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                  <text>1 6-The: Dely Sentinel

Grande Chorale to undergo changes
Students returnl,ng to the Unl·
• verslty of Rio Grande· 'this fall
have noticed many changes.
Among them Is a shift In musical
orientation for the Grande
Chorale.
Through the years, the Grande
Chorale has developed an excel·
lent . reputation for . presenting
music In the popular Idiom,
explained Dr. David Faber,
assistant professor of music.
The emphasis has been on
"Top40" andshowtunes, with an
·e laborate Broadway style of
cboreographywhlchresultedlna
multi-faceted program of entertalnment. The Chorale will have
a dllferent look and sound this
year, with the Introduction of
vocal jazz Into the repetolre.
''The performance of vocal
Jazz requires extreme lndepend·
ence on the part of the stlur~rs

Wednesdey, AugUst 30. 1989

.Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

FORD ·RANGER
.
AMERICA'S BEST SELLING COMPACT PICKUP
AT
'

because of the Intricate harmo- different occasions through the
nles Which are a part of the year."
genre," Faber said.
Because of the strong religious
"An additional element of the Influence which Is a par t of the
desired sound Is provided with regional culture, Faber said, the
the use of unld.lrectional micro- Grande Chorale wlll continue to
phones, which require the sin· offer a sacred program fo r ·use in
gers to stand very close to the local churches. This year. · a
miCrophones, limiting their abll· program wlll be developed whlcl!
lty to dance while singing, " he features songs from many sea·
added. "Carefully designed stag· sonsoftheyear, lncludlngEaster
!Qg Is created, however, to add a and Chrislrnas.
v 1sua 1 · e I em en t to the
There are still several open·
performance."
lngs In the Grande Chorale,
Faber said the vocal jazz Idiom Faber said, particularly .In the
Is ·"usually perceived as being . men's sectlons.·An electric bass
less formal than the Show Choir, player and a percussionist (set)
so the tradltloJI1ll 'Tuxedo' style are also required.
of concert wear wlll be a ban·
Limited scholarships are avail·
·doned In favor of something more able for participation. Interested
contemporary and less elabo· students should contact Faber in
rate. Chorale members wlll be Room 126 of the Fine and
exploring and deciding on a Performing Arts Center as soon
number of costume styles for as possible.

.

Scholarships were also
awardedtotwostudentsfromthe
Xenia Children's Home In Xenia.
The male recipient was 'Ian
McCoy, who Is attending Sinclair
Community College In Dayton
and , studying auto mechanics.
The female recipient was Julla
Thoren, wholsstudylngbuslness
at Rio Grande.
The group made a $100 dona·
tion to a member In distress. On
sick call were Lee Reed, Phyllis
Blake, Becky Tyree, Marie Tho·
mas, Shirley Roush, Cella Hlte,
John Hlte, Bob Gilmore, Lenora
Davis, Helen Kennedy, Lloyd
Johnson, Woodrow Gammon,
Ashley and Mildred Smith, and
Lisa Roush. Polly Martinez has a

PAT HILL FORD
.

The Masterworks Chorale, a
group of student and community
singers who wlll work on .;horal
presentations, Is getting under·
way this year and Is In need of
members.
The aim of the.group is to allow
amateur singers an outlet for
their talents, explained Dr.
David Faber. assistant professor
of music at the University of Rio
Grande.
"The term 'masterwork' does
not Imply that lt Is beyond .the
capabilities of most amateur
singers," Faber said. "A 'mas·
terwork' Is a choral work ol
extended length, written by a
composer wl)o Is considered to b{
'classic' in his or he'r orientation
to music. Because of this special·
izatlon, the chorus wlll be known
as the Masterworks Chorale.
"Our purpose Is to encourage
as many singers as possible, and
Its membership Is open not only
to students but to the community
In the four-county area;" Faber
added.
The gr'oup has scheduled Its
first meeting for Monday, Sept.

Beat of the Bend

11 at 7 p.m. In the Fine and
Performing Arts Center. It will
~ontlime

meeting on . Mo!Jdays
throughout the school year from
7-9 p.m.
The Masterworks Chorale is
separate from the Grande Cho·
rale, the student organization
that serves as the campus'
musical ambassadors, Faber
noted. The Masterworks Chorale
is tentatively planning to present
selections from Handel's Christ·
mas favorite "The Messiah" on
Dec. 12, and Is formulating plans.
to stage John Rutter's "Requiem" on May 13. ·
''Ratner than disband for a few
years until the next 'Messiah,'
the Masterworks Chorale will
continue through the winter and
spring," Faber explained. "This
will, in fact , be a regular portion
of the musical offerings at Rio
Grande, with concerts scheduled
for each Christmas and spring."
St ud ents and community
members can receive one hour of
academic credit for participatIng in the Masterworks Chorale,
Faber said. He emp)lasized that
volunteers are welcome.

Remembering the Roush
.family in the days ahead
By BOB HOEFLICH
Mrs . Albert (Velsia) Roush
sent along word
having just a
wee bit ol a
p r 0 b 1em 1n
keeping smiling
right now.
Small wonder.
Mrs . Roush
entered Univer·
sity Hospital in Columbus today
and on Thursday will undergo
by-pass near! surgery.
Meantime, one of her daugh·
ters, Becky Tyree, was in Colum·
bus today to see a specialist at
University Hospital. Becky, who
is diabetic and had a kidney
transplant several years ago, ls
now blind. There Is hope that
some part of her vision can be
restored through laser surgery
and treatment. The examination
will determine that .
A week ago, Larry Flowers,
,husband of another daughter, the
former Judy Roush , suffered a
massive stroke' and has been
conllned to Mount Carmel East
Hospital in Columbus. He suf·
fered extensive paralysis and Is
unable to speak. Later this week, ·
he Is expected to be transferred·
to another Columbus hospital to
begin rehabilitation trainlilg .
While Larry js unable to speak,
he Is able to recognize people he
knows acknowledging them
through facial expressions. Get.
well cards are held In front of his
face and the expressions again
Indicate that he understands.
By the way, cards can be sent
to Larry, who Is well known here,
at his home address which Is
12776 CobbleStone Lane, Pickerington, Ohio 43147.
The Roush family will cer·
talnly have the prayers of many
In the days ahead.
Some 1358 Meigs County fair·
goers registered for attendance
prizes aw.a rded by Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
There were four Pflzes offered

and then there were three someone stole a, disc camera
from the hospital s booth. However, Hospital Administrator
Scott Lucas replaced the camera
so that the hospital could award
the four prizes l! had promised.
Lucas also drew the names of
the prize winners following the
fair. They include Carl Carmi·
chael, Pomeroy, a kitchen
television-radio combination;
Sadie Carr, Harrisonville, a
stereo cassette recorder; Mindy
Patters9n . McGrath Road,
Pomeroy, the disc camera, and
Ann Norman, Racine, an electric
potpourri pot.
Mike Wllllams, son of Kenneth
and Arlene Williams, Fountain
Hills, Ariz., formerly of Meigs
County, Is making qulte a name
for himself as a baseball pitcher
in Arizona.
Mike was the pitching ace for
tile Coronado Connie Mack
leaglie baseball team which won
the state championship this
summer. He was the workhorse
of the team's pitching staff
throwing more than 60 Innings In
the 24 game season. During those
60 innings, he gave up 33 runs on
62 hits. But only 12 of those hits
were for extra bases, and Wllll·
arns did not Yield a home run all
season. He struck out 42 batters
and gave up 40 walks. Mike will
be a high school senior next year
and weighs In at 158 pounds. His
fastball travels past batters at
more .than 80 miles per nour.
Mike hopes to keep Improving
and to play college baseball after
finishing up high school.
By the way, you all know his
grandmother. She's Mrs. Pearl
(Helen) Williams who colnclden·
tally saw some of the preii!Jll·
nary games wllen she visited In
Fountain Hills last spring.
Aunt Maude says the biggest
step you can take Is theonewhlcll
letsyoumeetothershalfway. Do
keep smiling.

PICK-3: 477
PICK-4: 0028
Lotto: 1, 13, 14,
21, 29, 43. .
Kicker: 941447

Page4

.

.

.

1989 FORD RANGER 414

Vol.40, No.82 M

ONLY
4 TO

$10,250

CHOOSE FROM
For Immediate Delivery

AFTER REBATE

Tax &amp; ntlt Not lnduclld

MUFFLER and TAILPIPE
ONlv

$ 599 5 INSTALLED

NOW THRU SEPT. 15, 1989
We use Only Aluminized Pipe At No
Extra Charge

Your Co11plete E•hault Service Center

Ja.ckson holding up' solid •waste district: Jones
By.NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff ·
"If the City of Jackson does not wish to be a part
of our district, then maybe It's tlmetoaskJackson
County to withdraw so we can get on with
business," said Commissioner Richard Jones In
Wednesday's regular commissioners' meeting.
"I see no other alternative at this time. Let the
state place Jackson County where they want
them."
Commissioners Mailnlng' Roush and David
Koblentz were In agreement will! Jones.
. Jones was speaking. ·about Jackson . City
· Council's refusal to participate In the original
landfill surcharges which were proposed for the
slx-eounty solid waste district to which Meigs and
Jackson Counties belong.
AlthoUgh Jackson County government, arid the
whole of the other five counties supported the
origlDal surcharges, Jackson City Council vetoed
the proposed fees.
Under the Ohio law which mandated the

The Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall on Friday at
7:30p.m.
All contests will be judged and
inspection will be held. DegrE"e
work In full.
The Racine Grange will serve
refreshments.

development of solid waste districts, the city of
Jackson, as the largest municipality In that
county, has veto power, as do the largest
municipalities In each participating county.
Also according to state law, If a county Is not a
solid waste dis trlct unto Itself, or else Included in a
multi-county district, the state makes the decision
as to which district the county should belong.
The failure of Jackson City Council to approve
original surcharges Is proving costly for each of
the counties In our solid waste district, Including
Meigs, Athens, Gallla, Heicklng, Vinton and
Jackson. Bills are coming In and someone has to
pay them.
·
.
·
. But the state law provides a solution for that
dilemma too. If surcharges are not enacted to
cover district expenses, then the costs are
computed on a per capita basis and billed directly
to each county.
· Meigs County just this week received a $6,690
bill from .Vinton County Auditor Jean Morgan,
who serves as treasurer for the solid waste

. .

PAT HILL FORD

461 S. 3rd

Middleport
614-992-2196

If those words describe a car .you own, you probably face a daily problem:
getting that high performance with the low-octane, no-lead gasoline that's available.
DurAll® Fuel Conditioner (FC) is a solution to the problem. It's like a shot of adrenali.n
that keeps your engine running at its best.
DurAll FC is race proven. Lyn StJames,
America's most successful woman road racer
and holder of 21 national and international
speed records, uses DurAll FC in her 600·
horsepower Trans-Am racing Ford Mustang .
She uses DurAll FC because it works .

SCREENING- Nonna Torres, left, R.N. and
nuninl director ·at the Melp County Health
Department; .Ill seen here . administering the
"flager. slick" cholesterol screening lo Juanita
Roush. The screenjap were offered receatly as a
service to area reeldenll. 1\pproxlmately 200

people took advantaie of the Ill service which will

be offered again the week before Thanbglvlill.

With the 'Health Department In the process of
purchasing of a new cholesterol screening
machine, results of the reading can be made
available In two and one hulf mlaules ..

Victim testifies in Meigs trial

• 111118 mETIIIIEAII
• BIIIIB a.umJN

A Meigs County Common
ter, and the victim was spending
Pleas jury of 12 will decide
the night with her friend In the
whether or not Ronald G. Davis ,
Davis home.
45, of Pomeroy, had sexual
Prior to testimony from the
contact, but not Intercourse, on
12-year'old victim, the jury vi·
sited the scene at the Davis
April 7 with a minor girl under
the age of 13.
home.
Davis was Indicted earlier this
Once on the stand, the victim,
year by a Meigs County Grand
who was questioned by Assistant
Jury on the charge of gross
Meigs Prosecu tlng Attorney
sexual Imposition. The parents of
Linda Warner, explained what
the alleged victim Initiated the
had taken place on April 7 when
charge against Davis through
she was a guest In the Davis
local agencies, after their 12home.
·
year-old daughter told them
She said that her friend 's
what had allegedly happened to
father had made some remarks
her. ·
to her of a suggestive nature, but
Jury selection in the Davis · she thought he was kidding. She
case began 9 a.m. Wednesday
didn't think much about what
morning. The jury was seated by
was being said until he was
about noon. Opening statements
touching her. The girl said she
didn't know what to do since she
from attorneys began after lunch
thought she was in the home of a
followed by testimonies.
friend .
··
According to Information pres·
ented In yesterday afternoons
The girl was cross,examlned
proceedings, the alleged crime
by William Grim, of Athens,
took place In the Dav(s home.
attorney for the defense.
Meigs County Prosecuting AttorThe child cried two or three
ney Steven Story charges that the
times during her testimony
12-year·old victim was a friend of 'Which ended yesterday's session.
Davis's own 12-war-old daugh·
Basically, the defense attorney

DurAll FC contains no metallic ingredients, no methanol or ethanol, and no nitrogen compounds. lt.
reduces
i combustion-chamber buildup, as well as exhaust-valve recession.
All these benefits are linked to the fact that DurAl! FC enhances
combustion. That helps Lyn St. James' race engine, and it can help
your car's engine, too.
What does it cost? About 95 cents per tankful, because all it takes is
one ounce of DurAll FC mixed with .16 gallons of gasoline.

Newspaper project looking
for issues from. Middleport

• lllftllll PAmmD IW*JCT
....... aIIIII . . . 1111118. Rll
• TEIT IIEIUI.R IIEI'tllitiiiiAE PAPER
After extensive scientific review and
committee approval. laboratory and road test data
was published rna paper delivered at the 1989
International Congress of the Society of Automotive
Engineers (SAE). This data shows that DurAl! FC
reduces gasoline octane (anti-knock) requirements
by up to six numbers. In other words, an engine
requiring 93 octane gasoline may run just fine with
87 octane gas treated with DurAll FC .

• 1111-n HIIIIIOC• • BJIIIINI
• IMPIIOVB Rll .. FNIE
At the same time, DurAll FC can
improve fuel mileage and reduce hydrocarbon
emissions - good news in the.battle
· against air pollution .

FUEL CONDITIONER.
AVAILABLE AT

district, for Meigs•' share of 'the district 's
expenses . .
All total, the district has been billed $50,000 for
anticipated costs for the next three months .
In addition to Meigs' blll, Athens County lias
been billed $15,965; Gallta County $8,520; Hocking
County, $6,880; Jackson County $8,660; and Vinton
County $3,280.
,.
·
District officials estimate It will cost at least
$50,000 to operate the district for the next three
months. The operating costs will have to come
fr.om the general funds of the counties unless a
surcharge schedule Is approved. If surcharges
are adopted, the district will be funded from
revenue· generated by the users of landfills,
including out-of-state haulers.
·
"The fee schedule would have been In effect
August 1," said Meigs Commissioner David
Koblentz, If Jackson City, Council had not vetoed
the schedule.
Koblentz and Commissioner Manning Roush
are among representatives of Meigs County on the

district's governing board.
A second effort Is now underway to get
surcharges enacted. This second proposal Is for
higher surcharges of $1.25 per ton for dumping
ln·dlstrlct waste, $2.50 for out-of-district Ohio
waste, and $3.75 for out-of-state waste. The
process for approving a surcharge schedule Is
lengthy : A required public hearing on the newly ·
proposed fee schedule Is set for Sept.l4, 7 p.m. , at
the Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
Counties paying the most recent bills are to be
reimbursed once the newly proposed surcharge
schedule Is enacted. ·
''That's the only up side" of the problem, said
CommiSsioner Jones. "There's nothing· now ·ln.·
any of our county budgets to allow this$6,690 bill to
be paid," he added.
:
The commissioners will be meeting as soon as
possible with the county budget commission to see
If some way can be determined to pay the county's
share of the dlsfrlct bill.

Meigs officials discussing
regional jail facility:concept

See Rick Tolliver, Jay Hill, Dwight Honaker or Pat Hill

Meeting slated

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cent s
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, August 31, 1989

.

For more Information on th~
Masterworks Chorale, contact
Faber at the Fine .and PerformIng Arts Center, 245-5353 (toll·
free In Ohio: · 1·800·282·7201).
extension 364.

Tonight, becomin1 mostly
cloudy early. A chance of
showers and thunde~stonns
late. Low 70 to 75. Winds south.
around 10 mph. Chance of ralli ·
40 percent late.

•
CO!IYriphted 1989

new daughter.
Members lost by death were
Gall Miller, John Gogenhour,
and Edith Spencer.
All members present received
a Utile miss junior certificate.
Several bars and pins were given
for field service.
Welcomedlntojuniormember·
ship were Ashley Smith and
Courtney Parsons. Iva Stewart,
Bonnie Krautter, and· Debbie
Krautter, were welcomed as
senior members.
The unit Is now goal phis six in
the department.
A marzetti dinner was served
prior to the meeting.
The door prize brought by
Gerry Parsons was won by Iva
Stewart.

New Masterworks Chorale seeking
members from campus, community

Meigs hosts
Alexander

.

·Feeney Auxiliary conducts meeting
Appllcatlons for the Cora Ben·
nett Memoria! Scholarship were
read at the recent meeting of the
Feeney Bennett . Post 128
Auxiliary.
Applying for the scholarship
were LesUe Carr, Jerry Matson,
and Sue Little. The scholarship
was awarded to Sue Little, a
member of the post and auxll·
lary. She Is attending Buckeye
Hills Career Center to become a
licensed practical nurse.
Paullne .Greathouse presided
at the meeting In which prayer
was given by Kathryn Metzger,
chaplain. Therewasamomentof
silent prayer and the pledge of
allegiance was repeated In
unison.
.
·

Ohio L&gt;ttery

.
Tile Ohio Historical · Society
announced today that the Ohio
Newspaper Project will begin
work In Meigs County next week.
The goal of the Ohio Newspaper
Project Is to promote the preser·
vatlon and use of the · state's
newspaper f\!IOUI'Ce&amp; .
Project atalf members, Fred
Galeck and John Haas, will
Inventory and catalog . newspaper files held by The Dally
Sentinel and Sunday , TimesSentinel, as well as the Meigs
County Qlstrlct Public Library at
Pomeroy and Middleport. ·

The Ohio 'Newspaper Project~

'

part of the . United States News,
paper Program funded by the
National Endowment for the
Humanities .
Ohio's project Is sponsored and
directed by the Ohio Historical
Society, the national program Is
coordinated by the Library of
Congress. This national program
supporta newspaper InventoryIng and microfilming projects at
the state level. ·
Tile Ohio Newspaper Project's
staff hopes to find, Identity and
preserve every newspaper title
publlabed withlil the state of
Ohio. The whereabou IB o!several

said during opening comments
that everything alleged by the
prosecution Is true, with the
exception .of the alleged crime.
Grim pointed out that the burden
of proof lies with tile prosecution
and claimed that the state will be
unable to prove Its case aglllnst
his client. Grim said Davis would
be taking the stand In his defense.
The trial was scheduled to
resume Thursday morning at 9
a.m. with testimony from a
medical doctor, followed by a
videotaped deposition from the
victim's mother, who Is Ill and
cannot appear In person In the
courtroom . ·
Authorities anticipate tile trial
will continue throughout today
and Into tomorrow, with the case
going \o · the jury late Friday
morning or early Friday
afler11oon.
Tl\e jury Is.·c omprised of five
women, seven men, and a woman
alternate.
(The names of juvenUe or
sexual assault vlc«ms are not
disclosed to protect their prl·
vacy.)

Meigs County papers are not
knoWn.
Titles and Issues needed by the
project Include Middleport
Gazette, 1865 to March 13, 1867;
Middleport Leader, all Issues;
and the Middleport Review, •all
.up to June 1948, along with all
Issues of the Dally Tribune of
Pomeroy,
Anyone having Information
regarding the location of these or
any other Meigs County papers'
are asked. to contact Haas or
Galeck, at the Ohio Historical
Society, Ohio Newspaper Project, 1982 VelmaAve.. Columbus,
43211·2497.
'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Background Information Is
still being gathered In regard to
the possibility of contructlng a
regional jail for several area
counties. Talk of a regional jail
was Initiated by Vinton Oounty,
which no longer has Its own jail
facility
Officials from Hocking, Jack·
son, Meigs and Fllke Counties ·
·· ha_ve. 'been. Included In meetings
on the subject' The most recent
meeting was held Tuesday night
In McArthur.
·• .
· The Meigs County Commls·
sloners and Sheriff James
Soulsby attended Tuesday's
meeting which featured speak·
ers from the State's Department
of Community Corrections.
To obtain knowledge of the
financing of such a facility,

representatives from the Gover·
nor's Offlce of Criminal Justice
will be as ked to attend the next
meeting, reported the
commissioners.
Meigs County officials are
attending these meetings because they feel the jail situation
will be a future problem to Meigs
County, not because .they have
already made up their minds to
go with a regional facility : They
want to gather Information about
such a facility alolig with the
other counties .
Joe jenkins, of the Buckeye
Joint-County Self Insurance
Council, met with the commissioners Wednesday to apprise
them of a req ulrmen t by the
council to provide the lndentlflcatlon of county employe!'s who
toutlnely drive county.-owned
vehicles. A list of names Is to be

provided by each Individual
office holder. The lnsuran~e
council' will then check the
driving ,records of the lndlvidu·
als. Those county agencies which
have responsibility for the most
drivers are the sheriff's depart·
ment, the highway department
and EM~.
County Engineer Philip Ro·
berts reported tha.t Conrail will
be widening the railroad crossing
on County Road 10 at Dexter by
the end of September. The
narrow crossing has been a
problem for some time. noberts
Is hoping that the widening of the
crosslilg can be completed before
the start of the county's resurfac·
lng p(oject on County Road 10.
Costs. for resurfacing both
County Road 10 and County Road
55 are to paid for ihrougll·State
(~e MEIGS, pa1e 6)

Jim Bakke,r sent ·to mental hospital
CHARLOTIE , N.C . rUPI) -A ·lying on tile floor of his lawyer's
federal judge committed Jim office In the fetal position with his
Bakl&lt;er to a psychiatric hospital head under the couch.
Jackson, who said he has
Thursday after a psychiatrist
treated
Bakker for the past nine
testified at Bakker's fraud trial
months,
says the preacher Is
that the evangelist Is suffering
suffering
from severe psychiatfrom hallucinations and other
ric
emotional
regression. ·
mental .problems.
.
Potter rejected a defense reDr. Basil Jackson told U.S.
District Judge Robert Potter that . quest to have Bakker, who lost
Bakker saw "frlghtenting anlrn· his PTL ministry In a sex scandal
als, which he felt were bent on two years ago, treated at a
destroying him" when he left the private psychiatric hospital. Incourt Wednesday. Jackson said stead, Bakker IS being commit·
earlier Thursday Bakker was ted to a federal facility, the
Butner Psychiatric Institute In

Butner, N.C. Other patients there
have Included John Hinkley, who '
shot President Reagan.
After an assessment at Butner,
POtter sald he would determine
when Bakker can again assist Ills
attorneys In his defense.
The jury In the case, which did
not see the discussion of Bakker's
mental health, was sent home ,
and told not to read of lis ten to
news accounts.
Bakker Is being tried on fraud
and conspiracy charges. stem·
ming from the way he raised and
soent money at PTL.

' .

KEBM'S CORNER -With or without a pltlq•
commemerattaa Kenn'a Corner, theae area
re~~ldenla wiD alwaya remember lhelr beliiVetl
family member aad frlead, the late .Kermit
Wlltoa. GUhflNd u Kerm'a Corner, from left, In
trout, U'e lam• IMehl and Willer G~r, IOod
frlenda of the late Pomeroy re~~ldent aad
bull--au; Gerl Wlltoa, Kennlt'a daaabler·
In-law; laae Wlltoa, bla wife; Seaa Wilton,

·I

pwdloll; alld Melp Sllertff Jamea S.QbJ. Ia
bldt are IIIOI'e friMda, Fred Crow, Pomerar
MIQ'II' Rlobard Seyler, loe &amp;ruble aad Pomw.,
Councllmaa Bruce Reed. Kenn'a Coner "WID
llwar• he remembered affeetlolllteiJ u lhe
locatloa of WIIIDn'a New York Qolfllq ao-, a
place where M-. could lather 111111 lllare a •
thoqhl about Ill the Important aad unlmiJIOI'tut .
matllera of the dq.

�...

Thursday, August 31, 1989

Commentary
111 Court Slreet
., •
Pomeroy, Oblo
" DEVOTED TO THE INTEIWJ!TS OF THE MEJGS·MASON AREA

~lh

...

Thursday, August 31. 1989

Sentlnef. Bush .played .a wild card to ·aid hostages

The Daily
~~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

""-''-"T'If'Tw.c::l,o=o

ROBERT L. WINGE'M'
Publisher

,·

PAT WHitEHEAD
• Aulltanl Publlsher/ConlroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICil
General Manarer

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They llhoulcl be leeolbaa 110
wonlo 1oD1. AU letlero are sllbjecllo edllllllaa• muat be olpecl wl&amp;lt
.. aame, &amp;ddreee and lelepboae namber. No uaolpecl leiters wW be publlolted. Leiters llhould be ID JIOOd .lalle, addreeilallol-: DM penollllll·

,....

." .

.Commentary on Today's News:

Frank fights
:f or political life

WASHINGTON - President
Bush played a wild card In the
grim poker game;aver the life of
hostage Joseph Clclpplo. The
dramatic story can now be told of
how Clclppi0's execution was
stayed.
In a recent exclusive inter·
view, the president tipped us off
how he might handle his first
terrorist crisis. "I believe that
under the new leadership, . the
Soviets will co9perate. ... " . he
told us. "This should be tested."
That's exactly what Bush did.
Secretary of State James Baker
met informally In Paris with
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
Slievardnadze. Soviet-Iranian relations. had ~n warming up, so
Baker asked Shevardnadze to
use his Influence to defuse the
hostage situation.
Shevardnadze agreed to carry
a secret note from the United
States to Tehran· asking Iran's
new leaders to Intervene with the
terrorists. The Soviet , .foreign
minister not only delivered the
note personally, but added his

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

voice to the request.
In response, Iran's newly Khomeinl began recruiting and
elected presjdent, Hashemi Raf· training terrorists· In Lebanon.
sanjani, formed a committee of Several terrorist groups were
four 'to handle the assignment, formed, al)d their loyalty now .
including himself. The other varies. They operate under varthree were Iran's spiritual guide Ious names but take direction
All Khameinel, Prime Minister from a super-secret command
Hossein Musavl and Chief Jus· unit caiJed the Council of
lice Abdul Ardeblll.
Lebanon.
· The pallcy committee decided
The council rl!l!eives orders
to apply quiet pressure on the ·from Iran and distributes .iranterrorists. Foreign Minister All ian arms and cash to the terrorist
Akbar Velayati and an aide, groups. In the past, the terrorist
Hosseln Shelkholeslam, were or- operatio!IS were directed by All
dered to conta.ct the terrorists. Akbar Mohtashaml, an uncomWhen Cldpplo' s life was on the promising hardliner who was the
line, they succeeded in persuad- Iranian ambassador to Syria and
Ing his captors to postpone his Is now minister.of Interior.
execution.
In ·the . power' struggle that
Velayati and Sheikholeslam followed Khomelni's death, Mohhave continued to keep In close tashaml lost out to the more
contact with the terrorists. But moderate Rafsanjanl. Though
the question overhanging the Mohtashaml has now been
crisis. Is how much clout Iran's squeezed out , of the policynew regime has with the terror· making circle, he still has
is ts. Here Is some background tremendous clout. So it remains
gathered from confidential docu- to be seen whether the terrorists
ments and sources :
will listen to Rafsanjani or
In June 1982, the late Ayatollah Mohtashaml.

Bush, meanwhile, has been
using a cautious approach . In the
interview, he told us ·that he
would use force to rescue the
hostages if he felt "that the odds
were reasonably good that they
would be saved."
He also declared, "If the
fingerprints of state-sponsored
terrorism are tound on hostagetaking, that . state should be
expected to pay a price."
So, after the terrorists' latest
threats, Bush activated a 1985
contingency plan for · bombllig
terrorist strongholds In Leban·
on's. Bekaa Valley. He .also
ordered the necessary military
forces to assemble In the''Me!li·
terranean to implement the plan.
Meanwhile, his .back-channel
diplomacy got a reprieve for
Ciclpplo. Nevertheless, the
White House deliberately leaked
word to the press that, had
Ciclpplo been killed, the pres!·
dent would have ordered mil·
ltary retaliation against terrorist
tar !lets.

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor
: .WASHINGTON IUPI) ~ Rep. Barney Frank, tile Mas:;achusetts
:Democrat fighting for political survival, contends he Is the only ilrie
.w~o suffered from the risk he took In trying to help a male prostitute
)lfter having sex with him.
: Frank could turn out to be very wrong about that .
· .It the scandal ultimately costs him his pollticalllfe, the nation will
)lave lost a liberal lawmaker who fought effectively for mlnotltles
and the poor.·
·
: Frank beat his enemies to the punch by asking the House ethics
'committee to investigate the whole messy business.
: 'l'hat was a good tactic, but it probably required Jess personal
courage than Frank displayed in 1987 when he publicly disclosed his
)lomosex uality.
·
II also was tactically sound for Frank, a 49-year-old Harvard·
trained lawyer, to acknowledge quickly that he was guilty of some
st)lpid behavior and appalling judgment.
.·
· .
· He admitted that forthrightly after. a sexual liaison with Stephen
Goble he put the convicted sex and drug offender on his personal
payroll and moved him Into his Capitol Hill home to do household
chores.
1
· · "Anybody who knows me knows I don't do windows," sniffed Goble,
y;ho claims that when Frank was away he used the house to run a sex
service.
As it turns out. Goble wants to write a book about It all so there may·
be more to this sordid saga.
But there's already enough On the record to Indicate Frank violated
a House rule requiring congressmen to act "at all times In a manner
which shall reflect creditably on the House.' '
Ail lawmakers have at least bent that rule and some have with
impunity smashed it to smithereens.
,
·
Justlce and fairness prpbably will be best served if the ethics panel
simply tries to determine If Frank's private conduct has Interfered
with his official duties or adversely affected public policy .
Frank's political suMtivai ultimately may depend on his
C.JU!Stituents. Last weekend at Fall River he walked, subdued and
:unsmiling, for two miles in a parade In full view of about 100,000 of
them.
; , "Hey, Bar11ey," some shouted. " We're with you all the way ."
~. An angry voice warned news photographers' crowding Frank to
: 'leave the guy alone."
; There were only a few taunis and muffled boos.
~ The Washington Times, the conservative newspaper that broke the
spmdal, opined editorially .that Frank "harbored a rather frosty
)n!Ufference to the elementary moral standards to which public
ieatlers ought to adhere.''
~ Butthat newspapers's readers don't vote in Massachusetts' Fourth
~ ngresstonal District, where Frank Is highly regarded as a savvy
lawmaker whose voting record is one of the most liberal in Congress
: Frank proved he is not a liberal of the knee-jerk school when h~
l'Ciively supported Immigration reform legislation that most liberals
spunned. He opposes dairy subsidies that help hold House Democrats
iogether.
·
.
~ F.ew lawmakers have fought harder against funding cuts In public
hpusing for the poor.
·
: ~ Self-styled "pro-life" opponents of both abortion and chl)d·feeding
pr_!l~ams suffered Frank's biting wit when he commented, "Sure
tl\ey repro-life. They believe that life begins at conception and ends
lit bjrth."
;. Frank has put his political life in the h,ands of the ethics panel. So
-.;h~ther he survives is up to his peers. who also are flawed .

...
'

[._

'

[=.:.Berry s World
,.'

C
' ·.
,,r:

1I·-:

'• ~ ...

HAVE YOU SEEN
THE ABYSS~

'1/HlC.H
ONE?

l

-~

.-

.t:l~- ·- P· t
.,. ...· ,~
«· lite Dl' NEA, tnc

.,

Pop·u lation control is not a cure-all
Vincent Carroll

"Although the free-market sys- . of voluntary action, women on other zero-growth groups contern can be credited with count- their own elected to obtain tinue to Imply - more than 20 population Is more often a
less wondrous accomplishments, contraceptives pr be sterilized. years after the publication of symptom of underdevelopment
there really Is no evidence that . According to The New York - Paul Ehrlich's hysterical, dlscre- than its cause. While dense
capita 11 s m 1s 1 he be s 1 Times, the spread of TV appar- dlted "PopulatiQn Bornb" ~that PQpulations in' a few countries
contraceptive."
ently provided the goad.
population control must be the like Haiti and Bangladesh have
So says the Populaton Insu.'
"Television t~ansmlts images, foundation of development ef·
indeed· wreaked environmental
havoc,.most Third World nations
tute, In what surely wUJ come as attitudes, values and habits of a forts. Indeed, the Institute says,
a surprise to every thriving modern, urban, Industrial and our efforts In that area "will pos'sess fewer people per square
capitalist nation, from Singapore middle-class Brazil,' ' said ultimately determine the quality mile than Europe or ~a pan.
to West Germany, whose people George Martine, a Canadian of life for this entll:e planet- if
Women In Third World counno longer bring enough children demographer living In Brasilia. not Its very survival."
tr.tes deserve access to contra·
Into the world even to maintain "They are .Images of the small,
Thirty-one U.S. senators seem ceptlves and expert Information
their present numbers.
affluent, consumer -oriented to agree with this rubbish. They on how to use them for the same
Modern prosperity not only family, of the divorce between recently signed a letter urging reason that women anywhere
President Bush to restore U.S.
d
h
So
suppresses family size in ad- sexuality and procreation."
eserve t ose th1ngs:
they can
Vanced COuntries. It also lnfluen. ,. Free-market nations are nof f un di ng for t he UnIted Nat Ions
take charge of their Individual
ces the behavior of people alope in slowing population Fund for Population Activities,
destinies. To the extent that the
elsewhere who reinaln mired in growth, of course, as experience which was .cut off In 1985 to · United States can help them, 11
poverty.
.
in the Soviet Union proves. But 'protest China's policies of forced
should.
The fertility rate in Brazil for there Is little doubt that the abortion.
But we should never forget that
In a breathtaking leap of logic,
example, has plummeted f~om attitudes and social aspirations
the most natural population
5.75 children per woman In 1970 to un1eashed by modern capitalism the senators claim that every
suppressor remains a moderniz· ,
3.2 today, an entirely unexpected are the main reasons for ·the problem from "riots In Algeria"
-d th t h
development. Why? Not because growing popularity of small to "burgeoning Third World 1ng economy an
a s ower1ng
families.
,'
d b ' ' I
I
I d b
a nation with contraceptives has
O f an official birth-control pr~
~
F
e t
s
ue e
Y
little or nothing to do with
gram- for non exists In Brazil.
ar from acknowledging this, overi&gt;Opulation.
ensuring that modernization
To the contrary, a fast-growing
occurs.
Instead, in a classic convergence the Population Institute and

The case of the red car murder
LOS ANGELES (NEA) -With
traffic congealing on its streets
and freeways, Los Angeles Is
building a mass transit system
designed to belatedly relieve
everything from smog In the air
to congestion on the ground.
But construction on the Initial
4.4-mile downtown segment of
the Metro Rail project Is already
18 months behind schedule, and
its cost is likely to exceed the
very substantial orginlal estl·
mate of $1.25 bllllon.
Moreover, most of the
ti"ansPQrtation-relate&lt;l grief currently being experienced )Jy the
city would be unnecessary If a
corporatt~ cabal led by General
Motors had ·not cynically des·
troyed the elaborate, 1,200-mlle
l'ilasl transit system that served
the entire metropolitan area
earlier In the century.
Indeed, members of that crimi·
nal conspiracy brazenly dismantled ~treetcar and trolley

lines In dozens of locations
throughout the country - from
the cities of St. Louis, Baltimore
and Salt Lake City to the smaller
communities of Butte, Mont.;
Terre Haute, Ind., and Cedar
Rapids, Iowa.
.
By far the most extensive and
ambitious at the . early mass
transit systems was Los Angeles:
"red car" system, bunt In the
first years of the 20th century.
Named for the. color of · Its
trolleys, the electric railway
operated 2,700 trains dally along
a sprawling network of tracks
that stretched from Santa Mon·
lea on the west, through down·
town Los Angeles, Into the San
Gabriel Valley and as far east as
San Bernadino. It ran as far
north as the San Fernando Valley
and as far south as Long Beach
and Newport Beach:
Bunt wlthou t public funds, It
was the comprehensive urban

Robert Walters

mass transit sys(fm that city terns, which carried millions of
planners can only dream about riders, were bought and junked.
today. Indeed, It would cost well Tracks were literally torn out·of
over $100 billion to dup lcate the ground, &lt;~Ometlmes overunder current conditions.
night. Overhead power .lines
In · the years following World were dismantled, and valuable
War I, however, the trolleys were off-street rlghts·of·way were
unable to compete with the allure sold:"
of new vehicles called ·automoBetween the mid ·~s and late
bll es, and riders hip on the red car '40s, this happened In Saginaw,
system began to decline.
Jackson and Kalamazoo, Mich.;
To accelerate that trend.and to . In Portsmouth, Canton and
promote the sale of its cars and Springfield, 'Ohio; In Montgo.
buses, GM and Its partners mer'y and Mobile, Ala.; In El
bought transit systems In cities Paso and Port Arthur, Texas; In
throughout the country at 'de- Galesburg and Joliet, Ill.; In
pressed prices, then brazimly Tulsa, Okla. and Tampa, Fla.; In
dismantled them. Journalist Jon- .Portland Ore., and Spokane,
athan Kwltney, writing In Wash . .
Harper's magazine some years
In California, city transit sysago, described what occurred:
tems were systematically obll·
"In many places, mass transit terated In Fresno, Ollkland,
didn'tjustdle-11 was murdered Stockton, San Jo11e, Sacramento
... (.by those who) schemed from ·and elsew~e - , but by filr the
the mld·l930s through the 1940s. biggest prite was the Los An·
Electrified-rail mass tranalt sys- geles network.

{I

·'

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Moments .o f truth ·await several
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
streak, will ·counter with a
Tribune Staff Writer
aggressive defensive front that
Make no mlsii.ke- all but one· showed Its capability of putting
of the SVAC teams were Involved constant heat on the passet, in
In shutouts last week, and half of addition to a solid running game
the conference's teams recorded and 'a passing attack that is
victories In those shutouts. How- sU. . tlng to find Itself.
·ever, there will be some mo·
In last year's game in Vinton, ·
ments of tru!h awaiting several the Bucs edged the Bobcats 14-12.
league teams when they take the
Also facing a stiff test Friday
field Friday for the·second week night Is Southwestern, who
of non-conference play.
notched a i5-0 vlcjory over
For one, North Gallia, fresh off Hannan last )l'eek In Ashton,
last week's 46-0 victory· over W.V~. On the Highlanders'
Xenia Woodrow Wilson, a school agenda will be a visitfrom a Ross
In Its first year of varsity Southeastern squad that suffered
football, will he tested under fire a 36-6 Joss at the hands of the
when It faces Green Local Friday visiting Waverly Tigers .
The Highlander secondary of
night In Franklin Furnace.
The Bobcats, who also won Its Joe Hammon&lt;!.-Kevin Kiser and
season opener by knocking off Bill Potter will have its hands full
Chesapeake28·8, wlilhaveseoior trying to cover the receivers of
quarterback and three-year star· senior quarterback and threeter Jeremy Hughes guiding a year starter Mike Adams, who
team that sports an offensive line has been tabbed by many area
averaging about 220 pounds per coaches as a major college
man i.n addition to a well-stocked prospect. The 6-5 Adams was
receiver corps. The Pirates, seen but not heard from against
owners' of a 'four-game winning the Tigers, who racked up 173 of ·
'

.

Its 359 total yards via the Qass.
In last year's contest In Rich·
mandate, the Panthers won 33-0.
Also headed ·tor a tougher
battle is Kyger Creek, who after
pas tlng a · 16'0 victory over
Federal Hocking, will' cross the
river to face a. hungryWahama
squad who lost to Liberty Raleigh
30-0 in Beckley, W.Va.
The White Falcons gave up 331
total yards last week, 198 of those
on tlie ground. A rebound'by the
Falcons In their home opener Is
likely to be in order, unless the
Bobcats can keep their. r unning
game In high gear.
In last year's encounter in
Cheshire, the Falcons fle)l' away
with a 23·0 victory.
Hannan Trace's Wildcats, still
licking their wounds after last
week's 16·0 loss to Ironton St. Joe,
won't see the friendly Guyan hills
until their Sept. 22encounter with
Southern. Meanwhile the Wild·
cats will sail south to face
Huntington Vinson in the TJgers'

SVAC ·teams

season and nome opener..
· Junior quarterback Eric Lloyd
(4·13, 34 yards) can give a
breather to senior running back
Todd Saunders, who deliveretl a
workmanlike 141 yards on 15
carries, if the offensive line can
buy Lloyd enough time to open up
the passing· lanes to receivers
such as juniOr J.J. Bevan and
fullback /tight end Shad Johnson.
In last season's game In
Ironton, the Wildcats won 16·6.
Southern, who lost to J,l'ortFrye
28-0 last week in Beverly: will
face a Waterford team that
knocked off Eastern 32·12. This
year's version of the Tornadoes
will have its hands full of a .
Wildcat squad
In spite of
its statistical
In that

game (the Wildcats were out·
rushed 192·145 but scored on two
punt returns and a tumble) .
The Racine running game,
fueled primarily by tailback
Travis Nease, will have· to do
better than the 48 yards ~I gai.ned
against the Cadettes, and the
passing game will have to gather
wind and fly farther tha n the 13
yards it had and the three
interceptions it surrendered. .
And on and on it goes. East·
ern's losing streak now stands at
11, and' things are hardly better,
as the Eagles take on a Hannan
squad still mad about last weelt's
loss to Southwestern. The Eagles
are still .young, l)ut putting a
tighter grip on the ball may help
in preventing ·this season from

'

}

Mack pleads guilty
to lesser coke charge
.

.

....

-

-· ~

SV AC standings
·(All games)
Team .
W L PF PA :
No'r th Gallia ........... 1 0 46 o·
Oak Hill ........ ........ .1 0 28 o:
Symmes Valley ...... 1 0 22 20:
Kyger Creek ... ........ 1 0 16 •· 0
Southwestern .......... 1 0 15 o:
Eastern ..................0 1 12 33:
Hannan Trace ........0 1 0 . 16
Southern ................. 0 1 0 :. 28'

.•.

•

~

becoming a continuation of Hist
year's woes.
In last year.'·s season finale atTuppers Plains, the Wlldcat!f,
won 23·0.
,
Symmes Valley, still high over . ·
its emotional double-overtime. :
22-20 victory over Rock Hill in ·
Pedro, will host Unioto, while .
Oak Hill, who blanked Albany ;
28-0, will host Minford. who lost to •
Trimble 28-0. ·
.

Friday's games
.
Hannan Trace· at Hunt. Vinson
Kyger Creek at Wahama
North Gallia at Green Local
Ross SE at Southwestern
Hannan at Eastern
Waterford at Southern
Unloto at Symmes ·Valley ..•.
Minford at Oak Hill
...

Rio Grande to add basketball
athletes to its Hall of :Fame

4th Women's Inductee
Two alumni who have pursued basketball and softball teams,
Playing
for Redwomen Coach
careers In education and coach· noted that while she was aware of
Jamie
VanArsdalen,
Hagen·
lng are the 1989inductees Into the the Hall of the Fame in . her
Smith
was
captain
of
the
team
In·
Uni'!ersity of Rio Grande At· playing days, she never l'~pected
1983, received the Newt Oliver
to be a member.
hletlc Hall of Fame.
Award in 1982 and was MVP.
·
''I
was
really
surprised
,"
she
The hall's selection committee
Holder of a South Webster ~hoof
said.
"I
feel
it's
an
honor
to
be
has chosen for inclusion Don
record In high jump and team
part
of
such
an
elite
group.
I
used
Marks, a 1965 graduate who
mile
relay, Hagen-Smith ran
to
see
the
'names
on
the
Hall
of
played basketball and particl·
track
at
Rio Grande for one year.
paled In track, and Robin Hagen· Fame plaque In Lyne Center and
Following
graduation, she was
Smith, the school's first Aca- saw Walter ·cook (Inducted In
employed
at
Shawnee State and
. demic ~11-Amerlcan, . who 1974), who was my neighbor, and
guided
the
Rangerette
basket·
graduat(ld In 1983. Tlieir selec- I thought to myself, 'That would
ball
squad
to
first
and
second
tion brings membership In the be a big honor.' But when I was
place
In
the
competitive
OJCAA
Hall of Fame, founded In 1973, to playing, I never even thought
League. In '1987-88, Shawnee was
about it. "
53.
,20-8,
at the time the team's best
.
A
graduate
of
South
Webster
Marks, currently a learning
season
. .In 1988, the Rangerettes
School,
Hagen-Smith
High
'disabilities teacher at Waterford
became
the Lady Bears, entere,d
scored.
more
than
1,000
career
High School, said the Induction Is
competition
with four -year
points
and
served
on
,
the
'teams
"definitely an honor. I nev!"r
schools
and
finished
fourth in
• thought anything like that would that won the district champion·
District
22
with
a
23-7
record
. In
shiJ;lS In 1977 and 1979, 1n addition
, happen.''
·
1989,
her
softball
team
won
the
. Marks played four years for to being regional finalists in 1979.
district
championship.
Coach ·Art Lanham's Redmen. She was also the team captain
Hagen-Smith and her husband,
He was the team's leading scorer and MVP.
Hagen-Smith entered Shawnee Gregg Smith, a 1979 Rio Grande
from 1962 to 1964 and was chosen
State
Collll'ilunity College in 1979 gra.d uate , reside in South
, the Most Valuable Player In 1963.
and
transferred
to Rio Grande In Webster.
That year, he led NAIA District
She is the fourth woman to be
1981,
'
receiving
her bachelor's
22 In field goal percentage, and
Inducted
In the hail. The others
degree
In
physical
education
In
was ranked fourth · nationally In
are
Maxie
Fowler McCarley,
that category among all NAIA 1983 and her ·master's In educa·
Margaret
Hammond
and Perri
lion from Xavier University in
players.
Martin.
1985. '
. •A Different World' · ·
Marks · joins . several of his
teammates from that era In the
Hall .of Fame, such as Paul
Dillon, who was his roommate,
and Jim Marshall.
"It was a different world back
then::.: M'arks reflected. "We
were @.n illdependent then, so we
, had to play teams as big as
Ashland and Central State. But
we had winning seasons each
year."
In the early '60s, Community
Hal I, the famed ''Hog Pen'' of the
Bevo Francis era, was no longer
the Redmeri's home court. Marks ·
recalled that for one year the
. ..,,
I'
.team practiced and played all
:\:.:1,
'
·
home games at Oak Hill High
\1 k
School. Afterward, they switched
!l\\
their playing location to Gallla
;q:, .,.·'
.~~:~~ }·:.
.
Academy High School, which
remained the Redmen's "home"
DON MARKS
ROBIN HAGEN·SMlTH
location uri til the opening of Lyne
Center In 1970.
Marks was born In Wirt
County, W.Va., and his family
moved to Washington County,
Ohio, In the early 1950s. At
Vincent (now Warren , Local)
High School, Marks excelled In
\
basketball, being named to the
By THOMAS M. BURNETT
facility in Berea, Mack said-he
All-County team In · 1960 and
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Oeve- was still worried about what
receiving honorable mention Ali· land Browns' fullback Kevin sentence he would receive.
Ohio the same year. He qualified Mack pleaded guilty Wednesday
"I'm very concerned, more
for the state track meet In high to a reduced cocaine-use charge than I can say right now," he
jump In 1959 and placed third In that will likely keep him from said. "I'm a little nervous. It
that event statewide in 1960.
serving time in prison.
brings back memories or when I
Coaching Career
His lawyer also said that since was arrested.''
Marks also participated in It was his first offense. he also
He added; "I think after the
track for two years · at Rio would escape .punlshment by the police investigated and stuff,
Grande, but. noted wryly, "We NFL. League rules specify play- they came to their own conciu·
had very few meets. " ·
ers undergo a 30-day drug sian that I wasn't Involved with
· Following graduation, he be- rehabilitation program for their trafficking and selling."
gan teaching at Waterford in first offense, which Mack com·
Browns owner Art Modeil
1966, where he coached boys pleted at the end of July.
thought the plea bargain was a
basketball until 1973, when he
Mack had been Indicted on four positive development.
joined Metropolitan Life. In 1976, counts, Including drug traffick"What's important is that
he returned to teaching at lng,andcouldhavefacedupto20 Kevin has admitted he used
Morgan High School, coaching years in prison. But In an cocaine and he has taken dra·
track and cro8s country. Five agreement his lawyer said had malic measures to fight against
years later, he re-entered private been in the works almost since he 'ever using that drug, or any
business as general manager of was arres ~ed June 28, prosecu· . other, for the rest of his life,"
Kent Subaru In Beverly, Ohio, tors agre :d to drop the three Modell said . "He ·knows that his
· but came back to Waterford in more se lous counts of the effort will be a day-to-day com·
1985 to teach. . He currently indictmer :.
mltment and we're ali pulling for
coaches gfrls basketball, cross
And the wording In the count to hbn to succeed.
·
country and track.
which M• ck pleaded guilty was
"We never believed he was a .
At Morgan, Marks guided his changed 'rom "obtain and pos· trafficker and the prosecutors
track team to the championship sess" C() :alne to simply "use" obviously did not either. All of the
of the Muskingum Valley League cocaine - ' a fourth -degree facts of this ease are being
for three ·years and one year In felony.
forwarded to the commissioner's
cross country. The track team
The rt.aximum penalty for a office and we will wait for the
-won Its district and was regional fourth-degree felony Is 18 months league's repsonse to the resolu·
ninnerup In 1981. In addition, In prison and a $5;000 fine. tlon of this case."
·several albletes coached by . Cuyahoga County Common
Mack, 27, a two-time Pro Bowl
Marks have competed In the Pleas Judge Richard McMona· selection, gave barely audible
gJe deferred sentencing pending "yes''and "no" answers when
state track meet.
Matks, hla 'wife Linda and two a probation report, but Mack's McMonagle questioned him
children reside In Waterford. His lawyer, Gerald Gold, thought It aboutthe plea bargain. He left as
daughter 4\llssa Is a sophomore was unlikely he would get any · soon as the 10-minute hearing
at Rio Grande, majoring In prison time.
·
, was over, accompanied by his
elementary education.
"The minimum he could get w.tfe, Ava, and the Browns'
'Really Surprised'
would be probation," Gold said, security chief, Ted Chappelle.
Hagen-Smith. senior physical adding that probation Is ''normal
Mack was arrested June 28 In
education Instructor at Shawnee In such cases (first-time one of the city's most notorious
State University who also offenders) ."
drill! trafflcklnl! districts, al·
coacbes the IChool's women's
Later, at the BroWDI' training · (lee IIIACK en Pare 4)

~~:

Friday

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LAY YOUR HANDS ON HIM! - That's what North Gallla
skipper Gregg Deel and· his staff have been telling their players
when the Pirates Jake on Green Local Friday inFranklln Furnace.
Pressure on lbe quarterback (as demonstrated by defensive end
Richard Haney, right, against ,Xenia Woodrow Wilson quarter·
b~~Ck WUJiam Bush) will be the key 10 stopping Green quarterback
Jeremy Hut~hes and his dangerous passing attack. (Tribune photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Wolfpack starts ACC
action with Maryland

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By KEITH DRUM
five games," Krlvak said·. "It
UPI Sports Writer
will be after the full season."
Maryland and N.C. Stateget;m
(See WOLFPACK on Pare 4)
early start Saturday on a football
season for which neither Is sure it
is ready.
"By start)ng off with a key
conference game, 'one of .four .
straight for us, we feel a sense of
urgency," N.C. State coach Dick
Sheridan said. "Couple that with ·
Injuries, especially in the offensive line, and we feel like we're
behind. We've had Jess contact
(in practice) than any team I've
coached."
Maryland co'ach Joe Krlvak
also is antsy.
"It's an important game to us
and to them," Krivak said. ·
"We're not as far along as I
would like to be. We haven't even
started school, and It's time to
play. "
Saturday's game, which kicks
off at 3: 30 p.m.. and wlil be
televised b~ ESPN, is the only
league meeting among a light
schedule Involving Atlantic
Coast Conference teams. In
nonconference games, Clemson
Is home against Furman, and
Duke plays at Sol!th Carolina.
Maryland's visit to N.C. State
also starts a critical first month
of the season for both teams.
Maryland's first five games
are against teams that played In
bowls last season - N.C. State,
West Virginia, Western Michigan, Clemson and Michigan.
"The evaluation of this team
won't be made after one, two or
I. LOOK through newspaper!

HOWTOSAVE ·

GWITHYOUR

NEW

COLOR INSERT

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities · Com·
mission of Ohio has set lor
public hear,i ng Case No.
89-102-EL-EFC. to review
the fuel procurement practices an d polictes of Colum·
bus Southern Power Com·
pany,. the operat1on ot its
Electric Fuel Component
and related mailers. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
September 5. 1989. at the
offices of the Public
Utilities Commiss1on. 180
East Broad Street Columbus. Ohio 43266·0573.

2. REMOVE your new color insert!
J. OPEN right side up!
4. CHOOSE lhe items you need!
5. ARRIVE at the nearest NATIONWISE!
6. SAVE BIG!

All interested parties will be
given an opportunity Io be
heard . Further inlormalion
may be obtained by con·
!acting the Comm1ssion.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito,
Secretary.

•

------------~--------------------------------~--~~~~--~-

�Pltge 4 The

Seutinel

Ohio

Meigs to host Alexander in TVC opener
By DAVE HARRIS

. Sentinel Correapondeat ~
ROCK SPRINGS- Two firstyear head coaches will be looking
for their tlrst wins of their sun
young. careers when the Meigs
Marauders wlU host the Alexander Spartans on Frld;~y night.
·F ormer Nelsonvllle-York star
Dave Boston III (son of longtime
N·YheadcoachDaveBostonJr.)
Is In his first year of coaching the
Spartans. The Spartans only list
about 20 playerson·thelr roster,
but Boston feels the Athens
County School can be competilive. Alexander losttheopenerto
SVAC power Oak Hlll28·0.
In that game Alexander, after
a Oaks turnover, had a chance to
take an early lead, bill turned It
over on downs deep In Oak Hill
territory; "It Alexander scores
that trip down the field, It's a
dltferent ball game," remarked
Marauder head coach Mike
Staggs. "I thought Alexander
looked real good, they ti)row the
ball well and play excellent
defense. Number 55 (6·0 senior
linebacker Cory Russell) lsprobably one o! the bestln the TVC,"
said Staggs.

The Marauders, who lost the
opener to Gallipolis 26-3, will
make a few changes for the TVC
opener. The biggest will be at
quarterback, where -promising
sophomore Jeremy Phalln (5-11,
184) will get the nod over senior
.Eddie Crooks. Phalln played In

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CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
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day that th.e franchise is ending
Its two-year affiliation with the
Greensboro (N.C.) Hornetsofthe
Class A South Atlantic League.
Sheldon "Chief' Bender, Cln-

c-lnnati's vice president ol player
personnel, said the team Is
seeking an affiliation In another r,
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have a Class A affiliate in Cedar . ·.
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elude No. 6 Arantxa Sanchez·
Vicario and No. ll Jana Novotna.
In other first round men's
matches, winners Included No.12
Emlllo Sanchez and and No. 16 ·
Andrei Chesnokov. ·

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Graf took 44 minutes to defeat
Nathalie Herreman of France,
· 6·1, 6-1, and Navratllova required
one minute longer !or her 6-1, 6-0
decision over Julie Halard.
Other !lrst round winners In·

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Mack admitted It would be
dltllcult to concentrate on foot·
ball "with my mind going In all
dltferent directions. Right now,
I've just got to go out on the field
and do the best I call."

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Sampras, ranked No. 91, affect me. I should know better.
scored a 5·7, 6-3, 1·6, 6-1, 6-4 over growing up In New York, I should
the !Uth·seeded Wllander. Not · have kept my concentration."
since 1973 had the Open defend·
Haarhuls, from the Nether·
tng champion lost so early, when lands, came Into the match an
Tile Nastase fost In the second · unknown, to both the fans and
round to Andrew PatUson.
McEnroe.
Sampras, from Rancho Palos
Haarhuls, 23, playing In his
· Verdes, Calif., charged the net at first U.S. Open, wol) the first set
every opportunity, forcing the by breaking McEnroe's serve· In
Swedish .• basellner to try for the lOth gaine. In the fourth set,
passing shots oli almost every both players held serve until the
point.
lith game, when the Dutchman
Before the match, Sampras' . broke the New Yorker. Haarhuls
hope was "to put a lot of pressure held his serve at 15 to win the
on him to pass me arid to serve match, blasting an overhead off
well." He said WI lander "wasn't the court on his first match point.
on his game.'!
·
Although describing McEnroe
· 'i'he defending champion, who as "one of the all-time greats or
came Into the match with a 14-1 tennis," Haarhuls was confident
record when a Grand Slam In himself. "The main reason you
match went five sets, said win or you loSe Is you belleve you
Sampras ''made me play bad, can-win." ·
·
but that's my own fault."
Haarhuls attended Armstrol!ll
. Qualifier Pa.ul Haarhuls, State College In Georgia !rom
ranked No. 115, co~blned a 1984·86 before transferring 'to
powerful serve with precision Florida State, where he gradu·
passing shots to dispatch McEn· ated In 1988.
Second seed Boris Becker
roe, th e f ourth se· ed, 6-4 , 4·6, 6-3 ,
7-5.
came within a 11etcord of also
The winner o! three Grand being an upset victim. The West
Slam titles In 1988, Wl!ander had German fell two sets behind and
an emotional letdown after be- faced two match points before
coming the ' top-ranked player subduing Derrick Rostagno.
Becker, averting what would
last year. This year he has not
won a tournament and reached have beeil his second successive
second-round dismissal from the
only one final.
Wllantler said Sampras "ob- Open, struggled tor 4 hours and
viously can play some good · 27 minutes for a 1·6, 6-7 (1·7). 6-3,
. tennis at ttmes, as he showed 7-6 (8-6), 6·3.
. here," but added, . . 1 was dlsapRostagno, ranked 65th, had ·
pointed to be playing that badly." double match point serving at 6-4
Sampras had two match In the fourth set tie-break. But
points, both In the !lnal game, but the 23-year-old Californian sent a
double-faulted on the first one. "I forehand volley long and Becker
admit I choked," be said. On his followed with a forehand net cord
next mach-point opportunity, to draw even.
Given this lift, Becker capSampras won when Wllander's
lured the next two points on a
service return went wide.
Sampras !lnlshed with 72 servlce .wlnner and backhand lob
placement winners and 42 un- to even the match, and he swept
forced errors. He came to net 175 to a 4.0 lead In the final set to take
times against just 36 by control for the first time.
Wllander .,
In sharp contrast to the Center
McEnroe, working for three Court marathon, top seed Ivan
years to regain the form that Lend! required merely 33 min·
made him the world's best In utes to complete some unfinished
1981-84, came Into the tourna· business and advance to the
ment seeded tourth and said his second round, while top women
ouster was also the result of his seeds Steffl Graf and Martina
' own pOQr play.
Navratllova moved to the third
''To lose to a guy ·I've never round With their typical !lourlsh.
·seen before, that's pretty bad." · Lendl routed Diego Perez of
said McEnroe, who struggled Uruguay, 6-1,' 7·6 (7-1), 6·4, as he
.. with his concentra.tion.
began his bid to reach the Open
"I've got no one to blame but final for an eighth successive
myself. I let all the distractions year.

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(Continued from Page 3)
legedly with $500 worth of
cocaine.
But Gold said the cocaine was
in the pocket of a size-40 jacket,
indicating It couldn't have been
in .Mack's possession.
"He wears a size 50," Gold
said. "The police didn't know
who had what. I'm not saying
they 'over-charged' him, but It .
turned out the (other counts)
were wrong."
Asked if. Mack remained in
good spirits despite his problem,
Gold said, "I think he was scared
today , I think he woJJid rather
face the San Francisco defense
than be In court."
Gold said he expected NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
would act quickly In hearing
. Mack's case. The league announced after Mack's arrest It
would take no action untll the
court had reached a determination on his guilt.
·'We're going to make sure we
give him (Rozelle) ali the facts
and background In the case,"
Gold said. "This should be
viewed as a first offense. meanIng 30 days In a drug rehabilitation program."
Gold admltled some people
wlll think Mack gototfeaslly If he
escapes a ·jail term, but added,
'The prominence (of Mack')
actually hurt!J In a case like this,
It his name were Smith, no one
(would pay attention' to the

Aall fiii!H.W of UU! Padll~ Co•ILe ....

n.M.'aram•

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Mil_a. .cMcllerDarMnetellerfr.m

••'

tl'small 3 pc. Blue
REG. S1281.00
. NOW $84500
Living Room Suite
t1'2 pc. Benchcraft Sofa
Sofa/ Chair /Loveseat
w/Rocker Recliner $

$78000

ao.r..

........,,'I_

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NOW

Cllld•.CI - Cal ... •P plelt. . .b
Seln ... lad1 .v......,rram Nailville •l•e Amerte• A.MIIdlltlea (A.AA.)
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CbllllUooaa •I tile
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.. '71 .44'7 11
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$88500 REG. 5999.00
'NOW" $4.7500·
S399.00
NOW $20700 tlaenchcr~f; S~fa &amp;"tovese~t
V4 pc. Living Roo~ Suite
Camel Back
(Brown
Sofa
Sofa/Chair/Loveseat/Footstool
REG. S1099.00
NOW $58900
w/Rocker Recliner (Mciuve)
REG. SJ299.00
NOW $65000
VHide·A·Bed
..
REG. S1099.00
NOW $73500
Nylon Print Velvet
s14 &amp; 5 pc. Drawer Chests
.t'Benchcraft Sofa wI Recliner REG. S399.00
NOW $2 9900
S58 &amp; S68
w/two-year wear dated cover.
.

REG. S1499

Transadions

a.Klmore 'J, 0-"lud t
'l'er...o t, Ollrap I

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84500

HI

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39 f WEST MAIN STREET

I

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$99°0!

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WE REPAIR All
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STARTING AT

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AMDil::..I.EAGUB

STOP BY RUTLAND FURNITURE THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FOR TREMENDOUS SAYINGS.
BECAUSE OF HOLIDAY SHIPMENTS ARRIVING SOON, RUTLAND FURNITURE MUST SELL
. THEIR CURRENT
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Mack ...

_..

Majors

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historic proportlo.n at the u.s.
Open Wednesday night with a .
five -set victory just hours after
four-time U.S. Open champion
John McEnroe was also a surprise loser In the second round.

FACTOIY AUTHOIDID
..
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REG. liS99.00

(•

UPUpon. Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI)
Eighteen-year-old Pete Sampras
made defending champion Mats
WIJander an upset victim o!

1

2

The Daily Sentinei~Page-5

•

n action

By MARTIN LADER

THIS FRIDAY &amp; SATU

(Continued from Page 3)
N.C. State faces a similar
September - the Wolfpack' s
first tour games are agalnstACC
opponents Maryland, Georgia
Tech, Wake Forest and North
CaroHna.
"We know .we have to hit
mldseason form at the start,"
Sheridan said. "We know we're ·
either going to be in a race or out
otlt, depending upon how we play
In the first four games."
Sheridan wants an ACC championship. Despite two bowl ap·
pear ances and three victories
over league power Clemson in
Sheridan's three seasons, the
Wolfpack finished behind Clemson in the ACC chase each year.
") guess as coaches we see
!allures more than successes,"
Sheridan said. ''We were In a
position In '86 and '88 to win the
ACC and failed. We had an
opportunity we've not taken
advantage of." "
One reason last season was
Maryland's 30-26 victory over the
Wolfpack. The Terrapins won on
a touchdown pass by Nell O'Donnell with 1:12 to play .
O'Donnell's back, and he's
N.C. State's chief concern. He's
also Maryland's only proven
threat. especially with tailback
Ricky Johnson uncertain pending summer school grades.
· Duke shares the something-to·
prove attitude of the Wolfpack.
The Blue Devils' seven wins last
year was the most since 1962, and
this year Duke wants its first
bowl trip since '61. Defense Is
Duke's Achilles - opponents
scored 44 touchdowns last
season.
"We'll lind out Saturday night
If we've made Improvement
defensively," Duke coach Steve
Spurrier said. "I feel like we've
got better personnel jhan for that
to happen to us aga ln."
Clemson. Once again the ACC
favorite and 11th In the preseason
poll, is a solid favorite over
Furman but it won't be easy.
Furman. which lost 23-3 at
Clemson a year ago, Is Division
I·AA defending champions and
J;'€1urns 15 starters.

Pcimeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Sampras, Haarl;luis ·execute·upsets on Wilander, McEnroe

have Jim Durst (6-1, 160, sr. ) at
center, while the guards will be
Kennedy and Dennis Boothe (5-9,
218, sr) . The tackles will be Poug
Stewart (6-4, _225. sr.) and Aaron
S~eets (6.(), 229, Jr.). Senior
co-captain Jay Humphreys (6-2,
174, sr.) will be the tight end and
the spilt ends will alternate
between Kurds English (5-10,
145, jr. ). Robby Wyatt (5·9, 147,
so.) and Randy Hawley (5·9, 158,
sr.). Joining Phalln lp the b;~ckfield will be sophomores Terry
McGuire (5·10, 171) at tailback
and Frank Blake (5-9, 150) at
fullback. The wingback will be
junior Eric Heck (5·2, 114).
The kickoff will be at 7:30 at
Marauder Stadium.

·Ohio Valley Christian's soccer · goals. In addition, the Defenders
team survived a hard-fought, missed two penalty kicks In that
STAR11NG MARAUDER
scoreless first half against Rose- first half.
QB - Sophomore quarter·
hill Chris dan to defeat their hosts
Forty-five seconds into the
back Jeremy Phalln will gel
3-1 Wednesday In Ashland, Ky.
second half, a passfromDaxHIIl
ibe startlnl nod for Coach
.The Defenders, who found to Eric Burgess resulted In the
Mike Stan• In Friday nights . · themselves facing a small team Buckeyes' first goal. Hill later
T.V.C opener. Tbe Marauders
of quick bal,lhandlers, cOuldn't scored the other two goals.
Will bost the AleUllder Spiar·
shaketheoffsldesblues,asOVCS
Out 'of Rosehlll's numerous
laos, wllbtlle ldckol! at 7: 38al
was so ~nallzed eight times. chances to score, Its lone goal
Maraoder Stadium.
Those penalties cost them two game on a penalty kick.

31, 1989

U.S.

•

Defenders down · RosehiU
3-1
· ·

WoHpack.. . .

__________

only a couple series last week
hitting 2 of 6 passes for12 yards,
and has shown that he can do the .
job In action last year. "Crooks
will see some action on offense,
probably !II, wingback and he
probably will take some s~aps at
quarterback," remarked Staggs.
Meigs wlll also have back junior
guard Burt Kennedy (6.0, 213),
who will see action this wee!&lt;
after missing last week's loss to .
the Blue Devils. "We have had a
good week In practice," Staggs
remarked. "We are going to have
to play ball on llQth sides of the
ball, or we are In trouble."
The starting offensive line up
for the Maroon and Gold will

'

'TlRndlly,

"

�.

"-Di

8 The Daly SISitlu.al

"'?

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday. August 31. 1989

-----Area deaths-----'!'---- Dealel'Ship
Dean(Doc)Will
Dean Kirk (Doc) Will, 46, of
Rutland, dl~ Tuesday at St.
Anthony's Medical Center, Columbus, following an extended
Illness.
Born on Feb. 26, 1943, a1 Akron,
he was the son of Norman and
Allegra Wood Will of Rutland.
He was a retired Navy veteran
and had, been · employed as ·a
locksmith. He was a member of
the Dexter Church of Christ, the
American Legion Post at Bexley,
the Associated: Locksmiths of
America, the Naval Reserve,
and the Harrisonville Grange.
Besides ·. his . parents he Is
SUf'1Ved bY. his wjfe. Dorothy,
Rutlllnd, a son, Michael Thomas
Clyde , Will, Charleston, S. C.; ·
daughters, Donia · Rene Will,
Middleport, and Jo Ellen Will,
U .S. Navy, Mississippi; a . stepson, DaV.Id S. Manchester, Jackson~le•. Fla.; step-daughters,
Ther'e$&amp; Johnson, Fairbury, m.
and · .Pen11y Lush and Susan
Crosby, Gainesville, Fla.; a
sister, Donna Higgins, 'orient;
and 't wo brothers, Duane David
Will, Point Pleasant, and Danny
Lee Will, Middleport. Also sur.vivlng are ~en grandchildren.
_ Funeral sen•fces will be'held at
1 p.m. on Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Robert Purtell
will officiate and burial will be In
Meigs Memory Gardens .
Friends may call at the funeral
l•

• :·

home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.
Pallbearers will be Duane Will,
Danny Will, Vance Higgins,
Steven Morris, R'lbert Jewell,
Chester King. Honorary pallbearers will be Patrick Wood,
Keith Casdorph, Wald Nicholson,
Leo Morris, Charles King, Harvey Erlewlne, Orion Nelson,
Kenneth Davl$, Larry Edwards,
and Keith Molden.

Katherine L. Buckner .
Katherine Lucille Buckner, 69,
100 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
died unexpectedly oil Wednesday
at her residence.
Born Jan. 27, 1920 In Meigs
County, she was the d.a ughter of
the late George and Mae Warner
Lewis. She was a housewife and
member of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens.
She Is survived by three sons,
George Edward and John Robert, both.of Logan, and Charles
Buckner, Athens; three daughters, Mrs. John !Bonnie) Carter,
Logan; Mrs. Wayne !Shirley)
Hubl!ard. Pomeroy; and Mrs.
James (Carolyn) Youtsey,Shawnee; eighteen grandchildren,
eight great grandchildren, a
brother, Edward Lewis, New
York; four sisters, Dorothy Stewart, Margaret Owe'n, Norma
Davis, all of Columbus, and Betty
Bobo, Florida.
.
In ~ddltliln .to her
. parents she ,:
.

Meigs officials...
Issue II: Roberts has prepared
advertlsinenis for the two projects, which will be published In
the near future.
The commissioners approved
a request from Robert Byer,
-director of the Meigs County
: Emergency Medical Services, to
•advertise to refurbish a 1982
: Type III ambulance for Racine.
~ The Meigs EMS Board of Trustees decided some .time ago to go
with .box units for all EMS
departments, · anticipating that
by doing so, they could save the
·agency money In the long run.
_Refurbishing a box unit will cost
·$20,000 to $25,000 less than buying
a new unit. New units currently
sell for around $60,000. Racine's
unit . will need a new chassis,
along with upgrading of the
wiring and the. Interior and .
exteriOr of the box.
The commissioners also approved a request from Mike
Swisher, director of the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services, to continue contracts
.with the Gallla-Melgs Communlty Action Agency for the trans-.
portatlon of at-risk pregnancy
patients to medical facilities, and
the transportation of medicaid
clients to medical facilities .
These services have beeq avallabie for a few months. Swisher
sald the at-risk pregnancy trans- ·
portatlon has bef!n used very··
little but the medicaid transportatlon has been used heavily . The
extended contracts will · run

was also preceded by her bus·
band, Hershel Buckner on Sept.
15, 1976; one son, Hershel, Jr.;
and four brothers.
Services will be Saturday at 11
a.m. at the RoberiS Funeral
Home Chapel In Loga,. with
Pastor Joe C. Talley officiating.
Burial will be In Shaw Cemetery,
Falls Township In Hoelting
County.
Frle!lds may c'aU at the tuneral
home on Friday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m.

.

(FromM~IGS, ..gei)

Gordon D. Roush
Gordon D. Roush, 75, formerly
of Cheshire, living at Indian Trail
Nursing Home In ·carey, Ohio,
died this morning In Findlay,
Ohio. He farmed and was a
retired coal miner.
. Born In Gallla County, Sept.19,
1913, he was a son of the late
'Hollis and Belle Gordon Roush.
He was also preceded In death by
two brothers and a s lster.
He Is survived only by nelces ·
and nephews In Gallla County.
A' member of the Cheshire
Freewill Baptls t Churc b, services will be at Stombaugh Memor·
lal Funeral Home In Carey, Ohio,
SatUrday, 2 p.m .. with Rev. Paul
D. Moss offlcja tlng. Burial to I·
,lows In Spring Grove Cemeter.y,
Carey, Ohio. Friends may CJlll at
the funeral home, 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

Wiring.taken
from bam

though June 1, 1990.
. '
A report of electrical wiring
Transfers from . the county's
con.tlngency fund to the probate- being taken from a barn has been
juvenUe court and common pleas made by Anna Halliday, Dexter,
court budgets were approved by IQ Meigs County Sheriff James
the commissioners . The M. Souls by. Ms. Halliday retransfers are needed to cover ported that someone entered the
attorneys' tees for representing · barn and took the wiring someIndigent clients and witness fees . .tlme prior to Aug. 25.
. The sheriff also repqrted the
It · was pointed out by the
commissioners that witnesses arrest of Gerald L. Armstrong,
Jr., 22, Park St., Middleport, on a
who are called to court In cases
being prosecuted by the county, charge of carrying a concealed
are entitled to $30 whether they weapon. The arrest followed an
Incident on Leading Creek Road
take the stand or not.
Theprobate-juvenUecourthad which remains under Investigaearlier requested additional ap· tion. No further details were
proprlatlons from the budget released by the Department.
Now that schools are open,
commission to cover these costs.
Sheriff
Soulsby, urges motorists
However, certification from the
to
be
careful
about the many
budget commission could not be
children who stand along the
authorized, therefore, the commissioners are approving the road waiting for the school bus.
transfers from · the contingency
fund ..
The com.mlssloners also
pointed out the Common 'Pleas
Judge Fred Crow III Is trying to
recapture some of the county's
money by ·ordering Indigent
offenders, whenever possible, to
The driver was both Injured
make repayments io the county.
and cited In an accident at 7: 20
Finally, the commissioners
a.m. Wednesday on SR 7, 0.3 of a
Issued a reminder of next Wedmile soutli of milepost 12, near
nesday's meeting to discuss th'ts
Chester, according to the State
year's requirements for partlclHighway PatroL
patlon In the Community DevelTroopers said a. 1984 Dodge
opment Block Grant Program.
Ram pickup driven by Bruce F .
Themeetingwlllbeheldat7p.m.
Rlftle, 29, Texas Road, Pomeroy,
In the common pleas courtroom
went off first orie side of the road,
at Pomeroy .
·
then the other, striking a guardrail. The vehicle overturned,
throwing Riffle clear of the
wreckage. he was not wearing a
seat belt according to the patroL
weekend, mostly fair. Highs
The
truck was heavily damaged.
upper 70s to mid 80s. Lows In the
Rl
ffle was Injured and taken to
lower 70s Saturday, and from the
Veterans
Memorial Hospital, at
upper 50s to the mid 60s Sunday
Pomeroy.
·
and Labor Day.
The patrol cited Riffle for
Ohio Extended Forecast
failure
to maintain reasonable
Saturday through Labor Day
control
of
his vehicle.
Mostly fair. Highs In the 70s or
the lower 80s. Lows m td 60s to
lower 70s Saturday, and mid 50s
to mid 60s Sunday an.d Labor
Day.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections office wlllclose'at noon
on Friday due to the death of
Dean Will, son of Board Member
first four, for payoffs of $1,000;
Norman Will.
482 had the first three, for payoffs
of $100; and 4,931 had the tlrst
two, for payoffs of $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$549,269 and the prize payout
totaled $168,510.

.Driver injured
in accident

------Weather------By United Press International
Soudl Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming mostly
cloudy early. A chance of showers and thunderstorms late. Low
70 to 75. Winds south around 10
mph . Chance of rain 40 percent
late.
: Friday, showers and thunder•torms likely: High 85 to 90.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Outlook for the Labor Day

Office closed

No winner claims Super jackpot
CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
was no winner of· Ohio's Super
Lotto jackpot Wednesday night,
boosting the top prize to $6
mUiion for Saturday's drawing.
None of the tickets sold for the
midweek game listed the six
Mnnlng number~ - 1, 13, 14, 21,
29 and 43, a lottery commission
spokesman said Thursday . The
Jackpot was worth $3 miiUon.
However, 94 players picked
five of the numbers to win $1,000
.rach, and 4,_544. ptayers· selected
four of the numbers to win $75
apiece.
Ticket sales totaled $3,177,875
and the total prize payout was
.434.800.
The $100,000 grand prize In the
accompanying Kicker game also
went unclaimed. The winning
Kicker t9mblnatlon was 941447.
Four tickets had the first five
Kicker numbers In order, good
for payoffs of $5,000; 51 had the

Home from hospital
. Scott Grace, 12-year-son of the
~- and Mrs. Roger Grace,
Racine, Is home from Children's
Hospital where he was taken for
treatment Saturday. Theyoungs.
ter suffered a concussion and
other minor Injuries In an auto.mobile accident. He returned
home:lrom tlliP COitiinbus bospi'
tal SUIIIIQ. Hla W..nta and two
broth. . ~•114 received IJljur-

Hereford .w.i nner
named at fair

Lottery
PICK-3

477.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,228,018, with a payoff due of
$305,411.50 . .
PICK-4
0028.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$239,025.50, with a payoff due of
$61,700.
.

1!3en Slawter, Middleport, was
· the junior yearllng· bull class
winner with BS Star Doni 8805 ET
. sired by Star Do!l1ino 288 E'l' at
the Hereford show. held at the
Oho State Fair, Columbus.
Percy Debter, Horton, Ala.,
was the judgefortheshowwhlch
featured 58 head of cattle. It was
the John E. Kline Family,
LeRoy, IIJ. that dominated the
show as owners of tile grand
champion
- bull .and heifer.

By The Bend

recognized

Pat Hill Ford of Middleport has
beep selected as one of the
nation's outstanding Ford dealerships and will receive Ford
Motor Company's Distinguished
Achievement Award for Quality.
This award Is presented In
''recognition of progressive management, sound merchandising
practices, high quality stand·
ards, and continu!ng Interest In
rendering superior service to
Ford owners.
Pat Hill has lieen a Foro dealer
In Middleport since 1978. The
dealership Is located at 461 S.
Third, Middleport.

-·

-~

1-'"
BRONCOD
Slocllt131111,2dooll,4-ltM,I'!l,lllil.,__,
PS, PB,NoWII_bUIMI_IIIoli _ _ _

..

..

'4895

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce &amp;~~d Mark Smith
of Blnnt, Ellis &amp; Loewl .

CAVALIER

lllii. ......

PSPII;AIM'll-bu:UI

ELIZABETH J. CASCI

lllri.,PS,PB. _ _ _

WAS

NOW

NOW

$2'6 95

·$39.9 5

Announcements
'

. Flower uO.. to be held

.
Johnson at 992-3481. Booths are .
The Rutland Garden ciub, reserved on' a first come first
Rutland Friendly Garden Club, served basis, so call soon to
Rutland Friendly Gardeners, · reserve a booth.
and the Friends and Flowers
Gard(!n Club will present a GoWalp&amp; reunion
fiower show on Sepi. 9 and 10 at
The Goodnight reunion will be
· the Rutland Civic Center. The held at the Zion Lutheran Church
· theme for 'the show Is "The on Saturday beginning at noon. It
Change of Seasons Down a will be a potluck diMer and all
Country Lane."
·
family and friends are welcome.
Seeking reel~ lor ceokbook ·
Baekley reunion
.
. _When Pomeroy celebrates It's
The 53rd annual Buckley re11n·
150th birthday the aesqllect!nten- ion will 'be held on sept. 10 at tlie
nlal committee will have' avatla: .Belleville Dam Park In Reedsble for Sale a COOkbook made up ville. · A potluck diMer will be
of "old time" recipes of mothers, served at 1 p.m.
grandmothers, great grandmothers, etc. If anyone luls a Teal meeting
recipe they would like to contrlbo
There will be a tent meeting
ute to the cookbook, enillled · Sept. 5-10 at 7: 30 each evening
"Treasured Recipes from the at the Pine Grove Holiness
Past" send It or drop It by the Church Yard. The Rev. Tim
Dally Sen.tlnel office In care of Hamaker will be the evangelist
Julie E. Dillon. An)! church and Rev. Steve Manley and
women's organizations are also family will provide the special
enc_ouraged to coUect recipes tor music and singing. Pastor Ben
tile boot( and turrt them In to the Watts . Invites the public. The
Sentinel office. The deadline for church Is located off Route 124
subml!tlng recipes Is Sept. 15.
through Rutland on Route 325
and
Rolesville Road, or six miles
·
Middleport block party
from
Vinton off Route 325.
Middleport's annual block
party will be held on Sept. 16.
Interested parties should reserve Meeting
The Meigs Local Band Boos·
booths by calling Debbie or Mike
ters
w!U meet on Sept. 5 at 7 p.m.
Gerlach at 992-6898, Lennie
In
the
high school band room.
Eliason at 992--Gf85, or Brian

PRICES GOOD SEP1EMBER 1st, 2nd &amp; 5th ONLY
ON SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES

Whatever
the Job,
aS'TIHL
Can Cut It

.511' ''Quality

_STIHL

Olomatlc®1118 .·
Pro-Dealgud,
Pro-Preferred
$awCIIaln

ONLY 9 POUNDS
. 2.5 Cl.

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Only USN l winter.-

SI/HJ.; ·
IAI&amp;
CHAIN OIL

S3 9 5,EI .GAL

!

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BUY ONE
CASE .OF .6 ~
CHAIN AT', .
S1900
REG. PRICE, llllllt 1 Casa Pw
GET 2ND
Cust_..___
·. CHAIN

16" .Bor Reg. S339.95

41
I

3.0 Cl

SIIHJ.; ·

FOR

FILES

$50ct

40°/o SAVINGS

$1210

PIIDOI.

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._.tl Dft.per
C..t•-r

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STORE HOURS: FRIDAY 1:00 'TO 5:00-SATUIPAY i~OG TO 12:00
'

POMEROY H
.

' t

&amp;A

992-2094 •'

THE WOILD.'S LAIGIST SluiNG CHAIN SAW

•

ale

SERTA
PREMIER COMFORT

t
~
I

Clos141 Fnmt

S~ptember Sale prices on quality sofas, loveseats and
chairs. Beautiful new fabric. Smart new looks.

$49900

SALE PRICES START AT ONLY
FOR SOFA AND CHAIR -

$882~

. $108°0
Futl ·'-IA. I'IHI

lA. N(l

SERTA
SUPREME ULTRA

$14400

10 Year Worranly

FUU-U. riiCI

$99~

$344°0

19"
TAILE MODEL TV
-Mulll-fUfl •'D• 11-a..a.
lotr•llll-•

OUUN UT

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$20400

-11·1- Ch- -Cololtllttd\1
-Mtor~-

f!IU - IA. l'ti'CI

IS Tttw Wnrranty

$16900

sso4o'o

NOW

SPECIAL
SALE
PRICES
ON OUR
5" CONSOLE
ENTIRE
TELMSION
STOCK QF
-R-ote Control
-Cable ANdy
-D1tll Ute 100 Tube
SYLVANIA
-Hone, Pine ar
'-can Cebinll
TV'1
12' to 46"

S307

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GET A BERTA PERFECT SLEEPER

~

END OF S,UMMER SPECIAL
UOYD/FUNDEIS

LOW lACK
SPIING lASE

CHAIR

SALE
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Mrs. Lila Ridenour, Kellle, and
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman recently
at !ended the 25th wedding annh
versary celebration of Mr. and ·
. Mrs)3ob Fitzpatrick, Lancaster.
Tom an!! Sue Hayman recently
returned home from a fishing
trip In West Virginia.
· Mrs. Linda Weber and daugh·
ter, Chelsle Elizabeth, recently
visited Ernestine Hayman.
Mrs. Lila Ridenour and family,
and Mrs. Ernestine Hayman,
attended the eighth birthday
party of Julie Hayman, daughter
of Mr. a11d Mrs. Greg Hayman.
Mrs. Louise Gluesencamp,
Route 1, Portland, Is home from
the hospital. Cards may be sent
to her there.
Jeannie Theiss recently visited
the Paul Haubers.

. FIERO .

DURING _OUR 3-DAY PRE-FALL
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A meeting of the Meigs County
Fair Board will be .held In the
offices on the fairgrounds Tuesday evening Instead of Monday
·due to the Labor Day holiday.

f.

••

Thursday, August 31, 1989
Page-7

Rachel Nicole Chapman,
daughter of C.T. and Tammy
Chipman, Long Bottom, recently celebrated her fo11rlh
birthday at the home of Faith and
Terry Varney. ·
•
Thoae attending enjoyed homemade Ice cream, cake, and
swimming.
Attendlni were Barbara Ctuipman, David Johilson, Dan and ·
Donna Smith; Faith, Amy, and
Bridget Varaey; Karen, Eric,
and Stacy Smith; Ted, Krls, Ed,
and Terry Smith; Paul and
Josephine Smith; and Jerry,
David, and Paul Smith.
·
Sending gifts and cards were
Tom and Barbara Chapman,
Nora VIckers, Rachel Marshall,
.a nd Connie Little. ·

Meeting time
being changed

r,sss

-- ..

Chapman

WAS

Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T ......... ..... .......... ......... 39*
Ashland Oil ........................ 38%
Bob Evans ...................... ..... 15Y.
Charming Shoppes .............. 17',(,
City Holding Co ........ .......... 153,4
Federal Mogul... ................. 27'1.
Goodyear T&amp;R ....................53*
Heck's ............... .................... ~
Key Centurion .................... 12')(,
hands' End .. ............ .. ......... 27~
Limited Inc .................,. ...... 37~
Multimedia Inc .................. .106
Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .... 16~
Shoney's Inc ...... .. ........... .... 12',(,
Wendy's lntl ..... ........... ..........6
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The Daily Sentinel'

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�Thu...._,, Auguat 31; 1989 ..

Pomaroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Sentinel

·According
to ·the la'lil, .your spouse is next of kin
.

Garden club gets ·demonstration
Betty Dean presented an arrangfD&amp; demonstration, featurlpg arrangements to be used In
the upcoming flower show sponsored by. the Rutland garden
clubs, at the recent open meeting
of the Rutland Garden Club held
. at the Rutland United Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Dean's ttrst arrangE!" ·
ment, "Herbal Kitchen" featured herbs as a wail decoration.
The second, "Springtime on
Shady River, " a japanese design, used a container resembling a river with wine colored
glads.and greenery.
The third arl'l!ngement, " l'llrds
In . Flight, " a modern piece
shQwing motion, used a twts ted
'vine and glads arranged on vine
.to : resemble birds In flight.
"Country Kltclien" was the
fourth arrangement, a window
decoration, using a black tea
kettle and red glads.
For her fifth arrangement,
"The Gathering Basket," Mrs.
Dean .used a basket with corn·

.

Rutland ·Club to present show
Well, the Meigs County Fair Is
over but the flower showing Is
not.
The three garden Clubs In
Rutland , Rutland Garden Club,
Rutland Friendly · Gardeners,
and the Friends and Flowers·
Garden Club, wtll be sponsoring
a flower show at the Rutland
Civic Center on Sept, 9 from 2- 6
p.m . and Sept. 10 from 1-5 p.m.
The theme of the show will be
"The Change of Seasons Qown a
CQuntry Lane." General chairman of the show will be Judith
Hill, with Lilly Kennedy, Kim
Wtllford, and Pauline Atkins as
co-chairmen.
:me show Is open to the public,
which means anyone can enter.
The only exceptions are one
division which open to the sponsoring clubs only, and one special
class which Is limited to
members who have never won ·a
blue ribbon.
Entries for the show are to be .In
place before noon on Sept. 9 and
are not to be removed before 5
p.m. on Sept . .10. Oral judging by
the standard sys tern will begin at
1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 9.
One blue, red, yellow, and
white ribbon Will be awarded for
each class, with the exception of
the junior classes in which 'the
judge may lay as many white
ribbons as desired. Decisions of

the judge are final.
Registration will be taken care .
Special awards will be given of by Margaret' Parsons, Marfor first, second, and third best of garet Edwards, Pe&lt;~orl Cailaday,
show, junior best of show, and and Ruby Diehl.
· The education committee Is
horticulture sweepstakes In both
the junior and senior divisions. made up of Mrs. Hill, Mrs. Bolin,
Points will also beawardedalo.ng and the junior Club. The ribbons
with ribbons for first. four and special awards committee
points; second, three points; consists of Unda Lambert and
third, ·two points; and fourth, one Krista! Bolin.
POint.
Making up the ·hospitality
All entries .in the horticulture committee Is Joan Stewart, Neva
division are to be correctly NickolSon, Binda Diehl, and ·
named as to variety. There Is Anna Turner. Hostesses for the
only one entry permitted per event will be Linda Lambert,
exhibitor In the artistic classes, Octa Ward, Marcia Dennison.
but In the other classes one can and Stella Atkins.
enter as many times as desired.
Making the show signs will be
Classesmaybegrouped,dlvlded JoAnne Fetty, and the photo·
or deleted at the discretion of the graphers will be Su~y Carpenter
committee.
and Cam me Bolin.
Entry tags and three by five
In charge of placement Is
cards will be furniShed, as well as Margie Davis, Joan Stewart, and
containers for the ho,r ttculture Eva Robinson. Shirley Miller.
division. The exhibitor Is respon- Lilly Kennedy , and Carrie Mor·
stble for . placing arrangements rts make up the door pri~e
and horticulture exhibits . In the committee.
correct class.
The publicity committee conDried, treated, or colored ststs of Marte Birchfield and Kim
matertal Is permitted in all Willford, and the show book
classes, but no fresh material Is comnlltteetsmadeupofDorothy
to be painted or colored. Bases, W&lt;iodad' and Su~y Carpenter.
backgrounds, and accessories · Heading up · the entry and
are acceptable In any class.
· classification committee for horln charge of scheduling will be tlcullure will be Margaret
Janet Bolin, Judy Snowden, and Weber,fotjuniors,BrendaBolln,
Mrs. Hill: All three clubs will be and for artistic, Judy Snowden.
responsible for staging.

~

POME!WY -A free clothing
day will be held at the Salvation
Army on Thursday from 10 a .m.
to noon. All area residents In
need of clothing are welcome to
participate.
POMEROY-The Meigs Local
Board of Education will have a
special meeting on Thursday at 7
p.m.
FRIDAY c
ROCK SPRINGS -The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall on Friday at ·7:30 p.m . All
contests will be judged and
Inspection will be held. Degree
work In full. The Racine Grange
will serve refreshments.
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will have a
regular meeting on Friday at 6
p.m. at the Pageville Township
·
Building.
'

PAGEVILLE -The ·· Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Is having a fish dinner on
Saturday from 1-4 p.m. There
will also be a garden tractor pull
at 5 p.m. Cost of the dinner Is $4
for adults and $2.75 for children.
SALEM CENTER -The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet In regular session on
Saturday at 8 p.m. at the grange
hall located on County Road 1
near Salem Center. All members
are urged to attend. A potluck
supper will follow the meeting.
MASON, W.VA -The Mason
Ladles Auxiliary will sponsor a
spaghetti with slaw dinner on
Saturday from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m.
at the Fire Department. For
delivery call (304) 773-:-5832.
RUTLAND -The Rutland Fire
Department and ladles auxiliary
will be having a block jlarty 011
Saturday In Rutland. Activities
will be conducted throughout the
day.

doing a variety of skits dealing
with many topics and Issues
relating to the youth. The public
Is Invited, and any churches who
wish to participate can call
Pastor Mike Panglo at992-6249.
The New Life Drama Team will
also be at the Sunday 10 a.m.
service at the churcll which Is
located at 333 N. Second St. In
Middleport.
REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Volunteer Fire Department will be having a chicken
bar-b-que dinner on Saturday
from noon to 6: 30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire House. The cost
Is $4.50 per person. Entertain~
men t will be provided by the
Country Blend Band from 7-10
p.m . and there will also be games
and contests throughout the day .
A B-B gun shoot contest will
take place from 1-4 p.m. and at 4
p.m. there will be a greased pig
contest with three classes. Regis·
tratton for the greased pig
contest Is at 3 p.m. Anyone under
the age of 16 must have written
permission to take part In the pig
contest.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church Is havIng a yard sale and bake sale on
Saturday from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m.
Proceeds will go to the church's
building fund .

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS -The annual Bahr reunion will be held on
Sunday at the VFW post building
off Route 7 In Tuppers Plains. A
basket diMer wlll·begtn at noon.

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a rol!nd and square dance on
Friday from 8 p.m . to mldn lght at
the Middleport Legion Annex
ATHENS -The an'nual Guwith music provided by True thrie-Story reunion will be held
Country Ramblers. The caller . on Saturday at the Athens County
will be Ronnie Wood. The public Fairgrounds In the 4H building, A
Is Invited.
basket dinner will begin at noon.
All relatives and friends are
SATURDAY
urged to attend .
POMEROY - The Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church Is having
POMEROY -The Rejoicing
a hymn sing on Saturday at 7 Life Church will be sponsoring a
p.m. Pastor Bill Williams Invites special outreach for youth at the
the publiC. The Sisson FamUy of Pomeroy parklng'lotonSaturday
Galllpolls will sing.
at 7 p.m. Special guests are "The
New Lt.fe Drama Team" of
Cleveland, Tenn. who will be

CHESHIRE -The Ross Fife
reunion will be held on Sunday at
the Kyger Creek Club House with
diMer at noon.

Mrs. Nell Wilson, Reedsville,
was honored recently with a
birthday dinner at Forked Run
State Park.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
CharleS Gongrove, Mr. and Mrs.
.Thomas Williams, Michael, Matthew, and Jo~ua, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary McNerney, Jason, Jeremy.
and Jessie, Zanesville; Mr. and
Mrs,· Robert Sams, Adam, Gal·
vin and Sheena, Weston, W.Va.;
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sams
and Benjamin, Alum Bridge,
W.Va.
Mrs. Wilson was presented
cards, gifts, and a decorated
cake.
•(

· ·Davia, Dorothy Dillon, Joyce Mayle, Michelle
Kln~,t aad Edle Grimm, and tbtrd row; Maryaa'"'
Danner, R.N. , clinical Instructor, Darryl Danner,
Judy Muncy, Chuck Harper, Melissa Grepry,
Betty Morcl!ll. and BoJ!nle Allen, R.N., nursing
asalstant Instructor.

NURSE AIDES - These 19 students reeeatly

sraduated havlaJ completed t!Je auniDc asalllt·
aat prOII'aln at the Adult Educailon Ceater,
Trl-CollDty Vocatloaal School. Left to rtcht they
are, front, Mae Shea, Elizabeth Siunmona,
Deborah Tabor, Carol DePue, Sylvia Casto, Rl~
Riley; second row, Debora McDonlel, Kathy

Three Meigs Countians were hospital work with the acutely Ill,
among the 19 students. who 0r the growing field of home
graduated Aug. 10 from the health care.
Families and friends joined the
Nllrstng Assistant Program at
the Adult · Education Center, ·graduates In the school cafeteria
Trt-County Vocational School, for the graduation ceremony.,
Nelsonville.
Speakers for the evening In·
They are Edte Grimm, Middle- eluded Steve Winegardner, dl·
port, Darryl Danner, Racine; rector of-adult education, Bonnie
and Sy lvla Cas to, Pomeroy. ·
Allen, R.N ., BSN, nursing ass!st·
a1tt
Instructor, Maryanne
The students have completed
an 18 week course preparing Danner, R.N. clinical Instructor,
them to work with the elderly or and · Alvin Harper lfl, class
handicapped In long-term care, president.

Family medicine

·Nickel may cause rash

Rita Riley and Mae Shea
received recognition for perfect
attendance:
The next class for Nursing
Assistants begins Oct. 2. Further
Information may be obtalne(j
from the Adult Education Center
by calling 1·800·637·.6508.

A square dance will be held at , •

the American Legion annex on •
M.lll St., Middleport, on Sept.15, 8
p.m. to midnight. Bernat.d Con· •
noUy and the Travelers will •&gt;
provide the music for the public' .•
dance. Cost Is $5 a couple, or $3'
for singles.
•

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.

senseless breeding of unwanted
kittens and I shou ld be spayed:
E very day the animal shelters
are forced to kill most of the
kittens and puppies to make
room for the next flood of
unwanted animals. She also said
It was a great burden on the
taxpayer s, but the animal shelters' killings, sad as they were,
were preferable to the fate of
abandoned cats and dogs who die
from starvation , Injury or abuse.
After hearing of the fate of
unwanted animals, I no longer
want to contribute to the prob-

lem. My owner reads your
column every day and r espects
your judgement. I hope you will
tell him t hat I should be spayed
lmme!ltately bi:&gt;cause old Mother
Nature Is once again ma king me
desire the company of the sexy
Tom next door. - One of Millions
Dear One: You sound like a
pretty hlp cat to me. I hope your
owner 'and millions of others whQ
have pets will get the picture and
do likewise.
CONFIDENTIAL TO MAN OR
MOUSE: Don't leave any cheese
lying around.

Landers
ANN LANDERS
" 1919, Loa A.npiM
Tl ma Sr iWII •e and

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Do you h atre q ue.• rimu a bo u t .u·x.

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LEVI'S . ,

IUTUND, OHIO

BABY BUNNY COMING: All Hu(h Herner would say
Wednesday was, "If anybody Is wondering how we spent our
honeymoon, they'll find out In April." Around the hallS of
Playboy EnterpriSes on Sunset Boulevard, however, that was
considered confirmation that Hers new wife, 'Kimberl!y. 26. Is
pregnant. Hefner, 63, has two children by his first wife:
Chrlalle, 36, chief executive officer of Playboy Enterprises Inc.
·1n Chicago, and David, 34, a computer specialist living in
Nortllern California.
MONKEY BUSINESS: Jaae Goodall Is the chimp's friend.
Goodall, who spent 30 years living with chimpanzees tn
Tanzania and Is In San Antonio making cable TV special on the
monkeys, says chimps should be used in medical research only
on a very limited basts. "I am just waiting lor the daY that
sufficient advance$ have been made so that no animals will be
used In research and we can open all the doors and cages," she
said. "As long as people h&lt;lve known chimpanzees, going back
to the 18th ~entury, they have ijOOn exploited. and abused."
Goodall praised scientistS at San Antonio's Southwest
Foundation tor Biomedical Research, .which Is home to one ol
the world's largest chimpanzee breeding colonies. The
foundation has a retirement village and a $270,000 Pl!IYgrOlJild
for medical chimps.
KEEP FOLK AUVE: Peter Yarrow, who Is on the road
touring again as one-thtfd oi P.e ter, Paul and M81')', says the
prototypical '60s folk ~oup still Is f!!li!Vant. "We've never ~en
more active, never more wanted or needed as performers, l)e
says. "We see two, three generations, .sometimes four enjoying
our music." Yarrow said the group's Interest In social Issues
hasn't flagged but reality has set tn. "We just no lo~er believe
we'll build a new world In out llfet!ine," he says. Conccerts
consist of old favorites· like "Puff, the Magic Dragon" and.
"Biowin' In the Wind," aloq with, new protest tunes abo~t El
Salvador, apartheid and Northern Ireland. Despite the passage
or ttme. Yarr~ be.lleves their songs are ''alive and well. That Is
the nature of folk music they never go out of style."
PRESIDENTsto.ur.s: Prealdent Bnlh Isn't the only athletic
hlil'd. of state. Argentine Pretildent CArloll Menem. 59, suited up
In an oversized baske~ball uniform TuesdaY, night and played a
full game with Argentina's national team against a group of
Buenos Aires all-stars. The 5-foot-7 Menem. who last month
played 90 minutes of soccer with the national. team, scored a
respectable i3 points wlille getting preferential treatment from
'hts defenders In his team's 1~103 victory. Menem's
performance waned In the late stages of the game and he tossed
up a couple of air balls. : '1 wlis a little weak," he said as he
stgned ,autogrilphs after the 'game, "1 usually score more."
GLIMPSES: Actress-model PaQba PorJDova and longtime
boyfriend Ric Ocasek, the skinny, sad-faced lead singer. of The
Can, are now inan and wife. The couple were married last week
In a private service In an Anglican Church on the Caribbean
Island of St. Bart's .. . LciJ"etla J.yu ts suing the Globe, one o.t
those supermarket tabloidS, ·tor $U.5· million because of a
February report that said the cOUntry s!nger had nearly killed
herself with an overdose of the painkiller Demerol :.. Toni
Grant host of one of the first psychology call-In radio shows,ls
turntn'g off her microphone. Grant, 44, autllor of "Being a
Woman," says she's leaving the show and will move to Lake
Tahoe, Nev., with her hu!!band, Industrialist Joha Bell. She say
she will devote her life to "being a woman, to living thf book I
have written. "

.MOUNT VERNON, 01\lo
(UPI) - A fire at a !pod
processing plant In a rural area
30 miles northeast qf Co(umbils
caused some concern a bout the
posslbllty of a toxic clol!d, but no ·
chemicals were Involved.
Residents In about a one-mile
area near Mount Vernon were
evacuated Wednesday nleht af· ·

MEN'S PRE-WASHED

SOFT SUNSAliONS
TANNING SALON

. I

are bad for the nerves.
· Dear Ann Landers: Recently
you published a letter from a dog.
Would you please give equal tiQle
.. to a cat?
Dear Ann Landen: I live In a
very comfortable home, have
plenty of food, a grassy yar d and
lots of loving attention.
My problem? I am 4 years old
and have given birth to20ktttens.
As soon·as the klltens are through
nursing, my ma·s ter takes them
to the animal shelter.
.
Yesterday .a visitor told him
there was no good reason for this

Fire contained· 1n food plant .·

Prescription Sh·op

SIZES 28-38

.

.

GWCOMETER® ll Blood Glucose Meter ·
with Memory

,,~,···

t

.

Ann

a

Sauare dance

&lt;

-742-2334

.

By WILLIAM C. TBOTI'
. United Preu Interutlonal

which Is less llkely.k to produce
an allergic reaction, even though
It does contain some nickel.
Loose-fitting jewelry Is 1better
than jewelry that causes t'rlctlon
and chafing of the skin. '
If your sensitivity Is mild, you
may.
be. able to prevent skin.
Que111lon: I get a skin rash
rashes
from developing )f you
when I wear certain pieces of ·
coat
your
jewelry with la~uer, ·
jewelry. Do you know why this
or
clear
nail
polish. This will '
might be?
make
It
more
difficult
for nlchel .
Auwer: What you describe Is
fairly common and It probably to come Into direct contact with
,
your skin.
'
stems from an allergy to nickeL
If simple steps like tbes1 don 't
742-2455
According loa report In the Mayo
Clinic Health Letter, nickel bring relief. I'd recommerid that
SlUM mEn
causes allergic reactions In you see a dermatologist who can
RUftlND, OHIO
about 10 percent of Americans, diagnose whether It Is a nickel
although women are more likely allergy or some other problem
to develop the rash as they are that Is causing your rash.
more Inclined to wear jewelry.
Unfortunately, nickel Is uSed In
most costume jewelry and In
many "other objects toq; so
avoiding 11 Is difficult. Nickel Is
the metal the gives many rings ,.
necklaces, earrings and bracelets that glossy look and
smooth texture. It Is also used In
zippers, hairpins, buttons, bra
hooks, eyeglass frames and other
everyday objects . Jewelry which
Is gold or sliver-plated often has a
nickel alloy as a base.
You may have been wearing a
favorite piece of . jewelry for
years withOut any problem and
then suddenly develop a rash
each time you put It on. Your skin
may become mildly Inflamed,
red and Itchy, or swell and
develop blisters. This occurs
because the surface of the
jewelry has become scratched.
The salt In your perspiration can
corrode the metal, allowing the
medal, allowing the nickel alloy
to come Into contact with you ~
skin and produce the allergic
reaction.
Question: How can I stop from
Regular Price
$182.76
getting this rash?
Answer: The best way to
Special Price
$135.00
prevent the condition Is to stay
Mfr. Rebate
$100.00
away from metals that could
FINALCOS'l'
contain nickel. Butifyouare fond
$35.00
of wearing jewelry or don't want .
Ofrt: r~u()d Scptemhc:r 1- 1:\p.:c mhcr .\ I , IIJH9 . ,.:
to go without your favorite pair of
C~U :COMF.Tf.R i!to a n:Kisten:d rmd ~m a rk 11f Miles lnl'~
earrings, there are a few steps
you can take to reduce your risk
of contac't with nickel.
You may find that you don' t
have a skin reaction to 14 and 18
karat gold jewelry because they
992-6669
contain less nickel then costume
jewelry. Look for earrings Ia·
271 North Second
Miclclleport, OH.
beled "hypoallergenlc" - these
are made from stainless steel
By John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor of Family
Medicine
Ohio University CoUere of Osteopathic Medicine ·

NOW

DELTA FORMULA 3

.

People i.tJ !he news

Meigs nurse aides graduate course

· CHESHIRE -The descend·
ants of .J ames C. Hotrman and
Ctmerlon Cleere Finney will
have their annual reunion on
Sunday at the Gavin Recreational Area. A covered dish
dinner will be served. Everyone
Is urged to bring something for
the white elephant sale .

Wilson birthday

.

people eome and get' me;
to my husband, ·we aren ~ t rePlease JUittle. this li~(IUment ,
lated. How do you like that after . Ann. It's In Its fourth day and 'I
23 yeats and seven children?
don't think i can take much·
We got lntothedlscunlon when more. Thank you. - Uvln1 wl&amp;b
he was filling out a card of some a Slraaaer .. AbDea~ Tex. . ·
kind. It asked for next of kin. 1 · . Dear Uvlnc: Itseems to me a
saw him write down his mother's woman who has given ber
name. When I told blm I waa his husband seven children Is.more
closest relative, he replied, "No
t)lan just a noddlnc acquainyou aren •t. As a matte~ of !act, If• tance. In fact, according to taw,
you want to get technical, we · you are his next of kin.
aren'teven related." 1 told htm 1
Your husband, no doubt,
wasn't the kind of .woman who means you are not a blood
would live with a stranger and relative, which of course Is true.
maybe he bad better move out. He·sounds like a needle artist to
· He said I. was getting senile · me. Tune him out when he starts
before mY time, and maybe .he to act precious. Four-day fights
should have the mental health

~----------------------~

Community calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AI-Anoil will
meet on Thursday at 7 p,m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For Information call
1-800-333-5051.

.

'

Dear Aan Landen: Accordln;, ·

stalks, smoky colored dahlias, Shade Valley. Mrs. Atkins also
japanese eggplant, and yellow · recogniZed the outgoing regional
and green peppers. The sixth director and the new . regional
·
arrangement,"Snow · Covered director.
Lane;" ·· was a mass , arrange-. Margaret f!elie Weber had .
ment. Mrs. Dean used a white devotions with an article entitled .
"Time Is a Treasure" from
container · with white glads and
Ideals. Devotions were followed
Queen Ann's lace.
" Church In the Wildwood" was with a prayer by Helen Stetner.
the seventh arrangement, a ltne Rice.
Stella Atkins had the hint on
arrangement using orange
•
'Lily
Bulbs are Alive." She noted
glads, twisted vine, and a relt·
that
the
bulbs had to be handled
gious figurine. " Wildflower Ar·
wlthcaretoavoidbrutstng.
When .
rangement" featured a gray
earthware jug, joe pie weed, Iron using lUtes for cut flowers, sever
weed, Queen Ann lace, thistle stems as high as pOssible arid
and pokeberry. Mrs. Dean's final leave as much tollage as
arrangement, "The Covered possible.
The combined flower show of
Bridge," was a floor arrangement using a tall container with the Rutland garden clubs·will be
held on Sept. 9 and 10 at the
dried flowers.
The meeting was opened by Rutland Civic Center .
Eva Robson and Octa Ward,
Pauline Atkins who welcomed
hostesses,
served refreshments
guests from the clubs of Middleat
the
close
of the meeting. The
port Amateur, Chesire, Fretnds
table
arrangements,
featuring
and Flowers, Rutland Friendly,
Gallipolis, VInton, Fernwood, white glads, were furnished by
Vinton Township, Chester, and Brenda Diehl.
"

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Off

HO·eG

HD·io

3915

141 171
·~

~

Moat MIIJor Credit
c...- Welcome

�~

.

..... .....

Page

-

-·. . .. . ... . . .....

10-The Deily Sentinel

Pom«ov-Middleport, Ohio

31,1989

Thursday, August 31. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Jim Bakker prays · for witness who testified against him ·
CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UPI) ward in his chair.
·Television . evangelist Jim
A juror, Nancy· Summey, a
Bakker got a chance to show a nurse at Charlotte Memorial
judge and jury an aspect of his Hospital, leaped to her feet and
character not previously appar· sal~, "He has fainted ." She
ent at his fraud trial -that he is rutied from the jury box to
able to forgive.
Nelson's side. "I •m a nurse, " she
That opportunity came Wed- said.
nesday as Steve Nelson, a former
A marshal lifted Nelson, 39.,
vice president at the P'I'L minis· from the witness stand to the
try that Bakker founded, col· floor and Bakker ruShed to his
lapsed while testifying against side, knelt on the marble floor
Bakker. who is charged with 24 · and began to pray.
counts of fraud and conspiracy
"This is the real Jim Bakkerduring his heydey at PTL.
praying tor his enemies,'' said
Nelson gave two hours of the Rev. Paul Mays, a friend
highly critical testimony, saying from Jacksonville, Fla., who
he warned Bakker that his attended Wednesday's session.
fund·raising was becoming a
Nelson recpvered consciouspyramid scheme. The witness ness a minute later and clutched
was being cross-examined by Bakker's hand. The television
defense lawyer Harold Bender evangelist continued to pray
when he clutched his chest and until paramedics arrived.
lost consciousness, slumping forBakker, a charismatic, Is a

spiritual man who believes in the
gifts of the Holy Spirit prophesy, speaking II) tongues,
the power of prayer and faith
healing. But the PTL founder did
·not claim faith healing when
Nelson appeared to recover
Instantaneously. Instead, he
trembled .In silence.
Nelson was taken to Presbyter·
ian Hospital, where he was
treated for dehydration and
released three hours later. A
hospital ·spokeswoman .said. Nel·
son bad not eaten fo'r two days
because he had suffered a bout of
stomach flu.
·
Nelson was to be the first
witness at Thursday's sessioll.
Until Bakker fell to his knees In
prayer, he had appeared cold and
sullen as former employees
testified against him during the
first three days of the trial.

U.S. District Judge Robert
Potter, canceling the court's
afternoon session, ·. said, "No·
thing or this sort has ever
happened in my courtroom."
Nelson's testimony focused on
the · sale or PTL "lifetime part·
riershlps," under which people
giving $1,000 to the church were
promised three days' lodging for
life at the ministry's Heritage
USA resort in Fort Mill, S.C.
Nelson, then the ' PTL ·vice
president for partner relations,
Nelson testified that he warned
Bakker and his top PTL deputy,
Richard Dortch, that the ministry was offer.lng far too many
partneuhtps to followers.
"I met with Pastor Dortch and
explained I thought we had a
problem," Nelson said. ·"He told
me not to worry about It, that we
didn't have a problem, so I went

to Mr. Bakker's dressing room
and he told me the same thing.
"He said, 'These are not sales,
these a~ gifts. " •
That statement is crucial to the
defense, which Insists that no
fraud was committed because no
sales were made. Insteap, defense lawyer George Davis said,
tlh! partnerships were gifts from
Bakker to people who gave him
money.
Nelson said after hlsdiscu_ssion
with . Bakker and Dortch, who
pll!aded guilty to fOI!r of the 24
counts and agreed to testify
against Bakker, the matter was.
never resolved. So he ap·
proached the two men again and
was again rebuffed.
"I went to Pastor Dortch again
and I said, "!think we have a real
problem -here," Nelson said . "I
specifically said, 'Someone could

go to jail for this.'
·
'Then I went to Mr. Bakker's
office. I (old him we had a serious
problem. He said, 'The Lord can
do miracles here and It's not
anything for you to worry
about."'
Paker founded PTL and pre·
sided over all construction at
Heritage USA, where the corner·
stone of every building be~rs a
pledge from the Old Testament
book of Micah: "No &amp;word
Raised Against You Shall
Pros pet.
, Bakker Is fond of repeating
that phrase, although he lost PTL
2 ·~ years ago over a one-time
sexual fling wltlf'former church
secretary Jessica Hahn. He
turned his ministry over to the
Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder of
the Moral Majority, who refused
to give it back.
I •

Confessed·murderer executed after a · decade of appeals
RICHMO~D. Va. (UPI) Alton Way~.\baptlzed the night

before he was executed for
murdering a 61-year-okl widow,
peacefully accepted his fate but
made one point clear In his last
words: "What's about to occur
here is a murder."
With 10 years of appeals
exhausted, the 34-year·old Army
veteran skipped his final meal
Wednesday to take communion
and looked_skyward for inspiralion from h1s newfound God while
being str!'pped to the gpklen oak
el~tric Ch&lt;!ir.
.
I would like to express that
what's a.~u; to occur ~~re is a
murder, \\aye said. I want
everybody to know I forgive the
people mv~Ived in this murder,
that I don t hate nobody. and I

love you."
Waye, who held the r~rd for
longest stint on Virginia s death
row, was condemned for the Oct.
14, 1977, assault on LaVergne
Marshall. The Kenbridge widow
was beaten, rapedandstabbed42
times before her nude body was
dumped into a bathtub and
doused with bleach.
He was pronounced dead at
11:05 p.m. EDT after receiving
two 55-second . surges1 of 2,525
volts of. electnclty, said State
Penitentiary Operations Manager John Coble.
.
Waye was the eighth person to
die in the state's electric Chair
and the 117th person to be
executed In the United States
since the Supreme Court lifted
the ban on capital punishment in

U.S. ·V ietnam ends
fruitful MIA talks
BANGKOK, Thailand !UP!) - Experts from the United
States and Vietnam ended a "frank and constructive" meeting
to expand cooperatlon on accounting for the more than ~.700
Americans missing in VIetnam, a U.S, official said Thursday .
The experts completed three days of talks in Hanoi
Wednesday, said U.S. Embassy spokesman James Williams.
"This was the latest In a series of technical meetings aimed at
exapandlng the level of cooperation between the United States
and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam to resolve the POW-MIA
issue," Williams said. "They had a frank and constructive
meeting focusing on the issue of missing Americans."
Official Hanoi radio said the American delegation "thanked
and highly appreciated the·people and' government of Vietnam
for their goodwill and cooperation.'"
It said the teams reviewed the results of joint searches
carried out since last September, but neither the radio nor
Williams said whether any further MIA search efforts were
planned.
'
Williams said the discussions ranged from investigations of
specific cases to the excavations of U.S. crash sites.
He said the U.S. team led by Lt. CoL Joe Harvey, commander
of the Joint Casualty Resolution Center in Hawaii, provided the
Vietnamese with additional information to use in their own
efforts to find evidence or the fates of missing U.S. servicemen.
A totall ,713 Americans are still listed as missing in Vietnam
from the more than 2,300 missing in all of Indochina.
Vietnam and the United States have carried out seven joint
searches for missing Americans, and Vietnam has returned
more than 180 sets or remains believed to be those of Americans
since cooperation was renewed in August 1987.
President Bush has said progress on the sensitive MIA
question would help speed resumption of relations between
Washington and Hanoi once Vietnam has pulled its troops oui of
Cambodia.

Report: Testimony ties
White House to scandal
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
tes tlmony of a former official has
given a federal grand jury the
clearest indication to date of
White House ties to the grant
selectidn process at the Depart·
ment of Housing and Urban
Development, a published report
said Thursday .
Deborah Gore Dean, who from
1984 to 1987 was execu live assist·
ant to President Reagan's HousIng Secetary, Samuel Pierce, Jr. ,
told a grand jury sitting in
Jackson, Miss., that aides in the
White House repeatedly tried. to
promote the use of multi-militondollar grants forpolitical!ydesir·
able HUD projects, a report in
the New York Times said.
In her tes timony, Dean did not
imply that there was any improp·
riety in the White House aides '
involvement in the HUD projects. and prosecutors who have
studied the testimony , have not
alleged any wrongdoing, the
Times said.
She said the aides tried to
intervene in HUD Action Grants,
which were intended to ·promote
development In economically
distressed urban areas and were
supposed to be awarded based on
a strictly numerical formula.
The Times- said the tes dmony
was given last October to the
jury, which was Investigating
allegations of local corruption
involving HUD grants In Biloxi,
Miss. Since then, Dean. has
become a central figure in the
congressional lnves tlga lions
.into allegations of influence
peddling and political favoritism
at HUD.

'•'

The testimony also was the
first evidence that poittical influence played a role in the
awarding of Action Grants,
which had been praised as being
given based ·solely on economic
considerations, the Times said.
"It was not unusual to have at
least one-fourth or the projects on
the list that are funded, to have
gotten a phone call from the
White House regarding them,"
Dean said.

1976,
vlcted In 10 minutes.
Outside the . prison, several
It tookjurorsonly25mlnutes to
(lozen death penalty opponents recommend deMh, and despite
held a silent candlelight vigil evidence called "overwhelm·
while across the street a few ing" by one of the 30 judges who
death penalty supporters heard his case in at least 17
shouted and carried signs.
different hearings appeals
•'I feel sorry for his mother ·dragged on ror 1i ye~rs.
·
becauseyoucan'thelpwhatyour
The cost to Virginia for his
children do," said Mary Jones. years on death row was roughly
65, who carried a sign that said, $500,000, including prison room
"Fry the Murderer."
and board and legal fees . Waye's
Henry Gerrard Sr., chairman defense was financed by federal
of the Virginia Association to taxpayers, the state attorney
Abolish the ~ath Penalty, general's office said.
called it "a sad day for the
Shortly before 8 p.m . EDT, the
commonwealth."
Supreme Court by a vote of 7·2 .
Basedlargelyonhisconfession cleared the way for the execu·
- Waye's contention the sex was
tion, denying two last·minute
consensual was overwhelmed by appeals related to faulty jury
grisly photographs detailing the
Instructions and Waye's mental
savage beating - he was con- competence. Justices William

Brennan and Thurgood Marshall
dissented.
EarUer i~the day, the 4th u.s.
Circuit court of Appeals also
refused to stay the execution ·or
allow more time for Waye's
lawyers to investigate the possl·
b!Uty that Waye's drinking companlononthenightofthemurder
could have been implicated in the
crime.
Describing Waye as a "poor
black man". with a diminished
mental capacity, NAACP lawyer
Richard Burr said "within the
last feW weeks ... we have
conducted the investigation that
has never been done."
But the three-judge panel rejected the arguments, saying, ·
"There must be some finality...
and the final stage has been

LONDON (UPI)
Princess p.Jans to divorce.
A Buckingham Palace spokesAnne and Capt. Mark Phillips are
separating after 15 years of woman said In a prepared
marriage but there are "no plans , statement, "Her royal highness,
for divorce proceedillgs," Buck· the princess royal, and Capt.
Ingham Palace announced Mark Phillips have decided to
separate on terms agreed beThursday.
.
Maj. P~,&gt;ter Phillips, the cap· tween them. There are no plans
lain's father, revealed Wednes- for divorce proceedings."
The announcement was being
day night that the couple would
live apart under the terms of an portrayed in the British media as
amicable arrangement that the end of .a fairy-tale romance
might lead to a legal separation, that began on a winter's day
although they -h ad no immediate nearly 16 years ago when Queen
Elizabeth Il's only . daughter
married an army ollicer. Millions · ·or television ·viewers
watched the princess take ori il
NEW YORK (UPI)- Dorothy new title -Mrs. Mark Phillips.
The British newspapers carSchiff, the former owner of the
ried
front-page headlines an·
New York Post who built the
nounclng
the separation, which
newspaper into a voice for
followed
years of .speculation
progressive causes, died Wedthat
the
marriage
was long over
nesday. She was 86.
for
the
couple
rarely seen
Schiff died of cancer, a spokes·
together.
man said.
The princess royal, 39, will
Schiff was born into wealth and
continue
to live at Gatcombe
established herself as a friend of
Park in Gloucestershire, about SO
the poor and the first woman lo
~mUes
west of London. The estate
publish a major New York
W&lt;\S a wedding gift from the
newspaper, t!le New York Post.
queen to the couple in 1974. '
During the years she reigned
His father said Phillips, 40, will
as publisher of the oldest daily
move
into Ashton Farms, 2 miles
·newspaper in the United States,
away,
which also was purchased
Schiff generally supported candiby
the
queen.
dates of the Democratic Party
The former army captain and
and favored liberal causes such
world-class
horseman will conas social welfare legisition .
tinue
to
run
the estate and
The Post had New York's
organize
the
horse
trials from the ·
afternoo'n market to itself after
farm
where
the
couple's
child·
Its competitl&lt;m. the New York
ren,
Peter,
11,
and
Zara,
7,
keep
World-Telegram and Sun and
their
ponies.
The New York Journal America,
When news of the separation
merged into the World·Journalwas
disclosed, the couple were
Tribune and ceased publication
more
than 3,000 miles apart.
In 1966.

Schiff, former Post
ou;ner, dead at 86

Princess. Anne was In San Juan,
Puerto Rico, attending ihe 95th
sessipn of the International
Olympic Committee. Phillips
was at Gatcombe Park.
What had started as a J~~ry­
tale romance had evolved over
the years into a long-distance
relationship as the princess traveled the world on royal engagements and Phillips stayed at
home, turning his attention towards developing his equestrian
business.
From 1983, the prin~ess became Incr~asingly popular and
respected as she devoted more of

CARLETON SCHOOL- SYRACUSE. OHIO
CLASS TIME:
MON. &amp; WED. 7 P.M.-8 P.M.
TUES. &amp; THURS . 6:30 P.M.·6:30 P.M.

LEE AND LEVI'S

20°/oo,,

Please come and vis.i t us at our
more spacious and comfortable
office in Athens. We have ;plenty
of convenient off-street parking.
R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S ~
530 W.
Union
Street ':
.
.
Athens, Ohio 45701 i
Toll Free 1-800-527-0922
592-1483
'

We'll all be there, te»e». Janet, Rhonda,. Tonya, Paula .

Carlton-Cards For
Evety Occasi~n

s

WEAR

SHIRTS

1/2PRICE

20°/oo,,

.,,.. . . - GNeaway and Found acb und• 16 word I will be
run 3 diiW'I at no ch•t•·
•Prtoe ot ad for all Ctpitll IIItten is double price of ad cost.
•7 potrn Mnatypll only u•d.
•&amp;.ntintl il not re.pontibla for ertors efler first d., . IChedt
for errors ftrat d., ad runs in p...-J . Call betore 2 :00p.m .
. • • aft• public.ion to mike corr.c~ion.

•A• thllt mu.t b1 p1id in

·~•net

Card Of Th~kl.
In Mamori..,

16
'16
16

3

6

')

•

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111.00
19.00

.30
-42

113.00
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t1 .30/doy
.OII / NV
bra'-tupd.,swll.bech•ted

10
I
16
MonthlY
16
R.t• are tol'con11c:utW
for 1aeh' ,.... ••

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
Meigs County

Glilli• County

M•on Co. , WV
Aru Coda 304

Area CDdal14

HIPPY Adl
V•d Sal•

4•&amp;-GellipOI!•

112-Mhldlaport 471-P't. Pt. . .m '
Pom•ov
451-L_eion
186-Ch•••
57&amp;-Applo Grove
843-Pon .. nd
773- MIIDn
247-L..tart Fells · 882.-..N_., Haven
!148-Aac:ine
18&amp;-Leten
742-RutWid
83?-luff..o

317-Ch•hir•
388-Vft'wton
246-RiO Orende

251-Guv-n Dllt.
&amp;-43-Ar~bia Otlt.
379-W...-aut
'

Ra~tch, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story
MODEL OPEN DAilY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
I :00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. or Call For Appointment

We Buy All Non ferrous Metals, Plastics,
Stainless Steel

fAMILY HOMES INC.

614-992-2478
.
P. 0. Box 207
.
Pomeroy, Ohio

(PAYING TODAY
AUG. 30, 1919)
. ClEAN, DRY
ALUMINUM CANS
41 c per lb.
#I COPPER .........90' IJ.
#2 COPPER ..........75' lb.
RED IRASS ......... SO•· IJ.
YnLOW BRASS ...40&lt; U..
RADIATORS . ........ 3.5' lb.

LocallyOwnad B. Operated by Bill, SteveS. Kevin

·

9 -31 -' 89-1

Clay TOW"nhoust, ort At. 7 &amp;
Juellon 218. Houoohold b fLirnhura, mite. Fr1, &amp; Sat.
Clothl~,
toyt,
alanwara,
houaehold, books, miSc. ThWII,
F~,
Sol.
Qooeh
Cook
Rosldonc:o. HOfmln Northup Ad.
Canttnary.
F~ &amp; Sol. 1 &amp; 2, misc. homo, t
mi. W. ol Golllpolls on t41.
F~ Sopt. 1ot. 112 milo ocd ·
Nolghborhood Rd. on Hl!Hop !)r.
Chlldran'• ClOthing l Tupperware.

,

HOURS

7 Days A Week

9 a.m.·7 p.m.

At Jet. S.R. 7 &amp; 143
On The By. -Pass ·

8 · 36·'19· 1 mo.

117-Cootville

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
-11:00 A.M. SATURDAY
~ 2:00P.M . MONDAY
-

2:00P.M . TUESDAY

Get Ruults Fast

- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . T"URSDAY
-

2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguot 16. 19B9. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Cooe No. 26320.
Trocy E , Goodwin, 6246
Marie StrHt, Cincinnati.
Ohio 46224. was appointed
E•ecutor of the estate of
Norma
Goodwin,
dece•ed. late of 200 Laslev
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
. 46789.

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. NMselroad, Clerk
(BI24, 31; (917. 3tc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Offers will be received at
the office of Bernard V .
Fult1,
Attorney at law.
111112 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, until Friday.
Stptembar 8,
1989. at
10:00 A.M. for the purchooe
of the rul estate owned by
Edison
Hotistettar, De·
ceued. and shuated on
Root Hill. Saliobury Town·
lhip, Meigs County, Ohio,
con1i1ting of a 1 · 6/10 acre
lot on which there is situated
1 six room residence (3 bedrooma. living and dining
room. kitchen) bath. base• ment, fuel oil furnace, carport and barn. The real aslite is
appraised
at
U7.000.00. Bids may be
IUbmittad Bither in writing
or in person at the time of
ula.
Doted: August 28. 1989.
James W. Ho..tettar.

Executor of Estate of
Edison Hobstatter,
Deceued.
(81 30, 31 : 191 1. 3 , 5, 6

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS . thia Board is
required ·by SeC1ion 136.06
of the Ohio Rcovioed Coda to
eatlm.-te the aggregate ma•·
imum amount of public
moneys eubject to its con·
trol to be awarded and on
deposit •• iniC1ive deposits;
and
,
WHEREAS. inactive de·
posits are defined ·by Re·
vised Code Sections 13.6 .01
(E). (F). and 135.05as deposits which are not payable on
demand. are not active or in·
tarim deposits. and will not
be needed before the end of
the p•iod of dMignatlon,
which in this case is August
22, 1991; and
WHEREAS. thio Board
cannot find that it haa con.
trol, of eny public monevo
which wNI not ba ""dod for
IChool purpo181 prior to Au·
guot 22. 1991;
BE
IT
THEREFORE
RESOLVED. that tho eo·
dmated aggregate max.i·
n;tum amount of public
monaye to be awarded and
on depoeh as inactive depo·
slto for the period of August
23, 19B9, ' through Auguot
2'2. 1991... shell ba . 80.00

.

Business Services
DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
ClEARING

MEET TilE
STAFF
PERM SALE
Now thru Sept. 9, 1919

10% OFF

All P£RMS
WAlK-IN WElCOME

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP
169 N. 2nd
Mildloport
992-272

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

St.
Micidlopoirt, Oh.
P.M .

1 mo.

60 DIFFERENT WOOD
B. COAL STOVES,
INSERTS B. FURNACES ·

APPALACHIAN
WO!ID STOVES

In Carpont!", 01. Off 143

698-6121

BALLET ,• TAP
&amp; JAZZ
DANCE CLASSES
MODEUNG
&amp; BATON

IN MIDDLIPOIT; OHIO

Now Taking

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

Registrations
992-5218

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

7-18-'89-lfn

J&amp;L
INSULATION

For

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

CUSTOM BUILT

OFFERED AT

Mastic - Certointood®
Vinyl Siding
Seamless Gutter
Roplacement Windows
Blown Insulation Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

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

Call 992-2772

NO SUNDAY CALLS

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable

Prices"

4·16·86-tfn

7-12-'89-1 mo.

L. W.STEWAR
TRUCKING

Fabric Shop
992-2284

"W•••'
•• go•JI
Speelallstt" .
'

DEAD OR AUVE

· •Washers •Dryers

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

POMEROY, OHIO ,
'

WANTED

8-1·1 mo.

•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must

Public Notice
'
.
dollars

(zero

and

zero

centS); end
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that. in accor·
dance Wrth this dlltermina·
tion. and Section 136.06 of
tho Ohio Revioed Code. all

public

moneyS
coming
undlll' the control of this
Board during the abqve pe·
riod will be deposited ••
either active or interim de·
posits. and th4't the~e will be
no designation of a (lepo1i~
tory for inactive fundi; and
BE IT FURtHER ' RESOLVED, that a copy of this
resolution be published once
1 week for two consecutive
weeks in two newspap•• of
g1111eral circa.dation in Meigs
County. and given directly
to each eHgible depoaitory at
the time of the first publica·
tion in the newspap••·
(81 24, 31. 2t.c

80 FT. BY 14 FT.

1990 MODEL
3 BR, 2

D&amp;R
TACKLE BOX
OPEN 6 AM-9 PM
7 DAYS
LIVE BAIT
ETC.
21ft Mi. Below
Racine Locks &amp;

See It Now At
Miller Homes
614-423-6371
SECTIONAL HOME
COMPLETE
New 1989 Model

19N335-985-3$61

We Service All

Makes
5-4-89-1 mo.

and MORE

222 East Main
POMEROY, OH.

at Meigs Memory
Gardens

992-6872

We can

~,.,

1-100-535~2199
7 - 211- ' 11-1 mo.

No Hunting or Tresspasslng on

4

Female Golden Retriever r11l
good with kids. 3 yuro olil. 114388-8114.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

Malo Boaglo, 6 mo. old. 614-367·

0521.

Rapain

NIASE Certified Mach.,ic

CALL 992-6756
"'DOC" VAUGHN
Cel1ified Licensed Shop

PLIPPY· Had tt'lots, wormed,

l'loueebroken, well·tralnltd. To
excellent homa.l14·742·2019.

Howard L•. Writesal

Male dog. 5 mos. old. part lab.
Parter Garman Shephard. Llko
kids. 614-446·9258 afler 5.

CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

, 1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

FOUND small black female doa
on Main 51, Pt.Pit. 304-175-44d
Tim Morrison. ·

247-3522

. Call Anytime

7

St. lt. 331
'Letart
Ohio

6

992-2371
5113/191111

ALLEN'S
HAULING

MOO GALLON
WATEI SEIYICE
UIIESTONE
SPIEAD
DID HAULED
992-52

LocaW•tY. .yL..,..,
.. -llltltlllport.

o•.
PARTS AND SERVICE .

For Moat 2 ond 4-cycto
engin•
Stock Porto for
Homollte. Woocleattr'.
Tocumolh. Bri1191 •
Str1tton.

PH. 992-3922

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, .._., Ohie

$eat. 2, JuncUorl Texaa and·
ChlllicOiho Rd. on 588, Clothing:
women, t~ene, jtlnt, ewlltt~l,
home Interior.
Thwo, Sot. 3 tomlly, lnfont, toddltr ladun clothing, glanware,
miK. 112 milo 6ut Goorgo'o
Creek Rd.
Vord Solo: 115 Third Avo. Aug.
311_Solll 2nd. ll.m..llp.m, LGW
pncoo. Everything mull got
Vord Sa!o: Hio ond lw 12 opd.
blkH, lots of adun winter
ClolhM, IWUIII'I, coata, ttc.,

opplloncoo1 opor11ng 11ooc11.
booka ena much mort .. 10
Plno St. GoUipollo, ldiroc:tly bahind Supor Amoricoi Solwdoy
only, 8:00 o.m. lo 4:00p.m. 114-·
446-eeee,
•

•

Yard Sale: Sal, only. 2306~
Eattarn Avenue, acrott from
Blue Fountain Mottl. Sonwlhlng
tor everyonat
Yard Sslo: Slpl. 14. 1711
Chettnut. Mtne:, womana, boyt,
&amp; Jr. tlza clothing, lola mlac. .

Lost &amp; Found

Yard Sale

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
2 FamUy Vsrd Solo, Fri ond Sot,
Sopt. t &amp; 2, • lllllo bb ot
everything, 174 tt Perk Dr. Pl.
P&lt;t. NO SALES baforo t:OD.
Thera will also be batebaA
cardt to trade or ull.
Community Yard Salt, l~n
Boden Road, Sol, Sapl. 2 lhru
4th, Rain or thine.
Gorogo Solo, Frll SoiL Sapt. 1 I
2. t:00-3:00. Mlnon Rd, Comp
Conloy. Litllo bh olovorythlng.
Gorogo Solo, Thurodoy1 Frldoy,
Salurdoy. 2923 Moplo AVO. Af&gt;'
ptitncll, lamp., kilt mlac.
Vord Solo Tburs1 Frl, Sot. Rod
brick . houoo oolow Sldoro
Jowolry Shop, Golllpolio Forry.
410 Sho1gun, p,..au,. canner,
what nola, plllowa, dOIHea,
clothn, B·B gun.
Yard Slit, 4 flmlllet, Frl and
Sot. 9:00 tUI ? . 3 houooo paot
the Flalrock Groc:.ry Store.
Yard

MORRIS ·

Sate,

SI:OO . 1111

2:00

Yard Sale, Fri.Sat, 0:00 1111 ?,
81by Clolhol IIZI 0 Upc Knick
Knoc:ko, moro, 103 ~nglloh

EQUIPMENT
•IITOI 11ACTOIS

Road.

lf(HO PRODUCTS

Sopl 1 &amp; 2. 10:00.?, 3 I Moln Si,
betide
J.R.
Home
lm.
provtmants. Rtln located tit
trailer GrHr Rd.

etiOWAID IOTAVATOIS
•Y AIDMAN MOWERS
OOORSTATE UnEIIES

Pomeroy,

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlly

MORtiS
EQUIPMENT
Saltm

742-2455
St.
lutland,Oh.'

2124

CarrOll St.. Syrat:uaa.
ond lloturdoy, Sopl,
111,2nd.
F~doy

6/30/ljft

MOBILE
HOME PARK
-;,Mobile Home

3 lomlly. Fridoy and S11. 331
Broodwoy, Mlddlo-. Pool
t1bl1l matlmt and box tpringa,
cloth ng, lalo of mloc.
.

3 loml!y. Sopt.111.,2nd. 250 Mu~
barry Avo., ,_...,. (nut to
-oy-ry).

:'

''

Parta

3 fomlly. lopt"""'"' 111,2n&lt;l,4th.
I mil• ea11 of
an 81 .
At.241. e:30 Lm.-dork.

Rental•
•Lot Rant1l1

30111 Neace Rd., llldd' ~art.
Baby elolh•. babr things, odell
and endt, I dfnatte chllra.
Sopt, t 11,2nd,3nl,41h.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•Mobile Home

Alte Trtl,.lttlee
PH. 992:5682

992-7479

or 992-7121

D".

Sopt. tot ~ 2nd. 1ot houoo
South ' ot Kygor Crook High
School.
~

Thursday and F~day, ~ 02 Third
StrHt, Maton, WV~

1·21-'88-tln

DAVE'S
SM~LL INGINE
REPAIR

.

Male Golden Retritvtr mind

d.

SYIACUSf. OHIO
Moll Foreign end

'

Frea to good hom• 3 yr old
Doberman Shepherd mix. very
good watch dog. 304-675-3143.

PAT HILL FORD ·

WATER
SERVICE

Sopt. 1·2-4. Eloctrlc otovo,
refrigerator,
microwave,
stoneware, gta11 antiQue~,
clolhet, rtc. hncb, ltablllur
bar, load lavallrl, water pump,
ho...eware. 3t Clay St. VInton,

home. Part Terrier. Also 2 pupo
pies, mlxtd breed. 61 ..·94sa-3084
or 614-247-2622.

J.13·tfC

B&amp;W
GARAGE

Giveaway

1 female housa dog to good

r~air and re-

care radiators and
heater cores. W• ~an
also acid boil and rod
out radialors. Wi also
repair Gas Tanks.

6·5·'89.tfn

Tol

18400f~75-1624.

SER~ICE

4/ 6/ 89 / tfn

Control Assn.

913-749·3698.
NOTICE, Rllo Aid wlll baal 111
local compatltofll prescription
prlcet 1 give u• • call, 614~46the property ol Hattie R"Hd.
Signed Ernie Grimm.
,

EVENINGS

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Nil ional Post

and give lh.tm a happy future by
legal adoption, call coiiKt 1·

I st visit FREE
• -Possibly more.

· 8 -17· 1 mo.

992-226•

TERMITES • ANTS

Adoption: Financially ...:..-•
coupla, on1 from Wall VIrginia,
wish to adopt one or two Intents

742-2778
Cill for Fall Speciale

BILL SLACK

SINCE 1976,
ROACHES o FLEAS

3 Announcements

SUSAN COLEMAN

•FIREWOOD

IJ.1C Service
AU Major a. Minor

Racine, Ohio
949·2800
Iefort 5

•Riders
•Chain Saws

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE

614-423-6371

3rd St.

2112 Miles 0 ut New
limo Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.

-t.IGHT HAULING

TRI-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONtROL

Announcements

TANNING

1·24·'19-1 mo.

All MAKES AND
MODELS

Domeatlc Vehida

Hving out of
state. Manitger w.,ts ta

•Weede'a ters
3 miles off of Rt. 7

SWEEPER REPAIR

MILLER HOMES

selling,

"Free Eatlmstes"

SUN;S UP

7·24·89 1 mo.

VAUGHN'S '
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Rlason fir

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
•Lewn Mowers

· NO. SUHDA Y

Space
llfDUCED-1 ONLY
AT THI 5 PRICE

ESTABLISHED
BUSINESS FOR
SALE

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

BISSELL
SIDING
CO'.
...• ._luilt
PHi 949·2101
or Ret. 949·2160

Dam At Antiquity

B~TH

ONLY $17,995

•VINYL SIDING '
•ALUMINUM StDrjiiG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Be Repair..le"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

7-26-'89-1 mo . pd.

I,2 69 sq. ft. of Living

I

o.,., 16 Worell

AI'll Codal14

RACINE DEPT.
STORE

(

Rote
14.00

Wordl

Dovo
1

1, 1

'"A ct•..Hild lct.'l"lllment pl.c..t in The Deity SantinMIIItcept .- ciMtified di•pl-v . Rusin•• Cird 'and legel noticil)
t~~~~il 1110 app.., in the Pt. Pl . . . nt R•Qilter and the GaPi- .
pali1 Daily Tribune. .reaching OYer 18.000 hom•.

·~

MEN'S
SHORT
SLEEVE

r

.

.RATES

MODULAR HOMES
SINCE 1970

POMEROY, OHIO

•Aaoeiwl t .60 dilcount for 'ads .-din advance.

lo~ation.

290SK-AYL
'JBIIIPOII'

'

her time particularly to the Save
t~e Children Fund. Last ye;tr she
was outofthecountryfor70days,
carrying out 300 official
functions.
·
The most ·recent speculation
about the mar.riage Involved
British navy Cmdr. Tim Lau·
renee, t~e Buckingham Palace
equerry who wrote "personal"
letters to the princess royal that ,
were stolen from the palace.
Laurence, who was recently;
reported to be leaving the:
queen's starr at the end• of the"•
summer to return. to fuU·tlme;
naval dulles, declined comment.

As of September 12th we will no
longer be at the Middleport office.
We sincerely thank all our clients
for their past patronage and look
forward to seeing you at our new

For registration or information call
Instructor. Joy King 992-3794
Assistant, Jeannie Owen 992-6893

LADIES AND
CHILDREN'S

......

·~ out.td• Meig~. Qallia or M ..on cOunti• mu11 De pr•

~

reached In this case.''
.
Gov. Gerald BalUes · c!eclhied
Wednesday to halt the·executlon,
saying, "I do not believe the
governor's power of e~ecutive
clemency should be exercised in
this Instance.''
Assistant State Attorney General Linwood Wells said he was
Incredulous at the flurry of
claims, particularlY. defense con·
tentions that someone else could ,
be responsible for the crime.
Waye's attorney, aelrald Zer·
kin, said the Virginia , Supreme
Court refused to consider a key .
point of .evidence because it was
not brought up at the original
trial. In federal appeals, Waye's
attorneys could not bring up the
exclusion of psychiatric testimony because it was "a state
evidentiary matter."

DANCE FOR JOY
AEROBIC DANCE CLASS
BEGINS 10 WEEK FALL SESSION
SEPTEMBER 11, 1989
20 CLASSES •42.00

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A,M. to 5 P.M.
I A,M.
NOON SATURDAY

A HOME?

TRICOUNTY
RECYCLING

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

•

,

Princess Anne separating from husb.a nd

SUMMER CLEARANCE
BOYS HUSKYS,
STUDENTS
AND LADIES
BASIC
BLUE DENIM

Business· Services

a...

bad-·· ......

4 lomlly. Sopt. 1ot,2nd. Curta~~~~.

lt. 33 llorth of

end mooh - . lolly~
~
N~

YcllsLEb!LIIIi ........

lloclno. Aoln oonoolo.

. 1-tl·'lf.tfft

\

'

·

�Paga 12-The Daily &amp;entinll
Pomeroy,

.

Mlddllport
&amp; VIcinity

t"""""

........ 11'11
Auguot 10
S.pl.l.

110 ..

woOd -

-

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

35 Lots

AppfQz 25 lcr.., good houu

all-, county water, half milt oH
R1. 2, $20,000. 304-t71-27411.
Ashton. blautltul one acre tota

OfFic.tS Of
1\1'!&gt; flD'(,_L
f\1~1'116 .

wtth rtver frontage:,

..

vt.
Cool

,._,y,
Ul1dlrpart. Cladilftg. Home 1ft.

t -• . . _ - . ' " ' " " '
Comlr llwdA&amp;f and Main
~~- - . 0111o,
~o~neer-.. ~nt · from t to 1
Clolt.., he Hid ........ lllloo.

71

e •• ..,.,...... ,..,.._• ..,.....,...._.. t ·s•

''T
ha_t's NESS! HighNESS!"

Gnali le.ll Fftdar and lafutdav. 10 Ill! I. tm Nc!oo. ca•o,

lfGOI!'d ,._,

SIHplng room• with cooldng.
Also tralltr •pace. All hook·U.PI•··
Call lfttr 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Meson WV. ,

::_
87:_;8..:·27
,74:.:V~.-=:--:--..,.

::b;"Q
~=========-r:=========~ ihouu
bodrccm,
ft . ranch
,.._ CllaUII!tl- ...::.-"~oo~;,'=~
Qo OUI
on I·
for 1000
rentoq. Carpeted

QOUty 11ooc1 11. 111m 11
Help Wanted
WIIOh lor •'"" Looi oolo
·
•-• ..,....
1111
· IIi
- ,_yond
· ..,n ........
~~~
lor mol·lowing
lolurcloy. ·IDI- " Foml~
~-bit
nOitom.kl'\1
..,...._
- h roold ... on lor llclorly lady. 1:00 I I 1:00
Pfne I Grove
Rd.
s.pt. Mon., thru Frl, ..... IYellinp.
111,211d,:lfd. Gkl Iran bod, now own tro....,...to~lon and rtlo...,..
caah ntgiM8r, etorm cloot, · eM requlr.d. Sal1ry negotabltl.
uwlnt machine. mlec.
~ to Box C..23 Cl,. Pl. Ptt.
;::::~~=:.:::;,:::;:::,_=--=--1 Roa~!!t-.?110 Moln St., Pl. Pll
_,
011o doy ~ Sap.2. 13 Rut· wq'~o:w
lind St., lllddl1port. Kid'e
clot ....... ••1-12.
HELP WANTED
:::::;;;:'-.=7..::..:::-,.,---=""7'-1 A lorgo C.lllornlo Co. hoo ox·
Rain Of ohlnl. Friday, Sept..,. ponclod to 1ho Galllpollo, Pl.
bot tot. 4 ol Aaclno. Pl..- oreo. Wo hovo lull-limo
lTcom~Th~~·h~o~oo~o~ld~on~-~:-:--:c:1-lcno
tvolloble. wo are
:::locking
ocmo hcnool I honl
S.lurdar, Soplombar 2nd. 11-4. wcrldno - l e lhot con otan
llaln Sino~ Roclno. Roln or lmmodliltlly. Muol ba obit to lift
-oh::lno.;::.,:-:--:-:==--:--:-=-cl 50 lbe. Good Co. biMtlt.. For
•"-'~ ,._ 4th
Ia 1.., lnterview1 call Thurs. or Fri.
5
-~'~· 1 11,--.-·
m.,. cnlr.
o14-448-11146.
ThiN
Riftrbonk "' Croa' Store -nlcno will ba llllod qulckl•.
Raclnli. Lota .of boya and ....'
c•,.:•:.,:•.:..,.::'7c:ilolhl;,::;:;ng,;:,.
I ...., Wanted: part·IIIM, muet
;;;
h1v1 knowledge of paneling.
S.pl. 1ol,2nd,4th,51h. 1:00-4:00. plumbl;l 1 oloctrlc-. 814Gur
cor, ~h Addftlon, 11112-609
1'uPpiti'a ~lna. RotOtlllr, ;n•
·
• ·
onc1 rock, ot-. 3 onl uo
IN A RUT
chairs.. MWlna machine, or· nred of minimum w~e?
moJo, 001118,1afa ol clcthoo, ole., Bering, clood ond jcbt. Wt'ro
•2nd.
.
k)oldng for 8 lvety t":C.II who
-pl.
lot,
I O.mJo
Chipman'
bllkle
DIM Ip r.,m, want mOfl o·•
"' alii I on luol
-- ~ _
,_of gzzlr•10• gtlllng "'' Eam wfllla you loam.
·hint
- - r- •to
-• • a, ,..,___ _. 'I':(1141281-8422
. .bwn
•-born'.._
clofh~
tnd lola ·-1
.
_,..
of '"hor . . _ 114-414 2113.
JOB VACANCIES AVAILABLE IN
,.,._
. Ruotlc Hlllo, THE ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.
1Chi'""•·
ba
Enlist lor looo oloiH lrolnlng,
...,recu.. . --..
by, monthly paycecll:, col'-ga •nl..
IINdernllr cloth-., •lr can- tlnce, part-time mllhary 11rvlce.
IIIUoner,coflle ..ble, TV1t1nd.
304.e75-3150or 1-eoo.&amp;42·361 1..
Big Yard Salol s.r,:-bor 1ol, LADI~S (or monJ N~EDED FOR
2nil,
3nt
0 o
Alv•r GOOD PAYING TEMPORARY
C..mpgroun.. Salf'l C.rs»M OFACE LIKE WORK. NO EX·
S/Iam-, gullar amplllor, PERIENCE NECESSARY. AlSO
lent. cottM ,.Ill.,., tleetrk: NEED LADIES (
WITH
bcxoo, whoole, llreo, clclhlng 'CAR ' FOR liG~ m~ IVERY
tncl ...,.., Roomo klr ronl by WORK. GAS AllOWANCE. AP·
PLY IN PERSON ONLY. (NO
night or WHII.
··~ombar 1o1,2nd 3n141h Slh PHONE CALLS) TO: .MRS. CAR·
_,..
' ij ' ' TER ECONO lODGE IIOTEL.
Rt. 7 .YPHL APPlYTUE8; 1-8:30P.U.
-

.n;;.; .

for

·

,...-:::--:,.,....,=

18. Wanted to

l

r:Jflll~'

Lldy to cleln houM every other
~Mk. Will negotlatt WlgM. 114~6-13241brl p.m.

betide

Larry'a
Grocery. S.ptembar 1st. Girl•
winter Dlott..t.Juntor )lan•,
a.blt hot.tM; a clolhll, hal·
towten coMumea.

Man lo do gtntrll farm work on
dolry larm. l14-44&amp;-2412.
.Y•rd Salt! S.turdly only.
Now ecceptlng •ppllcatron. for
3;00 p.m. 40130 L.aunl Clift Rd. lull 1 port-limo omplcyMo. ApTha Ebllno.
ply In poroon. lorobl's Plzzo,
Yard oolo o1 llodlyn Pcwoll'o, Sll- Bridge PlaZa, Galllpcllo,
Vlno S~, Roclno. Frldoy Sap1.1, 111.m.-4p.m.
8:Q0..3:uu. Lota of nice clothing.
A.D. only w1nted. 11 haura par
Y1rd aatll Five Polnta .,.1 , WNk. W.I.C. couMellng. Melga
-oy, 4!1021 Wlpplt Rd. Fol· Ccunly · Hoollh Depl. 114-11112·
tow tlgnL Sept. 1&amp;2, t-?.
1828.

•=
00.

throughout, tclal oloclnc. Foncod fn back yard, L.ccolad 8
mlloo lrom Holzer HcoiTitol on
R1
Will
do hcuoo cleaning Rtl. · Sc·.~~
n oor N•"h Gallo High
ovolloble. l14-3711-~171 .
-1. 1 3SO. por monlh, $350.
dopcoll. Coli 614-216-1316 afiar
Would llkl to do hoUIICIMnlng, e p.m.
114-446-11765.
:-:':7-:--.,.,--:-:---3, 4 br. 'r•modelad horn~, On 38
•crH.
Wlth
•mall pond,
1300/mc. No oocurlly depcsH
WHh..rorancH.614-258-6418,
He us.- ~
•ur rant In country. 2
21
Business
badrccmo. 614·742·2896 afiar
_6,_00;,;p;,;.m;;;·; _,__ _ _ __
Opportunity
42 Mobile Homes
INOT1CEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING co.
for Rent
reccmmonclo thai you do
bullnen with .-ofll• fOU know, 2 bedroom In Tuppert Plaint.
•nd NOT lo •nd moner 1175. per month plus utllitJ ..
llvough lht moll unlll.ycu hove l::-'".,d_clopc.,:..-•-11. B_14..,.-&amp;e
c:.:.
7·.34
:.;;;8.:.
7.' --7
lnvosflgalod lho clloring.
·
2 bedroom 'mobile home turnlsh1d, wuher &amp; dryer, •lr,
prlv•le lot, Mason. 304-~
1751.

Public Sale

31 Homes for Sale
3 bodrccm brick h.,... wllh
l•rga lot, Mid Wa" Drive. New
HIvan. Good Cand.
'
304·7735881.
....
3car
- ronch,
2 112 balho, 2
g•rage,
nice neighborhood,
lamlly room wllh llrtplaca,
cion lo tlomonltry ochocl,
$112,000. Pepler Holghll, Pl. Pll.
304-«i75-1317.
3br., hom~~ full baumut, 2
llraploc•, mi. from lown, coli
anytime 614--446-7725.
3BA, 2 bath, gan~a-, 2100 lq. ft .
112 acreS ~· eft~ ochcolo,

z

2 br., localed In Ewrgr.. n,
children accaplad. Cable T.V.,
814-446-3897, or 814~45-5223.
2 br., mcbllo homo a1 Ev.,groon.
614-37"2678
·
r
•
2BR lum'ad wl1h washer &amp;
d ryer. 112 mII• E. o I Porter on
854 . 614-388-11963.
2BR, 1211115 In Poner oraL Dep.
roq'od. Poy own U1llllloo. 614·
388·11604.
.
3 bedroom 2 bath• mobile home
In country. Somerville Realty,
304-678-3030 or675-3431.
79 a cr.. with old farm house
Polnl Pl••sant ar••, 304-6751749, 304·768-5252 or 304-776605V
::--,',-.,.-...,.-----~mall 2 .badrcolll . lralltr,
Horilcrd, WV. $175. momh pluo
utllllloo, 304-&amp;82·2904.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12165 Mobile Home. 314 acre.
For Mil or trade on place of
ground. Go out At. 248, turn
right, go put Kino Church to
Bnh•n Rd, out 1 mill, '2 nd
tl'llltr on len.
1174 Klrll:woad, 12x.10, 2 badroom. 2 acree of lend, out
building with electric, chicken
hOIJII, blnk celler. 614~992·
7121 .
·

::=::.:.;.;.;..:...:.:,:..:.:.:;::,...,..,_,.

=

nac;;-_:ze

Vthlcloti: .;: .,

- .a

Office or email bualneu lptiCt
lor rem In Mlddloi&gt;OI1. All
uiiiHioo Included. .t,lr condlllcnocl $200Jmonlh. Coli 114992-5545 7:00..m....C:OOp.m. or
&amp;14-H2..S348 ev~nlnga.

Ont acrt lot, trail.,. allowed,
clty wa~tr, Galllpolla Farry. 304675·2722. .

~'7111.
Dirieod, -

-- -

Lots

Merchandise
Household

2 bedroom apia. for rent. Car·
Nlc1 tanlng, laundry
clllll•• •vallabll. can 614~992·
EOH.
3711

f:.ltd.

2_,br.Ntum. •pt. $200 me·, $100
dop. opots. 614-446-9332.
35 W. apt. 2 br., 1 bath, prlvat•
anclo•ed patio. Close to
groc1ry l lortt I ahopplng cen·
fer,
water,
Hwtr
lrash
provld1d. $265/mo. Call 614·
446-3727.
Apartment for rent, 304·675-2218.

GE •utomatlc wash1r, $95.
Whirlpool
washer:
$95.
Whirlpool dryer, $98. Dryor, $75.
Maytag IUtO. Wllhlr 1: d,ryer
aet, $150 each. Atfrlg., frolt
treo $150. Sldo by oldt rolrlg.,
1150. Electric range 30 ln., SH.
Frigidaire dryer,
GE dryer,
avacadO, $95. Gil range, 30
Inch, $75. Skeggl Applf1nc11,
Upper Rim Rd. 614-446-7398.

175.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pika
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
movlea. Call 614-«6-2568. EOH.

GOOD
USED APPLIANCES
Woshora, dryora, rotrlgoraloro,
ranges. Skaggo Apollencos,
Upper River Rd. Beslct. Stone
Cl'lst Mot1l. Call 614-446-7398.
Fum. Apt. 1 br., 240 ulllhu Pd. Henry Link Wicker Fumlture:
920 F:ourth Ave, Galllpolla, 614· Loveseat, chair, 6 ottoman. 614·
446-44161fter &amp;p.m.
446·9364.
Fum .. EHicl1ncy 1175 utllltl11 Kenmor-. mlcrow•v• ov•n iand
pd. Shar-. bath. 607 Second
ri
end 304 "71-16
G11ilpoll•, 114-446-441&amp; ah•~ ca 'axe c
'
-v
30.
8p.m.
PICKENS FURNITURE
F 1
N•wJUsed
urn sh.d
2
bedrOom Household furnishing. 112 mi.
ar,lrtmlnl, $250. par month plua Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleuant, ·WV,
• ••
•3900.
1ctrlc. $100 dapc•lt. 304--675- 0111 ••••
. - r u7.,.14' -·
SWAIN
Graclouo living. 1 and 2 bed- AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
room apa~rtmants •t VIllage
a.
Manor
lnd
Riverside Ollvl St., G•lllpoll•. NEW 8 pc.
Apartmtnta In Middleport . From wood group, $331. Living room
$184_0111 614; 992•7787.
au11e1, $199·$591. BuniC bldt
wllh baddlng, $249. Full olzo
Now •ccepII ng
II cat Ions for mattrn• &amp; round.tlon llartlnl
2 bedroom 1 1 11
d
$99. R~ellner• tt•rtlng . $9 .
P • u Yand
carpat•
, UESD Bedt, drn••rs, bidroom
1ppllance1, water
trash
r,lckups provided. Mllnltnanct tulles. Duke, wringer w11har, •
ru living close to shopping
~rnplet• lint of uud fumhurl.
bankaand schools. For more In~ NF.W Waatarn boola $35.
formation call 304-882~3716. e. Workboota $18 &amp; up. (ktHI I
~ual opportunity hoUIIng. Sac· IOh toe.) 61 4--448- 3158·
on 8 acceplld.
Used appllancet. W11har1,
Prlvat•
modem
furnished · dJcere,
refrlsr-rator•,
etflclancy apt._ With garage &amp; ~lcrow•v• ovai1L Ken'• Af.:
ltorage. Water paid. 81U4&amp;- P
•nee, 217
E. Second 9 ·•
8720
Pomeroy,
614--992·&amp;335
or 614-

•r.P

rang••·

~==·========-1.:96:5:-3:56:1:.::::::::::::~
:

SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUt'e

.,.._

~::-ooo·• mpo~ro
011 211,
..., • 114-281-tNO.
'

'

Whirlpool oU1c. Washor $150.
514-367.0234.

'I'OU'RE

tificial
have live
bait,
bait,
anddead
bait you
bait,can
areat If .the - ' -1"

1--T-~:....:;.F,:..:..,;Iir~~...::..,l--1

G Complelo

An.tlques
53
.,,...--,....;;..,..,_....,......,.._
":'
Alltlque oak tldtbollrd circa
1897 bwtled mirror, l'llflnlthed.

~61::=4-4~46-:.:;113:;:64::·==-:-:c7.-­

Top C.th paid. Old lumHuro
cuboerda,
quln•.
orlent1l,
palntlnp, toya, or entire est•t•
c•ll conect 304-525-3275, or
304-$2:Hi854.

54

Miscellaneous
Mer«;:handlse

2 uaed all fum..:n, t:J tanks, &amp;
more. 114-245-5150.

4 hive• a.... I'Nionlbll otttr,
304-682-2708.
Coal and wood fumacl with
blower end Contro11, $250. 304175-5168.

C.nnlng peactlea now In
euton. Ptars Plums, Grapea
•nd Appln w 1II follow around
Labor Day. .Bob's Market,
Maocn, wv. 304-773-5721 . .
Canning tomaton for sale.
Bring cont•lnera. 814-247-2911.
Picked
Canning lomatott.
$o4.SO, pick own; 13.00 ~ushol.
SwHt peppl" and green
bean•. Raymond Row• 114 ~247·
42V2.
Ounrovln Fruit Farm. Appt11,'
graptt, aorghum, honey, •po
plabutttr, misc. lt1ma. Hours:
Dally 11-8• .Closed Mcndaya. Rl.
881 Southltul of Albany. 6148118-62118.
G111pee for aala, call •ft•r 5:00
PM, 304-&amp;76-11181 .
Red Aasblrrl11 for Sale! Pick
your own or ready picked.
Taytora Berry P•tch. 814·24511084.

1:311.()) Ill NIC Nglltly-

(I) lpariUoll (0:30)

I

~Q

•

cane 1umett

' SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Occult - Typed - Brand ~ Infect - PICTURE
"Why Is II," complained lhe young man 1o his friend , "some

Farm Supplies

&amp; LivestCick

Fireplace lnsen all etMI 2 apeed
blcwor, 304-675-350V.

For Sela: His •nd h•rw, 12 spd.
Hurty bicycle•. Adult owned.
Llkt noW $80 Nch. 814-446-

61188.

Handcnftltd
Cherry
Cabln.tlbook0411, JVC AMIFM
tuner, c11e1,· deck, rtel to r..l,
turntable, Bo11 301 Speake,..'
614-446·9364.

61 Farm Equipment .
1974 lntefn1Uonal Tractor. 335
Cummins, new tim, 38 rtar•,
cab over, plOt loa trailer. 814~
949~293 or 114-191-81111.
63

LIVestOCk

,..-......,.,....,,..,.--::-....;..,....,......,...
8 yr. old Gildon Pony to tr1d1

55

Straw for aala. $1 .50 bale. 614·
4.118-4111 Evenings: 614-4417157
.

Building
Supplies

16 fl . 4x4 Inch O•~ tl1mbert,
Morgan Farm. AI. 35, Pliny, 304937-2018.
Block. brick, HWII' pipe:l, win·
dowa, llntela, etc. Cl1ude Win·
ter-., Rio Grande, OH Cd 614245-5121 .
56

Pets for Sale

:-:--~;::-=~..:..:~,..-,-::­
5 mo. old Puk-a-poo black &amp;

white. H~tl 1r11M'd. Shol•.
814~245-5611.

Transportation

~.&lt;

D MoneyMI•

• ·•
.• ..
'•

•

'

. ...1

"I lOoked an hour and still didn't find that
smudge you wanted cleaned."

I

the
pallaa-racing
· · auto
11 well
newsraces
from
around t1te globe are ·

I

W6'~' Of COV[lSf
yofl fcEEP .

laatured.
W lniiiii*II'I-·MIIItM
...ililnl Tonlgh1
(JJ UIA Toclay

e

Ill •111 G Jaop«dyl Q
Ill Cnlaah
·'

HtA~ING

llllanlon

0 Ptorsaalonel Tennla
•Top card

VOICES!

.,

7:111 (I) """" Orllftlll
8:00. ()) liS Coellr . _
Sondra ls bnldll hlnelf
alter tlte grandmother' a take

Motorcycles

..·•
....'

1986 Hondo CA 500. V.ry good
condhlon, one owner, $1100.
Phona81~111.

G &amp; J Cycle, WI new ben cyll/1dera, f•at HI'VIce tor boring and
piston dallvwy, Garr Klnl'lllnl,
304-&amp;78-1885.
,;,;,;.;,;.;.,;,;;::;____
,·

&amp;

the babies. (R) 1:1
Cll Ford/lkldtlltlfnr Truck I

T-~leiMFrom

Pontiac. Ml (T)
(I) • (I) A Man Callacl

Hawlt Hawk flnd1 hlmHit In
lila middle ot a govemmenl
allng go!l8awry. (R)

Motors

for Sale

w
ar..t I'Wfomla-•
Brlllllnl- 01 Agnes De

12 ft V-bciiDm baoo bell oncl '
trailer, $700: 304-371-1221. · ·

Mllle, lrom ballet to
Broadway to Him. g
.
(!) 'VIntage: A IIIUiry 01

11 n Ttl hull wnrotlor, n '"'· ,
Mtrcury motor, $1,500.304-675- ·
.
"
6370.

Wlnl

a

Pontoon

Calage Foalbell
01 PIIIMNIWI

111111 Sunlfnor
boot 24 .,
ft. 40 tiP Johnlon motor with , ~
lraller, $&lt;4,700. 30W71-3V71.
• .
76

Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories

I• !::a':;:~
eon-tiOft

.
..
' ·.~

:;Fo:-rd~S::_:-:.:..:::Ipcfo_:::.o;::lacl:.;:;ory:.....,•M"",--:,_-&gt;;.

..(3:00)
1:311 (J) 1111 ~DIIItll_,.,,..,ntnt World
.• J a - &amp; Wllllley lrY 1o
b1c:01ne Pips For a Nlglil. (RI

e

&gt;

79

Campers

~ WOfkl 01 Cartooning .
• C1oCIIt • ChaM
~ e (I) Gil Chalfa Woody
Writaa a aono as a blr111day

..

&amp;

ior hll waalllly glrtfrlllnd.
)1:1
.
Miele.., Thontplan'a on

II

~Roell Ch811 pia

Motor Homes
10 112 lruck compor. iiiiOO. Coli
a nor 4 p.m.I14-448-401S.
1973 Solro 'Scally Sponomon
C.mpor (Dear Humor · SpoclaQ
SIHp• 4, , ....ovt,ou lll:lht,
good cOJ!d. 1550. 114 .m oa04.

PrC~

-··
••

-

81

.

~

Home

vlru~~~~ Mlol Marple
W

.

.

clt8Cka IntO Bertram's Hotal
where lltillgl _ .. too

:·

~rftcl.

(!)

Improvements
71

Autos for Sale

1974 Plymouth Fury Ill. Hal air,
•hocll:t, nHd• lllgnment. 614·
256-111117.
1975 Formula Flrtblrd 6 partL
614-446-8518.

IIIUrder. 1:1
Ill Limy ICing Uval

• D ,.eeM•w McCal has
hit hands lui with twO very
. different women. (RI

I

for---... .

~·:·

,.

..

1:;1

•N11hw. . Now
8:311.(1) liS Dear Jolin Kirk
makn 1111 move on a widow,
~-

but hU 1o Clll John lor help.
(R)Q

. ""'·"'

BARNEY

ID:OO ()) 700 Club

e ()) iiD L.A. LAw Grace

I'LL JUST TAP
SNUFFY'S CORN

SQUEEZ.IN'S

meets Kuzak'l IX•wlle,
whom lit never loki her

AN' MAKE
THEM

about. (R)

DISAPP~R

eorv-

e

~=-"'

1101111 oc 1111 111011 ecclalllled
lnta,.lewi.Q

ellll IIIIFIIBY Millar
1111-*'11 .....

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

·'

. .,,,..

lui.- lo opur .cone~ n.,.today and
lhllll just what well
n1111ed In your
auoctetiOnl with olheN. Good lhing1
will
tranllllre
Cram
your
cooper811Wnlll.
Alllll (. . . . 11-Aprll11) Take pride
In -flhlng you do today, _ , your
moat nomlnll tlllct. Gretlllclltlon ll1d
-nga of Hll-wortlt .,. enhanCed 11Y
e.idllrce of gooc1 _,.,
TAUIIUI (April• " r ., EJopkJAI In

be

lind, OH 44101-3428.
LJUA (..,._ 2.1 OoL :Ill) You'l perform
mont ehellvll)/ K left to your own de-

vt..today, Remove ,ourlllt lram OUI·
llde ~ Of d - k n lind do
what needl doi:'L'~~~·
ICOIIPIO (Oct.
• 21) Your pree. - w11 be cen 111&lt;1 ycu'l 0t1•ate a
lilt ol activitY - ' - you go today.
Your -~ tor ln. will allmulale _ ,
1'- whO IRielltafGIC Of unlniPired.
IAQITTAMII (Nor. 21 11M 11) n
IIIIOUid be r8llllr auy tor you to ttand In
thewtnnar'ldldeloday. AUyou~to

greetardelllla-'Ufeyou're~dy
conttmplallng. You IlPPI• to on the
rCghl treck and w1t11 a little
lhOUght, ycu could lura. ntlnlriiiM lilY

e111 Landini' 11e11
01 LMdlnCI Greg lalla
for Plkle; Karen lea.
Lotul Point. (R) Q
10:311 (I)IHIIA DN1t Ruing
Ga-y NadOnlla from St.
L0u11. MO (T) Oa-y
Nalionlla (T)

be

be,._

CAIICIR (.luM11.......,tll Don't
IUGianlto dii"M wltll CICIItrlloday In-

,...... 11181 n

imp01 1*11 to

yau.

.Oft ....

11:00 ()) MDVII: The lplrll 0111.

Loult 13:001

•

.

.

&lt;ll dl

·=. .

·=

Gil

(I)""'

ACROSS

SOU'JH

....

.KQ1074S

.AK1065
tJ5

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: Soulh

2.

Soo..
••

West
p...

Nor..

2.

PUI
Paaa

4+•

4NT

5 ...

Eul
p ...
p...
p ...

s•

Allpus
•splinter bid

••two IK'el plus heart queen
Opening lead: t A
leads a beart to dummy's jack. A tblrd
club can be ruffed wilb declarer'llasl
heart, and a spade is lhen led to dummy's ace. Now tbe queen of hearla can
take West's last trump, and dummy's
clubs will be good after tbe ace II
CliBbed. Tbere will be no-need for lhe
spade suit to spUt, slllce declarer will
bave enoll«b tricks for lhe contract.

45 Theatrical

1 Gallantry

go-between

DOWN
1 Urn
Shl

&amp;Rex

· ·
Harnson
s

1

2

title

r ey
Temple's

9 Old
· meeting

first mate

place

3 Henry Cabot

10 Great
Lakes

4 -pro
nobis

cargo

Ye1lerday'1

Answer

5 Kind

12 Egyptian
ol wheel
statesman
6 As of now
3 Deadly
1
Work
7 Authnr
15
)A•vin
unit
Tea variety 8 Holder
18
181sland (Fr.)
of a gold

20 Nerd

29 Davis's

23 Perambulator
general
24 Wood-care 31 He beat
29 Down
prod u ct
25 "Kiss Me
32 Existent
Kate"

38 Solar disk

19 Anesthetic
211nlet (Sp.) 11
22 Moisten
23 Famous
· Quaker

watch
.
composer
Kansas Clty26 Fast
141ncllned
month?

17 All-

up

plan

27 JapaneSE~
delicacy

37 Conlined
39 German
article
41 Be. a
kvetch

24 Nautical

. pole
27 Pick up

the check

21 Exactly
Grazing

ground

30Umb
31 Planl cell

33 "Give
-rest!"
(abbr.)

Slurp
31 ;!.!"1~~~ac:cl"
35

In-+-+-

40Combine
42Picnlc
spoiler
43 Plunder
44 Crlescroes

DAILY CRYP'I'OQV(Jf~- Here's h«&lt;W to work It:

11131

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hintS. Each day the code letters are different.

ellll ArMnlo IIIII AI :00)

11:01&lt;1liiOYIJ: PIUIMr AtlaCII

(1:45)

lilT_..._

&lt;Ill :a:·.
!Ea.011L

n:aoe())

You

1

(0:30)

~,.=1:;1

U::t~~--

~

MndOWI,';"

.-

(T)

. I

CRYPTOQUOTE

.,

I·SI

IIJ
Vloe
• WIJI COl *i

vida you w1111 a dynamlo oombll\aiiCIII
. today. Bumn, • Wll • rwiOIIIII
' gain, n
. mn tllan.,IQIJ.
. . ....
- -·~

(I) •

GNnl

aiiCIUidbeablato-~101'
c• • ,...,,.,
yaur Idea IIICI win lhll ' IPPI ~~~ ycu
::"bec::-u::n::~:ou·~ ;:",....,IN.. Ill Ambition and
theN Ia no need lor you ID be Mrful ol lfMGinaiiCin, propll\f cllalll It I PfO-

tlllllllpg to ....,...,. yaur ... 1..-.tl
todiW M kq • yau dOii'IIIM advMgga ofolhelt.lno'lllllltNI wll pr I d lOt ....
. . . . ,..,... TMnclto patOII up a two- Ihalll. iillllllnG conc1m- work tO your
kin . IOIIIIIIOt?. fill ~ bentiiL
II ill IIIIF _ , llllp you to uncllt- PIICU (M. • " .. . . ,. Tlloughl·
.
llland wiiBI Ia. do
1
'
.to make
. . ..lila r!llaiiOfi.

tKI08t2

.KJ2

·by THOMAS
. JOSEPH .

Oai!IA~I lna!Md. 1;1
ellll.....,....,

be

111d•.._.,....,tolleclevoledloday to dolnCI t111nga tor you kM.
Your ~~otWiftlto 11 Ia edmlteble· ll1d
y01r .noru w11 be'tm.oiiW.

.7

tAQ973
.Q14S

CROSSWORD

Hanllt dacldel lo return 10
England, but hteda tor ·

rtlk111Mihed.

you
You'l ~ mn aaiiW In the 11M" · CUIIGOMI (Dia. Ill •
11) Know!IMad In ll1lklng major diiiiiOnl 11111 tdglto ~ you11
•P onrttoday
wlltruly . . . . jaur lite. Tlllngl you.,... wii!Mka a dalp 1noPi 1 IIICII on ycu .nd
¥loully GillY tlioullttl aiiOUI doing . . you'INI*'IIIe-rallllraiiiiY- Willi
you 11am w11 be put to OOII8IniCIM
- · put 11110 IIIOIIon.
WIIO (MI. • 1111' B) Thn " -later.
.
llOlNIID wniiiD wllll baing - ' I W ll1d AQW111N1
Some 1m-

••
••u

.J982

(!) MlltlrpiiOIT'hMire .

- • (-IIWIIM., Your 1111nc1

doiiMiyourllgldaonulngularobJICu.. thalli o1 prlmlty ~to

EAST

WEST

340ne ol435

Moyarlrecallo hlghilghll of

c-.

t6

.AI09765

North's jlllllp to four diamonds was
a splinter bid. It llbowed a singleiOn di·
amoad plus four-card support for
hearta, the lalt suit bid by Soulh. ADd
it also implied slam IDtere~~t. When
South aaked for aces. lhe five-spade
reapoaae llllowed two aces plus tbe
qu«lll of the apeed-apoa trump suit
. - UDIIte traditional !'ellpoasel to
Blackwood.
Aallllt six bearts, West led tbe ace
of c!l'aii!OIM!s. U Weal falls to contiDue
dlamolldl, declarer cau pitcb a dla·
monel on dummy'• ace of clubs, draw
three rounda of trumps IUid then play
a~. Even tbotiab spades do not
apUI,_a spade cau be ruffed ID dummy
and the rest of the spadel will be good.
But wbat about wben West playa a sec·
ood diamond? Now declarer must ruff
1D dummy and the band letJ tricky. U
declarer playa two I'OIIIIda of hearts
rigbt away and then plays ace and
kill(l of spades, . West will ruff. But
there II a way for declarer to IIIICceed.
Mter nilfiD&amp; the aeconcl round of dl·
amoods, declarer sbould ruff a club
blgb and lead a low l!eart to dummy's
nine. Tben be.ruffa a second club and

(!) Moyera: A laconcl Looll

_ ; , _ _ _ _ _ _ ohlp work. Melt 112 to Metchmaker, clo
lhiii'MIMP•I*• P,.O. Bo~ 91428,

1-ll·lt

.QJ94

By Jamet Jaceby

29

W Auto Racing
CIIallngl SerieS from
BrazeltOn, GA (T) Corvette
Challenga SerieS (1)
'
(I)
Cl) Piln411mt Uve
Willi Slm Donaldlon &amp; Olane

__,.,.

1

Q • .

Myiiii'JII Pennyfatlter'o

dlsappaarence BMmlto be
connected 1o Gorman's

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANO
Uncondltlon•l llfllthne gu•ruttee. L~ rwlerenon fumlahld.
FrM ••tlm•ln. C.ll collect 1·
614-237.()488, day or night. R o
gereBaaement
Wallrprccllng.

Mow:t:

From Loa Angetea, CA

(I) • (I) Mlulon:
Imp II IIIII I Can the IM Force
stop a h - n computer

.. .'

Services

i8lllp GFMd

(T)

·'

_ _ _:::::::;:=

II

Willi Dlnall
8:011 (I) MOYII!: ll.nte 01 The

wfchrom• cente,.. and beluly' · ....
ringa, tlzt 5x51/2a15 lnchta. ...:
304-682·3401 or 304·773-NN.
: • ·
'
POOR BOY TIRES, 304-1713331, lronl ond tllnmonl $1U5f
'
4,000 good · uood llroo, um
tlra, ntw tlru.
·

1978 CMvy Nova 8 cyl. Run•
tint, good tire•, exc. tr•n•por· Fetty Trea Trlramlng, •tump
AKC Regl•t•r•d mill Baa"g l•. 1 tatlon. $250.
removal, Clll304-175-1331.
yr. ald. ·a..utlful confirmation.
Good prospect. 160. 614·84• 1977 Buick L• Sabr•, low Marka 9ldlng •nd Aoof!nsl, F,..
. mileage, 301 V-8, cruise, good Eatlmat••, 304·'773--1111• .
2543.
AKC registered o.a.mai1Dr1 llreo, 304-678-17611.
f.upplea born Aug 1, 3 main a. 4 1979 Mont• C1rlo air cond, will Ron'• TV Service, •.-aW::.S
In Ztnhh Oloc Mrvlclng
·
•m•IM, $200. each. 304-882· tradt tor smaller 1uto c1r In other b,..ndt. HouM Cllfl, 11M
some IPPIIIncl Npalra. WY
288::76''---:--:--:-:---:--:-~ ,Uood cond, 304-67S.7649.
::.
-o
304-5'711-23111 Ohio 81 ,.._
AKC; male mlnl•ture plncher 2 U71
Oldamoblll
Custom
yr. ~d. Obedience lralned. Crul11r. 4 door atatlon wagon. 7 2454.
Chomplcn Slrad. $&lt;400. 614·251- ~asstnger. Uke new, full power, ·Rotary or cable tool *llllng.
6021 .
·
9,000 mlloo. $1995. 614-11112- MootwolltccmplolodNmo::l:
Pu'"j ••tn •nt .-vlce.
Dragonwynd· Cattery K•nnel. 6719.
Persian,
Slameu
llld 1960 Pcnllac Grond l'rlx, gOod I :;:81::,5=-.102:=-.,..--,--Himalayan klttont. Chew olud
SWEEPER and uwlng mochlno .
614·····3844 1 ft er 7 ccnd, $1 ,200. 304-&amp;75-71S8.
Hrvlc
1980 Pontile Satfart Station l'ePilr, part•, lnd tuppU.., Pick
p
:,
:•::,:·m;.·-:--:--:-:,.,--:-:--~ W1gon. 11500. 614446-2624. up and delivery, D1vlt Vacuum
C._r-..r, one h•lf mile up • . 1
Fish Tank, 2413 J•cll:aon Ave. Run• good, looks f1lr.
Georgn CrHk Rd. 814-446- '
Point Ple1aant, 304~75-2083, 10
.
I
g1l ut up S14.H and 10 g11 1982 Buick Regll, 2 dr., ve, 0214.
1ulo, cruiH, AM!FM et•reo ca•
complttl 14_3.25.
'
Httt, tin whtel, power win- S.pllc T1nll: Pu-.l_ng $tO 0.1111 • · ·
For ule. 2 Blue Dutch Rabbitt, dowo. Geed ccndlllcn. $2,100. Co. RON EVANS ENTERPIIIBE$, ' : .· • '
m•le. Great for 4· H proJ•ct Gr 614-44&amp;-e706.
Jockton, OH 1-100-137--. · •. ~;
pat•.I14·H5-3110.
Plumbing &amp;
·-~
For Sill. Whltl, New Ztaland 1982 Mazda RX7. saoo. &amp;14-992· 82
6848 attar 6:00 p.m.
Robblls.l14·94"2835.
..
1982 Plymouth Rtllonl, 4 cyl.,
Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Gnoom and Suppl~ Shop-Pol •uto, 96,000 mlle1, new p•lt, IX·
AND HEATING
Grooming. An broocto. Allolyloo. t•rlol' 11c. lnt•rlor, v.ry goad,
l1m1 Pet Food Dl•ler. Julie 34 mpg, mut t Ml to appreciate.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Wobb. Caii814-441-G231 .
614-448-8760.
Galll~~=i OhiD
Flore
Call
114-446~
or 114-446, $4,300. AC, Cruise, 4477.
Choice m•l• AKC Ngletered 1984
Bugle, 4 112 month, air ahots, AM-FM caaaatta, till wh••!, PI,
roaay 1c lroln, 1100.00. 304-871- •uto, 304-675-1331.
84 Etactrlcal &amp;
61184.
.
1984 Ford 4 door In good conRefrigeration
Pupploo IO&lt; Sale: ISO. Roglo- dhlon. $1100. S. at 132 Butt•·
1erld Chow !lnd ,..gletared 6or- nut, Pomeroy, OH.
Aeeidantlal
or aommtrc:J.I
dor 1orrlcr. 7 wko. old. 114-24151157.
11185 Chryolor Now Ycrltor, gcccl wiring, new HrVfct or ,.Ira.
Llconood illoCirlclon. R ohapo lcoclod, 304-'75-2722.
Whit'• 110 dut.,..,.. eboUI the .
Eioclrlcal, 304-675-1,711.
11185 ~ Arioo, 2 door oodan,
Happy Jtck 3-X FIN Ccllor???
tt WOrh•lll Now IVIIIIbl• for PBIPS, :Jf,ooo mlleo. Exc. ccnd. _85 General Haulln. g
colo loclll R &amp; G Food &amp; Supply 814-141-401111 allor4p.m.
31111 W Moln Ill., Pcm.oy.
11185 Ford Muolana GT. 5.0, 303 J • J Wa1ar Strvlco. Swimming
poote, cl•t•,.,., ....._ c.n 11c;.
Whot'o oc dlll...nr obol'l lho onglno. T-Tcp, AIC, oil · 245-11215.
.
Hoppy Jock 3·X Flu Collar?? H 614-811-44V7.
WOrkafl Naw IVallabll tor Clll 11118 Chovn1lol Spoctrum,. a R &amp; R Wtl• 8ontfco. Paolo, cbtccll 8klwtll Cooh Food J D docn, rid, 5 lpttd, tow wn11t1 tam•, weiiL lmmldll•1,000 or
NorthPrild-.
drive, 47,000 mlloo, ono ow nor, 2,000 gollono dollvwy. CoN 3Qol.
-..cmlcol 41 mpg, tz,IIOO. 8114370.
,
fi7
Musical
3044t:W2GO.
W.nonon'o W.tw Hli~lllirt. ·· '
Instruments
11111 S.10 Bllzor, 4wd rod 6 ~ rotJO, ........ Ill' ' ·
black, oil optlono1 IXCIIIInl -nto, 2,000 lo •,000 ........ ' · '
Bundy AHa - - $&lt;400. condhlon, aldng tMSO.
814- clatwne. 1100111. wllll, It&amp; Cl1 {'
Bundy 1rumpol 1121. Both oxc 446-11384.
.::.304:..:.,:-&amp;:;,:11-:.:H::..:;1111:;,.
· _· - - - - ,
ccnd. Table whh 1 choft 304871-1771.
' 1V87 cavollor
24, lcodad, '67
Upholstery
: ;: ,
•
'Individual
guHar
lt-n• $V,50CI. 304-671-41824.
Uphrl.,l";; ••••
!loll In~, Hrlouo gUIIIrill: 1117 Ford T1unm ilherp. blue,
8 runlclircM
MuM,
Jett Outcmollc,_PS, P~ _oNIH, IIH, ;t!ng ~=-'=- .J!Iro.. '.
·Wol!lolOY lnolruclor, 114-446- AC, AMIFIR. 114-...-3710 814- uphololoring. Col :104-i7;:4~" ·''
8077, Unillod -lngo.
~388:.:...:-3.:.24:.:0:....----~- .

I.

/

.

1987 Dodge LE van, 30,000
mlln, Untld glatl, ·10.pautnger, ICOdod, $8,700. 304-6715520.

VldiDCoultli

e

.

Notn'll

.A5

A clever
alternative

7:01 (I) """" Clrll1ltll
7:30 (J) Family Feud
Cll Spulh! ttk Highlights of

,.

1985 Do9 Car1van SE. 41,000
mllas1,AC, very good conclhlcn.
AM·FM lltraO. 614-11112-1681 or
614-1192-3714.

BRIDGE

111 """" Grllna.
IIJMylitleriMI

.. ·. ·
..,. ' ·

1984 Dodo• cu.. om Yin. II too · ·
mllao, 19,000. 1974 SN §lOr .: :
Boet, 70 harat out baird, $3,000. .:. . •
1968 Troutwood Compor, $11100. .
1969 Chevy Clmero, 17,000 •c·. ~
1UII Jnlloo, 12,000. Coli 614-742·• . ~ ,
2578oft• 6:00.
-

75 Boats

people have a great lr;J.me of mind and no PICTURE? ''

••••'a••

•

I

DOHEFO

PRINT NUMBERED

'-=-l~Laagtra
:"liM! 01
• &lt;Ill

:

Salesman in tackle shop, " I

LETTERS IN SQU"RES

NeWIIIot•
, ··
'.

~

lhe chuckle q ucled
bv fill ing in the missi ng wards
l ·-.L-..I.-..L-.1-.1--' you d~vtlop
from step No. 3 .be low.

Ill .Ill C8l _.,.
e &lt;Ill ~ C01olaallon
G lhowll&amp; Today
Ill . I a -..

&amp; 4 WD's

1975 JHp.. CJ5, nitw tlrM, ..W
mullltr, $17SO. 114-446-4141. a~
ttr 6 or on w.ekendl.
1982 Ford E-250 . ven, 14,000
mllet, 16 tt Squirt Sttm Lowe
1tumn canoe, good cond,
$250.00 linn. 304-&amp;75-20311 oflor
5;00 Pll._ _ _ _ _ _
.:.,;.c_;;;;

74

DucU ·for S.la:.614-446-011t.

For S.la • Concrete •nd Plastic
uptlc tanke'. All elz... RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
aon, OH. 1..S00-637·e28.

73 vans

,.

lrs-+l..:.;.-I:....rr...;_lr--1

AIMI1Can ...., ...
1:01 (I) Alii»

0111 ..

I~=·==·==-=-==-~..~
SAIDY

IIJ C8IIOOn ll!ltprHa

•

w (!) Mactlll/ ~

z

I

1

• &lt;Ill HiPIIr O.,a
Ill ..liCit Of Ufe

~=~""'1:;1
(!) :1-2-1
.

.

&amp; Acreage

tN1 ~,."' 112 lb. lab•c• belt ·

...

1976 Ford F700. Cob OVor, Cob
•
ond Cha-, 3111· onglno, I ' ·
apMd, with 2 1pe1d raar end.
114·742·2511.
11177 Ford F-350. Autcmo11c, air
.cond., PS, PI, $650. 614-'~
2812.

· lor calf. Call eft., &amp;p.m. 814.44&amp;.
302S.
86 ln. Tr~~dltlonal 110fa, chair,
ATTENTION
Hor1e OWner~,
Thomasville Coff11 llbl•. Uke
Paint
Plut
11
now
carrying tick.
new. All tor 1400 or will ••It
Paint PLUI, 2415 J•ckeon Av1.,
aeparately; 614-44&amp;-0413.
Jel 13x38 lathaa In stock •upar Point Pleasant, phone 304-67520.1 cu ft chlol 1ypo deep Hll prlc'e $3,095. Blue Rldga 4084.
freezer, axe cond, 304-882~2258. Machinery •nd Tooll, 304·562· Baby Pigmy goats, 7 weeki old,
3538.
Clllaher 5:00PM, 304·773-518i.
6 Tell Chy dining room chllrt, ·
Quun Ann tylle. solid mahog· L.rg• metal dask, chlllr, $150; Hall TenMaa•• Walk111r and half
ney1 fabric teats, very n:lce, $50. C1'81fttman 12" tlbl• new, •c· Quarter hor&amp;l, Gelding, 1.100
cntortee, 1750; H~da 125'' 3
eacn. 304-675~1504 .
wh..e 1750 new; 14" drill preu lbs, 1600. 304-175-4312.
County Applia nce, Inc. Good 112" cap. $150; 85 H.P. Mere, Raglsttrltd Corrledala Ram. 3
used appll•ncn, T.V. 1e11. Open Exc. cond. 11500. 114-446-3681 yaara old. $125. 814·992-7802.
a a.m. .to 6 p.m. Mon.-s... 614- 114~46-7385 aft•r 7p.m.
446-16991 , 627 3rd. Avo. Gal·
Regl1t1red purebred Llmousln
Wash•r, *Y•rt couch, chair, bull, 4 yr1 old, WI. approx 2,000
llpollt, Ot1
hld••WIIY bla, swivel roek1r, lb.l1,800. C::ullen Umousln, 304·
For Sale: 25" color T.V. exc. twin bed, •prlng~, melt*•• 895-3577.
working cond. $300. 2 HI wooden dinette Ht. 814-446washer &amp; dryer, exc. cond. 614- 3224.
Hay &amp; Grain
64
446-3548.
Whaelchalre - new or u11d. 3
Frlgld•lrt Electric R1ng1. AI· whHlad electric ecooter. Clll Ear" Com. 304-675-4308.
mond. 614-992-5083.
Rog•" MacUcel, 1-BD0-888-2104.
Round baln1 exc q_uallty, gr111
GE 17.2 cu fl. whl .. r•frlgaratar Woodbumer $125; pony with and Allllfa J18 • 125. Morgan
wlice maker, 4 yra, 3D4-&amp;15-537S colt fQr $150; wooden cabln•t Farm, R1. 35, Pliny, 304-f37·
ahor 5:00 PM.
2018.
135. 814·241-5467.

1 oc
_ ra.......
1o1o 71-2722.
Golllpcllo F~
.....
_,,,, ell•I

•

1974 Chtvy pick-up, 3110 onglnl.
Autcmallc. l14-251-17311.

;:
Buy or atll. ~lvtrlne Antlq~.~ea,
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Two trailer apacet, Route 1 Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
Locuat Road on right, 304-&amp;75- p.m., Sunday 1:oo to 8:00 p.m.
&amp;14·1112·2528.
1076.

Aporlment ltcuoo lor oole In
Pomttay, AI molar ..,. 1, 0
doni. HI,SOO. 814-M·7204.

35

!Zl . . . . Tllne ltllllonl;l
Rt Ulna llalnllow Q

VES, ALWAV5 TRV TO
REMEMBER WI-IAT FLOOR

I

PUSHTY

NIFL'r

ttoma Run Dllllr

(!)

DO 'l'OU HAVE ANV ADVICE
FOR '(OVN6 DOCTORS AND
NURSES AS THEV 8E61N TO
WORK IN A HOSPITAL'?

loti.,. of tile

lj
i
I ll'r1.

GNftl

Cll.lpaFIICI- (0:30)
W • (I) CUrrwnl AIIU

LAYNE'S FURNITURE ·
Sofa• •nd chalre priced tram
$385 to $895. Tablet $50 and up
to $128. Hld•a-bodo 1390 lc
$595. Aecllnera 1225 to $375.
Lampe $28 to $125. DIJM~tn
$108 and up lo $495. Waod
loblo w·B choln $265 1~ $7118.
Disks $145 up to 1375. Hutchn
$400 &amp; up. bunk bad• compll(l
with. m•nresa $295 an~ utt to
$395. baby badt $110 Maureeaes or box springe full or twin
$78, llrm $88, and $81. OuHn
1111 $275 &amp; up, King $3SO. 4
drawer chtst $69. Gun Cablnlta
6, 8,· &amp; 10 gun. Baby mllttre•ttt
$35 &amp; $0. Bod lromu $25,
DuHn Size $35 • king frame
$50, Gcccl oolocllcn ol l&gt;tdrccm
1uhe•.
mat•l
cabln.. t,
hN.dbo•rd• $30 •nd up to $65,1
90 d.. y• ~me •• c..h with •P~roved credit. 3 mi. out Bulavllle
d. Opon 9 A.M. 1c 5 P.M. Mott,
lhru Sal. C.ll614-441!-0322.

1BR untum. apl. R1nge &amp; refrlg.
provided . water, ••wage, garbale, ~ld . Oep. &amp; Alt. 614-4464 3 5,
1br.1 l•rga kitchen, wash-dry
hoot~:up, adults only. No pets.
Total tltctrlc. Call 614-146--6627
h 6
1-• -•r....:.p_.m_.- - - - 2 bedroom •partmanl, Mid·
dle~rt.
Partially fuml•h1d,
Ulllitlq not lr"K:Iuded. Deposit
requlrltd. $175.00 per month, In·
cludn gerbage. 1-614·992·2381
days.

I

I .

lplu ~~~

1972 Ford short whltl ~~. whitt lpobd whHitl, dUll II• hautt, ~1,000. 304-615-2457.

C) 1..8 b~ NEA. Inc.

•

•()) w e&lt;JJ a ec
Cll

lAIII

'"'" ocramblod wardo belOw •lo form four ~mplo words.

8:00 ()) llonanza: The Loat

....

••••

O locrrango

e&lt;JlPMMID •lne

for

I

!V!NIHG

11•-·:•:

72 Trucks. for Sale

THURS.. AUG. 3

8:31 w

Goods

~r~~:-n::,.~~=~~~d~~~u:~h:~~

Tho
AC11onGaiii•M•IG!
Agou&gt;:y, P.O.CommuniiY
Box 272,
8
&amp; Auction
Choohlro, Ohio, 45120, hos •job
opening In th• Job Tr~ln ng
w. VI. St•t• · Chlmplon Program (JTPA). The position
raqulret~ • MA Dear• (prefer"'•uctione.. Rick p ursan, 11cln· red),
BA required, rn COUHIIng
Hd In Ohla 1nd w... Vkginle. or tHtlnv. AbUity to deliver I""
Book.lng Aucttona, 30(-773- house asanement prognm to
:57:;:8:8·--------1 JTPA panlclpoma. M..l hove.~
factlv1
gi'oupllndlvldu•l 1978 14x70 Elcona loc1ted on
counHIIng skllla. Dutitt will ln- Sl.t1 Rt. 'NO, "'" Mercerville,
9 Wanted to Buy
rlco -•uc·• 10 $7500"1'2••
Compll!itl houHholda of fur· cludt tMifng end Interpretation. P
f9U
~
u --11177or814-251-11128.
nlluro • ontlquH. Aloe wccc1 &amp; Ccuroo wcrlt In looting loclwllcoal hut.._ lw•ln'a Fumlturl .qun end couRMIIng nqulred.
178 8
,__
Must hav• r•llabl• transpor· 11ftll t~eyv- 14x65, 2 br., 614I Auction, Thi rd &amp; Olive, 114- lallcrL Thla lo a lulltlmo.btnolft 379-212e.
4414151.
-Hion. Appllcollons con ba
·
,......
1171 Clllrmant 3 bedroom, Ht·
fumlt..,. •ncf •ppUenc• by lh' obtillr-..d It lht C.A.A.'a up ranted lot, 304-675-1082.
piece or entire houuhold. F•lr Chathlr• office, ot mallltd to in-Orlca51.• baing paid. C.lll14-446- lomlod lndlvlduolo. FO&lt; mort 11182 Nnhuo 14x'l!l1 2 room ••·
~151
Information, c.n 11,..317·73•1 pando. 11c-t4&amp;-01t&gt;U.
Of' 114-112-882;1. W. are an E· ·
Junk Ca,.. with moto,.. $50 &amp; qu11
Employment!Afflrmatlvt 1H3 Triumph, 14x00, 2 bid·
down. wlo molol"', $25 I down. Action tmptoy•r. Appllcltlont room•, 1 'A bltht, central air,
Rlchlrd Glorge, 814-381-tot5.
will be accepted thru September w•aher/dryer; 8x10 deck, un·
8 111111
dorplnnln~. Vtry!J:ood ccndlllcn
or w••-•
Junk CO.. W"h
n
'"""'""- -.·_::;~·;......,--"-:-:::-:--:-:::-~
on r.nte lat.
..&amp;75·2047 or
mclort. Coli Lorry Llvlly 614- Tho Molgo Local School Dlolrlcl 114-387·7120.
388::::·::9::30::3:...
. - , - , - -- - - lie -king quollflod 1.pllconto 1981 Aidman Stcllonal 28'x56'
for the po~Jitlon of Rea er Guide
Qui".
tor 1 va.UIIIy handlc.DOed 3br., 2 bath, CIA, musr bl
Pre 1940 qulltl. Any condition. student .ttanclng Buckeye.HIII• moved. 614-446-8594 ahtr e.
C.oh Pokl. C.U 114-11112·5657 or Jolnl Yocollonaf Scheel. lmor- 1H7 Danville, tol•l electric
814-&amp;112· 2461 .
ootid porecno oltculd ccnlocl 14x7D, h111 pump, 3BR, 1·112
---•
11
11
!d
rtcr
0.. R. Cho~.. Hcllldoy o1 114- b.. h. 614445-9244 1nytlm1,
1
R~• ng ... or or, •
742-3113 or 814-11112-21S3. 'IIIIo 245-86n lfttr 8.
roofing_,
concret• -ttlon naltda to be flllld 1mpainting.
Work, lloctrlcol • piiORblng. ~­
1111 CLOSEOUT SALE. Wanl a
Exp. Hta refarw~cn. Plus• call macll•tllly.
Luxu'3 Hom• tor the prlea of 1
•"" sp.m.a1c--..nu.
w.~...: Lady toa:~•J wtth .... plain enl? Check our 14x72, 2
bedroom, Island tub model,
TOP CASH ptld fot 1983 modal =~hl~orr;~nc!~ntl. Frpchmy-_ac,.00
al llterao,
paddle fin, deiUJI c•r·
tnd newer uald c:arw. Smith
•
Buk:k~PontlK, 1111 Ea..•m untO 1:00 WHk ·~ Sand ~ and mirrored wardrobe
Av•., Galllpolll. C.ll 814441- "'•""" to: Tht Dll~ Stntlnel, doortl.
••• •
11 ••oo
1nc lud H
2212.
Box 7211(), Pcmoroy, H.
dtllvt7 and Ht up, plus cen1r11
olr on vinyl tkl~lng, lnollllod.
Uood lumftwo and ltcuHhcld 12
Situation
CI111-800-721-4045.
..~-..o
' " " ' ' -· Phcno 114-742·
wanted
Lo rg• Hltct lcn o homea.
2041.
8,10,12 and 14 wide.
' Price ffom
UIMI tumlture by the place or Have 4 room In my home tor 'tl· $300 lc $81100.1 -800-7211-4045.
entire hout•holcf 11110 a~llng. derly nMdlng care. Reatonlblt.
MHR MOBILE HOMES •·- uo
In POmeroy. 114-11112·7204.
814·742-2455.
lor tour •-~en
used home,
OH 6 Rt.
.. ...23
We care for tlderty •nd h•n-- Soul Pl
w.nr to Bur: uood llobllo dlcapped
•
•
n
..
.u~.
•
In our home. 25 y11rt 2587
H-.014-446-G17S.
•
experience. LPN on call. low
Income home. Call 814-992-6873 REPOSSESSED mobile homn
alngln and double•. We flnan·
.,.., 7:00 p.m. tor more lnfor·
Employment Serv1ces mal len.
eel 800-826-0752. FI'H c111 end
fr• delivery.
15
Schools &amp;
USED MOBILE HOMES Check
!'lelp wanted
11
Ul 11r.t. Good Hlecllon elngl11
Instruction
anddowt.800~28-0752.
1350/Doy prcc•olng pltcno or•
RE-TRAIN NOWI
derst P•ople c111 you. No IX•
1100-826-0782,
part-nc•
ca11 (rafun.. BOIITitEASTERN BUSINESS CASH
W1 buyTODAYI
ueed mobile
homes
2 o!donolon COLLEGE, m Jockocn Plkt. old. ~11. (Ohio onlyJ. Aak lur
diblol1·315·
R
Coli 814-446-4387. Rog. No. 16P.2732A.
11·105SI.
'1·
2 nurH• •ldn, •hoP ctartl~:12x&amp;O mobile homt eome fur·
niU.II'I, lot 001100 la.t lot on Sun
quiN ot Odd• ond Endo
• 18 Wanted to Do
V.ll•y DriYII, re1dy lo mav•lnlo.
Mlddlopor1.
.U ty,_ aoncme wark don•, Priced nogotlcnoblo 814-441AVON I An Aroao I Shlr1oy pllloo, .,._..,, ....... ole. 8005.
,,.... ... 30W75-142V.
814-441-1111 IYenlnge, and
AVON • All orooo, CoN Marilyn 114-4-13 afllm_,o,
33 Farms for Sale
w.... 304-182-2641.
Babyol1tlng In Chrio11on homo.
22 acr. l1rm. 5 mile from GalBabrsm., w•nted, In my home. Aal. I cloycort txp. Rodney VI~ llpollo on blacklop rd. 814-446llge
I,
cell
1ft•
3p.m.
114-245114~45-113111 coli oftorlp.m.
2605.
1252.
Ccuploo ond lndlvlduolo
By OWnor. Bu11C41 Rd. 235 ocroo
bU1fnen of your own. Loc .. Chlldcar11 In my home. Clun a mil. One of tht beatloeltlontln
loving
envlranm.nl.
R••.arlabte
Amwoy dlotrla.. .. _ ... you·
Gallle Counly. Gcccl producing
lor oplan6l _.unity. 814- ,..t-. CMU~Irw .,... 114-317· finn, houu, bulldlnp. Muat
0115V.
11112·7111
... to •pprecllte. 114-440-4281.
EARN MONEY lloodlng bocko1 llloo Poula'o Doy Coro Conlf!'.
130,000/YI'. lncoMo oolontlol. Solo, oHordable, chlldcara. M·' 34
Business
Dotsllo '(II -40Cf0 E/d, Y· J o.m. • 1;30 p.m. 214-10.
Buildings
10111.
•
ltlon, oft or ochcof. Drvp-lno

Eom ittonoy lyplng 11 homo. W~IIC~o!mo.~~~~~~4~4M~~~4~~:::
I30,0GC)iyMr ootontlol Roof polnflng I -lnglrlnller
dllollt, (1JIONI7'-IOOO Eol. .: ......,
bamo, oo _.
1101.
t-.t1447N320.
loOJ Worfll hooflonl Poyl Ae- Will bab¥011 In my homo.
nlible rat-. ,......nc..
- . . . - . . . . . 1 1 -. C.I p
far lnfcirmollon. IOW41o01170 onllablo.
All - · -neiL Caiii14-24H7N.
ElL 312.
cloonlng, aEapwll:&amp; 11d l:todV n.n, ,_.., I Will do -

•

Daily Sentinii-Page-13

TIIAT lAilY
PIUlll

7:00 ()) MOYIE: The lplrll 0111.
Louie (3:110)

51

170,000. 1 48-1137 .
I room hcuoo on Sl. R1. 7,
btl- Raccoon Bridge, 3 balho,
now vinyl oldlng, 3 gorogao en
.011 ocroo. 114-446·1211 or ooo
01rrlh Wltaon, 114 mi. lboYI
Rocc-. Brldgo.
lccuol Rood en rlghl, 304-6781076.
All new 3 tw., home located on
Rt. 160. Priced to move. 614- Unfurnished 2 br., total •lac.
washer &amp;' dryer hook-up. Dep.
388.a711.
roq'd. 1250/mc. 614-388-83111 or
Loa HoUM tor ule by owner, 3 614446-9004.
.
beCiroome, In ground pool,
11tt11ne, blrn on 15 •cr•a.
Apartment
$82,000. on Plain Volloy Read, 44
304-6V5-3868.
for Rent
32

...

Do

S
_
p o n

~

.Television
Viewin~

GOVERNMENT SEIZED VohlciOI
lrom $100. FordL Morco•L
COrvtttN. Chevyl. Surpkl8.
Buyoro Guido H05-N7.-,
ElL ..1011V.
• • •. .
GOVERNMENT SEIZED
lrom $100. Fordo.
Corvoll•. ChtvyL Surpluit • . · ' ·
Buyaro GUido C11 105-117- • - .
Exl. S,.101BV.
·: '·

Rooms

3 a.drOom houH, J•ff•raon
Avo, PI.Pn. 1_300. mcnlh, 304-

·-.. "

11111 Hondo Accord XLI, I
•pMd, toadM, 3()4o.523-9154.

Furnished

AoorM for renr • w.ek or month.
Stirling .. $120/mo. Glllll1
Hotel. 61U48-9580.

Autos tor Sste

11181 GIIC I quorllr 1cn truck •
4it4 1 4 tod., lutl ln)octod. 1110
· •.
Moaol. Sforro FL814-441-2252. • :·· ·.

Toro Tcwnhcuoo Apll, 2 br., 1·
1/2 balho, CA, dlshwoshor, dlopoul, prlv1t1 enclosed patio,
pool , pl1ygraund. Willi', ..Wif,
&amp; trosll Included. Sll~lng II
12111/mc. C.H 814-~7-7150.

1 br., hcun, 1701 ChulnU1 St.,
Stove, refrlg. fum'ltd. $75
dopcoll, $150!mo. l14-14&amp;-~70.

The

.1989

·.:....;:..::::::.:~::..=:.:;,.,,;,..,_

RiQency, Inc. 28R, apt., new
plush c1rpet, new palot,
utllh ln, p•rftally paid. 1175/mo.
Call 304-&amp;7&amp;-&amp;104.

45

41 Houses for Rent

o...

'I

-

Upaltl~ 1 unlurnlsllod apl. Co~
l)lled. NO pall, Inquire •I 300
Fourth Ave.

Rentals

lla~lnaor

Sy...cuse,

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriaht

Twin River• Towlr......Hou•I!'SI for
lhs Eldody, Hanclcappod oncl
tabliah.d. 114:-)81 8318.
Dlubfltd.
Loc1ted
nnr
Wccdland, 132 ocr.., U5,000, dcwnlcwn
Pclnl
Plnoonll
Rt. 7, bltow Eurtkl, Call 614· Dhon• 304-87~711. Equ11
' Houalng Opportunhy.
U&amp;-4411 efler 7 p.m. ·

4

-'111M.

Apartment

Lot and 112, In Village of Vlnlon.
W.ta~
aewaae already. £a.

Aug.n.......z. t:ON:GO. Ill

0104

water.

For a. ..: One aen loll I 5 acre
wccclod let, 7 mlleo Nonh cl
HclzwHcopllal. &amp;14-388-16411. .

I . ................

-1

~Ko~bllo

Clydo/BcWon, Jr. :104-1'711·2338.

Aut- 1111........1. t :ON:GO. 715
-Ciottll-, aurt~~M.
IIC. brt
lolldd1opcM1.
·prc'd-

I·

44

'

... - .

llril'~..roo.

a. Acreage

Thursday. August 31. 1989

Ohio

. for Rent

.,..........._m•t•.W.
- illoiiM": -...:..
•FI

Middleport.

Tl

XS

UXOP
JF

DICOD
DICOD

Hll
GXHJ

JXMJ
JXD

~

I G T

GXTMD

GXAAXCB

U A C Q F

Y--•aw'•

c.w.tDIJI•Gtel NOTHING IS AS HARD
TO DO GRACEFUU.Y AS GE'ITING DOWN OFF
YOUR HIGH HORSE. - FRANKUN P. JONES
C) 19119 Kong Faalllret Syndicate, I,.
l!

•

�I'

14-The Deily Sftinal

Poma-oy-Midcleport, Ohio

*

i

~allstones linked to eating, weight

Computerized pump
has· diabetic promise
BOSTON (UPI) - An expert·
mental' llnplantable Ins ulin
pump controlled by radio signals
and computl!r chips appears to
help some diabetics avoid dally
Insulin ln)ectlons. resear cher s
reported.
The hockey puck-sized device
performed well in the first tests
In humans - a pilot study
Involving 18 patients with Type 1
diabetes published Wednesday In
The New England Journal of
Medicine. ·
·
· "I'm very happy with the
results so far," said Dr. Christopher saudek, an · associate
professor of medicine at the
Johns HOpkins UniVersity School
of Medicine In Baltimore who led
1 tbe study . "It's an approach that
has promise. "
At least 500,000 Americans
have Type 1, Insulin-dependent
diabetes. They do not produce
enough Insulin to ~ control the
amount of sugar in their blood.
Dally lnsull!llnjectlons usually
control the disease but they are
unpleasant, Inconvenient and
often Imprecise, which can lead
to such complications as blind·
ness, kidney failure and nerve
damage.
The 1mplan table pump Is designed to be more conven lent and
more closely mimic the body's
natural sugar-regulating process, Saudek said.
Housed In a disc-shaped Uta·
nlum ,shell, the pump contains a
reservoir of about 2 teas poons
of concentrated Insulin, a 3.6-volt
battl!ry that lasts up to five
years, a radio ·receiver and
computer chips.
The pump is Implanted under
the skin In the abdomen with a
' . 7-lnch tube extending Into the
abdominal cavity, where Insulin
Is released .
The device releases Insulin on
a regular basis phis at additional
times, such as just before a meal,
at the prompting of a radio signal
the diabetic sends with a trans·
mltter: The reservoir Is reflled
every two months with a needle.
In the study, the device ap. peared to adequately control the
blood sUgar levels of recipients at
Johns Hopkins and the University of California-San Diego for
an average of 18 months.
One pump was replaced be·

Thursday, August 31, 198S:

Women's Hospital ·In Boston ·
examined Information on a bout
88,837 women ages 34 to 59
participating tn the Nurses
Health Study, a contln~lng project begun In 1976.
The researchers compared the
diets, weight and alcohol consumptlon of the women who
developed gallstones that . produced symptoms, or had their
gallbladders removed, to those
who did not from 1980 to 1984.
The more the women weighed
the greater their risk for developlng gallstones, the researchers
found, with obese women being
six times more likely to deveiop
them.
The relationship existed even

and cholesterol that· can cause
pain or infections If they block
gallbladder passages.
Previous studies found a11
cause of a faulty computer c hip
association between obesity and
while the Insulin tubes on iour
other patients' pumps were
an Increased risk tor gallstones.
The new study Is the largest of its
blocked by tissue growing
around them. In two cases the
kind · and the first to show a
·
The
first-of-a-kind
study
of
lubes were cleared but two
relationship between gallstone
patients dropped out because of nearly 90,000 nurses around the riSk and moderate excess
country found the risk for gall· weight.
the problem.
" I'm ve ry satisfied with the stones appears to Increase with
Although researchers are unresults," said Saudek, He added, caloric Intake and Is elevated sure why excess weight and
however, more tests on more even If a woman Is just slightly caloric Intake would Increase the
chances dt gallstones, they ,bepatients for lpnger periods are overweight.
The study, published Wednes- lieve those factors may alter the
needed before the device Is made
day In The New England Journal balance between bile acid . and
widely avaiJable. .
·
The pump w11s developed at of Medicine, also confirmed cholesterol, Maclure said.
Johns Hopkins and manufac· previous reports showing moder·
For the study, Maclure and his
tured by MlniMed Technologies ate alcohol .c onsumption was . colleagues at the Brigham and
associated with a decreased risk
ln.Sybnar, Calif.
for
gallstones .
Dr. Donald Simonson, an as·
''The
Implications are that If
slstant professor of medicine at
you
are
reducing
your weight and
Harvard Medical School and
caloric
Intakecutting
down
on
head of cltntcal resear-eh at -the
and
drinking
alcohol
moderately
Joslin Dl abetes Center In Boston,
said the . find i ngs are - you are probably reducing
your risk _of gallstones," said
encouraging.
Malcolm
Maclure, an asslsJant
"It's a nice advance. This
professor
of epidemiology at the
paper shows the pump cal'l be
Implanted internally and tunc· Harvard School of Public Health
tlon for prolonged periods of · who led the study. "It's basically
time. It allows the patient not to fUrther support for being Jean. "
have to stick themselvs multiple
But Maclure noted that the
times a day," he said.
study does not support moderate
Simonson noted, however, that alcohol consumption by women
the patients still have to monitor because previous studies have
their blood sugar levels and linked that to a possible In·
make periodic adjustments In creased risk for breast cancer.
the pump.
"This not like a pump where
About 500,000 gallbladders are
you can Implant It and forget you removed each year In the United
have diabetes. This requires a lot States because of gallstones,
of work," be said.
which are accumulations of bile
BOSTON (UPI) - Providing
yet another reason for women to
watch their .weight, a major
study Indicated that a woman's
risk for gallstones goes up with
the amount she eats and how
much she weighs .

among women who were just~
sllghty overweight. For exam·,
pie, a ~foot-6 woman · who;
weighed 150 pounds was about .
twice as likely to develop gall· ·
stones as a 5-foot-6 woman whO:
weighed 125 pounds.
.C
The researchers also found a11 :
association between caloric In· .•
take and therlskforgallstones.A :
woman who ate more than 2,000:
calories a day had about twice_:
the risk of a woman who ate half:
that much, the researchers•
reported. .
·
Women who drank the equlval·;

36-13

PICK-3: 450
PICK-4: 8351

Page4

•
•

Vol.40, No.83 M

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
All Meigs Local school em·
ployees , cer-tified , · non-c ertified
and exempt, were given salary
Increases during a special meet·
lng of the Meigs Local Board of
Education Thursday night In the
board office.
Complying with the terms of
the negotiated contract, the
board adopted a salary schedule
for certified employees at the
same Index with a base salary of
$16,590 for the 1989- 90 school
year. This Is an Increase of $890
on the base salary, meaning that
every teacher will receive that
amount or more.
Also adopted was a new salary
schedule for non-certified employees with an· Increase of 43
cents per hour across the board

PEIMONTH•

12 S-lO's IN STOCK

·

*Payment based on sale price of 86650, 8149 down 60 month term Rebate
to dealer.
'
'

Meeting
The Columbia Township board
of trustees will meet In regular
session on Mopday at 7:30p.m. at
the fire station.

A Muh:imedia

2&amp; Conto

Meigs
al employees
given salary

..

S1495 6

2 Sectiono. 16

__ Pomeroy-· Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 1. 1989

11119

S10EL

p.m. All organizations and fire
departments are welcome to
participate.
•

Tonight, showers and thull·
derstorms early. Becoming
.parlly cloudy late. Low 65 to
70. WindS becoming north less
than 10 mph. Chance ol rain 80
percent early . Saturday , becoming mosdy sunny. ffigh In
the lower 80s. ·

eachweekhadabouthalftherlsk:
of ·developing gallstones than:
non-drinkers.

Announcements

Labor Day barheque
The Chester -Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a
chlc~en and rtb barbeque dinner
on Monday (Labor Day) at the
fire house. Serying will begin at
11 a.m. with over 600 halves of
chicken and 130 pounds of spare
ribs to be prepared. A parade will
also be formed at the Chester

Ohio Lottery

entoftwoorthreeglassesofwlne~

Save On .S-10'5 Now at Jim Cobb

Chapman reunion
The fifth annual Chapman and
Myrta Kerwood Hill family reunIon will be held Sept. 10 at
Racine's Star Mill Park. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish for the 1 p.m. potluck dinner.
All relatives and frlepds . a re
Invited to attend.

Notre Dame
tops Va.

~ INERFLOWINO?

effective JulY. 1, 1989, contingent
upon the fact that the noncertified emplOyees receive 14
percent of any ·new money with
the figure :to be adjusted If
necessary. This •action was also
based on the negotiated corltract
with the non-certified
employees.
All E:xempt employees received an Increase of 43 cents-per
hour or 5.67 percent Increase.
The board also approved salary
increases of 5.67 percent for
administrators contingent upon
the fact that this would be eight
percent of the new money received by the district.
The salary schedules were
adopted by unanimous vote with
the exception of the ones ·for the
non-certified and administrators
where the vote was 4-1 with ·

Richard Vaughan passing.
,
A motion from Bob Snowden
seconded by Bob Barton to
transfer $100,000 from the .Insurance reserve Into another fund
was defeated when J eff Werry
passed, and Larry Rupe and
Vaughan voted " no."
The motion was to make the
transfer to lower the premium
for all employees on their Insurance benefits and alsc:i that the
$41,000 paid to the teachers to
reduce their Insurance premium
be In a true percentage reflected
In benefits to the non-certified
employees. The motion was
defeated after some discussion.
. Attending the meeting were
Supt. James Carpenter, Treas·
urer Jane Frymeyer, and Board
Members Vaughan, Barton,
Rupe, Werry. and Snowden.

Jobless unchanged -_ in August

ClEM It Willi
CLASSIBADS
.

992-2156

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The maybe sometime later this
nation's unemplOyment rate re· month the markets could get showed little growth even though
malned at ·s.2 percent In August nervous that the rates are . car manufacturers posted a
and total non-farm employment staying too high," he said. "The substantial gain. The auto Indusrose by 110,000 despite the effects fear that we'll have a recession try added 25,000 jobs, offsetting
of a wave of telephone company down the line because the Fed is declines the previous two
months. Construction employstrikes, the Labor Department going to keep Interest rates too
ment Increased slightly after
reported Friday.
high too long Is going to be posting a large g'!in In July .
The number of new jobs stirred. "
created by businesses other than
ihere were .l84.000 Jobs
Tbe unemplOyment rale of. 5..2
farm• would have- been about createq In July. the bureau said. percent was t11e same as In July
' twice as large as 110,000 If not for An average of 275,000 jobs were and has shown little movement
the strikes at several regional created each month In 1987 and since April, the bureau said.
NEW MARKERS- Stacey Shank stands beside
a part of his civic leadership requirement lor the
phdne
companies, the Labor 1988.
Unemployment rates reone of the three new high water marlrers niade as
Eagle Scout award.
.
Department 's Bureau of Labor
A total of J08.9 million people mained abol!t the same for adult
· Statistics said.
were employed last month, the men, 4.4 percent; teenagers,l4.5.
People on strike are not bureau said. Total unemploy- percent; whites, 4.5 . percent;
counted on company payrolls ment was 6.4 million.
blacks, 11.1 percent and Hispanused in measuring ef11ployment,
The average work week for Ics, 9 percent. The rate for adult
When the rain comes down and his civic leadership project.
and G and J Auto Parts. then
meaning the jobs of the 108,000 non-farm workers declined by 0.2 women fell 0.3 percentage point
the river overflows, residents
It Involved soliciting the mate· solicited help In creating the strikers were subtracted from ' hour to 34.6 hours, following an after rising a half point during
will find It easier to keep a check rials lot the two 16-foot and one markers from Mike Van Meter,
the total. the bureau said .
Increase of about the same size In the previous five months.
on the flood level with Pomeroy's · eight foot markers and then Tom Werry, Keith Hagen. Brent
The employment figures com·. July. The manufacturing work
The number of long-term unnew markers. a project of Involving others In actUally deZirkle, Nathan Baloy, and Fre~~d with a Commerce Depart· week and factory overtime edged employed, defined as those with,
prospective Eagle Scout Stacey signing and making them. The Baloy,
ment report that the Index of down 0.1 hour to40.9 hours and 3.8 ·out jobs for 15 weeks or more,
Shank, Pomeroy·.
Active In scouting for the pa t Leading Economic Indicators hours, respectively, the bureau declined by 170,000, the bureau
project took about two months to
The Meigs High School junior complete.
six years, the son of Mr. and Mrs . rose 0.2 percent In July provided said,
said.
took on replacing the three old
Shank, a member of the Boy Scott Shank , Union Ave. is evidence the economy is not
Average hourly earnings fell
In the services sector, employmarkers, one at the corner of . Scout Troop 249 got donations of working toward completing his bQund for a recession and may be from $9.70 to $9.69 and weekly ment In communications and
'Lynn and Main, another on Main, materials from Sugar Run Flour 'Eagle Scout requirements some· gaining strength.
earnings were down from $337.56 publiC utilities plummeted by
and the third down by the levee as Mill, O'DeiiLumber, True Value,
time this year.
. ''The (employment) number is to $335.27, the bureau said.
130,000, reflecting the telephone
stronger than expected and may
Manufa cturing employment company strikes.
·
suggest to some that the econ·
omy may be reaccelerating, "
said Hugh Johnson, chief Invest·
-Swisher' s awards and decora- ment officer for First Albany
Capt. Wllltam D. Swisher, U. S.
H.is previous
asslgnm·e nts
Two of the petitions of candi- the basis of insufficient signadacy filed with the Meigs County tures. Don P. Smith' s petition
Army, took command of the have Included SI First Battalion, . lions have included the meritor·• Corp. in Albany, N.Y .
He said that means the Federal
Board of Elections were not was disqualified because of his
Shreveport Military Entrance School Brigade, Aberdeen Prov· · ious service medal, the Army
certified when the board mel this failure to sign his petition prior to
Processing Statton, Shrieveport, lng Grounds, Maryland; Assist- commendation medal with three Reserve is unlikely move away
La. in June.
week, Jane Frymyer.' director. having It circulated.
ant Operations Office and S.l!S-4 oakieaf clusters, the overseas from Its tight monetary policy
to
keep
Inflation
down
designed
ribbon,
and
the
Army
service
·
reports.
Swisher received his commis- Cleveland Recruiting Battalion,
Both candidates can file tQbe a
while
avoiding
a
recession.
ribbon.
The petition of Clifford T. write-ln. Deadline for that is·
sion as a Second Lleutenan t. Cleveland; S-12nd. Brigade, 2nd.
"These numbers are going to
Captain Swisher, his wife. the
Roseberry for Lebonan Town- Sept. 28 .
· Adjutant General Corps, from Infantry Division, Camp Hovey,
make
the Fed stay stuck, and
ship trustee was disqualified on
Ohio State University ROTC South.Korea; and Chief Enlisted former Sandy Curtis, and their ·
program. He holds a bachelor of Management Dlvison, Com· son, Robbie, four , live in
arts degre"' In history and Is a mander,-525th Replacement Reg- Haughton. La. He is the son of
graduate of the AG Officer Basic ulating Detachment, 'l Corps G-1 Mr. and Mrs. William Swisher
and Advanced courses.
Plans and Operations officer, Ft. and the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Swisher. Middleport.
Lewis , Washington.
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Candidates' petitions disqualified

'No connection' between two cases
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DRDCHICKRN
orBVCDr"

STOP IN

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News staff
There are •'no similarities," in
the abduction and murder of an
Athalia woman and the dlsappearano~ of a Galllpoll~ Developmental Center resident In July,
according to lnves tlgators from
the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Gallla·Melgs Post Commander
Lt. Dan Henderson said there Is
"no connection between the two
as far as I can determine."
News reports from several
local television stations and the
Huntington (W.Va. ) Herald Dispatch linked the two. calling
the disappearance at GDC an

abduction.
According to Henderson, "she
(the GDC resident) was not
abducted. "
Barbara Tharp, 35, left the .
center pn June 16, and was
returned to Gallipolis on Aug. 16,
Henderson said.
Tharp was only unaccounted
for durtng the Initial 24-hour
period, Henderson said. Her
whereabouts were known, but
Henderson did not elaborate due
to the ongoing Investigation. •
He did say the two have no
connection as far as he can
determine.
Some reports have linked the

two Incidents by a front vanity
license plate hearing the name
''Juanita," but Henderson discounts that as unsubstantiated.
Tharp may have left in a vehicle
with that plate, but It was never
confirmed.
.
Athalia resident Paula Kelley
was abducted from a convenient
store she managed on July 28 ,
and her body was found near
Miller In Lawrence County by· a
hunter Wednesday morning.
The Lawrence County Sheriff's
Department reported Friday she
was stabbed through the heart
and may have been sexually
assaulted.

Trial ._ expected to conclude today
The State of Ohio's ·case
against Ronald G. Davis should
be decided _,Y late today by a
Meigs County Common Pleas
' Court Jury of 12. Davis Is
charged with gross sexuallmposltkln for allegedly engaging In
sexual contact; but not Inter·
coune, with a minor girl under
age 13.

The state charges tha.t oo April
7, the 12·year-Gid alle&amp;ft .v ictim
WBI lllfllllaa tile D.llt In tile

Davis home with tile defendant's
12-year-old daughter. The sexual
as.sau It allegedly took place
during the time the girl was· a
guest In the home.
Meigs Prosecuting Attorney
Steven Story and Assistant Prosecutor Linda Warner rested
their case aaalnat.the defendant
·early Thunday afternoon.
WIIUam Grim, of Atlrens, reP,I'I!Hfttlna tlte defendant, called

·I'll
I

'

the defendant's 12-year-okl and
16-year-old daughters to the
stand, both of whom tes lifted that
the alleged Incident did not
occur.
Thursday's session ended
about 4:30p.m.
The trial resumed this mornlrig
at 9 a.m. The defense was
expected to call at least two more
witnesses this morning, IncludIng the defendant himself.

CALF BAJSINO -A diii'J toar- COIIIhlitlted
on Thanday at the Holler Fum Jllli&amp; off Route 'l'
near F1ve Points. Arnone tile tblllp Ilion oa die
tour wu thll new calf ralllag ban, built bJ Bob
Thom]IIIOO, 'secoad from ·left, and Auoclated
Fabrlelltan. Pictured with 111m are, from left,
.J•u alee, lllelp C.utJ Extealo• A,nt, AllaD

Bolter, l!ltll
aad Roy RoHer, all of Holter
J'araw. Tile barn Is a h1ter development In calf
raiiiDI where &amp;he animals are separated bJ ages.
Also viewed oa tbe &amp;our were computer feedlna,
com trials, muKIDora I'GIIe control, ma..re
sto~~e Uti hudllaa, and other tblap ef la&amp;erea&amp;. ,

\{;

•

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