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                  <text>June 5, 1988

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

sales...

WINS MINI·CAR- Tim Thoren, manaa;er of I he SuperAmerlca
IU station and store on the corner of Second Avenue and Pine
Street In Gallipolis, congratulates Jean Davison of GalllpoUs, who
won the Pepsi·Cola and SuperAmerlca gas-powered mlnl·car In
SuperArnerlca's car giveaway contest. (Times-sentinel photo)

'

Landslides...
Continued from D-1

Continued from D-1
6.8 percent from a year ago.
Chrysler, which acquired
American Motors Corp. last
year, reported a 6.5 percent rise
in sales when compared with the
combined total a year ago. Light
truck sales, Including Jeep, rose
28.1 percent.
Amo~ the smaller companies
reporting sales of U.S.·bullt cars,
Honda posted a 33.9 percentgaln.
Volkswagen, which will end U.S.
car production next montl!,
showed a 41.7 percent slide.
Nlssan's car sales declined 34.5
percent, although Its light truck
sales rose 110.5 percent.
Toyota, which was still accelerating production levels at this
time last year, said II sold 5,100
cars In the latest month. Mazda
sold 2,819 of its new MX6 coupes
produced at Its Flat Rock, Mich .,
. assembly plant, which began
production last fall.

First Holzer Apartments

The First Holzer Apartments Limited Partnership has been
formed by a local developer/ contractor, Maurice A. Toler, and Ar·
thur Howard Winer of Marietta, Ohio, for the purpose of creating
units for senior citizens of Gallla and surrounding counties.
First Holzer Apartments will be limited to residents aged 62
years of age and older, as well as handicapped and disabled lndl·
viduals. The bulldlng will be totally renovated at a cost of
$2,857,641.00.
Sixty-three on~bedroom units, complete with laundry faclllttes ,
a recreational space, new elevator service, a resident manager on·
site, parking and gardens wlll be the end result.
The Developers would like to hear from local residents who
would be Interested In living In the fadllty. Each unit will be government subsidized, and rented on a flrst·come/ flrst-served basis, to
those with qualifying Income. A waiting list Is now being prepared.
Anyone interested In becoming a resident should contact either First
Holzer Apartments at 388-8323 or fill out the coupon below and send to
First Holzer Apartments, Route 1, Box·34o, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.

scrap can cause repeated
slippage.
'·, The third is flows - landslides
where the movement of the
material resembles the flow of
viscous fluid downward along a
surface of failure. Flows are
generally thin.
On all slopes there are two
kinds of forces; the driving force
and the resisting force. The
driving force pushes the soli
downhill under the influence of
gravity. The force consists of the
total weight of moist or staurated
&amp;~&gt;II, plus buildings, tees, etc. the
resisting forces act against the
driving force , and are internal
properties of the soil or artifical
measures constructed by man.
Examples of resisting forces
Include shear strength (higher In
. -Jands and gravels than in silts)
imd cohesion (mainly in clays).
Artificial measures Include re·
talnlng walls and embankments
at the base of slopes. On stable
slopes the resisting forces are
stronger than the driving forces,
on unstable slopes the reverse Is
true.

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

Name: ______________________Age: ________
'
Address--------------------~---------------------

City: ______________.:&gt;tate: ~--

Zip :------

I would be interested In living In First Holzer Apartments when

they are completed. My income Is•--- - - - Signed: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.... .................................................................. ............................. .

·Dairy ...

OIL CHANGE AND
LUBE SPECIAL

Continued from D-1
dup activities. See details In this
paper. Our goal Is to make this
the biggest and best ever. We
need a lot of local participation.
For more Information call the
County Extension Office - 614·
1!1146· 7007.

Rio gets $2.4
million for project

Stocks strong ·in advance;
Dow·sets record weekly gain
By DONAW GAlLAGHER
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) .- The
stock market staged an Impressive advance this week, enabling
the Dow to score a record weekly
point gain and prompting some
analysts to pronounce a break in
the recent downward
momentum.
The Dow Jones Industrial aver·
age, which rose 18.85 Friday,
closed the week at 2071.30. For
the week, the index jumped
114.86 points, Including Tuesday's surprising jump of 75
points and Wednesday's gain of
nearly 33 points.
The Dow's advance during the
four-day week broke the previous
weekly record of 108.26 points,
set during the week ended Dec.
18.
The first and biggest surprise
this week was on Tuesday, when
the Dow soared 74.68 points, Its
sixth largest dally point gain
ever.
Investors, previously sidelined
by fears of higher Inflation and
Interest rates, re-entered the
market amid hopes that the
worst was behind them.
"This week has been a perfect
example of h.ow money can burn
a hole In one's pocket ," said
Harry Miller, portfolio analyst
with Johnson, Lane, Space,
Smith &amp; Co. In Atlanta. who was
quick to add a note of caution.
"As much as I would like to
believe In the upside we have
witnessed this week, l'm more
sensitive to the fact that we

GALLIA-MEIGS HEAD
START is now taking
applications for fall
enrollment of four .
(4) year ol~ children
from income eligible
families. If interested,
please call 446-6674
or stop. by the Head
Start office in
Woodland Centers
Monday-friday,
8:00·4:00.

entering June and likewise the
end of the quarter," Miller said.
"With the abundance of cash
available, decisions have had to

be made E'arly in the month so
that portfolios can be properly
positioned by the end of the
quarter."

e

...

SILVER

BRIDGE
PlAZA

SMORGASBORD

MAIN ST.

992-6614

Another body found;
death toll ·reaches 46

HOURS:
Mon. thru Sat.
11 a.m.·l p.m.
4 p.m.-8 pm.
Sunday
11 o.m.·8 p.m.

low mileage, 4,500 to 10.000 miles - Good colors.
'AM·FM·Cassette *Cruise Control
*Balance of 6 / 60 Warranty
'Tilt Wheel
'Power Windows &amp; Door locks *9 To Choose From

AS LOW AS

• Millime p!dessional management • No sales charge
• low minlrTLim investment ($1000)
• No lntetest penalties on redemption
• Check writing or wire redemption
• Free telephone transiBr
Spol..-.cl by T1le Ohio Com~ 1n~

llleH coupan, c.ll v-

_,..t ofllce or c.l ow tolllraa number 1..eoo.lll1111

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~ ....._"ttwt. RMII• ~bllole wou

,

.... Ml'ldi!IOM¥·
1
'
I· .
11-

..

I

'""'I
I
I

-----w-------i

-Weal news briefs-

Fully equipped including Climate Control air conditioning. Only
5.000 to 7.000 low miles. 6 to choose from.

Cardinal Goverrvnent Securities Trust oilers:

WEIE 120,700

ON THE SPOT
FINANCING

S16,900
DEPENDABLE
TRADE-INS
SERVICE SINCE
ENCOURAGED
1954

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . New

for killing aquatic Ute In
hundreds of lakes In the Nor·
theast and Canada.
Ohio has more such plants than
any other state and officials have
argued an acid-rain control blll
unde~ consideration In Congress
would cost the state's Industries
- and, ultimately, the consu·
mers -billions of dollars.
The agreement, The Times
said, would raise $900 million a
year to help pay for the cost of
equipment to eltmlnate sulfur
dioxide pollution. The federal
government would pay two·
thirds by a major change in the
way the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve Is filled.
The cost would be shifted from
the federal government to the oil
companies, which would be re·
qulred to set aside 2 percent of
their Imports for the reserve.
They would retain title to the oll,

and pay the government storage
fees .
Another $900 million a year
would be pa id by the polluting
industries themselves .
Celeste told The Times the ·
pending legislation in Congress
was hanging like a "Sword of
Damocles" over the coal and
steel industries and the utilities,
because it would require the
Industries to pay the entire cost
themselves .
Many industries already have
switched to buying low-sulfur
coal from the West, creating
double-digit unemployment In
coal-mining areas of Ohio, West
VIrginia, Kentucky and
Pennsylvania.
" If the folks in New York and
Ohio can find a common ground,
It may well serve as a guidepost
tor· the rest of the nation," ·
Celeste told the newspaper.

NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -The to begin deliberations Tuesday mtce. Research after that was
tobacco Industry has " manufac- on whether three cigarette com· done for public relations or
tured a legal defense" by con- panies are liable for Rose Clpol· product development, not to
tending that smokers know the lone's 1984 death.
Inform the public, he said.
risks they take In lighting up, a
Her husband, Antonio CipolThe cigarette makers, as par t
lawyer for the widower of a lung lone, charges that Liggett Gro11p of their complex defense , have
cancer victim said today in his Inc. failed to warn his wife of tl\e tried to persuade the jury that
closing argtiinent In a closely risk she was taking until legally their cr Illes are'grossly overs tat·
watc!led cigarette llablllty trial.
required to do so In 1964. The suit ing the case against smoking.
Lawyer Marc Z. Edell told a also claims that Liggett, Phl\lp · ''Tobacco Is a great whipping
federal court jury that the Morris Inc. and LorUlard Inc. boy," Donald Cohn, a lawyer for
industry maintains that smokers conspired to mislead the public . Liggett Group Inc., said Friday,
have known for decades that they
Reading from a few of the the day after the close of defense
run risks In smoking and that company documents used in the summa lions.
,
that knowledge Insulates tobacco trial, Edell said he had proved
The tobacco Industry has never
companies from lawsuits.
the existence of "an evil conspi- lost a smoker death case, beating
At the same time, he said, a racy" to keep cigarette buyers off about 300 suits since the early
former tobacco company chair- smoking by casting doubt on 1950s largely because of Its
man has testified that he was not scientific findings on the hazards argument that smokers have
aware that smoking was cons!· of the habit.
free wlll and are responsible for
derell harmful until 1964, when
"What you have heard their own decisions to kick the
the surgeon general's report throughout this trial is what the habit or keep on puffing.
linking the practice to lung tobacco Industry is best at - a
''This case Is especially strong
cancer was released.
strategy . developed over 30, 35 for that defense," Philip Morris
"But Rose Cipollone knew years, a strategy of creating lawyer Peter Bleakley said,
all the other smokers knew and doubt," Edell said.
describing Rose Cipollone, of
that's why we didn't warn" them,
Little Ferry, N.J., as a well-read
was Edell's description of the
Hq told the jury he has proved woman who pored over media
Industry argument.
that the Industry did no health coverage of the smoking controvAfter listening to testimony research before 1954, when an ersy but kept on smoking for 40
and reviewing hundreds of exhib- investigator at the Sloan· years.
its In a four-month U.S. District Kettering Cancer Institute linked
"You don't have some poorly
Court trial, the jury is expected cigarette smoke to tumors In educated individual who was

poorly Informed," Bleakley said.
But the Cipollone trial has been
closely watched because of the
Internal company and Industry
documents presented by Edell in
an effort to prove that cigarette
companies conspired to subvert
that free will in their customers.
The memos and letters purport
to show that the -companies
dismissed what they called "the
smoking and health controversy" as merely a public rela·
ttons problem.
Cipollone's lawyers argue that
the papers also show the Industry
engaged In a conspiracy to
mislead smokers over the
dangers of the habit by suppress·
ing their own scientific research,
disputing Independent research,
falling to disclose what they
knew and attempting to maintain
an Image of smoking as a .
pleasurable, social thing to do.
But Liggett, the manufactur·
ers of Rose Cipollone's Chester·
fields and L&amp;M filters, Philip
Morris, which sells the Parlla·
ment and VIrginia Slims brands,
and Lorlllard, producers of
Trues, continue to argue that
smokers make a free choice.

U. S. to pay $1 billion to savings depositors

S13 400 TO $13,900

A MONEY MARKET FUND • INVESTED ONLY IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES ANO REPURCHASE AOREEMENTS

Cardinal Government Secur~ies-irrust is designed to produce current Income
while p!8S8Ning capital, combined with a high deglee a! liquidity and the security
al a portfolio invested only in obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Governmenl and its agencies, and repurchase agreements. Certain federal
~ securities may be guaranteed by the full faith and credit c:A the U.S..
Government or may be backed solely by the aedit' cA the iSsuing Agency.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Tobacco industry's lawyer begins summation

BORKEN, West Germany
Tests have revealed that most
(UPI) - Search te&lt;~ms early of the miners died, of carbo)l
today found the body of another monoxidE' poisoning, the spokes·
coal miner kllled In last week's man said. Some had a concentra·
massive explosion In Borken, tlon as high as 80 percent In their
bringing to 46 the death toll in blood. Sixty-five percent is fatal,
West· Germany's worst mine the spokesman said,
disaster In 26 years . .
The mine's management also
Mine officials said rescue disclosed that it had overlooked a
workers were continuing the radio message received shortly
search for five men who were after the explosion from the six
still missing, but authorities said men who were rescued Saturday
they held out little hope they morning. But officials said the
would be found alive.
search had not been delayed.
Earlier, mine officials had said
Mine manager Erwin Braun
two bodies were found Monday told reporters the company had
but later they said only one body received an incomplete radio
had been discovered.
. message from the trapped men.
Six miners, five Germans and It was so brief and vague that the
one Turk, survived 2 ~ days · report of a message was cons!·
underground and were found dered a mistake, he said.
alive in an air pocket Saturday in
"Now we know there really had
wl).at authorities called a miracu - been contact with the men," said
lous rescue. On Sunday the Heinz Cramer, spokesman for
bodies of eight miners were Preussen Elektra, the mine
found.
owner.
Fifty-seven miners were
But he said the failure to
trapped nearly 300 feet under· evaluate the message properly
ground at Borken, 65 miles had not delayed the search In the
northeast of Frankfurt, after an part of the mine where the six
explosion last Wednesday. It was survlvors were found .
the worst West German mine
The Frankfurt Neue Presse
disaster since 1962, when 299
newspaper, however, said theslx
miners died In a blast in the Saar might have been found much
district on the French border.
earlier It the radio message had
Offlcals said a team of dogs not been ignored.
NEW YORK (UP I) - The
was brought to the mine to aid In
And the Frankfurt Allgemeine United States will pay more than
the search tor the missing Zettung said the mine manage- $1 bllllon In Insurance to deposi·
miners, but the antmals were not ment played down the slgnlfl· tors of one or more ·savings
used because of the high concen· cance of the message untU the six Institutions that will be closed
tratlon of carbon monoxide In the men spoke of !tarter Uteir rescue. down soon In the largest liquidamine, officials said.
"All the men were declared tion ever, The New York Times
The search In the rest of the dead far too early," the news· reported today.
mine was described as ex- paper said. "And the fact that
M. Danny Wail, the chairman
tremely dltficult because the there had been radio contact with of the Federal Home Loan Bank
tunnels had been badly damaged the six miners was admitted only Board, announced the liquidaby the explosion, which was so after their rescue."
tions Sunday but declined to tell
violent It Injured eight miners
The Bonn newspaper General the newspaper which savings
above ground. At some places In Anzeiger said the management and loan Institutions would be
the mine, rescuers struggled appeared to lack proper equip- · Involved. He said details of the
through knee-deep water.
men t for the rescue operation.
liquidation would be announced
"Whether more lives could today In Washington.
"We must never glveuphope," have been saved lfthere had been
Savin~ officials said
a mlne spokesman said. "But our an adequate reaction wlll have to they expected the liquidations to
hope Is becoming ever smaller." be Investigated," it sal d.
be In California, the Times said.
Neither bank board officials nor

SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE

POMEROY

•

enttne

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP() , The governors of two states on
opposite sides of the bitter acid
rain debate have apparently
reached a compromise agre~
ment that may break a deadlock
in Congress.
The New York Times reported
today that Govs. Richard Celeste
of Ohio and Mario Cuomo of New
York have ·reached an agreement that would provide for a
unique cost·sharlng method to
pay for air pollution controls .
Heidi Findley, a spokeswoman
for Celeste, confirmed there was
an agreement and said detalls
would be released later In the
day . Celeste scheduled a news
conference at 2: 30 p.m.
Acid rain Is caused when sulfur
dioxide
emissions, principally
ffiKED - Members of Racine American
number of small American Daa;s plus metal
from
steel
plants and electrical
holders noting the various wars were stolen from
Le glon Post 602 are Irked by Ute recent vandalism
generating
stations In the Mldw. the tribute and a low while plcketfence was !IUDed
to their Dag·Doral tribute to deceased veterans of
es
t,
combines
with water to form
all wars In front of their post home In Racine. A .
up and left lying on the flower bed.
sulfuric acid. It's been blamed

JIM
COBB
CHEVROL.ET-OLDSMOBU.E
CADILLAC

at

•

Clear ~onlght, low In mid
60s. Tuesday , sunny, high
near 90.

Celeste, Cuomo reach
agreement on acid rain

GOOD THRU MAY 31

DAYTON- Robbins &amp; Myers,
Inc., announced that Robert
DeVInney, formerly the executive vice president of the motion
products group at Baldor Elect·
ric Company, was appointed
' president of its motion control

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 6, 1988

Sl 595

··Named leader

Daily Number
761
Pick 4
0105
Super Lotto
36-8-26-10-15·24

Page 3

ALL NEW
MENU

LUBE, OIL
CHANGE &amp;
OIL FILTER

COLUMB(JS - The Ohio Department of Administrative Ser·
vices announced that the agen·
;.cy's Division of Public Works has
sent a list of 26 capital Improve·
ment projects to Interested
architects.
Among those projects Is a
$2.4-mllllon project that calls for
an addition to the library at Rio
Grande Community College.

Ohio Lottery

Wilander
French Open
champion

'

•

•

Two i_njured in accidents

Dam construction
begins at Hogsett

A Long Bottom man was Injured in a car-truck accident
Sunday, at 5:29p.m., In Orange Township at the junction of S.R.
7 and County Road 28, according to theGallla-Melgs Postofthe
State Highway Patrol.
Floyd D. Weber, 74, was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the EMS after his 1974 Ford F ·100 pickup truck collided with a
1986 Dodge Aries driven by George J. Stout, of Parkersburg,
W.Va. Weber was treated and released .
Stout was traveling north on S.R. 1 when Weber, who was
driving south on S.R. 7, turned left to County Road 28, into
Stout's path, causing the collision.
Weber was cited for !allure to yield.
A Pomeroy area man was Injured In a one-car accld!lnt
Saturday, at 1:08 p.m., In Rutland Township on S.R. 143.
Charles G. Ellis, 72, ofRt. 4, Pomeroy, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the EMS after his 1979 Chevrolet Malibu
went oft the right side of the-road and hit a tree. He was driving
west at the time.
Ellis was admitted for multiple bruises and scrapes. He was
last listed In stable condition.
He was charged with DWI and cited for failure to control.
(Continued on page 10)

HOGSETT, W.Va. (UP!) Construction has begun on the
mammoth project of replacing
the Gallipolis locks and dam on
the Ohio River.
Officials overseeing the fed·
era! project say about 1 million
tons of earth and rock have been
remove" as the first part of a
two·mlle·long channel by
workers on two lO·hour shifts a
day, six days a week.
About 200 people on now
working on the site near Hogsett,
with another 65 to be hired by the
end of the year. The work crew Is
to total between 450 and 550 by
this time next year, officials said.
The project is designed to
eventually replace the lockland
dam, which was constructed In
the late 1930s.

North American Savings and were insolvent, and more than
Loan, both In Costa Mesa, Calif. 200 "hopelessly Insolvent." The
The Federal Home Loan Bank Federal Savings and Loan Insu·
Board oversees 3,200 savings ranee Corporation, which proInstitutions. Last month the vides Insurance for depositors In
General Accounting Office, the savings Institutions, does not
Investigating arm of Congress, have sufficient funds to cover
estimated that more than 500 deposits in all those Institutions.
--------------------~------------~

Wall would comment on a report
sunday by The Orange County
(Calif.) Register, that federal
regulators would be "quickly
arranging a cure'' for two
seriously troubled local savings
Institutions - the American
Diversified Savings Bank and the

•

RECEIVES DONATION - Tbe Rutlaad ,a.t of
the Southeulen Ohio Emerpncy Medical
Services (SEOEMS) recent~)! received a S8IO
donation from Soathern Oblo Coal CompiiDJ'B
Melp Dlvllon. The check wu preaeated by AI
HUlard, general superllltea~ for tbe Melp No.
1 and Raccoon No. 3 miDea, to fthrcla and Herb
Elliot, both active members ol the r.cue squad.
'l1le service leads support to the area that
~

laeerporate. the Melp No. I mine near Salem
Center, RUiard aays. Tbere also are a aubatantlal
number of Southern Oblo Coal employees who
reelde In lhe RutlaDd area. From left to rtcht: AI
HDiard, pneralauperlntendent for Southern Oblo
Coal Compuy's Melp No. I and Raccoon No. 3
mlnea; Marcia IUid Herb Elliot, active members
of tbe Rutland po8t of the Southeastern Ohio
Emera;sncy Medical Sen &lt;ces.

..

�Monday, June 6, 1988

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middlepowt, Ohio

·Portsmouth West drops AA finals, 16-2

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 6, 1988

ASHLAND, Ohio (UP II -Two
five -run Innings Saturday provided Tallmadge with a 16-2 win
over Portsmouth West and Its
third high school softball state
title.
Tallmadge, which ended at
24·6, had won two previous titles
in Class AAA, but this year had
dropped into AA. It was the first
loss for Portsmouth West.
Tallmadge had been up 2-0
when Portsmouth West tied the
game In the third. Tallmadge
broke the tie with three runs In
the top of the foufth, and added
five In the fourth and fifth Innings
and one more In the sixth.
Tallmadge got to Portsmouth
West starter Lori Dials In the

------------------------------------~--------------------------------------~.~--Jack Anderson and

The Daily Sentinel
U 1 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~lh

rs:m~

~v

...................-r,,......._c:::~,,...

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

~ Oil

project threatens presenre

WASHINGTON -An oil exploration company Is making plans
to explode about 10,000 charges of
dynamite in tlie Big Cypress
National Preserve, the home of
endangered Florida panthers
and bald eagles.
If it can get the blessing of the
federal government, Shell West·
ern Energy and Petroleum Inc.
wants to blast along an 85-mile
stretch of the preserve In southw·

est Florida, looking for oil and
gas deposits.
Sheil Western began surveying
In late Aprn, but environmental
groups filed a lawsuit to stop the
work. Federal ()fficials suddenly
ordered a halt to the exploration
May 6. Until the lawsuit was
filed, the Interior Department
had backed Shell Western and
rejected pleas from the National
Park Service for more environ·

mental impact studies on the
project.
It Is a familiar theme that has
plagued the Reagan admlnlstra·
lion's Interior Department since
the days of former Secretary
James Watt. His pro-business
Image made him the target of
environmental groups and left.
his underlings in the National
Park Service wondering whose
side Watt was on.

'IfiHIIE

AMEMBER o! The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association a nd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welco me. They shou ld be Jess than 300. words
long. All lette-rs are subject to editing and must be signed with name, a ddress and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing !~sues, not personalities.

Municipal electric bill
volatile political issue
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - You can't see, hear, feel or taste It, but you can
smell it a mile away. A b!ll restraining municipal electric' companies
is a volatile political issue floating just beneath the surface in the Ohio
House of Representatives , waiting to explode.
While the lawmakers dealt with garbage, teacher tenure and
hazardous matj:'rials transportation during the last few weeks of the
spring session, the municipal electric bill was held in check.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·New Boston, who recognizes a
political hand grenade with the best of them, Is slttlng on the bill
despite the fact It Is sponsored by one of his trusted lieutenants.
Rep. Clifton Skeen. D·Akron, who used to room with Riffe in
Columbus, offered the bill at the request of the Ohio Edison Co., which
serves his district.
The measure, also favored by other Investor-owned utilities, the
J;'ubllc Utilities Commission of Ohio and the Ohio Chamber of
Commerce, would prevent municipal electric companies from
offering power to customers outside their city limits.
The municipals claim this Is an unfair restraint of trade, a violation
: of fair competition and a roadblock to cheap electric rates for
suburban and rural consumers.
"They make it look like I'm against competition. apple pie,
motherhood and Chevrolet," said Skeen in defending his sponsorship
of the bill last week.
·
Skeen, a former local Ia bar official In Akron, Is unfazed by the
: suggestion that It see,.ms out of character forhlm to be a hodcarrlerfor
· Ohio Edison.
·
"They came to me," he sal d. "I researched this thoroughly. I think
it's a very worthy bill. A number of my constituents want lt. People
think these utilities are always the bad guys, but we need electricity
and we need It cheap."
It is Skeen's contention that the municipal electric companies are
"stealing" customers from the Investor-owned utilities, thereby
' jacking up electricity costs for everyone else.
Skeen said the municipals purchase power from New York and
Canada, pipe it in on the transmission lines of investor-owned utilities
and sell it. They don ' t answer to the PUCO or the Ohio Consumers'
Counsel and they don't pay scllool taxes, state Income tax, utility
gross receipts taxes or tangible personal property taxes, said Skeen.
"And they don't burn any Ohio coal," he added. "They take the
cream of the crop (customers I and leave the rest. Why should we
allow somebody to go outside their district and steal somebody else's
business?"
Skeen said hls bill would generate $300 million in revenues and ·
"hold down costs for all electric customers in Ohio."
Riffe often likes to get rld of hot potatoes, but not thts ·one. Some of
his members. particularly in northern Ohio, could be vulnerable In
their re-election campaigns if forced to vote on Skeen's bill.
So it llkely will remain lodged in the Rules Committee until after the
: November election, despite Skeen's auempt to exert his influence as
: the new assistant House majority leader.
"I don't think it's needed that badly," said Riffe, who offhandedly
: denied any awareness of the contJ:oversy surrounding the measure.
· "Only one person's talked to me about It, and that's you," he told a
reporter.

q.

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Dale Van A tta
The Interior Department oversees the National Park Service,
and the Park Service oversees
Big Cypress. The federal govern·
ment owns the land In the '
preserve. The mineral rights are
privately held.
· The Big Cypress Preserve
spreads across 570,000 acres and
is the home of several eridan·
gered species, Including the
Florida panther, bald eagle and
red·cockaded woodpecker. Con·
gress es\abllshed the site as a
national preserve In 1974.
When Shell Western proposed
to explore for oil and gas, top
officials In the park service
asked for an extensive environ·
mental Impact study. They had
done their own preliminary assessment and concluded that the
exploration could adversely af- ,
feet the primitive, roadless areas
of the preserve, degrade water
quality and encourage the
growth of non-native plants. But
William Horn, assistant secretary of the Interior, rejected the
recommendation for more envir·
onmental studies, and the park
service approved the explora·
tion .
Our reporter Scott Sleek has
obtained a copy o! a Park Service
memo which lmplles ·that the
Interior Department tried to play
politics with the Big Cypress
preserve.
Robert Baker, southeast regional director of the Park
Service, wrote the memo tO Park
Service Director William Moll.
1n It, Baker expressed concern
about how the decision reflected

Legislative update_______n_s~_en_~a}_~n_Ser_M_~·L_o__:::.ng
0

The Ohio General Assembly
trash Is In the bilL
returned for a brief May session
The House did not approve the
before recessing untll after the
Senate version of the hazardous
November election. Several bllls
cargo bill. As I reported last
passed the Senate that I would
week, the Senate removed the
like to bring to your attention.
important prenot iflcatlon provi·
The most Important Issue of
slon thllt would require transporlate has been environmental
ters of hazardous materials to
legislation. HB 592, the overhaul
notify the PUCO on a shipmento'f Ohio's solidwastelaws, passed
by-shipment basis. The bill is
the Senate with a controversial
now In a conference committee
amendment that would ban out·
that wUJ come up with a com·
of-state trash from being promise version. If local emer·
dumped In Ohio. That particular c gency response teams are to be
provision Is ··most probably un· adequately prepared in the case
constitutional, as it violates the of a hazardous materials splll,
federal Interstate commerce Information should be readily
law. In 1978, the U.S. Supreme available on every shipment and
Court reversed a New Jersey law route to be used.
banning out-of-state garbage.
Another environmental blll, SB
While I wanted to stop Ohio from 76, would prohibit new solid or
becoming a huge dumping hazardous waste facilities In
ground for other states, I do not state or national parks and
believe we should be playing recreation areas unless they are
politics with such an Important used exclusively for wastes genIssue. I ·voted against the amend· erated In the areas. The bill
ment on the Senate Door because passed the Senate and now goes
It jeopardizes the entire bill. to. the House.
They Ohio Attorney General and
the EPA advised against IncludAnother bill on Its way to the
Ing this provision In the blll. This House for consideration Is SB 384,
week, the House approved the which would permit school dis·
Senate version, but Governor tricts to propose a levy on Income
Celeste Is expected to use his taxes. School income taxes were
line-Item veto power to remove permitted from 1981 to 1983,
the unconstitutional provision. A during which time six districts
fee schedule . making It more approved income tax levies. It
expensive to dump out-of-state has become Increasingly diffi·

cult to pass property tax levies.
Last month, Ohio voters rejected
the highest number of school
Issues since 1982. Another problem with the :property tax is that
It does not grow year to year, so
school revenue does not keep up
with Inflation. The Income tax
option would give school districts
'a funding alternative that has
become more popular In rural
areas and that would be a source
of revenue growth.
!
The Senate also approved SB
179, which would ban corporal
punlshmen t In public schools.
Local school boards are to
undertake discipline studies and
can vote to permit paddling alter
September 1991. The Ohio
Parent-Teacher Association has
advocated a ban of corporal
punishment.
On its way to the governor is a
blll that brings Ohio Into compliance with restrictions against
the use of lead In drinking water
systems. The federal Safe Drink·
lng Water Act requires states to
enforce lead-free requirements
by this month. Pipes used for
public water systems or plumbIng in facilities providing water
for human consumption must be
lead-free. This Is timely legislation, as a recently released
congressional study shows that

lead contamination of American
children Is a more serious
problem than has been recog·
nlzed. Lead can damage the
brain, nervous system, and kid·
neys. Drinking water Is only a
small source of this problem, but
enforcement of these requirements Is a step In the right
·
direction.
The National Guard Tuition
Grant Program also received
attention in theSenate.ln March,
the legis Ia ture decided to cut
scholarships to 60 percent of
t!litlon costs beginning In September of this year. Senate
Democrats attempted to restore
funding at 100% by amending the
budget corrections blll in March,
but the amendment failed on a
party-line vote. The Senate has
now passed a bill, SB 378, that ·
would provide $4.9 million to
restore 100% of tuition costs to
those guardsmen who enlisted
before November 1,1987. It Is not
certain that the House wiH act on
the legislation anytime soon.
As always, I welcome your
comments on these or any other
Issues that concern you. Please
feel free to contact me by writing
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Colum·
bus, Ohio, 43266, or call (614)
466·8156.

Doing Wright by Meese ____W_il_lia_m_Ru_:_sh.:...:::.:...er

•

~

8

: ~~ .

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, June 6, the 158th day of 1988 with 208 to follow .
The moon has reached Its final 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 Gemini. They include
Spanish painter Diego Velasquez In 1599; AmeriCan patriot Nathan
Hale in 1755; Russian poet Alexander Pushkln in 1799; British
AntarctiC explorer Robert Falcon Scott In 1868; German novelist
Thomas Mann In 1875; vaudeville bandleader Ted Lewis · in 1891;
Indonesian dictator Ahmed Sukarno in 1901; California Gov. George
Deukmejan In 1928 (age 60) , the Dalal Lama, exiled leader of Tibet's
Buddhists, in 1935 (age 53), and tennis player Bjorn Borg In 1956 (age
32).

I

On this da ~ e In history:
In 1933, the first drive-in movie theater opened in Camden, N.J.
In 1944, hundreds of thousands of Allied troops began crossing the
English Channel In the "D-Day " InvasiOn of Nazi-occupied Europethe greatest invasion In history.
In 1972, a coal mine explosion In Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) trapped
464 miners underground. More than 425 died.
In 1982. Israeli forces Invaded Lebanon.
A thought lor the day: Nathan Hale said, "I only regret that I have
but one life to lose for my country."

The recent announcement that
the House Ethics Committee has
at last agreed to Investigate a few
of the financial antics of House
Speaker Jim Wright Is singularly
·
well·tlmed.
The report of special prosecutor James McKay Into the
Wedtech scandal Is expected
momentarily, and liberals every·
where are primed to leap exul·
tantly on anything It says about
their current favorite target,
Attorney General Ed Meese.
McKay not long ago warned
that, whlle his Investigation was
continuing, he had as yet found
no grounds for indicting Meese In
connection with Wedtech. That
just about broke the liberals'
hearts, but they have consoled
themselves with the hope that
McKay may at least Inser-t a
paragraph or two In his report
reproaching Meese for behavior
which, albeit not criminal, was in
one way or another arguably
••unethical.'' ·
If McKay wlll just go that far,
Meese's liberal and Democratic
foes are prepared to go the rest of
the way: Meese must resign,
they wUl solemnly Insist. It is not
enough for an Attorney General
to avoid criminality; he ougllt to
be held to "a higher standard"
And that's precisely where
Speaker Wright's difficulties are
going to prove so useful to the
Republicans.
The Speaker of the House of
Representatives Is no small
potato. He far outranks the
Attorney General. As a matter of
fact, he Is second In line of
succession to the presidency
Itself, rl&amp;ht after the vice
president.
How, then, shall we penalize
the present holder of the speaker·

,
I

ship, if by any chance the House
Ethics Committee finds his con·
duct marginally less than crlrnl·
nal but plainly "unethical" or
otherwise Improper? Ought he to
resign, on the ground that he
must be held to "a higher
standard" than mere avoidance
of criminality?
Of course, the House Ethics
Committee Is not a body noted for
any especially piercing senslttv·
tty to questionable conduct. It
has taken a year-long barrage,
from within and without Con·
gress, to induce It to look Into
conduct on the part of Speaker
Wright that any objective observer would Instantly recognize
as dubious to say the least. His
roles ·in the Fort Worth stock·
yards subsidy and the Texas
savings &amp; loan investigation, his
apparent violation of the House
rule on book royalties, and his
office's pressures on Amtrak to
sell federal lands, all require
Intensive probing.
That Is why Congressman
Newt Gingrich (R.·Ga.) has
called for the appointment of a
special counsel to the committee
to lead the Investigation of
Wright's behavior. Only a tllo_roughly qualified Independent
attorney, wlthextenslveprosecu·
torlal experience and a clear
mandate to pui Wright through
the wrlnaer. can persuade tile
country that an Incestuous little
committee of Wright's own
House of Representatives wUI
Investigate this arrogant caucus·
boss as he deserves to be
Investigated.
.
Congressional Democrats
ought to have no difflculty
understanding why anything Jess
won't do. It was they, after all,

who insisted upon the designation of "special prosecutors" to
probe wrongdoing In the Executive branch - the theory being
that the Justice Department, as
part of the Executive branch
Itself, could not be trusted to
display sufficient zeal In pursu·
lng malefactors within it.
On the assumption, then, that
McKay tosses the liberals In
Congress and the media a bone or
two in the form of some phrases
criticizing Meese, let this constl·

tute fair warning that loud
demands for Meese's scalp will
be matched, yell for yell, by
demands for Wright's. These
Johnny-come-lately moral!sts
are going to discover that
"higher standards" Is a game
that two can play. And If Wright
Is half as deep in funny business
as the publ!c record suggests,
Tony Coelho may yet wind up
visiting his old boss on the rock
pile at Leavenworth.
·

Berry's World

I

fifth by loading _the bases before
Judy Shupert took over. Those
live runs came home on four hits.
two errors and two walks.
Unescore:
Tallmadge .. .. .020 355 I - 16 13 0
Ports.W....... .. 002 000 0- 2 8 5
Shelly Boggs and Lynn DeL·
uca. Lori Dials, Judy Shupert (5)
and Shupert, Dials ( 5) .
WP-Boggs ()J-1) . LP-Dlal!i
(6-1) .
COLUMBUS, Ohio tLTPI) Matt Callahan drove In two runs
In the second tnntng to propel
Columbus Watterson to a 9·2 win
over Parma Holy Name and the
state Class AAA high school

baseball title.
Watterson , which ended 33·2.
scored three runs in the flrsl
inning and were never threa tened . The Eagles had three
walks and two errors before
Blase Sparma grounded out wlt h
one run scoring . Callahan's blg
single In the second helped th
victors score three more runs.
Mike Mulligan, Todd Burleson
and Tod Kozlowski each had two
hits for thewinners.
Mike Locigno had two hit for
Parma Holy Name, which scored
single runs In the fir st and third
Innings. Holy Name fi-nished at
22-10.
Steve Shoemaker started for

Watterson, allowi ng thrf'e hits
and two walks while striking out
nine In the slx Innings he worked.
He retired the last 12 batters he
faced . He improved his record to
14-0. Sparma worked the last
In ning.
Ed Palko started for Parma.
with Scott Doeringer relieving ln
the third .
Unescres:
Watterson ...... . 331 002 0- 910 01
Holy Name ..... JOI 000 0-2 3 3•
Steve Shoemaker, Blase :
Sparma (7 ) and Mike Durant . Ed
Palko, Scott Doeringer 13) and
Rich Grega. WP- Shoemaker
(14-01 . LP-Palko.

Hatalsky clailns first PGA title in 5 years

I

POTOMAC, Md. CUP!) Morris Hatalsky won his first
tournament in five years by
downing defending champion
Tom Kite In the second playoff
hole In the $800,000 Kemper
Open.
The 13-year PGA Tour veteran,
however, did not sound much l!ke
the winner despite netting the
largest payday of hls career.
''I've been saying all week that
I wanted to enjoy my golf. But I
didn't enjoy this at all, " said
Hatalsky, who led by two strokes
heading Into Sunday's final
round but blew a fat final round
lead by bogeying three of the
final lour holes of regulation.
"My stomach started in and
my nerves were shaking."
Battling a swirling wind at the
Tournament Players Club at

.. (.p'

MATS WILANDER
(1988 French Open Champion)

Wilander claims
'88 French Open
PARIS (UP!) - Mats WI·
lander still hesitates to say It, but
his 7-5,6-2,6-1 victory over Henri
Leconte In the final of the French
Open makes It hard to deny: hels
just about the best all-around
tennis player in the world.
Though Ivan Lend! holds the
official No. I spot, Wilander
admitted his victory on the clay
courts of Roland Garros sta·
dlum, In the wake of his triumph
at the hard-court Australian
Open, have convinced him he Is
get tlng there. He also won the
Australian title l·n 1983 and 1984,
when It was played on grass ,
"I feel like I'm really close to
Lend!," he said. "I've never been
this close before, and I can feel It .
"To me it's always been more
important to win blg tourna·
ments. Over the years It's been
harder to concentrate on the
ranking because you have to play
really well in a lot of tournaments
and that's not my style," he said.
Wllander demolished Leconte
SundaY in one hour and 52
minutes . Leconte, who was biddlng to become only the second
Frenchman since 1946 to win the
title, was left standing flat ·footed
after the first set as Wllander
caught him at the net with sharp
passing shots and lobs. He was
particularly deadly with a backhand cross-court shot that repeatedly flew past Leconte.
The 23-year-old Swede. who
was the youngest-ever French
Open tltlist in 1982 and won the
championship again in 1985. also
served superbly. m lsslng just
one first serve in 73.
Even so. he said he felt his
semifinal match against American Andre Agassl was better.
"Today everything was so
natural, but I definitely think I
played better Friday. I think
Friday was my toughest rna tch

of the tournament," he said."
Leconte said he knew he was
playing badly .
"I was trying to take some
risks, but he was playing long
and he made me make mistakes.
He made me play badly, " said
the Frenchman, who had never
before made it to the final of a
Grand Slam.
"For the moment , he's the best
player on different surtaces. He
won Austral!a, Key Biscayne,"
Leconte said.
"Maybe Wimbledon will be
different, we will have to see."
Wimbledon and the U.S. Open
are the only Grand Slams Wilander has yet to wln.
The straight sets men's final
echoed Saturday's women's fl·
nal, when world No. 1 Steff! Graf
blasted past 17-year-old Soviet
Natalia Zvereva 6-0. 6-0.
It was the first such result in a
women's Grand Slam filial since
1911, when Dorthea Lambert
Chambers beat Dora Boothby at
Wimbledon.
Graf, whose first Grand Slam
title was the French a year ago,
needed just 32 minutes to defeat.
Zvereva. the 13th seed who
ousted second seed Martina
Navratilova on her path to the
finaL
Navratilova still manageed to
squeeze a Grand Slam title from
the tournament, winning the
doubles with partQer Pam
Shriver. They beat Claudia
Kohde-Kllsch of West Germany
and Czechoslovak Helena Suk·
ova 6-2, 7-5. The American said It
took a little of the sting out of her
fourth·round singles loss.
"It is easter looking back," she
said. "Now it Is over. It Is
finished . I have played the
doubles and won. I just want to
get to Wimbledon quickly after
the French Open so I can redeem
myself."

· Huntington surgeon
concerned about saving foot
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . (UPI)
- John Gregory's foot is more
Important that the Marshall
quarterback's football career, at
least to thesurgeonwhooperated
on him following a traffic ace!·
dent last week.
Dr. Daniel carr told the
Huntington Herald-Dispatch that
complex Injuries to the 25-yearold Lake Worth, Fla., native's
foot and ankle make It hard to say
when or If Gregory will play
football again.
Gregory sustained severe Injuries to his left leg and foot
Thursday morning when his
motorcycle slammed into an
automobile In Ironton, Ohio.
Bobby Lutz, a wide rect&gt;iver for
Marshall, also was hurt tn the
Incident
Carr operated on Gregory
following the wreck, and Inserted
a plate into his ankle and
repaired broken tendons In the

TOLEDO, Ohio ((UP!)- E W,
driven by Terry Morgan, Jed all
the way to win Saturday night's
featured pace at Toledo Raceway Park, beating Still a Star by
2 1-2 lengths. E W paced the mile
in 1: 58. Sadie Bird was third .
Special Fare and Whos Tel lin
won the first two races to return
$51.80 on the dally double comb!·
nation of 7 and 9.
The crowd of 2, 965 wagered
$296,666.

Avenel, Halalsky said he needed
a "miracle" to get past Kite, who
he led by six strokes six holes Into
Sunday's round.
It came In the form of a
sensational wedge shot from
behind the spectator gallery that
rolled just four feet from the pln
on the second playoff hole when
Hatalsky appeared headed for a
certain bogey .
"I got over the putt and I hit lt."
said Hatalsky of the winning
shot. "It was a strange feeling . 1
went blank and then looked up
and watched it roll the last three
inches."
Hatalsky dropped his putter ,
leaped In the air and hugged his
caddie, former major league
baseball shortstop Tim Foil,
after the Winning shot.
Hatalsky, who had missed the

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A Dllllsion of Multimedia, Inc.

I

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•

Dtnner
$

Davies captures
Toledo Classic

IUDS
EAT FREE!
10ANDUNDEA

SALES • SERVICE • TESTING

BlOWN &amp; SNOUffER
FIRE &amp; SAPOY EQUIPMENT

tv•••
•••••,.rt, .... 45760

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PH. (614) 992-7075

'·

Both golfers hit short pa r putts
on the fir st playoff hole, the par-3
17th.
Halalsky claimed hi s third
career tournament title

POSTMASTER: Send address Changes

CINCINNATI (UP!) - "Ca·
ville. mighty Casey corked his was th e appropriate reader of
sey," who struck outln a famous
bat."
.
Charles Campanella's pa rody
baseball poem, got another
Another parody, written by which recreated Bobby Thornchance Friday.
W.P. Kinsella. had an up to date so n's famous 1951 home run off
This time he homered, but. ..
Casey coming to the rescue after Ralph Branca that gave the New
Casey's return to the plate was a businessman stood on the York Giants a playoff victory
made possible In a contest mound and refused to let the over the Dodgers.
sponsored by "Spitball," a liter- game go on until he had been paid
After recasting Thomson as
ary baseball magazine, In which for building the ballpark. Play. Casey and vividly describing the
.people were invited to write ers and fans took up a collection, homer that beat Brooklyn. Camparodies of "Casey at the bat."
but came up short. until. ..
panella concluded:
The contest was to celebrate
"With one sure stroke Casey
''Well, that 's the baseball story
that occurred sometime ago . .
the IOOth anniversary of Ernest saved the day,
Thayer' s beloved poem which
"A gesture most profound :
"And though it has no moral,
ends with the well-known line,
"For whipping out his there Is one thjng you should
"There Is no joy In Mudvllle, MasterCard
know:
mighty Casey has struck out."
"Mighty Casey charged the
''T he ball thai Bobby Thomson
The top entries were unveiled mound."
hit went sailing out of sight.
Friday at a public reading lh the
Kahn, who as a reporter
"But you can bet some Dodger
Cincinnati llbrary . Among read· r-c:..:o:..:v.:.e:..red:..:...:.th:.;.e:...;;B;.;r.;.o.;;ok.:.l:::.Y.:.n..;Do:..:.:d::!g':..:e.:.r.;;s,:._.:.:f_a_ns_st_l_ll_s_ee_it_e_v_e..;ry:._n..:lg.:..h_t_
. ·_·
ers was author Roger "The Boys
of Summer" Kahn.
An extremely clever parody
was entitled "Casey at the bat,
St. Dizzy on the mound,'' written
by Eugene Flinn and read Friday
by Cincinnati radio sports com·
mentator "Wildman" Walker.
In Fllnn's poem, God ("a
baseball fan") agrees to give
Casey and hls Mudvllle team a
second chance against a team of
all-stars, now all saints In
heaven : St. Dizzy Dean pitches to
Casey. And, to be fair. God
umpires .
It seems that "Heaven's righted a mistake." when Casey
homers to give Mudvllle the wln,
but as Casey rounds the bases,
"God examines Casey's broken
bat. "
"Suddenly the cheering stops,
It's quiet as a -prayer. .
"Gold holds the bat aloft and
gently shakes It In the air.
"Somewhere. folks are happy
to be where the action's at.
"But there Is no joy In Mud·

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) ..:.. Until
foot.
two weeks ago, Laura Davies
"Right now, our main concern
planned to return home to West
Is trying to save hls foot," Carr
Byfleet, England, and play a
said. "Then we'll make a dec I·
c 0 uP 1 e of E u r 0 Pea n
slon on when and where he can
tournaments.
She changed her mind and
begin his rehabilitation. It's
entered the $2?5,000 Jamie Farr
more complex than justa broken
bone."
Toledo Classic, winning it Sun·
Gregory, after sitting out last
day after finally overtaking
year, was expected to be the
Nancy Lopez on .the back nine of
Thundering Herd's starting
the last round.
quarterback this fall.
Davies chased Lopez by one
"It's not the kind of thing you
stroke for three days before
want to have happen to your
catching up on the 11th holeofthe
·quarterback," Carr said.
Glengarry Country Club. The
In the spring, Gregory was
stout Briton whose long drives
taken out of spring practice for
and powerful fairway shots com·
an emergency appendectomy.
manded the attention of 51,000
He had originally been chosen to
people at the tournament said
start In front or Tony Petersen,
she decided to enter the event
last year's record-setdng passer,
last month.
but lnjurtes gave the nod to • The change of plans forced her
Petersen, who has since
to use a caddy other than her
graduated.
brother, Tony, because she gave
Gregory said he Is frustrated
him the week off and hired
rb~Y...:h:::l=s.;.ln:.:;j~u::r::.ie::s::.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
so_m_eo_ne_e_J.;.se_._ _ _ _ _ _---l

G

cut in his last three tournaments,
led the field by as many as four
strokes In the final round before
collapsing on the back nine with
bogeys on the 15th , 16th and 18th
holes. But after his two-Iron
approach shot sailed right and
behind the gallery on the ~44yard. pad 18th hole. he dell·
vered his miraculous wedge shot
and drilled the putt that gave him
the $1~4,000 first place check.
Kite, the only golfer to win a
tournament in each of the past
seven years. sent an 8·1oot putt
just Inches wide to the right on
the decisive playoff hoie. then
tapped in for bogey.
Hatalsky shot a one-over-par
72 Sunday and a four-round
JO-under 274. Kite, who won last
year's Kemper by a record -tying
seven strokes. shot a 69 Sunday .

'Casey' returns to the bat

Toledo race resuks

"I think It's high time that WE enter into
MISSIVE REDUCTION talks/"

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

SIIOuff• - 991.;7446

I

FREE
SUNDAE
BAR!
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT

lnclul1ed with wur Fam1t11 Dmner

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Special. ll'!lt gre1t way to tOP
ott 1 great meat

�'
Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 6, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 6, 1988

Gooden tops Cubs for. ninth win of year
By DAVE FREDERICK
Gooden, 9·1, wound up allowing
UPI Sports Writer
five hit s In pJtclllng his slxtll
Dwlgl\t Gooden sllowed ChI· complete game of tile season.
cago his bat ca n be just as deadly
·'When he went out and hit the
as Ills a rm.
home run In tl\e seven lh, he
Gooden held tile Cubs llltless probably lost some ·concentrafor seven Inn ings a nd sla mmed tion," Berryhlll said. " Before
hIs flr st home run of the season I hat he · wa s trying to get us out
Sunday to lead the New York with curveballs. Then he cllalMets to an 11·3 drubbing or the lenged me with a fastball. "
Cubs.
. ... Berryhill's single began a
New York was ah ead 7·0 In the
two-run Inning for Chicago. Tile
sevl'ntll when Gooden sm acked Cubs added one more In tile nlntll
·
the second homer of his five -year on Berryhlll's sacrifice fly .
career, a two-run sllot over tile
''This was a big tease,'' Gooden
said. "It could have been the
teft·fleld wall.
Howe ver, Damon Berryhlllled most unbelievable day of my life.
off the eighth with Chicago's fi rst It turned into a mediocre day but
hit. ending any hopes for ihe first I'll take the win."
no-hitter in Mets' lllstory.
EJ sewllere, Plliladelphla
"When I got to the mound In the downed St. Louis 6·3; Montreal
eighth Inning I was still ihlnklng edged Pittsburgh 3-2; Atlanta
a boul the home run, " Gooden defeated San Diego 3-1; San
said. " I had a r are feeling and Francisco wlllpped Houston 9-3
was a 111111' nervous . I think !lost a nd Los Angeles nipped Cin cln·
a lillie bit. I didn't want to lose nati 5·4.
the no·hltter with a banging
In the American League, it
curve so I tllrew a fastball."
was: Toronto 12. Boston 4;

.,

Det roll 6, CleveIa nd 2; New York
9, Balti more 2; Minnesota 4,
Oakland 3; Chicago 5; Texas 4;
Kansas Ci ty 7, Seattle 3; and
California 6. Milwaukee 5 in 11
Innings.
Phlllles 6, Cardinals 3
At P hila delphia, David Palmer
collected his first victory of the
season and lilt a solo llome r un to
lead the Phlllles. Palmer. 1·5,
s tr uck out six and walked four
over 7 2-3 Innings . Steve Bedro·
sian gained his four th save.
Randy O'Neal fell to 2.:l.
Expos 3, Pirates 2
At Pittsbu rgh, Andres Ga la r·
raga hit his major league-leading
15ih home run of tile season to
break a tie and lift Mon trea l.
Bryn Smllh, 4-4, a llowed four hits
and struck out four In six innings.
Je ff Parrett notched his lhlrd
save. Loser Mike Dunne, 3-4,
lasted elgllt innings .
Braves 3, Padres I
At San Diego, Ken Oberkfell
and Gerald Per!"Y · drove In

Meigs County property transfers

eighth-inning ru ns to lift Atl a nla .
Tom Glavl ne, 3·6, limited San
Diego to fou r hit s in seven
innings. stri king out two and
walki ng one. Br uc e SuIter
pitched two Inn ings for his elghlh
save. Andy Hawki ns fe ll to 5·5.
Giants 9, Astros 3
At San Fra ncisco, Mat t Willi·
ams drove in three r uns a nd
Ca ndy Ma ldonado had two hi ts
a nd three RBI to lead the Gianls.
Rick Reuschel. 8·3. allowed one
run over six innings a nd Cr aig
Lefferts worked th ree innings for
his fifth saVP. Houston s ta r te r
J im Desha ies fe ll to 4-3.
Dodgers 5, Reds 4
At Los Angeles . Kirk Gibson
doubl ed home one r un and scored
another to lift the Dodger s. T im
Leary, 5·4, allowed fo ur runs a nd
10 hits over 7 2·3 inni ngs, wa lking
one a nd strik ing out five . Jay
Howe ll got four outs for his fi ftl\
save. Mario Solo, 3-5, yielded two
earned r uns on 10 hits In six
innings.

Complied By:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meip County, Ohio
Court House
POMEROY, OHIO U769
Diamond Savings and Loan
Co., lot 97, to F rances L. Davis
and Martin W. Davis, Middleport
VIllage.
Thomas R. Rue dec' d, affld., to
Velma D . ·Rue, Middl e port
VIllage.
Harold E . Hili and Moreena J .
Hill, parcels, to Herbert B. Mlller
and Monna J . Mill e r ,
~ford /Orange.

FORCED OUT AT SECCJND- Braves' seeond sarkl'r Ron Gant,
top, forces out the Padres' Keith Moreland at second base In the
fourth Inning of Sunday's gamI' in San Diego. Moreland effectively
broke up the double play. The Braves came from behind to beat the
Padres 3-1. (UPI)

~ ~~Win ~~: lt'alll!l In th•· 1-llh c lr~ and Kist
hnyH tnu· k :•nd li dd t•hamploblhlp!!
f" r id"-.V M d S al unl :\Y at Ohio Studlum:
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Calendar
Colle(ll: e
On111oh a, Nt&gt; h. - fo lll" ~ P World !Serlefl

Ra!i keth llll
NBA Playofttt
No KIUI'If'll NCIU'CNted

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'

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CO LUMBUS. Ohio (U PI J - Sca re" of

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, Soct•e r
MISL P1a,-ofll

No

two , the other two were a gift. "
Jeff Robinson survived solo
home runs in the first Inning by
Willie Upsllaw and Brook Jacoby
to pitch a flve-llltter for his fifth
stralgllt victory. Robinson, 6·2,
walked one. struck out 10 and
retired the final 11 batters.
Swindell allowed more lilts In
the first two innings - nine tllan lie llad In any previous game
this season. He surrendered 17
over eight innings.
Elsewhere In the AL, Toronto
crushed Boston 12·4, New York
trounced Baltimore 9·2, Mlnne·
sota nipped Oakland 4·3, Chicago
topped Texas 5-4, Kansas City
defeated Seattle 7-3, and Callfor·
nla beat Milwaukee 6·5 In 11
Innings.
In tile National League, it was:
Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 3; New
York 11, Chicago 3; Montreal 3,
Plttsburgll 2; Los Angeles 5,
Cincinnati 4; San Francisco 9.
Houston 3; and Atlanta 3, San
Diego l.
Blue Jays 12, Red Sox 4
At Boston, Lloyd Moseby
belted a two-run llomer and
drove In three runs and Rance
Mullinlks and Kelly Gruber each
had three hits and two RBI,
powering Toronto to a four-game
sweep and Its sixth straight
victory. Duane Ward, 2-0,
pitched two Innlngs for tile
victory . Mike Smiihson, 1·2, took
tile loss.
Yankees 9, Orioles 2
At Baltimore, Rickey Henderson scored twice and singled In
two runs to llighllgllt a nine-run
first Inning that powered New
York. Richard Dotson, 6-1,
earned his IOOth career victory
with a six-llltter, striking out four
and walking four. Starter and
loser Jay Tibbs, 2·3, did not retire
a batter .

I

I
I

SWINDELL BOMBED - Indians' pitcher Greg Swindell wipes
sweat oil during the seventh inning of Sunday's game against the
Tigers In Detroit, Swindell, who has not lost a game since May 1,
was bombed for 145 hits untO he was relieved In the eighth. The
Tigers defeated the Tribe 6·2, leaving Swindell with a 10·2 mark.
(UP I)
Twins 4, Athletics 3
At Minneapolis, Steve Lombar·
dozzi belted a two-run llomer and
Kent Hrbek added tllree llils to
help Minnesota halt Oakland's
three-game winning streak.
Keith Atllerton, 4·1, scattered
two hits over tllree Innings and
Jeff Reardon went 11 ·3 innings to
notch his 14th save. Oakland
starter Bob Welch fell to 8·3.
White Sox 5, Rangers 4
At Clllcago, Ivan Calderon
stroked a pair of run-scoring
singles and Jerry Reuss scat·
tered four lilts lo pace the White
Sox. Reuss improved to 4·2 and
Bobby Tlligpen worked 1 2·3
innings for his ninth save. Chi·
cago scored tllree runs in the first
Inning off slarter Paul Kilgus,
6-4.

Royals 7, Mariners 3
At Kansas City, Mo .. George
Brett broke out of an 0 for 10
slump with two hom e runs.
leading lhe Royal s to a four·
game sweep. Ha rold Rey nolds
broke a Seat tie record with hi s
eighth consecutive hit and went 3
for :1. Mark Gublcza Improved to
7-5 while Edwin Nunez, 1·3,
las ted 3 2-:l innings .
Angels 6, Brewers 5
At Milwaukee, Johnny Ray
squeezed home Darrell Miller In
the l1 th Inning, snapping the
Angels' six-game losing s treak.
Miller reached base on a two·
base throwing error by reliever
Chuck Crlm , 0-3, and took lhird
on on Di ck Sc hofl eld"s sacrifice.
DeWayne Buice. 2-3. ea rned the
victory.

State Coacll Gene Stepllenson
said about Standiford. "He's
proven tllat time and time again.
He does more with his a bllltles
than any other player we've ever
had at Wichita State. "
Stepllenson added, "Don't sell
IIIese guys (Wichita State) short.
I may downplay them a lot, but
they 've got a lot of heart and tlley
know how to win."
Llkethepeoplewhowitnesshis
home runs, Standiford doesn't
really know wl\ere his power
comes from. "I'm pretty quick
with my hands, that may be
where It comes from, " he said.
"It just llappens, I guess."
Arizona State took a 3-llead In
Its llalf of the first with the help of
three hits and three Shocker
errors. TlleonlyRBiotthelnnlng
was a sacrifice fly by Martin
Peralta .
But Standiford said the
Shockers didn't panic and that he
thought back to llow Wichita
State sidelined then No. 1-ranked
Oklahoma State In the NCAA
Midwest Regional last week.
"I think everyone came out a
little tlgllt In the tlrst Inning, "
Standiford said. "But we played
down In Stillwater (Okla ., home
of Oklahoma State) and we were
playing No. I down there wllen
we won, so tllat was a big

confidence booster right there."
Winning pitcher Greg Brum·
mett, 10·4. allowed just tllree hits
after the first inning in go ing the
distance. The junior right·
bander had eight strikeouts,
walked th ree and surre ndered
one earned run.
Arizona State Coach Jim Brock
said Brummett was the difference in tile game .
"He deserves a great deal of
credit for Ills ability, but that Is
overshadowed greally by the facl
that you saw as· gutty a perfor·
mance in a giant ballgame as
you'll ever see." Brock said.
Brock was particularly lm·
pressed ,with Brummett's pitch·
lng In the eighth. A single by the
Sun Devils' Steve Willis and a
walk to Peralta put runners al
first and second with one out.
Brummett , llowever, got Spehr
to pop out to shortstop and struck
out Ricky Candelari to squelch
tile threat.

Stat e sta rter Linty Ingra m for
five hil s and fi ve runs in the
two-plus Innings li e worked.

CASH

Queen

Queen

''lbe Holzer Oinic

Summer vacation and kids

of a family physician. The Holzer Clink provides prompt professional treannent for minor
emergenaes and complete family medical care. They can bC relied upon to treat anything from
infecnons to -~~ed ankles as well as perfonn routine medical check-ups. With their recently
expanded faci.liues, they are prepared to setve you even bettet
·
Conveniently located at 150 Mill Street in Middleport, phone 992-7271, their office is
open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 pm., and on Saturday from 8:30 am to
11:30 a.m. When you need emergency treannent or regular routine medical care, it's nice to
know that there is a skilled physician avai4ble to take care of your needs.

children to be In a supervised has mastered this year.
program, with other young peoIf your clllldren are ever left
ple and also allow adults some unattended be sure that they
flexible time for other llome and know the basics for answering
Summer vacation Is ju s t
around the corner, and for
family responsibilities. Be cer· the telepllone and door. When
taln before you start such a your clllldren answer tile phone,
families wit II children this means
program that you as adults all make sure .they know what to
morl' time together! Planning
ahead for tile summer vacation
agree on acceptable types of say. If you like, post a written
can make It a more enjoyable
activities for tile children, safety response by the phone so tllat
time for tile entire family. This
precautions and discipline. Be children do not say my parent
If you've been thinking pool, now's the time to take the big pltu1ge. Why fight high _gas
comfortable with each other 's isn' t at home now.
week, In tile Spotlight focuses on
summer fun suggestions.
child care habits so thai eacll
Safety precautions are also
prices and resort traffic areas this summer when you can have fill at home With the
ill a
If a special family vacation Is
child will have a safe, secure Important at all times. Fire Is by
pool of your own.
·
experience.
not on your agenda tills year. why
far the greatest danger. Caution
not plan several one day outings
A potential disaster for children against playing with
When you contact Aegean Pools&amp;: Spas of West Virginia, located at 2715 Murdock
or a vacation at home! For one summer time Is a rainy day!
matches, practice fire drills wltll
Avenue in Parkersburg, phone 424-~339, they can showJou how y&lt;?U afford the fim and
day outings select a spot tllat It's Have a list of indoor activities on your children and caution
too tar away, plan your activities
excitement of having a pool or spa 1!1 your ~wn bac!&lt;Jar These ~g pool _contract~rs
reserve for rainy days. Tile list younger children not to cook
with all of tile family members could Include fun activities sucll when you a re not at llome.
pride themselves on building pools With ru~no~ quality, and ~~ys
personahzed se~ce.
Involved, pack a lunch and enjoy
as games, puzzles, etc., kitchen
Planning allead now for fun
At ~ean POols &amp;: Spas of West ~ they speaalize 1!1 doillg the complete job
your day. You can even plan projects such as baking . (with activities this summer will lleip
some special at home activities adult assistance J and household make your summer mor e
starting wiili. the ~esign work and ending _With the ~ land.scapillg. They feature cust~
such as a piCnic indoors, dinner chores.
pleasant.
designed pools designed to meet evety reqmrement Therr pools are co~cted ~y the ~ s
by candlelight, or neigllborllood
Let family members become
Did You Know Tllat : Tile
most experienced cciftsmen using the most modem eqmpment and the highest quality matenals
picnics. Use your Imagination to more Involved In the summer Meigs County Cooperat ive Ex·
come up with creative Ideas that montlls wltll meal and snack tension Service has a checklist . available.
everyone will !Ike.
time planning too. Plan meals a for choosing a summer camp.
Why not treat yourself to the good life, call .tkgean Pools &amp;: S~ of West_~
An overnlgllt at a state park week ahead of time and Involve For a copy of this list call us at
can be anotller inexpenslvevaca· children in selecting the menus 992·6696 or write to Box 32,
today. Let their expcnenced staff help you_ pl~ your dream poo_l or spa at pnccs well Within your
tlon Idea, and excellent for . and preparing lunches. Try to Pomeroy, OH 45769. Tile Meigs
means. Call-424-5339 for a free, no obliganon SUIVey and estimate today.
·
family time. Most state parks have a variety of nutriclous County Library has special
have swimming areas, lllking snacks on lland such as fruit, ' summer programs for children,
trails and special programs ' milk. peanut butter and vegeta· and this summer the Extension
organized for the summer.
ble sticks.
Office will be offering a bread
Check out special summer
It' s also a good Idea to build In baking workshop for children on
activities offered In your com- some summer reinforcement of Wedn esday, June 15 at 2 p.m. and
fur many years, Ingels Fumiture &amp;: Jewelry has put a diamond on manya bride's finger
munity. Are tllere sports teams, educational skills. Clleck with a Microwave Magic for kids on
summer recreation programs, your cllild's teacher on summer Wednesday, August 10 at 2 p.m.
and has offered ideas for deluxe wedding and annive~ gifts.
library programs, etc. avalla· activities to help them maintain at the Pomeroy Library.
Not only will you have evety possible s_tyle of jewelry to c~oose from, they also are a
ble? The answer is only a phone this year' s scllool progress. This
All educational programs a nd
call away.
Is especially Important for ele- activities conducted by the Ohio
furniture and appliance dealer, carrying everything nece~ to furnish a hou:;e o r i E a~Another option Is to share mentary scllool age children. Cooperative Extension Service
Featurin only quality products, couneous, helpful seMce and reasonable pnces, . . Fumichlldcare responsibilities wltll Plan time for reading together. are available to all potential
ture &amp;:
is the place to visit They are located at
North 2nd Avenue ill ddleport,
several others. Plan a meeting of j working on some simple math clientele on a nondiscriminatory
Interested parents to discuss the problems and ask for help In basis without regard to race, sex,
phone
and a new location at 435 2nd Avenue ill Gallopolis, phone 44.6-8084.
Idea and work out an agreeable telling time or counting money If color, national origin or religious
. Jewelry, fumimre and appliances are not items yo~ expect to replace evety few years, .so
arrangement. This will allow the these are skllls tllat your child affiliation.
By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent

Alfred community happenings
By Nellie Parker
Lloyd Dillinger, Alfred Sunday
School Superintendent, pres·
ented Bibles to higll school
graduates, Lisa Burke and Will
Poole, on May 22. Lori Rltt:llle,
who graduated from Rio Grande
College on May 15 was presented
a gift of money.
A family dinner was held at the
church May 22 with 55 In
attendance. Altred UMW furnished the llam . wlllch was
prepared by Nina Robinson.
During the worsllip service Elea·
nor Boyles, Belpre, and her
daugllters, Florence Spencer and
Sandra Massar, sang "What A
Day That Will Be."
Rev. non · Archer gave tl\e
blessing before the mea. Tile
program after the dinner con·
slsted of readings by Nellie
Parker, "Mother's Day" and
"To A Model Dad"; Cindy
Dillinger, "A Mother's Day
Prayer": Florence Spencer.
"Grandma At Our1 House" and
"To Grandpa" .
Present were Marilyn robin·
son, Lori Ritchie, Marlene Donovan, Lloyd, Ruth, Jim, Bob and
Debbie Brooks, Cllarlotte Van·
Meter, Doris and Lloyd Dillin·

· VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CAU (614) 992·2104
(304) 6'75-1244
I

Omles L. Kitdten, Owner

Jack Ruth, Owner

1~

CJ9ii6~5,

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

I

Dairy Queen Brazier

Et!

FOR PAPER
CARRIERS FOR
DAILY SENTINEL.
ROUTES OPEN FOR
3RD, 4TH, 5TH,
6TH STIEnS IN
MIDDLEPORT,

( ' h"mlc al CI• Me

Champln Midpll

Under New Management

Inge1s Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

~tam ~ ~e bedul ed--­

Italy - Bolopaa 0pftn
K&amp;elt. Arii»M Gru5 Court

Meigs Non-Ferrous

wvmg

Tetu..s
BoiDp~t. ,

Village.
Jerry E . Barber and Marjor ie
READER ADS IN THIS SECTION PREPARED BY CONTRACT ADVERTISING, INC. • ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. I988
M. Barber, parcel, to Spencer
Bucllanan; Olive.
Carol Jacobs, parcels, to Jolin
E . Blake and Sylvia Blake,
Salisbury.
America's narural beauty needs to be preServed, and one of the most productive and
Raymond V. Green, dec'd,
efficient ways of doing this is throu=cling. Meigs Non-Ferrous, located at 40193 Homer
affidavit , Helen J . Green, Olive.
Evelyn M. Morris, fka, Warner
Hill Rood ill Pomeroy, phone 99
, provides this needed service for our community and
a nd Harold MorriS, parcel, to
theruroocmding~.
.
Robert W. Mahr and Freda C.
Meigs Non-Ferrous recycles all grades of aluminum. They setve both the residential and
Mahr, Scipio.
John W. Young and Wilma · industrial alwn!num recydi!lg n~ of the community. They pay t9P prices for all of your
Young, tract s, to August Samb.recyclable alurrunum. Recycling drives are excellent money-making projects for schools, chlll"Ches
lanet, Olive.
Wilma Young and Joll.n W.
and other non-profit organizati9ns. Phone them today and ask Karen how you can get started.
Young, .38 A., to Donald W.
Meigs Non-Fenous has been llllder new management for several months now and are
Wood, Olive.
helping to keep this community clean Their business was fOllllded on the principle of good
John T. Nortllup and Vicki J .
Northup, parcel, to Jeffrey Cirservice and they have exceUed at this by providing you with the most professional service possible.
cle and Sonia Circle, Sutton.
You will find their prices are always realistic, and the service rendered is efficient and courteous.
Min a Swisher and Evelyn
Hess, parcel' s, to John Mitch and
Cecllla Mitch, Pomeroy Village.
Patrick T. Rose, by Alty In
fact., 3.2374 A., Sllannon L.
Good food and fast service are what you will find each and evety time you eat at the Dairy
Richmond, Columbia.
·
Jimmy R. Fortune and Melody Queen Btaziet Located at 700 North 2nd Street in Middleport, phone 9923322, Dairy
L. Fortune, parcel, to Robin Queen Brazier setves a f.tst, taste-tempting meal whether you're in a hurry or if you have time
Fortune, Donna Puckett and to linger over a luscious dessert. On their menu, you'll find mouthwatering hamburgers, hot
Slier! Strader, Letart.
Margaret L. Fortune, Sllerl dogs, sandwiches, crispy French fries, all t}Pes of soft drinks and some of the best desserts you've
Hefley aka Sheri Strader, .Donna ever tasted.
L. Puckett, Robin D. Fortune,
Dairy
Brazier is lUlexcelled throughout the collllty for delicious food and fast,
Paula Fortune, -parcel, to Ralpll
D. Sllain and Maxine Sllain, friendly, efficient seM.ce. Their burgers taste like a hamburger ought to because they are made
Letart.
from only the freshest grotu1d beef, and they don't cut comers on their portions. You can eat in
Ralph D. Sllaln and Maxine
.
Shain, parcel, to David Shain and your car, at one of their tables, or you can take your food with you.
Terry Sllaln, Letart.
Dairy
Brazier invites you to drop in the next time you drive by. Ifyou don't want
Clarence E . Fraley and Jacqueline F . Fraley, Parcels, to to pay a small fomme for a good meal or a great ice cream treat, visit them soon Why not treat
Sammy L. Darst and Sherry
yourself and your family to one of the best meals in town!
Darst, Columbia.
Lester M. Massar, parcels, to
W. Starling Massar and Sandra
C. Massar, Orange.
Starling Massar and Sandra C.
Most people have fond memories of the caring treannent they received from their family
Massar, 71.80 A. to Leota M.
doctor. &amp;om broken bones to routine check-ups, he was always there when you needed medical
Massar, Cllester/ Orange.
George Molden, lot 82 a nd 83, to
attention. The Holzer Clinic strives to maintain this combination of old-fashioned skill and
George Molden, Tllomas E .
care with modem state.ofthe-art knowledge and technology.
·
Molden, Pomeroy.
Emergencies ruch as bums, ruts or broken bones can happen quickly. VtruseS, including
Randy Lee Riffle, 11 A., to
Joanne Heinzman, Bedford.
colds and irill.uenza, often require immediate attention That's when you need the reliable services

CJ?

Rlrmlnllllam. fo:.t!llud - IISI,OIIt Dow

London -

13usiNEss REviEW

family

CALL 992-2155 FOR
DETAILS AND INFO. ,
-~T~h~e~S:h~oc=k~er~s~n~ic~k~ed~A:r~l:zo~n~a~~===========~

1

In the spotlight

The Daily Sentinel- Page- &amp;

Atpan Pools &amp; Spas of West Vtrginia

Shockers continue giant-killer role, 7-4
OMAHA, Neb. fUPI)· - Mark
Standiford, one of the smallest
players on the Wlclllta Stall'
baseball team, was a big force In
helping the Shockers continue
their glant-klller role.
Tile 5-foot-7, 165-pound Standiford drove In ihree runs to pace
Wlclllta State to a 7·4 victory
against top-seeded Arizona State
Sunday In the second round of the
College World Series.
The loss drops Arizona State,
57-12, Into an elimination game
against Florida Tuesday at 5: 10
p.m . EDT. Florida eliminated
California 6-5 In Sunday's first
game.
Wlclllta State, 56·14·1, will play
Wednesday at 8: 10 p.m . EDT
against tile winner of the FloridaArizona State game. A victory
would put Wlcl\lta State Into
Saturday's cllampionshlp game.
Standiford. a senior second
baseman, put the Shockers
ahead to stay with a two-run
llomer In tile third, Ills 27th llome
run of tile season. Wichita State
puslled three runs across the
plate In that Inning to take a 5-3
lead.
Standiford, wllo flnlslled 3-lor5, also llad an RBI single In ihe
first lor the Shockers, who
pounded 11 hits.
''He' s been tile most consistent
player we've ever had," Wichita

Brace, .36 A., to Carol J. Justis
and Paul F. J ustis, Sutton.
Henry Eichinger , dec'd, affid. ,
Opal Eichinger, Chester. ·
Opal Eichin ger , parcels, to
Charles Henry Eichinger, Do·
nald Ray Eicllinger, Dennis
Rolland Elcllinger and Laura
Jean Elcllinger, Cllester.
Charles Henry Eichinger, Susan Eichinger, Donald R. Eichinger, Rebecca Eichinger, Dennis
R. Eichinger, Gall Eichinger and
Laura Jean Elclllnger, unallena·
ble life estate, to Opal Eichinger,
Cllester.
, Paul J. Pauley, Lois A. Pauley
and Mabel G. Pauley, tracts, to
William Eskew and Mildred
Eskew, Salem.
Merlin H. Tracy Jr. and Susan
Tracy, .25 A, to Don V. Kapp,
Pomeroy Village.
FernS. Stansbury, aka Fern H.
Sweeney, parcel , to Robert
Snowden and Joan Snowden,
Rutland VIllage.

Marvin B . Wllsort and Roberta
H. Wilson, Lot 20, to J ames
Michael Reynolds, Rutland.
·c ora A. Karslmer, parcel, to
James Allen Radcliff; Orange.
Lowell E . Plotner and Lois M.
Plotner, parcels, to Teddy Joe
Bailey and Linda Bailey, Sutton.
Michael J. Hlll and Mindy K.
Hill, parcel's correction deed , to
Cllarles E. Yost and Iva J . Yost,
William L. Folmer, tracts, to
Sutton.
Chester Rose and Edna M. Je!lrey Folmer, Salisbury.
James B. Thomas and Darla
Rose, .20 A, to Clara E. Davis,
Thomas, parcels, to Roger M.
Sut.ton.
Gladys Wolfe, parcels to San· Allen and Beverly A. Allen,
Syracuse Village.
dra Nelson, Chester.
Roger M. Allen and Beverly A.
Evl'rett L. Scllultz dec'd, af·
lid. , to Beulall B. Scllultz, Allen, parcels, toRobertW.Crow
and Ruetta K. Crow, Syracuse
Orange.
James B. Bailey dec'd, aftid., Vlllage.
Leta L. Goodwin Hall, 'h A., to
to Verdie Bailey, Cllester.
VIolet H. Grimm dec' d. affld., Orland J. Laudermllt, Pomeroy
Vlllage.
to Harold B. Grimm, Sutton.
Donald W. Barnett and Mary
Archie Stegall and Gudalupe
Stegall, parcels to Charles L. Barnett, rlgllt of way, to Ohio
Stotts and Terry Stotts, Bedford. Power Co., Rutland.
Charles G. Dill and Betty E.
Raymond L. Andrews and
Megan L. Andrews, parcels, to Dill, right of way, to Ohio Power
Raymond L. Andrews and Co., Salisbury.
Carl L. Wolfe, 1.38 A., to Tony
Megan L. Andrews, Long
Shoemaker, Rutland.
Bottom.
Sonya Wolfe, lot 5, to Tllomas
Ellen Tucker Hatfield, 2.76 A.,
·to Larry Tucker and Wendel a E . Roush and Rllonda L. Rousll,
Middleport VIllage.
Tucker, Rutland.
.
Pauline · E : Carter, lot, to
Sam F . Williams and Clara
Williams, tracts, to Sam F . Pauline E. Carter and Jolin W.
Williams and Clara Williams, Carter, Pomeroy.
Sylvia Zwilling, dec'd, cert .. to
Bedford.
Edison C. Brace and Mabel Woodrow T. Zwilling, Syracuse

Swindell bombed,·
Tigers drop Tribe
By GERRY M"NIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
Wltll ace Greg Swindell on ihe
mound and a ·pair of solo llome
runs in the first Inning. tile
Cleveland Indians appeared
ready lo win a series from the
Tigers in Detroit for iheflrsttlme
In 12 yea rs.
Luis Salazar would not hear of
II .
Salazar, a Padres castoff after
suffe.ring through a knee Injury
for tile past two seasons, col·
Iected four lilts to raise his
batting average to .346. and his
lwo· run double capped a four-run
second Inning against Swindell
I hat powered I he Tigers to a 6-2
victory .
Cleveland has los t 26 consecutive series In Tigers St adlum
dating to May 1976. Tile Tigers
are 61 ·19 against the Indians in
tllat time. Sunday's victory
pulled Detroit within one game of
Cleveland, second In the Amerl·
can League East.
"You knew it was going to
come sooner or later," said
Swindell, who felllo 10·2 with his
first loss since May l. "Tills was
my worst game yet, but I've got
to get ready because I'm facing
the same club Friday night."
Salazar proved to Tigers
scouts during winter ball In his
native Venezuela tllat Ills knee
was sound, and Detroit signed
him as a free agent. Tigers
Manager Sparky Anderson has
made ample use of the retread.
"He can play so many positions. He's so valuable," said
Anderson, who has used Salazar
at all four Infield positions and
left field .
"I was very happy. My wife
and kids got a chance Iosee me, "
said Salazar of the game that wa s
televised to Venezuela . "They
asked me for two hits. I needed

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..

ger, Eloise and Russell Arcller,
Rev. and Mrs. Don Archer, Buck
and Dorothy Calaway, Sandra
Massar, Florence, Richard and
Tim Spencer, Gertrude Robin·
son, Tllelma and Clarence Hend·
erson, Garner Griffin, Nina Robinson, Steve and Jan lee Weber,
Kim Ewing, Sara Caldwell, Clair
and Osle Mae Follrod, Nellie
Parker, Will Poole, all local; Mr.
and Mrs. Eric Brooks, Erin and
Jody, New Marshfield; Rose and
Bill Follrnd, Mr. a11d Mrs. Rich
Dillinger, Cassie and Riehle,
Karen and Steve Follrod,
Athens; Kathy and Nicole Essman, The Plains; Eleanor Boyles
and Linda Williams, Belpre;
John Wesley and Julio lglaseous,
CllambersburR, Pennsylvania.
Gertrude Robinson returned
recently from a visit to ~elattves,
Edith Curtis . and daughters In
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stalnaker, Canton; Thelma Stalnaker and Sandra Singer, New
Castle, Pa.
Mrs. Wilber Parker visited her
brother and wife, Samuel and
Cora Michael at Stlversvllle, and
accompanied them to the family
graves at Ravenswood Cemetery

'· \

on May 22. She also visited Irene
Parker In Syracuse.
Rupert Schrader, Frankfort,
Ky. , visited tile Poole- Parker
home and otller relatives in tile
area on May 26 and 27.
Memorial weekend visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd· Brooks and
family were Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Brooks and Hallie, and Marvey
Carsey, Columbus; Mildred
Brooks, Jay and Cheryl Myers
and family, and Tim Showalter,
all local.

Frecker visit
Mrs .- Arvllle Frecker of
Tuppers Plains had a surprise
Memorial Day weekend visit
from ller daugl\ter, Jeannine
Frecker BOyle, Cleveland, and
her six daughters.
It was the first reunion of the
family In 17 years. Mrs. Boyle
and her daughters, Linda
Flenner, Perry; Louise Hall,
Stow; Deane Guffey and Darlene
Morales, Mentor. Janice Castellano, Willoughby Hills; and Judy
Huebner, Hiram, arrived for the
surprise visit late Friday evening and spent the weekend at the
Frecker home .

when you purchase them you want quality and an attracnve dCS!gn. Also, because they are maJor
purchases, you want economy as well. Along with furniture, Ingels Fumiture &amp;: J~ has
a large selection of major appliances. You can.find refrigerators, washers, dryers, ~shwashers,
ranges, microwave ovens, TV's and VCR's, all ill the most popular colors and featunng state-of.
the-art technology.
. .
. . .
fur personal service, wann aunosphere, high fashion jewelry, and quality funuturc .md
appliances, there is no pl~ce quite like Ingels Fumiture &amp;: Jewelry. Mastct{:ard and Visa Jrc
accepted for your converuence.

Hupp Lmdscaplng &amp; ~Sa rice

No Job Tho Small

The professionals to see for all your landsc_apillg and lawn .care needs arc Hupp Lands- :
~ &amp;: Lawn Senice, located at 33179 Smith Ridge Road ill l..o~. ~ttom, phone 843- :
They offer you an individuality you wi!' find nowhere else. frc?m illtnal p!anrung thJ:ough
comtrucnon and !?Ianting; they are ~ble for your complete job. BeautifY the cxtenor of
your home or business with the addition of a ~ lawn,_ shrubs, treeS, flowers, rocks and _
other
disrintive decorative items, which only a nue arnsan can m~~- ~ey ~so are eqwpped .
to handle tree and stump remov.ll, surgety, spraying, root fi
g, and tnmmillg to keep your ~
trees thriving and healmy.
de ·~..l
·a11v
Hupp lpndnpmg Be Lawn ~ p~~ a_ lawn care program .. s1e:..w e~"ll .
for this area. These services include seediJ1s aeranon, liming, thatchfug, fettilizillg, mowmg and
weed control. To further enhance~ en;z;:nr of that ~~ landsca~ lawn they have :
created for you, Hupp l•nd•~ &amp;:
~ will ):&gt;uild you a beautiful custom deck :
to relax on Their services are so complete, they will even install a fence to help define and
compliment your home or y.trd.
·
If you want to creare an outdoor living area, ~utifY your h~ or enhance yoor place of
business, call Hiapp IAndacapiog Be lawn Servict. Yoo deserve It

,,

�.

Pege-6. The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bookmobile route announced

,,

POMEROY - Bookmobile
Schedule - Week of June 6-10,
1988.
Bookmobile Service Is provided In Meigs County by the
Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohto
Valley Area Libraries (OVAL) .
Monday - Keno, 2:40.3: 10

p.m. ; Chester (Fire Station) ,
3:30-4:00 p.m.; Burlingham (Mobtle Home Park), 4:30-5:.15 p.m. ;
Harrisonville (Church), 6: 157:00 p.m ..
Wednesday - Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 4:40-5:10 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's) ,
6:10-7:10 p.m. :

'•

Halar birthday
Jon Michael George Halar
celebrated his third birthday
recently at the home of hts
parents, Michael and Wendy
Hailir, Pomeroy.
A clown theme was carried out
with a cake made and decorated
by his aunt, Dawn Carper. Lunch
'
was served followed with cake
and ice cream.
Attending were Peg Carper,
Dawn Carper, Ida Alice and
Charles Carper, Nina, Robbie
and Rachel Welsh, Michael,
VIcki and Joseph Hughes, Debbie, Jessica and Andrea Grueser,
. : Ellen Campbell, Kim Peavley,
·: . and Michael, Wendy and Marjo. rle Halar.
Sending gifts were Helen
Carper, Dr. and Mrs. Jim Boes,
Athens, Mr. and Mrs. George R.
Carper, Houston, Texax, and

..

.,

}
JON M.G. HALAR
Anka Halar, Generalski Stol,
Yugoslavia .

Class gathers at area home
Carl and Janet Morris hosted
: : an opeo house at their home on
the afternoon of May 28 for
members of the class of 1948,
Rutland High School, their husba.rids and wives and friends .
Pictures were taken and the
group enjoyed visiting before
attending the alumni banquet
and dance held at the Rutland
Civic Center.
Those attending were Bill and
• Helen Perry, Holland, Ohio;
: Hazel Sheppard and Eva Smith,

Columbus; Naomi GrahaJll
Schoonover, Granville; Ronald
and WUda Siders, Manchester,
Mo.; Max and Vivian Bolen,
Pataskala; Bob Brown, Columbus; Dana and Harve Barton,
Vermilion; Bill Buck, Jr., Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Leroy Kessenger and daughter, West Melbourne, Fla .; Clyde and Allee
Keller Davis, Rutland; Bob and
Beulah Kennedy Smith, Cincinnati, Wayne and Esther Tillis
Kennedy, Middleport; and Carl
and Janet Morris, Rutland.

Weddings through
POMEROY - Numerous ex·
hlblts carrying out the theme,
"Weddings Through the Years"
wlll be featured at the annual
Meigs Museum's Heritage Days
scheduled for next weekend .
Ac.tlvitles will be held on both
Saturday and Sunday aft~r­
noons, 1 to 5 p.m. and the
Museum will be open for visitors.Weddlng gowns, from before
the turn of the century to today,
will be featured In the exhibit,
along a varletyofaccessorles. To
create a wedding atmosphere
there wlll be taped wedding
music by Gerald PowelL The
Rev. Wlll!am Mlddleswarth wlll
be there so that any couple
married 60 years or longer may
repeat their wedding vows.
Slides of churches around the
county taken by Mlddleswarth
will be shown In the theater.
Patriotic memories Including
pictures of a military wedding ·
with swords crossed above the
couple wlll be displayed. Demonstrations on wedding cake decorating and silk flower arranging
wlll be teat ured.
Among the gowns displayed
will be the one worn by Ivy Frost
Morrison on Nov. 15, 1893, the
dress of Kathleen Meese, bride of
Jacob Bauer Elberfeld, Pomeroy, on 'Jan. 13. 1897 and a
hand-embroidered gown worn by
Mrs. Otto R Franz In 1891.
Groom's attire •. as well as
flower girl and rlngbearer garments wtll also be ori display,
along with some famtly Bibles,
and numer·ous pictures of wed·
dings of yesteryear.
Enter tal nment has been
planned for both afternoons On
Saturday at 1: 30 and 2: 30 p.m
the Sugar and Spluce Baton
Twirlers wtll perform, and on

Monday, June 6. 1988

~he

MONDAY .
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town.. : ship Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse
•· · Muntc.tpal Building.

••
. ...
.. ,.

·"

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township , Trustees will
meet Monday, 7:30 p.m ., in
regular session, at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, clerk.
·
POMEROY:.._ Meigs Salon 7)0,
Eight and Forty, wlll meet at the
Legion hall in Pomeroy, Monday
at 7 p.m.
RACINE - Stated meeting of
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
·Eastern Star, 7:30p.m. Monday
with Inspection to be held. All
officers asked to at tend.
Members lo take salads or
sandwiches.

,.

.

RACINE - Vacation Bible
school starting Monday at Racine Flrsgt Baptist Church and
' .... running through Friday with
classes from 9 to 11 : 30 a.m.

~

·'

'•

,
'

By WU..LIAM C. TROTT
United Press Inlernatfonal

.,.
"

.. '
..,. ...
..
~"

~ · ,.

..

-.·

....
" ,.

,,.

....•...
.'

"

ROCKER ROU.S OUT OF CONTROL: Ted Nugent won the
race but lost the victory lap. The wild-haired rock star drove
smoothly for 12 laps In wlnntng the celebrity race Saturday at
the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course In Lexington but he failed to
make a curve as he took a 109-mph victory lap.
His car skidded sideways across 100 feet of grass and another
100 feet of sand before striking a tire wall, rolling over a wire
fence and then landing on Its wheels. Nugent was taken to the
track hospital, examined and released.
"I lost my brakes," he sal d. "I bet that was the most
spectacular finish they have had to a race here. As soonaslsaw
the grass coming, I knew I had to get my rear end Into the wall
first. My seat cushioned me well, but my back Is hurting right
now."

FAMO.Y MATTER: Jesse Jackson's half-brother was
arrested du'Iing .the weekend In their hometown of Greenville,
S.C., on charges he was an accessory In the December stabbing
of a key witness to an earlier shooting death.
Noah Robinson, 45, a Chicago businessman, was held Sunday
on $500,000 bond and also faces charges of obstruction of justice,
·
tnUmldatton of a witness and conspiracy.
The case goes back to the slaying of Leroy Barber, a former
Robinson employee, In 1986 and the charges against Robinson
are related to the stabbing of Janice Denise Roaemond, a
witness In the Barber case, who survived when she was
at tacked In her apartment In December. Robinson was arrested
without Incident Saturday night after police stopped a car In
which he was riding near downtown Greenville. Robinson and
Jackson are both sons of Noah Robinson Sr.
PEN PAL FROM THE PEN: Mother Teresa~s weekend visit
. to three prisons In Massachusetts came about because of her
long-running correspondence with a prisoner there, Donald
Ouimet, 47. Ouimet Is a former monk who was convicted of
assault and battery five Urnes after leaving the monastery.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner was flown to the Concord
prison In a heltcopter and attended a mass In the prison
gymnasium . "I want to help these people make use of their
plison sentence to come closer to God," she said&lt; "God gave
them this time to think and to pray and return back to Him." ·
GLIMPSES: Actress Marilla Berenson, who began her movie
career In 1971 with Lucblno Visconti's "Death In Venice," Is
attending the European Community Film Festival at the
Kennedy Center In Washington. Berenson was Invited to hold a
seminar and to discuss her work at the American Film Institute.
The lltth annual festival, which began Sunday and concludes
June 18, wlllfeature 14 films from 12 nations ... There will be a
big party FTiday at the Trump's Castle casino-hotel to celebrate
the 42nd birthday of the owner, Donald Trmnp. The
entertainment Includes LaToya Jackson and Peter Allen.
Trump's 'birthday Is actually June 14 .

•'

(l"iED SUHOi\Y

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CUSTOM BUilT
HOMrS &amp; GARAGES

W~U!ADS

::r:

:=:::t=·-

-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second A"'"ue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

~

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7U - M_

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tiT-J-

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992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL .

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

PH. 949-2801

Day or Night

or Res. 949-2860

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

FILL DIRT

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16-86-tfn

3-11-ttn

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Authorized Service ·
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Hom elite
Jacobsen

Grange Youth will have hom emade ice cream. the Museum
and Modern Woodmen will be
selling sandwiches, pie and ~ake.
At the museum as a part of the
wedding scene , there will be a
reception with cake and punch
bei ng served
Fa.r m equipment will be on
display. along with antique toys
and tools.

Sunday the Faith Trio will sing at auction at 3 p.m. Cherry, apple,
2 p.m and 4: 30 p.m.
peach and miscellaneous are the
On both days there will be pie categories with all pies to be
hamburger eating contests and · at the Museum by I: 30 on
games. A pte baking contest will Sunday
be held on Sunday with judging to
Food will be for sale in the
take place at 2 p.m. and an garage across irom the museum .

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Transmisslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.
992-6611

Michael R Smith of Olathe,
Kansas, spent the Memorial Day
weekend with his parents, Mr .
and Mrs: Roy Smith of Rock
Springs . Other visitors were Mr.
and Mrs . William Taylor and
Sandi Lang of Texas.

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

6-17-tfc

3-J0-87 lfn

Visiting

992-6282

~I so

1-28-'88-Hn

BOGGS

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

168 North Second

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662·3821

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Authorited John Deere,
New Hottand, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

HElPING YOU R!COV!R
YOUR INVIITMINT
SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY

~arm

The best play award went · to
"M. Butterfly, " a perverse low
story rooted in espionage, starring John l,ithgow.
The director's award for
"Phantom" went to Harold
Prince , who holds the record for
the most Tony awards given to an
individual. He has 16 in all seven for directing, eight lor
producing and a special award.
Another top-rated play, "Joe
Turner's Come and Gone, " Au ·
gust Wilson's drama of Southern
blacks in the North, received
seven nominations but only received one award, for L . Scott
Caldwell as best featured
actress. ·

Diet Pills Sweeping U.S.

Doctors Invent
'lazy Way' to
Lose,Weight
New 'Flit-Magnet'

Gives

~

•Washers ••Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

985-3561

SINdy Fet l-ots

326 W. Union St., Athens, Ohio 45701
(6141 594-3571
1-100-237-7716
We feature aids from:
HEARING TECHNOLOGY, INC.

•IIW~k guliiVIIIH

i

If IIIII

1122188/ttn

PARTS

Columbus, Ohio

Tuesday, June 21, 1988, lot

NEW AND USED
PARTS

improvements in: Athens.
Gallia, Guernsey, Hocking.
Meigs. Monroe, Morgan,
Noble. Perry. Vinton and
Washington Counties, Ohio.

742-2315

on section ATH-33-19.26
on U. S. Route 33 in Athena

5-2·1 mo.

County and other various
routes
and sections in
Athena, Gallia, Guernsey.
Hocking. Meigs. Monroe.
Morgan. Noble, Perry, Vinton and Washington Coun-

Card of Thanks

ties. by applying last dty al-

CARD OF THANKS
I wish to exte~d my
thanks to all those
who helped during my
illness. I especially
want to thank Dr.
Hunter, the nurses,
and the staff ol Veterans Memorial Hospital lor their kind and
considerate care. AI·
so, I would like to
thank the friends who
sent cards and flowers. A special thanks
to all those who visited me and prayed
for my recovery.
Mrs. Marie Theiss

kyd paint for center lines,
lane lines and edge lines.

Project Length: 0.00 feat

Happy Ads

'

_________

I'

or 0.00 mile; Work Length:
Various feet or Various
miles; Pavement Width: Varin.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any
contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement,
minority
business enter·
prises will be afforded fuiJ
opportunity to submit bids
in response to this invitation
lnd will not be discriminated
against on the grounds of
race, color. or national origin
in consideration for an
award.
''Minimum wage rates for
this project have been pre·
determined as required by
law and are set forth in the
bid proposal.'·

"The date ,., lot comptelion of thlo wotk shall bo set
lonh In the bidding ptoposal.''

Each bidd• ohofl be required to file whh hil bid a
certified check or caehler' s
check for an amount equal

to flve per cent of his bid, but

•

in no event mora than fifty
thouaand dollars, or a bond
for tan per. cent of hi1 bid.

payable to the Director.
Blddet mult apply, on lhe
proper form1, for qualifica-

tion 11 1-t ten doyo ptlor to
the data set lor opening bldo

In accordance with Chapter
1121 Ohio Revioed Code.
Plana and specification•
are on fila in the Dep.nment

of Ttonopollollon anchhe offlee of the DIIIIICI Deputy

:!n:&gt;
E~~:;s ~~~{i!~ ~~
nwnber, expire date, and signature.) For
I

Contract Sales

Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation, Col·
umbus. Ohio. until1 0:00 A.
M , Ohio Standard Time.

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT

5

Moy 27, 1988

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Legal Copy No. 88-630
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
HES-OOOS(631
IR G-00011731
FG-OOOF(231
RSG·OOORI2731

V.We

1

Public Notice

ColumbuS. Ohio

We Service AU Makes

~

futeat service fur credit canl orde11
ONLY call anytime 24 hours, toO free
1(800)52'-9'100, ext.W705. ~P·M ~u

SSO PAGE STREEr
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
OPEN 8:JIJ-II:•DO t

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

' Director.
The Director reterv• the

right to reloct anv and all
bldo.
BERNARD B. HURST,
DIRECTOR
181 6, 13. 2tc

•

,!

,,

MIDDLEPORT- Owner wants
a sale and~ offer11g th1s home
in Middleport at a reduced
prrce large tot. bath 2 bedrooms. new roof. remodeling in
the process' ONLY $12,00()00.

· May 27, 1988

Contract Salas

RACINE - Approx. 26
acres ot vacant ground
Really nrce bulldrng siles.
Call Today' $13,000.00.

Legal Copy No. 88-531
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
HES-000St571
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depart ·
ment of Transportation, Col·

RUTIANO- N1ce ranch type
home on a level tot. 3 bed·
rooms. equipped kitchen.
close to schools. Assuma~e
loan Call for more details.
$29,900.00

umbus, Ohio, untl110 ;00 A.

M • Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, June 21, 1988, for
improvements in: Athens.
Gallia, Guernsey. Hocking,
Monroe, Morgan,
Perry, Vinton and
W ~:~;~,,~ Counties. Ohio,
'!"
Aflens-7-1 .38 on
State Route 7 in Athens
County and other various
routes
and sect1ons in
Athens, Gallia, Guernsey,
Hocking, Meigs. Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry, Vin ton and Washington Coun·

POMEROY - Ahome for a
cook! If you spend a tot of
trme in the krtchen, th1s one
1s for you Beautiful modern
kitchen compfimenls this 3
bedroom home wrth a deck
for outdoor eatmg full basement. n1ce woodwork. REDUCED TO $41,900.00.

1

lies, Ohio by applying tetro

reflective polyester pave·
mant marking material for
center lines and lane lines.
Project Length: 0.00 feet
or 0 00 mile; Work length:
Various feet or Various
miles; Pavement Width: Variea.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation hereby noti·
fias all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any
contract entered into pursuant to thil advertisement.
minority business entar_prises will be afforded full
opportunity to submit bids
In rnponsa to this invitation
and will not be discriminated
against on the grounds of
race. C\)lor. or national origin
in consideration for an
award.
"Minimum wage rates for
this project have been pre·
determined as required by
law and are sat forth in the

bid ptoposal."

"The date set for completion of this work shall be set
forth in the bidding propo·
sal."
hch bidd11 ohell be ,..
quired to file with his bid a
certified check or cuhier's
check for an amount equal
to five par cant of his bid. but
in no 8\lent more tt'lan fifty
thouAnd dollars. or • bond
'for tan per cent of his bid,
· pa~yabla to the Dir:actQr.
Bidder must apply. on the
proper form1, for qualification at leut ten days prior to
the date se~ for opening bid1
In accordance with Chepter
512&amp; Ohio Revloed Code.
Plan1 and 1peciflcation1
ere on file in the Department
of Tr11n1portation end the offlee of the Oiltrict Deputy
Director.
The Director rnttrv81 the

right to reject ony and all

bldl.

BERNARD B. HURST,
DIRECTOR
161 6. 13, 2tc

5 / 31 /1

RADIATOR
SERVICE

388-9303.

Buying furnitu.e and al)pliancel
by the piece or by 1he lot Fair

"''""· Call&amp;14-446·3158.

co~

WANTED: Good u•d hercise

Bike. Caii814-24S-5028 after 8

PM.

M!ODLEPORT - Unrque 3
bedroom home in good condillon. Equipped kitchen,
washer &amp; dryer mcluded. fireplace, front srtllng porch,
l 'h baths MAKE OffER
$17,500.00.

1

1

AJB

Middleport. Oh. 814992-3478.

()Jilts
C••h paid for antiQue or new
qultrt. Appl~ .... pieced, •nv
condhlon. Clll 814-912-5667

Employment
Servtces

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

located Halfway Between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan
NEIV &amp;USED NK)VVERS
8. 7 Financing On

Yardman
SerYice On All Makes
iVe Honor MC/Disc/Visa
•· 18·'88 lfn

TUNE·UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and 'Sell Used

LUBE-OIL-FILTER
S1495

Brakes, Muffler, Air
Condition 'Checked
and Refill,
Minor Repairs.

Cars
AIIANY AREA

NEWELL'S
• SUNOCO

614-698-7157

5-25-1 mo.

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
816,040 • $59,230/ yr. lllow

hiring Your area. 805·8878000, 8llt . R·1 0189 tor current
Federal lilt.

Tour Guides-Male e. female. Our
top people earn SB00-11200
per week. Flt....nt working
condhjons. A re•llv fun place to
work. Friendly, neat &amp; dependa~
ble •e the r~uirem.-rts . Call
1·814-288-6421. ask for Sue.

NOW HIRING

Government Jo bl. skilled and
unskilled. For current
of jobl

• oppllc:otion. call
0882 .... 2624.

•It
11021 9911-

Need extl'll cnh lhll st.mmer1

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE

CHESTER. OHIO
985-3350

11

5-26-'11· t mo.

Become' a c~rri• for The o.ity
Tribune. Ctrrier needed for
Spring Valley area-Oak Or .•

Hlda Or., Mllple Or.. Calli The

Dolly Ttlbuno-446-23U

Need someone to te• down old
hou• fin Vinton) for the lumber.
Coli 814-3811-8327.
NoW hiring drtvers. Make up to

t4 a hour plu1 mileage e. tips.
Apph' now Domino'• Ptza .

TRIPLE P

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

EXCAVATING

•Do1er &amp; Backhoe Work
•Witt Do Hauling With

Dump Truck

SYRACUSE, OHIO

•Wrecker Service
•Junk V'ard Business

Molt Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/C Sa.vice
All Major &amp; Minor

WANT TO IUY WIIEU!D OR
JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FR!E !STIMAT!lFor aoy of those mvic.. tal

Repaira

NIASE Cenilled Mechanic
CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

614-742-2617
BolwHn 9 o.m.·6 p.m.
or leavtMis-

Certified Licenaed Shop

2·1t="•·ttn

TAYLORED TANS
That Fit Yaur Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E. Main St.
Pom•.,
lohind City Hall

ANN'S

Gift Shap &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items. Clowns
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 AM. to 4 P.M .

135

20 SESSIONS

' 5-25-1 ~·- p~

(l~~.· 949-2414
OWNED &amp; OPIIIATED IY

Mon. thru Fri. or by
Appointment

ANGIE TAYLOR

CaH (6141 992-7204

811 Vine St., Racitie
5-12-'88-1 mo.

Wholeaio &amp; Rttail
5-19-'88-1 mo.

Echoing M111dow• A•idental
Center, Athens, Otllo hila im~
dlate o.,.,lng~ for 1uP.time 6
part-time AN'S • LPN'S. For
further inforrNtion • IIPJ)Mt•
tions call e14-693-8074.
Herald Ollpatch NIWICI8Pet
needl c•rl•s for 2 routtaOown City •r-, and Gallipolis
to Rio Orende •rea Must h•e
good trensport81fon •nd bt
bondcdlle. C.IIJe., Mil•. 304-

5211-2830.

accounts up-to--4••· .nlNiring
corretpondenoe relating to pe·
tiem accountt Tam~ry. CH11'1 ·
tlme positioln. Hour• •e 8 to
4: ~0

P.M . every Mond.(, Tue•·

dev. Wednesday . S. Fridey . Send
Oh

45631

by

ADMINISTRATIVE

ASSISTANT· Position ntquintll
typing 80 wpm, good verbal ·&amp;
written communication skills. 3
vears •11: pM"1ence. Suec .. aful
c1ndidate must be able to think
logJcefly , make lndivO.el judgement, p~lorltlz• wort tnd work
~icierrtty •nd inct.pendently.
Mu1t be able to work well und•
preuu,.. Computer and word
proceuing skills helpful Respoosibilitiet include: eniltinga
&amp;·member man•gement staff.
m~~lnteining fleld employee roster. payroll dtltrib.Jtion-, answering p~na and gi-eeting the
public. Job sharing position
Hours are B to4·30P.M. every
Thurld., end Fridav and every
ottw.r Wedn..:t..,. , Send rnume
to: SEOEMS, Rt. 4 Boa 144.
GIUII)Oiia, Oh 46631 by June

13th.

Position Open· Re9istered
Nune Contract. part-time with
tM Prenatal Clin1c. App!ICII'tions
will be tlken tMough June 1 5.
19 88. For furthet tnfoiTNitit"n.
call the Gallia County Health
Otp1rtment at 446-4812, Ellllt.
292
Equal Opportl{nitv
Employer.

)

Hatr Stylists. Across The Street
styling s•lon il 18eking one
additional stylist who is looking
for more than just another job.
Call Terri at 614-446-9510 for

de-tails
Now hiring! Gowrnment Jobs.
tkill«&lt; and unskiHed. For current

lilt of jobs and application call

18021 995-0882 .... 5455.

Job hunting7 Need • sldll7 We
tn~in people for lobi as Auto
Mlchanica. Carpenter•. El.etricians. Food Service Workers,
Electronics Technicians. Industrial M•intenance Workers,
Nur•ing Assi....,ts •nd Order-

Vo"'ionel Adu It c.nter .. I 1 4753-3511 ellt. 14. A veriaty of
fun:iing sources to pay for
training are avail.t&gt;fe for -.oM
ollgible

U.ck the skills? Need • job? We
train people for jobl as m•chintlts in our machine trad11
program . Ne.ty every product
of industry. from cornflakes to
turbine~, is made ltitt.r u.ing
m.chinatool• or using machines
mede with machine toolt. In the
m•chinet,.dll prOgtWm you will
leernhow tou•wriouttypa of
machinery tuch ••: lethe, drill
pr.,s, milling machine, grinding
~Y~.chine ., d punch pr.. s. We
h..,. awriety of fu ndlngsourc11

'available for eligible applicants.
Call tha Adu It e.i.l cal:ktnCenter·Tri-County JVS at 814-7533511 ext. 14. Summw q ..rter
begin• Jutv 6th.
H.tp n ..ded in prMte home.

lor elderly 209
Mlddloport. Ooy ohllt

C.e

S.

4th,

Governnw~t

jobs. t16.040 ·
$59.230 yr. Now hiring. Your
..... 805-187·1000 e... R9805 for cumnt federsllilt.

W.,tMI: Aeg~.t Oi.tician for
Contrect Work. 8 hu week •t
18.50 per hour plus mll•ge.
Mat•rwl and Child Ha lllth counselling. Cllll Nori'Ni Torrea. •t

Melp County Hoelth o.,..n.
814·992-8126.

mont

AVON . All .,.., Call M•llvn

We- 304-882-2845.

LPN. Pl . . . nt Valley Nursing
Care Cantl8r ,.king licented
LPNs

for_.
time employment.
and d'"•l iniUrance

media.~

available. ff inter. . .d cell Kathv
Tttornton. DfriC1or of Nursing.

t3041875-5Z3e. EOE-AAE.

Rtlpontible

ba~rtstner

in

mv

f~Aah

More Money!
Full or P•t nmel

home Mon., Tues .• Wed. 6 Fri. In

Rio Grande vidnlty. Pl. . . send
r.ume &amp; rlf~Nnces to: lox Cia
153. c/o O•lllpolis Dilly Tribune. 828 Third Avo, Gelllpolio.

Ohio 41831..

Telephone s.J• Pwson \Wf"'t•d.
Coli 814-4411-2087.

BAR MANAGER

PrwkJut ex.,.rlance plu1 good
knowledge of bweraae and
llbor controls. Should b• promotion minded .,d •ptrlenced
In booking entertainment. Clll
Ro~Ooldlootlt4-2811-1990

., 281-7581. Jolly Lounge.
Joelooon. Ohio.

Bored! Broke! And Bluel Sell
Chri•trN• Around the World
deCONtioiW untl O.c. Fun Job!
P_.y pl.. Free 1300 krt. No

or

collection

•nd/Of

lies. Mechmilts. •nd W&amp;lden.
Register now for clesaes begin·
ning Juty !Sth. C•ll Tri-County

Doalor For

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

d.thleryl

Now

hiring. SUperiYilon in Tninlng
.,d Demonstntors. C:aU e..ty
C•rpenter, 114 -2415 - 5 313
Todlyl

Men and woman naedttd to •II
our profitable line of calantt.-1.
pen• and 1dwertilirjg gtfta to

local bulin . . firm•. eern weelctv
commluton. ~ vour own
hours. Prompt fr•.-.cly .-vice
from 79 ,_.,. old AAA· 1 Comp«~y . No inwestment or collection•. Prwious •I• •perlence
not required. Write: kevin Pee'-.

NEWRON MFG. COMPANY,
towo
80208.1&amp;151792-4121.

Dept. G30114. NeWton.

Area demonstrators needed for
Chrlltml• Around the World .
Gr•t Plan Fr• SupptiM. 304-

&amp;75-5808.

Help wanted · man for dairy

l•m. 304-882·2228.
GOVERNMENT JOBS •
$17,840. to t89.485. lrnmo- .
diote Hltingl Colt JOB CENTI!A
1·518-459-3811 e... G22B4
for Federllliat 24 hrs.

AmHlll nCf! 111 en Is
4
•U1htweight
•Titter/C ul!iviiOI
•Easy to Opeule

a.

•Makes Garden

Yard

Care a Snapt
FOR MORE IN FORMATION

Giveaway

vard Sales

Reid of h..,, IIPproa. 5 acr• In
Vinton •rae to give ~~Nay . C.ll

814-2.5-8828.

On a light month old kttten. p•rt
Colt lt4-44B-7t00.

Slom••·

114-317-7111.

742-2465

RUTLAND, ur11u

Free to good homes. 4 kittena.

Utter trained. wry frlen~. 7

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.... , otd. eon 514-378-8171.
5 - blook dog 10 give IIWIY.
vwv lrt.,dly .. d Nk• cilll-.
Alia coto. Colt 114-11&amp;-1210.

OWNIII: GlfG I. ROUSH

I wit old k'«*''• to good ho~.

'M
~

•

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

•CUITOM KITCHINI. IATHI
•EXTENINE AIEMODI!iliNG
.VINYL IIDINO. ROOFING
•METAL IUILDINOB
HOUIINQ. APT . PROJECTS

sna; ,...

,;

. DIIIO Sl. SI'UCU51

•

992·f611 or
992-7513
. .,. MCMIS &amp; StillS to
VIISTlPI

Ill Ill,....,,...........
&amp; stWof " • to 111J VMS.
CAI,I AMY CAITO

• IOI'S EllmONKS

446-7390

11/trll·tft

~-'-'ll

.......Giimp·ons......... . · · Pomerov......... .
&amp; Vicinity

Mille pup, 4 mot. old. Mother
llonjl typo, modlum olzo. Colt

MORRIS EQUfMENT

"l'

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

lnd. Avo

PH. 949-2969

PAT HILL FORO

LISTING NEEDED! We have
buyers for Mergs County
propert'res and need homes
to sell. Call todayl We need
your property to sell!!
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Tracy Riffte .... ... 949-2807 ·
Office ................ 992·2259

Buying daily gold. sliver coins.
rings, jewelry, lterlingware. old
coins. l•o• currency. Tol) pricn Ed Burkett Berber Shop,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAll ENGINE

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

With 4 Ots. Oil

c••·

•nd n.w., u•d
Smhh
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 &amp;stern
Ave., G1llipolis. C.ll 814-446-

Junk Cars with or wrthoU1
motors . Call Larrv Uvely -814-

Most . Wells Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install &amp; Service All Types
Water Pumps
6. 1.. 88 _1 mo.

NEW LISTING- BASHANKENO RD. - Approx. 50
acres vacant land. 20 acres
gent~ rclhng tillable, balance
IS wooded. Home s[e has septr~ TPC water, etec. and
phone lines on sne Pone(
road frontage $35,000.00. .

614-446-3872
TOP CASH pold lor '83 model

Want to buy: Ulld furniture .,d
..,tiquet. Will buy entire hou•hoid furnithlng. Marlin. Wedemeyer, e14-246-!S 162.

CALL

POMEROY - N1ce nerghborhood'4 bedrm. homew/a
2 car garage, WB l1replaoe,
full basement. oak tr1m.
workshop over garage. lots
of cabinet space ONLY
$39,900.00

Public Notice

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

m

DILES HEARING CENTER

BODY SHOP

"Must Be Repairable"

Diet Pill

BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)An amazing new weight loss pill
called "fill-magnet" has recently been
developed and perfected by t\\0 prominent docto111 at a world flunous
hospital in Los Angeles that n:ported·
ly "guarantees" to help you steadily
lose fill by simply taking their tested
and proven new pill.
You Can "Est Normally"
The giant reptiles were found
invitations by performing lor the
Best of all, "you can continue to eat
visiting musicians . University at a giant screening machine that
all of your favorite foods as long as
carollinist Ron Barnes said he uses mechanical rakes to separwas confident the students would ate papers, cans and other , you don't increase your normal eating
habits. You can start losing fat from
be judged worthy of gu lid floating debris from sewage
the
very fi111t day, until you achieve
membership.
before It is treated at the Bronx
the
ideal weight you desin:."
Grid Chamber facility, he said.
It is a totally new major scientifc
"We heard a noise like a
breakthroug~ for weight loss
:'The quality of performance thump," he said. "We shut the
(worldwide patents pending).
sklll and artistry these days In machine down for a moment to
student advancement recitals try to get the turtle out."
Rushes Fet Out ot Body · .
far exceeds that of any of the
The turtles were turned over to
The new pill is appropriately call'pros' whose playing so aston- Lifeline for Wildlife, a conservaed the "lilt-magnet" pili because it
Ished us a mere 40. years 'a go," tion group, which released them
breaks into thousands of particles,
upstate.
Barnes said .
each acting like a tiny magnet, "at·
Turtles In New York sewers:
Turtles have turned up before
tracting" and trapping many times its
NEW YORK (UPI) - Sewage in the Bronx facility, but these
size in undigested fat particles from
treatment workers see plenty of were the first to show up this
food that you have just eaten. Then·,
flotsam and jetsam In the miles year, Rau said.
the trapped fat is naturally "Rushed"
of pipes under New York City,
"They get caught up the tides ,''
right out of your body.
but even they were sur,prlsed at he said.
Within 2 days you should· notice a
two recent discoveries wielding
Jeffrey Hon. a spokesman for
change in the color of your stool, caustong claws and powerful jaws.
the American Society for the
ed by the fat particles being eliminated.
Two giant snapping turtles Prevention of Cruelty to AnimMPI/Ia Go To Worlr"
turned up last week at a sewage als, said the giant snappers can
The fat-magnet pills alone,
treatment center In the Bronx, get Into sewers during heavy
"automatically" help reduce calories
workers with the city Environ- spring rains, when floodgates
by eliminating dietary fat, with no ex·
mental Protection Department that normally keep river '!later
ercising. You simply take the pills
out are opened because of the
said .
with a glass of water before meals.
One of the turtles weighed heavy flow.
However, you can lose weight
about 50 pounds and tti'e other
The turtles, which have long,
"faster" if you choose to follow the
was about 40 pounds, said Tom sharp claws and can strike with
lilt-tllllgnet diet plan along with the pills.
Rau , a sewage treatment lightning speed, have tremendThe fat-magnet pills are already
worker.
ous power In tl!elr jaws.
sweeping the country with record
sales and glowing reports of weight
loss. It's a "iliZY way" to lose weight
If HEARING is your problem- and you feel that
fur people who ' enjoy eating.
Now Aoillllble lo Public
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
If
you need to lose a large or small
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
amount of weight, you can order your
HEARING CENTER. Wd have many referral
supply of these new highly successful
sources for assistance and you may qualify
fat-magnet pills and diet plan (now
available
from the doctor's exclusive
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
manufilcturer by mail or phone order
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
only) by sending $20 fur a 90 pili suPP.:
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your adly (+$2 handling). or
fur a 180 pill
vocate.
·
·
supply ( +$3 handling), cash, check or
money Older to: Fat·Magnet, 9016
CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-7116
' !Wilshire ffivd., Dept W705, Beverly
:Hills, CA 902ll. (UncOIIIIItiolllll

GEARY

a~

DEAD OR ALIVE

Equipment
l-3-'861fc

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP WITH

WANTED

'

Parts &amp; Servlee

Phone 949-2202

ADVERTISEMENT

NElli LISTING - CHESTER
RT. 248 - Choose the s[e
vou likel 1 acre lots wrth
150' road lrontage. Many
Sites avarlable TPC water &amp;
elec. mil able. $5,000 ea.

Wepey cnhforlate model daa't
ull8d cars,
Jim Mink Chav .Qidt Inc
BIH Gene Jo "nson

814-445-3159.

Call Collect (304) 372-4331
601
e. Moln . .ol:.l~ll.loolool
POMEROY, OH.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - TUPPERS
PLAINS AREA - Success
Rd - Neat 3 bedroom
ranch w/ full basement and
2 ·car garage. Newly rede
corated! 3/25 acres wrth
fruit trees. $37,500.00.

Coml)~r

rasume to: SEOEMS . At . 4 Box

Complete householdl of furni·
ture a. antjquea . Alao wood &amp;
co1l hen.n. Sw•in's Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive.

B. H. Beegle, Owner
Rt. 1, Box 74-A, Riply, W. Va. 25271

CARTER'S
PlUMBING
&amp; HEATING

org~~nlz:ed .

word proc•slng skills h .. pfu l.

June 13th.

PH. 742-2463

B&amp;C DRILLING

CM~I~n~dMemu•be~g~

144. Gallipolis.

.

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

10-8-tlc

.
Patty Parker, co·chalnnan of the exhibit, shows
the oldest gown to be on exhibit, a two-piece
garment worn by Ivy Frost Morrison for her
wedding on Nov. 15, 1893. (Times-Sentinel photo)

tion ...... 304-773-5785.

2282.

. I
NEED WATER?

r~uir• 46 INpnl acall'llt.t._,
good verb.. S. wrrttln communi·
cat ton lkills, working knowildge
of medieal terminolOgy , Sue·

up on patient billing-.
computer tnpot to keep r-tient

Rick Pe•aon Auctioneet, 11cen•d Ohio and W•t Vlrgini411.
Eltlte, •nttque. f•m. liquida-

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH •

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

INSURANCE CLEAK·Positjon

ing

8-13

FEATURING :
Riviera
Cabinets
Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
Peachtree Doors
and Windows

Help Wanted

RetponsitMiitiee includ•· follow·

Public sale
&amp; Auction

Clinical Audiologist

or at
Ve,terans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy. Ohio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"At Reasonable Prices"

Quirks in the news ________

~lhr

· -""'---......
·--

licensed

~::~;.(I_

~-

s

~

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOPE CHEST- Every young bride needs a "hope" chest, and
this display fea,tures Items which might have been Included In
years gone by . The chest owned by Ann Rope's lather contains a
hye-lo baby of about 1923, w•·apped in a 19U ·handmade shawl,
quilts, dollies, and other home accessories, (Times-Sentinel photo)

Campus bells are ringing at
Berkeley: BERKELEY, Calif.
(UPI) -This week's meeting of
the Congress of the Guild of
Carillonneurs promises to be a
real bell-ringing event.
The Berkeley campus of the
University of California Is play·
lng host to a major conference of
carlllonneurs - the people who
play the carillon bells that grace
many public buildings.
The center of attention for the
week's worth of bell music Is the
61-bell carillon of the 307-foot
Sather Tower. Many of the 90
people at the meeting, along with
Berkeley bell-ringers hoping to
join the guild, were to give
concerts dally except Wednesday, when the conference visits
rival Stanford University.
The original Berkeley carUlon,
a limited Instrument comprised
of 12 bells, was first played on
Nov. 3, 1917. The current 61-bell
version boasts a five-octave
range.
The bells range In weight from
a soprano, at 19 pounds, to a
booming 5 V. tons. They are
encased In the 30-story Sather
Tower, the campus's dominant
feature, which was designed by
John Galen Howard.
New pieces of music written
for the huge assemblage of bells
were to premiere Friday, whe11
University of Montana carillonneur John Ellis performs the top
entries In the guild's 1988 composition competlton.
·
Also scheduled to play the bells
were professional carillonneurs
from Massachusetts, ·MtchlKan,
New York, Iowa and the
Netherlands.
Several Berkeley music students were hoping to win guild

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

Business Services

•'

......r;'i.i~~ '\}&lt;,
r -~' J ~ .,~ ..

...::_: :;...

q_,.,._ ... ..

-~-··

&amp; Duffle P8Pert·

Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic4 Fouret block chow. loMh;7o~
,,. Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
lor, o..... bri .. Eotot• . SondHIII
""
Rd. 3()4-875-381e.

q _ _ _ .... _

the

Racine, Ohio 45771

'

-

......_.__.....

;u - ...· - · - -

NEW YORK (UPI) - "Phantom of the Opera.·' Andrew Lloyd
Weber's elaborately staged musical, won the lion's share of Tony
Awards Sunday night at the 42nd
annual ceremony honoring
Broadway 's best. grabbing
seven trophies tn all, including
best musical and best director.

.

::J:t~.

jollowinf! lelephone e.lchcmJ'el ...
:.:c~~.

WEDDINGS THROUGH THE YEARS- A
display of wedding gowns from before the turn of
the century to today will be on display at the Meigs
Museum lor Heritage Days next weekend. Here

11

LOST:WI'•
Browncollege b•o withOn4
' I
Devices
ns. Co11814-379-22SO.
lr====~~;;~~;;~~~;;===1
VCR

tl--···
·..... -.......
..... ..
·-- ...............

RATES

O•••-o•
•••
Ul . . l
MOO
to'•••
..
w
10 DA¥1
f1 I oa
to•••

· ~:!.

'Phantom' sweeps
Tony awards

LONG BOTTOM - Flame
Fellowship Chapter meeting 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at Mt. Olive
Community Church with Jerli
Vincent, Akron, speaking; President Suzanne Bush Invites
public.

The Daily Sentinai-Page-7
6 Lost and Found

ooueu

TUESDAY
Regular
MIDDLEPORT meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7; 30 p.m. Tuesday; refreshments served following
meeting.

-People in the news--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

years dis
S .lM. Until NOON U.JUfiDA't

Clsses offered for three year olds
through ninth grade.

Water permits
RACINE - Quantity water
user permits for Racine .resi·
dents needing addltonal water
for such things as filling swimming pools, watering and
gardens and other uses where
larger amounts of water are
needed are now available. AppU cation and payment for such
permits are to be made at the
billing faclllty in the Racine
Department Store.

Monday, June 6, 1988

TO PLACE IN .lO Ull 992 -11.56
MONOAT thn1 fiiDAY 8 A.M. Ill 5 P.M.

Community calendar
•"

'

Coli 814-1143-SoMII.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

VIR• In Clnten.,.., hll I compl . . llneof nM &amp; uNCI furniture

a

app. at Vlrd ule prloes.
Mm...1 1811 two 'NMk1 onty-

luloloo 14t.M. At. 141, '4m!.
down Llnooln Pika big tan
bultding behind '-at trail• on
toll. 114·441-3158. Man ·511.,
9-B.
II• or

Seven

FamMy

Yard

B•cr• hay.lwlll mowMd,.ke

lll•l'rldly, lotutd.,, Mondo'l
• On. About a mle on , eo from
era~•
It Portw.

24...

4 flmify v-rd 11le. Tuee. June 7,
1·4. T•• Eltltll. Rain cenc.ts.

h. youbllelllld•ko•. Twoml•
OUI ol PDm•ov. Ollio. 814-H2Kltt.,o 304-171-1 1II oltor
4:30PM.
Mother Cllt Mid kfltMa

roa•

.......Pomeroy......... ..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.,.11~

1- tninod, 304-175-83114.
Wh•omottwOII ..

304-171-7422.

-k._.

LOIT:3 purlti · Viclnlty of
Foulllt A.... , Oltl!potlo. H found
Dluu colt 11 4-441·1117.

REWARD.

Found: Schna.•r. grty end
brown. We_.ng red oo... In
Sugar Run •rH. 114·912·

1114.

Sllelt RobtntonsC....... E..t
Second lt.. Po.,.oy, 0. June
3-1, to.m.-4p.m. Undoimod dly
cl ... lng, rentlll, uniforms lind
tb-Mfa.

1-

Y•d Salol Juno lith .,, Ill\

...... -.SWiftt-•t'L

••

7.

- • o1

Roodlvllla 9:00.4:00.

Yard Sale at De longs. June &amp;th
7th. •nd ah. St. At. 143. 1 mil8

from St. Rt. 7. 1:00.5:00.

Moving

Mle. lth

lind

7th

Furniture, .,._,ll~cet;. clothiniL
computer tnd mltc . l mil• ealt
of Racine .. lntw. 338and 124

Theiss residence.

·

June 8,9.10. 138 Condor St ..
Pomeroy, From 10-5. Vulety ot

l'lemt .

.......PfPJeaaiint·---..
&amp; Vicinity
······~·,··· ·-·---···-·······-.

o,..,.... _ _.., atotllln•
~t.

Yard Sale June 9. 10. 11 . Held
by JOPPI U.M.W, It Mery Harris
residence on St. Rt. 681 . 4mll•
•••• qf Tuppers Plaine. 31f.t mil•

lb...,. Hlfl/l lohoot oo

5-lomlly ,_rdMio. 11111thSt.&amp;
1!1 ~~~ lt. liowHov..,, June
7-Ith. Antlquoo, Homo lftt-r
Tupperware. dl••· •n ..a
clothing, lumll.,., .-~

.,

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

51 Household Goods

Pi ano pleyer Wlntecl far Mt.
Tabor Community Chu,::h if
lnterll18d call 304-895-3082.

12

can 814-258-8509.

Have roam for etderty man or
woman in mv home. 15 years

experience. T.uppers Plains area.

814-667-3402.

18 Wanted to Do
Willdoba1J;shtin9 inyourhome.
reliable 1nd affordable.

614-992-6858.
Pflvate home care and board for

Seniors and htllldicapped . Elem
Home 814-992-8873.

Give plena Ceuio Keyboard and
organ teuons in my home to

•••
"They're
testing
the
emergency broadcast system •••if You Want to talk to
fie, nOW'S the tun
' e."

beginners. acfl.tanced students
a"d aduhs. Also teach chording

1979 1 4x70 mobile home. Call

call 614-992-5403.

121183, 2 BR , mobile home In

ar,d tr.,apotlng. tf int&amp;r8llted

614-245-5851 Iller 5:30PM.

good ccnd. C.ll614-448-7803.

Will do baby llh:ting In our home,

in Syracup . Will pick up and
deliver your child if needed.
Christian home. Reference. C.ll

814-992-6559.

1971 Schultz. 12x85 trallw. 2

BR . Good cond: Part tv fur·
nished. 16500. Call 814-4462981 , from 10 AM· 9 PM .

1983 Shultz. 14x70, 2Bx30

Lawn Mower Repairs
IJiw n Service

gnge. 1.8 eaes. cent1111l air.
fireplace. from porch. biCk

Garden Plo'oY8d
Phone 304-675-1553

deck. 614-742-2997.

1979 P.-kwood 14x70 Mobile
Home. FhrtwoodsRd ., Pomeroy,

Financial

Ohio. 614-992-2227.

1973 Ch1mpion, 14x70, total
electric. und.-pennlng and hook

21

up. 304-578-2383.

Business
Opportunity

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you
do bu1inet1 with people you
know. and NOT to tend money
through the mall umR vou h~We
invntlg•ed the offering.

Rea l Esl ate
31

40 acr•· 2 mobile homes.
Raccoon Rd. 1000 ft. frontage.
$38,000, negotiable. Call 304-

522-7279.

Ashton, large building lou.
mobMa homes permtned, pubtic
v.ter, 1110 river loti, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-678-2338.

Screen8d, gl••d porch o\l!lr·

looking Raccoon Creek. Secluded 2 acraa. 3 Br .. 2 BA ..
CH I AC . woodbur'ner. boat
dock. Quick acce11 to Ohio

9 acrn very private. good hou•
sites, near counl:y- water. 200
'!Ids ofl black top roed, evening~

:104-578-2349.

Rlvor. May II nonce. S48. 900. Two building lots with County
Cell 614-448-7896.
w1tM, on Jerry '• Run Road at

Tupper• F'taln•-3 BR., ellt- in
kitchen. l•ge living room, fu It
b•emlf'ltl g . .ge. all electric.
central alir. Call after 5 PM.

614-448-7496.

Apple Gr0¥8. W. Va.

ached gnge with tool shed.
fenced in back yerd. Good

Blaltlful river lot• oneltCt'epluL
public wa1er, Ctyde BoMn. Jr.

LOTS. one Jere, lwei wooded.
city Wlter, Jericho Road, owner
fintncing. good termlll, 304-

372·8406 or 372-2578.

Small hou•. Gallipolis- One
bedroom plu1 Nurpry, new
wWutows &amp; vlnylsldlng, new g•
furnace &amp; central air cond. Smal
lot. Located 88 MIIICre-. Drive.

"II ''" $21 .900. Drive bv then
call 814-448-7037 to 18e.

For Sale or Rent· 3 BR . hou•
with attached g•age. CA. No

peta. Oop. llo ,.,_ roqulrad. 39
' Ollllleolhe Rd. Call 614-4462583. 9·5 dally.
Nice 3 BA double wide &amp; lot In
Thurman. CJII614-245--6643.
2 bedroom, 2 lNilhl. 2

c•

s••ge. lwei lot on Rt. 33.

SWimming pool, .. lelite. close
to Meigs High. Call 614-992-

3254.

6rooms , bath, newty-carp~~ted,

1

floor. ftat lot, quiet location.
deck porch. privaCy fence. in

Rutland 814- 742-2007or 614-

742-2880 for Jppointment.

8 room houl8. 2 utlltybuilcings.

•ere. Reduced to 1811. Call

614-742-2022.

For sale or rent , one bedrom
hou• on Peacock St .. Pomeroy.
S126.00 r,er month or $6600.
Call O'Br en and Crow Reatty

614-992-2720 "' 614-9922389.
Mlddl8por1. BeMJtiful 2 yr. old.
tot1l electric. bi· II!Nel home. 2 or
3 bedroom, hrge INtngroom,
11paclous kltch en wtth herdwood
c abinets . famllyroom with
woodburning fireplace. lots of
clotet sl)lce. wrep •round deck.
ctrpon. concrete driveway,
basoment, beautifultv landsc aped, .i real steal at S37,600.
Owner will consld.- *'d contract to qu.lified buv-r 1lsotake
other property 11 ptrtlal trade.

Call614-992-5053.

Government Homes from S 1. (u
rfiJNiir) . Delinquent •• proper1y.
Repos.esstons. Call 806-6876000 E•t. G H-9806 for current
repo tilt.
4 bedroom hou• 1Vz bath.
be .. ttfullight oek wood\Nork. in
Middteport. Good neighbor·
hood. Quick POSIHiion, 614-

992·5714.

-------------------·
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
f1 .00 (U rep1lr) foreclosures,
repos. •x delinquent propert:i•.
Now •lUng most are• call

Renl als
Homes for Rent

Nicety furnished sm•ll hou.e.
Aduhs ontv. Ref. required. No

peto. CoiiB14-448-0338.

3 bedroom hou111, 2 bath for
rent. 61~949 · 2tUHI .
Rou• 2 good location must 1111e

to appreciJte, t3B.600.00.

304-578-2466.

2 bedroom1, air cond, Sand Hill

1982 Knoa12x70. 3 bodrooma.

111 electric. morttv fur,.hed.

good cond. •7.000.00. 304773-9508.

1974 FrHdom 3 bedroom mobile home, •II electric. t3,600.
firm. Located O.lllpo4il Ferry.

304-882-2888.

1987 Olkwood moble home
lndudlng Trlrte heat pump, king
1tr1 w•tw bed 1nd dinette 181.
Loc•ltd on lot 1t Frezi.-slen ein
Lesage. WV. In ple. .nt , quiet
l"tighborhood. About 10 minu. . from Gtlllpoh Lodes Bnd
D1,n for complete Information
c•t Huntrlngton 304-782-2727
or Point Ple1t1nt 304-876·

2044.

.

814-448-0338.

Wheelchalrs·new' or ullld. 3
wheeled electric IC09111fl. Call
Rogers Mobilty c;ollecl: , 1-814-

BEAUflFUl APARlMENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT J"CKSON ESTATES. 536 Jackson
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
lhop •nd movies . 814-446-

2568. E.O.H.

Brookside Apanments: Located
off Bul.vlle Ad.- 1 BA . spacious

614-448-2127.

Ups•lrs untur,.,lhed apt. Clrpetld. utilttl• ptid No children.
No pet1. Call814-448-1637.
Dawmown-Modern1 BR .• comPiete kttchen, AC, carpet. Call
11 Court St.-2 BR ., 2 bllths,

kUtch en furnished, w / w c.-pet.
No pet1. Off street perking.
t325a mo. plus utilities. Dep. &amp;

""· Call 814-448-4928.

Gar1ge apartment-3 rooms &amp;

bath. w / d. air. Clean. No pets.

Adulto only . Cell 614-4461519.

Ranr

Nice1 .8R. apt.
&amp; refrlg.
furnished. Water
garbtge
peid. Depoah required. C1ll

814-446-4345 alter 5 PM.

Furni1hed ap,1.· 1 Br. e236•mo.
Utiltti• peid. 920 4th, Ave .•
Gallipolis. Clll446-4418aher7

PM.

G1r1ge Apt. FurrWshed. 8226.

Uliliti81 paid 291/, Neil. Gallipolis. Call446-4418 after 7 PM.

Furnished efficiency apt. Carpet
throughout. PrlvMe &amp; quiet.
Single working perton onty. Call

Duplex-Spring Valley area. 2
BRS. , with attached gnge.
Newt; remodeled . Nice yard

Call 814-446-8489 eller 5 PM.
Two bedroom furnished apartment. ~rlecl aduh;s oty. No
children or pets. Depoeit 1nd
reference required. Call 614-

4411-4571 .

Call 614·448-9610.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Grtcious living. 1 1nd 2 bedroom 1per1mants at Village
Manor and Riverside Apartmenu in Middleport. From

2 BR . Nice &amp; clean In Eureka.
s 200 a mo. Dep. 18C1Uired. No

peto. Call 614-245-59 83.

Furnished or unfurnished 2 BR .•
c•ble. water-.ewage peid.' AC.
Fotter' 1 Moi:Mie Home Ptrk-

814-448-1802.

Furnished 2BR . mobile home for
rent. Adutts anty. No pet1.
Natural gas heat. Call 614-367-

.. 614-992-3523.

7438.

2 BR .. unfurnished. ell alec. 2
miles out Rt. 68B. Prtvete lot.

Call 614-448-4807 or 4482602.
Mobile Home• for

814-448-0527.

Furnished Rooms

Furnished

room-91 9 Semnd

Aw.. Gllllpoll1. •125 a mo.
Rent. Cell Utll~leo poi d. Singlamlla. Sh•e
beth. Call4-46-4418alter 7 PM.

Mobile Homn for Rent. Call

814-448-0508.

2 bedroom mobile home In
Syracu•. $150. per month plus
utilities. deposit . 81 4-992·
5732 after 6:00pm.
1 2x80 fumtlhed, lir. wired for
Wither-dryer, c..-peted, t225.
plus •curttv depoait and ref•enc:e, 2 bedroom furnlthed.
$160. Plul dopOIIt. Small efllclen~ apartment, IWIIIable
soon. AU Sy,.cun .-ea. Clll

Room• for nmt· WIIek or month.
Starting at $120 a mo. Gellla

Hotel-614-446-9680.

46 Space for Rent
Store corner of Second &amp; Pine.
1400 sq. ft. Off street ,:.rldng.
I 360 a mo. plus utlitlel. Call

614-448-2325. 448-4249.

Urge corrmerciaf buldlng on

814-992-7880 or 814-992- Rt. 7 clo• to Rt. 35. L.rge
8238ollor 5:00.
parking llfel. C.ll 114-2465024.
12x80 111 etectrlc. 2 bedo-oom
mobile home, 1 Ya mites out
Millstone Ro•d. 12&amp;0.00month
plus depoatt. e111c oond, 304678-2233 Dr 1576-2483.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k.
Rou•
NorthCall
of 814-992·
Pomeroy.
Rantll 33,
trellera.
7479.

44

SpiCe for Jnllll tl'lllers. All
hook-ups. C.ble. AJJoaffidency
roams, 1lr and c1ble. MMon.
W.Va. Call J04-773-Stll51 .

Apartment
for Rent

Apertm~tnt for rent. t225 a
month. Dlpolft: required. 814992-5724. After 8pm or 992·

5119.

Newly redecorated apart:rNnta

""olllblo. Utllltlea pold 122&amp;.
por month, dopOIIt owqulrad. Call
814-992-5724 ofler 8:00 or
992-5119.
Beecfl St .• MlddiJPort 2 bod-

room furnlehad IPirtmtnt. Utllti• P'lid. ref. .nct required,

Spldous mobile home lots for
rern. Famtty Pride Mobil• Home.

P•k. GIIIIDOIIa Ferry. W. Vo.
304-878-3073.

Trtll• spac11 for ..nt. Loculi

Road. """" One. 304-8751078.
TrtH•Iof. with large yard, about
1 3 mil• south At. 2 from
Hog111tt locks, GrMnbottom
Leuge are•. phone 1 ·304-782·

2330.

3Q4-tiB2·2588.

1 bedroom apt. in Mlddl.ort.
11&amp;0 per month plus utlfti•.

Cali 814-992-5546 .. 814949-2218.

Mercllnilllisl!

51 Household Goods

APARTMENTS, motile homes,
hOUIII. Pt~ PIIIUint In d Gallipo-

lil. 614-448-8221.
2 room fumtshed

.t. prlvlte

utMitlel pold 117 N. 4t~
Avo. Middleport. 1-304-882·
2568.
bot~ .

J • S FU RNITUIIE

1415 EootornA ....
4 driWtr ch•. •u. I drawer
ch•t. tM. 91. I pc. wooden
dinnette ..... ffl9. 85.

888-7311 .

Big 5 BR . Dalto• f•m horTW
built on your kM. •31,996&amp; up.

Coll1 -614-888-7311.

Unlden Satellite all remote, GE

refrigntor,

30~876-8937.

55 Building Supplies

e2oo. can 814-448-2390.

95" Blue sofa &amp; chair. Call
81 4-2 ..)-621 4 eveninga.
Used R1lnbow Sweeper for •Ia.

Coll614-992-6883.

2628.

76 Monte Carlo. •460. Bonle
876. each. Riding
IIIWn mower, needll carburetor.

h•••"·

Call614-388-8847.

1 hospital bed, excellent condition. I 126. 1 He..,y Duty
Elkectrolux Sweeper with accessor!•. Ike new. $100. 1 stereo,
2 speaker•. 135. 1 Home Bne

50 per cent discount! Fl•hing
12991 Lighted.
non·lrrow t2891 Unlighted
t2491 See localty. (Banners,
artwork •lon•. overnite deiNeryl)
118001423-01 B3. eny~me.
1rrow 1ign1

ccnd. f7395. Call 814,3889738.

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 35 Woot J1ckoon. Ohio.
814-288-8451 .
MallOY F&lt;lr!PJJOn, Now Holland

Buth ttog Sal• • Ser\lice. Over
40 uHd tr1ctors tD choOIII from
&amp; mmplete line of new &amp; ueed
equipment. L.er~ •lection in

S.E . Ohio.

1g73 Nova. Custom'peint, 350
engine, -..to., shift kit. head•L
lots of ctwome,
11800Firm.

•c.

Call 814-387-7891 .

good cond.• 13200. 1979 Mero..~r; . 2 dr., 31 , 3008ctUII mil ...

exceL

Jim's Ferm Equip. Center
Rt. 35 W.·Golllpolla. 0 .- CIII

814-4-48-9777

Fence pcMt and rals, cedar·
long, bft wire,
20 u.-&lt;1 t11ctora. ploww. dlac,
wheel 3/pmower •dders. Over
1000 neW 1nd ueed. New
arrtvll· 500 New' Delu1 tools,
tr.

.,...ed· 7-8ft.

••s.

Fergarson30 tractor &amp; bush hog
In excellent condttian. Call 814-

448-434-4.

w~h

baler.

cond..

Ch_,.o, 2

I 1500.

dr••

1980

AT. •c. AM-

FM-C.ss, goad c:ond .. t1260.

¢ell814-448-086211klor Bob.
Iller 5 PM-448-7822.

1981 Toyca Cell01 OT. Low
m~l•ge. E111cel. cond. Call 304-

875-8532 oftor 5 PM.

1978 C;hrysler Lalaron 4 door,
n., (Jiint, ires, loaded. $ 1 600.

814-992-7214.

Red Hot bargJinJI Drug dealers'
c.-a, bolh, planH .epo'd. Surplus. Your Are&amp;. Buyar-1 Guide.

1979 fOrd T-81rd. Now 241ncfl
boys 10 lpood. Call 814-9863931 or 814-985-3839.

Conctete blocks- ell sizes- ~d
ordeltvery. Mason lind Gellipo-

Ferguson tractor w / belly
moMr, t2.tSO . NH Dyna
Bounce mowing m achlne.
• 795. 5 II. buoh hog. t250.

door, air, euto, C.U 304-8822704. I

245-5121 .

111 Block Co .. 123'11 Pine St ..
Galllpolla. Ohio. Call 814-4482783.
WESTeRN REO CEOAA
• Channel Au1tlc
and Beveled Lap Siding
• Deck Mat erial•
Guaranteed Oualtty

CETIDE, INC .. "thanJ-61 4594-3578 .

814-288-8522.

Cattle dodc

•ck•. 1100. Cell

814-288-8522.

. 6 11. ro11ry· dl1k mower. 3 pt.
hitch, •1eoo. eon 614-3888270.

Mu1t 1111 2 ..... bulldngt from
C•ncelladon. Bf'lnd new. nevet'
Mected. one 11 40x40. Will tell
for bllance o~d . Call DAN

1·800-527-4044.

Pets for Sale

1981 VW

676-2808.

1973 Cooe 5808 bockhoe.

wel~•bo¥1 ~Wrage

encload•.

Julia Webb Ph. 814-448-0231.
Dragonwynd C.ttery Kennel.
CFA Hlmalayen, Pertian 1nd
Sltm•e kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New Hlmeleyln kittens. Clll 814-446-3844 after
7PM.
pu~

piee. Call1 -304-578-2174altor
8PM.
Sp~niel

puppies; Hlmalay•n ktttens; all Ragdred.
Shots ... rted 1nd wormed. No
Baby Ferretti, 304-875-4103.

For •I e. reglatered femala4ye•
old EUthound. Good hunting

dog. $300. 304-882-3328.
Musical
Instruments

mile~.

$2,250.00. 304-875-3073 oftor MO.

Male Flf'rett •35.00. One com-

mode chair $55.00. 74 Chwy
NoYI, ... arp $350.00. 304-8762837.
Buck stow. medi.-n insert, axe
cond; 2 ton Lennox centrlll 1ir
con untt. Moving must •II. ben
raetonable offer, 304-878-

7488.

o_,.,

...

114-884-1125.

time to right
ofhpring. Cell

ASK- -POND STOCKING!
Catfish. Hyb&lt;ld BlueOIH, llooo.

Crappie, Mlnnowa. &amp; Triploid
Oei. : Tu .... June 14
at Southern Statet Co-op In Pt.
Gr~ucarp.

P I - from 12-1 PM . Cell
875-2780 to order or 1-B00843-14391

7 yr. old Tennn'" Walking
mare • 8 month old Walking

Angut Built, ¥t•llng tnd 2 ve•
old, read( for ~tn~lct. &amp;cheerbrook Farms, CIIYton. Ohio.

W1nted to buy good used
trumpe1, 304-876-1068.
'81 Ford 41114, 63.000

ptyments
home. c.n

filly . $1000forboth. Coll-e
PM. 514-379-2884.

lndivlduJI guitar lessons, beginners. serious guitarist. 8runic•dit Mullc, 614-44~0887.
Jeff Wamtl.,. lnttructor. 814446-80n. summ• openings.

58

VII••· •

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

513-837-4128 dova: 513-8373894 ev.,lng1.

64

For Sale: Hay to be cut. Call

814-379-2455.

Good cl..,.. h.,,

tf.!'s

-gon. 304-878-5579.
For •le. STRAWBERRIES. F,.e

Mulcfl hey. ·304-578-2209.

doy ftru S11urdoy. 8AM-8PM.
Call 814-4-48-8692 or 514245-5178.

...... 304-575-2209.

bo.us for picking. TAYLOR'S
BEARY PATCH. Ken Ad. Mon-

Str~wberri• . Doug Roush. 2
miiM b1~ of 1\faw Hwan.

on

Oood qUIIItyclo* hty .1.26 I

6 ton Whirlpool wl1ole hou11 air
conditioner, t500. or trade for
eqUII wlue. Antlq~ coke m•
chine for trnall bottles $200.

304-875-9704.

~dv KenmoNwashlngmachine '

good c:ond fBO.OO. Nocclti
sewing machine tii.OO. 304-

87!1-2052.

J•m berri•, phone orders, VOU
pick

WO pick, Doug Rou..,, 2

mil• out New Haven look for

ligna. 304-8B2-2237.

~::::::::::::::::::::J.:=========~
SNAFU«! by Bruce Beattie

1981 Oldl' Cutlou Supreme.
.1.500.00. 304-882-3816.

ruat.

U4PO. 30 4-875-4382.

'75 Mona body 79 ebc. cyl
engine for •le or tr1de. 304-

875-199'
'75 Duster 50, 000 miles,
wreck.:!. •ntn•. trllnmiSIIon

axcetlentl30 895-3900.

1971 Ford truck Cl"ler 304875-1821-

72

Tlucks for Sele

1975 Polerbllt 400 Com. Joke.
1973 40 11. Cl1y nil•, 1973
Fruoh ..l, 23.000 w~h job.
1985 S-10, 37.000 mii•·SIR

for loan , wlue, 14000. Call

814-388-8745.

o...,v

1978

Yt ton pickup.

E&gt;tcet. c:ond. $2396. Call 814388-9738.

1979 Chevy 'hton, M.lto.• 1978
atwy V.:.ton. auto .• 1979 Olevy
'!!ton. atanct.d. 13000 for all
three. Good condition. 814-

Nil..,

1880
top5*'.

Services

Sundoy

cilia.

D•t•un truck wtth
le~d. greM conch ion.

we pof\l'r HAVf ANY.

Home
'.

ALLEY OOP

Unconditional llfatime guarantee. Local reterencee furnished.
Free ettimat... Call collect
1-814-237-0488. d"f or night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

THE BE,_.,S,
"'LlEY! J:

D-DTHII

·-I!

rtp~~lr ,

sy ...m . Fldory tr11ined repair

1hop. RON EV...NS ENTERPRISES. Jackson. Ohio. 1-800-

637-9528.

EEK &amp; MEEK

RON EVANS ENTfRPRISES-

Septk: tank pumping- t90 per

SfAOO ~R
GFa:XJIJD

lood. Coli 1-800-537-9528.

M1sonry-Brlc:k. block. stone a.
flreplecea. Free •timate. Ref.-.
ences. Call Bill Denny-614-258-

IT IAJAS

RE:·ZCUD

1749.

8344.

Jim's Odd Jobs
Sundec::kt. IIi ding. painting. roofIng. c.-pemer work. trailer re~
pair. Free Estimates. Call 614--

379-2418.

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• ctls on RCA, 0u1ZII,
ClE. Specillling in Zenith. C.lt

304-578-2398 or 614-4482454.

.

Tree trimming and ltump rem~
vii, free estimate, 304-67S.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

4

W.O.

1987 Ford 150 Con..,rslonVon.

1884 Dodg1'Aton 4W0 .• 4 1pd.
t..n1.. lode. out huba. ee&amp;oo.

Call 814-~58-1252 or 2581984 C~ryll• Loaw. Pa. PS. 8811 .
AM·fM·Cu• stereo, • cyt.
E.:of. cond. eaoo. Coli et4- 1975 Dodde Spo.....,n Royol
448-4347 .. 4411-4748.
von- e1u.oo c.11 &amp;14· 7423188. !o1uttJ •• to•pprecl . ..
1983 Treno AM. blk. wtgold

CHANGE .

LONEi~

HE's BEEN WEARING IT

FOR E'IEiHTEEN YEARS ...
ll-\ATG PRETTY LONG;.

,,

Mlch..t'• R•identlllair cond;..
tlon and refrig.-111on. ntch•ge
1nd repan- service, Leon, W.Ve.

82

Vans &amp;

HAIR?lYLE'S

COES YOUR BROTHER
WEAR H 15 f.iAIR

S•rlcs LIIW'n and Shrub Service.

'68 Ford ,...,. R., gor. 4 cyl, 5
- d . .3.000.00. 304-8753073 after 8;00.

FUNNYHOWMENB

896-3802

304-468-1785.

TH' TATERS
WAS AWFUL

LUMPY

HOW COME
YOU TOOK
FOUR
1-lELPIN'S ?

1 WAS JEST
TRYIN' TO BE
PERLITE

C"RTfR'S PLUMQING
ANO HEATING

B4

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Retictentill or commercial wirIng, New tervice or repairs.
Ucenltd el actricl.-.. Est lmate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304-

..MY 14 11-1

~m.ICATIOH

875-1788.

trim. chlrOO.IIIntlf'kiHiean, like

nM. 305 HI-Perfor.,."oe .,_

1988 Toy'* •x.4 truck lhcm
bed. &amp;ipMd.ctwomaroHbar•nd
bed rella. 118Ck--chroma module
olr, 47.000 mil•- t7.000 whMia. AM·FMcM_. s•eo.
negotlllbl•lnrAIId• ......, le "" light•• otrlpo. 42.000
boo. 4 IXIRt 1Mf1 triml. 11- mM•. Eatno '1hlrp. *7000 ftrm .

alne, MW rims "Monto Clrlo
ltye.Oorlldo'', c•..ne IWto.

114-N2·8551.

19711Mo.,.CirloT·Top. ,171 1112 Chov 4 whHI drille truck.
Yo-. Call 814-"48- VI. auto, 40,000 mil-. ••trll,
8741 .......
...1100.00. ~04-112-3578.

85

General Hauling

time. Call 814-448-7404-No

Su ndev calls.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
paola. cisterns. \WIIs. Ph. 814-

74
I

1984Hondo Clw"' AC. AM·FM· 1184 Hondo 2008 3 wheel•
eoo.. Good «&lt;nd. Cllll14-245- wkh ..... Mid all - ...... good
9101.
cond. Call Iotter 4 PM (814)
448-NU
19711 ~. T·Top, block.
Elcol. - · .... low ......... . 1115 ........... Cell 814-387·
Call 8,4-2"58-8711.
0271
T
.
1184 - r y LY'* SW. Old .. • - lflrlov Dlvkllon Su por
- · nloo. U1U John'1 (Jidll. Call 814-4-45-11110.
Auto lola fit. 7 - " ' Holllfol'
..n.~•ea
K-""'1126. e:tso. Cll181437t-2826.
11711 .loop Wogo-. 4 WD.
t1QII- Call ollor 8 PM-814- 1110 eso .,,..,., Good cond.
4,...0150.
eeoo. Call &amp;14-381-1475.
1H3a.-tto, 4drhl... _
7t Hondo "-k. 400 CC,
52.000 .... n- point. - · wlndehleld, bl •ck· 1h•• p,
llhiUit, b•tt•!Y• br•k•• · UIIO.OO. fhono 304·875et9oo. Call ,,+448-3871.
87118.

A 8a A Water Servi~. Pool1,
cilterns, wells . lmmedlate 1, 000 or 2,000g.JIIonadetivery.

Call 304-875-8370.

Pa.~l

Aupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pooh. citternJ, Willa. Call 614-

448-3171 .

Wattltson's Water Hauling,
re11oneble rites, Immediate
2.000 g1llon deliwry, Ci1tern1.
pods, well, etc. cetl 304-576-

2919.

87

PEANUTS
''SECTION ONE .. RULE T~REE ...
IT 8E61NS TO RAIN ,TI-lE D06
PH~1LL 8E INV'ITEt'INTO TJ.IE ~OUSE 11

1

(R)

Ill Americlln M•zlne
, 2:00 I]J P. . . CheN IIIII and

Love

Upholstery

Mowrey' 1 Upholatering tervlng
trl oountvaru 23'f(lers. The best
In fumhuf8 uphot. .ring. C.ll
304 - 875 - 4184 for free
estir'fWlft ,

'

I)) Cyclng US Nallonal

Championships lrom New
York, NY (R)
(j)Nightlholl;l

(IJ8fGooOff

eCilFan Guy
e([!J Twlllghl Zone
I!J NewoNigllt

.

+A64 32

l•4

+B

.-

+K 9863

SOUTH
--•AK 876
+JI0 975
+Q 10 5

Vulnera ble : Easl-West
Dealer: North
West

Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortb

East

I+

Pass

1•
2•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead :

I••2..
South

+6

"The sad ·thing here is that I would
have made .the hand if West had attacked with his singleton club. Suspecting that the club was a singleton. I ·
would have risen with lhe club ace. I
would have had to rely on the hearts
s plitting. so I would have played .\-K
before forcing out the diamond ace
aod the club king. But I would have
been a step ahead of the defense. Isn't:
it remarkable how an opening lead
can make a four-trick difrerence?" •

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

46 Depression

1 Luxurious

DOWN

5 Group

1 Prince
of plotters
Charles's
10 Window
game
style
2 Spoken
12 "Who
3 Part of a
Killed
triangle
Society?"
4 You there!
author
5 Social
13 Popular
class
accordion
6 Elec. unit 21 " - if by
33 Exchange
selection
7 Word with
land ..."
34 Where
15 Encourage- life or row 22 Cacophony
the
ment for
8 Scotto
24 Aries
heart is
Manolete
· rendition 25 Frank's ex 35 Give out
. 16 Canary
9 Wildcat
26 English
37 Torrid - - ~
fancier
II Situate .
college
38 Egyptian
17 Strain
14 Bus token,
fellow
deity
18 Oda locale
e.g.
28 Deprived of 39 Cute
20 Thus far
18 Celerity
30 Rail-rider
41 Pre tense
23 Rumanian 19 Espouse
32 "The Color 42 Roulette
city
20 Sink need
of- "
co lor
27 Liqueur
flavoring
28Met cheer
29 Confined
30Pee-Wee
or Woody
31 Georgia
school
33 ·--Stoops
to Conquer"
36 Brit. honor 1..--l---1.-1--+-.,
(abbr.)
37 Shoot with
a ray gun
40 Lollobrigida

..

..
..

··.

film

.

43 Priest's
vestment
44 Peerce, e.g.
·45 Kind
of larceny

l.-..-l--+-1--t--

.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

"

8/6

•,

•

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
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 ,
apostrophe!!, the length and formation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are diffe·rent.
• CRYPTOQUOTES

aJ 8porta onlglrt

111121 'Hunter' CIS Lale
Nigh! A beg lady helps
H..,ter and McCall
lnveallgate 8kld row murders.

.QJ

EAST
+A J 9 8
.10 52

CROSSWORD

a

IJ(IJ=nec
at
lUI
um.l'.l.
tl®
Game

I

clarer in today 's deal . and the result
puzzled him . "I played low from dummy on the spade le_ad and ruffed East's
jack." he explained . "It's bad technique to play the top hearts right away
with my hand since the play can collapse if hearts split 4·1. Even with a
normal split, you do nol want to give
the defense an opportunity to draw
your third trump before forcing you
again in spades. since that may prevent you from enjoying the full benefit
of your side-suit. in this case diamonds. So I postponed drawing
trumps, instead leading the club
queen."
Charlie's caution did him no good .
East !"On the club king, played back
his singleton diamond and got a dia·
mond ruff. Then a club was ruffed by
West, and another diamond ruffed by
East. The defensive crossrurt contin·
,ued, with West making his heart queen
and East ruffing still another diamond
with the heart 10. That was seven
tricks to the defense. down four. Lis·
ten now to Charlie's lament. ·

convinces Dick to co-host a
shopping show with
Slophanie. (R) 1;1
IIIIJI Mualc CitY Newa
Country Awards
I!J Larry King uvel
0 Prime Time Wresdlng
9:30 iiDJ Ill G2l El-hewer • LUIZ
Bud ond Mogan break up
after a senseless argument.

CIJ Cheera -

WEST
+Q10764

Careful Charlie wa s Lhe unlucky de· 'I

WWII. C
i1DJ 1111!21 Newhan Michael

(j)~(L)

24!1-9285.

IK Q
+ AJ 7 2

By James Jacoby

rn

Dillard Wllter Service : Pooll,
Cieterns, Well1. Del Ivery Any-

.. , _18

• 943

No reason
to be suspicious

bonds lorged belween the
U.S. and Great Britain during

,0:30 I]J Good Flohlng English
River Walleye. llllbe
conllnu8s his llshlng for
Ontario walleyes with
sweepslakes wlnnor Bob
Dinsmore.
(!) European Joumel (0:30)
VldeoCountry
11 :00 I]J Reminglon SIHie Steele
Trying
IJ (2) 00 • Cll iiDJ 1111121
11!1 Newo
(!)TBA
Sign Off
t1 ([!] Love Connection
OMoneytlna
1!JJ Twlllgllt Zone
0 Alrwotf Discovery
gt You Can 1111 a Star
11:30 IJ (2) IUJ leal of C.raon

NORTH

+ K 53 2

James Jacoby

a Crool&lt; and Chase

448-4477

PR INT NUMBERED LElTERS IN
THESE 9QlJARES

BRIDGE

executive. (R) 1;1
0 Evening Newa

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-4•8-3888 or 614-

Comple te the chuckle quoted
by hll mg_ in th e missmg words
vou de..-cloo from steo No 3 below .

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

i

BARNEY

Q

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

New Country
10:00 llJ Stnolghl Talk
m il)) New•
(D Moyera: JoHph
Campbell and the Power of
the Myth Campbelllells
about lhe powerlul myths ol
early hunting societies. 1;1
®I 11 G2l c-aney I Lacey
Harvey Insists on helping
trap s crooked construction

(1, ........... ...

ELVINEY SHORE
PUT A GOOD
SUPPER ON
TH' TABLE II

a

.

Edging -·Music - Knife - Invest - MISSING
"Anyone who sa~s they can see through women ," said lhe
mala chauvanist. • is MISSING a lot. "
.

(!] An Ocean Aparl Examine

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells compllted same d11.
PUmp aalee and IMH'vice. 304-

304-875-3968 .. 304-5782903.

7:05(5) Andy GriHhh
7:30 IJ I]J W Hollywood
Sq111rea
Ill (IJ Judge
®I Wheel of Fonune 1;1
m([!] WKRP In Cincinnati
OCroeollre
111112l IUJ Joopardyii;J
llJJ Birney Miller
VldooCountry
7:35(5) Andy GriHHII
8:00 I]J Journey Through the
Firat Year of Uta This award
winning special shows
expectant and new parents
what the flrst12 months hold
in store for their b6bles .
1J (2) 1UJ ALF ALF and the
kids give Kate and Willie a
second honeymoon. (R) 1;1
1!J Baoeball
CIJ 8 (JJ ABC Monday Night
BIHbaiii;J
(!) Wonderworlce 1;1
(!) Advantura Trek 800 miles
Into the hean of Borneo and
encounler hardships. C
i1DJ Ill G2l Kate a Allie kale
is envious ol a C8b driver's
unslructured lifestyle. (R) 1;1
Ql I!J) llllllle ollhe Moneter
Trucko
OPrlmeNewe
1!JJ MOVIE: Where tha
BuHolo Roam (AI (1 :36)
0 Riptide Arrivederci, Baby
Q!l Naahvllle Jerry JeH
Walker, Roy Bookbinder
8:05(5) MOVIE: The Long Hot
Summer (1 :59)
8:30 1J (2) IUJ The Hogan Family
David struggles lo keep the
house to himself during a hot
date. (R) C
i1DJ II G2l bellgnlng Women
Charlene takes a sland on
her convic11ons and resigns
from church. (R)
9:00 Cll 700 Club
1J I]J 11!1 MOVIE: 'Can You
Feel Me Dancing?" NBC
Monday Night at the Movies

.

•.-

UNSOAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

gTBA

MORTY MEEKLE

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
remowl. Call 304-675-1331 .

7121.

71 Auto's For Sale

motl. Clll814-24~1172.

of.

THE PoLL-A!&lt; ---

Improvements

304-875-5133.

73

~EcAVSE

SuMMER,

PainUng: Interior &amp; E xlerior.
Free estimates. Call 814--446-

Tr dllsporl alltJil

31. Coli 304-882-2237.

Sttliwberrles- Ph:k your own.
Call Cllude Winters, Rio
Grinde, Ohio. 614-245-5121 .

5:00, 81,4-448-7572.

14.000 "'"•· loldltd. tile,
crulM, power windows&amp; locks,
AM-FM·CIS1. 381-HP engine.
4181 tanks. F1• steele ._.h.,
lntorlor. can 814-25&amp;-8327.
B-15 Mon.-Fri.

You-pick, \IW·Pidl: . Starting Mty

1979 Nomad. 28ft. Call 614387·0503.

Concrete Septic Tanks - 1000
gal. , 11500 gel. and .Jet Aeration

949-2801 . No

Hey In taldlor •lo. •1 .10 per
bole. Cell 814-742-2478 0&lt;
814-742-30118.

WE PECIDEP Nor ib
T/&lt;AVEL. AgROAD THIS

$125. Arm. Cell 814-446·
7985.

448-0294.

1980VW. Coll814-448-0749.

Hay &amp; Grain

New long wheel base camper
shell. two tone blue . Sliding
front glass. bubble windows and
roll out window with ecreens.
a.. chamber door with key.

1980 Fi ... h•dtop convertiable
X19. AM-FM radio casette, low
milaage. ' Exc cond, call after

1983Ph0enix Car. exc.cond. no

Regil'lllrltd Tenne~lll8 Walking
Hors•. Stallion, 1 2
•Y
keeper lrtd 8kcell.-rt treU horM,
2 brood mare•. 9 and 15 ye.-s.

8745.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

8

Slltr

~Cheers
0 "lrwoH Salvage Stereo.
a Crook and Chue

1972 Champion Cl11s A motor
home. 360englne. 69,000 mi.,
16,000 ORO. Call 614-388·

7348.

..... $1300. Call 814-992-

1982 Ford Eecon•tlonv.egon.
po. ob. good c:ond. $1-IOO.
304-875;2987 1ftet &amp; p.m.

Uvestock

U .OOO lor •II. \Mil occept

Full-Blooded Chow-Chow

57

63

Call 614-448-6316.

SVYEEPEA and sewing machine
p•rta. and suppli•. Pick
up and delivery, D•vis Vawr.m
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgea Cr"k Ad. Call 614-

01-1, rwd

Rabl&gt;~.

doth int'erlor. sun roof, good

condition. 24" • 38' buckot1.
uo.ooo. 304-458-1542.

Groom 1nd Supply Shop-P.c
Grooming. All breeds . .. AII
sty!.. . l1m1 Pet Food 0.•1•.

247-4811 .

7421.

t=.tMII H 1with !Older. AH~
Chtlrnen WD. 501 mow.. 22
ft. campar. 304-676-2328 · or

OH, Ll~ I&amp; A PICIIJIC,
AI,L RICi~f...

.

'-....L--L-'---'---'--'

6:35(5) Carol Burnell
7:00 I]J RemingtOn Sleele Steele
Cra~y After All These Years
1J I]J PM Magazine
(l) Enterlalnmenl Tonlghl·
11J (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer ·
NawoHour (1:00)
11J (IJ People'• Coun
iiDJ Hewa
QI([!J M'A'S'H
0 Moneyllna
111112l 11!1 Wheel ol Fortune

'
19 ft: trail II' in good condition.

1970 cOr~~~ttte. Dark green with
d•k green ftteriOt". 454, auto ..
1978 COrvette. White with red
Interior. ~ Auto.• loaded. 814-

you buy. Slder1 Eoulp..-nt

et.olute dHI . . cost plu1 8 P•
cent. Compere our pri~ before

COME- 0111 1 CI-UR OP'

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

81

.

0 lntlde Politico '88
llJJ WKRP In Cincinnati

a You Can 1111 I

I :,

t-o,--'i,r':,rl,:.._:;.,.,.S'--,1-;6-

CJ (IJ ABC Newo I;J

m([!] Andy GrlffHII

8729.

1968 Camero. V 8 cyl .. 327. 2

1984 Mercury Lynx. 4 cyl. 4 •P4 OR. pluo hotclt-. New
fiC~MII1. i '"'der 41.000mi. Very
good concltlon. f3200 OBO.
Call 814-898-1240.

While"• Tract on, 215 to 180 HP,

Henderson, W. Va. 304-875-

STfELE BUILDINGS

56

drlvor, e47SO. Big 1130 MF.

l

l1l Body Electric
CD Nlglltly Buelneoo Repon
®I Ill G2l CBS Newo

1984 Ford Tampo GLX. 4 dr..

lowhoul'l, V..-nwra round beler.
$1200. Owner wll tnance. C.ll

chacka. Call 814-992-2807.
Buy or Sell. Riv.-ine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomlfoy.
Houl'l: M,T,W 101.m . to 8p.m.,
SundiiY' 1 to 8p.m. 814-992-

For life. cylinder head for Honda
Accord . Al•o 18dlator, stllrter, &amp;
AC condensor. C.ll 814-448-

Block, brick. MWer pipes. windows. llntell, etc. ct ..de Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Clll 814-

Qcildlng Moterialo

Cock•

Antiques

198&amp; Chevy Caprice ClaSIIc.
Lo.ted. 27.000 mil•. Excel.

11)805-887-8000 Ext. S-9805.

2190.

Uvlng room suh. Excel. cond.

71 Auto's For Sele

,.Ike, motMng machine. pott

G.E . refrlg.-Qreen, 17 cu. ~ -.

Wood tlble &amp; two ch1irs, f40.
275 Harlequin books. 150.
Sea at 258 So.' Fourth
AY8 .. Middleport.

&amp; l1Vl~'tock

2010 J 0 ,,....,

Mon.-Sot. Cell 814-448-3168.

C.B.. $20. Clll814-992-6383.
45

Industrial Hydr.,llc Aug• drill
mounted on truck . Wlll11'1de for
good wet• well tig. Call 614-

PICKENS
FURNITURE

g•

bedrooms. Kttchen 1urnished. E.
Main. Pomeroy. 614-992·8216

p,.,...,

St•ao cabinet AM-FMradio and
8 track 1nd record
boy1
18 in. bike. Call304-458-1997,

Valley Furniture
New •nd u•d furnituAJ and
applic•nces . Call 614- 4487572. Houn 9-5.

2 bedroom A ptl. for rent.
Carpeted. Nice .. nlng. La~ndry
facilitlw availabl1. Call 814-

ap1 . 1 upttairs apt. with 2

7019.

0322.

54 Misc. Merchandise

1 bedroom furni1hed effeclency

bed-f&amp;000/ 080. 1975Toy. .

pickup .. •uto. Call 814-44&amp;-

with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
8\ltl\lille Rd. Open 91m to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614-446--

Moving s.a.3 pc. cuttom bultt
living room luhe-1600, 3 end
tabl•.$100. 3 pc d.-. furn·
$ 260, queen size bedroom tet1400, kitchen •ble/ 6 ch•irs175 , chair-160, pool
1able.t100, white wrought Iron
porch furn-fBO. Call 814-446-

filf lll Sllillllii!S

61 Fann Equipment

Whirlpool weaher &amp; dryer· $150.
recr1urtional vehicle. Kawasaki.
portable 2BOOWIIt:t power plant,
1975 GMC ... mp truck-12 II.

---········· .
ume 11 cuh

C.ll814-4-48-1960.

-

~

CUHHT

Two youngsters were engrossed in a mock wedding
ceremony. One asked. " Do you
take this parson for richer or
r~-------- poorer?" The olhar youth replled ,
. F E R R E P ! "' For - 1 "

6:05 I]J Leave It To Beaver
6:30 IJ llJ 11!1 NBC Nlghdy Newa

BUOGET TRANSMISSION-

I

CRABE!~

~::-,--.,-=-..::,,...:.;_;.!,:.._.:,,___, "'
.~
_
·.
·
.
~
.
.
.
.

a Fandango

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Used S. rebu 1ft ell tyP" . Guarantee 30 days mimmum. Prices
899 &amp;. up. Rebuift torques
conwrted •• low as $39.
Conversion kit-S· 10' s &amp; C-10's
over drive to 360's. We buy junk
transmltsions. Celt 304-6754230 or 814-379-2220.

r.:==========-~-====::=:::=:;::;:==-1

814-388-Q746.

metal caWneb, headboards 830
and up to 185.
.

1160. Amana compactor-green,
$715. Hot Point double own
range-Harvelt gold. 1300. Bedroom furn .. desk. chert with
hU1Ch. shelv" &amp; dreuer-white
wfthbtue denim trim. Misc. tUrn.

·-·

.•

8 HP Tr0yblh till.-, len than 8
hl'l. running, t 1000. Firm. C•ll

$30 &amp;. King frame SSO. Good
selection of bedroom suites,

1182. Cell 814-992-7787.
EOH.

992-3711 . EOH.

t150. Weight bench with
l':~:.''· n5. Call 81 4- 44 &amp;-

135 llo $45. Bed lnomeo S20.

VIRA In Centenery ' now 1111 1
complete line of new a. Ul8d
furniture &amp; IPplianoee 11 wrv
low, low prlcea. Tablea. recliners, br~~n headboards. wash••·
dryers, etc. M.nreq •le- 2
weeks only-full size. $49.91. Rt.
141 , 1A mile down Uncoln Pike,
big tan building behind l11t
trailer on left. Hou,.: 9·8,

76

GAM I

t.'·

Part 1

SE-FORI' WE FR Y I ~
T H I~ SU.O!

WOlD

~.. .,.ll;D_.:.R:,I. .:. .I.I,: .G. .:I.l:.- -~1. 1

Q1 I!J) Happy Daye
0 ShewBiz Today
llJJ Facto of Lila
0 Canoon Expre'*

HURRY UP. YOU FOOL ,

176-5821 .

258-6613.

1375. Lompo $28 to $126.

53

Nice one bedroom 1pt. wtth
range, ref., c•pet &amp; w &amp; d
hook· up. In town. $190 a mo.

14fl V bottom boat with trlller

•n d 71h hp Sears motor 304-

New K5000 On1n gen ...tor.
8argtin price. Will furnish spec.
&amp; price on request. Clll 614-

Olneltes $109and up to 8496.
Wood table w-6 chairs t2B&amp; to
1796. Detk 1100 up to 1376.
Hutchee t4DO and up. Bunk
bed1 complete w-mattresses
$2961ndupto 1396. Blbybedl
t110. Mattreuesorbox IP'ings
fun or twin see. firm 178, end
t88. Queen lett $225, King
$31!50. 4 drawer ch•t •69. Gun
CJblnets &amp;gun. S.bv mettrll ..l

l

6:00 I]J Big Valley Winner Lose
All
IJ llJ W G (IJ iiDJ ., G2l
11!1 Newo
11J Coloraoundo
CD Dr. Who The Web Planet,

900-843-84391

Hld•a-bed couch wHh chair.

•

EVENING

7 3 Buick. low mila.ge. 40,000.
$1 ,000. 8 6 Bui clc. Sky lark,
$1,500. 77 Ford Econllne wn
81 .100. Boat 18 ft. 85 HP
Evenrude. 304-676-8367.

Fish- -Pond StoCking!
C1tfllh. Hybrid Bluegill, S.11,
Cr~~ppie. Mnnowt a. Triptoid
Gr111 C.rp. Del: Tu111., June 14
at Southern St•t• Co-op in Pt.
Pl,.ant from 12-1 PM. Call
304-175-2780 to order or 1·

to $596. Recllnen S225 to

MON., JUNE 6

THAT DAILY
'UUIII

614-448-988S.

C.ll1 -814-886-7311.

$396 to $996. Tobl01 $60 and
up to $125. Hld•o ·bedo eJ90

Oinettee, beds ; bedding ,
dressers, ch•t. couches. chairs,
lamps, cotr. .end tlilbl•. Every
dJV Special•- % mile out Jerricho, 30 ... 875-1460.

•

18 ft, Cruiser Inc., 22 HP
Mercury motor. 8 600. C1ll

Big 2 Bedroom Rustle home
~lit on your ..... e13.995&amp;up.

Sofes 1nd chlirs priced from

ap1r1ments with modern Ieitch en
.,d washer-dryer hookups. c• .
ble televi1ion avall~e. Call

Television
Viewing

I'LL IMr:.f. ADE:AL WITH
'ttl! I OO~AAPP!..B ...

e27,500. Cell 304-727-8890.

870-9661 .

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

90 Days

Road, 304-878-3834.

3 bedrooms. 111 electric. cental

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home In
etty. Aduhs only. Ptrldng. Call

4411-0444.

41

lir. half acre lot. Gallipolis Ferry,

low 40' L 304-675-2932 after
4 :00pm.

87!1-5104.

Furniahed apertment-4 rt»ma &amp;
bit h. 1 or 2 aW Its. No pets. Sac.
dep. &amp; ref. required. Call 814-

1·315- ~38-7376 ext 2P WV H.

for current lat. 24 hrs.

2 BR . epta. 8 ciolftts. kitcl1enlll&gt;pl. furri1hod. Weoher-Oryer
hook-up. ww carpet. nEWly
Plinted. deck. Regency, Inc.
Apu. C.ll 304-875-7736 or

614-448-4807 or 448-2802.

ccndillon. Call 614-446-8624
all or 6:30PM.

,~

304-57~

2383.

304-578-2338.

Hou• for •1•12 Vinton Street.
1 y, story frame. n11w e•pet.
new roof. fu II bM8ment, det·

Apartment
for Rent

614-448-0139.

54acras. 1 200 ~quare ft. mobile
home, pond. free g•. t38, 000.
Pomeroy area. 814-992-5386

between 6:00-10 :00pm.

Homes for Sale

44

BORN LOS R

Boats and
Motors for Sale

28 ft. Bayliner cruiser. 1986
wide beam. al electronic, gallev.
canYis, etc. 3&amp;0 V -8 eng •.
•leeps 8 . V-v low hours.

GOOD USED "PPLI ...NCES 9 ft. Spun Aluminum dish, 65
W11herl. dryert, refri!:ier•tors.
degree LNA. Unlden 1000 ,.
range• . Skeggs Appliances. · ceiver whh acti.Mitor, remote
Upper River Rd. belide Stone
control!. $8150, Firm. Cllf 114Crest Motel. 614-446-7398.
448-7434.

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32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

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Call us for your mobile home
In surance : Millar Insurance,
30 4-982 -2145. Al so: auto,
home. life, heelth .

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County Appliance. Inc. Good
Ulld epplltncet end TV setl.
Open BAM to IPM. Mon dnu

Insurance

75

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NEW· 8 pc. wood groupo •399.
Lhllng room suit•- 1199-1599.
Bunk beds with beddln9" t199.
Full lira mllttrea &amp; foundation
1t1rtlno - t99 . Recliner a
nanlng- t99.
USED- ledt, drell8f'l, bedroom
suites, t199-t299. Desks.
wrlngw w . .her. a comphrt11ine
of used furnhu,.,
NEW· Westero boqt• t30.
Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
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54 Misc. Merchandise

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AUCTION llo FURNITURE 82

Situations
Wanted

Monday, June 6, 1988

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�•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 6, 1988

Local briefs...-----. Montana has record-high 109 degrees Sunday.
Continued from page 1

By United Press International
na tion was closer to average,
A day o(record-shatterlng heat ' with temperatures In the 60s and
In the northern high Plains was the 70s in most places and down
followed by overnight tempera' to the 40s and 50s over northern
lures In Montana in the 80s, New England and the Pacific
which is about the same as Northwest.
normal daytime highs for this
Temperatures at 2 a.m. today
time of year, the Natlonal ranged !rom 37 degrees at Sexton
Summit, Ore., to 85 degrees at
Weather Service said.
Weather across the rest of the Billings, Mont.

EMS has 10 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend; fi ve Saturday and five Sunday .
Saturday at 1:38 a .m.. Middleport to the pollee department
for John Hayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7:49
a.m. to Route 124 for Lynn Winland to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 12:54 p.m. transported Charles Ellis from
an auto accident on Route 143 to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland a t 3:20p.m. to New Lima Road for Darlene Spangler to
Vetera ns Memor ial Hospital; Middleport at 10: 20 p.m. to South
Front St . for Lllllan Dyke to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 6:23 a .m., Middleport to Fisher St. for Grace
French to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:06 a .m. to
Route 124 for Alleyne Rees to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 3: 50 p.m. to Route 124 for Louise Stewart to Holzer
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 5: 26 p.m. transported
George Stout from an auto accident on Locust Grove Road to
c amden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:32 p.m.
transported Floyd Weber from the above auto accident to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Hollywood mystery man
focus ·of federal probe
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
federal Organized Crime Strike
Force has spent 18 months trying
to determine If a Hollywood
consultant with reputed links to
Teamster President Jackie
Presser has been coercing film
and TV production companies
Into hlrlng him to guarantee
labor peace, It was reported.
The probe of corruption In the
entertainment Industry and possibly In the Los Angeles Pollee
Pepartment has Included subpoenas to such as flrmsas Sylvester
Stallone's White Eagle' Productions and has uncovered a leak of
sensitive Investigative material
In the department's organized
crime unit, the Los Angeles
Times reported Sunday.
The main target of the Investigation, Martin Barow, who calls
himself ·'The Rabbi," says the
allegations of labor racketeering

R.E.A.C. T. safety break successful
ThP Meigs County R.E .A.C.T. recently completed the most
successful Memorial · Day safety break In recent years.
Numerous travelers were served over the three-day period.
R.E.A.C.T. extends thanks to all businesses and Individuals
who contributed In any way to help them serve the public
through the safety break.
The next R.E .A.C.T. meeting wlll he July I at 7:30p.m at
Pleasers Restaurant . Anyone Interested In becoming a member
of R.E.A .C.T. is welcome to attend this meeting.

Peace activist to speak
William Sloane Coffin Jr.,
peace activist and head of lhe
largest peace and justice organ!·
zatlon In the United States. will
speak at an open meeting at First
United Methodist Church,
Athens, on June 16 at 8 p.m.
Sponsored locally by the Appal·
achlan Peace and Justice Network (APJN) In cooperation with
Ohio Sane-Freeze, Coffin wlll
meet with area cl.e rgy as well as
present a special program at a
dinner that day. On June 17 he
will have breakfast with Inter·
ested Ohio University faculty
members.
Coffin was active In the clvll
rights and anti Vietnam War
movement and this year has
become president and chief spokesperson for Sane-Freeze, a
recent merger of organizations
committed to a sane nuclear
policy and nuclear weapons
freeze. He brings an emphasis of
peace with justice.
After serving In the U.S. J\rmy
as a llason officer to the French
and Russian armies In World
Wjlr II, Coffin graduated from

'.

Yale University In government
studies, then worked for the
Central Intelligence Agency
three years before entering Yale
Divinity School.
For 18 years Coffin was chaplain of Yale University and In
1977 became senior minister of
Riverside Church, New York
City, resigning that post to head
Sane-Freeze.
For more than 25 years Coffin
has been active In the civil rights
and peace movements. He has
lectured throughout the U.S. on
reducing the arms race. In 1979
he held Christmas services In
Iran for the U.S. Embassy
hostages. During this decade he
has traveled to nations in North
and South America, Africa and
Asia promoting international
peace and human rights.
Coffin was In Moscow,
U.S.S.R., at the time of the .most
recent summit meetings between the heads of state of the
U.S. and the Soviet Onion.
For further Information or
dinner reservations call Bob
Gridley or Peggy Glsh at 614-5922608 or 593-5520.

Eric M. Robie
Eric Matthew Roble, 14, of Rt.

T, Bidwell, died Sunday morning

at Ohio State University Hospital
In Columbus.
He was born on Sept. 17, 1973ln
Galilpolls, son of Carroll Roble,
who survives, and the late
Barbara J . Shell Robie.
He attended Bidwell-Porter
Elementary School.
Other survivors Include a sister, Rachel Roble; maternal

grandmother, Mrs. Mlna Shell of
Point Pleasant, W.Va .; paternal
grandmother, Mrs. Erma Roble
of Bidwell; several aunts, uncles
and cousins.
Services will be Wednesday at
11 a .m. at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home In Point Pleasant.
The Rev . Bob Madison will
officiate. Burial will be In Suncrest Cemetery In Point Pleasant.
Friends may call the funeral
home Tuesday from 5 to 9 p.m .

are ridiculous, that he has never
been paid for hls services and
that he Is being framed by
anti-union forces in the entertainment Industry who want to keep
him from becoming involved In
the 3-month-old Writers Guild
Strike.
'1 know people," Bacow, 66,
told the Times. "If people come
to me, and they believe me, and
they trust me, Is there something
wrong with that?"
The Investigation has Included
unprecedented wiretaps on telephones of the LAPD's elite
Organized Crime· Intelligence
Divis ton, the Times said.
FBI agents reportedly eavesdropped on conversations In
which a veteran detective allegedly disclosed confidential
Information to Bacow and at
least one target of an unrelated
lnves ilgation.

hurls Reds
to 12-0 win

Daily Number

834
Pick 4

Page4

e
Vot.39, No.22

1872

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
was no grand prize winner In
Saturday night's Super Lotto
drawing, meaning Wednesday's
jackpot will be at least$6mllllon.
There were 116 tickets with slx
of the numbers, worth $1,000
apiece, while 5,413 had four of the

Hospital

news

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Beulah White, Middleport; John
Hayes, Pomeroy; Charles Ellis,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Leona
Hubbard, Scott Whitlatch, Kenneth Baslm, Beulah While, .John
Hayes, Cindy Stalens.
Sunday Admissions - Grace
French, Middleport; Peggy
Hartman, Pomeroy; Alleyne
Rees, Racine; Leona King,
Pomeroy; Floyd Reltmlre, New
Haven, W.Va.
Sunday Discharges - Mary
Wallace.

numbers, which carried a $75
payoff.
The winning numbers were 8,
10, 15, 24, 26 and 36. Sales totaled
$3,574,413.
The winning Kicker number
was 470367, but no one was able to
collect the $100,000 lor hitting all
slx digits.
Five people had the first five,
which Is worth $5,000 apiece. As
for the rest of the secondary
payoffs, 62 had the first four
numbers, worth $1,000, 592 had
the first three. worth $100, and
5,870 had the first two, worth $10.

50

Stocks

1231

-RAIN
SHOWERS
:
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded ;
Map shows maximum temperatures. Atleast50% of any shaded area is torecast
to receive precipitation iro:ticated.
'
u~

R

ft

•

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will he
widespread across the eastern GuU Coast and Florida. Showers •
and thunderstorms will be scattered across the northern Rockies
and northern Plateau region with ralnshowers more widespread
across the Pac!Oc Northwest Into northern Calllor'!la. The rest of
the nation will have mostly sunny skies.

Weather

Dally stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power .... .. ... :... 28%
AT&amp;T ........ ...... .... ... .. .......... . 27
Ashland 011 ........ ......... .. ... .. 68Y,
Bob Evans .... .. ........ ..... .... ... 17Y,
Charming Shoppes .. .......... ..10%
Jeffrey A. Miller, Syracuse, City Holding Co .. .. .............. . 31
and Darla Miller, Syracuse, have Federal Mogul... ..... ... ...... .. .38Y,
flied in Meigs County Common . Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. .... ..... ..64%
Pleas Court for a dissolution of Heck's Inc ... ....... .... .. ..... ... .. . ~%
their marriage.
Key Cen turton .... .. ... ... ...... ..38'1.
•· Eva Ruth Bookman has been Lands' End ...... .. ..... ........ .... 24%
granted a divorce from Francis Limited Inc .. ....... ... .. .... ... .. .18%
A. Bookman and restored by the Multimedia Inc . .. ........ ..... .. .. 67
court to her previous name of Rax Restaurants ... ... ... ... ...... 4%
DeLancey .
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. .... 11
Francis Marie Matthews has Shoney's Inc ........ .. ..... ........25%
been granted a divorce from Wendy's Inti.. ..... ...... .. .. .... . 5Y,
Terrance Wayne Matthews.
Worthington Ind ..... ...... ...... 20%

Seek divorces

South Central
Tonight, clear, with lows of 60
to 65 and light west. winds.
Tuesday, sunny, with a high near
90.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
and a chance of showers Friday ..
Highs In the 80s and lows In the
upper 50s to lower 60s.

Dismiss court action

An action by Ohio Valley Bank
Company against Anthony E.
Cardlllo has been dismissed In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
A reciprocal action for child
support has been flied by the
State of Ohio and Mary Jane Hlll
against Royal Brooks
Leachman.

. I
Meeting tonight
Letart Township Trustees wlll
meet tonight (Monday), 7 p.m .,
at the town hall.

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp;SUN
ALL SEATS $2. 50
BARGAIN N[GHT TUESDAY $2.50

GOODWILL EXCHANGE- Four members of
the Japanese Gllu Prefectural Assembly Included
·Rio Grande and a Jackson winery as part ollhelr
United Stales tour. Dean Brown. vice president
lor student services and dean of students, guided
the tour of the Rio Grande College/Community
College campus. ¥ part of the Japanese
dlgultarles' visit, they also toured the Louts
Jindra Winery. Toasting lo the cultural ex·

changes were (L to R) Brown, Junjl Taguchl,
whose son graduated from RGCC, Makoto Mort,
executive director of Japan America Society of
Glfu, Tom Evans, mayor of Jackson, Tomolchl
Sugiyama, · Paul Harrison, RGCC director of
annual and planned giving, Jeanne Jindra,
hostess of the Jindra Winery, and Junlchl
Kasahara. ( OVP photo)

Nation's farmers suffer as
dry weather continues today
condition, compared to 33 perWASHINGTON (UP!)
Eleven percent of the cotton Is cent last week. In Indiana, 18
Louisiana Is In very poor concll- percent of the corn Is In poor
tlon and the 11J.tll.ana corn crop l.s . condJ\IoJI. and 3 percent Is_~~
suffering, the Agriculture De- poor. Last week, the figures were
partment said In a report Mon- 2 percent very poor and 10
day showing the effects of percent poor for corn In the
Hoosier state.
abnormally dry weather.
In addition, department off!·
In . the South, 11 percent of
clals, to ease the Impact of Louisiana's cotton crop ls In very
drought-like conditions, said poor condition and 26 percent is
farmers In 83 counties In Mis- poor. Last week, 2 percent was
souri and Illinois could begin very poor and 37 percent was
haying and grazing llvetock on poor. In Alabama, 5 percent of
their diverted cropland. Ordlnar- the cotton is very poor and 17
lly, farmers cannot use the percent poor, compared to a
setaslde land.
week earlier when 9 percent was
A preliminary crop condition poor and nothing was listed as
,
report frlll!l the National Agricul- very poor.
tural Statistics Service Indicated
Misslsslppl also reported an
cr-ops deteriorated In some areas abrupt decline. Five percent of
In the past week.
the cotton is very poor and 25
In Kansas, 38 percent of the percent poor. A week earUer,
winter wheat crop Is In poor only 5 percent was listed as poor

and none was very poor.
In Missouri, 23 percent of the
corn is Ustei1 In poor condition.
Thg. A,itlS._ulture Department
said MondAy that emergency
haying and grazing could begin
In· 48 northern counties.
In IllinoiS, 35 counties were
cleared for the haying and
grazing.
Montana has the poorest condition report for winter wheat.
Seventeen percent of the crop Is
very poor and 21 percent Is poor.
That Is a slight chanie from the
preceding week when 19 percent
was poor.
Arkansas, however, reported a
huge improvement. Last week,
24 percent of Its winter wheat was
In poor condition. On Monday,
only 6 percent was listed In that
category.

liquidation record ·$1.3 billion
accounts, rather than arranging about $2 million In deposits over
COSTA MESA, Calif. IUPI) The record $1.35 billion In Insu- mergers to keep them going.
the Insured limit of $100,000,
"This payout Is unusual be- · while North America·S&amp;L had
rance the government will pay
·depositors of two bankrupt savcause of the characteristics of about $700,000. Those depositors
the two banks," said Mary will share In whatever proceeds
Ings associations will take a
Creedon, deputy execu tlve direclarge bite out of the already
the FSLIC receives !rom selling
tor of the FSLIC. "There are no off the assets of the thrifts.
dwindling fund that Insures savtellers, no windows, you can't
Ings and loan accounts in the
"The lnsltttlons' problems
walk in and cash a check. Both stem from their assets," Creedon
United States.
Officials of the Federal Home · are money-desk operations."
said. "Before they were brought
None of the money going to under control, the banks engaged
Loan Bank Board said Monday
Insured depositors Is taxpayers' In speculative and risky spending
the two Institutions, North AmerIca Savings and Loan and Amerl· funds because FSLIC funds come programs," including such venfrom assessments on healthy tures as windmill-driven energy
can Diversified Savings Bank,
both of Costa Mesa, paid deposi- savings Institutions and sales of and the production of ethanol.
Bank board chairman M.
tors some of the highest Interest bonds.
Creedon said 80 percent of the Danny Wall said In Washington
rates In the nation and had been
losing hundreds of millions of 15,000 depositors at both banks that payouts will continue to he
are credit unions, other savings rare and only employed In cases
dollars over the past few years.
The board decided that, begin- Institutions and commercial "when there's no feasible alter·
ning today, the rederal Savings banks, and the average account native to a direct payout."
These were the ninth and tenth
and Loan Insurance Corp. will is about $90,000.
American Diversified had
pay cash to depositors for their
Continued on page 10

Reunion planned
The annual Hollon reunion will
he Sunday, 12 noon, at the
Chester Fire House. Bring a
covered dish and,table service.
Soltballloumey slated
Portland PTO Is sponsoring a
D-Ciass softball tournament at
the Portland Elementary School
on June 25-26. Entry fee Is $65 and
two softballs. First place lndlvld·
• ual trophies and team trophies
for'ftrst and second places wlllbe
awarded. For information or to
register, Contact Dennis Long at
843·5426 or Kenny Walbrown at
843-5309 before Wednesday June
22. Drawing wlll be June 22 at 7
p.m. at the school. .

FLORIDA
VACATION
6 DAYS

AND

5 NIGHTS

License issued

~

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Brady Edgar Sayre, 37,
and Donna Ray Stitt, 24, both of
Racine; Kenneth Ray Riggs, 20,
Reedsville, and !Crlsty Ann Newlun, 18, Long Bottom.

~

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Defense and Energy departments have failed to clean up
toxic waste Improperly disposed
at 161aclllttes, although drinking
water contamination at many
sites tar exceeds federal safety
standards, House Investigators
said Monday.
One "classic example" Is the
Army's Plcat!nny Arsenal near
Dover, N.J., where groundwater
levels of the probable cancercauser trichloroethylene have
been detected at 5,000 times the
federal standard, said Rep. John
Dlngell, D·Mich., chairman of a
. House Energy and Commerce
' subcommittee that Investigated
the sites.
·
The contaminants at the munl·
tiona faclllty, also lncludllli
cadmium, chromium, cyanide,
lead and selenium, were found 2
~ years ago to be threatening a

Pat Hill Ford Inc.

NO TIME SHARE

461 S. THIRD
MIDDLEPORT
992-21&lt;4J6

NO GIMMICKS

JUST FUN I I I

v
(

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senttinel News Staff
Ii appears that Pomeroy will
he getting 11¥0 new businesses In
the not too distant future, now
that Pomeroy Village Council
has okayed an agreement with
the Village of Middleport for
sewage service for those
businesses.
Pomeroy Vlllage Council ap·
proved last night in regular
session a proposal whereby they
(Pomeroy) would contract with
Middleport to provide sewage
service to the West Main St .
property which borders the Middleport corporation limits.
Pomeroy Is to bill the bust"
nesses for the sewage service
and then remit the payment to
Ml ddleport. This Is the same
proposal that came before council at their last regular meeting
but 11pon which no action was
taken.
Despite Mayor Richard Seyler's objections to Pomeroy being
middle man In the matter,
Councilmen Bruce Reed, Bill
Young, Franklin Rizer and
Bryan Shank voted In favor of the
proposal. Councilman . Larry
Wehrung sided with the mayor
and voted no. As acting clerk at
the meeting, 1\1\lng In for Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton who was
absent, Councllmemher Betty
Baronlck was not permitted a
vote.
May End Differences
Last night's acceptance of the
proposal may put to restdl!feren-

Meigs board
accepts five
•
•
restgnat·tons
Five resignations were ac·
cepted Monday night when the
Meigs Local School District
Soard of Education met In
special session.
They Include Lloyd Haggy, a
custodian who Is retiring; Esther
Lowery, a cook who Is retiring;
Kathy Rice, a teacher; Carolyn
Phillips and Pam Lones, substitute teachers.
The board approved a number
of appropriation modifications
presented by Treasurer Jane Fry
and granted leaves of absence for
the remainder of the current
school year to Evelyn Hobbs, a
bus driver, and Lynn Bookman, a
teacher.
The July meeting was changed
to July 12.
•
Following an executive session, the board appointed assistant superintendent, James Carpenter, as Interim
superintendent of the district,
and denied an assault leave
request from one teacher.
Board members attending
were Robert Snowden, Robert
Barton, Richard Vaughan, Larry
.Rupe and Jeff Werry.

ces which have ariSen between
Pomeroy and Middleport during
the last year as Hap tons tall and
Haycraft have tried to get tbe two
businesses off the ground. DurIng the year the two vlllages were
unable to resolve problems over
the property In question and how
sewage service to the property
might be provided.
BUI Hap tons tall, owner of the
property, Pat O'Brien. Haptonstall's attorney, and Dick Haycraft of Point Pleasant, W.Va .,
the developer and owner of the
two buildings once they are
constructed, were present at the
meeting.
It remains Mayor Seyler's
con ten lion that since the property in question Is In Pomeroy,
that Pomeroy should have been
consulted first about the proposed development, not
Ml ddleport.
Haycraft said he hoped "lay to

rest any ill feelings " he inadvertantiy caused by not coming to
Pomeroy first. He said It was
never his Intention to bypass
Pomeroy, but he just went where
he thought he was supposed to go.
He said he has only had personal
contact with Middleport on two
occasions, one of which Included
Mayor Seyler and two Pomeroy
councitmemhers.
Outlines Proposals
Haycraft outlined his proposed
project which Includes the buildIng of a Domlnoe' s Pizza and a
Subway Sandwich Shop. He reported that the plans have been
approved by the State o!Ohlo, his
credit has been approved by a
local lending Institution, and that
leases with Haptonstall, and with
Dominae's, have been arranged.
"I'm ready to throw dirt and
hang wood," he concluded.
O'Brien explained that HayContinued on page 10

Seat belt funds
top boards agenda
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) The Ohio Department of Education's request to spend $233,000 to
operate a seat belt education
program topped the agenda at
today's continued meeting of the
State Con trolling Board.
The board, laced with more
tban 190 Items on the agenda,
acted upon more than 110 Monday and planned to finish today. '
Approved were requests for a
loan for a minority business to
develop a fitness club In Franklin
County and the approval of $1.6
mUIIon to purchase a rallllneand
Its right, of way in southwest
Ohio.
The agenda was heavy because
state agencies are trying to
obtain their budgeted funds before the fiscal year ends June 30.
Carried over until today was a
request for $233,000 for the
education department to take
over full operation of the seat belt
education program.
Board member Rep. William
Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia,
asked that It be carried over
because he wanted more Information on the Department of
Education's plan to Install a
toll-free line at centers that
provide seat belt education programs lor motorists ordered Into
the programs In lieu of paying
floes for not wearing their seat
belts .
Till! Department of Education
has been running the 125 centers
In 73 counties since Ohio's seat
belt law went Into effect, but the
Department of Highway Safety
had been operating the telephones. Highway Safety has
asked the Education Department
to handle those telephones .

The board approved a loan of
$430,000 to the Gahanna Fitness
Club, Inc.. a minority-owned
business, to pur!:hase and renovate an existing building for a
health and fitness center In that
Columbus suburb even though
board member Rep. Robert
Hickey, D-Dayton, questioned
whether the state should Invest In
a health club.
"It seems that this kind of
business should be able to make
It without state help, " he said,
Sheryl Dickey of the Department of Development said the
department appear9!1 before the
Controlling Board after being
unable to get financing through
other means.
"Minority businesses are not
getting financing through
banks," she said. "Most minority
developers don't have a history
or a relationship for financing ."
On the rail issue. CSXTransporation Is abandoning nearly 30
miles of line between Midland
City and Greenfield In Highland
County. One request from the
Department of Development
would allocate $346,034 so the city
of Greenfield could buy that line,
while the second would allocate
$1,333,966 to purchase 390 acres
of land in Highland, Clinton and
Ross counties that make up the
right-of-way for the rail line.
Mark Barbash of the Department of Development said the
five businesses that grew up
along the line have come to
depend on the rails for their
work.
•They were developed on the
rail line. They've used the ralls .
Their customers are on thp line
Continued on page 10

Defense, energy departments condemned on toxic waste

FOUR SUN DRENCHED DAYS AND THREE SPARKLING NIGHTS WITH
BEAUTIFUL ACCOMMODATIONS ••• ONLY MINUTES AWAY FROM
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1 Section, 10 Poges 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Pomeroy approves
•
sewage service deal

•

.

b:2 SNOW

•

Pomeroy-M-iddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 7, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Partly cloudy tonlght,Jow In
mld 60s. Wednesday, variable
cloudiness, high In mid 80s.

at y. enttne

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-7-88'

Announcements

Cub Olympics
Cub Scout Olympics will be
held Saturday at the Rutland ball
field In Rutland. Registration Is
from 8 to9a .m. andeventswlllbe
held from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m . Entry
fee Is $1 per boy . Hot dogs and pop
will he sold.
Dance Friday
The Meigs County Senior Citizens will stage a square dance
Friday at tbe center on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, from 8 to 11
p.m. with Larry Hubbard provld·
lng the music. Those attending
are to take snacks for the snack
table. The dance Is open to the
public and admission to $1.50 a
person.

ripped through a campground ·
north of Denver, destroying a ·
camper and pulllng barbecue
grllls-out of their concrete pads, .
authorities said. The twister was ·
one of several tornadoes and
funnel clouds reported by the
National Weather Service ln the
50-mile stretch along Interstate :
25 between Denver and Fort
Collins.
A thunderstorm In western
Adams County, Colo. , produced •
high winds that demolished a •
trailer home, destroyed a grain. 7
ery and damaged a barn and ;
hOmes.
Strong northwest winds ac- :
com pan led cloudy skies and
scattered showers In the Northwest. Winds gusted to 54 mph at •
Agawam, Mass., early this ;
•
morning.
Strong and gusty winds also :
continued In the West. In Utah, ·
winds gusted to 59 mph at Milford :
Sunday afternoon and a lake .
wind advisory was posted for the ·
entire stat&lt;! today .
·

No Saturday winner; jackpot $6 million

I

Area deaths

Sunday, afternoon's tempera tures. reached as high as 109
degrees at Glendive, Mont. The
lows In the 80s In Montana are
about the same as the average
high temperatures for this time
ofyear, theweatherservicesald.
A total of fifteen clUes In the
north-central United States reported new record highs Sunday .
The high of 94 degrees at
International Falls, Minn., broke
the previous record of87 degrees
set In 1976. The high of 108
degrees at Glasgow , Mont., was a
record for tl)e entire month of
June.
Thunderstorms that produced
severe weather In Florida, Maine
and Colorado Sunday afteroon
weakened during the evening.
Showers and thunderstorms
continued mainly over central
Florida and along the central
Gulf Coast early today . Showers
and a few thunderstorms extended from western Kansas to
central New Mexico.
In Colorado Sunday, a tornado

Ohio Lottery

Browning

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I

key drinking water aquifer but that. We're working as fast as we
the Army has failed to agree In can to get those sttes cleaned up.
writing to comply with laws We're not half-stepping on this
governing cleanup of the site, the situation at all. We're going full
report said.
speed ahead."
"Our Investigation suggests
The staff report blamed some
that military facilities are of the Environmental Protection
among the worst violators of our Agency's failures to force cleahazardous waste laws," Dlngell nups on Justice Department
said. "They've caused extensive constraints that have barred the
soli and groundwater contamina· EPA from suing federal hazardtion, both on their Installations ous waste violators or taking
and off.
administrative actions. Rather,
''The Defense Department's the report said, the agency bas
attitude varies between reluc- been left to "jawboning" In these
tant compliance and active disre- cases.
gard for the Ia w."
As a result, It sa:ld, the EPA
Dlngell charged that the Pen- "cannot negotiate with a federal
tagon has made efforts "to agency with the same leverage
escape compliance with the law, that It can with a private
even on Capitol Hlll," but did not company and ultimately cannot
elaborate.
force the federal atency . to
Asked about the repor~. Pen· correct the regulatory
lagon spokesman Glenn F1ood viola tlons."
said, "We have yet to review
The report said groundwater
~

contamination has been detected
at 13 of the 16 federal land
disposal laclllties on the EPA's
list of significant "noncompliers"- and the other three
facilities have failed to monitor
groundwater. It said 12 of these
16 sites have gone two years
without final enforcement
In thelast20montha, the report
said, the Defense and Energy
depllftrnenll each have entered
only one enforceable compliance
agreement.
The congressional report was
released less than a month aller
VIce President George Bush, In a
campalp speech, stressed tbat
"some of the worst offenders" of
environmenlal laws are federal
facilities.
"As president," he said, •'I will
Insist that In the future federal
agencies meet or ex~eed environ·
mental standards: The govern-

ment should live within the laws
u·tmposes on others."
The congressional report said
that at Holloman Air Force Base
In New Mexico, no groundwater
monitoring wells had been In·
stalled nearly three years after
InspectiOns showed serious contamination of TCE, arsenic,
soldlum cyanide and toluene.
Samplings at McClellan Air
Force Base near Sacramento,
Calif., It said, showed elevated
levels of triChloroethylene, as
well as arsenic, barium and other
solvents. Subcommittee aides
said the Air Force has refused for
live monthS to certifY It would
correct the waste disposal
problems.
At the Energy Department's
Portsmouth, Ohio, uranium enrichment complex, wute oil
spread Into the 1011 realllted In
TCE conlaminatlon at levels as

,

high as 790.000 parts per billionnearly 200,000 times the EPA
standard, the report said .
It also cited waste disposal
problems at the Army ammunl·
tion plant In Lake City, Mo.; the
Energy Department's gaseous
diffusion plant In Paducah; Ky .;
the Naval Weapons Support
Center In Indiana; the Army
ammunition plant In Joliet. Dl.;
the Marine Corp Air Station at
Cherty Point, N.C.; Reese Air
Force Base In Texas; the u.S.
Navy Public Works Center In
Florida; Ravenna Army Ammunition Plant In Ohio; the Iowa
Army Ammunition Plant; the
EnergyDepartment's Feed
Materials Production Center In
Ohio; the National Aeronautics
and Space Admlnl"tration's
White Sends Test Fli'clllty In
N.M.; and th.e Energy National
Engineering Lab In Idaho.
\

--~

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