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Page · 1o-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

,Ann

·Ann finds out not all gays want .to be straight
Dear Ann Landers: I could not
let another day go by without
writing to tell you that your
knowledge about the way hom&lt;&gt;sexuals think and leet is zero
minus 10. Sin~ you obviously
know very little about the sui)Ject. I hope you wUI permit me to
.enllgllten·you.
Your statement· that most
homosexuals would be straight If
they had the chance, because of
the way society views them , was
Incredibly dumb. Following that
.same line ol . logic, do you
honestly believe that all Jews

wish they were GentUes, that all
'Catholics wish they were Protestants. that all blacks wish they
were · white and that all women
wish they were men?
In case you're wondering, I am
straight and happy. but I know
several homosexuals who enjoy
their lifestyle and · wouldn't be
anything else.
You blew lt tills time, Ann. J.M., Milwaukee
Dear J .M.: Ten thousand readers can't be wrong. Read on:
Dear Ann Landers: You are
lll-lnformed, rock-headed or

brain-dead . My sexual attractlon
to males ls a part of me that feels
normal, natural and exciting.
Where do you get off speaking lor
us?

It's high time heterosexuals
got off their high horse and
realized that they are not the end
all and be all olhuman sexuality.
I am happy with what I am and I
don't need your sympathy, your
tolerance or your patronizing
attitude. Sign · me - Gay and
Happy In Vancouver
From New York: Thank you
for the good you have done In

promoting understanding and we are " an abomination" I would
acceptance of lesbians and gays like to say this: God made us as
In your column. I must take surely as he made you, and God
exception, however, to your does not make junk. ·- L.B.R.
Dear Ann Ll!ltders: I was
recent statement that most gays .
would.be straight If they had the deeply disappointed by the response you gave to the woman
choice.'
who wrote to say she had just lost
We don't wapt to change, Ann,
we want SOCIETY to change and a brother to cancer· and. was
Infuriated to see promiscuous
accept us as we are. - S.T.
Au(Usla, Ga.: Your column and reckless homosexuals with
about straights and gays made AIDS being .treated like "name write my flrst letter to Ann tional heroes" on TV. (She was
Landers: To all thOse Bible- referring to the broad t elevision
thumping screwballs who keep coverage of the AIDS qullt
quoting Corinthians to prove ,t hat project.)

Broncos top
Bills, 28-14

~J~~~~.:have suggested to your r
that she
channel some of that energy she
is wasting on anger over a
disease-awareness project llke
the AIDS qullt Into useful work at
a cancer hospice in memory of
ner brother. ,;_ Mark R ., Boca
Raton
Dear Mark: Well said. Thank
you.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.

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FEL7

Dally Sentinel Stall
Pomeroy VIllage Council, during Monday night's regular sesstan, approved an agreement to
resolve problems regarding
costs for sewage service from
Middleport . to two Pomeroy
businesses.
· The two businesses. Domino's
. Pizza and the Subway Sandwich
Shop, are on property owned by
Blll Haptonstall, also owner of
the Middleport Sears Store. Hap-

tonstaliattendedMondayntght's roy $1,200 a year, to be paid up ment which Pomeroy approved
Councll session in an effort to front, for the sewage services. last night. Haptonstali will now
resolve the issue.
.Pomeroy agreed to the arrange- · take the agreement to the next
Connell approved and signed ment. However. Pomeroy Clerk-. meeting of Middleport Council
an agreement that says that Treasurer Jane Walton has since for Its approval. ·
·
Middleport will send bills . to learned from the state auditor's
In other village matters, counHaptonstail directly, on a office that this was not an ell passed an agreement for
monthly basis. lor $100 ($50 for acceptable way to handle Middleport to apply for a grant
each business). Haptonstall will payment.
through ·the Ohio Elderly and
collect the fees and make payBased upon a letter from the Handicapped Translt System to
ment to Middleport .
.
state auditor's office, outllnlng continue operation of . the Blue
Originally, when the two buSI- regulations and at the request of Streak Cab Company. ·Middlenesses were built in Pomeroy • Hap tons tall, Attorney ·Patrick port Vlllage administers- the
Middleport was charging Pome- O'Brien prepared the new
grants that have enabled Blue

99

QUEEN
Only one oflour girls
Will be wearln1 the queen'• · tiara after the 1989
Easlern High School Homecomln1 Queen Is
crowned during Friday night's homecoming

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3.Qx6-8 730 Full Louvered.......... 77.24 ........48.51
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·

H&lt;Ymecomlng activities for
Eastern High School began on
.Monday and wlll continue until
Friday evening when the East·
ern Eagles take on the Kyger
Creek Bobcats.
The week ls being fllled with ·
spirit creating activities and
events for the students beginning
wlth "Pajama Day" on Monday.

II

OU Center room named for Davis
A dining room ln Baker Center
at Ohio University has been
named for Margaret Keehne
Davis of Athens, a native of
Pomeroy, by the OU Board of
Truste('S.
·
Dedication ceremonies for the
Margaret K. Davis Room In the
center took place Friday
afternoon.
Mrs. Davis ls a 1932 graduate

and a retired 35-yearemployee of

ou.

Three years alter graduating
from Ohio, Mrs. Davis returned
to Athens to accept employment
as an assistant to the university
diettclan .
In 1938 she was named as a
temporary replacement for the
dletlclan and soon became the
head of resident services, super-

Local news briefs-....,
Date announced for ceremony
The Eighth Annual Awards Ceremony and Dinner of the
, Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation and Development
(RC&amp;Di Area ls set for Thursday, Sept. 21, in Marietta.
According to Dewey Kennedy, chairman a! the RC&amp;D
Executive Council, the awards ceremony ls an opportunity lor
RC&amp;D Executive Councll members from the 10-county RC&amp;D
area to recognize Individuals from each county for notable
ef!orts ln resource conservation.
Wayne Schafer, awards ceremony committee chairman,
reports that the agenda for the evening will include an Ohio
River cruise on !he s ternwheeler "Valley Gem," followed by the
dinner and awards ceremony on the showboat "Becky
Thatcher." Actlvities for the evening begin at 5:45p.m. at the
Valley Gem landing site on Front St . ln Martel ta. Schafer also
points out that entertainment and door prizes will be part of the
.
.
event.
The awards ceremony and banquet ls open to all people
Involved with, or Interested ln, resource conservation and
development ln Southeastern Ohio.
· RC&amp;D Executive Council members from Meigs County are
Manning Roush, county commissioner; .Alan Holter. Meigs SoU
and Water Conseryatlon District; and Theron Johnson,
member-at-large.
For more ln!ormatlon, contact the Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D olflce
in Caldwell.

The Ken Amsbary Chapter ol the lzaak Walton League wlllbe
sponsoring National Hunting and Fishing Day for the younger
generation on Saturday at Royal Oak Resort near Five Points.
The day long events, which wlil be free of charge, begin with
ContinUed on page lU

r

.

.
Today /Tuesday) ls "Blackout · lng olympics, and of course, the
the Opponent Day" and "Poster
Pep Rally. There will also be a
Day." followed by "Clash Day" dance in the gymnasium followon Wednesd 'a y , and "Dress-up lng the football game.
Day," and "Banner Day" on
In addition to all of this, the
Thursday .
·
students must also choose a
Friday will conclude theactivi - homecoming Q\leen from four of
ties with "Green and White the selected candidates, Angie
Day." "Hat and Badge Day," Francis, Mary Parker, Amy
hall decorations, the homecom- Murphy, and Klm Mcintyre.

Hunting, fishing day Saturday

•. ,

Streak to function ln IVIelgs
paving is $3,187. The area on
County in recent years .
. Butternut is estimated at $500.
Council approved estimates on
Although the village has
costs for paving from the first wanted to repave the spot on
curve on Lincoln· Hill down to Butternut for some time, lt was
Butternut Ave., and the area on necessary to walt until a paving
Butternut .Ave. where water li11es contractor was in the local area
were repaired and paving is In order to have the job done
needed. The estimates from the properly .
Shelly Company, which ls workFinally, the mayor's report of
ing in the Gallipolls area; were $2,151 collected ln fines and fees
presented to council by vlllage during the month of August was
Administrator John Anderson. approved.
The estimate for the Lincoln Hlll

.

---

. SAN JUAN, Puerto Rlc&lt;;&gt; (UPll .
- Hugo, the northern Caribbean's mightiest hurricane ln a
decade, howled toward the Bahamas Tuesday, leaving aneast 1~
dead. more than 100 Injured and
thousands homeless in Puerto
Rico and the West Indies.
The deadly storm had wea·
kened since Monday morning,
when its maximum sustained
winds were clocked at 140 mph
near Puerto Rico, the National
Hurricane Center outside Mlaml
reported. At 9 a .m . EDT Tuesday, top winds were 105 mph but
the storm could regain strength
. over open, warm waters.
Puerto Rico, reeling in Hugo's
wake, struggled to prevent lootIng, restablish Island communi·
cations and assess damage.
"It was just howling - the
howling' just wouldn' t stop,"
John Law renee, a newlywed
!rom Salt Lake City. Utah, said at
the wind-battered Carlbe Hllton
tn San ' Juan. "That's what \vas
scary.
"I thought I had seen lt ·atl with
some of the blizzards we have ln
Utah but this was the craziest
thing I've ever seen."
At 9 a.m., the storm's center
· was latitude 21.8 north, longitude
68.1 west - 195 miles east of
Grand Turk Island ln the Turks
and Calces chain abutting the
southern Bahamas. It was moving northwest at 13 mph.
A hurricane warning was ·tn
effect Tuesday for the so·uthern
Bahamas and the· Turks and
Caicos Islands, which were expeeled to be brushed but not
struck head-on, Skies were overcast and winds were picking up
Tuesday morning.
Warnings were canceled for
the Dominican Republlc, where
at least 1,000 famllles in its
northeastern sector poured Into
schools, hospitals and government buildings Monday night for
shelter against Hugo' s flerce
winds. Hugo's eye passed some
100 mUes to the north, sparing
residents Its full fury.
Forecasters said Hugo might
hit somewhere on the U.S. East
Coast ln the next three or four
days. A series of high- and
low-pressure systems were tug-

ging the storm in different
directions.
"There's a big battle going on
between all those systems to
determln!" exactly where Hugo
wlll end up." hurricane center
director Bob Sheets said.
Forecasters had plotted three
potential paths -one that would
bring Hugo ashore ln central
Florida, one taking lt to North
Caronna. and one curving it
eastward Into the open Atlantic. '
The conflrmed death toll
reached at least 15 on Puerto
Rico and on Montserrat and
Guadeloupe In the Leewards .
There were as many as 27
unconfirmed deaths reported .
Others were reported missing on

land and at sea.
Hugo' s eye hit the northeast
corner of Puerto Rico about 9
a.m. Monday, sideswiping the
capital San Juan 90 minutes later
and then moving away from the
Island, a U.S. commonwealth of
3.3 million people.
Heavy ralrts caused flash
floods and mudslides on ihe
island as savage winds ripped
power lines, bent and uprooted
iall palm trees and churned up
30-foot swells that crashed over
seawalls, officials said.
Clyll Defense · Director Herlberto Acevedo said the storm
was especla,lly hard on the
northeastern coast, shattering
Continued on page 10

•
- com•ng
.

3.Qx6-8 Lauan..........................39.01 ...............26.86
4.Qx6-8 Lauan .....................63.05. ............... 42.04
S.Qx6-8 Lauan........................69.68.................46.41

ROU.

ceremonies. Candidates for the crown are, !rom
I he lefl, Angle Francis, Mary Parker, and Amy
. Murphy. Absent al the time o!the photo was Kim

Easte~n observes hOrne
·'

25 Cents

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Hurricane slams Puerto Rico;
aims for Bahamas; 15 .killed

3/8" x 20'
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1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio, Tuesday, September 19, 1989

•BLACK -GREEN •BARK BROWN
•GREEN &amp; WHITE •CHESTNUT BLENP •COPPERWOOD

NO.I&amp;
ROOFING

'

',

ByN~NCVYOACHAM

PRESSURE
TREATED
ftiCE

14
1
3.75 4.65
5.30 6.50
7.15 8.50
X 15.1.5
X 18.75

Increasing cloudi~s. Low
in mld 588. Wednesday, varia-.
bie cloudiness. lligh in upper
70s.

Council.,takes steps to resolve .· billing problem

4' x8'

8
12
10
2x4 2.15 2.65 3.25
2x6 3.15 3.60 4.70
2x8 4..10 4.95 6.80
2x10 5.35 X 10.90
2x12 7.25 X 13.75

•
:
:

Pick-3

Vol.40, No. 94 M
Copyrighted 1989

FALL HOME FIX-UP DAYS~
30 GAL.

Ohio Lottery

vising more than 800 employees.
During the 1960's her duties
Included supervising the feeding
of more than 8,800 students ln
OU's cafeterias. Mrs. Davis says
one aspect of her job which she
thoroughly enjoyed was the planning and staging of campus
picnics and parties. Her favorite
duty, however, was ·organizing
the campus' annual Christmas
parties for staff and faculty. She
is most proud of her role In
selecting the original furnishings
for the campus residence halls
and Baker Center.
Mrs. Davis credits her former
stall with Initiating the plan to
name the dining room In her
honor.
Born and reared In Pomeroy;
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles (Sklpi Keehrie graduated from Pomeroy High School.
Among the Meigs Countlans
attending the dedication were
Mr. and Mrs. Trell Sclioenleb and ·
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Reed.

PROPER TRAINING - Whether firemen are working on the
ground or up on the ladder truck it's important to know the proper
handllng ol equipment. Here Tommy Werry, a junior firemen with
the Pomeroy Fire Department, gels lhe !eel of the nozzle while on a
ladder during Saturday's training session.

Bum victim
transfer• ed
to Cincinnati
A 13-year-old girl critically
burned Saturday night was transferred Monday lrom Holzer
Medical Center to the Shrine
Burn Center at Cincinnati, according to a Holzer
spokesperson.
The girl was severly burned
Saturday night when she and .two
other other juvenlles were playIng with matches and gasoline
and an old couch along the creek
behind Jackson Estates, accordContinued on page 10

CERTIFICATES AWARDED IN MIDDLE·
PORT - Taryn Doldre, at left, winner of this
10mmer's 1wlmathon at Middleport Pool which .
w• sponaored by the MelpCouniJChapler of the
American Cancer Society, Is preHnled with a

certificate of appreciation by Clarnce E.
Hayman .Jr., the 111J8.81 Cancer Cruaade cbatrman, center. Middleport Mayor Fred Boflmaa
also accepla a certificate of apprecla&amp;loa lor bla
support of the swnmertlme fund rallflll event.

�Commentary
111 Cou rl' Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASoN /\REA

~J.b
Bm;9 ............ ..._....... ,,..,..._=·"""'
~v

I

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publb"er
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ C(_)ntroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Mana1er

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than SOO

words lone. All letters are subject to edltlllr and must be slped with
name, addrtwo and telephone number. No'unslgned letters wW be pub·

Ita-.
Leiters slloulo! be In cnod laole, addresslllc Iss-. not personall·
Ilea.

U.S. aid can speed
democracy in Eastern Europe
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - After the allies triumphed in World War II the
Indomitable Winston Churchill said: "In victory, magnanimity."
So, Instead of ex tractlng the spoils of victory with a vengeance, the
allies began the rehabilitation of Germany and Japan , and the fruit of
those efforts can be seen in current Western prosperity and
longstanding, popula rly e lected governments in former enemy
countries.
The Marshall Plan was the U.S. Inspiration in the post-war era,
bringing massive aid and technicai knowledge to restore democratic
i!lstltUtiqns - but the various tripartite treaties between the Un!led
States, Britain a nd the Soviet Union sealed communist control over
Easter'n Europe.
Years later, the failure of the communist system now Is manifest
even in the Soviet Union, where people hunger for consumer goods
and often prefer Madonna to Marx, and throughout the East Bloc.
With reforms in Poland and Hungary and with East Germans fleeing
over borders, clearly the workers of the world have made a choice.
But while Western leaders congratulate themselves and watch the
phenomenal changes behind what was once the Iron Curtain, they are
·missing out. Isn't this th e moment they have been waiting for, when
the people in the East Bloc would choose freedom?
They need a helping hand, the kind of. help that only the
industrialized nations can provide, to bring them into the 20th century
In terms of the availability of food and quality of life.
.
Soviet leader Mikhaii-Gorbachev, whose perestroika and glasnost
economic and -Political reforms are llelplng change the communist
world, also needs the kind of assistance the U.S. provided Nazi
Germany and Japan after World War II.
With hard-line communists seeking to defeat his reforms and the
other end of the ·spectrum, represented by maverick politician BorJs
Yeltsin, demanding a faster pace of progress, Gorbachev is trying to
hold his ground.
He desperately needs time and resources, and it appears for that
reason he is decrying what he sees as President Bush's go-slow arms
control policy; much of the funding Gorbachev could turn to domestic
use continues to be budgeted for his military .
Aid to Moscow to stimulate its economic reforms and to promote
' democracy may seem far-fetched at the moment, but then so was the
idea of a free election in the· Soviet. Union, The revolt of the Soviet
Baltic sta tes proves the truth that a little bit of!reedom is a dangerous
thing for tota litarian states.
Granted, the United States with its budget problems is in no mood to
dig into its pockets to provide a long-term assistance package. Butthe
president keeps saying he wants Gorbachev to succeed in his
reforms .
The unconvinced in Bush' s administration are sounding ominous
notes, many of them predicting Gorbachev will fail, some feeling it is
ail a Trojan ,horse and there is no turning back from communism.
Skepti cism seems to dominate the White House. What is needed is a
little risk taking, a vis ionary willing to take a chance that freedom
will wi n and that it should be aided in every way.

Letters to the editor
Support appreciated
Dear Editor:
Norma Torres and the staff of
the Meigs County Health Department wish to thank the following
people from the retired Senior
Volunteer Program (of the Senior Citizen' s Center) for the
tirelessly giving of their time and
effort. Thank you for making our
August Cholesterol Screening
Program a success.
·
Velma Rue
·Betty Ohlinger
Thelma Garrett
Dorothy Downie

Joan Corder
Dorothy Long
VIrginia Buchanan
Norma Jewell
Eileen Bowers
Betty Sayre
Wanda J. Fetty
Betty Spencer
Violet Morarlty
Ruth Moore
Beulah Ward
Leona Clelland
Norma Ann Torres, RN.
Nursing Director

WASHINGTON - Chemical
companies and the Food and
Drug Administration say there Is
' no danger In the lastest food
bugaboo - Bovlne,Somatotropln
· or EST, a man-made hormone
that gets more milk for the
money out of dairy cows. But
confidential studies from the
chemical companies' own scientIsts say something else.
Some of those studies Indicate
BST may harm cows and cause
fluctuations In the quality of
milk. But what has some grocery
store chains talkbig about refusing EST milk Is the lack of
research on what affect the
horll}one has on people.
A nQmber of American grocery,
chains have publicly questioned
the safety ofBST milk. Wisconsin
Secretary of State Doug La
Follette recently called for an
embargo on lt. Ben and Jerry's
Ice Cream announced it will not
use EST milk until It has a full
FDA approval. The hormone has
been to limited use In research

By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Wrller
Mitch Williams used his first
career hit to bring the New York
Mets to their last gasp.
Williams, batting for only the
fifth time !n his career, recoi-ded ·
his first hit - a three-run,
opposite-field home run In the
eighth inning en route to a 10-6
Chicago win over New York,
[reducing the Cubs.' magic
number to eight for clinching the
National League East.
·'I was swinging as hard as I
could," said Williams, who
knocked Don Aase's pitch Into ·
the le!t -fiel~ seats at Wrigley
Field to cap a four-run eighth
that gave Chicago a 10-4 lead. "I
was trying to get the gamewinning. RBI.''
As It turned out, Williams
looked like he was going to give
up the game-winning RBI In the
ninth. After two were out, he
walked a batter, hit another,
gave up a pair of RBI singles to
Gregg Jefferies and Juan Samuel before striking out Darryl
Strawberry swinging with the
bases loaded to earn his 34th
save.
The Mets, with their third
straight lpss, fell ti'h games
behind the first-place Cubs In the
NL East wlth·12 games remainIng for both clubs. Second-place
St. Louis remaine~ five games
back by beating Montreal.
"It's going to be very difficult
now," Mets manager Davey
Johnson said in assessing his
team's chances of overtaking
Chicago. ''We have to come back
and win tomorrow, and we need
some· help from · some other
people."
Williams, who struck outtwo in
one and two:lhird innings of
·work. pleaded Insanity. . ' .
"I thought after the holl:lerun I
was too hyper and.went out there
on such a high," he said. "! got
the first two outs and thought l

for six years, and the milk from cases, Monsanto researchers organs and a greater risk of
those research ' herds Is sold didn 't' count 'the BST cows that breast cancer. Monsant and
without any special labeling.
got mastitis, because they didn 't American Cyanamid scientists
- FDA approval rests in part on think It had anything to do with published a. point by point refutathe studies. done by ·chemical EST. Some studies found large tion of Epstein's concerns.
.. ,
companies that make EST. They fluctuations In the milk fat and
The chemical companies all ,
give their studies to the FDA, protein of BST milk.
say, for the record , that genet!- ., ;
which keeps tllem under wraps.
Dr. Samuel Epstein, of the cally engineered BST Is close
A source Inside the FDA told our University of Illinois School of enough to natural hormones to be
reporter Tim Warner that the Public Health, did his own study safe. They cite studies done on
review process for approving of EST and didn't like what he human dwarfs In the '50s and on
EST has been less than stellar.
saw. Epstein, who has long been lab rats, but those studies used
We obtained copies of the concerned about the FDA appro· natural grow(h ·hormones, not
confidential studies done by the val process, told us, "The chemi- man-made EST.
three BST manufacturers cal Industry has a long, dlsl\n- . At risk for the chemical comMonsanto A,grlcultural · Co., gished . track record of panies Is not only American use
American Cyanamid and Elanco manipulation, suppression, dls- of EST but mllllons of dollars In
(a joint venture of Dow Chemi- •tortton and destruction of data worldwide sales to countries that ..
cal , Up john and Ell Lilly) . Their submitted to the , FDA, regard· are more likely to buy it If It has 11
public relations campaign to sell iess of possible health FDA appro;wal.
EST to farmers says the hormone nimlficatlons.''
The irony of BST is that while , ·
poses no threat to humans or
Epstein faults the FDA and the the chemical companies are
cows. But some of their studies chemical Industry for lnade· pushing lor quick approvl;ll of a
show that a small number of qua te research on the effects of hormone that increases · milk , ,
cows Injected with EST lost EST In humans. Among the production, the U.S. government .: ,,
weight, suffered lower fertility possiblities Epstein Is concerned Is paying dairy farmers to .,,-,
rates or anemia or came down about are · the potential for produce less milk and Is buying ,. "
with mastitis (ln!lamatlon of the premature growth in infants, surplus dairy products to · keep ,.
mammary glands) . In some abnorm_al growth of infant sexual ·prices up.
•, -

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Pomeroy-

W.illiam$' first homer gives
~ubs 10-6 ~ictory over Mets

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relief to earn h'Js first career
victory. He struck out. two and
walked none. Frank Viola , 3-5,
got the loss, tagged for six runs
on eight hits and seven walks in
·five and one-third Innings, all
after being staked a 3-0 lead.
"I couldn't get the !as tball
over. .I couldn't get the curve ball
over. I . just didn 't have the
control I usually have," VIola
said.
With New York leading 3-0. the
Cubs broke loose for four runs In .
the fifth to go ahead 4-j,
Jerome Walton .Ied 1off with an
Infield hit, moved to second on a
walk to Ryne Sandberg and
scored on Mark Grace's bloop
single to left. Sandberg scored on
the play -when second baseman .
Jefferies allowed the relay to get
by him for an error, but Grace
was thrown out trying to reach
second. Uoyd McClendon drew a
two-out walk, and Luis Salazar
followed ·with a lined.shot Into the
left-field seats for his ninth home
run of the year and first since
being acquired from the San
Diego Padres In a five -player
deal three weeks ago.
The Cubs added two more runs
in the sixth to Increase their lead
to 6-3. VIola walked Grace with
the bases loaded to force In the
first . run, and Doug Dascenzo
scored the second run on Andre
Dawson's RBI fielder's choice.
New York pulled within 6-4 on
Howard Johnson's RBI single off
Les Lancaster in the eighth.
Williams then came on and got
out of an Inherited two-on,
one-out jam.
Elsewhere In the National
League:
Cardinals 3, Expos 2
At Montreal, Jose DeLeon
pllched .a two-hitter over seven
Innings and Tony Pena hit his
fourth homer, sparking St. Louts.
DeLeon, 16-ll, allowed just a
single by Wa,IIace Johnson In the
fourth and a single by Spike
Owen In the eighth. He struck out ·
five and walked five and has not
lost since Aug. 10. Scott Terry
notched his first save. Bryn

had it won."

Rookie Dean Wilkins, 1-0, entered the game to start the fifth
and pitched two Innings of'One-hit
•

Scoreboard ...

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£

',t!!·t.h.

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Seeing past immigration ·myopia
"Professor Einstein, I u.nder·
stand that you have a background In science. But we don' t
have enough officials a t our
consulate to process yourrequest
to come to America,"
"I'm sorry Mr. Iacocca. I'm
sure you would work hard In
Amerl~a . and so would your
children. But we have this budget
deficit, and It costs $7,000 per
immigrant. Too bad."
" Heinz Kissinger? Hello there
young fellow! Sorry, you can't
come ln. If we put more consular
officials in Europe, the Europeans would put more In Awer!ca ~ and some of them might be
spies.''
'
"You say you're a tailor, Mr.
Muskte? Nice. But if we let too
many people in, some of the
immigrants might be spies.
Can' t do it ."
"Sorry, Dr. Teller, we're turning you down because New
Zealand woti ld accept you."
Such are some of the bizarre
sorts of reasons offered today by
the U.S. State Department as
they craft policies that would

have the effect of keeping Soviet
Jews and evangelical Christians,
Poles, Hungarians . and other
Europeans out of America :
Spies? Consular officials? Is
this serious? Is $7,000 too high a
cost for Toscaninl, a John F .
Kennedy, a DI-Maggio, a Salk or
a Cuomo?
If you like an America withoul
Michael Dukakis, Anthony
Fauci, Martina Navratllova,
Mikhail Baryshnikov and Ted
Kennedy, you'll love recent government immigration
philosophy.
Democrats, finally sensing an
issue thai Is both good policy and
good politics, are responding.
After years of losing votes of
ethnic East Europeans, they
may have found a good cause.
The proximate cause of the
current maximum myopia Is the
Russian Jewish situation. But It
Is only the latest symptom of an
on-going government mentality
- In the White House and
Congress - devoid of Imagination, not thinking about what

makes nations great, ·viewing
immigration as a problem not a
promise.
Like the Poles arid the Hungarians, the Soviets are now easing
up on emigration, at least for
Jews and evangelical Christians.
The Israelis want the Jews to
come to Israel, but most Soviet
Jews want to come to America .
The State Department, and a few
American Jewish organlUitlons,
agree with the Israelis that many
Russian Jews should not be
granted U.S. refugee status- In
effect pushing them to Israel.
Is this In the American Interest? No. Nor Is our current policy
of denying refu.:ee status to
Poles and · Hungarians. Immigrants, particularly skllled Immigrants from Europe, are an
asset to America.
In the 1950s, more than 70
percent of American immigrants
were from Europe - It's now 16
percent. Today, lt Is much harder
for Europeans to get In to
American than it Is for Asians,
Hispanics and Moslems.
Non-E uropean Immigration

•

Wattenberg ;'
•.;

••'

has been good for Amerlc!l, b,~t
many Americans are nervous ••
about the changing complexion '
of the nation. That can polson the '
climate for Immigration - from '
everywhere. An America with •
low Immigration wlll stop grow- ,.,·
ing. A no-growth America In a
growing world will not be the ''
dominant superpower of the next ••
century. ·
'
Despite appearances, we ' re '•,
also too stingy on non- '••
Europeans. Have we been hurt .'•,
by people like Coftn Powell i
(father from Jamaica) or I.M. '
Pel (China)?
·
!
More Important, opinion at the · · '
House immigration committee-Is ~
Increasingly leaning toward a ~
short- term Immigration boost. ~
The long-range view at the ~
committee Is a wise one: RevJse
America's Immigration code,
permanently raising the number ,'
of ·Immigrants, particularly · :
short-changed Europeans. That •
would welcome future genera- •
tions of Elnstelns and 'i··
DIMaggios.
!.

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Lockheed "Ice Box' goes on hot seat

MESSAGE FROM PANAMA

19. 1989

Honn.o ne may ·h~ cows, and in
tum, humans!.__--'-____.J_a_ck_A~nd_e_r_so_n_a_n_d_D_al_e_v;_a_n_A_t_ta ;·:

The Daily Sentinel

l' .

Page- 2- The Daily·Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September 1~. 1989.:.

SUNNYVALE, Call!. (NEA)- done on a highly class !fled
Defense Department procure· satellite, surveillance and other
ment scandals . have become "black" projects, LMSC em·
common, but this one Is different ployees must be granted special!zed high-level security clearanbecause It Involves allegations ces.
While awaiting completion
backed up by of(lclal govern·
of
the
personnel Investigations
ment audits -of unusual misconthat
must
be conducted before
duct on the part of a major
those clearances lire Issued - a
Pentagon contractor and Its
employees.
· process that can consume many
months, a year or even longer The company Involved Is the
new workers . are assigned to
Lockheed Missiles &amp; Space Co.,
unclassified holding areas known
Inc., a subsidiary of the Lockheed Corp. LMSC employs 28,000 as Ice Boxes.
According to Interviews conpeople, 24,000 of-whom work In
the almost 200 buildings at the ducted by the Defense Contract
Audit Agency and a civil suit flied
firm's one·mlle-square headIn U.S. District Court In San Jose,
quarters complex In the heart of
Call!~ this Is what those emCalifornia's Silicon Valley.
ployees - paid by Lockheed with
Inside those buildings, work Is
federal funds It received to
conducted on advanced technolperform government work- did
ogy projects for the Defense
In the Ice Boxes:
Department, the National SecurIty Agency and the. National
- Entrepreneurs conducted
Aeronautics !lnd !!pace personal business during work
Administration.
.
hours, selling real estate, honey,
Because much of tha~ ortt Is stocks, diet foods, cosmetics:

jewelry, refrigerator magnets,
belt buckles, decoders for the
Home
Box Office cable television
·
channel and assorted other
Items. One employee earned
more than $6,000 month selling
Herballfe products, while
another (whose time was
charged to the supersecret NSA)
marketed Avon products.
- Others knitted, sewed, studied , slept, partied, played must·
cal Instruments, made personal
· telephone calls, worked on their
cars and built a model rocket.
"Employmees In the Ice Box
etten ...came to work late and left
early, all at the expense of the
United States government," says
the lawsuit. "At the end of each
week, (they) were Instructed by
their supervisors to bill various
gqvernment contracts for a full
40 hour week."
- One computer enthusiast
designed a software program
that was used on LMSC-compu-

a

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Robert Walters

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ters to administer the employees' football betting pool.
Another copied the entire Bible
onto a company computer (jlsk.
Others played computer games.
The lawsuit, which alleges the
government was defrauded, was
.Initiated by Margaret A. Newsham, who worked for LMSC
from 1981 to 1984 as a computer
software . management analyst,
and by Martin Overbeek Bloem,
an engineer who has worked at
LMSC since 1979. Their allegations are supported by DCAA ··
Investigators

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Lockheed has generally dented
any wrongdoing and has
mounted a constitutional chal- . •
Ienge to the validity of the civil ··
· suit. The compa'!y refuses, how- • '
ever, to discuss any of the
specific charges.

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Navan-0, Riley MA(: hooorees
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The

Mid-American Conference player$ of tbe week a.re tree safety
Bob Navarro of Eastern Ml~hl­
gan and quarterback David
Riley of Ball State.
Navarro made tour aolo tack·
s
le ' 1, tercepted two panes to
r
••

WW FIVE - New York Mets Darryl.
Strawberry (right) ' and Keith Hernandez cele- ;
brate Strawberry's third-Inning hon&gt;er against
.

'

Cubs pitcher Paul Kilgus with a low five In
Monday night's gan&gt;e in Chicago. The Cubs .came
fron&gt; behlnol to chalk up a 10-6 victory. (UPI)
.

Two tied for senior play lead
44th Little
Brawn Jug
'wide open'
DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI) This year's Little Brown Jug
3-year-old pacing classic shapes
.up as oile of the mostwldeopen in
its 44-year history.
·
The Jug, which climaxes a
week of Grand Circuit Racing
Thursday at the Delaware
County Fairgrounds, Is the final
jewel of 3-year-old pacing's triple
crown.
The first jewel, the Cane Pace
at Yonkers Raceway , went to
Dancing Master. The second, the
Messenger Stake, was won by
Sandman Han oiler at Frees tate
Raceway In Laurel, Md .
Both ,w ere · supplementary entries in those races but neither Is
el~ible for the Jug, since It does
not' permit supplementary
entries.
No horse has emerged from the
pack this season among the
3-year-pld pacers. although a
number have been on the verge.
Goalie Jeff, a sono!CamFella.
won the $1 million Northern
American Cup at Greenwood
Raceway In Toronto in 1: 53.3 and
the O.W. Holmes at the Meadowlands in 1:51.3. He also captured
the Audios at The ·Meadows and
the Prix d'Ete at Blue Bonet sand
finished second In the Messenger
final.
Goalie Jeff, a Canadian horse,
is trained by Tom Artandi, who
also trained last year's Jug
winner, B.J. Scoot. Winner of
eight of his first 18 starts, Goalie
Jeff has earnings of more than
$930,000.
The only double winner .in the
major stakes was Kick Up A
Storm, a Storm Damage col',
trained by Dave Furness. He won
the Miller Memorial at Rosec-roft
Raceway and the Art Rooney
Pace at Yonkers.
An Ohio-owned colt, Barefoot
Hanover, recently won one of the
two divisions of the J\lg Preview
at Scl~to Downs In 1: 54.2, his
eighth win in 16 starts this
season.
Dave Rankin drove Barefoot
Hanover to four wins in August.
Including times of 1:52.3 and
1:53.3 In heats of the Review
Stake at Springfield, Ill.
Others whose owners are expected to pay the final $4,000
starting fee Monday morning.
Include Casino Cowboy, Just The
.Ticket, Coach Riley , Hit The Bid,
Kentucky Spur, Follow My Lead
and Top Notcher.

HOUSTON, Texas (UPI) Frank Tenfel of West Bend, Wis.,
and Jack Van Ess of Grand
Rapids, Mich., shot l -over-par
73s Monday to share the !~ad
after the first round of the 1989
U.S. Senior Amateur Championship at Lochlnvar Golf Club.
Tenfel and Van Ess were one
stroke ahead of four players,
including three-time champion
Lewis Oehniig of Lookout Mountain, Tenn., and Joe Simpson of
San Diego. Simpson, father of
1987 U.S. Open champion Scott
Simpson, was a semifinalist In
last year's Senior Amateur.
Bo Williams of Ocala, Fla., the
1986 champion, led a group of
nine players at 3-over 75, two
strokes behind the leaders.
The highlight of Tenfel's round
came at the par-4, 12th and 13th
holes, where he made consecutive birdies without putting. He
holed his third shot from a
greenside 'bunker at the 12th.
then chipped In trom s" yaros ar
the 13th.

Mu~ter,

Rason

Defending champion Clarence
Moore of Winnsboro, S.C ..
struggled to a 7-over 79, and
four -time Canadian Senior Amateur champion Robert Wylie
opened·with a 77. Bud Stevens ?f
Plymouth, Mich., last year s

SHOTOKAN KARATE

runner-up, had a 79.
The field will be cut following
Tuesday's second round with the
low 64 scores advancing to the
start of match play Wednesday.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
" "' "~ ""

446 4524

HULJ!l

_Congratulations!
Charles Allensworth

OAC honorees
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)- Quarterback Mike Muster of Heidelberg al)d Otterbein cornerback
'Todd Rasor have been named
players of the week In the Ohio
Athletic Conference.
Muster connected on 16 of 31
passes for 161 yards and a
touchdown in Heidelberg's 17-3
win over Baldwin-Wallace.
Rasor made 15 tackles, including six solos, in Otterbein's 14-7
victory over Ohio Northern.

CHARLES ALLENSWORTH IS
O,UR WINNER IN THE DAILY
SENTINEL CO-SPONSORED
FOOTBALL CONTEST.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSI'S lt~HO)
A Dl•lolao of Mulllmodla, IDe.

through Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubU.hloa Company/ Multlmodla, Inc..
Pomeroy, Ohio W769, Ph. 992·2156, Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,,

Ohio.

Cheer Up!

Member: UnitEd Press International,
Inland Dally Pr., AMoclatton and the
Ohio Newspaper AuodiiUon. National
. Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Salea, 733 Third Avenue,
New \"ork, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send aclolreu changes
to 11oe DallY Sent•et; Ill Court St.,
Flomt'I'O)', Ololo 45769.

Fall Car Care Edition
In The Daily Sentinel
SEPT. 29, 1989

SVJIIICIIJI'TION BATIIll
IIJ Cam• or Motor Route
One Week ............ .... ................... $1.40
One Month ................................. $6.10
One Year ................................. m.lll
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .................. .... ............. 25 cents
SUblcrtbero notdeotrtngtqpay thecarrter may remit In adVance dlr«.'' to
The Dildy Sontlael on a 3, 6 or 12 ~b
bull. Cred.lt wm be atven carrier each

-

No subscrtpUons by mall pft"'''11tte:lln

"Reserve ·Your Ad Space Now"

areu wher, home carrier service 11

stop drives deep In EMU territory and broke up a pass In
Eastern's 30-25 victory over Ohio
University.
Rlley completed 13 of 19 passes
for 124 yard&amp; and a touchdown In
~dill&amp; BSU to a 28-3 triumph
over Bowling Gl'eeJI.
'•'

avaUable.

MallS.Oboertlli'-ldeMolpi:oaiiiJ
13 Weeka ................. ,........... ,.... $19.24
:16 Weeloa ............ ,..................... $37.96

992-2156

~2

Weeloa ...... :,.......................... $7U6
Olllil4lle Melp CouiiiJ
ta Weeloa ....................... ,.......... $JI.80
ill Weetoa ................. .. ............... $10.30
52Weetoa .................................. S1UO

••

l~ Nl~l

Beginning Classes Starting
Tuesdoy, Sept. 19th Dt
7:00 P.M. ot Corleton
School in Syracuse.
·
For Information Call 992-6839
After 6:00 P.M.
Or 992-6170 or 992-9920
INSTIUCTOIS:
Mick Howtll, Black Btlt
Ed Co1art, Black lelt
John Beaver, Black Belt

Published every afternoon. Monday

•

:·

Pirates 6, PbiiUes 2
At .PittSburgh, Bobby BonUla .
drove in three runs and Bob
Patterson scattered· four hits
over four and one-third innings
for the Pirates . Patterson, 3-2,
walked one and struck out two In
relief of Bob Walk and Randy
Kramer earned his second save.
The Pirates have won nine of
their last 11 games. Jason
Grimsley,l-2 , allowed four runs,
four hits and five walks over four
and one-third Innings in his third
career start. Bonilla's two-run
single In the fifth snapped a 1-1
tie.
·

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.

.

Smith, 10-10, lasted six Innings
and has OIJIY one victory In his
last 12 starts.

AD DEADLINE: SEPTEMBER 20, 1989
'

�Ohio

Tuesday,

Tuesday, September 19, 1989

19,1989

Angels ·top Twins 6-3 to stay
2!t2 games of Oakland AS

·'

.·

'

SAFE! - Oakland's Tony Phililps slides head
first bito. third base ahead of the throw from the
outfield, fo.r which Indians third sacker Brook

Jacoby waits in the third Inning of Monday night's
game In Cleveland. PhUIIp!O advanced from first
on a single by Mike Gallego. The A's won •·2.
(UP I)

Broncos buck Bills 28-14 .

By DICK USIAK
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (UP I I
- The Buffalo Bills failed Manday night In their bid for a second
straight last -minute victory. bu t
Denver coac h Dan Reeves thinks
the Bills may benefit from the
·· loss.
.· "I think it may be a blessi ng in
disguise for th em, .. Reeves said
Monday night after the Broncos
held on for a 28-14 victory. " When
teams start winning all the time
a t the end, they think they can do
it all the time and you don' t start .
:. ·.out with the execution a nd
·: every th ing that you need. "
.• The Bills, 1-1. scored a las t:: second victory over Miami last
•' week and a pJieared to be doing
: the same thing against Denver
: a fter switching to a hurry -up
· offense midway th roug h the third
: quar ter.
~
"You can 't- think you're going
~ to be able to accomplish what
· happened. a week ago Sunday,"
. Bills coac h Marv Levy sa id.
· " Yo u ma ke a garrison try at it
and it looks exci ting, bu t it's
. desperat ion football and it pays
·· off on rare occasio ns...
· Hi s players agreed.
"Maybe we need something
: like this to bring \IS down from
- where we think we are, .. wide

rece iver Andre Reed said. " We
ju st have to work harder."
Nose tack le Fred Smerlas said
in th e Miami ga me "we had some
missed assignments, bu t this ·
week we had stupid mistakes we
should never make."
With Denver leading 21-0,
quarterback J im Kelly began
working from the shotgun formation. The Bills firs t went 77 yards
in nine plays, capped by Lar ry
Kinnebrew's one-ya rd run , then
cut the lead a touchdown when
Kelly fi red a 20-yard scoring pass
to Ronnie Harmon.
On the next posession,.Eiway's
pass for Sammy Winder was
intercepted by Marl\ Kelso at the
Buffalo 31. The Bills, with a home
crowd screaming their support,
got to th e Denver 42 before Kelly
was sacked on a thlrd-and-10 by
rookie defensive end Warren
Powers.
The Broncos, now 2-10 on
Monday nights, put the game
away whe n rookie Bobby
Humphrey scored on a five-ya rd
run with less than four minutes
left .
"Beati ng a team like Buffalo in
their home opener is a big win for
us," sa id Elway, who completed
15 of 28 passes for 207 yards with
two In terceptions. "We knew we
just had toscoreonemoretimeto

By ERIK K. LIEF
So therefote, Bert Blyleven
UPI Sports Writer
.. pitching is a real plus." ,
The California Angels are
"This is what the game s all
having little dl!ficulty getting up abo'! I," said B!yleven, "Eve?
for . their opponents and that time you come to the ballpark it s
self-motivation is proving effec- exC'itlng."
.
tlve In the final stages of the
Minnesota s tar ter David West,
pennant chase.
3-2, lasted only three Innings.
Bert Blyleven and Chili Davis glvlng up five runs on five hits
turned In Impressive performan- and four walks with five
ces Monday night to power the s trikeouts.
· Angels to a 6-3 victory over the
" It was a great home run by
Minnesota Twins. The win, Cali- Chill Davis," said Blyleven.. "It
fornia's eighth 'In Its last 10 set the tone and allowed me JUst
games · kept the Angels within to go out a ild pitch offensively.
2¥, g~mes of the Anierican That three- run lead is really
League West-leading Oakland important to a star ting pitcher."
Athletics.
Davis' three-rtln h9mer to
Davis contributed two hits, center in the ftrst put California'
including a three-run homer, and on top 3-0. Corning after singles
Blyleven worked eight Innings to by Mark McLemore and Wally
record his 16th victory. The Joyner, It was Davis' 22nd homer
right-hander, 16-4, gave up just of the year. ,
'
one 'run on seven hits and two
Kent Hrbek s solo homer to
walks with 'four strikeouts right in the sixth broke the
against his former teammates.
shutout and pulled the Twins
"Just being In a division race within 6-1. _The upper deck blast
tends to get the adrenal In going," was Hrbek s 24th roundtrip of the
said Davis. "A 3-0 lead with Chili year and 200th of his career.
Davis pitching is better than 0:0.
Elsewhere In the American

Buckeyes ·ready for
Southern Cal contest

· slow them down and get the
momentum back."
The Broncos, 2-0, got a fast
..
s tart When linebacker Michael
By
GENE
CADDES
·
just
59
yards
rushing
In two
Brooks tackled running back
UPI
Sports
Writer
games,
including
24
by
Utah
Jamie Mueller fora safety at 8:31
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UP!)
State.
A
year
ago,
USC
was
of the first quarter .
The score came one play after Ohio State head coach John second in the nation In rushing
Buffalo defensive back Nate Cooper said his Buckeyes should defense, allowing just 76.6 yards
Odomes Intercepted a John El· go Into this week's game against per game, and has 10 of 11
way pass. The officials first ruled Southern California at full starters returning from that unit.
Illinois, however , passed for
Odomes' momentum carried strength.
Cooper
told
his
weekly
news
248
yards In Its win and Utah
him into the end zone for a
luncheon
Monday
the
Buckeyes
State
touchback, but on review said came through last Saturday's ·air. had 183 yards through the
Odomes was out at the 1-yard
37-13 opening game win ove ~
Cooper, In his second season at
line.
Oklahoma
State
without
any
Ohio
State (he was 4·6-1 last
" Brooks getting a safety early
year), called USC "a ·great,
In the game kind of set the major Injuries.
"We
got
two
or
three
guys
football
team," and said the
tempo," Reeves said.
banged
up,"
said
Cooper,
"
but
·
Trojans
were
better than the Pitt
The Broncos built an 18-0
we
don't
anticipate
any
of
the
team
which
beat
the Buckeyes
halftime lead on a nine-yard
guys
who
played
In
the
game
42-10
the
second
game
of last
scoring pass from John Elway to
Saturday
missing
an
extensive
season
when·
they
were
coming
Vance Johnson and David Tread·
of practice or missing off a 26-9 win over Syracuse.
well field goals of 33, 33 and 46 amount
the
game
this week."
yards. Treadwell added a 24Both
cornerback
David Brown
yard fleld goal eight minutes into
and
Inside
linebacker
Derek
the lhii-d quarter.
lsaman
are
nursing
ankle
Kelly, who had three passes
sprains,
·but
Cooper
said
they
will
picked off while completing 26 of be ready.
44 for 298 yards, hurt his right
Cooper said flanker Bobby ·
knee late in the game but the
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!)
injury did not appear to be Olive, who caught five passes for
serious. Bills linebacker Shane 108 yards and one touchdown, · Royal Cold ; driven by Mel
Conlan strained a ligament In his . was selected the offensive player Turcotte, won the $67,052 Ohio
left knee and may be sidelined up of the Oklahoma State game, and B eed . Ch rnplonshlp 2-yearr
ers
a
nose guard Pat Thomas was
to six weeks.
selected by the coaches as the top old open trot, the featured event
In Monday's Grand Circuit bardefensive player.
After looking at films of ness racing at the Delaware
Saturday's win, Cooper said County Fairgrounds.
quarterback Greg Frey, who
Owned by Rephard Reed and
completed 16 of 21 pasSes for 28 5· Leonard Fitzpatrick of John·
..
s town, Royal Cold won his
yards and two touchdowns, did elimination division in 2:03 3-5
some real nice things during the
d t k th final in 2:04.
course of the game.
an, oo
e
''He wasn't perfect " Cooper
l m Impeccable, driven by
·
· Dave Rankin, won the second
~.aid of the junior signal caller, elimination division In 2·: 02 2·5
but did a real ni~e job of reading butfinlshed sixth In the finaL
their secondary·
B T Smoke driven by Frank
Both of Frey's touchdown Todd Jr., set ~ national season's
passes - a 33-yarder to flanker record of 2, Oll-5 In winning the
Bernar? Edwards and a 27 · $62,022 Ohio Breeders Charnplonyarder to Olive - came on ship Z-year-old fll!y trot.
Valli Hll!, driven by Hugh
checked-off plays.
The Buckeye coach said, how- Beatty J r., won the first ellrnlnaever, he ~as disappointed In the lion division in 2:06. B.T. Smoke
Buckeyes rushing game, which took her division in 2:01 3-5 and
managed just 135 yards against beat Valli Hill by 10 lengths In the
the Cowboys.
"The disappointing thing, as finaL
far as I'm concerned, about the
offensive performance Is we've
got to be able to line up and run
the football better than we ran it
Saturday . Our offensive line has
got to do a better job run blocking
for us to have the kind of success
offensively we expect to have."
Cooper said the Buckeyes were
MAKES GETAWAY - Denver quarterback
"a little passive. I think we sat
this play Elway sCrambled lor 31 yards to set up
John Elway (7) makes his getaway from Buffalo
back and absorbed too much
the Broncos' final scoring drive, which Iced their
defensive end Bruce Smith (left ) in the fourth
from their penetrallng defensive
28-14 victory over the Bills. ( UPI)
quarter of Monday night's game In Buffalo. On
football team . But they did get
burned a few times."
In USC , a 14-13 loser to Illinois
in its opener three weeks ago and
a 66-10 winner over Utah State
NEW YORK (UP() - Notre October.
last Saturday, Ohio State will be
: Dame tightened its grip Monday
"Lou Ho ltz should take his Virginia, 3-0, remained No.9 and facing one of the top defenses in
~ on the No. 1 spot in United Press
players in to Ch icago and play the Washington, 2-0, moved up two the nation.
.
· Internatio nal's college footba ll Bears - and they'd do pretty places to complete !he Top 10.
The Trojans have surrendered
· ran kings. beating Michigan on well," Auburn Coach Pat Dye
the roa d to ex tend the natio n' s sa id.
longest winning streak to 14
Auburn, 2-0. inched up a spot to
games.
tie Nebraska, 2-0. for third place
Notre Da me. 2-0 after its 24-19 wit h 616 points. Co lorado, 3-0,
' triumph. capt ured 731 of 750 improved two places to fi ll out
:.possible points from the · 50 th e top five. This is the Buffaloes'
216 EAST MAIN
:coaches on the UP I Board to · highes t ranking si nce !hey were
·finish 45 points ahead of Miami.
No. 3 early in th e 1977 season.
POMEROY, OIRO
The Hurricanes remai ned No. 2
Clemson, 3-0, was No. 6. The
with the ir second straight rout. a
No. 7 Wolverines, whose loss to
Hyou've been
31,3 victory over California.
Notre Dame came in their season
. The Ir ish earned 46 of 50 opener, finished one point a head
holding back wait·
:first-place votes to retain the top of Arkansas, which won its
ing for a great rate,
·spot they have held since last opener to stay No. 8. West
.this is it. But you've

Royal Cold
wins feature

Call Ul •bout thil C•r inau.. nc:e
brMkthrough for
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League:
.
Red Sox 6, Blue Jays 3
At Toronto, Nick Esasky belted
a two-run homer, his 28th of thE'
year, to cap a five -run third
Inning and Mike Boddlcker scat·
tered seven hits over seven
Innings to lead Boston. Bod·
dicker, !'3-11, walked two and
struck out two a nd Rob Mu rphy
notched his eighth save. John
Cerutti, 11-10, took tqe loss.
Athletics f, Indians 2
( 10 Innings)
At Cleveland, Dave Henderson
sltlgled home Lance Blankenship
with the lead run and Tony
Phillips added an RBI single In a
two-run Oakland lOth Inning:
Dennis Eckersley, 3-0, notched
the victory despite aUowing a
game-tying homer to Brook
Jacoby In the ninth. Steve Olin
dropped to 1-3.
·
White Sox 4, Royals 2
At Kansas City, Mo., Sammy
Sosa . and Daryl Boston both
scored on a wild throw In the
ninth Inning to help Chicago
defeat Kansas City, which fell3¥,
games behind Oakland in the AL
West. Jeff Montgomery, 7-3,
unleashed the errant throw to
third and took the loss. Barry·
Jones , 2-2, picked up the victory
with two and tWo-third innings of
one-hit relief and Bobby Thigpen
picked up his 32nd save:
Rangers ~. Mariners 2
At Arlington, Texas, Fred
Manrique delivered a two-run
double · In the eighth inning to
break a tie and boost the
Rangers. Nolan Ryan pitched
Into the eighth, striking out just
two, before Cecillo Guante, 6·5,
went one inning for the win. Mike
Jackson, 4-6, gave up the gamewinning hit.

-

Pomeroy-· Middleport. Ohio

Footwear Store"

TWtN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
LOCKER 219
IIANII ONE
698 .West Main

·Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT HILL FORD .

a.;....,~''..''.••.•.;'';.h.•_s••s_v'.•.e•...~-~-11

Foothall '891
Cateh All The

MIDDLEPORt- 992·5627

I

NAME .................... ,. ...........•..............••...
ADDREss . : . ; ..... .... ........................ · .... • ...... •

I

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L.P.HO-NE_
•• ·-·•••••

------.--I

I.

I

••

I

I.

I

•••••••

I

•

I.

SeaHie n. New E•tltd

LUCK''
I "GOOD
Support These Fine

1

I

••••

·-·
•

.;.;.-~~----.1

Area

�The

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel'';J

By The Bend

Business Services
lelevision listenina Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen•icel
~ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Tuesday•.September 19. 1989
Page- 6

''

~ LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

Announcements
Open house
The Sacred Heart CatJ)ollc
Church will have an open house
on Oct. 8 !rom 4-6 p.m. Vespers
service will follow at 6 p.m. The
public Is invited to a ttend .
Chill suppe.r .
The Rejoicing Life Christian
school will have a chill supper on
Saturday from 5-7 p.m.
Wilkesville smo.rgasbonl
There will be a smorgasbord a t
the Wilkesville Pythia Hall in
Wilkesville on Saturday beginning at . 4 p.m. The public Is
.invited.
Long Bottom smorgasbord
The Long Bottom Community
Association will stage a smorgasbord dinner on Saturday at the
Long Bottom Community Build·
lng. Serving will begin at 5 p.m.
The dinner will Include · ham.
turkey a nd dressing, chicken and
noodles , etc. Desserts and drinks
are Included In the $3.50 charge.
For children und er 12 the cost is
$2 50
c~un.try Hymn Timers
The Country Hymn Timers are

, NOT AS EASY AS IT LOOKS- Dropping acoin
, llito a glass in a water-IIUed aquarium might look
· easy, but It's not. Just ask Jim Hill, owner of
· Pleaser's Restaurant, Pomeroy, shown her e
:trying his hand at dropping a quarter Into the
glass. Anyone coming into Pleasers for the next
' lew weeks may try their skill at the quarter In th e
;'glass, and anyone succeeding wins a free meal.
' Proceeds from the fr ee meal giveaway will be
'

-

(n the spotlight
•

divided between the Eastern Local and Southern
Local . School Districts athietlc boosters. Both
school districts have had to cut hack In athletic
program funding In an effort to trim the districts'
budget. Although It Isn't easy to put the coin In the
glass, Hill did say that alter just a lew hours, he
had given away six meals and had $10 orS12 1nth e
aquariUm.
·

Portland
PTO meets
Pla ns were completed fo r the
ann ual Fall Carnival when th e
Portland PTO met recently.

Vita mil• C· riCh source s u ch as a n

ora nge, ,'al ly and one Vitamin
A-rich sou, oe such as carrots a t
least every ot her day. Both of

•

Homemakers Cultural Arts Committee Is sponsoring Its annua l
Boosters to m eet
Harvest of Quilts II Show on Oct.
The Southern Boosters will 7 and Sat the West Virginia Farm
have a special meeting on Sept. · Museum. The show Is,open to a ll
25 at 7 p.m. at the high schooL exhibitors. Call (304) 675-3435or
Everyone Is urged to attend.
675-2198 fo r information.
Car show to be held
The Oldies But Goodies Car
Club of Meigs County will have
Its first annual car show Oct. 14
on the Pomeroy parking lot.
' There will be 17 classes offered to
exhibitors with two trophies
given per class. Dash plaques
will be given to the fifst 50 cars
that enter. Regis !ration begins at
9 a. m . and the fee Is $5. Call Gene
-Whaley at 992-7013 or Bill and
Sharon Neutz!lng at 985-4317.
George Hall to perform
George Hall, well known orga-.
nist, will perform at the Reedsville United Met hOdi st Chu rc h on
Oct. 8 at 7:30p.m . Hall will play a
variety of gospel a nd insplrationa I music, Including audience
requests .•The publ iC is invited to
a tte nd.
Portland PTO Carnival
The annual "Fall Carnival"
will be held at Portland Elementarv on Oct. 7. A s upper will be
served beginning at 4:30 p.m.
and will include c hilf. vegetable
soup, sandwiches. desserts, and
chicken and noodles. "Silver

planning a reunion hymn si ng on
Saturday from 7:30 p.m. to
midnight at the Church of Christ
in Christian Union In Middleport.
The service will be under the
direction of Dan Hayman. Sam
Anderson, pastor of the church,
invites the public.
Wings ... a country and western
band will provide e ntertainment.
Meigs yearbooks In
The 1989 Meigs Ht' gh School . There will also be games , door
P rizes. a countrv. store. cakeYearbooks are In and studen ts walks. a nd a dance. Admission is
who have ordered the books can
bring their receipts and pick the free.
bo 0 k
s up at the high · school Quilt s how
The Mason County Extension
between the hours of 8: 15-11 :30

that pack well ~nd would be a
great addition to the lunch.
To make lunch packing more
exciting, set aside a portion of
your kitchen lunch center. Stock
it. with plastic bags, different
tyupes of wrap a nd storage
containers. Children ·can help
with the lunch packing a nd it
would be a good time to talk
about the Importance of good
nutrition.
To make lunch eating more
exciting. why not include a n
occasional surprise? Ins tead of a
sandwich every day , add a
variety by including a sa lad,
soup, or be creative In your
sandwich. making by cutting
bread into different shapes,
sizes, or rolling them up. A
special note would add a bright
spot to a young st udent' s lunch.
es pecially if It's on a day that
includes a test! An encouraging
message would be very welcome.
Holiday napkin&gt;, puzzles, or
poems a re other little surprises
thar could be Included.
.
With a litt le Imagination you
ca n ~ ake !u nch packing and
lunc h eating away from home a
more e n joya bl e ex perie nce
for th e children or fa mil y
members ir\ your life.
.
Re member that a good pac ked
lunch will be nourishing. sa tisfying, tas te good a nd carry well .
Did you know that : Bacteria
thrive a t temperatures between
60 and 125 degrees. Moist, protein ·
foods like meats and meat
fillin gs, and milk products can be
stored safely at room te mperature for only 2 to 3 hours.
Remember to count preparation
time, not whe n the lunch gets to
work or sc hooL

The even1 will rake pIa ce ant;;hlieiiisii
eoiV,;,Itiiiaiiimiiiiiiin;,;,
• --~;;:.:::= ~---~
Oct. 7. A supper wi ll be served lr
SMOKED
a nd Ivan Potter and "Silver
THRIFTEE
Wings " wi ll provi de the m usic.
Admissio n is free and ma ny
act ivities are pla nned.
Rhond a Da iley , president. wel CHUNK
comed those In a tte ndan ce and
announc ed th e mem bership
drive is bei ng conduct ed. She
urged a ll paren ts to provipp
opinions and su pport for the
coming year.
GAY 90'S
RED SICIN
Lee Cod ner, vice president,
KING SIZE
announced that the polling location for the Leba non precinct
CHUNK
voters has been moved from the
20 OZ.
F
Lebanon Township building to
the Portland Elementary Sc hool.
'Phe PTO has been given perm issian to sell food on election day.
Marylin Cooper, chairma n of
HEll'S I OZ.
the Ca mpbells soup labels, will
be holding a contest next month
for the class who brings in the
most la~ls . This year's goa l is
61ft
10,000 Ia bels.
BUY ONf. GET ONE
The schooL will also be parti cipating in co Uection ''Apples"
DOl Ill
from paper towel products.
A report on the sc hool activit les fo r the year was given and It
PACI16
was announced that Tom Watt
ProCJucts will again be sold this
year.
The attendance banner was
.DDUPOIT OHIO
won by the firs t and second grade
classes . ·

Officers were Installed at the dues before the Fall Pouvoir in
recent meeting of the Eight and Toledo on Oct. 20 and 21.
Forty Meigs County Salon 710
Food and -toys will be taken to
whe n the group m et at the home the cysti c fibrosis family.
.of Rhoda Ha ckett.
It was reported that Delores
With Lula !iampton as the Kilgore, Mansfield, past depar tinstalling officer, the following m ent American Legion Auxiliary
were installed, Katherine Welsh, president, recently und er we nt
Pouvoir and L'Avocate: Mary eye s urgery.
Marti n, Le Pelit Chapeau: Pearl
Mrs. Hampton presented Mrs.
Knapp, Le Petit Chapeau Pre- Martin the publicity scra pbook.
miere: Julia Hysell, Le Dem! Mrs. Martin also received a
Chapea u Deuxiene: Florence certificate and gift from the
Richards, Le Secretaire-Cais- department. The group took
siere: Veda Davis, L' Aumonler: second place In the state compel!·
Iva Powell, L'Archivlste; Eunle tlon fat the book.
Brinker, La Concierge; and !'/Irs.
The Salon won awards at the
Harupton, La Surlntendante.
Ohio Departmental Marc he, held
Mrs. Martin opened the meet - recently in Toledo, Including a
ing in ritualistic form and a n- certificate ot merit for outstandnounc ed the audit comminee as
Mrs. Richards, Mrs. Ha1t1pton.
an d Loretta Tiemeyer.
Mrs. Richa rd s reported that
fund raising Items. such as
Peggl Vining was the.best loser
Christmas items, cards, novel- and Cherry Cadle was the 'runner
ties , pecans and cashews, and
up at the recent meeting of Ohio
Rada, would be ordered. It wa s · TOPS 570 when the group me t at
noted that the pecans and cathe coonhunte r 's lodge at the
shews will be shipped after the
fairgrounds.
first frost , sometime in NoLe nnie Aleshire. lea der.
vember, so the shipme nt will be a opened the meeting with prayer
fresh crop.
·
and pledge anq announced tha t
Nellie Grover was the winner of
Mrs. Richa rds also noted that
the
fruit basket.
dues need to be paid. She would
Thc&gt; bes t pre- teen loser was
the
like to see each member

OPEN
7:30 A.M .-6 :00P.M .

69CLB.

BOLOGNA

BABY BEEF
LIVER

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
PADS &amp; SERVICE

Bake and rummage sale
The Carpenter Baptist Chu rch
Busy Bees will have a bake and
rummage sale on Saturday .from
9 a. m. · until · 4 p.m. at. the
Townhouse on Route 143 across
from Laura 's Grocery.

•Lawn Mowers

•Riders
•Chain Saws
•Weedeaters
3 miles off of Rt. 7

Meeting date changed
The regular Meigs Local .
Sc hool Dlstict Board of Education meeting wil] be held on
Thursday , Sept. 28 at· 9 p.m.

at Meigs. Memory

Gardens
ACS AWARDS PRESENTED IN SYRACUSE
- John Hunnell, at left, pres ident of the Meigs
County Chapter of the American Cancer Society,
presents cerUflcates of appreciation to several
key individuals who s upported this summer's
Cancer Society swlmathons which were tiel«! at
London Pool In Syracuse and Middleport Pool.

Square dance
There will be a square dance at
the American Legion Annex on •
Mill Street In Mldd]eport on Oct.
6 from 8 p.m . to midnight. Music
will be provided by Bernard
Connoll
d th T
I
Th
·
Y an
e rave ers.
e ·
cos t Is $5 per couple and $3 single.
The public is Invited to attend.

59CLa.

TUESDAY
CHESTER -Chester Counc'il
No. 323, Daughters of America::
will meet ~~ the lod ge hall at 8
p.m. Tuesday. Practice will be
held for inspection and quarter ly
birthdays will be observed. Potluck refreshments will be
served.
POMEROY -The Ladles Auxiliary Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 will have a meeting on
Tuesday evening at 8 p.m.
Members are asked to bring
Ite ms for the gra b bag.

lng service In 1988-89, the yearly :
Chapeau's report of Mrs. Martin's. reaching full partnership
with Mrs. Richards as chairman
of tha.t committee, recognition
for, $100 donation sent for the
nurse's scholarship oi which
Mrs, Knapp was chillrman, a
certificate and award for Eunle
Brinker who Is La Concierge, and
a rituals and emblem award and
certificate presented to Mrs.
Hackett.
Mrs. Martine requested thai
members bring their favorite
prayers for the prayer book.
Refreshments wer served by
Mrs. Hackett and the' next
m eeti ng wa s annonced for the
first Mqnday in October at 1 p.m.

BREAD

79 (LB. 4 ~- s100 3 ~ 9
JUMBO
EGGS

99&lt;

TORTILLA
CHIPS

LAY'S
CHIPS

"FlEE"

RC COLA ~•

o:-z.~$":"l1~·~5_9_~_~u_P.--I

C&amp;K SUPERMARKET

I'

oz.

monthly meeting will be held on
Tuesday at 9 a. m.

•

I

RACINE -The Southern .Tunlor High Boosters will meet on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the junior
high.
WEDNESDAY
DARWIN -The Third Wednesday Homemakers of Syracuse
will have an annual potluck
picnic on Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
the sta te park op Route 33 south.
Members are . asked to bring
ideas for the yearbook.

RUTLAND - American Leg ion Post 602 will m eet · on
Thursday . Ha nk Cleland Jr. will
be speaking. Refreshments will
be served.
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet on Thursday at 1:15 p.m. at
the home of Francis Goeglein.
Louise Bearhs will have the
program. Helen Blackston will
conduct th e game.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8' A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
"Ads o ut side Meigs. Gall ia or Mason coumi• mu 1t be pr,e·
paid.
"Recefve $ .50 dis cou nt tor ads paid in ad11ance
• Free ads - G•veaway and Found ads undflf 15 Wt'rds will be
run l d&amp;¥ sat n o chtrge.
•Price of ad lor 111 capi1all etter s 1s double pr ice of ad cost .
"7 po int lin e type only used.
"Sent mel is not responslbiP. lor errors ah er firs t dl't' - (Ch eck
to r errou tirlt day ad runs in paper ). Call bf'lfore 2 ;00 p.m
d-.. atter publication to "1.-,e correction.
"Ads th at muSt be paid in adva nce are
Card of Tt1anks
Happy Ads
In Me mor iam
Y~~rd Sal•
"A ctass1ti ed a~eriisement placed in The Da1ly Sentinel (ell! ·
eept -:--c iMsified displav. Bu sines s Ca[ ~ and legal not ices )
... will also appear in the Pt . Pl easant Reg1ster and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homes

'

COPY DEADLINE -

I

MONDAY PAPER

I
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TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAP ER

'

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

I.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
_ , 1:00 A.M, SATUROAV
- 2 :00 P!Pt'l , MONDAY
- 2 00 P.M: TUESDAY

THURSDAY PAPER

-

2 .00 P .M . WEDNESDAY

-

z ,gQ P.M. THURSDAY

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2 :00P.M FRIDAY

D ays

1

3
6
10
Monthly

New Colognes Arriving Daily!

446 3673882452!i664337 9-

*46.00
'35.00
*14.50
*27.00
'16.00
'23.00
•24.00

GalllpOIII
Ch•hire
Vint o n
A•a Grande
Guvan Oitt.
Arabi a Dist.
Walnut

Meigs Count y
Area Code 614

Mason Co., wv

992 - Middlepo rt
PomlfOY
985 - Chester
843- Portland
247- letart Falls
949- Re ci n e
742 - Rulland
667 - Coolllille

675 - Pt . Ple11ant
458 - Leon
578 - Apple Grove
713 - MaJon
882 - New Haven
895-- Leta tt
937 - Buttalo

Ar u Code 3Q4

Get Results fast

'47.60

15

15
16
15
15

'29.60
*22.60

Announcemenls
123456-

78-

9-

Card of Thanks
ln Mem ory
Annoucemen ts
Giveawav
·
Happy Ads
Lust end Found
Yard Sale !Paid in ad:vance)
Public Sal e &amp; Au ct•o n
Wanted to Buy

Til-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

Roger Hysell .
DRY CLEANING
Go rage
SERVICE

SINCE 1976
ROACHES o FLEAS
TERMITES • ANTS
SPIDERS .
BEES • WASPS

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

.AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trau111lulon
'
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Moml&gt;Or Notional Pest
Control Assn.

free

'
1-800-535·2199

· · 4-25-tin

Servtces
1 1 - Help Wanted

12- Situation Wanted
1 3- ln suran ce

141516 1718 -

Busin•s fram ing
Schaols &amp; InstruCtiOn
R.diO. TV II CB Repatr
Miscellaneous
Want e d To Do

23 - ProfMsional Servit:n

Real Eolale
31 - Homes tor Sat e
32 - Mo bi,l e Homes for Sal e
33 ..... Farmli for Sal e
34- Bu tl nau Buildings
35- lots &amp; Ar:reage
36 - Real Enate Wanted

I;CfjiMfl .
41 4 24.3 44 45 46 47 48 48 -

House• for R•nt
Mobil e Homes fo r Rent
Farms for Rent
Apartmenl for Re nt
Furntst-ec:l Rooms
Spac;e for At nt
Wanted to Rent
Equipment for Rent
FOr L•••

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS
Seatocl btdo wMt be

,.

r•

ceived by the Meigs County
Board of Cammi11ioners in
their oflico to081ocl In the
Courthouao, Socond Str-.
PomerO'/, Ohio 45789 untH

12 noo~ on October 4. ·
1989. end oponod ot 2:30 p.
m. on October 4 for the following vehicle:
1989 or 1990 4-door Se·
din, full-liz• automobile.
ouN•bto lor poll~ uae.
Spocifl081iona lor lllid au-

tomoblto may bo obtoinod
from the Ctork of the Boord
of . Melga County Commissioner• bttw-., the houn
of 8 :30a.m. ond 4 :30p.m.
Monday through .Friday.
The Comm'-ilion•• r•erve the right to reject any

We can rlpllir and rt·
care raciatars arMI
heater cares. We can

.PAT HILL FORD

CALl 992-6756

992-2196

"DOC" VAUGHN

· Middleport,

Certified Li&lt;:ms.t Shop
6 ~ 26 ·' 88 ·

1 mo.

2112 Milts Out New
Lima Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.

·SUSAN COLEMAN
742·2778
Call hr Fall Speelal1
1st vjsit FR££ .
-PossiblY more.
a.u.·a~-1

ALLEt,I'S
HAULING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

l600 GALLON

WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
Dill HAULED
992-527

Merchandise
&amp;1-Houstholcl Good!:
52- Sparting Good•
53 - Antiques
54 - Misc . Merchandise
!)6 - 8uildjng Suppltel
56 - Pets for Salft

57 - Musical Instruments
58 - Fruit• &amp; Veg8tables
&amp;9 -F or Sale or Trade

Fm11 S11ppi1P.S
&amp; , IVP.SIUck
6 1·- Farm Equiprnen1
62 - Wanted to Buy
63 - l ive• tock
6;4 - Hay &amp; Grein
65 - Seec:l &amp; Fert iliar

71 - Autos ior Sate
.72 - Tru eks for Sale
73- Vens 6 4 wo ·s
74 - Motorcvclee
75 - Boats &amp; Mo tor• for Sale
76 - Auto Paris S. Ac::ceuori•
77 -- Auto Repair
78 - Camping Equ ipment
79- Camperl &amp; Motor Hom"

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REP All
locat.d at Yaley lUIIIbtr
ln·Midtlleport, Dh. PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4-cycle
engines

Stock Parts tor
Homelite. Weedeater,
Tecumteh, Briggs 6:
Stratton.

PH. 992-3922
SWEEPER REPAIR
AU MAKES AND
MODELS

MARTIN'S

•Custom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changes
•Grease Jobt
•General Chassis
Maintenance

•Computerized Balancer

Public N otlce ·
end 111 bfdl end/ or accept
the bolt bid lor the intended
purpose.
Morv Hobltot!er. Cterlt
Mol go County
Commiesionera
(9119 .. 28 2tc

.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Fa1tory Chokecl 12
Gouge OnlY.

WALK-IN WELCOME

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2160

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS

CUTTING &amp;
WELDING

247-3522

Call Anytime

St. Rt. 338
Letart
Ohia

992-2371
l/13/19tfn

r.'i •

~

~~

coG"NEii.-"iiAC:roR:sl
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHEN&amp; 1: BATHS
•EXTENSIVE fiEMOOELING
•VINYL SIDING A ROOANQ
~ETAL

IUILDINGS

•NEW HOMES

.'i i Nf.E; 1969

DIIStll' St. IYUtuSE

992-761
&amp; TREE
T~IM . and REMOVAL

.tiGHT HAULING

BILL SLACK

992-226t

St. Rt. 124

EVENINGS

Middleport, Oh.

4/ 6/ 89/ tfn

(Next to Hill Top Gracery)

I I

I
I

MOBILE
HOME PARI
•Mobile Hom..
Parts

- •M obile Home·
Rentals·
•Lot Rentals

992-7479
Rt. 33 Narth af •
Pomeroy, Ohio
L
· 1-u-·ea-tln .

Public. Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

Tho Tuppera Ploino-Cheo'
ter Water Diltrict is holding
a public meeting for the purpou of raviaw of line location•. tank aitH and other
pertinant information con·
earning Ph• e IV Project of
the District.
Thi1 meeting will be held
in accord8nce with require--

het d at the office of tho Diatrict, -39561 Bar 30 Rood,
Roedovito. Ohio at 9:00 A .
M. on Friday. September
29. 1989.
Any end/ or all ln1ereeted
persons are hereby notified
to attend. For further detllil1
on information to be r•
viewed, pleaee contact the
office prior to the meeting.
at 985-33 t 5.
(9) 19 1tc

3 Announcements

NEW HOURS

PAUL'S
BARBER SHOP
RACINE, OliO

WILL BE OPEN
ONLY 3 DAYS A

WEEK

Mon.·Wed.·Sat.
8 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR
Take the pain out af
painting. let me da
it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614-985-4180
8/ 4/ 89-ffn

6· 1fJi.tfn

PlUMBING

&amp;

• Now locatiotl:
16. North Second
Midtloport,- Olio 45760 ·

SALE' &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Flahlng SuppU•

Your Phone
CJI,ble Billa Here

Pay

IUSIHISS I'IIONI
(6 " ' "2-6550
.lfSIIINQ PHONE
(6141

"NEW" RECLINERS

Located Behind ·
Tractor Dealership

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
9-8 . '89· 1 mo.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

Reasonable

Prices"

· PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-1

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667·3271
Grant A. Newland

TRI COUNTY
RECYCLING
POMEROY, OHIO
We Buy All Non Fer· ,
rous Metals, Plastics,·
. '·
Stainless Steel
(PAYING TODAY

AUG. 30, 1989)
CLEAN, DRY
ALUMINUM CANS
41 ( per lb.

'·

#1 COPP£R .........'I0' lb. ' ·
#2 COPPER .......... 75' lb.
RED BRASS.. .........50'· lb.
YELLOW BRASS .... 40' lb. '
RADIATORS ..........35&lt; lb.
HOURS

7 Days 14 Week
9 a .m.-7 p.m.

At Jet. S.R. 7 &amp; 143
On

Th~-~t~:_s1s mo.

Howard L Writllll ,
USED FURNITURE ~====~liVING ROOM SUITES
ROOFING '
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEnE sm
NEW- IEPAII

Salem St., Rutland

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

7-18-'1!1-ffn

FREE ESTIMATES

oFIREWOOQ

10% OFF AU PERMS

169 N. 2nd
Middleport
992-2725

WATER
SERVICE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR

ROUSH
. CONSTRUCTION
jii!!!J: G~EG I. ROUSH

MEET THE
STAFF
·
PERM SALE

8+1 mo.·

GARAGE

992-3897

83- hciYating
84- Eiec:tricat &amp; Refrigeration
86 -Gen•al Haul-.til
86 - Mobile Mo"\e Repair
87 - Upholuary

Speciallets"

" Free Estimates' '

6-21-'19-\fn

Sr.t VICCS
81 · · Home Improvements
82- Piumbing &amp; HeM ing

"Wadding gow•

Now thru Sept. 9, 1989

NO SUNDAY

B&amp;W

ments of FmttA end wHI be

Tr~nsporl ~liOn

992-2284

POMEROY, OHIO

BISSELL
SIDING
CO".
....._ iullt.

mo.

JONES nRE
CENTER
.20
.30
.42
.60
. 05 / day

Fabric Shop

9-6 - 89 -tfn

SUN'S UP
TANNING

.

tin

•SHRUB

Over
. 15 Words

$4 .00
$6 .00
$9 .00
$13.00
$1 .30/ day

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Molt foreign and
Domestic Vehicl es
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Cert;tied Machanic

repair Gas Tanks.

6-5-'19-tln

R ato

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

SER~ICE

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

985-4422

OFFERED AT

8·1-1 mo.

992·6872

Employmcnl

Public N otlce

•'

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

222 Eastllain
POMEROY, OH.

Rates are tor co nsecutNe runs. br oken up days will b e char~ed
as separate ad11

....

~

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO

FURNITURE
and MORE

tnr ea~h 1111\1

21 - Busin•s OpportunitY
22 - Mon«Pt' to loan

followin!!' telephon e e:xchanf!'C's .. .
Gal lie Cou nty
Area Code 614

Words

ljif6h1Hijll

C /a .~ .~ified paf!'l'-' corer I he

992-6669

I

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

•New &amp;. Used Tiras

)

I

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and AL- Anon .wtll
meet on Thursday at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church at 7 p.m.
Call 1-800-333-5051 for
Information.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POLICI ES

271 NdiTH SECOND

DARWIN -The first annual
meeting of the Chris tian Me n's
Fellowship will be held Thursday
at the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly just South of Darwin
on County Road 20. A soup and
sandwich dinner will begin at 6
p.m. Entertainment will be provided by The Kingdom Builders
a nd Kerry Allen will be the
speaker.
,_

--Classifie

Crystal Smith, and Amy Smith
wa s the runner up. The best
losers and runners-up received
gifts and certificates:
Ms . Vining, assistant leader,
conducted two quiz games and
prizes were awarded.
·
Dreama Pickens conducted a
program about a football game
a nd losing we ight. The winners of
this game will be announced at
the Tuesday evening meeting.

OBSESSION, 3.4 oz. Spray ....................................
KNQWING, 1 Oz ............................................. ......
ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW, 1.8 oz ....................
LIZABETH TAYLOR'S PASSION, 1.5 Oz ...............
OMBRE ROSE, 1 Oz ...............................................
SHALIMAR, 1 Oz ..................................................
GLORIOUS by Gloria Vanderbilt, 1.7 oz ..-........... ... ..
~. OPIUM, 2 Oz ... .. ........... ........................... .. ..............
OSCAR, 2 Oz .... ... .................................................
LIZ CLAIBORNE, 1 Oz ...........................................

day at 7 p.m. Residents of the
precinct are urged to attend.
Anyone wanting to register may
do so at this meeting.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The
MIDDLEPORT -Group two of
the Presbyterian Chu rc h will Meigs County Health Departmeet a t 'the home of Mrs . Eddie m entwlll be conducting a limited
Burkett on Tuesday evening at number of cho !es terol screenings·
7:30 p.m. Bible st udy will be on Wednesday at the Farmers
conducted by Mrs. Francis And- Bank in Tuppers Plains from 1-3
erson. Devotions will be give n by . p.m .
Mrs. Myron Miller. A lhank
THURSDAY
offering will be co llected.
POMEROY -The Meigs
POMEROY -The Ladies Aux- County Branch of the American
iliary at Veterans Met:norial Cancer Society will have Its
board meetin g on Thursday at 7
Hospital will meet on Tuesday at
1:30 p.m . In the conference room p.m. at the Cancer Society's
a t the hospital. Officers will be office. All board member s are
asked to attend.
installed a nd dues will be taken.
The outgoing officers will serve
bread to the world.
REEDSVILLE -Voters of the
old Reedsville precinct are urged
RUTLAND -The Leading
to attend a meeting at the
Creek Conservancy District's · Reedsville Fire House on Thurs-

TOPS meeting_held

49&lt;LB.
LUNCH
PIES

From left Is Valessa Hunnell, London Pool
swtmathon winner and .o verall co.unty-wllle
winner; Edna Hunnell, of the Southern Band
Boosters, who provided concessions; Naomi
London, respresentlng Retired Senior Volunteer
Program members, who served as lap counters;
alid David Deem, representing London Pool.

Community calendar

Picnic
,..,
The Feeney Bennett r-ost 128
will have a Its family picnic on
su nd a,y a t th e Legt'o n p a rk on
Mill Street In Middleport. Dinner
wt'll begin at 1 p m Chicken and
· ·
noodl es an d coffee will be furnlshed. Those at tending a re to
bring a covered dish. In case of
rain. the event will be held In th'e
a nnex .

BACON

We Service All Makes
5-4-89-1 mo.

8-17-1 mo.

Softball tournament
There will be a class D soft ball
tournament In Middleport on
Saturday a nd Sunday for $60.
Call Rick Stafford at !304 1
882-3205 for Information . ·

JOWL

192·5335 -'-915 ·3561

8 · 23-' 89 1 mo.

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

SLICED
BACON

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

S50 Pap St.
Mitldltport, Oh.

Eight and Forty installation held

Brown b4gging it

By Cindy Oliveri
made a head of time a nd either
County Extens ion Agent
re frigerated or frozen. Here are
Home Economics &amp; 4-H
a few sugges-t ions for success(ul
· It's hard to believe that
sandw ich m aki ng, First. spread ·
summer is almos t over. and for
bread slices with margari ne to
many households It a lso signals
seal them ·and help prevent
t~e begin ning of another school
sogginess . So ft e ne d cream
year. Parent s have been busy
cheese, cheese s pread, or peanut
Helping their c hildren get pre- · butte r ca n also be used to "seal"
pared with clothes, bOok bags,
the bread. To freeze sandwiches
and notebooks . Another imporwrap them securely in heavy
tant item that needs daily a tte n- duty plastic bags, freezer paper
tion is lu nch. For those who take
or fall. Press the wrap to the
their lunches to school, planning
bread and seal tightly. Label
is. a n impor tant step to provide
with content s a nd date. Do not
adequate nutrition and variety.
freez e sandwiches with vegetaSchool prepar~d lunhes are also
bles, fr uit s or very crisp foods .
very nutritious and require less
They . become waterly and loose
time in preparation for busy
their cr is~ ness when thawed.. ·
famili es.
Another importan t consideraYou are, as the saying goes,
tion in packing lunches for school
what you eat. Even more imporis food safety . It is impor tant to
tant for the person who prepares
keep hot foods hot and cold foods
the family lunches. you are what
co ld. Fooo poiso nin g can defia person packs ' Da ily lunch nitely be a problem In fooo Items
m11kers know that the lunch ca n
that are not stored properly .
be a n Important part of a well
Id eally , sa ndwiches lather than
balanced diet.
hot sa ndwiches l should be kept
The most common it em in a
refrigE'rted. For many school
packed lunch is the traditional
c hildre n this is not poss ible.
sand wich. Sa ndw ic hes can proAnot her a!terna t ive is to pack the
ville a wide var iety of nut rients
sa ndwic hes in a cold-keeping
aqd food groups if they conta in a
co nt a in er or tuck in a ca n of cold
meat. cheese a nd bread. They
beve rage, or can of cooia nt. Also.
provide co nven ie nce for working . frozen sandwiches will be thawed
parent s because t hey can be
a nd rE'ady to ea t by lunch tim e.
Packed lunches should contain
food s from the fr uit and vegeta ble ~ro up whi ch could be celery
a nd ca rrot sticks. sliced tomatoes, fruit c up, fres h fruit, dried
fruits , or brocco li flowerets.
Remember that a well balanced
di et should in clude at least one

a.m.

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
oRange •Freezers
•Refrigerators
" Must Be Repair-It"

~ _Licensed'Ciinical Audiologist.
!1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Aveooe, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

GillY'S
BODY SHOP

WANTED

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
· 9-ll·'lt-l mo. pd.

NEED A HOME?
Af~'~~ MODULAR HOMES
"Qf:jp SINCE 1970

Ranch, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Stary
MODR OPEN DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
1:OD P.M.-6:00 P.M. ar Call For Appointment

FAMILY HOMES INC.

614-992-2471
P. 0. Box 207
Pomeroy, Ohio
Locally Owned • Oper1ted by Bill. Steve&amp;: Kevin Pullins '
9- 31 · ' 89 ·1 mo.

�..... .

--·~ ·

--·····.......
LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements
3

. ... ..... - '

Alone? Put ~our romantic tub••

42

idl

In cur hlnds l Someone lor
everyone! For delaile 6 conlldentlal reply eend name. ad·
drass &amp; age to Personal
Resourc~ 1 "PO.
Box 5846
Athens, Ot1 45701

4 free klttena.!.~lld while, 8 wka

J

Abandoned 3 mos. ago! " mo

I

old, 304-882•i&lt;:l19.

12x50 edge of town, gae, air,
stove, refflg., carport, no pets.
$150 mo. pll.ll dep. Ideal lor 1 or
2. 614-446-7124 or 614-141-0607

2
bedroom
furnished.
Wuhtr/dryer, air conditioned.
$235. per month plus ut1Ut111
ond do!&gt;&lt;&gt;lh. l14-992-7479.
2 br., mobile home, rent on
While Rd. 5 ml. from Holzer
Hosphol. $185 mo. Coli 614-2455633, after 6 p.m.
2br, Rt. 180 at EvergrHn.
$225/mo. I&gt;IUI SK. Dtp No
poto. 114-446-6189 or &amp;14-146·
6605.
2br., fumlshed, cable. air conditioned, blflutlful riverview In
Kanauge. Follert Mobile Home
Pori&lt;, 614-446·1602.

!

n

orange male cal. A l.lorrls look
• llko. &amp;14-44&amp;·4713 o.,.nlngo.

Hospltol bod, 614·245-9171.
female hampstere to

91YNWI)',

614-245-9175.

Old newspapers to give away
First trailer on rlght(Co. Rd. 25)
past Meigs High School.

Red Cann1 bulbs lo glvt away.
Vou have to dig up and furnish
own containers. John Lambert
on N.w Lima Ad.

6

Lost

&amp;

"Be nice to your brother,
Heather. Someday he'll be
•
your telephone
screenmg
calls."

Found

Found :small mate Poodle bet·
wHn Chtster and Long Bottom,
around Sepl. 11. cau 614·9854244.

Lost Black m.olo kitten, ml .. lng
from
At. 143
area near Pomeroy.
Reward
614·992-6763
LQSt , Tan w/black pug taea
Raccoon Creek area on 141
Answers to Butch, hard of
hearing. Rowanl offorod 614379-2957
Lost medium-sized

long-hair

black dog In Wolf Pen area. It
found eaU 614-992-5401 .

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

&amp;

Vicinity

4 ram11y, Sept 22 9·5, Centenary
Town House, Clot:hu Children
to Adult, priced to still
AL L Yard Salas Must Be Paid In
Advance DEADLINE 2.00 p m.
the day betOfe 1he ad Is to run.
Sunday edition - 2 00 p m.
Friday Monday •dillon - 2 00
p m. Saturday.

Yard Salt: Wad, Thur, Frl, Sat.
Barg1ns tor everyone! 9-4 30,
Nai ghborl'lood Ad 112 mile out.

9

Wanted to Buy

Fu rmtura and appliances by lila
p1ece or ent1re household. Fair
pnces bemg paid. Call 614-4463158
Good used church paws. CAll
&amp;1 4·992-7410.
J un k cars with or withoul
mo tors Call larry Lively 614·
388·9303
Quilts
Pre 1940 quHts. Any condition.
Cas h Paid Call 614-992-5657 or
614-592-2461.
TOP CASH paid for 1983 model
and newer used ears . Sm1th
Buic k-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave, Gallipolis. Call 614-446-2282.
Used furniture and household
appl1ancet. Phone 614-7422048
Used turnl1ure by the place or
ent1re household also ..111ng.
614-742-2455

Employment S ervices
11

Help Wanted

$300 a day Process Phone Or·
de rs People Call You! 614·256·
6450 Ext L·21
2 nurses aides, shop clerk .. In·
qutre at Odds and Ends Shop,
Middleport
ANYONE CAN APPLY! Guarart·
teed V1saJMC, US charge Even
w1th bad ered1t No one refused
Call 213-925-9906 ext U2508
AVON I All Areas
Spears, 304-675-1429

I

S hirley

AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2645

Admission Co·ordmalor!Soclal
Worker fo r long term care
laetllty, expenence preferred,
excellent salary and benefits,
Ca re Haven of Pam! Pleasant,
Rt 1 Box 326, Pomt PlaaSilnl,
wv 304·675·3005

11 _ Help Wanted
_

.:.,:.::..:::....:..:.=..:.::.;:..___

Job Hunting? Need a skill? W•
train paopla for jobs as Auto
Mechanics, Carpenters, Cosmotologists, Dlverslf1ed Med1cal
Workers,
Paralegals,
Electricians,
Food
Service
Workers, Electronics TeeM·
nicians, Industrial Mamtenanc:e
Workers, Nursing Assistants
and
Orderlies,
Machinists,
OH•c• Workers and Welders.
Register now lor classes bagm·
ning October 2nd Call Trl·
County Vocational Adult Center
It 614·753·3511 Ex1. 14. A
variety of funding sources to
pay tor training are avallab'e tor
those eligible.
LPN lull lime position Pleasant
Valley Hospital Nursing Care
Center,
contact
personnel
offlca, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
304-675-4340, EOEIAA.

21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do
b1,.1slness w1th people you know,
and NOT to Nnd money
through the mall pntll you hava
lnvastlgated the offering.
0~10

100% CASH INCOME
$300-$700 each Amusament
Gamo
per
week.
Prime
toeaUona. 1QO% return of lnvastmenl GUARANTEED. Call1800-14&amp;-5443 NOW.
Shoe Store and VIdeo Store
combined for sate. In Pomeroy
arta. 814-992·3830 or &amp;14-9922571.
Real Estate

Local rotaller seeking lost 31 Homes tor Sate
Prevention Manager, full-tlme
benet1ts, Hnd resume In care a 1 2 etory brick home, over 100
Bar: 655, Galli palls, OH 45&amp;31.
years old. Approx. 7 acres.
OWners will cons1der
Now hiring, part-t1m1 AN's Any $55,000.
land
contract
Located Eureka
3 shlhs. Competitive wages behind Clay School
. 614·256·
Contact D O.N Pmacrast Care 1678.
Center, 555 Jackson P1ke. Gal·
llpolls 614-446·7112. E.O E
3 bedroom brick house w1th
Now taking applications for large lot, Mid Way Drive New
cook,, waitresses, walters, Haven Good Cond. 304-n3buspersont, 6 cooks. Apply at 5881.
Oownunder Resataurant bet· 3 bedroom, Rutland, Central air,
woen 2 30 6 4 30. No phone garage, will con11der land con~
calls please.
tract $30,000. 614-992-6277.
Otl field help, mechamc, dozer 6 room ttouH, Mason, gas fur·
and service rig aperalors, rig nace, walking distance 10 store,
hands, laborers, truck drivers. $13,000. 304·882·2971 lor ap614-662-6921 .
polntmanl.
Phys1cal
Development By owner houst and lot, ~14
Speelalisl. Part time. Must have Walnut St., 304-675-1099.
Physical Education Certificate
or equlv111lent from
Ohio By owner, 2 112 bedrooms, 1 112
Depar1ment of Education. Adap- baths on 112 lc:rt lot. 2 outtive P.E. C.rt1l1cate preferred. buildings, central air and heal,
Valid Ohio Drlvors License newly carpetad. Owner will help
614-742-2718 Doyle
prefarrad. $12 66 hr 16 hours finance
par week ~base scalo). Im- Hudson.
mediate
pasitlon.
Hours 10 00am ~2 OOpm (Mon.- By owner, 3 bedroom, 2 lull
Thur ). Apply to: Betta Hoffman, baths, big Uvlng &amp; fam11y room,
Program Dlrecror. Meigs Coun1'/ huge fireplace 1 112 acre.
Board of MR!OO, PO Box 301, Priced to oell. 304·675·3123.
131 0 Carleton St , Syracuse, like new 3BR home. Rt. 160
Ohlo457N .
nur NGHS. Will be put In
Somaone to sit With children al- Realtor hands soon. &amp;14-lSBtar school and some weekends, 8711.
7 and 9 yrs olds, need malure Nice 3 br, home w/gara ge, new
and reliable person, call befort root, vinyl siding, newly •dded
3•00, 304-675-7349
dining room wiWet bar. Located,
The Galli• County Police corner lot In Kanauge. 614-440..
Academy Is ottermg another 420 2251 .
hour OHIO PEACE OFFICER Small ~ 2br, house wl2 car
BASIC TRAINING course to garage. 2 miles out 141 $34,500.
begin October 2, 1989, and end 614-446-0335 aher Sp.m.
March 12, 1990 Th1s training Is
s ponsored by lhe Ohio Peace
Officer's Trammg Council, and 32 Mobile Homes
Buckeye Hills JYSD. Tulllon is
tor Sale
$700 To quality you must ba at
least t8 yrs. old, han a high 12x65, 2 bedroom. 614·742school diploma or GED, hold a 2744.
comm1ssion as a pollee officer
(contact Sheriff or Chief), and 1985 Skyline, 14x64 new carptt,
have NO cr1mlna1 record 614- bay window, appllarw:u, decks,
446-0018, cr 614-446-4564 tor storage bullding, Underpinning,
prlcelowerod. 614-245·9625
deta1ts
Wa11tad. Babysitter 1n my home,
3-4 days a week Call after 5pm
&amp;14-367·7744

12

Be your oWn boss! Need parthme mcome? I havo an out·
s tandmg opportuntly wtth Net·
work 2000 an aull'lorlzad independent marketer of U S Sprmt
long dtslance services. 1-800·
74H111 .
COSMETOLOG ISTS. New Salon
Openmg . Guarantnd wages
plus co mm. patd vacations,
manager, stylists needed. 614·
682·7018, any11me.

15

Situation
Wanted

Room and board tor elderly in
my home Good care 614·992&amp;901.
We care tor elderly and han-dicapped in our home 26 years
expenent::e LPN on call Low
iocome home Call 6~ 4-992-6873
af1er 7.00 p.m. lor more Information.
Schools

&amp;

Instruction
Giving bagtnnlng piano lessens
In my home. 614-25&amp;-6276.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jackson P1ke.
Call 614-146·43&amp;7 Reg. No 8&amp;·
~1-1055B.

CRUISE SHIPS Now h1nng at~ 16 Wanted to Do
pos1Hons Both skilled a nd un- Babysllting In my home, any
s killed For Information Call shlh,
7 miles South of Gat6~5-779·5507 ext t-J656
11polis, 614·256·1691 .
Customer Serv1c:e woman/men, Babys 1ttmg Job In my home. 49
earn up to $7 to $9 por hr Hay SpruceSt , 614-446-0386.
working from home , 304· 344·
2210
Dependable hous e cleaner,
Mason &amp; Me 1gs County area,
EARN MONEY typing home. witt
work around your hours,
$30,000/year 1ncome potential. 304-882-3733
Oe tatls, 805 -687-6000 Ext.S·
4562
Nhss Paula's Cay Care Center.
affordable, thlldcara M·F
EARN MONE Y typing nt home Sale,
-530 pm Agu2 ~A-1 0 .
$30,000/ye;u Inco me potential. 6am
Boforo, attar schoof. Crop-Ins
DetailS, 1·805-687·6000 Ext. B· welcome
614-446-8224.
10189
Interior &amp; extanor, 15
Got EKtra Time, now lhe kids Painting,
yrs exparitnce Gutter cleaning
are back In school Turn that ax· &amp;
racelllng &amp; root coating Free
tra time, Into $$$ Call Avon , call esllmata
614·379-2320
Carol 614· 446-4397 or Bea 6,4•
446-4882.
Will do babysitting In my home,
Vmton area, exptrtlneecl
It you 're not afraid to answer In
Aeasonabla
rates 614-388-86&amp;5.
tho phones, answer this ad and
1 will pay you $150/Wk No ex- Will do Ironing, In my home, you
pereince necessary. Excellent drop off 6 pick-up 614-446worktng conditions Call M11 4434.
Lawson at 614-288-6422
Would llka to do babysitting In
Oil well pumpers needed for my home. Have experience.
Me igs Co Send resume to. Box Near N G H.S 614·388·Q096
172, Guysville, OH. 45735

Read the Best 5eler
Read the

t

44

Apartment

_,_

1BR unfum. apt. Range &amp; refrig
provided Watar, sewage, garbage, p•ld. Dep. &amp;: Ref. 614-446·
4345.
1br.1 apartment, all utilities lncluaad $300 per ma. Oep. req 'd.
814-446-4222 be1tw11n 9 6 12
a .m.
2 OR apartment, utilities paid
Call batwnn 11•m &amp; 6pm only
614-146-9742.
2 BR, 112 duplex, partially fur·
nlthod.
Neighborhood
Ad
Ava ilable October 1st. $250/mo.
614-446-1157 after 7pm, 1894·
4501 ask for Larry.
2 bedroom epts. for rent Caratad. Nlee setting, laundry
acllitles 1vallable. Call614·992·
3711 EOH.
2 br fum apt. $200 mo· $100
dep. No polo. 614·446-9332.

r.

45

35 W. apt. 2 br., 1 bath, private
enclosed pallo. Close to
grocery storea 6 shopping can·
ter,
water,
sewe'.t. trash
provldod $265/mo \,;Ill 614446-8727.
3br,
kitchen
w/stove,
refrigerator, $250/mo, utilities,
dap, &amp; rei, no pels. 5 Quar1 St.
614-146·4926.
Apar1ment lor rent uptown area.
Utilities paid except aleclric:.
304-675·5329.
Apar1menl for rent, 304-6752216.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 53&amp; Jackson Piko
from $192/mo Walk to shop &amp;
movlas. Call614-446-2568. EOH
Fum. Efficiency $150 ut11itln
pd. Share battt. 607 Second,
Gallipolis, 614·446·4416 after
8p.m.
Furnished apt, adult&amp;, 304~675~
2257
Fumlsh•d apt. 1 br, $225
utllltes paid, 920 Fourth Gal~
llpolls, 614-446-4416 af1er7p m.
Furnished apt 1br, $210, utllitl!ls
paid 701 Fourth Galhpolis, 61444&amp;-441&amp; ahor 7p.m.
Graelous Uvlng 1 and 2 bedroom apar1ment• at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments In Middl•port. From
$184 From September 15th to
Novembar 15th, tirsl month rent
free to thosa who quality. Call
614-992·7787. EOH.
Now accept Ing •r,p11catlons for
2 bedroom apt, u11y carpeted,
appliances, water and trash
lckups provided. Ma1nlenance
rea living CIOH to shopping
banks and schools For more In:
formation call 304-882-3716 Equal opportunity ttousing. Sect1on 8 accepted.

r.

One IMdroom apt, no pets
1100 deposit, $235. month In:
cludn wattr, 304-675·4023.

c..;.::,.:,:cc..::..:...,..-.,...,...---

Rentals
41 Houses tor Rent

VIIK)

Tuettday. Septem'* 19, 1989
Furnished

71

Autos for Sale

Rooms
11161 Plymouth Rotlont. 4dr,
PSIPB, aulo trant, AC, real nice
$3600. 114-25e-8251 .
11161 Pontloc Sunblrd, Turbo,
Sunroof
crulu
control,
automatic transmle•lon, MW
tiNO, good cond. 114-446-4127
after 5p.m.
11168 Chevy Corslco got&lt;!, 4 dr,
air cond. powtr tocli:•, a win·
dowa, 18,000 mUla. 11~251oo
1111.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcloo
frorrv$100.
Fardi-Marcede•.
Corvettes-Ch•vys.
Surplut.
Buyers-Guide
10~7-&amp;000
Ext.!l-10181.

Sleeping roomt with cooking.
Also trail., apace. All hook·ups.
Call aher 2.00 p.m., 304-7735651, Mason WV.

I

ij

46 Space tor Rent
Commercial space, 1400 tq ft.
Corner Second and Pine. Ample
parking. Call 614-146-1248, 44&amp;2325, or 446-4425.
Country Mabile Home P•rk,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
lots, renta1e, parts, talet. Call
614·992-7479.
Lot for smaH mobile hom~ 1
water 6: tewer furnlshMI, Tv
cable and garbage evaUable,
304-675-6984.

51

Merchand 1se
Household

1978 Dodqa, half.ton pickup,
50,000 orlg~nal mll11. Exc. cond.

~~;;;;;;;;;;~~;:~~=~==;;;~ 13,000.614·446·4045.
1171 ChiVY Halt•on,

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appliances, TV. sets. Open
8 a m to 6 p m Mon -sat. 614·
446-1699, 627 3rd Ave Gallipolls, OH
~:C.::.:~---G E. automet1c Washar $95;
ICanmcre dryer $75; Maytag
Automatic Washer, $95; Norga
dryer
$75,
refngerator
apartment
site,
S95;
Refrigerator, frost tree! white,
$125, side b~ side refr gerator,
coppertone like new, $250:
Skaggs Appliances, Upper River
Rd. 614-146·7398.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer&amp;, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appllanc01,
Upper River ACt. Baside Stene
Crest Motel. Call614-446-7398.
Gold sculptured carpel with
pad, 20x13 ft and 3x19 tt, good
cond, 304-675-4127.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NewfUsed
Household furnishing 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt Pleasant, WV,
call 304-675-1450.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oltve St , Gallipolis NEW 6 pc.
wood group, $339. living room
S\lites, $, 99·$599. Bunk bedl
with bedding, $249. Full size
mattress &amp; foundation atarting
$99. Recliners star11ng S99.
UESD Seds, dresser~~, bedroom
suiles. Desks, wringer wuher, a
complete line of used tumhure
NFW Western boots
$35.
Workboots S18 &amp; up. (Staal &amp;
son toe.) 614•446•3158•
Table with 4 chairs, chest ot
drawars, wood chairs, 2 wood
doors, washer, refrigerator,
recline chair, 6 portable washer,
614·245·9171 .
I :.:~~::..:..:.:...,-_ _ _ __
Valley Furniture
New and used furniture and ap·
pllances. Call 614·446·7572.
Hours 9·5.
Vl'ra Furniture &amp; Appliances

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 y.u old Regilterld Siberian
Husky, lomot.. $100. 1980 Oldo
Cutla.. 2 door, am-tm, tana, AC.
$1000.114·742·208a.
•·

2 tlckltl for any Cleveland

Brown Football Gamn. Praterred Hating. &amp;14-256-1267 ar
814-446·2289.
Dakota Farm Home built on
your tot, $ ,995 &amp; up. See our
model. 61413
-1 88•7311
FireWood for Sale: $30 a load.
614-367·7180.
For Sale • Caner... and Plastic
aeptlc tanks. All sizes. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack~
son, OH. ,.800-537-9526
For •ale: Lltestylar multi·
function exerciser. Will do over
25 exercises. $75. 614-367·7281 .

Metal work machinery South
Bend, Emco Maler, Jet Muford,
Clausing, Rusnok, Sharline.
Blue Ridge Machinery, 304-5623538.
I New cast Iron free atandlng
~Nood/coal burner, wffln &amp; vent
blower, $250; Ping-pong table
top, $45i 614-446-4141 arter 6 or
weaktnat.

1·';;

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

Top Cath paid. Old furniture
cubo~rds,
quilts,
oriental,
Rooms tor rent· waek or month. pa1nhngs, toys, or entire ntate
Starting at $120/mo Galha call collect 304-525-3275, or
304·523-6854.
Hotel. 614-446-9580.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

2 bedroom, all electric, In long
Bottom, OH. $275 per monttl
unturn1shed.
$125 deposit:
Available OCt 1. 614·985-3511 .

458·1031
Queen slzt waterbod $200; two
1O·&amp;pead blcvcles. 304-895·3801
before 9 p.m.

Radio and record player with
records (some 1930), large
microwave oven colored TV
w/remote contra!, wardrobes,
utility eablnets, electric lront,
uprlaht rreezer, chest freezer, ,8
tt relrigerator, real old wooden
ttlephonel, old hay rakt, Ford
Galaxy, chain saw, 24 ft laddar.
304-675-22&amp;7.
SM58 Mlc. Monitors 10 ft Satll1111 Dish Gas sump pump.
Bathroom cablnal sink and mir·
ror. 614-992-6137.

Somma Water Bad Mattress.
Full size. Like new Cost $595.
Wtllstll for $200 614-992·2912.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison, 1210 Second Ave,
Gai\lpolls, OH 614-446-4338.
Whlelc:halrs - new or used. 3
whHied electric scooter Call
Rogert Madlcal, 1·800-686-2104.
2 Wood or coal burning stoves,
one Harmon 2 yrs old wlblower
$400 Warm Morning 2 yrs old
used one yr $250 304-675--1977
or 675-2365 .
Woodworking Shopmate, 25 cu
ft chest frllztr, 20 ft two axlt
tralltr, king size water bed, 304&amp;75·1 556.
55

Block, brick, uwer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ters, Rio Grandt, OH CaU 814245-5121.
56

Pets tor Sate

1.;;;:;.-::-.:..:.;..;;.;_..:;::.::,.,
__
AKC Pomeranian pupa. 3 black
females, 8 w11ka old, 614-le
5095 ahll' Spm.

AKC Reglsteted
Rotwaller,
teamle, 7 wkt, chemplon blood
lint, $300. 614-388-9354.
Brittany Spantell AKC, registered, 6 yr. old female, 9 mo. old
female Selling do to ownere
health,IS14-24J.9548.
Collie pupe $25. each, 304·5762606
Dragonwvnd Caffery Kannel.
Peratan,
Siamese
and
Himalayan klflens. Chow etud
atrvice. 614•446·3844 after 7
P m.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jack•on Ave.
Polnl Pleasant, 304-675-2063, 10
gal set uf, $14.99 ond 10 gol
complet• 43.25.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brHdl. Allltyl...
lamt Pll Food O.aler. Julie
w bb c
• · all &amp;14-446.0231.
Red AKC re;latered Siberian
Huskey 1 yr Old lomolo, $150.
304-6 7·s.. 70:
1 3.

57

Musical
Instruments

Fruits &amp;

Molroot, Nd I ,... . dollclouo,
rirnoo, JonlthOn, 1 Moclnlosh
pploo honoy I Soraum. Dunrovln ;;uh Ponn, 181 Iouth Eolll
of Albony. Houro: .... CL.aMd

l

Mondoya. t1WIH2H.
Rod Ruberrloo lor Sot.! F,...on

Dwayne Is a sculptor. He l1kes to add an
extra touch to meat while 1t's still frozen .

larrln! Pick your own or rudy.
picked. Taylors llerry Patch.
814-245-5084.

&amp;

75 Boats

Good selection of Duroc Boars.
Rogor Bont~y. 513-584-23118.
Pigs for .. 1• • 10 wnk old pig•,
1 year old boar. 614-446-7297 after 4prn.

1972 17 ft. Starcraft Tri-Hull
Boat. 125 HP, Evlnrude Engine,
eomplate top, new upholslfJfy,
$3500. Call &amp;14-286-1316 ohor
7.oop.m.

SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SALE
Wednesday Sept 20, 8 •00 p m.
All breech, dHr calf sate. In·
eluding Holateins. Cattle ac:ceP.:
ted all day Tuesday, and up t111
4p.m. Wednatday For Information 614-592-2322 or 614-6983531.

79

&amp; Grain

Large round bales of hay, S15
ooch. 614-146·1052.
Round Baln Alfalfa - Grass,
$18-$25; square bale• $1.50;
pay now and we will store unUI
you nllld hay. Morgan'• Farm,
Rt. 35, PUny, 304·931·2016

tAOfiE MR. COffEr&amp;
().) J.ll!l WAY!

••

:.'•

"'
'

'...

1974 Super B11t11, good cond,
304-875-6224.
!978 Buick Regal, v-a, •lr,
73,000 mlln, no ruat. 12200.
614-446-4045.
1978 Datsun 200 SX, •xc cond,
$500. 304..75-4518 or 17!-2765
1979 Chevy Malibu Clanic
Wagon $995. 614-992·3090.
1171 Trans-am, T·tape, V·B, ntw
tires, n..dl little work. $2200 or
boot o!1or.l14-146-3305.
1980 Corvette. black, automatic.
1 owner, low mlte1geL excellent
condition. $10,000. Pnono 3IJ4.
273-3078.
1180 Mercury Bobcat 1tat1on
wogon, a cyl., no ruot, ooklng
$85"0. 614-24S.o232.
11161 Comoro Z.2!1 v.., 4 opr1.1
$1891. 1182 AMC Con&lt;;ora
wagon, one owner, $12M. 1142811"-8522.

11162 Chovrolot Mollbu Cloak:
with olr conclllonlng. 7Jl!/110
mlln. Good cohdhlon. e~ ...re.
2661 .
1111 Buick Elect,. 380 EJ:c.
cond. ~~':go cap, loodod,
114-44
34.
1118 Chrytler Fifth Avenue. EK·
tra •harp.l2,000 mil-. 1144~
2721.

v.a.

1111 Dodge Arln, 4dr,lca Blve,
auto, ~1~ cloth Interior, S2UO.
114-4 4 711 "'114-441-'1104.

z.

•

THIJ TilE WKONG

,!.
,

,.

•
"••

•
)

11111 Mullong GT, whir. groy ln.
lertor, loldlil, liking., $8500·
114418-8707.
'

.I:

JfPVGHi MY
L.AwyE,.

:.''
J

'

'

.,,'
"

(T)

(l) CJ (() Who'o The Booo1
On vacation , Tony reflects on
the deplh of h1s le6hngs for •
Angela Q
(l) (!) Nova Probe lhe
mystenes and legends whiCh
.surround Easter Island t;1
ill) 1111121 R11cue: 91 1
Allport rescuer tries 10 repa11
an airborne plane from a
movtng car
ID liD Railing Good Kld1 In
Bod Time\ (1 00)
IIJ) PrimtNIWI
@ MOVIE: Scrupleo (2 00)
0 Murder, She Wrote
Jesstca Behond Bars
12!1 Converutlon With Dtnah
1:30 (l) Ill(() Doogle Howser,
M.D. Ooog1e learns 1t s not
easy be~ a Sixteen year old
doctor 1;1
at Croo~ &amp; Chan
9:00 (!) Proflllional Boxing
(l) lit (() Roeeonno
Roseanne makes unw1se
cracks aboul Jackoe's latest
career goal t;1
(l) (!) Supreme Court'o Holy
llattfll Roger Mudd
exam1nes1ha relattOnsl11p
belween church and stale.
tracing the wall of separa110n
batwaen religion and
govarnmenl back lo Its

-··"
".'

.
,,

Must HI I, 1986 Terry Taurus 281
Travel Trailer In storage In
FlorldL Clean, exira nice.
$8,500. Serious lnqulriot only.
614-992·2910.

Vllclng 1989 Fold down lraller.
Stove, ice box, aink, water tank.
Take over payments. 614-9923017.

.
•
'

I

Services

MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP
Home

'!OI.l WERE SORN
ON THIS DATE ...

' IF

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran·
1•. Local reference• tumlshH.
Fr•e ntlmates. Call collect 1·
614·237-Q488, day or night. R a
gertBatement
Waterproofing.

"GRAB THE: N5A.RE5T

" Ya..J ARE VERY

TREEAND~ON.

€&gt;U6Ct=.PTI SL-E:

TO TORNAOOE6.'

OriQIOS

ill) 1111121 Wolf Tony agreas
to trackdown the runaway
w1fe of ona of Dylan s chants

'

li:tiD Proud To Teach
IIJ) Larry Ktng IJ'Ie!
I!]) MOVIE: Q (2·00)

C. W. Davison, Plumbing &amp;
trencl'llng, for all water &amp; drain
.
llnet, 614-446..01!9.
Expertencad drywall hang ing
and finishing also repair work:
304-875-6457.
'

'"

Fllty TrH Trimming , llump
removal. caii3Q4.675·f331 .
Ron's TV Service, specializing
In Zenith •lso servicing moel
other brands. House e~alls, also
somo appliance repairs WV
304·57&amp;-2398 Ohio 614-14&amp;2454.

-".

Rotary or cable 1ool drilling.
Most wells completed same day.
Pump 11111 and Mrvlct 3041195·3802
'

'

YOU FERGOT TH'

LOWEEIY II

1 GOT

.,

---~gg

SOME

BODACIOUS

GOSSIP II

,'
'

..

Davia

Sew-Vac
Service
G110rgn Creak Rd Pans suP: ,
pli•s. pickup, and deliverY 614·
446.0294

62

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating
Carter's Plumbing
and Haatln'
Four1h and P10e
Gallipolis, Ohio
114-14&amp;-388a

84

Electrical

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

&amp;

Refrigeration

65 General Hauling

J 6 J Water service. Swimming
pool .. cltttrns, welta. Call &amp;14·
245-9285

;R~A~R~W~o~to7r~so=N=I~co7.~P=o~ol~o,-c71a-.

tema, wetlt. lmmedlat•1,000 or
2LOOO gallons delivery Can 304·
111-6370.

Upholstery

Upholotorina oor·
¥Icing t~ county oroo 24 yuro.
Tho
be01
In
lumlturo
upholstering. Coli 304-675.41 54
lor free Hllmatee,

Mowroy'o

perlacl for you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker,
c/o this n - - · P.O. Box 91428 1
Cleveland, OH «101·3428 .
LIIIRA (lepl. 23-0ct. :13) You're sllll on
a favorable roll where your flnanclal and
commercial tnter111ta are concerned .
Keep looking for opportunltllll and II
you don'l lind any you like, engl._
some.
SCORPIO (Oct.
22) You and
your mate could be extremely lucky at
lhil Ume In achieving goals that are of
equal importance ro each. The key to
succeaa Is to slrlve lor harmony of
purpoee.
SAQinARIUI ( - . 23-Dec. 21) Try lo
treat those with whom you have bualneu dealing• today 18 friends Instead
or merely commercial contllCis. You'll
be amezecl u to tha benef!w your
•wermth will generate
CAPIIICORN (Dee. 22-.len. 11) Somelhlng beneficial thM a frtend p...-lly
hu going may be reviHd In a way that
will lllow you to !*llclpate. n·e ton opportunlty of whlcll you will deftnfttly
want to take advant~ge.
AQUARIUI (.IM. a.Pib.11) Your poellblltlel lor .,.,.anal geln are ratl* IX·
rraordrnaty today. There II a chence
you might rMP retuml from three dll·
larent ......
~~ (Felt. • 1111'1111 •1 You are
likely to be luckier wortdng In tandem

24--.

Resldent111
or commtrelal
wiring, new eervlc• or rapal,..,
Llcenud •lectrleian. Ridenour
Electrical, 304-175-1781.

87

rnrroo,

TAtcf

1973 Apache pup-up Fibergla..
oldn. Slllpl 6. $900. 614-2455870.

11161 Flroblrd 301 onglnll, llntod

.

~Y,CCIT

7:30 Gill Family Feud
(!) Mator League Baoeball
Magazine (0 30)
(l) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (JJ USA Todey
ill) 1111121 115) Jeopardy! t;1
SliD M'A'S'H
IIJ) Croaolire
® Beneon
12!1 Tap Cerd
7:35 (I) Major League llleball
8 :00 I]) MOVIE: The Chooen (PG)
(2 00)
U (}) I!J) Matlock Matlock
returns to h1s hometown to
help a career servtceman
(2 00) t;l
(!) Women's Proteoolonal
Bodybuilding USA
Champ1onsh1p from Raleogh.
NC , Women s Compe1111on

"'

11161 Plonoi outo, AC, AMIFM
cooootro. uood oond. .....
114-441-21144.

~~:·ooo

~W I)ON'l"

~

Motors

Wanerton's Wattr Hauling
r.aeanablt ratn, V61ume die!
oounts, 2,000 to 4,000 etpaclty;
olttern•, paola, wells, ate. cad
:1104-871-2111

114-37N728.

FRANK AND ERNEST

'•.

Improvements

1974 Corvette. Rebultt engine,
PS, PB, olr, outo, T·top. $6500
!lrm. 614-992-5545 or 614-94112217 evenJnge.

IIJ) Monoyllne
® Andy Griffith
I!]) Miami VIce Local v1ce
operations are undermtned
by bOgus federal drug
agents
1211 VodeoCountry
7:05 (I) Jefferoono

Motor Homes

Transportation

1974 Corv.t while with black lnl.
PW, T·Tope, AC, 4 new tlrtt,
everything original, exe. condition. $&amp;500. 614-446·7441, 614446·9421.

CD liD Nlghl Court t;1

•

Campers&amp;

61

Autos tor Sate

FortuneC

"I
.'I
.,

ltpl.11,1111
This could be an exceptionally gratify·
lng year lor yoti - • some of your In·
nermoet diiii'M might be lulflll8d.ln ar·
111 - . tr81111tion1 take pl-. 1118
changee wfll be lor 1118 better.
VIRGO (Aug. lapl. 121 Two o1
long-range planelhOUid start unfolding
In poaltlve WA)'8 • of loday. ThaH
trend• could give you wnplt reuon• to
leal optlmlllk: and hopeful. Know - •
to 10o1&lt; far romanoe and you'll flnd n .
The Altro4r• MMchmlk• lnetently
whlcll ligna .,. romantically

a

your

r.-

with 11110111er today tluin you will be
eratlng on your own. It shouldn't be
dllllcult lor you to 111tabllah lha right
type of alliance.
ARID (lllerch 21·Aprll11) Focus
energies and efforts today onn ~~~:;:~1
lhat are meaningful ro you In n
ways. You're in a good cycle lor linen·
clel growth and It's up to you to lake ad·
vantege of 11.
TAURUI (Apttl • ..., •111 you'relnvolved In 101118 type of team effort today, you tre likely to be tha one who can
elellale 8\11ry0118's enthueilllm revel
and lnetHIIn each a dlllrt to win.
GBEI (*r 21....... •1 Although tha
chanllll mlllht not be particularly vtalbte
to you at tftll time, Important benefits
are coming your way. They could be
apon- by a penon wtlh whom you
have llrong -lonal bOnds.
CAIICIII 1.-. 21..,..., 21) You could
be quite lucky today in your partllltlhlp
arr•IQMr1W1w, ~ally thole that a"'
not llnlelurtd lor oornmercrar purI*M- ' " - ..._could contribute
1811111hlng Cillaltlng .......
LIO I - D-Aug. II) Devafopmtnll
that ~~ave political ~Ortel ~~~
work out to your ulllmatt bentllt t
without you haYing to exert loo
ellort toward their outoome.

I

12!1 Noolwllle Now
9:30 (l) lit (() Chtclten Soup
Jackie 's birthday donner lor
Maddl6 faces unexpected
problems. t;1
'
181ID To Be Announced
10:00 (}) 700 Club With Pat
Robartoon
U (I) I!!) Midnight Caller A
cop commits su1C1de on the
a1r dunng Jack s rad10
broadcast. C
(l) Ill (() thfrtyoomethlng
Nancy's mom disapproves of
her warming relat1onsh1p w1th
Elliot C
(l) ® llewo
(!) P.O.V. Work1ng cowbOys
who wr1te and reate poelry
are prol1lad (1 30) t;1
ill) e11211oland Soil Or
Kulant convinces a mother to
donate her dytng daughter's
heart C
ID liD C'rtmewetch
IIJ) Evening NtWI
10:20 (I) lilly Greham Cruude
10:30(l) P.o.v. A 53 year old
retarded man finally prepares
10 leave home. (2.00) t;1
1D liD New Twilight Zone
1211 Oon Willems' P~me Cull
In concert, the gentle giant
performs selecttons from hiS
current RCA album, One
Good Well, as well as the
hrts lhat made him lamous.
11:001]) 11111mon
D &lt;2J (l) Ill &lt;IJ Ill ID1121
115) Now1
(!) Lighter Skit Of Sport1
Host Jey Johnstone
lntervoews two celebmy
sports gu1111 nch week as
well as unique and humorous
sporting eventa from around
the world. (0:30)
ID all ArHnto Hall (1 :00)
(j)~yllnt
Ill Taltll'lom The OartPartour Floor Front

1!J1 Miami VIce Milk Run

I 12 I I' I

Ii

I

RTTYS
h:-4...;.I;.....:,-.;1;.....,15;...;....1-l

t
I
•
I I I I' I
K0 RA C

t had come up with a great
idea for making extra money.
;. Grannx shook her head and
said
' Ideas are much like
r--~~~"':"".-:---, children, no matter what.your
-TL:_.:;U,...;.:.N"TT;,....:..:A;..W:..:...,.......il own are always ."
6
Compleoe tno c~uckle quoood
• ...,.J..--'."-..1.
by l tllt ng 1n the m1ss1ng words
L_J.. ...,..I•...,...J..
you develop from step No 3 below

6

£

r I I 1 I I'·

~

Sportoloolc (0·30)
(l) 8 (() ABC Newl t;l
(l)lodyEiectrlc
(!) 3-2·1 Contact t;l
ill) 1111121 CIS Ntw1 t;l
. , I!] Three'1 Company
IIJ) ShowBiz Today
® Jtffareone
I!JI He·Man
6:35 (I) Andy G~fflth
7:00(1) Our Houee
G (I) PM Magazine
(!) SporteCantar (0.30)
(l) Ill (() Currant Affair
(l) (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NeweHour
ill) 1111121 115) Wheel Of

DIFARY

I

6:30 8 (I) 115) NBC Nightly Ntwl

·:
•

tor Sale

Straw tor sale. $1.50 bale. 814·
446-4111 Evonlngo: 614-4467157

Do-

'fOU ONLV THINK
'f'OU HAVE A BASEBALL
TEAM, c,.,. . ."

..

11185 F·150 4x4, 4 opood, 6
cylinder, aood shape $6500.
6!4-379-21!2.
I ::7:-~==--:::---::---:­
1988 Fo,.. Aero Star Converston
Van with extanded top, power
windows, locks, am-tm cas·
salle, ac, 5 year extended war·
renty. 12,200 miles. $17,900.
614·742·2421 or8~4 ~742·2086.

Sooutllul AOHA roglotod maro, a
yrs old. Call &amp;14-379-2740 or
614-379-2671 .

lNI llc!d@
Turbo
lutDNtlo I AC. 111000 miles

FOOTBALL TEAM OVER, CHUCK,
AND WE COULD HAVE A 6AME ..

l DON T 1-lAIJE A FOOTBALL
TEAM . I ONLV !-lAVE A
6A5E8ALL TEAM ...

-·''
•

38,000

,7..,4,..,...,.,M,.,o,..to"""rc:..:y:..c_l.;,e.;,s_....,.
"AOHA Registered mare and filly. r·1984 CR-500-R, r.rtect eond,
Mara broke to ride, 1600, Call $850. 304..fi7S..166 .
late ev~nlngs, 814-949-2455.
1986 XR25R Honda X250R,
ATTENTION Horae Owners, good cond, $800. 304-675!:3492.
Paint Plut lt now carrying tack.
Pelnt Plut, 2415 Jackson Ava., Far Hie: 1980 Honda CR-250.
Point Pleasant, phone 304-675- Runs good. $325. Will consider
4084
trade tor guns. 614•317·7281.

71

I(OU SJ.IOULD BRIN6 YOUR

•'

Salel End of 1111on Bile on all
hay equipment. New and used.
Tedd•rt, drum mowers, con·
dltloMf'!t balars, take• Jim's
Farm t:qulpmont. GallipoUs, For Salt: 1974 Dodge Van $300
614-446-9m.
•
I .or~b_•.;.•t;...o~tt.;,•r_6;_1.;4·:.;2.;.5&amp;;_··;.;62;;7;;0.:..:__

Hay

1

..
,.,""

1981 Ram Charger. 4 wheal
drive, •xeellent condition. Clll
614·965· 3327.
1982 ChiY)' Van, C·10 6 eytlnder
automatic. tor sail or trade, tor
•mall 4x4 truck. 614.446·1172
day•.

1181 Ford Eacort Statlonwagon.
82,000 mlln. Fair eondlflon.
$150.614-9115-4418.

Groin bo- MJIO bu Dick your
own, $10.00 bu plc_k_o!.,~~_rtlng
Mondoy llojll. 11, 3--..33.

Nice 2 bedroom Ranch house,
In country. Located In Racine.
Cred1t refe,.nce~epoelt. $200
month. 814·992·5231. ·

''·

1979 4WO Dodgo truck, low
miles. For aale qr take over
paymente.
614-446--7687,
anytime.
1980 Plymouth Arraw. Plu 4 wttdr. Runa 6 looks good. Also
1979 Mercury Bobcat. 614-14&amp;7&amp;87

John Deere 60. Good condition.
Wide front end Call a her 6.00
p.m.,614-992-7651

64

. .... .

..

1975 JHp, CJS, new tlrH, new
muffler, S1500. 614-44&amp;.4141 attar 6 or on w"kends

Conn Trombone $300; B-..ndy
Alia Suaphone, $300. 61(.24a..
1252.

Vegetables

3 or 4br, houHin country on 38
acru. 1300/mo. S200fnc. Oep.
8/mo. ro-.114·2M-8411.

160 AC dieMf tractor, cream
puff, $4750. 600 Mrlet Ford
tractor w/5h. bush hog, plow,
disk, cultlpacker, $3395. 114286-6522.
Evan• Motors, 1530 Eastem
o.
Ave. Complate line at llvestocR
6 horse trailers, flatbed traller1,
truck beds, hltchea &amp; acc....
10rle1. 614.o14a.6592.
Farm Equipment consignment
auction Sal. Sept. 16, 101m.
Portland Equipment Auction, Rl.
124, Portland, Oh. Farm In·
dustrlal, lrucks and trall~re,
much
much
more
Con·
slgnmentt welccme Phone ula
:f'&amp;rd 614-843· 5256. Auctioneers:
Edwin Winter, License No. 4875.
Oan SmHh, License No. 3947

I

(I) (l) Ill (JJ ill) 1111121
115) Newa
(!) Home Run Derby
(l) Rarnohl After gelling sock.
lh front ol her class, Ramona
dreads go1ng back INA)
(!) Squaro One TV (0·30) t;1
Ill liD Andy Griffith
® Facto Of Life
I!JI Jem
12!1 American Magazine
6:05 (I) Btveriy Hlllbilllee

1958 CJ5 Jeep. 4 whHI drive.
Engine neltda rebuilt, need•
eome bodv work. 514-992-7492.

Bundy Uutt, uaed 2 rurs, eall
ohor 5:00PM, 30-W7H484.

58

3 br, farm house 1 112 mllee
from Rt. 7, Eurekl, OH 304-6755104

nn E qu lpm ent

1U1 Chevrotet Caprice Cleulc.
4 door ledan, llkl new. 17,000
milo. All equlpmenl, 305 V8.
$260. 614-992-8719.

lenona,
Individual
guitar
beglnnan .,rloua guitarist.
1 Muoio 814-44&amp;Brunlconlo
0887, Jeff WarMIIy' lnttructor,
111-446-6077, llmhod openlngo.

3 bedroom houH and 3 btcf.
room turnlahed trailer far rent In
Pomeroy. 11 4·9i2·5031.

a

1200 Sorloo lront
loodor
w/pump. Will fit email or
medium tractor, $2,000 firm. Call
batwe1111 8 &amp; 1 814· 992-6092.

Supplies

For ul•: Kimball Anlll Splnot
Plono.l14-1165-4145.

2 br, house, located 52 Milt
Creek, Stov• &amp; refrlg, fum'ltd.
$165/mo. $100/dop. 814-4413870.

61 F

19 •

8:00 I]) Hardcaotla I McCormick

'

CLAY I POLLAN_.;;...._ _ __

ORoorrango lottors of tho
four scromblod words be·
low to form four simp le words

i

1185 GMC, outo V·6, PS, PB,
holftoncnowllroo, 70,000mlloo,
$5,500. 304·57&amp;-2147.
Fer aa... 107 Ford Ran.or.
34 ooo 11
b d
$ 5 00
I
m es\ ... cover,
nogotlablo. Pnono 614-843-5287.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Building

For Salt: Bundy Clarlnot
wlcau. Good condition, $275.
614-446-3073.

2 bedrooms, bath,
newly
decoralad, clean, nice. 614·992·
5858.

.

TUES., SEPT.

~y

- - - - - - ldrt.d

o

EVENING

',

~~~~"cyf 1~n~I':,P$~~.·5"o': ~ _6-::3~~L:-:I~v.;;e.;;s.:;to;,.c;,.k.;_..,=-

Rt. 141, 1/4 ml on Lincoln Pike.

Mon-Sat 9 am -6 p m. Sun 12-1.
Call lilt 9 p.m. tor appointment•,
614-446·3158.
Financing
available with no money down.
s 1 &amp; c• 1 R
oa
na r, eg $&amp;99 now
$229 (19 In stock). Wood
Groups, Rog. S529, now 1299
(11 In stock). Sl11por Sofa,
Vaughan Bassett lntersprlng
Reg. $899, now $369 ( 6 In
stock,, Ouetn Anne Coffee &amp;
End Tables $149 a set. 5
varieties of Bunk Beds, $149 &amp;
up. Twin &amp; Full Mattresses wa•
$99 s. up. Now $49.95 (50 In
slack,.
Mattress Sets
g R Queen
$
$ 24 • eg. ~SO; King Mattresl
$129. 8 varle11ea Basstl Bad·
room Suits, Reg. $1600, now
$999 30 dare warranty on ap.
pllances, Mavtag Washer $99 &amp;
i:U~P::,•.:D~
ry::,or:..:$::7.:5.:l&amp;:.:u~P::,·.,..-,-.,.-Wa tniA br suit wllh bookcan
bed, lamps, chestar drawart,
wing chair, &amp; roeker ret::llner,
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furn. 814-446171
.;.;;·- - - - - - - 53
A tl
1=-~-=-..:.:~n:::,:q!.:u:;e:.:s:..,...,..r·
Buy or soli. Riverine Antlquet,
1124 E M 1 91
p
. an rill, omeroy.
Hou,.: MT.W. 10·00 a.ni'ilto 6·00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 8:00 P m.
614·992·2526.
I
Full tlz• bran bed w/ralls, Cor·
bin &amp; Snyder Fum. 614-446-1171.

•

mlln 614-446-1052.

54

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

VleWIDg

72 Trucks for Sale
1974 Ford 112ton pick up. Good
condition.
614•247-3895
evenings.

Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sola•
lrom
$395 toand
$995.chalnl
Toblooprlcod
$50 ond
up
to $125. Hldo·oobodo $390 10
$595 Recllnoro $225 to $371.
Lamps $28 Ia $125. Dlnett•
$109 and up to $495. Wood
table w -6 chelra $285 to $71!1.
Desko $145 up 10$375. Hutchoo
$400 &amp; up, bunk bodo comploto
with maHreu $295 and ur, to
S395. baby beds $110 Mat ,..
ses or box: springs full or twin
$76, !lrm $88, ond $96. auoon
sets $275 &amp; up, King $350. 4
drawer chast $69. Gun Cabinet•
6, 8, &amp; 10 gun Baby matlressH
$35 &amp; $45. Bed tramee ,S25,
Queen Size $35 I king frame
$50. Good aalectlon of bedroom
suites,
metal
cabinets,
headboards $30 and up to $65.
9Q days same as e~~sh wllh approved credit. 3 mi out Bulaville
Rd Open 9 AM to 5 PM Mon,
thru Sat Call 614-446·0322.
2 country style love seats.
Wood frame, excellent eon·
ditlon Blue and tan plaid
cushtons. $75. 614·949-2230.

o

Rore 36 Chovy, 2 dr. Sodon n
ohorp. $7900 "' trado. 114-Biii=
7311 .

One at::re lot, trailers allowed,
cl1y water, GatllpoUa Ferry. 304&amp;75-2722.

Pomeroy-Middl_eport. Ohio

~~--~------------------~~==~~1=~1f~e~l:e~v~i-s~i-o_n__-r--~=,~=~=~:=:=s~~;:~==~;lA~~-~~~£~~~s~·~:~:~:~

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

2br, apt. 11 Rio Grande, All new
carpel. 614-388-9946.

One, 2 bedroom apartments
thrH, 1 bedroom apartments irl
Racine Deposit and reference
3 bedroom Holly Park with Ex· required. 614-949-2&amp;85.
1
2BR
panda Total eleetrle. $7000, R-tncy
-~~~
' nc.
' ap1., new
614-992-3972.
plush carpet, new paint
utllilles, parltal1y paid. $H5Jmo'
House trailer with built on Coll304-675-5!04.
rooms, 3 bedrooms, llv.ng room
kitctten, bath\ l'lalf-basament, Small turn. house. suitable for 1
wcrkshop,
narn,
carport or 2. 814-446..0338.
Located In Hemlock Grove. 2.9
acres. Call 614·949·2112 aher Tara Townhouse Apts, 2 br:, 11/2 baths, CA, dishwasher, dis·
5p.m.
posal, private enclosed pallo,
pool, playground. Water, sewer,
33 Farms tor Sale
&amp; lrnh fncludad. Starting at
Rutland. Lasher Farm, 105 $289/mo Call614·367·7850
ac res. Houso, gas welt. &amp;14-992- Twin Rivers Tower-Housing for
6159.
the Elderlv, Handicapped and
Disabled.
Located
near
downtown
p01 nt
Pleasant
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
phone 304-675-6679
Equal
1 acre lots Gallipolis Ferry, cily Houslng Opport~,.~nlly
water, 304·675·2722,
Upptr River Rd. 2 apt. upslalr,
Athton, beautifUl one acre Iota 2br, stove, rei., waler, garbage
DepOSit
req d
with nver frontag•, public water. picKup.
1
Clyde /Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2336. downstairs, 2br, watar, garbage
Ashton, largo building lots, plck·up. 614-146·3940
mob1le homes parmlttsd, public , U t
f
h
water, prieta reduced, Clyde
P~l~0 un urOis ad apt . CarBowen Jr 304·576-2336
pet
pets, Inquire at 300
' •
•
Fourth Ava.
F or Salo: One acre levot lots, 7 Wen-kept unfurnished 1 bed·
miles north of Holzer Hospital.
614·388·8649.
room garage apar1menl In quiet
neighborhood. References &amp;
Wards Trailer Park 2 Large Deposit raquired $185. 304-67SLots. $75/mo 814·446-4265.
.;.15:.;5:.;10;_.- - - - - - - Woodland, 132 acres, $35,000, 45
Furnished
At 7, below Eureka, Cell 614·
446-44t6arter7p.m.
Rooms

Too many people, 100 ctote? 1
room houu on 33 11'2 leN, nnr
town Reference &amp; Otpotft ,..
qujrod. l14-258-84113.

I

3br1 2 beth, Port• aru, deposit
req d. Pay all utllitln. 614-38&amp;11604.
Very nlct 2 br, at Vinton, no
pttl $250/mo. plus Sac. Dep.
6,.-146·1189 or 614-146-68&amp;5.

for Rent _
rL.:::=========..,----------~ ....,.,....-...;.-_:....;.

Be 1n demand Food Service
workers make up one of the lar·
gest and fastest growmg oc:·
c upat1onal gro ups 1n the labor
Ioree. Enroll now for Fall
quarter 1n tl'le Adult Food
Management
and
Calermg
Progr a m at Tho Adu lt Edvca tton
Center- Tri·County V:Jcat1onal
School We hav e a varl et~ of
lund mg sources ava llab la tor
t hose who ~ualtfy Call 614-753351 1 E:d }4

CU\SSIFIED

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

I

Giveaway

Male I

41 Houses for Rent
Two bedroom house Park Drive,
304-875-3533.

Announcements

4

•••• ,..,..,O..,UI ,,

0

I' I, I' I' Is I' I' I' I' I

... PRINT NUMBfRE[)
W lfTTHS
.

III II I Il I

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

•

SC:RAM·LETS ANSWERS
~ ·\'
Clause - Lanky - Acom - Treble - ALL at ONCE
Overheard in hardware store: "Spring 1s the season when
you can have rain, snow arid sunshine ALL at ONCE."

Today's deal was played last year m
t-U-11
NORTH
a competition In South Africa. South
.... J 10
most frequently was declarer in seven
.... KJ3
spades and usually went set. In most
• Q 10 4
cases declarer drew trumps and, bav·
.... 74
ing no way of knowing that tbe dia·
EAST
moods were splitting badly, eventual· I WEST
74
ly lost a diamond trick. Once or twice • 5 2
.QB 42
West made tbe inespUcable openiDg • 10 9 7 5
+s
lead of a diamond away from the jack, +J B 7 2
.JI652
which made smooth sailing for declar· • Q to 3
er. Those who failed to make seven
SOUTH
.KQ963
spades would have done better if they
could have called upon our favorite
+AK963
declarer, Careful Cbarlie, to help
+K9
them In the play
Careful Charlie would have seen
Vulnerable: East·West
that a dummy revenal was a posstble
Dealer: South
approach to potential bad distribution
East
Well
iD the diamond suit. With the opening Soollo
Pass
Pass
lead of a trump, Charlie would bave
Paas
Paso
3+
woo in dummy, played ace of bearts
Pass
Pass
5+
and ruffed a heart with a spade bonor.
All pass
Pass
He would then have played a spade
back to dummy, noting that both oppoOpening lead: • 5
nents followed. Another heart would .
be ruffed, followed by K·A and the ruff ;Vtrtue wo.uld then be rewarded as the
of a club. Now dummy would be en· A·K of diamonds took the last two
tered with the queen of diamonds. The tricks.
. .
ace of spades would be played, declar·
And wbat if etther opponent bad
er dlaearding a diamond. Tbe king of shown out on tbe second round of
hearts would come nest, wtth the last spades? Tben declarer would bave bad
possible diamond loser going away to draw trumps aad bope that tbe ella·
molld tnllt behaved;;...~

•a

.6

I.s•

CROSSWORD
by lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

39 Indonesian

1 Superman s

Island

garb
5 Sapient
9 Asian river

40 Rainy
41 Uprising
42 Wavy (her )

10 Aromatic

43 Shake·

s

herb

speare •

1 t Unspoken
t2 -- Wendell
Holmes
t4 Feminine

wife
DOWN
1 Bactrian.
e g

suffix
15 lmpresano
Hurok

2 EnteHatn
3 Seeks a
loan (sl )

16 Freudian
lerm

4 Before
13 Functions
a choice
5 "When Harry 15 Doll
30 Earthen

17 Hire

Mel -

18 Some
19 Actor

Ye1terdey's Ans-r
10 Famed
27 Landing
frontters·
place
man
28 Make

"

21 Poem

(1989 film)
live

Mineo
R t 's
mono
22 Excellenl
(sl )
23 Hurried
20

pol

6 "-

22 Athteles
assn

32 Panama
city

and
breathe!''
7 Aggravales
8 Sumptuous

23 Actor
Jeremy
24 Sicilian
capital

33 Choice
36 lnvile
39 Swimsuit
part

25 Hill
dwellers
26 Town in
Guinea,
W. Air
27 Rake
29 Muslim
name
30 Cagney or
Lacey. e g.
31 Golf score
34 Vielnamese
holiday
35 Nonsense!
38Ward
heeler

(abbr)
37 Antarctica
volcano

1111

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter stands for another In
for

the

X

three L's,

apostrophes,

for the two

this

O's,

sample

A is used

etc. Single letters,

the length and formation of the word~ arP all

hints. Each day the code letters are different

C8YPTOQUOTE

9-19
XOWXNO

UYW

VRZO

OW

UORT·

DOKKOK RGO AOGGQENO; AVOGO
QK

OW

ARPO

URF
WM

WM

ARTQDP

RBZRD·

AVOS . - RDRAWNO

11 :20 (I) MOVIE: Ctuh Of Tho
nt.lnt lf'G) (2:30)

MGRD.IO
Yutw..,'e c.,ea.-etes WITH MONEY IN

11:30 I]) labntn
(2J IIJ) Tonight Show

YOUR POCKET YOU ARE WISE AND YOU ARE
HANDSOME AND YOU SING WEll TOO. - JEWISH

e

® SportiC- (0.30)

PROVERB

ll

(

'

I

••

�.

P.ge 10-1M Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

-Local news briefs...-----.
Continued from page 1
registration !rom 9-9;30 a.m. All activities should end around 3
p.m. when prizes wtll be given away. Youmustbepresent tow!n
a prize.
This annual event Is put on every year to show kids of all ages
demonstrations and exhibitions In hunter salety,turkeycalllng,
taxidermy, coon hounds, fish f111el!ng, trapping. canoeing,
black powder. archery, and tro11p shOQtlng and reloading.
All }oung people of the area are encouraged to participate In
this yearly event. For further Information contact Kay Batley at
985-4449.

Fore_stry Field Day Oct. 28
The Ohio Tree Farm Committee is planning a Forestry Field
Day at the Mead Experimental Forest on Saturday, Oct. 28.
Landowners, concerned citizens and anyone interested in
forestry In Southern Ohio should mark their calendars. The tour
wtll be held oil Bear Creek Road, one-half mile west on State
Route 124 in Scioto County, ·and one m!le south ol the Pike and
Scioto County line.
A great variety of forestry practices have been completed on
tills experimental forest over the past 27 years.
Tour visitors wl!l have the chance to discuss soil erosion
control, timber harvest methods, wildlife management •. forest
management, economic impact and tree farming from the
landowners viewpoint.
Registration for the tour begins at 9:30 and the tour wtll start
at 10 a.m.
The tour wtll conclude with a free beans and cornbread lunch
at 1 p.m .

The- Meigs County Health Department has receive-d a $28,000
grant from the OhiO Department of Health to Institute an Early
Intervention program, according to a release from State Rep.
Mary Abel, (D-Athens) and ~n. Jan Michael Long,
(D-C!rclev111e.
Early Intervention programs are designe-d for children from
birth to three years of age and their families. Developmental
and educational services, family support and programs for
teenage parents are some of the programs available through
early Intervention. ·
Funds were provided by the Ohio Department of Health
through the Early Intervention Unit using federal dollars from
the Handicapped Educational Amendments oJ 1986. Director of
the local project Is Margie Lawson, D.D.S.

EMS receives.four calls Monday
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered lour calls for assistance on Monday.
Pomeroy at 12:51 a.m. was called to Route 7 for Patrick
McHaffie; and at 8: 39a.m. to Mulberry Ave. for Ada Hoce, both
·
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland was called at 4: 14 p.m. to Hysell Run Road for Guy
Priddy who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 4:59 p.m. , Pomeroy went to the Americare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Mary Pickens to Holzer Medical Center.

Newspaper project completed
The Ohio Newspaper Project Inventory In Meigs County has
been completed, It was announced today by the Ohio.H!stortcal
Socjety.
The project staff member John Haas reported that he
inventoried 35 newspapers at the The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society Library, and
the Middleport Branch of the Meigs County Public Library. The
Inventory records Will be added to project flies at the Ohio
His ll&gt;rical SOciety and to the OCLC Online Computer Library
Center's national database.
Haas reported that he found a copy of the Mlddlpeort Review.
This was brought to the office of The Dally Sentinel by Mrs.
Mary '\'VIse and Is the only Issue known to exist. He also reported
finding several copies of the Rutland Journal, and one Issue of
The Dally Tribune, Pomeroy.
The whereabouts of several other Meigs County papers,
however, are not known. Titles and Issues needed from Meigs
County lnclul\e the Middleport Gazette, 1865 through March 13.
1867; Middleport Leader and the Dally Tribune, Pomeroy, all
Issues; and the Middleport Review up through June 1948.
Information or comments regarding the Ohio Newspaper ·
Project and its work in Meigs County may be directed to Fred
Gaieck and John Haas. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio
Newspaper Project, 1982 Velma Ave., Columbus, 43211-2497,
telephone 614·297-2559.

Area deaths

Licen~

issued

Marriage Ucenses have been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Cou~t to Theodore Willford, 50,
and Nancy Kay G!lllsple, 31, both
of Long Bottom.
I

Lt . Gov. Paul R. Leonard, who Sept. 21 when the Southeastern
has served as Ohio's second In • Ohio Regional Council and 12
command since January 1987,
area Chambers of Commerce
will be the principal speaker at
thank the utility companies, their
the University of Rio Grande on stalls, and the state · for their

Burn .•.

efforts In the economic development of southeastern Ohio.
Bob Evans, SEORC president
said Leonard was well qualifie-d
to speak about econom h; development because of' his experience
In economic development. He
tr(lvels extensively throl!ghout
Ohio promoting the development
program, ar.d In 1987 he opened
Ohio's trade office In Lagos , ·
Nigeria, located In western
Africa.
Evans said the companies to be
honored·are: ColumbusSouthern
Power, Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc .. Ohio Power, Bl!ckey Power
and the Governor's Oft!ce . of

Continued from page 1

lng to the Gal !Ia County Sheriff's
Bane said two male junveniles
Department.
are In custody, both charged with
According to hospital officials, an aggravated felony. Both were
the girl suffered second and third In Juvenile Court yesterday a.nd
degree burns. Her condition was dented the allegations. Attorneys
reporte-d as· "stable'' prior to her were appointed for both youths.
transfer yesterday to Cincinnati. The two juveniles are In custody
She was accompan led · by her In an out-of-the county facility,
mother.
Bane said.
Names of the juveniles are not
available because they are minors. The two boys allegedly ·
Continued from page i
poured· gasol!ne on the couch to
burn it. Gasoline sp!lled onto the windows in condominiums, tear·
girl and the ground. When they !ng out atr-cond!tiontng units and
set fire to the couch, the girl's stripping roofs from wooden
houses.
dress ca'l\ght fire,
San Juan suffered extensive
The Incident was investigated
damage.
Downe-d power l!nes
by the Ga!lia County Sheriff's
blbcked
traffic
and scraps of
Department and Gary Bane,
sheet
metal
!lew
through streets
Gallla County Juvenile Probabstrewn
with
paper
and broken
t!on Officer.
glass. :Eleetrlc power was cut
Island-wide to avert
electrocutions.

Hurricane ...

Plan famUy night
The Ladles of the Harr!sonv!lle
Presbyterian Church are spon·
soring family night on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the church.
The Rev. Harso Moelyadi,
Java, w!ll present slide show
and talk on Indonesia, as well as
Java, In particular.
The publ!c Is Invited to attend
this event.

a

Group to meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA and
Alanon will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at Sacred Heart Ca·
thol!c Church. Information on the
program may be obtained by
calling 1·800.~33·5051.

Couples to
end marriages
Divorce actions have been flied
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by John C. H!te, Middleport, against Celia A. H!te,
Middleport; and by Cindy L.
Richardson, Middleport, against
Thomas J. Richardson,
Middleport.

FALL

Dally stock prices
{As of 10: SO a.m. )
Bryce and !\lark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. ...... ... .. 30y.
AT&amp;T ...... .. ..... ........... .......... 42
Ashland on ...................... .. 41 y,
Bob Evans ...... .. .. ... ....... .. .... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 15%
City Holding Co ............ ...... 15~
Federal MoguL ........... .. ...... 23¥.
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ......... ......54%
Heck.' s ............ ... ....... .... .... ..... 'J4
Key Centurion .. ... ...... .........13%
Lands' End ...... ..... ... ... .. ...... 26)'8
Limited Inc ........................37';1.
Multime-dia Inc . ............ .. .. 100~
Rax Restaurants ....... , .......... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... .... .. . 15
Shoney's Inc .. .............. ... .. ... 12
Wendy's Int1 .......................... 6
Worth!ngt 0n Ind . .... ............. 24

old door.

you can install a Bilco Basement Door yourself*
lnjoy t .. cMwottl-o, ..taty anti low malntonan&lt;O of a• all-st•l
llro laM-•t J!oor, You'lllko Its -•· trlmaJIPIIran&lt;a,oaMohporatiM, anti tho way it thods rain. Irs a •'"'t do·lt·yourtalf
..-•loct anti actvaly coots lou tht!n llawlnt a now . . . . . ..., lltolt.

Hospjtal news

LOW

~~~~LUIIBER

Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Stella
Bush, Pomeroy; Lloyd Johnson,
Middleport; Carrie ·Kennedy,
Middleport ; Bernice Fry,
Pomeroy.
Monday discharges -None.

Mrs. Nolan wee the form• Gen••

Humphreva. daught• of the l•e WiiNem PrMton end luvenia OOI'c. Hend•aon Humphr.,, of Wilton, Roane
County, WV. She wea born Sept.,b_.
2. 1905. Attended the Mt. Leb8non
Grtde School and gr.:lu~ed from Wal·
ton High School in 1919. She hM been
• mem~ of the Adventilt church since
the age of s.vem ... wh•e she also
as a Sund..- School Teach•. Beaid• h• parent • lhe was preceded in
dealh by thr• ._oth••· Velm•. 1916:
Gilbert 1930; and BNce. one silt• Nettie 1983.
She married Howard 0 , Dolan March
20. 1943 who survNes. She ta alto survived by five broth•• : John W. and Ba ·
Iii Humphreys of Watton. WV., Luster
Humptweys of South Chel•ton, Hubert Humptwev• of luling. LA., and
Jam• C. Humphut{l
of Bowling
GrMn, Fla. and one
Mabel Dot.
phina Kelton of Clfll .... d. OH .
Mrs. Nol1n, 1 rCirMI HorneEcono~
le~ Exttn~ion Agent, HrVIng Meigs
Coumy 21S v••• working with 4-H Club
Memtt.s Md Homem• •• from Sliptam b. 1938 umil June 1913, when
she eufterad • heet ltttldt on the way
home from Hunlinglon, WV. wh•tthe
hMI
1 tlll•illon broMic. . on
s..vtng. After. tp.nding tour WMkt in
Holler Hotpllal tha rcurned home Md
hid IIICOnd8ttldc lrldb.dltothaho•
ptt .. tor two~. aft• which It wes
nec•Nrvfor h•totlkeeclsebillty Ml-

,...,ed

•id•.

m.,.

''••

ANNUAL

By Margaret Caldwell

YIELD* ·

ONE YEAR TERM

,,..,dt m.-, cell t.-•
I

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

Point Pleasant

882·2135

675·1121

*INTEREST COMPOUNDED QUAFUERLY

~~

8
No one hurt in 2-car collision

·

·
No one was Injured tn a two-car coll!s!on at 7:35a.m. Tuesday
on SR 7 at CR 21, near Hobson, according to the Gall!a-Metgs
Post, State Highway Patrol.
.
Troopers said the accident occurred when a 1985 Volkswagen
GoU driven by Heather A. Wood, 17, Middleport, pulled onto SR
7 Into the path of a 1982 Chevrolet Chevette driven by Ph!lllp S.
Harding, 38, New Boston. There waa moderate damage to both
vehicles. ·
.
The patrol cited Wood lor failure to yield the right of way .

A bel introduces legislation

Mason
773·5514

Representative Mary Abel (D:Athens) has Introduce-d
legislation to amend oectlons or the Ohio Revised Code
· regarding solid waste management plans.
Continued on page 7

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

-

bne
•

·

ANK
- -

positions with notice of the
openings posted to the community.
All this has left the town in two
comers of the ring, with the next
.round .rooking like more trouble for
the town ,and the people.
Meanwhile Nichols Conner mayor
waits in the bact8round . for hi~
chance at a position with the rown
government.
Students and other citizens stood
acrossthestreetfromthemunicipal
building holding signs supponmg
Roush
!hside,' the meeting was opened
up to the public for comments, of
which complaints expressed in·
eluded boycotting srores, firing
municipal employees and harassing
citizens at night.
Nichols who was e~rted out of
the rOQm by police officers after initially refusing to leave the table,
was the object of many verbal
complaints expressed by the more
than 80 citizens attending the meet·
in!(.

1 news

. Loca

I

New Haven

An alleged conspiracy in Mason
has left the town with no recorder .
and one council position vacant af.
ter Mayor Agnes Roush asked rown
policemen 10 re!llove fonner mayor
George Nichols from the COWICil
table.
, · Roush, who had submitled her
:verbal resignation at the last meet·
ing on Sept. 5, rescinded the offer
Since council members did not
make a motion on the resignation.
Council member Brian Keams,
after declining appointment to a
nominating committee to select a
recorder, stood before the council
and a , standing-rOQm-only crowd
and professed his disgust with the
way the situation has been handled
by the town, and submitled his verbal resignation.
A nominating committee composed of councilmen I ames Proffitt
and Frank Zuspan, will begin
taking applications for the two

·

EARN "BIG GREEN" AND SUPPORT YOUR FAVORITE TEAM!
INTERCEPT THE •FALL CLASSIC" C. D.
BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT!
ONLY AT

OPLES

Carolyn Robinson. Patty Duffy
Taylor, Robyn Pitzer, and Judy
Crooks. The res lgna lion of Nancy
Circle as a substitute teacher
was accepted. Mattie Teaford
and Ne!lle J. Cook were employed as substitute cooks.
The board ·approved the $100
charge per student · for driver
education with the student to pay
$50 of the total amount.
·
Also approved was special
tutoring for one-half hour a day
for a handicapped student at
Syracuse Elementary by Bar·
bara Brown, and transportation
to~ another handicapped student
to Rio Grande by Ralph
Steinmetz.
The board also approved an
agreement with the Meigs Local

School Board for Meigs Local to
transport a multi-handicapped
student for Southern Local to the
multi-handicapped class at
Southern Junior High School, and
for Southern Local to transport a
student from Meigs Local to the
Buckeye Career Center.
Dan Riffle was approved as the
district's on-bus instructor. Stu•
dent pickup and discharge points
for the bus drivers were approved, Betty Wilson and Carl
Wilson were hired as substitute
bus drivers and the rate for
drivers was set for $30 a day .
The Ohio School Boards Associ·
a lion meeting was announced for
Sept. 28 at Athens with the board
members and superintendent to
attend.

.,

DOING IT RIGHT - Proper handling of the
hose and nozzles at a flre scene plays an Important
part In flre fighting. Pictured from left to right at

the Pomeroy Fire-Department's training station
this weekend are Dave Ballard and Stacey Shank
(seated), and Mlke Van Meter and Keith tlagen
(standing) .

Gun barrel
explodes; man

Mason City left with no
recorder, one council position
s~!!~~~ea~~~uJ;:y
'!tal

_..._

through Ngh tchOOI Md ooHege. Aft•
i'odua1lng t.om Ohio Ufti¥0fii!Y In
1131 with a lechllora of Sd•oe
Deer• ·~•taught Homt Economice in
twin dep.tm..e:a in CheeterNI end
Ptftnevlla OH. for thr• ve-a.
hrviole wll be WtNin •*f. hotem20. 1tlht Rowllngo-C-Fiohw
wMh tho llov. Chort•
lurf.. w.belnMel..

dation can be taken, Ord said.
In regular business at the
meeting, . the board author~ed
Dennie H!ll, treasurer to make
application to the State Department of Education for funds with
which to purchase claSsroom
equipment and furnishings for
the proposed new Southern Local
School District elementary
school.
It was pointed out that this Is a
necessary -procedure prior to
placing a bond Issue on the ballot
to finance the cons tructton of a
consolidated kindergarten
through eighth grade elementary
school for a proposed new kinder·
garten through eighth grade
elementary school in the district .
Substitute teachers hired were

During the p~t several years,
there has not only been a decrease
In federal and state funding. but
also stricter guidelines tor operation which curtail where a taxi can
operate and how they may charge
for their serviCes.
Federal guidellmis, which are
now being more strictly _en·

Nichols removed from table

'

BeforecomingtoMeig~County, Mn.
Nolen worN!;~ to PIV h• •pen••

Society's High School Faculty
Advisory Counc!l dismissed
Smith, she was already a graduate member.
Present at the meeting . was
VIctor Goedlcke, American Clv!l
Liberties Union representative,
who has been active In the
process to get Miss Smith reinstated Into the honor society. He
was brought Into the situation
after Imogene Smith, Eliza·
beth's mother, made the charge
to the ACLU that her daughter's
right to free speech had been
violated.
A meeting of the High School
Faculty Advisory Council Is
expected to be called soon by
James Adams, principal, so that
action on the board's recommen-

!

Huddle Under This Warm And
Washable Throw From Biederlack
Of America's College Collection.
Choose From Marshall, WVU, or ·
Ohio State University Logos,
$1 0 With Deposit of $1 ,000 or More
$5 With Deposit of $5,000 or More
FREE With Deposit of $1 o,ooo or More

••tv
Sund., morning lit Hob:• Mediclll
Cent• following .n atended illn. ..

A Multimedia ln'c. Newapaper

~~~~~~~~~~~' !or~.-s~te

•,

G"''"'" Humphr.,a
84.
College Str•. Syracuse. .died

2 SectiOnt, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September20,1989

port, but Is the policy of the federal UMTA and the State of
Ohio Dept. of Transportation
which must be adhere-d to In
order that the publ!c trans porta·
t!on system can receive funds for
Its continue-d operation.
The VIllage of Middleport feels
the Blue Streak Cab Co. has done
an e,~uent jl)b in providing J?Ub.
· . • ml~MJe-llsettbyeach1'~:-wh1dt
"Uc
·transpbrtatton·to Ml~~port­
that on\)' one token
tiWI .
means tl)at the . balaf\i!l! ol the
Pomeroy area resident and
funded !are must he paid by the cus·
hope that this ·good serv e will
by
Mass Transit tomer In cash. Customers Inside
be able to continue. The village
funds, the State of Ohio Depart· the Middleport-Pomeroy service also would like to thank the
ment or Transportation, and lo- area may still use the service Meigs County Commissioners
cal funds provided by the VIllage by purchasing tokens lor their
for their financial support of this
service during the past several
of Middleport and the . Meigs rides as long as it Is In the one-toCounty Cotnmlss!oners. Middle- ken zone.' Any trips outside the , years.
port has a contract with the Blue one-token zone area musthepa!d
The village requests the coopStre11k Cab Co. t9 provide this . lor by cash.
eration and continued support
service and In return. the village
A fare schedule Is ava!lable at
lor this system which has propays Blue Streak for each token the Blue Streak Cab Co. stating vide-d a much needed service In
which they collect for tax! ser- what the cash charges are out·
the area since 1985. The changes
vl£_e. Slllce Rnlr rldt!$ are paid side the one-token area.
In fare ·structure are certainly
ior.~Ofrfclals feerihls Is a much
This policy Is notonewhlchhas
not wante-d but are necessary if
more e-conomical operation than been made by the Blue Streak the program is to continue to reflxe-d·route bus services.
Cab Co. or the V1llage of Middle- ceive federal and state funding.

Deposit

$1,000 MINIMUM

•

Middleport Ma¥,or Fred Hoff·
man stated today' that changes
will be necessary In the Blue
Streak Cab ·co. ·r are structure
due to a cutback In federal, state,
and local funds and due to more
stringent enforcement of both fe . deral and state guideline$ for the
. service.

·o r

I

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
lnmld60s. Thu~ay , variable
cloudiness, with high In mid
80s.

:Blue Streak ·cab Company,
Middleport adopt new pol· .
because of funding cutbacks

Ntat trim ~pp•cno.

CALL NOW FOR OUR

Page 3

of the reinstatement, while
By CHARLENE tiOEFUCH
Denny Evans voted against It,
Dally Senllnel Stall
and Scott Wolfe, board president,
Elizabeth Smith. who was
abstaine-d.
dismissed from the National
According to Supt. Bobby Ord,
Honor Society after a controverthe board's action was based on a
~lal valedictory address at South·
letter from Ivan Gluckman,
ern High School's commence. ment last spring, w!ll be associate counsel for the Nareinstated Into membership If tional Association of Secondary
Schools, sponsor of the National
the Society's High School Fa·
Honor. Society.
· culty Advisory Council follows
Ord said that Gluckman stated
' the recommendation of the
in his .letter that there are no
· Southern Local School Board.
: The board by a vote of 3-1 with provisions .In the National Honor
Society handbook for the High
' one member abstaining voted at
:a meeting Monday night to make . School Faculty Advisory Council
to dismiss a graduate member.
the recommendation lor Smith's
There
are .provisions, however,
reinstatement into the National
for
the
Council to dismiss a
Honor Society.
student member.
Charles Norris, Gary W!llford,
According to Ord, when the
' and John Murphy voted In favor

A
longtime
to enJoy it .••

short time
to install it ...

Piek-3
418
Piek-4
5366

Student reinstated into honor group by board

SALE

A

Ohio Lottery

Vot.40, .No.9&amp; M
Copyrighted 1989

FIX-UP

Stocks

Major
H()ople's
predictions

I

Appalachta and the Ohio Depart-,
ment of Developme nt.
Participating chambers are'
Lancaster, Perry County, Logan;
Nelsonv111e, Athens , Meigs•
County , GaiUpoUs , Lawrence.
County, Portsmouth, Pike·
County, Chillicothe, Jackson,
Wellston. and VInton County. In,
addition the ·Ross County lm·
provement Corporation and the '
Scioto Economic Developmen t.
Corporation.
·
Tickets may be purcnasea.,
from local chambers.
·
Dinner Is sche-duled for 6: 30 :
p.m. following a 5:30p.m. social
hour.

KICK OFF
FOOTBALL
WI,.R A RECORD
The "Fall Classic"
Certificate
•

Ralph Michael
Ralph Michael, 60, of Lebanon,
Ga.. a former Meigs County
resident, die-d Sunday at the
Archie Jones Hospital of Canton,
·G a . foUow!ng a brief !Uness.
He had been employed In the
Research and Development Department of M~Donald-Doug!as
Aircraft.
Born on Oct . 7,1928 at Gallipolis, he was the son of Dylvan
Michael and Hazel Thomson
Michael. He was a U. S. Army
Veteran, having served In the
Korean Conflict and was a
member of the Worldwide
Church of God.
Mr. Michael is survived by his
wife. Cora Michael, Lebanon,
Ga.; a son. Ralph A. Michael II,
Ackworth. Ga.; a daughter. Rene
Michael. Atlanta, Ga.; three
stepsons. W!ll!am A. Smith, and
Rickie Smith, Le banon, Ga .; and
James C. Smith, San Marcos,
Calif: a stepdaughter, Mrs . CaTolyn Smith Turnage, Austell.
Ga.; a sister, Mrs. Nora Mae
Shook, Akron; and three grandchildren, Ralph A. Michael II,
Ricky A. Michael, and Rachael
Michael, Ackworth, Ga .
Besides his parents. he was
prece-ded In death by a brother.
Gerald Michael.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at ) p.m at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Mark
Morrow will officiate and burial
will be in Bunker H!ll Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 9 a .m. to the time of
services Thu.rsday.

Lt. Gov. Leonard to address area leaders

·Meigs
announcements

Meigs receives $28,000 grant

Tuesday, September 19, 1989

. ·--·

-Nich~ls told the R~gister
the
accusauons were un)ustlY directed
to him and he explained· sevetal of
the complaints.
"I have no grudges or any ~d
feelings. Many of those people: JUS!
have a personal ax to gnnd,
Nichols said. ·~. COIDJ!!~ts
don't express the maJOnty opuuon,
but I'll ~cept ~is far romght." .
He wd he mtends on contacung
the attom~y get;tetal's '!flice to~quest an mvesugauon mto ce_nam
pos1Uons Roush has been appomted
to, .conten~ng that there is "conflict
of mt.ereSt;
.
Roush mtends to conunue .condueling town government busmess
and conce~!l'te on filling the two
~.~t ~nons. .
., .
I d like to think Its over. It
should be," Roush said. "It's a sad
siblalion w~. mauers like th\s
come about m c1ty govemmenL It s
the.pcople and the city govemll!ent
that suffers ~~ of the nme
wasted on feudin2.

Warner Jr., Chase Road, Athens,
was Injured Monday night when
a shotgun he was flrll!gexploded.
According to a report from
Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls by,
Warner had gone out to the
c h!cken coop with the gun to see
what was causing a disturbance.
He found an opossum In the coop,
fire-d the gun, and the barrel
explode-d.
Warnerwascutonthearmbya
piece of flying metal.
He was treated and released at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital In
Athens.
PROPER TRAINING - Whether firemen are working on the
On Saturday afternoon, depu·
ground or up on the ladder truck, It's Important to know the proper
ties took a theft report from
handling of equipment. Here Tommy Werry, a junior flrema!l for
Jimmy l{lng, DeWitt's Run
the Pomeroy Fire Department, gets the feel of the nozzle while on a
Road, Long Bottom, that gasoladder during Saturday's tralnbtg session.
l!ne had been stolen !rom his
vehicles. His fruit cellar had also
been entere-d and several jars of
food were taken. •
Also on Saturday atternnoon,
Reba Morrison, Route 2, Racine,
reported that someone had shot
WASHINGTON CUPI) -The changes In hopes of speeding up
outherfrontdoorglasswlthaBB administration backed a move In congressional. action and making
gun
Congress Tuesday to toughen the bill "stronger and more
Sheriff Soulsby reports that parts of President Bush's clean· workable."
"President Bush, along with ·
17-year-old David R. Kerth. air legislation, but environmenCHICAGO (UPI) - Mafia Nocatee, Fla., was cited by talists said the Improvements members of his administration
leaders ordere-d Teamsters boss deputies for !allure to control and were minor and do not address and at the suggestion of House
Jimmy Horta !tilled, dlsmem- !allure to report an accident, the bill's fundamental leaders, have Identified a
number of ways In which to
hered and entombed In a New following an accident on County weaknesses .
As a House Energy and Com· strengthen the proposed legislaJersey sports stadium because Road 4 at 4: 15 p.m on Sunday·
he threatene-d to expose union·
According to the report, Kerth merce subcommittee began con- tion and demonstrate our commob ties for federal tnvestlga· · was traveling west on ~ounty sidering changes to Bush's bill, mitment to a cleaner environ·
tors, Playboy Magazine reported Road 4 when the Ue rod came administration allies proposed a ment," Lent said.
Subcommittee Chairman
Wednesday.
loose on his vehicle. He lost wide-ranging amendment that:
·
Henry
Waxman, D·Callf, a key
strengthen
sections
relatwould
Hoffa's body waa dlsmem- control, and the vehicle, a pickup
ally of environmentalists .
bere-d .. w!th a chain saw and truck, went ott the roadway on' . lng to autOmobile emissions, air
praised some of the changes as
store-d In a freezer tor five the right side, struck the em· poilution In national parks and
clear. Improvements, but said
months before It was transported bankment and rolled over.
tall smokestacks at power
some parts of Lent's amend·
from Michigan to New Jersey
The pickup was heavily plants, among other Issues.
where the bcidy parts were burle-d damage-d.
.
Rep. Norman Lent of New ments appeared to he worded so
loosely that they still gave the
In the cement of Glanta Stadium
Three passengers in the vehl· York, prime GOP sponsor of
EPA great discretion over
at the Meadowlanda construction cle were transported by private Bush's legislation, said the adstrengthening emission controls.
site In East RuthertQrd, N.J.
Continued on page 7
·mtnlstratlon had agree-d to the

Magazine reports
· ff
rd red
Ho a mu e

Administration backs·strong

clean-air legislation

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