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                  <text>August 6. 1989

Ohio Lottery

Davis paces
Reds 3-2 win
over Braves

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOORS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Pick-3

050
Pick-4

5563
Super Lotto
1-18-23-10..9-7
Kicker 922766

Page 3

•

WEEK

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

AUG. ·6

PRICES EFFEcnVE SUN., AUG. 6 THRU SAT., AUG. 12, 1989

THUR

Vol.40, No.64 M

AUG. 12
20 Coupons

T~oBOne Steak •••~-.$389

GRADE A WHOLE

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Chicken
••••••••••••
~·••• 69-&lt;
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.
Steaks/R·oasts ••~-. $129
. OSCAR MAYER
'
$
3
Bologna ••••••••••• ~. 1 9
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k•es
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White Potatoes ~O.L~ $1 99
FLAVORITE

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Mac. , Cheese ....•.. 3/ 1 Jr. Pops ••••••••• ~~: •• $129
3 DIAMOND

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200Z.

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limit I Per Customer
Good CWy At Powell's SuPer Yolu
G0011 S1111. Aut- 6 thru s.i.. a.g. 12

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limit 1 Per C.'-r

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Good Only At Powlll's Super Voluo
Good
a.,. 6 thru Sat., Aug. 12

••

0
0

WAITING THE STORM OUT- Country music · cancel hla~econd show. Warlner and aeveral band
' and lalrboaril members sat on equipment tnmks
siDger-aopgwrlter Steve WariDer performed at
backstage, siDgiDg and playing J•l to make the
the GaiDa County Ju.nlor Fair Saturday night lor.
lbne
pus faster. (OVP pboto by Lee Ann Welch)
about 20 minutes before a rain and llghtalng storm
hll, lorellll! hbn to flee the open-air stage and

Most of state battered by ·
.tbunderStornts. over w~keP!I.

seeks grand jury Indictments.
against people growing marl·
Juana. "People also can lose
their land If they are found
cultivating marijuana. Soli and
clbnate conditions are the main
reasons why marijuana grows so
well In Southeastern Ohio,
Soulsby remarked.
The sheriff continue&lt;!. "It's
just the right mix of the two to
grow marijuana."
In an Associated Press article,
Soulsby was quoted as saying
that marijuana grown In Meigs
County Is among some of the best
grown In the world: The sheriff
said the local type of marijuana
started to be grown during the
r960s when Ohio University stu·
dents experimented with grow·
lng the drug.
A single plant grown In Meigs
County has a street value of
$1,500 to $3,000 In cities such as
New York City, Detroit, Cleve· .
land and Chicago, the article
s~ild.

FBI says crimes are ·down
•
ln Cleveland, up ·in Columbus:

By United Press International
Crime Increased slightly
across Ohio last year, jumping
-""'« ~-~_........- ......
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·· ·"sharply· In Ohio's largest city;··
.Columbus, but drop~lng In
ployees parking lot. ~
By United Press International
inches of rain fell In an hour.
At least one person was killed · Cahall was a tuba player In the
Ripley pollee said the roof was Cleveland.
The FBI In lts annual "Crime
and two other people were p11rk's Dlxlehihd trio.
blown off a garage In the ·
In
the United State" report
· Storms developed over the Elrown·Adams County area. The
injured by llghtnlng In severe
weekend thunderstorms . that western portion · of the state roof was taken off a house In releaaed Sunday. said. 505,034
took the roofs off buildings, Saturday afternoon and very Union County, where a barn and crimes were reported In Ohio In
caused electrical power outages . quickly became severe when silo were destroyed, the patrol 1988, an increase of about 2
percent over the 493,400 reported
and closed roadways around they tapped into the hot and spokeswoman said.
In
1987.
muggy air elsewhere around
Ohio.
·
Power Jines were down .In
Violent
crimes also Increase
A tornado reporte!lly touched Ohio.
Logan, Shelby, Butler, Hamilton,
slightly,
from
45,436 In 1987 to
The National Weather Service . Greene, Fayette, Licking, Mad!·
down In Fairfield Co6ilty, uproot·
49,144
In
1988.
lng trees and blowing the roofs said It received numerous re- son and Plckaway counties, she
Nationally, the FBI reported
off buildings, said an Ohio ports of wind damage In the said.
·
the
crime rate was up 3 percent,
Hl&amp;hway P'atrol spokeswoman. western and southeastern parts
Electrical outages occurred ln
FUIIO,el clouds also were spotted of the state.
Dayton. Cllnton and Highland with munler and rapes lncreas·
"Trees are down and there's counties, where Ughtnlng struck. lng more than cases of arson and
near · Dublin .and ln Licking
high water pretty much through· and Greene and Fayette coun· theft.
County.
, The agency said the number of
out
the state," said the patrol ties, she said .
. -I&lt;llled was a musician at Kings
spokeswoman.
Island amusement park, Thomas
Dean Blosser, 25, Urbana, was reported crimes-was 17 percent
Rainfall of 1 to 3 Inches was struck by lightning while stand· . higher than five years ago and 14
Cahall. 39, Covington, Ky.
Warren County authorities said common, said the weather ser·
ing ou tslde a relative's .house In percent hlgh'e r than 10 years ago.
. Cahall was struck while walking vice, adding there was flooding
Columbus. He was hospitalized ·
Despite a population Increase
to his automobile In the em· reported In Marietta, where 2 to4
In critical condition.
In Ohio - from an estimated
1

Do~t't

10,784,000 In 1987 to 10,872,000 ln from 18,534 In 191!7 to 17,136 In
.
1988 - the rate of crime was up: 1988.
Cincinnati showed an Increase,
from 4,575.3 cr,lmes for each
·100;000 ·1nhlibttants In 1987 ·to , from 27,751 in 1987 to 28;153 In ·
4;645.3 per ·lOO·,ooo ln 1988. 'For 1988, as did Dayton, which had
violent crime - murder, non· 20,489 crimes reported In 1988,
negligent manslaughter, rorclble compared with 20,015 In 1987 . .
Despite the slight Increase In
rape, robbery and aggravated
asssult - the rate was 452 for overall crime In Dayton, there '
each 100,000 Ohioans, up from was a big jump In motor vehicle
theft, from 1,265 In 1987 to 1,968
421.3 last year .
last
year.
Columbus showed Increases In
all but two categories- murder
m the total number of crimes
and arson. Total crimes reported
jumped from 52,772 In 1987 to 1n Ohio, the FBI ~aid an estl·
57,532 In 1988. Fueling the In· mated 21,823 occurred In rural
crease was a big jump In motor areas, 444,317ln large metropoll·
vehicle theft, from 3,5561n 1987 to tan areas and 38,894 In smaller
5,742 last year.
clUes .
Cleveland Is still far and away
There were 585 murders and
the state's leader In motor non-negligent manslaughters revehlcle "theft, but the number . · ported In Ohio last year, down
dropped last year: 9,975 vs. 10,508 from 630 In 1987.
In 1987.
Motor vehicle theft.· however ..
Cleveland's total also dropped, was up, from 41,291 ln 1987 to
from 46,365 In 1987 to 45,755 In 43,405 last year. There were 382.9
1988.
thefts per 100.000 Ohioans In 1987,
· Akron's crime also dropped, and 399.2 thefts per 100,000ln 1988

expect immediate release of
Bell strike enters .second day
American hostages, Rabin cautions

--

WASHINGTON CUP!) - Is· said of the Israeli offer, which
raell Defense · Minister Yltzhak also Includes the promise to
Rabin cautioned .Americans not release dozens of Shiite prisoners
to expect l)le Immediate releaae held ln Israeli prisons In ex·
of U.S. hostages In Lebanon, change for the hostages.
warning that only ''strongnerves
The capture of Obeld, a Hezboland patience" will bring an end lah leader who advocated ·milto the present crisis.
Itary action against Israeli
In an · interview Sunday with troops occupying southern LeCBS News's "Face the Nation," banon, triggered the latest flurry
Rabin repeated . his· govern· of activity that the Bush admlnls·
ment's intention to swap Sheikh tratlon hopes will finally bring an
Abdul Karim Obeld, who was end to the ongoing hostage crisis.
captured July 28 by Israeli
But, Rabin cautioned Amerl·
soldiers, for the 16 Western cans to think In Middle Eastern
hostaps and three Isra.e ll sold!· . lerrns. He explained that negotia.
ers held captive In Lebanon by tlo"ns between parties who have
the radical group Hezbollah, or . no formal dealings with each
Party of God.
·
other can take on the atmosphere
· "Our proposal ls all," Rabin of an Arab bazaar In which no

• The total value of the
double coupon may not
exceed $1 .00,
.• Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51 C will
be redeemed at face value
only.
•Only one manufacturer's coupon per item.
•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon cannot exceed the
purchase price of the item.
Money will not be refunded.

.

By CAROLE FLECK ·
Plumb said talks between the
United Press International
company and negotiators for the
About 2.000 electrical workers 9,000-member International
deal is concluded wlthput endless
In Pennsylvania jdlned the strike' · Brotherhood of "Electrical
back-and-forth bargaining.
against three "Baby Bell" com· Workers In New Jersey were
"One has to have strong nerves
and patience," Rabin warned. panles Monday ln.lhe second day continuing- although members
"We learned the hard way .... It of a strike marked by.delays In were not showing up for work· takes time (and you can't be)
telephone service to mUIIons of and that 2,000 IBEW members ln
aroused by any piece of customers In 15 states and the Pennsylvania called a strike at
12:01 a.m. Monday.
. nation's capitaL
Information."
About 150,000 workers are on
Mary O'Hara, spokeswoman
Rabin did express some optlm·
Ism that those holding Western strike over wage and health for the CWA locals In Pennsylva·
and Israeli hostages appeared to benefits ·but no new talks were nla and Delaware, said labor and
be interested In ending the scheduled between two of the management are "reasonably a
three telephone companies, ac- distance apart."
hostage crisis In Lebanon.
''The problem can be resolved
"I belle\le that otherwise they coming to company spokesmen.
woould have · taken stronger
Pacific Telesis, which serves If I Bell Atlantic) gives us more of
measures vis·a·vis Americans, California and Nevada, was to · Its profits," O'Hara said.
Meanwhile, company managmaybe later vis-a-vis Israelis. resume bargaining Monday with
negotiatlors
for
Its
42,500
striking
ers
filled In for strlklrig workers
that are kept under their con'
In
most
positions, but the wal·
workers,
officials
said.
trol," Rabin said. "When It
Atlantic
spokesman
Larry
1\out,
which
started early Sunday
Bell
Continued on page 10
'

scouts to reach for stars

•This offer does not apply
to Powell's Super Valu
Coupons. free coupons
or any competitor's coupons.

BOWLING GREEN, Va .
(UPI) - · Dismissing warnings
about "the danger, the hardship
and the expense," President
Bush exhorted thousands of Boy
Scouts· on Monday to reach for
the stars and help ensure a
·permament U.S. presence In
space.
.
.
In remarks prepared !or dellv·
ery to the 1988 National Boy Scout
Jamboree, Bush defended his
I'I!C4!Dt pledge to &amp;end American
explorers and lettlers to the
moon and declared, •'When we
abn for the stars, It will be to
stay."
"This Is th~ -c1ra11enge of the
next century -your century and
~our cliallellge," Bush told the
uaembled scouts at Fort A.P.

•This offer excludes cigarettes. or any other items
prohibited by law.
•Offer is good only for .
product on hand'. No
Rainchecks.
•There is a limit of 20
coupons you may redeem.

" ........ •

task due to the terrain of the
county. Soulsby said.
"We're doing a lotaboutlt," he
said.
•'Throughout the summer
Meigs County has earned na·
months
from May to September
tiona! recognition In a categoQ'
that some local residents mal"' we try to co,nftscate as much as
we can. The terrain of the county
.not be proud of. ,
A potent Ohio-developed marl· makes It hard to find."
Soulsby said the Sheriff's De·
juana hybrid that costs $3,000 a
pound on the streets of Miami, partrnent utUizes anonymous
Fla .• Is growing abundantly ln tips along with helicopters and
and planes to find patc}les of
Meigs County.
.
. In ' a report to U.S . . A!torney marijuana.
"You u~d to find big patches.
General Dick Thornburgh, U.s.
but
now you find smaller patches
·Attorney D. Michael Crites said
with
smaller plants," he said.
that Meigs County and Athens
In
June, the Ohio Bureau of
County are well·known In the
drug world for cultivating some Criminal -Investigation and the
of the best marijuana In the · Ohio Natlonal Guard assls ted the
sheriff's department In confls·
country.
.
Meigs County Chief Deputy eating 3,806 plants and arresting
Jlmmer Soulsby said It Is disturb- ' four people In relation to drug
Ing that Meigs County Is so raids. The confiscated plants had,
well-known for marijuana when an estimated street value of
more than six million doUars.
It Is "not known for a whole lot."
. ":We're trying to make more
The sheriff's department Is
criminal
cases (against people
trying io stop people from
growing
marijuana)," Souls by
growing m11rljuana · In Meigs
County, but it faces a difficult said, adding that his department
- By MICHAEL SHEARER
Sentinel News Stafi

$ 99

S1rlo1n Steak....... 2
CAROLINA PRIZE .
.
Bacon ••••.••••..•.••~·•. 69 &lt;
SUPERIOR PRESTIGE
Boneless Hanl:~A:;. Sl 79

26 Conto

A Muhimedi1 Inc.

Meigs County "green'
gets national attention

Limit

LB .

1 Section. 10 PogH

7. 1989

'

U.S;D.A. .•

Mostly clear lontghl. Near·
record lows In 50s. Tuesday,
mostly sunny. High In mid 70s.

But before his youthful auHill near the end of their annual
dience Monday, he said those
conclave.
Giving the appearance of busl· whose "timid and c hldlq voices
ness as usual In the midst of caution us against the danger,
Intense efforts to break the· the hardship and the expelllM!"
hostage deadlock In Lebanon, . should draw Inspiration from the·
Bush used the appearance before· likes of Hollywood producer
the scouts to promote his calllast Steven Splelbel'll and science
month for a revitalized Amerl· fiction writer ~ay Bradbury,
can program of manned space · ' 'Who once said apace will make
chUdren o! us 'all."
.
filght.
..ronlght, when you are lying
That proposal, Issued on the In your cots around a campfire,
20th anniVersary of the first surrounded by dark fo11111t, look·
American manned Iandin&amp; on the lng up at the stars of the nl&amp;'bt
moon, baa encountered criticism sky, I want you to collllder
for Ill priOrhles and skepticism somethlfli," Bulh uld. "Per·
about Its cost - esUmated· over haps you or your chlldrea or, u
time at hundreds of billions of hard u It Is for you to lqlaalne,
doDars - at a time of tight your grandchildren will one day
look up at the nl&amp;'ht sky before
federal bud~ets.

- - -...1--r-&gt;- _ _ _ ,. _ _....,_ _ _ ._ - · -- ~ -·-- -

~~

going to sleep and see the Earth '
as a faint, twinkling star."
0! more Immediate concern,
and ·closer to home, Bush lauded
the scouts for their efforts to
discourage drua uae among
young people. Bolatered by a
study lut-week that showed the
overall number o! dnii 111er1
"down by almoat.O percent;" he
nonetheleu aclmowledied that
''we cannot yet claim vlctory"ln
the face ~ rlllna addiction to
cocaine and crack.
"We must work harder," Bush
said. t'l am especially looking to
you to encourage friends to
refilM df1111-IDY lllepl drug. I
don't wu.t any yoUng American
start1111 down the path to cocaine
and crack." ·

against Pacific Telesis, Bell
Atlantic and NYNEX, quickly
affected the number of telephone ·
operators available for directory
assistance .
Callers dialing Information
were greeted with a reconllng
that said lines were busy · and
were forced to walt up to several
minutes before getting an opera·
tor. Officials also said response
tbne for repairs and new tnstalla·
tlon would be delayed.
In New Jersey c.alls to dlrec·
tory asslstan~ at least two
occasslons were answered by a
monotone saying. ·'This ls a test.
Channel nine. This Is a test.
Channel nine. This Is a test."
''These are riot normal times so
not normal things wlll be happen,
c:;:ontlnued on page 10

--Local news briefs.--,.
Name Pomeroy chamber speaker
Howard Thompson, execu Uve dlrecl!)r for the Pike County
Chamber of Commerce, will be the speaker at the Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Comml:rce meeting Tuesday at noon at Main
Street Pizza.
·
. Thompson -has aerved 30 years In community and economic
development as well as business ma'llliement. Since 1955 he has
been active with the Chamber o! Commerce and the Indllltrlal'
.
Development Committee.
He alao Is &amp;clive In the Ohio and U.S. Chamber of Commerce
the Chamber ot Commerce Executives of Ohio, and the~
Devlopment Association.
Members o! tbe Middleport Chamber of Commerce have been
invited to join the Pomeroy Area members for the meeting.

I' .

Patrol cites Rcicine man
A Racine man wu cited after his car hit two parked cara
Saturday at 9:45 p.m. In Sut~n Township on S.R.
about a
quarter of a mile east of milepost 28, accordlq to tile
.
Continued on page 10

12•.

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· ~;

'\

I'

�,.

Commentary
.

The Daily

.

Senti~el

Ill Court Street
.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTEKEST!I OF THE MEIG!I-MASON AREA

Q'b

~~

.

'

.
'
""'-'._...,..,...,.....=,;=o

RO.ERT L. WJNGE'M'
Publisher
PAT Wllll'EHE,ul
AssiR&amp;aDt PubliRber/Conlroller

. CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
General Mana{er

LETI'EBS OF OPINION are welcome. They lb&lt;MIId be leeolbM SOO
wonlo 1on1. AU letters are aubjeet to ediiiDJ and mull be olped wltb
Jlune, addreeo aad telepbone number. No IUISiped letters will be pub-

llsbed. Lettero !lbould be In 100d tute, addreaalncll•-· not per10nall·
Ilea.

·

'

D.C. ,gets to test
pOlitical theories

..

A thought for the day: President George. Washingtc;m said In his
fa rewell address, " The basis of our political system is the right of the
people to make and to alter their constitutions of government."

Berry's Wor

•

WASHINGTON - Ten years
ago this month we told the story ·
o! Thach Minh Lot, one of
thousands of Vietnamese retugees who made It to this country
In spite of overwhelming odds.
Southeast Asians have become a
familiar part of the American
landscape since. then, and their
dramatic stories are history. .
Now rhach's story has a sequel
to remind us that some people
are stU! feeling the effects of the
war on their lives.
Thach was stranded In a
wretched refugee camp In Malaysla when we first learned
about him In 1979. He had
escaped from Vietnam with his
wife and two· children but found
himself in worse circ~stances
In the camp. The famtly ate rats
and snakes to survive. People

..

aroul)d them were dying. There Minh Ellis. The famUy straggled
was little hope that they could off the plane, fatigued and Ul.
Immigrate to the United States.
Their Asian reserve broke down
Thach wrote til his sister Minh at the sight of the waiting sister.
Ellis, the wife ot a Navy veteran Tears streamed down their faces
In Veyo, Utah. Thach said be was as they !ell into each other's
. considering killing his family arms.
and himself to end their misery.
Our associate drove the family
Minh Ellis had hired a l!lwyer to southern Utah. They rode In
who began the paperwork to silence, overwhelmed by their
bring the fall'\llY to Utah.tiut the emotions. .
process was slow and Thach had
Veyo Is a bleak town which
not received progress reports or , rises ~ut of sagebrush and rock.
Ellis' letters of encouragement.
Thach s new home was a batShe appealed to us for help and tered trailer. But as the famUy
we got the Immigration and plied out of the van, he leaped
Naturalization Service to Inter- Into the alr like a football player
vene In time to stop the family who had justscored a Super Bowl
suicide. With bewildering speed, touchdown. With all of his lung
the famUy found Itself on a plane power, he yelled at the nearby
to the United States.
mountains, "America! "
One of our associatesmet \hem · · In !h~ intervening decade,
at the Las Vegas airport with . Tl)ach moved his famtly to

Jack Anderson
California where they found
steady work. Two more brothers
escaped !tom VIetnam. But they
left behind their aging parents
.who could not stand the rlgors.of
an escape.
American friends mounted a
letter-writing c;ampalgn to VIetnamese and American author!·
·ties to let the parents join their
children. In 1986, the Vietnamese
government eased travel-restrlc·
lions. Last month, the75-year-old
father Thach Mig, and the
69-year-old mother, Nguyen 'Ibl
De, arrived In Las Vegas,
Both are frail and neecl·medl·
cal attention. But If they had the
stamina,, they would leap In the
air and shOut,. "America!
·,
. "

.

7-~

·-

e~

@~g ~ ~~-:ss:&amp;~HUL'tl

Still they defend Owen Lattimore_-w-==R~=l~~=
'

The recent death · ·of Owen animously - seven Democrats
modified or retracted) is not
Lattimore has revived the old and six Republicans - that
mentioned In the article at all.
controversy over this veteran · Lattimore. from approximately
I confess that when Wicker
apologist for Soviet and Chinese 1930 forward, IJad been "a
wrote his first column on the
communism, whom certain un- conscious, articulate instrument
subject, and I took him to task in
discriminating liberals have felt of the Soviet conspiracy."
one of my own for falling to tell
duty-bound to defend ever since
All this is very old news, and I
his readers about the Judiciary
Joe McCarthy cited him In 1950 wollldn 't bore you with It If
Committee's linc,Ung, I felt a
as the sort of person who had no Wieker, In these recent months of
qualm . Perhaps Wicker had.
business advising the State 1989, wasn't going to such lengths
relied solely on the Times' article
Department.
to bury these Inconvenient facts
anc;l had simply been misled by It
Liberal columnist Tom In a Memory Hole and construct
- as thousands of readers
Wicker, for example, har- a new · and more consoling undoubtedly were.
rumphed that the tarnishing of version of the Lattimore stc,&gt;ry.
But now Wicker has written a
Lattimore's reputation was a
I first noticed that something second column, correcting the
spectacular example of "the true was wrong when I read The New blunder of the first in attributing
evil of McCarthyism" - not York Times' lengthy obituary Lattimore's problems chiefly to
realizing, or at any rate not article about Lattimore, which McCarthy. In it, he fortifies his
mentioning, that the real dam- Wicker didn't write , but which defense of Lattimore with seage to Lattimore was done, not you can be sure he read. The lected excerpts from the reby McCarthy, bufby the Senate Times, while acknowledging that search of a professor who is
Judiciary Committee, of which Lattimore had been Indicted on apparently working on a sweeMcCarthy wasn't even a seven counts of perjury for lying theart biography of the man. And
member.
to the subcommittee. stated only once again Wicker says not one
A Judiciary Committee sub- that a federal judge had dis· solitary word -about the stunning
committee under the chairman- missed several counts of the conclusion of the Senate Judi·.
ship of Democratic Sen. Pat indictment as "formless and cl!lry Committee. ·
McCarran, a former chief justice obscure," and that th!' govern· ·
He goes out of his way, though,
of the Supreme Court of Nevada, · , men! had dropped the others for to sprinkle a ' little dirt on the
held extensive hearings on the lack of evidence. T,he Judiciary commi~tee, perhaps because he
subject of Lattimore. In 1952, on ' Committee's solemn conclusion suspects he may not be able to get
the basts of those hearings, the
(which was never subsequently away with Ignoring it forever . He
~uu committee concluded un-

asserts that "the (Judiciary)
Committee's Democratic majorIty including the 'likes of James
0. Eastland of Mississippi and
William Jenner of Indiana." 1
Never mind that Jenner was a
Republican: Wicker was apparently so frantic that he forgot .
that. But it Is amusing that he
should try to cliscredlt the committee's Democratic majority
(without even telling his readers .
why It must be .discredited) by
the device of gqUt by association.
Eastland was a Southerner of
his time and roughly as racist as
the rest. But the Judiciary
Committee Democrats who
nailed Owen Lattimore Included
"the likes of" Willis Smith (a
former president of the American Bar Association) and the
very liberal Warren. Magnuson.
And their Republican colleagues
included Alexander Wiley an.d
Arthur Watkins, both of whom
were widely ·respected, . even in , .
liberal circles.
··
Tell ·your readers about !bat
Judiciary Committee report,
Tom. And, fora change, tryioget
the facts right.

..

"The next batter has one of the best stock
·
portfolios in the fesgue. "

I

,:

there. I don't have that edge you
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Eric need- that feeling that you know
Davis calls It the "ultimate" fora you're going to get batters out.
I'm kind of dull out there right
hitter.
now.'
' '
"It's the bottDm of the ninth
,
Norm
Charlton, 5-1, th e third
inning, your team's behind and
Cinclnna,ti
pitcher, worked the
. you hit a home run to win the
ninth
inning
to get the win.
game," says Davis. "It' s the
Atlanta
starter
Marty
Clary
ultimate, and the beSt part of It is
you don't have to go back out and permitted only one hit over seven
play defense any more. "
, Innings - Ken Griffey 's 1,500th
No . one playe(l · any . more National League hit- a double.
defense after Davis~ final at-bat Although the rookie was pitching
Sun(,lay. The Cincinnati slugger brUliantly, he •tired after the
belted a two-run homer In the sel(enth and gave way to Paul
bottom of the ninth to lift the Assenmacher, and then Mark
Reds to a 3-2 victory over the Eichhorn, In the eighth .
•'Clary had been feeling sick
Atlanta Braves.
·
much
of the day," explained
The Reds, who trailed 2-0 after
Atlanta
manager Russ Nixon.
the seventh and 2-1 after the
"He
just
ran out of gas."
eighth, opened the ninth against
was
very
surprised he came
·'I
Joe Boever, 4-5, with a single by
Luis Quinones. Davis . followed out," said Davis. "I'm glad he
with his 21st home run of the year did. The way he was throwl.n g, I
don't think we would have gotten
to right-center.
lt marked the second time in too much off him."
Jeff Treadway hit a two-run
three days that Boever, sup. posedly the Braves' ace closer, inside the park homer In the
had failed in the clutch against seventh off Reds' starter Tim
Leary to ·stake Atlanta to a 2-0
the Reds.
lead.
After Oddlbe McDowell
On Friday night, Soever enreached
first on a fielder 's
tered the game i n the ninth with a
choice,
Treadway
lashed a line
4-2 lead and promptly permitted
drive
into
the
right
field corner
Cincinnati to tie it 4·4 . Soever
and
the
ball
bounded
about75feet
then opened the lOth Inning by
giving up a game-winning home beyond right fielder Herm
Winningham.
run to Mariano Duncan.
By the time WIMingham
. " Our guys were talking about
that on the beilch when he picked up the bal.I, Treadway was
(Soever) came in today,'' noted nearing thitd base and third base
Davis. "We beat him last time, coach Roy Majtyka waved him
home. Winningham · threw to
why not again?" ·
second
baseman Ron Oes ter,
"It's very, very frustrating,"
who
turned
and seemed sup
said Soever. "When it happens
prised
to
see
Treadway
heading
twice In a row , It's time to start
for
home.
Oester's
throw
to the
mulling over what you're doing
and
too
late
to
plate
was
too
high
John Russell, butto no avail. The Reds came from
wrong.
LEAPS FOR BALL - Reels shorts lop Mariano
behind to hand the Braves a 3-2 loss. (UPI)
"I don' think rm doing that nab the sliding Treadway.
Duncan leaps hard for the ball hit by the Braves'
It Was Treadway's sixth homer
much wrong physically, so it
must be in iny head; I've lost my of the year and Atlanta's first
concentration when I go out inside the park home run since
Paul Runge hit one on July 28,'
1985.
Cincinnati got a run in the
eighth thanks to three straight
pinch-hitters. Dave Collins'
doubled off Assenmacher,
moved to third on Joel YoungbEAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. declared the race a dead heat. lood's ground out and scored on
&lt;UP!) - The Hambletonian trot, Moments later, Prl)be's share of ScotU Madison's sacrifice fly off
designed to produce a match the victory was snatched away as Eichhorn.
race by staging the competition Park Avenue Joe was declared · In other National League
in a series of two heats, fell the winner on the basis of bav!ng games:
victim to its own format.
a better cumulative finish.
Cubs, Expos l011e
Park Avenue Joe finished in a
Park Avenue Joe finished
The National League East
dead heat with Probe in Satur· second in the first heat and won
cil-leaders lost a bit of their bulge
day's third-heat match race, but the second. Probe won the first
almost simultaneously Sunday,
was awarded the victory on the heat and finished ninth in the
when .both Chicago and Montreal
basls ,of best summary finish in second.
lost road games in the very late
the three races.
The contusion that surrounded going on leadoff homers.
But the outcome still may be in this decision overshadowed the
Just about the time Pittsburgh
do.ubt, as Lindy Farms, which kind. of a race that could have
Pirates rookie Jeff King ended an
owns Probe, is considering a brought harness racing some
18-innlng victory over the Chi·
challenge of the result.
well-deserved attention. Instead, cago Cubs. New York's Kevin
"We have three days to chal- it gave the sport a black eye.
McReynolds was swinging the
lenge." explained Guy An to·
USTA Rule 20, Section 4, states Mets to a series sweep of the
nacci, a co-owner of Lindy farms a horse "must win two heats to be
Montreal Expos with a 14th·
with Frank and Gerald Anto- declared the race winner and
inning homer. All six divi~lon
nacci. " I didn' twant to sound like such horse shall stand first In the teams went Into extra innings, as
sour grapes after the race, but summary." The rule does not the St. Louis Cardinals beat the
the rule is ambiguous and I am account for two horses winning Philadelphia Phillies in 10.
going to have my lawyer look into two heats by virtue of a dead
As a result, the Cubs and Expos
it."
heat.
stayed tied in the NL East and
Nothing fires the excitement of.
Track otflcials, trainers and lost ground to the Cardinals and
racing fans like a match race. owners all admitted they were
Mets, who drew within four
When two horses square off unaware of the loophole that games of the front -runners. The
against eacli other head-to-head, allowed one horse to be stripped
horse racing reaches Its peak as of glory. Only Lo.u Guida, the Cardinals are ahead of the Mets
by a percentage point.
a sport.
veteran horseman whO owns part
"We have to forget about this
Probe earned a berth in the of Park Avenue Joe, professed to
SWARN HAULED DOWN - Cleveland Browns runnin11 back
and
get out of here and go to
match race as the longshot have known about the rule that
George Swarn Is hauled down by PhUadelphla ,Eagii)S Clyde
Chicago," Montreal third base·
winner of the first heat. Park made this thrilling dead . heat
Simmons (top) and Donald Evans (center) during Sunday's
man Wallach said. "Winning one
Avenue Joe pulled away In the meaningless.
American Bowl. in London's Wembley Stadium. The Ea11les won
here would have helped."
stretch to win the second heat to
"It was in the conditions, right
17-13. (UP I)
Wallach batted seven times,
set up the finale.
there in the program condi· Including five with a chance to do
The crowd of 30,000 roared Its lions," Guida said.
damage. With t~e bases loaded
delight as the two horses slugged
Probe, sent . out as a · 12-1 and one out in the fo.urth, he lifted
It cutin a furious stretch duel and longshot In the first heat, shocked
a sacrifice fly for Montreal's only
hit the finish line together.
the crowd lly upset ling 2·5 run but he twice left the bases
The judges called for a photo · favorite Peace Corps and snapand
fans shouted first one ping the talented filly's 17-race loaded and twice left two runners
LONDON (UP!)
Don
4:51 left In the first quarter.
on base .
McPherson fired a 34-yard touchIn . the second quarter the · number, then the otl)er as the winning streak.
'Park Avenue Joe won the
down pass to Henry Williams
Eagles dominated play, forcing slow motion replay showed the
stniln
to
the
wire.
valiant
colts
heat as the2-1 co-favorite,
second
with 10: 42 left in the fourth
Cleveland to punt four times. But
quarter Sunday, to pace the· the Eagles could . manage only a Minutes later, the judges called turning back a late challenge
,Philadelphia Eagles to a 17·13
48-yard field goal with 39 seconds for yet another photo- ihere was from Peace Corps , .forcing the
no separating the two. .
first Ha.m bletonian runoff since
triumph over . the Cleveland
left by Louis Zendejas to take a
After
five
minutes,
the
judges
1984.
Browns in the fourth American
10-0 lead at halftime.
Bowl played at Wembley
Mike Pagel started at quater·
Stadium .
back in the second half and took
Williams caught the TD pass
the Browns 91 yards. hitting
over his shoulder and some- George Swarn with a 22-yard TD
rsaulted forward into the end- strike with 6:26 left In the third
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Steff! forehand didn't .work too)Velland
zone. The score gave the Eagles a
period. Dan Plockl's extra point · Graf did not play up to her I didn ' t serve well either," said
17·6 advantage.
attempt was bloc.ked by Alan exacting §tandards Sunday and Graf, who committed 31 unforced·
· still pqsted a 6-4, 7-5 victory In a errors and dropped her serve
Both teams, playing in their Dial.
·
exhibition opener, kept the ball
$200,000 women's tennis seven times.
Williams's c11tch Put Phlladei·
tournament,
·
on. the ground In the first half. phia ahead 17:6, but the Browns
.Graf, who breezed by CllnaThe
20-year·old
West
German
dian
Rene Simpson, Betsy NaCleveland quarterback !3ernie continued to press.
Kosar, who played just one
earned
$40,000
for
her
1-hour
..
gelsen, and fellow countrywoWilliams fumbled a punt re36-minute effort, while Garrison men Claudia Kohde-Kilsch and
quarter, completed 6 of 8 passes
turn and Cleveland's Van Walt·
for 62 yards.
Bettina Bunge, said she could
ers recovered on 'the Eagles' 24 . of Houston, coUected $18,000.
"I didn't play well today . My ha,ve played better.
Pagel capped the24-yard scoring
The Eagles marched 48 yards drive with a two-yard pass to.
and scored when Mark Higgs Derek Tennell with 3:57 left.
HEAliNG &amp; COOUNG
blasted over from one-yard out to
The Eagles then ran the clock
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
give Philadelphia a 7-0 lead with out to end the game.
· Efficiency and
446 4524
'" . . •.. '

Eagles edge Browns 17-13

...

People's will defeats a demagogue · !~;:~

~~
«&gt; IHIIII' N&amp;A. one.

Davis' clutch homer.lifts
Reds to 3-2 win over Braves · 0

Hambletonian trot is
victim of own fonnat

.

It seems . fitting that the
Greeks, who provided us with the
word "demagogue," would also
provide us with an outstanding
example in the person of Andreas
Papandreou, the socialist prime
minister who was retired by the
voters on June 18.
For eight years, he harbored
terrorists, threatened to close
U.S. military bases and yam:
mered Incessantly about the.evil
Americans who were conspiring
to bring him down. An extramarital relationship with a young
woman (now his third wife) and
political corruption finally did ·
him In, but he detected some
Invisible bands manipulating
those matters too. ·
The · scandals· that engulfed
him, he averred, were "a conspl·
racy aiming to hurt Greece." His
20 years In the United States- he
studied at Harvard and taught
economics at Berkeley - gave
him speclallnslghtllnto the way
the nefarious spies at the CIA
work, ne tolel one mtervii!Wer:
"My experience as a Greek
politician and a North American
profeaor for a long time, during
which I had notable access to the

'
system ... allows ll)e to say tnere
are groups that play their own
game," Papandreou said.
II you can believe a Greek
financial wunderkind named
George Koskotas, however, It
wasn't spooks .that did Papan·
dreou in. It was sl!cky fingers.
The 35-year-old Koskotas has
been In a Massachusetts 1all
since ' last November while a
judge ponders a Greek request
for extradition. A mere decade
ago, 'he was a low-level otflcer at
the Bank of Crete. By 1~. he had
mysteriously accumulated
enough money to buy the Institution, and within a few months, he
told Time magazine In March, he
was embezzling millions In ca·
hoots with prominent members
of Papandreou's Socialist Party.
Koskotali' downfall - and
Papandreou's crlals - began In
1987; when :'c:;pccted Greek
journalist Elias Demetracopou.
los learned the banker was
regularly entering the United
States, .despite the fact that he
had been Indicted In 1980, wblle
living In New York, on &amp;5 countl
of tax ftaud. Demetracopouloa
tipped columlst Jack Andenon,

. j

•

nearly at the end of his political
rope. A conseryatlve-communlst
coalition - united prlmarUy in
its disgust over the Papandreou
scandal ·- has taken power with
tHe promise to· cooperate just
long enough to purge and prose- ·
cute the guuty.
A radio station owned by
Papandreou' s party Immediately denounced the new IIGve~:nment and exhorted Greeks
to "mobilize and take to the
streets." Papandreou himself
angrily declared that the new
coalitiOn was "without principles" and "violates the popular
wUI." ·
Dl;!magogues know how to
exploit popular prejudices, but
they don't always know about the
·popular will.

~~

•.

...

Gilbert captures Volvo title

..

STRATTON, VI. (UPI) Third-seed Brad Gilbert .. fell
behind 5-2 In the first set Sunday
then won the next 11 games for a
7-5, 6-0 victory over No. 14 Jim
Pugh in the final of the Volvo
International.
The $114,000 first prize boosted
Gilbert's career earnings to
$2,101,642. Pugh was t,he first
seeded player Gilbert faced In

the upset-riddled tournament.
The $602,500 event, played for
the past five years atop Strat!Dn
Mountain,. may be moved to
another site next year, much
against the verbalized wishes of.
the players ~~end fans. During
post-match ceremonies, tournament director Jim Westhal!'was
heardly booed and spectators
chanted "Keep It here."

Make This One
of Our Best
Buys.

. ,.

" We're just not hitting," Mont··.
,··real manager Buck Rodgers . .
..
said. "When you don't hit, you ·,.
.,.
.,
can either tie or lose. We lost. The·
Mets are back in the race. We · . · ''- -~
never· thought they weren't. "
... ..
On this day, a manager of ,a. ·.
rare team that can actually be. · ·
. ·:· .·
counted ·out of the NL East took . . . .· ...
joy from the Pirates who by now ..-·.. ,. · .;_....
h.a ve no chance but perhaps a
.. . '
· ·
' ' ·· ·...
huge role in the race.
"I'm proud of this bailclub ,,~ · ·
,',·
Pirates manager .J im Leyland ·
said. "We're 15-plus games out, :
and we played like we'd be the .
ones in first place."
.
Leyland pointed to the fact that _".. · ·. ··. ·
the Pirates also played Montre!il· · : · .... ·· ·
two extra-Inning games this past.::;. ::,·._,· :·. ·
week.
·
. ·
·: ···· ·: ·::,
"How can you be prouder of a . :. · ·. -- :. ·; :
team that battled the Expos and.·. .,&gt;." ·, .: &gt;.~ ·
then played the Cubs like we did ·, :,. · : ..::'.:·
today?'· he asked.
· · · · ,. · ··.·.. ·. .
Kirig ended a 5 hour, 42-mlnute··. ··: :. ., ,··.:::
marathon - longest in T!)ree .: : · ·
·Rivers Stadium history ~ ai!d!- .. . -.. ': :.
tionally lengthened by · ·a 45: ·. . :, · ..
mlnu te rain delay in the .10th · "
· · ·" ·
Inning.
· ·. ·
The homer made a winner.. ·pf .: ··.
.. .
Doug Drabek, 9-8, the Pirates': .. &gt;:'' :: :·::;:
sixth pitcher, who threw·. tWo .. ·.·, . , .'':':,..
two-hit innings In his first relief.' .,. ; . ..: ·::
appearance since Oct. 2. Scott :
"; .
Sanderson, just demoted to. the . ·
.. '·
bullpen. fell to 9-8 after pitching. · · · ·
eight innings of relief as the
Cubs' sixth pitcher.
. ·
.
The Cubs were without orlgt: · ·: ' ··
nally scheduled starter . Paui. . ' ·. '.·.
Kilgus. excused to be with Ms ·. · • -· ·.' -:,
wife for the delivery oftheir first : ·.. ...'. ..
child. Chicago used 19 of. 2j· ,: .·,' ·. '. ·.'
available players while the Pi· ,: ..
rates used 20 of 24.
·
· · · · ·.,:-.
·
.
Astros 3, Giants 2 . .. . . .
AtSanFrancisco.E~icYeldjng ;.. ' · .· ' , .;
singled to score Gerald Young .. . .. ·· ;-..
from second in the eighth Inning, :.
· ··.:.-. '"
breaking a tie and helping · •·
Houston salvage the final game.· ·
of the three-game series. juan ·
Agosto Improved to 3-4 and Cra'ig
. Lefferts dropped to 2-4. Dave
Smith notched his 22nd save. Will
Clark belted his 18th homer for
the Giants,

.

~

.

.•

·'

&gt;· ·'
.-- .~

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IDgh Quality

Today in history
By Vatted Pr.l b&amp;araatlonal
Today Is Monday, Allfl. 7, the 219th day of 1989 with 146 to follow.
The moon Is waxiD&amp;, moving toward Its flnt quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
•
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign or Leo. They Include Carl
Ritter, the German Joint founder of modern geolfaphlcalaclence,

..

Graf claims another crown

----~---

whose reporters alerted authorities with their Inquiries.
.
Koskotas was arrested on the
tax fraud charge in a Washington
hotel room In October 1987,
shortly before he was to join a
group o! international visitors
scheduled to see President Rea·
gan. The U.S. charges against
Koskotas were later dismissed,
but the notoriety sparked press
Interest and offical Investigations In Greece, and his fate was
sealed.
·
Since U.S. ambassador Robert
V. Keeley enjoyed an exception·
ally close relatiOnship with Papandreou. It Is unlikely that
anyone associated with the
prime mlntater would have been
closely scrutinized.
Now Andreas Papandreou Is

•.

.·

•
•

A happy ·ending for family ·of ref~gees ·

'

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Pity poor Washington, D.C. The, city that
politicians and columnists love to blame for whatever goes wrong In
the United States, now seems doomed to become a tesl!ng ground for
several crack-brained political ideas.
The first of these theories is that no one ought to run for president
who has not won an election for some other publiC office.
In spite of the fact that six presidents never met this unwritten
requirement, Jesse Jackson is being told he must be elected
something somewhere before he can be a credible candidate for
president.
(For trivia buffs, these presidents were Zachary Taylor, U.S.
Grant, Chester Arthur. William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover and
Dwight Eisenhower. l
It may be recalled that Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit, who is not
a major Jackson fan , commented in 1984, ''Jesse never ran anything
except his mouth, " a barbed reference to Jackson's lack of
experience in government.
So now that Jackson is moving his base of operations from Chicago
to ·the District of Columbia. a number of his Democratic "friends" are
talking up the possibility that he will run for mayor of Washington to
give him~eif better credentials to run for president later.
The possibility that many who are urging him to run for mayor are
either (1) enemies or incumbent Mayor Marion Barry who think
Jesse can beat him, or (2)' enemies of Jesse who think he would be
clobbered by Barry and destroyed as a national candidate has not
escaped Jackson.
·
Thus far , Jackson has said he would never oppose his dear friend
Marion and his dear friend Marion has made It clear he is in the race
for re-election.
The other questionable theory .t hat may be tested in Washington is
the pr oposition that a popular Democrat who switches to the
Republican Patty or vice versa will be even more attractive to the
voters than before.
·
·
The Republican National Committee seems particularly enamored
of this notion, and has spent considerable effort and money to put It
into effect.
The latest RepubliCan "coup" in this area was to enlist retiring
Washington police Chief Maurice Turner, a lifelong Democrat, Into
the GOP with a chorus of suggesl!ons that he will run for mayor next
year.
If Turner does run' against Barry, Jackson or whoever else ends up
with the Democra.tlc nomination, he probably will get ample funding,
but despite the high esteem in which he is held by the public, he
probably would not win.
In truth, the only Republican victory of any sortln D.C. since it got
limited home rule has been for a city council seat the majority
Democrats may not even seek and the GOP has had to flghi a third
party fo r that.
Party switching of this sort has a mixed record. Certainly Ronald
Reagan. Strom Thurmond and Phil Gramm made It look good by
jumping from the Democratic to the Republican Party, and winning
big in their new political homes . But other switchers, such as John
Co nnally, have been soundly thrashed.
One of the most recent in that category was William Lucas, a
winning black Democratic politician who transformed himself into a
losing black Republican in Michigan in 1986 and went on to be rejected
as a Bush adminis tration nominee for a top Justice Department post
ju st last week.

Page-2-nMt Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, August 7, 1989

.···

The Daily Sentinel-

.-•

.

"

�Monday. August 7, 1989

Homers pus
ue
Jays to 6-5 victory

SAFE AT HOME- Kansas City's Danny Tartabull smiles~ he
Is called safe at home by umpire Greg Kosc In the second Inning of

Sunday's game against the host Minnesota Twins. The Royals won
3-2.' (UPI)

-' Four inducted into Pro Football Hall of Fame
By BOBKEIM
UPI Sports Writer
CANTON, Ohio !UP I ) - Three
of the greatest teams In football
his tory were represented when
Terry Bradshaw, Mel Blount, Art
Shell and Willie Wood were
inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame.
Bradshaw ·and Blount were
teammates on the Steeler team s
th at won four Super BoWls in six
years , Wood was a member of the
Green Bay Packer teams that
won the first .two Super Bowls ,
and Shell played for the Raider
squads that won two Super Bowls
a nd compiled a glittering record
from 1970 through the mid 1980s.
- " The Packe rs were certainly
the team of the '60s. and no one
can de ny that the decade of the
'70s belonged to. the Steelers,"
said L.A. Raider s general
, partner.Al Davis. Shell's presen.• • · ter during the induction ceremo• ·. h.ies Saturday.
• - "The 49ers ate certainly the
, . team of the decade.in the '80s, but
~ (he teamthat had the best record

..

in the '60s , the '70s and t he '80s difficult future.
were the Raiders."
"It's a great opportunity for
Fittingly, Bradshaw, the only
young
people across the country
quarterback . to win four Super
to
see
what happens when you
Bowls, said he wanted to be
pay
the
price, when you work
remembered as a w.inner.
hard,
'
'
the
former Steeler corner" We're s upposed to win. " he
back
said.
"We have too many
said. "Al l the Steelers. We loved
young
people
in this country that
to win. We loved it.''
The flamboyant Bradshaw, are drug addicts. We ·have too
who even before he became an many young people that are 'lazy.
"If there's· anything we can·do
a nnouncer for CBS was as
as
athletes, it's give our time,
comfortable in front of a microour services to show young
gi-;e
phone as he was under center,
people
they can be something."
said he never was' the conservaHe
announced
plans to open a
tive type.
home
in Buffalo
new
youth
" My nature was to attack," he
Pa.,
a
community
that
Township,
said. " Throw deep."
Blount
said
has
neglected
the
Blount and Bradshaw become
minority
youth.
the third and fourth members of
With Pittsburgh only a 90the 70s Steelers to be inducted
into the Hall' of Fame. Since his mlnute drive away, Steeler fans
retirement, Blount has worked were In the majority In front of
for the Ieaglie and also ha s the Hall of Fame. Bradshaw wa s
founded a home for underprivi· · the crowd favorite, and there
were even a smattering of boos
l eg~ chlldren In his hometown of
when Davis came forward to
Vida lia, Ga .
He said the induction ceremo- present Shell, the mammoth
nies should be an inspiration to offensive tackle.
youths who face a n uncertai nand '
Shell's induction allows him to
join foriner teammate Gene
Upshaw in the Hall of Fame.
Together, the two anchored the
left side of the Raiders line
through parts of three decades.
Shell, an assistant with the
Fra ncl.&gt;;t"o tGarrl'll s !t-:1!. lu: u5 p.m .
Raiders, spent most of his time
,\tlant.a ~ G i av l rw 9-6J :.1 Los 1\nlt('IPS
praising Davis and the Raider
f Mll.l'tlntoz J.D 1, 10: 3$ p.m .
way of life.
Tuesd :1.\' '/'0 Gallt(' s
MOnl:rf' al at ( 'hlt-.-(o
"There was never a time that
New l 'o rk at fhllu.delphl a, nllt'ht
we went into a game where we
S l . t....uL-. :.t· Pitl!lhu I'll: h. nlttht
Hou~on al Sun Dit'I{O, nlttllt
didn't think we had a chance to
f lnt'litn~~otl :1t San Fl".uK·I~·o, ·nl.rhl
win, no matter what the circumAtlanlll atl..o " t\nf!t'I!.'S, nlj(tll
stances," Shell said.
Shell played on two Super
Bowl
champions, ane\ in his
NFL results
fir st Super Bowl appearance in
NATIO NAL FOOTBALL LE:\ Gn:.
Super Bowl XI against
Elli hlhll ion Standi n&amp;S
.\mnkun Conft&gt;rrnL' t'
Minnesota, he did not allow Jim
M' L T
Pt1. PF p ,\
Marshall to get a tackle or a n
nncinr.~ll .. .. ...... o
t1 ll .8011 oo 110
IJt'O\"rr .............. 0 0 II .100 ()(} lltl
assis t.
Hou)lton ... .. ........ ll 0 0 .100 00 00
Wood. a safety, is the 11th
lr dlanapol l ~ ...... 0
o 0 .100 IHl no
KanJ;U.-. f ll y ~ ..... o 0 o .1011 IKI uo
member
of the Packer tea ms of
I. A. Rllidrr ~ ........ o o o .100 00 uo
the 1960s to be inducted. He was
Mlami ...... .. .. ..... O 0 0 .lOll 00 DO
Nt·w Enldand ..... u o a .11011 ~"' no
not drafted out of Southern
N\' ·lrb ..... .. ...... ll 0 C! .1011 00 1111

Scoreboard ...
,J

J

Majors

"..:

B.v Unlwd Prt'fls lntPr nu IO nlll

AMERif.\N LEAGL'E
Ea"il

W I. Pt·t.

R:.alllm on•......... .. ......... so

~:.!

8 0!Iton .................. ....... ;j ~ Sl _. :;ou
T&lt;mm•o ....... ................ ;, ~ $6 .t95

.

..

-'

..
,•·

.
,.

:.! 1 ~

:1
:1•.l

flt'\'i' land .... .. ... ...........S-1 36 .tfl l
Mil"'llU lt •t• . . ......... .. .. .... ii :l 57 .IXt
p ,!
N1•w .l'ork ............ t' '"'' 'l:.! 5~ .-ltilt fi
Ot&gt;croil .•.• •..• •.. .•.. ....... ..:19 1() .:13K 111
\\'('SI

fa llfo rna ....................i7
Oakland ......................i':
KanSIL-c (' 11~· ........... ......60
T t•xa.o.; .......................... ~
Mlnnl'" ota ................ ...S;i
S!• aUk•......................... :i'l
Otil'aJI:O ....................... I':
SatW"d~,- ·,.

•.

C.B

.:ua -

n
-U
:tO
:i l
l it

.60! 1.60-1
1
..iU -;. s a·~
111 !
. IB5 121.!

:ill .113 Iii
6-1 .l:tl "!fll ,!

Rl'S ull :&gt;

no..ton 10. n t•\ 't&gt;l:vwl 2
:'litw \ 'ork 3, Toron1o -1
Olit•aJo ; , J)r(otmh ti
8 alllmol"l' 5, Tf'XWO 2
l\-111 "'-a.uk f' t' :J, ( 'allfornlu :l
i\11n..,sotu. i, K a nSl.-. (' It~·
Sf' at llt• II . Oakland :I

!

Surd~v ·s Rt•!'iult"'
Ros ton li, fl p\'('land I
To ront n li, Nt•w l'ork 3
B;&amp;ltimllrt' :1, Tf'.~w&gt; :.!. Ullnn.

Plllshurwh ......... ~l
Sun lltt•JO .......... O

.0011 no
.0011 000
St·alllt• ............. .. U
.001! 00
Ruffalo ......... ..... o
.1100
6
('lt''o' t'lan d .......... 0 _I 0 t .0011 1:1

Kansas CIIY"· MiniP!'iOlll. :!

Pt' lroll -1, f h iL'a11:•1:1
( 'a l llor nl a ti. MiiwlWkPt' 0
Oak land :!, )&gt;it•u&amp;tlf' I
Monday'!'i Gam ~!'!&gt;
'• T t'XIL"' (·It•llt·oal 3---1 ) al T or ont o ( ft·r unl
11-iil . J::ta p.m .
0 1'\'t•land ( Ballc&gt;s -1-6 1 at ~ ~ ·w \ ' o rk
tfa diU't'l :.!-:! ), i : :l&amp; p.m .
Mln!P11otu. tSmkh 6--11 a1 Blotltlmol"'.•
1Bl1llard ll -.1 }, 1: :13 p.m ,

Mii"'IUikt•t• (lto.!i lo 12-i and tllrr :l-1 1:a1

p.m.

.
/

Roston tG:ardnl'r J.6 ) a~ Kan~~ Ot y
tfiuhit •,.;~

!t-fl1 , K: n p.m .
Oakl».nd 1" 't•lt•h 11 -6) :ll Sl' Ul lk&gt; 1l.ava 1".\s e-·n , 10: 0 5 p.m.
Tu t~ay·,.

"••'
'

Gai'nf'!'i

( 'lt•,·toland&lt;lt Stov.· \ ' ork. ni~t
Mln r.&gt;,.ot~t al B~t lllmoft', nl,;hl.
TP1lll!ll ai Toronto. nl~~tht
OakJand 11i (' hlt:~tllt'(), nl_..l
Mll-ukf' .. id DPtrolt , nl,;ht
Bmtlon 1d K11n ~• Cll y, nl~l

\\' t

p,.,_

Chit'IIIII:I'-.................... ..G!l ~It .3&amp;it -

GB
.

Montn•al .....................Q:J -Ill .sax ~ .511
-1
NPW York .................... ;ltl 51 . ~3t ~

~t . Louho ......................l7

•

PiltMhUIJiilt ...................-17 Q!l •.127 151.'1
Philad4"1plll~t ................U Ill .-IIIQ 1!1
w~•

-

•

'
•
•
•
•

••

'••,
I

!&lt;!an F r llndoot.'O ........... .. IU ~7 .!117 Hou!lllon ............... .. ·....... tit -1!1 .:IH ~
~ an lltt'KU .. ··· ............... U H .-liS
!I
n ndn ...t 1... ............ .... ..52 Sll .-173 I~~ ~
' tm; •"-pl e- .................33 H .nl II IN
Atiillata .. ~ .. ........ ......... .. .U 17 .JM ~
S.aanl.,'~t Rt'11 ulb
Clllc-.o -1, 'Pltia!'Kh !
San iM•_.. .&amp; r lA• An p-I ~~
San Fr.. IIW• 7, ~u•on It
NewVorl3, Mellluad 2

Heaii ... J, 8• Pru~ I
Mo ... Q'M GarnH
N~ \'•" (\'lela 1·11 et Plllll.tlfJ ... a
IH•wellt-7) , 1:11 p.m.
81 . ..... . ~PetHr 1-1 ) .a Plt ..... l'lh
~Re e41-1) , 1':11p.m.

•

••

'

t

. .n.toa

Chkqo

at Su Di e~
(................... m.
•
. ('larln_.l (Rettln110n 1· 1) at Sail
( 0.. ...,_ IN)

0 1.000

31

Bl)IW skids out of control,
kills 'R aiders' Stacey Toran
LOS ANGELES iUPI) - LOS
Angeles Raiders. defensive back
Stacey Toran .was killed when his
car skidded out of control near
his Marina del Rey home and ·
flipped over several times before
crashing into a tree, authorities
said Sunday.
Toran, 27, was drjving his 1984
BMW when the car skidded out of
control about 11:30 p.m. Saturday , Sgt. Michael Florio said.
The football player was travelIng about 40 mpl;l when he lost
control of the car, Florio said.
" Prior to the actual impact,
the car skidded down the curb

0 o .000 uo 01
u o .000 no 111
u 0 .000 UO 01
0 fl .otO 10 ()9
fl () .010 tO DO
~ l n...., ota ... ; .... -11
11 n .010 oo i l
S.-w Orlran ~ ...... O 0 0 .1110 &amp;0 It
Sl' Gillni!!.. ....... O 0 II .otfl flO Gil
Ph Df'nhl ........... 0 I () .010 tO 00
T ampu Ray ....... 0 0 0 .010 10 00
San Fran . .......... 0 I II .flln U 16

and across the sldewal k Into a
grassy p'a r k," Florio said. ''Once
that happened the vehicle f\ipped
a number of times.and came to
rest" after slamming Into the
·
·
tree.
Toran was thrown from the
vehicle a nd onto the pavement.
He was pronounced dead at the.
scene. No one else was In the
vehicle.
Investigators had not determined what caused Toran to lose
control of the car, and said they
found no indication t)le incident
was either alcohol or drugrelated. An au topsy was planned.

Mahaffey wins

St. Judge Classic

6

,\ tlanw .............. o
fhh·aa-u ............. o
Da.llwi ............... 0
Dt&gt;tro\1 .............. 0
GrrPn Ru~· ......... 0

•

did the hen buy
• typewn•te,
r.
_/ ~

S ah&amp;rd ay'!&lt;li llfo!; tM !&lt;
Ha ll of Fume Gam{'
AI f idllon. Ohin
\\' a...hln,;t o n 31. Buffalo S
At To kyo
LA Ram,;lfi. San Frand!tt!O 13 cOT )

Sat urdQ •.o\&amp;1,;. 12
N 'tl' ,ff'l!! \' 1'1 . Grf&gt;t'n 8 11)' 111 MIIWIIllilrf'. \!

p.m .
N\' Hla~~ lnt New tit ,;land. 7 p. m~
Ho uAonU Tu.mpa Bay . 1 p.m.
KM!iMfii)'VI'I. MlnaeMIKillllM t mj:tll !!.

TtnJL , 'l': 30 p.m.

By The Bend

flrYf' lllndllt lk&gt;troll, 7:;Jiip.m.
" 'lllllllllll&amp;Onal PIICHh.-Jiti.K p .m.

lndlauu~poll~ "'New Or le an!l. II p.m .
LA RIUM IU De•wr. p.m.
i'lllft Franct~o at LA Rlll*'ll. 9 p.m.
SundiQ' , Mr. 13
Dal.,. al8an DI•P· J p.m.
Buff lifo IU Clncln..cl. 8 p.m.
MONI-.t" . A•l• 1-1 O.IUIO'al Miami. K

e

Transactions
·su nd q'~t Sporta-Tran•dtont
Buehll

Lot. All plfll -

Pla~ ed

•tlla:rman

Mltfleltllr Kal

l)uleiN and
Mickey Ha&amp;dt!t'
•n Ble IJ.diO' tl._bkd Ill tflellllhtt
M•lll• ; Called upedlfM"' Mike HMif
. . . lllllelder MIW Slll•pH_. from
Alhllq~M!ttfll!

of lie PadftcCOMI Le.,w

e iiiPd.lw llond-.y.
Foolball
IIUian&amp;pollll -111M t nd P ... lluch
~-.cW

a wtrhalapement on co,.rad

nP.pd.alo~WMIIJII

IIIIMr

••~oer ,

-

Slptl quarierb ack

Nobody.Could Read ~er Chicken Scratches. Every·
body needs the convemence and comfort that electric
~ppliances provide. Today and tomorrow. electricity
IS your best energy value.

Monday, August 1. 1989

Page- S

Community calendar

•

Chester 1931 class reunton held

MONDAY
COLUMBIA -The Board of
Trustees of Columbia Township
wlll have a regular meeting on
Monday · at 7:30 p.m. at the
firehouse.

The Chester High School Class celebrated the birthday of Irene
Others present were Henrietta
of 1931 recently held Its annual
Parker.
Bailey, Buel Ridenour, Mary
reunion at the Chester
Two teachers, Bertha Smith · E!uck, Janet Ridenour, Martha
Firehouse.
ani! Earl Knight, attended. Class Poole and Will.
John Bailey asked the blessing
members attending were
The group signed friendship
before the carry In dinner.
Mildred Vineyard Collins, Can- cards for Betty Davisson, ClayThe· group made a donation to
ton; Fred Smith, VIrgil McElroy, ton Bahr, and Raymond Gooch.
the Chester Volunteer Fire DeJohn Baney, Opal Gaul Wick- During the afternoon !hey shared
partment, and gave Opal Wick·
ham, Pauline Wickham Riden· memories and took pictures.
ham a vote ofthanks for ltandllng · our, Irene Summerfield Parker,
Nex( year's reunion. will be
the arrangements and making
and. Nellie Michael Parker, all held the last Sunday of July a I the
the homemade lcecream. A
same place.
local.
cake, baked by Martha Poole,

- ..... - ·

TUPPERS PLAINS -There·
Wlll be an Informational meeting
for the pUblic with the Eastern
Local School Board on Monday at
7:30 p.m. at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School. The.meeting
wlll deal with whether or not to
seek additional funding through
a property tax or income tax
levy. All dlstrtct voters are urged
to attend.

TOPS 570 conducts meeting
Lennie Aleshire, leader, wei·
corned three visitors and opened
the meeting . with prayer and
pledge when members of Ohio
TOPS 570 met at thecoonhunter's
lodge at the fair grounds
recently.
Mrs. Aleshire explained to the
. members the KOPS slatus. Ola
St. Clair read the minutes and
stated that there would be no
meeting during the week of the
fair.
VIrginia Dean gave the treasure's report and collected mo-

funny money, passed out money
for those with no weight gain.
. The July queen was Brenda
Templeton who was presented a
gift.
At the close of the executive
meeting it was announced that
fund raising and plans to honor
the KOPS In s·e ptember were
discussed.
Members meet at the fair·
grounds every Tuesday evening
to walk at 5 p.m., weigh in at 6
p .m . · and meeting at 7 p.m.
Everyone is welcome.

.
ney for the flower fund.
PeggiVIning, assistant leader,
conducted a: game entltll!d " Flll
the TOPS Basket with.Fruit and
Vegetables. " Phyllis McM1llan
was the winner ·a nd was presen ted a gift.
Mary Martin, weight recorder,
and Julia Hysell, assiStant
weight recorde(, reported that
the best loser was Tina Geary
and the runner up was Mrs.
Hysell. The best preteen loser
was Kristin Torres. •
Nellle Grover, chairman of the

~

Former area resident wins ·Batmobile .

SYRACUSE -The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet on
Monday at 7:30 p.m . ;tl the
Syracuse Municipal bulldlng.

.- --

POMEROY- The Meigs band
booster will meet on Monday at 7
p.m. in the band room.
LETART -The Letart Township trustees will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the office bullding.
RACINE '-The Racine Chapter Order of the Eastern Star will
·· meet on Monday at 7:30p.m . All
members are urged to attend and

one that revved up the engine.
She · was the 21st contestant to
give It a try.
The car was originally a 1969
Llpcoln Mark III. Ironically, the
man who did the body work,
Harry Graham, Jr., was ortgl·
nally from Rutland. He now does ,
body work In the Columbus area ·
at J .R.'s Body Works.
A lot of work had to be done to
the car In order for It to appearas
the orlg.lna,l Batmoblle dl(l. There .
was !lPProxlmately $12,000 wor,th
of work put into the restoration.
Even though the car Is not the
original Batmoblle It still got
plenty of . odd look~ and comments when Bowen drove jt froin .
Col4mbus to her parent's house
on Flatwoods Road. The trip was
quite and ordeal and she even
had to bypass Nelsonville in
order to escqpe the curious looks
and glances of passers-by.
The car Is presently at Bob and
il;(:~~''••c'.,.J,,'•.· Joyce Bowen's nouse &lt;on Flatwoods Road and .draws Aulte a
crowd when the engine starts up.
BATMOBILE - What would you think If you were driving down
Bob .Bowen stated that at- this
the road and suddenly passed this car ..; a replica of the original
point and time the car may be
ba&amp; mobile? Well, many people did wondered when CarolYn Bo)Wen
tentatively sold, but he admitted
drove the car from Columbus to her parent's home on F1atwooda
It would be a lot of fun to keep
Road. She recently won the car from a COIUJl1bus radio ll&amp;a&amp;lon.
around.
·
•.

When Carolyn Bowen, now a
resident of Lancaster, but orlgl·
nally from Flatwoods Road near
Five Points, sent in a postcard to
a radio station In Columbus In
hopes of winning a replica of the
original Batmoblle she didn't

refreshments will be served.

attend .

RACINE -There will be a
football meeting at 6: 30 p.m. at
the Southern High school football
building fo r the junior high
school football players.

HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Order of the Eastern
Star 255 will have a regular
meeting on Tuesday at 7: 30p.m.
in Harrisonville.

CHESTER Mrs. Joan
Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs County
Tuberculosis Nurse, will be con·
dueling a·community tuberculin
s k i~ testing clinic at the Chester
Fire Station on Monday from
4: 30-6:·30 p.m .

HARRISONVIL!$ -TheHarriSonvllle , senior Citizens are
holding a free blood pressure
clinic on Tuesday from 10 a.m . to
noon at the townhouse. The
public Is invited to participate.

TUESDAY
POINT PLEASANT - There
will be big kids and babies
program on Tuesday at 6:30p.m.
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Those, attending are to meet In
the hospit a l lobby . Call
. 304..:..675 -4340 for more
Information.

-..,...-

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will hold
it 's monthly meeting on Tuesday
at noon at Main · Street Pizza.
Guest speaker will be Howard
Thompson, execu live director of
the Pike County Chamber of
Commerce. Members of the
Middleport Chamber and all
regUlar members are urged to

MEDICINE
SPOKEN HERE
PROFESSIONALISM.
DEI'ERMINATION.
LAB TESTING.

dream she would be · the lucky
one.
She wa:; one of 92 contestants
with a key that had a chance to
win the car and when she went to
the designated spot on that
.designated day her key was the

nilS IS 1HE LANGUAGE
OF 11iE MEDICAL LAB.

rHIS IS niE LANGUAGE
WE SPEAK.

LEARN
IT
92nd BIRTHDAY - Lena
Helbnan was honored recently on her 92nd birthday at
Americare-Pomeroy Nursing
Home. Those attending were
Paul and Carolyn Sinclair,
Linda Foster, Cathy and Cortney Scarberry, Betty Dill,
Sharon and Michelle Fobner,
and Orville Hill.

SECOND BIRTHDAY
Michael Patrick Blssell,son of
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bissell,
Pomeroy, recently celebrated
1lls second birthday with a
dinner at his home. Those
atlending In addition to his
parents and sister, Michelle.
were paternal grandmother,
Ada Bissell, Kenneth Bissell,
Mae McPeell; and Harold and
Judy Holter, Long Bottom.

Ul'IIVU8I'IT OJ' RIO QRAJm~
IIEDJCAL LABORATORY
TJ:CBNOLOOT PROQRAM
POR n1RDtat INftlRIIA'IICN

COHrM:r
COlaO I 01' UCIINOLOOY
11fE UNIYaRIDY OF RIO ORAND&amp;
1110 DIWID&amp;, OHIO 4&amp;8'r4
(8140tt8 'M', Olt

t..eoo-281·1101; IXT. 301

Quirks in the news _____
Town cooks world record hurxer
SEYMOUR, Wis. iUPIJ -The
residents of Seymour made a
weekend bid to claim a record for
the world's biggest hamburgermore than 2 tons of It.
Residents of toe small city
near Green Bay plopped 5,300
pounds of hamburger onto a grill
Saturday, looking to beat the
world record 5,005-pound burger
made In Cape Town, South
Africa.
There was eno~gh of the
sprawling 4-inch-thlck patty to
provide each of the thOusands of
people at tending Seymour's
Hambuger Olympics ·fesUvities
with seven quarter-pound
hamburgers.
The record was an attempt to
honor "Hamburger Charlie" Nagreen, who according to local
newspaper accounts made some
of the earUest hamburgers back
on Aug. 15, 1895.
At Seymour's first fair he
flattened the meatballs he was
selling and put them between
sUces of bread to make It easy for
fairgoers to eat them on the run.
Nagreen became known as
"Hamb11rger Charley" and continued to sell hamburgers 'until
his death In 1951 at the age of 81.
"My major goal · this year Is
just to get Seymour national and
International attention,'" said
Dick Tepp, who headed 1the
operation.
Tepp said the city may try to
make a huge ch~seburger next
year.

AIIIUita U Phllu del !flla. 7: :10 p.m.

p.m.

Allan~ 7, q~tlnnMII
Phlll.tlfi,Wa 1'. st. LouiM 3
S. ndQ'A Gantf'M
PtUahuiJ(h s. Cllluso-1, IK Inn.
Ch•cl•...tll. ,ua..a. t
st . IA•III S, PhU..t!lpllla-1, lllna .·
New Verll t. Motltfto .. I, 1-1 hta.
Lo• ..\IIJIIPI" -1, 8u Dlep I

Molll"'ll (Pern 1-111 ·a
IM.... x 1... ),14: 11p.rh.

u

\\' ash\nlt(o n '.. . .... 1

He did much more than that. Iii '
11 seasons, Wood intercepted 48
passes and played for two Super
Bowl champions.
Like Blount, Wood said more
energy must be directed towards
the country's youth.
" We 'know that in all of our
inner cities, and in the country
overall. these are troubled times
for c hildren," Wood said. "I
would like to take this time to ask
!government officials) to recon·
sider their funding decisions and
give money to organizations like
,.
the Boys Club.''
Like the other Packers enshrined before him. Wood pilld
tribute to the late Lombardi.
" My real education, my real
dev.e lopmen.t, the day I became
the real Willie Wood was the day I
walked into that Green Bay
Packer camp," Wood said. "The
first time I met Lombardi, he
scared the hell out of me. I've
been shaking ever since."
Ali the inductees thanked the
nume rous people who had helped ·
them over the year s, and Bradshaw took time out to thank all
his former offensive teammat.es,
including Lynn Swann, John
Stallworth, Mike Webster.
Franco Ha rris and Rocky Bleier.
"What does it (being ensh·
rinedl mea n?, " Bradshaw said
he as ked himself after be ing told
he was elected. "Does it mean
you're the best that ever played?
1 said no, walt a second. You
don't get elected Into the Hall of
Fame all by yourself.
"It takes people to get anything
done. We didn' t do it by
ourselves ."

At Lonlo n
P hiludt'lphi ll 17, &lt;lf'W'IIIIId 1:1
tF iday . Au ~. II
Su.lllf' lllPh&lt;M'nlx . 10: 31 p.m .

L.f:AGUE

EaHI

\\' L T
P&lt;.1 . PF P,\
l.i\ R ams ........... I . II 0 1.000 16 1;1
Plllladl'lphla .... .. l () 0 1.000 li 13

team."

Su llhi,Y'M R {'l'l ult

· Sntllt• 1'1 Cllllloml a. ill,;hl
.~ATION,\L

uo
flU
Uti
;11
17

Nallo ..al ( ' onfrrrnt•f'

O••troll t HII :t :.!-1 and Glttoon 2·1), i ::ts

;

!I n

II II
It II
1 fl

California. but got Vince Lombardi to give him a tryout in 1960.
·'I never dreamed, I never
imagined, I never hallucinated
that I would be standing here at
this time, " he said. ''The only
thing I ever had In mind was just
making the Green Bay Packers

from stretching its lead with a
By eRIK K. LIEF ·
stelar defensive play lr\ the fifth.
UPI Sporill Writer
Alvaro Espinoza singled and
Fred McGriff and Mabny Lee
and are spending less time went to third on a double by
Roberto Kelly . One out later,
talking and more time hitting.
The two Blue Jays, both of Po Ionia flew out to deep left and
whom . have .developed reputa· both runners tagged up. Bell
lions for thelt sUence In the fired a perfect throw to third and
presence of reporters, dellvered Kelly was tagged out before
"home run clouts In the seventh Espinoza was able to cross the
Inning Sunday to. power Toronto plate.
.
Elsewhere In the American
to a 6-5 vjctoryover theNewYork
Yankees. ·
·
League:
.
Red Sox 8, Indians ·&amp;
McGriff, the Americ a n
At Boston, ElliS Burks and Luis
League's home run leader,
smashed a two-run homer off the Rivera ho!Tlered In the eighth off
· plexiglass front of the third level loser Jesse Orosco, 1-3. Rob
In the right-field stands for his Murphy worked one and two29th of the season. Later In the third innings to Improve to 3·5
Inning, Lee stroked his second and struck out the side In the
homer of the year, a three-run ninth. Starter.RogerCJemens left
blast over the ~foot mark In the game In the llrst after
center field, capping Toronto' s . throwing only 11 pitches due to
tightness In his forearm . ·
five-ruri Inning.
Orioles 3, Rangers 2
"I just try to go up and make
At Baltimore, Mike Devereaux
contact/ ' said . McGriff, who as
usual, was a man offew words. "I lined a homer with one out In the
try to swing down on the ball and bottom of the lOth to win .the
that way I can put good spin on it game. Devereaux hit his sixth
ho!Tler off Jeff Russell, 5-3. Mark
and get It to carry.''
Williamson,
9-3, earned the win
Since the Blue Jays moved into
with
one
and
one-third Innings of
tlie SkyJ:lome on July 5, McGriff
has slugged 10 homers - one work.
Royals 3, Twins Z
more than the rest of his team
At Minneapolis, Minn., Kevin
combined.
Lee was a man of fewer words , Seltzer and Pat Tabler each
Imitating fellow Dominican contributed two hits and an RBI
teammate George Bell's.custom· · to back Bret Saberhagen, 12·5,
ary behavior of refusing to talk to who scattered two runs on nine
hits over seven innings. Jeff
the media. ·
,
Bell, 'who collected three hits, Montgomery earn.ed his seventh
Including a pair of doubles, and save. Loser Shane Rawley, 5-9,
turned In a key d~fenslve play, gave up three runs on seven hits.
uncbaracterlstlcally couldn' t
Tigers 4, White Sox 3
stop talking ;.... about Lee.
At Chicago, pinch hitter Lou
· •'He hit the ball hard, he loves Whitaker delivered an eighthto swing at lefthanders," Bell inning sacrifice fly to snap a tie
said of the switch-hitter. ''He's and Frank Tanana spun a sixgot power, serious."
hitter as Detroit snapped ChicaTodd Stottlemyre, 3-5, worked go's 13-game home winning
seven Innings and allowed two streak. Tanana, 8-9, walkec! two
runs on eight hits and two walks. and struck out two In his fourth
' complete game. Greg Hlbbafd,
Tom Henke finished up.
Walt Terrell fell to 0-2 with the 2·4, took the loss.
Yankees and 5-15 overall this
Angels 6, Brewers 0
season. He las't ed six and ·one·
. At 'Milwaukee, Jim Abbott
third Innings ·and allowed four . combined With two relievers on a
runs on six hits. ·
four ·hlttet , Abbott, 10-7, who
With Toronto traiUng 2·1, Bell · allowed all four hits in seven
doubled and McGriff followed Innings and struck out a careerwith his mammoth shot. After high nine, got perfect relief help
Ernie Whitt doubled , Lee Guet · from Greg Minton and Bryan
Ierman relieved and walked Harvey. Jaime ,Navarro, 3-4,
Lloyd Moseby. One out later, allowed four runs on six hits in
after both runners advanced on a five and two-third innings.
botched ·pick-off attempt, Lee .
Athletics 2, Mariners I
homered to give the Blue Jays a
At Seattle~ Storm Davis al6-2lead.
lowed four hits ·over· seven
The Yankees closed within 6·5 innings and Tony PhUIIps and
against Henke In· the eighth. Luis ,Jose Canseco each drove In a run.
Polonla hit an RBI triple and Don Davis, 11-5, struck out three and
Mattingly his 15th homer of the walked two and Dennis-Eckersseason, a two-run shot.
ley pitched the ninth for his 21st
Bell pulled Toronto within 2-l save. Mike ,Dunne, ·2-6, pitched
on an RBI groundout In the fourth seven innings, allowing both runs
innbig and prevented New York on eight hits.

The · Daily Sentinel

No ftap flying bec1111se of
thievery
Pm'SBURGH (UP!) - A
Pittsburgh American Legion
post has stopped flying the
American flag because someone
keeps steal lng it.
Three 5-by-8-!oot American
llag!r have been stolen In the last
year from AOterlcan Legion Post
577.
PoUce said they have no
suspects.

Wl.lder Smith Sr, He's the physician who has delivered 5,100
babies and at age 74 shudders ill
the thought of retiring.
. "I'm not anywhere near rettr·
ing," said Smith. "I enjoy people.
I'd be miserable if I retired."
The townfolk of Swainsboro, a
llght Industry and farming community of 8,000, might be.miserable too, if "Doc" Smith retired.
Despite his age, he sees an
average of 45·50 patients every
day at his clinic.
The town , he says, needs more
doctors and Is acilveiy ID1n·g to
recruit them.
The desjre to tend the town's
medlc.al ·needs apparently runs .
deep In Emanuel County's Smith
family. Henry Wilder Smith's
great grandfather practiced
medicine In the county, as did his
grandfather and father, all of
whom were graduates of the
Medical College of Georgia.
Smith has a son who Is a doctor in
Covington, the fifth generation of
famlly doctors.
Another son Is a physician
assistant In Smith's clinic, and
his wife Is a nurse practitioner.
In. 1985, Smith was named
Georgia's family practitioner of
the year. It wasn't long after that ·
milestone that he delivered his
5,000th baby, Kashema Latoya
Miller, born Jan. 7, 19!!6 In
Emanuel County Hospital.
There were rumors at that
time that Smith would retire but
he put them to rest. "I am not
thinking of retiring," he said
. then. "If I dld, there would be

nothing for me to get up for In the
mornings. "
Monument to Pllgrbns turns 100
PLYMOUTH, Mass. CUP!) The largest solid granite statue •
In the country - honoring the •
Pilgrim's arrival in America turned 100 years old this weekend
and Us birthday was celebrated
with the swearing In of new U.S.
citizens.
The National Monument to the
Forefathers In Plymouth is an
81-foot·tall statue overlooking
tlt'e Jiarbor In southeastern Massachusetts where the Mayflower
landed In 1620.
The statue, depicting a woman
- "Faith" - standing with her
foot on Plymouth Rock, was
completed In 1889 and dedicated
to the Pilgrims, said Hope
Thurlby of the historic Pilgrim
Society. It turned 100 years old on
Saturday .
''She is surrounded by four
granite monoliths, each 16 feet
high, seated on thrones to represent morality, law, 'liberty and
education," Thurlby said.
To celebrate the statue's birth·
day Saturday, U.S. District Court
Judge A. David Mazzone agreed
to swear In 102 new citizens of the
United States the same
riumber of Pilgrims who arrived
on the Mayflower -at the statue
site, Thurlby said.
A quote from Pilgtlm Fa Iher
and colonial Gov. William Bradford was engraved on the monument In honor of the centennial,
Thurlby said .

NOW AI DOMINO'S PIZZA
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AJ ONE LOW PIICI

....

.•

IIIUYIII AIU

Small towu doctor not thlnldnl of
retlrlnl
SWAINSBORO, Ga. (UPIJ Just about everybody In the tiny
southeast Georgia town of
Swainsboro knows Dr. Henry

992-21 '5 6

$999

ASK FOR BRiAN OR DAVE
'

Domino's
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992·21U
WEn MAIN
"

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

''

ADDiiiONAL ITEMS
SJ,JO COVIIS 1011 PIZZAS

...

A Special Edition ·In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 24., 1989

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1989

POMIIOY, OliO '

L

r.

I

•

�/

P.gl 8 The Daly Sentinel

Ponwoy-Midcleport, Ohio

Monday, August 7, 1989

Opus heads for Pacific to help
-in -effort to help save·· the do~phins
KEY WEST, Fla. IUPU
an asset," Watson said.
Opus the Penguin, late of Bloom
Sunday was the final publicaCounty, Is headed for the tropical tion day for Berke Breathed's
Pacific to help conservationists comic strip "Bloom County." His
do battle with tuna fishermen new Sunday-only strip - called
whose wide, sweeping nets trap "Outland," makes Its newspaper
and kill dolphins.
deput Sept. 3.
.
The cartoon character's creaWatson said Breathed had
tor, Berke Breathed, painted given the Sea Shepherd Society
Opus on the side of the 2IJO.foot permission to put the Opus logo
steel trawler Sea Shepherd last - on T·shlrts to help raise money
week, emblazoning his · penguin for Its nonprofit activity.
tummy with the slogan •'environ- · The organization works mainly
mental extremist."
'
to save endangered species , but
The 600-ton vessel and Its Is Involved In many marine
International crew of 26 volun- Issues, Watson said. On this
teers are schedUled to san from campaign, · the Sea Shepherd
Key West late Monday to search crew will seek out tuna boats and
tor tuna boats· In the. eastern check to see If there are dolphins
tropical Pacific between Costa trapped among their catch.
Rica and Hawaii.
" We'll just poUtely request the
Capt. Paul Watson said captains to release. the dolphins
Breathed and his wife are ex- from thelr ·n ets, and if they refuse
pected to join the "Sea She- to do so, we'll have no alternative
pherd" In Costa Rica In about a but to rip their nels apart and
week, alter II crosses the Pa· release the dolphins ourselves," .
nama Canal.
Watson said.
He said the target tuna boats
"Jody, his wife, is a wildlife sell their product to U.S. canned
photographer, so she will be quite tuna fish companies that l.n tur~

• ,I

' I

'

' I

-:
. -,'
' '

are owned by three big multi·
national companies whose hold·
ings Include cat foOd companies.

• The

Although the Sea Shepherd
sails unarmed, Its crew has been
warned that some of those they
may confront are armed with
au tom a tic weapons, Watson
said.
"We don' t carry weapons, and
we make su~e our actions do not
hurt anybody . . We don't use
explosives. And we always accept responsibility for what we
do, " Watson said.
"We're a non-violent lnterna·
tiona) ·enforcement organization.
we· don' t have any politics. It
doesn't make much difference If
It's a Soviet· harpoon killing a
whale or a Japanese harpoon.
It's all the same thing to the
whale," Watson said.
The Sea Shepherd flys flags
from the crewmembers' home
countries, including the United
States, Switzerland, Britain,
Canada, the Soviet Union, Peru
and Germany.

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156

MONDAY thru FRIDAY a A.M. to S P.M.
a A.M. until ,.OON SATURDAY

F2J~~:Mei=- ~~~~~-

G:.aflie or

M•~

coumt• must be pr•

Mt~rLI .111111:.1'
1 - C.d of Th ..ks
2-tn MomOIV
5-HoopyAdl
1-Laat 8nd Found
7 - Vard I-'• (peid in adllanc::el
&amp;-Public Ue • Auction

9- w....., .....

•.10 ditcount tor • • ,.id in advance.

run 3 d., I at no ch . . ..
•Pfla. of ad tor 11 Ol!llilaiiiHers it ~ub'e price of ad cost

not.....,...-for.,..., ....,

•senttnel il
firat d • . tChedt
for Mora firtt d8rld runa in p.-r) . Clll before 2 :00p.m .
dw •h• DUbll. .kln to millie oorrecUrNI.
·~ , ... mu• be pei4 madwence . .
C..d of Tb.,kt
Happy-

Y•d s ...

In Memoriam

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges...
M•onCo., WV ~

O.UiaCoumy

MalpCouNy

ANaCodet1• ·

Artra COde 11•

Aru Codi 304 ·

t12-Midlil-rt
Pom•oy

t71-Pt. PI-om
411-Lao•

441-Gotltpotlt
317-Ch•hira
311-Vim..,
241-Rto G,.nde

211-Gu_.. Dltt.

••a-Arabia Dist.
3'79-WIInut

••&amp;-Ch•ttr

143-Portltnd
247-U.trt Folts
9.ti-Radne
1•2-Ruttlftd
117- Cootvlle

571-Apple Grewe

773-Mason
112- New Haven
115- Ltton
937- Bufftlo

~.·1. P:1

St:r

1 2- Sft..tk)n W.nted
13- lnturanoe
1•-auein•• Traini"'
15-lchoolt • Instruction
11-11-. 'IV. Cl Ropti•

,. .

trict desiru to - ·
ualad bids lor 11te IDffow.

1riu:

·

1. F-lnourance
2. o..otino and Oil Product•
In order to be considord,
ttit oeolad bids ohllll be r•

celvad In the Tr-uror'sOffico, 320 E81t Moln Strtt01.
Pomeroy. Ohio, on or beiDre
12:00 o'clock Noon

on

17- M i t . - - t
1 8 - Wented To Do

Columbia cleared for launch
'

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI\ -Engineers made up lost
time_Sunday and NASA manag·
ers I'Drmally cleared the shuttle
Columbia lor blastoff Tuesday .
weather permitting , on a
blacked-out military flight to
reportedly wt a spy sajelllte in
orbl!,
NASA's mission management
tean:ir a panel of top agency
officials chaired by astronaut
Robert Crippen, mPt Sunday to
review the status of launch
processing and to make sure
· nothing has been overlOoked
readying the veteran spaceplane
for 'Its first flight since the
Challenger disaster 3 ~ years
ago. .
Late In the day, Columbia and
Its five-man all-mllltary crew
were cleared to take off sometime between 7:30a.m. EDT and
11:36 a .m . Tuesday to launc h
what has been widely reported to
be a reconnlassance satellite to
spy on the Soviet Union.
"Everything's marching right
. along," said a NASA spokeswoman after the mission management team meeting broke up,
The only question Sunday ap·
peared to be the weather, wjth a
falr chance for unacceptable
conditions.
As with all such mllltary
shuttle flights, the exact hiunch
(lme and mission duration are
classified, but sources say liftoff
is planned for around 8 a.m .
Tuesday an~· that Columbia will
land Sunday morning around 7
a.m . PDT at Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif., to close out a
five-day mission.
Columbia has only flown once
In the past six years , completing
its last mission just 10 day s
before the ChallPngPJ di~a~ t er

21 - Busin•• Opponunit¥
22 - Mon~ ID Lo ..

23- Prow..- hrv1c.

Hedl l sl ale
'
31-H..,. ... Iolo
12-MobU. Komel for S1le
13- Firma tor Sele
:M-Bu•tn•• 8uHding~
36-Lott a Acreege
36-R•• Elllte W.med

·-

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
, . FIDUCIARY
' On July 1e. 1189. In the
Molga County Probata
Court, C..e No. 28318,

Phone 992· 7098

:

.·

. Trlfn for carHre In
o\IHI dH •;
ltJI .! ur1r

r
1 •L'•. l l IV .UJC.! ')

...IN),-..._

111

countv. Ohio.
Rob!irt E. B'!"k.

Leno K. NBioelrood. Clerk · ·

17124, 31;

Real Estate

Ill

o-r~l

7. 3tc

L. W.~TEW
TRUCKING

•')~

LHf I liflY
r ll r 1.; ' • 1 r

1 x1
WOf1U PHCC!' ',tHi

THIHAATICHOOL
o Di•. of A. C. T. c..,..

s
Business erv1ces
e

...... -

Cortointllllt!&gt;
Vinyl Siding
SHmlt• Gull•

..,....,_, w-...
' lltwtt
Insulation

E.

POMEROY,O.
'192-2259
POMEROY - LOCUST ST. - Old frame house on 40x120
lot. $5,000.00.
POIEIOY- SPRING AVE.- Old frame house on 100xl30
lot. $6,500.00.
A•TIQUilY - St. At. 33• - House and lot, Small Price.
River View w~h a little WOfk and frx1ng up could be a mce•
summer cabin and close .to the nver tor the hsherman.
$5,900.00.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-22"
EVENINGS
.

4/t/ 81 / dn

ROCK SPRINGS RD. - Aprrox . 80 acres of vacant grou~d .
Approx. 20 acres Iii able AI mineral~ water and elec. ava1la.
ble. Good hunting land. $29,000.00.

PORJIAIID - Have you been thinking about buying a
trailer but don't want the hassle of selling rt up, buyin gthe
land and all the other headaches thai go wrth H? 20 acres~!
land wHh a 198114x70 trailer. Everything is done for you.
Move in, prop your feet up and turn the kids lose. SElliNG
PRICE $22,900.00.

POIEROY - 3 bedroom trailer just out ol town! Wood·
btirner, 1 car garage, equipped kitchen, AIC. fenced yard,
and frurt trees. MAKE OFFER $15,000.00.
·

'i1IE CUUND ClEW IS aut "FISIIIIIG" ,
FOI UmNGS. LJ.st with us.

WATER

SERVICE

.

·
Per Day &amp; Up

949·2526

~ET AI.

Now Taking

a

MILDINGI

SINCE 1969

Junk Carw wfth MOtora, $50 •

992-5288

llllf 11. lli&amp;Cifll

Fw Mort

.

lnforlllfian
'
mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX

. D~VE'S
SMA~ ENGINE
RIPAIR

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENI
•ZETOI TIACJOIS
PIOOUCIS
eHOWAIO IOTAVATOIS

lodtMDtV.-.yL.....,

~CliO

.. MIUapart, Oh.
. PARTS AND SERVICE

•Y AIDMAN MOWIIS

For Moat 2 and 4 -cyclo

etiii'EIST All lA TTIIIES

Mlgineo
Stock. Prtrts for.
Homalito. Woadeotor,

LAWN lOWER REPAIR

MODIS
EQUIPMENT

Tecumseh; lrlfltl lk
Strmon.

PH. 992-3922

742-2455
Salom St.
Rutianti,Oit.

1600 GAllON
WATII SIRYICE
LIIIESTONE
SPIIAD
DIRT HAILED
992-527

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

New localiotl:

161 Ntrth . . .
····••rt, Oltie 45760
Wo COny Fiohlng luppll•

Pev Your Phon•
and C..bll Billa Here

·=,~
IISIIIIG ,..,_

•

Most Foreign and
DOW'IIItiC Vehldll

7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT

MC

So&lt;~rice

All Mt;or A Minor

Repllirs

ETC.

NIASE Certifi.t Madl.,ic

CAll 992-6756

'MEET THE
STA,F
PERM SALE

' •VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INIULATION

Now thru Stpt. 9, 1919

.. ..

PH. t•t-2101
arl&amp; M9·2160

100/o OFF All PEIMS
WALK-IN WELCOME

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

"Free Ellllmllt•"

1119 N. 2nd

I

.......,

NOSIIIIAY

"DOC" VAUGIIN

Employment Services
11

WANT.D

RECYCLING

DEAD OR AUVE

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM • 7 PM
· EXCEn

'•Washers •Qryars

•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
....... ltpairallle"

HOUDAYS

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

"At ltrtat t.h PrieM"

DownipOuta

... ····1101
., .... ····2160

Gutter Cleaning

Help wanted

S3501Doy proc-lng phone Of; ,
d...t ..-opto col you. No ••·
~nc· n~··~r· (retun.. . ' ."~
d•bltlt·3t5·73
oxttntlon , • ,_
P-2732.\.
·: .
2 nuroos oklll, ohop cllrlt, . In- • • ·
q_ulro ot OdH ond £tide 8hoR. •
t.~

Mkklteport.
3 rm., unlumlahtd lpl. No rlnl,_

trnaU oolary,

c111

lor

lody/por1•

.ft-..·

limo 114-441-7572 Hyo., 114446-tii!O ohr 5jt.m.
,

We Buy All
•
AVDN 1 All Ar.n 1 Shlrioy : ·J •
Non Ferrous Speua,304-t75--142G.
• .,T..
An oruo,
Metals,
W•v• 304-882·2M5.
.::::=.::::==-=:---:..
· ·· ·~. '
Accouttnt, mult have ex- ...
Plastics,
perlence
In
.ceounte
-,
rt01IV1bf., wtth apedflc ~
l~
phoolo, on tot a 3nl panr btl-, ·, _.,
Stainless Steel, u,.,
related buelnMI IP't
pUctUoM, ' apeclflo OOUrMI, ... ""
Etc.
In computer
&amp; ex•
~\

&amp;VON •

.f

·' ""~"

OFFERED AT

oper~ttona,

992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO
......1••••••

.

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
SINCE 1976
ROACHES • FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
Membelllational Pest
Control Asstt.

foiFne

1-100-535-2199

SER~ICE _
Wt can r~r ond n·
core radiatan cn1
heater cor". We can
also adtl ball and rod
Ht rotliators. We also
repair Gas Ta....

PAT 1111 FOlD
992-2198 .

Roger Hyse II

Woocllln4

Announcements

l&lt;llon omploflr, • d - not · •· ·
dlocrtmtnoto on the bttlt o( ~ · .

age,

color,

crHct.

nttlon11 _ , •
at dl.. ••
- .• '

oifgln, r~ce, ••· or trpe

Admlnlotrottvo oooloto,. lor ";.. _
Mortlotlng
ond
Rocrultlng .•
Sotdllllotorn Ohio
Muhf·
,.
-toiHy group procllco Ito • '

Giveaway

4

2 block. whHo tomolo kltt.,o. 3
•
moe. old., Blick ftiiMI..
•
old. et4"'*355t.
2 month old •-•lo puppy to

It• 742-2241
good-.•·
·
4 kilt.,. 2 gro~ Z bitt •
~-H

J'"Y

Ol~ppod

304-175-

1140.
Adortbto

t , ••

Inc., 412 VInton Pk. · ~
Gotllpotlo, OH 45631. 114-44e- '' ~ -.
5500. Woodland Cont-Ine.\ lo , "&lt;'
on Equal OpportunUy/affirmH vo . • ~

~fflJ .

I
W.ok-otd pill
AUIInHon Shepherd Plll'l wtt h
bfuo oyu. Molhor rwgtolo 1011
purobod. 304-4175-3648.

3342.

-king an lildlvlcluot with o cot- . -"·
llfll clegroo ond ••porionco II\ , , .

martllllrig actlvftiH. Solory I · ,'
bentflll eammenM~ratt with . 1 ;
txptttonco. R"-" In writing . • •
w"h '""""' to: H-r Ctlnl~1

Poroonnol D.pt. P.O. lo1 3'14 ·-- '
Gottlpolla, OH dnt. No pltona , :catto.

,

AI I* Arttolo '• Tro,.tor. and

,,

vacancloo,

8tc110rt B, Posting,
..
ol thl Nogotlatod Ag111mont .. .: • ·

botwotn tnt MLTA ond tho
ol E•c•tlon, tho Molgo

·

ii'

,
Local School Dtll~ct Ito posting " '
the following waetnciH tor h1 ·....... .
regular teacnlng 11111: Stc;ond • •
Grade TRcher at Pomeroy · ...
Elemlf'llary, DH Teacher 11 - ·~ •
Molgo Hlg~ School, Olrio' Junior . ,

One aolld blaok malt puppy . Hlgfi BaSketball Coach, Mentor r·.
alto blk end white killen, 304-- anG Library Supervlaor.
~ ··
675-1620.
&amp;von • LtmHod limo
U .OO · " •

ontl

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found ·. Smelt by with ttgotlllds
M ,rutr oil he
•
Loom ptaOI~L!n
Wlllt fi'G'UIO •ollrull. I t~

1M11 ol

-appoinlmont IM "bitted o your . •c
llrOI ardor", slzo up lrM lbNiod. c.
on your onlor). Ptuo ,_,.. .. ,
$30.00 lrM llftlduclo. CIU .' .
u-ri~
w - !Jo4.112-.'114S. ., ,
.,.. 10

•""'~-~.a~421~.--:::----:;;;;;;-~ Bobplttor lor 3 Jlllr old. Ool- · ' ..
700 lb lpofl8 or nur HMC. Wttkdty- ·· ~ ...,
Loot: La,..,nts
t 114-. w··•ondo.
"""11!12·7158 •ttor --, ' .
llortlord
bull. Robort Polly.
7424871.
.:.:''.:.:OO~p.:;:m;;.._ · --,-.,.,.---,--LHI: lmllll chllngo purw tn Babvllllar nooctod In our homo, ·
biH:k 1e11tter, aw.ld, had black oanrpoHa .,.., tor an 3 ahlffe! · 1 1•
watch"" clfllrollo tighter wlgotd Msturo, rooponolbto poraon: " , '
top. ~ eUmlzer, had email 614--i41-M15
· • .. ••

•-L

enev•
317-mt.

7

GQfQge

OHicer.

Pertonnel

c.m..

loCIIted Off Bypua AI
Jet. of Rta. 7 &amp; 143,
Pomwoy, Oh.
6·21-'lt-lfll

1-1-1 mo.

J,

compullltzod , , ~ '

lxlll,_ · envlomment ...., ~ . • ·
NSUIM tl:t Blndfl llcFirllncl. •, ,.._

992-5114

· Speelallde';

In

parloncod

Give Us A Call
Today"

Fabric Shop

moner.

wJold

114•

Yard Sale ·

a. on TV meny n..dtd tor
common:tata. Now hltlng ott .- ·,

ogn. For calling lnlo. Co116t5-

m -11n.

:·; -=" ·
_,

CRUISE SII1PS now hiring ttl

R1 124 L.-·'o•1 Ohio
•

COU MarUYJI • • - ·
,o~.­

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

' .,,.._

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

Gallipolis

REPAIR.
AI•• ,,..........

&amp; VICinity

r:.::o· ~~~-: ~~

w-·•-=•nl':"ord~~;
c - . otono,.,.
:0
tllllorlst,-

PH. 992·5682
Or 992-7121

10111p1to. •

-

I

JONES·TIRE
CENTD

ROOFING .
NEW- REPAIR
Outten

11110 ooltlng.

pooH!-, both okltlod and ..,. ,,
ilkltlod, lot lnlonnallon caN 115-'

77U507ocuns.

.. ,

11onoy typtng at homo. ~" S30~ IIOitntlol. ·- ••

Eam

=~to,

Ct)80H87-IOOO Ext.B- .

:.~

nyouhtnt~porloncaltnt... ·.·· '··

oo1 tn oolloond morkotlng, tnd • , _od-lonal bockgraurwl 1n •
biological ..- . prolorrtblf. • •.

4 25 tfn
·
In paro-Modlcal Holda, _you ,.,.
I,
';::::;;::=~;G~~~
-~~
ALL
Yonl
·
.
l
o
l'oklln
ohoulcl
be IOiklng with uo. Mull , .. · ..
1,
.&amp;ctvonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. ht'lll ralloblo lrwnoportlllon.

HawardLWrltetel

CUSTOMIRT
HMS &amp; GliAGES

Uood lurnlkn by tho piKo or

ontlro houtoholcl
814-742-2455.

C..-tifi.ct Licena.ct

Middleport,

C61•1

.
Oulno
Pro t140 qutno. Any ~ondttlon ,
C.oh Pokl. C.l 114-182·5657 or
114-lfl2.246t.

SERVICE

CoUto pupo and boby klltono·to
giva away. Klntnl hiiYI long

PLUMIING &amp; IIEA,nu1r.1

Junk cara with Of without
motono. c.tt Larry LIYelr 114381-1303.

SYRAC:USf, 01110

6/301~

ALLEN'S
HAULING

r.:r

down. wJo motora, 125 a down.
Richard Goarfll, 114-388-1011.

Registrations

~lWHOMEii

7-12·"89· ' mo.

1/4189-lltt

Call Anytl. .
992-2371

Day or Night ·
NO SUNDAY

·,'

$18

614·915·4180

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO• .

BISSELL
IUILDEIS

.

polnt1111. let file d•

1,000 GALLOIIS
POOLS, WIUS
OST-S

5113/lt""

J

IN MIDDUPOU, OHIO

hMr. 614·985-3831 or 114-INJS..

HUIITING ACREAGE - APPL£GROVE - DORCAS ROAD:
Letart Township, approx. 107 acres ol wooded land w1th 2
bedroom, I bath, furnished cabin._TP.C. water.Jdeal setup
for hunters!' 1~ Mile to the Rrver lot the F1sherman.
$45,000.00.

IIDDLEPORT- Remodeled home, 3 bedrooms, basement.
small yard with privacy lence. Ntce Iron! srttrng porch.
PRICED TO SELL!! $24,500.00.
·

WnH lOOMS AIIIID
APAITMEIIIITS FOI
IEIIIIT ·(By Day or
WHk)

FREE ESTIMATES
;lob the poln •ut •f

HAVE IEFDIICES

•SHRUB 8. TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

NOW OPEN

PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES

7-1_2-'19-1 mo.

CAMPGROUNDS

IIITERIOR-EKTDIOI

5tornt
Deors &amp;
Windows
'

Maitn. .lil

•Fill Dirt
'742-2421

•

11 NDA'$

It fer you.
ugy
IEASOIAILE
•

CaH 992-2772

608

•Gra.vel
•Limestone
.
I

j;
~::=======:;-r;=======:;1 l::=::::7:
-2;&amp;:··;•9;·;t::;=::::~
OHIO '

INSULATION

COIIERCIAL

•CUITOM KITCHENI a lATHS
•EXTI!NIIVIIIEMODEUNG
•VINYL IIOINO IIOOPING

2'12 Mi ......
ladne Locks &amp;
Dam At. Antii•Uitw

Treln 10 011 .-·Piotnolomlt

: 1 1

J&amp;l

-

W.
Vt. State Champion •
Auetlolllat. Rick PeatwCJ!l~ kon- , • ,
ood In Ohio llftd WOII VlralniL ; ..;
- n g AUC11ono, :IQ4:773- -. ~•
1781.
··.~.....: ·
.......,.,
-. ''
Calllptato -hoiH ol luf'.
nHIWt a anttquao. Atoo """"' •
_. hooloro. Swtln'a FumHIWO
a Auetlon, Tblnl • ottvo, et44414tH.
FumHura and optllllneM by the
piKo "' onllro ho&lt;loohokt. Fair
bolng paid. C.tt lt4-441-

..

6·5·'19·11n

.fiiWICtllL AID AVAIL
..101 PUC'M'IfT USIST.

Probo1o Judge

GllG I. IOUSM
. GENERAL

222 East Main

992-6872

~.

"h ,

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM

POMEIOY, OH.

\.

J)WNII:

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

'

Wllmo H:c.oto and John W.

'

(JMt 675·12..

ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

· (71 2o11, 31 : 1817. 31c

..

A. llewwlt

SWEEPER REPAIR

Pomeroy, Ohio 46 789

Suto Route 7. Tuppers
Plioltts, OH .
Fred W. Crow. Ill
181 7. 14. 21 . 3tc

411770.Moi
ttond.

H&amp;R Block Tax
Course Begins Soon

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

Grant

Sorah Olbbo, Clerk
34048 Ball Run Ad .

M. Bowen. dtiCIIuod.I01aof

:":::";..!:·~-:.· ~:~~

Baker touts Mexican cooperation

aaa.a•n

(614) 667-3271

86 - Mobile Home Repeir
87 - Upholtterv

Bl1ate of Hornor

trill of 1lte

E.-trio and Co·E-ot
of the utoto of Relph

'

Ul, 10g I YIIOAT

bury Township Bu~ding,
Rocktprings, Ohio on the

DUMP TRUCK
Sand'· Stone-Dirt

84- EieclfiCel &amp; Rtfrig111110n
85- Gen••' Haul•nt

124, Port len .. o, ~========:.l!::·"':rr:•:,.~-=,..:·:...,:,.:lk=h.=Fl~

Since then it has been heavily on track.
modified to Improve flight safety
The goal of the hush-hush
and one day o( the upcoming mission, the· fifth since post·
flight, sources said, will be -Challenger flights resumed last
devoted to a thorough checkout of September, is believed to be the
its many systems.
deployment of an advanced lm·
The weather outlook for launch aging reconnaissance satellite,
tlme Tuesday called for · a 20 possibly anotller radar sateiUte ·
percent to 40 percent chance of like one launched from the ·
conditions that would violate shuttle Atlantis In December.
NASA's tough post-Challenger
Aviation Week &amp; Space Tech·
guidelines, with possible ground nology magazine, however, has
fog and scattered clouds at 3,000 reported It Is a photo·
feet left over from expected reconnaissance satellite de·
evening thundershowers.
signed to radio ultra-sharp pic·
Heavy cloud cover could force lures to ground stations around
a launch delay and NASA: offl· the, world:
cials were keeping their fingers
A smaller, "secondary" pay:..
crossed that conditions at launch load also Is mounted in Colum·
HEADED TO PACIFIC - SporUng a newly·
Key West's former naval station piers, was
time will be acceptable.
painted emblem of cartoon character , "Opus"
bla's cargo bay, sourC!!S •have
readied late Sunday lor Its new mission lo protest
Columbia skipper Brewster said, possibly to test advanced
marked "environmental extremist," Ibis 20t-foot
the ktllf!lg of dolphins by tuna netters I'! the
Shaw, 44, an Air Force colonel, m Ultary sensors related to the
steel huDed trawler "Sea Shepherd," shown at
eastern tropical Pacific. (UPI)
and co-pilot Richard "Dick" "Star Wars" program, but Its
Richards , a 42-year-old Navy . purpose could not be confirmed.
commander, spent the morning
Columbia has been launched
Sunday practicing landing proce- only once In the past six years
dures aboard a NASA business and Its return to flight this week
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Secre· much better job In cooperation visit as 1J. forum for mutual
jet modified to handle like a wlll mark a major mUestone for
tary
of State James Baker
space shuttle on final approach.
the National Aeronautics and prepared Monday for high level with us, and we with them, In this · consultations and to resolve
whole area oi narcotics and drug bilateral problems. Tlie commisThe two pilots and their crew- Space Administration:
talkb
with
Mexican
officials,
enforcement.''
sion Is headed by the U.S.
mates - Navy Cmdr. David
For the first time since the saying the presence of "practl·
Baker
arrived
Sunday
at
Mex
·
secretary
of state and Mexican
Lees tma, 40, Army Lt. Col. Challenger disaster, all three of
cally
half
of
the
(U.S.
)
Cabinet"
leo
City's
Benito
Juarez
lnterna·
minister
and · has' mei
foreign
James Adamson, 43, and Air NASA's remaining space shut·
Indicates
the
importance
of
U.S.·
Ilona!
Airport.
Mexican
officials
every
year
except
In 1986 and
Force Maj. Mark Brown, 37 ties will be operational .and
Mexican
relations.
agreed
with
Baker's
assessment
1988.
spent the rest of the d!!y review - equipped with more than 200
Baker and three other Cabinet of the meeting's Importance.,
This year's m,eeting takes
ing their secret flight plan,- modifications to Improve safety
members
led a 52-member U.S.
"I believe that it Is an lmpor· place at a time when qmliallty
undergoing final medical exams arid performance. ·
·
delegation to Mexico City for the
and checking out personal equip·
·"It's the last one that had to go . seventh U.S. ·Mexlco BI-national tant meeting," Deputy Foreign dominat.es relations between the
Minister Sergio Gonzalez said. two neighbors, who share a
ment they plan to take on board through that very arduous get·
Commission
meetings
on
drug
"But one has to be very aware 1,933-mlle border. President
the shuttle.
the· thlng-back-to-fllght status
trafficking,
Illegal
Immigration,
that there will always be prob- Bush has · voiced support for .
Columbia's countdown began and the' proof will be ... when we
bilateral
trade
and
Investment,
lems
and difficulties In relations Salinas de Gortarl's liberal eco·
on time early Saturday even go fly It," launch director Robert
border
pollution
and
cultural
between
Mexico and the United nomic and political reforms.
though engineers were behind Sleek said In an interview.
relations.
States
because of their
Salinas de Gortarl has cracked
schedule finishing work in the
"We feel good about II. Everyb·
"
I
don't
think
the
United
States
proximity."
.
down
on rampant corruption and
shuttle' s engine compartment. ody feels good about lt. The team
has
a
relationship
with
any
A
U.S.
Embassy
official
called
drug trafficking, the key irritant
But by the II me the countdown that worked on It, as far as
resumed at midnight Saturday they're concerned, It's a better couuntry that Is any more Baker's top-level entourage In U.S-Mexico relations:
About 40 percent of the cocaine
alter a n eight-hour "hold," the vehicle than Atlantis or Important than our than our " perhaps the largest Cabinetrelationship with Mexico," level U.S. delegation -to visit any' and marijuana consumed In the
e ng ine room had been "closed Discovery."
·
Baker told reporters Sunday as country ever. " ·
·
United States passes through
out ' and thE&gt; co untdown was back
his delegaton flew to Mexico City
"It Is a great event for both Mexico, and the Mexican governfrom Houston. "I think that Is countries," he ·sald.
•
ment has long maintained that
evidenced by the fact that you
Presidents Ronald Reagan and Washington must do something
have got practically half of the Jose Lopez Portillo created the to reduce American's huge appeCabinet
coming down here for bi-national commission during tite for drugs.
meeting In Miami was recessed
returning
to
work
In
growing
this
binational
meeting."
Lopez's June 1981 Washington
until Tuesday, when leaders
numbers.
As
of
Aug.
1,
Eastern
Baker
pra_ised
Mexican
Pres!·
ex pect to take a straw poll.
said 367 pre-strike pilots were dent Carlos Salinas de Gortari
"There are number of options working.
.
for working hard with Washing·
before the !leadershtp·councll) ,
The union spokesman said the ton to stop drug trafficking.
and the options do include re-evaluation of the strike was
''He has taken some couragereturning to work, " said a not prompted by pilot defections. ous law enforcement ste~s."
s pokesman for the pilots union,
·
Baker said. "Mexico Is doing a
'
who asked 'not to be quoted by
'
•
name. "That ' Is not the only
1
option (and) it Is not the strongH&amp;RBiocklsoHerlilgaBaslc
lng the course. Although thou,~
est option."
Income Tax Cotne starting sands of job opportun1ttes are ' ~J
The pilots union has supported
Seplllmbir 5th. There will be a awllable to qualified tax prepar'
the strike, which was called
chOice of morning or evening
March 4 by the International
are under no obll- dMNS.
Association of Machinists, the
loaa:eptemploymentwlth
"".)
unJon that represents the air·
R Block.
'
•:
The 75-hour coune Is lau!lht
line's ground workers, and the
'\·
by Dpii'ltaiCid H&amp;R Black fax
unJon representing Eastern's
~lion lonns end broInstructor•. Certificates of chures can be obtained by conflight attendants.
llllhle.raa•ll and 7.5 cOOihdna ta:llug H&amp;R Block II:
Only about 200 of Eastern's
ecb:atlcn mltl 11'8 awardeil 118 Eul Main Slreet
3,500 pilots initially crossed the
graduallls succasf1.1y ""COivrmmlplelottt- Pomeroy, Ohio 45788
picket line but Eastern claims
\
114-98-116'74
that striking pilots havP been
78-JIHN36M

ria

H••,rg

12th day of Auguot 19e9 at
10:00 A.M .

.

JOH.NPIIUAIII
·A. WADE,
M.D.
Inc:
yauq IOIPIIAL

lmprowment 1

NOTICE OF SALE
Sallobury Townohlp wMI
offer IDr Solo ot Public
Auction 111 Ono 1978 Ford
Dump Truck.
Sala to be hald at Salis·

CONSTRUCTION

SITEWORK • ROADS
ClEARING

•••·•712

1-11·'19-1 ....

BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAIZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

DOZER

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

(6 Ul

.

'"'

Servtces

· NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On July 31, 1919, In the
Meitll
County Proboto
Co•n1, C..o No. 28275.
M01het L
State
Route 7. Tu-• Plains.
OH.,- appointed hecu·

a-.

and VISA WEL COME

• LOW HOUDAY 1111, kiiUUGI, OliO

75 - Bo•ts &amp; Molor4: tor Sele
76-AutO Perts &amp;: Acc•torf•
??-Auto Repair
?I - Camping Equipmern
79 - Camp•• &amp; Motor Homn

82- Piumb.ng &amp;
83- f.llC ... I\Ing

COI.Oitl. IUD.._ A11D . . . ..

MASTERCARD

74-Motorovcl•

81 . Home

~

Stop By and See Us! - Financing Available

11 - Auuts for s ...
,72 - Tru~1 for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD 's

IQdliJI
41-HOUMI for R•t
4.2 - Mobfle Hom.. for Rent

IJIID

HOU

Public Sale
&amp; Auctlori

8

WI: HAVE A OOOD HUCTIOII 011

v•SA ·

Tr ansporl a1 1o 11

•&amp;- S,ace for Rent
47- Wante(l to Rent
48-Equ;pment for Rent
4t-For Le•e

Hendenon, Stltl Route
d
0 hI
ollll770, oppolnfod Co-

Striking pilots weigh Eastem options
MIAMI (UPI )- Strlkllig East
ern Airlines pilots In New York
and Atlanta voted to contlnup
their walkout againstthecarrler,
while pilots In Miami voiced
support for the 5-month-old
strike.
The pilots met separately
Sunday In the first of a series of
local meetings Intended to asses s
the mood of the union
membership.
Leaders of the Air Line Pilots
Auoclation at Eastern voted
unan)mously Saturday to contin~ the strike, but the leader·
ship wants to gauge the depth of
s11J1119rt for that action within the
raall and file.
Tile M(Jml Herald quoted
union sources Monday as saying
pilots In New York and Atlanta
voted to remain gn strlkebutvote
Jotala were not available. The

63-Liv•todl
M-H-v &amp; Grain
11-Seed • Fertliler

Public Notice

Tho 8011rd of Educotton
r81erv81 the right to accept
or 1'8jtlc1 any Md all bids.
J1ne Fry. Tr. . urer
Maitll local -ol Dlotrict
320 Eut Main Strtt01
P. 0. Box 272
Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;7119
1817, 11, 14. 3tc

·The shuttle, In lhe backcround; Is covered by lhe
rotatlni/'servlce structure on pad 39-8, as workers
r ontinul&gt; to ready the orbiter lor flight ( UPI)

61 - hrm Equipment
12- Wantltd to 8uy

Public Notice

Tuadtiy. Auguot 111, 1189.

LOOKING 1\'0R AN ANGLE - Photographer
Mike Br-n lhld~ lhroogh mud as hP and other
pllotocnPIIers · ~arched lor camera angles to
~nl lhe 'Jaunchjollhe space shultiP ( 'olumbla.

IV 1~\1111:~

Public Notice

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The 8011rd of Edu-ton of
1lte Meifll Local School Dlo·

I ,;r rt• Su p,i11 1~~
&lt;"•

t 1 - llotp Wtn1od

43-Farmt tor Rent (,«-Apartment tor Rent
45- Furnithed Rooms

Get Recaltc Fact

54- Mile. M•ch.ndiH
5&amp;-8ulding SuP,pli•
&amp;6-Pet:t tot s.a.
57- MutiCIII Instruments
11- fruh:t • Vev••ttt•
51-For s•e or Tr•de

[ 11111 1 11'11111~111

edl - Give.wav and Found adl und• 1 5 wot"• will be

•7 IIOinllnt ._only -

51 -Houeel'lokl Goodl
52- Sponlng &amp;J- Am.,..

3- Annouc:em .. t•
4- Gnr•..-.y

•New • Uted Tlreo
OC:uotorn .,._ Banding
•OIIChenOM
•G-oJollo

oGanoniCh•alo
Maln1-ct
•CornputerRed l o l -

Painting

992-3897
St. Rt. 124

FREE ESTIMATES

Mlddlepon, Ob.

949·21

the Hf beloro 1he od to ,. Nn. Sollry ·ond Commlulon. Soncl • 1 ·
......., tdttfon • 2:00 b.m. ruumt to lox 001 c/o Otlllpoll• , ~ · ,

,_,_ - . y

MOIIU
HOME, PAll

odltlcin • 2:00

1 12S Third Avonuo,
::;Gal=ti:;:•P~•H;;;•;,:•&lt;11'1~4-::513=1·-::---:- •

DollY Trlbu~

"'
llchlt11n Baflotnlonl, Utargo lltclolf Ofllco RooOIIII""IOI lit- ;
clalhiil, ....... ...... ftiro 1!11 Clort&lt; - . . . ~ · · ..
.,...., 01loli. IlL I&lt;M'fllll rodlo Phftlcton Ofllco !o~ tar • ·, ..,
_ _.... .........
ootl - - lndiYiduol' wlh
•
... hla: ,.,.
i · ~ ·'·
p.lll. _ , _

oMoblle Ho. ·•

......rferw!

Part4

=-~·.:...".":#.== ...,=~n-:::=
-..,.. ihdl:i '

eMobllehume ·

Rent811
•Lot Rent...

- . TUoo.

-

Pt.• P""-aant

992·7U9

· &amp; VIcinity

If, II letlh

-Hn '"' 11 .•
llovi!tl ..... ...,.

Hoo•-• wy.

!Nut to Hill Top

frt Ill - .
fumlttn,-r,.- .

:-:l-- ,

liMO=
.
.
,
.
,
. . "=..... ."'

..'::,= ;, :;.

mtnoloaw. ......

If~~~~ P -....

;:.y·.
·--

.

•

1
. .~,.
.. .,

"-roy.. ,,,r1'{_:;

'

.f

. . . ~ ..

••

I,

' .

.,

II
'

·-

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~

... ... ..

�~

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel
11

POOl8foy- Middleport. Ohio ·.

LAFF·A·OAY

Help Wanted

Lany I . Mil*, Solllo 041
~J,

I
.
,
I i' l
1, /111/1

c......

14S Plno It Oolllpolle,
ott, - toillna o~&gt;~&gt;tlcltlonl tor
INck drlftr, inuil bl 21 oncl
ho.. ~ drlvtna .-d. H

·-

• I

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

44

31 N. Second, U!ddltpon. 3
t.c~room houtt $125. Nice
locltlon, Fourth St., Middl•port.
Rent or buy on land cOnlract.

-~~~~ lncl Chrtatmu? Wort&lt;
,__nllourl,~

eon 114-11!12-2403 or 614-11112·

ol Lloyd homo Docoi,
.......... '""' lifta, Chrlot .....
-

2780•

dooontlofta. F- hOD kit. F,..
. training, po.,.. oupplloo. No colo
lecdng. No dellvoring. ~~ ·
boalllng ,...... 114-441-tuW

45

Dlono Sondoro.

Roome for rent• WHk or month.

Slortl"l II $210/mo. Goiilo
ttorol. 14-441-9580,
Stooping roomo wilh -king.
Aloo trollor opooo. All hOok·ups..

care Haven of Point Pleaum:,
•ppey in pti'JOri, ·ROU:• 1·Box
328,111. Pn, 111. 12 N.
Port limo poeltlon opon Coro

llt•- "-'t•• ....••• '· ··~.... h-..;,,,..,.. ............

Rproctudlve "-hh n.cf1 of
womon 1nc1 tomrn... Muot bo

Do

M"uat bt able to work Uncljr
g1.1ldellnee With minimal auperoo WIU do houH cleaning 8nd
'fllalon and have euperlor wrtNII tprtna clli.nlng. Han rettr.n-001,

lrlnapcHtatlanj

~75-r.!M oo l"lt-7554.

w11kdawo houra are to ble11pee' ted. Slltd retuma and two

B I

to 21

employment roloroncoo
Plannod
Poronthood
ol
BouthNII. Ohio, 398 Richioncl

US ness
0
rt
It
pp0 Un Y
AVenue, Athens, Ohio 45701, by
INOTICE!
Auguot 11, 1981, EOE/ESP,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommtnde thtt you do
P•rt ~i mo Pllliont S.rvlcoo ...._

3 bedroom brick houoo with

by

1

ond

rocordkHpln1. ooolrr, notlon•l origlnh rollglon,
andlc•.P·
Must bt able to wor1e under ur or ptl~lcar

rvWon and han auperlor verblll
communication Milia, RequlrH
nft1bl1
tl'llntportatlon;

IIOxlblllty of llmil ond oblihr 1o

t1n1- 114-742-3033.
br;

hom.

~

bldroo~:n

2

New houle, 3 bed rooma, 2
balM, de~lt and relerencas,

111 Alto
·
'

•g•3e••·

~ ~

Atfrlg•alor and ltove fur·
nlahed, tully carpettd. $350. per

42 Mobile Homes
.for Rent

2 bedroofn trailtr, rou PlY
3M4.
utlihl11. Dopoolt roqulrod.
All naw 3 br., home locatld on Phone 304-175-2535.
At. 160. Priced to move. 114-

Mull leave

Chy tchooll 8 mi., from town on

6ti2G.

11582.

1071.

44

Apartment

w..k. W.I.C. couneeling. Melga Friendly Rldgo Rd. 114-251- '-:-:-:--fo;..r_R..;.;.e~n,;.t- - - , COunty Hulth Dopt. 614·ill2·

~

potod. Nlcl Hltlng, loundrr
llolililoo ovoliobto. Cilll14-11112·
3711 FOH.
1::::::-:,..-,-:---:--:-- : -

Nice 8 room home, 2805 Birch
A'llnut, 3 Hdroome, torm11
dining room, family room. :J04.

238 Firat Ave., 1 br., riverview,
kitchen , with
stovt
1:

We hav.loba that must bt tilled

Immediately. Positions available

32 Mobile Homes
In:
•welding
~echlnlca
•Eiactronlc. Benetha: •Good
for Sate
pay
and
benefill
•Paid
nkK:atlon •Advar'ie'emenl opo. 12x55, 2 bedroom. Good conportunltln . No . exptrltnce dHion. Cllll14·11112·15858.
necuury. Age 17·24, in good
htthh, with
high ac"hool 12lll5 3 bodroomo, ' 2 i&gt;otho,
dlplomo. Coil 1-i00-282·1S84, $4,500. 304..75-2722.
Mondoy-Th,.odoy, 8o.m.-2p.m. • 1978 14x10 Elcon• located on

X·RAY TECHNOLOGIST WAN·
TED.
Full-time . w11kend
position. Excellent bantlirs and
competitive ulary. Appllcant:a
send reaume to or call;
Emogene Slmma, Director ot
Radioi09V, Ooctore Hospital of
Neleonv1111, 1950 Mt. St. Mary
Or., Ntlaonvlll•, OH. 45764.614-

753·1931.

5870.

Now Havi Vacancy • For tlderl~

man or woman. Ezctlltnt care.
304~75-7541.

· Wt ctre for elderly and tlan·
dlcapJ)Id In our home. 211 yeara
tXPI'rltnce. LPN on Cll\1. Low
lncomt home. Caii814·012.P73
thtr 7:00 p.m. tor more lntor·
matlon.
Wt take cart of elderly men or
womtn In our home. 20 year•
ex!M'ritnce. Havt rtfertnee. Call

on)'llmo 114-949-3(114.

·

Will cart tor t1d1r1y. Have
relerencn. St.t.667-3402.
Will ttkt

washtr/drytr hookup, porch,
many txtrae. Sell Of rM furnished or untumlahtd. 114-185-

can

.

1983 Trlumptl, · 14x80, 2 bidrooms, 1 loti blllhe, ctntl'lll air,

Baby sitter n.ldtd for 3 pr•
achoot children in my home In
Raclnt area. No' week-enda.
RtferencN requlrtd. 614-992·

of eldertyr.roon

rifrlgerator, 11180/Mo. plu.
dtpot;lt. Utllltln .&amp; reterence, no
pliO. 814-4ote-4i26

t:B::E:C:.\7:UTI=FU""L~A==PA:C:RT:=:M=ENT=s=-=AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 5S8 Jockoon Plko
lrom $1 uvmo. W•lk 10 ohop •
movloo. C•ll814-445-2568. EOH.

Ba11mant apartment. $180. per

month. Ail utllltln pold, fur-

nished. Suitable for 1 or 2

aduha. Phone 614·992-2545 or

614-'i1411-2S28.
Stat• Rt. ~ n..r Mtrcii'VIIIt,
price roduooa to $7500 114-258- Fumiohod 2 bldroom •pt,
t9n or 114-256-1521..
reflrtnct and aecurhy deposit
requlrtd, New Haven, 3C)4.882.,
1979 Mid.. Motor Homo, 28 11.1 32117.
12,000 oct..l miloo. Vory gooa
condition. $15,000. Wt•Un- Fumlohod Apt. 18r, $210,
ghouM portable. dllhWIIhtr, utilltiH pd., 701 4th, Golllpoilo.
nka new, $100. Phone 304-882- 1!114-44&amp;.4418 after 7 p.m.
2484.
.
Fumlohod Apt., 1 BR, $:125,
1080 Na•hu. 14x70, 2 bedroom, utiiHioo pd. 243 Jockoon Piko,
2 bath, gardln tub, ce,.rat air, Goiiipollo. 814-448-4411 •hor 7
dlohwnhor, olcml, llroploco, p.m.
3919.

Situation
Wanted

12

"2 bedroom apte. tor rent. Ctr·

Now Lllllng.Portorbrook-3 br,
brlck-2 botho, LA, FA, Kn, hut
pump,
lll1lround poo~ny
School•$70,000. 114-245-1375.

LIRuo Hill, DON, 614-11112·
8. EOE.
VOCATIONAL TRADES
875-37S7.

Wanted. Reliable woman to live
In and cart for tldtrtr, coupl•.
No drinking, no smok ng. Must
be responsible. Call 614-992·
5335 or 614-e&amp;5-3561. Noar
atoru and hqspltal.

:c304;..;....;-8;.;8.;.2·.;.38;.;72.;.·~-----

-

_4_9_.,..-F_o_r_L.,...e_a_se.,.....,....,._ _,

woohor/d""' 1110 dock, undorpinning. Yory aood condition

on renttcf lot. 304.675-ZCM? or

614-367-7120.
1965 CIO)'lon. 3 bOdroom 1 112
both. Uko now. Will toko poy on
114-949-2901.
1961 Redmon Soction•l 2B'x58'
3br., ·a both, CIA1 mull bo
moved. 814-446.85SII4 after 8.

$5G5. ReeHnett 1225 to $375.

L•mpe $28 to $125. OlnttiH

$109 ond up to $411. Wood
table w~ cholro $2115 to $795.

o.. u $145 up to $375. Hutch..
$400 &amp; up. bunk bade complete

drawer chnt $69. Gun C.binllt
8, a, 11 10 gun. Baby mtttruse•

monlh plu.o doposli. Phono 114- $35 a $45. Bod lromn $25,
992-5028 or 114-11112-3627.
Qunn Slzo $35 ,. king lumo

Wlttmar) Rtal Estate, lh4-446-

R.D. onty wanted. 1a hours per

vi

$50. Good Hlection ,o f bedroom
eult11,
metal , cablntta,

hoodboordo $30 ond up to $65.

90 d•y• llmt at ct~~ah with ep-proved credit. 3 mi. out Bulav/lla
Rd. Opon t A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon,
thru Sat. Coli 814-448-0322.
Btd 8 mo. old. Qutt\n •lu. New
cond. $150. 614-446·2297.

Broyhill loVHHt and c:halr. EK·
cellent condition, 304-882·2887.

County Appll•nco, Inc. Good
ueed IPPIII:ncet, T.V. ••••· ()pen

8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon ..Sat. 614-

448·1699, 627 3rd. Avo. Gol·
lipolio, OH

Dteorallve drapery rod. Antique
whH• 116.. wd. Traverse rod

whllo

108" Pr, drapos·med

grHn, antique etaln,

len&amp;d,

good cond. L•ngth: 60" Width·
101. Prlco $75. Cali ohor 5 p.m.
814-4411-2802.
'
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathen,

dryt~rl,

refrlgerttors,

rong11. Skop Al&gt;pll•ncoo,
Uppor Rivor ·Ra. Blolde Stone
Crolll Motel. Coll614-441·7388.
king alu water bed, dining

room table, couch and recliner,

614-387.0304 ohor 1;00 PM.
SWAIN
AUCTION 1!. FURNITURE 62
Olivo St., Ooiilpollo. NEW 6 pc.
wood. group, $339. 'Living room
aultn Slgg.$599. Bunk beda
with bedding, $249. Full slzo
mattr•• 6 foundation atarting

$99. Rociinoro otartlng $9!f.

UESD Biela, dressers, bedroom
ault11. Dtskl, wringer waahar, 1
complete line of Ulld tuml!ure.
NFW Wutorp booto $35.

Workbooto $18 &amp; up. (!Uool &amp;
ooh too.)614-445-3159.
Tapper g.- range I couch. 814-

441-4437.

Upright Sta,. Coldepot frHZer,
work• great, $200. O.B.O. 304-

875-7637.

w..

UHd appUanc11.
hera,
drye,., rang••• rofrlgeratort,
mfcrowave owena. Ken't Ap-

piionco, 217 E. Second St.,
Pomeroy, 114·992-5335 or 614965-3561 .

Houae CIHnlng,

eaperlenc~

or 17li·MI7.
Plono--. In mr "-. Jor
Dr. - . Boglnnlna 10 lntor,...loto.lt-1-oadil.
.
Roof polntlfta a _,,., tnller

---

.....-,_-

-.,.~.': .
tlmolo.I1W

.JUST TI-lE EXCUSE I NEED,

WELL,JUST REMEMBER, WilEN

ClolliCK •.. ALL TJ.lE LAMPS

I{OU'RE READIN6, TJ.IE LI6J.IT
SHOULD COME. FROM OVER.

IN OUR HOUSE ARE ON
.TI-lE WRONG

'(QOR LEFT SHOULDER ..

whit teens can do to get
their parents to listen and
understand.
(!) Raiding Relnbow Q
•!Ill Happy Dayo
!HI Facto 01 Life
(JJ ~rtoon Expreu
8:05 (I) Allee
·
6:39 e (}) (IJ) NBC NighUy Newa

~ SportoLook C0 :30)

IIIIl A~ Newo Q
Q

r

.L.......TH.;_I;..T.;..,E;;....RT-11
. . . I Is I . :;!.

Some parents have a hard
time deciding on a name for a
. - - - - - -..............., new baby, · but some people
T R AB ET
have rleh .
..:;,;,,...;..,1...--1
Complete 1ho chuckle quolod
. -"·--'·'--'-'-.J.'-...1..
by lilling In the missing -d•
L -.L
you dovolop from 11op No. 3 below.

1--,..;,,.....;.;.li,.;..;..lr;-.

•

PRINT NUM8ftfP I~
LETTERS
. ·.

•

UNSCRAMalf FOR, .
ANSWER . .
.

n.w, wood •plltttr, 1 alcklt btr

mower, aulky for Grlvtly trac.

tor. Bolo VCR. 614-446-4148.
2 exterior

door~~

tor

ult.

Bovoiod glooo ponoio. All
hordworo lncl..,.d. Woddlng
ring oot Blto fl. 114·742·2831 .

2 Iota for eale, Ohio Valley
Mlmory Gardena. Ma1onlo

13 On Sl8ge
p.m.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jock!OOII Avo.
Point Ploooont, 304.e75-2013, 10.
gol HI up 114.11 ond 10 gill
comploto $43.211,
.
G.-n ond SuppiJ Shop-Pol
G""""lng. All broodo. All •yioo.
lomo Pol Food Doolor. Julie
Wobb.. Colll1~23t.
Porskooto $1; Dowo @j_~ p.,. 1111 Ford Thunderbird. Good
roto $25 ooch, 114-4441-711111.
oondhlon. Coli Tom Anderoon •t
et4-·SS41ol1or 1:oopm.
Rogul•r Coekor Bponlel pup.
pl.ot/$160. auw cotor. 114-2451122.

Diviolon. 614-245-5290.
38 Inch goo rongo, good aon- fiT
Musical
dillon. S75. Quorf coMing )oro,
~ngo. $4.00 dozon. Coll814-llll2•
lnstfllmems
7215.
Air· conditioner, 11 ,000 BTU, 110 IundY Fluto, uood n.. montho.
voltage, 1150; 17 ft. canoe. Excoilont oor~dnioft. $250.. 114S200; aa• r11np top. SSO; extr· 11112-5188.
ciso blko $3(1. PHono :W4-ti71- Eloc. gullor &amp; •,:gnllor lor oole.
2B08.
A·1 o~opo. 11 4 -3111.
Antiquo Solid Cherry Dook lndlvlduol gukor
le$125; love Mat, Brown or tan, boglnnorolo Hrlouo gultori•.
$50. Biook bor $10.00. h14-371- Bruniclrd
Muoio,
JoW
2484.
Womolor ln•ructor, 114-448.
Baby lttme, ewing, crfb mat• 11477,11mnod oponlngo.
Ireta, baby aleepen~, p8nta, Klmblll plono lor oolo. 2 ,..
atlirtl, Jaettl and rnor., tlu D- old. 114-742-31 :ro.
12 mo, !104-875-4840.
Klmboll plono 11&gt;r ••••· Exooliont
Big Dokoto Form Homo buln on oond.
Sttoo. et4-44d-tm.
your lot, $24,905 &amp; Up. Cllll1 ...

885-7311 .
Big Dakota Fa"" Home bultt on
yourtot, $24,995 &amp; Up. Coil 114-

888-7311.
CAMCORDER

6:35 (I) Carol Burnett
7:00 (]) Father Murphy
PM Megezlna
'!) SportoCen1er (0:30)
(I) IIIIl Curren1 Altair
Cll (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour
'
l1ll • I!}) (IJ) Wheel Of

58

FfUits &amp;
Vegetables

880 Pon11ao Trant-Am, 301 V-8

hord-lop, . tuiiJ loldod, gor...

eap, UIOOi 114-441-2350.
1180 Trono Am,

7~1000

mil..,

YI'J good oond, N,OOO. 304-

773.efl87.
1N1 Toyotoluroel~ lop;d., AC,
lit&amp; • ... codot, 10
ridl~ mowor, $200. 114-4411188;
1M2 Ponlloc Phoonlx, OU1o, olr.
.... lnoldo lncl out. 88,000
mil.., Noodo onalno-'&lt; $110.
114-441-~ or 114-4-711.
1912 block Trono-Am, T·1'=
Bolgo lntorior, . . . llrw "
11oroo oyotom, PS, Pl 1• PW, Air,
,.-buln onglno, runo uko now.
Lookolhoijl. 114-44.11-1711.
11183 Dod~ Omnl Hotchbocll,
good aonahlon, lllonderd •lr
oond., whhowolla, :104-117W11f.

Buno, $t.OO por llulllol. Ploll
YHS. Shorp, your own.. T~~'t,htS:.f""ioncl
• .
elum. carrying CIH, btttery olgnorcolllt
u.-•·-~· 1M3 Ford EXLJJoOOO mlleo on
ctlarge. Mon. Stll rl.w I12K-' Co ......
n.-.. tomot- · -· now -or.
080. 114Socrfllco $700. Phono :W4-t75511U.
~~:'":0:.rt.!~t-~CX:..t'"s':'~i 247-33811, •-lnao.
FOR SAL£ • Uon81 Tralnt, 304- Golllpollo on St AI. 7.114-288- . 1e&amp;4 Iuick Rlaol Umllodl PI,
8835.
.
. PB, AT, ·~~ P"W;"IIIr, pluoh ntol'675o4t03 '"'' 5 p.m.
lor AII/FM uc. cond. $4200.
For Salt - Concrete and Plutle Conning to..1- lor 11lo. 114-448-112711 oftor 1:00.
ltptlc .. l'tkl. All IIZII. RON B~ng own contolnwo. 114-247·
1114 Flroblnl, v.e •utom"!!!&gt;,
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Joel&lt;• 21111:
PS, PI, tiH wheel, air, AMII"M
oon, OH. 1•800-537·9528.
F-~ eonnlng pooehoe. 814etereo oauette, low mll•ge
For nit. Creflaman 41n. Jointer 448.S772 a•er I p.m.
.... 000. 11W88oii3GI.
.
In excellent condition. $100. Clll J&amp;R Produce. Corn, tornal~,
1114 Pontloo 1000; Good con814·985-4117.
cuoumboro, bllno. 814-tloU- dnlon.
114-11112~148.
Going out of buelnHa .. ~. 1313.
1111 Chrplor LOBinln Turbo
Cako ond condy -oupplr. ohop,
COupoc kiodod, •lr, out'!:L PW,
Harrioonvliio. Savo up o 50%. 59
For Sale
tooka • Nne excellent. 1-0,000.
Salt atartlng Auguat 1·15. 61 ...
or Trade
742-3033, .
Will ·
- trode-ln. 814-4481711
or 4411-7104.
1171
5
opd.,
BuboN
will
trode
Heavy duty wacker brt~ dirt
tamper, 5 yte. old. co.t new for hof'll8 or cowa. 114-367- 1N5.Chryolor !!ow Yortcor, good
ohopo loaded, :104-1175&lt;2722.
$3,000. Nil lor $1,000. Coiii14- 0t83or814 4111111.
367-7S25
.
1t111 Chlvlttt for ule «trade, 1188 Do!fgo Chrogor. 2.2 onalne,
Jenny Lind bod, box op~ngo for trucka of equal nlut. 114- 5 opood. · 41.000 mlloo. - .
114-74241113 - · 1:00 p.m.
and mttlrut, $40, half. bed S25, 256·1445..
Coal·wood burner with load of
1111 PIJ-'h Turlomo. 42,ooo
wood, ond rock, $60. 614-11!12•
mi.L_~c, PI, 2.2 "'·· ounrool.
3559.
13,._. 114-S81-1513. 9d oftor
Farm
Suppl1es
4p.m.
Mowlr, Sears 16hp garden trec•
tor, 42 lnoh out wlth .enow blode
11H Chovrotot llpoatrum, ~
&amp; L1vcstock
&amp; ohalno $550. 30W7U898.
- . rod s opood, 11on1 . , _
drtw, 147:000 mlloo. 0no _,.,,
POOL FOR SALE, 3 112 ft. x 15
-..omlcll 41 mpg. 13500. 304fl ., new liner, attrttr kit, pump 61 Farm Equtpmem
1112-3200.
and ladder. Sura. $400. 3CJ4.
578·2853.
1450 Ollvtr Trlclor, $3,150. till Lo- S-tO, olr, _ ,,
V•nnoor round hoJ biller AMIFII llpo rodlo, 2 whHI dr.,
SWIMMING POOLS $888
12,7N. 800 Ford troctor $2HO.. :ro,ooo mi., oxc. cond. $11,000.
Summer epeclal on 81 poole. Ford Front.. nd lol!dor. $495. 114-441-1144.
.
Hugo 1h31 J&gt;OOI. Hugo dock, 814-28M522.
flnce, tilt• &amp; warranty. IMIII·
111881/2 Nl-n plck..,P 5 opel.
latlon &amp; financing available. Ctll 188 MF troelor wnh 880 NH1 Am/FM Btoroa, oporto whoolo,
round btltr, 18750. Lilt mod11 ora.. oond.lt ohorp. $4700. 114241n: 1-800-345.0941.
550 Oilvor with 5 ft. buoh hog, 448-11278 • ore p.m.
String trimer, chain uwa, lawn U1H. 114-288 1122
mowers all on salt during thl
1117 lonnovllle LE. 56,000
Gallla and Mason CountY' Fair. 400 golon Muoiior Stoln-lon mil•. PS, PI, Air, POWir Win.
Sldoro Equipment, 304-t75- IINio Milk Tonk. 11 W8HI4f.
dOWII, POWII' State, AM.fM
7421 .
Couotte/Equollzor.
Excoilonl
1100 oorloo bockhoo, Spt. hlloh, oondftlon. Coil 114-11112-1085.
Whoolcholro • now or uud. 3 fill •m•ll or modlum .... troc- ovonlnao.
whetted ·electric. acoot•. Call tor. $2500. 114-112.eGII2.
Rogoro Modicoi,I-BOO.e88-2104.
Pontloo Tro-Am, Mor·
Now Holloncl I ft hoyblncl, Qohl 1117
"""'•
30S onglno, fully
grlndtr mlzer, both ua aond, looded.T·Tap,
31,000 mlloo~ oxc. cond.
55
Building
304-273-4215.
$1S,OOO 114-44&amp;-4S41. ,
Supplies
Now Hollond Slurry Monoour 11111 Nle- Sontrl XE, 4 oyl.
Block, brick, _ . , olpoo, win- Sproodor, uood 1 rr., 18ft. Pott· loW mi., clttn ltke over
dowa, llnttlt, etc. Claude Win. Silo • unlooder, uud 1 rr.,814- po-nto, 0111 Brondo Few limo
1: dly. 114 ••• 8407. .
tars, Rio Grondo, OH Coil 114- S81-11141..
245-5121 .
Sow oholno to In ony - ... buy QOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcloo
ono a• ono lrM drowlna, ... mo lnlm 1100. Fonlo. M-deo.
tnd Maaon Cauntr talra. lklera COrvott11. Chovyo. Su=.
Pets for Sate
Equlpmonl, 304-41711-7421.
Buroro Guide t.eos.ee7
,
Ext S-10119.
Livestock
63
3 goota, 2 nonnllo 1 ftlly, 2 II 72 Tfllck• for Sale
135 ·1 poloa, 1 II $40. li 4-388- 11tl Chevy half.ton truck.
1085.
pnvlouoiJ odvortlood Ill St2oo
ATTENTION Haroo Ownoro, linn. Prlco MW n-lonobio.
Point Pluo lo ntw canylng lick. 114-4411-2301, or 114446--.
Point PLuo, 2411 .lockOori Avo., 1118 Chovv plck.up, huvy duty,
Point ......... 304-4175- Juot ....,...k, lronfmloolon. 114.4084.
2411484.
Chlokono lor Sole.. l1 o pleco.
I14-3117-G113 orl14-441.e41G.

e (})

..--... c

ID !Ill WKliP In Ctncinnatl

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1H7 Cri..Crwt cabin crulur, !
manr thing• n•tored. $5,000. ~

11.W45-1122. .
•
1112 17 ft. Btoreroft Tri-Hull '
Boot. 125 HP, Evlnrudo Engine,
complete top, new upholaltry. · ,
$3500. ·.Coli 114-2811-1311 ollor .
7;00p.m.
1175 Trl Hull llborglou 18 ft.
boot whh troltoi, eo fip Evonr.udo
motor 11 200. or trodo lor 4
wheeler o1equal val•, 304-882-

FRANK

•

•

~CII•AT~•JT
.., .

TAte~: ~fspoN$•B•LITY
fD~ MY oWN L.IFE '?

~ ..

•. 1$

:1231.

'rtiAr LE-61\L?

tHI Chockmoto 20 It wllh 235

hp Johrwon, axe concl, prtce
$10,500. 304-1171-34S8.

22 ft. CUddy Cobin Cruloor, 228

hp v.e, llborglooo~'!j oxc cond,
oocrillcl$f,500.
59-1542.
BOA'i'ERSII Mlrcury Mtrerulstr,
-lollot Proclo1on Mobilo
Mtrlne, we coin• to you. 1-11425WII71. Now ond Uood P•rto.
Boa boot·1e&amp;7 Londeu II'S"
wfth Morcurr 35 hp motor whh
_ , trfm ond outo oil In)*
lion, Morcurr Trolling moto'l

THEN GET

OUTATHOSE

BRITCifliS AN'
INlO SOME
U:"VES!

Shoreline trall•r plu• more. AI

In good oondltlon. Coil 814-1922770.

.

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories
1117 Buick Rogol porto, good
gl. ., lnt.,lor, n4tlator,
fonk, ;105 onglno with lronoml•
76

a••

lion, 304-871-711L .

1ta1 Chovr onalno 221 v-e;
runo, high m11oo10 1!0.00 firm,
304471-7137.
POOR lOY TIRES,

~

mt, '-! onc1 oAnmont $18.15,
4,000 ...... uood tlr... .....

,,......... tt.....

Uood plcku• boda, Ford 108088; Chevy, Dodg•!.!'!_ort or ioftl,
304~75-2288

or 11114288.

=.,-.,--,..-,.,....,-...,.,....,...,..
1!185 Com.,.r. S2 ft. Skylark.
Llko now. Awnlngo oil •round.
610011. 114-37W124.
Services

Home

\M'I.IT A MINUTE .....
I'LL qQ HCW.EAND

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondltlonol lllotlmo guorontoo. l.ocol roloron- lumlohod.
F- atlm11111. Coil collect 1·
114-237-G468, d•y or night. R o
a_ • r • 8 a • • m • n 1
Wotorproollng.
·
Folly TIN Trlmmlng1 _-o..,-tu_mp_

C:.ET~ srAPt....ER.

FRCM r-o,.v ON, I 11,..L-

Kt=EP THINt$6 UKE
THAT 70 M'TSEI-F.

removal, eall304-871-f3a1.

Ron'o TV Sorvloo, -lollllng
In ZonMh oloo HrviCing moo1
other branda. HoUM CIITI, 11eo

oomo oppilonco ropolro. WV
304-57t-2311 Ohio 114-448-

.2454.

Rot•rr or coblo tool drilling;

Moat wollo compilllod umo
Pump taiM arid urvlce_

:X:

1111-3802.
SWEEPER oncl oowlng -hlno "
ropolr, po~o. ond oul&gt;l&gt;lloo, Plok
up and d.llnry, Davr. YacuYm
Cletner,

OM

half

mila

TRUST ME··

WHAR'S MY
Llfi'Le OL' SOY
TATER?

HE'S

IN

THAR

a city councilman .
9:00 8 (}) (IJ) MOVIE: 'Six
.Agalnot The Rock' NBC
Monday Nlghl At The
Movloo (2:00) C
.
(!) Amerlce'a Wilelemesa
(I) DIIl MOVIE: 'lnflelell!y'
ABC Monday Night Movie
(2:00) t;l .
Cll (!) Ame~cen Ma.atero
This film draws-on material
from Truman Capole 's last
unfinished work. C
IDl 18 I!}) Murphy llrown Q
1m Larry Kint Livel
(!J Prlnte nma Wrellllna
9:30 iiDl lall2l Dutgning W-n
Julia defends ·dirt-eating '
Southerners. (A) Q
at VldeGCountry
10:00 (]) 700 Club
(!) Mutual Of Omaha's Sptrll
Of Advan1ure Mt. Ev~rest
American First
iiDl .1121 Newllert Q
I!J) Evening Newo
10:30 (I) Major Lalgue Beoeball
Cll Countryalde Concerto
Schleswig-Holstein Festival

McGill emerged during the
1950s and '60s as one of the
mosl prominent and
influential Southern white
opponents of racial
segregation.
IDl ID I!}) Married To The
Mob A housewife has
problems with her mobster
husband .
1811ll .Bent1y Miller
QIOnSIIga
11:00 (]) Bltmen Curse Of Tul

up
•

S.ptlc Tank Pumping 'IIO~Goilio
CO. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jockoon, OH 1-IOO-U7-8521.
''
82

e

I!}) (IJ) Jeopardy! Q
1D [)) M" A·s•H
1m Croaallre
!BI Benoon
®Crook a Chaae
7:35 (I) Andy GriHIIh
8:00 (]) MOVIE: Tha Dancing
Maotero (2:00) .
8 (]) (IJ) ALF The Tanners
suffer through Thanksgivi!!IJ
with the Ochmoneks. (R) Q
(!) SuperBouto Ali vs Jerry
Quarry from Las Vegas, NV,
1972 (A)
CiJ IIIIl MacGyver A
woman from MacGyvers
past returns, intending to kill
him. (A) Q
Cll (!) Nlltlonal Geogrephic
Special Follow a pride of
lions during a typical Aight in
the African jungle. C
IDl Ia a2J Kate &amp; Allie Food
critic dies after panning
Allie·s sushi. (A) Q
II) [J) MOVIE; Rear Window
(2:30)
tQ) PrimeNewa
~ Mo)or League Beaaball
(!J Murdor, She Wrote
13 Neohville Now
8:05 (I) MOVIE: The C..undril
&lt;rrooalne (AJ (2:25)
8;30 e (}) I!)) Hogan Famjly
David uses Sanoy lor a sleep·
deprivation e~periment. tA)

~ Dawn'• Elrty Llghl Ralph

,Qoorgoo Crook Rd. 114-4480214.

a til USA Today

IDl

I!}) Eel lleiJiey Jr.
Show A former host of a
children's TV show becomes

Campars &amp;
Motor Homes

81

(Q;3Q)

g ID

WANTED TO BUY· 4 ·1200 x SS
x15tl- :104-117S.11311.

79

tQ) Monoyllne
!BI Anely Qrllfllh
(!J Miami Vice
®Tap Card
. 7:05 (I) Anely QriHIIh
7:30 8 (}) Family Feud
(!) MaJor League eaaebalr
·
Ma11zlna (0:30)
(I) Entertoi&lt;!ftMnt Tonight

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

.. (]) Ill • IIl IDl Ill I!})

Cor. Fourth and Pine

® •I!}) Newa

G•iilpollo, Ohio
Coil 114-446-3881 or 114-441-

.· •',""' '·•
Graph; c/o thlo.....,.piJI)er,

Plpo h In or Plpo It out. C.W.
Davison Plumbing &amp; Tronching

91428, a...t.nd;,OJl 44101-3428. Be
sura to lt... raW zodiac llgn.
VIIQQ (Alii- II lapL , ~~~ This Ia a
good day lo !Mile .., e11a.rt to put yaur
monetary afiM In bel1w bel8rlc8.
You'll be
clevilr and reeourcelul when yau work wtth flnlltCIII

44n.

draiM • Wiler finN, 11,....~

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

P.O. Box

ut.,....,

flcNree

·

LfiiiA .,. . ..II-Oat; Zl) Your Ieeder·
II1IP qudllie . . likely to be more evldalit 1o your IJMFIIIWt t~ wtll be to

yoU todlly. II ot1tera ,.._.. yau to held
up IOIMihlng, they wiU heW valid ,.._
IOIIt lor dollll 10. ' •
ICOIII'IQ COIL ....... •1 To the~
sull oblllllll', you might ....,.... lo 1M ,
Alii- 7, ...,. '"
qullll!ld JnUIM tl)dlly, llut In relllty,
'tour lima end etlartaln the year ahAd .Jotl'U be 111n1 at work wllhln yourMif
will be pmwlly dauottd lo till ld- trying to put yaur lflllrl, In proper 0«1er
lilllnw.
.
• co ••rtof.,aut ~. How­ lild
IAGITTAMIS
(Now.
Zl ho · 11) ,
- . t11M1 PI c1q will not belllllltll, be- Group., ~mora,_ ~
rour 01111 of
,..,.. ... ...,.. to .,..,. your
111 today. You ~ · ~ bllna
..,.. IIMIIICIIOn 11, 11u1 today tl*lecttvlllll CIOIIId 1M more tun thin
UUtl.
. . . . . . "11\ IWIIyau'l~to-of CAPNCGNI
(Ilea. .........11) Tnateed
~-----to,cw,.... ..
of trlepplng- ot11n 10 acttleue yaur
- - . "'- . . . . elltatfvlly. MljOr obi II,_ today, yau'l be bath COttlld-;
t~~~neu 1 . . lllleadlor LtO rn
.... llldlllaflnll. Thlllnllyonlookn:
1or JCU Aatro arap~~
'
P I • - • todlly.. MIITI 11 to Altro- are ltPI to ~A~I•J!I yaur
. .rlortt.

=-~J:Z ~=::c'-=
rno

=· . . .

""oom-

.

Gmt Arnoricln BIHblll
Quiz C0:30)
•!Ill Araenlo 1111111 :00)
0 MoneyHne
(!J Mllml Vic41
at You Cln Be A SUtr
11 :30(]) llltmitn Pharoah·s In A
(!)

AQUANua(-.211Ftlb.11)Anlmpor·
tantarr•....-•1 yau are praM)IIJ InvoMid In OM be bel1w ed!l*ed lo your

IMMIII. Focua on impr01181'1141ntund try

to !Mile your •IQIIBitlonl todey·.
~~ (IIW. 211 •r all 2111 You're
lllcely to~ your grat8et rewards
1odly 1r0m llldMvort ar wmuree you
th8l'e with OIMrt. Retuma tar w1111 you
do on ycu _ ._,.,.,. • gratlfYina.
Alllll (...,.. ~·April 11) A IOOMiy ,
knit..._ mlgltt be tormed today with
1 pnon yau'W , _ teemed up with
btfoq. It thould work out IUrprlllngly
....

.

, TAUIIUI (Apltl 211
.....
..,, 2111 The 11tltuc1et of~ will hiYI 1 Ctltlell
elllct on you todly IIICI mekl yaur Job
llthlr.....,arherdtr.Da.lyaucento
keep .... ~lleldr In 1 hiPPY lremt or

mlncl.
.
.
•W • (illr IWIIM 211) a.c.t• you
, _ . , 1111n 1111r1no mor1tt1 with

lrlendllllely,rt'l....,•hllplllltiiCtlcTn
an1t1na1ng rour popullrtty. n:1 • flOOd
ldealo}'I a 11~ liang t h e - - .

CANC . . . ..,...., 11J YIIII'IIIIYI
the lbllp 10111r to - taa1y clonilalc
..._ 1n1m a1 tldltllldlltlll will mike

. you 1 good m Hllator. You might be 1
"II~~ t 10 llelp •••••lllaltottl epert.

·

Rut
8 (}) (IJ) Tonight ShOW
(!) SportaCinter C0:30)
(I)CitHriQ

(IJ~n.lollrnel

eCJJ
111JIIIA

~nee;~

CICily

BRIDGE

w..._ .•

.7

NOII'b'EE

By Je. . lacllby

level. Tbll dell Js taken from Menhall
Miles' new bocill, "Bridge from the Top
- Book n· (Tamarind Press, 2054
Tamarind Court, Sin Benlardlno, CA
92404; fl2.95 jncl. sblpping). Miles
does a good job of disoecting play
problema from the expert's point of
~, bi a way that average players
uaderstand . .
Oli West's ace of spades. EUt 5Jg.
lllled with the king, encoliraging a dill·
lllOIId llltlft. Welt led the jadt of diamonds. Decllrer won dummy's ace,
certain that the kJng was with East.
He led dummy'• beart eigllt, flnelllDg.
Welt dlscarded a IIJNide. Anolber belrl
f~ waa followed by the ace of
belrts, as West let two more spades
go.
Nen deellrer ruffed hls remalnlnc
IIJNide, as West played the jack. Now a
dialllOIId from dummy. Eut won the
kinl and returned a dialllOIICI. WHre
was the qaeea of clubs? Eut preeumably bad five spades for bll opening
bid In that suit, had followed, lo tlrie
belrll IUid llltown with three diamonds; so be could ·have Ollly two
clulia.. Altbougll that mede It more
likely that the elub queen was with

•..

1-'1-lt

WESt

EAST
• ut .Q 1811

.AJ6S2 .

,

•ttu
•ttu

•Jio u

• IUS

.51

.Q •

".

SOOTLL

•AQJtu·

.,.52
.Q74

Vulnerable: Both
Deller: Eut

••

-

...

Nwlll

Eon

2.

••

l.

Allpua

Opening lead: • A
West, deellrer knew that Eut bad :
opeoec1 the biddJD&amp; in first polltioo ·:
vulnerable. Wauld be open will! K-Q of .
l!pltdellllld two red tlnp, and notblng
eJ.e? You have ·to know your oppo-

nealllo a - r that iplestion, but bolll :
Manball Miles IUid I 18)' DO, Eaat ·
needs the club q - for bll openlnit ·
bld, ud we would plly bim for II ud
mike oar five-heart c:oatracl
··

'

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS .
48 Wee
1 Prison
DOWN
guard (st .) 1 Not hollow
8 Canada's
2 Reproach
- leal
3 Jon Hall
11 "Th~t Quiet
TV role
Man"
4"- Tu,"
co-star
Verdi aria
12 Uae
5 Warning
13 Capacity
cry
y t d8 •1 A
14 Of late
6 Craze
•• er Y
n1wer
15 Crete
7 Greeting 24 Take notice 35 Like some
mountain
· for Cato 28 Mal de cereals
11 Greek
8 Rough up 27 After
36 "The
tetter
9 "Diamond
prinlemps
Chamo"
Ul ·- Rosen·
"
28 Curtain
star
kavaller·
10 Cathedral
holder
39 Priestly
19 Warning
city
29 Omen
vestment
cry
17 Bewltctu 31 Sandra
40 Trouble
24 Blend
· 20 Auto raee
or Frances . 41 One Mrs.
25 Ceremony 21 - transit 33 Corundum
Sinatra
21 Deserve
gloria
34 Robert 42 Sheep
29 Expectant 22 Shoeshone of British
lick
lather,
23 For each
India
44 Sheller
at times
30 Collar
style
31 Toto or
Checkers •.
e .g.
32 Certain
forest •
creature
34 Male swan
37Came upon
38 New GuineaJ=+-++Iown
39 Odels'
"- and
Sing!"
43 Choice
45 Suitor
41 Not at all
47 Like
some eyes
117

.

. ·'

.

'

• &lt;

.' :
.•

•

,,

..
'·

··'
HC

HJIHUUHBRM

FU

HC

~RCVUO

Cll'R••a
• clln-.rnment Tonight'
IIII'MIItlltlllow

UFM
ZVCMG TROORC ·
· y .......119'• c.,...._tet IF YOU CONFER A
BENEFIT, NEVER.REMEMBER IT; IF YOU RECEIY£
ONE, NEVER FORGET IT. - CHILON .

.0'""'..................."-

.,

caYPTOQUOTE8

ozv

e[J)TwlllgMZONewtNigllt

..

One letter slands ror another. In this sample .A is used
ror the three I.'s, X ror the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and ronnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dirrerent.

YRM

'

'•

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

uvco

(0-.30)

··.

DAILY CRYFI'OQU(1fES- Here'1 how lo work It:

JHC

YIIIIJII 11 Frcm Manhattan
Beldl. CA (T)

.

•

.JI754
.A IS
•ttJit7

Eut·Wellt did weD not lo double af-

ter forcing the opponents lo lbe five-

o.....-Tanlllhl

CtoOil a Chi..
12:00 (]) MOVIE: The Danctna
Mllllra(2:00)
ro
Pro IHch

I' l
IIIII II I I

Lanoet - Error - Nymph - Waffle - OTHER
One womm~ shopper to another: "I don't change with the
fashions because Hgoaa In one year and out the OTHER.''

eiD Pat Blllk Show
IBJ Mllgnum, P.l. Who Is Don
Lull Hllllllna
·

a

I8

SCitAM-LITS ANSWJU

!HI Jelleroono

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
12 cu. ft. O.E. upright frHzt,...
llko now condition, lllondord
defroot, $125 finn. 814-446-7721.
1873 Yom•ho 250 Enduro llko

-.u.

I!})

tQ) ShowBiz Tode~

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
Rool.ntlol or commorcl•l
wiring, n• urvlce or repakL ,
Llooriilod llloctrlclon. Ridenour
Elodrlcol, 304~75-1711.

,.,.,.,. . . Phone 304-171-4442

I

Run Dell&gt;y

(!) 3·2·1 com.ct

Schools &amp;
tnstfUctlon
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, S29 Joekoon Plko.
C•ll 814-4ote-4387. Rog. No. 8611-10558.
wanted to Do

PF..4Nf1TS

(I)

0151.Momlngo or Ewonlngo.

.1 8

low 10 fonn four llmple

&lt;D Power Of Chol.. Learn

.

In my home. 614-843-516 •

15

(II) I!IWI
(!) " -

.

814-'i192·74.7ll.

••• or box aprlnga full or twin

5;00.

NurH
potltlon
a~allable.
Exc:enant ulary,
benefita, tuition relmburaernent.
n on bonua. Call tor an Inter·

. .1 '

a IIl o •

• (]) Ill

Cl .......... ...

IDl 181121 CBS Newa Q
Ill ({Jl Love Connection

Two trailer apacn, Rovtt 1

0 r::ra.c-:..,::r.wJ. ::

8:00 (]) llonllnza: The Loot
. Epl~u ,

'1'EAiol, OUR TEAC"ER EXPECTS
OS .TO READ FOUR BOOKS
THIS
., WEIRD, loiUH?

Amlques

•

,.., ...., Ci/?Q
PIIILII P\lil

EVENING

Route renttla,
33, North
of aalt•.
Pon'lerQy,
Lota,
pa~rt ..
Call

Nlco lhrH or lour bedroom $78, finn $88, ond $98. OuHn
houo• In Pom•rov. Spring Avo. nto $271 &amp; tip, King $350. 4

arM. 3 br., homl 1
112 botho, OKC. ooncl. 20 ••roo.

Re;_lst•ecl

••

7

COunlrr Moblio Homo Pork,

$230 lumlshod plus utliltloo. with maltrooo S:Ztl ond up to
Soo ot 37 Uncoln. 814-448.()i68. $~95, baby bodo $110 Motlrae-

leborotorr. No ohlft worll. -ly

ln perton. Medical PIIZI, . 203
Jackaon Pllwp, Gallipolis. 8:30 to

Z•nhh 23" T.V., eolor oonoolo,
wood coblnet, aood oond. $1110.
f14-441-711S4 olior s.

AUG.

rn llody Elactric

bitha formal
baatmtnt 1nd

Modular, 3 br., 2 bath. a 112 + Tralltr nlet clean unfuml1htd
ocrn. $27,100. Mudaock. 814- refwtf'ICM ~uJrecf, Ro11tt 1 oul
Locuot Rood an right, :W4-tl7544f.l081. .

phplcltn"a

,

MON.,

m'S~n:;~~~~~0-4ao, 445-

tonoey $325 ptuo dopoolt. ·114- S2751mo. Utilnloo oirtro, ,.,.
448.e!S88.
.
roq'd. cau 814-4ote-442&amp;

2 br., AC, furnlehed, betutlfuf
388.e111.
river v~, In Kanauga, Fo.ter'a
By owner, 3 bedroom home In Mobile t10rM Pari. 114-«8uppor Monkor Run In good 1602.
oondhlan. Coil 114-'ii!IZ-31133.
2 br., mobllt home In Porter,
F1rmtr"t Home Admlnlltf'ltlon depooH roq'd. You poy 111
Bouthooll OH, · 398 Richland ioono ovoiloblo. Approved - · utilltloo. 11WI8-1604;
Ave., AtheM, OH 45701, br tlorw.l now an diaJtlay. Franch
Aug~at 18, till. EOE/ESP.
C~ Mobile. Ho-. 814-448- ThiH br., troiiO&lt; lor ront. 114251·1:W7.
1 0
Port4imo modieol lob tochnlclon 1,,.,.....,,..·-.,..-,,--:-:-:-:-,~ul~d

ciHnlng :~ · old, both white,
ilko now.
11&gt;r bolh. 114-441-

1400 oq.ft.

MCurlty dtpoeh nq•ct. s14-4,g. ::
Vlrf nicoopaclouo 2nd floor, 3
1189,orlt4-446&amp;IQ.
br., apt. untumlthld. atove •
3 bl:·• home on .Rt: 141 In Ctn• refrlg. historic home downtown

tl'llvtl together agency office u
Mldad. 'Evening, Saturdly end
wNkday houl'll aN to bt expected. Send resume 1nd two
employment
retarwncta
to
Plan!"'ld
Pa,..nthood
of

for. fully

·:r:···

blockt from campua. No
amoklng, drinking, drugs oi" '2 or 3 bedroom trailer or house
H11l11. lhl• Ia educational ut• In Maeon Arll, 304-773-9197 or

Nice 1 br., houu euttablt for 1
l1rge lot, Mid Way Drive. New or 2 ldulta. $225 untumlahtd or
Hoven. Good Cond. 3(14-773-

5881.
nina centel'll. MuSI be ••·
perfenctd In medical office 3 br. hom• tor aale,
ownera,
practlcn and client rtlatlona. 2 m . tram town. cal anytlm•
RHponalbla position tor • 8t4-448-m5.
maturtl Individual with good
Judgmsnt and
to . 7.99% · fixed rale mortgag•
npr-lvo hooHh
o ol money available, 2.75 pointa, 30
woinln and famiiiH M1.11t be yr. tenn. 'Lolna are av1llable on
well
organlud;
have 1 ,.lr and aqua! baala
d.nonttrattd competence with rtgardlnl of raca, color, an.

g1.1ldllnn with minimal auper·

114-'illl2·5144.
1N1 Hondo C70 PoooporL 755
miloo. 114-'il!l2·775t . 1284
lt., Middlopolt, Oh.
1112 HoriOJ 8portotor. 800 rnll11
on robuiH motor. $3200 OBO.
114-247-3381, ovonlngo.
11184 ·Hondo 700 Shodow. Uko
nn. $1100. ·7,000 JIIUI mloo.
114-8811-3171.

The Deilv

Television ·
Viewing
M

111.

Corner Stcon and Pint. Ample

Merchandise
dining room
gorogo, no polo; S4oo. month,
bullnna With peopl4t you know, 304-67S.3030 or 675-3431.
'
Household
1nd NOT to Hnd money .HouH for ront In Chntor. 51
tt'lrouQh thl mall until you hav1 Phono 114-11112-7252.
Goods .
[
ln-flglllod tho ott.ring.
NEW HOUSE, 3 bodroomo, 2 1-· LAYNE'S FURNITURE
.,.,h.. dtpoa/t and · referenc••· Sofat 1nd ch'altt pi' iced from
Locolod In Mt. Alto, 304·8!15- · $395 to $!1115. Tobin $50 •nd up
Real Estate
31178.
to $125, Hldo-o-bods $390 to

women and flmlllu. Musl be
well
organlztcl;
tva 31 Homes for Sate

llgura

COmmoralol

Loculi Rood on •lght, 304-87S.
1076.
3hRio Qhorondo lllluhde~-Cglglrlol to2 -4-7-W-.n t-ed-t--R--t-• ••• mo w.t ot~r rl.
a
0 en

!.,.p~ng contu~~n.!. ~~!

fluibillty of tlmo ond oblihy to
n -. Evonlng,'Soturdor ond

travel to other agency olflcn ••

ttns=

batteJY. Excelltnl

ExCihnt oondltlon, muat

2217.

. Hour~~ Q-1,

new

oondHion. 1113 CR480 Dirt Blko.

46 Space for Rent
'

=--.,.-::----..,.-...,.-...,.
41 Houses for Rent

will
"!S""Jzod;
hovo Will do bobyohtlng In my homo
d-rot compot- wtth onr ••· 1:00 AM.a:3G Pll 314llgura oncl '""""'kHplng. 875-2742.

domonllrotod compot.,.. with
liguroo •nd rocordkooplng.
Port~imo P•Uont S.rvlooo ...._
olellnt 10 work In llmlly pion-

I

t==========-r.iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiirt

moturo lndivlduol wH·h good
)ud1mont 1nc1 HJ!OIIIvlly to 18 Wanted to

moturo lndivlduol wnh good
Ju.dgmlnt ond oononlvKy to
roproduelln hoorfth nudo of

/0

"Tlwre &lt;ll'(' thilt"S
that tnolle,y
,.,
t'an't huy, hut Muriel giv('s it.
IIPI'
· I u•st. s IIOL ,

:~':.~~.~~nS:.~.;ot~

llitlant to work In famly pia,...
nlng ctntars. Must be ••·
ptrtenctd In intdle1l office
pflctlcn and client relatlona.
Rnponalbl• poehlon for •

crutal.

·

Houoohold lurnjohlna. 112 mi.
Jorricho Rd. Pt. Pl.... nt, WV,
ooii30W75-1450.
Rofrlg. 1root lrM • otovo oollo

53

~·

11111
Hondo.
CB750.f.
Wlndlhioid, 11101 guord, trunk,

Call after '2:00 p.m., 304-m.

Ho- l.oUnclrJIHouookooplng,

nllablt

New/Utld

Motorcycles

74

8151 , M111on WV.

apply rn PINOn1 Rt. 1 •lox S21,
Pt. Pn. Rl. l2 N.

communiclllon okHio. Roqulroo

N' CARLYLEI&gt; by Larry Wript

Volley Fumll...
Now oncl,.od lumlturo o.nd opJIIIoncoo.. Coil 114-441'7172.

Furnished
Rooms

Fu-hod oHicioncy lilt utliitioo
!&gt;Old, ·lhlro both. 1111 Socond
Avo 114-448-3MI
·•
•

hlllna lor d otifto oi&gt;PIY In
- · lion-Sun. 2-4, iol.-tor
Soni11J Wendy'o 310 Sllwr
Indio pt..., Golllpollo, OH
45131, EIOIE. '
Port limo LPN. floloblo ohllto,

m

Household
Goods

.
PICKENS FURNITURE

2
oportmont, Golilpoilo
Forry, WV. :104-1171•2548.1
Upetah ·lptrtmtnt. 3 bed!Win,
lvlng rwm. ldtchon1 both, Stso.

Heod-lorbooktoochool

"l"a cent... Mu• be II·
porlincod In modlcll olllco
practlc11
1ncl DHillon
cUent rtlatlona.
Rnpontlblt
for a

51

'*'""""

I 1'1 1/ I I

II III i

• I

Apartment
for Rent

.. ~ay-MidCnapclrt,
- ... .____ . OhiO

Monday, August 7, 1989

•

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.

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QRJJRCTVHKOZ

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.

Monday. August i. 1989

POilWXIY-Middleport. Ohio

10-The o.ily Sentinel

.---Local news briefs.;;..-_ ___,
Continued from page 1
Ga!Ua·Melgs Post of the'~tate Highway Patrol.
JohnS. Codner, 59, was cited lor failure to control alter his
1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo hit a 19110 Chevrolet Citation owned ._.
by Lo.r t S. Kimes of Racine and a 1975 Chevrolet 1'!ova owned by
Stephell M. Kimes of Racine. Codner was traveling east when he
lost control off the lelt side of the road, hitting both cars In
succeulon.

Sq~ have

20 weekend calls

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to 20 calls over the weekend.
On Saturday at12: 01 a.m. the Racine unit went toStation2 for
Robert Black who was taken to Hol2er Medical Center.
At 9:12 a.m. the Columubla Fire Department was called to
Route 32 for an au to fire. The vehicle was owned by Charles
King and received extensive damage.
· :
·
The Middleport Fire Department went to Beech Street at 9: 32
a.m. lor a tractor trailer lire with a ruptured tank.
The RQtland unit at 2: 55 p.in. was called to Meigs Mine No.1
tor Jim Fink who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
and at 3:50p.m. another Rutland unit went to Salel'(l C!1nter lor
Harley Nutt who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4: 13 p.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Amerlcare lor
Bertha Baker who was transported to Veterans, and at 5:23p.m.
the unit went to the Sheriff's Office .for Sherman Altrip who was
taken to Veterans. At 6:54p.m. the unit responded to a call on
Cave Street forAvonell Pettit who was transported to Veterans . .
The Scipio Fire Department at 8:25p.m. went to Route,681 for
a structure lire, ·and at 8: 28 p.m. the Olive Fire Department
responded to an electrical lire on Route 124.
The Pomeroy unit went to Forest Run at 8: 40p.m. for Charles
Werry who was taken to Veterans.
··
·
· At 8:57p.m. the Syracuse unit went to Station 3 for Eric Hayes
who was t·ransported to Veterans, and the last.call on Saturday
came at 11:16 p.m. when the Rutland unit responded to Route
143 lor Cletus Arnett who was taken to Veterans.
On Sunday at 1:03 a.m. the Middleport unit went to Be'ech
Street for Tammy Watkins who was transported to Veterans,
and at 2: 16·a .m. the unit was called to Second Street for Greg
Hayes who was transported to Veterans. .
At 8:30 a.m. the Bashan Fire Department went to County
Road 30 on a structure fire lrivolving a barn at the Paul Ord
farm. The Chester Fire Department and Racine unli. were
called at 8:31a.m. to assist. the structure burned to the ground
and there was farm equipment In it. Ther~ were no treatments.
The Racine unit' responded to a call at Elmwood Terrace at
4:22p.m. in which Diana Tucker was ta.ken !~Holzer. At 5:09 .
p.m. another Racine unit went to the corner of Broadway and
.
Vine for Maxine Philson who was not transported.
Finally, at 8: 56p.m. the Tuppers Plains unit was called to Old
No. Nine Road for James Carter who refused treatment.

In Glendale In Marshall County regatta spectators alike. The
Arkansas.
By Unlled Pre~~~ International
bad Its pho~ !iervlce restored storm whipped through the city
The thunderstorms produced
Showers and · thunderstorms
about
8: 50 p.m. Saturday after In the afternoon, brlefiy decreas· ·
soaked mucll of the nation small hall, damaging trees and
the storms forced the sheriff's tng vlsll)lltty across the Monon· .
Sunday, llerce winds whipped power Jines near Hopkinsville,
department
to take over emer· gahela River and buffellnl a bot ·
parts of Kentucky and New York, Ky. There also was damage from
gency
calls'
tor
several hours.
air · balloon at the Sheraton
and a storm le!tabout11,000West thunderstorm wind gusts at
A
spokeswoman
for
Ci:P
TeleStation
Square.
Virginians without electric Dundee, N.Y.
pho~ In West VIrginia, mean·
Oil
Saturday,
.at least one
Nearly half an Inch of. rain
power.
·
while,
said
a
strike
by
about
2,800
person
was
kllled
and two other
Rain covered a wide area from ~oaked Hornell, N.Y. , In 10
Communications
Workers
of
people
were
Injured
by lightning
New Jersey across eastern Vlrgi· minutes.
Amer.tca
union
members
slowed
In
severe
weekend
thunder·
Lightning, sl;tshtng rain and
nla, central New England, New
down
recovery
from
the
storms.
storms
that
took
the
roots·
off
heavy winds lelt as many as
York ' northwest Pennsylvania,
Rain
and
storms
lashed
Pen'
buildings,
caused
electrical
.
Kentucky. Tennessee, western 11;000 southwestern West VIrgi- nsylvanla Sunday, soaking spec· blackouts and cloSed roadways
North Carolina. northern Ala· nians wit bout power ·surlday.
Driving rain and high winds tators at the Pittsburgh Three around OhiO.
bama, .northern Mississippi, NeRivers Regatta· as the state
Killed was a musician at Kings
braska, northeast Colorado, whipped across much of the state readied for a cool front that wlll Island amusement park, Thomas
western Kansas, Oklahoma , late Saturday evening, downing wring out humidity and beat over Cahall, 3~. of Covington, Ky. Ohio
north-central Texas, southwest· powerllnes, telephone lines and the next few days.
authorities said Cahall was .
ern Texas a11d southwestern trees. ThecltypoUcedepartment . The cold front triggered thun· struck by llghtnlngwhllewalklng •
derstorms, Including a brief to his au tomoblle In the em. :
doWI)polir that moved Into Pitts· ployees parking lotln tile Warren :
burgh and showe.red sailors and County facility.

46 Chicago traders facing
indictment could be witnesses

.

.

Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
Reds thump

•

Rain, thunderstortns soak nation
•

.

,

NATIONAL WEATHER S!:RVICE FORECASl' TO 8 AM E!)T &amp;:8-'9 :

CHICAGO (UPI) - Prosecu· lions to tax fraud and lying to
•
tors preparing lor the racketeer· federal Investigators. They are
!ng and fraud trials of 46 Chicago the result of a 2 ~-year under·
futures traders are recruiting cover FBI Investigation at the · ·
witnesses from among some:100 Chicago Board of Trade.and the
other traders still facing indict- Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
ment, according to government the largest commodities exchanges ·In the world.
and defense sources.
The Investigation came to light
Their cooperation, and ·the
In
January when FBI agents
usefulness of their testimony,
handing out subpoenas to ·
began
could determine whether they
are Indicted, or the severity of traders.
At Ieast150 traders were called
the charges, defense lawyers
before
the special grand jury,
said.
which began hearlrig· testimony
"Deals are being made," said
in late January. Forty·slX have
.'
a lawyer whose firm Is representbeen
Indicted,
but
prosecutors
ing several traders. ''The U.S.
11nd defense lawyers said the rest
attorney's office has made it
are not necessarily off the hook
known that It Is shopping, and
and may still face action.
with the leverage of racketeering
ProSecutors made It known to
charges, it's a buyer's market."
•'
defense
lawyers when the grand
De tense lawyers had been
t ; ;I SNOW
RAIN
~SHOWERS
:
jury investigation began that
skeptical prosecutors could win
they were considering applying
an indictment under the racket·
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
-'Static
Occluded :
the racketeering law, but most
eerlng statutes, which allow the
Map
shows
mirimum
t9ml)erature!
At
least
50o/o
ot
aMy
shaded
area
1s forecast
defense lawyers dismissed It as
government to sel.ie ail profits
to r!Ce;ve l)reCif)ltatiO~ 1o6cat'9&lt;1
,
.
. UPt ,
what one labeled an "arm·
and assets acquired as a result of
WEATHER MAP - During early Tuesday, showers and
twls ttng" move .
.such illegal activities.
thunden&amp;orms
are forecat for parts of the southern Plains.
But 18 of the 46traders Indicted
But now the threat Is very real,
Showers
and
tltunderitorms,
are po8sl'ble for portions of the
Aug·. 2 were charged with racket· and both defense lawyers and
western
GuH
.Coasl,
'
s
outhern
Intermountain Region and the
eering or racketeering conspi· sources In the prosecutors' office
southern
Atlantic
Coast.
UPI
.. ·
racy. It convicted, they could say they expect it to encourage .
The Rutland Firemen's Auxiliary will hold a special meeting
lose their homes , cars, bank cooperation by traders still lac·
at 7:30 p.m .. on Wednesday evening to continue plans lor the
accounts
and other assets, be- ing Indictment, as well as those
·blQCk party to be held In Ru !land on Sept. 2. A variety of
sides
facing
20 years in ·prison already indicted.
activities are being planned for the even I which will take place
By United Pr.e ss IftjernaUonal
the lower 70s.
and
fines
of
up
to $250,000.
·E ight of the 46 defendants
at !he ·firehouse and In the vacant lot behind Bank One, Rutland .
Extended Forecaat
·
Soutlt Central ·()hlo
'.
''They
certainly
upped
the
ante
agreed
before
the
Indictments
Tonight
mostly
clear
with
Wednesday
through Friday .
branch. ·
with those indictments," said were announced to cooperate
near-reco~ lows In the low 50s.
Fair and gradually warmer .
Northwestern University law with the government. None of the
Winds northwest 10 to 15 mph. through the period. Highs will be:
professor
Ronald
Allen,
an
exeight,
perhaps
not
cotnclden·
Tuesday.
mostly sunny. ·High 70 in the 70s WedneSday, in the
· ~~
continued from page 1
pert on racketeering law.
tally, was charged with
mid· 70s to low 80s Thursday a~d
' to 75
The
indictments
contain
racketeering
.
.
to
consider
a
company
refused
Tu~sday, partly sunny. High In . In the mld·I!Os Friday. Lows will
tng," Jim Carrigan, spokesman
Their agreements were part of
be In the 50s.
for New Jersey ~II. said Mon· demand that workers begin pay- nearly 1,500 counts, with charges
r.anging
from
racketeering,
settlements
of
separate
admlnls·
day. "Direct dial calls will have ing for part of the growing costs
fraud and commodities law vola- tratlve actions brought against
no problems. It is only when· you oi medical insurance.
them by the Commodities Fu"We've never had an Issue that
need some kind of assistance that
tures ., Trading Commission,
stuck out like this one. They've
you will have problems."
.
.
which oyer,ees the,natton's com·
Negotiators for the Commum· been adamant and we've been
By Unl&amp;ed Pres• btterna&amp;io.-1
Huron County 1hter~tlon and
modities exchanges. 'the settlecation Workers of America and adamant," said Richard Howell,
At least seven people, inctud·
struck a truck.
ments were announced in Wa·
a business manager of IBEW
some locals of the IBEW de,: '
lng an unattended Toledo Infant, · '
' 'Satiarday
Shlngon less !hail an hour after
Local2324.
clared a strike early Sunday
were killed In traffic accidents
Sandusky: Michael R. Graves,
the Indictments were anno)lnced
The CWA and IBEW unions
against Bell [rtlantic. NYNEX
aroulld Ohio this past weekend,
21, Wakeman, killed when the car
in Chicago.
represent
some
52,000
workers
at
and Pacific elesis telephone
An Ohio Highway Patrol spa- In which he was rtd!ng struck a
As many as 20 traders are
about 60,000
companies ov r wage and heal!~! Bell Atlantic.
keswoman said Jane Kim, l, was tree along an Erie County road. ·
HAMll..TON, Bermuda (UPll
rumored
to have struck deals
care Issues. ~ fourth company, striking employees of NYNEX - Hurricane Dean sideswiped
killed Sunday on ~ sidewalk in
Piqua: Scott L Kuhlwein, 23,
with prosecutors to provide tesBellSouth, rea):hed a settlement and 42,500 workers for Pacific Bermuda Sunday. ripping apart
Toledo when she.was run over by . and Rhonda L. Kuhlwein, 19,
timony in the case thus far, and a
Telesis.
and averted a ;strike.·
an automobile that was backing Circleville, collided with a truck
hotel roofs and washing away
government source said others
Bell Atlantic serves New Jer· beaches with 105-mph winds,
Phimb said the CWA broke off
out of a driveway.
when their car, driven by Scott
negotiations were under way.
negotiations early Sunday "just sey 1 Pennsylvania, Delaware, torrential rains and pounding
The patrol Jogged four more Kuhlwin, ran a stop sign at state
at the time we&lt; were formulating Maryland, Virginia, West Virgl· surf but s~aring the Atlantic
roadway deaths Saturday and Route 48 and state Route 158 In ·
a final offer." He said the nia and the District of Columbia resort !slant! a crlppJ.Ing direct
LiceJll!e
issued
two Friday hlgbt:
Mia~ I County.
company was eager to return to and has 14 million customers.
Night
Masslllon: RObert A. James,
Friday
The strike by the CWA and blow.
the bargalnjng table with
AnnaL. Rousbdba Whitehouse
Norwalk: Shane E. Steffannl, 24, Navarre, a passenger on a
There were no immediate
IBEW was the first against the reports of injuries, officials said.
negotiatiors.
Restaurant , )002 E. Main St,
17, Norwalk, and Tony E. Cole, motorcycle, was killed when it
"Baby
Bell" companies since a
"We'd like a chance to put that
Pomeroy, has been issued a D-5 17 Norwalk, killed when the car went into a ditch along a rural
Bermuda's southern and west·
offer on the table," he said. "The nine·day walkout against ern shores were hardest hit when
liquor permit, according to a · In .:Vblch they were•rld!ng, driven Stark County road, ejectlrig him
CW A needs to name a time and NYNEX in 1986. It came two Dean's eye passed just 20 miles
news release from the Ohio . by Steffannl, failed to yield at a and the operator.
years after the federal court west of the 2l·square·mlle resort
place."
Department of Liquor Control.
Gaye Williams Mack of the order that broke up the Bell Island. Bermuda was last bit by a
These new Issued permits met
J8C
CWA in Washington. D.C .. how- Telephone Co.
. hurricane In September 1987
requirements, as well as
UP!)
Th
had four of six for $1,000.
Some 64,000 workers at Bei- when Hurricane Em Uy caused quota
all legal qualifications based
CLEVELAND (
e
ever, said the offer to return to
upon the findings of the depart- $15 mUUon Ohio Super Lotto
the table came as a surprise. ISouth telephone company, $60 million in damage.
menfs
thorough Investigation of
jackpot will go to the holder of a
"That doesn't jibe with what I've based in Atlanta, reached a
Severe damage was reported
tentative
contract
agreement
both
the
appUcant
and
the
single
ticket that matched all siX
heard," she said.
Sunday at the Mermaid Beach
Saturtlay
.
B'ellSouth
emlate
intended
permit
premises,
ac·
numbers
drawn Saturday.
YOUR HOME
Union officials said the talks
Hotel, where manager Jon Feld·
ployees,
who
serve
Louisiana.
cordill!i
to
John
R.
Hall,
director.
The
Ohio
Lottery
Commission
with NYNEX. the tetept10ne
man said the beach was swept
CAN HELP
said one ticket has ihe numbers 1,
company serving New York, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, away and one-third of the roof
7, 9, 10, 18 and 23.
YOU
Massachusetts, Rhode Island. Georgia, North and South Carol· was ripped from one wing of Bank awarded money
Sales totaled $$,303,855 for the
vermont , New Hampshire, ina . Tennessee and Kentucky, rooms. None of the 140 guests was
in Meigs court caees
Super Lotto, and . $1,136,520 for
Maine and part of .Connecticut, will get an lmmedtale 4 percent hurt.
.the
accompan lng Kicker game.
YOUR
broke down when the unions raise and bonus pay.
"The beach has completely
Citizens National Bank, a div·
Wednesday's
jackpot
will
start
disappeared," Feldman said.
CAR.
islon of the First Huntington
over at tbe.$3 ml!ll.on mark.'
Roofs on many homes were National Bank, has won two
Continued from page 1
There were 376 tickets with five
_::_::.:~-_:_:~----- damaged in Sandys Parish on the cases .(n Meigs County Cou{t.
Having Allstate Home '
of the siX correet numbers for·
western
extreme
of
the
15·mile·
Insurance
could save you up to
significant
result,
is
a
channel
Judge Fredrick Crow awarded
$1 000 each and ~5,239 that had
comes to these crazy people, I
tong,- J ·shaped· Bermudan ~ ar· the bank $5,989 In their case
15%
on
car
insurance! Call a'bout
Arthat
is
absolutely
reliable,"
fo~r of six corect numbers for $75
don't pretend to predict."
chlpelago,
Sgt.
John
Instone
the
Allstate
Auto Advantage.
against Neal Bonecutter and
But, he said: "I believe th~ ens said.
each.
said.
Arens named the International
$5,701.ln a case against Timothy
In the Kicker game, one person
· mood Is toward negotiations. You
4
C. Tackett.
has the correct combination of
have to have patience. It might Red Cross as the likely conduit
In other court news, a divorce
t614i 441·1104
take one month or one year. for any . demands made by
922766 for $100,000.
has been granted to Ke!Ue ·
Seven tickets had five .of six In
Whoever hasn't got the nerves HezboUah, which already has
Subj¥C"t W lucad ~avw.ilw.hiUt)' •nfi IIUIIhfH·IIt (un:.,
AII1W.k! lll!l~nlnf'l ' CumJ)IIny, Norchh"M•k. IL
Hospital news
Jenkins and Steven Jenkins .
the proper order fo.r $5,000, 105
and the patience will not achieve Indicated that it wants Obeld
Veterans Memorial
released before any negotiations
Ke!lie Jenkins bad her last name
any results."
Saturday
admissionsnone.
·
·
can
take
place.
·
restored to her malden name
In an interview with ABC's
Saturday
discharges
Dou·
which is Stewart.
"This Week With David Brink·
glas Enoch, Elza Gilmore.
Two dissolutions of marriage
ley," Foreign Minister Moshe
Sunday
admissions
Cletus
were
~ granted to Benton T.
Arens expressed a slmUar view
Arnett,
Pomeroy;
Tammy
Wat
·
Dunfee and Connie Jo Bibbee
and said:' "There have not been
kins, Middleport.
Dunfee and Lincoln E. Smith and
Dally stock prices
any negotations so far.
Sunday discharges - none.
Shirley A. Smith .'
"We have Indicated what our (As of 10 a.m.)
position Is . ... We've not yet · Bryce and Mark Smith
received·a response to this, and I of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
All
. liNG SID
would say that the thing that
we're waiting t9r, if there'sgoing Am Electric Power ............. 29%
'
6 PACI....;,12 OZ. WIS
to be a serious contact and some AT&amp;T .. .... .. .. ..... ..... ...... .. ..... 39'%
Ashland Oil ........... ............ .38%
Bob Evans ....... .'.: ... ... ..... ... .. 15%
Make dean's list
'
Charming Sboppes ........... ...15%
Three area students made the City Holding Co .. ..... .. ... .... ... 17~
SCcmAD
dean's list at Mountain State Federal Mogul .... .. .............. 23~
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ... .. ..... .. ...54%
College for the spring quarter.
AIIIRAVOIS
In order to appear on the Heck's ... ........ ..... ..... .... ........ ~
Ul OZ. CUt
NON IIIMNAIII-6 PACI 16 OL
dean's list, . students earned a Key Centurion ... ........... .. ....123,4
grade point average of 3.5 or Lands' End .... ...... .... ..... ...... 30~
fOI
above. On the list along with the Limited Inc .... .. ..................35'%
•
.
Multimedia
Inc
.............
..
..
106~
program In which they are
'
OFEJR EXPIRES AUGUST 12, , ...
enrolled are Cathy Spender, Rax Restaurants .. .......... .. ... . 2'%
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... .. , .. .... 16~
medical assisting, Long Bottom;
992·6669 .
Angela Damewood, travel· Shoney's Inc ....... ...... :.. .... ... llil
217
NORTH
MIDDLEPORT;
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By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
"There's no reason to let the
town run down because the
people are too lazy to clean their
yards up," commented council
member Larry Wehrung at Mon·
day night's vlllage council meet.
lng regarding the improvement
of property in Pomeroy VIllage.
Council passed a motion to
appoint someone to work in
conjunction with Pomeroy Pollee
Chief Jerry Rought . This extra
person, perhaps someOne al·
ready on the. police force, wol!ld
enable the two·person team to
survey the village and write up
the PI"?perties that need improve·
ment, even If this means simply

keeping the grass cut and keep·
ing up the· appearance of one' s
property.
A bid of $1,950 was accepted to
repair the slip on Wll~s Hill. This
will include the grading down of
the area and the implementation
of a drainage ditch on top of the
hill which will take the water
down from the slip area.
· Also passed were ordinances to
replace the culvert that caved In
by the Whitehouse, and the
implementation of switching
over from Columbus and South,
ern to Oh to Power lor threes IJ'eet
lights in the Welshtown Hill area.
· A lengthy discussion evolved
around the way payment Is made ·
~or the water and sewage service

that Is located at ~e Pomlno.and renegotiating the ·resolution that
Subway structure. As of now the states the terms of payment was
businesses are paying one Jump dls~ussed by council members,
sum for a year's service to the and council member Bill Young
VIllage of · Pomeroy , which in · felt that there was already a
turn pays It to the water company stipulation in the resolution that
for the businesses. This way of would deal with the problem, if it
payment causes concern for were to come up, of one or both of
Jane Walton, village clerk, be- the businesses moving out.
cause If one or even both of
Council heard three requests
businesses were to move out, the from the Pomeroy Historical
village would not be,reimbursed Committee for exterior repair
for payments already made. This and malntainance to Main Street
action could possibly be consl· Pizza, a new addition to an
dered as ail unintentional ml· existing structure on Spring
shandllng of funds , and this is Ave., and the addition of exterior
what Walton wants to avoid. She skiing to a residence on Pleasant
will confer with the state auditor Ridge. Members voted to fund ·
to see what steps should be taken. the · purchase of a 1972 pickup
The possibility of rewriting or truck for the Pomeroy Fire

The Gallla·Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol charged
Shirley A. Durst, 37, Syracuse,
with failure to maintain control
and driving under the Influence
after an accident at 6:35 p.m.
Monday on SR. ·124, 0.5 of a mile
west of milepost 24, near
Minersville.
Troopers said Durst lost controt other 1971 Ford LTD. The
vehicle went off the right side of
the road, struck a guard rail,
then went over an embankment.
was heavy. ·

Be st rr,'k e... _ _ _ _ _ __

·Seven die on Ohio highways

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'

Department In the amount of ~
$1,000. The truck will be used to
transfer equipment In to brush
situations when the need arises.
Betty Baronick, council
member,statedconcernoverthe
holes in the roads in the village.
Delay in repair is being caused
by the weather, and numerous
amount of water leaks that
occurred this year. The roads
will be repaired as soon as
possible.
Council member Brian Shank
noted that the village should
consider purchasing It's own
portable pump. This was stated
because of the recent unap·
proved borrowing of the fire
depattment's $3,500 pump. VII·

lage adrn!nistrator John Anderson asked permission to borrow
the pump from the department
but was advised not to use the
pump. According to Shank, the
doors on the truck where the
pump Is kept had been pried open
and the pump used anyway . ·
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler stated that the village
should buy the fire department a
new pump and that the village
would keep the pump that Ander·
son borrowed.
Council member Bruce Reed
showed to council the plaque that
had been purchased for Kerm's
Corner, in memory of long time,
well respected Pomeroy bust·
Continued on page 10

Syracuse motorist cited by
state patrol following mishap

- - - - - - - -·weather

NOW

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewiPaper

Council planning sunrey for 'cleaner town'

Firemen's auxiliary plans meet

11
• k pot
One ticket gets $15 mi ion

1 Section. 1 0 Pages

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. August B. 1989

Copyrighted 1989

-

•

fW

Hurricane
sideswipes
Berrnuda

Clear tonight. Low In mid
50s. Wednesday , supny. High

HEAVY DAMAGE - This 1971 Font LTD
saa&amp;alned heavy damage In an accident Monday
on SR. 124, near Miners~lle. The s&amp;ate highway
patrol charged the driver, Shirley A. Durst, 37,

Syracnse, with failure to maintain ·control and '
driving under the Influence. Durst suffered minor
visible Injuries. She waa taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admitted for observation.

H~d-sorting mail duties becoming

a thing of the .past in post offices
By lULIE DW..ON
processing centers around th~
Sentinel News Staff
country. Now, computerized
Most people can remember as equipment Is starting to do much
far back as elementary school, of the work and that means
learntn.g how to properly address addressing letters In a specific
a letter. There . were . pen pal format so these. machines can
exercises, thimk you letters, and read them."
letters to learn more about
About 40 percel)t of all mall
strange and exciting places.
currently handled by the postal
Later, in English, or typing service Is machine readable and
class there were those repetl· proccesed by high speed optical
tious letters to nonexistent character readers that not only
businesses.
sort 500 letters per minute, but
You practiced It, learned It, also apply bar codes to the front
of every•plece. The bar code, the
and It never changed much.
But just as the classroom has series of little Jines found beneath
changed, with calculators, com- the address. can later be read by
pulers, and video now In use, so bar code readers that ,sort . the
has. the way to properly address a mall to an even finer breakdown,
letter- that is ifyouwanttotake without the risk of human error.
advantage of the postal service's
The postmaster general remodern mall sorting technology cently annoQnced plans to bar
and get the best handling and code and automate.processing of
speediest delivery possible.
other types of mall, large enve·
"We want the public to learn lopes, magazines, and parcels,
bow to properly address letters to by 1995. It Is absolutelY' neces talle fuU advantage of our mod· sary In order to handle mail
ern methods of handling them," volume that is expected to grow
says Pomeroy Postmaster Tom from last year's 160btlllon pieces
Reuter; "Gone are the days of to nearly 250 bililon by the ye11r
sorting mall by hand in our mail · 2000.

Local news briefs--Bloodmobile in

M~igs

Aug. 16

The Tri·State blood center is suffering through a blood
shortage currently and Is asking people In Meigs County to help
by donating blood.
· .
.
Every suinmer biood centers nationwide experience blood
shortages for lje\leral reasons. Many people are so busy with
s.immer pctllllties that tliey forget how Important It Is to donate
blood.
'
People can help alleviate the blood shortage this summer by
stopping by the Bloodmobile on Aug. 16. It will be Ideated at the
Pomeroy SeniOr Cltlzen Center from 1 p.m. to 5: 30 p.m.
. The women of the Pomeroy 'United Methodist Church will
serve the canteen for the bloodmobile.
The blood center needs 300 units of blood to meet the demands
of patients In 57 local hospitals.
Continued on page 10

Currently, computerized
equipment can read only ad·
dresses that are typewritten.
printed, or computer generated.
That Is mostly . business· related
mall makes up percent of total
mail volume. But a system to
automate sorting of handwritten
mall is in development.
Many business mailers have
already modified address for·
mats and are taking advantage
of substantial postage discounts
for doing so by adding the zip
code plus four codes (the com·
plete ninedlgitzipcode), presort·
tng mail and even applying bar
codes on mail before it Is
deposited with the posial service.
These steps eliminate some work
and speed the sorting process
and delivery- especially impor·
tant to companies sending out
bills or awaiting remittances.
· But Individual letter writers
can also benefit from proper
addresshlg. Following these sim·
pie rules (which may make your
old teacher cringe) willhelpeven
those who skipped the pen pal
exercises take advantage of
modern postal equipment.
-Whenever possible, type and
address with black Ink. Enve·
lopes should be white or light
colored.
-Center the address on the
envelop and keep a uniform left
mar11in.
-Use all capital letters. and
· make sure they don't touch.
. -Eliminate all punctuation,
except for the hyphen In the ZIP 4
Code.
-Make sure the city, state, zip
code line IS at least one Inch
above the bottom edge of the
envelope. Do not print or write
below this line.
-The city name should be
spelled out, but use the appropriate two-character state abbreviation. Use a single space
Continued on page 10

as

Hospital by
Meigs
County Emerge.ncy Medical Ser·
vices, . She was admitted. to the
hospital for observation.
Another Meigs County , ace!·
·dent occurred at 7 a.m. Monday
at the junction of SR. 7, and SR.
681 at Tuppers Plains.
Troopers said a 1979 Buick
Skylark, driven by Lisa A.
Burke, 19, Reedsville, pulled
from SR. 681 to make a left turn
onto SR. 7 and collided with 1983

Ford Thunderbird driven by
Charles McCormick, 33, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis . Damage was moder·

·ate to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Burke for
failure to yield the right of way.

Bean dinner, war enactment
slated at Bob Evan~ Fann
The Bob Evans Farm and Rio
Grande Memorial Association
will observe the age-old tradi·
lion, tlle.RioGrandeBeanDinner
on Saturday, Aug. 12, 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the Bob ·Evans Farm In
·Rio
ll'be
Grande.
-lllgbll@;ltt
,
of. this year's
119th annual dinner will be the
Civil War re-enactment battle
and pagent, presented by the
Civil War Re-enactment Associa·
lion of Clnchinati.
· Held at the shelterhouse and
surrounding grounds, admission
for the dinner and re-enactment
is free.
Dinner of unlimited bean soup
and coffee Is $1.50 for adults, 75
cents. lor children ages 3 to 12,
with chlldren 'under three eating

free. Sausage sandwiches, corn
bread and pies will also be
available for an additional price.
Set tiers in Rio Grande ga·
thered for the first bean dinner in
1870 to pay tribute to Civil War
Veterans and their · famUies .
Several 'of the iron kettles used to
cook the more than 400 gallons of
beans are originals.
Two hundred authentically·.
dressed participants will take
part in the re-enactment , which
includes authentic camp sites
infantry and artillery drills,
ladles fasion competitions and a
staging of Morgan's Raid, originially fought in 1863, beginning at 2
p.m.
The Bob Evans Farm Is open
Continued on page 10

No' one·shows up for auction
to buy old Pomeroy school
By MICHAEL SHEARER
Sentinel Staff Writer
The late .of the old Pomeroy
Junior High School on East Main
Street remains a mystery today
after no one showed up at a public
auction to purchase the build lng
on Monday.
.
The Meigs Local School Board
had advertised the public auction
for the past month after McDo·
nald's restaurants expr!!ssed in·
tefest In purchasing the land·
according to Supt. James Car-

penter. Another group also was
reportedly interested In buying
the building.
·
However, no one showed up at
the old school at noon, and alter
w'aitlng for more than 10 min·
utes, Carpenter left.
·
"It will now be up to the board
to determine what to do with the
school," Carpenter said, adding
that "the board will most likely
discuss the matter at its next
meeting on Wednesday night."
A Meigs County official said
•

8'11LL FOB 8ALE - Tlte old Pomeroy laalor
High Soiloolla sill! for ule attt~r no one showed up
to purehue the bulldiB&amp; at a pabllc auction on

problems arose in selling the
building when McDonald's found
out how much it would cost to
tear down and dispose of the
debris because of the asbestos it
contains, and the fact that any
asbestos contaminated mate·
rials would have be disposed of in
a hazardous waste dump.
. The board was asking for a
minimum bid of $150,000 for the
property and for rights to retain
parking spaces for football
games at the stadium located
behind the school.

Monday. The school was buUI In 11:111. It '1\'U
·cloaed to studenlll In 1...
·
'

.

•

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