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Ohio

--Ar~
Hartis Frank

deaths---

Several survivors of Harus E.
Frank, who died Friday at his
Long Bottom residence, were
omitted from his obituary In the
Sunday Ttntes-Sentlnel. Other/
survivors as reported by the
family are Anna Frank, Pomeroy, a sister-In-law; Stewart
Coleman of Canal Winchester, a
step-brother, one niece and three
nephews.
}

30. 1989.

Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m on Wednesday alter noon at
the First United Methodist
Church Kenton. The Rev. Kenneth Br~ will officiate and
burial will be In Grove Cemetery,
Kenton. Friends may call at the
Stevens-Stout Funeral Home 3 to
9 p.m. Tuesday. Memorial donalions may be made to the United
Methodist Church.

locks-----

~ally

atock prices
(AI of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elll• 4 Loewl
Am Electric Power .. .. .. ....... 27%
AT&amp;T .................. ............ ...3571
Ashland 011 .......... .. .......... . .41 !)il
Bob Evans .. .. ... .. .... ........ ..... 15\2
Charming Sboppes ...... ...... .. 17%
Clty Holding Co ...... ............ 16'Vs
Federal Mogul .................... 54\i;

Goodyear T&amp;R .... ........ .. ...... 54
Heck's ........ ...: .... ................. %
Key Cen turlon .. .. .... .. .. .. ....... 13
Lands' End .. .. ..................... 29* ;
Limited Inc ........ .. .. ............ 32'!4 ·
Multimedia Inc ................... 94'h
Rax Restaurants .... .............. 271
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. .... .. .. .. 1671
Shoney's Inc .......................11\i
Wendy's Intl .. ........ .... .......... 5'%
Worthington Ind .... .. ...........21 'Vs

Ohio Lottery

Family
health
care

Pick3
633

-·.::-·-

Insert

---

~

Pick 4
1708

··----

.....

Rev: Leste·r Taylor

The Rev: Lester Paul Taylor,
67, of Kenton, formerly of Meigs
'·
County where he pastored United
i
Methodist Churches, died Sun·
day morning at Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Born on Jan. 25, 1922, . In
'·
' ,.., Pennsboro, W. Va., he was the
son of the late Tighe and Madge
•
'
Deane Taylor. He Is survived by
~ (
......
his wife, Lots R. Leonard Taylor,
FINAL TOUCHES - Bpbbl Price, left, aad Lori Mundry make
along with two sons, Thomas
some final adjustments before they enter the Eastern High Scllool
Taylor, Kenton, and Edward
gymiUIIIIurn for baccalaureate and commeneement ser\'lces on
Taylor,
Wheersliurg, and two
Sunday evening.
daughters, Linda Hedge, Fort
Wayne, Ind., and Jean Hoy,
Burnside, Ky., and seven grand·
r--daughters. · Also surviving are
continued from page 1
·
two sisters, Margaret Elder and
Cooperative Extension Service' are co-sponsoring a business
Maude Jacks, both of Pennsboro,
seminar on Tuesday, June 13, from 9:15a.m. to 2 p.m., at the
and one brother, Kenneth of St.
Grace Episcopal Church In Pomeroy. Topics of the program
Charles, Ill.
include "Building An Image for Your Store" and "Developing
He was a retired United
Better Relations with Your Customers." The speaker will be
Methodist minister, and a
Greg Passewltz, extension specialist, Community and Natural
member of the First United
Resource Development, with the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Methodist Church In Kenton, the
Service. Passewltz has conducted this type of workshop across
~asonlc Lodge at Edgerton, and
the state and is well known for his dynamic and creative
32nd degree Mason. The Rev. Mr.
approach to business.
Taylor was also a member of the
The reglst1'atlon fee Is $5 which Includes a lunch buffet.
. COlumbus Rose Association.
The program Is open to the publiC and registration deadline Is
He graduated from Ohio Uill·
June 13. Participants are Invited to attend the entire workshop
verslty and the United Theologior either of the two sessions. For additional Information, a copy
cal Seminary at Dayton.
of the program brochure. or to reglstet, contact the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Service, Box 32, Pomeroy or
~all 992-6696.
·
'
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Stephanie Nuzum, Portland: Randy
Harrison, Dexter.
Saturday discharges - Norma
Units of the Meigs County
Sunday. At 1: 40 p.m., Middleport Curtis, Charles McCloud.
Emergency Medical Services
went to Second Ave. for Tammy
Sunday admissions - Kathryn
answered 12 calls over the
Akram to Veterans Memorial Johnson, Pomeroy; Debra
Memorial Day weekend.
Hospital. Middleport was called Burns, Middleport: R)chard CurThree calls on Saturday in·
at 2: 58 p.m. to Route 124 for tis, Pomeroy.
eluded a 12: 58 a.m. call for the
Phyllis Clay who was taken to
Sunday discharges - Randy
Pomeroy unit t9 an au to fire on
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The Harrison, Allee Struble. .
Route 7. The auto was owned by
Racine Unit was called at 6:17
Monday admissions -Herbert
Angle Starcher. Rutland at 6: 10 p.m. to Valley Bell Road for Inscoe, Pomeroy: Larry Wiles,
p.m. transported Burton DeW!ss · Lillian Proffitt to Holzer Medical Racine; Ethel Reeves, Coolville.
from an auto accident at Harrl·
Center. Proffitt was later trans·
Monday discharges - Carrie
sonvllle to Veterans Memorial
ported to the Charleston Area Osborne, Marie Thomas, Louise
Hospital. Middleport at 8:51p.m.
Medical Center.
Smith, Ruth Bennett.
was called to Dexter for Randy
Diet PH/a Stnaplng U.S.
Harrison to Veterans Memorial
Monday
at
9:35a.m.,
Pomeroy
Hospital.
Four calls were answered on went to Butternut Ave. for Paul
Case! who was taken to Veterans
· Memorial Hospital. ~utland was
called at 12:37 p.m. to Hilltop
Road for George Burke to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Racine
(Continued from page 6)
at 1: 36 p.m. went to Route 124 for
book.was dedicated spoke briefly Larry Wiles to Veterans Memorat the banquet. Officers for 1990 Ial Hospital. Racine went at 11: 44
were elected and Included Judy p.m. to Yellowbush Road for
lLS. Gov't. A#orouull'llatt
Arnold and Karen Pooler, co- Mona Lisa Haynes to Veterans
Cllllma for NW Diet PIU
presidents; Paul Gerard and Memorial Hospital.
· BEVERL'r HILLS, CA (Speciai)Jerry Vanlnwagen, co-vice presAnamazing new weight loss pill caUcd . '--~;;;;;;;;;:;::=-----­
Idents; Cheryl Fife Roush, secre·
"fill-magnet" has recently been devel- rtary: Joe Yolng. treasurer: and
oped and perRcled by two prominent
Cinda Harris, decorating chair·
doctors at a world fiunous hOspital in
man. A vote of thanks was
Los
Angeles that n:portl:dly "guaranextended by Ms. Pooler to the
tees"
steady fat loss and cslorie
1989 officers. Mrytle Faulk St.
reductiOn by simply taking their tested
Clair, . secretary, Lois McEI·
and pi'OI'ell new pill. ,
hlnny, treasurer. and Jerry Da·
The U.S. govenunenthasjustapprovt:fiTIIA.ri'IE
venport. vice president along
ed the doctors claims lbr a hard-to-aet
with others who had assisted In
patent that confirms "there has new:r
making ·the banquet a success.
beenanythingliketheirfill-bondingpill

Partly C?loudy . Low In mid 60s.
Thursday, partly cloudy, humid.
High In 90s. Chance of rain 40
percent.

•

\

'

3 Sections. 46 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New11Japer

Ohio Senate adopts

Local news briefs... - -

$26.3 billion budget

Hospital news

EMS has 12 weekend calls

roo

.RITEAIIJ

...

lfiiUJrtiiMIIJ

~belbre."Itisatotally.-major
~·enufiC breakthrough and is revolu-

Alumni attending lhP ·banqU(&gt;f Jnclud@d Mat..-1

&amp;1~ . 19~.

Arlefoa Bowlf'l LockPII , Ralph Edwards.
Barbara and Jim Fry, Lo~!ta Rollt't., Diane
Wllltam1. CariH FrHch. 1911); lk'1lerl)' Pf'rr1n
Dtxon. 19G; .hldy Allensworth. Carolyn Sur
Frech. Knnr Fry, carol Harpr-r, Onda Harrts.
Hop! B . Rt"Yftolds. Ro,.r Rolllh,Harl')l MtCuffln,
Paula HI,VnM,l9&amp;1: Paul&lt;'&gt;t"rard, Suilla,. Wolfr..
a.tl Marilla NlcMIAOn, l!le~ OUI'ord Co~n ·
,Marl:r• Mt"lf'f'.lindO!arlnAsa Br.dll.lry.1961;
Debbte FlnJaw. 19til.
A dance wlrb mullc by EUnTakln In th~ jurUor
hiJh achool aloldltcrlum rollowtn.l!' fhf' banqul'l,

gave tributes to
teaching
In the Southern Loeal School District for the past
17 years. His teaching, coachlns, and extracurricular activities were detailed during the
recognition, Dudding was also presented a gift hy
Bill Baer on behalf oftbe Southern Loeal Teachers
Assoolallon.

Leading indicators up in April
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
index of leading economic Indica·
tors rose 0.8 percent In April alter
two straight · months of decline.
the government said Wednesday
in a preliminary esd!llate suggesdng the nation Is nol headed
.,. for~e¢11Uon.. . .,:~ ., . .
..
' The Increase . In the Index
designed to predict how the
economy will be colng In three to
six months followed declines of
0.6 percent in March and 0.3
percent In February and an
Increase of 0.8 percent Increase

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight

Middleport ...

Sca~ltli and FariP KenrJ&gt;dy . class or 192t; Ruth
Arnold. EuJu•ne Erlewlnf', 1926; Kalil&gt; Swanson.
1927: HaroldLoi\V'. 1932; Lrora ErlewlneBaJJey
Maxine G111 ldll. El Lza beth Lotl&lt;le, Marpre1 Yo~t :
~tnd Rowe!UI Vaughan. 1934: Lois 0 . Bu sh.
nlfford Cunningham. and JE'an Moore, 1!136;
Howard W. Russell. ·1937; Harold Kauff, 1938:
Yolanda Bus, Dormb)' Davis , Alief' L. Jore.~.
Ja~ Ward. and Jo hn Har~ .19 J9 .
&amp;tty Allensworth, Ma~~lne fkonrr!l. Chark&gt;.~
Bradlln~· . CbariP~ Brooks. Martha C'unnlnabam,
Cllarles Ent :rnlnJ;:er, Eugenti H ar ri ~. Janet
Harris, Dorothy While. 1!140: Goldie Gllmort".
Roma Johns on. Jun Rus!ell, Waller Smith, Bill
DUe. 1S41: Pauley BeavPr. Pe~tg; Kl.'rl\ll.
Barbara Mu lll'n, .Joe Young, and Marion Rift".
1942; P~:~1rlcla KIOf'!i, William Mayt&gt;s , Marjor lt"
Mllchf'll, Opal Priddy, Maraan&gt;t Weber. Rowrna
Young. Nan Fl!lhPl' Tf'f'rrll. Mir iam Hickman,
and William King, 1943.
Dorothy DreniiE'r. Peter and Carla JOt"'n,
VII'R'Inla Stallworth. EvPiyr~ Zcllf'r, and Jean,..
BradburY, l!tMo; RotK&gt;rl Ginther, 19l"': Alfred
Sca!'Wrry, JamPS Harlf'y, 1946; Mildrfod Bllley ,
Ma*llnr Dl&gt;nning. C.G. Kl"rwood. John Kauri,
NoM NelJOa Joan Morris. Robert Ftsher, 1947.
BrucP Bingham. HPIMt B)'f'r. Joan BonnPll, Bob
flahpr, Jnd han Clark Null, 1948; Cuolyn
BachnPr. Richard S.llfo)' , charles Byers, Kl11y
Dallu. Davl." Diles. Hazel Glnlhf'r, VlrAtnla
Gr0111n. Harold and Rowmary Moore, Jane c.
Say IP, Bfoatrlcr M. Stf!Warl. HazPI D . Mlllf'r, Bob
Mills. John Dud dina. JoAn nBuhn. JohnBio~ .. r .
l!HB; [moJf!'n(" F'i.!ihtor, 19511; Jlrlf't HInkle, C'l oo
Kt"rlll. D:lnPayne. Betty Snow, and Ro~ Wl!ll',
191\1: Doria Coleman, Nancy Beaver, Harokl
Hlnklf'. Carol Tf'nnPhiiL Carolyn LltcbUeid .
Adr~nrr Mu rn. 19~2; Arlelll' Bow if's King, 19!\1.
Katbryrl Haydt&gt;n. ChariH Wlnebrt&gt;nll!r, Mar«"111 WornPr. Laura Harrlaon. Junlll'Tk' Moon'
Cunnln,Kham. Barbara John!lon. 19M: Ror11ld
Fultz. Trll Stanlr,.' . and YvonnP Hackfoll Scally.
19!1!\; JarnnMoum l n~t. Errnfln('Aih('raft , Jan!!l
Faulkner, Lf'ab R. Parkf'r. Bet ty Ward Field.
19~; Rick and Call Hovat1Pr, Edward Kllchen,
JamPS Bow~. tt:n:· Judy Armld. JoPSiantey,
Je•~Witf' ThOmas , 19!'18; Jack Baron, Harold
Knapp. Ro(J!I' LIR'Jifoct. Nancy Morris, Alma B.
Nl"laon. Dttk Roller, Jennifer !k-otl. Stephe-n

DUDDING HONORED - A plaque In recognl. tiel a of hill 30 years of dlsllnplshed ser\'lce to the
teaching profession was presented to John F.
Dudding, center, at a teachers' meeting last week
at Southern High School. Principal Jim Adams,
left liU!d District Superintendent Bobby Ord, right,

IIIARD

-IUIT-801.

"..•,.

,.,.,.,.,. ....
Ill SDFT

&amp;IRI

-IUIT-fOl.

In January. the Commerce De·
partment's Bureau of Economic
Statistics said.
Three consecutive declines In
the index are considered a sign of
a tecesslon but analysts said
before the report's release that .
~n t•wrellS~ Q( ,0.8 per.cen~cw.a&amp; "
expected and that It should ease
fears of an Impending recession.
"That number is consistent
with the prevailing notion that
the economy In the future months
will slow, but only slow." said
Hugh Johnson. an inveslment

analyst with First Albany Corp.
in Albany, N.Y. "It's consistent
with the view that we are In the
process of experiencing a 'soft
landing' to use the over-used
terminology ."
The Federal Reserve Soard
has· ·PI&gt;ahed .up lllterest rates· 3
percentage points In tbelastyear
In hopes· of engineering such a
"soft landing," in which the
economy Is slowed to fight
Inflation but a recession Is
averted.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS -Taking advantage of "an astounding ... in·
crease in revenues," the Ohio
Senate Tuesday adopted a $26.3
billion budget for 1990-91 which
incre.ases state spending by 19
percent over current levels. ·
The budget passed on a 27-6
bipartisan vote after majority
Republlcans rebuffed attempts
to add more than $100 million In
various programs by Democrats, who claimed the state Is
"awash in dollars."
The budget will now go to a
joint Senate· House conference
committee for mediation of the
differences between the two
chambers . It must be in place by
July 1.
Although the latest version of
the budget spends · the same
amo\)nt the House approved last
March; It adds $150 million for
education, while cutting $35
million from welfare and $90
milllon, or roughly 1 percent,
from general government opera·
lions. The spending ,plan Is $190.
million more than Gov. Richard
celeste requested last January.
The Senate budget also ellml·
nates House-passed tax Increases on cigarettes. other
tobacco products, wine and draft
beer, thanks· to last week' s
- H')&amp;laU.OJ! by th ~ f:\!leste adminIstration· that ta* collections this
year will exceed estimates by
$183 million.
During seven hours of debate,
the Republicans shot down 33
Democratic amendments, including an attempt to take $50
million from the state's savings
account to launch as tate' •war on

Rain keeps
fanners from
work in fields

IIMLIJX

~

.,

AIIJJ&amp;II
uaz.

'!

tJomzmg the weight ross industry.

\bia Can "Eat NormaDy"

JnstaiiA
Bel 712.AC Cenlnl
Air Conditioner
V' 12 S.E.E.R.
V' TOP EFFICIENCY
V' GREATER ENERGY
SAVINGS
V' 10 YEAR COMPRESSOR
WARRANTY
The 7l2AC is Heil's most
powedid, most efficient central air
condltlonet It will l!eep your family
comfortableand"""'
.
...~ )'011 )leaiS cl

energy savinas.

uuboutill

WAIIIEI

HEAnNG , . COOliNG

Best of all, "you can continue to
eat your favorite foods and you don't
have to change your normal eating
habits. You can start losing fat and
red~ce calories from the .cry first day,
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire without exercising".

Flushes Flit Out Of Body
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
mto thousands of particles each acting
like ~ tiny magnet, '~ing" and
trapp1'&amp; many times its size in undigestal particles. Then, all the trapped
fill and calories are naturally "flushed"
right out of your body because they
cannot be absorbed.
Within 2 days you should notice a
change in thecolorofyourstool;caused
by the fat particles beint:,minated.

2 UTER BOJ1l,E

99(

London pool opens Tuesday
HERR'S

POTl TO CHIPS
6 OZ. lAG

The Meigs County Humane Society
~nnouncn the Opening of a

·-·

'----------,..--l · pounds or more, )'DU can Older your

Willow Crook I•••
PoMorey, Oh.
OPEN 1 to 4 Monday-Friday
8 to 1 2 Noon Saturday
IVENINGI 011 MOIININGI IY APPOINTMENT

CAU. ffi·J026

--.-

Its

:·~l,.~i::t.~
Credit i:lnl
0 ~ cd aydme
.,_11111

.
I

.

The Melgs-Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol, lnvest!ga!ed a
bltsklp accident at 6:45 p.m; Monday in Salem Township of
Meigs County, on CR. 45, at the intersection of TR 363. No one
was Injured.
Troopernald an unidentified vehicle collided on a curve with
a car driven bY Harriet J. Dye, 22, Dexter. Dye'scar then went
off the road, striking an embankment. Damage was moderate.
The other vehicle left the scene. The mishap Is still under
Investigation.

New parade route selected
A new parade route has been selected bY the Rutland Fire
Department for this year's annual Fourth of July celebration.
'l:be parade will line up at Beech Grove Road and proceed down
Roulf 124 to Depot St~t. The parade theme will~ "God Bless
Continued on page ~
· , ,,

~

--·· ..._ ..... '

.

306 EAST IWI SilEO
POMEIOY, OliO
PIAIMACY PIOIE: 992-2586

MulerCaRI and AIMfcla

London Pool in Syracuse opened Tuesday after correcting
mechanical dlfflcu Illes which prevented the pool's opening on
Saturday.
Pool hours are 1 to 6 p.m. dally and Tuesday's water
temperature was 72 degrees, a pool spokesman reported.
Admission to the pool is $2 for adults, $1.50 for students and $1 for
students five and under. Passes this year cost $25 and no family
passes will be Issued.

No ·one hurt in mishap

liTE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

(U-rN • • • • t.
'" If ••• .,. 1liiii!IM. Vlu,

24 houn. IDII free 1(101)

SENIOR
CITIZENS

..

~.t:r11'/~:U..m
.:
~t.
.Bcwrly Hilla, CA 90211.

ext. W'IOII.

YOUR

111 Tt NT/ON

who are nciiv slimmer, trimmer and

supply Of lheae "no:risk" hl&amp;hly auclleSSftil fil-1111jilttpilladlra:dj t'nlm the
docton' =lushe manullclilrer only
(includes optional calorie-recluction
plan fbr even beaer raultl). Send S20
fur. 90 pl1l aupply (+Slhuldl~

several gifts were presented to Struble. Hosting
the reception were Middleport postal employees,
pictured here with struble, fourth from left, Dale
Thoene, Charlotte Harper, John Hood, Mark
Grueser, Cinda Harris, Dewey Smith, and Kay
Holter.

Local news briefs-- Cong. Pepper,

'

Wllh~m Shell, heart specialist and
assoc1ate professor of medicine at
UCLA medical school, "the new fatbonding process is a "lazy way"to lose
we1ght because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories by
eliminating dietary fill. It is 100% iBI'c
and not a drua."
The_ fat-magnet pills are already
sweepms the country with alowina
reports. Of wciaht 1011 from lbrmcrly
overweight peOple in Ill walb Of lill

tiS-4212
0110

CAT SHELTER

RETIREMENT RECEPTION - Retiring Mlddlepot:t P011bnaster Joe Struble was ·honored
Sunday with an open reception at the Senior
CltlzeDA Center. Refreshmenta In a red, white and
blue color scheme were served to the guesta and ·

"Aulnmatlclllly"
Flit
~rdingtoone of the inVentors, Dr.

more llllniCti~ again.
Now AYIIIIII1e 1o tile Publk:
If you are tryiJ18to loac 20, 50, 100

c•na.

SAVIIIGS EVERYDAY ON
CD-COLA PRODUCTS
AT RITE All

' 't

.. ~

88, dies

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep.
Claude Pepper, D-Fla., the oldest
member of Congress, its· last
New Dealer and a fierce cham·
pion of senior cl)lzens, died
Tuesday, his office announced.
Pepper was 88.
Pepper, who died at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center, was
a lifelong liberal and loyal
follower of President Franklin
Roosevelt. He came to Washing·
ton as a senator In 1937 and
served }4 years, unt111951.
Pepper'returned to Capitol Hill
In 1963 to begin a long and
celebrated career In the House.
AI the tlmeofhts death, Pepper
was not only the oldest member
of Congress, but the only
member In eliber chamber who
served durtne the New Deal of
the 1930s. He apent 40 years In
coneress.
,
.
In recognition of that lengthy
service and P"'per's dedication
to "the vulnerable among ua,"
President Bwlb visited Pepper
iast Thurlday at Witter Reed
and eave him the Medal of
Fr~m, thtt natlo11:s hle*t
civilian hoDOr.

.l

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Rain kept Ohio farmers from
working their fields most of last
week and made the soU more
saturated than It's been at any
time this growing season.
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics Service report Tuesday
showed only 1.9 days suitable for
fieldwork last week. The northw·
estern part of the state fared the
best with 3.4 days suitable for
planting crops.
Heavy rains at the end of the
week brought soli moisture up to
19 percept adequate and 81
percent surplus, the most satu·
rated soils have been this season.
The service suggested produc·
ers contact their Insurance
agents by the close of business
Monday If they have signed up
for 1989 multi-peril crop Insurance on corn bu I have not been
able to plant by then because of
wet weather.

drugs ."
drug program and by cuts that
However, the GOP used the hurt consumers, people on welrosy financial crystal ball to add fare and senior citizens.
$5.8 million for the Ohio Depart·
"You talk about senior citizen
ment of Agriculture, courtesy of abuse," said Meshel. "It' s in this
a floor amendment by Sen. Ben budget."
Gaeth. R-Deflance.
Gray pointed out that spending
"This Is an astounding or will exceed the current level by
amazing increase in revenues $3.6 billion, He credited Ohio's
that the people of Ohio have economy for bouncing back from ·
brol!ght to this state." said Sen. a recession in the early 1980s, but
Theodore Gray. R-Columbus,
warned "we are at the end of an
chairman of the Finance Com- era of a rapidly expanding
mittee in outlining the budget.
economy."
''It's not perfect." Gray said of
Accordingly, said Gray. the
the budget. "No budget Is ever Senate GOP trimmed many of
perfect. It sets a direction that · Celeste's proposed $600 million in
the majority feels is right."
new programs, fearing they
Senate Minority Leader Harry would be a drag In future years if
Meshel. D-Youngstown, one of the economy lags .
the opponents. said the good
The appropriation contains
things in the budget were over- $5.9 billion for, primary and
shadowed by the delay in the ,,
Continued on page 5

Man pleads guilty
to· reduced charge
Wllllam O'Dell (Zeke) Collins,
charged with aggravated
murder, pleaded guilty Tuesday
morning In Meigs County Common Pleas Court to a reduced
charge of involuntary mansJaughter with a
gu_n
specification.
The original three-count indict·
ment against Colllns Included the
aggravated murder charge with
a gun specification. carrying a
concealed weapon and tamper·
lng with evidence, all In connec·
tlon with the March 26 shooting
death of Collins' uncle. Virgil
Collins. The shooting occurred at
the Tim Davidson residence on
Dark Hollow Road. Pomeroy.
Meigs County Assistant Prosecutor Linda Warner stated that
her office accepted the plea
bargain agreement to lower the
charge against Collins. and drop
the other two charges, because
the Investigation into the shoot·
ing indicated that aggravated
murder beyond a reasonable
doubt might not be proven.
The prosecution recommended
Collins be sentenced eight to 25
years In priSon ( 25 years Is the
maxlinum sentence lor lnvolun·
tary manslaughter) in addition
to a mandatory ' three years for
the firearm specification. Be·
cause of the lnvolvemen t of the
firearm, the Involuntary manslaughter charge is nonprobational.
John Lentes, counsel for Collins, recommended the court
impose a five to 25 year sentence
for the offense, In addition to tbe
mandatory three years for the
gun.
Several family members.
some representing the victim
and others representing the
defendant, were present In the
courtroom.

WOBK UNDERWAY- Work Ia uderway at
Ve&amp;eraaa Memorial lloapltal In Pomeroy oa tile
collllli idiDa of au Ndl&amp;loa to the fllel1lt)' to bo.e
tile 1a&amp;eR .ataie-of·the-_,&amp;, eqalpnua&amp;, a wllole
body CAT llcuaer. Tbe co•tructioa of tile • b)r

Judge Fred Crow Ill asked lf
any of the victim's famil y
members wished to address the
court.
James Reeves. husband of the
victim's sister. questioned the
court regarding sentencing
proceddres.
.
. Eugene Hogue, former mayor
of Jacksonville. Ohio. and a
former employer of Zeke Collins.
stated that. based upon his
knowledge of Colllns, he was sure
the shooting was an accident.
Hogue asked the court to be
lenient.
Judge Crow noted that
members of the victim 's family
could make statements to the
county's probation officer regarding the impact upon them
since the death of VIrgil Colllns.
or ·they can speak next week at
the sentencing of Zeke Colllns.
Anyone wishing to speak on
behalf of the defendant may also
do so at the time of sentencing.
Crow said.
Collins signed a written plea of
guilty and waived his right to a
trial by jury.
Sentencing has been scheduled
for Tuesday, June 6,atl0: 15a.m.
At the recommendation of Dr.
David Malawlsta, Collins was
returned to the Athens Mental
Health Center where he has been
In custody since shortly after the
shooting incident.
A written plea of guilty to a
reduced charge of felonious
aggravated assault was entered
bY James M. Brown, originally
indicted for attempted murder in
connection with an incident on
April 23 in Meigs County . On that
date, Brown. using a knife, did
cause, or attempted to cause.
bodily Injury to Dennis Tlllis.
A plea bargain between the
Continued on page 5

�•

The Daily Sentinel-

Ohio

·commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TBE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~'b

Bm~ ,r"T"L-.1....._-r,~=·-=­
~v

CHARLENE HOEFIJCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer

A MEMBER of 'lbe AIJiociMed Preu, Inland DJI)y Preu A.. cia&amp;lon and lhe American Newspaper Publllhen AM«il&amp;lon.
·,

LE'I'fERS OF OPINION are weleome. 'lltey Mould belllio IliaD IN

words lone. Alllellero are oubJee&amp; to ecllllal • • mill&amp; be olp.,. wll' ·
name, addreoo !Uid telephone number. No Ullllpecllellero ..W be pubJIBbed. Lellero ohould be In cood IUie, addreeolnlloo-, nol pl!toonall·
lleo.

Why Congress spats
By ARNOLD SAWlSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - One of the enduring cliches on Capitol HUlls the
·. observation that the most capable members of Congress are "able to
. disagree without being disagreeable."
· What this means in its best sense Is that truly professional
able to debate an Issue with passion and
politicians are
determination, but then accept the .result of the vote without gloating
if they win or anger If they lose.
·
There have been times within the memory of this writer when the
·contest of Ideas In the House and Senate promoted really stirring
.debates and votes too close to predict on issues of national import .
. The civil rights bills of the 1960s provided a number of such
situations, and it always came as something of a jolt to discover that
some of the fiercest antagonists in those battles were drinking
buddies after Congress adjourned. But that. oldtlmers said , is what
"disagree without being disagreeable" was all about.
There is very little of that around town these days. Including but
certainly not restricted to the cases of Speaker Jim Wright and
former Sen. John Tower. civility on Capitol Hill appears to be at a
30-year low. Not since the day.s when Joe McCarthy was labeling
anyone who opposed him "communists or unwitting dupes" has
.. nastiness been so rampant.
.
· The situation hasn't reached the depths of the 1840s and 1850s, when
· members of Congress were literally punching out each other and
_' Issuing dueling challenges, but the level of anger and frustration has
been climbing steadily since the mid -1970s.
There probably are a number of causes lor this. including two that
will be suggested here.
. First, campaigns have become so vicious that it has been difficult
for the participants to forget what was said and _done after the
election.
.
' It Is easy to blame this on television. and indeed the burgeoning use
of attack commercials probably is a contribu ling factor. But the most
cursory study of U.S . political history would show that modern-day
campaigning Is no tougher nor dirtier than that of earlier times. Still,
campaigns today have become nasty and the hard feelings they
engender recede slowly.
· Second, Congress has few major policy differences to fight about,
so the members have turned on each other.
· Twenty years ago, when Congress was considering federal school
, ald. the War on Poverty, fair employment and housing legislation and
· · a host of other issues that divided liberals and conservatives, the
'- debate was sharp, but generally free of 'venom. The opponents
· sometimes got off the po.nt in t"eir arguments, but they seldom
attacked each other.
. These days, about all Congress has to debate is the budget, and the
•' Gramm-Rudman law put lawmakers Into such a tight straitjacket
· that there is little to argue about: The law will cut the deflcllif they
.
'
. don t.
·' · When Ronald Reagan came to power in 1981, the GOP was back In
control of the Senate lor the first time in a quarter century and there
were enough conservative Southern Democrats in the House to
provide a working majority for his Etfforts to cut taxes and roll back
welfarism.
But the Regan Revolution ran its course, leaving Congress with
Uttle to do besides budget work. So now. in sheer frustration,
especially on the part of House Republicans who haven't been in the
majority since 1953 and have no real prospects to change that record,
the members lash out at each other like lab mice in a Skinner Box.
And a sorry spectacle It is .

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Wadn•dlri· May 31,1989

Washlnaton - The .current Bank Board. uttle did Gray
baUout of tbe savlnp and loan know that he really wun't the
Industry wUI plug the wrong hole, chief regulator of the savlnp and
solve the wroni crlall, answer loan Industry. He found out he
the wron11 question. Each and . was to answer to a higher
every taxpaper wUlllkely have to authority than Ronald Reqan.
chip in $2,400 to pay for the The real boss was tbe U.S.
mistakes ol a lew savings and League of Savtnp Institutions,
Joan oftlclals who were smart the industry's chief trade eroup
enough to put Con(p'ess In thel.r andthe!olkswbobroughtyouthe
pockets.
deb&amp;cle for which you must ante
The emphasis must switch up.
from the financial to the political
Gray has had a fl.rst-hand look
arena. Reforming campaign 11- at watching the taU wa11 the doJI.
nanclng Is the best antidote to the He soon learned that no piece of
rampant abuses ID the savings leJIIIIatlon, no regulation, no
and loan industry.
regulatory appointment 18 apAs long as campalp donations. proved by Congress without first
remain a pressure point In being cleared by the U.S.
American politics - a pressure League.
f.
.
point exploited by special interThe conventloni.U Washington
!!Ill groupo who en11qe ID legal- wisdom Is that Houle Speaker
lzed bribery In Congress Jim Wright, . D·Texaa, was retaxpayers wUI always be forced sponslble for bottling up legisls·
to pay for the mistakes of others. tlon In 1986 and early 1987 to
The bottom line Is, the taxpayer recapitalize the Insolvent Fedhas only a vote, but tbe political era! Savings and Loan Insurance
action committee bas clout.
Corp. and force the industry to
The savings and loan crisis Is a pay part of the bUL In fact,
classic example. In 1983, Pres!· Wright was a bit player comdent Reagan appointed his old pared with the strateilsts in the
friend Edwin J. Gray to head a U.S.League.lnanlntervtewwith
sleepy government agency our associate Michael BIDsteln,
called the Federal Home Loan Gray outlined some of the mo-

Berry's World

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Why should taxpayers bail o~t thrifts?

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT '
Publl.sher

Parker leads Athletics to 4-2
victory; Tribe tops Blue Jays~

Paga 2-The Daily Sa ttinel
Pomeloy-Middlaport, Ohio

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Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
tlves underlying that strategy.
"In private conversations,
some Industry leaden told me
personaUy the straleiY was to
keep the ~.~t~ount of the FSLIC
recapitalization down to $5 billion or Jess, which clearly wasn't
nearly enouJ1h," Gray recalled.
"It U was kept down that small,
by 1989 there would be a new
admiDIItratlon thta would find
Itself with a problem 110 bad that
only a maaalve taxpayer bailout
would IIOive lt."
Sound familiar?
The chief agenda for the U.S.
Leque and .f riends this year 1.8 to
minimize the amount that the
Industry must pay to close down
the 1,000 or so Insolvent and
crippled lnstutatlons whose
losses .o verwhelm the despositor
tnaurance fund. The Industry has
had little trouble In the past
romancing Congress, thanks to
the fact that, in the past two
years, candidates for the House
and Senate have received more
than $1 million through Industry
politiCal action committees ..
The rebuttal !rom the Industry
sounds like It was written by the

NRA: Deregulation doesn't kill
tbrlftl, people kUI thrtfls. How
Ironic. Before the tbrllt industry
was deregulated in 1982 the
collapse of a saviDp and loan
was a rare event.
AccorCilng to a recent report In
the Coneresatonal Quarterly, tbe
blggestthrlftlndustryPACtsrun '
by the U.S. League. It was the
fifth-largest among flnanlcal industry contributors. Its PAC alia
normally falll within tbe top 50 of
the 4,2000 federally rectstered
politiCal action committees. The
second largest savtnp ·sav1D8J
Industry PAC Ia managed by the
rival National Council of SaviDp
Institutions.
II you're still wondering
whether the U.S. LeagUe money
talks, ask Rep. Stephen L. Neal,
0-N.C. He was one House BankIng Committee Democrat who
received more than $10,000 !rom
the League. Neal was an ardent
backer of the league line that the
thrllt industry could not aftord to
rescue the depositor Insurance
fund without help !rom the
taxpayers. Lots of help.

steals second u Dodger shortstop Alfredo Griffin

Columbus Clippers
By United Press International
Randy Velarde smacked a
two-.run homer and Hal Morris
added a solo shot Tuesday night,
lifting the Columbus Clippers to a
6-4 Triple-A Alliance victory over
the Oklahoma City 89ers at
Columbus. Ohio.
Velarde connected for his sixth
homer of the season in the second
Inning to give the Clippers a 2-0
lead. Morris' fourth home run of
the year In the third heiped
Columbus take a 4-0 lead.
Dave Eiland, 6-2, won his fifth
straight start for the Clippers but
needed relief help In the ninth
from Darrln Chapin, who got two
groundouts with the bases loaded
to record his first save. Brad
Arnsberg, 0-2, allowed five runs
and took the loss for the 89ers.
Oklahoma City rallied with the

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Majoi'S

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8)' Unlltod Prt'l4JOlnll'trMIIOml

AMERICAN LEAGUE

East

~~~2Y

·
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·~
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Balllmo,..
Bo111on

~

Woods face unprecedented
threats. Corporate raiders have
started to purc:haae the timber
companies that own much of the
land, then dismember them.and
sell off the Individual pieces fori
their "highest and belt use."
Real eslate promoters awalt
the opportunity to carve up those
smaller tracts, then sell the
parcels to city dwellers anxious
to buy land they have never seen
for vacation and retirement
homes. Ski resort operators and
shopping center developers are
not far behind.
"What we are witnessing now
Is tbe IJeilnninll ol something
Irreversible," says Richard BarrlDJier, a formerdlrectorofboth
the Maine Department of Conservatlon and the slate plannin11
oftlce. "A land that once seemed
limitless ... 110\V Is often subjected to demands that clearly
threaten Its delltructlon."
· One Irony produced by the
recent developments Ia that
those who care about tbe preservatlon and protection of the
state's moat valuable natural
resource have come to cherish

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~tf-y hi history
... ...

By UDI&amp;ed Pr-.llder..U.Ial
::: Todly 11 Wedlletlday,May 31, tbel51Jtdayof1989wlth214tofollow.
:-: 'J'IIe..-11 WaDIJII, JDOYIJia
llllaal pllale.
• • Tilt monalal•tara are Mereul')'
latlll'll.
•• •'

Tilt

lip of GemiDl. Tiley laclude
t Mayo, foUDIIer tile Mayo
Fred Allft In 18M,
mliiB (qetl), actor Don

or

(

Durlnll the 1988 presidential
campaign, Georp! Buab prom·
!sed to be the "environmental
president."
So far, be'• off to a abaky start.
Firat, he waited two weelll
before offering any kind of
federal help In the effort to clean
up Alaaka'a Prince William
Sound after tbe Exxon Valdez
apW. Now, be'1lett1Dg his miD·
tons rewrite ICienc:e.
Tbll bizarre etory bepll wttlla
report prepared by 1 tap NASA
ICteDtlat for a Senate llelrlq OD
global warmlna - the areen·
boule effect. Hll ftndiDp were
bued oa compu181' projectlolll or
"the
efteell of g relte
Into the atmoapltere by
lndultrlaliOCIMJ.
In bll draft of the paper,

J:f•term

m.,

ICIIDtllt Jamet E. Ranlelllald a
couplnhcary tblnp: (11 !hata

balldllp of tiiiH .... ~
the JIJrellbooct of .clrougllt and
aevereatorml; and (2) that these

j

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troyiDg the Earth's ozone layer.
Since then, every environmental
scientist on the planet baa
re-emphasized the warning.
Of course the measures are
aoiDg to hurt. II we'd done niore
.about reducting the problems a
lon11 time ago, the shock wouldn't
be so ereat now1 but we didn't.
That's a pretty clear lesson tl)at
the longer we put It oft, the worse
the ltlng Ia golq to be.
Not ODiy do I waat to lmow wiiU
we have to do as lndlvlduall and
as nations to avoid cUsaater: I •
want governments to take an
active role In maklna It happen.
The IDfllnnatton has been there
for anyone enterprlaiq enoup
to look for lt. but humaas are by ·
heritage a lazy aort. Wltltout
aome inltlatlvel by the world' 1
leadllla lnduatrtal powa a, w're
aotna to eoatlmll to pollute tbe
atmolplllre, dePlete the ozone
layer and foul the water.

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Tut'IMI11,.V'M ftt&gt;!luMii
St•..atle 3, N.PW York t
Oil.llland .t, 8oKtqn i&lt;

flevl'lllfl• 8, Toronto2
Mlnlll!sota 1, K~t~~,.. Clly I
Balllmol't' 8, Te:w:u !

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Cllllfornla 3. Mllwau
1M ro1t II, O.lc.,o 3

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Wf'dMIICia,Y'II Gamftlo
Calll•rnla (M. Wlllt 3-1 ) at Mllwauk t'l'
( i\u~llf3-t),2::Wp . m .
·
!it&gt;llillr (HOIIRIUI 0.1) lU NeW York
( HawkiM-1-t) , 7:30p.m.
TniUI cB. WIU H l al BI&amp;IUmtJn&gt;
(Balan! !1-1), 1: ll p.m.
Oaklud (BurnK -1-1 ) W Btlslon (Cif'mt'nll HJ, 1: 31 p.m .
Toronto (Key Q.t) at f'lneland ( YPU-1!J), &lt;: 35 p.m.
Deimlt ( RllhlnliOn 1-11 at Chic ~
CHIIIea:ul-1) , II: 30 p.m.

Mln11r11oota (OIIwr&gt;L" 1·21 IU Ka•"•"
Cit)' (8aJuiiiW &lt;&amp;-0), K: :U p.m.
'ntunMIIO' ' 11 Gamf!i ·
ftaltJmore at OM roll, nla:hf
MlnrttOU. at Chlcaro. alp&amp;
New \'ork a1 Mll•lUikee, nla:ftl

Ta!Ui at Sultle. nlkfi ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE

6-4

help of Mike Berger's third groin pull. ,Jose DeJesus, 2-4,
homer of the season and John pitched a complete game for the
Gibbons' second of the year. Royals and allowed Dana WilliKevin Reimer hit his fourth home ams' two-run homer to account
run of the season in the ninth as for the scoring.
At Scranton, Pa., Ken Jackson
the 89ers scored twice. But
homered in the 11th inning to
Chapin ended the threat.
Elsewhere in the Triple-A make a winner of Todd FTohAlliance, Pawtucket blanked wlrth, 2-0. Jay Baller, 0-3, yielded
Omaha 2-0, Scranton-Wilkes Jackson's second home run of the
Barre edged Indianapolis 5-4 in season. Keith Miller also ho11 Innings, Denver dodged mered for Scranton-Wilkes
Toledo 2-1, Buffalo beat Roches- Barre. Larry Powell hit his
ter 7-6, Syracuse pounded Louis- fourth homer of the year for the
ville 10-4, Tidewater ripped Iowa Indians.
At Toledo, Ohio, the Zephyrs
14-4 and Richmond defeated
scored In the first and eighth
Nashville 7-3.
At Pawtucket, R.I., Steve Bast Innings to make l! winner of Tom
and Tom Bolton combined on a Flier, 2-0. Kevin Ritz, 3-6. took
flve-hlt shutout to spark the Red the loss for the Mud Hens .
At Rochester, N.Y., the Blsons
Sox. Bast, 1-0, went 81-3 innings
and allowed all five hits before scored three runs In the third and
leaving the game with a slight seventh Innings and then held off
the Red Wings, who benefited
from Chris Hailes' fifth homer of
the year In the seventh Inning.
Rick Reed, 3-6, recorded the
victory while Mike Jones, 2-1, got
·the loss.
At Syracuse, N.Y ., Todd StotSulde • New York. 1:Jip.m.
tlemyre, 1-1, got the win tor the
Texu at Baltlmol"'!, 7:35p.m.
Chiefs, who collected 11 hits.
OllklaDd at BoaiOa. 1': II ,.m.
Tororf:o M Clf!\lel•d, 1: 31 p.m.
Bryan Oelkers, 4-2, suffered the
DdNIIat Chh:qo, 11: 31 p.m.
Mlnntllol at Kd. . Cit)', 1:35 p.m .
defeat for the Redbirds. who
Natlo_. lA! ~CUE"
managed only four hils, includHoullloaat Sl. Lou•, I : SIIi p.m.
M•ntl'f'al at Lo1 Mples, 4:U p.m .
Ing Todd Zelle's 11th homer of the
ClrdaMII a1 Plltllllul'llt. 1':10 p.m.
season.
Chlca1•at Atlanta, 1':10p.m.
Philadelphia a1 San Dlexo. 10:05 p.m .
At Des Moines, Iowa, Tony
New YorkatSanFralldM.'O, II: 35 p.m.
Brown
and Darren Reed hit first
Bukethall
NIIA rl afOffll
inning homers to power , the
Chica&amp;o at Det.I'Dii. ~p . m.
Tides, who collected 18 hits.
lhxlaa
Junior Mlddi.Wf'l ghu
Blaine Beatty, 5-3, bene!lted
Clevt'land - .lo M Dll\' ld Jllcbon \'1.
from the offensive show while
WIU'n'R Wllllamli
.
SuP"r Fe.tbt'rwelptR
Mike Harkey, 1-4, suffered the
ManchMier , bA~Ud - BarryMcGuidefeat for the Cubs. Winston
J iln ,... ..lm McDen ..n
Soe\:er
Ficklin hit his second homer of
MISL Playolf11
the season lor Iowa.
No ,;amll'!l ll:hedllled
TenNft
At Nashville. Tenn., Barry
Paris -: SU mUJion French OJII'n
Jones hit his fourth homer of the
season for the Braves. Gary
Eave, 5-2, recotded the victory
while Keith Brown, 3-4, took the
S.01t11 Tru-.ctloDB
loss for the Sounds, who commithaeh .. l
Baltimore -seal pUc her~ Bau dlta
ted live errors.
to RoclaHifl' cAAAJ oa a retlahlllla&amp;len

W L Pet. GB
" 'll .571 t'J %-1 .UI :1:
~ ~-~ .500
3~
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Phlladt'lphla

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Pllit!lltuq:h 2. Cine I nJIItlt

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('hlcaao 3, Atlanta 2
Routon 11 1 St. Lo~• -1
Morlli!aJ S. Loll M.-eh.• .f
SIUI DIPI(O t, Phlladelphlll 3
Sa.n Franrl»ee Ul, Ntw York!
WPftsday's Gamt'IJ

Hnlllon CCiucJ t--1) at St . Lollll ll

(DeLroii•IJ,I : JI p.m .
Mnlllrul (Amlih 1-1) 81. Lo11 M1el~
(Hermlser 1-U. -l:h p.m.
Cl~~elnnall CBIJo 4-11 at Plltlrlluf1'h
(Hu&amp;oai·S),1 :0S p.m.
Chleal•lkii~UI+-1 I ai AILMia jSmollir;
Wt,1':-ltp.m.
r111•11tlplllla cRrtn. 1-IJ at 8• Dleao
(RMIII'I-.1-11, 10:415 p.m.
NewYort.COJeda!•D) lliSu~aacl~
(Gatrell• 1--11, 10:35 p.m .
T .. ,..IQ/'11 Game
LD1 AIJIII• at •••llloa. nlpt

Today's events

.........,

We. . .JO''II 8pllft1 CaiMdu

.tmerk•U..(al.,.,..a.
t:• p.m.
MIIWUII!f,

Men's basketballleasue
meeting ~ for tonight
••

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

There will be an organizational
meeting at the Middleport City
Hall today at 7 p.m. for all
Individuals and teams lnteres ted
in the Dfllanlzatlon of a summer
men's basketball league.
Ali ~tam captains, members
and lndMduals are encouraged
to attend.
·
,\-

M~ttlado•(AMI -

Seattle - A.Citvated pllellll!!l' r.m
Nle*nluer lramlt•ll-dardl•hlecllbt;
••.-ned hdlehl!r JWpr Mara~~~tt to
Calpr:y of •• Pacific Cout Leape
l..tAA.): II'IUI!ilerl"'!d catcher One Yalle
from the 15-cii\Y to Udlli,Y dl•bled lht.
Collep
Cl~maon- AniiOUIICeddle nslpalion
of MMIIIanl alhlelk •rector DoDBopn

to beotme ..... ul h•lwdlall eoaellal
Daowl~n.

Fu""an- NamedBarciQ &amp;adellMih

••laat b.uetb.U coaciL
a.tlloWII - A.a•IIHullt lulb.U coach
Jim McCarllr re.lped: ..ned Dan
IOnr.l wretiUDI (.•ell replaciiiW ..tl 1
Zellaer.
"'
·
Wlll.n lewel - Named dele111h-e
co...U . . OI' Dan Cu-ter lleed
~h, replad• sea. McGarWJ. wllo

_..

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...,all

. De•wr - n.. llft'We~ alped a
co•ntl flllfallo• aa be .. coach ud
owlee IJIIftifeii..,OUih tile ttl! M•OIL

nw.,.lll - w.n-ed del.ahe u.-

m•Tommy~a.oaoiGnmllll"*,wt*

recetwr llntn Ne._• ol T -. aad
df'la.in b.cka Seot'l Gut ol •lahoma
aad Meo Perkl• allllemplllaltate, all
rwWe he qellt~; &amp;acldeo • • • .4y·
dekiUe u-.cd IIIIa rellremeM .

............-·..
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Ja.. atpell wHirr CalptJ ol &amp;he

ea• .n.. "••• ~.e..-.

reporters, Phlllles' employees
and stadium personnel.
"To the young people whom I
hope I have Influenced throughout my career. I would say.
'Believe in your dreams like I
did,"' said Schmidt, his voice
choked with emotion.
''Have faith In God, work hard,
never give up and your dreams
will come true. Mine did. Lou
Gehrig once said In slmtlar
circumstances that 'Today I am
the luckiest man on the face of
the earth.' I now know that
feeling."
Schmidt ended his career with'
548 home runs, good for seventh
on the all-time list, and holds 23
Phlllles' career records.
He ended the 1989 season with a
.203 average, six home runs, 28
RBI and the knowledge that he
could no longer play the game to
his satisfaction.
"I respect the game too much
and I respect the fans too much to
hang on in the game with a
performance that I felt could not
match up with Mike Schmidt's
standards," he said.
Schmidt said he almost announced his retl.rement last week
but postponed making the decision because It was so painful.
"No one can understand what
kind of decision this is lor an
athlete to make," he said. "I
wanted to do It after the first
game in San Francisco (last
Friday night) but I didn't have
the courage.
"I prayed about it and looked
lor signs to get those thoughts out
of my mind but I continued to get
Joey Meyer, the Denver Ze- vibrations that told me It was
phyrs' designated hitter. He had time to walk away."
Under terms of the contract he
10 hits In 25 trips to the plate last
signed
before the 1989 season,
week. He had two home runs and
Schmidt
will receive between
two doubles and drove In nine
$200,000
and
$250,000 lor playing
runs.
In the International League, In 42 games this year.
Schmidt was to be pald$500,000
catcher Larry See of Toledo was
named the Batter of the Week at the start of the season and
and Richmond's Marty Clary the
Pitcher of the Week.
The Daily Sentinel
See went 11 lor 30, getting three
doubles, two triples and one
(ll8P81-)
·home run. He scored six runs and
A lllv!IIH of Mutllmedlo. lllc.
drove In six. He drove In two runs
Published evO?cy afteruooo, Monday
with three doubles and one
tllrouP Frtdoy, U1 Court 51 .. Potriples May 23 against Oklahoma
meroy, Obto, by tbo Ohio Vall 'I' PubCity.
'
Ita bini c.m-!Mutltmedla, Joe.,
Pumeroy, Ohio ~'1811. Ph. 912-21111. Se·
Clary won both his starts and
cond clau po1ta1e paid at Pomeroy,
did not allow an earned run. He
Ohio.
walked three and struck out 15 in
Member: United Pr•s1ntmlltlonal,
15 innings. His evened bls record
IDlud Dally Pr- A.-uaa 11114 tbe
at 4-4, and dropped his ERA to
ot11o ~A-lton. NatiOnal
AdvertlSIIC
•mtallve, Brutwn
2.10,.

Patterson, Miller named AAA honorees
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!) Two American Association
pitchers who threw a shutout last
week share the Pitcher-of-theWeek honors In the Triple-A
Alliance, It was announced
Tuesday.
Both Bob Patterson of the
Buffalo Blsons and Dave Miller
of the Oklahoma City 89ers won
their two game this past week.
Patterson threw a shutout May
22 against the Rochester Red
Wings. In 18 Innings last week,
Patterson walked live and struck
out 14. He Is 5-2 this season with a
2.20 earned run average.
Miller .In 16lnnings, allOwed 10
hits and struck out live. He threw
a shutout Friday as he raised his
record to 4-3 and lowered his
ERA to4.62.
The AA's batter of the week is

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WAaiiS, DIYDS,

IIPIIGIUTOIS, TVa, .
GAS &amp; ILIC. UIIGES

COUrtlY

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lp•~l•l 01 ''' Wull/

**

Detroit's errorless
streak ends at II CHICAGO (UPI) - The Detroll Tigers' 11-game errorless
streak came to an end Monday,
one shy of the club record, when
first baseman Dave Bergman
was charged with the mlsc\1e . ... Former Cub Keith-Moreland
is on a bit of a roll. Moreland,
Detroit's designated hitter Tuesday night, has hit In 17 of his last
20 games to raise his batting
average !rom .261 to .339.
'

IAC~CIDENT REPORTS!

•· 733 'lbtrd Avenue,

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receive another $500,000 for beIng on the roster on May 15 but he
said Tuesday the contract called
for his pay to be pro-rated for the
games in which he actually
played.
Schmidt also said that if he
could change two things In his
career, he would hit his 500th
home run at home, Instead of in
Pittsburgh, and he would have
played his final game in front of
Philadelphia fans .
He also said his 500th home
run. a three-run shot In the ninth
inning on Aprll17, 1987, that gave
the Phlllies an 8-6 victory over
the Pirates, was the most mean·tng!ul moment in his career on
the field.
He added. however, that he wjll
always remember most fondly
the events of Monday, when he
announced his retirement.
•'When I remember my career,
it won't be the World Series ,of
1980 or 1983, it will be the feelinj1s
of friendship, the respect of my
fellow players, the emotion ahd
the love I received last night In
the clubhouse In San Diego,"
Schmidt said.
·

N.,. York. New York 10017.

( ...

. ..

FISH SQUAaE

81. IAIIIa -!Hped pelte .. er Yl~e•l

GOOD USED

c

struck out seven and retired the
las tl3. Alex Sanchez !ell to 0-1.
Twins 7, Royals 1
At Kansas City, Mo., Wally
Backman had three hits, includIng a two-run double during :a
seven-run second inning and ROy
_Smith, 4-2, scattered nine hits lor
Minnesota. The Twins broke a
four -game losing· streak whUe
handing the Royals their first
loss in six games. Stan Clarke fell
to 0-1.
Orioles 6, Rangers 2
At Baltimore , Phil Bradley
sparked a three-run seventh wi!h
a two-run single to lead the
Orioles to their seventh victory In
eight games. Mark Williamson
Improved to 2-2. Rookie Gregg
Olson struck out Cecil Espy al)d
Scott Fletcher to end the game
and notch his fourth save. Jamie
Moyer, 3-5, took the loss.
AnJels 3, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee, Jim Abbott
allowed two hits over seven-plus
innings and Claudell Washington
hit a solo home run to guide
California to its fourth straight
victory. Abbott improved to 5-3
and Bob McClure pitched the
ninth lor his first save. Bryan
Clutterbuok fell to 2-2.
Tigers lD, Wblte Sox 3
At Chicago, Lou Whitaker.
Rick Schu and Keith Moreland
homered to power Detroit and
send Chicago to its eighth
straight home loss. Frank Tanana, 0-4, picked up his 193rd ,
career triumph. Frank Williams
collected his first save. Jeff
Blttlger, 0-1. dropped his first
start this season.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Mike Schmidt's career as a
professional baseball player began with self doubt and the
reappearance of ques lions about
his bwn ability led to his
retirement .
"I didn't have a lot of confidence as a young player,"
Schmidt said Tuesday at a
Veterans Stadium news conference where he discussed his
decision to leave the game.
"I longed to be a great
major-league player, but I
wasn't su~ I had the confidence
to do It, that! was man enough to
do it. I wasn't sure I could do the
things I needed to do to remain In
the big leagues ...
·'When people like Dave Cash,
Dick Allen and Pete Rose told
me, 'You're a stud, you're going
to be a great one.' that's when It
took off. It ended when I got back
lull circle to those ·feelings of
doubt about myself."
Schmidt, perhaps the greatest
third baseman in the history of
the game and the best player to
ever wear a Phlllles' uniform,
announced his retirement at a
tearfUl news conference Monday
in San Diego, where the Phllll~
were finishing a West Coast road
trip.
Schmidt shed a few more tears
Tuesday as he stood at home
plate and discussed his decision
before a crowd of about 150

Chlcap (A.LI- Optioned pitcher Bill
Lon.- to Vantouwr of tlllf' Padfle CINUII
LA-ap~• (1\AAJ: recalled pl&amp;ch@f' Grea
Hlltblud frcm Vucvuwr.
New Yorlt- fttoll',....d plldt.rTommy
Jo•: reuUN pkcher JlmiiQ' ,Jo_,.
tr... Cohnhu of lh• .. ter•l .. ral
LeiiiW' CAAA).
Oakb&amp;nd - Mowd lltlorttitop Wall
Welt• ltom the 15-d 1111 to the 21-d ~
di!Mhlrd IIIII.
.
Pletalluflh- Plaet&gt;il nrlll bUI"man Sl d
Bream on the 21--dQ diMbl~ Jlal,
retroctl~f" ta
tl: reealld lallelller
oholf l.ln1 fr.-n Blllflllo ol ..e Am•rtc ..

shoulder examined Tuesday and
a diagnosis is expected
Wednesday.
"Last year we had 64 saves and
Eckersley had 45," said LaRussa. " The other guys had 19.
These guys have all been In
pressure sit~llons , so they're
ready lor lt. Somebody has lo
pick up_the slack. ..
' 'They have a lot of good arms
they can call on," said Red Sox
shortstop Jody Reed. who went4
lor 5. ''They're probably the only
team where you don't want to
knock out the starter."
Boston starter Mike Smithson,
2-4, yielded 10 hits and three runs
In 4 2-3 innings.
Elsewhere, Seattle stopped
New York 3-2, Cleveland clipped
Toronto 6-2, Minnesota mau.led
Kansas City 7-1, Baltimore defeated Texas 6-2, California
clipped Milwaukee 3-2 and Detroit dumped Chicago 10-3.
·
Mariners 3, Yankees 2
At New York, rookie Ken
Crilley Jr. registered his first
two-homer game and Randy
Johnson won his American
League debut, lifting the Mariners. Crilley hit llrst-pitch homers In the second and sixth
Innings off Jimmy Jones, who
lost his AL debut. Mike Schooler
notched his 12th save in as many
opportunities.
Indians 6, Blue Jays 2
At Cleveland, Pete O'Brien hit
a two-run homer to highlight a
live-run fifth inning and John
Farrell pitched a five-hitter,
leading Cleveland to Its thl.rd
straight victory. Farrell. 3-5,

Schmidt: Career came full circle

llNRipnN'IIt.

M.,-

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J
'

8111

:u 11 .64J'l -

Oakbtnd

and stewardship of the timber
companies they previously
tlon and real estate development
distrusted.
firm
for $17 mllllon. All of the
One example: For almost a
Verm.
o nt and New Hampshire
century, Diamond International
mobile
home and condo-minium
was a benign Clllltodlan of about
developer
lor $19 inllllon.
1.5 mUllon acres of foreit in New'
The Maine properly Is stU! on
England, selectively harvesting
the
market - but It Is hardly tbe
trees while giving the public
only
timberland for sale In the
access to some of the most
state.
remote and beautUulland in the
According to the Maine Times,
region.
highly
regarded weekly newsa
In 1982, however, Dl was
paper,
Boise
Cascade Corp. has
hou11ht out by British financier
106,000
acres
on the market,
and takeover artist Sl.r James
Georgia-Paclflc
Is seeking a
Goldsmith. He dls·membered the
36,000
acres, and
buyer
for
company, sold oU Its non-timber
Interests lor quick profits and · International Paper . would be
wUIIDII to sell two large tracts transferred the timberland to a
one
350,000 acres and the other'
Cayman Islands holding
187,000
acres - If the price Is
company.
right.
That offshore company then
The forest products Industry 1.8
was sold to a French firm. which
by
far the state's largest, contriput up for sale 801,000 acres In
$4 billion annually to
buting
Maine's North Woods, 96,000
Maine's
economy. But wealthy
acres In Maine's North Woods,
city
dwellers
are wUIIDg to pay
96,000 acres In New York's
Adirondack Mountains and $250,000 for a lake-front bouie on
an acre of land In the North
90,000 acres ID Vermont and New
Woods - 1,000 times more than
Hampshire.
All of tbe New York land was the same tract wUI fetch as
sold to a Georgia land specula- timberland.

gues come prlmarUy from bu- White House Chief of Staff John
man activities such as burning Sununu said he supported the
fossil fuels and destroying rain Idea, but It was "premature."
forests.
A auspicious mind might think
Hansen turned an advance the administration Ia stalllDIIcopy of his text in to the White Crltlcl accuae the president of
HOUle Office of Management and wanting to put off metl.llll'etl that
Bud11et. OMB ataUera the'n would constrain our foaaU·fuel·
simply rewrote his CODCIUIIons. BUCking economy. "For the U.S.
Molt notably, they recut the role to really do IOIIIething to limit
of man ID tbe drama fnlm 1tar to greenbouae aas emlulon may
walk·OII. Han- laid man'• require rather expe111tve
aet1vttlel C81111d tile er-IIDtlllll and potfttlally dlmlptlve poll·
effect; OMB ebanflll'ldllllllt to clee," WUI!Im Nltze, deputy
say IDall'1 role ''remaiDIIICientlf· Uliatant aecretary of 1tate for
leal!)' llnkiw n..'
environment, health and natural
Tbe - • of tJIIIIICI- llellon resources, says.
came 0111¥ two' da)'ll after the
In other wordl, to cut down on
White Hollie rebtltfed a request the ereenhoule effect, we'd bave
for the U.S.avvemment tocml an to underao a major, coetl;y
IDternatiDnal COD'YIIltlon OD glo- adjllltmellt to l1fe as we know lt.
bal warmlq. Amoq the offl11 t!llllllppoled to be-.? In
clall wbo llad urpd tbe White .
IC!eatllta flrtrt ~~pnc~ 011t
Houle to Pl'OJIOM the COIIferenoe that cblorofluorocarhou, the
wu Envii'OIImental PtOIIictlon cbemlella liNd In uroiOilpn.)'S
Apncy bead William Reilly. and other productl, _.. del-

Tor•h•
Caltfornla

Problems won't wait _______Sa_ra_h_O_ve_~_str_ee_t

•

u 21 .-1110 t •'\1
2!27 ..1~9~
11 'lS .u9 s
u 211 .-129 5

Mn...... kf'r

..

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u ! 2 .3!2 U U
' AIIIt

.,.,.,

rll'Yf'limd
Nt&gt;W fork

interests
Last ~s fall . to corporate
.
Robert Walters

LISBON FALLS, Maine
(NEAl - Confined to the banks
of the Androscoggin River are
stands of !lr, spruce, birch and
other Indigenous trees - the last
remnants of the great forests
that once covered most of
Maine' s southern tier. ·
Also flanking the Kennebec,
the Penobscot and the other
great rivers here are similar
reminders of the timberlands
that were sacrlltced for second
homes, outlet-storea and assorted
other accouterments of "clvlllza..
tlon" as we know lt.
In the state's most distant
reaches, however, the forest stU!
dominates not only the landscape
but also the economy and the
culture of a society whose ·
members depend upon the continued harvest of lumber and
pulp lor their sustenance.
It Is known as the North Woods
- a vast, essentially undeveloped realm of 17 mUllan acres
that constitutes the largest quaalwllderness territory anywhere In
the country's densely populated
Northeasl
Today, however, the North

•
WID,

Scoreboard ...

'

•

has trouble comlnJ up wllh the ball In the fourth
Inning M llodJer Stadium Tuesday. The Expos
won, 5-4. (UPI)

STEALS SECOND - Montreal's Tim Raines

E.'f-rA £.,~~ ~tf'y-j()~~ii&gt;-~·~~IIJIM.­
HULME'

&lt;

RylAN LOVE
UPI Sporto Writer
Given a choice, Dave Parker
elected to ride a bike rather than
work on his swing.
It was the right decision as the
37-year-old outfielder went 2 for 3
and drove In three runs Tuesday
night to pace the Oakland AthletIcs to a 4-2 triumph over the
Boston Red Sox.
Oakland Manager Tony LaRussa gave the option to some of
his regulars to skip batting
practice because the team has
been In a hitting slump.
"It was up to us whether we
wanted to hit or not," said
Parker. "I elected to ride the
bike for 20 minutes and do some
stretching. The man (LaRussa)
Is pulling the strings and It
always seems he's doing the
right thing."
Parker Is hitting .329 over his
last 18 games (23 lor 70) to raise
his average !rom .196 to .247.
Parker has five home runs and
has driven In 16 runs during the
span.
Dave Stewart became the first
nine-game winner In the American League, imp!'llvlng to 9-2. He
Is tied with San Francisco's Rick
Reuschel lor the major-league
lead In wins.
Rick Honeycutt hurled two
scoreless Innings to collect his
fourth save, the third In his last
four days. That is good news for
Oakland, which Is awaiting word
on the status of alllng reliever
Dennis Eckersley.
Eckersley had his right

t

'

Here'• an eye witnesl
Nport from Kensal City: ii
11\'1• the accident OCCift. .
when the women driving
the car. attemptlei to ,.,
move hef girdle, Dnd lo~
control of the vehicle. A
Norfolk ledy 11\'1. I wei
taking my canary to the vet&lt; .
when It got looM, end f l out the window. The next
thing • - wM hie re~rend;
and there wae • cralh.
·

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wlidnasday, May 31, 1989

Meigs edges Wellston 1-0; shares TVC title
ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
Marauders scored an unearned
run In the third inning and the
three hit pitching of senior Terry
Fields made it stand as the
Marauders knocked off the Wellston Golden Rockets 1-0 Tuesday
afternoon.
The win gave Meigs a cochampionship In the TVC with
the Belpre Golden Eagles .
Wellston, ranked 13th In the
final Class AA State ratings last
week, had defeated the Marauders 8·2 in the Class AA Sectional

Tournament on May 16.
The Marauders scored the
game's only run when Jason
Wright led off the third with a
single. A Wes Young walk put
runners on first and second. Jeff
McElroy laid a bunt down the
third base line. :rhe throw to first
appeared to be In time, but the
Wellston first' baseman dropped
the ball, allowing Wright to
score. The Marauders bad put a
runner as far as second base on
three occasions, but each lime
came up empty handed.

Wellston's only serious threat
came In the third with two out
when Rich Corvin singled and
stole second . Joe Wlttkamp lined
a single to center. Marauder
centerflelder Jeff McElroy fired
a perfect strike to catcher Eddie
Crooks to nail Corvin at the plate,
ending the Inning.
Terry Fields closed out his
career In Impressive form, setting dowt\ 12 of the last 13
Wellston batters for the win.
Fields, In the route going performance, struck out six and walked

only one while giving up the three
hits. He finished the season with
a 5-2 record. Dave Swingle was
the loser, giving up only foul' bits,
walking 3 and striking out six.
The loss dropped his record to
6-2.
Vince Vanaman led the
winners at the plate with a
double. Jeff McElroy, Chris
Stewart, and Jason Wright each
chipped In with a single. Tr,a cy
Seymore, Rich Corvin and Joe
Wlttkamp each singled for the

Wellston hits.
The Marauders are now 9·6
overall and 6-2 In !'he TVC.
Wellston's record dropped to 18-5
overall and 5-3 In the TVC.
Former Marauder Head Coach
Dale Harrison came out or
retirement to lead the Marauders to the victory. Head Coach
Roger Foster was unable to
attend because of a serious
family Illness. Meigs Athletic
Director · Gordon Fisher asslted
Harrison.
·

•

Pirates blank Reds; Giants
humble Mets, hike West lead
By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
Randy Kramer has now seen
both sides of the relief pitching
business.
For the second time In three
days, the Pittsburgh Pirate .rookie entered a two-on, two-out
situation In the ninth inning, but
this time he was able to preserve
a victory.
Kramer notched his first career save Tuesday night, holding
off the Cincinnati Reds and
completing a 2-0 shutoutfor Doug
Drabek and the Pirates.
" !knew I was going to fall once
and succeed once," Kramer said.
"Now I've done both of them.
Maybe now the good times are
coming. I guess.' '
Kramer had pitched effectively until Saturday night, when
he surrendered a ninth inning,
two-out, two-run homer to Houston's Glenn Davis to tie a game
that the Pirates eventually lost in
extra Innings.
The Pirates have been looking
for a stopper all season after
elbow surgery robbed them of.
bullpen ace Jim Gott. Manager
Jim Leyland tro(ted . out a
number of bodies before deciding
on Kramer.
"I like what I saw," said
Leyland. "! think If. you look at
guys who have been stoppers all
their car~ers, that is one of the
jngredlents, being able to bounce
back.
"Lose Friday, but come back
the next two games. That Is why
you call them stoppers.''
Ora bek, 3-5, yielded six singles, walked two and struck out
three over 8 1-3 Innings. He
carried a four-hitter Into the
ninth but surrendered a leadof.f
single to Barry Larkin and a

one-out single to Paul O'Neill.
Kramer came on and while
pitching to Todd Benzinger, a
passed ball moved the runners to
second and thtrd. But Kramer
struck out Benzinger and retired
Jeff. Reed on a pop up to end the
game and hand the Reds their
f.ourth straight loss.
"! f.elt the excitement," said
Kramer. "It's really something
to sit around and watch a
ballgame like that. Doug pitched
so well, Bobby (Bonilla) hit a big
dramatic home run. And to come
in and be a part of it ... "
Drabek and Rick Mahler, 6-5,
were locked In a scoreless duel
until the fourth when the Pirates
scratched for a run.
Bobby Bonilla hit his second
hoine run In as many games and
seventh of. the season leading off
the seventh to make lt2-0. Mahler
lostfor just the second time In his
last seven decisions, both coming
to the Pirates.
"! haven't felt like this since
my first game against Montreal," said Drabek. ·'I felt strong
with all my pitches."
Elsewhere In the NL, Chicago
edged Atlanta 3-2, Houston
bested St. Louis 8-4, San Diego
blasted Philadelphia 9-3, San
Francisco rocked New York 10-3
and Montreal nipped Los Angeles
5-4.
Cubs 3, Braves 2
At Atlanta, Greg Maddux and
Mitch Williams combined on a
seven-hitter and Mark Grace
drove in two runs for the Cubs.
Maddux, 4-5, permitted five hits
over 71-3 Innings for the victory.
Williams earned his 13th save . .
Pete Smith took the loss and
dropped to 1-7.
Astros 8, Cardinals 4
At St. Louis, Ken Caminiti

homered and drove In a careerhigh five leading Houston to their
fifth straight victory and clubrecord ninth In a row on the road.
Danny Darwin, 4·1, pitched 3 1-3
Innings for !'he victory In relief of
Bob Forsch, who pitched for !'he
Cardinals !.or 14 years and was
honored before the game by St.
Louis fans. Scott Terry, 4-4, took
the loss.
Padres 9, Phlnles 3
At San Diego, Ed Whitson
scattered seven hits over eight
Innings to win his sixth straight
game and the 100th of his career.
Jack Clark stroked a two-run
double to spark a four-run fifth
Inning · for the Padres, who
handed Philadelphia Its seventh
straight loss. Whitson, who Improved to B-2, struck out two and
walked none. Don Carman fell to
1-B, lasting 4 1-3 Innings.
Giants 10, Mets 3
At San Francisco, Kevin Mitchell, Will Clark and Ernest Riles
each hit three-run homers and
the Giants won their fifth straight ·
game. New York has lost four
consecutive games. Mike
Krukow. 4-2, allowed six hits and
raised his career mark to 22-7
against New York. David Cone,
3-4, took the loss.
Expos 5, Dodgers 4
At Los Angeles, Pinch hitter
Mike Aldrete scored pinch
runner Otis Nixon with a sacrifice fly to cap a four-run,
ninth-Inning rally. Joe Hesketh,
Improved to 4-1 despite allowing
a run and two hits In one Inning of
work. Los Angeles starter Tim
Belcher.struck out a career-high
12 but failed to hold a H lead In
the ninth. Belcher, was relieved
by loser Jay Howell, who
dropped to 2-3.

Chris Stewart, Keith Hagen, luon Wright.
Second row, 1-r: Eddie Crooks, Keith Mattox,
Kevin Oller, Terry Fields, Wes Young, and Matt
Baker

Yanks·release hurler · Tommy John
NEW YORK (UPI) -Tommy for his career.
To replace John, the Yankees
John has decided he will try to
Jimmy Jones from
recalled
stay ahead of Father Time.
Columbus
of the International
John declined !'he New York
League.
Jones,
acquired from
Yankees' offer to retire gracefully Tuesday and the46-year-old
left-bander will try to hook on
with anol'her team,
The Yankees removed John
from their roster Monday and
gave hln'l a choiCe to retire or be
The 1989 Bill Hubbard Memorreleased. John chose the latter ial Little League Tournament,
with the hopes some club would · sponsored by the Syracuse Voneed a veteran to round out Its lunteer Fire Department, will
staff.
start July 5 at the Syracuse ball
The team that would most field. A 15-player roster with
likely pick up John Is the Chicago uniform numbers, and a $20
White Sox, which Is thin In entry fee, are needed. Trophies ·
pitching. John is also very close will he awarded to the first four
with White Sox Manager Jeff place finishers.
Torborg, one of his former
Deadline for· entry is June 20
pItching coaches on theYankees. with drawing on Juen 28.
John, who began his major
Send entries to Jeff Hubbard,
league career with Cleveland In Box 242, Syracuse, Ohio, 45779.
19!!3, posted a 2-7 record this
For more information, call
season and he Is 12 wins shy of 300 992,2909, 992-7775 or 992-7777.

little League meet
to begin July 5

a

San Diego last winter In deal for
Jack Clark, was to make his
American League debut Tuesday
against the Seattle Mariners.

OAC honors pair
TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI) - Marietta first baseman B!ll Holmes
was chosen the most' valuable
baseball player In the · Ohio
A!hletic &lt;Conference al)d , Dick
Fishbaugh of Ot terbeln was
named the coach of the year.
Coaches decided recipients of
both honors.
Holmes, a senior from Niagara
Falls, Ontario, led the Pioneers
to the league's regular-season
title and runnerup spots In the
conference tournament and
NCAA Division III Mideast Regional tournament. He hit .403
this season, with 12 doubles, 22
home runs and 79 RB!s.
In his four-year career, he
compiled a .370 batting average,
with 36 home run~ and 203 RB!s.
Among his 222 hits were 42
doubles.
Fishbaugh guided Otterbein to
Its nrst conference tournament .
championship and Into the NCAA ·
Division III Mideast Regional
Tournament. The Cardinals finIshed with a 29-17 record.
In his 24 years at Otterbein,
Fishbaugh has a record of
429-313-19.

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates placed first
baseman Sid Bream on the
21-day disabled list, retroctive to
·
May 29.

:·.

Car
insurance:

Sanchez In the second Inning of play ·at Municipal
Stadium Tuesday night. The Indians won, 6-2.
(UPI)

J~dge
says fight show must go on
,.,

;Palming this Is an undue
promoter G!achettl
a court Injunction. The
.was reacl)ed In
and Nugent put the
Jaw behind It by signing a
cGIIftlt order.
main event has World
Organization junior mldcllamploll John JackmeetlnJWarren

lna111J11&gt;Utle

otbel' bolita

Tom Hudson, attorney for time an undercard was actually
Glachetti, claimed it Is lmpossl- finalized seven days before. a
ble to have all out-of-town flgh- show. We agreed to get all this
ters licensed seven days before a, done by the weigh-In at noon
card because they must be Thursday.Itlsnotonlylmpractlphotographed, finger printed and cal to do It otherwise, It Is
examined by a doctor.
1 Impossible."
''In the tradition of boxing, !'he
Hudson contends that since the
only practical way to do this Is a~ Ohio Boxing Commission was
the weigh-In on the day at the formed In 1985 by Gov. Richard
fight show," said Hudson~ F. Celeste, the number of pro
"That's the only time you get all figlit shows In Ohio has dethe fighters together. Besides, creased dramatically.
nobody_can
,.......;
_ remember
_ _ _ _!'he
_last
-1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;,_-1

The Meigs Coun., Humane Society
Announces thl ·Optni., of a

CAT
Wllow Cr. . 1.-

TEl
,

•-••Y• OIL

OPEN 1 to 4 iMondey-Prlday
9 to 1 2 Noon Saturday
EVENINGS OR MORN~,OI IV APPOINTMENT

CAll tft.JOJ6

Continued from page 1

prosecutOr and defense attorney. However, due to additional InforJohn Lentes, resulted In the mation relating to Whittington's
. reduced charge 'o f felonious recent activities. as presented by
aggravated assault. The prose- Don Snyder, Investigator tor the
cution recommended that Brown prosecutor's office, sentencing
be sentenced from eight to 25 was postponed until 10 a.m.
years on the charge, which Is a Wednesday.
The agfll'avated assault charge
probational offense.
against
Whittington stems from
Brown entered his written plea
his
alleged
attempt to cause
of guilty and waived trial
· harm to Emmanloul Mazoros by
proceedings.
Brown's sentencing has been striking him wil'h a portable tank
during the Jan. 31 Middleport
set for 10 a.m. on June 6.
WJWam Dean Whittington, -Incident.
who pleaded guilty on Apr1116 to · Whittington, also represented
a charge Of aggravatedassault In by Lentes. was remanded to !'he
connection with an Incident Jan. custody of the Meigs County
31 In Middleport, was to have Sherflff.
been sentenced on Tuesday.

complete cover~ge may

.,.IIGday tor dtltaits.

NOW OPiillll
DOIIIIIO'S

...

PillA

DRIVDS
·
- ·M11n
· 011.
Wilt
St.
991·2124

IECEIVI 2 FID
PIPSI'S '

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

a PAll Plllt
:
,
11.011, ......... ...
•w~~'~n,.w

Hall21nches In diameter fell at
Pralriedu Chien, Wis., while golf
ball-sized hall fell at Bowler,
Wis.; Alden. Iowa; Granada,
Minn., and near Albert Lea and .
Twin-Lakes, Minn., the weather
service said. Dime-sized hall was
reported at Gunder, West Union,
Hawkeye and Waverly, Iowa.

CDst~ow
·FRONTS:

11 Warm

-RAIN
l&gt;:·J sHOwERS
"
Cold
. . Static . . ~cclud~1

'·'.=!P sho·,.,s mi~':"U~ t~mJ?E!ratuu~s AIIP.ast 50~~~ or a,.,y ~h~~ artJa IS t-:-reo~st
!':'

r'!IC~ivo! prt:t~C•I;thi'J'llntj:~a'"?-1

UPI

WEATHER MAP Durln1 early Thunclay momlng,
ralll/llhowers are lorecast for parta of the Great Lakes Relfon and
the nortll AtltmUc Coast States. Raln/lhowers are poalb1e In most
of the Plains States, the mid and nortltem Mlalaslppl Valley with
llhowers and thunderstonna poulble Ia the Ohio Valley. UPI

By United Pr- International
South Ceatral Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low between 65 and 70. Soul'hwest
.
winds 5 to 15 mph. .
Thursday: Partly cloudy and
humid, with a chance of late
afternoon thunderstorms. Highs
will be near 90. The chance of

rain Is 40 percent
Extended Forecut
Friday thi'OBJh Sunday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Friday, becomIng fair Saturday and SundayHighs will be between 75 and 85.
Lows will be mainly between 55
and 65.

COLUMBUS. Ohio CUPil -

Allrletllture wu lhe only beneficiarY of ftoor amendments Tues·

16.CIM111M

PIUAS
114.95

-...

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

i,'

day u the Ohio Senate added
• • million before palelftlllhe
$21.3 billion etate bUdget for

..
_,.._
-=r.=w::=-·
IWIOLMIE
INIUMNCI

'

or AKricuiture.

Gaeth'• amendment, eup·
porU!d by voice vota, added 13
Despite the tact that Repllbll- mWIOII for reiHI'dl at the Obto
cilll drew up the bUtlpt with Agricultural Retearch and DeCOIIIrOJlecl lpendlnJ flaurel .ad · velopment
at w-ter.
It tllroulh !'he Finance
-1•

liiML

••

Committee, Sen. Ben Gaeth,
R-Deflance, wu able to add the
moM')' for !'he Ohio Department

llllfJted
...... ..... ....

.

Ce••

,;

··'

Shain RPf'd. Logan. PernPia ~inrlw!ws RltnP.'
Racine. Larry Say R', R\llland. William WlckllM ~
Radra&gt; . tlau Of 1964 ; DanJW R. Proffln ,
Lanca stpr, Ma.t'"n W. McKeJw;;•, Sy racult' .
Elunor Sclmel df!r McKelvey. Syr11cute. Gordon
nsh er. Sy racu• . O au or 19M: fkoverletWickllne . Rae\ 1'1£', Den n,y F.van 1, Racine, Edith A.

Rose Hubbard. Racine. t-J.nda Adams Evan.
Rad !V', Clus of 1966 ; Marvin T. Hill. RaclnP .
Robyn Stearns ft(&gt;lbE'r. RachiP. Cl as!l. of 1007:.
Mark Beegle, Ra cl nP. Jeffrey Oombew . Plckf"
rlnRt on. RosaliE' M. 'T J~y lor Smeeb . Coolvtlle.
Pau l K. RoM". Mllchell\ltlk'. Md.. Ch eryl Mali·
lo nka. Omaha . Nf.'ll. . Me la nie 8e l'llle Hann••
Alh £&gt; ns, Rhorda Br aden Trnnant, ,New Havt'n,
W.Va .. CUrtis w. Matheny, !.ron. 'l't .Va.. Shirley
A . Hudson Stept..nson, Racine. Larry W. Hollon, •
Rar!M&gt; . Mike Stewart , Mlddlepor!. Martr L.
Morar lty. Ractnt&gt;. Carolyn G. Manue-l Robin10n, ·•
Norfolk. Va.. J anke Manuel Usle. Symc\ue.
Shirley GuPI!Ig Matheny. Leon. W.Va .. Mike Hil l. '
Radrw;o . M! rdy Profllt t Hill. Ract riP. Cl usof 1969.
BE'v Std:lart CUmmln&amp; . Racine . Trudy Mas ·
l ol\lta . DalLn. Texas. aau or 1910; Jb:lbtort B ..

C'l(t{&gt;k , Raci ne. Tom Hamm, Racine- .Unda Hollon

Hamm. RaclnP . Jeffrey Harri1. Portland . OP·
borah Cross Har m . Portland . Class of 1911:"'
DellOrah L. K elS&lt;In Morarlt y, Racine. Oau of
1973: An 111 Frank Norman . R ad11E'. Class of197'1: •
Kelk&gt;y s . Shasteen Hawkins. Mlddh.•port. Darla J .
Whit~ Tucker, Racine. J&lt;'lf Thornton. RaCIN' . ..
Tamara K. Davis Ba ch!W'r. Middleport , Oassof ...
1979.
Phillip Hood . Middleport . nass or 11181: Tra cy
L . RlfOe, RaciiK'. JE&gt;rry WoUil&gt;, R~di'K' . Tonja
SalSC'r Hunter. Racine. T('fry s. Pan{'rMn.
OrrvUIIl&gt;. Class of 111&amp;1: Lisa Deem Hood,
Middleport, Oau ofl9ftt; Mellnda K. Pauenon.
O•' rvllle, Otx,le Dugan Wolfe. Radne . q ass of
]986.
.
Ot htor&amp; who regblered bu 1dldnor llstlht"lrc-las.ll
ye ars lneludrod Mable CIIHk WlckllnP. Nl'\\'
Matamoras, Robert l. Fl!lht'r, Radlll'. Floll'nC('
A. . Wocd, CooiVtllf'. and Mar~ry E. Hill Roush , .

Radl'll'.

Others In at tendanCP did not reJjs!{'l'.

Ohio Senate...

SCHOLARSHIP RECIP·
lENT - Kristen Pape, daughter of Jim and lady Pape,
Syracuse, Is the recipient of
this year's Paul H. Carnahan
Scitol1.1'8hlp. A 1989 graduate
of Southern High, Pape was
awarded the Carnahan SchoIarohlp at Saturday night's
annual Racine-Southern
Alumni Banquet.

Am Electric Power ............. 27'14
AT&amp;T .................................35'h
Ashland dli ........................4l'Ve
Bob Evans .......................... 15'14
Charming Shoppes ..... .........17\i,
City Holding Co .................. 16%
Federal Mogul. ......... ...... .... 54 Iii
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 53\ij
Heck's ............................ ..... %
Key Centurion ...................... 13
Lands' End......................... 29%
Limited Inc ....... .. .... .. ... .. .... 31%
Multimedia Inc ...................94'h
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 17
Shoney's Inc ........................ 11
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 5%
Worthington Ind ................. 2l'fi

Proposal being
prepared by official
A proposal for expenditures of
Title 6B monies for special
education in the Eastern Local
School Dis trlct Is being prepared
by Mary Price, local district
coordinator for special services.
Residents may have Input Into
the proposal by contacting Mary
Price or Daniel Apling, superintendent, during the week of May
30-June 2.
Marriage licens~

nolds, Gallipolis; Joseph Reynolds. Seoul, Korea; Jack
McGinnis, Gallipolis; 10 grand. children. five great grandchildThe following couples have
ren, and several nieces and
been
Issued marriage licenses In
nephews.
the
Meigs
County Probate Court.
In addition to her parents, she
James
Thurl Nutter II, 23,
was preceded In death by her
Reedsville,
and Jenny Sue
husband, William Reynolds Sr.,
Cowdery,
18,
Reedsville;·
Robert
In 1975; and three sons, Kenneth,
·Eugene
Hayes,
63,
Syracuse,
and
William Jr., and Roger ReyMelba Jean Shreve, 43, Racine;
nolds; and one fi1'8Ddson.
Graveside services will be Jerry · Timmy St. Clair, 21,
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the · Reedsville, and · Glenda Lenn
Riverview Cemetery with the Kelley, 19, Guysville; and MatRev. Theron Durham officiating. thew Kevin Burke, 18, Pomeroy,
Calling hours will be Friday from and C)inthla Arlene Wolfe, 19,
6-9 p.m. ·at the Ewln11 Funeral Pomeroy.
,Home.
·

Agrieult~re amendment goes throop

Hllllan:l . Don Ho.rd E&gt;n, Oak .Hill. William OU I'II.
Marksvtlle . La. , Jo hn L. A.rnou . Pomeroy,
Robl!'na ! Bobblt'J 0HU1t'l'}l, Rlpleo\i. W.Va.. Carol

Amo111: al umni who I't'JriSiered at Saturday '•
banqLX't lnchKit"d Wilma Sargent, MIQ:11epot1,
Clan of 1928; l.Alc\111' Hollack Burkl&gt;. Jarki\on·
ville. Fill.. Class' or 1932; Hpmpr H. Mere~llh.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smtih
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

Florence Elizabeth Reynolds,
68, of Second Ave., Galllpol~.
died Tuesday at Holzer Medical
Center following an extended
llllless.
Born March 31, l9211n Marlon,
abe was !'he daughter of the late
John R. Long and Minnie Mae
Stuffle Beam Long. She was a
hOIIIewlfe and a member of the
Church of ChriSt In Chris dan
Union, Holl8on.
She ta survived by two daughters Al1118 Slayton, GaiUpolla,
and' DorothY Reynolds, Gallipolis; four 10111, Robert Reynolds,
Baton Rouae. La.; Ronald Rey-

c:oot leu thon you're now
poytng. tall a Nationwide

BACK TO FIRST - Porfllmoutb's Lance Daalels dive. back to
first as Eastern flnt11aeker Wade McQueen (Ill takea the throw
from Athen1 hurler Cory Corrigan In the lllxtb lnaln1 of the flnt
game of Sund&amp;)''s Eut-Weat Ali-Diatrlcl doubleheader In Atllens.
McQueen wu the only Melp County representative to make the
Eui &amp;quad, which Ioettheflntcamel-lbutwontbeaeeond conteat
3-2. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne I

heavy rains tore at the Michigan's soul'hern Lower Peninsula
Tuesday night, leaving nearly
35,000 customers without electric
power In !'he southwest and
southeast but causing little Immediate· destruction.
Heavy thunderstorms with
high winds also raked two
norl'hern Illinois counties, knockIng down power lines, scattering
three-quarter-Inch hall and
briefly breaking the grip of a
muggy late spring afternoon.
A severe thunderstorm watch
was In effect Tuesday for northeastern Iowa, central and
southern Wisconsin and much of
lower Michigan. An earlier severe storm watch was canceled
for parts of Minnesota and
Illinois.

Bc.&gt;lpn&gt;. HarOld G. Rou!lb. Rl&amp;cint', Oas 11 or 1911;

Agricultural Stabllzatlon and Mary V. Easlerda.v. Racine. Clan of 1936: Pau l
Sayre. Prlrt land , Clarence A. Bndford .
Conservation Service and a 1962 ' w.
Racine. ctus of 1937 ; VIOI; I nla Ritchie. Ptil'lla
Southern graduate. Fox spoke Go rda. F'Ja., Clus of 19311: Faye Wonhlntrton
Mlnei'Vll . Carolyn Yost Kucs ma . Oa hanna ,
about the learning experiences Elder,
Paul Moon&gt;. Rac ine, MlkttPd Canehan . Ractrr .
!'hat graduates will meet In the W8)f nf' Rou~. Ractrr . C\IMII M . Bradfortl .
Ar Unaton. Maxine Shain, Racine. Wilma Churtl'l
future.
Ammora. BPI pre. Wilma A. Byen.Warren . aass
Joy Foster Steever, Class of of1939.
Cora Millf&gt;rByt•u . War~n . Oauofl 9tO : RLlth
1959, was the farl'hest traveling · Bradford.
Racine. Paul Beegle, Racl~. Clas s of
alumnus, coming from Simi t!H2; Randall Talbott. N~· LexlnRfon , Audrey
Bolch)'n. &amp;L Oalr Shores , Mic h.. Oan of 1 94~;
Valley, California.
Elizabeth Fa)'t' Fisher Proffitt, Belpn&gt;. Class or
Frances Foster, Racine, of the 1916; Mary John.'IOn Gillilan . Ch['Sfer. O asli of
1~ : Mary H. Clet'k, Portland, Wilma Say ft",
Class of 1920, was !'he eldest Columbu
s. Carrol l aeek.. Co lumbu 1. Ceorgp M.
Sayn:o, Aurora. Colo.. F . J . St&lt;ban. Ra cl!'lf.
alumnus at !'he dinner.
R. Ervin, Racll'll' . Oass ol 1949.
Buster and the Nomads, a Howard
Ruth Bradtom_ Frank, Radlll'. Robert B.
MIUer. PennYan. N. Y.. Class ofl9:'i0; Cary L.
50's-60's group from Columbus, C\lbl,
Racl rr, Vera Norris P eckP)' . ladso n, S.
provided the music for !'he dance c .. Class or l9li2; Elizabeth (LiblJil Diddl e,
F isher, Racine. David Hill , Racl rwo. Cla ss of 19~1:
which followed the banquet. Jane
Gilmo~ Bee~e. Racine . Lar ry Wol fe.
Included in the band were Radnt&gt;, Bonnie Mar lene Ftsher. Ra ct ~. Ro n
McDade. Galllpol lt. aau of 19M: I)(&gt;IOC1'1
Carolyn, Shirley and Norman Krauller Wolfe. Radrr, Bette Epperly Mlllft'.
Gallipolis , Clu s of 19~; Robert E . Bt'cjde.
Norris. all Southern graduates.
Radne. Carole S. Jo ttnsonC\IIIlan , Canton , a au
Reunion years were the classes of19$;
Claudia C. Sh ields Roush. R actfW', aas&amp;of
19~7; Linda Hill. Radne. Dal&lt;'Hart , Radne , John
which ended In '4' and '9.'
Pape Sr.. Radl'll&lt;'. a au of 19~: Mara~ll
Outgoing alumni association M.
Sharpnack. Co lumllu l, Barbara M. Adams
president Is Larry Fisher, Cha- Dugan. Raclrr. Harry L.Ou r s, Colwnllu s. S ally J .
P&lt;&gt;arson Sa\·ap;E&gt;. Rad\11e', Mary J anie£&gt; Cundiff
rleston, W.Va., Class pf 1978.
Lavendfr-. Syrac-u !1'. Shirley M cKe lvt&gt;Y Johnson,
Next year's president will be Portland . Class of 19~.
Ooa L. Beegle, RadnP, Sue Ann &amp;C'k Bf&gt;eltll'.
Larry Circle, Racine, Class of Racine,
Patrlda Roush Pape. Ral.'lrK', Class of
1966. Serving on the alumni board 1960; Kalhr-yn Bract' Hart, Clan or 1962: Tt'rry
Bradford Jordan. Pataskala. Jf'n W. Wood .
with Circle will be Pam Cleek CoolviiiP.
Class of 1963; Jud:f Cozarl Papt' ,
Linda L. Van Meter S,llpY. Patriot.
Diddle, Racine, Class of 1968, as . Syracu~.
Randall RelllPr . Radne . Spenct"r !t SlearM.
first vice-president; Bobbl Chap- Man!dltld. Charlt&gt;S Cll~ . Moundl\ltllc, W .Va ..
man Hill, Racine, Class of 1977. Teddy J. Bailey , Patriot. C. Richard Holter,
second vice-president; Lisa
Pape, Racine, Class of 1987, third
vlce-preslden.t; and Joyce Proffitt Quillen, Racine, Class of1968,
secretary-treasurer. Another
member of the board Is to be
selected In the near future.

Stocks

Florence Reynolds

too much
· for too little?
CT.~r

By United Pr- lnteraatlonal
Thunderstorms battered the
upper Midwest early Wednesday
following two days of heavy rain.
hall and tornadoes, leading to
flood watches In southern Michigan and northwest Ohio.
Tornados continued to cause
damage .In several states, IncludIng one that touched down late
Tuesday near South Haven,
Mich., and hall as big as golf ballS
pelted parts of the Midwest.
Tornadoes also were reported
near Lyman and Granger, Wyo.,
as a separate storm system
brought showers and thunder- .
storms to parts of Utah, soul'hern
Idaho and western Wyoming.
The National Weather Service
said higher elevations received
. between 3 and 5 Inches of snow
Tuesday.
A tornado struck Tuesday
night near New Providence,
Iowa, Injuring three people, two
seriously. A separate tornado
was reported earlier In the day
near Bradford, Iowa. the NWS
said.
Tornados, thunderstorms
packing winds up to 60 mph and

--Area deaths--

Paying

'•

.
·I:LEVELAND (UP!) - The
Ol,llo Boxing Commission
grented a variance to promoter
JOhn Glachettl to hold his professiQnal fight show Wednesday
n)ght at Nautlca, an outdoor site
oti·the Cuyahoga River In downtgwn Cleveland.
'ln a settlement negotiated by
COyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Donald C. Nugl!nl,
the state boxing commission
wi\ved Its rule that out-of-state
bGters
bdfore amust
fight.be licensed a week

Man.'.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sendnel News Staff
Becky Evans and Shawn Diddle, 1989 Southern graduates,
were crowned queen and king
before 325 alumni and guests who
attended Saturday night's Raclne-Soul'hern Alumni Banquet
at Soul'hern High School. Evans
Is the daughter of Denny and
Linda Evans, of the Portland
area, and Diddle Is the son of
Tom and Pam Diddle, Racine.
Other candidates for alumni
royalty Included Chris Stout and
Monica J'llll, Mike Amos and
Becky Winebrenner, and Matt
Lyons and Sarah Philson. The
queen and king were selected
during the evening by vote of
alumni and guests.
Anol'her highlight of the evenIng was the awarding of the
annual Paul H. Carnahan Scholarship. This year's recipient
was Kristen Pape, daughter of
Jim and Judy Pape, Syracuse.
Pape will be attending Ohio
University In !'he fall where she
will pursue studies In the political
science field.
· The 50's-60's theme for the
evening was "Crulsln' Down
Memory Lane" with a color
scheme of black and red. Dinner
was prepared by junior class
parents and the juniors, dressed
in jeans and white tee shirts,
poodle skirts and bobby socks,
served the meal.
Speaker for the evening was
David Fox, Meigs County's executive director of the U. S.

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

Bream on disabled list

;: TAGGED OUT - Cleveland's Dave Clark Is
t'!'ned out at home by Blue Ja.v pitcher Alex

Our Vets.''
The fire department Is asking help from everyone this year to
make the Rutland Fourth of July celebration a success, by
entering the parade or displaying flags and signs In
appreclation of veterans.
Anyone wishing to help with the parade. enter !'he parade, or
with questions, should call Charlie BarJ:!!It at 742-2578 or Lilly
Kennedy at 742-2861.
.
.

Rain, hail hits Midwest

TVC Co-CHAMPS - Meigs beat Wellston 1·0
Tuesday afternoon, giving the Marauders a TVC
, co-championship with Belpre. Front row, 1-r:
Robin Qualls, Je~f McElroy, VInce' Vanaman,

Evans, Diddle crowned Southern queen, king

--Local .news briefs... _ ___,
Continued from page 1

The championship was the
second In the TVC for the
Marauders in baseball. In 1984
the Marauders won the Iitle
ou trlght under the direction of
then Coach Tim Saunders. By '
coincidence !'he Marauders defeated Wellston for that Iitle 10-4.
Saunders Is now the coach for •
Dublin High School out side of
Columbus.
By lnnlnp:
Wellston ...... .. .... 000 000 0-0-3-1
Melgs ................001 000 0-l-4-0

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Wedn11dey, May 31. 1989

Continued from page 1
secondary schools, an Increase of
7.7 percent and $66 mi!Uon more
than the House recommended. In
addition, local resources will add
another $44 m!lllon with a formula revision.
Sen. Cooper Snyder, R·
Hillsboro, chairman of the Senate Education Committee, said
the overall Increase of $420
million would Increase support
· for schools by 6.8 percent In fiscal
1990 and by 5. 7 percent In the
following year.
Colleges and universities will
receive $3.4 billion. an Increase
of $412 million or 13.8 percent,
and $84 million more than the
House called for.
''Once again, without raising
taxes, the Senate has demonstrated that education Is our
highest priority," said Sen. Eugene Walts, R-Columbus.
The .budget provides $4.2 bll- .
lion in state funds for human
services, with most of the Increase coming in the area of
Medicaid - health care for the
poor- which costs the state $2.3
billion.
Sen. Richard Finan, RCinclnnall, said the welfare
appropriation focuses on "people
who cannot help themselves'' A
4 percent welfare benefit Increase recommended by the
governor Is delayed by 10
monl'hs. and the Senate ellml·
nated relief payments for ablebodied recipients between ages
19 and 25.
Although the budget tor the
Ohio Department of Aging Is
doubled from $35 million to $71
million and the administration's
PASSPORT program - Independent living for senior citizens
- Is fully funded, Democrats
complained about cuts In House
levels. particularly In a senior
citizen pilot project.
The Senate version of the
budget also saves $30 million by
eliminating an employee classification modernization plan recommended by Celeste and
another $36 million by requiring
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to sell bonds to
finance community water and
sewer development projects.
As passed by the Senate, the
budget places a 7 percent annual
cap on tuition at state colleges
and universities and adds $5
mUllan to the House line for
public transportation grants.
It also cuts $10 million In
Industrial development programs from !'he House recommendation, eliminates the
Spanish-speaking Affairs Commission, and limits the Ohio
consumers' counsel's term and
makes him subject to Senate
confirmation.
The Senate declined to establish a Department of Recovery
Services, as lhe governor asked.
but It placed all alcohol and drug
abuse profll'tms under a deputy
director In the Ohio Department
of Heall'h, with a $35 million
appropriation.

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIDY

CATS FOR-ADOniON
fOI .MOIE

992·3026

-

992·5427

ALUMNI ROYALTY- Selected queen and king at Saturday
night's annual Racine-Southern Alumni Banquet were Becky _
Evans and Shawn Diddle, both 1989 Southern High graduates.
Evans Is the daughter of Denny and Linda Evans, of the Portland
area. Diddle Is the son of Tom and Pam Diddle, Racine.

..

Record number in contest
WASHINGTON (UP!) -After
weeks of Impersonating a dictionary, a record 222 students
from grades 4-8 were ready to
begin competing Wednesday In
the 1989 National Spelltng· Bee.
Contestants In !'he 62nd annual
spelling bee, sponsored by the
Scripps Howard newspaper
chain ' were to step up to the
miCrophone. listen to a word s
pronunciation and If desired, get
a definition of the word and Its
use In a sentence. A misspelling
means automatic elimination.
The final round with thl' two
'surviving spellers will be held
Thursday.
The 1988 winner was Rageshree Ramachandran, who outlasted 199 other contestants.
Ramachandran. who was sponsored by the Sacramento Bee
newspaper, won by properly
sjielltng "eleglacal," meaning
sorrowful.
Of the 222 contestants In the
1989 bee, 120 are girls and 102 are
boys. The youngest is 9 and the
oldest contestants are 15. The
children are sponsored by newspapers from every state, the
Dis trlct of Columbia, Guam,
Puerto Rico, VIrgin Islands,
Mexico and a Department of

.

Defense School In West
Germany.
•
Paige Pipkin, 21 of Wichita :
Falls. Texas, was the 1981
national champion and Is a staff
member on this year's bee. Her
winning word was "sarcopha-~
gus," a limestone coffin.
"Winning Is just a big kick. It's
just a thrill to work so hard and
win." she said. Pipkin was 13 and
in the 8th grade when she took •
home the trophy.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

' . :· .

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

•=··w

••-

_,.,_.

Our store made a quantity purchase of HEAVY D~TY
sewin&amp; machines which are of ruJ&amp;ed construct1~n.
Their performance is paranteed to make you a ~t.•s·
fled sewer. These models are used in $1f!ln&amp; chn.•cs
across Am•rica and will sew on all fabncs: den1m,
canvas, upholstery and EVEN LEATHER. All are
BRAND-NEW, in factory-sealed cartons.
These hi&amp;h pelformance MACHINES are available for a
limited time only.
Your Pay Only
s...st Ust
00
tl99.00

$139

PLACE: IHE FAIIIC SHOP
no war .,. Sllll1 ·
PO_.Y,.OU7..

DATE: JUNE 1st·1 Oth
TIME:

9:00·5:00

PHONE: 992·2114

�WadnUdiiY, Mey 31, 1989

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

•

BEDDING PLANTS AVAILABLE
ASST.
Cyprus
•
antums
·Multh

$
99
3
2CUL

FT. lAGS

•We ResllfVe the Right to Umlt Quanthlee •Pr'- Effective thN Sat. June 3, 1888

•USDA Food Stompo Olocly Accepted •Not Reoponalble for Typographical Errofl

ORANGE JUICE
~hht~· $149

Beat of the bend

41NCH

3

BREAD
~:.: $149

oz.

I'ECIAL

99·(

.,__

FOODLAND

COFFEE

FAT

\

MILK

2°/o
MILK

CAN

BEEF CHUCK

, BONELESS

,.~HUCK

ROAST

49
LB.
IONEUSS

TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ................ lb.

$ 9t

COCA
COLA

GALlON
Umlt I with fl 0.00

~ddiH-1

, .....

an.

5 LB.

BAG ..

Rinso :~xoz.
Detergent

2

HOLLY FADS

Mixed Fryer
Parts
..

SLICED
BA(ON

.

sing

~

Thelma Henderson , lead he
Mother's f!BY program, ''Grow·
lng Through United Methodist
Women," when the.Alfi'ed United
Methodist Women met recently
at the home of F1orence Spencer.
. All merrlbers Joined . In the
program read.lng and discussion
and sharing of 011t society's
.;hl5tory. Ten memhl!rs answered
roll call and 25 sick calls were
. reported; Sandra · Mas.sar was
. ~est.
,
'
.
,Mrs. Spencer has the, prayer
calendar and chose A. Delbert
Asay who Is a missionary In

education In Mexico. The group
signed a birthday card for lllm.
Mrs. Hende1;on gave reported
on the Methodist Church' ln the
Dominican Republic where the
church helped the people through
demonstration of a model farm.
Local' farmers came to the
church to express their
gratitude.
During the business meeting,
Nellie Parker, presl!jent, read
letters from Slne-Cer~. the
Henderson Settlement, Response
.Magazine, and the Festival of
Sharing. Ways and means of

~t;!i~~~
Roulli••

A picnic was held In conjunc- appointed service ch~lrnian, and
lion with the last meeting of the j,-llecky Triplett was appointed
year for members of the Ohio Eta l'ways and means chairman with
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Theresa Kennedy-as co-chair.
Sorority when tile group met at
Mrs. Kennedy reported on the
the home or Judi Cowan In
success of the pizza party that
Middleport.
was given for residents of the
During the business meeting Meigs County Infirmary. She
the golf tournament was dis· also reported on the state conven·
cussed and plans will proceed. tlon and some Ideas for mohey
I
Vanessa Sidwell was appointed makers.
historian. Ann VanMatre was . Betsy Jones won "best cultural

'

. A catered dinner was served to
131 mothers and dauchters who
attended the Racine BapUst
·Church mother-daughter ban·
q11el, with Martha Lou BeeaJe
giving the welcome and Mar jorle
Qrlmm the Invocation.
""Arter the dinner, everyone
sang the mother-daughter 10ng
and the Introduction of guests
and recognition of mother• was
conducted by Barbara Gheen.
•'My Wild IriSh Rose'' and

•'"*

.==·
~to

Jonathan

-IIVU

.

•

Increasing the treaSIIf),: were
t
discussed.
Mrs. Spencer served&gt;sloppy
joes and lemon' cake during the
social hour to , !!IPSe mentioned
and Sarah Calcl)lrell, Charlotte
Van Meter, i'flna Robinson, Mar·
·t ha Poole. Martha ElliOt&amp;, Eleanor Boyll!li. and Osle Mae Fol·
!rod. Mr-s. Spencer gave aa:erum
plants to the guests.
The next meeting will be June
20 at 'the church. Mrs. Henderson
and Mrs. Elliott will be hos·
tesses. The program will be
"Gospel Clues to
Communication."

.

1

report" for the year ~th her
report on India by Madua Mahol·
tra, and Joyce Douclaa received
the"bestrefresbment"honarfor
her angle food cake with cbocolate, whip cream. nuts. and pop.
Secret sisters of the past year
were revealed and new ones
chosen for next year. The names
of nine new pledges were·submlt··
ted and approved, and lnstalla·
lion of officers was held.

"When You Wore a Tulip" were Devotions were given by Nancy
sungbyeveryoneandashortBklt Carnahan, about Hannah,
about flowers followed{ Delorel mother of Samuel, the prophet.
Cleland I'Jead two poems, ''Moth-, ' C!OIIng prayer was by Ellen
· er's Gardcin" and "My Mother Deaver.
Will Walk • In Her _Ga~~,~~-"
I

END Of

//

'

VBSma~t.

The VBS Is for ages two throug
high school. A program will be
presented on June 18, wltb
Kathryn ·Johnson, director, and
Robert Purtell, minister.
,•'&lt;"

Men~s slOw pitch

soflba&amp;l tournament
There will be a class D and E
USSSA state qualifier men's slow
pitch softball tournament on
June 10 and llln Reedsville. Cost ·
Is $75 plus two softballs. More :
lnfonnatlon may be Obtained by ·:
calling (614) 378-6406.
Bible sebool

The Racine First Baptist
Church will be having Vacation
Bible School on June 5·9 from
9-11:30 a.m. forages two through
high school.

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to .lenftl' · lelllft'l, limY
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~ the joining ol two
.... in. rrlllrimony. To ce1ebrW this j¥ua OXNion,

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\'Colli ?ion hu, .

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pt\lllldl .........

IIWI1oCteo ol thM tpedll dlly.

call Ubi• a.Mdol
fine
CDIMY bell
.....
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Mil JIIP!i:ir-.

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SEASON CLEAUNCE

~ }glib

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"SAI4E"

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PRECIOUS

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1lle Wll!lddklg Qidi kAt sym-

nAiliNG ....AY, IIAY .J0-9 AJI.

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I

be obtained by calUng (614)
378-6406.
TnMeea to.m4!fJt
The Letart Township 'l)'ustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
office building.
Zion Chun:h
of Chrilt VBS
The Zion Church or Chi'lst,
Route 143,ls planning a tWo week
Vacation Bible School for June
·5-16 ·from 9·11:30 a.m. each ··
morning.
The theme Is "Joy Trek Journey with Jesus Through
Time and Space. There will be
workbooks, games, lessons,
songs, and "ApoUa Koala" tbe

mLL A NICE IELECnON OF PLANTI TO CHOOH

011111~,u.
•Robin
and ~uaene
atudiM

Pie baklug, cake
deeora,llug coaleal
The Rutland Fire Department
will be having a pie baking and"
cake decorating contest at the
annual 4th or July celebration.
Pies can be or any ldnd with
tlrst"place receiving $25, second
place $15, and"third place $10. All
pies must be In throw away pans.
· The cake decorating theme .Is
"Patrlodc." First place will
receive $50, second place$25, and
third place $15.
Family reunion set
The annua] E .R. Hollon family
reunion will be held Junella! the
Chester Fire House In Chester. A
bucket dinner will be held and
each person Is asked to bring
their own table service.
Bible sehoolsla&amp;ed
Vacation Bible School will be'
held at the Racine United Metho·
dlst Church June5-91rom 9 toll
a.m. The theme lor the week will
be "Joy Trek, Journey with
Jesus through Time ·and Space."
For information. call 949·2061 or
949-2589. All children, ages preschool through junior h_igh. are
· welcome.·
Zion Hill singers
The Zion Hill Singers will sing
Sunday at 11:30 a .m. at the
United Faith Church located
near the Rt. 7 -bypass in Pomeroy. The publiC Is Invited .
Soflballloumameat
A class E USSSA State Quail·
fler Softball Tournament will be
held on June 10 and 11 at Eastern
High School. Cost Is $75 plus two
softballs. More Information may

I

One new adult and one teenaaer were welcomed Into 01\111
TOPS 570 when the group met .·
recently at the fairgrounds for Its
regular weekly meeting.
Lennie Aleshire, leader,
C)pened the meeting with prayer
and pledge, and Peggl Vlnlnc.
assistant leader. conducted a
game wltb Diane Herdman re- ~ ;
ce.lvlng 11 gift for winning.
The bestloser was Tina Geary,
who also won the fruit basket,
and runner up was Kathy
McDaniel.
The group meets everj Tues·
day at the fair grounds. Walking
Is at 5 p.m.; weigh· In Is at 6 p.m., ·
and the meeting Is at 7 p.m.
EveryOne Is welcome to attend.

ALL aDDING &amp; .IRAIU PLA111S
IY. Rail•. $7.10 .
lOW •• 71

SLA'CIS,

¢ailutllera.
. .
F\lture scleattat
went
to ~or/ MelCJ~ ... JUOII
Rollah. Other 101eDcf/ awardl

TOPS 570 meets

Area happenings

Racine church conducts mothfr, daughter dinner

Of

Mlchflle Harrta,
Swluner Grvvw, &amp;lid Pell)'

I

Ohio Eta Phi has last m~ting. of year

ant.

tee:

Mrs. Don Archer, Mr. and Mrs.
"Doc" Archer. Mr. and Mrs.
John Arbaugh, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Weber and Mike, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Stout, Mrs. Connie
Soulsby and. Shannon, Mr, and
Mrs. Terrie Souls by, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Francis, Susie, Billy,
and Andy, Mr. and Mrs. John
Rice and David, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Barnhill, Leah Jean Ar·
baugh, Mr. and Mrs. Blake
Weaver, Mrs. Mildred Caldwell,
Mrs. Evelyn Summerfield, Mrs.
Edna Harmon, Mrs. Edith
Harper. Mrs . Osie Follrod, Mrs.
Mae Vineyard, Mrs. Doris Ko.
i!nlg, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Gorrel and Linda, Mrs. Don
Bennett, Mrs. Betty Chevalier,
Mrs. Debbie Chevalier, and Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Spencer.

Alfred .UMW has Mother'sDay program

Awards day was · held at
itlzer. Denlle Roush, Erika Mea·
Portland Elementary for at·
dows, Shawn .Dalley, and James
hlellc: attendance. and good Parsons.
'
citiZenship awards.
Students with perfect attend·
Studentortheyearawardwent ance Included Stephanie Ro.
to David Pickens. the citizenship ·berts, Robin Gillispie, Jes~~yca
award went to Bonnie Lawson. Hatfield, Erica Ginther, ·Angel
the school patrol" awards went . Roberts, and Peggy Caruthers.
A.aron Hoback, James Parsons, .
The outstanding Chapter I
Toni Sellers, David Pickens, students were Chris Proffitt,
Bonnie Lawson, Scott . Carsey, JamleEvans,ErlcaGinther.and
and C.J. Harris.
Leslie Richard.
· ." Super scholars noted Included
HonorroDstudents .f ortheyear
Jennifer Shain. Jessica Cooper. Include Chrlltey Riley. Jennifer
Asbley McKinney. Greg Mc!&lt;ln· Shain. Erin Bolin. Anita Holter.
n~. C.J. Harris. David Pickens.
Joey McKinney, ·~anda Lang,
Angel Robert~.
and ' Chris Joshua Pullins. J.eslllca Cooper,
Hamm.
Patty Lawrence; · Billie Jo
Wlnnlna ~ood clllzenlhlp Sellen. Albley McKiruiey, Greg
awards were Amanda Lang,
McKinney. Hillery Harris,- Amy
Leslie Richard. Jenny Sellers.
Rizer, C.J. Harris, and David
Greg McKinney, Robin Gillispie.
Pickens.
AngeiRoberts,anciChrlaHamm.
Thooe students who missed
Writing awards were given 10 three days or less were Ty
Joey McKinney, Ty Johmon.
Johnson, Todd Rizer. Emily
Dul11, Jan\le Evans,. Matthew
David Tiemeyer. Emily Dull!,
Gabe Smith, C.J. Harris. · and
Evans, !tillery Harris, Jusdn
Robin Glll15ple, Angel Flinn. Ell
Mlddleswart. Brlanne Prl&gt;ffltt,
Crall and Ronnie Johnson .. and
Jamie Rizer, Shawn Dalley, Ben
Forrest Teaford.
Kauff. Craig Wolfe. and Michael
Spelling award winners were
Rood. •
Erin Bolin. Tereu Bush. Lind·.
.,
Smith, EmilY; Duhl. Gabe
H _y_mn
.
~t
·.
Smith, Bollllle LaWIOn, Zot:ah
_
,
Hensley, and Michael Rood.
The Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad· ·
lnnen of reading awards
ventlst Church. Mulberry
w e given to Erin Bolin, Patty Heights. will be basting a benefit
· La renee, Jonathan Dalley,
hymn sing on Sunday afternoon
AntY RW!r, Den lie Roush, Mi· beaJnnlng at 1:30.
cbelle Harris, Summer Groves,
Among thole scheduled t!) take
and PenY Caruthen. •
part 11re • the Jobnsons from
l\lath award wbtnera Include
Belpre, the Mixed Choir from
Jo*ua Pullllll. Patty Lawrence,
Athens, the Clark Family. the
Anfand~ Smith, J•ua Roullb,
Junior White TriO and others.
Gafle Smith, Erika 'ltl*'w•.
RoPit Jom.-, _
FellY

iay

'

lEG • 'IIICIIAHII'S

l!ongenette
birth announced

.

2 UTER

A famtly night banquet was
carried out recently at the St.
Paul United Methodist Church In
Tuppers Plains with the Rev.
Don Archer giving the blessing
before the potluck dinner.
Games were played during the
social hour with prizes awarded.
A program was presented with
the singing of "Love Lifted Me,"
scripture reading and poems,
·"Home" by Anna Rice, '"I'he
Soul of a Child'' by Joan Francis,
"Growing Older" by Carl Barnhill, "Father Grumble" by Hazel
Barnhill, and "Masterpiece" by
Debbie Chevalier.
The gropp sang "Bless Be the
Tie that Binds" and John Rice
closed with prayer.
Those·attending were Rev. and

named ·
valedictorian

I.

HUDSON
FLOUR

Yes! It doesn't Sl'em posalble
bu.t It Is THAT time of tbl! year
already.
.
The . Racine
V lllage
Board will
Its 1989
Summer
grams at the
Star Mill Park
thl5 Saturday, June 3, beginning
at 7 p.m.
And the entertaining proerams
will continue throuah Sept. 9 on
alternate Saturday evenlnas.
.Invitations to various country,
~stern and aospel aroupa have
bee'! sent Inviting them to share
their time and talent In Racine.
Ail· groops Interested In par tiC!·
patlng are asked to call Bob
~egle at 949-2891, or Ivan
~ell, 949-24115.
\YIIh appreciation. , the Park
Board notes that through the
Racine Home National Bank. 11
acres have been added to the
parkslteforfuturedeveloprnent.
And - addltlo~t~~l playaround
equipment Is to be Installed yet ..
thl5 spring. Talk about growth.
!;a program dat~ , fpr the
summer as plans . now stand
Include June 3 and 17; July 1, 15,
a~pd 29; August 12 and 26, and
S4pt. 9.
·
The Park Board stresses that
'tl!e programs are good clean fun
for the entire family.
There's only one requirement
- you gotta bring your own
chair. Enjoy!
-------High schoolaraduates living In
Syracuse have those wonderful
.Carleton Memorial Scholarships
If they · wish to further their
education.
And - the scholarships ate
lilrilled to grads living In
Syracuse.
So now Is the time to: complete
those applications. the deadline
being June 19.
The applications can be secured from John Lisle, secretary
of the Carleton Coll~ge Board or
Trustees, and of course.. can be
returned to John.
.
-------• - The&gt; ~ ~~ . Obambe.- · of
CoJIU'I)etce Is looking for support
·letJers for the opening of a new
seafood restaurar:tln Pomeroy.
• The restaurant ls.attemptlngto
obtain a lll'&amp;nt and so are'a
support letters must be available

Awards
Day
held
.

•PLAIN •SELF RISE.

CREAM

Church has family banquet

stating that there is a need and
desire for that type business In
our area.
'
11 you would suppo~t tills type
ofbuslneasyouare.ukedtowrlte
a lettentatlll( the.need and lend
your ·letter to the Pomeroy
Cbamber of COmmerce, East
Main St. The name of the
establllhment lnteretlted In the
community 15 The Red snapper
- one such restaurant Is cur·
rently operatlnaln Parkersburg.
----.--Yes, Southern Hl&amp;h School
prom pictures are ln,Jnd can be
picked up at tile high IfbooI office
anyweekday,8:30to .l la.mand1
to 3 p.m.
..
--,------- ·rAnd don't look now but· the
allllual obserVance of Heritage
Weekend 15 rolling right ln. This
Matthew Christopher . Cofwill be the weekend of June 9 and
fland,
son of Rdbert Louis and
the Melp Museum .will be
Debqrah
Spen~er Coffland,
1eaturlng special programs and
Cadiz,
and
grand~on of Billy Joe
exhlbltll In additiOn to other
activities being planned, espe- and Mary Kathryn Vaughan,
c.lally by the Pomeroy·Chamber Pomeroy, will IM!1valedictorian
of Commerce which will be doing. at the Cadiz Hlg~ School com·
a craft show and some entertain' mencemenl ' exlerclses on
Thursday.
1
ment do~town.
Throughout
high
school Cof· ------fland
has
maintained
a 4.0
ADAM J. LONGENETTE .
· Md It Wllf! a delightful lOOth
average.
He
has
redelved
a
letter
, birthday party for Middleport's
of commendation r om the NaMaude Betz.
She received over 80cards and tlnnal Merit Scholarship Corpogifts on the occasion and appre- ration and an honor awards pin
elates so much the work of her from the 1988 American High
Larry and Robin Longenette,
nieces, Loraine Lee, Sally Ben- School Mathematics Exam. He
has
been
honored
as
a
Puritan
R*:hland,
Ind., are announcing
nett, Eva Robson, and"Genevleve
Ward and her friends. Reva Honors Scholar lor four years the birth of a son, Adam Joseph,
Beach, F1ora Marte Gibson and and Is llstedlnWho'sWhoAmong on May 9.
The infant weighed seven
• Sarah Flo~r who helped In so American High SchOol Students.
He
also
participated
in
the
Ohio
pounds
ten ounces, and was 22
many ways wllh the nice party."
Mrs. Beti' Is at her home on Tests of Scholasdc Achievement inches long.
The couple also bas a daughter .
High St. )!I MiddlePort for .the for four years. placln~ within the
,
top
20
each
year·
Thls
year
he
Karl
Michele, who celebrated
summer and by the way ~ this Is
wa;s
a
member
of
'tqe
winning
her
third
bltthday on May 4.
· the same residence where· she
state
team
·
In
Sen~or
Social
Paterntil
grandparents are
went to housekeeping so many
1
Duane and Betty Longenette,•
years ago. Mrs. Betz spends a Studies .
Coffland Is a two year member Long Bottom. Maternal grandpart o1 her.tlme In Columbus and
there wu an ejU'IIer party staged of the National Honor Society, parents are Bill and Charlene
In her honor 111 that city.. A and this year's winner of the Ohio Wilkinson, Hatfield Ind.
'
member of the Middleport First Board of Regents Scholarship '
from
Cadiz
High
SchOjll.
He
has
,
Grange
to
meet
Bapdst Chun:l!. Mrs. Betz loves
company and !here are (requent ' been Involved In the Cadiz .
wrestling program for 11 years,
Star Grange will meet In
visitors. ·
, . .
on
the
varsity
team.
He
three
regular
session on Saturday at 8
So - thanks rtom Mrs. Be.t z to
competed
In
the
state
wreslllng
'p.m.
at
the
grange hall on County
all or you who made' tl!e surpriSe ·
tournament
as
a
junior.
Road
1,
north
of Salem Center.
. party S\ICh a plea~ant expe· .
.
•
Cotn.,id
plans.
19
.attend
tJ1e
.
Racine
Grange
will visit and
·. r.lence. ,Jus,NI)I,DII-:- o~ wbole
.
'
University
of
'li'oledo
where
he
preseqt
the
program.
.
century a.nd . haqain&amp; right In
will
major
In
accounting.
He
has
All
CW
A
sewing
and
needlethere.
·'' •. '·' ·
,.,
·been admltted l to the Honors work contes Is will be judged at
--------- "
Happy retirement. John Dud- Progr~m at Toledo •. and Intends this meeting .
All members and contest appll·
ding !llKl J!J#e sinible. Do keep to become a Certlfled Public
Accountant:
cants are urged to attend . .
smiling.
r
'

·:~ortland ElerrientafY

PLAsnc

• DIET OR REG.

oz.

~-day. M-v 31, 1989

,•

•

SPRITE,
34.5

.

i By BOB HOEFLICH

.. 32

.

.

It's ·that time of J(jar

SA.LAD I)RESSING

LOW

DailY Sentinel
.

hgl 7 _

NA1UII'S lEST

CHASE &amp;
SANBORN

I

By The .ftend

FI)_ODUie liNG SIZE

SEALnST

•

0. •

�·.

WednaldiiY. May 31. 1989

Ponwoy-Middeport, Ohio

•

......-----------CHATEAU

31. 1989

Rutland

Charcoal
••

10 11•
lAG

We Reserve The Ri1ht To'
Limit Quantities .

•

•••

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

99·&lt;

limit I Pw Coupon. G.H Oolly
AI Pow••• Supll' Vall. Good
ttwu Sot• .1u11t 3, 1tl9

I

r--·----~-------

ARMOUR

ViernlG Sausage

2.~A:~·· $·1
limit 2 Ptr Coupon. Good Only
At Powoll's So!por·V•Iu. Good
tllnl s.t. June 3, 1919

Community .
calendar

1·
1

""-----~--:-:-------~

r·
·
· I
-~·-------------·

.I

I

CORONET
.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BO ELESS

I

'

I

·Toilet
Tissue II
·

$159
Chuck
Ro
st
~~~
$169.
i
••••••••
..
SLICED
I
I
r· •
· · · · $149
'14 ··Pork Lo1n •••~••••
!------~-------J
ll. .

I

I

'

!

•

I

·.

1

r

STATE F~IR BRANq

I

$

.

MIDDLEI;'ORT -Members of·
the Middleport Literary Club_will
· m~t at the home of M~s. Dwight ·
Wallace on Wednesday at 11 a:m.
for their a.nnual O)ltliJg. Call Mrs.
.GeOrge Hackett Jr. for details.

,,

Cubed Steak ••••~••• S2
·

,.
'

'

·: .

.

.

1

Hotdog Sauce II
oz.

A Missions
Conference will be held Wednes·
day· through Sunday at VIctOry
: Baptist Church, 525 North Second
• , Ave., In Middleport. A dlf,erent
· miSsionary will be speaking each
night. Speclalslnglng will also~
featured nightly. Rev. James E.
Keesee. pastor. welcomes
everyone:
·

I

limit 3 Por Coupon. Gold ONy I
At Powell'•
Vatu. Good . . II
lin
s.t.
Julio
3,
1919
,__ ______________
JI

•

s...,.

,.,-------------,
I

KEYSTONE

$

I
I

Ham .Salad ···'-·····l=• ·.

lhn S.t., · - 3, 1919

L-------------..11
'
STOKElY

I

Catsup

I
I

..

I
I

•
•

I 32 OZ.

lm.

, .

89&lt;.

••

·
5
9&lt;
Toma t oes ········•••~!•·
FRESH

. . . lB

..

.·

.••

..

•

FLAVORIJE I·

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
' PlASnC GAllON . ,

•

$•1· 49·,

..
,4

•
'

i

DAIRY LANE

SHOWBOAT

Porki &amp; Beans .·m3 / Sl
1

.Ice

2.2.~· S1
20 OZ. lOAF

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees lVIII meet II!
regular session 'l'hlll'lday·at 6:30
· ,p.m at the Rutland nnt Statton.
The public Is Invited to attend.

'

'

I

nm.t.Y
HARRISONVILLE - Lend-a·

.Lo.tsa· Pop

:band SocletyofHarriiODvillewllt
. : 'hokl a bike and rwnmare 18le
;• Friday and Saturday from 9a.m
·; to 4 p.m at the Harrtlonvllle
. :Presbyterian Church.

-,
50~

147

I
. ,. II
••
i. , I
I
I

oz.

$599

..
• · The Pomerqy Cburcb of Cbrllt
wUI be awardlnr certlfleates Cor
; "StudleslD tbe BIIIW' oallunday
: •to the follawtDI illd.lvld)llll;
'. J - llld Jellll)' Wbltlltch.
: • · Middleport, 8l1d Jtudllr and
Unda LauclennDt, Pomeroy.
Thele '•• Waft ulfaed, free

soc'

- -·:.1

'

.

•

·ofr.r:;.re·
' lO

.:......IIIIDn'nllto
...
WlsMI

ca11181· 21or•2••·

'

1~... S2.19
.

SWW,I'S IClliiKII

VA~ .BlAND:

HAM ••e.!~••••s l . 9 9

Ill .....

.

'

1-------NOTICE OF SAlE

s!:
"1:'.:.r :~ 1 ::!
Common PI- Court
0~'/"'

01

~~~ County, Ohio, in tho

~~ ~'o::::":~~~i~~.!

Robert T. st-•n. 01 11..
·Qetondllnto. upon a Judi·
mont therein rondefed. be·
ing Cou No. B9·CV-4t in

:\~ !i~.=·~0:::1.1..':!':'t!:

Courthouoe in ·Pomeroy,
MoigoCounty.OH.onthl18th
dey otJune. 1989,11110:00
1.m
.. the ton-Ing Iondo
and tenementl. A compl..e
logot deocrlption ot the root
eoute ill .. tollowo:
The following reol eoutt
li!Uitld
in the
VMioge of.
Rutiond end
Townohip
of
Rutlond. Meigo County,
Ohio:
_ Percot Ono: The following
real en.te ·•itu.ted In Au·
tlend Townohip, Mtigo
County, Ohio, boing in the
ooutl!west quorter of Sec·
tion B. Town 6, Range 14ot
the Ohio Compony'o Put·
chMe. Beginning ilt the
nQJ!hwoot co•nor pilot No.
&amp;• .of Barton's Addition to
the Vill~_vo ot Rutlond:
.thence North 16 dog. Eoot
483 feet to Theobald lot:
thence North; 76 dog. Wnt
142 filii .to tl)o centet of

I

OPEN ENROLLMENT NOTICE
In accordance with Chapter 1742 of the
Ohio RaviHCI Codti, AdvaCara. a Holzer
Clinic, Inc./Central Benefits Mutual lnaur·
ance Company Health Maintenance Organiution, will conduct ita open enroll·
ment period for the entire Ohio State Ser·
Vice Area from June 01. 1989 through
June 30,1989, for anaffactivedateofJuty
01, 1989. You may not be declined on the
buia of your health status unlea you are
confined in a hoapltal or medical facility for
a chronic illnea or permenent injury at the
time of the application for AdvaCara cover·
!1198 .i1 m.~de. lnforma~on abo!!J the plan .
ce_n__beobtai.n_edbycallngthaAdvaC•reof·
flee at: 814~6-15281." 1f Interested, you
thould apply in _peraon at tha AdvaCara Of·
fice, located at the Holzer CUnic, 386
J ac kIOn Pik e. . Ga ttl pot'II, Oh'10 . . Inperaon
enrollment is atrongly 1ugge1ted for pur·
pon1 of acquainting new anrottea1 with
our facilitiel. If specifically raquelted, ho·
waver, - will accept application by matt .
You may apply Monday through Friday bet·
ween thajloura of 8:00a.m. and 6:00p .m.
The pre-payment for the firlt month of a
coverage mult be made pn' or to tha effec·
tive data of .,!:Overage.
J5117.-24. 41: (117. 14.21. 28 7tc · ·

thence

ooutherly down center of
crHk with the meanderlnlll
thereof to 11 point which io
north 76 diiJ. WMI 23&amp;·feet
!tom the point of boginning,

•Read the Best 5eler
Read the

PARTY SNACKS

SIIIII'S-1.111
m-.u.~u.!:. 2/991

--..... LIMA

PIISIIIPI 6x6 SIZI
,IOMlTOES-•••~.~....691
24 (1.

HIAD DnUCE .........691

--7, CT.

DEL APPUS ....... 2/691
CAW. CEUIJf!J!~.39c

G .OLDEN fRIES •••••••U!Ze. S1.89

BE·ANS.l~!Ze. S1.79

BABY

ll•s•n

CAUUFLOWER
••••••••lt!Ze••••• 99&lt;
. .

~~!Ze. S1.49

lliECTAR ...

WIDU

.

I.I A I S a..e••e..

'

Sesame Sticks • Pretzel Rods • Oriental
Ric• Snack • Club Mix • Bridge Mix,
PHnuts (salted or unsalt141),
lutt1rmints • Party Mints
Cakl Tops ·Wedding &amp; Amiverary
Cake Decorating Supplies

·s,..l•l Thl• w..kl J••• t, 2, s
Sorbet Sugar Fret Candies

s-

• ... $1.11-1 OL
Sale $17
I 01.
NEW SUMMER HOURS:
Mon.-Tu1. 8·1: Thuto.·Fri. 8·5: - · • Sot. 9·5
Wo Accept Food Stompo

OHIO VALLEY BULl FOODS

Potcol Four: The following
root
inRut..,d
County.
lot No.4
RUtt~d. bolng-81
IN! on Dopot Street by 181

lti.Ze••••• 7.9&lt;

••••••e••••••••~.ltJV;. 2 / S 1 . 1 9

IALVES.~••• ~•••lt.\Zee•••a 99&lt;
WHEAlS ••••••••lte\Zee S2.49

•a.e~•·····l!A\ee,. S1 st

.cinco• eet~eth s

1.29

.. •

TOWILSe.tBIIIe S1.19
·"e••••••••e•eeeUAee•iieltc

Parcel Four and th1 . . .

ment dllctibed
One

•boY•

1r1

In

Potcol

bouncilci on

the by Dopot Stroot
(County Road 1131 .,d the
otreet to ·the North jo Moln
Street (IIIIo Route 1241 •
- n n o - o i D_.,.
oouth end weot. Percele
One, TwO •od Thr• dlii·
crlbed above 1n not

r-ray.
Ohio
'

8

office.

· :

In ordef to be conolder8a·
ott -eel bido oholl bo:

received in the Tntllurw·a:
olfico by 12 o'cloctc noon o~ .

Moy 31, 1988.
.
.. ·
Sold Boord of ·Education :
fiiiiYM the right to occopf.
or reJect onv ond oil Plrto al:
ony lnd ••• bido.
-.
Boord of Education·
Elltorn locll School Dis,: .

trict :
.
.
--EioiH Bolton, TreMurer ·

38800SR7 ·
RHdovillt. Ohio 46772 ·
(61 10. 17, 24, 31, 4tc
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURt
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ·
PROBATE DIVISION '
In the Millar olthe
:

E...teof

-

Omo G. Sllrlcey, Doce•ed
No. 21258
:
NOTICE OF HEARING .
TO: DAVID JONES, w-•
piece of r11~ce ill u~
known ond to the heiro of
2101.0110 2101.21 of the
Ohio RIVillld
hoG
0mo G. lllrlcey, DeCOMod;
died hotootote:
.
An epplication hoo beert
tilld In thio Court offering
decedent' I pui'JIOI'ttd laot
Wilond Tjllllmonlfot p,.,_
· The -ing
on thi
opplicetion
wit ... held
....
June 28. 1988, 11 2:0&amp;
o'cloclc P.M. in thio Court:
Tho Court la.loclled in the
Court Houoo, Second ond
Court Strooto, Melgo
County, Ohio, 4&amp;769.
·
Robert E. auctc&lt;
Ptobete Judge
1An1 K. N11ootroad, Clerk •
(II 31: Ill 7, t4, 3tc
.
1 Card of Thanks

c-.

'.·a.RSSfiED ADS

514 East Main
- . 992-6910'

Speclflcetlon 1heet1 eril~
.vllilable •1 the Tr. .urer•e·

Inherit under Sectiona

corner of lot No. 4 in South

Percol Throe: The follow·
ing doocribed reot • - ·
oltuoted In the Vllloge of
Rutl1nd, Mel.go Countv.
Ohio: Beginning 11 the
oouthwwt carnor of Section
B. T-n 5. RMpe 14, of the
Ohio ComPiony 11 Purchooo:
lhonce no&lt;th 1tong 11ld
oection line 48 roclo 1nd 4
tNt: thence Millfly 19 rodo
to the center oi the crMk:
thence ooutlt olong the con·
tor of the crMk 25 rodll1nd 4
teet: thence eoot 18 rodo to
the nort- corner of lot
No. 4. in South Rutlond:
thence South 18 rodo ond 4
teet: lhM1ce wooblrly olong
the fllltoed right of woy 27
rodo .,d 4 filii to the piiCfl
of beginning, contoinlng 7

Eeotern local School Dio• :
bido on the following:
:.
Buihlng and Peroo1111
Pnopertylnounanco ·
.

trk:t d.. lr• to receive ~e.aecf.

-eot.t9

64 Misc. Merchandise

Rutiond: therlce In 1 WM·
torly direction 16 roCio to the
center of the cr.,...: thonce
northetly llong the cr.,... 1
dlo-ce of 8 rode ond efiOI:
in I -lolly ..._
14 roclo to the oouthwMt
corner of Lot No. 8: thenot
lOUth • rodo to tl)e .......ot
beginning; contoinlng .IT

NOTICE TO BIDDERS '· :
The Board ol Educ1tion of ·

Ome G. Surtoey,
who would be entltltd

.d•cribed ,_. qt.te aitu.te
in tho Villog 0 of Rutlond.

,_,

'
DAn 16 SIICI
'

18

r--------...!..._____
.
,
ADVACARE

acrH. more or lesa.

. . A T SALAD •••a•e••eelffe •••••e79&lt;

.

•

1--'-:::--:--::--:::-..,.,--Public Notice

acre. more or l•a.

SLICED lACON ••••••• lffe •• S1.19

Women of the Syracuse NIIZII· ..
rene Church will have a yarcf. aale ..
at the shelter house on Route 124
In Syracuse Thurlday amf Frl·
day. Proceeds will go toward
church projects. .

CASE OF 24

I

'

SIIVI YAC. PACK

---SYRACUSE - Tbe Mlaslonary .

GAY 90s BREAD

·~
/
~
'
.
G
AL
· $1l9'
Cream ............

OUAUIY SHOE notE '
.. •..... PO-OY'S
.

~

SYRACUSE - , MI. Morlib
Church of God Ladles Auxiliary •
will be having a yard saie on
Thursday, Fr·klay, and saturday
across from the Syracull! .Park. :.

BETSY ROSS .

'

'

.LOAF ••• •••••••••

. ROCK SPRIN&lt;;S .:.. SllllSbury
• Pack 246 wilt have It's award
: nlghi pack meeting on Thursday
al 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs ··
.United Methodist Church. ·

---·-----------'

Mediu_, Eggs ••••••••

I

LOTS OF
POP

.

DOZ.

.

•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Meigo County, Ohio, to-wit:
Beginning 111 the oouth-t

•

•••·~

---------------·
------------I

•

Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
PIOC.
: Star, Middleport, will have It's ·
CIIIISE-.....!~11,19
· regular meeting ot 7: 30 p.m. on
, Thursday at the · Middleport · ~ . . . . IMuniUIIl
. Masonic Temple. Offlc:ers are to
SMAI.L IIGS ..;.!l!-... 791
. ·. wear street dresses: ·

lilnlt 2 Por c..,... Goo4 Only
At hwell's Supor Vatu. G.H
llwu Sat....... 3, 1919 .

GRADE A
·•'

ne•
.

-.- ..

":.'"

Classi

Leading Creek:

'h",....,

..••

IWICI-1

-~

... ..

Sentinel- Page-9·:

right·of·woy 20 filii wide
by 161 IMt long-lota B and 9 in Barton's
Addition to Rutiend. con·
tolnlng 12,1 oquare rodo.
Percei Two;, Tho follOwing

.

THUBSDAY ·

--MIDDLEPORT ·- Evaneeltne

,Lillit 1 Por Clapoo. Gold Only
I · At Powell's Supor Vatu. Gaod
I
ttn Sat• .1u11t 3,
I

20°/o OJ

:; .:. .CHAPMAN SHOES·

. POMEROY - The Meigs
· County AA and AI-ADon meet·
: lng will be held Thursday at 7
~ p.m. at theSac:reciHeartCathoUc
Chu reb In Pomeroy.

I

SANDALS

•SIZE

'

---

·~

11

•

POMEROY - The Big Bend
Midget Football meeting will be
held at 8: 30 .p.m. at Cleland
Really on WE:dnesday .Interested
persons are Ul'Jed to attend.

r---~--:--------.,

~

conuining 2.62 ecr•. Aleo

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local Board of Education will
' meet In regular session Wednes·
day, 8 p.m: In the high school
cafeteria.

Ulliit 1 P• c..,... GIOII Only
At Pawoll'1 Supll' Vall. Goo4

ALL WOMEN'S

•.Connie
•Footworks
•Naturalizer
-•Panelli

HOBSON :- Tbe Hobson
Church of Christ In Christian
Union will be having missionary
service on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
· Mrs. Essie Lee of Gallipolis will
:·. be • •pc!atllhg. " Pastor . Tberon '
: . 'Durham Invites the public to
attend.

99 (.

I
I

,THUISDAy I FRIDAy &amp; SATUIDAy

---

::

Apple Juice
6~0Z. .
CAN

•

,.._..

--MIDDLEPORT -

'

I
I

•

HOMEMADE .

''
..

1

VIEm

10
CANS

".

FRESH

1

'
'
I

(
Leg Quarters ••••~.... 49
(.,
Chicken·Livers •••l:... 49

CHICKE~

RACINE - For anyone Inter·
ested In playing football this fall
In Southern Local School District, welghttlftlng will start on
Wednesday, 4: 15.to 5: 15 p.m. for ·..
the junior high; and 5; iiO to 7:30
p.m. for the high school All
young men are encouraged to
• : attend.

s
1
·l
3
·Frankies ••••:•••• ~!~!••• 99&lt;
SUPERIOR

39

1

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

149
Cor"' Dogs •••••••~••••

•

s.t. 1- 3, 1919

• - WEDNE$J)AY

..

I

ttwu

meet

FUN.
:IN THE SON
SANDAlS lf

•

..

RACINE ,- Wildwood Garden .
• Club will meet Wednesday for a
. 12 ·noon pot)uck at tlie home of · • Connie Hill. ·.
· ·,

Ulllil 1 •• c.....,. Gaod Only .
I At Powell's Supll' Valu. Goo4 1

I

Frien~y · Gard~ners

an

1

.- ...

Ohio

Officers were elected when ' project was dlscusse!! and a work·
'The A:ug. 15 fair flower show
.. members of the Rutland session' w,s set to plant befo~ · was· di!5Cussed with the club
- ... -Friendly Garderners met .re-._ the.111umnl banquet',
. responsible for · five arrangecently at the home of ·Marie
Tbe Ohki State Fair flower rnents. \1udySnliWdenistorunoff
· Birchfield.
.
beds, were discussed but no tlme · copies of the schedule for
NewofflcersareJoAnneFetty, was set for planting because the members. Mrs. Stewart, Lorrl
presklent; Janet Bolln. vice beds aren't ready. A work I)arnes, Kimberly Willford, and
president; SUzy Carpenter, se- session was set to ,flnlnsh the Mrs. Snowden will be making the
cretary; and Margaret Ed· sculptures for the bed. It was arra.ngementa.
wards. treasurer. .
-·
noted that five members are
A new copy of the by-laws was
'tbe meeting opened With· . planning to attend tbeconvention passed out with a vote to be held
' at the June meeting.
' members ·reciting the collect, ; at Mansfield on July 18·20.
aqd devollons entitled ''Friend- · " Joan Stewart ·asked club
The videotape •'Gardening
ship Garden" by Mrs. Edwards, members to make 'an arrange- Ground ·Up" was viewed, and
RoU call was answered with each ... , ment for t)!e four!~\ of July with . Kimberly Willford gave a 'report
member naming an. old fashl· "Patriotic'' being, the theme. on the Kentucky Coffeetree.
oned flowering sltrub In their ·Mrs. Stewart noted that the more Janet Bolin gave a reporL on
yard.
. ' far out the better. Anyone wislr- seeds tor cut flowers, and she
A thank you note was read ' lng 'fo· do
entry may do so. ' also read .. a 'paper on the
. from the Jade Garden Club for . 'WIMers wilt be voted on by the cucumber.
the seed package given tq them. public. The group also decided to
A revlj!w · or next month's
. The civic center beauUfiCatl_on . make a float ror the parade on meeting \!;as given and refreshmehts were served.
,July 4.

L-------------·.1

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,
OH;
··.
PRICES EFFECriVE SUN., MAY 28 THRU SAT~, JUNE 3,1919

-

.
'

~....

I

Public Sale
8a Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

The flmiiy II Cllerles
Arnold wishes to llipiiS$
their sincere apprecilltion. and hllltfllt thanks
to their l'lllltives, lritnds,
Inti fllilhbo,s for the ·
pt'II)WI,
visits, faod,
canis, flowers and to
1hose who helped in any
WI'J with their acts of

llndness and concem

Uinc the brief illness
11111 tht sudden dtlltll of
011'

kwttl 0111.

Daupters and
Solis·ln·law. Dorotby

and RIIY Underwood.
· ·. 'llrtllland Daniei
Cunninclllm, llary and
Loren Coleman

Saturday, June 3, 10:00 A.M.

· . MEIGS COUNTY NEAR DARWIN

Tho f•llr of tilt lilt Pt•l H.lla,. wUI offer at (llllllic
euctio1 tilt follawinl lilt. DirtclloiiS: Fro111 Athlns.
Routt 33 to D1111i1 about I 111i111, tum rilbt on Atlltns

Business
Services

i~t':f. T235, ..~ 1.5 mil• to f•m. Sfps !fill bt

STONE

CoulflJ It, 2 111i... tum on ltip Coanty T235, lmllt
·to farm. Fro111 P-oy. ROIItt 33 to Routt &amp;11.-t.
lsltn for Wlllley's Aulo), 2.5mll• turn riallt on lltip

DIUYIIII " SPIUI
IAWA CO.Uil
'
FARI
EQUIPIEIIl
AIID
TOOlS:
Sawmill
w/COIIIinental
red
bounded by ony ..
17.50 .. , .
seat power unit lias ot natural gas) in excellent condition,
howwer.
the
"'"'
to the
~ad
lleiM Teyler
_, ill Depot Stroet (County
planer, edtet, 1950 Chevy pickup, 1956 Chevy pickup, 77
614·US·t557
Road 1131. ond the otreet to .r Pinto. 68769 Malibu tiid other car bodies for parts, 1950
_ _ _ _3-;;,1,;,;0..,·' 1 mo.
the north Ia Moin Stroot'
Moline tractor. 1938 Allis Chalmer tractor, flrmelt400, 8N
Ilute Routl124lond t...,.
Ford Tractot, hay wa10n. 1930 Caterpillar, silo w/conciele
1re no • • • to thl IOU.,
staves
&amp; rinp, AC all crop IXJmbine. IXIrn planter. MF 7' dy·
•nd welt. ·· ,
i
iiabll81ced
side mount mower, slip SIXIop, Mf3 pt. 3 bolt!Jm
Potcol Five: The fol-inQ
plows, pain/hey elevllor. 2 side delivery nokes, Oliver ma· .
nure spreder !needs wood), Farmall end loader, Simplicity
tlond
Townohip, Malgo
----In~
County. Ohio: Bogin_nlng It .garden IJdor w/sickle bar &amp;cuttivllots. Simplicity rotiltiler,
· tt.
hrlllt'oy Oltio
riding lawn mower, disk harrow, draa harrow, s11ate aon1
the. ,nort- - - of
leotion 13: therlce South
culipacker, MF 7' flail mower, Moline pain dr~~ pull type
AUTO &amp;TRUCK
obout 100- to the road pader, scraper blade, post hole diner lor tractor, Ho- .
tine of the NYC RR r!Gitt·lf. ' mei~e,
f!icCuftoutill, Trtan a_nd David Bradlay choin saws. _
REPAIR
Se•s
ll!llt
qw,_Shaldon
benchl'!fl
3'
stock
metal
lllhll,.
the.'
north line of .H id rilflt·of
Al11 Tr•ite•lealo•
Kinfilly drill priU, 2 electric piped1eniachines. 2 \! Tchoin
Wllf 100 IIIII; ~ 11t1r11t
hoiit, 3cylelr compr•sor.gas ptllllfed aenntor, 3 heavy
-.1100 -totlti.IHtlon
PH. 992-5682
snatch blocks, !i" sloll ubla. braces &amp;bits, pipe dies &amp; pipe
line: lhliiC.-t to the.,._
· or 992-7121
of bogin'*'a. oontotning .21
visa. rope blocks, lll11mermill, 2 track, carn~~t. rope as·
ecr•. more • a. a.
sernbliaslrom barns, pavei Iori!, grass seeder, 5 hp.gaslllo..25·1fn
P - IIIII: Aloo the loltor, Sled deaner, wap miDI, lots of hand toots and much
1-lngroel-oitultedln
the 11me tC!Wnohlp, county
..
'lit - ~ II!. · -1 ...d
AIITMMJU AND COlllc:flllU: Antique horse dra1111 steilh
bounded • • d11crl~1d •
in pi! Cilllldi1lol~ vtcti'Qia wlhorn IIIII fJIIIIIdl. ,., .. rlllht ·
Ucuus r ·zl ••• • N · •
desk
lip, old trulltr. treadle s11111in1 ruchint. Hoosier caDInwtll.wt . . , . . of Seatkln
nit.
ward1obe
(routilll. oak Slcilboerd w/mirror, bullet
13: tbonGI nOrth 121 flit;
w/dlllllleet. hi;. blt:koak bed tram-. iron baby bed&amp;dou·
OPEI7 DAYS
bided, prim"IVt cartJIIIIer's chest. primitive wood pi81e &amp;
•bout 102 fiOI: 9AII-7PM
etlnr.llireea ballet. ltlntt~~~~. small butchlll' blodlllblt.
- t o the ~ · hot
fira pres. stone iln end crocks. cheese bqx, milk bottles,
leoti!&gt;ft 13: t~Mftoe-1011
. Paying today
B11111n Mule TlbiCCD bDx p:.M. KintAtl!enlj, earn jobba-s,
to 111!1 ..... of t~M~n­
nlng. aontllnlnt _1 .H ieroo.
Af!rllll, 1919
wooden wheetad cart. lior1l colin h•nes &amp; hii!Hit
Ill&amp;
w/llres llflolll, old wood worlin1 dltlt endtools, storltl•s.
tWI-t tolletiool
cast iron pols, tin boUw, bee 111v-. wooden keiiiRd
a..~., 21
bucklls, antique dod! parts, Stlllwl woodburner slowes,
cllld' s SllldiJ.'
\

Roger Hysell

n•.Garage

-=--...

""'

Til-COUNTY
IECYCUNG

---··-.·-

~

c.~

ondel•rotMid.
, _ M . ._lolly,
1t1e111t of Metro CouniY
ill 10. 17. 14. i1 4to

lEI

........, !W.IIIr'm, ~

==-:.'=~~&amp;":R.';;':
·
nln1l111,
.GIIIi
...............
11Gb
IIIII
(l!lllllltd'IIIIGII
_..
.
~==.~~t:2;~~
fOIUI.EI'IWAI8.Y:
IMRAt IUILDIIIII

"""""'
....a..
I ..,

Sl••

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
'

'

"Precious Memories, Precious
Moments" was the theme of the
Bradford Church of Christ
mother-daughter banquet held in
the social room at the church.
Tables displayed antique
Items. old pictures, and other
memorabilia. The color scheme
was carried out In lavender and
pink with place mats. napkins,
and small wicker baskets with
pink and lavender sachets used
as favors . Fuschlas were used to
decorate the auditorium. and
refreshments of salads, finger

Bradford
church dinner
honors moms

Wednesday, May 31, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
foods, and desserts were served
to approximately 50 guests.
Vicki Smith and Paula Pickens
lead the program for the evening,
and Bonnie Joyce Smith had a
reading entitled "My Grand·
mother Taught Me." "Precious
Memories was sung and Tina
McGuire read "A Slice of Life."
Miranda Nicholas played a special piece on the flute and awards
were presented to Mildred Hy·
sell. Brook .Bolin. Paula Wood,
Gerry Lightfoot, Cherie William·
son. and Miranda Nicholson.

Eloise Mankin was awarded the
door prize.
It was noted that there are
several firsts In a woman's !Ue,
beginning with the birth of a
chUd. first s-teps, first date, first
grandchild, and the ladles of the
church gave personal exwrien·
ces. Mrs. Pickens reported on
becoming a Christian, and gave
devotions entitled "The Four
Musts·of a Mother.''
The meeting closed with the
singing of "God be with you T111
we Meet Again."

•-lor
-In-.
"*"•-.

HarrisonviU.e
happenings
Mrs. Shirley Graham of South
Carolina. visited her mother-h'i,.
law, Bessie Graham. over the
weekend.
Mrs. Virginia Wiseman and
son, Noel, of Ch111icothe, called
on Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
this week.
Nellie. Ruth, and Jeremy Lowe
were recently in Columbus and
London. and visited Ray Lowe II.
Joe Wright and two sons have
arrived from Arizona to join his

SynEM:

.
·I
J

WATER
SERVICE

'

,.

-

--•

Holly Farms
Quarters

'

.
~

'
'

''

'

'
·.
""

'

..

'

.

•
'l
''
'

''
''

IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE
"THE HOT ONES" FRESH BAKED

''

Chocolate
Cookies

BILL

Gutters
Downepouts
Gutter
Cleaning
p I ti
a n ng .

All Mojor .. MlnO&lt;

SLACK

R_l..
NIASE Conlllod Moch..lc

992·2269
EVENINGS

CALL 992-6756

FREE ESTIMATES

"DOC" VAUGHN

.

Cirttfitd UoenHCI

4/1/88/.,.

949 •2168

w

'

161 lllrth SlcoM
p ul, Olie 45760

I'

....,.•'

REGULAR OR DIP STYLE

I

••
'

11-oz..

'•

•

-•

.. '•

MOORE'S POTAT.O CHIPS &amp;.&amp;·OZ... 1190

'

....·.

ED
GRAIN
BEEF, "U
IMMED WHOLESALE
CAP-ON 10-12-LB. AVG.

"

•
•

.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

14th&amp; . . St.
Pololt ......llf, W.Va.
We Buy Aluminum
Col)o, Ol11o, Broto,

CopportndMore

I

Pound .

I

• I

YAIDIUII MOWBS .
ICHO SAWS &amp; lll.lEIS
OIEGON IWS, CIWIIS
IYAN SDVICE CINTII
Partt I S.Yic1 On

.....

,

'

MON ••fll.: 9 ant·6 pm
SATd I a... 12110.. ..

.VISA • MASTERCHAR GE

304-675·3161

Clotod Sundoy

lnfor~~~t~tlon
1CF •

OUN11Y
MOBIL.
HOME Pllll

HOURS: Mon.·Frl. I· 7
Sot. 8·8

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM I DING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-Mobile Homo-

Pertl

Homo

•Mobile
Rental•
•Lot Rantalt .

.... .._lult

"Froe Eltlmlt•"

992-7479

If,, 33 North of
,_,.,_1-t'al~~w-

W...,lngCIIItll

Pll. 949·2101
or Res. "9·2160

··-··01118

-M!I'AL atiiLOINGI

CONSIGNMENTS WRCOME

S/TVCE: 1969

PATRICK H. ILOSSEI

11m SJ. SJUCIII

1-4-81·1 mo.

992-7611

. SSO PAGE STREET
~y-Friday

KAY'S

BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middltport, Oh.

(I

Otint~1

'

:t....itii

43020 St. Rl. 124
Pomlfoy, Ohio 45769
1-614-992-3664

992-2196

Middleport,

992-2725

1 - 11-1 mo. pd.

MARCUM

''.
.,'

,'

3-oz.

J&amp;L

:

SLICED
FREE

Gelatin

Movlnp !O Florida ulo. Tooio.

.,."""'·
1..... ru•olturo. cle&gt;
thine boola!. crofto. drop ...

June ·1ot, 2nd .. 3rd. 488
Joc:bonPilto. Wotch foro;g,..

RummoaoSole

luac's Auellon Houu. Vk\ton.
OH. Jun• 1 • 2, 8-4. FurniMo.
ltlfiO. courmy albumt. dr.pea.
bit!•. tools. n.w
ctott&amp;mflc.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDinONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING It R.EPAIRS
PHONE Dl'f 01 EVENINGS

915-4141 .
GENEIAL CDNTIACTOIS

&amp; AMoeiatee

108 Hlsh s. .... ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phono (6141 992-2922

"FIR PUNt"
Noon • 7:00 p.m.

,_. . . C..KUI
Chrt
Stroot I a

4·11-1 .... pd.

Allllll u Ill: I! 1111! Ills
3 Amouncement•

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet Pepsi
~'~--w or Pepsi Cola

••'

INSULATION

Mastic - Ctrfelrlt...te

VInyl SWing
Seantlt• Gull..
......._ , Wlnllows
llown lnlulali.,.
.Storm liMn &amp;

......

FREE ESTIMATES

c• 992-2772
1:::::===5-

•

.},,

'
I
I

For

'•

&lt;

JELL-0 INSTANT PUDDING 3.6--4-0Z. 3 FOR .. :t1.00

"·

.

•
"

' ~ o ~·( II

•
•
•
' •

...

KROGER BUTTERMILK OR

.•

Saaltest 2%
Lowfat 'Milk

---•

l.

Won
'

'

. .'
'

I

'• •'

~
•' .

·•1•o.

WAITED
DEAD 01

AUVE

•DIY••

•Waher•
•Range •Freazart

•AefrigeratOI'I
"Mull le l1pair•l•"

UN'S lPPUANCE
SDVICI
H2·SIIS-tii.J561
We Sorvlce All Mtk•·
.

~1

....

FOR

WE
I Sty..s
11114

V.h II Si111

•'

WOOIIN . . .S
... 0. ,_ Let
011 WillOW AT

• ,

614'-ttt-1171 '

•
•
•

••I

• ,J

sua.. ..,.

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At .......... Prim"

PH. 949-2101
or R11. 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Giveaway

Ze•itheolorT.V. needl riPait&amp;
So•• Cotpoo

for

f'· -d
'*'"· c•••8homf4'
,.. 3897. '

Gentle I wk. old kltt!nt. 41 male.

2 female pupploo. 7 ""'· old
beaale. Clll 11~44•

part

2~.

...

tcltt ... gllor&amp;- 14 to eho011e
fro..,. el ODior • CDmbGI. 7 wks.
old. ,.o apoodhomeorflrm. C.I
814-211-1783.

Pupplei · Born Much 10th•
Mother hall lrlttlttl' Spanlot
holfllodtl.ob. WOr-. To good
hom• onlof. Ce" 114-441-0810.
Kttt.n1 ta. givMWIY. In Brad·

... ..., . 114-882-1071 .

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING
101 C:UJIIIIIIGIIAM-0-

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GREG BAILEY

Young m.te leftala Runs Rebbits. 814-881'-3c412 efter
1 ·OOp m
.
. .
7 week old kinen. Wttned 1nd
lltt•tl'llnod. 814-98fi.3t07.
. 2 cutekltt-needenloehome.

half A _ . , Heel·
••· pl\ono 304-812-2148.
P~~pp._

AllC Oofct. RMrltttr needs 1

,_., home.

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

CMtntr

mowing end

c.nnot telce wttt. tMrn, h81 hecf

..773-1108.
, •hot•. v.v

nlee doa 304-

"Quality and •easanablt Pricts"
WE GO THE Em&amp; MILE.....
992·6110

Bide trv olde , ... l....cr. n _
..,....,_.,, 304-176-lllt.

4

kilt-. 304-n:~-u•.

8

Lolt and Found

I. S.D. HIAST
IRS¥111._.
614-..2-3111

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

Equ....- DNttr.

~,...

Iiii LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
z

Curteins. shorts. lhlrts, &amp; tops.
Jo... dlshto. ruoo. ttwow pillow.. Neighborhood Rd .
I f.miU•. June 1·4. 141 to
linoolnPik.-~ 3•3/10mleout.
Foflow !lignt~ . lV, Atlri, dll hel

Subdivision v•d ul-. Bthlnd

oldBidwefl Elem. SChool. June2
• 3 ftom 9-5.

2441.

2. bechpr.O.. drapll, pictures.
portM!e SMinQ me•
chine. dithet. w .. owen.

Iampi ,

Qlrl8ge nte. 92. First A .....
June1.2.3. Child-.,. clothing.
bechpreedl. llntiqu•. wicker.
dilhM, houlehold . .id • .
Sun•• Or. aaO!'II from Nan·
r-Me church off Second Ave.
Thur~ .• Fri .. a.t. New bicycle.
h. . furniture . beiJ;' &amp; children•
ctothll. New t•ic. lntlquM.
dDIIt furniture. much more.

June 1 encf 2. 8 family pr&amp;~~e
ule. In Arba~oh Addttkln In
Tuppen Plain• Follow ~ns

143. lmileaout. Whh:.-hou•on
l.rt of roed. Antiqun. .,n!'l.
tooll. clothel. misc. CeR tS 14892·31 70. Ken Eblin realdence.

l.icensed' Clinical AudioiQiist
l614~7&amp;19 or (614) 992·2104

AvRa. Bat 1213
- Glllipalls, OIIio 45631
or at
Vatlranl •1110rill Hospital
:lulbllrry lfiU, Pomeroy,

417

It=:

WORD

JIRCOI *ISING
nPIWIIIIIR
XD7100

___
_
----

"'"

eaulpment. nerci•• m1chlne
(nf!WI.clothingof811tv.-.. toys.
whlt·notl, menv othet ttems .
810 South Second. Mlddleporf.
June1 ~ 7. Sp.-Ndl, ced• chen.
beddtng lin-. dlsha:, new
PinS. clot..,g. drap•. curtains.
tmetl ....,pNenoet. knNtl. furn~
tore. k&gt;tt mise

Cat' port .... F ride, lftd Satu,..
d.,. June 2 ,3. 9 :30e .m. lAe
Nlidence. Tyree Blvd .. Aadne.
2 fam;tv. June 1 .. d Z. 8-5.
Ot•l• Mel81n residence SR
124 Alclne Ohio. Floor )licks.
good dryer, 2 ehainaawe. elect·
rle motora, ear Mit, good
clothing, •ntiques. Odds and
ends. .
Homa interior. clothing. curtains. bed spr•dl. b11eball

ewdl. tovJ~~andmil:c. June 1· 3 .
888 Gen••l Heninger Pkwy
Midclaport
June 2. Beginning •t I:OO..m.
770 Syc.more St., Middeport.'
Ftrst onethil
One ell¥ ont,.

ye.,_

&amp; Vicinity
Giant Y•d Sale, May 29 thru
June 2. Camp Coni.,-. Mitton
Road, chain IIW. h .. f hp electric
motor . furniture. clothing.
Chri11m11 dtcorali9ns. Mile

2

O.r~e

s.l•.

upper end of
Mlntrtvile and luwM end of
Syr~se.
I

June 1. 2. 3 Rain or

hint.

J .... 2.3. 10·0()-3:00 236
Mulberry A~ . Pomf'foy, Ohlo.
20 Inch glrlo biko

Yards .... Thund., .. dFri~.
June 1 .,d 2. 9:00tll &amp;:00. 703

Second St ., M11on. W Va .

Fri 1nd Sat. 108 Second St..
Mlton Hot Rod Boob, childrflfll clothing. plup; lots more!'
VardSele. 3famify. Frid-June
2, BiM BerllerFarm. 2nd hou.e in
holtow Southllde. W. Ve.
Vwd B•le. Pant•sate Pl•t.
Fri. Slit. 9:00 AM tiil 7.
Tomato end flower plents Memorlll flowers. iteWing maehin•ln
Cl'lbinet. ntdio. chimes, clothes.
tool11 . misc.
•

Thut'll ,

B

Public Sale

It Auction
Cell Merliro Wedemtrter. Auctioneer, Licensed 6 Bonded in
StMe ot Ohio · liquidllion~
fwnw. eltMtt. antiquM, etc
814-24&amp;-11U

9

Wanted To Buy

Compl«e houteholdt: of furniture S. entiaues .1.110 wood S.
eoel hMter1. SWitin'l Furniture
• Auetlon. Third &amp; ONv••
114-.W8·3118

Junk Cera with or without
motors. Cell llny Livf!ty 614388·9303.
Furniture end epplienee~ bv the
piece ot entire houeehold. Fair
prlcoo bfoingpoid. Coll814-4413118.
.
Will buy or IPPraile enytflinW,
Antiques. fuJnlture. appliM~.

without motcn. Call Rleh•d

a cueNDM.

1/2 mi. - · I.H.C ..... d
- - f(ltdFIIt..praPI , ,
1-1.

.._.
,.,. ""'* - ....•
........
a.reee l•l .. w••d

.,
~~·

ar,rta,

....----··-··
,.,,
~~--- ~eo~~n

.... a ..... _ . ,

Rd.

Food &amp; bevero~~~e menAger
n_.d M historic hot., In
Maritltta. OH. EIQ)erlence n-=-sery. Send r•uma to Uf-vette
Hotel. P .0 . bok 718 Merlllte.
OH46760.
yM~ .

Now

l*ing. Co" 111 80&amp;-887-1000
Ext. A-9801 lor current tee~.•
lilt.
The Meigs LoCIII Sehoot Oittrid
it rurr.m~ teelllng IPPiiC81ioN
from certified ipplcmil for en
A1111tent V••ttv"Foot~COM:h
f&amp; pO«ilio,.., 7th and lth Gf'8de
Football Cood&gt;. 13
1.
Bovs' 9th OrNe Besk•blll
Coec:h. Boys' lthOradehsket·
boll Cooeh. Bcrv~ 7th Gndo
Baaketball Co.eh. Junior Hlah
Trd CDaCh. A.e.tlnt ~un~r
Hi9h Treck Co.ch. H...t len·
bill Coech. Aqittlnt 81se.
Coach. Girlt' AM.-va 8otttNI
Caech. Hiqh School Che.-lllldw
Advllar. J unk&gt;r H~h School
Che.-1...._ AdvlaorandANin·
~nt lend Director fDr tM1989-90 school v-. A pplieMt1 rn.~M
holl'l • valid Ohio te.ching
c.tific•• 1nd tor coechlng

-•1o..

I)Otltiom must n..- c.tfflc•
tlol'l requirements of Ohio tor
1pnr11 medicine Md CPR . Per·
sON

inter•ted should eontatt

of Moioo Locollk:ho .... II P.O .
Box 272. 320 Eltt Mllin Str•
in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Femity Planning A. . . ant In
Melga. Lawreru:e •d OeHie
Countt.. P.. d travel. clrti•:
interviw.t din•. keep recordl.
pfwrsidan. 1t1 d m ..e •
pointmtntt. Will tr1Mn p . .on
Wllh releled •peri., crt. Must be
dtpendebla anl'l fl•lble wlh
time. EweninfJ, laturdlrr end
wetkMf houn •• expcted.
l~nd lllltt• of lnt•ll1. retume
1nd two emplovmant m.enc.
to Ptann.t Pltrtl'lti'Dad "of Southe"' Ohio. 311 Rlchl.,dAw..
A-•· Ohio 41701. "'Juno I,
1998. PPSEO loon EOE-ESP.

••itt

W~nt-.~Me~to~~

vide .t.mlfy TVP* ton• c•e tor
acl.ltta witt. MnGIIionll ,tlubHIti•. Relmburs.,_.. t20 p•
i~Wt' - Muat be willing to complf
w"h Btoto Gop .. _ .
111 Heelth leen1ureiM1 end to
work In conP,.netlonwllhment.t
hellthn. .memt..,.. F«more
lnformtrrlon mme~ a.rb•e
Co11 . Coonlnator, Community
Support lervkle. Wooclend
Center.. lne., 412 VInton Pike.
O.llipolil. Ohio. 41831. 114446-1600.

ol-·

Clnic Coorcln•or for femlr
Dt1nnlng diem servicll: lllltime
h•ed In PemfPI"Oit with trMitl
LPN or miiCICIII office
8XJ*'I•ce prf!'f..-.t. Pollllon

•peel•.

Used t.nnilure by the piece cw
entirt hovtthold also selling.
814-742-24&amp;1.

r-.u•• e s.tf-mot~Med p . .on
wllh •ctlllent
In CDrnmuni-

Oulto
Pre 11•0 qultts. Arry eondltton.
Cash peld. Cal &amp;14-912·1187
or 114-112·2411.
Uttd furntture anl'l houllhold
appliances. Phone 61•·742·
2048.

I 'J,iliiiVIIII·III

o•

e,.ion and riCIOf'61111Ping w-h ·
ability to follow 189"""' ., id.lines; mutt h.,e rlllll*e trenaport:M5on. Ewning. Stturct.r
and .we~~~:., houn requlr.._
Send lilt• of lnt•tJt. I"'IIUmt.
end two emplorment ..r•encw
to Planned Par.-rthood of Sou·
tht•t Ohio. 391 RlchiMd
A_.o.
Ohio 41701.
brt June 9 . 19tf. PPSEO it •
EOE-ESP.

A-•·

Oor~e •le. Frid., end leturSt:I VII.I!S
cWi une' 2, 3 . 10a.m. ill 1 pm
Turn ttft off At. 7 etJeyMerGolf
Course sign. go toendofrOICf. 2
chlidtono bikA trikL - -· •1•1
oloctronlco. IOVL alrio. Jr'o.
Help Wanted
wontenl, mens clothlnJt. Boob. 1 - - - - - - - - magu:ine1 . tS14-992-2.t72. I
Rein or lhina

PuH tim• •.,.teneed llr MINd.
Coftlt4-18Z.HOt o f t - .

June 2, 3. First houH .,_.
fh-thouM in Ch••· Venltv.
redln.-. 1 O·•IJIPIMI bib. T .V.
coffee end end abl•. ponHie
VHF antenM.

mone,? Or would you
to
hiNt e c•--7 Elthlr wey A\101'1
Cln help vou bethet.t you C:M
btllt Cetl Merlly n Wt•er. 3D 4882·2148.

--;=;=o===-- ~~~-~"~"~·~-~-~Co~l~-=lty~n.

e

r:tw.r..

8-10 wedding

Oereae hie. Allin or aNne. 2
mil• Mtt of Racine on St. Rt.
12.t.1hllill retlden~. JuM ,.,,
2rMI end 3rd.
Ztsm... ,.rdsele.Juneht. 2nd.
.,d 3rd. t:00-1:00. Rain or
tNnt. 0 .E . St.,._ nfiW at.. top
tndtnl•. ex.atebllal.npt.
- " " · boyo .,d alrlo _._
{nowboro tO tiro 7, Jr. olio 3. I.
~r~d 7. mtll't
med.~ For•
"'niW. Slgn1.

•e

June 2nd 1:()0.4:00. E-do•
Iii~ e. I ft. Plllo - · Aftlh-.
toolo ...... -lntcli*·""""

........ 3 II'- ... _ ....
-..,wotlior.- clot...,

ldoodonllt.7.

- .... a oto. It lit. 124 2

noon. Taylors Berry Patch. Kerr

Cloorgo. 114-381-8086.

RutiMd It, Middleport. Ohio.

ao..r

.lorN 1 untl ? AI .... fill II-.

Full or plr't rime firm help for
gen•ll f•m WOrk Cal &amp;14-

Jim Cerp.nt:M'. lup•lnt:en-.

HELP WANTEO: Fomlty Pl.,.
nlng Asliltent in Meigi. Lewrtnoe • ••1• Counliel: pefd
......, flrtlol: Int. . . . dl.....
rec»rdl. eultt .,.,tid.-.. &amp;
mike appolntm1n11. Win trllin

k•

304-812-21411.
AVONoll•-ll•loi-Sp-L
~
306-87&amp;-1.t29.
'

•e

Jun wn to e•n a flnle •trl

. l•bv sifter in m, home. Mon
tlru Frl, ref•tn~;~~~. Send Hill
Rood . . .. 304-171-1791.

12

penon with rtlaed .. ...,.....
Must ... d_,tnct.bla • l•lble

wlhtlm«..,...,"Sotu"""'a
wealcdll! hours •e •pllllted.
lond ltt1• ollnt.... - ·
•two.......,mMI,...tnC81to
Plll'lned
of lou-

-

,.,.,.hood
•e llldil.,d A.o..

OH.

A - . OH 48701. "'June I.
11119. PPSIO lo., EOEIESP.

CIIUIIE BHIPI l*lng II
Bath •1111.:1 a unok•od. For lnlo. colll11-7711107. ht. Hill.

PG~IIo...

-

...... """'""
J.... - ..........
-*tl
Mllnt .. .,.ce p . .on. tor liP . .•

Col 304171-1104. • :104-171-UII.

Tololott . . . . .lo,. tow .......Gillipotlii""''''" .,.,...._
...... 11t .. d lncl ..... - · · 2 ......... 4 p.m.,,_..
•rtiiM. ••a ••e. ,.,_ .......,..._ •7Jealtlan
It VIcinity
alotJolottl.
t:C»I.-GO:
- ......... ____
....__ · - .."""'"'
"• 1,......;...;,-.:;.;;...;_

..,.... ••• cau111.

provide limit¥ type tolter c••

for -.ltawtl hemotional dllebilltl•. Relmhursernent/t20 p•
d.,. Mullf: bewiltnptoaunpt,
with State Dept. of Ment.t
Helllth ICM'IIureiMs • to wcwk
In coniUncUon with m~111
hellttl tr•t1Mrtt t-.m. For more
into_mnteet B•rbtri.C~ Coordln•or. Community l .u pport
Sarvle.. WDo. . . d C.m~rs.
Inc. . 412 Vlntan Pika O.Hipofil.
OH 45831; 814-.WI-11100.

11B.Oot0- t81. 230

lottofchil*ensetot1Wl1 . 4to12

IIID .Wrioht Bt .. '-•crv·
and 111 noon on llld.
1ot.
1:00-1:00.

· Yard Sale

WANTED· PrivMe homet to

3 famltv BlgY•dSat,.,.&amp;27M ..n
Street, Point PleMant June
1.2.3.

V" old. fridov 2, Sot. 3. 83

mloc. Dole Htrt. Yellow '"""
Rolli. Raotne_

7

mem

GOVERNMENT JOBS

W~ntMitobuy:Junke•swithor

it..,.. Phone &amp;1ol·985-.t202.

lln.• : lftllt h•e r~.tlle tr... s·
portation. Evening. lit. IJwHIId., hrt . requ irld. lend lfltt• of
int••· IHUml..twOMII)fov•
ref. to Planned Pwenthoc:id
ol Sour- OH. 3tl Rlc:lll.,d
Ave., A - . OH 4170t. !rv
June 8. 1888. PPBEO lo •
EOE/ESP.

Item•.

Y•d S.le at the John Tlllil

tions. dithet Md other mite

oblllty oo follow 111.,.,.. IJIIde-

r•pon!llblep•sOI'tl

eatat ... autot. comptete home
furnilhinAf! . M•lin Wedemt¥er.
814-241-8162

retut.rlceonSt. Rt. 7.June1. 2.
1nd 3. Clothing. curtain«. oun
rldt, tn81erl.t and .wing no-

Clinic: Coordln•« tor femltv
pl.,nlng dl.m te~Vtc:. : tJihlme
b•f!d In Pom•ov wilh trw•
ftpeded. LPN or mediclll otfica"
•perlenct prl!lf•red. Position
requ .. • e setf·mothtlted p . .on
with exe. skllt in oommu,Wcatlons &amp; rflCOrclceeplng wtth

448-2ol12.
.,.------Need
to pi de
...... Pt.. PTeasaiit ...... lltrawberries
Applr lam to

l;aturdey, June 3. Aeln or lhln._.
Kidl. lerge Wornartl, dr•e-.
Iota miec Aomprintll Rd ., off
Petch Fork Poml!roy.

dotMI. lllzoe
dr••· mite .

l.olt: ... of ".,. bet .....
Mldcl- Flro St•lon .,d N.
.hoond Aw. on Mo.._ night.
co~ at4-19:Z.2U1 ., el ....
112-7Ht.

ilt!lhHotl'llrm

VwdSate. Thun, Fri .. Set. 9-5.

••'*·
.,.I,
wood table wfth

AGreat Combination-

:a:

Y•d Sale. rein/shina Thu,...
Fri.. • lat. 1.t1 .....,.. of
Centenary, tNtb¥ bed. 'boll'l mO:
tor. .wing machine.

5 family .,.rd Slle: June 1,2.3 .

BOGGS

Autllorllld John
o-.. "'"'Hotlencl.

·

8:00a .m . Turn off Rt . 7 onto

· · ·· Tal•vtslon Lil1111i111 Dlvicts
5n bledr c.e ln&amp;tlltelt.
DIPiftdlbll Hllrinc Aid. Slits &amp;Sarvi'ctl Gletse.
down Fourth Aw.• to lfh. 7
-th. Cell 114-441-t814.
c:1 Htari!ll Evalultions For Alllps

SAliS I SBYICI

telwilion, aquerlum. and t.tiiM, dllhel. t.wn
neder, humidifier. clothes.
some tuppaw•e. faot fiKer end
manv hem• to numerou1 to

Rlverm~n'e Reunion and Picnic.
Suncll¥ June11tl\ 11:00 AM .
1. R•dn1loc:b pltr~ie groundl.
23 ml• NorthPcNntPI. ..nr on
Rt. 33.

Cell 114-317· 7120.

992·2621 or 992·69il4

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Eleetricel appll.ncea. . ktgg~e­

dishes . furniture , firtplece

Tronctling. Call 114-441-0119
after I p.m.

4

•High Efficiency
Gas
•Cantr al Air
•H11t Pumps .

SYIACISE

3 ftmily . Fridlft f!nd SaturdtiY,
Juna 2nd and 3rd. 9 ·0().1'
Denver Webef' t , Reedlyille.

appli~nc..

Ctntenerv townf10u11. Frl, Jun.-

. I will not be re~pon~lble for .,.,..
debts otMr th., mt own as of
thit d-'e• BeCky Centrett.

Fw mort iRfo write:
Scott Anderson
P. 0. lox 337

.,_Up

UrQe fir1t titnf" 4 flft'lily g.-ege
ult. Rein or !lhinf\ Old Grange
Hill-PatriOt, June 1, 2. 3 from 9 · 1
Ground ta~lt .-viCe bole , llftlll

fnvir~ Tech will be hiringAIIbe101 worker• for out ot ttete
work. StartinG P-r il •• 19 .,.- •
hr. Hutth lenetkt. training.
Juna2ndand3rd Onet..-dmlle opportunttl• for IMlienc.m.,..
rlorth of Five Points on Route 7 _ For more Into. c.t1 304-8223311 or 803-321· 8n8. E.O .E .
Witch for ~nt .

m•eri•. -Done bv
C.W. Devieon. lltumbfn~ '

Part Time Job With Network 2000
In Network Marklting
Col1 ., 8400 (lnclud• training .. mate!i&amp;ll)
BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE

GII-OUSE

3 flmitV 'tllrd allle in Rodnev on
Rt. 888. June 1,2,3. 9-6 .
Furniture, Adutt dothea. mise.

Housekeeping Room
By Day, Week, Month

614·949-2526

Help Wanted

&amp; Vicinity

~....,

4· 1 4-89· 1 mo.

IEAUJJII. IASIIIS ss.oo
FlAYS Mix
15.00
S!raWflew•1, Statice,
WIWflowen aM Mort.

June 3rct 9-ot. elothln~.,, tiret),
Amigo 3 whHf ll'ec::lrTC ecooter.
cnft1man rldln 1J mow'ltl'; windows. furnhute. appli•ctll!l.
home Interior. crafts. much
mort.

Y•d Sale. June 1.2.3. 26
Madl•on Ave. n..- Pbu Hut .
Ref. included. Call 11 .... «&amp;-

Wat11r lin• &amp; dr11lnege clld'l• &amp;

3 Mila East of •Arthur on 5.1. 50
PH. 596·4756 or 992-6637

4/~lt/1

OJeil Creek Comm.Jrity Annuel
Y•d Sale. Cora Mill Road. Set.

1 bedroom. very
beautiful, furnished.

1 1 ·16· 'EI8·1fn

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

'Thur•.. Fri. 9-S. From Pon•. go
1 rile down lul.,..ltle , . .
Clothing. boolra. gl•tw~ra , Ia·
bla houMhold.

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
CAMP
, GROUNDS

304-176-3771.

Jei~O

boiow town
hollonrigltt. Juno1ot. 2nd. lth.
lth . Movlng-Fuonltuoo .
dothooo. kJto-houoohold goodo.
Vwdlaoo. Juno1 . 2. &amp;3. 9to4
pm. 101s Second"""·

mention.

11

11

Middleport

2 fernity, June 1 . ehlhtent &amp;
womens dot..,u ie.,t. bicv·
d•. ltM'Ing mechln~ typ8Wr~
t•. pictures. Off 1ol1 to 7711.

CHESTDr OHIO

AIIG•·s

302 W. 2n4 Slnol
,._..,,Ohio 45769

.~ ·~

NOW THIU JUNE 10

AIMrica's only 100-At Fiber Optic Loni
Dllf-• Network
COMING TO IllS AID SOON!

for HIALTH
INIURANC. call:

J. WARNER

co.

We can rtplir atlll fl·
radiatiWI and
Plumbing • Plaster
heat• c..-11. We ._...,1"
Repair • Painting
Electrical • Carpentry
aha acid llail and
•we Fl• ~l•tot Aloflllltt"
aUt radlat..-s. We
Harry Leffle
repair Gas ·y.....
20 Years Experience
PAT HIU FORD

U.S. SPRINT

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

5-17-lfll

MAINTENANCE

liWt

H2·'1H•.

UMESIONE
SPIEAD

4-5·19-1 ....

SE~ICE

Quality
Stone Company

Leesa Murphey

I

PH. 304-421-7245

CAN DO .

BODY SHOP

1600 GAUON
WAID SEIYICE
DIIY HAULED
. 992-5275

PERM SALE
10% OFF
ANY PERM

LIMESTONE FOR SALE

ALLEN'S
HAULING

1-100·421-3535

AUcnONIEI

GEARY
PAINT and

HOlliS: 9 A.M.· 6 P.M.

992-6855

I

HOM'S GROVE PARI
lelpre, Olio

-NEW HQMEI

NO SUI'IDAY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OPUI IIOST SATUIPAU

Ph. 614-992-5479
.... 614-992-2477

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT -6:00 P.M.

5-2FI9-tflo

IEPIESINTAnYE

Whole Boneless
Sirloin Tip

POMEROY
992·2284

,_

IISIIISS

~

Kroger
Potato Chips

FABRIC
SHOP
110 WEST MAIN

•4-28·'89·1 mo.

Fw Mart

PUBLIC
AUCnON ·

OWNB: GIEG I.IDUSM
,;~.
GENERAL
•'' '
CDIITIIACfDII
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
-•CUITOM IOTCHINI a IATHI
:v~.:~:.:.~l!~g:~~~

16141 992·6SSO

992-2371

10:00 11l5:00

''
'

AT THE

IUSIHISS PIIDNI

Lorge Supply of Bookot
Wowing lupplloo
Sign u p - for Bloke!

-.

ROUSH
CONSTIUCnON

Your Phone
f:~blo Bill• Hare

THE
BASin WEAVE
HANDWOVEN
BASKETS

'

MONEY.·

Ale.......

Wo Carry Flohlng luppll•

lOW OPIII fOI

'

D

Moot Fonlgnond

•FIREWOOD

IEPAII

NEW -

oom.,lc YoNd•

TUXEDO RENTAL

SALEi &amp; SERVKE

PUIUC
IECYCUNG

Western
Cantaloupes

U.S. GRADE A

.... um•

Call Anytime

.

FREE!

1001 PillE
.
2 H.D. FREE witb COUJIIII and,
pun:h• of lllln. H.c. ~'Jell·
1 coupon,. alit.... per bl.. .....
Wo l'wr~SO.oo ,_ &amp;eoioo
Ower 110 '""'" •u.ao
Per Game
UL 11005-32
Z·l-tfoo

.......Po'merov... -.....

&amp; Vicinity

STIACUSf. OliO

TilliS. LL 6:45 P&amp;
•LIGHT HAULING
s•. U. 1:45 P&amp; ; ·

.... ._.....

POOLS, WELLS
. CISTERNS

Jumbo 12Size

BUY
ONE
D 1-L!l . PKG. REGULAR OR THICK
.--.Oscar Mayer
SAVE__. ~~-~~JSiiced Bacon
IJ
GETONE

112' 1871

PLUMIING &amp;

1rOOO GALLONS

'

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

· · ··a·ampolis... --···

.t10•.

.
ow rtces
n
ore •

IJMLIPOUI AND POIIIHOW ITORU.

Save thousands on
exist in" mortpae.
N0 ref nancin~. A
Mortaaae Consu tant
Serviee
Call 1-800·422-9010
Ext. 4051

4-11·1 noo. pd.

Count On Kroge·r For • •

COPYRIGHT t989 - THE KROGER
CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY, MAY 28, THROUGH
SATURDAY, JUNE 3, tlllll, IN

The Daily Sentinel-

;:::M=O:IT=G=A:G:E=::tlr===!;B:;IN~G::;O:r=;.=!f!lrr.:s:H:R:U:B=a.=T:R:E:E:;,rF:·::Y:A:U:G:H:N:':S=:rrt=llow=:..=d:L=W:rlt=....
=~ ~~~~-·1_;~i2-~;~~-~-~-~~POIIIIOY~GUS
TRIM and RE·
AUTO
DIESEL
c.n........ 1 mPo
REDUCTION
CLUI
ROOFING
224 E. MAIN ST.
MOVAL
SERVICE
•

-~~~oily notod In thlo od. lf
the -IIVIngo or t ,.lnchocl&lt; whldo will
be
per hem pun:-.

;

Poma-oy-Middleport. Ohio

31. 1989

Business Services

K=-· .....,tad

ADIIEiliiiDIIIIII'tli.IC'I-Eich o f t - - llorMII r 1 'nd to be.....,
we do run out of on -Item, - wllollw- your- of 1 '""'
lAo
-lllrlo,
·
onthle you to pure-the ocl&gt;..- h. . It 1M ocl&gt;lftlll ~ price wtdoln
doyl. Only one coupon

1:

Wednesday,

wife. Veronica, and daughter.
who have resided her for several
months. They plan to reside In
this area.
Noah Birchfield, Dade City.
Fla .. spent two weeks with his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Cotterill.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
enjoyed a trip to Hawaii In the
company of four relatives.
The Lend-a-hand Society will
hold a bake and rummage sale at
the · Presbyterian Church on
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.

•1.,
6--,Sc.-=-;h::oo=la:::---

lnetructlon
IIE-TIIAIN NOW!

IOUTH!ASTEIIN IUIINEIS
COU!GI. 121 Jocbon ... &amp;
Colt e14-441-4117. II. . No.
11-11·10-.

1a Yr.nW t10 DO

'

''

.

..'
-·

�I

.

~

.

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

Page- 12 The Daily Sentinel
'

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

I llldiiCidl

415

Fwniihild

Roomt

B111ineu
Opponunity

!NOTICE!
lHE OHIO VALLEY PUilllti-

•

l

ING CO. NCOmrr.ndl1h• you
dD bualnea• wllh PM&gt;PM you
know. lfttl NOT to lllnd mone¥
through tt. mel until you

..... -ion
d/ ..... 1 - ·
8•f2.
taw 01/fiJO. Mol,_

- Coii14-.... :M41.
•-.ine roon. wllh cooWne
AlooTI'III•-AI-CAI ott• 2p.m. 304- nJ.
SIUMoaonWV.

011114--7~.

h••
.

hwestipl:ed t te att.ing.

I

'I

1000 Wolff ... _
_ T.....
labt•- Commerdii-Home f.,.
nina Bedl. ltve to 10 I*Cint.
Prieta from *249 Lampl·
Lntions-Acceltoria. C. It odey.
,,.. cola..
1-11()0._2 28·
8282 f(IHOI'7DI

-=···

s.,_ for Rent
o,.., ,..,_

loll .,........
Mabh Homo ........ CoR I 14-

-02S4,. 114-""-3143.

Trel•t-.lnRo•e,troriOft
Of

...

mobile horne. Call

J

114-4-411- 4344.

1

Cauntry ...,... Hom,. ,., ..
Route 311. _NOrth of PDmw011.

•

IlolL
14-182-7471.
-·· -

r

Own your own IPP..e or thoe
ttore. choo .. from: Jeen·
Sporltweer, ladin. "'""'''·
chil~m••nilv. l•ge tirn.

48

--

· Col

"l'vP clom• it this tinie! I )on't
~='t';.~~:::r~;:::: worry, though, l'w ~ot it.
Bugle loy. l.wi Como lov...
I
J I'
J"
Hlh. o .....· - o - n. LuciL
llllC PI' c·unt.ro . Ill ~rou1u 111g
~ 2000 otNu. Or • 13.98
k i"
ono prklo dollgner, mu~l •'- . lllySeJf for f.WO Wl'l~ S.

~;;:::;;;;;;~i;:;:;==:="'l~~~~;;;~;::;=:=1

p,._

pricingRet.tl
dltcaunt ar.......,.
shoe
~ora
unbeli.,•lba
lo• '"" ouollty """• nor...,. 32 Mobile H
priced """' n5 to •so. o 011181

uo brenda 2100 atyl...

for S1la

t 18.800 to •21.100: Inventory,
openin~ etc

Can

open 15 Mvs

Turn b¥ BUlin••
HWid'ing Frho-ll.,. Nlbilco.
Mart .. d simii•IDod products.
Servicing cornpwyy ~rfld loe.Uon~. No tellng Matted.
Independent n•ianel censu•
tl~retllhow evf!Nge income of

12a11 trail•. tar Mfl or J'IM.
wit! lll on .,.d comrect. call

114-441-744-4.

Moble harne141. .,. of Cent•
nwv. m*e
Alto 1 eao• of
land ... owner an premil•.

off•.

12124. CouiCibeuaedtorldd-Qft

t2.141 P"' month. RequiNd room, office. 0r aon111tructlon
tpprmlim.tef';' I h,. PW week. .,. . . CaM 114-317-0oU7, •
You win need 110.000.00c•h
and up lor a q u -. con 1171 121ol0 Ll-y. ' Dock.
1-IOo-334-08154. ••· 515. on· -nine naoo. Cotll14-742vtlm• da¥ or night end Sundav 2754 wMiulriVt
5:00p.m.
or 114-9t:Z.3107doya.
.

•tt•

1... 711 with 71r21
304-1711-1141.

HomesforSele

31

.,...do.

1979 Blyvi.w mtile home.

Re1l Es l d lf~

GOVERNMENT
Fmm
t1.00 fU flap_,HOMES!
Faredast,_
R., .. Ta 0-o.-. ,.,_.
tin. NOW SELLING THIS
AREAl coli IRollndoblel1·311i733-eGM. EMt. 02732A FOR
CURRENT LISTINGS!
For Solo· 3 br.. 2 fl'"oloco.
~_.11116 pool A-Cttlt.soo.

1110 Liberty mobile hamtt
14a7D, 3 be ... oom plus •tnl
lurnllu,., t7. 000.00. 304-17138 7

~~~
;:':::;;::=:::;:::::;;;;;;::
~
33

Farma for Sale

*•

Pomwoy area.
84 2l
Mobile homo. froo- ol wOlf.
wid Ito. V..., prlvltt. UB.C!00firm. Ctiii14-M8.22U(8:00A-Onr ReA Estate broker. C•ll l·1;;:0:;::0:0:p:.m:;;;::
.l.: :;=====
304-1111-~104. or 304-1711- I,
5328.
34
B•ineu
· Ouotlty ..,., • br.. brlc:l homo 1
Buildings
1/ 2 Hit\ .. II baement witt.

tor-

20•21 l&lt;wetv toliollod fomll¥

room with firf!f'lacr &amp; slicln"
buo&gt;
AI•• doont to pakJ. AI h•d- Bulldlnp euMIII&gt;Io
ness, k&gt;cMed 2201 J•cbon
wood floors. plentv of dolet •
Avo. phono 304-8711- ~7.
lt~e lpiee 1&amp;.28 11•19•
Rom en bfidl flr..,r .c.- in lvlng
room • front door tide louvers. 315 Lots 1o A ...,..
ptomy of inlulotlon w•h doooblo

R~•• windi:MI'11, m•bt• ails.
etecrrie he•- 2300 aq. ft. of

llving•ea Lor.e:edinLakrDriltr
addition-Rio ONnde
Rio
Gr... de college. Mutt_ •• to
ODP•ecltl&amp; Colll14-2.1i-11411
for eppolntment. Price recl.ICftd
to *87,000

n•

CO&lt;npiOO .... llrnlthod 3 II'.. 2
beth home on 1/4 •era full
hM f!fMIIt. c...tul
Hwd
floOI'tl, ca port a '!filly lhed.
lrnmPCII'IIe ocqtMat C.ll 114-

•ir.

317-na8 .,. &amp;14-317- 7111.

______c_.-..
__
-_
1

t.ndfcrsale. Oneto••aein
Rutl.,d Township. Coli I 14192-31143 oft• 1:00 p.m.

Ashtan be..tltll onl acrft Iota
wittlrivlrtontlge. publlcMter.
C"'do a-on. Jr. 304-17112331.
Ashton. I•~ buldlng lot'
moble ho"* permfned. public

- ·· .............d Clydo
- ... Jr. 304-1711-23311.

OWNER ANXIOUS-MUST 1 8Cf'e with 2 moblf' home tM
ups , S1nd Hill Ro1d ,
SELUI llor . . bootoorn
remodel@d eolonill. upper 2nd I 10.000.00. Phone 304-17118\lenllf!'. c.ll tor .pantment
5301.
18141 448-2217.
12 IICI'et l•d long HoHow
3 bedroom hou•. 1"h stories on Rood, 304-1911-3121.
Rt. 7 to tr8de tor 3 bectoom
tuiler. con 114-912-1332 ""
., 8ppointmtnt.

now"'

Henl.1io

6 y...- old rfi.lewlll on 4

ACI'Ifll.

Close to 1own. Ow,.. trMt·
I••""· Prieod to .... 114-1921874or 114-742-2880.
Be111ttlJI viiiW, quMit

At~~wrev

..,.,-,..,---.--..--:4 1 HDtneS for Rant

C.n be yourt for ont, t20.000.
Rustic:. 2 bectoom. el .tedric.
cwerloolcina rir.ter in lono Bot·

Nlu 2 br. cerpeted. no
peurt271 mo., depostt ,...
auirod Coli I 14-4-411-4222 ...
,_1,.11p.m

3 hedroombridl homawilh._ge
lot, Mid
D rtwe. Nlw Hnen.

tur'*hecl. In town. Nla.'de.t.

tom. 11~986-3511 . s 'e riout
c.. l" onftt.

w.,

Hou• for ..... 1 •
Nlco

tor...,..._

cottege.

No potL !of, •

Good cond 304- T1~ 1881.

dop. Coli 114-4411-843.

2 tt"'V home. 8 rooma. bMh. 3
lot~ 2 c• O•ID&amp; fruft tr....

to town. Col 114-UI-3112.

304-1711- Ul&lt;t

FOR SALE OR RENT

3 be€toom. 2'n bit h. 2 llfOry
hout~~e in bend • •· CMrner
fin.nelno. phone 304-171-

2484
little lblteen Road. Southside.
4 bedroom hou11. g•ege. . . .
oul buM din" 1.1 tta'f!!!ll. Will ltkt

other property on tr•de.
· •38.000.00 Phono 304-17111115

asl1 .

· - 1001·1117 Londou 11' S\'
with Mor"'rv 31 "'motor w•h
power trim-" dauto ol injeetiO"
Mer01ry Trolling motDr, lhor•
line ttll• Dklt mora AI In 8Dod
ex&gt;ndltlor\ tollt14-9t:Z.2'170.

Outsl•-

--d.-:

:M Indo -with
frem••lf ..arwuloor. •110.00. ·
,...,. 304-171-1413.

tJOO:oo.

......... 1100.00, :104-171141211.

211droom home. 'h • • close

Nice 3 BR hou• tar .m. t.ge
yord. 314 Third 11 . ..... ,..
Colll14-4411-7473. ·

For rent. 4 IR doubiMide In

countf'l neer Rio Grinde .
S...t-tm ldlool cllotrlet.

Coiii14-IMII-IIII.

3 IR ho- "" 111. 141 •300
mo. '*''~"'k. CoN 114-448111$,. 114-Utl-40 • .

0

c

----"""····

,...,.,ooi

atr•.

1uv
ArotlqoM,
1124or! .loll.
...,.Riverine llam•oy.
"'"'"' M.T.W10o.m. telp.m..
•f'HII¥ 1 to lp.m. 114-8822121.

114 Mile.

Merchandi11

76

I:;~~~~~~~:::~~~~~~~~~~
~
68
Pats for Sale

71 Auto's

Pur•bred white o.rm.n Sh..
pupploo Col 814-381-

-

I'IM.

1llt

____.__
For Sale

Ch•ene. 2

*·· •

apd.

wkh rlr. 11800. Call 114-4417720.

'

be*""'

f

Melanle'a aoc:lalllle Improves

Uted &amp; rebult lor~•
convert... nendlrd ctltc:h-..
preuurept•es. •cvCJaint•••
typot~. Buyln~ rronsmlu;ot101or
• . . , . 011 814-371-2220 _.,
30..,.175-1758.
•
;
Few•• 4whites.,...ew......, I
lugw.. hwllltol..,•t~•- FMo
mini l,ldt-upa 304-n:H305
aft• • m

I

(I) lp J t C I llli (0:30)
(I) elll a - t Afllllr

"'*

GIChalnl
IIJ Miami VIce
(IITapCMI
7:011 (I) Andy Cklfltlh
7:30. ()) l'!llllly l'aud
(II lei! Dlullc - -

.........0:30)
(I) 1111111111-t Tonight
(0:301
elll USA Today

PEfTtiJ' ·Of
('S'(Gtif HIP

WE

HAV!
45 MtNUTfS t.EFT.

1:=n:

STILL.

ai ..... LIII\Ie 11111111

(NR) (2:00)

• ()) liS Unaolvad
Mylllttaa A teen-11g11 boy
diet Iller atterldlng a
Hallowaan ,party. (R) 1:;1

'THERE ARE SOME OF

IJ) Advantllra: Tfia

o-man

THE VII.LAGERS OVER

C1J e(l)
Pelna
Mike movaa out of tile houM
Into 1 ~room aver lhe ·
~-IR)

- a Rofonn
l!liUtllltllpiDIIIMW1. .
(l) lalla ale•

Champion
· · - In •·
their talent .......
and dedication
lhil blemlal exhibition liPid
In Aochelllllr, New York. ·
(1 :00)

• • • Herd Time On
.........
....,tP' I!Oinmunlcllte
.........

lHERE.'S

'TJ.II~K a:"

MY HEART
AS A s.HR·ThfJKE.R
FIJI..L CF l.lJ.E.

attlmpla
with hll home planet .,.

thwlt18d. a

sevERE.

LOIAJ 11CE Fol1£AD

IIIPillillCNiae
. 11J llunllt, 1M Wrote
. ,.

• (I) Head of ... ClaM
The Honora clan may go to
Russia tor a rematch debate.

(RII;I

(I) 0.

12x70, 3 br .. 2 l.lll bat hi. new
HOUII type windows.
u rplnnlna Prl- lor quick

e:c.,•·

••le. Foster' tMob;teHomf!Pitk.
114-Utl-1102.

Moy Spoeioi/No Poym.,.a til
Augult on env ,... Mobile
Homepun:h•.tin ,._,, fNnch

Moble Hom•. C•ll 114441-9340.

City

Moon 14r&lt;711. 2br ..
1111 • """"" with flraploco. Col
114-3711-2818.
1811 Ctoyt.., 14Jr711-inaln
Ouol c... ,., 2.000. Col""'
448-2131 . ... lor .......

.....

-·.Cont.

Gov-- 14r&lt;711 3 ..... 'lttth •
1/2.
itlr/ f7.100.

Cal 114-318-1831, or 114381-1748.

Mlltl toll 1814 Nttoloro llollllo
Home.elll• • ..m.
k&gt;... lo.. Col 114-448-1421
aft• 1 p.m.. or •+1111116 on

--·

*·...,.,

. . . . .with 10.30 ....
tion/12.000. eo• 11 .. Utl1. . . . 114-441-1371.

TWo be*Min home In Pom•ov·
full ........... Coli 814-912-

MORK MEEKLE AND .
jQANNA"? JQA.NNA":!

Nlwe, remo~. on I ' blodl
from city pooL phonl 304-171123S9.

0QANNA 5
PROM&amp;L-Y

WHE:RE .H2E 'rC:tl,

.........,.,.
(!) An Ill' a••

advlillurea- !;II

Q.l ec;w.s.
O'TI-1ER60AP

1 ' - Worried abou1 her

QPE:RA..

safety, Jake ehldowa 1
tom. glrllrlfnd. (R)

g......=-=
~u:
Hanlr (NRI

AWIIdl Thil new avant will

jlay trf~ to .lhe graarock partormlrlln tile world.
Including the praHnllllon of
tho Uvlria ~ Award to
Klllth R!Chard'f. Nomlnlll,
whO may be In lltandllnoe,
lncluclf Bon Jovl, Oaf
Leppatd, Edll Brlckll &amp; New
BoherriiiM. Living Color and
U2. David 11ow1e and hll new
band, Tin Machine, IIIII
echedulada to perform. Olhar
aclledulad partonnart Include
Lou Read. Uvlng ColoUr, The

SHE'S NAPI'IN'
RIGHT NOW,
JUGHAID ·

42

2 .... _

MobileHOIIIII
for Rent

---·- ..

·-Idly.
.,.......

Fully llrnllhod o•ogo opt. AI
utlltl• pold - Dop.AIIo3 _ _ _ __Ctl

114-441-1911. or 114-Utl-

.nd

with ....... In """"

yerd. e·es.oow_. utlltl•

prld. 304-1711-3100 ., 8711-

ISOI.

1 ...._
-. ... """ opt. utlltloa pold -~od
304-1711-27 22...-

74

Motorcycle•

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

~ • ., ....
01 111Daldnl thl Ohio R~•.
CHio T.V. •llolll&amp; Pottw"o
- · " - .... Col 114-

._, ,,

Ucenttd tleatrld•. "id~nour

El-icti. 30 .. 8711-17111.

B6

.,.., ...-. . . -·

.J • J W81wlerv ice lwim...,t

poft. clot ....
:MII-8211.

-

·

1'\1. 814-

A W•• S..lco. ........:

II •

c .. ternt, wtlll. lmmecll81•

1.000 or 2, 000 -nadoltvory,
Colt 304-1711-lnD.

-~--""'"'
Houllng1.000
-~..
. ........

...........14-117·,..

......

·~~~~- ... ..... Col

Watter1on' t W.ter Maulln•

---z•a
....
"",.................,"
,.,.,.... ," .............
CA. . . . -

Colli,... . .

(R)

(J) • l'llr ClaNallounty
huntw Joe MaptH and hll

•

Retlffentill or oomrMrdll WW·
ing' Nflw .-vice ar rt~plb.

2 br .. -.,,._ Dop. Uof. 1/2
mi. dl ""'• on 1114 Col
114-318-1913.

2 II'.. torn'od.

fir..-!'&amp;.
Joey"'"
to fiiOW Nicola's frtenda jlllt
hOw
he li.
1:;1
• Yldaac.. *'
,0:00 ()) 100 Club
hlp

1110.

2 br., .............. 12al0.-D'IIAC . 1/lmL, -HMC.NI.
·-~od. Coll14-448-4318, or
:104-1711-1710.

Repi1C111181111 end The

Electrical ,
11o Refrlge ration

. .. -

.... phono

.., .. 2311 or 11 .. 4"11-

_ ·.....
....VGfutM
ooo..,.....
...
·
-2.000
· ....
fly......
"'- c.n
304-171-811.

'

·~

Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.

commerc1811nvo.v~rntnu ulta11S

Box 91428. Clevelend, OH 44101-3428. ol-1he-mlll. II looks like you may come
Be aure to state your zodiac eign.
out even better than you've been
CANCelli"- 21-.lulr 22) s-al key anllclpallng.
reta11onllhlpa can be ttreng1hened tub- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JM, 11) A
atenllall)' today 11 you 1110w 1 wtlllngneu chence social eftCC!Unler today mlgh1
BERNICE
to ·.,_are Do whit you know . - . ' · tum ou1 far more lnterntlng than 11
B~EOSOL
'doing
without having to be directed to would ·even If II - • painstakingly
.
do ao .
planned well In ad11anca. Flaw with
'
LIO (.luiJ 23-Aug. Zl) Conditione that events.
have a critical eflect upon your work or AQUARIUS (...... :.~~~--. 11) Do not
career look like they will be a trifle mora diiiCOun1 !l"Y brilliant n - of !naiQht
favorable today than they'll be lomor- orhunC'-yougetloday.regardlngc:olrow. Make your mOVIIIn 111,. with the leCtlvelamll)l lnter"ll or thing• of a dotrandl.
mntlc natura. You're t~ned Into pOIIYIIIQO (Aug. Ill lapt.IJ) A calculated tlvellgnala.
.
rlok may be In order today pertaining to I'IICU (l'eb.lllllltrcll•l You COUld
something you 1horouglll)' ana- be' lutkloe tban todey
lyzed end thought through. Do not be your IJ)ICial friendl and contocta.
timid 1n .,... whel'a bold _ , , . . are •a1ar1 tor ltelptullnlorrnatlon that can be
" ,.
liar 11, - ·
required.
uoad to advance your pariOftal
. •
~ (lapt. II-Oct. :D) Something
.. _ _
In 1118 v-r- you might make- prop11- and p r - could -oP lolllll ~ 11-Aprll 11) Your
~ mltloni In your blllo plttloao- tor you todey 1h~- t,.,a of ell..- tor IU c111 In commercial anplly In ordlr to kelP CUNni ..th • llhllrad wntura. It
t not look like daavorl will l8rgety be predlcllld on
T'-CII'flllDII w1ll ~to be much II flnl glance,
.,.,....,,.,.. , your ability to make quick, on-thl lpct
adjUIIIIWIII to daotlcpmauta 19 1hey
IO}OUI' ultlm818 benalll.
can be .._.h1o.
..... llllr 11.,_. IDt A altu8tlon ICORPIO (OIIt. . . New. •1 Soma un- ariBD. You'll have wha11 - ·
you npr~unlly lnWMid In hal bean expao1ad bu1 pllllll'll you may TAURUI (April • , . t II) A Undll going poaltlve -allonl 18CIIV8 tOdar oould a polillve If- . 1 way of d!&gt;4no 101111t1111111 qrlltoel mey DC"-'-.not obtlawt to .rou or 10 0111- feet Ulibn an tmportll'll Cllolllon that cur to you todey. 1M!\ IIIOUah H might
.... lllglnnlno today u..w'1\ be II)Cn ,.._ you'H to mallein 1118
futon.
making a rat111r l'1ldlalf tlhangl, H
IIIII. Ga~MU, -if0UT9811 to I blrthdey .IIAGITTAIIIIUI ( -• • D• 11) You 11111 llhould be aartoully oonaldltod.
111ft, Send tor your
~ oou1c1 be.,..,..,.~ 1odey In a '
'
aon. ~of the v-- ahNd 11y no o •
'

-Ia.

Allfo-0=

'*'

"*"

~1ry lo capture Ea~

not run--

golllltldaiWYW 10 protect •

bultnen 11om O!VIftlzed

=-~~~~~~
IIJI"'*'I .....

111:2111foo,
MOYII: Ill ...... (I'Gl

-4•-·

l'll.trr¥-

'

.

CROSSWORD
ACROSS
39 Dolphin
1 Throb
genus
5 Blocks up 40 Sluice
9 Evince
41 - oul
10 Disney's
(lust gol by)
middle
DOWN
name
1 FoK
12 Bargain
2 Gregorian
price
13 Type
3 Getting
o lruil
caught
15 Run oul
4 Sheep
1 8 - lransil
5 Resolve
14 Trolled·
• 28 Bit player
gloria
8 Texas city 18 Donald!lon 27 Colonize
17 Oklahoma 7 Cambridge • and olhers 29 Cap lor
city
campus
19 Rake
Pierre
181nvective
(abbr.)
22 Zhivago 's 30 Spooky
20 Beachboy's B Ferber
love
34 Droplel
hue
novel
24 legends
38 Wagnerian
21 City in
11 Where
25 Fr.-Ger.
heroine
Alaska
Khartoum
river
37 Traynor
22 Actress,
is
basin
of baseball
Shelley
23 Virgil
Grissom 's
.
nickname
24 Fall behind
25 Overfill
27Wading
bird
28 Alas,
in Berlin
29 Bawl out
31 Eroded
32 Summer
(Fr.)
33 Confederate
soldier
35 Columnist
Novak
37 Unsullied
311 French
composer

m1crca1 c~ have halpld

&amp;1:

e.

lhiiiOm

Mocllrn

;:-:-f~::.

IIIMIID ...,., lnglnulty,

......
.
• .... ,. *•

IIIII . . lilTS ollhll

~-(0:3111

11:101u-·(1) • ••
II I A I lillie

!::r,:
..
l ,.. a.. ... -

Mon

11:11•1·'
-· uua-~~~-­
r(0:30)
\;

(I)

t•

'

.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOI I!S- Here's how to work it:

11131

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands ror another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes the iength and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code (j!tters are different.

10iJO (l) lllntl Of Tllllh Eloctron
~

.JIOU
tAQ42

'

Willy Nilly had a tough bidding deci.J91
sion after his partner had responded WEST
EAST
with one no-trump. Eventually he • K
.J902
jumped in his six-card spade suit. • 8 3
• A 915
Since North had enough to bid game, t J 10 6 3
t975
he bid four spades. No doubt North is • K Q 10 6 5 4
.32
·still hoping to see Willy play a hand ,
SOUTH
well someday.
1
.AQ8743
West led the club king. Willy took
.KQ6
the ace and right away played three
• KB
high diamonds, pitching his club loser.
.A 7
Nexl he played a spade back to his
Vulnerable: Both
queen. West look the king and played a
Dealer; South
fourth diamond. East carefully played
a low heart as declarer ruffed. Willy Soutb
West
Nortb
Eul
was just about to pia y the ace of 1 •
Pass
I NT
Pus
spades when he suddenly realized that 3 •
Pass 4 •
All pass
it was possible that East had all there·
maining spades. If he could get lo
Opening lead: • K
dummy, he could guard against that
distribution by leading the 10 ot L-,----:---:--:--=-:-r:==...-!
spades and letting it ride. He tried a diamonds as before~ and then run the
low heart to dummy's jack, but East 10 of spad.es. He w11l lose one. spade
won the ace and returned a.club. Willy ti·ick and the heart ace, mak1ng an
ruffed and now had no choice but to overtrick. If no spade honor appears,
play out the spade ace. East got two he will still be able to play up to tbe
more spade tricks, and the contract queen of spades from dummy, !011111
was down one. Even if declarer plays the contract only when West began the
a high heart out of his hand, East hand witb K-J-9-x in trumps.
should keep declarer out of dummy by hmH J~y·s boob -~y "'11r~·~
.
"JacobyonCardGamH •(wrUteawi
duck tng.
J.a Os ld Jacoby) .,. no• anU.ble at
The correct play is for declarer. to :,..::..., :,...,. publlsil&lt;d by
lay down the ace of spades at trick _ © ~~~- NEWS,..,.ER"""""""" ASIII.
· two When the king drops, he can play

(iii:iiil:i. Pro IOwltt'a T(I)NaaeacfMII
• . . . . . . . ."' VInnie

UI1111Sta

NORTH

•to s

ttll'i of

(2:00)
8:30(1) • (I) ._...,., Roell

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Faurth and Pine
,
'
Oollpoflt. Ohio
Phone 114446-3111 or 114446-4477.

84

......,._

Follow • typical American
family end Ita not-eo-typical

MOCNLI~TINGf

/

II

alna. 1:;1

Kelly's -

~AA'? JQA.NNA~

.·

71 Joop CJ7. V-1. 3-opOid.
opnd. 12100 304-17111318
'

fiiQGrdl World

(l) Mind Thlnldng

1

-

1871 .,._ qUirt• ton Chwv
Cuot- v ... f3.100.00. 3041111-3128.

2304

.....

(I) .(I) c..ch Hayden
enllatad to perform with

1----------

1198 Jotp 4 cyl good mnd.
3114-1911-3311.

I

OISporlll (1:00)

- g o.

32 Mobile Hames
for Sale

liS Night Court Cable

cameru enter lhe courtroom
&amp; tho atalf .,.,.. TV
penonae. (R) J;l

i

S•le

• tlllhu•• Now

~ 1:01(1) NIA IIMitalbelt

. . . . (J)

r· ••

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1:30 (I)

;;:::;;;;~;;:;;===-I
.
i4

-••ocL

.

Gto•••

THERJ;!

Oetu••

"''*

JJiiu~pp•arlllttylrl 1:;1

• Crtoolt .... Cl1ela
7:31 (I) Andy Cklfltlh
1:00 ()) MOYII!: The LMt Oulpol1

o.o,.,._

bot•,.••

=.ir LNgue

laMbett

THf

No. 3 below.

I' I' I' 1
"I 1.. I I

IHEI

I

OIMauart~~oa

·I

r 1· I'

II I

By James Jacoby

Newattour
J!.:,.ID Gil Wheat 01

WILL, '(otJ'VE P/ZOIEP

you develop lrom step

BRIDGE

(l) l!l Maclltl/ LII1Nr

I/

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

Origin - Eagle - Testy - Horrid - HANOS
The woman helped the man through the door with his baby
carriage. He grinned, "I guess chivalry isn't dead."' "No,"
replied the woman, "It just chan.~g~ed:::.:H::.A::.N.:.:O:..:S:.:.-"_'-------1

7:00()),0ur . . . . .
.
• (J) Pll M I •'nil

eo

Q

sa

SC:IIAM-LITS ANSWERS

taNawc-d!y
•=•w~-..a

caWn••·

Auto'a

• ~~~~~fBLE FORI

oeer-~xprau

up.

:'How old is the boy you're
·; meeting?" asked the airline
"" agent. I had been at the airpon
several hours
I grinned ,
I"Well, he was six- he-."

l6
_ _

mwR~~~B~~~RES I' 1~

G1 WIIRP In Clnalnnd

I"IWbe".... ••

1----------

•

Ollhowlllz Today

IUDGET
Uted
II TRANIMIISIONrebultt all type1.
w.-r-·30dw•. Prl . . ttl•

j ~ •

L-.L.-.L.-.l..-.1.-.l......J

WKRP In Clnotnne1l

r.-.

1_

I
_

t--Tl;.7-=TI-i'::...YI;_;-jl....;;.,l--j

•.11!1••caa,.....

w......

72

•

L E W0 M L

(I) e(I)AICIIewaQ
(%) llod)' lh Dtile
(!) s-2-1 Cmo- Q

br••·

.._..oom

HA FT

I
_

~~===~====~for

1Ji 8part1Laak (0:30)

..-vm.,.•

••a

_

1:;1

SFocta
Ulo
IIJ lha-Ra
1:05 (I) Allaa
1:30. ()) liS NIC Nlghlly Newa

In-

""'•'"'""-

s
I

bracnolf.~

Auto P•ns
11o Acce1110rles

£1 L 12

PESTW

overnight when the geta her

1:m•;Day.

t I

I-_ I' I I I" It_t'

(%) u...... Junior High

0

.....
..w•.

0
1z

ctw. . I 1111-d'l
~:~) IIOwt 01 . , _ T- .

••lc t••·

•••

'

(I) (II

Gl .....

HE'S DECIDED TO DEVOTE
TI-lE REST OF I-llS LIFE TO MAKIN6
HIS D06 1-lAPPV ..

Fhlh T.nk. 2.a13 Jedrt.., Aw. 18-73Volb~ne.s ·iof'•t•.
Two treil . . tor .-m. iet.ent:e~. For rent 2
tuMhed
304-178-1018.
moble homa, 1115.00 1110nth Whttldii~MW or ul8d. 3 , Point Pl••ent. 304-8715-2013. C•H 304-T7:S.I3015efl•lp.m.
whNietl t i - l e -. .. Col 10Sofa11..,.14.9t.,d10Aol
plus: utlltl&amp; _. 8ea1J4: Hucl.
Ito~:" Modlctl. 11011-1111- complete 143.8.
1812 E_,, 2 door. ...o.. PI.
Mobile horn1 tar ..nt. 2 ~ 304-171-M1Z • 87&amp;-3100.
rooma. a.nd Hit Raid. 304"1
AM-FM ••.eta t1300. Call
•
.
FIAt b - AK C Gor- 114-742-24-42.
~
171-•34.
Few Sal• . Conlnle •d Pl•tlc . .hlrd femlle 7 monthl old
. lotly -•lorCioevySo.burt..l.
M RON 11iO.OO . Phone 304-171- ! 111Fardhoart Wogon. 4 cyt.. 304-171- S30 1.
EYANI !NTEIIPRIIES. Jtcll- !.:_108::.:4.:.
. ---:-:---:---::::-:: needl mlnOf' ...,.,, t710. &amp;1444 Apartment
1011. OH. 1-IOCJ:U7·192S.
Cec:lor lpMial puppl.._ AKC leB-4411.
for Rent
61 H0111ahold oodl . WHITE'I METAL DETECTORS r0111ateret1. firot aholt. Ch.,._ 1871 Dalta II Cud•• Royale. 79 Motors Homes
8o Campers
llonA. .on. 1210 . .oondAvt.. PMPII .,d Bill color. AwMoble PS. Pi. •"· •C811n1 aon•llon
Oolllpollo. Ohio. 114-441- n-. t1150.00. ·304-77J.H21. •1100. Con 114-lt:l-2315.
4331.
IEAUTIRIL.APAIITMENTS AT
1918 Vihlto Mer"'ry Cou. . LS . 1174 Wlnobtto. Mini Motor
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· AUCTION .•SWAIN
FURNITURE
12
67
MUiical
SON ESTATES. S:M ....,.,..,
law mHttt~o.
110.100 Home, Dodge Ch•~ 11,000
Dlwo St , Gollp....
Con 114-19:Z.271:Z.
·
mi., 21 ft.• ger~ . . .or. a Rot elf.
Pille from t182 • mo. Wllk to NEW - I po. wootlpaup- 1338.
1.-.trumants
......... d ........ 114-4411- l.hrinp- ...._1111-1118.
Coli 814-44ti-881S, ilr 1141973 Oldt ltltlonwagan Utl-1119
21518 E O. H.
·--wMhllo-p-1248.
Cruis•. Oood condlllan. t375.
full
alro
m
•
loorndtlk&gt;n
PIANO
FOR
SALE
CoR 114-192-3137.
1874 OMC II pauenp bus .
Tara Townhoua..A,.rtrMnll · 2 ttortlno- I l l.......... tttrtlno-toll: ....,....... '""" to
Convert.:t lo c...,per, 90 {'~
lr . 1 112 ..... CA .. olo• • • 011 tiNI monthlrr
...,.,_, cfilpmd priwMt .,...
..,. ""...,.. 304-n3-130v
Oft pl.-o. lee loallly. c.ll
UlfO.-.
d
r
eft•lp.m.
suit•. O.s•s. wrin. . welf*. a
- - ot 1-100-1311-7111
w••.
a trMh lnclulld. eamp
....elne of u ... tlmhure.
...,tim• .
Alii C0-110111
1871 19ft Mkl• Motor Home.
ltertW.q • t718 P• mo. Cal NEW- - . . , boo,. US.
Ctmplltl1 H.,altld UIA
CoMt to C.n membership ~
114-:M7- 7110.
Workboot1 e11 • up. fate.l a
18a2 Cloewottt 4-0 Hotdlllocl&lt;.
Good condition 18000. I U.
-til-l Coli 114-4411-3111
2HPv.,lctlpu-20gtl. ..,k,
Sten.,d triiiSmlttktn. ntw 192-U43.
·
p_.. 27 tlr ,-. lorgovtrlttv
CIM
Cou~ ~.. .01. Inc. Good to c~ fror,t. •rtlnget tit. ln.,kkllll ..,~tat l••on•. he- tlr-. nf!W front
"R Pllomtno C.mper tih
Ul_. IPPiililcel and T.V. seta.
flin,.,., teriout gutt..t.t. lrut. 114-9t:Z.H04 A" Hunnol. · .n..-,
Ulld 3 timet. Flbergl••
Open 8A.M. to II P.M . Mcontlwu
c
.
.
.
Mullc.
114-441·0187.
Furnll:u..
1972 Monte Cotto. 1972 Smotide,. •. f•ctorytlr. thow!fj'
lot. 814-Utl-1198, 127 3rd Rt. 141. Vl'llla
Jeff
W8m•ler
lnltructar.
114Cant•-v. 1/4mHeon
key Qomper. Coli 114-742portable commode. !!love, , ..
A.. GoHI~oh.OH
Linooln Pille. Mon.·l•t. lAM· 441·1077. limited o-ln...
2701.
friqeretor. tink. c•ptt"- .....
Furnllllod ofllo;.,._,. 107 So·
I , 'Ori~ t7,498.00 wlfl Mil lor
cond Aoo.. Gllllpoflo, 1110. GOOD USED A"PIIANCES IPM. lun. 12·S. 114-44tiGull• lor oolo. Martin D-35: 13 Chovv ~lebrlty, 4 31M.
11,&lt;40000. Coll304-171i-S814
-. •• bot!\ Col814-""-4411
dryera. ..... l....an.
"110thAnntv.....,". •aoo.oo. 12.410 304-1711-7421.
ott ... 4:00
.
oft•7 P.M
rant:tea. llll!ltll Appliances, For llle: Browntweedtofl. call &lt;til 304-1711-17S4.
iJIIpor Rlvtr Ad. llooldo llono 114-117-0441. ., 114-31718BO c~~ov c-.... 1n good 1181. 29ft.. hltchlk• 2. Plllh.
CNtt M-. 114-44&amp;7311.
0 -.
cond for • 1. 200 or belt oft•. wheel. c1... • nM. lt•eo.
f!Uit
158
Coli oft• 5:00 PM. 304-1711- h~c:h Cal 304-171i-H01. • ;lAYN!!'S FURNITURE
Riding mower. a pulh mo ....
1841
8o Vegetable•
3 ..,.._. bte¥cte b tele. Cel
lot•
111d ch. . priced from 114-Uti-UK
Efll,;.,._, opt. ldool tor 1 1111 to 1111. THIN IIO•d
198" Ford EXP. •c ilond. 40
pnOf\ moble hDme bllow up to 1121. Hldo-o-boclll 1310
ml• to
p..an. • • tN« PI'V·
ltriWHrri•·
P'dc
your
~n. .
.. - ·17 .-..o.
•-•
town avertooldng • • · CA •
Call Cleude Winters. Rio ment. 30.,..,,
to 1111. Redlin.. f221 to
h••· llof. Ctll14-44&amp;03al 1371. LM!pa f28 le t121.
Gr.,do. OH 114-2411-1121. . -...
-C-...,---s-.-,-...,-.-V---~---o
Din.,.. 1101and up to 1411.
• Horne
Fu&lt;nllhod tl'lld..._.. neo. uti- Wood tolllo w-1 choirs •21s to
tr-mi11lon. ooocf cond. cell 81
oont•in•s. :104-181-3041
iller
1:00PM.
lmprovenml8181rl'ltsll
.
••• pold, - · b.l\ 7111 4th
Dook I 14S up to 1371. llolld otlo gr•dltl'- ok&gt;dno Tovlot'o lorry Potdl. OPMIII
A... Oollpolll. Col 114-448- 17K.
Wed.
CtH
114-M92.
or
114
Hutc:hoo
1-ond
up.
bunllltda
ltertln, ·lt 1410. Aleow.. Md 2411-1171.
U11 itlor 7 P.M.
compiMa w-men,..... •29&amp;
mentle aladiiMd • "
lAS EMINT
';·•
up ..
Soby- An
horld m - Colt 114-742- liriWbMrl•. Addllon Pitc., 2
Furn Apt. 1 br., t221 utlltl• ...
1110.
Mlinr
.
.
.
orllml
..-lnfl'
WAlfRPIIOOFit.G
.•
:'
.
.
3151
... d. 138 Socood Aw. Oollip&lt;&gt;
ml•
hmAt.
7.
Coli
114-317·
'-Moondltkuwl
lf•lme
.
.
.
.
flrtl
or
twlr!
•71
firm
•••·
.,d
lio, 114-UI-U11 oft• 7 p.m.
0118.
... _. o - •n5. up
••· locll rHenetl llrnilhl6
Klnpt310.4-•dloltfll.
p,.. _.,rn••· c.n c:olhtd
Furn. Effitlt~nar/a171. utlltle
1-114-237-0411. dll' or nlghl:
. . I, I, • 10 1111"
ptld 701 1411\ Golipolo. 114- -Boll¥ cobln
1871
Thu.-blrd
•aoo.oo
mttt- 131 • I ....
f 11 r 111 :1tll 1Ill!! :.
4-48-U11 oft• 7 p.m.
prJee negati•bhJ. 304-171· RogersBesement
Sod fromoo 121, Quoon lin
w.t •proafin flo
1110.
131 • .,n, " - • •so. Good Paint .... naw going on at Plllnt
,\ ' I\, I t J I'~,
tefiCtktn of
tuftet.
Upitoiro ""· 3 '""'" • . . ~
SWEEPEJI ..,d tteWingmiiChine
Untur•hed utlltla lnduct.d. met81 IC8bln ... hftadbo•• UO Plut. 20 P• CWtt off r•l•
Plf'tt. . . dtuppli..
TIUckl
for
Sale
No P•L Col 814-Utl-2183 end up to Ill.
prloe
Oft Interior
Md - - up and ..,..,. D1vil Vea~um
,.,,...,.,.
Point~ You woriiiOO
l-5d~.
Cleen•.
one h81f mile up
hord to point w•h ""Y1,Nng lot~ 111 Farm Equipment
1981 Dodoo pick-up. S1 .000
c - Rd. eo" 81410 O.ys ume •• c•h wilh Pllnt PIUe. 2411JaetraonAwe .•
mi.. nlco inrclv •38111; 1187 oM&amp;oaot.
3IP .ttnlnl.
·-.
bolh ......
Untur•hed.
1140. o p - crdl. 3 Ml• out :104-1711-4084.
3pt. hltdiH . D.rttflu.-edlle, Ford Aant~~r XLT. picll-up,
Second Aw .. Qoft 114-441- lulovlloRd . (lpon 9A.M IDS
thar_p. 43. 000 ml . /*491&amp;: Septic T•k Pumplnf' 110. G•l,
7S72. oftor S p.m./114-U&amp;- P.M. Mon. thru Set. 8U··441o oon•t m•• 1 move wthout ua. ulld YMY lttle. Clll 814-44S. 1013
Fordii.,QN, XLT plc:lo-up. llo Co. RON EYANS ENTERI11t. or'I14-441-19H.
0322.
Coli U-Houl.304-1711-7421.
1180
........... olr/t2415: 1182 PRISES, Jtc:laon. OH 1· 100F-210 4a4. lh•p/13211!1
Vllllflr F"'nltu,.
137·1921.
Elod,olu•. SALE. Sorwlco .,d I ft. 3 palm - n - · 273 IFord
2 tr.. la~ndry room.
•
D
Motart. Hi-'My 110 cell
Nlw
•nd
us.t
furnitura
enrt
N,H.
hoy
btl•
310
N.H
h.,
,..,.
..
Colt
304-11711-1417.
in..,illtll ,-Wng •c.lo.,.ion.
btl• :104-1711-8110 or 1711- 114-UI-IIIS. or 114-441- Jlm"tOddJobe. Sundtclktklng
C.A .. No pat, nc. dl!p, C•l fPI&gt;IIon-. Coii14-448-717:Z.
1188.
"'"'"a-s.
pMntlna roofln o c•p••· a
Dozert. loeden. Backhon. 1014.
I 14-4-411-1117.
bu~clrl1111. F- ••-o. Col
lobe•.
TGWmotar.
log
troclt.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
1171 Ch..,rot• plcl&lt;up. 011 114-371-24111.
'
Dump true*, C8ftle. HuMin ~Jon.
CDm!llete hou ...hold furnltho w.v.. 304-731-71811 ...... 83
114-941-2181.
'
Livellock
lngo, No oppl..- .. 1/2 mil• Iunday.
11H Ford Ronpor, 4 &lt;"ll S
Jarrlcho. Coli 304-11711-1410.
I 14-311-1773. ov•lngo
speed tnntmlaslan.
HtH horao wol pump • 278 00
ATTENTION Horoo Ow'*'· I 22.000.00. Coli
7:30
Furnllllod 3 rmo., • btl~ Otild't bad wlmettr-. tlblel wllh tenk. RunMtg bo•d •d Point
Ptuo 1o now eorrvlot~ tlldo. .nd 4:30. 304-8711- 1178
u••• clun. no_,... luhMe chein. .tow. 2 eh•t• Df .nw. fendlr 11drt1 fDrfordVII'I.IIhone
hint Plue. 2415 J•cktton
:104-1711-1174.
for one Ref. • Dip. , ...........
A-o. Point , . . . .. Phona 1178 Ford F210. HeiiVV duty.
... Iota ol
hou-ld
Ctiii14-UI-1S11.
MMII. Col 114-448-3313 or . IIO!Jrlllionalro pool-e. 11n 304-8711-4084.
.
:104-192-3238.
1114-317-04SI . •
thldlll•••decc.aoriet.good
.1 br .. opt. on Third In OollpoliL
'54 Dodpo 0-10 plclnro. phono
cond. 1100.00. PhoNI 304
nico/.181. - Col Rlc:ll14H1y 8o Grain
304-171-1114.
Bllf!-3831 .
4-41- 2002. "' I 14- 9t:Z. 310 ..
eft or S:OO
.. 32171 trtl• 121.00.
Vena
4 W .D.
WI- tlr COIId •100.00. On 2&amp; ecra cf hav In Rutland. tar 73
RID Q,.dl. Nice 2 BR. no Plft.
U25 mo. Col 114-4-411-1038.
r•oe top *71.00. Phone 304- sell Of' wll teh on•t.. d. YCJU
1711-2801.·
. cut .,d btl• 114-843-1114
73 VW • .,. 11100 or trodolor
pictoupttuc:l of oquolvoluo. Coli
2 BR , furniiMd or tftml·
0 - h1 11.00 ,.. btl&amp; • 14-3811-11142.
-. .............. In .....
611 Building Supplie1 · 304-192- 247·
neiphborhood. Onf! c• e•11•
18till Oodgo Ctrovan, 41.000 20 p• cent off .... on Z.,tr~
wit" .,tomMie door GPtn•·
mloo. Air. AM-FM rodk&gt;. Lug- ..., ... l'lrta or ....., w•h tllla
Fully
1221. ptue utligage redt. 7 p . .~nger lett: od. tM Ju"' 1 . 118t. WVo ,
"•· Col 114-4411-7728.
304-S71-2388 Ohio 114-. . . .
· - - 114-982-3714.
2U4
.
U..llr . . lwduottaft IP.,Inlftt,
2BR't. 322ThWdAw.l!lopt"ts.
19. GMC truak. 1M tan. 4
Coli 114-4411-3748 "' 814whMI drl¥e. ,......., 1Xtf8;1, '""' B2
,·
Plumbing
21141-1103.
maeulltt. phoM 304· 171!1·
71
For
1724. lett evenlntt• tarl¥
11o H•tlng

-- , -

• I· t
·=

(II IDI

1811 bel. 17 It 71 .... , ...
lnclud11 accet~torlel ,
It. 000.00 or belt offw. 304
11711-1387.

uml·

113

Far..._,.. A-mont. newlydeeor•ed. 2nd floor. corner
Somnd.PinaGolllpolla.Dn•
b. .oQIII.
tt.,.. 6 Dlpolll
r*la.•or.
wet•
· pjlawidid.
end
roqUirod. 1221· . .
month eo• 114-44&amp;4248.
114-4-41-44U or 814-4411232S.

11:1 adn

• (J) (I) •

1171 Iloilo 17 «.. U HP .
••cellent concHtion. tl200.
304-n:J-1301 ott• '" m.
1S ft. lhu-blrd wMh sO HP
JohntonMdtllt,...•. N.w I~
1114-742-2178 "' 114-7422103.

0

........ 0 .. COUIII' medldnl

Ill••*•·

EVENI~

won

i!IW 10 form four ~mp .. word1.

1:00 ()) lltlnlnu: The Loa1

217 f. Jftd 11.. - • ..,..
t1•·M2·1331 or 114-tlll-

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

training. fktuNI. 8irf•e. grand
Mr Lnrw h1•n Rl ? RAA· 4??P

42 Mobile Horne•
for Rent

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

Boats • nd

Page-13

sea

WED.. MAY 31

Motors for Sale

..............IWU.OI&amp;.II'IIcr•

1110.00. 304-171-7121.

49

•

Sentinii-

'::~:t:~'
\\cJllA- "£~s· lAM I
.----.:.......;; 1411H •r CLAY I . POLLAN - - - : - - - lleorrango lettert of tho
0 four
acramblod wordt bt·

Viewing

715

ot1o
Aot!Qu.towot
.,.,.,
,...,

•
..... ,.8100

T

1•• M•oDrt HM1., Davi•on
11 3 Sportotor. loodod. • 3100.
114-742-2282.

UeM .., . . . . . . . .. dry.

The Daily

'

Motorcycle•

fUrniture. lit. 7North0111pollt.

Complete

petite. denewf'......oble, bri-

:".:;,11n~,"'O:::!:."'"::".i

KIT N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wriaht

Hou1ehold Goocll

Pomaoy-Middeport,
Ohio
.. ··-··-· ··-- .

31. 1989

Wedn

Fur. . heel EflciMC¥.... ut•e.
prld. ahoro bttl\ 811 Socond

-

21

111

.

CR\'PTOQOOTE, .

5-31

81&gt;

CEH

EQVFK

LG

LBVRAH

QKJtiWLCFKJ

I B

LG

IWFBK

MHWU

CEFC

MH

ZGQAJ

BC.

MB

M GQAJ

LBVRAH

CEFC

.

IIIH

, ZGQAJK'C.-HVHWLGK , RQXE
. Yeaterdaf'• Cr,.te•••tel CULTIVATI, THE
' HABIT OF EARLY RISING. IT IS UNWISE TO IU!£P
ntE HEAD LONG ON A LEVEL WITH THE FEET. HENRVTH~U .
~ 1111 _King Fetturn Syndlcllle. Inc

~.

•

�.1

Page 14-The Daily Sentinel

1989

Ohio

Cincinnati
'Reds snap
losing speD

THURSDAY IS SENIOR CmZEN'S DAY AT .VAUGHAN'S
5~ DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ~=).
MUST PROVIDE . .I BUCKEYE CARD IR DIIVER~S UCEISE

Ohio Lottery .
Pick3
719
Pick 4
6038
Super Lotto

Page 4

6-23-26-35-3 7-42
Kicker 567740

•

e·
'

.CHUCK STEAKS OR
CHUCK COMBO ·PAIS

16 OL

'

•

Steaks • Roast • Ground Chuck

$139
UMIT 3 PEl PilSON!

''

·'

LAYS POTATO CHIPS ......~.~!·.... 99&lt;

CARDINAL BREAD .~ •••••••••~~~!..... 29&lt;

ZESTA CRACKERS

Ground Beef

99c

Sl 09LL

1

10 II. 01 MOlE

LB.aox

THOROFARE

17

Ground Chuck ,
S Ll. OIMOU

4/$199 .

oz.

112 PORK LOINS

FOLGER'S COFFEE
' 39

oz.

$549

$159

PORK &amp; BEANS

2I 89&lt;

160Z.

VAN CAMP'S 16 oz.

PORK &amp; BEANS

2/Sl 09
SNO FLOSS

TOMATOES
16

FRANIIESl

2/SJl5

oz.

oz.

3f$Jl9
SNO FLOSS 27 OJ..

SAUERKRAUT

2/99&lt;

12
'

CHOPPED
lULl

oz.

.

IL 01110111

·

SLICED BACON.................

$SI9

8 9(

BOLOGNA •••••••••~~!M!l~! •••• 69C
CHUNI

LB.
LB.

89( Ll.

ROLL SAUSAGE ••••••••••~."1••!~. 79 C
BALLARD'S
.
.
ll $ 99
2
LINK SAUSAGE .................... 4
.699
SU RAI s 1L 101
.
BAnER DIP FISH ••••••••••••••••••
BOB EVANS

oz.

..

LAID •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.Lf...

513.49)

.'

-~

lED SKIN

CRISPY SERVE
.

BACON

69 c
.

LB.

YELLOW·ONIONS

s

:,~· 149

1

·

'2

(FULL CUISt

LONGHORN CHEESE ••••••Lfo ....

$ 99

1

. CAUFI~

10 Ll. RUSSO

NAVEL ORANGES

POTATOES

89C

~~ $169

$]99

$2~9

c••=• im ,,

1a CIQM ........!.!!!:.
'

.,
).

•2•

9

·-

26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

alcohol test shows 0.10 percent or
more- will be "mostdramatlc"
In changing driver behavior.
' 'This w111 cause them. If
they've had too much to drink, to
find somebody else to drive them
home or walt until they sober
up," he said., ~~a doesn't matter
how good your lawyer Is, you're
still going to get administrative
suspension."
Although 23 other states allow
it, administrative suspension
without a hearing has been
opposed by certain grot~ps as
violating a driver's due process.
Sen. Cooper Snyder, R·
Hillsboro, said the •'casual social
drinker Is Impressed with something Immediate - right now."
Sen . Barry Levey, RMiddletown, said habllual drink·
lng drivers would be hit hardest

WASHINGTON: (UP!) - The
words got harder. the tension got
:hotter and the smiles grew larger
lor surviving contestants In the
National Spelling Bee Thursday
· · : a~ the 62nd annual event moved
:toward Its conclusion.
·
. The final rounds of the two-day
showdown started wlth 151 of the
record ~2 entrants- and where
words had been chosen from a
practice list for the first rounds
Wednesday, they were culled
randomly from a dictionary
Thursday.
Benjamin Brashear of Victoria, Texas. was the first one
knocked out In the morning; the
14-year-old got whomped by the
word womp. which means a
sudden Illumination. misspelling
.It "whamp."
Next down was Emily Moun·
lain of Bella Iff', Ohio, despite the
rabbit's foot she pinned to her
skirt for good luck. The 14-yearold misspelled wakltori, a word
for meal on sk.ewers, as
' 'wochatory. ''
Eight of the first 20 partie!·
pants were eliminated Thursday,
. moving the contest sponsored by
the Scripps Howard newspaper
· chain toward Its final faceo!f
between two students roi' the title
•,and $1,500 In prize money. The
runner-up wins $1,000 and all
other contestants get smaller
cash awards.
While none of the early mistakes by students In grades 4
through 8 drew dramatic emotions, the mounting tension saw
wider smiles and louder sighs of
relief from those who managed to
correctly spell the words given.
them.
.
William Aston III, 12, of.
Jackson, Tenn.. thrust a bold

by confiscatiOn of their cars.
"Confiscation gets people's at·
tentlon, he said.
Levey said that of the 22
accidents In Ohio killing 29
people over Memorial Day weekend, nine were alcohol-related,
and there were Indications alcohol was Involved in some of the
others.
Pfeifer's bill provides for automatic license suspensions of one
year on the second offense, with
no work driving privileges for 90
days, and three years on the third
offense, with no driving to work
for six months. The suspensions
are even longer for drivers who
refuse to take the blood alcohol
test.
Pfeifer's bill gives judges a
variety or options on a second
DWI offense: one year In jail and

one yea r in an alcohol rehabllita·
lion program; the existing 10
days to six m'onths in jail
followed by -a five-year requiremen t that the driver's ignition be
governed by a breathalyzer.
locking d,evice; or a special
orange-colored license plate denoting a DWI convictio n.
On third offense, Pfeifer's bill
raises the 30 days to one year in
jail to a felony carryin g a penalt y
of six months to 18 months in jail,
plus confiscation of the vehicle
drive n by the offender.
.
The bill also des ignates the
Ohio State Reformatory at Mansfield. to be abandoned fo r a new
prison in December, as a ja il for
convicted drunken drivers and
traffic offenders.
The school district income tax

•

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HOI!IfOIUID :aJi:ijNfi:V - 8oJ O'Dell. lledloa aupervlsor traiDJaa for Sou_. Ol!lo Coal Compa!Q''a Melp Dlvllloa, was

r~ 110~

r.r

ld! coDirlbutloa to sdety t. lbe coal miDIDc
IDMU'J rib lbe Dauoa E. McNece Safety Award. 'lbe Rutlaad
reslde!K 18 pletareci wllb Ida award, preseated to him by· lbe
Soutbeaa&amp;ee,~ Oldo DIMrlct CouacU of lbe Holmes Safety
AIIIIOCIUion.

" thumbs-up" stin, apparentiy to
his parents In the audience, just
before his turn at the microphone
Wednesday. And after Rober!
Kleinberg, 13', ' of Elma, N.Y ..
earned the right to compete In the
next round, ·he returned to his
chair. clasped his hands behind
his head and produced a huge
grin.
The first round· had 17 casual·
ties; starting with the 22nd
speller. Malinda Shepherd. 10, of
Burnsvtlle, N.C., stumbled on
seriatim, meaning arranged In
order, by Improperly spelling It

''serlatum."
The next to fall was Aneka
Walker, 14, of Plainfield, N.J :,
who misspelled tyrannize, meaning to govern cruelly, as "tlran·
ize. •· The sound of the bell is the
disappointing signal or a
mlsspell1ng.
"It was terrifying," Jennifer
Smallwood. 14. of Danville. Va.,
said or her successful experience
at the microphone. She survived
the first round by properly
spelling lumpkin. meaning a

,WASHINGTON (UPIJ
Wright said he was offering the
House Speaker Jim Wright,
House "a proposition. Let me
·facing the reality that he could give you back this job you gave to
·not win exoneratiOn of charges . me" t() end "this season of bad
:that he violated House ethics will that has grown upon us."
rules. Is giving up the fight and
Wright spent most or his
his office.
address. Offering a detailed de· Wright's decision, announced fense to the charges made a gins t
Wednesday In a dramatic one- him.
.
hour address to the House, clears
The memberi gave Wright a
the way for Rep. Thomu Foley, standing ovation when he warned
0-Wash .• to become speaker and of the deatructive effects of
.second In line of succesSion to the charges and countercharges that
'presidency. Foley currently Is have overshadowed the work of
Democratic leader. the No. 2 Congress. He $aid his colleapes
leader81tlp post.
allould "brine this period of
Wrtgbt, 66, aald he wltl resign mindless eannlballam to an end.
u speaker as 1100n as his There's been enouch or 11."
.sueceuor II elected, probably
Wrtght'a resignation Ia ex"next ~k. arid will resign from pected to bring a clote to the
the Houlll! by the end of June.
ethics committee Investigation
The embattled speaker told bla that bepn lut June, altllough
llleatand attentive colleapes he the committee may still act on
does not waul "to be a party to hi&amp; motiGJIIS to dismiss the most
.tearing up this lnstltuUon." and setloua cliarges asalnat him.
·wtu reslpln order to put an end
As a result of that probe, the
to ethics charles that haye committee announced Apru 17
doQed his footafl!ps for more that It had "reason to believe"
than a year.
Wrtsht Ylota.ted HoUle rules In 69
' ~"

.i

bill. sponsored by Sen. ·Rober t
Cupp. R-Lima, Is viewed as an
alternative to real estate taxes.
But municipalities, which de·
pend on the local income tax as
their sole source of revenue.
pppose the bill.
The House performed surgery
on Cupp's original proposal,
removi ng a 1 percent ceiling on
the school district income tax,
allowing a $50 senior citizen tax
credit and allowing school . dis·
tricts in large cities to impose the
tax· with voter ap proval.
Six districts ena cted the tax the
last time it was permitted in
1981-82. Five of the districts still
have the tax, although the
Legislature in 1983 repealed the
authority for any more districts
to Impose II .

Southern Ohio Coal firm's O'Dell
presented McNece Safety Award

clumsy, often stupid person.
By the endofsecondround with
205 students, 174 survived to
move on to the third round. And
151 of them earned the right to
return Thursday for the final
rounds.
Ana Gordan, 13, of Manchester, N.H., was not so lucky. She
flubbed lnumbrate. by spelling It
''tnnumbrate." It mean·s to put in
shadow, or shade.
, "I was so nervous. I knew all
the other words other people
were getting, but I drew a total
blank." she said after the first
round .
Of the 222 contestants, there.
were 120 girls and 102 boys. The
youngest was 9 and the oldest
contestants were 15.
The first National Spelling Bee
was held In 1925 with nine
contestants and has been held
annually except the war years or
1943, 1944 and 1945. It has grown
steadily each year, with more
newspapers - Scripps Howard
papers and others - sponsoring
students.

ALBANY - Roy O'Dell, sec·
tton supervisor - training for
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division, was bonored for
his contribution to safety In the
coal mining Industry with the
Dalton E. McNece Safety Award
presented by the 89utheastern
Ohio District Council of the
Holmes Safety Association.
O'Dell Is the third recipient of
the award, given at the district's
annual banquet, which was held
In Pt. Pleasant, Va., this year.
MeN~. ~llo-4Ued several
·years ago, was an Inspector with
the federal Mine Safety and
Health Administration and was a.
major force In the formation of
the Holmes Southeastern District CouncU.
O'Dell was nominated for the
award because he has touched
the lives of many miners and

w.

Improved their safety behaviors
through his good example and
sincerity. O'Dell has been an
employee at Southern Ohio Coal
since 1972, when he joined the
Meigs No. 2 mine. He has been In
his . current position since 1976,
speeding most of his time with
the federally-required annual
retraining for miners.
Prior to his employment at
Southern Ohio Coal, O'Dell had
more than 16 years of experience
In underground coal mining. He
spent about 12 years with the
Llevlng Coal Company In West
Columbia, W.Va., and also
worked for UniOn Carbide's
Putnam mine In Jackson County,
W.Va.
.•
"I've worked In some smaller
mines, too - Including pony
mines," Roy says. " In fact, I've
seen about everyway that you

By NAJ'iCY YOACHAM
Senllael News Starr
The Meigs County Commls·
stoners have appointed Dr.
James Conde as Interim Meigs
County Coroner to ser.ve the
counly untU the Republican
Central Committee meets to
make their appointment to the
corouer's office.
The appointment of a coroner
at Wednesday's meeting of the
commissioners was necessary
due to the retiring or Dr. R. R.
Pickens. Dr. P lckenssenta letter
to the commissioners to Inform
them ot his retirement from his
medical practice, due to health
reasons. Pickens also retired as
coroner, effective yesterday,
May 31.
According to law, the central
committee must meet to appoint

a coroner, not sooner than five
days nor more than 15 days from
the May 31 date. The commissioners' appointment to the pos l·
lion Is just temporary, unless the
central committee would decide
to appoint Co nde also. Whoever Is
appointed by the central commit·
tee will serve until the November
1990 general election. The elected
official will then serve the
remaining two years of this
unexpired term.
Circumstances surrounding
the interim appointment of
Conde are unusal, since Conde
was originally elected to the
office of coroner. Conde resigned
the office when he moved from
the county. at which time
Pickens was a ppointed by the
central committee to fulfill
Conde's unexpired term. Dr.
Conde has since returned to the

instances over the last 10 years.
House Republican leader RoThe charges -concerning limits bert Michel of Illinois said the
on gifts and outside lncorne resignation was a sad moment .
Involve sales of Wright's book, for the House House of Represen·
"Reflections of a Public Man," tatlves, and a personal tragedy
and his financial relationship tor Jim Wright. It II a profouad
with George MalUck, a Fort and historic moment · for this
Worth. Texas, developer and great lnaUtutlon."
longtime friend who fonned an
Another Republtan, Rep. Vln
Investment company with Weber or Minnesota, said Demo- . ·
Wright and his wife, Betty.
crats mtght not believe It, but
Wrtght assured the House that "everyone !eels terrible about it.
·'under no circumstances would I . .. Nobody likes to
a man
ever knowingly or Intentionally whole given his life to his country
do or say anything. to violate go dowa this way."
(Houle) rules," and that "for
Wrilbt'a predecessor, ronner
just about a year I bave ached to Speaker Tbomu O'Nel11 of Maatell my aide" of tbe cue.
ncbuaet 111, said the Teun had
Moat memben reacted with not broken the law and, "He Ia
ayrnpathy and support for one of the rnott decent men I've
Wrillbt, Who Wll puttlq U ead ever met.''
to 34 years of RI'VIceln Concress.
A Democratic member said
Rep. Jack Brook&amp;, D-T~. a Wrtght made Ida decl&amp;lcm to etve
IOJlillme ally of Wrlgh\'a, •l'Oke up hi&amp; fillbt atter learning that a
to the Houle Immediately after majority ot the a1x Democrats
Wright, saying tbe speakers• 8Jid alx RepullltcanJ OD tbe ethlcl
decIlion was his cleerett poulble CODIDiiUIIt were prepmld to votl!
demo111tation of hta love" for the · apJut 1111 req11111t for dlmdual
Houteo- ..
ot tbe cbarpl. .

ser

.
.J

can mine coal."
O'Dell also has experience
with the U.S. Army as a medic.
He served during the Korean
conflict from 1951·53. O'Dell and
his wife, Bebea, live In Rutland.
They have two sons -Gary, who
works at the Meigs No. 2 mine,
and Mark, who works at Ohio
Power's James M. Gavin Plant
- and two granddaughters. Roy
also has a brother, Harvey
O'Dell, who Is a section supervisor at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Other Meigs employees recognized at the Holmes banquet
Include John Moore, shift supervisor at the Meigs No. 2 mine;
Roger Black, longwall supervisor at Meigs No. 2; Dan Conway,
maintenance super'vlsor - underground at the Raccoon No. 3
mine, and Steve., Runyon, shuttle
car operator at Raccoon No. 3.

Dr. Conde appointed interim
coroner by Meigs commission

Rep. Foley expected to succeed Wright

$ 49

S1••
FISH S11CIS •••••••••••••••••••·! .••

IUCH HAYEN

•••
OAI IIAN

151/J oz.

l

89C

(lox of 16 lb.

'

SIRLOIN PAniES •••••••~."1••~~.

TOMATO JUICE
46

LL .

$699.

llLPIG.

ARGO PEAS
17

•

COUNTRY... STYLE
RIBS
t'

CAMPBELL'S

By LEE LEONARD
school district Income tax bill.
UPISiueboWJe Reporter
That measure was sent to Gov.
COLUMBUS- State senato~s •. Richard Celeste. who has said he
.weary of coddling repeat drink· wlll sign It: If signed by June 30,
lng drivers, unanimously passed the bill will enable school dislegislation Wednesday providing tricts to place local Income taxes
. . for Immediate and automatic on the November ballot.
suspension of the license of any
Pfeifer's bill provides for a
driver falling a breathalyzer six-month license suspension on
test.
the first OWl offense, with no
The measure, sponsored by occupational driving privileges
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, for 60 days. Current law provides
now goes to the House. which · for a suspension of 60 days to
historically has been more le- three years after a court hearing.
·nlent on drinking drivers.
The current mandatory three-.
. Pfeifer's bill also calls for day jail term or completion of an
stronger penalties on the second alcohol education and treatment
offense or driving while lntoxl· program, and the $150 to. $1,000
cated, and requires authorities to fine would ·remain.
confiscate the offender's car on
Pfeifer told his colleagues ·the
the third violation.
so-called administrative suspen·
. The Seiate also ratified, 24·7, slon -lifting a drinking driver's
·House changes In a permissive license on the spot if the blood

-Spelling
Bee field
:r educed ··
:to 151

,.

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
&amp; GREEN BEANS

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy.:.... Middleport. Ohio. Thursday, June 1, 1989

Ohio Senate approves DWI, school tax bills

FAMILY PACI

PEPSI

•

at

. Vol.40. No.19
•Copyrighted 1888

mid 60s tonlghl
of Low
rain In
70percent.
Friday,.•~::~~t
cloudy. High In mid 80s.
of rain 50 percent.

•

'

'

local area. Pickens would have
served as the appointed coroner
until the November 1990 general
election.
Although a final vote of the
commissioners ended with the
unanimous appointment of
Conde, much discussion took
place before the vote_was taken.
Commissioner David Koblentz
had been in favor of making Dr.
John Ridgw_a y. a democrat, the
interim coroner, since Ridgway
was the assistant coroner under
Pickens. When the vote was
taken however, Koblentz voted
with . Commissioners Richard
Jones and Manning Roush in
favor of Conde, a republican.
In .his letter to the commission·
ers, Pickens acknowledged 35
years of support from county
residents, as well as the support
. Continued on page 16

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