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Monday. July 17. 1989

Pom.oy-Middlaport. Ohio
NATIONAL WEATHER SEAVICE 'FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7·17-89

D

SNOW

FRONTS: "

-RAIN

,Warm "Cold

~SHOW. . . .
"Static . .C)x+'llld

r.,ap shows minimum t9rnperatures . At least 50~', of any shaded . . . 11
1o f ~e i•o· e ptedp;tat'On i ndit:at~

------Weather--~--By Unlled Press lnler~looal .
•
Sou til Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. !,.ow 55
to 60. Winds light and variable.
Tuesday, mostly sunny with the
high In the mld·80s.

· Extended ForecaSt
Wednesday throullt Friday
A chance of showers or thun·
derstorms each day. Highs wlll
he 80 to 85. and lows mostly In the
60s.

·
b
1, · '·
r-- L oca l news
rteJs... -o

1

Continued from page 1

.Rain l~gers in East; heat bakes Texans
By United Press lnleroatlooal .
Ralnshowers lingered ear~
Monday from New · England to
the Gulf Coast, causing scattered
damage and flooding, while
Texans-braced for another day of
sizzling heat, the National
Weather Service said.
The blustery thunderstorms
battered pockets of tile Deep
South, topplfng trees and damag·
lng cars. To the north, heavy
rains flooded streams and roails
along the East Coast.
An upper air disturbance mix·
lng with warm, humid air produced Intense thunderstorms '
from the eastern half of the Gulf
. Coast to much of the Atlantic
Coast, the NWS said. Forecasters did not report Injuries but ,
said there·was some damage.
A tornado near Rockmart, Ga.,
Sunday afternoon uprooted trees
that blocked roads. Winds also
downed trees and caused numer•
ous power outages near Colum·
bus, the NWS said.
.
In Alabama, storm winds ,
toppled numerous trees at
Gadsden, Attala and ' Hoakes
Blu!f, with some of the Umber
· falllng on au tomoblle~ and dam·
aging homes, the NWS said.

near Garden City, Kan.
Temperatures soared above
tl)e 1CJO.degree mark across
!)outh, Central and West Texas
Sunday, and the NWS warned of
unrelenting beat and humidity
over North Texas the 'next few
days.
Lar~do had a blistering 108

degrees Sunday, the highest both had highs of 101.
·The weather service Issued an
readlhg In the stale. San Angelo' s
excessive
heat advisory over
high of 106 and the 104 ln Del Rio
North
Central
Texas through the
tied records.
But the heat was not confined early part of the week, warning
to Sou.th Texa~ . Midland-Odessa people to avoid st:I:enuous out·
had a high of 105. Abilene, Austin· door activity and- stay In air
and Waco had highs of 103. conditioned areas as much as
Mineral Wells and Stephenville possible,

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news

Growl}rS _begin· picking chores
Mon~; yields.down this summer

l'lfiiiT FILII

No one claims Ohio Super Lotto

are garnevlng $7 to $7.50 per Clarence Hill. "And when we
By NANCY YOACHAM
10-pound basket on the markets, were lucky enough tocultlvate,lt
Dally SenUnel staff
Last summer, area tomato
Hill ,says. "At least that's what would just start. raining again the
yields ' were down because of .. we've . been told," he adds. · next day."
drought. This S\ll'(lmer, crops
Locally, a 10-pound basket Is
Weeds stand tall in parts of
were damaged by an overabun·
selling for around $6.50.
some fields, something you just
dance of rain.
,
PACKING HOUSE - Kelly Porler and Shelly
right size .an!l color tomatoes from the conveyor
It remains to be s'eeri whether wouldn't see In a normal year. '·
belt to pack Into baskets·for shipping.
Tomato fields and packing good mar~et prices will offset the
Winebrenner, along . with other packlllg house
One or two farmers tried to
workers on the Don Richard Hill Farm, select the
reduction In crops. Together th.ls
h,ouses In the Letart Falls a~ea
the water off their fields,
pump
were full of activity Monday year, Clarence and Heath Hill set
but
most
farmers just let the
the first full day of picking for out 65,000 plants on the Don
water
stand.
"We had no place to
Richard Hill farm. Of that 65,000,'
most area growers. No~rnally ,
pump
the
water
to," says Heath:
tomatoes would be ripening and at least one-third of the plants
Hill.
ready for picking at least by the were lost to water. Other farmers.·
Because of the rains, many
Fourth of July. But the heavy In the area also experienced
.
tomatoes
developed. Into what
rains experienced earlier In the similar loss Of plants due to
farmers describe as cat faces ·
growing season delayed · the wa!er,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "We've never had a problem tomatoes with a wrinkled ap- .
growth of plants and production
Fruit on the tomato vine Is
of fruit . Prior to Monday, most ·With low spots In our fields," says pearance and brown patches or;
sparser than usual so far this
area farms were just picking a Heath Hlll, ' 'until this year." seams stemming out from th~
year. Although there's little you
There were 'places In the fields bottom. Cat faces usually don't: ,
few tomatoes to sell locally .
' can do to help except wish for
, One farmer reportedly said where water accumUlated and have a lot of meat Inside and are·
·
·
better weather, there's still time
that last Tuesday, July 11, 100 just stayed, making It virtually not marketable.
On
the
Clifford
Hlllfarm
one
for most plants to stage a
10-pound baskets were picked on Impossible for. farmers to care
comeback.
his farm. On the same· date last properly for young plants. A of the largest farms In the Letart'
"It began as a tough growing
year, 1,100 10-pound basket~ place In one of our fields Is "just Falls area - workers were'
season for tomatoes In mary
now beginning to dry out ," Heath · InstrUcted to go through a whole.
were pick¢.
gardens," says Jim Utzinger,
The first of the tomato trucks Hill says. "For awhile, It looked field which had deJJeloped .Into
cat faces, and remove antJ.
horticulture professor at Oljlo · bound for northern and eastern · like a pond."
'
FarnJers could not' properly discard the Imperfect fruit&amp; .
St11te UniVersity. "Most were
markets also started leaVIng the
Rain ' Is also causing some
·planted · In ·May when the-·days
Letart Falls area on Monday. cultivate tomato fields because
tomatoes
to form black, rotten
were cloudy and the soil was still · Right now, reports Letart Falls of standing water an'd th'e result
The
tomatoes with the ·
spots.
farmer Clarence Hill, "the of standing water -mud. "That
cold.
Continued on page 5
"This caused them to grow
markets are good." Tomatoes was the real" problem," says
I
slowly or not at all. Those not put
In the ground early but held for
planting ln drlet soU also grew
slowly," Utzinger added. "They ,
set fruit while still In . their
containers but didn 't grow the
ROANOKE , Va. tUPI)- Most where union officials reported 'flexible' beyond Its previous
roots and leaves to support the
of the nation's 11n1on miners are miners back on the picket lines. terms. ·
fruit."
Virginia Gov . Gerald Ballles
back on the job after a m9nthlong
"Asking they now demonstrate
Soli temperatures In central
had
pleaded
with
both
sides
last
walkout'
In
sympatl)Y
with
min·
the
flexibility they claim before
Ohlo In mid-May were about 50
week
to
resume
negotiations
with
ers
striking
Pitts
ton
Coal
Group
the
world
but have never demondegrees, Utzinger ' says. That's
a
federal
mediator.
Trumka,
who
but
the
head
of
Its
parent
strated
at
the bargaining table Is
normal for mid-April.
last
week
ordered
·a
five-day
company
says
he
will
not
go
to
only
reasonable,"
Douglas ·conTomatoes are native to the
memorial
holiday
period
east
of
the
bargaining
table
until
the
'tlnued.
"To
do
otherwise
Is to
tropics and sub-tropics. To grow
the
Mississippi
River
to
cool
United
Mine
Workers
cease
"all
Invite
a
repetition
of
the
sad .
well, they need prolonged peri·
tensions
In
the
coalfields,
agreed.
unlawful
activity."
charade
and
devastation
the
coal
ods of high temperatures, sun
But In a letter the governor's field community has endured
A less formal meeting than one
and moist soU.
office
made public Monday, over the past three months."
with a federal mediator was
"Continued moderation In
Pittston
Co. President Paul Dou·
arranged. Officials from the
Douglas said he believes the
weather - more heat and sun
glas
said
Virginia's largest coal UMW's goal Is. to "try to
UMW
and
Pittston
prepared
to
and less rain - could provide us
producer wQuld have to see some transform this relatively local
meet with a federal judge at a
· with a fair to good harvest,
movement
In the UMW's stand labor dispute lnto a broad-based
coalfield
motel
Tuesday
In
Duf·
Utzinger says. "Tomatoes bloom
on
the
Issues
and an end to any regional or even national polltl·
field
,
Va.,
to
give
the
jurist
a
.
over a long period. Eventually,
lawless
actions.
for
the
Issues
separat·
better
feel
cal issue."
.
weather that favors pollination
lng
the
two
sides.
"Surely
having
shootings,
fire
About
1,700
Pittston
miners In
,_..,
and fruit setting will stay with
Pittston
Coal
Group
President
bombings,
and
wanton
destruc·
Virginia
and,
West
VIrginia
have
us,
TOO Mt,JCH WATER- Mary Hill, of the Don Richard Hill Fll'fii,
lion
Michael
Odom
agreed
to
meet
of
property
cease
Is
funda·
worked without a contract since
holds tomatoes which show the black, rotten spots which are
The season's cool, cloudy
with
U.S.
District
Judge
Glen·
mental
to
everyone's
best
Inter·
January 1988. On April 5, the
Indicative of too much water during the early growing season;
weather didn't help tomatoes In
Williams
and
the
UMW
said
one
est,"
Douglas
said
.
UMW went on strike, and began a
other ways, Utzinger says. "Less
Inside, the tomatoes are fun of waler.
Its
representatives
would
he
on
of
series
of sit-down demonstra·
",
S
ince
we
have
observed
no
sun kept some of them from
hand.
Broadcast
reports
late
substantive
movement
by
the
tlons
In
Southwest VIrginia deflowering. Rain helped the plants
Monday
In
Roanoke
said
the
UMW
during
the
past
20
months,
signed
to
halt the flow of coal
t,a ke up a lot of nitrogen, which
union
official
would
be
UMW
I
will
ask
the
federal
mediators
to
from
Pittston's
mining
led to grawth of stems and leaves
ascertain
whether
the
union
President
Richard
Trumka.
truly.
operations.
but not flowers."
The main exception to the end has significant new positions on
More than 2,000 miners have
Lack of sun on tomato plants
of
the
wildcat
strikes
seemed
to
Issues
and
been
arrested for misdemeanor
the
outstanding
caused some flowers to grow
be
In
southern
West
VIrginia,
vlollltlons.
,
whether,
In
fact,
the
UMW
Is
abnormally, Utzinger says. This .
keep them from being pollinated.
Consistent rain has an even
quicker and deadlier effect on
tomato plants, Utzinger says.
Stanqlng wat~r In the garden for
'
only a few hours can kill the
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reports that a one-story
plants.
frame house on Peach Fork Road was completely destroyed
Tomato plants started from
Monday afternoon by fire.
A Bend Area clearance sale
seed normally produce a harvest
The
hQuse
was
owned
by
Robert
Ball,
of
Ball
Hun
Road,
but
. In 70·85 days depending upon and trade show will be held the .
was
occupied
by
the
Jim
Hayes
family.
Hayes
was
able
to
get
variety. Tomato transplants nor- weekend of July 29:30 In the
out
a
televisiOn
and
stereo
but
nothing
else,
Zirkle
reports
..
mally bear fruit In 4045 days Meigs High School cafeteria.
The Hayes famUy was home at the time the !Ire started, says .
The two-day event, a first for
after being planted In the garden.
Zirkle,
but everyone e~aped the house. A nelghtior called the
Utzinger offers these tips on here, Is being staged through the
fire
department
at 2: 26 p.m. but by the time firemen arrived,
helping your tomato plants grow cooperative efforts of the Middle;
the
house
was
already
engulfed In flames.
port Chamber of Commerce and
well:
·
Pomeroy Fire Department was assisted by Syracuse ·and
-Get asoU (l!st. The healthiest the Pomeroy Merchants Assoca·
Scipio
Township Departments.
,
·
tomato plants grow In soU with tlon, with Mike Gerlach of
Origin
of
the
fire
Is
unknown.
The
structure
was
Insured,
the right levels of nutrients. Have Middleport serving as general
Zirkle reports. An estimate of total losses has not been
your soil tested If It hasn't been chairman.
determined.
"Emphasis of the . area·wlde
tes led In more than three years.
sale
Is to showcase merchandise
Results will Indicate If the soil
available
here an\1 to let res!·
needs nutrients or If It has too
dents
know
that our prices are
many. To get your soil tested,
right,"
Gerlach
said.
· contact your county office of the
Two people suffered minor Injuries In a one·car accident on
Ohio Cooperative
Extension
SR 681 at Alfred on Monday at 6:45 a .m.
He described the end-of-season
.j
Ser vi ce. ·•
,
, clearance sale and trade show as
· The Melgs·Ga!Ua Post, State J;llghway P 'atrol said Francis
-Have the plants grow up- a "type of shop-at-home promoParker,18, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,was travelllngeastontheroadwhen
right. Unsuppor~d plants lose tion while at the same time
he swerved to miss a deer and went oil the right side ofthe road
bare
soiL
more
fruit
to
ro
or
giving
the
merchants
a
chllnce
to
causing
him to drive off the right' side of the roadway Into ~
IMPROPER GROWI'II - Rain water wbleh 8tood fer leqtlty
St11ke
them,
cage
em
or
grow
·
"move"
their
summer
stock.
creek.
perlodJ ... time Ill some leel&amp;lo• of &amp;omato flelda o• the Doa
them on a fence or trelUs.
Gerlacl\ aald that the entire .
PBI'ker suffered minor Injuries, but was not treated. A
RleJalrll Hill Farm at~ l'alll, lltuted·the growth af pllllllll.
Stakes
should
be
put
Into
the
Bend
·Area
Is
Involved
with
passenger,
Dorothy Parker, 48, Rt. 3 ~omeroy, also was hurt
Tldl ,ear'a exeeulve raJ• outed maay liomat- to rot, lllle the
ground
abOut
4
Inches
from
the
from
Mason
and
New
businesses
amaller fruit held here by Hell&amp;b Hill. The larger tomaa- held by
Continued on pa(le 5
Continued on page 5
Continued on page 5
· Bill are.JIIIt beglmllng to .rlllfln.
\
.. :. 1.-.. ~
•

Agriculture experts say there's still
time for plantS to stage_a·comeback

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r--Local news briefsCause of Mondayfire unknown

Two injured in Meigs mishap

.PHARMACY
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to meet judge

•

Trade show,
sale scheduled
July 29,30

·nr. Jack M. Levine

.,

lacreaslnl cloudiness . to"
night. Chtiace of rain 41
percent. Wednesday, high
near 80. Chance of rain 80
percent.

0305

·Meigs .tomato crops

Squads have 7 weekend calls .

,,

Pick-4

.Recent rains damage

d~ntr~~h=~~tfc;~~f=c~::e~~

Yllllr DIM, Pain! PII

· 702

July 18. 1989

Grof!-p lAJOnts to start car club

UTICA, Oblo (UPI) - The
North Fork Local School District
has named an YpsUantl, Mich.,
educator to be superintendent of
the Licking Cbunty Dis trlct. '
Named to bead the district Is
Gilbert Dunn. the superintendent
of WillOw Run Community
Schools In Ypsilanti. He has 20
years experience as a superln·
tendent In Michigan.
Dunn begins Aug. l at the
district that has 1,850 students.
He will be paid $49,500 a year.

Pick-3

Indians, 5-2

e

building. Strong wind gusts up to,
50 mph downed power lines and
uprooted several trees, the NWS
said.
A tornado near Merry Hill,
Attempts are underway to start a car .c lub In Meigs County.
N.C., knocked down trees and
The first organizational meeting wll) be tonight !Monday). 7
power lines.
o'clock, at the Chester Fire Station. Anyone lntere$ted In a car
Heavy storm ·rains flooded
club Is Invited to· attend.
·
·
·
underpasses In the Attala·
Gadsden area, with some homes
threatened by high water' the
NWS said. It said the drenching
In the already soggy area con·
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services .
trlbuted to a mudsllde that
answered seven calls over the weekend. Two calls were on
damaged a home.
Saturday and the other five on Sunday.
Portions of the mid-Atlantic
Saturday at 1:15 a.m., Pomeroy went to Crew Road for Linda
Coast received between 3 and 5
Foreman who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
Inches of rain Sunday. Many
5:13p.m. to Chester Road for Christopher Lee to Holzer Medical
creeks
and streams were at or
Center.
above
their
bank5 In the region.
Sunday at 10:37 a.m., Racine went to Fifth .and Main Sis. for
Rain
was
scattered
early Mon·
Arlene Stobart who was taken io Holzer Medical Center.
day
from
eastern
New
Yprk state
Syracuse was called at 12:43 p.m. to Rustle Hills for Allee
across
Georgia,
from
northeast
Loomis who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Florida and the Florida Panhan·
Tuppers Plains at 1:57 p.m. went to North Tlilrd Ave. for
die across Louisiana and nor:
Marvin Murphy who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital In
theast Texas. Umbrellas also
Parkersburg, W.Va.
were In order from western
Racine at 1:57 p.m. transported Gary Johnson from · the
Texas across southwesternSouth
station to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:07 p.m ., Racine
Dakota, from ·southeast Ne- ·
went to Portland for ElsiE&gt; Roush who was taken to Veterans
·
braska
across southwest Iowa
Memorial Hospital. .
and northwest Missouri, as well'
as some areas In New Mexico,
Arlzona, Montana and Oregon.
Thunderstorm winds gusted to
68
mph Amarillo, Texas, and to 53
(:LEVELAND (UP I) -No one total prize payout was $726,275.
mph
at Billings, Mont. Lightning
One player selected all six
claimed the $9 million jackpot In
caused
a few fires at Billings.
·Saturday night's Ohio Super numbers In the correct order In
up
to
an·Inch In diameter fell
Hall
Lotto drawing and ,the prize for the accompanying Kicker game
Wednesday's game w!U rise to for a grand prize of $100,000. The
winning Kicker combination was
$12 million.
The winning numbers were 14, 379882.
·In addition to the top prize
17, 22, 29, 31 and 32.
winner, six players matched the Dally stock prlees
first five numbers for $5,000; 76 (As of 10 a.m.)
The Ohio Lottery Commission ·matched the flrsi four: which Bryce and Mark Smith
said 170 tickets were sold with
pays $1,000: 713 had the first of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
five of the six correct numbers,
three, •for $100; and , 7·,280
for $1,000 prizes. and 7,417
matched two of six, which pays Am Electric Power ............. 28%
AT&amp;'J: ......... ....... .................36¥.
players selected four correct $10.
numbers to win $75 each. ·
Ticket sales In the Kicker Ashland Oil ...................... ..38',1,
Ticket sales for the weekend game totaled $816,410 and the ·Bob Evans .... .............. ... ... ... 15
Charming Shoppes ..............16¥.
game totaled $5,349,55! and the total prize payout was $350,100.
Cliy Holding Co .......... .. ......15¥.
Federal Mogul. ............... .. ... 23
Goodyea,r T&amp;R ......... ........ ..53%
Heck's .... .... .. .... ... .... ......., .... Y.
It would actually be the third
PROVIDENCE, R.I. CUP!) Key Centurion .................: .. 12'%
Someone In Rhode Island cl\ose . biggest ·single winner In U.S. Lands' End ....... ,..... :..... ... ... 27'%
all six numbers to win tl\e $39.4 history If one person claimed the Limited Inc ... .. .. ........ ......... 32%
, million Lotto America jackpot, prize, but the $39.4 mllllorlls the Multimedia Inc .................... 98
the seventh. biggest lottery seventh largest overall figure In Rax Restaurants .. ........ ........ 2%
North American lottery history.
winner In U.S. history.
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ..... ....... 17%
The largest overall prize was Shoney's Inc .............. .. ....... 11%
"Rhode Island has never had a
(grand prize) winner but we have $61.98 million In California, split Wendy's Inti.. ................. ... .. 5%
a winner now and a big one," by three groups In October 1988. Worthington Ind .......... ....... 22%
Peter'o•connell, Rhode Island's The largest single winner was
Sheelah Ryan, who won $55.1
lottery director, said Sunday.
• It was not yet ·known If a single . million In Florida In September
person or a group owned the 1988.
Hospi~
O'Connell said the previous
winning ticket. Officials said the
winner or winners probably high jackpot lor the Lotto Amer· Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions- None.
would be Identified Monday when lea game was $16 million. That
Saturday discharges - Karen
the prize Is expected to be drawing was In March.
Lotto
America
began
In
Sep·
Pooler,
Max Folmer, Thomas
collected . The ticket must be
tember
1987
as
a
way
for
Frye.
validated, O'Connell said.
Sunday admissions - None.
The winning ticket was pur• less-populated states to compete
with
larger
neighboring·
ones
Sunday discharges - Floyd
chased at 7: 23 p.m. Saturday,
less than four hours before the siphoning revenues from lottery · Reltmlre.
Saturday night drawing. O'Con· ' ticket sales.
nell refused to say where the
ticket was purchased, citing
security reasons.
According to lottery officials,
the player or players used the
"quick pick" system. In which a
computer randomly selects the
six-number combination.
The winning combination was
Qeneral and Qynecologlcal Surgery
10·19·27 ·35-4042.
Yearly ~emale exams
" It Is the biggest jackpot In
New Englan&lt;~ and probably the
Women's Health
third· or fourth-biggest ever In
the country," O'Connell said.

. New superintendent
from Michigan ,

Ohio Lottery

Twins stop

..

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~

I

_...,._

�.-

Tundey, ·July 18, 1989 .

Co~melltary
The Daily Sentinel

•

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L

111
Street
Pomeroy, j)hlo

.

...,..._,._-r•

~

Washington didn't
invent greed ·

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - In an article titled, "Down and out In Was~lngton
on $89,500 a year," in Washhigton Monthly, contributing editor
Jonathan Rowe argues th_at Congress ts not so much underpaid as the
rest or the capital is overpaid.
.. Rowe makes a good case. especially in noting that Jack Valenti is
paid $660,000 a year to lobby for the Motion Picture ASsociation In ·
Washington.
·
Valent! is a nice fellow , but he was a long way from being the
intellectual leader of the Lyndon Johnson White House, from w!Jence
he went to the movie·trade group, and It is difficult to detect what he
does or could do for Hollywood that Is worth 660,000 big ones a year.
The only major problem with Rowe's article is that It treats
Washington as If It was an Island withoutcommunlcationwlth the rest
of the world- the so-called insid~th~beltway syndrome. He blames
'Washington for the mess, but In fact it is a problem that was imported
into the District of Columbia.
·
· While Rowe makes much of the statistic that the average American
worker earns less than $21.000 a year while the Washington average
household income is $47,000, he touches only lightly on stratosphj!rlc
salaries paid elsewhere, such as junk bond 'l'hiz Michael Mllken's
HALF BILLION dollar yearly Income before lie was Indicted.
.The hyper-inflated paycheck is one curse Wasltingtondidn't foist on
the rest of the country. It came to Washington from places like New
York, where Wall Streeters are flops if they don't make a mUllan by
the time they are 30, and Hollywood, where the fellow In charge of
Mickey Mouse draws more than $4 million a year.
It certainly is true that Washington has taught the country some
bad habits. such as an inveterate inability to balapce its books, but it
sure didn 't originate the rampant greed that anjmates
_, the Me
Generation.
..
·
,
That credit goes elsewhere - In· part perhaps to the graduate
schools of business administration that did such a good job of
instilling an insatiable lust for money and unsiakable taste for
conspicuous consumption in their masters degree candidates during
the late 1970s and through the 1980s.
·
'
· As Rowe says, members of Congress are exceedingly well paid
Americans, but very poorly paid Washingtonians. This pa.radox did
not exist until sometime in the mid·1970s, when a sudden rush of
· business a nd professional groups moved their headquariers Into the
' capital with buckets of money to spend ,an influence, foreign
automobiles and real estate.
The executives of these associations (or '(Vashington lawyers who
were retained by trade associations that remained elsewhere) may
.have had mixed results representing their clients, but to a, man they
did a bang·uP job securing big pay and perks for themselves. This, of
.·course. is supposed to be nobody's b11siness because it is .private
enterprise at work, but like most everything else, it ends up costing
: fhe public money .
Members of Congress actually tried to keep federal salaries in
. check by permitting few federal officials, including judges and
oepartment chiei s. to eat:n more than· themselves. but the outside
money distorted the whole system.
When he came to Washington, Ronald Reagan was one of.the best
paid residents of Washington; after eight years his $200,000 and
: expenses had become the wages of a second-level lobbyist.

Berry's Worl~
Ol'&lt;l\'&lt;
MR.
.
I
STAiE POL\T\C\~N,
HOW DO YOU STAND

oN ·mf A~oR:r,ol'\
Q UE:STIOt-\ ~

. ..·"'ow- £It ..-

w~u

L-E1"'5 Sf.E! WHIC~
'J)"'( IS

It\ E.

WIND
BLOWING~
.

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.

'

Jack Anderson
'

fingerprints of state-sponsored
terrorism are found on hostag~
taking, tbat Stille should be
expected to pay a price."
The typical American attitude
was expressed bluntly by Col.
Leland Holland, himself one of
the 52 original hostages taken In
Iran, and who was abused by his
captors. Even when his life was
011 the line, he said: he would l!ave
liked t 0 see 1\ts government react
more forcefUlly.
"The Russians do that," .he
said. "The - Iranians · haven't
picked on the Russians." In his
opinion,. ''there needs to be.some
kind of program sold firmly and
:;wlftly that if they take an
American, It doesn't tnatter who
does it or where It occurs, we're
gonna do something about lt. ...
We're not a bunch of pushovers,"
he said angrily.

are moved to new 1dcauons, they tell us it wo11ld be impossible·. The
are sometimes wrapped like hostages are guarded by the
mummies and transported in Musawi clan, whose members
wooden coffins.
.
are related to one another and,
One hostage has gone mall and therefore, cannot be Infiltrated.
babbles Incoherently. Two es· At any sound of commotion
caped but were caught; they outside their makeshift prison,
were beaten so mercilessly that the guards also rush Into the cells
tbey haven't fully recovered. The and put guns to the heads of the
hostage with the most time in hostages.
·
custody, Terry Anderson, once
But military retribution r~
became so frustrated that he · mains an option. We reminded
smashed his head repeatedly ~the president that U.S. lntelll·
against a wa)I until blood gence agencies possess positive
streamed down his face.
evidence, Including Intercepted
President Bush does not dis· messages, that the Party of God
agree with thos.e who wanf action takes orders from Teheran. Why,
to free the' hostages. "If I could we asked, doesn't: the United
rescue hostages by u~ of U.S. States retaliate lj,g~lnst Iran?
force and feel that the odds were
"I learned longilgo, when i: was
reasonably good that tliey would director of the Central Intellibe saved alive,'' he told us, "I gence Agency, not to comment on
certainly would."
intelligence matters," .said Bush.
Sources who have studied the But he added quickly: ' ' If the
possibility of a rescue mission

I

ns -n~~

\0 DQ
S~W\~\~.
' '

.

'·~

.
..
11 1989 by NEA, lne

''

. foday in history
•,

~

•. .
·
By Unitea Press International
·
· Today Is Tuesday, July 18, the l99th day of l989 with 166 to follow.
The moon is full.
The morning star ·Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
·~ Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They InClude
:: ~ngl!Sh novelist William Makepeace Thackeray In 1811, playwright
· Clifford Odets in 1906, c.omedlan Recj Skelton In 1913 (age 76).
'

Pomeroy-Middl8port, Ohio

The Daily Set:rtinei-Page-3 '

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ken
Howell didn't need to throw a lot
ot strikes to beat the freeswinging, poor-hlt!lng Clnelnnatl
Reds Monday night . ·
All the PhUaqelphla pitcher
had todowasget the ball near the
· plate and 11te swlng·at-anythlng
Reds took care of the rest.
"I think I had some guys
off-balance," Howell .sald lifter
scat terlrig six hits over seven and
two-third Innings In the Phlllles'
4·1 win over the slumping Reds .
"When they thought I would
. thro~ a fastball, !'would throw a
· . hreaklng baiL
''When you're ahead late In the ·
game, you don't lreally have to
throw strikes. Batters can't
afford to take anything close."
Cincinnati manager Pete Rose
complained that his undlscl.,pllned hitters. were swinging at
bad plt~hes all night.
.
'!'
"I can't tell you bow many
balls wl!! swung at that wereoutof
. HUSON SCORES ~ Tile Expos' Jeff Huson
P~rez In the fourth Inning of Monday "lght's game
the strike zone," grumbled Rose.
beatil the tag of Bra:ves cateher Bruce Benedict to
In Montreal. (UPI)
"I quit counting them. It gets
score from third on a single by pitcher Pascual
ridiculous after awhile.
"Howell threw a lot of row surrendered seven hits and two choice tapper In front of the and Randy Kramer and Bill
breaking balls out of the strike runs over five.lnnings to take the plate. O'Neill movcil to second on Landrum combined on a four·
McKELVEY SCORES - SyracuN'a Jay McKelvey slides In
zone that Ql!r hitters swung at. loss. It was the seventh defeat In Todd Benzinger's ground out and hitter. Kramer, '4-5, allowed four
from third buetucoreouwUclphcb by Ricky Perdue (stand bag)
We don't have a helluva lot of the ·last eight games, and 23rd Jeff Reed walked to load the
In the ftnt lnalag of Tuesday nlallt'a aecond·I'OIIIId lame qaloat
hits over Expos 5, Braves 2
Young
hit·
loss
in
the
last
33
games,
for
the
disciplined
hitters.
At
Montreal, Jeff Huson, just
the Gallpolll Royals Ia the Kner ·cree" Little League
bases. Davis scored .on a Howell
ters,
old
hitters,
established
Reds.
,
Tournament In (:bemire. Tile 100re was one ol 14 tb~ the Bend
wild pitch.
called up from the minors,
hitters, It doesn't matter."
The PllH\ies grabbed a 1·0 lead
• · Area nine wo..d get ba tUt apealng lrame, which pushed ll)em to a
stroked . a two-run double and
Howell said there are only In the third. Len Dykstra singled,
In other National League scored once to lift the Expos.
29-3 victory ud a cllaace to take oa Cheshire Ia the quarterfinals
three
Reds hitters that concern Tom Herr walked and Von games:
Pascual Perez, 5-9. scattered five
· Th.unday night. &lt;OVP photo by G; Spen"Pr Osborne)
Aslr011 6-12, Mets 0-3
hits , over eight Innings. Tiln
him.
Hayes' groundout . moved. the ·
" .
''There are three guys I try not runners to tl)lrd and second.
The New Yorlf Mets had better Burke posted his 20th save. Tom ·
to let beat me when I come here Dwayne Murphy singled In Dyk- wake up on this hornestand or Glavlne, 8-6, allowed five runs
- Eric 'Davis; Kal Daniels and stra, but Herr was thrown out at they'll be looking bleary-eyed at and five hits over six Innings. '
Paul O'Neill," said Howell. "The the-plate by right fielder O'Neill. the Montreal Expos.
Giants 8, Cardinals 4
rest of the guys I'm going to
Philadelphia upped its lead to
The Expos have opened a .. At San Francisco, Robl!y
challenge and niake them show 2·0 In the fifth. Dickie Thon five-game lead in the NL East Thompson tripled with the bases
With victories over theGaiUpo- . double by Don Wamsley and me they can pull me."
doubled, moved to third on over the ·defending champion loaded In the second inning ·to
Its Royals and Green, respecdented the plate three times
So far this season, none of the Howell's sacrifice bunt and · Mets and clearly ·look like the spark a seven-run rally. Kevin
lively, Syracuse Hubbard's against Green starter Mark Reds has shown Howell a thing. scored on Herr's single.
favorites to win the division.
·Mitchell, the major league.Greenhouse and Cheshire ad· · ' Moose" Clark In that opening He's 3-0 against Cincinnati and
The Phil lies moved ahead 4-0 In
"We are the front runner and leader In borne runs and RBI,
vanced to the quarterfinals ofthe ·. frame. However, Clark quickly · has given up. only three earned the sixth. Pinch-hitter Ricky the Mets have to catch us," missed the game because of an
Kyger Creek Little LeagUe Tourgot back on track,.striklng·out 14 run5 In 29 and two-third lnillngs Jordan, batting for Jim Adduci, ·Montreal ' manager Buck Inflamed lower back. St. Louis
narnent Monday night In ways as • hitters and keeping Cheshire for an earned run averageof0.91 and Darren Daulton singled off {todgers said Monday night after took a 4-0 lead in the first, but San
,different as night and day.
hitless and giving up only one run against the reds.
• Tim Birlsas. A Birtsas wild pitch his club defeated Atlanta and the Francisco erased the deficit in
Syracuse will take on Cheshire after the first Inning. .
Monday night, Howell, 8-5, moved the runners up to third Mets dropped a double-header to· the second.
·
Thursday at 7:30p.m., following
Wild pitches by starter Buck gave up no earned runs, struck and second and botll scored on a Houston.
•
.
Cubs 6, Dodgers 3
the 6 p.m. game between Rutland Reynolds helped Green put two out eight and walked two. Roger bounding single up the middle by
Montreal, which has bolstered
At Los Angeles, Curtis Wilker..
and Bidwell.
1•
runs on the board In the second, McDowell pitched the final one Charlie Hayes.
its pitching by acquiring Mark son drew a bases-loaded walk lit
. In Syracuse's 29-3 win over the and in the third Green tied the and one-third innings for his
Cincinnati got its lone run In Langston and Zane Smith, Is the eighth Inning to break a Ue
Royals, the boys from the bend game at 3-3. But Cheshire ans- ninth save.
the . sixth. Davis singled and · relatively healthy and the team · and spark a th~run rally. The
chased Royals starter Ricky weredGreen'schallengewltb the
ClnclnnaH'sRonRoblnson,0-1, moved to third when catcher Is playing well together. .The Cubs won It .agalns t Tim Leary,
Perdue otf the mound with a eventual winning run in the making his first start of the year Daulton hurled the ball Into Me'ts, meanwhile, are somewhat 6·7, who was making his second
14·riln cl.oudbur~t In the first fourth Inning.
after undergoing elbow surgery center field trying to nail Davis beat up and haven't put together relief appearance of the season.
inning. The Gallians were able to
In the bottom of the sixth; twice in the last 10 months, at second oil O'Neill's fielder's _much of a run all year.
seven Innings and Landrum
hold the visitors scoreless In the Cheshire, now with former first
"We played like a tired a ball pitched two hitless innings for his
second, . but the Greenhouse · bllseman Adam Loveday on the .
club and we are a tired ball club, 13th sa\'e. .
came back with 10 runs In the hill, induced two Green hitters to
but it's still two 'Ls;'" New York - - - - - - - - - - - third before the Royals were able hit grounders to second base. It
manager Dave Johnson said
to score a run against st.lirter looked as if Cheshire was going' to
after the Mets fell 6-0 and 12·3 In
Rod Evans of St. Albans, WV
Heat II - Charlie Swartz,
Mason Flsherln the bottom ofthe walk away with the victory. But wop
the doulil~header. "We are
his first 1989 Late Model · Harold Redman, Marc French,
Green's Matt Mllsteac) hit an
third.
horne for a length of lime now. So
.
Syracuse scored five timeS In b)fleld single off Loveday's feature at SkyUne Speedway in · Rolando Esparza , ·
It's time to make a move."
Heat III- R.J. rc onley, Benny
the top of the fou,rth, and the glave. A bad throw by Cheshire stewart, Ohio. On the drop of the
Dwight Gooden will probably
Royals scored twice In the shortstop John Browning put green Bob Adams, Jr. of Racine, Hickel, Mark DickSon, Weasel
be on the disabled list for another
Ohio jumped Into the lead and led Rhodes
Jx&gt;itorn of the frame to finalize Milstead at second base with the the first five laps. On lap six
month, and his replacement in
Last
Chance
Race
Weasel
the score.
·.
potential tying run. But .Chris
the rotation, minor league phe·
Charlle Swartz took the lead Rhodes, Bill Childers, Doug Hall,
For the Greenhouse, the 13·hlt Moore popped out to third base to from
nom
Dave West, isn't picking up
him and led through to the Mike Wills, ··Joe Mernel, Lee
attack was led by Kevin Deemer end the game.
the
slack.
(three .singles), Cass Cleland
Green's other hits came cour- twelfth lap, when Rod Evans took Floyd, Archie Burdette, Eddie
"Collectively we are not doing
(double, single), Tyson Buckley tesy ol Jamie Harris (triple) and over the first position on lap Deem, Jim Skinner, Rolando
a
good job," said Mets first
thirteen and held on for the Esparza ; Scott Wolfe, Donnie
and Robby Crow (two singles Chris Casto and Troy Durican
baseman
Keith Hernandez, who
remainder of the feature. It was . Kenntspn and Buckwheat Shutts.
each) and Jay Day, Fisher, Ryan (one single ,each).
returned
from
the disabled list
Feature Whaley's Auto
the first 1989 Skyline feature win Tonight'• acttoo
Hill and Jay McKelvey (one
last
week.
"We
are making
for E;vans. Following him across Parts Night - Rod Evans, Larry
single each).
Point Pleasant PSM will face
In
the field, the
glaring
mistakes
the fliltsh line was Larry Bond, Bond, Bob Adams, Jr., Charlie
..
. • Fisher struck out eight, walked Addavllle at 6 p.m., followed by
starting pitching is struggling,
Jr.,
Charlie
Swartz
Swartz,
Greg
Carpenter,
Bobby
Bob
Adams,
Ira tile SEIUII:S ONE
six and surrendered one hit, the Gallipolis White Sox-New
the offense Is struggling."
and Greg Carpenter.
Davison, Bill Childers, Benny
which carne oft the bat of Ricky Haven game at 7: '10 p.m. · ,
a ....... Polley...
· The Mets were never in either
··In the Semi· Late Model Dlv- 'Hickel. ·Marc French, Steve
Perdue.
On Wednesday the GalllpoUs
game of the twinbill, being
PIICU&amp;ed pn&amp;ecdoa for
!sian, Bob Adams, Jr. was the " Francis, Tim Buckley, R.J. ConT)Je nightcap between Che- Indians wlll take on Mason at 6 viCtor with Bobby Hill, Steve ley, Rod Conley, Andy Bond,
lbnited to a pair pf first-Inning
ret· 0 ~ores, offtce'
shire and Green didn't start out p.m., followed by the Hannan
hits
by
Jim
Deshaies
in
the
Lucas. Jim McClellan and Larry Mark Dickson, Do11g Hall, • Hacharclles, aparfmeata,
as a nail-biter, as the junior Trace-Middleport Dodgers
opener and falling behind 6-0
Stathers following him across the raid Redman, and Weasel
Bobcats opened the game wtth a 'garri~.
dralltoret. SlmpUD"
after two innings in the second.
finish line.
Rhodes.
'
Deshaies,
9-4.
yielded
singles
Ia coateD&amp;, coavelllea&amp;
Phil · Davis was the feature
Semi-Late Division - Fast
to Dave Magadan·and Tim Teufel
winner In the Sportsman Division Time Bob Adams, Jr.
Ia format &amp;Del very
and shut New York down on two
with
Jim
Amick,
Donn
Kerr,
Tim
Heat
I
Bob
Adams
Jr.,
'
'
aUordable.•
walks . until Larry Andersen
Smedley a!ld Gary Bertran in hot Bobby ·Hill, Steve Lucas, Larry
relieved hbn to start the ninth.
pursuit.
Slathers
CINCINNATI AUPI) - Kent RedS of his decision Monday,
Ron
DarUng, 7-7, took the loss.
The Street Stock Division saw·
Feature - Bob Adams Jr.,
. Tekulve, who was the mainstay saying, "The time Is right for this
Ken
Caminiti drove in four
the winner as Harold Pickens Bobby Hill, Steve Lucas, Jim
of the Pirates bullpen for inore to happen.''
runs
to
poWCT Houston In the
than a decade and appeared In
"I've enjoyed the game my followed by Jerry Toncray, McClellan, Larry Slathers
nightcap.
Left-ha.nder Bob
Sportsman Divtsioh:
more games as a relief pitcher Whole career and now I'm not Roger Garnes, John Williams
214 EMT MAIN
Knepper,
'4-10,
pitched six inand Clair Sullivan.
Heat I - Tim Smedley, AI
than any0ne In major 'league enjoying it anymore," said T~
nings
for
his
first
victory
since
POMEROY
Plaques were awarded to the Flohr, Donn Kerr and Tim
history, announced his retire· kulve, the losing pitcher In two of
112·1117
May 29. West, 0-2, lasted two and
. ment Monday.
.
the Reds' three losses In the , . top three drivers In all divisions Launderrnan
two-third
Innings
for
New
York
in
by Gene Whaley of Whaley's
Heat II - Phil Davis, Kevin
; . Tekulve, 42, signed by the recent series against Montreal,
his second start since replacing
Haught, Jim Amick and 'Gary
Auto Parts in Darwin, Ohio.
, Cincinnati Reds as a free agent Including Sunday's 6-3 extraNext week, Skyline ts running a Bertram
early this year, Informed the . Inning defeat. "I'm notable to do,
Go~.
I
•11
regular program paying $600 to
Feature - Phil Davis, Jim .
· . _l'lfl'!ea 4, Padres 1
physically, what I've been able to
0
F
II 1
At San Dlegq, Glenn Wilson
win for Late Models, $300 to win Amick, Donn Kerr, Tim Smed·
do for the past 15 years."
The ·Daily SentiQel
went 3 for 3 with two solo homers
Seml-Lates, $175 Sportsman and ley, Gary Bertram. Time Laud·
Tekulve had an overall record
'
• of 94-90,.. with 184 saves in 1,050 $125 Street Stock. The gates will erman. Roger Cozad, All Flohr.
•. (tJINI-)
open at 5 p.m. Time Trials 7:30 Kevin Haught and Chris Diddle.
. games. He broke Hoyt Wilhelm's
A Di¥11... ollldlmllla. be.
and Racing at 8:30 p.m. For
Street Stock Division:
record of 1,018 relief appearanPublllhed every allenoon. Mollday
further
information,
please
call
Heat I - dair Sullivan, Roger
ces on April17 this year and was
thr""P Frtdaf, m Court ·st.; FoDarrel
Willie,
Promoter,
at
(614)
Garnes,
R.W. Beck
closing hi on another of Wll·
meroy, Oldo. by, !be QlltO VaUor Pal&gt;
.
662-4111.
·
Heat
II
- Harold Pickens,
helm's, marks - 1,070 total
tllhlnl eom_IM.. Imedla, . lac.,
St. IT. 7
POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy; Ohio-· Plo. 192-21A S.·
· The Results are as follows:
Terry Bunner, Dale Kessel, .)'ohn
appearances as a pitcher.
co~d cllll 11011111• palo! at l'llmeroy,
992-6191
Late Model Division - Fast Williams .
Ohio.
He played a major role In the Urne Bob Adams, Jr.
Street Stock Feature- Harold
Plrates'l979 World Series chamMember: Unlt&lt;d Prflllntenilltloaal,
Whaley's Dash for the Cash- Pickens, Jerry Toncray, Roger
lnlaad Dolly PreoaAIIOdatloa aadllle
piOnship, saving three games in Larry Bond, Andy Bond. Bobby Garnes, John Williams, Clair
'
Ohio Ne...~ AIIOdallon. Nattonal
that Fall Classic.
Advertlllni
r01111tat1ve. Branham
Davison, Bob Adams
Sullivan, R. W. Beck, Terry
"Basically, If I ~ould break
a, 133 Tblrtl Avenue,
Nevnpaper
Heat I - Rod ,Evans, Greg Bunner, Roger Dunlap, and Dale
' New Yor!l. New Yor• ~17.
that record pitching·the way I've Carpenter, Rod Conley, Doug Kessel.
NOW CARRYlNG
·
always
pitched
In
·the
past,
with
I'OII'I1I4AS'I' !lend lddrlll ch•po
Hall
A FULL UNE OF
the same standards, then It
to 111e Dolly Seattnd, 111 Court st ..
would have been an aecompllsh·
Pomeroy, Olllo - ·
rnent I would want," said
.
llt1BiaiiPTION BATD
Tekulve.
One w-·...................................$1.10
"But I wanted to do It the right
One Month .................................$6.10
way, storming through, not tnud·
One Year ................................. $72.80
IINOU: copy·
die through just to let i record.
PIIICZ
Hoyt Wilhelm Is the IllY who
Dolly ................................... 25 ee.u
eMAil CAll 50 ••
•CAlf PIIMII I 50 lb.
ploneet'ed relief pltchjng. He
·
.,OII+DIY
50
••
•HIIfll MAPI 50 lb.
s.•cr111er• aotdalrlnitopey tbtcar·
paved the way for me an"'I-(Reds
rl• .!M}' relllt In ldYanc» dlroet IO
1919
TOPitS,
S(OIE,
RIEl,'
DONIUSS,
UPPER
DECK
eU1m MA- SO U. eCAT fOH IS II. &amp; 10 lb.
reliever) Johnny Franco and all
111e Dally Seat till on a 3, 6 or 12111011111
.
AND f9PPS COINS
.
the other relllif pitchers.
lot
bull. Credit will ._ IIYIIICarrltr. . 18 IIIIGIT DOG FOOD 15 •• &amp;51 II.
·lhe one record. I jUit u aoon
.... IJIOWR 50 . ;
eiOG MAUl 50 lb,
leave the other one lor Hoyt.''
No aublertptlolll by mill pmnllt.. 1D
· ••OIICO MSIR AIID S1P11 16 HOI5I flED SO lb.
ar., where borne carrie' aervtce II
In :rr relief appearances thts
avaDable.
' eLAIII STAIIII SO ••
.
seu1111, Tekulve, who wu bam In
NO ORDERS TAKEN. lnEI JULY 2~, 1919
Ctnctnnatl and grew up In nearby
"USE 011 DIIVI1111U.FOI ALL YOUI NEEDS"
AI Sets An Unitlll
Falriteld, bad an ().3 record with
~ m.:w
. u w.......................................
one save and a 5.02 ERA.
:Ill w....................................... ~.ll
WI CAN SPECIAL OUEI
i12W.................... ,.................. $7UI
110 NDD 10 1•¥1
''We want to thank Kent for his
~
0 lldlllllpc.uQ'
contrlbuUOIII to the Reels ~ijid to
. SIYIUL •11s;
AND DEU¥11 WITIIII
u w...................................... r».ll
211 .....................~ ............... lti).IO
all Of ball!baiJ,' IBid · Reds'
WE'VIIOT
992-3411
fiDDLEPOIT, OHIO
i12 WIOIII .................................. fiUtl
president MarJe Schott.

Syracuse, Cheshire .advance
·.to tournament quarterfmals

'

Adams take$ third at Skyline

ADS

WORK

•

Medical education marks ·a milestone
BALTIMORE (NEA)- If 19th
century author and social critic
Charles Dickens had been pres· .
eilt at the recent Centennial of
Johns Hopkins Medicine, he
probably would have observed
that "it was the best of times, It
was the worst of times ." "
There was considerable cause
for celebration because Johns
Hopkins University was com·
memorating a series or salutary
events that dramatically irn·
proved the practice of medicine
not only in Baltimore but
throughout the nation.
Prior to late the 1800s, medical
schools everywhere in the country had no formal entrance
requirements, dlcj not admit
women on an equal basts with
men and provided future doctors
with only two years of fotmal
education.
Moreover, instruction was II·
mited to textbooks and lectures.
When they, graduated and went
into practice, most students had
no experience actually caring for
patients.
But Quaker merchant ·and
banker Johns Hopkins, who died
in 1867, bequeathed $7 million for
the establishment of a university

Robert Walters.

with a medical school and an forever," Dr. Louts W. Sullivan,
affiliated hospital, all bearing his
name. His will stipulated that the
hospital was to be used to train people at the four-day centennial
the univer s ity's medical program, which included every- new crises,
thing from lectures to parties and · Dr. J. Robert Buchanan, gen·
students.
era!· director of Massachusetts
That le.d directly to the estab· fireworks.
Indeed, Hopkins remains what . Gel)eral Hospital, cited the conlishment of a four-year medical
school curriculum. The first ~a Or. Arnold S. Reiman, editor of tlnutng AIDS epidemic, the ethi·
years perpetuated the tradition the New England Journal of cal. debate over whether to
of classroom teaching, but the . Medicine, describes as "one of employ llf~extendlng technololast two years were devoted to our most distinguished centers of gles and the rapid growth of an
clinical education - what Is now · medical care and scholarship, elderly pOpulation requiring ex,
known! as the "residency" or still vital and Innovative after an tenslve and intensive health
hospital· based intensive training illustrious century of service.' "
care.
.
Another speaker, Dr. Robert
Hopkins surgeons and scient·
period.
isis discovered adrenalln, purl- G. Petersdorf, president of the
The new medical school (which
opened its doors In 1893, four fled insulin, developed life- Association of American Medical
years after the hospital in 1889 saving card 1o- pu lrn on ary Colleges, warned that "the rnedi·
and 17 years after the rest of the resuscitation and pioneered in cal education enterprise In our
university In 1876) was the first to "blue baby" operations that country Is in considerable tur.
make an undergraduate college opened the ·era of modern heart moil." He said this was true In
degree a requirement for surgery. They were the first to part because the education
use rubber gloves, to grow tissue "most medical students receive
admission.
In return for substantial flnan· cultures and to perform renal Is no longer appropriate for the
clal assistance from a group of dlalsts on patients whose kidneys physicians who will spend most
prominent Baltimore women, It did not function properly. .
of their lives practicing In the
also granted full equality to
Amid the celebration of tl!ose 21st century.' :
To meet those challenges,
female applicants. The first class and other accomplishments,
of 18 students consisted of 15 men some of the mos' thoughtful Johns Hopkins must continue to
and three wqtnen.
speakers warned that Johns · provide what Buchanan des"The founders of Johns Hop- Hopkins and other medica( . crlbed as ,"standard·settiog vikins changed the face of medical schools - indeed the entire sian and leadership" .In medical
education In the United States medical profession - now face care and education.

~!;~~~!7 ~:~:~~~~:~:s:O~~~~

Too much scandal is· junk food diet

,•

'

Cincinnati drops 10 gameS off pace

Tuesday, July 18, 1989

Militclry sought to free hostages

W~lUNGTON- In·an outcry
heard all the way to the White
House, 146,630 angry Americans
DEVOTED TO THE IN'l't:REST!lOF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
took to their telephones the other
~'b
. ..
night and called for military
~m~
..-.-c::~.,.;;
action to tree the nine remain log
~v
.
American hostages. Or if a
•
rescue li not feasible, most
ROBERT L . WINGETT
Americans want military retrl·
Publisher
.. lion against the captors.
· This was their thunderous
.
response
to our recent television
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
report on terrorism, the results
General Manager
Aulstallt PublisherI Controller
of
which we sent to the White
'~
.
House. Only 9,831 callers wanted
LE'lTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They llhould be \eo• tbiD :!00
to continue relying on diplomacy
worcls loog. AU lellers ilre oubJed to edlllag and mull be alped wltb
to gain the hostages' release.
name, ad.drO&amp;a and lelepbo•e number. No iinalped,le«era wiQ•be ••~
•
From intelligence reports and
118-. Lellet'allhould be In good tule, addreoalaglotauea, aol penoullllea.
.
·
briefings, we have learned that
the American hostages have
been singled out for special
abuse. Usually they are confined
to dark cells, chained to their
beds and blindfolded. When they
.

·

Page-2-The Daily Seritinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

The year is not half over. We fix. Like junk food, If consumed
have not even come to the in large portions over an exslow-news months of summer tended period of time, It Is not
when the reportage of sleaze and healthy.
scandal usually intensifies. Yet
It' is not healthy because, at
we. are already drenched In lt. root, -It establishes a pernicious
Tower. Wright. Coelho. And, it is falsehood that makes it more
said, there Is plenty more to difficult to govern a vigorous
come. More hearings, more democracy. Any individual scantrails, more television stakeouts, dal story may be correct, they
more leaks and counter-leaks, may almost all be correct, they
more trivia, more serious stuff, may almost all be correct, they
more partisanship, much more . may almost all be correct, but
sanct bnony.
the totality of the Impression
Will It ever end? Should it end? yielded by the steady drumbeat
·
Can It end?
o'f all the scandal stories put
It may not end frr a long, long together Is not correct. Dear
time. Remember, it's been 15 readers:' This nation Is not
years - since Water11ate - that governed by a collection of
America has been on a rich diet sleazebags, not in Congress and
of scandal.
not in the executive branch, not
n should end. At Its core, now and not earlier.
scandal news Is a junk-food diet
It Is not healthy because, in the
for the body politic. Like junk media age, flrestorrn television
food, It Is tasty and offers a quick news of 'Sieaie devastates in

almost equal measure the repu·
lations of those guilty of serious
deeds. those guilty of triVIa and
those not guilty at all.

·

Ben Wattenberg

taken scandal hits before. Remember Tom Eagleton, Billy
Ca.rter; Geraldine Ferraro and
Is not healthy because the
Hart? This won't lance the
thti!at of a trail by television , Gary
boll;
we'll go right on balling
keeps good popple out of governLance.
ment service .
There are those who think It . Journalists say: Don't blame
us for the scandal-mongering,
can end now that the lens Is
we're
only the rneasen'gen who
turned on liberal Democrats, "
·
bring
.
the bad news. . That Is
rather than conservative Repubmostly bunk. How ' many meslicans. After all, It II said, most of
sengers
do you know who sort
the scandal target&amp; have been
through
a hundred potential
Republicans, while most of the
·
mf!188ges
and decide which three
sanctimonious ·scandal hunters
"
to
deliver?.
have been Democrats. It Is .
argued that Democrats 'wUI now ' The j&lt;lurnallsts say that, even
with the excesses, reporting on
be getting their share of sleaze In
sleaze and scandal cleanses the
the face. And that, It Is said, will
system. There Is some truth to
stop It because everyone will
that; there is some real wrongdosober up and see that everyone Is
Ing.
now destroying everyone. Don't
count on lt. Democrats have

n

..

Tekulve announces.retirement
.

5··=·....::

FIVE POINTS EXPRESS

'

DRIVE THRU CONVENIENCE STORE

._____ _
,

NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR

BASEBALl CARDS
COMPLm SETS

-·

I've

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

ORDER NOW! .

·JOHNSON'S VARIETY STORE

n.

,••

�•
Pllga 4-Tha

Sentktel

Ohio

Tueaday, J&amp;Jy 18, 1989

Tuesday, July 18. 198lf

hiS 22nd hOmer off Dan Petry, a
-three-run shot ·off the plexlglass
front of the SkyDome's center·
field restaurant 440 feet away.
'In the first game, Toronto
snapped a H Ue with a pair of
unearned runs .Jn the seventh.
With one out, slngfes ~Y Lawless
and Felix off Jim Abbott, 8·1;, put
runners at fir st and second base.
Nelson Llrlano hit a potential
· double-play ball to third baseman Jack Howell, but second
baseman · Ray dropped Howell's
throw as Lawless .c rossed the
plate with the go-ahead run.
After Fe lix advanced to third
on Gruber's flyout, Bell hit a
run-scoring infield single . to put
the Blue Jays ahead 6-4.
Elsewhere In · the American
·
League:
Twins 5, Indians 2
At Minneapolis, Kent Hrbekhlt
a three- run homer In the eighth to
cap a four-ron rally that enabled
Minnesota· to exten(j Its winning
streak to three games. Hrbek' s
11th homer came off Doug Jones,
3-4. Juan Berenguer, 6-3, earned
the win and Jeff Reardon worked
the ninth for his 16th save.
Orioles 8, Mariners 4
At Baltimore, Cal Rlpken and
Joe Orsulak each drove In . two
runs and Craig Worthington '
homered to · power Baltimore to
Its fourth straight victory. Pete
Harnisch, 1-2, earned his first
major-league victory to beat
Mike Dunne, 1-4. Harnisch
yielded four runs and eight hits
over eight and one-third Innings.
Tigers 2, Athletics 1
At Detroit. Chet Lemon singled
home Lou Whitaker with one out
in the ninth to lift Detroit. Gene
Nelson. 2·4, took the loss In relief.
Mike Henneman, 6-2, won with
two Innings of scoreless relief.
The' last time the Tigers had· won
two games In a row was June

/

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( D.Marllni•z 10·1 ), 7:3:5 p.m . ·
Phlhtddphla ( Ruftlnl -:') :t.l flnt •lnrar.ti
(•l llo.:ltson 8-$), 7: :U p.m.
PIUID!rl{h ~""alk HI al San IHI' JI;"O
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St . l..oul~ !Hill 5-$) lit SIUI Frand!O(-o
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fhltaJI:IliMaddux 9·71 at IA•10 A.nJ{t•li'fl
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!Kf'J HI. 7:;u p.m.
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CBalbiird 11--1). 7: 3~ p . m .
•
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(Guill e-m K-7 ), II : :u p.m .

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Wt•dnt&gt;sdllV".-. Ga nu-s
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Clt&gt;Vf'llllld at Mln..,1'!ota. nl ~~: hl .,

Donald wins
A-BC crown

With that 7-foot birdie putt on
the par-4 16th hole, Donald won a
three-way playoff to claim the
$153,000 first-place check In the
$Bso,OOO tournament at the soggy
6;776-yard Klngsmill Golf Club .
course. Hal · Sutton was eliml·
nated on the final extra hole
played Sunday before the tournament was suspended due to rain
. and darkness, while Tim Simp·
son was eliminated on Monday's
lone hgie.
. In winning the tournament,
Donald also became the 1015 t
gOlfer to win more than $1 million
on the PGA Tour, wlt·h $1,070,288
for his career.
:Donald, ivbq needed a strong
final' tournament last year to
eyen keep bl.s tour card, did not
dismiss his accomplishments
over 10 years.
) .

.

' 'It hasn't been a horrible
career," Donald said. "I had
oYer $900,000 coming Into this
~k. so It hasn't been painful.
I've been making a good living. "
I
.......
••

_

--

By BOB HOEFLJtg
You might want to mark July
'29 and 30 on your calendar since
these are the
dates for an Innovative actlvlty'belngcarried
out by the Middleport
Chamber ot
Commerce.
·on those two dates the Bend
Area Clearance Sale and Trade
Show will be staged In the
cafeteria of Meigs High School.
Already committed to take part
are over 4() merchants and
professional businesses and
more are expected to sign ln.
The event Is not lbnlted to
Middleport businesses - . It's
open to all professionals, businesses and other sales people.
Merchants will be taking a
variety of stock to the activit)'
and prices are expected . to be
es peelally good.
Legal, medical and dental
professionals wlll·be also partlclpatlrtg as well as food businesses.
Mike Gerlach Is heading the
activity and Is making every
effort to contact everyone who
ml8ht want to· participate. However, should you be missed,. do
.feel free to contact Mille at his
business, Corner Collections, In
Middleport. If he Isn't there just
leave y.o ur number and he will
get back to you.
Incidentally, with so many
taklng·part It laoks like the sale
and show may extend In the
hallways at Meigs High.
Hours on Saturday, the 29th,
will. be from 5 to 9 p.m. and on
Sunday, the 30th, will be from 1 to

•

••..
..••
..•
~

.

.

~

WATCH DOUBLE PLAY - Mhmesota second the filth liming of Monday n.l ght's .game In tlie
basemaa AI Newman (left) and Cle\leland's Dlon .. Melrodome In Minneapolis. (UPI)
James watch the second hall of a double play lr\

~

·~

•

By LEE LEONARD
there was no federal question and grounds 'tot removal (to federal' · prejudice and local bias have not
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
no diversity permitting federal courtl." said the memorandum.
been grounds for federal remoPete Rose's lawyers said Mon·
val jurlsdlctlon ·since 1949."
jurisdiction. Unsupported specu·
Staebler cited court cases that
day he Is no greater than the latlon · to the contrary Is wrong '' he said showed "allegations of
Cincinnati Reds or the game of and Irrelevant."
!·baseball, and lt Is "wrong· and
There was no Indication when
Irrelevant" to \ISsume he would Holschuh would rule on JurisdicIMUirt_ ..,_ ...
have a home-field advantage In a tion. It Rose bet on baseball
SPRING
VALLEY
CINEMA
AU.IU!WII.IO
......,_,.,._,..
Cincinnati court.
games, he could be suspended by
446
4524
"(~1~:
.
-~l~~AUtun II. •
In a memorandum f!led In U.S.
the commissioner. It he bet on
Dlstrh;t Court, the attorneys for Reds games, he could be banned·
JUU'14 ttvu 20
the Reds' manager also said It Is for life.
FRIDAY thru TlfURSDAr:
legal for Rose to sue the Reds and
"In fact, " Staebler's brief
,,.,_ DYNAMITE."
..
-...,..
major league baseball and that continued, "Pete Rose's reputa·
. . .. L
they have tailed to prove his tion and affiliation with Clncln·
\
:1'
,...,.,. ....
gambling case should be decided nat!, though not Insubstantial. Is
In federal court.
~.,~
no greater than that of the
o~a-a
Rose, shown by a 225-page Cincinnati Reds or baseball'
Investigative report conducted Itself. Indeed, as Commissioner
_
by the baseball commissioner's Glamattl himself said only seven
·M4PIJ\I
office to have bet on sporth\g days ago: 'The season'sgolng on.
~:::!!111 PASSts
..... --""~·
.
events, Is trying to avoid possible No one Individual Is any bigger
110 STIII[IIT OISCOIJIT ·,
C
MJS
AM
THtS
ftAlUIIE
.
s\lspenslon from the game by than the game.'
7:00 I 9:l0 DAILY
7:00 I 9:3D DAILY
Commissioner A. Bartlett
" Neither the fame of the
SAT/SUN I WED MATINEES SAT/SUN I WED MATINEES
I:
I 3: 0
Glamattl.
plaintiff por the Importance of
Rose won a temporary res- the Issues Involved are SIJI'clfled
training order last month In anyWhere In the U.S. Code as
Hamilton County Comrrion Pleas
Court, halting disciplinary action
by Glamattl. He claimed thE'
commissioner was prejudiced
and already had decided agalns.t
him.
But the commissioner's office
had the case removed to federal
court, maintaining local biases .
and press11res gave baseball's ·
•
all-time hits leader a natural
'• ..
· advantage In the Cincinnati
courtroom of Judge Norbert
'
Nadel.
·
Rose asked li.S. District Judge
John Holschuh to remand the
case back to HamUton County,
but Glamatti's attorneys argued
that baseball Is the national
pastime and the commissioner
has been directed by all the clubs
to maintain the Integrity of.the
game.
Rose ' s lawyer, Robert
Stac·hler, In his response, termed
the attempted removal to federal
court ' 'frivolous'' and said it was
a ~ ·gratuitous" charge that Rose
was willing to accept jurisdiction
only in a Cincinnati court. .

.....

lBHAL

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'Charlie Hustle' not bigger th~ baseball

...

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......

1989

"This totally · misperceives
Pete Rose's position," said the
legal brief. "Pete Rose filed the
action In state court because

;
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"'"'"'

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.,..,
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--Local news briefs... -~.

Pomeroy, Ohio

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EMS units respond to 4 calls

fortheDippin'.

I

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is·
Coming August .. 11 th.
Advertis_ing Deodli~e .Is.
August 5, 1989

.. !

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to itch and begins to whine,
yo1.1r Purina dealer can
make your dogfeeljlne.

'

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CALL BRIAN OR DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

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WHY YOU SHOULD

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banks that let you pay your
Interest and don't say a' word.
And then you hope next year Is
better."

INVEST IN A

THURSDAY JULY 20, 1919-10:00

··

Trade ...

.

The Store with "All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pats. Stables. LarQB &amp; Small Animals, ""'''""

Come dressed to he/ p cUp
and bring yoUr own t0\1¥81.

You can tell me.
.
Hoi\' many times since Saiurday have you, out of habit, dialed
the nine-nine-two numbers without using the nine-nine?
Of course, with the new system
put Into operation by General
Telephone Co. o!Ohlowecan'tdo
tt.at anymore. Isn't It amazing
how much more time and energy
It takes to do those two extra
flicks of the dial now? Well, It was
a perk while It las.ted. Do keep
Sll)lllng .

Weather

~

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY ·CO.
992·2164

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RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
.

BAD TOMATOES - Mary IDil dlll)llays two had tomatoes
damaged by this year's heavy rainfall.

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.ON ALL CLOTHING!
949-2800

The ques tlon as to when the last
street care ran In Pomeroy has
arisen. The date escapes me. If
you have a firm date, I'd
appreciate hearing from you.
Thanks .

TOMATO PICURS - Three workers plcklal tomaioe~ oa the
Don Rlcllard mu Farm were sdll In the field at 3 on Moaday
afternoon. Corey mn, Michelle McCoy, Carlllsa Hill, Ste\le Tracy,
Jeff Tracy, · Amber Cummins and Heath mn were among
Monday's pickers. ·

--Area deaths-·- -

•"

20°/o OFF

3RD STREET

him Sunday at . the open bouse
held at the Senior Citizens Cepter
to mark his retirement from 35
years of practice In the Bend
area.
, Hostesses were staff
members, Diane Hawley, Mona ·
Neal, Janet Russell and Judy
Pape and they were joined by
former employee, now retired,
Louisa Johnson. The.group found
that It was a pretty big chore to
keep up with serving refres.h·
ments to the large crowd
attending.
Apparently, they like their
present positions pretty well
because when It was suggested
that they might sign on with a
restaurant to ·serve food on a
dally basis their answer was NO
WAY .
Old you know that Mrs. Mabel
Moore, well knolfll by many In
Pomeroy, has been hospitalized
and has undergone surgery~ She ·
was ·a ble to . be among those
attending Sunday's open house
and Is doing ·well.

black spots turn soft and some of
Approximately one million to- at local road side stands and to
them seem to be lull of water,
mato plants are . planted each farmer's markets In Meigs and
reports Mary Hlll, also of the Don
year In thE' Letart Falls area, surrounding counties, the i(lss of
Richard Hill farm .
producing about 250,000 to3()(),000 · corn crops wlll still be felt by
·
During a day In a normal
iO-pound baskets wlllch are farmers.
Bell peppers are another big
growing season, workers would
shipped out to nortlfern and
be picking tomatoes. by 6 a.m .
eastern markets each summer. con\tnodlty !or local farms . Thus
and finished by about 11 a.m. or
The number of baskets shipped far ln . the late growing season,
12 noon. On Monday howel(er,
out will be greatly reduced tl)ls only a few bell peppers have been
picked. But "the peppers look ·
workers were still In the fields at
summer .
But tomatoes weren't tile only like . they're OK," says Heath
3 p.m. ''It takes more time when
6.
Hill.
you have to sort out so many bad
crop damaged by rains.
Heath, and his mother, Mary
tomatoes," says Heath Hill. The
Corn production Is also. down.
Thanks from Dr. John. Ridg·'The wa(er kept the plants from Hill, both agreE' they'd rather
bad have lobe picked right along
way for the good day you gave
pollinating," says Clarence Hill, battle a year with too llt[le rain.
with the good. lf bad tomatOes
are left On the vines, they'llcause
"and what the water didn't get, than too much rain.
So what ·happens to area
the birds did." As with tomato
potentially good tomatoes to rot
too.
·
farmers
when they have two bad
fields, farmers couldn't get
..
'
growing
seasons in a row - one
In the packing houses, tor'na·
equipment Into fields to cultivate
She Is survived by two daughCaiTie ~borne
caused
by
too little rain, the other
corn crops either.
ters, Mrs. Wilbert (Gladys), toes are dumi&gt;ed onto a conveyor
belt wltere workers sort through
Although corn produced on caused ' by too much ' rain? Says
Carrie ·Pullins Osborne, 80, ·Barber, and Margery OsbOrne,
them
again
and
pack
the
good
area
farms Is normally just sold Clarence Hill. "You thank
Reedsville, died Sunday after, both of, ~ville; two grand-.
heaven for understanding local
Into baskets for shipping.
James'
Osborne,'
·
Reeds·
sons,
. noon at Veterans Memor!al Hos· .
pltal · following', an '' extend~ . ville. aqd Robert .E . . Barber,
Coolville; Qne . great·
11Jness. ·
:ontlnued from page 1
granddaughter,
and one sister,
Born In Olive Towns~lp, Meigs .
Continued from page 1
County, she was the daughter of Twlla Clark, RaCine.
•She
was,
prece!Ied
In
death
by
. plants when the,plants are young.
Th~re ' s no control ior the virus. Haven. W. Va., Syracuse, Rathe late Oztas 11nd Mat de R~
:Pullins. She was a hom~aker, a . her 1\usb•nd, James Lewis Os- This avoids damaging the. roots . Commercial growers fight' It by cine. Chester, Rutland, MiddleThrlstlan by faith, and a'llfelong· borne In 1972, an&lt;f a son, ·James .of larger plants. Staked tomatoes controlling thrjps and by using port and Pomeroy partlclpatlng.
Robert ·osborne ·In· 1974! along need sterns tied six or . seven
To date a total of 43 businesses
'fesldent of the Reedsville area .
disease-free transplants.
··
· tlnies as the plants grow. Suckers
with four sisters.
-Early blight. It has also hit have been contacted and are
,Funeral serVices will be bel~ at should also be removed from
some tomato plants In Ohio. Interested In participating. Gerlthe· Spencer Funeral Home at staked tomatoes.
Affected plants lose their lower ach anticipates another·dozen or
Belpre WedneSday at 2 p.m. with
-Don't
spray
herbicides
near
leaves first. The fungus can so will come in.
'
the
Rev.
John
Dulas
otflcla
ling.
Merchandise will be moved to
tomato plants. The plants are
Dally siocll prlc'es
spread up the plant causing all
Burial· will . be ·In the TuJlllE'rs seqsltlve .to herbicides, particuthe
cafeteria and the trade
·(As of 10 a.m.)
the leaves to drop.
Plains
Cemetery.
F~tends
may
booths
set up on Saturday of the
larly 2,4-D. Herbicides can easily
Bryce aad Mark Smith
Plants with blight can be ·
can·
at
the
funeral
home,
2
to
4·
damage or kill them. Symptoms
of Blunt, EIIII &amp; Loewl
sprayed with the fungicide sale weekend and wlll open to
and 6 to 9 p.m Tuesday and up of herbicide damage Include' · Maneb. Follow the label direc- buyers and browsers that evenuntil the time of services.
twls ted or curled leaves.
Am Electric Power .............. 29
tions carefully to ensure fungi- Ing, 5 to 9 p.m. Sunday hours wlll
Tomatoes are also suffering
AT&amp;T ..... ;............... :...........36%
cide residues aren't on the be noon to 7 p.m.
Gerlach said that one of the big
from disease problems, some of
Ashland Oil ....... : ................. 38
tomatoes at harvest time.
aclvan
tages of having the sale at
which are related to the un11sual
Bob Evans .... ,........... ... ..... :.15% ·
-Wilt. Some varieties of !O·
the
school
is the free and plentiful
weather,
Utzinger
says.
He
lists
Charinlng Shoppes ... ...... .... .16%
mato have been weakened by
.
The
couples
have
been
granted
parking.
City Holding Co .. .......... ~ .... 15%'
several of the diseases :
wilt disease. Avoid the disease by
In addition to theehd·of-season
-Spotted virus wilt. It has hit
Federal Mogul .................... 23~ dissolutions of marriage and one
using varieties resistant tovertl,
couple
...
has
been
granted
a·
clearance
sale of merchants,
commercial tomato 'f arms In the
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... .. ........54%
cllllum and fusarium wilt.
divorce
In
the
Meigs
County
several
professionals,
Including
.state. The .virus . Is carried by
Heclt's ....... .. .... ..... , .. .... ........ ~
Court
of
Common
Pleas.
..
Insurance agents. accountants,
lhrlps, a common Insect pest.
Key· Centurion .·....... ,.......... .12%
Granied dissolutions are Jerry Some plants In home gardens
:' public relations firm, and medl·
Lands' End .......... : .............. 27%
. · Limited Inc ............ ............32 ~ L. Tillis and Darlene Tillis;
could become Infected· by the
By United Press International ' cal personnel will havf' exhibits .
Sharon F. Dra,sko and Joseph F. virus. : Af.f ected plants · are
and displays .
Multimedia Inc ............... .. ... 97
South Central Ohio.
At least four food places wlll be
Tonight; Increasing cloud 1Rax ,Restaurants ......... .. ... , .. . 2)i, · Drasko, Jr.: ·. and. Peggy ·Ann stunted and ' bronze ln. color.
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. .......... 16% Stevens and Charles Edward
ness. with a chance of showers there for the convenience of
.
and thunderstorms late. Lows shoppers.
Shoney's Inc ............. .. .... ,... 11% Stevens.
Meigs
announcemenl8.
K.
VanMeter
has
been
Nancy
will be In the mid 60s. Light south
Wendy's'lnt1 ....,. .. .................. 5%
·worthington lnd ................. 22~ · gFimte.d a divorce trbm Melvin R.
winds. Chance of rain 40 percent.
VanMeter, Sr.
Volleyball to start
Wednesday: Showers and
·All girls wishing to play volley- thunderstormsm, with a high
ball at Eastern High School, near 80 Chance of rain 80
grades .7·12, . who have not yet percent ;
.
Continued from page 1 ,
'
• 'c
, recelyed the volleyballlnforma;~
Extended Foreclllit
tlon
packt&gt;t
should
make
arranThursday
through Saturday
and was treated for minor lnJ\Irles.
.
gements
to
do
·so
as
soon
as
A
chance
'o f showers and
Parker's car sustained heavy damage from the accident.
possible.
For
Information
call
thunderstorms
dally. Highs wlll
A driver also was Injured In a two-ca~ accident on SR 124 at
667-6942
or
667-6530.
be
between
75
and
85. with early
9:33p.m. when a car driven by Cynthia Bailey, 19, Vinton, hit a
morning lows mainly In the 60s.
car driven by Gary Milton, 77, Pomeroy.
·
Bailey was attemJ)tlng to pass Milton while he was making a
left turn. Milton's car was hit on the lett side and he complained
Super Lotto jackpot
of a minor Injury. ·
Veterans Memorial
He was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Meigs County
Monday admissions - Elsie reaches $14 million
Emergency Medical Services.
.
Roush,
Portland: Dorothy Robin·
Balley 1s car sustained light damage while Milton's car was
son. Coolville; and Candace
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
moderately damaged. The patrol said the accident Is still M!der
Tillis, Ru !land.
jackpot foi' Wednesday's drawlnvestlagtlon.
·
Monday discharges -Roberta Ing of the Super Lotto wlll be at
Dalley and Margaret Wyatt.
least $14 million.

SUMMER SALE

WILLIAMSBURG, Va . (UPI)
- In his 10 ye ars on the PGA
Tour. Mike Donald has ' been
known more for his influence
be hind the scenes than on the
greens. Until Monday , th at is.
Donald , an important figure in
shaping policy in his position as a
player-director on the tour's
powerful policy board, birdied
the first playoff hole Monday th e fourth for the tournament to claim his first career victory in
\h f rain-extended Anheuser ·
Busc h O assic.

. .

8o~lon ut Tt•lu&amp;s.

Cit]' , ftl~thl

Ells t

" "t"!OI
CMiifornill .......... ......... 53 :m ~n ~ Oaklund ............ ..........34 39 .llll K~ri- C'lty .......•. ...•... .51 4Q .5h
I! ~ .
Tt"'llll'l . .............. ..... ......-tt -tz .33!1 -1
Chlc~&amp;~d .. .....................37

KlUI!IIUO

NATIO~t\L

8 tdtimono .. ... ...............3'l 314 Xi H S ew ' 'o rk .....................t6 U .JUII ;

ToroMo ............... ........ -16
Roslon ................. .;..... A:t
Cit-ve l and ....................-~:~
MHw;w ... e ................ ...4'!'
Detroit .•.......•......••......33

Mllwau Itt• ~· .. ,

·Middleport .Chamber plans
big ev~nts . on July 29, 30

27-28.
I
While Sox 7, Yankees 8
At Chicago, Carlton Fisk went
3 for 4, Including his· 2,000th
career hit, to help Chicago
extend Its season-high winning
· streak to five games. ·Dave
LaPoint, 6-7, yielded Fisk's big
hit and took the loss. Steve
. Rosenberg, 3·5, allowed three
runs In seven . arid two- third
Innings and Shawn Hillegas got
his third save:
Royals 3, Brewers 2
At Kansas City, Tom Gordon,
11-2, scattered six hits over
eight-plus Innings and struck out
a career-high 10 In his first start
of the season. Tom Flier, 0·1,
lasted six Innings, yielding four
hits, four. Walks and three runs.
The Brewers tied a season high
with their fifth consecu tlve lou.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend

Blue _lays ground Angels in
twinbill; Twins beat Tribe 5~2
By Uaited Press lnlerriatloaaJ·
Toronto discovered a winning
combination In the opening game
of Monday night's double header
and they found It worked just as
well in the nightcap.
· Reliever David Wells won two
games and bullpen mate Tom
Henke notched two saves, lead·
lng .the Blue Jays to a 5·4 and 6·4
· twin-killing of the Califor nia
· Angels.
·
"'I won two games In a high
schOPI tournament once," said
Wells, who hurled one and
two-tl!lrd shutout Innings In the
opener and blanked the Angels
for three Innings In the nightcap.·
"But I've never done It In the
majors. Once In a Triple-A game
.I got a loss and a save in a
' doubleheader."
For Henke, who struggled
throughout the first half of the
season, the double-save evening
was sweet vindication.
"I said early in the season that
· If they'd just give me enough
action I'd be effectlve." said the
right-hander who in his last 15
appearances has five saves and
three wins. "I think I had six
outings In the first six weeks and
I said I just couldn' t pitch like
that. "
A sellout crowd of 48,641 , the
largest ever to watch a game' in
Toronto, saw the Blue Jays win
tor the seventh time In their last
nine games. The Angels have lost
. five straight ariel dropped into a
first-place tie with Oakland In the
AL West.
With the score tied 4-4, Gruber
opened the eighth Inning of the
nightcap with an Infield single of!
Bob McClure, 2-i. George Bell
'followed with a double Into the
left-field corner, scoring Gruber
without a play.
In · the bo.ttom of the flrst
lpnlng, Fred McGriff launched

'·

ACODINYS

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--.:...

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Ser.vice
responded io four calls on Monday.
.
At 6:48a.m. the Tuppers Plalns .unlt,.asslsted.by the Pomeroy
unit, was called to Route 681 West for an auto accident In which
Josephine Kibble was transported to Camden Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg, W.Va. Also Involved In the accident were Frank
Parker and Mary Parker who both refused treatment.
The Syracuse unit. transported Billy Joe Halley from
Syracuse at 1:29 P,.m. to Veterans Memorial Hos.pltal.
At 2:25 p.m. the Pomeroy Fire Department was called to
Peach Fork Road on a structure .tire at the Jim Hayes
residence. The depariment' was assisted by Scipio Township
Fire Depariment and the Syracuse Fire Department.
The Middleport Fire Department at 9:40p.m. responded to an
auto accident at the lnter.ectlon of Route 7 and 124 In which
Belinda Bailey was taken to Velerans Memorial and Cindy
.
. Bailey was treated but not ri'anaported.

DaVid R. Ayers, M.D.
Faniily Practice.
'

I:.
I'

- - - ·.. on•.,... ........ ~- ....- ~ ..

·~ ..,..

Mon~ay
through Friday
·
.
' .

,1;4;;30 a.m . .·~ .5:00 p.~. , · .

.
'

·'

holding back wait·
ing fcir a great rate,
this is it. But you've
got to act fast.

This offer from
Central Trust

Sulte · l~

PVH Medical Office Bulldlng
(304) 675-6015

Meigs. Title Office closir&amp;i earlier
The Title Office In the Meigs County Court Hou!ll! will
temporarUy be closing at 3 p.m.. untU further notice due to .,
unexpected circumstances. This situation will be as temporary
ali poutbk! and anyone wltll any qunllons or problem• may call ·
Larry Spencer at 992-52111 during the day, or ~g.~ In the
evenlnp.
,

Office Hours:

II you've been

.

is available for a
limited time only.
For more infor·
mation contact
your nearest
central Trust office
« atl Glila i!h 446-41902
. Mltl......., 992-6661

THE CENTRAL TIIBrCOM~
1ht BaM That MaWs~ &amp;pfJtn.

1

'

IJLI PLEASANT VALL£Y HOSPITAL
• .,.... 1M fomlfy al pro!.uionot.
'

.

.

Vahv Drive, Point Pieulnt W.VL 25550

�-- T

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
Mijler family gathers for ·reunion .

Tueeday,

TOPS ·570 meets

Graduates named

..

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THERE'S ABETTER WAY TO PROTECT
YOUR MONEY WHILE YOU TRAVEL

'

.

$15.oo ·

••

••
. '~

r.:::,~~::..:~PER
SUNDAY PAPER

~

13- lnlurlnce
1 4-Busln•• Treining
16-Schooll • lnstruetlon
18- Ridio. TV &amp; CB Repair
1 7-MI•cell.,eoua
18-Wanted To Do

21-Bu•k1•• Opportunity
22-Moni'J to Loan
23-Prot•llonlll Servict~~

following telephone exchanges...

Rr~ol

'

~
1;-

4441-Qalllpollo
3B7-Ch•hire

9t2-Middl-rt

'
...
'

318-VInton
2411- Aio Grande
258-GUyan Diat .
643-AratMeOist.

1571 - Apple OrCNe
843-Pcwtt.nd
773-Mason
247- Ltten hils 882-New..Htven
949-A•cin•
· 891- Letert
742-Autltnd
937-Buffllo

i;

f

~

~

.,.

~

\"
rc.

371-Wtlnut

.

Pom...,
98&amp;-Ch•ter ·

Mnon Co .. WV
Are•Code3o•
87&amp;-Pt. Plo0unt
•ti!58-Leon

8&amp;7- CooiYIIe

----~..;;.,------------1 ·

41 - HouHI for Rent
•2-Moblle Hom• for Rent

43-Firmt for .AentRent .
4•-Apartment'for
•a-FurrUtf'!ed Rooma

:u:.::..~~~:.:t ,

Oet Retu· Its F-a·et

•

••

Public Notice

tslaiP.

31 - Horp for S~e
·
32-Mobile Hom• for S1le
33-F.rms for Slit
34- Busin•• Buildings
36-lots • Acreege
38-Aalll btat1 W111ted

· U-Equipmlid for Rent
41-For W•e

f· -----.,.~,--,--- --=-:-::c-=-:~

•

Form Supplies
&amp; Lrvcslock

1 1 -Help W41!1'1ted

Classified pages cover the
.

to. Sole

57- Muliclllnstrumenta
68-Fruitl • Vegetabl•
&amp;9- For Sale or Trade

12-Shuation W111ted

Meigs County
AruCode614

7

51-Poto

Si~IVII.CS

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- I I :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY
- 2:00 -P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00P .M . THURSDAY
- 2:00P .M FRIDAY

Gallil County
AreaCode&amp;1•

•\&lt;

53-Antiqun
5•- Misc. Merehlftdi•• ·
55-Building Suppli•

61 - hrm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
153- Lhlestpdrl
&amp;•- Hey &amp; Grein
6~-Seed
FertMizar

• Public N'otice · .

•
.•.,

NOTICE OF .
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF .
APPOINTMENT OF
F-IDUCIARY
•
FIDUCIARY
On July 6. 1989. in the
On July 6. 19B9. in
Countv Probote
Moigo
Cou ntv Pro bote Melgo
Court. ·Cue No. 262117, Court. Ceoe No. 28311.
Myrville Brown. Box t 39. Fronk W. Porter, Jr., Route
fl3. Box 36A. Recino, Ohio
Rutland. Ohio 4117711.
• • -olnted Execut01 of the 41!711, WOI oppofiited Exeeotate of lvo Stewart, de- cutor oft he ltlltete of t..opho
toto of Box 2111. Wegner. *-Btl. tete of
Recine, Ohio 45n1.
~! , Rutland. Ohio 45n&amp;.
Robert E. Buck.
~;
Robert E. Buctc.
Proboto Judge
~·
Probate Judge
lena K. ·Neuelroed, Cieri&lt;
~ ..' lene K. Nosselrosd, Clerk
, . (7J 11, 18, 26 Jtc
. (7) 11. 1B. 25 3tc

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w•

" -ed.

Tronsporl~lion
71 - Autos for Sal1
72- Trucks for Sale
73-Vens &amp; 4 WD's '
74-Motorcyel• ·
71-Boets &amp; Motors for Sale
78-Auto Part. &amp; Acc•IOfi•
77-Auto Rep1lr
71- Camping Equipment
79-Campers Ill Motor Homn

81 -- Homelmprovem,ts
82~Piumbing • He•ing

13-h:c..,ating
84- Eiec:trictlll &amp; Refrtgeration
815-0eneral Heuling
88-Mobile Home Repair •

Public Notice

· ' Sold huring wHI be hoi din
lEGAL- NOTICE
the Common Pta• CourtRe: Propoaed Annexation
room on the third floor oflh•
IO Middleport Village
This flo to odvioe that the Meigo Countv CourthouiS .
All written end oral comMeigo Countv Boord of
menta
will be heard at the
Commiaaionera h1ve ntab·
tithed thedotoof Auguot23, time so dellgnoted.' ,
. Bob Gilmore.
f989 end timo ·of 10:00
50 Riverview Drive
o'cloctc A.M. for • public
Middleport, Ohio 46 760
hnrlng on the propooed onAgent
for the Petltlone&lt;S
nexotion to 'tho Vltlego of
(7) ~ 8, 26; (8) 1, 8, 4tc
Middleport, Ohio.

liSA/Iii 1M WMT.AIJl

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
·OSTEIN$

Roger Hysell
Garage .

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INlEIIOI-ImiiOI

lt. 124, "-riiy Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Tallo the pall out of
palnflnt. lot M do
It for you.

Aleo Tr••••leelo•

YIIY IUSQIIULI
• HAYI UfiiiiiCI

PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

6lot·915·C11d

LW. STEWART
TRUCKING
YOUCAU IT
WE Will HAUL IT

HAULING
1600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIU HAUUD

992-5275

&amp;

SIDING CO.
New._ lullt

Adolescent Medicing

•Gravel

•Limestone

Now Seeing New Patien~
.'
'

742-2421

••

__............

PEOPLES ·BANK

Suite 118

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPrrAL
The fctmlly ol ptOfeuionals .

V...y DrhM, Point Plealllnl, W.Va. 25550

MEI.ER F.D~C.

New Haven

Point Pleasant

882·2135

675-1121
B•nk

Your Good

Mason ·

®

773-5514:

Equal

Housing LAnder

IAIU ....

I

SE~IOE

S::,~~-=.:•

I'

...·

r_., -

•anu.'.

PAT ... fOlD
112·2111

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

a.t. a.-a

·I i::'·

•SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

I:....

•LIGHT HAULING

~

.. I

~d.·

.. I

·.·;

·~··-

·--..

,,
--··· ---~ -,-· --··-·

1 fullv ... ulppotl Phvild.,'o
laboratorv. No 1.hlft work. A'ppty
in penon- Medical PI••· 203
Jac:bon Pika Gellipolll. 8 ;30 to

5 :00.

Love clot"'s1 Deino~1trete
beautit.ll dot,_ for•n.w pMty

ProfessiDIIallnstallation

•FIREWOOD

FR~E

EmMAm
IISIDENJW. &amp; COMMIIOM.

•

.992-2269
EVENINGS

OHIO
_CAMPGROUNDS

'' J&amp;l

INSULATION

NOW OPEN

(jtrtoint•d ®

. VinyfSiding
· Seamltss Gulter
Rtpfocemont Windows
Blown lns ..ation

WITH lOOMS AND
APARTMENTS FOI
lENT (By Day or
Week)

Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

$18 Ptr Day &amp; Up

Call 992-2772

949-2526

7.- 12-'89-1 mo.

7-12·'89· 1 mo.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ

DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON
IN MIDDtEPOIT, OHIO

•Rmlgeratorl
"Must It llplll,.le" .

iEM'S APPUANCE

ollruse Jobs

oGenerll ChiSs is

Stratton.

992-'3B97 •

"At letllOIItlble Prices"

••• 949-2801
or 1... 949-2160
Day .. Nilht
NO SUNDAY CAllS

815-779-11107 bt." 81&amp;

Middleport, Oh.

(NIIt to Hill Top G'ocery)

Eel'( WOrk! EJIIC. Pl¥1 A..Mnbte
product• at home. c.tt for
lntormetion . 50 .... 149'- 0870
Ext. 313 (Open Sunoloitl

6-16-tln

DMtal •siltent ntlllded. E xp.
pfef•red but not necawv.

Send resume to: eta loa: 002.
G1llipolil Dally Tribune. 826
lhirdA\111, Gallipolil. OH4&amp;131 .

An~room workers torG•ItieCo.
Jr. hir. July 31·Aug IS. C:ou~•
pool•-• · Coli 614-446-9443.
or 614-448- .. 120.

A1111 ounL: emen 1s
3 Announcements
Alf'lned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio. 238 E..t M•in
Straet. announces"""' hours for
client servic• beginning A ugu at
I. I 9S8. The office of PPSEO
will be open on Wedn11day1•d
dosed on Thurlldeys. Hourt •re
to be 8:30 to 5 :00 Mon41Y;
Wedn ..diiV and FridiiY; 9:30 to

8:00 on Tuesctev.

4·

Givfi!IWBV

Free kKtena togive11Wey-3male,

2 fem1le. 8 wks. o4d Call
114388-9956.
~ room houl8. Lumber ftee for
teerina down houae. Cell S.tur·
dov• only. 814-448- 27B4.

Regillared Collie &amp; GermWt
S,ap,_d to gtveeway to good
hpme. C•ll 814-388-9958.

lht~~lepupa. S.lPoodlepups.
Coli lt4- 388-8727.

3 kittens. 1 white. ·2 cllico.
30487&amp;-1703.
7 Mo. old, -"•II mMe. mix breed
puppy alto fllmele be•gle, 304-

-

Blocl&lt; Coetcor Sp.,iol 304-87555&amp;1 .

I lARIY D. BROGAN, CIC
I c.tifiod ........... c.......
t.. •tmont lral&lt;w
I,
I
I·
1
422 Market SlrHI
P. 0. lox 111
P..-kenburg, WV 26102
i 1-100·333-5252

8 Lost arid Found
Found. white and orengi mal&amp;

Brittnev Sp•nlel . 304· 882·
3282.

.......G-allip-olis··--··--··
2 ftmlv : 701 Pine Street. Rio
Grondo-Thur•• Fri. 20th.21ot
8 a.m. to .. p.m. B•IIW rtems.

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
EXCEPT
HOUDAYS

, We·Buy All
,.on Ferrous
~ . Metals,.
f I Plastics, ,
Stainless.Steel,
'l
Etc•

dott., furnftura .
Y•d Sele: Tlw.lrs. Fri. Sat .
Thurmon OH. bot- At. 3&amp;, •

tiM dumpbedtructc, or te•eone
of ours. Your trudl. must be
property insured • you thoukl be
able to work ft.:lble houra. Work
avail~• in single or multiple
locations. ACT NOWIIil Acetin·
ingApplicMfonsW.d.Juty 1P. 8
e.m . - 5 p.m . Thurs. Juty 20. 8
a .m. · 6 p.m . 84 lumber
Company, At. 2 O.llipolit: Feny,

wv.

Choleetrol Sereaning Technician: Will train, mutt htNe
relieble tr.-.sportation. Call 81 ~
448-4407.

2 nurMI lidl. Shop cl•k. 2
house h:-r:,•· Inquire at Oddl
andEndl
p. Mldcllpon. '
TELEMARKETING. 5 :30-1:30
evenings, Mond.y lhrough
Thursday. 15.00 per hour plus
bonuo. Coli 814-992-7440.
1,0 :00 a .m.· 1 :00 p.m. only.

Office Menager-Bookkeeper
needed for Ameri~e-Pomeroy.
This position r«~uiree 2 v•••
bookkeeping acperia"lce wllh
Medi~e and MediCiid billing
preferred. This il a full ch•ga
bookkeeping po•tdon which il
r•pontible for ell Account•
Recetvable ecUviU• . Send l,e.
1umea: to : Willi~mJ . Bi•. Adm ..
387&amp;9 Rod&lt;springo Rd .. Pom ..
roy, Ohio E .O.E.
Need Mtrl money1 AWin. lfi. to
get star1ed. Free gift. Call
814-992-7180.

Need Bowling Une Man,or.
Mu1t .,.,. gOod personlllity, ke
to meet people. willing to work
some night•. make p-.onil end
telephone oontlcts. Must be
self· ttarter end en•gaic. Write
Box 408. Pomeroy . Ohio.
4&amp;789 g;,;ng rull ,,..,._ru,n
time or part time.

WOINO&lt;

304882-2845.

'

AVON all •easll Shirley Spe••·
304-875- t429.

'

Aecept ton!st·lnsuNn ce Clerk fOr
ioCII doctor'• office. send r•
aume to Bo• 3150, Point Pie•
aant. WV 25&amp;50.
'
Drummer needed for 811tabHshld
Herd Rock-Metal · b.-.d Catl
304-875-7114&amp;.
•

Middlepof1
&amp; VIcinity
Olrsgo Sole July 11, 18, 20.

1992-5_1__.1,...4,_~·t

9

Rta.

I

Profeuional Sub Contr'act

HIUier. Mutt own'a11• orlo"v•

...,..'Pomerov· ·-:--~-- -­

lchoal. All ' " " chH- .,d
Hilt - " ' · • humloltl•. ... ldokn.... etc.

Jot.

-illll

SUBCONTRACT HAULER ·84

L...,blr ComplftY II

279. AcroasfromoldCentwvlle ·certified ""phtorv Therapy
Technid111. oont1ct Penonnfl
lchool House.
Office. Pleaalnt VIII fill Ho•pitif,
.
•
Going out of bobr ooie/Moving 304-575-4340.
sale. loy• infent to four. bebv
Prior Milltlf'V Serw lee lndiv iclJa..
•coe~soriH. I79JeyDr. Thurs.,
n-d. Join the Aomy Netionfl
Fri... Sot. 8-4.
Ouord pa~·tlme. Montlov - 3 ,.,... Tooll.-clotHna ,__. chlldt, 20 ye• r«lr.,lftl, COl·
hold .,d much m.,., Don't miss lege ••ietanoa. 304-171-3110
•
l h i l - Thundlr¥ .FIIcJev. 9-7. or 1-800.842-3118.
424 Fourth A,.. -aogo.
'

kve
Us A Call
f Today"

Locltld Off ~t'l

C.'

AVON · AD Wel!l. Call Marilvl1

&amp; Vicinity

.,RECYCLING

We need Upet"ienced Conckllt .
Runnlft. Mu1t be lbae to mike
elec:.1rical connactlofui. E•p•
rienced onlv need applv.
814-2&amp;5-11068.

7
Yard Sale
- - - - -- I - - " " - - - - -,
-

HU..1I

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

shlled. For inform.tion C..

St. Rt. 124

891-3079.

51111. E.l. 1:45 , .M. .I
DOOI PillE
2 H.D. FREE with COUJ1011•d I·
pun:h~~e of inin. H.C. Pa~ I
IlL Lim~ ~ coupon per cos- 1.
tomer per binJI sessoon.
I
Wt Po&lt;/ 150.00 Pw Gamt .
Owtr I tO P10plt 16S.oo 1

915-UOO
CIIISI&amp;

CRUISE SHIPS Now - g I l l
poaifions.. Bot;h aklted &amp; Uft.

Adorable puppies. 6'1t weeki
Old Fluffy. littledaga. 304·6758833 .

,---·------~,.

•T·SHIRTS
oJACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS.
ORGANIZATIONS

.

lhint•ance
.Computerized Bal•cer

In Middleport, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 end 4-cycle

7-17-'89-1 mo. pd.

BUILDEIS

•Range •Freozor•

.Oil Ch11n1es .

J.mNd at Vahy LUIIIhr

Stoetc Ports for
Homelita. Waede•er.
Tecumseh, Briggs •

loW-.

Now hiring demOMtratcn to 181
home decor kern~ 8UCh •
picturtll. door wr•tw.. 6 etc.
Foron-porty pl.,. Ftl E£1300
Krr. No c:ollec:tlng or. deiW•ing
work your own hr1. ·C.U 814246-5363 for .. intlfViiw.

Mother eM a • kittena. litter
trained. Calic:o mom. 2 yellow a
2 tiger. Btue eyes. Ceii814· 24S.
9424.

en ginn

N!)w Taking

•Walhera •Drven

DUD OR AUVE

•New fires

.Custom Pipe Bendinl

BILL SLACK
4/8/81/ tln

1
BINGO
I POMEROY ·EAGLIS
I
CLUI
'
I
224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
I
I THUIS. U. 6:45 p.M.

JONES TIRE
CENTER

·

No modllinglnv••· Fun

(obwlthfow hill No
no coHICI:inO or diiWa,ln• Cal
81•-2•15 · 5383 , f·o r an
lntwv_..

'

J;

BISSELL

····2161

L·.,_M_Idd_lt_port_...~...-~.tliiloc

..

WANtED

FRE&amp; ESTIMATE~ ,

CloHtll...._

-

· llowcrd L Writlltl

NEW-:-- IEPAII
Guttera
Downspouts

v•A · MAITI!IICHAIIGI
HOUIII: MDII.·FII. 1--7

·

WlftiMOOEUNQ

llllf sr. SIIACIII

ROOFING

• We - ..... and rt•
ECHO SAWS &amp; I US
c.-e ratlat.-. and 1 011G0N IAIS, CIIAINS
...... cora Wt Clll • lYAII SIIWICI c....
.... adtl ........ 1M .
..___ • lor-'-- .._
wt , ...ton. Wt alit I .......,Ai'.,;;: vw
--L. ,._ .,_.__ .

•

oii!NYL IIDING. ROOI'INQ

oNlWHOMU
SINCE I~

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

RADIATOR

.•

-cu.r..:.IITQI-. IATHI
eM !TAL IUILDINGI

H24172

' ....,._~
----·

'

, •Mobile Home
Remelt

POMIIOY, OH.
6-15

to.

.IUSINISS PIIONE
16141 992-6550
.m•ENa PIIOfiE
(6141

742·2455
Salom St.
Rutland,Oh.
6/30/tfn

CHAIN UNK FENCES
, .. .

•HATS

·

2221ad ....

•Fill Dirt

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

PH. 949-2801
or ••· 949-2160

PlltmiiG

•Mobile Hcime-

Partt

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

"Free E;etlmate1"

CUSTOM SCION

HOME PAII ·i

MAmN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

•HOWAlD IOI'AVAI'ORS
•Y AIDMAN MOWERS
.. NTEISI'Alllli'TDES

MY-T-SHOP

MOBIL.

MODElS

•UI'OI TUCTOIS

Help Wanted

Pwt-tlmemedlclllllbtechnici~n

Your Pho!le
I. Cll.ble Bille Here

For Moro lnformtion

5-17-tfn

AU MAKES AND

SALES &amp; SERVK~

eECHO PRODUCTS

Registrations
992-5218

ALLEN'S .

&amp;,27-11-1110. d.

SWEEPER REPAIR

11

Wo Corry Flslllng lullllll•

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

B~SSELL

lllaotic -

Public Notice

. .

JJ'enl

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

614-992-21

Services

W1nted. old h8ndcutfound ... ion
bioetc. WiD pid&lt; up coil 130~
882-3287 or (30~ 3"2-8447.

St~rvrcn

Now LtocaMII:
161 Nt!rtl! Socand
Mitllllaport, Ohio 45760

11-18--'811-tlnl:

. ON SALE NOW AI'
SEARS IN MIDDI!POIT

ustness ervtces

WATER
aSERVICE

4511-1881 .

VAUGHN

PLUMIING &amp; IlEA IIIG

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

References

NO SUNDAY

~ ~.----~------._------~----+-~~--~----~----------~
•
•.
•

'!•

"DOC"

F IIIIJIIlylllP·,I

a.

f fJI,~III:irll

I

••

&amp;2-Spooting Goodo

Empln v111 r.nl

~

•I

The Tree Harvflsters ~ted
tim tier to buy, h•dwoodor pne,
Gary Bo~; Leon. WV. 13041

CAU 992-6756 .

985-4141

u. •oos-n

· Monday through Friday
9a.m. - 5 p.m .
Pleasant Valley Hospital

M..,;r.

PHONE DAY OR EYENINGS .

m:gg

51 - Houuhold Good•

3-Annouc.mantt
4--Gtv..way
5-Heppy Ads
1-Lost end .Found
7- Y•d Sele (plid in advance)
8-Public Sal ell 'Auction
·
9-WM'Ittil to' Buy

•A clauHied aiiNtnMmam pieced in Th.!,Daity Str)tinell•·
cept - cl•llfied dlsplt¥. Busin•• C.rd 1nd leglf notlcll)
witl 1lso IPP ... in the Pt. Pl . .an1 f'egilter and the GaiiJ.
polit Dell¥ Tribune~ 1'8Khlng·over 18.000 homes,
·
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

Used mopeds. Ooe~n't hwe to
be in running co~itton . C.U
814-992-7410.

A/C Senric:e
All
Minoo
Repairs
NIAS~ C•rtitied. Mech.nic

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ; BATHS
•ROOFING
_
•REMODELING 8t REPAIRS

"' Gaoot

For An Appointment

Mo.t Foreign •nd

Domeltic Vehicle~

McrclloiHirse

1- Card o~ Than lei
2-ln Memory

p..,....,.

Infant, Children ·

lltf.

~ Licensed' Clinical Audiologist ·

28-31 WORDS
87.00
810 .00

•Receive 1.&amp;0 discount for tdt p11id in advance.

r

Used turntture 'end houllhold
•pliance1. Pho"' 81•-7•2·
2048.

SYRACUSf, OHIO

CHESTR, OHIO

Rat• are for con•cutive run•. broken updiJii 1 will be ch wged
tf.w. •• •parate . ..

•Fret Mit- Give.way 1nd Found . . und•15 wor~s "¥Viii be
run 3 d.,1 at nc;~ ch•ge.
·
"'
,
•Pftee of-' tor •II capital IItten is doublt price of 1d cost.
•7 point Nne type ontv u•d.
•Sentinel Ill not ,..ponslble for errora after firtt d"l. (Chedl
for lffOfl first dl'¥' ad runs in
c•l before :00 p.m.
d• llh• DUbllc.ilon lo make correction.
•Ads th .. mu.t be peid In adv•nce are
Card of Thll'lkl
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yll'd Sal•

,.

"

:!: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

RATE
0:15 WORDS 18·2&amp; WORDS
$4.00
$6.00
t DAY
30AYS
86 .00
u .oo
6 DAYS
.a.oo
813.00
10 DAYS
813 .00
821.00
861.00 .
1 MONTH
n3.oo

•Acll outtide Meig1, G•lli• or M•o~ counti• mult be pr•
plid.

•

Quilts . ·
Pre 1940 quilts. Aoy condition.
C11h paid. Coli 814-992-_6U7
Of 61.t·692-2.61.
'

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

MARCUM

Pediatrics

' .

·· Television
Dependable Hearina Aid Sales. &amp; Sen,ittl
CJ Hearinc Evaluations For All Ages

.

'

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

5/U/19""

(304) 675-5220.

Used 'kl rniture tiy the piece or
entire . houeehold ll1o lttlllktg.
8t4· 742-24&amp;&amp;.

11110W HOliDAY liN, IAIIAUGA. OHIO

/

992-2371

Call

3158.

\614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, BOx 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Mulberry H&amp;ts. Pomeroy, Ohio

• The Area's Number 1· Marketplace

..'' Call Anytime

Dr. Victor Hochman

•

Ronald Pettry, s 0 nofCathyW.
and Donna F. Barley , Rutland,
left fqr.Parrjs·Island, S.C. on July
12,to begin basic training with the
U. S. Marine Corps . He will
complete his training and gradu·
ate on Oct. 6. Pettry Is a graduate
of Meigs High School. class .of

Classi

..

town,

money on your other financial needs; ·

piece of .entire houllhold. FaW

prices being peid. C.ll61 .... 4.46-

Stop By and See Us! - Financln1 A,vallable
MASTERCARD and VTSA WE LCOME

Begins basic

CHESHIRE -The GalUa
Meigs Community Action
Agency will have a free clothing
day on Thursday from 9 a .m. to
noori at the old high school
building In Cheshire.

Furnkul'l end IPplitneea bv lhe

HAVE A GOOD la.ICTION
IN BIZ Dll'f1!:llltln" COLOU ..IIA•SD' AID VAliS. '

z

TUESDAY and THURSDAY

·:Auxiliary meeting held ··

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Hearr Cathollc Church.

:c

Development district to meet

EVENING SPECIAL
~--L Y. 1$ 'and JULY 20

RUTLAND -The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
meet on Thursday at 9 a.m. This
will be the regillar monthly
meeting.
'

THURSDAY
RACINE -The American Legion ~a cine Post602 will hold It's
regular meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Legion home.
Refreshments will be served.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middlepop Lodge 363 F .and AM will
have· ·a special · meeting on
Wednesday at 7p.m. at the Lodge
hall to confpr the enter apprentIce degree.

..

..

MIDDLEPORT -Keith Wood.
Meigs County Game Protector,
wltl present a program fo r
children on wild animals at 2
p.m . on Wednesday at the Middleport Library.

POMEROY The Ladles
Auxiliary Fraternal Order of
Eagles 2171 wlil meet Tuesday.
· All members are asked to bring a
. covered dish for the potluck.

Stray cat·pickups.·begin ·

·-. Fair tickets on sale

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

G:&gt;mmunity calendar
TUESDAY .
POMEROY -The Drew Webs ter Post of the American Legion
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m .
Refreshments will be served.

Named to
Who's Who

of

Pomerov-:-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday, July 18. 1989

Tbe ninth annual family reunKevin Eugene Roberts, Charles Justin Robinson. and· · friend,
Lennie Aleshire welcomed two Judy Laudermllt. The best teen
• ion Df the late J. Doyle and
Padrick Miller, aJ\d Johnetta Rich and Ronda Ayres, Bob and new members and the -lead ·the loser was Dan.lelle Kibble. Each
Gertrude Russell MJiler was held
Louise Davis. Deaths noted were Edythe Jay, John and' Mildred group In prayer and pledgp at the. one was presented · an award
~tly at the Miller homeplace
Vlrglitla Miller, Juanita Ward. Crooks, Anna Mae Ebblnghouse,
rec~nt meeting of the Ohio TOPS
certificate and a glft : · lt was
In Middleport with 87 attending.
and Amy Lefever, all from 510.
I!Dd Margaret Ann Farmer./·
announced that ·there •are . now
Tile day bepn with a friendAttending were Jack Miller, Columbus.
II was announced that secret
mother-daughter groups.
four
ship cirCle aad tbe Lord's Prayer
Ronnie, Bonnie, and Ron
Charles and Johnnie Buzby,
sister names will be drawn In
June :queen was S11zanne .
The
by aH. Dale Miller WIIS the· . Missy, Jason. John and Johnetta Miller, Tucson, ..:\riz .; Carl and
August.
Klbble
.for the most weight lost.
mailer of ceremonies. After tlle · Davis, Mindy Gainer, Lori . Dorothy I Miller) · Roach, RayVlrgt_nta Dean, · treasurer. colPeggl Vining, assistant leader.
potluck dlliner. eatnes, swim- · Walke~i. Angle Troiano, Jackie mond Roach, Darin Roach, l!'Cted the monthly flower fund
passed
out literature on blood
- · min&amp;, picture lakin&amp;, remlnlscand Kevin Lenox, Vickie, Mark, Trudy, Kasey, and Jordan
and gave that report. Ola St.
and hldden·f ats , and a
cholesterol
• in&amp;, and entertainment by "Clem
Annette, Shawn, and Brent La- Williams, and Gardner WebClair gave the secretary's key to weight control.
DANIELLE SCOTI'
tbe Clown" CRDnald Miller) and
cey, Louis and Mary (Miller) rung, all from Pomeroy.
repor),
. ·
.
·
A'
question
and
answer
game
Dale Mllief and friend, "Joy"
Tom, Fay, Brawn, and StanSmith, John, Wanda, jeff, Jason,
The frulf basket was won by was played by Suzanne Kibble.
: wu enjoyed by all.
don
Roach, Racine; ···Randy . Brenda Templeton.
and Mary Lou Abshire, Pam
Virginia Smith, BonnieJohnston,
Fifth-· eeneratton babies welSmith, Henry, Rebecca, and Roach and Theresa Azbell, LaoGeary, Ola St. Clair·, Shirley
Tina
Mary
Martin,
weight
r!'Corder,
comed Into the famUy circle were
Mal!hew ·Lemons, Anele and caster; and Ashley and Charla
VIrginia , Whltlatch,, and
Wolfe,
and,
·
Julia
Hysell,
asslstan
t
Roach, Clyda Allll!nsworth, Carl
Krltin
·
Torres
. . Each. one was
For the second consecutlve
·and Jessemae Brannan, Bill.and -~eight . recorder, reported t~at
presented
an
apple
for
the
·
best
losers.
were
Brenda
year,
Danielle SCott, daughter of
Flo Graeser, Mike, Debbie, and
participation.
Templeton,
Dlah.e
Herdman,
and
·and
Mrs. Steven R. Scolt,
Mr.
Tara Gerlach, Chad Carson, and
has been nam!'d to
Cheshire,
Lee and Beulah McComas, all of
·who's
Who
of AmPrican High
Middleport.
.
School
Students
for Academic
Willard and Judy Miller, WoosAc
hlevemen
t.
•.
ter; Ronald and Janice Miller,
Is
the
daughter
of Mr. and
She
Steven Miller and friend, WhiteDue
to
the
numerous
comMrs·. Steven R. Scott, Cheshire,
· deposited at the Meigs County
hall; Dale MIIIPr, Friendsville,
plaints received from residents ·dog pound where If not claimed
and the granddaughter of Mr.
Tenn.; Gary, VIckie, Tina, and
In recent weeks the Meigs County will lie disposed of hi a humane
and Mrs. Charles Wildermuth,
Kevl"n Lefever, from New York;
Health
Department
will
begtn·
a
fashion.
·
·
'
Pomeroy, Mrs. Bill Scott and the
Carl and Marjorie Vanderhoof,
program
to
alleviate
a
MlddleThe
trapping
operatiOns
will
be
late
Bill Scott.
Marlon; and Jim, Barbara, Japdrt
neighborhood
of
stray
-cats.
conducted
during
evening
and
A
junior
at Kygpr Creek High
son and Jennifer L&lt;Jwrence, and ·
Department
officials
Health
nighttime
hours
ahd·wlll
last
for
School,
she
Is active In the Art
Kevin Chappel, all from
report
that
the
area
where
·
several
weeks,
it
is
reported
.
.
Club,
the
French
Club, the Key
Syracuse. .
· '
trapping
will
begin
soon
Is
near
Neighborhood
·cat
owners
are
Club,
Pep
Club,
Quiz Bowl.
Next year's reunion will be
the.
Intersection
of
Beech
and
urged to k!'!'p their animals
Students Against Drunk D~lvlng,
held on the second Sunday In July ·
Oliver Streets.
restrained du'rfng .the time trapthe Kyger Creek marching, conat the Miller homeplace.
cert, pep, symphonic and jazz
Once trapped the cats will be ping is going on in that area.
bands, co-captain or the flag
corps, student council, and plays
softball, and volleyball. This
summer she has attended band
camp at Caniers Cave at ·JackA meeting of the Buckeye chairman, Fred Hoffman, Nancy
son, and volleyball camp at 'Rio
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Hollister, and Jim Waymer. ·
Grande. College.
District
Ex!'Cutlve
D!'velopment
GED pr01ram
Committee will be held Tuesday,
The first annual Meigs County
July 25 at 7:30 p.m. In the ·
Adult Basic Education Recognicon(erenc.e
room at Its office
tion Ceremony will be held· on
locafed
on
Washington County
Friday: July 21 at the Pomeroy
Road
9.
Elementary School. Guest
Highlights of the agenda will
speaker will be State RepresenInclude review and approval of
tative Mary AbeL The public Is
ihe revised cost allocation plan
Invited . to attend. For more
.'
for the fiscal yeiir ,· and job
lnformatl~n call 992-3883.
FIVE GENERATIONS - Pictured here are five generations
description and consideration of
ranpns In ase from lnfioncy to 74. Clockwise from top left are Reba
staff salary adjuslrnents.
Slnser reunion
Board, sreat &amp;randmolher. Thunnan; Barbara Tolley, srandThe committee meetings wlll
The annual Singer family reunmodler, Creola; Lena Brooks, modler, Dexter; Shannon Renee
be
held at 6:15p.m. In the office of
Ion will be held on Sunday at' the
· Hayes, daughter; and Rita LaudennUt, great sreatsrandmolher,
the
executive director. Audit and
Senior Citizens Center In PomeRutland.
committee members are
budget
roy. Potluck !linch will begin at 1
Hon.
Glen
Miller, Chairman, Ms ..
p.m. All friends and relatives
Eleanor
Thomas,
N. Richard
welcome.
'
Mowre;;, Hon .. Glenn Dierkes,
and Mike Workman: and person·Bible·school
The St. Jlide Blke-a-Thon to be thanked for thP!r work. It was
nel committee, Louis Tulbee,
,The,Chester Community Bible
- held on Aug. 5 at Letart Falls, noted that Rita Garrett was the
School will be held on July 24-28
Bucktown Road was discussed at winner of the grill and has until
from ~: 30-8: JO p.m. at the
,·
. the recen.t meeting the Racine July 31 to claim the prize, either
Chester United Methodist
· "Firemen's Ladles Auxiliary held through Emma Lyons, 949-2431
Church. Classes will be available
or Alana Butler, 949-2227, and
:at the annex .
for nursery through the sixth
It was noted that the bike-a- · that Mike Sarsons was the money
Thirteen area residents gradugrade. The public Is lnvlt!'d to
thon will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 hat winner.
ated
June 20 from the Galllaattend.
Mrs. Butler presided at the
p.m. and that applications can be
Jackson-Vlnton Joint Vocational
: picked up at businesses in meeting and others attending
The Laurel Cliff Free Metho- School·in the nursing program.
Racine. )Vlore Information on thP were Joan Grady , Misty
These Include Rita Adams,
dist Church will be having
program inay be obtained from Grueser. Wanda Patterson,
Gloria
Brown, Sean Capehart,
vacation bible school July 24-28
.Kay .Holman, coordinator, 949- Emma Lylons, Jean Lons, Jean
Ed
Clary,
Barry Davis, Dana
fr.om 6-8:30 p.m. dally. All
Johnson, Kay Holman, new
~2609.
Draper,
Vicki
Jeffers, Austln ,
children age two through 16 are
member, Joyce Grady, and junJordan,
Phyllis
Martin, Barbar
Invited to attend.
The success of the Fourth of Ior member, Sissy Lyons. Next
Moore,
Kathy
Stover,
Theeresa
July celebration was noted and meeting will be held on Aug. 8,
Van
Meter,
Kimberly
Winnings.
Fish fry
members and contributors 7:30p.m.
The Wilkesville Township Volunteer Firemen's Association
will hold Its .annual fish fry on
Saturday, July 29. There will also
be a street dance from 9 p.m. to .
m ldnlght. The Midnight Cloggers
Membership tickets for the Glockners Dave's Exxon.
126th annual Meigs County Fair,
Middleport: Middleport DP- will be performing before the
Aug. 15-19, went on sale today.
partment Store and DJ's Trading dance. Those atlel\dlng are ad- ·
The membership tickets arp $8 Post.
vtse~dring a lawn chair.
.
and entitle the purchaser to gate
Rutland : Joe's Country
hunler
fety
course
admission and free parking for Market.
The 0 o Division of Wildlife
the entire fair. Tickets can also
Syracuse: Baer's Market.
Safer than a sale; and a lot easier to carry, traveler's
will
sponsoring a hunter
be purchased at the secretary's
Racine: Wald Cross and Son's
safety course from July 31-Aug. 4
checks put an end to worries over .lost or stolen money.
office on the fairgrounds after Grocery .
from
6-9
P~each
evening
on
the
paying admission at the gate. but
Chester: Baum Hardware,
Now through August 31, 1989, you can buy VISA
the admission price will not be Keebaugh's of Chester, and C&amp;D second floor of the Pomeroy
Municipal Building. Pretraveler's checks frorn Peoples Bank without paying an
refund !'d.
Pennzoll.
registration
Is
required
and
class
· The tickets may be purchased
Tuppers Plalsn: Nita Jean
Issue charge.
.
.,. ·
.
size will be limited to 30 students.
"from any fair board member or Ritchie.
Get your "free~free" traveler's checks before.you get
at the following locations:
Long Bottom: Phyllis Larkins. To register, call John Costanzo at
992-3883 before 6 p.m. and 843Pomeroy: Sugar Run Mill,
Darwin: Whaley's Grocery.
out of
and·let us show you hoYt! we can sav,e you
5405 after 6 p.m.
Swisher and Lohse Drug Store.

_Community
happenings

18. 1989

,.,_

Orin

by

loliobuoy

Wanted To Buy

lmsl
"""" In . . .
.
, - lir
10._171UIII
or """"'
IJI4.
411-1041.

)

··-· · ·

- ·-·~ '-

--·-·--

•

)

�•
·• P.a~~t--8-The Deily Sentinel

Porileeoy-Middleport, OhiO

'

·-·~11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-------r-~~P~~~~y~M~~~~~,Oh~~~~~~----------~~------_2~~~~1~8;·~19~89~
H-'LAFF . A-DAY
..... ......
""' nt_..
""
51
Household Goods

54 Misc . Merchandise

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

~­

"

.

l

Situations
Wanted

c••

W.
b ·-~ lftd hlltdiotpped. in our home. Zl y. .1
.,..,._,... LPN., on Cllll. Low

•215.

......_ ........ Col 814-992·
..A7I .tl:• 7 :00p.m.. fDr .mare

· Information.

·

1 -1&amp;

() .....:..,. •• _ •• ~ .......

h

.

:11 Wanted to

Do

1980

NHhua

. for Rent

14x70 apMciD.

new 3 ton C .A.. 2 porch•.
undlrpinning. With• Md $ylll',
ltereo. funilhed. bult in b•, on
rant.. lot. 11 • •000.00. (3041

773-&amp;421 .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES, 5311 Jockoon
Pike from •192 1 mo. Walk to
ahop .nd moviel . 114--446·

2818. E. 0 . H.

T•• Tow mou• A.,.rtments - 2

33
' WHI bebUit in mv home. Oeya.
: .,.,lnga otwellk.,da. Flea one• llle m-. Lhle on Mttchetf Rd.

.Coli 114-441-11102.

• .,-~-.,------

1Hou••dTr. . . R., • . unct.-

~ pin= peinting. insidtMdout
. plu
'II W111 point collingo.
! 11~02-5818.

Farms for Sale

M11on .Co. 70 ac:r•. •c:ellent
beef f•rn. ft• to roiUng, no
house. modern bulcln.-. City
Jnd weH wM•. could be dwe.
loped for residtntill or comm..
cially . ·~00.000 . 00 firm
150, 000.00 down. own• cou kl
fl~•ce b••ca ,Write to Point
Pie• ... Regilt•. Box C-12, ·
200 Main StrMt, PcMnt Ple•.,t.

WV25&amp;!50.

: 21

Buaine11
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
' THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH•

; INQ CO . reaommendl thllt you
, do laloln . . wllh p•ple V'"'
. know, lftd NOT to ""d mone,
• ttwough U• m .. und vou hate
inv.a... Mitha ofl•inQ.

, OWn your own apperel or show
-11tore. choose from : iean .-tp_o rtlwtlltr , ·ledlet , men's.
· chi.l ctM-mltwnity, 1•9* aiz-.
p•lte. d.,CIIW-· . .obiC. ~j..

· d... lng~rie ·Of' ac•soritl nore.
Add color analysis. Brand
namill: ~11 Claiborne. Helllthte,
Bonnie A 811. St Mlc:hale.
Forenze, Bugle BO¥, le\IL Camp

Bev•l¥' Hill. lnlle Fave. lucla.

avo.

2000 olhon. o• 113.99

ona priee d•6gn•. multi tl•
pricing_ dltcount or iltmllv ~
ltore. Retal prlc• unbellwable
for tOp quality tho• norm-'tv
priced -tom t 1 Ito
over 280
Brtndt 2800
818. 900to
• 29. toO: inventory', training
fil.tu,.., airf••· grand opMing.
Ill c. c.n open 15 d.,-a Mr.

•eo

..v...

Louglllin 814-881-4228.

31

Business
Buildings

814-992-6646 7:00 A.M .-4:00
P.M . o• 114- 992 - 2217
•enings.

New / Utad

.Jodoson Pik•Cioso to 36. Cell
814-446-8005.

Wooill.,cl132oa•/ 135,000,
Rt. 7. betow Eurllk• cell 814--'48· ~16 attw 7 ~. m.

O.J . White Rd .. 2 wooded
building lots. Approx .. 2 aa-•
each. Call 814-246-9586 .tter

4 :30

Do you want thapeace&amp;quiet tJf
the country? And tt. convenience of the City? We h..e the
building tit ~ 1or you. Call 614-

441 -0601 .

A!ihton bea~tiful one acre lots
with river frontage. publi cwater .

Clyde Bowen. J•. 304-5712336.
.
'

Renlals

3 br., sectional. 2· tull battw.
fiuplacat buitl- in hutch. double
oven &amp; r1nge. CA. city IChoots.

Coll614-44&amp;-1764.

113 31-d ovo. Golllpolil- 2 tw ..
c•p•ed. duplec.. 1 11 2 bllh
ouuiCte 1torage 12501 ~• d'ep
&amp; utiliti•. Cell814-2.t&amp;-9696

2 br .. 1 bMh in Gallia County.
Awilableimmtdiatrltf. Call&amp; 14446-2000. . . . 1.. 446-629 6.
Meadow hiNe. 3 mi. , from Pt.
Pfea1nt. New 3 br .• rl!nchwilh
flmtlv room &amp; central air. Large
lot. For appt CeH 61~448-

9340, .. 304-676-8898. ..
676-3313.
New rull:ie 2 BR home. N••

C•own Cloy. U6.000.
814- 25&amp;- es..e.

eon

2 badroom hwse. "h b•emiW'It.
~ .a a Alto 1 2x 10 2 bectoom
trill• on tot. Both in Pomeroy.

Homes for Rent

c:---------

Hause for rent at Rodnw 0 H no
puts. Call 614-388·8368.
2 bedroom home. back
Redne. 614-949· 2849.

of

Moda'n 3 ber:t"oOmt 1 "h bath lg.

living room 24x24
family room. deck. 2 car g•age,
vay nice. 10 miles from Point
Ple~t~ant , Rt. 2 N
1360. 00,
kjfchen,

16141 446-9278.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Coll814-992-3880.

3 be*oom ranch. Nice lla,el lot
l•ge out-bu;lding. Clll 814-

Full'( fur nil heel o•age apt . Aft
utilities paid e:~~cept ele&lt;tricrtv.
Newty redeoorllted &amp; caprered
Dep. Alto 3 bed'oomtrailer, Call

614-441-8511. o• &amp;14-4467126.

2-3 br .. trailer on 1 aae l.nd
t1 280 mo. Outtuiclngs. Call

614-446-2466.

2 BFI in country. Vinton area
Stove. refri9•1tor. water S.:
tralh paid. en&amp; month. S150
deposit. Call 61~388-9688 .
'furnisHed 3 bectoom on Kin.-

bu'V Rd . Coll614· 992-5039.

3 bedroom bride honwwtrhlwge

tot Mid w. Drive. N.w HIVWI.

Trailer, 2 bedroom. cle.,, reference~ required. Rt. 1, Locutt

Good cond. 304- n3-e&amp;81 .

Rood, 304-675-1076

For •te. 2 ttory hout8. 7 rooms.

4 Bedroom. furnithed Mobile
Hame. Children b.tt no

""814-992·6580.

304-671-2461.

Of'

Rent. 1986 2

bed-oom 14x70 mobile horne.

44 ·

r

1987 Shultz motlll• homo. 3
br., 2-bMht,, CA, 3 e• 9•1tfie.
For .. lebt owner. call614-317·
7212 afl:• &amp;' p.m.
MUST SELL Owner mO\Iing to
Flo•ldo. 19114 14x70. 3 tw .. 1
1 / 2 b•h on remld tot. French

Now accepting application• for
2 bedroom tp.-tmentt. fullv
c•pMed. "'pli.. CII. Ytlllt• and
trMh pic:kupt. Pf'ovidecl. Mainte·
n.nce free ltvlng dote to lhopping, banka •d IChoolt. For
more infor.,..tion call 304-8823718. Equel Opportunity Hou•
ing. Section 8 accetrtld.

Furnilhed 2 bedroom ipt .. • ·
franca and MCUrlly depotit
614·4411- . required, New Haven. 13041

882-3217.

1 -114-2&amp;1-1381.
- ·· 10.&amp;01 11800.
Coli
1t71 Boron - . .. 14dO. 2
to••l electric ,

All wood country din lite nt 3
ehairs &amp; bench with mtlching
hutoh 1618 or $2.t.86 mo. &amp;7&amp;

""ri

Curio cabinM-curved
gl111s front · 8279 or
t 115,14/ mo. Trade in's tllk8fl .

Furnilhed apt. 2 room~&amp; pr~•e RefriQer a tor- FF·White- I 160.
bath. 2nd Ave/ 1150 mo. Utili· , Refrigeralor·Harvnt Oold-FF tiel paid. Depotlf req'd . C.ll 1150. Refrigeretor· tide bV lideAvacado green • $176 .
.614-446-2390.
I Refrigarator
-side by !lideFurn. apt. 1 br .• 1240. utitil:i• H~rvest gold- • 175. Auto.
pd.. 920, Fourth Ave. Gallipoli1. wu her, Q E-copportone- 196:
Call 11.t,-448--44 18, after 7p.m. Kenmore wither/ dryer tit· like
new. 1150 each. Dryer-harvett
gold-,76. Oryar-whit•'75.
Garage • · furnit ..d. 29 112 Whirlpoo1 washar-almond Nail. (iellipalit. *225, utliti•
p'd."Call 814-448-4418 after 7 1160. KenmOfe wather· he.-y
dutv·h..vast gold-1160. Whirlp.m.
pool wither· whh•hewy ~tv·
1 bt., furn'ed., utiliti• paid. •&amp;o •uo. Elect.ric r~ge-GE - t75.
inch etectric r•ge. S95.
deposit. 1210/ mo. 8 mo. lease. 30
Freenr-20 cu. ft . t150.
Cell 614-446-3687.

2&amp;02.

bedroom Apts.' for rent.
CA1petld . Nice setting. laundry
tacilhln available. Call 6142

Gracious living. 1 .,d 2 bedroom ap artmenh at Viii
Manor and
ments in

1182. Coli

Unlnnished one
East Main St .. Pom•ov·
utiliti11 paid. 814-992-2094. ,

Skoggo ApPiioncos
&amp;79 Upp., Alv., Rd.
61.t-446- 7398

Sttrting at $120 a mo. Gallift
Hote\-814-446-9680.
Sleepinq roomt with cooking.

AlsoTratllll' space. All hook· l4JS
2p. m. 304- 773~
6651 . Mason wv,

Exe .

· _/.10, &amp;00 finn. Coli 814-

441-IIHO.

..

md.tm airetracnora. calllft•l

p.m. *2500. Coli 814·992·
8082.

814-992- 633&amp; .. 614-9863&amp;61 .

Bunlt Beds with
matching chest. HeiNy wood
ld.-k) . Slim Line Mattres1e1

.

Grt~om

end Supplv Shop-Pat
Grooming. All breedt ... AII
ttyM. lams Pet Food Outer,

Julie Webb Ph. 614-448·0231 .

Oregonwynd Cltttlr\' Kennel.
Per1ian and Si.meae and Him..
l..,en klttent. Chow stud ter·
vice. Call814:448, 3844 aft•7

CFA registered Himel8¥'n. kittens. Sired by top qu1th:y, New
York Bred Cettwv, •rvenl color
point• to choose from. Had I hOts
&amp; wormed/ e200 ea'~ . Call

379-2&amp;66.

Albino ferret11 . I 20 each. Clll

614-446-31140.

pupsc $30. Coft 614·992·2882.
AK C BuSett puppi• ReadY to
~ol

F. A. Benedum 614-M7-

3B56.

Fi!lh ·Tenk, 2413 Jackson AYB
Point Pln~ent, 304-878-2013:
10 gal set Up 81-'.99 and 10Qal

complele &amp;43.25,

AKC ~ttweit ... 3 femll•, 7
wk1 . ald. :104-937-2018 ,

Woodi-n Konnel 127&amp;.00.

2526.

57

54 Misc . MerchanCiise

clition. 814-992-6304.

~yinlhe

79.

Mer1:lliind1se

12'x3'poolnevwusedfilterlnd
pump. rain •oftwat•tofurur. 3

~~~U,~ 8 f""

m.

1 041

-;::;-;-,.--.-..,...,,..-;::--~~ I::::::~:;~:;;~~;;_L;:~::::::~::::~:;;,J
5~ Hout~ehold Goods
t sr~AFtr® 11y Bruee Beattie
1

1877~y.

CVl

run• good.

.

Trii 11 suurI d t1011
71 Auto's For Sale

1972 3/4 lon GMC kUCk .
,PS,PB.
5123••,

GOVERNMENT SEIZEO Voh.&gt;
cl• from I 100 · Fordl. Mer-

1913 S-10 4x4. atendld cab,
AC. cruise; tilt. AM/FM

ced•. CarvettH. Chavys. Surplua. Buyeri Guide 1 U

........ 86.000 mi.l t5400.
Colll14-241-&amp;417. ,

BOII-887' 8000EKI. S-10189.

19871D•8d. Toyata 8upr11 with
100.000 mi. warranty.' Exc ..
11\apa See c• it Jumbo, Rio
Grende/.13.600. Cell 114-

1971 FO&lt;d F-1&amp;0, 4a4 pido·up:
•e. cond. /11,000. Call Gary at

814-441-3110. dll\': 114-4417781. wenlnp.

2411-81143.

1977 GMC Tri-A ..e. 1&amp;00 • ·

1971 Ch..,ollo 3110. Soullwn

.... 15/4 tfentmlation. 12 front
••.. 34 ,_.,, nfiiN' w.y air •'•·
115 ft. alum. bad. ..n wllhlwt-

4823.

llloul bed. Col oft• 8:00p.m
814-2&amp;8-8325.
.

1985 Chevy Chovoll. 2 d•..
67.000 ml/$1800. col 61._
379-2728.

71 Chwy p.u. long bocl Nno
good. .1000. Coli 114-4417380.
1881 0.UUI\ long bee! 70,000
mH-. bed Nn•. UOO 1111

1819 Ohio CUll- con~~onlblo.
•c. cond. 82.000
1971
Fo•d LTD M. 51.000. octuel
mlloo. coli 814-441-9911.

Harlt¥ O.vidlon. Custom Soft
Till. Blue .,. d sltver. Lois of

742·2803 oftOI' Sp.m.

For Sale: 1975 ForcfTorino, 2
d•.. 351 win- II•. PS. Pl.
AM / FM ano Tr1n1, 71 .000
mi.ln400. ·Coli 814-441·
8987 1ft• 5 p.m.

. c '"' ,, '"'· ...

delenda. beali!Y COliwinner ICCUsed of munlel'.

I

'THA"I!:S 7-

W
&amp;uno 1989To'ur De ·
France Ill
• :(1) Wllo'a 1he IIOel?
Angela's new :C
causa
(i)

~lckly

1182 F"'d

""'* 302 ""tn•

-~ -c:llnd. •1oo.oo. 304- 71-

16.000 mL Coll614-44&amp;-7307

(1 :00)

neoo.

o

~-e.
Coll114-lll0&lt; 814-986-44&amp;3.

-~
7·111

Serv ICI: s

naw sex educaUon book. (R) .

I;J

Home

1 1

1978 P1¥mouoh Awo0v, oUio 73
Vane &amp; 4 W.O.
••ono.
taoo.
eon
814-251'
-------6704. .. 814-28.1189.
,.
1171 VW \/on: GoodCond. Boll
0!101'. Col 114-446-0815 .....
1983 oodge co11 4 • .: 4
8
p.m. ,
wlthhiyh•tow. Powwtt•lng.

•oct.:

1171 CJ7 o•lolnol ....,~ -

Aoaaanne questions Dallana
about what's troubling her.

!£!Dtmocncy
'i Slnlaale
Far
-watson mett1s

em en ' t

. western autllor Louis
Ulmour and a California

SWEEPER end eewingmechine
r.air. p.-1:1• ., d IUPPii•. Pldc.
up end daNifllf\', Davit Vaouum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Goo•ges c- Rd. Coli 1114-

activist.

·~· C88 T1181deJ

-----

Sopllc T.,~ Pumping- ISO. 0.1 ·
lie Co. RON EVAN!; ENTER·
PRISES. Jodosan. OH 1 ·80011;17- 91128.

a

"'rOIJR c:AIL..Y Ha&lt;.OSCOPE:

171-.1 814.

bonwy . Col 1.14-241-Me4

*·

cyL nM . . . ruiW FOd niH

1117 Hondo p..,, T- 210 lC .

lxtr1 tlr• and whMII. 814-

. 1981112 Nlo-plolo-up, lopd. 112·77. .
AM/FM ~~- c - &amp; wheals ~
ah1rp, ••c , 1171 KUO. oondllion.
..,nd./14100. Coli 114-446- c.III14-112-HU

.

NEW· W_,•n - · Ul.
w.,..,..,,
•11 &amp; up. IBt•&amp;
- ... ,Coli 814-...... 3111.

121 VldeoCciun1rJ

•
Rotary or cable toot drllln..
Moat Wilt completldtamedlt¥.
Pump Ill• end aervice. 304-

1 0:1111 ()) 700 Club
• (J) Ill llldnlllht Clller
Killian pr011ete ilch man's

...... !

son galling a lenient
IJUnlahment. IRII;J

Ron~ 11'V Servioa.

apeci•iztng in
Zenith
lti'Vicingmott othw
House calli, alto aome
appliance r"eplin. W.Va 304-

br••*o

571-23980hlo 814-441-2454.
82

l1l • (J) lhlfty~

BARNEY

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

ii::

MIChael and Elliot

ALL MY GOOD
OL' BUDDIES HAVE

lfc'fl!E&amp;J':~~~

BWS YORE
HEART~ WKEY!!
DOLLERS !!

(NR) (2:00)

Electrical
Refrigeration

Re1identlal or commarc1el wtr.
ing. New ~ice or repairs.
Lic:Mted electrld~. Aidanour

EloCO•icol, 304-175-1788.

General Hauling

J &amp; J Wet• hrvioe. Swimming
pools, ciltwN, w.llt. Ph . 814246-9288.
II I R -wells.
· '""'",oolo; .
datern•.
fmmedlet•
1.000 .. 2.000golonodoliv"'V
Cell 304-1711-1370.
.
PMrlt*t Wit• HM.!IIng Serv~
Pooll. W'llt. dtt:•n1. 1. 000 or
2.000 . a•. delfv.-le. phone

104-571-2311 "' 614-4414081.

oouno.• 2.000 10 4.000 , ....
lty, C111Wftl, pooll; W1f1t

Coll304-17&amp;-211i.

87 uPhOiatery,

· otc.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

perfecflor you. Mall $2 to Malchmaker; CAPRICORN (0.:. 22-J.n. 11) II' a
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, com.-.dable 1o want to be your own
Cl......,d, OH 44101-3428. .
per1011, bu1 H's no1 very admirable 1ojry
1.£0 (.IU!y 28-A,.. 22) Kaap accurale ,· to gratify your sell·lntereata at someone
records of your procedures today l!l'd, else's expense. Be mindful at a1hers
be sure1o documenl everything you do, today.
especially H you're perf"'!"lng 8 aervtCe , AQUARIUS (Jan. 311 ,..,_ 11) . Fulura
tor someone elee. Thera • 8 poulblltty planallhoukl be pradlc1ed upon honest
of a mlsunderltandlng down lhe line. . projacllons. nol wtohlul 1hlnklng. II you
VliiOO (AUf. 21 SapL 22) Ulullly mlacalcul811 today, you could be buying
you're ralher. prudent In the manage- glllll 1omorrow.
mtnt of your reaourcee, 811hough upon PIICIS (,..,_ 'IH' ell 311) There's a ,
o
Jon you can be aurprillngly ex- po•lblllly you mlglrt be operallng on a
, lravaganl. This could be 00. of 1hose dllleran1 .,._ !han your lrllndl today.
days.
This oaulcllled to m~ngall
~(..,._Ill Oot.II)Here'a • help- the dlllet•ICII beGuine too great.
lui moHo to hanG llllldl your office to-. Alllll , ....... 1'1-Apdl 111 Don'! bull
day, "What you- here, uy here. hear your helld 1111 Inti 011•1111111111ng odds
here, Slays here- y o u - here." 1oday. It may be CICIUFigiOUIIO Nlllln
H n dolln'1, 11 could you f8lllllla ailgela..., ta lr8MI, bul It could
ar oompllc8llonl.
. . , be ~ loalllh II It's 1 ~·no win"
8CCIII'IO (Oot. :M NIW. 22) Don'! ll1ultlofi.
knUCkle under today H you have 1o cllllll TAIMUI
wllll I 1110 moulll. 81111d UJ1 lor V0Ur 10

A - mlgiiiiHm to,_ llkl

'1 2111. 2 bN'oom. . . . .......
..... Colll14-812-llll.

1111111'1 . . . -

.

..,. (1111!'•• .,..

1113 111¥-.tiiiiiH ... 4 .....

•• cond • 1. '100 00. 304-1711-

1'1) Be

exb&amp;llll) ·•fOUl today H you'n1 ln-

841

111:30 Cll ~: TNe Hollll
Explore Clneda's 1l019 of
·
muJtlcullurlllam. (Nil) Q
ellll Berner M11ltr
Gil Mljor lelgUIBelllllll
• NlwCal ... ,
11:00 ()) Pepar CIIIM
ew l1l e(J) 111 • o
IIIJNewa
.r. I ' lwr 81dll 01 . _
.w
Hoe!4Jay .Jolllmone. .In,....... two Clllil111y
spo!le guellt IIC1I Mill as
well as unique 1nd humoroUI
sporting _,a from around

Phone 814-&lt;148-3818 "' 114441-4477.
.... ,

85

same ageooy.

(1 :30) I;J
.
IIJ I!Veillng News
10:15 Cll MOVII!: Clllllne Wlllllml

Cor. Fourth and Pine
O.lllooUo. Ohio

&amp;

get , _

(J) P.o.v. Stories ot killer
and W11n1111s complement
and contradict eac:h other.

LEND ME TWO

CARTER'S PWM81NG
ANO HEIO'ING

Wetterson't Water Haullnt'••o.. ble ,.., ¥.-nne ch-

.... 114-...... 1118. 127 J.d.
Aw. OolllpoiiL OH.

British comedian Benny Hill
performs as only he can In
this two hour speclll.
8:30 (i) e (J) eo.cli Hayden
discovers Kelly's boyfriend
ambodles everylhlng he
hileS. (A)Q

atump

top 304 11-8~ 43.000 ..... Oft
.......&amp; 130~

, . , . (2:00)
IIJ Leny Klngl.lvel
iiJ ,... Benny H11l Shaw Get
ready to laugh when beloved

ESEFORE-)'t)U REAOTHIS .
.
FORE~T. .'.

Fettv Trae Trimning.

ar

iiJ ei!I'MOVIE:

441-0294.

IIJ=...

!lie WOI'Id. (NR) (0:30)

ellll AnenJo .... ·

=·
.
.
!I!
~

You Cln Be A Iller •
n:30e&lt;JI llllllllt 01 Certon
(i)
(0:30)

T~'l JownB1

IL"f;I;J

!Eii!.--

,2:00 ()) MOVII: Tltundalhud,

loll 01 Pllallll (NR) 12:00)
fl) Auto lllallltJ Beiber 8ub.
Pnl Berlle tram Lulugtou,

.OHP..ti.-.T........

.
...

+

-:;~~=~~ii~=~~

CROSSWORD
1 "Gorillas
In the

5

Fish or
voice
9 Grafted
(her.)
10Awaken
12 Malay
title ol
respect
13 Poem
14 Sea bird
15 Tincture

DOWN

1 Cab
leature
2 Habituate
Yesterday's Anawer
3Seem
logical
4 Hamilton 11 Eared
'25 Watered'
bill
15 Peter
Iabrie '
5 ForePan's foe 27 Pursuit
shadowed
1J
Garrison
21 Terrify
Monk's
6 Wooden 21 Genre
28 Hobbes
title
core
22
Italian
Is one
17 He played
7 Stuck-up
city
34 .- and
the
23 Member
run
"Sundance 8 Barren
10
"The
ball
ol
a
crew
.
(flee) •
Kid"
is in •
24 Stringed
35 Andress
19 Townsman
your
"
Instrument
film
20 Binge .
21 Unique
22 Table
Implement
23 Whetstone
24 Not hor.
25 Artist
Chagall
26 Choler
27 Dispute
30 "Are you
- a ·man

'If

-mouse?"
31 Concealed
32 Here
(Fr.)
33

East
Indian

sailor

..

35 Party
for him
3CS Excite

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here't how lowed It:
..
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

7/11

" '

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used : ·
for the three L's, X for the two O's~ etc. Single letters, :apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different.
....
CRYP'I'OQUOTE
7-18
.' '

.'

czo

LUYA

VR G ·O

XLG

YHREZCOG

TCA

T I

czo

LUVA
'

YHkEZHPYO

XHRYC
TI

..
HUN

.C Z H C ' 1 '"

:r

JHUTCA

POGEILU
Z 0 U G .T
. •.
Y•l&amp;hf'l Ct1P1•4•alal IF IT WEREN'T FOR
.ntE lAST MINln'E. A LOT OF THINGS WOULDN'T . . .
GET DONE.- MICHAELIS. TRAYLOR,
I

'-·

midst
31Poker
term
39German
river

;.~'

,

)1111 Now

J

.,

THOMAS JOSEPH
:tl In our
' ACROSS
by

.,
I

•

~

......
llitiiiiiOn
tWII CJIInIn\!
1 hlfd IIIIIIIICII*tlor 01111 out11r on . ~
your lJilllll, It 11111albWly Dlrll1n you

..._ !111M Jllll'ra ctotng,

.

'

11J
V1ce Forgive Us
Our Debts Stereo.
1

•

North's transfer bid of two hearts·
live spades; then, when
~~ 32
·
jumped to game In nG-trump,
South wisely decided that it would be WEST
EAST
better to play four spades. Unfortu7643
nately .South's bidding. decision was ,. 10 9 5
,. Q 8 7 6 2
far better than his playing decisions.
+ Q10 6
+ A8 3
Declarer ducked the opening lead of • K Q J B 6 £
+ 10
the' kin&amp; of clubs. preser~ing comrnu-1 '
SOUTJi
nications. West continued a club, de• KQ2
'
."
clarer played dummy's ace and East
,. A K 4
ruffed. Now East returned a low dia+K J 7 5 4
inond'. Declarer put in the jack. West
• 97
won the queen and returned a diamond
Vulnerable: East·West
to his partner's ace, and South was
Dealer: South
down one before be bad even won a
W..l
Norlll Eut
.'
trick.
Pw
Pw 2••
Certainly it is sometimes right'to~~­ !NT
Pi1111 I NT
Pw
low a defender to win tbe first tr~ck 2 •
All paso
when you bold the ace. But in this in- 4.
•Jaooby transfer bid
staltce there was really nothing to be
gained and, as .we saw, much to lOIII!.
Opening lead: K
, Declarer should win tbe ace of clubs
right away and lead a club back. if
.·
West tben leads a trump, declarer can
· win In dummy, ruff a club with the
queen of spades, play •A·K and ruff a · li:ow bad-was tile I!LiBtak~ of lett!Qg
beart, and then ruff dummy's last club west bold the king 'o! clubs at tiick ,?
with tbe king of·spades. Now he bu to one? It wasn't terrible, and South was
lead away from bls K.J of diamonds. certainly uulucky when East wae all)e
Big deal! So be makes ooly four to ruff the second club. But it wai-a
risk ibat be did nat need to take.
spades, just what be bid. ·

"

,... Night "" 81Ciped
conviCt pull Joann's life In
danger. !R) Q
(J) Top llank Bolling
(i) e (J) R-nna

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG ·
'*'oonditlonal lif•ime ., ...,.
tee. Local r.r•enc. lur. .hed.
Free 81tirMt•. Call cotl.::t
1·814-237· 0488. doy o• nigho.
Roger 1 B
wat•prooflng.

.

8:1111. (J) lllln ,... I1Mt Of

Improvements

NORTH
.AJI095
,. J 3

•

IIJ
Nlwl
Ill V, Pill 2 (1:43)
Munier, 1M w.- W)lln
Thieves Fill Out
• Nllhv111e Now
I:IO(IJ e(J)TbeW_Y..I8
Kevin and Paul race to bUy a

20ft. Trav.t Tral• Prowler. AC.

84

___..,

. (R) .

pr

!D!!Frnno,Hrt2015

t'Vtninga.

•7&amp; El Comino wilh 160 ..,gino
198&amp;-'"''VC'"'flll'· V-8,Eoc. •aeo.oo. 'T1 Fo•d lruck w~h
c:ond., cruile. tilt, air, all power. 302ongine . .OOJIO. Coli 30415,000. Con 814-448-110&amp;4. · 178-8123.

92!8. . '

'

&amp; Campers

19&amp;0Modol F!)l'dpido-up. Good
oondMio" Col 114-992-7384

NEW · I pc:. Wood group· 1339.
l.iYing room autt. . •1t9-*199.

*99.

Son Of F1lclul (NR) (2:00)
Gill Mltlld Mllllock

• (J)

{f) NoVII Explore why 1he
Chemollyt dl11881er h8ppened
and what n means. Q ·

ltCCBIIOriel. 1000 mH•. 114-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive Sl., Oolllpoh.

Full •'" milttr•• • fourKIIIUon
..erttng- •se. Aldin• atanlng-

1.110()) MOVIE: Tllulldamud,

79 Motors Homes

81

the 'chuckle quoted

s.a.-

Cha11

ffi

n..,
point. 4 opd.. 40.000 mL
etc. cond. / 11 ,000. C1ll 114-

CIIIV~•

1111...._
all Croak I

u-no oil. esoo.oo. 304-8711&amp;&amp;41.

895-3102

7314.

Blllblll
IIJ Cnlllllra

1972 modtl 472 eng. witt, 400
turbo trlntmlslkJn, run goOde.

removol. Coli 304-175-1331 . '

1918
Lolorol\ 4 dl' .. 19114 Ch..,Y .... high miNOIIe.
hollvlnl'llop. -·~~~~-.
AM/FM ...... • ..... w ... .-c1 ooncl. Re• h... end air'
whHI cow.,.. Ice blu• Vwy 13041 8711-1101.
good cond./14115. Col~ 1144411-1021 . . '
74 Motorcycles
1971Che"'- MonooCorlo. 1

8101k bodo wMh - i n l t *249.

3331. front •nd 11inement
t18.91, 4,000 good ultltd tir•.
..mi tirll, ,.._. tir•.

.llll Milar L......

To i&gt;16T I

·''

POOR BOYS TIRES. 304-1711-

1988 - ... .., COUIIO' LS; 1911
Dodge Ch•IIO' llholby T"'bo. 114-311-81181.
colloftw7p..m. 814-251-172&amp;.
1973 14 1on Chevy wilh oompor
1978 ,...,..,,. Zophy;. e6.ooo. top.. New tranaminlon. Bod'W'
good cond/UOO. COli 814- good. Noe•- g•.... UIO.
379-2111 .
.
Cell 614-3811-Hie.

eft• 6 p.m.

(0:30)
e(J) USATodlr
Ill • 0 9) ,Jeoplnlyli;J

Wft..L,
IT TOO\(.
A
.
'
L.OT Of WI &amp;.L· f'O~f~,
JvT .:t fiiV.At..LY
: · GAVf uP T~Y• NG

·

197'1Chwy •wh. dr. ~ton with
lnou.,..ow. Runt good. n_.
trlr'ltm6uion "Pair. *900. Cit II

1980 Dodge Omni. n• tlr-.

.

MljOr Leap I!I*'H
(IJI!nterlllnmenl Tonight

Moo. C.ll
.

. ..

!

(J)

304-1711-3248..

4418

.

BRIDGE

Ali-AIMric:8n Pulling ..,..,
From Flshetvlle, VA (T)

C10. 3sod.. 2&amp;0:8

1983 S-10 pldwp. long bocl
b&lt;iahl •od./ 02800. Coli 61437&amp;-2728.

VacanC'( .
Twin AN•• Toww-HoutlnQ for
tho El-.
.,d
Dtubled. LoCIItd nw dow~ . Counoy AIIPII.,.._ Inc. Oood
town Point Plelllftt, phon• uoocl •plfoii• .,d T.V . . .~
304-171-1171. Equol H..,oift·g Op.. aA.M. to8P.M. Monolwu
&lt;Jppo.lunily.

•100 .00. 304-175;

114-1143-2187.

PB.
9.000 mi . . good
.,_,elt1100. C.ll 114-441-

.

1978 Ctiwltt'. c•. good for

P•"•·
3781.

.

•·a

(J) Red Mln(TNT

1711-2808.

lioldl1.00. 304-876-

Fender Stret whh DIMIRio
PlckuptlndKahurTremoiQ. CaH
304-676·&amp;027.

304- 676- 1821 .

GITopCinl
7:06(1) Andy Gllfll1h
7:30 e (J) Flmllj Feud

J•tP plrttwithwheihandt.._

72 . TNc:kl for Sale

For Sale: 1981 FordConvll'lion
·Van, mid- tize. 8 cylinder.

•I•

·

~rWIIMl-Of
iiJ Miami V1ca Al1es Of
Paauge

Grein

Upright piano tor .. ,.. $100.
Paint
now going on at Paint Cell 614-949-2182.
Plu1. 20 p• cent off r$1•
price on interior .,d ellt•lor Flute. Exce1181'1t oondiflon. U18d
Country Mo.bile Home ,a,;,.k. Pittsburgh Paintt. SeleMdiJuly · 9 months. '150. Cell81~8436232.
Aoute 33. North of Pomlll'oy. 22. You work too h.-d to paint
Lott, rentals. parts. , Ah•. Call with.,ythinglt~t. PAINT PLUS,
2416 J1cklon Ave. 304-8715Bundy Cl•inlt and Flute. See •
• 14-992-7479.
4084.
232 S . Fourth, Mlddllf&gt;ort.
Ohio.
331C 11x4 . above "ound pool ·
49
For Lease
.•800.00 (304 773-5887.
lndividull ~ltlr' l•aons. bevinner•. teriOUI guitarist. BruiRiding lfiNn mower, cheep,
cardis Music. 814-448-0887,
Jeff Wamsllrt' Instructor, 81~
For S1le or L111e: Twefn ln 13041 1711-2310 d.., •. 675·
4-'8-8077. Limited opening~.
Middlapon. 0 H. Ap.-trnent up- 4078 ave:ningS.
stairs, will contid• ..,d c:ottladiel 10 IPHdblke. boy!IBMX .
0
00 3
tract. C1ll 304-882-3382.

446-4249. 448·2325. 446·
4426.

.

Newltlour

In Clncllllllll
Mol..,..
..
1111 Andy Gr1lt1th

Vinton Auto Sehrega. For Selle:
,Foreign &amp; dDmeatic a.~to parta.

aU. In .,glnatHO. OO, 304-

mil•.

Bundy trumpet. Ike new. Catlo
kl!llfboard. Call614-26&amp;-8&amp;68.

8 .0 . 4

_

"How long have you lleen flying?" the elderly man asked
the youthfui.Jooklng pilot. Jokingly, the piiQt replied, "You
mean COUNTING today?"

IIJ

Auto Parts

197&amp; Old'o Regoncv. SS. 455

Soulholdo. 304-1711-192&amp;.

&amp;

fot . ~1.000

8711-UU '

Hotttein heif• cetvea, AI tired,
Rev •n d Willleftlaon Dairy

Hay

b'U'* ,......

speed. noA .C. Callllft•lp. m.
anvtlme on weell:endl 130~

ATTENTION .Horse OWners.
Paint Plus • now- carrying tack.
Paint PluL 2411S Jeekton Ave.
Pl. Ph. p-304-878-4084.

64

t• and

1880 ch.,

.

379-2502.

Musical '
Instruments

46 Space for Rent
Pool tabte for ule. Slate top.
Ieath• pockets. V8fV good con-

hidden

•o• d....... 304-176-6833.

c•. E tre . cond. C1ll 814-869-

Pure bred Walker ·Coonhound

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiqu&amp;s
1124 E. Main Street, Pomf!llcry:
Hourt: M,T,W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 1 ttl &amp;p.m. 614-992-

5 Hololoin Helf.,.fTMh In 2
rnonlho. Con 814-381-9946.

.

28&amp;4.

Buy, sell or trade. antiques &amp;
collectablea. See DiCk or Sally at
Ed'•. Gallipolis Fles Market
Sat/ Sun, ' or call 614-4487612, daity eher 6 p.m.

.1 918 Mercury Top• .t door.
Auto. ilr, AM-FM ca1etta
budcc ...... dehri w1p.,..

2411-81196 .

.

Sign over boss's desk:
What we do during our working hours determines what we
have; what we do -in 'Our
~isure hours determines what

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
,.,,
Gypsum - Troclc- Sworn ·- Pinion - COUNTING ·

• «D

&amp; Acce1110ries

Coll614-3811-9082.

1971 P1¥moulhS,..ion Wogo"
AM-FM c••.ne. aiR 8. "-"
point. Mun - · Clfton. w. Vo.
Coli 304-.77J.f3&amp;4
·

P.M.

AKC Registered Golden Retriever puppi• . 6 weeks old.
tead eil shot•. C.ll 304-882-

Antiques

Liveatock

FOr Sale: Ouartar hot.. • Colt.

Pets for Sale

'

motor. 10 lb. troUingmotonnd

76

•oceeNeWt

fl) llpolti18CC111n"'teror (0:30)

14 ft . 1987 SI•O'oll 0Hp V
Bottom loet wllhtral•. 41t!t HP

1985 Dodge 4 cvl .. 8 llunsgood. C.III14-992-1B41 .

!

By E KAR

l1l e(l) CurNnt.Affelr
, Cll {f) MICNIII/ LAiirer

387·0447. "!' 814-387-04115.

1178.17 St1rcrllfl T'*'ful, 120
H p 1o
. . . . M•.,.ulo. .. E..,. Cone!
$4&amp;00.00. 1304) 175-7270.

.

8:311 Cll Clftllllurnetl
7:1111 ()) ,...., ....,.,
e (J) PM Megulne

New Pontoon Boat Trail• a ol
injector, for 50 horte power
Merauy Boat Motor. C.ll 114-

1178Chwylmpala.PS. PB.AC.

I

~Nftc-try

looo BOel-1987 Lindau 18'5".
wtth ,._aury'36 hp motor with
powertrfm•dautooU injection.
MarOJry TroHing motor, Shor•
II
nekoil• olus mo••· Allin-··
oandltion. tan 814-992-21'70·.

114-882-5321 d""' 0. 114112· 7541 .... ln... .

I

KW I S H

h4-;.;l:...;;,l,...:..,l;;...;.;.l-1. j

~~~~~

•

dopoh Rndw. 1510. Coli 114742-3028.

1e74 Co.vono.. T·lop. PW. Pl.
Air, •• wheel good condition.
17300. 114·112-114&amp; 7:00
A.M.-4:00 P.M. 0&lt; 814-949-

4horael, 3T.,M11HWalk . . &amp;
1 so.. . - 8oed Filly. coli 614-

L Shaped

includecl 304-675-6633.

c'" 11 .._. 21 8- 1311 af·

tit wheel. cruite. 11500. Call

.

eoo S.i•lod&lt; H- Excollenl
condillon. Sm,. .,d - . m
t•oelo&lt;&amp; USOO. Coli 114-1128092 """' 1:00 p.m.
John o-o 4 eo H~o Puoh
.......
Sp•OO&lt;I•. Ike n-. 11&amp;00.00.
304-882-3578.

Aed Chow, female. 2 vrs. old. 1
female puppy, tix wks. ·Ween tel.
Wormed/ t150. each. Cell114-

814-992-2174 o• 614-9923667.

a2IOo.

Il

VAEHE
3

IIJ llllowllz Tadly

Boats end
Motors for Sale

•.• 7 :0 0 p.m.

I·

• «D LOve Caloltellon

· '"' · 0 p.m.

1985 Fo•d Eocon. 43.000
mil ea. excellent co nditlon.

Fflorods.tc:J.~~ c:.n;r~.e;~

8890:

Usl!ld w"tta bathtub and !INatory. Also en electric stove.· Call

81 4 3 oftoi 5pm.

18 ft . ft•bed til trill•. S'i ngle
axla. DUll tir•. he~ dllty.
137&amp;. Call 114-3811-9111.

727.

·

. .,

by filling in the missinv words
IL......i--L-.1-....J'--'---' you develop
from sle:p No. 3 b81ow.

(llllody l!liCtrlc
.
{f) 3-2·1 eon-~;~

1111

be-

1--.l;;....,l,_;;;...,;l.;.g...;.,l,.--rl-i1G Comt~lete

.CIJ eCIJABCNewaQ

1984 Plymouth Relhwrt Station
Automlltic tran•m•-' . 1972 17ft. Star C111ft Tri Hul
oion. P8 . p 8, Ill wholi. D'Uioo loot. 12&amp; HP Evln"ICio Engine
complole lop. n- upholot...,.
control. AC. AM-FM c•tette. 4 t3800. Call 814-281-131111f·
cyl 27 MPQ. Col 814-4467:0

800 owi• bedolloo IMcolenl
conditiO,. wll Ill &amp;

(304!372- 93~3.

AKC regi!51ered Cocker Sp111i ..
pupa. Buff melet &amp; femel-.
shots started A wormed,
price/ t160 each. Cell8 14-388--

/Ji~(0:30)

Wlgon.

Celll14-211-1210.
66

..

fintn.:.. Cell 814--281-8522.

WV truss, roof truHH t..Jill to
Order, Route 21 , 'mile North of

Riploy .

1$ 79 Ford Ltd. Good condition.
PS, AC. cruial control , 810.
11 4- 2 5 1251

Ford tractor/t2816: H11t1on

83

114-246-6121 ..

USED- Beda. · -. .. bedr~m
aull•. Delkl, wi'ingii'WIIher, 1
oompt•• line of ualll IJrnftur._

-·-pod

_

•ound bol•lt1195. ow-wll

CAll after

Comnwclelspace. 1400 squere
fMt. corner Second and Pine.
Ample p•king-rear. Cell 814·

E
. qulpment

2217 . . .ingl.

wave oven1. Ken' 11 Appli.-.ce,
217 E. 2nd St. , Pomeroy.

53

Farm·

86 MF trHior, ptow 1 • dilc.
nav bush hOg/. *3100; 4000

solid oek. $60. 814-949·2671.

8 14-388•8890.

$250.00 plus elec. 13041 8755329

Furnished Rooms

81

Wooden tebl• .t ch..-1. 1110.
Coffee table. end 1..,.1. he-..y

Used ippliences. Wathera. drv·
en. ranges, rafrigerMors. micro-

· Used Se.-s Cqppertonerefrig•·
ator with ice mak.-, S50.00.
1 bedroom. Point Pleatent area.
304-675-7309.
1 bed'oom fur,jshed apt, air
cond. e175. 00 month pfu11
ei~M;tric. Jeff en on A -we. 30 4675-29 20 before &amp;:00 PM .

C

Building Materiels
Block, bric~ •wer pipat Win.
dows. Nntelt. MC. Claude Wi~
t ws, Rio Ortn de, OH. Call

reblle~

76

F

55 Building Supplies

8 gun gl1111 front
cabinM:
1289 or '13.66 / mo. S26 r•
bile.

»

1184Chwttta 4 lpd. .,_n&amp;
tlon. Reef good condition. AM·
Fflllsowoo . .,.,. • 140iiiColl
11 4- 2 &amp;8- 82&amp;1.

••m.

1, ,.,..

SliAOV lAWN APARTMENTS.

...

71 Auto's For Sale

Couch, IDIHite•. *71. 2 end
table.. t20. Tablelf'ld 4 chlin.
t35. Table. 5 chah. t40.

reb••·

&lt;t»

Kroll•m ... 10 Inch •odiol ••m

18• 38 to I• pool cover· t?&amp;.' 2
triple track white storm windows. 1 fitt 40x64 opening. 1
fits . 38x 54 openin·g- f!IO
Complete VinYl lined rePlacement window. Fits 3~x53'h
opening. t175. AI items good
oondtion. Call 814-446-1&amp;18.

.29.9&amp;.

.... .

OVER YOUR HEAD!

1982 Hartw Davldlllon Sports••· Original owntf', 3500.,il-..
Coli 614-949-3042. II no
1n1wer. I~We on Mtwtlring
medtine.

rf ~~~~~~·'"'~====~~~~;;;;;~;~;~ ---~-'----.....:-

"4-441-3375.

ut t99 . eUnkiea
•39 . 96 . crib mattreues

1987 KXBO. Excoll"" condi.
lion. Coli 814·992-&amp;085.

...
.•. "
•

For Sale: 1989 Emm81'1on ,...
mote oontrol VCR. 1mment
oond. One ih contest. I 175. Call

Mau,ns

clwome. Co~ 81:..44&amp;-7380.

tht

.__..._1_,_1...J..I---&amp;1--J

I;J

GIIF-Ofut.
·i1J Cl~ i!xpNH
8:011(11•
8:30. ()) 1111 NBC Nightly NIWI

IF WE WIN TODA'r', WE CAN
HAVE A 616 CELEBRATION, .
AND I CAN POUR ROOT BEER

~lth

82 Goldw"lnV, loaded

.. .

~ '"' "'

2 1/ 2 ton cent•l 1ir with 20
KW. electricfurnacit, •1500 ftrm .

7 pc, poster Ballet BR .. suile
•999 or 132.76/ mo. 160 cash
reb••· H.D . Bunk bedt 1149 or
I 12.481 mo, 4dr. chllt t.t9.9fi.
5 d•. chool $54.95.

cl1*o.e949 o• 837.89/ mo. e50

·7 29 Seco.f'd Aw. Furnished
effidencies l11rting at $176.
lncludin g v.eter &amp; u•bage. Ideal
for 1 person. Cell 614-448·

---=-1
' I

wooden tebfe with 4
~hair't/ 17&amp; . Call 814-3889943.

IVIIIabte.

1285/ mo. Cop 814-446-8727.
.
'

tawer , trash provided .

lot. U4.99B &amp; Up. Coli

Coli 614· 446-8280.

ttorna. shOpping cent•. w....

Apartment
for Rent

1811 Now Moon 14x7D. oil
eiiCtric:. flriJI)Iace, nM c.-pet.
Coli 814-378-2819.

ln .•

~in8'1olng

-t ,

Home &amp; car cOmputer dltk
PIIVet with remote contr~ •
bltt:ery,ptck. ••king/•100. Clll

He~y

quel~y

v•• old 304-875-1146.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

eon

For Sale

456-1887,

304-675-7888.

Apple Grove. home, 2 bedroom.
b•ement nice cond. Price
recl.lced. thown bv epp. on~

Cllv a"''*lll•
9340:

pl\onol30~

p••·

.,aw top

!Eellll HIIIPv o.,.

1986 YZ2150·Yar:ntlta. ru"' axe.

Colloll•4p.m. 114-441-1538.

'

after 6 p .m .

•moll . ,.oct.,, plow "'""
vatas. di1c &amp; mowt~r/ •700 .

Furniture &amp; Appliances
Rt 141 inCent.-.ary, 1 14mi. on
Lincoln Pk. Mon-Sat : 9·8, Sun;
12-15. Open Af1er hrt. until 9
p.m. lo• oppolminlinlo. So glv•
Ul a call. 814,446-31158.

CompiMe line of oak furnist.ings, oak dinette 6 pr•• bade

Aooms for rent· vveek or month.

992-7449.

1 'h b.. hi. fuH ba.,ent. new
wood--coal lnrwce. remodat'ad.
4 .715eae, 3aa•wooclad. Mutt
tile pricen...~cad. •20.1500.00

en doted petio. Close to grocery

45

117.000. 814-992-3122.

8 roo"" .,d bath in Syraa.se.

35 W. opo . 2 bl' .. 1 both. privlle

992-3711 . EOH.

-;4;:;--;:;-::==:-.-~;:;-:c--:;­

1

Large u pttairs apt. 238 11t Ave.
refrigerator.
U&amp;o l mci- pluo dop. Ullhloo lo
ref. No pets. Call . 614-4464821.

ing/1950 . Cell 114-379-2183

tMN, like new c:ond./ *260. Call
114-446-4046.

VI 'RA

All

0

Darbr

Run

(J) -

/

I
I

•o

111

O learronge
!etten of
lou• Kramblod word1

ACTRIG
~Pr-n'l2 "-r'-l~I-.---~1

=:rJ::.:rr

-110-

..

with ""'merout gem•. '*'c•
tiorial, • blank · 'ditcs. Alk·

24
1-soo,,.. ovoNolll•
.. os.... Coli
tlonh..
&amp; , fln.,cln_g

PICKENS FURNITURE

One Br., unlurnithed apt. renge

Coli 814-388-9948.

water. price&amp; reduced. Clyde
Bowen. J•. 304-571-2331.

1 h&amp;O moble home for tale.
ptu, lot wh h workahed on

6388

ax

Uke new Tanct;o 1000
wllh
tl.lal disk drive. color monitor,

..,:~
...... •w

.

low to form four simple words.

1:00 ()) a-nn: Tile 1.o1t

1971 HOrliiV Dovloan Su.,..
GNdo. Exc. cond/U,OOO. Coli
O.'V ot 814-446-3810. d..,:
814-4411-77811. ...

WOII
lAM I

•

EVENING

1 I II Y2SO good cond.11521.
Coli 614-2411-9187.
·

0

1·614· 886·7311 .

o• 304-676-

Efficienw apt. in Rio Grandt.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Homes for Sale

30~-176- &amp;104

Kttch.n/ttove &amp;

Ashton, · large building lots.
mobile homes permitted. public

Real Eslale

Regency, Inc. 2 BR .,_.ment,
new pluth c•pet. new pllnt.
utllitt. p1rtieltv PII d. • 176 mo.

R.,'d. eon 114-441-4345.

Office or small butinen spece
for rent in Mict.leport. All
Ulliti• induded. Air conditioned. 1200. p• month. Call

35

814-387- 71&amp;0.

&amp; •oft! g. "'""!dod. wot ... - aae. 1 o•beae paid. O.,o••

flllillll:ldl

34

lr.. 1 1/ 2 Mths, CA.. dis·
hwllh•. dispoul. priv•e endol8d patio. pool. p4.,ground.
Wit•. ..wer. • tr•ah included.
Starting at •289• per mo. Call

Coli 614-246-8786.

TUES., JULY 18

1984 Hondo V-8&amp; Mognoi,OOO
mu• . ·19811 HOftdo 700. wilh
heociir. Coli 814-381-8108.

0

For Sale·~ .t mirrorld 1li1Hng
closet doors .. Size 24" a 80"" .

.. . J: 001-l'T IQ.lOW~ JtW61()11!;
fWD~''( FFG\1.\ nu: ~T...

•

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jodi·
son. OH 1 -80().537-9828.

Big Dakota Farm Home built on

Houtlhol&gt;!i Pt.
Jerricho
t;.;::;;~~:;:;:;;~~::;,-;:;::~::::::::::::::::1
32 Mobile Homes
44 Apartment
co11 304-875-1460.

for Sale

uptic tMkt. A. sll:lt. A ON

Television ,
Viewing

Motorcycles

1984 Honclo- &amp;0. dirt bih&amp; ~od
&lt;:,9'1i-'t260. !;ell 814- 48·

~ 4' ~y ~f4HTS.

for Sale · Conaet• and Pl•ic

vou•

furnithin9
1/ 2 WV.
mi..
Rd.
Plaa1nt.

RE·TIIAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. &amp;28 Jodooon Plh
COli 114-4•41-4387. Rog. No
11-11-101&amp;8.
.
.

Ro3••

SWIMMINO POOlS 11188
Summer sDedll on 89 pooft.
Hugo 19•31' pool. HUge dodo.
lenoo.flllalowo ....,..,.lnolollo-

"Let's get one thing strajght
...you don't like doctors and I
don't like kids!"

Schools
InstructiOn ·

c."

11-lAf ~Vtt£N££ IS
\~DMt7SrBJ.&amp;. 'ftlll biDH'f

Wheelchair•- new or utitd . 3
wheeted el«=tric acootn.
Madi cel. 180D-88821 4.

1

P,M, Mon. ohm Sll. 114-4410322.
.

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

KIT N' CARLYI..Ee by Lury Wriaht

614-379-2183 oflw 5 p.m.

90 O.ya ume 81 CMh wtth
ltPPf'Oved a-edit . 3 Miles out
ew.,i•e Rd. Op,., 9 A..M . to s

- " '' Ae•on•ble.
bo•d. loundryfo&lt;
oldtrl¥
onl¥:
814-9927204

16

1318 to •9915. Teb\M 160 end
up to •12&amp;. Hid••·bedt • 390
to ·•695. Redin.,. t2215 to
t375. Lampi e28 t o '125.
om-.. *109 and up to 1496.
Wc&gt;od teble w-6 chairs t286to
Deak, 1145 up to *375.
HUich• 1-'00indup, ~nkbeda
eornp'-te w-mllhn••• t29fi
and up to 1395 · BabV beds
1110. Mattretlft or box IPI'in91
full or twin 178, firm 188. .,d
*98. Queen ' " ' • 27&amp; &amp; up.·
Ki.n'g f360. 4 draw• eh•t 189.
Gun c:ebinlll 6, B. &amp; 10 """'
Btbv "'ettr81181 • 36 &amp; I 45.
Sa~ fr1m11
O~een Size
131 &amp; king • ..,. 1&amp;0. Good
~ion of bect oo!1' 1u..a.
metal cabin••· haadbo•d• •30
and uP to 166.
·

•m.

-'I
12

Sot . . . . d chairs priced from

74

Sentinei-Page-9

�•

Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 18, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Philathea· Women hold meeting ----People in the news---Cindl Oliver l. county extension
agent, presented the program
and received a tiO\Yer arrange:
ment, when the Phllathea
WomenoftheMiddlElp ortChurch
of· Christ met for their July
meeting with the Loyal Womens
class as hostesses. . .
In ihe . program, members
were ·glven pointers on cooking
· for ope or two, shopping, and
. ·
using left overs..
Marilyn Wilcox presided at the
meeting with opening prayer
given by Farle Cole.·

I

•

Twins trip
Cleveland nine
·again, 5-4

bolognese, The Washington Post
reported. The . hotel staff pre- .
pared a dinner for four but after
arriving at the stadlurn, It was .
learned that Daltrey had deelded •
to dine alone- back at thehQtek;

The Hague Monday to dedicate a
By WILLIAM C. TR01T
· Reports were given by Dorothy
The group voted to buy one
cornerstone at the construction
United
Preas
lnlernatlonal
Roach, secretary, Mrs. Cole, dozen mattress covers for the
site
of the American School and
RAMBO
BEHIND
BARS:
Syl·
treasurer, and Mildred Riley , camp;
vesli!r
Stallone
Is
spending
a
lot
she
received
a standing ovation.
flowers and cards.
Named on the prayer list were
of
Several
of
time
In
prison.
In
the
soon-tothe
school's children
For devotions, Martha Childs Martha Haggerty, Nettle Boyer,
helped
Bush
unveil
the plaque
be
released
"L;ockup"
he
.playsa
read the Psalm 1, a · reading Pat Wehrung, Mike Stewart,
and
she
shook
their
hands
before
convict
and
now
he
Is
shooting
entitled "Marks of a Godly Grace Hawley, and Lois Perry.
to
the
crowd
and
saying,
turning
GLDIPSES: Tina Tumer Is ..
"Tango
ana
Cash"
In
which
he
Man," a poem. " Don't Quit," and
There will be no August meet·
Kurt
Russell
piay
policemen
"!forgot
to
mention
I
real!y
have
back
latter taking a year off. She ·
and
a prayer.
lng and a ·tood auc11on will be held
sent
to
prison
after
being
framed.
11
grandchildren."
Bush,
who
has
a
single, "The Best,'' due for :
"Ladles Day Out" at the at the September meeting.
church was nnounced for Satur·
The. Phllathe,a ladles from the . Stallone drops his super-macho said visiting Holland was " like . release In mid-August and the .
day, Sept. 9, d tbe retreat at the . 'Loyal· Bereans Cl!lSS will be Image for "Tango and Cash" and visiting friends,.. later went to album, ''Foreign Affair," wfll •
church was an
ced for Sept. hostesses with Nora Rice and appears with close-cut hair, Amsterdam's Van · Gogh Mu, follow In September. Turner ;
22 and 23.
Clyda Allensworth as co- · wire-rimmed glasses and suits seum and pollee shooed off th~ served as co-producer ancl co- :
before his character ends up lri . few protesters who were shou't · arranger on some qf the songs ... •
chairmen.
·
Comedian WU Shrloer and Mar· :
prison. "I needed glasses since I lng "Bush go horne.''
WHO'S D~ER: It's not easy cla Strassman, late of "Welcome : ·
. was 13 but wasn't brave enough
io wear them . until I started catetlng to a rock star. When the Back, Kotter:' and currently or'·
· walking Into walls. Then I said Who played Washington, D.C. ; "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids," wlll •
OK,',' Stallone says In an "Enter- recently, the Watergate Hotel be co-hosts for the Miss Teen •
tainment · Tonight" Interview gladly fulfilled lead singer Roger USA pageant, which CBs Will ·
most family members: and
Tabatha, Jason Imboden, Lucille that will air Tuesday and no Daltrey's request that a dinner of televise July 25 . .. Phyllis :
Misty Laudermllt, traveling the Lawson, Goldie and Earl HOI· doubt make ex-wife Brigitte salad. rolls, champagne and George, Miss America of 1970, Is ·
farthest. The door prize was won man, Sam and . Ruth Shain, Nielsen's ears burn. "I need salmon be sent by limo to RFK Jtllng back to Atlantic City, N.J., :
by Judy Nelson.
Emily, Samuel, al!d Matthew them for distance even though I Stadium, where the band was this year to ·Join Gary Collins as :
Attending the celebration were Charles and Evelyn Manuel: think with some of the mistakes · playing. But then came another host of .the .pageant. George ;
Debl Michaels, Tara, Jeff, and Joan, Jenny, Jtll, and Jane, I've made In life I could have call saylng'Daltrey had changed previously had appeared as
Myca, Mike and Kathl Salser, Jerry and Gall Rowe; and Jen- used the glasses for closeup his mind and wanted spaghetti co-host from 1971 to 1979.
Mike, Jr., and Matthew, Shade;
niter, and Harry . and Helen endeavors, too.''
Mindy Snyder and Norma Sl;~y- ·. · Shain, and Clayton, Racine.
ton, Marengo: Pete and Verdene
The 1990 .reunion will be held
WOMAN PLEADS INNO·
Snyder and Michelle Denny, July 15 at the Star Mill Park In CEN:T IN FOX «;ASE: The
Delaware: Joe 'Holman, Joey, Racine. Each filrniJy Is to bring a
woman accused of sending more ·
• Bobbl, and Crystal, Galloway; '{!oor prize.
·
. ·
LOS GATOS, Calif. (UP!) -A wanted that suit," Stlckerod, :
than 5,000 wrltt~n death threats
Paul Leonard Sliyder, Radnor;
to Michael J. Fox was ordered burglar has thwarted an Elvis sale!. "I don't know what to do." :
Brett and Misty Lauderm.Ht,
Stickerod, 37, had planned to ·
kept In jail without ball after Impersonator's plans to perlorm
Jackson, Mich.: Jay Rowe,
before the Sovl~t Union's first retire the suit after appearing In :
pleading Innocent Monday to five
Jeremy and Ryan, Carol Jeffers
counts of making 'terrorist lady In an original gem-studded a show In October In Moscow for •
and Justin, Middleport; Ed and
suit designed for the king of rock Ralsa Gorbachev, wife of Soviet :
threats. Tina Marte Ledbetter,
Judy Nelson, Anthony Row,
'n' roll.
_:
lea.d er Mikhail Gorbachev.
26, a Westlake VIllage, Calif ..
VIrginia Rowe, Jessie Jarrell,
Charlie Stlckerod's glitzy
shipping clerk, goes back to court
Russia's first lady Is an Elvis ·
The Taylor-Harper reunion Aug. 18 after she Is evaluated by
and Charles Shain, Pomeroy:
white ·gabardine .Elvis suit and fanwhowouldrecognlzethesult ·
'
Arnold and Ruth Johnson, Co- has been scheduled for July 30 at psychologists. Ledbetter alcape, studded with blue an(j red Stlckerod said. ' ·
lumbus: Roger and Sally Hoi· the home of Ben and Ruby Rife. legedly started the carnpalgo
stones and gold stars, was stolen
The suit Is one .of only three ·
man, Bryan, Tracey, Kelley, There wilt be a potluck dinner all · after Fox 'm arried actress Tracy
from . his house. by a bandit who .existing made for Elvis, he said. :
p.m. Those attending are asked PoUan and renewed It after
Jarrod, and Monica, Rutland;
left behind other Presley memo- The others are on display at :
to
take their own table service Pollan became pregnant.
Jean and Samson Hall, Janice
rabilia, Including 24-karat gold Graceland mansion and the Las ·
Lawson, and David, and James and lawn chairs. Additional
Vegas Hilton hotel.
records.
MRS. BUSH ABROAD: The
.,
Information may be obtained by Dutch !Ike Barbara Bush. The
and Zane Teaford, Syracuse;
"It
had
to
be
someone
who
Clarence and K!rn Lawson and calling the Rlfes at 992-3464.
first lady was in a suburb outside

Piek-3

716
Pick-4

•

'

.

at

e

Pomeroy~ Middleport,

Vol.40, No.ll1
1988

'

.

•

•
•

•

ONEGRAND PRIZE
.
.. .
A '21 00 home entertainment package including: an '800, 27" RCA Colortrak
2000 Stereo TV, an '11 00 Sony® Handycam 8mm Video Camera with power
zoom and auto focus, and a '200 VHS VCR with 28 function infrared wireless
remote.
RVE 1st PRIZES
.
A Sony® Super 8mm Handycam Video Camera with power zoom, auto locus,
edit search and much more. An '11 00 value.
TEN 2nd PRIZES
.
An HC VHS format Video Cassette Recorder with a 28 function infrared
wireless remote, and 14 day, 6 event timer. 122 channel cable compatible. A
·
'200 value. '
325 RFTY DOLLAR GIFT CERnFICATES
·
One gift certificate to be given away at each store! Gift certificate must be used
by Sept. 13, 1989. .

Enter As Otten As You LikeI

SUMMERTIME SWEIPSTAKIS
NAME~~--~----------------~-­

AIIIIIIESI

DRAWING DATE
AUGUST 16, 1989

CITY - - - - - - - STATE - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - -

PHONE

AREA CODE

specla&amp;ol'!l who ,a ttendejl MGM Dlsll'lct's June 2~
·Cub Olympics. See story and photos on page 7.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Infla·
CoQtblned with last week's
lion eased · slightlY. In June, report that producer Inflation
jumping 0.2 percent during the dropped 0.1 percent In June, the
month, as energy and clothing modest growth lri consumer
priers fell and f9od priCes leveled Inflation should reassure the
off after shacp frttuJe.tlarller l~e ~c!et~ ' R~rve · and financiaL ~
· ''i'tar. the government reported •markets:.that 'Inflation: It above
W!)dnesday.
the low levels of 1986 and 1987: Is .
The Increase in the the Labor not Out of control.
Department's Consumer Price
, So far this year, Inflation has
Index was the smallest since advanced at a 5.9 percent annual
February 1988, and followed rate, the biggest December-tosteep 0.6 percent and 9.7 percent June hike since 1982.
jumps in April and May that had
But taking out food and energy ·
analysts worried that spiraling
prices, which tend to be volatile ,
inflation rn lght return.

'.

T-120 VHS
VIDEO
TAPE
Up to·6 hours
of viewing time.

INSECT KILLERS
Amrlfi ,.,,

ggc "''"

1~

to stock
on hand.

. -:3~

Anchor Glass
12-PACK .
CANNING JARS
WHHUDS
JELLY JARS
211
Oft PIIT JARS ...

. .

QUART JARS ....

341

EACH

oz.

20
PINEAPPLE ·

"""'"~.

YOUIICIIKE

49!..

BABY

POUND
PUPPES•

ggc

·and drove the Inflation rate up
earlier this year, inflation rose
0.2 percent in June and at a 4.5
percent annual rate for the first
six months of the year.
.
'"Over time we will see some
drop In tlie Inflation rate ~&gt;articu- .
larly If we see the economy
continue to weaken," said Ml·
chael Penzer, a s~nlor economist
with Bank of America In San
FranCisco. "But a's long as the
unemployment rate remains
low, there is go lng to be a
tendency for Inflation ·to stay ·
rather high."

WASHINGTON cUP!) - The
House passed on a 394-26 vote
Tuesdaay a $42.1 billion agrlculture and related agencte~ fund·

lng bill providing more than the
administration requested for domestlc. food and nutrition programs. international programs

..--Local news briefs·_ ,
A man was slightly injured In a one-car crash at 2 p.m.
Tuesday in Lebanon Township of Meigs County, on CR. 31, 0.5 of
a mile west of SR. 124, the Melgs-Gallla Post, State Highway
Patrol reported.
· '
Troopers said James L. Allen, ~7. Rt. 1, ' Portland, was
southbound on the township road, approachingSR.124, when his
.brakes failed. The 1987 Chevrolet Chevette rolled across SR.
'124, went off the road and overturned. Damage was minor.
. Allen suffered a mlnor·vlstble Injury. He was treated at the
scene by toe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. There
W'as no cltat)on.
·

Juvenile sentenced by judge
•

A West Virginia juvenile charged with breaking and entering,
gross sexual tmpo~ttlon, and felonious assault was given the
maximum sentence allowed by law to the Training Institute of
Central Ohio Monday afternoon when he appeared In the court
of Meigs County Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck.
•
According to Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell, about daybreak on
July '12 in Middleport, the 16 year-old youth broke Into an
upstairs apartment where a woman asleep with her two year old
child was awakened and then attacked.
The youth reportedly threatened her with a butcher knife and
also attempted to choke her. Hysell reported .that the woman
was able to fight off the juvenile and came out of the ordeal with
only a few bruises and scratches. He fied the apartment on foot .
Middleport pollee were called to the scene and charges were
filed In Meigs County Juvenile Court. The youth was arrested
late Satur~ay night by Middleport Pollee Officer Rick Johnson
who had stopped him on a routine traffic check. He was turned
over to Juvenile Officers Hysell and Robert Jacks and
transported to the Musklngum Detention Center In Zanesville
where he remained until Monday when he was returned here for
his court appearance:

Pomeroy Council lacks quorum
For lack of a quorum, Pomeroy VIllage Council conducted no
business Monday evening. Present for Monday's meeting were
Councllmernbers Betty Baronlck and Franklin Rizer, arid
CGuncll President Larry Wehrung. Mayor Richard Seyler and
Clerk-Treasurer :Jane Walton were also present. Absertt were
Councllmernbers Bruce Reed, Bill Young an~ Brian Shank, who
were out of town. The next regular meetln&amp; of Pomeroy Village
Council will be Aug. 6 at 7: 30 p.m.
Continued on page 6

t

.

the other expenses Involved in
supporting the groups, the high
S&lt;;Jlool athletic, junior high, and
tlie band booster organizations
have come together In a joint
effort to raise the money.
Denny Evans, president of the
athletic boosters, advises that
two girls softball tournaments
have already been held and that
Saturday a "battle of the bands"
will be held on the high school
football field. The competition
wlll begin at 1 p.m. Refreshments .wlll be served and door
prizes awarded. Cost ts $3 for
Individuals and $5 for couples.
Those attending are asked . to'
take their own lawn chairs.
Other activities being planned

are a consignment auction and a
chicken barbecue.
Evans has asked parents of all
concerned students to help with
the various activities.
·'II your child Is a cheerleader,
a member of the band, Intends on
playing any sports, or if .you are
just a concerned citizen , please
volunteer your services ," Evans
appealed.
Heading up the various activities for booster groups are Edna
Hunnell, · 949·2338, and Ruth
Shain, 247-4965, band boosters;
Don Smith, 949-02704, junior high
boosters; Becky Mallory, 9492133, junior high cheerleaders;
Denny Evans, 843-5116, Southern
High School Athletic Boosters .

Striking .miners,
Pittston .officials·
resume talks today. _

UMW President Richard
Trumka called the agreement to
resume negotiations a small step
but "better than no step at alt."
Both sides accepted the bind·
tng proposal by U.S. District
Judge Glen Williams after a
three-hour. closed-door ses ~ ion
Tuesday.
Inltlally. the parties planned to
meet in separate rooms of the
same hotel, with . a mediator
carrying contract proposals
•
from one party to the other. The
talks could lead to face-to-face
negotl3tions.
Joseph Farrell, vice president
DUFFIELD, Va. (UPil of
Pittston Co ., the coat firm's
Sheriff James M. Soulsby United Mine Workers and Pitt·
and the Food and Drug
parent
corporation, and 'T rumka
reports that his department ts ston Coal Group officials reAdministration.
•
signed
the agreement .
continuing the lnves tigatlon of an sumed federally mediated talks
''Rural communities and agri"We
wanted to be in the same
incident reported Saturday by Wednesday in an attempt to end a
culture are better off today thai\
Martha St.e wart, Middleport. Ste· 16-week-old strike against Virgi- room" with Pittston negotiators,
In the early 1980s," said Rep.
Trumka said of his reasons for
wart reported that sometime nia's largest coal producer.
Virginia Smith, R-Neb. "It is a
attending Tuesday's meeting.
during the night, someone had
better day for agriculture in
The negotiations to resolve the
"We wanted the negotiating
thrown roofing nalls In her dispute that has echoed across
great part due to the decisions
process
to start and Pittston was
driveway. Some of the nails the nation's coalfields are the
and policies of agricultural lead·
not
willing
to go that far."
landed In the path of the mall first since the union broke off
ers and Congress."
Pittston
Co. Chairman Paul
carrier. A copy of the sheriff's federal m.ediatton June 7.
The only controversy carne
DoUglas
said
Monday in a letter
report wilt be sent to the U.S.
over a House Appropriations
UMW Vice President Bruce to Gov . Gerald Baliles the
Pos~&amp;l Inspector. ·
Committee report, attached to
Bratten said union leaders dell·
Other recent concerns of the vered a brief statement before company would return to barthe bill, instructing the Food and
sheriff's department Include a negotiations hegan with two -gaining only if the union ceased
Drug Administration no't to ban
ali vlqlence and if it showed i I had
Monday' altern~ report that a federal mediators shortly 10 a.m.
red dye No. 3 - a possible
new proposals.
fire el(tingutsher · fell from a
"We just felt it was time for a
carcinogen - without further
Odom said Tuesday the comSyracuse fire truck being driven different approach," Pittston
- -·
study.
pany
was taking at "face value"
by Jeff Ra ble, and struck vehl· Coal Group President Michael
. "The industry has used every
the
union's
intention to bargain In
cles dr';en by Sharon Smith and Odom said Tuesday. The comtrick In the book" to keep the dye
good
faith
.
Lois Wolfe, Racine. Smith's 1987 pany's goal Is to "try to take. ,
from being banned, Rep. Ted
Williams. who has jailed strikChevrolet
sustained moderate away the acrimonious atrnos·
Weiss, '0-N.Y., said in agreeing
miners and levied .huge fines
Ing
with consumer groups that . damage. Light damage was phere and give a new way to try against their union for strikesustained by Wolfe's 1979 Ford ! to resolve this dispute."
enough studies to date warrant
related activities he considers
pickup.
an immediate ban.
As the talks opened In a motel, violated his court orders, will not
April McGrath, Beech Grove Virginia State Pollee were Inves- be Involved In the talks.
But Rep. Sid Morrison, RRoad,
Rutland , reported that
tigating what appeared to be a
Wash ., said It would be "unfortuAbout1,700 Pittston mine rs i·n
nate" If the dye was banned some time Monday night or early
home-made bomb found on rail· Virginia and West Virginia had
Tuesday, eight panes of glass
,before the FDA study ts
road tracks near a Pittston been working wtth.o ut a contract
were broken from a window of
f&amp;ct\tty In southwest Virginia.
completed.
'
since January 1988 when they
Pollee did not definitely linked struck Pittston on April 5, prim·
More than half ofthe blll's$42 .1 her home and a coupie of items
were missing from the residence.
the bomb .to the strike, although arUy over benefits and schedulbillion is targeted for food and
Another
Incident
lnvolvlng
a
·
consumer programs, including
there have have been similar Ing as Pittston seeks more
motor vehicle occurred about 2 Incidents In recent weeks.
$21.8 billion for food programs;
flexlblllty
p.m. Sunday near Racine. Aimee
$992 million for Food for Peace;
Wolfe, Racine, was traveling
$583 million · for the Food and
south
on State Route 338 when the
Drug Administration and $423
million for meat and poultry hood latch released and the hood
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The condition.
on her 1984 Ford Escort flew back
Nearly all of the nation 's
inspection.
Agriculture Department said
and
smashed
her
windshield.
No
Tuesday
most
major
crops
are·
spring
wheat has headed, with
Of toe total, dorpestic foOd and
Injuries
were
reported.
progress
than
at
just
7
percent
left to do so, and 80
showing
less
nutrition programs received
On
Sunday
morning,
Roger
this
time
last
year,
but
the
percent
of
the
crop is in fatr ·or
$17.6 billion - $345.! million
Falls,
discovered
Roush,
Letart
majority
of
crops
are
In
fair
or
.
better
condition.
As for winter
more than the administration
that
during
the
night,
an
unbetter condition.
wheat, 72 percent has been
requested and $816 million more
known vehicle had run off the
As of last week, 33 percent of harvested, compared with 83 1
than· last year's appropriation.
road and destroyed four rows of soybeans were tn bloom, com· percent this time last year.
Of the $17.6 btlllon, $14,2 billion Is
seventy-four percent of cot ton
tor the food stamp program, $713 his tomatoes. It Is believed that pared with 51 percent at this time
the vehicle was passing another last year. Ninety percent of the · has squared and 25 percent has
million for child nutrition pro·
vehicle and lost control and went soybean crop ts reported to~ In set bolls. Ninety-three percent of
grams and $2.1 bllllon for the
off the roadway on the right.
Women, Infimts and Children
fair or better condition. Just 5 the nation's cotton is at least tn
Roush estimated losses at$400to
program, designed to provide
percent of the Soybean crop is fair condition.
• setting pods, compared with 11
Eighteen percent of grain
health care for pregnant women, ' $50(),
The
department
Ia
also
lnvestl·
percent
this
time
last
year.
sorghum
has headed, tracking
nursing mothers, Infants and
gating
the
theft
of
Items
froll)
a
,
last
year's
progress, and 82
children at nutritional risk.
farm
on
King
Ridge
owned
by
Twenty-seven
percent
of
the
percent
of
the
crop is in fair or
The bill provides $582 million
John
Young
of
Cincinnati.
It
was
nation's
corn
crop
Is
sllklng,
better
condition.
,
· for the Food and Drug AdminisreJ)orted
that
a
hitch
from
an
old
compared
with
48
percent
at
this
.
Rice
Is
the
only
crop
ahead of
tration - $113 mllUon above the
trailer
was
taken.
Aluminum
time last year. The All'lc\llture ' last year's progress, with 22
adrnlnlltratlon's request: The
from an old camper' was also Depar~ment reported 92 percent ~percent headed. The entire crop~'
House provided $57 million for
removed.·
of the.comcrop ls In fair or better · Is In fair or better condition .
AIDS activities·

ouse ·approves ·$42.1 billion
·agriculture appropriations bill

Driver hurt in Tuesday mishap

.HOT · .·
SHOT.
11 oz.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Slaff
. Approximately $16,000 . will
have to be raised by booster
groups in the Southern Local
School District if extra·
curricular activities are to be
maintained at last ,year' s level,
according to figures obtained
from Dennie Hill, treasurer.
The Southern Local schools,
llke man:t other dlstrlcts.in Ohio,
face financial · problems and are
looking to booster groups to pick
up the funding shortfall.
Fourteen Junior high and high
school assistant coac~tng posi· ·
lions are affected and· while
personnel is available, contracts
will not be awarded until funding
Is determined, school officials
·r eport.
The positions include junior
high basketball coaches, seventh
and eighth grade boys and·gtrts,
junior high basketball eighth
grade bQys, junior high volleyball girts, junior high cheerleader advisor, junior high foot·
ball boys coach, two assistant ·
football coaches at the high
school, a freshman basketball
coach for boys, an assistant
volleyball coach, assistant baseball and softball boys coaches,
and assts tan t basketball and
softball girls coaches.
In order to raise the needed
funds to hire \he required personnel to maintain the prevlpus level
of activities, as well as to finance

~-

June. in~aiion eases slightly
How to win: Registration lonns are available In this publlcailon or at your
local Big lots" or Odd lots store. Deposit or mall in your entry by July 30,
1989 for an August 16, 1989 drawing. Drawing to be conducted by 11n In·
dependent auditing company. Winners wiU be contacted within one week.
No purchase necessary, you need not be present to win. Employees of
Consolidated Stores International Corp., their affiliates and their respective
. families are not eligible. Contest covers all 325 Big lots• and Odd lots
locations. Chances of winning depend on number of entrieS received. You
must be at least 18 yeers old to win. Void where prohibited by law. Win- ·
ner is responsib~ for ai. tJXes .and fees. OHicialentry fllrms only. Contest
presented by Consolidated Stores International Corp., P.O. Box 18301, ,
300 Phillip! Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43218. All prizes will be awarded.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewiD&amp;IDOr

sters are asked to
help fund Southern's
extra school . activities

SPECTATORS - It's almost u rnucJ! fun to
wlllllh the C11h Scout ' OIYD)plcs u It Is to
participate In the events. . Ask any of these

'

f Section, 14 pag~s

Ohio, Wednesday, July 19, 1989

Reunion scheduled

OFFICIAL RULES

•

.,

Elvis impersonator all shook up :

·Win Tllil
·tttoo Noms Enflrllinmsnt P1cksg_s ·
Or~ II 340 othsr gr11t prizsi/

Low In upper 60s to11ight.
of rain 80 percent.
Thursday, high In mid 70s,
Chance of rail) 70 percent.
Chan~e

Page3

Snyder family conducts ·reunton·

•

•

5441

•

The descendants of Charles
and Alma Hunzman Snyder met
recently for their 16th annual
reunion at the .Star Mill Park in
Racine.
Seventy-one family mj!mbers
attended the reunion In which a
basket dinner was served at
noon.
Janice .Lawson presided at a
short business meeting In which
Joan Manuel ' read tpe secre-'
tarx's report and Jean Hall read
the treasurer's report. ~~e death
of Harry Shain In Febfuary was
noted and the marriage of Trace
Rowe to Anthony Wilson was also
noted.
Officers elected for next year
are Charles Shain, president;
Sally Holman, vice president:
Emily Shain, secreiary; ·and
Jean Hail, treasurer.
. Recognized and presel)ted
'gifts were . Myca Michaels,
youngest girl; Matthew Salser,
youngest boy; James Teaford,
oldest man: Jane Teaford, oldest
woman: Roger Holman family,

Ohio Lottery

Sheriff
•
contmues
investigation

More tban 1,000 area miDers
tiDed the K mart parking lot on
Eastern Avenue In GaiUpolls this
morning to fonn a caravan to
Piston, Va., in show of support
for fellow mll!ers.
Dressed ln'camouflage oulflts
wllh yellow ribbOns tied lo their
vehlcle antennas, the miners left
GaiUpolls In the rain to show
solidarity and protest the judicial
handling ollhe strike, said Max
Whitlatch.
The miners will return this
weekend.

Major crops are prog1 essing slowly

I

.

1

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