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                  <text>I UBIOBY, .IUI'V I .t, Ultsts

r-omeroy-MICICIIepOrt, Ohio

Marietta closes out its year-long bicentenniw celebration
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
United Press International
The yearlong bicentennial ob·
servallon In Marietta, the first
permanent settlement In the
Northwest Territory comes to a
close this weekend. '
Activities In Marietta begin
Friday to mark the 1788 lnaugu·
ration of Arthur St. Clair as the
first governor of the territory and
continue through Sunday with a
rededication of a monument

marking the westward
movement.
Top country musics tars wlllbe
performing in Brush Run Parkin
St. Clairsville for Jamboree In
the Hills Saturday and Sunday.
It was 19 years ago that Ohio
native Nell Armstrong walked on
the moon. This Saturday and
Sunday, the Festival of Flight at
the Armstrong Museum near his
hometown of Wapakoneta com·
memorates that lunar landing.

The Pottery Festival will be
held Thursday through Saturday
in the Ohio Ceramic Center
between Roseville and Crooks·
ville, Perry County. A Pottery
Lovers Show and Sale will be held
Friday and Saturday In
Zanesville.
· An Old·Time Fiddlers Contest
will be held Saturday at Sauder
Farm and Craft Village near
Archbold, Fulton County.
Roscoe VIllage, a restored

Poople in the news _ _ _ _ _ __
By WII:.LIAM C. TROTf
United Press International
BUDDHISTS AND TANKS:
Zen devotee Patrick Dully was
the star of an eclectic parade In
Worceste~; Mass., to celebrate
the opening of a- Buddhist conven·
tlon and the U.S. Constitution.
The "Dallas" star and Cmdr.
David Cashman of the USS
Constitution, the 11at1on's oldest
battleship, were grand marshals
of a parade Sunday that featured
.thousands of Buddhists and
Army tanks from Fort Devens.
Duffy is one oflO,OOO Buddhists In
town for a convention of the
Ntcheren Soshu Soka Gakkal
Association, the largest lay Bud·
dhlst organization In tbe nation.
He's been a member of the group
since he w~s a senior at the
Un iverslty of Washington, where
his wife, Carlyn, Introduced him
to the organization. '
NADER GOES HOME: Ralph
Nader's latest crusade Is di·
reeled at his hometown of Wins·
ted, Conn. Nader got Interested
when town officials voted to tear
down Mary P. Hinsdale School,
which he attended while In
grammar school from 1938 to
1942, despite an offer to lease It
for $1 million over 12 years. " This
is so profoundly stupid," Nader
said. "To replace a building like
that costs $2 million at $100 a
square foot and they turned down
a $1 million lease. So they turned
down a $3 million deal." As a
result , Nader, who lives In
Washington but maintains his
legal residence In Winsted, will
conduct a six·month lnvestlga·
tlon Into the local government to
determine. if residents are satis·
lied with their representation.
Nader said the town fathers were

guilty of "mismanagement, lack
of planning and officiousness ...
obstinacy, Ignorance and polltl·
cal ego- tripping." Officials, how·
ever, say the school was In poor
shape.
TV POLITICS: Ted Koppel and
the people at "Nightllne" don't
· Intend to yield to Michael Duka·
kls's request for a change In the
·seating arrangement for an
Interview. The Democratic pres!·
dential candidate had been scheduled for t,hls week but now says
he wants to sit next to Koppel at
his desk, rather than be remotely
Interviewed by camera in
another room, as GMrge Bush
was on a Tecent "Nlghtllne"
Interview. Bush blamed the
set·UP for causing him to refer to
Koppel as "Dan," as In Dan
Rather. Koppel does occasion·
ally share his desk - as he did
with Gary Hart - but only when
the stat( thinks It appropriate.
But executive producer Richard
Kaplan says It's too late for
Dukakls to ask for changes In the
rules. "This universe (of presi·
dentlal politics) has two people In
It - Bush and Dukakls," he said.
"You have to treat the two people
In that universe the same way.
Now he (Dukakls) Is making
demands. It just wouldn't he
fair." ABC and the Dukakis
camp are still trying to work out
something.
OLIVE OU. ALA IACOCCA:
Leelacocca is taking a little time
out from pushing Chryslers so he
can promote his family line of
olive oil. The Iacocca clan runs
VIlla Nicola Limited, purveyors
of Italian "extra virgin" oils and
red wine vinegar. The olives and
grapes come from Iacocca' s 11th
century stone villa In Tuscany,
Italy, which he named after his

late father. He's In Chicago this
week promoting his products at
the International Fine Food and
Confectionery Show. When he
first boug~t the estate four years
ago, "We made a lot of olive on.
and wine and didn't know what to
do with It," lacoc.c a said. So he
came up with a solution and a
sUck new business venture. He
says that while he likes a good
Arnerlcan hamburger, It'll never
take the pia ce of a real Italian
meal.
GLIMPSES: Some 800 fans on
the verge of hysteria were
awaiting Sflchael Jackson at
London's Heathrow Airport as he
arrived for 13 concerts In Britain
and Ireland. Jackson's Luf·
thansa flight was 50 minutes late
because of air traffic congestion
over West Germany .. : Oliver
North, who goes on trial Sept. 20
In the Iran-Contra scandal, spoke
at a $150·a·plate barbecue Satur·
day at a country club In Midland,
Texas, as part of a fund· raising
swing to bring In money for his
defense fund. But a group of
protesters was outside the coun·
try club making a statement that
combined politics with cuisine:
they were passing out baloney
sandwiches ... Michael Reagan,
the president's adopted son, says
he did nothing wrong In making a
commercial for a diet "patch"
that has been banned by the
Federal. Drug Administration.
The long-running commercial
for the mail-order diet aid at first
seems to be a genuine talk show
with Reagan as the host "I
auditioned as an actor and was
hired .to do the job," Reagan told
the Dally News of Los Angeles.
"It could have been baby bottles.
I knew it (the producn from
nothing. What do I know?" -

Quirks in the News_~----"It's given the public something to talk · about," said
Howard.

By United Press International
astrologer quits
LA GRANDE, Ore. (UPI)
An astrologer just wasn't In the
stars for Union County.
Jenny Nicholson quit her con·
troversial job as county as trol·
oger 'before ever advising officials, saying the publicity
brought her so much business she
can't afford to keep the volunteer
post.
Nicholson resign!!&lt;~ Monday,
five days after taking tht' job and
a day before county commission·
ers planned to rescind the contro·
versial appointment.
"The ensuing controversy has
given me so much publicity and
so many new long-distance
clients that I no longer have time
to be your volunteer." Nicholson
said in her letter of resignation.
Nicholson's appointment last
Wednesday stirred up so much
controversy in the rural county
that the commissioners sche·
duled a special meeting today to
deal with the issue.
Commissioner Bill Deering,
who originally proposed the Idea
of appointing a county astrol·
oger. had l-sald Nicholson could
advise the county. on the most
propitious time to apply for
federal grants.
He said Monda y that some
''fundamentalis t Christians"
had accused him of "dabbling
With the occult ."
County Judge John Howard
said .that despite Nicholson's
resignation. the three-member
county panel would still vote to
rescind the appointment.
C~unty's

-~-

All's well that ends well'
NAIROBI, Kenya iUPI)- The
independent Kenyan , govern·

Public Notice

Public Notice "

FOR SALE .
SHERIFF'S VEHICLES

$75.00
1 1976 Buick · Skylark.
Minimum bid: 876.00
1 1982 Chevrolet lm·
palo. Minimum bid:
$76.00 .
Vehides may be in·
spactad during daylight
hours at the Meiga
County · Garoge, Rock
Sprin(ll Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio, by making an ap·
pointment with the Seriff' 1 department.
Vehicles to be sold "Ao
l1" with no guarantees.
Outoide of envelope con·
talning bids muot be
cleerly marked as to whet
vehicle being bid.
The Board of Melg~
County Commi11ionen
rwr •• the rllht to .ltlllf or NIICit ..., or eA
bids.
Meig1 County
Commlaotonen
Mary Hobtltetter, Clerk
171 12. 19, 2tt

Pursuant

to SeC1ion

307.12
O.R.C. the
' Meigs County Commis·
sioners
will
receive
sealed bids until 1,2 noon
on Wednesday, July 27,
1988, in the office
of the Meigs County
Commiisioners lo~ted in
the Courthouse. Pom·
eroy, Ohio, withbidstobe
opened ot 1:30 P.M . and
read aloud for·the ale of
the following vehideo no
longer in u10 by the Sh8f·
iffo department:
1 Homemade camper
traUar: Minimum bid:
*100.00.
1 1983 Plymouth 4-dr.
MlllltwM IIIII:

uoo.oo

1 1979 Pontlec Sunblrd.
Minimum bid: •711.00
1 1977 Chevrolet Con·
cours. Minimum bid:

'

Free lunches barred for waldng
prisoners
PITTSBI.{RGH (UPI) There's no free lunch anymore
for some prisoners In Pittsburgh.
Inmates had been served free
grub while awaiting court ap·
pearances in the past year but
city officials say the practice
gobbled up the $15,000 food fund,
which won't be replenished.
It cost the city about $65 a day
for sandwiches. soup, potato
chips, puddings, mllk and soft
drinks for the prisoners. But the
$15.000 budgeted for the free
lunches at three lockups has run
out, prison officials said.
And Louis DINardo, deputy
director of the Public Safely
Department, said authorities do
not expect to reinstate the. free
lunches.
The lunches began several
years ago for prisoners awaiting
arraignments anti other hearings
when It took longer to process
prisoners, not the four to six
hours It takes today, officials
said.
Assistant Pollee Chief Mayer
DeRoy, who Is charge of the cell
blocks, Issued an order todlscon·
tlnue the·lunches Thursday.
The program has caused prob·
!ems for the city In the past, when
angry prisoners threw food at the
walls, detention officers and
other prisoners.

ment seems to be recovering
from a 7·year·old "colonial hangover'· that would make William
Shakespeare proud.
In 1981, Kenyan leaders
branded the English versions of
Shakespearean works as too
colonial and banned them from
the nation's schools.
But President Daniel Arap Mol
announced the return of the
classic English writings Sunday,
and instructed the Ministry of
Education and Kenyan Institute
of E:ducatlon, which approve
scbool texts, to put the Erigllsh
bard back on the exam syllabus.
The president said he saw
nothing wrong with Will's works.
The English texts of the Ell·
zabethan poet and dramatist had
been dropped from Kenyan
schools In a move described by
tire education Institute as "get·
tlng rtd of the colonial hangover
In lndej)j?ndent Kenya."
But Mol described Shakes·
peare as an "international
figure,"
Mot cautioned the ministry
against hasty condemnation of
foreign books, but said they
should be carefully blended in
school courses with the work of
African writers.
. Though Shakespeare's original
English texts were banned, three
celebrated Swahili versions of
Shakespearean plays were
widely read in Swahili courses In
Kenya.
The translations of "Hamlet,"
'"''he Merchant of Venice" and
"Julius Caesar" were done by a
former Tanzanian president, Ju·
llus Nyerere.

Public Notice

to 1 r . .olution
adopted by the Board of
EduCition of lhe Meigs Local School Oiltrict... County
of Malgo, Ohio, on "tho 19th

doy of AprH, 1988, thorewHI
be tubmiHed to the qu•Mfied
oloctoro of 11id oc110ot dlt·
trict at the election to be
hold on the 2n~ d- of Au-

••I•
places of voting therein, the
It the

qu•tion of luulng bondl of
lllid boar6 of oducltlon In

tho oum of 1&amp;00, C)OO,

Kids learn from boxes

for

the purpo18 of irnprov•
ment1. renov1Uons 1nd ad·
ditk»ne to school t'1cllitill.
end providing eq.,lp,_t;

furnlshlngo ond olte Impro-

vement• thertfor. •"d of I•

-prlncl·
efllld

The meJiimum number of
years
during which the
bonds wHI run 11 two (2)

veers and the ntimated av·
erage additional tax rate.

outside of the ten-mill limitation, to pay the lnter•t
thereon and to retire the
11mo. 01 i:tnlfitd by the

county auditor. Will be two
and seventy
hundredths
(2. 70) mills ' per dollar

II 1.001 of ttx valuation,

which amounts to

twentv~

o...n canto (10.271 for eoch
one

hundred

Four IDPS losers

doll••

(1100.001 of taa valuation.

Tho polio wHI baopon from

-·------

many oC us are turning our
thoughts toward outdoor chores.
Tbne to paint the house, wash the

Windows ...
But In our haste to get the Job done,
acctdents can- and do - happen.
And prompt medical attention Is
cften called for.
1bat'a when you can can on Pleasant
Valley Hospital Emergency Care
Center. We're open 24 hours a day weekends and holldaya, tool And you
don't need an appointment to get the
p1umpt and proper attention you need

room doctors and nurses.
We11 even send a fuU repon of
your Emergency Care Center visit to
your farnlly doctor so that he can
provide :You with the proper follow-up
care.
Proceed with caution with your
wann weather chores... and t{ you do
need us, we11 be here.
A1 the Pleasant Valley Emergency
Care Center, every emergency - btg
or small -Is Important.

~Emergency C11re Center

__

-----··-"' -·- ...

----·- --·------

----~-

------ ·-··---·---

,_

•

2 Section, 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middlepo;:t. Ohio, Wednesday, July 13, 1988

Board members . show temper in meeting
By BOB HOl!:FLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A meeting of the Meigs LOcal School District
Board of Education ended ~bruptlyTuesday night
when tempers of some board members flared ·
during a discussion on athletic league
membership.
Discussion on whether the district should
remain In the Trt-Valley Co11ference League or
rejoin the Southeastern Qhlo Athletic League
appeared to be calm and routine for the most part
!!Dill Gordon Fisher, . athletic director of the
district, was asked to give the results of an
Informal survey which he had conducted among
parents, students, coaches and the
administration.
Prior to the survey results from Fisher, board
members, Robert Barton and Larry Rupe, had ·
stated that they had open minds about membership In either league. Rupe said he bad found the
preference of people he had talked to on the
problem about equally divided. Barton said he
had asked for public opinion on league preference
but had received few repUes. He stated also that If
it were a big issue In the district. a large crowd of
parents would have been on hand tor last night's
meeting.
Board president, Robert Snowden said that he
. had never favored membership In the Tri·Valley
Conference League. Meigs Local untU several
yeqrs ago had been a member of the SEOAL. The
fourth board member present for the meeting,
Jeff Werry, compared league membership to an
educational experlence Indicating that young
peole would be better served with the challenges

o! the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League.
Fisher was asked to give the results of his
survey and these figures Indicated strong Interest
among those surveyed of remaining in the
Tri·Valley Conference and Fisher spoke on the
Importance of young people knowing successes
such as they experience in the Tri·Valley
Conference.
Snowden then emphatically charged that the
survey was not au thorlzed by thE' fivE' member
board of education and alleged thai Fisher has
sollclated opinions favoring continuance of
membership In the Tri Valley Conference.
Snowden said that he did not even know of such .a
survey being conducted: that he had just "found
it''.

Fisher firmly denied having solicited anyone's
vote in favor of the Tri-County Conference and
stated that .he had conducted the survey because
he feit the board wanted it done.
Rupe said that Fisher should not be chastlzed
for conducting the survey. Rupe indicated that he
had been one of the board members requesting the
unofficial survey at the last board meeting .
Barton became obviously quite angry and told
Snowden that he, too, had requested Fisher to do
the survey at the last meeting. Barton told
Snowden also that he (Barton) had just as much
right as Snowden to request a S\lrvey and that he
was gettlng."slck and tired" of Snowden's telling
the board \vhat to do.
Barton then started' to leave the meeting room
with Snowden shouting at him telling him to go
ahead and walk out oq the meeting. Barton,
however, stopped and commented that he was

-------

only going to' get a drink of water. Snowden told
him to keep walking and leave the meeting.
Barton refused then to leave to get the drink of
water and returned to his seat.
Snowden then called for adjournment statlrig
that the mj"etlng was out of order. There was no
motion forthcoming from the other three board
members for adjournment. Snowden then de·
ctared the meeting adjourned and left the room.
At that the session ended.
Before the athletic league problem developed'
with board members, several residents, mostly
coaches, had expressed calmly opinions on the
membership. some favoring continuing In the
'T ri·Valley Conference and some suggesting
rejoining the Southeastern Ohio Atnletlc League.
In business prior to the abrupt ending of the
meeting, the board accepted the resignations of
Gall Waddell, a substitute teacher; Gay Pippert.
vocal music teacher, and Martha Vennarl, high
school guidance counselor who Is retlrlng.lt was
agreed to sent a letter of commendation to Mrs.
Vennarl. Granted leaves of absence for the 1988·89
school year were Carolyn Snowden and Donna
Jenks.
The board approved requesting approval from
the State Department of Education for calamity
days, Jan. 4. 8, and 26, for all schools due to
Inclement weather; Feb. 15, Salisbury, and May
24, Rutland, both due to utility failures .
Contracts were approved for several businesses
to provide supplies and services for the next
school year Including; gasoline, oil and anti·
freeze. Ashland Oil; student accident Insurance,
Davis-Quickel; fleet insurance. Downlng·Childs-

. .-

Mullen· Musser; milk and dairy products, Valley
Bell; Ures and tubes , Meigs Tire Center, and
bread and bakery products, Heiners.
It was agreed to join for the next school year:
The Coalition of Rural and Appalchian Schools,
cost of $250; SEO·SERRC, special educatlo·n
services, $1, 795.50; COG·SEOVEC, cooperative
purchasing, $1, 795.50; Educational Technology
Services, $1,410.75: EMRC, Educational Media
Resource Center, $4,873.50, and the Ohio. High
School Athletic Association for the high school and
junior high school.
The board adopted a resolution for uniform
Implementation of curriculum and adopted a
classroom observation-evaluation form for cerd·
fled personnel. the form reducing the paper,work
to be completed from seven pages to two pages. AI
a vote of three·tO·one. with Rupe casting the
negative vote, the board approved a student
evaluation procedure. The procedure was pre·
pared wilh teacher input and provides more
avenues for grading over the six weeks testing
program emphasized In the former policy.
Snowden was nominated for a position with the
Southeast Region Board of the Ohio School Baords
Association. The board approved !Iancia! state·
ments of Treasurer Jane Fry and approved a 25
percent temporary appropriation. Cinda Harris
and Judy Crooks were hired as co. advisors for all
of the high school cheer leading groups for the next
school year.
Interim Superintendent James Carpenter pres;
ented the recommendations acted upon by the
bOard.

Select committee to review drought

plane 10111e of the old blacktop from tbli street.
Pomeroy VIllage and GTE North joined efforts to
pay for the paving project.
·

What to do about vandalism In meeting of the executive board.
Chapman also announced a
Pomeroy's mini parks was dis·
cussed Tuesday In the July meeting ihe morning of July 19 of
a "core group" of ·community
meeting of the Pomeroy Area
group members. Chapman said
Chamber of Commerce.
that a lack of communication
Anne Chapman, local business·
woman, pointed out that the between groups such as
Chamber, ·the Merchants AssociChamber of Commerce Is respon·
ation and VIllage Council makes
slble for the upkeep of the parks,
while the village pays the $100 It difficult "for the left hand to
per year rent to the property know what the right Is doing." By
having a core group made up of
owner. But unless the parks are
two Individuals from each com·
going to be locked at night,
munlty organization, projects
Chapman said, the Chamber Is
can be better organized and
wasting Its money for upkeep.
Lights In at least one of the duplicated efforts eliminated. By
parks have been broken, the tops combining Information, It might
have been broken out of two also be possible to come up with a
trees, and flags hav.e also been community calendar of events
stolen, The vandalism seems to around Pomeroy and the sur·
roundiJII areas of the county,
occur in the early morning hours,
Chapman said, so If the pollee Chapman added.
It was reported by Sherr! Hart,
department would lock the parks
a bout 10 p.m. each night, then chamber secretary, that letters
regarding the proposed state
someone else could unlock In the
mornings. Chapman also sug· revitalization grant for Pomeroy
have been sent to all businesses
gested the posslbllty of using
In
the area, and that she has
summer youth workers through
received
two reepolllt!ll from the
Carl Hysell'• office to maintain
letters.
Bualneases
can now ex·
the park, with siiJ.IL!I'VIslon for the,
peel
a
personal
contact
regard·
youths.
lng
the
iJ'ant
proposal,
Hart
said.
Tom Reed, former vice presl·
\Hart al110 Introduced summer
dent and currently a member of
youth worker Vanessa Young
Chamber's executive board, conducted Tueaday's mettlai - In ' WhO will be helplnll In the
cbamber office for lh.e lleXt few
place of President Paul Gerard
weeka. With Yoq, !he chamber
and VIce Pr811dent Dlllk WITllll!l'.
Reed said he would diiCIIII the office may be Jcept open Tuesday
matter of tbe parka at the next throuch Friday from 8 to 4:30

from our
professl!&gt;nal staiT of
highly trained mtergency

•

enttne

By United Press International
The National Weather Service
says two more regions of Ohio
dropped Into the extreme cate·
gory this week. putting about
two:thtrds ·· of the stale 111 that
category.
Meanwhile, House Speaker
Vern Riffe established ·a select
committee to review the situation lor possible legis Ia tive
remedies.
The NWS said the balance of
. the state - the North Central;
Northeast, Central Hills and
Northeast Hills- are In a severe
drought, according to the NWS'
Palmer Drought Severity Index.
So~ thwes t and Sou thei!,St Ohio
moved Into the extreme cate·
gory, while the Northeast, which
was the last area where the
drought was ·only moderate,
dropped into severe.
Tlie Northeast region needs 6.2
inches of rain -In addition to Its
normal rainfall - to emerge
from the drought, while the South
Central region needs an almpst
unattainable 13.4 inches of rain.
The crop moisture index,
which measures short-term crop
water needs, showed soil mois·
lure conditions were excessively

Vand8Iism to· Pomeroy mini-parks topic
at area Chamber ~~ Commerce meeting

r;JUj PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Malga, Ohio
"""" M. Frvmvor.
Dlroctor of Eloctlono
171 ?, 12, 20, 27, 4tc

":...""·_:_

Vot.39, No.4&amp;
Copyrighted 1988

PAVING WORK UNDERWAY- The do-·
town bloob ol Main.Street In Pomeroy are being
repaved this week. But before.the pavlaJ can take
place, workers for lhe Shelly Company have to

After the fall•••

oold dote.
By Order of tho Boord of
Education of tho County of

-

at y

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

n av..," ,w .......,c..c..twa. ......,a -'tM"•••••Yde)tHea,at..
....., "'.,., • 1• ...11.1 ' J •• • .. Ml• v.~or....,..," n'·'*l''s.q,co,

--·-

•

$998

6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p,m. on

,.

Page 4,.6

25°/o OFF

~!ll.~.~i!.~

Showers, humid tonight.
Low In high 70s. Thursday,
showers. High In the mid 8os.

3096

"JULY SAVINOS''

fs summerttmel And that means

ticle XII. OhtO Constitution.

purst.~ent

Daily Number
029
Pick 4

°

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
Notice is her1by givtmthat

gult. 1988,

canal towninCoshocton.holdsan will be held Friday through the Hancock County community
Americana Festival Saturday Sunday at the Richfield Coliseum of Mount Cory.
and Sunday.
In Summit County.
Lantern tours will be offered at
Also on thlsweekend'sagenda:
nie Inboard hydroplane racing Schoenbrunn VIllage 1 ~ i,!ew
A Sweet Corn Festival will be at ihe River Regatta Friday Philadelphia, Aug. 13 an
pt.
held Thursday through Saturday through Sunday in Steubenville is 10.
C
b
1urn us
In Lodl, Medina County. An Ice · to be televised nationally.
Ohio Village In
Cream Social will be held Satur·
A Swap· A·Thon Friday offers entertainment Saturday
day at Buell Island In Lowell, through Sunday at the Mahonlng and Sunday afternoons with a
Washington County.
County Fairgrounds In Canfield different topic each day.
An Air Show Thursday through Includes a car show, swap meet ·
An Agricultural Dinner C:nd
Sunday at the Lawrence County and flea market.
,
Dance will be held at the hlo
Airpark near South Point tea·
The Ohio Renaissance Festival VIllage July 23. Reservations are
lures military aviation displays winds up Saturday and Sunday required and can be made by
and model airplanes.
near Wilmington. Knights, jous· calling 614-297·2606.
The Great Balloon Race and ters, jesters and minstrels will
The Summer Meadow
Fly Days Friday through Sunday entertain In a re·created 16th Meander and Picnic Saturday at .
Includes five hot-air balloon century Tudor village.
the Caesar Creek State Park
races and ground displays at the
The Tri-State Fair and Regatta near Waynesville Includes a
Wadsworth Airport In Medina Includes professional powerboat guided three-mile hike. The
County.
racing on tile Ohio River, along weekend program at the park's
The Gateway Arts and Crafts with festivals tn the Ironton· Pioneer VIllage focuses on sold I·
Show will be held Friday and Ashland·Huntlngton area ers and !ifttle[alExhlbll
1
Saturday at Courthouse Square through Aug. 6.
..
~ec ,
In Sidney, Shelby County,
TheNatlona!AntlqueRaceCar
Biennial II at the .Contem·
The Aurora Farms Market In · . Meet will be held Saturday and
porary Arts Center In Cincinnati
Aurora, Portage County, hosts Sunday at the Tuscarawas
Is a bicentennial exhibit by 10
tl!e Amerlc.ana Crafts Festival, County Fairgrounds In Dover.
Ohio artlst,s Friday through Sept.
3·
,
an early 1800s theme craft show,
An Old Car Show will be held
Friday and Saturday and·July 22 Sunday at Century VIllage In
"Brass Rubbings Is the theme
and 23.
Burton, Geauga County.
of the display at the Springfield
The Plecemakers Quilt Show Art Center Saturday through
Folk· A-Fair Saturday and Sunday at the Ohio State Fair· will be held Sunday at the Aug. 17 ·
grounds tn Columbus Is a look at Delaware County Library,
A Basketweave Exhibition will
Ohio's rural heritage through Delaware
1be on display through July 31 at
music and crafts.
Weathe~ permitting, wheat · the Dairy Barn In Athens.
The Brook Park Home Days threshing will be held Sunday
A National Painting exhibition
will be celebrated Friday afternoon at the Carriage Hill with works by 93 contemporary
through Sunday In the Cleveland Farm near Dayton. An Old· American artists will be dis·
suburb.
fashioned square dance will be played at the Butler Institute of
The Kelleys Island tour of held at the farm Saturday night. American Art In Youngstown
homes offers Island visitors an · Zoo·pendous Fun Day Sunday through Aug. 21.
opportunity Saturday to see at the Metroparks Zoo In CleveThe C!ln;!on Art Institute In
homes with past and present land allows visitors togetcloseto · Canton otters the Ohio Designer
charm.
, the animals. .
C~~ftsmen through Ju!~ 31.
The New Spirit Music Fest ·.. A Day Lily Show will be held
Honore Daumlere Is dis•
Friday through Sunday In Cuya· Sunday at the Kingwood Center played at the Allen Memorial Art
hoga Falls Is an outdoor show of and Gardens In Mansfield.
Museum In Oberlin through Aug.
Christian gospel music.
The Mount Cory Community 14 ·
ThePappabelloAntlquesShow Festival will be held Monday In
The Akron Art Museum· dis·
play Is "Robert Colescott A
Retrospective" through Aug. 14.
At the Toledo Museum of Art
are: "Ornament and Object,"
through Sept. ,24, "The Work of
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - A problem·solvlng and the survival Walter Chapman," through Sun·
researcher who says children skills needed to function success· day, and "Henri Riviere Prints"
through July 31.
become consumers at a young fully and responsibly.
''We
have
found
that
the
best
age Is studying cereal boxes anp
other modern artifacts to find out way to help kids learn to ·think
Jo Tyree, Bonnie Johnston,
about the "real world reading" critically and solve problems
Is
to
have
them
Peggy
VIning, and Maida Long
successfully
that children do.
'
participate
In
the
real·
life
sltua·
have
been
the top losers for the
"No doubt about It, kids are
tlons
facing
·
consumers,"
she
past
three
weeks of TOPS Club
consumers," said Mary Melvin,
·
said.
570.
who Is an education teacher at ·
The activities In the book call
Runners-up for the meetings
Miami University. ,
on
students
to
make
consumer
were
Llnnle Belle Aleshire, Shlr·
Melvin's office at Miami's
decisions
related
to
earning,
ley
Wolfe,
Julia Hysell, Gertrude
Hamilton campus Is filled with
saving,
sharing
and
spending
Casto
and
Mary Roush. Winners
cereal boxes, which she said are
frequent sources of consumer money, Melvin said. She said the of the fruit basket were Mrs.
book Is written strictly with Tyree, Mrs. Vining, and Imogene
Information for children.
children,
and how they learn to Humphrey.
"They start at a very young
read,
In
mind.
A funny money auction will be
age, progressing from the back
"We
need
to'help
our
clllldten
held
at the July 26 meeting.
seat of a shopping cart, through
learn
to
sort
through
these
Reguiar'
meetings of the club are
the back aisle of a toy store, to the
messages
and
make
their
own
held
at
the
Coonhunters Building
back lot of an automobile dealer·
on
the
Rock
wise
and
effective
decisions,"
Springs Fairgrounds
ship," Melvin said.
Melvin
said
.
at
7
p.m.
each
Tuesday.
''Throughout childhood ,
youngsters are bombarded with
advertising, visual, written and
Implied, and (they) are lnflu·
enced by ... paren1s, peers and
television personalities," she
ALL
said.
·
Melvin and several colleagues
WEARING APPAREL •••••
have gathered material about
the reading habits of children
SWEATER SHELLS ....
.....
Into a bOok for teachers called
"Kids Are Consumers, . Too!
"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"
(Real·World Reading and Lan·
guage Arts)." •
According to Melvin, the book
3RD STREET
949·2800
RACINE, OHIO
responds to concerns that schools
MASTERCARD- VISA- GOLDEN BUCKEYE
should teach creative thinking,

Ohio Lottery

AL wins
All-Star
game, 2-l

each day.
June Ashley, representing the
Pioneer and Historical Society,
reported on events to be held July
30·31 In observance of the 125th
anniversary of the Civil War
Battle of Buffington Island at
Portland. The Union army was
victorious at Portland over Gen·
era! John H. Morgan and his
troops on July 19,1863. Brochures
a bout the upcoming events are
avalla ble at the Chamber office
or at the museum, Ashley said. ·
Actual events will be held at the
Buffington Island Park ·on State
Route 124 at Portland, exept for a
Civil War Military Ball which Is
to be held theeventngo!July 30at
Southern High In Racine. There
Is no admission to the general
public for any events. except for
the ball which costs $9 single or
$15 a couple. The commemora·
lion Is being sponsored by the
Pioneer and Historical Society.
Anyone wishing addltlonallnfor·
matlon may call between the
hours of 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. ,
Tuesday through Saturday , at
the museum. The number Is
992-3810.
Mary Powell announced that
brochures for the musical' 'Eden
On the River" on Blennerhasset
Ial,and, are now available Ill the
Cbamber office. Performances
for the musical begin In August
and Powt!ll said anyone planrilng

·==.,.-...---------.--~""-'"'-'"'·'---·~·--~·

and Natural Resources (Dwight
dry across much of the state.
Chairman of the select com- Wise, D-Fremont), Financial In·
mittee will be William Hinlg, stltutions !Ronald Suster, D·
D·New Philadelphia, with Re-. Cleveland) and Economic Devei·
publican leader Corwin Nixon of opment and Small Business
(Troy Lee James, D·Cieveland) ,
Lebanon serving as ~ vJcechairman.
and Reps. Thomas Johnson,
R-New Concord, Robert Corbin,
Members will include:
R·Dayton. L. Eugene Byers,
Speaker Pro Tern Barney QuilR·Loudonvllle, William Bat·
ter, D·Toledo, and the chairmen
of various committees: Ways chelder, R·Medina, and Joseph
and Means IDean Conley, O- Haines. R·Xenla.
Cana! Winchester), Agriculture

Groups' support appreciated
for July 4th fireworks funds
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff·
man today expressed thanks to
all those who ·donated towards
the cost of the July 4 fireworks
display and to the Middleport
Fire Department for taking
charge of the fund raising
campaign.
The fire department received
donations from Fruths Phar·
macy, Dairy Queen, Manley's
Sunocp, King Builders, Dr. Dayo,
Dr. Kennedy, Brown and
Snouffer Fire and Safety Equip·
ment, Blue Streak Cab Co., Kays
Beauty Salon, Dr. c7nde, Bahr
Clothiers, Hudnall Plumbing,

Mill End F?brlcs, Middleport
Department Store, Central Trust
Co., Western Auto , Carter
Plumbing, Pat Hill Ford, Dr.
Pickens, Middleport American
Legion, Blue Tartan, McClure's
Dairy Isle, Twin City Machine
Shop, Farmers Bank and the
Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
department.
The mayor stated that In
addition to being In charge of
fund-raising and setting off the
fireworks display , the fire department also donated $900 of
their funds toward the cost oft he
fireworks .

to attend a performance should
consider making reservations as
soon as possible. Seating capac·
tty has been Increase(! this year
to 1,000 but the musical Is also
being advertised nationally, Po·
well said, rather than just
regionally. A toll free number,
1·800-525·5900, is available for
ticket Information, she added.
It was reported that .the recent
free Pomeroy concert by the
Ohio University Communlver·
sity !;land, sponsored by Bank
One, was a success, along with
the Art In the Park project.
Chamber members said they felt
Court St. was a better location for
the concert than the parking lot,
because the buildings provided
shade lor the audience.
Finally, Rick Blaettnar, of
Rick's Fire and Sa(ety Equip·
ment presented Chamber with a
fire extlngulsher for their new
office on East Main In Pomeroy.
Blaettnar also gave a brief
accounting of his 'business, reporting that In addition to selling
equipment, he services any type
of fire extinguisher, large or
small, and has many contracts
with small businesses In the area
as well as several larger Industry
contracts.
Tuesday's meeting was held at
the Pomeroy Trinity Church.

DONATION INSTALlATION -

Rlolc Blaettnaer, owaer of

Rick'• 111re and SaleiJ Eqatpment, llutliernut Ave., Pomeroy,
donated a lire extlniQII!her le the new office of the Pol)leroy Area
CUmber of Commerce. Blaettnar lqtalled the exdn11Jisher
Tuellday alter-n,
.... .. ,.

411' .....

__

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

•'

�Continent
r

Page 2-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, bhio
Wednaaclay. July 13. 1988

•

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

~lb
ts:m~
~v

'""'-'._...,..,.......,.c::::,,.,.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
;:4-ssoclation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LElTERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long, All letters are ~ubj e&lt;:t to editing and must be signed with name, addre$S and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

•

\Yashington Window

~ampaign

finance
•
get new ·twist

WASHINGTON -In the Atlantic Coast region of Nicaragua Is a
grieving mother whose son was
kidnapped and killed by Sandinista soldiers. Free-lance jour·
nalist Gary Moore of Washington, D.C., persuaded her to tell
her story to his video camera.
"She looked right In the ca· ·
mera and talked about how the
soldiers had dragged him off and
cut his throat," Moore said. He·
asked the woman why she would
risk -her life to talk. "If I have to
die lor the truth, I 'II die for It,"
· she said.
Now Moore Is afraid she might.
Alter he spent more than three
months combing the Nicaraguan
jungle documenting human
rights abuses on both sldes.o! the
, civil war, Moore was jailed by
the Sandinistas in May. He was
released! after five days, but his
film and notes with nam¢5 and
faces are still in the hands of the
Nicaraguan government.
·
Moore was detained because
he had venturexd into a res·

trlcted. zone. Few journalists
have gone to the Atlantic Coast,
because the Sandinistas don't
allow it, and because the area is
primitive - horses and. canoes
Instead of airlines and taxis.
Moore had read the reports of
international human rights or·
ganlzatlons, which send periodic
delegations to Nicaragua. He
wanted to document for himself
that the reports told the lull
story. "The few little Incidents
that they have In their reports
are nothing compared to what's
going on," Moore told our associate Daryl Gibson. Most or the
human rights organizations had
" blind spots,' ' Moore said. They
would miss the human rights
abuses of the side they
supported.
What Moore found in the
Atlantic Coast jungle was a
pattern of abuses by Sandinista
troops, and a side of the war that
had not been reported precisely
because the area is closed to
outsiders. "You can't get there ·

By ROBERT SHEPARD

a

Leave private clubs
T heSupreme Courtin slst!;Jhat

1 be admitted to the ev~ry -other·

Saturday ven ison potluck supper
down at the Bull moose Lodge.
They say that the Royal Bul·
lmooses have been discrimlnat·
ing aga inst me by not letting me
irt. ·
•' Gee 1 hate to have it said tha t
~~ nyon~ is doing any action verb
,
·
'.
.:·

~

•.·~

against me. especially when J
don't know what the action verb
means, exactly. So I looked up
the word " discriminate" to see
what it was theBullmooses were
domg to me.
My dictionary defined ''discriminate" as "acting . on the
basis of prejudice. "I wasn't sure
exactly what that meant, eithr,

Today m· hi"story

: Today is Wednesda y. July 1.1. the l95th day of l98S With 171 to
, fo llow.
'

'.

Th e moon is new .

'.

The morning stars are Mercury . Venus , Mars and Jupiter.
~
The evening star is Saturn.
:; Those born on this dat e are under the sign of Cancer. They
.: include English poet John Clare in 1793; Father Edward
; Flanagan, founder of Boys Town. In 1886: television

~ ~~~d~~~e; ~~~~~5 ~:;~o~~: !~t~1~a~~;o~';!;~~1~~~s~~~

} 46); comedian Cheech Marin of Cheech and Chong in 1946 (age
:: 42), and singer Louise Mandrell in 1954 Iage 34) .
;; On this date in history:
:· In 1859, Mexican revolutionary President .Benito Juarez
•: ordered property of the Roman Catholic Church confiscated
~ throughout Mexico.
~
In 1863, opposition to the Federal Conscription Act led to riots
•' in New York City. More than 1,000 people were killed.
:: In 1898, Guglielmo Marconi was awarded a patentforwireless
:· telegraphy, the radio.
.; In 1977, a state of emergency was declared in New York City
~ when the entire area suffer~d a 25-hour power blackout.
;• In 1985, more than 50 rock stars performed a total of 17 hours
.; at televised "Live Aid" con~erts In Philadelphia and London to
:· raise money lor African famine relief.
:: A thought for the day: John Clare wxote , "II life had a second
&lt;edition, how I would correct the proofs."

'--,..••.,

~.

,~a~qQ~.

The Middleport Fl~ Department answered 35 calli durln1
June, two fire runs and 33 emer1ency nans, Chief Jeff Da._t
reports. All vehicles of the department were driven 939.3 miles
during the month.

he learned from methodically
following up each story, Is that
Sandinlsta o!licers presided over
the torture or Nicaraguans, that
soldiers sometimes cut off people's ears and smashed In their
faces. In the town of San Pedro
del Norte, Sandinlstas took over
a Catholic church, burned down
houses, murdered some people
and tied others to trees and beat
them. One'victlm, whom Moore
interviewed, was raped by a
soldier.
The region, heavily populated
by Indians, might as well have
''dropped of! the ea_rth" to
outsiders. Moore said. "The
government has cut it of! so
much that people haven't had
medicine lor two years, even
aspirjn. People were even shor.t
or fish hooks. They just didn't
have anything."
·
Moore got careless and wan·
dered into the town of La Cruz,
which turned out to be a Sandi·
nista stronghOld. A Sandinista
commander confronted him
with, "How can you be here? No
reporter has ever been here
before." He was held In La Cruz
for two days and then taken to El
Chipote, the state security prison
in Managua, where he was
interrogated for three more
days. Moore was not mistreated,
but had taken film and notes
from his apartment-in Managua.
Back in Washington, Moore
told his story to the Congressional Human Rights Caucus. He
has also appealed to the InterAmerican Human Rights Commission of the Organization o!
American States for help In
protecting his sources. He wants
his film back, and he wants the
OAS to demand proof from the
Sandinlstas that the people he
talked to have not been harmed.
Some of those people had
feared lor their lives. They told
Moore they had heard stories of
people who talked to reporters
and then suffered reprisals . "All
that is echoing in , my head,"
Moore said.

Police report June arrests
Fifty-seven arrests were made by the Middleport Pollee
Depariment In June, PoUce Chief Sid Little reports. The
department Investigate(! 11 accidents and all vehicles were
driven 6,458 miles during the month. Merchant pollee
collections totaled $26. Parklnl meter collections totaled
75
and 373 parking tiCkets were written.
·,

snc.

Fund report announced
All Middleport Vllllle funds totaied$225',680.81asot the end of
June, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck report..
Receipts, expenditures durin&amp; the month and the end of the
month balance, ~spectlvely, In each fund Include:
General, $15,107.14, $20,584.o7, $8,316.93; street maintenance,
$4,685.50, $6,431.03, $5,136.61 !leflcll; Income tax, no receipt$,
$7,457.29, $10,232.49 deficit; litter control, $660, no dlabllne-·
ments, $660; fl~ equipment., $150, $486.96, $595.04 deftelt; fl~
truck, $1,135.20, $4,761.57, 119,2t8.04; IAJiltary sewereacrow. no
receipts, no dlsbunementa. $54,872.21; economic development,
$1,709.40, $9U.&amp;1, 114,255.13; public transportation, $22,,.9.59,
$14,318.61, 111,729.58; water tank. no receipts, no disburse·
ments, $99,886.81; water, $12,905.1&amp;; $10,373.90, S18,o&amp;H.SO;
sanitary sewer, $18,310.53, 116,742.99, $6,330.16; IWlmmln&amp; pool,
$4,471.75, $7,835.65, $1,781.75 deficit; cemetery, $1,913.9C,
$1,719.49, $1,488.70 defiCit; water meter trulta, $3!!0, $673.511,
$13,586.ii5; miniature golf, no receipts, $233.70,$2,486.51 deficit.
Receipts for the month totaled $84,148.21 whlledlsliursements
amounted to $92,561.67.

EMS reports six calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
. Tuesday; Rutland at 12:58 a.m. to Beech Grove Ro1d for
Russell Priddy to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at li26a.m. .
· to Beech Grove Road for Alice Priddy to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 6:05a.m. to Melp MIDI! No. 1 for Danny
Jordan to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at a: 16 a.m.
to Lasley St. for William Watson to Dr. Vallee's office In
GaiUpolis; Pomeroy at 1:19 p.m. to Peacock Ave. for UIUan
Gardner who was dead on arrival; Middleport at 5: 11 p.m. to
Sycamore St. for Lisa Manley to Veterans Memorial Ho_spltal;
Pomeroy assisted wlth .the transport of ~an_I!.!! , ,. ~
.

annual salaries, are limited in
both the House and Senate to
$2,000 on any single occasion.
Both chambers also place caps ·
on the total any member can
accumulate in a year.
In the House, that ceiling is 30
percent of the base salary. or
$26,850. In the Senate, the maximum is40percent ofthesaiaryor
$35,800.
.
Notwithstanding those limitations. vast amounts of money
change hands in honorarium
transactions. Common Cause
reports thai last year representa·
tives collected $6.5 million and
kept $5 million, while senators
received $3 million and retained
$2.2 million.
"Honorariums arr now a
multi-miliion·dollar business on
Capitol Hill , a business which
allows special interest groups to
put money directly into the
pockets of members of Congress." says Co mmon Cause
Pres ident Fred Wertheimer.
In earlier years, lawmakers
were requirPd to perform at least
a modest amount of work to

justify receipt or an honorarium
-typically .to write and deliver a
speech.
Then, the solons were relieved
of the writing task by some
cynical interest groups. They
could earn $2.000 by merely
reading a few pages of text
prepared . by the sponsoring or·
ganlzation at an intimate lunch.
In recent years, honoraria
have been' awarded to members
of Congress who engaged In such
thoroughly passive tasks as
making plant tours and attending
breakfast and luncheon
briefings.
The scandalous nature of the
current practices was illustrated
by the recent disclosure in the
Dallas Morning News of a
luncheon sponsored In April1987
by the Oshkosh Truck Corp.,
which was then seeking to sell
10-ton trucks to the Army.
Six members of the House
Armed Service Committee were
taken to breakfast by Oshkosh
executives . then paid $2,000
apiece in honoraria for attending
the meal.
Five of those present were

little worred about the recent
Supreme Court ruling. They say
private clubs with more than 400
members, and whose members'
dues are often paid by employers, are subject to state and local
anti-discrimination laws. As a .
matter of fact , I'm darned afraid
that some of the Bullmooses are
going to get into thE' Royal Order
of Worn-Out Journalists. 1·m
afraid they'll want to start'
belching and hunting small game
there in the Dangling Participle
L ounge, j ust wh en we •restarting
to talk about !at old men who
wear antlers on their ceremonial
hats. Hey, 1 pay my dues and this
is America . I want to associate
with worn-out journalists, not
Bullmooses.
I wonder if the Supreme Court
thinks we can't discriminate
against anyone who wants to jQin
our private clubs, what's the next
step? Let's say an applicant to
the Royal Order of worn-Out
Jour.n alists is not o~Jy not a
journalist,. but also someone who
doesn't have the money to join.
Wlll we be discriminating
against the poor by not admitting
her or him to full membership?
Wfil we have to pass .the hat
any.t ime someone takes a notion
to join one of our priv11teclubs, so
that we . don't discriminate
against those who don't have tbe
ante for the game?
I might not like the rules other
private clubs mak~ up to determine membership, but then they
mlg!It not like mine, either. And

.... _____ ..Ji.____

believe me, • l think it's pretty
Important that the first amend·
ment of the Constitution guaran·
tees worn-out journalists the
right to gather together In a dark
tavern, away from Bullmooses.
Go in peace, Bullmooses, and

Two fined in theft
The cues of two Middleport men charged with theft we~
among those handled by Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman In his
couri Tuesday night.
. ·
Jttcky Mohler was fined $100 and eosls and sentenced to 10
days In )all, while Rick Hawley forfeited a $200 bond
the
charge.
Others fined In the court were Tommy Quillen. Middleport,
$110 and coats. disorderly manner, and $200anilcostaitnd 10days
In jail for asaault; Anna WIIUamson, S40 and costs, leaving the
scene of an accident; Tammy Blake, Mlddleporl, $!10 and cos ...
disorderly manner; RoKer L. Hoscher, West Columbia, 116and
costa, speeding. Lance Herman. Middleport wu sentenced to30
days In Jail on charges of old unpaid fines and costs.

on

Fund raisers discussed
Several fund ralslnl projects are being planned by the MelJS
County unit of the American Cancer Society, accordlna to
Lillian Moo~: executive director.,- ·
'..
. ,.
The unit wlllhold a publlcwlneandcheesetastlngpartyat the
Senior Citizens Center on Aug. 14. A silver service set displayed
In the window of Marguer ltes Shoe Store Is being used In another ·
fund raiser.
A JOlt tournament planned for later this month atJaymar has ·
been cancelled due to the condition of the greens. Mrs. Moore
reports.

Hospital repor.ts activity:
TuesdJIY admissions to VejerJ!n's Memorlai ·Hospltal were
Ethel Hatfield, Middleport; Jall)@S l:featon; Pomeroy: ---·- · ·
DI1Cha111ed waa Betty_WuUs:..
~

Rain hits Tennessee
in some drought help
By KAREN LEE SCRIVO
United Pras lnlernatlonal
Heavy rains finally drenched
the Tennessee Valley, one of the
most droqht·aftllcted areas In
the nation, while high winds from
thunderstorms blew roots of!
buildings In Minnesota , officials
said today.
Late Tuesday night, showers
swept across the upper qreat
Laketl and Mississippi Valley to
Iowa, as well as east Texas, the
Tennessee and Ohio valleys and
the mid-Atlantic coastal states.
Mo~ showers were forecast lor
the Southeast and the Great
Lakes re11on bilt none was in
sight for the Great Plains, said
Brian Smith, a meteorologist lor
the Na~ianal Weather Service.
One Inch of rain was measured
at St. Cloud, Minn., overnight.
Hall and gusty winds accompan·
'' led the thunderstorms across
~nneaot. as a co kl front pushed
thr0111h the reaion. Small hail
was reported at Minneapolis-St.
Paul and wind gusts to 87 mph
were clocked at Alexandria,
blowlnl the roofs off a half-dozen
businesses and flipping small
planes but causing no injuries,
o(flclals said.
Two to 4 Inches of rain fell
overnl&amp;ht In the Tennessee Valley, which has not seen that much
rain previously .iri the entire
year. the National Weather Service said.
Rainfall a.m ounts during the
past 24 hours Included more than
4 ~ IncheS al Dyersburg, Tenn. ,
more than .llnchell at Jackson.
Tenn., and just over 2 Inches at
Nuhvllle, which was about 15 'h
.Inches below normal for 198S.
"This rainfall is just a very
small dent In a drought situation
that has large deficits for rainfall
thJts.tar__ro~:.the )'ea,r." said NWS.
forecaster Dan·McCarthY.

...;.,;,.;...;.;....;_ parts
Minor
flooding
was reported in
of West
Tennessee.
----- Area deaths-------....;;..._.;;...__;________..;...______
.
.
. . . . · The Tennessee Emergency
Heren .

members or the committee's
procurement subcommittee,
which convened a lew hours later
and voted to require the Army to
purchase from Oshkosh 500 more
trucks than it wanted or needed.
Wright also could seek to
remedy a related problem - the
reimbursement lor thousands of
dollars ·Jn unjustified expenses to
lawmakers who earn their honoraria by delivering speeches at
out-of-town conventions and conferenees sponsored by their
benefactors.
Current House rules allow
virtually unlimited reimbursement to members who fly to such
places as Palm Springs, Calif.,
and Boca Raton, Fla., to make a
speech, then remain at a pricey
resort (often with their spouses)
lor as long as a week -with all of
their bills paid by their sponsors.
By exercising his leadership to
restrict such tawdry practices,
Wright could neutralize some of
the criticism he has received in
recent months and · Improve the
moral climate In the legislative
chamber over which he presides.

as far as the drought's concerned. It would take several .
months of rain to alleviate this." :
The Department of Agricul· ·
ture, in Its first comprehensive
look at the drought's impact. said
Tuesday the winter wheat crop is
largely unscathed but predicted
big cuts In production of other 1
major crops. Large reserves of
corn and wheat from past crops ,
will Insulate consumers from ·
price Increases due to small
crops this year, officials said.
The department's latest lorecast for July 17-21 11ves corn '
farmers east or the Mississippi ;
some hope. Normal rainfall is
expected · in lllinois, Indiana,
Ohio, Michigan and Kentucky,
said Norton Strommen, · chief
meterologlst lor I he ·usoA 's
Economic Research Service.
Farmers In the southern Plains
and the Southeast also get somP:
relief In the forecast, which calls
for near-normal temperatures
and above nonnal rainfall !roin.
New Mexico to Mississippi.
,•
''The people In the northern'
Plains are the people with no
relief In sight," Strommen said.
Thunder'showers rumbled:
through tlie eastern half or the:
nation earlier Tuesday, a day
after storms dumped up to 10
inches of·raln in Bandera County
or the Texas Hill Country and
··
flooded rivers and •streams.
The rains that began Sunday''
night In Texas were blamed for at
least seven deaths.
But while parts of Texas were"
swamped, officials In Kentuckv
asked water haulers to help our'
by carrying water to cities, towns
and Individuals facing lmml"
diate shortages.
'
Officials said 58 cities ani! '
towns, most of them in central'
Kentucky, raced immediate
shortages or water. 'f:he biggest
city amon~ ihe 58, ~exlngton, ·
ordered a ban on lawn sprinkling
Monday.
'
Meanwhile. hot sultry temper: '
atures continued throughout the
country.
'. '
"I !eltlike a cross between the'
W.ic.l!ed Witch of the East and a ·
fried egg," said Willie Stump, 'a
recent graduate of Brown Unt: ·
versity In Providence. R.I.
An all-Ume high lor the date Of
97 delfees was recorded In Rhode Island Monday, breaking ·

11:SO:

•

don't set another place at the
potluck dinner just yet. The
Constitution guarantees you the
right toassociatewilhwhomever
you please, and the Supreme
Court may eventually discover
that.

Scat•·..ered.. ram
• b. uys time
• · IOr farms

rr;:;:;;;~::::;::~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

Berry's \fYorld

$1650

Stocks

GALLON

I •••••

.·
"I could hai!W sworn I 511/d 'ALMS for
the love of A/Ish. "'

.-

afoni.Wiifi-oie daulht~~:·
' Manal!ement Agency said about
Friends may call at ttie wlll be in Robinson Cemetery at
Langsville.
Friends
may
call
at
E.
s
ther
HoHman,
three
brothers
a dozen people were evacuated
Rawllngs·Coals·Blower Funeral
EWing
F)l!le.raLHome
on
Thurs_
and
two
siB~rJ.-._:;-:---c·
~
~'
~.;_fromJ!!t!!:
~Q.mes in the BrownsLillian Victoria Gardner, 82, . Home op Thursday- from 2 t~ 4
dav
from
2
to
4
and
.7
to
9.
-·siiNivors
·
tnclude
twn
sons
Yil!e
area
during the night as
formerly or Lai!JSVII~. dll!d _ jl}n:aiid 71o-t:p.m. Bvrtal will~
·
n ·c= ~ ·-~--- -..=.-:::;"---' ·~ some- 3 -inches of- rain fell in the
rw .... rt no...... n, &gt;~Prlnlfleld, .
A ho
.
Tuesday afternoon in Pomeroy.
at the Catholic Cemetery In
Ohio and Raymond H Hoffman
area.
use, a busmess and a
Born March 11. 1906 In Melp Pomeroy.
Melva .€. Healey
Wllll~ville aiOIII ~lh thr~ car were damaged by high water
County to the late Belva Church,
·IJ'IIndchlldren and two lfeat· In Madison County. TEMA off!·
Mrs. Gardner was a homemaker
Conrad Roush
c:Jals reported. .
and a member of the Langsville
Melva Clare (Hollman I Hea· grandchildren.
Services will be F~lday at .11
Weather forecasters were cal·
Christian Church.
Conrad Roush, 73 , of Mason, ley, 91, Wilkesville. died W~nes·
lin&amp; for more rain the rest of the
Survivors Include a son and W.Va.,dled'l'uesdavatVeterans day In Doctors Hospital 'at a.m. al the "'!cCo;v·l'd!lore Fun·
erallfome at VIntOn. 1)fflclatlnl week-u a atorm ,syatem moves
daughter·in·law, Harold and Memorial aospltal following a Nelsonville.
ou.~ of yexas.
lirlef Illness.
,
Born Sept. 13,1896, she was the wlll .bt the Rev, Rlck.Mallilyed.
Neva Gardner, Winter Haven.
Burial will be In Greenfield
· We ~expecting showers and
Fla.; two sons and dau1hters-inBorn Sept. 14 , 1914 In New dauahter of the late Emory and Cemetery at Greenfield, Ohio.
The Daily Sentinel
thun~_erstorms through Saturlaw. Wanda and Robert Fetty, Haven w v M Ro llh w
Mabel McCarty Grate.
Frlends may call at the funeral
day, s.~ld Dick Campbell of the
(USI'S Hil-960)
Pomeroy, and Juanita and Doson of Em'o.;:~n: Jes:e
She was preceded In death by home Thursday from 2to · p.in.
NWS. -Everyone in the state
A DiviHion of Multimedia, Inc.
4
nald Hersman. Apple Valley, -Roush. Hehadbeenanemploy~ twohusbands,CareyHoftrnan,ln and 7 to 9 p.m..
should see some preclpitatJon,
Minn.; nine grandchildren; 21
of the Uverpool Salt Works at 1953. and Richard Heal~ In 1969,
Published £&gt;vrry after!"'oon, Monday'
but it won't have a lasting impact
throuJth ·Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
.great granchlldren; three gre11t
Hartford, W.Va .. and of Craw's
·
mcroy. Ohio. by lh!" Ohio Valley Pub·•
great grandchildren; twoslsters· ·steakHouse.liiPomeroy.Hewas
~
llshlng Compan}• / Multtml"dla, lne~
Pomeroy. Ohio l5169. Ph. 992-2156. Se- '
in-Jaw, llazel Grate, Pomeroy, a member of the United Methocond class postag(' paid at Pom«oy, ·
and Helen Gardner, Rutland;
dlst Church.
Ohio.
one brother-In-law . . Lalnl
Survfvors include a dau1hter
would have some effect, but not hl&amp;h pressure syst.e m haS deve·
Membor: Unlled Prtss lntornallonal,
Strong, Galilpolls; lour special Connie Lucll~ SJWprlz Auburn'
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
loped
and
Is
helping
to
send
lntandDallyPressAssoclatlonandthe
,
enough
to
reverse
the
damage
of
friends. Lucille Murray; Mat-ilia· '· Wash:; 'tWcJ· grindehlldi'e'n&gt;" ' .t pPil - Indlana's.corn crop .is
inolsture up !rom the Gull."
Ohio Newspaper Association. National,
the
drought,
he
said.
Knapp and Brenda and Rex David and Sara Swartz· one currently rated the poorest in the
If the two systems stabilize,
Advertising Representartve, Branham
Darst. all or Pomeroy; and sister, Maxine Durst Oldend nation. and the recent rainfall
"We're sdll not ietttng suffl·. then tile .more normal summer
~:;:·~~~:: rJi.':!.'¥o~rr~Wd Avenue.
-several nieces and nephews_. -~ ...Beach. N.C.; . two brotbera, . was not enolll!h to brea.k_ ~he · .clenl moiSture ,_ f!x_cent localized
_·
· ···clpltation for Indiana would
In addition to her mother, she Emory Roush. St. Petersbli.Y. drought, Purdue Unil(erslty agrit bil
pre
·
POSTMASTER: Send addrE'Ss chang.,'
th und erstorms tha t. m""tn~t
,... s a · return.
to The Dally Sentlm•l. II! Court st ..
was preceded in .~eath ,by ,her Fta: and Willis Roush, Camano cultural statistician Ralph Ga~n
lze the crops, but I don't know if
"I can't sav yet that the long
Pomeroy. Ohio m69.
husband, Harold, in i973, and two lsisnd; Wash.; and se"eral nle- said Tuesday,
It'll
be
enough
for
a
dramatic
run
will
bring'
a
return
to
norma-l
sisters. _
ces and nephews.
The weekend rains have only
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Improvement, " Gann sa j d. " 1I p~clpltatlon: but more moisture
By carrier or Motor Route
Services will be 2 p.m. SaturHe was preceded In death by boUJht a little extra time for
might ·make the difference be- from the Gulf or Mexico will be
One weet&lt; ................................... $1.2~
day at the Langsville Christian his parents; his wife. Lydia Hoosier farmers struggling lo
tween getting a poor crop and avalllble to ruel potential thun·
One Month ................................. ~~-~~ '
ChurchwlthRev.CharlesNorris LeltheitRoush; twobrothersand make It through the worst dry
getdng no crop lor some farms. derstorms In the next 10 days ,"
one Year ································· lt.';.(l) ·
oiflclatlng. Burial will be in one sister
spell since the 1930s, he said. ,
I've seen fields that ap~ar to Kottke said. .
stN~~~ciOI'Y
..
Wright Cel)letery at Langsville. · Servlc~ will be Friday, 1 p.m..
As of Monday, the Indiana corn
have no chance to make II to
Kottke noted that although
Dally ...... ......, ..................... . 2~ Cents.
Friends may call from ·7 to 9 at Ewing Funeral Home with crop had been reduced 25 to 30
grain."
. ' ra.ns were widespread in
Subscr!bers nor des Irina- ro pay thecarFriday at Rawllng·Coats-Blower Rev. Don Meadows officiating. percent from normal. said
Last week's especially hl&amp;h Indiana, they were in highly
rler may remit In advance dlre&lt;t 1~
Funeral Home or at the church Burial wlll be In Beech Grove Purdue BIJ'Onomist Bob Nielsen,
temperatu~s. which ·lopped UJO
The Dally S.ntlnd on aJ, 6or t2month
r
variable amounts.
basts. Credll will be ~i.vf"n carriPr each
lor one hour prior to services.
Cefllelery. Friends may call at who added the weekend rains
delfees
In
several
areas,
caused
,
"Few
areas
received
an
inch
of
woek.
the funeral home from 110 9· on were not sllfliflcani enough to
a rapid · deterioration In the rain or more as of Monday," he
No ~ ubscrlpllon.• bv mall permlltl:&lt;lln
Thursdav
end the droqhl.
Danny Corde~
Hoosier
corn
crop.
Si!ld.
"The
one-quarter
to
three·
"""
wher• homp carrier service Is'
· •·
Gann said the national crop
''The
small
rains
over
the
quarters
inch
amounts
or
rain
available.
:
proaress report released MonCelestino tDannvl Cordero. 68,
weekend and on Monday only are not enough to save the crop."
Mall Suhscrlptlon•
day showed 90 percent of the the
oi Middleport, dlect Monday at Alice M. Priddy
brou1ht temporary relief;"
'
tnotde Mrlfl" County
corn
crop
with
ratlnp
or
Hoosier
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
Nielsen said. "Before the rains, 1
13 WeekL ................................ Sl7.2!1 •
26 Weok.s .... .............................. $.14.06,
lowing a lengthly_lliness.
Alice Marie Priddy, 74, of "poor" and "very poor," making
would have said the hot, dry
Ma
G
52 Work.s ......................... ......... SiG.!\6
He was born July 15, 1920 hi Beech Grow Road, Rutland, It the wout In the natloll.
1rom Wash.mg·
weatller
was
deterloratln1
the
rcaret
onnan
Outsld&lt;· Melli" County
,
Kentucky followed with 88 crop by 5 to 10 percent per day ton, D.C., wu the first Miss America,
Quebradillas, Puertp Rico, and died Tuesday at Veterans Mem·
JJ-Weeks ........................... ....... stR.2(l
In 1921.
26 WP&lt;'ks ........................... .... ... U~. 10 .
served In the Army In World War orlal Hospital after a sudden percent, Mlsaourl had 77 percent,
without
rain.
But
the
rain
and
the
s2
WP&lt;'ks ........ .......................... $67.60 •
Ohio showed 72 percent and
II before retiring from Hercules
illness.
Corrugated Manufacturing in
A homemaker, Mrs. Priddy Illinois rounded out the worst live
cool
weather
is buying time."
Marvin
Swear1n11n.
soybean
Brooklyn. N.Y.
was born March 24, 1914 In com crops with 66 percent rated
agronomist
at
Purdue.
has
estl·
·Mr. Cordero moved to MiddleRutland. She was a dau1hter of poor or very poor, he said.
mated
a
15
percent
I&lt;iss
in
Factors used In the ratings
port in 1975lnorder to be closer to the late Arthur and Ona Butcher
When you use
·
soybeans
for
the
state
as
of
July
his family.
Nelson. Shewu a memberofthe Include corn height, condition on
Wonder Flow as
11.
·He was preceded In death by Middleport United Pentecostal the stand, the amount of leaf
dir~cted, you don't
It normal rainfall returns to
curllnl: and deaths from heat
his parents, Francisco and Her·
Church.
need a primer. You
the Midwest. tile damage cauled
minla Cordero and several brothSurvivors Include her hullband, stretls, Gann said.
saYI
money and
The corn crop will pollinate by by the drou1ht may be halted, he
ers and sisters.
Russell Lee Priddy; four sons,
time!
He Is survived by· his wife.
Randall Gaylord Priddy of Co- July 25 and additional rainfall said. and specialist. will be In a
better
position
to
I!Stlmate
what
Monserrate Corderq, a dau1hter,
Iumbus, Ralph Lee Priddy of
the dama1e really Ia. But It the
Encida Cordero of Rutland; two Hernlon, Va.. Edgar Arthur
dry
weather continues, so will the
grandchildren, John Dale Jacobs
Prldd.v or Columbus, and Ml·
deterioration
of U~ crops.
11 and his wife. Alicia. and Mary chael Robert Prldll)' of Rutland;
"The
shortl-term
we1ther
E. Jacobs, Columbus; five sla·
six dauJhlerl. Lavonna Ruth
chang@d
because
the
blocklnl
ters, Monserrale Lupsof Puerto LOtan of Columbus; Crella M. DaJbo atock prices
hl&amp;h pri!Saure In the upper
iTedllY Mae) Rlpter
Rey- ' (Aa of 11:31 a.m.)
Rico; Carmen BadiUo of LORI
atmosphere
baa moved out over
island. N. Y.; Franctsca Muntz
noltllbura, Ednl Vlrlllala Long J1rJce 111111 Mll'k Smllll
the
Roc'kli!S,"
arid John Kottlct,
or Brooklyn, N. Y.; Nlcolasa of Colun'lbua. Edith Arlene of Jllunt, IDIII 6 Loewl •
an
~~~tlCUitural
m~eorii!Qpt.at
• Gots on faster, easltr.
Rodriguez of Babylon, N.Y. and PrldllY of Rutland, Luclllie Irene
PUrdue. :"Also, · the Bermuda··
• Paint on dtwy mornings - dii!IP
Ramokna Gonzalez of Brooklyn,
G(llns of New CIJ'lllle, and Am Electric Power ............. 27%
evenlnp.
N. Y.; four brothers, Antonio
Beulah Ann Tackett of Colurn- ATIIf .......: ......................... 26%
_..,_.
Cordero of Puerto Rleo;_ Jose
bus: .27 JI'IDdchlldnm-·10 JI'NI . Ali}lalld Oil.-............... '' .•
74,~
• Excellant color retention and duriblllty.
Cord•ro of Broo!dn, N. Y.; Lu~ -~ ll:l)lacllililrea:.llllnlllifr; ~ Bali Evau..; ...... ,................ ;&gt;J7
• Colon keyed ta todar'a modarn look.
Cordero of Fayellevllle, N. C.;
Jordan of Atheaa; RIIRY Chll'll\lnl Shoppes ..............1'%
• Soap and water cltan-up.
Manuel Cordero of Lexington, dauabtera·ln-law and . sons-In- City Holdlq Co .................. 33%
Federal
Mop!..
..................
40\i
Ky.; a slster·ln·law, MIJ'Ia Del·
law; and several nlec:t'a and
GoodyearTIIR ...................61%
aado and her husband, Joe, or
nephews.
. Middleport, ud 1 nllet, Norma
IIJ addltloa to bel' perent., lite lfaGk'• Ine .................... ,.. : ... lH
Kli Ctltllu'lon ...................JIW
Torres, 1nd her da!llhter, Krllwu jltue•d Ia dnlll -11y tin, Mlddlejlort.
.
llrod!•·al.._; and_ tbree ~·· Elduuuoooo~oooooouoouh28~
A tunerllll\aSI will be held for t!lltUJ. -~
' Nalilln; · Verate ·Ltriia.d·lllc .:.:::;~·.. ;......... ~o:.UK
.,
Mr. Corderroat theS.credHeart Hysell a
DOVIe"lleiiOii: ·
Multtn'ledla Inc ...................'71ll,i
Catholic Cllurcb In Poiiiii'O)' on
llervlea will bt Frida)', lO . Rax a..tauranta..•.....•....•.••• i%
Friday at 11 a.m., conductad II)' a.m., at ta. Mlddl tart Unlttd Rolllllaa MJwa ................. 12
inC ....................... 27%
Ma1 . Mtehaei Hellmer. Rolli)' PttniiCOte~t~~ wtlll t.v.
wiU II&amp; held at 7 p.m. Thvndayat. LlolliNI
ltlilftlf, CIUt w:
1Dtl ........................ 5"
thPtuneral borne.
,
Biker bOtb offlclallq. l!lurlal
Dill ad ................ .JIH:
Lillian V. Gardner

alone~.--::-=-:----------:-----~Sa:::::.:ra:.:.:h:....:::Ove::..::.::::.:rs:::_tr.::::.:.eet
so I looked up "prejudice." My
dictionary d~~ined that as acting
with elthr a preconceived preference or bias." or "with an
irrattonal hatred of a p,articular
group, race or religion or to.my
"detriment or Injury."
~ell, I was just shocked. I had
no Jdea the BUllmooses felt that
way. Here I'd tbought all this
lime the old fellows just wanted
to get off by themselves so they
could swear, belch and otherwise
do things they 'd feel more
restrained !rom doing if J were
among them.
And really, I 'd never thought I
had much of offer them, if they'd
asked me to join, seeing as how
they mostly liked to shoot pool,
hunt small game and drink each
other under the table. Some of
my friends say I'm thinking
wrong.
My friends tell me It's tom y
"detriment and injury" that the
Bullmoosesdon'tailowmeaseat
at the every-other-Saturday po·
tiuck dinner. They say I'm losing
the opportunity to "network," to
make valuable business assocla lions which will propel me along
my career. I guess I just didn't
understand that "careerpropelling" was part of my
Constitutionally . guaranteed
rights. I'd always though! the
Constitution merely guaranteed
me and the Bullmooses the
freedom to associate with whomever ·we please, even II that
isn't me.
Personally , I'll admit I'm a

Six peraons were fined and 11 others forfeited bonds In the
court or Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday nllht.
Fined we~ Jerry Haning, Pomeroy, S88 and costa. open
Oask; John ·£. Fisher, Murray City, $U3 and costa, public
Intoxication; Jeffrey Hayes, McArthur, $375 and coati, DWI;
and S63 and costa, uJ!H{e:velllcle; Haney Faw, ~r.land. ~
and costa, speedlnl:; Warren Hanln&amp;, MiddlepOrt, $150
lneludlne costa, poaseaslon or a dangerous i111trwnent; and
Ricky Shaefer, $63 and costs, operatl!IJ under suspension.
Fortellinl banda were Jacob Shuler, Pomeroy, $113, public
Intoxication; Paula Horton. Middleport; $63 , expired plate~;
Delbert Fridley, Pomeroy, ,$43, assured clear distance; .Gary
Casto, Jackaon, W. Va., $43, left of center, and $375, DWI;
Kenneth Hartley, Jr., _Pomeroy, ·$63, expired plates; .Dena
Wat1011, Pomeroy, $43, Improper backing.
Fortelllnl bonds on s~ cha111es were Arthur Nibert,
GaiUpoUs, $51; Terry Spark&amp;. Columbus, S47; Toni 'l'limer,
West Columbia, w. Va. $51; Carol E . Brown, Bidwell, $46; and ·
Laura Smith, Cheshire, $45.

'

End .abuse of .honoraria ____R_o_be_rt_~_a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (N EAl Beset by allegations of ethical
lapses, Rep. James C. Wright
Jr., D-Texas, has a unique
opportunity to partially rehabilitate his reputation while simul·
taneously enhancing standards
of conduct in the House.
Wright could exercise his
power as speaker In a salutary
fashion by convincing his col·
leagues to end the· wide spread
abuses in their collect ion or
honoraria from special interest
groups.
Any reasonable tnlllative
Wright advances has a betterthan-average chance of being
adopted by the House because. as
speaker, he Is the chamber's
leader.
The 17-term Capitol Hill veteran currently is the subject of an
official investigation int·o
charges that he used his position
as a senior member of the House
to enrich himself as well as
various fr iends and business
partners tn Texas.
The honoraria . which suppl ement the legi"lators' $89,500

The Daily Sentiillai-Pege-3

briefs--~-------------:.
Middleport reports fire calls
Six fined in Pomeroy Court

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
without permission, and you
can' t get permission," he said.
Moore was an early supporler
of the Sandlnlsta revolution, but
when he traveled to Nicaragua it
was with press credentials from
the · conservative National FO·
rum Foundation, which has criticized the Sandlnista govern·
ment. He had worked for the
foundation on an earlier trip to
Nicaragua, but was not being
paid by the foundation for his trip
this spring.
Along the Rio Grande de
Matagalpa River, Moore heard
tales of a scorched-earth policy
by the Sandlnistas, who had
branded the entire region as
enemy territory. The natives told
him 8,000 people had been dr.Jven
from their homes.
Many of the stories were
exaggerated, Moore said. but
when he tracked down the
victims, he found the stories
contained nuggets of truth. What

.

Pomeroy-Middlapott, Ohio

-Meigs news

Nicaragua reporter. fears for his sources

•

'WASHINGTON IUPJ) - A new twist has developed in the long
controversy over political contributions and campaign finance, with
q ues lions now being raised about members of Congress contri bu ling
money to each other.
.
One House member - Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla. - calls the
practice "dangerous" and has Introduced a bill to ban lt.
The practice has drawn attention as a result of contests for
J~adership positions in the Congress. Essentially these are In-house
elections and would appear to be the kind of events that would not
involve campaign costs in the usual sense - no television ads, no
travel, no mailings. But some of the candidates have raised money
from outside Congress and handed It out to their colleagues, who also
happen to be the voters in these elections.
.
Anywhere else, this would appear to be blatanl and illegal
vo.te-buylng. but Congress often makes ltsel! an exception to rules
that apply elsewhere.
In the House, three members are vying for the post of chairman or .
tlle Democratic Caucus, generally considered the No. 5 position in the
Qemocratlc leadership. At least two of the candidates have ,raised
s~yerai thousand dollars, largely from lobbyists, and pian to dispense
the money to Democratic House candidates· in the November
el.ection, both incumbents and non-Incumbents. Theelectionwlnners
will meet tate this year to choose the caucus chairman.
,In the Senate, two of the three candidates to be the next Democratic
leader also have raised money - also !rom outside Congress - to
donate to fellow Democratic senators or would -be senators.
,Bennett's bill would prohibit members from not only giving
campaign money to other members of Congress or candidates lor
Congress, but would also bar the handing out of personal funds, thus
ensuring that wealthy members would not have more clout than the
non-wealthy. The bill would prohibit the solicitation or acceptance of
~ontributions .for congressional leadership elections.
. "This is a very dangerous practice that ought to be stopped. My bill
does that in a very straightforward way ," Bennett said.
Bennett makes the very logical argument that "leadership·
positions, including committee chairmanships. shouldn't be bought
~1\d sold .... They ought to be earned."
· Such posts should be filled on the basis of se niority . Bennett
s ugg ests, but he recognizes that the once-ironclad congressional
$epiority system has largely fallen by the wayside. But "absent the
sen iorlty system ... shouldn' tthe basis for election be more than who
gave whom a thousand bucks?" Bennett asks.
Bennett has good reason lo oppose the practice just on the merits.
but he also has some personal incentive, feeling that he was a victim
6! it just two years ago.
· In late 1986. when the Democrals were preparing for the opening of
new Congress, Rep. Melvin Price. D-IlL. theelderlychalrman of the
House Armed Services Committee, was ousted in a coup led by Rep.
Les Asp in, D-Wis. Aspln, Bennett and Rep. Marvin Leath. D-Texas.
then became candidates to succeed Price, and Aspin ultimately won.
!lennett, who was the most senior member of the committee,
attributes his defeat in part to the fact that Aspln and Leath made
campaign contributions to other House Democrats. He says election
teports show a total of $125.000 wa s dls lribu ted.
· Unfortunately. the odds are against Bennett's bill ever becoming
faw , and the practice of in-Congress money exc hanges probably will
ex pand . Members of Congress are reluctant to pull the plug on
a nything they believe smoolhes the pat h to re-election or additional
P?wer.

Wed1181day, July 13, 1988__

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Pitching, defense wins game for AL, ·2-l
By RICH EXNER
CINCINNATI t UP!) - AI·
though the American League
received its run production from
the least-likely source Tuesday
night, Its pitching staff and
defense provided predictable
brilliance.
"Pitching and defense won the
, game tonight," American
League Manager Tom Kelly of
the Minnesota Twins sal d follow·
lng his team's 2-1 victory. "We
had some outstanding plays."
And Impressive pitching. Even
Mark Gub!C28, who gave up the
National League's only run,
minimized the damage by mak·
lng big pitches. Frank VIola,
Rllger Clemens, Dave Stleb, Jeff
Russell, Doug Jones, Dan Plesac
and Dennis Eckersley held the

· The A's Dennis Eckersley • by Andy Van Slyke In the
threw a perfect ninth Inning for seventh. And Harold Reynolds
his first All-Star Game save. '
went deep Into right field In the
"Being that Eck had more elghthonaflybyRyneSa'ndberg.
saves (than any American LeaEven the two errors - Terry
guer with 26) we figured he Steinbach's throw Into center on
shouid finish the game," Kelty a stolen base and Mattingly's
said.
fielding ·error on a grounder The only AL pitchers who did did not figure In the scoring.
not enter the game were Doyle
The combination enabled the
Alexander and Jeff Reardon.
AL to win with as fe~ a.s two runs
Despite iwo errors, the AL for the first time since a 2-J
turned In some All Star caliber viet~ In 1947.
plays.
·
"We Just played well as a
Orioles shortstop Cal Rlpken team," said the Yankees' Dave '
made a back-handed stop of what Winfield. who had a double and
couid have been a second-Inning sco~ a run.
hit for Will Clark. Yankees first
''The whole American heauge
baseman Don Mattingly dove to pitching staff pitched well. I was
his right and threw to second Impressed with them," NL (llanbase for an out on a hot grounder ager Whitey Herzog said. ·

National League scoreless on
three hits In seven Innings.
"II seemed like It was over
before It started," said Viola, the
Twins' World Series MVP, whO
retired all six men be faced.
"Tom Kelly and I tal ked before
the game, and he said that since
there were so many pitchers, I
would only go a couple. It wasn't
fair to go any farther. ~tried to
get everybody In there."
Boston's Clemens, the 1986 Cy
Young and AL MVP, follO\IIed
Viola and continued the trend by
retiring all three batters he
faced.
"It tell great," Clemens said.
''The adrenal in flowing tor an
All-Star Game Is Just like a
playoff or World Series."

I

Herrog's NL team like Cards.

STEINBACH WINS MVP- Oakland catcher Terry Steinbach,
who drove In both American League runs wllh a home run off the
Mets' Dwight Gooden and a sacrifice fly, accepts the MVP award
of the 59th All-5tar Game Tuesday night In Cincinnati. The
American League won 2-1 to win Its third midsummer classic In the
last six years. (UP I)

By MIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Whitey
Herzog must be doing something
right, because be has managed
three All-Star Games. His batters. however, must be doing
something wrong, because Herzog has lost all three times.
"I've managed three AU-Star
Games and we've scored six
runs," Herzog said Tuesday
night after the American League
·topped the Natlonal2-lln the 59th
All-Star Game. "It kind of
reminds me of my team:··
Herzog's Cardinals have had a

;,.A couple of Inches elth\!r way,
and It could have been a real
productive night," Clark said. "I
was Just glad to be part of
everything."
With two on and two out In the
seventh. Andy Van Slyke sent a
smash between first and second.
First baseman Don Mattingly
dove to his right and picked up a
force at second. The' NL never
tllreatened again.
Herzog's latest All·Star loss
came against Tom Kelty, the
man who guided Mlnesota over
the Cardinals in a seven-game
World Series last season.

similar problem scoring runs,
but St. Louis has won three
pennants to make him the
AII·Star skipper.
Herzog led the 1983 squad that
fell13-3. His NL stars lost 3-2 In
1986. This year, his team managed only five hits, none of them
In the right-situation.
.
The NL went out In order five
times. They could have done
some damage In the fourth with
one run Jn, two on and only one
out, but Bobby BonUla flied out,
and Will Clark smashed to
second.

nn
. \

.

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"I had \my hitters tonlg~t ...
last year . I didn't have my
hitters," Herzog said. "I thought
It was a great ballgatne. Everyb-

:~'

•
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~ ~~:~~~~~:~f!':ef:.~~hers all ~~ .
The NL has produced only
three runs In Its last two All-Star
Games and five In Its last three.
Last year, In the, Oakland twllight. the Nationals needed 13
Innings for a 2·0 victory.
," Last year they blam~ the
twilight," Herzllg .sllld.
This year they can only credit
the men on the mound.
'

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All-Star notebook:

·t

Steinbach wins trophy Herrog on the pitchers he couldn't ·~~e ..,...
...

•••••
~,.

'I

as All-Stars' MVP ·

By RICK VANSANT
Inches out of reach of Darryl
CINCI!'&lt;'NATI (UP!) - Ter r y Strawberry's outstretched glove.
Steinbach of the Oakland A's.
" Gooden's got one of the best
whose .217 regular season bat - fastballs around. " said Steinbting average was the lowest of ach. "He threw his first pitch
a ny All-Star. moved to the head right past me for a strike. I was
of the class Tuesda y night with a looking for another fastball on
homer and sacrifice fly to be· the next pitch. I didn't crush it,
come th ~ Most Valuable Player but I knew I hit it to a part of the
·of. the 1988 All-Star game.
park where it had a chance to get
Steinbach, who accounted for out."
both the Am erican League runs
In the fourth inning, Steinbach
in the 2-1 victory over the came to bat wlth th11 bases loaded
National League, used his bat to · and one out. HeJofted a high fly to
a nswer a lot of pre-game cr!ti- deep left that was caught near
cls m that he reallydidn'tdeserve the warning track and went for
to be an All -Star because of hi s an easy sacrifice fly.
tow batting average.
Steinbach insisted he hadn ' t
" I couldn't plan what I did been !!linking about hitting a
t onight, of course." said Steinb- grand slam·.
ac h, "but now that It's happened .
"In that situation, I was
I hope people will change their
looking for a pitch that was up so
I could drive it for a sacrifice
m inds .
" Bu t, I'm not going to thumb fl y," he said. ·
m y nose at anybody. It's tough to
Before his first at-bat. Steinbd£'scr!be my feelings. I'm ver y ach had simply been thinking
exc ited."
aboui avoiding embarrassment.
Steinbac h homered in his ver y
" I was nervous In the on-deck
firs t All -Star at-ba t. He also had circle," he said. "I Just didn't
homered in his first ma jor league wan t to strike out. "
at -bat In 1986.
American League manager
·'The guys in the dugou t were Tom Kelly said he had no doubts
sayin g I'm an answer to a trivia
that Steinbach belong~d on his
ques tion." said Steinbac h. "They , All -Star squad.
wa nted to know what I'm eating,
" He must be doing something
wha l' s going on."
right In Oakland," said Kelly .
Steinbach's homer came in the "They've won more than 50
third inning against famed New games and have a 5 % game lead
York Mets' fire baller Dwight In the American League West. He
Gooden. The ball just barely sure proved he be longed
r leared th e right field wall. a few tonight. "

By United Press International ' said VanSlyke, 27. ·•rm not Just
CINCINNA,'l'l tUPI) - NL talking about St. Louis, but even
Manager Whitey Herzog listed If I was traded to San Diego,
the pitchers he considered but Montreal or Philadelphia, who
couldn't take to the All-Star knows If I would have had the
Cjame.
same success."
"! figure I could have taken 16
--guys," said ·Herzog, who has a
Cardinals reliever Todd Wor10-man staff. "(Pittsburgh's rell said the team's front office
John) Smiley, (Cincinnati's must take some blame for St.
Jose) Rijo, !Cincinnati's Tom) Louis' struggles this season.
Browning, tNew York's Ron)
"We've lost too many good
Darling, (Met Randy) Myers. players," said Worrell. referring
(Montreal's Jeff) Parrett. That particularly to Jack C!ark
k!d'shav!ngahellofayear.Also, through free agency, and Andy
(San Francisco's Rick) Reuschel VanSlyke, Mike LaValliere and
askedofftheteam so he could get Mike Dunne through trade.
married and (Houston's' Mike) . "Since we won tthe NL .pen·
Scott is hurt.
nant last year), the first thing Is
Myers was perhaps the closest you expect to go out and win. But
call. Myers Is 5·0, with 13 saves withwhathehavelt'shardto~a
and a 1.25 ERA. Reliever Mark contender, lt'shardtobecompetDavls. San Diego's lone repre- ltlverlghtnow. Wedon'thavethe
sentattve; Is 3-6, with 16 saves guns to run with the Mets and
and a 2.77 ERA.Theperceptlonls Cubs."
Davis took Myers' roster spot.
The Cardinals are 14 ~ games
But Herzog says he would take behind New York In the NLEast.
only two Met pitchers &lt;Dwight
"We deserve to be where we
Gooden, David Cone) so as not to are because of the Jack of some
disturb the staff too much. Also, players who could really help In
Herzog admires Davis.
the lineup, Worrell said. "When
"Tell me," Herzog said, "Is it we play, . we need five, six
harder to get 16 saves with the straight singles to do something
New York Mets (53·34) or San and that's tough."
Diego Padres (39-49). That's not
Worrell Is particularly critical
bad."
·
of the loss of Clark. who was
upset the Cardinals didn't sign
Greg Maddux wears one of the him quickly and went to the
more prominent numbers In Cub Yankees.
his tory. But the 22-year-old right·
"I could,n't understand their
h'a nder with a 15-3 recoi'll down- (management) thinking," Worplays the Importance of toting rell said. "When he played he
the same No. 31 rlghty Ferguson made all the difference In the
Jenkins did.
world. Sometimes an organlza·
''f don't know that much about lion pushes a player to a certain
history," he said. "They'll proba- point and the player becomes
bly retire It In a year or two and tired of it all. The last thing you
I'll wear number 24 or want to do Is let a quality player
something.
go for nothing."

Thompson Award. The Award
goes annually to a player for

~·

"exemplary Chrlsilan splrlt In
baseball."

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Pittsburgh outfielder Andy
Tuesday marked the fourth
VanSlyke says if he was still with time the All-Star Game came to
the St. Louis Cardinals he proba- Cincinnati, with the three prebly wouldn't be appearing In his vious verdicts going to the home
!ITst All-Star Game.
team National League. 'The NL
Van Slyke came to the Pirates won 4-11n 1938, 5-1 in 1953, and 5·4
last year as part of a trade with . In 1970.
Pittsburgh. The Pirates also got
Country music fans must have
pitcher Mike Dunne and catcher
Mike LaValliere from St. Louis enJoyed this year's All-Star
break. The GatUn Brothers not
for catcher Tony Pena.
VanSlyke showed talent in St , only performed at Monday
Louis but never solidified his night's party at the Cincinnati
spot. Since going to the Pirates, Zoo, they also sang the American
though, Van Slyke has become a and Canadian natibnal anthems
before the game.•
star center fielder.
"The only thing I can say Is
New York Mets catcher Gary
that who knows If I would have
gotten the ample opportunity Carter won the 1988 Danny
with anybody but Pittsburgh,"

I.

.!•
'

OUT AT SECOND -Cardinale' shortstop Oule Smllh,left,let•
oul of the way of a slldlna Rickey Hende1'8011 of the New York
Yanllees after retlrln1 Hendel'84111 on hie way 1o throwtn1 &amp;o fln&amp;lo
complete a double play In the firs&amp; lnnlna of &amp;he All-8&amp;ar Game,
played Ttleeday alghlln Clnclnllatl. The American Le&amp;~~~e won!-J.

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�Pqe 8-The

Behind the
•
scenes m
Cincinnati:
..

,

~ Oakland catcher hoping to improve

;·.~ record in second half of season

By RICH EXNER
CINCINNAATI (UP!) - If
~ everything goes the way he
• would like, Oakland catcher
.; Terry Steinbach will get a chance
· ,• to complete a unique baseba 11
•• triple.
•
Steinbach has already ho·
: mered in his first big-league
• appearance. Tuesday night, he
;; belted a homer In his first
:: All-Star at-bat, prope!Ung the
•; American League to a 2-1 victory
:·. over the National League.
•
And, with Oakland leading the
• · AL West by 5 ~ games, he might
: get a chance to play In a World
• .Series, perhaps even homering in
• his first at-l;&gt;at.
"The guys were teasing me.
• They were already saying I was
• an answer to a trivia question, "
• Steinbach said.
,
:
Steinbach drove in both AL
• runs with his homer and a
sacrifice fly , settling any doubts
• about whether he belonged In the
game. He hit .284 last season,
which suggests he can Improve
on the .217 he dragged into the
All-Star Game.
•
"I've never doubted my hit·
ling," he said. "I'm not happy
with the numbers I've put up
going Into the Ali-StarGame. But
I expect to turn It around in the
• second half. I have to get my
• confidence and turn it around.''

:.

•

.

.-

• . The AU-Star performance
• earned Steinbach the game's
• MVP award. The outcome of the
game and the MVP voting,
, however. might have been differ·
··- ent If New York right fielder
Darrvl Strawberry would have ·
; · been· able to make a leaping
: catch of Steinbach's fly . Instead,
• the ball bounced off Strawberry's
glove and over the fence to give
tl;te AL a 1-0 lead In the third
.. inning. (
"It hit my glove as I was

coming down trying to pull the
• ball back. I kind of had It until my ·
• glove hit the wall and It just
; . popped out. It's a catch you can
· ' make,". Strawberry said. "The
ball was slicing away from me
and dldn' t go over the wall by
very much."

•

Steinbach's sacrifice fly to left
field in the fourth inning scored
:- the Yankees' Dave Winfield to
• give the AL a 2-0 lead.
The 55,837 fans witnessed just

.•

'

•

••

one more run - the Cardinals'
Vince Coleman scoring on a wild
pitch later In the fourth - as
pitching dominated the game.
Frank Viola. Roger Clemens.
Dave Stleb, Jeff Russell, Doug
Jones, Dan Plesac and Dennis
Eckersley held the NL scoreless
on two hits in seven innings.
Even Mark Gublcza. who was
charged with the one NL run,
minimiZed the damage by makIng enough big pitches .
"The whole American Leauge
pitching staff pitched welL I was
impressed with them," NL man·
ager Whitey Herzog of St. Louis
said.
"Pitching and defense won the
game tonight. We had some
outstanding plays," AL manager
Tom Kelly of Minnesota said.
The combination enabled the AL
to win with as few as two runs for
the first timesincea 2·1 victory In
1947.
.
Minnesota· s Viola retired the
first slx NL hitters for the win,
and Eckersley pttbhed a perfect
ninth Inning for a save.
Gooden took the loss and is now
0-2 in all-star pla·y. The final six
NL pitchers held the AL scoreless over five innings.
"I just thought you saw a lot of
good pitchers." Kelly
"It's

tough for a hitter to go against a
pitcher for just one time. If a guy
can get a couple looks at a
pitcher, it would be a different
story."
Only io runs have been scored
in the last three All-Star Games,
five by each team.
There was enough hitting,
however, on Steinbach's part, to
give the American League its
first win In four tries in
Cincinnati.
"I think I was caught up In the
excitement. I just forgot about
everything," Steinbach said.

Sports calendar
By United Press International
(All Times EDT)

••

•
•

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•,

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STRI&lt;f. A l!lDW N M VIM ON
: • HGH I'RICE.i SHOP M CLASSI'ED$.

Toledo to host
2 tournaments

the five inning affair. Stewart
gave up a run on two hits and
whiffed three while allowing no
free passes. Chris was the
game's top hitter as he hammered two horne runs and a
single. Scott WhObrey ripped a
triple for the winners.
In a losing cause. Andy Baer.
Jamie Anderson and Jeremy Dill
turned In a creditable performance las they allowed only six
hits but gave up nine bases on
balls to the Middleport squad.
J3aer was tagged for the loss as he
worked tour innings, with Anderson and 0111 combining for the
final frame. Baer and Anderson
had two of the Syracuse hits, both
singles.
Middleport will meet the Point
Pleasant Carpenters Thursday
night at 8:30PM as play
continues.
Terry McGuire was the win·
nlngpitcherfortheRutlandteam
in t~elr win over the Point Lions

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U.S. goHers IJtiffed at Jacklin comment.

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LYTHAM ST. ANNES, En~­
conclullloa of tile Brltllll 0pl!ll. H 111 an! Eu.,.••· but ~ra~
: land IUPI)- Employlnea tactic
not lor bopys o11 the final two Grec Norman will aot play this
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match than a ,major golf tourna·
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Curt!' $trance, u.s. Open
: ment, Tony , Jacklin Issued a
championship.
cllllnpilln alld the ~~~Pest ranked
: verbal slap In tht! face tQ
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American c~allengers for the
can do, but hlf's a pretty cood · to tile ball.
~ 117th
a1ritlsh Open player. finished jlllrd at 1M U.S. "You couldn't walt to Uf me
championship.
0p!!n., I think. or rnaybe '·tourth tbat, could you~" he joked wben
"I just don't think they're as
(tied for tlllrdl." said ~r. a ·rt¥.-stloawur~IIM!Ciatapress
, good as we are now.~ said
:!I-year-old fnln Saraaolll, Fie.. ' ~~. "I c011ld - ~ all
Jacklin , who last year helped a
who was last y~ar'1 PGA Player ellolftpilll: at the. bit. I tlloU&amp;ht It
European team hand the United
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States its first home-turf Ryder
It JO(ICI, Lee TJ'evU.IdtiJit low.
"Well, .now I'm eotne to disapCup defeat.
.
'"'''Ieft
are•a
list
of
IllY•·
pcNJit you by saylac: No
· ·•r look throU&amp;h who I would • "Lauy W.OIIIll, h-en you I!OM-t."
• consider 'the favorites, and I
leav~ him out! How can you say
P111Md · for an uswer, the
·can't see beyond a European win.
Lalllly.WIIdkl•can'twlJib~re?" 33-llfU:Oid from Norfolk, Vlrcl·
,.... I can't se.e an AmerJcan win. But
Beruard Lallllfl' would not alll&amp;ld, NI'm cotna to play and
~ then I'm biased."
, say such a thine.
let my eoU clubs and my scorlnll
!'
And some Americans were
"I don't quite a~ with Tony do tile talldnc. That's the w'y It
lj miffed. 1
Jacklin abo11t Europeans win· •lloulll be."
'·
"Tom Kite could win bert!,
nlll!l," ha said. '1 would thlak · Laapr hal practieft ~-· Fred Couples. could win here.
some ot the Amerle- 1taacl a tlvely on tile US1·yard Jtayal
Jack Nicklaus could win here, very trood chance of winlllna."
Ly!llam aad St. Anne&amp; cour•. He
1
~ Tom Watson could win here,
"History hu proved dl&amp;rem spe~~t bls time on th~ CIIIIII!W
:1 !Rayll\Ond Floyd hits a nice low so far Qn tills count", but I don't
dlllerel\t clulll, dltr.ren1
ball and is still in areat shape, !)linll th~re will be no Am.rlcans ';J!Utrrs and puttlnr strokes.
iJ : Mark Calcavecchia can hit It as
In tba top lhi'H or ftw and t~
"I've pt 11 down to two or
~ , long ~s anybody. and is very should !» ~«~~e collleftdlnr for tllree," Ill saki loltlllfly of hla
~ •powerful," Paul Azineer
the Ullr."
puttrr Rltctlon. "But seriously,
~ . responded.
Thlf United States currently • wlll!11 my pultln11trolte II rlcht,
1 Azinger. presumably out of hu four players in the world'S' ltwon'tmatterwbichclubiuse."
~ 'modesty, refrained from lnclud· top 10, accordlna to til@ weekly
The weatber was kind to the
~&lt;! ' ing tits. own name, which last ~ompuW!r ranklncs. and 47 of the . play~rs TuHday. Thlf sun shone
·year ap~red with Rodtrer Da· 1:&gt;3 starters In 1h~ Open are tor mucll at !be mornlnr and
~ ·vis'
, in second place at the American. Flveoftheworld's top Hrly afllfrnoon. the wind was
~
~
~ ...

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' The Meiga Ca.ully ~­
sioners hiiYe diiMnintd ·ec1 corclng to proviliona of the
Ohio Reviled Code IDt _,.
th. . . 10,()90.00,
tho County wit dilponM wkh
CUI1M1'1'Y . . .ortiolng..., ter into informal bidl:lrlt· luch
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~

ALL WOMEN'S

PURSES

Fabynn ties course
•Tec:Dr:rf .in

-----------------r------------------r------------------r------------------,

~

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... 1011% "' .,. •

• ..

P&amp;fh I 1 IMf efll
lte$6MittfllleC;
I lor
1DCI!Ito "' ... • · - , . . ,

. .,.... •

wll Ito II I I sJ will: tile 1ft..

ITi•••
ea.
-11M ..,_.,0.000.00.
-= c:-y .,. *1tia.*.
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Two shots back of Fabyan were
MasaUion's Mike Emery and
Akron's St@Ve Parker. Rick
Jones of Yost and Taylor Metcalfe of Wyomlnl were at 70.
Columbus's Pt!ler Hammar, a
senior at Oblo State University
and cletelldlnc cllamplon. shot.a
4-over 71i Tuesday.
lrOillcally, Fabyaa said he
hasll'l been playlnc welllate1y.
"I'm really surprl.oed." be
said. "I n-·_...,, I would
... .....4 ...
. . . . . . . . ...
shoot this well."
Altlvwp Fabyan bllster.ed· the
..,___.... h ........ t d
eount' L_._y, e p•.,...e e an
even-par 211 would win the
lour-day LPYellt.
''I'd take par riJht now," he
said. "Tillscoune Is a lot toU&amp;ber
than it showed today. As a
tournament
1'1lU, the acores will
rise."

far

lhepaotttfdleCa 1-for

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Phone:
8:10..m.ltl8p.m. Rf.21 Sctih·RO!ey
811.. a:ao. e11.m. '75 SotAh Cludl St. . 4IHIIe
a.o&amp;ED SUNDAY
:144-1147

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leplar lusiaess.•ws Wilt T~e
Plwce AI Otlwr Days.

I MUtt

:••'•,•• ~. s 1 ~. *:·

Cs I JU

A!Ut

LEBANON, Ottlo CUP!) Barry Fabyan o1 W01'11liiWJOII
fired a COII!W record tyjq
5-under-par 17 Tuftday-to rrat!
the openlll&amp;"felllld lead In the
82nd Ohio Amateur coif
championship.
Fabyan, a senlot' at' Wake
Fornt. tq.~~al«&lt; tbe r!!!=Ord set by
~local ptay.rs 11 the C,f34.
yant"'ttlkerluaGoltCblb . .W.IIII
pro Larry Jaq. profe,.lo•l
Mika McGee of Middletown and
FraaldiP's Fraak Llckliter also
have sllet 6'11 at 1M course.
"It (Mia ll'lfal," fabyan said.
''Wh_. you lhoot a 67, you
have to IHI ll'lflt, but to aoot
that well at tills course and this
tour 11 am~nt It's almost
unbelievable."
If Fa--aa holds his lead. he'll
bt!come the' 11th collerl~tn In 12
years to. capture the Ohio Ama·

- tto!l
"' tiLe
-.......
• PI;
It a.tl
en

-ILW.
0 'lad lblti I

taking

Ohio Alntlteur

1---c__,.
lldllrl,. ... d .......

~
,,
•il. !==~

·WILL IE (LOSED
AT ·4:0() TI:IIIS~Y AN~.
WILL~E·.q~
All DAY Se'UIDAY

t_,

trym.

r,

EMBASSY

'&lt;
:i

30°/o-50°/o

l!Pt. •11d by the time !he rain
apr1Blded. es If 1etllnr itself In
tile mood for Open week. most of
the eompi!tltors had left
art!aa.

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DRESS
SHOES

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to divu.lge just what 'the league
was -king, but a source said
the prlnelpallssue was a further
cutback ot each team· s salary
cap, reportedly another $200,000.
Kent»at said WollleiJI and
ownera.Kerry ~ardoaot KaD$8S
City aad Bill Oliver of Wichita
m!l with Kerr and player representative Scott Mannlntr of
Baltimore.
"Our group carne away very
impl'fssed wi\h the players'
as!j)Ciatton's acknowledgement
of our financial problems," the
comm1ssloner said. "They are
wllllntr to work with us."

Sum111er Clearance
Sale COotiaaes

ers

CAVALIER

rl

again next week

lq the tea• from bankruptcy.
tickets a lid then resell them, then
Fowler, wllole Sockers won they would have somethlne
thetr founll MISt. IItle In th~ last coin&amp;'."
six us e• lit' sweep!D8 tile
Wol&amp;teitl ..,ld the key kl TaeoForce lJI - . n:n.~s. said he ma's ellaaces appears to resron
r.fl&amp;lld to c 1 pnnfith leis tllan reaewed ftell!ltlations with tile
eip1 fr~. Lot
It
• OWIItr J&amp;lllft Buss issued ·
"Lots of lssiM!I are lnvolwd
a llitllilar stat~. "
~lid It must be a •new five-year
"We did not really know wheN! deal, there Is no room for a
Wll atood wlln we went Into the
short-term atrreement," he said.
tw~weells.
111eetlq." KentUn&amp; said. "We •'But John Kerr knows he is a key
Commllalo.ner Bill Kedtllnc left t11U afternoon with a much to the fu lure of this league. He
llelll a ..nea 411 ~~~eetinc• 1n the betlirr 'W'IPI. We found o11t that plays a vital role. II he and his,
tQIIu)'bu Q twJ.and Offlcl!l of W~ UW II¥ AroiiJ tea~ willlq
croop can't accommodate us.
Bart Wol&amp;lllla, ow_. of the to 10 , . . ard and San Die&amp;Q is well, then there won'·t be a
Oevelau f'orc9. the only team dolllc everythlnc possible to tro leatrUe." •
to survtve all 10 sea1011s of the !orWllllll
Wolsteln and Kentlln&amp; refused
lea~·· exlatnee.
"W. ~ with rwpresentatlves
Tile P'orea 11aa Ilea the 0111y of Jl F•P !rom Tacoma,
MJSL trucldla to twD a trOftt who .... atven liS lttatJe.
tbe past 1ew - · Leape They will ~ back to us no later
Jllelllb«*lp llu dwi1141ed 1r1111 , than next Wednesday with their
14 teaJM In till liM,Jil 111.- 1o deelsloa M wllether they are with
lllx at the start of' tba l'ftMtlqs. . Ul or not. ShcMIId T._. -.come
ne MlSL cornplet" 1 5fl. our seventh tam, tbelllt Is llkely
l8iM rtiUiar 1uson and that San Dlep will ~In as ltl4!
playoffs wltb 11 teama IIIia -put tiabtb team."
''
'.
~n. In Mareb. awaera an·
Repu.entat!Vft of tile P'oree.
MIIIICed the leape woutlt fllld Lazers,' Soekers. Bal limo~
'
.~Was 111e playen' ~~~~
lllut. Dlllu SldeltlelfJ!, K&amp;llfU
re-.ue salary mtuctlllls.
City Conleta and Wk!lllta Wlacs
'TU MJSL Plll)iotn A.ssoclatloa at Inlift, 11 , well as J a - ·
'£ wd 10 a U!5,000 rut In each MaM..,"f&amp;P~ the T!~a tgrlOlll'Pr~
. _ , , ovenll,. salary cap of
..yws ....oc a on es.$1.2'!1 mlllloa lui seasOil. ,
~nt Jolul Kerr.
ftatwun·t-tlhtosave tile
Mepn hal been Involved in
St. L4Wa Stee=rs aDd MlaP. mlnor·leque baseball and is ·
· 10111 !trtbn. ..-ll:'abe ; la.t putUJIItopllleralareeerouptor
llllllltta. Last Friday, tile~ the !!Oerer club.
~·· cltlne loul!l of $1.tl~J,ll~Xln
"Havln3 a Jarte croup of
over flw - - · alld tl!e Chi· owaers rathft than one main
eago Stlil&amp; folded.
man torteerns, m~ a bit / · Wol·
That left th~ lea~Ue with .evea sW!n said. ''But I ,emphaslz@d to
tnas. leacllnl jlan lltqo !Mm th't if each of t~ pros~
!INI u owaer Roa ~ · to tlve own~rs -would m"' · a
111Spead Ills ~!forts or repurellaa· CQftlllllltmelll to buy 100 ~-·on
IIIOJQ:LAND HJLJ,..S. Olllo
(UPI) - The Major Indoor
Soecer Leap reeetwd 1 &amp;lilY of
exeeutloa Tufida)lrW!th OWDI!I'I
acreellll to resume talks Ia on.
wwk 011 bow the aiiin&amp; Jaatue
Cia be saved.
Tile lllerarcby wW J:DeCeca!n
July 20 to deckle 11M late et the
.leai!W. which ll.as bad five
trnMI•ft drop out In the past

•

NEW 1988
CHEVROLET

~eet

MISL owners to

hits and walked three which
resulted in two runs lor
losers. He struck out three of the
opposing batters. Kevin Taylor
relieved for the flnalfour and set
ten batters down via strikeouts,
walked four and allowed three
hits.
The Rutland bats were active
with McGuire taking top hlttlng
honors as he banged 0101 a single, •
double and triple. Shawn Lam· ,
bert also had three hits, a triple •
and two singles; John Evans and
Shawn Lipscomb each had a pair •
of base hits and Taylor and Kevin ;·
Musser chipped in with a single .:
each.
Jason Swain and Brian Hall .
handled the mound dulles for ~
Point Pleasant. Swain was the ,
losing pitcher. Hitters for Point •
were Sammy Ferrell with a ~
single and double and Chad !
Leport and Hall with a l;&gt;ase hit :
eaAsch. the winner, Rutland will :

:m~.~o=n~;~•
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The ~a~u~b~s~q~uEa~d-~~~~h~ur~l~ed~th~e-2m~ee~t~M~Idd~l;epo~r~t~II~a:t~6~p~
first two
·
and
two Thursday night.
U.S. Volleyball Association has
tapped Toledo as the site of next
year's U.S. Opep . Volleyball
Championship and the Junior
Olympic National Championship, marking the first time one
city will host the two tourna·
ments, officials said.
Tim McHugh, convention manager for the Greater Toledo
Office of Tourism and Conven·
lions, said Tuesday Toledo was
chosen over Raleigh, N.C .• for
the U.S. Open after the. city
located a portable surface to
cover the convention center's
cement floor.
The U.S. Open will beglnJune5
and attract approximately 2,300 .
players and coaches. The six-day
event will start In the SeaGate
Center. and the finals will be held
at the University of Toledo's
Centennial Hall.
DYNASTY
TIFFANY
·'The 1989 event will make the
first time that our national
championship has been played
on portable courts In a conven·
tion center, Toledo's SeaGate
Center," said AI Monaco. executive director of the volleyball ,
association.
The Junior Olympic National
Championship will be played at
-Pomeroy
the convention center, the unl·
verslty, and at two high schools
July 2-8.
YOUR DEPENDABLE JEWELERS
Richard Nachazel. execu live
director of the tourism office,
This offer not good with Any othn- discount or coupon .
said over 1,800 players between
AN R. JOHNS. LTD. EXCLUSIVE
ages 11 and 19 will he involved in
the second tournament.

Baseball
No games scheduled
Cycling
Tour de France
11th stage - Besancon to Mt.
Blanc Tunnel
·
Tennis
Bastad, Sweden - Swedish
Open
Newport, R.I.- $200,000 Virgi·
nia Slims tournament
Stuttgart, West Germaqy
Mercedes Cup

SOFT 'SPOTS &amp;

.
•

MIDDLEPORT - Play continued in the Big Bend Pony
League Tournament at General
Hartinger Park with Middleport
1 defeating Syracuse 14-2 in the
opening game of the night. The
contest was ended before the full
seven innings were completeld
due to the twelve run rule.
Rutland, In the night cap, elimi·
nated Point Pleasant Lions Club
entry by a score of 11·6.
Once again for the Middlepor t
squad, pitching was the prime
factor In the victory as two of
their ace hurlers, Jeremy Phalln
and Chris Stewart. teamed up to ·
fire a three hlttl!r. Phalln,
starting pitcher, worked three
Innings and fanned eight batters,
allowed only one run on one hit
and walked only one man.
Working the final two frames of

,,- '

ALL WOMEN'S

The Dilly Sadin.. Paga 7

•

Pony League tourney continues

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI CUPI)- Behind
the scenes at Tuesday night's
All-Star game:
Working In dirt and lime
r:eached new heights. The
• -· grounds crew wore tuxedoes.
"It's hOt In here," said Pete
Buchery, waving the tails of his
long white coat.
..
"It's nice for onee In a
'
lifetime," said Paul Malone,
WHAT A SPORT - Surprised at how good his throw was, VIce
adjusting his red bow tie.
President George Bush holds his head and Is then congratulated by
• "But not every game," said
Meta' catcher Gary Crier at the Al~lar Game Tuesday In
: Jay Bell, fingering his trUly
Orinnall: (UP I)
· shirt. "Too hot."
:
Three blimps circled above
•
• Riverfront Stadium. Goodyear square feet ot.foul territory near the game. Chris Sabo's goggles
: was In competition with the Pepsi home plate- 200squarefeet that drew heavy attention.
: blimp and the FuJi blimp.
catchers ordinarily can use to
Instead of wearing glasses, tbe
: . The "Full On-Field Photo chase down foul pops.
Cinclnnatl Reds' rookie wears
· Session" went bust, however.
In a scene resembling a gen- . goggles. The posed many lmp&lt;?r·
· Grounds crew meembers. long era! visiting a battlefield, Na· tant questions for Sabo to
before doMing tuxes, had placed tiona! League President Bart answer.
hundreds of metal barriers Glamattl walked on the field near
Q: Why do you wear gogglfs? ·
• around the field so FuJI contest · the ~pot where Cincinnati Reds
bo: "I need them to see.
Sa
•• winners could photograph All·
manager Pete Rose shoved an They're prescription."
.: Star players. It was rained out. umpire _and triggered fan rowdl·
Q: Why don't you wear regular
•• Hundreds of metal barriers were ness a couple of months ago. That glasses?
- then taken down. "All that for incident prompted Giamattl to
Sabo: "They don't fit right. My
nothing," said a grounds crew suspend Rose for a month. The nose Isn't right."
member.
National League president was
Q: How about contact lenses?
Four hours before the game, a not the most popular All-Star
Sabo: "Can't wear contacts. I
slide head-first too much."
•• takeout order of chicken arrived visitor to Cincinnati.
·• at the stadium. A minimum · Special guards were posted at
Q: Where did you get your
.: order of 725 chicken dinners had two strategic locations on the goggles?
!: been placed. It was no colncl- field three hours before game· Sabo: "Sears."
.._ dence tha(725 media credentials time. They guarded freshly - , Q: Are you going to be a
' had been issued.
painted "All-Star Game" emb· baseball fashion 'setter with your
The Integrity of the game was !ems so that red, white and blue goggles?
:~ tarnished slightly so the commls· paint wouldn't be streaked all
Saba: "I'm not Interested in
stoner and 50 of his friends could over the green Astroturf.
baseball fashion."
· have good seats.
"
Reporters, oumumberingplayAfter several dozen more ques•
A construction crew built a ers 725 to 56, conducted dozens ot tions like that, game time finally
• glass-enclosed platform with 50 marginal Interviews with drew near. Sabo looked relieved.
chairs that gobbled up about 200 trapped players two hours before
'

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WadnBICiay, July 13, 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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8 The D!!ly Sa tlinel

-~gan,
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Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•..
.... 1118y,
d July 13, 1988

'•l'ldlllldlly. July 13, , .

I

director of 'South Pacific', 'Mr. Roberte.~, dead

By BRUCE OLSON

• NEW YORK IUPI) - Joshua
:oigan, who produced and di)"C:ted "SOuth Pacific" and "Mr.
ft&amp;berts"
during one or the most
• •
.versa tile careers In the hIs tory ot
llij! Broadway theater, died at his
11ome In Manhattan after a long
) llness. He was 79.
·
... i:.ogan died at 3 p.m. Tuesday
from supranuclear palsy, a debilItating· disease from which he
suffered for six years, said Ethel
Weinstein, his personal
secretary.
··
• In addition to directing and
RToducing the stage version of
Rogers and Hammerstein's
''South Pacific," Logan co-wrote
the musical and In 1950 won the
Pulitzer Prize for his work on the
long-running sh6w, which was
based on a book by James
Michener.
• Logan also was co-author,
qtrector and producer of "Mr.
Rgberts" and a spin-off play
llased on a character In that
dl'ama, "Ensign Pulver." as well
as· ''Wish You Were Here," and
·. '"Fanny."
.. ," The whole damn theater is
alive and vibrating when Josh is
at . work," said lyricist Oscar
fll'mmerstt&gt;in II at the pt&gt;ak of
Logan's cart&gt;er.
,.. Logan was born In Texarkana,
Te'l&lt;as, on Oct. 5, 1908. A hand5'ome 6-footer, he attended
0ulver Military Academy and
Rrinceton University. He was
Qne of the founders of the
University Players on Capt&gt; Cod,
acting with James Stewart
~enry Fonda and ~argarei
Sullivan.
·· ''Josh has meant so much to
me, especially as an actor.
beea use Josh Logan Is reponsible
absolutely for getting me into the
acting profession." Stewart said.
"When I was at Princeton on
graduation day he asked me if I
wanted to come up to an outfit
called the University Players."
:. At the end of the summer
Stewart said he was planning t~
return to Princeton for graduate
sr'udles In architecture, bufwas
urged by Logan, who had graduated the' year before. to come to
New York and pursue acting.
"It was then that I decided to
j;Y. It," Stewart said. "Josh
:~~:an has meant a tremendous
~ount to me In my life. He gave
~encouragement all along the
~-"
~Tor his work with the UniverilP~ Players, Logan won a
~olarshlp to study with Kon~Un Stanistavsl!i at the Mos~w Art Theater.
~ "Meeting Stanlslavskl was the
~birth of me as a director," Logan
~ecalled years later. "I never
Jhought of directing until I met
i!jlm .. He had such strength and
fentleness, such humor. I
~anted to be as much like him as

ance on a stage as an actor, at the
Biltmore Theater In New York In
October 1932 as Mart Strong In
" Carrie NatiOn." His first major
assignment as a director took
him to Lo11don In 1933 for the
productiOn of "The Day I Forgot," w~lch was soon forgotten.
After returning to New York,
Logan dlr •' rtPd &lt;orne other for-

BIG BEND

gettable plays. Then h~ went to
Hollywood to direct movies. His
work on films developed his
talents as a director and when he
went back to Broadway only
fame was in his future.
Summing up his cart&gt;er, he
said, "I am nota puppt&gt;teer, I am
simply an editor, a sort or
audience, and a friend. a sort of

encourager that nobody should
be scared of or angry at."
fils own fears resulted In two
nervous breakdowns that took
him out of the theater twice, In
1941 and 1953. On both occasions,
he had himself committed to
men tal hospitals and recovered.
He was able to serve In the U.S.
Army Air Corps In World War II,

.
.
leavlq t,M lft'VIet•a a
in combat lnteiJII•••· · .
Piaped by deDIIIiiiiOJI'* tile
1-.1.4p· . . . . . ,,., !liJI
tak iNr 'lltlthiiiL u.-JJ111 ... - ·
able to keep tile lllaltll ll!lder
control tile ~ at lib liJt. · · '
He wrote Ill$ aufllbiCIIl'IPbY,

•lMal•

"Josh,"inlNiand~r'llook,

"Movie Stara, Real Peopjl·•nd

Beat·.

Your Independently 9wned
Low-Priced ·Supermarket

,.

Three graduates of Meigs Hlgh
School have been awarded scholarships to begl.n their coUe1e .
studies at Rio Grande College
tbis tall.
Donlta Pooler, daughter ot
Karen Pooler, 204 Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy; SherryCoopt&gt;r,daughter or 'rhomas and Cathy Cooper,
30705 ~urray Hill Road, Pomeroy; and Charlotte Hart, daugh·
t~r of Jack and Maxine Hart,
39500 Bunker H111, have been
aamed scholarship recipients~
Pooler recleved the Rio
Grande College-Community College Honor's Scholarship. This
tuition scholarship Is awarded to
the area's finest students. The
scholarship recipient is determined by both past scholastic
achievement, extra-curricular

.

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S
ale!
.
Cool Store ••••IIOT PIIGESIII

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMfT QUANTITIES. PRfCES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY. JULV 10 THROUGH
SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1988. USDA FOOO STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS ACCEPTED .
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OA PICTORIAL ERRORS

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...

•
•
'• CLEVELAND cUP!) - Blue
~ross &amp; Blue Shield of Ohio said
'tuesday it has agreed to underwilte the Insurance program of
,:Preferred Health Plan Inc. of
lVheellng, W.Va., and market the
flan In 10 counties In southeast-ern Ohio and northern West
-)'lrglnla .
Blue Cross said il will underw' lte Preferred Health Plan's
.program- as part of Its "Supt&gt;r
;.lllue" program at select hospl ~ls In Belmont, Washington,
jefferson, Monroe and Harrison
•counties.
~ The "Super Blue" plan offers
:fmployers lower Insurance rates
:et select hospitals that have
:tontracts with the Insurer.
, ;:i In emergency situations, "Su~r Blue" subscribers may use
~ny hospital and receive maxllflum covered benefits, the comJany said.
All contracting hospitals must
gree that If they give some other
nsurer a lower price than the
lue Cross price, the4nsurer has
!'the right to terminate the

!

~tract.

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l;

WHOLE 14·16 .1.8. AVO.

~

Phio,
W.Va.
.•

NEW HAYEN - The ~elgs
County Retired Teachers Association will have a picnic at the
New Haven. W.Va. park on
Saturday at 6 p.m. Bring a
covered dish and table service.

,,
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SALEM CENTER - The Salem Township Voluntrer Fire
Department will be l)avlng its
annual Ice Cream Social on
Saturday, July 16, from 11 a.m .
until 7 p.m. The menu will
Include homemade Ice cream,
roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs,
potato salad, macaroni salad,
baked beans, pie and beverages.
The Midnight Cloggers will perform In the evening. Prizes will

• : ,.!'

.-Blue Cross
'pffers plan to

be given away.

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club will
sponsor an opt&gt;n dance on Saturday,
from 8 to 11 p.m .. at the
TlltlRSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Inspection senior citizens center In Pomeof Rock Springs Grange, 8 p.m. roy. Caller will be Jerry Cochran
of Fairmont, W.Va. All western
Thursday at the hall.
square dancers are invited.
CHESHIRE - Free clothing __
--day by the Gallla-Melgs CAA 9
SUNDAY
a.m. to 12 noon Thursday;
LANCASTER - Descendants
'" agency's clothing bank Is In old of the late WIIJ!am and Lydia
' high school building at Cheshire.· Matlack of Long Botiom wlllhokl
a reunion on Sunday at the
,.
FRIDAY
Lancaster Fairgrounds. Basket
1',
SALEM CENTER - Salem dinner at 12:30 p.m. All relatives
' Township Trustees will have a and friends are Invited.
:; hearllq!' on the 1989 budget on
--~: Friday, at 9 a.m .. at the Salem
POMEROY - The annual
•· Fire House. The public Is Invited Biggs reunion will be held
:, to attend.
Sunday at the Nathan Biggs
--residence on Route 124. Basket
,.
MIDDLEPORT
American
dinner
will be at 12:30 p.m. All
''
:• l.,eglon Feeney-Bennett Post 128 relatives and friends welcome. ·
•: sponsored square dance, 8 to 12
--•, Friday at annex. Mills St., with ·
POMEROY - The annual
i: True Country Band providing Tuttle reunion will be held
music.
Sunday at the George Collins
residence. Dinner will be at noon.
.,
-""""":•· SA.TUJ.&amp;DAY
''
SALEM CENTER
Ice Bible schools
POMEROY __;_Vacation Bible
cream social 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday at Salem Center fire School at Pomeroy Church of
'• station sponsored by Salem Christ will be held Sunday
,, Township Volunteer Fire Depart- through July 22 from 6:30 to 8~30
;: ment; sandwiches, salads. baked p.m. each evening. Director will
:; . beans, pie and beverage also be Ann Fields. Classes for
kindergarten through teenage.
I• available. · Midnight Cloggers
Everyone
welcome.
• will entertain In the evening.

.: ~·
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!:

• REG, • DRIP ~ A_DC • EP

HOLLY FARMS GRADE: 'A'

Breast Quarters

,.

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Tavern Ham

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'

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' '.·
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LOW

:• .
;•

fAT

SLICED

Ole Carolina
Bacon
.-

_.Pepsi-Cola
·
8 oz..
16

'

5Q: OFF LAEIEL

.-C.Iorox

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.DAIRY LANE

2°/o Milk

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Oil Mal! ADIItfiOIIM PUIICit~l

Mrs. Ruth Stethem was ·a
recent guest of Mrs. Leota
Masser, Tuppt&gt;rs Plains. They
attended the Keno Church and In
the afternoon a cookout was
enjoyed. Alsoattendlngwere~r.
and Mrs. Starling Masser and
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buckley and
family.
Inez Young, sister or Audrey
Smith, Is a temporary resident of
the Amerlcare Nursing Home,

,

Ruth Stet hem recently enjoyed
..·•·• a birthday
celebration with gl.tts

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POMEROY- Vacation Bible
School at Sliver Run Baptist
Church will be Monday, July 18.
through July 22, from 6 to 8 p.m.
All children are Invited.
POMEROY- Vacation Bible
School at the Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church will be held this
coining week, Monday through ,
Friday. from 7 to 9 p.m. each
evening.

Long Bottom visiting ·notes

:: Pomeroy.

::

Plus
Deposit
lii!T ON! WITH 110.110 OR MORE ADDITIONAl PUICIIASE

.,

· ;!

MILK
MT. l&gt;EW, PEPSI FREE, DIET
or REGULAR

~:

'46 class girls gather
I

;
WEDNESDAY
'·
POMEROY- Past Councilors
': Club ot Chester Council 323,
• Daugthers of America, will hold
lis annual picnic and meeting at
the home of Sadie Trussell, 6:30
p.m. on July 13. Members are to
take a coyered dish, gifts for
game prizes, and a lawn chair.
Table service and beverages will
be furnished.

/

. TENDI;ABEST

DONITA POOLEB

.Teens use sex as love substitute

activities, and current aptitude.
Pooler was a member of the
high school ·chapter's National
Honor Society and choir. In
adcHtion she playa plano and
sings at church. She has also
received the following
recognitions-Academic AliAmerican, Who's Who Among
American High School Students,
and Natlonal Leadersh lp and
Service Award. Her major at Rio
Grande will be nursing and her
professional goal Is to work with
the elderly and teach In the
nursing field.
Sherry Coopt&gt;r has been selected recipient of the Rio
Grande College-Communl.ty College Trustt'es Scholarship. Scholarship ellglblll.ty Is determined
by achlevement, current aptitude and graduate ranking in
high school.
Cooper's school activities Include National Honor Society,
chorallers, and student council.
In addition she tparticlpated In
Fellowship of Christian Athletes,
Collegium Muslkum and track,
Her major will be In nursing.
Charlotte Hart received both
the Rio Grande College- ·
Community College Trustt'es
Scholarship and the Central
Trust of Middleport Scholarship.
The Bank scholarship has been
awarded to her for demonstratIng academic promise. BOth
SHERRY COOPER
scholarships are awearded In
recognition of scholastic achievement and aptitude.
American Award and was named
Hart was a member of the for Who's Who Among American
Madrigals, Spanish Club, and High School Students. She plans
newspaper staff. She was to major In mathematics at Rio
awarded the Academic All- Grande.

:;.. -------------------------------------------------Community calendar

$ 9

BAG
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Viva . .
Ice Milk , ·

Rocky ~ Top

,

10 LB.

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ASSORTED FLAVORS

•COLA •O.IET •ROOT BEER
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otatoes

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~ssible.··

,. Logan was involved, behind
;ihe scenes. In numerous Broad""'ay hits, among them "On
llorrowed Time," "I Married An
;;.ngel, " "Knickerbocker Holilday," "Stars in Your Eyes,"
•,1'Charlle's Aunt," "By Jupiter,"
. 'Annie Get Your Gul)," "Pie;ilic," "Wish You Were Here."
~~lue Denim," "World of Suzie
jl'ong" and "Mr. President."
·~ Logan ventured Into Holly~lvood to direct "Bus Stop,"
~.' Picnic," "South Pacific." "Say~nara • " "Fannv"
and "Camel '
~
'j;ot." But he never became a
:oHollywood denizen and nevPr
~ught a home there. As he once
~aid. "New York is my home. I
'!;an't Imagine just being In
rl!oUywood and not working."
~~Logan made his first appear-

Scholarships givep
to Meigs graduates

'
Me. "In lll78. Ashlscareerwourul
down In thf"19110s he took to the
l'OIId with his wife, Nedda Harrigan Lo1an. and two young
sinpr-aetors in a lectureentertainment tour based on his
remlnllcences.
The Logans were married In
1945 and had two adopted
children.

and cards from numerous ramUy, friends and neighbors.
Among thoae noting her birthday
was the Long Bottom Senior
Cltlzeu.
Mrs. Joe Rebeec:a and daughler, Blaeklake area, Columbus,
are vtaltinl her parents, Mr. and
Mra. Jobll Heillll!y.
Loac Bottom senior elttz.na,
Mn. Eileen Swain, Mae McPeek,
Mary Andre8. Ada Bl8sell,
Either Bultey enJoYed a three
day , 1tay In the Renfro Valley
area of Keatueky.

The Oaily Sentinel-~•

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Larkins,
Wesley and Whitney, Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Wamsley,
Cheshire, were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Larkins.
Brandon Fitch, son of ~r. and
Mrs. Bobby Fitch, celebrated his
thlrd birthday with a party at the
home of his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Brewer. A
cookout was enjoyed by his
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Fitch, bls paternal
· great-grandfather, Mr. Ours,
Mrs. Sharon Gilbert, Tracl
Deem, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Qeem,
· VIenna, W. Va.
Recent visitors at the home of
Paul and Mildred Hauber and
Melody Roberts have been Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Kl.bble, Mary Ann
and MarUyn, Tupper• PlaiDI,
Mr. and Mrs. Grand Borinl,
Reedaville, Mrs. Bettie PlaOtt.
and Luellle Kl.mes and SUsie,
local.
Roland Stethem has as his
recent guests, the Terry,Stetllem
family ot Pomeroy.

I•

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Girls of the graduating class of
1946 of Olive-Orange High School
bad a get-together recently at the
home of Evelyn Spencer,
Tuppt&gt;rs Plains.
Six out of the seven glrIS In the
graduating class of 12 were
present and Included Norma·
Yates, Cambridge, Ina Weaver,
Beaver, Wilma Robinson, Coolville, June Carson, Buford, Ga.,
and Margaret Follrod, Pomeroy. '
Unable to attend was ~axlne
Yost of Lanraster .

The only thing that would have
Dear Ann Laaders: I read the
letter in your column from the reached me as a teenal!tlr would
teen8l!e girl who was concerned have been an answer from you such
ab(lut her young friend l!tltting as: "If you are a teenager and are
presnant. You recited a string of having sex, this is a symptom of not
cliches and missed the boat com- getting the love and affection you
pletely.
need at home. Do your parents
When I was 17 I beoime preg- ridicule you and mistrust you?
nant. I am now 41, Had I read your Have you given up on getting love
column when I was 17, it would from them? Ask your counselor at
have had no effect whatsoever. school about dysfunctional famiWhy? Because I was emotionally lies."
and physically starved for love and
Thank you , Ann, for your many
attention. For the first time in my years of caring. I hope you will
life, someone touched me affection- print this letter and open up some
eyes and ears. _ L.S. IN OREGON
-ately.
DEAR L.S.: You have written a
During my first 16 years I had
letter
loaded with insight and good
two severe illnesses and nearly died.
I now believe those illnesses were sense. We have known for a long
cries for help. The only way I could time that sex is often used as a ·
l!tll my parents' attention was to be substitute for love. You have spelled
very sick. I knew t~at teenal!tl sex it out for teenagers in a forthright,
was risky, but I couldn't give it up nonj)Jdgmental . manner and I
beoiuse it kept me emotionally thank you.
alive.
Dear Ann Landers: Please tell
Today I go to ACOA meetin(!S those battling SCRABBLE players
(Adult Children of Alcoholics and
Dysfunctional Families). I learned ~~=~:~~r~i~i~~:r~c~~ld S~~~~B~~
.
why I have felt such overwhelming cheaper t han a d lvorce. A paperfear, pain, anl!tlr. loneliness aqd back costs about $5.
shame. My father was an alcoholic . · This dictionary contains more
and physically abusive. My mother than 100.000 two· to eight·letter
was also verbally and emotionally words that are acceptable. The
abusive. I had no one to turn to. official rules say that if a player uses
We were fed, clothed and we went a word that isn't in the dictionary.
to church every Sunday, but I was he loses his turn.
never allowed to express my emoThere are several interesting
tional needs.
words in the dictionary such as
Children from healthy families qaid, qindar, qoph and faqir. It is
do not have sex at an early age. essential to know these words when
They have self-esteem. They have no you get stuck with a "q" without a
sick need for '"love" of any kind, at "1!," especially late in the game.
any price.
Some other valuable words are

Fair flower-shows

Committees for the Meigs
County Fair flower show have
bt&gt;en announced by the chairmen, Betty Dean and Janet
Koblentz.
"Yesterday andToday"wlll be
the theme of the two shows, the
first to be staged on Tuesday,
Aug. 16, and the second Thursday, Aug. 18.
As In previous years, members
of Meigs County garden clubs
will be handling the committee
, work. Winding Trail and Chester
Clubs will be doing the staging;
Middleport and Bend 0' the
River will be In charge of
staging; and Fernwood and
Wildwood will take care of the
educational and special exhibits.
In charge of judges and clerks
will be the Fernwood and Wild-

•

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Ann
Landers

_
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___
....... _
....

ANN JAND&amp;ise

...
ixodid, muzjik, xu and zloty.

·,

I have been a tournament player·
for years. SCRABBLE is a great way '
to meet intellil!tlnt and interestinl
people. Anyone can get a list 11f,
local SCRABBLE dubs by writiiJI
to SCRABBLE Players, Box 7Q(l,
Greenport, N.Y. 11944 (enclose "~
long, self-addressed stamped enve-•
lope). - MATI D.W., a-JESTER"
FIELD, MO.
· ;
DEAR MA TI: Thank YOJI for
helping expand my vocabular&lt;t
now know that ixodid refers ~0
ticks, . a iloty is Polish money,"
· •
qintar refers to Albanian ·money,and qoph is a letter in the Hebrew
alphabet. The things I learn from
my readers!
'"
Do you have questions aliour seX;·
-·'
bur nobody you can talk ro abour
rhem• Ann Landers' newly re&gt;is'rd'
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager,"
give you rhe answers you need. To~,
ceive a copy, send $3 plus a self-ail-,
dressed, stamped No. 10 rnvr/opt! (45l
cenrs postage) to Ann Landers, P.O~
Box 11561, Chicago, Ill. 606/ HJ562: · ·

will,·

set------~
:·,:

wood clubs. while Friends and
Flowers will make the class and
show signs. Horticulture exhibits
will be handled by the Ru !land
Friends and Star Garden Club
members, and the Shade Valley
Council will take care of junior
exhlblls, with Rutland to do
placement, and the Middleport
Amatuer gardeners, the photography of the two shows.
All classes of the show areopt&gt;n
to exhibits from any Meigs
Countlan as well as members of.
Meigs county gardens residing
out of the county. One does not
have to be a member of a garden

club to exhibit, and In fact, the~
public Is encouraged to en~t:.,
The only entry ft&gt;e Is the purcha_!l!}&lt;
of a membership ticket.
l,.f&gt; .
Entries must be made at the
secretary's office on the faii&lt;
grounds no later than 4 p.m Qn~
Aug. 12 p.m.
,
Ribbons and premiums will De:
awarded in three places In each '
class of both shows. In additiP.nthere will be six special awards,,; ..
senior best .of show, reserve be~ .
of show, and horticulture sweeg-;:
stakes; and junior best of sho~;
reserve best or show. and hor,f!;;
culture sweepstakes.

BurkeS host pig roast
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Burke, Lori, . Gum, Tommy Leachman, Ruth
Scott and Randy hosted their Francis. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
annual pig roast on July4. Guests McGrath, Nellie Parker. Martha
enjoyed horseshoe pitching, mo- and' Will Poole.
Marlene Donovan, Dorothy
vies, and an evening hayride.
Attending were Jim Huff, fl. E. and Bill Robinson, Mr. and ~rs.
and Nancy Cote, Amy Rail, Gene John Rankin, Jeff, David, and
Cole, Carolyn and Roger Ritchie, Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Denny Hill
Amy Ritchie, Paul Hendrix, and sons, Tony Jones, Clara
Allee Ritchie, Tim Hawthorn~. Follrod, Nina Robinson, Ken and
George, Nancy and John Collins, Betty Young, Barbare, Alvin,
Mike, Rhonda, Tabitha and Sa- Rodney and Todd Tripp, Harold
brina Collins, Wimp Swartz, Nita and Wilma Henderson.
Jeff GUiogly, Sharon HenderJean Ritchie, Don and Robin
son,
Sherman and Roberta HendGuthrie, Marilyn and Wilbur
erson,
Elton, Joyce. Kenny and
Robinson, Lori and Larry Ritchie, Lee Ann Gaul, David, · Jayne Ritchie, Jeff Nelson, Pat,
·Nancy, Tom and Carrie MorrisKathy and Stacie Watson.
' Dorsel Bibbee, George and sey, Roger and Rogte Gaul, Lisa
Tom Parker, Bryan White, Blair Henderson, Emerson and MarWindon. Rod, Susan, Jason and tha Douglas. Richard, Joyce. and
Cricket Pullins, Robert Hender- Jerrod Douglas, Sheila, Jerry,
son, Bruce and Teresa ~cKel­ and Abe Rachi, all of Meigs
vey, Michelle Donovan, Nancy County.
Jenny and Kevin Tibbs, Andy;
Gaddis, Charlotte Van Meter,
Sara,
Joe and Deb Fabisey,
Teresa Lambert, Tricla Burke.
Eric Morrison, Little
Athens;
Joyce,- Jerry, Lisa, Sherry and'
Greg Burke, Pauline Wolfe, Hocking, Jeff Amos. Vinton; Guy
Betty and Jack Farrar, Amber and Mary Tibbs, Mark Amos.
Columbus; 1-,eanne, Donnie, EdHayes.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Henderson. die, Mat thew, Vinetta, and ChrisMr. and ·Mrs. Dean Stright, tina Jordan, Belpre; Mr. and
Wally, Barbara, Tiffany, Tonya, Mrs. Blll Wood, Zanesville, Jim,
and Tara Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Karen, Jimmy. Shane. and
Max Carsey, Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Minear, Parkersburg, W.
Robert L. Bean, Mr. and Mrs. Va.; Jeffy Saunders, Brighton,
Clair Follrod, Edith Harper. Ill.
Edna Harman, Pam, Tom, Chad,
and Justin Diddle, Fay and
Leonard Amos, George and Jodie

Thatcher hosts show
The fourth show of the summer
season of the Showboat Becky
Thatcher, permanently moored
on the Muskingum River In
Marietta, will open Tuesday.
Wrlten by Bill Johnson, "Dirty
Work at the Crossroad" Is the
storyofavllllandrlvlngthehero
to drink and blackmail with a
sweet country girl saving the
day·
Tickets are available for Monday and Tuesday shows at $7.50
for adults and $7 for seniOr
citizens and children .
Wednesday through Saturday
tlcketsare$9foradults.Reservalions are recommended and may
ribe;;m;a;d;e;;;;;;;;6;14;-3;7;3-;60;33;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

BOYS, GIRLS,

&amp; MEN'S

SHOES

JOGGERS, FLATS, CASUALS, HEELS
last Markdown

$3 to $1 0

SIMON'S PICI·A·PAIR
IIIII

I

SWIFT ECKRICH

luTTEiiiALl

.

TURKEY HAM •••••••• ~.~••••••••••••• S219:
'

'

SUPERIOR BIG RED

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••• J.~••••••••••••••
SUPERIOR

GOOSE LIVER •••••••• !!·••••••••••••••• 99C ..
KAHN'S PACKAGE
JUMBO· FRANKS •••• J.~•••••••••• S1. 99 ~·
HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD ••••••••• J.~~-~.~ ......... 89&lt;')·
MARGARINE
SPREAD •••••• J.I~.~~~.... SJ.39
IEAVIR VALIIY

GRADE A
LG. EGGS ........... A9.t..... 79&lt;
KRAFT 16 SLICE

"NEW"

YELLOW
ONIONS ..............l.lt..... 89&lt;
CELLO PACK

CARROTS .............\t..lll.-35
FRESH

,

CANTALOUPES .....\~.r.t.... 99! .
HEAD

AMER. PROC.
CHEESE ........17-.Ql....
NEW YOlK

GARLIC BREAD •••••• J!.~~·•••••••• S1.79

TASTE-0-SEA

OCE'AN PERCH •••••• ~~-~~·•••••••• S2.89

DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE •••••••••••••••••• ~~~~!~!•.... 69c·
HAWAIIAN

RED PUNCH •••••••••• ~~.~~·•••••••••••• 99&lt; '
VAN .cAMP

PORK &amp; BEANS •••• JJ.«l~·•••••••••••• 99&lt; ~·,
INSTANT

'

NESTEA ••••••••••••••••• ~.~~-••••••••• S3.49

°

SIIELD

s oz.
59(
BAR SOAP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
FRENCH'S

·MUSTARD •••••••••••••• Z.i!·••••••••••••• 69c ~: ,
JIFFY
40 oz.
99(
BAKING MIX
••••••••••••••••••••••••••

llEENEX

"

r

,

,

FACIAL TISSUE •••••• m.~r•......• S1.19·-'
IOUNTY

TOWELS ••••••••••••••••1..1L~!.A~••••• S1.39
MORTON HOUSE

lttf . Turkey • Salililury Steak

.GRAVY MIX •••••••••••••l!~:.o.z•···· Sl ~29 -

�Pumwot

10-The

••

People in

Wednaaday. July 13, 1988

By WD..LLUl C. TRO'IT
U•lled PreN IDternailolllll
UMBO PILOTGitOUNDED:
Sylweater Stallone ' s first
"Rambo" movie was about a
man unjustly jailed and the case
of a "Rambo" helicopter pilot
may have some parallels . Ch•
rles ~lla, 43, the chopper pilot
Involved In Monday's bold New
Mexico prison breakout that
briefly freed three Inmates, said
·he was forced to participate In
the escape but W&lt;IS arrested
anyway. Bella. owner of Bear
Helicopters In EJ Paso, Texas,
flew his French-made helicopter
In "Rambo III'' and his hometown newspaper In El Paso,
Teus, ran a picture of Bella
posing with Stallone. Bella was
jailed In Santa Fe while author!·
lies decided whether to charge
him and his wife, Carrol, says lie
called her to say he was "mad as
hell" about the arrest. She says
her husband was contracted to
fly to Santa Fe for a real estate
agent when be was waylaid Into
the escape.
.
JAILBAIT: Huey Newloa, the
former Black Panther leader, Is
going back to prison for violating
his parole. Newton was arrested
In June In Oakland, Calif. , for
driving under the Influence of
drugs, which means he will have
to do six months for violating
parole from a weapons posses·
slon charge. Also bound for
prison Is Scott Thorson, ~9. the
former "palimony" lover of the
late IJberace. Thorson pleaded
guilty In Los Angeles Monday to
joining four other men In robbing
a couple of money and cocaine
last year and Is expected to be
sentenced to three years In
prison. Thorson sued Llberace In
1982 claiming he had been his
lover, chauffeur, secretary and
animal trainer In return for a
promise of $70,000 a year for life,
up to $30,000 a year for pet care·
and use of one of his homes for
life. Thorson settled out of court
for a reported $95,000 and Llberace died of AIDS In February
1987.
MAUREEN'S MEMOm: Mau·
reen Reqan's memoir won 't be
a "President Dearest" type or a
kiss-and·tell book like those from
White House insiders Michael
Deaver and Donald
"First Father, First Daughter"
is due in February from Little,
Brown and Co .. which describes
It as "a very human and
endearing portrait of Rollllld
Reagan" and promises It will be
"engagingly insightful and filled
with amusing never-before·
published anecdotes about the
president." II also will Include 30
black-and-white photographs.
Maureen's co-author Is Dorothy
Hernnann, a former magazine
editor and ali thor of a biography
of humorist S..J. Perelman.
MJNI.SERIES IN MOTION:
While author Barbara Taylor
Bradford Is In New York redecorating her office, her· 1\llsband,
&amp;bert Bradford, Is In London
launching the latest Bradford
miniseries. which stars Lindsay
Waper, James Brolin and VIctoria Tennant. "She's already Into
another book," Bradford said of
his writing wife . . "Voices of the
Heart." an $8 mllTlon, four-hour
miniseries, starts shooting In
England on July 18·, followed by
two weeks in the south of France
and two on the East Coast of the
United States. "A U.S. network
deal has been signed for 'Voices
of the Heart,' but we're not
announcing It yet." said VIctor
Glym, the British producer.
GLIMPSES: John F. Kennedy
.Jr. will be an apprentice this
summer at the Los Angeles law
firm of Manatt, Phelps. Rotheberg and Philips, which will
provide him with a company car
and pay him more than $1,000 a
week, the Boston Herald said
Tuesday. The newspaper said
Kennedy is ecstatic about the job
at the firm, which represents
such celebrities as Barbra strelsand, Prtace and Princess stephanle ... CBS will no doubt have
the most experienced team of
commentators at the Demo·
cratlc National Convention in
Atlanta' next week. Eric ' Seva·
reid, 75, who covered Ills first
convention In 1948, has been
added, joining Walter Cronkite,
71. whose convention experience
goes back to 1952.

ae,an.

11

Business Services
-=====::;:;;;;;;;::;;::::;:;;;;;;:;=====i1
r
Wt Rtservt The liaflt To
Limit Q111ntities

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

11-·.--·
....·-·
__ ...._ _____.... ,.. ·- .,._
..
.
.
.
··
....
.
.
.
·.... -·
-·
.,=
·.=.•:::.
-_____
-__-·------·._...._
,__"_.... ..
.
.
.
.
w--.
·.,..,..,_
..=-.. -.-.t ......
-------.,._,. __
·-

M..

·-

8 AM-10 PM

•,'

'
•j

298 SECOND ST •.
POMEROY, OH.

'

''
4'
I
.,'

JULY 10 THRU SAT., JULY 16

PRICES EFFECTIVE

.,

RATII

-------

OQ.. .

M,.

-

___

··

:""..::.!;'"

:::n!::

__

··~-==C::i:.'::'-::~
......

_,,_,-..._,,
:r-"1• .. _.___.:::r... -

..---a:z...iiti:·

.$ 39
Slab Bacon .•••.. !~... '· 1
.

~.
,•

11 Years
Chll'ch·Hilme·Schaal

•

Alert Ught wkh tuning
Ofi'•goodl/1 · 7/ 30

••••••••••••••

,...,•• battery
operated Houee Pl.nt

..•
'

..

•
•
••
•'

~

Chuck Roast ••••••••• .99C
LB.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

~

....

'

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE II horoby given
that on Saturday. July 18th,
1988. et 10:00 e.m.• 1 pub·
lie ule wMI be held at I 06

$

7
9
Round Steak ••• !~.. 1
·,

..•
... '

,;

roy. Ohio. reoorveo tho right
to bid It t~lo sale. and to

whhdraw the 1bove collateral prior to sale. further.
The farm•• Bank and Savinlll Com111ny ,....,.,. the
right to reject any or all bidl

..

Further, the above coli•
twal wMI be oold In the con·

dltk»n it Ia in whh no ax.-

prelled or implied Warran-

tloo given.
13, 14.

,

t&amp;.

3tc

Lettuce ...........H:~•• 2 / $1
VELVEETA IND. SLICES
$ 69
Cheese •••••••••••••••••• 1
16 OZ. PKG.

NEW COUNTRY

Yogurt ...........·.~~.5/Sl
KEMPS

Assorted Pops •••••• 89&lt;

TEN

24 PAK

Tea Bags ••••••••••••••
1000.

~ DAIRY

CASE OF 2·4 .

$399

lll;t I,_ c.t
Goeol ChoiJ AI ........ S p ; li'lrat
Goeol s.:.. Jlly 10 ll:nt sw• .lily "

,.•

CHEER DETERGENT •
Goeol Choly At ,_.., S4
rl:lt
Goeol s.:.. ,.., 10 """ s.e..... "

w .. ,........... oldMn • .

1·28·'88·tfn

Business.

CAll AMY CMTEI

PINTO BEANS
lAG

••

••

••
•,.•'

••t'

In Memory of Edgar
B. Taylor who left
us July 13. 1983 ..
Sadly miued by
wife, daughter and
randchlldten.

59(

GRAN. SUGAR
4LI.
BAG
()9

Sl

lintlt I P• ci.tGotl Only II Ptwoll'1 S.,.me1:UI

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Suppli

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSIIISS I'IIONE
(6141 992·6550

IISIDINCE PilON£
. (614) 992-1154

$510 OFF With 'lttjs Ad

I/281Un

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorizttl Sonict
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumaeh

LADY RACHEL'S
Pl&amp;M lEADING

Weed Eater
HomeUte
Jecobeen

,_

6/2llal/ l mo.

1-2-11·1110.

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

BOGGS

DEAD OR AUVE

J&amp;L INSULAnGN

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mutt It RtptJir..,lt"

SALES &amp; SDVICE
GUYSVW, OHIO
614-662-3121

1·3-'U.Ifc

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At leosonable Pricts"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUl

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER

7-1&gt;·'11-1 mo.

Veterans Memorial Hospital, a JCAHO accredited, not-for-profit hospital, Is looking for
a Patient Review CoorJiinator. '
The Patient Review Coordinator wlll as1en.
pl~n, Implement and ltllaiuete the hospital's
Ouelhy Anun~n~ Plan and Infection Control
Plan. The Pet lent Review Coordinator will re·
view chlrts for 1pipraprlate utUizatlon of nr·
vicll end 111111 with providing patient• qual·
hy continuity of care lifter dlach•ge.
Qulllflcattone include a Regt.tered Nuru
with 1 current Ohio nursing liCM~ae. Prior
Quality Anun~nce and Utllzatlon Review ex·

J181'ilnce preferred,
Plene olll or •nd a resume to:
M•aartt Holm, Ant.tant Admlnilt!lltor
VII•- Memol'lll Hospital
111 I. Memorfll Ortva
~IIY· Ohio 41711

rv14)112·2104

c-•

lH Thre h A letfar Woy.

GEARY
BODY SHOP

Middleport, Ohia 45760

on love. Marriage and
If y.., Art ........ •d
• ..,., ..... Wlolrhlhy To
Two
1r1 for AIIYI&lt;e
- Oroo Vhlt Wll c-lroa

11/2/U-IIc

PWMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Second

1ells Past, Preaent and
Future - Give• Advice

&amp; IIi. . ..., lo ••Y VIIS.

or 1011 QKTROIIKS
446-1390

HUDNALL

WANTED

PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR

PURE SWEET

4LI

.
.,
..,

· f,ll.'88 tin

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1·13·1fc

992-6611

992-2156
In Memoriam

·Wt Honor MC/Disc/Yisa

PAT HILL FORD

Middletlort, Ohio

FILL DIRT

2

8. 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on AH MMes

614-594·3310

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

!

Located Hallway be·
tween Rt. 7 a. llooh11n.
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
S.rwict Cent• for Ryan
Products

MIDDifPOIT, OHIO
OPEN 8:30·6:00 P.M.

992-3410

t

YARDMAN I ECHO

Middleport, Ohio

JUST CALL!

'I
'
!

Dealer fer

302 Wootllrllon St.

LANE

Ice Cream

Lotsa Pop •••• . c:':..
oz.

lm11 MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VIIS TAPE

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 9·9·2969

550 PAGE STREET

4·16·86·1fn

WANT ADS

,,.,

Midcleport. Call Scott M The

SER~ICE

aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

319 So. 2nd Ave.

NO SUNDAY CALLS

SMALL

12

992-6282

The Farm•• Bank and
Sovlngo Company, Pom•

MJbmitted.

1470L$549
lli'lilt I ,_ c.t ; r

&amp; HEATING

F~r• E••IP•••t
P1rh &amp; Ser11t1

.....

.. COFFEE

PLUMBING

oFABP211AOGF1 27796
1980 Buick

· 17)

MAXWEU HOUSE

CARTER'S

Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio. to Ill lor cash the lob·
lowing coll-al:

SS 4NII14AH412139

$199

-----

7-13·'88-1 mo. d.

Authori!ed John
o-e. New Hollond,
Buoh Hog Farm
Equlprllant Deller

1981 Ford Muotang LX

BUCKET.

Cube Steak

614-742-2235

m

Rump Roast •••••'!.:$159
U.S.D.A.CHOICE

CONSTRUCTION

OWIIII: Jtffr oy s.ltll
It. I BOX I 36, V111110111

C. F. SCOTT
Mi.......
..61_4:f1!:1·31'18

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Sutton Townohip
Truat- wll hold their
hearing on the budget for
1989 at the residence of
1be cl•k. July 15, 1988
from 7 to a p.m .. 1988.
The Budget for 19B9 was
approved at the July 1,
19BB meeting.
PaulS. Moore. Clerk
Pleasant View Rd.
Racine, Ohio 46771
. PH. 949·2194
13. 1tc

U.S.D.A.

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUmR&amp;

-

Public Notice

,.

no miiATD

~ -- ,!2-

I
I

.,

•Seaml- Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

FrM GHt ..."WatO&lt; Me

•

I

12 OZ. PliG.

;,:~ ..c'!.':"'\~'f~.f~:t

Borodl Brot&lt;el And Bluei

We can repair and r•·
core radio tors and
heater cates. We can

~1.

•

BULK SLICED

WMI do MY kind af wort. for , -,
t3.00 I hour. Odd jobo . . Coil

101
E. Main

POMEROY. OH.
992·2259
PRICE REDUCED - Pomeroy - Beautiful view of
the Ohio River. Th1s 2 story
home features 3 bdrms., lull
basement. nice living room,
large lronl sitting porch, II?
baths, attic area. MAKE OF·
FER. ONLY '17,900.00.
NEW LISTING - lliddl•
port - Recently remodeled. including kitchen.
low uliiHies. has 3 bdrms ..
I \1 baths. part basement.
dining room and storage
building. $32,500.00.
JUST RIGHT FOR THE
GROWING fAMILY ~ 4
bedroom homesittingon approx. 6,47 acres ol ground.
Nice big dining room. car·
port, lamily room and much
more. ASKING $29.000.00.
SYRACUSE- Remodeled 2
story home. Includes 3·4
bedrooms, I \1 baths, basement. garage and an older
barn Of1 approx, 1 Acre of
ground, 139,900.00
LONG BOTTOM - Home
along the river in a great location. AppK. I acre ground
goes with !his 1 floor plan
home. fully furnished. river
bank use. FAF.O. heat, TPC
water. '6 · basement. out·
building. Could be a nice
summer place or live in year
around. ONLY '19,900.00.
RACINE- Unique I \I story
home w/3-4 bdrms, added
leatures in'tlude central air.
original woodwor~. fireplace
in ltving room, lam&lt;IY room.
part basement sitting on 2
lots. ASKING $29,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED on this
handicap accessible home.
Ramp ways, special floor
coverin&amp; special bath fix·
lures, etc., all designed wHh
the handicapped in mind.
Really nice 3 bedroom home
w/fireplace, basement and
porch area. large modern
~itchen. NOW 134.900.00.
LETART TOWNSHIP - 29
acres ol mostly wooded
land, building sHes for home
or hunting cabin. MAKE OF·
FER. $14,000.00.

'
MIDDLEPORT-Nice
neigh·
borhood, ve&lt;y nice and nell
3 bedroom ranch wrth a big
corner lot UtiiHy room. F.A
N.G .. pretty krtchen, JUST

3-311-.Ill In

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
I
985-3561
'U

•

We Service All Makes
1/22181/lln

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer • Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard BuainBis

WANT TO IUT WRECKED OR
JUNK CAIS OR TIUCKS
-FREE !STIIUTISfor CIIIY of thtsuonices call

614-742-2617
letw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Loavt Mtss11111

2-1 f:"' BB·tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CovO&lt; your home with
beautllu I MASTIC or
~ERTAINTEEO vinyl
siding.
. Btll Prices Anywhere!
ROOFING and SEAMlESS
GUnERS

PH, 992-2772

6·13·1 mo,

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124, POIIItiOJ Oltito

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Aleo Tr••••lulo•
PH. -992-5682
or 992-7121
6·17·tfC

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Howard L

Writelll

ROOFING

NEW- BPAIR
Gutters
Oownapouta .
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES .

949-2263
ar 949·2168

6-10· 88-1 1110.

At C Servica

All Major 81 Minor

NIASE Certified Mech.,lc

CALL 992-6756
"OOC" VAUGHN

T--

OHict .......- .... 99f.21S9

Ally lhlft.

O.monst ..tors. C.ll Betty C.penter.

814-992·5ol83.

.' .

11,..2U-&amp;3UTodlyi

Federtll, State, &amp; Clvl Ser\ltce
Jobo. tii,OOO . f711, 110 yr •
Now HirJnill Crib$ JOb

cmr.

-g

F1nollt:lill

1-619·1811-1813 Ollt. J U10H.

z......

work••

••: brk:k. bloc*. 6 oorcnn;

4- 8 week old klttent. Call

lt6-441-7100.

FrM puppiee· mbr.ed. Crown Chy

..... Coli 816-251-8719,
·~ Black Lob. pupploo. 7 wko.

okl.-3 rnelel. 7 femll•. Cell

""""'"IJII·

814-266-1886.
:u wlo. old klttena. Coli 116441-3341.
F... to good home-Full B:OO.d
Sp.,let JIUJIL C.lb 1!162.11-&amp;09&amp;.

-y

2 femele hou• kittens. Would
Uke to go to ....,. hGme. C.ll

814-UI-1010.

T1n puppy-Part Ger"*' Sh•
ph«d to give ~•Y· Call 814441-8111 before 2 PM.

Femeto Colll•typa dog. 10
mootlw old. Good wtth chlidren.
814-9t9-20155.
2 Cltl, 2 kltWftl. Cofl614-992·
5278.
Ouln• plge to give •-rtagoad

ho... C:tlill4-742·317•.

Mile khten. 14 weelrlt Did to
goad home. Call 114-99231177,

ohoctrici.,o; piumben: hooting
a. olr conditioning; dry woibbng;
co.....,.l,; builders:

pol_,.

.

' .~

: ~llperienoed, tlllentld end c...,·orientld indi·
vlduaia to be pr&lt;lject auperin...,deml. Send m..-na or wark
h;otory,lnliludlng whldo t-or
work yoo have experience ln. to:
Rt. I 8oJC 247, Goitlpolla, Ohio

.8631 .

Melr*nenct penon to lfwe-in
apertment co rnpl-.. C811 304-

8711-510..
FEDERAL, STATE. AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

Now hiring. Your ArM. •13, 510
to *59,480. lmmedlete opan-

lmrnedlnt Df*~lng for an indivldull dtlirlng • challenging
position in a .,ural lllltting.

·•
,
'

know, Md NOT to llftd money •
through the m .. untl you h.ve ~
lnvoltlgtlod the ofterlng.
''

'!l: wtth&amp; • ""•

StMt au~:c~~n 8 ·o.....
Ml!lor M.nuf.cturer-1 •

furntthld. Some .... liken.

Coli (303) 7&amp;11-32000t 2401 .

~. 1

...

Own your own • ..,.. or lhoe • '
1tore. chooM from: Jt tn·
Sportswe•r. Ladl ... Man' 1, -· •

Chlh••·Motornity, b.ariOSIIN, • '
,_..._, DHCIWII•·AIIrablc. lrl- , ,:

del.u-.
.. - StDN. Add colorM. .. Bnnd
nemM: Ur CfaibarM, Heatlhtax,

· ·•

ao.... t.e.stMI-..Farenu.
- · Boy, LovL

Comp-ly -

ttlfs, Org~niCIItv OrDWn. lucia. o.~ ,

.,..., 2000 otherl. Or 113.99
prloo ........ '"""' ... ' •
pridng dltcount or family lhoe ~ •

Minimum reqiMrementl .,• ..,
O.gnte In Account
plus 2 VI•• coet •Pif'IIRCI'.
bcellent benefltl PIC~~~ge.
PI- - d ,.....,. .,d ....
req..-emenle to: Jeno"t/ A Div-

- - - - - - - ··
Re~l

Eslote

..

Auoci~ta•s

Equol Op-unlty Em .......

HELP WANTED

Free firewood for cutting, 1'1.1
milt out .J ericho Ro.c:l. · 304-

.. '

lngo. Cell 1-3t5-733-1012 ut,
F 27118,
ltore. Altlll Drices unblllwebfe •
for toP qlllllty ehoel normalty ...
Talented, Creethte individual priced from t19 to tiiO. Over . •
wented for an excttlng elMer in 2110 brsndt 2100 .tylet .
tt7.900toS29.900:invontory. ' ~
Advertising Sal•. Call for an
•ppolnt....,t. 306-727·78118. t.-inlng, fixtures. alrf•e. Qrlnd ""
opOntng. etc. Can - II d.,o. •
Mr.M.Comb, (•041124-0010. •
COST ANALVSI'

Bo• I &amp;1. Welfton. Ohio •&amp;692.

Warm momlng coli lf1d wood
h - . 30.. 571!-2333.

,"

""d h•:z::~•"*" -··· Engln-Jng .-.Stoner octo :-

Al1o n

Ision of The Pllllbu!Y Co .. P.O.

31

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

Homes for Sale

.
-

.

--~------------- ~
1185 Merlflfte Mo611er Home, 80•28. All el..,rtc. Ct. 3 BR.. 2 "
b•he. ore• room. dlnlna room. .
To meny utr11 to ••· MUst • • -

Local compeny now hiring for
ful 11me employment. No expe-

rience ••n r:;. IYenlng wort.
Bentffle: tt200 a mo. plus
lntuf'Mce lk profit lh•lng. For
piH'8onlll interview caM 114-

to •prect•e.

•u.ooo. OWMr ..

flnonctng. Colt 816-448-U08
1ft'! 5 PM.

1

.., '

1111 Rectrn. S.Cltlonll home. " •
21•11. 31R.• centraf air. Maw
to your lot. eo:: 816-4.1-8584 '

17!1-7t87.

446·8U6. Thurodll¥ &amp; Fridey,

aft•IPM.

Lovely brown and whitt 8e8gle,

Htllr Stylists. Acroa The StrHt
lf\lting talon g ll!leking one
edlltlonti atyilll who lo looking
for more th~n )ust •other )ob.
Cell Terrl11 814-••e-91!110for
dMaill.

Older 3 IR., otory llo \ol, fuM •
b. .mw, I~ •crt, centenary, ~ ·

Oovernrrem Jobs. *10.040 •
•&amp;9,230 yr. Now hlrtfm. Your

Coli 6t6-t4&amp;-92t0 OYeniiiQI. . '

8 - · old, 306-882·2059 or
come tee New Hav•. W. Va.

6 Lost and Found
LOST: Black Lab.·mal• W••ing
blue coHar. Lecw-Mud Soc•••·

erea. 805-887-8000 !xt. A9805 far current Fe.,.. lilt.

,,

Coli 816-.411-30-44.

";

l.Geeted 5 ml• from town-Rt. . : ·•

141 . Over 2* acres. Ctty
.:hools. Landcontftlct poedl .. e.

1 '"

~

---------'
Hou• hM I rooms. b•h. lwga

-ik·in cl-. l•nclry room . ..
Coil 116-2511-1379.
Moblt honw h• cld• lin.. .
Fec:t.ril. Stlte, •n d Civil S~rvtce do•tt. 2 bedrooms in • beauti- ~ ·
LOST: In 0111-1. Sot.·July ..lobo 118,000 · t79,150 yr. b'ui -ion ofi' Rt. 7 ioto·pOU. ·
!1111. White Ohio Vtilll¥ Bank Now htrtngl Call Job Center Ctii'616-992-6BU
enwlope can•lnin9 m0ft11¥. tf 1·119-815-6513 tilt, J 8ee&lt;IH.
.•
108 Stitt St., Pomeroy. 2 or 3
fatlnd "'·- Coli et•-2•1- 24hrl.
9872.
bedroomt, earpeted. No
·~
Lo1t: Ank and blullt pogo ball ~
An lewle St .• Mlddlepon. Tues.

Gowrnment Jobs. •18,037 10
•e9,.t0!5 . Immediate 'hiring!
Your .,.• . Cell refundable. 1-

••a- •

..

nablaoff•retu•d. Phonel14- ' -

992-3721.

July 12. Coli 1!14-992·1928.
818·•89·3511 Eo&lt;l. 1622 lor In Rut..,d. I rooms. b•h. nice ., ,
loeotion. woli bult. No ...,ting.
flderlll iflt. 24 hra.
Lolt July 11th in IAtdlng CI'Mk
felling or lind C:DnftCII. 114- :
ntue Ad. areL fernllt Beegle Now hiring dernonstnton 742-2110 or 814-742·2007. . •

puppy. Approx . 10 wkl. old.
Black. brawn •nd white. Call

51 ..742·2249.

8

flidl P•••on Auctloneer. II·
cllr*d Ohto end Welt VIrginia.
EstMe, antique. f•m. liquid•

rton .: ... 306-773-&amp;785.

9

Chr....,.• Around The World.
recttNe weekly comnlstion, no
colltcting, delivery. receiW free
TV. VCR Dr even trip 1D HIIWail.
SUpsrvilor Pet Greenlee 304-

6711-281115.

Public Sale
8r.. Auction

Wanted To Buy

Villege Pizza Inn now hiring
deiMuy person for both toca11001. Apply In ......, 3004
Jackson Ave. Point Pl...,nt Of'
Spring Volioy p;.,., Gatblpollo.

OECORATJNG SEMINAR
BE AN JNnR IDA
DECORATOR CO NSULTIINT

With certificate, futl ·e~ part time
and n.-rJob hunt 1pln. Cell

•I•

o,;.

For
Atn•l Propany.
plex .ndtNIIeron lotslnRadM.
Qood monthly lnaorne. aa.tto
echoolt end chutch•. Eay tD

RACINE
GUN SHOP

,

rent. Owner hit Mlocated. call '·
lftor fiJ&gt;.m. . -

816-M9-2800 or
e 1"-9•11-2228.

..

87x33 Ranch Ptrmaltone ...
Home. Birch peneNng. 3 bed- :

room. 2t}, bMh. 2 e• a.-eoe. _
buitt In oven, IBngB end ,.trJger~ · ~
at or, stone. •• through lire · •
place. Com.,...."J'Iththelrtand ;
draperlet. complete c•Pttld.

buitt in leroe TV, utflltymom.full • ••
b. .ment. 3 ac:ret and 11h a en

304-523-8672 or wrhe Ruth E. loko. .,25,000 unl\lrniahed.
Adkins. 2781 North Staunton e130.000b'urnlohed. At 7, Rvt
Roed. Huntington. \V. Ve. Poln11. mint candltton. Phone
814-992-21!71 .
25702.

~.

•
....

NEASE HOUOW RD.

GUNS· AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Follow Signs
on Boshan Rd.
PH. 949-2168

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

Complele houleholdl of furni-·
ture
antlqun . Alao wood •
0011 huttre. Sw.ln' 1 Furniture
Auction. Third
Olive.

a.

a.

a.

l t..441-3t89.

'"-· 816-241!-&amp;IU
Junk Cer• with

motors. Colt Lorry
381-9303.

Of'

wtthout

Uvely-lt 6-

Buying furnlt\lfe end IPDII .. cee
by flo @lice or by the lot. Foir

ll6-.48-3t88.
Stendng or pulp wood.
~- Coil

Coil614·367·711~9.

W•ledtaluySt.nclngnmber.
Coil It ..3711-27111.

CUSTOM
tNTERIOR DESIGN .

PH.

742-741~3

·······Gallipolis··········
&amp; Vicinity

Buylna dolly gold. olhlor colno.
•arlin a wwo. old
oaina. l•go ,.,,_..,. Top pr~
Ed aur- llltbar Shop.
2nd. Avt. Mldcloport. 01&lt;. It 6rlnlo.l~.

112·U78.

to Mercerville. Ohio, get on • ·

V•d Sel•2 mM• aut O•k

Ch11&gt;el Rd.. July 13th. 14th llo
15th. 9 AM to. PM.
Oeorge'e Creek-1.t hou111 an
right ob'ler RR tncko. Wed ..
Thu,... • Frt. 9 to 3.

Oerao•Sai•FMield-Centenr.y

Ad., Thuro., Fri., &amp; Stt. Boioto
""'""· omoib glrlocl- micrc&gt;-

wave, toys.

lttmi·IDO much to mentfc)n. 1A-

.
I Jl'emlby lol•llln-ory Tawn
Hau•. July 1•. 1·7 Clathoa,

11

Veterans ltiJ!Orlal Hospital
Mulberry Hell. Pomeroy,

w- 106-882-21...

Help wanted

or at

AVON · N1 ..... Coil Marlyn

6 '

-......-................
--·p····
····· ··'
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

....... ...........................
Julv 15th •nd 1&amp;1h. 9:00-15:00.

I••·

....

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avlnue, Box 1213
-·
llllllpalls. Ohio 45631

a . ts&amp;18.

Henry Hertmsn. Chester, Ohio.

'h ..... out . . . . . . . . . ....
lid.. off Rt. 7 .......... Swing oat.
top. clo-. he. . Int.. •illos.
..,., Clf ._,,, ••,,. Thurt.. 14th.

LISA M. KOCHl ••S.
Licensed Clinical NICiiologist

mi., watch forwhhedoublewide' ..
:•

trailer On right. Lots of mi.c, S.
new baby Items S. clothes. Juty

1otTIIINIIFri.&amp;Sot. 9toi.Milc. Blcycl•, Mopeds, lewn mo~oWr,
a...,.
Va mile out Gtor11'1 dMinet. ~cnic t1ble. canning
Cr.- Ad.
tyi)Mii..,. atectrlc sewing
mecfitine, 19 inch T.V .• lote at
Muh~f.. ly Y•d-Gortgo 8•1•
mloc. 614-18!1-3139.
loturdey·July II. 11-5. Roln or
·l hiM. Rlclng IMn mower. •Artt lime yard Nit. July 1.t and
olotlling ,..._ lodl-. kidl 0.1!), 18. 9·3. Co. Rd. 30. Foroot Run
.,.~ r:.-. houRd. 3 mlltt. tU'fl 81 Oll~nCNW
lt.m~, rolatllw. medium .._
Com-.. 3rc1 pioc• on loll.
c-ea coMOII ....,. other
mle from Rt. 7 afi' Geor10'1
Cr.-lld.·Kelly Dr. Follow algno
to Kelby Dr.
·

Dtpendlblt llearl111 Aid Slits &amp; Servid
Hearine EvalllltiOis For All Aaes

Yard Sale for 8ig 4 Church · Go '"
Co•·MercervHie Rd, ga epp . 2

w.nt to buy: UHd furniture and

antique•. Will bUY entire houll·
hold furrMtNng. Marlin Wede-

$32,900.00.

IINIY E. CLEUie
992-6191
.._ ,..,._ 949·2660
htllo
991·5691
TNCJ llfflt -·· 94f.2660
Ja HI .......- ... 915-4466

Will do bowaltttng in rrrv homo. '

O'A'ft hGUrt. Now hiring

moM of the following: C. pen-

Conified Licensed Shop
S.25·tfn

7-1-'11·1 .... 4

FEATURING :
Riviera
Cabinets
Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
Peachtree Door•
and Windows

ooll..,ton or delhloryt Work your

....., inl
No FIE!ITA
... - - HAIR
· · luot
walk
'A•
oppiicotlonl for oel~ =--;;:--;::-=-~SHIONS. 322 Second A.... torvlce_goo-lon&amp;oon-ltnt
.Business
acr-fromtllepork.UI-9ti!2. store. Pt. Pl.....t ..... Sind 21 Opportun
· ""
_ . . . . ta: So• Clo, 1&amp;7
•••
Dabbfe Shop. Oolng - out of c/oOolllpallo DablyTribuno. 8211
bu• .,.. . .-le.June - Juty2. eo ~ Thi!d Aw.. Golllpobio. Ohio
711....-alf.
411631.
I NOTICE I
lHE OHID VALLEY PUBLISH·
WANTED : Muiii · Tal1nted lNG CO . --~~~- you
4
Giveaway
experienced In oM or do bu•"'- wtth peopil you

SYRACUSE. 01110

PH. 949·2801
l-ll·ltn

Add -tlfui bod¥ ond bounce
to your hair wtlh a p.,...nent
WIY&amp;opriaed from •11.•8 com.

Most Foreign and

Repaire

NO SUNDAY CALLS

3 Announcemants

nRED OF PAINnNG?

Oomudc Vehicles

Res. 949-2860

Allllllll llceillenls

deorntktrw unll Dec. Fun jobl
k~. No

_ Pwty p;.,. FrM noo

•FREE ESTIMATES•

llew H-s luMt
"Free Estimates"

or

Soil

ChrittrMI Araund tt. World

also acid boil-and racl

.,
•

18 Wanted to Do

21~1.

..

•

Call us far your mobile homl
lnsurlnce; Miller Insurance,
304·812· 21.t5. Alto! •uta.
ho,., Hfe. hellth.

Sentinel Office •t 114-982-

-·

I

lnaurance

816-25&amp;-1398.
..
Will do bobylittlng in rrrv hemo. ~
Mondoy-Thurod.,. 9 AM-2 PM. St. Rt 35. Coill14-••a-.OIIO.
....
EARN EXTRA MONEY during Hou • pelnting • blrn roofe, ,
tho Summer: Got out of tho Aef•anc:efu""hed. Clllt .tter 1 1
hou.. become • Daily Sentin.l l PM. 116-4.1-1790.
...,., ..rter. Rou'" o..., tn

advtnCid clrQiitry. Exceflent

Most Wells Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Alao Install 8r. Service All Types
Water Pumps

- c... W¥

••n •~•1200

top
peopleS1l_,. to ltitrt ptus
per .__..,
ctunrN ..ion. Pl....-nt woradn9

requi...........

Call Collect (304) 372-4331

Cl-iJied PfiP' cmrerl"'
/flllowin6 teler'toM ••dwtnpa ...

TourGuldee-M81•&amp; fiMMie. Our

bl• tho
Coil
1·816-288·1•22. ••ki'l&gt;rSuo.
ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
TIUUNEES
Wet""n you In molnton..O.ol

I. H. lttgle, OwMr
Rt. I, lax 74-A. liply, W.Va. 25271

·==-·==:==:::...,::-:

13

Help Wanted

coNilt'-. Areolyb'unpl-=oto
work. Friendly. neat • Mpend•

B&amp;c DRILLING Co.

li:&amp;E-

fta

. . ...

NEED WATER?
CALL

Business Services

1:.o~

bl11 be floating on o cloud wfth
rhe ~you'll fnd In the
' .,. cJQssl(ieds.

The Daily Sentinai-Page-t1

Ohio

the news

·~

.

toys. ""- ~.. " " 01&lt;111·
mOllie.-•

-ell.

Hamm Rftidence. I.Dit of good
hlmll, p;.,t
flo:. prloo

1e1ye.

cu,.,n .. etc.

Frklay July II only, •••. 8ahtnd
in i'lutlond, Ohto

Omlo Bcheal

Claro JlfiHIIpa.

·

•

••

.......Pt.Pleuent ...... -·
&amp; Vicinity
..................................

�Wednesday, July~1,;,3;;,:·~1~9~B~B.__ _ _ __ __________P_om_e_ro_v_-_M...,id_dl_e.,.port
__• _o_h_io_ _ _ _ _,...._ _ __ _ _ _ __T;.;h.:.:e;,;D
:;.a
: ;i;.!ly..:S:.:e;;;nt::;in
:,:.:ei::;_-.,;,P.:a.::
ge:.-_,:,1:,
3

• •'

P
31

Wednaacla , J

Pom&amp;loy-Middleportr Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel.

51 Household Goods

Homes for Sale

BORN LOS

56 Building Suppliee

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry

'

13. 1988 -;:,.

see;~o~

~~~~~~~------·.

78

WriaJtt

FIL.~ I ~

Auto Pllrtll

'/OUe

8t AcceUorlea

ow~

luilclngM_,.il
8-.
brloll. - • • · otc . Clou&lt;lo Win·

"TmH~

plpoo. win-

Television
Viewing
•

WOl D
GAM I

M

WED.. JULY 13

O four
Reorronge

_letters

of

ttle

~rornbled words be·

low

fO

form four simple words

EVENINO

tort. Rio Orondo&gt;'O . Coli 814246-8121.

8:00 (I) 1110 Valley Devil' s
Masquerade
.I}) (j) . . ()) liD) •
@Newt

Con..... block•· on ..... iid
orrlollvory. M•on-ci.Goll olio . _ co.. U3'h l'lno ..
Gollioollo. Ohio. Coli 114-44&amp;2783.

GJ

® SpotuLool&lt;

&lt;Il Degre"l Junior High
Spike's period Is iale; Yick
l!kes Melanie and seeks •
romantiC advice. 1;1
(Jl Dr. Who
18 (!]) Happy Dayo
II)) ShowBiz Today

tDI Goad Time•
0 car10011 Expre"

.....;:;.G_:I.,..:2M
.:....,::..E. .D,...--~
: 1

~.

I 1 I

-;'.

l . "1

.-;..F_E:::,..:N:. . ;.I:-.:.K;,...-11
An old-timer sat on a park
' "',...-,:, bench
watching the pe ople pass.

~

I I I I

I:Dii (]) Father Knows Beat

- ~S,. . . .;.S: . . :L:;. . :U~:E. .;N:;..,.:S:..,--11 C) l::m~lete

8:30

'----1- ...1..-I.......L-

8Fandango '

e (I) ill) NBC Nightly News

i

Spollnllta

(JJ II()) ABC Naws E;J

&lt;Il Body 1!1ectrlc
(Jl Nightly Butlne" Report

I

.
.
.
.
He turned lo his friend and
..-- - -- - - -----. sighed , "The future isn'l wh at i1

. ) I . 1 16 I

·e

1he chuckle quo1ed ·

by filling in the ml$$tnQ words
.L....J you de.,.elop' from step No. J below .

PRINT NUMeERED LETTERS IN
THES E SQUAI!.ES

•o

UNSCRAMSlE l ETT ERS TO
GET ANSWER .
.

Gil
cas Newa
18 (!]) Hogan'• Heroea
II)) I n - Politico! ...
tDI Jtfferiont
8 You can Be a Star

I

SCRAM.LETS AN SWERS
Sorely - Doubt - Party - Votive -- IT the LOUDEST

8:35 (]) carol Burnett

From the " didja ever nolice" department The person who
.knows lhe leasl, usually knows IT the LOUDEST .

7:00 (I) Remington Ste8le
Hounded Sleele·

e ()) PM Megezlne

BRIDGE

•

(JJ SporteCetrt.r (L)

(JJ En-lnment Tonight
&lt;Il (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
N-Hour (1 :00)
(J) P..,._,, Court
Gil Newt
18 (!]) Star Trek
II)) Moneyllna
Ol ill) Wheel ol Fortune

Small 4 room hou•. lot Nnl to
r"""• odgo.law20'o. 304-67113030 or 67!1-3431.

, Owner mO'ttfng an•lout to •II 3

'*"'·

btdrDDmt, 2
flnilhld
~-. 81h.,.. centellwt\1·
bit loan, 304-875-3030 or
67!1-3431.
Mutt Sell nlc:e 2 bedroom home,

*18,900.00, good location,
thown by aPpcH""'-1t. 304&amp;75-et39 or 675-1553.

2 b41drqom " A '' fnlme, onelta'e
wtthnla.yiird.,dthldet,.., 8
... old. *22,000.00. 304-8751185.

3 biodr_,, 2 botho, lull ftnohod

balem.m. n fiN furance end

cent•l elr, g . .g&amp; fenced yard,
e12.000.00. 2414 Mt. Vornon
Avo.. Pt. Pit, coli 304-8751774.

32 l\llobile Homes
for Sale
1972 wtndlormobRe t)omewith
2 car glt'lge. 5 rnlnuat from

town on Goorvn Crook Rd. Coli
614-388-9352 befo,. 1 PM.
Must Sell-1979 Uberty mobile

home, 3 BR .• 1 bath, underpin.
nlng. Good condition. Alldng
HIOO. Neg. Coli 614-3811-

9644.
NrN Moon mobile horN with
.. .-ndo. Stow. refrig...tor,
dithwwthlr, air eondltlonen. all
n tiW c •pat. EntIre home in

exc.llent condition. MovingMull Sell. Coli 814-446-3852
· or 448-2912.
1984 oiiCtric 1 4&gt;&lt;60 Flo~w. 2
BA .. 1'h b. h. e1o.ooo. Rontod
~-re,cfr to mow into. C.lf
114-216-1927-ingo.
1918 Schultz rilobile home. 2
IR .. CA. ea,ooo. Coli after 9
PM. 614-448-8504.

a
Nice 2 poulbfv 3 BR . houae In
Middleport. AC.. dlo,_oher.
garbaga dltpo•l. full basem.,t.
Call 814-448-9205 after 1!5 :30
PM.

for

2 &amp; 3BR . All utilitiea pMd81tcept
elec:trickv. Ccn\ollniemlocatlon.
Coli 814-446-8668 or 4464008.

Trailer for rent. Rt. 588. 2 BR. 1
b81h. Coli 614-446-6193.
2 BA .• unfurnished mobile
home. Prtvate lot on Rt. 588.
AC . Adu~oo~. Col1614-446-

4607 or 448-2802.
Furnished 2 BA . moblie horne. 2
miles from Gallipolis on Rt. 141.
Coli 614-.4 46-4109 or 379
2740.

12x10. 2 bedroom, Trailer for
ala In Vinton , Ohio. Price
nogodoblo. 814-742-2060.

2·2 BR . mobile homes-one wkh
exp~n do lvW.g room. Nice cond.
Coli 814-446-8726.

1174 Champion 14x66 total
tilltv 1urrihsed. will consider
trod- 06.900.00. 304-5762381

2 bldroiom traihir on lot at
Southside. drilled well wfth new
pump, •5.000.00. 304-6753488.
19BI hW bed roOm mobile
home, 14x70, for sale« .ent,
304-675-7988.
1970 Windtor.
10~~:1

3267 or 304-773-5024.
2 bedroom. furni1hed mobile
homo. 304-875·6512 or 6753900.

44

Apartment

1978 Windsor 14•70 3 bodrooms. 2 bath.. centl'lll air·. good
cond. priced on inspection.
304-875-2580.

Fanns for Sale

48 acre f•m. mi~V between
Bi~l and Rio Grande on SR.
554. 038,900. Coli 614-5238558.
Farm Tribbte Road, 7mil81 from
Rt. 12MasonCaunty, 31hacrn.
Hou• and bu ifdingl.

755-7290.

can

304-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

IPpl, furrished. W11her-Oryer
CIN'p&amp;t,

newly

Regonc:y, Olc.

Apts. Call 304--87!-11104, or
675-5386 or 875· 7738.
New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home in

city. Aduhs only. Parking. Call
&amp;) 4-446-0338.

BEAUTIFUL APAR11\IIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jackson
Aka from ' 8183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 814·4482568. E.O.H.
Brookside Apartments: l.acated
offBIAwHieRd.- 1 BR . apacious
apartments wtth m odern kitchen
end washer-dryer hookups, csble talwltlon available. Call
614-448-2127.
Ups•Jrs unfurnished apl. Car-

1

acre and up bu II ding Iota and

rnodular ho.me sites. Tu~rs
Plllfni·Oieltef \IIMtet, I'OI!IIItNif
to e~ch lot. G14-985-3594.

16 acr• foF •le. Beed1 Grow
Rd. , Rut ..nd. Gas Willi, montHy
incoma off well, t10,000. 814-

992·3901 .
Ashton. large building Iota,
mobile hornet permitted. pubtlc:
Wlter. also rtvtr lots. Clyde
· Jr. 304-578-2336.

ee..tlfUI river lots one ac:re plua.

public water, Clyde Bo"Mn, Jr.

304-176-2331.
LOTS. one ape, lwei wooded,
dty wat•. Jerldto Road. owner
fln.ndng. good terms, 304372·8408 or 372-2578. ·

two 1 acre lots with pWIIC

watar, Jerryl Run Road,
• 4,100.00each. conlidertnlde.
304.576-2313.

Hi
41

IlLilS

Hom• for Rent

Nicoll' fumlollotl omoll ~·•·
Aclrho onllo. Rot. roq ...cl. No
- · Colll1~0338.

2 bedroom furnilhed apt NeYII
Heven, reftfence and Hc:urity
deposit required, 30•·B82UI7 or 304-773-8024.

Beech Street Middleport. Ohio,
2 badroom fumllhld apertment.
·Jtlitiel pehl, "'terence~ . PhOne
304-882-2866.
.
New ground floor 3 rooms and

bath, c•peted. washer and dryer
hooll up. porch, prtvete parking
Jnd antmnat. 304-67&amp;.4880 or
675-1962.

45

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Second
Aw .• Gallipolis. e125 a mo.
Ulilities s-id. Slnale m.. e. Sh.-e
bllh·. Call «8·44"18after 7PM.
ROoms for ...rt-week or month.
Slarting at S 120 a mo. Gellia
Hotel-614-448-9680.

'

2 BR . apts. B clol8ts, kitcflen-

hook-up, ww
paln•d. dock .

APAR11\IIENTS. mobile hornet.
houl8s . Pt. PleasantendGellktolis. 814-448·8221 .

46 Space for Rent

for Rent .

1 2Jc;65 with

Z add on. woodburner,
Wither and dt'flll, aircond, must
be mowd. 304-891-3802.

33

2 bedroom mobfle home Middleport, Ohio, reference end •cur·
lty deposit .equired. 304-882·

p8'18d. utilities ~I d. No children.
No ...... Coll614-446-1837.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo P•k.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailera. Call 814-992·
7479.

Space for small lrailert. All
hook· ups. Ca~e. AtaoeHicleney
rooms, air and. cabte. M•on.
W.Vo. Coli 304-773-5851 .

.

53

Chevy 'h ton pi·ck-up. AecentiV
restored bocfV, nM PJIIInl, many
naw parts. 380, 4 spd, 81,000
milt~. Run• greet. ih•pl Cell
614-448'7849- 5 PM..

Antiques

47 Wanted to Rent
Young coupla looking to rent
home with garage, prefenbty In

Merchand1sr:

1177 Ford. 4x4. SA ton. 4 speed
trans .• 480 cubic fncl'! engine.
' n8'1V 8 ply tiret. V_.y good
condklon. 814-949-2237.

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antlq..-..

1124 E. Main Streat, Pomer~.
Hours: M.T.W 10..m. to &amp;p.m .•

Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 814-992·
26,26.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Calllh... l Used nre Shop. Over
1 . ooo~r.o. o1 ...
13~ 14, 15.
18. 18.5. 8 mU• out"'· 218.
Coii814-Z56-8251 .

u.

Wh..rch•s·ntw or u•d. 3
whollod oiiCtrlc - - •· Coli
Aogon Mobllty colloet. 1-61487fi.Hll1. ·

Oo Y'"'roolf afworl Vlo~ FIESTA
HAIR FASHIONS today for 1
refr•,h lng ftiW' _hlllrstyfe. Cuta
ore jolot ee.99. 322 Soooncl
Ave.. ecr011 from the park.
814-446-915.2.
AlUminum window awnlngt,
32'• wooden door. 430 J .O.
tractor·"Nide front. Call 614448-3413.

ToleYiliono. VCR. 74 9 . pot·
unver VolluMgen bus, Registered Poodle, &amp; 2 8R. hou.e In
country. eon 614-446-8976 . .
400 w.tt IDUNisy•em, 4-:150
WOII orak•s complete with
Snek•
Shvre mlcs, stendt
(ldetll for Oo1pel Group-church
•ound systtm). t1200. Call
614-446-2311 otter 8 PM.

57

~ectlic Lowery Or91n. Mint
condition. · t700 firm . Nwtt
hBIVy duty exerciM bike $76.
6 14-992·2571.

Individual gutllr l111an1, b•

gintwra. •rlous gultlrlst. Bruni·
cordlo Muolc. 614-448·0887.
Jeff Wam-'ev instructor 814.448·8077. tun:tmer openin.gs.

Singer uwlng miiChine, RoY,al
manuel typewriter. make-up

mtrror. prMIIUN canner. 814843-5190.

PORTA8LE SIGNS: Lighted
e199; non-lighted e199. Free
dellwry-llttlrl 1hru Jutv 1 &amp;th.
WV 1-800-642·2434 Ohio 1·
8!10-133-3453 ony~mo.
20 cu. ft. deep trent. 304-8755663.

1984Fordlempo.auto.• lttiUIO·
*2799. 1984 Ford Eocort, 4
spd .. nloo-·e1889. John'• Auto
Sate•.

Below Holiday

59 For ·sale or Trade

1983 Chry~er Yorl&lt;or.
Auto., air. ~1814.. 379-2728.

'

.

Want to trade full size Mev1811
washer &amp; dryer In good condf.
don for epenment llze washer •
dryer of tqUII value. CaR 81 ....
446-9280.
Would ljk8 to trade hou• in
Middleport for .,...u term. Clll
Robert D""lo 814'992·5095.

rarm SuiJPiir.s
&amp; ltvr.stock

1979 Oodgo Ornnl. V•v good
cond . 4 spd. transml11ion.
*810. Call 614·258-6251.
1967 Moroodeo 250 S. 02000.
1974 Chevy pickup. t975. Call
614-446-0335.

1988 Ford Ranger pickup
•&amp;.000.00. 304-676-5880.

CAOSSioSONS
U.S. 35 W"t Joclcoon, Ohio.
.
814-286-8451.
Mu-v Ferguson. New Hollen d.
Bush Hog Sal• II S.vice. Over
40 UHd trlctorl tochOOII from
&amp; complete tine of n~~N &amp; used
equlp,..nt. Largest •lectlon in
S.E. ~io.
·

·1987 ChM1111·5,000 mllot.
1985 Skyhowk-83.000 mll11.
1182 Arioo-73.000rnlloo. 1983
Colt-40,000 mnu. 11181
Ch-•·79,000 mlloo. 1982
Ch-to-14,000 rnn.. 1977
ToyDhl Corafla-78,000 n:tiln.
Belt offer Call 614-6775 or
446-8980tvl.

73,000 octuol mil•. e.1900.
Coll 814-256-823!1 after 5 PM.

1987 Lincoln Town car .
*17.000. E.CoL cond. Coli
114-246-9238.
RED HOT b1r91lnal Drug dea!·
.,.. can. boats. plan• , ..d.
Surplus. Your ar••· Buyer~
Guido. 111 805-687·6000. Ext.
5-4562.

or

74 llllotorcvcles

1-------- 1983 XL600R. Exc:oi. cond. Coli
affer 8 PM, 814--446-4473.

IYtningl.

head mm motorcycla Eacelent
ohepo. 814-985-4308.
1981 Pauport MotorCycle.
77cc. LowmR•ge.1800mll•.
6 14-992'7789 .......go.

1981 Vam.tta 7150ae Virago. II&gt;
miDI 4.589, tJU: CJDnd. wtth two
hllrneto, •1 .000.00. Coli 304875-7373.
1986 XR 200 R dirt bike, good
cond. • 7110.00. 304-675-2498.

'

1979 Honda Hawk, stierp,
ueo.oo. 304-87&amp;-0758.

75

1 BR . apt. nt•HMC. 1ad.ltt. No
peu. Colll14-448-4782.
Furnls~ opt. t1 80. Utl~leo
Plid. Shere blth. Sinde m~le.
919 Second Aw., G.flipolls.
Coli 446·4418 oftor 7 PM.

Boats and
llllotors for Sale

26 fl. &amp;ayHo• onr100r. 1181
wl&lt;lo boom. Ill oltc!ronlc. .....,.
~-.s, ate. 310 V·l eng.•
o l - 6. Very low ho•o.
.27.800. Coii304-7Z7·8110.

A. . .fNOI, 2 9R ., 110fumlohoci
e11s. w- po1c1. 11 38 S•
cond, Oolllpallo. Coli 446-4418
att•7PM.

---0.

1173 Iter- 17 ft. Trllltrl
loot wlttt lop .,d - · N....,
128 HP E-rude
- . .. Campi.,. with CIMoo
TroH•. UIOO. Cltll 114-1181318.

Furni•had llfflotency •pt .-3
r - • both. Corpot ...........
out. Prlvoto lo quiet. Aclrlto..,..
Coli 114-446-4807 or 44&amp;2602.
Fur..-hlld J~P~rtment In town for
ron1. Col1814-44&amp;-1423.

1870- 81. 3110. 4 ,,..d,

21R. op1.-Rio Orondtt. W- l
trooh polcl. U2S o mo. oluo
d ........ Coli 114-24&amp;-1178.

1111. Pard Eooan Wogan,
11.000 ..... 11.. ""· AM-FM
• • -· biro ctowl. Coli 814141·2434 trfl• Bp.m.
.

*1100. Coii114-III:Z.I111.

I

322.

14 ft. · law lloo loot. 1.8
Mercury HP ond 1nllor. 614892·2794.

-------

161t.llbll'gloubootw"htroll•
n28. ~... 304-871-7841

_
ov::-on-:-lrtgo..:.-·":":'":":'-:-"--:-Fllr-rm 11 ft ln-11-ou._d

1181 VW Robllit. Fuel ~-d. 260 hp M•oruiH, - r "'""
cloth 1-lor. blocll. UOO. lng. p . - 1rlm. • • oond,
._....... Coll614-892·7348. 304-87&amp;-3601.

and reeumee In cue
ljke me.,_ becomes
famous!"

liD 01• - · 11t -lng 1178 Collin t:Mor. 30 cdow
wltNI. ~~~- end rotlo, ....... lui top. tollot.
d - lnoldo .,d out. aood 9•
II- Ill, coii304-87&amp;-

"''1Hta 304-773-11938.

S'tt1:EPER ..d eewlng mechlrw~
repelr. partl, and IUpplla Plak 'l 1
JJP and del~. O.Vis Vac:u...,l:lf ; '
Clt•ner, on• h•lf mile u,a &gt;'J,
Goc._ Croolt Rd. Coli 814-•. :,
•446-0284.
·
, _

ot-.
7281.

· ·

you WANi ITf

&gt;.

·'
,.

II)) cro..llre
!121 ill) Joopt1rdyl
tDI Benoon
8 VldooCountry
7:35 (]) Andy Grlftlth

t) \1141\ ~· H(~ ' "'

ALLEY OOP
WELL., ~W!

construction company

HE

execU11ve. heading a tos1er
,family of lour racially diverse
boys, lrles to provide the
love and slabilily each each
boy needs.
® Pro Beuball
(j) G ()) Growing Pains
Mike plans to join his
Hawaiian glrllrlend In L.A. (A)

C&gt;lANGI'O DIRECTION
MERE!

g
Center' Pianist,

1::;.. .

11-\t. DiCT100ARY? VJP.AT

l&lt;tW Cf IDIOT' (.UC(JlD
'SIT NJD READ l11E.

LE.XI&lt;aAAtJ£

Dlcna.JARY 1

. NO,

:r.

WAT~t-IED AAWN
Df~1E ~ICA

Myatariea Features include

1118 slory ol a man serving a
life sentence for a crirtle 5

HAL.f...
t-IAI-IN ON CA!3-f...e.

arl'd\:

witnesses Insist he didn 't
commll Robert Slack hosts .
(A)
(JJ CJ ()) Hoopennlin Harry
raises elh!cal questions by
buying a car lrom a drug
dealer. (R) 1;1
II)) Larry King Live!

ldtchen ln ..llollono, lloctlcal.- •
et;tncnte.brldlend bloCk layl~g. ;:
eatlmms.: 304-l?a-2440.
r,,4

Ak: ... TrMTrlmming . . dStump ;
R e - froo eotlmotn. 304671·7121.
'

:1

--------~--------~
' ~~;:
Mlch ... )RnkltntlaiAirCondt-

tiii!J The EqUIIIllr

tlonlng •d r.trlgllmion, re- 1 ~
ahlrgt 1nd repelr •Mea. 304- , 1
488-1781.
· I•

Telephone operator
acldentally overhears

conversation

------;;'i..
~

CAR'II!R'S PWM81NO
AND HEATINO
Cor. Fourttund Pine
·,
Gollloollo. Ohio
• •
l'lroM 814-446-3188 or 614448-4477

:;
'•
~·
.
,.
,,

9:30 (JJ CJ (J) Slap Maxwel

rM SORRY l MISSED

Story Slap seeks rapport
with ex-wife Annie at a parly
full of hostlllly .(A) 'E;J
8 Now Couttlry
10:00 (I) Streight Talk
It()) ill) Modorn Medical
llfeakatrougha Four s1orles
take viewers into the
hope..f!lled world of
progressive victories in the
never-ending battle to
conquer Hlnessllfi and
debilitations;
(JJ 8 ()) Spenaar: For Hire
Sgl. Belson's beloved niece

SNUFFYS CARD PARTY
LAST NIGHT

------------------··
=B:-:4- -:E""Iect-r..,.lc-al..,---- ;;
&amp; RQfrigeretion:.J8'

.

• rWf:.

I ' -.. ~!

Rlll!l}dentlll or cornrnercl~
·
.•t
ing. New llrVIoe or
~~~:
Ucen•d tlectridan. &amp;t
free. Rld.,.our Electrical. :JOic
871-1788.
i

__________

General Hauling
;;
..::..(,
Poole, ''
•:

dies of a cocaine overdose .

.THE GRIZZWELLS®

W'iNawa
(JJ An Empire of Raaaon
Examine the debates thai
took placa in 1787 and 1788
In New York Stale over
ra11ficalfon of lhe United
Slates ConsliiUtion.
1m 1D ill) WIHgUY Vinnie
has to root oul a mole In the
mob to pro1ec1 his own
cover. (R)
18 11]1 Honeymoonara
i1J !venlng Nowa
0 Tlte Naw Mike Hammer
Murder In the cards
Crook and Chtlu
10:05(]) MOVIE: Shlortd IPGI (t :32)

I OO'T Bai~E IT...
! 'M WATCHING RE·RUNS
ONTV ...

Clo,..no, Wollo. Dol"""y An~~! ­
u-. Coii -, 114-44&amp;-7404-No
Sunday collo.

J • J Wiler Service. Swimm:~

pools, cls•rns, W'llllll. Ph. &amp;1f!i

...

24&amp;-928!.

' , ,,

~·

A • R Water S•vlce. Po~~
cl••rns. well•. lmmedia(ei, ,r
1.oooor 2.000gollonodll.....,, ,,
Coii:ID4-671·U70.
·;;&lt;; ••
·

...

~Rupo,
.•

&amp;.r\1\ce:--'· ·

1...,101 - • ltarfing. Jomoo

lahulor 814·742·2478 or ·
IVtlr•tle Sahul•r e14·742.. '

•'', ,

,,

WIJWrton'a Water Hauling,' 11
re"dMlJie rltll. ll'l)medlate'l!
2.000 gallon d - . , elotorno.'.'•
Poole. wtll. eJC. aalf3o4-57&amp;- ; ~

2911.

.

,,

_, :

DumJI """" dollvory ond buoh . •
~~ ·mow!nv phono 304.87&amp;- •

~3~1~0'::::;::;;::::;:::====·~ :
87

a

·1 II

Jr. w•r
dear"•· w.ll1. Clll 11~
. 171 ,
......

:so!'r"'"

Upholstery

- - - - --

abo~t

murder.(A)
11J Street Hawk Vegas Run

&amp; Heating

Dllard Wll• S•vlce:

diJ

E;l
9:00 (IJ 700 Club
It!}) ill) Unao1Yod

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
hou• coli oervicln~ 0 E. Hqt ' :
Point, .w•ahers. dryers end ci
ltiWH. 304-878-2398.
I
:,

85

(!) Live from Uncotn
Vlamimir
Fettsman and Fredrica von
Slade fl!lrform. 0
1m Emmy Awartfa for Sports
18 MOVIE: Band ollhe
lfand (Rl (1 :50)
.
II)) PrimaNowa
18 !121 Jake and lite Fatman
Falman seems lo have alllhe
ingredients tor a swift
conviction. (R)
tDI MOVIE: Ca ..blllltCI iNA)
(1 :42)
0 Talea ollhe Gold
Monkey A Distance Shoul of
Thunder
QD NultVIIIo Now

8:05 (]) MOVIE: Blue Water,
White Death IGi (1 :39)
8:30 (JJ CJ ()) Head ol the Clan
Charlie and Arvid meal al a
Woody Allen film feslival. (A)

• 11

Roofi.,. flllrnl!lfl, bf!lhfOOm

•

A~ O~OMATOMA~IA(AL

Fetty TriO Trimming. lt~P
rom01181. Coll304'875-1331. ,

•

1;1

1:00 (])Crazy Like a Fox Sunday
In tho Park with Harry
It!}) ·ill) .Home F- A

:~

.

A-

(JJ Hollywood
Squares
® Bell ol SchOiaetic Sports

It (I) Judge

--~~------------~~!~·
Concroto &amp;optic Tenl&lt;l • 160(1"-'

2454.

e ())

e

r,

- - - -'' --..;·:..
·

19"71 500 Honda Twin, owr~

············

t

1980 Vomoho dirt bike. Coli
814-446-2350.

Kowoookl 175 • - wlloolor,
u8o.oo. 304-576-~704.

•me - CMh whh
. . .. . . _ .......... 0 ...
d potlo, ·
d
· 3 Mil• Olft
........... 111-not ....... 0 Rclo Op.., 9orn 10 8pm
Included. 'liortlrla ot Ullt por Mon. 1hru Sot. ~- et 4-446-

'•

.;;8:;;2=:.;;:P;::Iu:m:;bi:;:::n:g=:::::;•;:,
}

1982 J1o ntiac J •2000. 4 cv 1..
~ ~~ AM
·
od nd
cru-. u"·
·wry go 00 '
Truck topper for .,ort bed trucll: .
Coli 614 '~ 4 "' 9 ~ 82 ·
1981 Statloll Wogan Chovrolot
Clprlca. colllpslble third seat In
reor. *3000. Coli 814-4468239
·
1979 T· 81rd. Excel. concl. Now
motor. brak•. ~oclte. t1ra1. Cell
614-2411-5188.

8275 lnlorrwtiOrwl dlooll tractor, new dr-. . n.w bush ho.g.
• 2395. 990 Dovld Brown troctor, *3880. Nt!W 6ft. pullbush hog. he.wy duty getr box.
UIO. OwMr wHI lnonoo. Coli
814-286-8122.

~~

1987 Sur'*' Ouacl Racer 500.
New concl. Many extra1. Call
814-446-7521.

1951 HoriOfO.VIdoonPM~d.
.Recently overhadad. Also mile
pBriL .3000. 614-949-2293

..,t.

mo. Colll14-381·71110.

anglne. Call 814-992·7214
614-992-3224.

1977 Thund•blrd. 2 owners. ·

One BR unf\lrnlst.d
New
tl•pet. Ringe • nrfrlg. furnlohod. W81or lo gll'bogo poid
Oopolit 10quirod. Coli 614-4484345.

....... •

19~ Jeoi&gt; CJ5. Hardtop. 380

7:30

1m Wheel o1 Fortune 1;1

••

1978 Jeep CJ-S. •Excel. cond.
Call 814-367-7897.

1987 Hoi.da Crl00. e11c cond.
t1 .700.00. 304-17&amp;-1780.

10 Dey•

j\JE&lt;iOTIAiE" .r I(II

po

!:

Stl:rke Lew nand ShrW Service.
304-175-3956 ,or 304-818, .C
2903.
....
1+~1

197!1 van equipped far fishing,
hunthlg. camping. New brakes,
paint 'job, 318 motOr. helders.
1700. 614-992-6881 .

1978 280 Zo runi great. BoW
folr condition. *825. Coli 614·

l----------

~86-8522.

II

~D

''

Von. 38.000 mll01. Loodod. Coli
after 5 PM, 814-448-2603.

Top quality hydraulic olla.
grta•. fueloil1&amp;motorolafor· 1982 Pontiac Fireblrd. Loaded.
f•m equip,_,, CoiiBurllle 011 Good oond. t2400. Coli 614Compony· 614-446-4119.
256-11!32 or 245· 9223.

1030C.setl'lctorw/ 10ft.bush
hog, *4350. MaoeyHorr~pony
tn~ctor w/culltvetor 6 m~ng
machine, Good •lwpe, t&amp;SS.
aw- Will' flnonco. Coli 814-

~

HoW

l'

Rotary or cable taal drilling. · r;
MoatWIIttcomJII.CIHfaamedav. 1,
Pump all• end ~&amp;Ntce. 304- 1 ,
:8.:.95-:..:.31::.02~._ _ _ _...:...:;·-- .• !'I

1---------1981 Plymouth Vayogor Mini

1519.

- -

Vanll &amp; 4 W:D .

.73

448-1827 betVtBG!' 7 &amp; 8 pm.

61 Farm Equipment

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unc:ondltlQr~~l ltftltlme guar.wtae. local m.-encee furnished.
Fr•·...,-eltlmltet. Call collect
1·614-237·0488, ciOf or night.
R o, g e r 1 I • • e m a n t
w-pioollnv.
-

/

eon

In~·

Konougo.

1967 Ch•y 4 dr Soden. N'ow
Cable Nelaon spinet pleno. pro- p.tlnl-ttres. dual txh.,at. •OOftt
f•llonolyoppnrl•dt1,200.00. enalne $; trensmllillon. Call
Must ucrlflce t971S.OO. Phone . 11"-378-2424.
daytime 304-875-3842 ......
lngo 8;75-8881 .
1982 Oodgo Chtr-- AC. Ex·
eel. interior. good body. Runs
good. 12000. Coli 114-2581134 oftor 5 PM ..

.

111Ji Cu. Ft. freezer. Phone
614-992·5830. Avery Ooegllln

1981 Pontiac Bonn. Brougham.
Ftill · di.-1. Coli 614446-3044.

51 Household Goods

Lu•wlous Tar11 Townhou•
opwutwnto. EIOQMI 2 t1ooro. 2
.... lui b81h .......... . . - .
r - do.....,.,ro. CA.. dlo·

IIHow TO

11

gil., 1&amp;00gll. tl"dJet Aeratiori ' ~
,.,....._ Foctory 1nlnld -k~~.
1982 Dotoun plctc-up. e1200. .
ohop. RON · EVANS ENTilR:;t.
614-742·2442.
'
PRIS~S. Jockton. ~lo. 1·800.:J.'
537·91128.
' ;~
1981 ola cyl. .... ~ ...
rolet. 1 owner. 1981 Four door
RON EVANS ~NT£RPRIIES · :··
Oldlrnoblle cor. Coli 614&lt;985Septio
urnk p...,plng, eao PMi ,.,
3839.
IOid. Cei11 -800-837-91S28. ~. , I
. 'r'
198&amp; Ford ptckup. Runs good.
Pelnttng: lnttrlof' • Exit.fri! i
body noedl work. Coli 61 4-992·
Free ottlmotoi.
814-44$":1•
8943.
8344.
. -_
111.1 ~on Ford Truck. 1944 stake
Tro• • Stumo rem...l. ohodo !'-..,
body. Good Condtion. Aotlq,.
• ........ A..l•• mu!oll. 10p fOIJ, 111
orworld~vtnrck. n .950.Soeot
stane. •acing. Don•• t..~• ~~
Siders Equipment. Hendlrton.
wv.
•
:c.:;op:;o.:.o·:..
· e:..1:..4-:..4:..4:;•:..:9:;8:..48:::.:_ - _ "' .;:
RON·&amp;
TeiiV'Ialon Servlc8. :~
1978 Ford F100 plctcup, V· 8. 3
Hou•
a•s
on RCA. Qua'.,, I!
apeed. good condtUon. Phone
304-676-1988.
~g;..~:'2~;\ lno/";:'::4~~~;:

l\llusical

Instruments

For sale ; Mayt8g Wringer
w11her. 'f:liiCellent condition.
.. 00. 614-992·2558.

SURPLUS •. DENIM. ARMY,
RENTAL CLO'IliiNG. Comou·
tlagt vr•n. black whitt Metrc.pollurn dotlllng. PoiMical, builn~~s. edvertl-'ngendspeclaltln.
Novtfty T-shlnL caps, what.
nit. end retail. Sam So.,._
rvlle•s. Rt. 21 Rwenswood.
Fri., Set.• Sun.. Noon-8:00PM.
Coli 304-27:1-5885.

9662.

Trucks for Sale

72

Trailer spaces for I'Wlt, Locust
Road, Route On e,. 304~8751076.
'S tore budding 30K80 on Rt. 35
Henderson. W. Va. 614-44&amp;-

Do you HAvE

-------------------- ,.:•''

Whirlpool Air condltlo~er.
10.000 BTU 110 volt. 614992·784\ ..

•'

.,."'

~~--~~---------81
Home
:;'•
Improvements
:•

Spacious mobile horne lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.
304-675-3073.

rural area around Gallipolis. Call
11 Court St.-2 8R .. 2 bstha, . 614-446· 1915.
lditchen furnished, w / w G•Pet· - - - - - -- - - No pets. Off street parking.
• 326a mo. plus utilities. Dep. &amp;:
or!. Coli 814-446-4921.

Furnished- 3 rooms • b.th.
CINn. No pets. Ref. _
a. depOiit·
required. UtllltiJ!s furnished.
Adults only. Call 814-446·

'·
'•

Services

POmeroy and Middleport apart·
menlt. S1150 plus utilh'-. Call
614-992-6059. after 7p.rn. coli
614-992-7511 .

~ent

lklmey Miller
'Airwoll Klndgom Come
8 Crook and Cht!H
7:05 (]) Andy GriHIIIt

I

Larga 2 bedroom. sun room,
wllher·drver hoc:*-up. com·
pi--'Y •diCOffted. adults preferntd. No pets. Raference.
t210 month plus depoait. 222
N. 3rd,. Middleport, Ohio. 614- Apertnoenl for rent. t228 a
month. O.polit .,.qu'red. 814992-3189.
992·1724. After 6pm or 9923 very nice hou•s. One. 4 5119.
bedroom, and two, 2 bedroom.
reference and deposit .equlred. Newly, rediCOrlted apartments
...IIebi" Utilllloo polcl. 0225.
814-742-2728.
par month, dopoolt roqurod. Coli
In Mldcleport Ohio. 3 bedroom 814-992· 5724 an.r 8:00 or
hou11 furnished, 304-882· 992·5119.
2188.
2 bedroort! apts. Middleport.
All electric home. fu l sim t185-t185.permonth. Zand4
b•ementan dgar11gf\ 304-175- bedroom· hou•• in Pomeroy
•ea. $200..t225 per month. All
3217.
parttv furnished. Ref•ence re·
3 bedroom houae on Sand Hill quirod. Oay 614·992·2381 W ·
Road for mnl or IBia, 304-773- enlngs 614-992·6723.
5974.
5 room unfumilhecl apt. 614992-5434 or 304-882·2566.

42 llllobile Homes

i11J

FRANK AND ERNEST

ntnt. 2
b.troctrna, ~;:•pet. Moe and
ctoon. No irroido polo. Dopoolt
required. Coll814-992·3090.
Unturnllhed hdu• for

14•70 Schultz. Z6x32 gaoage.
front pon:h. bock declo, I. 6
ocroL Coli 614-698-6348.

electric. unct.pennlng and par-

e

.,:

10:30 (IJ Arnarlcen Sltaptrflota

' PEANUTS

(!)hi-

'' FF:IEHD OF THE COURT''

IF I'M A FRIEND OF
TI-lE COURT, I-lOW COME
E JUD6E I-IATES ME?

..(!]) rle"-aont
Vl~tOCOIIIItry
11:00 (I) 1!1111lnglon SIMte Steeled
with a KIM, Part 2

a

•1111 m
Cll
Newa

• &lt;ll

a.. ac

® PIA llovltlna

&lt;Ili'IM LINt: Jlonraita of
Manlo o.rn•lon Patty

Duke l~all'lla Insight
1n1o mental 111neaa and
·
payclliatric trlltmant through

lntarYiaM w111t ptlllenta, their
apou• and children.
(JJ IliOn 011

NORTH
+KJ 102
"'AK 6 2

By James Ja~oby

7-13-88

.10 7 2

North had close to an opening bid , so
he was comfortable ba~king in with a
takeout double after E ast's weak twodiamond bid was passed . around to
him . The bidding ended up with South
in three spades. Frankly, i f I were
South, I would have bid four spades a f·
ter North's raise to. three. The play for
game is poor, but
lucky configura·
lion of the diamond honors changes
the odds to favor declarer.
-·
'West opened .the ace of diamonds .
Then, trying the obvious way to get
East on lead, .he switched to the eight
of clubs. Declarer won East's 10 with
the queen and played ace and king of
spades. With trumps dividing nicely,
all !feclarer had to do, it seemed , was
give up the obvious four losers. De·
clarer played his other high club and
then followed with dummy's A·K and
another heart. West won the jack and
continued with the queen. ('or no good
reason, South ruffed and now had to
give up two diamond tricks to East .
There's nothing brilliant about the
winning play for the overtrick. Declarer should simply let West hold the
trick with the fourth heart, shedding a
diamond. West will now have nothing
to lead but a club . That will let declar -

+J 9
WEST

EAST

.Q7

• 53

'QJ85

'10 9

+876 5 43

+ K 10 2

.A

tK, Q8 65 4

SOUTH
+A98 6 4

a

,74 3
tJ9 3
+AQ

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
·

West

Nortb

Pass

Pass
Db!.
3+

Pass
3+

Pass

East
2t
Pass
Pass

Opening lea d:

Soutb .

2.

Pass
Pass

+A

er ruff in dummy as he rids himself of
his last diamond loser.
Here's the moral : Bridge sometimes
just presents player With an unforeseen opportunity to gain tric ks. When
that happens, try not to overlook it.

a

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Indigent
1 Squabble . DOWN
6 Criticize
1 Win every
9 Relinquish
game
'
10 Dutch
2 Lily
cheese
variety
12 Young eel 3 Try to
13 Tower of ice outdo
15 Musical
4 OVId's
note
greeting
16 Director's 5 "The
word
Seven
17 Colorado 33 Brought
18 Sky Altar
Solution"
Indian
· into
19 Bed
hannony
6 Remainder 20 Donnouse
of straw
Swiss
city
34
Abrasive
7
Fruit
23
21 Devilish
drink
24 Bethlehem
substance
deed
export
36 "Leapin'
8 Summer
22 United
"
umbrella 25 Entrance
23Timothy
11
Yacht
26
Crazy
one
39
Short
Dalton
basin
27 Disparage
flight
film role
24Just back 14 Southern . 29 For shame! 41 Zuyder
from Reno
novel
32 Revolted
lr""T',...
27 Pass on
28 Trip
29 Partleche,
e.g.
30 Aquatic

'

·-

bird

31 Spiritual
35 Greek
letter
36 Guided
37 Molasses
derivative
38 Shaping
machine
40 Kind
of oxygen
42 Plimpton's
"Paper - "
43 Gennan
river
44 Tax expert
(abbr.)

DAD..YCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it:

71 13

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Is LONGFELLOW
•

. One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

for the three L's, X for the two O'sr etc. Single letters,

apostrQphes, the length and fonnation of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
RPHUJFWF&lt;(C
UC
G

H U LFA

GJUWT

EPWCJAGUWJ

OGOFC

UJ

C G Z

J

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RPCCULHF

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Yeaterday'1 Ceyptoquotet' POSSESSION NOT ONLY
HINDERS ENJOYMENT; IT INCREASES At/NOYANCE
WHETHER YOU LEND OR KEEP. --: BALTAZAR
GRACIAN
C) t918 King Felllurtlo ~. Inc.

'.

�Page-14- The Daily Sentinel

Up to 10

• •
•
IDISSIDg 10

ferry capsize

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAUGHLIN, Nev . tUPll -A
casino ferry boa t ra rrylng pass~ngers across the Colorado
River between Nevada and Arizona overturned Tuesday night,
dumping about30 people Into the
last moving water.
Capt. Joe Anderson of the
Bullhead City . Ariz. , Fire De· .
partment said 20 people wt&gt;rt&gt;
pulled to safety almost Immediately, butnineoriOotherswere
missing.

Joe Harri ngton, administrator
of the Bullhead City Community
Hos pital, said the nos pltal had
been placed on alert to treat the
Injured . He said lour of Injured
were en route to the hospital ,
apparently suffering from shock
and trauma .
Anderson said th e accident
occurred about 9 p.m . when a
casino ferry boat c apsized near
the dock of the Edgewater
Hotel-casino. one oftwoLaughlln

Wednesday, July 13, 1988

resorts owned by Circus Circus ambulance criws.
Enterprl.ses.
Laughlin Is a boomtown Io·
Anderson said three ambulan· cated on ·the Nevada side of the
res from Bullhead City were sent 'Colorado River where casinos
to the Nevada side of the river to . line the shore shoulder· to·
assist. He said eight fire depart· shoulder. Virtually every casino
ment divers were In the water has a fleet of ferry boat s to
within a few minutes to rescue transport c ustomers and hotel·
and search for the victims.
casi no e mployees betweerj
A spokesman at Mercy Ambu· Laughlin and Bullhead City,
lar.ce Service In Las Vegas said whi ch Is loca ted directly across
at least two divers were en route the river.
from Las Vegas as well as air

Ohio Lottery

Reds trade
two
. Expos

Daily Number
722
Pick 4
6488
Super Lotto

Page4

Partly cloudy, mild tonight.
Low In high 60s. Friday,
clearlnr, partly cloudy. High
·
In the 90s.

4,5,6,36,37 ,44
Kicker

399276
!•• . •• •

e
11M11TIS16 ITEM POLICY
Each of theM adventled items is required to be readily available for
aale In eaoh Krogtr Store, eKc:tpt 11 specifically noted in this ad . If we
do run out of en IKtvertiud item, we will offer you your &lt;lholca of a
compareblll kem, when available, reflecting the aame savings or a
ralncheck which will et'ltitle you to purchase the advenised item at the
a"-tloed pfico willlln 30 days. Only one vendor coupon !Nill be
accepted per item purchased.

Vol.39, No.47
Copyrighted 1988

•

at

1-lb. Pkg.

Gwaltney
Great Dogs
1-lb.

-

Pa~ing

•

(SOLD BY THE PIECE ONLY)

Because the athletic and band
bqpster organizations have
raised the necessary money to
exterally fund fall sports and
academic extracurricular actlvi·
ties, the Eastern Local Board of
Education hired several staff
members for the programs at a
special meeting Wednesday.
Hired were Arch Rose as head
footb.l'll coach; Ron Hill and Don
Eichinger as assistant football
,., coa~jles; ,_E!tn Ball as_,marcblng_ ~
' band director; Mrs. "l'.raxine

New Jersey
Blueberries

Bing Cherries

LB.

99 (

Buy One

~

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f

Luck's
Pork &amp; Beans

6-COUNT

Q

t

;!:

Freezer Pleezer
Ice Cream Sandwiches

i-

Get One

&gt;

Freel

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The Shelly Company Is just about finished
blacktopplnl the downtown bloclul of Main St. In
Pomeroy. Pomeroy VIIJare aad GTE Norlb are
sharln1 lhe coals of the blacktopplnr expenae.

&lt;(

"'C&gt;r

IN OIL OR SPRING WATER
CHUNK LIGHT

::&gt;

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Light &amp; Lively
Cottage Cheese

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24-oz.

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NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,
DIET PEPSI FREE, PEPSI FREE,

FROZEN

Kroger
Pizzas

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

10.1-10.8-oz.

2-Litar

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mlnary drawings of the proposed elevator for the
courthouse. The elevator Is deemed necessary by
the commissioners to serve the handicapped and
elderly citizens of the county for whom climbing
the many courthouse steps is either extremely
difficult or In ~orne cases impossible. Dittoe has
estimated costs for the elevator,, Including
architect's fees, at about $125,000.
If estimated costs are reliable, then the
commissioners are considering using this year's
county allotment of• Community Development
Block Grant funding to pay for the elevator's
construction.
·
A final decision on the elevator must be made bv
about Aug. 1. In order to meet state application
deadlines for CDBG funding .
In other matters. the commissioners okayed a
request fr.om County Court Clerk Linda Bentz to
attend a demonstration of a computer system in
Sylvania, Ohio; approved a sheriff's department
transfer of $1,500; and approved a secondary
credit line on the bond Issue for Fisher's Big
Wheel, as requested by counsel representing
Mellon Bank, trustee of the bond Issue.

Whitehead as elementary choir
director; Mrs. Gina Tlllts as
yearbook advisor and James
Huff as 12th grade class advisor.
Since no one from the certified
staff, as oflast night, has applied
for the positions of head volleyball coach, assistant volleyball
coach, and assistant football
coach, the board has directed
Supt. Dan Apllng to advertise
outside a! the district's certified
s.tafL..to. ~.flU. these positions.
~
,.

Persons interested In being considerated are to contact the
superintendent's office at 98fi·
4292.
The board .~?,Proved the Brown
and Snouffer · tl.fe and Safety
Equipment Co. to Inspect and
service the district 's fire exttngulshers for the new school year
and set Friday, July 22. at 6p.m.
as the dille and time of the
regular July meeting to be held
at the high school.

a

TrafOc bas been backed up throughout the town
wh~ lhe pavlng has been underway, and It Is
expe&amp;ed to be completed soon.

COL.UMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Doctors monitoring the condition
of Ohio's , first artificial heart
recipient hope a human heart can
soon be found for the patient now
In crlllcal condition.
A team of three surgeons'
Wednesday at Ohio State Unlver·
slty Hospitals Implanted the
popular Jarvlk·7 Into the chest of
Lowell Goddard, 49, Columbus. It
Is the first time doctors have used
fhe artificial device In Ohio.
Doctors said Goddard's heart
was so weakened by cardiomyopathy that they didn't think he
. could survive another day with·
out the device.
They removed his heart and
put In the artificial heart during a
seven-hour operation. Goddard's
. crlticlal condition Is normal after
such a procedure, Drs. David
Myerowttz and Kevin Murray.
two members of the surgical
team, said at a news conference
following the procedure.
The Jarvlk-7 Is a temporary

device to keep Goddard alive
until a donor heart can be found.
Doctors decided on the artlflcal
heart because no human heart
was available.
Goddard could live for several
months on the device, "but we're
hoping to find a donor soon," said
Murray . "The longer he has It In,
the risk of Infection and blood
clotting Increases. "
"Our goal is to get him a new
heart, hopefully In a couple of
weeks," said Myerowltz. "We'll
give the device a chance to work
and give him a chance to recover,
to get In better shape to with·
stand the transplant operation."
Goddard has been a patient In
the hospital lor about a month
and has been on the waiting list
for a heart transplant· since
February.
"I think he has a shot. I
wouldn't have given that "much
last night," Myerowltz said.
Seattle dentist Barney Clark
was the first human to receive an

artlflcal heart : He lived 112 days
after undergoing the prQ~:edure •
in 1981 at the University of Utah ·
Medical Center.
:
osu Hospitals Is one of ~'6 ·
medical centers with feder,al ·
government approval to use the
Jarvlk· 7 and one of two In the •
nation with Its own on-site :
training program for surgeons. :
They have been training to use
the device for a bout two years.
Murray, former acting director of the University of Utah's
artificial heart laboratory, has
extensive experience with the .
Jarvlk·7. He heads the Jarvlk·7 program at the OSU hospitals '
division of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery. He was ap·
pointed an assistant professor of
surgery at Ohio State In July
1986.
Myerowltz Is co-director of the
hospitals ' heart transplant
program .
Twenty-nine heart transplants
have been performed at the OSU
Hospitals In the last two years.

154 Cub Scouts learn··Jesson
of ou~doors at Camp Kiashuta

"'...::! "'z
..."' 0z
0
.,;
&lt;(

deficit

Columbus man becomes first.
Ohio artificial heart recipient

~

~

26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

the way... - - - - - - - . . Eastern Board names staff hirings

Pint

lb.

. .'·

2 Seciion, 14 Pagn

provide more width for the road. He said lhle has
also agreed to try tocleim off the road following
cattle drives. Any widening of the road would be
on county property, Roberts added.
Roberts also has been In touch with the Sutton ·
Township Trustees concerning Wessel Road,
Township Road 137, a quarter-mile connector
road between County Roads 30 and 34. Roberts
said he has q\!)?Stioned the trustees about allowing
Wessel Road to be put on the county road system,
then paving the road with a double seal to give
motorists In that area an alternate route oftravel.
The trustees have Indicated, Roberts said, that
they might be wllling to turn the road over to the
county, or else let the county do the paving and
then the trustees continue maintenance of the
short stretch of road .
Roberts called the problem on County Road 30 '
"a give and take" situation among everyone out
there."
He also said the paving of Wessel Road to
provide an alternate route "would be a, good
Improvement for that community."
Blll Dtttoe, of Burgess and Nlple, Parkersburg,
W.Va., presented the commissioners with prell-

will be no 1989 litter contra! program In the
county.
The problem of widening a stretch of County
Road 30 was discussed by the commissioners and
County Engineer Philip Roberts.
.
A few weeks back, the commissioners received
a petition signed by over 70 local residents
requesting the widening of the county road.'
Complaints about datly cattle drives over the
narrow stretch of roadway were also Issued at the
.. time the petition was presented.
Roberts said he has been "talking to both sides "
In the matter, meaning some of the residents whO
signed the petition and to Charles Ihle, the farmer
whose cattle are driven down and across the
roadway.
Roberts said he believes enough footage Is
available to widen the particular stretch of road In
question, but that widening will require the
moving of utility lines , Including a Tuppers
Plains-Chester water line, a Columbia gas line
and a privately owned gas line.
Roberts. reported that Ihle has been very
cooperative and has agreed to move a fence to

FRESH

NORTHWEST

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday. July 14. 1988

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News stall
General fund estimates In tbeantlclpated Meigs
County budget for 1989 show a $36,000 deficit . .
Figures presented In Wednesday's county budget
hearing by the Meigs County Commissioners
anticipate a general fund totaling $2,271,027 next
year. However, expenditures for next year are
anticipated at $2,307,385.
A deficit of $3,498.1s also anticipated In the dog
and kennel fund budget lor 1989.
" The commissioners discussed only tne general
fund monies which they have l urlsdlct!on over.
They did not discuss the anticipated budgets for
other agencies of the county. They did however,
point out that this mid-year budget proposal Is
only anticipated, based upon county operations
from the first of this year, and that the budget
figures prepared at the end of this year will be the
true budget for 1989.
It was pointed out that $76,713 In state revenue
has been Included In the anticipated budgetforthe
county's 1989 Utter control program. However,
unless the county can commit by Aug. 31 to a
$12,000 local match for the state funding, there

Serve 'N' Save
Sliced Bacon

Chuck Roast or
Chuck Steak

•

Meigs General .F und faces $36.,

KWICK KRISP OR

U.S. GOV'T
GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF
BONELESS

•

.._. __...,___..

"'f'"8lll»U 4£1':1J!t b IS

lit\

04

---

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~~

The htlls are alive this week
around Camp Klashuta near
Chester. Cub Scouts numbering
154 and ranging In ages from
seven to 11 are attending the
annual M-G·M District Cub Scout
Dliy Camp.
Safety Is the name of the game,
or the theme If you will, at this
year's camp which Is under the ·
direct Inn or Shirley Smith, local
,
scoudng volunteer.
Wolfs, Bears and Webelos, the
names of the different clib scout
ranks, are partlclpattng In a
variety of projects at camp from
woodworking to !Jul coUecttng to
knot tying to BB-gun safety and
more.
Two special visitors to camp
this week were State Sen. Jan
Michael Long (D-CirclevUle)
and State Rep. Jolynn Boster
(D-Galllpolls).
Long !llscusled the state lawmaking process· With the boys
and explained to them how young ·
people juat like them can present
an Idea to their 10vernment
reJreRntallves If they believe

their Idea should be a law. Long
visited the camp Tuesday
morning. •
Among other things, Boster
discussed with the boys dllrtng
her visit Wednesday afternoon
the different oftlclal state com·
memerattons, such as the state
flower, the state bird, and even
the state rock song which Is
"Hang On Slcxipy."
And both state officials urged
the scouts to always be respectful
of the· nl!tlonal and state flags .
In appreclatlnn of their visits,
Long and Boster were each

Infant returned
Tbe newborn lafaal kidnapped

frcm Cabeii-Bunllllpaa B•JPital
Ia Baldlllpon, W.Va., hu been
Maned to •• 11111'11'111 paren&amp;a.
UIIIIIQ Mu111, born Molldq 10
UaU ud 0.1. Mu111 on Unoo~
Collat;y, W.Va., 'II'U lddDapped
on Taeeda,. 8ee •tory, pace If.

presented with a Camp Klashuta
tee shirt.
Another special activity this
week has been the geology class.
Carolyn Summers, a geologist
from Belpre, prepared a selec·
tlon of rocks and ores for study by
the scouts. Many of the sped·
mens were found . around Ohio,
bu I others were from as far away
as Australia.
But the highlight of the week,
according to the scouts that Is,
was Water War Day. Held
Thursday afternoon, the boys
were divided up Into groups,
given water guns and an endless
supply of water, and turned loose
to try to find and capture the day
camp flag.
Allin all, day camp week Is a
time for fun, friends and learn·
' lng. But come this weekend,
when camp Is over, the boys wtll
resume their normal routines
GEOLOGY - He:r, IIIIa Ill rean, l•lereallall
while cub scout leaders and
Melp, Gallla ud Muoa C•ll Senla at....Uq
parent volunteers wbQ flave been ·
th.. -k'• dq camp a&amp; Camp lluhula, are
on the job all week .at Klashuta,
learln1 lha&amp; 1eotop caa be lnlereaiDI ud ftm
will ~It the sofas for some we 11
deserved rest and relaxation.
Robert Smltb, a&amp; rlpt, an .M.O·M dlll'"1
&lt;'(

too:

cl••

comm...loaer, .. teaclllll1 lbe
with the ·
u•t.=ace of vehudeer parent illelpera. Carolya
!lammen, a polollalltcm Belpre, preparelttllt,
rocb ud ores whlclllhe boJ• are learnln11 about,
for pre~~e~~la&amp;loa a&amp; lhe camp. '1:

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