ooptolld-.,.

tlot. Col 11 .. 4411-77211.

Dip. Aloo 3 boct_,tnl.,. Col

46

7121.

•-Ina

.,...,_

.

2br.. u-Dop.IIRo1.1/2
mL of Port• on 114. COl
114-3111-. .11
2 llr .. .,rn'od. cl- II qu.._

ov _ _ , tho Olllo R.....

Coble T.V ........... Foot_.o
Moblo Homo Par~ Coli 1144411-1102.

._r.

Nloo 3 br.. furnllhtd.
¥Wd./t:IIID.No ~4112m.,
.... 141. Colll14-4411-1031.
2 Ill. Dopoolt ....,INd. In
- - Col ., .. 311-1104.

-lrod···

4br.. llf.lldop.
turb¥1
10&lt; .... Coli 114-24111122..,onlnto-

For Rorrt: MoblleH- 1411711.
3 br., 2 bill .. _ ..........
11..211-1181.

Fwni8118d

Ferme for Sele

Cau...,.d,_ltnn- 3 br..

2 bllh&amp; ooll'/t24,111 II up.
- o u r - . Col 1-11 .. 11117311.

•1n1 - . 1..-11 yord. 314
Third lt. Ken ...... Dill 114~7473.

2 br.. 11'111• In oou ntry. coli
114-37t-2431.
Nlc:.trol• tor-: 141111, coli
• 14-4411-1147.

.. Moblo homo tor - . 2 bodrDOml. IM d Hll Aold. J04178-3134.
3 -tnonlh
-··
.....
lc. .200.00
pw
plut
ut•l-.
304-

--

- n d Aw. Col 114-441SIMI!Inl

&amp;MidfDr ... e.OnetotllfeMr•in

AlMon .......,

OM . . . .

A.,.rtment
for Rent

fu...hod Apt., 1 br., U...... L
ell
polcL Coli I 14-4418121

ut••

2br..

-•relrtc.. furl\.-•

Pilei. Utoo•llt. 7. coli 814-44113140.

tote

wlhrlwlrlrorrtogo. pullllo-•.
c... 1 - ~·- 304-1711-

••pot,

zua.

2 br.. opt.. now pluoh
now point, utllltloo ,..1111¥
AIIIIDrl,. Ioiii bul- lot&amp; D01dlt171 1110- col 304-171- · - pormlttiC( public •104. or 304-1711-1311. or
- · · ....... reduotd. Cl¥• 304-171-1704.
- J r . 30.. 1711-2331.
- - - - . : . .·- - , - - - : PutMift Caunly. 2'7 _.., brlak

roomo wlh oooloiOCI

AlooTroi•-AI-CAII oftw 2p.m. 304-7731111. Muon WV.

48

Space for Rent

•001'1'1
. .lntoppiOII-tor
2 ....
••beaut&amp;, ....,

-· ••130 ...................... _ - · - d
....... ooun&amp;y wet• ·•lllble tr•h .,..,,.. _prowld1t M. l l n1•
tiO.OOO -IIIII• Mo· • - •• ~v~ng ·- to ollop,., CouiiiY l i t - ·
plno ...... .,d - • For
1 7 . - • • - I M o l : d ..... ln-16noo130..11J.
78•11.'7.43-11. 1 -•or 1711-I.O.H.
11 - · ~ood
~;z-:•-lW.(Co.

t_._

·-ov- 1--..,...... ._ . . _

• -~~C~'"t• tloo
- - -Ired. ·
-lid.
304-171'1a0
-1711-2721.
- o r .... UIO. 4:00.
'
In MIH- 2 - - _,,.
nlohld opt, . _..... end '"""

..... 30 ..112-lltl.

54 Mile. MerchendiM

S.b¥' lopp1d . ..s rebblla. 2
white mete1 • .1 bleak fe·
molo./010 ..... Colll14-4414110.

For Solo: llodl AIIC roglotPDm•MI• pu ... 3 mil-. I
w ... old. noo. Coli 114-44110174.
..

A.K.C. Dobao....,, bo.,llful
bluo
2 yn./fiiO. Coli
otter 1:0011 .. 4411-1127.

""'*

o

For Solt · eon... end Pllltlc
loptlc tonka. AI oil•. RON
EIIAIOII ENTEIIPIIIIEI. Jocll- AKC Chow Chow pui'Pioo tor
. _ OH. 1-100-1:17-oolo. 114;742-3010.
' .
AIR CO MPIIEIIOIII
floh Tonk. 2413 Joduoon Aw,
C-pbol llou1fold UIA
A&gt;lnt P I - 30..171-2013.
10101111141 t14.H•d..10 . .
2 HP-IDOI pump. 20 ... ..,lc. complete t43.21.

~;::::;;:;;;===

- 2 7 · · -........
- ........
lilY •
to-from.
' "·
Country Mollie H.n• Plrk

Route 33. North of PDm•o,.
~ - • · ,........ Col

114-. .2·7471.

Yl'llo ,,.....,.

49

For

Leete

Le••

For
Aplltmlnt. n.-avdecor•K 2nd floor, oorner
Second II Pin a Golllpolo. On•
beet....,_ • - II rolrl-or,
Mt• provldad. Dlpoel end
................ t221. ...
month. COli 114-441-4241,
11 .. 441-44211. .. 114-44112321.

IWIMMINO POOLIO 1111
-thohootwltllo..,go 11•31
poal. " - .............. ft~• •
- · Col 2• lro: 1-11003411-0141.

I WAIN
AUCTION II FURMTURE 12
o ... lt .. Oolllpollt.
NI!W · I pc. wood group. t331.
LJva- rODm ......., . . . .181
....
·

1-41121.

Don't make• move Wlttl:tut us.
Coli U·Hou1.304-1711-7421.

.......... 1 ........ -

w•

...

kit. .,.,. dollwory. -44

Ideo pul-typo -log
moohlna Ooodoonlltlof\ '3110.
Col 11 .. 742-3031

.l-.. .

fit•. •
·~. .'. ,. :~ ·~;·
-..--.lntlollllon llllnono- , l_..,M'ogloOinnov,ollnotrv-

-.~u...:.~,:-: : - : . :

JIMI FNIM IEOUPMENT
RTUWIIT .
IIALUPOUI. OHIO 41131
NIW IHINNIU 21HP Dian
TIIACTOII WITH:
•
ITANDA ·RO CAT.
NUM. 1 .3/PT HITCH
N1!W I' KINO KUTI!R RO.
TAllY MOWIR
N 1!W I 11~ KINO KUTTER
OIIC
NIW IGNO KUTTIII 1 IIOW
CULTIVATOII
NIW lUNG KUTTER POTATO
PLOW
NEW KINO KUTTER I'
ORADIII II.ADE
NEW fiiiTIUlER II OIIA88
SPIIEADIR
NIW DIIT ICOOP
TOTAL VALUI ti.III.OO.
NOW All FOR ONLY
tS.III.OO.
N1!W IMI'J!MENT. KINO KUT·
Till PAIITI. IIIIVICE
ADDCfiONALITRINO COMI'AIII DICOUNTIRID
3 oil otool •oh bulldlngo.

Now ocooptlng otudontt tor
plene. argon. . , . . end kov
bo•dlng. Coli 114-812-7141

poal. Huge dlok. ftn01.

-For..
oond .. coli 114-

·

10•11 2 •zz. 700 . • 14.180- Cotlll'1411411-3001.

••-=

II It llftor '""' bolt with
-·.10--.Evlnruclo
....... coli 114-4411-2218. or
114-441-2030.

ZIIII-M22.

- ..- 'liDO- ...
-12
-· · · .,
- 11110; ...
11110;

I

For
2 tractor tlr• 1111 '"*k*181 • • • t•I(Jf'll. be13-1-21. Colll1 .. 317-7141 . . gin .... -IJIIorlot. INI• • • Mutlc. 114-441-0117.
.loll W-11;.;-•· ., ..
IWIMMINO POOllt 1111
l . . thohootwlho..,go11•31 4411-1077, l
~anonlngo.

IElaflt
f&lt;~-44~-2711.
- - - · • · Col

-or

ralla/*711: NH •q_uare
lrol•l Olll!c 414 lnt'l Dlot.ol
with lnt'l IN¥ ...,...
t1Drw.lnt'144 ~q&amp;~~rebll•wltl
pul-typorollwt4110- Coii14-

ftWIIL flrol .
304-11:.2011.

ow

___
a._v_eg_e_u_b_le_•__

8trawberrlel-plck yaur awn.
Cleudll Wlnttu.

0-

1111 vw llobblt. 0 - · ...
lnlllltd. tlr. Roll nloo. n4011.
1810
Ornnl.
Col
11....2-1112.

.'liDO.

1111 · - - 4 ....... Hlth
m10111o .- . . , oondltlon. 2
door.
114--1101. no
lundl¥-.......
1171
NoW ......

"'*•

ford,__

....... ...... .1 zoo. ''" •. \

. . Ia&lt; · - ..... 112-17...
•kfDrDoa.

1171
oond••

•.

Cot-

2•..

Ponlloc. ac.
~11r'ledi!.C.•

304-1711-1111.

a

Llveetock

RID

lleg'ldCluort•HDI'IoMor•ond
4 yr. old rog'ld Ouort• Horoo.
Ooldlng-hoo bo"' thownWelt., Pl. .u... 0.1 11~
211-1122.
I - 2 bo~ II plgo-11,.
hogo/11100 tor ........ Coli
1,.. 1711-21011.

:;
. ••

.,. q

:I

• )&lt;

g....,

73

Ven1il

4W.D.

Of-

-•It•- •-••:

=::J

Brace Beattie

lr

,,II:.J1111i..fl Ill

' '

'...

82 · Plumbing
&amp;

H•tlntl,

'·'
'

4.-

MYPROPITTY!!

Cll-

. _. . . . . . .--d

l'LL L'ARN THAT
SNUFFY SMIF NOT
TO TRESPASS ON

' DON'T

SHoen.

__ __
84

Ellctllcll

-- -··.

. ·• • R.t•le•...tton
....;.,
..;·.:
~:.._

homlr ........

-12000- Col""""•
a II?S
...._ ..
114-....

tro-Graph, clo IIIIo - - · P.O.

Box t1428. ~. OH441D1-3428.
a...,. t o - your- olgn.

..._,,.....-:--,-...,..--.==--71 Auto's For S1le

C~IIC- (.,._ 21......, Ita) Kelp
Pllllillll tllld comm-It todey..,..
H M Ia lncort¥tnlen1 lor you to do oo.
People you Ill dewn or dlooppol~t
tiki
lightly.
LIO
II) n iooka like coIll bMted with kid
. . . . ,,.., ........ of
181· "DO!fl do not perllcl-

BERNICE

BEpEOSOL
'

_,.t

..

- ... of-..........

Dlw• II

Ill ....

10:all • • • ~.~A

~-llrugglol

;:,..=.,'C .
..... ca. ••

Gf

I

Ik

I CIIIGIIIIIII

..... "IIOIIan RaciiCIII.
1171111)

=JL::r~=~~
-Oibolll...,

Uo.t...,...,:;w--..,_
........,411&amp;! .........

11111 I'DII. a

..,..,......,,=

c::: ....

l
''.11:!! :z=-

• ••
•;•;..-..,u...jiiiOI...,..
......
tt"'•-v-·~:. ,.
_...l:,_;..,;;.....;..___
.
...
.,

.

.•. ..--.•.....'-',...--,.....
_... ....
~

-~

'

"I don't know where your bell wen!, but I've

found your dlvotl"

1110 II eo.lno ... '"' ...,

---~~~~~~.-.....
"-a'r
t2.

00. ....

.... ____

-~~~ Cl IO. .In ....................1 Coli
JCI4-111·4U4 for tru
__..
~-~ . . .::;.:.;.;;'"'::.;•;;;.......,...
11 •

I

=~···

,~

'

..

YwCIIIIA . .

~

':~·

. ··:,

,~·

..

l _l,.,u,... ••

'

1 Morsel
8 Contour
11 Greek
· latter

12 Place ol
safety

.,

3 lace
again

"

4 Coneumad
5 Exemplar
8 Aclor,

13 External
14 Revise
Martin15 A Filipino 7 Noah's
people
son
18 Primate
8 Haill
23 Secular
34 Ovemead
18 Golf term
(lat.)
24 Art
35 "Sunllowar"
11 Cheap bar t Pocket
movement
star
(sl.)
item
28 Air-dalense38 Emissary
24 Acler
tO Windup '
group
31 Hack
Johnson 17 Common
(abbr.)
40- Khan
25 Director
or
27 Bird
41 Dracula
Kazan
cotter
28 Billro bill
on the wing
28 Belial
20 Food
2t Deduct
42 Carpenter,
2t Dawdle 21 Badly
31 ltsy·bltsy
e.g.
30 Rumanian 22 "Diamond 33 Type
44 June

city

•

baatle

of race

w1

.,

•

: J

....

..

...

••••

..
..

31 Moisten
32 MinneiH
film
34 Neighbor

(

'

or Ga.
37 "Ever"
in an ~e

38Fan
31Junto

43kloliza

45Guam's

... ,
~

'

capital

.o{ ,1

41Witches

gathering
47 "Nuts"

•

41English

.. .,.

river
DOWN

.;
'. L-.j......&amp;-..L.....I

ermine

··DAILY CRYPTOQUOI'Ii3- Here'alltw to work It:

1111

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

~~~lhNwrt

(1] . . . .

lid. """ I A.M. • I

_.. CoiiD4-771-DI7.

a

IU1•(J)I •I ••
I'ITr

...... .,., . .. 114-44111122.
•

"

•beoomlllorlman
ea .......ofDick
what ...

11iCIO(Il Ill lllllft .....

...........
E

.A

'
.,'
Tbe player in third position has the
tJ5U
responslbUity of guiding tbe defelll!e
+AJ874
by expl't!ISing his attitude toward the
opening lead. If either tbe openmg WEST
EAsT
tutu
leader or the dummy Is going to win + A 1
•K87&amp;
that first trick, then a high card by • 4 !
tAQ 10
third seat expresaes encouragement, a . +K P 8 1
+Q
low card no Interest. The defender's ; + K 10 9 5 2
•
decision Is based upon more than just
SOUTH
-.
his strength in tbe suit led. He must
.KJ 10
judge whether the defenders' best in.QJIOU2
tu
terests are served by attacking anolh·
+u
er suit.
.
East bad nothing in spades and
Vulnerable: North-Soutb
therefore played his deuce. West
Dealer: South
wasn't sure which minor suit to switch
to, so be tried an apparently safe Sootlo
Weot Nortlo
Allpaa
trump. Declarer won the ace, came to 2 •
his band with a spade aod played the ,
nine of hearllr. East woo the king aod 1
Opening lead: +A
led anotber spade, but West was out of
.
"
trumps. So South ocored five -heart more be would have selected a differ- :
tricks, two spades aod the ace of clubs ent openiDg lead), and 10 should flq,.
to make his contract.
· an encouraging sii-spot 011 the opm- ·,
It's obvious that West should have ing lead. When a oecond spade Is
continued spades despite his partner's played at trick two, declarer can oo ·.
dlscourapq deuce, but East should longer escape loslnR anotber trick. M •
also have done better. East should re- ·10011 u Eut winl the lead, be pftl .
alize that West cat~ be leadinc only West a apade ruff, and the coatraet Ia
from a doubleton spade (with three or down one.

1 Large Eur.

~==-ellort

. . • liln1 "-• tiO. Good

......... -..~ ........ ,•. oo

-

to pi'IIIIW and IWtOrW their

..., ...... ••· o- ••

,.

s..

(I) .........

a , ..,

..

drapea In order to ...... I
.dladllnr.
. . . . . ~) Poelol

(f)Na•alntcll

Quo ........ II. I. • 10 .,"

117 I. 2•d 11.,
114-112·11• • 1, ....

T h e - Cllcldl to -

convenatlol1. (1 :00)
10:110 (J) 7110 Chill

;. ;.
~r

··-···-···
• - h with

-·•u .....

1:30111 e111 DIIIIIIIIIU WGIIIIII

. . - poa1ry and hlo eongeln quilt

10 lloyo -

...ale171- !I!II!NII,.
..... Colll1i!44i4Uibo-

¥1

Hllgglld on bollr oldll of lire
llahtl U he llocb IIIII I
NUhvlllll.-, llrln

-----130
onduptat...

IIIH I lr.. oorpetld, no

I

~when
lhonl:ut to In

... co.....

PAWU

. . . . . . . . . .d

...., m•runa ••

YOU'LL SCARE
TH' DAWG !!

NOilTII
+QI5

-'

and lire pollnllally
do\ utalb rg llllc1 ft lloa on
our llvlo. Hlgllllghtl IICIIndllc
~who are
abrnl)llnQ to u-.tand lire
cauMa ofnoturel d1Ua1era,
In 111 elton to prtdlct Mura
. - and lotoen llrelr
.. IIIIPICI on the world.
0 llrlme TIN W111111111.111Uta

ond3bu. . Cotll14-742-3031l---------

..

ganing
slope

o~i.Uv.t

••
,.'

.
..
..

.,•

dl Dilllll Dfl DI wat liflln
'l1le a.-. Examlnra

IIU ........ ltotlo• , . _.. 4
wftN ..,.. MilA tit. 1lr,
AM-FM,Ioto,_,_,_point, t2.371.00. 304-1711-

BRIDGE

..,

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Tobog-

PiiiiWNIWI

Murphy r• 11ktc1 to glvl 11re
~ when her lrd&gt;-rlval

RENEW IT. ••

•duptotal...,._
tnD.M-orboa..,...
-.. . . -

~TO

SCRAM~.irs ANSWIIS
• .,
Riddle - Umbo - Budge - Cohort - OUT of ME .
Overheard in line at bank: "I llgure my daughter will bl
a SUC!»SI if she gets as much out of college as the college
gets OUT of ME."
·

0

Ma81ef AIC ~ NlgM
Mo¥11=2~C!OJ..Q
Ill(!)
OfThi
Wolwea (1 :00)
Ill elllllr.llr.IIIDI!IIhvhf lltWft

'PI EA-. !!END ra-.1

.:•

-

CROSSWORD

m•m
(I) e (J) MOVII: "night

lloo,.._

,,•

over 1 park being torn down.

Lat

1117. 4w- • .. Chewy 110.
•tondodJIIil,bld-.plo• - low ml-1•. oond.,
07,100. COl 304-172-1811.

Y.-

Kate

iBoniiU
IUpt .. DUII Leonard
from
Vegas,

:-..::.:.!"!::::.•.:.-::~~ 74 Motorcycle•

ld._

.(J).::c:

auction. Q
1:00 e (J) G MOVII: 'lltl AM
. - . ...,, NIC IIOIIMr
!light At 'l1le Movlae (2:00)

;;

43111\1tlln&amp;

ex:J:&gt;o

llrey takti

M.ll.
Pt*ltlng ',·
-lowlr,..a
-~F114-81J.31211
. . . . .- . ·"'1
· ·;

a:

crooked ruto repair lhOp
wlllr a hidden Clmet'll

;&gt;B.Liinuotan.~lll
Tam and
ahano o

*:t:

or .• , ....

i~ 'it ALJI ALF uncovrrs

Odell
0 Munltr, 8lle WIOII
.NIIIWIIIeNow
1:05 Cll MOVIE: DoldiJ lntentlane
(3:20)
I:IOe(J) · Olllogln l'lmllr
Mlc:hall {10M 011 Ills llrtt
dltJ llnca hlo will' I dHth.

;;:t:.ula ,::c,

8"..": =-.:-:.d ,•,-:~.;:

1:00 If MOVJ!: lrtdg ,. CNR)

Ill Trapper John, M.D. Short

, _ ,. ...,...... ,c.l ooll..
1·114-237·041.. . , or night. .,1
Roa•r•••••ment •
_ _,_..
&lt;~ 1
' •

;v

Andy Orltllth

1:18
MOVJ!: lllue Hawaii
INR) (2:00)

.. ]l

NO

(J)

~

"\1
Un . . . .lo....
...
......
_.__,
__
_
_ _,,;!,
WATIII

• c.o. And CliMe

7-.31

;'1:;,'\...
•,...
drago Allie 11110 •

OrondO, OH 11 .. 245-1121.

·- 1~3=141=-=======lMo::•:·":~:·:IA:M=to=::·

...

. .....9:

eiDJM"A'I'H

, 1111 Cnuftte
8 Nlgllt Cour1

Of 'l1le Wartd
(!)...........,.Journey to
Jndonoll't Komodo ltllnd
to 111m IIIIIHIItfng Komodo

't

. .,.

01 WhMI Of

Mac()yvtr It It oekll wlllr I
pretty pollee detective. (R) 1;1
(!) CiMIItN&amp;ta Radltcn• 't

~-~ (

~

•

e&lt;Jl UIA Todly
Ill e111 01 JJe414al.poarnlrdiJrltl 1;1

~

. ..:17;.;11.;:::::;;::;:;==.====

.,........

•.,.._ .......
.._-•m•u,.
Klntt310.4*.... - - .

"A~PW~f,
ANP NOWttf~f/

....''

· '- -

Le••

SNAFU~ by

PEopLE $/'+oY,

=--7'r.,.,.=;:.
" -'':O,',--- ·~I i
81 1 Heiml . I
~·
''

o.,....,_

1&gt;1'*

"'*

Ole, AS' $oME

=,.---:---:,..,.-...--=-,...,......,~ IWHI'!II- .....,gmoohlr)o · 11
R , .....:.. for S •' le , - ropo1r. ~ •••• Lila Plcll , ,
72 T ,,...gw
•
·~
up _.d'dillrf-v. Dnii'VIICIUum 11
- - - - - - - - - ' CIMiter. one hillf mile up •;
11714-ct..
Ooor""'
Rd. Col 114- :,
,...... I ft., Good oond.. 441-0214.
"
liM/AM C l l l l t t l ,
I
41 000/mla col 114-211- loptloTonk-tiO, Ool- • •
lo C. liON I!YANI INTIII- ~ .'
-==----.:'~:,:...
·
Pll.lt, Jicbln. OH 1··0.
1111 Doda• Carav•n . 137·1121.
NlwtMIII; 1tl2 Chewy 3
"•
quorur ton Pl~k·up, Jlm'IOddJ-Iu-o-.1 :•
o._p/N3111;
Toy010
-~~ - - · · • r'
......._
I lad 1111
t1r nd
PI P-inl
bu~.ll fiM 101-e. Col •' '
c..,Y 1,..3711-2411.
::
plolt-up. autDII'Iatlc,
•'
P.l./t171. I II 0 ........ Woe,........ polntlngllo•o- ,,
HI-- 110 Nort .. 0111 .1!.. ~f...-oot~';
:~
441--. or ll4-441-llll.
1021 or 114-317-7111.
•

ATTENTION Hor11 Ow-o. , ... v...... Vlrogo. 700 ...
or · WI• _ , . . o l l - ......l n i - 3IOo nil•. lmm ......• oondl·=lng- " " llllllln• otortlng- Dozoro, loodoro, look h-. 11r-.1oo. You
Pelnt
A_ _
Pluo. _
2411
_
JoOicoon
,.,... tlon. UIOO. Col 114-4411USED--· • - - - 1 - . To'""'-· Log tnrc1r. ploll. 8 o.m.-8 p.m. Tovlor'o
3411.
- - 0oo111, ... - . . . . . . o .... ptnrclr.Cotllo.H-Ingron. •orrv ,....._ ..,.. Rd. Col
30 .. 171-4014.
oorrrplotolnoot--..-... W.Vo. 304-7311-7111 •OIIPt 114-4411-1112 or 11 .. 241N- W- tH. lunclov.
1171.
10 yr. old pony ,..h • d • 1111 - · - · 700-CC.
Good wlh
c .. 30 .. 171o
oholl - ..
1111..
·
til
II
up.
Cltool
II
1oft t•.J COli 114-441-1111.
For Solo:
YRouoh'a 2 mi .. 1143d•l.
...
114-2411-bortlei.H-Itr-oyllolcl. South
H..on WV·County Appllonoo. loa. Good Moo tlrru F~. 1-1.
llrtlon Comp G""'nd· -lrto
11. IWIIw Dovtton
:,r.on- end T.V. ,.._ 7 112 H. P. lonGomoloMr Mondw,
J
ltl\
col 30&lt;j;
... Col 114-441-2117.
Op
M·to .PM
Mon tM Mat motor, wotor oooled. 1122.237
en
·
·
·
•
·
... 114-441-1111. 127 3rd.
A•. Gollpollo. OH.
UIIO.: llh_, I TouAiroo...,., ea--.loLPI'*y-own.Na
tiiO; 121,000 B.T.U. CJoo ......... - -......lo t.71 l'trr
T o - pou-o
0000 UIED A,UANCEI .. moco.lt100ort200farboth. "*'-I ml•-nllt. 7 - -11-o/11.,1.330 ..........
ble. -.ld •o ,..,_
w...... . _ '""~- Col 304-1711-4031.
Goltlpallo. Col 114-2111-1031.
born w•h houoo. coli 11 .. 441[;':il:!oaf..!!':.:!";.':! llrlllotollodllhtor•l• Nloo Tom11o Pltnto: •1-00 4111. or 114·441·7117.
Crllt Motel. 114-441-7311.
or-torMmminlpooi.Cotl Dor.. good-IIY.Iuotolfllt. 7
- 7 0 0 • - ..a.ooM..
304-171-14111.
II Cllpl*' Ml~ 112 mi. Ken
u. . . 1300 mi., '2.171. Col
I 14-2411-U1 4.
LAVNE'I FURNFFUIIE
"Porto Pottr• unu- ~h - - - · - · - - - . , . . . . - - lofel •d ah . . IH'kllct ..Dm oh . . . . . eiO.C)O. A...m •t_. PICik yDUr own . a..-...nl-.
1112 v... oir&amp; 11DDMAXUM. '
0311 to till. Tolrl• oeo •d lion - · •40.00. 30.. .,.. Huulll'o 8 t • - = Field.
to
upiO
till.
t121.IHlriH-I - 11321 to
t:l71. Lompo t21 .. 1121.
Din- t IOiend up to •4111.
Wood toblow-loh*' till to
t781. O..k '1411 ... 10 tl71.
H-MOO•dull.bunll-

f'/lOliAAMMIN~,

~ '·!1.

mprovlfl1elllil

-.ume

(0:30)

"'' ., I

r Vl,.l'.o

-1"

..

(I) !-Inmon! Tonight

1.

'

0441 .

83

~)I

there aren't -

ibf

(J)
. .•lnr
.. ~
Mrg
(O::fel) . .- ·

Helfte. r1 ft.~ AO~ -Ir8t0f. •
2100 lllltlllll ' ..... Muot bo

-·-::::·..:1..:1,;,
...:.81.:.':1-:,71;_:;:21:,·..:'-r - -

I

....

.,

•'

.TopC8fd

.tella.na._c ...AMotor •,

-

the first

Cpmplere lho chucklo quotod
. ....J.I.-..1.-..1.--1
by lUling In lhe mlsolng wordt
L -L.- L
you develop lrorn IIOp No. 3 below.

7:05 Cll Andy Orlllttll
7:aoeCJl ,......, feud

It

....... Corln•bouaht --Oct.
I. 1111. Corn• wlth Mrtonty,
.... ....... - d . • book
lnc./tZOO, or blot all•.
-;;;::::=:;=.;===
;;68
FR•it

Call

Food 101 - · t o r IZIIrol•.
tlndln axla trill•. ToiNicao
1.... Toboooo ltl.,..., COl
30 .. 171-2121 or 304-17112101.

1184 flrtlllrd. 17,000 ......
2.2l ............... oollllltloft. - . COl tl4-3171 or 11 ... 111-41 11.

MA U L T U

0-VIce

...,.._

Muaicel
nstrurnente

Lin....... Mon.-lot. - .M. lun. 12·1. 114-441-

lnl -IIIIo. 0111 24 In: 1·11003411-0141.

Ml:ll:iLilliiiSI:

67

lit. 141.Cont-.y; 1/4mloon

3151.

~~::'.:! l 'l,;~=~

1 br., opt., 238 llrot ovo./,171
mo.lllut ...CIIIti.Ar ... No,.a.
eon 11 .. 4411-41121
11-d - ....... Coli ., ..
112-3143 . . . 1:00 p.m.

.

Hourt: M,T,W 1Dt.m. 10 lp.m.,
lunclov 1 IO lp.m. 11 ....22121.

Fwn.. efftal.nCIIF .. utili:._ P!llld.
llh•o bot hltiOO mo. II I

furnlohtd. 3 -oorn w•h
w•hlr end dryer. No p ... C.ll
114-14&amp;-2211

44

Woollond. 132oorw .:ti.OOO.
Eurolla col 11 ..
lit. 7. -4411 ell• 7 p.m.

Room•

Nloe 3 br., tMII• wtth a~ do

1711-4011.

36 LOti&amp; Acreege

123-1114.

WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT
AIOUT THE HAPPV JACK 3•x
I'I.EA COLUIRl7!;11'.WOfiiCIIII
Comolno .NO oy ..... lc PVNt-IIIIIWillCAIHPI!EOJ
0 NORTH PIIOOUCI.

Roomt tor - - - or montll
11 441-IIIO.
t120 o "'"· Gollo
Hotol-t"1 ..

For - ·homo.
FumioMd
-moble
COli 2 114-"2·
1031.

33

orr.ntal1, qult1, Oupbo••
ntMNI o1oca. _..,, .t81-. C•l
oolloot: 304-1211-32~11. or 30..

.....hod . . .In ......
nlklhborhDod. One c• ..-811. . IIJ¥ or loll. Rlolrlno Antlqull.
1124E.-IIr... Pomorov.
wilt artCIINtlc door

1171 141110, 2 br., . . ~ ....
nM aebln•., mutt be moved.
........ tor .............. 100.
Coll1 .. 317-7114.
.,,,._ goodoond.. ooll142111-112&amp; or 114-2111-1177

Hla- ~- pold. - h far

blnw ...ll; • .,. -

"Mom,"· said

grader, "my te1cher says I'm
in the CIISS ·of2000, bull've
been counting the kldl and

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1:35 Cll c.nolllurnetl
7:00 (J) Our HouM
e (J) PM
(J) lp art1Co- (0:30)
Cll
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Ill W MraNol/ Lelwr

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.....
br.. t200.
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243, Jookoon
Pk_- -::~==::;~====
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...
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63_ _AntiquM
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Equipment
114-241-1121.
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1
.
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dryer lot; P'l,..lwoldol II • II '"d •
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like ,_/tliOO: Kenmore dry• lupply, 311 W. Moln II.
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&amp; Campen ,
;.
doond..ll o - end lupp!J - ....... ...... with JD Cluldo.. .i!f 1.'
t
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chOir ,..,._,good ........ oo1
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rauM lrol•llllll!c NH Hoy-

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a a-.

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pold, 84lolllot/ a 10 mo. t71,
dop. COl 114-4411-1340, or
I f&lt;l-4411-3170.

0 C8r1oon bpNu

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ea

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1711-17A
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. or 114-4411-

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up. U.od • robull - · ,.
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pr

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tar/HOD. Cllll14-••t111 ·!:
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. . .lolL Col 114-441-1117

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room t...rnttu.. (pr • 1ak oak
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tar/t2.
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AN E't'E ON 1-lER .. SOUNDS LIKE
51-lE COUL.D 8E 61VIN6 ~AV
OUR TROOP MOVEMENTS ...

~MIT

I'M CAAZED
WITH
JEALOUS'&lt;!

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is Uied
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apcllltrophee,the length and fonnation of the wonlllare aU
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

z8

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T XV V L '

DXZ

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... --·-- ..-----------~·~·------~--~~~----------~--~~--------~--~

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 12, 1989

POilla'Oy-Middleport. Ohio

EMS has 13 weekend calls for assistance

------Weather------

Thirteen calls tor assistance
were answered over the weekend
by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Servcles.
Nine calls on Saturday In·
eluded Middleport EMS at 9:17
a.m. to the police department lor
Sheldon Capehart who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 11: 34' a.m., the Middleport
Fire Department went to Cheshire for an au to fire. The vehiCle
belonged to Clarice Jarvis.
The Rutlan(l unit was called at
11:55 a.m. to Strong's Run Road
lor Beatrice Rhinehart who was
taken to · O'B)eness Memorial
Hospital.
Tuppers Plains was called at
1:52 p.m. to Route 681 East for
Elizabeth Brooks whO was dead
on arrival.
At 6:09p.m .. the Pomeroy unit
went to the Pomeroy parking lot
for Eleanor Redman who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Racine EMS and fire depart·
ment. and a unit from the Bash an

Soulh Ceatral Ohio
Tonight. showers and thun4er·
storms likely with ·a low In the
mid 60s. Wloos mostly southwest
about 10 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Tuesday. s bowers and t huooer·
storms likely with a high of 80 to

Fire Departtnent. were called at
Department. assisted by Racine
6:37p.m. to a tractor accident on EMS and fire department, the
Hayman Road. EMS took Cha· Chester Fire Department and
rles Hayman from the scene to Pomeroy EMS. responded to a
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
call to a motor vehiCle accident
At 9: 17 p.m.. Pomeroy went to on Route 248. Darrell Michael
Route 143 for Dana King to and James Michael were transported from the scene by LlfeVeterans Memorial Hospital.
.fllght
to Grant Hospital In GolumMiddleport went at 9:30p.m. to
.
bus.
Racine EMS took Scott
Oliver St. lor Julia Bowles to
Ogdln
to Veterans Memorial
Holzer Medical Center.
At 10:13 p.m .. Rutland was Hospital and later to Holzer
called to Noble Summit Road for Medical Center. The Pomeroy
Brenda Taylor who was taken to unlt took Charles Smith Jr. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Four calls were answered by later to Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:42 p.m.• the Bashan Fire
EMS units on Sunday.
Department
':"as called to a
AI 3: 14 p.m .. Tuppers Plains
minor
brush
fire
near Keno on
EMS and Olive Township Fire

Route 248.
At 3:48p.m., Syracuse went to
the corner ofFJ fth St. and College
Ave. for Vera VanMeter who was
transported to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
.
The Middleport unit was called
at 8:37 p.m . to the pollee
departmeni for Keith Musser
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

85. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Extended Forecast
Wedne&amp;da)l through Friday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Wednesday . fair
Thursday and Friday.

Stocks
Am Electric Power ........... 27'%

AT&amp;T ................................. 36
Ashland Oil .. .................. .. 41~
Bob Evans ........................ 15\1
Charming Shoppes ............ 16*
City Holding Co ................ 16~
Federal Mogul. ................. 27*""
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. 56~
- Heck's ................................ ~
Veteraas Memorial
Key Centurion .................. 13\i
Saturday admiSsions - Nea
Lands' End ....................... 27~
White. Pomeroy; James Hay·
Limited Inc ...................... 32%
man, Long Bottom.
Multimedia Inc ......... , ....... 100~
Satur(laydlscharges -Jeffrey,
!lax Resta.urants .................. 3
Sellers, Barbara Boling. Con/
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. 17~
Birch.
Shoney's Inc ................ ..... 11%
Suiulay admissions - Sarah , ·wendy's lntL.. .................... 5)1, .
Bowles, Middleport.
•
WorthlAgton Ind .......... : .... 22~
Sunday discharges -Virginia
' (Lands' End Inc. to buy back
Phalln. Carol Wines.
- liP to 100,0QO c~mrnon shares)

Ohio .wttery

.Ftght
ends in
draw

Pick 3
ll9
Pick 4 ·
9133

Hospital news

Page.3

•

•

June 1

1989

Elizabeth Brooks

'

Elizabeth Kathym Brooks, 64,
of Route 1, Reedsville. died at
home Saturday.
Born June 25, 1924 In Madison
.Township In Franklin County, he
was a son of the late Wllllam
Franklin and Ethel Deeter
,
Baker.
She Is survived by her hus· ,
band, Paul Brooks: and two
daughters, Ruth Ann Smith and
Barbara Ann Richards, all of
Reedsville; three half brothers.
Carl Baker, of California, and
Clarence and Bob B~ker, both of
Reedsville; three half sisters.
Lillie Baker. of Columbus, Hattie
Rockhold. of Reedsville, and
Ethel Clutter, of Elyria; five
grandchildren and five great
grandchildren. .
Besides her parents she was
preceded In death by her first
husband, Verdle Smith; a half
brother. Charles Baker; an in·.
rant son; a great granddaughter
and a stepmother.
Services wlll be Wednesday at
1 p.m. at the Eden Church.
Reedsville. Rev. Robert Sanders
will officiate and burial will be In
the Reedsville Cemetery. Calling
hours at the White Funeral Home
wlll be after 3 p.m. on Tuesday.

Maurice

'

'
-~

~~r
.... ~··ill ..

t-• ....

'

TRAILER DESTROYED - One trailer was destroyed Ia GaiDa
County and other• were blown off their. foundalions during a
tomado-llke wind storm lat~ Monday afternoon. Eyewitness and

•••

.

By MICHAEL SHEARER
OVP newa staff
TornadO-like winds destroyed
at least two trailers and cau!l&lt;'d
· power outages In Bidwell and
Johnson Ridge Monday
afternoon.
Gallla County Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury said high Wind• struck
t.~,e, ar~!l 1u~~ ~(!!~, 5 p.!fl. f'i'o
lnjul1es wer~ reported.
In Bl(lwell, one trailer was
destroyed along SR 554 while
three others were shltted a bout
two teet 'off lhelr foundations.

Maurice D. (Pete ) Ackley. 80,
of 2759 LOll Ridge Road, Guysvllle, died Sat11rday at O'Bieness
Memorial HOSpital.
Born Dec. 30, 190!J'In Carthage
Township In A.thens County, 'he
was a son ol the late Daniel and
Lena MUehle Ackley. He was a
retired farmer and school custo·
dian. and amemberoftheGospel
Baptist Church at Torch.
Survivors include his wife,
Audra Church Ackley; two sons
and a daughter·ln·law, Carl aoo
Karen .Ackley, Lancaster, and
· Richard and Sue Ackley, Burke,
Va.; two grandchildren. Lezlle
and Matthew Ackley. Burke,
Va.; another grandson and his
wife. James an(! Janlnt&gt; Thomas,
Charlotte. N.C.
. In addition to his parents, he
was preceded ·Jn death by three
brothers, Autmer. George and
Charles Ackley; and five sisters.
Ruth Varnt&gt;r, Hattie Ackley.
Emma Turner, Gertrude Bat·
chelder and Erma Blue.
Sj!rvices · wlll be Tuesday, 1
p.m.. at the White ·Funeral
Home, with Rev. Jerry Wilson
officiating. Burial . will be In
Carthage Cemetery in Athens
County. Friends may call at tht&gt; '
funeral home after 2 p.m. on
Mon4ay.

Several large trees In the area
were blown over by the winds,
causing several roads to be
blocked.
Another trailer was destroyed
In Johnson Ridge when It was
moved approximately 100 feet off
Its foundation by the gusting
winds. Other minor damage was
reperte411) t)le~r,ea.
Among eyeWitness reports.
Dennis Cooper said the winds
sounded like "a tFaln coming
through" and . said he told everyone to get In the middle of the
house. He said the strong winds

also blew his garage door off Its
hinges, sending It .flying at him.
In addition, siding was blown off
of the house.
Vance Dray said he was In his
mobile home at the time of the
Incident and said.the walls were
shaking an(! 41slles were knocked
from their cabinets. ,In addition,
Val)ce's waterbed bul'l;t &amp;J1.d his
trailer was knocked slightly off
Its foundation.
Ruby Dray reported seeing
funnel clouds, but a4ded that he
did not see any funnel clouds
actually touch down.

Bidwell residents also found a
large tree lying In a field behind
the Bidwell Elementary School.
There were no signs of where the
tree came from: .
Homer Painter said his corn
crib was destroyed by the winds
and added that several large
trees were uprooted.
There has been no announcemimi whether the winds actually
were a tornado. However, Salls·
bury said the winds appeared to
cut a path through the Bidwell
area.

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge project on hold
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
The painting of the PomeroyMason Bridge is on hold, not only
because of the rain, but because
the contractor is not . In compllance With regulations of the
West Virginia Department of
Natural Resources, Division or
Water Resources.
Mike Lang, construcllon engl·
neerwith the Ohio Department of
Transportation's District 10 of·
flee In Marietta, reported this
morning that officials from the
West VIrginia agency were at the
workslteonTuesdayandWedneday of last week. At that time. It
was determined that thecontrac·
tor. M&amp;J Painting Coinpany,
·Campbell, Ohio, was not comply•
.

lng with West VIrginia regula·
tions regarding the Ohio River.
According to Lang, West Vlrgl·
nla DNR has said that ·'no
materials'' from the contractor's
operation -Including sandblast·
lng fragments. paint spray or
any other materials - are
allowe(l to fall in the river. Since
West Virginia controls the river,
DNR has authority to stop the
ODOT proJect.
Although ODOT provided the
specifications an(! accepted the
bids for the $1.8 million painting
job. ODOT does not tell the
contractor which of today's
available methods should be
used to catch materials from the
project. One available method Is
to use vacuums, but "that's up to

.

the contractor," Lang said. At
least some of the time since the
project began April 15, the
contractor has been using plastic
sheeting to catch any falling
materials.
Before painting of the bridge
can resume. the contractor must
submit to ODOT a plan for
meeting the West VIrginia regu lations to bring the job back Into
compliance. The compliance
plan will then pass through
ODOT to West Virginia DNR
where It will be reviewed and
either accepted or rejected.
Lang said he talked with the
paint contractor this morning
and was told that the needed plan
is being developed. Officials
cannotdetermlnewhen the paint·

lng will start again untll the plan
for compliance Is submitted and
approved.
The added costs of complying
with the West Virginia regula·
lions will have to be absorbed by
the contractor. There will be no
a(ldltlonal cost to the state. Lang
said.
At this time, there Is no change
In the project's Oct. 15 completlon date.
A second contract which was
awarded to D.V. Weber Con·
struction, Reedsville, should not
be affected by the temporary
shut down of the painting, Lang
said. Weber's $94,664 contract Is
to Install new ralls along the
upriver sldeolthebrldge, toward
Pomeroy .

necessity for additional funding
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Into
both funds to meet financial
Sentinel News Staff
obligations.
On July 1 the first of
The condition of village vehl·
two
$8,600
payments on the
cles were discussed at length and
lagoon
Improvements
Is due,
a used truck and cruiser were
payable
from
thesewerfund.and
approved for purchase at under
$5,000 each at Monday night's currently there l.s only $3.176 In
meeting of Middleport VIllage the fund. The Increase would
generate about $27.000 annually
Council.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported into the sewer fund.
The Increase In the water rates
that the water, cemetery and
street department trucks are by 10 percent would take that
"beyond repair" and that the minimum from $5.40 to 5 .94 a
village has one pollee cruiser out month, while the 30 percent
increase In sewer rates would
of commission.
Council au thorlzed the mayor take that minimum from $5.35 to
to go ahead with the purchase of a $6.96 per month. The combined
1983 three-quarter ton truck for minimum per month would go
the water department which can ' from $10.75 to$12.90, an Increase
be purchased for $4,500 from Pat of $2.15 per month. If the
Hill Ford. and also approved the ordinance is passed the 10
purchase of a State Highway percent senior citizens discount
Patrol vehicle. a 1986 Ford. for will continue to apply.
Mayor Hoffman announced .
$3,570, for the pollee department.
The mayor was also au thorlzed that the required hearing on
to try to locate two more good public transportation funds will
used trucks which can be pur· be held at the June 26 regular
chased for under $5,000. Once meeting of vlllage council. This,
replacements have been se- he said, pertains to the cab
cured. then the 1984 Plymouth service.
He also read a letter from the
cruiser, the two 1978 and the 1973
Liquor
Control Board advising •
trucks will be advertised for sale.
that
all
permits
In the village are
Council gave the third reading
and adopted a gas rate ordinance up for renewal and that objecwhich specified that current t ions must be flied by Aug. 31.
It 'o/.~§ . reporteli that only .t-.:o
rates with Columbla .Gas co: will
remain 1n effect for the next 18 more signatures are needed on
the petitions for annexation of the
months .
Council also gave second read- Hobson area Into the village.
ings to.ordlnances providing for a Once those signatures are se•
10 percent increase In water cured. then the petitions will be
rates and a 30 percent Increase in presented to the Meigs County
sewage rates. The second read· Commissioners for approval of
ings of both ordinances passed by the proposal.
The mayor commended Counfour to one votes with Council·
cilmen BOb Gilmore and Jack
man Paul Gerard casting the
Satterfield for their dedication to
"no" votes. He asked for a two
the annexation project. It was •
week delay to allow for further
noted that Gilmore suffered a
discussion · with the Board of
heart attack over the weekend
Public Affairs which recomand Is confined to Mount Carmel
mended the Increase.
Continued on page 1U
The mayor again expla !ned the

Retail sales up 0.1 percent during May

Paul Sayre

f

official reporte have not verified that a tornado touched down, but
the wl"d stonn cut a path through the Bidwell and Addison areas
causing d3J11age .to several structures.
·

Tomad&amp;like winds roar through Gallia

~ckley

Paul S. Sayre. 74. Third St ..
Syracuse, died unexpectedly at
his residence on Saturday.
Born Aug. 7. 1914 in Anltqully.
he was the son of the late Sullivan
and Bertha Bentz Sayre. He was
sales manager at the Buckeye
Truck Bo&lt;ly Bull(lers In Colum·
bus. a Wotkl War II Army
veteran, member of the Amerl·
can Legion Racine Post 602.
Racine Lodge 461 F &amp; AM, and
the United States Trotters
Association.
He Is survived by three daugh·
ters. Mrs. Donald !Barbara 1
Corbett. New- York, N.Y. ; Bev·
erly Sayre. Elyri~; and Lynn
Sayre. Columbus; a sister, Mrs.
Norman I Wilma I Styer, Water·
ford; two brothers, Douglas
Sayre. Portsmouth; and Brooks
Sayre, Syracuse; thrl!e grand·
children, Carrie, ·Maggie, and ·
Timmie Corbett. all of New York.
N.Y.; and several nieces and·
nephews.
In addition to his parents, Mr. ~
Sayre was p~eded In (Ieath by a I
brother, Howar(l Sayre.
Masonic services will be at the
Ewing Funeral Home at 7:30
p.m. on Mollday. Gravl!$lde
~ervlces will be Tuesday at 11:30
a.m. at tbe Letart Fl!lls Cemetery wltb tile R~. Steve Deaver
offlclatlflr. Frlt!ndl may call at
the funeral home any time on
Mon4ay.
..
•

1 Section, 1 D Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Council to buy
used truck and
police cruiser

'

I Area deaths I

•

Low tonight near 65. Chance of
rain 70 percent. Wedne&amp;day, high
In mid 7118. Chance of rain 80
percent.

Why do insurance premiums keep going up?
One big reason is the incredible cost of repairing
or replacing cars damaged in accidents-over
33 million last year alone. In the last 10 years,
• the average cost of repairing damaged vehicles
has gone up 93%, while the cost of replacing a
car has gone up 126%.
•
Why is it so expensive? Lefs ~tart with tl)e cost
of replacement parts. The cost of your car-if you

bought it as replacement parts-would be two to
four times more than the cost of a whole new car.
And speaking of new cars, their average price
has gone tip from $6,379 to $14,389. That should
give you an idea of just how much is paid'out of your premiums-every time an accident
results in a "totaled" car. .
At State Fann, we believe that ways must be
found to keep these expenses from forcing pre-

WASHINGTON (UPII - Retail sales edged up 0.1 percent In
May, marking the third consecu·
tlve monthly Increase, the Commerce Deparlment reported
Tues(lay.
Advance estimates of retail
sales for May were a seasonally
adjusted $141.1 billion, up 0.1
pe~cent from April and 5.2
percent higher than the level of
May 1988, the deparlment's Cen,
sus Bureau said.
Retail sales had Increased 1.0
percent In April and 0.1 percent .
In March of this year after falling

miums to go up. That's why our researchers sit doWn
face to face with automakers to help them design
stronger, safer. easier-to-repair cars. And why we
helped found I-CAR, which trains body shop people
·in the latest auto repair techniques.
State Fann is there, everyday. Finding more
ways to help protect,our policyholders from the
causes of rising premiums. So we can keep
insurance aflordable.

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Dates given for boosters' event -

STATE FARM

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State Farm Mutual AulamObile Insurance Company
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Home Office: Bloomington.IIUnois

INSURANCE
®

Committee to meet June 27

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Sheriff probes stabbing

Local news .briefs---.

FIGHT
L

0.4 percent In February in the and 0.4 percent In March after
Sales were flat In May for
biggest drop In 15 months and declines of 1.9 percent In Febru· building materials. hardware.
rising 0.6 percent In January, the · ary and 2.1 percent In January.
garden supplies and mobile
bureau said.
Excluding car cates, overall homes as well as for furniture,
In the first five months of this retail sales rose 0.1 percent In .home furnishings and applianyear. retail sales were up 2.3 May.
ces, the bureau said.
percent.
Sales of durable gonds, big·
ticket Items such as cars and
furniture, rose 0.3 percent In ·.
May, putting them at a level 3.9
Twenty-one-year-old Samuel Jlmmer Soulsby, Mark Boyd and
percent higher than In May 1988. McCloud of Middleport has been Jeff Miller.
Car sales also Increased for the taken into custody by the Meigs
Also taken Into custody In
third consecutive month, rising County Sheriffs Deparlment In connection with the Investigation
0.5 percent. Automobile sales coMectlon with the stabbing of was 22-year·old Charles Knapp.
had gone up 2.2 percent In April his brother, PatrickMcCiou(l, 30, also of Middleport. Knapp fled
the Hudson St. residence of his
also of Middleport.
parents
when deputies appeared
The stabbing occurred In Mid·
dlep~rt around 3: 25 this morning . at the residence to speak with
at lhe rear of the 359 North Front him about the stabbing. Knapp
St. residence of the McCiou(l was taken Into custody by Deputy
family. McCloud was stabbed Scott Trussell at 6 a.m. He was
Urnes - three In the back, found hiding behind an outbulld·
eight
A weekend of fund raising projects to finance extra·
three
In the arm, one in the left lng near his parents' home.
curricular sports and other activities at Eastern High School
According to a report from the
cage
and·one In the abdomen.
rib
has been scheduled for the last weeken41n June.
sheriff's
ortlce, Samuel McCloud
He
was
taken
to
Veterans
Mem·
On June 24 a chicken barbecue will be hel4, there
be ball
Is
beln&amp;
charged
witb attempted
orlal
Hospital
by
another
games, other orpnlzed activities, and a yard sale on both days,
murder.
Charles
Knapp ls' belng
brother,
Joe
McCloud.
Patrick
and on Sunday the feature•wlll be a car show.
charged
With
obs
tructlng
official
McCloud
was
placed
In
the
Articles for the yard sale are to be brought to the high· school
business
and
drug
abuae.
Both
hospital's Intensive care unit and
on Friday, June 23, for aortlng and marklna. and for those who
are
being
held
In
the
Meigs
was to have undergone explora·
have Items to be picked up, Doris Well, 9115-4262 or Jill Holter,
.
tory surgery later Tuesday County Jail.
949-2603 may be called.
·
At the scene In addition to the
morntna.
above officers were Sheriff
Samuel McCloud was taken James Soullby, Proaeuctor's In·
Into custody about 4:35a.m. He vestlgatoi Don Sny(ler. Shertf1's
The regular monthly meeting of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
was
apprehended a short dill· lnveatlgator Robert Beqle, DepValley Regional Development Dlltrtct Executive Col'IIIJIIttee
lauce from the residence where uty Mannina Mohler and Lleutea·
will be held TUesday, June 27. at 5 p.m. In the district's
the atabbtDg took place, after_Jl ant Jolin King of the Middleport
Continued on pare 10
foot e~~~te· by- OepiltY' Sberlifa · PoUce Department.

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