<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11391" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/11391?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T18:55:43+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42359">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/4a752954e5602b817658e0f01ff47dfa.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fec05ef92145f1bbfe7d456e61a58cc9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35892">
                  <text>Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·--Local news briefs... --....,
Continued from page I
neither were transported, according to the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service report.
The accident was Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
According to the report the officers were In pursuit of another
vehicle at 3:05a.m . on County Road 5 (Bradbury Road) with
their lights on and siren sounding when the cruiser failed to
negotiate a curve and went straight into a utility pole.

Squads respond to 11 calls
Emergency Medical Services units In Meigs County
responded toll ralls for assista nce over the weekend.
On Saturdav at J· 12 am . . Middleport Fire Department was
ca lled to Middleport Hill to an auto acc ident . James Ash and
Ryan Hall were treated but not transported. At 4:54a.m .,
Middleport squad was called to Park St reet lor Naomi Hoschar.
She was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 9: 04
a.m . William Sorden was transported from Sorden Road by
Syracuse sq uad to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 10:54 a.m . ,
Ra cine unit was cal led to Stale Route 338. Ryan Clonc h was
taken from tht're to Vetera ns Memorial.
At 2· 42 pm. on Saturday, Rutland went to SSalem Street.
Charles Schoonover was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospit al. At 7:28p.m .. Tuppers Plains squad went to Reedsville
for Bill Congrove He was taken to Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital.
On Sunday morning at 2:10a .m., Rutland unit went to Happy
Hollow RoarJ for Nellie Vincent. She was transported to
V&lt;•tPrans MPmorial. AI 8:49a.m ., Syracuse was dispatched to
College Road for Helen Harris . She was taken to Veterans
!V1emorial.
At I : 16 p m . Pomeroy was called to Abbott's Road for Tracie
Abbott She was tran sported to Holzer Medical Center.
Midd lepo r t wr• nt to Oliver Street at 2: 11 p.m. and transported
l os hiil Mit chell lo Pleasant Va lley Hospital. At 4:05p.m.,
Porrwroy squad was ca lled to Eas t Main Street for Howard
1\'a genhalf. fi e was taken to Veterans Memorial.

Trial begins this morning
.lurv se lection began this morning In Meigs County Common
PI Pas C'ourt in the case of Stat e of Ohio against David Persons .
Pc• r so ns is charged with felonious assault, an aggravated
felony of the second degree. aga inst Andy lannarelll of
Middleport.
Mc1gs County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story Is
representing the State of Ohio In the case. and Persons Is
re pres.•ntPtl in thr trial by Meigs County Public Defender
Char les H . Kn ight

Rose Kennedy celebrates
JOOth birthday with family
II\' At\!\ IS PORT. Ma ss. t UPI 1
- Ch ildrPn and grandchlldrt'n
cc lebratr d
Rose Fit zge rald

K1 •nnedy's !UOth vear. hailing the
malriarch of the natio n's most
famous family as a woman who
put her loved ones first.

Four of Mrs . Krnned y's five
rhildr~n.
abo ut 20
gra nd children and a host of
great ·grandchildre n gathered at
Jhr Kennedy famil y compou nd
on Cape Cod Su nday to celebrate
hPr birthday - a week early ~ u r \ ' i\' i n g

with more than 300 guPsts

Rose Kennedy turn s 100on July

'21. when the family will hold a
private celebration .
The matriarch has lived
through political triumphs and
national tragedies. including the
v ioiPnt deaths of four of her n i ne
(' hlldren .
Hrr lone sunrt vin g son. Sen.
Edward K e nned~' - D-Mass .. said
h1 s mother's "lm·f' of famil y.·"
ca mP first. followed by her l ovr
of cou ntry , po li tics and sPnicC' to

othrrs
"Wr continur to be inspired by
mothrr. who' s HKl _
vPars young
today," hp said . The senator
ra iled her 't he most In spiring
tr ac hr r and thr most wonderful
mother that any child co uld evr r
ha w• ...

HPr daughter. Eu nice K ennedy
Shriver. said of her motller' s
s tre ngth . ·· wr were much
stronger as a family than as
ind ividua ls. Shr said once. 'You
will always havp problems, bur
thrrr are manv so luti ons ." '
Rosr K ennedy's old rst son.
Joseph P Kennedy .Jr. wa s klllr•cl
whrn his planf' f'liplcxll'd ovp r the

Engl ish Channel during a World
War II bombing mission. Four
yf'a rs l ater the family's second
daughter, Kathleen, was killed In
a plane crash in southern
France.
In 1963. President Kennedy
wa s assass inated In Dallas . Les s
than five years later. her third
son, Robert , was shot to deat h In
a Los Angeles hotel as he
cam paigned for the 1968 Demo~
cratlc presidential nomination .
Her husband, .Joseph P
Kennedy, died In 1969
Rose Kennedy, who Is conf ined
to a wheelchair, did not attend a
luncheon In her honor but stayed
Inside her white clapboard home
which over looks Nantucket
So und. She attended a morning
mas s with family members .
The attend ing clan included
her children. Sen . Kennedy ,
Eunice Kennedy Shrtver. Jean
Kennedy Smith and Patricia
Kennedy Lawford: gra ndchild
re n F:dward Kennedy Jr., Caro·
line Kennedy Schlossberg, Ro·
bert Kennedy Jr .. Rep. Joseph
Kennedy II, D · Mass.. Rhode
Island Rep. Patrick Kennedy and
Marla Shriver
Amo ng the 370 guests who
accepted invitations to the ce le·
brat ion were Secre tary of Educa
lion Lauro Cavazos , historian
Arthur Sc hlesinger, humoris t
Art Buchwald and actors Tom
Hul ce. Dick Sargent and Shrlv ·
e r· s husband.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
.Jacq ueline Kennedy Onassis,
wife of the late president, and her
son . .John F. Kennedy Jr .. did not
attend.

--Area deaths-Calhy Spen('er
Cathy Dee Spencer. .14 , of State
Route 148, Lo ng Bottom. died
Saturday at Ohio State U nlver
slty Hospital. Columbus follow
i ng a n ex tended illness .
She was a medical as sistant for
Dr . Lloyd Dennis. A graduat e of
Eastern High Schoo l and Moun·
taln State College. Par kersburg.
W. Va ., Mrs Spencer was ac tive
I n her communit y She wa s
advisor tor the Dreamers 4·H
Cl ub . a room mother at River ·
view School. a member of the
Eastern Athlet ic &amp;lasters. the
Riverview PTO ., and the River·
view Garden Club. She wws a
member of the Bradford Church
of Christ at Pomeroy
Born on Sept 6. 1955 at
Parkersburg, W. Va .,shewas the
daughter of Delores Kibble
Pickens Frank of Long Bottom
and the late George Frank lin
Pickens.
Besides her mother, she is
survived by her hu sband. Dr.
Thomas R. Spencer, Long Bot
tom: a son, Thomas Jared. and a
daughter. Tracie Jane. both at
nome, a brother, George F.
Pickens, Long Bottom, and her
grandmother, Helen Kibble,

I
t

Reedsville.
Besides her father, she was
preceded In death by her step.
father, HartiS Frank. and her

grandfather. Johnn ie Kibble .
Funeral S&lt;'rvices will be held
on Tuesday at 11 a.m . at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Mark
Seevers and Derek Stump will
officiate and burial will be In the
Reedsville Cemetery Friends
may ca ll at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today
1Monday).

By United Press lnlernatlooal
Rivers and streams over·
flowed their banks Monday lol·
lowing storms that dumped up to
3 Inches of rain In an hour on
parts of south·central Texas, but
the threat of floods eased In the
East and Midwest after days of
rain.
Flash flood watc lies were In
effect In several counties sur·
rounding San An tonto as far
nortll as Austin as storms
trudged slowly eastward, leav.
ing most Interstate highways and
many secondary roads under

water.
A portion of Interstate 35 In
downtown San Antonio was submerged under 8 feet of water
Sunday night, autllorities said.
Up to 61nches of rain fell on the
towns of Pleasanton and Jour·
danton south of San Antonio
during storms Sunday night and
Monday morning. The San Antonio Light said a downtown-area
fire sta tion reported lllnches of
rain had fallen.

Officials said several n ·s tau .
rants on the popular Rive r walk
tourist area were flooded. b1u t 1he
water quickly receded when
flood control gates were O)JI ' ned.
Kerr County autllorlties said
six people were Injured Sunday
afternoon when a tornado des·
troyed three mobile homes and
damaged 30 other homes. Olfl.
clals said all slx were !reate d tor
minor Injuries at a local hos pita!
and released.
The National Weather Service
said a storm with golfball ,,lzed
hall moved through Dirnmit
County, along the Mexico bor'der
southwest of San Antonio, e arly
Monday. Showers and thunder·
storms also moved thrpugh
southern Louisiana.
Flood warnings also " "ere
posted In the early mort ling
hours In southern Nevada, In ·
eluding Las Vegas and Lake
Mead, and a flood watch for
soutlleas tern Arizona lapsec:l at
midnight as light rains contln ued
In the already damp area.

F'loocl watches in western Pen nsylvania expired Monday and
fog covered the area In anticipa·
tlon of clear skies for the first
time in days and a chance for the
soggy ground to dry out, the NWS
said.
Little Beaver Creek northwest
of Pittsburgh remained high but
was expected to begin slowly
receding by evening. West Vlrgl ·
nla and eastern Ohio ha~ a
chance to dry out.
In central Oregon, more th an
600 firefighters batlle&lt;l two
blazes on forest lands that

Ohio Lottery

Davis belts
grand slam
in 8-3 win

Rivers and streams o·verflow banks in Texas
dramatically increased in size
Su nday.
In Malheur 1\atwnal Forest,
the Corral Basin Fire almost
tripled Its size despite the efforts
of more than 500 firefighters.
About 130 miles to the west in the
Deschutes National Forest, the
Spring Butte Fire spread from
!50 acres to I ,200 acres of
privately owned forest land .
Sticky, humid weather hung
over New England early Man·
day, making sle ep difficult . In
Boston. It was 75 degrees at 2
a.m., but the humidity was 9o

Daily Number

284
Pick-4

MANILA, Philippines tUPIIA major earthq uake struck the
main Philippine Island of Luzon
Monday, collapsing buildings In
the capital , killing at least 84
people and Injuring hundreds,
authorities and news reports
said.
Richter scale readings world ·
wide ranged from 6.2 to 8.0 and
officia ls said II was the worst
eartllqua ke to hit the Philippines
in two decades.
The temblor struck at 4:26p.m .
and was centered in Cabanatuan
city In Nueva Eclja, a riceproducing province about 60
miles north of Manlla, said the
Volcanology Commission, which
registered the quake at6.2 on the
Richter scale. The Initial earth·
quake was followed by several
aftershoc ks.
·'Let us pray to God to keep us
safe." President Corazon Aquino
said, urging Filipinos to stay
calm .
Aquino sa id she was in a
meeting at the presidential pa·
lace when the quake struck and

nld under the table for abou t 30
seconds.
Relief sources and news re·
porL' said 84 people died In t.lle
temblor and officials expec11ed
the toll of lives to rise.
Several schoolhouses c ul·
lapsed In the towns of Cabana ·
tuan, Gulmba and San Jose In
Nueva Eclja, killing 67 peop lle.
radio station DZRH said. At le&lt; '•S I
55 of the dead were killed wh 1' n
the Philippine Christian Collc;· ~e
building co llapsed "l ike a sand ·
wlch" and more than 100 stu ·
dents we re injured. the static m
said .
The Red Cross said three
people died In West Central
School in the neighboring town of
Gulmba and nine others in
co llapsed build lngs in San JoS&lt;' .
Ten people died in severel ,y
damaged buildings in Bagul ·o.
about 120 miles north of lt1 e
capital. Including five studen Is
who died at Sa in t Louis U niv e ;r ~
sity. In nearby Dagupan city, th•e
Red Cross said slx people died t ·n
a movie theater. In Manila. ,,
hospital source reportPd on11)
quake· related death .
At least 16 people were hospl ·
lallzed and one person died of; 1
Dally stock prices
heart at tack after the quak1 •
(As ol 10: 30 a.m. )
struck, hospit al officials said . I r
Bryce and Mark Smith
was not Immediately rica "·
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
whether the temblor direct!}
ca used the heart attack.
Am E lectric Power .... .. .. 29 112
A Volcanology Commission
AT&amp;T ... ..............
..3/1, 1 spokesman described the quak&lt; ·
Ashland Oil .
. ............ 37)\
as a "very strong shock" that
Bob Evans ..
......... 14'~
las ted more than a mlnu te . He·
Charming Shoppes .
. ...... 11
said there we r e several after ·
City Holding Co
1) 1/4
shocks over st:•vera l minutes . ThE•
Federal Mogu l .
.. 18 1h
quake was felt In varying de·
Goodyear T&amp;R
... .. ..... . 29'; ,
grees In wide areas of the main
Key Centurion
.... 12 ',&lt; · Luzon Island .
La nds' End ... ......... .. ..... 16'-1
Limited Inc.... .. . .. .
...21%
Multimedia Inc
.70 1h
Divorce granled
Rax Res tau rants .
2~'.\
Robbins &amp; Myers .
. .. . ... 22Y,
ln \1etgs County Comrnorr
Shoney's Inc ..... .. ..... .... 16\j,
Please Court. adivorce has been
20y,
Star Bank..
granted to Melissa Dawn
Wendy'slntl ...
.. 6¥.
Cowdery from Kevin Dal&lt;·
Worthington fnd .
. ..... 24
Cowdery .

Stocks

Meigs announcements _ __
VBS underway
Vacation Bible Sc hool w11l be
held at Vlctorv Baptist Church In
Middleport from 6·8: 30 p.m.

through Sa turday. The church
bus will ru n throughout the week
If you need a ride, rall992·6772.

Page 3

•
Vot.40. No.301
Copyrightod 1990

TO DAY'S MAP- Isolated showers will be evident in and along
the upper Northeast. The Southeast and GuH Coast could expect a
few thunderstonns. Stong storms are still developing around
Texas and Oklahoma. The Pacific Northwest can expect lair and
mild weather. Some lsolaled showers will be found In California
and Nevada. (UPI)

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

Specializing in the Diagnoses and Treatment
of Cancer &amp; Blood Disorders

(304) 675-1759
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Ollie• Building +Suite 1t
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Dt.J PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
V1 The foml~ ol proi.Nionals
.

Wednesday through Friday
Fa ir Wedn esday, with a
chance of showers and thund er·
storms Thursday and Friday .
Hi ghs will range the mid 80s to
the low 91ls each day, with
ovrrnlg ht lows in the 60s

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Monday night .
with a low in the mid 60s . Partly
cloudy Tuesday . with highs be
tween 85 and 90
Extended Forecast

Eastern Ohio is hit by more
rain, flooding over weekend
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio iUPil
- Fastern Ohio , pounded by
killer floods las t month, was hit
during the weekend with more
rain and flooding.
But officials reported no lnjur·
ies and minimal damagp from
sto rms on Saturday and scat
tered rain on Sunday .
A sma ll-stream and urban
flood warning remained in effect
until Su nda y afternoon for the
contiguous counties of Jefferson.
Trumbull. Mahonlng , Relmont
and Harri son along eastern
Ohio' s borders with Pennsylva ~
n ia and West Virginia .
In Jefferson County. three
count y roads wPrf' c losPd and
another four roads wrre water covered but passable. said Sgt
John Bootll of the sheriff's
department.
"A lot of people haven't e,pe.
ricnred this floodtng In yea rs .
because it hasn't occurred." hr
sa id . "Our creeks are becoming
so brushed up with debris . The
creeks are badly in need of being
dredged out."
Boot h sa id a number or people
left th eir hom es Satu rd ay night
as the creek levels rose. but most
had re turned home by Sunday
afternoon.
" Any time you gel water
coming toward your front door
you get pani cky because you
don't know how high the water
will get," he sa id

T he grou nd In the region is
saturated with water from thr
unusua l precipitation In June and
July. and will absorb little new
rain. sending the water rushing
into sma ll creeks that can
quickly overflow.
· ·Every creek in this county is
flooding," a Jefferson County
sheriff' s spokesman said earl y
Sund ay. "Every road in the
cou nt y that's near a creek Is
floodin g."
In Trumbull County, an off
ramp from Interstate 80 to route
762 was closed by high water. and
portions of Route 62 were closed
due to a bridge washing out. The
wralhPr service said thr Grand
River was expected to rise above
it s banks Sunday
In Columbiana Coun&lt;y, some
arPas received morr than 2
inches of rain between 8: .10 and
10: .\ 0 p m . Sa turday . But a flood
warning in the county was
canceled by Sunday
ln . M•honlng Cou nty, part of
Route 224 was c losed du e to flood
water s.
T he flood1ng was a sad re·
mlnder of events a month ago In
the Ohio River town of Shady .
sid e. Twenty·si x people In the
Belmont Coun ty commun it y died
In the floods and at least 60
houses washed away.
T here were no reports of
damage from the latest rains, a
spokesman l or the Shadyside
pollee department sa id .

COMING SOON

INGELS F:·urniture &amp; Jewelry
lOth A.nnual Tent Sale
ALL LAWN FURNITURI: &amp; WICKER SO% OFF
THUR., JULY 19
FRI., JULY 20
SAT., JULY 21
9 P.M.·TILL?
TENT LOCATED NEXT TO FAMILY DOLLAR

30-60°/o

BUY DIRECT OF'F FACTORY TRUCKS SAVE

LIVINIG ROOM- BEDROOM
DINING ROOM - RECLINERS

Oncology /Hematology

Over $200,00000 At Direct Factory Prices
HUGE SAVI~IGS ON All MAJOR APPLIANCES,
COLOR TV'S, V'CR'S, STEREOS, AIR CONDITIONERS
3 DAYS ONLY

DON'T MISS
THIS SALE

IIIUY NOWI

INGELS

TENT
SALE

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
992·2635

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. July 17. 1990

2 6 Centl

A Multimedia Inc . Newtpaper

Pomeroy Council and
McDonald's agree on
properties exchange

Hospital news
\'eterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Naom i fl oschar, Middleport; Lil
lla n David, Detroit, Mich .
SATURDAY DISCHARGESNone.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Lee
Wood, Rutland; Helen Edwards.
Middleport; Anna Greenlee,
Pomeroy;
Craig Darst.
Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
VIcki Ellis, Mae l~elchka .

Party clear tonlghl. Low In
mid 60s. Pardy cloudy Wednesday. High near 90.

8446

PoweriUierurthquake
kills 84 in Philippines,.

Vinay Vermani, M.D.

1

Monday, July 16. 1990

1-100-U6-SS81

-

•FREE DELIVERY
•CREDIT TERMS
•LARGE SELECTION
•FACTORY PRICES

MIDDLEPORT
(VISA • Dis(overl

YOUNG TAK&amp; LEAD - Wes Young, alter
drawing a walk In the fourth, lakes a lead against
Lancaster pitcher Pal Anderson. The Lancasler

first baseman Is Jason Maddux. Lancaster won
the game 8-0. (See details oo page 3).

Skies still
clear over
Ohio today
By United Press lnlernallonal
Clear skies are expected to be
across most of Ohio Tuesday
n ight, with partly sunny condl ·
tlons Wednesday .
Shower s and thunderstorms
developed over nortllern Ohio
Monday night.
The National Weather Service
sa id Tuesday night lows would be
in the mid 60s. wllh highs
Wednesday from 35 to 90.
On the Tuesday morning
weather map, a high pressure
was centered over Virginia and
ex tended across Ohio . Low pres·
s urr was over the northern
Pl ains
The weather serv ice sa id the
livestock sa fety index would risf'
into the alert to nf'ar danger
catf' gory over the sttJ te Tuesday: ,
and to the danger category
Wednesday .
Harves ttng of wheat and can
ola should make progress the
nrxt few days wlth mostly dry
weather rxrx•etcd Dew should be
on the light sid e thr nex t few
mornings
Sprayin g cond itions ma.v br
drgradPd at timrs by wind
speeds exceeding l2 mph from
t h e southwest through
Wednesday
High temperatures for the
period Thursday through Satur
day arf' r&gt;xprcted to bt&gt; in t ht' mid
ROs to !owrr 90s _ Low s will br in
the 60s .
The 6·IO·!O ·day outlook for
Sunday throu gh Thursday of ne't
week indicate s temperaturE's
wl II averagP near normal across
Oh io. Halnfall is forera st to
average abovr normal.

Resume search
for two men
LEBANON, Ohio tUPll - A
sparch resumed in the fast ·
running Little Mtami RlverTues ·
day for two men missing since
their canoe capsized Sunday
aft er noon
"Righi now we 're on a body
recovery, we're not on a rescue ,"
said Col. William Dunn. ch ief
deputy of the Warren County
sheriff's department.
The names of the Warren
Count y men were being withheld .
as was that of a woman In the
canoe who made II to shore and
called tor help. Shew as related to
one of the men. Dunn sa id .
T he accident occurred about 4
p.m Sunday on a stretch of the
river seven miles east of Lcbanon. A search Sunday evening
and Monday Involved boat s but
no divers. because of the river' s
turbulence.
When the boat capsized , the
river was swollen not only from
heavy rains but from the outflow
of water from an open dam at
Caesar Creek Lake, Dunn said.
He said the river was 6to 10 feet
above normal flow

'

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall
Pomeroy Village Cou nc il
pas sed a motion to enter an
agreement with McDonald' s to
exc hange properties in Monda y
night's vi llage council meeting.
The property now belonging to
McDonald 's Includes part of the
road In between Pizza Hut and
McDonald 's.
Under the resolu Uon, l n re t urn
ior this property the VIllage of
Pomeroy would give property
between McDonald's and West
Main Street. Council voted to
have this agreement writ ten In
resolution form .
The motion to enter an agree·
ment was made by Co un c ilman
Bruce Reed and was seconded by
Councilma n William Young.

The properties each mea sure
village administrator for the
on ly a few hundred square feet.
s treet and water department, for
$400.
Counci l heard an offer from A.
Zon ing maps made by Triplett
B. Sm ith and Company, a Col um·
Eng ineeri ng Services were re·
bus insurance company, for
viewed by Co uncil and members
coverage of Pomeroy vehicles,
heard a report from Jack Kraut·
but postponed action pt•nding
ter.
street supervisor. for the
other offers . The current village
work
done during I he week of
auto· insurance expires August 1.
July
9·13
.
It was reported that "c hildren
Accordi ng to the report cemeplaying" signs have been or·
teries were mowed, patchlng was
dered and will soon be placed at
started on water lines on Mul·
several areas througho ut town
berry Heights and brush was cut
A resolution to borrow $15,5(J()
and hauled away from the
from Farmer's Bank for the
cemetery.
purchase of a water truck was
Also, a water leak was fixed on
approved. The money will be ·
Co ndor Street, trash was hauled
paid In monthly Instal lment s of
from town and city hall, drains
$389.44 for a period of four years.
were cleaned and buildings and
T he co uncil also approved the
trucks were clea ned and
purchase of a 1975 Chevrolet
m a intained .
pa nel truck from John Anderson.

U. S. industrial production
up 0.4 percent during June
By VINCENT DEL GRID ICE
UPI Butdne8o Writer

TAKES A CUT- Tim Bissell lakes a cut against Pal Anderson In
Monday night's 8th District Legion ha."balllournament at Athens.
Anderson struck out eig ht In going the route lor the win. (Sec
detail• on page 3).

Southern board OKs
personnel contracts
Several supplemental con tracts Wf're approved and con tracts awarded at the Monday
night meeting of the Southern
Local Board of Education.
Con tra ct s approved wer&lt;•
David L. Deem, assllant band
director: Romaine Frederick.
junior high c heerleader advisor:
C. T. Chapman, junior high
football coach; Tonya Hunter.
junior high volleyball coach; and
Jeffrey A. Baker, assistant foot ·
ball coach.
The resignation of John Van
Reeth as a teacher and band
director was accepted by the
board.
Contracts were awarded to
Best Office Supp ly In Belpre.
BOE office machine mainte·
nance; Valley Bell, milk: Mica·
hel's ice Cream of Jackson, Ice

crram;
Hf'iners. bread and
baked goods; Sohlo. heat in g oil:
Excelsior of Pomeroy. coal:
Snouffers Fire and Safet y of
Middleport. fire extinguishers;
G. and J., antifreeze; Ashla nd
Oil. motor oi l; Sohio, tra ns mis·
sian grea se: Soh io . gasoline for
the bu ses: Ashla nd Oil. diesel
fu el for the busrs: Warehouse for
Athens. tires for the buses :
Abbott nf Co lumbus . food
supp lies
Bridget Powel l was accepted
by th e board as a tuition st udent
for the 1990-91 school year.
Attending werr Charles !\or·
ris, pre sid ent; Denny ~vans,
vice president; Scott Wolfe, Gary
Willford, Sue Grueser , board
m embers; and Den nie Hill,
treas urer. and Supt. Bobby Ord .

Grant will assist coal miners
Dislocated coa l miners from
Meigs County , as well as Athens,
Belmont, Gal !Ia, Guernsey, Har·
rison, Hocking, Jackson. Jelfer·
son. Monroe, Musklngum, Noble,
Perry and Vinton counties will
benefit from a $764,810 joiJ
training grant.
Governor Richard F. Celeste
announced the grant today stat ·
lng that It will assist workers
dislocated !rom the coal industry
In southeastern Ohio cou nties.
"fhe dislocated coal miners
will receive tangible benefits
from this grant and I am pleased
that sta te governmentls contlnu·
lng efforts to provide real train~

\

ing for workers and their faml
lie s In today's c han ging
economy", Celes te sta ted .
According to Celeste, dlslo·
cated workers a re considered
those Individuals who are out of
work due to plant closings or
o ther circu mstances beyond
their control and are unlikely to
return to their former positions.
The grant will be used for job
search activities. classroom
training and on ·the-job training.
In the
Anyone Interested
program should contact the
Tri-County CAA at 592-6601.
The grant Is funded through
Co ntinued on page 10

WASHINGTON -U.S. indus·
trial production advanced OA
percent In June while capacity
utilization Inched up 0.2 percen·
tage point during . the month to
83.5 percent. the Federal Re·
se rve said Tuesday .
Private economists had l')(
pected a 0.2 percent increase in
production In Ju ne, and a slightly
better showi ng in th e utilization
of the nation's plants and
factories .
"The output of motor vehicles
and parts rose suiJs tan tlally, and
the extremely hut weather
pushed up utilit y output." the
Federa l Reserve said . "Com·

blned, these Increases accounted
lor three-fourths of the June
Increase."
The Federal Reserve also
estima ted that Indu stria l produc·
tlon Increased 0.6 percent in May
after falling by a revised 0.2
perce nt In April and gaining a
revised 0.4 percent in March .
By selected Indu stries, produc
lion ga ined 0.7 percent i n J un e in
the consumer goods sector. ad·
vanced 0.9 percent for business
equipment, but fell O.l percent
for cons truction supp lies . Mate~
nals gained 0.2 percent.
By Indu stry groups, .Junr rna ·
nufacturlng prOOuctlon was up
IJ 5 percent, with product ion of
durable goods- e'penslve Items

made to last three or more years
- also ahead by 0.5 percent.
Non-durable goods posted a 0.4
percent gain.
Although production at the
nation's mines tumbled 1.5 per ~
cent !n June. production at
American utilities soared 2.1
percent for the month, the
Federal Reserve said.
While the capac it y utilization
for all Industry edged up to 83.:.
percent in .June, the capacity
utilization of manufacturers in·
creased to 82.9 percent and the
rate for utilities moved up to86.3
percent.
But the capac it y utilization for
mining slipped to 87.8 percent,
the report sa id .

Voinovich proposes senior
citizen health care program
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse ReP&lt;Jrler
COLU MBUS Republican
gubernatorial nominee George
Volnovlch released Monday hi s
11 ·polnt, $7 .7 million program for
improving senior cit izen health
care. concentrat ing on cost ·
saving measures.
"Many senior c itizens in this
state are frantic." said the
former Cleveland mayor. "They
are worried that a serious illness
could wipe out thei r life's

sav ings."
Accordingly. Voinovtch pro·
posed limits on health care and
Insurance c harges for sen lor
citize ns. He also recommended
that senior citizens be allowed lo
tap their In surance policies for
long-term care, and to keep a
greater share of their assets
when their spouse enters a
nursing home.
Volnovlch also recommended
passage of a "living will" In
which an Individual could dictate
future medical treatment In the
event he or she falls Into an
Irreversible coma.
The Republican candidate said
the administration of Gov. Rl~
chard Celeste has done well In
proposing the PASSPORT pro-

gram ror senior citizens - a
variety of s('rvtces availabiP in
commu niti es to keep oldstt•rs
living ind epende ntly
Bu t he said bureaucratic red
tape has caused the program to
be delayed by nine months in
Cleveland, Toledo. Youngstown .
Athen s. Port sm outh and
Springfield
Susan Lewis of the Oh10 De·
partme nt of Aging acknowled ged
that the state has been thwarted
by a federal agency which has
" nitpicked" It s PASSPORT ap·
plication three times .
Lewis said half the Oh1o
population Is receiving thr program, and the res t will be nn line
by October
Noting there are 1.9 million
Ohioa ns over 60, Volnovtch re·
commended that hea lth care
providers be lega lly forbidden to
charge senior citizens above
Medicare eligible charges.
He also proposed a statewide
Insurance pool to purchase Medl·
care supplemental Insurance
and long ·term care Insurance for
Interested sen ior citizens at
lower rates .
Other parts of Volnovlch's
plan :
-Creallng a long·term care

program In the Ohio Department
of Aging.
-Allowing se nior citizens with
ex traordlnary out · of ~ pockel
medical expenses to apply those
expenses against Income to qual i fy for property tax reducllons .
-Giving the state insurance
commiss i oner authorit y to
light('n s tandard s ror insurance
rate increases.
- Creat i ng a Hea l th Insurance
Information Cen ter In the Ohio
Department of Insurance. mak·
lng It eas ier for seniors to obtain
compara ti ve Information on
policies
In a rebuttal, Democratic
gubernatorial nominee Anthony
Ce lebrezze said Volnovlch cut
the Cleveland Department of
Aging's budget by 35 percent
when he was mayor and called
for a freeze In Social Security
benefits.
Celebrezze said he has success ~
fully pursued settlements In
major anti-trust cases against ·
health Insurance groups and
hospitals to keep prices down.
and th.1t he favors Medlgap
leglslallon. which regulates the
sal e and advertising of Insurance
policies sup plementin g
Medicare.

Rescuers search for more victims
MANILA, Philippines iUPI)Workers using blowtorches and
chain saws dug through the ruins
of cr ushed buildings Tuesday In a
race against time to rescue
hundreds of trapped people by a
massive eartllquake that killed
at least 196 people, officials said.

Rescue efforts were centered
In the town or Caba natuan and In
the mountain resort of Bagulo,
where some 750 people were
reported trapped In a hall-dozen
coUapsed luxury hotels and
factories.
Television news films showed

tlle hotels crumbled like accor·
dlons, Incl uding the Hyatt Terra ·
ces and the Nevada Hotel.
"There are cries of children
and voices of people In these
hotels," Rudy Roxas, a rescue
coordinator In Bagulo, said In an
Continued on page 10

�Tuesday. July 17. 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
llEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS- MASO~ AREA

ROBERT L. WIJiiGETT
Publlsho•r

CHARLE~E HOEFLICH

General Manager

PAT WHITEIIEAD
Asslo&gt;tant Publish er/ Controll er
A MEMBER of Thr United Press Interna tional. Inland Da il y Press

A.'i.sociatkm and the American Nrwspaper Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETTERS OF OP INION are welcome. Thev should be less than JOO
words long. All letters ;Iff' subj ec t !O editing and must be signNl wl1h
na me. address and telephone num ber No u nslgned lf'tter s will be pub·
lis heLl . L r ttrr s shou ld be in guutlt as ll', addrC'ssl ng Issues, not persouali

1if' S

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, July 17, 1990

Honecker has fallen a long way
EAST BERL ' N - Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev Is secretly co nsid ering whisking F:ast
Germ any's ousted, long t ime
rul er out of the country before he
fa ces threatened charges rangIng from tr eason to murder .

Gorbachev's good will Is ex traord inary because he person ·
ally di sliked Erich Hon eck er , the
comm unist who l ed East Ger·
many for 18 years until he was
toppled l ast Oc tober . The two
clashed In pri vate.
In light of the one-t ime anlmos lry, a close friend of Honecker's
told us, the ailing form er leader
was surprised and moved by
Gorbac hev's co ncern for hl.s
well -being .
Honecker was communism' s

Thrift scandal threatens
polls of both parties
By LEON DANIEL
VPI Chiel Corres pondent
WA SHINGTON -

Public out rage over the s;,oo bi llion tab for th e

savmg s and loan sc andal ha s sent the polltit'ians scrambl in g for
cover

One of those billions ca n be attributed to the co llapse of a Denver
thri ft where Nei l Bush. son of the pres id ent, alleged ly violatPd
conflict ·o f·interest rules as a director of th e S&amp;L.
fnste ad of cowering like the pols. Bush is fighting bac k angri l y
He doPsn' t seem to unders tand wh.v the re st of us are angry too .
Bus h di si ngenuousl Y acknowl edged that the infamous $100.000 loan
he receivrd from a De nver in ves tor was " an incredibly sweet dea l "
he was n' t req uired to repay.
Perhaps the prestdf'n t' s son has not yet heard that the CPnPr ~ll
Accounting Office figures the 30-year bill for the thrift rl cbaciP will
brea k dow n to $2,000 for every Am e ric a n.
WP were handed thf' tab just when many of us had come to expect a
"peace divide nd '· from the end of the Co ld War
Insisr in g in hi s media bl1tz thai he did nothing wrong, the
prPs id Pnt's "O n stu bbornly refu sed to nego ti ate an out ·of-court
se tt!Pment w1th fpd e ral rf'gulator s. although Republ1can strateg1sts
fr:lr thP prolon gPd negative publici ty co uld damagr t hP prt'sident

original "little drummer boy,"
beginning his politic al life at i O
years of age as a "Youth
Pi oneer" drummer In th P Wl ebels klrchen C'o mrnunist Band.
Ht s fath er played bass drum.
Honerker was Impri soned for
10 yea rs by the Nazis and freed
by rhe Sov iet Army when it
ca ptured Ber lin in 1945. He rose
quickly In Sov ler occupiL"&lt;l Eas t
Gf'rm a ny. He eln chcd 1he leadershi p post In 197! and held It until
Or t t7.
Sin cE' 1hen. Honp c kf'r ha s

fall en a long way . He Is currently
l angushlng at a Sov iet Army
conva les ce nt hom e near Potsdam. He need s his Soviet protectors; his own people hate hlm.
Thei r resentment has soared
sin ce t he Berlin Wall fell last
Nov ember. Mas s demon strations prevented Honeckcr from
ren tin g an apart ment and even
forced a Protestant minister to
evic t

Honeck er

from

a tw o-

month sa nctuary with him .
Hon ecker. 78. Is not well. He's
had co mpli cated surgery, Includ Ing an operation fo r cancer.
Friends say he drifts In and out of
reality.
The East German prosecutor
general Is handling the probe .
Honecker was lntlaliy charged
with treason: the charges were
l ater dropped. Our sources say
authorities could pres s th at
charge agai n any tim e.
Honecker's lawyer , Wolfgan g
Vogel . told us he was able to
dispense with tha t charge the
f l,-,1 time because It was Judic row~. What Honecker did as a
co mmunist

lr ader

was

"not

r rlrnlnal" because he believed in
it . Vogel asserts. "They are
accusing him of betrayal of hi s
co untry. But he would hav e had
to l&gt;erray himself to go any other

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
way ."
Maybe It was merely an
upper-middle cl ass li fe by U .S.
standards. but it was unquestionably superior to the dally tribu l ations facin g the East German
masses . Unlike their subj ects.
this elit e dldn' t have to walt more
th an lO years for a car: they
could buy Western goods that
were denied their citizens; they
had the best schools.
Yet Hon ec ker didn 't live the
high lite of some departed
potentates who looted their countries ' treas uries. By contrast,
Vogel notes, Honec ker Is virtu ·
ally broke, "never had a Swi ss

bank ac count" as some accot.Jnt s
charge, and currP ntly doesn' t
own a w eekend rPtrea t or even a
house.
The mo~ 1 serious - and mos t
justified - charges he's like ly to
face ar e for mu rder of Ea st
Germans sho t or ot herwise killed
while fl eei ng to Wes t Germa ny.
About 200 havp perished thi s way
sin ce 1961
Whil e he was the No. 2 man ,
Hon eck er personally suprrvl.sed
co nstru ction of the Wall and

other border fortifications As
leader, he continued the shoot -tokill ord er against hlsown citizens
trying to leave. He obviously had
the power to rescind th e order at
any tim e: He lifted it briefly In
1987 so no deaths would mar his
state visit to West Germany.
A medical exam will determ ine If Honecker ls lit to stand
triaL an event neither Ea st nor
West Germany relishes, sources
tell us.
The sources say as part of a
pre-unlfl callon deal, they likely
would secretly acquiesce to a
Soviet airlift to Honecker out of
the countrv . He' d have to spend
the rest of hi s days with hi s Soviet
benefactors.

Hon ecker' s surprise at Gorba ·
chev's appar ent secr et gesture
stems from theco ldn ess between
the two when Honecker was one
of t he last East Bloc leaders to
oppose Gorbaehrv's reforms .
Honecker se cretly had boasted to
fr iends he would outlast Gorba·
chev and h is perestroika, or
economic restr ucturing. ll onecke r saw thP economic policy
as a s1r p backward.

I'Ve 6aT i&gt; PUT
Mil FOOT [)1WN ON
rHIS S&amp; L CRlSIS...

Billy Hat cher
openrd th e sixth with a double
and Mari ano Duncan bea t ou t an
1nfirld hi! . La rk in's single loaded
t he ba ses an d Davis ripped a shot
Ci ncin nati 's

ovf'r thr left -fi eld wa ll.

Oli vPr led off the sevenrh with
his sixrh homer. Hatcher si ngled
and sto le seco nd befo re L arkin
h it his fifth ho mer .
Reds manager Lou Pinlella
ned tted his bullpen with keeping
ttw ga me cl osr until Cincinnati
~ ta 1

trd hlttlng.
· 'H&lt;Jmmond was a littll• ner\'OUS, but it wa s a good le-ar ning

experien ce for him. " Pinlella
sa id . "Then M ahler came on and
got thr big our of the ballgame
t~gain s l

Gala rraga .
·'La y a na did a grea t j ob.
&lt;.;hut1i~g tht'm dow n the rest of
1he wav ."

Bigger rigs keep on truckin' __Ro_be_rt_W_al_te_rs
Drar Edit or·

On the 4th of July. ro he able to

:\fl ay l Px pr&lt;:"ss a pprPCJa li on to
al l wh o ht&gt;lped in an y way wit h

the M lddlef&gt;&lt;Jrt Four th of Ju ly
CPirbrat ion. Th ank s to all rh e
people and orga nizations who
helped !h e v illage t o purcha se the
firew ork s and the many fr ie nds
a nd re l at ives whn helprd to put it
all togerh er. thL' day was a hu ge
SUCC'l'S~.

The eve nt has grown each
vra r . and this ye ar . Buck y
Walters said that we drew the
biggest crowd tha t's Pvpr bren in
Mlddlrpor l I agree Those of you
who were thC'reat fi rework s lime
know what we're sayi ng. We
thank you for your int erPs t. and
p lease come ba r k nex 1 year .
Br ing a frlrnd
I think it' s ti me In ou r growt h
for a loca l civic or ga niza tion to
take It over and r ea lly expa nd it .
We need to be ab l e to have
co mm l tt ers for !he planning and
ex ecution of the variou s ph ases,
and enough people to mak e It
work. Now Is the t i me t o think
about next year.
I think it would be goo d for
Midd lepor t If Wt' have a theme. in
addition to Independence Day .
Somet hing to take adva ntage of
the fantastic natural resource
upon whose banks we're situ ated. When I think of all the
co mmuniti es scattered across
the nation who have nothin g
special to distinguish them from
others , I rea lize ju st how precious It Is to be an Ohio River
Vall ey nat lve.

enjoy t hPrPOectlons o n the water

fr om 1he campfires on rhe West
Virginia side , the flr ck er lng
Images from the arm ada of boat s
with r hel r Roman ca ndiP s.
topped by a canopy of the mosr
beautiful fireworks Im aginabl e.
All ! his after enjoyin g a tine
parade, great speakers, good
music and an outstanding patriot ic performance by the Shady
Riv er Shutflers, yeah, a rear
streaked the dust on my cheek
and I 'm not ashamed of it.
How about lt ·oneofyou movers
a nd s h ake r s organization
presidents-can you see your
group getting Into this nex r year?
f think we ought to have a Catfish
Festival. Perhaps a Cat fi sh Ca r nival with all the trimmings. We
cou ld have a lot of fun with that as
a them e! Everything based on
Channel Ca ts, Mudcats, even If
we had to buy our catfish from
Vaughans and C &amp; K Ma rke t.
They could handle that' So could
the rest of the merchant s gain
from the eventual Influx of
out -ot-towners who would come
to see it. Look wha t Circlevlle
and Jackson have done with a lot
less fun thing than catfish-even
Reynoldsburg has a successful
Tomato Festival which by right s
should have happened In Letart .
Thanks again, and let any
m ember of Middleport VIllage
Council hear from you .
Sincerely,
Bob Gilmore
Councilman

Appreciates support
Dear Editor :
We, the Southern High &amp;booi
Cheerleaders would like to thank
ail of the individuals and the
merchants who donated In any
way to help us go to cheer leading
ca mp at Athens.
We had a great time, learned

I

'

nPW techniques and won some
awards. Thanks again.
Tamara , Valerie, Raberta, Julie,
Nikki, Tabitha, Robfn, Chris,
Amber, Jody, Marcy, Michelle
One or thl' mothers
Faith Hayman

CI NCINNATI iUP l ) - Clncin nari had go ne five games sin ce
the All-Star break withou t a
home run, and were shutout for
five innings Monday night. Then
Er ic Davis ripped a grand slam
a rrd, by time they were fin is hed
sl ugging. the Reds had four
homers and an 8-3 rout of the
Mo nt rea l Expos.
Davi s' fifth career grand slam
ove rcam e a 3-0 Montreal lead ln
the sixth inning . It was his 12th
homer of the season, and tea mmates Joe Oliver, Barry La rkin
and Chris Sabo joined him by
slugging homers.
Tim Layana , 4·0, pit ched four
shut out inn ings for the victory .
" I was just trying to put rhe
ball in play," said Davis, w ho had
go ne 5 for 35 before hitting two
I{B I doubl es Sunday against the
Nt•w York Mets.
' 'It was a breaking ball down
and tZane ) Smith had to get the
ball over because the ba ses were
loaded. He just didn't get It where
lw wanted."
Smith, 5-7, gave up seven of the
eight Reds runs, includ ing the
firs t thre!' homers.
T he Expos built a 3·0 lead
aga inst Chris Hammond, who
ma de his first major league
start Montreal scored a run in
the first when Otis Nixon walked ,
move d to second on Ha mmond' s
wild pi ckoff throw , took third on a
passed ball and sco red on a Tim
H_a incs g roundout.
Monrreal made it 2·0 in the
seco nd on Larry Walker' s li th
homer of the year.
T hr Expos arldrd a run and
knor krd out Hammond i n the
thi rd Delino DeShield s wa l ked
and took second on a balk.
DeShields moved t o third on
N ixo n's ground er t o Hamm ond
and sron~ d on tta inl•s' single
W ctllach' s single and a walk to
~1 ik e Fi tzgerald loaded the bases
and Rick Mahler replaced Ham mond after he went l -0 to Andre s
Gal arra ga . M ahlrr struck out

be rt'qutred ro pa y for the finan cra l shenaniga ns of the greedy
Democrats are billing the S&amp;L bailout as the pres ident's "blark
ho le" but there is plent y ol blame for ever yone.
Rt&gt;p ublrcan straregisr Ed Rol lin s links 17 pasr and prt'sPnt
D£·rnocr~:~tic member s of Cong r ess to the thrlft scandal.
Former GOP s rrategist Kev in Phillips. au thor of The Politics of the
Rich and Poor. sug ges ted that !he Democra ts could profit by focusing
on Republ ican policies dunn g the 80s that benefitted th e wealthy.
The Democrat s ran con tend that the scandal occurred during
Republican administrations and was nurtured by GOP policies They
can even chor1ll' that the cris is worsened s ince Prrsldent Bush
declared las t year that it was fix ed.
So far. however, th e S&amp;L sc and al has been a frus tra ting iss ue for
the Democrats.
Mt er all. t here are four Democra ts among the notoriou s Kea ting
Fivr g-roup of lawm aker s accused of interve ning wit h regu lators on
beh alf of S&amp;L exccu tive Charl es Kea tin g.
Republicans r an argue tha i Democrati c vo tes in Congress helped
ca use rhe thrift cris is. And fo rmer House Speaker Jim Wright .
D·Tcxas. and former House Democratic Whip Tony Coeh lo of
Cal ifor nia. both are closely identified with it.
ThrrP is a dismal suf ficie ncy o f dirty laundry to go a r ound

Middleport event big succe.~

Davis' grand slam pushes
Reds to 8-3 win over Expos

( ;alarraga

po!Jtica ll y
You don ·t have to be a I ip· reader to figure aut that tax increasrs wi ll

Letters to the editor

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

OLY M P IA . Wash

rNEA, -

No v. here In thr na t ion are the re

morr doubl e- trai ler tru cks massive rigs 55 to 70 feet longthan on Inters tate 5. th o Wes t
Coas t 's new "Mai n Str rr t "
slrPtchlng fr om north of Srattlf'
ro south of San Diego
Allhough a 1982 federal law
opened certa in roads In f'vrry
state todou bl P tra il e r trucks. tht'
nam es of tht' most oft en usPd
co mb inati ons - We stern Dou bl es and Rocky \lountaln Doubles - Identify th eir regio n of
preference.
(A Wes tern Doubl e Is a tractor
hau lin g two t ra il ers of the sa me
size. Each is typically 28 feet long
bur so me are up to 35 feet lon g. A
Rocky M oun tain Double In cludes
a tractor followed by a long
tra iler. usuall y 40 feet long, and
anot her sho rt er trail er .
For year s, those rigs have
terrifi ed motori sts throughout
the West as th e trucks VPr rPd
ac ros s m ount ain passes, swayed
around curves and lurch ed
through urban traffic . Now, the

tru ckin g Indu stry Is poised to
launch a ca mpaign for govern

now In use w ith fewrr but ta rgr r
vrhl cles w ill reduce enprgy co n-

mPn t approva l o f Pven hea v lf'r ,
wiflrr and lo nger t ru e ks

su mption. ai r pollut 1on and hi gh

When Congress begin s fa shi on·
ing new hlghw.w legis lation late
th is yrar or carl~· next yPar, thP
1ndu s1ry. w ill tw prPssing for
ff'dl'ra l apprm al of

- Th P Turnp ik e Doubl e. a
IIO foo l · long, nine-ax le, 34·wherl
lX'hemorh 1h at con s1s t s of a
trac tor pullin g a pair of ful l
leng-th trailer s. rac h 48 feet lon g

Cunrnt

law allow s only 1hr
tr.1ctor and on e such t railer.

- T he T rip le Tractor. an
ex panded vers ion i about
feet
long! of the Wester n Doubir' in
whi ch a trarto r pulls thr pe
trailer s, each 28 feet long.
Curr ent law allows on ly the
rra ctor and two such trailers .
Such m ega · truck s, their proponent s cla im. will In crea se produ cti vit y and a&gt;duce costs be·

roo

cause shi ppers can use fewer
cabs and drivers to haul more

goods M oreover. the Indu stry
arJ;U es that repla cing the trucks

way conges tion .
Bu1 railr oad shipmrnt of
f n ' i gh t co ns ume s P\'f' n Jpss
ene r gy' , pro ducrs l rss po llut io n

and occupies no ,·atuahl&lt;• hi gh
way s pac~ . Morro ver . 1her e is
rvidence th &lt;J1 larger multi-u nit
truck s po se unacceptably high
saf(~1y ris k s on thenatlon 's roads.
A rrl a ti vr ly r ecen t st ud y condu ct ed In t he stat e of Washl ngt on
found th at doubl e- trail er truck s
arr esperlal l y prone to accl·
dent s. Tha i st ud y's co nclu sion:
" When the crash tnvoJvemPnt
of dou bl es wa s compared to that
of I si ngl e ) tractor -t ra il er s oper·
atln g under sim ilar condition s.
doubles wrre Involved In crashes
tw o to th ree times more oftrn
" It the use of doubles become-s
more wid es pread t hrou ghou I th e
Interstate highway sys tem and
connecti ng roads, an ln ev lt abl r
result will be Increased number s
of tru ck cras hes."
Thar stud y . conduct ed fo r t he

fn surancr I nstitute for Highway
Sa fet y. did not even consider the
po tentia l danger posed by the
hl gger doubl es or hu ge trip les
l••lng proposed .
"R r la rl vely smal l tractor
s1errmg movements I such as In a
lane cha nge maneuvrf) arc
magni fif'd by the second trailer
Jnd can reach unm anageabl e
levels, producing exaggerated
sway and subseq uent rollover of
rhe rearmost trail er ...
" Th e ln c reaselral l er sway and
ro llover potential of doubles Is
also evident ln cra sh dat a th at
indi cate sign ifi cantly higher proportions of rollover ln fatal
cras hes In vo lv ing double or trl ·
plr combination vehicl es ."
Multi-unit r igs als o are more
prone t o jack-knifing than co nvent ional tru cks. Of the approximately 5,000 people who die
ever y year In truck -lnvolvPd
cr !lsh cs. almost three- fourth s
ar e In other vehicles. Allowing

bigger truck s on the road almost
ce rtainly will Incr ease the
carn age.

Contest! Tennis boots soccer __B_e_n _Wa_tt_en_be___;;;_rg
Th ere Is a meaning t o most
things. That . at least . Is the
gro und rule of thr columnist
business .
Because I spent a weekend
watching at hl etes sweat on a
screen In my famil y room.
readers of thls space are In luck.
We begin another ron test'
The tournament has a fl as hy
t ltle: "The Modern Metaphor."
Its purpose Is to judge what
Institution, event, personality,
irend, condition, situ ation, product or whatever, best Illuminates what' s now go in g on In the
world.
There are several rules: The
first entry ln !he new contest Is
mine. I nominate " Tennis." I am
the judge, but I profess to
open-mlndedness, with only one
exception. "Soccer" is not an
acceptable entry because It Is
dumb.

My case for

h~nnls :

l 'pward m o ,,il•l ) . The world Is

thought th at the top two Ame r ica n tennis p layer s would be

upmoblllzlng. Lots of peop le are n amed I van and Martina ? Or
doing wha t only well -to-do people that, In what was once a spiffy
used to do. The two most obviou s and Was py country club sport ,
Items ar e divorce and ten nis. other l eading American players
I "D ivorce" would be an accepta · would be of Chin ese, African .
bl e entry In the new contest.J
Iranian and JPWish ancestry
Clolulli:.rrtirm . It is one of the !Micha el Chang, Zlna Garrlsop,
few modern cli ches that holds up, Andre Agassl, Aaron Krlck and tenni s qualities. The recent stelnj 1 Or that Steffl Graf, the
Wimbl edon tournament was No. 1 ra nked woman player, Is
bro adcast to 76 counlrles. Profes- thinkin g about moving from
siona l t enni s comp etitors com e West Germany to New Jersey 1
trom mor e than 80 countries.
(A sensibl e choice. giv en !he
HiKh -~ec h Just hit a lew balls
alt ern ativ es.)
with one or those new wtde-body
Fitnm An estimated 18 million
rack ets made out Kryptonite. Americans now play t ennis.
Zoom! There are purists who
Special Uation . Players tra ve l
think the new Space Age r acket with per so nal roaches- Soon lhl'y
mater ials are ruining the game. will have several coaches , one
Not me. I hit aces with it..
each for forehand. backh and,
A'1H'riron unitler,alirr. People serving and volleyin g.
are now here !rom !'verywhere.
Fcmlni.•m . It's been a lon g lime
Tennis proves it. Who ever since Guss ie Moran became

I

fa mou s because she wore v isibl e
ruffled panties beneath her t ennis dress . Professional tennis ha s
taught the world that wom an can
be great athletes, just as they can
be grea t at anything els e they do .
Feminism based on merit l s a
great ach i eve ment of our lime.

El sew here in th e Na tional
League. Sa n Fra ncisco blas ted
l )i t tsbu r g h 6-1, Houston be at N f'W
York ~ 1. Philadrlphia crown ed
,\ tla nta 7 2, Chiea go edged Sa n
Di ego l :1 and Los Ang eles
grou nd ed St. Loui s 52

Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament to begin Friday
The Kyger Cre ek Lillie L eague
T ou rnanwn1 will r eturn t o th~
baseball f iL•Id s of the Kyger
Creek Cm ployl'L'S Club Friday
w ith i.l pair of fir st-round gam es
.II band 7:30 p.m.
On Sa turd ay, fi ve ga mes will
hi' pla yrd. wit h starting t imes or
10 and 11: JO a. m , l. 2: JO, 4 and

Tlw Daily Sentinel
1US PS IU-960)
\ IJI\·boion

of Muttlmedi &amp;,

In ('.

l'uhlts la 'tl ""'r v a f!Pr noon. Monda\'
Hn w~~:h FrtdaV, Ill Court St.. Po-

nlf'ro&gt;. Oh ln. hv thf' Ohb Va ll r;.· Puh·
tlshtn'g Company ' Multi media . Inc.
Pomero~. Ohi o 4~769, Ph. ~2 - 2156. Se
cond r lass pos tage paid at Pam er()}' .
Ohi o
Mt•mlJt•r. UniiPd Pres ~ Int erna tional.
In land Dallv Pr ess Associ at ton and I hl•
Ohio NewsPapf'r Assoc iat io n. Nat tonal
Advf'rllslng Rf'presen ta !IV£'. Branham
~e w spaper Sa les. 733 Thi rd AV('nu e.
New York. New York 10017 .

POSTMA..'iTER: Send addrt'ss rhangf'S
Da lly St&gt;nllncl. Ill 0J u11 St..
f'omrwy. Oh lo 4.'"l769.

l o Ttw

SI IIL"i('RIPTION Ro\TFB

By Carri er or Mol or IWul-e
Ont • Wt'l' k. . . .... . .. ... .. ..

.S\.40

O tw Mont h

$6.10

On t· Yenr

S72.80
Sll\GLE fOP\ '
PRICE

Oa lh

Thus, a m etaphor of modernit y: globalizing, up-scaling, feminizing, specializing, universa lizi ng, fit and technical.
Obviously, soccer doesn't qu ai·
lfy, especi ally not the World Cup
st uff that showed up In my house.
Does anyone believe that wbat
happens In th e world can be even
vaguely similar to the extend!'d
boredom or a 1-0 final score,
where the 1 comes on a penalty,
and half or the best players from
one tea m are prohibited from
playing?

Giants 6, Pirates I
Scott Garrelts started the
season by digging himself a deep
hole, but after hls latest victory
he's now standing on level
gro und.
Garrelts pitched his best game
of the season Monday night,
tossing a three-hitter In thl' San
Francisco Giants' 6-1 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
By doing so, Garrelts evened
his record at 7-7 after beginning
the 1990 campaign with a 1-6
record through May 31
''For my SPit, It's been one sllirt
(at a time I, not to try to do too
many things," Garrelts said. "At
1-6, you do that and you dlg
yourself a bigger hole. You just
keep working at lt ."
Garrelts, last season's ERA
leader, dld just that and has gone
6-1 ln his last nine starts.
Including a 5-1 record in seven
road starts .
It was slow going for Garrelts
In the early stages of the season.
who lost three of hi s fi rst slx
starts, and didn 't captu re his
f irs t victory until his seventh
start.
Hi s lack of success through the
fi rs t three m onths, In a way, ha s
mirrored that of the Giants team .
"The first half was frus tra t
lng," Garre lts sai d. "for myself.
and the tea m wasn't playing
really well. We weren't getting
th e pitching, hitting . Now we are
starting to put things together
and play good ba seball"
t\nd not surpri si ngly, GarrPII s
IS find ing his groove as well.
T he defending NL champion
Giant s had a 17-28 on May 28.
Since then they have gone 31· 12
with a .72 1 winning percentage.
The Giant s have won six of
their last seve n and 10 of their
las t 12. They have climbed 10 a
season ·hlgh eight games ove r
.500, yet remain 7~ games
behind th e NL West ·leadlng
Reds.
"There's plenty of time," \!all
William s sa id. " It's a questi on of
rhem not playi ng well. We're
playing very wel l. now. Play ing
good defense . getting good pitch·
ing. lf you can do those thin gs.
you ca n win."
Rick Reed . 2·1. took !he loss for
th e Pira tes.
Garr el ts. mea nwhile. allowe d
just one run on three hit s. I n
pit c hing his third complere game
of the year.
"After a slow start, hr's bee n
outs tanding ," Giant s ~ mana gpr
Roger Craig sa id . "He' s in a
gr oove and it's a big lift. He has
be!ler sruff, he 's just not rhrow ·
ing the ball down the middle of
the plate...
Gar rel ts all owed a second ·
in nin g si ngle to Bobby Bon illa ,
who wa s erased on a doub le pla y
Th e oth er hit s were Andy Van
Slv ke's infield si ngle and a
ru-n·scori ng singl e by Sid Dre am
th at scored Barry Bond s In the
Sf'Ve nth.
"WP ha vrn't hPen swinging thf •
bat s consi stantly," Pirates manage r .Jim Ley l and said . "And
ronight he 1Garre lts1 ju st pow er

Su bse t lbNs not dE's lrlnR I opa .., 1heca rr1f'f mav rem II In adva nC&lt;' direct to

Th" D111iv Se ntinel on a 3, 6or 12monlh
basis Cr.&lt;'dlt wll1 ~given carrier each
Wl'l'k .

No subscr1pl tons by mall perm itte-d In
when~ horne carrier serv iC'l' Is
avaHablf'.
arl'fi S

Mall SuhRcrtpUons
Inside Melp Count)'

1.1 W&lt;'f'k~ ...
26 Wi.&gt;t•ks .
) :l

Wi.&gt;('kS..

.. $19 24
. ......... $.17.96
.. ........ S74 .36

Out~dr Melp County
13 Wr£'k S ................................ $20.£[1
26 Wt•l.'k S.
· ·· · .. $40.30
~2 Wt•eks .
... $7HO

..

5:30 p.m , followed by theconc l u·
sian of fir st·round play Sunday
wi th 1 and 2:30p m co ntests .
Also on Sund ay, seco nd-round
action will begin with the frid ay
eve ning winner s playing a t 4
p.m ., foll owed by a 5:30 p .m .
ga me featuring Saturday 's 111
a.m. and l1 : 30 a.m. winners.
Three of last year 's f inal four
- t he defending cham pio n Syracuse Hubbard 's Grrrnhou.se,
runn er ·up Point Plea sant PSM
and fourth-place Hannan Trace
- will be participating In the
tournament. This year 's dl amondfest wlll have a new rhlrdplace team. as Bidwell, last
year's co nso\allon-ga me winner,
Is absent from this year's
tou r nament.

Scheduled to participate In thls
year's 26- team tournament field
are:

Athens County - Cool vill e,
Nelsonville·York
Gallla County- Add avllle, the
Cheshire Bobcats. the Elks.
1ndlans. White Sox and Yankees
I all Gallipolis), Gr ee n and Ha nnan Tra ce.

Mason County - the Hartford
Braves, Ma son County Bar
Assn, Mason VFW. New Haven
Orioles, Fruth's Pharmacy, People's Bank, PSM and PVH
M edical (all Point Pleasant ).
MeiiJli County the A' s,
Cardinals and Dodgers (all Mlddleportl , Racine Reds 1 and
Racine 2, the Rutland Reds,
Syrac use Hubbard's Greenhouse, and the Tuppers Plains
Giants .
The Kyg!'r Creek Employees
Club Is located on S.R. 7, about
1~ miles south of Cheshire and
across from Ohio Valley Elect·
ric's Kyger Creek Power Plant .

~--- --· - -

pitched us. He didn' t go wit h the
spilt finger much. he came at us
with fastballs ."
After taking a 1-0 lead In the
seco nd on Terry Kennedy 's RBI
double, San Francisco increased
It to 2-0 on Kevin Mitchell' s RBI
sin gle.
In the seven th . a passed ball by
ca tcher Don Slaught gave the
Gi ant s their third r un . San
Francisco scored twice more In
the ei gh th on a run -scoring single
by Jose Vrlbe and a botched
rundown play after a pickoff.
Mitchell 's sacrifice fly in the
ninth ca pped the scoring for the
Gi ant s.
A-•lros I, Mets I
At Houston , Mark Portugal
gnve up three hits over six and
two-t hird Innings to pace Houston. Craig Biggio drove in a r un
and scored another to help
Portugal Improve to 4-8. Portuga l retired 16 straight hitter s
betw een the first and seventh
Inning s and Larry Anderson
wor ked the final two and onethird Innings for hi s third save.
Bob Ojeda, fell to 4-4.
Phlllles 7, Braves 2
At Atlanta , Terry Mulholland
pitched a slx -hlttl'r and Dickie
T han ripped four of 15 Philadelphia hits to power the Phllli es.
Mulholland . 4-3, pitched hi s first
complete game of th e season
while Mnrt y Clar y fell to 1-6,
al low! ng eight hit s and thr('E' ru ns
over fiv e and tw o-t hird innin gs
Cubs 4, Padres 3
At Chicago. Marve ll Wy nne hit
a two-run double and winning
pitc her Mik e Ha r key added an
RBf sin gle to l ift Chicago.
Harkey, who impro ved 1u 7-4.
gave up six hits over si x inni ngs
and M i tch Willi am s record ed the
las t out for his l Oth save. Eric
Show . 1·7. took the loss in his firs t
start sin ce May 1.1 .
l&gt;odgers 5, Cardinals 2
AI St. Lo uis. Mike Sc iasc ia
drove i n two run s In a fou r -r un
six th i nning

Eldora to host
world's highest
race
Pnvrng
- J....
•

By SCOTT WOLFE
ThIs weekend, F:ldora Speed
way In Ros sbu rg, Ohio will ho ~ 1
the highest payin g race, per mile
of anv automobllr racP ln thr
"world" a s promote r Ear I Ba lte s
present s the annu al ''Kings
Royal" Sprlnr Car race paying a
whoppi ng $50,000 . to win and
$1.000 to sta rt.
Ac tion beg ins Fr id a' with an
Ail-Star Ci rc uit of Champions
Sprint Ca r Rncr pay in g $4.111111 to
win plu s an All-S tar pa yo ff as
warm-u p for Sat ur day night 's ·
tJu ly 2l, i990 t gra nd finale
Since this i s th e big ges t race of
1he yra r. the King s Royal dra ws
a hu ge field of c ar s. a la rgP
crowd. a nd mPd 1a from around
th e United State s Includin g

ESP:-; Sperdw erk covpragt•
All th C' prf'vious wmn E'r s arr
rn ter rd f or th1s y·par's evf'nt
Including defending c ham pion
and ct efrnl11ng World of Ou tlaw
sprinr c hamp Bobby Da,·i s. Jr.
Two rime w inner Ste\'P Kinse r .
Doug Wo ~ gang. Jac " Wi ld
Chi ld'· Haudschild . Sa mmv
Swindell and thf' nation's bf&gt; st
sprint car dri ver s

Slammi n Sa mmy Swindell.
who recently won th e $](1 ,000 ro
wi n Ohi o Spr int Speedweek event
at El dora and the Eldora Anm
\Pr sar v show is &lt;1 favoritP
com i ng into t hr 1990 King's
Hoya l T he beauti ful black and
Goid ·lraf TM C Challenger has
bee n featured on TNN-Nash ·
villf' a long with Stf'Vf' Kin srr and
Doug Wolfgan g in recent seg
ments of " Hidden Heroes" and
"A mer ican Sports Ca l vacade ".
E ld ora is a high banked. 1·2
mlle dirt oval. wllirh is dangrr ously fast a s l'VidPncPd by ! hi'
record mid - l.J second tim es
turn ed In bv the winged sprlnr s.
Track r eco-rd hold er Dave Bla
ney of Har tford, Ohio Is th r
fastPst man to clock in on thf'
f:l dora clay, set ting that ma r k in
last season' s King 's Goya l eve nt.
Dave Is the son of Lou Bla nev.
l ege ndary sprin t and modified
driver. and ma y be more widely
known In this area as the bro the r
of West Virginia Moun taineer
basketball star Dale Blant'Y. who
also made th e fina l cut for the LA
Lakers two years back .
Ironi ca ll y, Dale Bl a nry
squeezed hi s slender 6·foot ·6
frame Into a spr int for th e 1990
season and r ecently won back-toback twin 25-lap features at
Sharon Speedway . Dal e and
Dave were both all-stat e bas·
ketball pla ye r s fo r Kinsmen
Badger In the early eighties.
Many locals make the annual
trek to Eldora each year for thi s
event, but first time fans may
want to consider an early start to
gpt a good seat lor the 6 p .m .
warm up period both Friday and
Saturday .

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

·-

- · ------~-

.,--.

.
'

The Daily Sentinef- Page- 3

.

~·

BELTS GRAND SLAI\1- A jubilant Eric Davis

the sixth Inning of Monday night' s gam•• against
the vi siting Montreal Expos, whom tlw 1\eds heat
R-3. (UP I I

is congratulated by teammates Mariano Dun can
and Gll"nn Brug~ after Davis hit u grand s lam in

Lancaster blanks Meigs, 8-0
ATHENS - After waitin g
t hrL'l' days bee au se of rain the 8th
Disrr lct American L e gion Base
ball Tournament finally go t
undrr way Monday evening with
Lancas ter pulling awa .v late in
t hf' ga mP to post a 8-0 vic tory
over Meigs .
The game was quite a pitchers
duel for seven innings between
Andy Ba er for Meigs and big Pa t
An derson for L anca s tflr Kf'vln
T ayl or had a bunt sing le with one

ou t In the third for Meigs for th e
firs! hit In the gam!' by ei th er
rea m, while Baer had a no hitter
go ing until Mike Wickham 's one
out sing le in the sixth innin g.
Barr was crws ln g a long until

the si xth allow in g onl y two base
ru nner s. Pat Ander so n led off the
Lan cas ter six th wi t h a sma sh to
ie ft ·Cf' nt er f i Cld b u l C'E'n te r f il' I d1• r

1h e SCV Prtll bu1 !Joth flrTil' S
AndNson put out the fin•.
An drrson Wf'nt the routP to
p1ck up thr win sca lterin g five

Ke vi n Ta y lor mJdc a finf' run ning catch tor thP first ou t. 1hJt
wa s th r firs1 ball al lowed out of

h1ts. striking out B in cluding thL'
sidr 1n l hP nint h. a nd walki ng J.
Baer wa s 1he loser des pl tf'

the infi eld by Baer . Bu t Wickham
followed wilh a gro und ball jus t
out of t he reach of third ba sPman
Ja son Wrig ht to end the no hill £'r.
Wickham advoncl'd to seco nd on
a grou nd out and to third on a
passed ball. M ter Chad Swack·
hammer walk ed and sto le second. J ason Maddux l in ed a sho t
off I he leg of Baer and into left

p itchi ng an ou1 sta ndi ng ga m e.

fl r ld to SCOIT' hotll runnf'r s
Lanc a-.; tcr score d four m on• in

the cighr on four wa lks and a
Meigs error. a passe d ba ll and a
La ncaster double b\· T im Hen
wood. L ancaste r i cPd 1hP g a me
wi t h two 1 un~ 111 thP ninth on a
wa l k. sal'rJ fl.Cl' 11 nd two ~ in g l ps
MC'igs wa\ unablt~ to gl't
any thin g go lng aga inst Ander ·
so n. they put t wo runner s on In
the fifth and loaded the bases ln

-Sports briefsCycling
Frenc hm an Ch ar ly Mottet
broke from 1h e park to win thr
15th stage i n 1h C' Tour de F'ra nc P.
cove rin g the 106 miles fr om
Millau ro Revel In a n unofficia l
time of four hours, 13 minutes , 56
seco nd s. Italian Claudio Chlappu cci retained rhc overall lead ·
er's yellow jersey ... Fre nchman
Laurent Flgnon. a two- tim e Tour
de France winner. won't rid e in
th e world cycling championship

Andy went 7 1-3. giving up fl V&lt;'
run s on only t hrer h its, whi ll:'
walkin g 6 and str i king ou t 7.
Chris Stewa rt and Wes Young
a lso saw action on the m ound for
Meigs
Tim HPnwood led La nr ds tf' r a t
rhe plate wirh " double. Mike
Wickham . And y Smeltzer. Ch ad
Swackh ammrr an d .J ason Mad·
du x each singled. Ke1·in T avlor
lrd th e way for Meigs with t wo
~ in g les. Er ic Heck. Ja son Hager
i.ln d Ed Crooks carh had a sing!P.
MPigs will pi&lt;J _v the losL•r ot las t
n ig hts We\lston-Giouswr ga me
on Tuesday af 1rr noon at '2 at
Glouster, if M eigs wins that

game they will pl ay aga in
Tu esday at 5:30 at Athens H1 gh
School.

1 n SeptPmber bee a u se of rontl n ui ng inju r~· p rob lem s Fi gnon , who

dropped ou r of th e Tour de
France rhis wa r With a leg
injury·. has been ro ld by physi ·
cian~ to rrq brfore resuming
training ldtN this .su mnwr .
Fnothull
A Uni \'lTSily uf 1\'orth Curolina
researr hpr

wh o

m onit ors

footba ll·rrlatrd injuri es sa id
dea th s and paralysis among high
sr' hoo l dnd co ll ege players
J"f'~H ' hf'd ; 1 ll _V('Cll' high in 1989 .
Fi f lf't' n plavPrs d if' d fr om
tra um a.

hrart failurf' or hra t

.stroke . said Fred eri c k Mueller .
profrs so r of ph _vsical ed ucation
&lt;11 Ur\C. F'ourt r rn sp inal c-o ni
in j ut ir-; ea usrd pl'fm(:l ne n1
pa r:.~l vsl .s

Skiing
The Italian men' s World Cup
to&gt;a m. lrd by doubi P Ol ympir
r hampi on A lbrr to T o mba . was
fo rcC'd to d ~:lay !h drparturr
M o nd &lt;.~v for thP sPasun·op!:'ning
racf· s in !'..:ew Zrala nd du r to a
id &lt;'k of snow The .Japa nese
squ ad and thr Austrian s arr
a lrPi.lcl V in Nrv. Zea land . M an.\
F: u rop{'a n squads wPrr due to

I'ITCIIES OUTSTANDING GAME -

Sonth(&gt;aW Andy Baer
causl' Monday night
against Lanca" tt•r . Baer gavr up onle thrPP hil"i and stru ck out 7 in
1 I-3 innin g-s.

pltchrd an out..;t anding game in a

have ldl Monday fo r !he Sou th·
f' rn Hrm is ph r rc.

losin~

Socet•r
Craham Taylor has signed a
$1 07-m illlon . f~ ur ·xrar pact to bP
1hc new ma na gl'r of thP F.ng l is h

Randall F. Hawkins, M.D.

nat iona l t ea m Taylo r . whn lr d

As ton V illa t o second place In th e
Engli sh Le ague l as t season.
rr •placrs Bobby Robson. wh o
n •s ignf'd his positi on af ter fh P
World Cup ro become head coach
at lea ding Du rch c lub PSV
Ei ndhoven.
•••

~ p [ [ J Jl

S ilK~ BA~JN

SAnJIOA T!SLINMT &amp; WEM~~l

51nnou nce.s tfi.e opening of fi.is practia in

...

In tern a[ Meaicine

SPRIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524
f2

1~

,::~·~~·,"-,~' ':!p~~l

B•RIOA IM ~TIM£[ S SAT /SUN l M'fC .

UJI1i,l.lft

~ ~~T llJ£5~r

!fl ~ (P I "[Ill~ Of • lfJ'I[I( • •

"011 IOUO l")

in tfu
I P{easant Vaf{ey JWspitaf 'Meiiwf Offoe 'Buifiing
/

1

I

Seeing patitnts oeomning ~ugust
'Moru&amp;zy tfirougfi 'friday
9 a.m. · 5 p.m.

1

CaU {304) 675-7700 aftu July 18 for appointments

DJ.J PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAl

IVl The family ol proltuiono&amp;
,,

~ --

'I

�. . -.

...

.

Page- 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. July 17. 1990

Play resumes in '90 Hubbard
Memorial Little League meet
BY SCOTf WOLH
Senllnel Correspondent
Finally! Yes. Finally, Monday
night was a good night for
baseball as a com plele and
revised schedule of the Bitt
Hubbard Memorial Little
League

Tournament

resumed

with the Pomeroy Mustangs,
Coolville. and the HartJord
Braves posted wins to adva nce
one s tep closer to the t ourna mrn t
crown.
The Pomeroy Mustangs de-

feated Pleasant ValleY Hospital
Medica l F:quipment 10 5 brhtnd a
big three- r un first inmng and a
duplicate fifth frame .
Pomeroy took a 3·0 lead 1 n the
f irst w hen Travis Curtis rrJchf'd
on a n error. Travis Abbon

singled. Josh Harri s singled. and
Matt Ault reac hed on an E'rrar
that allowed him to advancr al l
the way to th ird a nd ch:&lt;H th r

bases
PVH made It close 1n thr t op ul
the second with tw o run s on

walks toR. Bragg and M. Shinn
and a Fil'lder' s cho ice. 32 .
Pomeroy added one in 1hc 1hi rd
frame and onr in thp fourth. bur

PVH

the game with a

tied

thref' -run fourth inn ing on si ng iP'&gt;

by M. Crul l, .!. Halt. A J Wr ight.
and a triple by J.D Holste in .
Singles by Josh Harris. M;llt
Ault. and wa l ks to l srJP I Gr imm

and Chad Molden opened up the
ga me i n a thn•(•-r un

PomNo _\

fl ft h
Pomeroy hittrrs were Gr imm,
a double and sing le: Ault with a

trip le and si ngle; Harris three
singles. Abbott two singles. ond

Travis Curtis a single . .Joe Hi ll
had two walks .
M. Richmond was the win ning
pitcher as he fanned B. wa l ked six
and gave up j us t five hits J. D.
Holstein suffered the loss despite
a good effo rt . He fanned 10.
walked six and gave up nine hits.
Hols lrin had a triple, A.J .
Wright t ~vo singles, and sing les
each by Crull. llall, and T .

WallacP.
Pomrro\' ad\·ann•s to Tuesda.v
night's gamr '""'i!h second gamP
wi nnrr Coolville . bPginn ing al

7: 15 .
In th(' sPcond gamr Coo lvll lr
Jd\·o ncrd wi th an excitingR -:i win
O\Tr Ru !land's RPds
!lut iLind wrnt ahpad 2-1 in th('
f 1r"t Jnd 4-1 in thC' th ird brforr
Coo h·illf' brokr thf' ga mf' ope n
1.1.·i th a S{'\'f'n run fuurth innin~ .
f&lt;l\ t' o.,ing iPs b~- ~r i son. J R
Spr·ing('!', Gowrn. l\ichol son, Jnd
!hock. a douhlf' bv Ch apman.
a nd ~~ t ripk· b\' Dixon supplied thr
runs
O!hPr Coo J\·i JII · hilt(•rs wen'
Sp r i ngP• .Jddi ng two sing Irs.
Hrol'k ct duublr . Coler a si ngle· .
and a Guf' S' a sing lr
(; ;t r Y Stanlr\ led Rutland with
a tripl l'. homt' r·un, ~:~nd sing-lr;
wh ilt' g~d ning sJng lf's f'ach W('t l'
Jcrem .\ · I 'ir·r f"P. Chris Rou sh.
Srott .\
(;(•orgf',
and Sam
Mrh:innf'_
\
B Dhon w~'-" lhP win n rng
p11ttwr with ~s lr ikPOU ls , Jwa lks,
and W('\'Pn hi ts to hi s rrrdit,
~A'h t lr Chris Roush dC''&gt;pitl' i.l good
rtfort -"uf fl'rPd thP loss. 1-h'
fanne-d f h·f', wal ked threC' anrl

By The Bend

Tuesday, July 17, 1990

gave up eleven hits .
Th e Monday nigh t finale was
quite a pitcher' s duel as 30
strikeouts were register ed by
both pitcher s. Unfortunately ,
only one young man was going to
reap a win for his fine effort and
that was Chris Roach of the
Hartford Braves, who defeated
Pt . Pleasan t PSM 2~0 in an al l·out
ba t tie.

Page-5

Shamblin
birthday

T hose tw o runs came early off

losing pitcher Mikey Richmo nd
in the first inning. Doug Fields
and Mike VanMeter collected
back to~ back leadoff hits for
Hartford. then sandwic hed

Pooh ca ke

fanned 16. wa l ked ju st two. and
gaw up three hits. while Rtch ~
mond fanned 14. walked five, and
Both young men and their
respective teammates should be

Birthd ays of Dana Hoffma n.
Janet Bolin. Go lda Reed , Bob
Reed . Helen Eblin, and Norma

the home of Donna NC'Ison.

l .ee were observed at th e recent

rar h rollectPd wa l ks.

and the obligation WJs gi vpn to

meeting of the Harri sonville
Order of the Eastern Star with
Worthy Mat ron Golda Reed and
Worthy Patron Bob Reed in
chargp of the 27 members
at tending.

the group led by Bob Reed .
Harold Ri ce gave th e blessi ng
before th e group entered th&lt;'

and Mark Olive r rac h singiPd ror

PSM .
Hartfo rd pla ys the first game
W ednesday aga in st thr wJnner of
thr Syracuse Hubb ard's
Grf'rnho use-\lew Haven game

It wa s announced tha1the Past

COAL WOMEI'i - Insight into women's roles and their
significance will be Included In the scr ipt which explores the loca l
minln~ history by Connie Wi nter s, left, and Helen Horn.

which Is slated for H .10 toni ght
At siX ton ight . Pt Pleasant
Fruth's Pharmacy plays the
Middleport Dodgers, while

A1'TE!\:IPTS DOUBLE PLAY - Indians seco nd
baseman Jerry Browne attempts to complete the
double play after retiring Oukland's Dave
Blankenship at second hasc in the llrst inning of

Pomrray pl ays Co olville at 7: 15

.

Monday night's game In Oakland. Browne was not
able to throw out Dav(' Ht~ nde rson , who beat the
throw to llrst. The A's won 3 ~ 0 . I UP I)

_.(

Coal Town Women
topic of program
The cha lleng ing live s of 20
local women will be explored this
co ming

rurn ed

to

Fenway

Park

and

his parents and a number ol

ro ughed up th&lt;• Rt•d Sox .
Mi nneso ta 's Paul Sorre nto.

friends . but onr of his old college
buddi es wasn't too pleased.
" It wa s a good p iecC' of hi t ti ng

who grew up and attf'nded h ig h
sc hool in thp Boston area a nd

,Jeremy Hill, Jared Sm ith, Mike ,Johnson, Tommy
Roberts. Kyle r-iorris, and Matthew Shain. Back

Majors
fh

.

F"-,.j

f•· arn
ll n~ l and

[)o.t rl)4c

B•IUmnM'

""'" '\"'~.~
,..,.
on.

.

I.

I'd

-

IJ

I~

I]

I~

]~

Oakland
( "h\o· OJtO

1"'

ti l ~

"iU.IIIfo
j

•

..
.
"
0.\

a llfornlo

VII nrr~o&amp; a

1:1

Tr•..,

l :l

K111n"""' l 'lq

"'
I~

1:\ ' '

1&lt;1 I .I''

I.

~~ I •

~ R,...llil•
, _ \ on. "l '""
I\ lin'£• I II) !
Df'trol ~ - Clllo •J:" I
\t:iniW'~ Ol:l I. Ro•l nn :

flalnrnnn · ;

r P &gt; ...

llwight IIIII, and Gary

~

f o·£Jn

I.

"' . ·"

l 'l!t,f&gt; u I"R t1
l o rl.

''"''
''"" r•· i4l

l'hll ad .-1(-11 1.,
l hlo aru
l A) II'

,..

ilnolnnan
~~~" f't1101 '''
\n~l

...

I'Ll

-

bll .-,

_n

_", ((

.MI .19
I ' II

"oli"l

"
••
'~
'
"
".. "" "
" '"I
"I• "" I -I': •,
" " I" "
" ""
.1 ' '

I~

1!'.!

"

3~

n

......

lil.'i
_-, ._.-,

l :l

:-,,.., fll .-11'
llou'\lon

o;

:1~

\ll anl~

&lt;I
11:

~!

:q

1!1' ,

! II

\Iond o~,' H""t~l•

( lro~· IIWllill l ~- .\ l onoln •11l :1
~~~~~ t "ranfl,.·o li. 1 ' 11 ~111: h I
l'h ll.t drl phla
\i l.anta ~
( hi&lt;':aJ:o I "i.an Olo• ~;~, J
ll n u..Jnn I . "'"'"" l ..rl I

· ~f· 'ult .. . ,... .)

"

IJJlll• :

Re,ist•d
8th Distrit·t Tournament Srhedul ...

'

'

Tl'ESD ,\L .Jl 'L\' 17
Gamr 4-Lo.srr Cam(• lv " !.nst•r Camr . '2. ~ p m .
Gloustrr rark •
Gam(' 5-Winnrr Gamf' 1 •,·&lt;. Winnrr Larnr ~. 2 p m . .
Ra nn ow FiP id
Game 6-W! nnPr Camr .1 ·.;-. ArhPn\, i2-l 111 . '2 pm.
Dalton Field
Ga me 7-Wlnner Camp~ vs . L os rr C amr. ti. ~ :.10 P- m.
Ra nnow Field'
r.amp 8-Loser Gamr ~ v s LosPr Camf' :1. ~ · .30 p. m ..
Dal ton Field'
WEDNESDAY , .JULY 17
Gam(' 9-Winner Gamf' :i vo.; _ Winner Game f., 5:.10 p. m . .
Ra nnow Flelkd
Game 10 - Winner Game 7 vs Wlnnrr Gamr R, 5:.10 p.m .
Dallon Fiel d'
THURSDAY ..JULY IS
Camp 11 - Winner Game 10 vs. l.oser Game 9. 5:.10 p.m ..
Rannow Field'
FRIDAY, ,JULY 19
Game 12-Win ner Game 9 vs . Winn er Gamr 11 . ."! .10 p rn .
Rannow FleJd••

SATURDAY ..JLLY 20
Game 13 &lt;If neededi - Winnrr Game 12 vs Losrr Gamp 12,
11 am .. Rannow Flrld"
• - Indicates loser ellminarrd from tournampnt
•• -Championship game o r game.s: team losi ng spco nd game of

lr

~orris.

Skyline plans
complete
program

t:

'·"
"" "" ,.
'"
"·
"
"
'
" "" ,.,
"'I" 1-i'' ,
"''"'' " " •• ":a ·: ' ' 100 I '
"" . ..,

I ornflll&lt;&gt;
fl.&lt;.&gt;•toa

Coach("'' St e"'e Randolph. Sa m Shai n,

Ualoland l . l l t'H IIIII d I]
Toronto I , So•IIJliP :1
"' llwau••·r ] _ I all l o~nla I

I &lt;&gt;lt~dPro-..• ln lf'fiiiiiiO~ij(

\'1t:Kil \ .' Lt: .\1.\

row -

tou rn ament will be ellminalrd.
LOCATIONS OF FIELDS
Rannow Field - Athens High School. The Plains
Dalton FJeld-Jaycee Fields Complex. West Sta te Steel ,
A I hen s
Glouster Fle ld-Cious ler Park, Glousler

Skylinr Spee dwav in St('wa rt.
Ohi o wi ll r un a compte tp progra m this Fr iday nig ht as ~~
\1.·arm -up for thP up-coming July
:!.7 rnids r ason cha mpionships
to so mr of thP finest racing in The
Midwrst, as so mrof t hC' nations'
fin('st racrr s prriodically drop
b\ · in an clfort to ta ke homr th r
v..innrr's share of thr largr

\~· pekJ~· purse.
Las t WPC'k" s racing was
wJshed ou t b~- thr rains in the
Oh io Vallr~- . but wi th somrJddC'd
m uis tu r.P in thl~ ground thi s
week' s ra ri ng should provr to hr
\"('f\' fa st.
!'\·a mrs suc h a" B.A Malcuit.

Shavrr. Yl artv Horton .

oi Sorrento's at Florida State . "I
had him 0 2 and I co uldn 't put l1 irn

in the winning ru n in the ninth

away

mning Monday night to l ift the
~ i nnesota T\.vi n s to a J-2 vie t ory

"Maybe when vou're str ug·
g !ing y~u try a lit tl~ too hJ r d .·· hr

over the Boston Red Sox
Th e nati ve son. who hPipc-d

sa id '' Ma y br I was tryln g to hP
too perfect ln the ninth."

knock theSoxo ut offtrst place in

The Red Sox. who ha\c now

the AL East. ('ve n go t the benr fit

lo st seve n of thpi r last Plght,

of a lu cky bounce off the fampd
Green Monster
Wi th Mi nnesota trailong 2·1.
Krn l Hrbek led off the ninth with
Jn opposite·field double off Jeff
Gra)' . l ·l Greg Gagne ran for

dropped bac k tnto seco nd place
1·2 game behind the Toronto Blu e
Javs
The Red Sox took a I 0 tn the
ftr st on Tom· Pena·s douiJIP pia\
gr~u nder but !he Twins tied the

Hrbe k and scorPd on Bri an
HJ r per' s onP ·o ut single 1oce nrr r
for a 2-2 t iP .
Sorrent o t hf'n followrd with a
driv(' tolpft -cen ter field. T he bal l

scorr in thf' th i rd on Dan
Glad drn ·_., firldrr ·s rhoicP
I3o ston reg&lt;JinPd the !Pad a1 2 1
in th(' sixth o n an run -scori ng
Pr r or by sPrond h&lt;:~srman Frf'rl

caromed off the wall and hit Red

Manrtque

Sox centrr f!PidPr Kr vin Ro mine
i n th e f'-1.('(_' As thP ba ll ro lled
along th r warning t rack. Ha rprr
circ led thr basf's and sro red the
go- a hr ad run
Altho ug h So rrento was cut

Juan Berrng-urr. 7-2, pitrhrd
o nr and o ne· thircl of scorr lr ~s
rr lirf fnr thP win antl Rick
Aguilrra worked lhP ninth for hi s
'22nd Sct \ 'C
El sPwhPrT' in ttw Arrwrican

Lf'ague. Nr11· Yo rk nipped l&lt;an
sas CitY J -2 . DPt roit erlgPrl
ChictJgo-5-4. !3alti morr downf'd
TC'xas 7-6. Oakla nd blanked

"I im agi ne if they wou ld haYr
play ed it cleanl.v . I would ha&lt;·r
had to hold at thtrd." sold

Cleve land .l ll. Toronto topped
Sea ttl e l ·:l, MilwaukeP bounced
Ca l tforni a l l

Harpe r · ·1 was jus t reaching
second when i t took the we!rd
bou ncr awav f rom both out
fiPidPr s_ 1 jUst s tar ted r un nin g
hard .··
Homin1 • left thr g&lt;J. m P altC'r lht•
p la_\:. •l'ith a bruisE' over hi s left
ryC' and ~·· as schedu lf'd for
x rav~
i1"dd insu lt 10 in ju ry , i t w as
thf' fi r st ninth in ni ng come-back
for thr Twins th is seusun . Minnr

Blur .l ay~ 4, \-tarinPr~ :1
A I Sril t tlr, Jimmy Ke y allowPd
j u st three hit s O\'C'r seven scorrlf•ss i nnin gs and Frf'rl McGriff hit
his r ig hth homr run in 16 ga mt-'!-1
to lea d Toronto into fir st p lacr in
thcALEa st.Kryimprovedlo5 -;1_
a nd Tom Ht-·nkl' n•cordPd the
final ou t for his 17 th sa\'C' . E r ik
H anson droppPd to 10-1
A. ·s 3, Indians 0
At Oa kland. Calif . . Scott Sand

snta had been 0-40when it trailed

prson and Gene Ne lson co mbined

OC'Ima~

aftrr right innings.
" I t was certain ly

on a si x -hit shutout and Mike
Ga l lego had three hi ls and an

a

we ird

plav." Sorrento sa id .· I thought

II
I
I

h~Js

Adams Is currentl y th e Late?!-:.
Model point s leader and was the •
las 1 feature winner as he cap -

;&gt;

tured the 6t h an nual Bob Adam s.
Sr . Memorial Race on July 6.
Racing begins at 8:30. war·

o

m-upsareat6
lions at 7:30. :30andquallflca.
The las t raci ng
program . despite a large num ber
of Th
cars
co ncluded
prior atoregu
11 :30.
is week
will carry
lar
admission for a full program and

~
0

~.
8
"'

•z?.
;;;,

:·~;.:·briefs- r
Horse racing

The $500,000 Caesars Interna-

tlonal Handicap, the first major
thoroughbred race sponsored by
a casino. will be run Saturd ay a!
Atl an l ic Cll y Rare Course. The
post position draw - to be
"dealt " from a blackjack dea l ·
er's cards - Is Thursday.

I

1'1.!:]\"l.oAJIRES

condi tions. I t descr ibes their

d ist Ch u rc h in Ath ens. Admi ssio n

r igorous chi ldhood r horps and

is $1. The even t Is CO·sponsored

homestyle fun . The Millfield
Mine Disaster of 1930 is pres·

Tigers 5. White Sox 4
At Detroit. A l an Tramm PI I 's
solo homrr with two Ollis in the
ninth i nning off rPl ievrr Donn

Pall. H. snapped Chicago's road
win ning strrak at II gam('s .
Rc lievpr Mik P HPnn e man

pitched to four bat ters to im·
prove ro 5 - ~
BrrwPrs :J, 1\ngL•Is I

At Anohcim. Calil, Rob Derr's
solo homrr snapped a seve nth -

innin g dead lock an d Ron f{obin ~
son sca tte re d 10 hits over srven
an d one·third innings to lead
Mtlwaukee. Mark Langston. 4 ~ 11 .
pitc hrd h is th lrd com plete game

of the yrar. al l of wh ich have
bN'n losrs. Robinson improvPd to
:1 -1 ancl 0Jn Plt•sac not chf'd his
l :)th savr .
Oriok&gt;~ 7. RangPrs li
At Ba l ti m on•, HrJ d Arn sbrrg
w al kPd Mickrv TC' t tieton ~vith th r
basrs loadPd and nonP out in the
ninth i nning to l ift Baltjm orr.
Kcnnv Rogrr s took thC' loss and

Greg~ Ol son . o :1.

Tournamrnt director Terry
Cilkry ha s an nouncPd that thrrr
wtl I tic " Class E State Tourna

ment Qualifier CSSSA softball
t our namen t at the West Stat e

St rrrt Field s in At hens on July 21
and 22 . Ent ry fee is $Go and two
bal ls. T rophies arc tobeawarded
to thr fi rst thrl'r pla ces.
Thr tournr~' is oprn to tram s
rh at ha vp no t yPat qualiiied for
thr statf' tou rn ey . It is a rou nd robi n tournament and on ly lht•

fir st 10 team s wi ll be accep!ed .

l":"'"'..oo"

BRAKES
r-t/..1fRONJ END PARTS
M'
ALIGN AND fRONT END
Ll::f

-,
~

("l

.zo•

,~

0

business insurance pack age, that is . It's SERIES
ONE. a broad -coverage.
competitively -priced
plan
for retail stores. offices,
churches. apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a proposal and quotation.

"

·~!~~·.~. $1.69~. '"""" 1 ~2:!8~
~

1

GOOD THRU 7 1 31 1 90

L-------------------------------1
H &amp;A

Pomeroy ome

600 E. Main St.

uto.

992-2094

T E AREA FOR 23 YEARS
SERVING H

Pomeroy

Coun tv Historica l Soc iety a nd
District Six of the United Mtne
Workers of America .
Wome n who lived In surround ing arras co nrr ibu ted o:; tories for
th is program . Man_\' wrrP daug h!['r s a 'ld wives or miner s. Somr

ta ught sc hool , clerked at stores.
tended bar. were church orga
nlo;ts. nurses or .-.Pa mstrrssc s.

Hi gh lights f rom the irexperi en·
res wi ll be read in dramat ic form

r nt rd from the unique perspec li vp of a first gr ade teacher, a
m in r r 's wife and a nur se.

ThP

c hallenges

of

stn kes.

lniPrmittent work and a lcohol
abusf' t o the families involved

are illu strated. and the pl easures
of ca rds, old -lim P ra dio and
danring. Th crr arc t~cco un ts of

home doctoring, home birthing,
jobs in town when hu sbands are
disa bled. and women helping

Jov Huntley's backgrou nd inter pr~·tat io n '~'i l l t'.'&lt;p lore our loca l

C' ach uthf'r m·pr the rough spots
Onr of the most moving rem inis cences te lls of a miner 's wlfp' s
pa.ssionatf' outb urs l i n J rl'st&lt;Ju
ra nt at som{' upper -class ladiC's
who are cri ti ci zing s tri kers

mining hi storv. She will set It tn

ml/IP LS

by ConniP WintPrs and Hf"'l f'n
Horn . from a script composed by

Horn and Je anette Myers. Dr

the l argrr contrxt of powPr
st ru gg les in the Ap pal achi an coJ I

field s and their socia l consequen ·
ces . Her talk and the dram at ir
read ing w ill provide insight Into
women's ro ll~s and break silencr
about thpi r signifkanc e. Minf'·
rrlatcd songs and d iscu ssion wi l l

be incl uded in thr program.
which is part of l hts yPa r's tOOth
.annlvrrsarv rplrhratJon of lt11 •

Unit ed

~l ine

Workers

America .
Tht• Fir " ! LniiPd

of

\1 r t 1Hldi &lt;-.,1

Church ts at 2 South Co il&lt;'gl' St in
A thrns. anoss from Th r CiT.\"
Parking G.na gP 1 frrr parking on
Sunda\· •- / 1 i'&gt; a(Tr .';sJ biP to thf'

handic apped at the rear of th&lt; •
church . Funding for lh1 s pro]f' CI
and fol low -up \'ideo documenta
t ion ha s b{'en pro\'i drd b~· num f'r ·

t~uth e ntic house hol d eq uipmen t

thr Afhrns Cou n ty·
Mu seu m .

Histor ica l

A half·hour VHS vi deotapr
b ~JSf'd

on !h is program plus l wo
li\'(' in ter\'irws with roa l town
womr n wi l l p rr mlrrr durlng
Womrn ·s Histon
We£'k in

March . 1~9 1. it " 'iii br avai lab le.
along with a dl .sruss i on guidC'a nd
suggp.:. t f'd rrsouiTf' \"ll lunt Per'\.
to srhoob. co lk gC'~ and groups
intrn•s ted in )('Jrning morP
about loca l hislon· and womC'n's
rolf'\, . Fur ther i nf~ rma lion about

the vi df'Otape or Sund ay's pro
gram

may br obtai nrd

Helrn Horn at

f rom

fi9~·Rb~5

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

preparrd. SpC'C ial r lass awards

were given to David John son and
Sa ndy Storms for lear nin g
verses. t o Angie W illrtt for
br inging the most visitors and to

Charlolte

Goodman

for

best

br ha vi or.
Specia l ovpra ll v ward ~ wPn'
give n 10 Angle Willett and Ryan

c low ns. TheyhwPrP on hand t o
show the c hlidren how impo r ta nt

Refreshments wpre served a ncl
parents wert' able to sec th('

fr iend s co uld be.

crafts and projects th eir child ren

Other

vis itors

were Kenn y

Kool. Stinky, Molly ond Clyde.
the friendly puppets.
Closing activit ies were held
Fri da y
cvC'ni n g with
102
atten ding.

made .

a luminum foil

Brtdgrl \ aughan. Danielle Mid·
k itr: plastic canvas nf'ed lepoint.

Er ic Mon tgomNy , Br id get
\ 'aug han . Chris Midk iff; refrig~
€'!'a tor

mag nf't. Chrlsea Montgom(•r-,·, C"'h ris NlidkHf: s tuffpd toy

• ontrst. Chip Macomber; photo·
gr aphy. Chri s Midk iff. Er ic
Montgomrr_\.
:vla rnmht'r

ar t .

Co ntribution..., \-n~r-t• rnudl' to Thr
Ch i llicoth(' \ 'Pte ran " Hospit al
birthda _
, . pa r ty, Co,·rnant Housf'.
and M issionarirs o f At r i ca 'dH'n
th(• Amrriran I.Pgion Lrwb
Man IE'\ ' L1nit 2h.1 mPt J"f'CI'ntl,v ~~~
Oa t ('·~· in {;Jllipoli.' wlfh Mr_o.,
i.orrrnr Coggins as hostps..,
Margar('t Bowlf's pn•sidt•d &lt;1!
ttw mrC' tin g whi ch opf'nf'd 1n
rit ualist ir form Stw ~ t &lt;J t l'd 1/u l

o;; hr had rPtu r npd a s1gnrd pcti lio n to thr \at ion&lt;_
d Ht•adquar tpr.s uf t he Amrrican Legio n in
Indianapolis. !nd .. roncPrn ing
burning Jnrl othr&gt;r des('lTJtio ns
of t hP Amrrican fla~
A round ro bin get wrllcard was
signrd for FlorPncr Richards
who 1s
rc·cuprr.:Jting from
su rgt 'r\· . She is sra,v lng a1 thP
hom{' of twr daughtrr a nd so
n - tn - lJw 1n Co lumbu s
Mro.; Gogg in s served refresh ments and it wa s announced that

the nex t mN'ting will be held at

The Salpm Township Volun ·
teer F i re Department wi l l hokl
its annu;tl il'(' tTP&lt;Jill social on
Sal urda\· from II a .m . to i p.m .
ThC'I"e. will bf' SC'\'(' r al fla\·ors of
homemade i r r crp;-Jm ;J\'ailablr
as w C' Il 1:1~ hut dugo., and r utJSt IJC'd
sa ndwirhr~. macaroni and po
tala sa lad. bakf'd hr&lt;Jn s. ~law.
homrmadf' p ics. a nrl hP\'f'f' agrs
Thrrr will also bf• l iYt ' Pn ll' r
talnmrnt durin g thr af tnnoon
ThC' firr dPpa r tmrnt J\, locatf'ci
on Routl' 124 at Sa lt•nr l'l'rltl'r

thP home of Lu la Hampton i n
S(' ptPmbPr .
1/o.., in g ('rrrmoniPs werr ron du t tl'll h\· thr prPsident.

·

LCCD Meeting
LrJd i ng Crrrk Consrr,·anc_\"
D1 s1nct wi ll hold its monthly
me(•ting \\' Pd nesday on Wednes da~ · at ~ &lt;l.m at its office .

THE 1990

The presc hool sa ng "Love Is"
Me ...
Th e prima ry departme nt sa ng
"Hear Us Lord" and recited their
verses . Special class awards
we r e given to April Large for

bringing the mos t visi tors and to
Scally Byer s for learning the
most venif&gt;s .

The mlddler deparlment sang
"Gods Friend" and recited
ver ses.
T ht• vo uth depa r t ment sa ng
·'Missionary Miss ion'· and (X'r -

formed a Sp&lt;'cial sk it ther had

Clarification

ThPy an-:o as

fo llows:
No spots may be reservrd pr ior
to the opPning of the Sf'Crrtar~' ·s
offkP on th e fa irground .;; on

Thursday

Aug. 10. The offi ce

hours Jf~ 9 a. m . go 4 p.m .
Spacrs will bl.:' assigm•d on a
fir st come. fi rst serve basi s.
On lv one space m ay be re ser ved per indiv i dua l, w h ich
mea ns thai if a n indi vidual
cannot bP prPse nt t o re se rve a
ca mpsite, someone may ask

anot her Indi vidu al to do that for
them , but they may on ly reserve

one spot tota l.
An Indiv idu al must be at least

Lee Ballard\ Van Dykf', Kan sas

18 years of age or older to rPserve
a space .

The fee s are $50 a week for
campers and $25 for tents.

Fall Festival

and was 20 inches long .
Grandparents ar e M r. a nd
Mrs. Arno ld Va n Dyke. Kansas
Cit y. Mo.; and Mr. and Mrs
Ralph Ballard. Long Dotlom .

The Racine Fall Festival will
be held Sep t. 29.
Anyone wanting to rent spa ces

KELLEY A. VAN DYKE

Family vacations in Carolina
The group also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Burnside. They toured
Old Wilmington. rode the ferry
boat. Sea Level. across the Cape
Fear River to Southport, N.C.,
toured theS .S.N. Carolina battl e~
ship and watched the Fourth of
July celebration with 200.000
people from that ship.
A tour of the North Carolina
Aquarium and swimming at
Kure and Wrightsville beaches
highlighted the vacation .
Mrs. Burnside took the group
to shop at Independence Mallin
Wilmington, N.C. and also
cooked out several evenings.

for food . arts. craft s, or other.
should co nta ct Joyce Quillen at
949 ~2438or Mind y Hill at 949~2877.
The cost Is $10 per space.

Reedsvi!ie
Community VBS
Reedsville Communlly Vaca
lion Bible School will be held
through Friday from 6: 30-8: 30 at
Riverview School. Classes will be
held for nursery students
through and Including adults.
Churches participating Include
Reedsville and Long Bottom
United Methodist Churches, Fel lowship Church of the Nazarene,
Faith Gospel Church, Reedsville
Church of Christ and Eden
United Bretheren Church. Everyone is invited tp attend and
participate.

Ch ip

Legion Auxiliary meets

and recited th eir memory verse
·'I L ove J esus and Jesu s Lov{'s

oj)('ratlng under

Eric

Ho lcomb
r\at ional na fts, Chris tm as or
namrnt. Er i c Mon tgomery,

Ice cream Jocial

Clonc h.

Becau sC' of the numrrou s rf'·

from th e turn of th e century by

Lois Thompson.

Visit ing for the weeks act ivi
ti es were Rondo and Joebo thP

quests concer ning camp sites at
the Rock Springs Fairground s
during Meigs Count y fair week.
clarlflcallon on procedure has
been iss ued by Mary Gilmore.
secretary of the Fair Board .
Shr advi ses that thl'rr arr five
r ules which thP Fair Eloard Is

Mr. and Mr s. Rydel I Br rnda

Pa t Thoma. Suzan Thoma .
Ruby Burnside, and Ga ll Thom a,
al l Pomeroy resldenls, vacatl·
oned las! week In North Caro lin a.
Driving 1,398 scenic miles on
Monday evening, they spent t he
night with Pat Thom a's son.
Kelly Thoma, at Mald en, N.C.
They toured National Food Pro·
ducts Corp .. a major distributor·
ship for apple produ cts In United
Stat es supermarkets .
On Tuesday , a dinner and
fellowship was enjoyed with the
form er pas tor of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ and his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo La sh.

fo r ever

Costumes are bei ng p rovided

Van Dyke birth

Gre at gra ndmot her is Oorma
Morrison. PomeroY

how to make fr iend s and to know
thai Jesus would be their friends

bv th e Living Hi story Museum of
Hocking Technical Co ll ege and

pound s, 11 and one half ou nces.

1

0~

by thr Oh io Un ivers i t y Womf'n· s
Stud irs Program s, the Athens

Cit y, Mo .. are announci ng thr
birth of their first child , a
daughter, Krllry Ann, at St .
Joseph Hospital in Kan sas Cit y.
The infant weighed eigh t

II
I
I

(")

Am\' Aberc rombie anrl Wa lt Pr
F:n:i n. It opens with memories of
lh P coal tow n women' s f at her s
and brot hers work in g in danger ou s mines an d thei r mothers
homemaking under primitlvr

begin at 3 p.m . In the Fellowsh ip
Hall of the First Untied Mrtho·

RBI to power Oak land . Sander

VACATION SPECIAL

Tuv.m

Nipper fell to 2 3.

For fu r !h er information pleasf'

shown
to race ,.JrRacine
dnver
Bob upAdams.
. has
walked away with !he lions share
ol th e 199(] payoff

f'o;.!l

malic rpad ing and songs will bP
i nclud ed in thi s presentation , to

hits,

ca ll 614·593-7817 or 592 2845 .

--Cot:POI'i COUPON COliPON COUPON COlJPON COUPOI'i - -,

Co unt~ ·

ft·om 1983 to 1990 by Helen Horn.

over eight and o ne -third innings
Nel son gained his fourt h savr . AI

up four

Plan lournamenl

Co ni&lt;''. and Harold Redman
ha\'f' made appearances at Sky .
ltne 1n 1990. but no maltl'r who

specia l

Womcn,19001950.
l nterpret ive background. dra ·

fell io J:,

th e pla tr Irvi ng to

a

Grace Warner. Helen Ebltn. and

Bible school held
sio n ." and thl' rhildrcn learned

walked two and st ruck out etghl

son. 11 :), gave

rn trrrd thr ni n t h to pick up !he
w 1n

stretc h i t i nto an inside-t he-park
homr r un . th e damagr was
al readv do nP

TO

M1ko • Balzano. Charl ie Swartz.
.J ac k Boggs . Don Gross. Stf'\'P

tJ\· h im." sa id Gra y, a team mat('

makes his of f.season home in
nearby Peabody. Mass., lnpled

down "'

Each week Skyline plays host

for su rr 11 would be tn th&lt;' gap and
then it took that weird hop ."
Sorr en to' s hi t came in front of

in

progrilm ca lled The Other Half
Speaks:
Remini sce nce s of
Ath r ns

By ERIC Mclll:GH
VP I Sports Writ er
A native l'ew Englander re·

Sund ay

dining area where refrC'shment s
were ser ved by that committrc.

Matrons CJub will meet July 2l at

Vaca tion Bible Sc hool was held
recent ly ot the Hillside Baplist
Chu rch.
The theme was .. FrienDimen·

ous
organization.~~
and
voluntPers .
Th r dramatir rPad in g is based
on tape IT'l'ordPd inlt'rviews donr

The land marks of the OES
were read by Bern ice Hoffman.

picture,

sc ulptun•. Mike Macomber.
n .van Wat son. and Ginger

Sl at(' craf t."&gt;. Shrin kH·~ mag nrt .
M ik r
!\1a combf'r-. Ch rp Ma
comhr·r. &lt;"hri'&gt; \1idklff : acorn
crPJ t ion, 1\\,hlr\ Colu:PII, BridgPI
Vaughan. Ch r i~ Midkiff
crm

ANTHONY SHAMBLIN

paper

Chri s MidkiH;

Thr statf' and national crafts
wrn• j udgrd with thr followi ng
rt 's ult s Earh rr&lt;J t l ha~ thn' Pagp
c atrgoriro.., , :1X; ~lll : and 1:! 1-1
_\'f'J rs

proud for playing a super game.
Lane Young had a double In the
fifth Inn ing for Hartford and Matt
Hickel. \'anMetcr, ond Roach
Stephen Di amond. Richmond .

struc t!on

Montgomery. Bridget Vaughan.

Rutlacd .

Harrisonville 0 ES meets

gavr up just t hrl'e hits .

Sorrento's ninth-inning triple
pushes Twins to 3-2 victory

rrcentl)· placed seco nd ln th eir tournanw nt. Tt•a rn

A nnual inspc-ct1on l or Star
Junio r Gr&lt;:~ngr was hrlct rh"'f•ntlv
and 1he group had a skati ng pany
at th r Rutland Ci \'ic C'e nl n
The group also partic ipatf'rl m
the Fourth of ,l uly Paradt• 1n

wen' served.

Attending were Sally Savage.
gra ndm other, Nora Pearson .
Mary HayPs, and Be tty imboden.
grea t grandmothers. and several
o th er friend s and f am il y
members .

ar ound three straigh t st ri keou ts
Wf'rf' t hree walks that forced
home the two ru ns, the scorP 2-0.
Roach in gaining the win

.

members are, first row , left to right - Tony llupp,
.Jason LaudermUt, Tyler Llttl•·. Chrls Randolph.
Brady Bowling, and Ryan IIIII. Seco nd row -

Star Junior Grange meets

Anthony Shamblin, son uf Tony
and Robin Shamblin, celebra ted
his first birthday recently at the
home of his grandparents, Har·
vey and Linda Imboden.
A barbecued chicken dinner
with Ice cream and a Winnie the•

rJJf$.#0~%WWJ i)t.'iftc'io/i!ff!'(iJ#!)~ ' '

RACINE ATHLETICS - The Racin&lt;• c\thletks

The Daily Sentinel

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 10, 1990
Advertising Deadline Is
August 1, 1990
CALL BRIAN OR DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

992-21 ss
I.

'

�.

~

.

. .. . ..

.

~;

Page

.

6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 17, 1990
Tuesday, July 17, 1990

Garden club observes anniversary
Recognilion

of

charter

Mrs. Gask ill , the fifth prcsi
drn t of the club , related some
early his tory of rhe cl ub mzntion ing specifica lly lhal members
wPrf' req uirPd to be under th e age
of 35. She reflected on early
flower shows of Ihe 1wo Middleport clubs the redbud Irail which
was establis hed, as well as many

mcmbf&gt;rs and reflections on
activlt ies uf the past 50 years

highlighted lhe go lden a nni ver
sa ry celebra ti on of lh e Middleport Amatrur Gardeners Cl ub.
He ld in the conference room of
the new Meigs L ibrary in Pomf'
roy. the meeting featured a

flower arrangemen t demonstration h\ Janet Boli n, past pres ioenl of lhe Ohio Association of
Carden Clubs.

o ther civic en te rpri ses dnd edu ·

ca1 lonal aspecls of clqb work
s uch as promoting flower growing and arra nging .

Two of the nine charter
mrmhcrs of the club were

pi"('scnt. E lizabeth Joac him Bur
kelt and Maxine Coats Gas kill.

Marjorie FPtly presidc'd a t the
mePting with J ean Moore giving
the invocation. Attending were
pas t and presenl members, as

,lion,e: with lhP only member who
ILJ\'£' had con tinuous member -

we ll as severa l spec ia l guests
i ncluding Johnnie Lo u Ga brielli,

•, hip for 50
lllJkcsleP .

years.

Da1sy

regio nal dlrecror of rhe Associa 1ion of Ohio Garden Clu bs: Rila

Other cha r!Pr members of the
c lub wen.' Mr s Frank White. the

tirst

presid(&gt;nt:

FrazPr, regio nal lhf'rap~' cha ir ·
rnan, Eli.za\.x.&gt;th Ph illips , t reas ·

Mr s. Robert

urer of the Ga llipolis club; and
Pauline Atkins, con tact chairma n of thP Me1gs County Garde n

E aw lings. Mrs. Gordon Harris,
~1rs

F M. Cluff, Mrs Roy
Rnne:-,_ Mrs. CProge Schaaf.
\ 1rs R.E . McKay. Mrs. Walter
11 llcirns. Mr s. Ke lly C r oga n,
\Ir s. F.mmrl l Shu lC'r, \1rs Ca l·

Cl ubs

The rravcl1ng pnze dona led by
Grrn icP Durst, wa s won by Mr s.
Atkin s. Rosrs fo r the refresh ·
ml'nl s were donated by Mr and
Mrs Arthur Stra uss and ar·

\ :n K.t&gt;ichman. a nd Frances
Pullf-n .
In her dC'monstration. Mrs .
Uu ltn u ~e d lllP 19~1 M{.'igs Cou nty
Fair '&gt;&lt;"hcdu!P. She made sPvera l
.trr J nge ments us ing th E' sc heduiP
.1nd tal ked about cut tm g, dry ing,
.tnd pamting, wha t is permiss ibl e
.t rnJ \\" ha I is not, and what fl owprs
may bp u s&lt;'d in the green s ta te.

ra nged by Mrs . llurkell and Mr s.
Haro ld Lohse. Mrs Fe lly presi deU a l th e plHIC'h bow l. S herb Prl

punch, open face and other
sa ndwi ches. rook ies and mints
wrrr s Prvrd . .'vl r~. BlakPsiPP,
Mrs

were

The demonstra tor also lalked
,1 tJ.uut Wf'Pds that add lO th e

for Ihe 50 th annl\-ersary ce lebra
lion.
PrcsL' n ted at the meeting wa s a

\·,ni{'l\" of pxhibit material which

, .1n tw usrd in arrangeme nt s.
:'&gt;lr s.

OJ\" Id

Burke tt a nLI Mrs Loh se
in chargr of arra ngem e nt s

li st of past presidenls, which il
was expla ined. provides a hi story of the community. They

Cumi ngs . program

chair man. 1ntgod uced program.

were Mrs . Fra nk White, 1940-41;
Mrs Rubert Rawlings, 1941-42;
Mrs . F. M. Cl uff , 1942-43: Mr s.
Charles Blakes lee, 1943-44; Mrs.
Cha rles Gask ill, B44 -45; Mrs. A.
J . Slrauss. 1945-46: Mrs . E. S.
Schaff, 1946-57; Mrs. Howard
Ew ing, 1947 -48; Mrs. Ear l
Knight, 1948-49; Mrs. Harold
Lohse. 1949-50.
Mrs. Walter Crooks, 1950-51;
Mrs. L. E Reynolds, 1951-52;
Mrs. Druce Lloyd, 1954-5.1; Mr s
E. M. Blake. 19:h1-54; Mrs . R H.
Raw lmgs, 1954 -55; Mrs. Ben
P hilson, 1955-56; Mrs. Rober t
Reibel. 1956-58; Mrs. N Humph
rey, 1958-59; Mrs. Guy Reynolds,
1959-60; Mrs. William Sla ter,
19ti061; Mrs. Wesley Fry, 1961 62; Mrs. Arthur Strauss, 1962-63;
Mrs . Edward Burkett, 1963-64,
Mrs L. F:. Reynolds, 1964-66;
Mrs Edgar Pratt. 1966-69; Mrs.
Harry Moore. 1969-72; Mrs. Ferman Moore, 19 72-72; Mrs. F:dgar
Prall. 197.1-74. Mrs . Harold
Lohsl', 1974 75.
Mrs. John Reese, 1975-76: Mr s.
Guy Rev nold s. 197:i-76; Mr s .
Ha~rv D~vi s. 1976-77; Mr s E d ·
wari Burkett, 1977 ·79; Miss
rrma Smilh. 197982; Mrs . Mar jorie Felty. 1982-86; Mr s David
Cumings, 19&amp;187; Mrs Burkelt,
1987-&amp;1, and Mrs. Fetty, 1988-90.
Oth ers a rte nding the celebra tion

were

MargarPI

Hutchn .

:VIar inn Taylor. Kalherine Rail,
Rurh Powers. Kalh rrine Hysell.
Manha Sla ler, J an Ches her .
:\ellie Z irk lf', (;racC' Vohnson,
1-\i.ilhL•rinL' Swa nson, Fay·e \V ii ·

dermuth, Iva Powe ll. Clara Co nroy . a nd Jennifer ShPf'ts

Leadership camp scheduled by bureau
The Ohio Farm Bureau Feder a tion and Nationwide Insura nce
Companies are providing sponsorship for local 4H members,
Carrie Gloeckner and Brent Rose
to participate In the 1990 State 4H
Leadership Camp.
According to Cindy Oliver!,
County Extension Agent, thfs
sponsorship wtll provide all program costs as well as two full
camp scholarships to be a warded
In each county. The program wfll
be Friday through Tuesday at 4H
Camp Ohio near Utica .

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Drake.
Racine, are announcing the blrlh
of their third child, Tina Ma rie
Drake, on May 28, at Holzer
Medical Center.
The Infant we ighed seven
pounds and 13 ounces and was 19
Inches long .
Gr~ndparents are Mary King,
Long Bottom; Joe Lawrence,
Belpre; and Mr. and Mrs . James
Drake, Summersvflle, W.Va.
Other daughters are Christy
and Jamie.

Past Councilor's Club meets
Erma Cleland asked Ihe bless
mg a nd Opal Holl on presided

()ffl("rrs w!'rP insta lled at th t'
r r·cent pic n1c and meetin g of thr
] 1,L" t Councilor"s Club of Chester
(", _
, unci! \o . J2J. DaughtPr s of
-Aml'rir d hf'lcl a t 1hf' Pythian

O\'Pr

'Sl.sli'rs' Hall in Long Bottom with
F:n·1· h:irkhar t as ho stess .
· lll "- t.il!Pd v&gt;f'rr Er m;t C'lt·land.

were read and lhe Lord's Prayer
and pledge to Ihe fl ag were glven
t nun ison. Ro !l cal l wa s a n swPrf'd

thf' businrss meeting .

Verses from th e book

or Lu ke

HayP s.

•••ith members tt:'llin g what they

tn •,J &lt;.. ur Pr. Fa\P kirkh ar l. SP n
ti :w l. Lo rJ Damrwood. flowrr
cu rnmtl! Pf' [lthrr offic ers were

d1d on Ju ly 4
\\: innmg. door priz es wrre Ada
Bi sse ll. Elizabe th Hayes. Char
lolle Gran!. a nd Opal Hollon.
Games were conducted by

Pn·o., :d!'Tll.

Elizalwth

a hsr·rll

ThPlma Whi1P. Char!oll l' Grant,
a nd

Mary K Holtrr

Present

Wf'n' I3rtty Roush.

lnzy Newe ll. Ada Bissell. F: ltza
hf'lh HayPs. Marcia KPilcr. Faye
Kirkhart, Elhe l Or r, Lora Damewood, Erma Cleland. Laura Mae
N!Cf' . Char!o ttr Gr·ant, Marv K
HoliPr , Jo Ann Baum . Thrlma
White, Opa l ll ollon. Mar
McPeek. and l' iSi tor s. Sa ndra
Whill', Mary Jo Barr ingrr and
Ada Bi sse ll' s granddaug hl er.
J udy Holter .

~ ..

continuous membership for 50 years, seated left to
right, look o\'er seraphooks of newspaper arti~ les
whi•~h

--.......--------------------•
The Daily Sentinel
Is Introducing A New
Service Now Available.

CHESTER - Chester Com·
munfty Bible School will be held
at the Chester United Methodi st
Church through Friday from 6; 30
to 8:30 p.m. eac h evening.
Oasses wfll be held for nursery
throug h sixth grade.

The junior members of the
3hadv Rlver Shufflers Clogg ing
Team recen tly rece ived a first
plBcr award for best marc hing
unit in Ihe July4 Rurland Parade.
.~long wilh clogging the parade•
·roule, lhc·y performed a clogging
rou tm e 10 "Mi ll ionaire's Ho~down" for th e parade watchers
and judges .

'

These members a nd the adult
tea m will perform later this
sum me r at Rio Gra nde Co llege,
Athens County Fair, Meigs
Countv Fair, Perry County Fafr.
Morgan County Fair, and Ohio
Sta te Fa ir . They wfll also be the
opening ac t for Billy "Crash"
Craddock al lhe Ohio River
Festival in Ravenswood, W.V a .
on Aug. 12.

Cross country practice for
Meigs High Sc hool wfll being
Au g. B.
Runners are to meet a t lhe high
school at 9 a. m.
All Interes ted athletes are
asked to have a physical com
pleted before beginning practice

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16·1&amp;-Hn

SALE
DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

FRE SH PEACHE S,
TOMATOES, BANANA S,
WATERMELONS

- vs .PATIY VANCE. the named
b;ecutri.11 of the Estate of

Marv Crickman, Deceased ,
et al ..
Defendants
Case No. 26673

SALE
Push Mowon &amp;
Riding Mowers -Twin Cvl.
Repatr All Makes &amp; Models of
Cha1n S.Ws and Lawn Mowers
Saw Chains for Sale

PICKUP &amp; DEliVERY

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

man, Deceased. ttleir Eucu ·
tors. Adminiatratora. Cuetodiona, Aaigns, or Guardiana.
end the Unknown Heirs at
law, Next of Kin , Deviseu
and Legatees of Hobart Halt.
Clinton Hall, Su&amp;ie Mall. David Hall. Lucy Hall. Rosie Ferguson. Lee Mall, Haden Mal.
their Executors, Administrators, Custodians. Auignt, or
Guardiana, Addresses u..-...
known and David Hall. Lucy
HaiL Roste Ferguson, AddrMI81 unknown
You are fle reby notifie d

• 7 pornt hna typt only use d
'Sentone4" nof re1pon • •ble tor errou atler t" st d~r,· iChack
tor errou lortt day •d run1 rn paper! Ca ll bf' l or~ 2 00 P r''
d~ aher publr c.-oo, to make co rr ~ct oo,

'Ads1htt mutt be p1 1d tn 1dv1nce are
Card of ThMiu
H11ppy

In Msm01ram

Over 15 Words
20
S400
30
56 .00
42
$9 .00
60
$13 00
S1 30 ' dav
05 / day

Words

Rate

15
15
15
15
15

Aatn I l l! l Or conaecutrve runs tH o~f!n up d.-v! wrll b~ cl"1arg~
rlll\l u Sf!PI II If! ads

lnr earh

Announcements

Merchandise

1 C&amp;r d o f Than ~s

!io 1 - Houurt,old Good•
52 - Sporting Ooodt
53 - An tiQues
54 - M ''l Merr:M a, dote

2 - In M111mor v

3 - Annoucemen ts
4 - G 1ve,.....ay
5-

Ht~ppy

Ads

5 - lOS1 a,d Found
7 Yard Saffl fpa rd rn

S5 - Burfdmg Suppl rel!
56 - Pen lor SaiP
57 M u1rcar lnslrumen!l
58 Fru r15 &amp;. Vegl1!1bles

~t:tvAnce l

R- Publn Se l e&amp; Au~trv n
9 - Wanted t o Bu..,.

Ad1

Ya1d Sales

59 - For Sale ur Tr ade

'A cl•urlred •dl.-ertiSement place-d rn Th eOa oly Se,t rnette•
cep l - elMsifted drspl.., . Busrn ess Car d and l egal not rees '
will al1o appeer m the PI Ple•ant Regrater 11nr1 the Ga ll ·
polls Da11y Trr bune . reactung over 18.000 homes
Hel~

Wa n ted
1 2 -· Srtui!IID, Wantflrl

DAY BEFOR E PUBLICATION
- 1 1 QO AM SA TURD AY
- 2 00PM MONDA'!'

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
Tt-IURSOAV PAPER
FRIDA~ PAPER

-

-

SUNDAY PAPER

FRI. JUN E 6 &amp;
SAT. JUNE 7

2 00 PM TUESDAY

- 1 00 PM WEDNESD AY
2 00 PM T~UR SDAY
:ZOOPM FRIDAY

Clas sified pa;u'.l cntf'r

f IJ('

-

NOTICE
There wt ll be a meet1ng
held on Th urs, June 12
to elect offi cers at
John's Restaurant.

Countr

G afl•l County

M ll ro;JI

Aru Co de 614

Aret Code 614

446 - Gell opoh•

99 2 - ModdlepClrl
Pomma y
985 - Chester
843 - Por11end
247 - letlrt Fsll s
949 - -Rt erne
741 - Rutl•nd
66 7 - Coo lv dl e

367- Chestwe
)88 24&amp; 256 643 379 -

THANK YOU
For All the Flowers, Cards
and Gtfts I Recetved Whtle
I Was Ill
SARAH

Vont o,
Rr o Gr•nde
Guyan 011t
Ar•b•a Dr1!
Walnut

M.u on Co W\/
A.1ea Code 304
675 ·- F"t Plaasa,,

458 - leon
576 - Appfe Gro110J
713 - M11on
882 - Ntw Haven

13

6 1 - Fa rm Equopmenl
62 Wanted t o Bu~
1 63 - lrveswdl
1

- ln s urt~nce

14 - Busmeu TrAmrng
15 Schoo l• &amp; 1'111 •uc tr o n
16 - Aad•o . TV &amp; C B AtrP•"
17 - Mri CI!ill,t!&lt;lu!
18 - Wan ted To Do

1

64 -

65

Hay

II. Grarr.
Seed &amp; ~l!rtolr:er

Transportation
21 - Busrness OpportLJn•t\
22 - Monev to lo~n
7.3 - Prolessoo,at Ser vrces

Real Eslale
3 1 - ~ o m es fo r Sa le

31 - MotllleHomes fer S11le
33 - Far ms lor Sale
34 - BuslnessBurldr,gs
]5 lOll &amp; A e t lllo;Jll
36 - Real Eit• re W1nte d

7 1 Autos for Sale
72 Trut~l fo r Sale
73 Van! 5o 4 WD ~
74 Motorcvcl~
75 - Boar1 !1. Motvrs fo r Sill!l
76 - Auto P,o,rn! ~ Acc auor rf!l.'l
77 Auto ~eoa'r
78 · C11 mpr ng Equrpmen t
79 - Campt'fs ~Mo t o r Homes

l;btilWAI

896 - Letart
937 - Bull !llo

41 42 43 44 -

46 46 -

47 48 49 -

Houses to r Rent
Mobtle Homes fo 1 A11n1
Far m s lor Rent
A penmen! lor Rent
f:urnrshed Room •
Space for Rent
Wanted t o Rent
Equrpment to r Re,l
for leeu

Services
et

Ho me Impr ovement•
82 - Pl um bon g 1!. He lltrng

81- E-c~t~lltng

84 - Eiectro c al &amp; A efrrglll"allon
86 - Genl!fal HatJhng

86 M ob1 IP. ~ome
87 - Upt,ulster~

auigned Cue No . 26673,
and i1 pendina in the Court
of Common Pleas of M ei gs
County, Ohio, Probate Diviaion. the prayer of the Com ·
plaint demands that the pur·
ported Last Will and Tastament of Mary Crickman. deceased. admitted to probate
on the 8th day of March.
1990, be de creed invalid
and set aside
You are further no tified
tl'tat yo u may have some
claim or interest in the
proceeding• whi ch are filed
heroin. You are required to
answer
the Complaint
within
twenty -eight 128[
day 1 after the last publica·
tion of this Not ice. whi ch
will be publisl'tod once oach
week for .i, 161 succosoive
weeks The lut publicotion
wm re main on the 3, s t day
of July, 1990, and the twen ty -eighl (281 dave for an ·
swanng wilt commence on
that date. In the case of your

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFEIS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ....
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt . 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt . 50 &amp; S.R 143
NEW HOURS :
POMEROY : 9 a.m.-7 p.m 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m .- 5 p.m. 6 Days. Closed Sundoy

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90C per lb .;
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 35C per lb.
Clean Auto Radiators . 40C per lb .
WE BUV All NON FERROUS SC RAP. BATTERIES.

RUTLAND, OHIO

STARTERS. TRANSMISSIONS. AlTERNATORS. ETC

(614) 992-5 114

&amp;-19-'96-1 mo.

USED APPLIANCES

FREE
ESTIMATES

WASHER s-$100 up
ORVERs-169 up
REFRIGERATORs-$100
RANGES- Gos-Etec -1111 up
FREEZERS- 1121 up
MICRO OVENs-$79 up

up·

PROFESSIO
INSTALLATION

SEARS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

788 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

992-5335 or 985 -3561
·Aao11 From Post Offi&lt;t
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2

JO/J0/'89ifn

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Location:
161 North Second
Middltpor r, Ohio 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We c.,..v Flthing Supplie~
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

'

IUSINISS PHONE

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Garages

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

BILL SLACK

985-4473
667 ·6179

USED RAILROAD TIES

992-2269
6-12· 90tfn

1 31-' 9(1 tf n

I /281tf~

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

·uGHT HAUliNG
•fiREWOOD

•Complete

'IIIDENCI PHONE
16141 992-7154

fault will
be rendered
against you and for the relief
demanded in tne Complaint
Dated thi a 21st day o1
June, 1990
Lena K. Neualroad. Clerk
181 28 :
t71 3, 10. t7 . 24. 31. 6tc

MICROWAVE
O~EN REPAIR

• COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

ALL MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

• Mobile Home
P.ar~s

• Mobile Hoine

RPntals
•Lot·RenJals

992-5335 or 98S-3S61

992-7479

Across From Post OHi'e

II. 33 North of

217 E. Sec. Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Ohio
t-11-'88-Hn

POMEROY, OHIO
3/6/'90./tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; ~RAGES

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

"At Reasonab e Prices"

Pit 949·2801
or Res, 949·2860
Day or Nighl
NO SUNDAY CALLS

985-4427
1 · 11 ·90 tfn

4-16-86-Hn

HERE'" A"AlE
.FORE"
IN y••f
n .
~

~

~OU

8

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•New Homes

16141 9'1H!l0

Public Notice

313 90rl"

FENCING

90 DAY WAIUN1Y

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO: Tho Unknown Moin at
L&amp;w. Next of Kin. Devis88S
and Legatees of Marv Crick-

Monthl~

'Prr ce olad tor all caprtallf!lters ''double p11ce ol 11d co11

909 ABERGALE LANE

TV- VCR-STEREOS

SER"ICE
I

SALES AND SERVICE
Factory Authorized
Service (enter hr Most
Makes and Models

We can repair and re core rodialors and
heater cores. We can

also O&lt;id boil

and

Fast

rod

out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

;J~~:;e~h~;::~:=~~t~~ r
~lA~~IFIED AD~ L.-M-id_d_le_p_o_rt_.-~--~-~ -~...'
Procedure. judgment by de·

11

LINDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

Help Wantod

DIRECTOR OF
RADIOLOGICAL SERVICES

INTERIOR fltTUfOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take Ihe pain our of

Full-servk:e hospital in arna rich in history, city parks, golf
courses, water rnaaauon and hunbng and fishtng seeks
ARRT -&lt;ertllied Director of Radiological Services wttl1 pre~·
ous supervisory experience. Must be knowledgeable m
raclology, uttrasound, nuclear modicme and CT. Salary
nogobable. Excellent benofits packaga. Wnte or call B~l
Barller, Dtrector of Personnel, Pleasant Valley Hospitol,
Valley Dnve, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304[675-4340, Ext
308.

pain ling.
Lei us do il lor you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAV£ REFERENCES

(614) 985-4180
6 -18'90 -1 mo . d

1

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

~ecaor

INSTALLED
nNTRAL HEA TING
AND AIR
r.nNDIT IONING

.

r' .

4,-.t"

-p,,,., '""" &gt;;;IIR$
788 N. 2ND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT
992- 2178

l /711 90

)ir= TRAVEL
PURSUIT
Airline
Resorvation/ Ticl&lt;ots
Ask for Kendo

(614) 742-2027
" Your

conn~;tion

Q·

All

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

NOTICE TO BIODERS

thl1 invitation of bldl. The

The G..lle-Melg1 Commu..-...
cond end E11t Main Strelltt.

In 18 USC 100t. Accooao·

Chtohire. Oltlo. 45820, •
non- profll organlzolton. Is
tlldn' -Joel bids u of July
1
990. "" tho following

rlet are discouraged and lu x·
ury itemt 1r1 lnappropriete.
Seeled bid1 will be accepted
untH 4:00 P.M., Jut., 28 ,
1990. 11 tho Clelllo-Melgo
Community Action Agency,

e.

!llhlclo:

One u•d. mid-ailed t tl·

lion wegon with apeclfla·
llone u followe:
1. Four Door

I
l
'

penetty for making,..,. ata temanteln bldlla prMcrlbed

2. Autametic Tranamle·
olon

3. VII or V8 Engine
4. Power BtHrlng

5. Power lrlkH

North Second and Eoat Morn
Streete.
Cheahlre. Ohio,

45820. At thot tlmo oil bfda
will be opened end reviewed. Purcl't111 It tublect
to epprovel of the EKecutlve
Director, Sidney Edwards,
and 1hould occur within two
wMkt of the opening of the
btda. Tho Qolllo·MoltJI C .A.
A. renrve1 the right to accept or reject any and all
blda.
'

8. Sporo WhHia • Tiro
7. Dull Outoldo MlffOrl
8. Air Conditioning
8. Vohlclt MfltoQt Not To
EKCHd 11.000 Mllto.
Tho Oolllo-MolooCommuThooo bida mull ott forth
full. 1 ccurett, end complete nlty Actfon Agency lo an
lnformetlon •• requiNd by

Equal

Opportunity Em ·

Public Notice
ployer! Equel

Provider of

Servicea .
i?i 18, 17, 18. t9.

ici. 6tc

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
It Is tho fl(llcy of tho MoiJII

County Boon! of Montlll A•

t•rdatlon I Developmentll

Olaobllhfoo to .. cliento
whhoot rogonl to colo&lt;.
origin. hondlcop or
ega. The •me ~lrementt
oro IIJIPied to ol, end cllenta
oro !llllgnod whhoot rogord to

roce. color. nottonol origfn.
hondfcap or

~go.

Thoro Ia no

-odon In olgfbllly lor, or
In tho mennor of provltlng. clont ..roo.. AI ore
ovololllo wlthoot dlotlnclton to
ol clienta ond vlaftoro rwgri
lou of roce, color, nottonlf ool-

SIDELINES
SPORT CARDS

Pub lie Notice
gin. MIX, handicap or age. Att

penona and organizations
having occation either to
rlltfer client 1 for services or
to fi(;Ommend the MCBMR / 00 are advised to do 10
wtthout regard to the client's race. co lor , national
origin, handicap or age .
The person d81ign•ted to
coordinate compliance with
Sot:tlon 804 of tho Rohoblll·
tetlon Act of 1973 (non-dlacrimlnttlon 1geinat the hen·
dlcopped 1 It David Milliken
who can be reeched et P. 0 .
Box 307 . 1310 Carleton

Street,
Syracuse, OhiO
46778. 1614) 992·8881 '
17117. 1tc

Buy · Sell
Trade

THIS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
ONLY ss.OO ADAY!

367-0588

5·21·"90..1 mo.pd

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

MOW OPEN

Call Now To Make

Appointment

949-2794

SPECIAL

aw

30 Sassion•-$30
Co. Rd. 28

WADSl

6-11·'90·1 -

,. 01

Walch For Sigm
RACINE, OHIO

-·

Types of

Travel"

tty Action Agoncy. North Se-

'

Plaintiffs

1
3
6
10

CLOSED SUNDAY

run 3 dl¥1 11 no ch•ge

HAMILY YARD SALE
RAIN OR SHINE

NO MATTER WHAT THE REASON MAY BE •••
"YARD SALE", "AUTO FOR SALE", ''PUBLIC
NOTICE" "MEETINGS" OR "JUST TO SAY
'
SOMETHING
SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
SENTINEL BULLETIN BOARD.
STOP IN TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
PLACED IN THE BULLETIN BOARD.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE OIVISION

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

000-0000

~

PH. 949-2 801
or Res. 949-2860

RATES

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

BULLETIN BOARD

MOBILE HOME
3 BR, Kttch en, DR, LR Mu sl
sell now Best oHer.

Cross country
practice set

Now Homos loilt

"Free Estimates"

'

'Ads ouurde Merga Gallr e or Maaon cou nt•• muat lJe p re
ptrd
'Rec.,..,e I 50 dracounl lor 1111 pard m advance
'free ad I - G rv•away and Found ads undl!f 15 wo rdl wdl he

000-0000

Shufflers first in competition

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POLIC IES

1982 ENGLAND

,.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Classified

f oUmrin{l relephunr exchull/{e·'· .

of July Parade. They are, front, Ashley Hannahs,
Daniel Young, Denise Cotterill. Back, Melissa
Ramsburg, Amy Yonk er, Susie Cotterill, Amanda
Musser and Jodie Sisson.

6-19-'9(1 l mo.

Defendants in the action entitled Susan Wade. et al ..
Plaintiffs. va . Pany Vance.
the named Executri11. of the
Estate of Marv Crickman.
- - --!Deceased, et at., Defendants Thi s action has been

~

BEST MARCHING - The junior members of
the Shady River Shufflers Clogging Tea m were
: awarded bc•st marching unit In Rutland's Fourth

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
OUTDOOI POWER
PIODUCTS

742-2455

RUTlAND, OHIO

that you have been named

THE BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE IS
4:30P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

000-0000

•

742-2455

THURSDAY
POME ROY - The Meigs
Coun ty Dem ocrat ic ExecutivP
Co mmittee will mee t Thu rsday
a t 7:30 p.m. a t th e Carpenter's
Hall in Pomeroy .

11

$5.00 PER DAY
1X2 $10.00 PER DAY
1X3 $15.00 PER DAY

1983

f

PICKUP &amp;DELIVERY
MORRIS EQUIPMENT

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Co nse rvancv Di strict will hold Its
monthly meeti ng on Wednesday
a t 9 a.m. a t Its office.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy will hold a book sale through
Friday from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.

EXAMPLE: 1X1

FOR

1{

Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery

nur sery through and incl udin g
adults. Churches participating
Includ e Long Bottom and Reeds
ville United Methodi st Churches,
Eden United Brethren Churc h.
Reedsvflle Church of Christ.
Fellowship Church of the NFa ·
rene, and Faith Gospe l Churc h

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Victory
Baptist Church In Middle port
wfll begin Vacation Bible School
on Monday, to continue through
Friday, from 6:30-8:30 p.m.

MONDAY PAPER

i

TRACTORS &amp; LOADERS
MOWERS, RAKES
AND TEDDERS

SUSAN WADE . at at. ,

COPV DEADLIN E -

..

Business Services
ZOOR

Community calendar

werr displayed al the an niv('rsary meeting.

11

f

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 7

Public Notice
RECOGNIZED - Maxine Coats Gaskil l and
Elizabeth Burkett, cha rll'r membt•rs of the
Middleport Amateur Gardrnr "s Club, a nd Daisy
Blakeslrr, the only club member who has had

YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS LOW AS SS.OO PER INCH.
golden anniversary meeting of thr t\maleur.~ . Shr
Is plclurcd with Marjorie Fell)', pres ident, and
Johnnie Lou Gabrielli, Ga iUpolis, Region II
dire ctor.

Carrie Gloeckner, daughter of
Dave and Sally Gloeckner, Ra ·
cine, has been an active 4H
member six years. Her accomp·
lishments Include holding offices
In her local club, serving as a
junior leader, a nd serv ing as a
camp counselor . She Is currently
enro lled fn th e Meigs Bette r Beef
4H Club.
Bre nt Rose, son of Chester and
Maxine Rose, Racine, has been
an active 4H member for eight
years . Hi s accomplishments In clude holding offices In his local
club, participating In lhe loca l
demonstration c ontes 1 and
safety speaking cont es t, serving
as a member of th e junior fair
board and 4H comm it tee, being a
delegate to 4H Cl ub Congress a nd
4H Conservation Camp a nd al tendlng the Ohio Sta te Fair for
three years. He fs currently
e nrolled In the Meigs Dairy 4H
Club.
Mrs. Oliveri says that being
c hosen to partic ipat e In Sta te 4H
Lea dership Camp is a once in a
lifetime opportunity. During the
camp, Carrie and Brent will be
taking part In a var iety of

Drake birth

"The Bulletin Boatd
DEMO"'STRATOR - ,Janet Bulin of Rutland,
lrrt, pa.st president of the Ohio Association of
Gardm t.:lubs, use d the Meigs County Fair
s(' hrdulr as th t• basis for her demonstration at th e

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~~o. n. J -..

Want Ads

""

~
Announcements

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. July 17, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday, July 17, 1990

3

LAfT A lJAY

Announcements

42

Amwav Products. 614-985.4186

CREDIT

''

CARD

VlutMutereard guart~nleed, no
co. bitt• $48.50 fH.

2 bedroom, twnl•hed. Good

Singl•• lntorm.tlon and a clgnlfi~ option tor finding a

clun c:ondhlon. 1 ehild, no
pelt. Nw H1ven. H.U .O. 304-

panner. Hearta.. n:h: P. 0 . Ba1:

882·241111.

1043, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

4

2 Dldrooms, untuml1h.d tralltr.
E1gla Ridge Road. &amp;14-Mi-2588.

Giveaway

1 ytar old eat 4-6 w.ek old kittens. 1 long hair, 3 ahatt hair,
blue eyu. 614-992-3354.

_1

-

2 klttena and 2 calalo gtv.away.
614-446-4999.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Wri11ht

0000

1088 14 112 ft Bayllnw C1pri
run1bout, 50
engine walk
thru wlnd.tll•l , AM-FM ca•
Mtt•,
cond,
kop1,
phoo• 304.e75-203 1ff1r 5:00.
$3,&amp;95. « bell ott•-

CreM Motel. CaiiiJM..44&amp;-T.IU.

24 Ft. Troj1n Cabin FI•Mrm•n.
lully oqulpood. 225 HP llon:ury
llo motor. tz low ln~il•. $12,900.
C.IIS14-446-71ot,

USED APPUANCES
Wuheta, dryers, ratrtg..-aton,
rongoo. Sugga Aol&gt;llancoo,
Upp.r Alw• Rd. BnlO. Slon•
PICKENS FURNITURE

44

Refrigerator 1nd Range. 15144464134.

Apanment
for Rent

po~tor

comp._,.l $1.!1.20 per WIIH,
dln.tt. wtth 4 eh1lra 17.50 per
week. Magk: Chef M cu. fl.
Refr19er1tor $12.t5 par weak, 15
cu. ft . nu.r, tl0.90 .-r
w..tL VI'At Furntture. Rt. M1, 4
mil• off Rt. 7.C.ntonary.Open 7
Root I hoUN paiNing lhln-gllng rooft, houn ,..,.lr. t14388-11881ftll' 5 p.m.

groy otrlppod, 2 t19•r olrlpood,

liuar lram~. good home, 304675-4033

Elltlollant Wag• far 1p1r1 lime
Good home In country 4 yNr au•mbly. Euy work 11 homl.
old ma la, part blacll lab. Good No a~~:perlance nndad. till 1·
wat ch dog. Loves ktda. 614-388- 504-641·7718 Ext 5214. Open 24
hours, Including Sunday.
9306
Lab. puppy 8 weeks old to H1 ir S1yllsl na.c:l.c:t Full-lime or
g ivea way . Shohi and wormed . part -time. Good working condl·
11cn_ For Into. call 814-592-4779
614-367-7228.
ask for Monlka.
Mala 3 year old c al , dtctawed
and neutered. Needs a good
ho ma . All Sho1s. 614-256-1380 or Help Wanted Futttlma per10n 1o
614-256-645 9.
1 wort. in grocery slort 1bout 35
Malo cat, tong t1air, tiger cat. 2 1 lo 40 hrs_. ~r _..k. Ca ll 614·
years old Novambar. Dectawed ' c._..
_:_.:.:J~SOO
_:_:__ _ :---::-c:-:nAutarad To g ill a away lo g~ , lmmadltta opening available tor
home . 6!4 -99:2"-2970.
.
pal11ima R.N. Supervisor. Coma.tal~ at ;~aw - 2 yrs ~ ' pelitlva wag•, diH.,..nlal wt1h
daclawad 'and neu1antd, to good axperltnca. Contact tha Dlrac1or
home 304-937-2895.
ol Nuralng, Plnecrll1 Cart Can'
t•, 170 Plnaer.tt Orlva, GalShort bad Ct'l•vy topper, J04. llpollt, Ohio 4~631. fi14-44&amp;-711:Z.
6 75~6182 .
Equal Oppor1unlty Employ1r.

NNd babyalnor In town, G•lllpollt, Pratan~bly b.tWNn VIne
51 . tnd Oukl Cleanera. Clll 6'14446·1412 or 61......... 1~4.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found : Po11ible ptr1 Norwelgen, mala dog. Black with

kmg hair. Found at Noble Summit Road lhr.. weeki ago. 6149Y2-2887.

POSTAL

JOBS

116.392-$~

125tyr. Now hiring. Call (1) 805-

187-6ooo Ext. P-4562 for current

1111.
LOST malt and female Baagle, READ BOOKS FOR PAYII100 •

blk, white, brown, please call
l04-4S8-1992, REWAAO.

Title.
Call
l-too..847-7m
(S0.99tmln) or wrh•: PASE ..JJE ,
161 S. Llncolnw•y. N. Atl'orl, II .
60542

7

Read boob tor p8yl $100 1 tHie.
Call MlOG-847-187&amp; ($0.99/mln)
or wrtl:e:PASE-31E, 161 S. Uncolnway, N. Aurofll, II. 80542.

Yard Sale

R..ponslbla baby tlner, Uon-

••r,
lhru Frtday, rt'-rence
qu r«t, l04-675-1812.

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
AMer tt'le R1in Yard Sale 120112
Tnu Road. July 15th tt'lru July
181h.
ALL Yard Sa tes Must Be Paid In
Advanc• . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lt'le day befort the ad It to run .
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Fr~ay . Uonday Millen · 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.
-

~--

-- - - · - - -

Gar.g• Sate Finn Brick., Route
l5
ol Rodnll)'. Enntno• 1
p.m. til 9 p.m.

wm

Household Sale: WIKI-Thurs. 9--?
Route 7, 2 tenths ol mile below
218 Junction . Home Interior,
Houuhold hams . Good et•n
etolhH.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
't'1rd Sale, 105 S.venth St, Point
llleas~nl , July 17 and 18. Som•
thing for everyone

S..k.lng c.ll"'ll oriantld Individual for m1n1g1ment poecl·
Uon In k-rmu1 Food Sert~. No
exparlanc.e naccaa~ . Apply
Wtd. betwt~~n 3 &amp; 4 p.m. EOE
Wanted.

0ent11 Recaptlonl.t:.
l'rogr-vo Dontol proctlco
'"ilnv friendly, outgotng perton to Join their dlntaltNm In
providing quellty patient car•.
o.ntal 1nd CompYter IX·
parilnce ~lerftod . PIMII Mnd
reauma to Or. lAf'f')l Ktnn~y.
"1 Gen.m H•rtlnpr Pwbny,
Ulddlti)Of't, OH 45780.

12

Public Sale

Situation
Wanted

C.ra for atderly In my home.
Man or woman. Mutt be ambulatory.
A..o
accept
Alzheimer. paUa,.a.. 614-6676183.
Roommt~tt

tOt new hou11. For 8
montht Furnlahlld, Nut, NonSmoker. lntln'd Requlrltd .

18

&amp;Auction
R~k

Pearson Auction Company
now booking auetlont, experience mak.aa tha dlftarenca.
licenud Ohio, Kentucky, Wnt
Virginia, 304-173-5785.

CALL · BOGGS AUCTION SER·
VICE.

AUCTIONEER:

BOGGS . 61H46-mo.

9

DAVID

Wanted to Buy
mole

Oult1t

Antique Of new. Excallant eondllicn only. Prompt payment . 6M-

tt2-665l

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON · All 1rau, C.H Warllyn
WeaY., 304-882-26&lt;15.
Accepting appl~atlon tor nu,...
ing aulttanta, Clr11111d 1nd uncar11filld, will orter certified
cln.... Contact SuNn Sm"h ,
R.N. Pln.erut C..ra C.ntar, 110
Plrweres1 Drive, Gaillpol!l, Ohio
61-4-446-7112. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Aecauntlng
PoeHion Op.n:
Knowtad91 of Accounting Procedural, Ccmplrl•r Etl)lrllnC41
N~•aary. 40 Hour Work Wnk.
S.nd RHuma to Box CL.A03g
clo Galtlpohe Dally Tribuna, 82.!1
Third .Awanut, Gallipolll, Ohio
45631.
.AIJ- 9tar Wat•liNIM It now
hlrtng tof h'a new 1tor• In Ohio
Rlvar Plaz1. No Expefienee
. -..ry. ...... bo -go&lt;lc,
hard -kina &amp; onlol worto~na
wllh ~- Salary ph.ll Commll.tan.
Appty
at:A.II-Star
Woto-"· Ofllo Rlvor Pl.wl,
Clolllpollo,un

AVON I All A,.u I Slll"oy
Sj&gt;MI'II, :100-el!i-142i.

poolllor&gt;-Con1roC1, 311
hc&gt;ur11 por tor lho WIC

C1orl1

Progrlnt 4utlea: lneh.Kia but not:
llmlfld to IICrBrt.l lkiUe. ApIf GilDa
pUeatlon• tak.n
Caunl)' ~toanh
Dop&lt;or1mom

Court- Gollloollo. Oh. July
, ..201h ~- E.O.[.
Eam mon!IY by lfM week. Jo'n
the numberl to demonttm•
"Chrlotrnoo-Ar&lt;Mind-Tho-World",

=':"nctblr~:m=':

- l n g •wvlee. 814-182-13'11,

EARN MONEY RNdlna booflll
130,-yr. polon1111.
-

Wanted to Do

Car &amp; IIWn mow1r rapalra, plekup tnd d•llv.,-y. Mobil• hornn
unblocked 6 ~btocktd, roota
painted. 304-ft7'8-2818
Cart for elderly In my hom•,
304·n3-S:Z46.
Custom m1de Country curttlna
with 1 or 2 rutfiM, FHtoona,
Swagt &amp; C.acada, uphoistar.d
Comte... Any 1lze, any tabr~.
114 -9&lt;1~2202 .

Adu"
ul\-neu1ered
Slam... c11 6l4 -367·7123

hlifna. (1) -

Cut1om Remodeling. Otll and
Hot Tuba. Call -E:venlng1. Bob
01vi1 614-446-3641.
Oatal'-d Hcuaec:INnlng 1100
Hr. Anltl T1ylor 11 614-(...._04
Laava nama and Phona numbwFormer Kind•rg1r1.n tttclw otlering chUdcara In my home. FT
or PT. Structured aetlvltiH. Centenary 814-446-4230.

Georg" Por1abla Sawmill, don'1
hauljut1 call 304-e75·1g57.
Magie Y••,.. O.y Ctre C.n1ar
rusonablt,
dlpandablt,
lictntt, qutlhy child cart. Monday thru Friday, 7:30 till 5:30.
For mOI'I lntorm1tlon 01' to
regltler 304-175--5847.
Mill P1L111 't Dly Ctrt Center.
Sa'-. artord11M, ehlldelre. M.f
8 a.m. - 5 :30 p.m. Aot• 2-10.
Betott~, ,,.,. ech~ . Drop--lN
wetcome. 814-448-8224.
Will Btby lit In my home. Han
Good Rit.renc... 814-38W114

Will do gtfleral ct.anlng ol
horne, otHe1 or bullntM. klvt~
tJtperlenet~ .
R•f.,.ne•. 814-

$30,000/yr.

lnoome

potential.

•-I&gt;IJ.

IMY _., ot
llome. No orporionoo .-.d.

lima

Call 1.fl8~-5152, Ellt 1244,
Including Sot. ond Sun.

2 bedroom older home, 1200 aq
ft, good ccnd, 4 llraplaeu,
clost to town, schoo61, c: hurch.
Priced tot qulek. sale, "'1t1 Mt·
!lament, 304-67S-1552.

7 rooma 1 11'2 batha, country

living but ciOH lo Uolgl Sc:hoot
1nd town. At.
lane,
Towntt'tlp R01d 21. Arst road lc
~-· Call 614-992·7118 or 1·384·

3,_.

By ownM, 4 bedroom homo
river lot, anclo.ad front and
baek porch, Butt.lo Putnam,
$32,500. 304-757-0280.

Sell: 2BR Log Homo.
Newty carpottod, tton~ haar1h
wood-burner,
10'K24'
Deck,
1.2')112'
OOIIding.
Riverview.
Makt Offer! 614-448-4\KMI or 614Mutt

2511-1982.
Prlee Reduced! Portar Brook
Subdtvl•kln, 38R, 1 112 Bath,
F. R. 9efHn.d·ln-Porch, 314 ICtl
kit, CMy Sehool. e14-446-1965.

32

11.00 [U·Ropolrl Oov"l

glvttway•,
bank
repot,
foreeloaurfl. ta x dellnqutnt
propar11t. 1·918-122-6852 tit.

R1244,1ncluctlng S.l. ond Sun.

living. 1 1nd 2 bidroom apartment• at Vlll1gt
Manor
1nd
Rlvertldt
Aptrtmant. In Middleport. Frum
Gr~clout

11911. Coli 614-ttH7117. EOii.

Nicely Fumlshad Mobile Hom•
In city. CA. Sult1bt. tor 1 ptrton. Rat. &amp;Dep Required 614-

4411.0338
Nicely furnished mobl~ home, 1
mill below town, ov..-1~1;/
rivtr, CA, heat, A•t. 11

0336.
Ont bedroom apt1. tor rent
$225 month. O.poelt r~ulrtd .
614-ll92·22"1B 1fltr 8 p.m.

boord/Outboorcl-tiO.OOO.

76

Room• tor rant· Mlk or month.
12x80 with room addition . 3 S11rtlf'g II $120/mo. 0.11'- ~11.
aeriS m/1 . Will conalder land 814--«6-9580.
contract. 614-JII2-2914 av.nlng1. SIMplng roomt whh cooking.
1973 klrtwOod 12x60 two bed- Also tralt.r space. All hook-upt.
room mobile hem., 14,000. ln- Call lfter 2:00 p.m., 304-773eludn atov1, retngentor, vinyl 5651, Mason WV.
underpannlng, 304-458-1908.
dan

Fuluram~~

1:bell. 2

46

Space for Rent

bedroom, Contn~l Air l599tl Country Mobils HonM P1rk,
ahown by 1ppolntment 814-44t· Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
1012.
Lott, rentals, parta, ...... Call

614-192· 11179.
18111 Kirkwood '121&amp;0 2BR, nc.
cond. $6800. 614-40"'4182.
47 Wanted to Rent

llngtv1Ua/Oal1ar 01 Sa.l•m Cantar a,..l . 6l4-X2-23lt or 614-

446-6217.

669-4008.

Skyllna

1m MK7tl 2 BR.,
EIKtrtc, lg. bey window, tklrt·
lng, .tep., good eondhlon.
Freneh City Brvkartge. 614-446-i31t.

33

Fanns for Sale

10 Year old 3BR, 2 batt'l ,
housaf?S AcrH . Clou lo VIn ton. 614-388-97'J9.

For Lease

,-,--,.-,.----:--:--Untutnlthed,
ona-btdroo"'
tpartmanl. Second Uoor, cornaf
Second and Pint, G.llllpollt.
Stove and ratrtgarator. Wat1r
provided. No pelt. Ralo,.nc:n
required. $225 per month. 61C.
446-4249, 8~2325 or 614446-4425.

St

LAYNE"S FIJRNITURE

Solu 1nd chalrt prletd trom
$3Q~ 10 Si'95 . T1bltt $50 and up
to S12&amp;. Hld...,..beda S3to to
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
$595. Aecllrlltl S225 to 5375.
Lat. &amp; tereega tvallabla for L1mpa $28 lo $125. DIAI'ItiO
new
eonSiruetlon on $109 and up ta $CQf5. Wood t•b•
to 1795. O..kl
R1ybum Road. PIVtd ro~~d, w-6 chllf'l
county
water,
rauonabie t145 up to $375. Hutc:hM $400 I
Nltrlctlon1. Information mailed up, bun .. bldl eomplelo wl1t'l
on raquHt. 304-675-5253, John mlttrH.• 1295 • .nd up to &amp;385.
or
D. Gerlach. no . tlngl•widal boby bode $\\0
box tpringt full or twin S~J!.""
trJIIIN, plosa.
$88, and $98. ~ IMttl ~nl I
2101:1. Y1uft1 and headlton• ot up, Ktng S350. 4 dn1..., chest
Mtlga
M.morttl
G•rdene- Me. Gun C.blnatl e, I, I 10
Votar~na S.ellon. 47.A Lott 3&amp;4. gun. Baby ma"r..._ 135 I
$3,000 for 111. 814-453-8464.
145. Bod I n - 125, 0vooo
Size $3.!1 I king frlrne taO. Good
38 aer.. 2 mllaa from Vinton. •ltet+on of O.droom IUMII,
Good build~~~ ~II H . No Ulnetll metal e1blntta, hudbol.rdt 130
flvhto. 614
2n.
1nd up to 165.9() d•y• NITII 11
Excellent Building •H• 21 .8 cath w"h 1pprovtd credit. 3 mi.
acrn, cHy achoolt, rural wttlf. ot~l Bulavllla Rd . Open i A.M. to
No lfllllf. St. Rt. 325 1 112 mll11 5 P.M. Uon, thru 9.at . Clll 614446-0322.
trom Rio Gr1nde. 614-245...5417.
One tc,. lrtillr lot with water Countot Appllanea, Inc. Good
and Mptle ayetem, JJ,INlO. 304- ulld 1ppllancas, T.V. •-'•· Open
8 l.m. to p.m. Mon ...Sal . .,.••
875-2722.
446·1699, 827 lrd. Av•. Gil·
Route 2 Aahton, 1 acrt ~• 1 3 llpolls, C»i
mills IOU1h G111ipoUt l.Deu,
public wlller, no reltrtcUon•. Croat.y air eond, Speoed Ouwn
eome wl1h river frontage, :104- ll.ackabll ••,.,., and dryer,
111&amp;-2331.
both 110 voltA, bill o"'r, :loc-

.,om•

uas

llo",_

e

61!1-57!11.

BOXES.

Kldo Onlyl

RECORDS. ~'s-45'1·78'•EP'•
50'a-80'•
Ja....Ciaulca~
Country-Big Band-Rock. 614m-6&amp;67 Marc Fultl.
Top Cleh paid. Old tumltur.
eubolrd1,
quiHt,
ortanlel,
~lntlnga, top, or enttre ..t1t•
c.ll colleci 304-52.5-3275, or 304523-6864.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

12170 houll trailer, ~ood
kJinl1)awson kiln atrl. 35' x32 ..
wl1h elctr1 rlnQ, paints, lte. 30414K Odd l1di1S w.ddlng band.
Lllw MW. UO. IM-H2·23n.

pl.c•

pon:h .... Whit•
W~ht
Iron.
TurquoiM
cushtone, $7'5. Large Birch gn
llroploeo logo. $50. 614-9&lt;11-2367.

AnHqw VJctortan Emplr1 chest,
Vlclort.n
Ealtlaka
d,.....,,
1020'• drener and chett, col·
tectlb&amp;e chtlra, deelt and am•H
tabtft;, Nwlng machine, 1112 x
13 11'2 eerpat, etnnlng jlf'l, bad·
room •uH•. £14-317-7200.

c... ,..nce

StiO Husquvtrna
trimmers, 10'% over co.t. Paint

Farm tor rani whh tobacco
batt, tlx room houN newly

SNAFU® by Bruce

~ahl, kitchen tabla and ehalr'a,

weed u11r, large exh1u11. fln 1
ponabll Hoover waahar In gooa
eondi1Jon.
132
Butl•nllt.
Pom.roy, otio.
Couch &amp; Lcve Mit. MoM~ 12· 12
gu•g• gun. 614-446-0897.
End ol S..eon Cloan1net 111
lawn mowen and 11rlng trim·
maort in ttoek no r ..aonible of,., rwfuMd. Sldat'l EqulprMnt
Company, 304-67~7421 .

Business
Opponunlty
INOTICEI

OHK&gt; VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
I'ICCHIU.. ndt thai fOU do butl•

_,with-'" you know, ond
NOT1o oond money 11\rcuQn 11\o
moll unlll you havo ln-fgotod

1 lflo.
:::-:OI:;:ft=orl::;~~-:-;-===:::

Loettlone • Sm111 lnVIIImt~nt •

1-~~230
Wot.FI' ToMina 8.... ComUnlto lrorn
tttt.ao. Lompo-Lodon•Monthly
low
oo ··
118.00.
Call poymonlo
lodoy PIIEE
.
Colo&lt; catolog ·-m&lt;~m.

,...lo-

Flrrol w1eage. $150. 814-2M-

Lumber ...IOMd 1nd 1)11ln, 3/4
101112 lnc:k. Red 1nd bl1ek c.k,
wild cherry, walnut, popltr, uh,
tnd maple also bls•board,
cuing, J•ma, ate. 6"14-44&amp;-a038.
U.mbtrlhlp: Cllfttlde
Gulf
Course M•mbar ha• moved out
of town. OHerad at Nduced
price. 814-44&amp;-i320.
Ram Level• 5000, A llvallng
1t1bUizlng ayltem. New, In box.
Retail $13g.06. Plica $100. 814-

2o46-68M.
Retrlgtrlfot,
stove-mod~ .
New wringer waehlr, 1ntique
oak dreaor 1nd round coft11
tab4e. Twin bada. 114-446-0121.
S.etlonal aofa,
retnQef'ltot,
dryer, and pfano. Call 1·14. .'Jit2·

2101 .

conditioner $400. 814-e92·3488.

Building

Block., brlclt, eawer

~JMt,

1..-., Rio Grande, OH Call
245-5121.

Bealtie

$400.

wln-

t14-

Germtn Shephard. 10 wNkl
old. $200 •xc:ellent Witch dogl.
4 m11.._ 814-388-W'11.

0.-n ond Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. All brMda. All •yt...
lama Pot Food DuiM. Julia

Wllilll. Coli 814-441Hl23t

1980 Pontiac: Phoenix, 4 cylinder nMdl tflnl. $300, 614-448-

51

1M4 CMvettt tor par11 with anC.
r.bulld ldt. s200. 814-317-

1084 Chrysler LA B1ron eonYMtlble. All opUont. 12,500. 614W2-247'B botwelfl 8-.!1 p.m.
wtlkdaya.

oboui"J&amp;M".

VCR $100. Guitar and amplifier
$40, oolllna llln 1181 lfoytog
W~n~tr we•htr UO, nnH tubl
-~2526 .

58

1i86 Ford Tempo XL, atlor 5:30
call 304-882-27'98.

1181 Thunderbird tor aale. Take
over p1yment1. 614·247-'193.

" ct..vy Now1, 4 dr. ••k..lng
$600. 114-446-11638.

Fruits &amp;

Canning Tomatot tor Sat• · Itreedy picked Sll buthll or 4 for
$20 . Baug.,mtn Farm 7 1/2 mi.
eouth of Gtlllpoil• on Sl. Rl . 7:
4·7 p.m. only. 614·256-6535.
Dunrovln FNh Ftrm just ott St.
Rt . 68'1 Ellt of Albeny. We IC·
cept food ttampa. Amllh
product1, gr•n bNr., home
grown
.,...com
and
tomatoea. e-7 daily, ciOIIcl
Monday. 814-ell-8288.
Rou1h'1
Strtwbtf'f')l
Firm.
Bunt, plelcin, eucumbtf'l, lie.
2 mil" blck of New Haven,
W. Y1. 304-882·22'Jl

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1i0 AlliN Chllmer XT with 4
Bottom plows 1nd gn~ln drill
$6350. 014 AC wldl front 3 pt.
Hitch wlbuth ftog $2550. &amp;N
Ford wlbwtl hog 52295. Owner
will rtna~ . 814-286-1422.
JO 350 Dour dleeel. 1fT7 Inter·
national truck. 3 u•l flctory
Lowboy. C. II lfllf' 5:00. 614-JII2·

8-10\69.

Spec\all It Mlril't Auto Sa....
1ia61ROC Z lolldoct, $6995. t085
Pontlltl Gr~nd Prfx, nle•. 14000.
1185 Ooda• Charger, 1uto I air,
$2500. 1915 Chevttte, auto &amp; air,
11650. 1984 Suburu 414, $1450
1h4 Dodge Con, tl.lto, $1650.

614-446-8751.

Trucks for Sale

1m Ford Ton Truek 9 11 . bed.
Good Shipe, Alto, metal 10 11.
nat bed tor a 1ruck. 614.....,.6-0151.
1m Dodge truck, ehort bed,
r1bul" angina, 111c eond, mu.t
1111 $800 . 304-675-5156 aher 5:00

PM.

1184 Ch•vroNt Cullom Dtlura,
one owner, low mltuge, axe

conct. 304-&lt;11!1-131111.
15 GUC, elngll 1111 dump truck.
12 fl . bod. Good condHion . 114-

vans

&amp; 4 WD's

1111 Dodge ex• tNCk whh lift
kM, 17l40 In tim, 380 motor
nw1y

2696.

Rorglo1orod
lluortor - -·
114-192·
7'042.

ro~~u~n, 11.500. - ·

614-286--

74

&amp; Grain

Motorcycles

1112 Kondl Cullom 900 CC,
Mutt etii-Ho FIIU ::ablt ott.r

rofuMd. 114-Wti-&lt;1421.
tiD Goldwlng lnlllfllat•. E~~:cei­

IMit condtlloh. 19,000 mu...

-

71

. 1114-36).7!11.

Suzutd Tornp&lt;or. Excollonl
oondMon. MOO mil•. At.o ln-

cktdel ........ c.ll Ifill' 7:30

tor Salt

1114o+fe.31118 «

timing
chal"' tlllftlllor,
ro&lt;lofor,l'lll_~~ 11roo,

s

bedroom, fur·

nlohod. 814-992·~.

" Remember .. lhis camouflage only works
if you fly around real . real slow.' "

noru•.NOO·

•

1fll Bulc~ Lo8obrt1 ~C1 f81 ~~
MOO. or boototlor. - ...a....,,

1911 Choelunlllo boo~ :10 ft. 231
hp oloh.....,, now mooring

11!:".!1 .....,. houllrallor, -

8..... 31.

.IF WHAT WE HEA..RD
IS TRUE, OUR CLOUD

f'.10UNTAIN KING DOM
IS DOOMED .'

®l m~Rescue:91fA

blind man and h1s dog save
apartment res1dents from a
lire. (A) Slereo. Q

CDil] MOVIE: Murphy's Law

IJATIOIJAL PIGGY
SAW£) &amp; tpAKJ
j ~~'?-1

f"lf(ST

~

/ ,.

/

/

/

I'lL BH UY £Vf.10
HAVt; AIJ '£XPRfSS
Cl-1t:CkDUT' LA!Jt;

@ PrlmeNews
[)Murder , She Wrote From
Russ1a .. .With Blood
® Funny Business With
Charlie Chaae IV Charlie
Chase play&amp; 1ncks on
country rn us1c stars and tans
alike

lound. IAI t:;l
9:00 II crJ
In The Heat

01

IAlO

II) ClJ American Experience
Two very different women
befnend each other m I BOOs

Nsw England . Q

MORK 'VIEEKLE AND WII\TRHOP
THEN '&lt;n I c;:ANT BE"
AN
MU6T

YOIJ IOL.DME
YCU\NEPEA

'ANT:r-.Yoo
BE AN 'UNa.E " /
-~- - ---o----

~~
n

011 m:J !D 'Kenny
ANTS CON'r 1-V\.VE
MUCH CF A SENSE

~
0
v-&gt;,.

'--'!:'JLJ

Rogers as

The Gambler: legend
Continues Pt 2' CBS
Tuesday Movie 12:00)
[I) Larry King Live!

[II Budweiser Presents:

Tuesday Night Fights

® Nashville Now
9:30 0 ® Q Ill Coach Hayden
unw1t11ngly causes Kelly and

Sluan 10 brea k up. IRI Q
10:00 (I) 700 Club Wilh Pal
Robertson

.·-.....

0 C2l

a

Real Lite With

Jane Pauley
~

0

Commerelal

Mrlng, naw

and

HARNEY
HE DON'T LOOK

TENSE TO ME II

a

0

C

IIJI~1rtysome1hlng

0

10:20 CIJ MOVIE: Conon Comes To
Harlem IAI I2:00)
10:30 I]) To Be Announced
(!l Major League Baseball

CD Raising Kids
CDil] Tari
® Crook &amp; Chase
11 :oouC2J

CD cr21

ASTRO-GRAPH

UcllnMd Eiec1rlei1M. PltqUIII
Eloc:tric: 5orvlr:o. 614-448-2718.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

A... denllel
or
oomu*olel
wiring, new tei'Yico Of repalrt.
Llc:.nHd alectrlc:lan. Ridenour
Electrical, 304&lt;171·1718.

Mowroy'o Upholo1orlng WYICIng trl COIMlly oroo 2!1 yooro. Tho
In tumMIHO U-orlng.
Call :104-6711-41114 tor .......
llmiiM.
Orah•m Upholstery Canter, lOS
HIIHop Dt. Call tor.::~ntm•nte
l •tllnltH . C.ll
14438.

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) One way lo guar an lee lr1ends will have n 1c e things 10 say

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) In career In-

A&amp;A W1t1r Dallvary. 2,000 pl.

Upholstery

unavailable elsewhere. Cancer. treat
you rsellto a b1rlhday gift Send tor your
A str o-G raph prediCtions lor the year
ahea d by ma111ng $1 .25 to A stra -Gr aph,
Clo lhi S newspaper . P .O Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44 101 -3428 Be sure to
state your zodia c s1gn

abo ut you is to tal~ tllem up 1n front of
oth ers However . don "t use flattery, be
s1ncer e

85 General Hauling

~ 3,;~1ono dolhrory. Call -

aa om

a

1111

News

(!) Moyers: The Public Mind

Ruldentlel

A • A W.t•r ~lea. Poa11 cl•
lemt, wtlll. lmmedllt•1,000 or

NORTH
• 97

'110 7 1 3
tQJ IO J

Key decision
at trick one

+AQJ
WEST

EAST

+ 10 B 5

By James Jaroby

Shou ld South Lake the a&lt;'l'" of hearts
nght away, or IS 11 better to hold up for
one round? Declarer"s play lS 1mmate·
rial if th e suit lS div1ded 4-3 between
the defenders hands. Whatever South
does, he will sllll make mne tricks and
his

"l-17-90

+ K J4 2

'1!9

'IKQ A&amp;2
t A92
• 93

t6;.
+10 7 &amp;2
SOUTH
+A Q &amp; 3

'IA5
t K8 3
K 8; 4

+

contract. But declarer must make

Vulnerable Both
Dealer Souih

his best play ba sed on the likelihood
thai opcmng leader Wesl began with

hearts.
West
North
South
East
If Wesl has led from a five-card
I NT
Pass
2+
Pass
heart sutt . it is ex tremely unlikely that
2+
Pass
3 NT
Al l pa ss
he he ld the K-Q-J and led a low card
Opcntng lea d 'I G
When he has other five-card holdings.
11 is clear that Ea st holds the nine and
one honor. If declarer ducks at trick
one. East will contmue with the Jack :
Now declarer IS set whenever West Wesl players, holdtng K-Q-J -x·x of
· holds the diamond ace. So declarer hearts. m1ght lead a low heart . partir·
should take the ftrsl lnck . Then he utarly 1f they held the diamond ace for
forces out the ace of dtamonds . East an entry. They would expect to find
and West c annot put their heart tricks four hearts in the Norlh hand smce
together, and declarer easi ly makes North looked for a major·suil hi benine tricks. (He makes an overtrick if fore b1dding three no-trump. In that
he ts foo lish enough to lake the spade Situation. West's best chance to beat
f 1ve

finesso .1

It is onl y fair to ment1on that some

game might be to find East with the 10
of hearts or even the nine.

0

CROSSWORD
by

'\Our
'Birthday
July 18, 1190

volvements today the race w ill ~o to the
smart ana not necessarily the sw1fl. Use
your head so you can be numbered
among the winners

(PI 3 Of 4) How candidalls
CAPAICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Th&gt;S \S a
good day to talk to your boss about
some changes you would like to mak e
you feel could llelp the opera !ion Your
boss should be recep1 1ve

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) .. 'udge
not lest ye be judged ·· is a good "'age
to keep in mmd today when dealing with
others on a one- to-one basis AssoCiates will emulate your behavior

PISCES (fob. 20-March 20) Today il
you get in~olved in a serious discussion ,
wtlh another the debate won "! be wan
by the person who gets in the last word
In stead it will be graded on the quality
of the comment s

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19) You 're an

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) People who

extremely effecllve communicator taaren 't tuned into your wavelength could l day, but don't waste your time on idle
prove to be ratller boring today . Try to chatter. Use your skills to get your
.assOCiate with companions whose , points across to those who can help ad lhinking and interests parallels yours .
vance your present inleresls .

SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 22) Timing is

TAURUS (April zo.Mtr 20) Someone

In the year ahead you should be able to
no t1ce a continuous improvement in
several matters that are of considerable
·importance to you . Be content with your
pr ogress instead of tt)1ng to accelerale
the pace

extremely important today . especially II
you are trying to sell or promote someth ing !lnancially beneficial to you. Don't
make your pitch until you ha~e your
prospect 's complet e alfenllon.

who has your best Interest at heart

CANCER (Juno 21·Julr 22) Be logical

as much feedback BB possible from as' sociates today If you have to make an
Important decision The input of olhers
could
re~eal
aspects
you've
overlooked .

and pracllcal in your commercial deal·
ings today, but, by the same token,
don't discount your hunches. Your Inner
voice may convey information to you

SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) Gel

could be o1 help 10 you today by show·
ing you a procedure to strengthen your
financial po"tkln. Listen to this per·

son's suggestions.
OE..NI (Mar 21·Juno 20) Your possl. bllllles lor personal gains look good 1o·
day. but don"1expecllo be a millionaire
overnight. Be grateful for profitable de,vetopmen1a even though 1hey mlgh1 be
small .

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
39 lmilal ed
1 Army ba se DOWN

5 Ulah

9

1 Shore

2 Tree

s late
llowe1
Potpourn

01 shrub

3 Forly 1sh

10 Jackel

pan1c
4 No l neg .

lea lure
t

2 Augmenl s

5 Shade

13 Behav1 01
14 Sail (Fr I
15 Mors e

ol qr;•y
6 EVP./1

24 Respond
2~ F1ber
s ound
Cillid
lube
nch
16 Good
d1spanly 18 Raset·al l
lood
old tune s
8 Bar lerm
llllrac !IOII 27 Fo riJ!llden
17 En comlulfl 10 Hll
21 l e le gt rlph 28 lmpa c l
19 Slower
I 1 I ove
22 ll al•rl"
29 I1!Je, alerl
(rnu s )
po elry
u ly
34 I •kely
20 VI S ~CJP.
lll t iS r
23 ( :o"';lrucl 35 f'a lm len I
21 l e•~ s r11y
22 ij al failn c
23 Wee bi l
24 Take heed .
[poel)

7 Parenl ·

code

15 Co11du'l
or

'

old s lyl e

25 Bombay
belle

s

allir e

26 Go wr ong
27 Spo o l
30 Lille
Mr Ona ss1
31 Beverage
32 And nol
33 Melo11
35 Monsle1

36

jj

Type

ol sland
37 l 1ngerie

~News

..me. or ,..,.1,..

-ny. 6M-367·7301.

BRIDGE

Nancy laces mixed emotions
on the 8\le of pubhcatton ol

and HMtlna
Fourth 1nd Pln.
Galllpollt, Ohio
1114 Uti 3888

Refrigeration

no finish line in the race lor QU.,_A:::L::_IT:..Y:..'_'- - - - - - - - ,

receipts are nownere to be

The Night G111esp1e tnes to
p revent a civil nghts leader"s
as sassmahon . (A) t;1
Q ® 0 (I) Roseanne
Becky and her g 1rlfnend get
drunk and try to cover it up .

Plumbing &amp;

Electrical &amp;

Humbly - Trife- Quick- Savory - QUAL!TY
My boss had this mono hung 1n h1s off1ce : There IS

8:30 0 ® Q :ll The Wonder
Years It's taJii t1me and the

a

Car1tr'l Plumbing

84

the moss1ng word s
you develop fr om step No. 3 below

(Ri l2:001

her bOOk [A) Q

87

1m Polort1, CI,OOOml, -

ill Who's The

1:I) Newswatch
1:!) P.O.V. Jim Klem v1sits the
campus ol Ken t State
Umvers1ty. (1:30)
CDil] New ~wlllghl Zone
[3) Evening News

304-&lt;1"1Wt19

~· •tlor 1:00 Pll :I04-f7l.

8M~!I-1t00.

Mobl)l harM fer 1111 or rwrt.
11'74 lchunz.

AUtos tor Sale

Q

Boss? Tany dec1de s to
chaperone Samantha s class
w1nter liSCation tnp {AI Q
(!) (]) Nova Tile ar1 of
decept1on m war reveals a
range of techniques C

Septic Tank Pumping S901...Gallll

WdtnOn't Waler Hauling,
NIIIONbM rltN, Vo4UfM dllo
cauntl, 2,000 lo 4,000 01pacltyl
ottlamt, DOOia, weUt, tic. Cal

1m Fonl Ftl"*- aGO, onaltlo
302, two door, Mtuel mll•

2 lA S22 Third Av•. No ptltt.

~I j

ALLEY OOP

Heating

71 GIIC Yon H, 3SP, P8 PB
$100. Noa. Good Worfl True~.

Llveatock

Hay

and tnnamlakm. $200. 114-

a

a

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISE9,
Jook.oon, OH 1..!100&lt;137..!11126.

119:14997.

TransportatiOn

4

bogo tun~onoa.

695-3802.

82

75 11oate &amp; Motors

AsM:on

Rotary or c1bt1 tool drilling.
Moat Willa eompl.. ad aama d1y.
Pump 11111 and Mrvk;a , 304-

Fonl 200. 8 cyell- onglno

for Rent

tralltr,

Ron·• TV Service, tpeclallzJng
In Zenith 1110 •rvk;lng most
ott.r brlnd1. HowM calla, 1110
aome 1ppllanc• rapalr1. WV
304-676-23Uo8 Ohio 1114-446-24-54.

~ Andy Griffith
7:05 m Jetleroons
7:30 U crJ Family Feud
(!] Major Leagua Baaeball
D
Enlertalnment Tonlgh1
Ill Ill Mama's Family
1!11 CD I!J) rzt Jeopardy! Q
CDil] M'A'S'H
0 Crostftre
~ Major League Baseball
7:35 Cll Major League Baseball
8:00 CD MOVIE: Between Two
Women 12 DO)
0 crJ
Matlock Matlock

r etu rns to college to defend
a student framed lor murder

HouHhold
Y11ntanence·
Roofing, new frepalr, siding,
newtr~palr, carpentry, odd )obi .
ettlmtt ... 614-379-2D20 , 11M for
Mtlch.

Remodeling:
Mobile
Mom•
repaolr roofing , eoncrett work,
alactrfcal, plumbing axpartsnct.
Aalerancn lnsurane. cl1lmt
accepted. 614·256-1811.

Mobile Homes

bedroom

Hit 1nd Mer Conttructlon, we
will do additions, dec::k•, tiding,
•ldewtlks 1 roofing, plumbing,
etc, flo jOD too tmlll. Call after
11 :00 wHkdays 1nytlmo Sat and
Sun. 304-67S.2919.

For ult « tr1da eo madill Ford
truck. 4 whMI drl¥1, new paint,
tiM lnd WhHII, ltep aida. Ae~lna $3800. 614-448..!1785 .. 614441-2194.

Hlw Holland 387 t1nk menLH
epretd1r. o.hl U grinder mlur,
both exc conct, 30&gt;f.z73""'216.

fECffTION.

Gardnar't Home Improvement.
RQ. &amp; Com., Roofing, p1lntlng,
gutter, patio decka, and etc. 61"&lt;146-6228.

M Yudl P'ekup B-2000. 8144411·1480.

73

&lt;"

Uneondttlonal lifetime gu1rsn·
tM. Local rotor~neu tumithtd
FrH tttlmatH. C.ll collect 1814-237..()488, day or rWght .
Aog.,. B111mant Waterproofing.

Jlm'a F1rm Equipment, SR. 35,
Wilt G1lllpollt, 11'14-446-9177;
Wide eea.ctlon ,_. l UHd firm
tr.ctor1 I lmp1MMnt1. Buy,
1111, tl'lde, 1:00-5:00 weakdlya,
Sat. till Noan.

llvotonJ. .~lvor corn pic 1.,.,
othor ,_ oqull)riiOnl.

I/'IE POf'l 'T cKT
lfTTftr

BASEMENT

O.vla
S.W-Vae
Servlee,
Georg• Crttk Rd. Partt, tuppiiH, ptck.up, end dall¥«y. 114446.0:zM.

AS214. 2.c houra.

2

Home

245-6017.

manure 1prelderai, rnowwa cu~

.,
..~

WATERPROOFING

GOIERNMENT SEIZED vlhlc:l•
from 1100. Fordt. Man::.clee.
CorvenH. Chevy•. Surplua.
Ye&gt;ur II'M. (1) lll)5...e¥7-&amp;000 Ext.

...... .
I'M 5u[?p~J~fp

Improvements

114-251-1270.

p,m.IM-1112-7171.

Upllnd Rood. 1160 mo., 1100 tor
doposh, .t~v•l ~- ~1•r·

81

241111.

proportl...
government
glvH•Y programs. For lntorrnlllon e-ll l-Mot-641-1778 Ext.

Mol\llo homo lol ""'· Ono
QentJ.,..n. 614-112-3111.

Services

auto, wlair.l
$3300. 15 CM\1. Cavalier auto,
wlalr. $2500 . For S.lo Of trade.

'18 Chevy Luv, look1 good, run•
~~-rtl 1968 Chlwellt, 304-

Fann Equipment

""""

7789.

Dodoe S.,adow

For Salt or Tn~de 2 '68
Camaroe. $3,000. 614-388-177'0.

[}I Moneyline
(]) Miami Vice C10ck et1
contemplates a walk down
the a 1sle w1th a recordmg
star. Stereo
® Music Row Video

Ford L.e4tufl lime Motor Mama
tor ult. Sell..contalnad. Mlchlln
tim. 1,800 actual mil... Roll out
1wnlng. $6,~00 . C. ll 614-912·

78 Cldlll•e good body part• car.
No lit~ . $200. 614-387-0581.

81

Fortune

Now $3495.00. 614-24HBM.

I

the ch" kle qooled
1n

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

a

CDil] Night Court

Bargain,
Blrgaln-15
Oodge
Motor Homa. Low mltuga,
Good eondhlon. Reduced $15M.
1

CDil] Three's Company
@Tap Card
~ Newhert
6:35 Cll Andy Griffith
7:00 C2J Fif1h Annual Purina
Invitational Dog Show
11 C2l PM Magazine
(!] Sport&amp;Center
g
Inside Edition
ri! (f) MacNeil Lehrer
Q (J) Current Altair
g) I!J) rzt Wheel Of

8 parson camper wllull bat.,. 11
pa...nger v1n. Both ••cellant
eh1pe. $4000 . Nagotlabl•. 6M446-e7M.

1

0 a Q (J) ABC News Q
ri! Body Electric

1!11

24' Prowfer Trav11 Tr1IIOr s.ttContalned. Air Cond . UieoWav•. very good eondltlon.
13000. 614446-3669

85 Plymoulh eon very good
eondtllon. Otaat MPG. Stereo.
$2:,000 OBO. 614 4UI 8819.

112 Runner BNnt pick your own
$8/buthel. Al•o have bNtt 1M
cucumber~ . C.H 814-446-45gg..

61

23 H. Air Strum. WUI t1ka tr1d1.

985-44"18.

Regular J&amp;U CuMOIMrl 11wa,..
rwcel.,. more lhln tMy're cher·
gad tor. JIM J)tano Strvla. Bill
W•rd 304-882·2126. AU me

120.

tact eond, 17,000 mil••. 304-675-

I

1--T'
OI;-,Ir-rl"""""l'
,....,-1--i
O Com
p l" e
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by lollong

NewsHour

985-o4418.

1185 CMvy Ctvall1r. Auto., AM·
FW atereo euuttt. $2800. 614-

Pliny, -93'-2011.
Hoy ... SolO. Ciovor • Timothy_
Round SoloO In lho Flolrt. 6142t&amp;lllll

Why Poy Ronl? Homoo lor 11.1101

1ga3 Toyota Dolphin Motor
homo. Euy on gat, tow millg1,
IC, Nlf cantaJntd. $11,500. !t4-

44114020.

Musical
lnatruments

B(ACH ...

198'1 Shtnlndoah, 30 n. travel
1f'llllor. Full tilt bed, AC, niC41 &amp;
clean. $5200. 814 446 06-43.

1884
Pontile
Aero
SE
autornetlc1 35,000 mi.... Btsck,
tunroolt.a..!lU)ll llttct.lsuade Interior, AMit-MICI:Q., EA, 1111, AC,
crutat, pwr. windows, tlum.
whNia, limited adlllon, wery
lh1rp. $4350. 114-446-0152, Eve.

flf'l iniUrtlnct, grut rOUt 1nd
balee. MOf'lln Farm, AI. H,

Bedroom, untumlshld
houu In Pomaray. 814·9Sa2·2218
aft.- I p.m.

1979 lntemattonal .ehool but,
tid• door 1nd 1111, ldal for campIng Of b1nd bus, partly convar·
t.a, 304-675-3249.

15011.

tlrnall cat.

·~

Starcr1f1 pop-up ctmpar
with awning, tleapa 6, exc eond,
1900. 304..!75-3;78.

Good Condit lon. 814-44 6-2568.

Hlm111y1n

BUT ffi~kl, WHAT
IF YOU GOT A
1'\.AC£ Af ~E

1m

1132.

Reg.

(iE.f

949-2490.

Rot Tlorrlor pupploo. 304&lt;171-

1100. 614-192·711111_

CIJIJ'f YOU
WDIIRY
ABOur THAT'

DIVORC£01

111111 Slorcrofl pop-up compor.

1i84 Chryaler New Yorker, per-

Rorg. Dobo"""n Pupploo bcol·
toni Pedigrtl. Pepan Guartn•
t.... $2011.Each614-2M-6403

YOO WOI-l'f

SIMps 11. Good condition. 614·

2 Trsller - 25ft. 5tt'l wha.l, lift.
Camper. Both Will cared b .
Barry, &amp;M-446-4478.

Hllnlllyan Klnena. 1 Ma1•1
Female. Box t,.lned, thott.
Havo bollh pat'lnta. m tach.
614-441-oz'lt

7 - 17

1913 Dodge molor home, 304113-5363, Charta• Otekar.

1980 Oldl Omega. Good condlllon.l600. 614-:ZS&amp;-6/51 .

NEHHPY

I

~ Sportalook

(f) 3-2-1 Contact Q

&amp;

campers

DIEER

1!11 m cr21 CBS Newa Q

Motor Homes

Bulek. Skyt•ril, Y..f •uto,

1982 Ponti.: Sonnevlllt, 111
powtr, AM.fM ltmo, 81,356
mil.. , $2,000. ~me 304-t754397 ,,..,. 8!30
75-3824.

120 IOM prwnlum Alfllta hly
n&gt;llo In dry wl1h 1110&lt;1110 pluo

Ridge.

'

VInton Auta Sa1\llga.l..ala &amp;
Early Modtl Partt. "Forakln &amp;
Oomestlc . We Buy Junk "tara.
614-338-9062

304-458-1~4

gal 1M up 114.81 and 10 gal
complete $43..25.

64

Three

42

,gao

1180 Sunblrd, rtbulft engine,
f\.ln• good. $800. 814-379-2847.

Palnl Plouonl, 30...-T&amp;-2063, 10

:rBWMI.

dmft, llntala, ate. Claudl Wln-

"

&amp;

3n-2213.

79

Flah Ttnlc, 2413 Jaeklon Ave.

Haw• Farm Mecfllnery, Fh. t~
&amp; Movhow R&lt;l., JociiMn. 814-

Supplies

engine

1253.

Whirlpool Wllhor SIOO. Uprlvh1 Haw HoU1nd m B1llr. Now Hoi·
trMz..- $150. 27,000 BTU air land 68 Baler. JoM DMrw R•k•,

55

r.:

rta·

72

liM ,.poa, tu dellnquen1

21

1171 Okil Cutl... W•gon tor

I

Man to wife "How do you
expect me lo remember your
.
.
.
.
.
_ . - birthday, when you keep
. - - -- -- - - - . , lookmg younger----·---!"

a

Budget
Tr•n•miiiiOflt;
All
Typn,, Utod S. Rebul", 30 day•
1o 1 y..r warr1n1y, ownar: 9111
Flowen . 114-24U6n or e14·

$350. 6'14·

1393.

63

perw. 1114-1112·2121

docorolod, Chond\oro
31M&lt;171-230t.

Drlgonwynd Canery Paral1n,
SllmiN and Hlmateyan kh11n1 .
114-446-3844 eHar 7 p.m.

Vegetables

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

wortr. car.

Cocllienpanlel. 5 months, $75.
~ymant•. Btondl. 114-gg2.

King aize wat1rbld m.attrne.
Comforter 11'1 and king Ht &amp;.
....... $14-367-05t1.

Goods

446~472.

Buy or sell. Rlverlna Antiqu. .,
1124 E. Main Streit, PorMroy.
Houn: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. to 11:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m .
!14-982-2526.

007ll

Household

air. Good

19'79 Plymouth 2 dr. Runs good.
$500. OBO. 614·24.&gt;90n.

lnt•matlonal Da:z•.._TD-15 wtth
wench. Excellent .._ condt11on.
Alao, LeRol 130 Air Comprnsor,
gu engine with lea than 400
Flours. C.ll 6M-448·1H&amp;e14-446-

Merchandise

1m Dat1un 9210 4 door with

Beautiful black Pom•n~nlant.
Purebred, no ,.glttartd. 8
...u Ofd $15. 814·742·3110.

W•k• old.1 Mala 1 Fmata.

Plu., 304-t75-4084.

OBO. Set 11 3194~ Wllehtown
Rd. Mlnnet"'vtlle, OH 01 call 814-

crowllld Amazon ,.,.

RAVAYJ

YU R B E

Today

6:05 (5) Beverly Hlllblllleo
6:30 0 aJ
NBC Nightly Newo

and tr1n1. Chevy-350 4
barrell,
volt. Ford-351 C &amp;
lrano, 302 4 bornll &amp; lrano,
Truck 4 spd. Barry f14-446-447ti .

ae

Antlquel BrougM end Sold
Dally 1 piece or whatonr. Cora
Ml118l4-379-2727

ComJ»t-'•bodroom eat Gall elrHome, Nice Trailer 12500.00 Would like to rent hoUM In eullltlng hlattr, r.cU~ng-chalr,

49

r-'low

OS or

3271.

1m 12X10 3 Bedroom Mobile

HIM two bedraam, all el«trle,
141170 lfllltr. 304-&amp;82-3451.
SPECIAL flctory to .-oul99"1, 2
or 3 bedrvom14x?O modale at
the unbeollovabll price of
$12,go(J delivered and Ml up.
C..ll1~729-4045 tor datallt.

1

ae

Eacfi. 614 44e 0373 After 6:00PM

3

Rooms

ets Or

Ant ques

WNCH

Auto Pans

Wo~d

az I Dream Of Jeannie

614·

t:==========-r:=:::===~::==:1
3 motor~
4
'11 Aut f S I
f S I
56 P

Sholo ond Wormed. 814-367-0117
114-387·~22
e..glo Pupo. I Wollb Old. $20.

Paying up lo $1.!10.00 tor JltIOO'e box. Hlgknt prict paid
tor vinyl and metal box••·
Before you throw II away gtve h
aw•y or ull It to chup. C.ll
614-912·5657 Man;: Fuftz.

I!J)

t:;1

1!11 He·Men

1974 Dodg• Cx4 Ortva train 4ap

lock.cl
up·
r~naFnlt~lon, rear end and
m1ny other par1t good. $500. If
lnttrntad leave nama on
answ1rlng machln1 304-675-

----:-.....:..--~

AND IF ONE 15 600D, FIVE
SHOULD BE EVEN BETTER

3.14 1on. $200.00 114-388-8778

2 AKC Reg. Boo1on Torr!« Puppile. Both Bilek I WMa. 8

45

Furnished

C 1 M~ "1£A. Ine

Upright lrMZar 18.3 cubic ft.
FroefiHI. Good Condition $325.
Microw~va, medium IIH, Tappan 1150. ZtnHh Cotor, floor
model T.V. 25". $125. 1114-t854418.

I

60 CANOE ING
WITHOUT A LIFE JACKET~
CAN'T

Ac'cessorles

rot Approx. 1 YMr old. Talka.
$100. wllh cogo. 614-992-6320

53

'{OU

CDil] Andy Griffith

367·7877.

fumHuro, hlattrl, Wtttem I
Work boola. 614-448-31&amp;g.

675--2562.

for Sale

1D P.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE_ 62
Olin St., Qalllpolll. Haw I UHd

Aaclnt . 2 btdroom, 1ppllanc~t.
Oft ltrttt parking. Avalllbll
Augult 1. Day 814-992·2151
Evenlng:ttweak.•nd•
814-'N2-

Mobile Homes

polnllng. Prolnolcmlll wort. tor
omotuor poy. Ex.,.,- 10

Financial

APARTMENT RENTERS! Hom11

hom

m:z

Will do lntertor and tlfter~

Wfll
pour
clrtva
wayt,
patlotiNbe, Ill lypM CQf'IC .....
work 1nd fHd 1011, lldl willet.
8M-M2· 2127.

2BR, turn'ld, eantrally located.
Aduttt prsltmd. Na pelt.
$225/mo. plu. ttcurtty d•potll,
releranea. 61c.4.2238 or 614445-2581

3 Br. ,.nch, gat furnace, CA, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
garage, lull bateman!. Prtea BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Reduced. 6W-446-0390 or l&amp;B- ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plkt
9652.
from $1921mo. W1lk to shop &amp;
movlas. Call 614-446oo2568. EOH.
3BR In Chathlr.. Cantril Air,
new csrpet and 1ppUanc... Fumlshtd
Efficiency,
$"175,
ba11ment tnd carport. $:16,000. Utllitiel Paid, 701 Fourth Avt,
61'-446-82651614-446-0963 .
G1llipalla, 6J4..446-4416, tlltr
7p.m.
3BR, 11!2 bllhl, FR, LR, tully •
quipped khchln wl dining area. Furnished, ttflelaney apat1mtn1
2 e•r g~rag1, In -ground" pool. tor rant Utilllin Included. 614·
Price rtduced. 614~46-Tl:J1.
W.Z-6i49.

192-1139.

1"V.ncllng ROUiea· Grul Income
Ext. Y·1018f.
EARN MONEY Roocllng boof111 Polonllll I Exeollonl II$

hiring. (11 Ellt. Y-4582.
EXCELLENT WAGES lot opore

31 Homes for Sale

,...

11H4&amp;-36ll4

B

Real Estate

_1_1__
H_e.:lp_W_a_n_t_ed_ _

MlmiQ
(f) Reading Rainbow

Yukon Oaltl 1i81-29 H. cemper
boat. 140 HP Volvo-Pena ln-

dlyoo-.

Four 3 montl'\1 aid kltttnt, 2

ri! Second Voyage 01 The

Mercury Mercruller Spaclll'-t.
F1ctory tralntd, bondld,. ,Preclalon Mobile M1rlne. W• coma to
you! 814-25i-5m.

bedroom lull•,

I

I
I
1--rl-1"'--.,llTl-:,1---l
~
I

a

(!] Running And Racing

BOATERS

6 pc. wood grvup 114.0\ por

•

U C2l IJIIJ Q Ill 1!11
g) cr2l
News

ft. 100 hp.l1800. 6M..!02·3436 .

61........3'U58

17

6:00 CD Hardcas11e And
McConnlck t:;1

For 1111. 1m Glu•par bolt. 16

RENT TO OWN

TUES., JULY

WDID
OAMI

THAT DAILI
PUll Ill

EVENING

Tr1lllr, 1\lo )lekiMI. $800. 614-446-44n.

Jorrlcho Rd. 1'1. PIN..nl. WV,

wNk. 4

•

Flthlng Boll twlval IIIII, live
w•ll, 23 HP Johnson Motot' and

NawA.Ited
HOUMhokf lumlt;hlng. 112 mi.

c.ll :J04.175.M50.

rr•g•

••c

448-&lt;1226.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing

1

Gardner'• V.rl.ty I Fumttur•
Shop, 1415 Eaatem Ava. B.t!Y.
Sell 1nd Trade. Low prf~CM. IU-

Trtlltr . for rant, water 1nd
gar1bage paid, $150. dapotlt
1nd rafareneH. 304-576-2260.

Pomeroy-Middleport,
- -· ·- Ohio.

BORN LOSER

for Sale

Goods

2 bedroom trall•r, eomptet•IY
tumlshld, waahar •nd drytr, alr
cond, 304·713-5958.

aecurlty ,depoalt, 1-900..863-5100,

t~.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Household

for Rent

attar 5 :30 Monday-Friday.

GOLD

St

Mobile Homes

trirn

38 Concerning

DAILY ( "II 'r'PTOQUOTES ~ flrrr 'show to work it :

use visual 1mages to
man1pu late voters . t;1

AX'r'llLHAAXII
Is L 0 NG f E 1.1. 0 W

CDil] Arsenio Hall
I!J) Moneyllne

0

Miami Vice Crocket1 and
Tubbs set out to lind a group
of d rug np-ofl terronsts .
® Church Street Slation
@ Twilight Zone

11:30 CD Batman
II C2J
Tonlghl Shaw
Stereo.
II® Cheere Q
Ill ill Nlghlllne Q
®J Night Court
@ Sports Ton1ph1
Ill cr21 'SUngray CBS Lillo
Night Stingray becomes the

a

prime murder suspect in a
series of murders . (AI

@On Stage
~ Magnum, P.l.
12:00 ()) Fifth Annual Purlna
lnvlhltlonal Dog Show
ma NlghUino Q
II (J) Enlertalnmonl Tonight
1111 Magnum, P.l.
CD []) Love Connection
I!Jl NewsNight
II) Crlme Story Luca gives In
to paranoia when he
suspects he's being set up .

Sleteo.

On~ letter stamls for another In this salllplr 1\ 1s us~d
for lhe three l."s, X fur the two o ·s, etc Single letters ,
apostrophes, lhc length and formation uf the worils an' all
hinls Each day the code letters are different

CRVPTOQUOTE

1·11
l U I J

F T A I'

II Z ll I

W J C F

I. TZU

C K WI

B I II II

W J C F

ST X W

C K WI

S L F T LX

MF

ST L V

I'Flii.X

T

US

N .

IIJUQBFHHJN
Yeeterda11'• Cryptoq•ote: EVERYTI-IING HAP·
PENS TO EVERYBODY SOONER OR LATER IF
THERE IS TIME ENOUGH. - GEORGE BERNARD

SIIAW

. ,.

�......... ...--- --:-

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

,_Local news briefs
Squads have 7 Monday calls
Seven c al ls for assistance were answered bv the units of the
Meigs County Emerge ncy Medical Services o·n Monday .
At 3:22a.m., Syracuse squad was called toPagevllle Road lo r
Bonnie Qulvey who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1: 39 p .m. Rutland went to Mine 31 to transport Ernes t
Munday to Holzer Medical Cen ter . Rutland was dispatched to
New Lima Road at 2: 31p.m. for Harold Nutt who was taken to
Veterans Memorial.
At 3:51 p.m., Middleport went to Zuspan Hollow Road lor
Betty Caldwell who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, at 4:51p.m. , Syracuse squad was called to Dutchtown
Road for Ely White. , also taken to Veterans; and at 7:13p.m ..
the Racine unit went to State Route 124 for Wanda Riffle , also
ta ken to Veterans Memorial. Tuppers Plains squad was called
to State Route 681 at 10:32 p.m . for J ohn Hawk who wa s
tran sported to Pleasant Valley Hospita l.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Explosives found in Piqua; 2,000 evacuated
PIQUA , Ohio iUPl) - Abou t
2,000 people stayed away !rom
thelr homes lor a second day
Tuesday as officials tried to
decide what to do wtth a qua rt of
nitroglycerin found In a
basement .
The powerful explosive, some
black powder, wtre and a detona ·
lion device were found at the
home of Dana Taylor, 26, Man·
day mornlng when pollee re·
sponded to a domestic quarrel at
the house.
More than 12 city blocks were
closed off, with some residents
spending the night at an evacua·
tlon center set up at Ni cklin
Elementary SchooL

RJR Nabisco refinances loan
NE W YORK iUPI ) - RJR
Na bisco Inc. said Monday 11 Is
beginning a $6.9 billion reflnanc·
lng that will retire the debt ·
ladened company's most trouble
some junk bonds and leave It wtlh
a more conservative balance
ShPet.
The food and tobacco gla n t said
$4.45 billion of Its high-yield ,
high· rlsk junk bonds, Is sued to
help finance Its reco rd $24 .9
billion leveraged bu yout last
year . and $2 billion of oUter cos~y
forms of debt wtll be replaced
wtth lower-cost bank debt , pre·
!erred stock and new equity.
Chairman Louis V. Ge r stner
J r . said the program Is expected
to leave the company with total
debt of les s than $20 bllllon and
Iota! equity of about $4 bliUon.
The company estimated li s
debt-to-equity ratio would drop to
5·1&lt;&gt;-1 at the completion of the
res truct uring as compare d to
23- to-tlas r March.
"This comprehensive recapital ization initiates the second
ma jor phase of our rebuild ing
program for RJR Na bisco,"
Ge rstner said in a pre pa red
statement .
While th e fi rst phase Inc luded
the divestiture of $5.5 billion In
asse ts and strategic changes to
Increase cash flow and Improve
profit margins, Gerstner said the
seco nd phase will increase equity
in th e company by more than SJ
billion, signific antly reduce high·
cos t debt and elimina te all
remai ning te mpcrary bridge
loan s used to help finan ce the

buyo ut.
RJR Nabisco and Kohlberg
Kravls Roberts Co., the leve r·
a ged buyout firm that took the
company private in the most
expensive transaction in history,
had been working for months to
find a way to avert a potential
financi al crisis related to some of
RJR Nabisco 's junk bonds .
The ma in objective of the plan
Is to retire most of the junk bonds
th e company was required to
reset to trade at full par value by
next April. These notes were
trading at tremendously depressed levels earlier this yea r.
Although the bonds had rebounded somewhat , RJR Na ·
blsco faced the prospect of
paying costly yields that would
have hurt its cash flow .
The plan, howeve r , leaves RJR
N a blsco with $2.05 billion ea r·
m arked lor the repurchase ollts
m os t problematic notes, and
resets the yield s of two rema in·
lng 14.07 percen t junk bonds at
Interest rates of 17 percent and
17.625 percent.
Bur analy sts said It Is unlikely
there will be many of the reset
bonds left on the marker at the
time the company Is required to
pay Interest on them .
" The ra te Isn't high when you
consider the company will be
buying the bonds back all along,"
sa id Lonnie Schaeffer. a v1 ce
president of capital markets at
F irst Alban y Co rp.
The reset rates were set by a
neutr al Investment bank , Do-

na ldson, Lu fkin &amp; J enrette Secu·

Grant will ... Continue d from page I
Title III of the federally funded
Job Training Partnership Act.
JTPA, administered in Ohio by
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Se rv1ces, Is a partnership among
busi ness. indu stry. labor. e du ca·

Hon and government designed to

train disadvantaged a nd unem·
ployed persons for job opportunl
ti es. Titl e III target s funds to
dlslocal cd workers.

--Area deaths-Ruth

Hill

Ca lif. , and An thony Mel van and
Sue Stephenson. both of Gallipolis; one s lster · ln ~ law, Rosemond
Ec kardt of Greenfield, Iowa; and
four great-grandchildren .
Private funeral services will
be held at the convenience of the
family .
There will be no visitation.
Burial will be In Greenfield
Ce metery.
In lieu of fl owers conlrlbuUons
ca n be made to the Am erican
He ar t Association or the Amerl
c an Lung Association.
Funeral arrangements are
under the direction of the Cre·
meens Funeral Chapel.

Ru th E. Hill. 71. of Bu c kha nnon, W.Va , died at Si Jose ph' s
Hospita l in Buckhannon on
Friday.
She was OOrn Decem be r 12.
1918 in Pomeroy . the daughter of
the la te Cl arence and Stcl L1
tGr irnm l Ebersbac h. She was a
mem ber of th e First Uni ted
Met h o d ist C hur c h In
Buckhannon.
She is su rvived by her hu s·
band , Rod ney W. " Rocky" Hill;
one daughter , Lynda Cline . Indi ·
anapolls; one son. Gregory C.
Hill , Buckhannon, one bro ther.
George Ebersbac h, Middleport;
two s isters. J ean Cooke. Middl e·
pori and Al yce Lalich, Sp r ing Annis Phelps, Jr.
Hill , Fla.; seven grandc hildren
Annis L. Phelps, Jr., 63, of West
a nd e ight great -gr andchildren.
Co
lumbia
died Mooday, July 16,
She was preceded in death by a
1990
at
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
sister, Mary He len Dav is.
Born
Sept
21,
1926, in WhitesFuneral services were held
Monday a t Po ling-S t. Cla ir Fun· vill e, West Vuginia, he was the son
era l Home In Buckhannon. Bur· of Anni s L. Phelps , Sr. and Arizona
(Watts) Phelps. Phelps worked as a
ia l will be in Pomeroy .
cooductor for Conway Railroad. He
was preceded in death by a step·
son, Edward "Guy" VanMeter.
Helen Brown
Survivmg is his wife, Helen Sue
Phelps,
West Columbia; two
Helen Ma e Brown. 76, of 602
Spring Valley Dr., died Sunday, daughters, Hazel Jean Cleland,
July 15, 1990 at Holzer Medical Chrisney, IN and Dottie Lou Wdl,
Ce nter following an extended Pomeroy, Ohio; two sons, Wiley L.
Phelps and Earl E. Phelps, both of
Illness.
She was born Aug. 11, 1913 In Pomeroy, Ohio; two step-sons,
Creston. iowa , daughter of the Charles Franklin VanMeter, Jr.,
la te Fred L. a nd Grace Devoe Clifton and Joseph Allen VanMeter,
West Columbia; two brothers,
Luce.
She was a re tired bookkeeper Frank Phelps of Garden Grove, CA
lor Scott Foresman Publishing and Bdly Phelps, Plteland, CA; two
Co., Illinois Central Railroad and sisters, Ruth llBmmonds and
Brown Packing Co., all In the Coletta Osborne, both of Pheland,
CA; seven grandchddren, five stepChic ago, Ill. area.
· She has been a Gallla County grandchildren and four greatres ident since 1979 before mov· granddlildren.
lng from South Holland, Ill.
Services will be Wednesday, July
She was preceded In death by 18. 1990 at II a.m. in Foglesong
her husband, Donald Jay Brown, Fpneral Home with the Rev.
Ge&lt;rge Hoschar officiating. Burial
Fe b. 24, 1987.
Surviving Is one daughter, will follow at tlte Kirkland
Mrs. Jack (Barbara) Melvan of Memorial Gardens.
Galllpolls; four grandchUdren,
Friends may call at tlte funeral
Donald Me Ivan of Tampa, Fla., home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
Michael Melvan of Los Angeles, Tuesday, July 17, 1990.

----Meigs announcements--Meet set J uJy Z7
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative will hold Its annual
meeting on Friday, July 27, at

Buckeye Hills Career Center at
Rio Grande. Registration will
begin at 5 p.m. and the business
meeting will start at 7: 30.

Tuesday, July 17. 1990

rites Corp., after RJR's advisers
and bondholders' representa·
lives di sagreed on the appropriate rate .
Additionally, the company
plans a $2.4 billion exchange
offer In which certain reset bonds
can be traded for cash and
convertible preferred stock.
Other parts of the restructur
lng Include a $1.7 billion equity
infusion from KKR and the
repayment of $1.15 billion bridge
loan with a new $2.25 billion line
of bank credit .

Rescuers
...
Continued from page 1
interv1 ew with a Manila radio
station. ''We can't say how many
there are but the rescuers were
trying to reach them."
U.S. Ambassador to the Philip~
pines Nicholas Platt said three
officials of the U.S. Agency fo r
In te rnational Development
trapped at the Nevada Hotel
while attending a seminar had
been rescued bur anotlter wa s
pulled out of the ruins dead . No
additional details were released.
Officials said the Monday
afternoon earthquake measu red
7.7 on the open-ended Richter
Scale and was centered In
Cabanatuan , 60 miles north of
Manila. It was the worst temblor
to hit the Philippines In 14 years.
Authorities said the quake
killed 196 people and Injured 595.
The dead Included 81 In Bagulo.
20 in Dagupan city in Pangas l ~
nan , 24 In La Union prov1nc e, 60
In Nu eva Eclja, one In Tar lac and
10 In Metropolitan Manila . The
Red Cross reported 221 deaths.
The soc ial welfare deparonent
said 19.183 people wer e
homeless.
Officials fear the death toll will
r ise. Bagulo, 120 miles north of
MManila, remains Isolated because of landslides and downed
commun ications and power
lines. At least 70 aftershocks
have been record ed, offic ia ls
sa id.
Pres ident Corazon Aquino, a c·
companied by her 1 8 - year ~old .
daughter Kr ls, flew by helicopter
to Cabanatuan City In Nueva
Eclja Tuesday . She consoled
relatives of the victims a t a
building near the toppled six ·
story Philippine Christian C'.ol·
lege, where crews were attempt·
lng to rescue some 100 people
pinned Inside.
Aquino later declared an emer·
gency In fiv e hard·hlt towns to
allow swtlt relief and rehab! lil a·
tlon operations .
Twenty mangled bodies had
been recovered from am ld the
slabs of concrete and twts ted
steel in the school that folded like
an accordion. of!lclals sa id.
Workers using chain saws. blow
torches and flashlights rescued
mor e than 100 s tud e n ts
overnight.
In Washington, the Pentagon
said It had received no report s of
deaths or injuries among the
15,000 U.S. mili tary personnel in
the Philippines

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m. i
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewt
Am Electric Power.. ........... 29%
AT&amp;T ................................ 37
Ashland Oil ....................... 37Y.
Bob Evans .. .. ...................... l4\ii
Charming Shoppes ...... ... .. .11'%
City Holding Co .. .......... ,... l5Y.
Federal Mogul. .................. .l8Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ............ 29 %
Key Centurion .................... 12*
Lands' End ................. .. ...... 16Y.
Limited Inc .... .. ..... ... .. ........ 24~
Multimedia Inc ............... 70~
Rax Restaurants ..... ............ . 2-IJ
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. .... .. .. 22Y.
Shoney's Inc ..... .. ... .. .......... 15'%
Star Bank ................. ........ ... 20
Wendy's Inti ...... ...... ..... .. ..... 6'%
Worthington lnd .. .............. 23%

Hospital news
Veterane Memorial
ADMISSIONS
Benny
Spears, Syracuse; Helen HarriS,
Syracuse; Anna Frank,
Pomeroy.
William
DISCHARGES
Hughes, William Smith, LIUian
David.

Taylor was arraigned Tues day
ln Mi ami County Municipal
Court on a cha rge of possess ion of
a dangerous ordnance. a fourtlt·
degree- felony, alter reportedly
threatening to blow up his
estran ged wile, Karin . 20 . Ba ll
was set at $50,000 and he wa s
being held In the Miami County
JaiL
The FBI, Including an agent
from Washington, were called In
to decide what io do with the
nitroglycerin found In two 16·
ounce bottles In the basement of
Taylor's home. The FBI used an
electronic devi ce called a
" sniffer" to try to determine how
dan gerous the situation was.
A bomb squad chec ked the
home aga in Tuesday as offici als
we ighed their course of a ction .
Nitroglycerin is a colorless ,
oily liquid used In dynamit e th at
Is se nsitive to shock and can bl ow
up with a slight movement or
sudden temperature chan ge.
Officials reportedly were considering parceling out the liquid
and tran spcrtating it in s tages to
a farm north of town to be
detonated. In addition to adja·
cent bl ocks, offic ials cleared a n
evacuat ion route lead ing to the
farm.
They al so cons idered blowing
up th e nitrog lycerin at a lot nea r
th e house. Tuesday morning , cit y
workers began re adying the area
for a possible detonation by
boarding up neighboring houses
and preparing to cu l off gas and
electricity. Fire trucks and hoses
were deployed to the neighbor·
hood , sa id city Prosecutor Mike
Hemm .

Taylor. descri bed as lon g inter ·

Highway bids
are announced
COLUMBU S, Ohio iU P li Beave r Excava ting Co. of Can ton
was the appare nt low bidder of
three bids received Tuesday by
the Ohio Department of Transpu·
ration lor completion of the
middl e section of U.S. 35 ln Gall Ia
Count y
The Canton firm submitted a
bid of $8,495,896.55. The project
was es tim ated to cos t $8,335,000
Ot her bidders were Jo hn R
Jurge nse n Co. of Cinc inna ti.
$8, 701,600.34; and Kokoslng Co n
structlon Co, Frederi ckt own,
$8,792,107.47.

Cheryl Guerra .
" His solution to everythin g
was to blow it up ," she said "I
always thought he was a little bit

es tcd in roc kets and explosives.
had threa tened to kill his wife
once when she was goin g to leave
h lm . sa id Ta y lor's sis te r ·in-law ,

Ohio Lottery

Jackson hits 3
homers in row
for Royals

craz

Daily !\umber

284
Pick-4

8446

Page 4

Vol

40, No. 302

....

..a..&amp;.

=

~ ~~~~~
TT

~

~

- -·

-

-

~ f~

Tna.ogo~..li.1.
yA

:li-..., ... ~ .....!We&lt;l "'' ...,,., "' • .,..,. . ...........

------Weather-----Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday , and a chance of
showers and thunderstorms Fri·
day and Saturd ay . Highs wil l
ra nge from th e mid 80s to the low
90s each day. with overnight lows
In th e 60s.

By VINCENT DEL !i!UDICE
tiPI Business Writer
WA SHINGTON - Consum ;•r
prices jumped by a s urpri sin g 0.\
perce nt in J une on higher food .

a ft er r ising by 0.5 percent in

been runnm g at ahou t 4 7 pe r -

u ptu r n 1n th e ind ex f or frui t s and

sl ipped a not her 0.1 percent Jf lr r

Marc h, according to !he re port
compiled by the department 's

&lt;l ft t-•r inr r'easl ng by 0.8 pcrcr nt i n

cent.lh e LaborDepartm ent sa id.

veget ab les. co upled with a s harp

a 0.:1 pf' r cr nt dPc line rrp ort ed i n

\l ay

~b l'.

Bureau of Labor Statistics.
ln a rel ated report i ss ued

housin g and rnc rgy C'Osts. th r

Wedn esday, th e government sa1 d

Labor Departm en t reported
Wedn esday .
Private economists expectf'd
a n increase of 0.3 perce nt in th e
gove rnm ent 's c lose ly watc hed
Consumer Price Ind ex.
In May and Apr il, consum er
prices a dv anced by 0.2 percent

"Abou t bO p.&gt;rcent of th f· Ju ne
mcroasP 1in th is ca trgoryl w as
acco unte d fm by a LA percen t
jum p i n priers for to bacco a n d

ave r agf' weekly earn in gs a ft e1

Pr ices for hous in g surged O.h
pc r cr nt in .lu nl' a fte r ga ini ng 0.2
pe r ce nt in M ay, wh ile food and
bcvcragp priers shot up 0.7
pe r ce nt las t m on t h ;lf ter in c hi ng
up 0 1 percent in May , t hf'
de pa rt men t sa id .
·'R isi ng ho m eowner co s ts wrrf'
primar i ly.' respunsib h• for t hP
i ncr ease in t he s helter index."
th e repor t said . "A subs tan ti al

ri se in pork anct poullry pri ces.
we n• Jar gPIJ' r esponsible for thr
increase in the food i ndex."
Gas oli nr pr icPs ror kP tf'rl 2 :1
per ren t in Junl' after fall ing l .f.
per cen t i n May , as overa l l
transporta t io n cos ts movf'd
a hf'a d0.4 percen t vs _a drop ofO .L
pr r crn t in M ay. tht' govrr nmf'nt
said.
In ol hPr r .1trgoriPs 1n J une
- Appar pl a nd upkPep costs

inflat ion - or th e buying power
of Am er ican work ers - re·
m a l ned unc hangPd i n J une a fter

advancing by 0 2 percent in May .
With the over all 0. 5 increase in
consumer prices i n JunP, in fla lion fo r the la st 12 months has

for m or e rain .

By JIM FR E EMAI"
Sentin el Ne ws Staff

ing sy stfl m T hursd ay .

Acco rdi ng to Gn :·s Pomerov
ma nager . Ga r y B ales . t hat i ~
w hrn thC' p hone com pa n ~' inaugu rat es thn.'P fl (: w d ig ital sw it c hing

c entr a l

Minnesota.

sys tems.
These new sys tems cost GTE
$9% .000 Ba les sa 1d that an
additional $138.000 was invested
in projects designed to support

The storm s were movlng eas t

and some had hea vy rains an d
frequent lightning, th e NWS sa id.
Thunders torms a lso hit n or~
lheasl Indi ana with powe rf ul
storms that were 30 miles north
of Fort Wayne ear ly Tuesday
moving east at about 30 mph.

sldf&gt; streets in San An tonio we re

barri caded as autltorlties bra ced

t he nrw systf'm . pushing th r to tal
amount spe nt to more than Sl l

SUMMERTIME
SPECIAL!

NEioV..~JWNE..OFJ'JCE

~.

Ga.ry .Bates, looal

phone manager, stands In front of the
olflce
In Letart Falls. The new phone svslem !!~~

more. upUQll!i .llcVaUabkJor Letart Falls, Racine
and Rutland eustomers.

Warm
weather

Offer Good NowThn.. / ,ugust 31 , 1990

conttnues

Completely Installed With

By UnltL"d Pres s lntfornalional
With a n East Coasl hig l1
pr ess urC' sys tem ta king co nt rol,
tranqu i l summrr wra th Pr will bethe rule in Ohio thro ugl1 Thurs-

200 Gallons Of
Petrolane LP Gas

_

For Dtptndable Propane Service
Clfl

(304) 675-1700

-

"Your Area Authorized Petrolane LP Gas Dealer"

with 100 &lt;'qualiO wha l $!()(]wou ld
ha1·e bought in 1984

sk iPs

Tul.' sdJy

I

''

project.''

as the base unit lor the Leta rt
Fa lLs. Rac ine and Rutland off!

Rar in r and Rut la nd exc hanges.
\\.-'f''rp conf i den t th e new systems
will provide rxce lle nt srrvicr to
our customf'l"s

By LEE LEOI"ARD

1

lll i.I JMIJUS - Cal ling s k\
rockrting hea lt h carr costs a
"soc ial !ragPd:V ... Rrpublican

I

\' oi novic h pll'dgr d T uPsda\· t o
tr_v to pr ov idr af fo rdablr hPalth
c~m · msu ra ncP to P\'l 'n' Oh ioan

m id 60s

by 211(11.

Wrdnr sdal'

Lot s of sun shi nl' WPd nesdJ_
\
· was to p ropf' l tr m pera turf's to
very w arm n •ad in gs by laH'
aft er noon . Hi ghs wf' rc to r0ach
th P 90s. excp pt in th P rx trPmr·
nor th eas t cor ner of t hr stai r .

Hut \·c11novirh said t hr Kay· t o
do it i:- to get Pmplo_v rrs.
in suran rr compan iPs, doctor s.
hos p!l al -;_ consumt·rs and othrr
a fkr tt' cl par! iP~ to barg;un o n&lt;~
rt' ;J :,o n ablt~ sy·s tt•m. and nor for
~o,·rr n ml'nt to mandate onP o n

Wedn esday nigh! wi ll br clear
with lows falli ng int o lh e 6() s

f'mp lo_
\ ·f•ro..,
''\\'hal v.:p'rr goi ng to trY to d o

thund Pr st nrm s

Highs Frid ay will be 1n lhr
middle to upper ~ s. bul lhe h1ghs
Sa turd ay and Sunda y wi ll be
cooler.

in

th r

up per

70s

to

mid -80s. Lows will be in 1h0 60s
throughout the penod
The livestock safety index will
most areas both Wed nesday a nd
Th ursda y, while the warm.
sunn y wea ther w ill ravor rapid

growth of corn and soybea ns.
Har vestin g conditions wi ll br
good for lhe mos t part thro ugh
Thursday . Scatt ere d thunder ·
storm s la te In the w ee k and over
the w ee kend m ay ca use so m e

delays

In

harves tin g

a nd

cul11 v ation .
In sect ac ti vit y may increase

the next few days wi th Ihe wa rm
weath er . Spraying co nd itions
will be bes t during the mild er
morning and eve ning hours.
Conditions will be good for hay
curing Wednesday and Thurs·
day, with afterno on humidit ies
dropping to 40 percent to 45
percent Wednesda y and 45 per·
ce nt to 55 percent Thursday. Dew
Co ntinued from page 1

Juts han• bf'en m ai led out to

res in th f' t hrPf' com muniti es.
The company's off iee on Wes t
Mai n St ree t in Pomer oy se rvps

com fort ab le IPv Pls statew id t'.
bot tom ing out i n the low to

be suffi cient for th&lt;' fr on t to
trigger a t lea s t sca t tered

be made bv mark ing a ballot
d1stribu lrd b\' GTE. Those bal ·

the new e-lectroni c ('q ui pment
has bee n un derway for sever al
wee k s t o r n surr p r o p er
opera tion.
Th 1s ni 'W com pu tPr -con tr oll ed
swit ch in g sys tem p rovi des abou t
a fivC&gt;fold increase in cal l
ha nd ling raparit~· ovrr l hf' f'Xist

UPI State houst&gt; Reportrr

('('S .

Th is

mea n s

Pump r o\· 's

larger s_vsH'm pr ovi dPs compu

and should Ue re -

" Wc' r r

Pxc i ted about t his
co m mPn ted Bates .
"and wh ile it represents a heavy

Inves tm ent 1n the Letart Fa lls,

trr r apJcit\ to furnish !hP nf'\\.

I" gr t t'\"PI'vbo d y· ro-.f' r·r d hv
in .s urJnl' ('. · Voi novid1 told a
pre ss confrrr ncr . · ·wr wa n t 10
)::r t rv£&gt;rybod _
v in thr room. anrl
t'\ Prv b od v·-;going lo ha\'1' tog ivp
;l l i111(' . "
Thr Rcpublic.1n Lindidatf' n '
l!'tl&lt;-; Pd a hP:.Ji l h cJ rf' program
v.-h ich boils down to rrf ormi ng
~rdira i d and lmp roY ing a\ cf'ss
to IH•alth r an •
Hr sa id rhildrr n and 1lw
t' ldrrly should br srnrd f1ro.,t.
and t tJal l1h pla n would i mrn t'

di"trlv a ffP&lt; 'I 110.000 of thP Sl I
m il lion OhiO&lt;lll " l ack ing ht 'a l th
carr• covf' r ;t g£•
Thf' pnct• tag on Vo mvic h\
pb n wa ~ pl :tc t'(l Jl :S29l m il lion

fo r th r f1rs t fi scal yt'ar. Hr sai d
t-'mplo_vf'rs wo ul d bp l! Skl' d to
co nt r ib utC' to t he pl an. and th at
i ns ura ncr companies would have
to u n drr~o sc ru tiny .
· 'EvPry bocl~ 's part of !hr pr oblem. " he sa id . " E v erybody has to
t1ght0n up ...
\·o in ov1ch proposPd crrating .J
bas1 c hralth rarP plan as t.l
fi\'C' \T:.J r pi lo t proj t'ct to i nsure
-., mal l bu siness f'm pl oyees and
1h1 · wmk ing poor ra rn mg up to
doubl t• th1' fc·d.-.·ra l 1-JO\'l'rt v leve l.
&lt;i l' $:.n.o1 ~ 1 a ~-f'ar
T ha t pro(?; ram wou ld cnst $7 ~
m il liUI\ ;1 \' I'd !". tht• CJ ild ida tp
:OJ id
Co nttnut'ri n n pagr :1

Gret&gt;nspan says:

th-E' ru le agai n T hu rsd.1y wit h
high tempe ratu res around 90

II

L:srrs wi ll also noticr th a t tht&gt;
fam iliar dial tone ha s J highf'r
pit chrd electron ic sound whrn
thrv usr thr1r phonrs [or thr fir st

turnc•d by August 15.

g uht 'rl1&lt;-11orial norn1T1Pl' (;t•nrg' '

dcg-rf'f'S throu ghou t the state .
T he nPx t c hance fo r prrn pi ta
li on w ill br on F ri day , whPn •• a
cold fr on t crosses the stall..'.
M oisture a nd in st abil it y sh ould

and ca ll wai ti ng. Ca tes said.

fo r loca l cal ling to cont1 nu0
unm trrruptrd eve n if an acc ident
shou ld sever
t he links
to
Pom ero.v
B e~t e~ rppo n s t hat th r ne\-\'
sw it chin g crntrr '" pavrs thr way
for Eq ual Access"
This w i l l r nab le cus tomers to
~r l rc t th e long d is tance company
of thPir cho iCC' . T he se lection w i l l

The new dig it al switching
rqu1pmrnt wa s insta lled at offi·

rt ig ht

ear ly

The GTE customers tn the ll:J
squarr m ilr area of sou th easrrrn
Mrigs Co unty sPrviced by the
exc han ge can look furwl.l rd to
fas trr procrss ing of cal ls .
c lr arrr co nn rc ti ons and nr w
scrvicC's. incl ud i ng touch r ai ling.
thrcf' ·wa:,.-· ca ll ing, spe ed ca lling

sNvicrs for thC'sr three offi ces .
HowevPr. the advance des ign
of thr system s ma kes it possi ble

million.
Accord ing lo Ba tes . teslmg of

allowed tem!Jf'ralures to fa ll to

rise into tht' dange r ra t f'gor~' i n

CITY ICE &amp;FUEL CO.

shot u p 0 . ~ pcorc en t last month

ru~tomPr s .

~' '

mornin g .

*Includes 20' of Copper, Over 20' Of Copper Extra

(3o4) 675·1700

The lonsu mer Prier Index
il '-&gt;Pif finishP d t lw m nnt h rt l 129 .9.

produc ts in May."

ti me on T hursduy morning

I

--;!!I !I

dav. and there will br no re lil'f
frOm th e hr at un tH thP werk r nd.
Clear

...

I

a ~ a in . Mo stl y su nny skies wi ll br

NowThru Aug. 31, 1990

re ported that the costs of other
r onsu m f'r goods and srrvirrs

Voinovich calls rising health
care costs a "social tragedy'

0

00*

sai d. "Th is follows a sha r p ri s-f&gt; i n
whoiPsalP pr iel's for tobacco

So me 1.236 rps idc nts of Leliut

ac ross the north ern P lains early
Tuesday . brightenin g skies with
ll ghlnlng in easter n North Da·
kol..,, northeas t So uth Dakota and
a nd

smoki ng product s." the report

creased 0.2 per cent for the
se cond st raig ht mon th.
Thr Labor De partmc·nt a lso

i ng rlr c t ro mrcha nic al sys trm .
Hat rs rx pla i ned .

Fa lls, Rac ine an d Ru tl and wi ll
begin uSi ng a new dig ita l swi tch ·

thunders torm s swept

northw es t

11.7 pe rce nt aft er a 0.8 perce nt
gai n i n Ma _v
- [nte r ta inme nt costs I n -

Thursday for 1,236 residents

The heavi est rains, some
dumping 2 'h inc hes an hour ,
were reported so utheast of San
Antonio and were moving slowly
northward, the Na ti on al Weather
Service sa id.
Stro ng

- Medi ca l care cos ts advanced

GTE to switch to new system

Rains continue in southwest
By Untied Press lnlernallonal
Showers and thunderstorms
m ove d through a lre a d y
drenched sections of souther n
Texas, closing roads and s trand·
ing res ident s Tuesda y, but flood
wate rs ca used by a drought
turned deluge receded In Sa n
Antonio
Roa ds reopened in San Anton io
as ragin g to rrents caused by 10 .5
Inches of rain dra ined awa y, but
heavy rain Tuesday for ced thr
closure of at leas t one highway In
the Victoria area. south eas t of
San An ton lo.
Flas h fl ood watc hes were in
effect ear ly Tuesday in much of
south Texas as s c a tt er~d thunderstorm s rumb led as far no rth
as Houston. So me flood -prone

25 Cents

A Mult imedia In c . Newspapor

Consumer prices up 0.5 percent during June

~~

:::,.._,. {: ~

WEATHER MAP - Very wet conditions will continue over
portions of the South, while only scattered morning showers and
thunderstonns are possible over the Appalachians and also over
the upper Midwest. The remainder of the country will be fairly
qulet , with a warm, steamy morning followed by a sunny, hot
afternoon. 1UP!)

South-Ce ntral Ohio
Par ty clear Tuesday nig ht ,
with a low in th e mid 60s. Partly
cloudy Wednesday, wll h highs
near 90.
Extended Forecast

2 Sect ion s. 16 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, July 18, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

·~

Clear tonight. Low In ,mid
60s . Mostly sunny Thursday.
High near 90 .

Likelihood of recesslon seems low
0

BRAINS OF THE SYSTEM - Ga ry Hates, f'ortlt'ro y GTE
manager, shows high te c hnolo gy t&gt;qui pm ent in lht• nr w phon•·
offlcr in Le tart }'all~. ThP ne w digital swit {· hin g S ) ' l.i lf' nl g o('S intu

operation tomorrow morning.

Persons found guilty
on charge of assault
Aller spend ing a dav and a ha lf
li stPn in g to tes timony in a M eigs
Co unt y court room . a jury re-

tu rned a guilty verd ict yeste rd ay
on a charge of assault aga inst
David Persons.
The jury deliberated for less
than an hour befor e returnin g to
th f&gt; cou rtroom with its ver d ict.
Perso ns, wh o was r eprese nted

by Ylelgs County Public De·
fe nd er Cha rles H. Knight, was
fo und lo be Innocent on a rela ted
c ha rge of fe lonious assault . He
was sente ncad to a term of six
month s In the county jail and
fined $500 on th e assa ult charge.

· ' 11 ()1;.'1'\'{'r' .

Stor y· s;1id

,. ,

plaining tiH' diffnt-nct' in till'
chargrs. " th(• jur~- rulrd that
Pe r so ns actf'd rPcklr ss ly instrad
of knowingly . Tht• c o n so l~tti n n is
tha t someonp as \'iolrnt a."
Perso ns i s IOf'kPd up for ;1
si gnfica nt period of timP· ·
K nig ht was mon' StJ t is f iC'd with
the j u ry's vf'rdi r t
" I am ver y pl t•as Pd wit h t hr

at

a "somewhat s lowe r

durin g thP sPrond q uartrr .
On Ua la nCl'. Crrcnspan sa id.
" thP rco nomy: stlll appears to bP

grow in g. and th r likelihood of a
nenr -term rC'r f'sston SPf'ffi S low.
In part beca u se bu sinPsses have&gt;

IJern working hard to keep their

Pe r so ns was too ...
K night wen t on t o s,l_v. ''T he

i nvrntortrs
tre nds."

jury fully co nsidered lhe cv l
de nce and had diffl cu lt .v fi nding
th a t Pe rsons aC' It d knowi ng ly to
tha t he acted rPck less ly."
Pe rsons was indicted by I hr
Me igs Coun ty Gra nd J ury in
June. The Indict ment a lleged
that Persons assaulted Andy
lannarrelll on the night of Apr il
H In !he parkin g lot of the Blue
Tar ta n Ta vern In Mlddleporl.

in llne w it h sa les

Greenspa n said

prr('rnr
A d rop in r ;ll ('&lt;-; co uld low('r
inter Ps t p;n ·mrnt s for '-'('\'E' r al
( ·n mp Mlit·~. which in turn rou lrl
(•ncourJg4 ' IJ usi nr...,-,es to l'XI-Ja nU
.1nd promp1 ba nkrrs TOPase l hPir
~ !·n d mg rPqu i rrmrn ts
Cn·P tls pd n spl i t srma nt ical
h:lirs and rolcl tiH' pH nl' l hr dar:.
not th i nk ttw currrnt crrdi t
~ituat inn rrprrsrnts a "crrd it
nunrtl." IJpca uo;;f' "tho._, ,. wnrd s
connnlr' a ro n tr&lt;.~rt ion of lf' nd i n~
on J m •.qor scalf' ·

l nstPa d. hr sa id. lender s arf'
rl't urn ing !o norm s set beforp t he
l ~l KOs. a drcadr Crt 'r nspa n notf'd
wao., t' rt.~ugh t
IA'ith fi nanc i al
{'X('f''-&gt;S.
"A ut I can we ll appn·c iatc tha t
m_v ~- ~ r·w ru1 th is top ic may be
I.:H'rrP ivPd a~ a se ma ntJ c nicpt y'
b.\" a borrowrr w ho today i s
~ uddf' nl ~· unaiJit' to get a loan on
the trrms former ly ava i labl P. ··
hr sa id .
Turning toward mom't ar.v po l

Con tinued on page 5

ratP' '

out co me a nd I know thai Mr

co mm it th e cr ime. r at her find in g

Meigs Co unt y Prosecullng AI
forney Steven L. Story Indic ated
th a t he would like to have see n a
felonious assaull conv1cllon .
"] would like to have seen Mr
Pe rsons go to prison", Story
re por led after th e senl encl ng
Tu esday a ft er noon.

W.-\S l!J »;CT()!' 1lPI1 - Fed
lksrn·r Chairman Alan
CrPrn &lt;-, p;l n -.aid \r\'pdnPsday· thf'
likl' l ihnod of a m·;1r 11·rm i'f 'l 'l'-"
...; iu n '"S( ' \ ' m ~ low" and ~ ug~ro.,tp&lt;J
tlw Fr·cl m tg hr ad j ust its monl'
tary po licv if mol Jor cut s ~-J.n •
maclr in thf' ff'drn l IJudg('t
drfict r.
In his S('m i;Jnnu;_ lltro.o.,Urnon _
\ on
tht' ('('Onomy a nd monptar.v 1-JUI
icy. C r Pt' nspan to ld thr Srna1£•
IJ&lt;Irl ki ng Commi!lP&lt;' that thr
Pco nomy ap pc.'&lt;.HS to ha vP grnwn
f'rtll

l.ocal news briefs
Patrick

arraign~d

on 2 charges

Chri sti na Pat ri ck. Rac inf', was arraignPd on c hargrs of
comp liC'i1y an d carry in g a co ncea led weapon TuC'sday
aft er noo n

the Frd' s

moneta ry pulley has "conti nued
to br di rected at sus tainin g th e&gt;
f'Conom ic ex pa nsion whliP m ak ing p r og r ess t owa r d pr ice

sta bilit y
llcce nl ev idence of tig hte nin g
cred it cond ltions prompted the
Fed las t week to lower It s federal
fund s ra te - the ral e ban ks
charge one anot her for ove rnight
loa ns - to R perce nt from R.25

Th e charges aga in st Pa l rick or iginate from the escape of her
husba nd Eddie Pa tric k from the Meigs Co unty .Ja il.
Accord ing to the Meigs Co un ty Sheri ff's Dr partmenl. Edd ie
Pa trick fl ed the custody of the depar tment on Sa turday while
being re turned to the cellbl oc k area of the ja il.
Both Eddie and Chris P atri ck we re apprehended in a veh icle
on Sunday eve ning on Sta te Route 33 nea r the Peach Fork
Inter section.

Acllng J ud ge John Lentes ordered a personal recognizance
bo nd In the amount of $5,000 on each of the two felony counts A
Continued on page 5

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="299">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9572">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35894">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35893">
              <text>July 17, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="262">
      <name>brown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1029">
      <name>ebersbach</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>hill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6702">
      <name>luce</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1621">
      <name>phelps</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
