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                  <text>Pege-10-The Daily Sentinel

··. U. S. Congressmen say...
to Point Pleasant, a north 10 ·
soulheast link from Point Pleasant
to Hurricane and a nonh·soulh
route from Point Pleasant 10 Mil-

ton.

·~
I
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Cost on the West Virginia link is
estimated at upwards of half a billion dollars.
·Ohio, on lhe other hand, accord·
ing 10 Miller, has a three-pillse plan
in lhe w~ for the four-Janing of
Route 35 in Gallia County.Tbe $82
million project includes $25 miUion
for the road link from BidwellRodney Road 10 east of Route 160;
$43 million for completion from
Route 35 10 the Bidwell-Rodney
Road; and $14 million for the route
(rom one mile east of 1ackson to
Route 325. Right.of-way comple·
lion is done for the first phase and
partially .completed for the second
phase.
Funding would be a 75-25 match
with lhe state of Ohio picking up
the lesser percentage.
. Miller said the federal highway
trust fund provides $321.4 minion

to Ohio this year and $108.1 mil·
lion to West Virginia. The total
projected cost of ma1dng Route 35
a complete four-lane to the Indiana
state bne is $250 million, officials
were told Monday at the Point
Pleasant meeting.
. Jack Fowler lhe GaUia County
Community lrnJliO'jl:lll(:llt Cmp.,
said his group wiD work with both
West Virginia and Ohio officials to
make the project a reality. "We 'rc
going to offer our assistance and

or

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offering help or assistance to
clients, In large and small ways.
"Without commlttment and
dedication," Wedemeyer said,
"our work here at Carleton
Schooi·Melgs Industries would
be In vain. And the staff deserves
the credit for the goud that comes
about, because they do the

work."
.Carleton School·Melgs Indus·
tries staff members and volun-

New bureau office hours set

'

Office hours at the Meigs County License Bureau have been
changed as follows: 9 a.m . to 4 p.m . on Monday, Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday; and from 8
a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday. For. Information, call992-2084.
.

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EMS reports five Monday ~lls
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to
five calls on Monday.
·
At 7: 08 a.m. the Middleport unit responded to a call on Gold·
Ridge Road In which Mabel Brlckles was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Rutland unit, at 11:43 a.m. went to
Happy Hollow Road for Mary Crickman whQ was trasported to
Veterans Memorial.
At 12: 14 p.m. the Middleport squad was called to Stonewood
Apartments for Mary Gilkey who was treated but not
transported. The Pomeroy unlt was catted to Lincoln Heights at
7:02 p.m. for James Travis who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 10:53 p.m. th~ Pomeroy squad responded to a call
at Cltlf Apartments where Hubert Clower was transported to
Veterans Memorial.

Impact...

Continued from page 1

made a second $500 donation to
the project. He reported that
about $5,000 has been · donated
and pledged at this point, but that
about $15,000 must be secured
before the vlllage moves to hire
someone for the job.
Mayor Hoffman advised Counell that the Board of Public
Affairs is discussing sewage
rates and will probably be
recommending an Increase soon.
He said that the Improvements
made at the lagoon mandated by
the EPA will cost an additional
$16,000 year in payments, this
not lncludlng'tbe additional oper•
ational costs, testing and monl·
loring, of $1100 a month.
"Tbat translates into the need
for an additional ~5 percent· in
revenue just to keep afloat," the
mayor commented.
He talked about the possibility
of equalizing water and sewage
rates. since the differential in the
two rates gets bigger according
to w.ater use. Sewage is much
cheaper than water, he explained, and noted that consider·
atlon Is being given to some share '
adjustment between the two.
The visit of David Baker.
director of the Ohio Department
of Develop1'Jlent. and other off!ciats to Pomeroy at 5 p.m. on
Wednesday, was noted. It was
suggested by Mayor Hoffman
that he be asked at that time to
give a statement of support for
free telephone service In the
Bend area of Meigs and Mason
Counties.
The need for additional direc·
tiona! signs Into Mlddleportfrorn
State Route 7 by-pass was
discussed by Councilman

a

Clatworthy. ·.
Councilman Robert Gilmore
reported on the proposed annexatlon of land In the Hobson areas.
He and Councilman Jack Salterfield are In the Pf'dl:ells of
circulating petitions to the property owners and reported ,last
night that to date the signatures
of 15 of the 43 property owners
have been secured. An additional
seven are required before the
petitions can be presen~d to the
Meigs County Commissioners
which must give the final
approval.
Letters detalllng the plan and
listing the benefits of annexation
have been sent by Mayor Hoffman to the home owners in that
area. The benefits Include fire
and pollee protection, water and
sewer service, street lights,
reduced Insurance rates, a 15
year tax abatement on new
construction, a vote in. village
government and cable TV
service.
It was noted that several
. property owners do not live in
thts area .and efforts are being
made to contact them. As Councllman Gilmore pointed out once
annexation takes place property
values will increase because of
the additional services. It also
opens up the area for development, he said.
Mayor , Hoffman commended
Councilmen Satterfield a'tld Gilmore for thell' work on the
project.
Attending were Mayor Hof·
fman. Clerk-treasurer Jon Buck,
and Councilman Horton, Clatworthy, Gilmore, Gerard, WilHam Walters, and Satterfield.

--Area
deaths----F. H. Gilland

and Paul Gillian, a daughler,
Ellen Gillian, four brothers,
Oi:land,
Ottle. Clarence and
Ferdinand H. Gilland, 91,
Thurman
Gllllan; three sisters,
' Pomeroy Pike. Pomeroy, died
·
Clara,
Dorl.
and Oma, and a
Sunday at the home of a daughter .
close
frlenll,
Lllllan
Barbee.
tn Lancaster following a brief
Funeral services will be held
Illness.
Wednesday at 2.p.m at the Ewing
He was a former miniSter of
Funeral Home with the Rev. Don
Pilgrim Holiness Churches. Born
Meadows offlciatinjl. Burial will
on June 10, 1897, in Bedford
be In Meigs Memory Gardens.
Township, Meigs County, he was
Friends
may call at the funeral
the son of David and Mary Inez
horne from 6 to 9 p.m. today.
Jeffers Gilland.
He was a World War I veteran
of the U. S. Army serving In the
166th Infantry Division and belonged to the Disabled American
Veterans, Post 53.
' He Ia survived by five daugh·
ter.s and sons-In-law, Olive L.
Bourne and Pat Cavanaugh,
Lancaster; Marilyn and James
Ewing, Wellston; Mable and
Floyd Knisley, Greenfield; Ber·
aelce 81111 Leon PhUIIpl, Ocoee,

Fla.; and Mary Bell. Henderson,
Nev.; hVO 11011f and daughters-In·
law, Rolcoe and Jeanie Gilland, ·
Wub.; andChuleland
Dolul8 Glllllld, Elko, Nev.; a
1116r. IMta Warner, Pomeroy,
aDd ,_-a]llleceS and nephews.

r.-....

AJIO IUrYIVIIIJ are 27 Jll'and·
cblldttn

an4 32 treat ·

... . .

~-·
a:;.bfa,...bewu
~

In dllath ~

sou. Roy

Continued from page 1
cooperation and pomole anyway
we can," Fowler, a retired
Ravenswood Kaiser Cllecutive,
said.

Completion of the Ohio four.
lane is a job Sllei.Cblna than
100 miles. The Obio Dqilnment or
Transportation bas 19 projects on
the drawing bolrds Involving the
upgrading of 101 miJea
Route
35. None of the projects are to be
inititated lhis year.

or

Dr. Gutterrrwn... continued from page·1

.---Local news briefs --.

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Pomaoy-MidciiPQrt. Ohio

teers were recognized at ills t
night's d!Mer, and many presented with awards. Dee Brown
was presented a plaque and a gift
for having worked for tile Meigs
County MRDD Board for 20
years.
Among others recoplzed for
their contributions to the success
of Meigs MRDD .programs were
Jim Lawrence, principal Of Syracuse Elementary School; Dr.
Douglas Hunter, Racine; ·and
Dick Vaughan, of Vaughan's
Cardinal Supermarket, Dick
Warner, of Krogers, and Larry
Powell, of Powell's SuperValu,
for donations over the years. ·
MRDD Board members were
also rerognized, Including President Robert Eason; VIce·
President Denver Rice; RecordIng secretary Vfckl Gloeckner;
and Thomas Weaver, John
· Lentes, Jon Karschnlk and John
Rice.
The evening's Invocation was
given by Chuck Snider, a school
employee, and the d!Mer was
prepared by members of the
Meigs Association for Retarded
Citizens. Entertainment for the
evening was provided by Sweet
Mountain Sound.

Tueeday, May 9, 1989

woe got the tallest checking in town.
We call it The Club. No
' other checking account can
stack up to its benefits.
The Club offers you
unlimited check writing
privileges, over $2~
worth of discounts on
travel and entertainment,
Emergency Cash
Advance (with your VISA
or MasterCa~d). accidental dealh insurance,
dining discounts,
financial ·newsletters,.
free credit card protection. a free registered
key ring and more
If your ~hacking account
does not measure up, join
The Club.

Pick3
920
Pick 4
1487

Page 4

.

Low ionlght In mld-40s. Chance
of rain 60 percent. Thurwday,
high In mid 50s. Chance of raln80
percent.

•

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2 Section•. 16 Pages

10, 1989

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NBWIPIPet'

Chamber speaker .says

Coal indusiry's future
stable next 25 years

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(

~~liN HONORED - Cllulle WI!R)' and
Jed Will, each with $8 yeiii'S service io lhe
Pomer07 Fire Department, were honored at a

Plan parade...

.,

Continued from page 1
completed and painting of the
pool will be done as soon as
weather permits. . Plokens also
stated that a drain was placed
around the pool in order that the
pool may be drained in preparation for winter.
Sadie Tbuener.sent a new Flag
to council on behalf of the
Dautrhters of America. The flag
was given to council Monday
night. Mrs. Thuener noticed that
the village did not have a nag so
she took It upon herself to secure
the flag for the village. Council
·extended the!{ thanks to Mrs.
Thuener.
In other business council discussed needed ditching, patching
· of streets, repair to culverts,
grading of alleys and the drainage problem In front of the
school. Council also dl8cussed
mowing of grass at the park site.
Members are to make a list of
what they feel is needed to be
done and present the ltsts at the
next meeting of council.
Kenneth Buckley, councilman
reported that due to the efforts of ·
Monty Hart the Pepsi Cola Co.,
donated a score board to be
placed at Louks Ball Field.
Thanks was extended to Hart and
the Pepsi Company.
It was noted by Bclcktey that
the new ordinance In regard to
cutting of weeds or grass and the
cleaning up of litter could now be
enforced since it has been over 30
days since the ordinance was
passed.
Grass and weeds must be cut
. within five days after the owner,
lessee, agent or tenant has
received a written notice. In
regard to Utter persons have 15
days to rectify a situation after
notice is given.
Residents lire asked to comply
with the ordinance. Litter includes any garbage, waste, peel·
lngs of vegetables or fruits,
rubbish, ashes, cans, bottles,
wire, paper, cartons, boxes,
parts of automobiles, wagons,
furniture. glass, ol 1111 unaightly
or unsanitary nat~,~re or anything
else of an unsightly or unsanitary
nature.
Attending were Mayor
Pickens, Janice Lawsop, clerk·
treasurer, Pollee Chief Jim Con·
nolly, Ernie Sisson, Jack Wllll·
ams, Kathryn Crow, Jim Hill,
BUckley and Minter Fryar coun·
ell members.

meet1n1 of lhe firemen Tuesday nllbt. Above,

Danny Zirkle, fire chief, Jell, presentll watches lo
Werry and WID In reeopltlon of their service.

•

.New representative sworn In

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COLUMBUS..:. Mary ·Abel was
: sworn In Tuesday morning as
• state representative for the 94th
. House District during a full
· session of the Ohio House of
Representatives.
.Stale Rep. Abel succeeds Jo: lynn Boster Butler who resigned
. from the legislature to assume
: the chair of the Public .Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
"I am honored to be selected
. for tills position and I am looking
· forward to working . with my
l cio"Uiiiues \n the House to b\!nefl,t
• GaiUa, Meigs and Athens Cdun-

~ Urge

•

·ttes. The office of state represen'
tallve carries a great responsibilIty to serve the people of
southeast Ohio and represent
their Interests In state government," Ms. Abel acknowledged
after the ceremony. "Many chal·
lenges face ·southeast Ohio and
meetiqg those challenges will not
be an easy task. However. by
working together with state and
local officials, I am confident
·th~t we can continue the progress
our region has made In recent

year:s."
State, Rep. Abel; an Athens

big turnout for
Baker's visit ·today

'

'

· Pomeroy Area Chamber of
. Commerce officials hope that
: chamber members and local
. residents will turn out this
afternoon for an appearance In
Pomeroy by David J. Baker,
,, director o1 the Ohio Department
· of Development. Director Baker
• will be In Pomeroy at. 5 p.m.
: today to present the Pomeroy
, Chamber with a $5,000 tourism
~ grant from the deparment of
development.
Baker, who Is making a week
" long tour of several Appaiachlan
" Ohio counties. Is expected to be
accompanied by State Senator
• Jan Michael Long; State Rep.
• Mary Abel; former state representative and current PUCO
- chair Jolynn Boster Butler; and
Dennis Mlngyar, assistant dlrec·

resident, was formerly the deputy director of labor relations at
the Ohio .Department of Transportation where she worked for
the past three years. She began
her state service In 1983, working
first as the department of agrl·
culture's legislative liason. and
then as Governor Richard Ce·
leste' s . scheduler. State Rep.
Abel is married to Richard Abel,
·an at-large Athens City
Councilmember:
"As• a reslde!tt of southeast
Ohio I am familiar with many of
the Issues that affect our com·
munitles on a daily basts education. eronomlc development, assistance for the econom·
icaily disadvantaged, senior cltl·
Continued on page 11

tor of the Governor's Office of
Appalachia. The presentation In
Pomeroy will be on the parking
lot, If weather· permits, or at
Pomeroy Vlllage Hall. ·
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce President Bruce
Reed coriunended Mary Powell,
Pomflroy businesswoman. for
submitting the grant application
on behalf of the chamber.
The grant Is to be used to
develop a tourism brochure on
Pomeroy.
'
Llgbt refreshments will he
served ·following the presentation by Baker, Reed said. He
again stressed that he hopes
Pomeroy residents, other rest·
dents from throughout Meigs
County. and members of the .
Pomeroy Chamber will attend
Wednesday's presentation.

By NANCY YOACHAM
or physical connection, of Mine
possible the accessing of coal
Sentinel News Slaff
No. 1 and Raccoon Na. 3. The
reserves via longwall. A new
connection Is within one· half longwall. which wtll be the third
A "stable Industry for the next
25 years" Is how Jim Tompkins,
n\lle of completing at this time.
in the division, is pr~sently being
vice president and general man·
To make possible the merger, a
developed .
.ager of Southern Ohio Coat
natural sandstone barrier beAnother expensive pre-requiCompany,descrlbedthefutureof tween the two mines had . to be site to the merger was the
coal In Meigs County when he penetrated. Penetration of the upgrading of the coal washing
spoke Tuesday at the Pomeroy
sandstone barrier was com· plant at Mine No.1 to handle the
Area Chamber of Commerce pleted ear)ler this year "at a product from all three mines.
meeting. However, It ts the .conslderatl\e capltal expend!· Currently, coal from Mines No. 1
upcoming "physical merging" of ture," Tomkins said. Penetra- and No. 2 is washed at the Mine 1
Meigs Mine No. 1 and Raccoon
tlon of the barrier will make
Continued on page 11
Mine No. 3 that Is going to assure
the stabilization of the Industry,
Tompkins explained.
The short term and long term,
negative and positive effects of
the pending merger were depleted In detail by Tompkins.
The major negative effect will
· be the reduction of about 100
'United Mine Worker employees,
and a reduction of salaried
employees In addition to that.
About 25 percent of Southerq
Ohio Coat Company's employees
live in Meigs County, so the loss
·of jobs to Meigs Countlans will be
reJatlve to that percen~ge. Completion of the merger and the
reduction of work force will
ht1ppen "sometime In the third
qul\l'ter of the year," Tomkins
sal~. ~·
· But the reductlonJn work force
is "ohe of the short term
negatives," Tomkins added. The
tong term positive. he said, Is
that "if we didn't make fhe
lmprovemen ts and reduce the
costs, we wouldn't be there at
all."
It was two years ago that the
company began considering· 'every conceivable method" to
reduce the costs and maintain
PROS AND CONS - Jim Tomkins, vice presldent and general
the longterm viability of the
manager
of Southern Ohio Coal Company, explains what lhe
division, be explained. Between
merger, or physical connection, of Melp Mine No.1 and Raccoon
the division's three mines, It was
Mine No. 3 wlll mean to Meigs Counly during Tuesday's Pomeroy
finally determined that the only
Chamber meeting.
alternative was the combination,

ODOT oulines policies for
ad· signs, driveway permits
MARIETTA - Each year the eral and primary highways.
Ohio Department of Transporta- Signs may be erected only in
tion (ODOTI encounters numer- certain areas along those rQutes.
ous violations related to Its
An application form mu'st be
rlght·of-way . Most of the viola· completed and a minimum applilions are related to Individuals cation flat fee of $50 is required.
and firms not being aware of the Once the application is approved.
requirements of the Ohio Re- a $12.50 annual renewal fee must
vised Code.
The requirements. as stated in
the Ohio Revised Code. arc as
follows:
"No Individual, firm or corporation shall place or maintain
any post. sign . or obstruction
within the bounds of any road or
The 17tl;l Tri·County Simulated
highway on the state highway
system without first obtaining Disaster Exercise, held annually
the consent and approval of the on Thursday of National Hospital
Week. willplacestrongemphas!s
director."
The department has impie· &gt;·this year on the Involvement of
mented the lllgbway · permit volunteer fire and emergency
medical service personnel in the
system for those Individuals and
trl·county
area of Ohio and West
firms wishing to construct new
VIrginia,
along
with the staffs of
driveways from state routes to
the
three
hospitals
In Gallla,
adjoining land . Applications may
Meigs
and
Mason
Counties,
ac·
be secured from the State High·
cording
to
Thomas
R.
Childs
,
way Garage In each county . The
permits are also required for President of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Industrial Emergency Planning
other work within the right·Of·
Council (MOVlEPC), who Is also
way .
No :permits will be Issued to the Vice Pesldent for Professional Services at the Holzer
place any advertising signs
Medical Center. .
within the highway rlght-of·way,
In Ohio, the Holzer Medical
where they are prohibited.
Center
in Galllpolls andV~terans
Advertising signs are also
Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy
regulated outside of the state
are
Involved,
along with Pleahighway right-of-way on all fed'
sant Valley Hospital In Point
Pleasant, W:Va. Also participatIng from the health care field will
be the GatUpoUa Developmental
Cel)ter (GDC), Woodland Centers, Inc .. and Middleton Estates
be set by lllettate tor ''excellent" In Galllpolls, and Lakin Hospital
and "defk:lent" diltrlcts. Excel- In Lakin, W.Va.
tent districts will be allowed ·
This is the one time of the year
more ftexlblllty. in teaching;
that all join forces to participate
dedclent dlstrlcta wlll be monl·
In a tri-county dlaaate: drUI,
iored cl-ly by the state and tes ttng the emergency prepar~­
forced to Improve.
ness of each facility.
''Thll bill il destined to lm·
Representing industry, Is
Contllluecl on page 11
AKZO Chemicals, Inc., Galltpo.

be paid.
More complete information
concerning signs and permits
may be obtained by contacting
ODOT District 10. Box 658,
Muskingham Drive, Marietta.
Ohio; 45750. The District 10 phone ·
number Is 614-373·0212.

Disaster drill to be
held in area Thu~day

•

NOTICE
The Family Dollar inserted In Mon·

day'I Dally Sentinel should no' have
b11n in11rted on that dclte. The11
·salt pricts were to be effective . ,·
15·21. However, FGIIIIIy •••r
will now h-r the sale prlc•lil tilt
insert. We an sorry for any lncon·
venience which this IIIGJ hawe
caused.
Thl Dally Stntliel .
"

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop
3-l contest
to~ Mets

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RECEIVES 11,. . DONATION J'OR IUDS Pomeroy MQor Rlebarllleyler, atadlnl center
and llold!IIC dannih lfoolartl, wu preeeated with
a 11,810 clleek fl'llm uea motorcycllltl to be uaed
for lmprovementa or playlll'-.d eqnlpment for
an exlltlnJ Pomeroy park, or for equipment If a
new park II co•incted In tbe vlllqe. The
dO..Uon io Pomerey Ia a pordoa of ftulda ratted
lhrGuP tile 1tll8 Toy Bua, whleh Ia an nenl

......Nd.., 1118 local lllOiarcyellltl io belleJit tile
Salva&amp;lo• Ann7's annual loy clriYe, • well u
oilier wortlnrblle cau- tllroiiPnt Melp·
County. The Tny Kiln usually lakee plaee In
November, If weather pennltll, wllh 101 to 110
motorcycllltl taiiiDc part. Over lhe yeiii'S nee
llle Toy Bun bepn, ·many 1 - r - donaeteu
have been made to area OJ'Ianlzatlou.

·iOhio Senate passes education bill,

...... I'.DJ.C.

PEOPLES
New Haven

882-2135

· , Point Pleasant
671Hl21

Mason
773-5514

·. COLUMBUS. Ohio 1UJIIlL' Despite complalnta that II will
:not fully solve Ohio schools' real
. problems, the state Senate Tues;day puled, 29-2, and forwarded
·to the Roue what wu billed as
:an ''education reform" package.
; Hatched by Senate President
.;Staaley Aronoff, R~CinciMatl,

.,

..__ ·-· .. -

and reworked by the Senate
Education Committee, the blil
provides ways for school Illstrlcts to achieve accountablUty,
productivity and measurements
o1 pupO performance without
coatlq excesalve sums of

money.
Among other thlnga, the bitl

'

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&gt;il

.

requires districts to offer kindergarten classes, gtvea parents a
choice In where they send their.
children to SChoo~ and seta up a
statewide computerized atallatl·
cal bue to allow diltrlcts to
publicly compare thlllr faciUtles
and peftom~&amp;~~ee with others.
It also will permllltalldarda to

----·--~-w----

2~-2

lis Ferry, West Virginia, with an
emergency drill, both for Inside
plant personnel as well as outside
the plant, on a simulated chemical release. This allows the
county emergency response
agencies an opportunity to practice their ellectiveness In dealing
with a simulated community
evacuation.
Mason County law enforcement, fire departments, emergency. squads and Beale School
PTO, In conjunction with AKZO
Chemicals. Inc .. will portray the
events surrounding a response to
·a simulated major tank failure at
the Industrial facility located in
Gallipolis Ferry. West Virginia.
The plant slrcn,local emergency
equipment, along with the help Of
voluntary participants will be
used for this practice exercise at
5: 30 p.m. on Thursday evening,
Ma~ 11, 1989.
S pposed victims wlll betaken
to t e three area hospitals In the
tri&lt;OUnty area. Addltkdlly, tile
Gallipolis Developmental Ceneer
will have their own ----~.
drUI, and Lakin Holphltr.l Ill
L,kin, West VIrginia, WUI ptn··
their own mock dlaaaler.
Additional "vlctlml"la a.uta
County . wUl inctlllle ltatiRta
from Kyger Creek HlP lleha
ContiDued Dll (1111'1 U .

�r
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Wedn•.•;ry. Mlly 10. 1989
•.

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

. ,

................................r:::i.-

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager
PATWIDTEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LET":\'ERS OF Ol'INION are welcome. They should be less lhan300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, addr-ess and telephone number. No unsigned letters·wm be published. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

•

.,

Democracy's
toughest problems

•'

'

By ARNOW SAWJSLAK
UP! Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Flaring controversies over abortion and the
death penalty remind us that some disagreements in our society run
so deep that they seem beyond the reach of democratic compromise.
Abortion was legalized and the death penalty outlawed by the
courts during the 1960s and 1970s. But those decisions, balled by
liberals as a triumph of progressivism, did not settle the ques~!ons.
Feelings continued to run so high on both Issues that the death
penalty was re!nst!luted lor some spec!!!c crimes and abortion
remained as a volatile element!n the legislative, judicial and political
arenas. Even now, the Supreme Courtls cons!det!ng a case that could
make abortion a crime again.
Both of these issues re!!ect basic values of right and wrong for
many people.
,
The b!bl!cal concept of "an eye for an.eye, a tooth fora tooth," is the
first remedy many people think of in response to violent crimes such
as the wallpack attack on a jogger in New Yorif's Centra! Park, even
though it would not have been a death penalty crime unless the victim
died . Others view the death penalty as a savage response to savage
behavior:
The idea that artificially ending a pregnancy constitutes murder is
fervently supported .by ant!-abortlonlsts, while the concept of a
government requiring a pregnant woman to give birth outrages those
.
who support the current legal status of abortion.
In its 1973 decision legalizing abortion in the early stages of
pregnancy, the ·Supreme Court sought a compromise position, but it
failed to quiet the concerns of anti-abortlontsts.
And It is a good guesS'lfthe court now tries to finesse the legalization
question at the national level by returning the abortion issue to the
states, it w!ll provoke a roar of protest from those who support legal
abortions.
These certainly are not the first seemingly intractable
controversies to face the United States in lis two century history. One
was slavery, which In part caused the bloodbath of the Civil War, and
another was the consumption of alcohol, which brought on one of then
most lawless eras'!n the nation's history.
'
Slavery was ended by the defeat of the Confederacy, but it was
another century before American blacks were able to move toward
significant political and economic equality. While no one seriously
defends slavery now, progress ln dealing with the underlying
problems of racial relations has been slow.
As for liquor, the 1919-1932 Prohibition era, which followed decades
of zealous anti-booze campaigning by lay and religious groups,
caused such chaos and crime that the country finally decided the cure
was worse than the ailment.
The compromise that accompanied repeal of Prohibition was to
forbid liquor to children and adolescents, but even that was eased in
many places during the nation's !l!ng with cultural Uberalism.
And the problem of alcohol abuse, which also was not .solved by
Prohibition, remains with us. In one way or another, booze kills more
Americans than all but a few other causes.
This is a bad news-good news situation. The bad news is that we
haven't found universally accepted solutions to racism, alcohol
abuse, birth control and violent crime despite many decades of effort.
The good news is that some progress has been made and we're still
trying.

Letters to the editor
Is gambling agood idea?
Dear Editor:
· In my .opinion, the 57 members
of the Ohio House who voted for
allowing gambling c as!nos ln
Lorain (Ohio) should hereafter
be known as the' 'Casino Legislators. " Their names should be
printed in every newspaper in the
stale including this one.
At a time when a national
sports figure like Pete Rose is
getting all this publicity for
gambling, (and remember Art
Sch!!cter from Ohio State) and
every study sbows casinos bring
in organized crime, murder,
rape, robbery, assault, and prostitution to the area- why would
they vote this_way?
With all of the criminal activity
in nearly every jurisdiction in
this state, because of drugs,
alcohol, and gambling, and we
don't even have jails to put them
hi, why would anyone with any
integrity, morality or common
sense vote in favor of a gambling
casino.
A majority of the members in

Today

the House of Representatives
already voted in favor of the
casino so that shows the skids
already have been greased.
"Plant" articles wlll start ·appearing . in newspapers all over
the state saying things like,
" everybody does lt (gambling)
so why not get something out of
it."
People already have been
contacted and key people who
can get the vote out have already
been asked the familiar question
"What does it take?" or "What
do you want?"
Obviously, education doesn't
pay in this state but casinos do.
Our current governing body of
this stote has us at a crossroad.
Which direction do you want to
take? Contoct your Ohio Senate
Representotlve now. The Senate
vote could be coming up very
soon.
Nell Mangan
8849 Number Nine Road
Brookv!lle, Ohio 45309

mhistory

Today II Wednesday May 10, the 130th day ot1989 with 235 to follow.
The moon Is .waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
Tbe morning star Is Sat\U'D.
Tile even InC stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Tllolt born on tills date are uader the lip of Taurus. They lnc1Qde
81ldlllttatam•n and scholar James Bryce In 1838, Swiss theololtan
Kerf IIIPtb ID Jllll6, film com1*81' Max Stetner ID 1888, actor-dancer
,_Aitltreillli99, movleproducerDavldO.Selznlck ("Gone With
Tile
Wlnlr.') In 1901, and actreu Nancy Wallrer ID 1121 (age 88).
'
.

.

&gt;

· Garb~e .a
MOODY, Ala. (NEA) - The
dogwoods and azaleas have been
in bloom since late March, the
landscape is dominated by red
clay hills, and most people here
speak with a decided drawl. This
certainly isn't New Jersey.
Why, then, is 40 tons of
Hackensack's garbage burled in
the Acmar Sanitary Landfill ln
this central Alabama town? And
why ls the Harman San!tory
Landf!ll in nearby Pell City, Ala.;
seeking up to 1,500 tons a day of
Newark's garbage?
There are two answers to those
questions: First, nortl\ern New
Jersey. like many of the country's other densely populated
areas, has run out of space to
dispose of its waste. Second,
some rural communities in Alabama and elsewhere in the South
view garbage as a source of
desperately needed revenue.
But hauling garbage around
the country clearly isn't thll
solution to the nation·~ solid
waste problem at a time when
almost one-third of all landfllls
now operating are expected to
close within five years.
Indeed, the Alabama Depart·
ment of Environmental Management has never approved the
burial of out-of-state refuse In
' this state's 110 tandf!lls. (The
shipment from New Jersey to

.

buniing.issue ·

·-

town from Kansas City, Denver

and Chicago. Sioux falls pollee
recetitl)t arrested two Minneapolis mldenta and confiscated
$10,000 worth of crack. In Des
Moines, Iowa, drug counselors
are seeing a sharp rise In clients
seeking help for cr~tck addiction.
Crack merchants aren't shopping tor just any burg. They need
·high wllltile Ales for their cheap
product. A wide spot ln the road
with one 1~ lliht and ·2,500
people ~·t cut it. But a city
with a population of 30,000 to
10(),000 is Juat right for keeping
one or two big fish happy in a
little pond. They can claim the
whole town and not worry about
competition.
"The dealer may not be mak·
!ng the kind of money that
dealers In Florida or other
coastal eiU• are," South Oakota
attorney generill Roger Telllnghuisen told us. "But It's still a
significant law enforcement
problem In this 1late."

•

produced during the burning.
Although the residual ash may
contain heavy metal arid other
hazardous materials, it lncreas·
!ngly is disposed of in specially
lined landfU!s where provisions
have been made for leachate

"J:! · auu,

"Youcould-itearl)i,NTWIII . Kl.-Puc~lati•Gaioyeaetuo
Manaeer To~ Kelly IA1d.
load Ole IJMII. ·Witll tile count~
as far as oul"thlrd , . . . ID
. 011
GeniHr left 1M
York (an 8-5 Twl•' lou to
will a atrained r!Pt elllow 8lld
Yankees), you collld He
wu l'epll.cwd by 0..1111 Lamp,
wasn't foculed.
.
·wlio csa4JIIted tile walk, &amp;eorill&amp;
."Alter that," Kelly ..14, "be . . Glacldell.
.
·
started getting better. He threw a
Tile Red Sox did not IndiCa~ If
couple of bad pltchea aga!nat · Garda« would mill hll next
Milwaukee (a 3-2 loulaatThui'IL· start.
day), 1111d ioateht, he waa really , Mlnneaota went allead 2.0 In
focused. He put It all tocetber."
tbe third. Gladdi!Jt an&lt;l Puckett
While he pul it tocether tile~ alftgled, puttln&amp; ruiiMt's at the
Sox• unraveled, unable to cor· camera. a¥ Gaetti lilt a aacrlrectly time Viola's cllupuJ. fico Oy. In the fifth, wltll two out,
bat lira takm&amp; Gaetll doubled alld lkalllt slagled
•'Whea you half-sw!np and luiiiiD&amp;. Fruk'l 111m !lome to put the Twtu ahead
effective," Kelly ald.
. 3-0.
Viola gave way to German ,.
Mlnaesota acored three runs in
Gonzales In the etpth and Jeff
Reardon came on In the nblth for the elptlt to put tile 1alllt! away.
Gre1 Galftt! hit aa RBI alnlle and
his fifth save.
The Twlaa took a.l·O lead Ia tbe Hrbek coatrlbuled a two-run
tint Inning. Dan Gladden IIDJled lillie with the bues loaded.
and Wes Gardner, 1·3, walked
The Red !lox acored on Viola In

I
'

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·the eilllth on a double by ;yvade
Rosas .and a llhiJle by ' Ellls

Burtrs.

·. . . .

I

Red Sox catcher Rick Cerone
dropped a foul pop in the eighth
lEIJi&amp;, ·making h!J first error In
1"" gamq - .spannlliJ 902
chancea.
Elsewhere in the American
Leape, New · York d~mped
Texas 5-3, California defeated
Detroit 5·1, Seattle sl!ppi!d by
Toronto 4·3, ChiCago blasted ·
Milwaukee 10-1, and Kanus City
downed Clevelud 3-1. O.kland
at BaiUmol'l! wu rained out.
In theNatlonalLeaeue,ltwas:
San Franclaco 4, Chicago 2;
Atlanta 7, Philadelphia 2; New
York 3, Clnclnnatl1; St . Ululs 4,
San Diego 3; and Montreal 4,
Houston 2. Los Aneeles at Pitts·
burgh was postponed by ta!n.
Yankees I, Banpn1S
At New York, Alvaro Eap!noza

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Men'1!1 10llWl tourney
1laled for June 10, U

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· There will be a USSSA Class D
and E men'1' slow-pitch softball
toumameat Atlated toY June 10
ud 11 In Reedsville.
Tlte entry fee II $'75 and two
softballs for IIIII titate qualifier.
For more lntiumation, call
378-6t06.

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(Billiard 1-th T:a

Portsmouth, Wellston place
in 'Ohio's Top 20 teams'

Te_.

.................
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l-t),

DUBLIN, Ohio (UPI)- One of was played ''up'' in the Memorial
tile hot topiCs Tuesday at the was during the first two rounds at
Memorial Tournament was the the 1978 tournament.
rain and cold.
.
"But, that's the last alternaRain and temperatures in the tive,'' said Eger, who added that
upper 4011 forced cancellat!oa of decision probably would, not be
the scheduled double shootout at made until just prior to tpe start
the Mulrfleld Vlllap Golf Club of_the opening round. . ,
.
with more precipitation and just
StranJI!, last year's ileading
slightly hiJber readlnp forecast
for Wednesdax's practice round. . money winner on the PGA Tour
when be became the ftrSt pro to
·~t· s . wet," aald de!t:nd...
champion Curtis Stranfll!, who earn over $1 rrtllllon In earnings,
played lt!VI!II holes In . the rain is one of the favorites In this
Tuesday. "The fairways are year's Memoria!, being played
saturated. Thl!l'e's water alalld· two weeks earlier than a year
lng everywhere, · but the greens ago.
Toumament founder and host
are tiM.
"It's a real, real toU&amp;Il ,olt Jack Nicklaus said the switch
coune tor me beeauat .t tile was ballcally three-fold -to get
. length. Becaue of tllat, you away from the televlllnl of both
hlttln&amp; · 10111er Illata Into the the NBA playolfJ and the llldla·
napolls 500 aad to allow mote
IJ'I!I!IU which stay fairly finn.
"I'd mueb prefer it to be European players to participate.
In past years, they have been
harder and faa ter. I tlllnk it's a
kept away by their comm!ttment
bettter ,olf course that way."
PGA official David Eger said l.t to play in the European PGA
was ~llble the ball would be ChampiOnship.
played "up" durinl Thursday's
Strange, who stands just 16th
first rouad of the $1 m!IUon on the money list this year and
tournament, &amp;lvlng players the still is looking for his first 1989
rteht to move tbelr balls away victory, described the current
ll'om casual water and remove condition of his 1ame as
mud. The ony other time the ball ''decent.''

NEW KNOXVILLE, Ohio .
(UPI) - This week's 1989 Ohio
high school baseball ratings,
compiled by Chuck Braden for
tile Oltlo Hllh School Baseball
Coacllel Alloclatlon and d!atrlbuted by UPl (first place votes
and records 1ft parentheses):

Majon

-n

pme

:r ...

BALOV WINS FUN &amp;UN- Na&amp;llaaiJial.,,lt, of..
.,, tnla
l-ard lbe flallb l1ae ID tH ...... Bu, part Df 1M&amp; ......,,.
Frenci&amp;City Bltn,lpi.IUd by RelaePMedleaiCel&amp;llrudHMII
Gallpo... Balojwualaetl&amp;emale11·14,e-WIIJI.....,..._
In lhe Ill. ru wltlla &amp;lllle of II: M, alao .... for 1M&amp; lliaeo .wniL
(OVP tlloto by G . .,__. Olllene)

--·

-....__

.

ment and long-term storage.
That's not an !dealsolutllln, but
the volume ·lilt tbe garbage
collected is ~lll!led by90percent
when it is burned and reduced to
ash - a substantial saving in the
landfill space reqtdred.

drove · home a run with a blint to Its ninth vi~tory ln 11 games.
single.and two other rul!lacored 1411r.e Flanagan, 2-2. took the loss
on basa.loaded walks in 1&lt; · for T.oronto, which lost for the
three-run New York fifth lnnlnl[. ·. 15th time in 18 games.
White Sox 18, Brewen 1
Dave LaPoint, 5-l, recorded his ·
fifth straight victory. Dave Rlgh'
At Milwaukee, · Shawn H!Ueetti got the final two outs Cor his -caa. 1-4, scattered four hits over
f!tth save. Charlie Hough, 2-4, seven innings and Ron Kittle' s
took the loss.
thr~ruit homer in the fourth
An&amp;eta 5, TJ&amp;en 1
inning led Chicago's 15-blt at·
At Detroit, Devon White ripped tack.Milwaukee' s B!l! Wegman,
a tie-breaking double to key a 2·4, gave up t!ve runs In 2' 2-3
four-run flflh inning and Bert innings and took the loss.
Blyleven, 4-1, allow!!d IeVen hits
Royals 3, lndlallll1
over seven Innings. Paul Gibson,
AI Kansas City, Mo., Bret
1·2, suffered the loss for Detroit, Saberhagen scattered five bits
which has lost 11 of 13 games. It !J and Danny Tarta bull walked
the Tigers' worst start since they with the bases-loaded to force in
began 1953 with the same record. the go-ahead run. Saber hagen,
Mariners 4, Blue Jays 3
3-3, struck out seven and walked
At Toronto, Erik Hanson, 4·2, two in ou!duellng Tom Candlott!,
allowed just three hits in seven 3-2, who allowed just six hits.
innings and Jeffrey Leonard Saberhagen leads the majors
drove in two runs to spark Seattle with five complete games.

n...

"I've played a lot of good
rounds and a lot of so-so rounds ,"
said StraniJ.e. who has emerged
as one of the premier players in
the world. "I'm swinging a lot
betler than I was earlier in the
year. I've just got to be patient.
It'll come. You've just got to
hang in there and keep working."
With the rain and cold, the
thoughts of many went back 10
years to the second round of the
1979 · Memorial when eventual
winner Tom Watson battled rain
and a wind chlll fac!or of 13
degrees to shoot a 3-under par 69.
In that round, more than 40
players fa!led lo break 80 and

Doctors remove
Burson's brace
COLUMBUS. Ohio !UP!)
Doctors have removed a brace
from the . head of Ohio State
basketball star Jay Burson, who
suffered a broken bone in his
neck Feb. 13 in a game against
Iowa.
Dr. Robert Murphy, OSU's
team physlclaR, ·said it was
decided to remove the brace
Monday after X-rays showed
excellent healln&amp; of the fractured
fifth vertebra.
"Jay w!ll wear a neck collar for
the next four weeks, and then
begin rehabll!tallon after that,"
Murphy said.
Burson's father, Jim Burson,
basketball coach at Musklngum .
College, said his son was told he
could even shoot a basketball,
"as long as it doesn't bother his

neck."
"The ligaments and tendors
were very stiff," Jim Burson
continued. "His neck Is going to
feel different to him lor the next
few days. He'll be doing some
very mild moving· and
stretching-type exercises until
. the neck gets stronger."
Burson, who has said he
Intends to pursue a professional
career, has been doing commer·
c!al and publiC relations work for
the Kroger Co. since the injury
ended his college career.

lormer J...champ Roger Maltbie
had a 9f, with a 50 on the back
side. ·
But Watson comes into this
year's tournament as just
another player in the field of 117.
The six-time PGA player-of-theyear hasn't won a regular Tour
event in nearly two years .
"''m playing prettY lousy,"
said Watson. "Last week (Byron
Nelson Classici I played pretty
poorly and it was pretty disappointing. You've got to stick with
things you know you can do the
best and don't try to change too
much.
"I have a tendency to do that
and it affects the way I approach
the game," Watson added. "I'm
worrying about my golf swing
more than I am scoring."
The field Includes the top 45 on
the money list and allll former
champions.
,

The Daily Sentinel
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Adverttslng Representative, Branham

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New York, New York 10017.

.

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areas where home carrier service Is
available.
Mall Sut.crlp&amp;iona
...... Molp l:oulll)&gt;
' 13 Weeks ........................ .. ........ $19.24

26Weell:s ....... .... .. ........... ..... .. .. . $37.96

52 Weeks .................................. $7(.36
Oololtle Melp Coulll)&gt;
13 Weeks ............... .... .............. . Pl).80

26 Weeks ... .............. ................. $10.30

' 52 Weeks ....... ........................... $75.10

Oat¥ I aiM •hett.le•

--no-totiLo

-- ·-

,

Rob.ert Walters

•tM•

-•

·IIY KiJU UNNEDV DAY
UPi Sport. \Vrller
It took eight star~. but last
year's American League Cy
Young Award wlnnertlnallywon
one Tuesday nleht.
Frank VIola, 24-7 last season ·
tor Minnesota, scatteretl seven
hits over 8 1-3 innings to lead the
Twins to a 6·2 victory over the
Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park.
"It's a big load off my mind to
get the llrstone," said Viola, who
Improved to 1·5 with two nodecisions. "But having gone
through it before, I knew how to
deal with II." VIola turned slow
starts into good seasons in 1933
and 1986.
Coaches and players saw that
Viola was not focu11ed 'this
seasoil, a problem that could
relate to a contract dispute. He
signed a three-year deal on April
19.

.

.

·Bad weather threatens Memorial Toomey

Acmar
More was
thanunauthorized.).
95 per.cent of the r=~~~~Fci~~=r==j;;.;~~;;r.;===-r-==~~~~~;:=r:::::;=j~~~;f.;=~
llc
Public
•
country's solid waste was dis·
Public ·Notice
Public Nol:ice
Pub
posed of in landfills as recently as
to the cantor of the crHiu·
ATTENTION
thence aouth along thll oen•
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF SALE
tlie late 1950s (they were called
AUTOMOTIVE DEALERS
APPOINTMENT OF
ly vlr1uo of ., Order at tar of the.,.... 21 roclllnd~
garbage dump then), but that
The Meigo County Com·
FIDUCIARY
Silo
laoued out of the f.-: tli1r1ce 1111 11 rodl ta
figure now has declined to about mloolonon. c/o Cour1houM
On Ml\l 3, 1881, In the Common PI- Court of the northwllt oor- of Lot
80 percent and is expected .t o drop Seoond St., Pom•ov. Ohio Molgo
County Probete Mllgo County. Ohio. In the No. 4. In Iouth Rut!Md;
to about 70 percent by the end of 4117119 will ICCIPt Holed Court. CMo No. 21234, .,... of Dlomond Sovlngo &amp; thence South 111 rocliMd 4
bide lor .one 111 1118 or Pout 1'1. Korr. R. F. D. 111, loan Company, Plaintiff. vo. f-: - - -torly eto...
this century.
n - • 4-wheol clrlva,...lde. long lottom, Ohio 46743, Robert T. 8-11. It II .. the rollroed right of Wl\l 2~
With landf!lls being phased to be uHdln the Emergonoy woo oppolnted EKicutor of Defonclinto. upon a Judo· rodl ond 4 feat to the p...,.
out, there are only two other M... CIII S.rvlceo, untl 12 tha
of Attona Klrr. de- m.. t-~ "'"wed, be- of boglnnln1&lt; oolltllnlng 7.
options- recycling and lnc!nera· noon on Ml\'24. 1911. Bide CIMed, loto of R. F. D. ll1, Ing C111 No. 89-CV-41 In acre~. more or e.L
~
be opened at 2:00P.M.; lont lottom, Mligo Coun- Mid Cour1, I wll oflw lor
Parcel Four: Tho f o l ti!m . Environmentalists who will
Ml\l 24, 1889 end reed
olio 11 the front door of tho rHI • - ohUitlin Rut!M
ought to know better insist that publicly. Bide wKI be OC· ty, Ohio. Robart E. Buck, Courthouoe
In Pomwoy, T-Ip. Metgo CountY&gt;
the first option ought to be the ~ed u foli-o:
Probate Judge Mllgo ec.ur.y, Oh. on tho 11th Ohio. ond being in Lot No. 4
One 111 1918 or ,_., Lana K. NMIIirOOid. Clerk
sole solution, in part because the
di\IOfJune, 11n.at10:00 In South llytland. llolng Ill
(41 wheol drive vehicle (II 10, 17, 24, 3tc:
o.m., the following il!lde Ml on Depot Street by 18"
second poses purportedly unac- lour
acoorclng to apecifloatlona
ond tenemonta. A cornpleto feat.
'
ceptable hazards.
'
with no tred•ln. Each bid
logll deoarlptlon of the roll
ParCIII Four and the ••-'
m•t ·delcrlbed · In Parcel
But the trash currently gener- mull Include 1 bid llond of
• - lo 11 tollowo:
The following real eotlto One ,...,.. ora bounded oLI
Public N otlce
ated nationwide amounts tQ a five pwo1111t tl~l of the t bld Pl\llbll to thl Mel..
oltuoted In the VHIIOI of the Wt 1iY Depot St...-«
daunting 400,000 tons dally or 150 County Commloolo-a. An
Rutlolnd and Townohlp at (County lloed 1131 ond the
million tons yearly - and those tilde mull be In • allied
Rutland, Molgo County, ati'Mt to the North 1o MII!J
Street (8- R - 1241,
totals are expected to almost -elope, cleored 1Miked ORDINI.INCE NO. 1201·18 Ohio:
"BID
FOR
4-WHEEL
DRIVE
,...,..
One:
The
following
An
Ordtnonce
to
-blloh
double by the end of the century. VEHICLE". The Molgo
recre•tlon poaltlona end roll - • oil- In Ru· _,.h end wilt. - 1
Even wjth the most ambitious County Commluion•o Re- their
tlond Townohlp, Moigo One, Two .,d Throa dOli
........
source-separation operation, oerve the right to Njoct ony
S. It ordained by the County. Ohio. being In the crlbed above are not
recycling can be expected to ond/ or oU bide. Spoclftce· Council of the VIUago of _ , , _ , quortlr of Boc· bounded...,- - o l
tiona ml\l be ollt81ned et the Mldcleport • foli-o:
don 8, Town II, RMge 14 at howwwer. 1lte 1tre11 to U.
handle only 10 to 15 percent of the office
of the Melgo County
tho Ohio Compony' o Pur·
1o Depot ltrMI (County
Sao.
I.
Thot
tharalt
h••by
massive waste stream in the . E-ov MediCIII llrv~
to
-bllohed the pooltlon of ciLHe. llaginnlng It the Roed 113) end the immediate future ll)ld probably - · P. 0. loa748, Mulberry Recreation Director and northw11t- of lilt No. the north lo Meln ltrw(
no more than 25 to 33 percent In Haighto, Pomwoy, Ohio . Heed Llf1l Gulrd et the I, of a.rton'a A-ion to llt8w l'louta124l end tlilte
411718. Phone. 11141 ft2· munlolpol pool.
~he Vllloge of ltutlantl:
- no - . to the ooutl!
later years.
..
8817.
lao. II. That the Mill of -North 11 . . . Ellt ll'td wwt.
Inctnerat lon , suffered a setMory Hollot.,..,, Clerk thol'l-lonO"- ..... 4113 fMt to Thaolllild lot: ,...
Plraet
Five:
The
toll-~
_ _ .,R":'
back in the 1970s, when a Metgo County Commloolcln- . . 10 Mlpor¥1M oil ........ - .. North; 7&amp; deg. Woot
Townahlp, Moig•
once - promising technology oro
•cana ad reoreetlon eatiV... 142 feat to the of tland
(II
to.
17,
2tc
County,
Ohio: llaglnnlng at'
i.oadinll
Creek:
thence
known as refuse-derived-fuel
till. lnd~dln
the C.Pillllon
at the
awlmmln
-.y
- · a t the nor1... - - of
failed disastrously, hopelessly
pool
end
t • rilln~,O'IJ · - - t h e m-dir~LIIO IILCIIIon 13; lhlnoa lout!!
Public Natlae
clogging RDF plants in Bridge- ,
lhawf ttl • point _.., lo lbout 100 . , to the nortl(
port, Conn.; Akron, Ohio; and
.... Ill. Thlt the ellory of n-?ldlg. Wll12•t.et - of the NYC ltR rlght·ol•
~
tho It-litton Director .._ the tiOirLt of lieglnnlnt,
Baltimore.
'
NOTICE 1'0 BIDOERI
n
line
of
Hid
right-of,
Tho Board of E-lan of ................ f u l - oorwolnlng 2.112 - • · Aloo
"Unproven equipment turned
100 t.t; lhlneo north
clurlnll 11M .......... montllo. • rflht·of..- 20 . , wide Eootam
LIIOII tlalloot Dlaout to be no match lor the dally trk:t deiW.
to 11 atlwe ...... -liefiOO.IIOINI'monlh. by 1111 M!long ......... lbout 100 Mltothe~
accumulation of municipal bide on fla following:
leo. IY. Thllt the dutloo of Loto I 111d I In a.rtM'a llna: - - - t o t h e , . _
8ulcln1 ond . . . , _
trash," acknowledges Wheela·
tho Llf1l Gulrd oholl be Addition to l'ludinll. oon- of beginnlne. oontlinlntl .23;
--orlolo.
•
to
.....
11M Il-Ion lllnlng12. 1 llrapaJtyln.,,.,.ce
rodl.
brator Technologies, Inc., the
Poraet Six: A1ao the to!{
......, Twe:ThefalaWOctt
Director wllh till OPillllon
country's leading designer, ovollabla
Spaclfloation
- · ...o at the ,.....,... owlmrntng . .... ld 1'111 .18M llluM8 -lngrlll-oMuotedi~&gt;
et the ·
T-urw'
builder and operator of incinera- office.
11001 Mtl to Ill r•ponelll• I~ the VHiop of ltulla"l. the - · -.ahlp, COU""'tion facUlties. "A series of
In orw to Ill oonlldored lor Ito -'ion during the Malgo COIInty, Ohio. to-wit: Wid - • 1 1 - oniC
well-publicized technical disas- Ill ....... bide ..... ... ........ of the Recnetion .......... It the IOIItttuullt boundld Did dllorlbed of"L.ot No. 4in Iouth
r-..ed In the T-rw'o D~-ters left many! communities offiOI
ho. v. Thllt the ulery of R-.t: lhlnoe id o - · n - - o f l a a t
by 12 o'alocdl- on
bitterly diiWusloaed."
tho Heed Llflhlrd ahllt be caty cliwtkHL 1. . . . to the 13: - - - 1 2 1
Moy :n, ten.
.
-.cenorthi1Liag.llkl ._.. of lduoatton M.oo ..... - .
But the Industry has aban·
-........
of ~the
till.,.. ......
- · lllout 102 ..... leo.
VI.
111M
11111
orcl·
....
doned RDF In favor of "mus •
tho riglll te ICOOIPI _
.. ......,, atat4to dluMi101oflrodl8ilcllfwt to the north 11na ot:
or
.....,.
lilYof
bum" technology, mucb of it
I; A I 1 IILCIIIon 13: thlnOI-100
Ill M -FINlY Ill thllt ........ 1
14 . . . ttl . . louiiMIIt . , to the . , _ of ........:
borrowed from tile Germau and
. . . . of . . . . ,
~-··
RIIJ ! llnrt ••
I '; fw ... the Swiss, that llldlll!l'tltel waste
of Lit lifo. 1: - - niftti,.........,..1.11apa
ei'J
ef , • ....,. , . . 1011111 ............... of
IIH.
'
at about 2,!100 deerees for 45
l'lafar- Deed: ~
l
.....
lau
a..Tu
:a . . . . - - • I '-!In tiM ............ ,........17
mlnutet.
111. M•ip
I
atl0011117 . . . . .
1'1-...
,..,..
.........
Tha
"'"-·
Wheelabrator already haa
1M.
VII.
Thll
Onln" ........ Olllo ...772
TAU AI'· •
.... efflalt ....... In 1nt tin r 1 .... - - .
eight 111eh p1antl IUCCI!Ufu!ly 11110, "· 14. 11 ....
ne.z?l.oo.•
........ In ... .,..... of
fwool"-aollllfllr
.......
operattna ID M•aaach1llt!t~. New
lllutltftd, M•lll Ceunty,
24,, ....
York, P1orlda, JCaryland, New
~!l'ft.1.J~ 14th .,. ."' Ohio: llfiRIIIill It the
HamPIIIIre and . C'olulectlcut,
" " 311_., .......

Janey, Wuldqtoa, M'•1011rl

'

.

and New York.
Moreover, the two principal
environmental problems associated with lnclnerallon are
being brought under control.
Smokestack "scrubbers" trap
the acid vapors and toxic fiy ash
(which often contain dioxin)

. The Deity Senl:inei-Piuge-3

....... "" Mld .. IPDI't. Ohio

·~

Pomeroy-Micklaport. Ohio .. .
Wedl.udey, May 10. 1Q89

WASHINGTON- A few years tile crack crowd. All you need !a
ago, pollee ofl!cers from Sioux $10 in your· pocket.
Guerra, as" the alleged candyman
Falls, S.D .. traveled to seminars
We surveyed small and ·mid· lor the Enid crack market.
in the East and heard horror · size Midwestern tQWlls to find out
Pollee now claim Guerra was ·
storle!l about a potent new form how far crack has spread. Most
of cocaine- crack. They thought do not yet have crack dealing on known to have shot people who
couldn't pay up and terrorize his
the stories were hype, like the old the rap sheets of the local hoods. customers with stun guns when
' 'Reefer Madness'' !lltn that cast But the pollee officers in middle
they were "late on their bllls,"
marijuana users as homicidal America have a strong hunch
Bouzlden said.
maniacs.
that crack is thert.
The Enid pollee recruited a
One officer remembers his • Some have more than a hunch.
serviceman
from nearby Vance
first reaction to the crack rum· Pollee in Enid, Okla., told our
Air Force Base who had been
ors: "Can II be that bad?" He associate Scott Sleek how crack
d!dn' t think so. ' 'Theit we got our crept up on that city of :50,000 charged by base officials with
using cocaine. The airman was
first crack house."
people. "We didn't expect it to hit later wounded during an under·
Far from Miami vice, Sioux so bard," said Enid's narcotics
cover buy that erupted into a gun
Falls seems an un!!kely place to officer Mark Bouz!den. "We
find crack. The drug has turned figured we had two or three battle. In the end, Enid's little
crack problem netted 33 arrests
big cities into war zones pitting dealers and we could take care of
and a cache of 26 weapons.
gun-tot!n teen-agers against the problem."
The pollee in smaller cities
But Enid had a bigger problem
each other In a deadly compel!·
have
an advantage because they
lion for the underclass clientele. than that. Using the tactics of a
know
who everyone Is, but they
But it Isn't just a ghetto problem big-city sting oi)erat!on and the
anymore. Crack has come to the heI p of nearly a dozen federal and also have a disadvantage bestate agencies, Enid pollee unco- cause everyone knows who they ·
cornbelt.
The small towns that may have vered a major crack distribution are. Many drug rings are exescaped the costly cocaine habit ring that !nchlded two local posed by undercover operations,
are now prime targets for crack high-school students. The eight· ' and rural pollee have a hard tllne
dealers. You don't need a fancy month probe, which ended in going undercover.
In Lincoln, Neb., pollee say
foreign car and a hot tub to join March named a Cuban Emllla
'
•
n crack Is flowing into the college

JIIIUIIIII or 1ltldllr --t1 uc:tluia 111

·'

SutiMII

.....

Nt\TIONAL Utt\GVE

ATTEN1TION
MOMS .....

W L PDI. \GB
11

u

.11'1' -

111S.HT11' 14 .HI
~
11 II .Ill I J.i
II 11 .til f
I! tt .II'J' ~~

Cl~~rl ..au ~

"'•t n

14 .HI 1
11 .111
~

SuBlett

n

IT IT .lit
11

n

t~

Ala....

t

s.. P'rudaco

.111
LIM Allll'!l1!5
II II .tit
It 18 .ta
!
'f'IIMd.,'H . . . .
Lo1 l\rlplta al PIIW.I'Ib. ppd.,

·•••on

sy.
rain

lliolllrut 4, liD•. . . t

we-..11111''• Gun•
1M ""-'• &lt;Le.,- t-tJ • l"ltt~~~~trs•
Clmliey J-11, 7:• , .•.
New v.n fhr ... 1·1) • a.a ••u
......... J-t), 7! . . ....

.Uiu&amp;a (Qtlhl• f.t) • ·~ .........

, ......... ), 7:11,••.

.. ft~-- co........... ~ a. ..

~...

(81..,.... t-11, t:H ,,.,

1M llfiD !T•NII 14) II •.
fMa.-eN),I:.,.m.

s·

.........

, ....... 1-1)

~

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

---IJL·--·--·....._,- __
..-,..............
.. ·...............
.,_

v......

Clc...
.....
-~
,

.i

.........

f(J_, l·I),II:U......
'
'I'IMI ... II''• Gun•
· IMIKep•ll. Lollll

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

!

8&amp;11 Fr•elkoo ~. O.leqo !
Allula "· raa...,,... t
Ntw 1'.,1l.S, Oad••• I
,81. Lo•il 4. Su Dlep I

_....

, ·= ...........

By Ualled Pr- lnteru&amp;lonal

--

•

Daily

Jack Anderson aiul Dale VanAtta

DEVpTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS..MASON AREA

~~

PaDa 2-The

'

Crack is not just a ghetto .drug.anymore.

The Daily Sentinel
~'b

.

I

.,

•

..........................

Olltlrl.... ttlt...IHI

, II I I II

. . . CliJSWI

..,"lllo. . . . - -. .,

.... -..

,_..._
.... ,.,a ·~·•.•
,_...,..~..... m
,_.._

1- .......:lt.M%72

.,_.,.,
"•
tiS IIIIC.
courm

10 lotlk at my ~tllme~.
alanotd 1t my motiM·Int.w. and ~ 0'1111' the
-II&amp;Miunant.

"Hanging Basket"

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS~ IN&lt;;
'500 EarlMain
992-2174
. Pot'neroy,Ohao

•
•

111o1 a ltolt In 1111 foot. A
man tram OlhQth ,..
portetl. I l"llled .tf the IMIII,

Fo,r Each Mom Who Stops In
Friday and Saturday and Test
Drives A New Bui&lt;;k-Ponciac
or1GMC Truck Will Receive
AJBeautiful...

----------··'

IIIIlS

-·- --. _____......_...

:1

A l'hoenlx poi~I'IMYI
h e - what a..-r.c~ 10.,.
a ~lllttllt crawllna on hl1
Plftll Jetl. So he c1tew lite
,...., and IMt lt. Ha a1.o

IT'S OUR WAY OF SAYING
I
THANKS FOR ALL
YOU'VE DONE .

GOOD USID
WASIIIS, DiYas,

.......
.
;;:~;-"**

\

REf)OATSI

WANTS TO SHOW THEIR APPRECIATION
TO A "MOMS" IN THE AREA.

"

I

�.
Pllu•

.

•
'

Weduuday, May ·To. 1989

4 The Deily Santinel

VhldnlldJIY, May 10, 1989

.•

BIG BEND

Atlanta records sixth win·
•mrow; Giants stop Cubs,. 4-2 ;
••

POmerov- Midclaport, Ohio

Yu•u .1ntleatende•ttly Owned
Luw-l'riced Sua»ennal'ket

•

OUT AT HOME - Mets catcher Gary Carter
covers the plate as he puts the lalt on the Reds'

Todd Beazlnpr In the- flftb lnnbig of Tnaday
night's game In Cincinnati. The Mets won 5-1.
(UP I)

Bulls, Waniors win playoff tilts
Eddie Johnson, who led Pho·
By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
enlx with 35 po!rit~. said the
The Golden State Warriors Warriors "shot the ball exused a balanced team perfor- tremely well and we weren't able
mance Tuesday night to erase to stop them. They got some
the bad memories of their last second and third shots against us
game while the Chicago Bulls and that's something we didn' t
continued thefr winning ways, want them to do."
riding the emotions of their laJt
At New York. It was business
outing and receiving another as usual, as Jordan scored 9ofh!s
typical game by Michael Jordan. 34 points ln. overtime, and
Golden State, .demoralized notched his first ti"lple-double of
Sunday In Game 1 of its best-of- the playoffs.
seven series against the Phoenix
"We kept coming at them,"
·suns, turned the tables Tuesday said Jordan, whoenteredaveragwith a 127·122 victory over lng 39.8 points In the playoffs. "In
Phoenix, evening Its series at one the overtime, the pressure was
game apiece.
on them and we didn't let them
Chicago. which won Game 5 of get back on their feet. We kept
Its opening-round series against Ulem outside and stopped them
the Cleveland Cavaliers Sunday from penetrating."
when Jordan hit a shot at the
Game 2 of the best-of-seven
buzzer, stunned the New York series Is Thursday at Madison
Knicks In overtime with a 120-109 Square Garden. The series then
victory taking Game 1 of their shifts to Chicago for games
Easter~ Conference semlflna1 , 1 Saturday and Sunday.
series.
~
Jordan. who also had 11 assists
At Phoenix, Chris Mullin
and
10 rebounds, broke a 109-109
scored 37 points, Terry Teagle
tie
with 2:04 left and then
came off the bench to add 29, Rod
Higgins poured In 21 points and converted a spectacular 3-point
Mitch Richmond tallied 25 and play In the lane to put the game
grabbd 13 rebounds for the out of reach.
"I thought the key to them
Warriors, who gained a split of
beating
us was the play on the
. the first two games on Phoenix's
boards,"
said New York Coach
home court.
Rick
Pltlno,
whose team was
Game three of the best-of54-38. ''There are
outrebounded
seven series Is Thursday night In
no
excuses
now.
This is the
Oakland. Calif.
playoffs
and
the
Bulls just
Golden State Coach Don Neloutplayed
us
tonight."
son said the Suns "probably
Chicago also benefited from
.played an average game and we
former Knick Bill Cartwright,
played a sensational game.
"I don't know If we can play
·much better than we did,"
Nelson said.
"We took beqer care of the
CHICAGO (UPI) - Chicago
basketball tonight ," said Mullin,
Cubs slugger Andre Dawson will
who was held to18polntslnGame
undergo arthroscopic surgery to
1. "We were rebounding the ball
repair cartilage damage In hls
well and we shot the ball well."
right knee and be sidelined at
Terry Teagle, whocameaffthe
least four weeks, It was an·
bench to score 29 for Golden
nounced Tuesday.
State, said, ''Some nights they go
Club physician Michael
and some nights they don't.
Schafer examined Dawson on
Whenever we make shots, we're Monday and found cartUage
pretty tough to match up with. "
damage on the Inside of the right
Suns Coach Cotton Fltzslm· knee and possible damage to the
mons said he had' 'no complaint'' outside. The surgery will take
.with his team:
.
_
place Thursday morning.
, "I just thought the W:arr!ors
Dawson, last week's National
were outstanding," Fltzslm·
League Player of the Week, had
mons said. ''They came out
fluid drained from his right knee
alter us early. The offensive
on April 18. He previously had
rebounds they got tonight. we
arthroscopic surgery In October
got last time. I thought they
1982 on the same knee.
controlled the tempo for the
The Cubs Tuesday placed their
;, · whole night."

who scored'is points and grabbed
14 rebounds. He also got Patrick
Ewing Into quick foul trouble,
having his former teammate
whistled for his second foul just
1:16 Into the game. " It was my
fault ," Ewing said. "I got two
fouls right awaY and that made
me play a different game."
The playoffs continue Wednesday night with Milwaukee and
Detroit opening their series In
Detroit and In the another
Western ··conference semifinal,
Seattle travels to Los Angeles to
meet the Lakers 'for Game 2 of
that series.
· ·
MUwaukee at Detroit
Milwaukee Is coming off a
grueling five-game series upset
of the Atlanta Hawks and will be
without the services of leading
scorer,_ Terry Cummings and
guard Paul Pressey until next
week. After disposing of Boston
in three straight games, the
Pistons have been Inactive since
May2.
The Bucks won four of the six
games between the two teams In
'the regualr season.
Seattle jlt LA Lakers
The Lakers got a big lift from
Kareen Abdut-Jabbar In a physl·
cal Game 1 of the series. Jabbar
had 16 points In the opener as the
Lakers won 113-102. II the Sonlcs
are to challenge the two-time
defending c hamplons, they 'II
have to reduce their mistakes.
'i'he Lakers took advantage of 31
Seat tie fouls by going to the foul
line 37 times.

·Dawson to undergo .s.-rgery

• .

p

(

I

7.
•'Whal can we do except
play? " said Cubs manager Don
Zimmer. "It's not the end of the
world. "
"I agree, It will be difficult to
replace him," said Cubs general
manager Jim Frey. ''We're not
going to go to Class AAA and find
another Hawk, butltdoes no good
to pout."
Dawson last week went 11 for
14, Including eight straight hits
during a West Coast road trip.
The streak consisted of three
home runs. three triples and five
singles, plus seven runs and five
RBI.
.

CHUCIWAGON STEAK

'

Baseball playoff ·

l'e8Cheduled

.

.
Due to rain, the District 22
baseball playoff game between '
Rio Grande and Malone set for
today at Capital University has
been postponed.
•
The game was rescheduled for
Thursday at 11 a:m. The location
has been changed :to Mount
Vernon Nazarene College, Coach
Dave Oglesby announced.
Baseball dtamonds at Ohio
DominiCan Colle11e and Capital
University had been previously
announced as the sites for the
playoffs. The six-team, double
elimination tournament features
to the top six teams in the
district. They are, In order, Ohio
DominiCan, MVNC, Malone, Wll·
mlngton, Rio Grande and
Defiance.
·

$114

Protect.

:

Willi FIIU-.....•1"

.

ENTER TO WIN

•
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..

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Departmento: Entry Bo•as located near
Meat Department.

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•

PORCH IOXES ........ $995
4-lnch CUniNG $
GERANIUMS ........... 149
$
4·1nch SEED GERANIUMS ......!!.l!':.!JrJ.-:.~J.~.. 00 EA. ;,
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ROSE lUSHES ......... $650

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MUST BE 18 YEARS OF AGE TO ENTER

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DEC RATIVE

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the fuU ·value .
of your home
for now ind In
the futtn, ~=

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MIXED FRYER
PART·S

I

.-uom.ANn ENTRY m ••ANK

Giamattihas
.
data on· Rose
.1-nvestrgatton
•.. .

;;;:1~··-

•

•

Reid heads for NBA

game

star right fielder on the 21-day
disabled Jist, retroactive to May

.
.
.
,,,,,,, 011111 w..kl

··~7

threw out Murphy at the plate. lnnlnp for hll .fifth !ave. Paul •
By EBIIl K. LIEF
Pinch hitter Dian James a1qled Kilgus, 3·3, took the loss.
UPI Sporta Writer
•
For the Atlanta Braves, It's home Treadway, and Davis
Prior to the 11ame. It was •
been a season of feast or famine. scored when rillht fielder Von announced that Andre Dawson '•
Atlanta, the National League's Hayes threw wildly put home. will under11o surgery on hll rlllbt ,
hottest team, poated its s!xth- Jeff Blauser then s!n11led home knee and miss at least one month.
stralgbt victory alter pounding 'James to give the Brava a 6·2
Meta 3; Beds 1
the Philadelphia PhUlles 7-2 lead. Atlanta added a r.un In the
At Cincinnati, Sid Fernandi!Z,
ninth on'Murphy's RBI double.
Tuesday night.
4-1, perniltted five hits over 7 2-a
, However, prior to their win' 'The bull~n . did not do the Inning~. Randy Myen-plcked up
ning streak, the Braves bad lost job," PhiUies Mana1er Nick his sixth save and New York
eight stralgbt and occupied last Leyva said. "I thought about snapped a 27-inninll scoreless
place In the NL West:
keeping Carman In there when I · streak. Danny Jackson, 1·6, •
•
Atlanta's turnaround is In went to the mound, buthesaldhe suffered his sixth strall!ht 1081· ,
large part due ttl the pltchlni felt some stiffness and he had .Shortstop Kevin Eisler commit· ;
staff, sparked by the emer11ence thrown 130 pitches."
ted an error In the nlnUllnnirlll, ,,•
of starter ~ John Smoltz as an
Elsewhere In the National snapping· his major-league reeffective and cohesive force In League, San Francisco downed cord for consecutive errorless ;
the Braves' rotation . .
Chicago 4-2, New York dropped 11ames at 88.
;
Smaltz, who at '21 is the Cincinnati 3-1, St. Louis edlled
Cardinals t, Padre~~ 3 ·
•
youngest pitcher In the National San Diego '4·3, and Montreal
At St. Louis, Tony Pena ho- '
League, tossed his second con· defeated Houston 4-2. L,os An- mered in the seventh breaking a
secutive complete game as be geles at Pittsburgh was post· tie 11nd lifting · ~t. Louis. Grell
shut down the Phlllies on five paned by rain.
Harris, 0-1, served up the homer. , :
, hits, striking out six and walkinll
In the American League, It Ken Dayley, 1·1, was credited ,
one.
was: New: York 5, TellaJ 3; with the win and Todd Worrell , :
"I'm confident now, I believe California 5, Detroit 1; Seattle 4, recorded three outs and escaped · ·
In myself," Smaltz said. "Last Toronto3; Mlnnt!SOta6,8olton2; a bases-loaded jam to record his
year I didn't think I could get Chicago 10, Mll-ukee 1; and fifth save.
batters out. The key is command, KaDIIIS City . 3, Cleveland 1.
Ex,_ "· Aatroe ~
. I'm trying fp stay away from 2-1, Oakland at Baltimore was post·
At Houston, Dennla Martinez :
3-1 counts and I'm trying not to paned by rain.
allowed five hits over 8 1-3 •
get too high or too low
Olaata 4, Cube I
'
innlngl to lead Montreal. Mar·
emotionally."
At Chlca11o, Mike Krukow aild tinez, 2·1, walked four and struck
Smaltz Improved his record to Craig Lefferts combined on a out four before Tim Burke came :
5-2 and won the confidence of his four· hitter to lead Sail Francisco. on to 11et the final two outa for his '•
manager Russ Nixon.
KrukoW, 2·0, retired 17 COqBeCU· seventh s~tve. 1'41ke Scott, H .
"He is a mature young man," tlve batters In one stretch. He gave up three runs and •seven
Nixon said. ".He's an aJJ-~round also struck out three, allowed hits, over elgbt lnn!np. Tim '
athlete, a power pitcher with a
three hits and walked none In Raines stole three baRs In the
good b'r eak!ng ball and he's seven InningS. Leff.erts went two 11ame.
getting It over the plate now." ·
•,
'
Tuesday, Smaltz was the bene•
ficiary of a potent offensive
••
attack as Jeff Treadway's RBI'
•
single ignited a four·run eighth
Inning.
•
With the score 2·2 In the eighth,
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI)Reid Is the fourth player under , •
Philadelphia starter Don CarJ.R. Reid, the star fozwa,d on Smith to turn pro ~tfter the Junior ~ :
man, 1·5, who had limited the
North C,.rollna' s ba,sketball · season. Bob McAdoo (1972), "
Braves to two hits, hit Gerald
team, Tuesday said he willllive James Worthy (1982) and Ml· : :
Perry with one out. Todd Frob·
up his fl.nal year of college chael JQrdan (1984) were ~e : :
wirth relieved Carman and
elillbl!lty to enter next month's others.
·,
·
,:
walked Dale Murphy, the only
NBA draft.
.'
"If he's In the.toJ)ll, he can get :
batter he faced. Treadway then
''I think It's best for me right $3 million over 4 yeiJ"B;" Smith ,
singled off Gordon Dillard to give
now," Reid said' at a news said. "On that lnfonnatlon, I'm :
the Braves a 3-2 lead.
conference on the North Carolina sure people can understand. U ;
Greg Harris replaced Dillard
campus. ''I've done everything anybody can't take that and be · :
and served up a single to Jody
I've expected and more. I've had financially secure, then they are •
Davis, but left fielder Curt Ford
a good time for three years. Now, spending too much money."
:
I'm doing what's best for J .R.
A year ago,, Reid may have :
Reid."
been consld~ the top pick, but ;
Reid, 6-foot-9 and 260pounds,!s hiS' stock slipped a· bit the past •
the second touted uilderclass· season. lh exhibitions last Ail· :
man to announce he will turn pro. gust between the U.S. Olympic :
Indiana sophomore ,Jay Edwards team an~ NaA piAyer,s, Reid's :
earlier said he's leaving school streng111 end&lt; scoring did. not •
.
figure as prominently as a11alnst :
for the NBA.
Underclassmen have · \lOIII college competition. This past :
midnight Saturday to Inform the season, he was plagued by :
NEW YORK (UP I)- Baseball
NBA If they want to be Included injury, Inconsistency and d!ffl· ~
Commissioner Bart Glamatt1
in the June 27 draft.
culty in •djustlng to a shuttlesaid Tuesday he has received the
Reid's physical maturity and substitution system employed by
report on an investigation Into
·
inside scoring ability make him a Smith . ,
allegations against Cincinnati
Reid missed the Tar Heels'
likely lottery pick.
Reds Manager Pete Rose.
"I think he'll definitely go In first nine games because of a ••
Glamatti made the announcethe top 11," North Carolina broken foot, then was In and out :
ment through a statement, and
Coach Dean Smith said. · "That of the lineup the rest of lhe ;
hls office offered no Indication
Includes the expansion (Orlando regular season. StRI, he led North ·,
when the commissioner m!gljt
and Minneapolis) teams. He's . Carolina's seating with 15.9 •
rule.
got size, quickness, good hands points a game, averaged 6.3 j
''John Dowd, spectat counsel to
and he can cover anybQdy out on rebounds and shot 61.4 percent ,
tile commissioner, has submitted
the court. u
from the floor.
,:
his report to me re~ardlng
•
allegations concerning Mr. Pete
•'
•
Rose," the . statement said.
•
"Should arty addltlonal!nforma·
••
t!on relevant to the investigation
WRH FLOWUS FIOM HUIIAID'S GIEEIOIOUSE ,•'•
be obtained, he will forward It to
me. I will now study the report
•
thoroughly."
LARGE SELECTION OF BIDDING PLANTS ••••••
Flat •

R••••~er

.
The Deily Sentinel- Page 5

.

4

VALLEY .

--·-

ZESTA
SALTINES

FIRM

HEAD LETTUCE

t
I

�'

.
1881 : ...
.

. Adams .receives
·scholarships ·

TOPS disCusses
· area conf~rence
The area conference was diS··
cussed at the recent' meeting or·
Ohio TOPS 570 when the group·
met at the Coon1tunters Lodge at
the fairgrounds il?th walldnJ .
from 5-6 p.m. , weigh In trom 6to
7 p.m. and meeting at 7 p:m.
Lennie Aleshire opened the
meeting with prayer and pledge.
Ola St . Clair gave the secretary's
report .. and VIrginia Dean ·gave
tbe monthly treasurer's report.
The group had singing and
welcomed two new members and
one transfer.
Maida Long displayed her
poster "TOPS, The Magic Kingdom", for the group on Area
Recognition Day.
Peggy Vinning announced a
new game, "Garden of Eaten"
with four different categories ,
tomato, lettuce, carroll, and
wheal. She also conducted a
game using vitamins with Phyllis Dreyhel as winner.
Bonnie Johnston won the fruit
basket and Pearl Knapp was
announced . best loser, with
runner up being Nancy Manley .
It was announced that VIrginia
Whitlatch was the April queen.

Stephen E. Adams II, son of
Stephen and Dlaru{ Brewer
. Adams, Route 2, VInton, and
IP'8lldson of .M r. and Mrs. How·
· ard W. Brewer,-Route 1, Point
Pleeaant, W.Va., and Mr. and
Mn. Kenneth AdiiJJUI, Route 2,
Bldwel~ has received severaf
scholarship awards.
The scholarships Include
$6,000, , the American Electric
Power $ystem Annual Education
Award; $1,000 Stocl&lt;;er Scholar·
ship Award from Ohio University
· School of Engineering; and $200
from the Ho)zer Clinic Science
Award.
·
He was also a recipient of the
United States Achievement
Pa&amp;ricla C. M•lherta. RaAcademy Awards In math and
cine, has Jl'l'dua&amp;ed from the
science; rated I In class C plano
Southeastern Ac~y, Klaat OMEA; listed In Who's Who
slmmee, F1a., where llhe
Among American High School
compled a training prorram
Students tor two years; America
Iii travel and tourism. Ms.
Christian Honor Society; and
Mulherin completed the requirement. for speclallaed. SQcl~y of Distinguished Amerl·
can High School Students.
occapa&amp;lonal tralnlnJ plus
He has participated In soccer,
work Ia business professionalIsm and career development ' basketball, band, choir tnd the
church youth group. He has
and Ia aow qualified to beJ!n
served as an office aide and
her career Ia tbe travel and
tourlllm lildastry.

C~urch

Club orders shrubbery
.for cemetery project

.

r

STEPHEN E. ADAMS II
yeiirbook pllotographer, and has
performed with the choir and
band at area nursing homes
He has been active.• In public
service at the Gallipolis City.
Park, and Raccoon Creek County
Park.
·
He will attend Ohio Unlver~lty
and major In the field of electri· ·
cal engineering.
.
Adams Is a senior at Ohio
Valley Christian School In
Gallipolis.
' '

Life Ll:ases range from S20,000 to S6S,OOO. Several refund options are
.. Milable. or ~ou may choose a monthly paymettt plan.

RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters will
meet Wednelday, 7 p.m., at the
school. Members are urged to
attend.

---

MIDDLEPORT - The Ama·
leur Garden Club of Middleport
will meet Wednesday, 8 p.m., at
the home of Mrs. Ed Burkett.
Mrs. Grace Pratt will be the
co-hostess.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7:30p.m., at the Grace Episcopal
,Church Parlsb House.
RACINE- The Southern Band
Boosters will hold their regular
monthly meeting on Thursday, at
7:30p.m., tn the high school band

The flftli annual Drug-Free
Entertainment Night, sponsored
by tbe Meigs High Chapter of
Teen Institute, will be held
Saturday night In the Meigs High
cafeteria. And not only Is the
evening drug-free. It's admission
tree.
The even lng of music and fun
will get underway at 7: 30 with a
talent.show. Reglatratlon for the
talent show will start at 7 p.m., or
l&gt;te-reglltet for are talent shaYI
by calling the sch.ool, at 992-2158,
and speaking with T.I. advisor.
Jeannie Taylor. Singing,
comedy, pantomime, skits.
drama, dancing, or any other
type of actls just what Is wanted
tor the show, Taylor says.

&amp; Fruit Tr-. Geraniums,

992-5776
SYRACUSE, 0 0..._~

room. Parenta of all band stu- · R. Morrison Gymnasium, on
dents In the district. are urged to Friday, May 12, at 8 p.m.
attend.
·
Admission Is $2 tor adults and $1
for students. The students are
POMEROY - Alcoholics AnG- directed by Cella McCoy.
nymous and Al·Anon .will meet
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Sacred Balle sale
Heart Church, Mulberry Ave.,
The Explorers 4·H Club of
Pomeroy.
Meigs County will be having a
flower and bake sale at the
FRIDAY
University Mall, Athens, on
ROCK SPRINGS - Mary Saturday starting at 4 p.m.
Shrine 37, White Shrine of Jerusa- ·P roceeds will be l\5ed to purlem will meet Friday at 7: 30 at
chase shirts and caps tor the
the Rock Sprlilgl Grange Hall.
members.
Potluck retreshments will be
·
served.
SYRACUSE - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter D .A.R. will
1'11!!1!1 Friday at 1 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Gene Yost. Mrs.
John Rose will conduct the
program on D.A.R. schools.

IOLOGfll .~ •••:••••••••••••••••!~ •••!~~!. 99C
.

Prizes will be given out and
tree refreshments will be avalla·
ble throughout the evening. Free
helium balloons and free pens
will also be given out. Tee shirts
will be sold and a dance contest
will be featured at midnight. The
dance will end at 12: 30 a.m.
Taylor notes that the. tree
refreshments are being provided
through donations from local
merchants and businesspeople.
• Teens thi'oughout the county
are welcome at Saturday's T.I.
sponsored event. The only stipu·
lations for admlttnnce are no
chemical use before ordurlngthe
event, and a willingness to have

TOURING - Chuck and Lynn Kitchen,
Middleport, were In Columbus recently to tour the
Children's Hospital In recognition of their
sponsorship of the Children's Miracle Network
Telethon which Ill bel11g aired Jane 3-4 on
WBN$-10 TV. The Kitchens are pletured here
boldln11 Dairy Queen coupon books which sell for
$1 and have a $6 discount value on Ice cream, milk

shakes, soft drlnlut and hot dop. All of the
proceeds from tbe coupon bo
will benefit
Ch~dren's Hospital. At the Joe
try Queen
store bright yellow Wishing Well Co
Uectlon
Canisters will be displayed creating
ay for
the residents of Middleport to
1e to
Children's Hospital.

Mother's Day Sake

Oothing day set

Softball tournament

, .Gallla-Metgs Community Action Agency's tree clothing day
for low-Income persons will be
held Thursday, 9 a .m. to noon, at
the old high school building In
Cheshire.

A men's slow pitch softball
tournament. Class D&amp;E State
Qualifier, will be held June 10-11
at Reedsville . Entry fee Is $75
plus two softballs. For Information, call 614-378-6406.
·

Evealnc of theater .,
POMEROY - The Senior
Class of Meigs County School Is
Inviting the public to attend an
Evening of Theater at the Larry

Teens spons6r drug-free night

Hanging Bukets. Shrubbery
.andTr-.

Hubbard's Gr..nhouse

representative of the 20th con- colleges and universities prepargressional district. His term will Ing teachers.
expire on Dec. 31, 1990.
Also to review department
Other members appointed to evaluations of colleges and unl·
the advisory board besides versltles preparing teachers; to ·
Bowen were trorn ColtllllbUs collect data concerning the curCincinnati, Montgomery COunty, rent and projected need- forCincinnati, and Groveport.
certificated per10nnel In the
The five major responsibilities various teaching fields and areas
of the Commission whiCh was of specialization to be used by the
established In 1974 are to study State Board In making Informed
teacher education and certi!lca~ recommendations concerning
lion standards and make recom· the adoption of comprehensive
mendatlons to the State Board, to stat! development policies, and
formulate advlaory lnterpreta· · to analyze and report to the
tlons of teacher education and Department the financial recertification standards for use In quirements of teacher education
·the development of teacher edu- as II pertains to coneges and
cation programs by colleges and universities and to approved or
untversltlett and Ohio Depart- chartered schools or school
ment of Education evaluation of districts.

20°/o

OFF

STOREWIDE

EXCLUDING CLEARANCE ITEMS)
ELIZABETH BOWER DUNLAP

FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

Attorney at Law
announces the

'

SPRING SEASON

CLOSING

of her private practice of law
effective .luge 2. 1989
All former clients are invited to collect their file materials
9:00a.m.· 4:30 p.m. daily from her office
507 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV ... 675-3999

Corner
Collections
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT
STOll HOUIS
10 A.M.-S P.M.

''I like saving on groceries,

fun.

spending an clothes,

DUTCH LOAF ..................!;~~ S1.97

and my meals...

IIOM'•ADI

~;·

.

MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••••••••••!!'=•• 79C
'
IIGIIf IIIUI

PAIIAY

IUIGAIINE.!.~. S1.19
DAIT 16 sua

&amp;1111. PIOC.
CHEISE ..._....!!..~~: SJ,I 7

.....

IUQIYMUY

Pllli

S ll. lAG

GIAPIFIUII _...... S1.79

CIUO PACK

16 01

CADOU ..............~29 4

FIOM CHAPMAN SHOES

•

A SUPER SAVER SALE

TV DINNER·---..··-....-~..··-~~!~------',·"
IAIIQUD - 10 PC.
FliED
21 oz. s·

~~~;::)

•

I

Compl&amp;te Line of Veglltable
&amp; Bedding Plantl. Azaleas

A new fitness center with heated indoor swimming
pool is opening in the Summer'l989.

i

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - OAPSE, SoUthern
Local Chapter, wil~ meet 7 p.m.
· Wedneilday at Southern High
School.

NOW OPEN FOR

...., 't.'

..

/1&gt;1\(,ld Bowen , Meigs Local
Schoo't.... Distrlct elementary
music teacher, has been named
as one of the six appointees to
new· positions on the Ohio
Teacber Education and Certification Advisory Commission.
The State Board of Education
announced the appointments
along with the naming of a new
member to the board following a
'meeting Monday.
JQseph D. Roman, senior assGclate, Cleveland Tomorrow, was
sworn In as a member of the State
Board to till the unexpired term
of Ronald Popek; who resigned In
March. Roman, appointed by
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, will
serve on the board as the

Community calendar

friend from England. Maurice
Pearce, who sang a solo, ''Just a
Closer Walk with ' Thee" and
accompanied himself on the
guitar.
The offering, $47.10, was donated to Eldercare for the Senior
Citizens.
All attending took sack lunches
and the host church served
desserts and coffee.

J

If you haven't thought about (,
• Bristol Village for a while,
I
• it's time you stopped by to se~
how we· ve grown since our
beginning in 1961. We now
·. .
have so much more to offer in
·
providing for the growing needs and desires of retired folks like you.
We're a not·for·profit. non-denominational community open to people
~ ~r the age of fifty.

)-

women fellowship held

snsto
· 1v·11
· f~ r:,r:·~~~~~
1 age now o 1ers l G-'"ow,;,&lt;&gt;-,
more modern homes,
;::WAY'__
more attractive facilities
~0
and beneficial health care
services than ever before.
We now offer home health care
services and assisted living
apartments . A new skilled ·
nul'!ing home is opening
March 1989.

. ~.RitaHanuflpre-~tbe plant fiMrs·at General Hartin,
.
PI'IJII'Im "Qld " - Find New . rer Parli.
Frlettda" at Utereceiltmeettngof · The nomtnattnr committee for
the Mlddl~ Garde~~ Clulillleld the~bir ye.ar coiUIIItS of Mrs.
at the llqme of :M~. Goollwta .. Mofrll, ~·· Betsy HorkY. and
Schacllel Ill PolllefGY;
, :. Mrs. Diaa Kesalnger.
· .
Mn. Hammnotedtbatmanyof
• Plaq wer.e made for the
tbeiiiiW hybrid r-1»10t11ave annual piCJilc to be jleld JJune 5
the fragrance of tbe older varl11· ·ate p.m. at the borne of Mrs. Rae
!Ions, but that they are more Reynolds, president, In Syra·
h~arty and disease resistant. She
cuse. The affair will be a potluck
al10 spoke of the bes I methods of and everyone )s to brln&amp; a
· caring for them, which lnclu~ covered dish.
planning, soU, and prunlng 'aner
The meeting concluded with
blooming.
Mrs. Schackle, and Mrs . Allee
" Roll call was answered with Ne-1 aslllsted by Mrs. Patricia ,
each member telUng of rardeiUI Schackle, serving refreshments.
tlley had visited
Refreshment table arrangeMrs. Dorothy Morris reported ments .Included red roses and
on the spring fellonal meeting at fer lUI In a crystal container,
Nelll!lnville. ·She ~vee! a rib- dogwoodandredbudlnacrystal
bon for a Japanese arrangement vase, and lavender wildflowers.
of pink tulips and japontca thai
she bad taken to the flower show. . Adrenalin is actually a trademark
It was announced that Brian for a chemical tbat Ia ayt)tbettca1Jy
, Conde had Inquired a bout the produeed from eplnepbrlne, which Is
possibility of the group helping to produced by the adrenal .glanda.

tin, Gloria Ours, Phyllis Wood·
yard, Debbie Peckham, Ruth
Riggs, Edlih Ross, Bernice
Borden, Gladys Miller, Ada
Payne , Edna Payne, Angela
Payne, Iris Payrie, Do~othy
Gore, Shonda Harris, Stephanie
Hawk, and Erica Armstrong. ·
Cake, punch, nuts, and mints
were served, and games were
played with prizes awarded.
Mrs. Williams became the
bride of James F. Williams on
April 15 In a small family
ceremony.

OPEN DAILY 9 All TO 5 PM

Bowen"appointed music teacher

'

'·

Bridal shower honors Evans

Jeannie Evans Williams was
honored recently with a bridal
shower, given by Donna Boyd, at
the Kyger Creek Club House.
Guests attending were.Tammy
~
Grlflth,
Robin Payne, Janie
;. The 24th anniversary dinner of talre, gave a brief history of the
'the Eight and Forty -Meigs Metgs · Salon ' which was char· Woods, Sharon Anderson, Cennle
County Salon 710 was held tered on Aug. 10, 1965; Esth~r Fields, Undsay Fields, Marjorie
recently at the Trinity Church Edgar, departmental chapeau. · Payne, Ernestine Mundell, Kim
With the Harvest class at the presented the charter to petit Dettwlller, Kim Payne, Helen
Boyd; Corliss Miller, Pam
;church serving the dinner.
chapeau Pearl Knapp, and Mrs.
; Petit Chapeau Mary Martin Martin. departmental Ia secre- Franklin, Judi Moore, Heather
·welcomed everyone and lntrG- talre, prepared the request for Moore, Elaine Armstrong, Conituced Patricia Olaker, depart- the charter. Charter par't ners nie Evans, and Beulah Hickman.
Sending gifts were Jean Mar:tnental chapeau; Dorothy Wort,
present were Julia Hysell. Rhoda
departmen ta I Ia secretalre. both Hackett, Eunle Brinker, and
·a f Chillicothe; Robbie Good, petit Mrs. Martin, who had transfen!d
chapeau of the VInton County from the Richland County Salon
Salon 752; and JoA-nn Wood, past 450.
· .petit chapeau of the Gallla
Mrs. Good and partners Judy
The Church Women United of
~ounty Salon 612.
Rodwal, Mary Helm, Becky
Meigs Cout)ty held a May fellow~ Dawn Friend and her daugh·
Caudill, Mrs. Good, and Sylvia
ship meeting recently at Sacred
£er. Heather, who has cystic Thacker, thanked the Salon for
Heart Catholic Church.
pbrosls. and Phyllis Howerton the Invitation of joining In the ·
Mrs. Mary Frances Baum·
and her daughter, Lucille, who celebration each year, and ex- gardner presided over the annual
Jias asthma. thanked the Salon tended an Invitation to the Salon
business meeting.
{or the support of their children.
to attend the meeting on Friday.
The program theme was ..To
': Florence Richards. Ia secre·
Mrs. Wood and Becky Pas·
Pray Is to Us ten." Those taking
quale. JoAnn Wood, and Earnespart In the pr,ogram were Ra'
tlne Baird, thanked the Salon for
chael Do)Vnle, .Dorothy Downie.
their Invitation. Mrs. Martin was
Rhoda Ha.ll, Florence Richards,
formerly a charter member of
Lula Hampton, Mrs. Baumthe Gallla County Salon 612 .
gardner. Glenna Rummell, and
'
Corsages
and
gifts
were
presDoris Graeser.
;: it was reported that the
ented
to
Mrs.
Olaker
and
Mrs.
her
Mrs. Rummelllntrnduced
siK'ubbery had .. been ordered lor
'
Wort
by
the
Salon.
i he Reedsville Cemetery project
Mrs . Martin thanked Mrs.
at the recent meeting of the
Hysell
for the gifts, Mrs. Knapp
Fed beard
eommunlty Builders Club when
and
Lula
Hampton
for
the
tables.
ihe group met at the home of Mr.
and Coretta Tiemeyer for the
The Federal Reserve Syotem, the
lind Mrs . .Warren Pickens.
central
bank of the United States, is
games in which prizes were
' Ronald Osborne presided at
controlled
by seven members of the
Ihe meeting In which a discussion awarded.
Board
of
Governors,
notes The World
Mrs . Olaker spoke on Chapeau
,..as held concerning the sign .
Almanac.
Each
member
is appointed
Day at the National Jewish
tJi'oject. A thank you was read
by
the
president
and ,confirmed by the
ti"om Mrs . Ronald Osborne lor Hospital In Denver. Colo. , and Senate to serve a 14-year term.
announced tHe departmental
ltle planter she received when Marc
he will be held in Toledo on
!lbe was ill.
July
28
and 29.
: Refreshments were served by
The
next
meeting will be a
the hosts to Mr . and Mrs. Donald
polluck
at
the
home of Mrs.
Myers. Mr. and · Mrs. Denver
Tlemyer
on
the
first
Monday In
Weber. and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
June.
·
Balderson.

4

·R95e .program ·presented ·. ·

.·

Eight and Forty to host
?4th annivers~ry dinner

10~ 1989

.

Fruth Pharma(y in Middleport
Will Honor Any Of Our
Competitior' s Discount
Coupons On Prescriptions

20°/o OFF
NATURALIZ~ AND COnnie"

-~:tl.e"'!!~k-

SWm ftCILES •••:••••••••
!~.!!. S1.79
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FASHION SHOE·S

.....!t~~;. S1.69

Coordinating ,Bags ••••••••• ~•••••••••• 1f2 Price

solution that's simplf
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What could be better than a dellciowllmpromptu•
microwaft meal tllat's ready In only 3 minutes?
Big aviJip to make tllat meal even more delicious.
Of course, by now you know that lmpwmptu iln't
froaen. So It taka only 2 to 3 minutu In a mlcrowa...

And you in!m' Impromptu Is made with the flneet

.'

'

meats and vegetables In savory sauces, alllle&amp;SOIIed to

---------------··
I
SAVEstm
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110

when you buy any one of

N.SHB&amp;S .........- .......;•• 11.19
"II.

MANt.JfACn1RIR'SCOUPON

the 10 dellrku ennes

~-.---- -

OPEN FRIDAY TIU 8:00

.

•
Hll¥11 "·-····..••••••• '1.0
1
-..!:.~ 2/11.29_,

I

11
•

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..-..,_

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ToN&lt;Wi vup.alll 4
; •.. ,l'tdWwtliwn-.. tOMpiiW.....,tiello
bfiow lnd rtdMm lhit toupOft.

Nonw-----..,--------....
~--------------~-------

NO ElCPIRAnQN Do\TI

�..
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Paga-8-The Daily Sentinel

Wedn•d"", May 10.1989
-·

Saturday visitors of Ida
Murphy were Mrs. Joseph
Evans, Tyson and Jonathan.
John and Julie Murphy, and
Barbara Davis , Ashli and
Joshua.
Robert Murphy and Robbie,
Racine, were Wednesday evenIng visitors of Mrs. Ida Murphy
and Iva Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole. Stock·

port, were. weekend visitors of
Mrs . Ida Murphy and Iva
Johnson.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp.
Langsville, were Sunday evening
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Mrs. Leslie Frank, and Matthew, Texas Road, were Wednesday visitors or Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Han lng and Ronald.

The annual Rutland High
School Alumni Banquet and
Dance will be held Saturday ,
May 27. Tbe catered banquet will
start at 6:30 p.m. and the menu
will include baked steak or baked
ham, scalloped potatoes or baked
potatoes, green beans. cole slaw
and rolls with the chplce of apple
cake, pies or brownies.
The dance wlll be from 9 p.m.
to 1 a.m., featuring the Ivan

Potter Band.
Cost of the dlnnef and dance Is
$10 per person. Local alumni
may make their reservations at
either the Rutland Department
Store or Joe's Country Market In
Rutland. Deadline fGr reservations Is May 21. Or mall your
reservations. with $10 per person, to the Rutland High School
Alumni Association. P .O. Box
125, Rutland, 45775.

Arthur Spencer returned home
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Avis were
from Camden-Clark Hospital In called to Logan, W.Va. where
Parkersburg, W.Va . His daugh· Mrs. Avis' grandmother, Bessie
ter, Josephine Lamb of Toledo, Jeffries, had suffered a heart
came for a weeks visit with her attack.
parents.
.
Nina Robinson received word
WeeKend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Stearns were their that...her great granddaughter,
daughter, April Neely, and · Emuy, daughter of Sherr! and
grandson, Jeff Noble, both of Larry Shears, Marietta, Is very
Ill.
Fairborn.

~·;.'ij~~:,stot., except illo opoclficlllly noMd in thl..&lt;i. if we do run out ohn
Ool
YoUr choice oil compllroblo item, when available, nrllocting t!le ..,..IIYinal
will ontltlt you to purchloe tht - . - hem 11 the oct.0111ood pnc. wltliln
.,. - · coupon w11 bo IICC8j)IOd per ~em purchued.
COPYRIGHT 11118 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. MAV7'
THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1989, IN •AA"'O&lt;IUIID_cw..._.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. ~ONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

Don't Forget

Assorted.
Pork Chops
Pound

BEAUTIFUL

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

#~

.. ..;

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.:

..
I

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0

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VJJIO

' •

ignoring· the postive side of cycles
Who appointed you our nation's the training course." Call (800)
mother? You have blackened the 447-4700. -O.M.R.
eye of every motorcyclist on the
From Clinton, Iowa: My dad
continent. Motorcycling Is a was with the pollee force In
legitimate, legal and economical another city and he· said almost
form of transportation. You have all the motorcycle accidents he
chosen to Ignore all the positives saw were caused by booze or
and highlight the "dangers." drugs . .Either the driver of the
That column sure mad~ you a lot car that hit the bike was stoned or
of enemies .·- Bob N.
the kid on the bike was high on
From Oklahoma City: Do you something.- F.D.
want to know who causes most of
From Sequim, Wash.: When
the motorcycle accidents? It's our son, a physician, was workthose bonehead motorists who . lng In the emergency room of a
are lousy drivers and don't see us hospital he told us of a big poster
because they aren't looking. that hung on the wall. It read:
J.L.
GET YOUR SON A MOTORCY·
CLE FOR HIS LAST BIRTHFrom Los Angeles: If a kid DAY. - H.B.S.
wants to ride a bike he will, with
From San Rernardlno, Calif.:
or without his parents' consent. Quit pushing helmets. Those
My advice to the parents Is to brain buckets don't do any good.
say, "Ol&lt;, but you have to take Why are nearly 4,000 cyclists

'

Valley Hospitat ·Health Fo11nda·
lion, an . Individual must be a
resident of Mason County, We,st
VIrginia or Gallla County .or
Mt!lgs County, Ohio, hav~ graduated from an accredited high
school or possess a G.E .D.
certUicat, and -been accepted
for admiSsion and declared a
major area of study In a health
care field at an accredited
Institution o! higher education In
either West Virginia or .Ohlo.
Applications must be received
by the Foundation by Wednesday, May 10. Letters of reference
from two people familiar with the
applicant's academic and/ or em·
ployment . history, as well as
school transcripts must also be
sent to the Foundation at Valley
Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
25550 by that date.

FOUNDATION APPLICATIONS- Charles Lanham, c.halrman
of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation, gives
applications for 1989 awards from the foundation's financial aid
program to J'hyllls Ashley, guidance counselor at Point PleaaiUI&amp;
IDsh School. The appUcatlons were placed In Mason County high
schools last week, and are available to others Interested Ia
studying for a career .In the field of health care hy calllq the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Public Relations Department at (304)
675-4340, ext. 253.
'

Express Your ••Love" This
Mother's Day By Giving A....

Ann

Landers

HAND WOVEN SIGNED
AND DATED BASKET!!

ANN UNDI!RS
.. 1919. Lot A......
TlmeeSr..U•e•
Cft• . . S~ndlclle

10°/o OFF ALL MOTHER'S

killed every year? Because they
didn't wear helmets, or because
they were hit by someone who
didn't see them? Be fair for
heaven's sake! -John N,
From Vaacouver, B.C.: Life Is
to be lived. I'd rather have 35
good years than 70 dull ones.
Motorcycles are exciting! What
a great way to go! - A.R.
·

DAY BASKETS
THURSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY

THE BASKET WEAVE'·

When planning a wt&gt;ddinl{. who
pay• for wltar? Who stan&lt;U wher~?
"Tite Ann Lander•• Guidt&gt; for
Bride•· hu all ehe an•we,,

992-6855
36425 lOCI SPRINGS RD.

CAuco coUN1RY
e/~tirm Only

50°/o

.1

OFF

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

"AS ADVERTISED 011 TV"

Oven Fresh
Italian Bread

Country Club
\...-----..._ Canned Ham

\..----,

~lb. C~n

88

16-oz. Loaf

\

GARLIC BREAD 16-0Z. LOAF ... $1

r; ·

SEE US. FOR

TENNIS BRACELET

REGULARLY ·
$1 .09

SLICED
FREE

POMEROY, OHIO

C A P,_.-E _ C R A F T

Pound

Pouhd

-! •

.

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Fresh
Asparagus

Boneless
Round Steak

.~

.•

foundation
awar~
applicationS
available
.
.
.
.

' Dear Readers: Remember the
'J etter from the 18-year-old ~llo
-said he'd like to wring my neck?
lt seems his folks were all set to
:_bii;Y him a motorcycle for his 18th
-birthday and changed their
)nlnds when they read the column about a young man who lost
a leg In a cycle accident. Well, 1
, haven't seen such angry mall
Jilnce a Michigan paj:&gt;er printed a
typo In a recipe for pound cake
:and batter wa~ running over all
&lt;the ovens In Detroit, Flint, Bay
.;€tty and Muskegiln.
·; · I pointed out that every'year at
least 4,000 people are killed In
motorcycle accidents and that
'ma11y of the vlctlms .would have
·:ttved had they been wearing
helments. This Is what my mall
bas been like:
,: From Jackson Heights, N.Y.:

FRESH "SILVER PLAITER"
ISOLD IN PKGS. OF 1()..11· LBS.)

,

. ..
.
. ,
Applications · tor the first . help educate local students who · services ln. our community.
:awardS · to be made by the havec)10senafutu~thehealth · The foul)datlon Initiated the
Pleasant Yalley Hospltall:iealth . care Industry. .
·
financial ala program recogntz.
1
'Foundation following Its ,highly
The foundation has since estab- log lhr setlous shortage of health
:successful campaign to r11rse.. llshed the Pleasant Valle:( En- care professionals that exists
-funds to provide financial·assiSt- dowment Fund, with ,Interest thtoughout the nation, Including
:anc:e to local students preParing from the Trust to be uSed for. the Upper Ohio Valley and the
~or careers In the fleld,qf health scholarships and grant·ln-ali:l : stat,e of. West VIrginia, as well as
~· .care were placed In Mason
loans for students majorllle In a •the lncreaselng costs of higher
:County high schools last week, health care related field at a education.
·according to Charles C. Lanham, West VIrginia or Ohio Institution
" We cannot express our gratiFoundatlon chairman.
·
of higher learning.
tude enough to those business
: Appllcatlons 11re also available
The scholarship program Is an and Individuals In our commun-by calling the Pleasant Valley extension of the Pleasant Valley lty 'who supported this program
Hospital Public Relations De- Hospital Health Foundation's with their financial gltts," Lan)lartment at (304) 675-4340, ext. , primary purpose of furthering ham said. "Their Interest will
i!53, Lanham says.
the development of new and help assure that the current level
· Last year •. the foundation re- existing health care services In of quality health care available
:Celved pledges of over $300,000 Mason County, and assisting In our community Is maintained
;toward ".Educating Today For a Pleasant Valley :Hospital In Its well into the future."
•Healthy ·Tomorrow", a cam- efforts to maintain and Improve
To be eligible for financial
)lalgn designed to raiSe f~nds to upon the quality of health care asslostance from the Pleasant

.

;

·~Ann

--~...._

II

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---Wolf Pen news--- Alwnni banquet, dance to be held Alfred area happenings

I

YOUR

GIFT BOXED

MOTHER'S

#3640

DAY AND

·- . .

.

..

$·
3
99
.

GRADUATION

... .. ...- ---~

GIFfS

'

••••••••KROGER
. 5e OFF LABEL, REGULAR SCENT

FROZEN

Fox De Luxe
Pizzas

Clorox
Bleach

:

6.8-7.6-oz.

Genlle Curls •• Trio

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Thia complet. genlllltyling syatem can
help shape any type o1 hairstyle! All
l h n l e - rodiiiiWI amooth
cUihioneciiUifal:e barrele thlt treat hair
genay, curl hair smoothly and protect
agalnlle•canl'te.heetdamage. Easy to
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ALL NAPIER JEWELRY

25°/o

•

Mmher's Day .&lt;~nd provide lasrin~
pleasure rhrou~hom the years.
We invite you to see our tumlerc
line of fine pon:el ai n tollenibles

OFF

\

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from The EN ESCO PRECIOUS
MOMENTS® Collection for
eveq• od:as iun.

Fruth Pharmacy
in Middleport ·
Will Honor ·Any
Of Our
Competitor's

llRECIOUS MOMENTS•

-- --- ~ -.

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sentimems of tenderness and
love. Delicately crafted porcelain

The graduate deserves a
special pat ori the back for a
job well done. Congratulate
t~e scholar on your gift list
with a cherished collectible
from The ENESCO
Collc:t:tion. Superbly crafted
porcelain figurines and
acces!IOries acknowledge this
m,jor accomplishmenr and
serve as treasured
remembrances of school
di ys and commencemc:nr.

2-Lir.

~· :

ENESCO PRECIOUS
MOMENTS® Collenion will
t&lt;iuch her hean with endurin,g

FOR THE
GRADUATE

Gillon

t • l'il'e ~ .I r. 'rN'&lt;

There is no one who can take the .
place of mother. G ifts from The

Model FT·1

Kroger
Skim Milk

~ '' "'~ !;(~ CQ;r •) ' . ' •

TO MOTHER,
WITH LOVE

• CUihloned IUr!Ke barnoll pro18CI
hllr agalnllt111:8Ui.. heel damage
• 3/4 incll brUih rod with llexlble,
heel rWIIIInt ball ~p brillles
• 3/4 inch curling rod
• 112 lncll mlnl curling rod
• Sa!My tips and lllandl
• Hlnc:Jie with locking ring
·Two heat settings
• Onloll light
• Tangle-lrW lwiWII cOld

Minute Maid
Orange Juice

11 2143
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Futures:
• One handle plus three detachable rods

CHILLED REGULAR, CALCIUM PLUS
OR COUNTRY STYLE

"1'10/1\MY I LOVE YOO"

'

W.e i nv ire you to come in
and see our exrc:nsive line
of graduarion gifts from 1
The ENESCO PRECIOUS .
MOMENTS8 Collecrion.

-

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Prescriptions

____

_, -

---.1.~-----------.,... .

lldclltport
-

992·6491
....

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�Pomlroy- Midcl1port. OtUo

Long Bottom news
Ginger Hayman daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman,
recently moved to Florida where
she Is working on two Jobs.
Deanna Rockllold caught a six
pound perch while fishing In the
Ohio River recently.
To add to this column, call
985-4275, or write Box 7, Long
Botiom, OhiO, 45743.

'&gt;"ledne•d.Y. Mav 10, 1989

Wednlllt.y, May 10. 1989

Special speaker slated :

Name omitted

Dave Carpenter, Belleville,
W.Va., will be the special guest
In the recent birth announcement or Sbayfer Lynn Gage, speaker at the Stlversvllle Comdauehter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery munlty Word or Faith Church on
Scott Gaee. the name of the Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The
Infant's brother. Joshua Lopn . Gospel Rays Singers from Parkersbutg, W.Va. Will provide the
Gap, are 19 months, was unlnmusic. Pastor Gary Holter In·
tenUonally omitted.
vites the ubltc.

:
.

Mothe1 '1 ·Dsg

Support group meets
FamUles discussed their relaxed !eellngs about the Overbrook Center and the ·pr01J1!SS
they have seen with their loved
ones since being admitted at the
recent meetln&lt; of the support
group.
.
Support group meetings are '
held the first Tuesday of every
month at 3 p.m. Refreshments
are served and the public Is
welcome. Shirley Finley Is the
group leader.

r---local news briefs---., C_..._f
Seyler fines Bush on 3 charges

SUNDAY, MAY 14, 1989

Jason Bush or Middleport was fined 011 three cbarlea wtMn he
appeared In the court of Pomeroy Mayor Rlcbard !leylsr
Tuesday night.
On a cbaree of drlvinc without a Ucenae, be wu tined t6l and
costs, on a charee or contrlbu tine to a )uVI!IIUe,lle wu ftned 1213
• and coats, and on an (JIM!n container char&amp;e he wu ftned S63 and
costs.
Others fined In the court were Leon Gray, Mason, W. Va.,$88
and cosds, open container; Mary Ann Jobuon. Campbell, OhiO,
$375 and costs, OWl.
-,
ForfeiUng bones were Henry Price, Tuppers Plalna, Ma,
e)lplred license; and Mary Ellen Sheets, Dunbar, W. Va.,$10, no
·
child restraint.

"Two Ways To Send Mom Love"

Man _sentenced on 2 charges
Sam McCloud of Middleport appeartnc belbre Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday nlcbt In Mlcldlaport court wu liven Jail
sentences on two charres and fined on two others.
McCloud was given five day lallantences on each of two
charges, resisting arrest and ae,ravated menacln&amp;, and wu
fined on two disorderly conduct charge~, $25 and costs 011 one,
and $50 and costs on the other.
Also lined In the court were Sharon Farley, Racine, $25 alld
costs, drMng on revoked license, and$25andcoall,lllegal tap;
Jerl-y Moore, Pomeroy, ~ and costs, disorderly manner;
.Catherine Cremeans, Langsville, M2S and coati, and three days
.In jail, DWI; and $10 and costs, expired tags; Brad K. RobiiiiiOn,
Pomeroy. $25 and costs, allowiniJ an unllc:ellled peraon to
operate a motor vehicle.
.
·
ForfeiUnc bonds In the court were. Georetr D. Lemley,
Cheshire, $450 on OWl; and Ellzabeth ' J . Swisher. $40 on a
speeding charge.

-

Theater evening

YOU, THE JURY - These are studenta who
will be performlacln "An Evenllllef Tbeaier' • at
Melp Hlgb School on Friday at 8
Tid. 11'"11
ef aenlora will pret~e~~l lbe aepnent, "You, The
Jury." Seated, left to right, Mlaay Wooda, Leah
Doidge, Elise Meier, Beaee Youn&amp;, 10m Chad·

,.m.

well, Rod Stewart, Matt Baker, Todd Powell, ,

I

Cbrlll Becker, and Ron Peltry. Staodlag, left 1o
rtcllt, w- Howard, Jeff McElroy, Chad Car100,
Jason Dodson, Mall Pderaoa, Shawn Fetty,
Jared Slleets, Marc Conrl, and Terry Flelda.
Ahaeat at time ef pbolo were Scott Edmonds, Beth
Ewlag, and Rhoad a Hacgy.

,_

The public Is Invited to attend
"An Evening of Theater," dl· ·
rected by Cella McCoy, . on
Friday. May 12, at the Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium at Meigs
High School. The evening is
sponsored by thesenlorclassand
will get underway at 8 p.m..
AdmissiOn Is $2 for adults and *1
for studepts. Everyone welcome.

PORCELAIN
PITCHER BOUQUET

CRYSTAL 'N' BLOOMS

.

DAR chapter to meet
The Return Jonathan Meigs 1
Chapter, Daughters or the Amer- ,
lean RevoluUon, will meet Friday at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Gene Yost In Syracuse. Mrs .
John Rose wlll conduct the
program on D.A.R. schools.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Yost,
Mrs. Edward Foster, Mrs.
Theron Johnson. Mrs. James
Werry, and Mrs. Harold Hager.

Special meeting set
Michael Vance, assistant pastor of the Bill Swad Church In
Columbus, will hold a special
meeting with preaching and
singing at the Meigs Junior High
School on Saturday from 2 to 7
p.m.
For more information contact
Hazel Diles at 992-6361.

t
t

.
~·
•
:
POTPOURRI SCENT
POT BOUQUET

f

GOLDEN ROSE

VANITY JAR

!

POWDER BOX

BOUQUET

BOUQUET

. EMS has 3 Tuesday calls

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
992-6454
106 BUTTEINUT

'
''

Meigs County Emergency Medical S!!rvices reports three
calls Tuesday; Middleport at 1:46 a.m. to 20 Railroad St. for
i Dorothy Roush lo Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 12:33
'~ p.m. to River Heights Apartments for Mona Lisa Haynes to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:29 p.m.
transported Kevin Manley from an auto accident on Middleport
Hill to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.

992-2039
POMEIOY, OHIO

. Patml probes Tuesday wreck

SUPER SAVINGS THIS
. WEEK AT SWISHER LOHSE!
Mother's Day Sun•ay, May 14th

.

inJ!etlg~~=-::~r :CO:.~e~: at~:~1 ~~~eTu~~~~S~~~~

; 0.1 of a mile west of US 33. No one was Injured.
Troopers said Roy G. Wlthrow, 17, Shade, Ohio, loatcontrolot
his pickup truck. The vehicle went ott the road, striking a guard
' ran. Damage was moderate. Thj! patrol cited Withrow for
fallure to maintain. control.

.

I

'

WHO AM I THIS TIME? - These senior
students will be perlormlng lbe segment "Who
Am I This Time?" In "An Evenlngo!Theater" a1
Meigs Web SchOol on Friday at 8 p.m. Pictured,

left lo right, Mindy Spencer, Lesley Carr, Nikki
Bunch, Rich Vance, .. Kathy Tbomae; John
Burdello, Jenny Beth Miller, Scott Barton, Cindy
Maynard, and Jody Taylor.

~
: --Area· death-•

1!i-ll g._,__
.... ,...
..........

~

f;-·· _
~

Mldd\l!port Pollee Investigated an accident at 11: 47• a.m.
Tuesday on Hl&amp;h Street. There were no lnju~. cllatlons, and
only mlnQr .damage to one vehicle.
. ·
.
According to the lnvestleatlng officer, ll.a Darnell who resides
on High Street qac)ced from her driveWay Into the passenpr
side of a \leblcle driven by Dbrothy J. Davis, Middleport. ~ere
was minor damaee·.to the Davll vehicle.
At 2t 23 p.m. Kevin E. Manley. Middleport, traveling east up
Mlddieport Hlll4ost control or the his truck. It crossed the center
line, struck a utility pole and overturned In the roadway.
accilrdlnj to the pollee report.
Tratflcwas tied upforabout30mlnutes.Manleywas takellby
the Middleport unit of the Meigs County Emercency Medical
Service to Veterana Memorial Hospital where he was treated
andreleased. He was char&amp;ed witfl failure to control.

II.

•·

Eldon MOITiB
~

l

Elden Morris, 79, Bailey Run
(toad, Pomeroy, died Tuesday at
liis residence foUowin&amp; an exfended Illness.
•
: Born on Sept. 12, 1909, be Wll!l
!he son of the late fra Morris and
i)essle Grueser Morrll. He
;..,.orked as a groundman and
Sruck helper for Columbus and
~uthern Electric Co. for 22
;rears before his retirement.
~ M(. Morris Is survived' by his
».-Ire. Phyllis Michael Morris;
&gt;'hom he married on July 10,
;l-937; a daughter, Janet Manual,

Nice Selection of

Russell Stover &amp;·Whitman's
Candy.

....
GOOD SELECTION OF

JEWELRY
GREEnNG CARDS
By

GOOD SEUCTION OF

GOOD SELECTION OF

TIMEX WATCHES

.SUNGLASSES

..

LU..Y DAW AND THE THREE LADIES These Meigs High School seniors will be
presenllag lhe secment "Uiy Daw and lbe Three
Ladles" daring "An Evenlag of Theater" Friday
nl«hl al 8 p.m. In the omnaslum. Left te riJhl,
Jody Brothers, Shannon Coates, Laurie Wayland,

Monica Tamer, Kevin Oller, Brent Zirkle, Tara
Clark, Cathy Hobsteller, Shannon BallbW, and
Kathy Hess. Abse11t waa Scott Nelgler. Admlulon
lo the play will be $2 adults and 11 students. The
play Is under tbe directiOn of Cella McCoy.

Phi Kappa Phi NHS
inducts~ three members
Three Meigs Counttans were
among those s tudents at Ohio
University recently initatled Into
Phi Kappa Phi National Honor
Society.
The three are Opal Marie
Offutt Grueser, Pomeroy, a
master's student In health services administration and health
and human services; Ryan
Oliver. son of Raymond and
Susan Oliver, Racine, 11 senior
electrical en&amp;lneerlnc stu~ent;
aDcl Veronica Provo, daughter of
Ste P. Murphy. Racine, a aenlor
11 lnt«per-al communtca-

ttona.

Phi Kappa Phi !'eCOIJII%es and

eacouraaea superior scbolarablp'

•*'

Ia aii ~= cJiaclpllnea. To be
Urw••duate -lora
. . .t rank In the
seven
t*'l:lellt of tllelr
colleee

crade polilt

Ia the final
year wltb
elfllble.

Honors Tutoral College students must be In the final year of
their program with a 3.5. Graduate students must have no less
than a 3.8 and students In the
College of Osteopathic medicine
·must have at least a 3.6.

SPRINf, UAll EY CINEMA
-14f.

4~14

..................
s....,
O.IB IIHie, I. I'll.

MH. lllrv Sat. 1.00 ...._ te 9 ,.._

Disaster
...
Continued 'rom page 1
~

SEEGUI SILECTIOII OF
.

IIAMIIUND

FRAGRANCES
.........c..............

'

S!IJISHH~
'

1o .......... ,...

l !lH5E
'

t

MANY OTHER
Gin IDEAS TO
CHOOSE
FROM.
I

SEE US TODAY!

COUPON VALUES

PIUC..,.,_
... 992·1955

r.-..,s...
E. . ..,....
.
•-•••
, 1111.

............
~ce

VALASSIS

presentlng the Builders Club,
nd arranged by Gary Minton,
1 uldance Counselor · at the
·!fcoool. The group participated
~ast year for the Holzer Medical
~enter, ·· and ·wlll again be ' lnolved for Thursday's ·mock
lsasfer exercise.
A disaster drtlr is a requlrel!nent lor those hospitals accre~tted by the Joint Commission on
~ccreditatlon of Healthcare Or·
:'ganlzatlons (JCAHO). A written
,.isaster plan must b'e on file and
flhat plan must be tested at least
Jewice a year. The coo.r dlnated
effort of the three area hospitals
In staging a joint annual stniu·
..ted disaster takes this stlpula·
lion far past what Is required.
' The actlvl' participation of ·
AKZO Chemical Plant, lOcal flrl',
('Jllergency services and law
1\ftlorcement personnel, makes
this 17th annual mock dlaaster
exercise for the three hospitals
and all of ·the other agencies
lllvolved, even more meanllllful.
For that, the hOspitals express
their gratitude.
The combined e!fQrt of the
three counties In two states, their
hospitals, Industries and ·aeencies is unique and takes a great
deal of time and coordination.
The chief executive officers of
qie three hospitals feel slrOfllly
about the value of workllig
closely together, along with
MOYlE PC, for the benefit of all
residents of the three countJea,
Gallla and Melp In Ohio, and
Mason County ID Well Vlr&amp;lnla.

'

Trial--emeeled
The jary trial achedulsd for

Tburadlr . mllrnbit II Me...
Coullty Colnmon Pleu Court llu

lleen ~·-*'· Junra lllef not
.........
l.i.,

a-

reductllla In employment, Melp
County's tax bue will Increase
becaua of the Improvements to
tbe coal washlnt plaat, wlllch Is
an expe~~cllture to the company of
about Sl mWioft, u well u the
drllllnc of a new allaft at Salem
Center, an additional compa11y
expenditure of about M mUII011 .
The pbyslcal couectiDII of the
mines shOuld be complete by
Ju.ly, followed later 111 the
summer by the completion of the
longwall. Also by mld.-ummer,
the undetgrai!nd tra11sportat1on
network to the coal washing plant
shOuld be !lnlshl!d.
" Beginning late this fall and
ln10 the fllture," Tomkins said,
the beneftts In ._bar that will be
paid Into Melp County will be
"IOiftewebre In the area of $23

Meip announcements
Acadelnlp ,ll•...l,
The FlftllAuualMejp C011nty,
Academic Ezeelle- Banquet
wlll .lp. held at 7 p.m. .'T ftunday
-nllht at Melp Hlp Scllool
cafeterlil.
The IC~IIY. II 1pQIIIOI'ed by
the M"-- Qlunty lloard of
EducatiOII Ia COtijlei atloa with
tile tlllw loell aciiOol dbtrlcta,
Eutera. Melp and llouthern.
4a In yean fUt,
will bo110r tllp allldfttsln If · •
f, ~. 8, 10 abd 12 from all publiC .
achooll In Mfip County. This
year 65 stuclenll will be presented awards.
.,_ SpeakeT wUI be Jamea Carpen&lt; ter, superintendent of ihe Melis·
Local School Dlltrlct.
Of•pleMelt
'
Rotk Sprblp Granae wlll~eet
I p.m. Tbunday.
c

Free eiiChltll Day
Gallla-Mei&amp;S Community Action Arency's free clothing day
for low-Income peraons Will be
held Thursday, 9 a .m . to 12 noon,
at the old hlch acbool buUdiiiJ In
Cheshire.

.......,

....

million," In ad41tlon to tax
lncre.- and payments to

vendon.
Alao of lnterMt to cblmber
members wu a report from
Corky Werry, Pulllehly, that she
will be openln&amp; a women's dress

Stocks
D&amp;;lly 1loek prices
(As ef U:3e a.m.)
Bryce • • Mark Smllb
of Blunt, EIU1 II Loewi
Am Electric Power ..... .... .... 261-4
AT&amp;T ................................. 333io
Ashland 011 ........... ........... .. 42%
Bob Evaps .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 16 ~
City Holding Co .................... 15
Federal Mogul ............ .... .... 52%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................51%
Heck's .......... .................. ... .. %
Key Centurion .................... 12%
Lands' End .......................... 30
Limited Inc , .......................30\1
Multimedia Inc ........... ........ 95~
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 2J'a
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .. ..... 163,4
Shoney's Inc .. .. :.... ............... 8~8
Wendy's Inti ... .... ......... ........ 5~8
Worthington lnd .................. 21
(Goodyear Is ex dividend
loU)'.)

shop, •'Corky's Classics," on
May 25. The shop will be located
next to the Fabric Shop on Weat
Mala Street. The grand openlnc ·
of the shop, which will feature
petite throueh larcer sizes and a
personal ordering service, will
be held two or three weeks after
the opening date, she said.
Chamber President Bruce
Reed also reported that Red
Snapper, a popular seafood restaurant, Is Interested In locatingIn Pomeroy . Reed urged
chamber members to write letters of support lor a Pomeroy
location to Charles Retlly, who
owns a Red Snapper In Parkersburg, W.Va. The letters may be
given to Reed or to Sherry Hart,
chamber secretary. for forwardIng to Reilly. The letters wt'h help
R111lly In his attempt to ~cure
block grant funding to develop in
Pomergy.

Hospital news
Veteraans Memortlll
Tuesday admissions - 09rolhy Roush, Middleport; Maggie Nelson, Middleport; Teresa
Moore, Langsville.
Tuesday discharges - Walter
Roush.

,

c::a• ....

Ameltl:ll'l

1......,...._

-tlte ~fPIAll

GARDEN
CENTER

Ohio ...
Coatllllled from pap 1
prow ·edUcatloMI oppo1 tualtJeoa
.. . and st:reqthen the -Ohio
citizens' confidence In educa·
tlon," ..td Sen. Cooper Snyder,
R·HIIisboro, chalrmlll of . the
Education Committee.
"W11llope and antiCipate It will
foster Innovation, provoke
,reater achool dlltrlct employee
productlv,ty. prOIIIGII! creater
accounlalllllty ... and m01t lm·
portant,llllprove tile etlucatiOIIal
opportunity for all tile puplla. We
all aaree. I tlllnk. lt'a a erurlal
II1C7Ye we're Iatini ben!."

Sale Price Ia. H•alll•raza._
cutflvoted tn 1~lion containers.
These compact ev-.green shrubs.
featuring dazzling blossoms In the
$piing. add life to any land$COpe.
Come riO the Gorden Center fOI
IO\Ilngs on all your plonHng needs.
MaMe ;

New
...
Continued from pare 1
zen and health care Issues. and
environmental concerM. ·1 wlll
be working to address these
Issues to promote our reclon of
the state," Slate Rep. Abel
added.
Jolylln Bu tier admlnlatred tile
oatil .of orne. to Abel.
· "I appreelate the excelle"t
representation that JOJynn provided for our district over tile
put seven yeara. I pisdi(E to
build upon this fouiiclatlon of
excellent service to IOUtheaat
Ohio," State Rep . Abel
concluded.
After lakiar the oath of office,
State lqp. Abel participated In
her first leJislatlve lll!lslon.
House speaker Vernal Riffe
welcomed Abel to the lectslatton.
"I am sure that Mary Abel will
provide the same excellent r~
presentatiOn for southeast Ohio
that Jolynn Boster Butler has In
the past," the speaker !ald.

%,uu Current£

1
, ...

thOWn

hrgulol Prtee~ Moy 1/aty At
Saoml S.... Ot.le To LocOI C~ion

8.44..

7.97

21%
OUf 10.97 I&amp; Plo:u.rtng at• uall !n 10"
hof9ng baskets. Popular varlelle$ lnclud·
~Uchla, begor ilal, lmpaHens and more.
I

Sale Price Flat. 12·pack annuals in
choice of flowering and vegelable
varieties. Perfect fOI beds, borders.

•••lhawn

Mc:111.we ._:1 I ;ad shoWn

i'OR :'HE

OR CITIZEN

~

•

VALASSIS

Portland; three sons and
daughters-In-law, Walter and
Nancy Morrll, Wduam and Kay
Morris, and Roland and Fern
Morris, Pomeroy;· two sisters,
Mary Hyall, Pomeroy, a11d
Irene Thomas, Jackson; nine
grandch'lldl'l!n, and two creat. ,randcblldren.
Besides his parents, he wu
preceded In death by two sisters
and a brother.
Funeral aervcles will be held at
1 p.m. on Friday at the Ewlq
. Funeral Home. Tbe Rev. Amos
Tillis will otflclate and burial will
be In Riverview Cemtery.
Friends may call at the ~neral
home Thursday. 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

Pas!• 11

.

factllty, Whlcb II tile lal'fllt coal
wuhilll faelllty In the United
stata.
COlli from thbl
facility . - 11)' Clftl'lanll co•
wyor to the Cavia Pllllt at
Cbellllre. ~ No. 3 bad Ita
own co.l wullllll fadllty from
wlllclllla clean coal product wu
.IIIIIJIPMI to the Gavla Plant by
' rallnad. Tile creater txpeue or
trauport1a1 by rail, u oppDied
to 'the overlan4 conveyor, wu a
factor In IU COIIIpPY'I CM!Fall'
cleclllon to combine the mines.
The lnatallatlon or a third
loqwall, the reduction In
warlrera, the elbniMUon of rail
tranapert, all play a part 111 the
coat reiuctloB nlcll TOIIIplllnl
MYI 1110111&amp;' to fl've the d!Ytlloll
uoth« 2!5 )'Wars Ia the Melp
County area.
And willis then! will be a

tile biJIJ':t

Police probe two mishaps
. .

The Daily Sentinel

Coattnued from paee 1

(}(.11 •••

l

,
:
·
•
.:
'

ftu;;IWUV- Milcleport. Ohio

·:;.tMMH

14 ~·

. .,._,,,... , ''" .•;. "' j-~
~ ... 1 .., ~11. ;....;.. ~ .'•IIIIH •

•

It Makes Good Sense
· To Adv~rtise In
"River Currents" For
The Senior Citizens!
Here's .Why:

2.33Save32%

5.97

IaNZI%
Our7.t7M. #11JI'•d• leafo'n budroNbulllllln 2-galfon COiotail *1. Cholc• Of
~ 'IOiiellel and colol1. Sovi!JOSI

OUr IM. tunnowr bird bowl. Feathered
h~ wtN gull oer around this dec01aHve

bird bath. Mallis a great bOCk'/Ord accent.

.... = ., •• -...n

1. Low Rate.
2. Target Advertising
' 3. Circulation of 30,000 and a readership of
approximately 80,000 in Gallia, Ma~on·
.and Meigs Counties.
4. The life expectanq of "River Currents"
For The Senior Citizen is at lasr 30 day·
-sin the home, due to marketing stra-. ·
tegy .

......

•

O.Ltr......... ._....., gatdenlng
.... IUI4tlu. CCinlltucMd of light·
u: 11- piG IIIIo b eGIV CQIIYIIIg. Sovt now.

CALL MATHEW· RODGERS AT
446-2
675-1
t.

t.,

\

-.-. 1-----=---------------------------~------------------------------~--------------------------~------------~------~--~~--~~·

�.I

P.a•

12...:...The Dllilv Sentinel

Ohio

10, 1989

3

The

Ohio

Spring stornts continue around country
sippi Delta, battering the area
By Ualled Preee lateraatloaal
Moll!, unstable air across the with winds that damaged scores
Rockies triggered thunder· of homes and knocked down a
storms, cjamaglng buildings, 12·fo.o t watchtower at the Mlsslscausing blackouts and spitting . sippi state penitentiary and In·
.
hall that dented cars, weather jured two guards.
Thunderstorms and hallofficials said Wednesday.
An area of low pressure over storms also socke(llhe Carolinas
Idaho helped develop strong and Georgia as well as parts of
thunderstorms across the north- the Ohio Valley and Oklahoma.
At the 16,000-acre Parchman,
ern Rockies Tuesday night, the
Miss.,
prison, none or the 25
National Weather Service said.
Inmate
housing units that hold
Winds gusted to 60 mph at Bern,
some
5,000
people were affected
Idaho, where sheds and roots
were damaged and power lines · by the violent storm, the weather
bureau and prison officials said.
were downed.
A female corrections officer
Thunderstorm winds gusted to
suffere&lt;l a broken leg when the
69 mph at Soda Springs, Idaho,
causing blackouts. Winds also watchtower she was In collapsed
damaged roofs and at Caribou In thunderstorm winds, said Ken
County, Idaho.
A thunderstorm at White Rock,
N.M., dumped 1.251nches of rain
·and three-quarter Inch hall that
covered the ground. Autonioblles
were den ted by the hall and
numerous accidents were
reported.
. Thunderstorms also rumbled
·over southern Texas with hall the
size of golf balls striking Edwards County.
Heavy rains also hit central
and Northern California.
Farther East, . showers and
thunderstorms extended along a
· cold front from southern Mississippi across central Georgia to
· the southern Atlantic Coast.
Heavy ratns caused water to
rise over roads and bridges In
northwest Union County, N.C.
Earlier Tuesday, fierce thunderstorms whipped the Mlssls-

Jones. a

s~an

for the

Mlssls~/PPI ~partment of
Corrections.
"The wooden structure slta on
steel beams a bout 12 feet off the
ground," he said. "The structure
collapsed, throwing the officer to
the ground."
.
A second euard suffered a
minor Injury In the storm.
: About 80 sta.ff homes and three
. mobile homes were damaged,
Jones and weather service offl-

11

clals said.
''The s,torm fonowed a path
down the mllln entrance road of
the prlaon for about a mUe,"
Jones ~ald .
The Clarksdale-Coahoma
County ClvU Defe~~~e, located
northwest ot Parchman, said the
area suffered extensive damage
frOIIl 60 mph wlads. Tortentlal
rains flooded several major
streets and U.S. 61 was closed to
traffic.

GOVERNMENT JOBS
011.o4o-tl9,230 - · Now
hiring. ean 111 1011-117-1000
EJrt. A-9805 lor cu""" fo&lt;lwol

lin.

WEATHER MAP - Durla1 earb' Tbandq mendiiJ, llbowera
aad tbaaderatornw are forecul for IJie cnlral aad aordlen

latermou&amp;aln Repoa wltb raJa forec:ut (!lr JarW of &amp;be Oblo
Valley aad IJie mid to norill Atlaallc Cout StatM. lllowen aad
thuaderslorma are poaalble Ia par1l of the-~~~- Plalaa, mt~~lef
the Oblo Valley aad lbe exlrime aoulb Atlullc Caul. UPI

Part time floor per'lonetAm• ~
c.eof Pa"'*OV· Multbe8bleto

G:::'JINDW
FRONTS:

II W1m1 ,

.•

IUIN

llrip 1nd

fl'la .IDWIM

"Cold ..

clot'-·edutts. Wood cr.tts •
Turn-•~•

1870 3 whMIIf.
Sino- ltwlnl nwchlne: Clll
81"-448· 741

......l'o-mero;;--.........

THURSDAY IS SENIOR CmlEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
5% DISCOUIT 01 ALL PURCHASES ( ~':)

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

,

'

WANTED

HOURS

UVING ON A
IUDGET'l -·
Beat The Heat This
Summer With
Central Air!

DEAD 01 AUVJ

DAILY:

_ •Wut..-a•DIY••
oAenge•Frwun
•Refrlgeratora

8A.M.·11A.M.

"Mutt ....,.,......

UN'S APPUANCE
,
SBVICI
992·5S31-91S·JS6 1
Wa Servloe All Mak•
!1-4-lf.IIIIO.

1911-14170'

MOll£ HOME
Ill c1 home. loceted n•

3-BA, .2 bllh, pnl111 tub.
lllrrlsOAVUlt. $6500 Cash..

CALl

114

\

. lAY'S
BEAUIY SALON

,,"

COCA

1At gallon *'On

Midleport firemen
have 44 April calls

COLA

12 12-ounct;e cane

12·13\11

ASSORTED
PORK CHOPS

Middleport Police ll)ade 65
arrests during the month of April
and Investigated 10 accidents.
. The merchant pollee collection
· totaled $24, the parl&lt;lng meter
collection was $640.50 a_nd there
· were 398 parking tickets written.

package

B

$119 ~

B

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-3
- 920.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
. $1,287,442, with a payoff due of
1
$272,403.50.
PICK-4
·~ 14B7.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$231,067, with a payoff due of
$120,300.

SINGLE '
GERANIUMS
41NCH
I POT

I

THURSDAY, MAY 11
HOWl'S GlOVE PAll!

•

'
!

•

PUBLIC
AUCTION

$ 99

MI-XED
FLOWER POTS

' ' $199

ar 421-7245

T1n1111 Cash ar 'Chtck

3 ROLL

-.

-~- ~

,..,. Pltalam,w.v•.
We Buy Aluminum

c"'.; Gl•e. a.....

•

.8112-284&amp;.

8

F• Mortlnf!lnMiion
3-10-'

'

.

'

''

Point Plu

•LIGHT HAULING

Lee sa Murphey ·
&amp; AMoelates

•FIREWOOD

PUBLIC

BILL SLACK

RELATIONS

992-2269
EVENINGS

108 High St"'tt
Pomwoy, Ohio 45769
Pho~• (614) 992-2922

4/ 1/ 11/ t;fn

THE
BASKET WEAVE
HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

Howard L Wrltnel

ROOFING

NEW- I.PAII

.latgo Supply of Bukot
Wowing SuppiiM
Sign up nbw for Balluot
Weovlng Clu-

Gutters

949-2168

PubiJc Sale

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
CAMP
GROUNDS

nt, WV. Watch For Signa.

. THE ESTATE OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
WILL BE SOLD
AHTIQUES: 3 door Olk bo«+ceM, ~ bulflt, large ctdlr
n.t,IUnlletdlett. Empire...._, \eedad ,_...~rd
tap,- racklr,large Qlpbolrd.• pc. b«&lt;roorn auilt, .wing
IIICIMr, luplrHrpanlnt olk wuh atand, mana palnlad
limp ttlgnld Hnhucl, quill, .......... ht• IIIII whllt,
green IIIII whilt, Nil, whilt and blue;' llfd
Co. Sword. Col., Ohio; 1hl Sly Ann Co. Sward, .l'lllntq al
Plo•ars marlolcl Ram Olrdan, gluawn --EIIII!ft, ANra.
Milt 01111, Ropll Auatia, Nottolk, Hligtr, lloltintl, F - .
Clllld'l Plllt K.P.M. ~; ~ IIDor limp, lampa, Dr.
Mv. lhetmomaltr, K8owood Vua, beer llllnl, Tot~~',
~~c: llol1a pitcher,
pildllr, blue

._.'I ••.•

P18tor Jamet1

E. Keeoee

992-6772

3-20-'11-lfn

Quality
Stone .Company

.......PfPTeasanc.. _1'2
G~~tege

--'

CHESTER, OHIO
INSTALUnON AND SDYICE Of HElL
ENEIGY EFFICIENT HEAl PUMPS, All
CONDITIONING AND 95"fe EfhCIENT
FURNACE.

915·4222
DAY ·01 EYEIIIIIG
4/ 5/89/1 mo.

Compllte hounhol* of ltrniture a lntlqu•. Atto wood &amp;

814-446-3119.

Junk Clrs with or wll haut
matCft. Coil Lorry Livlly 814318-9301
Furnflure .,d IPPH.,c:.~ b¥ thl
P'- of enth hou-ld. Fair
prlolf boingpold. Ctii814-446-

31S8.

Wll buy Of ...,...,. . onythiogl
Antlqu•. furniture. eppii•'*-

Annuuncenrenls

Mt....

3 Announcements

W•tedtobuy:Junk~wtthor

whhout motan. C.ll Rloh•d
Qoorga. I 1 4- !18- BOH.

UMd l.lrntture

CUSTOM UT
HOMES I GARAGES

"At lnua11111 Prkas" .

814-742-2451.

Qllltt
Pre 1940 quMII. Arrv condiUon.

2048.

1-100-421-3535

PH. 949·2101
or ..._ 949·1160 ·
Day ar Nlt'lt
NO SUNDAY CAllS

tilt

FOI
SALE

...

3 Stylls

..... ,....
" ..
V1rilll Sills

ON SAlE NOW AT

Aulhor•d John
DMre. New Mollllld.
lulh Hot Farm
Equpment Deal•.

.............
.....

;o

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SEIVICE
SYIACU$1, OliO

MotiForllg~~and

NIAIE ·Cortlllod Moallar~IG

CALL 992 ·6756

"DOC"
cort-

1 8 Wanted to Do
Paint Nide Ot'lout I yN......
riMce. Ettlm.t• fr• of ch•ge.

CtA 814-317-0401.

Wll ,.,.,.•• In my homo. Aa•onllble ,..... Ref«.._ .,.... ·
blo. AI 1111-. oloo _ __Call

814-2411-5718.
' - " work arid lltiM h.,llng.
nothioa to big or ....1. coli
anytime 304-1711-7138 or 8711-

7170.

MDWinv low no. !104-178- 2844
c .. l lift• 1:00.

lrlld\11.\o!l
21

EXCELLENT PAVI Homo_ . _n--.
__
diow.._.
Ov•_
71 camtrlbutore, 6 wholeulen
clroctorv. Sond I .A.S .E. P. 0 .
Bo• 2521-GT. Huntington. WV
21728-2121.
INOTICEI
THE OHIO VALLEY I'UIILIIHo
lNG CO .
lllot you
do ....ln.. with pooplo you
know, Md NOT to .,.d montr

.-mm...•

11

Good forhllv ... ,In_ E -

llohod pine ohop. - . , . . _
frenehile reolp•. ' 10 ,._.
goodwB. E -· •ool- ·
oondtUon. lnt. . .ted / . , ...
...,.. Can 114-2411-831 .

Help Wanted

I-------EARN MONEY Ao-1 baokol
t30.000/yl« inGDme potiM1111. Dotllt. (1) 1011-117-1000
Ext. V-10181 .

31ong hotrod kitten• 2famola. 1
mlle. Utt• tNin.t. Call 11._
441-2113oftwlpm.

4 ..... kltt . . tb g~v..;oy. Ctll
114-379-22S1.
~.We Doblrmll". aood Rlltured.
Coll814-388-17.._

to-

l tdtt••·•ll m... I wka. old. To
good honwor firm. Will t.more
fl'om. c.n 814-2&amp;817t3-4P.M .

2 hmll• cllloo ldn-. t wkl.

old. Celll14-446-7732.

-

70.000 ITU · - . - .......
CtA

3 • - t• ,Alao
, .. 742·!1071

..

-1\1.
c:.ti.,4-7~2-IIQ.
~--

-

..,_,._ptoolve-.

114-III-17ZI. Workl•t

....

8 Lcm and Found

8ueinasa
Opportunity

ttwouah them .. unCI you h••

illl!liiiVIllP.III
:) t! r V11: f; ~~

ep., Houu.

fridOI' and S.u....., May 1 :t 13.
10..m.- lp.m. 2 .nil• from
,__.,~• on SA 321. 5th ploco
71.... a~. 011.-. 814-742-

-

ean

lrwaotlgotad tho oflw~

nrtd of giving Mom thl Mme
old lhing? Try •n orig(nll,
h..dm.te alft from Clrol's

DCIIII•ki:YINII•
AIC .......
AIIMijar.MN
A. . . .

plea or

Uled furnltuN .nd hauHhald
..,pnan-.. Phone 114- 7•2·

PH. 304·421·7245

I. S. a. MUD
IIYS¥1&amp;1, OliO
614-661·3111

your lot. t17.991 • up.
814-111-7311 .

Ctth pold. Coil 114-992-5157

AUCTIONIU

SAIIS&amp;Sibla

bv tht

or 114-592-2411.

... 614-992-5479
... 614·992-2477
Clti ..:

I'ATRKI H. II.OSSEI

BOGGS

Big 3 BA . Country home buitl on

autoe. complete home

entire houlilhold •o ••ling.

,.,...,,Ohio 4!U9

-----

17 Miscallaneoue

furnlahioQI.
M•lln - - ·
114-2411-1152.

w.nted to buy : To'ta.cco poun~ Cell 114-446-1437 or
448-9288.

4·5-19-1 ...

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Wanted To Buy

co81 h...... Sw.in' 1 flM'ntture
6 Auctlo" Thl&lt;d 6 Olivo.

lelpr1, Ohio
CONSIGNMMS WBCOME

Schools ·
lnltructi'on

2282.

11-1ei.'ll·rln

EVERY THUISDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWE'S GROVE PARI!

614·949-2526
4-11-1 JIO. pd.

,.••on.

TOP CASH paid for 1983 madol
•d ntwtr UMd en. Smhh
Buldl~ PontiiC. 1911 E•lt•n
Ave.. Golllpollo. Coli 814-448-

GENEUI. CONTIACTO.S

PUBLIC
AUCDON

1 bedroom, very
furnished. ·
Housekupinl Room
By D1y, Week. Month

15

....... "' 304-773- 578&amp;

9

985-4141 .

-;;;:=:;;;:::;;:;==:
-.

AE-TAAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
CO u.EOE. 528 ~on Pika
Call 814-4411-4317. Aag. No.
88-11-tOIIII'.
Llotnted in
Ohio "'d _ , V~alnla. Booking

PHONE DAY 01 EVENNGS

Homo Do_lllln,

c••

814-2411-1112.

tJontr. Rick

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG II&amp; REPAIRS

FIPIESENTAn¥1

llmlb. CtM 814-446-0139 bo9 • .m. • 10 p.m. .

t~

tor .. _.1¥ •d h.ndf.
c..,ped tn our horN. 21 ,.. .
Mperilf'lce. LPN on ctll. Low
Income home. 011 114-m1873 aflw 7,0Dp.m. for '"""'

W.VI. ltlte Ch1mpion Auc-

CHERB, OliO

30% W. 2n• Stroll

house with beclcyerd wllhlft City

morm~~1on.

MARCUM

J. WARNER

. Situations
Wanted

24HA . OAV CARE S..porvload
structured PIIY·tlme. Large

W.

Public Sale
8t Auction

c.ll M•rlln WeclrerMyer, Auction_., Ucens.. &amp; BondN tn
- · of Ohio ' Llquldotlon•
, ............ antlq ..... etc.

Country Cmto. 814-742-2484.

be~atiful,

Sale: 1407 CHI• St

Meedowbrook edltkH'I. Thuti. &amp;
Fri. Moy 11, 12. 9-4.

4-14-89-1 mo.

Par HIALTH
INIURANCI 0111:

2127 ext. Fs•t.

mille.

8

3 Mile East of McArthur on S.l. 50
PH. 596-4756 or 992-6637

R~~

ClOVE A NMENT JOBS I Now

&amp; Vicinity

All POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

2·3·'8'1 tfn

'99lf•OII,5

SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1989
10 A.M.

hiring in your., ... both lkll.r
tnd unlldll«&lt;. For • U1t or iobl
arldappllcotlon, colt 1-818-383-

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

•SHRUB II&amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

T•ms of Sale:
C11h or Chedl

ESTATE AUCTION

Y•d !Nie 11 Joeeph Connoly's
retldln01. 2 mil• aouth of
Tuppora Plolnt on Old 7 Road.
Moy 12th "'d 13th. 9,0().5 ,00.
Some· I. G. tmp•ltl. LDta of

-

PIB MHO IN - OWIIR

8t Auction

Middleport, Ohio
EVERYONE WELCOME
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M .
· SUNDAY 7:00P.M.
WEDNESDAY 7:00P.M.

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

lioon -·

304-675=3161

4-1

..

w-v

NNe • C*-? !ittw
Awn
C.rl help 'fGU btittw t.ft you CM
belli Call Marlyn W.wltt', 30._

Hair oydlot. apptv 01 KMh.. Kut
tnd Kurl or clll 30._175-42•7
or878-3088.

· Call 992·2772

Coppw ond More
MQN••f ••: 9 om-6 Jl!.ll

WOODEN-NGS

-

.SUIISS

14th &amp; . . St.

SEW .. PIIIIPtlllf
..., .

NOW OPINFOI

OP£11 lOST SATURDAYS
10:00 lll 5:00

Located It 814 Main Sttwet In

COO PIODUCTS

~lter, _•Orient,

RECYCUNG

304-863-8895
304-421·7245

PACK

'

I

2

i

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE I;STIMATES

Patrick H. BIOSSif
Auc:tion'ear

PH. 304·163·1195

'

· Rollllle E. Taylor, Charled
' with theft, a felony of the fourth
di!81"H. hu been senteaced toalx
In !be Orient Correc-

(Now the Rinky Dink
Flea Market)
State Rt. 1.
• Marietta, Ohio
Lot of New furniture,
Limps, Bedsprllds,
Bikes, Ridina Toys,
Toys Battery Operated
Toys, Blby Furniture &amp;
lt•ms, Lots llore.

AUCRON&amp;I

''

'

FRIDAY,
MAY 12, 1989
6:30 P.M.

PATIICII H•.ROSSER

PAPER TOWE

Hospital news

'_ Court news

loll af IIM.. tld Fll'lli·
turt atMI Misc.lhlnl. Of.
fict Funiturt .... EIMI·
11111!1, Nlw INtnl aillf
loll of loll Lets Plus
loolts and Maaazintl.

•

BRAWNY &amp; SCOTT

I•

Wt'l llaYI 2 Partial
Estat•

••

·•
Ve&amp;eraas Memorial
Admissions - Mabel Brlckles,
Pomeroy; Mary Crlckman, Middleport; Ann Williams, Clifton,
W.Va.; and Victoria Lehew·
·• Chillicothe.
'
Discharges - Mirada Ash
Velma Dugan, Flossie Badgley:
- Merle Davll. Annie Dll~ Nonna
- Ooodwln, Berry Staats, and
· Darla Pickett.

. . . . OliO

•

3 LBS. OR MORE

HANGING
BASKDS

6:00P.M.

•

1-LB.
PKG.

'S DA

I

Public Sale
8t Auction

OLD RINKS
BUILDING .

PUBUC AUCTION

BACON

R M BERMO

numbers

..,..

UT.: I ant·12

PubliCI Sale
II&amp; Auction
I

CRISPY. SERVE .

lB.

~ ·

2 H.D. FlEE with COIJIOI.! lltd,

J.

99C

Jutt went to ••n 1 lhtle u:tre
monev? Or would ~ou •• to

l"nnl• upHYtlll Aun .. St.wart' a
r•ldenoe. Mev 11th and 12th.
&amp;,()().5,00.

:J.Il-tltt
- -· ..._._,.-

PUIUC

•Lot

. . . PIIII

•

April arrests total
65 in Middleport

J'«) SIINDAHAllS

2o:4 E. MAIN •'812-11?1

•••

GROUND ·
BEEF

PH. 949·1101
or 111. "'9·2160

•Mobile Home
Rental•

BINGO
POMROY.UGUS
-" CLUI ··..,..,

--:;- . . . •IIOA.
w. •suo r. Goooo
lhw 10 ,... ••s.oo
r. Goooo
,lk. 1005-U
/1) Z·J:fl

SAVE UP TO SOC LB.
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

... .._Wt

"Frn Elltlmat•"

HO. PARK

pilclwe of Mit. N.C. Pldlllf. lltlll 1 CIDUf)Dfl Jill' Cl.

The Middleport Fire Depart- ment answered a total or 44 calls
.. during the month of Aprtl IncludIng six fire and rescue and 38
emergency calls, according to
~ the report or Jeff Darst, fire
chief. Vehicles were driven a
total of 1500.7 miles.

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

Plrtt -- · .

• • U.I1UP.M. .

FREE ESTIMATES

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•Mobite Home-

r.-s. LL ••s ,._

992-2371

s.a-.,

Thr• Ftmltt GtrtiQe Sllel 2

525 North Second

1·21-'R·tfn

MOIILJ

_,._ Olt.

KRAFT
SINGLES
ounce

Storm •-• &amp;
Windows

· ·~

16tN. 2M

American (2 Slices Free),
Thick Amer., Pimento or Swis.s

Call Anytime
4-21 -'89-1 mo.

Call 1·800·422·9010
Ell 4051

NoW THRU JUNE 10

~

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Save thousands on
existinJ mortcaae.
No rtfmancin(. A
Mortpae Consultant
Servica

10% OFF
ANY PERM

..,•••.

992-6282

. SYREM:

SALE

. CISTERNS

POOLS, WELLS

IEDUCDON

..uPOif OliO

CARDIIAL
ICE CREIM

AVON Ill •-II Shlrlev Spe•l.
304-8711-1428.

M.,. 131h Md 14th. Second
hoft• put corporetlon In A•
cine. Antlqu-. .,.,., 1ir-. clothio&amp;- dithoo....... k .....

VICTORY
BAPTIST
. CHURCH

INSULAnON

Maltk - Ctrtllintlld ~
Vinyl Siding
Gutter
leplactllletll Windows
llown l•ulalion

1,000 GALLONS

MOOGAGE

OPEN •10•·6:

•

WATER
SERVICE

CARTER'S
PlUMBING
&amp; HEATING

110.'

sso •• snar

Assorted Varieties

AVON - AI ••-- Ctll Marllvn
w• .,.. 304-112-284&amp;.

'

CARD • DRIVER'S UCEISE

Tax collections
total $58,606.16

- Lottft)'

I fM11!v . M.. 12 613. 9-5. At.
141. 375 LoG,.,do Blvd. Bobr

Stille . . Qccludlld

dodtl. 4 lpd. trlni . .QM CM'.

Frozen•Ass't. varieties

wu floors. 20 hours

P•WMIL Pt . .epldlupepplli~
liont at Amtriwe of Pom•O'J'·

GEAIT
BODY SHOP

Middleport Income tax collec-lions from January through April .
totaled $58,606.16, according to
the report presented by Carol H.
. Cantrell, tax administrator, to
Middleport VIllage Council Monday night.
Expenses during the same
period totaled $7,266.62 leaving a
balance or $51,339.54.
Receipts for April totaled
$27.664.26 with expenses being
$1,874.56.
According to the report, the
April receipts were $9,706.30
from withholding; $14,370.87
from Individuals; $2,538.17 from
business; $694 from corporations, and $354.921n penalties and
. Interest.

Help Wanted

'*

•eo 100
pr•ari•l -.tnfar-lon-d
-toK.I.!nt.......,P.O .
lox 1117-VT. Hlhtldo, NJ
072011.
WOrk from homo

Pork 0 lotrtot lllrlno for Tlnl' T01
Ooy
(lour- poaMiont.
-nHithlcillool.,d

.......c...r,- . .........,.,__
boll ofllcillo ..-dod for ........

........ ............ •.U.Wr.
l'orl. Dlttriia olll• _ ... ot
tho -·County Caurt Hou•.

Couple to lv•ln • do molnt•
nMoaworllonApl . ~

Ctll JD4-1711-1104 or !1041711-1*-

�.

'

Seitllltl·

14-The
31

Hem• for

..

-

•

W1dn11ct.v, ~ 10. 1989

Pomeroy- Midcleport. Ohio

s•

LAFF·A·DAY

715

64 Ml1c. MarchandiH

61 Household Goods

Wadnnll~.

ao.ts end
Motors for Sale

.

Pomeroy- . Middapcrt,
Ohio.
. .--·

Mliy 10, 1989

---.

"

BORN LOSER

IOAT REPAIR . Mor.,oy Mor·
cruleer. lpeoitlltt Ftotory
- o d. ........... _ ......

Television
Viewing

8

-Qolllpollo.
Mollllo- 814•
Boot Cklli. Col
211-1171.

Uood p~moondotormodoon tor

Mia Contp~••••fllbunlt--.

........

_

......

ltllu lin

·~ III

ct..-.• wlh

AND '&lt;OU
REALL'( WANT '!'OUR ~UPPER,
'(OU AAI/E TO KNOW f-lOW TO
STARE AT THE 6ACK tx&gt;OR ...

• .,. . . . . .

on Third A.... Ill IWiipalll. GM
--11110Col 114-441-2002 or
114-. .2-31101 oft• 1:00 p.m.

R11IEatate
Wanted
I II.IJOSI. 114-182-

OOVEIINMENT HOMEII F"""

fU ~Foe
IC'UUI'IL
ftopoo, T•
_..,_.
t1 .00

e

Home on Unooln Hll.
roonw
· .. d bath. nice 1ectlof\ 2 ltory,
IPP'OX· 1 M:reof d ... l•d. Cell

814-992-3270.

tta Now Wing

A...r ca1
·
-..
1·118-733-8014
EJd 027UAior ...,..,. llotlngol

3 ••oambridt homewlthl•ge
lot. Mid
W~~t304-773-1111
Drive, -.-·
Good
a&gt;nd.
3 bochom ..,cit. "''Old 150' L
_,,. nlco. Moodo- Adcl·
tktn. clll lift• 1:00 Md w ....
...... 304-1711-7431.
HauN tDr ..... Seaond Str-.
... wv. 2 ........ ~ bodI"'OM''Ia, on• Mth. .... ...,..,
araoe and c.,port .
48. 800.00. Coli 304-77311021 oft«I:OO.

-

l

10·ecr• 3

•••oom home

Ill flood. 304-1711-13111.

a.,d

.. Niae aDUnh'V home. 1.1.-&amp; tri

...... 3--2r..to.2cw

gauge. touthern Maton

County, modtratety priced.
304-17e.2481.

..EJC oond. 7 room Mme. IS
r001111 •d b•h 11t flo.. 2
bpctDOIIII 2nd 11oar. I doll MI.
tul
p•lo.
~ochod gwog&amp; prlcod · 30'o. 3111 ...... h Ill, Hovon. wvo 30.. 182-23111

b•- .........

Hr!IILl l s

bMIIfMIIt. FOd

niMh ,.....
.. _ .... 304-1711-1071.

1111rtmn In *'ol•

menh In Mlclcl•ort· Prom
Ul2. Coll14-. .:l-7717.

llouoo. Moln 11. Ch•'*olt200

mo.
1811.

lmll 2 1ft homo· on 211.
1175/mo.
clop- Col
114-44a.l:ll7 ... 3114-1711480 ook tor Aloh.

'*'•

For ttnt , llrnilhed 3 room
coniQe. one bect'oom. nioe •
cl .... Nice for ooupla No IMIL
Rof. • dopaok. Col 114-44..
2143
3 or 4 br., ... rl'lll

~

town

-co.

Furnlo- 3 - · - ·
Flnl tloor• .,..,.,.
no
Colll14--2211

P••·

2 b o * - Kllahon Wnlollod.
I 1711. por month
clopOIII.
Colt 114-192·217t.

'*'"

Of

count:Jy. Good r•tn-. Cal

oft• I p.m. 114-241-IMI.

pluo ........ Col 11e-•:z.
2371.

12o7n 3 ..... 2 .......... · HOUIHI typt' WirHIDwL
u.-olnnln• l'rl- lor quick

o...rouo 1v1ng. 1 •d 2 bodroom 111.-tmen~e •• . Yll ...
._,., .,d Rlv- A-·

1 -OOfn
..... tor_.lrod.
- · •221
dopook
114W•• pold. Call 114-2411- month.
812· 1119.

Noo 2 llr••

pwmoowh~tlllr...,.lnckoclod)

Cirpel.

-OOfn -

t92·3711 . EOH.

2bo*-'-•lor-. UID.

32 Mobile Hornetr
for Sale

fprnllhld OM l:li.ODIII .....
........... Adub Only. 1200 ...
month. Ullftl• pold. 304-17118780.
lor rWd.
Corp•od. Nloo oon~n~&gt; Lou '*t
toclllioo .......... eon a1e-

••oom.•..."'"•
•••n.
3

66 Buldlng Suppliea

....

2 'nchom • .,....._ ""'
. , l..a., - · •d
tnU pldlu\::;rultl t M•nt•
aiDH to ~hop­
ping. bonko .,d - • For
more lntor-lon con 3114-182·
3711. E.O.H.

2

Home• for Rent

41

nM• ._

lEI.,....

Houae for ..... 2 I»*OOfM.
car..- lot. lyr-a~•• Ohio. elM•

.8101.
*' paal

-. -

e- .... -· 211n ·Concord
:M .... 12o221n ....
' -· 2 .r. .rrc t r i -. 12R
John bo•. l'hono 304-87112143 oft• 1:00.

Hou .. fDr ..... 2bldiOOinhouM
r. -ntry. 11110. pw month.
1100. ........ 704-411- . . . .

114-441-1102.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Deye ..,.. •

aa~h

w•h

a-edit. 3 Ml• out"
lcj••• Rd. Op., I A.M . 1D I
IP~

~

v•.,

Furniture

..,d uaed IJrnlture Md
IIIPMon-. can 114-441· 7572.
PICKENS USED RIRMTURE
Complllte hou•hold furnl1~
logo. 1 I 2 "'"o-Jotrloho. COli
3U·1711·1410. 114·388·
1773, .........

46 Space for Rent

gold•-· ..........

_,whit ..

Pom•ov.

Groom end Suppfr' Shop-Pet

Grooming. All breedt .. . Att
otyr.. lwno Pit Food Doolor.
JuUo Wobb Ph. 114-441-0231.

114-982·1335 or 114· 985·
3111.

.MoRihlf'l
, -Furniture
---1nd C1rp ...
No. One CII'Ptf, dtlaount price.

Stain,_..,, AnloV. Monanto,
- h 0-d SIOin ftol . .o.
two 1oeo11ono 122 Vlond St.
PUintPI._t W.Vo. 304-1711481. U~por River Rood, Ko·
naogo. Ohio 114-441·7441.
Iring lhlo od lor odd~lonol 10
P« coni dloccunt 120 yolo
mlnlm.tml.

l'uro-brod whlto Oormon .,..
;~. puppl•. can 114-311;

--·
_ ....... ... ......
_,

Ttll• 1or ..,., 12o80 two

1978 14XII Bo~. 2 IIi..
""'" bo movod. Ciolll14-37&amp;.
2821.
Moble Home for ....: 1971
~-....... 2 ..... 12o82.
Uke new throudl out belt of
quollly. CoN 114'441-0171.

fOf Solo: 1988 llo21 clcUblo
wldo. 3 br.. utllly 2 ...
~hi . Totll •-=tr~c with hRt
pump. A \o8fV beMiful ho.,., if
Int ........ coli 114--71112

,,_,. on 211 Q1IIDCIII. OH I
ml• from town/ t200 ..., mo.
Coil 114-211-1311

12o80 1 llr.. . . . ./tziO mo.,
.... utllloo ............... ...
onlr. no pet&amp; Cllt 114-44843t1
.
2 - - . turnlo- MOhor
., d di'!Or. orr, •210 por morwh
pluo utili• on d dopook. cal
. , ..... 2-7478.

44

-"• 8:00 p.m.

Moble home l•d wntaaet. Ge1
furnace: ttove. refrltwetoi.
woohor • dlyor. Coli 114-2111211.

121&lt;11 hoc!• troHw lor lllo. 3

br.. Coli 114-441-7444.

u:?.;

1111 12o10
~­
-oodd-·~
114-742·2714 • 1:00 p.m.
or 814-•2·31107 "-•·
2 .,. ••om. -

roof.

3

porohoo,- - ·-llldlng
- ,.
...
..
v.ry good ~Dacltlun.
1 mle off
2411 on ._,_ flood. - n d
. . . . on loft. bol .. Wid..._,,
1171 ...,._ ...... ...-.
141&lt;70 with 71&lt;21 ..... ....
30 ..171-e141 . •·

33

Farms for Sale

411 - · old ...... 4 , . . .
....,......,. 11 mi. - t h on Ill.
11 UI.OOO. Coli 114-117·

12211.

34

a..rn..

Buldlngs

Apartment
for Rent

IEAUni'U L APMTMfNU AT
IUDOET PRICES AT JACK ·
ION ESTATES. 131 Jockoon
Me from I 112 • mo. Willi: ta
ollop .,d - -· ., .......
2111.E . O.H.

-·-· ....-. ...........

Twe Towllhou•A.....rftQetl • 2
lr.. 1 1/ 2 r..r.. CA. . ....

,..,ground.

oloood , .... pool.
t ...h lndu~

w..
•. - · •
lkortlna at 1211

11 ... 311'7· 7110.

por

mo. Col

locond ond Plno. Oolllpollo. CoR
11 4·441·4421. 81 4-441·
4248. or 114-441-2325.

Office speoe .,....e In • 100ft
to be remodelld downtown
-lonof bulcln~ l'orklng
r om.,._ •
Will
buHd to euit. Clll 114-44Pr
0144.

r.:

ell-.

_ _ .... _ 7 1 - · swn..
30e-e7a.
1144.
2 , . _.. ,...,... 1 mol••
1 ........ 7 will. alcllt100 ••·
Cell eft• 4:00 p.m .. 30~ . .23110.
---------

,_on.

i ·;

I 1 : I : IJIJ I I

~ ~ l.}t~:-,jfl,

k

o.... w..rnao: 114-181·4340
Country MaWie Home Perk.

Holl u.- A~ pupploo foo oolo.
Co!ll14-318·!1802. ·

orl14-44$.1781.

Route 33. North of Pom1r0y.
Lcrlo. ......... - ·· . . .. Col
114-892· 7471.

'h - lllbredor end 1f.t •ittany,
Spaniel. Fethtr Germ• lh•
phord. llovo- wormocl. Only
oocf ho rne1 need lnq~lr•.
11.00ooch. calt·44S.ot10.

One ecretriiH• ~for Nnl Rt. 2
Non h. coli oft• 1:00 PM
3114-171-2181.

l

AKC flog- Coolcw lip•
nftula. 2 mel•. Chnpaon•
oolor. Coli 114-982·3001 '-'
fore nodn or •fi•I:OO p.m .

For LeaH

-

Holon4 - • bol• h~

:=:o..~;,:;r.,.':':":i...

fOfd 132 """• 12.2110.01.
Or.. lly liod 1271.00. Two, . . auldret. . 1200.00. A• •c
cond. 30_.171-1133.

62 Wanted to Buy

1- - - - - - - - -

loCX&gt;nd • Pin&amp; OoHIDolo. on ..
- - . . , _ • roft._or.
wm• ,..Oioidtd Dtpaelt end
,.,...,.,. NqUirld, •221.
month. Coli 114-441-42•1.
114-441-4421. or 114-4412328.
.

13

Llvlltodl

-------3 mo. old Filly - . Colt. 3
ooloro. 1210. Col 114-441
3 - oftw I P.M.
Fw Uo: 1 polllll h - d liUIL

'*

........

1Nnt:,..,n work. t7eo Dl' Htt
oHw. Colll14-ll:l-1300.

: ,.-

81

• lilly.

Col .,.. . . - .

31 Loti i Acr11ge

1'1-1•••:&gt;1 f5

t.a -

7:31(1)a.dord lion
a.-oo~: ..._tal

S • I0

e~

'(l iNt ~ NEA , IIIC

1114Nrooone_..,._.,..
41rn.p .•.• ~fln-epll¥•· 4
....- lir. 12211. ....... tor 10
~...r-"P. l'liono 114-HI-

lndlln golcl mine In New
Maxleo.C
Ill ............, The
GIIMIIIIIIII

III

llftllnio .,• .,..
t • Locll , .......,. t.arMM&amp;(

'77 Dodao Men.... 1700.00.
Pliono 3CI4-19.. 1411.
'

1·114-237· 0411. ..., or night.
Aogera8a1ement

Iori·-00.

machine. (NRJ C

Ill .Ill Hardb!W On

1171EI Com4no. -21. A , ...... ok. Alto 11M Cttollno
--~~~~· . , _ ..... look
.. .. "'~ . . .. 114-Ha.3144.

p-

&amp;i ~,L R - Sea

and a1m0sphere unite 10
form 1 globel -Iller

- · ol-lotl.
_.,.
Jllk11·oompl•o.
Call 814-44a.
7121.
· IAIEMENT
WATEIIPROOIINO

Plana! Eattll Jeal8 joins a
rodeo and helps an old

u..o-ro..r

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

cowboy

Clll . . . .

~(NRJ11 :41)

D

w••.,.-• .

-o, .,

OIL ~ILLIUG ~ 1J.£
UlVI~t .. 50I.AR IS 100

EXPWSIVE .. .

'74LTD...,,_,_oo. "77
11r 4 -·
3114-171-1122.

year old boll develope an
lmrnedlatll crush on

'71 Oldo Cull- ......_
304112-2121.

IWnbow ,_,• . AI work gu•
r.n...S. lnt*'or . •d lllderlor.
CII114-H2-2311.

1171 lulluru ltatlon ,_.n
U'7 1. 00. 1171 Su nblo 4
13711.00. '71 For" Vo11

.....,. Troo Trirnmln• ....,..
!8f"D ..I. Clll304-111-1331 .

t700.G0. , two 11711 D.._

1112 camwo Z·28. V·l .,,.,.
mollc. MC. cond. Col 30_.17a.
3111

iiiNtiiNtlle Now
1:011 Cll NIA llalllelball
1:30III • Cll - O f Tile Clna
Arvid must face a showdown
with a IICIIool buully. Q
1:00 e &lt;2J 01 CIIHN New 20

·IJlXLE.AR EURSV IS WSA~,

Rebecca. (Rl Q
Cll ,., fRill llecordt World
Ollllofta (1 :00)
Ill eCil •war•
. hmtmbrance: Tile
Conalu•lo;, Pan 4' AIC
Mlnlllftii(NRI Q
Ill Tile lllncl Reporta link the
brain and the mind 10 the

~ • oolilo tool *lllna
Molt . . . DDmp4Ctldllffttdl¥.
I'Ump . . . .,d torVIco. 30..
. .. .. 3102
'

-'"· -od·--·

porto.eor-Wid-.Fr.--. Coli 304--3421.

ENTIRE'l..Y DI~T
P5RSON.

IIDn'oTV .... Ioo. ...... lllllngln
Zonlh
" "c..-.
' " " " ' - tom~~
otr. 1
brandt.oloo
Hou•

, IHII~nae

•o
r•lira. w.va 30...

J71-23110iilo 114-441-24114.

od...

Immune a y a t t = .
(!) Amelltiln
Ail
American and a
leave
the Geneva conlemce 10
lllke a stroll. Q

I'VE ~ECCME: AN

"

Ill e!II.Jaka I The

F - Two murdlra letd
the duo down a twtated trill
of dometlk: violence. Q
IIJ Left)' ICing Llvll

1 ·

cr..,

11J MOVII!: 8candllllheat

1877 GMCfrl.•l&amp; 11ft. oklm.
-oolwlhlwllkouiCII 814-lla.OII oft• ......

1171 Chwy, - - / .310.
Colll14-~1031.

with, . .
Julv 1. , .. .. wv.
30 .. 17.. 2.1 Olilo 114-2~

.

82

11114 F..d holt 1on - - d
llilft .... ........ 304-1717118.

Motorcyclea

babyaltllng, Christine
queationa har maternal

.::=~~Y ·

BARNEY

'

CAAT!R'I PWMIING
AND HEoiiTINCI
Cor. Fourth •d Ptne
Gollloolo.Ohlo
...... . ., ............ 1144414477.

V.ns• 4W.D.

77 Decfgo- •4711. 304-178.301.

1:30e&lt;2J 1111 Nlahl Coull Art.(

Plumbing

a. ..eetlng

1177 ...... . - bod V·l. .,,..

~:;..-,::, t2.!"00· firm.

(NR) {1 :o40)

I

10:00 ~ 700 Club

rM PLUMB
PROUD OF YE,
PAW!!

I GOTTO 60
DO MY JURY
DUlY NOW.

• &lt;2l 1111 Quantum LIIP

Sam ll•pe Into the file of an
IIWkwllrd 17 year old hoi
rodder In 1981 . Q
'

HE'S MY MAW'S
SECOND COUSIN'S
NEPHEW·IN·LAW

HOW DO

YOU KNOW
HE AIN'T?

Cll L8lha Plo IIOwlar'• T(l) NIWIW&amp;b:AI

MAW

111 e111 W'-Y Nawquar
wr1gg11a out of hli arrnt. but
hit - . continue. Q
e1111 MM~~D Hal
IIJI"'*'IIIIewa

Electrical
S. Refrigeration

10:20 Clllaltll .. GlnJn
10:30(1) NIA ..........
Ill Of Tnllh Look at the

.................'"'*·,....
OolllpdloEI_.. .... Ioo. Eioot·
ric motor • • • tervloa.
AIIID-I&lt;Io .rocorrc
~~~
117 ..... 11. 114-441-2312.

lxpa!lrntnla pro~­
It aqulvllent 10 anergy. Q
ill New Cot y

rop-

11:00•~ III

Ill 1111 .....

BERNICE

-

J .• J - · ........
2411-1211.

BEpEOSOL
..

lw._.
..... .,"'

•

ft.RW--Ico.Poolo.

oltterne, wellt. lmmedlet•
Colll04-171--

44fl- P.M.

.....
......................
-ftOD0•40DO ......
--~ Wotor -II••

""·Cil

..........
\.,:f&amp;:·-"'
E
•

CIMI-·-Col.,....., . .

...

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

'

UiihDIIIery

".....

Col .,..

.. _

1t'1 a wry gODd way to

HYBttfll our product."
I

I

_V

P~I NT NUMBE~EO LETTERS IN

!

~~~~~~8~Nl~~E ~E.:TE~.J

THESE SQUARES

I I I I I ·I'
..

.....11

Notml
+Q51

•u

•t8742

Everyone at the table knew that
East's reopening one no-trump WEST
EAST
showed only 11-14 high-card points. + 10 96 z
+J17 s
9 K 10 9 6
Therefore it was not cpmpletely sale • 8 ·
• KJ 3
for West to bid over two hear.ts. 1 . • AQ 10 s
would say to West: "Live a little, even • K 7 4 3
dangerously. Bid two spades.' That
SOiffll
contract would have socceeded, but
+AK
East-West found a smaller SU&lt;I'efiS
.AQJHI
when declarer Willy Nllly mangled
.QI092
the play in two hearts.
Willy won the spade aoe, cashed the
Vulnerable: East·West
spade king and led the club 10. West
Dealer: South
played small.. East won the aoe, returned a club to West's king and got a Wnt
Nor!lt Eool
club ruff. Then he played a diamond to
Pau
1 NT
West and ruffed another club. Declar· P...
Pass
Puo
er ruffed the next diamond, but be bad Pas&amp;
lost five tricks and had one more to
Opening lead: • 10
lose to East's heart king. One would
think Willy would do better by playing
A·Q of hearts right away, but the de· L,th·e·a·c"'ti,_o.n"'b.y"w"'es--.-t.""t;"'
··v~e"'n""th"'o"'u"'gh,....,b,-!ls
fense stili geta the same six tricks.
partner's reopening no-trump did not:
The winning play lor declarer Is to promise spade support, West •ould.
firSt disrupt communic;ations between risk a two-spade bid; gambling that his
the defenders by playmg a· diamond. side can make a part-score. HiuingleEast can still get one club ruff, b~t be ton heart suuesta that South may suewill have no entry to partner's band ceec1 in two hearts.
for the needed second ruff. South can J,_J.,..,,_•JMy,by""/Jrldp' ud
theo play A·Q of hearts and make •Joco~~Jo•ConiU..W'IrtrltiWl rntUIII•-·
eight tricks.
~~&gt;o ~II! Onnlll Joco~~yJ ... •••U.blo •t
The more. lm_po
, rtan_t lesson here is Jlflb/IM«&lt; by

.AS

.,

Boll.,..

1'111,..-

OI'I'ERPRISE .....

@ - · NEWSPf.PIIII

·CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

5 Withdraw
8 Highbrow
7 Legal

ACROSS

1 Passable
5 Junta

10 At the peak

profession
11 "I Love a - ' 8 Summer
12 Poet
slpper
Alexander
9 Trevino
11 Confined
13 Menu
15 Swiss river
offering
18- plexus I!Z!de:l!::
14 Belween
17 Type size
Yeeterdey'e Anewer
·Rosalynn
18 Lose one's 23 Otis
34 Red
and Barbara
shadow
lnvenllon
or Irish
18 Unemotional 19 Fortlfl27 Oaled at 35 Road
18 Work unll
calion
28 Jellifled
covering
21Trpe
20 Narrow
31 - of Nod 37 Nigerian
o bear
valley
32 Nelwork 31 Faucet
22 Nol sloping 21 Brazil
33 Horned . 31 Pub
24 Dismounted
river
selection
25 Ball
28Badger

cousin
28 Auto design
28"You -My
Lucky Slar"
30 Gridiron
number
32 Lasso
33Rearward
31Goodbye
In Soho
40Ushered
41 ~xam type
42Redueed,
wlth 'down

~~ard
1 Weaken
2 Slouan

3 Bribe .
4 Free time

OAILYCRYPTOQU(Jli!S- Here's howtoworllll:

lito

AXYOLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

-.~
I
' ·

r.~Mi
.......

14

r frM

•l

91428, C-11nd, OH 44101-3428.

01. . . llleJ 21....._ •&gt; a..m,

youma1&lt;11 a grand glltUrelfiUWing a&lt;&gt;
wit tuefly !hal this penon thlnka highly of

and thoughtful- ... toolt !hal you you.
will b e - lo tkllllully uee today to win UGITTAIIIUS INev. ZI-Deo. 2'1) You
ovw to Y"iK ...., of thlo;iklng llld will runctron much more •flwc1Nely In
doing thlngl.
but!- tltuatlonl today Nyou .., be
CAHCIII I..._ 11-.lulr II) N you·.. objective rather than -tlonal. Stand1
_ , hllllllit about _.,ng a lavor back a bit Md llillyZ8 tlllnge logically. '
from a lrttlnd who can help you with CAI'IIICOIUI (Del. ........_ 1t) Strl¥e
aomelhlng rather conlldenllar, II"• time to be ag,_ble In ra1a11on1 with
to....,.. your thinking. Your pal can be mile today. One way to kiiP .,._ In
truated.
'
the hOUMiiotd Ia not to .,.., Ida , . _
~0 l.rutr ....~.. II) c-p.. Jton• will on ttnanclal mau...
hlvunanormoua-upon,ouraut· AGU...,.I,_IO l'elt. II) e.1y In
loollanciM!IIudetoday,aotryto- the
paulblllly thel you
,.,..,.... with upbeat paople. Don't might
trille loo _, laly.
lor them to find you, go find them.
How a,., u-lnclllnalklnll -..c1 Pill
VIMO lAIII- a-11p1 II) Today you rnthe.n.MO!Janclyou'lbealltu,.nd

i11Y111Conll1llar

11:10

--

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

lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.

:..-:.:.'!::.a::·:::.:= =· ll'elt... ....,
IIll--u..,

.......

.... pat11t could opan lor !IOU In the
year - • mlghlmalle n p0111111e
11 fUIItll 1 IICrit llllbltlou. Your target
will
be I 11-, r11her ......lellltlc. ' .

TAUIIUII...... 57 1 Ill Caildltlot18
1ao1c r--.ror !IOU today...,.,.,_.
tiMnCIII V1lu
or"IIIOUicl ...... 10 lllkl 10
Glmlll.

,_. , n a

' or

l1llllllngL

r-.

clay...,.,..
11M,.,.,...,.

lhelra. Vou'l- the lolly of making I
big IUIIOVW nothing.

~ I..,._ II DeL II) uae ll'fltle
-011111011111 with whom you'l
be ...._ tolley ...... naiiiiiJr or bullllll•llu. Tllaywtlbelarmon~elllo11¥11 ihan '-ling r.roaru~• ..u....
10 aane (Oul. 111
vou could.
lie Ill flit I PI
•• IIII1Hflu today.,.,

-In,_-

might be - t o d a y lftQII*II·

1ng 10111111*11 11111era11' lor you -

your-IIGOI-IIId.
.. . . .
~Wid 11) ...., _
. -lkW~MIIIIaoaldnaUIItp101a1 .,... ll'i · w~~~a~~ !1011'1 11gon
111 om~~,.~~~y. vou tl1otll!l .._ 1111ou1

cr ..

_, yulllilll'a bllllrrdliglfl. lend flit
'lfiUI1 Alti'O-GriPh .... dlalloll8 lor the
!111m - .
year ...... llr II Ill lfl .1 10 Milo.
.QriPI, o/o IIIII :18&amp;111 ...... P.O. - · - - · you lflo\lgllt
I, - . nollcecl
.

:#

Nt !IIIII II liuld ol• dUUOf

••

11:41 (I) Cl I J8

11:00ii5j ......~......-1....1111

K~1~:-

;lp.
.
.
l ,...,
~

....

TITolllllllgl11114

41

Ill 1£1

11111(81111•••

-aa:::...........

&amp;:,:iltrlld I '

'

Single letters,

apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinte. Each day the code letten are different.

•

CR\'PTOQUOTE

•,

s-••

your·

1.ooo. 2.ooo ............,.,.

t ,.. , . ,., "'

•

A
V

o.....rvtoe

..............

• ·: • Cii a1._.......,.

ft Complele rho chuckle quotod
by filling i n the mi ssing words
.l-....L......J you develop from 1iep No. 3 below.
•

e1111.._ eonr........

-·

7111 4Ch
• Coll14-.....

111 • •

(J)IIgnOff

81

- - 1111....... t11D. ....

I.eCil

........

'"•
orRldon ...
U-- olootrlci.,.
a ...- . 304-171-1711.

I

.FOR RELEASE WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1111

PalluaN1w1

Ill Mljor I •11111• llaHball
11J Mui'dar, 8lia WIOie

IWEEPEII.,J -lng mochlno
oopolr,
d ouppll•. Pick
up .,d cl6ery, 0.11 V.CUum 1
Cle~n•. one hllf mHe up
Oocrgoo C - Ad. caH 114441-0214.

.,,_,.. u.80o.oo.

L.--1.....1.......1-

Noted in a small-town
paper: " The lire was quickly
brought under control . but not
before the building had
burned to the - !"

regains hla pride. Q

•1111 MOYII!: Tile

---------

'IWo 1174 rrloliilpo ono UOO. 00
•• It ""' tilt otr. 1100.00.
1110 IIJio qoen onglno
ltoQ.OD. 30_._1111.
.

•Cil Gnlwtllll Pallia Ben

s t - hlm1811 for hla first
111

eo,:.,., _ .. '"""""" drf
·

(NR) (1 :34)

01 un101vee1

Mr•llriM Search !or • ioat

1mprovemen ..
..

,..,....... ....... 1 tor.. · -

2• J .... -.-""'""~
........
~---OJ: While
..... Cll ., ...... ....
I:IOP.M.

oau ••

IIINitlhiCoull
ill Cnlak and CIIIH

. IMI-Iol or ,..,._er.r wir-

wo-J 11 ""•· CA •
..... lief. Col81"-........l
A...

IIIA.f.~t;l

t•.

74

llfll. . . . . . .. ...... for 1

lluMn\iJ:"
nrn
Lo•o

eCIJUIAToday

ICN~rNS

TtiE I&lt;EY IS
uNr&gt;f~ THE MAT.

..:...;-oH;:OI-:I-:III:---

n o - fief. •o.,.. , ..... Col

Ollloo
_.......

ifMPTATION

III._...,_ Tonight

...

I I ill ' ' ' " I 'I I '

71 Auto'a For Sale

61 Household Good•

(J)IIchollletlc lportll
AIMIIoa (0:30)

Jlm' o Odd Job' o. . .. . . . .
....... point ln. rooflnll corp...
bu Uclng. daR• work P,..
• ...- • . Coli 814-37.. 2411

84
;

....... .,--,.,..
p----"'• =-.. .
.....
....---.-,.....
CJoroae• , .._

~ looct; •d
Needt •hllltt end

11711 Oldo 11.

7:30e&lt;2J Faltllly Feud

oppoftTUNIT~, E~~IE..

1177 For4 lliu.-l*d. 2nd
ewner.• 7.0001'11-. MWtlr-.
..... CX&gt;n&lt;lllori. 114-742-2171
or 114-•:z-3314.

73

Merlli.r llll r;,t•

7:011 (I) Andr Gllfllth

20 por..,. lAf-on Zonkh

01 304-1711-1311.

FIWnlollod op!. • 1 lr.. 243
Joolloon IItke tz21 o mo.
11111111• pold. Col 114-4414411 oftw 7 P.M .

, :00 Wid 3:011-

I

,

.J86

Ill a-N
OMIIrlniVIca

r--Tf1AT MLIJT IE

..1111 l'ollmlno TXL lolcl-ol
- · 304-171-3771. •

" I
.I .I .I .

By Jame• Jaceby

JloneriiM

Campers

·•

1-I...,:T:...::E,..;N:.:.·..;.G;,...:,I,..·-II :.·

BRJDGE

ill Top C.rd ·

1813C,.I-I-71.000

mlloo. Till, AM.f'M _.,.,
tru .... 304 7'73-1110 Htwas

':=n

.Tr£·.
c-pany
0

'

t

A woman began a writing usignmant by visualizing an un·
conventional scene. It began: " Thl nousa Ia quiet, the
cnlldren are NOT at HOME."

'- eo as WhMI 01

.,...

l~

&lt;·•

Newattour

_.11...., chlomoo_,._
w1111 1'238- 71 ft11 w.o.w. .
·~-. for Oodl•· 304-1711-

2

1 1

,;;.R.!:A~G::...;.;.N3. Y.....-lj
.:.
I I 1 I

~Ill (!) MuNtl/l.alnr
Aflalr

Only

11 .. H2·11132 or 114-1141733

s.rv.... ~~

241-"

:;r.:..'=~":'.ro~

e

-.._
--------:-:-•
tor
Covllw.
uood - · Ml 010. Coi

1173 23 fl. Holldir R..,blw.
loll oontolnod. UIOO. Col
114-19:1-7479.

1112 ...... llogol Lionllod. 4
•or. - 4 1 - -. aoft-ro
1:00. . . . 171-38:11.

·or-:.:eooo,... eorr .,_.

For lAMe: A.Piftment. nMir·
doalr•od. 2nd ftoO&lt;. corn«

00• · 1 Yf. gtUrOIII- Porto
•
1 -. 1480 - - Ctii142411-- ar 114-2411-1123
oft• 8 P.M.

r

' SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Employ - Round - Henh - Picket - NOT II HOME

alllewCounlrJ
1:31 (I) One Day ~t ... Time
7:00 ~ Our ltouM
~ PM Magazine

· :;79-;;t-M=ot~ors=-:H"'o=m=,.::::::,-

1111 ...... Contu..,. ..,_.,.
eutom.tic. AC, oruile tilt,
AMIFM l t -. Col 17114-1710.

Interior.

unurv kDO . .,1.:30'•10'•1'
..... 1·111-•r olclng door.
1·--1-EAECTED·
IRON HORIE kDIII. 114332-1741.

o.

Puovl•. born Moroh 10. Mot._

2 .... ...... n-·lhcwpot.

iFurnlohod olfl-011· 107 ...
CX&gt;nd ............. ·•110.
. . . . both. Coll14-441-4411
oftw71'.M.

~i~lta&lt;:'.t:'."'

tick--

AKC Aeg' red C~•·IP•Iel
pupe,l t150 •ach. FIAI-b1Dad1d
u•·NIIIoterod Chow ,...,./ 1100
Eecli. Coli 114-38a.llt0.

49

1weet pottto pl ...1 ,..dtonwto
pi- for .ro. CoH 114-742·
2220 or 114-742·2771

.. 1871 FOfd LTD, all 3114-1711'7 111.

211·4210.

·--·-

r

UC E l 0 0
1--,:;~s:-:ilr::'=-,I;::...;I...=..TI-1

01 lhowlllz Today
Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
11J Calloon Ellpllll

or

1D

1-1

bowQ

(J)R-.g

III ·• Cll A11C Newa Q
Ill lolly lleotric
(!) 3-2·1 Comact Q
8 eCCBINril
•1111 WKRP In Clnctnnali

Owoiio ·~ A-1&lt;1•. UnlIll. Turko .0. .,.lh

··-:z.

1 11

animal rights.

1:311~= Nightly Newa

=·

§lliU. Clll 14-378-2220
o..I7S.I711. ·

(0:3o)
Ill Dagraaal JUnior High .
Caitlin, as tdltor of the ·
IIChool newa~r, takes up

Ill,_-01 Life

TAANIMISSION
·:
robuiH
oR

Chwy

w-.

Coil 1·

• 271/ mo. Comm..rll lot wllh
builclnt. OOrnlr 2nd • If~
mor• COM8GI OWMr Jud'f

!t

11e3- .. sw. lopd.
aon - · *oo. 31
•oolont-lon.lo•11110. COl 114-

1117 Momo Corio ._.port.
!_ur_rnc!ll· 301 high ou~

pp1

Pl ..o tor •I e. w.nt•: l!laponolble~ tD IRUmt tmel
mon
fllyl'lltntt. See Loct~lly.

54 Misc. Merchandise

1u1,. 1•11 · bro. Pl. PW.
PL. AC. T
CC. AM"M·
/C..-. t11.100. Coli 114441-1411.

1981 Pontloc aonn...o SIE.
25.000 miOL loodod lnckoclng
looto-•o. prloo
-lobi&amp; 311..878-31311 - ·
lor Ch•f• 8:00em to ll:OO pm.

Shih

•c

IIJIIIHia
1:011 Cll Alee

,._ol••·•cvcjolnto..l
1YPM· •uvrn\•--n•,.,

1.74 ---~ Von 1181
Chwott;:•;;;:r1aw. C.. .,._

68

drlle. ._... . lo.Ww.hfliont
pump, 8 N Fordtr81Eltor, mtnu,.
lpreedeu. oiiMr· flll reed¥'
......- . H -' • Fwm Mo·
•
Ad
chin._,, ftt. 124 , . . , _ ..
JocicoOft. OH or ooll 114-21&amp;
1·' -1•4.•--..,..--,- - - : '!Wo 9mo. olclloglotwodonglloh 1.A MF lrociO&lt;. cloc. ..,,..g
rod
Ono 9 mo. old
~
.....,_ •glohbluotlckmoJo. • - · - " ........
Ono 8 mo. old - - toll 114-441-IMIL
lick fomolo. Coif 114-44a. T o - oott• with cullr...
1413.
lor/ ,221. llprortt311.DO. 2
WHAT ' S SO DIFFERENT bolllng-•/MD.OO.Coii814ABOUT THE HAPPY JACK :J.X 281-1117.
FLEA COUA~lll IT WORKIIII Contuovl~~r-tor3,. _ . ,
Conteint NO · IYntMtlc py,.
tlwoldoiBipWElLCASH FEEO J lioor.,.tl121. caR 814-44a.
7732.
'
D NORTH PRODUCE .

luy or Sell. Allt•ine Antiques,
1 1 24 E. Moln Sir.,, Pom•ov·
Moun: M.T.W 10•.m. eo tlp.m.,
a.n.... 1 !\) lp.m. 114-892·
2121.

71 Auto'

14.,..,_, •2700. llllonaoa
" " -· t:IOOO. FOfooloor-o.
CIII 114-Ha. 1270.

poclol
ew
·tzu pu • to I
homoo. AKCroglotorod. roodV to
AKC rogiltorod
go In 3
Shlh-llu molt llud 0 ..,rco. CoR
814-31a.IIM.
N

IIIII

e1111 MIDDY Daya

~~30 :"'~.:::"..,.!
ooiMri«L otondorcl ckolohOL

·"
' -· .,... 1204Jimi1••,.......
4•1d77.
Llnollool.......

,._.i.,

For Rent: Urge on.cw ......

._lr....

Colli·---·

Drogonwynd canory Koilnol.
and lln. . lnd Hlr'MI.,en ldtt1n1. Chow ttud ..,.
vlco. Collt14--3144oftor7
P.M.

Com-.ro-1100-e
fMt. eorner leclond ., d Pine. 140.00. All warlc wllllolco bolt
Ample p•tdng In , . ,, carl oh, 304-418·1111.
I U - 44a.4241. IU-441·
2321. or .814-441-4421.
53
Antiques

r.- of llultlnt on oorMr Df

l.oooll¥.

.... _
..... '-Ono. lio. . , _ - · ~- IN~
-· .,._..... 0117,

81 Farm E~pment

Peta for Sale

66

A 600P STARE CAN PEEL Tf.IE
PAINT RI61-!T OFF THE DOOR!

Auto Partl

I~========:;:====:;===~ Uood
IUDOET
•

VVh•'1 so different ebOut the
H~~ppyJocll :J.X FlooColwmh
worbtiiConWlnt. no ..,.ntheltic
pymlrcMdol A • o food •
Supply. 389 W. Moln St ..

Dfstww..h•r ·•eo.oo. Deep·
, _ ., oo.oo. - ......

Ma.. e home tar ...t. Rwf. •
Dop.
Col 114-441082'7 aft• 2P.M. or.nytlmeon

"'l'!'J

-••a

ftofrtooiotor·whll• 2 • · · 171..
Rtfrf~ator·white; Hotpoint
FF-t1IO. fhfrlgenlor·
Av•c•do ; FF-117&amp;.
R""l-or-2 .....; FF Hoi¥. .
Gold-Like New t2&amp;0.
ftolrl-or·oldolrr
1171: .. efrt....ot-FF; whtt•
tii.OO. QE - -· 181. Kon·
mo,. Wahtt· til, Kenmore
- · t711. Wlllrlpoal.,_ 181.
Whirlpool
-30• ln.
- etKtrk:
....
llh ..,.,•.•300~
rongo.Ho"'ott Oolcl-t71. 30 ln.
t• rw~g• t71, OM A1n gedDuble own·•171l, 30 ln. g•
, . ... whit•tlll, 1111:._. Ap·
p~. 178 Uppw Rlvor Ad.
Coli 114-44e.7318.

Roonw tor ,..•..._. • month.

______

llpoclol ... _,. .... 1 0 otbrow4oc8 ....-H
I
n o --·,~
o. · ~
of
6 plu_g_oo
Aluminum facln • J.NJd
lnelde • au_..._..... • ......,
3411n.
• -. 1goldo-,..2ol,
2o5. 2o10. •ZJc12 •o~r-mro ..
Coli oftor I p.m. 114-441-1772.

R •frlger etor· whltt· ·• 75 .

wwe aven1. KM' 1 A!PPII1nce.
217 E. 2nd St., ~m«oy .

Fw,.Md room. t100 / mo. AI
utlllloo DOid. Shwo """ 811
,:....:.:
loCX&gt;nd .....

ConcrMe blodcl- eH 11Ht- Yll'd
ardeflvery. Muon..,d. Geflip()o
llo Block Co., 1231/ 2Pino8t.,
~lorro. OH. can 114-441-

Hours t-1.

Uood _.... .... W•hln. dl'f·
... .nge~, Nfrigeratora. rnicro-

aortlng .. t1211.- Oollo
Holol-114-44$.-

Bullclng-•lillo
Block. brick. plpoo. win- .. llntoiL •c. Claodo Wintoro, Rio Grondo. OH. COR
114-241-1121.

P.M. Mon. llru . .. 114-4410322.

46 Furnished Rooms

.. . . . ., roa1111 with coolin•
Alto Trlilw AI lloor. ..o.
CAll oftw Z..m. 304-7735811 . M11on WV.

•Ia Fo.~•'•MobHeHom•P.-k.

to

I(OUR E'r'ES HAVE TO FLASH
LIKE THE BEACON FROM
A LI6~THOU5E!

• Acceaorlea

oon
..ion,
oloo310 -nd r...n "'
rol•.
304-176-11114.
..h :011oo Oolo bWioh 171.00.
20
1410 7
Mollo fonco ' rodo.
l&lt;4
67
Muaicel
Inch• high 140.00. 3114-1713771.
ln.trumenta
Complete film devtlop,.,enr
oqurp,.,, 1111.00. T••'"r
c.,opy ond llblo 1100.00. Co
PIANO FOR SALE. WANTED:
oft• 4:30PM, 30ll-171-17114. IM-II&lt;Io porty ,. _ , .
wnoll montlil¥ li0¥fti0nlo. loo

Nlce•d•llf'~r1or2p. .a,.

·plloo-•
.,.,..............

76

3114-M~

dllu•• TV tntenna. -.rfMII

~UN6RI(

IF

WDod 1nd ...-11 w_....g m•
chtn.-y on d:fepl., in our th.w

Uaed

ew

r

1

1

(J) ........... ' 'lllbeU' I

ltlechrl\«''tt. ru,. Ull:e n .....
• 188.00 • h or ternw .,..
· -· 394-1711-4411.

-ln.,.,ondToolo.
31:11.

•

. _ llowl Of Sporta Tllvlli

.mabile hame. Also tntlque
sell•. Call 114-112-2028.

room. bt.,d ntmet.

........

1:00 ~ llonMu: The Loet

,... Solo: R..,l_or ftom

Rllnbow vacuum

WED .. MAY 10
EVENING

11AU IOAT UQIIIDATIOIIII
Hvdra tpartt. PrleH fronr
t2111.
...,. - · coru,.
..~.,

•80.
" e~~..,.
"' ""' 1110.
-.
1410."
1t71
ChowyT....,_
1971 four wh!;el ..,. a..y
Truck, UOOO. 1877 ....,_,..
1200. 114-742· 3073""1'-

The Deily Sentinel- Page 1 6

••

EZW

CRNDT

ORE

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FOB

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LAVV

ORE

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AX
RVB

XFQFTW,
KFD

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Y........_,••

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XFDEFCF8F

c.,,.,,.aa.a IT IS A JMN'S oe '

FAULT, IT IS FROM LACK Of USE.

GROWS TORPID IN OLD AGE. - SIMI
SON

I.IJ

.....

'·'

�...

.

&lt;'

'

Pomauv-Milicllport. Ohio

.
'

·PLEASER
10 POUND
·MEAT
SALE

We Reserve The Riehl To

Limit Quantitie~

.

_ .. - . ~TORE HOURS
·Monday thru Sunday
8 At"·10 PM

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose;
Giants take
over top spot

Pick3 '
140
Pick 4
7416
Super Lotto
4-l 0.14-19-25-44
Kicker 299077

Page 6

•

BACON

298 SECOND ST..
POMEROY, OH;

Low In mid 40s. Chance ol rain
80 percent. Friday, high In mid
~Os. Chance ol rain Is 60 percent.

10 LB. PICG.

PRICES EFFECnYE SUN., MAY 7 THRU SAT., MAY 13, 1989

Vol.40, No.&amp;

Co

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, May 11. 1989

r hted 1989

2 Sect tons. 1 6 Pages. · 26 Centt
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Meigs fit·m gets grant; to expand operatiOns
CHICKEN
LIVERS
.U.S.D.A. CHOICE

10 LB. PICG.

$ 89

.

$ 90
T-Bone Steak •••• ~~. 3
GUNNOE'S OAK RIDGE
CHICKEN lEG
.
.
.
89&lt;·
Sa usage ••••••••••••• ~.. . .
LB

By NANCY YOACHAM
announcethata$65,000CommunSeaiiDel New• Staff
ity Develop1flentBiockGranthas
Ohio Director of Development been awarded to Meigs County to
David J. Baker announced some help Twin City Machine and
good news during his Wednesday
Welding Company expand Its
afternoon appearance In Pome- operation.
·
roy. Baker, who Is currently
Of the block grant fqnds to
Involved In a week-long trip Twin City Machine and Welding,
through several counties in Ap- $601000 will be loaned to the
palachian Ohio, scheduled his company at six percent Interest
visit to Pomeroy to present the for the next 15' years. The
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com- . remaining $5,000 goes to the
merce with .a check for a $5.000 county for administrative purtourism grant' from the Depart·
poses, Baker said.
ment of Development.
·'ljhe block grant funding, comHowever, Baker also took the
blned with other funding sources,
Including the Meigs County Reo~=~~~w~h~lle~ln
to

volvlng Loan Fund and a loan
from Noble County of revolving
loan funds which that county was
unable to spend, Will enable Twin
City Machine and Welding Com·
pany owner, Robert M. (Mike)
Haley, to expand his market Into
the radiator, gas and specialty
trailer areas. Expansion of the
company will help create five
jobs and retain six.
Theuseofrevolvlngloanfunds
from Noble County was arranged
by Kim Shields, Meigs County's
director of development.
Director Baker dutlng Wednesday's presentation, and

QUARTERS

HORMEL

Pepperoni .•••••• :;.~z~ •• 99&lt;

10 LB. PKG.

CAROLINA PRIZE

Bacon
................
~~ ••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$11 9
Chuck Roast •••••••.
.
BONELESS .
$.1· 79
Rump Roast ••••••·•••
SUPERIOR
$1 29
Lunch Meats ••••L:.•••

ASSORTED

PORK
CHOPS

LB..

LB

SUPERIOR ·1.2 OZ. P~G.

10 LB. PKG.

.

'

PORK
STEAK
10 LB. PKG.

Frank1e W1eners •.•• ·

90

$

COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE .
RIBS·
10 LB. PKG.

90

U.S. NO. 1 ·RUSSET

$299
$
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
15 LB.

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ......... ~... Sl s~
PARKAY QUAR!ERS

'

· .

Margar•ne ••••o:-.~:•• 2

$

'

147

oz.

'

$689

lillllt I Ptr c..,_ .._ Ooolw At

,....,..s.,..
.. -.-s.... ..,
....... .., 11, , •••

BATH TISSUE

LEMONADE

99&lt;
,..... s.,.. ,..

$139

..G.

,....Siptr ..

u.tt I Ptr c..,_ .... 011r At

.._ 41R1r At
IIIHS...,.., 7,
tin 1111• .., 11, 1...
'
'
.

1illlll I Ptr Cup

8IH .... .., 7

*• Sit. .., n. ""
....

- - ·-

,....;- Local news briefs--

WHITING
· FISH

Reveal cause of man's death
Respiratory arrest due to drug and alcohol Intoxication has
been listed as the cause of the April 28 death of Kenneth D.
Breeding, 36, of Middleport.
That was the ruling of Dr. Ray Pickens, coroner, according to
a report on the Incident from the depar1ment of Meigs County
Sheriff James Soulsby.
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Little reported that he was called
to the Friendly Tavern at 3:11 p.m. on April 28 when an
employee · and some patrons became cOncerned a,bout the
condition of Breeding.
Chief Uttle said the employee told him Breeding had been
silting at the bar, appeared to have passed out, and was moved
to a booth. About 15 minutes later fvhen Breeding failed to
respond to some efforts by another person to rally him, the
Middleport Emergency Squad was alerted and the ppllce
called.
,
Breeding was taken' to Veterans J11emorlal Hospital by the
EMS where he was pronounced dead on arrival.
No local funeral services were held'. It was reported that the
body was taken to Kentucky for burial.

10 LB. PKG.

90
COIIIIIY miS

-

Area' Development Committee.
Eliason also reported at Wed·
nes!lay nights meeting In the
New Haven City Hall Building,
that the new state representative
In Ohio is very supportive of the
venture, but that the Med for
eslabllshing a strong case Is
extremely important.
George Nichols and Frank Lee,
Mason County Development Au-

McDonald home leveled by fire

4 ROLL
7,

By JULIE E. DW..ON
Seatlnel News Staff
The director of the Public
Utilities Commission Is ready to
have a public hearing at any time
regarding the establishment of
toll free calls between 773, 882,
and 992 excha.nges In Meigs and
Mason counties, according to
Lenny Eliason, who is in charge
of that committee for the Bend

'

6401

..

GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PICG.

90

AIDS bill

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP))
State senators, sailing uneasily
in uncharted waters, Wednesday
adopted a comprehensive bill
setting guidelines for testing for
acquired Immune deficiency syndrome and requiring positive test
results to be reported to health
authorities.
The bill, described by its
author, Sen. David Hobson, R·
Springfield, as the most compre·
hj!nslve AIDS measure In the
nation, also requires the Ohio
Department of Health to es tabthorlly, have prepared a draft Ush programs to counsel and
which outlines tt\e needs that the treat AIDS victims, educate the
Bend Area feels are important publiC, and survey the population
for the establishment of the toll to prevent further spread of the
free access between the Incurable disease.
communities.
The bill, a product of more than
EXPANSION PLANNED- A $6$,000 Community Development
In regard to a bend area two years of study, was sent to
Block
Grant from the Ohio Deparlment of Development will
festival, It was noted that an the House on a 22·8 vote, but not
enable Robert M. (Mike) Haley, at left, to expand ltls business at
"umbrella effect" might be most before skeptical senators dealt a
the TWin Clly Machine and Welding Company. Congr(Uulatlng
successful. To carry this idea out blow to AIDS victims by ellml·
Haley
on his successful grant application Is David J. Bat.er,
would mean having one event In natlng language that would have
director
of the Ohio Department of Development. Baker vllllled
Mason on one weekend, the next given them handicapped status
Pomeroy
Wednesday where he announced the grant for Twin City
event In Pomeroy on another and forbidden discrimination in
Machine
and
Welding.
weekend, until all the communi· the areas of employment and
ties In the area have had a housing.
particu tar event.
Sponsors of the amendment
In order to maxl'llize public .. that passed, 16·14, claimed the "We have the most comprehen- the Division of Communicable
awareness, the group has chosen handicapped provisions would . sive piece of legislatiOn of Its type Disease at the Ohio Department
a new name for the organization. create ." a lawsuit waiting to in the nation," he said.
of Health. "It's a step In the right
The group will now be known as happen," and would wreak havoc
"We're glad It passed as It
direction."
the Association of Communities with employers, schools and did," agreed Ellen Abraham of
Under the bill, Halpin's agency
Together, or A.C.T. A committee others bound by state and federal
Catholic Charities In Cleveland,
would be required to develop risk
is now working on a graphic to go equal opportunity laws.
representing Ohio Action on
reduction and educational proalong with the new acronym.
Hobson said he would seek AIDS, a coalition of more than
grams, regional outpatient treat·
The group Is working on restoration of the language In the 60 organizations.
ment programs, pllot programs
promoting Itself through radio, House, but would not try to
for
long-term care, a confidential
"We're happy the bill passed,"
newspaper, newletters, and pos· dictate the terms of the bill there. said
partner
notification system.
Dr. Thomas Halpin, chief of
slbly television, and the development of an eye catching logo and
graphic will help to associate the
prganlzatlon .wtth the public.
Becky Stein reported that the
recent highway development
meeting was a success. She noted
that the people really want the
Rew four lane highway. Three
corridors have been proposed but
corridor one Is the only one that
·would really benefit the bend
area, she said. The communities
of the ~nd area have to make It
known that easy access to
whichever of the · corridors
chosen Ia the Intended goal, It
was emphasized.
. The posllbllity of coordinating
a Bend Area craft cooperative
for both sides of the river was
also discussed, With examples
noted of the Middleton Doll
Factory and the Oltlo Valley
Bear Factory, The fonnatlon of a
craft cooperative would not only ·
bring money Into tile area, It
8tJIINBII TO GROW- I'IYe- J• will be
might also create a tow1am bue
arrntel lllil1 Ill J•
wll• Twill Clt7
for the community.
Vg'~p
lllil1
.......
ClompuJ
...... Ia
Thenextmeetlngoftbeorganl..........
,.,
..............
elaltJ~IIr
zatlonwlll be June 14at 7p.m. at
areM. All~-~ came Wedttet«&gt;J tram
the Farmer' I Bank In Pomer()y.

·hearing on to-1 free .phone .call issue

I

Ice Cream
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Development, was presented the U,OOO check late
Wednesday afternoon. Powell, along with Jolynn
Bollier Buller, at left, chair of the Public Ulllltles
Commlulon of Ohio, and State Rep. Mary Abel,
who took over In the legislature when Butler was
appointed to the PUCO, discuss their hopes for the
local area.

__ _

·puco directqr ready to hold public

GROUND
BEEF

PKG. OF 12

TIDE DETERGENT

APPRECIATIVE
- Mary
P~~!1,re~~;:':;
Pomeroy
chamber member,
Is m11sl
of
of a 15,000 Jl'&amp;llt to the Pomeroy
Commeree to develop a toari8m
on
Powell, who submiUed the grant
of
behalf of chamber to the Ohio

L1

DAIRY LANE

DE Bill

southeastern Ohio area and has
and Mary Abel, who replaced
1nstructed development depart·
Butler as state representative
ment personnel to pay particular
when Butler was appointed to the
attention to southeastern Ohio, It
PUCO. Chamber member Mary
Is a fact that recent "pr,oject
Po"(ell, who submitted the grant
proposals coming out of souproposal on behalf of the
theastern Ohio are as good as
chamber, accepted the check
project proposals from therestof
which will be used to produce a
the state."
four-color brochure to promote
Another significant change in
the historic and scenic natural
thedevelopmentdepartmenthas
resources of the Pomeroy area.
beentheexpanslonoftheGoverBaker's entourage also innor's Office of Appalachia, which
cluded Randy Runyon, director
was created by the legislature In
of the Governor's Office of
November 1986, from one em·
Appalachia; Dennis Mlngyar,
ployee to four employees.
assistant director of the Office of
Also, Jacqueline Souel, assistAppalachia; and other depart·
ant director of the development
ment of development staff
department, was appointed spe·
members.
ciflcally to focus on the nee~s of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
distressed areas of Ohio.
Seyler; Meigs County Commis·
"As I travel across Appalastoners Manning Roush, Richard
chla," Baker said, "I see strong
Jones and David Koblentz;
examples of economic develop·
Meigs Development Director
ment projects that have stimuKim Shields and several · Pomelated growth in the region. By
roy Chamber officers and
continuing to reassess the area's
members were also present for
needs, state and local governyesterday's activities, along with
ments can identify opportunities
Ted Reed and Paul Kloes from
to further expand development · the Farmers Bank and Savings
activities/' ·
Company, and Mike and Vicki
The $5,000 tourism marketing Haley. rpresenllng Twin City
check to the Pomeroy Area
Machine and Welding Company.
Chamber of Commerce was
Bruce Reed, Pomeroy
'presented by Jolynn Boster
chamber president, conducted
Butler, chair of the Public
yesterday's activities.
Utilities Commission of Ohio,

Senate
app~«:Jl7e~_ ~·-·-

99(

·

Shields, following the presenta·
lion, both commended the
Farmers Bank and Savings Com·
pa 0 y, especially Ted Reed and
Paul Kloes, for their significant
role In the Twin City project.
Speaking before Several Po me·
roy VIllage and Meigs County
of!lclals Wednesday afternoon,
Baker reaffirmed his commit·
ment "to strengthen the Appal·
achlan economy'' and reported
on the "changes In thinking'' that
have taken place within the
Department of Development In
the past year or so.
Baker took over as head of the
development department in July
1987. In April 1988, he made his
first trip through Appalachian
Ohio and whlle speaking in
Pomeroy, pledged to make
changes at the state level that
would benefit the counties of
southeastern Ohio. Those
changes, which Baker reported,
Included policy changes to channel a larger percentage of all
available grant dollars into this
area. A revision of the state's
formula to allocate Community
Development Block Grant funds
Into southeastern Ohio was also
mentioned In particular.
Baker was however, quick to
point out that although he is
empathetic to the' needs of the ·

The McDonald residence located on G~over Road at Cheshire
was destroyed by fire Wedneday night.
Middleport firemen were called to ihe scene at 9:53p.m. but
the one story frame house was engulfed In names when they
arrlvi!d. Also on the scene was ihe Gallipolis Fire Department.
The fire remains under Investigation, according to a
spoksman from the Middleport depar1ment. Tllere was no
lnfonnation available on the cause of the lire, the owners ofthe
house, or whether contents were ~troyed late Thunday
·
morning.·
.•

Thefts reported to sheriff
The theft of four sections of aluminum scaffolding and planks
from American Painting at Hoblon Ia uDder Investigation by
the Melp County Sheriff's Department.
'
· According to the report, the lncl4ent occulTed sometime
(Continued on page 16)

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