<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12110" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12110?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:18:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43080">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/5f7786863ea05bb2ff6340e1acd19e64.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7fb16c9cbfd94cf3631b6a32c3ce1e13</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38051">
                  <text>April 24. 1988

Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Soil, Water Stewardship Week underway
have more and more people In
this country with little or no
understanding of farming or care
of the land. So !tiS Important that
we alJ strive to pass ·on this
knowledge of the land and Its
care to· our children.
Since 1955, the National Association of Conservation Districts
has sponsored Soli and water
Stewardship Week, In cooperation with nearly 3,000 local
conservation districts ·nationwide. The locaj district work ·
hand-In-hand with churches lo
help them convey this message of

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the GaiDa and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
GaiDa County. Individuals wishing to parllclpate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
457111!, or the GalUpolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., GaiDpolls, Ohio 45631, and you may win a S5

Farm flashes

soil stewardship.
You may think this does not
effect you, but the quality of the
water you drink, air you breath,
and food you eat Is dependent on
the way we take care of the
source of these basic fundamental needs. We could have all the
money In the world to give our
children, but It would do them
little good unless we also give
them productive soli on which to
Jive.
For more Information, please
contact our office by calling
446-8687.

· The latest in
desktop accessories ·

cash prlze from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lotlery. 'Next week a Meigs County farm will be
featured by the Meigs SoU and Water Conservation Distrlct.

Orioles
lose ·l8th
•
mrow

for Secretaries' week, Apri/25-29.

e

Raccoon Creek
•
•
proJect r,n .
planning stage
By Constance S. White
Gallla SWCD
GALLIPOLIS -A project is in
the planning stage which will
look at the pos11ible Improvements that cpuld be made to
Raccoon Creek. A committee Is
being formed which wpl wo~k
with the District, Gallia Conservation Club. and volunteers In
setting goals and objectives for
the project. Hopefully volunteers
can be drawn from 4-H Clubs,
FFA Chapters, college fraternities and sororities, service organizations and any other Interested
Individuals.
April 26 at 7 p.m. a meeting Is
planned for landowners along the
creek. The meeting wUl be held
a I ~he Raccoon Creek County
Park. Slides will be presented of
types of problems we lire looking
to correct, such as streambank
stabilization to stop erosion. It
you are a landowner wishing to
contribute your ideas and suggestions, please come as we need
your support.
If you plan to attend, contact
the Gallia SWCD office by calling
446-8687 or stop by at 529 Jackson
Pike, Room 308-C. If you are
unable to be there we would still
like your comments.

SUPERIOR

at

enttne
2 Sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 25, 1988

JERUSALEM (UPI) - Retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk was sentenced today to
death by hanging tor sadistic war
crimes he committed as "Ivan
the Terrible," the Nazi concentration camp guard who sent tens
of thousands of prisoners to their
deaths.
"The blood of the victims still
cries out to us ... and still 'Ivan
the Terrible' stands and poisOns,
sta nds and stabs, and his face has
not turned old," Judge Zvi Tal
read from the panel's decls(on.
"We sentence him, for the crimeshe has done and for what he has
been convicted of, to the death
penalty."
Demjanjuk, seated In 11 wheelchair because of back pain,
repeatedly shook his head during
the reading of his death sentence.
Spectators In the packed cour-

HOT
DOGS

99(

)

_7

1,8.

GROUND
TURKEY

HOUSE STEAK

$169

$429

PORTER

~~

II.

USDA

PIE·SUCED

SIRLOIN

SLAB
BACON

STEAK

$239

$129

II.

Life
•
Insurance:
a thoughtful.
lasting gift.

HOLLYWOOD

ll

ARMOUR 3 OZ.

3/99(

POTAT
~:f~ CHIPS
IN FOIL BAG

25 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

troom burst into applause when
the judges announced the sentence for the man convicted last
week of being the sadistic death
camp guard "Ivan the Terrible."
People shouted "bravo," the
Hebrew word "mavet" for death
and began singing ''The people of
Israel live. "
Shortly ltefore the sentence
was read Demjanjuk, 68,
shouted, "1 am Innocent." Someone in the courtroom yelled back,
"You're a liar."
Outside the courtroom, John
Demfanjuk Jr .., 22, denounced his
lather's sentence.
"It will goon to shame the state
of Israel, the Israeli Justice
Department, the U.S. Justice
Department and, most unfortunately , the 6 million Innocent
victims of the Holocaust."
Prosecutors said bemjanjuk
forced tens of thousands -or
prisoners into gas chambers,
then fired up the engines at the
Treblinka death camp In Nazioccupied Poland. More than

850,000 people, most of them
Jews, died at Trebllnka in 1942
and 1943.
Demjanjuk immigrated to the
United States after World War II
and settled in Cleveland, where
he worked for about 30 years onan automobile assembly line and
became a naturalized U.S. citizen. The Justice Department
uncovered his past, stripped him
of his citizenship and sent him to
Israel for tr.ial in 1986.
The only other person tried
under Israel's war crimes law
was Adolf Eichmann, the mastermind of the Nazi plan to
exterminate the Jews, who was
convicted in 1961 and hanged In
1962.
The three-judge panel last
·week convicted Demjanjuk of
war crimes, crimes against
humanity, crimes against the
Jewish people and cr.imes
against a persecuted people each carrying a maximum sentence of death by l)anglng.
· Under Israel's Genocide Law,

the judges' decision on the death
penalty mlust automatically be
appealed to the High Court of
Justice. Demjanjuk also has said
he will appeal his conviction .
Chief defense lawyer Yoram
Sheftel said he was not surprised
by the sentence.
The judges rejected defense
arguments that people sentenced
to death sometimes were later
found to be innocent, that the
events at Trebllnka had occurred
more than 40 years ago, and that
Demjanjuk had since started a
new life and raised a family In the
United States.
' 'The meaning of these crimes
is that we have to look at them as ·
though they're timeless," Tal
read from the decision, " as if
Treblinka still existed and Jews
ln their thousands still choked to
death as one and shouted out
from torn lungs."
State prosecutor Yonah Blattman, hours earlier lnar'guments ,.
before the judges, said the native
Ukrainian deserved to be

hanged.
"He committed the most hei·
nous acts with his very hands,
killing hundreds of thousands of
victims with unspeakable brutal ·
ity, " Blatlman said. "We maintaln that the only punishment
that may be imposed is the death
penalty."
As the prosecutor recited some
of the atrocities of which Demjanjuk was convicted last week.
the retired autoworker made the
sign of the cross, shook his head
back and forth , and appeared to
be pray ing.
Before the sentence was an·
nounced, Demjanjuk declared
his, Innocence speaking from his
wheelchair in a loud clear voice
and occasionally sipping from a
glass of water. Defense lawyer
John Glll said Oemjanjuk needed
the wheelchair because . of a
persistent back problem and had
bee~... given an injection of
,palhkiller.
" I believe the atrocities of
Continued on page 12

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci
and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman William Crowe have confirmed they are reconsidering a
plan to send Coast Guard vessels
to the Persian Gulftoworkpatrol
duty.
·
Speaking on ABC's "ThIs Week
with David Brinkley," Carlucci
said Sunday the plan Is under
consideration because the Coast
Guard vessels have "a better
patrol capability that would free
our larger ships for other
missions."
Interviewed on CBS's ""Face
the Nation," Crowe added, "We
are looking at the wisdom of it,
·the parameters, the costs, and
we could very well make such a
decision."

Both men, however. stressed
that no decision had been made
yet to assign such duties to the
Coast Guard, which is under the
Transportation Department.
The New York Times reported
Sunday that under the plan for
the Coast Guard, its vessels
would assist larger Navy warships In escorting merchant
vessels through the war-torn
gulf, keeplrig watch over sea
lanes to prevent mine-laying and
guarding offshore installations
from attacks by small craft.
· The idea, rejected last fall by
Carlucci's predecessor, Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
was recently resurrected by
mllltary officials who believe the
Coast Guard ships would add
flexibility to their operations at

less cost.
Carlucci noted the United
States has "plenty of Navy ships,
but why use a larger ship when a
smaller ship will do? Smaller
ships have somewhat more
flexibility ."
Coast Guard ves5els .a re used
chiefly formarttimepatrol on the
U.S. coasls and in that capacity
they conduct l'ntreh of the Interdiction of illegal drugs coming
into the Unlled States .
Crowe, a Navy admiral, said
any decision on using the Coast
Guard ln the gulf would not affect
the anti-drug effort because the
vessels under consideration currently "are not being employed ."
The proposed Coast Guard use
comes as the ·administration is
considering an expanded Navy

role in the gulf to include
protection of ships other than
those flying the American flag .
Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N. Y., a
member of lhe House Foreign
Affairs Committee. was quoted
by the Times as saying about the
latter proposal: "This is not a
Rambo-llke policy In which the .
United States Is out there all by
Itself. Our response Is part of a
larger cooperative effort involving our European allles and
countries in the gulf."
But the newspaper quoted
unidentified sources as saying
Coast Guard officials are eager
to get involved in gulf duties .
During the Vietnam War , Coast
Guard vessels opera ted along
VIetnamese shores and In Inland
~
waters.

'

'

.WASHINGTON (UP!) - As
chances for a slrateg!c arms
reduction agreement have
dimmed, President Reagan has
begun to highlight other aspects
of U.S. -Soviet relations In preparation for his summit In Moscow .
Reagan's talks with Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev no
doubt will deal at length with the
thorny issues that stand In the
way of a joint desire by the
superpowers to halve their strategic arsenals.
Secretary of State George
Shultz denied on the NBC "Today" program today that he had
told NATO allies there will not be

ll

$1 t9

PEPSI
2um

l6

99(

oz,

89C ·

·PRODUCTS
8-16

oz.

U.S. NO. I

IDAH,O
POTATOES

99(

an intercontinental missile
trealy when Reagan goes to
Moscow.
"No, I didn't tell them that,"
Shultz said. "It's difficult, so the
probability of finishing that
treaty In time for the Mosco'w
summit becomes less and less....
We keep working at it and that's
where we are."
, But ,t he little time that remains
before the summit opens a month
from now suggests only limited
headway can be.•expected. The
Moscow meeting May 29 to June 2
will lack the kind of concrete sign
of progress that the Intermediate
Nuclear Forces Tr~aty provided

With an eye on the summit,
Reagan has pointed to the Soviet
agreement to withdraw troops
from Afghanis tar as a triumph of
his policy of supporting anticommunist insurgents around
the world , like the Afghan
·
Mujahldeen.
At the same time, he has used
the Afghan peace accord as a
political opening to exert added
pressure for a Soviet retreat
from such other trouble spots as
Nicaragua and Angola, where
U.S. -armed rebels oppose Sovietbacked regimes.
Leaving arms control In the

for their Washington summit In
December.
As a result, White House
efforts to frame the fourth
Reagan-Gorbachev summit
have cast attention on matters
other than arms control, with a
heavy emphasis on Soviet foreign policy and human rights In
the era of glasnost, or openness .
Today, that summit warm-up
had Reagan meeting wlth a
group advocating j:reater religious freedom In the Soviet
Union. Leaders of the organization wanted the opportunity to
ask Re~JWn to deliver their
appeal to'Glorbachev next month.

openness at home, "this could
hands of technocrats and diplomats, the president also has indeed turn out to be a turning
spoken at length of the Indica- point In the history of East-West
tions of economic and political relations. "
Whether such a judgment will
change ln the Soviet Union,
challenging Gorbachev to build be made by the end of the
on glasnost by permitting his - Moscow summit Is doubtful. The
people more access lo citizens, oonven tiona! word is that U.S.
policies and culture of the West. officials look lor good will but
In a pre-summit speech last little substantive achievement.
week to the World Affairs Council Reagan will press Gorbachev oq
of Western Massachusetts, Rea- ,such issues as Nicaqagua and
gan drew a link between the human rights , but progress in
Kremlin's foreign and domestic ,either area Is more likely In less
policies, suggesting that If Gor- public settings than the first trip
bachev pursues a course of less to Moscow by a U.S. president In
aggression a broad and . more 14 years.

FBI files suggest North lied
to prompt Contra inv_estigation

·\ 1~.\1~~t
HANGING ROCK

·

LARGE
EGGS

59.~.

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Oliver North may have lied to
FBI agents to get th~m to
Investigate his political adversaries two years ago, according
to doduments and sources close
to the Inquiry.
North told the FBI he had been
followed, his car was vandalized,
his tires were slashed and his dog
was poisoned, but after months of
looking lnto the reports, FBI

agents came to believe he may
have concocted the harassment
story to spur a criminal Investigation into several people he
believed threatened to expose hiS
secret aid to the Nicaraguan
Contra rebels, evidence shows.
Moreover, the alleged effort to
manipulate the bureau backfired
when agents eventually turned
their sights on the Matlne lieutenant colonel who worked on the

National Security Council staff.
seurces say.
tn sworn testimony to Congress made public last week ,
Associate FBI Director Oliver
Revell said that at one point In
early 1986 he turned aside a
North request to investigate
several people he perceived as
political adversaries .
"I told him that Is what we
Continued on page 12

Meigs EMS has busy weekend
SOUTHERN

IN
MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S

President Reagan begins to ·look.'for other summit aspects

$129

SPARE
RIBS·

1&gt;. f~ArlRN"" Lift INSIJRAI\IC( !lOCI I Tr
HIC:IMt OfiiCI 11001151."1'«&gt;. IlliNOIS

CROSS TIAINER LOW .

$199·

CHUCK
ROAST

99(

MIKE SELLS

GROUND
- 3 lB. OR
. BEEF MOR£ PKG.

USDA

BAKED
BEANS

PO nED
MEAT

FRESH EXTRA LEAN

~~

OLD FASHION
HOMfMADI

A gift that grows In value
and encourages a young
person to think about the
future, that's life insur·
ance. L~t's make plans for

. The search for the two missing Meigs County men In the Ohio
River was suspended as of 11 a.m. Monday, due to dangerous
weather coridlllons and the lack of volunteers. The two men are
presumed to have drown.
The search for Shain Smith, 18, near Salem Center, and Pete
McDonald, 19, Dexter, was suspended Sunday at 3:15p.m. due
to high · winds and the lack of volunteers. according to Fred
Taylor, Mason County Emergency Medical Service director.
Taylor said some llsblng equipment has been found.
The two men and a third man, Jobn Brown, 24, Langsville,
were on the Ohio River near Ohio River Mile marker 258 (near
the K:~~ger Creek ~ower Plant~ Friday when wavedrom the tow
barge James K. Ellis apparently swamped the 8-foot,
flat·bottom boat at approximately 11:40 p.m.
Brown was rescued by Gavin Power Plant employees on the
barge when they heard yeiDng.
The search has been conducted . by · the · West VIrginia
Department of Natural Resources, Middleport, Ohio, Point ·
Pleasant, New Haven, Leon, Valley, and Ohio River Road,
W.Va, volunteer lire departments, and Mason County and Point
Pleasant Emergency Medical Service. LlfeFilght, of Columbus
and Wellston, also assisted in the search. ·

USDA

lEWIS

PUT 'EM 10 WORK.

300 2ND AVE.
OALUPOLIS, OH.
446-4222

JOHN DEMJANJUK

•co:Jl~~TsAL

•

Official.s suspend
search for victims U. S. -Coast Guard considered for gulf

ll&amp; IMI

THE SHOE CAFE

-

..

Mostly clear tonight. Low In
mid 40s. Tuesday, sunny, plea~nt. High around 70.

John Demjanjuk sentenced to death by judges

Give your secretary a Teleflora BuHerfly Keepsake Mug or
Basket Bouquet and you can register to each win separate
vacations for two in Thhiti via Continental Airlines. Each pretty
and practical ceramic flowers-in-a-gift keepsake features a
colorful springtime motif They c-Jn he displaved at home or
the office, even after the flowers are gone. Call or visit us today.

6'NJUii&amp;.ac/!f.t!m/Jer

•

Copyrighted 1988

By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Agent

~~

Super Lotto
1-2-21-29-31-39

Vol.38, No.246

Cold temperatures hamper spring planting

.CONTINENTAL

Daily Number
053
Pick 4
4732

Page 4 .

.

GALLIPOLIS The Ohio
Weekly Crop- Weather Summary
released on Aprll18 showed only
2 percent of Ohio corn 'planted.
An estimated 80 percent of the
tobacco beds were sown. Bare
soli temperatures averaged In
the mid-50's for this area for the
week ending Aprll 18. This past
week probably brought the average down a little.
Though no-till can reduce tillage cost and minimize soli
erosion, careful management Is
necessary to get a good stand.
Missouri researchers say to walt
untU soU temperatures at a depth
of four Inches r.e ach 50 degrees F
for corn and 55 degrees F for
soybeans.
Don't plant If the soli would be
too wet to seed by conventional
methods. Set coulters to penetrate about one-half inch deeper
than the desired seed depth,
To get good seed- to-soil contact, use press wheels that close
the slot. When planting In sod,
moist solls, or under rough
~onditions, hold speed to no more
than 3¥, mlles per hour. Unless
no-till conditions are ideal, use
highly quality seed and increase
Sf!"dlng rate by 10 percent.
An anticipated change in lab
tees at the soli testing lab in
Wooster will take place In a
couple months , The main reason
for getting a soli sample analysis
is to. be able to select an efficient
but yet low-cost fertility program. Turn a round time' Is still

Ohio Lottery

ICE CREAM
1/1 GAU.ON

,. 89(

ao'ss .

BREAD
20 OZ. lOAF

~ 1 oc

USDA FRESH

GROUND
CHUCK

9.~

-MT. VERNON

.\2°/o MILK

_jq"9(

11
•

HONORED - .Jaek A....._., p-ocery
mu.,er at tbe Pomeroy Kroger !Kore, left, was
hllnored for fl yeara 11entce rib the llrocer
Compllll)' Saturday alternoon. A baHel tuacbeon
'wu held for emplOyees of the iltore IUld Ambroee

wu pr••ted rib a oalte by Dlek Warner, 1tore
maaacer, rtpt, ud other pl't8. Ambroee'• f1
yeara of 1entce have beea at ator• In Point
Pleasant, W.Va., Marietta, tnd Pomeroy.

Twelve calls for rrtedlca,l assis lance and three for fires were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service and fire departments over
the weekend.
Saturday at 4: 04 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to the
Leading Creek road where an
auto accident had occurred.
Beverly Hayes was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then later taken by Health
Net to the Charleston Area
Medical Center.
At 8: 04 a.m. the Syracuse unit

went to an automobile accident of
Morning .Star Road and transported Bill Rice to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 8:23 a.m.
the Racine unit responded to the
same area and transported
Donna Rice to Veterans Merr!Orlal Hospital; at 10: 24 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to the
Cheshire boat landing to treat but
not transport Velvie McDaniel .
At 11:36 a.m . the Tuppers
Plains ·unit answered a call to
Olive . Township Road ' 1189 for
Helen Sanders who was taken to
St. Joseph Hospital In Parkers-

burg; at 12:35 p.m. the Rutland
squad went to Route 143 and took
Rayma Booth to O'Blenness
Hospital in At-hens for treat men:
of Injuries suffered In an auto
accident.
At 2:35 p.m. the Racine unit
transported Shirley Evans from
Greenwood Cemetery Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospif al; at
3:45 p. m. the Syracuse Fire
Department responded to a call
to State Route 124 where a car
was on fire, owner's name not
reported; and Jlt 3:53 p.m. the
(Continued on page 1.21

'

"

.

�Monday, April 25, 1988

~Comment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday; Apr~ 25, 1988

Drug firtn avoids

•

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - The Pfizer
drug company Is lobbying hard
on Capitol Hill for two bllls that
would make It next to Impossible
for foreigners to win sizable
lawsuits against Pfizer or any
other company over faulty
products.
Pfizer has reason to worry:
The comtyany finally withdrew
Its convexo-concave BjorkShUey heart valves from the
market In late 1986 after the Food
ani:! Drug Administration had
recalled the value twice. An
Investigation found serious manufacturing prol:llems at the
Irvine, Calif., plant where ab(&gt;ut
80,000 of the values were pro-

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE 1\IEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

rsm~ r-n._,._-.-.~=·=­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press Ipternattonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPlNlON are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. Alllellers are s ubject to editing and mw;t be signed with name, address and
te lephon e number. No unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, no! personalities.

Celeste being wooed
by Democrat candidates

:. The governor's press people don' I make up quotes for him, as
; former pres idential press secretary Larry Speakes says he did for
• President Reagan.
: But tl)e Speakes controversy has caused them to review their policy
; on quoting the governor. The likely result may be fewer direct quotes
• ;from Celeste jn press releases.
: • Deputy press secretary Heidi Findley said her office Is careful to
' check with the governo·r for his position on an iSsue. If it's an issue
: where they know Celeste's position, they wlll paraphrase In his
; behalf.
.
"I think we are going to be !OUCh more sensitive to the quotes that
: are being used in press releases in .thl' future," she said. "We want to
:: make sure that we don't misrepresent the governor. Not that we're
doing that now , but we want to make sure what the press gets is
: 'legitimate quotes."
'

: Letters to the editor
'

Support appreciated

.

: · Dear Editor,
: We the Portland PTO would
like to thank the following for
support lng our co mmunity
schools. The parents, grandpar~
ents, taxpayers, the Editor of
~
The Dall·y Sentinel, W.M.P.O.

t·

,.

Radio Station, Channel 8 TV
Station. We would also like to
thank Charlene Wallbrown and
Dennis Long for being spokepersons for the PTO.
Sincer.ely,
Sheila Long
President of Portland PTO

&amp;iTl ~"~oil!'~~ ~,,'01 . ~
Hu"•1E1

.....

.. d

..,.

.,.r.~'

'

~

""
~

.:
!•
••

••of
~

E
lo

t
~

~
~
~

~
~

.

c:;ttl. IMNUEL ANTONIO NORIE6A IN

:~

ttAl'I'IE~ 'PA~S

Today in history
By Un lied Press International
Today Is Monday, Aprll25, the116th day of 1988 with 250 to follow .
The moon is moving toward Its !uYI'phase. I'
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
Oliver Cromwell, lord protector of England, In 1599; Guglielmo
Marconi. Inventor of the radio telegraph, In 1874; pioneer broadcast
journalist Edward R. Murrow in 1908; singer Ella Fitzgerald In 1918
(age 70); ballerina Melissa Hayden In 1923 (age 65), actor AI Paclno
In 1940 (age 48), an~ctress Talla Shire In 1946 (age 42).
On this date In history:
In 1862, Confederate forces In New Orleans surrendered to a fleet
commanded by Union Adm. David Farragut.
.
In 1898, Congress formally declared war on Spain In the battle over

~· ·· Cuba.

'

liability_A_nde_rso_n_and---;;~~os_ep_h_Sp_ea_r

duced. About half of those valves
faulty products. Currently, fed- trenches of the trade war. On the
were Implanted In foreigners.
eral judges can choose between other hand, the benefits to Pfizer
One hundred forty -seven deaths
would be enormous.
U.S. and foreign laws.
have been traced to broken .
Aides for Heflln and Glickman
Pfizer's subsidiary, Shiley, has
Bjork-Shiley heart valves, acargue that the legislation would · reportedly settled heart-valve
cording to a Pfizer report to the
make American companies lawsuits for as much as $1
FDA In January.
more competitive In the lll!erna- million. Many of the settlements
The bills, filed late last year by
tional marketplace. If u.S.'I!om- are being made In California,
Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan .. and
panles don't have to pay massive where the heart valve was made,
Sen. Howell Heflin, D-Ata., would
judgments to fort&gt;lgners who sue and where liberal court proceforce foreigners to take their
in American courts, the lawmak- dures apply to such cases. Not all
product liability suits to federal
ers figure the firms wUl be able to of the 40,000 valves lmp!anted In
courts Instead of state courts.
lower their prices to compete foreigners are necessarily defecThe legislation would also rewit!) overseas manufacturers.
tive, but It appears that Pfizer
quire federal judges to apply the
Proponents of the bllls could could save hundreds of mllllons
laws of the foreigners' homenot tell our associate Stewart of dollars If even a fraction of the
lands. Foreign courts, for the · Harris just how much the bllls foreigners were. prevented from
most part, are not as generous
would mean to American com- winning hefty lawsuits In Ameriwith awards to the victims of panies slugging it out In the can courts.
..
• Pfizer's lobbyist did not return
calls to his Washington office.
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader and his Congress Watch
are preparing a lobbying blitz
against what they have dubbed
the "Pfizer bailout."
Lobbyists pushing the bills say
that Nader's raiders are Ignoring
the possibility that U.S. consumers will pay the price If
American companies must continue to protect themselves from
foreign lawsuits. As an example,
respected attorney Douglas Be. sharov of the American Enterprise Institute said liablllty Insurance adds about 10 percent to
the price of general aviation
aircraft built in this country . Not
surprisingly, Boeing Co. also
supports the legislation.
Besharov also points out that
ariother proviSion of the legislation would enable American
consumers to bring their lawsuits against foreign manufacturers In American courts. Currently, Americans have to sue
the domestic distributor If they
want to bring the suit In U.S .
court

MV FRIEND, AND Hr::
CAN 5TAY As

•

-.,

WINS BATTLE - Braves' catcher Bruce
Benedict, left, battles a young spectator for a foul
ball behind home plate, falls to the fence and
comL'S up with the ball for the out In the second

LoNG AS HE' WANTS!

candidates on the Democratic
side actually has a record of
taking an active role In attemptIng to prod and poke the world's
"greatest deliberative body"
into establishing some sort of
national policy regarding organ
transplantation. But If current
voting trends continue, Albert
Gore will have returned to the
obscurity of the Senat!' long
before organ allocation and national health Insurance become
election Issues.
But if voters reject Gore, that
wlllln no way change what may
be a rare opportunity for raising
the healthcare Issues posed by
ihls year's presidential election.
What makes the upcoming
election different from the usual
circus we sit through every four
years? This November we may,
in the words of the 1964 Republican campaign slogan, be faced
with "a choice, not an ech(}." .
At this point, It's hardly daring
to predict that George Bush, son
of Reaganomics, will head up the

Republican ticket. It's also relatively safe to predict that he is
hardly a!x&gt;ut to propose any
major changes In our patterns of
taxation or resource allocation.
With a Bush presidency, we
can look for.ward to four more
years of the philosophy that lead
to ketchup be!ng dec! ared a
vegetable on school lunch
menues. Which Is fine, If that's
the way you like your tomatoes.
There is one safe prediction:
Whoever the Democratic candidate turns out to be, he or shewlll
have to take positions on Issues
that offer a really clear choice
between the parties.
Not only Is It no longer safe to
laugh at the idea of a Democratic
ticket heacled by, or at least
Including, Jesse Jackson, It is
virtually Inevitable that Jackson
wlll have enormous tnnuence on
the rhetoric and Issues that
surface between August and
November. Jackson has not
made it as far as he has simply
because he has captured such a
large percentage of the black

vote. He has succeeded because
he has mined a streak of
frustration, and decency, In the
American people. He has proven
that there are large numbers of
voters who are dissatisfied with
the country' s,status quo.
And that's where we get back
to the question of health care and
medical economics. Now Is the
time for you to decide what Issues
are Important to you and what
yoti want to see the candidate or
that. Don't ignore them.
Do you want national health
Insurance? II so, start writing
post ~ards to the remaining
candidates, and get your friends
to do the same. Do you want a
change In Medicare or Medicaid
coverage? Let the candidates
know that.
Even more Important, If you
really wimt changes In access to
health care and payment for
health services, you must be
wllllng to pay for them with tax
dollars. Tell the candidates that,
and you may . really find them
listening:

Early education bills before Senate
It Is becoming more and more
report early this year. 4\,ll school
Important to have a high school
districts are now required to
diploma In order to find a decent
offer kindergarten classes, but
job In this society. Research
children are not required to
studies have shown the Imporattend them. The bill would
tance of early education, esperemove current age requirecially for economically disadvanments for admittance to the first
taged youngsters, to later
grade and would require all
success In school. Two · hllls
children to attend kindergarten
regarding early education have
before being admitted to first
passed the House .and are now
grade. Each district would have
· pending before the Senate Edu- to establish a Pupil Personnel
cation Committee.
Service Committee, which could .
HB 67 would permit school ·tssue waivers to permit qualified
districts . to operate preschool
children who have not completed
programs that meet minimum
kindergarten to attend the first
standards of the State Board of
grade. The committee could
Education. The school jllstrlct
Issue the waiver for a child who Is .
could use public funds or charge
at least six years old and
fees, but would have to demon"demonstrates the social, emostrate a need for a preschool
tional, and cognitive skhls necesprogram that Is not being met by
sary for first grade." ·Each
any existing child-care program
Individual local school board
and could not compete with would determine the scheduling
ex !sting Head Start programs for
of times for kindergarten classes
grant money. The Importance of and the length of the kinderearly education has been proven
garten school day, so the bill does
by the success of Project Head
not mandate ail-day
Start, one of the various prokindergarten.
grams that began In the mldResearch s tudles have shown
1960s to foster educational opporthat kindergarten Is a very
tunities in rural areas. Preschool
Important· part of a child's
programs produce long-term be- education. Many children who
nefits, especially lor low-income did not attend kindergarten ,lag
children. We need to reach more beglnd their peers socially and
of these children, however. • !!ducatlonally wheJY they begin
There are over 250,000 young first grade. Often, these students
children 'receiving public assistcontinue to fall behind and are at
ance In Ohio, yet only 9,000 of risk tor failure and dropping out
these children participate In a of school. According to the Ohio
subsidized child care program.
Department of Education, stu·
There Is thus a need for preschool dies have shown substantial
prAgr ams In our public schools.
differences between gains made
by kindergarten In such areas as
nother early education blll,
academic achievement, social
HB 226, would make kindergarten mandatory. This was one adjustment, self-concept, and
reading readiness. There Is a
of the recommendations or the
strong correlation between qualSelect Committee to Study and
Ity early education Jnd keeping
Review Ohio's Education Syschildren at grade revel, out of
tem, which Issued a preliminary

-.

'

special education, and In school
until they graduate. Most Ohio
children do attend kindergarten
now, but those who do not are
most often thOse who would
benefit most from early education. The blll would ensure that
all children attend kindergarten
and receive the early education
that Is so important to further
learning. The Ohio School Psy-

Sen. Jan
M. Long

chologlsts Association and the
Ohio · School Boards Association
support HB 226.
If you have any comments or
questions on this or any other
Issue of Interest to you, please
feel free to contact my office by
writing State Senator Jan MIchael Long, Ohio Senate, State. house, Columbus, Ohio, 43266, or
call (614) 466-8156.

Majors

lii ·May 8- Sun Anlonloat Los Ansefes,
3:30p.m .
Den~l' v11. Seattb!
Apr. %II- SeaUir a.l Denwr, 11: 311 p.m .

AMEHICi\N LEAGUE

East

L ~ Pt1 . GB
u .J .7111 - ·
1:1 $ .7%! I
II 5 .GSII 2

W

rJ ..vehtnd
New Vork
Boston
Detroit
Tormllo
Mllwau .....
Baltimore

9
9

7 .$6:1

-1

II .5:e9 ·1!-1
7 . II A47 Ill}
n 111 .oeo 14

Oakland ·
K~tnlill."' City

I'!
9

Chica~o

!t

Statile

9
7
7
!J

T~xas

Californht
Mlnh)'~ola

7 .63t II .!129 2
!t .500 21ft
10 .4'14 3
IV .-11': -1
II .389 • 1%
II .3 U S%

S11fllnla.Y 's lle&gt;~ulh
Boston at Milwaukee. ppd .. nln
KxnNU~ Clty4, BaltLmo~ 3
Oakland 3, O.h:xKo2, 10 l11n.
Toronto 3. New York 2
Cle\lel~t~~d 10, Mlnnet~o&amp;a 2
Detroit 7, TeJCaK 6
.
Sealtk&gt; II , Clllllornla 4
Sunlay'101 G11meo~
New York II, 'roronto 3
MJnll!sola 13, Cleveland 7
Oakl~t~~d !I, O.lcago 3
Kun~~a01 City 3, Bllltimore I
Boston 4. Mllwau ~ ll 0
Te~~:l&amp;!J 4. Dd rott 2
Seallk&gt; 4, CaiUornla ~
Monda,y'11 Game
Roston (Hunt 2:-0) at llllw11ukt!l'
1\\-'f'~an 1·1). '7 p. m .
Tue19dtlY '8 Games
K~t~~!laS Clly al New York,' niP~
Oakland at Toronto, niRhl
Sealtll• al Cleveland, nl~thl
California at Del roll, night
IL11Umore lt.l Min rr5otu, nl~ht
Bo!iton 111 &lt;:hlcaa:o, nlrht

M~

I -Seattle at Den\er,ll: 30 p.m.
Ma.,y 3- Denwr a1 Seattle, Ul: :Itt p.m.
x·Mit,)l 5- Denwr lit Seattle, 10: 30p.m.
~: · Ma,y

7- Seattle at Denwr, TBA
Dallas \'8. Hou!!ion

i\pr. 'lll- llolulton al Dallas, 8: :IV p.m.
!\pr. 30 -llouRCon at Dalla~~, 3:30p.m.

MI\Y !1- Dal"*• at HouMon, S:3f) p.m.
lf:·May S- Dallu ILl Hl'lu!llon,l! p.m.
11·M1U' 7 - Houl!lonat Dallas, 3: :II p.m .
Portland " "· Utah
Apr . 'lH- Utah at Portland, 10: 30 p.m.
A,r . lO- Utah at Porthmd , 10:30 p.m.
MI\Y -1 - Portland at Utah. 10: 31 p.m.
X·Ma.v II- PortLand at Utah, 12 a.m.
x·May 8- Utah at PortlMd, TBAx·tf
IHllleol!lllry

NBA results
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC .
(Final Rea:ubLr Se!VIion}
Ea81ern Conlerenee
,\tJauttlc Dl\'illlon
W L Pet. GB
y-Bo~lon
!11 'Z!I .69s' x·New Vork
3K t4 .462 19
~~:-WaKhlnston
38 M .413 lit
Phlladelpllla
36 M .43t U
New lerM'y
18 83 .!3! 38
Central Dlvl11ion
y-Detrott
54 28 .•st ¥·L1ticqo
M 3~ .tHO -1
5I 32 .610 t
11·1\tlan&amp;a
x·Cie\leland
4% 441 .51% 12
x·MIIwauket'
42 to .!IU I'Z
lndlan~t

Eaott

'M'

L Pet. GB
13 .. .765 11 6 .641 'Z

Pltisbu...,-h
N..w \ 'ork

K

7 10 ..u~

s

Philadelphia
St. Loul"

II lO .375
12 -~"

6~~

\\'eiil

'

Los Angcol l'!Oi
Hou"'on
Clncln,rall
Satn FT~md~•·o

s

11
It
It

San Dlep

II .llfll

-1 ~

Montreal
OIICilKO

.·

t

'
7
II
9

7

9 .488

~

.733 .:w!K 'I
.!IN t~(z
.500 3%

.. %

3 13 .188 R%
Saaurday'!ii Reli ulls
Clnclnmllat Athuna. ppd., rain
Pltl8hu rgh 5, O.lcago 4
Lo!t AnJclet~IO, S11n Franci!'OO 3
,\ lontreal 3, PhUadelpllla 3, ti % Inn .•

Atlantll

Nt!W York 12, St . Loulr; t
'"'"San
Dlrgo 4,
I
Hou~&amp;n•

8u nd_,. ·~ IWsult~
Montreal :I, Ph!Lad¥"1phlal
PIU!Ilu rKh 4, Ch lea go ~
Atlllnlu 4, Ondn..tll
Sf. Ll'loh !1, New Vork 4
Sltll Dl e«&lt; 3. Houflion 0
Loll Angelts 4, San Francisco 0
Monda,y'!l Gam~!!~
No ~amt'!l -.:la'Cfnled
Tu11'11dq'101 Gamf"!!.
Clncl nlllllal Montreal, nlrhl
New Vorllal i\dltll&amp;a, nlpt
Pblladelphla&amp;l Houllton, nlpt
OllcllJ'O Ill Lo101 An-ftele!l, nlpt
Sl. Loul!iat SanDI~«&lt;. nlcM;
Pttt!#lu ra:h ll1 San Francisco, nlrtat

NBA playoffs
NBA

Pia~ off

Schedull'
f1ut RGund
(Be,;t of Five )
EMirr n ('() nler~ncor
Nl' Knlck!t ""· Hollton Ct&gt;ltlc.'(
Apr. 't!t- New \ ' ork al Boston. K p.m.
M14,,- 1 -New York at Bo!ilon, 1 p.m .
,\(..,,. .a- Bo.o~ton tU Ne111· Yor~ II p.m .
x·~l11,v ll- Bo!lloo ai Ne•· York, M:3n ·
p.m .
Ji:-Mu.y II- New York at BOi'ilon, TBA

Ma.,y 2- Detrott Mf Wa~~hlna:ton, I! p.m .
ll-Mil,V .a- l)etroll: at W1111lllnston, M
p.m.
~~:·MI\,V II - WMhlh«ton at Detroit, Til A
Cleveland""- Clllcaa:o
Apr. !H- C1e\lt!IIU1d ad ChlcaKo, R p .m .
MI\V I - Clevehmd at Chll:ago, 3: SO
p.m .
MQ iJ - Chlcaa:o 111 Cle\leland, S p.m.
x-Ma,y 15- Chlu.a:o at Clet~eiMd,Kp.m.
x-l'h.v 8- Cleveland at Clllca&amp;o, TBA
Allllllla \IL Mll•auEe
Apr. 2B -Milwaukee~ Atlank\. 1: :JO
p.m .
May I - Mllwau~e Ill Allanlll, 7 p.m .
Mil,)' 4 - A.lllllllll al Mllwa.ukee, 1:30
p.m .
x-~'v ti- Atlanh&amp; 11.t Milwaukee, 7:30

p.m.

x-MII.Y II- MllwauiLoe at AtiUJia, TBA
WeMiern Conference
SIUI Anlonlo ""'Loll Allwelfti
Apr. ~- Sut Alltonlo at Lo11 An~le'l,
IO:JO p.m.
M~Q I - s.. Anton&amp;o at l..o• An~e~~o.
10:30 p.m.
MIQ' !I - Lot An &amp;eta at Su Antonio,
!4:30p.m.

x·Ma,y S- Lo!i An~~ llt San o\niOBio,

II p.m.

3A f4 .41:1 18
We11tern l'o nkrcnce
MldWetlt Dlvlslon
WLPctGB
54 ~ .ts9 -

MlhNitUI!Pt• ld Texlh , 11lght
NATIONA.L LEI\GUE

Deti'OH \'S. " 'ILiihlnaton
~r . l!K- WaMhln~onat Detroit, II p.m .
A.pr. 38- Wlll'lhln~o•at DetroH.~p . m .

Berry's World

Inning of Sunday's game against the Reds.
Benedict caught Dennis Rasmussen's foul pop to
end the Inning. The Braves won 4-1 (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

Make an issue of your health _ _B_.D_.c_oLe_n
This week's column Is about
politics and your health. What
does poll! lcs have to do with your
health? Ultimately, a great deal.
Who do you think makes the
tradeoffs between financing B-1
bombers and funding basic medical research? Who decides which
federal agencies should receive
what percentage of the healthcare budget? Who determines
wheth~r chlldho .odlmmunization programs should
be Increased or slashed?
· If you answered "politicians,"
you're on the right track.
Today, virtually every Important question Involving medical
science and medical ethics will
eventually be answered by poilUclans. The question, then, is what
effect you can have on the
answers those politicians
provide.
Thus far, health-care questions
have played little part in either
party's primary race. Trade
issues, contra aid and tax reform
are hot. Heal! h Is not.
Oddly enough, OQe of · the

~~~.6481

-17 3.S
4&amp; 36
31 51
24 H
Pacific 01\'lslon
y·LA Laken
82 to
x·Pordancl
53 '!II
x.Se.ittlt!
14 18
Phonlx
:a&amp; 5t
Golde• St.
• 11
LA Olppl'n
11 8!1
x~IIIICh~ playoll berth
y·dlnebel clvlllonlllk
x·Uiah
x·lhulion
x.San Ant.
Saeramenlo

.513 1
.HI K
.3711 t3
.213 ·30

.1:.8 .1141 9
.137 lA
.341 l.f.
.244 n
.!fl1' U

~W'dar'• RH~ta

New .Jer•y 118, Mllwaa llee It•
'"-•hlnRton IDI, Allanla 16

Clewlandllf. P•Uad~phla !t9
New l'oriiiiM, an•ana 81

De•wr 114, LA Clppen 189

Vtall 1!1, Houlton 117
Portland Itt, 8aen,meato I 18

Sunlit''•

Res~s

Chleap Ill, BoiiOa llll
LA Lallen Ill, Golden State Ito
Dallu
San -Allton!• tn
Detroit 1!11, Phll~elpbla I IR
Houston 1!'7, Phoenix lUI
Seattle lit, LA Clippers 110

nt.

H.. results
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Dt\'lalon
W L Pet. GB
Rlchmolld
s s· .500 Pawtocllet
8 • .500 'ndewater
S • . :IRS I ~
-t 10 .:ss a
Mal"'

'

WeKtern IHl'lak)n
II t .1M Co hun bull
11. 1 .w I%
'IOiedo
7 7 .MO t
Syracuw
I 8 .4!1 S
SaturdiQ''• lle8-'1A
Richmond II, Col...nbUMZ
Pawtucket l,s,. ..eueeO
TideWater t. Tolado s
MaiM at Roc.ader, late
Surlllt''t Re11ulb
Columbus I. Rlcllmoollll
Rochn&amp;er t, Maine I (f1rltGame )
RoeheMer II, Mal• I (H&lt;'Onl 11mel
Roche~~t&gt;r

Tole.. 1,

Tldewllt~r

Pawt~~~:kft

I

at Sy .. cuae (ppd , ralal

MOIIIIQ''II Games
Columbut at Rldunend
PaWIUl!ket Ill Roche-Mer
Malnr al Syraaue
To~llo 11 "ndewater

Transactions
liMe hall
Pl.cd rlchi llelder Jim
Undeman o• the- 114., dl-.bled 1111~
ulled up oudleider Duane Walkft' of
Laulntlle Ollh• American .b.oci1Uon
(AAA).
St. LGuiR -

Football
Gree• 81,)' - Ripe• s tree •••'•
wide Ntelwn K•l Powe and Perey
Kemp, aalety ToiQ' MIQ'et~, ud nOM
taei!M. Tom Poftll and Stu Maiaele.

.
SALES - SERVICE • TESTING

q.: ,•.. ew.-...
.,-.....
¥-c
~

"So, I'm outta touch with reality, ·eh? Well, ear

your hart out, Doc!"

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

San Diego·bl~n~s Astros, 3-();
Pirates ·keep rolling, top Cubs

'E:P ME£$£' IS

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- G,ov. Richard Celeste is being wooed by
the remaining Democratic presidential candidates for his support in
Ohio's May 3 primary campaign, butheprobablywlllremalnneutraL
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls telephoned Celeste late last
week and the two tried to get together in Toledo.They met briefly at a
Dukakls news conference but didn't have time for a private chat.
Jesse Jackson also called Celeste to enlist his support
Dukakis campaigned in Toledo Friday morning, and was about to
leave for Pennsylvania when Celeste breezed In for a scheduled
event.
"It was a chance meeting, like two ships passing In the morning, "
related Heidi Findley, deputy press secretary, adding that Celeste
stressed he was not endorsing Dukakts.
. Celeste is a valuable resource for both candidates on how to
campaign in Ohio- what works and what doesn't. The governor has
won three statewide elections and has visited just about every place
that's 0 n the map.
. Of course, Jackson doesn' t need too much of that advice. His
campaign manager is Gerald Austin, who directed all of Celeste's
.wtns.
Celeste has some empathy for Dukakls, a fellow governor who
turned the Massachusetts economy around, just as Celeste Is trying to
do for Ohio. He has to believe that as president. Dukakis would know
what Ohio needs in the way of assistance.
On the other hand, Celeste is an admirer of Jackson and would like
to see the cause of minorities and the poor advanced with the success
of the Baptist minister.
The question becomes, would a Celeste pre-prlm~ry endorsement
help or hurt• The governor has made some enemies, even among
: Democrats. He does have the vestiges of a campaign organization to
':turn loose. But many Celeste volunteers already have made their
: ·personal choices for president
: The main advantageDukakls or Jackson could gain from a Celeste
endorsement would be the public perception of a blessing from the
, state's most visible Democrat
. ·In I984, Celeste backed Walter Mondale, who lost the Ohio primary
. to Gary Hart. He would probably do bes tto stay neutral and try to heal
:: the party and help fashion a winning ticket at the Democratic
; National Convention.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY EQUIPMENT,
172 llerth Smlld AY811ut
lllcldleport, Olllo 45760

PH. (614) 992·7075
Gar Snouffer- 992-7446

Browns pick
Florida ace
in NFL draft

By DAVE¥REDERICK
UPI Sports Writer •
San Diego's Andy Hawkins,
who has been the subject ot trade
rumors for the past week, may
have boosted his market value
Sunday.
The righthander hurled a onehitter In ieadlng the San Diego
Padres over the Houston Astros
3-0.
· "I wasn't counting on throwing
a no-hitter," Hawkins said after
pitching his first complete game
since 1986. "I really wasn't
expecting I(. Maybe If I got Into
the eighth or ninth, I mlght've
felt differently ."
Hawkins, 2-1, who struck _out
fo·u r and walked three, hag.,
pitched three three-hitters In his
six year career. His no-hit
attempt was spoiled when Bill
Doran led off the seventh inning
with a single.
"! was just trying to get on
base," Doran said. "It was a
fastball. He pitched a great
game. It's tough to figure."
Meanwhile, Roberto Alomar's
RBI single In the filth Inning
provided Hawkins and the Padres with the only run they
needed.
Houston, which has been held
scoreless for 24 consecu tlve
innings, got only two runners as

and Rafael Belliard collected
far as second base.
"I had a good changeup to- RBI sIngles In the fourth Inning,
day," Hawkins said. "I was while Bob Walk scattered six hits
going in and out on the hitter.s so over 6 1-3 innings to lift the
they couldn 't sit on one location . Pirates . Jeff Robinson pitched
The only thing I'm out to prove is two scoreless innings for his
that my arm Is healthy. I wasn't fourth save.
Cardinals 5, Mets 4
going to walk Doran , so I threw
At St. Louis, Ozzle Smith had
him a fastball. The way it took
off, I knew it was going to go over three hits and Bob tforrier and
Dickie's ( shorstop Thon' s ) - Tom Brunanksy each drove In
two runs to snap a five-game
head."
losing streak against the Mets.
Sart Diego added ·two more The Cardinals stole a seasonruns In the eighth Inning when high six bases, Including two by
Marvell Wynne tripled in Randy Vince Coleman who has stolen 34
Ready, who had walked. Hous!Dn consecutive bases against the
starter, Jim DeShaies, 1-2, gave Mets.
.
way to Ernie Camacho, who
Expos 3, Phlllles 1 r "allowed a . suicide-squeeze. bunt
At Philadelphia, Mike Fitzgeby Benito Santiago to close out rald singled home Tim Wallach .
the scoring.
·
from second base in the eighth
Elsewhere, Pittsburgh downed Inning lifting Montreal. Wallach
Chicago 4-2, St. Louis nipped New opened the eighth with a double
York 5-4, Montreal defeated off loser Don Carman, 2-2. Kent
Phitadelphia 3-1, Atlanta beat Tekulve relieved and allowed the
Cincinnati 4-I and Los Angeles game-winning hit .
blanked San Francisco 4-0.
Dodgers 4, Olants 0
In the American League, it was
At San Francisco, Fernando
New York 5, Toronto 3; Minne- Valenzuela and Jay Howell comsota I3, Cleveland 7; Oakland 5, bined on a five-hitter, and Mike
Chicago 3; Kansas 3, Baltimore Sciascia drove in three runs to
I; Boston 4, Milwaukee 0; Texas lead the Dodgers. Valenzuela,
4, Detroit 2 and Seattle 4, 2-2, held the Giants without an
extra base hit over 7 2-3lnnlngs to
Callfornia 2.
·
record the victory.
Pirates 4, Cubs 2
At Pittsbufgh, Darnell Coles

•

Braves finally wr,n home tilt

BEREA , Ohio (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns, seeking the
pass rusher that has eluded them
In previous years, Sunday made
ATLANTA (UP!) Pete
linebacker Clifford Charlton of . Smith and two relief pitchers
the University of Florida, the
combined on a six-hitter Sunday
team's first-round pick in the
and Dale Murphy got untracked
NFL draft alter the Houston
with three hits to give Atlanta a
Oilers initially passed on their
4-lwinover Clnclnnatlandchalk
selection.
up the Braves first home victory ·
Charlton, a 6-foot-2, 240-pound
of the season.
product from Tallahassee, Fla :, · Smith, I-1, surrendered five
had seven of his career 25 sacks
hits over six Innings and said the
his senior season with theGators. Braves ''put everything together
He is considered an agile pursuit
today."
player and Is being projected as
Paul Assenmacher pitched the
an outside linebacker by
ninth fo'r his second save. That
Cleveland.
denied Bruce Sutter, who struck
"He and I watched some films
out three, a chance to record his
· together last week," said Browns first save since May 17, 1986.
Coach Marty Schottenheimer at
"We got some hits {}nd some
the team's practice headquar- good pitching," Smith said . .
ters. "He's an outstanding "Bruce (Sutter) pitched outplayer."
standing and (Paul) AssenmCharlton was tabbed by Cleve- acher did the job. That's what it
land after Houston hesitated on takes to win. we have to be a little
making the 21st pick as the more consistent with that and
allotted 15-mlnute period for
announcing first-round selections expired.
When that happened, equipment manager Charley Cusick.
CINCINNATI IUPI) - The
the Browns' designated repre- • Cincinnati Bengals passed over
sentative at the draft in New Helsman Trophy winner Tim
York, quickly relayed Cleve- Brown In Sunday's NFL draft
land's drafting of Charlton.
and made speedy Oklahoma
"We had to make the pick defensive back Rickey Dixon
Immediately, because we under- their No. 1 choice.
stood (Houston) was Interested
Although Brown was avallable
In Charlton and (Oilers' eventual when the Bengals picked fifth,
choice, running back) Lorenzo they decided to forego the tripleWhite," said Schcittenheimer. threat. (receiver, runner, kick
· "They could have Interrupted us returner) s(ar from Notre Dame
a; any time."
In order to shore up a weak pass
Charlton, reached at his apart- defense.
ment in Galnesvllle, Fla., desAfter the Bengals bypassed
cribed himself as a pass rusher Brown, he was immediately
"because that's what I qo best." snapped up by the sixth-picking
"I anticipate snaps, watch Los Angeles Raiders.
films on my opponent and have a
''Tim Brown doesn't fit us,"
good knack for It," added Charl- sald Bengals' general manager
ton. 23. "I haven't had that much Paul Brown, whose club already
teaching In pass coverage, but I can catch passes but can'tdefend
want to better that.
against them. "This has to be a
"I think I'm ready . I won't go team proposition."
out on a limb and say. to people I
want to have 15, 16 sacks a problems
No. have
1 draft
Although signing
the Bengals
had
season. I'm just very excited picks (Ricky Hunley never
excited about helping a football signed In 1984), Brown bristled
team just as tep away from going when asked If the potential
to the Super Bowl."
contract demands of a Helsman
Chip Fallvene, the Browns' Trophy winner figured into the
director of player personnel, said decision not to draft Tim Brown.
•'Hell no,'' said Brown. ••That's
Charlton was their secondranked linebacker behind Aun- nothing to us . That's PR. We had
dray Bruce of Auburn, taken as a guy here who won two ofthem."
the No. I overall pick In the draft
by Atlanta.
•
Although the Bengals drafted
Schottenhelmer Indicated that
two-time
Reisman Trophy
linebacker Mike Junkin, the
winner
Archie
Griffin of Ohio
Bro\\'ns' top pick last year who
State
in
theflrstroundln1976,
the
played sparingly and eventually
little
running
back
turned
out
to
· was lost due to wrist surgery,
be
too
small
to
be
much
of
an
may be moved to left Inside
linebacker If Charlton's progress NFL threat:
Is steady.
"Brown may have been' rated
"It certainly opens the door for
higher
than Dixon In the (scoutus," said the coach. "Charlton
Ing)
,combine,
but obviously he
has played on both sides of the
was
not
rated
ftlgher by us,"
defensive line. and can be flip~
cadded
Bengals'
detensive
coordl·
. to either side as matters
nator
Dick
LeBeau.
develop."

we'll be all set."
Atlanta took a 1-0 lead In the
first off starter Dennis Rasmussen, I-2. With one out, Ron
Gant doubled to left and scored
on a single by Murphy, who has
been struggling and said, " It felt
good to do something right
today ."
"I haven't really been contributing, " Murphy said, "so It felt
good' to get some hits and get on
base a few times."
The Reds tied the score in the
second when Nick Esasky drUied
a 3-2 pitch over the left-center
field fence for his third homer of
the season.
Atlanta took a 2-I lead in the
fourth. Murphy led off with a
double and moved to third on a
passed ball by Bo Dlaz. One out
later, Gerald Perry delivered a
sacrifice fly to left.

The Braves moved ahead 3-1ln
the sixth. Paul Runge led off with
a double and moved to third on a
ground out by Ken Oberkfell.
Bruce Benedict followed with a
sacrifice fly to left.
Albert Hall walked with the
bases loaded for the Braves' flnlll
run.
"It's hard to mount a -drive
with just six hits, " Reds manager Pete Rose said.

The Daily SentineL
.

.

CUSPS lfl-. .)
A lllwloloa of Molllmotlla, Itt&lt;.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, lllc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se-

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Member: United Press lnternatloaal,
Inland Dall~ Pres1 Assoclatlon and Ute
Ohio Newspa_per Auoelatlc.. NafaauJ
Advertlslnf Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

Dixon Bengal's top choice

POSTMASTER: Senti addri!ss cllana&lt;s

to The DaUy Sentinel, Ill Court
Pomeroy, Ohio Ci71i!.

St.,

SUBSCJIIPTION RATES

531 JACKSON PI&lt;E - RT.lS WEST
Pbonl 448-4524

BARGA I~
All
BARGAJN N

II,,

l'llbcl~·

By Carrier or . . _ BoiKe
One Week ................................... $1.25
One Month ......................... ........ $5 ..S
One Year ........................... ...... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .. ......... ........................ 2:&gt; Centli
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll be gtven canter eacb
week.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In

areas where home carrier service l.s
available,

52

Mallflttbocrlotwide Melp

c.-,.

13 Weeks .... .............................. 117.29
26

Weeks .................................. $34.06
Weeks ................... ............... $1D.5&amp;

Oullltle Melp CootMJ
l3 Weeks .................................. rnuo
26 Weeks ................ .................. $35.10

t-;~~~~~~~~~=~~~5;2;w;ee;ks;·;··;···;···;··;···;...;.. ;...;...;..;···;...;.l61;;.eo~;

If HEARING is 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
· Vllhether you are regularly employed or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE wl\o can be helped should
be deprived of bener hearing. Let us be your advocate.

CALL TOLL-FREE 1-8C)0-237r7716

DILES HEARING CENTER

326 W. Union St., Athens, Ohio 45701
(614) 594-3571
1-100-237-7716
We featura aida from:
HEARING TECHNOLOGY INC.

3-R's
For Continued
Highway Improvements
FOR

MEIGS I·
COUNTY•
FOR RESURFACING WITH
•

2•

FOR REPUCEMENT

.3

Philip M.
Roberts
IE PUBLICAN

MEIGS COUNH ENGINEER
OVII 21 YUIS EIPIIIENCE IN IIGIWAY,
IIIDGES, CONSTIUcnON &amp; IUINIIIIAIICL
Pd. lor 11J Co11m. to RHIICI Plrilip I. ltoblrtl, WtiiiCt lllllor~
Tr•.. 44010 Stny Hollow ld., Coolvllt. l*io

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Hapless Orioles lose 18th in
row; Twins ·bomb Cleveland
Cal Ripken Jr.'s ninth-Inning
By LEN HOCHBERG
homer prevented a shu tout .
UPI Sports Writer
Elsewhere, New York bea t
What if Roger Clemens pitched
Toronto s·-3, Minnesota shelled
for the Orioles? ,
Cleveland 13-7, Texas downed
Would Clemens. 4-0. be 0·4?
Detroit 4-2, Oakland got by
Would Baltimore. 0-18, be 4-14?
Chicago 5-3, and Seattle defeated
Both remain perfect after
California 4-2.
Su nd ay: Clemens led the Boston
In the National League, it was :
Red Sox to a 4-0 victory over the
Montreal3, Philadelphia!: PittsMilwaukee Brewers and the
burgh 4, Chicago 2; Atlanta 4,
Orioles lqst to 1he Kansas City
Ci nci nnati 1; St. Louts 5, New
Royal s 3·f
York 4; San Diego 3, Housto n 0;
Milwaukee may be able to
provide some answers. While the . and Los Angele,s 4, San Francisco
0.
Brewers 'have padded . their reYankees 5, Blue Jays 3
cord with six triumphs over the
Orioles th is season, they've also
At New York, Rickey Henderson stole th ird arid continued
been ·shut out twice by Cleme ns,
home on a wild pitch by Mark
the two-time Cy Yo ung Award
Eichhorn, 0'1, to break a tie, and
winner.
"lt's no secret he's the best snap the Blue Jays' five-ga me
pitcher in the league, " Milwau - winning streak. Charles Hudson,
kee catcher B.J. Surhoff said. 2-0, pitched 2 2-3 innings of
'The way he's pitched against us shutout relief. Fred McGriff,
Kelly Gruber and Tony Fernanno runs in the last 30 innings, 7-1
lletime), it's kind of tough (to dez homered lor Toronto.
Twins 13, Indians 7
come back from an early deficit) . Any time you give a
The buck-ninety fan club may
pitcher like that the lead, he
have to adjus t to inflation.
.
·knows what to do with it."
Tim Laudner's two homers and
Boston. which has won five
six RBI's sparked Minnesota to a
straight, scored.. ··twice In the
12-4 pounding of Cleveland Sun·
seco nd against Ted Higuera , 2-1,
day afternoon, looking less like
and Clemens did the rest. The
the .190 hitter of 1987 and more
righthander pitched a three·
like the .360 slugger of this year.
hitter.,. faced ' only 30 batters,
More importantly, Laudner's
ret iring 18 co nsecu ti vely. The
renewed punch helped the Twins
Red Sox added two runs In the. snap a six-game losing streak
ninth.
and end the Indians three-game
Milwaukee's only hits were
winning streak.
singles: by Surhoff in the fir st,
"We've been pressing a little,
Glen n Braggs in the second , an d maybe trying to do too much,"
Ernest Riles In the eighth.
sa id Laudner. "A game like
Clemens retfred the 18 straight today maybe let 's us relax a little
from · the second to eighth
blt and go out and play the way
we ca n."
Innings.
Reliever Juan Berenguer, 2·2,
gave up only two hits in three and
"I mixed up my pitches well, "
one-third Innings to get the win as
Clemens said. "Milwaukee is a
the Twins snapped a six-ga me
pretty aggressive team to play. I
losing streak and ended the
knew r had my work cut ou t for
Indians three game wmnmg
me."
"He didn 't give us too many streak. Cleveland starter Scott
Balles, 1·2, gave up five earned
opportunities and we didn 't earn
r uns in two and one-third innings
any on our own," Milwaukee
·
Manager Tom Trebelhorn sa id. to take the loss.
"Scotty wasn't as aggressive
"We chased some bad balls, but
as usual, " said Cleveland manthat' s to be expected against a
ager Doc Edwards , who saw his
guy like Clemens."
At Kansas City, Bret Saberha - team blow several early leads .
gen pitched a six-hitter, extend· " His stuff was too fine. Ite didn't
lng Baltimore' s record streak to go after them from the get-go like
18 losses .at the start of a season. he usually does ."
The Orioles, who Tuesday begin
a three-game series against the
indeed Minnesota used its
Twins in Minnesota , are two shy biggest Inning of the yea-r to take
of the Amerlcan - Le ag~e ma r k a H lead In the third. After Kirby
for consecutive defeats. The Puckett doubled , Gene Larkin
major-league standard is 23 set walked and Kent Hrbek's RBI
by the 1961 Philadelphia Phfllles. single tied the game.
··something has to be done; we
La udner then greeted re llever
can't keep going like this, " Rich Yett with his first homer of
Baltimore Manager Frank Ro- the year, a three- run blow to left.
binson said. "Maybe ju~t . some Mark Davidson followed with an
changes will help. We need some Infield hit, advanced on a wlid
help. ''
pitch, and scored on Dan GladRobinson, Indicating he had den's RBI single.
specific things in mind, said he
Laudner put the Twins ahead
will talk to Oi'ioles General 11-4 In the fourth when he
Manager ,Roland Hemond and connected on his second home
conslder ·moves with Baltimore's run after singles by Gary Gaetti
triple-A afllliate in Rochester , and Larkin.
N.Y.
"1 was just trying to throW'
Kurt Stillwell and Danny Tar· strikes and he (Laudner) hurt
tabull hit hom e run s to give us," said Yett. "They're bound to
Saberhagen, 2-2, his second vic- break ou t. They're a good balltory over the Orioles this season. club. Bul we'll take two out of

Monday, April 25. 1988
MEIGS CLASS "A" SECTIONAL BASEBALL

•

EASTERN

'By The Bend

(,8-5)

WED., HAY 4, 4:30 p.m. 1---------,
three ballga mes anytime."
Minnesota added more padding _In the filth when Tommy
Herr walked and scored on
Gaetti 's RBI doubl e to make the
CROOKSVILLE (4-4)
score 12-4.
·
The Indians pulled within 12-7
in the seventh when Berenguer
TUES., HAY 10, 4:30p.m, 1 - - - - - ---"-·-;
gave UIJ a single to Joe Carter and '
walks to Brook Jacoby and Cory
Snyder to load the bases . Pat
Tabler followed with a bases·
Ill
TRIMBLE ( 11-7 )
emptyi ng double after hitting Seed
Into a doubl e play In a similar
third Inning situation.
"I thought if he'd (Tabler)
THURS., HAY 5, 4:30
have done it the first time he
would have put us back in the
baltgame," said Edwards. " But
Lea (Minnesota star ter, Charlie )
WINNER ADVANCES 1
FEDERAL HOCKING (4-10)
. made a good pitch. · J give him
Unioto District
credit ."
vs
Valley Winner
FRI., HAY 13, 4:30 p.m.
Credit also belongs to the
Twins' renewed offensive power.
MON., HAY 16
SOUTHERN
&lt;10-5)
"It was just a matter of time," . 112
at 4:llo p.m.
sa id Puckett, whose first homer Seed
of the year, a solo shot to center,
made the score 13-7 in the bottom
SAT., HAY 7, 1: 00 p.m. 1---~-'-----,
of the eighth and added to
· Minnesota's padding. "You' go
through those streaks. But we
knew we'd brea k out of it a nd
somebody was go nna pay ."
SOUTHWESTERN (l-10)

Rangers 4, Tigers 2
At Arlington, Texas, Ruben
Sierra and Steve Buechele homered and Charlie Hough, 3-2,
pitched seven innings to help th e
Rangers snap a three-game
losing streak. Det roit's Jack
Morris, 2-3, allowed all fou r runs.
Athletics 5, White Sox 3
At Chicago, Jose Canseco
clubbed his major leaguesleading· seventh home run, a
three-run shot In Oakland's fourrun third inning, to make a
winner of Bob Welch, 2-2, a nd a
loser of Ri cky Horton, 2-3. Dan
Pas qua smacked two homers for
the White Sox .
Mariners 4, Angels 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Seat tle's
Mark Langston, 1· 2, struck out 10
In throwing his first complete
game of the season. Loser Chuck
Finley, 1-2, was hurt by five
errors by California , which has
lost six of Its last seven ga mes.
Angel Johnny Ray went 3 for 4
and has now gone 16 for his last
25.

Redwomen lose
to Urbana
URBANA - The Rio Grande
softball team paced Urbana' s
Lady Blue Knights In the first
half of a Mid-Ohio Conference
doubleheader Saturday, but Urbana outlasted the Redwomen
15-13 and went on to hand the
visitors a 15-4 loss In the
nightcap .
.
The Redwomen's overall record is 2-20 and 0-8 In the MOC
and District 22.
The Rio ladies will host Morehead State in their final home
game of the season Wednesday at
3p.m.

0-8)

SAT., MAY 7, 3:30p.m.

"
NORTH GALLIA

( ·- q l

Home batting prac ti ce 3 :00- 3:30
Visitor "
"
3:30 - 4:00
Visitor infield

4 : 00-4 :15

Home

4:1 5 - 4:30

..

By TOM WITHERS
who Chicago beat In five of six
UPI Sports Writer
rE!gular-seasofi ·meetings. The
The Chicago Bulls won their Bulls have spilt their six games
regular-season finale and earned against the much-Improved
a higher seed and a tougher Cavaliers.
opponent in the NBA playoffs.
Cleveland, who finished the
Michael Jordan and the Chi· season with a 42-40 record, enters
cage Bulls reached milestones the playoffs as the NBA's hottest
Sunday by defeating the Bosotn team. The Cavaliers have won
Celtics 115-108.
.
eight of their last nine and 11 of
Chicago set a franchise record their last 13 games. The 1987-88
by reac hing the 50-win plateau season was the most successful
for the fifth time. The Bulls In the last decade for the
clinched the third best record in franchise.
the Eastern Conference, giving
Jordan, who scored 46 points In
them Cleveland Cavaliers as the game and won his second
their opening .round opponent straight NBA scoring title, said
Thursday night.
things wlll be different In the
A loss against ~on would •postseason.
have mea nt a first tpund series
"If we took Cleveland lightly in
against the Milwaukee Bucks, the regular season, that won't be
1

the case In the playoffs," Jordan
sal d.
'
Chicago's Dave Corzine was
guarded In assessing his team 's
next opponent.
"I would have rather played
Milwaukee," the center said.
''Cleveland has confidence that It
can beat us. "
Jordan finished the season
with 2,868 points and a 35 points
per game average.
Led by Jordan, the Bulls took
control with an 18-7 run over the
final 6:20 or the first q'uarter.
Corzine contributed 6 points hi
the surge, which left · Chicago
ahead 30-23.
Charles Oakley and Jordan
scored 10 points each In the
second quarter as the Bulls
extended their lead to 9 at
halftime, 59·50.
Bostons' Reggie Lewis scored
on a layup with 2:39 left In the
fourth period and pulled Boston
within striking distance at 106103, but Sam Vincent answered
with a steal and 3-polnt play to
p'UII Chicago out of danger.

I

TUESDAY MORNING LADIES
4-11·88

"We 've got to sta rt putting
every shot to the back of the net, "
Montreal's Brian Skrudland
said. "Obviously, our opportunities are few and far between.
When we get an opportunity, we
have to bury it."
After playing a scoreless first
period, Boston grabbed the lead
midway through the second when
Rick Middleton skated arounnd
Larry Robinson and backhanded
a shot past Montreal goalie
Patrick Roy. From that point on,

the Bruins rtever looked back.
"They hlld the luxury of
playing with the lead, " said
Montreal's Bobby Smith, "and
that has been the key factor In the
series.
Gord Kluzak put the game on
Ice as he scored an empty net
goal wit h 20 seconds remaining,
turning the tables on the
Canadlens.
"It's a llttle bit like what we
used to do to them, " Montreal's
Guy Carbonneau said.
In the Patrick Division Final
the Wa~hlngton Capitals dC:
feated the New Jersey Devils 4·1.
Capitals 4, Devils 1
In East Rutherford, N.J., Dave
Christian scored two goals and
Peter Sundstrom added one,
helping the Capitals even the
Patrick Division final series at
two games apiece. Game 5 of the
best-of-seven series Is Tuesday
night In Lapdover, Md.
The Norris and Smythe Dlvlslon Finals resume this evening
when the St. Louis Blues will try
to even their best-of-seven series
with Detroit at two games
apiece, and the Edmonton Oilers
can eliminate the Calgary
Flames In four games with a
victory.

I
~

HUNTER SCORES - Dale Hunter of lhe WashlnpOn Capitals
New .Ieney Devils' Sellll Burke In
the lhlrd period of Sunday's NIIL playoH game lnEasl Rullterford,
N.J. The Capitals heal the Devils 4-lto lie the series at 2-2. (tJPI)

8CO!'ell the lhlrd goal lllalllllt the

I

'

. .

.

High Game -

c.;•fl'/•le meets
It f V

E aster program. T he group sang
·" What a Friend We Have In
Jesus" followed by an account by
Mrs. Perrin of the life and
Christian service of Joseph
Scriven, author of th e hymn. .
Scripture, prayer, poems, and a
reading, •'He is Risen Indeed' '
emphasized the beauty and
promise of the earth •s renewal
each spring and the wonilerful
meaning of the resurrection. •
Mar-Ie Hauck and Pauline
Mayer served a dessert course to
13 members attending. Aprons
for detergent bottles made by
Mrs. Mayer were given as
favors .

Several members were reported Ill when Chhester Councli
323, Daughters of America, met
Tuesday night at the hal'!.
It was noted that Ada Morris Is
a patient at Veterans Memorial
Hosltal, that Sadie Trussell Is
recuperating from Injuries suf·
fered in a fall, and that Dorothy
Ritchie remains in Mt. Carmel
West Hospital, Columbus.
Thelma White, councilor presided at the meeting with the
pledge to the American and

Christian flag being given and
scripture being read. The Lord's
Prayer. was given in unsion.
New by-laws were read. It was
noted.that the stove belonging to
Letha Wood was donated for use
tn the hall. Erma Cleland had a
reading, "Never Alone" for Mrs.
Ritchie. Flagbearers escorted
Erma Cleland to the altar which
she was presented cards and
gifts. Refreshments were served
byMaryShowalter,FernMorrls,
and Iva Powell.

38
56
61
69

Jeanie Roble-174: Tina

Tina Collins-49G; Lisa

Johnson-468: Cindy Mayte-465;
High Team Game- Pools Plus-587: 556:
Rainbow lnn-556: Railroad Junctlon-545; •
High Team Series -

Pools Plus-1679:

Rainbow Jnn-1628: Railroad Junctlon1446.

· ltow Open For Spring
Season

REACHES FOR RIM - Philadelphia's Bob Thorton, center,
gets causht between the long arm of Detroit's Chuck Nevitt, rlghl,

and .lames Edwards and lo!les lhe basket In the first half of
Sunday's game In Pontiac, Mlcb. Thorton was knocked lo the fioor
but no foul was called on the play. (UPI)

COMPLETE LINE OF VEGETAIU
&amp; IEDDING PLANTS AND
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
HANGING IASIIETS, AZALEAS,
FRUR TREES &amp; SHRUIBERY

MONDAY
PORTLAND - Special meetIng of Poruand PTO will be held
at 7 p.m. Monda y al the school.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYUCISI - .ft.IJ76

April 25-Southern ............................... H
April 26-Sou thern (JV) ................ , ...... H
April 27-Atumn\ .. .. .... ............ ..... : .. ....• H

April 28-Southwestern .... .... ........ ,, .. .. .. H

Aprn29-(0pen)

April 00-Fort Frye {DH) .... .. ... ... ... ..... A '

2-Game moved Southwestern
3-Southern tJV)

Dear Ann Landers: I feel the need
to respond to the man who wrote
about people who commit murder
after losing control. I identified
with that man because it nearly
happened to me.
My mind snapped, as his 'did, but
fortunately nobod~ was _hurt. It
· happe~ed one ~vemng while I was
w~tchmg TV wtth my husband. The
children were asleep upstairs. Sud·
denly I wanted to kill the neigh·
bors. Not because I was angry with
them but simply because I wanted
to kill somebody.
I felt like rwa5 two people. One
. person was a cold·blooded killer
who wanted to kill just for the
thrill of killing. The other was
terrified and sick at the thought of
it. Had I lost control of myself,
nothing,couldhavestoppedme. .
There is a happy ending to my
story, Ann. I went immediately to a
psychiatrist. He told me that for
many years I had repressed the
anger toward my mother and later
toward my husband. The stress in
my life had triggered the urge to
!&lt;ill. Since I was 1,10able to direct
that anger toward my mother or
my husband, I subconsciously
aimed it toward innocent, defenseless people.
Yes, Ann, there are individuals
who use the insanity plea in an
attempt to get off. But there are
some who go from sane to insane
and then back to sane again in a
matter of moments. If I hadn't
experienced it myself, I wouldn't
have believed it was possible. I amA SILENT WITNESS IN KALA- ·

POMEROY - Jaymar Ladles
Golf League meeting, 9 a.m.
Tuesday at clubhouse; dues are
payable at this time and all
women golfers Invited.
POMEROY -The Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital wlll
meet at 1:30 Tuesday at the
hospital. Members are reminded
to take things for an alftiOn.

MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
Clvitan meets the first and third
Monday evening of each month
at 7 p.m. at the Mlddlep_ort Publlc
Library. The group Is Involved In
many worthwhile projects but
needs additional members to be
able to take on other projects.
Anyone Interested In Clvitan is
invited to attend a meeting.

Commodity distribution
Free cheese and dried mllk wlll
be·dlstrlbuted by the Community
Action Agency and Meigs Coop·
eratlve Parish for people with
yellow or green food cards,
Tuesday, at the usual sites,
beginning noon In Gallla County
and 10 a.m. In Meigs.

May 5-Waham a ... ..... .......... ............ A
May 6-North Gallla ... ...................... A
Oak Hill make-up?

-

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;~- THROAT

RACINE - Revival will begin
at the Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Mile Hill Road, Racine, Monday
continuing through May 1 with
evangeliSt to be Rick Murphy of
Columbus. Services will be held
at 7 p.m. eacb evening with the
public Invited. - - GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
· Charles Norris of Racine will be
evangeliSt for revival services
which at Sliver Run Baptist
Church and run through AprU 30.

GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

,,

,,

Deadline
. Deadline for horseshoe throwers to sign up for the ''Toad
Brlckles Open" Is May 7. Entry
fee Is $10 and Includes scoring.
'l'he open will be held May 14 In 1
Middleport. Entrys may be sent
to Carl E. Searles, Box 19,
Middleport, 45760, or to Harry L.
Bailey, 1126 East Main St.,
Pomeroy, 45769.

Dance planned
Square dances will be held on
the first and third Friday of each
month at the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 annex from 8 to 12
midnight.

public and other costrnetology students. At the
completion of1500 hours of training, students may
take the state board of cosmetology and upon
passing become licensed cosmetologists. Instructors of the program are Kay Proffitt and Linda
Yonker.

Insane, sane together? Woman
says (normal people' lose control

TUESDAY

POMEROY - Jaymar League
will meet Monday at 6:30p.m . at
the club hOuse for an organlza· .
tiona! meeting. Anyone lnteres ted In playing Is welcome to
attend the meeting.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wlll meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Harvey Erlewtne. The plant sale
has been postponed. The program will be on wlldflowers
presented by Betty Wells of the
Wllkesvllle Club.

Ma y 4-Sect tonal Tournament ·
Crooksville .............. .. ....... ............ .Meigs

.

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meeting at Burkett
Barber Sh~p Monday evening
with social hour and radlng
session at 7 p.m. preceedlng the
business assoelatlon: election of
officers, a coin auction and
refreshments.

Special mil~lc will be presented
by the Gabriel Quartet on Aprli 26
and 29 and by the Way Marks on
Aprli 30. Services start at 7:30
each evening.

STYLING - Tracl Newlun, a stodent enroUed
In senior cosmetology at Meigs High School, Is
shoWn styling the hair of patron, Barbara
McDaniel. Stwlents In the program perform
services of styling, cutting, manicuring,. perm
waving, facials, coloring and scalp care on the

OPPI DAILY 9·5-SUNDAY 1-5

Revised EHS card

May
May

1

Community calendar

Colllns-173: Lisa Jotmson-169;
High Series -

· .

A meeting of the Women's
Fellowship of the 01\lo Association Congregational Chrlsian
Churches, on May 6 at Little
Washington, was noted at last
week's meeting of Friendly Circle, Trinity Church.
Plans for spring activities
were made and reports on the ill
and shutin given. Cards were
signed lor several members.
Diane Hawley , president, con·
ducted the meeting with reports
from officers and committees
being made. Marie Ha11ck reported that the jelly concentrate
has been ordered .
Gay Perrin presented a post-

W L

Pools Plus ....................... ... ........ . 74
Rail roa d Junction ..... .. ................. 56
Rainbow Inn .. .: ...............~ ............ 51
Royal O~k Rollers .................... ... 43

An "art in the park" themed
meeting was planned for May 10
when the Portland PTO met
recently at ttie school.
It was noted that If the weather
permits, the fourth graders will ·
play flute.a phone, there wil l be
music by the f.ifth and sixth grade
band, and an art exhibit by ·
Debbie Hill, teacher. The fourth,
fifth and six grade students will
do some square dancing also.
The PTO discussed the divid·
ing of Portland and . Letart
sc hools. It was noted that the first
gra ders won the Campbell soup
label co ntes t collecting 5061abels ·
which brings the year 's tota l to
12,125. The labels can be redeemed for school materials and
equipment.

Also needed are Individuals
Interested in doing back stage
work. Mrs. Smith advises that
rehearsals wlll be scheduled
around work schedules and that
one a.c t will be rehearsed at a
time so that cast members wlll
have to attend only those acts in
which they are involved.
Additional information may be
obtained by calling either Mrs.
Smith, 992-3289 or Shirley
Quickel, 992-7756 .
Plans are also being made to do
some children's theatre this
summer.

"1
h
•
ester
unct
as
meertng
.
Ch
Co

I

Local bowling

recnetly celebrated their 24th
wedding anniversary. They have
five children, Mrs. Frankie ')'olliver, local ; Mrs . . Tammy
Cowdery, Reedsville: David
Wells Columbus: Mindy and
Missy, at home. 'l'he couple also
have two grandchlldren, A. J .
and Brittany Tolliver.
Visiting here with Mr ."and Mrs.
Pau I Hauber and Melody Ro·
berts were Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Hall, Coolville, Larry Hall and
sons, Coolville, Mrs. Linda Bailey , Patriot; Mrs. Jeannie
Theiss, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs .
Glen Lawson, Limburger Ridge: ·
Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs. Juanita
Wells, Mrs. Jane Fitch. and
Brandon, Mrs. Ruby Breewer ,
Mrs . . Ernestine Hayrpan, Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Dailey and Rae
Lynn.

Auditions for "Our Town" to be
presented mid-June by The Legion Players · wlll be continued
Sunday from 1: 30 to 4 p.m at the
Amerlcn Legion annex , Mill St.,
Middleport.
Shirley . Smith, co-director of
the play. with Dewey Horton,
reports that male actors of all
ages are needed. The roles of the
stage manager, Dr. Gibbs and
Mr. Webb have.not yet been cast
and in addition there are several
small bit parts for men. Most of
the female roles have already
been cast, she reports.

F~end'l1J
f It
{)_,

Bulls win regular season finale

Portland PTO
meeting held

Auditions planned by League

'

TEAM STANDINGS

By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Writer
The Boston Bruins are with ina
victory of finally laying to rest
the jinx that has haunted th em
for 45 years.
By handing the Montreal Ca nadlens a 2-0 defeat Sunday the
Bruins took a 3-1 lead In the
Adams Division final and now
have a realistic chance of ending
their embarrassing streak of 18
consecutive playoff losses to the
Ca nadlens.
"Forget what happened be·
fore," said Bruins netminder
Rejean Lemelin. " We're responslllle for creating a new era. This
ts new. The new Bruins'' ·
"The new Br~ins" can win the
Adams Divis ion Title Tuesday In
Montreal, obviously something
they've wanted to do for a long
time.
"I don' t care If we win It In

By Melody Roberts
Brandon Fitch recently spent
the . day with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Fitch.
Clyde Adams, visited his
daughter, Connie, of Stewart who
Is recuperating from foot and
~nkle surgery.
.
. Mrs. Carrie Countes, Pound,
Va: Is here visiting her daughter,
Mrs. Sue Hayman, and family.
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman wlll
be leaving for Florida later this '
month accompanying Mr. and
Mr . Elbert Fitzpatri ck,
Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball, .
Columbus, Dougie Ball, Montgomery, were here over the weekend to get things ready for an
auction at the home ·at their
parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank · Wells

WED,, HAY II, 4:30p.m.

KYGER CREEK

Monday, April 25, 1988
Page-5

:4

Long Bottom news notes -

.

Bruins within win of ending hex
Tokyo," Boston delenseman
Gord Kluzak said.
Meanwhile, .Lemelin notched
his second playoff 'shutout of his
career and has won all three
ga mes against MontreaL His
teammates supported him with
non-stop checking, allowing the
Canadlens very few scoring
opportunities.

·•

The Daily Sentinel

MAZOO
DEAR WITNESS: Your letter
'auld have been written only by a
"witness." I'm sure it was not an
easy letter to write.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
35-year-ol~ professional career
woman. I've put myself through
college and graduate school and
have a master's degree in nursing. I
am not married nor am I in a
steady relationship.
I have two sisters, both married.
My parents gave them elegant my "wedding money" now? Sign
weddings, one in 1984, the other in me - PATRICIA IN IDAHO (I
1986. They spent SlO,CXXl on each DON1' LIVE Til ERE)
.
affair. My sisters have lovely homes.
DEAR PATRICIA: You say you
My parents bought them house- would like your wedding money
warming gifts that cost about
now as a loan and that if you
S2,000.
I've had my own apartment for should marry you would not expect
15 years and am totally self-sup- your father to pay for the wedding.
porting. Recently I decided to buy a Why not? If you repay the loan,
condominium, but I can't swing it your father should pay for your
on my own. 1 asked my father for wedding, the same as he did for
help. He became angry and refused. your sisters.
I felt that since I have no plans to
Keep these two matters separate.
marry, he might give me my · If your father can alford to lend
wedding money as a loan. My you the money for the condo he
father has always said it was his should do it, and you should pay
responsibility to provide for his interest on that loan at the going
daughters' weddings, and that he rate. Good luck.
had set aside money for that
Everyone does drugs, right?
purpose.
Of -course, if and when I do Wf()ng. And today, more and more
marry, I would not expect my. dad people are aware of the dangers in·
to pay for it. But sim:e marriaee is volved. IfYQU want to be in the know,
not imminent and I'm getting to the too, wnce for Ann lAnders' newly reage where I must start thinking vised booklet, "The Lowdown on
about my future, a condominium Dope. " Send $3 plus a self-addressed,
stamped /l{o. IO envelope (45 cents
would be a good investment.
It greatly upsets me to fight with postage) to Ann lAnders, P.O. &amp;x
m~ family. Am I wrong to ask for JJ562, Chicago, Ill. 606JJ-0562.

Ann
Landers

I

STEPHANIE N. BELL

Bell birthday
Stephanie Nicole Bell, Rich· ·
mond, Va. observed her fourth ·
birthday with two parties. One
was held at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Bell, Racine, and the other at the
home of her great-grandparents,
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Jeffers.
"My Little Pony" was the theme
carried out for the party. Cake,
ice cream, and chips were served ·.
to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffers,,
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry Aleshire and
son, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Peyton and children, · Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Van Meter and child· ·
ren, Mrs. Shirley Durst and ·
children, Mr. ·and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, and Stephanie's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Shaun Bell, and
soil, Joshua, Richmond.

Jagger trial
expected to
jury todiy

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (UP[)
- · The copyright infringement ,
trial of Mick Jagger has filled the
suburban White Plains court-·
house with sounds of music and
crowds of fans hoping for an
autograph from the rock
superstar.
The case against the lead
singer of the Rolling Stones, flied
by a Jamaican-born reggae
musician who claims Jagger
lifted a song he wrote, was
·country - more than 15 years
ex pected togo tothejurytodayln
ago. And that was just a small U.S. District Court.
passenger car, " he said. "This Is
Jagger, 43, spent two days on
our biggest such undertaking In the stand last week defending
this coun\ry."
himself against the lawsuit flied
Soviet heavy machinery will be by Patrick Alley, 37, who claims
marketed through Soviet-run a ·song he wrote In 1979 and
Global Technologies Group Ltd . . recorded In 1983 constituted " the
of New York
wholeroots"ofJagger's1985solo
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - h - l t _ ' _'J;_u;_s..;.t..:.A::n::o:.;;th;;.e::r..:N;_I:.::g::.:h::.:t._"_ __

Watch out CAT, Russians -are coming
. CHICAGO (UPI) -The Soviet open fo r a well·mlnded, proles·
Union has made Its first U.S. slonal relationship based on
trade show appearance In 15 mutually advantageous coopera·
years, sbowing up at the Interna- tlon ," Morozov said, speaking In
tional MINExpo to put Its heavy Russian rrough an Interpreter.
equipment up against such
" I think a tot about the
American firms as Caterplllar
,development of the automotive
and John Deere.
Valentin Morozov, first deputy Industry on a large scale, and 1
minister of the automotive Indus- have to say, In my opinion, one of
try, told reporters Sunday that the most Important aspects Is
Soviet participation In the mine- Internationalism," he said.
Industry show sponsored by the
"We have a very wellAmerican Mining Congress developed export trade strucmarks a new Soviet Initiative to ture, with strong experience in
break into the U.S. Industrial foreign trade - In Europe and
market.
Asia. We hope that the time Is
'l'he only Soviet-built equip- right to market out products in
ment on display In the sprawling this country."
·
McCormick Place exhibition hall
In an Interview, Morozov told
Is a 180-ton quarry dump truck. United Press International the
Its yellow mass towers two MINExpo presentation Is In
stories above the showroom keeping with Soviet leader Mlk·
floor , and Its cab Is emblazoned hall Gorbachev's directive to
with the· name plate "Belorus- expand exports.
slan Automobile Works" - betHe said the Soviet exhibit Is the
ter known as BELAZ.
first ever at any U.S. mine
"'l'hat we are here today Is due Industry show - and the first of
to the overall betterment of the any kind In at ieast 15 years.
political climate - and the
"We only participated in one
economic relationship Is now other such exposition In this

----------"---------------1

SHARE LIFE
"GIVE BLOOD

WEDNESDAyI APRIL 2 7
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
Pomeroy Senior Citizen Center

1:00-5:30
•

AREA
BUSINESSES ! I
F.OR ALL YOUR ADVERTISING
NEEDS, SEE US••••

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
ASI FOR

BRIAN
BILLINGS

01

DAVE
HARRIS

WE DELIVER ...

�Monday Apnl 25 1988

••2775
p11dTae

2776

Co a

v

om a
a ne ncome. 10
equitab
o determ na

11

ho a

IE plena ono pop
arty - o The porcen ago
o

he .. payer

1

M

end

tang lila poraonal p oporty
wlthn hoV ageo Mddeport Ia detorm nod by dlv d

ng he nit book 1 ue du
ng heporlodcovlfodby he
,..,..rt o auch proporty
within M dd aport wlthou
deduction o onv ancumbr
encee by he ave ege net
bolt 1 • 1 m erty com

pu ad of • ouch proporty
within and wMhou M deleport Only property owned
by he a P8VIf 1 cone d

1 eel n det•m n ng euch
pa-~a

C Eaplonot on of buo
n••
racalpta t.Gtor Ra
calp fnHn he fallowing ora
I

oloo anoaobla o Mldd aport
1 Wo k dona o par
fo mad o nrvlc• rendered
n Mdllaport

�.Page-8-The Dally Sent1nel
Publtc Notu:e
ORDINANCE NO 1196 88
Cont from P ev ous Page
hereof and thai pay ha
amauntas equ edhe•nas

follows
11) In monthly paymen a

to be made not a e than
thirty 30 doya follow ng
the close of the calenda
month dUi ng wh ch th&amp;
amount was withheld
0 Sad etunsha beon
'I fo m p eacr bed by and obte ned f om the VI age Tax
Adm n It ato and tha be
-.ubjact to the u es and
regu at10na p esc bed he
•for by he V lege Tu Ad

m nitt ator Such employe
n collect ng aa d tax. sha
be deemed to ho d same un
t payment ts made by such
employe to the V age as
.tUch to the benet of the
~ liege and any auch tax co
,acted by euch employe
~ om h 1 employees sha

unt the same 1 pe d to the

V llao• be deemed a trust
fund n the hands of such

.emp oye
E) fo ad ustmen of e
o 1 n eturnt to tax wJth
he d by employe s see Sec
tlon 27 72
Sect on 27 66 l m tat on
en Cred t to Tax Pad
at Sou ce
The fa lu e of any em
p ove n d ng a he with n
o outs de the V age to co
lect the tax and to make any
Mtu n p esc bed he em
thall not ttl eve the em
P oyee from the payment of
tuch tax .., compl ance with
these egu at10n1 espect ng
!he mak n g of etu ns and
1he payment of taxes
Sectton 27 66 S atus
and Lablty of
Emp oye s
(AI Evbry employe s
l;laemed to beat ustee oft he
Village of M dd apon in co
lact ng and hold ng the ax
aqu ad t.tnder the o d
nance to be withheld and
the funds so collected
by such withho d ng a e
""'deemed to be t ult funds
IBI Every ouch employe
equ eel o deduct and with
bold the tax at the sou ca •
I ebla d rectfy to the V age
tor the pavment of such tax
whethe actua y collec ed
by such employe o not
$oct on 27 67
Dec arat ons
tA An employee whose
ent a wages 18 a es o
t&gt;the compentat on for any
taxab e yea w
be sub
acted to the wrthhold ng
p ovll ons unda Sect on
27 64th ough27 66whooo
tax w acco d ng v be wrth
he d as to h • entire ea n ngs
fa euch year by h 1 em
p oyer and who du ng such
taxable yea expects to de
Iva no othe compansat on
o othar ncoma wh ch 1
MJbject to tax unde
h1
chapter need not fi e e
decla at10n u p ov dad n
thl1 Sect on
(B) A other ta•paye o(ao
dallnod n lh a chapte ) sub
ject to the taxes mpoted n
Soct on 27 03 ond every
taxpaya
who ant c pa 81
any MlCOma o na p ofitt not
•ubject to total wtthho d ng
11 prov dad n the p ecad ng
porogroph aholl fi ow~hthe
V laga Tax Adm n It ato a
cledarat on of h • est meted
a.x u follows
(1 On or bafo e August
31 198a 8V8f'/ ouch tax
payer the fl e a dec a at on
cf h 1 eat mated tax to the
Jaxable penod beg nn ng
July 1 1988 and ond ng De
combe 31 1988
(2~ A 1 m a dec a at10n
thall be fled by each such
taxpaya on or befo e ha
30th day of Ap I of each
Jublequent yea du ng he
fa of the chapter and each
tuch decla at on the con
tein a ttatement of the tax
payer eattmatadtaxfo the
ful taxable yea n wh ch
such dec 1 at on • fi ed
31 Taxpaya 1 who o
wh ch are perm ttad pur
tuant to the p ov eacmt of
Section 27 69 to etu nand
'PlY the tax upon filca yea
baalo aholl file thOt fi at
ded•attan wtth n fou t4
month1 efta the bag nn ng
of the firtt fiaca yea beg n
n ng after January 1 1988
and the aubsequent dada a
tion to each yea the eafter
pn o before the 30th day of
the fourth month follow ng
the beg nn ng of each such
f11cal yea
41 The eat mated tax may
be p•d n fu wrth he dec a
at on o n equa nata
manti on o befo a Ap 130
Juno 30 Sept em be 30 and
Docembe 31 thofi atfi ng
be ng •• of Septombe 30
1988 Those taxpaya 1 on a
fiscal year bu 1 thall make
quarterty payments on o be
fo o the 30th dey of th&amp;
ourth month and on o be
o a the 111t day of the tDtth
n nth and twa fth month fo
ow ng the bag1nn ng of
MJch f sea yaar The f at n
ttallment aqua to at east
one fourth
must accom
,peny the declarat on
5) The dacla ation110 equ ad tha be filed upon a
form fu n•hed by o obte n
e~ef omtheV lageTaxAd
min atrator Any taxpaye
who hat fi ad an •t mate fo
feda al in~a tex pu poJM
mtiY n maKing the declare
tlon
oqu od he aundor
simply atolo therein thol th&amp;
.figu • the em contatntd a a
tho aamo I gu 11 uood by th&amp;
laXPIIYO
n mok ng lh&amp;
&lt;locloratoon of h11 Mllmato
for the federel ncome tax
However in odd lion to auch
ttetement any auch tex
poyor mov n ouch declor•
!iO" moclfy ond odjult ouch
.ct.clwed noome 10 .. to ex
cludo thorofrom
ncomo
which It not oubjoct to t ..
u . - the choptor
~
(41) Any eotlmoto fllod
""hereunder may be amended
by the filing of an om.,dod
_.kneta It the t me pr11
orlbed for the poymont of
trW inttellm~~nt of tex pa d n
a-rclanoo whh Soctloo
27&amp;8
Section 27 tiS Payment
of Tu lnltllllments
(A) At the I mo of flllog

l

Pomeroy- Mtddleport OhiO

Monday Apnl 25 1988

each dec a at on
p oya I w~ be eloctod lo any orde oEubpoene of the
by Sect on 27 67 each tax
tluthoraed
menta n camp ete ecordl Adminilt o
payer eha pay to the V age of such adjuatmenta w._h ho ot;y o
on•founh
of
the the amployMI any such ad
191fo I uaoo dnorydl
amount of h • es matad jultment made dur ng any gance n m1 ntam ng p oper
annua tax The aafter on o
res
month wll not need 10 be e- recordl of emp
bolo o the 30th doy of Ap I
floctod n the withholding dance add • • •
tota
June Septembe and 'De
wog• pold ond the V llogo
etu n or d a closed by tcha
cembe of eech yea du ng dul111 o ate ementa the eto to• wMhhold. o to know
ngly QIVI the Adm n ttrato
the fe of the chepter such attached
taxpaye the pay at eat a
(0 In thota cas• in wh ch fa •• InformatiOn o
1 m a amount Howavllf if too much ha bean withhetd
(10) Give to on omployo
states that the productive capac
The public is lnvlled o com
BUI Hansen said This leglsla
any tuch taxpaye thl on by an employer from an am
fa te information 11 to h 1
ment on proposed changes in the lty of much of the U S agricultu
ton authorizes several lnnova
o before any such payment p oyee and em ned to the true nama co ect soc a ••
ral land Is not being maintained
U S Department of Agricul
tlons in conservat on programs
data file an amended decta
V llaga and the e hM been a curlty number and • dence
at on show ng an ncreae termination of the em
oddr•o o fo to promptly
lure s (USDA) Nat onal Conser
It says that
to dramatically educe soli loss
notify an employe f any valion Program from Ap
o dec ease of an ett mated p oyea employe
alat on
About
4 to
1 5 million acres of f om erosion during the next
tax the nata menu then th p the taxpaye em
change n a~ldence add eat
June 4 1988 according o Roger
and are being removed from severa years
and the aafta due shall be P oyeel may obta n an ed
and dete hereof o
A
Hansen
Acting
State
Conser
agricultural
production each
111 ) Altompt to do any
Reducing contamination of
nc eased o d m n shad (u jurtmant by app cal on to
the case may be n such the V age
th ng whatever to avo d the vatlonlst for the USDA Soli
year
surface and subsurface water
manna that tha ba anca of Soct on 27 73 Penalty fo
payment of the whole or any Conservation Service (SCS) in
- Nearly ha f 41 percent or will be done through research
the ett mated lax aha be
part of the taK penatt es o
D vu g ng Coofidant ol
Ohio
173
million acres of cropland Is da a collection information edu
nteraet mpoted by th a
fullY po d on o belo e De
nfo mat on
eroding
too fast o malnta n long ca len and assiStance programs
Changes
in
the
Nalional
Con
cembe 31tt of the tuable
Tax atu na and a aud t1 choptor aha be gu Hty of a
yea nvo ved th ough the connected therewith are mitdema1nor and *hall be servation Program are being
term producliv ty
Hansen said that USDA wants
payment of quarte ty ~nata
fined not mo e \han F ve proposed which USDA officials
confident al Any nfo ma
of
10
percent
of
A
total
to
know what those Interested in
menta n aqua amountt du
ton ga ned by the Village Hundrod and No 100 Ool
cropland and pastureland 57 agriculture or the environment
feel are needed to reduce erosion
ng the quarta ly pe ods e- C ark T auure
mp
by
h 1 ... (e6oo 00 0
million acres) is affec ed by think about
evels on highly erodible land
man ng from and afte the agenta o amployeet o by aoned not mo a thin tbc 8
fi ng of any such amended any othe off c a1 o agent of months or both fo each of
he p keep con tamlnants out of sal nlty
-What the National Conserva
dec arat10n
Jhe V llage u a rasuh of tense
surface
and
subsurface
water
lion
Program priorities should
tB Taxpaye 1 who o
(8~ AI p osecution1 under
any etu n1 nvett gat10n1
and address other land and water
-More than half of nonfederal be
th 1 Section mull be com
whcha ape mnedtomaka hea ngs o var ficat ont •
resource cond!tlons and trends
atu ns and pay the tax on a qu ed or autho a ad by th 1 menced within three 3
- The balance of federal state
rangeland (61 percent or 250
yaara from the time of the Hansen said
f seal year bat 1 (see Sect on chapte aha be ~old confi
and
local conservation responsl
million
acres)
Is
in
less
than
oftenae complamed of ax
27 69 may make the qua
dam al except fo off c a
Public
parliclpatlon
and
blllty
ancj
good
condllion
and
nine
percent
capt in the case of falu a to
te v payment• on the
pu potet and except n ac
- USDA efforts as they rela e
of the nallen s pastureland is
file 1 etu n or n the ca~e of cooperation are needed before a
dec arat on of est mated tax co dance with p opar JUd
pu auant to Sect10n 27 67 cal o de o as otherw sa fil ng 1 fa 110 fraudulent a- final program can be formu
0
eroding excessively and
p ov dod by law V olatloo of tum n wh ch avant the lated Comments from farmers
Bl 3 141
- Increasing assistance o
COntamlna
ion
of
surface
mltation of t me wrthin ranchers and o hers with an
C Fo final alums and f
this p ov11 on conatttutet
small
scale limited resource and
and
subsurface
water
is
a
serious
a m adameano pun.. hab e wh ch protecut on muat be
na ad ustmenta of tax due
m norlty farmers
and pervasive nalional problem
lee Sect on 27 62
by f ne not exceed ng F ve commenced ahall be llvo 61 interest n agriculture or the
environment area cornerstone of The appraisal reports moderate
yea 1 from the data the •
Soct on 27 69 Roc p o01ty
Hund od ond No 100 Dol
- Research and analysiS onn
P ov11 on C ad t fo Tax
a • 600 00 or mp •on tum wu due o the data the conservat on program developallernatlve farming systems that
to
severe
pollution
from
sources
falta o fraudulent retu n ment
Pa d n Oth' M un~apal t 81
ment fo not mo e than atx
Hansen said that the such as urban runoff mine may resul In reduc ng chemical
Every nd v dua taxpaye
6) montha o bolh Every wu filod
Nalional Conservation Program
and fertilizer use
drainage and agr cultural lands
(C) The Ia uro of any am
who as des n the V age tuch breach of confidence
p oyer o Pft aon to receive resulting from th s process will
but ace vas nat p ofit1 11
- Linking USDA benefits to
constitutes a tepa ate of
In two-thirds of the states
o p ocure a atu n decla a
a 11 wages comm1110nt o
ftmta
guide USDA conservallon policy
conservation programs and
Hansen
staled
thai
he
updated
tion or other requ red form and programs through 1997
o he pe aona tarv ce com
Sect on 27 74 lntoroot
- Use arid management of
program proposes a major at
shall not tJicusa him from
penaat on fo wo k dona o
and Penates
USDA
made
the
proposals
at
and forest land
rangeland
making
any
nformatlon
etack
on1
two
basic
related
reserv ces parfo mad o an
(A) A I tax.. mpoaod ond
tu n. eturn o dec arlllon
the dlreclion of the Sol and
de ad outs de of the VII age
Interested persons can review
a moneys withheld o •
source !lroblems that cause loss
fom f ing auch fom o
f be made to appear that qu od to bo withheld by om
Water Resources Conservation of productivity and envitonmen
details of the USDA conser.vatlon
he haa pa d a mun etpa n
p oyere unde the prove110ns f om pay ng the tax
(RCA
of
1977
That
Act
Act
program proposals in any SCS or
tal
degradation
erosion
on
the
come tax on auch net p o
of this chapter and ema n
Soctoon
27
77
of
Agri
requires
he
Secre
ary
Agrlcullural
Stabilization and
nation
s
agricultural
land
espef ts sa ary wagaa comm 1
ng unpaid alter they bes on o othe compensat on coma due aha bea IAterest Boa d of Rav.aw
culture
to
identify
conservation
Conservation
Service (ASCS)
cially
critically
eroding
cro(A) A Boo d of Review
to anothe
mun c pal ty
a the ate of one half pa
per
od
c
appral
needs
through
off
ce
Written
comments or
pland
and
contamination
of
aha be allowed a crad t on cent ( V2) per month o f ac consilting of the pret dent
sals
of
soil
water
and
related
suggestions
on
he proposals
of
the
v
I
age
counc
the
vii
surface
and
subsurface
water
the ta~ mposed by the chap
ton he aof
egomoyor
thov
Hogoclork
resou!'"ces
on
nonfederal
land
be
mailed
by
June 4 to 200
must
For
the
next
several
years
te of the amount m pad by
(8 In add t on to Interest
h m o n h 1 beha f to the as p ov dad n parag aph A trauurer and two add
Public
review
for
the
second
North
High
Street
Room 522
our
major
erosion
reduction
othe
mun Clpal ty
The pena t • baaed on the un tional mamba s appo ntad
major
appraisal
was
in
1987
Columbus
Ohio
43215
efforts
wlll
be
based
on
the
Food
c ad t shall not exceed the pa d tax a a hereby mpo1ed by the village mayor 1 he
The second appraisal report
eby created A maJority of
Security Act of 1985 (the Farm
tax aSJeased by th 1 chapte
at fo lowt
the
mamba
1 of the Boa d
on such net prof t1 telary
t1 For fadu a to JNIY texas
wages comm 11 on o com
due othe than taxes wtth shell conattuta a quorum
pensat on earned n such he d Ono half porcent V.% The Boa d sha I adopt ta
othe mun cpa ty o mun c
pe month or tractiOn the e- own procedu a ru • and
thall k...-p 1 record of ts
pa t as whe e such cjty n
o!
coma tax 1 pad
t2 Fo faueto emt tranaacttOnl Any hearing by
Sect on 27 70 lnqu tltor a
taxet withheld from em the Boo d may be conduclod
Powe s of the V liege Tax
p OYHI Th 18 percent 3% pnvatelv end the p ovis10n1
Adm n stator
pe month o fractiOn the • of Soct on 27 08 whh efor
ence to the confident al
(A TheY agoT.. Adm n
of
st ato pe tonally o h 1
(3 Excapt10na A ponolty cha ecter of nfo matton eagents a e autho mad and ahall not be usassed on an qu od to be d acloaod by th&amp;
By JEFF BERLINER
persist If you have stamina you
Everywhere Gerasimov was
ampowe ad to exam ne the add ttOnal tax aasestmant chapter tha I apply to auch
will
succeed
confron
ed with requests to allow
book&amp; papera and eco dl of made by the Adm n ttrator matters u mey be haa d
ANCHORAGE
Alaska
UPI)
Gov
Steve
Cowper
forma
Jy
travel
across
the Bering Strait
before
the
Boa
d
on
appeal
any amp oye o supposed when a ratu n haa bean filed
IB
A
I
ru
..
end
rogul•
A
top
Soviel
official
urged
asked
the
Sov
el
Union
to
estabespecially
for
Eskimo families
amp oya o of any tax
n good fa th end the tax p11d
ttona and amendments o
Alaskans to persist n promoting lish a consulate n the 49th state separated by the closed border
pave
or 1uppoalld u.x the eon with n the t me changes
the eto which a e
paye n orde to ver fy the p eacribed by tho Adm n a
international tourism and trade and called on both the Soviet and the
for four
ce curta n
accu acy of any return t ato and provided furtha adoptod by the Adm nIt 1
and
predicted
their
efforts
o
American
governments
to
open
decades
made o f no atu n wat that n the absence of fraud to unde the autho ity con
open the border between Alaska
the border Business academic
Alaska Air Unes has scheduled
made to ascarta n the tax netthar panelty nor intereat fer ed by th 1 o d nence
mutt
be
opp
ovod
bY
lhe
and
Eskimo
and
government
leaders
mposed by th s chapta
Siberia
would
pay
off
a
May 31 goodwill flight to
thai be •••sed on any ad
Boa d of Rev fiW before the
(B) Every employe o sup
d tional tax UIBIIment •
leader
Mikha
l
Gorba
Soviet
joined
In
the
call
Providenlya a Soviet Bering Sea
posed amp oye and avery suit ng from a federal aud t same become eHecdva The
chev
s
spokesman
Gennadl
Ge
coast
town 220 miles due west of
Boerd
ahall
hea
and
put
on
taxpaye o tupposed tax
p oviding an amended eCowper called for a more Nome but approval for that date
paye 11 equ ed to furn ah tu n a fllod ond the addl appeal• from any rul na or ras!mov on a four day tr p o
Alaska that included a vlsll t6 the
to the V lege Tax Admin 1
tonal tax • paidwithlnthrea doclolon of the Admin It 1
neighborly relat onshlp with is doubtful Alaska Airlines
tor and.. at the &amp;quilt oft he
t ator or h 1 duly authonzad
3) monttw eftar final dete
Bering
Strait border region said
Siberia
Geraslmov said Kremlin wants to begin summer service
tupeyer
or
Adm
n
atreto
11
agentt o employeea the m nattOn ofthefederaltaal
he
was
Impressed
by
Alaskan
empowe
ed
to
aubatttuta
al
leaders
were vaguely aware of to Providen!ya next year In
means facd t es and oppo
lblily
ternata methoda of alloca
efforts to pry open Russia s back Alaska s Interest in developing conjunction with a cruise ship
tun tv fo tuch exam na
D) Upon acommenda
lion
t ona nvesttgetiont and au
door
t on of the Adm nistreto
t es but he called his trip an company Execut ves of both
tC Any person d aaatil
dill aa are autho lled nand the Boa d of Review may
Geraslmov predicted that per
eye
opener and said he would companies were among the bus!
tied
wtth
any
rul
ng
o
dacl
by th a chopter
abate penalty o mter•t o
slstence
by
Alaskans
Intent
on
lion
of
the
Adminillt
ator
bring
Alaska s message home to ness leaders pushing for Alaska
C)TheVIIogeTo•Adm n
both or upon an eppaal from
Siberia ties during the
h s bosses and to the masses
atrato o h 1 duly autho
tho oluool of the Adm nla whicH 1 made under the opening lhe border would pay off
rlzed agent or amp oyee s trato to ecommend abete- authority confer od by lh a but said the Alaska Siberia front
symposium
Geraslmov
promised
to
devote
further autho ized and am
ment of pena ty o nter•t. ord nenca may appeal the •
er
wou
d
not
be
open
like
the
Geraslmov said it was likely
his
next
monthly
Soviet
televl
powered to exam na under the Boerd may neverth• from the Boa d of R""lew
U
S
Canada
border
and
he
wllh
n
lh
rty
(30)
doya
I
om
that
such flights would be ap
sion
program
the
May
8
ed
!ion
oath any pe 80n concern ng leu abate penalty or nter
the annouRCAmant of auch caution"~~ that old line Soviet
of Panorama
to Alaska s proved once they cleared various
any ncome wh ch wu o
. . . 0 both
rul ng or docoaoon by the Ad
should have bean etu ned Soction 27 76 Colloct on
bureaucrats presented Siberia Initiatives My idea Is bureacratlc hurdles
m n atrato 1nd the Board
fo tauteon and to th 1 end
of Unpaid Tox•
obstacles
Geraslmov who has become
that maybe I can use my 45
tho V !loge Clork T euu er
IAI All taxeo impoood by lhall on hN ng h11111 ju Ia
Yo4
must
be
persistent
In
known
for his wit told a news
diet
on
to
affl
m
evarsa
o
minutes
on
the
air
just
to
show
has the ght and power to thla chapter oholl be collectiyour approaches
Geraslmov this enthusiasm which you have conference; WehadourOctober
compe the producdon of ble together with any inter modify any tuch uling o
boob pepe 1 end ecordl Ill oncf ponoltleo th&amp;~oon by doclolon o ony pontheroof
told the packed Alaska Siberia
tor Improving and expanding Revolutlol)', and one of the
and the attendar1ce of a
ault u other dabto of I ko Section 27 78
symposium
Saturday
sponsored
relations with Siberians in the reasons for the revolution was
pe aons befo e h m whether amount are recoverable Ex Appl cob1 ty
by
the
Alaska
Chamber
of
Thlo
choptor
a
neppl
co
that the czars were so sUJy to
Soviet
Union
cept 111 the c• a of fraud
as part •
o witness•
Commerce and the governor s
whom he be 8Y'81 to have omll110n of a 1ut.tant a bla to eny pa ton or co po a
Geraslmov visited the state have sold Alaska (in 1867) But
know edge of auch ncome
portion of noomeaubjact to tiOn upon whom o which t office
capita of Juneau Anchorage there s no way to get It back
I 0 Refuul of any exam
thil tax or failu e to file 1 a- lo beyond tho logo! powo of
You
see
we
have
perestroika
and
on Sunday flew to the Bering
the Vlllogo Council to om
nat on by any amp oyer o
tu n an addit10nel •••• poaa the tax tt 1 I kawita
res
true!
urlng
of
society)
We
Sea
coast town of Nome From
pe aon subJect to the tax o
nw1t thall not be meda after
Inapplicable
u
to
any
prop
are
now
opening
up
to
the
world
there
he arranged a brief trip to
p eaumed to be such em
Ill 11(31yurafromthotlma
arty Income o proflta (o
p oyer o pe son 10 subject
the etu n wu due o flied
Geraslmov
said
But
there
are
Little Diomede Island where
pon thereof) 11 to wh ch ~ II
conatitutes a m sdemeano
wh chovor Ia lot• provldod
many middle level bureaucrats Alaska Eskimos live just 2 ¥.z
The Ross dependency which has
beyond
the
ogal
powor
of
pun~&amp;ha~e by f ne o mpr s
however n those cat• n
been
adminiStered by New Zealand
who
prefer
old
ways
There
are
Council
to
l111y
the
tu
m Ues from the Soviet s Big
onment or both
which 1 C:omm esioner of In
Soctlon
27
79
s
nee
1923 comprises 160 000 square
many
old
dogs
that
don
t
want
to
Diomede Island In the Bering
Sectoon 27 71 Reco da to terna Revenue and the tex
Conatruct on Sepo ob lty
miles
of Antarctic territory
paye
have
e~tecuted
a
learn
new
tricks
So
If
you
Stralt
be Kopt by Employe a ond
waive of the federal Ratue of Provlalona
Taxpayara
Emp oye 1 and others of I mltollon tho period apply
Thio tochoptor
ohall firm
oot t-==:::;::;:;::;=;:::::=T==;:;:::;;:::::====rl------------~-----~
any poroon
subject to the tax unda th 1 wit!Un which en addtt onal
corporotlon
or
to
ony
prop
Publrc Nottce
Public Not ta
chapter 1 e oqulrod to keep au•tment may be made by •rtv u to whom or which n:
the
Admlnlat
ator
ahel
be
tuch eco dt • wtll enable
ontl1) yeor from tbe t me of Ia beyond the power of the
the fi ng of ttue and accu
Village Councl to lmpoao ltockholdoro o wilh othe
chapt•
ate retu na. whetha for the final determination of the tox horoln provldod for
corporatlono
rolotod by Soctlon 27 a4
tho
lodtra
to•
I
oblllty
taxn withheld It tou caor If
atock ownorohlp lntorlock
Elu-• Lou Sot off
B) Tox11 orronoouoly po d If .ny untance claun aac
taxn payable upon ea nings
ing d rectorat• o trantac
t on or pert of thla chapter
IAI ' looa IIUito nod by on
thai
not
be
refunded
unl••
o nat p oftts or both. and
tiona whh ouch dlvlaton
o any tax agalntt any lndi
ndlvl..,al who II ongogod In
tuch aco dt a e to be pr• a c 1m fo refund made vidual or any of tM twerel
brooch ftct81"/ office lobo
a buain•o. in oddhlon to be
served to enable the V llllliJa whh n three 131 yHra from groupo apoc tlod h•aln Ia
l'lltory
or
activity
or
by
some
lng 1 pM'tner of member of
tha data wh ch auch pey
C ark of any agent or em
other mothod he ohall melee 1nother uaocl.tion or bualfound to be unconstttu
m.,t
waa
mlde
or
the
eturn
ployeeoflheV logoTo•Ad
he n•a. may not be aet off
ouch allocation• u
tlonol llllagei or lnvo ld.
due or whhln thr11 (3
min tt ator to ve lfy the doomo
opproprlato
lo
protuch
uncanlt~ut
onallty
II
ogeinot the p oflta of the
cor ectnass of the etu na mont._ oil• final dllorml
duce 1 falrandproporalloca
logallty or Invalidity ahel of
othl&lt; lllodtllon or buoinotion
of
the
focloral
tex
N•
Iliad
tlon
of
nat
proflto
10
the
vA
fact
only
euch
aent•u•
n•o. nor ogeinot the Mlory
Soctoon 27 72 Colloctoon of blllty which wor Ia lotor
logo
ciMIM O«tlon or port ofthlo
wlae commillekln or other
C)
Amouma
of
l11o
then
Daflcianc aa Allowance of
Soctlon 27 81
chiiPI•
ond
ohall
notoffoct
peftonal aervicl OOf!IPenaa
One Dol• 1• 1 OO)ahal not
Crodlt fo Ovorpoymant
Split Poyrolla
o mpolr ony of the oma n
tlon Uf ony) which ho moy
bo
coHocted
or
rolundod
A) II oo arllull oflnVMII
(AI In the ••• of hourly ..m In onother capoclty
ng provlolona ..,tonSoctlon 27 71 Vlolotlona
gotion canductod by the VI
employ...
where • peyroll Nor mey the buolnllolooo of
e
....
aectiona
or
othM'
age Tax Adm nlat ator 1 re- Penal! lea
contlnu• ~tJuly 1 1988 on •ooolotion or buoln11a
pono of thlo choptor It It
AI
Any
penon
who
ahel
turn it found to be incorrect.
ond oald poyroll do• not- be Mt off ogalnot the proflla
1) Fall oogloct or roluao hortby declarod to be the n
the V age Tex Adm n11tr•
untl 1 p-d In July 1988 61 another bualntoo onaoaod
tentlon
of
the
VIIICountor ll authorized to UIMI to mike eny mu n or dad a cil thll lh • cheptor would told poyroll ahell be aooald
In by 1 member Of penn• o1
ration
oqulrod
by
thlo
chop
and collect eny underpay
orad
•
oplit
poyroll
.,d
u
auch
••oclotlon or buoihove
ocloptod
hod
ouch
mant of tax wh:hheld at tor or
unconotllutlonal lllagei or ouch thlo poyroll wll not be n•• or ogalnot the Mlory
21
Make
any
ncampleto
.au ceo any underpeymant
IIIYIIIcl ........
ciiUII
•J.,oct to wllhholclng tex comrnllolon or othor
of ta• owing by any tu:payer false or hu..,lent retum or O«tion or port thoroof not u
thlo choplor Thlo II to pononol
camptrll•
131
Foil
nogloct
or
IliuM
with r•pact to ee n ngs or
..., only the flrat fuR poy for lion which a mombor of
.
lncludod
t'-aln
net profits or both, If no r• to wltfthold the tex from hlo
Soctlon 27 80
hourly ornployIf portMr moy earn In another
turn hea been flied end a tax employ- or rornlt auch Conoolldatod Rotumo
tor July 1 1188 ondaltpoy
wllhholtlng
10
the
Admlnla
Ia found to be owing the tax
the CMI of on ind
(A) FUing of conoolldotod rolll -Hit« wll - m •
trator or
octuolly owing moy be u
atumo rnoy bo permltlocl or MIJ..OCI IO
Wllhholclng vklual who rune two or mora
141
FaM
nogloct
or
ofuH
-•ocl ond colloctod whh or
thlo chlptor
NqUirod In oooordan.. wkh u
buoln•-- lntlvlduol prowithout the lormeilty of ob- to poy the tax ponoll._ or in
IBI
AH
oolarfld employ- prlotonhlp lou from one
rulea
end
regulations
praatlroat
lmPGOocl
by
thlo
chop
tl nlng 1 delinquent ~urn
paid on a cal.,cler month ouch buoiMoo 11111'1 be Mt off
c )bed by tbo Admlnlatrotor
tor or
f om the employ• or ltlx
wll bo oubjoct to wllhhold- agalnot the not proflto of the
Ill
In
l
h
o
e
o
f
o
1&amp;1 Rofuao to pormit the
PIYt
lng undor thlo choptor 11 of other (but not ogolnot Ill•
otlon
that oorrlocl In
Admlolotrator or any duly
IBI Shou d It be clacloaocl
JuiV 1 11S8
lrtriOIGtlono
wllh
Ita
rflo ....-orot'--11
a - o d - ' or om
olthor u a rMull of on iml•
.-holdora or with ot'- Soctlon 27 82
..,lae DOm-"'&gt;n) Tho
ployoo
IO
...
mini
hlo
IJoolco
1 gotion by tho Vlllogo Tu
-otlono rei•ocl by Wlthholtlng Stet-to
0111!*-(1ll)tu-be
Adm nlotrator or lh oufh - d a or PI'*' ralotlngto atock OWftlflhlp lhleiiDak
Tho Mlddloport Income l..lld on the llnll n• buo~
the
lnoo,.
or
not
proflto
of
a
tho mod um of the filing o o
" ' - qulcldU'IIIIdl • c1111111M 1111c1 . . . to
lng clr-rot"' or oomo Tax O.ortm• wll roqulro n111 ln110n11 of the lndl
claim or pothlon lo rolund
q outll. ..... 11-.11 IIIII 001110 111111111 ar
other mothod. or In ...e ony the filing of ""'ployoo _ ...
or credit that an overpay
-oppHr
-·
• SECTION
II
-~~~ rtt wiiiiJOUrwdtubiariO.-•gllll.
_ . . . . • dlvlllon. lngo NfiOit ,....,bllno fl. vlduol
the
...,lnlltrllor
ondto
pro.
mont h • - mode the
brench foctory oflloo. lebo- donllorm w 2•ofDeOom
Thll Ordln- ohlll toke
a~ Baa•-..r Bowl lor~ nee 11 "' Stlp-byhlo bMb. - d o onct rotorv or ICit1vlly within tho blr31 1111 orot-•b- lfftal
VIII- Clerk Tr-..,. wll ocllotoly upon lla
,..,.. ral-g to the In
lllp lnltrucllana lor 10 wrwiOne (3 .,_, tin).
refund ouoh ovorpoymonl
clata,
•
raaanoll•
Vlllogo -!luting • por
Whip lhlm up lor youlle(l or lor glfta
(C) Tho employer wll In oomo or M! proflto of a tax
=::;rD Apr(( 11 19aa
tlon only of Ito total bull- ,..,..
upon
ordor
or
Mlb, _ . .of. totol
wllh poyrollo.
payroll
wery lnatance be required
7101 Dreu up a alaalc d1'11118 or IWNI8f w1111
AnESl':
Jon
P
Buell
- .. thl AdmlnlotNtor lheil
to poy the lull to• which - o of tho Admlnlotrllor NqUire Mlch oddltlonal ln- IIIIOUniiNP'"Iod.,bjecrtto
dramellc croct•t colin and cufl8 Use : : ; : •
Cl'!fl!
T,..u,.
or
Otrec:tloua for 2COllars and 1 set of
ahould h..,. whhheld
Mhlcl lW'"~ Ohio VIII-In
Freel Hofllri• Meyor
171
RofuM
IO
clo-1
IO
lormotlon
..tohe - MOII1Iiln
oven though he moy leilto
oomo IL
OPPIII GOOOTHIIU AUO. J1, ...
n
•err
of
Middleport
the Admlnlotrllor ony lnfllr
withhold from the om
IIDtlon
'D
83
w
h
,
.
.
proflto.,.propThe
~lng
Ordln•oo
EACH
MTTIAN U 2S PLUS 11 00 P'H
ployoo If too much h"' boon matlon wllh ,.._. to the orty olloollld IO the Vllllgtl
V-Poy
II
hlroby
opprov.d
..
to
withhold the ex-• ohall be lnaomo or not proflto of • If tho Admlnlot- IIndo
VIOitlon poy pold In 19S8 form
ofundod by the employer to ~a~~,_ or
not proflto are not proporly ond In .a oubaoqu.,t yun. St..,., ltory Law Dlroctor
Send to Patterns
6315
18)
Falllo
comply
with
the
tho omployoo Wh It the
Miclclopon Vlllprovlolono of thlo choptor or alloooted to the VIH- by wll be oubJoct to wllhholdBoll
4000
Niles
Ml
49f20
4000
withholding agent (om
,..on of tfMUICtlon wkh lng doductlono under thlo 141 2&amp; 1&amp;1 2 2tc

ov•• •

Ponwoy-Middleport OhiO

Public response welcomed
on USDA program changes

Soviets urge international tourism to
continue at Alaska, Siberia border

••mod

'ifi'r:.~

.....,lllt

mad

Deot

I

-·--·=----

-w

--

-~-

.-:=.

D-ORO::~~: ~:t:~: 4 L--..:!~~~!!·~~~s~!S~e~rv~ai~c~e~SL_j

)

88
AN DRD NANCE AUTHO
R Z NG COOPERAT VE
AGREEMENT FOR CON
STRUCTION MA NTE
NANCE AND OPERAT ON
OF TITLE I CONSTRUC
TION PROJECT BETWEEN
THE VILLAGE OF MIDDLE
PORT AND THE OHIOWA
TEA DEVELOPMENT AU
THORITY AND
DECLARING AN
EMERGENCY
WHEREAS THE V age of
M dd eport he e nafta
fa ed to as the LOA
s
unda o da sf omtheD ec
to of Env on menta P otec
ton to contt uc certa n
was a wa a t eatment and
sewage co ect on faetl t n
as spec fed n sa d o de s
and
WHEREAS the LGA de
1 es to co ope ate with the
Oh o Wate Devalolpment
Autho ty he a naf e a
far ed to as he OWDA n
the const uc on ma ntenance and ope a on of such
fac 88 th ough the OW
DA s Loca Gove nment
Agency P ogram natltuted
pu suaant to Ragulat ona
adop ad by the OWDA on
Decemba 6 1979 as
amended unda the p ov
a ons erma and cond t ons
set forth n Exh b A an
ached he eto and made a
part he eof and
WHEREAS the OWDA
has stated ts des e to
coope ate n he canst uc
ton ma ntenance and ope
at on of such fac It 11 unde
he p ov ttans e ms and
cond t ona set forth n Ex
h bit A
NOW THEREFORE BE T
ORDAINED by he Counc
of the V ogo of M ddloport
Oho
SocllOn 1 Thot the LGA
he ebv app oves the con
st uc on ma ntenance and
ope It on of the afo esa d
waste wate t eatment and
sewage co act on fee t ea
n coope at on with the
OWDA unda thep ov 1 ona
te ms and cond tons tat
forth n the Coope atrve
Ag eement fo Con1t uc
t on Me ntanance and Oper
at on of T tie II Construct on
P ojact as let forth n
Exhibh A and he aby autho
izM the Ch et ExecutiVe
Off ce and the Ch ef F seal
Off ce of LGA to executa
such an agreement with the
OWOA subltant a y n the
form set forth n EKh bit A
Sect on 2 Tha t s
and de e m ned that al
fo mal act ons of th s Coun
c conce n ng and elat ng
to he passage of th a
o d nance we a passed n an
op~ meet ng of th 1 Coun
c and that a del be at ona
of th s Counc I and of any of
ta comm ttaes that 81Uited
n such fo ma ect on we e
meet nga open o the publ c
n comp ance w th a agel
equ ements nc ud ng Sec
ton 12122 of th&amp; Oho
Rev aed Code
Sect on 3 Tha th 1 o d
nance a he aby decta ed to
be en eme gency mauu a
neceuary fo he mmediata
pe Hrvateon of the pub c
peace heelth and ufety of
•• d V lloge of M ddlopon
fo
he eaton hat the
mmed ate conttruct on of
the was a wa e t eatmant
and uwage co act on fee I
tHat the ea I Bit po11ba
t me s necessary n o de to
p otect tha health of the
nhab ants of he LGA by

Embroder
pretty flowers on a
bedspread all easy
stitches aumlng
des gn and transfer
12 motfs
0 ract ons tw n &amp;
double spread nc
Each pattern S3 25
plus $100 PH
OFFER GOOD
THROUGH
AUG 3 988

Send to Reade Ma
Oep 0000 Box 4000

es Ml 49 20 4000
Prln Name Add ess
Zp Sze Pane n Num
be IN Y&amp; Ml es dents
add sa es ax)
N

RADIATOR
SERVICE

.. :::.-o:"-

L&amp;L
INDEPENDENT
CARPET
CLEANERS

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

The Best Technique
In Carpet Cleaning

WeCa ryf1hng Supp ea

PAT HILL FORD

742-2451

992 2196

Pubhc Not1ce
p ov d ng adequato d opoo
ton of watte wate wha a
fo e th 1 o d nance shall be
n fu fo ce and effect f om
and mmed ately efta ts
PIINge
PASSED Ma ch 28 1988
ATTEST Jon P Buck
Cia k T a11u e
F ad Hoffman Mayo
41 26 (6 2 2tc
Pubhc Not ce
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LINIITATION
NOTICE 1 hereby g von
that n pu IUinCB of a Re
., ut on of the Boa d of Edu
cat on of the Meeg1 loca
Schoo D st oct M ddlapon
Oh o pasted on the 18th
day of Feb uory 1988 tho o
w II be aubm ned to a vote of
the people of M d Ma ga
Local Schoo 0 at ct at a
Pr marv Elect oo to be hold
n the Me gs Local D ttnct
of Ma 91 County Oh o at
the regula placaa of vat
ng therein on Tuaaday the
th d day of Moy 198a tho
quelt on of levy ng a tax n
axcau of the ten m Ill m ta
ton fo tha benefit of Me gs
Loca School D st let fo the
pu po1a of Cu ant Ex
pen set
Sa d tax be ng an add
t onal 6 0 m lla to un fo a
cant nu ng per od of t me It
a ate not eKceed ng 6 0
m 1 fo each one dollar of
valuat on wh ch amountt lo
I fly conta $0 601 fo uch
one
hund ed do art of
valuat on fo a cont nu ng
pa odoftme
The Pol 1 fo u d E ect10n
w II be open at 8 30 o clock
A M and rema n open unt
730ocockPM
By o do of the Boord of
E act ont of Meigs County
Oho
Eva yn Clark Cha man
Jane M Frymyar Directo
Doted 3 23 1988
(4111 18 25 [S 2 4tc
Pubhc Nottea
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE a he eby glvon
that n pu auanca of a Re
aolut on of the Boa d of Edu
cat on of the E11tam Local
Schoo 0 at ct Roodavlllo
Ohoo pooood on tho 8th doy
of Fob uory 19B8 thoro w
be subm ttad to a vote of the
poop o of Mid Eoatorn Local
School D tt ct at a Pnmery
Elect on to be held n the
Eastern Loca Diet ct of
Me gs County Oh o at the
regu a p aces
of vot ng
the a n on Tuatday the
th d day of Moy 1988 the
quest on of evy no a tex n
axca11 of the ten m I I m ta
tlon for the benet t of Eas
tarn Local Schoo D stnct
fo the purpoae of Current
ExpenJat
Sa d tax be ng en add
tiona 12 4 milia to run fo a
coni nulng period of time at
a ate not exceed ng 12 4
m 111 fo each one dol a of
va uation wh ch amounts fo
one do Ia and twenty fou
centa (t1 24~ fo each ona
hund eel do 1 aofva uatlon
fo cont nulng period of
tmo
Tho Polla fo aold Elect on
w lbeoponol830ocock
A M end remeln open wtt I
730oclockPM
By orde of tho Boa d of
Eloctlona of Molgo County
Oho
Evolyn Clerk Cha rmon
Jooo M Fryroyor Dlrecto
Dated 3 23 1988
(4 1 1 1a 26 (B) 2 4tc
Public N ot1ce
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE lo hortby given
thot In purouonoe of a Ro
oo ullon of tho Vllllflt Coun
ell of the Vlllogo of llutltr1d
Rutlo,..t Ohio poooed on
tho 1111 clay of
t 917 theN will bo . .mil
1111 t o . - of tho -plo of
lllid Rutllnd Vlllqo It • Prf
mory E l - to be held In
tho Vlllogo of llutlond Olllo
at tho rogulor ploae of voting
thoraln on Tllllclay, the
th rd dov of Moy, 1181 the
quootlon of levying 1 tox n
...,_ of tho ton mill lim to

o--

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CAW
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

161 No th So&lt;ond

Middleporl Oh o 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Phone
Cabo B lis Hera

mont¥ UMmblingTeddy . . . .

z LISA M KOCH MS

- 2203.
2203.
Ki&lt;al....,... F ' 0
32742

Ucensed Chmcal Aud1olog1st
~ (614)
446 7619 (614) 992 2104
417
Second
-z s o 45631o at 1213
Avenue

Box

Oh

Galhpol

GOVERNMENT JOBS
159230 .. -

0 &amp;040

Veterans Memor al Hosp tal
Mulber

Em-

F M lnformltion Write: Jo.EI

Otlp.,d.M:II. WOMM nlilded tor
chi d - · .... hou..........., Ill
my home. Ref•an«* ttlnapor
.tlon raqulr.ct Cll 114-44681551 betn•• 6-9 PM

0

X

Eoro

AISEioiii.EIII - ·

hlr1ng. You 1 •
8015-117
1000. ex R 0 89 for CUf'l'lnt:

y Hgts Pomeroy

Fed•tl ilt

1300

WEEK Y a .. amblyin.PJ:GGACUI
n yOU home. Burt
IWIY

._d

J&amp;L

No •PIMna. Nac...-ry
•• ed~•IMI stJmP«&lt; enveooe o HOMECIIAFTS P 0

INSULATION

Box 7802.

WV

Huntinigllon.

257711

CALL 992 2772
GARAGE 1k
POLE
BUILDINGS
ROOFING &amp;
GUTTERS
4 II I mo

d

16141 992 6SSO

RES DINCE PHONE

It I Rutlo..d Oh 45775

16141

• 3 II

p

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Roger Hysell
Garage

EXCAYAnNG

•Doze • Backhoe Work
•W II Oo Hau ng With
Dump Truck
•Wrecke Service
•Junk Yerd Bualn•••
WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
IIINI CAll 01 TIUCKS
-fRII ESTIMAIU
For any of lhna '""""call

PH 949 2969

lotwHn • a nt. 6 p m
or Loan

6 17 tic

Pubhc Notu:e

Public Notice

ton fo the benefit of Rut
land V liege fo the pu poae
of p ov d ng and ma nta n
ng moto veh cles commu
n cat ona and otha aqu p
ment uaed d rectly n the op
e at on of a police depart
mant o the payment of sa
a ea of permanent pol ce
pa aonnal
nc ud ng the
payment of the po ceman
amp aye 1 cont but on equ red undo Met on 742 33
of the Rev aed Code
Sa d t1x be ng an 1dd
tona taxof80mlltto un
for five (6) yaau at a att not
exceeding 8 0 m 1 fo each
one do 1 of
va u8t on
which amounta to a ghty
cants (tO 80 fo each one
hundred do artofvaluat on
for flvo 6) yoora
The Pol 1 for aaid Elect on
wl beopanet630ocock
A M and remain open unt I
730oclockPM
By o de of the Boa d of
E act ona of Meigs County
Oho
Eve yn Cia k Cha man
Jane M Frymyer D acto
Dated 3 23 1988
141 1 1 18 26 16 2 4tc

sad co ne be ng the TRUE
PLACE OF BEGINNING of
the parce he e n conveyed
hence along Owne 1
easta y ne and sa d cante
I na w th a curve to the eft
hav ng a ad um of 964 93
fee a can al ang a of 5
deg oas 38 m nlnaa 48
second• an a c eng h of
9411 feet and a chod
bea ng South 9 deg eas 16
m nutea 38 seconds West a
d stance of 94 07 feet to a
pont on 11 d easta y I neat
Stat on 443 pus 76 97 on
sad cante ne
thence cont nu ng a ong
sa d ne and sad cente ne
South 6 dag ees 27m nutes
14 seconds Watt e d stance
of 26 97 tee to a po nt at
Stolon 443 p ua 50 00 on
sad cente ne
thence North 83 deg " '
32 minu •• 46 seconds
Was a d stance of 30 00
fee
to a po nt on the
ex st ng weate y ght of
way ne of U S Ro A :l::l
sa d po nt blt1ng 30 00 teet
aft of Stat on 443 p us
60 00 on the centa I ne of U
S Route 33
thence along tha weater y
I ne of a propoud h ghway
easement to be taken fo
P o eel MEG 33 01 73
North 6 degrees 27 m nu es
7 seconds West ad s ance of
108 48 feet
o a pont
55 00 feet eft of Stat on
444 pus 5000 on sad
cane Ina
thence cont nu ng a ong
the waste y I na of sa d
easement North 31 deg ees
51 m nutet 54aeconda East
adstanceot2447feet toa
pont on Ownert aaste v
Ina aod pont beng48 60
feat left of Stat on 444 p us
7182onudcenta Ina
lhence • ong Owna 1
easte ly I ne South 76 de
g 111 41 m nutas 2 seconds
East a d stance of 46 64
feet to the T ua P ace of
Beg nn ng contl n ng 0 12
ofanace moreo 111 of
wh ch the Present Road
Occup et 0 08 of an ac a
more o •••
Th 1 desc pt on 1 baaed
on a survey made under the
d ec on and supervluon of
Rona d W E fort Reg lie ad
SuNoyo No 6046
Sa d a at ona be ng the
St•t on numbert as st pu
lated in the here nbefo e
mentioned survey and as
1hown by plans on f Ia n the
Department of T anspona
t on Columbus Oh o
Owne 1 cam ttla by
nat ument reco ded n Vo
umo 242 ol Pogo 2B7 and
Volume 290 ot Page 716 of
lho Deed Roco do of Me go
County Oh o
Said pe tons noted above
shall furthe take not ce thet
un 111 they o the r anor
ney f 1 an Anawar no ater
than 28 deya efta the
comp at on of the Serv ce by
Pull lcotlon they w II be
deemed to have we ved the
right to answa end the
petit on w11 be tekan 11 true
end judgment w be ren
derodocco dlngly ClviRulo
121AH1l
BERNARD B HURST
D rector of Tranaportat on

2

In

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
AI

Reasonable Pr &lt;IS

PH 949 2101
or Res 949 2860
Day

or

Ntght

NO SUNDAY CALLS

IOGGS

'SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S RT SO EAST

GUYSVILLE 01110
614 662 3121
Authonzod

John

Dooro

Now Holland lull Hot
Farm fc(ulpm011t
Doalor

f•r• E4elp•ett
P1tt1 &amp; Strrl~•

13Htfc

GRANDMA
(Lucy) GAUL
On Her 92nd
Birthday
April 2&amp;
Remembered
With Love
Barbara Roger
Rodne lk Sis

3

Regitt....t Nur11wenttd lmme-

Announcements

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Wen eeL Peraon lo work In
Clolllpola offlco I • d '"l'ly
•urN to Box C • t•&amp;. Glllipo-

INSULATION

H.., Stylllts AI: 011 The

4

G•veaway

FREE ESTIMA n5

JAMES KEESEE

old !lz German Shepherd. ~

Coli al!ar 5 30 PM
8 4-388-8101

E k Hourld

•FURNACES
•A R CONDIT ONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

•RangH •Freezers
•Refrigerators
Must lo Repo ralllo

FREE ESTIMATES

PH 992·2772
32888 I

SMAU ENGINE
IEPAII
Serv ce

&amp; Parts
Br us &amp; Stratton
TtCUIISth
Weed Eate
Homtl to

Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport Oh

10-IU.

DEAD OR ALIVE

lEN'S lPPUANCE
SIIYICE

Sheep dog. 5 moa. old Femele.

To 1 good home Celll14-317
0889

TWo bl"'* ,...a-Oanopupo

f...._

One mill• OM
Good
watch dog~. gentle. In ~•••
nMd of a good hame lihDne

814-742 2317 0 814-742
2388

6

lost and

Found

P E MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

Health Care

Aaency

Wo Provldi Co11 Fo The
Elderly In Their Homo
NURSES AIDES
ORDERLIES LPN a
Hourty o Ltve-ln
Arrangement•
BONDED INSURED
Whh

3 II lin

Will do Federal
and State
Income Tax
typmg
bookkeepmg
and Notary
Servtce

LDII bftween N8W' HIY• •
M neNo 3 onegreanA""VM'IO
box wfth m tc: Hind tools.

- · d COl 304-882 2253 or
878-8890 D......

LOST •ve amount moM¥ In

al'nlll to ded brOW"n P'P• beg In
t100 bllt Point P . .lnt Oa
poUs .,_ Wednlldrt. WI •
wardfo mum 304-1198-3855

3 21 17 I mo

Ml ttl'nta

1oto1n8t eooo.•o.OIII0487H

a.b¥•1ft• neect.d tor 2 •d 4
,.. old. Mltura wtth •IJII.,CI Cell e14-112 . . ., or
81'1-112 3033
AVON AI • - Cell
w.
... ,.,....,.. . .

7

,.,.,n

Oontmiioo 11...,. 23 ,_.._

rr .. ,_.,.,. .......... . -....
GED colegawlth..., op..!ng
n dlrtctt. c.tnetNCI:ktnand.,.o
cl•ol.
col Jim - - only
9:00 Alol to 4:00PM llor11 28

-,._Job0-344-IOM
.........
me oollecl:

outokloWVa 800.824-1111

S.ac-v Aa~lo~ m;:'dre
P•IOIIIble lntlw.....
ln

on--,.--.~

ly-

flee. Good .,.niiW •••.-.•
lklls •• •eantill .... ...
ld. . at bulin- ........ . .
tlono. 0 - d ..
0
pnil..ionat ..... , .... e~~r. of
1011 P20 PI PI AoglaiOi 200
- • 8 PI PI WV~IIIO
AR lEA SUPEAY18011

of Uoyd aaper
now tM lng • •
ND lnvaatment

Led _. HDu•

P.ty Phn

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

IU ......... orl

Yard Sale

114.373-1177
FEDERIIL ITATE AND aYI.
SEAVICEJOII
l*lntl.
113.110
to • • 4to lmmtdl•• o....m38Col 1 318)733-1062 ...
IColhy -

l'omeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; VICinity

vour••

We buy quills P t1910 1 Arrv
condlt on
1400 Need

cas

Situ llti0n1
Wanted

12

now Col 814-992 8857

Elm Homo, 209 S Fourtll,
Mldcl- Oh o - m .,d

Public Sale
8t Auct1on

8

boardloraoniordt-alpoolar
c••
in prMie ..,me. 11... H28173

W-or'a Auctloo Sorvice•vl lillie M you convenienoa
end loCitlont Mtr In Wed•
m.,w Auction.., 114-24151&amp;2.

I now h•a an GpMinf for 1
eld.-tr women or ...., In ""
prlwlte hona 17 yrs. . , . .

ionce Tuppon PI- 01111
I 14-887 3402.

Auctionw Cd Oac• E Cldt.
304-1811-3430 l c No 711488

R «* Pe•aon Auct on.r H
oennd Oh o Wid w.. vtrgln a.

Eltlte antiQue fwm. iquld~
on oal• 304-773-1715

9

Wanted

To Buy

We pay c•h fo Itt modal o1...

uled•a.

J m Mink Ch.-, .Oidl nc.
Ill O.n 1 John eon

Wll

mow ,.,. In "' n1

,....

A•• depends on 11M of
l'"'d ean aft• 4:00 304-17&amp;3179

lint

Babrtlting '" rnw home •c
lotetian AWMf from road. w•h
o w &lt;qulp.-1 Aef l'rovklocl.
304-773-lltl

lnaur~ce

13

&amp;14-&lt;1411 3172

Margaret Parker

992 2264

"I

p_, limo AN ..., _ . , dow
shift ICF.&amp;NF long ..... c•a
focllty. ll..,...oNu-gc.tar

lftyt

Free Eotlmatea

NO SUNDAY CAW

0 2203,
Ftp 32742
2201

•nc•d nu 1

.... . _ . lullf

PH 949·2101
or let 949-2160

ICitsimmM.

lh ough 4 27 I Contaat
Am• cer•Pomwoy Nu aing
and Roh..,.hatlon Cooter flo
ollono eolia ,._.. E o E

We Servlce AU Makea
I 22 BB lin

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

inlofnwtion. Write: Jo.l

E-lng appllcallo1Wior O!(po.

985·3561

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Em-

.-nt«&lt; Eam rnoTICkft ean.

utM\bllng

Govarnrn.rt Jo._ ' " 040
089 230 y Now l*lng. Vou
· - fliOI-..71000 •t "
9805 for curront Fodarol ln.

Mile 1mtft whllt doG. 1 bt..:k
•'fl and apota 30'-l'&amp;.-1415

WANTED

n•
F•

AtNmbl. .

3y

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulat on
•Storm Doo •
•Storm Window•
•Replacement W ndows
•New Root ng

ltr•

lllllking on1
oddlllonal .............. .....,,
lor more than Ntt anottw jDb.
Call Torr 01 814--lltltO lor
dlliMI

ltyting ..ton •

1 28 88 tfn

•Wa~hera •Dryers

Home

118 04CJ..
ou2301 II 1 BOS-.887 8000 Ellt R
9805 for ..,.,. Fad... llot

319 So 2nd Ave
Mtddleport Oh1o

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

992 161,

N--•v-

Qovwnmem Jo._

3 2888 I mo

J&amp;L

Author zed

oa DaliyTrl ... .._l251hlrdA,.
OH •5831

a...,..

992-6282

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

ll•ety tG IUpii'Vil• the niW
Holz.,. Cln c Weight ReGiodon
Pro91'.n f lnt....rad call 814-

•4&amp;-5244.

Locatod Hallway Be
tween Rt 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
B 7 F none ng On
Ya dman
So YKI On All Moket
We H - MC/Dnc/V ta
4 18 88 In

PH 992 2772

TOP CASH pold for '83 modol
and n ...• wad en Smith
................ 1811 - """ Clolllpolla can 114-44&amp;-

c• ~,~, fo y~ mollie home
nsu ance Miller ln1urance
30. 882 21 •1 A IO MilO
home Mfa health.

2282.

CHARLIE'S

MIDTOWN

Memorl•m

In Memory Of

Announce men Is

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alii TUltMIIIIOI
PH 992 5682
or 992·7121

Would vou Ike • n.,. look tar
Op&lt;ing Cal MoryKoy CONUII...
fo ofraofaclol- 114-318-IDI

haler ...

Rt 124 Pomeroy Ohoo

614-742-2617

dog-•

Wanted

EARN AS MUCH •

IUSINESS PHONE

MIKE LEWIS OWNER

LEGAL NOT CE
FOR PUBL CATION
SHARON DAY DSON
whose add eas as s un
known o the Pia ntiff w
taka not ce that aha has been
aued by the 0 recto of
T antportat on of the State
of Oh o who has nstrtuted a
p oceed ng n the Common
Pleas Cou I of Me gs
County Oh o to app op
eta certa n p operty daa
c bed he aafta fo h ghwey
purpose• nama y the mak
ng contt uct on o m
p ovamen ot Sta a Route
No 33 Sect on 1 73 Me v•
County Oh o and to I • tho
value of 11 d property The
p oparty sought to be ap
p op atad 1 mo e epee f
cally d"c bed at fo ows
DESCRIPTION OF
THE PARCEL OF LAND
AND ESTATE INTERESt
OR R GHT THERE N
APPROPRIATED
S tuatad n theTownth p
of Bedford County of Me 91
and State of Oh o and
known 11 be ng part of
Sect on 17 Town 4 Range
16 and mo a fu y bounded
and deacr bed aa fo owa
PARCEL NO 1
H GHWAYI
PERPETUAL
EASEMENT FOR
HIGHWAY PURPOSES
Be ng a pa ca of land ly ng
on the left 1 de of the
canterl na of a aurvay made
n 1987 by Korda Nomoth
Englneenng Inc for the
Department of Tranaporta
t on and be ng located
With n the fo low ng dea
cribtd po nta
Commencing fo
efe
ance at the touthweat
co ne of the northweat
quortor of Section 17
thence along the southerly
ne of u d northwe1t qua
tor South 86 dogr- 62
minutea 49 HCOndl Eatt I
d atonco of 34a 7&amp; loot lo •
point at Station 448 pluo
1 1 97 on tho cantor no of U
S Route 33
thence along 11 d canta
no South 30
3&amp;
mlnutaa 38 aaconct1 Wast a
d atonce of 33 39 loot to o
point at Station 44 7 pluo
78 118 on uld contorllno
thanae continuing along
ukl centerline with a aurva
lo tho loft ....,lng • rod ua of
954 113 loot 1 aentrol anglo
of 18 ..._a3Dmlnutoa311
Moondo ond orelongth of
308 BD loot ond a chord
boorlll'g South 21 dogrooa
21 mlnut• 20 -onda
Woot ad otonoe of 30718
foot to the Ownon uotorly
corner 11 Station 444 pluo
70 oa on aold conterl no

Help

Lstenmg Dev1ces
Dependable Hear ng A1d Sales &amp; ~n•ir.•
CJ Heanng Evaluat ons For All Ages

FREE ESTIMATES

We can repa1r and re
core radiators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d boll and rod
out rad1ators We also
repair Gas Tanks
M ddleport Oh1o
1 13 tfc

Sl'r v •u·:

11

992 3410

--.., =-

..r.;·:::

t

lnqilr ·1 rirl:rll

Business Services

•-leo

k,.,

The Dally

•o - -.... "' .......

~I . . , _ lllao wood I
tu,.

coat._.... 8wafn • Flmllure

I Auction, Third •
814-44&amp;-3111

OO.o

VIDEOS
HIWIDE
MUllLROADING
SUPPUIS

""lin

2 11-1110

....., ...* ....
614-742·1355
4 11 17 1 ...

loll¥•.... -~~~~~· ft ......
lloura, or fut 1'll'd. claooto- 3114-1~
2784

Saturday
12 N.n tiA "i PM.

CAN OIDII Mad1m
GUNS ON REQUEST
AI IIDIDI•IIIt Prlcll
It 114 Acreu

- mow owna In
(In
town Call 11 .... 44&amp;.. . .

Open Ma•r thru

Coraer tf New Uma
1-' I lrpnt StrMt

Rutlallll Ohio

or 1ntorlo!l
work. ..... I $111 .....
1tea Ca I Ma k 11• 241
1111
Pointing (..-

E.:el

Gall......,

PH 742 2133

llack Po'*r
................1..

18 Wanted to Do

Old 1100'oloaooblnorhouaoto
- - Callt"14-24&amp;-t448
Uaod MobloHOmao Call 1 11444&amp;-0t71

A lo I Odd lol&gt;a you -

II WI

can do • AUio. ._.n • .......

- - - 3114-77s.1041,
WI llloln•d-lor.._
p..on . . . . . . . . . . . .

coi30"-III-IIIO

-····-

a.:oo

Lown-Ropalto

am•Gor--

304-&amp;7SotS81

~~-

�I

Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel
18

Wanted to

Do

51

LAFF-A-DAY

Sundei::k•. lidlng. painting. roof~
inq. C¥pent., work. trailer ,..
pa1r. Call 814-379-2418.
Cleenlng.Housfl &amp; oHiC*. Ref-

•enc•. Call 814-446-8788 or
245-5383.
Will hall-.,., kind oftraah Mcept
c• bodl•. 120 pidlu p load. Call

304-876-15482 Of 875-7274.

laNna cut and trlmm.t. Call

614-445-9391 .
R ' 1 Roofing- Siding &amp;

1912.

GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigerators.
rang•• · Skagg1 Applilncll;
Up.per Rlwr Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446·7398.

Wouklllke to ch:t housecleaning.
·

Will do mowing and complete
yard ,.,..,ice, ~toting &amp; tmBII
Clll'pentry work. Price dep~~nda
on ;ob. Call 614-~6-6342 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
11,............. ~-- ... -

flelible houra. Part or full trme.

21

ffiOre fun?
~:=;~~~~~~~~r;;~~~~~~~~:1
44

Business
Opportunity

1986 Redman Seatlonel ,home.
2ilaH. 3 BR , contn~leir.' rudy
to be moved. C.ll 614-4488594 after 6pm.
·

I NOTICE I

121150 Mobile Home with porch
In Cfown City. t3700, Negotiable. Call 814-448-0278 efter 8

ntE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH-

ING CO. recommendl tMt you
do buain . . wtth people you
know. and NOT to .end money

PM.

through the mal untl you hiN'e
invHiig•ed the off•ing.

1985 14x80 Nasl'l.le, 2 Bedroom, unfurnl1hed. Elolcoj . cond
Set up It ready to move into.
012.200. Coli 614-25&amp;-1953.
M· F AM only , Sat. -Sun .
MVtime.
'88 Fleming mobile home. exc
cond, 304-675-5841 .
.

Real Est at e
31

Gentleman'• Ferrn-68 lcr81,
mo1ttv PNture wed woods.
Rettored. two-llory'homa overlooking R1cooon c..-. U.rge
b•l\ work lhop, gnlnary. etc.
Cell 814-388 · 8510 for

Homes for Sale

Modern 2 Bedroom home, anached o•aoe.. Close to golf
course &amp; swimming pool.
Fenced In beck yard. Call 814445-9818.

appointment.

•cr•.

188
Rutl.,d towr.hip,
remodeled 3 bedroom hou•
with 1'h blllhs, 2 bant, 3 ott.
bJIIdlngt, pond, fr• g•. miner·
1\1 lnduded. Clll after 5j:).m.
814-742-2348.

Owner h• hou • for tile. Been
remodeled wh:h n.w gwage end
work:lhop. Hill 911 hHtwlthctty
water and sewer. Utititl• are
low. Five minute w1lk to town.
NeoN school reef cloae. Asking
prloe $18000. will a~cept llllnd
contl"'ct. C.ll1 ·717-4208after
6PM.

35

11 486 JaeUon Pika

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Clmp lite It traH• for
on
Blue l.ak e &amp; R1ccoon Creek.
J .H. Holch•- 304-876-4078.

814-4-t&amp;-1192 01446-4364.

3 BR .. 2 bat hi. 1986 Sectional.
1 aae of llfld. 132000. Cell
814-388-9305.

2029 ChMhllm- 3 BR .. centn~l
air oond., niM' roof, .tuminum
If ding. Excellent, condition.
031. 000. Call 814-448-2205.

2 bedroom, 2 b•hl. 2 c•
g . .ge. leVel lot on Rt. 33.
9Nirnmfng pool teteltte. etoae
to Molgo High. Call 814-992, .
3254.
3 Mdroom hou•. 1.9 acres. On
Rt. 7 . Appointment onty. 814992-8332.

3 bedroom r1nch. 189 Beech
St., Middleport. SinQie bath.
City lot. 818,600. Call 814992- 2806.

1'/z acre lot with ru"l water If
Apple GrO'IM. phone 304-5782383.

For lilt or rent, 18n Uncoln
Helght1. Pomeroy. 2 bedroom,
living room. kitchen. Call 81498&amp;-4103.

Hou• loti, Gallipolis Ferry,
304-875-8908.

Lot and g•agewitht"ll• hook
up, can be nen In Hen cllnon.
307 Hollo~o&lt;Wy St or call 304895-3098.

rOOfT'IS, bill: h. ' c.,pet, good
sh..,e. Clo• to school• end
church. Nice yard and porch•.

6

814-992·72~4.

Renlal s

Investment JWOperly for sale.
Remodeled rent1l hou•. 2 br
with beum.nt, ch:y. t17. 500.
304-87&amp;-6331 .

41

Primo loc011on At. 2. Apple
Grove . Next to Goodve•. loc:ks
dam pr&lt;Jtec:t, full tb:e bMam . . t.
forced air fur,.ce. nice lot.
County 'Mit• IVallable. Priced
to ..... •38.600.00. Call 304575-2466.

Homes for Rent

Furnished Houllt, 3 BR . 29 Nell
Aw., GalllpoNs. •225emo. C.ll
448-4418 rrftor 7 PM.
Rio Gr.nde · Thr .. bedroom.
unfurnlahed home, full c•pet
fuR Hltnwtt. Rtt...oea ... d
dopool1 roqulrod. Coli 814-4469430.

1 'h .tory. elr, 3 bedrooms,
!Ning, dining. family room, new
kitchen with range, disposer,
dill'tllttalh•. oak cabinets. con_,.,,, 304-87!&gt;5027.

2BR., unfurnl1hed- 1 mile-218.
$200 Nnl. • 1 50 dep. &amp; rflf. One

c1111c1. ean 814-44&amp;-H88.

Nice one BR .. fur . .hed hou•.
No petl. Ref. • sec. dep.
roqulrod. Col1 814-445-1759.

Mobile Homos
for Sale

2 BA , l•ge. ~Wing room . ._-rd.
lamdry, parlo, on loring Aw;

19 88 Cr81tridge 14~~: 70, 2 BR ..
2 b•tf•·a•den tLG. cathedr ..
callings:. tottl etecc .• unct.p~
nlng. l•ge porch. Call 814-4469853.

No p... Ooj&gt;otit. Call rrftw 6,

61 .. 992·8888.
Nice 2 Mdroom home, bas•
mer)t, lwge Yllrd. Unootn Hta.
•175. Reference Md depaafl
roqulrod. 814-992·5063. A,..~
able M-r 1.t.

1983 Uberty 14x60, 2 BR .,
furnlohed. 091500. con 614367-0851 aftw 5 PM.

2 ·b'*oom hou•. 3 room
11&amp;'81• opl. 304-876-3030 or
876-3431 .

1984 Fi1her mobUe homtL 2
bedrooma. 11h blthl. Bea~tlful
blrlk· m footu..,. Coll814-445"291 evenings.

42

Government hom• from t1. (u
r..,....J. OeUnq...-nt ax pro,.-tv.
RJpot . . . k)nl. C.l 806-1878000 hi. OH 9805 for....,_
repo lilt.

•L

•1.

bedroom•. 11,.; bit h. .Nice.
Priced to
Phone 304- n38448 .. 304-n:J.t18 1.

Mobh home for .ant. Call lift•
2 .... 814-448-0627.

SkyHne 10~~:50. 2 blci-oomt.
completely refurbl1hed. uc
rond. CMh onto, or t.-dt for
vohlcloo ,1,900.00. 1-304883-8155.

2 BR . furnfohod M unfurnfohod.
Dopooll roqulrod. No Co11
oflw 8 PM, 814-44&amp;-1200.

3 H*oam.. n. . ChM .... Clll
81 .. 367·01182.

1988 Bollno trollw 20 II. Ret.
lfav!l, ~~tower 1nd lllr condl:ion.
t88o . Noofotoble. 614-25&amp;1391.

1173

fl-.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

In Eurllc•2 nloa &amp;. ct.., 2 BR.
- · h o -. • 200&amp;02251*
mo. Dip r..uftd, No
Adutt1 onty. Clll 814-2-'511863.

19781.._70 BlyviM"Tr.. • fDr
Nle. Hea 7x22 fl. «&lt;l!*'ldo, 3

be-·

appl. furnished. W•her-Oryer
hook-1.4), ww cwpet. nerNI't
painted. deck. Regency. Inc.
Apta. C.ll 30~876-7738 or
671&gt;5104.
New completely 1urni1hed
apartment &amp; mobile home in
· city. Adutts only. P•king. Call
814-44&amp;-0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 638 Jack1~
Pike from 1183 e mo. W .. k to
shop end moviel. 814-4482588. E.O.H.

to 0596. Aocllno'" 0225 to
1375. lamps S28 to S126.
Dinettws $109 and up to t:496.
Wood tablaw-8 chairs $286 to
87915. Delle
8100
up up.
to 1375.
Hutchea
t400
•d
Bunk
beds complete w·mettreues
029&amp;onduoto0396. Sobvbodo
01 10. MottreoHI orbo• oprmgo
full or twtn t68, firm 878, and
Queen sets 1226. King
8360. 4 drawer chest 869. Gun
ceblnm 8 gun. Baby mtttre~ ...
$35 &amp; t45. Sod from01 020.
•30 &amp; King frame $60. Good
1election of bedroom lultes,
metll cablnetl. headboards 830
end up to 8155.

•ea.

90 Days ume as cash with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
'Ju41N'IIIe•Rd . Open 9am to 15pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 614-4460322.
Valley Furniture
New and ulltd furniture and
applleancaa . Call 614-4487572. Hours 9-5.

Brookllde Apartment•: Located .
J lit S FURNITURE
ofl BtJwlle Rd.· 1 BR . specious
1415 EesternAw.
apanments with m-..n kitchen Uving room a.ites $179 &amp; up.
' and washer-dryar hookups. c•
Bedroom suites $399 lit up:
ble tehwillon av11fabf• Call
614-446-1932.
Refrigerator. Good cond. 1200.
Call 814--'48-3648.
Up11ain unfurnl1hed IPt. C~r­
peted. utHttlel peid. No children.
Brown carpet. Good condition.
No pet1. C•ll814-448-1837.
14V:!x281f.l ft . teo. Call 814446-6668 after 3:30PM.
Downtown-Modern 1 BR ., complete kitchen, AC, cwpet. Call
PIC1&lt;ENS
614-44&amp;-0139.
FURNITURE
Unfurnlolled .,t.-2 BR. t186.
Water paid Stow &amp; refrlg. 1 1 38
Second. O.Hipolls. Cell 44&amp;4418 after 7 PM.
Furnl1hed lfflci~~r~cy . t145. Utit-

O.rage apt ., fur,.hld. $225.
Utlltti• pMd. 29% Neil, O.lllpoNs. Call 814-446-4416 1fter 7

PM.

.

13 Court Bt.-2 BR ., 2 balhl,
klttchen furnllhed. w / w c•pM.
No pet1. Off lti"Mt perking.
•326amo. plu1utlltt181. Dep. It

Graciou1 living. 1 ., d 2 bedroom apa,-tnwtll at Village
Menor and Rlvenide Ap1rt~
menu In Middlepon. From
1216. indudlng utilkl•. Call
614-992·n87. EOH.

Dinettes , beds. bedding ,
dreal8rt. chest. couches, chairs,
IamPI. coffe•end tlbl•· Every
dav Speclels. Y2 mile out Jerrlcho. 304-676-1450.
Hlc:t.a -bed. queen tile. Brand
new, used 3 month1. 1426. Call
614·742-2798 or 614-7423154.
Klng-sfze five piece bedroom
suite. Lerge toeictional tofa. All
excellent concUUon. Call 614949-2783.
Frigidaire Heavy Duty WuMr
andOryer, S100 . Call814-98~
4176.
Sears Coldapot refrigerator.
Sunray metro .. cer ttave . both
elec. Hervest gold, good cond.
304-e7S.2231 .

53

Antiques

Buy or Sll'll. Rhrerine Anttques.
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hour~ : M.T.W 10. . ~. to &amp;p.m .,
Sundov 1 to ep.rn. 614-992·
2526.

54

St..l I beams ·8 in. :~~8ln.:~~B
ft. x7/ Hlln. UO each. Ch•nel
Iron-10 ft . 8 20 each. C•ll
61,4--387-7619 after 8 PM.

Misc. Merchandise

DIRT CHEAP OIAMONDS,
Emtfllld• and Sapphire~. 25
stonH for 826.00. AI reel. Call
111 806·687·11000 Ext. DX·
1000.
One· white prom dress. lim 5-6
petite and one black prom dreu,
size 7. Both worn once. 814985·438e.

2 bedroom Apt. for rent. Car·
p811d. Nice aettlng. Leu n:lry King aize wat• bed; 8 )Dints 1
facilltlea avlilable. C.ll 814- .Inch galvanized pipe, .21 ft .
length; 1of1 and chair. Call
99p711. EOH.
81 '4·985·4488.
1 bitdrOom furnilhld effiCiency
apt. 1 up•lr• apt. whh 2 Kenmore Mlcro.,..ve Oven. ExbedrOOt'ftl. Kitchen bnithed. E. ceUent condition. leu than 2
at d. Olrls24lnch bicycl a 2
Main. Porn.,.... 614-992·8215
new tlr• and tubes. 814-949*
or 814-992-3523.
24n.
1Wo-four bedroan apartment•
In Pomeroy. Deposit required. U Haul trUCks and tniiilara for
Call 614-992·6723 . . . 8 :00. .... •. 304-576-7421 .
Nice one bedroom aparlment Zenith color 19 inch TV with
with appi•c.. c•pet. 1n d otond, t 126.00 . 304-875washw-dryer hook·...,. In nice 6090.
neighborhood in Gallipolis.
$220. per month. Call 614-.W&amp;- Portllble •lana: •ghted and un·
lighted, • f 99 · t 379. Free
9510.
delivery and IMters. W.Va. 1·
APARlMENTS. mobile homet. 800.:142~2434, Ohio 1 -80~
hou••· Pt. PIN1111t1111dGIIIIIpo- 533-3463.
llo. 614-448-82,21.
Baby bed complete . MettJela,
Be edt Stl"'et, Mldcl~port. Ohio, bumper .. d,, exc. cond. Priced
2 be*oom furnished apt. utR~ to Mil. 2722 Uncoln Ave.
d• paid, ..t.nncwanddepolit 304-675-5500.
304-882-2566.
Queen tile mattre11 end box
IPrhigs, like new. 304-5782 9 18
45 Furnished Rooms ::::...:..'- - - - - - H.,WIIrd P•fl• ell tended cylc.
f•nllhed room-919 Seoond Paol filler with self priming
A..... Gallipolis. n 215 • mo. pump. 0175. 304-675-?393.
Utll~l• pold. Slnolomolo. Sh ••
bMh. C.ll44&amp;-o4418lfler7PM. Double bod, 2 pioceo corpat
(grey end belg_. like n.w. Call
Aot~ma for rant-Meic t11 month. 304-875·69958,_ 5:00
Startin_g .. •120 e mo. O.llia
.. x8 utility . tnlller. 304-876Hot~-81 4-448-9580.
2159.

46

Set ChlldCrafl book1. noo.oo.
New. 304-882· 2301.

Space for Rent

Sandstones. toolboxfarpickup.
Coli 81 4·387·0448.

6 wkt, old puppies-part. lleM·
Apso. Twin sia bookcae bed
with bo~esprtng• II ml'ltreu. II
nlghtlfand. t76. Portlctib lit
blthinette, t15. For more infor.
coii614-388-9802.

Fanns ~r Rant

ea-•

LEASE OR RENT, 27
crop
l111d and 10 _.. pature.
304-87&amp;-40.S.

cond . . d underpenn;,.g in·
eluded. ••• 1100.00. 304-67&amp;2879.

2 prom gowna for •I•Gunnv
uck, llze 3 &amp; 6. Worri once. Cell
81 4-448·7923.
Round kitchen •ble, Clpmin's
lounge bed. drap11, odd chairs.
Call 814-256·1 788.

55

I

1160 Oliver n.ctor;' exc cond,
304-875-3190.

8 hp Grwely, plow, mower,
till•. anow

Building Supplies

Building M.terlal1
Block. brlelc. sewer pipll. windows. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ten. f'lo Grande. 0 . Cell 114245-6121 .
Concrete block•- all eizes- .,.rd
or delivery. Meson und. Gallipolis Block Co., 123'1:! Pine St ..
Gelllpoli1. Ohio. Cell 81 4-«82783.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming, All breeda .. . AII
styles. lams Pet Food Oeeler.
Julie Webb Ph. 614--'46-0231 .
Oregonwynd Cetteiy Kennel.
CFA Hfmalaven. Pwsian and
SlameH kittens. New AKC
Chow puppiea . Cell 81~4483844 altar 7PM.
R11g. Himalayan • Per1ian Blue
Craa!'ft, Champion Bid. Hne.
8176. Declawad. Excel pet.
Fomole. Call 814-387·7815.

Slemaee Kitten• for AI• call
61 4-448·4885 oller 6 PM.
Pair of trained Coon Hounds to
Jell c.tredeforgunsor•vlhlng
of equal Vllue. 814;7o62-2521 ."

57

z

Bundy Trumpet. Uted ye.-s.
noo. Csll814·445-2868.
Wanted: R*'ponslble plrty to
t1keover lowmonthty payments
on spinet plano. Seelocelty. Call
80().327· 3348 .... 102.
lndNidull gutt• lenom. Be~
ginners. Set"iou1 Guttlrilt. Brunleardll Mualc. 614-••e-0887.
Jeff Wamsley lnst~or. 114446-8on. Llmtted Opening~.

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Fr...or boo!, 304-67&amp;-4182.

FMm
&amp;

Supplies

L iv 8s lu ck

Farm Equipment

SNAFU®

bl~e.

exc cond,

304-67!&gt;2885.

63

Uvestock

18th Ann..-1 Bentle¥ Pig Sll•
Wed,. AprH 27. 7:30 PM.
Fayette Co. fllirpoundl, W•
shington Court Hou•. Sefllrta
200 head·Duroll. HampDuron, Hamp--Yorkl. Barrows
It Gifts. Remember lhe champion h•row It tha Otlio State
fair plu1 the chlimplon at
F.,.ett., Green &amp; Rou .,...,.
,pui'Ch•ld Ill lut ye.-s ... e.
Rogor hntloy 3112 Rood Rd ..
Sabino. Ohio. 51 ].684-2398.

Oullrter hDrH&amp; thDroughtnd. 3
yr. old M•e. 13&amp;0. Call fS1.,_
446-1158.
..
One riding ho'rM Ill one pony.
Coll814-445-2222.

8 wlc. old bobv chldto, Slhor
laced Wt'.. dDitl, Blrl"'d Rock1,
white rookl. punet1, Rooster•.
Coli 814-265-8413.
Stallllon S.vlce AOHA. lncen~
thte Fund Pelomlnt~ Stlllkln.
Offaprtng waillble for Inspection. NDOHA ellgoblo. t100.
814-949-2456.
1

Reglstered hint Stallon aervk:e. ltt.,ttful derk brown Tobl·
ano. APHA-R OM arena blood
!Ina: Fee 0715. Call 614-949·
2062.

Regll*ed Sorrll Cf'.*'ler horMo,
4
old. m•e Btr • Leo
bloodline whh saddle lit bridle.
304-57&amp;-2173.

v-••

Musical
Instruments

Splnet"Consolfl Piano BargainWanted: Responsible partv to
tske over lowmonthty ,:.ymentl
on spinet piano. See locally. Call
800.327-334&amp;. eiCt. 102.

61

Farm Equipment

Oe•borndllkandplowt. lpoinl
hitch. 1 oem.U: mbcer. · Call
614-98&amp;-3388.

Monrgomery Ward 14,800 BTU
air conditioner. U11d 1 year.
Aoking 0300. Coli 61 4·256·
1911 .

Tra nspor lai!Oil
71

Auto's For Sale

1982 Pontiac Flroblrd. engine, paint. 4 cyl., lt8nd8rd
ahlll. Eacol. b•QIIIn-03000. Col1
814-445-0045 rrftor 5 PM.
1979 Pontloc Sunblrd. PS. 2.8
litter 4 cy'l. Runs good. Oood
Interior. UOO. Cal~814-4450212.
1976 Mo- Corio. t1000. Cal1
814-44&amp;-1847.

72

Trucks for

1979 Dodge. V-8 dndllrd,.
Excel. running cond. Call 8143711-2588.
1974 Ford F-100 super c1b.
v~a. auto. awns. t850. Cell
614-44&amp;-4045.
New 1988 Jeep Commandtt

sporttruck. Black With sHwr
"~f
1pc1. s.w.a. "110o.
Cal 614-25&amp;-8327.

... •

BOO Cou blrldol•. 1984 Ford
plcloup F 280. 361, 4 opd. CR
2110 Hondo Elolnoro. Coil 814445-3040.
19711 Ford F1 00 pi&lt;*·LCI I[UCk.
Call 814-445-4344.
1978 Ch.,y4•4. $80, .uto, PS.
PB,.fH whool. a14-949-2237.
1981 R•en• A•, 10 ft., 2
Sprood. With oldoo, hlsh bowo,
nSN tarp. E..::ellent condition.
Coli 614-949-2455.
1973Dat:sunplck~up. Topper, 4
as-d. no INks. Oood running
oondttlon. 1650. 1978 4a4
ptymouth TreU Oustar. Mea.
Auto. •lr. em-fm. t1471. Call
814-98&amp;-4358.

79 Ford F250 4x4. c.ll Henry
V-otor. 304-773-5538.
1970 Ford pickup, ..,... cultom
Y·8, 3ep.1971 HollclavTrwel•
luf1V oolt-co . .lnod. 21 II. 30487!&gt;8394.

Vans

&amp;4

W.O.

t-------,---1967 Ford 180 ·.. ..,dod oonvtr1&amp;on ..,.... 14,000 mi-. fl•
atool I l_,ller Cll!ltoln cholro •
lounge. Coli 814-255-8327.

Sport, V-8, 2 dr .• 33.200ml•.
Ish •P· Aul 0 •• AC • P8 ' P8 •
~~,:S~:;,uo .• tilt. Call 81 ""

PS, Pl. PO lodlo. tilt. Afii.FM·
Cue.
dtfrt;Mtl. running
bo-. 39,000 mil-. Eacol.
cond. Cal1 304-875-7438 rrftor
8 PM.

1981 Buldt 111tylork. 4 dr., AC,
AM·FM·Ceea .• o6 cyl., hlah mtle~ge. Good c•. Call 61 (..4487211 .

o.

••a.

44~9230.

1981 Oonoord Wogon. lllt.
.,.uloo, AM·FM. Aoldno e1100.
Col1 814-445-0ZOa

•orm

IE Dlacoverlea Underwater
ArchaeolOgists excavate

Roman-Cel11c wreck and an
English 1rade ship. C
IIJl II) l!2l Ka1e &amp; Alae An
overdose o1 toge1herness
drives Kale and Allie to a
counselor. Q
[J) Wanderworko Andy
leaves home and take~ his
little sister to England . Q
II)) PrimaNewa
® MOVIE: Hard Coun1ry (PG)
U :44)
ill (IJ MOVIE: Year ol the
Dragon IR) (2:16)
8:05(IJ MOVIE: M'A'S'H (A)
(1 :56)
8:30 II C2l ll2l Valerie'• Family
Program for gifted students
puts Mark in David's high
school class.(R) Q
(!) USTS Tril1tholon From
Hil1on Head, SC (R)
IIJ) 111112) Dllalgnlng Woman
HowarG, the obnoxious
cruise nerd, pays Mary Jo a
surprise visit (R)

EEK&amp; MEEK

Work· Foundations,
brick ......... ftreplac•. "Piira.
rltltONilona a srNII jobl. Free

Brtc:t~Biock

klUALlY Tl-lt. LAST FE.tAJ
MOtJnlS OF A l.AME.-DlXK
ADMtkJIS'fi(A110fJ CAIJ
Offi.R SOVIE. GR£.AT ,

eltlmlt•. 26 ~-· .Xptril!ftCI.

Col1 814-24&amp;-9882.

Con't olto.d high pri-7 Coli A
&amp; B remodeling. Youswmah.""
do llttt low lowco11. 114--4468970.

~t1lf:S 1D

1-WJ

COME"

PtCRt

RC remodeling. Odd job•·
Carpemrv. Free estlmlt•. Call '
614-385-8491.
'

9:00 CD 700 Club
II CD ll2l Unsolved
Mvotertea Reenactments and

Concrete Septic Tana • 1000
gll.,1100gll. and.Jet Aeration
1yatem. Factory tninlll repair
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PR1SES. Joclcoon. Ohlo.1-IOQ.
637·9528.

interviews foous on a
missing man with four wives .
and a Florida man, convicted

of double murder, who

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON'S Television S"ervlce.
Hou• c ..lt on RC·A, Quezar.
OE. Spoclollng In ZonHh. Coli
304-575-2398 or 814-448·
24114.

AREYCU GOING ANYWHERE .
TH 15 51JMME"'R ~

NO PLACE IN 8"RTTCIJLAR.
THOLlGH I N.AYGQDOWNlO#N ..

'•

•'

1814 , ... IXP. root. 8
'.-4 coli rrfl• 8:00. 304-417&amp;-

116

'

-

proclaims his Innocence. (R)
Cil f1 (I) MOVIE: 'LI1tlo Qlri
Loe1' Golden Showcue Q
(!) [J) Japan Chronicle 1he
factors leading 1o the attack
on Pearl Harbor. C
1!11 1111121 Newhlrf Stephanie
and Michael announce 1hat
they are getting married. (R)

AND5TICK MY

IDNGtJEOlJrAT
THE SCHOOL.

Fetty Tree Trimming. ltLmp
romo110l. Coli 304-87&amp;-1331 .

g
'

Ca~

'

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

1177 H .D. l i p - . t1500.
Cal1 814-445-4014.

180 Ho- XR 200 R. Good
cond. t411. eon 814-387·
7 10hllor I PM.

See TH' PURTY
BOOTEES I KNITTED
FER TH' BARLOW
YOUNG-UN

f • ....,../,'

• . , ...

YOU SHORE
GOT NIMBLE
FINGERS,

various individuals and

MIWJ

examines the reality behind
the adage. Stress Can Kill.
(!) A1alkl 11 W• Examine
the occupation by Japanese
forces of tha Attu and Klska
Islands In Alaska during
World War II.
1111 IDII2l C.gney I L.acov
Cagney and Lacey go
undercover 10 exfl':!se fraud
on a_9ame show. (R) Q ,
[11 (]J News
7, 1:
. :b
llJ) Evonfng Newo
(IJ Bonny Hll1

THE .GRIZZWELLS®

J

I
i

.

I I I' I I
.

e

.

.

1

lleeta!PGI

(1 :53)

s-

11:00CD flemington
CD CIJ • CIJ

a1151 Ne. .

w..r SeMce. Swimming

POOia. cltllrna. w.Us. Ph. 81.._
24&amp;-9286.

1111 • ll2l

(!)Sign Oil

.

0

Co mp lete the chuckle quoted
by !.ii ii'HJ in the m1ssmg worc:ts
you deve lop from step No 3 below.

I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Asthma - Outdo -

Quota -

Noffly -

THAT'S NOT

In a police lineup, lhe men were given a semence 10 say
verbatim. When the gl(ii!V felon stepped forward. he blurted ,
" THAT'S NOT wha11 sald! " r - - - - - - - - - - - ,

BRIDGE

NORTH

1-U·I&amp;

+43

Willy Nilly's opening two-spade bid,
the weak variety, bought the con:ract.
Purists might disdain a two-spade bid,
ci1ing too much defensive strength,
but we agree with Willy that it's all
right to have a little extra when you
are vulnerable against non~ vulnerable
opponents. Anyway this particular declarer always seems to need a little

.K874
tA10753
• ... 6
WEST

EAST

+a

+KJ9 6

.109653

.... Q

• Q8 6 2
+KQ2

+J10983

Willy took the opening lead with lhe
ace and led a club right back. That !il·
lowed East to win the trick, and East
returned a trump 'lmartly Willy
thought it dangerous to take a spade
finesse . (West might win and play a
heart to East's queen. and then anot.~·
er trump, would stop Willy from rolling a club.) He rose with the ace,
ruffed his third club .and got back t o
his hand with the diamond king to play
a low spade. When East showe&lt;! up
with all the spades. WiUy eventually
had to hope for luck in the heart suit 10
make e1ght tricl&lt;s . The luck wasn' t
there, so once again Willy Nilly we"t

set in a cold con cra-:t
The fault was at trick one. If declarer simply allows West to hold thal

trick with the king of clubs . nothing
baa can happen. West cannot iez·1 a

t94

.J

SOUTH
+AQI0752

extr'2 .

2
t KJ

+754
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
We1t

North

East

Pass

Pass

Pass

Soutll

2+
Opening lead:

+K

irump, smce it will be lnto declarer's
strength. In due time declarer wi.\1 be
able to ruf! a club and then take a
spade finesse without undue jeopardy
Since the finesse works. South will
come to eight tricks even with the!».~
trump split. Once again, to c~snge the
ol~ seying s:igWy, haste at trick one

l!lak:es waste,

ti1u
•~•ttf
by .THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

40 Raise
41 Roman
highway

1 Dialer's
code

5 Letter

DOWN

opener

1 Subside

9 Swine
10 Inert gas
12 Cape fox
13 Nephews'
sibs
15 Match
a score
16 Clangor
17 Kraiy18 Maip dish
2001ympus
queen
21 Ship part

2ZoGerman
river

23 Part of
an act

-

2 Violinist's
need

3 Command
to a

Yesterday's Anawer ·
helmsman
4 "We- not 14 Gape
25 "Two Years
amused"
16 Cross
Before
5 Mr. Ortega
out
the -"
6 Actress
19 Talk
27 WineGray
nonstop 30 Effrontery
20 Mob
31 Sidetrack
7 Store,
33 Place for
as wine
. job
8 Created
23·•Bart
a sala
a problem
'' or
36 Icense
(sl.)
Brenda 37 Omega
11 Less remote 24 Attac~k~-.:-~~:::,

25 Bishop's

headdress
(var.)
26 Picador's
target
27 Pat
of tennis
28 Egyptian
deity
(var.)
29 Belgian
seaport
32 Cerise
33Bunk
furniture
34Bonnet
resident?
35Type

of tire
3.7Wine
38 Succinct

30 Edmomize
, D!ILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

liLONGFELLOW

e

10:35 Cil MOVIE: -

.

UNSCRAMBL E lETTERS TO
GfT ANSWER

10:30 CD Good Flthlng
[J) Europaen Joumal (0:30)
(IJ Jelleraona

General Hauling

.

PRINT NUMBERED LETT ER S IN
THESE SQUARES

e

Dill1rd W•er · Service: Poota.
Cl-no. Wollo. Oollvttry Anylimo. Cal1 814-44&amp;-7404-No
Sundor col1o.

J.

Larry King Llvel

9:30 (!) NHL Hockey
IIJ) lilll2l Etaenhower I Lutz
Bud Is introduced to his son;
another bombshell loaves
him reeling. £;1
10:00 CD Straight Talk
G (2) 1151 NBC Newt Special
S1ress: Correspondent
Connie Chung dolves in1o the
pros and cons and impac1 o1
stress In everyday li1e. She .
highlights the llles1y1es or

Electrical
Refrigeration

R•lc~Mrtill or cornmerdel wirIng. New eervk:e or rtp~lrs .
Ucenl8d eleatrlcl1n. Eltlmete
frae. Ridenour Electrical, 304875-1788. '

85

'· "

BARNEY

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

84

One leUer stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apastrophes, the lenath and formation of the words are ali
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.

[J) Au10mobl1o: lfo Firat 100

CRYPTOQUOTES

v...

IDl Monoyllne

Gil Twilight Zono Mighty

c,_

"CongratulatiOns! What ·wtl you do ~h the
prize money, ball your mother '?ll1 of jail?"

$1NCE;

I DON'T T&gt;41"11( lHAT

Siding. owrhang gutlllr1,
doors lit windows. Free •rtmote. Coli 814-445-6070.

1976JoopW-. 0000.00.
Runo good, 4 110col AT t,.clt•
~~&lt;•. 304-8$2-2088 rrftor 6:00

BOltS

Ooocl ulrtd upright f r - . Call
614-445-1412 ... 445-7382.

nerve~shattering case of
hiccups. (R) C
(!) Starahoot New Clay
Target Shoo1ing Game; Show
2 (R)
Cil fl CIJ MacGyvar A close
friend ot MacGyver's is
murdered during an
investigation. (R) Q

Trenahlng-rw•onabla rat• w.ttr, electric, g-. drainageln11.
Pipe • fixture• at dllcount. Call
814-448-8508.

CARli!R'S PLUM81NO
ANOHEATINO
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Oollloollo, Ohio
Phone 114-44&amp;3888 or 814445-4477

1974Volcl lgan ..ttle.1100
.. 1!0ft ...... Good
condlllorl. Qr. . - k ••· Col1 · 1179CIIIIOO. ••· cond.lor•l•
or IIOdo. - · Arm.· 304-17f.
814-HI-83117- 4:00pm.
4090.
1811
V1«crlo. e1o.ooo.
On•-· 22.000mHor. 110
'ord Ron..,. t3800. Ono 715
and
- · ee.ooo m11oo. Callt14Motors
fur
Sala
tta.2374.

Goods

exclusion with a

•ALLEY OOP

for, htto &lt;IIIII
1802) 142-1011 ........

1190 Z·28, T · - oruloo, tit.
PW. U.OOO.OO or mollo all•.
1114Chwr lloi-Air. •1. 100.00
or mollo all•......,. 304-1153427 or :104-1'7U80&amp;

7:35 Cil Senlord and Son
8:00 CD Father Murphy
II CD ll2l ALF ALF reacts to

.,

()Diwot-. ..CI.

Trllllw tots. Rt. 1 LA;IIOJII Rolld.
bod&lt; ol K &amp; K Mob11o Ho..,.,
304-87&amp;-1076.

Household

oNE DAY ;t Lt:Fi
MY wo~~aes oN iHEf&gt;OOF$T'fP. ANO 'Z..'VE
' TH~ EACf':
SEEN U.&gt;lNCi

SWE EPEA 1t1d HWing m.chl,;e
repair, parts, end luppli•. Pick
up and dellwrv. D.vl1 VaC21..-n
Cle1ner, one hllf mile up
Goo- Crook Rd. Call 51444&amp;-0294.

1978 Ch ...rbl. v•. 18 pll·
1enger former achool bu1.
Rough condition. Minimum •ocoptod. 0200. COn111ct Molgo
1ndu..,._, ..o.. P.O. lo• 307,
Jt~hn St., Syrecu11. Ohio
45779. Coli 814-992-8881.

1112 Y.,...• 7a0 ~1m.
Good Cllnd. Cal1 814-24&amp;-9192
oftw 8 PM.

1'onlo. Cllwyo.

5o

w-~•o.

82

83 01• Ftr. . .
wa.gon.
831uldl Slcvlorll. IHyna. loll
or llodo Coll114-285-1270.

froon t 100.

7:30 II C2l Cil Hollywood
Square•
(!) Major League Baseball
Weekly
CIJ Judge
IIJ) Whliel of Fortune Q
llJ) Crooallre
IJ) ll2l 1151 Jeopardy! Q
® Barney Miller
ill (IJ WKRP In Cincinnati

I"

r - - - - - - - - - - . o f lh.e richest people in America.
'j 0 E A rJ y
I'm not on il , I - lo - ."

Cheers
(I) M*A*S*H

a

BASEMENT
WATER PROOF1NO
Unconditional lif•ime guar•ntee. LoCII references furnished.
Free eltlrnatel. Call collect
1·114-237-·o..aa. d., or night,
Aog ·e rala•ement

1880011N'y411[4plckup.PS.PI,
55.000 actual mltel, excel.
~~'ta.:'l: &lt;:-or troct... ean

1981 luzoM Gl 7110. 4000
m*· tiroo1 _wry cl-.
• 2000. Coi1814-0M5-4045.
.

KRYEJ
1--T"'-,!C."-'
-lr=--:;.--1/~r..~ · "Every morning," said the ad
I1.-1-....i..-..L.-..L._J
execu1ive, " !look through the lis1
1

Nightly Newo

7:05 Cil Andy Griffith

ENTI&lt;'At-.ICS: evEf&lt;'

S•rkl Tree Md L..wn S•vlce.
IIWn cer•. lwuiiCI!ping. lt!Linp
removel, 304-671·2842 or
575-2903.

1978 Hortdo 7110. 05110.
814-445-0781.

llu'lea•..,.... lllledwhlol•

ifiJ

Home
Improvements

&amp;

1

8:35 Cil Leave It
Beaver
7:00 CD Remington S1eele
U C2l PM Magazine
(!) SportaCenter (L)
CIJ En1ertainman1 Tonight
filii People's Court
(!) [J) MocNai1/ Lehrer
NawoHour (1 :00)
IIJ) Nowo
llJ) Moneyllne
111112l ll2l Wheel ol Fortune

Serv 1ces

pm.

-r:-j
l .:;,sl_;_v-T-j

..
11;::-G

Tp

1978 Dodge -..n. 8 cyl., 3 tpd.
on column. •too. C.ll814-38 81669.

7

I I · 1· I I..
~-I
~/ 1

Bea1 of BIU Dance
ABC Nowo Q
CIJ NlghUr Buoino11 Report
IIJ) 1111!2l CBS News
llll Body Electric
l!))lnolde Politics '88
® WKRP In Clncinnldl
Ill (IJ Andy Griffith

Motors Homes ·
&amp; Campers

81

1DJ NBC

li\Cil CJ CIJ

r•

Pa
87,000
U495.
RCAAC.
VCR
VIti.mi-.
•121.
Coli
1 14-44&amp;-8271 .

Rod Hot blrgolnol Orug - - ·
a.a. bo•....... RPO'd. lurplue. Your Area 1uvwa Guide.
11)10f.Q7-IOOO lb1.1-HDII.

6:30 II CD

Auto Repair

Sale

I c HE L E K

(!) SponoLook
(!) Dr. Who Keys of Marinus
[J) Colorspunds •
llJ) ShowBiz Todov
llJ Foc1a of Life
ill Cll Happy Devo
6:05 Cil Leave 11 To Beaver

•bl•

1981ptymouthVoy~gerSE.Iir,

••ion

Spldoua motMie hom~ loq lor
ron1. Ftrmlv Prldo 'MoblloHomo
Pork. Ooii!Odlo Ferry, W. Vo.
304-87a.3073.

51

Auto Parts
Accessories

P~tlntlng. body work. tune-u~
brake•. ate. Minor mechanic
work. Clll814-448-7572, after
5 PM-44&amp;-8441 .

79

low to form four sirnple words

MON., APRIL 25 •

BUDGET TRAN SM1SSION·
UMd &amp;. rebuilt ell tVPM· GuarantH 30 diYI minlmt~m . Prices
899 &amp;. up. Reta.llt torque•
con..,.rter 11 Jow as 839. Conv.aionktt-S-10'•• C-10' lOYer
dlrve to 360's. We buy lunk
tr..,lmltslont. Cetl 304-8764230 or 814-379·2220.

77

T:~~:t:~' S@\\4{llA-~~zrs~ :~!:
0 four
Rearrange letters of the
sci-ambled words be-

_ _ _ __;_;.;;_ Edirod b, CLAY l . POlLAN _.:__;_ _ __

EVENING
6:00 CD Crozv Uke a Fox
. , CD CIJ a CIJ IIJl II) ll2l
ll2l News

•ir.

198S a,.,y Oi41berty Euro

Ford 1503 side dellvery1 rake. •
"-"''"" 6 II. Dvno·!litl-o
1111 01• Dollli I I Royolo.
Mowet. 2 twelve Inch Fw~ton 7&amp;000ml-. Florldlw. E•el.
High Clearance Plow1. John
1hlpe. '2100ortr.detor•WD.
Deere 24T hav btl•, Ford ,V·I.J81portruokotequalwtue.
oubooRor. AU oqulpnw1t In •·
Call 304-87&amp;-2241.
cellent condition. Phone 114949-2783.
' 1988 - r y Monta1olr. PB,

Cablo. Alooollld.,av
lnd cllbla "'-on.
w.v.. Coli 304-773-5881.

•

1879 Mercury Capri ,.lty spor1
AT 1982 Hondo C8900. 1979
Morourv Capri AT. '304-67&amp;· 1975 27ft. motor home. Sleeps
8394.
8 . Self-contained. t&amp;SOO. Call
'75 Chry1ler New York 614-367·0643 Iller 6 PM.
Broughm.
tit cruila, PB,
PS, vinyl top, lealher Interior, Coachman Sunpuppy CM~P•·
IINPI IS. AC-OC hook-up, Ice
1660.00. 304-67~144.
, bo11,
•e6o. call&amp;14-44&amp;'81 Ohll Cutl•n Supn~me. new 3402.
brlk-. n.v llr•. new wheel
bell!'"inp and ball )olnta. Black
with bu rgandl Interior, Trwet triMer, 28 ft. Exc.llent
*1:800.00. 304- 75-6438 af- oonditiM. $2800. Call 304882·2076
1•4:00.
'77 Dlda. felr cond, after 4 :30 27ft Concord camper. •HP• 8,
coil 304-87&amp;-6369 or 675- HIV out awning. tub with
7~51 .
·
· 01.800.00 •"• 8:00
coli-304-882·2069.

For •lo or tmt.. 1878 CJ·7
Jeep. •1100 M belt offw. Cell
814-388-87114.

1984 Monte C.rlo·l2,000
mi-. while with rod -lor.
tuck•
ooniDie. AC, PS,
PI, tit. cruiN, R.W.L. tires.
UBOO. Call 814-387·0632"'

roonw. air

1983 Codllloc F1ootwood De·
l.egumeT· top,IMdedwlthextra
31.000mll•. EKC. Cond. brown
metallic. Call 304-372-1390.

1982Ch
211r V
od
cond. ~lutch 'a~...
.1000. Call814-882·8440.

155001Nert,.ctor.piOWI.grain
llrYI, poll dflvor, 03,5110. 3600
Ford with Dynelounaemowar.
t 49&amp;0. Owner wll flln~nce. Clll
814-28&amp;-8522.

hoolc·-

loodod. SHAft P, 17, 700.00.
1983 Dodgo 600 ES, 1oodod.
•c cond. 14.600.00. new tire•
both en. must 11111! make an
Off• on elthw. 30.,.17~15308.

73

1977 P1vmoufl. V-8. Good
cond. 0800. Coli 814·448·
7712.

Space for smal trllll... All

1 98&amp; Dodge Day tons Turbo Z,

1984 Chwv eom... with T• - · Low m i l - Call 814445-9814 rrfl• I PM.
~'rbo
,98 • Oodg 0 t
Good oond. ~1 :'f~S:iiee4
rrfl• 8 PM.

I.H.C . baler. Modo! 27. 0450.
Call 615·266-1618. No Sundor
aall1. 1

by Bruce &amp;arde

Auto's For Sale

1 87o6Ford trw:k. .utometlc. air.
.."'". ·-ndlllonod, good'""·
t7l50.00. 304-875-5751.

1981
1 un 310. " •. hatchbiiCk.. Ooodcond. Call 114-3881987.

MMIIIV Frea••on 186 di8181.
Good a&gt;nd. e40QQ.Firm. Call
614-388-9364.

71

1981 01 dl. Cut I••· LDededl
Low mileage. e2750or tf'ldelor
cattle or f•m equipment. C.ll
814-44&amp;-4288.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W•l. Joci&lt;oron. Ohio.
814-28&amp;-8461.
Musev hrgu1on, New Holl~nd.
SuahHogSoi•IS.vlco.Ovor
40 uNCI t•ctors to choa.t from
II. complete line of MW • u•d
ulpment. largest •lectlon in
s . . ohio.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork.
Aou• 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental tr~~ll•s . C.ll 11 .. 912·
7471.

--

/

61

Needs some repair~ . See It

1:Z.H, 3 bocl-

roonw. penntled. dedi. unit air

t~~~=~=i===:r:~=~~~·~~~~~

U~ed Lorov 126 •i•comp&lt;eaoa..

Middleport VIllage Garage. Park

-rn;;; CCMP!&gt;Jj'{,

Oldl., Buick. Pontiac. O.evy,.
ChiiWy lrt.ck. Ford, Chry .. er·
trenlmilsk)na (\Jsedl are Inter·
nalty Inspected II c1rry 3000 mi .
or 30 dav warnmty (whldlevtor
occurs fir ttl , We buy .Junk
trensmlnione. Cell 614-44609118.

Asher woodbu~ning stove plus
trvc::k lOad of wood. Uvlng room
tables. Cell ·after 6 PM, 114446-9284.

2 be*ODml. furn6ehed or unl.lr·
n~hedtr~~H•. 'fiWIMktJ or monthly
depo1lt required, 304-1715·
1206.

43

&amp;

:=========J..:=========-1

.,I'I

Mobilo !lorna 101. 60 tt •
amollor. 920 4th. Oonlpollo.
o7&amp;--.. pol d. eo11 44&amp;-44, e
oft• 7 PM .

76

F/&gt;e. ~ W!&gt; CAA lf.l

I

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Television
,V iewing

lUTHOO~!&gt;Pb

THIIJK ~ HAVe

1 I ft. V.hul Gl•tron boat with
66 Mere. 6 trailw. VflfY good
cond. •1900. Call &amp;1-4-4467346.

Huge 31' owl pool with deck,
fence &amp; filter. Installation &amp;
financing available. 1·B00.3o660946.
•

&amp; High st • .

'it!U~ l\16 aJ9.&gt; AllO I'M ~T A
I..ACKEY, I3UT 1. LI!G:' TO -.---

I

SWIMM1NO POOLS· 0988
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

water hetter. Ua8d 9 montt\1.
Seet'11PowerMi•rBelectrichot
.0100.
Coll614·255-1435,

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Boats and
Motors for Sale

28 ft. lleyllner eruillr. 1988
wide beam. •lltllectronlc, galley,
canves, ••c. 350 V-8 eng ..
1ie101 8 . Very low hours.
027.1100. Call 304-727·6890.

'

54

75

KIT 'N' CARLYLE!I&gt; by Larry Wriabt'

Misc. Merchandise

Callah.,'• Used nreShop. Over
1,000tires. lizH12 .. 13. 14.1 15.
16, 16.6. 8 mil• out At. 21e:
Coll614·268·6251 .

ve••

---------Nlcelv furnished srnal hou•.
Adults only. Ref. rtqulrad. No
pitt. Call 114-448-0338.

3 bedroom, 2 bit hi. full tinshed
bMement, niW fur,.ca 1nd
cent,.l elr, ger1ge. fenced yerd.
Low 80's. 2414Mt. Vernon A.,.,
Pt. Pk. 304-875-1?74.

1970 12aU Wlndo"' with
10x12 add-on. woodburnar,
w.1hw a dryer. elr cond. Mult
304-89&amp;-3102.

6 CIOIMI, ktlchen-

2 acr81 • Rt. 160. Drilled wei &amp; ref. can 614-44&amp;-4926.
rural w•t•·•· Concrete trllll•
pad. NumerDUI frutt tre81 : · Gar~ge apartnwnt-3 rooms &amp;
t10,500. Coli 814-388-9364.
b•h. w / d, lir. Cl .... No pets.
Adu~s only . Ca11 614-4462 taM At . 124. 1h mile from · 1519.
H.-ria Ftrma, Portllnd. Oh. 2 BR
trill•. 2 nice big adcldonal New' one BIG-oom aptl. In
rooms, g•age. cell• with ltor· Mldcleport: Furnished or unfur~
age room, pl.rty wst1r, gwden nlolled. Call 614-912,6304 or
446-8898 after 5.
1pot. a• wood bui'MI'. outllide
chlmnev. See to IPPrtef•ePrlced on in•PtCtlon. 114-843- Furnished apt .. 1 BR. 607
6424 call for appointment.
Second, Gelllpolls. •226 e mo.
Utilhi• paid C.ll 448-4418
20 acr11 for •le. · Hemlock Iller 7 PM.
GrGYe • •· Electricity, Wilt•. 2
building okeo. con 814-992· In Rio Q..,de, nice 2 BR, $228
mo. Refrigerator, ltave 6. water
7287.
furnished. No petl. Cell 61 4Alhton. l•ge bulding lotL 445-80118.
mobl.e homea permttted. public
w1ter, alao river lot1, Ctvde Furnished apt. for .ent In town.
Bowon. Jr. 304-575-2338.
Cal1814-446-1423.

Great Deal12story, 3BR ., w / 32
ecru in Eureka on At. 7. NBIN
c•pet.lutt r-lnted ln1lde lit out.
P.,lal b_.ment It st~g_ebldg.
031 . 000. Call 814-445-2206.

32

epu.

446-4416 lfter,7 PM.

•I•

Call

2 BR .

itl• peld ShWI blllh. 607
Second, Ollllpolis. Cell 814-

5Dacr•- 'hmlleoff 160 peM No.
G111i1 H.S . $35,000 or best
offer. Call 814-448-8980.

Brie* home tar •lei rent. 3 BR .,
1 'h blthl, full b•emW. lo·

c•ed

Apartment
. for Rent

for Sale

Smatl grocery store with eltcellent meet S. deli dept. Inventory
It equipment. Help with fin WI I&gt;
lng -.uipment ltavallllbla le•e
on building II open. In Gallipolis,
Ohio. Serious lnqulrl• ontv
plea••· Cell 614-245-5559 or
445-1543.

~;~~ ~o,;~ 9~iJ!~-'I:'.:.~;;g

n

r 3 2 MobiIe Homes

Financial

Sofu and chairs priced from

"If we are living beyond our
means' Why aren•'t We ha:vm'g

Oav Care Service~ provkled. All

l.lwge fenc.d verd. Rerer.,ce~
provided. Call 814-446-9402. i

Goods

Cbunty Appllanoa. Inc. Good
uud IPpllances and TV sMa.
Open 8AM to 8PM. Mon thru
S01. 614·445-1699. 827 3rd.
A,ve. Gellipalil, OH.

remoct.ling. Will build g•~•·
&amp; outbulldinf. MinorcarpMter
work only. 1 yearsuperlence.
Coli 614-445-6327 or 445-

C ell 814-379-2188.

Household

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Otive St., Gellipo\11.
NEW- 8 pc. wood grouS&gt;- $399.
LNing room ILirfl!lllll· •199-•699.
,Bunk beds with bedding- $199.
Full lfze mmre~~ lit foundat ion
starting- 899 . Recliners
ltlrtlng- t99.
USED- Beds. dr8118fl , bedroom
sullel, 81 99· 8299. Desks.
wringer ~1.1Mr, e complete line
of Ulltd fUrniture.
NEW~ WHtern boob- 130.
Workbootl t 18 • up. ISteel •
soft toa). Call 614-4o6S.31 59.

·Jim's Odd Jobl

J &amp;

Monday. April 25, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

-ry-•

18 ft. C.W. 1nc., 22 HP
troNw. tiiOO.
Cai1814-H88.
18 II. Trj.HarL 50 HP - r y

Motor, treller t_Ofper, Hie.

18odod. •211011. Col1 114-H22579.

•

Paul Aupe, Jr. W•er Servtce.
Pooh, clo.,no. wol1o. Call 81444&amp;-3171.

W•ttersol1'1 W•ter H•u ling.
re•onable r1tie, Immediate
·2;009 gollon dol!very. cio•no. ,
~;'i'f.
otc. coli 304-57Bl

-·

87

Upholetery

Mowrey•• Up..,.....ing IINint
trl ooun~t~aree 22.,.... TheNt
In furnll:uN ullhonrlng. 0111
304·171·4114 for free
ootl-...

PEANUTS

'

MUST 6E A STRANGE COUNTR'(•.
1"\/!;llt'( TIME ntE't' HAVE AN ELEqiON
VIOLINS BREAK OUT..
'

VIOLENCE:
IJREAKS OUT

caeev
• (IJ Love Conn1C11on
11:30GW !Ill Tonight Show
(J) Clloora
GIII Nlghlllne t;1
Gil Mlg1111111, P.l.
llll -time TradiUonal 3/4
.
Inch floor lnstalied;
prellnlahlel flooring

diiCUIMCI.Q

iiJ lpn TOnllht
'Hunllr' Cl8 ~.o~e
Nlaht Humer lelm's his

•a

MTS'LX

· OUXPPM
FXU
•

Dp

TKQ

RAXE

GATRXQ

p T

W T P
PT

PL

PAX

A 0 K N- P H .Z X

NTTPFDKK

• (IJ No Oil) wed Clime
12:00 CD lurna ond AU..
Cil Nlghlllne Cl

U T· W XU

UXZXZ-

DIPSDKKM

lather's delth wa1 a

controcted ti~. (R)
~::rum. P.l. Heal

·F X'

WDZXG.

G HZ T E

Yeeteni&amp;J'• Cl')'ptoqaote: BY THE TIME A MAN IS

WISE ENOUGH TO WATCH HIS STEP HE'S TOO OLD TO
GO ANYWHERE. - EARL WILSON

�..
Monday, April 25, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-'the Daily Sentinel

..--Local news briefs__.. Showers, thunderstorms move eastward
Breeding arrested by police

P,Y United Press International
-Rain and a few thunderstorms
extended today from northeast
Texas to southern Kansas and
~2"~s we. re scattered • .long the
Y".'.' Coas~m southeast Texas
to the Florida Panhandle.
Snow advisories were in effect
today for the mountains of
Montana east of the Continental
Divide and the northern mountains of Wygmlng, the National
Weather Service sald. Three toG
inches· of snow was expected in
the mountains and foothllls of
Montana. Between 5 and 8 inches .
of snow was forecast In the
northern mounta ins o( Wyoming
above 8000 feet.

JaniceK. Hatfield Breeding, of Middleport, was arrested by
Lt. John King and Cpl. Rick Johnson of the Middleport Pollee
Department Saturday night after- an alleged shooting Incident
in the Cedar Bar In Middleport. Breeding had attempted to
shoot Ersel Blevins.
Breeding has been charged with felonious assault and
carrying a concealed weapon. Th'e Incident Is under
investigation by the Middleport Pollee a nd the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.

Reynolds arrested by deputies
Terry M. Reynolds. of Kingsbury Road In Pomeroy, was
arrested by the sheriff's department Monday morning after
being stopped on a routine tra!f!c s top. The Washington County
Sheriffs Department haS charges of contempt or court a nd
interferr!ng with custody agalnst .hlm.

FBJ. ;?ntlnued from page 1

Advisory board meets Tuesday
The Meigs County Lil ter Control Advisory Board will meet at
the Litter Control office Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. Members are
asked to attend .

Me ius
"'e' ... - - - - - - - - Co ntinued from page 1

Pomeroy unit went to the West
Matn,Street res idence of Lester
F'lelds who was treated but not
transported.
The Tuppers Plains squad
answered a call at 6:56 p.m. to
the residence of John Olscar of
Umberger Ridge, who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and at 10:29 p.m. the Rutland unit
. transported Ruth Erlewtne from
her Main Street residence to
Veterans Memorial -Hospital.

I

Four calls were answered on
Sunday, the first at 3:31 a.m.
w~en the Middleport unit tra ns·
ported Ricky McClellen to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Mattie
Warner was taken from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
5:12 p.m. and at 10:54 p:m. the
Middleport unit tran s ported
Harry Garten to the Holzer
Medical Center from his res idence on Bradl)ury Road .

Area deaths

Ruth Erlewine

l
.

Garnet Herdman

Ruth G. Ertewine. 72. of Main
Gamet M. Herdmaq, 64, Route
St., Rutland, died Saturday
even1
.
. Leon, died atll29
: p.m. Saturlng at Veteran s Me morial day,Apri123,1988,atherhome.
Hospital.
She was a member of Pine Grove
Born Nov. 15, 1915 in Leon, W. Church at Leon, a member of the
Va., she was a daughter of the Feeney-Benncu American Legion
late Floyd and Iva Thornton Auxiliary for more than 20 years,
Howell.
an honorary Kentucky Colonel, a
She was a retired merchant, member of the Mason County
having been the owner-manager Democratic Women's Organization
of the Rutland Hardware Store and committee woman of that orfor 23 years. She was a member ganization for more than 20 year.
of the Rutland United Methodist . Born Apri!IO, 1924 in Leon, she
Church where she was treasurer was a daughter of the late Elza and
for 27'h years. and was a Alta Matheny Miller.
member of the United Methodist
She was also preceded in death
Women. She was a past matron of by three brothers.
She is survived by her husband,
Harr!sonviUe Chater. 255 of the
Order of Eastern Star. and past Ephrum G. Herdman; one daughter
president of the Rutland Garden and son-in-law, Bonnie and James
, Club.
Matheny, Leon; two sons and
Survivors lnclu de her husband, daughters-in-Jaws, Darrell and
Harvey Erlewine. of Rutland. Mary Ann Herdman, Leon, and
whom she married March 16, Golden and Anna Marie Herdman,
1940; one daughter and ·son-ln- Point Pleasant; two sisters, Mrs.
law. Joetta and David .Eskew. Alben (Velsie) Roush, Pomeroy,
Newark; and ( h r e e Ohio, Mrs. Mildred Meade,
grandchildren.
Columbus, Ohio; two brothers,
llesides her pare nt s, she was Ralph Miller, Point Pleasant, John
preceded in death by a daughter. R. Miller, Newburg, Ind.; eight
Karen Ruth Erlewine.
grandchildren,
four
greatServices will be Wenesday, 1 grandchildren.
p.m.. at the Rutland United
Graveside services will be conMethodist Church with Rev . ducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday, April
Robert Mussman and Rev. Park 27, at Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon,
Russell, both officiating. Burial with the Rev. Louis A. Bussell and
wiU be In Graham Cemetery in the Rev. Johnnie Hayman officialNew Haven, W. Va. Vlsltmg ing. Burial will follow.
hours at Hun ter Funeral Home, , Friends may call at the CrowRutland, will be 2 to 4 and7 to9 on HusseU Funeral Home Tuesday afTuesday. Eastern Star services ter 4 p,m. In . lieu of flower~.
will be held at the funeral home donations may be made to the Mt.
at 7 p.m. on Tuesday evening. Flower Emergency Squad.
Friends may also can at the
church for one hour prior. to the
funeral on Wednesday .

James Bailey
James B. Bailey. 86, New Hope
Road, Chester. died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol lowing a brief illness.
Mr. Bailey was born May 9.
1901 in Meigs County. a son of the
late Henry and Nora Wills
Bailey. He was a member of the
Chest er Church of God.
Surviving are his wife, Verdle;
two daughters, Mrs. Charles
(Joanna) Lanham. Belpre. and
Mrs.·Paul (Janice) Poar. Rend·
erson. W. Va .; a brother, John
Bailey, Pomeroy. and several
nieces and nephews. Also surv,vlng are four grandhclldren and
flve great-grandchildren.
lleslde his parents. he was
preceded In death by two broth·
ers and two sisters.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m .
Wednesday at the EwlngF'uneral
Home wllh the Rev . Gilbert
Spencer and the Rev. Don Co"'bs
offlclating. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 4 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday. Burial wUl be In Mount
Hermon Cemetery .

Two players pick all
Super Lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) _: Two
players picked aU.slx numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Saturday night, making them eligible to claim equal shares of the $6
miUion jackpot.
The names of the players wtn
be announced after their winning
tickets are validated by lottery
officials. a lottery spokesman
said early Sunday . The players
wUI receive the winnings In 20
annual pre-tax payments of
$150,000 each.
The winning numbers drawn
Saturday were 1, 2, 21, 29. 31 and
39.
In addition to the top prize
winners, 117 players picked five
of the numbers to win $1,000each,
while 6,367 players selected four
of the numbers to win $86 apiece.
Ticket sales for the weekend
drawing totaled $4,726,861, whlle
the prize payout totaled
$6,664,562. Wednesdal&lt;j'S jackpot
will be worth $3 mllllon.

LAST WEEK'S AD SHOULD HAVE READ

4 &amp; ·5 BUCKLE ARCTICS

S15
SIMON'S PICK·A·PA
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

'I

Showers and thunderstorms
wUl extend today from the lower
Mississippi Valley across Tennessee and Alabama Into South ·
Carolina. Georgia and northern
Florida, weather service spokesman Lyle Alexander sald. Showers and thunderstorms will also
be scattered over Utah. Colorado, Nebraska and eastern
sections of Kansas, Oklahoma
and Texas.
Clear skies covered the Great
Lakes region and portions of the
Ohio Valley early today, Alexander said. These clear skies will
allow temperatures to drop to
around the freezing mark in
some areas.

don't do," Revell said in the June covert enemy operations in11 deposition io the committees tended 'to influence political
tnvestigatlng the Iran-Contra events, and alleged the harrassscandal.
ment was timed to coincide with
North. fired from his White pending congressional votes on
House post when the scandal Contra aid, the documents show.
exploded into public view Nov.
In FBI Interviews, North also
25, 1986, wa s Indicted March 16 claimed polltical enemies went
with three others on felony to the extreme of poisoning his
charges of conspiring to defraud dog . Friends said he confided
the government by diverting that he thought his dog was kllled
millions of dollars to the Contra by two journalists wrltlng artiguerr!Uas from secret sales of Cles about his Contra operation,
U.S. arms to Iran.
but associates of North·later said
his
dog died naturally of cancer.
North's attorney, Brendan SulJivan , refused to comment on
North's gradually er oding
Revell's testimony or newly
released FBI documents. But the credibility with FBI agents can
be traced through the flies and
bureau flies sh·ed new light on the
accounts
from ,sources familiar
lengths to which North went to
with the bureau's probe. For
shield his secret Contra support
net\York during a congressional example. North told investigators he would turn over the tag
ban on official U.S. military
numbers nf the alleged surveilassistance to the rebels.
According to the documents, lance cars, but when pressed
North met with two FBI agents at later he said he had lost them.
During the May interview,
his White Hou se offlce May 9,
1986. to complain about alleged · North furnished the FBI with
names of the people he consiharrassment and surveillance
from political adversaries chal- dered prime suspects in the
lenging his support for the. alleged harrassment ~ampalgn.
Contras. The agents initially
believed him, the documen ts
The first was Jack Terr-ell. a
mercenary who had trained
show .
Contra troops In Central AmerNorth sta ted that he was being
ica but later defected from the
followed by unidentified people
rebel movement, complaining of
in at least two rental cars, that
corruption and human · rights
his own car was vandalized, that
abuses. Another was Daniel
his tires were stashed, a nd that
Sheehan, chief lawyer for the
key a ssociates in his Contra
network were being sued on cl vii
non-profit Christie Institute. who
filed a multimillion-dollar civil
racketeering charges in a bid to
lawsuit in Miami accusing 30
disrupt their support for the
rebels.
defendants, Including leaders of
North's Contra operation, of
North argued the events consticomplicity in a 1984 bombing that
tuted an "active mea sures campaign, " a term referring to
killed an American journalist.

Freeze or frost advisories were
In effect early today for lower
Michigan, Northern fndlana,
Ohio and northeast Kentucky .
Clear skies also prevailed this
morning across \he South Atlan tic states, Tennessee and from
western Texas to Southern
California.
Temperatures early today
were In tile 40s and 50s across
most of the nallon. Readings
were in the 30s in portions of the
Ohio Valley. Temperatures were
In the upper 20s and 30s from the
Great Lakes across the northern
Plains to the northern Rockies.
Temperatures were In the' 70s
over Florida and along the Gulf
Coast to southern Texas.
Thunderstorms were scattered
Sunday night from western Okla·
homa to south central Texas.
Some of the thunderstorms In
Texas were severe.
Several Injuries were ~eported
when strong thunderstorm winds

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted Saturday: None.
Saturday Discharges: Jayce
Leonard, Ralph Day, Eleanora
Redman, and F'red Willison.
S\lnday Admissions : Goldie
He ndren, Pomeroy ; Mattie
Warner. Pomeroy .
Sunday Discharges: Phillip
Donovan, Robert Snowden, Shirley Stephenson, Norma Godwin,
Lawrence Scarber ry.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26¥,
AT&amp;T ... ............ ... ........... .... 27J.l
Ashland on ........................68Y,
Bob Evans ................. ......... 171;. 1
Charming Shoppes .............. 11% ,
City Holding Co ................... 31 •
Federal Mogul.. ................. .40%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................64'1.
Heck's Inc ........................... l'h
Key Cen turton ....................41 '1.
Lands' En~ ......................... 22%
Limited Inc ........................ 19%
Multimedia Inc ................... 65¥,
Rax Restaurants .. .... ............ 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 11
Shoney 's 1nc ....................... 24 Ya
Wendy's Intl ........................ 6%
Worthington lnd ................. 20%

ROBERT E.
BEEGLE
FOI

SHERIFF
•CAPABLE
•HONEST
•EXPERIENCED

H. llr CMIIdlle. Boo 72.
11 11• St. lllclne. Gllio 4sm

no doubt in my lieart. my heart ls
pure. I am innocent, innocent,
innocent and God is my witness."
The audience hissed as Demjanjuk sald it was "very painful
for me to sit here and hear the
terrible tragedy that befell the
Jewish people because of Nazism. ... They died a terrible
death and I hope they all reached
heaven ."
Oemjanjuk winced occasionally as Blattman delivered his
impassioned plea lor death by
hanging before the courtroom
crowd of an estimated 400 people.
some or them Holocaust
survivors.
"The accused was no small
cog," Blattman said. "He was a
major crlmlnal against humanIty and one of the arch-henchmen
who wielded his acts against the
Jewlsh people. He stood at the
gateway to the inferno. where he·
went about his duties with
unparalleled zeal and
enthusiasm."
Trebllnka survivors said "Ivan
the Terrible" sliced off women's
breasts with a sword as they
were led to the gas chambers,
gouged out prisoners' eyes and
once ordered a forced laborer at
the camp to perform necrophnta.

I AM INTERESTED IN
OPENING A
DAY CARE CENTER
IN THE RACINE AREA
If Anyone Is In Need
Of A Service Of This
· Type Beginning lh
May. Please Contact:

DAYTIME-949-241 0
AnER 6:30-949-2450

baseball
roundup

South Central
Today. mostly sunny. High In
the mid 60s. Variable winds less
than 10 mph .
Tonight. mostly clear. Low ln
the mid 40s. Southerly winds less
than 10 mph .
Tuesday. mostly sunny and
pleasant. High around 70.

. Ex ten !led Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Cool through the per iod . .
Chance of showers Wednesday
and Thursday and fair Friday .
Hlghs in the upper 40s and 50s
Wednesday and Thursday, and 55
to 65 Friday. Morning lows in the
mld-30s to mid-40s Wednesday,
and mostly in •the 30s Thursday
anci Friday.

START WITH

Ohio Lottery
/

Daily Number
302
Pick 4
3440

Page 4

•

at y

e
..

Vot.38, Na.247
Copyrighted 1988

.

\

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
While many residents may be
looking forward to the warmth of
summer, Middleport Village is
making plans for the Christmas
holiday ·season.
Meeting In regillar session
Monday night, Middleport VB·
!age Council heard Mayor Fred
Hoffman express thanks to a
number of
businesses . and
individuals whO have donated
towards the purchase of n.ew
Christmas deebrattons for the
town. Oo~irtfons and pledges total $3,47 and In order to get a 40
percent !scount on the new decorations, the mayor ordered
them before April 1.

Donations and pledges for the
new decorations include: $1,000
from Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
American Legion; $200donal!ons
from Consolldated Communications Group, Central Trust, Or.
R. R . Pickens. Heritage HouseLocker 219. and the Holzer
Clinic; $150 from the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home;
$100!tomDr.JamesSchmon. the
Blue Streak Cab Co., Western
Auto, Manley's Sun&lt;JCO, Valley
Lumber, Pat HUI Ford, Fruth's
P1Jarmacy. the American Legion
Auxiliary and Columbus Southern Power; $50 !rom King
Builders. Carter's Plumbing and
Heating, General Tire Sales, the
Dairy Queen, Ingels Furniture.

SPECIAL 7035. 21" PUSH

MOWER WITH FAMOUS LAWN• Lawn-Boy two-cycle eng&gt;neno messy orl to check or change.
• Easy-to-empty srde bag ..
• Rugged t4·gauge steel deck
• Comfortable. easy-touse controls.
• Full one-year

!i m1ted

$259

·RIDENO
UR
SUPPLY
985-3308
CHISTR

EMS sponsors pupils
for June 19-22 clinic

FULL

Ea. P(.

QUEEN

KING

Ea. P(.

Ea. P(.

(SOLD AS 3 PC. SET)

STORE HOURS: 9:30 lM-5 PM MON.·SlT.

ELBERFELDS
992-3671

POMEROY

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April26, 1988

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Foreman and Abbott and the
Friendly Tavern with· $20 from
the Cedar Bar and Lounge and
Mrs. Clarice Erwin .
Anyone else wishing to make a
donation to the fund for new
decorations may do so at the
office of Mayor Hoffman.
Mayor Hoffman also extended
thanks for a $1,000 donation from
area motorcycle riders to provide playground equipment fo r
Diles Park.
Council passed a resolution
declaring the seat of Allen Lee
King on council vacant. The
resolution states that Klng has
not attended a council meeting
for 14 months and that he was
given a 30 day notice of the

Impend ing action to vacate his
Include a vlsil by Dav id Baker,
position butdld not respond to the new director of the Ohio Departnotice. Council has 30 days to ment of Development at the
make an appointment to fill the Meigs County Emergency Medivacancy with the appointment cal Training Center in Pomeroy
going to Mayor Hoffman if the at 4 p.m. About 2:30p.m., George
group does not make that ap- Ferguson who Is knowledgeable
pointment in the time slot. on processes to be followed by
Council President Dewey Horton communities in establishing
said that it Is Important to get the · their town -owned television cavacancy fiHed since vacation ble sys terns will be at village hall
time Is coming up and the sixth and on Thursday afternoon also,
councilman is necessary In order an individual who was active in
to sometimes to have a quorum the construction of the Middl i .
so that meetings can continue at port Swimming Pool, will be in
during vacation time.
town to inspect the pool for
Mayor Hoffman announced deterioration and make recomrequested representation at sev- mendations on corrective. steps.
eral meetings which will take The recreation commission as
place on Thursday. These will well as village o!flclals will meet

attend that inspection .
Mayor Ho!!man announced
that the traffic light at the corner
ofNorthSecondAve. and Walnut
St.. which was damaged recently
by a tractor-trailer, will be ready
to be put back into place this
week.
Cou ncilman Bob Gilmore re·
ported on progress belng made
on the installation of the mlnla·
lure golf course at Hartinger
Park. Roger Williams was employed as manager of the course
with Teresa Cremeans to serve
as his assistant. The two will
start at the minimum wage of
$3.35 an hour . According to plans,
corpponents or the course s hould
Continued on page 10

Jng In the first quarter.
"Economic activity wa s better
balanced, with strong growth in
consumer spending, business
fixed Investment and exports."
he said.
Intiatlon as measured by the
GNP report' s Implicit price
deflator was 2.4 percent In the
first quarter. according to the
department's Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Non-residential fixed invest-·
mentlncreased $22.7 biHion or 21
percent from the third to fourth
quarter. All of the increase came
in -the producers durable equipment purchases. especially
computers.
The 32.5 percent increase in

producers durable equipment
purchases was the largest since a
39.5 percent Increase ln the
fourth quarter of 1983, according
to the government .
Personal spend ing Increased
$23.6 billion In the first quarter in
contrast to a $16.1 billion decU neIn the fourth quarter .
Durable goods purchases rose
$11.7 billion with more than half
of that increase in purchases of
motor vehicles. Non-durable
goods purchases fell $0.4 billion
while service expenditures Increased $12.1 billion, the depar tment said.
·
Real net ex ports Increased $3.6
bllUcm from quarter to quarter
Continued on page 10

Youngstown receives emergency ·school loan ·
AUcTION FIND- Attending auctions Is a hobby of John Veith
o! Story's Run, and Saturday at a sale at Chester, he found In a box
he purchased this !ramed 1914 Ohio llcepse plate wllh the number
1. Anyone have ln!onnatlon about It?

Ea. P(.

enttne

By DAVID VESEY
goods and services while removUPI Business Writer
lng the effect . of inflation, was
WASHINGTON - The econ$21 .8 billion compared with a
omy grew at an annual rate of2.3 . ~44.9 billion or 4.8 percenfhlke in
percent in the first quarter. with
the final three months of 1987.
personal spending, non All figures were adjusted fo r
seasonal variations.
residential Investment, exports
and a continued buildup of
''The figures show a strong
lnventories contributing to the
economy still on a vigorous
Increase, the government said
growth track." said Norman
today.
Robertson, chief economist of
Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh.
In a report that accompanied
the prellmlnaryfirstquarterreal
"The slowdown in GNf' growt11,
Is a temporary situation," he
gross national product estimate,
the Commerce Department also added. "We can look for mucli·
said corporate profits after taxes
more rapid growth in the second
rose a revised 2.6 percent in the and third quarters."
fourth quarter of last year.
Robert Ortner; under secre_ 'fhe first q_u arter rise In reaj
tary of Comp~e.,rc~. a11reed th.at .
GNP, which places a value on all the GNP figures were encourag-

BOY QUALITY AND STEEL
DECK VAWE.

TWIN

•

Nation's economy shows 2.3 percent gain

LAWN-BOY STEEL DECK

ONLY

• Cloudy tonight. Chance of
s howers, thunderstorms. Low
near 50. &amp;aln likely Wednesday.

King's post ·vacated by Middleport Council

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

Demjanj uk .. .._c_o_nt_ln_u_ed_f_ro_m_p_a_ge_1_ _ __
Trebllnka did take place and
there was a hangman tthere
named Ivan who brutalized people, but that hangman was not I.' '
Oemjanjuk said in his native
Ukrainian, which was translated
Into Hebrew for the court.
"Last week, you. your honors,
pointed to me as 'Ivan the
Terrible.' That is a grave mls ·
take.· a very grave mls takt
because I am not 'Ivan the
Terrible' and the most just
witness to this is God himself who
knows tht I am Innocent. I have

SVAC

destroyed two mobile homes
near Whitt in north central
Texas. At Mineral Wells. Texas,
60 mile an hour wlnds · were
reported and a large tree blew
onto a power llne.
Winds gusted to between 60 and
70 miles an hour In Hood County,
Texas. southwest of Fort Worth.
Thunderstorms near Menard,
north of Juitctlon. produced
one-Inch diameter halL Wind s
gusts were clocked at 55 mph at
Hobart.
Ralnshowers were widely scattered over Nebraska and Washington state Sunday night bu t
dissipated early today. Rain
·occurred over northern New
England with some snow In
northern Maine.
Rain and mountain snow fell
early today over the Rckkies of
northwes t Wyoming and_western
Montana. An inch of snow fell at
Great · Falls. Mont., between
midnight and l a_.m. MDT.

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services announced recently its Intent to "extend Into
the next generation for EMS'' by
sponsoring students to a sports
Injury clinic for local high school
students. The clinic will be held
June 19-22 at Ohio University in
Athens and the clinic staff will be
. he.: 'led by Charles "Skip"
Vosler, A.T.C. "head athletic
trainer at the university. Local
students are being sponsored by
EMS in cooperation with the
Meigs County Juvenlle Office.
Four students from each of the
county's three high schools wlU ,
have the opportunity to attend
the three-day clinic. Upon completion of clinic activities, partielpatlng students wiH p~ovlde
their local high school athletic
programs with trained persons
"to assist coaching staffs and
team physicians during practlce
sessions and games." said Robert Byer, EMS director, when
he explained the program to the
Meigs County Commissioners.
Supervision of the students wlU
be offered l)y Meigs EMS personnellf the schools so choose. As In
the past, EMS personnel wiH also
offer assistance at the various
athletic events throughout the
school year.
Hopefully , said Byer. this
program wiH' ·encourage at least
some of the students who partlpate into entering some aspect of
the medical field." Participants
will gain exposure to an a!Ued
medical field through athletics.
They- will gain basic athletic
training skills and techniques for
..the prevention and care of
· athletic Injuries while under the
supervision, encouragement and
direction of wen qualified instructors and supervisors.
The Sports Injury Clinic Program will consist of Information
on the athletic training profession, educalion, routes of certification and job opportunities. It
will also include tralnllli In

injury prevention, management
of medical emergencies. anatomy, use of computers in record
keeping, taping labs and athletic
Injuries; recognition, treatment
and rehab! Uta lion.
"We feel by exposing the
students to an allied field we wiH
be giving them a background of
medical knowledge from which
to build a career while assisting
fellow students and taking part in
the various athletic programs of
their schools," Byer said.
"We hope to sponsor an update
prior to the 88-89 school year .lor
our personnel as well as the
students and coaches of their
schools, in order to get the
program of! on the right track, "
he added.
Coaching staffs and athletic
directors at Eastern. Southern
and Meigs High Schools have
offered full approval of the EMS
sponsored program. said Byer.
Plans can for the selection of
junior and senior students to
participate in this year's clinic.
Eslimated cost to send students
this year Is $3,600. The sponsorship program 'is be on-going, year
to year.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state o! Ohio has approved a
$1 .7 mUUon emergency loan to
the Youngstown City School
Dis trlct to offset revenue losses
from the bankruptcy of the Hunt
Steel Co. ln 1985.
The slate Controlling Board •
approved the two-year loan
Monday.
To help repay the loan, the
school dlstrlct has a 9.5-mlll
property tax levy on the ballot
next week .
State officials said thai if the
loan is not repaid in two years.
the state will penalize the school
district and begin to take payments out of Its school foundation
allotment.
James VanKeuren, dlreotor of
the Division of School Finance
with the Ohio Department of
Education, said the state has

weeks ago when David Baker.
director of the Ohio Department
of Development, said a verbal
commitment had been made'
with the Unlted Steelworkers of
America that the state would pay
for half the cost of the analysis.
The analysis recommended
against the buyout and Baker
said the union would have to foot
the entire $115,000 cost of the
study unless the state helped.
Both Baker and Joseph Marinucci, assistant deputy director
for business development, apologized for not consulting the
board ahead of time.
Marinucci said 2.000 jobs were
at stake and there was a time
tlmit for undertaking the buyout
study. He said since then. a
management group has expressed an interest in purchasing
I he plant.

The board a lso approved a
$12 .5 million project involving
the relocation of the University of
Cincinnati's College of Applied
Science to a suburban site.
The college, whlch teaches
engineering technology. has
been seeking' to move out of its
88-year Q!d downtown Clncinnatl
bulldlng since 1974 and has been
looking for property for the last
six years.
A new building will be built and
three others renovated at Edgecillf College - a girls' school
whlch was once part of Xavier
University.
The state has appropriated
money for the move since 1981
but a suitable site was recently
obtained.
A university spokesma n said
the move is expected to take
place by the fall of 1989.

OPEC seeking ways to stabilize prices

VIENNA (UP!) - . OPEC's
pricing committee sought ways
to stabilize oU prices In a meeting
today before an unprecedented
session with seven non-OPEC
nations, but made no immediate
decision on proposals to cut oil
production.
1 The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries' fivemember pricing panel committee ended Its talks after three
hours.
The pricing committee SaudiArabla, lndol!esla, Venezu ela, Algeria and Nigeria - was
scheduled to meet with the
non-OPEC delegation from Mex Ico, Egypt, Angola, China, Malaysia, Colombia.and Oman at 10
p.m.
"So far, so good," OPEC
President Rilwanu Lukmall said
of the pricing panel session. "It
Soulh Central Olllo
Increasing cloudiness today, was a very good meeting. "
But Lukman, who also Is the
with highs nea.r 70. Cloudy
tonight, with a chance of showers Nigerian ott minister, indicated
and thunderstorms and .a low nothing had been decided, alnear 50. Rain likely Wednesday, thOugh he said "we have Ideas"
to put to the non-OPEC producers
with highs In the upper 50s.
The probability of precipita- In an attempt to stabilize shaky
tion is near zero today, 50 percent oil prices and possibly even boost
tonight and 70 percent them l)y cu ttlng the flood of
petroleum on world markets.
Wednesday.
··
Asked if any concrete actiOn
Winds will be !rom t~e southwest at 10 to 15 mph . today and had been taken, Lukman merely
smiled.
variable near 10 mph tonight.
Alaerlan Oil Minister llekaExtended Forecu&amp;
cem
Nab! was equally enigmatic.
Thundar lllrOUih 81dlll'llar .
·'We
have been able to solve the
A chance of showers Thursday
problem,"
he told journal Jats,
and Saturday, with fair weather
but
he
refused
to elaborate.
on Friday. Highs will ranae !rom
A delegation source fro~ the
1the lower 40s to the lower 50s

Weather

loaned $3.76 million to school
districts. Including Cleveland,
which have lost revenues because of bankrupt companies.
VanKeuren sald 21other school
districts are In debt to the state
because of an Inability to raise
money to pay their bUls. and the
state :loan fund has to be
replenished. He said almost $6.2
million has been loaned since
July 1987.
The Controlling Board also
voted to pay $57,650 for an
analysis of the feaslbiUty of an
employee buyout of LTV Steel
Co.'s Warren plant.
Approval came on a 5-2 vote
despite objections that the analy·
sis was contracted for and
completed prio·r to Controlllng
Board approval - a violation of
procedures .
The Issue was carried over two

pricing committee said OPEC
was discussing five possible
options. but that mutual produc·
tion cuts already had been ruled
out.
The most likely poss!b!Uty was
that the non-OPEC producers
would agree to some sort of
production cut and ask that the
13-natlon oU cartel observe Its
current commitment t~ ltmlt
production to 15.06 million barrels a dav.
World oU prices are between
$16 and $11 a barrel on the open
market -below OPEC's official
$18-a -barrel price.
Another possibility waR that
the status quo would be preserved until OPEC'S regular
June meeting when there would
be a good chance the non-OPEC ·
countries would be invited back.
While U.S. Energy Secretary
John Herrington has criticized
the purpose of the blla teral talks,
others. including a representative of the Texas Railroad
Commission, watched with Inter- ·
es I and concern over whether the
two sides would reach a production cut accord as a first step to
becoming a "super-cartel ."
rr. as analysts say, modest
produclion cuts could raise prices by $1 a barrel over current
levels. Americans could be payIng 5 cents to 10 centS more for
gasoline t~ls summer.
With a weak dollar encouragIng more Americans tortravelln
the United States this summer,
'"an agreement with correspond·

lngly higher prices could clearly
lead to Inflation and will certainly not help the U.S. economy." said one European energy
analyst.
The aim o!theOPEC talks with
outside producers was to reach
an agreement on production
curbs that could bolste'l- the price
of oil, which had flipped from an
early 1980 high of $41 a barrel to
around $15 a barrel In recent
months.
The session comes In advance
of a full-fledged "consultative"
meeting of the OPEC cartel
Thursday that could be turned
into an emergency conference to
take action on pricing and
production.
OPEC Is the Arab-dominated
organizalion whose two on price
shocks In the 1970s outraged
gas-guzzling car users and threw
Western government budgets
Into turmoil.
With petroleum · discoveries
ranging from the Gulf of Mexico
to Canada to the North Sea,
OPEC no longer has a stranglehold on the world oU market - a
problem complicated further by
the nearly 8-year-old war between two of OPEC's strongest
members, Iran and Iraq.
The meeting between OPEC
and non-OPEC countries "may
be historical,' • said Lukman.
According to some estimates, a
production pact between OPEC
and non-OPEC countries could
lead to a virtual super-cartel of
oU producers, sending petroleum

prices toward th e early 1980s
level.
Failure. on the other hand ,
could result in prices cras hing in
the next few months and deal
pe~hapsa morta l blow to OPEC's
hope of regaining the dominance
it held for so long over tl:le
International oil m ar ket.
Even with an agreement , there
was no certainty OPEC co uld
recapture that power.
Among tho se absent from the
VIenna meeting were Brita! nand
Norway with their r iches of
North Sea oil. the United States
with its vast Alaskan resources,
and the Soviet Union, the world's
-leading producer of oil. Another
complicating factor was the
Internecine conflict within OPEC
Itself between Iraq and Iran in
the oil-rich Pe rsian Gulf.
In December. OPEC reached a
makeshift accord to limit Its own
production to 15.06 mliilon barrels a day for the flrst half of this
year to defend the cartel's
$18-a-barrel price. But Iraq rejected the agreement on grounds
It should be allowed to produce as ·
much as its enemy, Iran.
The situation wa s made more
turbulent in January by a sharp
500,000 barrel-a-day rise In nonOPEC production to around 22.5
mUllen barrels a day and reports
of spreading cartel discounts
thatdrovedownon by as much as
$4 on world markets by midMarch. OPEC output is running
around 17 million barrels a day .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="142">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2726">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38053">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38052">
              <text>April 25, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3925">
      <name>erlewine</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6860">
      <name>herddman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="198">
      <name>howell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
