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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middl8port, Ohio

Wednesday, May 18, 1988

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
50/o DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ~:~~~~~~ )

Oilers win
Stanley Cup
playoffs

~

.•'

-1

.•

Ohio Lottery

'

Daily Number
726
Pick 4
1716
Super Lotto
8-12-13-15-30-31

•

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

I

'~:/(

Page 7

I

e

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl St.•992~3471

•

•

•

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enttne
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Vol.39, No.1 0

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Five-year improvement
plans to be dra~ up
by county officials
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commis·
sioners and county engineer will
begin right away putting to·
get her a five-year plan for county
Improvements lor the purpose of
requesting State Issue II funding
for those Improvements.
Only projects which qualify for
funding under State Issue II
regulations will be Included In
the plan the commissioners said
yesterday In their regular meet·
lng. The plan must be submitted
to the 28-member Dis tr)ct 18
Public Works Integrating Com·
mlttee which will play a role In
the disbursement of Sta.te Issue
II funding to the 10 counties in
District 18, of which Meigs Is one.
Meigs Commissioner Richard
Jones was appointed last week as
the county commission's repre·
sentat!ve on the district integral·
ing committee.
The commissioners reported
!hat core drilling for a proposed
transfer station at the county
landfill has been completed and
engineers working on the project
are now In the process of
analyzing soil samples. The
commissioners should have a
report from the engineers right
away as to whether the landfill
would be an acceptable site for a
transfer station. The county
landfill was permanently closed
last Sunday by the health depart·
ment, but part of the landfill
property may qualify under EPA
regulations as a transfer station
site.
Judy Williams of Brogan·
Warner Insurance, Pomeroy,
presented health insurance proposals tb the commissioners for
the county general fund em·
ployees, the Department of Hu·
man Services and the county
highway department. The insu·
ranee carrier under Williams'
proposals would be Blue Cross of
Northern Ohio . . Williams, who
s pecla!izes In health and life
insurance for Brogan-Warner,
was asked by the commissioners
to see if she could combine the
three separate policies into one
policy and return with a report
within the next three weeks.
The commissioners have until
the end of June to make a
determination whether to keep
the current Insurance program
which the county has with Blue
Cross of Central Ohio, or switch
to another carrier. The county's
current health Insurance took a
drastic rate Increase this year.
The commissioners opted to pay
the increased rates through June
30 while they look for a less
expensive program which would

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dealer WilHam K. Tnnnan, 39, of Roxbury, Mass.,
as he Is cuffed by Officer Steve Melia during an

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project Wednesday. Ponce said Turman was
captured with 69 vials of the cocaine derivative.
(UPI)

Byrd asks .Meese to resign
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Se·
nate Democratic leader Robert
Byrd said today President Rea·
gan should fire Attorney General
Edwin Meese on grounds the
operation of the Justice Depart·
mentIs faltering because of his
chronic legal problems.
Meese has rejected stepping
down, and, alter a visit to Capitol
H!ll Wednesday, apparently is
ready to fight through "the last
days" of Reagan's term, despite
harsher criticism. within his own
. party.
Byrd, D·W.Va., said that wha·
lever the validity of the allega·
• !Ions against Meese, the Depart·
ment of Justice is not operating
· efficiently ''because he Is spend·
!ng an inordinate amount of his
time dealing with his own per·
: sonal problems.
·'I think Mr. Meese ought to
resign," Byrd said at a news
conference. "Somebody ought to
tell this man. and it ought to be
the president of the United
' St.a tes. The attorney general ol
the United States ought to be a
lull-lime attorney general."
· Byrd said tire critical point Is

not whether Reagan h~s full
confidence In Meese, but whether
the public has full confidence in
the proper operation oftheolfice.
''The higher interest is the
public IntErest," Byrd .said.
As he left the Justice Depart·
ment Wednesday to deliver a
speech. Meese hinted he fully
expects to be attorney genera!
until Reagan leaves office in
January.
"We are going on the oflen·
sive," he declared. "We have a
very vigorous progr&lt;!m in the
Department of Justice.... The
battle against drugs. continuing
our efforts against obscenity and
organized crime, what we're
doing to combat terrorism, all of
these things ·a re going to be
vigorously pursued right down to
the last days of this
administration ."
Asked about his c01iference
with the conservative senators at
lunch, Meese sald;"We had very
good meetings. " Sen . Jesse
Helms, R·N.C., said Meese's
future at the Justice Department
came up only in a "peripheral
way."

But Christopher Simpson, a
spokesman for South Carolina
Sen. Strom Thurmond, ranking
Republican on the Senate Judi·
ciary Committee, said there
"was a very frank and candid
discussion on how the depart·
mentIs operating."
"The atiorney general reas·
sured the senators that despite
what they are maybe reading In
the media, · the department is
functioning effectively," he said.
One Capitol Hill source, speak·
!ng on the condition of anonym·
ity, said the Issue of Meese's
stepping down was dlscu·ssed but
no one suggested he do so. The
attorney general was said to
have told the senators there Is no
reason for him to leave in
response to unsubstantiated aile·
gatlonsofwrongdolng.
Nonetheless, Reagan was
called to defend his longtime aide
for the second time in two days,
telling reporters at the .Coas t
Guard Academy In New London,
Conn., "I thinksomearegolngto
keep on trying to make a fuss
over him and so far they're all
(Conl!!tued on Pa.ge 9}

.Trial TV program offered ·by .group

.

crime solvers program on televl·
slon in central Ohio, In hopes of
speeding the apprehension of
felons .

"I believe the program w!ll
benefit all Of central Ohio," said
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer In
announcing what he called a
"new partnership" between the
state reparations program and
Crime Solvers Anonymous, a
cooperative effort involving the
Columbus Police Department,
Columbus Kiwanis and local
med!aoutlets.
The ·teleyislon program will
have a two-week trial· run on
WTTE·TV (Channel 28) In Co·
lumbus starting next week. If it is
successful, the program will
continue.
On the program, a recent
felony is re-enacted during a
90-second segment in hopes that
tipsters will come forward. Sue·
cessful Ups result In a $1,000 cash
reward. Tipsters remain
anonymous.
When the program was aired
on another Columbus television
station, It resulted In 34 felony
arrests and 34 convictions In one
year, sponsors said.
John Quigley, gesnerqi man· ·
ager of W'ITE·TV, said the
segments will be a Ired 21 Urnes a
week. "We're out to see how
many of them (felons} we can get
behind bars where they belong,"
he said.
·
The VIctims of Crime Program
makes rewards of up to $25,000 to
innocent victims of violent
crimes. II will spend $4,100 of its
$200,000 annual promotional
PRIZE WINNER- Julia Wllloap!Q-, of New Haven, W.VL,
budget on the trial TV program.
recently woa a •Inch plllll mower !rom Sean Ia Middleport.
Funds come from assessments
Plc&amp;ued with WOloiJih!Q- Ia Bill Bap&amp;eutall, Sean owner.
· ·• against convicted criminals.

• COLUMBUS, Ohio) (UPI) : The Ohio Supreme Court today
: announced that the OhioVictims
: of Crtme Program w!ll sponsor lt

POTAMES

26 Centa

:~o~p~yr~ig~h·~~~~s~e~e~·----------------------------------~P~o~rn~e~r~o~y~-~M~id~d~l~e~p~o~rt~,~~h~i~o=·=Th==u~r~s~d~a~y~·~M~a~y_1~9~,~1~9~8~8;_________________________~A~M~ut:t~~·d~ia~t:n;c.~N:•:w~~=•:P•~·---

REGISTER 11 STOR
ADUlTS AND CHilD:E:OR PRIZES FOR

Beef Chuck

Cloudy tonight, low in 5Cis.
Chance of rain 511 . percent.
Cloudy Friday, chance ol rain
40 percent.

•

provide the same coverage.
No comrn~nts were received
by the commissioners on a
request from LTD Co., a partner·
ship of Larry and Terry Dean,
doing business as LTD Carry
Out, Route 7, Chester, to transfer
a C1 license for beer carryout
only to Ralph B. and Mary E .
Wells, doing business as LTD
Carry Out at the same location.
The transfer request will now be
submitted to the State Depart·
ment of Liquor ControL
A request lor the transfer of a
D5 nightclub license has been
received by the commissioners.

This transfer request is from
Donna Faye Barley, doing busi·
ness as The Cove, Route 7,
Pomeroy, to FRJC Inc ., doing
business as The Water Hole at the
same location. Shareholders in
The Water Hole are Frank
Musser, Reva Musser, Carl Van·
over and Jaqueline Carl, all of
Pomeroy . Public comments on
this transfer · request will be
accepted by the commissioners
through June 8. The transfer
application must be submitted to
the state by June 11.
Philip Roberts, county engi·
(Continued on Page 9}

Justices overturn
appeals court on
product liability
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) When a product falls ·to perform
as safely as can be expected, a
design defect is not proven unless
the•e Is proof that some aspect of
the challenged design caused the
failure, the Ohio Supreme Court
ruled Wednesday.
In an unanimous ruling, the
justices reversed a Montgomery
County Court ol Appeals decision
In a case raising claims of strict
product liability lor automobile
design or manufacturing defects
and reinstated summary judg·
men! in favor of Morningstar
Chrysler-Plymouth Inc. and the
Chrysler Corp.
The State Farm Fire &amp; Casu·
ally Co. and Barbara Mowen
filed suit as the result of a fire in
the Dodge Aries "K·car" she
purchased in 1981. The March 1,
1982, blaze destroyed the auto
and damaged the Mowens home.
State Farm, their insurer, paid
$166,523 of the $366,523 in damage
claimed by the Mowens.
Evidence showed a history of
electrical repairs performed on
the car under warranty. Donald
Mowen testified that because the
auto was under warranty, only
Morningstar mechanics worked
onlt.
A red w·arning light came on In
the car Feb. 27, 1982, the lights
progressively dimmed and a
burning smell developed. Mowen
took the car to Morningstar, but
did not leave It because they
could not lend him another
automobile.
Mowen drove the car home, put
It in the garage and took another
auto on a short trip. Returning

several hours later, he saw black
smoke coming from the garage
and summoned firefighters.
Experts testified that th fire
probably was of electrical o !gin
but, because the auto was om·
pletely burned, could n say
lire or
which wires
which might have been energized
when the automobile Ignition was
turned off.
The defendants argued there
was no proof of a detect In the car
when it left the manufacturer
and no proo~ that the lire was
caused by recurrence of a defect
previously repaired by Morning·
star, or caused by its repair.
Montgomery County Common
Pleas Court held that the plain·
tiffs failed to prove the !Ire was
caused by something negligently
repaired or something inherently
defective In the car's electrical
system.
Finding that the law does not
permit speculation as to cause,
the trial court ~ u.led for the
defendants, but the appellate
court reversed that decision.
Writing the high court's ruUng,
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer
said that to prove the product
liability claim against Chrysler,
it would have to be shown there.
was a defect in the product, the
product was defective when it
left the manufacturer and the
that defect was the cause of the
Injuries or loss.
The plaintiffs' evidence was
insufficient to prove the second
two requirements, he said. ad·
ding that there also was no
evidence to show negligent re·
pair by Morningstar.

Seventy-five Southern seniors
will receive diplomas Sunday
Meigs County's first baccalau·
reate and commencement exer·
clses this SRrlng will be held by'
Southern High School Sunday.
This year's services will be
held outdoors, weather permit·
ling, In the football stadium with
speakers to include Ohio Governor Richard F. Celeste, the class
valedictorian, Heather Shuler,
and the class salutatorian, Scott
McPhaiL
The Southern High School
Band and Choir, both under the
direction of·Mrs. Roberta Maid·
ens will present music for servi·
ces and the Rev. Charles Norris,
who is a member of the Southern
Board of Education, will deliver
the baccalaureate address.
Board President Charles Pyles
will present diplomas.
The 75 seniors are Jerry Ray
Aleshire, Jr., David Lee Am bur·
gey, Jennifer Jayne Arnold,
Shawn William Arnott, Pamela

,,

\

Kathleen Ash, Christopher WI!·
!lam Baer, Mary Denise Bald·
win, Scott Allen Bickers, Bridget
Dawn Bing, Angela Lynn Bos·
tick, Ronnie Eugene Burkhamer,
Jeffrey Todd Caldwell, Annett
Lynn Cardone, Patrece Elaine
Circle, Leanne Sue Clark, Kim·
berly Joe Cogar, Richard De·
wayne Cummins, Shawn Allan
Cunningham, Brian Lee Diehl,
Mickey Edward Eakins, Ammie
Renee Franko, Carla Christine
Garrison, 'Angela Diane Garten,
Earnest Allen Greene, Angela
Marie Grueser, Jerry Joe
Grueser, Dolly Renee Hill,
James Michael Hill, Jarrod Lee
Hill, TamiJ1Y Dawn Holter, Wll·
!lam Edwarll Hupp, Curtis, Dlon
Jones, Paula Jean Justis, Mollie
Denise Kimes, Darla Marie
Lambert, Larry Ray Lauder·
mOt, Charles James Lawson,
Robert Franklin Lawson, Ken·
neth Lee Layne, Donlta Joy

,.

Manuel, HarveY. Smith Martin.
Barry Wayne McCoy , Douglas
Scott McPhail. Patricia Coleen
Mulherin, William Joseph Par·
sons, Ronald Lee Rice, Donald ·
Andrew Riffle , Jo hn Eric Riffle,
Richard Shannon Riffle, Sara
Diana Rose, Detner Roush, .Kim·
beriy Kay Ryan , Richard Ray.
Sellers, Gregory Alan Shamblin,
Laura Earlene Shamblin, Clif·
ford Michael Sharp, Brian Ed·
ward Shuler, Dina Christl~
Shuler, Heather Camille Shuler,
Richard Nell SloaRe , Tina Carol
Slater, Kevin RAndall Spaun, Joy.
Beth Stobart, Kimberly Dawn·
Stobart, Donette Ruth Talbott,.
Trina Dawn Taylor · Young,
Brenda Faye ~eaford , Wendy
Jane Triplett, Kenneth Alvle
Turley, Jr., Jon Scott Tuttle,
Dena Darlene Watson, Timothy
Will lam Willis, Jamie Lee Wolfe,
Tara Dawn Wolfe, and Larry
Wayne Young.

•

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Comment.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-.Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 19. 1988

'

The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Street
·Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~

~m ~
~v

.
f""T"1,.,...

'--r• r-r-ea

'

=·~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Uni ted Press Interna tiona l, Inla nd Dall y P ress
Association and 1he Ame rican Newspaper Publi sher s Associati on .
LETTE RS OF OPINION are welcome-. They should be less than 300 words
long. All let ter s are subject lO edl!!ng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone num ber . No unsigned lelle,rs will b.;o published. ~e tters sho.u ld be In
good tas te, a ddressing Issues, not per sona lities.

Declare drug problem
'national emergency'

'

•

may have killed terrorist

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
WASIJINGTON - An offi cial
Tur kis h hit team assassinated at
leas t one Arm e nian terrorist

leader five year s ago, despite
pleas fr om the United States not
to go ahead with the hit.
The story , whi ch has remained
a secret until now, lends credence to the possibility that
another Turkish hit tea m killed
the most wanted Arm enian terrorist two weeks ago in Athens.
The kill -and-run tactic is common for Armenian terrorists, but
Tur key's internatlona reputation
has not been desmirched r &lt;"
cently by the label, "assassin.''
Hundreds of thousands of Arm en·
lans, a major ethnic group in
Turkey, died at the hands of the
Turks before and during World
War I. Since 1975,. a new surge of
vengeance by Armenians has
resulted in a bloody terrorist
campaign, killing dozens of Tur·
kish diplomats.
Apparently, the Turks have
been striking back without at·
tractlng much attention.
Knowledgeable sources told

By WR1 SANTOS
NEW LONDON, Conn. IUPI) - President Reagan declared
America' s drug problem a " national emergency" and called on
members of Congress today to join with his administration In a joint
task force to propose solutions In the next 45 days.
"In the crusade for a drug-free America , the next step is to enforce
IT,
,a policy of 'zero tolerance' of illegal drug use, so when we say no to
drugs, It will be clear that we mean absolutely none- no exceptions, "
YoU
Reagan told the graduating class at the Coast Guard Academy.
The president unveiled his new anti·drug strategy at the Coast
Guard Academy In New London in a commencement address to those
at the forefront of the fight to keep Illegal drugs from crossing the
nation's borders.
"Illegal drug use is the foremost concern In our country. " Reagan
said. "That Is why today I am calling on both houses of the Congress,
both sides of the aisle, to join with my representativ~ in a special
execu tlve-legisla live task force, .. to propose ways to comba t the drug
problem .
Reagan gave the panel a 45-day deadline in which to come up with
solutions, ranging from blocking supplies of drugs to curtailing
demand .
"Our task force should agree on solutions for every area of the drug
problem .... nothing should be overlooked or ruled out. Our policy is
one of 'zero-tolerance' for Illegal drugs , and we are looking for
solutions, not just a restatement of the problem."
Reagan asked the task force to consider capital punishment in
drug-related deaths, tougher mandatory sentences for drug dealers,
additional education and prevention programs to reduce demand, ·
and gteater use of U.S. military assets in drug surveillance efforts.
He' also proposed the use of civil sanctions such as fines and the
prospect of being barred from federal programs.
Reagan called on Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci, who has
opposed an Increased use of the military for such efforts, to "seek
creative solutions for the better use of military resources."
"More has to be done," the president conceded.
"One of America's greatest strengths is our unique capacity for
coming together during times of national emergency ... we have done
this before, we must do It now."
Senior administration officials, keeping the plan secret on the eve
of the midday speech, said Tuesday Reagan would "lay out some new
Ideas on how to recapture the drug issue in a . bipartisan manner."
They indicated he also would take note of current congressional
efforts to put the military squarely Into interdiction.
"It's a very serious national problem," White House spokesman
"Morality is all right, but what
Marlin Fitzwater said Tuesday . "But it's easy to let the debate get out
about
the dividends?"
of hand."
Those
are Kaiser Wilhelm's
Particularly in the current election year. Fitzwater noted,
"Everyone wal)ts to 'outdrug' each other in terms of the political words, but they might as well
have been spoken by Donald
debate ... . He will call on the natiOn to depoliticize the debate. "
Regan, Larry Speakes, Michael
Deaver, David Stockman, AI
Halg and the rest of the gossip·
mongers and grudge-bearers
who've left the Reagan admlnis·
tratlon over the years .
Rarely have so many been paid
so much to betray former associates. The operative word, by
the way, Is "paid. ' ' Hefty publish·
WISH, MASTER?
log royalties are obviously
among the germs spreading this
epidemic of bad form among
former Reagan officials this
1 WISH
exuberant urge to settle scores
YOU'D PUT
and ridicule colleagues within
the full public gaze.
OUT TtiAT
At least Regan says he 'll
CIGARETTE.
donate proceeds from his new
book, " For the Record: From
Wall Street to Washington," to
charity. Apparently, he's found
the pleasure of making Nancy
Reagan squirm to be payment
enough .
This is not to say that blind

Date Van Alta that In the
summer of 1982 the Central
Intelligence Agency learned. that
a Turkish Intelligence unit was
planning to kill Armenian terror·
1st lelftlers operating in Western
E urope.
Slmllqr assas~lnations of Pa·
Iestlnlan terrorists by Israel had
resulted in relatively little condemnation around the world . But
U.S. officials believed that an
assassination by the Turks would
be more difficult to swallow, and
Turkey would be roundly de·
nounced by fellowNATOalliesas
heavy handed.
So In September 1982, U.S.
officials visiting Ankara raised
the delicate matter with Turkish
counterparts. The Amer icans
presented themselves as con·
cerned friends who dldn' t want to
see an ally open Itself up for
criticism, and they urged the
Turks to cancel t he hit.
"The effort was not success·
tul, " a National Security Council
source 'told us. "Not long after,
the Turks killed at least one

MANGY
/ MVTT!

Armeni a n terrori s t , m aybe
more. But the whole thing was
kept quiet. Few Individuals out·
side the CIA were even aware of
It in Washington." So the U.S.
fears of public scorn were
unfounded. Our sou rces refused
to reveal the name of the
terrorist who was assassinated,
The Turklsl\ embassy has had no
comment on the story.
But no group had a stronger
motive than the Turks in last
month's assassination of Hagop
Hagopian , the leader of the
Armenian Secret Army for the
Liberation of Armenia, ASALA,
the most brutal of the Armenian
terrorist groups. ln a surgical,
highly professional hit on April
28, two gunmen !Ired four rounds
from sawed-of! shotguns at the
39-year-old Hagopian as he left
his Athens home. No one else was
hurt in the pre-dawn att11ck.
Hagopian's Identity and whe·
reabouts have long been a
mystery. Hagop Hagopian was
not his real name, but his nom de
guerre. Few captured terrorists
had ever seen him or knew his
story. He founded ASALA In 1975

Go oN,
SHOO!

Bt'AT

/

STAY!

/

Got a grudge? Write a book

.,

WHAT IS YOUR

'--.......

I

.. '• :
..

.

after breaking with the PLo;-:-'
which had trained and supported' ·&gt;
him .

:::

The biggest surprise following .• ~
his assassination was thl! dlscov: •:.
ery that Hagopian was only halt :-:
Armenian. He was alSil halt :Iraqi. New evidence indicates .. •
that he was part of the hit team :
responsible for the massacre of . ~
Israell athl etes . at the 1972 .:.
Munich Olympics.
That means the Turks were not
the only ones with a motive to kill
Hagopian. Intelligence sources ..•
told us the Israells knew all along
that he was also an Arab ·
terrorist, so It is possible !_hat an •
Israell hlt team brought him
down with the sam~ efficiency
that Israel demonstrated in the
assassination of PLO leader Abu
Jihad in front of his family last
month.
A third possibility is that other
Armenian terrorists killed Hagopian. Splits among Armenian .
groups have led to bloodshed In
the past. Hagopian himself was .
believed to have ordered th~
execution of more moderate
Armenian leaders.
Ironically, the Greeks, who are
Investigating the murder on their .,.
turf, don't think that Turkey I~ .
responsible, even though there Is :· ..
no love lost between Turkey and ·:··
Greece. l! Greek authoritie~ ·. ·.
have figured out what Hagopl· .;:
an's real Identity was, they are ·. ·
not telling.
::~ :
'
To date, Armenian terrorists, · : ·
primarily with ASALA, hav~ &lt;
murdered at least 30 people In · ,~
their campaign to get revenge ·- ~
against the Turks. Th~;&gt; most ·• •
Indiscriminate act was the deto- • ••
nation of a suitcase bomb In July ·: ·
1983 at the Turkish airlines •,,
counter at Orly Airport in Paris. •·
Eight people, Including an Amer·
lean, were killed, and 51 were
injured.
Four Turks have been mur·
dered in the United States since
ASAL-A was founded In 1975,
which explains the high security
at the Turkish Embassy in
Washlnglon, D.C. The ambassa·
dor keeps a machine gun In his
desk. Other Turkish officials
carry guns in case they have to
defend themselves against ter· . ·
rorlsts while In the United States.

- -..
Reds pKcher Ron Robinson slides Into home,
~4, . -~

...

~

loyalty to a president should take
precedence over truth. But let's
face it: Most of these men hardly
needed the muse of history in
turning to their typewriters.
Their works have none of the
magisterial range and density of,
say, Henry Kissinger's memoirs.
or the grace and lofty purpose of
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s paean to
John F . Kennedy's Camelot.
Deaver's "Behind the Scenes"
and Speakes' "Speaking Out"
sometlnes .read like the boorish
prattle of lotto winners awed by
the high·class company they're
suddenly able to keep. Look at
me, they seem to exclaim,
surrounded by s.uch powerful
people!
Not every fugitive from the
executive branch has had namedropping or revenge on his mind.
But even "The Triumph of
Politics," Stockman's 1986 book
and the most substantial of the
lot, suffered from unpleasant
undertones of bitterness toward
those who'd clashed with him.
To some extent, the rise of the
kiss-and -tell political book can

probably be blamed on the length
of Reagan's presidency. Not
since Dwight Eisenhower has
anyone lasted eight years In the
office. But even Ike's era produced nothing like the current
spate of gossip and back·
stabbing. Neither did Kennedy's
brief presidency; most books
from JFK 's aides verged on the
reverential.
The administrations of both
Lyndon Johnson and Richard
Nixon offered fertile ground for'
unflatter-ing assessments, but
officials who produced them .
(such as LBJ press secretary
George Reedy) often waited until
the boss left office.
So there does seem to be
something new going on, at least
in scope. Future President Bush·
/ Dukakls, kindly take note. You
could be the next victim.
Happily for Bush / Dukakls,
there may be a simple way to
reduce the risk: Pay attention to
the people you employ. Stop
depending on so many professional functionaries who could
serve virtually any president

.

Vincent Carroll ·~

(and sometimes have), and in- stead rely on men and women ·
who believe in what you're trying
to do, who share your values and;
vision.
.
For example, it's hard to
imagine Education Secretary .
William Bennett turning on thf ·
president in the manner of his
predecessor, Terrel Bell. Ben- '•
nett shares the president's corn·
mltment to educational choice as
well as the belief that funding is
not the key to Instructional
quality .
Bell, on the other hand, always
wavered in those goals. Not
surprisingly, he began to snipe at
the administration not long a;ter
resigning office In 1984.
But.even hiring people commit·
ted to the president's goals Is not
going to ellminate every kissand-tell book. DaVid Stockman ••
certainly thought he was In tune •
with Reagan's Ideals. Like it or
not, we seem to llve in an era of
the vindictive tattletale. Bad
· form has become.the only form
many of our public servants
know.
'

The enemy is -us _______.....___R_o_b_er_t_w,_al_te_rs ·:
·Today in history
By United Press Interr.allonal
Today Is Thursday, May 19, the !40th day of1988 with 226 to follow .
The moon waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They include
American· born Lady Nancy Astor, the first woman member of the
British Parliament, In 1879; VIetnamese leader Ho Chi Minh In 1890;
Black Muslim leader Malcolm X in 1925; playwright Lorraine
Hansberry 1..A Raisin in the Sun") In 1930; actor and TV talk show
host David Hartman In 1935 (age 53) , and disco diva Grace Jones in
1952 1age 36) .
On this date In history:
In 1536. Anne Boleyn, second of King Henry Vlll's six wives and
mother of Queen EliZabeth l, 'was beheaded.
In 1588, the Spanish Armada assembled to Invade England set sail
from Lisbon.
In 1935, T .E . Lawrence, known as "Lawrence of Arabia," died In a
motorcycle accident in England.
In 1964, It was revealed that American diplomats had found at least
40 secret microphGnes hidden in the U.S. Embassy In Moscow .

•

I

~J

I

.,,, .; '

BIG CHALLENGE - Catching routine fly balls at Municipal
Stadium In Cleveland Wednesday became very challenging for
hallplayers because of strong winds whipping into the stadium off
Lake Erie. In the fourth Inning, Chicago White SO&gt;&lt; shortstop Ozzle
Guillen (13) positions himself under the ball hll by Indian hiller
Mel Hall, while third baseman Ken Williams almost runs Into
Guillen. The Indians won 2-1. (UPI)

"We have iegilators in Michl· tlons, whether military bases or
gan who have not defended the facillties operated by Pentagon
B-1 program," the general said contractors, is hardly new. But
in a pointed reference to the as recently as the 1970s, the
state's two Democratic senators. Defense Department had little
A statewide letterwritlng cam· need to manipulate that pride to
paign to sway their votes might adyance Its Interests. The Penbring the B-1 squadron to Wurts· tagon had a symbiotic relation·
mlth, he added.
ship with a lew powerfulleglsla·
The senators, however, re. tors and used this to get whatever
malned skeptical of an aircraft it wanted from Congress.
that has become a flying disaster
In more recent years, how·
- and the Alr ForcE! decided ever, Congress has become more
against basing any B-1s In democrat! and Influence within
Michigan.
the Institution Is more dlfluse.
That episode Is nota.ble be· . Adapting to those changed circause It Illustrates one of the cumstances, the resourceful
central themes of Kotz's provoc- Pentagon has developed a sophls·
ative book, "Wild Bjue Yonder: Heated form of grass-roots
Money, Polltics a«td the B-1 lobbying.
Bomber."
When support Is needed on
Explains the author: "Many of Capitol Hill for a major weapons
us use the military-industrial ~ystem, for example, legislators
complex as a bogyman. We talk are targeted on the basts of which
about It as an external force that military contractors and subconcontrols our lives against our tractors have facilities In their
will. But If you look closely, you districts and states. Pork barrel
find that hundreds of compmnl· considerations routinely overties throughout the country whelm national security
and their residents - are an requirements.
Integral part of it."
One notable result of that
Local pride In defense lnstalla· distorted process Is the B-1, a

.

seriously flawed plane that was ·
supposed to penetrate the Soviet
Union's frontiers at supersonic
speeds but, In fact, is vulnerable
to flying birds.
After squandering $28 billion in
public funds on 100 B·ls, the Air
Force decided In the early and
mld-1980s \fhere to base them. '
Michigan got none but Texas
fared better - as a favor to the
chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, a Texan.
Kansas also was a winner,
principally because the ·Senate
majority leader was from that
state and understood what politl·
cal maneuvering was necessary
to satisfy his constituents.
"In explaining our defense
woes, we either defer to the
experts or glibly blame powerful,
impersonal and autonomous lor· '
ces that are beyond our control,"
notes Kotz.
"But to a great extent, those
are evasions, ways to justify our
passivity as citizens and avoid
taking responsibility for our own
actions or lack of them,'' hP adds.
"In short, the mUJtary-lndustrlal
complex Is ourselves."

York beat San Diego 5·2.
In the American League: Deti·oit 3, Milwa ukee 1; Balti m or~
8, Cal iforn ia 7; Texas 4, Toronto
0; Bos ton 4, Oakland 1; Cleve,
la nd 2, Chi cago l ; and Kansas
Cit y 8, Minnesota 2.
Cardinals 4, Cubs l
At Chicago, Tom Brunansky
do ubled In two r un s durin g a
three-run eighth Innin g. Reliever
Bob Fo rsc h, 3·3, worked two
Innings for the victory. Todd
Worrell pitched 1 2·3 innings for .
his leagu e-lead ing 12th save. Th e
Cardinals scored three unearned
r uns ln the eighth to break a 1·1
tie off loser Les Lancaster, 1·4. ·
Giants 5, Phlllles 1
At San Francisco, Mik e
Kr ukow allowed four hit s over 8
1-3 Innings and Brett Butter
broke a tie wi th a two-run
sixth-inn ing slrt g!e. Krukow. 3·2,
walked th ree and struck ou t six .
Scott Garrelt s picked up his
second sa ve of the season. Br uce
Ruffin, 3·4 , was tagged for seven
hits and walked five thyough five
innings befo re being kn oc ked out.

in the sixth .
Reds 8, Braves 4
At Cinci nnati, Da ve Coll ins' .
two-strike suicide squee-Le off
Pa ul Assenmacher, l -3. scored
Barry Larkin with the go-ah ead
run in the seven th inn ing to lift
t he Reds. J ose Rijo, 5-1, the
four th Cincinnati pi tcher, hur led
fo ur Innings.
Astros 4, l'lrates ~
At Houston, Alan Ashby and
Denny Wailing each drove in two
ru ns. 1\'ol.an Ryan , 4-2. allowed
two runs on four hi ts over six
innings . Joaqu in An(luja r, J ua n
Agosto and Dave Smi th each
pitched an Inning of relief. Smith
picked up his eighth save. Doug
Dra bek, 4·3, surrendered th ree
runs on eight hits.
Mels 5, Padres 2
At San Diego, filob Ojeda
allowed two hits ov~r S.l -3 innings
and Keith Her nandez homer ed to
snap a seventh-inn ing tie to lift
New York . Ojeda , 4·2, struck out
five and walked three. Pad res
starter J immy Jones, 3-5, las ted
6 2-3 innings, yieldi ng fi ve r uns.

•
WID

Birds.cop sixth victory; Indians
By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer

With the Orioles leading 8·2, nati 8, Atlanta 4; Hou ston 4, ,'
Baltimore rookie starter Jose · Pittsburgh 2; Montreal 3, Los
Bautista , 1·2, and Doug Slsk Angeles 0; and New Yo rk 5. San
failed to retire five straight Diego 2.
Angels to open the eighth.
Tigers 3, Brewers l
At Milwaukee, Luis Salazar
Aase, who came off the dis·
a bled lis !last Tuesday, relieved, scored the go-ahead r un on
and yie1ded an RBI single to Teddy Higuera's nin th-inning
Johnny Ray that cut the Orioles balk. Doyle Alexander, 4·2, scat·
lead to 8·5. Aase struck out Ja~k tered eight hits for the victory.
Howell' with the bases loaded, He struck out seven and walked
and got Tony Armas and Butch three in his third complete game
Wynegar on fly balls.
of the season. Higuera , 3-3, gave
up ll hits in 81 ·3 innings.
" lt'stheflrstgamel 'vebeenin
Rangers4, Blue JaysO
where the game Is on the line,"
At Toronto, Ray Hayward fired
a six-hitter in his first ma jor·
Aase said . "The one inning was
alL I could have pitched longer,
league complete game and Geno
but told Elrod it was their
Petralli doubled In two runs.
Hayward, 3·0, struck out five and
decision. 1 felt good, threw some
fastballs good and some 1 over- walked three. Toronto starter
threw. I gave It everything I Todd Stotllemyre, 1-5, yielded a
had. "
pair of solo homers. Texas has
Hendricks decided against us· won 10 of Its last 12.
ing Aase in the ninth . Instead he
Red Sox 4, Athletics 1
turned to Tom Nledenfuer to save
At Boston, Mike Greenwell and
Bautista's firstmajor -leaguevlc· Ellis Burks scored on pitcher
tory . Niedenfuer ended up allow- Dave Stewart's throwing error to
ing two runs before earning hls trigger a three-run seventh in·
second save.
ning. Dennis " Oil Can " Boyd
"I wish I could have run him · Improved to 5-2. Lee Smith
IAase) out In the dinth inning, but pitched the ninth for his fifth
he did what I wanted," Hen· save. Stewart, 8-2, dropped his
drlcks said. "We don' t want to second consecutive decision.
Indians 2, White Sox 1
rush him. He Is too valuable a
piece of property."
At Cleveland, Joe Carter
Elsewhere, Detroit downed doubled in two runs with one out
Milwaukee 3-1, Texas toppled In the eighth inning to give the
Toronto 4-0, Boston bounced Indians their seventh victory In
Oakland 4-1, Cleveland clipped etght games. Tom Candiotti, 6-1,
Chicago 2-1 and Kansas City pitched his Ieague·leading sixth
kicked Minnesota 8-2. The game complete game. Rookie right ·
between New York and Seattle bander Me lido Perez , 3·1 , took
was rained out.
the loss.
In the National League: St.
Royals 8, Twins 2
Louis 4, Chicago 1; San Fran·
At Minneapolis, Danny Tarta·
cisco 5, Philadelphia 1; Cincin· bull, Kurt Stillwell and Bo

With the American League
West's two worst clubs on deck,
Baltimore interim skipper Elrod
HendriCks could wind up as the
first Orioles manager with a
winning record in three years.
Not that Frank Robinson
doesn't have a chance, but since
he's due to resume managing
Saturday alter being sidelined
with a ruptured disk, his odds of
turning around the &amp;-31 Orioles
are very good.
Wednesday night, the Orioles
scored five runs to snap . a
sixth-inning tie then held on to
defeat the California Angels 8-7
and give Hendricks a 1-0 managing record .
Hendricks, who faces Seatlle
and California before Robinson
returns, needs only one victory in
the next two games to go out with
a respectable .667 winnln~r­
centage. Earl Weaver. fter
taking over as Baltimore' third
1985 manager, ran up a 53·52 .
Cal Rip ken Sr. , who began the
season as Baltimore manager,
was fired after an 0·6 start.
Robinson replaced Ripken and
presided over the team as It lost
its first 21 games to set an
American League record.
"He (Robinson) called me to
say it was a piece of cake, "
Hendricks said.
Hendricks was able to win
thanks in large part to Don Aase.
The one-time ace of the Orioles
relief corps ls trying to return
fljom shoulder surgery that
forced him to miss most of last
season.

Jackson homered to support Brei
Saber hagen, 5·4, who al lowed'
eight hits, struck out four and
wa lkPd four in pitching his fourth
complete game. Minnesota starter Allan Anderso n fell to 1·3.

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'•

;

'),\...

OUT AT HOME only to have Braves catcher Ozzle VIrgil waiting on him with the
ball to record the putout 'In Wednesday night's contest at
Riverfront Stadium. Home plate umpire Gerry Davis made the out
call on the play . Robinson protested the call and was ejected
shortly thereafter. The Reds won 8-4. ( UPI)

'·

WASHINGTON (NEAl -The
speech was made almost five
years ago by an obscure Air
Force general in a remote town,
but author Nick Kotz under·
stands its significance and reconstructs the occasion In his power·
ful new book.
The speech was delivered in
June 1983 by Lt. Gen. Earl
O'Laughlin in a rural part of
Michigan where the economy
was heavUy dependent upon the
3,600 jobs and $78 million annual
payroll at Wurtsmlth Air Force
Base.
The vast 5,200-acre Installation
was home to a wing of B-52H
bombers that were to be replaced
· by the B-IB. "If you're not on the
list to get the B-1," O'Laughlln
told his audience, "you're In
trouble."
In great measure because of Its
location - closer to the Soviet
Union than many bases elsewhere In the country - Wurtsmlth had been expected to get a
B-1 squadron. But O'Laughlln
warned that the base could lose
its privUeged status for political
reasons.

,'

•

'

By DAVE FREDERICK
He yielded five hi ts in ~ven
UPI Sports Writer
innings and struck ou t a season·
Montreal's John Dopson Wed· • high eight.
nesday night earned hi s first
" You can't win if you don't
major-league vi ctory - three score," Hershlser said. " I threw
years after . getting his fi rs t the ball well. I had good locat ion
chance to do so.
and good breaking ba lls .."
" I 'm happy and glad it finally
Her shl ser's was n't good
happened,'' said Dopson, after he enough to fool Andres Galarraga,
and two relievers combined on a who led off the second Inning by
six-hitter to lift the Expos to a 3-0 beltlpg a 3·1 pitch for his eighth
triumph over the Los Angeles homer.
Dodgers.
"E ven after the home run , I
:'I'm glad I got It early. I didn' t felt we were going to win,"
want that mental barrier ."
Hershtser said.
Dopson, who made his first .
With one out In the eighth, Tim
major·league appearance in
1985, was lifted for a pinch-hitter Wallach hit his third homer, a
.
the seventh Inning after shot to left off reliever Alejandro
lo ing jus-t two singles . The Pena. Montreal added a run in
right· ander, recalled May 9, is the ninth on Herm Winningham' s
happy just being back In the infieid single with the bases
loaded.
majors.
Reliever Tim Burke pitch ed
"I felt I could go all the way ,
the
ninth inning to pick up his
but things worked out well, "
sixth
save of the season.
Dopson said. "! 'm not going to
Elsewhere, St. Louis downed
question the decision."
Chicago 4-1, San Francisco deDodgers starter Ore! Her·
shlser, who began the season feated Philadelphia 5·1, Cincin·
with six straight victories, lost nati decked Atlanta 8·4, Houston
for the second consecutive time. topped Pittsburgh 4·2, and New

~

.

a

Berry's World

Expos blank LA; , Reds topple Braves
,.

T~rks

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

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..•
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Thursday, May 19, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 19. 1988

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�Thursday, May 19. 1988

OhiO

Thu111day, May 19, 1988

Atlanta ·stuns Boston Celts 112-104
By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Atlanta Hawks , bu.oyed by
two straight home victories, won
at the Boston Garden for the first
time In 14 games to put the
Celtics one loss away from
playoff elimination.
The Hawks surprised the Celtics nno4 Wednesday night to
take a 3·2 lead in their best-ofseven Eas tern Co nference semlf·
ina!. Atlanta can eliminate Bos-·
ton Friday night !nGame6atThe
Omni.
For the first time in four years, ·
the Celtics trail In a conference
playoff.
"Once you're rolling, you've
got the edge," said Atlanta's
Kevin Willis, who scored a
game-high 27 points and grabbed
14 rebounds. " Our confidence Is
up."

Red -Wings give
Demers new pact

IIOsiOn's Danny Alnge grabs Atlanta's Spud Webb
around the head as Webb tries to work his way to the hoop during
the third quarter of Wednesday night's NBA playoff game at
Boston Garden, as Celtic lorward Kevin McHale looks on in the
background. The Hawks won 112·104to take a 3·2 lead in the series.
(UPI)

Reds ·acquire Leon Durham
from Cubs; trade Pat Perry
CINCINNATI CUPi t - The
Ci ncinnati Reds, hopin g to add
some punch to their offense . have
acquired veteran fi rst baseman
Leon Durham from the Chicago
Cubs in excha nge for left-hand ed
f)itcher Pat Perry.
Durham had been re legated to
" pinch·hittlng role si nce April
29, when the Cubs called up
minor-league player Mark Grace
to play first base. Durham , who
mdlcated he wan led to be traded
aft~r being benched. wa s hitti ng
. 219 )n 24 games with 3 home runs
and~ RBI.
Reds manager Pete Rose said
lJurham. a Cincinna ti na tive.
wlll be In the lineup Friday night
when the Reds open a we ekend
series against the Cubs al Rivrrtroitt Stadium.
"We plan to play him Fr iday
night against the Cubs a nd Rick
Sutcliffe. " said Rose.
Rose said Durham probably
will bat In the middteofth co rder .
"One reason that we got him
was an opportunity to get a guy ro
produce some runs in the middle
of' our order and an opporlunlt y to
get a le!t-handed hitter .
. " He's only 30 years old an d
L·om!ng back to his hometown
might help him. Th ere 's no
question In m y mind he makes us
a better ballclub tomorrow than
we are today ."
Durham's 138 hom ers r'ank
him eighth on the Cubs' all-time
list. He has hit 20 or more hom er ~
four consecu live seas ons and five
nmes during hi s ma jor-league

career. He slugged a ca reer -high
27 homers las t season.
RasP sa id he was surprised the
Cu bs were willing to give up
Durham. who lives In theCinc in·
nati area du ri ng the off-season.
" I gues s they needed a !eft·
ha nd ed pitcher, a nd they didn ' t
wa nt him (D urham ) s itting there
affec t ing that Gr ace kid. I know
!here's nothing wrong with Durham . He 's coming off a career
high in homer s a nd I know he 's
no i over the hil L"
Mu rray Cook, Redj, general
manager. sa id the dea l was made
beca use of :t concern fo r t·he

cl ub 's s lugg ish offense.
·· rrs a reac tion to the co ncern
have ou r offensive product."
.,d id Co'f:lk .

DETROIT (UP!) - Coach
Jacques Demers, who led the
Detroit Red Wings to the Camp·
bell Conference finals the last
two seasons, Wednesday received a two-year contract
extension.
General Manager Jimmy De·
vellano said the contract, orlgl·
nally a $1.1 million five-year
deal, will expire after the 19~2 -93
season. Devellano said he Is "not
scared at alj 1' to say Demers Is
the highest-paid coac h In the
NHL.
Since joining the Red Wings In
1986, Demers has guided Detroit
to a 73-62,25 record . In his only
two years with Detroit, the team
has advanced to the Campbell
Conference finals , being eliml·
nated both times by Edmonton In
five games.
The anno~ncement comes one
day after the Quebec Nordiques
phoned Detroit executive vice
president Jim Lites to ask
permission to speak with De·
mers. The Nordlques, who fired
Demers after his first NHL
season, had planned to make him
general manager and vice
president.
Detroit also announced Wednesday that It had cut defense·
· man Harold Snepsts and goalie
Darren Eliot.
Snepsts, 33 , was the oldest on
the team and was seeing less and
less playing time. Eliot was one ·
of six players caught breaking
curfew In an Edmonton bar
before Game 5. Devellano said
Eliot 's release was not rr'i" rc•d to
the incident.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT Till
7 P.M. FOR YOUR
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE.
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

In the other Eastern Cooler·
ence semifinal , the Detroit Pis·
tons eliminated the Chicago
Bulls 102·95 to win the series In
five games.
Both Western Conference se·
milinals resume Thursday night.
The Los Angeles Lakers, leading
3-2. play the Jazz at Utah. The
Dallas Mavericks, also ahead
3-2, lace the Denver Nuggets at
Reunion Arena. Game 7 of each
series, If necessary, will be
Saturday.
At Boston, Atlanta's Domi·
n!que Wilkins scored 11 of his 25
points In the final 8:16, and the
Hawks hit 22 of 24 fourth quarter
free throws. Robert Parish had
24 points and Larry Bird 22 for
the Celtics.
,
Boston held an 84-76 edge with
9:46 remaining. Atlanta then ran
off a 15·4 run that Included
Wilkins ' first 5 points of the
seco nd half. ·
Wilkins' two free throws put
Atlanta ahead 97-94 wlth 3:30
remaining. Alter a basket by
Parish , Dennis Johnson hit two
foul shots to put Boston ahead
98-97 with 2:25 le ft .
Wilkins sank two free throws at
2:07 to put Atlanta ahead for
good, and start a 10-0 run that
gave the Hawks a 107·98 advan·
tage. Boston did not score over a
2:01 span .
"Everybody for Atlanta did
everything right. down the end,"
Johnson said. "They did the right
things teams need to win.''
At Pontiac, Mich., Bill Laim·
beer scored 13 of his 19 points In

the fourth quarter to help Detroit
overtake Chicago, ·
Chicago's Michael Jordan was .
held to 25 points. Picking up the
slack for the Bulls were Horace
Grant, who scored 20 points, and
Charles Oakley, who. had 19.
Isiah Thomas led Det rolt wlth
25 points, and Adrian Dantley
had 22.
Detroit took the lead lor good at
81·80 on John Sally's basket with.
8:03left.
Lalmbeer scored· nine points
over the last 5: 24, starting wlth a
3-pointer to give Detroit an 86-82
edge.
"I was looklngtoshootlt at that
point," Lalmbeer said. "Certain
shots you just know are going ln. I
was open. There was nobody In
my face. I dldn'thavetoworkfor
the shot, just get the ball and let It
go. ''

Oilers win ·Stanley Cup playoffs opener

probably don't know what it Is to
lose."
Utah may not know what Is to
be tired, either. Tuesday, Bobby
Hansen, Karl Malone and John
Stockton all played 48 minutes,
Thurl Bailey 44 and Mark Eaton,
until fouling out, 37 .
In Game 5, Stockton tied Magic
Johnson's playoff assists mark
with 24.
Nuggets and Mavericks
Denver played without injured
Lafayette Lever and Jay Vincent
the past two games. Lever wlll
miss Friday's contest. and Vin·
cent Is questionable.
"I don't like our chances,''
Nuggets Coach Doug Moe said.
"I don 't like the spot we are In:
But it Isn't over."
Dallas' Derek Harper says the
loss of Lever Is damaging to
Denver.
"There Is nobody on their'team
who can play Rolando !Black·
man, 24 points In Game 5) like
(Lever) can,'' Harper said .
"They are a different team
without him . If he Is not in there,
we definitely will go to Rolandoo
more and he is going to score

Laimbeer put in a rebound,
then followed Thomas's two free
throws wlth a long jumper to
make It 92-86 with 2:54 left. The
center sealed It with another long
jumper with 1:24 remaining to
put Detroit up 98-90.
Lakers at Jazz
The .defending champions were more."
expected to have lltUe trouble
advancing to their seventh consecutive conference final. Utah,
though, led 2-1, and los tin the last
minute In Game 5 Tuesday.
Rio Grande's Trey Seibel fin·
"They are one of the grittiest lshed the 1988 baseball season
teams since I've been with the · and his collegiate diamond ca·
Lakers that we ' ve played." said reer with a Mld·Ohlo Conference·
Michael Cooper, who nailed the leading .448 batting average.
winning jumper wlth seven se·
In 37 games Seibel, a senior
conds left in Game 5. "They first basema n, contributed to the
Re dmen's 7-71lnlsh In the league
with his 1.54 hits per game
average (second in the MOC) ,
four
triples, for a .108 per-game
that the winner would come in at
average
(fourth) and nine ho·
mlnus-5 or mlnus-6, not 12 or 13
mers,
for
an average of .24 per
under. I think we've added a few
game
(fifth).
strokes with our changes."
Teammate Ed Ya).es. a senior
But Donna Caponi, ~ho won
catcher,
Is lOth in the league in
the tournament In 1979 and 1981.
hitting,
with
a .381 average in 35
isn ' t so sure.
games.
He
is
third in doubles per
"All the changes are good,
game
(12,
lor
a .34 average) .
but It's not going to make that
Redman
slugger
Don Becker hit
much difference,'' she said.
10
homers
In
37
games
to give him
"The players today are playing
a
.27
per-game
average,
good for
so touch better and hitting the
second.
ball so well you can't believe
Among the pitchers, junior AI
the scores they shoot no matter
Sleradzki
Is eighth in the league
. what they do to a golf course."
with
a
4.53
ERA In 47 213lnnlngs
The four -day tournament ,
Pitched,
stretched
over 13
which winds up Sunday, Is one of
g~s.
He
fini!;hed
the
year with
four major tourneys on the LPGA
a
6·7
mark
.
tour each year. The winner
receives $52,500, with the run·
nerup getting $32,375 and · the
third place finisher taking
$23,625.
Among those challenging deMOUNT VERNON - tm
fending champ Geddes are twoMeadows, a freshman golfer at
time winners Nancy Lopez and Ohio Jliorthern University and
Patty Sheehan, along with Betsy )987 graduate of Galli a
King, who lost to Geddes a year Academy, came close but not
ago by just one stroke.
close enough to the all ·
Lopez, who Is very familiar conference cut-off point of 16'3.
with the course because she used
At the Ohio Athletic Conferto live In a house that borders the ence golf tournament at Apple
layout, has won three of the nine Valley Country Club, he shot a
LPGA events she has entered 165.
this year, Including last week's
Ohio Northern compiled a
tourney.
team total of '855 to liE' Marietta
"I've played a lot with Nancy for sixth place. Wittenberg won
this year," noted Geddes, "and the tournament with a total of
she's the player to watch."
800.

EDMONTON, Alberta !UP!)
- Two years ago 111 the seventh
game of the Smythe Division
final, Steve Smith scored Into his
own net- a goal that eliminated
the Edmonton Oilers from the
Stanley Cup playoffs.
WednesdaY night, Smith assisted on both Edmonton goals
and contrlbu ted to a smothering
defense to help the Oilers win the
opening game of the Stanley Cup
final series wlth a2·1 victory over
the Boston Bruins.
·'It has never had any effect on
the hockey I've played, " Smith
said of his fateful rookie-season
mistake against Calgary. On that
play, his attempted pass from
behind the Oilers net hit goal·
tender Grant Fuhr's skate and
bounced Into the goal lor a 3·2
Flames triumph.
In Game 1 against . Boston,
Smith's play greatly affected the
Oilers' fortunes again, this ti\ne
more favorably. Both Edmonton
goals resulted after Smith slap
shots.
At 1:56 of the second period,
moments after Boston's Ken
Llnseman nearly scored on a
short-handed breakaway,
Smith's drive defieected off the
skate of Bruins defenseman Glen
Wesley. Goalie Andy Moog
stopped the puck with his left
pad, but the rebound returned to
Wesley's feet. Gretzky swiped at
Wesley 's skate and sent the puck ·
caroming off Moog's glove, the
post, Moog's arm, and Into the
. net.
Boston' s Cam Neely tied the
score at 13:15, but early In the
third period, Smith set up the
game-winner.
Moog stopped Mike Krushel·
nyski, who sliced to the net and
took a pass alone in front. The
puck went to Smith high In the
slot, where he fired a slap shot
that Keith Acton deflected for his
second goal of the playoffs.
Defense, however, was the key
to Edmonton's opening-game
success in Its quest lor a fourth
Cup In five years. The Oilers held
the Bruins to only 14 shOts on
goal.
"In a defensive game like that,
you have to jump on their
mistakes, and theyweretrylngto
capitalize on ours," Smith said.
''We were playing so disciplined,
It was very difficult for them to
get to the net.
"The criticism of our defense

Seibel leads MOC
with .448 average

LPGA Championship begins
MASON, Ohio (UPI) - The
$350,000 LPGA Championship
opens Thursday on a course (hat
has been lengthened and tough·
ened alter players complained
last year the layout was too easy.
· "! remember last year all we
heard In the locker rooms was
how It dl(ln't play like a championship golf course," said Jane
Geddes, who won last year's
72-hole event with a 13-under par
275.
LPGA and course officials.
after being stung by the comments, ch;10ged half the holes
and added several hundred yards
lo the now 6,427-yard, par 72
course at the Jack Nicklaus
Sports Center In southwestern
Ohio.
"I like the changes," said
Geddes. "It looks like a cham·
plonshlp gail course now and
that's what we wanted."
Club pro Larry Herrmann
recalled that some players
"laughed at the course" a year
ago.
"They screamed and
screamed that the course was too
easy," he recalled . "Well.
they've got a tougher course now .
Let's see what happens."
Sports Center manager Dick
Craig ligures this year's scores
will reflect the changes.
"It will contain the LPGA
player&gt;," he said. "I would hope

•

Meadows misses
All-OAC in golf

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Buffet and baked ootalo C"annot be used wdh.any other d1SC01.H'tls Tax nat
•ndlldecl valid at P1fltc•pat1ng steaktiOo!!oi!S

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v

Trey Seibel of Cincinnati, first
baseman for the Rio Grande
College baseball team, was
named to the NAJA Ali·Distrlct
22 baseball team by district
coaches lo~ his efforts during the
1988 season.
Seibel, a senior majoring In
restaurant management at Rio
Grande, leads the list of 15
players chosen as All-District.
He ls the only player on the list
representing Rio Grande.
District coaches named
pitcher Jeff Kuder of Mount
Vernon Nazarene as Player of
the Year. Kuder was also named
the Mid-Ohio Conference Player
of the Year. Kuder's coach, Sam
Riggleman, was chosen the
Coach of the Year. Riggleman
was named the district's top
baseball mentor In 1980 and 1985.
Seibel ended tne season wun a
.448 batting average, nine home
runs and 32 RBI. He was the
leader In Individual batting average for the Mid-Ohio Conference
and finished second In the district
behind Bluffton's Matt Hender·
son ( .461) . The Redmen ended
the season with a 19-17-1 overall
record. They were fifth place
(7·7) In the MOC and seventh
place (17-16) In the district.
During the season, Selbe 1 had
57 hits, breaking the old record
(56) for the most hits by a Rio
Grande player In one season. set
In 1980 by Brett Wilson.
Seibel Is the son of George and
Alberta Selbe! of Cincinnati.
Seibel said he plans 'to help Rio
Grande baseball coach Dave
Oglesby with !all training lor the
1989 season.
.
Within the MOC, Rio Grande's
Ed Yates, a senior catcher. was
listed lOth In hitting, with a .381
average In 35 games. He Is third
In doubles per game (12, !or a .34
average). Rio Grande slugger
Donald Becker, a freshman, hit
10 homers In 37 games to give him
a .27 per-game average, good for
second.
Among the pitchers, junior A1
Sleradzkl Is eighth In the cooler·
ence with a 4.53 ERA In 47.2
Innings pitched, stretched over
13 games. He finished the yea!'
wlth a 6·7 mark.

Bengals sign pair
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Blin11als sl11ned a pair
o! free agents Wednesday UniVl!rslty of Wisconsin punter
Scott Cepleky and ' HillSdale
(Mich.) .College safety Steve

Loans Subject
To Qualification
01 Borrower
,)

n.

has been going on since the
beginning of th.e playolls. We've
just been working hard and we're
going to continue to work hard.
We've been pretty successful to
this point, butthere's no patting
yourself on the back until it's
over. When we've won the
·Stanley Cup, maybe there will
be. We've played hard and we've
played·strong, and we' re going to
continue working a.s hard as we

11 home Final games. Boston,
shut out on six power plays, felt to
12-7 this postseason.
"They're much different from
when I was here," said Llnseman, who played lor the Oilers
from 1982-84. "There's no holes In
their defense now.
•'When we came up the ice,
they were standing up at the blue
line and their forwards were
back: We were trying to beat five
can."
Oilers almost every lime. When I
Game 2is scheduled for Friday was here, a lot of times I was the
night at Edmonton. The series only forward back. "
shifts to Boston for games
Boston Coach Terry O'Rellly
SuQday and Tuesday . Successive gambled wlth Moog, who played
games, 'if necessary ,- will be for Edmonton the previous seven
played at alternating sites.
seasons. Instead of Rejean LeEdmonton Improved Its play- melin, who owns a playoff-best
poll record to 13-2, 10-1 II) Its last 2.45 goals against average and an

Dlckl~oa .

11-4 record. Moog entered the
game with four playo!l appearances and a 1·2 record. He
received a warm greeting from
the Northlands Coliseum crowd,
and many of his 20 saves were
outstanding, despite suffering a
slight leltleg injury In the second
period.
The Bruins, however, could not .
muster enougl\ offense to over·
come the Oilers' strong effort.
"It's absolutely no surprise to
me," O'Reilly said of the Oilers'
strong defense: "The jJerceptlon
that they're ~ wide-open o!len·
slve team Is a thing o! the past.
They did a good job of hokllng
down our forwards, and when
they do make a mistake, (goal·
tender Grant) Fu()r Is there."

ARGUES WITH REFEREE - Edmonton Oilers' captain
Wayne Gretzky argues with referee Den Is Morel over a penally
tha&amp; was not called during the first period of Wednesday night's
Stanley Cup opener against the visiting Boston Bruins. Though
Gretzky didn't win this argument, the Oilers ended up winning 2-1.
(REUTER)

REBATES UP TO

1988 SABLE G.S. 4 DOOR

$750°0
ON SELECTED

UNITS
COMPARE THIS EQUIPMENT

•3.0 L. Eft v.e ooa.
•Auto. oftrdrtve trtnt.
·P205170R14 BSW tlr•

·Stock I 8704
•SpMCI control
•Air condition
•Alit window defrost
•Power tid• window•
·Power lock group

c••••n•

•AUIO. averdrlv. trtnt .
·Alr condition

·Crul.. control

oa•""'

•,UtiFM
·CI•roo•t Ptlnl

•

·1111 wheel
•Power lOck group
·AM/fr.l
•Floor meta
•Retr wlndQ"- detroat•
•P195170R14 BSW Uret

·3.0 L. V-6 MPI eng.

•Tilt whHI

TURNPIKE DISCOUNT • 11,968

RETAIL PRICE • 115,467

•R-clll.. blue cloth lie •••••

TURNPIKE DISCOUNT 11,794

RETAIL PRICE: 115,293

SALE PRICE-

1

COMPARE THIS EQUIPMENT
•Stock t 8245
•Navy vetour• pinstripe ...,,

SALE PRICE·

$13,499

ONLY
$,196~1

\ USED CARS &amp;TRUCKS
1983CHEVY
CHEVETTE
Stoc:k t 84031, 4 doort, ,. cyl ., air oond.,

auto. trans., AMIFM radio, t18reo
bucket seats.
WAS

2995

1

Stockl87481. 2doorl, hllrd 10p,4 cyl.,
.. &amp;peed trlnl ., racial tnt, 1'811' ll&amp;p
bumper, g..ge• .
.

NOW

1983 GMC JIMMY
Stoek • 82338, bucket saata, 4 whael
c*ive, 6 cyl., 4 tpaedtrwn., PS, PB, AMI
FM rado, stereo ~apt , budtat 18&amp;tt,
gauge I .

WAS

NOW

NOW

'6895

1983 BUICK LE SABRE

1985 NISSAN SENTRA
WAGON

Stockt75124, 2docrs, hardtop, V--t.alr

cond., 'lin~l roof, auto. trans., PS, PB,
power windows , power 10111, power door
locks, tih wheel, cruise control , AMIFM
rlldio , radial tires, white walls, roar window defog., power mirrors.

WAS

15495

NQW

$4699

Stoc:k t 87041, 4 cyl., aif cond ., auto.,

15695

WAS

1 10,794

auto. trans., PS, PB, AMIFLt racio,
atereo tape, radial tires, boekat tBitJ .

NOW

WAS

15495

Stock I esset, 2 doort, coupe, front
wheel drive, 4 eyt., Mlto. toot., PS. PB.
AMfFM rldio, radial tiles.

Stock 1 87161 ,6 cyl. , auto., PS, PB,
cruise, ~It
NOW

WAS

NOW

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$3985

'6295

1985 FORD ESCORT
Stock 1 83242 , 2 doon , coupe, front

wh&amp;eldriw, -4 cyt., 4 speed trMa., ttand.

Slockl87551 , 6 cyt., airoond., •
PS, PB, tilt, CNisa.
WAS

trans .. PB, AM radio.

WAS

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Stock I 70541 , 3 doors, sedan. front
wheel drive. 4 cyt ., 4 speed trans., AM'
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16995

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$5499

1987 NISSAN 200 SX

C&gt;

Stock 1 85931, 2 daora, c:oupe, fron1
wheel drive, 6 eyl., IWtO. trans., P$, PB,
power windows, power seat, power door
lod(a, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM/FM

NOW '

NOW

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1984 LTD
STATION WAGON

1986 FORD ESCORT

WAS

$4499

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1985 CJ7

ire&amp;, whha waHl, bucket nail, rear

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1987 FORD TEMPO
Stock 1 78321. 4 doors, Mdan, front
wheel drive, 4 cyl., air oond., auto. trans.,
PS, PB,AMIFMracio. siBreo tape. radial

1984 FORD MUSTANG
Stock t 84151, 2 cbort, 6 cyl., air c:ond.,

cruise. PS. PB.

tape ,

'3795

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$8495

'3995
t 84533, • daorl , !lard top,

tront

ctiva, 4 cyl., aum. nna .. PS, PB,
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NOW

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1985 FORD LTD
'llt32.• -·· ....... tronl
lwllooh-.
4 cyt., PS, PB.
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, ..,.,, tranL, PI, PB, puwer wir"'-

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·-

FORD F•150 4X2

.Seibel named
to All-District
baseball

•

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radio, white walls, buclo.et seats, rear
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WAS
NOW

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$10,699

..

�Thursday, May 19, 1988

Big I 0 tournament u~derway

SMASHES CAR - Spike Gehlhausen, ol
Speedway, Ind., smashes his car Into lhe Tum
One wall Wednesday , while practicing lor the

Three more
INDIANAPOLIS !UP!) -The
dream of competing in the 72nd
Indianapolis 500 ended Wednes·
day lor the three slowest drivers
In the practice field. Meanwhile,
two rookies began their quest lor
a Sta\lting spot.
Spilte Gehlhausen, a five-time
Indy starter. suffered a bruised
left foot when he crashed his 1987
March·Cosworth into the firstturn wa ll. The car suffered
extensive damage and Gehl·
hausen. who has no backup. Is
unlikely to find a ride In time for
this weekend's final qualifying
sessio ns.
Harry Sauce and Dale Coyne,
both seeking their first Indy
starts, suffered a more Ignoble
fate. Neither was able to drive
fas t e nough to pass their rookie
qualifying test by Wednesday's
dead line. Sauce's 1987 March·
Cosworth had only achieved
199.247 mph. Coyne's 1986 March·
Chevrolet V-8, the only engine at

Indianapolis ~00. GehlhauSen, who has not
qua!Uied lor this year's race, walked away from
the accident wilh only a bruised ankle. (UPI)

soo·hopefuls ousted

the speedway without a turbocharger, never managed better
tha n 160.
Two drivers made their debut
on the speedway asphalt Wednesday . Finland's Tero Palmroth
com pleted his rookie test In a
Lola-Cosworth owned by Dick
Simon and Rocky Moran took
over a March-Cosworth owned
by A.J. Foy t:' Moran passed his
rookie test las t year, but mu st
take a refresher · test before
trying to qualify.
Time trials co ntinue Saturday
a nd Sunday to fill the final12 slots
In the 33-car field for the May 29
race at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway.
The fastest practice lap Wednesday was driven by Mario
Andrettl, who reached 213.523
mph in his qualified Lola·
Chevrolet. The top lap by a
non-qualified driver was 208.574
by Pancho Carter. The slowes t
qualified car now belongs to

Falivene affair
may haunt Browns
CLEVELAND iUPI) - The
demotion of player personnel
director Chip Fallvene within the
Cleveland Browns' front office
easily has provided the first
sur prise of the off· season.
Mind you, there are people who
won't shed tears for Faltvene.
The horror stories concerning his
modus opera nd! have traveled
the rumor circuit.
Those anecdotes have gone
along these lines: Falivene often
told hopefuls in trai nlng camp
that they had been cut. Whether
this Is apocryphal or not, I'm not
sure, but the word Is that Chip
would say something like, "En·
joying yo!lr lunc h? Well, It's your
las t with the Browns" or "Skip
desser t a nd bring your pla ybook ·
to my office." Nice things like
that.
Certai nly, Fallvene wasn't
well-liked by the players. He also
won few friends among the
media because of his reluctance
to co mment, In any way, on the
Browns' draft plans.
This latter point did not escape
the Browns, as loquacloU!l Ernie
Accorsi, the tea m's vice pres!·
dent oflootball operations, began
accompa nyi ng the taciturn Fall·
vene to sc hed ul e d press
confere nces.
In Fallvene's defense, he has
acq uired the reputation of being
a thorough a nd dedicated
planner when It comes toprepar·
lng for the draft.
Yet the manner In which he
dropped down on the Browns'
organizational chart Indicates
more than just something was
wrong. Also. \)ear In mind that
there is llttleoccurlng In the Iron•
office that doesn't have the
approval of Coac h Marty
Scholten helmer.
There Is some cause for alarm,
especially s ince the Browns are
trying to fill those personnel
holes that must be dealt with If
the team is to continue Its
success.
One question remains: If Ac·
corsl Is now in charge of the
scouting In addition to his duties
of negotiating player contracts,
what Is Falivene doing these
days? The next few months will
tell what effect this will have on
the Browns' operations .
If there is some Inter nal
struggle andor dispute, It should
be handled much more discreetly
the rest of the way.
So, the Cleveland Force finally
has advanced to the Major
Indoor Soccer League Champion·
shiP series. Judging from the
attendance at games, though, It
seems few fans really cart!.
That fact may serve to underline another: that the MISL trufy
· • Is an endangered species.
The Wolstein family Is til' be
admired for Its tenacity In
continuing attempts to Improve
the team and the league as a
whole. But the Wolstelns, as truly
Involved and well-heeled owners,
also are an endangered species
·1 .. -

'

.,

as far as MISL s hakers · and
movers are concerned.
StU!, even pres uming the
worst, Cleveland sports fans owe
the Force the purchase price of a
ticket or two. This m ay be the last
chance to see professional
soccer.
Getting a bit antsy where the
Cleveland Indians ' bullpen Is
concerned? Join the club.
Hank Peters has been given
much leeway In shaping the
pitching staff, but It Is obvious
the boys of spring have turned
In to the geezers of summer.

rookie Scott Atchison (205.142).
"Proba bly be somewhere In
the 207s would be a safe guess,"
said Carter when asked what It
would take to qualifY . "We
haven't even talked about It yet
a nd probably won't until
Saturday."
Foyt, still trying to qualifY for
his 31st Indy, barely reached 206
Wednesday In hlsLoia-Cosworth.
Gehlhausen reached a top
speed of only 198.150, which
w·ould not have been good enough
for the 1984 race. Gehlhausen, 33,
a resident of nearby Speedway
and a native of Tell City, Ind., lost
control of his car entering Turn 1.
The car s lid 360 feet, spun
one-half time and struck the wall
with Its left side. The car skidded
580 feet, completing Its spin and
halting between the first and
seco nd turns.
Sauce, 41, Is a judge In nearby
Noblesville. He had hoped to
raise $50,000 for a local drug and
alcohol abuse .rehabilitation program for teens. The former
sprint c ar driver had never raced
an Indy car until last March,
when he reached 195 mph.
Coyne, 33, or Plainfie ld, Ill.,
could not overcome an uncom·
petltive engine.
"It's an engineering problem
In the motor," he said. " It 's going
to take major surgery to get the
car up to speed and we just ran
out of time."
Oil flooded the engine whenever Coyne tried to push beyond
Its limits.
"Every time we got up to
speed, oil would come 'through
the breathers. We just couldn't
get io competitive speed. We
tried a lot of. fixes without going
to a major overhauL"
Coyne sa id hls te am would
keep the engine through the
season for financial reasons .

SHOP US FOR MANY SPRING
AND SUMMER
FASHIONS AND
QUALITY NAME
BRAND
SPORTSWEAR FOR
MEN AND WOMEN.
A
It{ ·

BAHR CLOTHIERS
z

MIDDLEPORT

OPEN 9-5
MON .· SAT .

ANN ARBOR, Mich. IUPI) The Big Ten baseball tourna·
ment was scheduled to open
today With the University of
Michigan as the favorite to win
Its filth tourney tltle In seven
years.
The Wolverines (20-8 In the
conference, 45·15 overall) begin
defense of their tourney crown
against Ohio State (16·12, 32·26
overall) . In the other matchup,
Mlchlgan·State (16-12, 39-18 over·
ali) faces Miimesota (17'11, 34-15
overall).
The winner of the double·
elimination tournament receives
an automatic berth to the NCAA
regional tournament.
Michigan won the regu lar
season title with Minnesota finIshing three games be hind , fol·
lowe d by Michigan State and
Ohio State tied for third. The
Wolverines have won the iast two
conference tourneys.
"We played 28 games (In ' the
league), but now we' re back to
· even and have to prove we're the
best again," said Michigan coach
Bud Middaugh.

The Wolverines hope that they
have better success against the
Buckeyes than they did In the
regular season, when Ohio State
won three of four games from
Michigan.
"It was embarrassing to lose
three of four to Ohio State," said
Michigan catcher Mike Gillette.
"! don't know what it was, but we
were sluggish.
'·
"But if our pitching and hitting
come through at the same time,
we can beat anybody In the
country."
Michigan boasts the conference's top pitching staff with Jim
Abbott leadi ng the way. Abbott,
who is 8-3 with a 2.99 earned run
average, will get the start
agai nst Ohio State.
The Wolverines also have
seven regulars batting above .300
with Steve Finken's .419 heading
the list.
But the Buckeyes will be
aimi ng lor a repeat performance
of their visit to Ann Arbor two
weeks ago.
Ohio State outfielders Jay
Semke and Mike Pl'l!f! were

I

Postal training session set

among the top 10 hitters In the
league this season. Tom
Schw~rber and Bill Wertz are the
Buck~yes' top pitchers.
Mi'J'nesota enters the tournament, winning seven of Its last
eight games. The Gophers combined ' strong hitting and excellent pitching Sunday and Monday
to sweep Wisconsin. Two of those
wins Were shutouts.
The,Golden Gophers have six
P\a ;:~·~~:a;mong the Big Ten's top
4f
, led by first baseman

1

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

"""~ 40

Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Wednesday; Middleport at 2:04 a.m. tra nsported Mark
Davis from a motorcycle accident on Middleport Hill to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy a t 3:10a.m. to Bunker
Hill for Richard Caruthers to Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Rutland at 5:34 a .m . to Meigs Mine No. '1 for John Goese to
Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 12:29 p.m. to Bucktown
Road for Allee Balser to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
Squad 4 at 5:48 p.rn. to a n auto accident on Route 33 for Tony
Andrew to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy Squad 1 at
5:48 p.m. to the same accident lor Ed Fowler to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Raymond Fowler, Wendy Swann and Kelly
Smith refused treatment at the scene; Middleport at 7:07p.m.
to South Fourth Ave. for Charles Edwards to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL

Second

.YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868 '

The rest of the country will
enjoy sunny skies and tet:npera·
lures In the 70s and 80s, accord ing to the weather service.
Cooler temperatures are ex ~cted In the Rockies .and the
northern Pacific Coast while the
mercury will climb to the 90s In
the desert Southwest and parts of
northern Florida across the
central Gulf of Mexico coast.
Rain drenched the Eastern
Seaboard Wednesday, with showers and· thunderstorms stretch·
ing from New England to North

Carolina and west Into the Ohio
Valley.
A !lash llood watch was posted
until early this morning lor parts
oJ central Pennsylvania and the
Laurel Mountains , where up to 2
inches of rain fell , the National
Weather Service said.
Allentown, Penn., received
more than a hall inch, along with
WJ!Iow Grove, Pa ., and Newark,

Cut ·
5 400

799!~
Where available

1199.00

Mobile antenna and
adapler pac:k eMira

Or Carry Ale:ng
Low Aa $40 Per Month.
T~rns commuting into productive time. #17·1003
Save $40 on CT·200 Portable Adapter Pack
With Two Rechargeable Batteries. #17-203,
#23-181.
Separate Items 139.85 .. Sale 99.85

;=~~Tandy® 1000 SX
Tandy Save "24905

1000

Stereo HQ VHS VCR

Save
$200

39995
Reg. 599.95

sx

Low As 520 Per Month .

Watch, record or play
MTS stereo TV programs. Remote. #16-613
Re~ole batteries e11tra

~!mClte HQ VHS VCR By Reali~ic
PC compatible.
Perlect for home
or business. With
DeskMate®II.
#25·1052

With CM-5 Color Monitor

89900 ~~::~.~~ '24985
Save
#25·105211043

,

Low Aa $45

p., Monlh •

Scientific
Calculator
EC·4018 by
Radio Shack

Cut
29%

2495

Reg. 34.95
Solar powered! 76
functions. #65·962

Intelligent
Modem
DCM·7 by Tandy

40% Off

5995-

Reg. 99.95
Features full duplex,
auto dial and answer,
300
#26·1394

AM/FM Dual-Cassette

Save 530 s~-~2

by

~ealistic

Synchro-Start Dubbing
Plays two tapes in sequence. Three-band EO,
2-way speakers. Has auto-level recordlng,-auto·
stop. External mike jacks. #14·751 eanerles •""

Mini LCD
Travel Alarm

** Satellite Repairs**

B&amp;WPocket
LCD TV
Save By Realistic

'60
Reg.
159.95
Low As $15

Reg. 44.95
#12a1566 Backup battery extra

Per Month •

#16-156

Bal\er•es extra

B&amp;WTVWith
AM/FM Stereo

....

~

:I-. Cut 38%

By Realistic

Reg. 119.95
Plays on AC , DC , batter·
ies. #16-113 Baneries e11tra

Big-Button
Telephone
ET-201 by Radio Shack

40% Off 45%
Off

2995

HQ System lor
Sharper Picture
Record all those pro·
grams you've been
6·
missing!
event timer. #16&gt;·5CI8

~~I

6995 ~~35

Save
$100

ga~

rrEfi«)-IMf£
I

2795

Reg. 44.95

#12·1 30
el(tra
1 AMIFM Stereo
Conce rtmate®by Reetlistic,

Cut
300fo

3495
Reg. 49.95 Betteriesexlr~
FM·AFC. #12·706

9'!!h

neer, and Ted Warner, highway
superintendent, discussed dust
control when they met Wednes·
day with the commissioners. The
two reported that several townships in the county have already
purchased and applied dust con·
trot, including Sutton, Chester,
Letart, Scipio and Lebanon
Townships. Townships which are
I In the process of buying dust
control to be applied later are
Salisbury; Columbia, Salem and
Olive. · Rutland and Bedford
Townships have not contacted
the highway department about
. dust control Warner said, and
Orange Township has gone to the
public for donations to help pay
for their dust control. All town·
ships which have already pur·
chased or have committed to
purchasing dust control have
opted for the more expensive
material with a $.13 pric e differ-

1

empty. charges. "
Sehowell Welcker of Connec·
ticut, a liberal Republican who
has never kept secret his opposi·
lion to Meese, was not nearly so
charitable as he acrompanled
the president aboard Air Force
One.
" I've been bat tllng the son of a
bitch ever since he became
attorney generaL I don't like
him," Weicker said bluntly,
. though he later advised waiting
until investigations of Meese are
complete before making any
resignation demand .
The Justice Deparlment has
been wracked by high-level protest resignations In recent weeks
as Independent prosecutor
James McKay pursues his crlml·
nal probe into possible violations
of federal ethics law.
McKay, who Is not expected to
bring criminal charges against
Meese upon the Issuance of a

BILLFOLDS

.

TWIST-ON

WATCH BANDS
By Spiedel

ENTIRE
STOCK

EC-416 by Radio Shack

30o/o

**Movie Rentals**

Sampling
Keyboard

35-Watt PA
Amplifier

Concertmate-650
By Realistic

MPA·40 by Realistic

Off

&amp;!!

ONL.Y $1 00 A DAY

9.95
a Eny·lo·Read DIIJIIay
a EXtra·Lirge Keys
Auto-switches between
solar and battery power.

N66·581

Reg.14.95
a 24·Hour Alarm
• Stopwatch Mode
Displays month/day/
time or use as a stopwatch. Backlight
M63-5057

Save •so

I

Edna A. Deem, 76, Elm St.,
Racine, died Tuesday at Ohio
State University Hospital in
Columbus following an extended
Illness.
Mrs. Deem was born July 21,
1911 at Mechanicsburg In Cham·
palgn County, Ohio, a daughter of
the late Howard and Mae Smith
Bradford. She operated small
grocery stores in Racine and
Portland and at one time was a

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions - Ri·
chard Caruthers, Pomeroy;
Clero Baker. Middleport; Allee
Balser, Racine; Howard Wagen·
hais, New Haven, W.Va.; Peggy
Brlckles, Middleport.
Wednesday Discharges Helen Capehart, Jasper Powell.

8985· 1~:\5

~ll..

· Captures real sounds.
Has 32 mini keys, 8
presets, 10 rhythms.
11'42·4006 BIHtri.. tlllra

FLORIST

Moiga County' a Otdnt Ftoriot

352 E. Main St. r.n.oy, Oh.
PH. 992-2644
.

POMEIOY, OHIO
10 All-6 PM MON.·SAT.

"Often /miloted - Never
Duplicated"

I

.'
'

F/.:?J

-RAIN
SHOWERS
Warm "Cold
. . Static
ucc:~um~at
FRONTS:
Map Shows m1nimum temperal\Jres. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
to receive pra&lt;:ipi1ation indicated

R

___.__.....;.___

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Cloudy, wl\h a chance
of rain. Low 50 to 55 . Northeast
Is
50 percent.
winds
5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
Friday: Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain . Hi gh 65 to 70.
Chance of rain is 40 percent.
Saturday through Monday

992-6669
271 N. Second Ave.

FU

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellla a Loewl

Middleport, Ohio

ITURE
SALE
,,

GALLIA COUNTY JR.
FAIRGROUNDS
T~ursday

Friday and Saturday

MAY 18th • 21 st
10:00 A.M. TILL 9:00 P.M.
Saturday: 10 A.M. TILL 5 P.M.

116 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
(6141 992·7328

May Be Over Earlier If All Merchandise Sold
OFFERS
FULL and PART-TIME
CHILD CARE and
PRE-SCHOOL SERVICES

OVER 50
- LIVING ROOM SUITES
OVER 100 RECLINERS
. &amp; SWIVEL ROCKERS

Now Enrolling For
Summer and Fall
Children 3 to 12 Years
Title XX Subsidized
Sliding Fee Scale
Limi1ed Enrollment

MATTRESSES &amp; BOX SPRINGS
•
END 'TABLES &amp; LAMPS
DINETTES • SLEEP SOFAS ~

CALL NOW

DENTURES
MADE IN ONE DAY!

Delivery Availahle

•RELINES 8o REPA IRS MADE WHILE YOU WAIT
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Financing Avallahle

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TWIN CITY DENTURE
Rt. 33, 607 N. 2nd St.

Buy Your Kodak Film
For Graduation Here •••••••

riw~l~th~o~v~e~r~n~ig~h~t~Io~w~s~l~n~t~h~e~50~s~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~

"

I

20°/o OFF

Village Pharmacy

Fair Saturday, with a chance
of showers Sunday, and lair
Monday. Highs will be In the 70s,

Stocks

Dally Sentinel rural carrier.
Surviving are a daughter. Mrs.
Louise Jackson, Bellville; two
grandchildren, Carolyn Ritchie,
Tuppers Plains, and . Aurelia
Jones, Canfield; several stepchildren; several step ·
grandchildren, three half broth·
ers and a hall sister.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by two hu sbands, a brother and a half
brother. ·
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wlth Mr. Lawrence Bush
offlclatlng. Burial will be In the
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Cemetery. Friends may cal! at
the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m .
Friday.

COLOGNE
PERFUME
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FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN
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tW

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will extend
east from eastern lower Michigan, eastern Indiana and Kentucky
across the Atlantic Coast from central Maine across Maryland and
Delaware. Showers and thunderstorms will also reach from
northwest Wisconsin across the upper Mississippi Valley, South
Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, eastern Colorado, western Kansas
and northern New Mexico. Skies will be sunny over much of the
remainder of the nation.

report perhaps within days, has Am Electric Power ............. 26%
looked Into Meese's involvement AT&amp;T ...................... ............ 26
with Wedtech Corp., the now - Ashland Oil ......... .... ..........68¥,
bankrupt New York defense Bob Evans ... .. .................... .16%
contractor; a $1 billion Iraqi Charming Shoppes ............. .10¥,
pipeline project supported by qty Holding Co . .................. 31
Meese 's longtime friend and Federal MoguL ................ .37%
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. .. .. ...... 58'}l
attorney, E. Robert Wallach;
Heck's
lnc .................... .. ..... l%
and other financial questions ,
Key
Centurion
....................38%
Including about Meese's wife.
Lands'
End
........
.. ................ 23
The attorney general has been
Limited
Inc
........................
17%
questioned several times before
Multimedia
Inc
........
...........
63'}l
McKay's grand jury . In addition,
Rax Restaurants .................. 4~
independent prosecutor Law·
•
Robbins &amp; Myers.. ..... .. ..... .. lO'}l
renee Walsh Is Investigating his
Shoney's
Inc ....................... 24 \!,
role In the Iran-Contra scandaL
Wendy
's
Intl...
..................... 5%
In a related matter , Meese's
lawyers Wednesday rejected the \ Worthington Ind .................. 20
(Ashland Oil announced a 2-for-1
conclusions of a recent Senate
stock spOt would take place;
report that found Meese violated
payable date Is July 29)
a White House ethics policy In his
dealings wlth Wedtech while
presidential counselor .
Ass is tan t Attorney General
Wllllam Bradford Reynolds. who
serves as Meese's counselor

Area ·deaths

Edna Deem

m-352c

391 WUT MAIN STIEO

&amp;:ill SNOW

2

Hospital news

** Rent to Own **

_

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More than 1 inch of rain fell
during the past 24 hours at
Allentown, Pa.: Roanoke, Va ;
Wilmington, Del. , Baltimore and
Washington , D.C., the weather
service said.
Showers and thunderstorms
were widely scattered from the
central Missouri Valley Into
parts of the central Rockies.

25°/o OFF

ence over the less expensive
materiaL Th e county a pplies the
dust control for the townships.
Warner reported the highway
departm ent is grader patching
on several county roads and that
· State Farm Road and County
Road 1 North have already been
completed. Roberts said that
these two roads In particular get
lots of heavy load traffic and they
still needbaseworkanddralnage
which takes money and time.
Also discussed by the commls·
stoners and Warner was the
billing procedure for the county
highway depa r lment to haul
out-of-state, ta West Columbia,
W.Va., road side litter which has
been picked up and bagged by
litter departme nt employees.
Finally, an interdepartmental
tranfer of funds within the
sheriff's deparlment was approved by the commissioners.

Continued from page
Byrd... -----,-____:_.;:__

N.J.

LADIES &amp; MEN'S

continued from page 1

Reg.15.95

ALL MAKES AND MODELS

Page 9

AMITY

c;TI~AL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 5-2().88

EMS has 7 calls Wednesday

INSURANCE
II t
St., Pomeroy

CT-200 by Radio Shack

All MAKES AND MODELS

,,

By Unite&lt;! Press International
Showers and thunderstorms
are expected to continue to
dampen the East Coast from
Maine.to Maryland today, as well
as parts of the Midwest and West
Including Colorado and New
Mexico.
The National Weather Service
a lso predicted precipitation for
parts of Indiana , Kentucky ,
lower Michigan as well as
. northwest Wisconsin, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming and
western Kansas.

There will lle a pre-test training session, and possibly more
than one, for all applicants who applied to take the Postal
Entrance Examination lor Meigs County Post Offices.
At least one session will be held and It Is scheduled for Friday,
May 27, In the social room of the St. Paul Luth·eran Church In
Pomeroy.
,
Registration Is required to attend a pre-testing training
session and all applications wishing to attend must call or stop
by either the Middleport or Pomeroy Post Office during
business hours before Saturday, May 21. The Pomeroy Post
Office phone number Is 992-2235 a nd the Middleport Post Office
number Is 992-5731. All those applicants planning to attend a
training session are required to be registered before the session.
Time of the trai ning session or sessions will be announced In The
Dally SentineL

Five-year ...

** VCR Repairs **

Jl

The Daily Sentinel

-Local news briefs---. Showers, storms continue along East Coast

Southern Local Schools will present the elementar y )land In
concert tonight !Thursday), 8 p.m. , at th e junior high schooL
Admission to the concert is free but donations will be accepted.

CTR·85 by Realistic

HOME
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Elementary band concert tonight

Cassette

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ONLY $100 A DAY

Thursday, May 19, 1988

SALE CONDUCTED BY EMPIRE FURNITURE - ALL NEW
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10

The paily Sentinel

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio

Iranian gunboats fire -on Norwegian gas canier ti n
MANAMA , Bahrain (Uf'I) Hanlan gunboats attacked a
Norwegian gas carrier with
rocket-propelled grenades today
In the Strait of Hormuz, setting
the vessel ablaze in the second
such strike In two days, shipping
sources said.
There was no indication that
U. S. warships now under orders
to al.d neutral
shipping in
distress in the Persian Gulf had
been called to assist the 43,849 ton Berge Strand.
Shipping insurers Lloyd' s of
London said the Berge Strand, a
liquefied petroleum gas carrier,
was hit as it was steaming
through the Strait Of Hormuz
bound for the port of Ras Tanura
In Saudi Arabia.
Lloyd's said the tanker was
a ttacked at 7: 20 a.m. by two
Iranian gunboats firing rocketpropelled grenades . It said a fire
aboard the v~sel was later
extinguished :!'nd that salvage
tugs were heading for the
stricken ship to lend assistance.
The vessel, which was empty,
is owned by the D1Y. Bergesen
company of Oslo, Norway,
Lloyd ' s said.
There were no immediate
reports of casualties lri the
attack, the second by Iranian
gunboats In little more than 24
hours.
On Wednesday, three Iranian

gun,boats

attacked

the
Panam~nlan - reglstered
tanker
Ace Chern!, setting It ablaze and ·
forcing the crew to abandon ship·. ·
No casual ties were reported on
the 4.072-ton Ace Chern!, which
was steaming northward up the
Strait of Hormuz. Shipping sources said an Oman! warship
chased off the Iranian gunboats
as the crew members escaped
the blazing vessel In lifeboats.
Shippers described the Iranian
attack as a direct challenge to the
United States after Defense
Secretary Frank Carlucci la~t
month ordered U.S. forces In the
gulf to extend aid and prote~tlon
to neutral mariners in distress.
Protection by U.S. warships
had been limited to 11 Kuwaiti
tankers that were placed under
Am e rican registry last July after
repeated Iranian attacks on gulf
shipping.
The 32nd U.S .-escorted convoy
of reflagged Kuwaiti vessels was
reported steaming southwa rd
through the gulf today. The
47,000-ton Gas Prince was being
escorted by the guided missile
frigate USS Copeland .
Commenting on the first test of
the U,S. Navy's extended protection policy , a U.S. Central Command spokesman said U.S. sh ips
did not heat a request for
assistance and were too far away
from the Ace Chern! to provide

forces Aprll 18, which left six
vessels of Iran's small navy sunk
or badly damaged.
"The thinking behind the protection move was that Iran has
been weakened militarily and
will not be In a strong position to
continue Its repeated attacks on
neutral shipping," one diplomat
said.
' 'The administration needed to
show another ally, Saudi Arabia,
that It was willing to have a
military showdown with Iran if
necessary in efforts to encourage

immediate aid .
A Navy .spokesman In the gulf
said the point of the new U.S. .
policy was not to pollee the
stateglc waterway but to render
humanitarian assistance whenever possible.
"We have to be in a position to
help and we have to receive a
request for help before doing so, "
Lt. Cmdr, Mark \1 an Dyke said.
The new U.S. policy came after
Iran suffered a series of defeats
In its ground war with Iraq and at
sea In clashes with American

conn e·s got t.
SANDAL SCANDAL
~

•

Thursday. May 19. 1988

Available in
White &amp; Natural
Leather

the Saudis to break lies with Iran
and isolate further the Iranian
regime," he said.
In Madrid, Spain accepted an
American proposal to extend
naval protection to neutral SpanIsh mariners steaming through
th e volatile waterway .
A Spanish Foreign Ministry

Thursday. May 19, 1988

G~lf

By Cindy Oliveri
County F;d. Agent,
Home Economics
Spring cleaning Is on the list of
many folks this tlmeofyear. This
week "In the Spotlight" focuses
on two aspects of this annual
project - storing winter clothes
a nd proper use and disposal of
aeros~l

rep~~lr

on the

CHIEF. E•Z-UNER

ROUSH'S BODY

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SHOP&amp;PARTS

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Funeral rites tum,into
heritage
hou
773-5024
N. 2nd
Middleport
Bob Roush, Owner
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I

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SEOUL, South Korea (UPl) Funeral rites for a dissident
student turned violent today as
thousands of students burned an
American flag, threw gasoline
bombs at a U.S. Embassy building and mounted hit-and-run
firebomb assau Its on riot pollee
In downtown s treets.
The students, mourning the
suicide of a 25-year-old university st uden t, chanted "down with
the dictatorship" and "oust the
Ar.nericans" ln a march through
the capital that had a s trong
anti-U.S. tone. Several Westerners were jostled by the
students.
About 8,000 students burned a n
American flag and attempted to
deface the outside of a n Ameri can Embassy annex hous ing the
U.S. Information Service, before
pollee moved · in with three
mobHe tea r-gas launching vehicles and cleared the area.
Students armed with rocks a nd
Molotov cocktails attacked riot
police on several broad boulevards In the downtown area,
sending shoppers scurrying for
cover and cars careening in all
directions to avoid the fl ying
firebombs and chunks of
pavement.
,
The scene was reminiscent of
street battles last June that
forced the government to agree
to democratic reforms, but unlike thai uprising, ordinary citizens in the area did not join in the
battle.
The "Peo ple's Democratic
Funeral" was held for Cho
Sung-man, a Seoul National
University student who hurled
hlmselffrom the top of a Catholic
church building In Seoul last
Sunday after calling for the
release of all political prisoners.
The procession began in a
downtown park early today a nd
was to proceed through the city to
Seoul National University and on
to the city of Kwangju, 170 miles
south of Seoul, where his body
was to be burled next to the
victi m s of a 1980 antigovernment revolt.
The violence er upted one day
after generally peaceful anniversary ceremonies for the May 18,
1980, Kwangju Uprising, a civil
rebellion crushed by crack army
troops .
Students took the casket from
the park to the large plaza in
front of Seoul City Hall where
several students attemJ:lted to
enter the building and lower the
Korean and Olympic flags to
half-staff.
'l'he students also burned an
American flag and a flag of the
ruling Democratic Justice Party
a nd called for an end to U.S.
influence In South Korea. AntiAmericanism Is growing strong
among the youth In Korea
because of a continued military
presence and pressure to open ·
domestic ma~kets to foreign
goods.
Witnesses said abou t 4,000
mourne rs then began marching
towards the building housing the
offices of the United States
Informatlon,_Servlce and a U.S.
agricultural' products trade
office.
·
A group of students ripped
several signs off the front of the
building and smashed them in
the. street. Pollee then moved. In
with three motorized tear-gas
launchers that filled the air with
exploding canisters of the stingIng fog.
Witnesses said the procession
broke up Into smaller groups who
fled Into the allies of the downtown area.
?

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Robertshaw
Thermostats

Store hours 9 :00a .m. to 8 :00p.m. Monday through
Friday, 9:00a.m. to 6:00p.m. Saturday, and 10:00 a.m.
to 5:00p.m. Sunday.
-prices in effect IIIIJ tt,.,_h . .J 25, ttee

209 Upper River-Road

(614) 446 4103

NA: I am in complete agreement.
Too bad )OU didn 't get a second
opinion and even a third when
your fatherbrokc ~i s hip. I'm sure
that not all physicians would have
recommended surgery for a 98year·old.
It must be very difficult to stand
by and see your father sutTer,
knowing that the prognosis is poor.
Be aware that the family can refuse
to allow "heroic measures" · to
prolong his life. The next of kin,
however. must make these wishes
known to the physician in charge.
No doctor can take it upon himself
to do anything to hasten the death
of a patient, even when there is no
hope of recovery. To do so would
be to violate the Hippocratic oath .
My condolences to you all.
Dear Ann Landers: I've been
meaning to write to you for a long
time. but I have been puning it ofT
because I'm not terrific at express·'
ing myself. Today, I decided to get
this letter in the mail no matter
what.

Elmer Hysell and Flossie Hysell, pt. tot, to Leo D. Davidson
and Mary E. Davidson, Letart.
Ray M. Haning, dec'd, Myrtle
L. Haning, affld, Scipio.
William P. Mof!att, dec'd by
adm, 7 acres, to Peggy Harris ,
Olive.
Nora R. Eason and Robert H.
Eason, 2 acres, to Michael M.
Marcum and Connie J. Marcum,
Ches ter. ·
Diamond Savings and Loan
Co., Parcel, to ~nald C. Poole
a nd Mary Ann Poole, Middleport
Village.
'
G.A . Radekln aka George A.
Radekin and Wanetta Radekln
a ka Wan etta G. Radekln, parcels
to George A. Radekln and Wanetta G. Radekin, Columbia.
Mitchell Holley Sr. and Doris
Holley, parcel, to Everett Grant
and Charlotte Grant, Chester.
Doris M. Barney, Lester Barney. Me\da McDonald, and Walter C. McDonald, 4 acres . to Basil
L. Wr!ght and Florence E.
Wright, Scipio.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean V. McClure, Lot 71, to
Hershal B. McClure, Middleport.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean V. McClure, }'arcel, to
Rhojean v. McClure, Meigs.
Hershel B. McClure and RhOjean V. McClure, pt.lot 93, 94 and
92, to Rhojean V. McClure,
Middleport.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean V. McClt~re, sect. 12, to
Rhojean V. McClure, Chester.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean v: McClure, lot 95, to
Hershel B. McClure, Middleport.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean V. McClure, lot 80 and pt. lot
81, to Hershel B. McClure. Porn.
VIllage.
Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean ~- McClure, lot 79, to
Hershel B. McClure, Pomeroy

Hershel B. McClure and Rhojean V. McClure, pt. lots 107 and
lOB, to Hershel B. McClure,
Meigs .
Harold A. Rainer and Blondina
M. Rainer, pt. lot, to Thorleif V.
Bentz a nd Donna J. Bentz,
Racine Village.
VIolet. H·. Grimm , dec'd, Harold B. Grimm, a ffid avit, Sutton.
VIllage of Middl eport, easement. to Columbus Southern
Power Co,, Salisbury.
Brady Gilbert and Ellen Gilbert, easement , to Columbus
Southern Power Co., Salisbury.
Edwin Andrew Cross, E .A.
Cross and Arvllle Cross, easement, to Columbus Southern
Power Co., Letart.
·
J ames Adams and Carol
Adams, easement, to Columbus
Southe rn Power Co., Letart.
· Earl Adams and Doris Adams,
easement, to Columbus Southern
Power Co., Letart.
Aaron Sayre and Shirley
Sayre, easement, to Columbus
Southern Power Co., Letart.
Lawrence Yeauger and Carolyn Yeauger, easement, to
Columbus Southern Power Co.,
Salisbury.
Gladys R. Reeves, parcels, to
Caro lyn Perry and Jack J.
Perry, Scipio.
Elnora Davis, .41 acre, to
Trustees of the Danville Holiness
Church , Salem.
Madeline Faye Buchanan,
dec'd , cert. of trans., to Daniel J.
Buchanan, Olive.
Madeline Faye Buchanan,
dec'd, cert. of tran s., to Elizabeth
Ann Curtis and Benjamin M.
Buchanan, Jr., Olive.
Sherman W. Mills, parcel, to
Robert G. Workman and Catherine E. Workman, Rutland.
Helen R. Morrison, 1/6 Int., to
Helen R. Morrison and Kathleen
Marsh, Chester.
MargaretL. McDaniel, pt. lot. ,
to John David Staats and Diana
Lynn Nease, M!dd. VIllage.
Lewis Miller and Ruby Miller,
parcels, to Michael W. Lance Sr.
and Dorothy A. Lance, Olive.
Edith E. Everitt and George D.

BARGAIN KATINEES SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY
All SEATS $2.50
BARGA !It NIGHT TU ESDAY $2.50

·.,·~·•.
.'·'.'
'

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Gallipolis

Ann
Landers

.--~

0

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

' !'

'• •
'• '

COZIIP:IIaora

G&amp;ONew

Dear Ann Landers: I am writing'
this , letter as I anguish over what
has happened to my 98-year·old
father, who broke his hip two
week.&lt; ago.
It took tO days to get his frail
body in good enough condition to
undergo surgery. His physician sa id
this: was the only option if we
waljted to keep him from spending
the rest of his life bedridden.
My father suffered excruciating
pain before the operation. Even the
strong medica~on didn 't help. He
continues to suffer and is given one
test ·after another, as he lies there
with tubes, needles and bottles
atta¢hed to his body.
Even before Dad broke his hip,
he was becoming in creasingly con·
fused and senile, a condition th at
ha&lt; accelerated these past weeks to
the point where he doesn't recognize his wife of 63 years. He keeps
asking us why he is being tortured
like this. We have no answers.
My father has led a full life. It
seems cruel and inhumane that he
must go through all this agony
when there is no chance that he can
resume a nonnal life. . The poor
man is 98 years old. for Lord's sake.
His body is worn out and his mind
is gone. What arc these needles and
tubes and bottles all about anyway?
We believe he should be allowed to
die in peace and with dignity. What
· do you think, Ann Landers?- N.S..
MT. PLEASANT, S.C.
DEAR FRit:NDS INS. CAROL!·

CompUed by
· Emmogene Hol8teln Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Court House
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~Daleo

alter rebate

Llmltt2

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alive Exiension Service have
received an Increasing number
of calls in the past ·few years
about moth-damaged clothing.
Here are a few tips she says will
help prevent such damage:
The clothing must be cleaned
before storage. Either have It dry
cleaned or wash lt and air It au tin
the sun, brushing under the
collar and inside the pockets places where moths like to hide.
Store the clothing In air-tight
containers. Carboard boxes

taped shu t do nicely, Smith sa ys .
A cedar closet is effective if it 's
new . If npt , Its Inside must be
sanded down to offer any protection against moths .
Use moth spray, moth balls or
crystals, or moth cakes to repel
the pests . If you're wor ried about
the odor, moth cakes are the least
offensive.
,
lf storing your win ter clothes In
a closet, In a drawer, or in a box
under the bed, clean the area
thoroughly and spray lt with a

Wherever 1 go. hotels. restaurants, movies -- by train, plane, bus
or ship ·• someone always comes
out of the woodwork and wants to
know, "Where is Ann Landers""
I have no idea what my voice
sounds like, but an awful lot of
people think I sound just like you.
Yesterday, I visited a patient in a
nursing home. All of a sudden an
RN came runnin$ into the ,room to
see if Ann Landers was there. ''I'd
know that voice anywhere," she
said. At first I was embarrassed but
I felt ill'tter when she told me that
she loved the way I talked and that
I should enjoy the "happy acci·
dent." Sign me -- LR IN ALBANY,
N.Y.
DEAR ALBANY: If you are
having trouble, what do you think
goes on with me? You only sound
like Ann Landers.
My Midwestern twang is very
much a part of my roots. Although
it has been suggested that I take
speech lessons, I've decided to leave
it alone. If you'll permit me to
quote myself, " If it ain't broke,
don 't fix it."
Drug.'\ are ei-J!rywhere. They Jrr easy
ro get, easy .ro use and even easier to

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Johnson birthda

A party honoring Jessica Johnson on her seventh birthday was
held last week at the borne of her
parents, Hank and Kathy Johnson, Bradbury .
A Hotly Hobble theme was
carried out. Pizza, cake and Ice
cream were served. Gifts were
presented to JessiCi!. Attendi ng
were her brother, Derek, Nicole
and Aaron Meckstroth, Huntington, W. \1 a .. and her grandparents, Bill and Naomi · King,
Bradbury.
Another party was held on
get hooked on. If you have questioru
Satvrday
with Jessica's school
about drugs and drug use, Ann wnd·
friends
.
Attend
ing were Jessica
ers' newly revised booklet, "The LowEvans,
Sarah
Larkins, Jenni
down on [)(Jpc," will git'l! you rhe anHowerton, Mellsha Swisher, Raswers. Send $3 plus a self-addressed, chel Ashley, a nd Derek Johnson.
stamped No. 10 envelope {45 cents Games were played, and cake,
postage) to Ann Landers. P.O. Box cookies, ice cream and koolald
11561, Chimgo, Ill. 6061/-0561.
served.

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Everitt, lot 7, to Keith Ke nnedy 1
and Irene Kennedy, Rutland.
James A. Swaney, 9.94 acres,
to Carol L. Swaney, Rutland.
Harry L. Brooks Jr. aka Harry
N. Brooks Jr . and J acq ueline M.
Brooks, lot 104, to Wesley M.
Brooks and Estelle M. Brooks,
Middleport VIllage.
Albert H. Caldwell, Jr. and
Reva L. Caldwell, parcels , to
Southern Ohio Coal Co.. Salem.
Calvin Lane and Mabel F.
Lane, pt. lot, to Steve Lane,
Middleport Village.
Frank 0. Wells and Shirley L .
Wells, lot 14, to Hou sehold
Finance Corp Thrift of W.V.,
Inc .. Olive.
Richard E. Swain, 1 acre, to
Kenneth E. Flu hartz and Rosemary Fluhartz, Olive.
Lawrence Rapp and Roxie
Ftapp, parcels, to Tina Moore, ,
Bedford.
Bernice M. Higley, dec'd, cert.
of tran s, to Roger C. Wels h and
John M. Welsh, Rutland .
Bernice M. Higley , dec'd , cert.
of trans, to Roger C. Welsh and
John M. Welsh, Middleport
Village.

'

Food, clea ning items, persona l
ca re products, a nd now medicina l prppa r ations are di spe nses in
aerosol cans. Keep produ cts for
different uses in their proper
s torage a reas (kitc hen, pantry,
med ici ne ca binet), an d always
out of c hildren's rea ch or in
locked c abin ets .
. Dis pose of aeroso ls with nonburn abl e trash. Aerosols should
not be put into a n Incin er ator or
open flame. Ae rosols co n ta in
pr essurized g as . T hey should
never be expos ed to tem pe ratures greater th an 120 degrees
F ., or forced open with a shar p
Instrument. Use aerosols only for
their inte nded purpose.
Whatever your projects may
include in the days a head , don' t
forget to take a n occa s ional
break, enjoy some sunsh ine a na
the swee t smell of spri ng.
Did You Know Tha t.. ..lt's not
too late to have your soil tes ted
for veg etable or flower gardens.
The cost is$6 and result s will take
about two weeks. For addit iona l
information, co nt ac t the Meigs
County Extension Offi ce a t 9926696.

For fast,
quality
film developing
come to

Kllflnttlll McCultouth, R. Ph,

Chllrlet Rlfllo, R .Pio.

Ronald H•nlft9, R. Pn.

MOll. tllru Sat. 1:00 •.m. to' p.m.
SUIIIhly tO::tO to 12::10 •nd sto' .m.

PRESCIU PTtONS

E.Maln

PH. m-295!

Friendly SIH'vlco

Pomeroy, 0 .

o...,. Nithls 1111 f

LIVING ROOM
SUITE SALE !
·.
SAVE

30°/o TO

50~/o ON

ALL SUITES!!!

Some Closeout Suites Going 'At "Half Price''

·All SUITES
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
NEW 2 PC.
Our Biggest Sale EVER on New Living Room Suites
LIV. RM. SUITE
Now is the time to buy! You can't AFFORD to miss this sale! SUG. 10 Al 1339

$18995
SAVE $150

RICE'S
FURNITURE

1/2

854 Second An.
Gallipolis; Ohio

PRICE
CLOSEOUT

OPEN 9 :30 -5: 00
CLOSED THURSDAY
446-9523

We Are Proud Of Our Area
Gra,.duates and As Our Way
Of Saying Congratulations
To Them We're Offering
These Specials.

ssoo

POMfRQY

ATimely Oiftf
BULOVA, SEIKO
PULSAR

FREE!
FREE!

GIFT CERTIFICATE
WITH ANY PURCHASE OF '2 5.00
FOR YOUR fAVORITE GRADUATE

rlow U•tll Or••••tlo•

WATCHES

25°A
OFF

•FREE GIFT WRAP
•FRU ENGRA YING
•lAYAWAYS WELCOME

EARRINGS
1OO's IN STOCK

ALL

•ENGRAVED FREE
•IN STORE REPAIRS
•1st BATTERY FREE
Quality • Service
Price

-.-.

mot h repellant.
Place moth bails or cr ystals in
th e pockets of your garment s, or
in the drawer where winter
clothing Is stored.
In the fall , a ir the garments
outdoors or dry cl ean them to get
rid of th e odor from the moth
repetlant. Ordinary laund ering
won't do it.
Spring chores may also Include
the purchase of additional cleanIng supplies such as aerosal cans.
When you buy an ae-rosal, look It
over carefully and read the label.
The manufacturer not only provides information for its prope r
use , but very often gives tips by
which you will get the best result s
from the product.
Keep aerosols out of the reach
of young children . Although the
government and industry ha ve
established standards and devi·
· ces for children' s proteciion,
adults have the primary responsibility of seeing to it that
youngsters do not hurt themselves by misusln·g household
products. Teach older children
how to use thes e products
properly .

JESSICA JQHNSON

Meigs County property transfers

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

ACDelco
Oil Filters

From

•

MDelco
ltaiH"UIIIioi
lll•rtt Plugs

your cost
allw rebate

Limit t2

....''

••

- 35c mfr"l,......
2.77 saleprlce
- 1.00 mtr'a rebate

woolen wardrobe, lt'simportant
to store the clothing carefully for
the summer .
There's a generation of lndlvld·
uals who grew up on synthetics
and are now buying a tot of
natural fibers. You just don't
think about storing these clothes
properly until you have something really nice and It gets .
ruined.
Joyce Smith, clothing and
textiles specialist, and home
economists with the Ohio Cooper-

Families have rights in treatment
opinions
of loved one,

•Free Estimates
·Domestic &amp; Foreign
•All Insurance Claims
•Complete Painting &amp; Collision Work To
Your Satisfaction
•Automotive Parts At Wholesale Prices
We leeture colllalan

cans.

Thi s past weekend I spent
several hours putting away our
winter clothes. Whether you have
one wool sweater or a winter

ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP'&amp; PARTS

The Daily Sentinei - Page-11

Spring cleaning bug got you? Here's a few tips.

In the spotlight

spokesman said Wednesday the
decision was not linked to an
Iraq 1 raid on five tankers,
Including the Spanish supertanker Barcelona · which exploded at Iran's Larak Island
Tuesday, .because the ship was
coming fr9m Iran and therefore
not neutral.

f)omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

All

STONE RINGS
All
~

20°/ooFF

OPAL • LINDE • RUBY
EMERALD • MUCH MORE

20°/o oFF
Other Great
Savings
FROM

0°/~0 40°/o
OFF
'

'

�By The

Bend~

The Daily Sentinelj

. Beat of the Bend

i

• • Richard L. Richmond, for·
; merly of Middleport and more
. recently of Gallipolis, has been a
: patient at University Hospital
s ince last Tuesday.
Employed at the Holzer Medi·
:. cal Center, Richard underwent
· open heart s urgery last Friday .
: He has now been transferred to
the 9th floor . Doans Hall, and
would certainly appreciate hear·
tng from you folks at this time.
The address Is Richard L.
Ric hmond, UniverSitfy Hospital,
9th Floor, Doans Hall, Columbus ,
Ohio.
Once Is enough.
ThIs week two young people

stopped at a home in Pomeroy to
solicit funds for the heart fukpd.
I'm advised by the Meigs
County Chapter of the American
Heart Association, that the fund
drive was done In February so
you should not be having any
soiicl tat ions for that fund at this
point In time_... a word to the wise.

Rose Sisson and Mary Morris
are working up a special reunion
for the 1938 graduating classs of
Pomeroy High School.
The special event, marking the
50th graduation anniversary,
will be a luncheon at the home of
Mary and George Morris, Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy, and
hours for the class members to
socialize will be from 1 to 4 p.m .,
on Saturday, May 28. Of course,
class members will be taking in
the entire school reunion that
evening at Meigs High School.
Invitations to activities were
mailed to class members but
some of them apparently did not
reach their destinations. Be
assured, if you were a member of
the class, you're more than
welcome. Call Rose or Mary for
any details you might need.
By the way, Rose, who under·
went major surgery at the Holzer
Medical Center recently, is doing
wei 1. Her son, Fred, was here
with her for some 10 days and
later her sister, Olga, of Florida,
came to be with Rose until she got
straightened around pretty well.
You've noticed? It isn't there.

)

Long Bottom News notes
I

'

By Melody Roberts
Orva Jean Holter is recuperat ·
ing at home following surgery at
the Holzer Medical Center .
Several local senior citizens
traveled to Lancaster lor an
all-day outing Tuesday. In the
· group were Mae McPeek, Garnet
"Hensley , Esther Bukey, Ada
Bissell, Mary Andrew, and Ei·
leen Swain.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Larkins
ha ve been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
··. : Virgil Wamsley, Cheshire, Mr.
· and Mrs. Mike Larkins , Wesley
and Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
: ~ Sa!L•bury, Gal ilpoils. Wesley and
• Whitney visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Larkins several days.
Recent visitors of Ernestine
Hayman have been Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Fitzpatrick, Mrs. Sharon
Fitzpatrick and family, Linda
. Weber, Mr. and Mrs. D&amp;ve
Bitle r, Sarah, ali of Lancas ter;
'· Richard Hay uma n, Florida; Mr.
.::'and Mrs. Larry Hili and Jamie,

Apple Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Ml ke Hayman and Josh,
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Hayman and
daughter. JuUe and Jennifer, and
Marilyn Swain, all local.
Roberta Larkins, Columbus,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lar kins and Jerry.
Callers at the Paul Hauber
home have been Whitney, Wesley
and Phyllis Larkins, Guy Hysell,
Rutland ; Mae McPeek, Juanita
Wells, Brandon, Jane Filch,
Ruby Brewer, Ernestine Hayman, Harlan Ballard, ali local,
and Grant Boring, Reedsville.

Meeting changed .
POMEROY- The May meet ing of the Meigs County Democratic party has been changed to
the fourth Thursday, May 26, at
7: 30 p.m. The meeting will be
held at Carpenters Hall, East
Main St., Pomeroy . New central
and executive committees will be
organized at this time.

Meeting planned
Officers will be elected at the
May 25 meeting of the American
Legion, Feeney: Bennett Post
128, at the hall, 7; 30 p.m.
Legionnaires will join the auxiliary for a dinner at 6: 30p.m . that
evening.

TO I'UCI AN AD C&amp;U tf2· 1U6

MONDAY tllr• f . . AY I AJl to S P.M.
I A.M. U..lil NOON UTUIOAY
CLOUD WNOIY
....IC'f.

! .

'~

, -··,&lt;

'!1

..

"M.~''

BEST OF SHOW WINNER- Jeremy Honaker,
a lourih grader, was the wlnnerolthe bestolshow
trophy among the 213 entries In the annual science
fair of the Pomeroy Elementary School. Honaker
is pictured with his top prize winning entry, a
mlnialure conveyor belt. He was first place
winner In his room and overall winner oil he entire

show. Trophies were awarded fo the top three
entries in all room sand all participants received
ribbons. Monday evening, approximately 200
parents visited an open house held at the school to
view Ute 213 entries. Honaker is the son oiTeresa
Taylor, Union Ave., Pomeroy.

Community calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Revival services wUI be held Thursday
through Sunday, 7:30 each evenIng, at the Flatwoods United
Methodist Church, near Pomeroy. Rev. Fred Penhorwood of
the Middleport Nazarene Church
will preach. Everyone welcome.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet In special
session Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Shrine Park building.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet at the Rock Springs Church
on Thursday at 1:15 p.m .
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine,
White Shrine of Jerusalem, will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs Grange.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Free musical pro·
gram Saturday evening at the
Racine Village Shrine Park. Dale
Hart, park board member, will
cook soup beans over an open fire
with beans and corn bread to be
sold along with hot dogs, pie and
soft drinks. Any musical group
wishing to participate in programs should contact Ivan Powell, evenings, at 949-2485. Res!·

dents should take lawn chairs to
program .
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . A Bend Area Gospel Sing will be
held Saturday, 1 to 11 p.m. , at the
West Virginia State Farm Museum, off Route 62, for miles
north of Point Pleasant. Several
area gospel groups will be
featured. Bring lawn chairs.
POINT PLEASANT - Crusade for Christ business and
planning meeting, io a.m. Saturday , Christian Union Fellowship
Hall.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The M~Jgs .
Mason Girls Softball League
(senior division) w.Jil hold a final

pre-season meeting on Sunday at
1 p.m . at the shelter house near
the Middleport Pool. A manager
or representative must be present from all teams .
POMEROY - The dramatic
musical "His Last Days" will be
shown Sunday, 6 p.m., at the
Abundant Life Church of God on
Route 50 East. For information
about the presentation call 985·
3309.
POMEROY- The Meigs High
School Choir Concert will be held
Sunday, 3 p.ro., at the high
school. The Choral iers, the Mad·
rigals and the high school choir
will be featured. The concert will
be under the direction of Gay
Pippert. The public is invited.

Postal training session set
There wtll be a pre-test train·
ing session, and possibly more
than one, for all applicants who
applied to take the Postal Entrance Examination for Meigs
County Post Offices.
At least one session will be held
and it is scheduled for Friday,
May 27, in the social room of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy .
Registration is required to
attend a pre -testing training
.session and ail applications wish-

ing to attend must call or stop by
either the Middleport or Pomeroy Post Office during business
hours before Saturday, May 21.
The Pomeroy Post Office phone
number is 992-2235 and the
Middleport Post Office number is
992-5731. All those applicants
planning to attend a training
session are required to be registered before the session. Time of
the training session or sessions
will be announced in The Daily
Sentinel.

Lydia Council plans father, son banquet
A father-son banquet was
planned for June 18 when the
Lydia Council · of the Bradford
Church of Christ met recently at
the home of Carolyn Nicholson.
The group also discussed the
"Christmas in July" missionary
project with each member to buy
a special gift for one of the
missionaries given support by
the church.
Aso discussed was the men's
prayer breakfast which will ,be
held on June 4 at 9 a .m. Bible
school dates were announced for
July 1-15. Visitors cards were
passed out for the month, and a
new communion list was made
for the year. It was announced

that the Women's Fellowship will
meet at Bradford on May 26 .
Madeline P a inter presided at
the meeting with officers' reports being given. A housecoat
wlli · be purchased for Helen
Miller and Tina McGuire wili be
in charge of donations !or a
microwave for the church
kitchen.
Tina McGuire had devotions .

Refreshments were served to
those nained and Vicki Smith,
Jackie Reed, Frances Hysell,
Renee Stewart, Nancy Mofris ,
Delores Frank, Diana Bing,
Sherry and Elizabeth Smith,
Cherie Williamson, Becky, Be·
thany, and Ryan Ambefger, and
Miranda NicholSon. Next meet·
ing wiil be a family picnic at the
home of Delores Frank.

three winners of each room at the
Pomeroy Elementary School in
the school's annual science fai r
staged under the direction of
facult y member , Mar lene
Fisher.
Firs t through third place
winners, respectively, in their
rooms were: kindgarten a.m.,
Grant Abbott, Jackie Buck, Mar·
gan Mathews; kindergarten,
p.m ., Celena Dillard, Charlie
Neal, Heidi Matson; grade one,
Blaettnar, Andrea Neutzling,
Jennifer Heck, Lester LOwery;
grade one, Ohlinger, Bonne
Smith, Helen Rice, Ben Molden;
grade two, Arnott, Wend! Da·
niels, Heidi DeLong, Ryann
Trelawny; grade two, Carpen·
ter, Kippie Smith, Adam Tho·
mas, Jenny Mankin; grade
three, Haley, Leigh Mash, Adam
Smith, Charles Molden; grade
three, Zarnoch, Jessica McElroy , Julie King, Matthew Dailey;
Carter, D.H., grade level, 1-2,
Amanda -Buckley, Carllsa Barton, Lynn Kennedy; grade four,
Fisher, Jeremy Honaker, Monty
Hunter, Jason Runyon; grade
four, · Gibbs, Tam iko Deeter,
Heather . Knight, Bert Mash;
grade five, Stanley, Jeremy
Runyon, Adam Sheets, Amber
Blackwell; grade 5, Sebert, Travis Drenner, Jeff Darnell, Tara
Erwin; grade six, Hubbard, one
trophy to Tracy Fife; grade six,
Triplett, Brad Anderson, Stephanie See, Erin Warner; Stewart, D .H., level, 2-3-4, Michael
Klein, Carl Carmichael, Lester .
Bushray; Horkey, L.D. level,
4-5·6, Shawn Whittekind, Joey
Roberts and Eric White.
Fourth grader Jeremy Honaker was best o! show trophy
winner out of 213 entries in this
year's science fair .

i"OPS meets

Mothers were recognized at
the recent meeting or the TOPS
570 held recently at the Coonhunters building on the Rock Springs
fairgrounds.
·
Peggy Vining and Lennie Belle
Aleshire had a mother-daughter
skit, there were songs by the
group and flowers presented to
the 'o ldest mother, Ola St. Clair,
the youngest mother, Mrs. VIning, and the mothers with the
most children, Josephine Tyree,
Phylls McMillan, and Donna
Jean Smith, each with six
children.
Area Recognition Day was
announced for May 21 . At the
May 3 meeting, Gertrude Casto
was the best loser with Virginia
Dean and Shirley Wolfe as
runners-up. Josephine Tyree
won the fruit basket. At the May
10 meeting, Donna Jean Smith
and Tersa Wood were the best
losers with Shirley Wolfe as
runner-up. Mrs. Smith also won
the fruit basket. Information on
enrollJng may be obtained by
calling Mrs. Aleshire, 992-7464.

.'.

NAMED CHAIRMAN , Scolt PuUins, a sophomore at
;, : Ohio University, majoring in
• economics and political
science, was recently elected
chalnnan ol the Ohio Univer·
, slly Republican Club. Son ol
' Susie and Charles Mllllh, 42Itl7
Enterprize Road, Pomeroy,
ane the late Ray Pullins,
Athens, Pulllns said he and the
club plan to sweep the campus
lor Republlc&amp;~~s in hope that
1988 presidential hopeful
George Bush, as wellllll slate
and local Republican candl·
dates, will win in Athens and
Athens County In the No·
vember election,,

v

illness.
. An invitation was read to
Chester Council from Perry
Council inviting members to its
inspection and anniversary observance on June 6 at 8 p.m.
On June 7 members will assist
Syracuse in initiatory work and
asked to wear white.
The nag bearers escorted Jean
Fredrick and Clarice Allen to the
altar where they were presented
50 year pins. Dorothy Ritchie was
also escorted to the altar with
Erma Clelancj presenting her a
flower in recognition ol her
return following Illness.
Betty Spencer and Betty Biggs
of the Syracuae Council were
guests. Other members attending were Inzy Newell, Betty
Young, Erma Cleland, Margaret
Tuttle, Bonnie J,.anders, Sandy
White, Clarice Allen, Marcia
K~ller, Zelia Ritchie, Betty
ROush, Eva Robson, Doris
Grueser, Lora Damewood, Ruth
Smith, Virilnia Lee, Thelma
White, Ethel Orr, Sadie Trussell,
Alta Ballard. Faye Kirkhart,
Genevieve Ward, Charlotte
Grant, and Opal Hollon.

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a

TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 29, 1988. in the
Meigs County Probate Court.
Case No. 2S834, Larry Mont·
gomerv. 27320 Montgomerv
Road, Langovlla. Ohio 45741
was appointed Administrator
of the Mtataof Paul H . Montgomerv. dece•ad. late of
Un(JIVille, Salem Township,
Meigs Coumy, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck .
Probate Judge
Lena K.Nessalroad. Clerk
1515. 12. 19 3tc

\

•

•

•Tiller / Cultivator

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Makes Garden &amp; Yard
Care a Snap!

614-698-7157

742 -2455
RUTLAND, OHIO

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

Call 1614) 992-7204

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 6. 1988, in the
Meigs County
Probate
Court, Cue No. 25B44,
· Chart.. Lochary, 1952 Golf
View Drive, Ville Olivia,
•. llllnoio, 60120. woo · ap·
pointed Executor of the ea' tata of William
Patrick
. tW .P.) Lochory, dec•asad,
late of 1 14 High Street.
Pomeroy,
Meigs County.
Ohio, 45769.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
lena K. Neuelroed, Clerk
161 12, 19. 2&amp;. 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 6, 1988, in the
Meig1 Countv
Probate
Court. Caoa No. 25813,
Barbara Lahman, 4505 Co.
Rd. 26, Rawson, Ohio.
411881, wu appointed Executrix of the estate of Nency
Chepman. aka Nencv E.
Chapman, daceued. late of
Route #3, Box 237. Albany,
Maiga County. Ohio.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne11elroad, Clark
· 15)12, 19. 26. 3tc

&amp; Slidoi·owor•to to~r VIIS.

CAll

AMY CARTER

o1 101'1 IUCTRONICS

u•-r39o11121'11-tfc

SEALED BIDS NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received at the Pomeroy Village Hall. 320 Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio until 12 :00
o'clock noon June 1, 1988
for the following 1980 Inter·
national Fire Truck.
9200 Milea. 446 cu . in. angina, 10.00x20 Tires. 6
speed trans .• 2 speed rear
end, 10'' dump valve, dump
valve extension, 2 electric
reel line holders, reel line
hole. 2 1Yz-pre connects on
rear extension ladder. roof
ladder, 2 10-ft. sections
4"'12" herd suction •. 2 10-ft.
eections 2'h" hard suction.
tank cop, 1500 gallon, fold ·
ing tank holde;.
The truck may be seen at ·
the Pomeroy Fire Station,
Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy , ~
Ohio.
The Village of Pomerov
reservee the right to accept
or reject any and all bids.
. Richard Seyler, Meyor
Jane Walton, Cterk~ Trees .
15) 13. 19. 2tc

Roger Hysell
Garage

CA~~~ 949-2414

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

OWNIO &amp; OPERATED BY

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tnnsmlulon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Public Notice

6-17-tfc

of Thanks

and
Various Sizes

11

WOODEN BUILDINGS
ON SALE NOW AT

SEARS tN MIDDlEPORT

WANT
ADS

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

6 14·662-3821

family of

~uthoriud John

Dotre,
Holland, lvJh Not
Farm (quipmonl
Dealor

IUSINESrPHONE
RI!IDENCI PHONE
I•U) 992·

eryone for their loving support during

our recent loss.
Words fail to show

' 992-215

our appreciation.
Robert Hersman

and Family

EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bu1ineaa
WANT TO IUY -CKED OR
JUIIII CARS OR TRUCKS
-FlEE ESTIMAniFor ooy of thost m•i&lt;n toll

614-742-2617
lolwetn 9 e.m.·6 p.m.
or Leavo Mtsoago

Correction
The Refiectlons Trio of Operation Evangelize, Chesapeake,
will present a concert at the
Rutland Church of Christ at 7
p.m. Sunday rathan than at the
Rutland Church of God. A freewill offering will be taken to help
with the traveling expenses of the
group. Light refreshments, prepared by the host church
members, wili be served follow ing the concert. The public is
Invited.

CJ

z

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E.• INC.

a:

JUDY DeWITI, BROKER

~

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERIES CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY SALES AGENT
8

::r::

z

-

Public Sale
8o Auction

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860

LOST brown Wil1on bell glove.
A98JO mitt. Brewers name In

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

•

~

We can repair and re-

core radiators and

heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

BISSELL
BUILDERS
PH. 949-2801
ar Res. 949-2860

a.

I USED MOWERS .
8.7 Financing On
Yardmen
Sonic• On AH Makos
Wo H..., MC/Disr/VIsa
NIW

vrcroritn Cllrlo, orau: tied, tllll·
11111 , 2i"&lt;~"Odoor wtodrotleJ, I 0111 werdrotoe ll'lmor·
rorlld COllr. &lt;1 dra wer top kH:k desk. Clloni cloalll,
2 drtuer wrbeYI1eG 1111 mlrrcwa, oak roUt!', Cltl~
wJcll•lr, 3 Slngtr pi'C!•l typet-lng mlchonei,
111:1111. 2 oak ko lchen tltllnera wla!lde IODI . flour
tllnOI, OCILitllt tUO hand wronoer mamere llae
I&gt;M•d drwuer. - • tlloll"f rldlo, "'oOd ,.cloner,
antrque loors. old botlln. milk bolt lea. 10 11
Hanam~~oe Buil1in secretary, Tnla it only 1 ptr·
tl•l hli•ng

lrHtrMtiOnll eJO

••Ntowr• bller,

rlklllled~Mf"tlllll ~~.
ra~e.

VtrmHr 300

Hol ..nd elct. dell•er~

'8olent AiiUng Mower. Bolent Acto Tiller.
18' pull IYpt grain tll&lt;ia!OI' WIPQIIMI !1111 Oil
dri.,.., L••"' Boy mo-11. t cyl 0!0" mower. r.,m
WIQOtl. 2 gu l loor lumac ... ·2 Gil hetlera,
Scr~ BINI for J.D rJarna ~wtr, 11 mow
lng n.chlne, ronr moun!. thlllo• . .11 pump
wltlltartll.

r

TlltMI! CAIH Oft CHECK Wll" 1.0.

c••·

2282.
Complttte houl8holdt of furnl ·
ture a. antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal hMtert. Swain's Furnilu,.
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive.

814-44S-3t59

Want to buy: Used furniture and
entquu. wm buy entire house·
hold furnishing. MarUn Wedemavar. 614-246-6152.
Junk Cart with or without
moton. Cell larry Uvely-814-

388-9303.
Buying furniture end

appliance~

bv tho piece or by the lot. Fotr

prices. Call81 ... 448-3158.

1 Cash

peld fOr color tolid Jtate

Wented· Uon lucklea 4-H Club
needt • good Ulld rlffigaratar.
Coli 304-458-1997.
W1nted 10 Buy· Used mobile
ho._. Coli 6t4-44S-0175.

Buvin!l dalty gald, tilv• coin,,
ring~.

jewelry, Merlingware, ol~
coin•. lerga currency. Top Pl'l·
c•. Ed Burlr:en Blrbet' Shop.
2nd. Aw. Middleport. Oh. 814--

992·3478.

EliiiJIIlylllent

4-II·'Uifn

Help Wanted

Naw taking eppliCM:iofts for
rWght lhfft at Subwty. Open tit 2
liM. Apply In ""'"""'
Office help wented-Ty-pingcommuniCI'Iion lkllls MQuired.
Send r~~ume or lnfonnltion to:

Bo• 148 c/ o Gollipollo Dolly

TribuM, 825 Third_,.,, Gelllpolle, Oh io 45631 .

Kelter, 11ecoad tram rtaht, • aeniDr a&amp; Aleunder
Hlah Scboolla Albany, won AEP'• Educational
Award, . .3,500 ~ebolanblp. Be will recelveii,GOO
lor hlalreellmaa year Ia eollep and 11,110 lor hla

,.

I

(3041675-52311, EOE-AAE.

AVON ell eN•; Shfrll¥' Sp_.s,

304-175-1429.

Get Pt.id for ree&lt;Hng booklit
$100.00 P• titla. Wrhe: PASE
-617 N , US1 S . UncolmiWiy-, N .
Aurort , Ill 80&amp;42.

Adv..-.oe your c...- by- accepting m. r.wercllng potttion of
St""' MMogO&lt; with )IAR!).

MAN'S HOME CENTERS. The

righl Clf'l ltd.l:e wtll h•• 1
minimum of tour ~n of retiiH
store m~n~gement e~~~:pwl1noe
end or 1 d4tgrM In BuliMN
Admlnistretion. H•rdwertb.litding iuppll• procltct knowledge d•irtrble. Prown '-der·
thip tldll1 •Hntirll. E~e.elent
bentfttL If you 1reloaldng fore
ehllen;ing • ptrlenc:» wkh •

growth com.-.v. ep pfrtiDCI-v bv
sending vaur retuml to: c ' ann
H1rdtllen. Pr•iden1, Hllrdnwn
Hame C.nters, lox 119.
&amp;p.,C81'. W. Va. 215271.

Sloto. ClvH

s..... co

JobL NDw hiring, your er•

v••

304-882-2&amp;46 .

LPN-naeded part·dme for 100

bed SNF/ ICF. Elilcellent

wag~;~

&amp; benefits. Inquire M Scenic
Hills Nursing CtntM Ot ad*"•

mall to Director of Nursing.

TourGuidn· Mele&amp; fen*e. Our
top people
eaoo-•1200
per w . .k., PINeM'It WOfktng
coN:IIdon1. A r81tly fun pl.ce to
wor1c.. Friendly, neM &amp; dep.ndl·
bla are the requlremWt. Ctll

••n

1-&amp;14-28&amp;·8421. ook foo Suo.
Wenttrd·Ma1ure lady to live in &amp;

C.. for eldwly WCII'Mn. Room.
boMd. &amp; wag•. Call 61•·446-

Someone to c•• fof M d lift In
with oldllfv l""t oomo llaht
houteWortc.

c tll after 8 :00.

304-87&amp;-10N.

THE F'T. PLT. REGIS'II!R

h• rou• otMnJnge .., moat
..... H you •r• 11 yn old or
older endw.nt toe•n,.our own
manay orereret:W.t lftd'Mnt to
. .n extlll money .,d gM IICM'ne

~~t~erdH tuo. c.ll Sccrit .. the
Point Pl....,t Aeglrntr. 304-

1092.

875-t333

LPN-Posttians •eilable. Applv
at Plnsmm: Cere Center, 6515
Ja ckson Pike. G11Upollt. Ohio.

Need someone tor phone •••
., d eomeone for gen. .llllbor.

•r."

lllf'lll"age ..-ning~S.IIllpen• paid
2 week training . RETURN

TRANSPORTATION OUARAN·
TEED. An eppNa.usmultbe 18
&amp; over. SuperSh.-p, l6t8tteehad
It reltdy for mmedlete employ·
ment. For Interview conaret
Jateph l'tlnN, 814-446·3:373,
10 AM·I I'M, 111uo&amp; lo Fot. oolvl

Bobvoitter In Golllpollo for 2
&amp;14-448-0065.

PIYI minimum wag-. cell H..,.., 5:00 pm Md 7:00pm
oolv. tNo lo • muot. 304-178-

2295..

12

Situations
Wanted

Room 1nd tH.rd. Elderly onty .
PersonlfCIHI. "-•onable. 814-

992-7204.

13

lnsurtl'loe

CeU us for your mobMe home
inaurince: Mill., fnturenoe,
304·112·2141. Also: •to,
home. life. hHtrPI.

1B Wanted to Do

Aggreteiv._ Sel•penon needed

selling rettU

11aor~ring.

Mu11

have drl'lert lcen•. 1 reliable

c• • able to meet the p~llc.
Multtpplyin perton. Top'Mg•
pold Coopot LAnd "'

181 Third Ave . No
naedlld-wtll tr1in.

Gollipotll.

ex~ienc.

Jim's Odd Jot.
Sundtckt, aiding. 1)11intlrta. IVOf·
In" c•l*'fl• work. trel• ...
l*r. Cell . , .... 378-2418.
Woukt Ike to bMJ¥' 1ft k'l my

Help W.nted

Local Company nNds 7 gaod
peopleforfulltimaemploym.,l.
No eJ~perlenct nec••rv. Bl~
ing wen. light lfting tnvotved.
• 1200to t1 !SOOmont:hty. Prafh
sharing and other ben.rtl:s. For
pertonll Interview c .. l Fridl';' 9
AM · 5 PM. 814-448-8146.
Hair Stylistt. Acro11 The StrHI
styling tllon Is INking one
addh:kmll tt-,4111 who It looking
far mon~ thin jutt 11\other job.
Colt Toorl ot ef4-448-9510 lor

dettill.

Government Jobe. $18.040 •
869,230 yr. Now hirktg. \'our
.-ee 85887-8000 ext. R·
9805 for current Fed. .llilt.
Full or Plrt·time RN Supervltor.
7-3:30 thift . LPN 3· 11 :30 and
1 1 ~7 : 30 shift. 75 bed ICF·SNF
long term c:•e f.cillty looking for
nu!'IIH to Join ourdedlctted stiff
who ere committed to providing
qUIIily ewe. pt111e clll Petty
Conr11d. O.O.N. for
New- W.UI .:ale. IKC.. III'It benllfh: plclciiiJ•. Arcildla Nursing
C~tnttr, Bo• A Main 91. , Coo ..
ville, Ohio, 1-814-887-3186.
EnthueiMtic, motweting lndivldutll for 1he follo'INing pOll·
tiona: Acttvlty director end II·
alttlnt far Skilled Nu~~
Fadllty. CertlficMlon pref
but no1 nec••rv. SendReturnt

to Amerlc.r• Pom•ov Nursing
1nd rehabllitltion Centtr ,
3&amp;751 Rodcoprin!ll Ad .. Po moray, Ohio. Attention: Jen
Busldrk.
•

homo. Coli &amp;14-361-7141.

Wou kt Ike to boll¥ Itt In my

home . Re1sonebl•. Experienced. Call 814-448-8844.

Rio B. Odd~ you -d~­
cen do tt. Auto. llwn or homt,
froo ..,..,..., 304-773-8048.

flnoncloil

21

Bus in &amp;IS
Opportunity
I NOnCE I

THE OliO VALLEY PUILISHING CO. ,........_ .. tltot you
do busln... wtth people vou
know, tnd NOT to lind monev
through the malt untl you h.e

tnvootlo•od tho olforing.
1983 Cuotom bull - t y Np
tnltoo. 141132. Fullv oqufo.,...
Excel. cond. or wtlf . . equip.
..,..t•. c.u 304-818-3211 .
Food bullnMI for •te. AI
aqulpment end rec.... In
Mldii~Port. S.klu1 .nquWI•
only
Wttte Delf lentf..

pi••·

nlll, Bolt 729 T. Pom.-oy, Ohio

467&amp;9.
BntOne...,.onlwin. .
Cll\ be operated Pllt· dme or
ful-1ime. ~OIICOOUrnt wflh
nam•br~nd produata. No _..
ling. low owrtt.d. Mnlmurn
lnYHtment. cell 1·100-2155725 ext. 1031 for 1 loclll
tppointment.
ttora, chooH from : JlenSportiWIIr. LediM, Mtn•s,

.......Gallipolis ..........

19 and 20 .

Ungerle or Accweoriw
Store, edd GDIDt' M-tv•. brend
n~mt~ : Uz Cleibome, "'llthleJI,
·o..,s.Lie. It Michele. Foren~e.
luole loy. t.tl. Comp _ . . ,

10..m.·8p.m. Itch d.,. 1 14
mll11 from LMigavlle on SR

..- 2000 01- Oo 113.19

ChU-·MOioonlly, Lorgsllno.
Pet1t1. 0.. ...,..,_ Mrobfc. Brf..
dill,

&amp; Vicinity

Thur.

~n t:

Fri.

Mev

325. 4th plec1 on right. 814-

742-2033.

Gtrfl-'d Extens6on-Thurs. • Fri.
9·5. Slngw MWVIng tn~chine,
hom• i nterior . Lots or

Evoryttttngl

Homltv Y•d llolo-Moy 20. 21 .

AaUr01d St.. Kan~t~ge.
trail• end of etreet.

t.t

Boye • Glrlt clotting, toy&amp;
bro._ own, mflc. C.ntenlty
Townhou11. flidlrr. 9·1.

Fotdoy.- 3 mi. o. of Golltfl&lt;* on

Rt. 7 . t-1. Lots or oddl• encta.

Moy llltlt Md 20th. tO o.m.·
3p.m. Collllll• Rd. ly..eull. 20
anch boyt blo,cl1. protector and
Pten. clothing. mlto. Stereo
COrnpot'lftt ty11em with 2 llt'ge

•PIIk. ..

Hllfa. 9!SJMicllt¥

Grown, Lucia.

OM priel d•lgnlr, mull tier
prldng d61oount or ,..., lhoe
ttore. A•ll prioel unbtll.,.ble
foo !Of&gt; quollty •"'"'"'tv
prtood ltom 111 to
250 brtndl 2100 ltyl...
117,90010 121.900:1nwntory,

no. o-

,....,,.,a
•-· otrtore. "'"'d
opening. ate. Can= 11d*tt.
Mr. LoughNn 18121

l-ll811.

Glrlge llle: At Fry retldenOI
..., to Sotloburv Elom. Sohool
.., old At. 33 Fridoy 3:00p.m.·
8:00p.m. S.utdt!Y 1 :00 to

4:00.

Gorllo Olfo. r.. oo Ad. Fnd.,
1ndl•. TurnWI:etFtv.Pts.end

for tllgnt.
..... "Po-merQv· ·:· ...... · Witch
.......PfPTeasant ......
Middleport

31

Homa for Sale

-o-----c:-:--~

Tupplf'l Pletn•3

" ··

••·In

- .... .. -ole.
-

... 1•10

lvlnt -

lui

&amp; Vicinity

c.mfll lir. ·-~
0111 .tl• I taM,
t14-44&amp;-1411.

Y•d a.te. wOm., end bov•

1115- 3 1~ .. I b•lto. 24&amp;40
l•cdonll. ()te • • of lind.
132,000. Coiiii~-1-IJOI.

-•llla,...,dtot.Mor20
2011 - - A•.
11:00 "'' 4:00.

Uft. . loltod
" ' • •{or
•
mint
on -one .......,.
Cloooboot
10
1\tOOOft Lltlto. 110.000.
ollw. Muot oolt. Col 11~""
2107-Doyo. 2·...- -.

&amp; Vicinity

olotting. tOVI. mlec, fur ooat.
OM lftd I tenth mM11 out lll'td
HRIIIood. Ia. 1:00 to 1 :00.

• zt
,I

medietl end denial lnJU,..Ot
1veilable. tf in1er..ted call Kathf
Thornton, Dir.::1or Df Nurling.

YaJd Sales

••Mr.

left; and J.E. (Jack) ~lie, eenlor ~ce prealdent
of fuel flllllply lor llle AEP 8erV!ee Corporation.

LPN. '*'•_,.t V .IIY Nuning
c.,,.
Cant•r ...king lc.nMd
LP,. tor plf1 dme tmployment.

Own your own epp1rll 01' tho•

Moy 11·20. 11o\ mlloo H flun . Hyoofl flun Rd. Houoollold
ltomo. dlohoo.
-dryw , -

Mplmnore year. Be Ia lbewa bere with bla
pareata, Mr. and Mn. a'erey Kelter If Albany,

AVON - All erBM. CaU Metllyn
WeiNfll 304-882-28ot6.

enrofl pra.pectlw .tudent1 for 813,15150 to '51,480. tmme30
old nMionalty accr• diMeoptnlnga. Clll1 -3115-733dieted school. High commit· . 6012. Ut . F2938.
tlonl. protect:ed te"ttorv. no
Be number 300in number onrtln
lnvast.Tient required . Setd ,._
suma ·to; Bolli Cia 160, c/ a United St.... Md win •100.00
Gollipollo O.ttv Tribune. 826 of frM produC'tl for more
Third Ave., Gallipollt. Ohio lnforrtwtlon eal Marlt'fnW..,.r,

··-····~···-····-···········-··"··

KEITER MNS SCHOLAR8111P- Douctu E.

CAll &amp;14-U9-2581 .

Fod...t,

Selat Representattve to tollclt &amp;

Int...,_..

s~rvlces

11

HousMc.-p•-camp.nk)n fof el·
lldt In "• ho,.... 4 dll¥'t
end 1 niJtrt w.lkty. Radne••·

· derty

· cflildntn for the sunvner. C.U

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Locoted llolfwov Be·
tween Rt. 7 Bootuon

ANTIQUES

Ohio 48831 .

Oay ar Night

YAIDIIAfl &amp; ECHO

.

n..,.,

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

1110 c.no.Ht ~... .. ,..._. wnlllloP, new
rid Ullfior, r~ew rid lnleroQf. 350. 3100 H P . 4
lpd. 4.000 tCtull m1ln r•l lhMP.··f l"l

FARM MACHINERY
AND EQUIPMENT

TOP CASH paid tor '8 3 model
u.-1
Smtih
end
Bufcll·Ponllarc. 111 I l!ntern
A,.., Golllpollo. Coli 814-44&amp;-

porto. Colt &amp;14-448-4328.

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

'ave seat,

&amp;'f-446·31172

--..,.._,.-~_,."'"""-, 1 late model porWble TVS for

PH. 949·2969

3 IX·

used cars.
J im Mink Ch..,,.Qids Inc.
BHI Qene Johnson

1

CORVETTES

'"'- _,.,It

pol~.

R IENCE NECESSARY I Above

We PlY cnh lor late moclet clean

L.--------

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

117&amp; c.l·l...., . V-8, 3·1P0 . oe• top. ntw 1811,,
1111 nlc.e. 42,000 actull mllee.
OWNifl ftiSUIVD THI CONFOIIMAliON OF
ANAl liD ON COAVmll ANO JU,.
¥1f11111te wtfllll olleref ter Nil 11 1:00 p.lt'!.
111y el Nit • .,.111'1411 M uPOn
..,...,. el tit .. IfNI wefltcll, All"" 11 It,

SALESPERSON · Em.bllshed
Com.,.,y looking for •lepenon
to sell Janitor SuppliM &amp;.
Equipment ta .... bllshed eccouma: Athen1.Jeckaon. Meigs.
Gallla, &amp; Vinton countl•. Mud
be ...t ••rter, Stnd r•uma t«
Box Cla1 49. c/ oGalllpolil Dalty
Tribuna, 825 Third Aw., Gallt.

era• inctudlng NeoN York. Bo•
tan. Ml.,l with unique young
buslnus group. NO EX PE-

4-16-86-tfn

pw, llr, INI niCI.

Equal Opportunity E.mplo';'8f.

fr•lo toovol
Ill mljor U.. dU• I r•ort

5• 2. 1 mo.

"At Roasenable Prien"

CIUI .
1111 L..J Orang~, Mo". ~. 4 tpO . P W. P B ,
IIIC • _.., nlct. oolw 1.0571our 1pel{l1 made
1177 Cllnoelt. . Blue on ttlue, ltmlfm-lact. PI, .co.

grow In the poeition 11 need
arises. Must hiVI r.. ilble tnnsPortltlon and be wMIJng to travel.
Weeekda¥. evening end SeturdiJY' houn ere t o be expected.
Send r811Uft'11, lnclucl ng two
em ployment referen ces to
P'tenn«&lt; Parenthood of Sou,
theeat Oh io. 398 Ai chlend
A...,.,., Ath.,,, Ohio 41701 .
t,. Maov 23, 1988. PPSEO Is an

Immediate opening for Iuper

NEW AND USED
PARTS
74 2 •2 31 5

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PARTIAL LISTING OF ITEMS TO BE SOLD

ctients. Looking tor 1omeone

olwp qalo

RABBIT

CUSTOM BUILT

SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1988 10:00 A.M.
Located On St. At. 93 In Wellston, Ohio
Across From Columbus-Southern Power Company

indiYktJal lo"'Jtlo 11 senaitivt to
reproductive h81'-h needt of

TOO YOUNG
FOR AIR UNES 1 11
IIIIo OVER I

BEETLE-BUS

61

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senricl
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PARTS

We Providi Cera For The
Elderty In Their Home.

PH.

side. 304-882·2435.

SUNDlf CALLS

v.w.

Hama Health Cart
Aaency

Covered With Workmen's
Compensation

lOST: Cebbaga Patch Doll at
Mclnty,. P•konTun .. May 17.
tf found piMSe cell 614-44&amp;2889 or 448~ 4526 . Sadly
misted tr;' li111e girl.

10.8·tfc

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

NURSES AIDES ,
ORDERLIES, LPN's
Hourly or llve· ln
Arrangements
BONDED · INSURED

7392.

Fourl(t: Blue Parek81Jt in Sy,..
cute. T1me. Call 814- 9925078.

flr111 Equlp1111nl
P1rt1 &amp; Senrht.

1614) 992-6550

Reward off&amp;red. Cell 814-446-

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Now

Pay Your Phone
end .Cable Bills Here

LOST:Smel! blonde mate Benji
type dog. Ch•olala Hills area.

3-ll -tfn

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Lost and Found

NowH-IuHt
.. Free Estimates..

NO

BOGGS

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO

RUTH HERSMAN
Wishes to thank ev-

wr~,

MuSt Be Repairable"

We Service All Makao
1122188/Hn

61

6

mo.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

Built On Your lat

Gray an d white male 8 montht
old kh1en, will neu1ef' and dad liN
If dMirftd cell 304-882· 2545.

Give to good home female Rat
Terrier, 304-937-2 895 or 937·
2874.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

3 Styles

dog. 304-875-5508.

304-875-4840.

RtKine

~ - 12.' 88· 1

Smell brown end black male

Help Wanted

m~r~:unt

46831 .

DEAD OR AUVE

JNe Carry Fishing Supplies

The

·

992·6809.

3gray Klttent. 2 femtles1 male.

ANGIE TA YIOR
811 Vine St.,

ta give away. Cell

4 bea~ttful ltlt1ent to tood
home. 304-876.2474 or 67581,8.

S35

20 SESSIONS

WANTED

FOR
SALE

1•1 North lerond

1 Cerd

FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

curwcv whhfl"'"'; be dlp.ndabte, org-.iled, Md responsible.

who It •lf· motiveted ..,d c.,

2 kitten1. 15 months old. Fath.Manx, mothM long hair. 814-

That Fit Your Body

ning office. Must have high
diplom~; or equivalency;
gOod communication .kills; 1 ~
mchool

Small femele puppy . 3 months
old. Half MenchRt:Of Chihuahua. Cell614-742-2103.

Beagle pup. 8 wks. old. Female.
Cell 614-949-2418.

r----------.1
TAYLDRED TANS

Help Wanted-Hourly Clink: Aide
needed plllrt· tlme in famlty pt., .

Treinklg INailabte htr

614-949-2905.

Middleport, Oh.
992· 661 \.,..., '"

Wtlkty. 111ambtying Proct.leb
in your home. Send Htf eddreQ!Itd, ltlrmoed enwlope to:
Homacnfts. P.O. Bo• 90oe.
Huntington, W.Ve. 25704.

Femate ·cllloo cat. 1 yr. ~d . 1
mala kiftftn 8 wks. otd. To good
home, 614.992-7382.

KittM11

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

5"19·'88-1 mo.

8 · 2· 1 mo

YHS !APE
lJt Ul ~Of!llfl'f thole oW MIIYift

514-245·9&gt;000.

Jacobsen

Wholoialo &amp; Retail

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUD£S to

Ft.4ll site bed f1"11me, bo111. springs
&amp; m.tt""'· Mavtag dryer. Call

Homelile

ANN'S

Open 10 AM . to 4 P.M.
Mon . thru Fri. or by
Appointment

FOR MORE INFORMATION

S-26·'11·1 mo.

Pom•"

W.incl Citw Hall

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items, Clowns
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes

•Easy to Operate

Angor11 Guinea Pig. Cell 614-

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

• Ug~tweig~t

614-448-7046.

&amp; Parts
Briqs &amp; Stratton

much .. t600.00

EARN n

3 kittens. 7 wb. otd. Call

. Authorized Service

System

We Buy and Sell Used
Cars
·
ALBANY AREA

6000, el!lt . A·10189forcurrent
Federell'*t.

3 cltts·1 mala, 2ftTM!n. 8wks,
old. 9•11 614-448:.21 63.

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

..r.::::=:Ot,..,
.........
·-n
----

Precision
Gardening

4 PUppiea to a good home.

44&amp;-7603.

___

324 E. Main 51.

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
t16, 040 · S69.230 / yr. Now
hiring. Your •ree. 805--117·

448-2880.

~ ···­
-~·--

11

Help Wanted

Giveaway

Mother full Beagla. Call 614--

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

1--o:.. T ' f l l - 1 ..1.,.

MANTIS

\

..

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

· ----u
.··-u
--

JTI"- -

Public Notice

·---·...
.:::=:=-...
••
n-- .....

____":.'•':.
: ::t:;.

- c• . .,.,
_c ... ..

;:::::~::t::.:..·:-:.;..::::;::oso·~=

"n-•••-•
1 ---··

.,._,_

4

992-6282

· -~

11

Announcements

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

-

.,
n--•••

ClaUijied PIIJfll cov.,,. I he
followi;.~ 1elephone e_;u:"IJa,.~e, ,. .

"'"'_

Chester Council meets
Charter mem~bers were honored at the Tuesday night
meeting of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America , in observance of the organization's 54th
a nniversary.
Elizabeth Hayes and Ada Bissell, both charter members, were
present for the observance.
Esther Smith had a reading for
her mother, Mrs. Hayes, and
Mae McPeek gave a reading for
her sister, Mrs. Bissell. Helen
Wolf sang a song for the two who
were then presented with a fruit
bowl. A cake decorated for the
occasion by Jo Ann Baum was ·
served with ice cream and punch
following the meeting.
It was noted that Ada Morris
and Zelda Weber, both charter
members, wereunabletoaltend.
Thelma White, councilor, presided at the meeting which
opened in ritualistic form. Scripture was read from Psalm 141. 11
was reported that Zelda Weber,
Beulah Maxey, and Cathy Pul·
lins are Ill, and that Mary Kay
Holter has fractured her lj!K. Iva
Powell thanked the lodge for ,
remembrances during her

"-''Tll

.. .....
..
.
··.::::...-,_----..
.........-_.......... ··----"
.. - .. ........
....
-... --.... - ...................
·-··--·
........
-... - ............
·--·---···
____
..
_,_,..._
....
-_.... _.. _. __
_,... .. .,_

Science fair
conducted
Trophies were awarded the top

:Rutland alumni invite
:·.Meigs seniors to event ·

Winne r of the Meigs County
mystery farm contes t In the May
15 edition of the Times-Sentinel is
Bonnie Lawrence, 30135 StiverS·
ville Road, Portland. Bonnie was
one of nine persons correctly
identifying the farm as that of
Deibert Smith and was selected
as the $5 pr ize winner via lottery.
She will receive her check In the
mail.

,_.. _ __ ... _ ......_..._
........,._
·- ·_
...
..........
·...
£::!::: .....---·......
................
.....

Thursday, May 19, 1988·

Page-12

By BOB HOEFLICH
A nice move on the part of the
..Rutland High • School Alumn i
"Association.
• The association Is inviti ng
: a ll Meigs High
School sen tors,
class of 1988,
: .who would have
· ·graduated from
' Rutland High School had It not
.:been for consolidat ion, to attend
; the association's banquet . and
. dance.
The dinner for such seniors is
complimen tary from the assoc la·
·lion but seniors attending are to
cpay dues of $2. Seniors wishing
information or who want to make
· reservations a re to call Carolyn
Dailey, 742-2694.
The annual reunion of the
Rutland Association will be held
,at 6:30p.m . on Saturday, May 28,
at the Rutland Civic Center.
Tickets may be purchased at the
Rutland Department Store or at
Joe's Country Market in Ru·
' tland . Also reservations may be
. made by mailing $9 a person to
: the Rutland Alumni Association,
. Box 125, Rutland, Ohio 45775.
Reservations should be mad e no
later than May 25.

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

I

'••with ""· -

"

�•

Page-14:__The Daily Sentinel
31

LAFF·A-DAY

51

Household GoodS

17" Zeniih biiiCk &amp; white TV.
125. Wood ''18ble &amp; two chairl.
140. 275 Harlequin books. t50 .
Tru- ~na stereo ~th speak••·
S50. Sn at 258 So . Fcurth
Aw .. Mfddlepon.

C Br. f'lorne, 2 blllhs. CA/ H .

Bloch_~·9• On Ch.chlm Ave
S31, 900. Call614-4.t6-238 6 0f

4411-0322.
2 BR. I'IIMch, ~ acre, Nltricted.
Affordable. • 28. 000. Msg.,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
-W •hera, drvars. refrig. .tor•.

614-2611-1200. d., •.
Otd houte S. Ill molt 3 aaes.
Aural water, eleetrle. ChMhir&amp;
rown1hlp . Great locat ion.

rang•• - Skaggs APpliance•.
Upper Aiver Rd . betide Stone

c,..t Motel. 614-448· 7398.

t &amp;.OOO. C.ll614-367-7512.

Quality furniture and carpet It
low Prices. Fln..,dng l!lvalllble.
Mollohan Furniture - Upper
River Rd., 614-446-7444.

3 or 4 BR . hOull with 2 btllht.
Onty

3

yrs. old. 2

Thursday, May 19, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Homes for Sale

acres,

ou1Duldlng. pond, extra trailer
spec1, county water !. welt, 2
dedll. Na .. MercMvilleonOa~o~is
Rd. Clll 61 .. 26&amp;-8887.

Good

8083.

with anached g•age. CA. No

o.p. II

pvts,

ref. required. 39

16 fl . fiberglau bo.- • t111iler.
"260. Coll814·25&amp;-6215.

55

1987 Regel 19ft. open bow.
186 f'lp, low hours. e111tr111 deen,
304-743--3109 or 743-31 10.

•

2~83,

9-5 d .... .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

4x8 fr utMity trail•. fiM .,_d

or

Building.Suppliea

Concrete bloc:ka- 111 aizea· ¥ltd
orcWivery. Mason.nd. Galllp~
111 Blodt Co .. 1231h Pine St.,
Galllpclls. Ohio. Cell 814-4415-

2 bedroom, 2 baths , 2 car

Swimming ·pool, satelite, close
co Meigs High. Clll 614-992·
321M.
3 bedroom and bsth. All electric.
Rand1 Mme. 1 acrewtth14x 18
outbuildingefter
in Syr11cuse.
992-5293
4 :30.

1u repair) . Repos. back tu
PtotJOrty end morel Call 1-518459-3646 Ext. H 1622 fQr
filtingl.
OWner tr.nsferred, price reduced. 142,000. 2 bedroom. 2
b.h. electric hellt pump. gar age. •21 4th A\11&amp;. Gallipolis.
Ohio. Hoddng V.tly Reahy . Will
Co-op. 614-446-8663, 814--

592-8252.114-783-3081 .

.
4 bedroom tlou•. 1 'h: bsth. 770

Ash St. Middleport. Ohio, Must
• • to appraciate. Call. 8111- 995714.
1677 Uncoln Heights. Pomeroy.
far
or l'lnt. Call 814-985,.., 03after 4 :30pm.
~"·-----'---Nice 3 to 4 bedroom home In
9;-raa.. • · On llfge lot whh river
fron111ge. 1511:30 sheller house.
. Vf!WV nice lot overlooldng-river.
C.ll 114·992·8591.

•I•

"... so after the divorce 'llI
thought W h at t h e h eC k ' I.
just get away from it all for
a Whl'le."
.
41

Homes for Rent

For rant . Two bedroom. unfurnished house, 1637 Lincoln

Heights. Call
after a p.m .

61 4•992-2304

Route 2, go od loc ation must !188
to appre ci at o. 93 8 , 500.00.

304-5711-2466.

.

Small unfurnished houl!lll, cloan.
good location. preferco upleone
child. no pets, 3218 Howard

.

A""' , 304-675-6621
.
.

3 bedroom house, fUrnished or
unfurnished, 1 350.00 m o nth
plus d9p osit, Ma! on. W.Vfl .

304-773-5081 .
Two · room co ttage furnished.

utilrties pai d.

$58.00 week,.

single persc n. call 304-8753100or 675-5509 .

Mobile Homes

2 or 3 bedroom. 2 story home,
for Rent
sit.,.ted on 1 acre lot on S Fl 3 3.
New Len noll furnace end heat
pump. Privlt• beck yard whh ,
dOck. 814-992-6383.
2 BR . Nice &amp; ci BHfl in
8
$200
Oep. re&lt;Juired . No
Good location, Rt. 2 Apple pets. Callmo.
61 4-2!15-5883.
G'rO!oe. mun ll!!le to appreclllle,
$~8. &amp;00.00. Call
Furnished o r unfurnished 2 BR ..
2481.
cable, water · !loOWflge paid, AC.
Foster' s Mobile Home Park-

Eureka.

304-676-

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1988 Red!Tllln Sectional home.
28xl58. 3 BR .• centl'llllair. Re86(
.to be moved. Call 614-4468594 after 6 PM.
1985 Nast-ue 14K80. 2 BR ..
.;: ent•l air. unfurnished. •t up
on ,.nted lot. E•cel. cond. Must
sell. Cal!814-258-1963, mornin"g. M· F, Set . &amp; Sun. anytime.
1989Schuttz12)185, 3BR . new
cwpft. g• heat. extra nice
throtJghout . Call 614-446-

814-446-1602 .

Nice 2 DR . mobile home in
cuuntry. Call 614-446-8318.
2 BR .. air. 4 miles-St . At. ·218.
Call 614-266-6561
Furnished. 3 mi. from Gallipolis.
No children. No pets. $175 a
mo. Utilities &amp; S 50deposit. Call

614-448-7075.

44

Apartment
for Rent

0178.
1979. 24x52doublewkle. Good
cond. •13.500. Call 614-25&amp;9393.

2 fnobUe horMI· B acres fap ·
pro)I . ) . Sel-~. 181dy to live ln. 3
mlln w••t of Centerville.
114, 000. Call 614-444-7315,
Col.

1911 Kentw:kl.-. mobile home ,
LOclted It Homew-ood Dr.,
Bld\Noll. C.lll14-388-9769.

1979 P•riot tnller 14JC60.
Fireplace, AC, g• furlli!IC&amp; nice
condition. U995 firm . 61~

843-&amp;185.
wfth
10K12 edd on. Woodburner.
w••her &amp; dryer. air cond. must
"1970

Windsor,

1 b:65

•• mo-..d. 304-89&amp;-3102.
~

EJCc cond. '86Fiemmlng 14-80.
lived in 8 monthl, csthedral
ceiling, fgvolor blinds, c:elllng

fen. garden t\b , vinyl underpen·

nlng, blocks, 2 _, of ltBps,

hurrican• tie downs. 304-675-

5841 .
Small. 2 bedrooms. porch. air

v•

t1,900.00.
2349.

cond.

304-576-

funwce, quidt ..,e,
evenings

1973 Ch.mpion. 1 4x70. total
.t.ctrtc, underpenning and hook
up, 304-871-2383.

1987 Soulhbrool&lt;. 14&gt;74. 2.-16
conttr..:tlon throught out. e)ltrtl

apeclal tutu,.•. hear pump, 3
bedrOOflll. 2 blthl, call for more

details, 304-875-3030 or 675~431, SomeMIIe Realty.
1178 Wlndaor, 14)170 with add
on room. woodburner. porch
'Ox30, 2 ecret land. Cell

304-175-3030 Of 675-3431 .
1973 Holty Park 14x70, large
porch, central air, .,-,all bldg, lot
100x200. neat and nice, call
304-875-3030 or 675-3431 .

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

TraH.-Io1 with hcok-up. Al::ron
from Portland Post office. 17()

por monlh. 814-843-5186.

Alhton,

l•ge lxlitding lot•.

mobile homes pet'mitted, public

.,..,_., also river lot•. Clyde
Jr. 314-1578-2336.

lo~.

LOTI. one ec:re. ·l..,el wooded.

~ywater . JerldloAoMI, owner
Hntnclng good terms, 30.4-37 2·

8-'0II&lt;W 372-2671.
9acrH ~ry priVIte, good hcu•

ahea, n...- county water, 200
.,... off tudl top road. evenings
304-1711-2349.
f'wo buldlng lots with County
~••· an Jerry 's Run Read at
Apple
W. VI. 304-5711-

2383.

Or-.

.... ttful river lots on.acr•plus.

wet•, Ctyde
304-1711-2336.

publla

Bowen, Jr.

for

Home~

for

2 BFI . apts. 6 closets. kitchen-

44

Smell glou huieh, 1128. Hulch

::::bi•PI!...:

0126. C.II614-367-0322.

Apartment for rMt. 8225 1!1
mcnth . Deposit required. 614992-5724. After 8pm . ~
Newly redecorated apanments

available. Utilities paid. $225.
per month, deposh required. Cl!lll
614-992-5724 after 8:00.

APARTMENTS. mobile horTM!Is,
houses. Pt. Pleasant an dGtllipolis. 614-446-8221 .

Buy or Sell . Riverine Antiques,
1 124 E. Main Street, Pomer~y.
Hours: M,T,W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m .,
Sund...- 1 to &amp;p.m. 814-992-

Apartrmnts for rent , 304-675Apt . for rent 117 N.Fourth St
Middlepon. Ohio. 2 bedrooms

furnihsed apt. also 2 room apt.
304-682-2566.
Apartments in Henderson. 304675-1972 after 5 p.m.

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Second
Gallipolis. 1126 a mo.
Utilhiea p&amp;id. Single male. Share
bsth ..
7 PM .

Aw ..

Call446-4416.!1fter

Room! for reht-we" or month.
Starting at $120 a mo. G.1111ia
Hotel- 614-446-9580.

46

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK-

SON

~STATES,

536 Jackson

Pike from S183 11 mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 614-446·

614-446-2127.

Upsmirs unfurnished apt. Carpeted. utHities paid. No children.
No pots, Call 614-446-1837.

Large mobile home lot for rent in
Crown City, Ohio. Call 614--

25&amp;-1293.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Roum 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental tn~ilers. C.ll 81~.!1.92-

Spaciou1 mobile home lot• for
rent. Famity Pride Mobil a Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

304-675-3073 .

Trailer spaces for rent, Locu 111:

Road. Route One. 304-675--

1076.

47 Wanted

147,

11 Court St.-2 OR .. 2 batha.
klitchen furnished . 'fY / W c•pet.
No pets. Off street parking.
$326 a mo. plua utilities. Dep, &amp;
ref. Calf 614 -446-4926.

Garage apartn-ent-3 Jooms &amp;
bl'llh, w / d , air . Clean. No peta.
Adults o nlv . Call 614-446-

1519.
Nice 1 BR . apt . Range &amp; refrig.
furnished. Water 8t garbage
paid. Deposit requifed .. Call
61 4-446-4345 after 5 PM.
New apartment. 1 BR . St0\1'8 &amp;

ref . 8285 utiliti&amp;A pd. 241
Ja ckson Pike. Gallipolis . 446-4416 af1er7pm.
Fu~nished

Cellah an' 1 U•ed Tire Shop. Ovet'
1.000 tires , Iiles 12. 13. 14, 15,
16, 18.6. 8 mil• out At. 218.

C.ll 814-258-6251 .

Wheelchair1-new or used. 3
wheeled efectrlc ecooters. Call
Ro98f:s Mobilty collect, 1-814-

870.9111.

SWIMMING POOLS - S988
ORDER NOW· PAY LATER
Huge 31' oval pool wilh deck.
fence &amp; filter . lnsmllation &amp;

1inanclng avail~ a 1·800-3415-

Merchandise

4411-1004.

1 2-window•. 12-atorm win·
dows, 1·11torm door, 1-w. sir
conditioner . Call 814-448-

3347.

Commodore 84 Computer, printer. di•k drive, key bo•d. &amp;

dilkt. 0700. Coli 814-3170405.
Snapper-R -5000 ,.., nne tiller.

1600. Coli 814-4411-0787.
Big 2 Bedroom Rustic home
built on your the. $1 3,995&amp; up.

C.111-614-888-7311.

19' ' colorT .V., 1100. 2800Witt
new po'Mit' plant. Whirlpool
h .....y With• a. dryer, t175.

C.ll814-448-7019.

1978 Ford Fi_., good cond .•
1500 or belt offer. Elec. dryer,
140. good cond. C.ll814-387-

6 ft . glass •llding door wtth
screen. 1 25. Sm811 wood burn.
ing 11ow. 140. 28 Inch 3 spaad

*

girls bicycle,. 120. C.ll814-992·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Olive St. Gallipolis.
~e;N- 6 pc. wood group- 1399.
Uvmg room suites- •199-1599.
Bunk beds with bedding- t199.
Full size manress &amp; foundation
starting- 199 . Recliners
staning- •99.
USED· 8ad1, dr• ...... bedroam
1uite1. I 1 99-129 9 . Desks,
wringer washer, a complete lin a
of ulltd furniture .
NEW· Western boot• t30.
Workboot• 118 &amp; up. (Steel
soft toe). Call 614-446-3169.

Phon~

304-773-

AKC regisl•d German Sh•
pherd puppies. shou and
wormed• ..et cheeked, after 15:00

PM, no Sund.,,, 304--8754663.

AKC registered Golden Ret river
puiJI, 2 mtle.1 femate. •200.00

each. 614-886-6888.

Musical ·
Instruments

Pigs for sale. 145 each. Call

614-379-2240.
Reg. HamPShire ·~Yearling
ram, yeerling ewe, ram lamb,

Coil 614-4411-1168.

owel~mb.

RlfQ. pure breed Umou•n bulla
for •I e. Gallipolis. 0 . &amp;14-256-

1187.

Saturd..,., M.., 21. 1 PM - Will
h.,., 1 SpedatCow &amp; C.lfSele.
All breed~ including Holsteins.
Cattle wtll be accepteds•rtlng4
PM-Frlct.r. M...- 20 • up to •I•
dme, Mar 21. HMIIIngavalleb4e.
... t ~Albany on St. At. 60. Cell

PIANO FOR SALE

W.nted: Re1poneible party to
aasume small monthly payments
on piano. See loc.tly. Call
Manager at 818-2 34-1 306
anytime.
lndivktual gultlr l•aons. beglnnen, .,iout,ullariat. Brunlcerdit Mt.ttic. 14-448-0887.
Jeff Wamsl~ instructor, 814446-8077, eummw opening~.
Went to rent. modern cl..-. 3
bedroom horne In Point Ple..ant
area. Ratlred couple, 8JIIcellent
rafarl!lncet, phone 304-676·
74881

Lead voc•l•t wanted fur 1ocat
rode bend, caU 304-675--15027

ott .. 4:00pm.

58

Strawberr._ coming soon, pick
your own or piiiCe your order.
Ctyde Bowen, Jr. 304-578-

2331.

7891 .

Central air conditioner tar 181e.

Coli 814.-992-6740.

1988 Camero, 1 982 Lincoln
O,ntlnentl!ll. 304-882-2704.
1980 Fiat hardtop con-.ertiable
X19. AM·FM redia g••tte, OliC
cond. call•ft• 5:0(), 304-675-

26311.

72

Trucks

1988 Dodge 0 -100 pickup. 4
apd., e cyl., 14499. John's Auto
7- below Hollct.r-lnn.

Sale~-Rt.

KanMiga .

·

NeoN 1988 Jeep Commanche
Sporttruck. Bl.ck/dver nrtpn.

Pallimino Gelding. g.tted, gen.

19815 Ql..,-y pickup Cul1om
delu•. Full aile. a cyl .. •uto ..
AC, PB, cruise. No ruSt. Clean.
Coli 814-448-6460.

114-317~n7o.

for 581•3 yr. ~d Simmenttl

Bull. Call
d••-

614--2158-8740 efter

1979 Oodoe pickup. 4 wheal dr.
C.ll 614-4411-7887.
1 97t OMC truck. 427 engine,

Femeleburroforsele. $100. Cell

814-992-1594.

Work horte 81ld h•neu. 8 yea,.
old. Gelding 1600 lba, work
lingle or double. broke to ell
farm machinery, 304-678·

1 ]lh h. dump. elr brak•. • bag
air lift axle. new tlret. Call
814-2615-1.51.

19e5 S-1 0 lnJCi&lt; PS. P8,
AM -FM·CII••· 4 ..... $4900.
Cell 24&amp;-51215. before 3 PM. or

2779.

448-3981oftor 3 PM.

BebJ ducks, phone 304-875-

1977 Ch.,y 4 WD. 3-" ton. 400
.,....11 blodt. Evllrythlng n,...

64

Em• 1horp. C•ll 614-3889083.
.
Hay

&amp; Grain

Square bol• of hoy , [01 fiold}
.1 .00 bolo. 114-843-8346.
StrtiW for .... wire tied, 304-

&amp; Lrvi~SIIIr:,
.71

U.S. 35 WMt, Jeckson, Ohio.

814-2811-6481.

Auto's For Sale

1984 Chrylll• La. .r. PB. PS,
AM-FM·C.•a 1tereo, 4 cyl ..
Excel. cond. •41oo. c.n 814-

4411-4347 .. 4411-4746.

1975 2 1A tonGMC dump uuck.

12ft. -

2 1pd. 1976Toy01a

1980 lnteriVItion~l Tranatlr II,
big cam ensjne, 18cently overhaded, good shapa 1974 Frueh .. f Yin, 415 fl.x13 ft. 14 in.,
good shape. Cllll ttler e PM,
814-843-2883.
85 S 10 rruok. extended c•b.

304-1711-8375.

1972 Dodge truck, 78 Nove.

phone 304-1711-8311.

S.E . Ohio.

198&amp; Ch ...... stand., 82199.
1 I 14 Ford E •cort. at an d .,
11999. Jahn'aAutoSti•·Rt. 7
b~ow HoiiU,Inn-K8ni!U91·

1987 S-11S Jimmy Sl.,. Ct•·
sic.
Cell 814·3792853 afler 3:30PM.

8522.

Jim's Farm Equip. Center

AI. 35

W. - GIII~I.

0 .-C.II

814-448·9777
Fenca pod: •nd rills. ced•·
pool ad- 7·8 ft. lo"ll- borb wk1,
20 ldld t,.ctort, plowa. disc,
~HI. 3/pmower•dctw.. OYer
1000 new and used. ,..,..
..-rMI- &amp;00 New Delu• t oof1.
tr. •Its.
601 Ford 'Norlunuter tractor. 15
ft. buah hog, one Mt- 14"' 2
·bottom plows. Call 614.256·

1811.

3100 For_d tr.ctar with &amp; h.
finished mower, tl53150. 1IOAC
S.l• 3 tractor wtth 4 bottom
ploWI, tren1port dilc. •59&amp;0.
Ow-rwr will finanoe. Call 814-

2811-8522.

114-4411-2126.
1978 Buick. V-8. 231. Coli
814-4411-3025.
1985 Chevy Otllbrlty EuroSV-8. 33.200

port. Uke new.

mil•.

.,to.,

AM-FM-Cau,

3811-8240.

AC, PS, PB,
tilt. Call 814-

1979 Ford Pinto. 4 cyl., low

mll0190. Coli 114-388-8795.
1980 Olclo. Omog1. Good condition. One owner. Call 814-446-

hoond Aw. Stow a rlfttg.
fu..,..Md Dip. • rot. Oood
~~~~--·
Coli 814-4411JUI..4411-2419.

Vans

lit 4 W.O.

•14,500.

1987Ford 150 COnwer11DnV•n.
14,000 mil... loMied. tile,
cruiM. po..- windOWI &amp; locks.
AM·FM·CIIII- 351·HP engine.
duel t8n kl. A• steele lellther

lnlerlar. Call 814-261-6327.

8·15 Mon.. Fri.

1982 Ford 4&gt;&lt;4, 4 lpd .. V-8
engine. tSSOO. Call b.. ._.,.
B::IQ-8:30 PM, 814-317·0231 .
1181 Toy ate 4x4 truck lhort
bed. 15 epMd.c,..ome rol.,-end

bed Nita. Bl-*-chrome module
wheele. AM-FMc._...
oH n11d- llghu, olri!IL 42.000
ml•. Ext18 1Mrp. •7000 firm.

••teo.

4418.

1184 Chwy C.V•II• wfth sunroof. TIke over peymenta. Call

1977 Ford 4x4 3.-i ton. 4 SPied
trlnsmls•lon. •eo cubic Inch
engine. n• 8 pty- dr•- &amp;·14-

9411-2236.

1979 Manta C..-lu, Call 11-4--

1 BA . &amp; 2 BR . apt . Park front.
downtown Gellipolil . Call 814446-0286 or 448-3919.

19711 Hondll 3801'. Low mll10.
· - - 814-9811-4411.
1982 Hondt C - 100. ol
llllfl drllllo, 14,000
oc1uo1 m11._ n.300.00 flrm .
304-112-2098.

oo-.

Furnished 1 BR .• Ulilitiea paid
No children. No pet1. S190 per
mo. 160 dep . 6 mos. lellft . 1 58
Stete St. Call 814-446-3687.

' U - 1110. - · 1.~ mila, IIIII
--

2 bedroom apartment on lincoln
Hill, Pomeroy. Call 814-9928539 01 614-992· 3489.

-f1.210.00.
.....
304-171-2348.

1188 Hondl 2150R, 4w-or,
304-878-1118.

2 bedroom Apts. for rent.
Carpoled. Nice oolllng. Lau.-.trv .
facHhi81 evailllble. Call 614992·3711 , EOH.

76

cho. 30 4-171-14150.
•I

I

'Ill vw 110111111. , ....... _ ...

mlaler,

l•n• •II 1raullll oandhlan.

n .eoo.oo.... Z:IOOJorr.-

304-171-Uts or 17a-lf14.

A$ IT 1$
IN ENGLISH!

..

ALLEY OOP

304-89&amp;-3008.

.. .

Services

'

Bott1S and
Motorl for Sale

o.-.... 110. 310 V-1 eng.,
. , _ I. \lory law ho.,._
•27.100. Coll304-727-4110.

.

e

(I) WICRP In Clnclnnoti
7:3$ (J) llllnlord 1nd Bon
1:00 I]) Crtlzy Uka • Fox Suitable
for Framing
.
G (}J 1111 Tha Colby Show
Theo comes to terms with
hla feelings about hla friend 's
cancer. (R) 1;1
(1) LAgend• of the Brlclcylrd
1982; lndlanapolla 500 Films
CJJ e Cll Pfobe Mystery
surrounds the death ol a
colleague In a nuclear
accident. (R) Q
(!) ComradH A fashion
designer from TaHinn lries to
raise lhe laehion standards.

1;1

llJI MOVIE: l'llly Mloly lor Me
(AI (1:42)
(I) MOVIE: Pitton !PGI
(2:49)
I:OIIJ) MOVIE: Talalon !POi
(1:42)
1:30 Ill i11J A DlfiiNnl World
JaleMI take&amp; beta on how

e

BASEMENT
WATER PROORNG
UnooncltioMI lif•lme ~aran­
tlle. l.ocll nd•ances furnished.
Free ettlmlltft;. Cell collect

e

1-114-237-0488, dOl' or nigh!.

Roger1Basament
Watwprooflng.

o...yna--~
sad~CH

WHAT OOE-S IT AI\E.AIJ WH£-tJ
A MM) ~ fJC. 'S 001" REN:N
YE-T 10 C3e:r MARRIED '1

SWEEPER and .ewing m.chine
rep8ir. pwt1. and suppli•. Pi~

Georg• Croel! Rd. Coli 114445-0294-

8:00 I]) 700 Club
&lt;2J iiiJ Cllaara Rebecca

e

hurnllatea heraetl by making
an awkward pal!le at her

boll. (A)
(1) Boxing
(JJ aCil M I W Man 1nd .
W - Fawn Hall, Jane
Seymour and Katie Wagner
out the tasctntulng,
giiii!IOI'OUI, aurprlalng.
puzzling and oddbaH as they
view the contemporary world .

thop. RON EVANS ENTER PRISES. Jackson,. Ohio. 1-800.

537-9&amp;28.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISESSeptk: tlnk pumping--

•to p.-

lold. C1ll 1-800.837-9628.

Meaonry-Brick. block, stone &amp;
ft,-..,IK•. Free •timlte. Referenc.. CaiiBIUOenny-814-26&amp;-

~

1749.
·P8intlng: lnl..-ior

a.

ONCETH~E

ExterJor.

WA'5

A l'j&lt;I.R&amp;JT'.MJD
A L.IONONA
DESERr 151.AND...

Free eatlrMtes. C.ll 814-44&amp;8344RON'S .Television Service.
Hau• cilia on RCA. Quaar.

AND THfN, eER:lRE'
.'\'0..1 i&lt;NCW IT,
11HIERE WAS o--IlY
THE L-iQ-1 ...

J

/

GE. Spocl.lng 01 Zonhh. Coli
304-5711-2398 or 814-4482484.

ANDI~T

THE'TEXA'B
INSAW
IMA.S!5AC::RE."WAS
$RWE:50ME/

!Ill Myft81yl Grace
WIIII&amp;On reveals lhe real
reaeone lor withheld
Information. IJ
llll e1121 MOVIE: 'PromiiiCI
1 Mlrlete' CBS Spacial

r~KlngU..I

1:30 e Ill !IS Night Coun The
courtroom Ia endangered
when Dan Is handcu"ed lo a
time bomb. (R)
10:00 I]) ltnilght TIM&lt;
Ill !IS L.A. Lllw Kuzak's
patience Ia tasted by e
HH-daatructiVI celebrity
clllnt. (R)
CJJ e Cll 20/20 lpc. Edl1lon
W11klv newt magaztna. 1;1

e

Rotlry or cable toot drilling.
MosttMIIscampleted•amedev.
PUmp Ill• •nd service. 304-

8911-3802

91..-k• t..w n end Stir~ Serv-ice.

IT LOOKS LIKE
ItL NEIJER AMOUNT
TO A DADBURN
HILL OF BEANS

;;;::::::::;;;:=:;::;====
82

him. (R)

(1) L - * ol1111 llftckylrd
1983; lndlenopolla 500 Films

Conaete Septic Tenka • 1000
gal .. 1500g81. •ndJet Aeration
syttem. factOfY balned rep~tr

-Plumbing
&amp; Heating

(]) Md'lllr C••tiooll: of
Shertaakttonel
IIII
11)11-*'tl10:06 (J) NIA lllkltball
10:30 I]) l l r a t - OutdoMa
(0:30)
Gll The Hero'• Journey 1;1
11:001]) lllmlilllOn II.... Cut In

MAW WAS RIGHT··
SHE TOLD ME I
OUGHT TO L'ARN
ME A TRADE··

s-

CARTER'S PLUMBINO
AND HEATING
· Cor. Fourth and Pine
Glllipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-44&amp;-3888 or 614--

s-

4411-4477

• Ill Ill • Cll 411 .1121

IIIJ-

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigaration

®

THE GRIZZWELLS®
Till.,

Ucenllld el-=tricl.,. EatiJMte
fr"' Ridenour EleetriC.W, 304-

W£:~

8711-1781.

86

0=111
e
(!)IIIgnOII

•

~ce--

IIIIIOneonOna
'l:l:t:.?

Night A flmlly of women
illllrmlllll to keep their
1111..- 11tve In fantasy.
ill "11 un, P.L Tropical

MedneH

DOOle. Oilterna, W.lll. Ph. 814·

LATI NIGHT

PEANUTS

p., 1 Ru,., Jr. W•• Sor.icl.
PD~.dt. . ni.~~. Calll144411-3171.

Weter Hauling,

' '•..

.

I HAVE TO DO A BOOK REPORT
0~ ~TREASURE ISLA~D:.'. DO
'IOU KNOW WI-IAT IT'S IWVV

Upholltary
·'

trloounty8rea23ye•s. The belt
In .. rnltuN ur;a""''"'l· Cell
304·171·4 14 for

•to 2

t K J 8·
4 95

SOUTH

+Jl

.K97643

t3
4AQJ 10
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
West

N'o rtb

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

East

It

I+

2NT
3+

Pass

64

Pass"

Pass

DbI.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead : • 10

' e

apart for declarer. After the unfortunate choice of a spade, West could still
. have recovered. What he had to do wa~
allow dummy's jack of hearts to wilt
· when the heart suit was lirst led . Once
. again, the communication for setting,
up the heart suit and getting back to
the South hand to cash heart winners
would have evaporated .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
44 Little
1 Cut ·
brother,
5 Capone
at times

DOWN
feature
9 Flutter
1 Part of an
old block?
in the air
11 Ann of the 2 Chinese
Amazon
province
12 Witless
3 Egg-shaped
13 Caper
4 Sword's
15 Robertson
conqueror
Yesterday's Answer
16 Hood's
5 Freshet 20 Part
28 Alkali
heater
6 •Anything
of GWTW 30 Whiff
18 Dock·
you23- colada 31 Swap
workers org. do ..."
24 Missile
32 Roof
19 Nullify
7 Craftsman
component
feature
21 "... -to
8 Racetrack 25 Overfill
36 Saucy
tell a lie"
feature
26 Emulate
38 Dad,
i2 Calif.
10 Esteem
Pete Rose
to
27 "- Foot
granddad
neighbor 14 Staff
23 Window
17 Had lunch
Forward" 40 Mr. Torn
part
24- one's
way
26 Emperor
in '"Flash
Gordon"
27 Cause
of harm
28 Scooted
29 Work unit
30 D.C. body
33- 'nuff!
34 Half
a dance
35 Knock
37 Succinct
39 Serious
41 Greek
contest
42 Sea duck
43 Baseball's
Buclcy
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

NEED TO KNOW

I CAN FAKE THE
REST OF IT

YMKIZTET

FPV

EM W P V R P Q K.
S Z T

fr••

.,

••

- ,.

....,

.

...

.....
...

..,

.. '·...

...-•••....
SZT

F S-

SZT

K WE-

CZRBZ

B F 0 D

GT K S

SZFS

RK
RP
WK.-BMWPSRO .DME '
Ynt.nlay.. Cryptaquote: YOU WILL GET MUCH
MORE 0014!" IF YOU WILL ONLY CRACK THE WHIP
AT YOURSELF.- DONALD LAIRD

.'

"

.•'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

KTTO

•

'',.

lsLONGFELLOW

.. K Z M W 0 V

.

. ..

·•

5/ 19

AXYDLBAAXR

C T

TJ.IAT's ALL I

...

A - .... ..,,1¢/
C"eeuctu
v ...

AMESZ

Mow.y's Up.hollterlng .-vlng

EAST
+Q87632

5-1.8

Coli 304-17&amp;-13.70.

87

WEST
4JO
• AQ65
• Q 10 9 ~ l
4842

CRYPTOQUOTE

R &amp; A W•er Service. Pool•.
cls•rna. wells . Immediate·
1 .oooor 2.000g11Hon•deltvery.

2111.

.

e(lJ Naalfwld oar.

2411-9285.

t A 7 62

4K 7 6 3

When the opponents seem to be
overboard, and you have the declar·
er's secondary suit apparently locked
up, a trump lead is usually devastating. Alter West had neglected to lead a
trump today, he had a chance later to
make an unusually great play. He
missed that chance also, and then the
dedarer countered by making a great
guess of his own .
South won dummy's ace of spades
and played the jack of hearts, passing
it to West's queen . Now West led a
trump. Declarer won and led a heart,
but not just any heart. He led the king.
ducked, and a spade was thrown
from dummy as East played the 10.
Declarer led another heart and ruffed
II with dummy's club king . He 1hen returned to his hand with a second trump
lead and ruffed out the last heart. He
able to return to his hand with a
di1am•ond ruff to draw trumps and run
the remaining hearts. That was six
doubled .
An initial trump lead would have al·
lowed West to play a second trump
when he was in with the queen of
hearts, and the band would have I allen

ea

w.. r S.vice. Swimming

,....,...ble r•t", lmmedlete
2.000 g.rlon datMrv, cl11lrns.
pools. well, etc. c81 304-576-

Lots of chances
for gr~at plays

Oilptlfi8Tonlght
'Night Hilt' CBS Lila

Genaral Hauling

Wauer~on'e

.

Plrt 2 1;1

Dtflllrd W•er Sero.Ace: Pbols.
C-rns, Wells._ Deltvery Any- .
tlmo. Coli 114-4411-7404-N&lt;&gt;
. . ndi!Y cells.
J • J

Z-Gravs

III !.ow Cor~

11:30eW • Tonlghllhow

RlUI-W 'THE ·
&amp;t!zt\IIEU. •.

.J

NORm

I AK9~

I

1I11 An Ocelln Apllrt 1;1
OPrlma-

Home
Improvements

--··--.....,. --21 ft. lloyllnor ......,_ 1988

llll Whlal of Fortune 1;1
IIJ CI'OIIItre
.1121 iiiJ J-rdy! 1;1
® llllmey Millar

rmt .1121 41 Houll

R•idential or co~lll wirIng. New eervi011 or rep•lrs .

1114 Horlrry o.v ...., SLHTC
- - - Loldocl with ........
114-742-21:M.

1980.

Tu~tc:E'{

:

1977 VW c•mper. sleeps 5,
watar. electric, pgrtl patti, very
goQCI cond. t1.99S.OO. Coli

1173 H.-1-v O.Vidlon Sport•

Kaw•Akl 100. &amp;eel. cond.
..... "'""· Colll14-448-7337.

5 100m unfurni1hed. Up1iairs
apt for Mnt. Ca\1 deva- 814•46-7572, aher 5 PM , 446--

IN

•.

2349.

84

1983 Hondll 71111 llhodow.
Ellcel. oo.-.1. *1100. Coli 8143111-8238.

446-2581 .

-r-

t-toW AJOUT iHAT·-·
11
No'' IS iliE SAME

18ft. 50.000miiN.
sleep• 6, good tires, 8·cyl, auto
tnn•milsion by Ford .
•4.300.00. Evenfr'!g• 304-676·

1980 Suzuld GS6151JE . Loob
good. Run~ ¥oad. uoo or.._,
oH•. c.lll 4-31.84715.
lor. Oood •hlpo. *1100. Coli
114-4411-1314 .

Newly redeoor11ted ~rnishod, 2
Br. 468 Second Aw. 1225 per
mo. Sec. Oep . &amp; ref . Aduttt. No
pets. Call 814-44&amp;-2236 or

\I

Wlnneb~go.

Motorcycle~

...

75

LOANS

304-n:l-6986.

2903.

....

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

(1) SpeedWalfl

.Cil JUdge

17ft. Skylllrk camper, fulty •If
ettnltined, 11or.e 4 burner with
ov.n, refrigerator. furnace. bat:h
with shower. hot water heater.
tM'Idam ~eels. twtn g• 11n ks
with 30 lb each, awning. phone

top, goad cond, phone 304-

Hondo CR 80 II. 1911 din blk1,
aood lhape. .Strong motor.
t325 . Coli 114-4,11-8893.

"You want the maternity ward,
seventh floor!"

1978 Monftor 27ft. air. awring,
puling equipment, other extn11,
very good cond, 7 Burdette
Addn. c.n 304-875--4304.

81

BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

aqu..,

FRANK AND ERNEST

304-17&amp;-3956 or 304-571-

74

Sat . 814-446-1899, 827 3rd.
Ave, Gallipolis, 0 H.

e......,

3811-9017.

19711 .loop CJ5, hord lnd 110ft
17&amp;-&amp;433.
1977 Subu-. 90,000 mil•.
e&gt;c cor&lt;!, PS. P8. AC, one
- - 01,890.00. 304-67&amp;1788.

County Ar,pliance. Inc. Good
used appl IIW'IOIJI and TV•.JSets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru

lamps, coff...,d ....,•.

SIMP• 6. Good oond. SeU·
contained. 11250. Clll 614-

•1

. . reo, cloth Int. Call 814-4463886 or 4411-2083. Prryoll.

a.

d.,. lpedalt. 1!1 mlfe out J«rJ.

7:01 (J) Andy Grtlllth
7:30 G (}J (I) Hollywood

1987 Ch..,y A1tro ConvtralonVan Mark Ill. Uke n.w. low Fet1y TrH Trimming, shmp
miles.
3.900. 614-986- remOwl. C•ll 304--67&amp;-1331.

4411-8741 .

D,l n ettu . bedt. bedding,
dr .. _.,, chett, couch.._ chllifa.

1968 18 ft . Smoky C.mpor,

1986 Pon!llc Sunblrd. AC, P8,
PS. auto.. tltt. cru'-t, AM-FM

upstairs 3 room apt .
Utilit ies pflid. 94 Locust. 8210
JMtr month, 8
dep. Call
61 4-446•1340 or 446~ 3870 .

1 bedroom furn4ahed effeelency
apt. 1 upstairs apt. with 2
bedrooms. kitchen furnished. E.
Mein, Pomeroy, 614-992-8215
(11 814-992-3523

e ro ,.. A·s·H

114-992-5851 .

114-1111-1551 ... 4411-1428.

ichlare

elr. U350. C.ll814-281-8522.

1001.

Rent

un.,_hld. 2 BR. on - .

1971 21 fr. Empi"' Camper.
S'eepa 6. Seff.conteined with

up and deltvery, Dnil V•ruum
Cleaner, one hilt mile up

1977 C.m•o. V -8,11Uto. trans .,

Honda Accord UCI. 1988. Blue .
St8nderd tran•mlulon. Calli

(1:00)
.
11)1 M-yllna
•1121 iiiJ Whlal of Fortuna

llll Nllwo

-.

73

ell_.

-·Hour

Camp~rs

Young - Unwed - Hiccup - DANCING
r-~;:__-----,

(!) IIII MtcNIII/ Lehrer

12800. Coli 114-4411-4482.

PS. PB. Coil 114-448-1115.
ofler I PM-4411-1244.

830 Case
tl'llctor wtth
baler. mowing rn~~ehlne &amp; nlke,
$38150. 240 ln1ernlt6orwl with 8
ft . Fla~l mov.er, •24915. Owner
will finance. Call 114-288-

&amp;

Enable -

ANSWERS

Granny' s advice to youngster: " You can 't be afra id of stepping on toes if you want 10 go DANCING ."

.. Cll Peopla'l Court

Motors Homes

1980 Dodg, 318, 3 apaed.
AM-FM. white apok•. 1un
visor. bug lhielll. n..-v paint.

Ma•.ev ~ ..aon. New Hollend,
Bush Hog Sat• &amp; Service. Ovw

40 uMd trlctors to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. Largest •lection In

304-87&amp;-2179.

pu, !ebulh: matar. Clll 814-448-

Transport all on

~arm Slliilll lr:s

CROSS.SONS

a.

\Mtekendl.

17&amp;-2837.

Fsrm Equipment

&amp;14-255-

8327-davs. 446-2849-nlghts

7019.

61

c.11

4 •pd .. s .w.e.

a

for Sale

89S.3531 e&gt;Aningt.

tie. 1 1 yrs. old. 2 antlqut
seddl•. YtiY good cond. Call

Pft .

,-, ·"

~CRAM-tETS

Steeled and Delivered
ill PM Magazine
(!) lpowliC1nter
Ill Enterlalnmant Tonight

Fiob• ~ass topper for Ctuwy 8
Camino. 2306 Monroe Ave, Pt.

79

su,c:kv•d 114-89 2-23 22 "'

5412.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

. .

Air Conditioner. 1 2.000 BTU.
Good cond . CI!IU 81 4-•46-

Household Goods

UOO.OO.
9688.

18 cu. ft. •ight freezer, Se•s
Cold Spot. 36 in. avodedo gel
range. Good oond . Call 814-

4933.'

51

AKC rlfQIIItered mlnatura ~Dach­
thund puppi81, 6 Mekl old,

PRINI NUMBERED LEII!RS IN
THESE SQUARES .

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE LETIERS
TO GET ANSWER

e (I) .Andy Grtlllth

0946.

0235.

614-446-0139.

Garage apt .. furnished. $226.
Utilities p&amp;id. 2914 Nell, Gallipolis. Call 614-446-4416 after 1
PM.

Misc. Merchandise

J .D. 650 C dozer Sari••
#241832 with ripper. New
under carriage. rebult tnln•.
819,000. Coll814-384-82i'O.

to Rent

2 Physician femityde•imtorent
- Large house 'Nitti poulble
intent to purchase starting July
'88. Send anv in for. ID~ Bo• Cia
c/ oGallipolia Deily Tribu ne. 825 Third Aw., Gallipolis,
Ohio 46631 or cell evenings
904-787-3488, Aa.

Oowntown-Modern1 SR .. complete kitchen, AC. carpet. Call
Furnished efficiBncy. 1145. UtU,
fti81 paid Share bath. 607
Second. Gllllipolis. Cell 614446-4416 after 7 PM.

54

Mobile home lot. eo ft. or Unlimited free kodak film. plus
smaller. 920 4th, Gallipolis.
free 351'hm camwa with Wlr$7S· m~ter Plid. Cl!lll4415-4416 ·ranty. Toll Free 1·800-433afte.- 7 PM.
. 8312 (24 hours) .

2568 . E.O.H.
Brookside Apartments: Located
off Buleville~d .- 1 BR . s.-clous
apartments with mOdern kitch111
and washer-dryer hookups. cable television available. Call

2526.

8

1:311]) Carol Burnett
7:00 I]) Ramlngt011 8.._11 Signed,

Athens Llvntock 1•1•1 mile

Ml!ltchlngcouch S. chair. Navy&amp;
beige. UOO C.ll 814-4488891 .

Space for Rent

Space for small trailers. All
tlook-ups. Cable. Atsoefficiencv
rooms, air and cable. Mason,
W.Va, Call 304-773-5651.

BEAUnFUL APAATh'IENTS AT

Antiques

'''

11)1 t n - Politico '88

57

3900 .

painted, deck. Regency , Inc.
Apts. call 304-675· 7738 or

614-446-0338.

675-q72.

53

7479.

New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mcbile home in
city Adults only. Parking. Call

Hou:eehold fu rnhure, OJ alter
colcr TV. round glau tlble
dinette let, 4 chairs. be*oom
suite, recliner and chair wtth
ottoman. diahet •nd many mora
decorative items, phone 304-

5 room and bath. apt. for tent.
Third floor. Nico. 8175 ph••
ut~itiM , deposit. Reference 1"8 ·
q u lrftd . 614-992-&amp;026.

appl. furnished, WMher- Oryar
hook-up, ww carpet, newtv

675-5104.

Oinnette set, end tabl• coffee
table. lamps. TV aet, phone
304-675-7315 after 6:00PM.

....

.

IIIIIIody l!loc1rlc

Uaed Furniture - 304-8751450.

for Rent

45

llll e1121 CIS -

top• w / light, 839. Uke new

Apartment

,.

e

to159 . Kitchencupbo•ds.l49.

Whirlpool Washer. 4 cycle. mel
nice. Perfect working condition.

•

lit .1121

llao•dwelk and
llll...,..r, Super B!lwl of
TIMe (R)
(JJ • Cll ABC NIIWI E;l
(!) NlgMiy lullnell Roport

oo-.

3 lr., 1 ~ bllhi-Eureb. 1210
...- mo. Oep. required. 0.11
81 ~U&amp;-4212. ht._en 9-1.

~OU ' '' +&amp;&amp;IT
WA!;W'T TOO HARP
TO FIGUIZE-

Din-3!o11pc. groupo.t45

~~~~~ :u';~

II I I I

8:051Jl Allee
1:30 e (}J iiiJ NBC NlghUy N -

1981 ...... kl 305 C8 1\ toad
cond. UI!O.OO. 304-112·3182.

,...., lu,.hod 1mlll hou10.
....... onOV. Alf. roquiNd. N&lt;&gt;
poll. Coli 814-448-0338.

Parts

&amp; Accessories

Sale

ill~lll.iiS

41

Auto

•

Gl Bportol.ook
(!) Dr. Who Dalek Invasion of
the Earth, Pan 1
IIII Movln' Right Along
0 8howlla t ....y
(I) Hlll'fll' Dayo

Special

42

32

Pets

1111 Newt

114-4411-1912.

614-l::::::::::r:::=:::===:;:===l----------

Govornmon1HomoshomS1 .00

56

Matt Bentlll
• (}J (I) .I])

8699.

76

GAM I

1:00 I]) lila Valley The Guill o1

1980 Bey line runabout 151.-i h .
open bow. walk thru windshield,
19815 · Mercury 90 hp wtth
stainMIII 1teele prop. 304-675-

~4&amp;-5121 .

WOlD

EVENING

·304-743-3109 "' 743-11!'0.

dows. lin1111•. etc, Claule 'Mnteft, Rio Grandi. 0 . Clll 814-

15

THURS .. MAY 19 •

1974 Drifter houl8 boat. 43ft.
axe cond. completely restored,

Building Moler!...
llodt, brick. .-war pip•• win-

215" color RCA consote tef&amp;Y._
lion. E•cel. cond. 8219. Call

J BR ., l•ge kitchen. large LR.
H~ bMh. 1 acre land. Asking
S1 8.000. Call 614-742-3168.
garage. lavt~l Jot on Rt . 33.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

blonk11 . Coli 614-448-2140. ·

· O,llllcothe Rd. Call 814-446-

,1he Daiiy

,.nol ortvlo. coli 304-882-2411
after 8:30 pm.

75

Merchandise

couch. Cell 814--256- · 2783.

End table~. coffee tibia. lamps,
lezy Boy, King size bedspread&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Television
Viewing

54 Mite.

---~

Fo r S1lt or Rent· 3 BR . house

Thursday, May 19, 1988

....

;· ~

••·••

..

..', '
'

•

•

•'

. "•

�•

Process l l
•
cases In
court

•Supreme Support and Sleeping comfort
•Tempered Coils for Overall Firmness
•Decorator-style Quality Ticking
•10 Year Warranty

$2 99 ·
REG. 5554.00 QUEEN SET ................................. $ 399

S59.0~

-RCA
SALE
ALL RCA COLOR TELEVISIONS ARE NOW

REG.
AND 579.00

5 YEARS

ON SALJ

PARTS &amp; LABOR
WARRANTY

CLEVELAND IUPI) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
726
Ticket sales totaled $1,321,158,
with a payoff due of $604,048.50.
PICK-4
1716
PICK-4 ticket sal_es totaled
$225,407, with a payoff due of
$101,462'.
P!CK-4 $1 straight bet pays
- $3,972. PlCK-4 $1 box bet pays
$331.
Super Lotto
8, 12, 13, 15, 30. 31
; Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3.259,893 .
Kicker
1, 6, 8, 9. 5, 6
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$622.512.

1

To present hym

8ifl8

The Heaven Bound Sinaers of
Calvin, Ky., will be presellt for a
hymn sing at the ReedlvUie
United Methodist Church at 7:30
p.m. Friday. The sing Is under
the sponsorship of the youth o!
the church. The Harvest Trio o!
Meigs County will also he present
for the sing. ~l'fe public Is invited .

.
'

6

'

Pomer 0 y- M"ddl
I
eport •

Copyrighted 1988

$339
2 GREAT
STYLES

Just
Recei•ed

YOUR
CHOICE

26" REMOTE
COLOR CONSOLE

$3··49

WHIRLPOOL

$549
LE

SIVE

FLOOR
COVERINGS

EUREKA
UPRIGHT

AIR

VINYL
LINOLEUM
99sa.YD.
$ALE
SCULPTURED

-~-

CONDITIONERS

4 I'DiiMDII Olaf-A-Nip
lop Lollllng Uflt
C1pocily Disposable
Dual lag
Dull Eolgt KIHftlf

I

S3

~ARPET .

7,500 BTU ..................... Only •379.00
10,000 STU ..................... Only •479.00
12.000 BTU ..................... Only *559.00
18,000 BTU ..................... Only '599.00

TEDDY
One and two piece
teddies in pink,' blue
and aqua.
SizeS, M, L

SA~E

30°/o
LlnLE GIRLS

SUMMER
. $1188
DRESSES
Reg. $14 ....... Sole
Pretty Summer Styles
$1388
. ........ 5ole $1588
Reg. S18

Reg. S16 ....... Sole

and Colors
Size 6 mos. to
Size 14

REG. SlO TO $56

tSAL£

$595
·.
.
S~YD.
PAll TURF

, S3 95

SALE

so. YD.

1

"We do not have the money for cleaner and more efficient than the
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Construction of the largest pres- both." he said, " That is why it existing technology," Byrd said
surized fluidized bed combustion just doesn't make sense for today from Washington.,
power plant in the world wa s Congress to pass new laws now
Byrd, who broke ground last
proposed T.hursday by American mandating the use of old envirOn- month for AEP's first clean-coal
'Electric Power Co. Chairman W. mental controls at very high cost project at the Tidd plant near Brilwhen more efficient. less-costly liant, Ohio, said that AEP's
S. White .
technology .is so near."
proposal for the Sporn plant calls
In an application to be filed
In a pressurized fluidized bed for the federal government ID
today with the Department of
combustion boiler, coal is burned provide $184.8 million or 31.9 perEnergy, under its clean coal
with limestone in a churning cent of the tolal project cost.
technology program, White said
"
fluidized" bed.
AEP would pay about two-thirds
AEP is ID apply ID lhe federal
In the burning process. su lfur Department Of Energy Friday. The
of the plant's $579 million cost if
chemically combines with the DOE is cxpecled to decide by Ocstate and federal support could
limestone and becomes trapped tober if it wiU fund the project,
· be arranged for the balance.
In the ash, resulting in 90 percent Byrd _said. . According_ to . AEP
Without federal support, AEP
removal of s ulfur pollutants and projections; if lhe project ts apcann$t proceed with the projecl ,
making di sposal easier.
said White.
proved by the DOE, en~nccring
The coal also is burned at a and design work could begm m laiC
The project would be underrelatively low combustion 1989, consauction could begin in
taken at the seven-state utility's
temperature, res ulting In less early 1993 and the plant could be
coal-fired 1.05 million-kilowatt
than half the nitrogen oxide operating in laiC 1995.
Philip
Sporn
plant
on
the
Ohio
NOMINEES - These are the 1988 king and
May 28. The candidates are, lront.l tor, Petrece
emissions
-of a comparable plant
The Philip Sporn project is the
River
near
New
Haven,
W.Va
..
queen nominees of the RaclneHighSchooiAiumnl
Circle, Angie Bostick, Bridget Bing and Dolly
of
conventional
design,
said
largest
clean-coal
1echnology
he said, because of its age and
Association. AU are seniors at Southern High
Hill; back, I to r, Jeffrey Caldwell, Dave Lee
White.
proposal
ever
made
under the
proximity
to
abundant
coal
field
s
School In Racine and the winners of the titles will
Amburgy, Barry McCoy and Chris Baer.
program
initiated
by
Byrd.
in
the
eastern
United
States.
be announced when the annual reunion Is held on
"Tiilsnew clean coal technol"As founder of the clean-coal
ogy has the potential for making
technology program, I am delighted
By Charles A. Mason
to see a proposal of this magnitude
our nation 's coal supply usable in
for this technology," the senior
an
environmentally
acceptable
U.S.
Sen.
Robert
C.
Byrd
•
manner. and this · Is further Thursday greeted as "welcome senator said.
Byrd said he has obtained nearly
evidence that we are serious news for West Virginia's coal inabout developing the technology dustry" a proposal by American $1 billion in federal funding for the
as rapidly as practical."
Elecuic Power Co. to develop a program to fund ways ID promo1e
New acid rain legislation. $579.3 million clean-coal ICCh- the use of coal in an "environmenhowever. could seriously jeo- nology project in Mason County.
tally safe" manner. He added the
pardize the project, he said.
The Columbus, Ohio-based AEP proposed plan would be the
"We cannot pursue this prom- is proposing a 330 megawait, pres- nation's "best defense" against
ising technology If we have to surized, fluidized bed combustion costly acid rain legislation.
spend our limited funds adding project at the Philip Sporn plant at
"The technology be developed
under the program, lhe senator said,
outdated scrubber technology to Graham Station.
our existing power plants,"
is innovative and drastically reduce
"Not only will this project use a
WASHINGTON !UPI)
White said.
wider
coal
emissions.
range
of
coal,
but
it
will
'be
Higher prices for clothing,
energy and food sent consumer
prices up 0.4 percent lp April, an
annual inflation -rate of 5.3
percent, the Labor Department
reported today.
•
Patrick Jackman, a departLEAH DANNER
ment spokesman, said more than
GINA JAMORA
a quarter ofthejumpwas duetoa
2 percent leap in clothing prices.
consider the more potent HouseCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) committee will be working with a
The cost of petroleum-based
passed version.
.
State
legislators
negotiating
the
substitute version, sponsored by
energy products was up 0.8
Suhadolnlk, chairman of the
terms
of
a
solid
waste
disposal
Sen.
Scott Oeislager, R-Canton.
percent_ the first increase in
bill will be dealing over a Senate Energy, Natural Resourlhal is even stronger than the
energy prices since November .
stronger version of the bill when ces and Environment CommllHouse
version.
"It was not unexpected, '' Jackthey meet next week to carve out tee, said he will allow the
Tilling
said it contains inCommencement exercises will state level In Christian Schools man said. "Some of It can be laid
nine-member panel nexl Tuesan agreement.
creased
dumping
fees. protecbe conducted by Ohio Valley for Bible teaching, English, to imports. It's like model
Reacting to a loud public day to amend and vote on the
tions
lor
township
roads,
a more
Chris tlan School Sunday, when creative writing and speech. She changeover in automobiles; peooutcry tl1at extended into his own measure which cleared the
wor.
k
able
moratorium
on
new
ten young men and women will was winner of the District 4-H ple tend to Introduce new lines at
caucus, Sen. Gary Suhadoinik. House 87-7 in March after seven
landfills
and
several
other
provigraduate, according to school Safety Speech Award and a local higher prices ."
R-Par ma Heights, retreated months of study .
sions Suhadolnlk had proposed.
Food also cost more in April,
administrator, Dr. Fred Willi- winner four years: is a leader in
James Tilling, chief execu tlve
Thursday from his weakened
which he felt were overlooked by
ams. The ceremonies will be held Proteens, a youth group at First up 0.8 percent from March , and · substilute solid waste disposal officer of the Senale. said the
the
media .
at 2:30 p.m .. in First Baptist Baptist Church, and is a kinder- that increase ranged from higher
bill to give the Senate a cha'nce to
grocery prices for meat, fish,
Church of Gallipolis.
garten teacher there.
eggs,
fruits and vegetables, to
Valedictorian will be Leah
Miss Jamora has been a
higher
prices at restaurants and
Esther Danner, daughter of Mr. member of choir, treasurer of
liquor
stores.
and Mrs . Thomas Danner of her sopho~ore class, vice presiHigher airline- fares sent the
Gallipolis, and salutatorian will dent of her junior class, a
cost
of transportation up 0.8
be Gina Laurie Jamora, daugh- member of student council,
percent,
the department said.
ter of Dr. and Mrs. Ismael
played volleyball two years and
Michael
Penzer, senior econoJamora of Pt. Pleasant. W.Va.
was a cheerleader for four .
mist
with
the
Bank of America in
Graduating
be Miss
She is a member of the
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - Four
San
Francisco,
had projected a
Danner (with academic honors ), American Christian Honor Somore
locals have voted in favor
0.5
percent
Increase
in
advance
Rachel Ellen Danner (with aca· ciety, the Society of Distinof
a
tentative
contract with the
of
today's
report,
saying
Inflation
demic honors) , Kathy Ann Fra- guished American High School
Goodyear
Tire
&amp; Rubber Co ..
this
year
Is
"In
line
with
what
we
ley, Miss Jamora (wilh aca- Students. Is listed in Who's Who
Including
a
giant
Tennessee local
went
through
last
year
."
demic hOnors), · Ronald Eric Among American High School
that
rejected
the
last tentative
Prices on a seasonally adKeenan. Ramona Kay King,
Students and Who 's Who in
settlement,
the
United
Rubber
justed bas is rose 0.5 perc en !from
Laura Dawn Sayre, Edina Kay Music.
Workers
union
said
today
.
February lo March, also because
VanMatre , Michael Joe Wright
URW
spokesman
Curt
Brown
of higher clothing costs. after an
and Aaron Fleet Young.
said
the
proposed
agreement
was
0.2 percent Increase from JanuSpeaker for the commenceapproved
Thursday
in
voting
at
ary to February .
ment will be Rev. Glenn Archer
Local
878
in
Union
City,
Tenn.,
Jackman said the Inflation rate
of Richland Baptist Church of
for the year would be 5.3 percent Local 843 In Marysville, Ohio.
Livermore. Ky. He formerly
If the seasonally adjusted prices and Local 307 in Topeka, Kan.
Due to rainy weather th'e piiSt
taught at OVCS and pastored in
Voting to reject was Local 845 in
rose at the same rate they rose in
few days and the weekend
the Gallipolis area.
Madisonville,
Ky.
April. Averaged for 1988 to date,
The class color is scarlet, while weather predictions, the annual
Also
approving
the pact today
inflation Is running at 4.5 perbaccalaureate and commencethe song they have chosen is
was
Local9041n
Sun
Prairie, Wis.
ment of the Southern High School cent. he said.
"Make A Joyful Noise."
Results were expected later
David Wyss. chief economist
For their class Bible verse. will be held Sunday In the· bleb
today or early Saturday from
they chose Proverbs .3:5-6, school auditorium. rather than for Data Resource~ Inc . In
Local 831 in Danville, \'a.
"Trust In the Lord with all thine ouldoors in the Southern Jllgh , Lexington, Mass .. projected a 0.4
The other five locals are
percent
April
Inflation
hike
and
NEW OPERATOR- Robert McCarley has been app.&gt;lnled the
heart; and lean not unto thine School Stadium.
1
scheduled to vote Sunday and
predicted inflation for the year
new Gallla-Melp Recional Airport operator. Beginning the
own understanding. In all thy
Each of the 75 seniors will be
Monday.
would be about to 4.5 percent,
appointment May 9, McCarley said It was !lllmethlng he has
ways acknowledge him, and he given two reservations lor reThe way the URW tabulates
marginally above 1987's 4.4
shall direct they paths."
wanted to ~o all his IUe. "I hope toaee the growth and prospering of
served seating and the reratification ballots, tf a local
percent..
the airport," McCarley said. ''Many people · have made
Miss Danner Is a member ef mainder of the seatlnr will be
votes to ratify an agreement, all
Excluding the volatile food and
contributions, and they are startlnr to come Into effect - we are
the school band, was basketball open. The auditorium will seat
of
that local's membership Is·
energy sectors. inflation for the
·statisticaln, treasurer of the approximately 1,800 people.
startlnr to see the effects now!' McCarley said his primary goal
counted In favor. Thus, although
junior and senior class, in 4-H,
6-month period ending in April
Speaking at the commencewu airport maintenance, which be said was on a roD. He operates
the vote at Union City was 872 for
was running at a seasonally
choir, was volleyball statistician, ment with the Ohio's Governor
his own private ohop, Night Hawk Aviation, named alter his.
adjusted annual rate of 4. 7 and 743 against, all of that local's
was a junior varsity cheerleader, Rlcbard F. Celeste, Class ValeVIetnam unit. He has been flying since IINI'l when he was In army
approximately 2, 700 members
percent, the department said.
and Is In the American Christian dictorian Heather Shuler and
aviation. Dr. Howard Under, president of the airport board, said
are counted In favor of the
The consumer price Index Is
Honor Society and listed in Who's Class Salutatorian Scott
McCIU'Iey wu the belt applcuat for the position when the board
tentative pact.
one of the numbers most closely
Who Among American High McPhail. The services will becJn
appolated blm May 6. "We are looktnc forward to airport
As a result, Brown said, the
watched on Wall Street and by
School Students.
at 8 J1.m.
expanalon to oene the community and business needs," Dr.
Continued
on
page
10
She has won awards at the
Under salcL
Continued on page 12 ,

Jeans, Casual .Pants
and Dress Pants. 1
Pleated Styles, 1I
Elastic Waist ,Styles
and Baggies.
'
'
SIZES 5/6 to 17/1 ~
Reg. •20.00 .... Sale '15 .S8
Reg. 524.00 ... Sale '19.18
Reg. 532.00 ... Sale '25.58
Reg. '36.00 .... Sale 1 28.

OVCS graduation
Sunday in Gallipolis

'

'

Four more
locals vote
for contract

will

BOYS'
TROUSERS
BOYS SUMMER WEIGHT

JACKETS

Perfect tot- wHr now. for
comr.lng and vacation. Solid
co oro and novolty looka.
W•tom jacket• Included.
Slz• S 18-10), M 112-14), L
118-181. XL 1201

Boys s18.9 5 Joclcth.... s111.1 0
..Joys $19.95 ...lcth •. l16.95
loys 129.95 ...lcth ••• 125.45
leys 132.95 .....h ••• 121.00

Distress dyed 100%
cottons, dress slacks,
novelty jeans. Sizes 8 to
14 in regular and slims.
Student sizes 26 to 30.
in and try on a pair
or two and save: ·
"16.96 and •17.96 TROUSERS·--· Sala •13.28
•19.96 end '22.96 TROUSERS .... Sale *18.28
'24.96 end '28.96 TROUSERS .... Sale •21.88

WESTERN
SHIRTS
True western styling in long ·
or short sleeve styles. Sizes
S 114-14%), M (15-16Yz). L
(16-16%), XL (17-17%) and
XXL (18-18Vz)
FAMOUS MAKERS

115.95 Western Shirts ..... S12.75
117.95 W11t1m Shirts ..... 114.35
119.95 Western Shirts ..... s15.95
122,95 Western Shirts ..... s11.35

2 Sections, 16 'Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Due to pressure, tra~h bill
•
•
retummg to stronger version

LORD ISAACS '

MEN'S ,

Frt'day, M ay 20, 1988

PriCes
up 0.4
percent
in April

.

I

TEXSHEEN

oh·10,

Sen. Byrd says, 'Welcome
news for W.Va., industry'

19" COLOR
PORTABLE REMOTE

20" REMOTE COLOR PORTABLES

•

-~~=--------;;----..:..:....__:....:.:..:...:..~--:--~:--...:.:.=.=:::.:=::.::.::::.::.:

$258
SUPER SPECIAL

Cloudy tonight. Lows in mid
50s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Mo•lly cloudy Sat urday .
Chance of rain. IUgbs In mid
70s. Chance of rain 40 percent.

e
at
enttne
AEI• proposes huge power plant
Vo1.39, No. 11

'

Two forfeit bond
in Middleport
Two ' defendants forfeited
bonds and live others were fined
in ihe court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Kenny Wise.
Middleport. $100. posted on a
disorderly manner charge, and
Wayne F. Green. Albany, $450,
driving while intoxicated, and
$200. driving while under
suspension.
Fined were Angel M. Harmon,
Rutland, $425 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while Intoxicated; $25 and costs. open
container; Charles Knapp, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner, and $25 and costs, open
container; Tammy Wise, Middleport, $25 and costs. disorderly
manner; Robert Scarberry, Mid·
dleport, $25 and costs,11sorderly
manner: Bally J. Dugan, Rutland, $25 and costs, expired
operator's license.

Daily Number
671
Pick 4
5835

•

19" COLOR
REMOTE

Lottojackpot ·

Lottwy numbers

~age

REG. 5488.50 FULL SET .....................................

One person wins
CLEVELAND (UP I) - There '
was one winner of the $3 million ·
jackpot in Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednesday night, but no
one claimed the $100,000 top prize
In the Kicker game.
The player who picked the six
winning Super Lotto numbers 8, 12, 13, 15, 30 and 31 - will
receive $150.000. before taxes,
each year for the next 20 years, a
lottery commission spokesman
said today .'
In addition to the top-prize
winner, 99 players picked five of
the numbers to win ,$1,000 each,
and 5,007 players chos.-four of
the numbers to win $74 apiece.
Ticket sales for the midweek
lotto game totaled $3,259,893,
while the prize payout totaled
$3,469,518. The jackpot for Saturday's game will again be $3
million.
The Kicker numbers drawn
Wednesday night were 1, 6, 8, 9, 5
and 6.
Although no player had all six
of tllose numbers, five players
had five of them to win $5,000
each; 62 players had four of the
numbers to win $1,000; 573
players had three of the numbers
to win $100; and 5,591 players had
two of the numbers to win $10
each.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$622,512 and the prize payout
totaled $200,210.

Church
•
notices

ORTHO LUX ULTRA PLUSH TOP

Eleven cases were processed
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Harold Norton,
Clifton, W. Va ., $63 and costs, no
operator's license; $63 and costs,
expired plates; James Polcyn.
Middleport. $63 and costs, consuming alcohol in a motor
vehicle; Fred Willison, Pomeroy , $375and costs,drivingwhlle
intoxicated; $63 and costs, !allure to control; $263 and costs,
leaving the scene of an accident;
$50 and costs, no financial
responsibility; $313 and costs,
destruction o! property: Michael
Harris. Forest, $48 and costs.
speeding .
.
forfeiting bonds were John f .
Hatfield, Point Pleasant, $44,
speeding; James Ohlinger,
Langsville, $313, assault: $313,
resisting arrest, and $57, speedIng; Lisa Robson, Coolville, $63,
traffic light; Leonard Ford,
Gallipolis, $63, expired plates;
Cynthia Childers, Mason. W. \ia .,
$45, speeding; Dana Haning,
Middleport, $49, speeding. Brian
D. Hayes, Middleport, charged
with destructln of property, was
placed on probation for six
months.

Ohio Lottery

MEN'S,

DRESS
SLACKS

Southern ceremony
to be held indoors

A big selection ,of
solid oolors and

lriylas.
Sizes ~9 to 60
waist
me81urement.
This nie Includes
our ~opular
"Hubbard" slacks.
Stock up on your
needs inow and
save Iplenty.

5ks. . . . . . . .
I
I

115.95
l12.75
119.95
ks............... ll5.95
132.95
Irs l...... dl - 126.95
. 134.95 Slacks IHIM•dl. 127.95
'

.

'
'

::1

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