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•

April17, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, y.t. Va.

Page- E-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Houston ·
stops Reds

Speakes resignation from Merrill Lynch due to .m emoirs
By ALAN KRAUSS

~

NEW YORK (U P!) - ExWhite House spokesman Larry
Speakes quit his execu tlve post at
the giant securities firm of
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. Friday
because of the furor over his
admission that he made up
quotes attributed to .President
Reagan.
A Merrill Lynch spokesman
said the resignation was due to
the publication of Speakes' memoirs, "Speaking Out. "
Spokesman. Peter Leach said
Merrill Lynch had not asked for
Speakes' resignation and added
that he did not believe there had
been any communication between the giant brokerage firm
and the White House.
Leaving the company was "the
best course of action for Merrill
Lynch and for me personally,"
Speakes said in a brief statement
released by the firm. "Merrill
Lynch Is a great firm and the
industry leader and I have
enjoyed being part of it."
The revelation about the fabricated quotes was Included in the

blistering, gossipy hook about
Speakes' experiences at the
White House and wltb the Reagan family that prompted a stern
rebuke from Reagan earlier In
the week when he dismissed it as
" fiction." Reagan had no comment on Speakes' resignation.
Merrill Lynch said In a statement, " We accept Larry
Speakes' resignation with regret.
Larry has made a significant
contribution to our firm during
his time here and we wish him
well in every regard."
MarUn Fitzwater, Speakes'
successor as Reagan's chief
spokesman, said, "I'm sorry for
· him personally, but I don't have
any other comment." However,
Fitzwater denounced Speakes
earlier In the week, calling his
fabrication of quotes a "damn
outrage."
· Editors gathered for the AmerIcan Society of Newspaper Edl. tors .convention In Washington
generally said they were pleased
Speakes had stepped down.
"I'd say MerrUI Lynch's P.R.consclousness was very alert,"
said Jim King of the Seattle

Times.
Bill Wood of the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch said, "It seems to
me his boasting (about making
up quotes) certainly reduced his
credibility . Apparently, It was a
fatal liability for Merrill Lynch,' •
where Speakes served as head of
communications.
But Doyle HarvilloftheTampa
(Fla.) Tribune said the move was
too "drastic. " "ThAt kind of
thing has been going on for years
and years," he said.
Speakes took several pokes at
Reagan, first lady Nancy Reagan and administration figures
In "Speaking Out," but InsideWashington tittering erupted
Into bitter criticism after attention focused on the phony quotes.
Speakes said In his book he
feared Mikhail Gorbachev's
"communications juggernaut''
at the Geneva summit and he
made up the remarks to help
keep Reagan's name In the news.
"There Is much that divides us,
but I believe the world breathes
easier because we are talking
here together, " Speakes quoted
Reagan as telling the Soviet

leader during their first summit.
Speakes also reported another
"manufatured" quotation that
he said "received exten.slve play
In the press"- Reagan's telling
Gorbachev , "Our differences are
serious, buJ so Is our commitment to Improving
understanding,"
In his first public response to
the book, at a Wednesday appearance before the American Society of Newspaper Editors,
Reagan approached the affair
lightly, saying: · ~one of the great
things about this job (Is) you get
to quote yourself shamelessly.
And If you don't, Larry Speakes
will."
But when Reagan was asked
about the fake quotes, the president said sternly, "I can tell you

right rtow that! have no affection
for these kiss-and-tell hooks that
are being written and I lind them
entirely fiction ."
In Rochester, N.Y., Wednesday, Vice Preslden t George Bush
said Speakes violated a trust.
"I didn 't llke what Speakes
did," B.ush said, adding that he
has not read the book. "What I
don' t like are kiss-and-tell
hooks."
"It's a serious government
point here," he said . "You lose
con11dence If you can't believe
that In working with a press
secretary that there's some
confidentiality. and you think
he's going to go out and write a
kiss-and-tell hook and say ugly
things about your wife or you or
somebody else, you're going to .

hold back, you're not going to
level."
Speak~ was thrust Into the
role of chief White House spokesman on March 30, 1981, when
James Brady, press secretary to.
·Reagan, was seriously injured In,
an assassination attempt on the·
president.
.
Speak~ retained the title of:
"deputy" press secretary, al-.'
though Brady was never able to ;
ret urn to work.
Speakes' resignation from the.
White House, announced In De- .
cember 1986, three months before his departure, came In the
midst of the Iran arms-Contra
;
aid scandal.
He dented his decision was
related to the controversy.
•

Page 4

e
Vol.38. No.24t
Copyrighted 1988

REVIVAL

.

RENEWAL

''

(United Methodist Evangelistic Assoc.)
(GALLIA-MEIGS CO.)

Grace UM Church
600 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Rev. Scott Kelso, Evangelist
SPECIAL MUSIC
FREE-WILL OFFERING
NURSERY PROVIDED

IS. 43:19 Behold I do .a new thing- now it shall spring forth shall ye not know it.
·
-

ALL ARE WELCOME .

.

~

'

WASHINGTON rUPI)
House Democratic Leader Thomas Foley, briefed by President
Reagan before the U.S. attack
today on two Iranian oil platforms, called the action "a very
positive response" to Iran's
mining o! Persian Gulf waters.
The president briefed Foley of
Washington, House Speaker Jlin
Wright. D-Texas, Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of

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West VIrginia, House Republican .
leader Bob Michel of Dlinots and
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole of Kansas shortly before the
1 a.m. EDT attack on the oil
platforms.
The shelling of the platforms
came In response to the mine
explosion last week that damaged the USS Samuel B. Roberts.
"I don't think It Is useful to
discuss the actual specltlcs of the

briefing," said Foiey during an
interview on the CBS "This
Morning' • program. •'But that It
took place ... was something that
we see as a very positive
response from those who were
present."
Foley said the attack was an
"Inevitable consequence" of the
decision to re-flag Kuwaiti vessels and to provide escorts In the .

Environmental balance may
be in trouble, report says

•

MAIN STREETS

IN PoiNT PLEASANT To ·THE JUNCTION

1 Section, 10 Paget
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewiJiaper

mas · Foley of Washington,
briefed by Reagan before the
u.s. attack, called the action "a
very positive response' ' to Iran's
renewed mining of Persian Gulf
waters.
Sen. Claiborne Pell, D-R.l.,
chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said, "I believe
we acted In a correct and
justifiable manner."
The response from the IranIans was more aggressive than In
the past.
·

At the same time, the threat of
additional militar y action
remained.
" We hope that Iran will draw
the appropria te lesson from this
and cease Its attacks on peaceful
lnter~JBtional shipping In the
gulf," Carlucci said. "We stand
prepared to defend this shipping
... as we have In the past."
An hour tater, the Pentagon
disclosed that In a fu r ther spillover !rom the Initial U.S. attack,
the Iran ian frigate Sa hand had
been pounded with missiles and
In a distinct escalation of the laser-guided bombs alter steamPersian Gulf conflict, U.S. forces Ing In the direction of three
destroyed two Iranian on plat- American warships , refusing
forms, then fired on Iranian warnings to move away and then
naval vessels and warplanes In firing on three A-6 Intruder
defending themselves against a aircraft.
Pentagon spokesma n Dan
succession of apparent retallaHoward said the Sahand was hit
t.ory attacjcs . .
The exchange of hostilities, by ordnance !rom the American
which began around 1 a.m. EDT. warplanes as well as a missile
left the oil facilities demolished, from the destroyer USS Strauss.
an Iranian patrol boat sunk and He said the attack left theSahand
an Iranian frigate heavily dam- heavily damaged and ablaze, the
aged with unknown casualties. smoke too thick to permit a
No American casualties were visual assessment of damage by
U.S. forces on the scene, about 10
reported.
Missiles also were fired at two . miles southwest of Larak Island
Iranian F -4 fighters that closed in the Strait of Homuz at the
on the USS Wainwright, one of six mouth of the Persian Gulf. It was
American warships that partici- located between 150 miles and 210
pated In the attacks on the oil miles 1from · the oil platforms
destroyed by the United States.
structures .
At the White House and Pen·
Almost ~lx hours Into the
tagon,
officials asserted the
operation, Defense Secretary
Frank Carlucci appeared before mUitary options were exercised
reporters to announce with satis- by Reagan only on the basis of
faction , "We regard the mission "conclusive evidence" of a reordered by the president as sumption of Iranian mine-laying
operations In the gulf.
having been accomplished."

Congressional leaders see U.S. attack in gulf as 'positive'

·THEIR WHoLESALE FAc-ILITY FRoM

'

'

enttne

Rain breaks dry spell in Ohio

,.

••
I , •,

•

.

-

•

U.S. forces destroy 2 .
Iranian oil platformS

U.S. Warships attack
Iranian oil platforms

\

APRIL 17-22-7:30 P.M.

BURLILE OIL

at y

WASHINGTON (UP I) - MakIng good on earlier threats , the
United States today struck Iran· ian oil facilities and naval forces
in the Persl;:m Gulf as "a
IRAN
measured response" to renewed
mine-laying that could provoke
further U.S. military reprisals .
SAUDI ARABIA
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said President
Reagan ordered the oil Installations attacked in retaliation for
the mine explosion last week that
caused "extensive damage" to
the USS Samuel B. Roberts and
injured 10 crew members.
In addition, he said the Slrri
andSassan oil platforms, located
In the southern gulf, were tar·
UNITED ARAB
0
100
geted because they double as
OMAN
EMIRATES
armed command-and -control
miles ·
radar facilities to help coordi'nate Iranian attacks on International shipping.
that rtPped open the huU of a Navy frigate, U.S.
ATTACKED OR. PLATFORM- U.S. warships
The same justification was
officials and gull-based shipping sources said.
attacked two Iranian oil p!alfonns In the Persian
given for a similar attack In
l!Pl
Gulf early Monday In retalla!lon for a mine blast
October.
"We have repeatedly told Iran
that we do not desire military
confrontation," Fitzwater said.
"But the government of Iran
should understand that we will
protect our ships and our Intermost of the state Monday as the
By Unlled Press International
du,-tng the day.
ests
against unprovoked
After a pleasant spring day
The mercury started off in the colder air was pushing south Into
attacks
"
prevailed across all of Ohio 30s Sunday morning but climbed the Oh lo Valley.
Con~esslolll!l
Democrats 'tnThe warmest readings are
Sunday, rain fell In parts of 'Into !he 60s by early afternoon.
ltlally
supported
Reagan's
action
!IOUthern Oh!Q around . 6 a.m. How~ver. wind gusts of 30 to 40 expected to occur In the early
t~y to· snap a two-week dry
miles per hour kept a bit of a chill morning. There will be a slfghf •· with- Sa""tec Democratic leader
chance of showers In the east and . Robert Byrd of West VIrginia
spell.
.
In the air.
'
calling the decision to destroy the
High pressure moved Into the
A cold front was making Its south Monday morning but skies
ol) platforms "a legitimate reOhio Valley Saturday night and way Into the Buckeye State late will become sunny over much of
sponse. Our frigate was In
the state during the afternoon.
turned the winds to the southw- Sunday night.
International
water.s.''
The Sunday evening weather
est . This tapped the warm gulf
Temperatures were expected
House
Democratic
leader Thoair which rushed Into tile state to fall through the 40s across
Continued on page 5

sponsored by: U.M.E.A.

UNO CAL

•

Mostly clear, cold tonight.
Low near 30 . Tuesday, mostly ·
sunny. HIgh In mid 50s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 18, 1988

IRAQ

Wayne Housley doesn't let snow get In his way
Friday as he prepares the diamond for the next
game. UPI

Daily Number
219
Pick 4
9257
Super Loto
5-8-18-19-34-38

.,

and

IT'S SNOWING? - There will no excuse for a
ba8eball game being pulled on account of tall
grass In the village of Rudolph, near Bowling
Green, Ohio, but. snow may be another matter.

Ohio Lottery

LOS ANGELES (UP!) -The
environmental balance that sustains life on Earth is - being
thrown dangerously out of kilter
by the continuing pOpulation
growth, especially In the Third
World, according to a report by
the Population Institute.
Released Sunday, the report
says the United States and other
Industrialized nations must help
stem the population explosion In
the Third World or lace ecological disasters that will not respect
·national boundaries.
Timing the release of Its
findings with the start of World
Population Awareness Week, the
-Institute report predicted that
the environmental balance that
sustains life on Earth Is "being
thrown dangerously out of kilter
by the continuing (population)
surge.''
"For now, nations and rrovernments too often find It easy to
i!IROre the emerJIJII realities of
this growtnrr Imbalance between
population and resources," the
Institute's president, Werner
Fornoa, said. "AI we approach
the end of this century, bowever.
that luxury will vanllh as the
stana of ecoi.oJical damarre become tncreaslnJIY
unmlataltable."
The report said the world's
population grew by an unprecedented 90 muuon people laatyear
to 5.1 billion, wtlb 9t percent of
the Increase occurrlnlln Third
World countrlel.

The report, ''Population and
Environment: The Growing Imbalance, the Growing Imperative,'' made several recommendatiOns to promote population
stabilization.
Foremost, Fornos calls lor the
restoration of funding to the
United Nations Population Fund,
which he said Is the "most
effective" family planning progra!D In the world.
The report also urges the
United States to free Third World
nations from their debt burdens
while helping to develop "sound
environmental policies" such as
protection of oxygen-producing
rain forests and opening educational and employment opportunIties for women In order to slow
the birth rate.
The report also recommends
the establishment of an Urban
Incentive Fund, which would be
adminlslered by the United NaUolll, to ·alleviate the now of
mlirants lnto·the Third World's
,xplodlnl population centers by
establllblnl"malllet clUes' •out,
side COJIIftlied urban areas.
In adclltfoll, leaders must also
find altllrD&amp;tlve eneJ1Y sources,
especially In the Third World
where wood products represent
the primary source of fuel and
contribute to emllsiOns Into the
atmosphere of barmful rru•
such AI ozone·deatroylnl
nuorocarbo111. .
Underdeveloped nations as a

whole still rely on wood for much
of their energy, which Is leading
to the rapid destruction of the
world's forests and resulting In
soil erosion· and expanding
deserts.
The most devastating environmental consequence of a boomIng world population has already
manifested Itself in the slow but
certain deterioration of the
planet's ozone layer, the report
said. '
Burning fuels and the buildup
of fluorocarbons in the atmosphere already have destroyed 2
percent of the ozone layer, twice ·
the amount previously thought,
the report said.
The result will bean lncreaslni
number of skin cancer cases,
emergence of diseases that involve a breakdown of the Immune system and warmer
temperatUI'ell that will disrupt
crop production, the report said.
••AI we approach the end ol this
century ... the signs of ecological
damaJe will become lncreaslnJiy unmlllakable," Fornos
said. "(And) eco!Dilcaldlsasters
have -little respect for national
boundrlel.
•'Once unleuhed by the practice• or neiJect of one repm, they
apread ... unUI they alter the
enUre ilobal environment," be
laid. "Unlela we brlnl the
world' 1 poJIII)atlon In balance
with resources available, we'll
face dllu 11111'1 acrouthe world."
'

J ...

Foley said although the U.S.
action against Iran could lead to
a series of attacks and counterattacks In the gulf, "from the
viewpoint of the president, I
think this Is an action designed to
be a single action, to be a
response and , a deterrent to

further action."
Yet In a succession of apparent
retaliatory strikes, Iranian forces have fired on an Americanflagged tugboat, a Britishflagged vessel and one of the U.S.
warships Involved In the assault
on the oil platforms.
Foley declined to disclose
whether the briefing Included
discussions of more aggressive
actions the United States might
take, but said, "There are
obviously a whole serieS of
possible options you could take.
" I think we have the resources
In the region to respond appropriately ," he said. "The heavy
burden of the decision lies with
· the president, and I think all of us
who were present last night felt
how Important and central that
responsibility Is. It focuses on
one man to make the decision."

IPtJDI- ThiiHYeD m :t oW oalll mla llMIP
wbole lllll'ldllp reNmble &amp;bole al 8ptldl
Maclltllllle a.dl a pod bmle. H11 ~ Ia
movlna-n ill anodler l&amp;ll&amp;e and eiiiiiiM talle &amp;be

..

\

Persian Gulf.
"I think the president has a
responsibility, obviously. to ensure that American lives and
American assets are protected. "
the congressman said. "The
damage to the Samuel B. Roberts
was extensive and could have
resulted In serious loss of life.
•'The resumption of mining by
the Iranian forces has created a
very serious risk not only to
American shipping but to other
neutral • shipping and nonbelligerent shlppl.rig In the area."

·'

White House spokesman Mar- .
lin Fltzwa ter reported six American warships participated in the
assaults on the Sirri and Sassan
oU platforms early today . The
platforms , according to U.S.
officials, have doubled as radar
facilities used to coordinate
attacks on gulf shipping.
Assessing the tense crises that
have developed In the Middle
East during the past two weeks,
Foley said, "A whole series of
things have come together at
once.... The conditions In the
West Bank and Gaza, the hijackIng Incident of the Kuwait!
(plane), the killing of (PLO
mUitary chief) Abu Jihad, all of
these plus the mining of the area
and the damaging of the Samuel
B. Roberts create a very Intense
and potentially volatile situation
In the whole region."

do&amp; aloq. Belklentl lntere~llld ......, tile
ulmal a pod heme may eee "SUIIJ" at . .
Diamolld St., Middleport.

'

�Monday, April18, 1988

Cotnment
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, ,Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

rs~lb
m~
~v

~._-.-.I'"T"EO!c:~

.

.

.....

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBE~ of The United Press Internallonai,lnland Dally Press
Associatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less t han 3IXI words
long. All letters are subject to edltlng and must be- signed with name, ad~ress and
telephone number. No unsigned l etters Will be published. Letters sh·ould be In
gO'ld taste, addressing· Issues, not personalities.

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepol1. OhiO
Monday, Aprl18._1b88

WASHINGTON - The Reagan and 3.400 miles wUl be disadministration has puffed up Its . mantled under the treaty signed
Intermediate-range Nuclear last December by President.
Forces treaty as a historic Reagan and Soviet leader Mlk·
agreement "to eliminate an hll,ll Gorbachev.
JThat leaves many Sf\B·based
entire class of nuclear weapons."
But the INF treaty doesn't do nuclear missiles with ranges In
, that. The United States wUl keep that field, and many more
at the ready whole groups of nuclear missiles and bombs with
short- and Intermediate-range ranges of less than 300 miles Including several dozen deployed
weapons.
Even If the American public In South Korea, among other
·
doesn't know this fact, which Is locations.
The Pentagon Is quite happy to
hidden under a classification
stamp, the Soviets know II. They hang on to these weapons. It
are protecting some of their own considers it vital to have nuclear
weapons with the same loophole. weapons that let us fight someOnly "land-based" nuclear thing between a conventional
missiles with ranges between 300 war and an all-out strategl,c or

.

IT'sHtV

·· By ARNOLD SAWISLAK

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - There Is no special reason for
remembering the 43rd anniver)iary of anything - except that the
other morning the voice of Robert Trout came out of the radio
·announcing the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt:
That was Aprll12, 1945, and Trout's familiar, auUtOritatlve voice,
replayed In 1988, brought back that spring day long ago when, with no
warning to us who did not live in Washington and know of his startling
decline. FDR died. .
To those of us who were only dimly aware of anyone else ever being
·president, nothing, not even the murder of John F. Kennedy 18 years
later, compared to the numbing effect of Roosevelt's death.
It created a gaping hole in our lives, as If some' familiar object of
dally use like a bed we had slept In since childhood, suddenly
vanished, ~eaving an empty place we could not imagine how to fill.
· For us teenagers It was a nameless dread. For our parents. who had
lived through the shock of the stockmarket crash, the grimy years of
the Depression and the blood -SO!! ked horrors of World War II, It was a
specific fear of a return to grim days past just when the future seemed
brighter. They saw visions of Hoover and Coolidge and Harding, and
they were scared.
Most of us really knew no more of Roosevelt than the confident,
cultured radio voice, the newspaper photographs of his face and the
occasional spots of newsreel film. usually showing a seated man.
The well-informed knew he was a paraplegic. but there were
puzzled looks, due as much to Ignorance of his physical condition as to
our own lack of sexual sophistication, when a civics teacher told us
Roosevelt was such a handsome man that there would be a lot more
nasty gossip about him had he been able to walk. (It would be
Interesting to know If she lived to learn the truth about FOR and Lucy
Mercer.)
.
We have had only one president die In office since then, and that
carried Its own crushing blow. Kennedy's asasslnatlon was even
more shocking than Roosevelt's death, but the added freight of anger,
revulsion and suspicion about the crime occupied the public's mind .
Tile sudden vacuum that followed Roosevelt's death was filled In the
JFK case by Lee Oswald's capture and his murder by Jack Ruby.
Today, presidents come and presidents go. A 14-year-old In 1945 was
born the year Roosevelt was elected and would have known no other
president. In" the llfe,t lme of a 14-year-old today, there have been four
pres !dents and a fifth Is on the way.
· .
Oddly. although FDR was In the White House for 12 years, he
remained a distant mythic presence. Presidents arrive at 1600
Pennsylvania overexposed, and few days go by that they are not
delivered Into our living rooms in color and with sound. Perhaps there
really Is something to the aphorism about theoffsprlngoffamlllarlty.

Berry's World

~~TRuNN@RS ...
DliiCAKI~ PUTS

\IOT@~To S~P

AND JAC KSJN'S
51 VI N&amp; PARTV
~Ar12RS'

IN~NIA.

Liberal
"Is there a liberal 'media elite'
In this country? Of course."
If It took 30 years to wrench
that admission out of America's
liberals and print It on page 20 of
their literary flagship, The New
York Times Book Review (April
10), how long will it take them to
concede that this media elite's
liberalism saturates It journalistic output?
Another 30, I guess, If David
Shaw is representative. The
quoted admission opens his review of my new book, "The
Coming Battle for the Media:
Curbing the Power of the Media
Elite," which Is being published
this month by William Morrow &amp;
Co. But as I say in the book Itself
(page 64):
"The truth Is that many of the
media's defenders have thrown
In the sponge on the Issue of the
personal liberalism of the over·
whelming majority of the media
elite. They are falling back to a
previously prepared position
which they Intend to defend
tenaciously: Sure, journalists
have their private opinions, just
like anybody else: and OK, those

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
long-range exchange of nuclear
weapons.
That goal is clear In a highly
classified "guidance" we have
seen, which describes the Pentagon's weapons plan. It lumps
short- and Intermediate-range
nuclear forces under the heading
of Theater Nuclear Forces.
"By providing a wide range of
credible options, TNF .. . enhance
our capability to ·deter enemy
conventional, theater nuclear
and chemical warfare aggres- .
sian and to defend against such
aggression should deterrence

fall," the secret guidance says.
"In this regard, U.S. military
forces shou~d maintain the capability to conduct offensive and
defensive operations in a nuclear
environment.''
The short· and intermediaterange weapons could keep the
Soviets from escalating a war,
the Pentagon adds.
According to the guidance, the
Soviets might be willing to begin
a nuclear battle at sea, even If It
means risking the loss of their
fleet. So, " It wUl be U.S. policy
that a nuclear war beginning
with Soviet nuclear attacks at
sea will not necessarUy remain
limited to the sea," the guidance
says.
The combination of nuclear
weapons - short- and mid-range
ones based at sea and strategic
ones, which can hit Inside or
Soviet , Union - will keep the
Soviets guessing and providing a
powerful deterrent to any attack.
The guidance was written
before the INF treaty was
signed, so It lncluP.s weapons
based In Western Europe as part
of the mix of options. But It
unknowingly deflects the major
criticism of the INF treaty- that
Western Europe will be left
naked in front of the overwhelm·
lng conventional firepower ol the
Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact
countries if the intermediaterange weapons are taken away.
Critics of any arms reductions in
Western Europe have always
seen the Intermediate-range nuclear weapons there as the only
thing keeping the Eastern Bloc
from taking advantage with their
superior conventional armies.

Today in history
By United Preu IDternatlonal
Today is Monday. Aprll18, the 109th day of 1988 with 257 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
· • Italian duchess Lucrezla Borgia In 1480, lawyer Oarence Darrow In
1857, symphony conductor Leopold Stokowsld In 1882, actresses
Barbara Hale In 1922 (aae 66) and Hayley Mllls In 1946 (age 42) ; and
actor James Woods In 1947 (age 41) .
On this date In history:
In 17'75, American patriot Paul Revere began his famed ride
through the Massachusetts countryside, crying out ''The British are
coming!" to rally the Minutemen.
In 1906, an earthquake struck San Francisco, collapalna bulldlnp
and IJDIUna flrel that destroyed much of what remained of the city.
By the time It was over three day1Iater, nearly !100 people ftn! dead
and more than a quarter of a mUllan were homeless.
In 1942. Lt. Col. James Doolittle led a aquadron of B-25 bomben on a
daring raid against Japan, later Immortalized In the film "30SecondJI
Over Tokyo."
In 1949, the Republic of Ireland formally declared Itself
independent from Britain.
In 1980, Rhodesia bec;ame the Independent African nation of
ZimbabWe.

•

The Ohio Department Of Development recently released results
of a year-long study showing the
economic Impact of the travel
and tourism Industry in our state.
The encouraging results show
that our Investment In promoting
Ohio has more than paid for
Itself.
According to the study. gross
earnings generated by tourism
were $2.4 billion In 1987, supporting an estimated 4,7,000 full-time
jobs. The total direct and Indirect
economic impact of the tourism
Industry In 1987 was $5.1 billion,
affecting over 142,000 Ohio jobs.
The Ohio travel Industry generated $156 million In state and
local taxes last year, 'while only
$2.7 million was spent to promote
tourism. Thus, for every ·one
dollar spent on promotion, the
state realized $56.47 In state and
local tax revenue. These figures
show that promoting Ohio's recreational attractions has been a
very good Investment with positive Impact on economic
· development.
·
The results or the survey are
very f'(lnservatlve because the
study covered only recreational
travel by Ohioans and visitors
from Chicago, Detroit, Indianapolls, Lexington, Loulsvllle,
Pittsburgh, Toronto, and But·
falo, cities targeted by the
"Ohio... the heart of It all"
advertising campaign. Not In·
eluded In the study were busbless
or forelln travelers or vlllton
from otber statea. Accordina to
tile U.S. Travel Oata Center,
wblc:ll considers all fo1'1111 of
travel Jl'OUJl8, tourlam Ia a S6.8
bUIIon lnduatry In Ohio. The u.s.
Travel Data Center ranks Ohio
tenth nationally In travelaenerated revenue and jobs
created.
The diversity .of Ohio Is Its

Montreal forWard Claude Lemieux, known for his quick

opinions are - for whatever
reason- much more liberal than
those of the American people as a
whole. But journalists can, and
do, put aside their personal
preferences when they report,
edit and present the news."
Much of the rest of the book Is a
demonstration (and quite an
easy one, I might add) that they
do no such thing.
Sure enough, though, Shaw,
having led off with that quoted
admission, executes, exactly as
described, a stylish retreat to the
aforesaid previously prepared
position. On tile basis or his own
considerable experience (he Is
the able in-house press critic of
the Los Angeles Times), he
asserts that journalists, far !rom
deliberately serving liberal purposes, are merely by. temperament "malcontents; they com-

plain 'about everything,"
especially corruption. "If the
corruption Is there, the reporter
'wm expose it- gladly, gleefully,
regardless of the Ideology or the
_target".
So, all you sUly conservatives,
call off your dogs. Dan Rather

a11d the gang at CBS have nothing reporting unanimous European
against George Bush ldeologl· hosttllty to the Idea of the United
cally - they just love to com- States repudiating the SALT II
plain. (That presumably even Treaty, was published In the
Includes Dotty Lynch, the pollti· Washing!on Post (just two days
cal editor of CBS news, though before President Reagan made
she assumed that position after a his decision) with a "transparlmt
long career as a pollster for Intention... to influence adminls·
liberal candidates, from George ·tratlon policy." Such a notion,
McG6vern In 1972 to Ted says Shaw, who evidently prefers
Kennedy in 1980 and Gary Hart In the Coincidence Theory, "is
1984.)
contrary to what I know of
Similarly, over at NBC, the journalism."
boys merely love to root out
Maybe .he should ~pend some
corruption. Do you suppose Tim time In Washington.
Democracies aren't good at
Russert, vtce president of NBC
news for editorial content, deve- anticipating problems. The one
loped a nose for It during his days represented by our media eliteas chief of staff to Sen. Daniel as biased and arrogant a gang ot
Moynihan or (later) as media self-satisfied liberals as you
strategist for Gov. Marlo could lind- wUl probably rattle
Cuomo? And how about Ken along untU (as prophesied In a
Bode, who worked for Morris chapter or my book called
Udall's 1976 presidential cam- "Scenario") they try to bring to
paign and then served as politls Its knees some future American
editor of The New Republic mUitary operation of which they
before becoming chief political happen to disapprove.
correspondent of NBC news?
Then we' II find out, In the
Just anti-corruption?
collision between an overweenI guess It was pure paranoia Ing media elite, a cynical Conthat led me to assert that an . gress and an outraged com·
article by Karen de Young, mander In chief. just who speaks
lor America.

by 172 percent. The "Ohlo... the United Kingdom, Western Eu·
heart of It all campaign" wUl rope, and Japan. An effective
continue to target out-of-state campaign to attract more travel· •
travelers to visit Ohio for two- to ers for longer visits in Ohio wUI
four-day getaway trips. The generate even more economic
Division of Travel and Tourism development and Ohio jobs.
plans to expand Its campal&amp;n to
If you have any questions or
·market the state as a vacation comments on this or any other
spot and also to target foreign
Issue of Interest to you, please
visitors. Along with Indiana, feel free to contact my office by
Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota,
writing State Senator Jan Ml·
mances, and events.
and Wisconsin, Ohio is a member chael Long, Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio, 43266, or
All regions of the state take of Great Lakes States USA, an
organization
which
markets
this
call
(614) 466-8156.
part In the tourism Industry and
region
Internationally
to
the
benefit from it. Southeast Ohio,
the first part of the state to be
settled, Is known lor Its early
Ohio history and spots for outdoor. getaways. There are many
historical and scenic attractions
and events In our part of tbe
state. Early history can be found
In Gallipolis, the third permanent settlement In Ohio: In Chilli·
cothe. our former alate capital;
and at Ohio University, the llrst
college founded under the
Northwest Ordinance, which
celebrated Its bicentennial last
year. Many Ohioans and out-ofstate visitors travel to Southeast
•
Ohio to enjoy the Hocking Hills
State Park, the production of
"Tecumseh" in ChUiicothe, the
Jackson County Apple Festival,
the Circlevllle Pumpkin Show,
and the Ironton Memorial Day
Parade, the nation's oldest, in
Lawrence County. For more
Information abOut Ohio attractions, festivals, and events call
1-800-BUCKEYE.
Despite our succeuflll promotion efforta since llharp Increases
In tourllm apen4bla be&amp;an In
1983, Ohio stDI tralll Dllnoll, New
York, Mlchlaan, and Pe11111ylva·
nla. Spendlneln Oblo jp'ew from
$5mUIIon In 1983-84toS6-3mllllon
"Hey men - Is that your beeper or mine?"
In tm-811, a 27~ Increase, while
Ullnola spending jp'ew by 3118~
and in New York, spending rose

main attraction. Ohio leads the
nation In the number ofagricultural fairs, state fair attendance,
and the number of public zoological parks. We also haveoneofthe
finest networks or state parks In
the country and lead the nation In
visits to such parks. Only New
York exceeds Ohio In the number
of arts-related facUitles, perfor-

•

temper, sail! the series could be
determined by penalties.
''The most disciplined team
will win the series," Lemieux
said. "We also have to pressure
Bourque to make sure he can' t
hang on to the puck too long. He's
dangerous when he has control."
In Washington, the Capitals try
to continue the quality of play
that enabled them to become
only the fifth team In NHL
history to overcome a 3-1 deficit
in games when they defeated the ·
Phlladelph~ Flyers 5-4 In overtime Saturday night to advance
to the second round .
"I think we've proved a lot,"
said Capitals Coach Bryan Murray , whose job may have been
saved with his team's comeback.
"But you've got to continue to
win. I don't think we can take for
granted that we've achieved
what we 've wanted to achieve
bec;ause, absolutely, that has not
happened."
Washington's first -round victory helped erase the me mories
of the Capitals' dismal playoff
history . Washington previously
had won just two of seven playoff
series and last season squan- ·
dered a 3-1 series lead to the ·
Islanders. Including a fourovertime Capitals loss In Game 7.
The Capitals face a New Jersey
team that Is making Its first
playoff appearance. The D~vlls
will be well rested, having
finished their sertes against the
New York Islanders in six games
Thursday .

Scoreboard ...
Nt!W Vnrii.J,

Majors

.....

CIC\'eiiUid

........

New York

Bolton
Torolllo

Milwaukee
~ltlmore

st. Loula!

Pit tabu 11h 12, Ollcq:e l
• Houillenl, Onclnnatl 9

AMERICAN LEilGUE

but Unbiased?____·_w;_ill_i.a_m_R_us;__he_r

Results of study released-:--._ _s_en._Ja_nM_._Lo__;:;_ng

"Oolel Of course, Dolel I KNOW YOUR
PINEAPPLE/"

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Boston Bruins, losers of 18
straight playoff series against
the Montreal Candlens, get
another chance to snap what is
presently a 45-year dro.u ght .
The Bruins play the Canadlens
Monday In second-round Adams
Division playoff action at the
Montreal Forum. The last time
Boston knocked Montreal out of
·
the playoffs was In 1943.
In second-round Patrick DivIsion play. the New Jersey Devils
begin their best-of seven series
Monday at the Washington
Capitals.
The remaining playoff series
begin Tuesday, when the St.
Louis Blues play the Detroit Red
Wings In the Norris Division final
and the Edmonton Oilers face the
. Calgary Flames for the Smythe
Division crown.
Although Montreal finished the
regular season 9 points . better
than second-place Boston (103·
94), Candiens Coach Jean Perron
said the teams are evenly
matched.
''They're both big, physical
teams with good balance, " Perron said. "They have a clutch
scorer In Cam Neely. We have
Stephane Richer. The goaltending on both teams is very go.od.
They have Raymond Bourque on
defense. We counter with Chris
Chellos. And both teams have big
wlngers. It's very equal."

Many missiles will survive pact

Remembering

April 12, 1945

NHL playoffs to
resume tonight

Page~2-The

W L ret. GB
II 2 ',1141 fl :!. .158 1%
I 4 .NO 3%
7 5 .513 ~~
5 7 .U'7 5%
47.96fl
I t:t .1110 ' II~

w...

Ailm&amp;a S, Ut All te(M I
San Prudsct I, San DI!!JI) t
MOQIIIQ''I G.ml!ll
PIIU.delphla (a..Uial·l) at New fork
(Aplen 1-1), 1: 3:1 p.m.
Su Fraacbto IKrulww 1-0) .at
Clncln•U IBroWnlns 0-0) , 7:35 p.m.

San Dle10 (S how G-1) At Los Anlf!les

(Le•y 1·1) , 10:05 p.m.

blerwl.,. '•

C&amp;lllornla

I

:1 .:14:1 -

s .5411 -

c•tcqo

•
6

D .145 -

Oakland

t
II

6 .510

5

7 ,Ul

I 1,i

4 I .ItO

1%

MJa~ota

6 .UO

Gamet~

Mo•rell a1 Clllcaro
st. 1.-u.ll at PIUibu. rth. nlpt

Kan.s Clly

TelM
Seatile

liz

Phlllldelphla at New York, nl~
Su FrucUco at ClnclnMtl,

~lsht

I

Atlanta II HOUalllft, nl(hl
Su Dlep at Lo&amp; An piN, niP&amp;

SahrdliV'A Reltjta

Te11u 2, Bo11ton 0

NBA results

Deuok t, Kaeau City z

Mla.,aota J, Toronlo 2'

Mltwullee t, Nllw York Z

Q.lca,o 5, OaliiMd 1
Ch~'·e lmdl, BaltknoreD, lllnn.
Sea&amp;tle 7, Callfornlal
8und"'" Gaml!tl
Boawn U, Te••• I
Clevelaad 4, Balllmorre I
Det roli 8, Ka~~•• Cliy B
TorGale I. MI•RII• I
Mllwaalee I, New YorkS
Chtc.,o 7, Oall. .... d1
Calllornla 7, Se•tle 4
Mo.-1..,-'a Gamtt~o
Texu (Witt 8-!) at Boston (Boyd Z.OI,
11 ;05 a.m.
,..
Kau . . Cit, (Ban Mtter W) at Detrell
(Tananal!-GJ , 1:1~ p.m.

New York (Dohon 2- 1) al MlnM!IIU

(8bleven 1-0) , 11:05 p.m.

Chlca,o

(LaPoint 1-i)

at

Oak-

Bnd (C.l:'ounr G-0), IO:SG p.m.
Tuead.,'a Games

.

Baltimore at Mllwau IRe, nldlt
Bo•lonat Detroit, nl&amp;fll
Texu at Cle.-eland. nii(N
KanMl!l Cit 1 aa Toro•o. niPt
New Yerkat Mlnii!IGI&amp;, nlpil
Chlcaro a1 sume. •t~~t

W L Pd . GB
R 3 .12'1 -

II !I .1t7 .:....
8 5 .5452
s • .451 I
SS.%715

Pfttlilu rrh

st. Louifl

w...

38.2'135

.1n-

Houlllloa

11

3

Luii.Upl~

II

4 .lf'l

ClndnNUI

San Fran.
San Dleto
,\tlMta

Dal••

Mo...,'aO~~omt­

IHiaaa a1 Clt\leiMII. 1:• p.m.
Detr~

-r.e.d., .•

Gamet~

at hai011o nlpa

, s .sss
7

5 .181

4

II .3SS

1 10 .ttl
SidW'd~~,Y't Kes•l•

Oltcaro at New York. nl(ht
Milwaukee at Phlladef ..la. nt...,_
Dallu at H. .IIIOL nllfll
LA. Lalunat S..n Alllonlo, nl&amp;hf
Seattle al Denwr, ai,W

c8lendar

....

Chlcaco
Munlrnl
Phll&amp;delpllla

Rou1ht11 121, LA LUert 118 .
WM:IIIDA'Oilll. Bolton tl!
Den¥M' ISS.
IH
Portland Ill. Sacnmento 10~

Ulalt at PortLand, nl&amp;flt

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Vnrlr.

Su al., 'a &amp;esuiiA
Otlup liS, Mllwau tee 91

OoiBS&amp;aae aa Phflftlbl:, nlpt
LA CllppPI's at Sacrame~~to, niJht

Ca!Uornla a1 Oaklud, aiAfll

NP.lolo'

NA.TIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.
Satwdq't'Be.uitl
New York IS, A.Uuta IS
Detr!IM 114, New derllfll 91
I••IIDil IM, Phlladel~a I!
Utallll1, S• AlltOIM 82
Pb~ll: 121, Seattle 119 {OT)
O.hllrn 8ta.te Ill, LA Cllpper11 I I&amp;

Allarl&amp;l. M New .leraey, nlpt

at Sul:tle

(Camp!ell ~I) , 10:05 p.m.
Callfornlll (Petry 1•1)

t'omeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

~

Amerk:u Le ape
Tnu aileMoa.II :OSa.m.
Kan . . Cly a&amp; Delrtla. 7:31p.m.
New Yerk at Mlnne~~oa. tl :l5 p.M.
Clllcaro at Seattle, 11:11 p.m .
Calltor•• at OUlad, II: 15 p.m.
Nukual Leape
PlllladelpNsll New Ynrk, 7: II p.m .
• Su Fruct.co !lot Clmel..tl, 7:35p.m.
San Dtep at Loa An pi•. 11:11 p.m.
Bu~b.tl

·~

...... id Cln-el_., 7:31p.m.

4~

NHL Pla,.ulf•
Stcoal RIHind
•
New drr.ey at WMIIInaton, 1: S5 p.m.

1~
7

New York I, St. Lout. 4
Ct~lnnatlll , Houalon 2
PIIUbUIStl t, Chlu.a;• 0
Loa AnP• 1, At Mia 4

2, Phllad~plllal, 10 Inn.
Su Dlep l!, 8&amp;1 F1'aciiiCO I
&amp;ullq's Oamea
Mo~re.t 5. PIIUIIdelpWd
Mo~rellll

Beclley

lu11ten at

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

Mo~al.

7: U p.m.

loa'-- Bosloa M..aMa
MaJer IndDor Socctr Learue

No a:ames ache* ted

Mahaffey Ohio Coach-of-Year
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio Wesleyan University Coach
Gene Mahaffey. who gathered
several trophies this past season
as he gu lded his Bishops to the
NCAA Division IJI national title,
added another one Sunday by
being named the Ohio Coach of
the Year.
Mehaffey's fellow coaches cast
27 first-place votes, good for 90
points In the Columbus Dispatch
poll released Sunday.
Second in balloting was Xavier's Pete Gillen who got four
first-place votes and 42 points.
Ashland's Roger Lyons got three
first-place votes and 31 points to
finish third .
Ohio Northern's gale Daug~­
erty didn't get any first-place
votes, but compiled 17 points to
finish fourth. Others getting
first-place votes were Ohio
State's Gary Williams, 2, and
¥usklngu!Jl's Jim Burson and
Defiance's Marv Hohenberger,
one each.
OWU won the North Coast
Athletic Conference by a flip of
the coin after tylna with Allqh·
eny for the lead. The Bishops
then won the NCAC post-season
tournament to advance to the
NCAA Division III tournament.
The national dUe for the basket·
ball team was the first in.any

sport for an OWU team.
"It's all a fringe benefit of
winning." Mehatfey said of the
vote by his fellow coaches. · 'This,
the coach of the year. Is all
bec;ause of winning . I'll keep
riding it."
Mehaffey was also named th~
Division Ill coach of the year and
one of his players. Scott Tedder.
was the division's player of the
year and an all-America selection. Another player, Lee Row lin·
son, was a second team allAmerica choiCe.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Southern downs North Gallia; Eastern
defeats .Sytttmes Valley twice, 5-2, 9-2
RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes took advantage of timely
hitting and free passes en route to
a hard-fought 7-4 SVAC victory
over the much Improved North
&lt;;;allla Pirates here In area high
school baseball action.
North Gallla collected 7 hits
compared to Southern's five, but
SHS took advantage when oppor·
tunlty knocked , accounting for
the difference In thi&gt; game.
Junior hurler Mark Porter
combined with reliever Roy
Johnson, a freshman, to strikeout a combined 8 and walking
four. Porter picked up the win.
while Johnson registered the
·save.
B. Jacks and Todd Petrie took

Nonnan cops
MCI Classic
HILTON HEAD ISLAND , S.C
(UP!) -Greg Norman, Inspired
by the presence of a 17-year-old
leukemia victim who idolizes
him, shot five birdies for a
5-under 66 Sunday to win the MCI
$700,000 Heritage Oasslc and
claim his first PGA tournament
victory since 1986.
. Jamie Hutton of Madison,
Wi s.. was sent to the tournament
by Thursday's Child. a founda·
tlon In his hometown that tries to
meet ·the wishes of sick children.
"I just wanted to fulfill a wish
for Jamie and I think we've done
more than that ," said Norman.
who came from four strokes back
to win his first PGA title in two
years. "I'm very excited abo ut
winning here, but I'm more
excited for Jamie."
Norman, an Australian', .beat
David Frost and Gil Morgan by a
stroke with a lour-round total of
13-under 271.
"That's the reason he's great."
Hutton said. "Everyone has
heroes as a kid. Some people !Ike
movie stars, I )Ike Mr. Norman."
David Frost. a South African.
missed a 25-foot birdie putt on the
fi nal green that wou ld have sent
the tournament into sudden
deatli. His putt spun three Inches
past the cup, giving Norm.an first
place and $126,000 in prize
money.
Frost. who canned a 50-foot
putt on the 18th green Saturday,
vowed to improve his putting
game.
"That's just the way It goes,"
he said ot the missed putt " It
bolls down to the end. You've got
to make the putts going down the
stretch and I haven ' t made
them."
Frost.l!eld on at 12-under with a
par on 18 to tie for second with Gil
Morgan, who birdied the 18th
hole. It was Frost's sixth secondplace finish since he joined the
PGA lou r. In 1985.
Fred Couples, who led by one
stroke .going into Sunday's final
round, floundered on the final
nine hoies to fall to fourth place
with a 274 ..

Toledo results
TOLEDO. Ohio (UP!) -Mac k
Lobell, the world record -setting
trotter. made his 1988 debut a
winning effort when he captured
the $35,000 Silver Bullet Challenge Sunday night at Toledo
Raceway Park.
·
Mack Lobell. the 1987 horse of
the year, faced a field of top Ohio
and Michigan stakes per·
formers. winning in a track
record 1:57 3-5 for driver John
Campbell. Schlmltar, an Ohio
Sires Stakes champion In 1985and 1986, finished second, five
lengths •back. Mondo , Ohio's
three-year-old champion colt last
year, was third.
Mack Lobell, trained by Toledo
native Charles Sylvester, will
race four ' limes In the United
States this spring before travelIng to Europe to face the best
trotters on that continent In
several races in June.
· The horse trotted a 1:52 1-5
mile last year at Spring Garden
Ranch. He won 13 of his 16 races,
earning $1.2 mllllon as a 3-yearotd.
His appearance drew 5, 770 fans
to the track where a track record
$470,667 was wagered.

Compo1ed of Sterilized Horse Manure, Peat Moaa.
Brewer's Grain and Gyp1um Lime. (Wheat Free)
IDEAL FOR LAWNS, GARDENS, FLOWER BEDS
• LANDSCAPING
i

•

LOADlR ON DUTY
Load At No Costl

over pitching chores for the
Pirates, rl!,g!sterlng 2 strikeouts
and 8 walKs.
Three players accounted for all
of Southern hitting as Jeff
Caldwelllnked three-tl!lhs of the
total five. Caldwell had three
singles,Barry McCoy a single,
and Mike Hill a single.
.
For North Gallla,Saunders had
two slngles,Petrie a single, Todd
Mays three singles, and Kevin
Smith a single.
Southern went ahead 1-0 In the
bottom of the third, but NG
pushed the Tornadoes towards
walking the plank as they plated
three In the second frame.
Mays led off with a stngle,an
error followed,then a walk
loaded the )&gt;ases. Smith. walked
.home a run and Saunders delivered a two-run single, 3-1.
SHS knotted the score at 3-3 In
the thlf!l when David Amburgey
drew a lead off walk, stole
second. then Chris Stout walked
and the duo pulled a double steal.
Barry McCoy delivered a two run
smash to tie the score,3-3.
Southern took control In the
fourth when Todd Lisle walked, Mike HUI doubled for an RBI.
Mark Porter walked, and Jeff
Caldwell singled both home for a
6-4 SHS lead.
Earlier NG scored Its last run
on a error, walk, andPetrislngle.
Coach Mick Winebrenner's
club held on for the 74 win.
Southern hosts Southwestern
Monday.
Southern Is now 7-4 overall and
6-2 In the SVAC,whlle North
Gallia Is 1-7.

Symmes Valley had a shakey
Steve Horner a double and
start,but hailed well the rest of ;lngle.and Scott Fitch two sin-:
the way to fan 9 and walk three, gles . Chris Lance singled,KennY,
while giving up just six hits. Caldwell had a nice bunt single,·
Robinson became increasingly and Jeremy Barber slnglj!d.'
stronger as the game Barber also had a super sacrifice;
progresSI)d.
bunt,
Although somewhat nippy outCatc her Kyle Davis earned
side, the Eastern bats were much praise for handling th~
warm and smoking to lead off the · EHS pitching and for catchln!}
two complete games as one ofth~
game.
,
Senior second baseman Jeff area's tops In that position.
SV nad but three hits, the two
Johnson drew a walk.' stole
second, then waltzed home with long balls and a D. Justice single:
the game's !lrst run after Steve
Eric Christian suffered the loss
Horner pounded a triple In the with just one walk and terl
gap. Chris Lance was hit by a strikeouts to his credit. Christian
pitch, Scott Fitch reached on an turned In quite a strong showing;
Mark Griffin walked one, and
error, Kenny Caldwell walked
and Jeremy Barber ripped ·a -struck out eleven, while scatter·
two-run double,the score 4-0 . .
lng just three hits to pick up the
After Symmes falle.d In Its next win.
Eastern is now 7·4 and 7-21n the
at bat, Robinson went to the hill.
where he 'easily struck out the SVAC. Symmes Valley Is now 6-6
slde,rlght In the middle of the and 5-4 In the SVAC.
.
Eastern Is slated to travel to
Eastern line-up.
Eastern,however, recovered
North Gallla tonight. host Waas Lance singled and scored on
hama Tuesday , and go to Hannan
Kenny Caldwell's Sacrlce fly,5-0.
Trace Wednesday .
SV scored twice In the fourth
Inning on singles by Robinson
and Albert Bloomfield and a
The Daily Sentinel
single by B. Williams.
Eastern hitters were Jeremy
(USPS IIS-!HlO)
Barber and Steve .Horner with
. A Oivl81on of Multimedia, IDe.
two hits apiece. Johnson a single
Published every afternoon, Monday
and Lance a single.
through Frlday, 111 Court St ., Po Fox ,Roblnson,Bloomfleld,and
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia , lnc.,
Williams had the only SV hits.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. SeIn the next contest Mark
cond "lass postage paid at Pomeroy~
Ohio.
Griffin reached · back and
snagged the win In a 9-3
Member: United Press International;
cakewalk.
Inland Daily Press Assocla tlon a nd the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Natlonal
Playing the role of visiting
Advertising Representative, Branham
team In the second affair , Mark
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Gritfln led the game off by being
New York, New York 10017.
'
hit by a pitch . After stealing
P&lt;.lsTMAsn:R: Send address changes
second Griffin scored on a Steve
to The Dally Sentinel, lll Court. St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Horner double.Horner came
home when Lance reached on an
SUBSCRIMION RATES
error,the score 2-0 in the first.
By Canier or Mo&amp;or R&lt;lute
.
One Week .................... .. ............. $1.25
Jeff Johnson knocked Griffin
One Month ............. ................. , .. S5.4~
home In t.he second for a 3-0
One Year .................................. 165.00·
score, while Scott Fitch scored on
SINGLE COPY
an error In the fourth. 4-1.
PRICE
Dally ................................... 25 Cents
In the second frame Albert
Bloomfield jumped all over a
Subscribers no.t desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit in advance direct to
. Griffin fastball and sent a rocket
The Dally Sentinel on a3, 6 or 12 month
shot over the trees down the left
basis . Credit will be given carrier each
week .
field line. The blast was oneofthe
longest ever at the EHS stadium.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier service Is
Symmes made It 4-2 In the
available.
fourth when Donnie Craft played
longbali with another impressive
Mall Subscriptions
lnalde Melp C4Junty
shot to deep left center.
13 Weeks ......................... " ....... $17 .211
Finally. Eastern padded the
26 Weeks .................................. $34.06
52 Weeks .................................. $66.56
win with a three run sixth Inning
Outside Melp Counly
and two In the seventh.
13 Weeks .................................. I18.2G
Mark Griffin had a double and
26 Weeks ... .................... , .......... $35.10
52 Wcets ... ............................... $67.60
slngle,Jeff Johnson two singles- '

.

Eastern vs. Symmes Valley
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles baseball team remained
alive In the hunt'for the SVAC
title race by posting two very
Important league victories over
Symmes Valley Saturday afternoon at Eastern High School.
Eastern was near perfect In the
field and played great ball behind
the complete game pitching of
seniors Steve Horner and Mark
Griffin.
.
In the first contest Eastern
capitalized on a four run first
Inning to win 5-2. then came back
to win the nightcap 9-3.
· In the opener crafty senior
flreballer Steve Horner fanned 13
batters enroute to his fourth win
of the year (personal record 4-1),
giving up just four' hits and one
walk In seven Innings of wor~ ,
Senior Tommy · Robinson of

"You have a choice.
Replace your old furnace
with a heat pump."
BOB

Vll.AlE~~~·---­

HOME IMPIIOYEMENT EXPERT

Why not heat your
home with today's
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system, the flameless
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ln the winter, the
heat pump keeps your
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The reliable, efficient electric
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And it saves.
Get the full story by contacting your power company at
992-3786.

�.

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Page-4- f he Dally Senttnel

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Monday, April18, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TAYLOR ON MOUND - Lefty Lance Taylor Jets one go In
Sat urday's non-conference game agahwt Meigs at Rock Springs.
Ga!Upolls won, 11·7.

Houston defeats
Cincinnati Reds

singled up the middle, scoring
Bailey and Jackson to give
Houston a 4-2 lead.
BOSTON (UP!) - An Ethlo·
The Astros ' third run of the
plan
In Rotterdam and an Irish·
co ntinue winn ing more than their - Inning came with the help of two
man
from Rhode Island have
balks by loser Danny Jackson,
share from the Cincinnati Reds .
combined
to make a world's
In 1988. when Houston won the 2-l .
record
or
even
a simple victory
Jackson balked Ryan to second
NL Wes t title, the Ast ros won 14
more
elusive
In
Monday's
Boston
of )8 ga mes from the Reds. In and then hll Gerald Young with a Marathon.
Houston's third-place finish sea· pitch. After Houston's Billy
Belayneh Dlnsamo set a world
son, the Reds struck back to win Hatcher sacrificed Ryan and
standard
Sunday at the mara·
l 3of18.
·
Young to third and second,
thon
In
the
Netherlands, his
With the ir5-3winover the Reds respectively, Jackson was called 2: 06: 50 time knocking
seconds
on Sunday, th e Astros have won for his second balk1 which scored off the old mark set In 22
1985
In the
four of the seven games played Ryan and gaye Houston a 5·2 same race by Carlos Lopes,
between the two teams, a start edge .
Moments after Clnclnnat!'s Dlnsamo and the rest of the
that Astros rlghtflelder Kevin
· Bass sa id could pay dividends as Bary Larkin led off the third Ethiopian contingent were en·
inning with a double, second base tered In Boston but their national
th e season progres ses .
"It helps , no doubt about It, " umpire Eric Gregg ejected Jack· governing body sent · them to
said Bass, who drove in two runs son from the Reds bench.· Jack· Rotterdam Instead.
John .Treacy, an Irishman who
Sunday. " We,know they 're a top son jumped over the dugout fence
lives
in nearby Warwick, R.I.;
contending tea m, and maybe we and charged Gregg, but C!ncln· Saturday
announced his Intennat! third base coach Bruce
can be a craw in their side."
tion
of
running
In the already
Kl111m stopped Jackson before he
"I think !tis impor tant ," added
competitive
Boston
race .
wim\lng pitcher Nolan Ryan, who could reach the umpire.
Treacy,
silver
medalist
at
the
also had two RBI for the Astros.
1984
Olympics,
Is
In
peak
form
"II is Important that we play
"J haven 't balked In 3 %
them tough. We'll both be com· years," Jackson said. " I don't and Immediately becomes one of
peting for the division."
quick-pitch because I don't. think the favorites .
"One Treacy makes up for four
Astros Manager Hal Lanier, I have·to."
Ethiopians,"
said David D'Ales·
"The balk didn't help, but
however , is more concerned 1hat
sandra
of
John
Hancock, prim·
the 8·3 Astros win early against that's not why we got beat," said
ary
sponsor
of
the Boston
anybody.
Reds Manager Pete Rose. Marathon.
"It 's Important to start off "Danny didn't have good loca·
Treacy finished 14th In last
strong against everyone, " Lan· tion, and they didn 't let him get
year's
race, struggling In the .
ier sa id. "It' s to early to worry settled.
final
5
mlles. Strong workouts
about a single series."
"Houston didn't see Danny
and
an
Impressive
showing at the
Ryan , 2·0, allowed seven hits, a Jackson pitch today . They'll be
Eklden 'race helped his decision.
walk and struck out nine in eight surprised when they see him ·A
high finish at Boston would also
innings. Dave Smith pitched the again."
assure
Treacy a spot on ireland's
Barry Larkin led off the game
ninth inning to gain his second
Olympic
team.
with a home run to give the Reds
save.
Kenya
and Tanzania are now
The As tros tied a National 1·0 lead . Bass' two-out double In
producing
many world·class ma·
League record by mak ing only the bottom of first scored Young
rathoners
and because both
one assis t in the game. Second and Glenn Davis to give Houston
countries
are
using Boston as
bacs man Bill Doran was credited a 2·1 edge.
their
Olympic
Trials,
their best
The Reds, 7·5, tied the score In
the assist when he threw out Jeff
runners
are
here.
An
African
..Trea dwa y In the seventh inning. the second on a Chris Sabo
won
on
the
Hopkintonnever
has
Houston scored three times in sacrifice fly that scored Bo Dlaz
to-Boston route.
the second to take a 5·3 lead. from third . Cincinnati scored Its
The young Africans, who disre·
Mark Bailey led off with a single final run In the third when Larkin
gard pace and time splits,
a nd moved to third on Chuck and Treadway belted b·ack-toprovide one unknown element.
Jackson's double. Ryan then back doubles.
The other uncertainty Is the
constant one -weather.
Runners would be helped by
the forecast cloudy skies and
55-degree temperature. Heat Is
an enemy In a long-distance race.
'
For most of the last week, brisk
winds have swept through Boston
and that could continue through
BALTIMORE / UP!i - John level head out here because all Monday.
"The course Is tough enough
Fa r rell says the Indian pitchers
kinds of things are going through
feed off one another. The rest of our players' heads right now . I without runntnx Into a head wind
for 26 miles," said 1988champlon
the Indians have been feeding off have confidence In those guys,"
the BaIt lmore pitchers.
Farrell struck out four, walked Rob de Castella, who Is not
Fa rrell, who said he was
three and scattered four hits In 8 running this year. ''The wind
ins pired by Greg Swindell's 1·3 Innings. Dan Schatzeder really makes a dlffereoce here. If
performan ce the previous night, recorded two outs for his secorid tbere is a tall wind, the runners
scattered four hits In 81-3lnnings
save. The Indians won their fifth are going to fly . Last year It was
to spark Cleveland to a 4-l
straight game and lith In their horrible."
last 12.
·
victory over Baltimore Sunday
that extended the Orioles' losing
"I had to stick to my game
st reak to 12 games.
·
plan," Farrell said. "That meant
" I drew energy from Greg
keeping us In the game and
Beginning Clams Starting
Swind ell' s great 10-lnnlng shu· trying not to get too fine with my
TUESDAY, APRI. 19-7:00 P.M.
tout effort Saturday, " said Far·
pitches."
.
AT
rell, who improved to 2·0 this
Cleveland Manager Doc Ed·
season a nd 7·1 lifetime In 12
wards said he Is not surprised by
CAILETON SCHOOL SYIIACUSE
career starts. " It makes ~ou
his club's 11·2 start.
For Information CaN
want to go out and do the same.
"We came out of spring train·
\..92·6839 After 6:00P.M.
Our pitchers feed off one lng proving we could win," said
OR 992-5196
anoth er."
Edwards. "Yes. I expected us to
INSTRIKTOIS:
The Orioles crept within one dowell, tobewhereweare. When
Mkk Howell, llock ltlt
loss of tying the major league
there Is a race to be run, you run
Ed C01ort, .... ltlt
record for most defeats at a
it the best you can."
John ....., llacll ltlt
season's s tart. The record ofO·U
is shared by th e 1904 Washington
Senators and the 1920 Detroit
Tigers.
Baltlmore travels to Milwaukee, where the Orioles will open a ,
three-game series Tuesday .
Manager Frank Robinson said he
wlll not make wholesale changes
just to break the streak .
HOUSTON tUP il- If the l988
Plouston As tros hope to contend
for the Na tional Le ague West
title, th ey know they have to

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Boston
Marathon
underway

Meigs Vs. Gallia A¢ademy
In weather that seemed more
approplate for football or lee
hockey, Ga!Ua Academy's Blue
Devil nine evened !hell- record at
l-1 against the Marau,d ers In an
11·7 win at Rock Springs.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

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JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

•'You don' t make changes that
you don' t think are going to help
th is club In the long ·run," said
Robinson, whO Is 0·6 since taking
over for Cal Rjpken Sr. "I don't
wan! to panic.' I have to keep a

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

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1s. 1988

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Spring into Action!

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Now is the time to see how your car
weathered through winter.

By United Press International
At least 10 people have been
kllled In Ohio traffic accidents
this weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said late Sunday.
The count showed one death
Friday night, seven Saturday
and two Sunday.
One victim was kllled In a
car·traln accident. Two victims
were pedestrians.
Victims Included:
Friday nlgbt
Sardinia: Angela Buckam·
neer, 18, Sardinia, killed In a
car· train crash at a rallroad
crossing In Sardl nla, Brown
County.
Salurday
Cleveland: Karl E. Newsome,
29, O~on Hill, Md., kllled when
his truck colllded with a
tractor-trailer rig on the Ohio
Turnpike In Cuyahoga County.
Chardon: Charles J . Angeloff,
58, Chardon, kllled when his car
coUlded with another at the
Intersection of Ohio routes 166

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map showed a cold frontfrom the
The thunderstnrms In Louis!· severe thunderstorm watch was
northern Great Lakes to north· ana produced one-Inch hall nor· Issue d this mo rning for norern Missouri. High pressure was theast of Keithville and east of theas tern Louisiana and most of
along the east coast.
north ern and centra l Mi ssissippi.
Stonewall, and nickel-size hall
The cold front was expected to east of Elm Grove and west of
More than 2 Inches ' of ral n
move across Ohio early. Monday Hen!n, the weather service said. drenched Abilene, Texas, Sun·
morning while high pressure Strong thunderstorm winds day and minor street flooding
settles over the 4J!per plains.
was reported In Wichita Falls,
downed numerous trees near
Kepler Lake In Bienville County. Texa s .
· Around the Nallon
The southern and mld·At Ia ntic
Thunderstorms In Arkansas
Spring thunderstorms moving produced heavy rain that caused coas t stat es re porte d fair
slowly across the lower Mlssls· some fiooding In Madison County weather tOday. Pleasant weat her
sippi Valley produced large hall Sunday evening.
was also reported In the northern
and damaging winds In Louis!·
Heavier rainfall totals for the .' Plains and upper Mississippi
ana, whlle storms spawned two six-hour period ending at 1 a.m.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
tornadoes In Idaho.
Included 1 ~Inches at Jonesboro,
Ark.; an Inch and a third at Knob
One of the tornadoes touched Noster, Mo., and ' Little Rock,
down near Ririe, Idaho, Sunday Ark.; and more than an inch at
night, destroying a shed and Memphis, Tenn., and Blythecarrying a telephone pole across vllle, Ark.
a field, the National Weather'
Showers and . thunderstorms
Service said. The other tornado extended from eastern Arkansas
touched down south of Roberts, and western Tennessee to
Idaho, but there were no lmme· southwestern Louisiana and soudlate reports of damage.
theastern Texas early today. A

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Maggie Vlrglnla Bush, 89, 1106
Adrian Ave., Ga!Upolls, died
Sunday at Scenic Hills Nursing
Center. She was a homemaker.
Born Oct. 13, 1898, Cabell
County, W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late Davis and
Delilah (Rowsey) Black.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, WilHam Everett
Bush: two sons, Lambert and'
Ophle Bush; three brothers,
Wllllam, Rosco and Chester
Black; and four sisters, Mrs.
Hanley (Bertie) Kerns, Inez,
Alphla, and Manora Black.
She Is survived by three sons,
Clyde C. Bush and 0. Gayland ·
Bush. both of Gallipolis, and
James 0. Bush, Vinton; three
daughters, Mrs. Elsie L. Gooch,
Ga!Upolls, Mrs. Norman (Marie)
Pinschmldt, Carolina Beach,
N.C., and Mrs. V. (Geraldine)
Carter, Columbus: two sisters,
Mrs. George (Nanny) Sowards,
Hurricane, W.Va., and Mrs. Blll
(Alva) Leadman, St. Albans,
W.Va.; two brothers, Harbor
Black, GalUpolls, and Herbert
Black, Bidwell; 17 grandchlld·

Seeks divorces
Earl B. Chapman, Middleport,
has filed for a divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Catherine Chapman,
Middleport.
Divorces have been granted to
Michael Lee Conley from Sandra
Lynn Conley, and to Rochelle
Eichinger to Scott Eichinger. .
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted Susan T. Reed and
Steven M. Reed.
In a related action, Mary Helen
Haggerty was restored by the
court to her malden name of
Blaettnar.

Stocks
Dally sloe• prices
( A• of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of munl Ellis " Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26~
AT&amp;T .................. .. ........ .....26~
Ashland 011 .... .. ..... .............68')k
Bob Evans ................ ,.........16%
Charming Shoppes ...... ...... 12'&gt;'
City Holding Co ................... 33
Federal MoguL. ........ ... ....... 40%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................62~
Heck's Inc.............. ............. 1~
Key Centurion .................. ... 39
Lands' End ......................... 21~
Limited Inc.................... ... .19'&gt;'
Multimedia Inc ................... 64%
Rax Restaurants ........ ,.... .. ... 4~
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... .. ...... .10%
Shoney's Inc . ...................... 24~
Wendy's Inti................ , ....... 5'%
Worthtncton Ind.................. 19"'

Valley.
Temperatures were below
freezing early this morni ng from
the northern high Plains across
northern sections of the Great
Lakes region . Tempera! ures
around the nation . at 2 a. m :
ra nged from 19 degrees at
'Bismarck, N.D., Fargo, N.D. a nd
Warroad, Minn., to77degrees at
Laredo, Texas .
The high for the nation on
Su nday was 96 degrees at
Laredo.
FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 4-19-88

Lt. Henderson
issues reminder

Lt. Dan Henderson of the Ohio tossed about or ejected from the
State Highway Patrol's Gallla· truck bed. Many of these Injuries
Meigs Post as advised Meigs ·could be minimized or prevented
County small truck operators If the passengers were secure In
against carrying passengers In the cab of the pickup."
Henderson, concluded by re·
the back of open pickup trucks.
minding
area motorists "that the
"Spring
llke
weather
and
out·
and 86 In northeast Geauga
automotive
Industry has made
door
actlvltles
tempt
people
to
County.
very
significant
advances In the
"'hop
In
back"
for
the
sake
of
Dayton: Kenneth E . Arthur,
art
of
"people
packaging."
Sharp
convenience
and
the
cooling
47, Eaton, kllled when his pickup
objects
have
been
removed
from
breeze
that
Is
always
present
In
truck co!Uded with another
the
Interior
of
the
pickup
truck
or
the
back
of
a
pickup
truck.
pickup truck on U.S. 35 In
they
have
been
recessed
where
Needless
to
say,
this
practice
Is
Montgomery County.
dangerous, particularly for they cannot harm the people who
Bucyrus: Patrick T. Hutson,
young passengers who are usu· are In the vehicle,
28, Gallon; kllled In a one-vehicle
The Interior has been padded
ally
hurtled out during the
accident on a Crawford County
with
energy absorbing materials
Impact
of
an
accident.
road west of Bucyrus.
and
of
course, each seat has been
"Each year", continued Hend·
Akron: Ralphe C. Crawford,
equipped
with a safety belt and
ersori, "approximately three
37, Cleveland, kllled when hit by
shoulder
harness:
So as summer
hundred
accidents
occur
lnvolv·
tractor· trailer rigs on Interstate
approaches
and
outdoor
actlvl·
ing pickups With passengers
77 In Summit County..
ties
Increase,
travel
safely
In the
riding In the truck bed. Over
Athens: Kenneth J. Hopple, 21,
front
seat
of
a
pickup
and
reserve
Columbus, kllled In a one-car · one-third of these passengers
accident on an Athens County receive injuries from being the rear bed only for cargo."
road.
· Columbus: Scott Wllllam Ber·
gandlne, 18, Mt. Gilead, kllled In
a one-car accident on Ohio 605 In Crusade starts
Enterprise United Methodist
northern Franklin County.
Mason-Gallla·Melgs Crusade Church will meet Wednesday,
Sunday:
tor Christ wlll be having a 7: 30 p.m., at the home of Ruby
Ironton: Angela C. Cotton, 23, crusade at the Carleton Church Frick.
Wurtland, Ky., kllled whenhltby on Kingsbury Road, CountyRoad
a vehicle on on U.S. 52 In 18, beginning tonight (Monday) Child cotwervallon
Lawrence County.
and cont!nulilg through Aprll 24.
The Middleport Child Conser·
Services will begin at 7 p.m. and vatlon League wlll meet Thurs·
different speakers and singers day , 7:30 p.m., In the usual
will be featured each night. For location. Devotions and traveling
more Information, contact Rev. prize will be by Janet Dufty .
ren: and 20 great-grandchlldren. Clyde V. Henderson, 992--7350, Each member Is asked!Q.brlng a
Services will be Wednesday, 2 Carleton Church pastor and favorite snack. Final plans will
p.m. at the Willis Funeral Home pres !dent of the MGM Crusade be made tor the spring cooler·
with the Rev. Paul Voss and the tor Christ.
ence on :rhursday and for the
Rev. James Lusher. Burial will
bloodmoblle. All members are
be at the Mt. Olive Church Sorority to meet
urged to attend.
Cemetery, West Virginia .
XI Gamma Mu Sorority's rlt·
Friends may visit Tuesday
ual tea wlll be held Tuesday, 7: 30 Belter health club
.
from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at
p.m., at the home of Annie
Rock Springs Better Health
the funeral home.
Chapman.
Club will meet at the home of
Pallbearers wlll be Bill Bush,
Mildred Jacobs on Thursday at
Dean Bush, Marlo Bush, Michael Council to meet
1:15 p.m.
,
Bush, Jimmy Bush, and Timothy
Syracuse V!llage Council will
Bush. Honoraries wlll be Tom meet In continued session Tues- Hymnslng
Stutes, Wallace Swisher, David day, 7 p.m., at village halL
A hymn sing will be held at
Kennedy and Ivan ManselL,
Sliver · Run Baptist Church on
Saturday, beginning at7: 30p.m.,
Boosters to meet
Meigs Athletic Boosters will with singing by the Gabriel
meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the Quartet and the Way-Marks. The
Bessie Ellcessor
high school. All members urged church wlll be In revival starting
Sunday evening at 7:30p.m.
Bessie Garnet Ellcessor, 84, of to attend.
42 Grape St., Galllpolls, died
SmorgaSbord
Saturday at Scenic Hllls Nursing Literary Club Meets
The Wilkesville Pythlan Sis·
The
Middleport
Literary
Club
Center following an extended
wlll
meet
Wednesday,
2
p.m.,
at
ters
are sponsoring a smorgas·
illness. She was a homemaker.
bord
on Saturday at the Pythlan
ot
Mrs.
Fred
Penhor·
the
home
· Born Aprll29, 1903ln Lawrence
HalL
Serving will start at 4 p.m.
wood,
located
next
to
the
MiddleCounty near Lecta. she was the
Everyone
welcome.
port
Nazarene
Church.
Mrs.
daughter of the late Perry
Everett
Hayes
will
review
Peter
Massie and Elzena Myers
Hymn sing
the Great by Robert Massie.
Massie .
Mount Olive Community
She married Rufus Ellcessor,
Church,
Long Bottom,ts having a
livestock
club
Sept. 25, 1926 at Gallipolis, and he
hymn
sing
on Saturday evening
An
organizational
meeting
of
survives, along with five grand·
beginning
at
7 p.m. Singing by
the
Meigs
County
Livestock·
children, Marc EllcessorofGaJU.
Dairy
Club
will
be
held
7
p.m.
the
Unroes
will
be featured.
polls, Ginger Hemsworth of
Wednesday
at
the
Everyone
welcome.
ext
ension
Cincinnati, Kim Greene of Bid·
office In Pomeroy.
well, June Ellcessor of Pt.
Pleasant and Chris Ellcessor of
Church meellnc
GalUpolls; and four great·
The Willing Workers Class of
grandchildren.
One son, Deryl, preceded her In
death In 1984, along with two
brotliers and one sister.
She was a member' of Grace
United MethOdist Church, Bust·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
ness and Professional Woman's
ticket
from Saturday night's
Club, Abigale Circle.
Super
,
Lotto
drawing has the
Services wlll be conducted l
same.
six
numbers
as chosen In
p.m. Wednesday at Waugh·
that
game,
the
Ohio
Lottery
Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
Commission
said
Sunday.
Rev. Joe Hefner officiating.
Burial follows In Ohio Valley
Those numbers are 5, 8, 18, 19,
Memory Gardens.
34 and 38•
Friends may call at the funeral , The holder of that ticket can
home Tuesday. 2 to4 p:m, and 7 to redeem It at a regional lottery
9p.m.
office to become eligible for the
Pallbearers will be Noel.Mas- $3 mUUon prize tbat will be doled
sle, Don Pope, Nell McMahon, · out In 20 annual installments.
Tim Hemsworth, Tom Greene
Lottery officials said 3,999,875
and Ty Sommerville.
one-doUar tickets were sold for
the game.

-----Announcements-----

Area·deaths

Maggie Bush

#

SPRING

.

The Qaily Sentinel Page 5

spell _eo_nt_lnu_~d-fr_om_P_ag_e_l_ _- _· --------~

At least 10 die on Ohio highways

I

205 N. Sot:ond An.
Phone 992-6651
Middleport, Ohio 45760

••

Rain ends Ohio dry

Saturday at 12: 51 a:m ,. Syracuse transported Tara Wolfe
from the scene of an auto accident on Route 124 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 5: 16a.m. to Railroad St. for
Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:57
a.m . to the Baum Addition for Roger Tony to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 6:46p.m. to Route 124 for Charles Ohlinger
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 7:05p.m. to Route
124 for James Kinnison to O'Bleness Memorial HospitaL
Sunday at 1:31 a.m., Syracuse to Minersville for Timothy
Douglas to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 4:54a.m.
to New St. for Paul Garnes to Veterans Memorial Hospital·
Middleport at 7:57a .m. to Grant St. for Bonnie Miller to Holze~
Medical Center; Scipio Township Fire Department at a barn
fire at the Tom Winter's residence on Sand Ridge Road; Scipio
· was assisted by Albany Fire Department; Tuppers Plains Ftre
Department at 2:09 p.m. transported Roger PuU!ns from a
·four-wheeler accident at Alfred to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeory at 2:12 p.m. to the Amerlcare·Pometoy Nursing
. Center for Joseph Leach to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 2:21 p.m. to a false alarm at Stonewood
Apartments.

'

••. c

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Twelve calls were reported over the weekend by Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services; five Saturday and seven

•

R. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.

' RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT NOW BY
r
CALLING••••992·2156
...
TillS SPECIAL EDITION WILL APPEAR IN TilE DAILY
. I SENTINEL ON MONPAY, APRIL 25, 1988.
~~ DEADUNE IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1988
;
ASIC FOI IRIAN OR DAVE
-

•

EMS has 12 weekend calls

,•

ln ,response to the questions of many of our
patients, the office of Dr. Craig Mathews will re·
main open in Middleport. Dr. Mathews is opening
a second practice in Athens, not relocating the
Middleport practice.

SHOTOKAN KARATE

,

• •

The Racine Vlllage Councll today Informed students and
athletes, along with their famllles who were Invited to the
Racine Vlllage councll meeting Monday evening, that the
meeting has been changed to Tuesday at the Shrine Club Parkin
Racine. Tuesday's meeting begins at 7 p.m.
The public ls. lnvlted to attend.
'

./

- ·

• . • , . ••

. Meeting changed to Tuesday

',.

Indians hand O's
.
12th loss tn row

•

li . .

--Local news briefs--

their sixth when Ray doubled,
Two unearned runs in the first the sixth and ~red on Skid·
with one out, and a single by gave the 'Galllans a lead they more's · single to right. Wes
Wllllams plated him. Wllllams never relinquished. Two hit bats· Young, for Meigs, hit safely and
was thrown out at second by men, a free pass, four wlld was driven home after Fields
catcher Brent Bissell and a pitches and a stolen base led to reached on a fielding error and
ground-out ended the Inning for the two tallies.
Matt Baker beat out an Infield
Vinton.
·
Three more runs were chalked hit .
Wiseman led off the Vlke up for the visitors when Scott
The visitors plated ·thelr final
seventh with a triple and Bryan Davis led off with a second Inning two In the seventh. Hassman got
Durst, who had given way to single, Hassman doubled him aboard on a fielder 's choice,
Kevin Oller on the mound for home, Todd Casey tripled and Casey hit to right, Saxon walked
Meigs in the slxth,agaln took Brett Saxon' s base hit drove In and Skidmore picked up the
over the pitching dulles . Durst Casey.
R:BI's with a single to center.
fanned the first batter he faced
Meigs marked up Its first hits
Meigs mounted their final
but then a Deal single scored In the third when Matt Baker and offensive thrust with Bissell's
Wiseman and Deal advanced to Chris Stewart singled and both · leadoff single to left followed by
third on a twobasefieldlngerror. advanced on a balk. Blue Devll Bartrum's towering two run
Wright singled Deal home for the hurler Lance Taylor put out the homer that just cleared the left
3·3 deadlock before the side was fire , however, and the Maraud· field fence. Young drew a free
retired.
ers . missed a golden scoring pass and Fields ripped a one out
With little action In the eighth, opportunity .
double to score him, Getting a
NlckKlngopenedthenlnthwitha
GAHS picked up a run on secood out, the GAHS hurler
base rap and Chris Stewart singles by Roll Nelson, Pete walked Stewart and was lifted In
replaced him as a pinch-runner. Anderson and Todd Casey In the favor of Saxon who came on to
Willi one· down, a hit and run fourth and Meigs retaliated In record the third outand put down
single by Durst scored Stewart their half of the Inning when the rally ,
and Bissell foUowed with a base Bartrum hit to right , advanced' to Taylor was the winning pitcher
knock. Mike Bartrum struck out second on a wlld pitch, stole third lor the Blue Devlls and Meigs'
but the catcher dropped the ball · and scored by virtue of a second Chris Stewart was tagged with
and on the play on Bartrum at balk called by Umpire Ray the loss.
first, Durst crossed with Meigs' Jewell.
Todd Casey led the GAHS
fifth run.
The teams traded two runs hitters with two triples and two
With Bissell on the mound In eachlnthenextframe,theGallla singles. Bartrum had a round·
the lower ninth, Wiseman gQt crew on a base rap by Greg tripper and single lor Meigs,
aboard on a fielding error and Roderick , a base on balls and two Stewart,s Bissell and Baker each
Robinson was hit by a pitch to Marauder fielding miscues . had a pair of singles, Fields
give the Vikings two baserunners Meigs accounted for a pair on doubled and Durst and Young
with none out. Bearing down, Chris Stewart's base hit, an error each hit safely.
Llnescore:
Bissell fanned the next two and back to back singles by Durst
battersandgotthethlrdtoflyout and Bissell.
GAHS ....... ....... 230 121 2-1112 1
to preserve the win.
Todd Casey tripled to lead off Meigs ., ..... .. ... .. 000 121 3· 7 11 4

Bls sell led the Mar'jllder hit·
ters with three singles and a
double, Durst and Mcf:lroy had
two base hits each, Williams a
triple and Fields, Snyder and
King each hit safely. Deal, for the
Vikings, had two singles and a
triple.
Llnescore:
Meigs ............ 300 000 002·5 12 3
Vinton .. ......... 000 001 ;200-3 8 3

··~··

Monday, Apnl

Marauders top Vikings, lose ·to .GAHS
It took nine Innings of play for
the Marauders to capture their
seventh win In the TVC title race
as they faced the Vikings of
Vinton County In a Friday
afternoon game. With one makeup game to play against Trimble,
Melgsninehas lost but once, that
to Wellston, In the first round of
play In the league.
At Vinton, Meigs jumped out to
a three run lead in thefirstfraine
when Jeff "Cheez" McElroy;
BryanDurstand:BrentB!ssellall
hammered out singles with Bls·
sell's hit driving In the first tally.
With the next two batters going
down In order, Scott Wllllams
slammed a triple to left field for
two RBI's.
· Then, for th~ next seven
Innings, the Viking mound crew
kepttheMaraudersprettywellln
check as they scattered five hits
and allowed two more batters to
reach base by way of fielding
errors.
Vinton missed a scoring oppor·
tunlty In the fifth Inning as Deal
led off with a sure triple but was
gunned down at the plate on a
relay from Wl!Uams to Baker to
Bartrum then to Bissell as he
tried to stretch It Into a homer.
The hosts made It a 3·1 game In

~

I

!Z1]sNOW
-RAIN
V// ] SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . Occluded

11

Map shows minimum tempe ratures . At least 50'%., of any shaded area 1S forecast
to recetve prec1p1tat1on 1nd1cated
UPI

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunder storms wlll be
numerous across the Southeastern stales, the Tennessee Valley
and the Carolinas Into the central Appalachians and middle
Atlantic states. Ralnshowers will be widespread lrom the upper
Ohio Valley Into New England. Snowshowers will be scaltered
across upper Michigan and northern lower Michigan. Ralnshow· ·
ers will be scattered from the Pacific Northwest and northern
Plateau regions south Into the central Intermountain region and
north ce'ntral Arizona.

. Weather
South Central Ohio:
Cloudy with a chance of morn·
lng showers Monday, becoming
partly sunny In the afternoon
with a high between 50 and 55 and
northwest winds at 15 to 25 mlles
per hour. The chance of rain Is 40
percent.
Mostly clear and cold Monday
night with a low near 30.
Tuesday, mostly sunny. High
In tile mid 50s.
Exlended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Dry Wednesday and Thursday
with a chance of rain on Friday .
Morning lows will be In the mid
20s to mid 30s Wednesday and In
the 30s Thursday and Friday .
Highs wlll be In the mid 40s to mid
50s Wednesday and 50s to lower
60s Thursday and Friday .

53 1 JACKSON PIKE · RT 35 WES T

Phone 446· 4S24

BARGAI N MATIHE[S SAT &amp; SUfi
ALL SE ATS $2 .50
BA RGAI~I NIGHT TUfS OAY $2 . 50

L

APRL15 thru 21 _j
FR IDA Y t hru

T HURSDAY ~

ELBERFELDS
FLOOR COVERING
'

•

r1ng ale
3"
...
Vinyl Floor

f ftVA1rin1n ............ SALE
PAmiNSl

&amp;

Outside Turf ................................. sALE
(12' WIDE, 4

One has winning
Super Lotto ticket

Hospital news
Ve&amp;eran• Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Lewis
Taylor, Middleport; Monte Rlf·
ne, Pomeroy; Joy Hysell. Mid·
dleport; Avis Lawson,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - James
Quillen, Natalie Sigler, Rhonda
Hoover.
Sunday Admissions - Kenneth
Swartz, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Julia
Flagg, Mamie Swauaer. Robert
Lewll, Charles EUII, Sue Geoa.

'

Now Open For Spring

s.....

COMPlETE LN OF YEGnAILE
&amp; lElDlNG PWfiS AND
GEIA- NOW IIEADY.
HANGIItll tlSIETS, AWEAS,

FillY ES &amp; SHIUIIEIY

ELBERFELDS
PO.IOY

992-3671

545
SQ. YD.

�•

The Daily Sentine~

By The Bend
-

Page-6

Little book makes big Ann
difference to couple· Landers
_._.._

Dear i\nn Landers: I have never
ANN UNDEfisa
I would not have believed that
wntten to you before, but I foci that one little book could have made
'l1mla8~Md
o.-.s,_..
I must ll't yo u know how much that such a big difference. Thank you,
book you recommended. "'Making Ann. l feel like- A NEW PERSON
Your-Famil YWork." helped me.
IN INDIANA
This year the mini-skirt is back. Do
On page 81 was a perfect desert po
DEAR INDIANA A number of you really want to see (i(). and
tion of my marnage: "'john comes people have wntten to tell me how 7~year-old women in mini-skirts?
home from work, has • few drmks. the book helped them. For those The sales clerks tell me yes, but l
ems dmncr, falls aslocp watchmg who didn't see that column, the don't beheve it.
TV, Al1 cc w mcs home from work, book is "' Making Your Family
Frankly, I never see my!lflf in the
fixes dinner, helps the children with Work "' by Dr. Mary G. Durkin. fashion catalogues that clog my
homework, puts them to bed, docs · Send S8 (this includes postage and mail box nor do I see myself in tlte
houst•hold chores and collapses handling) to Thomas More Press, store windows or the newspaper
around mtdntght ··
223 W Ene St., Chtcag\1, Ill. 60610.
ads. l see only fresh·faced women
Dear Ann Landers: The letter under 30. They are all thin, tall and
The author goes on to dcscnbe a from P.O.M in Pittsburgh about leggy.
humdrum, borirtg marnage - dull her frustratton with women's cloth·
What are older women to do?
"'' lt fe, two people who have ing sizes struck a responsive chord Wear last year's clothes? This is
not hmg to say to each othe r The m me. May I send thiS open letter to precisely what you are forcing us to
onl y thmgs th,u keep them together the garment manufacturers and do. Sign me - DISGUSTED IN
a re the kids and the money it would fashion designers evcrywltere? l KENTIJCKY
cost to li ve apart.
know of no better way to reach
DEAR DISGUSTED: Thanks on
Then I hooked up the state of our them
behalf of the millions of women
marriage to the part m the book
who refwe to be steamrolled into
about men who have affatrs It
Ladies and Gentlemen: You have accepttng the short short • skirts.
dawned on me that my husband added msult to lllJury. Some CPA's Count me among them.
was a prime rargt&gt;t for an unhappily must h11_ve pomted out that thou·
The truly chtc designers have not
ma rried woman (or a divorced sands of dollars could be saved by gone all out for the mtnt They
one). and he works wtth several of making garments with not one- realtze that not all women are 24
them
quarter inch of extra matenal m years old, have great legs ahd weigh
Till' book suggestl'll ways I could the seams to permtt a slight adJUSt· 109 pounds. Bless them.
become a playmate agam ltnd it mcnt. Thts •s additional evtdence of
(Piannmg a weddmg? What ',
pointed out that n was up ro me to your contempt for tho'se of us who rrghr? What's wrong? "The Ann
change rhlll!&gt;' I embarked on a new have committed the unpardonable lAnders Euide }or Brides" will relu:ve
approach to "'john" that very mght sin of adding a few pounds.
your aiiXIel)•. To receiVe a ropy, s•:nd
and was amat ed at the response. He
Women still want to look smart $3 plus a No. 10, selfaddressed,
couldn't figure out what prompted and well·groomed. I said smart, not stamped envelope (45 cents postage)
the change 111 me, and I wasn 't ndiculous. Last year your dresseS roAnn lAnders, P 0 Box I I 562, Chi·
about to tell him.
and sktrts were down to our ankles. cago. Ill 6(}61 UJ562.

Community calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs
County Churches of Christ Men's
Fellowship will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Middleport
Church of ChriSt. Carl Hysell,
juvenile officer, will present the
program. All men are welcome

REV. SCOTI' KELSO

Revival set
The 17 Methodist Churches in
Gallia County are sponsoring a
Catch the Spirit - Revival
service. now through April 22.
Services will be held nightly at
Gra ce United Methodist Church
"' at 7· 30 pm ., led by the music
tea m from Tr inity United Methodist Church in Picker ington,
Ellen Judge and Nell Ftsher;
Ric~ Smitson will sing on Friday .
EVa ngelist for the servtces will
be Rev. Scott T. Kelso, pastor of
Tn ntty UM in Pickerington.
Along with services. workshops will be conducted on praise
, worship a nd church growth at
Rodney , Po rter. Cheshire and
Ch r ist Unit e d Me thodist
Chu rc hes. For information, con
tact a nv of those c hut·ches

MIDDLEPORT- Revival services will be held at the Middleport Church of Chris tin Christian
Union, April 18-24, 7:30 each
evening. There will be special
singers and different speakers at
each service. The public Is
invited.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Boosters meeting
at 7 p.m. In the junior high
building with election of offleers
to be held.
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club will meet at 5 p.m.
Monday at the Ohio Power Co.
parking lot preceding a tour or
the Harris Greenhouses.

TUESDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Chamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday, 8 a.m., at the Dairy Isle
in Middleport. All members are
urged to attend .
POMEROY

XI Gamma

Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m. , at the senior citizens center
in Pomeroy.
I

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that 1n pursuance of a Resolutton of the Board of Edu-

cation of the Meig1 local
School Otstrict, Middleport,
OhiO, passed on the 18th

'

day of February. 1988. there
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Meigs
Looal St:hool D11trict at a
Primarv Election to be held
m the Meigs Local District
of Me1gs County. Oh1o. at
the regular places of vot·
mg therem, on Tuesday, the
thord day of May, 1988, tho
question of levying a tax., in
e~tceas of the ten mill limite·
tion, for the benefit of Meigs
Local School Dlmlct lor tho
purposa of Current Ex·
pensea.
Said tax baing: an additional &amp;.0 mills to run for •
continuing period of time et
a rate not tKCHding &amp;.0
mills for eac~ one dollar of
valuation, wh1ch emounta to
fifty conll (fQ 50) lor - h
one
hundred dollars of
vetuetion. for 1 corrtlnuing
period of time
Tho Polio for Mid Elect""'
will be open at 1:30 o'aloclt
A.M . and remain open until
7 ·30 o'clock P.M .
By ardor of the Boord of
Eloctlono. of Molgo C011nty.
Ohio.
Evelyn Cleric, Chairmen
Jane M . Frymyer, Director
Dated 3 / 23. 19BB
141 1 t , 1B, 25; (6) 2. 4tc

when the Syracuse PTO met
recently at the school.
It was noted that Debbie Hill
will have students' art work on
display at the May meeting of the
PTO. Field Day was announced
for Monday and Tuesday of the
last week of school.
Joyce Sisson was authorized to
secure an estimate for concrete
for the new walks at the front of
the building. Purchase of a Band
Boosters calendar was ap·
proved, and It was noted that
protective mats for each end of
the gym have been ordered.
A report was given on the
candy bar sales with the PTO
making $1,500 fr()JTI the sale. A
skating party for the children as
a reward was well attended.
Speaking at the meeting on the
financial problems of Southern
Local District was James Lawrence, local principal.
Room count was won by the
fourth grade. The treasurer's
books will be audited by Patti

SALES- SERVICE- TESTING

BlOWN &amp; SNOUFPII
FilE &amp; SAFm
EQUIPMENT
171 ,..,... Slcllltllft.
....... rt. ONe 45760
PH. 1614) ttl-7075
Gar, Sneuff• -

992-7446

Mr_ and Mrs_ Robert Reeves,
Robbie, Brandl, and Bryan
Reeves, Chester, were Sunday
visitors of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah Beth and Matthew, were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning and Ronald .
Mrs Howard Thoma was the
Wednesday afternoon visitor of
Mrs. Iva Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.

_

,

Mrs. Florence Richard s, children and youth chairman , commen ted on the goal and challenge
to the Auxiliary of continuing "A
square deal foreverychlld_" She
encouraged members to become
involved and talked about the
Legion's national commission on
children and youth, the teenage
suicide, mis sing children, and
drug abuse and prevention prob·
!ems and challenges.
Mrs_Richards also reported on

Genius night was observed at
the recent meeting of Salisbury
Cub Scout Pack 246 held at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church,
Several games were played
and pack events were announced
including a fishing derby to be
held at the May meeting .
Joann Vaughn and Tom Reed
were judges for the genius
projects. Winners In the wolf
division were Michael Leifheit,

Forest Run
UMW meets

~::..

· :KARL A. KEBLER 10, CPA

· DILES HEARING CENTER
Ather~~, Ohio

45701
1-100-237·7716

We feature aida from:

..,,

co... ouo .....
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•• -.:•

l l.lf iO• o OA,.. M

'" 10N&lt;f0AV """' ~
f "'J OI DAT OAOU

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P.,n
IU fOOAo OortO

OAT IUOMO PU I UJJATI(l~
11
IMU~DH
J 00 0 M ... O~ IIA O
100 0 .. TUUOA¥

Oil" "'

JOoll o ., P'IDoouo. .
l oo • M • ~u u o• '
l 00 0 .. ' II OAT

•

'

point on said easterly hne at
Statton 443 plus 75.97 on
oao'd -nte;hne·,
'"
thence
continuing along
1 a 1d line and said centerline
south 6 degroeo 27 minutoa
14 seconds Woot a diatonca
ol 25 97 feet, to a point at
Station 443 plus 60.00 on
sold contortino:
thenc. North B3 dagraos
32 minuteo 48 seconds
Wool 1 diotanco of 30.00
a poont on tho
• •o•to'ng weotorly roght of
" lone of U S Rout• 1&gt;
war
oaid point being 30 00 toot
left ol Station 443 plus
60 Ooo nthecenterl 1neofU
S Route 33;
honea along the westerly
' of a propoeed highway
tine
•••• m.nt to be taken for
Profect MEG 33-01.73,
North 6 degrees 27 minutes
7 ••cond l West a distance of
1 06.48 ..'. 0 • point
6&amp;.00 teet
' left' of Station
444 Plus 50.00 on 111d
C.nt.rlln. -,
th.nc. CO ntinuong along
th. westerly line of sa1d
•••amant North 31 degrees
6 1 minutes 54 seconds Ea11
a distance of 24 47 feet, to a
point on Owners' easterly
line, said point being 46 50

..
' '' '0

~

feet left of Station 444 p1u1
71.82 on 111d centerline,
thence along Owners'
easterly line South 75 degrees 41 minutea2 eeconds
Eoat a dlatanca of 46 54
feet, to the True Place of
Beginning. containing 0.12
of an aero. more or fall. of
which tho Present Road
Occuptas 0 .08 of en acre.
more or le11.
'
Thlt deacriptiOn il baaed
on a turvey made under the
, directiOn and superviaion of
Ronald W. Eifert, Registered
Surveyor No. 8046.
Said atetlona being the
Station numbers 11 ltipu·
latad In the harelnbefore
menftonad survey and II
ohown by plano on llloln the
D•pertmtint of Transporta·
tlon. Columbue. Ohio.
Ownars claim tide by
'onotrument recorded In Volumt 242. ot PogolB 7 : and
Volume 290. ot Page 715. of
the Deed Record• of Melgo
County, Ohio.
Said per,ans noted above
shall further take notice that

r,

'

u•

Ltst~ntng D~v1ces

·-·------

.1 -....--··
_. ,_ .......

•••

7

...
OOIGO

...... _, ____,_..,,,
ou aa

....
Olt til
01 1 •

11100
OM OCI

-Gil

:::.=t.::::r-

-

....

"...... -...

~u=.o

,,..,_,_

Public Notice

.,_ ....,.,,.._

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

ii:i=-"'-~­

-

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be
received at the·
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1B 56 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
SECOND FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Friday. May I, 1988 at
11 .00 a.m . and opened
thereafter for furnishing the
material• and performing
the labor for the execution
and construction of:
GROVER RECLAMAriON
PROJ~CT
MEIGS COOIIITY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG·Sb·14
in accordance with the plans

Farm Equipment
Deater

F11111 Equlp111ut

PH. 949-2969

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Doalor

Cable Bills

RESIDENCE PHONE
1614)

EX.CAVATING

Cuunucs

RICK HALSTID, AGENT
Potnt Pltosant, WV
1304) 675-7618

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
tN EXCESS OF THE

Pl.".

Nore Jorden.
Ada Eellterday,
Vln11 LIMI

367-7UO- J6:J-J,671

Makes

Wa Service AU

CHARliE'S
MIDTOWN
VIDEOS

Roger Hysell
Garage

PH. 742-2833

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trantllllulon
PH. 992-5682

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohoo "

Open Monda' thru
Saturday

12 Noon lill 8 P.M.

614-742-2617

Corner of New limo
Road &amp; Br,ant Street

or Loavo MKSCIQI

Rutland, Ohio

lotwHn 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

Now Homos luilt
"Free Estimates"

Public Notice

Public Notice

WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
JUNK UIS OR TRUCKS
-FREE ESltMATfiFor any of thase servi(IS call

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

11'10.

Reclamation. 1866 Fountain Square, Building H. Se·
cond Floor, Columbus. Ohio
43224 No bidder may with-·
draw his bid within sixty t60)
days after the actual data of
the opening thereof
The Director of Natural
Resources reserves the right
to reJeCt any or all bids, or to
at:cept the bid which embraces such combination al·
ternate propoa.ols as may
promote the best mterest of
the State
As provided in Section
I 23.161 of tho Ohio Revised Code and Administrative Rule 123:2-16-02 of
the Department of Administrative Services. the CON·
TRACTOR shall make avery
effort to ensure that certified minortty business sub·
contreclort and material·
man participt~ta 1n the con·
tract. The total value of sub·
contracts awarded to and
materials and services pur·
chered from minority busi·
nesseashall be assatforth in
the apecifications.
Contractors requiring ••·
sittance in securing bids
from certified M8E subcon·
tractors and supphers may
contact the State Equal Em·
ployment Coordinator by
calling (614) 466·83BO or
the Minority Bullftlll Development Division by cal·
ling (614) 468-6700 or Toll
Free on t -(BOO) 2B2·1 OB6 .
RECOMMENDED:
Tim L. Dieringer, Chiaf
Divition of Reclamation
4/ 5/ 8B
APPROVED .
Joseph J Somer. Director
Department of Natural
Resources
4/ 5 / BB
141 11' 1B. 2tc'

•Dorer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIOING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Galha anJ

3/14/'11/1

TRIPLE P

4-18.' 88

· -o•
TD WOIUI un
I1IIJIJUlllllllllmiT!

ofREE•ESTIMATESo
IF NO ANSWEI CALL:

1/ 22188/ tfn

Nf,W &amp; USED MOWERS
8 7 Financing On
Yardman
Strvict On All Mokes
We Honor MC/D•c/Visa

l:tere

BUSINESS PHONE

Ma ~ un

367-0317

Batween Rt_ 7 &amp; Bashan

16141 992-6550

S~.: rvm~-: Me1,g:;

For

Located Hallway

We C1ny Fishmg Supplies

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

SMALL or LARGE JOBS

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

and

lnstelled

949-2860

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUl
JUST CAll!
992-3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEl - SAND
TOP SOil
Fill DIRT

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3-II·Jin

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money
1
1

We pay cash for l•temodel cle11n

used cars
Jtm Mink Ch&amp;Y -Oids Inc.
B1ll Gene Johnson

614-446·3672
TOP CASH pa1d for '8 3 model
11nd newer used cars. Smrth
BuicJc.-Ponthtc, 1911 Eastern
A w • Gellipolis Call 614-44&amp;-

2282

.

Complete households of 1urniture &amp; ant1que• Also wood &amp;
coal heaters Swein'1 Furnh:ure
&amp; Auct1on. Thtrd &amp; Olive.
614-446- 3159

Want to buy Uaed furniture and
ent1que1 Will buy enttre house~old furnllhing Marltn Wedemeyer 81~245· 5152.

Junk Cars With or w;.:hout
moton Cell Larrv Uvety- 614388 9303

Wanted Standing timber large
or amallacnage Cllll 614-682·
7348"' e82 7216

Buy,ng datly gold, 11lyer coms.
rmgs. jew'8lry sterling ware, old
coins large currency Top pri-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

J&amp;L
INSULATION
FREE ESTIMATES

ces Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd Ave Middl.,.::~ort Oh 614992-3476
Wanted, used compact but
powerful PA system for band

CUSTOM BUllT

CALL 992-2772
GARAGE &amp;
POLE
BUILDINGS
ROOFING &amp;
GUTTERS

Call Steva 614·7•2-2594

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Reasonable Pri&lt;es"
PH. 949-2801
or R•s. 949·2860

Weight bench with we~ghta
1ncluded 304-675-2200 after
5

Employmen1
Serv1ces

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
•-16-16-tfn

HI-I mo. d.

10-8-tfc

Wanted To Buy

6-17-tfc

PH. 949·2801
or Ras.

9

Wanted to buy Used Mobile
Homes Call 614-4•6-0175

or 992-7121

4·12-'88·1 mo.

2 115'=''88 ""

wall abl e at your co nven 1ence
and locations Marlin Wedemayar AUCtio neer· 6 14-2455152

Estate. antique, farm. liquid•
tion satn 304-773-5785

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It Repairable"

Water, Gu. Elactr~c: . Sewer &amp;
Ore1nage Lmea, Reed Bu1ldmg,
U.nd Cleerlng. Footers
Complete Mob1le Home S.tups
Fill D1rt · Top Soil · L1meatone

Wedemevels Auctten Service-

Ftick Pearson A4CtionMr li c ensed Ohi o •nd Welt Virgtnie

DEAD OR ALIVE
SeptiC Tanka and l ..ch Beds

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auet1oneer Col Otcar E Chck
30~895-3430. L1e No 75488.

Pull &amp; Suvil ee

WANTED

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

1nd specifications prepared
b Y t h e DEPARTMENT OF
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NATURAL RESOURCES.
NOTICE is hereby given
THE DIVISION OF RE • that in pursuance of a ReCLAMATION · COLUMBUS • aolution of the Board of EduOHIO · BIDS
WILL BE cation of the Eastern Local
OPENED IN THE SEC • School D1strict. Reedsville,
OND FLOOR
CONFER • Ohio, Pined on the 8th dey
ENCE ROOM OF 1B65 of Fobruorv. 19BB, there will
(BUILDING HI OF THE be subminad to a vote of the
FOUNTAIN SQUARE OF- peopto of said Eaohll'n tocol
FleES OF THE OHIO OE • School D11tr1ct at • Primarv
PARTMENT OF NATURAL Election to be held in the
RESOURCES · THE ESTI - Eastern Local District of
MATE FOR THIS PROJECT Moigo County, Ohoo, at the
of voting
As DETERMINED By THE regular places
DIVISION OF RECLAMA- therein, on Tuesday. the
lhord day of May, 19BB, tho
TION Is .3Bo•6B1 50 ·
A pre- b 1d maeIIng w Ill be question of levying a tex. In
he ld on We dnesday, A pn·1 excess of the ten milllimita t1on, for the benefit of Ees·
27 • 19BB a I 11 00 a.m a
·
tam Local School District
'
I h o lito.
Cop Iea of 'h e Plano . opact · for the purpose of Current
. .
I 1catlon1
an d propou t I orma Exlensea
aid teK be~ng: an eddi ·
WI'It be 1orwardod 1rom tho
·
tlonal12 4 milts to run for a '
D .IV1I 1on o1 Rac tamattOn,
D IJNI "m.n' 0 1 N.tur.t R. · continuing period of t1me at
sources. upon r ec.lpt oI • e rete not exceeding 12.4
check m th e emoun I oI mills for eaoh one dollar of
.11 ·00 mld e paya ble to th • valuation. which amounteto
D apert menI oI N.'ur.l R. • one dollar and twenty·four
aourc11 . Tho•• m.y .110 be cent• (t1.24) for uch one
pure h••ed w lth C•• h In 'h. hundred dollars of valuation.
.nd for continuing period of
exec .moun'·
'
specifications
become the time
property of the prospective
The Polls for uid Election
bidden end no refunds will will be open at ft 30 o'clock
be made. Additional infor· A.M . and reme~n open until
mation mey be obtained 7:30 o'clock p M .
from the Division of ReclaBy order of the Boerd of
mation, Department of Na- Elections, of Meigs County,
tural Reoourcos.
1866 Ohio.
Fountain Square, Building
Evelyn Clark. Chairman
H. S•cond floor, Columbus,
Jane M. Frymyar. Director
Ohio 43224 . (Phone: (8141 Doted 3/23. 19BB
(4) 11, 18, 26; (61 2. 4tc
285 _1 otlll
Each bid must be accom·
panied by 1 BID GUA~ 2
In Memoriam
AANTY • meeting the raqui·
remante of Section 153.14
of tha OhiO Aevieed Code.
IN MEMORY
Contractore ere actviHd
~•Of
Our Father,
that In accon..nce with t,...
HOWARD WILSON
proviliona of thi Jenuary
27, 1 972 oxeauttve order by
who died
the Oovemor of Ohio, and
amend..t executive order
Aprll12,
1936
84-9, Fobruorv 15, 1984,
and our mot her,
equal 11mployment opportunlty condltonaereapplicaKATE WILSON
bla to tl:'il bid. Wage rat••
who died
ootabllohed In occordonco
with Section 1613.18 end
April 22, 1971
11113.37 of tho Rovlled
Codo ore ot110 oppllcobto.
Btdo ore Holed end od·
dressed: Department of Ne·
turel Raaources, Dlviaion of

·--~

New Holland, Bush Hog

11

Will do Federal
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Here ts a
beautitul newer home 1n one
of the best locatiOns rn Metgs
County 4 or more bedrooms,
2 baths, tam1~ room, many
features. Th~ 5 the one yoo
want! $67,500.00

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

NEW LISTING- MIDDLE·
PORT - Here ts a cute lttlle
log house wrth cute lltlle
pnce. Up to 3 bedrooms
wtlh a beaultlul nver v1ew
WANT $17,900 00

RACINE - Approx 3\\ acres
of land wrth a 3·4 bedroom
home. Also tndudcs a small
mobile home for rental tn·
come ASKING $24,000 00
MAKE OFFER.
CALIFORNIA CONTEMPO·
RARY - on over 5 acres m
the country 3 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, over 1300 sq. ft ,
storage butldtn~ wood·
burner hook-up, elec B.B
heat Garden area and much
more $39,900 00
RUTlAND - Ntce ran ch
type home on a level lot. 3
bedrooms, equtpped ktlchen, close to schools All m
good cond1hon. BARGAIN
PRICEO AT $29,900 00
POMEROY - 50'•280' lot
w1lh older house tn town.
Would make a mce butldmg
stteor put a lratler on rt Also
2 other lots avaolable. All lor
$8,500.00
MIDDLEPORT - PRICE
REDUCED on the 2 story remodeled home. N1ce kit·
chen, lots ol closet space, 3
bedro~ms, d1n1ng room level lot Much more! ONLY
$26,900.00
RUTlAND - 3 bedroom
home nearly remodeled wrth
central atr, elec. heat, garage w/workshop, concrete
patiO, fully msu~ed. !eve lot
w/fenang Ntce condttton'
ONLY $32,000.00.
He~ry E. Cltllnd, Jr.
992·6191
J- Tru&amp;atll ..... 949-2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992·5692
Tr1cy Riffle ....... 949·3010
Office................992·2259

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement W1ndoW!l
•New Roofing

,.

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

3-28·88-1 mo.

016,0&gt;10 - 059,230 / yr Now

AVON- SeU Awn for All•ees
Call 814-446-3368

Middleport. Oh.

992-861 , .,..., ..,

Blatk Powder Supplies
"Modern Ammunition"
CAN ORDER "Modern"
GUNS ON REQUE5T
AI Rtasonoble Prim
Rt. 124 Across
Happy Hollow load

614-742-2355

4 -11 -'87-1 mo

f'?

ltt us connrt I hoM ohl Movies
&amp; Slides onr to tasy VMS.

CAlL AMY CAIITER
or IOI'S lliCRONICS
-

446-7390

11 /2/ll·tf~

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

Home

Health Core

Prov~~r~

We
For the
Etdorty In Their Homa.

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repah;,and re·
core radiatci'rs and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT Hill FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1·13-tfc

Co'llered Wwith Workmen 's
Compenaation

PH. 614-992·2657
3-21 -'8i-1 mo

Announce 111 en 1s

MANAGER TRAINEE

Do to a tremdous incr... e in
business &amp; furtt. corporate
eJtpanlson we h... e to offer

3 Announcements
Reduce aefe &amp; fat with GoBeta
Cepsula a E-Vap ''WII'Ier P1lls"
1111 Fruth Pharmacy
OhioRNerCemp Groundt open
Full hook-up t7 per night

J&amp;L '
.INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

GEARY
BODY SHOP

FREE ESTIMATES

550 PAGE STREET

3·21·81-1110..

L&amp;L
INDEPENDENT
CAIPO
CLEANERS
The Bet1t Technique

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN 1:30·6:00 P.M.

3-14-'11-lmo

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- AddoM 1nd remodeling
- Roofing end guttar work

-·

-Concrete work
- Piumbtng end et.ctric•l

I free Estimate•)

742-2451

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

Rt. I, ltltlond, Oh. 45775
4-11-'11-t ....

Call

male Getman Shepherds.
Betvween 9 end 11 montht old
Call 61•·992-2260 after 5 .00

2

pm

Smal Beaghi puppies. 5 femalll, 1 m1le.. 7 wits old Call

814-742·2075

2 kittens, 1 gray, t bi8Ck. will
deliver wtlhin ~asonable die·
t:ancs, 304-895-3681

6

992·6215 ., 992·7314
Ponwoy, Oh,l~ ·~ ,_'1

L,__ _ _ _.;;.4· ~

tatlon required C&amp;ll 614-4466556 between 1·9 PM,

Full &amp; P.-t -ttme LPN Potitlons
aveileble Appty It P1ne Crest
Care Center 555 Jackson Pike
EARN AS MUCH aa S300
W'EEKLY asaembtylng pt'oducta
in your home. Sun right ew8 v
No experience Nec•Nrv Send
self.addre11ed. nemped enve·
lope to : HOMECRAFTS, P.O
8011 7802. Hummgton. WV

25778

Lost and Found

Government Jobs

116 040-

559 230 ..., .. Now hirmg Your
area 1- 805-887 8000 Ext R9805 far current F•deral hst

Heir Styhsts. Acrosa The Street
styting salon is seelung two
additionllstylms who Ire look
1ng for more th., JUst enother
job Call Terri at 814-446-9510
for deta1ls

.
Mlnillure grey
Schnauzer Vicinity of Golf
Courte. Antwers to name of
••Purtkln" Call 814-..48-2021

LOST :

LOST· BliCk lAbrador Spade.
femele. Rio Grtnde •r•a
Glrnwa Ford Ad Call.,.nlng•·

814-245-9263.

Found · Female Chow dog,
Found In Rutllnd by Bottle 911
plont. 8t4-742-3013
LOST. ladl.. \Netch Po1nt Pl. .

In Carpet Cleaning

MIKE LEWIS.OWNER

Oependeble women needed for
child ca'e l1ght housekeeping in
my home Referenoea tl'llnlpor-

2435

F,....fun:y hatf grown csta to
good home. Also • young ooNia
dog 614-949-2906

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

PH. 992·2772

Hamttsr to giYft wway
614-446-6978.

Giveaway

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

1·28-'88-tfn

vti!IIIN cllll81~446-3373ask for
Mr Hides. between 9 AM· 5 PM,
Mon -Wed

FrH to good home '" the
country- Young bladt mele dog
Lovea children. Cell 8'14· 379-

4

CARTER'S

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

•1ncome"om 15, 000to20.000
first yell'. •Locaf &amp; nat!Onel
flmployment ~rlciing condi·
tions, 9-5 weekdiJft. •E~~::ell.,t
benllftts For confident181 mter-

PositiOn Open · SoCial Worker.
Contract pan-dme: Wrth m•tmum af 14 hout1 P• week.
Applicetions will be taken
ttwough Aprtl 22. 1988. For
further lnforrNtion. cllfl the
Gellia Counrv Health Depart.
ment at 44~•612, e~tt 292.
Equal Opportunity Employer

Regiltered Mele Afghan Hound
to gfve .,.,., to good home 8
y,. old Call 814-742-3194 or

992-6282

FEDERAL, STATE, AND CIVIL
. SERVICE JOBS

dov•

614-9.49·2685

NURSES AIDES ,

ORDERLIES. LPN'o
Hourly or Liva·m
Arrangements
BONDED - INSUREO

Kissimmee, Fl 32742-2203.

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
t ime ••embfy work; .tectortles,
crdte. Others. info '1 - (5().61
641 -0091 . Ext 2987 Open 7

814-949-2626

Bmm MOYIES &amp; SLIDES to
VHS TAI'E

ASSEMBLERS Wanted EM"n
monev assembling Ted6f Be•s.
Free information Write· :Jo-El
Enterprises, P 0 Bo11 2203.

NOW HIRING Your area
S13,550 to S59,.-80 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS. Coli 1.
{31517:!3-6063. Ed, F 2758.

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
ClEAN UP WITH
CLASSIAED ADS

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

Wanted

hilng Your •re. 805-6876000 Ext R-10189 for CUrT_,.
Federal lilt

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

3-21-'87·1 mo.

Help

GOVERNMENT JOBS

Authorized Strv• ce
&amp; Parts
Brius &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eller
Home lite
Jacobsen

992-2264

NEW LISTING - Ntcely remodeled home on a good
street m Mtddleport. 117
story 3 bedtooms, basement Call lor your showtng
$24,500.00

SYRACUSE - Remodeled
two story home on eludes 3
4 bedrooms, l 'h baths, ba·
sement, garage and an older
barn on appro• 1 acre of
ground. Great for the grow·
ong tamtly PRICED TO SELL
AT $39,900.00.

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

and State
Income Tax.
typing.
bookkeeping.
and Notary
Service.
Margaret Parker

POMEROY, OH .

fr om the ol d

35 lcr ou

Centerville achool hou•. On
Wtdnesday, Thursdev &amp; Fr~d-v

8

Authorized John Deere,

01 at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Oh10

II~=;;;;~~~~~~ti========:::;1

Pay Your Phone
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that m pursuance of a Re·
solution of the VIllage Counctl of the Vtllage of Rutland,
Rutland, Ohio, patsed on
the 8th day of December,
1987. there will be submitted to a vote of the people of
said Rutland VIllage at a Primary Election to ba held in
the Village of Rutland. Ohio.
at the regular place of voting
therem. on Tuesday. the
third day of May, 1988, the
questton of levying a tax, '"
excess of the ten milllimtta·
tion. for the benefit of Rutland Village for the purpose
of providing and maintain·
ing motor vehicles. communications, and other equip·
ment used directly in the op·
eratton of a police depart·
ment. or the payment of se·
!aries of permanent pohce
personnel,
mcludmg the
payment of the policen1en
employer's contr~button required under section 742 33
of the Revised Code
Said tax being: an addi·
tiona I ta)( of 8 0 mills to run
for five (6) years at a rate not
exceeding 8.0 mills for each
one dollar of
valuation ,
which amounts to eighty·
centa (SO.BO) tor each one
hundred dollan of valuation.
for f1ve (6) veers.
The Polls for said Election
will be open ai6:30 o'clock
A M and rema1n open until
7·30 o'clock PM .
By order of the Board of
Elect1one. of Meigs County.
Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M, Frymyar, Director
Datad 3/23. 19BB
(4) 11. 1B. 25, (5) 2. 4tc

z

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Dhio 45631

'Business
servi·ces

unless they. or their attorney f1le an Answer no later
than 28 days after the
completion of they
the Sarvtce
Publication.
will by
be
deemed to have wa1ved their
r~ght to answer, and the
petltton will be taken as true
end JUdgment wtll be ren dered accordingly, CIVIl Rule
121A)(1 I
BERNARD 8 HURST
Director of Transportation

.....
·· ---~­

,,
::::::.:-.:::·

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

At Thurman Ohio 9etvwaen 279

a

U. S. RT. SD EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO
614-662-3121

J: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

... ...
,._
....
·~--·-

....

~

&amp; Vicinity

SALES &amp; SERVICE

-az: LISA M. KOCH. M.S..

Yard Sale

-- --.. -Giillipofis·-·-- ---..

BOGGS

Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Ser•lic4
CJ Hearing Evaluattons for All Ages

...... - "'-··---·-·
.1 ---_
· --··h
----·_,
-c·......
_
-c
.
··--._,_
....
._
__.... -....... tl -...-_
__
··. - ·• _ --- ...

.......
"'""'"
I OIOIIIM

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR PUBLICATION
SHARON DAVIDSON.
whose addresa(ea) is unknown to the Plaintiff w1ll
take notice that she has been
. sued by the D1rector of
Transportation of the State
of Ohio, who has 1nstttuted a
proceeding in th8 Common
Pleas Court of Meigs
County. Ohio. to appropriate certain property described hereafter for highway
purposes, namely the making, construction or im provement of State Route
No 33, Section 1 73, Me1gs
County, Ohio, and to f1x the
value of sa1d property The
proparty sought to be ap·
propriated is more spectfl·
cally described as follows
DESCRIPTION OF
THE PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE, INTEREST
OR RIGHT THEREIN
APPROPRIATED
Situated 1n theTownsh1p
of Bedford.., County of Me1gs
and State of Oh10, and
known as being part of
Section 17. Town 4. Range
16 . and more fully bounded
and described as follows·
PARCEL NO 1
(HIGHWAY)
PERPETUAL
EASEMENT FOR
HIGHWAY PURPOSES
Being a parcel of land lying
On the left side of the
centerline of a survey. made
m 1987 by Korda / Nemeth
Engmeering, Inc. for the
Department of Transportation, and bemg located
w1th1n the followmg described points·
Commencing, for reference. at the southwest
corner of the nonhwest
quarter of Section 17,
thence along the southerly
line of said northwest quar·
ter South 85 degreeS 52
mmutes 49 seconds East a
d1stance of 348.75 feet. to a
potnt at Stat1on 448 plus
11.97 on the centerline of U.
S. Route 33,
thence along ,said centerline South 30 degrees 36
minutes 38 seconds West a
d11tance of 33 39 feet, to a
• point at Station 447 plus
78.68 on said centerline.
thence continuiqg along
uid centerline with a curve
to the left. havtng • radius of
954 93 feet, a central angle
of 18 degrees 30 minutes 36
seconds. and arc length of
30B.50 foal, and a chord
bearing South 21 dogrooa
21 m1nutes 20 '!~:£n~j~ ··l
West a distance of
1
Ieet, to the 0 wnors •
corner et Station 444 plus
70 OB on said centerlone,
said i:orner beong tho TRUE
PLACE OF BEGINNING of
the parcat horain convoyad:thence along Owners '
easterly line and said centerline with a curve to the left,
having 11 radium of 954 93
feet. a central angle of 5
degrees 38 minutes 48
seconds an arc length of
94 .11 feet. and 8 chord
bearong South 9 dogreeo 16
minutao 3~ secondo Well 8
diotance of 94.07 toot. to 8

If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligaion to you.

992-2156

...

. • IJ.,.n•.-Oil.

AATEl

11-ot "'MDI " . WOIIDI

Clabijl ed PGRf!l COlier the
/olloWinf telephone e~clumte •

Public Notice

618 EAST MAIN STREET
H&amp;R BlOCII OFFICE
lOCATION
POMEROY, .OHIO 45769
(614) 992-7270

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

'"""'
.......

11- ~.....,I'V•c=-­

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

If HEARING Ia your problem- and you feel that
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
HEARING CENTER. We have many referral
sources for assistance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It Ia '
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your advocate.
I

326 W. Union St.,
(614) 594-3571

c....,,_, '"'' _"''

Rebecca Elaine Jacks recently
celebrated her fourth birthday
with her aunt and cousins at
Show Biz Pizza In Parkersburg.
She later returned to her home
in Salem Center where her
parents, Tony and Charlotte
Jacks, and her brother, Larry
Glenn , joined in a birthday
observance. Cake, pizza and pop
were served and numerous gifts
were presented to her by friends
and relatives .

Six area students attending
Mountain State College have
been named to the dean's list and
honor roil for the recent winter
quarter_
Dean's list students must earn
at least a 3.5 point grade point
average and named to the list
were Cathy. Spencer, Long Bot·
tom, medical assistant; Melissa
Primmer, Racine, higher accounting; Patricia Eagle, Reeds·
ville, executive secretary-word
proc..!sslng; Shalen Lipps, Cool·
ville, medical secretary.
Earning at least a three point
to be named to the honor roll
were Jeffrey Basham, Coolville,
higher accounting, and Genevieve Wilfong~ Coolville, word
processing.

CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-7716

o

"·--. ....__
-. ..... h··-

jacks birthday

The first birthday of Megan
Tibbett was Qbserved recently
with a celebration at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs . John
Tibbetts. The youngster's grandmother, Grace Welch, and her
aunt, Sharon Wise were at the
family's Woodstock, Ill. home for
the observance. Also attending
was her brother, Shawn. The
occasion was videoed. Ice cream
and cake were served.

..... .....""'"' .. _.............. .....

._ ....... ........,.
'!j::.::::.·.-:.:::;,::~- · • - - ..~ ..... ~·
'.................
""'"'"'"-·
..................
... ,eo..;.
........
,•.,...,_-.. ,,,..,_,
,,._c
""'
...,..,_.. _''"
Rooo.,o OlO.,,._..., .., , ... '" _ _ ,

REBECCA JACKS

Tibbits birthday

"J 11511

'' " - c....-. _,..., .,. _ ,. _., ~·• ..

the Amer ican Legion Child Welfare Founda tion wh ich was
created ln1955 which contributes
to the physical, m ental , emotiona! and spiri tual welfare of
children , the research and treatmen! funds provided through the
Children's Heart F und , a nd the
Special Olympics_
Bulk mailings from the Depar t·
men! of Ohio and the bulletin
from the Ei ghth District pres I·
dent, Mrs . Mary Moose , were
presented by Margaret Bowles,
president. The summer conference to be held on June 2 in
Athens was announced and the
change In method of paying dues
was noted
Refreshments were ser ve following the prayer for peace and
singing of "America. "

MEGAN TIBBITS

AN A.D UU

CLOSIO SIJHDAY

l'&lt;&gt;uc.,,

Mr. and Mrs Doyle Knapp of
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs _Charles
Knapp, local, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle and Amy of
Racine, Kail Knapp, and Barbara Hatfield brought In a dinner
on April 11 to the Charley Smith
home In observance of his
birthday anniversary . Cake and
Ice cream were served and gifts
and cards were presented to
Smith .

workmanship; James Geiger,
reallstie; and Vlcent Broderick,
Imaginative _Winners in the bear
division were Jamie Broderick,
workmanship; Josh Witherell,
realistic and Adam White,
imaginative.
Weblos projects will be judged
at the May meeting. Other scouts
participating were Chris Ball,
Jeremy King, Billy Young, Chad
Folmer, Pete Sisson, Shawn
Harris, Josh Leach, Mlck Barr,
and Jolm Jeffers _
Sending projects were Evan
Struble and James Geiger . Also
attending were Patrick Young
and Ryan Dodson.

I'U(f

IIWNDAY llwu fltDAY I A.M. ta S PM
I AM Until NOON 5A1UID.AY

Salisbury Cubs have Genius Night

Named to
dean's lists

Struble and Ruth Stearns. New
officers Installed were Rose
Anne Jenkins, president, Rexanne Knighting, vice president;
and Hilda Weaver, treasurer.
It was noted that 19,347 labels
were collected in the Campbell
Soup redemption program. Six
high fidelity cassette players and
records have been ordered.

The fore ign relations program
for this year also involves the
scholarship fund, Radio Free
Europe, the VIetnam POW-MIA
Issue. and the National League of
Families

Wolf Pen community happenings

POMEROY - Eagles AuxilThe annual mother-daughter
Iary 2171 will have nomination
banquet
to be held In May was
for officers at regular meeting, 8
planned
at
the recent meeting of
p.m. Tuesday at hall.
the Forest Run United Methodist
POMEROY - Jaymar Ladles Women held at the home of
Tuesday Golf League meeting Evelyn Hollon .
Mary Nease presided at the
for organizational purposes at 9
session
with 25 sick and shutin
a.m_ Tuesday at the club house;
calls being reported. Edith Sisall women golfers Invited.
son was program leader using
MIDLEPORT - Group II of •'The Fruits of the Spirit'' as the
the Middleport Presbyterian topic. Purpose was to relate the
Church will met at 7: 30Tuesay at fruits of the spirit to involvement
the home of Mrs. Donald Lowery. In social action In regard to
Mrs_ Harley Brown will have the hunger, homelessness .and
Chapter 4 Bible Study with Mrs. health. ·
Devotions were from the
Francis Anderson to give
Upper
Room entltjed "Test of
devotions.
Fruits" from Matt 7, Col. 3 and
RACINE - Racine VIllage Gal. 5.
For a dlssusslon, the leader
Council meeting In recessed
read
about character with social
session at 7 p_m, Tuesday, April
being the topic of other
concerns
19, Instead of the regular meeting
readings
by
Mrs. Nease, Carolyn
night on Monday, April 18, at
Salser.
and
Kathleen Scott.
Shrine Park building.
Hunger In America and health
care were also discussed by the
Softball tourney
A softball tournament will be group. Prayer and an article
held April 23-24 at Reedsville. entitled "Alii Really Needed to
En try fee $70 and two softbal iS. Know I learned In
Prizes will be awarded. For Kindergarten."
Refreshments were served to
Information, or to enter, call
the
members and a guest, Carrie
614-378-6406
Grueser.

Syracuse PTO meeting is conducted
Several sprmg actlvittes lncludmg an art show were planned

TO

Auxiliary makes contributions
Contributions were made to the
Chlld Welfare Foundatlon and
CARE when the American Leglon Auxlllary, Lewis· Manley
263, met at the home of Lula
Hampton
Mrs Dor~thy casey foreigh
relati~ns chairman n~ted that
France Is the study country lor
thiS year as the America Legion
celebrates Its 69th birthday. She
described France as being the
largest European country with a
high level of Immigration noting
that between the two world wars,
more than three million people
entered the country. Education
she said, Is free, beginning at ag~
three and is mandatory between
six and 16.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Business Services

Monday. April18, 1988

-·

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lint. llntlmentlll vetu•. NWI!rd.
Phoow Rio Onndl 614-2455092

Assemblers !Ninted Eern money assemblmg Tedtt( Be.-s
Free mformatlon 'Nf ite Jo . El
Enterprises, P 0
Bo~t 2203
Kissimmee , Fl 327•2· 2203

Government Jot. 11ft 040
8 59. 2~0 yr Now hiring Your

•ea

80~887· 8000

ext

R·

9805 for eurrent Federal list

EJIIcellent cash money! A ....,ble
proclJcta 1t home Jewelry

tov•

a

el~ronlcs. morel "
PT
11111ilable 1· 518·4159- 3535 Eltt

8·1622 24 lora

Feder.t. State •nd CM1 Service

Jobs. Now hlir1ng Your llrH

113,550 to •e9.480 lmm•

7

diMe operungs Call 1-3'15· 733-

Y1rd S1Ie

8082 ext F 2766

------'Po-merov---.... --..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
W•

buy qultts. Pre 1 IIIO'a.

sr,t A won to frlendstndrlllstlvel
or in\ ..,,itOfY No I!Qn up fee tf

eall 614-992-7180
AVON

Aller ... C.ll Merityn

Wo- 304-1182-2145.

AREA SUPERVISOR

Anv

co ndltlon tl&amp;-1400,. N•ed
now Coli 514-992-11187

Udi111- ·Hou• of Uoyd ~v
Plan now hlirlng • • IUPftVttors No lnwstmem Fr.. t,.ining. suppll• &amp; kft Call ICathv

collect B14-373-17n

'

·

�' ·1.

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
12

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

209 S. Fourth.

M iddl eport . Ohio

Room and

~enior citizens. Special
in prNate nome. 614-992-

bo•d for
c~e

SWAIN .
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group. $399.
Uving room auites- &amp;199- $599.
Bun~ beds with bedding- $199.
Full eilll' mattress &amp; foundation
starting · 11199 . Raclinel's
starting-- t99.
USED- Beds. dr-essers , bedroom
tuhes. $199-$299 . Desks.
wringer wastJef, a complete line
of used furniture .
NEW: Western bools- S30.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft loel . Call614-448-3169.

6873.

I now hava an opening for a

elderlv women or man in my
pri\lale home. 17 yrs. e•pe rienoe. Tupper$

Pl11ins

Oihl.

6, f...66 7-3402.
Housekeeping. Furnish references. 304-575-7185.

I nsur.an ce

· 13

home, life. t.eahh

•

~

1 8 Wanted to Do
Jim' s Odd Jobt
•
SUndedts. siding. painting. rootins,, c.-penter work. trailer repair. Call 814-379-2418.
Cleaning-House &amp; offices. Ref·

erences. Call 814-446-8788 or
245-6363.

J &amp; A 's Roofing- Siding &amp;
· remodeling. Will build garages &amp;

outbuildings.

Minor carpenttf

work only . 18 year!l &amp;Mp91'ienee.
Call 814-446-8327 or 446;1912.

in a day or two, but I'm n~t
quite out of the woods yet!
33

Farms for Sale

on

re~l•

basis. Have roferen -

44

Apartment
for Rent

168 aa-es, Rutland township,
remodeled 3 bedrDOm house
with 11/a bltths. 2 barns, 3 other
buildings, pond. free gas, mlneri
els induded. Call after 5p.m.
614-742·2348
72 acre farm, 6 mHes bade of
Roberuburg, call 304- 937-

2095, 937-2005 o• 937-2138.

2 BR . apts. 6 closets, kltctlen·
appl. furnished, Wl!llhet'· Oryer
hook-up, ww carpet. niM'~
painted, deck. Regencv; In c.
Apts. CAll 304-675-7738 or

675-6104.

N'ew co·mpletefy furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home. in
city. Adults only. Parking. Call

814-4411-0338.

Houtedeening in Gallipolis area

cet. Call 614-446-8869.

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

8EAUllFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

Will do-b11bvsitting in my home.
Call 614-446-8034.
Woman would like to babysit in

her home. Lives In Eagle Ridge.
Call 614-949-2617.
Need d&amp;ycare service1 Call 61 4949· 2410 or 614- 949-2450.
fl)r elderly_ in their
home. hcellent refereneit and
exparience. Call 614- 742 ·
WtH

Cfii'B

2631 .

R &amp; B Odd Jobs, It you need it
done we can do it. Auto, lawn or
home. Free estimlrte, 304-- 77~
~46 ask fur Arbie. ·

Financial

SON ESTATES. 538
2 acres. Rt. 160. Drilled wet! &amp;
ru11111 water. Concrete trailer pad.
Numerous fruit trees. S10, 600.
Call 614-388-9364.

2 acres" Rt. 124, 'h mile from
Harris Farms. Portland. Oh. 2 BR
trailer, 2 nice big additkmal
rooms, g•age, cettar with storage room, pleotv water, garden
spot, gas wood burner, outside
chimney. See to appreciate.
Priced on .inspecUon. 814-84~
6424 call for appointment .

Ashton. large building lots.
mObile homes perml«ed, public
water, also river lots, Ctyde
Bowen, Jr. 304--576-2336.
11ft acre lot with rural wate.- at
Apple Grow, pkone 304-57~

2383.

21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

"0-IE 01-ftO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 1'8e0mmMds that you
do busin•• with people vou
know. and NOT to lf!f1d money
through the mail untij you have
lnveJtigaled the offering.

Real Estate

(oTS. one acre. 18vel wooded.
city water, Jericho Road, owner

finaneinQ. good terms, 304372-8405 or 372 - 257~.
Hou~~t

lots. Gallipolis Ferry,
304-875-6908.

Rentals

Reruced t34, 000 to $32,0001985 Sect+onal. 3 BR ., 2 baths.
n f1"V fireplace. utility room. 1
acre land. can 614-388--9305.
3 BR .. Iivingroom, balh, utility ,
1. kitchen. att. gtwage. Price
reduced. Ca11614-446-1368.

41

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnlthed smsll house.

Hou• for rent / sai~Seduded
country home. 8 mi. from locks
&amp; Dam . Glenwood, W.Va. Call
614-446-2914.
38R ., Iivingroom.blrth, utility, I.
kitehen. •" · garage. Deposit &amp;
references. C.ll 614-446-1 358.

6 room hou!IB in Gallipolis:. No
pets. Have ref. &amp; dep. Call after
2 bedroom. 2 baths. 2 car
8:30PM 614-448-1734.
gerage. level lot on Rt. 33. : _ _:__:_....:__ _:_:_....:__ __
SWimming pool. satelite. close lt:lu• in Plantz Subdlvison :3
to Meigs High. Call 614-992- BR . ranch. $325 a mo. Call
3254.
614-446-7"123 Mornings &amp;
twenings.
3 b&amp;droom house. 1.9flctM. On
Rt. 7. Appointment ontv. 814-- 2 BR . trailer in eountry. $166 a
992-6332.
mo. plus deposh. Call 614-379-

3 be~oom hoi"Tie. Salem St.
Rutland. Garage. g•dM spot,
fruit tree's. See Fred \MIIiamson
or call .tter 6:00 614-7422490.

2436.

Furnished House. 3 BR . 29 Nell
Aw ., Gattipolls. S225amo. Call
448--4416 after 7 PM.

4 bedroom hou!l&amp;. Garage, on
Gravel Hill in Middleport. Must
•e to appreciate quality . 814-

5 rooms &amp; blll:h at edge of city
limits. $300a mo. plusdeposh.
Must h..,e ref. Call 614-4¢63548.

3 bedroom brick house. Full
bMement. 2 car garage. wood
burner. 1Yt acres. P.O.t. 614-

2 bedrooms. c•peted. stove.
refrig•ator. Will accept one or
two children. Deposl1 required.
No inside pets. 614-992-3090.

992-5714.

985-392().

6 room tlou!tB, 3rd street:.
Mason. WVa. walking distance
to grocery, furnitur'l'lstore, po!t
office, b.-.k. t14.000.00. 304-

882-2971 .

2 bedroom, full basement. patio
and garage. Fen.oed bflck yard.
Bellmeade. 304-675-3427.
. 24x80 double wide home on
50:~~:1 10 lot. tcreened porch,
utilhybldg, fenced yard. Clifton.
wva. 304-773--6157.
·
Investment . property for sale.
Fhtmodeled rentl'll hou9lt. 2 br
whh basement. crty . $17,500.

Brookside Apartments: Located
off 8 uhiV~Ie Rd.- 1 BR . spl'lcir:ms
apartments with modern kftch en
and washer-dryer hookups, cable tei~PJilion available. Call
614-448-1932.
Upstairs unfurniahed apt Car·
pMad, utilities paid No children.
No pets. Call 614-448-1637.
Downtown-Modern 1 BR ;, eomplete kitchen, AC, carpet. Call
Unfurnished apt.-2 BR . $186.
Water paid. Stow &amp; r¢Tig. 1136
Second, Gallipolis. Call 4484418 after 7 PM.
F~rhished effldency. $145. Util·
ities paid. Share bath. 607
Second. Gallipolis. Call 614446-4416 after 7 PM .

Garage apt. , furniahed. S225.
Utilities paid. 291ft Neil, Gallipolis. Call 814-446-4416 after 7

3 bed'oom ranch home with
g•age. $276 month. Caii814742· 317L
2 BR, large living room, yard.
lflltndry, patio, on Spring Ave.
No pets . Deposit. Call aftet 6,
81 4-992-6886.

'"'· Coli 614-445-4928.
2 or 3 BA .. 2 fuU baths on First
Aw, Call614-446--1079.

Gaftge apartment-3 rooms &amp;
bath. w / d, air. Clean. No pets.
Adults only. Call 814-4461519.
Downtown. ground ftoOf apart·
mant. 4 rooms, bath &amp; bMemant. New-tv decorated. Off
street parking. For more infor.

ca11614-4411-0865. 8 AM -4,30
PM weelcends.

Completety furnished- 3 rooma
IL bath . &amp;225 per month. Call

614-448-4109o• 379-2740.

New- one Bedroom apta. in
Middleport.' Furnished or unfu r·
nlthed. Call 814-992-6304 l'lr
446-8898 after 5.
For rent· 1 BR. upstairs. Newly
remodeled. Second A\8. C&amp;ll

814-.4411-8519 ot 4411-4927.

Nlee 1 BR . apt. Range &amp; refrlg.
furnished. Water • garbage
paid. Deposit reciuir&amp;d. Call
614-446-4345efter 6 PM.

v,.,

nice. 2nd. floor. 1 &amp; 2
bedroom apts. for lease wfth
stow &amp; rafrlg. t210- t226amo.
plus utilities. Call 614--4484249 or 446-2326 or 446-

4425.

Furnished apt ., 1 BR . 807
Seeond. Gallipolis. $225 a mo.
Utilities paid Call. 44&amp;-4416
sft• 7 PM.
3- 2 BR . furnished &amp;pta. No peu.
Ref. • sec. dep. required. Call
614-446-1384.
In Rio Grande. nice 2 BR , S226
mo. Refrig~ntor. stO'It'V &amp;water
furnifhed. No pets. Call 614-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

446-8058.

In Eurek&amp;-2 nice &amp; dean 2 BR .
mobile homes. S200&amp;t225per
mo. Oep required. No pets.
Adults onty . Call 614-246-

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartn.nts at Village
Manor end Rtverside Apartments In Middleport. From
S215. including utlllti81. Cell

814-992-7787. EOH.

32 Mobile Homes

14,;70, 2 BR ., unfurnhlhed on
private lot. 1h mile from Holzer
Hospital. Aduhs only. all 614-

1 bedroom apartments. Furnished and unfurnished. 8200.•225. piW month. Utili1i1111 fur·
niahed. Call 814-992-5724.

12&gt;63,

~

SR. 84500. C.ll

614-446--7&amp;03.
1986 Crestridge 14x70. 2 BR ..
2 bMI'tl-garden teA;) , cathedral
ceilings, totl'll elec.. underpinning.largeporch. Call 614-44~

9853.

1988 Redman , 2 bedrQOm,
centretair. on lot inmobilehome
park. Used onemo. $1,2,900or
beat offer. Set up local. Cflll

304-863-9544.

2 BR ., 12d6. Very nice. Cell

614-2511-9349.

Government homet from S1 , {u
r&amp;JH~irl , Delinquent•• property .
Repot-liOnl. Call 806-887·
8000 Ext. GH 9806 for current
repo lilt.
1989 Prlee Me·y ers 12xiS
trailer. Mutt •II. Call614-687·

3409.

Two motile hornet plus 50x1 00
lot, 305HoiiOWIY Sti'HI. Hendetton. wva. 304-875-0725.

446-2300.

Mobile home for rent. Call after
2 pm. 614--446-.0627.
Two and ttwee bedroom mobile
homea. 3A mila out Sand Hill
Road. 304-675-3834.
2 bedroom trsller, furnished,
unfurnis~d. Crab Creek Road,
Gallipoli• Ferry. 304-676-1206.

44

Apartment
for Rent

992-3711 . EOH.

46 Furnished Rooms
Furnlthed room-919 Seoond
Ave., Gallipolis. $126 1 mo.
Utllit:i• paid. SlnglemMe. Sh ••
b.th. C.l1448-4416efter7PM.

Two-tour bedroom ~trtrnents
in Pomeroy. CMposit ~equired .
c.! I 614-992·8723 oft• 5,00.
~Pt.

1tt floor
lwei . No_Qets. 814-949·2 263.

2 bedroom 81Jt. Ch·• ter arN.

814-985-4291 .

Furnithecf'b•emenf apt. 1 per;:
son. All udittw fumithed. f1&amp;0
per month. 307 Spring Aw .

814-992-2545.

Room for ,.nt by dev, week

&amp;

3269.
__.:.:_:.__

2783.

I ~~==;:=:::;:=:;:::;:=
56

Pets fOr Sale

Grqom and Supply Shop·Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
!lyles . lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph . 614-446-0231.

SNYDER FU RNI-

TURE CO.
955 Second A~ .. Gallipoths.
0 .- 614-446-1 171
Used refrigMators, 11ir co nditioner, rocker reeliner.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlm&amp;layan. Penian •nd
Siamese kittens . New AKC
Chow puppies . Call 614-4,4 63844 after 7PM.

1 set bunk beds-co mplete, S65.
New eotfee, end tables, 889.
Table, 8 chairs, 2 leafs, &amp;149. 3
piece bedroom suite-complete,
S179. Pickens Furniture. 304675-1460.

AKC Aogisl!'red Chow Chow
puppies. 6 wks. old. Gall 61 4·

446-2589.

2 AKC Reg. Boxer pupt. 1 male
&amp; 1 female. Call814-742·3080.

Mrytag automaJ.jc washer. Ex·
cellent Conditi6J.. 8200. C811
614-992-6941 .

AKC Regiltered Siberian Huakv
puppies. 4 mates. 1 female. Both
parents on premises. Shots and
wormed. Call evening• 814-

Sofa &amp; chair: Good condition.
Call 614-2&amp;6-6795.

949-2940.

Cabinets for •Ia. Starter set . 5
ft . Make offM. Cftll 614-2561446.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livesto~k

Mallo han Furniture. Quality furnitul'ft &amp; c&amp;rpet at lowest possiblu prices , Financing available to
qualified buyers. Upper River
Rd . Gall. 0 . 614-446-7444.

61 Farm Equipment

Small kilehen table and twa
ehairs. 304-876-5344.

CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S . 35 West. Jackson. Ohio.

614-286-6461 .

53

Mauey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bu•h Hog Sales &amp; Setvlee. Over
4.0 used tractorstoctloose from
&amp; complete line of naw &amp; uaed
equipment. Largest selection in
S .E. Ohio.

,Antiques

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antique11.
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours; M,T,W 10a .m. to &amp;p.m ..
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 4114-992-

MF 20 Turf tractor whtt 8 ft .
fini11hed mower. $4360. 830
Cesewith baler. mower. &amp; rake,
$3850. Owner will flnence. Call

2626.

614-286-8522.

64 Misc. Merchandise

John Deere 14 T bal•. manure
spreader, grtcfer blade. disc.
ooltivators. plow1. 5 bol1om
ruttipacker, fertilize spteader200, htt; wagon. electrleiMII der.
gas welder &amp; cu«ing torch, hay
elevetor-square bales. Pasture
for rvnt. Call 614-448-2784.

SURPLUS DENIM, army, rental
clothing, Wild turtl;ey season
soon. camoufl&amp;ge gMen, black
white clothing, NO checks.
Political advertising imprlnte:d
tpec:ialties. Sem Somerville, At.
21 junction In dependance Roacl.
East Ravenswood, Fri. Sat. Sun,
n~on-8:00 pm. 304-273-5666.

Massey FergM"aon 186 diesel.
Good cond. 84000, Firm. Call
614-388-9354.

Oouble bed, aota &amp; chair, !JOfa &amp;
loveaeat. Curtit M&amp;thfls TV. end
tables, 24 ln . girls 10 · speed
Huffy bike, bedspreads, drapes,
eKercile bike. Call 304-6756996 efter 5:00 pm or after
12:00 noon Sat.

Brand nB'N, New Holland Slurry
auger type manure spreader.
85,000. 8rend new, New HotIMd tltt;blne. 9ft. COt· tla~ only
cut 6 acres hiiY , $6200. John
Deere 7000, 4 row corn plantertop shape-can also tod plant
wilh it. 83260. 3 point hhch, 4
wheel hay flke. f326.

1 8 ft . ul&amp;d satellite system.
Installed S800. 304-676-5477.

Lorust pott-Largeplle. eeo. Call

Ptom dresses for sale. Wbrn
once. size 6-6 . Aalling S35each.
Call 61 4-992·2962 e'\lenings.

614·387·0824.

Manu"' sJ)feader. Good cond.
Call 614-379·2733 after 4 PM.

Pal amino mare for sei e. alsoM M
tnetor with com planter and
eultivator. Call814-985-3891 .

1954 Farnwll Cub. Hydraulics,

~ony

42 inch belly mower. $1900.
OBO. Call814-742·2142.

Beta VCR machine and
360 movies. Case. All $350.

814-992-2 617.

Deutz· AIIis new 3815 4 row
no-till planter, plate unrt1. dry
fertilizer, In teet attach.
$7,1500.00 . Used Allis·
Chalmet's 2 row three point no
till planter. dry fertiUzer. lntect
attach. used appro,. 100 aer•.
exc cond. S2,600.DO. Keefer'e
Service Canter. St. Rt. 87, Leon,
W.Va. phone 304-895-3874.

200 ttee'a as ad\.tertlMd before
at a rudueed priee. This weell
only . RobertVaneeRt. 1 Middlepon.
King size watarbed, eon-c:alete.
$300. Magnavo~e stereo. 820.
014-985-3920.

304-882-2668.

-

--

(

.

Spedef Springer Cow/CIIIfSete
- Fri. , April 22, 7:30 PM.
Swting at 6 PM· 12 newS. used
!lock tr'l'lllen-goo• nectc &amp;
bumper hhch. AI breedl Including Holallllna. cattle will be
accep'llld 4 PM. Thul'ld..,, Aprl
21 &amp; up - to sale - April 22.
Heullng •vallabte. Athena Uve•tock Sal• 1 mile ea1t of Albany
on S1. Rt. 60. Clll atoek ..,.rd

814-692·2322 "' 898·3531
evening1.

18th Annual Bentley Pl8 S•l•
Wed.. April 27, 7:3
PM.
Fayette Co. fairgrounds. W•
ahlngtO!' Coun House. S .. llng
200 head-Duro11. Hamp·
Duroet, Hemp-Yorkl, Berrowt
&amp; Glt•. Remembtf the champion b•row 11 the Ohio Stat:e
·fair plut the ctlampion at
Fayette, Oreen a. RoiS were
puteh . .d .. lut ........ e.
Rog• Bentley 3112 Reitd Rd ..
, Sabina, Ohio, 513-584-2398.
RegtsteredJeriiiY Cow from top
bloodlines. Juat fra~h. 1800.

Reglttered P~nt Stillion tervice. Beauttful d•J&lt; brown loud
tobl.-.o. APHA ..,d ROM arena
bloodlines. Fee 175. 114-949-

2052.

7894.

black m.ne end 1111. Good whh
ehildren. Approxlmtltefy ; 2 ve·
ers old. 814-742-lOM.

1988 c .. H.,., 2 doo•. V·l, fullv
equipped, P-v' balance due,
phone 304-87&amp;-.274&amp;.

72

Trucks for Sale

1977
topper.

o. ..y

Scot.t•le with
Pl. eutomatlc,

PS,

01800. Coll814-387·7891 .

19115 Ford pickup with camper
top. beet shape. t700. Call

814-38.. 9889.

1979 Dodge, V-8 atlnd.lrd.
Excel. running cond. Call 814-

19818-1081-•. '8850.1985

Elcamino, loaded.

814-4411-8898.

eeeso.

Call

e.

C.ll 814-387·0824.

lawn Farm. Rt. 315',"PUny. W. Ve.

1978 0.tNy411l4. 3SO.euto, P S.

Wood·

304-8?5-1288.

1987Fordl.itonflatbed. 8200.

PB,

f~

who.,. 614-949-2237.

1978 81-. 400. T•.UIIring
Spoc:lol. outo. 1973 OMC 'ono

Trans pur t a11 on

ton pidt- ~, .,to. 4, 1100x1&amp;
truck tr". Call 014-992·2260

71 Auto's For Sele
1983 Chevy. Citation. Am f'lldio,
auto. trMa.. PS, PB. 89,000
mil•. f1410. C.n bt•Mr'l•tthe
G•lllpoU• Dsltv Tribune or for
more Information eall 014-448·
2342.
1975 Pon1iBC Firebird. V·8,
auto. Sharp. 11160. Call 814-

PS, PI, dh. erul11 1 elr, AM·FMtterao. Call 814--441·4910 or
448-0852 enytlme.

1983 Bulcl&lt; Sky,.rk, 19114 Mot·

cury Lynx for •le or trad&amp; Cell

614-258-1270.

1983 Ford LTD Crown VIctoria.
PS. PB. crutae, tltt, power
••at·!ockt-wlndowl. AC, AMFM 1tereo, •uto-overdrivt.
7ti.OOO mll11. One own~r.
clean. Call 114--440-4044.

v.,.,

w-.

1178 O:N'wtte.310. 4 •Pif.,

304-1711-1518.

5AIP WHeN IT COME.&gt;
To gelf\IC§' ~~c..ow

814-949-2526.

A\JEflA(jE, .I.'M WM
A'ov~ AV~~Ac;e!

Serv1ces
'.
81

Homa
Improvements

' ..

•·

.

BASEMENT

1911 Dltaon 4 wheel drive,
Runs gre11, high mileage.
~·•- 114-192·7384 even-

lngo.

___

1879 Hondl XR 280, on or off
roed, 1400. 1881 Hondl CM

1914 Y1111th• XT Monocro•
IOOcc. Ru,.. ·IIOOd. eeoo. C.fl

814-38.. 135(.

'.

MotQ~Cyela

Uke

t100Q. Low mii-.L lnclucNI

..,.,.. addlttonll 1c:neorl•.

...,..,d
•IIIII. Exool. b•goin-13000. C.ll
ll'laln•. Pllnt. 4 cyl.,

1178 Kow-1 too. 1 time
-8«-448-00SS- 5 PM.
ow-. 1700.00 ., boot
. dl¥1 c . . 304-871-2354 .,.,..
1983Ciu·voi•-YOtllor·Rflh lngo 8711-3787.

off•.

Brown .....::.:..:.:...:_::_:::.:.__ _ __

FOR l'HE FORMER

Reginald saves money on weed
by
watching for airborne dandelion seeds.

old amateur sleuth join

......._

SRANP WIZERI

Painting, roofing, remodelln~
tree trimming, bu Hdlnga tor~
down, gennl ha~llng. C•ll
814-317-0121 .

'i · te

pays o visit. (R) I:l

Much·foared convicted

murderer offers Anthony

business portno,.hip.(R)
9:00 (}) 700 Club
D (2) !Ill MOVIE: 'When the
Bough Brooke' NBC Moncley
Nfght at tho Mov'"
(J) 1J (JJ MOVIE: 'Tho Men
Who Loved Women' ABC
Monel~ Night Movie (R) ·
(1:50) Q
(!) I[D Jopen How Japanese

Sidin.g.. .,..,.rhMg gutws, ttorm'•
doors &amp; wtndowt. Free eatt-mlte. Celt 614·441-8070.
Bri&lt;*·Biock Work- Foundatlont, ,
brick \Mneer, fireplac•. •pairs,
r11t0111tlon• &amp; smell jobs. Free
arstimM81. 211
experi.-.c:e.

j

:.;

it

Can,.t•fford high pric•7 Call A
&amp; B ramodtling. You rwmeit. we
do It et tow low cott. 614-446-"'

I
·~~------------------~

89'10.

Tree 8t sta.nP remowl. Nw.t
lawns, ltone, mulch, shade
tr. ., lhr~•. A•liaa, tOP soft.
Don'• Landscapes - 814-448--

THE NEW PR/NCIR/I.L.
SAID HE !XlE51&lt;-l'r
BELIEVE ...

984&amp;.

RON'S Television Serviee .
Hou• callt on RCA, Quaar1
GE. Spodollng In z.,lth, Coli"

NIY CONDUGr 16 A6
BADN3MY

RE'CORD 6HOW5.

1..001&lt;'5 L.lKE M i&lt;EALLY
GOTMY w::.PI&lt; Q.JT Cl..JT

FOR ME.

304-5711-2398 o• 814-448· ,
24114.
.,mo,.l. Cefl304-875-1331. ·:

Rowrv or cable tool drHIIng.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARll&lt;R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Clolllpoh, Ohio
Phone 114-441-3888 or 81~ '

44&amp;-44n

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

'

----------------~'

THE GRIZZWELLS®

Reaidentilll or OOmmlfCial wifIng. New •vice or repalrt
Ucenaed etectrlci.,, E_.lmltl!
fr•. Ridenour Eleetricel, 304-

~

..

1:05 (1) MOVIE: Boom Town (NR)
(1 :56)
9:30 I!Dl G) 112l.Elaenhower a Lutz
Bud learns lhat a potential
client's married to his former
glrffrlend. 1;1
' 10:00 (})Straight Talk
I!) An Annonlen Journey
llDl Ill il2l Cagney a Lacey
Cagney and Lacey lind an

ill llportiCenlor (L)
(J) Cheers
II ()) Nlghlllne D
llDl ® M8gnum. l&gt;.l.

llJl HonwHmt Learn how to

-----------------'

a;~o:.T.~ La..

Dilen:! Water Servic;: Pool•,
Cll1ef'nt, Welts. Del ~wry Any·
time. C.U 014---441-7404-No :
Sundll'll calls.
,

olltgod eulclcle. (R)

Night McCaN wanls to
'lOIII" lhe case of en

ettr Newf)--..•d Game

I

11:31(1) Honer--.
12:00 (J) lum• IIICI Allin
ill1• LGndon M - n

J • J Weter S'ervice. Swimming '.
IJOOII. Cllftlrnl, 'o\MIII. Ph. 014- :.

2411-9285.

•

R • A Wlter Servia.. Pools,
ciuern1, wells. Immediate-

1.0000. 2.000goll... def1Yoty.
Coli 304-8711-8370.
•

(J)

l

W••

PEANUTS

CAN TIIINK
OF SOMETIIIN6

4411-3171.

Watterton'a W•t•r H•'lllng, "
r•soMbfl ret•. lmmediete 1
2, 000 gellon deltvery. clttefnt,
pools. well, etc. cell 304-178- r
2819.
' 1;

EVEN MO«E

· 8fA111'1FIIL ••

-;;;:::::;;::;:::::;::===="·
87 Upholstery

c•oo

*•·
.. ..... 304-112·3387.

lllatlllllll;l

OIIgnOtf
·~,.··­
Olllwelllgld

~'

p.,J Aupe, Jr.
S.vice.· •
Pbolt, clst8rn1. wells. c.ll 814-

''AFTERNOON OF
A SEA6LE"

II(I)TallglttZ1:1:01 (J) llltiOnll Cloographlc
lxflo"' (R)
12:311 (J) .111111 llnnr
• (]) • 1.811 Nlgllt """"
Dlvld~
(J) ~ ColoiiCIIon
Ill MOVII: - " ' - (NAI
(1:110)
.
IIIII MOYll: ·~. Mlrr'
Cll 1.1111 Mowle D

1111 MaiM: AWIIIMn of

7'
1911 Iuick ...,. ..... 4 dr., AC. 1H1 liZ 10DOLTDMOiarCIII'otO.
AM-FM-Cus. Good c•. High •c oond, t1,&amp;00.00. PhOne
......,.. Col! 114-448-7211 . 304-171-2307.
.

...... ... Pill 1 (2:00)
• (I) Tallght

z-

1:00(J)IHtot~

'·

.

'

6

CJ

Co mp le te the chuckle quo1ed
by frl lin g In the miss1ng words
you develop from step No. 3 be-low .
\

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Yellow - Thumb - Aisle - Bygone - TELLS YOU
One yuppie to another: "My idea of a 11&lt;Jre Is somebody who,
when you ask him how he is, TELLS YOU."
~~------------,

NORTH

BRIDGE

f.ll·ll

+J 101

.AKQ3
Rubber-bridge fane ·deprecate the
t D4!
tournament player's efforts to win
+sH
overtricb. Tbat attitude is unjustified
- the skill used by the tournament ex- WEST
EAST
pert to squeeze out an overtrick can +-. +65432
justaseuilybe used to make an alllbi- • Hs 7
tJ8
tious contract. There's nothing dra- , • K 7 8 $ Z
+KQU
malic about today's three no-trump • +10 t 3 2
contract, 10 to appreciate the clever
SOUTH
work done by declarer to make 12
+AKQ87
tricks, lmqlne that you are the de.IOU
clarer in Biz no-trump, with a friendly
tAQIO
dlamood lead.
+AJ
South woa East's diamond jaclt with
Vulnerable: Both
bll queea and played a hiflh spade.
Dealer; South
When West showed out, it seemed unlikely that the heart suit would split
North Eut
well for declarer. Soulb bad 11 tricks
Pau
wllb the opening lead, so the 12th trlclt
would depend upon ellber the hearts
Paso
dividing ~ perbaps the jack beiDC •
.
.
doubleton. However, even wilb a bad ,
Openme lead. t 5
beart apUt. 12 tricks were there if .
·
Welt the defender holding the king of • return to dummy w1th a spede to cash
dla 'onda
.
the rema1nmg honor.) Tben be played
m
• also held length m hearts. · blJ club ace and the temainlng spadee.
To exert pressure upon West, declarer When the last black winner
·
lint bad to give up a triclt, 10 be
wu
played the club jack from his band. played, West bad the choice bf jetti·
Eul won the queen and returned a di· BOtting the king, of diamonds, !bus
amoad. Soutb took the ace and !ben making declarers 10 a winner, or UD·
caahed dummy's A·K of hearts. (U the guarding the heart jack. Either way,
jack feU, be could nell win his 10 and declarer had 12 tricks.

•u

dSIAMPlJW
bJ THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Cut

48 Eng1ish
river

6 Nonnan
Bates'
place

11 House
feature

12 Muslim
decree

13 Become

19 Role
assumed
24 Street

(Fr.)

25Thrust
26Howard of
the White

DOWN
1 Hammett's
sleuth
2 Burdened
3 Expiate
4 Drink
5 Violent one
6 Role for
Jack Benny

Alllwer
34 Isolated
35 Edison's

YNterday'l

22 -

7 Sourdough's

sequitur

23 Fruit

find
8 Game
marble
9 Dutch
commune
10 Celtic
deity
17 Laughing
sound
20 Quick
21 Gold
(Sp.)

Ohio
drink
birth24 Interpret
place
26 Cry of
36 Blessed
contempt
27 ·-you 39 Tent item
with it?" 40Eggs

41 Floor

28 N.Z.
parrot

product

29 Reach
31 Gratuity
letter
33- Noster 44 Not vert.
42 Greek

House
29Hag

30 Field
31 Bauble
32 One of ten,
in bowling
34 Soul (Fr.)
37 Ukely

3854,
to Caesar
390ne of

Santa's
reindeer
43 ·--in the
Head"

. (1969 film)
46 Egg-shaped
46Role for

Schwarzenegger

47 Turklc
language

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOI&amp;S-Here'sbow to work It:

lnalll vinyl flOOtlng ln sheets
or In aquarn I;!

General Hauling ·

•

1 I I I' I

lhamselves in a romantic rut.

1;1
1!21 Larry King Live!

. _

l -.J._:_-L.-.J.I....-L.-.J._:_.J

-Sweet"
18Compass
point

IDl Twlllgh1 Zone
II (!) .Lov• co...ctlon
11 :30 11 (2) 1111 Tonlght llllow

11011 IC!lMANTIC...'TJ£ ~
If'£ ~MMIN6 t.IP.Sili!E.6M .
TO SlW.Vf·t..

~8;.7~11-=1=78~8~.::::~~~==;
85

After beginning our fl ight, I
asked the aerial photographer
·
specific directions to our destina·
. - - - - - - - - - - - , lion. He smiled, " Follow lhe
__,...L::_.:O~T:..,..:S~M,:_:Y'-.--:.....11 ~~~hway ~?s1 and 1he name Is on

16 "Ain't

(R)

..:;..1-11 ;

I.::..E

s

and maintain native culture.

injustice. (R)
crJJ ® Newa
I!)) Evening Nowa
II(!) Benny HIN
10:30 (I) Ciooel Fltltlng
ill Major League aa.-n
WHitty
crJJ European Journal (0:30)
ll(l)J-.on•
11:00(}) Remington Steele
. D t2l ()) II !ll till Ill il2l
I)) Nowa
ill19SS Botton Mere!Mn
Hlghllgllll
(!)Sign OH
crJ) ~~ to Revolution
OMOMyllno

BARNEY

"

absorb outside influences

gandIllMichael
il2l Newhart Stephan·ie
suddenly flnd

""

-,l...:r"~V,..:E::....~-1~1 1 ;!
tI I
.

a parent
14 Ed Norton's
milieu
Ui Haunt

early case resulted in

30~

St1rkt Tree end Lew n Service;
lawn c.-e, lendlcaping, .. ..,P
remove!, 304-&amp;71·2842 or

82

m

I!Dl Ill il2l Designing Women

814-4411-8508.

'f'l••

lo•ces. Q
I!)) PrlmeNowa
11!1 MOVIE: Qrece Quigley
tPG) (1 :27)
Ill (!) MOVIE: Em1111: QUHn
of lho South s..., P•rt 1
8:05 Coull-: Queen
Charlotte llllndll
8:30 D m tBJ Valorie'a Family
Sandy remembers why she
,d ivorced Richard when he

Trenchlng-"'asonable rttee- wa~ '
tar. electric, ga. dr•inege Minn. ;~
Pipe &amp; fixtures at diecount. Call ,

Col) 814-2411-9852.

abandoned baby. C
([l Dlacoverlea \Jna•rwater

NYC detective and a 14 year

AND FIND 1&gt;. NEW

STRING OF BEA.I&gt;S

fJI (!) M' A'S'H
7:05 (I) Anlly QriHith
7:30 I) (2) (1) Hollywood
Squ-•
[J) NHL Hockey
G ()) Judge .
i11J Wheel of Fo11Uno 1;1
I!)) Croufll4
.
Ill il2l IBJ,Jeopordyl 1;1
11!1 Iamey Miller
fll (!) WKRP ln Cincinnati
7:35 !1l Sanford and Son
8:00 (I) Father Murphy
I) (2) tBi ALF ALF enrolls
Lynn in a beauty contest to
boosl her self-imago. (R) 1;1
(J) Ill ()) MacQyvor
MacGyver. Jack Dalton and
Peter Thornlon are loll wllh
Expedition to a vessel that
may be•1h0 oldest shipwreck
in lho world. 1;1
I!Dl Ill il2l Kale &amp; Allie Kale
sets up her lrlond Angola
with her ox-boyfriend. (R) 1;1
I!D Woncletworlt• A tough

~~~DEJ,

eiCterklr wtth bekle velour lnte- Hondli
futtr. dr-..d.
rlor. bael cond. "JrriDid 1o
cycle IOUndl, n...,
m..J

•L
13515. Coli 814-24&amp;-11011.

~"18

lltNG GUZ AND

445-0294.

...... Coli 814-445-8892.

1987 Ford 150 ex...,dld eon\4falon "*'· 14.000 mil•. fl•
ltNI &amp; 1...1-ter cep•ln chairs &amp; ·
lo&lt;ong•. COII814-2511-8327.

T~AV/i.S

QUEEN LIMP" AAVE

5711-2903.

1179 Bronco, lodt·ln. lodt·out
hub1. 4epd., AM·FM·Ciu. New

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

"THING~

Goo•U"' C•pek Rd. Coll .814-

F\imp sales •nd llno'ice.

Vans lk 4 W.O.

~

YES! AND IF HE
SUCCEEDS IN HIS
QUESl: WE'LL GEl
OUR OLD W!ZEI&gt;.
BACK DOING HIS

l

WATERPROOANG

895-3802

=::=:,:.:-;::..:::::..,____

~aodod).

.:t PIP GREAT! HE

Volks\Wgon camper ven. Run•'
good. $1200 cash. Sleeps 5 . •

Most ..wllaco mpleted..-nedll';'.

Aolly
75000 mh•. 814-148-21SS.
U500. Coli 114·448-1122
-Inti·
1911 Kowt•k!CIR3Q5. Oood
co-lon. ••so. Colll14-112·
1,82 l'ontlac Flttblrd. 11311 or 114-SSI-3112.

AYO. odhlon.

I

614-446-2568.

1982 Toyota truck lA! ton. 6
tpeed wHh topper. 17.000
mil•. exc cond, 15,000.00.

1981 f'\Ymoutll Roll.,, ...tlon 74 Motorcycles
wegon. Automatic, •lr aandt-- , ______.:..__..:__ _
tlonlng. cruiM. Body In good r
ohape. •te5o. Coli 814·4411- 1985 Hond8 v-es. Call 814870S.ftor 5 PM.
448-8077.
.:..;.:.::.:..:.::...
1978 Ford Grande, good cond.,
18&amp;0. Allis
tractor,

APTITUDE TESTING

1976 layton camping t1111ter.
Air, loaded. call tor more inform.
Also 4&amp;0 Honda motorcycle.

Fetty Tr11 Trlmtnl"g, lt~p ·

'3

~Cheort

FRANK AND ERNEST

eot•814-388-9796.

""• 5,oap.m.

285-8522 .. 288-7214.

1987Chovn&gt;tot Calob~ty. 4 dr ..

camper

with e,;tenaion. E,;cel. eond .

·n

379-2248.

Mo,..,.,

Coac::hnWt 34 ft. travel

Unconditional llfelime prantee. Locll referenceJ furnished.
""M B•Ja rail boggy mav tn~de for
Free estirnl'tes. Cell eollect
small c•r. 1978 ·Honda Culton . 1-114-237-0488. dllf or night.,
&amp;00 ttreet bike. 1982 Suzuki AogeraB••emenj
126 dirt bike. 1979 M..-cu.., Waterproofing.
,.
Grand Merqula. 304-8715·15135.
S't\EEPER and sewing machine
Ponti~e Sunblrd, 4 cvt.. · repelr, parts. and suppll81. Pfck
IUtD .. NN Of,)od, gDod body. up and delivery, Davts V•cull1t
0800. 304-875·7375.
Cleaner. one half mile up

Ground 'hell corn 84.60 per
100. he round balee AHatfa or
o• hlfl' In dtY 020.00. a,oo

12,00 dolly.

____ .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

448-1606.

Ford 198&amp; 1 ton
bed. 9
dieeel engine, new dre•bed.
E~teel. concl. f87&amp;0. C.ll 814-

Hay &amp; Grain

.

306 engine &amp; transmission. :
71 .000 actual milas. 304-176-

1984 Cutl .. s Supreme
Brougham, T·top, toeded. 814-

n•

64

Ford IIUtomatietnamsmlnion fltt ~
302englne. t100. Tan reclining
btlclc .. seats. $60. Call e14-- '

.4.200.00. 304-878-8787.

379-2588.

Quenet- Hor• nwe. Bay with

0988.

----~------ ··

198, Grand Prlic Pontiac,
48.000 miles. exc cond ,

Honcll 125

(

•

1979 DatJO'l. body good cond.
$3&amp;0.00. phone 304· 176 -

1984 E... rt. AM·FM-Cou., 4 - · U50. C•ll 814·992·
tpd..
"""or tool,
•dd1181
on5~-~30::_4,:·-------­
cru•. AC,
13000
tredeln.
Ford To..,.,o, .,lo., AC. PI, PI, 1879 tt.rley Dovld8on au...,
AM·FM, UOOO 0t IIOdtln. C.ll OHdo. Atllltfgl""l. 1,000 ml•.
814-448-7717.
ExoiOI. cond. Call 114-245·
5131.
· 1874 ,.,.d Elho. 18,000 mlot.
C.ll 114-9230"' 387·0832.
Hondo Ana 80 Boo-. 2 fo•

7479.

304-575-1078.

3 Ewe sheeps- 1 ,r. old. 41.rnb&amp;
for Slllle. cau 614a;367-0334,

0101.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•rlc.
Rouw 33. North of Pbm•oy.
Rtnt81 t,...en. Cell 814-992-

Tr•il• lots, Rt. 1 L.oo.11t Road,
back of K &amp; k Mobile Homee.

1959.

814-992·8313.

1878 MeJcury M•qWe. 11200
"' """' off•. C.ll 814-843-

304-875-3073.

Apwtments in Henderson, w.
V_&amp;, after s ~ oo call 304-1751972.

o.....

8812.

400 • - bike, low mll""''•
8800. U50. Coli 814-25111988 C.ll
..lck
Sky,.,k. Ex C.!. 19 24.
cond.
814-245-5138.
.,.:..:..::_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mobile home lot. 80 tr:. or
small•. 920 4th, O.llipotlt.
t75-Mter Plld Call 448--4418
aft• 7 PM.

1984 Falrmqm. 14x60. central
eir. 2 bedroom, n~ b•hs.d call

John

a,.,._,
rI,:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;J,::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;;;:::;;_j •aoo. C.ll814·387-7813.

46 Space for Rent

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Famity Pride Mobile Home
Pll'k. Galllpofit Ferry. W. Va.

~PAATMENTS.

-

Call 814-4411-0231.

month. 814-992-7521 110-5)

Beed'l Street, Middleport, Ohio,
2 bfldtoom furnltMd 1pt, utlitl• ..ld. referenc•anddepoth.

882·2808.

PICKENS

CORBIN

1978Chryller le Baron. 4 door.
. New paint and tlr• . e"1700.
t.oadad. Alto Hondll Moped.

814-992·2353 evening~ and
Sundav. Mlddl~pon.

mobile homes,
hou•s. pt, Ple~~~~nt In dGIIIfipolls. &amp;1 ... 446-8221 .

"'"'' 5,00 pm. 304-8711-3118.

1416 Eastern Ave.
Living room suite!! $179 &amp; up.
Bedroom suites $399 &amp; up.

Oinnettes . beds, bedding,
dressers . chosts. couches ,
cha;,s,lampa, eo flee, endtabl es.
Every dey Specials. 1/1 mile out
Jerricho. 304-676-1460.

4 tlor•· gooae-neck , ... .,with
living qUIIrt. .. 2 hor•trallerfor
ule, 304-882-2195.

Of

2 bedroom• mobfte home. Plrttully furnlthed. drapee. c•pe'l.
air cond. 14. 996.00. 304-676--

-18 72 PMC mobile honw. 3
bedroom~ unfurnished. 304-

S FURNITURE

transmissions fused} •re lnter-1
natty Inspected &amp; carry 3000ml.
or 30 dav warranty (whid'lever
oc:cun first} . We .buy Junk;
lrllntmlaslon!l. Call 814-.. 418- ,

387-7508.

Rooms for ,.nt-'o\Mek or month.
Starting at S120 a mo. Gellla
Hotet-814-446-9580.

1 bedroom furnish&amp;d effeciency
apt , 1 upslairt apt. with 2
bedroomr. Kiteh8f'l furrWt.hed. E.
Main. PomeJoy . 814-992-8215
or 614-992-3523.

3 room furnithed

2 bedroom Apt. for ntnt. Carpeted. Niee utting. lau ndrv
f&amp;cilttles available. C&amp;ll 614--

Space for tmal t,.H.,., All
hook-upl. Cable. Altoefflci.-.ey
roornt, ltir and cabte. Malon.
W.Va. Call 304-nl--&amp;651 .

6258, 10&lt;105,00 PM.

J&amp;

"SPECIAL"

5863.

1988 Redman Sectional !"lome.
28~t66 . 3 BR, central air. r&amp;act,t
to be moved. Call 614-4468694 after 6pm.

Vallev Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicances , Call 6,4 -446 7572. Hours 9-5 .

FURNITURE

304-875-6331 .

for Sale

0322.

614-445-0139.

13 Court St. -2 BR .', 2 baths,
klitchM furnished, w / w carpet.
No pets. Off street parking.
$325a mo. plus utilities. Dep. &amp;

c;au

Homes for Sale

2568. E.O.H .

11-:

Oldt., Buick, Pontiac, O'tfN~.'~

Red Hot bsrgein 1 1Drug dealers'
cws. boatt. planet rvpo'd. Surplus. Your Ar81. Buyer• Guide.
(118015-887-6000 Ed. S-9806.

1980 Pon!Uc Sunblrd, 231-VB,
4 apeeit, tl atchbeck. ..., spoiler,
louvers, •unroof. Pon1iae Rellv
rimt. 81000neg. Call304-87&amp;

No. 88 riding l''c!
3c:·8.:.o_
. c:::':.."_6:..:1..:4..:·9.:.9.:.2..:
·7.:.2..:1..:4.:.
.mower. 38 in. cut. very good Buy golo'lrnment •ized vehicles
from $100. Forch. Chevys.
U Hau I trucks and tnall ers for · oond, call 304-882-2170.
Corvettes, ,11~. For info call
rent, 304-675-7421.
Farmall Cub ti"Bctorwlth ~ows
180,2}842-1061 ex1 . 6466.
&amp; cultivators. Very good ~Condition. t1BOO tor ell or will
1987 Oldl Cutlass Suprema.
56 8 uilding Supplies
separ~~te . C.ll 614-446-4045.
14.000 -mHee. AC, AM-FM
t"lldio. tilt wtwt.l, power windows. VB . t10.800. 814-843Building Materials
63
Uvestock
6163.
Block. brick, s8'1Ner pipes, windOW!! , lintel!!, 81c . Claude Win1977 Olds Cutless Suprema
ters, Rio Grande, 0. Call 61450% Umoutin Bull. Born 2·10- Brougham. Electric IIUt. win·
245-612:1.
87. Yeartlng weight 1030 lbs. dowtand_lockt. body good. rum
Come .-.d .,. wh .. Umaualn good, in18flor good. 81000
ConCTe18 oloclcs- all sires- yard
010. 814-985-4278.
or delivery. Moson sand. Gallipo- can do for your crou breeding.
Afldng $860. ChMtnut Hill
lis Block Co .. 1 2 3Y1 Pine 51.,
Umoulin, At. 2 Box 115, Crown 1979 Uncoln Contlnen1111 Town
Gallipolis. Ohio. Call 614-446Chy, Ohio 46823. 614-2&amp;6-- Car. loaded. Vinyl roof. Cheap.

90 Days same as cash with
Approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Ad. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon: lt'lru Sat. Ph. 614-446·

Auto Parts

=-z:.;...j

'

(i]

&amp; Accessories

Used BOO and 800 series Ford
tractors. New Holland Round
balers, r~~k•. mowert, n811N and
uud. See ut for all your met Qf
and hiY tool nMdl. 0 per cent
fi..,.ncing tor oneyeer on•ll new
Ford tractors and New Holland
equipment. Keefet's Serviee
Pioneer recefwr &amp; 2 speakers- Center. St. Rt. 87. Leon, W.v..
10 monttls old. 5176. Call . 30
._
..._8_9_5-_3_8_7_4_._____

Whirlpool. &amp;176. Nlee whhe
deep freeze. 12 cu. ft .. 8126.
Complete !et of lifting welghts400 lbe of weights, $126,
benet! . leg lift , excellent
condition .

For sale: Firewood, sttasoned
hardwood. HEAP Vendor No.
7047, plcll -up or dellv8r. Anytime 614-742-2426.

C1J Ileal of BUI Donee (R)
Ill ()) ABC Nowa !;I
(!) Nightly Bu•lneu Report
i11J ·111 a2i CBS Newo
crJJ Body !loc!nc
I!)) lnalde Politic• 'SS
11!1 WKRP ln Clnclnnlll
Ill (!) Too Cloao lor Comfort
8:35 Cll Lea.. It To lleover
7:00 (}) Remington Steele
·
I) (2) PM Magazine
lJl Sport.Comer (L)
(J) Entertainment Tonight
Ill ()) People'• Court
(!) I!JJ MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
I!Dl Nowo
· I!)) Moneyllno
111!21 tBJ Wheel of Fortune

·I

FAN y I M

~-:-j...,.I .~B

f!

·· Chevy ·""""· Ford. Chtv~oo\'·

71 Auto's For Sale

Sanyo tmall refrigerator, 1.6 cu

ft . S65. Nice gold electrlcltcwe,

614·446-6729.

THo
THIEF M THI~
HEROINE DID f

, . - - - - - - - - - , - APPREHf•P

304-576-2384.

61 Fa. rm Equipment

G) a2l

Newo
lJl SporiiLook
(!) MOYlE: D1. Who: Tho
Deleko
1
crJ) Coloroounda
I!)) ShowBII Today
11!1 Facto of LHe
&amp;Hll Happy Doyo
1:05 !1l Leave It To a..ver
8:30 (2) !Ill NBC Nightly Nowo
I))

1987 boat, C~ke over psymenta
nothing down, V-8. 19ft. 175
hp, el'ltral, used 54 houri,

in.~t6in.xB ~~~:;;;::;~;;;;~~:;;~;~··~~;~~

614-367-7519otw 8 PM. ·

D t2l ()) D ()) ill

19ft. Starci"Bh 1 1010unlt. With
trail•- Call 614-448-3797.

ft
Steel
. ~t7/ 16in.
I beams-8
$30 each. Chennel
lron-10 ft. 820 each. Call

I

' "'

8:00 (}) Cr8ly Like 1 Fox

12ft. baas batt &amp; trailer. •300.
Call 614-446-0787efter I ,PM
or weekendl.

76

low lo fo•111 lou• oimplo wo•ds.

EVENING .

'

Cemetery Lots - Memory
Gardens, Garden of DevotionsectiQn 3, lot 137 C. S375eaehRrm. Call 614-245-6467.

OR•&lt;
...ongo lot!... of lho
four scrambled words · ba-

MON., APRIL 18 •
01 ""1 1•

26 ft. Baylinar cn•lt•- 1988
wide beam. •II electronic. gi£111'11.
canvas. etc. 360 V-8 eng.,
tlaeps ·8 . Very low tloun.
$27,500 . c;:an 304-727-8890.

$ears 10 HP riding mower,
$350. Gibsan frost free refrlger·
ator, 575, Call 614-388-8189
after 6 PM.

'::~::;~' S@\l..gijl¥\-"'t.~S"
::::
lditod b, Cl..lY R. ,OLlAN _;;.__ _ __

o

Motors for Sale

.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

v•tewtng

•

.76 ....Boats .and

16001bstobaceobase. 40cenu
per pound, Call614-367-0397.

Jacl&lt;son

Pike from S183 a mo. Walk to
shop and moViB'!I . 614-446-

~~~llHIIOSI(.~
~'{J.IafF,

Must 1111111 1982 Yamaha 760
MaxkT-1. Good cond. 8800mllee.
Call &amp;14--24ft-9192 1ft8f 8 PM.

Baldwin Console piano-bought
nWN in 191;16-$1250, Tr;.Star
lSW&amp;eper-new in 1986-$600.
Se&amp;rs Kenmore heevy duty
washer &amp; df'V'Ir- $360. Call 61 4446 - 7123 . mornings &amp;
evenings.

Sofas
chairs
priced
$395 toand
$995.
TablftL'I
$5Qfrom
end
up to 8126. Hide-a -beds $390
to - 8595. Recliners S225 to
S375. lamps $28 to $12_5.
Qlnettes S109and up to 8495.
Wood table w-8 cha,irs S286 to
-8795. Desk 8100 up to $375.
Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mattretses
&amp;295and up to $395. Baby beds
S 110. Mattresses or box springs
fu II or twin $68, firm S76. and
$88. Queen seta $225, King
&amp;350. 4 dr8W8r chest $89. Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Baby mattresses
S36 &amp; $45. Bed frames f20.
$JO &amp; King frame $50. Good
setection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinet!!, headboard!! $30
and up to $65.

PM.

Aduha only. Ref. required. No
pats .
614-446-0338.

31

0946.

'

r-----~------------~------~~T~e}~e-V~l.~8~1.0-.D~-r--~========;=~;=~====r--.--::----r

Huge 31 ' oval pool with deck.
fence &amp; titter. lnstalt.tlon &amp;
financing available. 1-800-346·

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

I~;;===;~~~~:;;~r::;:==;======:i

BORNLOS

Motorcvcles

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SW1MMING POOLS - f98B

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wethers. dryara. rEJfrigerators.
·ranges . Skaggs Appli&amp; ncea ,
Upper River ~d . betide Stone
Crest Motel, 614--446· 7398.

"I expect to get back to work,.

74

ORDER NOW - PAY lATER

County Appli!Wlce, Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open BAM t o 6PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1699, 627 3rd.
Aw . Gallipolis. OH.

Call UJ for your mob"• home
Insurance! Miller lns ura ne'e,
304-882-2145 . Also: auto .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Ov..1,000 tires. lizas 12.. 13, 14, 1 6,
16, 16.5. 8 miles out Rt. 218.
Call 614-266-6251 .

51 Household Goods
Hom~e.

Monday, April18, 1988

Monday, April18, 1988

54 Misc. Merchandise

Merchandise

Situations
Wanted

Ellm

'

4111

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One. le~

stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
. hlnta. Each day the •letters are dlfftrent.
CBYnOQUOTES
4-18

TPHOGTA
AV

DGXXPS

KYXX

GA

Np

Q y L p

YM

S G H F

QOP

G W P A

QOVBWOQ

YMDXBSYMW

4BH

VE
VKM

· xYDOQPMNPHW
Y.......,,, Cr)ptuqaote: EVERY MAN CARRIES

Wl'I1IIN HIM 11fE ENTIRE roRM
CONDmON. - MONTAIGNE

OF

OUR HUMAN

..

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April18, 1988

r------People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
Untied Press International
OLYMPIA DUKAKIS DAY: Academy Award winning actress Olympia Dukakls was cheered
Saturday by more than 150 friends, fans and
politicians In her hometown of Montclair, N.J., on
"Olympia Dukakis Day ."
Dukakls, named best supporting actress last
week !or her role In "Moonstruck," was brought
to tears dur.tng a ceiebratton she called, "So, so
satisfying." She added, "It's quite wonderful to
see so many faces I know. Sometimes you're so
Involved In what you're doing, you don't realiZe
how people are taking you in."
Montclair Mayor Robert Jackson said, "We're
all walking around now with our chests sticking
out." Deputy Mayor Betty Jane Ricker said,
"People bump Into her In the A&amp;P. We've been
enjoying her for years, and now the whole country
ca~:~ enjoy her."
CASHING IN ON LANb: Johnny Cash took his
act before town officials In Hendersonville, Tenn.,
to seek permission 'tbdevelop95acres of farmland
he and his wile own. The request has already been
turned down by the planntngcommlsslonbutCash
showed up at a meeting last week to discuss the
matter with the Board of Mayor and Aldermen.
"We're talking about a qilallty development,"
Cash 5'!ld. "The property means a lotto June and I
but ... It has outllved Its usefulness as farmland."
The Cash plan calls for building 78 homes as well a
setting aside 17 acres for commercial development in the Nashville suburb.
Some residents showed up to lobby against the
development but Cash, like a good American,
wasn't offended by the dissent. •'I thank God that
these people can come here to oppose me," he
said, recalling a recent trip to Poland. "That
country Is run by communists·. People are
starving for food. I got to thinking about
Hendersonville while I was In Warsaw. I'm glad
we can speak olit."
HALL MONITORS DAUGII'J:ER: Marjorie
Hall says she reacted like most mothers would
react when she learned that her daughter was
dating Mlck Jagger. She's the mother of Jerry
Hall, the model who has had two children with the

Alta Ballard and Lora Damewood hosted the recent meeting
of the Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, held at the Ballard
home.
Laura Mae Nice opened the
meeting by reading. "One Solitary Life." The Lord's Prayer
pledge to the flag were given
nison, and Inzy Newell and
lma Whlte gave ·officers'
reports. For roll call members
named their favorite spring
flower, It was noted that on
behalf of the club, Erma Cleland,
Opal Hollon, and Ethel Orr had
placed flowers on the grave of
Letha Wood .

Betty Roush was reported ill
and the Injuries of Sadie Trussell
were noted.
Erma Cleland read "God
Created The Earth for the Four
Seasons" and Opal Hollon read
"Who and What is a Senior
Citizen."
Games were conducted by
Laura Mae Nice and Marcia
Keller.
The door prize was won by
Charlotte Grant. Refreshments
were served to those named and
Margaret Tuttle, Mary K. Holter, Pauline Ridenour, Goldie
Frederick, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek, Margaret Amberger,
and a guest, Bonnie Landers.

FISH vs. FISH: Former isolationist congressman HamUton Fish Sr., the one-time scourge of
Franklin Roosevelt, Is urging voters not to elect
his grandson to Congress. Hamilton Fish III Is
running for Congress In Westchester County
outside New York Qty but his 99-year-old
grandfather has been writing to the local
newspapers, saying young Fish Is way way too
liberal for the job.
•
Fish Sr. points to his grandson's edlto~shlp of
The Nation, a progressive publication that he says
"appeases communists." The Fish family has a
long and rich Republican history, with members
having served in Ulysses S. Grant's admlnlslra·
tion, as governor of New York and as senator. The
youngest Fish Is running as a Democrat.
WANDERING WALTER: Walter Cronkite
discusses his fading relationship with CBS In TV
Guide and talks about how you might be seeh•g
him on another network someday. Cronkite's
exclusive $1 million-a-year contract with CBS
expireS on Nov. 4, dropping his pay to $125,000 and
reducing his duties to consulting.
Since CBS will no longer be able to restrict his
appearances, Cronkite might develop some
projects for the competition. "Some of the offers '
would Include ABC and NBC," he said.
Cronkite makes It clear he would like to be part
of CBS presidential campaign coverage but says
he hasn't been invited. "I'd like to be Involved but
It's their candy store,'' he says.

Riverview PTO has meeting
Dr. Dan Apllng, superintendent of the Eastern Local School
District, met with the Riverview
PTO recently to discuss the
upcoming school levy to be voted.
on in May. Approximately 90
parents, students and teachers
at tended the meeting.
Mus1cal selections were presented by the school choir under
the direction of Maxine
Whitehead.
School announcements. as well
as planned end-of-the-year
school trtp·s were announced by

Grace Weber, head teacher.
Reports were given by the
auditing and nominating committees. Special recognition was
given to all grandparents in
attendance. The sixth grade won
the attendance banner.
· Refreshments were served by
the mothers of second graders.

A 1984 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he joined the
Navy in December 1986.

0 1987 OSA RH163

A great value! Createl
a redwood finish that
enhances wood surfaces.

I

$4~on

Exterior Latex
Flat House Paint

$899

Ideal for painting exterior siding
and trim. Avail·
able In white only.
Gallon

Exterior 011
Redwood Stain
Restores color to redwood. Use on other
aurfiC&lt;Is to create a
redwood finish.

•

Exterior 011 Baae
Houae&amp;Trlm

•eon

Use for painUng the exterior and
trlmofyour . . . ~
home. White
only.
Gallon

Beat Exterior Latex
Flat House Paint

'1399•'

Highlight the beauty of your
llomewHhdecobeautiful
rator colors.

$1~on~

Gillian

Beat Exterior Latex
Gloaa House Paint
Chooee from Yibrant, faderetillant c:otora, C r - a
durable, easyclean finish.

Beat Exterior

'1599•

Semi·Transparent
Alkyd Stain

DAILY SENTINEL

Daily Number

Demjanjuk guilty
Page 7

Page 3

894
Pick 4

8943

Clear tonight. Low In mid
30s. Mostly sunny Wednesday.
Highs In low 60s.

•

•

e I at y
42

~~~N;o· ~~~~==============~P::omeroy-Middleport,

enttne
1 Sect;on, 10 Pages ·. 26 'cent•

Ohio, Tuesday, April 19, 1988

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy
Rizer
Village CounCil vacancy
. By NANCY YOACHAM
&amp;mtlnel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Village has a new
counclln\an and a new village
• administrator.
Franklin Rizer was voted In as
councilman at Monday night's
regular village council meeting,
to fill the position created by
John Anderson who resigned last
week.
Rizer was nominated. by Councilman Bruce Reed. Reed said he
had already spoken with Rizer
and that Rizer had agreed to take
the position if council voted In his
favor. It was pointed out by
Mayor Richard Seyler that Rizer
has served on council before and
would be familiar with council
business. Rizer was unanimously
approved by the members of
council present for the meeting. ·
Councilman Bill .· Young was
CAMPAIGNS IN MEIGS- For the third time In
for Tax Justice, a national effortto close loopholes ' absent. A little less than three
years remains of the term which
recent weeks, David Wilhelm's campaign for the
which allowed corporate giants to pay no federal
Rizer will fill.
Democratic nomination to run for 10th District
Income tax. He has also served on the staffs of
Congressman brought him Into Meigs County
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, Sen. Paul Simon and
Monday. Wilhelm, a native of Southeastern Ohio,
Sen. Joseph Blden. In the photo, Wilhelm, who
received his BA degree from Ohio University
resides In Athens, ·eJCchanges comments with
where he was named outstundlng undergraduate
active Meigs County Qemocral and a former
In the department of government. From 1985 to
Meigs County Commissioner Don MuDen.
A delegation of some 200
1987, he served as executive director of Citizens
. ·•
parents and 'patrons of the
Portland and Letart Falls Elementary Schools was on hand for
a meeting of the Southern Local
School District Board of Education Monday night.
Parents indicated they attended the meeting because they
understood that the board of
education was making plans to
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Gore, trailing In the polls, areas, and they close at 9 p.m. turn both the Portland and Letart
Democratic presidential - canditoday picked up the.endorsement EDT.
dates made a last pit~h for
of the NewYorkPost, which said
After twu weeks of campaignsupport today in heclic New York
In an editorial that "a vote for Ing almost exclusively In the
City, and early voter turnou.t was
Gore Is a vote for the survival of Empire State, the three Ciindlreported heavy in the state's
the Democratic Party's moder- dates scheduled only a handful of
ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) primary that could be pivotal in
ate wing." Gore also has the stops today .
The
hijacking of Kuwait Airways
determining who the party will
backing of New York Mayor
422 entered Its 15th day
Flight
run for the White House.
Edward Koch.
Dukakls, recognized by all the
today,
·.
but a leading Kuwaiti
With sunny and cold weather
Polls opened as early as.6 a.m.
public opinion surveys as the
newspaper said the 31 hostages
over much of the state, MassaEDT In some parts of the state, front-runner, for the most part
be freed within 24 hours
could
chusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls
and Bea Dolan, the executive wrapped up his effort Monday
without
authorities meeting a
and Sen. Albert Gore of Tennes- director of the Board of Elections with a barnstorm lng tour
demand for the release of 17
see met morning commuters in
In New York City, noted that through the state. Jackson and convicted terrorists jailed in
New York City.
polling places were busy during Gore, meanwhile, concentrated
Kuwait
At Pennsylvania Station in
the morning rush hours.'
on New York City.
"The .breakthrough comes as a
Manhattan, commuters
"The iurnout is heavy alresult
of the Intensified efforts
emerged from the subway to be
ready," Dolan said. "There'll
Some polls have shown Jack·
exerted
by Kuwait at a high level
met by Gore, as well as volun- probably be a slowdown, and son cuttlng Into the Dukakls lead
with
sister
states " Al-Qabas
teers for civil rights leader Jesse
then It will pick up again. But It statewide, while Gore has main·
newspaper
said
cuing Informed
Jackson passing out campaign
was heavy as they were going to talned In the past few days that
sources.
'
leaflets. Dukakls made a stop in
work."
the undecided voters were break·"There are Indications that the
Queens.
Polls opened later In other Ing In his favor.
ordeal Is approaching a happy
~

. John Anderson has been appointed by the mayor to fill the
new position of village administrator. Voting by council was not
necessary to hire Anderson.
The position ofvlllageadinlnis·
trator will replace the village's
Board of Public Affairs arid was
created in an effort to deal more
effectively with problems facing
the village regarding EPA mandated upd aling of the Pomeroy
sewage system. Duties of the
village administrator encompass the scheduling and superv1§·
lng of employees In all village
depariments, Including water,
sewage and street. Anderson's
office will be in village hal I.
It was reported that a problem
with Pomeroy's water system
has developed and Is taking
precedence at this time over
sewage problems. Mayor Seyler
reported that one of the village's
water pumps stopped working
last week and that the village is

now dependant upon one welL
Efforts are underway to get the
other well back Into operation the
mayor said, and fortunately, no
water shortages have been
experienced.
A resolu tlon was passed by
council approving the financing
for Pomeroy Fire Department's
new truck which was just recently delivered. The loan for the
truck was handled through the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company. Passage of the resolution
was a routine procedure in the
loan process.
A donation of $500 to the
Pomeroy Youth League was
approved. Each year council
appropriates $500 Into the budget
for the youth league.
Finally, two locations in the
village where street lights are
out and need replaced were
reported. It was also reported
that one of the gates at Beech
Grove Cemetery needs repaired.

schools Into three grade schools
- one of them grades one
through three and the other
grades four through six . .
Parents Indicated they were
agalns1 transporting the students
the long distance from one school
to the other. On the other hand, it
was reported that some of the
teachers in the two schools have
a very low count of students,
some as loW as six .

The board moved Into executive session several Urnes during
the meeting, Treasurer Denny
Hill reported, to dlscussk the
problem.
I he board agreed In an attempt
to reach a solution satisfactory to
the parental group, to keep
grades one through six in both the
Portland and Letart Falls
Schools and to use a double class
Continued on page 5

Hijack stalemate continues .

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Page 6

Candidates .make final .pitch
in NY;· Post endorses Gore

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Charles E. Davis
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"I was worried," Mrs. Hall said In recalllng
when she learned about Jerry's romance with
Jagger, "but he's really a find , a gentleman, and .
he' s excellent with the children."
Jerry admitted she also was a little skeptical
when she took up with Mlck. "When we first
started dating I thought, 'If this lasts five years,
It's a miracle. )3ut we get on pretty good and I'm
real easy going. I think I got that from my

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WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Reagan said today the
situation In the volatile Persian
Gulf appears to be "quieting
down" and he hopes that no
further U.S. military action Is
needed to keep it that way .
Reagan, who has held out the
threat of further action if U.S.
Interests are threatened, also
said that nine U.S. ships were
searching for a missing U.S.
helicopter and Its two-man crew,
I

the only apparent American
casualties from Monday's In·
tense battling In the war-torn
rtglon.
U.S. jets, ships and Marines
blasted two Iranian oil platforms
early Monday, retaliating for
renewed mine laying that damaged an American warship last
week and crippled or sank six
Iranian vessels that fought back.
''There are nine ships right
·now trying to find the answer to

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that," Reagan said, when asked
for any news on the missing
helicopter had been shot down by
Iranian forces.
But asked If he expected a
further show of U.S. military
force, he said twice the situation
seemed to be sta blitzing.
"It seems to be quieting
down," Reagan said at a photo
session at the White House. "We
hope It continues that way."
Reagan, meeting with GOP
congressional leaders on the
trade bill, also said he did not
think the United States had
underestimated the Iranian response to the U.S. attack.
On Monday, alter the most
serious clash yet between Iran
and American forces ptaced in
the gu If to keep commercial
shipping Janes open, Reagan
said, "We aim to deter further
Iranian aggression, not provoke

llcly, "We've taken this action tQ
make certain the Iranians have
no Illusions about the cost of
Irresponsible behavior."
Defense Secretary Frank Car-

Iucci echoed the threat of further
armed action, saying: "We hope
that Iran will draw the approp.
riate lesson from this and cease
Its attacks on peaceful lnterna-

tiona! shipping in the gulf. We
stand prepared to defend this
shipping ... as we have in the
past.''
Continued on page 5

it."

DecOrator COlors
available.

At the same time, the president

told an audience In the White

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tiona! Airport In Lebanon. Algerian authorities would let the
plane leave for Beirut In return
!or guarantees the 31 hostages
would not be harmed, the sources
said.
Lebanese and Syrian authorlties refused to allow the airplane
to land In Beirut AprilS after the
Boeing 747 left northeastern Iran
where It arrived Initially after
the hijackers commandered the
jumbo jet with 112people aboard.
If they relented, the hijackers
probably could "melt away"
after they freed their hostages,
the sources said.

Search continues in gulf. for missing helicopter crewmen

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end whereby the hostages wlll be
freed without Kuwait giving up
Its principles," AI Qabas said. It
said the hijacking could be
resolved within 24 hours.
The newspaper did not elaborate. But the Emir of Kllwait,
Sheikh Jaber AI-Ahmad AI·
Sabah, has been in telephone
contact with a number of Arab
leaders rec.ently, Including Sytlan President Hafez Assad, to
try to break the Impasse.
Some Arab diplomatic sources
said Kuwait and Saudi Arabia
were trying to persuade Assad to
allow the airplane~o. iand,at the
Syrian-controiled Beirutlnterna-

AIMJNO '1'0 t.El'Bil- l'relldell&amp; Reapa adda til II a paup of
contrac&amp;on MolldtQ' on the AmeriCIIII a&amp;lacllllllran. Reacu lAid
that .._ aim to deter Irulan &amp;lp&lt;eMion, nt~l provoke
Jt.:• (UPI)
.,
)

House complex Monday, "(IranIans) must know we will protect
our shlpa, And If they threaten us,
they'll pay the price."
u.s. Jets, ships and Marines
blasted two Iranian oU platfonns
In the gulf Monday, retaliating
for renewed mine-laying that
damaged an American warship
last week, and crippled or sank
six Iranian vessels that fought
back.
Reagan said the decisive milItary action aent a clear message
to Iran, and he explained pub-

BlAZING PIATPoaM - Alllrulla l&amp;lvap
tuc spray• water Oll&amp;o a blalla1 lnnlla oD
pll&amp;loml at Slrrl In tile IIOIICIIer11 Peni&amp;D Gulf
'
.

.

MolldQ _....._., after $lie pla&amp;fonn waa
a&amp;taclled by Amerlcu wanllkpa. A maellllle pa
liN abando~ on the platfonn on tile l'llld(REUTER)

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