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..---Local news briefs----.

Monday,~

Ohio Bell workers
walk off jobs Sunday

Squads respond to 13 calls
Units ot the Metas County· Emergeltcy Medical Service ·
responded to 13 calls over the weekend.
On Saturday at 12: 16 a .m. Racine' s. station 2 and squad unit
went to Morning Star Road on an auto acclden' In which Tonya
' Iqels was taken to Holzer Medical Center and Chad Taylor was
' taliea to Veterans MemoriAl.
·
. At 2:36a.m . the Pomeroy unit was called to Page Street In
),ltddleport for James Spencer who was trusported to
eterans, and at 4:58p.m. the fire department responded to call
~ n Gold Ridge Road for an auto ftre at the Banks residence.
!!\ The Racine unit went to Yellow Bush Road at 10:17 p.m. for
1
/ •Y
f elessa Runnel who was taken to Veterans, and at 11:52 p.m.
\ be Pomeroy unit was called to the Sheriff's office for David
.~cDanlel who was transported to Veterans.
.
· .'1 On Sunday at 2:47a.m. the Rutland unit responded to a call at
/ r.fetas Mine No. 2 In which Norm Shaner was taken to
· .
.
O'Bienness Hospital In Athens.
\ At 7:57a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Dark Hollow Road
for Bill Shaffer who was taken to Veterans.
, • The Racine unit at 10:22 a.m. went to Barringer Ridge for
Owen Dalley who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Rutland Fire Department and squad were called at 11:08
· a.m. to Route 124 and Noble Summit Road on an auto accldentln
ikhlch Donald Fltchpatrick was treated but not transported.
I /. At 1: 24 p.m . the Middleport unit went to South Second and
\ Hamilton for JusUn Seymour who was taken to Veterans.
The Racine unit at 4: S7 p.m. responded to a call at
Rlverhelghts Apartments In which Mona Lisa Haynes was
transported to Woodland Centers, and at 5:17p.m. the unit was
called to Letart for Zelpha Stewart who was transported to
Veterans.
· ·
·
·
Finally, at 9: 52 p.m. the Middleport Unit went to Riverside
Apartments for Brandon Roush who was taken to Veterans.

r

I

GD'l'Y·UP- Lori Hayes waa one of several competltonln the
poles coate.t cl8118 durillg Sunday's open hone sbow at the Melp
County Fatrgrouads. Even tlloqh the fair doesn't ll&amp;art unUI
Tuesday, there was a lot of activity there lbla weekend.

1

Settlement ... ·cmiunued from page 1
tlon Committee, and Mayor
Richard ~ler, with the blessing
of the Ohio Historical Society.
Initially, Turner ud Cain were
not Included as parties In the
action. However, when a federal
judge ruled that the two should
either be Included In the action or
the case dropped, Turner and
Cain were notified by Cremeans·
-Strong that they were ·being
named as co-defendants with
the Corps.
. Although both atiQrneys would
·prefer to settle the case out of
court, Turner and Cain are
refusing to accept the settlement
so easily.
As Turner reports, the stlpula·
!Ions by which she and Cain
would have to abide, In return for
the dropping or the case, are not
acceptable at the present time. It
Is Turner's understanding that
the stipulations were suggested
by a representlve from the Ohio
Historical Society, who has re·
commended that the dock be
painted earth tones, the roof of
the dock be either removed or
painted, and that very little

$100,000 injury suit filed
A $100,000 personal Injury suit has been f~ In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Wllllam Gregory Peck, and his Wife,
Della Peck, Cheshire, against Zinnia B. Dayo, New Haven,
W.Va. The suit stems from an Aug. 14,1987 automobile accident
at the Intersection of State Routes 7 and 124 near Pomeroy.
According to the complaint, both the Peck and Dl.yo vehicles
were traveling north on aou te 7 on the day of the accident. The
plaintiffs allege that a collision between the two, which took
place at the above mentioned Intersection, was the result of the
defen dan rs negligence and failure to keep her vehicle under
control.
The plaintiffs are requesting damages for Injuries allegedly
sustained by William Peck as a·result of the accident, and for
damages to their vehicle.
In other court matters, Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred Crow III, due to con!llcts of Interest resulting from
his former famUy law practice or his former term as Meigs
Prosecuting Attorney, has stepped down as presiding authority
In the cases of Regina Sue Davis versus Richard William Davis,
Charlene Barton versus William B. Barton and Patricia F.
Kitchen versus Edward E. Kitchen.
• ·

· Weather ·

Deadline for rll"8t·phase
non·vlolent offenders who otherWise would be committed to a
state penal Institution. It will
operate as a secure facility with
lock-ups and other measures
sufficient to to ensure the safety
or the surrqundlng community. ·
Job openings will be advertised
In newspapers throughout the
area In three phases. The first
phase will begin the week of Aug.
20, Crow said.
Anyone Interested In applying
for one of the jobs should contact
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services after Aug. 21 or watch
for the advertisements.
The deadline for first-phase
appllcatlons will be Sept. 1.
Crow serves on the Judicial
Corrections Board for the
SEPTA Center .

Harry A. Swartz, 73, of Route 2,
Coolville, died Sunday at the Pine
Crest Nursing Home, GalJ!pells,
following an extended Illness.
-A painter and road construe·
tton worker, Mr. Swartz was born
ori March 11, 1916 ai Alfred In
Meigs County, the son of the late
Val C. Swartz and Carrie
Worthen.
He Is survived by his wife,
Helen Cullutms Swartz, DarWin;
two sons, Allen Swartz, VIenna,
W. Va. and John Swartz, Pomeroy; ol)e grandson, Eric Swartz,
Vienna, W. Va. ; a sister, Mary
Swartz O'Brien, Pomeroy, and a
half brother, Ores Swartz,
Athens, along with several nieces
and nephews.
Mr. Swartz, a veteran of World
War II, was a member of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church. He also belonged to the
Modern Woodmen of America
and the Hemlock Grove Grange.
Funeral services Will be held at
1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. David Prentice
will officiate and burial will be In
Burlingham Cemetery. Frtends
may call at the funeral home
Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.

lnes Marchi
fnes Marchi, 85, Rt. 3, Galllpolla, died Sunday at Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
Born Feb. 26, 1904, In Bagnl dl
Lucca, Italy, she was a dau&amp;hter
of the late Roberto Buonamlcl
and Jmola (BarSittl) Buonamlcl.
Site was also preceded In death
by ber husband, Louis G. Marchi,
In 1980, and a daughter, Lillian
MIJ'Cbl.
SUrvlvln&amp; are · two sons. Bob
. MIJ'Chl and Gee Marchi. both of
Gallpolll; five ltfalldchlldren;
four pe~~t"lfuclcblldren; two
brolllln, Aladt.oBuoaamld and
Bnlllo Bu«M!!mld, both of Lucca,
Italy. aDCI oae 111111', Cel~

. ...
.

~

Divorce actions have been tiled
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Donlta AprU Pooler,
Pomeroy, against Oavtd EIJiott
Hendricks, San Francisco,
Calif. , and Carla Sue Kimes,
Long Bottom, against Randall
Lee Kimes, Pomeroy.

Hospital news

Licenses issued

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admlssloils- Harold
Jeffers, Pomeroy; and Melissa
Fife, Langsville.
Saturday discharges - Rl·
chard White and MaryNeutzllng.
Sundi!Y admissions - Bonney
Shaffer, Pomeroy: and Zelpha
Stewart, Racine.

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Gary Oliver Lane, 24,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Atrlcla Lynn Louden 34, New Haven,
W.Va., and to Ivan Jerry Card·
well, 54, The Plains, .and Janet
Louise Nakamoto, 49, Rutland.

NOW AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
'GO 2 GREAT PAN PIZZAS

$999

Montreal
I
slump
•
·c ontmues

..
Yo!.40. No.70 M

.,.;

•

.
at

Meigs County Commissioners .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Alli!St night's meeting a letter
· Dally Senllnel Staff
The he!lrlng on annexation of was read from Conrail stating .
' property southofthecorporatlon that .,ompany has no Objectlo!l to
limits to the village's sewage annexation of the Hobson yards
lagoon to be held on Wednesday, to the vllllige of Middleport.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
Aug. 23, ilt 10 a.m. In the Meigs
that
he and village employee, B111
. County. Courthouse, was dis·
Miller,
had been to the Ohio
· cussed at Monday night's meetDeparmtent
of Development In
, lng of Middleport VIllage
Columbus
regarding
the vii·
·. Council.
!age's
housing
appHcatlon.
He
_ or the 43 property owners
· Included In the proposed annexa- said that the village did not attain
. :• tlon area, 12 have expressed the required number of points to
opposition to the proposal, and be In the funding range this year,
, one Indicated that he had no btl t that officials there had shown .
; objection but did decline to sign 'them what wo.uld, have to be done
the petitions which were pres- . to score higher when another ·
: ented ear Her this summer to the application Is made next year.

Read at the meeting was a for solld. wastes generated out·
letter from Sara Hendrtcker, side the boundaries of the state.
In her Jetter to the village, Ms.
chatrmap o,f the Solid .Waste
Management Polley Committee Hendrlcker said that until a solid
of which Meigs Is .a part, waste management plan Is
regarding the rate resolution adopted and approved by the
which was adopte!l at the Aug. 9 Ohio EPA, there Is no local
meeting and requesting repres· control over the Importation of
entation at the Sept. 14 public sol!d.waste Into this district. She
hearing to be held at the Meigs said th'at voting against the
County Senior Center, Pomeroy, surcharge means that only th.e
local taxpayers will pay for the
6p.m.
The resolution adopted at the plan Instead of a ll'laJor share
Aug. 9 meeting provides for fees ~lng paid for by out-of-district
of $1.25 per ton for solid wastes and out-of-state landfill users
generated within ttie six county · and haulers.
district, '$2.50 per ton for solid
She stesseil that It Is only
wastes gelierateil outside the tlirough the planning process
boundaries of the
but that the district may be able to
Inside the state;
ton control the flow of refuse Into the

"

materials.
Linda Fisher, Lucllle Haggerty,
Certified and non-cerU!Ied per· . c,.rol Hare, Betty Hutchinson,
sonnet hired by the.board at the
Valentine Hoover. Paula Horton,
mlll'le.vy for current expenses of recent special meeting Include C. Darla Kennedy, Dave Kucsma.
the E~tstern Local School Dis trlct D. Mcintyre, junior high football
Shirley McDon~tld, Geroge
will be placed on the November 7 coach; Debbie Weber, head McLean, Jenny Manuel, Brent
ballot.
teacher for the Riverview Ele- MarshaJII, Linda Mancini, Ina
·That was the decision of the mentary School; Judy Wolfe.and Meadows, Nancy Morrisey, Mike
Eastern Local Board of Educa· Margaret Cauthorn as state Miller, Kathleen Peyton, Lori
lion after holding three public funded library aides; Edna Ritchie, Nathan Robinette, Jozle
Informational meetings on Householder, accounts clerk and Roberts, Gayle Sayler, Jeff
school financing In the district educational aide substitute; San- Skinner, Deanna Spriggs, Grace
over the past two weekS.
dra Bowen, head cook at the Weber, Kay Wilson, Sandrll
Voters of 'the district have Chester Elementary School and Walker, Margie Bartee, Tammy
twice defeated continuing 12.4 Darlene Buckley assistant cook Chaprn11n, Deborah Davis, Llnyd
,,.,· operallll&amp; levies. ;;t•
.
, __ ca '!lt~ : h!1lh llllhopl, and Gle!l ..:rlirptn, Valerle. Hanstlne·, Betty
According to 1 Dr. . Daniel EasterUng, f BJU Hannum, . Ed 1 Ann Loftis, Steve Patterson, Ann
Apllng, the 8.9 mill levy would Holter.- Bob White and Cindy Sisson, and Terry Wayland: )
generate $275,535 a yea,r, allow' Rector as substitute bus drivers
In other action, the bpard
lngthe board to pay some back to to be used on an as-needed basis released David Fetty to aJtend
the State Loan · Fund, deal with only. ·
Meigs High School. '
theprojectedshortfalllnrevenue
Employed as substutte
Next meeting was set for 7:30
for the coming year, reinstate teachers for the 1989·90 school p.m on Aug. 231n the high school
board fund 1ng of extra. year were John .Barcus, Betty · cafeteria. Attending were Jim
curricular activities Including Boggs , Karla Brown, Kim Batey, Smith, president; Kathy Mallthletics; allow the purchase of a Judy Browning, · Nina Bias, nlcke. vice · president, and
new bus every other year, and Nancy Circle, Larry Cool), VIc to- members, Ray Karr and I. 0 .
provide minimal funding for new ria Diddle, Mike Edwards, Rick McCoy.
textbooks,
supplies and other Edwards, Marsha Egleston ,
horses aad wagon and left Racine at 8 a.m. with
aadclpated arrival !if the falrfl'Otlllds ar01111d
1
noon.

•

Bob Evans Farms net sales
up .7 percent over last year .

Ohio .Powel! promotes jobs

throughout
53
county.
~ea
.
-.

growth of Meigs County,

The demand for jobs, Indus·
trial growth and diversity are
among factors Involved In Ohio
Power Company's newest economic development efforts.
Ohio Power has announced
· that It has targeted 10 types of
Industries to receive data designed to ln~rest til'e m In the
53-county area served by the
company.
C. A, Heller, Ohio Power
president, said the project is
designed to promote' the a'dvan·
: tages offered by locating In the
communities and counties within
. thecompany'sservlcearea. "We
have an environment that Is
: conducive to economic growth.
· We plan to share data about this
· llfi!B .with lndustr~ wanting to
- I!J!:paild, and we hope to place
· companies In a manner that will
. prove beneficia! to. both."
· 'The comPitly's newest project
; Is an extenSion bf Its economic
• development program ..
"We've been · involved In eco-

"THE SHINING LIGHT IN BANKING".
.

'By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

'
·])ally Senllnel Staff.
"': A _tllrl!e-year emergency 8.9

OFFTOTHEFAIR-TbeHerbErvlnfamllyof
1ee11 here on their way to tile Meigs
Count;r Fait on Monday. They hitched up the

We, at The Farmers Bank, encourage all Meigs Countians to support the '89 Meigs County Fair. From the youth who exhibit to
those who make our great fair possible, we thank you for your
long hard hours of work!!
Like the Farmers Bank; you are a vital part of tile

area. The State Legislature has
village funds for the next two
mandated that the District must years . .
have a plan by June 24, 1990, and
To comply with county's
tf not then the Ohio EPA will do . budget commission require·
the planning and bill the counties ments, th ~ village set rates of ·
for It, leaving the local area taxation noting that there Is no
without a voice on the plan.
change from the previous year.
fn her letter to Council, Mrs.
It was noted th at plans by the
Hendrlcker urged ratification of Middleport Chamber of Com·
the proposed charge fee merce for the ann\lai block party
structure, ·c
on Sept. .16 are moving forward.
A letter from the Meigs County 'rhe mayor's report shOwed reCommlsslonerswas read regard· celpts of $5,765.90 for July.
Attending were Mayor Fre!J
. lng fiscal year 1981' Comunlty
Development· Block Grants. A Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Jon
public hearing was announced · .Bucjt, and Council member~.
for 7 p.m on Sept. 6 at the Paul Gerard, WilHam Walters,
courthouse. . ,
Jac~ Satterfield, Bob Gilmore,
Council vpted to designate . James Clatworthy, and Dewey
Central Trust as depository for Horton.

board to place three-year
emergency 8.9 mill levy. on. ballot

Raclae Ia

AUGUST 15-16-17-18-19

25 Canto

Inc. Nowop-

E~tern

COME TO RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16

'

M~ltlmodlo

:Twelve property owners oppose annexation

WE NEED YOU

MEIGS ·COUNTY FAIR

1 Section, 10 PogH
A

•

YOU CAN'T GET BLOOD FROM ATURNIP

POMEROY SENIOR CITilrN CENTER
1 TO 5:30

Partly cloudy tonlgbl. Low
In mid 60&amp;. Chance of rain 38
percent. Wednesday, high In
mld.SOS. Chance of rala 38
percent.

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, August 15. 1989

Copyrighted 1189

nomic development for many
years, " said J. G. Kennard,
economic development manager
for Ohio Power. "We work
closely with all of the communities we serve to both attract and
retain businesses and Industries.
We consider this latest effort an
extension of our commitment to
enhance the .deyelopment of our
service area ."
The ·company recently ·reviewed hundreds of basic· type
Industries, studying the history
of their employment, expansion
and uUIIty needs. Also studied
were the companies' sizes and
regional compatibility. As a
result of the study, 10 classlflca·
!Ions of Industries were selected
to receive mailings from Ohio
Power Informing them of potential plant locations In Ohio.
Scheduled to receive data
about service-area communities
are some 2,000 Industries, Involved In (1 )' miscellaneous plas·
tics products, (2) plastics mate-

MUaGSCOUNTYFAIRSCHEDULE

'

Farn1ers
Bank

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1.. l988
9:15 A.M.-Junior ·Fair Beef Showmanship a,nd 'Judging
Followed by Open Class Judging !
12:00 Noon-4·H FloWer Show JUdging (Jr. Fair Bldg.)
1:00 P .M.- Beef Cook·Off...:.. Hill Stage
2:00 P.M.-Horse JJarne8s Racing
2:00 P.M.-t-H Style Shpw-Hill Stage
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pun -Show Ring
•s:30 P.M.-Junior Fair Parade
6:30 P.M.-Wyomtna Wolf Band-Hill Stage '
7:00 P.M.-Youth Awards Night- Show Ring
7:00 P.M.-Antique Tra~or Pull- Tractor Pull Area
"8:30 P.~.-cllarUe McClain II Wayne Massey
8;30 P.M.-Kiddie Games- Show Ring
'
• -Grandstand atinction

Member FDIC

POIIIIOJ, OliO

,.

rials, synthetic resins and
nonnvulcanlzable elastomers,
(3) adhesives and sealants, (4)
electronic components, (5) spe·
clallzed Industrial machinery,
. (6) electrical equipment for .
engines, (7) motor vehicle parts
and accessories, (8) convertecl
paper, products, (9) telephone
and telegraph equipment, and
{10) all'mlnum extruder
products.
Many factors must be considered In economic development,
Kennard said. These Include
labor, available bul~lngs, land
and utllltes. "Computers are
used In sophisticated market
research to pinpoint the best
prospects for a region. Our goal
Is to match an Industry's needs
Continued on page 10

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
The sausage division of Bob
!:vans Farms saw a decline In
net sales·' dUring the past year,
· and the restaurant saw some
growth, stockholders were told at
the annual meeting Monday In
Rio Grande.
Overall, the company only
experienced a seven .percent net
sales Increase. They reported net •
sales of $108,336,000 for the
quarter ending July 28. This Is up
seven percent from $101,274,000
·one year ago.
According to officials, the
sausage dlvtston saw a seven
percent decline In sales and sold
three percent less total poundage
than last year.
What Increase occurred was In
the restaurant division, and after
the menu price adjustments, saw
little growth, according to seg. ment executive vice president

RobertS. Wood.
"After the menu price In·
crease, there was no real
growth," Wood told · the shareholders gathered.
For the first time In the
company's history, the restuar:
ants were rejected In a marketChicago - Wood said. Of the six
units In the Chicago area, five
were sold and another closed In
the past year.
In other. efforts to make the
segment more profitable, Wood
said the 24·hour weekend service
was discontinued, corporate and
local management structure was
altered, and new Items such as
Egg Beaters were added for the
cholesterol-conscious consumer.
. Wood also said the design oft he
restuarants Is being evaluated
and changed to serve the public
better.
The company Is operating with
223 restaurants, which Includes

'

the 27 new units opened la~t year
and the six closed In Chicago.
Two opened In the first quarter of
the year, and four will begin
operating the the second.
The biggest single problem In
the restaurant division Is the
quality of service, according to
Chalrman.of the Board DanielE .
Evans. He noted there Is a high
turnover of personnel In the
Industry and that affects profits.
Just as In the reStaurant division, .
the sausage segment saw a move
toward the more health-oriented
buyer.
Today's consumer Is looking at
their cholesterol count , and that
Is having an effect on the buyer of
Bob Evans Sausage, according to
Larry Carroll, execu live vice
pres ident of the sausage division.
"We hear a lot today about
nutrliton," Carroll said, and that
Is reflected In the buyer pattern.
Continued on page 10

Man treated
·for stab
wounds

Wllllam Tlemyer, 43, ·506 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, was trans·
fertoecl early this morning to the
Athens Mental Health Center
folloWing treatment at Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital for an appar- ·
.. ent self·lnfilcted stab wound.
·
Pomeroy Pollee were called to
·the residence at 4:' 43 a.m. by
Teresa Bartlett, 29, also of 506 E.
Main St. who said that she found
Tlemyer lying on the steps
outside tl)e house with the knife In
his chest,
Police iald .that she told them,
Tlemyer had been drinkln&amp;, that
BOARD JIIEMB~ - Memben of the Boanl
they had an ll'(lllment, and he
llf Dlne&amp;cn of Bob Bvaa1 Farma were pre~eat at
left. A short time later lhe said · tile aaDUlltaellboltlen meeb1 MltadiQ' Ia Rio
she round him on the steps. He · otaatle to uner aa:r q-tfo• aad report In tile
was transported by the Pomeroy
varlo• cllvlalo•. Seated.,_ left are Mewari K.
Continued on ):lBge 10 ·
0wen1, pn~ldenl . .of the •w.ldlaey OWen•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1188
"7:00 P .M ...:..Demolltlon Derby
8:00 P.M.-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship &amp; Judging
9:00 P.M.-Midnight Cloggers- Hill Stage ·

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Pick-4

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874

Page3

YOUR COMMUNITY OWNED BANK

WISIIIIII

Pi~k-3

8954

ADDiiiOIAL ITEMs
S1.70 COVIIS 10'111 PIZZAS

Domino's
Pizza
992-2114
.-

'

di'scussed. Pa ren\s who did not
attend the spr ing registration or
who are new lo the district will
need tq provide a · copy of their
student bi rth certificate and a
record of the various vacclna·
tlons and shots a lready received.
-Junior high footbau ·•·
.
All jun ior high students Interes ted in. playing football for
Eastern are to report·today at 4
p.m. at the ~i gh school.

Am Electrl~ Power ...... .. ...... 30
AT&amp;T ........ ... .. .... .... ............ . 39
1\shland 011 ....... ...... .... .. .... .. 38
Bob Evans , .............. :.......... 15 ~
Charming Shoppes ...... ...... .. 16';4
City Holding Co .. .... ...... ...... 15';4
Federal Mogul .................... 23%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... ...... .. .... .54 ~
Heck's .. .... ............. ...... .. ...... ~
Key Centurion ....... ............ .12 ~
Lands' End .................. .. ... .. 28%
Limited Inc ................ .. ...... 34~
Multimedia Inc ..... ....... ....... 108
Rax Restaurants ... ...... ......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers _... ............ 16~
Shoney's Inc .. .. .. .. .......... .. .... 12
Wendy's Inti. .. ..................... 5%
Worthington
Ind .......... ........24~
'

Divorees sought

Ohio Lottery

---Meigs announcements---Kindergarten orientation
·
Two meetings will be he ld
regarding kindergarten orientatlon for the Eastern Local School
District on Thursday all p.m. a t
Tuppers Plains Elementary, and
at 3 p.m. on Thu rsday at Chester
Elementary for all parents of
kindergarten students.
This years full day a lternate
day program, teacher-parent
conference schedules w111 be

•

. .

Th~ Communications Workers
In addition, said spokesma~;~
of America's 10,100 Ohio Bell Greg Kenefic, the C'ilA will ask
workers walked off their jobs the public utilities e&lt; mmisSio,ns
early Sunday, inlnutes after
In eac h state where ·' he strikes
rejecting the company's latest are occurring to r.,bate the
offer.
·
payroll savings to the' ustomers
Contributing support to the to limit the companies' profits.
CWA were approximately 25
Kenefic said Ohio Bell Will save
local Ohio Bell employees, who an estimated $1 mUilon a day .
began picketing lnfront or the during the strike, admitting the :
GalHpolls offlel!, Locust Street.
tactic was an effort to .place ·
·~rm out here because Amerl·
pressure on the Bell companies. :
tech is. talking about changing
On the picket line In Toledo, : ·
the accounting procedure on our Harry Zetomer, a circuit tester, ·
retirement' fund. And I'm afraid predicted the strike would las I of what that will cause us later three weeks " simply because of :
on," said Mike Polcyn, vlrethe a mount of money the com· ·
presldent of Local 4321, which pany saves by not paying the
co,,ers the areas from Ironton to wages."
Ma ~letta to Zue5vllle.
••l'hey are offering an assign·
Norma Craden, president of
lng ilonu's and not actual pay Local 4315 representing iservtce
wage~ which Is base pay that
representatives and operators,
nev~ r increases With lnfiatlon,"
wore a red t -shirt emblazoned
Polcyn said. "Our pension Is with " CWA: I'll walk the line In
·good,. but It's not great. They '89" While pacing In front of the
wan.t to take our excess funds . Ohl9 Bell building ln. downtown
from our stock profits to use for Toledo.
•
corporate benefit."
"It was clear that not enough
Polcyn said the local union will progress was being· made In the
simply picket with no .. major right • direction," said Jeff Replans to ma'ke any scenes, unless chenbach, a spokesman for CWA
outsiders come In to take over Local 4309 in Cleveland. "No
their Jobs:
talkS a re sc heduled to start
"We're going to picket and again, but bo th sides are subject
that's all. We basically plan for to call and ready to talk."
this to move smoothly," Polcyn
Ohio Bell s pokesman Caesar
said.
Powell said In Cleveland the
The Ohio union members company was disappointed by
joined an estimated 51,000 em- the action because. It considered '
ployees of five Mldwes t Arnett· Its offer to be "a very good
tech telephone. companies as contract.''
"Baby Bell" strikes spread
The lates t company offer Is
across the nation.
Union Officials held a confer- worth more than $5,600 per
ence call Sunday afternoon, after employee over three years, up
which they termed the com· fror.. $3,338 In the company's .
pany's latest offer as .earlier proposal, Da vid Martin,
another Bell spokesman. said.
"Inadequate. "

..

Clanelll of Stockholm, Sweden.
She and her husband owned
and operated a restaurant In
GalHpolis for many years. She
was a member or St. Louis
Catholic Church, the American
Legion Auxiliary 27, Eight and
Forty, and the CathoHc Women's
Club.
Services will be conducted
Wednes4ay, 10 a.m. , at the St.
Louis Catholic Church With the
Rev . Wllllam R. Myers and the
Rev. Albert MacKenzie otrlclatlng. Burial Will follow Iii Mound
Hill Cemetery.
Friends may cali(I'uesday, 6to
9 p.m. at the Waugh·Halley·Wood
Funeral Home. Rosary service
Will be Tuesday, 8:30p.m.
Pallbearers Will be Bobby,
Mike and Scott Marchi, Remo
Rocchi, Don Robinson and Lawrence (Panzo) Bastian!. -

AT OlE LOW PIICE

Louery numbers

Stocks

--Area deaths-Harry Swartz

asphalt be poured at the top of Ute
river bank adjacent to the boat
dock.
·
Turner says she had no In tentlon of pourlnp: asphalt for the
private dock (Turner and Cain
were also.thinking of building a
public doc.klng facility).
As for painting the dock or
removing the roof, Cain says that
the treated lumber from which
the doc!C Is buUt shoul4 not be
painted so soon, and that he has
no Intention of removing the roof.
So, with the settlement appar·
enlly out-of·the'quesUon, as far
as Turner and Cain are concerned at this time, It would
appear that the case will go to
court, whether the lawyers want
It to or not.
Says Turner, "In my opinion,
the court system Is used too often
by authorities who are trying to
Intimidate people lntodolngwhat
they want. It's my property, and
I don't think anyone has the right
totellme.whatlcanorcannotdo
with it. I want a decision by the
court. I want a definite yes or
no."
·

CLEVELAND IUPil ~ Satur·
By United Press International
day's Winning Ohio Lottery
South Central Ohle
Tonight, variable cloudiness numbers:
PICK·3 Twice
with a low In the mid 60s. Light
491
and
585.
south winds. Thechanceofralnls
PICK·3
ticket sales totaled ·
20 percent. Tuesday, partly
$1,814,645,
with payoffs due of
cloudy and hazy with a sllght
$705,390
and
$635,212.
chance of showers and thunderstorms. High again In the mid PICK-I
1692.
80s. The chance of rain Is ~
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
percent.
$277,569.50, with a payoff clue pf
Extended Forecast
$189,500.
Wednesday through Friday
Super Lotto
A chance of showers and
25,
26,
34,
35, 36, 40 .
thunderstorms Wednesday and .
Super
Lotto
tlcket ·sales totaled
fair Thursday and Frlday. Highs
$4,738,437.
will be mainly 80 to 85 and lows
Kicker
near 60.
059776.
Kicker ticket Slilles totaled
$763,929.
Dally stock prices
(As or 10 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis lo Loewt

applications September 1
POMEROY - The Southeast·
ern ~robatlon Treatment Alter·
native Center, a regional correction facility serving Meigs and
six other counties, will be hiring
people to.staff the new faclllty In
the near future.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III
sale! a variety of jobs will be
available and the Ohio Bureau of
Employment' Services will be
accepting the applications.
The SEPTA Center Is currently
under construction In Nelsonville
and Is expected to open by fall.
The center Will provide a sentencing alternative for people
convicted of non-violent offenses
In the seven county area.
The minimum security facility
Is Intended as an alternative for

1

14, 1989

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·~· -~··--~-·

...

Couatr;r Sauu1e; Larry carrou, exee~~Uve vlee ·
pn~ldent, NU•ge dlvlaloa; Keith Bradbaey,
execulve vice president aad treullft!l'; . . .
. Robert s. Wood, ex-the vice pi'CIIIdell&amp;,
reetauraat dlvlaloa. ( OVP llhoiD)

�The Daily Sentinei- Page-3
•

Commentary
.

.

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio
T~.A~.t16,1989

-

'

lll Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~'b

Bm~ ~ ......
""T",,..,..._c:::l.•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AuiMut Publlsber/CoalroUer

•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener8l Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They ollould be JeullluaeG
All Jellen are aubJeel lo edll..l ud mull be olped wKh
- · addr- ud leleplloee number. No •aolped lellero ..W be pubwonlo Ioiii·

• - · Leiters ........ be In JIOOd lule, addr-m11o•- aol penoull- · ·

u.. .

Yiird and Smeal
may have a good idea
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
.,
WASHING'I'ON - If feminist leaders MoUy Yard and Eleanor
Smeal were hoping for a reaction to their call for creation of a new
national women's political party, their wishes were fulfilled. Almost
everybody gave them hell.
The two leaders urged consideration of a new part~ because they
, feel neither the Democrats nor the Republicans are ,!,a'ylng proper
attention to the concerns of women - Issues such as abortion and
equal rights.
Their proposal got the expected negative broadsides from male_
politicians, press commentators and from some feminists as well.
The main knock on Yard and Smeal was thatthelrldea would only
divide their liberal friends and encourage their conservative
enemies. In fact, the anti-abortion publication Llfeletter said the
Yard-Smeal proposal "has anti-abortion strategists asking, 'How can
we help?"'
It certainly Is true that a separate political party to advance
feminist causes would seem more likely to draw adherents from the
liberal-led Democratic Party more than from the conservative- ·
dominated Republican Party.
The Yard·Smeal proposal seems to be based on the proposition that
women, who outnumber men In the voting age population, can
achieve more of thei• political goals operating Independently of the
established parties than by throwing In with one of them.
The recent history of third parties based on specific Issues suggests
a women's p;~rty would fall, If the mark of success Is winning
elections. Although a few third parties have been able to hang on In
the !&gt;tates, none has made a national electoral impact for more than
llalf a century and there Is no sign that the Democratic-Republican
lock on public office Is loosen In g.
But that does not mean Yard and Smeal are engaged In a fruitless
enterprise. Third parties and political movements have had a major
policy Impact on modern American politics, If only as Irritants that
have prodded the major parties Into actions they would have
preferred to avoid or postpone.
There Is a long list of examples of this. Social welfare proposals
ranging from the eight-hour day as a national labor standard to the
establishment of the Superfund to deal with hazardous waste dumps
all stemmed from political action outside the major party
framework.
·
The rise of the civil rights movement, with the Implied suggesdon
that Black Power could become more than a slogan, had an effect on
both major parties In the 1960s, and on their role In the legislative
breakthroughs that followed In the areas of public accommodations.
employment, voting and housing.
Labor unions have publiCly flirted with the Idea of starting a third
party In the past, bu I the idea probably was most valuable as a way to
get labor-backed issues such as minimum wage Increases as the
forefront.
So Yard and Smeal. feeling neither major party has done enough to
advance what they see as the major concerns of women, are entirely
within U.S. political tradition in threatening to siphon voters away
from the Democrats and the Republicans.
They may never starta new political party, but justtalklngaboutlt
might accomplish their gols.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Aug. 15, the 227th day of 1989 with 138 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
'
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They Include
Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte In 1769.
·

Berry's World

WASHINGTON - When. the and 1988 were rip-offs. But
value of the doDar soared In the authorities say there were
mld-1980s, so did the American plenty .
appetlte for foreign car bargains.
So what did the Environmental
On the automobile "gray· Protection Agepcy do to m~tke
market,"luxury European mod· sure the gray marketeers 'didn't
els could be · bOught legally break the regulations? It relaxed
overseas for half their U.S. price the regulations, of course.
and modified for U.S. pollution
Now It may be easier for
staridatds at a small additional unsc~pulous gray marketeers
charge.
to foU the EPA and scam the
But what began as a joy ride for buyers. Here Is the substance of a
manybargalnlluntersendedlna newEPAprogramforreguliitlng
head-on coUislon wllb reality. the gray mar)let: ·
Some gray marketeers were
· - Cjlr brokers used to have to
actually bandits hawking stolen bolO the cars at U.S. ports untU
or previously wrecked models. the EPA gave them permission •
Cheap emissions equipment to hit the highway. Now, the EPA'
broke down within months, and has only 15 days to Inspect the
some gray marketeers faked car. After that, It can be released
emissions tests.
to the new owner, Inspected or
No one knows how many of the not.
.
155,527 gray market cars brought
- Gray marketeers used to be
to the United States between 1983 required to post cash bonds until
'

their cars were approved, but no
more. That means they can sell
an unmodified car without penalty If the EPA doesn't find out
about lt.
,- The sellers still must test
emissions on every car, but now
they only have to show the EPA
the tests for one In three cars.
.-Even If a gray marketeer Jl;
caught red-handed breaking the
law, the penalties are minor. The
EPA can fine the broker only·
$10,000 _per car. When a Lamborghlnl Countach goes for
$128,000 and a Ferrari GTO for
$148,000, that $10 000 penalty Is a
drop In the gas Utnk.
When the EPA developed the
new rules, It apparently listened
more to the complaints of gray
marketeers than the warnings of
experts, . accotdlng ·to a report
our associate Stewart · Harris

«--2....J

~···o:~~-,_
; lift by NEA, one
•

• "PSSTI Hey, buddy, wsnt to buy s ssvlngs
snd losn?"
&lt;'

B7 .JOilN SWENSON
UPISporia Writer
, Nothing Is euy these days for
the slumplnl EJ1pos.
The team that looked lnvincl·
ble at the top of the NatiOnal
League East two weeks ago with
Mark Langston anchorine Ita
pitching staff hu ~rone Into
free-fall, dropping nlneofthe last
11 games. The Expos are three
games behind the Ch_lcago Cuhl
atler a 6-1 Monday night loss to
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
. Expos manaaer Buck Rodgers
hasnoexplanatlonforhlsteam's
slump. "I can'tputmyflqeron
II but..we were flat tonight," he
said. We weren't ready. Blame
It on the manager, maybe It W!IJI
my fault. But we aren't throwing
In the towel. There are still a lot
of games to be played."
Pirates starter Doua Drabek
m!lst have looked like Cy Young
to the Expos as he baHied them
with a slx·hltler and added Insult
to Injury with a two-run single.
Drabek, 10·9, struck out five
and walked one In hurling his
fifth complete game of the
season. Dennis Martinez, 12·3,
was touched for three runs and
six hits In five Innings of work.'
"Drabek pitched very well,"
said Pirates manager Jim Leyland. •'When a starting pitcher
beats a good ball club you know
he has done a good day's work."
Drabek downplayed his stellar
perfonnance. ''The Expos are so
good that you have to throw
strikes against them," he said. "I
don't have to talk about my
hitting because I want to give
credit to the great defense behind
me. We have to flnlsb the seuon
. as If we are at the top of the
standings."
Pittsburgh grabbed a 2.0 lead
In the first Inning on a run-

obtained from the flies of the
EPA Inspector general.
"It appeared that more eml\ljasls was placed on the Importers'
suggestions than on the lessons
learned through Investigations
and enforcement actions," the
report says.
The EPA's easy standards will
do more than cost consumers
money. They wUI hurt some of
the nation's most polluted cities.
Even with modifications, most
gray market cars give oH three
to five times as much pollution as
a car buUt to American standards, and some emit as much as
40 limes more exhaust. It just so
happens that gray market cars
are concentrated In badly pol•
luted ell Jes sue h u Houston,
Dallas, Miami and Los Angeles.

.

scoring double by Bobby BonUia one-third lnnlap for the victory.
and an RBI slneJe by Glenn
Blae .Jaya 4, ~d Soa: Z
Wlllon.
At Boston, Rance Mulllnlks hit
Montreal closed the gap to 2·1 a two-run homer and George Bell
lntbesecondonanRBidoubleby stroked a tie-breaking single to
Spike Owen.
·
lead Toronto to Its 13th straight
Barry Bonds put the Plrateup victory at Fenway Park. Mauro
3-1 In the fifth with a solo home Gozm, 2-0, went five lnnlqs In
run, hla 15th homer of the year.
his second major-league start,
The Pirates added three more while Mike Boddlcker, 10-9, sufr111111n the sixth to take a 6-llead. fered his third loss In hiS last 11
LaValliere, Gary RedUI and decisions.
pinch-hitter R.J. Reynolds
Orloa 4, Tl1en 1
singled to load the bases off
( 10 lanlllp)
reliever Andy McGafflaan.
At Detroit, Craig Worthington
Drabek followed with a two-run belted a three-run homer with
singlefora5-1Pittsburghadvan- two Ol!t In the lOth to win the
tage. ReyaoldJ stole third and game. Loser Jack Morris, 2-10
scored as Drabekgotcaughtlna and winless since May 12, took a
rundown 1n the auempted double two-hitter Into the lOth. Dave
sleal.
.
Schmidt, 9·12, won hlsflrstgame
In other aamea:
since July 4 with three hitless
Cudl..a. 74, Brave~ U
Innings. Grl!lil Olson pitched the
At- St. ·Loull, J01e Oquendo lOth for his 18th aave.
collected a pair of hits, scored ·
Willie Sox 4, Royals 3
two runs and drove In aaother to
At Chicago, Lance Johnson
lead the Cardinals to a double- slqled home the pahead run
header sweep. Jobn Coawllo, 2·2, after Dan Pasqua led offthe sixth.
pitched four lnniQ&amp;S of hitless Inning with an upper deck home
relief and Ken Dayley recOrded run Monday night to rally the
tbelaatoutforhlllOthaave.Pete White Sox. Ken Patterson, 6-1,
Smith, 3-12, took the ION.
got the victory with two and
In the opener, Milt Thompson one-third Innings of scoreless
drove In three runs and Joe relief. Luis Aquino, 6-7, has lost
Magrane,15-7, scattered six hits his last three starts.
In eight Innings to become the
Twlna 8, Ancel&amp; S
first St. Louts 15.game winner In
At Anaheim, AI Newman, col·
four years. He struck out six and lected three hils, drove In one run
walked three. Todd Worrell and scored another and Allan
notched his 17th save. John Anderson, 14·9, posted his fifth
Smoltz, 11·11, suffered his fifth straight victory as Minnesota
straJgbt losa.
dealt California Ita fourth Joss In
Bnwen I, Yukr• t
the last five games. Kirk McCasAt Milwaukee, Gus Polldor kiD. 12-7, took the loss.
stroked a two-ou~ RBI siJiile to
break a 4-4 tl!! and cap a
~run ninth~ rally after
theYankeellwt'tuentheleadln
the eighth. Relle¥er Dave JUab· _ RENO, Nev. (UPI) -One light
ettl, 2-4, \POk ~lou, whlle',J'Ony after retaining his title with a
Fossas, ~-2, Pllehed one and knockout In 88 seconds, Internationa! Boxing Federation middleweight champion Ml~hael Nunn
found there are many who stU!
around the first two weeks In question his punching power.
"I felt I entertained the
September. Entry Fee Is S85 and
you can call 66S-65E5 or 742·2024 crowd," Nunn said Monday night
for more Information.
after he was booed while retainIng his tllle "1tli a 12-round

Plan 'co-ed . soflball league at :WUkesville
A co-ed softball league (5
women and 5 mel)} will be played
at the American Legion Grove In
Wllksville. Tbe league will start

Openings still available for Sunday trip
There are sdll sev_eral openIngs for the Whitewater Ratting
Trip on Sunday, Aug. 27.
The price Is $89.95
person
and Includes round· trip tranapor·
-tatlon from Middleport, l\111Ch
and•·raJtblg. 'l1le de4dlble for
reservations Is Wednesday, Aug.
23.
Reservations may be made by
calling 992-9968.
There will be no night swlmmlilg this week because of the
Meigs County Fair. The pool will
be opened during regular pool
hours. Tbere must be 10

per

North American

anti~Americinism

Somebody up there doesn't like geopoliticians are concerned
about anll·Amerlcantsm everyus: Canadians.
In a recent poll, a sample of where else In the world. If poll
1,000 Canadians were asked to ' results like those above came In
describe Americans In just one from -Bangladesh or Burundi,
word. Brace yourself: Eight of there would be a task force at
the top 10 responses were work. Results like that from
usnobs, "pig-headed,.. "ag- Japan tend to shake the Internagressive,'' ''powerful,'' ''obnox- tional economic system: In Eui&lt;?us,'' ''Indifferent,'' ''stupid'' rope, when American are desand "rich." (The other two cribed as obnoxious pig-headed
snobs, we shudder about the
answers were - whew! future of NATO. Everyone Is
"good" and "friendly.")
It's pretty clear that It's not concerned about what Mexico
just our acid rain policy that's thinks of us; you know, Its our
been bothering them.
back door, and there are CommuThe poll was taken by Decima nist guerrillas In Central
Research In Toronto and ap- America.
The standard solution for anupeared In a July Issue of
Maclean's, Canada's largest cir- Amerlcllnlsm Is well-known:
culation magazine. Devilishly, teach 'em aboutAmerlca,let'em
Maclean' s/Declma simultane- see our movies and television
ously also polled an American shows, let 'em read our books and
sample.
. hear our music, let •em come
Would you like to know what visit. There Is a small problem
single words Americans used with that remedy for the Cana·
most frequently to describe Can- dian situation: They do know us.
adians? "Friendly," "nice," They're the largest tO'urlst group
''neighbors,'' ''wonderful,'' ''sat- we have. And Canada Is
drenched with U.S. popular culIsfied," "normal" and- ugh! "delightful."
ture: An overwhelming proparIt's an odd couple: the fat klutz tlon of Canadians live within
wal tzlng · with the demure range of a U.S. television station.
damsel.
What's bugging them up there?
Curiously, American cosmic Maclean's cited some verbatim
It

responset of what Canadians
least liked about Americans:
"they are self-centered," "they
don't try to, understand what In
going on beyond their borders."
Truth be told;, the poll reveals
clearly th!lt ::We are lndeeil
Ignorant a,bou( our friendly,
satisfied nelghf!ars. Only 12 percent of Americans knew that
Canada was our largest trading
partner. (Erroneously, 69 percent thougl)t -the answer was
Japan) . Only ' 11 percent of
Americans knew that Brian,
Mulroney was the prime minister of Canada. (By contrast, 35
percent of Canadians knew that
Dan Quayle was the American
vice pres !dent. ) Only 57 pe~cent
of Americans knew that the
United States and Canada bad
recently signed a Free Trade
Agreement - but 97 percent of
Canadians knew it.
Maybe we ought to take a short
course about our wonderful
northern neighbors. We could
begin by noting that not long ago
(1964) a substantial percentage
of Canadians (29 percent)
thought It would be nice If
Canada became part of the
United States. Ho, ho! Today the
rate Is down to 14 percent. By

Ben Wattenberg
contrast, 66 percent of Americans think It's a peachy Idea.
Is all this a problem? It Is a
symptom of the problem that one
even asks the question. If the nice •
Canadians were not sueh com- '
patlble neighbors, they'd surely
be a big problem. We share 5,527 .
miles of common border. ·
,
What should be done? Maybe ,
we should start a reciprocal •
dislike campaign: ·We could call
them obnoxious snobs. There are
those who say the United States :
needs a large northern eneniy.
With the SOviets co'lapslne, we ·
could get angry a I the Canadians.
But, alas, the Canadians are not ;
obnoxious snobs. They're wonderful; the poll says so.
Anyway, with the new Free ;
Trade Agreement, the United ~ •
States and ·canada are now •
embarked on a monumental
economic enterprise that will be •
compete directly with the Euro- "
pean common market jugger· •
naut, which comes Into being In
1992. We'd better be pals.
·
Therearetlmeslnthecourseof '
human events when the best .;
thing to do is not much. Maybe we ''
just ought to leave bad enough ~
alone.
~

CHICAGO (NEAl -Looking
skyward at the 80-story headquarters building of the Amoco
Corp. here Is an Inspiring experience. The cleq vertical sweep
of the majestic tower Is awesome
as It soars more than 1,100 feet
above Lake Michigan.
·
VIewing the base of the buildIng Is another matter, however.
It Is surrounded by an unsightly
jumble of sawhorses, Industrial
waste bins, plastic sheetlni.
plywood panels and s lgns warnIng of potential hazards faced by
passersby and company
employees.
All of that material Is necessary to construct an elaborate
network of temporacy passageways to protect pedestrians from
being struck by one (or more) of
the 43,000 marble panels that '
were supposed to provide a
permanent facing for the
building.
Shortly after It was. completed
In 1973, however, the marble
panels began to bend or IJI)W
outward. To hold them 1n place,
bolts bad to be driven throuah
each panel, then fastened to

heavy steel straps attached to the\
structural frame.
That failure Is cited by one of
the country's leading authorities
on the Integrity of buildings,
bridges an other large-structures
as an example of the "trial-and'
error engineering' • evident In too
many major construction
projects.
Indeed, John W. Fisher, professor of civil engineering at Lehigh
University, says some of the
public works catastrophes of
recent decades have been Inaccurately attributed to decay or
Inadequate maintenance. In·
stead, they may have have been
caused by faulty materials and
Improper techniques when the
structures were buUt. ·
"Our nation's decaying Infrastructure needs more than a
Band·Ald approach. Research
Into building better, more reliable structures and ways to ·
monitor them once built will give
us the long-term answers we
need," says Fisher.
"Amerlca:s construction Industry Is courttne diluter by
spending millions of dollars on

q

repairs and litigation lns.tead of
putting the money Into strengthening the Industry's base of
knowledge,'' he adds. "By that, I
mean research ~ •
Specifically, Fisher fears'that
architects and builders are too
quick to rely upon oversimplified.
mathematical models that contain too many assumptions and
too lmpl:jlperly extrapolate from
small-scale research for largescale construction.
At Lehigh, he Is the director of
the Advanced Technology for
Large Structural Systems Cen·
ter, which Includes the world's
largest facility for testing the
strength (and weakness) of
materials used In public works
and other heavy construction
projects.
That $7.5 million laboratorywhich contains 2 million pounds
of steel reinforcement bars and
500,000 feet of steel cables set In
4,000 cubic yards of concrete ,...
can determine the tensile
strength and fatigue point of
massive steel l·beams by subjecting them to extraordinary
strain and pressure.

~

.

.

Team

· WL
Tile BookmaiUI................... .8 1
Meigs CounJy Greens ..........7 2
Middleport Lunch Room .....6 t
L.A. Clothing .................. ....5 4
Blue Tartan ........................5 5
40 Plus .......................... : ....3 6
Backstreet VIdeo ......... :......3 7
Gunners ................: ............2 8

.....

.

NA'I'IGPUL POOftW. UA.Olfl:

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· Robert Walters ...
If such testing had been done
on the marble cladding of the
building that houses the execu·
live offices of one of the nation's
largest petroleum companies ·,
here In Chicago, Fisher argues, •
Amoco would not now be forced ~
to replace all ot'the panels.
;
After cons I ruction of the
ground-level protection Is com· :
plete, work wlll begin on four ;
huge metal towers to be welded •
to each of the buUdlng scorners. J
Scaffolding will then be suspended from them, enabling ,
• workers to reach the faulty :
panels.
·•
Finally, all of the marble :
cladding will be removed and ;
replaced with granite panels. •
When tbe ·project Is completed
next year, Ills expected toCQatat 1
least $60 million, and u much as
$80 million.
:
That represents more than half •
of the $120 million required to ••
construct the entire buUdlng 16 ·~
yeara ago - a high price to pay '
for the failure to systematically ~
test consttuctlon materlalll.

swimmers by 1 p.m. for the pool
to open.
Current standings In the Middleport Men'• Summer Basliet·
ball League are:

Scoreboard ...
Majon

....

II ... M .Ia I

... 1111
All II
... 1111

AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL·STARS Members of the American LeBIIIe Ali..Stars of the
Melp-Mason girls softballleBIIIe are front row
from left to rtsht- Kim Osborne, Doreen Hadsell,
Heidi Snider, Healher Roush, .Jackie Wolf and

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::J= . ~~*~e ~:e~P~~o~

ated. Booing doesn't mean nothlq - they'\le been booing me
my whole career.
"I'm 34.() and tl'le champion. I
can't satisfy anybody. I satisfy
No. l, that's me.''
Nunn an overwhelming favor·
lte Improved to 34.0. Barkley,
much slower than the champion,
feU to 25-6. There were no
knockdowns.
Judge Art ,Lurie of Las Vegas
had It 116-113 for Nunn, Glen
Hamada of Washington scored It
115-113 for the champion, and
Keith MacDonald of Reno had It
114-114. UPI had Nunn winning
116-112.
"I know In my heart that I
didn't lose," Barkley said. ''The
bottom line Is that he got the
declalon. I can'! change what
happened.'.
Barkley tossed angry words at
Nunn durina a post-fight news
conference.
"You never hit me," Barkley
said. "You hit like a Dower."
The quicker Nunn danced the
first half-minute away, then got
the best of an excbanae despite
being backed to the loose Lawlor
Events Center ropes. He made
Barkley miss wildly later In the
round, smUed and scored with
uppercuts that caused the challenger's nose to bleed.
Barkley couldn't score Inside
In the second round, either, and
he was rocked late with a Nunn
combination.
Nunn's superiOr hand speed
was evident In the third round
when he opened a cut above
Barkley's lett eye. In the fourth, .
Barkley received encouragement ,from the crowd and got
through with a series of rights
that made the champion retreat .
Barkley slammed a left hook to
the body midway through the
fifth round, bu tNunn Jaacled with
a lett to the head JeCOnds later
and came on.
''I ·didn't have a hard time
hlttlq him," Nunn said. "He was
just awkward."
The Challenger motioned for
Nunntocomeat hlml:251ntotbe
sixth, and Nunn won a trade of

MIAMI (UPI) - Mike Tomczak fired touchdown passes of 11
yards to Neal Anderson and 28 to
Dennis Gentry Monday· night to
send the Chicago Bears to a 28-20

punches seconds later. In the
seventh, Nunn dropped his hands
and talked to Barkley. Barkley
got through with a right uppercut
50 seconds In, but his left eye was
puffy.
.
Nunn landed two letts late In
the eighth and shook off a solid
right by Barkley seconds before
the bell. Tbe champion was the
more active In the ninth round.
Bar~ wobbled Nunn with a
left book to the head In the flnallO
seconds of the lOth round, but had
no time to foUow up.
Nunn went down from a
Barkley push a minute Into the
· 11th. Tbe challenger cracked
Nunn with a right 1:15 In, but
Nunn laughed It off. The chal·
Ienger was caught with· another
lett hook seconds later.
Barkley, looking for a knockout, could not land a serious blow
In the final round.
•'I could've done nothing In the
last round and still won the
fight," Nunn said.
Nunn, who weighed 159, won
the title last July when he
stopped Frank Tate In the ninth
round. The 26-year-old retained
his crown In November with an
eighth-round stop of Juan Domingo Roldan, and In March
when he knocked out Sumbu
Kalambay with a thundering left
hook 88 seconds Into the bout.
Barkley, 1-4 pound over the160
limit before shedding his underwear and trying again, gained
the World Boxing Council middleweight crown when he KO'd
Thomas Hearns In the third
round 14 months ago. He lost the
title In February when Roberto
Duran scored a split-decision
victory.
Nunn earned a career-high
$1.25 million. Barkley got
$400,000. '
An extremely overweight Duran, whO meets Suaar Ray
Leonard Dec. 7, fought a threeround exhibition with lrll;h
Danny Morgan. The rounds
lasted two minutes each and
Duran, who was booed for not
throwing many punches, wore
headgear.
The Leonard·Duran winner
may pass up Nunn to fight
Tbomas Hearns .
EarUer, Olympic sliver medal·
Is t Michael Carbajal Improved to
7.0 with a second-round KO of
light flyweight Prudenclo DeJesus. Also, gold medalist Robert
Wanglla moved to 6-0 with a
fourth-round TKO of welter·
weight Keith Banks.
An estimated crowd of 6,500
watched the bouts at the 12,000·
seat arena. '

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Calendar

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The Daily Sentinl'l

THE CENTRAL TRlSI' C&lt;MB\NY
!!" /JaMT1taJ Mlfes ~ HlppeiL

• -.... a

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~

INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST

got to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust

. . .. . .

He was three-for-three agau ..
on the Bears' next possessJ&lt;m
collecting 58 of the drive s ~~
yards and hitting Gentry ove, ,
Dolphin rookie safety Lout.
Oliver lor the score.
,
He was replaced by McMaho&lt;.
who put up some good numbers u•
his own In his only drive. H. .
drive was finished off wh ~·
Green circled left end un touc h• "
from two yards out. ·

WHY YOU SHOULD

If you've been
holding back waiting for a great rate,
.this is it ~ you've

A-ol'' l ' - ... 1 .....

NY 01-ol-l:ltr,l .....
Nl' ltls"' nllleiSUI ..........

J

victory over the late-stardng
Miami Dolphins In the exhibition
opener for both teams.
Tomczak Is locked In a battle
with Jim McMahon and Jim
Harbaugh for the starting quarterback job, and opened for the
Bears Monday night. He completed seven of eight passes for
122 yards and the two
touchdowns.
Jim McMahon played the second quarter and completed four ·
of six for 47 yards, and directed a
drive that set up Notre Dame
rookie Mark Green's 2-yard
touchdown.
Harbaugh played the third
quarter and led tlie Bears on
another scoring drive, this one
capped by Brian Bero's 5-yard
touchdown run. Harbaugh finIshed the game with five comple·
lions In elgl)t attempts for 52
yards.
Dan Marino started at quarter·
back for the Qolphlns but was
unable to mount a touchdown
drive. He aompleted five ofseven
for 62 yards . and threw one
Interception.
The first two Miami touchdowns came In the second half on
passes from backup Cliff Stoudt,
who h\1 Scott Schwedes for 13
yards and Andre Brown for 20.
Stoudt finished 10 for 14, 177
yards and the two touchdowns.
The Dolphins picked up
another score with 6: 30 left in the
game on a 9-yard pass from Scott
Secules, a recent acquisition
from Dallas, to fuUback Gerald
White.
The Bears were forced to punt
the first time they got the ball,
but they scored their next three
possessions for a 21.0 halftime
lead.
Tomczak led off with a sixplay, 62 yard. drive, completing
all three of his passes.for6~ yards
Including the touchdown the row
to Anderson In the right corner or
the end zone.

. ...,. . . o.............

. . . . . . . . . . .

11:1 ..

Shelll Hill. Second row - Chrissy Richmond
Wendy Davis, Paula Bird, Slefanle Leach, Kelh&lt;
Thomas, Chrissy Weaver, Trlcla Baer , 'frac·•·Richmond, and Coach Ed Baer.

Bears outlast Dolphins, 28-20

Nunn retains crown

'

Sky-high cost of fixing a skyscra~r

•

6-·l .loss to Pittsburgh Pirates

.

-:

.

EPA· goes
easy
on
gray
market
cars
·
·
Jack Anderson

The Daily Sen.tinel
~v

Expos' slt1mp contirl\les With

Pag8-2-Tha Daily Sentinel

'·

$20 110

140 :ltJ
~i"!:I I J

~

�. Ponwoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Tuesday, August 15. 1989

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 6

Hay show
winners named

Grand champion ·steer .sells
for ·$28,000 at '89 state fair ·

!

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER - Farmers
Bank of Pomeroy purchased the Mason County
Reserve Champion Steer shown by David Crank.
Pictured are Tyler and Bruce Reed of Farmers .

Bank, David Crank, Fair Queen Kelly Safford,

Utile Mr. Mason County, Curtis Blessing and
Utde Miss Mason County Kalle Gerlach.

..
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Susan Shealy came away with a
big payoff in her first trip to the
Ohio State Fair as an animal
exhibitor.
Shealy, a 17-year-old resident
of Tiro in Crawford County. sold
her grand champion . steer for
$28,000 during Monday's Sale of
Champions at the fair.
The 1,245-pound ChlaninaAngus crossbreed . steer named
"Halik" was .purchased by Link
CarniVals of Fremont, Ohio,
operptor of the .midway rides at
the 1989 fair.
Shealy WIIS one of eight young
Ohioons who sold their grand
champion animals during the
sale, which netted a total of
$84,800.
She has been exhibiting anlm·
als for four ye11rs, bu I this was
her first time at the state fair ..
She said she plans to use the
money she received for the steer
to pay for her college education.
• She plans to attend The Ohto
State University.
The reserve grand champiOn·
steer, owned .by Janet Leon·

hard!, 18, Crestline, was purchased by the Bogey Inn of
Columbus for $6,200.
Jenny Smith, 15, of Xenia
received $12,100 for' her grand
champion barrow. It was purch8$ed jointly by Schmld\'S
Sausage Haus restaurants of
Columbus and Cox's Concessions
· of Fremont. J.P.'s Ribs res taurant of Columbus. paid $7,100 lor
the , reserve grand champion
barrow, owned by Brian
Schroever, 9. of Columbus
·
Grove.
The Kroger
grand

ior $11,500. The owner was John
Shroyer of DeGraff. The reserve
grand champiOn, .owned by
Luther Hilio!Mt .. Perry, was,sold

for$5,400toMax'sConcesslo~sof

Parker City. Ind.
Two Columbus companies, Rl·
cart Fdrd and Zimmerman Publie Relations, teained to buy the
grand champion pen of s~ meat
chickens owned by Karen Kolb,
17, Eaton, for $8,000. Jennie
Brandt of Anna sold her reserve
grimd c)lamplon cl\ickens for
$~.500 to McKen~ie' s Cardinal
Markets of Worthington.

.,

Resort owner to plead guilty

BAKING JUDGING - Jackie Anderson, left,
home eeonomlcs teacher at Point Pleasant, and
Betty Burris, retired home ec teacher al
Wahama, served as the Judges for lbe baked

1

'Betsy A. Herald, Tuppers
Plains, won the best of show
award In the amateur photograpy competition at the Meigs
County Fair out of a total of 220
entries.
Deborah Grueser, Pomeroy
received the reserve best of show
award.
Winners in the color snapshot
category of landscape and seas·
cape were Texanna Well, Pomeroy, first; Judy Garraway, Vlnton, second; and Karen Smith,
Chester, third. In the . animals
class, Debbie Spencer, Pomeroy,
first; Sharon Card; Racine, second; and Paula Mora, Racine,
third.
Portraits · and personalities
winners were Becky Codner,
Syracuse, first;
Robert A.
Bailey, Long Bottom, second;
and Maxine Dyer, Bidwell, third.
W)nnlnglntheplctoral (storytell·
lng with one picture) class were
Robert A. Bailey, Long Bottom.
first·. Kathy Oyer, Middleport,
' second; and Sharon Card, Ra-.
clne. third.
Abstract, pat terns, and special·
effect photo winners were Kathy
Dyer, Middleport, first; Robert
A. Bailey, Long Bottom, second;
and Sharon Card, Racine, third.
In the nature closeups class the
winners were Glenn Collins,
Syracuse, first; RobertA.Bailey,
LoJ!i Bottom, second; and Becky ·
Codner, Syracuse, third. Mlscelianeous winners were David L.
Harris, Pomeroy, first; Judy

'

'

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG - River City
Farm Supply purchased the Mason County
Reserve Champion hog shown by Della Hogg.
Pictured are Alden Wedemeyer of River City

Supply, D.ella Hogg, Utile Mr. Mason County
Curds Blessing, Miss Mason County Kelly Salford
and Utile Miss Mason County Kagle Gerlach.

~,

~

.,,,.

'

•

c

STATE GRAND CHAMPIONS SOLD- Su111111 Shealy,lop photo,
holds on to herl,245-pound Grand CbampionSteet at the Ohio Stale
Fair Monday. The prized animal sold for 528,000. Below- Jenny
Smilb attempts to contrel ber 2110-pound Grand Champion
CI'OIIIlbred Barrow which was auctioned for $12,000. (UPI) . ·
Rose, Long Botiom, bio-color ·
tomatoes; Ben Crane, Middleport, green pod pole beans; Jim
King, long pole beans; Jim King,
yellow pod pole beans; Jim King,
green pod bush beans; Jim King, ·
yellow pod bush beans; Mary .
King, Long Bottom. lima beans;
Lenora Leifheit., white onions;
Lenora Leifheit, yellow onions.
. Larry Ritchie, Coolville, pimentoes; Delma Karr, Middleport., hot peppers; Chester B.
Rose, Racine, sweet peppers;
Lenora Leifheit., beets;' Joyce
Arlo Sauters, carrots; Keith D.
Ashley, green cucumbers; Max·
ine Dyer, Bidwell pickles;· Joyce
Al\n Sauters, zucchini; Jim King,
summer squash; . Delma Karr,
crooked neck squash; Lenora
Leifheit, ornamental gourds;
Joyce Ann Sauters, . penquin
gourds.
.
Fred B. Smith. and Delma'
karr, melons; Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell, winesap apples; Joyce
Ann Sauters, Jonathon apples;
Evelyn Hollon, red delicious
apples; Thelma Giles, Pomeroy,
golden delicious; Darlene Hayes,
grimes golden apples ..
Taking blue ribbons with other
fruit exhibits were Joyce Ann
Sauters prune plums and damson
plums; Patricia Holter, Pomeroy, concord grapes; Roy Holter,
Niagara grapes; Patty Dyer,
Bidwell, pears; Thelma Giles,
yellow peaches and white
peaches .

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YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

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as age 26 and are particularty at·

see just how lOw your car insuranc:e premium can be with the

"
•
~
'

Dale Nibert, Peoples Bank, Fair Queen Kelly
Safford, James Lewis, Peoples Bank and Kelly
Hughes. In front are Little Miss Mason County
· Katie Gerlach and Lillie Mr. Mason County Curtis
Blessing.

~:Lawmakers deaths mark sad week

l

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WASHINGTO N (UP!) -The
: deaths of Reps. Mickey Leland,
: D-Texas , a nd Larkin Smith,
·· R-Miss., · in separate airplane
: crashes marked "a very sad
,: week" for Congress, where law; makers remembered the lives Q.f
: tbelr two colleagues.
: The few legislators who were In
. Washington on Monday during
.; the s·ummer break for Congress
· had kind words for the veteran
;'lawmaker Leland , who died
-~along with 15 other people in
~Ethiopia, and the freshman
::smlth. who was ktlied in souther n
. Mississippi.
; ' 'fhis has been a very, very sad
; week for the House of Represen~tatlves and the Congress," said
'-House Speaker Thomas Foley ,
;:D-Wash. , who called the loss of

two colleagues in a single week
"a heavy blow. "
House Republican leader Bob
Michel of Illinois said Leland and
Smith "exemplified the highest
standards of government service
and reminded us ail of the truly
high caliber of Individual we ·
have serving our country today."
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.,
said, "We lost two members'
.from opposite ends of the Ideological spectrum who were both
putting themselves at some risk
to do their jobs."
At the White House, press
secreta ry Marlin Fitzwater on
Monday expressed President
Bush's sympathy for Smith's
family, just as the president had
done Sunday for·Leland's family
upon confirmation of the congressman's death.

v.

· •congressmen Smith was just
beginning a promising career In
the Congress," Fitzwater said .
House memorials for the two
congressmen had not yet been
scheduled as of Monday, Foley
Chris Baer of Racine took blue
said. The Senate Black Legisla- ribbons In two oflhe three classes
tive Staff Caucus held a memor· of the hay show judged Monday ·,
tal service Monday for Leland.
at the MelliS County Fair.
The deaths of Leland and
Ribbons and premiums were
Smith mean there are now five awarded in three places, $20 for
vacancies In the 435·member . first, $15 for second and SlO for
House.
·
·
third.
Seats in Congress have also
The winners, first to third
been opened by the resignations respectively, were as followa: 75
of fo1'lller House Speaker Jim percent or more alfalfa, Baer,
Wright, D-Texas, and Rep. Tony Chris Hamm, Racine, Philip
Coelho, D-Callf., who both quit Hamm, Racine; In all grasses,
amid allegations of unethical Baer, Chris Hamm, B. J. Ervin,
conduct. A successor also must . Racine; and In 49 percent or less
be chosen for Rep. Claude legumes, B. J. Ervin, Herbert
Pepper, D-Fia., who died at age Ervin, Racine, and Howard
88.
Ervin, Racine.

Baer claims two
blue ribbons at fair

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FOR BACK-TO-SHOOL
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IICI., OliO

IIAmiC~ID~YISl-GOI.DEN IUCDYE

.

Garroway, Vinton, second; and
Carol Nicholson, Middleport,
third. Black and white snapshot
winners in the landscape and
seascape class were Judy Garra·
way, Vinton. first; Patty Dyer,
Bidwell, second; and Opal Dyer,
Bidwell, third. In animals, Judy
Garraway, first; Opal Dyer,
Bidwell, second; and Sharon
Card, third. In portraits and
personalities the winners were
Becky Codner, first; and Sharon
Card, second.
· Winning in the pictoral class
were Becky Codner, second; and
Robert A. Bailey, third. The
abstracts class was won by
Robert A. Bailey, first and
Sharon Card, second. In nature
cioseups, Judy Garraway, first;
Sharon Card, second; and Robert
A. Bailey, third. In miscellaneous the winners were Sharon
Card, first; Robert A. Bailey,
second; and Becky Codner,
third.
.
.
1.
In the category of color en Ia rgements in the class of landscape
and seascape the winners were
Sharon Card, Judy Gij.rraway,
and Carol Nicholson. In animals,
Betsy A. Herald, Kathy Dyer,
and Paula Mora. In portraits and
personalities, Barbara Sue Renderson, Reedsville, first; Deborah
Grueser. second; and Helen
Blackston, Pomeroy, third.
Winning In plctoral wre Becky
Codner and Robert Bailey . In

.Quirks in the ·news

tractive for the 45 to 64 yeor old.
If you have a safe driving record.

B:

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - Peoples
Bank purchased the Mason . County Reserve
champion lamb shown by Kevin Hughes: It was
resold to ET&amp;S Sand and Gravel, Smith Buick,
Johnson's Supermarket and McDonalds to benefit
the Mason County fair queen pageant. Above are

goods at the )lfelgs County Fair on Monday. They
had the Job of tasllng every single bakl!li good
entered In the competition.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
owner of two campground re-sorts .long pursued by state and
federal auth.;&gt;rltles has agreed to
plead guilty to felony bank and
tax fraud charges.
In papers tiled in U.S . District
Court Monday, William F. LlVorio, co-owner and presjdent of
The Landing and Ponderosa
Park Resort, agreed to plead
guilty to defrauding Bank One,
Warren, and lying on his 1985
federal Income tax return.
. =:';,""l;l'j~ ...JI~
~-- ,.,. :r,:::,_. ~~'i!1-~

Photography results
n~ed at Meigs ·fair

Sauters
has .best
garden
exhibit·
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally SenUuel Staff
Joyce Sauters of Pomeroy took
the blue ribbon for the best
display of garden produce in the
farm crops and horticulture
exhibit at the Meigs County Fair
judging Monday afternoon.
Second in that category went to
Delma Karr, Middleport, with
Peggy Crane, Middleport, taking
third. Premiums of $15, $10 and
$5 were awarded to·the winners.
There were 350 en tries in the
show.
In the largest specimen cate- .
gory Madeline Painter, Middleport, displayed the largest potato, Lenora Leifheit, Pomer.oy,
the iarges t pum pkln, Fred B.
· Smith, Pomeroy, the largest
watermelon; Joyce Ann Sauters,
Pomeroy , the largest apple;
Mary K. Rose, Long Bottom, the
largest tomato; Lenora Leifheit,
the largest beet, Lenora Leifheit,
the largest cucumber; Sharon
Card, Racine, the longest cucumber; Lenora Leifheit, the
largest onion and the largest
sweet potato; ·Joyce Ann Sauters,
the largest squash; Fred B.
Smith, the largest cantaloupe;
Dale Kautz, Pomeroy, the iarges tear of corn; Mary King, Long
Bottom, the longest bean.
In freak vegetables, the
winners in four places, respec·
lively, were Melissa Coleman,
Long ·Bottom, Jeff Rose, Racine,
Deborah Grueser, Pomeroy, and
Lenora Leifheit.
Blue ribbon winners in grains
were Dale Kautz, yellow corn;
Larry Ritchie, Coolville, sweet
corn, white; Allee~ - Thompson,
Pomeroy, sweet corn. yellow;
Sharon Card, sweet corn, bicolored; Peggy Crane, red popcorn; Roy Holter, Pomeroy,peck
wheat; and Don Smith. Racine,
peck barley.
In potatoes the blue ribbon
winners were Howard Ervin,
Racine, kennebecs, Merllee Bryant, Long Bottom, LaSoda, and
Delma Karr, Middleport, other
variety.
Blue ribbon winners in sweet
potatoes was Fred
Smith,
yams.
In vegtabies, taking first places were Darlene Hayes, Pome-roy. green cabbage; · Evelyn
Hollon, Racine, red cabbage;
Jeff Rose, Racine, egg plant;
Fred B. Smith, red tomatoes;
Keith D. Ashley, Pomeroy, yellow tomatoes; Jim King, Long
Bottom, pear red tomatores; Jim
King, cheery tomatoes; Mary K.

Chris Baer of Racine took blue
ribbons in twlllbfthethreeclasses
of the hay show judged Monday
at the Meigs County Fair .
Ribbons and premiums were
awarded in three places, S20 for
first, $15 for second and $10 for
third.
Tbe winners, first to third ·
respectively, were as follows: 75
percent or more · alfalfa, Baer,
Chris Hamm, Racine, Pliutp
Hamm, Racine; in ali grasses,
Bagr, Chris Hamm, B. J . ErVl!l,
.Racine; and Ill 49 percent or less
legumes, B. J. Ervin, Herbert
Erv{n, · Racine, and Qoward
Ervin, Racine.

They · weren' t even .wearing six numbers in the drawing.
Although Schlappl won $1,192 In ·
masks...
, MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. the drawing, he would have won
(UPI) - Pollee In west St. Louis the jackpot had he been horn on
·County were on the lookout for the 19th instead of the 16th. .
·three naked bandits who robbed
Schlappi, an avid trapshooter,
a deliveryman of two pizzas and chose five fjgures using trapcaused a few other disturbances. shooting numbers. For the sixth_
· The incidents occurred late number he chose his blrthdate.
The next Lotto A111erlca drawSunday in an unincorporated
· area of the county near Maryland ing for Megabucks players is
Heights, a suburb of St. Louis, Wednesday, when the jackpot
· said Officer John Mlederhoff of will total $10 mlllion. Lotto
the St. Louis County Police America Is known as Megabucks
· Depariment.
· In Wisconsin.
.
A pizza deliveryman walking
Megabucks players collected
through an apartment complex more than $85,000 In prizes for
when he was accosted 'bY three matching five of the six numbers
naked men who were carrying drawn Saturday .
their clothes in their arms,
Lotto America is played In the
District of Columbia, Iowa, KanMlederhoff said.
•They asked if that was their sas, Oregon, Mi.ssouri, Rhode
pizza,'' the officer said. ''He said; Island, West Virginia and.
· 'No I don'tthlnk so,' and tried to Wisconsin.
· tgn~re them; With that, one of the
men grabbed the pizza box and Governor backs casino dolphin .
hit him In the mouth with his free display
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UP!)hand. Thim they took off." .
Gov.
Bob MJller Is throwing his
The startled deilveryman wa~
• n·ot Injured seriously, Miederhoff support to Las Vegas casino
, said. He said pollee had received owner Steve· Wynn who wants
federal permission to put six
olher reports that aparently
dolphins on display In his new
concerned the naked robbers.
·"We had another call about the giant M(rage hotel which opens
same time in the same area of
in December.
Miller wrote a letter Monday to
three subjects running aroun~
the Department of Commerce
naked causing a c;listurbance,
he said. "Another local pollee saying the dolphin display would
be good for education and goOd
; department says they walked
into a convenience store there in
tor tourism '"Las Vegas.
"It will be top rank,'' said
, the same .lack of at tire."
Larry
Henry, the governor's
: Police were investigating re·
' ports of a large party being held · press secretary. "It wlll be good
In the neighborhood sunday · for Las Vegas.''
The National Marltlne Fishernight, fdlederhoff said.
ies service of the Dejlariment of
"Our assumption is they were
Commerce will conduct a hear·
probably swimming in a pool,''
tng Tuesday in Washington D.C .
he said. "Aud that's probably
Miller's letter will be presented
why they were attired .the way
then . . ·
they were- or weren't."
The pool at the 4,000-room
-""""-Mirage
will be larae enough to
Lotter)' pla,Jer bon too early
handle
2' dolphins but Wlnn
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - If a
Darl1nlton man had been born plans on having only six.
•They are not aoln&amp; to have six
three days later, he would bl!ve
won the •. 2 million Lotto A!ller· dolphins In a mason frult ·jar,"
, Henry said. "Some people back .
lea Jackpot Saturday night.
Mark Schlappl wa1 one ot 22 in Wuh~on don't understand
players who matched five of the this."

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· PHOTO JUDGING -Dale Lear, photographer, Is seen here
judging the 220 entries In the amateurphololf&amp;phy competition for
the Meigs County Fair.
·
abstract the winners were Helen the black and white enlargement
Blackston, Kathy Dyer, and Judy category in animals, portraits
Garraway. In nature closeups and personalities, plctoral. abthe winners were Robert A. stract, and miscellaneous. She
Bailey. Helen Blackston, Debbie also won third place in nature
Spencer. Miscellaneous winners closeups.
In the fair happenings class the
were Deborah Grueser, David
Harris, and Robert A. Bailey . winners were Debbie Spencer,
Judy Garraway won first place in first; and Paula Mora. second.

r--People in·;. the news-RJNGO GETS A Lfl'l'LE HELP FRoM HIS FRIENDS:
Ringo Starr's tour ts attracting iilotofstars. Theex-Beatle got a
little help from his friends during a weekend show at the Garden
State Arts Center In Holmdel, N.J. , when Bruce Springsteen
·came onstage to sing backup with Starr and his band on
"Photograph.'' "Get Back" and "With a Little Help From My
Friends." Actor John Candy joined them for the final number
and Starr's ex-wife, Maureen, was In the audience.
COKE NOT THE REAL THING IN HOLLYWOOD: The word
in Hollywood is that cocaine can be harmful to your career.
'.'Cocaine is a fallen star," Allan Rosenlhaf, founder ot Cocaine
Anonymous and ex·h\lsband of reformed user Heather Thomas,
says in TV Guide. The drug has fallen out of fashion . partly
because entertainment executives don't hire addicted stars, the
magazine says, pointing to the case of Jan-Michael VIncent,
whO recently went through drug and alcohol rehabilltatJon In
South Africa. ''You can get blackballed,'' Vincent says. "I came
very close to the edge of that." But that's not to say that there
are no more cocaine users left In the business ..' 'I know of a few
entertainers who've announced that they're sober,'' Rosenthal
says, "but they're not. For some it was a case of backsliding and
for some it was bu U .. . from the start:"
HAMBURGER STORY: In his television commercials,
burger mogul Dave Thomas says he named his fast-food
restaurants Wendy's after his daughter but that's not quite
correct. His daughter's real name Is Melinda and, In fact, her
nickname Is ·not even Wendy - it's Wenda. Mellnda-Wenda
lives in South Carolina and manages a country club. Thomas
has stepped into the role once filled by Clara "Where' s the Beer'
Peller and, ·tn addition to starring in his own commercials, the
folksy, high school dropout is on a 30-city tour of his res tau rants
tor promotional visits.
. NEW CONDUCTOR IN L.A.: The Finn is In with the Los
Angeles Philharmonic. Conductor Esa·Pekka Saloaen, 31, of
Flnllind will replace Andre Previn as the orchestra's music
dlrecto~. the 11th person to hold the job in philharmonic's
70-year histOrY. Salonen was caught In the middle of a dispute
last year hi!tween the philharmonic's managing director,
Ernest Fleillchnlun, and Prevln when Fleishmann acted
without Prevln's permission when he signed Saionen to take the
orchestra on tour. The athletic Salouen, who has led orchestras
in West Berlin, New York, Paris; Montreal and Washington, is
said to cut a dashing, dramatic figure at the podium, which
should please those who found Prevln too conservative.

YOU CAN'T GO BLOOD FROM ATURNIP

WE NEED YOU
COME TO RED ·cROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16
POMEROY SENIOR CmZEN (ENTER
l TO 5:30
.

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QUILT ·JUDGING -Bunny Kuhl is seen .here carefuUy
inspecting and Judging the many quilts entered lor competition in
this year's domestic ar.ls sbow at the Meigs County Fair.

Hair dryers .recalled
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The commission officials said.
government announced the voThe dryers and the companies ·
1u11tary recall of 250,000 hand· involved in the voluntary recall"
held hair dryers that can cause arethePomairPro2100and1900,
electrocution when immersed in MBR Industries Inc., M,laml; the
water in the off position, and . Mustang ~U 2100, Mustang
!N'ned that another 80 million Electronics Inc., Hallandale,
dryers ·already sold pose the Fla.; the Major Styling Dryer
same danger.
Model 1250, Major lnternationaf
In the announcement Monday. Inc. , Orange, CaUl.; and thE!
the Consumer Product Safety Minlmate Hair Dryer and Iron
Commission said acCidents in- DS-601, China Bazaar, Sari
voivlng the devices kill about 17 Francisco.
people a year -more than half of .
Consumers can return the
them children under 10.
' dryers to the place pf purchase
·"Children often use the.se devl- for a refund or a ~placement.
ces tor bath-time play," said TheCPSCsaidnoneoftheChina
Anne Graham, acting CPSC Bazaar dryers reached
c halrwoman. "One scenario we . consumers.
have seen Involves one or more
Nearly all hair dryers, lnclud·
children left unattended in a ing the recalled ones, are foreign
bathtub when a parent leaves made, and "more than 10" other
momentarily. Too often the par· importers ate being investigated
ent returns to find that a child has for violating the industry standbrought a hair dryer into the tub, ard, said David Schmeltzer.
electrocuting one or both of the CPSC associate executive
children."
director.
Schmeltzer said the voluntary
The 250,000 hair dryers being
recalled were sold after the standard wlll become official in
adoption "in October 1987 of a 1991 and a petition is pending
voluntarY' industrY standard re- before the commission that
quirlng devices that prevent would make it mandatory.
electrocution when the dryers
He described the companies
are immersed in water while involved in the recall as "relaturned off.
lively small" and said none had
Theother80million\lryersalso been aware of the standard until
do not have the safety devices but contacted by the commission. He
were sold before the standard said it costs about 50 cents per
was adopted, the commission dryer to comply with the industry
said.
standard.
.
R.. David Pittle, a CPS€
Because there is virtually no
way to tell which dryers have the member from 1973 to 1982 who is
safety feature, the CPSC urged technical director for Consumers
consumers to keep ali appliances Union, said the recall may '
unplugged when not In use and to indicate the commission wlll
install a ground fault circuit take a more active role under
interrupter in each bathroom , President Bush than In · the
socket.
'' Reagan admiJiistralion.
The GFCis, which cost about
'.'Given the rather dormant
$10 to $20 each, cut power when posttire that the commissioners
an appliance is placed in water, · have taken over the last eight
without a fatal discharge of years, this is a very encouraging
electricity. Permanent GFCis move," Pit tie sa!d in telephone
shOuld be installed by an electri- interview from Mount Vernon,
clan and portable ones are N.Y.
available in hardware stores,

Shear Illusions Welcomes Lillian
Cameron to Their Staff. She is
Available for Walk-ins .or
Appointments

Tanni~g Specialts VISITS S32° 0
Hair Cut and Style S1QOO
Trudy Marshall · Owner/Operaror, Susan Sisson, Lois
. Eblin, Liz Smith and Lillian Cameron.

Shear Illusions

STYI.lNG SfUDIO &amp; TANNING CENTER
2935 SECOND

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992-2550

MIDDLEPORT

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�•

16, 1989

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Judge questions use of DNA testing

0

NEW YORK CUPI) - A legal
decision that questions the valid··
lty of genetic tests In a murder
trial could lead to the reopening
or scores or criminal and paternlty cases nationwide, some
legal experts say.
The ruling Monday by Acting
Justice Gerald Shelndlln ot state
Supreme Court was believed to
be the first major challenge to
DNA "fingerprinting." The technique Is used to Identify lndlvidu·
als as the source of blood, semen,
hair or skin based on analysis of
~he genetic material DNA found
m cells.

Tuesday. August 16. 1989
Page 6

Spiritual life topic of UMW
Nurturlns Our Spiritual Lite"
was· the title of the program
presented by Mrs. Mae Young at
the Aug. 3 meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women.
The purpose of the program
was to explore biblical and other
readings that can be helpful for
individual spiritual growth.
It also provided an opportunity
to share personal experiences
that may enhance each parllcl·
pants desire for more spiritual
nurturing through meditation,
bible readiliJ(, prayer and friend-

wmmunity
calendar

ship within · ttie eommunity of
faith. This helps women grow in
their ability to use . spiritual
experiences to Inform. and
change their daily activities.
The scripture reading was ,
Colossians 1:9·10 and Young said
a prayer.
TUESDAY
Five members were present at
KANAUGA -The Silver Mem·
the 'meeting and the treasurer's orlal Freewill Baptist Church In
and secretary's reports were Kanauga will be having revival
read. Mrs. Clarice Allen, presl· . now through Friday at the ·
dent, was sick and not present at church.
the meeting, so no new bu.siness
was discussed.
MIDDLEPORT -The Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church
wlll have r~vtval today through
Friday at 7: 30 p.m. nig~ly .
Norman Taylor from Evans,
. Mrs. Carver Williams of Marion,
W.Va. will conduct the rl!vjval.
Ohio·
· ·
M~. and Mrs. Tliorne Cottrlll,
POMEROY -The Ladles AuxJoan and Jennifer, Ms. Jill
iliary Franternal Order of Ea·
Bushee, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
gles 2171 will have a meeting on
Orth, Michael and Allen, all of
Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Carroll, Ohio, Ms. Judy Cottrill,
Tedd and Zach of Lancaste.r,
MIDDLEPORT -The special
Ohio, Dan Binner, Lancaster,
meeting
of the Middleport Lodge
Brian Payne of Columbus; .
F
and
AM
scheduled for Tuesday
Mr. and Mrs. Art Skinner, Mr.
at
7
p
.m
.
has
been cancelled.
and Mrs. George Skinner, Mr.
ancj Mrs , Jo~ Foster, Mr. and
THU~AYc
Mrs. Gene Yost, Mrs. Carl Circle
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
· and Patrice, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
group of A.A. and AI-Anoll will
Yos~. Carson and Stephen, Mr.
meet on Thursday at 7 p:m . at
and Mrs. Kevin Sheppard and
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Mrs. Edson Roush, ali local.

The lOth annual · family Ingathering of the descendants and
relatives of Marla Skinner Foster was held at her home on July
29, 1989.
Her birthday also was
observed.
Activities al the reunion In·
eluded games, picture taking and
displaying, and visiting among
the 41 people present.

SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED - 'l'hls yeu:'s
recipients of scbol!orshlps from the Carleton
Memorial Trust Fund are left to riJbt, front, Todd
U.le, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Usle, wbo will
lltllend Olllo University; Tammy Theiss, dauJbter
of Mrs. Pam Theiss, Ohio State Unlverstty; and
Brlu Weaver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weaver,
'ntlln Unlverslly: and back, Barbara Lisle,
4auJhter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Usle,
~ocklnJ Technical College; •and Darla Lamberl,

daughter of Allab Lambert, llockl~~g Technical
College. Also a recipient not present for tile
pidure is Shelly ConnoUy, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim ConnoUy, Hocklq Tech. Over the past
10 years, the Carleton Collep Board of Trlllliej(!ll
who admlnisle,.,. the trust fund bas awarded 78
scholarships lotalin« $%%,1100. The money Is
_..derived from interest received from the Initial
Investment of $25 ,000.

AnnouncementJ
Seekins

re~lpes

for cookbook
.POMEROY -When Pomeroy
celebrates li's 150th bir.thday the
sesquecentennial committee will
have available for sale a cookbook made up of "old time "
recipes of mothers, grandmoth·
ers, great grandmothers, etc. If
anyone has a recipe they would
like to contribute to the cookboOk, entitled " Treas ured Recipes from the Past" send it or
drop It by the Daily Sentinel
office in care of Julie E . Dillon.
Any church women's organizations are also ·encouraged to
collect recipes for the book and
turn them in to the Sentinel
ornce. The deadllne for submit·
ting recipes Is Sept. 15.
Homecoming revival
POMEROY -The Zion Church
of Christ of Route 143 is planning
a weekend homecoming revival
for Aug . 18, 19, and -20. Greg and
Jennifer Wallace, Johnson C'lty,
Tenn. , will be leading the ser vices at 7: 30 p.m . on Friday and
Saturday, and 10: 30 a .m . and 2
p.m. on Sunday. Wallace ·iS from
the Ripley Church of Christ in
Ripley, W.Va ., and ls married to
the former Jennl.fer Grove r , .
daughter of Ken and Mary
Grover of the Zion congrega tion.
A carry in dinnN I~ pla nned for
noon on Sunday and the public is
Invited to a tte nd

Dorsi reunion
POMEROY -The annual
Dorst reJ.tnion will be held on
Aug. 20 at the Lancaster fair
g rounds . A potluck dinner will be
served at noon. All friends and
re latives are invited.
Softball tournament
REEDSVILLE -There will be
men's slow pitc h soft bail tournam ent held on Aug. 19 and 20 at
Bas tern High School. The cost is
$65 and hit your own baiL Cali
378-6406 for information.
Middleport block party
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport's annual block party wlii be
held on Sept. 16. Interested
parties should reserve booths by
calling Debbie or Mike Ger la ch
at 992-6898, Lennie E liason at
992- ti485, 01 Brian John;.on at
992- 3481 . Booths ar«' reser ved on
a first come Iii st ser ved boisio. so
call soon to reserve a booth.
RuUand block party
RUTLAND -TheRutiand Fire
Department and ladles -a uxiliary
wilt be having a block party on
Sept . 2. There will becraft shows,
e ulel' tai nm&lt;&gt;nt , and food .
P 1·eview t·hanged
KEE DSVIL L£ - The S.V.A .L .
footb a ll prev 1e"
has bee n
.: ha uged from F rtuay , Aug. 18, to

Saturday, Aug. 19.
Brlckles reunion scheduled
POMEROY -The second annual reunion of the descendants
of Dannie and Flossie Brlckles
will beheldonSunday,Aug. 20,at
the Old Holiday School grounds
on Gilkey Ridge Road. A basket
lunch will be held at noon.

honored mason, was welcomPd
and invited to sit In the East.
It was reported that Joe Bolin
was Ill a nd in the hospital and a
get well card was &gt;~gned for him .
The obligation W&lt;" giv.e n to the
gr oup by the worthy pa tron, und·
the lesson o n heroines . 0 1 the
ordet .vas ftonc.led With the
tes.u1&lt; on E lect a .
s, hoenien gave a s hort talk
.mtl expressed appreciation. of

Meeting
NEW HAVEN -The Letart .
Flame Fellowship's monthly
meeting chapter meeting will be
held at the home of Gerri Tate in
New Haven, W.Va. Ail ladles In
the are welcome to attend. II will
be a pool side, covered dish party
with special singing and mlnls.terlng from the Word.
GoU tourn!lmenl
POMEROY -There will be a
Florida scramble with lunch and
tee off at 1 p.m. open to men and
women. Cost Is $40. Proceeds will
~o tor the Southern Boosters. For
information call 992-6312 or
~92-3671. · .

the welcome that he received.
At the meeting of Robert's
Circle on Saturday, each person
ts to httng an article for a white
elephant sale.
Harold Rice gave the blessing
before the group entered the
dining area where refreshments
were served by the refreshment
committee; Mrs. Lous Wyant,
Mrs. Janice DeBord, and Mrs.
Pat Arnold.

&amp;.rh parrions Hammer
I.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Bush issued a pa rdon for
international financier Armand
Hammer, charged with making
Illegal contributions to the 1 eelecUon c ampaign of Prestde ut
RIChard Nixon In 1972, the White
Houesaid.
Hammer, 91, a multt~RtiHo­
nalre known for his work on
behalf of peaaants In the Soviet
T.Jnlon and hll business finesse,
was ftned S3,000 In 1976 and put on
· prllballon for making tllegal
cOIItrtbutlons to Nix on' ' re
election campaign

over th e committees for the
September three club flower
show. entitled "A Walk Down a
Country Lane. "
Mrs. Carpenter received a call
from Ga il Thoma, VMH Skilled
Nurs ing ~·apiilty wanting the
C'l ui.J to com e and give program
presen ta Ituns to thP patients . The
club votPu to give the demonstra
tlons once a month.
hi was noted that Janet Bolin
at tended the Amerlfiora meeting
in Cheshire given by Richard
Amsiey .
.
·· Announcements were read on
· Exhibitors and .Judges School on
Aug. 21 and 22 In Columbus. The
open meeting of the Ru !land

Garden Club wtli be Aug. 28,
Gardener's Day Out wtll be Aug.
31 at Seven Caves, the Fourth of
July float won best overall, Mrs.
Bolin won a service award at
convention, alld Mrs. Snowden
and Mrs. Bolin entered the
convention flower show .
The open meeting will be held
on Aug. 23 at the ~u tland
Methodist Church. The program
will be Exhibition Table Pictures
by all members. Kimberly Wil·
Iford sent out invitations to other
clubs.
The lrave:llllg prize, brotightby
Mrs. Bolin, was won by Juan Ita
Lambert.
Refreshments were served.

Fire 'Department Auxiliary meets
Th~ Pledge of Allegiance and
Lord '" Prayer , led by Alana
Butler, opened the recent meet·
ing of the Racine Fire Department J.,adles Auxiliary.
Discussed at the-meeting was
the St. Jude's Bike-a-than held
on Aug. 5 at Letart Bucktown.
The Fourth of July grill was won
by Becky Hal I.·Labor Day ~vents
Wl're discussed and ic!' cream

will be made on Aug. 24 and 25.
The next meeting will be Sept.
13 at 7: 30 p.m.
Attending were Wauda Patfl!r·
son, Jeau Johnson, Saudy Patterson, JoAnn Grady, Jeau Lyoaa,
Emmie Lyons, MlsU Grueser,
Joyce Grady, Kay Hallman,
Missy Jones, Junior · member
Sissy Lyons, and new junior
member, Shelly Gillenwater.

POLICIES
•ol,ds ovtefdt Mei91. Galli1 or Muon coUmi• mullt bt prepaid.

point line'- ont-~ Ulld.
. ·
"Sentintf Mnot
· .• ,.~.for errors •tter firat d., . tChaclk ·
tor etrCM'I firlt d"...._... ru,s.in p...-) . Cell before. 2:00p.m.
d~ m • .publl•lon lo mike correction.
1Ada th.t rrlu• be .-a'd In ldvanc:. ••

Mildred Brooks gave the secre·
tary's report and said that some
cards are on-sale at Helen's shop
In Tuppers Plains. A get well
card was signed fore Doris
Koenig, Who has been
hospitalized.
,
Barnhill was recognized for
her upcoming 55th wedding ann!versilry on Aug. 21. ·
Others attending the meeting
Included Mildred Caldwell and
Joanna Weaver.

(Laura Hoover• from .MI . Vernon, Ohio.
Also visiting for several days
~fere Wendell's three sisters and
members of their families. On
hand , were Rev. and Mrs. Thurman Beavers and Mrs. Julia
Hoover from the AI bany, N.Y.

Rutland block party set

The Rutland Fire Department
Belles and Beaus Square
and auxiliary is sponsoring a dancers will be performing
block party on Sept. 2.
around 3 p.m. and the Wyoming
There wlll be an old fashioned Wolf Band will be performing
fish fry, crafts, and games. The from 6-10 p.m.
Meigs cheerleaders will be doing
There will be free drawings ail
the dunking .machine and the day but you !JIUSt be present to
Meigs Band will be ,performing.
win .
There will · be a prince and
Those attending are recomprincess contest for ages three . mended to b~lng a lawn chair,
through seven and a little miss For more Information on craft
and mister contest for ages eight tables or any of the contests, call
through 12.
742-2580 or 742-2421.

•

Weight control class slated
The Meigs County Health Department will begin a series of
six-week classes for weight
contrpl at 6· p.m. on Aug . 22 and
23.
There will be a choice of nights
for the classes or Tuesday or
Wednesday and classes are free
to Meigs County residents.
Each class will be two hours.
Attendance in required at only
one two hour session weekly.
Classes will include nutrition
education, stress management,
weekly weigh-Ins, relaxation
techniques, recipes, diet recall
sheets, exercise techniques, and
other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the

number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are to be held in the
conference .room of the multi
purpose building on Mulberry
Heights In Pomeroy:
Res !dents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations.
Those wishing to.register may
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626. Please
·indicate your preference of Tuesday orThurrdayeveningclasses.

Meeting canceled
Racine American LeJion Post
602 has canceled 'nlurrday's
meeting due to the Melp County
Fair.

Yerd Ill•

U .Oil

10 DAYS
1 MONTH

113.00
133.00

113.,00
121 .00
861 .00

18.00

• -···

992-3897
St. Rt. 12•

' ;-.:.rd of Th~rtkl
2-ln Memory
3--Annoucem..,tt
4 - Grve-.w•Y
1-Heppy Ad•
. 1-Loat end FoYnd
'7- V•d lelelp&amp;Nd in tdvlncel
1-Public •••• Auction
1-Wint.. to auy

f ' [II , ',
,)I''

1 , -Help

'J

.,,1

M111on Co .. WV
Ares Code 304

441-Geii-

912- Middi-

176-Pt. ,,......,
411- Liton

lit-Vinton
241-Rio Qrende
261- Guw-n Dilt.

111- Ch••r

Pom•ov

317-Cn-•

2·7-Letllrt Ftlls

n3-Mpon
112-NewH.-

742-Rutl~nd

18&amp;-LIItllrt
137-Buftllo

143-Poollo&lt;ld

•••-A•cHte

143-Areblt Dist

37&amp;-w•••

c\

ot1 - Hou- tor Rent
•12- Mobile Hom• tor Rent
43-F~rme tor"'"' ·

....._"-*tenent

~r

'

let Retultc faet ·

. MORIIS
EQUIPMENT

742-2455
5altm St.
luttand,Oh.
6/JI/llll

74- Motorcycl•
71- lolltl &amp; Mot ora lor Selt
76-Auto P•t• &amp; Acc•toti•
77-Auto f\tolllir
78- C.mplng Equ~p"'enl
79-Cimpllr• &amp; Motor Hom ..

Atnt

.__.,_. for,Rent
47-Wented co Ae•n
41-Equipment tor' Aenl
41-forLe••

a. ...M!ng

83- Eac••Unl
N-Eiectricll Relrtgtt"ation
ai- Gen . .l Heuling
II- Mobile HOme Repsir

Looking for
S8DSI"ble

life insurance? ·
/--~,
!. It
\

I~
Call mel
Morwln a.dort.

vert

.

-sold ponlon of hlghwot
within' tt. munlcl.,.t corporotlon Umtt1 being herolnroftor .....,ed 10 • thelm·
provemont, 1nd
WHEREAS, the Vitlfurthor deelru cooperotlon
from the Dlrtctor of "~:ron·
oportotlon In the pf•nlng.

A•.

. Goltlpols, Oh.
(6141 441·1104

Allstate•

AIINtoLUol-~r

design lind conltruct5on of

utdlmpr......,ent.
NOW. TltEREFORE, II It
ordained by the . Council
of tt. VIII- of Pomeroy,
Ohio:
.
SECTION I ICoope«etlonl
Thlt llld Vllltal horoby
requuto the coop•etton of
the Dlreotor of T,..,oporto·
tlon, In the colt of tt. ebov•
detcrlbed Improvement •
follows:
SECTION 1-A; Thot the
•um of eo.oo 11 h.,.lry •P·
proprlted for the lmprov•
mont of the highwey • d•
·IICrlbod horetnlbove. by tt.
ViH

;

•

:rCTION IIICon-1
Thllt It II dtcl«ed to bo In
tho pubic lnttrMt thllt tt.
con- of lllid VIHta• b«1
end ouch coneent II horoby
lv., to the Dlreator of
"•oponotlon to -~~­
- • IIMcrllld lmpro'thl
vell*tl, In oocardenciO with
piJJIII, opeodllootlone ond •·
tlmotM M IPPIOW!i by tt.
Dirootor.
SECTION Ill
(A-ltv to lignl
Tho the Meyot, of llld Vll·
loge, II lleroby out-ed to

=..

tnt« Into ,..,...,. end
perldng .......""'"' •d
-·tJIOI.-1 obllgt-

tECTION tv ·
IMIIuteu.,oo, hrtdng T..tto Control lfln* end D•

.._,
TJtat

upon ........... of

lllcllmp;ow•,.... Mid VI ..
1tae. Wll lhlrwft• ....,.
lll1d _,_., ..... tolnlflo
11t •llinw. tiMI
II) ••
IMM In II DD . .,..
the
I

....,Ill

=.

...........

prwltlonelllll_,.
\.

.econ.m.aotkJn, ..,d/ or...,.
olon1 for ouch mllntenence; ,.n_..,1 of both publicly
end
ond prlvetely owned uti~
tbl Molntoln tt. right-of· tleo. referred ta In IUboec-Y ond keop It fr• of ob- tiono CCI ond ldl · - · •hill
atructlan in a m.,.n• • • be done In 1uall a mann• u
fectory .to tho &amp;tete of Ohla not tO lntort,re unduly withend hold Mid rlaht·of·woy theo.,..ttonofthecornnclnvlolllte for publfc hi1hwoy tor constructing the lmpro- · ond p - no ...._ venlont ond oil b«&lt;ckllll!rlfl of
· po-11. blllbolird, rOidolde 1,.ncheo mode n-ooqo by
stands or ott.r prlvote In· 1uch utllty rwrrengamilntl
ltOtlllltlontl within the right· lhltl b«&lt; pertormld tn ••cor·
of·Wil.t~o; end
· ,
dence with the provlltono of
lol
.,d molntoln oil ' the Ohio Deportlll'ent of
trofflc control devicel · con- Tronoportetlon Conlltrucformlng to the Ohio Minllel tlon ond Mlltorilll Spodflcoil
of Uniform Trofflc Contiot ttono ond 1hllt b«&lt; 1ubiOC1 to
Dovicel on the lni,.,.,.,.. epprovet by the 9tote.
(fllhot the ln1tallstion of
mont In complillnce wid! tt.
provlltono
of
Section 111 utHity focllttleo on the
4&amp; 1 I .11 ond ,..llted He· right·of·WIIY thell conform
tiono of tho Ohio Reviled with the rroqutreonent1 of tt.
Code; ond
Fedorot H.:J!'vwoy Admin;
(dl R-Iot• porldng In tt. lot rot ion P
end l'roce'
foil-Ing monn«: Perking du,. Memorondum 30-4 ·
wll b«&lt; prohibited within tt. "Utility Relocotlonl ond Ad·
project Hmltl1t ell tim•.
justment1" end the Deport(IICTION V)
mont of ..T,..oportetlon'o
IRight-of·Woy, Utltty Rt«· • rutoo on- Utlity Accommo,.ngom•tond01mlfl8ond dotlon.
Uobltttv R•on•lbltttool
til Thllt th~ Vllloee hetWw
(II Thllt Ill niOtlng street ogr-to oocept -ponoibll:
end public woy rillht·of·Wily tty for eny ond ell doqlogll
within tt. Vllllfl8 wlllch li 11 clolmo for which It to
for the -•old \etlollr llblurillngfromtt.
Improvement, _ ,
Mgll...,ce of Ito offlc«ll.
available tt•efot.
.mploy. . or
In the
lbl Thllt tt. State wll oc- ,.... lomlonoe of tt. 11!11-' 1
quirunyeddltlonolright·of· abligoCione- or egrMd
woy required for the con- to l«tSectlont lei. (bl, tel. (dl,
otruc1ton of the eforwold 1•1 ond Ill horeinlbove. Uk•
Improvement.
'
wiH, the Stote
toecfor ony
lcl Thllt orron.,....onu hovo
or wit b«&lt; medl wnn . l end
clolmo
ond eor-ontt obtained •for
loble
from oll publloutlltyoompo·
ntoo whou llnM or otructurw wll b«&lt; offected by tt.
llid tmprovem•t 1f1!1 llid
componl•· hove . , _ to
meko 1ny •d ott n-•rr (b••
plont ......... orr-. . . .
1hlo onllnonce II horoby
mento In
to
b«&lt; cloor of ony -ruction dtclonidtoloeen_...,cy
by reMon of tt.
coiled for by tt.piMo ofllld
lrnprowamlnt and Mid aom· noN for ... podltlng hlghwoy
penleo hove...- to - · Imp; cuamenta to promote
ouch n-oory ,_,.n. . hlghwoy lllfllty; lind mento lmmadllltoly oftor no- vkllclit na•tv•thlefflrmetift Oil ion by llid VII- or tlve Votl of two-thirds of the
tile Deport~ of Tron· memboro ~ 10 Counail, It ohll tolul ofleot ond b«&lt;
• ..-ton,
ldl Thllt II II hereby ogrlld In ,.,_ lmmedllltoly upan
thllt the Vllt- oholl It Ito ltl pMIIIgo end opprDVel by
the Motor; othelwlll. It
-n · - · mtke Ill ,.or- lhtll
tiki ofiiOI end b«&lt; ln
,.ngement• ofwlit• mlllna.
Mrvlce Una, fire hydront1, force from ond efter the ..r••lv•
-ltary - · lleot portad l i t - by 1-.
or othor munlclpolty owntd ,_oorl: Aug. 7, 1989
utlllttoo end/., onyoppurto- . A.-t: Jono Wilton, Ct.,.
A~: Ietty A. llronlck .
whloll · do
·fllollord Boytor, Moyar
-oionoOOIRIIIv
the DH.P-~
of Otiecttve
No.
Lony Wehrung. - ofCaunall
411.
(el Thllt tt. canlltruCtlon, ill 111, 22, 2tc
pie finMtillll Md other prov~

-•rv

be-

•vent•

ce,t

ouch....,._ •

.......

_u,.

n--o,
bo•-.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Metga County Board
of Mentel R•tardatkln/Dev-

olopmontat Dl11bllttleo II
piecing for ..to 1 1985, 59
p-tlff Ford ochool bu1.
lui II oqulppod with o
Thom• body, Ford gMoline

engine.

Seeled lido wiil bo ro·
colved ot tho Molgt County
Boord of, Mon\11 Rotlrdo~n/Dwelapmental
0181·
bllltlio,
· 1310 Cerloton
&amp;tr-. P.0. Box 307. Svco·
ru ... Ohio 411779 untH 4:00
p.m. Auguot 28, 1988.
Bldo wMl be o~ed o1
4:1&amp; p.m. on August 28th,
I 989. hie of the bus wHl bo

DAVE'S
sMAU ENGINE
IE PAll

l.oalnd at Yalty L......
hi IIWtfltport, Oh.
PARTS I'NO' SERVICE
For Moat 2 •nd 4-cycte
an~n•

Suppll•

Stock art a fOr
Homelite. Weedeater,
Te~umoeh. Briggs &amp;

PM. 992-3922
OHI
CAMPGROUNDS

OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT

WITK lOOMS AND
APA11MENTS FOI
. IEN1 (ly Day ar

ETC.
21ft MI. lelow
lacine Locks &amp;
Dam At

Wuk)

$18 '"Day &amp; l!p
. 949-2526

Coui'JIY, 0~ ,411771, w•
lflpol11tid E 0 1rluf the •·
tete of Roy H. llolnoy, doceMed. leto of 2411as Apple
Grove DorcM Roild, Rodn•
Molgo County, Ohlo, 411771.
- Aob«&lt;n E. ·Buck,
Probote Judgo
l.eno K. Neooolrood, Clerk
lB. 111, 22; 29 3tc

Mo11 Foreign tnd
Domertlc Vehid•
AIC Service
AU Mljor • Minor
Atpalrt
NIASE Certified Mtch.,ic

WATER
SERVICE

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

Call Anytime
'992-2371
5/Uin ttn

•SHRUB flo TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS.
CLEARING

•LIGHT HAULING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
~ 992-22...

CAU 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271

EVENINGS

C•rtiH..

,·,

'

Grant A. Newland
Ml-'89-dn

4/1/89 / tfn

.,

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE .

Til-CO. TEIMITE' .,
&amp; PEST CONTROL ··,:

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

SIIICE1976

CUSTOM IUILT

OFFERED AT
'

Fabri'
Shop
992-2284
POMEROY, OHIO

Sp•elallda"

ROACHES o FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS
BEES •WASPS
Member Nolionol Pest
Cont1ol Assn.
1oft Frw

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At ltasonabll Prlcts''

PH. 949-2101
or

Res. 949-2860
Dny or Night

1·1-1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, P-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

NO SUNDAY CAllS

LW.
TRUCKING
•Gravel

'\

.,

RADIATOR

0'

. SER~ICE

We cDn r~r and
con rad1ator1 and ' ',..
heat• cores. Wt can
also acid boil Gild rocl
out radiators. Wt also " '
'.
rlpllir Gas Tat*s.

•Fill Dirt

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

.,

1•800-535-2199

•Limestone

Aln Tr••••l.,le•

'·

PAT HILL FORD

742-2421

992-~196

:1
,.'

0-

Middleport,

mo.

''

'

ALLEN'S

.,

J&amp;L

INSULATION

RECYCLING

Certointllllll&gt;
Vinyl Siding
Seomi111 Gutter
lloploc•mont Windows

Mastic -

1600 GALLON

Public Notice
,

0... - · Rocln• Molgo

SERVICE
SYUCUSf, OHIO

1/4119-tln

WATEI SEIVICE
UMESTONE
SPIEAD
DIIT UUI.ED

·Col•

AUTO - DIESEL

614-tl5·41i0

The Moiga county Board
of Mentel Retordotlon/Dov·
olopmontat Dl•ebllltloo r•·
erveo tt. ri{lht to reject ony
or ell bldo.
17130, 31; (II 1, 8, 15, 22.
29
'

NOTICE'OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguol' I, 1989, in 1ho
Melli CouJWy !'robMo Coutt.
No. 21334,
Qohlo
-..,, a4818 Applo Gn&gt;vo

VAUGHN'S

...... , •••••11

bid·

hig~•t

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX

NOW OPEN

YEIY IIASOIAIU
HAYI IIFIIIIICES

HAUUNG

awarded to the
dlt'.

1·1·1 110.

Stratton.

INfRIOit-IXTERIOR

17-Up-10ry

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 184
Nomo of Stroot; M..n end Brldgelt.; Route No. B.
R.124.
D11te of Enectmont: Aug. 7,
1989.
An ...,orgoncy ordlnonae
enootod by tt. VHIIII8 of Po·
moroy, Molgt C041nty, Ohio,
In tho mlttet of the herelnof·
1er delcrlbed Jmpr-mont,
ond ta req_UOit caoperotlon
from the Director of TrenIPortltion.
WHEREAS, the Vltloge
hu ldor!tlfled tt. nlld lor
ond pr&lt;ipa- tt. lmprov•
mont of 1 ponlon of tt. pub~ lliahw8v whl'*tll - 81 follow•:
Roplece nlotlna stono
orch culvert with 1 new cui·
von. Construct Inter· ·
Rctlon et U. I . 33 ond I. R.
t 24, ond rebuld 1 -ton of
S. R. 124 from tt.lntorMC11on 1oepolnl'-t ofthecu~

LINDA'S
PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES
1akt the pain eut of
paletlllt• Let .. tlo.
- it for yau.

, 81•- Hometmprowmtnts

.a-FurlliiiUd AHm•

·,,

LAWN lOWER REPAIR

71-Auto• tor Stlt
72 - lrYCII.t tor S111
73-V~~nt&amp; 4 WD"1 ·

·2-PiumtMng

6·S-'19·tfn

SALES &amp; SERYKE

... ...

etNTRSTA1E IAniiiES

TrMlsporLilton

U-F1rms far 11111
M-luein•• auiltling~
31-Lotl • &amp;or....
H-R..I ERne Wentecl

Mi!ldloport
169"' 2nd
992-2725

•Mobile Hom•. _ .. Pan~ _ _
•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rental•

"F- 1!1tim1tn"

efCIIO PIOOUClS
etfOWAIO IOTAVATOIS
•YABMAN MOWDS

.IVI'SIIIt:k

63-LN•todt
64-Hey &amp; Grtin
61- S•• &amp; Ferlillzsr

J2-Mob61eHomel tor Sslt

992-6872

.... l.eattliln:
, .. Nerth S.COIMI
Mi •• loptrt, Ohio 45760

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

•ZETOilbCTOIS

Stqqiiii'S

61-Ferm Equlipment
82-Winled ta luy

for IIIII

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

PI.UMIING &amp; HEAnNG

s•e or Trade

I,., Ill

. 222 East Main
POMEIOY, OK.

MOBILE
HOME PARK

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDI,NG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

EQU. .ENI

I I ,,

WALK-IN WELCOME .

7-12-' 89-1 mo.

r~t

22-Monw to Lo11n
23- Pro. .Mnellenri.,.

117- CoolviUe

,...,...

58-frUrtl &amp; Veg.ebl•

21-lutin•• Opponunltv

171-Applo Gr-

MASTERCHARGE
HOUR!!: -Mon.-Fri. 9-7
•So1. 9•5
Cl- $undoy

Now lhru Stpt. 9, 1919
100/o OFF AU P£RMS

FURNITURE
and MORE

Parft I Ser.nct On

NO suNDAY

&amp;••

w.....,

~.1-Hom•

·

54-M•c. Merchtndi1e
66-BuWdir,g 8uppli•
II·...,.. PM• for
57-Mu•cll lnstnun.,,,
69-"For

.......

MAITIN'S

IY ._. SIIYICE CIIRII

PH. 949-2101
or .... M9·2160

12-Sponllltl Ooo&lt;k

·
14-l.,..._e trlininl
11- Scllooll • lnttruction
11-R-. TV. Cl Rot&gt;Oot
17-M..oeUeneout
18-W~ed To Do

following telephone exchanlles ...
Mtill County
Ar.. Cocle a 14

110.00
116.00
826 .00
160.00

51-HouMhold Goods

13-ln~•

Cla., sified pages cot1er the
4

WORDS

n .oo

53-Am-

AU MAlES AND
MODElS

YAI"MMANIIOWIIS
ECHO SAWS I liiiiiiEIS
OIIGOH IAIS, CIWNS

YISA -

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE

SWEEPER REPAIR

Middlepon Oh •
t- · to Hill Top Orocorv:

" ; ;."·o :--------Mm: hanrli se

I I It,, I' 1: I d I

Gtlli• County
Area Code 11 I

Zl-31

16.00

12- IH,.Iio~ W-od

1 oOO A.M. IATUIIDAY
2&lt;00 P.M . MONDAY
2;00 P.M . TU!IOAY
2;00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
·2;00 P.M. THUIIIDAY
2;00 P.M . FIIIDAY

- t

-

1&amp;·2&amp; WORDS

15.00

policed in TheDaltf &amp;entin .. l•·

-

14.00

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

3 / 17/ 89 lfn

•Computerized B1loncer

3 DAYS
6 DAYS

l

DAY I!FeiiE PUBLICATION

Alfred news
Clown Ministry that was scheduled for Aug. 6was canceled due
to the death of Mrs. Dorothy
Robinson who was a member of
the church and loyal worker in
church projects. The ministry
will be rescheduled later.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Marclnke,
Stephanie, Kimberly, and Otto,
Jr., Cloudcroft, N.M. ate visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Van Meter, and other
relatives In the area.
The 5l)th wedding imniversary
of Mr. and Mrs. Art!Jur Spencer
was celebrated at the home of
their daughter, Brenda Weber,
on Saturday.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
DelbertStearnswereApriiNeely
and Jeff Noble, Fairborn, and
Charles Stearaa, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz
vlalted Clara Follrod and Nina
RoblniOD.

In Memor..-n .

Ctpt - ct•IMied dilplt¥. aulin•l C.d Md ..... noticel)
wUI elto . , _ . WI the"· ''--'" A....w ed the Galli·
poNs D.t~Y Triaune. N.ching OWt 11,000 honte~ .

area and Mrs. Jane Parkinson
and daughter Polly and son Paul
from Sanford, N.c.
A party was held on Aug. 5 to
celebrate several important
dates which occur this month.
Wendell and Martha's, 33rd
wedding anniversary was Aug. 5.
Andy and Jaye will c1Hebrate
their 8th anniversary on Aug. 23.
Morgan Anne was one" year-old
on Aug·. 1 and Laura . wlll
celebrate her birthday on Aug. l4
and Jaye on Aug. 22.
Family members also noted
that J aye Hoover will receive her
Master's degree from The Ohio
State University this month. She
Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Ord of Syracuse.

In~

HIPPY Ads

•a. c:a.tified H¥ert1Mm'"t

A quilt making day was set for
Aug. 16 at 9 a.m. Members are
supposed to bring a sack lunch
and selssors.
The group voted to have their
bake sale and bazaar in the
church social room on Nov. 3 and
Nov. 4 from 9 a.m. to 3 p ,m .
The meeting clo5ed with the
prayer circle and and the Lord's
prayer. The next regular meetlng will be on Sept.l2 at 1: 30 p.m .

45G

Card of Th1nlc1

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

M•lntenMtce

.

!-....;;;;;

•W11hers •Drv••
•Range •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It lepair...t"

oGen«ol Ch••ll

A•• ••• far aon•autift runt. broken up d..,., will be ch .-ged

"Recetve 1.60 cltcount for HI pefd in ..,,no.,
"Fr.. _. ,_ ONe.-.y and found ada und• 1fiwordtwill bt
""n 3 d8\'slt no ch•ll:·
.
. ~ Price o.t ad tor 111 c.pileii.U«'i • double price of ad con

DEAD 01 AUVE

•GreuaJobrl

0· 1 5· WORDS

1 DAY

WANTED

•N-• UoedTir•
.Custom Pipe Bonding
•Oil Chongeo

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY a A.M. to S P.M.
a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

.·
Business
Services
h========z=tn:=======:.'ri===:C::::::::::;;r.:::=======;

JONES TIRE
CENTER

• The ·A'rea's Nu~ber 1 ·Marketplac;e .

Hoover family holds recent gathering

"

Rutland Friendly Gardeners meet
Suzy Carpenter gave tips on
grooming exhibition flowers, and
JoAnne Fetty gave a report on
crops in pots or container
gardens, at the recent meeting of
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
held at the home of Joan Stewart'.
Mrs. Stewart read devotions
entitled "Smell the Roses," and
ail members read the collect .
Rollcall was read wtlh all
members bringing something for
the workshop which was conducted by Judy Snowden.
Judith Hill, chairman, read

The · workers of the St. Paul
United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains met on Aug. 8 at
the church with Evelyn Spencer,
president, in charge of the
meeting.
She read the 11th chapter of
Luke teaching and Mae VIneyard
gave the prayer. Readings were
given by Beulah MaXey, Glenna
Sanders, Hazel Barnhtll, Edith
Harper, Edna Harmon, Mae
Vineyard and Spencer.

a reasonable degree of cer talnty," Shelndlin wrote.
The ruling indicated DNA tests
could produce reliable results lf
certain testing standards were
followed and said pretrial hearlngs should be held to assure the
stantlards were employed.
Severallleientls ts. and lawyers
have assumed that DNA tests
were infallible and the decision
left legal experts divided oyer
whether scores of cases ln which
the tests helped win convictions
will be reopened in light Of the
ruling.

Classi 1e

St. Paul Church workers hold meeting

A family gathering was held
recently at the Wendell Hoover
home.
Offices closed
Present for the occasion were
· POMEROY -Planned·Parent·
the Hoover children - Rev. and
hood of Southeast Ohio Patient · Mrs. Andrew Hoover and daugh·
Services offices will be closed on
ter Morgan Anne from Dayton.
.We&lt;lnesday fo~' a staff meeting.
and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnil' Totten
Offices will reopen on Friday at
8:30a.m.

Harrisonville 0 ES has recent meeting
Allofthe pastmatrons, G(lyear
memberRubyDiehl,andthenew
member, Naomi Sronfe were
recognized and welcomed at the
recent meeting of the Ha~ris on -•
ville Order of the Ea s tern Star,
with Betty Bishop, worthy rn atron, and Doug Bisho p worthy
patron in charge.
Mr. a nd Mr. . Lou is Schoen len
were visilm &gt; and .s ncoente n,

Those attending were Mrs. Joe
Foster and Patty. of Sterling
Heights, Mich., Mrs. Sam BartfUg, 'J udy and Ike of Warren·
town, Va., Mrs. R,lchard Young
and E;rlc of Sidney, Ohio, Mr. and

Shelndlln · ruled DNA tests·
could be used to show that blood
found on li murder suspect's
wristwatch was not his but could
· notbeusedtoshowthe,bloodwas
that of the victim.
The Judge, basbtg his ruling on
testimony In a 12·Week pretrial
hearing, found the DNA test used
to identify the blood as the
victim's was nawed.
·' 'The testing laboratory failed
In several major respects to use
the generally accepted scientific
techniques and experiments for
obtaining reliable results within
·
'

••

Skinner family gathers

7

Ohio

llown lnsoldon
Storm Dean &amp;

WindOIWS
FREE ESTIMATES

We Buy All

Call 992-2772

Non Ferrous

7-12·'19-1 mo.

Howard

L Writosol

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters ..
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

944J-2168-

-DUPOU, 01110

,.,

Now Taking
Ragistrations
992·5288

WANTED - Stnalo molo compsnlonahlp. 304~71-4603.

4

GiveaWay

3 Otrmon Shtphord pupptoe, B• •
.
Fam111 81H111 hound mal• • •

"""" old. 304-115-3594.

Give Us A Call

b(&gt;xtr pup lo

6301.

glv""w•r· 114·256. .

FrH lo loving homo 3 rn old

Doberm•n Shepllerd
304.e75-3143.

mixed'; '

~~....
~~=5,-----.,.
.. ,
Odd
304-773-510 '
6
Losl &amp; Found
LOST Julr 4, 1981; vtclniJy of :
moa.

18

browWbl•cklwhhe;

Located Off Bypnt At
Jet. of Rtl. 7 • 143,

old,
1

brownlwhlto, $100. Rowsrd.
67$-7218 or o75-8891.

1
derk

304·

LOST: Whho Chow, 2 rrL old . ..

No collar. ReWird, Edgem011t ~:..

Dr.lroa.l14-44..a71D.

Lost: Sliver

!Telnision Listenln&amp; Devices

.

Comstalk/Southalde (2) Hellar1; . .

Today"

992-5114

.

.,

Announcements

3 Announcements

Metals,
Plastics,
Stainless Steel,
Etc.

BALLET, TAP ·
&amp;JAZZ
DANCE CUSSES
MODEUNG
&amp;lATON
IN

'

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
EXCEPT
HOLIDAYS

•,n,ictl

•Dependlbll He~rilll Aid Sales &amp; ..

a. •• Rlna, VIctory '·

Chrtollan H.S. Ruby Stona,
lllrgi'GUndo. 114-44S:.2541.

7

·

II . '

• ...

Yard Sale

" HMrin&amp; Evaluati011s For All Aps

-z ··LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

!:z::

------------------_,_
Gallipolis
-..
0

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Aug. 14 15. School •'
clothoo boys .{... 1-14. e .... · "
cl10 blko, mt~e. ClothooL.I0\'1,

10-a

furniture, from HMC: Kt.18D':
Rrol Rd. poll R1.554 Into,....

tlon. Turn left on Homewoocf
drl,. (beforo Hunt'o grocoryl. · '
1lgno 1 mlle In (Soxton1.

1-'=----7""----t--------1

•.:~..=.:i~;:::J:::::::

I - l'lllllldDI Available

MASTERCARD llKI VISA WELCOME
..WIIOUIAY .......... .

··"'~d~..-.......~-------'------

--'--·

.. ..-

'

:::':'""':"::~&amp;_v-;:lc:-ln.;:lt~y~~ , ,

'614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
z i417 Second Ave~~~e, aox·1213
- ,GIIIipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
-Mulberry Hit$, Pomeroy.

ltop BJ ... 11M

'

-

-- •·

�.

,·.

:

'Paga · 8 The

•

•

'

Sentinel

.

i.lr r clli1 nd iSe

42 Mobile Homes.
· tor Rent

LAFF-A-DAY
·. ..

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity .

I llr. loootod In E..-o-.
......... r a: ,.,., ·Cible ·T.v..

1:14 ··~·~114141

51 .

.'

;=.

~-

... _-"""""'"Ref.

POmeroy,

. ............. 114 411 11127.

Middleport"

r.-

~ooll?o!L1-INtnTowo.

•-111·

1981 750 CB ~onda noo II!Mal,
S700 514-245-1120.
•
1982 Kowaookl 550 LTD 4 ~~1,
:;~.::, S750. 304-175-112·-"!'

Trllllr nlco cloon unlumlollocl,

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
W. Yo. ltato Champion
Aucl-. Rick P•'""!'J lie.,..
ood In Ohio and Woat Vlralnla.
Boelling luctlona, 304'7731715.
wanted to Buy

Nloe twn. JIA, +1~ mlloo"""'
No polL f250/ln0,
.

..... •
NIIU&amp;r.d, Ro,.M 1 aut
L - Rood on right, 104-171-

.a:..v . '
r: ~ -

=
1071.

Troller lw 10111. WIDotlo,
yard; Ganigo. 11~

"Relax, Mr. Collins. That's
just. to see who buys corfee."

44

1-::========::r;:::========i

gun.114-MI-11121.
32 Callbor ·CQII aulomollo hancl 1,
Complata .__holdo oi tur- 11
H I W ed ·
31 Homes for Sale
nUIWa I antlquoo. Aloo wood I ._ _ _..;.e..;.p;..
· ·_...;a~n..;.t~
· -cool hoat- sw.Jn'o Fumn,.a
l Auction, Third I Olive, .,._
Now ~omo, 1500 oq, n. llvlnO
~131.
aroa, 10 acrH or MOra. Prlvat•
Foaw 11 Inch Stock whoolo lw
app•""
""".,.1~ ..
-.-"""!"}':"~·
Ford truc:k. Caiiii4-DMMO.
~.:::"
••
-~•~
Furnlwe •nd UD'knc•• by the
,._ or ontlre 'liouoohold. Fair
llrloaA.o being paid. Colll14-1413111
. Jun• Cara with mal;"i 110 1
•
: ,_,_wto melon, m clown.

' 2041.
: :,U:..:aod,;;..,tu,-,ml-::-ttuu-,.,.~
11¥-,.,.=--ploc:--o-or, ontlre ._.._.. 1100 Ollllnt.

Small hon)o, l.llkl Dtlva, Rio
G,.nclo, 2111, batll. Nvln:g , _ ,
kltchon cotnbo whh nlrl,r,:tor,
ranga, po
.,...,
w- hoaterbo":r and ffYOr
!look-up In
nt. Exc. tor
,.nl.. nar con.ge. 11~
Wanted
2171 11otora 2 p.m. or a1 4-24&amp;- .
1111. SZJ,OOO.
Wo c... lot olclorly ancl hand - I n - homo. 21 ,_. 32 Mobile Homes
oxr&gt;Otlonco. LPN on call. Low
Income homo. Coiii1.,H2.e872
for Sale
after 7:00 p.m. lor more lnfor12lll, 2 l!adroom. Ooocl con·
matlon.
dUion. Cai1114-111Zo58&amp;8.
'
15
Schools&amp;
12180. mobllll 1t0ma ooma lurnh..a,lciiOX100 llallcl on SUn '
Instruction ·
Ylllay Dtlw, reiHiy to movolnto.
. Ri·TAAIN NOWI .
nagotlonUIII 114-141SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 121 Jock- PlkL 12181 3 badraomo, 2 balha,
Call 114-441-4317. Rag. No. . .
$4,100. JDWl'l-2722.
11·1011B.
14x7Q 1 1ZIIO. 11+31H71 7.
18 wanted to Do.

: 114-742-2455..

All typu muot11J brick blocko,

. RlchMt Georgl.l14 318 IDtl.

: Junk ..,. With or Without
, ~ Coli l.llrry Uvtly 81._
.. ~3II-8303.
aurn
; Pro 1140 qulha. :ny condhloti.
• Caoh Pold. t;aU 114-11112·5157 or
·, 114-5112-2461.
' TOP CASH pold ·for 1f83 mocftl·
: oncl newlr uood cara. Smhh
. Bulck-I&gt;Gntloc 1111 Eaotam
• Avo., Galllp.;/la. Coli 114-141• 11212.
+ ·u..~

fumtllft •nd houuhold
: ......... Phone 114o70.

Watk AI Homo, oom 1100 ;~
Taking Phono ~ P
coli youl Bnonda 714-817
12
Situation

3

=r

torRent
Handonon,
1 bocl.- 10+175-11n
tumlohad aptoftor
In

I:OD.

2 boclrocm apt&amp; 1w tint ea..
1101011. Nlco -Ina. ll•uncliY
laclltiH ........... Ciiiiii._IU3711 EOH.
231 Flral IV.., 1 br., ~vorvlow,
kltchan
Whh
IIOVO
l
,.~r~gon~or
1$180/lolo. pluo
clepOelt. Utliltl• • refer--=-, no
polL 114-441-41121
J boll,_ opl In uptown Pt.
Pit., 114-441-111111ot tunhar 1ft.
"""'""""'
·

tumlahed. Wortdna

3 room,

l;f• 1 1uun. ~- -

ou..:

/:a

rr.':

liD
111; "
160. Oood ..ltcllon o1 bad1oom
ounao,
ooblnoto,
haodboordo·-tJ0 IIIII ..
to Ill.

:..=•=s•mt.O:: r:.Tt

oduho only. : " ..a
r e - 114 112
3 - . untum~~~ balh,
-olalra. Daft: 11 1 ·71n;
Allor II: 114-44C-1880.
IEAIITIRJL APARTMENTS AT
euooET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES1 . 1131 'Jac[uion Pika
lrom $11;umo. Walk to ohop I
movlaL CIJI11.4 441 ZHI. EOH.
For nn1 or - . ono boclroom
opt. 1Wo oftlco IPI-il ont
opaco ldalll lw 1111111 or octor.
Uptcorn looatlon.104-17S.2tM
Fum. Apt. SZZI U1111tlao pf. 1 br.,
107 Saconcl, llalllpollo, 114-14144111ft•lp.m.

oppllancao, T.V. lno.
NIL Oood
Open
Counly
a a.m. toAppftoI lt.m. Mon.4M. 8t444ll·llll,!,. 127 3td. Avo. Oaf.

11po1111,""

m

'

Early Amlll- b"""' oota
:fs~~: 11. ~- 7~

W•ver 304 Ia 214L
, , AI por Attlclo I Ttanlifora and

·-ncla.
avtlltbft.

All

.a.o

•a•,

~ 81 ..2'45-1731.

Yocancloo, Soctlon I, Poollnt,
• of 1ha No9flatod , . _ , . Will do blbyahtlnll'"fl, ogo. Coli
bltWoan thO MLTA and tl!o 104-t75-7742.
Board of Edoicatlon, tho Me!9o
Local School Olotrtct II poodng
tho tollowlng vacancy lor ho
Frnancial
,.gular tNChlng etaft Dl•
trlbullvo Educllion Teocher 11
Molgo Hlg~ School.
Business
OOAvon • LlmHod 1imo only 21
Opportunity
15.oo •cpclntmtnl '" "blllod
ta your f rs1 ord.,.., algn up frM
(blllod on your ordor}. Pluo ·
INOTICE!
,.CliVI $30.0Q frM producta. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

·
G.E. uDtfghl lraazar-Exo. $12L Soi at .1100 or
114-441-lnl.
0000 USED APPUINCII
Woohara, dryora. rofttgtlrat-,
rangoa. Bkilaao · AIIOIII--,
Upper Ad. t.ldo Btona
Cr1ol -~ CIJII14-MI-T.III.
King · lla ......,.,, ...,..
wovoraoa. S21CU14-2lJI 1111.
·
·
PICKENS FURNITURE
Houoahol~";,"~~ng: ~ mi.
Jorrlcho Ad. Pt P l - . WV,
caii3DW75-1410.

1

Call Marilyn Waver 304-882·
2111.
BaM olayor for Country Rock

Bank 304-171-1451.
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring oil
poohlono. Bolh oklllod IM un-

lk11141d. For Information Call

through the mall unlll you hive

invoonaotod tho ollotlng.
Own Your OWn Apparal or Sloro,
Chooll
INtn:

Jea!W'Sportswur, lldl•, M.n'a,

815-771-5507.,. 11851.

Chlldrenlllatemlly, Large Slut,

Demonstrate for P1rty Plan FrH
$300 kn. · No colloctlng. No

Petitt,

delivering. For Interview: 614-

448·7002.

Dental A11111am nHclid full·
tlmt txptJrltnca preferred, but
nol nec. .ary. S.nd rnumt to
Box 009 ell&gt; Galllpollo Dolly
Trlblm~

825 Third Avo. Ga~
llpcllo uh 45631.
Dut to rnlgnatlon Plntcrnl
Coro C.nlorl a highly sklllotf

nursing lac llty, now hat 1
pothlon open tor a lleenMd
.oclal worker. This Is a
department head level posiUon
ropc~lng

illrec:lly to lho Ad·

mlnlttrafor. DutlH Include •~
mla~on and dl.c::harge pltnnlng
and evaluation of rtsldtnt't

aoc:lal nNds for cara plans. Appl~nta
with
equivalent
ectuclrtlon or axperttnct may
1lso apply to: Mr. Jamn Un·
dtman At $55 Jackson Pike. Gal·
llpcllo, OH 41131, EOE.

Dlnetw~~relAtroblc,

Brlfal, Llnglllt or Accaaorl•
Stora.Add Cclor Anolyalo.
Br1nd Namn; Lit Claiborne
Bill,
Michele, FoMnzt, Buata Bor.•
Levi, Camp Btvtrly Hllls,LIIelt

si

Hoallhtox, Bonnio l

Faye, Lucia, Over 2000 others.

or Sl 3.99 One Prlco Dosignor,

Multi Tltr Pricing Discount or

Family Shoe Store. Retail Prien

Unbelltvablt tor Top Qualhy
ShDH normally prlc.d b'om $19

to 160. O'lor 250 bronfo 2t00
otyiH. $18,900 IO $2!1,900: In·
(407) 316-8608.

USED MOBILE HOMES c~ck
~
undolldrotubGood800HI.Ctlon elngt•
a
o loa
.e2fi.0752.
Wo buy uood mobllll homoo
CASH TODAYI 811()-82$.0752,
""'· 315. (Ohio only). Alk lor
Roy.
.
·

--hor,

Tara Townhouu Apta, 2 br., 1..
1~

bltha, CA,

a. ttaoh lilcludod. Sta~lnt It
11211/mo. Coli &amp;1.,317-7850.
Twin RIV«&lt; Towor4iouolng lot
the Eldor1y, Honcllcoppod ond
Dloablotf.
Locatod
noar
-town Point Pilo-t
33 Farms for Sale
phOn• :3o4-175-8671. Equil
'"]~;;"~~;;;;::4--;;;~ Holiolng Oppottunhy.
4!
45
· furnished

I

Rooms
Fumlohod
afflcltncy,
11 I
Second Avonua, Galllpollo. All
utllhln

pt~ld,

ahara a bldh.

2 ocro 1o1 Aohton, Mooon 80,
public watar, $20,000.00. 3Q5.

46

Space for Rent

D4B-t983.
.
c:om..ara•
.-·· 1400 14n.
Comer Second and Pine. Ample
2 aero lot, Aahlon, Maoon 80, parking. Colll111-411-4241, 441-

Ftdltll, Stall and Civil Sarvlc:a

736 .a 24S.

oponlngo. Coli 1-315-733-6062
Ext. 11'2741.
.

If you hllva axperience I InterHI In ul• and markellng, 1nd
educational bac:kground 1f'1

biological ocltnea. prolorrobly
In pora-Modlcol floldl, you

ahoutd btl talking with ua. Mu.t
have rallabll transpartatlon.
Soiory and Commlllllon. Sond
resume to BiiX"GbT cJO CIIHipolls

Dolly Trlbu!!" 1 125 Third Avtnuo,

~~~~r~,-6~~~~iloorF;.r:

3 br. homa ror salt,

1 !~o m town,
2 m.....
114
7725 ·
~~

1183
-:-:--a-...,,...
· .....,.,.,....,.---:-- COUnWy Mobllo Homo Porlc,
.Ashton beautiful ana acre Iota flout• 33, Harth of Pomeroy.
With riYif frontaga, publiC Water,
Clyde Bowen, Jr. 304·576·2336.

br owners,

cal tnytlmt

Aahton, beautlhd one acre tota· PRIVATE 2 112 ACRE lrallar laC,

3.1 acrn, 3 bedroom fntma, C8llor, pa~ baaamont, out bldgo,
fruit ,,.... drilled well, 8 112
mlln H, Rt. 2. 3Q4..675-7690.

Clyodii/Bonn, Jr. 304-578.-2336.

Aohton, Ia- building loto,
1 h ·•trtld: p
m11
obrlll polm-n par!!!' _... Cu~dollc
w •, r
-uc-. .,
BOW&lt;In, Jr.104-t75-2331.
Laval loll 7 mlloo Nonh ol HoiZit' Hoopnor. 014-318-8641.
W-Ind, 132 ticra. $35,000,
Rt. 7, belOW Euroko, Call 114-

7 room1, 2 •erH, good garden,
city watar. $15,000. 114-7Q7-

2744.

7.88%

.

fixed

rate

loti, . rtntall, part I, Nl81, tall
114-912-7471.
·

with rlvor lrontago, public wator. 1.1 mlloo rlghl on· Northup

morti•a•

monay available, 2.7!5 points, 30
Galllpolll, utt 45631 .
yr. tarm. "loana avallablt on 1
Lady- to llvt In and cart tor 11- fair and equal baala r.gardlau
do~y II'Y with light ho-ork of raca, color, ancntry, natlonal
In eKe... ,..,. for gOod homa and origin, rallglon, ux or phyaleal
amall .... ry, must hll'le raleren- handicap. WfMman Raal E8tata,

~411

after 1 p.m.

P.itrlal: Road. CALL 114-642..

2232 fuHng morning.

Twa
:ll'lllar tpacell, Routt 1
LocUli Rood on right, 304-1751071.

,.,4_9-.,_F_o_r....,.Le_a_se-=-=--=
Ytry nlca -louo 2ncl floor, 3
br., opt, unlumlollocl, otovo I
refrlg, hlltorlo home downtown

11275/mo, Ullllllao Olll,., ,.,,
roq'f. Con 81+4-25.

Rentals

514-44fl.3144.

c•, 304-175-1585.

HU1ch $181; ocm,Cola llna of
oak I oountiy lutrilohlnao. Oak
Currlo Cablnal Curvtcr glloo
front wllh claw 1111 · 1211 lr
$15.14.
Woof
m""-"
cablnll $121, raau11r 11241. Air.
com-oora HI; gill ca$199. 30 far -tanly on llovo,
r~frlg-or, wa~, dryora ~
doop lrlollrl.
VOIIay FumHure
Now oncl uood rumn.n oncl • .,.
plloncoL Coli 114-MI-71n.

Hou,.l.a.

·

53
Antiques
~~=::-:~=""!"'=-Buy or· ooll. Alvl(l,. Antlquoo,
1124 E. Moln Stroot, Pomeroy.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m.,
1:011 to 1:00 p.m.
114-8112.
Top Caoh pokl. Old · tumn..a
cuboatdo, quiHo,
orlontll,
palnllngo, fQytl, or ontlro call collocl 10WZ5-J271, or
304-523-1814.

"'=.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
11180 Vtrmoo&lt; 434 · Trenchor
wlbac- l i.lado. 40 hp. 11._
441-3111 or 114-441-4477.
2 air condnlonora lor ulll. Ona
111 · 21,000 ITU 1nc1 olher lo
18,000 BTU. Oood condHion.
II 4-1112-1837.
4 bar lloott, llaPit llnlllt, uc.
concl. 11+441-0112. ..
40" Tram~OO; Oaptoln
chaf,.lot va
, $101. Call
oftor4 p.m.
317.
7,000 BTU wlndcw a.c. S71,
Bralhar
llachlne, wHh 1

Miscellaneous
·Merchandise

, ..

!loll 112,000 BTU lull oil tu..
- . lomo ductlng. ExhaUII
~good. 1so oao.l14-

ol-- a_,,
*

=I

2 lncl
• • - tabll, chllt.
1 1 - 13D1
··
Lllrv• pictur'awi-Luc conf.
a,_n carptl 1ZXZO fl. 304-1112. ~130. . • · ..
·,
eha
MoVIng -It: c rry gate-log
1
i1oa koMtl wnh
, 114-1123&amp;ft aller7:011 P.IL
Nlnt- 11 t con1rolllrl, UOO, f~ Joecbnn
~ t1,- 814-441-

:!:.:!: =.~~ f:,.'JiA

.POATABI.a ~~- ANO LI.T·
TEAS. frH -.ry. WI! P -'t
1-ION»-MSS anyllma.
IWFIIIIINO POOI.8 U8l
eum- opoo1o1 on n poa1o.
Hugo' 11d1 ,...._ Hugo t?aOic,
lonCo, IIHor I warronty. ' Pnllllo
llllon I flnonolnt ovalloblo. Cal
24 hrll: 1 - ~~141
Batollho D?oh. Doric liar. 10 n.
_ ,, JYC C..poot Dlac. KOflo
woof I t - Pow• Amp. 114llll-t137.

41 Houses to( Rent

I EVEN LIKE Tj.jE
RE5URFACES

S40 .--

llrao,

IHI~I

11
"

I

THfff ~~

WELL~

I

IHI Major Loogue BeHball
Qll Croolc • Chloe
7:3$ (I) lndr Orilf?lh
1:00 (J) MOY?E: The ere.. Ona ·
~2:00)

II &lt;21 01 MIIUock Mailock
defends a rare-coin dealer
accused of· klli~ an
·
•omJIIOyee. ~R) g
·
· (!) Cllamplono?ilp Karrale
World Light W.llorweighl
Champlonohlp from San
Jose, CA ~T)
(JJ
(I) Who'o The Boo&amp;?
Tony Ia irate when Samantha
comas homo drunk. ~R) Q •
(l) (!) NOYII Nobel
Prize-winning physicist
,
Richard Foynman is profiled .

e

iPlafha.e
e1121 CBS Sumtner

A streetWiae ·

newspaperman and an
, innocent travllar form an
alliance: .
18 ill). MOYIE: P,tartng For
lreepa (P013} ~2:00) . .

UPtlmeNOWI
.IIJ Mu"'-, ,She WIOta
Qll Naohvtlle Now
.,a5(1) Hogln'l .,_.I
1:30 (I) Major L110118 BntbeH

we

e

..

'

MEEIUE AND. WINTRHOP ·

"rl:llii&lt;E NOT ,TRYIN~.·

II

:n=-~~~~I T"""'""w
c-. Port 3' ces

•-oo.

-na

Fruita&amp;
Veget!lbles
canning p· S. now

Tueodaly Mtrvle (3:00) Q
Lorry King u..r ·
. IIJ 1aBI Purinl PIW?te?loniiF
Dog ShOw From St. Louis,
· MO (Tape Delayed from June · ·

o

r:A':"

..

6)
·9:30 (iJ C1 (I) Anr!hlnt BuP LOYII

,.,ry wll_lf..ai.eo11.

In

1181 Chrvofor Now Yo~r

ancl Appl~ '!IH follow orouncl
Labor Dar. lob'o · Markll,
1111-., wv. J04.773-5nl.
1
!lannlna
- ""
• 111•
Bring own oontal~
. l1+247·

1111 1
11 f •••- 11•
or · ~
44
7
.,::',--::no,......,......,....,..-...,.....,...,.
•
1111 Chryolar .....,_,, loadod,
•••·
cond. Ill
roaoonobll otto,.
oonoldorod.
11+445-1021.

Hlton.

Ex-ceacher who wanls to be

a writer gets a shot at a

.-:.

•

~ ton.. •••~·•our
yow
-.rn. ...OOibulllll.
. . - - . t-t~ no?. I. ol
o-.all• on 11. Rt•.7. 114411-

ouc-..

61 Farm Equlpme;:lt

-

AN' MY MAN
SNUFFY IS
COMIN', TOO !!

WE'RE COMIN'
EARLY SO'S
:WE CAN GIT

SWEEPER and -ng mochloo
perta, and aUIIPIIM, Plak
Nluon pick..., I opf, ,.pair,
up
•ncf
DaVC. Vacu'""
Am/FM at,_ , ..... -Ia, CIN-, delivery,
ont had mllll 'Up
· -~ ....,,-4700
axo. -Na.;'orp.
. 11._ Ooaraoo Cruk Rd. • .,. .
441-1271•
• p.m.
0214.
. •.
tl87 Pontillo Trant-Am, ,:'~- Baptlo Tonk Pumping SIO~OliMa
Top, 101 l(18lno. tun,
. Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPniii'S,
000
"• 100, 11mJ't•,..347.
oxc. - · Jackoon, OH 1-801).1137-91211. ,•
1111 P - lunb?ld aT, 2 fr. 82
';:
PIUJIIblng &amp;
PI/PI, lrlno., .AC._!IIIHeating
,:
11101, - · Oond. t14-JIH.,..,.
4-01111 1171 YW Rabbit ~ cyt.
CARTER'S PLUMBINQ
ANOHEATING
lutMI'OIII- lnlatlor UC.
Cor. Founh and Plna
110011;
Eac.
running
·
'leo II 17 lmh.,.. Ava.
Golllpcl~1 Ohio
.,.,..,, • p.m.
Call 114-441-38aa or 114-4414477.
GOYIRNMIHT IIIZID Ylhlofoo
11111~

.

his controversial life Is

· explored through inlerviows
wilh friends and follow
performers .
10:00 (J) 700 Club
e (21 i1J1 NIC Newa Specll7
Gan~, Guns &amp; Drugs. Part 1
of 2
.
(JJ
(I) thlrtyoomol?llng
Ellyn Is scunned to learn her
parents are getting a divorce.

SEAT

u: .,..

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

=~==nrw..IO

......--,..,., 11t . . . . . .

D?oo ""'tilL ~ ot?oli8
10--IFIJTIIIolo.IIMJI.all.

lEotola . , _

·magazinejob. (R) Q
Q!l Elvia: Tilt Fana Look al
lho Elvis phenomenon
through the eyes ol his fans;

PUre. Plum11, Grapee oha;loloodod, 304-171

211'f.

~R)D

CD Newo

(!) P.o.v. 1\morica·s

, _ S100. FoniL U.Cidll.
Colvllt•.
Chovyo. Sur;lluL
luvwre Guido 1'10W17.-,

lnllanlly r,_,. wlllcllolnga are romantlcally ptffect lot you. MeFF $2 Po Matchc/o thll newap.oper1 P.O. Box
. 91421, ~. OH 44101-3428.
Y11G0 (Alia'- 21 I ' ; 1 21) In order to
, ac71lelle your ob)eel'- today, you are
golngPohaWtoproceedlna_, _
rloua lll?tlon. Do wltal needl doing llrat
and there wtll be ume lot )Okeo and

mak•.

.

"
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL ..

laugh1er Jat•.

1&lt;
_,_ •

~~'__:

:;: " '

'

,

·

,

day pemlnlng to IOIM?hlng you'll piC·
lura ciMrly In your mind. Share your
75toughlt only with t'- whO are 11 VIolonllr)' 11 you 11'8.
PIIC:U (Fill. ao !' ell II) The un·
loc?clng of homo 1o P&lt;*lble todiiY regardlng negolllllonl that ....,. deacl?ocked Iince lui ....... .. parac7 and wiling Po mmce 10111e - Pial CGr.CIIFI0111.
Al15l8 Clllnlh 21-Apri? 11) A kind 11sqclote might. oller to you help ?ocily
Phil will tum 1 comp?lcltld uo?gnrnenP .
IntO one IMI Ia ... .,~ llmple and
mmce uuc c r ""comp7o11on pcllalb?l.

..-,_ (lept. 21-GoL 21) 1wo "'*II..
· - · - - - - - · thot ....,. left dli1g(lng can be flnlbed today If you opera)e ,,. !rom
oulllde ln...,_ and are lble to protV... ••
·
ceec7 17 your own poet~.
ICOR.'I50 COoL JoHiotl.ll) Your-TAUIIUICApriFliiD ...,IDtYouriiMgl-.
. ~ ~ .,. opt Po be more pro- · netkltl e111 be put to benel'icFaF ,_ 10:nquiiCed tll8n UIUa? ?ocily and you . day, pnMdld you uround yooneli
iiiKIIIId be Ult to !WOlve moot of your wl?71 11P1 1'*1, ~ people whO
Aug. 1s, ,_
weighty pro- In an ollect~W 0111 I1I1P llrlnQ Into being what you

-.uua'Birthda.v
.,.

manner.

IAGITT,._ (NoW. 21 11ec.111 Thlre

::r.--

~~

•

•

-........

are

Jndicetlonl you w11

lll'lllllatl.

an

promol

a r11a1 or • ..,.,... F)ljll. of
Ill
.

lllniiWI

r:' ::~=

AMC

21 - .

t

1 (lllf 11..,..., ~ tn?nJt-

~ ....
:. . .... illlldlr 11141 IOnglr ::~ :.ru::.~ ~ ~
._.,....::PJ~~::; acluliJI
11)a.aeo,
-....

: : : ,._ A15r0..Qr1p11 Moo?cl1n*• '•
r.r•
'
I

t"

~~-pui?O~fOrlll
'

'

010,.

-iiiFiling ..., II mFIIr OOI1I7Iuotift
and ptcMdoo ....... 1*..,.11!

1tJ Con- · blnlflta.

on wapto dlulap llid
ach'- peiMniF go171. BerFoul dllllloentrate

50 a l**lall

'

Alraw
• (J) (iJ •

... ......

~,.

dll • il2l
.·

(I)

illllloWI

(JJ tlotrie Run Dalby •
• (J)) AllilniO Hill ~1 :001

,

• You Con eo A hlr
11:11 (J) MbVII: The Alire 8nNd
C2:00)
11:30(1) ...... Con even lhe
Beltptlngl IIVI' the Peerlell
Pair !ram Atdter1
(21 . . . . . 01

Coreon

lf:@;;:30)
•

.:=:,:r._

IJ!obllm Cll1 be di&gt;AIP ~.

... ,... . . . .

11 I to- .. , ·

foremost Social Realist
painter Is revealed at his
baSI. (I :00) Q
• ill) Synchionol R-orch
11J Evonlng Nowa
10:30 (Z) P.!S.Y. Haallh and safety
·problems at our nuclear
weapons plants are growing.
~1 · 30) D
• ill) famoy MIHI Newt
80n 8tJge
11:00 (J) llllmlln Shoot A Crooked

(.-.IWIIIJ Ill 'A ...,..,.

:=.-.: ~ ·=
. ~==·
_..Ill,.,..·
CAIICIR

.

IIJ M1ll1ll Vice

•w Pl.. 11!11 twill otdi be In llaNfllr you 1111111·
t1or _,.,hFnl rou Cild ... llri1a w:.n IOINIII•• 11111 - ;nvr-·
,_... n oau1c1 come In thl fanll oh . ouoty
PI odiiii?M twn1 Into

,_

Cll T7!e wcrncar , ..,.

Kevin ~ his llrsl look at
his paronls as real, separate
people. (A) Q .
8:00 (21 i1J1 MJ15ock MaCIOCk
SU!IpedS his private
in•esbgator is being
blackmailed. ~A~ D
. (!) Ptoleaalono iloxlng
(JJ Cl (I) Rooeanne
' · · R'o seanne must .negotiate
between Dan and his ·
super-salesman lalher. Q
&lt;ZJ (!) 81NIIille For
De.,_.cr-frace struggle
lor women 's rights as
citizens in Iceland and

Ill Moogqul1l, PJ. U7lll Olrl
Willi
.

• c-:r • CFiiiJt
, I

12:80(1) MOYII: T7le . _ . Ont
'

.

'

N01\TII
+QJIS

tAJ74
. +QU

East-West worked their opponents
I)Ver In today's deal. First Easl overcalled 011 a four-card suit at t1!e oneWhen South responded ~
West jumped pre-emptively to
Pre-emptive jmnp railes
are a way of maklnc life
n:rilerable for tile oppoiiiU011. (To sbow
a strrJII6 bl7ld In support of partner,

EAST

WEST
• "7
.QPUS2
ttS2
+IOH

+to3
.,KJII

•xu

+AJI7 .

sOOl'B

+KIIU

.74

+Qltl
+KU
Vulnerable: Neitber

mllll cue-bid u opponent'• sull)
Allboqh three bearts would not

)'011

1

......

•u

ByJamnJJCtby

'

o c....o?lre

,.,~

BRIDGE

llll .1121 iiJI Jaoplrdyl Q

•oM•A•s•H

J::::=l.!!!:;==t' poN' T • GfT- ANY. S ICtcf~" CA[tP$ f
o'"'"'"'~ '" il'fAVI!!'~ 8 · 15

CARDS

.&amp;.liD 1.111!..,.. II) Your pcllllblllllel

._-

"ET y.

f)(pEN$1 VE - -·
po yov HAVE AN'(

GET

•.-IIIIM?y.

__

IHI Andr Ortlft1h .
I(J Mleml VIet
Qll Top Cord • I
7:01 (I) Anc?y Ott?flth .
7:30 &lt;21 Family Foud
(JJ F,.lghtlr Side 01 Spol1o
Hosl Jay Johnstone
'Interviews two celebrity .
sports guests each week as
' well as unique and humorous
sporting events !rom ·around
the world. ~0 : 30)
(JJ Entlrtlllnmenl Tonight
C1 (I) USA Toclor

e

'

~

F'-1 - Nylon - Att1r - Tunnel- YOUR LEFT
The walter led me to a table and Slid, " Thllla ?he border
line b81Waen ~ng and StTIUklug. P1eeU dO not breath .
to YOUR LEFT!"

1

Jo..._,

58

(I) Spor?oCenter ~0: 30)
(JJ
(I) CutNnt Affair
(Z) (!) MacNIH/ Lehrer
NowoHow
111J
i121 01 WhHI 01

:.TwiP
In C?nclnna?l
IIJ Monor?lno

=-

Fotty Trot Trlmm?nt, olui)p
removal, catl304-875.f331 . t.

'. '

e

II

covered .In mud •

SCI•MLETS ANSWIIS

e

AND ERNEST .

come home

UN
. SCRIIMBLE "BOYE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

7:00 (J) Fe1hor MUrphy
8 (21 PM Mllpzlno
.

f

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
.

I

a:;s&amp; (I) c.o; a11111.u "

-

71DL

•

Qll On Slogo

-

1115 Chovrolllt Monto Co~o CL,
Mrto., PIIPI, air, tiH.t..~!UIH, raar
window do?aal?lli ..... locka,

.-

I · I 1, I..
. . _

5 I
A Complete th, chuckle quoted
,
. V by fill ing in lllo milling -ds
1
I
I
L-...J.L-...J-L-..I.L-..1.--'.----' you develop from Slop No. 3 balow.

ill) Love Comec7lon
(!JIIho.elz Tpc?er

l?ata=,

· .,

.

1he woman's children had

r

Q

•

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

......

e

· (JJ
(I) ABC NewJ
(l)_,~

llll • il2l Cl8 .... Q

opaclallot P
on
Marina. wo coma to you. 1-t1
211-6171. ancl Ulac? Po~~
bool-1117 Landou 1s'i•
whh Uoreury 35 hp motor W!lh
power l~m oncl auto o1 lnl...
lion. Mercury Trolling molor
ShOrollno tranor plua moro. All
In oood conditiO!'. C.lll1._1ft.
2710.
'
, •
'Canoolorula,30W75-1141. i

w,,._nng.

1•

One child had lost a shoe, so
the woman said she would
.-,-G-E~D~E~L-:::-P-,1 return to the scene of the-.

(!) 3-2·1 ColiF8ct Q

1111
Ill' """'"'
-Pill. ......
1&amp;0 PIP
La4o
aHI.114-I'U
'
triOC5II, 11100 - •
:1010 JD 1rlolor $3410.. 24-T JO
-IIIIo ldolio!rJ11tl. JD

~ .... liorna. S300. 1111'
lotnitltv l rol No polo.

--· ~ ·

(li Spol1oLook ~0:30)

ICE ..

..

Om!._II.J auto, *• CNIM, control,
S25ou.I1+44M711 or 814-141-

I.·

1:01 (I) Allee
1:30. (J) 01 NBC NlghUy News

INTERMISSION WilEN TJ.lE
ZUCCJ.liNI COMES OUT AND

'·
End -hoblt - · 114441-4447.

ling. .,..74240U.
.
3 br;, homo u - AI. 7 - r
ohoppfng -er. 12711/ma. pluo
-""''do""'" "'''d. 114-441l111,ori1'H4tllll
FumWtedl room ~.1 br.,
In town, reloronoo I diDOIII
req'd. No polL 114 441 2113.
-

-.on.

En ..1011t.
1010 J.D . - luoh Hop;-

3 Rio G,.ndo otUilon1o (gltlol to
ohare homo wnh olhor gltl. 2
blooko from · oampw. No

.....
-.

Aut~ for Sale .

71

P H U MT

1H1 Facta 01 LHt

.r.r,

BOATEASIIM:e"...7.

Q

IIJ Cartoon Expreoo

2801 oftar I:OIIp.m.
CHIOriH.
Bluo, allvar. 11._742·

8G l J Cydo, wa n- l!or•
61 Farm Equipment .
~~..':' .;~;. ':.~
norld,104-175-1S85.
;,_:
ilow Holloncl' Slurry Manliaur · Honfl CX500 st,.ot Blko. Eico~
f l p r - . - 1 yr., 181. Patz. lllnt' confhlon. SilO. 080. 81,411r. I -dor, t rr••1._ 742-2~7 or 11.,742-2311. '"•
SIS-IMI.
Honfa CXSOO, 1111 lor
,
~63~=L:::I~v~eat:-::oc:::-k-::::;-::::: S125.oo.
or
bHI
ruoono
•
"'"
lor.104-t75-1221.
1 p1go. Call ai!Or
1l,lyr. old !"'Y
,
·K-Id KXSO, KXI01 txclllant
14 44 1-3025.
-lllori.
I14·H2-IIII
AnENTION H- OWnoro, ovonlngo. or &amp;14-941-21&amp;2 doy,
Point Pluolo now corrylnt tack.
Point PLur. 241&amp; Joclloon •••·· 75 Boats &amp; Motors ;:
Point Ploaoant, phone 104-171fOr Sale
'·
4084•
Po~y .wllh Aog'od OUarltr •1Mr Btrotao 111 ""'""" ill, ·
horaeo ttalnlng taciiHy 1 lrlllor. ,,. option trallor, _brok•il •"'
Naatla potl-tlma hor.. , tralnar ,,..,.!Ina co-. 11""'15-111 , .
"" IIIHer 1 wolltm ploaaltto. · 14 11 llllrlalaoa Y·hull ......
114-28WI22.
· newly polnfod, . cuotoon Mt
cover 21 hP JahnHn 1)16JiSr,
altctr"' llatlo.:o~ 111 plv
=84~=H:::a~y-:-&amp;=G~ra=ln:':"::::"::~ boat trailer, 3 7 5700.
Exc. qualfty Allalia ar- round 111-112 ft. Bllrcron, now 70 liP
boiH $18.21. 11-n·o Farm, More. Mull oacrlf191. E........
AI. U Pliny, J04-13T-201L
&amp;14-446-11243.
,,
Hay In 111o Bald $1.00, 304-175- 1171 flborogl- boat,
1171.
·
ntwty ....,.,In llht&gt;. Daplh
&amp; on oataty oqulpmont 11ciW.cl. 11W71-24211ftor lp.fjl.

Ago l For A!'ar Q

• (!Jl Hippy Dero

~.rdoon. Lola of chromo,· oi:·
..,..

n.-

llll .1121

. (!) Rucilng Rlln-

1151 Chevy Dalroy -Y on
11111 oftor ovor
oood 11
·~·741
JtOOO
3.
·
1m No•POit,' lolr cond., $200.,
Ponlloc SIO molar, axe. oond.,
1200.11WI7-ol13.
.
1871 Ch~ltr l.lllaron, mini
PB, PS, AC, AIFIFM
••re wud aoal .......,.. eton.
Starcflfl Montago. 11 ft. w;l:
txellllfli Ooni?Kion; • U75.oo; otorao. Loathor lntarlor. oood thru. 221 H!\_vtry ICM hOuN.
hauling anclllaoklnc; _,; oatl, tlrao. No rul1. 114-441-3b2 1-1 Phono 114 -1111 ovanlngo,
114-446-1104 onor lp.m.
tu.OO. 304-1711112. . .
or 11 ._MI-2112 day.
,.
UIIIKy lrolltr, S7LOO. 1IJ4.I1I. 1171 ChovoHo, light bluoil 4
oDd..
cor. 1._ 76 Auto Parts &amp; .:::
1104.
3~414.
_ . . • , """ or Ulld. s
AcceftOI'Iel
••
•
whoolod alllcltla oooolor. Call 1171 Ram C - AC, a~o, PS,
..._.,.. _,;,;, 1.-.aas-2104, new
71,ob0 miiH. $1800 POOR BOY TIRES, ~ 304!
....,.
114-211-1111.
and allnrnoid Sl
55
Building
---,.,.-:,..---.,,--,.-.,--.,-=
·
toof uaod 11-.
1180 ~ Citation $471, 1971 llrH, now u-.
·.
Su.p'plleS
Dotlaa
Chilllllngor a.as1 11171
_
Pontiac Catlllna SilO. 1 4-4441- 79
Bloclc, briDle, IIIPH, win- 1711 or 445-7104.
·',.
HnNII, ole. CloiK?o WI"' 110 Pontiac Tren~m1 301 Y-8
lora, Rio (lrantlo, OH Call 114' hard-top, tullr roo-. gorago
245..!1121.
.
ciop, $1800;~14 441 zzifo.
•·;.;,_"·11112 Bulo
. k,Skyhawlc, clllon ,lfi.
56 Pits tor Sale
_,._ and
1 ooncltlo
=~-':-~~-=-==
out, or
n;
2·10 old Purabred 14,000 mllll. 12,400. 114-441Slamooo llatono, 1 mall ancl 1 174S.
lomalo. 114 441 001 5 or 441- 1N2 Ponlloc T-1,000 aulo, 1112 Cobra ~'i'&amp;:·10 ft. good
or 11~Mt2417.
AIIIFII oo-., good cond. oond., 114-4
2140.
AKC Aoglol"'"" Baoalo ..._ aconamlcal IIHIII car.
p1oa. W..rnoc? and l?ro(-. 7 SI~OOO'. 0.1.0. 114-445-2140 Sat. 19711 2411. Yall_.tono A.,lng.
AC, axlru, txc. concl. 11+446olcF. 11+11N131.
I " 111•
.
•
1182 black Trlno-Am, T·Topo, 0014. '
Drl,s:••YIICF
eon.,
·
Bllgo
lntatlor,
now
tltoo Alptno
,.. n.
Slalncl
eptem. PI, PB PW, Air,
H'-layon kiH11111. C - otud ltarH
onglno, runo lrko now.
-w.. 11t ... 3144 ...., 7 ,..,uln
Looko Sharp.l14-445-171l8.
p.m.·
Cava?ltr, 11,000
Fll7l Tank, 2413
·Avo. 11183 · Chovr
otondord tronomiMion,
Servrces
Point PCt-nt.104-t75-ZGe; 10 mlloo,
runo I locki. oooct. $2,001. or
gil Ill
. "f.!~l" ancl. 10 gal ~:tMt aftlr, ~70.
oon:pl•
Home
11184 Cllovy ~o. now 81
G - and SuPPlY ShoD-Pol CIU1ch~
Call bllwoon 4 l I
a,_lna. AU llraadio. All oivlao. ~· •14$750.
Improvements ~ ·
441 4101.
tamo Pail Foof · Ooolar. Juua
1
Wob?t. CoU 114-445-0231.
BASEMENT
jll4 Ford Eooo~. 4 - · alanWATERPROOFING
;:
doni 4 apood. Good oondltlon.
57
t1450. .,._1182·137&amp; anor 5:00 Unconditional lifetime gua,.nMuslcai .
lM. Local relerencn fumlshad.
p.m.
Instruments
FrH
Coli colltci 1•
1115 1~ MtrcUI'y 'Lyna 112,000 114-237~U, day or night. A'o

frawor wolnoil cablnll. 'S1110. ens;
11+111Z-t11L
Conning
_.. 011
1- Flohar _, and wood bumor, oontolnor.
buohiL ~ou Ffora
DFolt..ll1r7na flat lop 1200. long bad ' - ·
140.00; Full .... ttuck tooli.box Lolatl, falo.I1W47-.
$40.00. 1171 Chavrotot otatlon Jill Pr I • •, Corn. ·-....
1100. Phone 104 m
1111,., 11 ~
121:1. ·
.
For • Conorola ond PIMillie - · An oluo. . RON
r .11111 surplirs
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jaolo.
- . OH. 1-.837•1121.
1 I 1vrstock

SNAFU® by B~ Beattie

="~~~:~"!1--=

· (Z) ~

mi., auto. S2500i 1085 DOdge a • r • I • • • m • n: t

31 Homes for Sale

3 bedrooms, ldtchan,llvlng end · ~blla walar, $20,000.00. 305- 232S, .or448-4421.

$13,550 to S59,4SO. lmmadltlt

54

Real Estate

Ootollo, (1}101-887-6000 Eai.B·
4512.

Jobs. Now hiring. Your area.

dlt-

paul. private enciOHd patio,
DOOI, ptayOI'OWMI. water, .......

~~~~~~~~;;r.:===~~~;~~

'

Eam Mohty typing at homa.
S30,000Jyaar Income potential.

Dolollo (1} 105-8117-tOOO Ext. Y10189.
.

eel 800o82t-07S2. FrM aall and
free •livery.

~~n~ ~:•::-.:": r,~:::
Dlnatt., table a 4 chllre $14, ,

$135/mo. t14-4*3M5 ..

3 bedroom brlck houSe with
largt lot, Mid Way Oriva. New
Havan. Good Cond. 304· na..
5881 .

Income

South, Plkolon, OH, 111._26- SHADY LAWN APARTMENTS.
2587.
721 Saconcl Ava. Fumlohod
aHiclanciH otartlng II $175. InREPOSSESSED mobile cluflng water a gortlago. ldoal
olngiH and doubloo. Wa fino"' tor\ poraon.l1+441f.21102.

.

potanllal.

EARN MONEY Aoadlng bookol

central hut and 11r.

for. your .usad home, At. 23

ventory,
training! fixture ..
airfare, grand open ng, .tc. can
open 15 days. Mr. -schntldlr

2-3 btdroo"'s. bath, basement,
garege. 4.59 acres on achool
1&gt;&lt;11 Hno. 614·690·3374.

$30,000/yr.

:"t

P"',ni 304-1~.
2 br., mobile txNn. gu furnace
a 11ovo, ratrlgorator; woohor a Aogenoy, lno. 2BR, opl., now
pluah aarplll
MW ·DIIInt,
recommend• that you do dryer, 114--251;e258. ,
buelnt.. with people you know, MHA MOBILE HOMES Sao uo ~~~Mt:J~!"Id. S17llmo.
and NOT to •nd man.,

1W tr ...-_ -.

=;!'

lp.m~

•D&amp;rt~a~n~.

8781.

(I)

(JJ HolM Run Dalby

MOtorcycles .

' ••
1981 Cullom Soft Tall. HatlfY

ft-·--

Gradouo living. 1 and 2 batf..
Uaod applla.-. WHhlre.
1001n apo~manta • II Vllloao
tangH, relrlgarat-,
Manor
and '
AlvaroiGt frytre.
mJarawava onna. Ken.. Apo
A~l In M~diiiDOtl. F ptlanco, 21.7 . E. Soconcl II.,
S1U. Call114-112-m7.
Pomeroy, &amp;1.,112-1331 or 11._
~
1,. apl. 231 Flral 1185-3111.
•
, II
.
VI'RA
~· ~J.
'"
•
11210/mo.
pluo doD.
U.IIHioo
·
Fumn,.a l App!lo,_.
1421.
rtf. No polL
AI' 141 In Cant-!Yo 114m?. on
1111 U""" 14XSO 2BA• ~ran- occtp41ng jlllllflcatlona for Lincoln Plko. Mon Sot: t o.m. lUI
tod lol, G - ..... 114- 2 boclrpom apt, hilly carpotod, 1· p.m., Suncloy 12-t. Open IIA I
37114443 bal•oon ._7 p.m.
!ra-o, ,.... ancl traoh p.m. lor appa?ntmo- 114-4411117 Dlnvtne, 1o111 .e.ctrtc
kuPI. provided. Malntanance 3151. Flnonclnt tvOUobll, pluo
14•711, halt pump, JIR, 1-1~
Jiving cr-. to ohopplng, lnotant caoh . -. . . to t100.
bath. 114-145-11244 .anyllma, banklonf ooh-. For -•ln- B~.-·e.lnt.:':.:i':;,..~~:=
245-8177 aftor 1.
lormallon coli, 104-182·3711. E· lO ....
qual oppcnuryhr houolng. Soc- $141. 1 . . . - wood · G"'"P'
2 br., klrkwoocl tumhuro With uon a occopttd.
.
S31t. llotlol~-· liaF SliL
Crlb monraoo S28.11; 7 pliCa
malchlng bom ohopod outbuilding on ,.ntod kit. 114-441- Ona . . boc!rootn
gorogo Ba- pctlor boclroom outto

.,.......,.121.

·~()) lononu: The Loll

tru.I14-441-7S21.

. For-=llllor a!IOI 1ruck top,
Fun olio bad"""" ouho. a., lw 811. ' bad, llllil ·- • ollie.
drHoor. Solid wood, . llroylllll. re"t;1~, an In lilc. - ·
Ukl now. &amp;14-IIIZ.anJ oftor 1 114
•
pill.
,_ Point ·· - Full olzo a clryw. 1200. , - . , $12.00 eoch. 104-17$114-441-G"IOZ.
JilL

fum. Efflclonoy t171 utiiUioo
Dd. Shl,. both. · ~7 Saconcl,
Ollllpolo, 114 441 4411 anar

=

-

or

11one and concNtt. Free Eetlnlat-.304-TIJ-11111.

Elcono. 3 boclroom, 1 1~
Employmenl Servrces Coro 1w tho oldtrly In thtlr 1172
bltiiflh 11p out cor~:tod. (loof
•4000 1 • ... "071
homo, daya only. 114-141-2427.
•
co "I on. •
· ~~ ·
I
Doycare lor chll- In my 1878 14x70 Eloona· locatod on
! 11 Help Wanted .
ham•. Cl•n a laving ..~,..... Statt At 7001 naor Mo.....,.llll,
, 2 nura11 aida. ohol&gt; clerk, • '"' manl. Choohlre I ilL 81 ._317, pf1oo Nduooa to17100 11._215.
, . quire II Odcla and Endo ~hop, 0651.
1177 or 114-211-112L .
· Mlcliftapotl.
Aool pointing • -llng1 trailer 1110 Naohuo 141171 tl(ponclo.
: , AvON I All Arooo f Bhltlay roota, houiH, I blma, troa now J · lon oonlal air ci&gt;nd, ~
tlmoto. 114-171-2320.
.
~-......... 304-175-1421.
poro11ao, unclorponnlnG, wthalr
I d.,.•, 111110, l&gt;&lt;llh Iii - =
.on.
• AVON • All araao, Call Marilyn Will blbvllt In "" ,._aan~ble raa-. Rtf.,..
• rentll lei. t13,00D. I04-7n-

AUG. 15 •

EVENING

11184 XA500A Goof oond. 1874
4a4 lflck..,p. &amp;14-441-4477. " "
1117 Fourlraxh 211).11 P"*'
aondlllon, loW ours. many ~·

'f-IS"

Rd. Open t &amp;.M. to 5 P.ll. Mon,
ttwu I&amp; c.u 114 Ul II'"

I plaoo living "'"'" oultL Uko
now. S1 75.11WIZ.J311.

Apartn)ent

TUES ••

··ai)Newo
74

114~1

•

4 WD's ,

74n.

Otill-.

.
Qulllo
· Wonlodto buy. 1-5-8525.

Television
Viewing
·. Ep51odes
• (21 (iJ •

Nlco 31A lnllet, upondo, llvln§
-314 Tlllrf'lt,
..... ptd.
City ..
Konoup.
t14-141-

Tllooda,, _ ,
·1Oo4pltl.
.

72 Tnicks tor Sale • ·

73 vans &amp;

11444~-i~~d--

•IL Cnw Ad.,

bohlncl ~All­
clclhlng.
Truck
'-•
hood hOld -.l!fll._!l,11,17.

9

2111."2llolh, oolilo -UP,

-

&amp; VIcinity

,•

1117 Ford 'Rongor, I ~'a':
miiM poi gallon. 14,0CICI' m
.
Soli or·lroat f&lt;ir olfior lruck or
von. iOW75-1421. ·' ·
1117 ha~ ton Cho~ Dlck..,il. ·
4WD, CoD altlr l 'p.m. 114-171. 2431. .
(liiC 1.2 d - . 11,000' aCbtil
mlltt, orlalnal owner. u. coricL
114-446-2117. .
' .

Ho*hold

Ul(lll id. 11......
11122.
' , .
211r,
·-·
-·· ......

3 tamlly

16,1989

..Tuaaday,

make, North bid three spades. South
wilely palled.
West led a low beart. Declarer wan

Dealer: Soutb

:~~ West
ace andtook
played
~of
lbe111eace
and

10 the 10 of clubB. He dlcl not
Jill partner bad only four bearts,

Opeillng lead: • 3

lboqht declarer would rail 1 aec.
round of tbe suit. East played tow
declarer wan lbe lilnl· Declarer
I played a ·~ to dummy's jack end
back to.lbe 1p1de king. He led tile
1queen of diamonds, .11-'Dfl. East
tbe

kin&amp;

Nolblng is easy about tlill deal, but
declarer would baw IIIClf-*l at
trick one by makJn&amp; a llmple Uttle
play of daeklng lbe openlaa lead. Eut
would bave to win tlie trici. He c:auld
not atlaek ciubJ, IInce .be lleld 1lle ace.
West WOIIId come 011 lead only CJDce,
with tile spade ace, to 1eaci a dull. Tbat

and placed tile niDe of

, ....., ... 011 tile table. West could ncure
tbat one not. He overtook with lbe.lO
led anotber elub to set tile

would not be enou&amp;b, and tile eontnret

contract.

would

mate.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOS£PH
ACROSS
37 Cry of woe ·
1 Made
31 In comparlthe acene
son wllh
c; Enumerate 39 Ending · ·
Cor young
9 Fragrance
10 Kalahari,
or old
e .g .
DOWN
12 ltalla's
1 French
capital
painter
13 Dinner
2 Venerale
3 Bullcourse
fighting
14 Mining
term
discovery
4
Time frame
15 Interdict
5 HoHman
18 Mover's
film
truck
8 Adherent
171n
(si.Ffl .l
netvous
7 Desetve It
way
8
Foot levar
t9Nige•ian
10 Distributed
clly
11 Church
20 Pavilion
principle
21 Shed
feathers
22 Chesterfield, e .g .
23 Sandy hill
24 Quill
decorallon
'25 Legal
aclion
28 Garfunkel
Is one
27 Palestinian
district
30 It's mighly

a

Yesterday's
15 Curved
11 Chair
21 Arizona
cily
22 Fruit
for jelly
23 Klrl le
· Kanawa·s
title
24 Food
selling

Answer

25 Pianisl
Frankie
27 Harsh
21 Foolish
29 Bolh
or eilher
34 Narrow
Inlet
35 Dawn
goddess

cold I
31 Three
.· (pre! .)
32 Hostel
33 Stan the
comedian
35 Mild oath
38 Unabtldged

1175

IJAII.Y(:RYPTOQUOTES-IIe~ ·s how to"·ork It :

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

,...

.

.

One letter stands for another. In this sample 1ft. is used
for U1e three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion
the words are all
hints. Each day the eode letters are different.

or

CRYPIOQOOTE .,
1-15
ZMMB

N

EP

MXJT

QEP

Ml

HIEOYI

LEDFQVI.

VXJYPP

l&gt;NJAYI ·
N

NVBEVXFY

REDQ

QYNID

FNDFQYP

NXB

OEXB

BVGVNDYB. -

QEO
QY'P

"E.IPMX OEUXYI
IS.EASV TO STAND ..
A PAIN BUT DIFFICULT TO STAND AN ITCit
CHINESE PROVERB
•
Y.......,'e CatpiD,_.eiiT

\

~

�"••
,_ 111 10-The Daily Sa1tillel

'

Pornaoy Midclaport. Ohio

'

•

.-;;;;......;_Area deaths· ~- -Local news briefs-- Hay 4amaged by bam ·r~re

. Ruth,Dye

Rulli Ann Dye, 53, of l.etln.
died Sllurday, AU&amp;usl 12, 1989 in

Vcieenns

~~

Memorial

Hospital,

Sbe was bon July 6, 1936 ill
Midlanil, Pa., lbe dluaht« ol lbe
Dewey llld Hazel Nicbolsoa

Slillweaoo.

Sbe was a member of tbe VFW
Posl
19926
Awtilialy IIICI tho AliiCriclll LeJioa
S~.Jolmson

Smith-Cipc:Un Pull 1140 of New
· ifa~n. She ll1ellded The FathCr's
House Church in HlrlfOid,
Survivors include ber husband,
Robert P: Dye of Lewt; 11m1e sons

llld daughftB.iJi.Jaw, Robert P. and
Sue Dye of Wuhaw, N.C., Donald
W. llld Joyce Dye of l.etln,
Richanl W. and 'Jerri Dye of New·
port News, V..; Olie daughler and
son-in-law, Linda L. 11K1 Scott
BRWC:r, of New Haven; seven
· gnndchildren; four . brodiC:rs,
Robert W. Still~on of Beaver,
r._, Kenneth ~ Slillwagcn of
Elyra, Ohio, Darrell R. Stillwagon
of Hunlington Beach. Ca., and
Thomas D. Stillwagon Of G~
.Town, Tem.; six sisters, J. Florine
Broderick of Wellsville, Ohio,
Helen J. Kidder of Easl Live!)IOOI,
Ohio, DoN J. Dye of Industry, Pa,
Thelma M. Miller of Grove City,
Pa., Frances E. Stillwagon of Mid·
land, Pa, Linda .Lou Eolarianni of

Monasa,Pa.
Services were held Mondav
1:30 Burial was in Sunrise

Memorial Gardens, Lelarl.

.Mary A. Stapleton
Mary Ann Stapleton, 87, of
Ewlngton, died Monday at Oak
Hill Hospital.
Born June 17,1902, In Ashland,
Ky ., she was the daughter of the
late Charles and Llza (Childers)
·
Wheatley.
Also preceding her In death
were her husband, Luther J.
Stapleton, In August 1968; one
son, Charles Stapleion; one
daughter, Audrey Comer; and
two brothers.
Surviving are four sons, Ed·
ward Stapleton of Logan, Ohio,
Damon Stapleton of Pomeroy,
Naamon Stapleton of Ewtngton,
and Thomas StapletonofLondonberry, Ohio; eight daughters,
Mrs. Carl !Opal) Fox of Lake
City, Fla.. Mrs. Darrell (Anna)
Harbour of Salt Rock, ·w.va.,
Mrs. Raymond (Kathleen) John·
ston of Accuville, W.Va., Mrs.
Owen (Foe) Haynes of Romance,
W.Va., Mrs. Larry (Francis)
Anderson of Parkersburg,
W.Va. , Mrs.· Peter (Jo) Fitch of
Martella, Ga., Mrs. Rasco
/Hilda) Payne of Sissonville,
W.Va., and Mrs: Alan (Myrtle)
Goble of Batayta, Ohio.
Also surviving are 44 grand·
children;, 68 great ·
grandchildren; 12 great~great ·
grandchildren; four . sisters,
Myrtle Hayes of Phoenix, Ariz.,
Laura Lyons of Ironton, L!lllan
Stewart of Ashland, Ky., and
Marguerlta Alexander of Baltl·
more, Md.
Services will be Thursday, 11
a.m. at the Vinton Baptist
Church wtth the Rev . Marvin
Sallee officiating. Burial will be
In the Marcum Cemetery In
Wilkesville, Ohio.
Friends may call Wednesday, 4
to 8 p.m. at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home In Vinton.

· William K. Oiler
William K. Oller, 69, of Racine,
died Monday at Veteran's Mem·
orlal Hospital In Huntington,
W.Va.
. Born Sept: 3, 1921t In VInton, he
was the son of Alva Cecil O!ler of
VInton and the late Flossie M.
(McFarland) Oller. He was a
retired welder from Buckeye
Steel Company In Columbus.
He Is survived by three sons,
William Eugene Oller, Stanley
Wayne Oller and Thomas Lee
Oller, all of Greenfield, Ohio; one
daughter, Debbie Kay Patton of
Greenfield; four brothers, Robert Oiler of Racine, CarJOtler of
Grove City. Ohio, Paul Oller of
Marengo, Ohio, and PhllUp Oller
of McDermont, Ohio; and two
sisters, Helen Hafchar of Cincinnati and Mary Blankenship of
.Prestonsburg, Ky.
·
He was ·preceded In death by
two brothers and three sisters.
Arrangements will be an·
nounced by the McCoy·Moore
Funeral Home In Vinton.

Daryl Sawyer~~
Daryl Leo Sawyers, 32, of
Middleport, died Monday ~t his
home.
Mr. Sawyers, a son of Leo and
Lucille Mills Sawyers, or Cheshire, was born Oct. 13, 1956 In
Columbus. He was a 1974 gradu·
ate of Westland High School,
Columbus, and was employed by
his father as a mechanic.
SUrvivors Include his wife,
Valarle Kennard Sawyers; a son,
Matthew, and a daughter, Amy,
all at home; his parents; two
sllter.s , Sharon Elliott, of Athens,
and Carol . Ann Ro~r~n. of
Roanolle. Va.; and IIIIi father-In·
law and inother·ln-Iaw. WilHam

and Dorothy Kenilard, TrJmble.
Services for Mr, Sawyers wJII
be Thursday, 1 p.m., at the
Rawllngs-Coats·Fisher Funeral
. Home, with Rev. William Price
otrlclatl118.· Burial will be In
Gravel Htll cemetery. Friends
may call at the Funeral·Home on
,Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

John W; COU@henour
.

.

·' 69, Rt.1,
John W. Coughenour,
Cheshire, died Tuesday morning
at Holzer Medical Cenler.
He was born on April 12, 1920 In
Chester, son of the late Clinton C.
and Faye (Swisher) Coughenour.
A World War II Army veteran,
he retired from the Kyger Creek
power plant In 1982. ·He was a
member of the Cheshire Masonic
Lodge No. 456, where he was a
32nd degree Mason. He was also
a member of the American
Legion Post 128 In Middleport.
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Ethelyn EarJeen
.(Swisher) Coughenour, who died
In 1980.
.
.
SUrvivorS Include his daugh·
ter, Mrs. ReVa Hancock of
Corydon, Ind.; and two grand·
sons, Travis W. and Chad W.
Hancock.
Services will be Thursday at 2
p.m. at the WIIUs Funer11-1 Home.
The Rev. Ron Hammbnd will
officiate. Burial will be In Gravel ·
Htll Cemetery.
Friends may call the. funeral
homeWednesday·from 7to9p.m.

Trixie Clark

n~

said minor in mishap

The GalUa-Melgs Post ot.tlle State Highway lnvesllcated an
accident at4: 46 p.m. Monday In Meigs County, on SR. 7, 108-feet
north of milepost 9. One driver was slightly Injured.
Troopers said a 19110 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Douglsas
A. Strayer, 28, Kent, Ohio, stopped In traffic. HIJ vehicle was hit
· from behind by a 19115 Plymou!h TurJstmo, driven· by Terry J .
Bailey, 24, 'Pomeroy. Damage was mine( to both vehicles.
Strayer suffered a complaint Injury but was not Immediately
treated.
·
,
Thli patrol cited "Bailey to G•lllpolls Municipal ' Court for
failure to stop within the assured clear distance.

Police investigate 2 accidents
The first occurred at 4: 18 p.m on the ·Pomeroy parking. Jot
when a car driven by Shelby Pickens, Racine, backed Into the
left rear fender of a· car operated by Shelby Davia, Pomerqy.
According to pollee, Davis was backing out of a parldng place_
when Pickens started to move and the vehicles collided.
'
Pickens was cited for Improper backing and ·no financial
responsibility.
·
The second accident occurred at 10: 06 p.m Mo!14ay night~
Spring Ave., Pomeroy. Pollee reporled that a ti:UCk,drtven by
James Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy, was struck by a car. owned by
Yvonne Edwards and driVen by Joey Relhnlre, Jr., 21, of
Pomeroy.
·
Pollee reported that there was light damage to th 'rear left
side of the Taylor truck, and to the right front fender of the
Reltmlre vehicle.
Reltmlre was clled for leaving the scene of an accident, OWl,
operating.under suspension, and no financial responsibility.

EMS has nine Monday calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered Monday by units of
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
.
At 12 a.m., Middleport was called to Page St. for Henry Myers
who was Jaken to PleasanfValley Hospital.
Rutland was called at 11: 05 a.in. to State Route 124 for Dirrell
Sawyers who.was dead on arrl'\'al.
· ·
'Middleport was called at 1: 27 a.rn. to Railroad St. for Dorotjly
Roush who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 2: 14 p.m., Pomeroy was called to the Meigs County'
Fairgrounds for Grorla Frederick who was taken to Veteran$
Memortalllosplfat..
...
.
.
At 3: 11 p.m., the Middleport Fire Department and the EMS
unit were called to a tractor fire on Story's Run. Richard
Wal'necke was treated at the .scene.
Rutland EMS was called at 5: 38 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Jerry Back who was taken to Holzer Medical center.
At 7: 43 p.m., Middleport wa:s called to State !lou te 554 for
Muriel Spires who was taken to Holzer Medical center.
Pomeroy at 7l50 p.m. treated Phyllis Vanlnwagen, Lincoln
Heights.
.
'
At 10: 57 p.m ., Middleport was called to the Riverside
Apartments for Shirley Roush who was taken to Veterl!.'ls
MemorJal Hospital:

Trixie Clark, 88, 847 Second
Ave. , Gallipolis, died Monday 'at
· her residence !ollowtng an ex- .
tended Illness. · ·
....
Born June 2, 1901, In Harrison
Township, Gallla CQunty, she
was the daughter of the late
Thomas a,nd Effie (Bosler) Neal.
She was a retired employee of
·Clark's Jewelry Store In
GaJUpolts.
Preceding her In death was her
husband, Buell Waugh Clark on
Oct. 15, 1985, whom she married
Aprll23, 1921, In Pomeroy.
. Also preceding per In death
were one Infant daughter, one
Continued from page 1
great-grandson; one brother;
'
.
,
and one half-brother.
People are looking for leaner peppers and potat~s In a flour
She Is survived by one son,
choices, and avoldtug red meat, tordlla ..
Neal Blaine Clark of Gallipolis;
he said, adding Bob E:vans
granddaughter, Nancy Vaughn
Sausage Is probably the leanest
~
of Gallipolis; grandson, 'Joe
on the market.
·
Clark of Pomeroy; and one
He also noted the company Is
.health,
great-grandchild.
looking Into foreign markets -in
lltJmB, Gr,
A resident of GaJUpoUs· for 58
Canada and Japan, If trade
andbf ' S I
years, she •Was a member of the
agreemen Is are favorable.
~al:
Grace United Methodist Church, .
Both the sausage and ·restauProgressive ·Bible Class, and
rant divisions are moving Into
Church Circle.
·
the VIrginia market, according
8ervtces will be Thursday, 1
to.Carroll .•They will opel' res tau·
p.m. at the Waugh-Halley-WOocl
rants and place products In the
Funeral Home with the Rev. Joe
Norfolk and Richmond areas In
Hefner officiating. Burial will be
November, he said.
In Mound Hill Cemetery.
· A new Item was distributed to
Friends may call Wednesday, 2
the local shareholders for their
to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m.
testing and Input - a breakfast
Pallbearers will be Tom Phil·
taco - manufactured by subsl·
Ups, Dave Phillips, Johnnie Notdiary Owens Country Sausage
Company.
ter, Alfred Clark, Ronnie Halley ,
Marlin Kerns, and Skip
According to Owens President
Meadows.
Stewart K. Owens, the Item Is
quite popular In the southwestso popular In fact, they cannot
produce enough to satiSfy consumer demand.
·
Dally stock prices
''This (breakfast taco) Is a
(As of 10 a.m.)
novel Item here, but Is an
Bryce and Mark Smith
accepled Item tn the Southwest,"
of Blunt, Ellis a. Loewl
Owens said.
The Border Breakfast Is sa us- .
Am Electric Power .... .. ... .... 29~
age or ham, with eggs, cheeses,
AT&amp;T .... .... .........................38l!
Ashland on .... ....................37l! •
Bob Evans ....................... ... 15~
Charming Shoppes .............. . 16
City Holding Co .. .. .. ............ 15%
Federal Mogul... .. ............... 23~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... .. .. 55~
Heck's .................... ...... .. ..... ~
Key Centurion .... .. .. .. ......... .123,1
Lands' End .. ............ .......... .28%
Limited Inc .............. ........ ..35%
Multimedia Inc .... .... .... ..... 106~
Rax Restaurants .... .. ... ......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 16%
. Shoney 's Inc ........ .... ............ 12
Wendy's Infl ... .......... .. .... ..... 5%
Worthington Ind ....... ...... ....24Y,

Bob Evans· · · - - - - - - -Ft:ll'...

. Appraxlmalely 115 round bales
of llay 1J! 'the Pomeroy Pike area
of Melp County were destroyed
or dUIIIIPd by . fire Monday
night, according to Information
from Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulaby. A vandal, or
vandala, set fire to the bales on
three different f,rms In the area.
The fires were set sometime
between approlilmately 1 and 3
a.m.
According to reports, tile lara·
est aiJ)Ount of hay - 90 bales
from the Gary Michael farm,
Pomeroy Pille, Racine - was
destroyed Qr damaged. Fifty of
the Michael bales were on
Pomeroy Pike and 40 bates were
on Wood Road.
About six bales on the Mike
· Elberfeld farm, also on Pomeroy
Pike, were also damaged or
destroy~.
'
The Chester and Pomeroy Fire

Deparbnents were called to both
the Michael's and Elberfeld's
farms. ·
·

Ohio

Power..

On the David Watson farm, ;;
Bentz Cemetery Road,- CoOlville, 1
.15 bales were destroyed by fire.
The Tuppers Plains Fire ~ ~
partment was called to tht:
Watson farm .
Value of the damaged hay
bales totaled approximatelY,
$2.200 according to a sheriff s•
departmentapokesman.
.,;
1bere· are no suspects In tiM!
matter. .
. ,•1
.
'
The sheriff's department also•
reports the theft of a trencher
with trailer. from the Chuck'"'
Bar1els residence on Frank"
Road, Pomeroy. The theft oc-"~
curred sometime between 9 p .m.,
Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday.
According to a report of tbe
Incident, a vehicle wllli a trailer~)
hitch ·apparently backed Into tlJe:··
Bartels yard, cut a cable whlc
held the trailel"to a tree, and lett:;.
with the trailer and the trencher.':;.
Value of the trencher and.'l!
trailer Is $3,000.
·~
There ·are no suspects at thiS.,
time In the theft.
· fJ

.

'

Continued from page 1

Hospital news
Veteru1 Memorial
Monday admissions- Dorothy
Roush, Middleport; Edward
Capehart, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges -Clifford
Connolly, Robert McDaniel, Paul
Saunders, Brenda .Handley; SU·
ale Windon.

'

The 1989 Junior
and Senior
Fair Schedule
.
.
. .

Vol.40, No. 71 M

Copyrighted t989

Pull held Tuesday In the Show Arena. The
competition will .b e held every day thla weeli at 4
p.m.

5:00 P .M.-Talent Show-Hill Stage
"7:,00 P.M .......Demolltlon Derby
8:00 P.M.-Junior Fair S.wlne Showmanship and Judling
• 9:00 P.M.-Midnlabt Cloaers-Hill Stage
.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16 ,
~:15 . A.M.-Junlor Fatr.~ Showmanship ancLJudling

:.
·
Follow~!~~ by pPen Class J udling
12:00 Noon-4-H Flawer Sjlow Judling (Jr. Falr.Bldg.) ·
.1:00 P .M.:-Beef Cook·Off'-Hill Stage
,2:00 P;M.-Horse Harness Racine
2:00 PM.-4-H Style Sl)pW:-HIIl Stage
. ·
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Rlnl
4:30P.M.-LIItle Miss lr Mister Contest-Hill Stage.
"5:30 P.M.,ll.Junlor Fair Parade
.6:30 P.M.-Wyoming Wolf Band-Hill Stage
· 7:00 P.M.-Youlh Awards Night-Show Ring
7:00 P.M ...,.Ailltque Tractor Pun-Tractor Pull Area
"8l30 P.M.-Charlie McClain &amp; Wayne Massey-Grandstand
8:30 P.M.-Kidde Games-Show Ring
"Grandstand Attraction

complain on the
child · revealed that

Scout
results
revealed
One-hundred·twenty·ntne Boy
Scouts participated this year In
the Meigs County Junior Fair.
entering a total of 319 projects in
1S•dlfferent categories, Including
PUMP YOU UP .._ Television stars Hans and
Meigs County youths who told the crowd that lhey ' Indians, Frontier, Models, Art,
Franz made an appearance at the Meigs County
wanted to "pump you up." The duo then displayed
Collection or Hobby. Ropes,
Fair on
during the talent show.
their balling musclfl!! for lhe crowd.
Outdoor Nature, Cooking,
However, Ihe
stars were
two
Games, Wildlife, First Aid or
Safety, Electricity or Battery
Operated Craft, Science, Country, Woodcraft, Welding, Photo·
graphy and Day Camp Projects.
Judging of Boy Scout projects
took place on Aug. 10.
Two persons were Injured In an
Al.J projects were judged on
accident at 2: 25 p.m. Tuesday 111
their
own merit to receive A, B
Letart Township, on the Apple
and
C
ribbons:
Grove-Dorcas 'Road, 3.4 miles
The
awarding of Grand and
spouth of SR. 124, according to
Champion ribbons for
Reserve
theGallla·Melgs PostoftheState
the
various
projects was based
Highway Patrol.
upon Ideas, usefulness and
Troopers said cars driven! by
workmanship.
Jon VanMeter. 17, Syracuse, and
Receiving Grand ChampiOn
Elmer B. Parsons, Jr., 34,
ribbons
!rom each of the ranks
Racine, collided on a curve.
exhibiting
were Matt Milhoan,
Damage was heavy to VanMe·
·Tiger;
Josh
Jftll, Wolf; Michael ·
ter's car and moderate tQ the
Leifheit,
Bear;
Jamie Broderick,
Parsons' vehicle.
'
Jared
~tewart, Tender·
Webelo;
· Parsons suffered mlnorvlstble
foot;
Matt
Craddock,
Second
injuries, according to the patwl,
Class;
Nathan
,
Baloy,
Star;
and
and was taken to Veterah's
Bobby
Johnson,
Life.•
Memorial Hospital. A passenger
Reserve Champion ribbons
in the Parsons· car, Marvin
went
to Christopher Gilkey,
PLACE - Flve-yeu'old Mindy O'Dell was the winner of
Teaford, 21, Racine, was Injured
Tiger;
Andy Kitchen, Wolf;
the Talent Show competition· held at lhe Meigs County Fair on
and was treated at the scene.
Brandon
Smith, Bear; Adam
Tue~~day aHernoo~. O'Dell's hallel perfonnance heal oulslx other
The patrol cited Parsons for Smith, Webelo, Chris Chapman,
older conlestanls and won $15.
failure to yield one-half of the
Tenderfoot; Matt Craddock, Seroadway.
cond Class; Nathan Baloy, Star;
No one was Injured In an and Bobby Johnson, Life.
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR SCHEDULE
accident at 10 p.m. Tuesday on
The following boys received A.
SR.
7, the patrol reported.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1&amp;, 1989
B and C ribbons.
Officers said Brian E. Dur·
-6:30 P .M.-Wyoming Wolf Band-Hill Stage ·
From Pack 249, Pomeroy, Carl
ham.
18, Pomeroy, attempted to Carmichael, B; David Anderson,
7:00 P.M.-Youth Awards Night- Show Ring
pass another vehicle driven by A; Wade Pooler, B; Adam Smith,
7:00 P .M.-Antique Tractor Pull-Tractor Pull Area
Ricky
L. McKnight, 31, Pome· A. B; Shawn King, two A's; Steve
~8:30 P.M.-Charlie McClain &amp; Wayne Massey
roy,
then
cut back Into his Jane of
· 8:~ P.M.-Kiddle.Games- Show Ring
travel, striking· the McKnight Hoover, A; Josh Hooten, C; J .R.
Blackwell, two B's; Wesley
car. Damage was moderate to
THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1989
Thoene, two B's; Joseph McCall,
McKnight's 1986 Olds De! Ia 88 two A's; Matthew Ault, B;
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
and minor to Durham's 1977Ford
'
_ J.
.
(Free Gate For Senior Citizens)
Steven McCullough, B; Adam
Granada.
1: uu P.M .- Pet Show - Show Ring .
Thomas, B; Keith Ash, two A"
The patrol cited Durham was B; Clay Crow, B; Charles Tyre ,
2:00 P.~.-Horse Harness Racing
cited
for changing lanes without B; Jared Woods, two A's; Juad
4:00 P.M.-Kiddie Tractor Pull
caubon.
5:30 P.M.-Group Therapy Band -Hill Stage
·
Roush, three A's, B; Michael
Thepatrolalsotnvestlgatedas · Stacey, A; Ryan Pratt, two A's,
6:00 P .M.-Open Class Sheep Judging
car-deer accident at 6 a.m . . Ryan Well, A, two B's; Daniel
Followed by Junior Fair Sheep Judging
Tuesday In Olive Township on Custer, two A's; CurtlsHansdne,
7:00 P.M.-CircleD Wranglers- Hlll Stage ·
SR. 681, 0.1 west of milepost 23. A; Jason Roush, two B's; Scott
7:00 P.M.-4-H Horse Fun Show
Officers said a 1986 Ford Pinto Sellers, A; Matthew Smith, two
8:00 P.M.-Ho~se Pull-:-, center Field
driven by Cheryl D. Young, 30, A'sj John Davidson, A; Matthew
•8:30 P .M.-McGuffey Lane
.
Reedsville, struck a deer but the. Justice, two A's.
•-Grandstand attrl!ct!on
Continued on page 14
continued on page 7 ·

Two hurt
in mishap

·CHARGE ON
• NO SERVICE
'
PASSBOOK .SAVINGS
. ACCOUNTS
.

Your Good .Neighbor Bank

PEOPLES BANK
Point P*liant
675~·1121

MotOn
773·5514

while both doors were shut,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
neither was IQcked, that the
Dally SenUnel Staff
The in-school suspension prob- student was observed at least
lem of the Harrisonville Elemen- every half·hour, that she did
tary School where a practice has have restroom privileges .and
been to dtsctpUne children by that she was there lor less than
assignl!tg them to work In an 8 lt four hours.
Bob . Smlddle, parent . of a
14 foot closet was discussed at
length at Tuesday night's meet- second grader at the schOol, was
Ing of .the board of education of spOkesman for the delegation. He
reported that there had been a
the Meigs Local School District.
A delegation of parents from community meeting held last
the Harrisonville school met with Friday and that the committee
board members to question what would like to see In-school
the practice wtll be when school · suspension held In a room with
outside windows, suggesting
starts this fall .
It was pointed out by the either the library or the music
parents as well as Superintend· and art room, a discussion ·.with
ent James Carpenter last night parents of the child Involved
that using the closet for In-school about the discipline, a responsl·
suspension has been the practice ble adult with the child at all
times , lnteratton betwen the
of the principal and teachers at
child. arid the adult with some·
the school for many years.
·· It only came to the board's . learning going on, and access to
attention earner . this summer water and liatliroom facilities.
· It was further noted during the
when the parents and grandpar·
ents o( a siudent assigned to the meeting by Doris Trader, also a
parent, that Channel 6, Colum·
room made a formal complaint
bus,
had been to the Friday night
In open session before the Board
meeting
to hear the story of how
of Education. The parents
dlsclpUne
has been handled at
charged that their daughter had
the
school.
She also said that
been placed in the room, that
petitions
containing
144 signa·
both doors were shut, that only a
tures of parents and grandpartransom was open, that she was
ents had been sent to the State
served lunch In the room, that
. sh~ was only occasionally supervised, and that she was told when
could · to the re~~room. .

~~~;}~.i~f~~~~~;~~:~~~~~~
0~responded
r~
following

~

'

211 Centl

A Multlmediolnc. NeWIPIP"'

Suspension issue tops
Meigs board ·agenda

_ TUESDAY,-AUGUST 15

'SEE YOU THERE!

1 Section, 14 PlgM ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 16, 1989

.

•NO SERVICE CHARGE ON .
STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS ·-

N•w Hav.n
. 882·2135

••

WORKING HARD~· This youngsler was trying
his best to gel a full puU during the Kiddie Tractor

.

Thursday's meeting or Racine
American Legion Post 602 bas
been canceled due to the Meigs
County Fair.

Page4

and that a representative o{
WQOdlands cen1er had recona-~
mended tbe transfer to the;..
AtheR$. Mental Health Cen1er: ·"
The lnl:ldent remains under \
Investigation by Pomeroy PQI~ ·

• STAFFORD, SLS, AND PLUS
STUDENT. LOANS AVAILABLE
TO QUALIFIED ·'BORROWERS

Canceled

8647

~

.

Variable cloudl-tonlcllt.
Low In mid .... Chance of raln
21 percent. Thursday, partly
cloudy. 10 gh near 80. ChaDCe
of rain 30 percent.

Pick-4

legislators and other loclll and'"
state leaders.
;
Last year, Ohio Power's eco- •
nomic development efforts aided ·
local groups In adding 2,568 jobs·
at 146 Industries throughout the .~
area served by the company.
•

OUR SERVICE IS WORTH
CHEERING ABOUT!

Any junior high student who
plans to participate In sports this
school year may' have his physl·
cat at Meigs Junior High School
at 6 p.m. Tuesday (today) .
Athletes should wear shorts and
t -sh lrts. Examining physicians
wUI be Dr. Mark Brown, Dr.
Doug Hunter, and Dr. James
Witherell.

294

,....

Stocks

Physicals today

Pick-3

... ~'

unit of the Emergency Medical
Service to Veterans where he
was treat~ In the emergency
room.
.
It was reporled by the hospital
that the wound was superficial

'

Ohio Lottery

Cubs rally,
defeat Reds
in 12th frame

~

Continued trom page.1

with what we have In our service
area. That Is the reason for the
Industrial targeting study," he
added.
Cop!es of the targeting study
also are being sent to Ohio

Man...

7

•

Department . of Education re-.
questing an Investigation Into the
situatiOn .
In response to the commentS
from the parents, Supt. Carpen,
ter said that as a result of the
loves ligation which the board
held In regard t~ the Kennedy
ch.lld Incident the board d~ld~
that "we were to have a dJscl,
pllne gul!le or procedure and that
they wan ted to check each
building's dtsctpUne procedure. •1
He reported that the principal$
had come back to work on Friday
and that as a result of twQ
meetings the principals ha4
come up with some things which
the board has not yet had time to
review. He said that the pro))Clse4
guidelines set up dlsctpUnary
options for grades K through ~
and then any other methods of
dlsctpUne much have parents
approval.
;
He detailed the proposal, no~
yet adopted by the board, for the
parents as follows:
:
Detention, he said, would be I!
loss of recess, with repeated
detentions to result In notlflca;
tton of the parent of the problem:
In-school suspension would JJe
removal of the student from the
Continued on pa~~:e 7
•

One man arrested in ·
Meigs marijuana raid

One man was arrested and
another 366 marijuana plants
were confiscated Tuesday as
local Jaw enforcement agencies
. continued their effort to catch
people growing the Illegal drug.
David B. Dillard of Racine was
arrested after the Meigs County
· Sheriff's Department observed
marijuana growing on his property. Dillard consente~ to have
!;lis property searched and he was
consequently charged with cultivation and possession of
marijuana.
· Chief Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby
said since the current drug
eradication effort started on
Saturday 2,084 plants have been
confiscated by the department.
Each plant Is worth about $1,500,
making the total value of the
plants $3.1 million.
Dillard was the second person
to be arrested during the effort
and charges are pending against
another two people.
Helicopters from the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal ldenttftca·
tlon and the Ohio National Guard
are assisting In the effort.

The Sheriff's Department also
Is Investigating the recent rash of

hay fires throughout the county.
On Tuesday, seven more fires
were reported In a ddltlon to
Monday's fires when 115 round .
bales of hay were burned:
Soulsby said the matter ts undei
Investigation and would not com~
ment further.
In other matters, Wes Arbaugli
reported to deputies that some::
one stole $8 In cash and $40 In
candy from the Eastern Athletic
Booth at the MeJgs County
Fairgrounds on Tuesday. A
wallet, pair of pants and a Ugh(
green duffle bag also were taken:
The sland's cash drawer waS:
found near the stand .
•
MtchaeJ'Ingram of Reedsville
told deputles someone stole tools
from his garage on Success Road
on Saturday and Sundl!-Y . Ingram
said he had left his garage door
open.
Sheriff James Soulsby also
warned residents Wednesday
that If they go to the fair to lock
their vehicles. All valuables
should be putln the trunk or out of
sight, he said.

,..._Local news briefs-Mayor Seyler Jines five
Four people forfeited bonds and five people we re fin ed in th£&gt;
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on Tuesday evening.
Forfeiting wer.e . Joseph Perry, .Shade, $63, traffic light
violation; David Nance, Syracuse, $63 driving under suspen·
slon; Marjorie Baker, Middleport, $63. open container in a
motor vehicle; and Clarenc!l Spencer, Jr .. Clinch burg, Ky ., $43,
.
Illegal left turn.
Fined were Cynthia Stanley, Mason, W.Va .. $213 and costs,
petty theft; Jerry Reltmire, Jr. , Pomeroy. $263, leaving th£&gt;
scene of an accident, $50 and costs, no financial responslbllty .
$63 and costs. driving under suspension, ~nd $375 and costs ,
O .U.I.
Also fined were EJecta Martin. Gallipolis . $63 and costs ,
Illegal left turn , $63 and costs, no operators license; Ruth
Snodgrass, Racine, $63, traffic light violation; and Scott Ray
Wygant, Sturgis, Mich., $375 and costs, D.U.I. , and $313 and
costs, concealed. weapon.

.

Five fined by Mayor .Hoffman
.
'
In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman on Tuesday
evening, five t tvlduals forfeited bonds while two Individuals
were fined.
Forfeiting nds were Carl E . Dunlap, Gallipolis, $460 D.W.I.
and $60, w g way on a one way street; Eric Priddy,
Middleport, 110, disorderly manner; Jerry L. Collins,
Jddleport,
, a pinning tires; CarolS. Toops, Middleport, $60,
nlng a
p sign: and Jeffrey P . Nelson, Middleport, .60.
fa re to eld.
Fl
re James A. Wilson, Gallipolis, $25 and costs, Illegal
exhaust; and Thomas J . Richardson, Pomeror. $25 nne.
excessive speed.

•

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