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Pega 16-The Daily Sentinel

'

Wednuday. August 17, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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•

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MIDDLEPORT, OH. •GEN. HARTINGER PKWY. &amp;· PEARL ST .•99.2·3471

A CAI;JDINAL AFFILIATED

Vol.39, No. 72
Copyrighted 1988

at y

Scattered thunderstorms,
humid tonight, low 71. Friday;
scattered thunderstorms,
high 91
.
.

en tine

i.

2 Sections, 12 Pages
25 Cents
A Multbnedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, August 18, 1988

Meigs paving program nearing coDtpletion
;-l

:'&gt;'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senllnel News stall
The Meigs County Highway
Department's hot mix road pavIng program for this year Is
drawing to an end with the
completion of 2.4 miles of County
Road 36 (Sumner Road).
County Engineer Philip Ro·
berts reported In Wednesday's
Meigs County Commissioner's
meeting that approximately 15

'·

m lies of county roads were paved
this summer. In addition to
Sumner Road, county crews
paved the Intersection of County
Road 75 (Hiland Road) and
Route 7; and stretches of County
Road 34 iPlne Grove); Eagle
Ridge Road; County Road 30;
County Road 27; Peach Fork
Road; County Road 26 (Flatwoods); and County Road C1A.
Neither Roberts nor Ted

-F(lir . . . . . . th day... - - - - - - . .
I
I. 301
I
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I

Creamy or Super Chunk

SKIPPY
BUTTER
PEA

I

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I

c

I

-I

I

~~

I

I

'I
18 OZ.
.1
jar
- ~1Limit one with coupon and •10.00 purchaae. Excludlng beer, wine

and clgarenes. One coupon per family. Good at Cardinal Super-

; markets weak of August 15, 1988.

fJO..OO-DD

.,
-------~---~-~----------

Additional Purchases S1.29
I

I
.I

:

..
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CARDINAL
SLICED BACON

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Phil Dirt and the Dozers
attracted a big crowd Wednes·
day at the Meigs County Fair.
Above, Phil sings to a member
of the audience.
At left, selected as the 1988
Utile Mister and Miss Meigs
County In competition on the
hiD stage at the Meigs County
Fair Wednesday afternoon
were John Thomas White,
seven, and Ashley Hannahs,
five. Each received a 550 gilt
cerdflcate from Elberfelds.
Eva Robsqn of the Middleport
BuslneAs and Professional
Women's Club chaired lhe
contest, and each of the 16
participants received a ribbon. Dotde Campbell Interviewed the children and three
out-of·state women did lhe
judging. John Thomas Is the
son of Bob and Dove White of
near Coolvlle, and Ashley Is
the daughter of Chuck and
Rhonda Hannahs, Pomeroy.
Below, Brooks Sayre of
Syracuse and members of his
family are pictured In the'
winners' circle after Sayre
drove to a win In the 14th race
for two year old pacers at the
Meigs County Fair Wednesday afternoon. Sayre drove
his own horse, Brookfield
Blast, to win the race.

c

I

16 oz.
pkg.

.

Liml1 one with coupon and •10.00 purchase. Excluding beer, wine

and cigafettes. One coupon per family. Good at Cardinel Suptf·
I markets week ot August 15, 1988.
()0..90-00

1

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oz.
can

12

Limit one with coupon and

•to.oo purc:han. Excluding bear, wine

and c•garette&amp;. One coupon per family. Good 11 Cardinal Supe:rmarkets week ol August 15. 1988.
00-00-00

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

Assorted Colors

NORTHERN

BATH TISSUE
pkg.
and c:igeretttl. One coupon per famil~. GOO&lt;I at Carctinal Suptf·
merkets week of Augutl 15, 1988.
oo-oo-oo

----------------

MEDIUM EGGS

c

ctn.

Lrmit one with coupon and •10.00 pureMM. Excluding beer, winl
anG dgo-. One ......,.. per lamHy. Good 11 Cardlnol Super- - .. Augull 15, 1M8.
00-00-40

'I •

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Over 300 people at tended this
past Saturday's free entertainment at the Racine Shrine Club
Park according to a report given
at thls·week's .meeting of Racine
Village Council. The evening's ·
line-up featured golden oldies hy
Denver Rice. gospel music by
Jan and Cathy; comedy by
Haddle Mae; countrv western
music by the Everett Wedge
Band of Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
and hi uegrass and gospel music
by the Southern Wind Band of
Ravenswood, W.Va.
The park comm lttee offered an
apology to performers for the
inadequate sound system at the
park. In relation to this, Mayor
Frank Cleland reported that his
wife, Delores, wilt be donating a
handmade . quilt to the park
committee to be used as a
giveaway Item to start a fund to
acquire a sound svstem.
Mayor Cleland also reported
that Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Wickline have offered the use of
their field adlacent to the Shrine
Club Park for parking of cars
during the free shows. Cou'ncll
expressed appreciation for the

I

I

Locally owned horses did well
In the racing program and Doll
Spencer, Vincent, formerly of
Pomeroy and a son of the late
Sidney Spencer of Pomeroy, who
was a harness horse tratiier and
driver, made it Into the winner's
circle several times. 1Brooks
Sayre, Syracuse, also made It
Into that circle and Ralph Calvert, Jr., Pomeroy, made a good
showing with In two year old filly
pacer In the third race.
In the first and seventh races
for three year old trotters, Hey
Frosty, owned by Harry and Iris
Horowitz, Brooklyn, N.Y., and
driven by Debbie Rucker was
first and third, respectively.
First In the seventh was Mac's
Classic, owned bu AI Jones.
Second In both races was Brook-

THOROFARE ·

. ..

took place In Logan, Lincoln and
Cabell counties . The FBI had no
estimates on how many of the 87
suspects had been taken Into
custody .
"They (ring leaders! have
been selling thern (vehicles) to us
for 5 to lOcentson the dollar," t)le
spokesman said.
Federal grand juries in Charleston and lluntlngton returned
27 Indictments Monday, chargIng 691ndlvlduals with 141counts
of violations of federal law. The
other suspects were charged in
state and federal counts.
Legal proceedings are planned
In In both Huntington and Cha·
rleston. An FBI spokesman
called the sting operation the
biggest in West Virginia's
history.
(
~ Robinson said the ring used a .
variety of methods to try to mask
the vehicles before reselling
them . Including filing off serial
numbers, switching frarnes and
repainting the vehicles.

Racine council conducts business

OK. .

Grade "A"

doz.

"There apparently are two
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. !UP!)
other
locations where identifica- West Virginia pollee teamed
with FBI agents to flatten the tion numbers can be found,"
tires on a multi-state car theft Robinson said.
"One Is relatively easy to find.
·operation, one that gobbled up
The other Is hidden, and that Is
some $1.6 mllllon In vehicles and
parts.
where the Automobile Theft
Bureau was real helpful. They
Known as Operation Mine
are about the only ones who know
Stopper, the 18-month underwhere It Is."
cover work produced· 87 arrests
Stolen vehicles ranged from
Wednesday, and the confiscation
passenger
cars to four-wheelof 5 pounds of cocaine and
drive trucks to 18-wheel tractor·
several automatic weapons.
trailer rigs. Passing themselves
Trooper Ric Robinson, a spoas prospective buyers, police
kesman for the West Virginia
said they also obtained bulldozState Police, said the massive
ers, rontend loaders and various
sweep enta!led 125 agents of the
other construction equipment.
FBI, state police, and county
Ten arrests were made In
sheriffs offices.
Kentucky, four In Ohio and the
So many vehicles were recorest In West Virginia. Most ofthe
vered that pollee had to set up a
vehicies were stolen in West
cor:nmand outpost at !he lj:untlngtotre!\'lc·ei!'!Jter.•• • -: · Virt')n!a, hut some were taken til"
Ohio and Kentucky.
.
The Automob!le Theft Bureau
Suspects were hauled In vans
was a major factor In compiling
before U.S. magistrates in Hunneed~ evidence, by identifying
tington and Charleston. An FBI
the stolen vehicles through hidspokesman
said many arrests
den identification numbers.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Fifteen races- count 'em -In
the 100 degree temperature Wednesday might have been a bit
much for harness horse racing
fans at the Meigs County Fair but
the horses seemed to cope wl th It

Lrmit one with coupon and •10.00 purc:h11e. EKCiudmg beer. wint

:~

Vehicle theft ring smashed
by FBI, West Virginia poli~e

offer.
Council acknowledged the receipt of a 5 by Bft. nylon flag for
the park from the Kroger Employees Advisory Committee.
Also, Mrs. Bertha Johnson presented a 5 byB ft. nylonflagfo~ the
park In memory of her !at_!!
husband, Curtis Johnson. Mrs.
Johnson was recognized at last
Saturday 's free program. The
park committee reported thai
appropriate markers will be
obatined to recognize these
people.
The next evening of free
entertainment at the park will be
Saturday , Aug. 27, featuring the
Sunrise Gospel Group from Chester. Music wlll begin· at 7 p.m.
Council discussed efforts to get
one of the two proposed State
juvenile cqrrecllon facilities Ia·
cated In Meigs County. Although
members of Council would prefer
to have the facltlty Ioca1ed In the
Racine area, they will work just
to get a facility anywhere in
Meigs County. Council views the
possibility of securing at least
one of the proposed facilities as a
way of bringing jobs to the people

of the county.
Council Is reminding residents
that refuse to be picked upduring
collection must be pia ced at the
curb In suitable containers.
These containers must be of
propoer size so that workers are
able to load thernonto·thetruck.
An ordinance raising the rates
for refuse collection will be
considered by Council at the
September meeting.
Council approved the purchase
of materials to coat the fire too use
and annex roofs.
In a routine matter, Council
approved a resolu tion accepting
the rates and amounts lor the
village as established by the
Meigs County
Budget
Commission.
Clerk Jane Beegle reported
that she has received a letter
from the State Auditor suggest.
lng the breakdown of costs for the
state audll be completed inApril .
The costs may be taken from the
various village funds.
Due to Labor Day falling on the
regular meeting night . the next
mee1lng of Council wl!l be
Tuesday, Sept. 6. at 7 p.m.

Racing highlights Meigs Fair

c

4 roll

reported he has received a State Park. Residents of Olive
request from Letart Township · Township complained lo the
Trustees for an extension to be commissioners and county engi·
added to Letart Township Road neer several months ago when
631. Roberts Is to review the Ohio Department of Natural
request.
Resources' employees rnade a
Brought up ·by Commissioner decision to barrtcade the road.
Manning Roush was a matter Although steps were taken at that
Involving an Olive Township time to clear up the problem and
Road Into Forked R11n Lake. This define rights of way for this road,
road provides the only other the matter remains unresolved,
access to the lake besides the Roush said. Roberts said he
main entrance to Forked Run would check Into the situation.

Warner, highway superintend· sidewalks In Middleport was
ent, could report the exact costs accepted by the commissioners.
of this year's paving although The Middleport project is being
Warner said costs were probably • funded by a Community DevelopIn the vicinity of $175,000 to ment Block Grant. A preconstruction meeting on the
$200,000.
Roberts said he has received project Is to be scheduled right
"a lot of positive comments" on away by Kim Shields, Meigs
County's director of
this year's res urfaclng program.
The low bid of $8,970 from Ken development.
Hartley to construct access
In other matters related to the
ramps for the handicapped on
highway department, Roberts

·•

field Wlll. owned by Michael
Swatzel, VIncent. formerly of
Pomeroy, and Brooks . Sayre,
Syracuse. and driven by Sayre
was second In both races.
First and second, respec1lvely,
in the second and eighth races for
three year old trotters was Mingo
Mac, owned by Mr . and Mrs.
Vinal Link, Sunbury, and driven
by Ll nk. Seco~d In the second
was a loca'J!y owned horse,

.

-.

-

Bropaul. owned by Paul ~ayrc of
Racine and driven by Brooks
Sayre. Propau I was t hlrd in the
eighth. First In the ejghth was
G.W. Du Rite . owned anddrivpn
by Ron Fuller of ~ewark.
Don Spencer drove Ha nkv
Panky, owned by him and
Sedonia SpencN. to first and
second places. respective!~·. in
the third and ninth races lo r two ·
(See RACING, page 3)

Board explains "oo' votes
Robert Snowden, president of the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education, has Issued an explanation of his "no'' votes
cast In regard to hlrlpg of personnel at Tuesday night's hoard
meeting.
Snowden reports that he has been advised by an attorney of
the Ohio School Boards Association that local board members
should have the recommendation of the county superlntenden1
of schools In the hiring of all certified personnel for contracts,
including supplemental eo'ntracts.
Snowden stresses that his negative voting on employment of .
certified personnel, particularly In the one year footba 11 staff
action Tuesday night, was cast as a result of the attornev's
advice on the county superintendent's required recommenda:
tion In all cases and not for any other reason.

•

.·

�Thursday, August 18, 1988

Comment

Page-2-.The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-4Middleport. Ohio
Thursday.
August 18. 1988
.
.

Greening of nuclear

The Daily Sentinel

Hot enough? You should be.
It doesn't only feel hot: lt

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
~v

-.-.,..,.....,d.....

n-L....&lt; ......

ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Conlroller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Un ited Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arP welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wUh name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters s hould be In

good taste; addressing issues, not personalltles.

'·

Parties try to cast
bnage of Quayle
'

'

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
l iPJ Political Writer

.
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - For two solid days, Republican and
Democratic strategists across the country have waged a
tJe1!ind-the-scenes battle over Dan Quayle, trying to take advantage
of fils obscurity to quickly frame voters' perceptions of the man who is
the GOP's surprise of the year.
•
How they fare may very well help determine if Vice President
George Bush's.bold selection of the 41-year-old senator as his running
mate ls eventually viewed as a stroke of genius or a serious blunderand that could piay a large role in the success or failure of Bush's
drJ.ve for the White House.
in an almost non-stop flurry that began Immediately after Bush
stunned the GOP convention with his choice, Republican strategists
have told almost anyone who will listen that Quayle - who most
Americans never heard of- is a foreign policy and defense expert. a
generational leader and an inspiring presence who will ignite a
prairie fir" of support for the vice president.
At the same time, their Democratlc counterparts have gone on a
quick counter-offensive, frenetically trying to paint Quayle as
Inexperienced and opposed to popular legislative elforts such as the
pllint closing notification bill, the Civil Rights Restoration Act and
droughl relief.
Because Quayle is so unknown, the stakes are particularly high. He
will get only one chance to make a first impression on voters and , with
the election less than three months away, that impression will be
critical.
"I think yotJ have a group of voters who now have a candidate of
their own generation - and that's the first one - and someone
younger than most candidates for pres ident and vice president,"
Bush campaign adviser Robert Teeter said Wednesday.
"That alone will make him an interesting pick to a large number of
)'Oters and they 'll pay attention," added Teeter, noting that voters of
baby-boom age and younger now comprise a "clear majority" of the
electorate.
:nre general tack taken by the Bush camp has been to immediately
play up Quayle's youth and energy by contrasting him with
67:year-old Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, the Democratic vice
pfesidential candidate.
Bush himself did that in a very high-proflle way Wednesday by
bringing up the subject of debates and noting, " The one I can't wait
for is when Dan Quayle walks into the arena or on that stage with
Lklvd Bentsen. We're going to do very well, thank you."
lie even pointed to himself to boost Quayle's youth, noting, " He's
different from me. I'm 64 and he's 41 and that's good- that's posit ive
because his message of hope and opportunity ... will resound and have
great emphasis in the areas of younger people."
The Democrats, meanwhile, have been equally busy trying to put
their own spin on Quayle's age, repeatedly trying to convince
reyorters that he is a "lightweight" in the Senate with a sparse record
of· accomplishment. And they have also not shied away from
comparisons to Bentsen, contending that the ,Texan's extensive
congressional record gives him the proper tools to lead the nation.
Susan Estrich, campaign manager for Democratic presidential
candidate Michael Dukakis, said the choice of Quayle was a
desperate move by Bush, while the Democrat's campaign chairman,
Paul Brountas, framed his own comparison between the two vice
presidential candidates, noting that Bentsen "accomplished more in
one vear than Senator Quayle has in all his years in Congress."
Dukakis press secretary Dayton Duncan also tried Wednesday to
punch holes in the argument that Quayle, because of his good looks,
mav help Bush among certain segments of the women 's vote. "In
terms of the gender gap, I don't believe that the problem that Reagan
and Bush )lave with women has anything to do with their looks,"
Duncan said. "!don't think looks are going to solve the problem for
them.''

" ! just don't see what he adds to the ticket," noted former
Democratic candidate Walter Mondale.
While his aides and supporters put on a fuli-CQurt press trying to
bUster Quayle, Dukakis also hit the new addition to national pol\tics,
but tried to be subtle.
"!don't know Mr. Quayle. I don 't know that much about him,"
Dukakls told a news conference in Minnesota. "But! will say this , I'm
very happy with mv selection of Lloyd Bentsen. Since the day I asked
him to run I don' t-think anyone has suggested he isn' t qualified to
move Into the Oval Office if that were necessary."
Asked if he were suggesting that Quayle, a relatively unknown
sena tor, isn' t up to that task, Dukakls said, "That judgment the
American !ieople are going to have to make. ! just point out that no one
has raised that with Mr. Bentsen."
·

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Aug. 18, the 231st day of 1988 with 135 to follow,
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include
explorer Meriwether Lewis in 1774, Chicago department store
founder Marshall Field In 1834 . songwriter Otto Harbach ("Smoke
Gels In Your Eyes") In 1873, former Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger in 1917 (age 71), actress Shelley Winters in 1922 (age 66),
foirner flrst lady Rosa lynn Carter In 1927 (age 61), film director
Ra;man Polanski In 1933 (age 55), baseball player Roberto Clemente
In .1934, and actor Robert Redford ln 1937 (age 51) ,

officially Is hot. This year may
end up as the hottest one since
records have been kept. And the
four runner-up years were all in
the 1980s!
What's going on? Is the world
really getting hotter and hotter?
Some environmental scientists
think so, and they say It's
because so many people are
using so much fossil fuel essentially coal and oil. They say
. these fuels , when burned, yield
gases - particularly carbon
dioxide - that create the socalled "greenhouse effect."
In decades to come, lt Is
maintained, the earth will get
hotter still. More drought will be
likely, more farmers w!ll be in
trouble, icecaps might melt, the
sea level may rise dangerously In
cities close to the coasts.
True• No one really knows.
Some experts say yes, it's
already upon us. Others say
there Is not enough hard evidence
to make a sound judgement, but
If the process hasn't started yet,

lt will probably begin In a few
decades.
If we don't know all the facts,lt
Is nonetheless Interesting to pay
attention to the remedies that are
being proposed by the environmental community, and the
intensity with which they are
expressed.
What should we do about the
greenhouse effect• Conserve on
our use of fossil fuel, the
environmentalists say. That Is a
good· Idea. We've done a great
deal since the Arab oil shocks of
the 1970s. There Is more that can
be done with existing technology.
And with advances In flelds llke
micro-computers and ceramic
engines coming on line, there's
even more that will be available
to help.
The environmentalls ts also say
let's go to solar power. That's a
good Idea, too, but It shouldn't be
trumpeted just yet. Repeated
earlier attempts have shown that
solar power has big problems .
(The Japanese - surprise! seem to be taking the lead in
photo-voltaic panels.) We shall

po~er__.:____
Be_n_W:_at-:-te_nb_er...:...g
soon see how much utility there Is
in the next round of solar
development.
Conservation. Solar power.
And then, on occas lon, a stray
environmentalist whispers a
third alternative, and the hated
word is sounded: "nuclear." The
whisper continues: "Maybe we'd
better re-investigate nuclear
power.' '
Ironically, it was environmental activists and their polltical
allles who played one of the
leading roles In destroying nuclear power in America. The
primal no-nothing shriek of "No
Nukes!" took the place of a
rational dialogue regarding
ways to wisely refonn America's
troubled nuclear Industry. And
so, no nuclear plant ordered
since 1974 has been buill . This
despite the fact that nuclear
power is safe, clean - and does
not produce greenhou~ gases.
The French have demonstrated
the way to go: standardized
power plant designs rather than
the crazy-quilt proliferation of
designs that have been the rule in
the United States .

If the current concern about a
hotter cllmate and the greenhouslngof America is valid (and
it probably Is) it seems clear that ·
tile United States and the rest of
the world wUI have to ·move
further on nuclear power. This Is
true even If we can take a big bite
out of our own fossil fuel
consumption through conserva·
tion and solar energy.
· But that alone won't solve the
problem. It Is a global situation.
World population will be climbIng from five billion to close to10
billlon people before population ·
l-evels off in the next century.
About nine bllllon of these prople
will be living in countries that are
now poor. To allow those people
to modernize and improve their
standard of living, means one
thing: much more energy .
Energy use is a basic ingredient
of human progress- always has
been. always will be.
The choice, it seems, will end
up as a fairly stark one: nuclear
power or global poverty. The
environmentalists ought to bite
the bullet on· that - the nuclear
bullet.

Psychiatry and the 'presid,encY-_V_in_ce_nt_Ca_rro_ll
Mental health made a brief
appearance on th e poII t IcaI stage
this month, lingering just long
enough for some people to
discover still another "prejudice" In our midst.
A phone call from a stranger
alerted me to the phenomenon.
Our discussion follows, more or
less intact.
Caller: I'm with the stati&gt;
mental-health association. We
were wondering If we could meet
with your editorial board to
discuss the flap over whether
Michael Dukakis saw a psychiatrist for depression. The publiclty underscores the fact that
there's stlll a "stigma" assoelated in some minds with
therapy.
Me: But the issue is dead,
right? Dukakis denies having
seen a psychiatrist, and there's

d

I'm
not sure Ioubthlm.Anyway,
follow your point.
noreasonto
Are you suggesting . people
shouldn't care whether a presi-

national hero with nothin~ to
f d t o be
prove, h e usua II y reuse
stampeded into either dubious
domestic expenditures or militarv excursions -or, In the late
1900s, into the fevered exaggerationof enemy strength so dear to
the likes of John Kennedy and
Richard Nixon.
Kennedy, on the other hand,
seethedwiththeneedtoprovehis
toughness. No doubt that's partly
why, having learned of a cockeyed plan to invade Cuba with a
ragtag army of refugees, he
failed to stand up to the CIA and
cancel the Bay of Pigs,
Then there was Lyndon Johnson. Didn't his compulsion to
bully subordinates help explain
how he managed to delude
himself about his Vietnam
policy?
For that matter, weren't Nix-

Plenty of Time to Enj" oy
the •'Fai· r"
Support Our youth!

"WE SELL AN"JHIN""
1
V

EDWARD "MI•.ke'' MARTIN
3790 SR 7

UCENSBI &amp; BONDED IN FAVOR OF THE STATE Of OHIO

INTEREST RATES AR.E GOING UPt
LAST CHANCE
FOR
l
·

9°/0 FIXED RATE FINANCING.

I

I

.

Nine cases were processed in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
The included: Cynthia Freeman, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
destruction of property; Jeffrey T. Davis, Jackson, $43 and
costs. unlawful left turn; Kenneth Mankin, Pomeroy, $88 and
costs, open flask; Mark Casto, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, and
Brian Sharp, Reedsville, $63 and costs, discharging fireworks;
William R. Lindeman, Pomeroy, $52 and costs, speeding;
Teresa Sennett, Pomeroy, $43 and costs, improper turn; Terry
Van Kirk, Dexter, $63 and costs, squer.ling tires; Earl R. Reid,
Pomeroy, $61 and costs, speeding, and $375, driving while
intoxicated .

Golf scramble announced
A scramble for all members was announced for Tuesday,
Aug. 23, when the Jaymar Ladies Golf League met Tuesday.
Door prizes will be awarded during the event. Winners after 18
holes of play on Tuesday were Sue Burnett, low gross; Mary
Froendt, low net, and Sue Burnett, low putts.

Hospital report announced
Admissions and discharges for Wednesday were announced
bv Veteran's Memorial Hospital. Admitted were Williard
Boyer, Pomeroy; Eva Lawson, Racine.
Wednesday discharges were Floyd Cummins, James Owen,
Lillian Werry.

EMS reports eight calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Wednesdav· Racine at 9:37a.m. transported Jane Ann
Ritchie from the' fairgrounds to Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Pomeroy at 11:13 a.m. to Union· Ave. for Opal Cummins to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:11p.m . to Butternut
Ave . for Virginia Hedrick to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at
7:14p.m. transported Martha Howe from an auto accident on
New Lima Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital; MldQ)eportat
7: 35p.m. to High St. for Charles Wilson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 7:54 p.m. to Walnut St. for Wayne
Williams to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at
7:57p.m. to the Bellville Locks and Dam for Troy Mann to S_t.
Joseph's Hospital; Racine at 10: 15 p.m. transported Je~me
Buckley from the fairgrounds to Veterans Memorial Hospttal.

Andrew F. Lemley , 83, Middleport, died Wednsday night at
Veterans Memoria! Hospital.
Born in Gallia County on July
13, 1905, Mr. Lemley was a son of
the late AndrewS. and Ollie Allen
Lemley . He was a retired coal
miner and painter. He belonged
to the Poplar Ridge Freewlll
Baptist Church and the Middleport Fire Department.
Surviving are three daughters,
Betty Jane Lemley and Mildred
E . Lambert, both of Middleport;
Bertha June Wheeler. West Co-

By United Press International
Attempting to ward off recordhigh temperatures in the upper
90s and lower JOOs, Ohioans used
electricity In record amounts
Wednesday .
High-temperature records for
Aug. 17 were broken at . every
regular National Weather Service reporting station in the
state. The mercury reached 102
degrees in Dayton and 100 in
Cincinnati.
The previous record in Day ton,
98, had stood since 1908.
Columbus Southern Power Co.
customers consumed a level of
electricity the utility had· not
expected until 1994. Demand
Wednesday afternoon averaged
2.819 million kilowatt hours , up13
percent from the 1987 peak.

1988 CHEVROLET
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Ohio Power Co. customers
used a record of just over 5
million kilowatts of electricity,
and Clncinnatl Gas &amp; Electric
Co. usage of 3.996 million kilowatts broke Monday's record of
3.977 million.
Customers of the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. consumed a little more than 4 million
kilowatt hours, and Toledo Edi·
son Co. customers used a record
1.6 million kilowatt hours. Born. bined usage of 5.673 miiUon
kilowatt hours was a record for
their paren Lcompany, Centertor
Energy.
American Electric Power
reached record retail demand of
17,164 megawatts, 10.3 percent
above the 1987 summer high, at 5
p.m. Wednesda'y.

TOM PEDEN
992-2156

lumbla, W. Va.,; two sons,
Freddie L., Addison, and Charles
R., Spring Lakes, N.C.; a sister,
Viva Searls, Pomeroy, 11 grandchildren, 13 great-gran·d children
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife.
Eve lena Foley Lemley in 1977, a
daughter Wanda Isabelle Johnson, five brothers and two
sisters.
Graveside rites will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Rawlings-Coats-Blpwer Funeral Home from 4 to 9 p.m.
Friday .

utilities far exceeding their
forecasts.
"These peaks are being driven
by a strong economy," be said,
"as well as extreme temperatures. It's weather-related, obviouslv, but that's not the sole
cause: It's happening in the
midst of a reboundlngeconomy."
Highs statewide today were
expected to range from the upper
70s to near 90. forecasters said.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
'

· Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ................. .'.... .. .. .. ..... 24 Jis
Ashland 011 . ........................ 33
Bob Evans ..........................16%
Charming Shoppes .............. 13%
City Holding Co .................. 34 1h
Federal Mogul. ................... 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ............... 58
Heck's ...... :............................ :Y.,
Key Centurion .................... . 17
Lands' End ......................... 27%
Limited Inc ........ ...... ... ·., ..... 20%
Multimedia IM ..... ,.............. 71
Rax Restaurants ................ .. ..4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11%
Shoney's Inc .........................7%
Wendy's Inti ..... .... ............... 5%
Worthington Ind ....... ..........22%

Celeste
assistant
•
resigns
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Joan
Hammond, one of Gov. Richard
Celeste's assistants, has announced her resignation rather
than accept a transfer to Columbus from Washington.
Hammond, a special assistant
in the state's Washington office,
has been under investigation in a
job-training grant scandal. She
was suspended for 20 days ln
June . in connection with an
investigation in\9 the awarding
of federal money by the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services .
The order to return to Columbus was Issued because of a
federal Investigation into the
problem , Celeste aides said.
The governor suspended Hammond June 20, after accusing her
of falling to tell him about
potential problems with the
grants she handled between
April 1983 and January 1987 as
the director of the state's Job
Training Partnership Act
program.

year old filly pacers . Second in
the third was ldealady , owned
and driven by Ralph Calvert. Jr. ,
Ppmeroy, and first in the ninth
• wa&gt;Magnetic Smooch, owned by
Sue Conley, Columbus.
Sun Del Judy owned by Larry
Six, Washington, C.H., and
driven by Don Spencer came
through for first place wins in
both the fourth and lOth race for
two year old filly pacers. Second
in both races was Coe Zada,
driven by Joe Andre and owned
by W. Pfdeffear and R. Howe of
Piketon and Jackson.
.
Driven by Terry VanRhoden,
Roll N Sweet Pie was first in both
the fifth and 11th races for three
vear old fillies . The filly Is owned
bv Garv Peck and Clarence
Haybrori of McArthur. Second in
both races was Led It Snow,
owned by Ralph Mallet tt, Lewisville, and . drive n by Dean
Foraker.
Terrv Van Rhoden drove
Mighty Tara, owned by Burton
Walker, Sunbury, to first place
wins in the sixth and 12th races
for three year old filly trotters.

Second place in the sixth went to
Fair Classy, owned and driven by
Jim Sautter, Lexington, Ky., and
Don Spencer, driving McMello,
owned 'by Roger Spencer of
Pomeroy, came in second in the
12th.
Karate Colt , owned by Bob
Pugh, Barlow, and driven by
Terry VanRhoden was first in the

..'

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New York. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address chan2E'S
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Pomeroy. Ohio

.'
13th race for two year old pacers. ·
Savre came through with a
victory In the 14th race for the • ·
two year old pacers driving his _
own horse. Brookfield Blast. for
the win. Mac's Chris, owned by
Jack MacDonald, Portsmouth.
and driven by AI Jones was first
in the 15th race, also for two year
old pacers.

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Racing ,highlights... _&lt;_Fr_om_RA_c_•N_G._p_ag_e~-)- - - - - - - : -

Stocks

NO MONEY DOWN!

Qn this date In history:

Athought for the day: shelley Winters said•.•'Now that I'm over 60,
I'm veering towar~ respectability."
,,
,

Nine cases heard: in Pomeroy

Ohioans gobble electricity ,
to ward off record-high heat

(ENDS SATURDAY, AUG. 20th)

.

In 1916, Abraham Lincoln's birthplace in Kentucky was given to the
U.S. government as a national shrine to the 16th president.
In 1940, the United States and Canada established a World War II
pllin of joint defense against possible enemy attacks.
1)1 1976, President Gerald Ford was nominated In Kansas City, Mo. ,
to ·bead the Republ!can ticket. He lost the presidential race to
Democrat Jimmy Carter In November.
.J)l 1982, Lebanon and the Palestine Liberation Organization
approved a plan for withdrawal of PLO fighters from besieged West
Beirut; Israel approved It the following day,

1

NEW1988
8-10 PICKUP

Two defendants forfeited bonds and four others were fined in
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Joseph A. Snyder, Pomer~y. $50, failure to
yield the right of way, and Robin Nance, Racine, $450, driving
while Intoxicated.
Fined were Terry R. Little, Middleport, $425 and costs, three
days in jail, driving while intoxicated; Charles McCloud,
Middleport, $25 and costs; Josephine Donohue, Middleport, $25
and costs, both charged with disorderly manner; Stephanie
English, Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's license.

Andrew F. Lemley

614-985·4396

'

Tu;o forfeit bonds in Middleport

---Area death----

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

AUCTIONEER
EDWARD "MIKE" MARTIN

-Local news briefs.-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

DIGITAL

and isolation ct&gt;ntr 1 to his
f~o~n~·s~p~er~s~o~na~l~lt;y~,~h~i~s~s~u~s~p~lc~io~n~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~;;;;;;~;;~~

dential
candidatetwice
needed
psych!·
atrlc counseling
In his
life?
Caller: Of course they
shouldn't
care.
Me: Well,
I certa!nlv care.
Caller: If I might sav so, sir.
perhaps you're one of those who
stigmatizes people for visiting a
therapist.
At this point, I explained that
my attitude was somewhat more
complicated. Character, as the
saying goes, Is fate. While It
makes little difference whether a
crisis Immobilizes most of us
with depression, It matters a
great deal how a president reacts
to emergencies . Voters can't
possibly be sure In advance, but
they need to Inspect every bit of
evidence in trying to guess.
No, there's nothing wrong with
seeing a therapist, no routine
reason It should diminish our
respect for someone's talent or
accomplishments. Nor should a
brief history of dt&gt;presslon automatically disqualify someone
from political office. Abe Lincoln
succeeded despite a gloomy cast
of mind. Even the e bulllent
Winston Churchill occasionally
succumbed to deep despondency
- a condition he calleil his
" black dog."
.
Given a choice, however,
surely most Americans would
prefer to see the White House
occupied by someone steady and
consistent rather than subject to
wild swings In mood, someone
utterly comfortable with him- or
her~lf and thus capable of
accepting criticism, someone
calm and unflappable under
pressure and so prone to mea·
sured response to threats.
We may not care whether our
mechanic, lawyer or grocer
sinks Into troughs of despair, but
our Pt:esident? That's quite
another story.
Just consider the role played
hy character In postwar pres!d·
encles. Eisenhower personified
the untlappa ble Ideal of confl·
dent, stable leadership. As a

downfall?
too late. We'd be foolish to Ignore
hints of a problem in advance of
Often we fall to learn of a casting our vote.
1
r~p~re:s:!d:e:n:t:'s:w:e:a:k:n:e:s:se:s:u:n:t:l:it=·=s============:;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19

Showmen of Showmen Contest
In Show Arena
12:00 Noon All Meigs County Fair Chorus; lim Stage
1:00 P.M. Pet Show-Show Arena
1: 00 P.M. Pork ·Cook·Off-Hill Stage
2:00P.M. Horse Harness Racing
4:00P.M. All Meigs County Fair Chorus, Hill Stage
4: 00 P .M. · Kiddie Tractor Pull
6:00' .M, Midnight Cloggers-H111 Stage
6:30P.M. Jim and Connie Prenger, Show Ring
6: 45 P ,M. Dairy Sweepstakes Presentation,
Show Ring
7:00P.M. Junior Fair Market Steer, Lamb
and Hog Sale
7:30P.M. Truck Pull
8:00 P.M. Jim 11nd Connie Prenger,
"8:00P.M. Crossover Band
10:00 A.M.

"We expected to see our
summer peak go up about 1.5
percent a year through the next
five years, but the actual growth
· In demand is running six times
higher than forecast," said AEP
Vice President Charles Falcone.
"We're seeing this all over the
East Coast and the Midwest,

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�•

iddleport, Ohio

Sentinel

The

•

.ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP &amp; PARTS

Rio baseball team schedules
limited number of fall games
Fall may be· the traditional
time of the year for football. but
it's anything byt an extension of
the off·season for college baseball players.
The Rio Grande Redmen baseball team will play a limited
schedule of games In September
and October to stay In practice. II
will also give Coach Dave
Oglesby . . entering his second
year at Rio Grande. a look at hls
new and returning talent.

The team's first meeting i;l set
for Wednesday._.S.ug. 24 at 3:30
p.m. in the Lyne Centf"r gymnasi um. Practice begins· Monday,
Aug. 29. Oglesby said tryouts will
be conducted with &lt;'mphasis on
conditioning and fundamentals.
The fall season, he said, wi ll be

Commentary

District 22 (17·16 lor .515! and posit ion players."
Lost to graduation this year
filth In the Mld·Ohlo Conference
(7·7) . Conference champion was were pitchers Rick .Brown and
Mount Vernon Nazarene (26-14 Eugene Collins, first baseman
overall for .650, 11-3 In the MOC and District!MOC team selection
for .676) while Wilmington !26·16- Trey Seibel, outfielder Rob
1 on the season for .623, 23-9-1 in Smith, catcher Ed Yates and
district play for .723) holds the infielder Larry Conrad.
Since spring, Oglesby has been
Ohio NAJA title.
busy
recruiting and hls efforts
"I look forward to this vear's
have
brought
to Rio Grande six
baseball season," Oglesby said. •
freshmen.
They
Include Dave
''We have a number of promising
Amburgey
(Racine,
Southern
recruits coming In and It should
Local),
Brent
Bissell
(Pomeroy,
be fun working with them as well
Meigs·), Jon Gibson (Chesaas the returning players."
Oglesby added that It's "too peake). Pat Holmes (Ironton,
early to determine the strength Ironton St . Joe), Scott McManus
of the team, since we face a [Glouster , Trimble Local) and
rebulldlng situation, having lost Kelly Wilson (Columbus. Bishop
six seniors, five of whom were Hartley).

approximately eight weeks, during which the 1989 team wlll be
selected.
The Redmen will play Marshall Un1versily away on Sept.
15, oppose West Virginia Wesleyan on the road Sept . 18, host
Wilmington on Sept. 24 and
confront Marshall again on Oct . 4
at home. All ar&lt;' 1 . p.m.
doubleheaders.
Oglesby said a second game Is
tentatively scheduled with Wll·
mlngton, with the date and time
· to be announced later. Other
games are to be added and will be
announced, he said.
Rio Grande finished the 1988
season 19-17-1 overall r .534).
ending up at seventh place in

Edwards needs to get tough
I

By ROBERTO DIAS
UP I Sports Wr iler
CLEVELAND !UP!) -Is Doc
Edwards guilty of malpractice?
It depends on who you talk to,
read or hear.
Since winnlng 16 of their flrsl20
ga mes. the Cleveland Indians
have looked pretty unhealthy.
You can't argue with !acts. Bulls
Edwards toblame, and If so. does
he deserve to be rehired?
Hank Peters, the president and
·essentially general manager of
the Indians, has said that a
decis ion will be made after the
season as to whether the genial
Doc will be back in house in 1989.
Peters is being fair when he says
tha t many of the veteran Indians
-Greg Swi ndell. Tom Candiottl.
Joe Carter and Brook Jacoby, to
name a few -

have not co m·

pletely performed up to
expectations.
Swindell and tandiotti have
not pitched consiste ntly well
while Carter, Jacoby and Cory
Snyder still are mystified by the
stri ke zOnt=o.

Pete rs himself has not. either
by limitations or design, given
Edwards much to utilize. Con·
sider that such luminaries as
Paul Zuvella, Domingo Ramos,
Dan Schatzeder, Chris Codiroll

and Jeff Dedmon gave graced
the Tribe's roster this season.
Now there's something named
Alfonso "Houston" Jimenez on
board. There's a pool In the press
box concerning the date of
Jimenez' first at -bat. Indeed, he
may not get one this season.
Peters Is still talking to teams
concerning trades, wllh all sorts
of rumors flying around: Julio
Franco to somewhere, somebody
to Boston !or Spike Owen, anyb·
ody lor anybody , etc.
A lack of needed personnel
aside, Edwards must shoulder
some of the blame lor this
wayward '88. There have been
times the Indians have appeared
completely lost and other times
where key Individuals simply fail
to answer the bell.
A lack of motivation may bo&gt;
the problem, and It Is In this area
where Edwards must assert
himself. Problem is, Doc reallv
Isn't the rah-rah type.
·
An editor of mine recently
remarked that teams tend to
respond to unsuccessful managers by hiring replacements that
are opposite In temperament and
philosophy.
How true. The friendlv and
quiet Doc Edwards replac'ect the
gruff and taciturn Pat Corrales.

The

technica l and reserved
Schottenhelmer took over
lpr good neighbor Sam Rutigliano. The cordial and low-key
Lenny Wilkens relleved the emo. tiona! and enthusiastic George
Karl.
Edwards needs to become a bit
more of a take-charge leader In
discharging his managerial du·
·ties. There's little time left for
him to do so, however, and there
seems little doubt his job is one
the line. Indeed, the pendulum
appears to have swung toward
Doc's departure.
And that .would be a shame.
Just once. you tend to wish ·Leo
Durocher was wrong a bout the
nice guys.
!~;'~arty

0

The Indians certainly did Chris
Banda a favor by releasing him ,
giving the veteran catcher a
chance to hook one with a
contender ·or at least look to
secure a spring training
Invitation.
Banda made the most or
limited skllls in his career, but
his knowledge will benefit any
team need! ng an experienced
backup. By the way, "CB" was
not hiding from the media when
Edwards gently gave him the
news . The player only wished to
tell his wife the proper way.

Thursdav. August 18, 1988

Browns Bits: Every training
camp, the media gets to vote for
the most impressive Cleveland
Btowns' rookie. Thane Gash has
to be the fellow this year. The
safety has played very well,
showing the finesse of a veteran.
I've got to hand It to Webster
Slaughter for get tlng right to
work alter his ill-a dvised hal·
dout. He has smoothed many
ruffled feathers with hls efforts.
But he still n~eds a new agent.
Matt Bahr's tenure cer\illnly Is
shaky, considering the performance of second-vear kicker Jeff
Jaeger to date. jaeger's efforts
may also help secure a roster
spot for punter Lee Johnson, who
has been the holder on field-goal
attempts. Word is that Bahr Is
being dangled as trade bait.
A pulled hamstring and a lack
of speed doomed ex-Ohio State
sta r Mike Lanese's chance with
lhe Browns, who waived the
wideout Tuesday . Lanese, a
Rhodes scholar, basically was a
Brian Brennan clone and Marty
Schottenheimer decided not to
use a roster spot on a another
slow target lor Bernie Kosar.
Kosar keeps saying he "only
has one gear" In evaluating his
mobility, but he looks more fluid
afoot this year. The off-season
dedication is paying off.

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season, three off Blrkbeck.
The Indians Increased their
lead to 10-2 with a six-run fifth.
Snyder had an RBI single and
Allanson greeted Odell Jones
with a two-run singla. Zuvella
added a run -scoring double,
Houston Jimenez had an RBI
fielder's choice and Carter lifted
a sacrifice fly .
Rob Deer had an RBI fielder's
choice In the Brewers' sixth.
Snyder led off the Cleveland sixth
with his 22nd homer. Mike Felder
had an RBI . groundout, Joey
Meyer an RBI single and Dale
Sveum a two-run double to pull
Milwaukee within 11-7 in the
eighth.

Farrell allowed five runs on
eight hit s over 71·3 innings. Don
Gordon relieved afto&gt;r Farrell
suffered a bruised right c hest
when hit by Mike Felder 's line
drive, and allowed two r uns on
three hit s.
' 'The las tcouple of games, I 've
been hit ting the spots and making adjustments along the way,"
said Farrell. 18-8 since joining
the India ns in August 1987. "You
have to try a nd do the job and
forget about giving up the early
runs. I've got a bruise , but it Is n't
sPrious."

Birkbeck. 8-6, had gone 6·0
since bemg reca ll ed .July 2 from
Triple· A Denver. He walked f.lve .
in 4 1-3 innings . The right-hander
had walked just seven batters In
his li r~t 53 .2-3 innings si nce
rejoining the Brewers.
"Jt was a situation where I
didn't have control of anything,"
said Birkbeck. "l was throwing a
lot or fastballs . but r wasn't
getti ng the m over the plate. "
Trailing 2-1, Clevela nd turned
thre1e walks into a 3-2.edge In the
second . The Indians loaded the
bases on s ingles by Cory Snyder
and Willie Upshaw, and a one·ou t
walk to Andy Ailanson. Paul
Zuvella and Terry Francona
walked to force In two runs .
"I don't think he rBtrkbeck)
pilched very well," said Milwaukee Manager Tom Trebelhorn,
·who had infielder Juan Castillo
warming up in the bullpen at one
point. "(He ) had too many
pitches up In the strike zone."
Cleveland opened to 4·2 when
Carter led off the third wlth his
second homer of the game and
~2nd of the season. He has five
homers against the Brewers this

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Mike Maddux, 3·3, surrendered
· By JOEL SHERMAN
10
hits and two walks In six
UPJ Sports WrHer
"Innings.
The Dodgers lead the NL
Dave LaPoint and John Tudor
West
by
3 1-2 games over
eased successfully Iilio pennant
Houston.
races Wednesday night.
Elsewhere In the NL, Houston
At Pittsburgh, LaPoint yielded
three hits over seven Innings In shaded St. Louis 1-0, Chicago
the Pirates' 2·1 triumph over the blanked Cincinnati 5-0, San Diego
downed Montreal 4·2 and San
Atlanta. Braves.
AtLas Angeles, Tudor allowed Francisco beat New York 4-0.
Astros 1, Cardinals 0
11 singles In sparking the
At
St.
Louts, Dave Meads, an
Dodgers to a 7-2 triumph over the
emergency
starter for the in·
Philadelphia Phlllles.
jured
Bo~
Knepper
, teamed with
In ·the last week, LaPoint and
three
relievers
on
a
three-hitter
Tudor moved through trades
and
Glenn
Davl~
scored
on a wild
from teams struggling near the
bottOm of their divisions to clubs pitch to lift Houston. It was ihe
lighting near the top. They are first start of the season for
what many competing teams . Meads, 2-0. Dave' Smith earned
yearn for - exper lenced left. his 22nd save. Joe Magrane, 2-7,
was the loser.
banders.
Padres 4, Expos 2
LaPoint went to Pittsburgh on
At
San
Diego, Tony Gwynn
Saturday from the Chicago White
keyed
a
four-run
sixth Inning
Sox for Barry Jones. Tudor was
with
a
bases-load,
two-run
single
acquired by Los Angeles from St . .
to
11ft
the
Padres
.
Gwynn,
who
Louis Tuesday lor Pedro
went
2
for
4,
tied
Atlanta's
Gerald
Guerrero.
The Pirates closed within 41-2 Perry for the NL batting lead at
.321. Dennis Rasmussen, 12-7,
games of the first·place New
York Mets In the National was the winner. Mark Davis
League East. Pittsburgh has gained his 21st save. Bryn Smith,
longed to add another left· 8-7, took the loss.
Glanls 4, Mels 0
handed starter to join Smlley and
At
San
Francisco, Rick Reu the rlghty contingent of Mike
schel
silenced
a New York attack
Dunne, Doug Drabek and Brian
that
had
generated
13 runs the
Fisher.
previous
day
by
pltchlnghls
fifth
LaPoint sti'Uck out two and
career
two-hitter
to
11ft
the
walked none. Jell Robinson
Giants.
Reuschel,
16-6,
became
worked the eighth for Pittsburgh ·
and Jim Gott pitched the ninth the fourth NL pitcher to reach 16
lor his 22nd save. Tom Glavlne, victories. David Cone, 12-3,
matched his career-high of 12
4·14, was the loser.
strikeouts
The Dodger• needed to add a
lefty with the loss of one-time
southpaw ace Fernando Valenzu·
ela with a shoulder injury. Tudor
Is one of baseball's best left·
banders.
Tudor posted his fifth complete
•~~~:;~o~~f: ~t~he year and lowered his
I~
ERA to 2.22. The
left·hander. helped by three
ld011blE plays, Improved to 7-5 this
season and 3-0 In four starts
laga.lnst Phlladelphla.
Tudor, who reported to Dodger

Cincinnati shut out by Chicago Cubs 5-0
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Sud·
Among the names that cropped cally, but I'm just not getting
denly, the Cincinnati Reds have up In trade talk were those of people out," said 23-year-old
run Into pitching problems that Sutcliffe, 10-10 on the season Armstrong, who pitched a nohave forced them to make some alter pitching his ninth complete hitter for Nashville just 10 days
changes as they head Into the !ale game Wednesday night and ago when he spent a week In the
stages of the season.
lowering his ERA to 3.59, Rick minors. '' Maybe part of Jt has
Jack Armstrong, who failed to MahleroftheAtlantaBravesand been getting adjusted in the
last through the second Inning Bob Forsch of the St. Louis majors, maybe I've .been trying
Wednesday night In a 5-0 loss to Cardinals, all of them high-paid too hard .
"I don't totally agree with the
the Chicago Cubs, paid the price veterans who could be available
decision to send me back." he
when the big rlght·hander
if the price Is right.
Wednesday was optioned to
"You can always make a · added, "but I'll try to get
Nashville of the Cl!j,ss AAA trade," Cook adm!Hed, "but you somethl!'g out of lt. I still believe
American Association.
want to pick up someone who can In tnyself, and I'll be back In a
Recalled from Nashville to help you In the pennant drive. We couple of weeks (when the Reds
take Armstrong's spot on the • prefer togoalongwlthour young are permitted to expand their
24-man roster was' lefty Norm people In our minor league roster on Sept. 1). "
"Armstrong's going to be an
Charlton, who was to join the system, like Charlton .(who is
outstanding
pitcher, " Cook preteam today In time for the final 25) ."
dicted.
"He
simply had very
game of the homestand with the
Armstrong, who gave up four
Cubs and then start Friday night runs on as many hfts In 1 23 llltle experience, but he'll defiIn St. Louis.
Innings. In losing for the sixth nitely be back, because he has a
Charlton, 11-10 with Nashville time In eight decisions, admitted lot of confidence in himself, and
that's good."
with a 3.02 earned run average, he couldn't figure out what's
Sutcliffe, In complete control
has won four In a row and struck caused the problems that have
out 161ln 180 Innings. ·
seen hls earned run average soar against the Reds, retired the last
Further complicating the sl·
to 6.70 (and 15.87 his last two 12 batters in striking out four and
walking none for the 23rd comtuatlon for the Reds, who were outings).
blanked on four hits by 36-year"I've had good stuff physl- plete game amd ninth shutout of
old Rick Sutcllffe on a steamy
nightfact
at Riverfront
Stadium,
Is
the
that right-hander
Jose
Rljo continues to be plagued by
tendinitis in his right elbow,
making his Immediate status
uncertain.
Rljo threw about 60 pitches on
the sldellnes Wednesday and
never was able to get loose.
"We'll just have towaltandsee
how his elbow comes along," said
Reds General Manager Murray
Cook of Rljo, who will miss at
least one turn. "We're hoping
that Jose will be OK by next
week. If he isn't, we'll have to
look tnto trade possibilities."

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DOWNING CHILDS .
MULLEN MUSSER

the season by Cub pitchers.
He was only In trouble In 011e
Inning, the fifth, when he gave up
singles to Nick Esasky and Jeff
Treadway, but got pinch hitter
Ken Griffey on a pop)lp for t~e
final out.
"I was lucky," said Sutcliffe.
" I made some mistakes tonight,
but I got away with them. The
biggest thing was not walking '
anybody , built's so much easier
pitching with runs. When we got
those four runs (In the first two.
innings) that made pitching·

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773-5024

Tudor sparks LA
in win over Phillies

''
''•

no~

Milwaukee went ahead 2-0 in
the f]rst on Jeffrey Leonard ~
run-scoring single and Greg
Brock's RBI fielder's choice.
The Indians got a run in the
first on a homer bv Carter.
Cleveland has ihree pitchers
ready to be activated off the
disabled list - Bud Black, Tom
Candlo•.U and Jon Perlman.
Perlman will pitch for Double-A
Wllliamsport at Glens Falls
Frl.day night. and may be activated by early next week.
In the !lnale of Milwaukee's
three-game visit tonight. the
Brewers wlll send Bill Wegman
(10·9, 3.58 ERA) against the
Indians' Rich Yett [6-4, 5.06).

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CHIEF. E•Z•UNI!II=I .

Indians power past Btewers
CLEVELAND !UPli - Joe
Carter attributes his recent
power slump to "hitting them
right at people. "
Wednesda y night. the Cleveland Indians outfielder solved the
problem by lofting baseballs
over the Milwaukee defense.
Ca rter drilled two long homers,
hi s first s ince Ju ly 30, and
co llected th ree RBI to lead the
Indians to an 11 ~7v ictoryover the
Brewers.
"Fo r a change, I didn't hit the
ball al people." s aid Carter.
"That's the key. r got my wrists
flexed pretty well. and drove the
ball.
"You just wa nt to co ntribute to
a team effort. We did come back
after spotting them two runs, and
tha t's so important."
Ca r ter's fourth two·homer
game this season backed John
Farrell. 13-7, and handed Mark
Blrkbeck his first loss In seven

...

The Daily Sentinet-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cl1988 A&gt;ndtrooa, Inc.
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UPJ Sports Writer
With their lead In the American
League East beginning to shrink,
· the Detroit Tigers have begun
finger-pointing as the losses
mount.
Doyle Alexander expressed
Irritation Wednesday at having
to throw over to first base lour
times just before surrendering
the game:wlnnlng two-run homer to Mlri~sota's Dan Gladden
In the seventh Inning.
That helped Allan Anderson
win his fifth straight decision and
the Twins extend their domination of Detroit with a 2·.1 victory.
Minnesota held Detroit to three
runs In three games to sweep the
series and make It eight straight
victories over the Tigers. Detroit
has lost five of its last six overall
and holds a two-game lead over
Boston in the AL East.
Alexander was Irked at having
to hold a runner on with two out
and a 1-0 lead.
''There's a signal that tne .
catcher gives to the pitcher to
throw over," Alexander said.
"I'm obllged to do that. We had
the lead at that point. I hadn't
seen that ·(slgnal) before.
"I don't mind ~hrowlng over
there, but four times In a row?
Give me a break. That's wrong. I
disagree with that. Alii! does Is
break your rhythm.
"I'd got myself Into a position
to perhaps wln a game without
help. If you think a guy's going to
steal, pitch out. I'm not sure I'd
do It that way again, given the
same situation."
Mike Heath, Detroit's catcher,
had staked the Tigers to a 1-0iead
In the fifth with his fifth homer.
In the seventh, AI Newman
singled with two out. Alexander,
11-8, threw over to first several
times while running the count to
1·2, then threw over four times at
1·2. He delivered "a changeup
down and out over the plate that
wasn't a bad pitch untll It went
over the fence" for Gladden's
eighth homer.
"1 guess he was concerned
about me," said Newman, who
has six steals this season after
getting 15last year. "I was going
on the pitch."
The Tigers are 17-17 since the
Ali.Star break. Detroit's hltdng
has dlmlnllhed, but the club had
maintained Its compos~ until
tlit~ outbunts by Hernandez and
Alexander.
''I dOn't even want to bear that
stllff," Detroit Manaaer Sparlly
AncleriOII uld of Alexander'•
complalllt. ''1 don't have any·
thllll to uy. 1 hope people are
smart en0111h to read betweell
tlie !Illes.
''l hope you understand !hat
bad IIOIIIIDI to do wttb the
ouu:ome ottbe pme. I hope you
ulldentan4 human beiJIIS. ~·

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(614) 446 4103

.,-·~

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�Page-6-The

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Scoreboard ...
Majors

Chi~...

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10

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51

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68

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121,1

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30 Y.

Wedne!id~ ' !l Re!lull ~

'l. Dec roll 1
'Vorlll1, Ca!Uur .. a 1
Ue\' t land II, MII"'&amp;U•e 'l
011kland 10, Balllm.ore ~
Boslon 7, SeaUte 'l
{11tca~~:o 1. Toronh I
Kanl!llU Cit)' 9. Teu .&lt;; 6
Thursdll,)' 'l Gam8
Cal\lornl~~o (F\•IeY &amp;-11 ) at N~w \'ark
{John ~ j. i : 3t p.m.
(; hlcu~~:a
(Perez 11·7) at Detroit
(ftohhHlOP 13-6), '7 : 35p.m.
MIIWMuk.e l' ( Wt~rl 10·!1) al Cl•ve·
land 1Val i --n , 7:35 p.m.
Oakland t \\'dch 1+81 al Baltimore
I Ballard 3- IO J, ~ : as p.m.
Se.aUIC! ( La.npton li-10 ) a1 lkl•
I on (Boctdlcker !l-13) . 1: 35 p.m.
Te)(U (Ru!l'il'\19-5) •I Mln~sotll (lea
&amp;-&amp;) , K:U p.m .
Mla~Sota

N~·

Frl~'sGamM

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ac New York, 2 lwl·niKti

Eut
W L

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Gil

7t ... .151'! ,., 5t .5r.4 41,\

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Montreal

as se .ne

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u n .43'7
$1 &amp;A .4!8 lllrl

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lil. Lo,ull
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Loto An~e!O
Hou•o•
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Chtda.tl
San Dlep
Allanla

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By Uded PrhilllnternuloMI

Thursday. A1.1gust 18. 1988

Ohio

18 51 .S"fl iS u .$4t 39r
IS 51 .$= 5¥i

10 II

.$0~

1%

S1 U .f.75 II %
fl 11 .St! t? %:
·We~lf!/'1 G•m•
FtH!Ibu qbl, Atl•l&amp; I
Chlcap 5, a~t••ll D
Hou!iton 1, Sl . ......, 0
San Dlep t, Montreal t
Lo11 o\lafeiN i, PIIDadelpftla 2
San Fr•daeit 4. New l'ork I
Thullldq'1 GamN

Ph.-ddphla (Grou 11·8) at Lo»
Mpl~ (Marhez D-tt , .. :CIS p.m .
Moa&amp;rul (Perez H) at San Dlep
(Whltmiii&amp;-S),4:D5 p.m.
New Yorll (Ojeda 11-11) at San
FranciJtCO (Arukow i:4l. 4:05p.m .
Cblcap IMo)'t'r f.ll) at Clndmatl
(Jacbon lf.5), 'l::U p.m.
Houllll:on (Stolt IS-3) .. St. Louis
(For.::h i--4), 8:U p.m .
Friday's Gamet~
Atlanta at Chlca1o
Hau•an at PIIUJbllflh, niJbt
CinCinnati at St. Lollt, nlaM
New York at San otero. niJN
Montreal 1&amp;1 Los M~ln, niKbl
Ptdllldelphiaal Su FnnctRCO, niRflt

Olll"'n-.tl - ()pUoaed plkher oliat•k
Armllro .. to NulwUie of the Amt&gt;rlc an
"-toelaUoh (A.AA): t&gt;tcalled pitcher
Nonn Cbllliton front Nuh\'UII!'.
Saa FranriMJ• - Recalled pllllkt'l'
lloJH" flamW!Islrom PhoenP: ol l"aclflc
CMIIt Leaaue \AM): outrlrlil:edrel~er
Ron Dll\'ll to Pkoe•bl ; ••• oudl~der
AIIUI Cockrell from l'houtx to Portland
of l.he PCLI oeomplete ,.\IIIIJ. 14 trade with
Mhu.e•u for pUe~er ~I Bed.
Collep
Ku. . Slate- Named Beryl SWitaer
MilliCan I at Netic dlredot.
Rockey
Flltlbu11h- $1prd rl~:hl wtnr Mlll'k
tt.c~hllo muiii · ~U' co~rat't .

Football
Chlcqo - Rei~• q•r\erbaclf, Jell
Bufler, runnlnrhacip Huwy Reed ud
Fhll Webb, IIMbad&amp;~nSteve F•rch and
Mike Shaw. purier l..ou61 Berr~, dclen·
111w tlack Jeri')' Deckard, klcketRI~hard
Ehmlrl!, ruard MlkP.McBrld1e,defen~ve
tackiet olon Norris and Dan Vouna.
center Mark Rodenb!W.Rr , Sllif ety 81'pn
Sl~er aad wide receh-er Tommy SmMh.
lA RIUI'UI- Slped delenlllive nd Do~

R"4

Minnesota - Sl ped ren&amp;er Klrll
I.Jlwdermll 11. t.oserles of l·yearco,.racll:
MIIIM!d pumer S~oU Cepk:k)'; CUI kicker
&amp;rry Belli, pu,.er Cralt Salmon..
delt!lllive linemen Fril'd Molden and
Uo,. LcwiK.
Phlladl'lpllla ~ Sl pd linebacker Seth
.Joyner to 3- ,ear conlr:act.
SIUI Dleao- Sl Af11!d dl'lmalve l'!nd Lee
WIIBwna: slped rllnninll' hack Cutis
Adam~~ to a !Series of I· )'eld' contracts.
Olympics
USA Amateur lkalinJ Federallon Relniillted Ken Ad~ aK Olympk:
CQIICh.

u.s. Women's Bwsle!lbiPJI Team Dropped Fran Harris or Tex11r1.

Koken says this WVU team
"most ·together' he's been on
MORGANTOWN, W . V~ .
(UP!) - To find out what Is
happening with the West VIrginia
University offense, pick the
brain of the man In the center of
things- literally.
That would be center Kevin
Kok.en. who has some definite
ideas about his teammates.

"How good Is this t~am? I
could tell you what I would like to
think," the 6-foot-2, 2130·pound
native of Youngstown, Ohio,
feels. "Two-a -day practices wlll
tell. That and Bowllng Green.
Right now, It Is a one-game

season."

Yet, history shows when Bo·
wl!ng Green comes to Mountal·
•
"This is the most together neer Field Sept. 3. the Falcons
football team I've ever played should expect a hornets' next.
In eight seasons at WVU, head
. on," he says. "Really. I say It
coach
Don Nehlen, a former
every year, but this Is the most
Bowling Green quarterback,
together team I've been on."
This year, be Is unlikely to run never bas been beaten. One more
Into many doubters. Promises of win wlll make h 1m the wlnntnges t
a successful season and an coach In Mountaineer history.
Not a bad way to start off the
all-senior offensive line touted as
season
for Koken and the rest of
one of the best In the country
line- five seniors,
the
offensive
make for togeth.e rness. A twomost
of
whom
have played two or
year starter at center, Koken Is
three
years
as
starters.
the keystone of the Mountaineer
"We
gave
the
commitment
offense.
over
the
summer
by
keeping in
Koken feels the practice field
will decide whether the offense Is shape and working out." Koken
as good as everyone seems to said. "Now. we have to give the
commitment In camp."
believe.'
I

By The. Bend
- ~

...

·.

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday. August 18, 1988

,.

Page-7
•

It Is not possible to discuss the

offensive backfield without hear·
lng about the linemen. Points
couldn't be scored without them
seems to be tile sentiment on the
parts of those whO count on 'the
big guys to keep them from being
squashed. Koken, on the other
hand, returns the compliment.
"We're only ·as good as the
backs are," he said. "I know no
matter what, they will bUst their
butts to make us look better.
Those guys can make positive
yardage out of nothing."
Koken realizes It takes more
than a line and a stable of
talented backs to win games especially the close ones !hat
eluded West VIrginia lnl9&amp;7. This
year, he said, experience tells the
story- and !tis a tale of a squad
that wlll win.
"You go across the board,"
Koken said, "and you w111 find at
least one guy, and In some cases
two, In every position who bas
seen a lot of action."

Rocksprings
Road, Pomeroy, was a two-time "best of show" winner In the
domestic arts department judging at the Meigs County Fair. She
took the top award lor needlecraft, the lovely alghan she's holding
here, and alia the best of show for quills, pictured here with the

At least one Brown familiar with Canada countryside
MONTREAL (UP!) -In their
first foray north of the border,
the Cleveland Browns and New
York Jets will be facing strange
territory - all except Browns'
punter Lui Passaglia.
Passaglia, who played 12years
for his hometown British Colum·
bia of the Canadian Football
League, will be making his debut
in an NFL uniform.
And it will come at the site of
one of his greatest days.
In the 1985 Grey Cup game at
Montreal's Olympic Stadium.
Passag!ia kicked five field goals
to lead the Lions to a 37-24 victory
owr the Hamilton Tiger Cats.
He also ran for a first down on a
fake punt. "It was the turning

point of the game," he said. "I
was named Canadian player of
the game and I won a pound of
gold for It."
·
Passaglla, 34, decided to try
out for the NFL when financial
problems hit the CFL last year.
But leaving his home and family
behind have been quite a. trial;
homesickness hit hard the first
week of training camp.
''It's hard being away, but I'm
glad I'm going through It,
whether It works out or not," he
said. "Bet.ter late than never.
Maybe it could have been easier
on me five or six years ago.
"At Urnes, you get sad not
being home, but everybody at
home jumps on the phone and

tells me they're behind me and it
gives me inspiration for the
coming practice."
Passaglia's career punting
mark Is 44.3 yards and he has a
good shot at making the Browns,
who have had trouble at the
position In recent years. In 1983,
he set a CFLrecord by averaging
50.2 yards on 117 punts.
The Browns, who missed Super
Bowl trips by f!ngerna!Hhin
margins the past two seasons,
have won both their exhibition
games. while the Jets are 0·2.
The last time the two teams
met - In a Jan. 3, 1987, playoff
game at C)eveland Stadium, It
was one of the greatest games in
NFL history, with the Browns
winning, 23·20, in double

Indiana solid Big 10 contender
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UP!)
- An improving Indiana football
team , suddenly confident it can
beat any Big Ten rival, has
become a solid contender for the
confer ence crown.
Big Ten coaches believe the
Hoosiers will challenge Iowa,
Michigan and Michigan State for
top honors this season after a
second-place finish to the Spar·
tans in 1987. But coach Bill
Mallory, whose team was 0·11
four years ago. realizes the
toughest task .remains ahead of
Indiana.
" As you climb the ladder, it's
!ike cl imbing a mountain. The
closer you get to the top, the
ha rder it is ," Mallory said. "We
ha ve more good players this year
and I !ike their attitude. Our kids
believe now they can compete
with anyone they play ."
The Hoosiers lost seven star·
ters. including such key players
as flanker E r nie Jones. tackle
Er ic Moore and linebacker Van
Waiters.
" ( feel !ike we've got good
people who can com.e along and
fill in at those positions," Mallory
sai d.
Offen sivel y, the team will· be
led by junior quarterback Dave
Sc hnell, who threw for 1,707
ya rd s and 13 touchdowns last
season . Mallory put the Elkhart
native on a weight program to
he I p his durability .
·' I told him that he has been
hu rt enough and we can 't afford

Other critical receivers include
seniors Tony Buford and Tim
Jordan and sophomore Eddie ·
Thomas.
" With Ernie Jones gone, our
passing game Is going to be like
mayonnaise · all. spread out,"
Mallory said.
A lack of depth on the offensive
line also troubles Mallory. Don
Shrader and Tim Radtke ate
veteran guards startlng for the
fourth straight year, but they
have unproven backups. The loss
of Moore at tackle and Brian
Finney at · center will require
newcomers Chris Simons, Jeff
Fryar and Ron Vargo to learn
quickly.
Nine starters return on defense, Including linebacker Wil·
lie Bates, who led the Hoosiers
last season with 117 tackles last
year. Brian Dewitz, a senior
safety who Intercepted nine

passes last season, returns to
anchor the secondary.
·'We have to come along on
defense. We gave up a lot of yards
last year,': Mallory said. "Look
at anybody who has won through
the years, They have had great
defense. We haven't arrived to
where I would refer to us as that
great defense. We' ve got to fall
into that category."
Linebacker Darren Bush. who
started seven games for the
Hoosiers last season, Is academl·
cally ineligible this fall. He had
attended summer school, but
could not pull hisgradesuptoBig
Ten standards.
Indiana's kicking game con·
tinues strong behind Pete Stova·
novich. who needs just 29 points
to become the school c·areer
scoring leader. He kicked nine
field ~oats and a school· record 32
extra points last season.

overtime.
Cleveland's first-line units, mi·
nus running back Earnest Byner
- who Is suffering from a knee
strain - w1lllikely play the first
half, and possibly a little of the
third quarter.
The Jets also are expected to
play their first-string units the
entire first half.
Definitely out for Cleveland is

free-agent running back Tony
Baker (knee), wh!!e rookie
safety Brian Washington (elboW) ·
Is questionable an,d tackle
Rickey Bolden (thumb) and wide
receiver Brian Brennan
(shoulder\ are probable.
The Je!s !1st live players as
out: wide receivers Wesley
Walker (groin muscle) and Mi·
chael Harper (knee), guard Dan

,.--

NOW

......

•I'

Judy to first place wins In theshortestllrne among
TROPHY
Don Spencer, members of his
family and other• are pictured receiving the · all of the two year old fllHes In two divisions, four
races, taking pari In the racing program at the
trophy blanket awarded by the Jim Cohb motor
. company In Pomeroy alter Spencer drove Sun Del 'Meigs Fair Wednesday.

_,

.

.,...n

BEST OF SHOW - Janet Bolin's
arrangement in lbe class "Way Back Home" won
her the reserve best ol show rosette In the Jlrst fair
llower show. Using a container which had ~en In

the famUy for many years, she constructed a
mass deslp using zinnias, dalllles, aiUum,llalrls,
artemsla, and gladloU. Here Mrs. Bolin, right,
receives her roselle from Faye Collins, Judge.

Back To School .
Perm Special

$2 sFOR CHILDREN

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In the
program were
awarded Wednesday evening during the Meigs County Fair Youth
Nigh&amp; activities. From left. to rlgbt In front are, James Patrick
Clifford, of Chester Pack :135, and Jasoo A. Roush, of Pomeroy
P!'ck :149, co-outstanding cub scouts of the year .In back are Harold

$1995

·1983 FORD LTD CROWN

Winners of kiddie traaor pull

Stock t 85972, 4 doors, sedan, V-8, a it I Stock t 76322, 4 doors, sedan, V-8, air
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1980 BUICK CENTURY
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.

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•••

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wheel drive, 4cyl,,aircond., auto. trans.,
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Nicklaus, Azinger
finish round 1
at Castle Pines

•

WHAT'S NEW
IN USED

5TH AVENUE

•

'•

CINC!I\iNATI (UPI ) --The lineup Saturday night. First Buffalo. After giving up 34 points
Cincinnati Benga!s and Detroit round pick Bennie Blades of to Kansas City two weeks ago,
Lions, whose cat nicknames Miami (Fla.), a safety, and the Bengals surrendered only 13
should have been changed to second round choice Chris Spiel· points to (he Bills last weekend.
kittens last year, meet in a man of ,Ohio State, a linebacker,
Cincinnati held Buffalo to just
pre-season game Saturday night. are probable starters. It's also 33 yards rushing, Intercepted
Both the Bengals and Lions possible that former Universltv three passes and recovered a
suffered through dismal 4-11 of Cincinnati quarterback Dannv tumble.
McCoin may make his pro debut
"We were more aggressive
seasons last year.
Cincinnati has a 2·1 pre-season In Cincinnati. McCoin, who is than we were against Kansas
record, with victories of 24·13 trying to make the Lions' roster City," said Bengals coach Sam
over Buffalolmd 14· 7 over the Los behind Chuck Long and Eric Wyche. "Fo.-some reason, we hit
Angeles Rams. The Bengals Hipple, Is yet to play in a a lull in Kansas City. We played
. upbeat football In ·the Rams
were beatep 34·21 by Kansas pre·season game.
City.
Cincinnati Is coming off a game and we got back Into It In
Detroit is winless in pre· strong defensive effort against this game. The defense got !Jack
season, having lost to Cleveland r-------------,..;l::.:n.:.to:...::.a.:.t.::ur:.:n::.:o:.:v,..;e_;r,..;f:.:ra:.:m=e.:.o.:.f.:.m::.::.!n:.:d,;,..'_'
13·10 and to Seat tie 16·14.
Saturday night 's 7:30 p.m.
(EDT) game at Riverfront Stadium is Cincinnati's lone home
pre-season game of the year.
The Bengals and Lions have
been playing each other in the
pre·season each year since 1970.
The Bengals hold a 10·8 edge, but
the Lions have won the last three
1982 FORD
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Mallory said.
Anthony Thompson, a junior
ta ilback ·from Terre Haute, returns afte r rushing for 1,014
ya r ds and scoring)2 touchdowns
las t year. But the key on offense
will be how well sophomore. Rob
Tu rner from Indianapolis han·
dies . the flanker spot he Inherits
from J ones. Indiana' s deep
threat the pas t two seasons.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (UPI) Jack Nicklaus and PGA Cham·
pions hlp runner·up Paul Az.mg'e~
made It safely through the
round of the $1.1 m!ll!!oo~n~~:~:;
tiona! tournament \1
and Mike Reid capJtt~ur~:e~d:D.~~
in bonus money for"
of the day.
Reid shot a 5·under 67 over the
Castle Pines Golf Club course,
which translated Into a score of
11 points In the unique
tournament.
"I started out with three
birdies In a row and that Is the
!deal start for this kind of
format," Reid said. "I guess It Is
the Ideal start for any kind of
format."

•

Bengals host Detroit Lions
Saturday in pre-season game

radio, stereo tape, radial tires, white

to have him hurt . anymore,"

Alexander (necK) ana line·
backers Bob Crable (knee) and
Bobbv Curtis (ankle). Corner·
backs Terry Williams (shoulder)
and Michael Mitchell (groin
muscle) are questionable, while
tight end Rocky Klever (scia·
Ilea), wide receiver Kurt Sohn
(groin muscle) and quarterback
Pat Rvan (hamstring) are
probable.

vinyl roof, auto. trans., PS, PB,
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Winners In Tuesday and Wed· 55 pound class.
nesday's kiddie tractor pull were
Wednf~sday's winners were Jo·
announced today.
hanna Ervin, first and Larrv
At Tuesday's event, Mike Tut· Ritchie, second, In the 35 to s5
tie took first, and Jason Roush pund class, and Ryan Ramsburg,
second In the 56 to 75 pound class first, and B. J. Ervin, second, In
and Justin Roush took first and · the 56 to 75 pound class. The
Jason Pullins second In the 35 to contest Is held dally at the fair.

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Stock#B962t. 2doors, coupe, 4cyl., air
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to speak

$2995

George and Charlotte Dixon
and Bill and Millie Crane, lravellng evangelists, . will be at the
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Sunday for both morning and
evening services.
The IJl'oup wll be singing and
speaking at the 10:30 a.m.
service and the 7 p.m. service,
and will also be participating In
the 9:30a.m. Sunday school. The
Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor,
Invites the publiC to attend.

1980 CHEVETTE ...............................,.$500
19n VW SCIROCC0..........................'600
1973 VW SQUARE BACK..:................'400
1974 CHRYSLER NEW PORT............S400
1980 OLDS OMEGA............................S350

111 WEST SECOND

••
!.aMI Subjaot
To Qo ll'uton
Of IeNiG:.,

(

,_··- -.:....~1--

POMEROY

, ENDS

Carriage reflectors not required for Amish
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -The
Old Order Amish sect, whose
members shun virtually all trappings of secular society, are not
required tod!splayorangerellec·
tlve triangles on their traditional
black horse·drawn carriages, the
Michigan Court of Appeals ruled
The three de!en&lt;lants In the
case were ticketed In October
1980 for

AUGUST 20

drawn carriages without a renee·
tor triangle meant to
automobile drivers of a
moving vehicle.
Jerry Swartzentruber
given a citation hy the state
pollee In his horse-drawn corn
binder, Henry. Troyer was Issued
a ticket by a Beaverton pollee
officer and Amos Gingerich was
cited In the
of Gladwin.

SUGG. RETAil

5339.95

Cremeans reunion
The Cremeanss family reun·
lon, descendants of James and
Bertha Cremeans, will be held
Sunday at Forked Run Lake,
Long Bottom. Dinner will be at
12:30 p.m. and all relatives and
friends of the family are Invited
to atlend .

992·6720

$19995
SAVE 1140 ....._:1.1.

,,

-

•

i

' I

••

�(:"\,

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pom•ov Middleport, Ohio

Flowers flourish despite hot days
I.

While the hot dry weather of
I he summer of '88can be credited
with the reduced number of
specimen !lowers and arrangements entered in the Meigs
County· Fair flower shows,
there's still plenty for !alrgoers
to see and enjoy In the way of

beautiful flowers and creatlvl!'
arrangements.
The first show staged yester·
day wes judged by Faye Collins
of Minford. an accredited judge
.of the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, who· was &lt;;ompllmentary
on the over all quality oft he ~how .

Seven rose! tes were awarded.
five for artistic design, and two
for horticulture specimens.
Taking the "best of show" In
the adult division was Betty
Dean, Pomeroy, with reserve
going to Janet Bolin, Rutland.
The nature. art and industry
award, given the first time this
year. went to Melanie Stethem of
Pomeroy . while Peggy Crane
and Juanita Lodwick tied for the
senior horticulture sweepstakes
award.
For the junior exhibits, the best
of show went to Jamie Erwin of
Pomeroy, with the reserve
award going to Laura Mitchell,
Pomeroy. Billv Crane was the
sweepstakes award winner.
Winners for artistic arrange·
ments, listed, first for blue.
second for red, and third for

white. in the respective classes of
the show, "Yesterday a nd To·
day", were as follows:
Senior Artistic Arrangements
"Way Back When", mass
design in old contai ner: Janel
Bolin, Rutland; Pat Holler.
Pomeroy: Melanie Stethem,
Pomeroy.
''The Days were Long", line
arrangement: Ruth Erwin,
Pomeroy; Pauline Atkins, Rutland; Jo Hill, Long Bottom.
"And Time!l'were Hard", min·
!mum of plant material with
· treasured wood : Melan,e Stethem. Ruth·Erwin, Jo Hill.
. "Mood and Memories", inspi·
rational: Betty Dean. Pauline
Atkins, Pat Holter.
"Became Mldntght Tales".
using a phone or phone parts: Pa:t
Holter, Jo Hill, and Betty Dean.
''To Build a Better Future", a
construction: Betty Dean, Jo
Hill, and Pauline Atkins.
"A Garden of Good Things ",

Including vegetables: Melanie
Slethem, Pat Holter. Janet Bolin.
"Not Just the Same Old
Grind", modern with grain:
Belly Dean, Janet Bolin, and
Pauline Atkins.
Junior Artistic Arrangements
"And When I Was Young" ,
favorite designs: divided into
two classes, with Kathryn Mitchell. Pomeroy. and Bill Crane.
Middleport, taking firsts; Karyn
Thompson, Racine, and Jamie
Erwin, seconds; and Ben Crane.
Middleport, and Trlcia Davis,
Pomeroy, thirds.
"Everyone · Made a Garden",
Including tools and vegetables:
divided Into two classes, with
Jamie Erwin and · Laura Mit·
chell, first; Trlcla Davis and Ben
Crane. seconds, and Kathrvn
Mitchell and Billy Crane, thirds .
Adult Horticulture
Marigold, over two Inches:
Peggy Crane, Allee K. Thompson, Karyn Thompson.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT
STORE

Summer Clearance
Continues
ON YOUR WAY TO THE FAIR STOP BY

RE'JI~AL

LADIES

SUMMER MERCHANDISE

1/2 PRICE

Shorts, Slacks, Skirts, Topsr
Sweaters, Swimsuits, etc.
BEST OF SHOW- An arrangement featuring contrived Dowers

and branches In a modern design mostly black In color In the class,
"Not the Same Old Grind" by Belly Dean of Pomeroy was selected
best of show at the Meigs County's Fair first flower show. The
second show will go Into place today.

RACKS OF CHILDREN'S

SUMMER ClOTHING

S2, S3, S4 ,ss

Business·· Se~ices

11o

=ed~.,"'~w~:,~

•

d1111oofthe~eofthio notiot.
to tho Environm...ul Boord of
Reviow, Rm. 300, 238 E.
Town St.. Pdumilu, Oh..
43216. Notice of eny appeal
shall bo flied wnh the director

:.':'wi~~::..:

~en adjudl~ion hwing
requllt il .,bmitted wMhln 30
dill' • of tho ~~ of tho ;..

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FREE ESTIMATES
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446·3487

•

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lf2 PRICE
•

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STUDENT ONLY
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992-6857

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Middleport, Ohio

a..12 1 mo.

SERVICE
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446-7390

BAUM
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Public Notice

985-3301

Certified licensed Shop

a sttndard of 0.060 porta

household, such as shower·
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WANTED

lmm MOVtfS I SUDfS to
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let us conw•t those otdMoYiel
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CAll AMY URrER
,or IOI'S RECTRONICS

PUBLIC NOTICE
SYRACUSE WATER
DEPT.
The United States Envi-

ronment Protection Agency
IL/2/'SI·tlt
(EPAI seta drinkiOg water
standard and has deter-· ---=-~,...-,,.,-~--'-

concern at certain levels of
eJlposure. There is currently

per million (ppm}. Based on

new

health

information.
EPA is likely to lower this
standard significantly.
Part of the purpose of this
notice is to inform you ofthe
potential adverse health ef·
facts of lead. Thia is being
done oven though your wa·
te_r may not be in violation of
the current standard.
EPA and other~ ere concorned about lead in drinking water. Too much lead in
the human body cauae aeri·
ous damage to the brain,
kidneys, nervous system;

ond rod blood cello. The
groatest risk even with short
term exposure, is to young
children and pregnant wo-

men.
··Lead lavels in your drinking water are likely to be highast; if your home or water
system has laad pipes, or if
your home hal copper pipH
with lead solder; and if the
home is Ins than five years
old; or if vou have aoft or·
acidic water, or if water sill
in the pipes seVeral hours .."
The only way to ba sure of
the amount of lead in the
sUpplied water is to h'ave the
water tested by a competent
laboratory .
Use only the col.d water
faucet for drinking and for
use in cooking or preparing
baby formula , and to run the
water until it gets as cold as
it is going to get before each
usa. If there has recently
bNn major water use in a

CHESTER

HUDNALL

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Second
Middlepor.t, Ohio 45760

sehold ohould check the
plumbing to see if lead
pipes, solder. or flux have
been used in the plumbing
that provides tap water, and
to ensure that new plumbing
repairs will use lead-free ma·
terials .
For additional informetion
you may contact the water
office during office houra
and obtain a free booklet on
Lead and Your Drinking Wa·

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Mino'r
Repairs

CALl 992-6756

Pay Your Phone
and Ca~le Bills Here
IUSI~IS! PHONE
16141 992-6550
.RISIDINCE PHONE
16141992-7754
!128/lln

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C!eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

7-14-'88·1 mo.

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

•Roofing

•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

FRIII!TIMATE!

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnER &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

985-3561

Itt. 1 BOX 136, VINTON

We Sorv ice All Mak'es

614-742-2235

"Must Bt

Repairable"

OWIIR: loffroy S..lth

1/22/88/tfn

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS •- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Happy Ads

..

. SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

985-4487
8-8·1 mo. pd.
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Ntw Homes Built

"Free

or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
J.l J.ltn

Roger .Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

. 985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
11 2211 mo.

Also Trantmlssio•
PH •. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6·17-lfc

• . Television Listenina Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; S•rvid
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a:
~

Licensed Clinical AudioJogist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

:I:
Second Avenue, Box 1213
z 417
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or
Veter~ns Memoriar Ho,soital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy.

SWEEPSTAKES WINNER - Veteran exhibitor Billy Crane,
Middleport, captured with horticulture sweekstakes rosette wllh
his many ribbon winners In the junior division.

RACINE
GUN SHOP
NEASE HOLLOW RD.
GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Follow Signs
on Boshan Rd.
PH. 949-2168
7-S-' 88- 1 mo. d.

•

NOW ON DISPLAY
3 NEW MODELS BY

Dr. David Ayers
Family Practice

&amp;

Dr. Edward Ayers

- .

For appointments call (3M) 675-6015
Wa11c:-Ina Welcome

FIREWOOD

$35

TRIPLE P

SPKIAL FACTORY INONIIYES AU.OW US TO OFFR A
28'156' HOME DURING AUGUST Wlfll FUlL FOUNDATION
AND UTIITY 11001-UPS FOR ONLY
11ADES FIGUIID AT REG. PRICE
1

$2 7. 69 5

nus offer exptr
There is llubstantllllnterest penalty for early withdrowai'Compounded
d&amp;ily.

Call BANK ONE
for more information
992-2133 or
742-2888

BANKEONE.

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE, ATHENS, OHIO, NA I ONEPART OF THE CARING TEAl.!

Member FDIC

SEVERAL SOURCES OF
FINANCING AVAILAILE WITH
UP TO 30 YEAIS TO PAY.

2"X6" walls. 16" D.C. • flberglasuhingled roof •vinyllap aid=
ing with underlavment •copper wiring ••elf storing storm win·
td~IWI •ell interior walle16" O.C. •frost-free dbl. door refrlger·
ator •cathedral ceiling •deluxe jute backed eculptured carpet
•gerden tub .
u.s. Rt. 33 &amp; 595
South of Logan
We Service
Mon.-S.t.
Mee111

Your

SatisfactiOn

IIIO.aiOO
CloHd Stmday

385·4367

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Sidinc
Roofi
Seamless

'lfutter

Replacement Windows

Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Eotlmateo

Call 992-2772

llii/ffn

EXCAVATING

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

WANT 10 IUY WIECIED 01
JUNK CAliS 01 TRUCKS

...:FRII IST.ATISfor any of thttutnicn call

614-742·2617

lttw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
ar lea¥1 Mtss2·1r.·aa.ttn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

SER~ICE

(FREE ESTIMATES!

can repair ond recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boll and rod
out rodiators. We also
repair Gas TankL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT IIIU FORD

- Addont 1nd r.modellftQ
- Roofing lind guuer work
-Concrete work
•
- P4umbing 1nd electrical
work

992-6215 or 992-731
Pomoror, Ohio
7-13-'88·

Giveaway

3 Free kitten s. 4 1,/z weeks old.

Call 614-.46-8789.

We

992·2198

Middleport.

MediCIII 18cretary wanted. R•
quirements:typing prollc::i.,cy,
good telephone voice. experience with tx~Uections . Send
c::urlculum vrtaa and referenc•
to box : Cia 1 B5c/ oTribune, 826
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .
Needed-Caregiver tor 1 one v••
old child 30·40 hrs. per week
during the dav. Ref. required.
Coli 814·317-0407.

17 hens, some laying and 1 · Pinecrest c_,.e Center now h,s
rooster. Call 614-949-3050 af- an opening lor e Medical R•
t• 5 :00p.m ,
cords clerk. Exp. ini .C.D. coding
required. A.R.T. certHiCition or
Pups to giva f!lrNay . Pert Aust11!11·
medical records dipl~;tma pre·
ian Shepard. 6 wka . old. 614- ferred. Salary besed on expe247·4322.
rience or cartrficetlon. Apply 111
556 Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
Cute kittens gray 1 f4!!1male 1
Ohio. No phone calls, please.
male. will deli'YBr to good home
in reasonable distMlce. 304Wanteti-LPN's for private duty
895-3681 .
nuraing. If interested 18nd re·
sume with shift availablhy &amp;
Cllte Kittens. 304-882·2334.
sal.-y mquirement to Gallipolis
O.ltv Tribune, Box Cia HIS, 825
10 week dd puppl•. 304-675- Third Ave .. G•llipolis. Ohio
3056.
45831.
Yard sale item•. Thursday, Aug.
18, 3 :00 p.m. Must take •II.
2413 Mt. Vernon Ave. Pt
Pl&amp;l!lsont. 304-675-1374.
Lull'ber from porch. 304-6752211 .
Kit1Wns . 304-87~6141 .

lost and Found

LOST:Tyeoon lake &amp; 325 area.
Small long haired gray 18rrler.
Famity pet. Call 814-2 45-6497
or 245·5231 .
FOUND : large, ell white ,
Mother &amp; aldM pup. Ger.

Shepherd type. Well-kept, nice
dogs. Pleae claim 614-2568038.
FOUND: Small black famale dog

on Fairfield Centenary Rd. hae
collar but no name. Call 614446-3537.

Lost: Small black dog, and
Bor.d er Collie with short ha ir.
614-992· 7749.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pe•son Auctioneer, li·
censed Ohio and West VIrginia.
Estate. antique. farm. liquidation •les. 304-773-6785.

We pay cash for late model dean

used can.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614·448·3872
TOP CASH paid '{or '83 model
and newer used cars. Smtth
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis . Call 614-4482282.
Complete hou!lllholds of furnitl.lre &amp; ant iques. Also wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; OliVe,
614-446·3159. .
Went to buy: Used furniture and

antiques. Will buy entire house·
hold furnishing. Marlin Wedemeyer. 814-245-6152.
Junk cars with or without
motQrs . Call Larry Uvely.61438S-9303.
·
Furniture and appliances by the

piece or entire houtehold. Fair
prices being paid. Call 614·448·
3158.

Baby bassinet &amp; high chair. Call
814-256·1584 or 614·256·
1648.
Used Mobile Homes.
446-0175.

can

614-

Hair Stylists. Across The Street
styling salon i• seeking one
adcitlonel styfist who it looldng
for more th,.n just enother jol;),
Call Terri at 614-448-9510 for
detail •.

Buyin 9 daily gold, silver coins.

rings, Jewelry, tterUng ware, old
coins, large currency. Top pri·
cos. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd . Ava. Middleport, Oh . 614·
9~2 ·3476

Wanted to buy: Will buy standing
timber. 3094-876-5328.

Help wanted

HELP WANT£0: R•ldem: Care

Coordln.tor. Ple11•nt ·V alier
Nurting Care C.nt.r it •a-ching
for an experienced 1nd .nergetie
regltta'ed nu,. to psume the
n ..vly crNted posh:lon of rHi·
dent c•• coordinator. StiH
dewelopment cau-lity allu!Wiee
twpll'ilr'ICI il .-quired. The ida.,
candldlte should h.,. 2 to 3
.,.. .., ol Geriatric • SuperviiOfY
experl..ce with Qer.,talogicel
Certification. H you are inter•ted Md want to make a
difference in 10meo.- life caH .
Personnel Of1ice. 304-8754340 .. 'P.te...,.t Vaiii!Pf Hurting
Care Center il en eqUII oppor·
tunitv · 8t •fflrmttive action
employer'' .
NewfPIPer earrl• needed for
Herald Di1p.th. Rou• from
Glllipo!MI tof'omeroyback down
to Pt. PIH•1t lndudln~ New
Haven a. Meson. Must h.,.
dep.. dabla vehlcla Call Jean
Miller, 304-528-2830
FINs end LPNs. full time position
open alaoy b•ed on tninlr•g
end exp8flenoe Wid il: M~~O'tabte
fuH benefit .-ckaoe.
w. va~
license required. Cell Carehmn
~hris~lnt Ple11ant 304-17 . .

Nursing aiSistant for areas newest long term c•• facillly, have
vacancy for part time •nd ful
time nursing assiltant. Must
Mve trtllining and or previous
uperlence. Benefit packege
available. Call C.reh1111en o1
Point Pl . .ant 304-875-3005.
Someone to live In with lady ful
or Plrt tima. in town. 304-1752835 after 5 :00.

GET PAID for rwlding books!
t100.00 per title. Write: PASE-

517T. 181 S . Uncolnway, N.
Aurora, I L 80642.

• SEMINAR

Interior Decorating Consuhant
with CertificMe and Interior
Decorating Sewing Business.
Retet'\!Mions. 304-623-5172.

Government ·Jobs. $16. 040·
•59,230 yet~. Now hiring. Your
area. 805-887-8000 E~ . R·
9805 tor currenl Fedenllisl.

12

Federal. State and Clvl Service
Jobs. Now hiring. Your eree.
'13.560 to $59.480. Immediate openings" Call1·315· 7338062 eu F27 86.

Have room in home foreldertvor
henciCIP person. Crown City,
can 814-25&amp;-6509.

The Meigs Local School District
Heka c., cl dales for the position
of ltudent·instructioMI aide.
The position wfH be at Meigs
Junior High School .. d will
involve anisting a student who
h• cerebral palsy. DutiBt wm
inel1.1de : (1Jassittingthestuderlt
with entarl~g and uhlng the
•chool building. including
wheelchair transfer; 12)at~isting
the student With personal CIJfl
and toileting: 131 assisting the
student with ciiiSIIroom la•ning
act ivtties, induding' using a
personal computer; and 14)
uslsting with gen . .l de ..room
learning activille1. Physical
strength and ltamine neceeurv
lomeettheneedt oftheposttion
are required. Knowledge of
person~~! computers is dealred the ability and w;mngn•• to
le•n t o use a peraOfWI compuhtf
it requifed. Interested p6rtons
should contact R . Cherlel Holliday. Director of Special Education, at the Meiga Local Schoo4
District Cent rill Ofice, tatephone
614-992, 2t53.
The Meigs Local School District
seeks c.,didat:n fortheJ)ositlon
of reader-gold~. This position
will beet Meigs High School and
will involve aiding a viiUIIIY
impaired stt'.dent. Outlet will
Include: {1) reading neeessary
reading aaaignments to the
visually impaired sCudent . 12)
reading nec•sarv rneerch and
resouree materials to thevisLelty
imp11ired student; (3) aiding the
visualty impaired sludent with
written tciKiemic work; l"t)
assisting the visually impeit1!1d
student wtth continued d&amp;llelopment and use of personal
computer skills; and 151 main·
talning communication with
dassroom teachers and coordlnatinil the acquisition1ndu!8 of
s pec•al learning materials .
Knowfedge of peraonal compu·
ters it diJiired • the ability and
willingness to learn to use a
personal computar is required.
lnterotted persons should co ntiel R. Ch•l• Hollidey, Director of Special Education, at the
Meigs local School District
Central Office. telephone 614992·2t53.
Get paid for reading boolrlsl
$100.00 per title. Write: PAS E31T, 181 S . Linoolnway, N.
Aurora, IL60542.
McCLURE ' S RESTAURANT

11

LO~D
DELIVU(D
PER

INSULATION

. e5August 31, 1988.

4

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

J&amp;L

'SEE WHY PRESTIGE'S 50 STD.
FEATURES MA~S THEM THE
BEST VALUE ON THE MARKET

Plano IMJona Gallipolit Ferry
area. Marktrtta Crum, 304-8766118.

Employment
Serv icBs

8·8-88-tfn

Pediatrics and Internal Medicine

, Seeing patients
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

BINGO

BILL SLACK
992-2269

announce the opening of their practice
at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Suite 12

Announcements

Estimates"

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

-

I

3

PH; 949-2801

7-13-' 88· 1 mo. cf. .

MARCUM CONTRACTING

tor.
16} 17; 171 18; 181 18

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

5·25·tfn
•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding

ness. Duti.. would indude:
Patient home visits, completing
medical formt. in store oostomer
sale~, insuNnce billing., Hour~ :
Sitnd resume to: Box Cia

Announcements

SALES &amp; SERVICE

"DOC" VAUGHN

7-6·81·1 mo.

leta. or doing laundry with
cold water. flu1hing the
pipes may take 5 to 30 ••
conds. if not flushing the
pipes could take as tong a1
several minutes. Each hou·

5

Lft.N..for Medical Supply busi·

6

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

Public Notice

Now hiring. Yourar•. t13,&amp;50
to t59.4BO. lmmedillte open·
lngs. Ca111-315-733-6062.

3·30·'87 tfn

· 1·28·'88·1fn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

11

992·6611

We Carry Fis hing Suppli

NOW THRU SEPT. 3

1·3·11·1 mo. d

of ottndby boMer.
18) 18 1tc

Perm

12l 00

Hours 10-4

300.310 E. Vlno St.
Coldwater. Oh.
Effective DattOB/ 10/BB
Facility Deocription: Air
Application No. 03-3819
This final action not preceded by proplloadactlonand

Middleport, Ohio

1·3-'8G-Ifc

10·8-tfc

PET Inc.

-

WILL HAUL

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

Plrtt &amp;StNite

TOP SOIL
FlU DIRT

Final issuance of permit to

PHONE ·992-6249

Equipment Dealer
F1r111 E•ulp111ul

4·16-86-tfn

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND

install

HEALING$, MIRACLES AND
DELIVERANCE ARE CONSANT
SIGNS THAT CONFIRM MIKE'S
TEACHING MINISTRY. .....

Homolite
Jacobsen

992-3410

fied oomptlinl, any person
m1111 obtain notice of fUrther
actlono. and eddnlonal inform•lon. Unl. . othorwioe provided in notka of partic:ulw
actions. d communications
ohall bo oent to: He•lng Cltl'll,
OEPA. P.O. Box 1049, Columbuo, OH. 43286·01 49, Ph.
1614! 1144-2116. ConoultORC
Chap. 3746 and OAC Chaps.
3746-47 and 3746-6 for .,..

FRIDAY 19TH
7:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 20TH
10:00 A.M. - 7:00 P.M.
SUNDAY 21ST
10:00 AM•• - 7:00 P.M.

Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Buoh Hog Farm

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

of tho dllta indiceled. "A£.
tion". • U8M above do• not
indude rocolpt of a veriied
complaint. If lignificont public
int.-..t Miltt.a publlic meeting mov bo hold. Aa to any ac·
lion, induding r~ of veri-

AUGUST

"At R10sanablo Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

any G-alt oction within 30dovo

REV. MIKE WILLIAMS

J;:~~~~~:r

DENNY CONGO

posed action. Any nm.,. IUbmit comm.n:1
and/ or a m•ing r-clng

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

614·662-3821

8/ 18/ 88

aNH'I08 dllea: or the director
,..,iltllwittDaw• the pro.

LIFE

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Help Wanted

Income Tax Cl., . . begin Sept.
8. 1988. Here ls .,. opportunity
to beoome • part of the fastest
growing Income tax firm in the
•••· Career-oriented persons.
oonrect DenTax, ln e. Tua. or
Wod.. 10 AM -4 PM. Coli 814448-817S.

1111 ·weak.

WITH

lf2 PRICE

11

j;:::::::::::::::;r;:::;:::;:::::::;tr:~~~~~~==~;:;;;;~;;~;;;:;l
~= ~~~"':u:V~
TRI-STATE
BISSELL
BOGGS
SMALL ENGINE
IOEPAIof final actio"'Effec:tOrt
DRYWALL co.
BUILDERS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
REPAIR
dM•
and ilAuthoriud
Serwice
'!'..,"' d•• of propoeed ,.,.
Complete Drywall
CUSTOM BUILT
U. S. RT. SO EAST
&amp; Parh
t..,. one! of drift tc1iona oro
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Briggs Stranon

quirements.

1 RACK OF CRICKET
LANE &amp; DEVON

The Daily

Ohio

PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY:MERCER
,
The fotlowing w•e receNed·

SER"IC·ES

333 NORTH SECOND

1988

Public Notice

Marigolds , under two Inches:
Allee Ritchie. Reedsville, Peggy
Crane, secood and third.
Celosia, plumed: Janel Bolin.
Celosia, combed: Pauline Ad·
klns. Janet Bolin.
Zinnia, pompon: Evelyn Hoi·
lon, Racine, first and lhlrd,
Peggy Crane.
Zinnia, cactus: Janet Bolin,
Peggyh Crane, second and third.
Hanging tvy: Juanita Lodwick,
Pomeroy, June Opal Johnson,
Rutland.
Trailing gera nium; Juanita
Lodwick.
Fern: Juanita Lodwick. Karen
Lodwick.
African VIolet : PaullneAtk1ns.
Jaunlta Lodwick, Karen
Lodwick.
Junior Horticulture
Wildflower: Billy Crane,
Jamie Erwin, seocnd and third.
Marigold: Ben Crane, Billy
Crane, Kimberly Michael,
Pomeroy.

REJO~~'ING

AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SUMMER
SAVINGS!
IACIS OF

Thursday, August 1

Thursday. August 18, 1988

HIRING. Cooks and waitresses
needed. Rn~Mnes being talrlen
1:00..4:00 p.m. Tuesdavs end
Thursdays at 479 Jackson Pike,
Ga/lipolis-'Nhi1e hou!t!t behind
McCiurea Re~teurant.

v••

Needed. A care giver for 1
old child. J0-40 hours week.
Day . Reference required. 614387· 0407.
AVON - All areas. Call Marityn
We.,;8f 304-882· 2845.

SituatiQns
Wanted

Will c•eforelderly in my home.
lots of experience. C.ll 614446-8725.
Will do houlft or office de .. ing.
Excellent ,.eerenc:es. 614-992·
2760 efter Gp.m .

13

Insurance

------~-­

Cell us for your mobile home
Insurance: Miller lnaurance.
304-882-2 146. Also: auto,
home. life. heaf1:h.

15

Schools

lnstru ction
RE-TRAIN NOWI

SOUTHEAS'It:R N 8U SINES S.

,COllEGE, 529 Jackson Pike.
Ohio lnttructionel Grant Deadline Aug. 19. Call 446·43&amp;1:
Reg. No. 88 -11 -10558 .

..·

18 Wanted to Do

&amp;:

Painting all types. Roofing
roof repair. Free estimates. Call
6 t 4-258-6566.

C.rpentry, remodeling. Experienced, honest. reasonable .
Free estimates. References .
G.M . Gordon. 614-446·8958
evenings. ThMk ,You .

Painting Sa roofing • carpentry
wont by the hour or job . Call
814-379-2418.
Will do btbvsitting in my home
for working parents. Also will do
iroi'Mng. Call 614-446·6307.

Will do babvilting in mv homeCentenary area. Clll 614·4463161 .

Will do babv sitting in my horne.
Call 814·448-8463.
ExperiMced retired accoun1ant
desires Bookkeeping job. Part
time or full. Call Barney We.wer
8 14-446-434 7.
Would like to Join a Gospel
Group-SopranO-If any opening

call Vidci at 614-446-8679.
Y•d care, brush cutting, light
hauling. some tree trimming and
remO&lt;AI. Bill Slack 614-992·
2269 evenings.
Painting, axntrlor and interiof·
dry walling; paneling: porch and
dedi: work. Call 814-992-286$.
Will give privata guitar les1ons. 4
students. Beginners only . Cell
614-949·2687.

lou of Tender loving C.re . Will bat7l1it In my New Hwen home
eny shift . Re•oneble rates. Cell ·
304-882-3828.
.

Help Wanted

TourGuides·l\1al e&amp; female. Our
top people earn • BOO- 81200
per vveek. Salary to 1tart plus
cornml..ion. Plusant working
conditlona. A reilly fun pf.eetO
work. Frlendty. nelt &amp; depend•·
bte era the roqulrem.-wts. Cell
1· 614-286-8422. a1k for Sue.
EARN EXTRA MONEY during
the Summer. Get out of ttie

hou•. become a Daily Sendnel

~· carrier. Rou'" open In

Middleport. Call Scott at The
Sentinel Office at e 14-99 22155.

Part-time Reg iste red )( . ray
Technlci.,.. Varied hours· No
week~~ndt . call. or holld.,.s .
Apply to the Modlcol Plozo 203
Jackson Pike. Gllll ipolit between 8 :30·5 PM.

FEDERAL , STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

Now

Hiring . Your Area .
t13, 510 to 1159, 480. ...tmmedloto Openlngo. Coli 1-31!733-6062. oxt. #F2758.
Wenctv's now hIring smiling
t.ca. Apply In J*lon between
2 • 4 , Mon. -Sun. 3PO Sliver
8rida• Piau. O.tlipolit. Ohia.
E.O .! .
EJc~l.,ced

hNI pump, elr
coftdftlonfng It fl.lrnece servia.
..... AppNcollono bolnw token:
lo• t U c/ oOolllpollo Dolly
'Ill"'""· 121 llllrd A .... Golll·

polio. &lt;IIIIo 41631 .

GET PAID for ,.odlng boolcll

•100.00 por IIIIo. Wrtto: P-.SE:
33T. t 11 S . Unoolnwey, N.
Aurora. IL 801542.

1-.- --uc::':':o-&gt;.-:o::---

l- -------YardSale-17, 18. 19. Twomll•
from Vinton ·32&amp; towtrds Rio
Grande. hbv clothes. eduhs
clothes of all siZII, nictt nackt
and lots&amp; Iott of misc. Watch for
signa.
VIJdSa4e-J3GarfieldA&lt;A. Fri. &amp;
SM. 9 -1

Ett.te Sai•Hou.ehold good.
qulht, furniture, dlahet. etc.
(Some antiques) . Call814-4489798 or 44&amp; · 1988 for
appointment.
Michigan Sai•Due to delth
have to 1811. No A~Btoneblaotfer
retu•d. 60 Noll. 9· 7
Thurs., Fri.. Sat. 9-5. home
Inter lOt', drapft, dathM. du sit to
dow. n lioht and miiC. 1158
Golflold Ext.
V•d Sal•18 &amp; 20 Kelly Dr. on

Otortt'• Creell. Hend tool•. 5
lua '"DO" wheel, elothtt. furni·
lure. Ctll 114-448- ns7.

Beck· to· School Vard Sale- Aug. :
19 &amp; 20. 9-4 . Off Rt . 35 w. •
(Kristi Dr,) Des ign• boy &amp; girl "'
clothes. C!)ats. hou•hold. toYs. :
misc .

...... Piimerov.... _.....:
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
-· ···· ···········-···---·- ·-·· ·· ··
Earl Young residence on SR. 7 . :
Aug , 17- Aug. 20. Sterling s ilver- '
retson~ble. old coin1, coin col· '
leetionsuppli•. l•geslzel&amp;dles'
dr•~. jeans. Some furnhunt . :

Alot of good ct.,. long andh.nd
g!Jnt. Priced to 1811, Fife's South
ltd. St. MlddiiPort, Ohio. 114·
892·7494.

--------- ~

..... "PfPTeasanf ...... i
&amp; Vicinity
--·-···- ······ ··-· ·· ···-~····· -··-

&amp; family Vlrd •le. Rail road
laby furniture. bat., cloth... tracks In GaUtpols Ferry. Fridt¥
rnoro. 9:00.1 :00. Sot.·Aug. 20 ' endSaturdt¥, Everything cheap
M Thurman by "1\e Church.
4 famHy ~rd tale, 2014J•rterPlying for .,hool olothool Good •on Aw, Wed, Thra, Fri, Aug
wlntef. summer clott.. all
1~1~19 ,

olaoo. Sot. 9·7 101 OR Dr.

3 Fornlly V•d Sol• Aug. 19 •

20. I to 4. Aodn.,. Pik• /a. milt
from Rt. 3B.
1

:
•
•
'

2 -family e•r/ott nle, 28
lunlotto Add, ·I Aug. 19. 20.
Fri. • Sat. Car • •· Tupperwere
loyt, clothel. hou•hold items.'

..·
•
•

:

·
;
I

�44

LAFF·A-DAY

18 Wanted to Do

Apanment
for Rent

61 . Household

Goods

74

KIT ·N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

,,omeroy-Middleoort, Ohio

3 room ipertment. t1001 mo.

304-175- t t 45.

'

Will b.tJv lit in my home fiMible
hours. 304-575-7987 or 675-

Television
Viewing

3 bedroom apt. Jlrrv• Run
llood. 304-&amp;78-2t03.

45

Fumishad Rooms

F\,rnilhed room-919 Second

304-676-2784.

Aw .• O.llipoHI. t125 • mo.
UtMM:5et peid. Single mel e. Sh••

b .. h. Coll44&amp;44thttor7PM.

Financial

Roomt for •nt·w... or month.

Stlrting M *120 • mo, Gellle

b . . , and MW back tlrtl.

&lt;load """"· uoo. Att.r
304-175-2&amp;&amp;9.

Coli 304-875-5t04.

3734.
Babysitter aveilabe, flexi~e
hours, pan or full time, tenctd
yard , behind Ordance School,

I'WW

7 pc. lhring """"ouho. Good
ccnd. Coli oftor 4 ,30 PM,
e t4-"45-8558 or 4-45-3139 .

e. c 111

Hcndo t918 vee Moe... v.
..ho380dlrtblko. Hondo ttl3
XA 1100. At. 35 Cvclo Soloo,
3Q4.17. . t30.

2 pc . HCtlonll. Ent...n,.,.t
center. 1 rowing
1
treredm.,bothllkenew. Cement
mlxer-I.Mid 3 time~ . 3 pc. Levi

Rt. Jl Cyala ..... pert• .vice
and aca.eorill ayel_,• for

lodl• -t2. Coli et4448-ot90 ottor 5 PM.

v -.. 304-175-4t30.

•erct.r.

Hcndo. "--oolcl,

8u1~

6t4-247-3824.

75

M

Boats and
· Motorw for Sale

THURS .. AUG.

18

won

':~~:t:~r S©\\.&lt;iU~-"'f..tfS"
------CLAY R. ,OILAN
·~··
Reo rronge letters of the
0 fo ur scrambled
be·
E~:tttt~y

M

words

low to forrn fo ur slrnple words

I

EVENING

&amp;:oo Ill Big Volley The PriZe
IJI]) Ill • CIJ !Ill • 1121

Md

Upright trener for 11le. Clll

HciOI-It 4-448-9&amp;80.

The

Motorcycles

'81 Hondo TAX t 2&amp;. 4-whool•.

I wMI bMw sit In my horne. 211111111
childr... Days. Can h.w ref.
~oil

Thursday, August 18. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

1111 Non
&lt;!I SpottaLook

••'

(l) Voyogo of

.,

111e Mimi

8usin8SlJ
Opportunity

46 Space for Rent

I NOTICE I
lliE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

AttractMI office tuM . Vfl!fV
private. lo Cftlld In downtown
Golllpollo. U&amp;O per momh. Coli

..,.

ING CO. recommendl th .. vou
do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
t hrough the mail unti you have
invettigatflf the offering.

e t4-4-48-3432.

"I couldn't put your new

Shoe B ~JSiness for •••· In d•
pendent tltoe store in Pomeroy,

autobiography down, Ms.
Harris, and I must say,
'shame on you.'"

Ohio for 28 years. Write The
Daily Sentinel, Bo_,~~; 729P Po me·

roy. Ohio.

I
I
"-TI~_,.RI..:U._IGF-=Orl-II ~
~

for Sale
31

Homes for Sale

for Rent

1 979 1 4x70. 3 IR , t ...ll. for

oai&lt;O 17000.
1985 Marlette Modular Home,
60x28. All 91ectrie. Ca. 3 BR .• 2
baths. greet room, dining room .
To many 8Atres to lltt. Mutt •e
to appreciate. $45,000. owner
financing. Call 614-446-1408
after 5 PM.
Saa-ifice. 2 BR . home, 1 acre. 2
miles pessed Vinton School.
Co mpletely remodeled. New
wiring. lights. windows, blown·
in insulation. plumbing. kit&lt;::hen
c abinets. c•pet throughtout.
drapes &amp; sheers. Also'Misher/ drver. stow. nJfrig. G.-den spot.

$23.000. Coll6t 4-388-8482or
388-9864 til tO PM.

Beautiful Ho\oo mb Hill. add._
t io nal lo1. 3 BR .. Ca. Call

6 14-446-0338.

C~l

8,4-388-

9644.
1979 Slyview mobile home.
14x70 with 71121. eJII~ndo.
t&lt;MI elec. C..Ufllllr. 30~175-

8t4t .

Sale of Rent-1.9812 BR . mobile
home. Elthll nice. Clll 30~1715--

6566.

3 bedrooms. 2 baths, centrelllir.
carpon. aae plus lot st0111ge
' bldg. Call wenings 614-992·
5477.
.

Nice 10 room brick hou•. 4
BR .. 2baths.heatpump.ful\size
basement. Ne.- L.ecta. Call
614-256-6412.
1 Acre, 2 bedroom hou1e, all
el ectric. carpeted, part bale·
'"""'· plus • t4•70 trailer, all .
el&amp;etric. 2 bedroom, furnished
kitchen. living room, famity
room with fireplace. 1 \II blthl,
wather·dryer. 4 mi. lrorncity on
State Route. Rural water. Call
614-256-9360.

By owner.Qr...- Rd., trail• app.
1 acre. Concrete dr. Lot• nlbery . Muot ..11. Call 8,4-274-

8247.
14x70 2 bedroom. 1'-"2 b•ht,
fuly c.-peted. lf&lt;MI. rairigntor . w••her / d"ryer in eluded.
10x30 roofed pttio. 10x12
building. New windows. •
storm doors. Call before 4 PM.

1979 t 4x67 with, 2xt 6 """'·
mobile home on 1 acre lot.
t20,000 -GI.,woad. Call 304578-2487- Cloy, oftor 5 ,30 PM

6 14-742-22 11 .

3 bedroom, 2 story home.
Garage. central air. finished
basement, fenced in back yerd.
l.Dcated center of Point Pleatent. Price re~ced S40' t . Call

304-675-6633.

Garage apt., 4 rooms &amp; bath
w.ith appliances. $17.000. Call
after 5 :00. 30~675-2569 .
1 d 5 privnte acres w / easy access
Ga llipolis Ferry, n81N home also
2 lots with wells. 870.000. Call

1978 ttllcrest mobil• home
14x70 ft lots of._ ...... 304-

675-t4t8.
For Sale-1978 Wll'ldsor Moble
Home. Centl"'l Air, lll:ove. nrfri~t
. .tor. micrO\I'IIht, dittw\lleh8f'.
C~ll 304-875-4394.

~;:::::;;;::=::;=:::;;::;=

"33

Farms for

Sale

40 acr11 Raccoon Rd.- Mobile
home. 838,000. c.u 304--522-

7279.

85t0.

&amp; Acreage

35 Lots

Bel!lutKul IIJ'ltlng for home,
located 17 mllm from Athena
near 'HarritonvHit in Meigs
County. 715 acrtt. free v•.
stnrem. wind c.we, \Moodl.. d
pond. wood•. cem1r1t foundetion with bMemtnt. C.llweningt. 614-1594-8192.
A1hton. l~rg8 bulding lots.
mobile homes permltled. public
weter. alto mer lots. Clyde

Bowen. Jr.

30~576-2336 .

BeMitiful river kJtsoneacreplu1,
pt.blic water, Clyde Bovwn, Jr.

304-678-2336.

Call 304-675-2365.

304-578-2383.

811 7 Fruier Lane-Grunbottom .
Large, very nice 3 bedroom
homelocm:ed on 90x153corner
level lot. 2 car oversized garage
&amp; 1 2A36 work shop. Mlrion
Davis McGuire Raafty. Call

Hou•lota. 304-1!176-1908.
lots, one acre. Level vvoodtd.
citywater,JerichoRoad. Owner
financing. Good terms, 304-

372-8405 or 372-2578.

304-522-3637.

6 75, t774.

Rentals

1968 Shultz mobile home for
sale, underpinning, CA., refrig.
&amp; stove . Call 614-446-8504 or

388- 9336.
3041 .

1972 12d5 , 3 bedroom. 1 %
baths . Good t;o nd. $4500. Call
614-446-1528.
Warm fuzzie5 with '"AC , cozy 2
BR . 4 miles from Gallipolis. Acre
tot. septic system. Call 614446-6100 evenings,

2 bedroom mobile home lac-ted

t37t or 175-38t2.

44

Apartment
for Rent-

2 8Ft ept • . 6 clotett. kitchen"""'· fumiohod, Woohor-Oryor
hook-up, ww cwpet. n4M!'ft
painted; deck.
From *17&amp;.
Reg811cy, Inc. Apta. Call 30467$.5104. or 676-5388 or
675-7738.
"'
New c~ompletely furnished
•P•rtment • mobile home In
city. Aduha only. Perking. Call

41

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGEt PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. !531 Jackton
Pike from t183a mo. Wlfk to
•hop end movlel. 614--446-

2588. E.O.H.

11 Court St.-2 IR .• 2 bahl,
klitct.en furoi.hed. w / w cwpiet.
No pet1. Off ttreet perking.
S32Samo. plusutllhl• Dep. &amp;

Furmht&lt;f. 3

room•

6

blth.

Clean . No pets. Ref. &amp; deposit
required. Utllhlet furnished.
Adutts only . Call 814-448·

t5t9.

Furnhhed apt. $160. Utilities
pltid. Shere bl!h. Single male.

t

19 Second AVII., Gallipolis.
Call448-4416 after 7 PM.

Luxurious Tara Townhoute
apartment•. Elegant 2 floors, 2
BR .. full b81h upatllirs. poVIIder
room down• ..lu, CA.. dl•·
hwaaher, dftpotll. private entrance, prMita .nclo•d patio.
pool, pleyground. Utllitl• not
included. Starting at $299 per

mo. Call614-387· 7860
Furnlthed efflciency -920
Fourtt., Gallipolta. t180. Utlities Plid. Call441-441 6 1fter 7
PM.

Furniahechpt. NlrW. Ne..-HMC.
1 BR . t295. Utilitlet ~id. call

446-44tlottor 7 PM.

Homes for Rent

4 46-4418 ottor 7 PM.

Nicety furnished amall houlf.
Adutrs !Jnly. Ret. required. ffo
pMs. Call 614-446-0338.

Rio GI'IMlde-Fourbedroorn. Cllll·
tral air, cwpeted, dishwllshef,

large kitchen. b•ement. Reier·
ences Ill deposit. Call 8 "1 4-4469430 evening~.
3 BR .• utility, attached gantge.
large khchen, all elect. 1 yaar
lease. Flrlt mo. 11nt &amp; deposit.
Nlee 2 bedroom hou.a. Nee
carpmlng. cabinlltl, neighborhood . Middleport, 8, 4-992-

6858.

AnractMt one floOthomeat 197

Mulberry Ave .. Pamlltf'oy- . 2
bedrooms, living fOOm,. dining
room, kitetlen, beth and ..,_tv
tun porch. Clrpets, drap•i•.
stove and refrig.ator. Full b•e-

1 SR . apt .• nev.~ c•pet. range/ frott free refrigerator fur·
n ithed. WatCK·garbage pel d.
Depotit required. Call81~446-

4346.

2 BR. aplrtment. All utHities
paid. Call 814-446-IIS723.
Garage apt. furnl•hed. 291h Neil.
Gallipolis. t22r.. Utlliti• paid
Call 4•44 18 1ftar 7 PM.
1 BR . apt. In Rio Grande. All

utilrtl• paid t250 w / 1160

depotit. Call 614-245-6220.

Gracious lhling. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmenu et Village
M•n or and Riverside Apartmenu in Middleport . From

et82 . Call Bt4-992·7787.
'EOH.
bedroom Apte. for rent .
Car-. Nlco oettlng. Loundry
2

fac.itl• avalllbl• Call 614-

992-37tt . EOH.

Rou• 33. North of Pomeroy.
Ren•l lr8ilers. Call 614-992-

7479.

Tri-hul. Needl lower urit work
• 1500 or 1dde for b•• boet.

2 e. 3 BR. All utiiHioo poid O&lt;C!pt

1971 mobile home. 3 bedroom. t4~ridly . Conwnlent location.
n good condition. Cllll 814- Coil 814-448-8518 - 445-

4001.

1974 Olampion 14xll total Furnished 28R . Cl.c•bf•WIIttr
electriC, underpennlng. Fur· IIIWIQII paid. Fotllr"e Motlile
nf•hed or unfur,.Md. Reed¥ •
Home Park. Call 814448mow , t8,500.00. 304-811- t802.
2383.

'NheMch.W•nrN or u.ed. .3
'NhNied llectric ICOoterl. Clll
Rogoq Moblhy c:olloct, t ·It 4-

870-911t .

.

Coil lt4-992-5545 or
et4-949-22t6.

pocldacloo•. •t750. Coli 8t4448-8471.

Spacious mobile home IQtt tor
rent. Family Pride Mobile Homa

P•k. Golllpollo Forry, W.
304-876-3073.

)/o,

Spac• for rent, trlllhr t.-ces,
water a sewerfurrithed. Locust
Rd. At. t, 304-675-t076.
Room for ntnt n priwt11 country
home, utith:tes paid. 304-8757541 evening~.

51 Household Goods

rec:haraMble. variable spMd,

Browning 50 Cal. Mur:zleloeder·
ntrw In box unfired, t376.

BotglumBrownlngB27ovor.,d
undOr ohotgu n. 28 Inch fu! •
modified. new In box unfired,
U50. Call lt4-«5-4041.
'

Olive St., Gallipolis .
NEW- 8 pc. wood group. t399.
Uvlng room Uta- t199-e&amp;99.
Bunk bedl with bedding- t199.
Full • • mettrftl • found .. lon
starting- 199 . Recliner•
ltllrtlng- 199.
USED- Bedt. dr•eera. bedroom
tuitet, 1199·1299. D11k1.
wringer Wllher, a complete line
of u•d furniture.
NEW- WHtern boots- $30.
Workboots $18 • up . (Steel &amp;

aoft too).

eon 6t4·441-3t59.

----- ,.... _ ___
...- ......

.....

..;___

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1416 Ealtern Ave.
4 drBWVer chett, $48. 5 drawer
chest. 1!54.95. 5 pc . .wooden
dinnette set•. $199.96.

PICKENS USEO FURNITURE
Complete houuhold furnl•h·
inga. 1f.r mila out Jerrlcho.

304-675-t 450.

StopS. Cheek out our in..,..,tqry
of quality fumlturalt carpet for
low prlcn. 8 pe. wood tulttS399, 5 pc. oak dlnette-8226.
cut toop cerpet starting It 88.95
a yd .. cammBrclal carptt-$3. 99
a yd. LargesltiectiDn of room llltl
remnantt. No job too big or
small. FinancJog a. Installation
available. Mollohan Furniture,

River Ad., 446-7444.

Upper

VIRa't Furnhure
New aota &amp; chairs-one to fit
INifY budget, bedroom tuh:s,
chSit. wardrob111, bookshelves.

wood din.... seta. hutches,
wathert a. dryert, deep freuert.
refrtgeraton, l'lnQ81 . All furntture Is at lowcott priceabecaalll
we h..,. no hidden coat. Laya ~
wayt eJtcep.- plut flnenclng il
•.vallable with epprowd cr.dlt.
At. 141 -Can•Mry- 11. m•e on
Uncoln Pike. Open 9 AM-8 PM,
Mon.·Sat. SUNDAY· 12· 6 PM.

6 14-446-3 t 58.

Modem all wood dining room
suite with buffet, $200. Free
flow water bed, t150. Call

AKC Oor"*' Shophord block
lomola. Col1304-458-t528.

1979 Deteun 210 SW for •le.
tiOO Dr belt off.-. Call 814441-4135 oft« 6 &lt;30 PM.

No.... Ftlir

1972

co ... tion.

&gt;J

(l) Body

Musical
Instruments

2 grave tPIC81 for Veteran end
IPOUIII in Memory Gardent in
Military Section. t.S50. 1 -814..E"

1974 Jeep for •le. Excellent
condh:lon, t 1800. KXIO MotCM'Cycla. tBOO. 8-N Ford Tractor
end Brush Hog. $1600. Call

304-175-

AIt SMophone.

beat.

Cond. '3711. Coli lt4-38&amp;
8777.

Used Tra-tamluion1. All lntllrrwlly inal**d. 30 dev• gueren·
tee. We buy tren1mf11iona. Call
114· 4.t8-0918 . Rebuilding
aveillble.

• tOOO. Coli 8t4-949-25t4.

.... 8t4-992-2707.

• tO,&amp;OO. 304-678-4480.

t 979 Ch"rolot Now. tO.OOO
mil• on rebult encjne, tr1n•
minion end,.. end e.:. plus
meny ot,_ ,...., ...,..,, bodv
wrecked, $500.00 ftrm . 304-

Wolkor. $300. 814·742-2820.

1979 Hydro Streern. new 1 1 6
Men:urv out board, very •h•p
and very feat. Suz~i 250 Qued
Racer. Both priced to 1811.

Jeff Wai'Miev lnstrudor, 114448-8077. Umltod ()p.,ingo.

&amp;

6t4-985·39t3.

1978 T·Bird goad cond PB, PS.

olr. t600.00. 304-882·3348.

19BI Black andwhlte131nch

T.V. EIICall.,t, Coli 114-8925171.
Troy &amp;JII ~~~-.

5:00pm.

AdarN Farms-Canning toma·
to. for .Iiiia. Llllart Falla. Ohio.

Coli 8t4-247-205B.

Canning tomet081. •4.50 per
buahat. Raymond Rowe, 814247-4212. Bring contllnan.
C811nlng tomlt&lt;MII . t4.00 bu·
shet. Pick your own. Bring
contalnen. Eugene Davia. 114-

247·3213.

•GOd. CompiMO

r IIIII SUilililW:

draft beer . . up, t125. K.w•·
•aki 1000, 122&amp;. Mower. Call

II.

304-876·463t.

18 hp riding tl"'ctor and equipment, fr8ming lumber all m:ea,
3.4 plywood exterior, wrought
Iron tailing and poets. 304--8764004 after 5:00.
Steem Jennie and pretture
washer combined, coat over
Ui.OOO .OO will sell for

$ t ,800.00. Coli after 6 &lt;00 PM
304-882-347t .
10ft Uniden t~tellite dish wtth
remote 8600 .00 . 304-676·

6937.

• .ooo

btu room air cond
1100. 00. Recliner-carriage
stroller S30.00. One step c.sell with ·2 covers $15.00. All
exc conct, 304-675·6732.

14ft. aluminum boat and trefler
with new7YJ HPM•curymotor.
Delta Motor Home 23ft. E111Cellent Condttton. 30~882·2289.

Lilll:,t 11Lk

61 Fann Equipment
CRoss• SONS
U.S . 311 W•t. Jadt•on. Ohio.
8t4-288-145t.

""-lilY Fergu10n, New Holland,
Bush Hog S.t• 6 Service. Over

.to uMd trictort to choote from
&amp; oompl• Une of new &amp; Utld
equipment. t.gnt Bectlon In

s.E . Ohio.

UNd wtre corn cribl. 1 000

bu""ol U50. 1200 bu""ol
'450. Coli It 4-717-4289. No•

Ath.,s, Oh.

02 Cat, Pony Bngine with C•
vvench. good oond. • 3.000.

ordeU\18ry. Matontlnd Gellipt&gt;
lit Block Co., 123112 Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 114-446-

2783.

WESTERN RED CEOAR
• Channel Ruetlc
and Beveled lap Siding
• Oec:lc Met:erllls
Guaranteed Quality
CETIDE , INC., Athent-81··

&amp;94-3678

Old log horne.huge ..flen.
Good cond. Approx 20x25. Call

6t 4-742-3048 or 388-8100.

56

Pets for Sale

•tvt•Julio Wabb Ph. 81 4-448·023t.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel.
CFA Pertlln and Slam. . kit·
tent. AKC Chow pupPei. N.w
Himalayan klttent. tall 114-

448-3844 oftor 7PM.

t977 Ch•y otop otdo pick-up
truck. n11dlel tlr•. I cyl., 3 tpd.
ltiiOO. 304-882-3238.

Conc:rete Sopllc Tanko - tOOO

t987 Plymoulh. 14,910. 304-

RPN EVANS ENTEAPAISES-

87&amp;-.t480.

Septic tank pumplno-

304-675- ~480 .

evenlngt. 1

TMdem Mac truclc &amp; Tandem
low boy Wll•. Good cond,

• 57110 .. will ooll ..,. ...... Coil
lt4-448-9035.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
rernoW~I . Cell 304-175--1331 .

8,98-3802

running cond. 1 d1maged
fender. 8700 or belt offer. Call

r..o•tweltscomptetedsemectav.
Pump tales and MrVice. 30...

2903.

1981 Chevyluv. 71 . 000rnil ...

Good ccnd. $2200. Coli lt4448·115&amp;.

114-319-9045.

Pigs for •le phoM 304-1711-

t977 Ford XLT Rangor pickup,

64

.

Hay

&amp; Grain

•

.,,'
'.,

..' ,,,
•

,IJ

'•
•

4

t.1
··'.!'!

•&lt;'l'

.,
I

ACCOAffiiJI€0 CUY BY
A ~T~D ~ RGHTE..R

'

V-8 , auto .• alr1 PS. Pl. Good
cor&lt;!. Coli 11 4-441-9tl0 .,

448-t909.

!

..
:"I
'

''

N

..

.
-''
..'

II Ill

"'

' '

!

it
i

'

•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

'

WE'~

NOT

eo DIFFERENT

· - · 304-575-2398.

Jii.••
Trae Trlmmlnpand Stump
Ae,..,..l. Free ntimltes. Cell

I

I

'

'.

FROM. EACH
OTHER..

I

WE BOTH EAT,

ONLYMYGOO

DIZINK 1 OLEEEP.,.
WEeoT'H
6EL.II:VE IN
GOD ...

HAe&gt;GREEN
FEATI-IEii1.5 AND

AN ORANGE
BEAK..

''

Aooilng. framing. bathroom and
kitr:h., ln. .llatlona. el.:trlcal.
concrete, brick and block leylng.
•tlmatoo, 304-876-2440.

82

~

'

~

Point, waehera, dryen and

304-675-7t2t .

PIL.Or 10
CHNJGE.
DIAPEIC

:I

,J

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

t 971 OMC Pick-up. Good con-

ExciiiiMt Alfelf1 hiP(, MoriJin
W&lt;\.odiiWn F•rrn-Rt. ·35, Pliny.

304-937·20t8.

Tt~ilSportoliiHl

948·3087oftor &amp;p.m.
t 986 Toyote ~ 1on plc:lt· up. 4
W.O. outo. Colllt4-992·3149.
t976 Oteov ~ton plck-uo.
.,,o., •tooo. 114-988-3&amp;97.
t 980 Chovy

71 Auto"s For Sala . ,
1977 C.maro. V·8, .. ta. trans .•
PS. PB. Coli lt4-4-48-tet5,

RED HOT bargains! Drug daai.,,. c.-a, boat1,
Npo'd.
Surptu1. Yc;,ur •rea. Buyers

pl.,•

Guido. It I 808-687-8000, o•t
S-4&amp;12.

1982 Buick Regal, aoca~eori-.
IOIIded. e)tcet. cond.· t3800.
1978 Ford lltl II, t15o0. Call

lt4-448-t388.

1 I. 700 mll111. Prloe 18duc:ad..
Call 114-318-8240.

•4400.

Coli 114-

\&lt;\ton

w11oo1 drlw. usoo

pick-up. 4

oeo. eon

t980 VoliiiMIDn llu'- for
Mlo.
Good ooncltloo.
Att.r e,oo coil 114-388-8033.
lt4-318-814t d.,o. A borloln

01....

87&amp;4.-

1 971 Chwy one tan truck wtth
wrelct.N bed, 414 engine, auto,

oolld truck. •t.IIOO.OO. 304372-&amp;858.
73

Verts

&amp; 4 W.O.

1983 ChwyRo., Crtlft Conwer·
lion Van. ," ton. low mneage,
load... wtth •ti"'S, Cl radio,
n.w IIWnlng. tl210. Cle~n •

304-675-6489.
86

General Hauling

w0

CJI Jaep, I f:'fl, 4spd .• newtop.

Dllerd

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

.....

8,oo • to.oo pm. 304-87579t7.

t 987 cn .. vs to. 4•4. o~c .. clod

C eb. l'tlf80 CMIIN, bed liner,

••c coftd, 20,000 mll81,

•e.300.00. 304-372-IIH.
74

Motorc:yclas

THAT'S SORTA

PUULIN' COMIN'
FROM YOU,
SHERIFF

I WANT HIM
BACK ON HIS
FEET MORE'N

ANYBODY !!

..... ooolod. Good'"'""·
Prlco •en. Coli 11 4-218Utl.

,••
t

~ J

• ••
I

MEAL

TICKET II

&lt;!I SporlaCenter (L)

.,'

(J)Cheere
on

m one

..,...

A &amp; A w..., S•vice. Pool•.
cllterna. wells . lmmedlate1,000 or 2.000glllon• deltvery.

Coli 304-175-1370.
Pa~l

SC:RAM-LETS ANSWERS
wife replied : "Only if you are an

•=
.'

•

Rupe, Jr. W•r Service.

W1tteraon'1 Wetar Hauling,
rea1on•ble rates, immediate
2.000 Q811on de41ftry, cil..-ns.
pool•. well. etc. clll 304-&amp;7&amp;-

29t9.

'100'[7 ENJ0V MCKPACKIN6
A L9T MORE, MARCIE, IF
~LEARN TO RDU.

'1'0\IR SLWINi SA6 ..

Upholstery

UP

Ametlcln Mlgozlno
12:00 Ill Peper
IJ) c,allllg International
Clanlc (R)
(I)
hllnt 1;1

B=

c....

trtcounav•r•23,e. .. Thebelt

~-·~-----j"'--

+KQJ1054

Declarer's superfluous cue-bidding'
helped East· West beat four spades.
Don't ask me why South bid four dia·
monds. Since he wasn't going to slam,
why should he give the o!fllonents more information?
East put his mind to work alter the
opening lead. Apparently declarer had
controls everywhere. The defense
might take three club tricks, but it
would be child's play for South to take
· A·K of spades and ace of diamonds,
and lead a spade to dummy's queen for
the rest of the tricks. But what if cashing the ace of diamonds before leading
to dummy would not work? East
hoped his thinking was not lost on
West. He overtook .West's club queen
with his king, played the ace and led
his last club to West. West correctly
reasoned that East did not bold either

red ace and, for whatever reason, simply wanted his partner to continue
with the last club. He did so. To dis·
courage an uppercut, declarer played
a low diamond from dummy. East
shed his singleton diamond as declarer
ruffed in his hand. Try as he might, declarer could no longer take 10 tricks.
Declarer can succeed against tbis
defeose if be bas X-ray vision . He
musttrump the fourth club in dummy.
When East discards a diamond, declarer can throw his diamond ace

+ 10 9 2
WEST
+9 7

EAST
+J 10 2
.H54U
+2
+AK3

•Qs

+98763
+QJ 74

SOI.ITH
+AK883
.AK106

+A
+su
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
WHt

Eut

Nortb

Pass
Pass

Pw
Pass

Pau

Pass

Pass
Opening lead:

+Q

away and then start playing bigh dta·
monds from dummy. If East ruffs,
South cao overruff and play ace and 1

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 "What Kind 1 Breathing
of Fool
2 Try
"

3 "-

4 Enemy of
Carthage
8 E. Europe
people
9 Lagoon
enclosure
ll Scout
adventure
12 Harvester
attachment
14 Twilight
15 Summit
16 Islet
17 Church
official
19 Seraglio
chamber
20 Zola novel
21 Valley
22 Rabbit
23 Temperate
24 Recent
25 Nucleus
26 Leftover
27Roomer
30 Mining
fmd
31"Jt- to
Be You"
32 NOW's
concern
33 Lumberjack's
shout
35 Party
for guys
36 Seed
37 Gaelic:
38

been

had!"
4 Bathhouse
5 On tiptoes
6 Cargo
weight
7 One's
utmost
15 Volcanic
effort
apex
(sl.)
-18 Relief
8 Leanorg.
to
21 Encircle
10 Like
22 Joel
some .
Chandler
gasoline
13 Cornelius 23 Frame
or Nolan
of mind

24 Plunder
25 Wine
28 Expunge
29 Frenzy
31

Medal

recipient
34 Scary
word
35Cover

· a bet

Binge

39 - bank

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three· L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are di£ferent.
CRYPTOQUOTE
OCPN
RGF
ld&lt;IJBG
RWDN

·~TWilight Zone
O•aNight

U A

• "••lwll•
Now
Ill Lilt Night with

12:30 IJ (J)

Dhld LeiiMnlln
Loft Cor•WCIIon
Ill MOVII: Tht Oultt
~tlloln (2:001

IJIID~:I:•ID MOVTI: 'Tru11n or
the Amo&amp;on' CBS Loti
MeNte INRI

8118

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

UD

IJCI)PdQuy

11 the •

dr -'·

spade to tbe queen, aonug a
a...
verse trumps. And of coune U Eut
ruffs tbe fourth cltbub,dldecmoodlarer idmandply
overruffs, ~bes e a
ace
. plays two bigh trumps endln&amp; in dum·
my for tbe rest of the tricks.

CROSSWORD

(l)flllinOII

(J)

Mcwroy'o Upho-lnt ol!n.tng

1-IJ.II

.7

By James Jacoby

cas

OWired

PEANUTS

NORTH
+Q54

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

'Night Heel'
Lite
Night The trainer and jockey
of a winning race horse are
found murdered. (R)
18 Trepper Jolin, M.D.
Frtenda and Lovers

a

AMATEUR I"

BRIDGE

• il1l Newlywed Oilme
iUl Sporla Tonight

Pools. ciaterna. vwella. Call614448-3t71 .

87

One

I!Ill Cfu:'
!ll''""I;J
Mognum, P.l.

245-9285.

t9711 Hondo. Qol~ tOOO. · In ft.trnltu• uDhOinWing. Clll
Sodcl..,_ondtolrlng. uooo. 304·171 · 4114 for free
8 t4-115-l117.
ettknetn .

_______ . __, ___..______

HE'S MY

a

III Convention Night In
Rtvltw Nighlly wiap-ups of
the Democratic and
Republican conventions.
mil1l ~ovo Connection
IIJI Monoyllnt
IDl Twilight Zona Third from
the Sun
0 Hitchcock P!8..nt•
® You Can 1111 1 Star
11:30 Dill 1111 BHt ·of C1reon

dallvory. Coil lt4-882·1275.

1171 Hondo ex 1100. &amp;holt

I NEVER
KNOW ED
YOU CARED,
SHERIFF

Ill (I) 1111

IJill Ill II (I) llll 1D 1121
1111 NtWI

Wet• dellwry . 1"000 gallons.
A. .aMble prices. Immediate

1181 Yarnehe BINgo 710. Good
cond. tii&amp;O. Coil 814-25514:10 or 448-n40.

lll'ough., AC.. Pl., PI, AM·
FM·Cooo . .roo. 17.000 mlloo.
• 8:100. Coli 8t4-445-8818.

. Ehtctrician, State Certified, free
81~ima181 . call Ed Shamblin

poots. cts1ern1. wells. Ph. 614-

~~o~

LDWEEZ.Y

676-t788.

E•col. cond. Coli 8t4-387·
0"47.

-lon. Coli

SNUFFY'S
SICK IN BED,

(l)

Republlc8n NoUonal
Convention (Lli;J
&lt;!I TNck and 'rractor Pulling
Championships from
Richmond, VA (T)
(l) III Myatel}'l A duk6's
son Is abducted from school,
and the master is also
missing. C
IIJ) Lorry i(lng Llvel
9:30 New Countl}'
10:00 Ill S1rllght Talk
Cil USAC Sp~nt•
(l) NtWI
ttl The Day 1l1e Universe [
Changed Examine !he
discovery !hat changed the
view of science. 1;1
IUl Evening Newo
i1J Hitchcock Pretentl
® Crciok and ChaM
10:20 (I) MOVIE: Flr8C!8ell (NR) .
(1 :44)
10:30 Ill Ceble Kitchen
(l) Eoollndere
IDl Newo
iiJ Hitchcock Preanto
® VldiCICountry
t t :oo Ill Remington StMie Steele
Away wHh Me, Part 2
(l)

S.-vlce: Pools,
Ci1terns. Walls. Delhlery Allytime. Call 814-441-7404-No
Sund8¥' cella.

gcod

I'M SORRY

Electrical

Residential or oomrnercl.t wiring. New tervice or repeiu.
Ucen18d etectrldan. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

t 987 Ford T•ruo4oyl.. 20.000
mloo. Eltool. ccnd. Toi&lt;o _ ,
poy-. Colllt4-3S7-7812.

1114 Olds. Cutlau Clar•

84

t982 Doto.., King Cob. Bt,OOO
mil•, atuo, PI, PB, re.-window
defoaa•. nice truck, 30,..875-

..,

Oalllpcllo. Ohio
Phone 8t4-448-3888 or 8t4445-4477

&amp; Refrigeration

.. ...,.110.

• tiOO. Colll14-245-1378.

Cor. Fourttland Pine

114·992·3753 or 8t4-982·
1047.

t tn Vomoho VI 2110. Ron _.,
llttlo. E•col. cor&lt;~ . •tooo. eon
8t4-445-8t32 "'44&amp;02t2.

1t71 _ , Mor~ulo. High
mllet but excellent cond .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Sondra and Elvin return from

!heir honeymoon with
surprising news. (Rli;J
&lt;!I NHRA Dreg Roc ng ·
California Nationals from
• Sonoma, CA (T)
(JJ Ill (I) The Loner A
weahhy, eccen1rlc cop and
his female partner get caught
up In murder and mayhem
when lhey Investigate a
$750,000 jewel theft.
(l) Tilt Day tht Unlveru
Changed Look at the rise In
mOdern medicine. D
III Victory at Boa Beneath
the Southern Cross
llll 1121 Republican
Notionol Convention !LI
ID il1l MOVIE: The T~al of
Billy Jock (POi (2:50)
tiJ PrimoNew•
0 MOVIE: Once Bitten
(PG13) (1 :3:!)
® Nllhvlllt Now
8:05 CIJ MOVIE: Donovan' I Reef
iNA) (1 :49)
8:30 II Ill 1111 A Different World
Dwayne Is caught climbing
out of Whitley's window after
midnight. (R)
III Vlc1Dil' at See Magnetic
North
9:00 Ill 700 Club

e

~

.,,,.

dition. Many niiW' pertt. 114-

tu,. !Iori•. A·t condition. Coli
114-317·7329.

·-----~.-~---1-------

GE. Spoclollng In z.,~h. Coil
304-578-2398 .. 6t4-4482454.

1979 Dodgo, e c:vl .. 4 opd. Good

•

1913 Unaaln Town C. Sl...-

"'"'-- --- ·-

RON'S Television Servlca.
Hou• cell• on RCA, Ou11:1r,

Rotwy or cable tool dr•lng.

3t80.

1490.

..

,;.- :.

EXNrlor.

1983 smtlt Plymouth pickup
with ""''' Clmpet' tap. Only
40,000 miles. Very good condl·
tion, •2600or will trlideforcar.

COli lt4-25&amp;825t.

•
!

'

'

Dead or Alive
IJill 1111 The Colby Show

i

' I

Hornt·all kinds. ChNp. Loctc
1 1, Hendwson, C.ll 304-175-

t98t Dodge An• SE. 4 dr.
eed-.4epd .. PS..PI. • ,ade.
AM·FM-Cooo., hlllh mlloogo.
moln111nod. $liDO o r oflor. Coli lt4-448-9700.

"You ~ a Cllange from the old routine?
Okay, raw on the nghl side Instead of the left."

a

..,

'

Free eatlmat•. Call 814-4468344.

1973 Ford 'h ton 302. Ne«&lt;l
r•dl.mr. U7S or wll tmde. Call

Good cond.
448-0877.

ping. b.,lcl Md 1Chooll1 Far

•eo p•

lood. Coli t-800.537-9&amp;28.
Plinting: Interior

Trucks for Sale

72

-~ -

.....
.,-,; :

g .... 11500gel.'- tndJe1Aeratlon

t990 Mu .... g. lt,200. 304175-4480.

8:00 Ill Crezy Ukt a Fox Wanled'

"3.

J

448-0294.

o-m. Foctory volnod '""""
ohop. RON EVANS ENT1!APRISE&amp;, Jackoon. Ohio. t-100.
&amp;37-9528.

7797.

t 918 Sulek Skylork, 4 door, lix
ctylnder, AC.. cruile, tltt. PS.

n•et he IWig clo• to lhoi&gt;

Vaa~um

up and dallvery, Davia

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
hou• call •rvlcing GE. Hot

~=========:J=::=======~J AC,
1987
Chwv Ca¥1111•.
Auto.•
AM-FMaiiiNO,
re•dllfroet.
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Cleener, one half mile up
Georg• Creek Rd. Cell 814-

1978 Chevy truck, 8 cyl., auto .•
pov.er . . .lng &amp; brllk•. Short
narrow bed, Call 814-448·

oftor 6 PM 448-1244.
Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All bread 1 . . . AII
l•m• Pet Food Dealer.

1913 Orand Prix. new tires.
t2.191.00 ftrm. runt good.

63

1250. Coli 114-258-t588.

Concrete blodta· all tiln· yerd

t-6t4-237-0488. doy or night.

Starks Lawn end Shn• S.vice.
304-875-3956 or 304-571-

Quarter hor•-Mere, 4 yrs. old.

245-5t2t .

Free aatimete1. Call coll.a

.8 t 4-379-2502.

66 8 uildin g Supplies
Building Materiels
Block, brick, sew-..- pipes. windows, lintels, etc. CIC~Ude Win·
ters, Alo Grandi. 0 . Call 614--

WATERPROOFING
Unco~lo.wl lifetime gueren..._ Lol_c al ref•ence. furmthed.

aftor 5,00 coli 304-875-2559.
Livestock

'.'

'

BASEMENT

SWEEPER Md -lng mochlno
!opOir, porto. and .,PI&gt;II•. Plcll

• 4.350.

IDlllll-11

l

'

loodod. f9,950.00. 304-1764480.

1983 Malibu Stetlon Wagon.

llll ID ID 1111 Jeopardy! 1;1
il2l Croooftre
7:35 CIJ Andy Olltfl1h

••

RogersBatement
1987 Grand Am. white exterior Waterproofing.
gray Interior, low mileage, , _ _:.__...;.._ _ _ __

304-175-3213.

8(1)Judge

•

I

.150.00, 304-176-8t69 attar

Fruit
Vegetables

.,

882-2240.

1979 Ford Fairmont. 8 cyt, auto,

68

.

'

. . .. .''

or
Fat1Unoi;J
· 18 il1l Slar Trek
IIJI Monoytlno
I!Jlllllmoy Miler
0 Alrwotf (NR]
® CIDOI&lt; end ChaM
7:05 CIJ Andy Oritflth
7:30 Dill Hollywood Squares
&lt;!I SPMfiWMk
(JJ Enllrllllnment Tonight

® VldooCountry

Home
Improvements

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THE SE SQUARES

Umpet - Vaiua - Idiot - Pallor - AMATEUR
Husband: " It takes two to have a quarrel." The quick-witted

Court

llll IJID 1111 Wheel

Serv1ce:;

81

'I

Complete the chuckle quolod

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO "GE T ANSWE~

Newa=J~:OO)

&lt;I)

.150.00. 304-178-8758.

e

81 1 Stir

• (I)

t914 IIUick Rosol. AM-FM

0085.

conllo Muolc. 8t4-"48-0887.

0111 MY WAY Ho.M.t..

&amp; Campers
1978 Winnebago motor home.

s..mpc:ollectJon. Call814-992·
Slgll!lf' Qat hUier. 85,000 BTU.
t300. 11 year old Tennn1ee

79 Motors Homes

3712 . After Surd., Aug. 21 ,

Clldtte, solid little c•r.

fnchlduall gubr l•aone. bi.
glniWI, ..,loua gu harist. 8rui-

f'Uf I fORG!Oi fO ~TOP

t 988 Orond Am. Loocled. Aoklng •to,50o. Coli &amp;t4-992-

6t4-992·5883.

Electric

8:35 CIJ Carol Burnett
7:00 Ill Remington StMie Steele
Searching, Part 2
Dill PM ,..gulno
Cil lporUCenllr (L)
Cll Cutrent AHolr
(l) III MIICNell/ Lehrer

teen•"**"'·

1980 Buick 911yllrk. Good tlrea.
uMd no oil. Good work car.

Bundy Clerinet. IEJCcel. oond.
Complete W/C-. boob,. &amp;
mutlc ttlnd.. Call 114-«8-

3649.

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·

Ullld a. rebuild...,_. OUaran... 30 ct.r• minimum. Prla.
199 • up. Aelluilt torqUII
converted •s low •
•39.
Stendard clutchll, preuure
ol-e. throw-outbooringo. AH
t'fPII12 mos. werrantv. We buy
ju'*
Can 304-

0

.
.
.
.
.
·
by filling in the missing words
L..J.--L-1--L-~_J you develop from Step No. 3 below.

i1211n•kll Politico '88

• 100. Coil 8t4-992-2537.

t8e2 Ot1M!tt11 • ••50. Bt'l742·2257.

no.

I

" Is !hera anything stronger
than love?" sighed the lovaslck
teen to her mother. "Y81, dear."
chuckled lha mom . " - . ' '

I

SELVAH
~-,:;~5...:::;1"'6.::..,1,:.....;:;1...:.:."'1--1

100 Jlfff8reono

......

""

·

III Nlglnly Buaino•o Report
!Ill ID 1121 cas Newo
ID il1l Hogen'o Horoo•
~ You Can

!

r---------.

~ Llghllr Side of Spom (R)

..,

Parts

875-17118 or 114-3711-2220.

67

tOO,OOO BTU. lt25. Call 114448-8112.

UnNer•l. h111er. 18.8 cubic fl.
upright. Herdly ullld. EKCellent
condi-tion. 614-992-2781 .

Valley Furniture
New and Used furniture and
&amp;pplicances . Call 614· 446·
7572. Hourt 9-6 .

AKC. •t75ooc:h.Cotl304-87&amp;
2721.

• 7900. Coli 6t4-317·0508.

t979 Cu11ou s...,.mo. COil
304-773-&amp;492.

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

0322.

S.mo¥8d puppl•.

304-578-2928 •"• s,oo.

3rd St. Mldcloport, Ohio. 8t4992·7494.

90 Oeys •me as ca~h with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Buhwille Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-446-

Ador~tble

Used Down Flow furnace,

Sat. 6t4·448-t899, 627 3rd.

Sofu and chairs priced from
&amp;395 to 8996. T•bles 850 and
up to S125. Hid•a-bed• 1390
to t595. Reelinen $226 to
8375. Lllmps 128 to 1126.
Dinettes 8109 and up to $495.
Wood table w ·6 chairs 8286 to
1796. Oetk 1100 up to 1376.
Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
bed• co,.ete w·mMtressea
S295anduptot396. Bllbybeda
1110. Met1reuea or bo~ springs
ful or twin sea. firm 878, •nd
$88, Clueen _.s tZSO • up,
King 1360. 4 driWer chKt $19.
Gun cabinets 6 gun. Babv
menresses t35 &amp; 845. Bed
fnlm111 t20. 130 &amp; King ·frame
$50. Good telectlon of bedroom
suitet, metal cabinets. headboardt t30 and up to $86.

2

mil•. Adultdriwn. O.ragelcept.

Super cl..,. Contkllr U.de.

Blaelc a. white rea61tered Cocker
Sp.anllll. 7 moritht, mala. t1 !50.

Ave. Galllpoltt, 0 ~-

Creo1 Motel. 6t4-448-7398.

oft• 8-2t-88. Coil nowl 114448-1251
.

t 985 Com oro, loodocl. 38;000

448-9146.

A lot af good clean long end h•d
gurw. Priced to sefl. Fife's South

dryers, refrigeretora,
ranges . Skeggt Appliances,
Upper River Ad. belide .one

AKC Rag, Goldon AotP'-IPI· Thebeltfor kidl. Awlltlble

Auto

.

Ill 8 CIJ ABC NeWI! 1;J

· &amp; Acca110ries

,Booglo pupo.
2079.

NDw accepting liP piCMtont for
2 - - ... - • .,....,
... fully
c.,.....S.IPplatoM
•d
trHh plclwpo P&lt;OVIdod. Molnto-

·~---~---------

®Fandango
8:05 C1J Aile•
8:30 Dill 1111 NBC Nightly Newo

mtM11 ft.
Celll14-t92·3917.
Mlrcury
111
HP. 1171 Check·

76

71 Auto's For Sala

Tree &amp; ltump remGW~I . Ton
truck. I 1600. Brown
top.-r. t275. Stone, toPtoil,
thrubt. Don·alantlec••· l1+

County Appl~ance, Inc. Good
uaed applian&lt;:e~ and TV Mts.
Open SAM lo 6PM. Mon thru

W~thera,

Pets for Sale

dump

992·708t.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

~~=&lt;&gt;=•,.:•:•:••:•:•·:·~====::;;:=========~
66

3 wheeled tri-c.-t new.lndoor·
outdoor, batterv powered·

304-882·2511.

maoo lnfo.-ion coil 304-882·
37t8. E.O.H.

Colllt4-4-48-2t51.

64 Misc. Merchandise

.,-d.

• 7000. Call 61 4-448-298t .

MoKI!!E.

· - · Cotii14-25S.t909.
Slcl botot. 8 cyt. 1.0. t9\&lt;\ It,

2528.

OffiDO or nail butinen • .-ce
for rent . loctted It North Seoond
Aw. in MlddlepCMtt bl.nlnees

114-448-1588.

Newly redecorttad ~aPartment•
available. Utililill paid 1225.
1977 Bayview 12x60, 2 bav mll'lt wtthMihel'·dryer hookup.
per month, deposit .-qulred Call
windows, C A S 5900 Cell Ida_. for working couple: t()rr¥.
no pets or children. 8235. plus 614-992·&amp;724 1fter 1 :00 or
6 14-446-7665 or 256-1 142.
992-61 t9.
securh:y depolft. PhorM 81~
1986 Redman Sectio.-.1 28:w:56, 992-6292 after 6:00 'N'8tkdiY•
' New 1 bedroom furnithed or
3 BR ., CA. To be moved. Cell or anytime on waltlend
unf\.m.hed apartment .. One in
61 4-446·8594 after 6 PM .
Pomeror. one In Mh:k..port.
GlenwDOd·Nie&amp; 2 8A . bldl, 3
1989 Kirkwood trailer, AC, all car garega. ell alec.. wood Call 8t4-992-5304.
e arpet. Good cond. Call 814- burning flreplllc• w.ll to Will
3 roomfurnilhed. A•f•.nc•.,d
446· 7826,
cw pet. Acceptlng1 child. t320.
depotlt Nqulred. Worldngaduhs
Huntington, 304-525-70111 .
0 nly. Phone e 14-992·1942 af12x6S Federal 1977, 3 8R .,
Bodroom hou•. l04oe 75- ter ISp.m.
tota1 &amp;tee.; new carpet, washer&amp; 2
·
th
h
4480 ext. eo or 53, betMtn
,
d
c':0~,~~4r:,;Qc.:'7s. roug out. 8am-4pm . Rent •200. Security 1 bedroom apt , In Mlddeport,
• 150 P• month plut utlltttes.
di!P.
CAll 8t4-992-&amp;545 or 8t41971 Schult! 12x85, 8K10 1-.:._________
e•J18ndo. 2 BR .. completety 3badroomhou•.tul.,..."'tnt, 941-Ute.
furnished included- new plumb- IH8ilable Sept. 1, r.teratee
APARtMENTS. mobllo homoo.
ing. underpin_ning, rebuilt fur. l ·n;a~od:ad.:;;:30;4-:;;::1:7~8-:10:78=.==
hou-. Pt. Pl. . . .t lndO.IIIponac:e. complete bedroom, lh.oing I·
Uo. 114-448-822t.
&amp; din:ng room. AC. ..,lg.· 42 Mobile Homfreezer . Slow, microWive, keroBeech Stroot, Mlddloport. Ohio,
sene haater. washef'·drver. Ever·
for Rent
2 bedroom .,,..hed ap.nment,
ything good to excel. cond. 1- - - - - - - - - - utlita
tef~n~~c.. Phone

Ru•bout. II~ H.P.

Johnoon. troll• oqulppod. A-t.

ANOTHER
FRieND OF

lo11tlindmotannd•ll•. 1178

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo P•k.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Up . .irt unfurRshed apt. Carpeted, utiUtilli paid. No children.
No polo. Coll6t4-448-t837.

Furntthed apwtment. 8225 1
mo. 1 BR . Utllh:i• paid 920.
Foruth Ave.. Gelllpotil. Call

Coll6t4-445-135&amp;

1986 Clayton. Call 614-446-

Ohio. Coli 6t4-4-45-0508.

304-676-5t04.

referance. 304-87&amp;.19 26.

1974 Buddf 14A60. 2 BR .. all
elec. , underpinni ng. dack, &amp;
steps. Call614-448-8298.

MobUeMDmes for rent. Evetyn•a
Mo!Mie Home P•k. Kana~ga,

Apartments and hou••· Cell

Small hoult Jefferson Ave.
Partielly furnished. Depoth &amp;

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Furnllhed, 3 bedroom•. Wllher
and dryer. No pet1. 11~9492253.

rot. Coil 8t4-448-4921.

Two 1 acre lob wl1h public
Road.
Brick home, allfllectrle. Greenb- water. Jerrys Run
rier Estates. With 5 acres. barn. f.l 4,900. 00 each, consider trade.

992-3223.

4534.

Merchandise

6t4-441-0338.

30 4-675-4631

3 bed room home on 41ots. Greer
Road, Hillview. 304-875-4108.
....:.....--------~- 4
J bedroom. 2 btrths. full finished
basemen1. new furnace &amp; central air, garage. fenced yard.
Asking S62,000. 2414 Mt.
Verno n Ave. Pt. Pleasant. 304-

Nice38R . allelecl .. AC. nlcelot.
wM• &amp; tr.. h pi-*up furnllhed.
No ,.,•. Dop, Coli 114-4488038.

~78-20t8 .

68 acres Rt. 160. Gallla Co.
Large b•n. milkhou•. work·
thop. grlinery cell• end mort.
614-448-t358.
-Pientypatture, woodsenddiMIoped spring water. Two story
3 bedroom house on double 101 re1tored home, country kitchen,
near river in Cheshire. Call stone firepllc• F.0. t.Jmece,.
614-367-0324.
rural water. App. only-8 "I 4--388-

• 44,000. Coll6t 4-992·5764 or

Rot. ""'Uinod. C.ll 8t4-4480527.

Camp Conlev. cell 304-87&amp;-

'3 BR .. utilrty. g.-age. kitchen
with appliances. Excellent opportunity. Price to sell. Call

· Hou.- for saleorassumeloan. 7
yrs. old. S109.00 month if
quelifi sd. FHA ap prow d. Al.;r oss
from Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.
Approx . S36,000. Appnllited at

Mobile home for rent. WMer,
MWtr, tl"'lh pldfup furnl1hed.

7988.

304-875-t9ee.

3 BR . home- Rt. 141 Centenary
on 1 aae lot. Call 614-446-

••

PrMte Mobile Hame lot In
Centanary. Pref• older couple
or qulel eouple. Clll 114-448-

•m.

12 •

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antlquet.
1124 E. Mein SlrMI:, Pomeroy.
Hours: M,T,W 10..m. to lp.m .,

ID il1l Hoppy Doyo
il2l ShowBiz Toctoy
100 Good nmeo
0 Cartoon E•prell

AH. I 5-EE,

O!KAR, I'D LIKE YOU TO
MEET THE ONLY OTHER MAN
IN AMERICA WHO UNDER?TANDS THE I'O!&gt;ITION
'/OU'RE IN.

Soo King 2&amp; HP mote&gt;&lt;. •tao.
Coil 11-4· 387·0447.

Sundw 1 to lp.m. 114-892-

l;;;::;;:;:;;::;;:::::::::j~;=:~~:;;::;;:::::::::-j
32 Mobile Hom42 Mobile Homes
d01trict.

Real Eslole

Antiques

53

I

MACLI

1 :,..-..;I
~---.-1'-'-r--1::...r!-'-1

III Dr. Who The War Games;
Part 2

21

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Yeeterdaf'• CrJPtoqaote: 1111 POLITICS A CAPABLE
RULER MUST BE GUIDED BY CIRCUMSTANCES,
CONJECTURES AND CONJUNCTIONS. - CATIIERINE
II
'

"

•

:

�Beat of the Bend

Children's theater
kicks off season
By Sob Hoeflich
C hildren's
theatre wlll
getting off
ground by
Legion
In · Middleport
with auditions to
be held at 10
a.m . Monday at the old American
Legion Hallin Middleport.
Director Shirley Smith ls welcoming all interested young
people to take part In the
readings on Mondii'!P'9nd to sign
up to participate lh the program.
A vehicle for the new group has
not yet been selected since Smith
needs to know about the talent
and ability of those taking part
before the decision ls made ..
Adu Its are needed to take part
and to !)elp in other aspects of
doing the shows featuring the
children' s casts.
Gene Grate who keeps up on
river traffic passes along Information on this fall's Delta Queen
schedule so that you can be
looking towards the boat's pass-.
ing our communities.
. The Island Queen wlll leave
Cincinnati on Sept. 29 and should
pass the Pomeroy-Middleport
area on Oct. 1 arriving at
Pittsburgh on Oct . 4. lt will leave
Pittsburgh on Oct. 7, passing the·
Middleport-Pomeroy area late
on Oct. 9 arriving at Cincinnati on
Oct. 11. on Oct. uj th'e boat· will
leave Cincinnati passing the
Pomeroy-Middleport area In the
evening on Oct. 18 arriving at
Pittsburgh on Oct. 21. Then the
last trip--the Queen will reave
Pittsburgh on Oct. 28. passing our
area on Oct. 30 arriving In
Cincinnati on Nov. 1.
Scott Pullins, Pomeroy, a
student at Ohio University where
he headed the Jack Kemp organization. ls in New Orleans to
attend the Republican National
Convention. He dined with Kemp
and his party and it was the hope
of the group that Kemp would
slip ln there as the Vice Preslden·
tial candidate, but as you know It
just didn't work out that way.
Mrs. Dorothy M. Collins who
resides at Iillis Home for Adults
in Chesapeake, Va., wrote Pome·
roy Richard Seyler telling of her
former residency In southern
Ohio and of her great-des Ire for a
box of paw paws.
The Mayor will be taking care
of seeing that she gets the paw
paws.
I keep hearing these great
reports about this year's musical, River on the Eden, being
presented on Blennerhasset Island. It runs until early September and I hope you'll get an
opportunity to attend. They tell
me--it isn't even all that warm
attending these evenings. Among
the local participants In addition
to five other residents I mentioned earlier, taking part ln the
musical this year, ls Jim Stewart
of Chester. I admire the local
gr oup for having the fortitude
and talent .to be participating.
Capt. and Mrs . Clare
Carpenter--he's formerly a local
resident and the couple has been
frequent visitors here, being
especlaJly Interested in the
Meigs Qlunty Pioneer nd His torical Society--will quietly mark
their 50th wedding anniversary
on Monday, Aug. 22.
They 'd love to get cards on the
occas ion. Their address ls
George St.. Belpre. Ohio, 45714 ..
The wood burning cooker of the
Meigs High School Future
Farmers of America seems . a
little hard to locate on the
fa irgrounds this year. However,
It Is there and aren't those beef
sandwiches great! You can locate it at the end of the coon
hunters building where the farm
crops , art and photography are
on display.
And about John McKenzie,
former Pomeroy pollee officer.
He is currently making his
home with a great-niece, Brenessa Phillips, 110 ~(!te St..
Pomeroy.
John has been having some
health problems and as a result
doesn't get out. However, he
loves to have. company and get
cards so you might want to perk
him up a little.
And, I'm happy to advise you
also that Kermit Walton, former
Pomeroy businessman, has been
released from the intensive care
unit at the Holz.er Medical Center ·
and Is now In a room. Things are
looking up and there's even talk
that he might get home In a
couple of weeks. You've been
very supportive and I know the
famlly appreciates that. Thank
yau.
Speaking of thanks, Nell Wll·
son of Reedsville. sends along
her thanks to friends and, neigh"

.

Brown celebrates first
Derek Roush, Ryan and Dyana

Hart birtbtkw
celebrated
.
J
The first birthday of Randy W.
.

bors and ·to the Meigs Senior
Citizens staff and center visitors
for all of their cards and prayers
during her hospltalizstlon.
They say it's been the hottest
summer In 100 years·· I wouldn' t
think of contradicting that, would
you? Well-keep smlllng anyway.

1988

Thursday,

Pomeroy-

Ashton Brown recently celebrated her first birthday at the
home of her parents, Robert and
Cindy Brown, Minersville.
Theme for the party was "My
Little Pony." Ice cream cake.
chips and koolald were served.
Attending were her grandparents, Sharlee Evans, Portland,
and Danny and Dee Brown,
Minersville, Ryan and Matthew
Evans. Alicia. Corey, and Alison
Woods, Joe, Beth and Cole
Brown. Megan, Janna and Benjl
Manuel, Debbie and Nicole
McDaniel, Sandy Lee, and Brandon Williams.
Sending cards and gifts were
Ada Van Meter, VIctor and Allee
Brown, JoAnn Willford, Melinda
Dunn, VIcki Hoffman. Helen
Maag, Marvlene and Junle Beegle, Shery Wilcox, Jo Ann Crisp,

Hart, Jr. was celebrated Thursday with a party at the home of
his parents, Randy and Sherr!
Hart.
A Bambi cake was served with
Ice cream and koolald . Attending
were Evelyn Lusher, Richard
Lusher, Robert, Patsy and
Bobby Hart, Karen, Angela and
Levi McGrath. Also rememberIng Randy on his birthday were
the Randall and Linda Gerlach
family .

Ohio Lottery

.Meigs County

Hawthrone, and Melissa Gow.

Fair scenes

Daily Number

502
Pick 4

Page 6,7

'

•

e
ASHTON BROWN

ELBERFELDS
MEIGS COUNTYFAIR
SALE DAYS

TOP AWARDS - With their arrangements In the class,
"Everyone Made a Garden", Laura Mitchell, Pomeroy, a first
Clme exhibitor, look reserve best of show, while Jamie Erwin,
Chesdter, took the best of show award. Jamie used a mass
arrangement of peach colored roses with Queen Anne's lace,
golden rod, and a variety . of vegetables, while Laura's
arrangement featured a large red glad with vegetables.

ary

Vol.39. No.73
Copyrighted 1988

GO.P tickef hits trail
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) George Bush, launching his fall
campaign today as the Republican presidential nominee. decided to take running mate Dan
Quayle Into the crucial Midwest
In the hope of finding a smooth
road after a bumpy start.
It remains to be seen, however.
whether the vice president's fine
acceptance speech at the GOP
National Convention Thursday
night can overpower the doubts
about hls youthful ticket mate
that dominated much of the
conclave's finale.
Bush dellvered what was prob·
ably the speech of his life
Thursday, rousing the thousands
of delegates and others packed
Into the Louisiana Superdome
with an address deslgl'jed to
j)ortray him as his own man,
away from the giant shadow of
· President Reagan.
It appeared at least In part to
stem concerns that arose be•

Quayle has new answer to skeptics

I

cause of Intense speculation by
the news media about whether
Quayle, the junior senator from
Indiana, used family Influence to
join the National Guard ln 1969
and avoid combat duty In the
VIetnam War.
Howeve~, that Issue was certain to dog the two men as thev
began their first campaign swing
together, highlighted by a hometown welcome for Quayle today
in Huntington, Ind. The pair will
continue on io Ohio and Illinois
Saturday and Sunday before
Bush heads off on his own to the
West Coast and Texa•.
Bush's speech, delivered with
measured eloquence, was the
high point of the convention and
probably the long political career
of the 64-year-old vice president
who has labored under Reagan
for almost eight years, battling
an Image that he lacks the
leadership needed to guide the
country.

VICE PRESIDENT BUSH

He appeared to hit the tone lie
had been seeking for the speech,
presenting himself as a strong
statesman who had earned his
party's nomination, not a highlevel bureaucrat who cruised to
power on privilege and
connections.
In the process, he began to
craft an Identity separate from
that of Reagan. without dlvorc'
lng himself from conservative
Ideals, and he contrasted himself
with Democratic opponent Ml·
(See GOP, page 3)

$299°0

$39900

DRAPERY &amp;
CURTAIN SALE

UPRIGHT
I'WIIIoot .....
4 ,.,.., Dfii.A.III(I

=·~::,~
Doni ...

.

Open Daily 9-S

Our entire atock of curtain•
an• I drapariet II Included In thll
•ala . Hug• a..anment of atylea

SAVE

9-8 Mon.&amp; Fri.
Free Delivery

20°/o

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ST.. • GALLIPOLIS

Saunders and fellow commissioner G. Richard Brown at·
tended the meeting, as did Kail
Burleson and J.E: (Dick) Cremeens of theCountyCommisslon
and Prosecuting Attorney Brent
Saunders.
Cremeens said the county
commission would consider passIng a resolution on the issue.
Dow Saunders also told the
group he was personally opposed
to the proposed hazardous waste
incinerators In Mason County,
W.Va. by PyroChem and Aptus.

VItamin C too. Melissa .obliges the horses by
sharb,g an orange with them. With Melissa Is her
mother, Faye Clifford, and her sister, Sarah.

Temps cool off for some of nation
·WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO

By KAREN LEE SCRIVO
United Press Jnternatlonal

THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

TO THOSE 60 AND ·ovER
ON ALL PRESCRIPTIONS
SUJISHER LOHSE
Ph&lt;J&lt;
K•nnett. McCuhutJh. 11."-.

TWIN ea pc.
FULL ea. pc.
QUEEN ea. pc.

!SOLD AS PC. SET.)

FLOOR
COVERINGS
VINYL UNOLEUM

NEW SHIPMENT
METAL CABINETS

Sale $3 99 Sq. Yd.

SCULPTURED
CARPET Sale

$5 95

Sq. Yd.

PAnO TURF
Sola

$3 95

Sq. Yd.

FREE ORNERY---•

,nCJc,
Ch.... fttffle. ... Ph .

Ro_,d HMIRg, 1ft Pll.

Mon . tttru Sat . 8:00A.M. to I P.M.
Surnt.y 10:00 A.M. to 4 :00P .M.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 112. 2915
Ftleftdty Servic:•

011en Nighta till I

·- . ·--

I

Gallipolis commission taking
stand.. on hazardous wastes
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
GALLIPOLIS -' "'J'echnlcal
arguments don't mat-ter." when
It comes to hazardous waste
management, according to Bill
Beard of Galllpolls. "It's a
political Issue," He, and other
members of the Mason Associa tion for a Clean Environment.
have urged local political bodies
to take a stand on the issue and
one Is planning to do so next
·
week.
The Galllpolls City Commission w!Jl be taking a stand on
environmental issues ln the form
of a resolution of concern at Its
meeting Tuesday qlght, accordIng to Commission President
Dow W. Saunders.
The commissioners will present the resolution during its
meeting Tuesday, he told approxImately 50 community members
attending the MACE meeting
Thursday at St. Peter's Episcopal Church.

Whirlpool Laundry Specials
Whirlpool
Whirlpool
Large
Electric
Capactiy Automatic
· Washer
Dryer

and colore tor every room In
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10°/o DISCOUNT

NEW ORLEANS !UP!) -New nominated him by acclamation appear ln Its proper place.
The change reflected the escavice presidential nominee Dan Thursday night.
In a 17-mlnute acceptance lation ln a single day of an issue
Quayle looked toward support at
a hometown rally with George speech cheered loudly by parti- sure to await the candidates on
Bush today to help defuse the sans ln the packed Louisiana the campaign tral,l. questions
furor over his military service Superdome. the largely unknown about whether Qua:~lle's wealthv
that already has the GOP ticket Quayle introduced himself to the publishing family used political
nation by describing his political lrtfluence to put him in the safer
on the defensive.
·
background
and Immediately haven of the Guard after he was
Quayle, the juntor senator
from Indiana, told reporters on declaring his pride in serving tlte graduated from college and lost
·
his draft deferment.
·
the eve of his departure from the Guard through 1975.
"As a young man, I served six
In the late 1960s, at the height of
Republ!can National Convention
the Vietnam War, joining the
that in his first campaign swing years In the National Guard with Bush this weekend he would and like the ml!l!ons of Amerl· Guard for six months of active
answer questions about the con- cans who have served. in the duty and 5 16 years of reserve
troversy of whether he avoided Guard and who serve today, I'm service was seen generally as a
the draft, and possible Vietnam proud of It!" he shouted to way to avoid the draft and
combat duty, by using family roaring approval from delighted combat exposure, though some
Guard units were activated and
· Influence to j oln the Indiana delegates.
Quayle's decision to address shipped to Southeast Asia.
National Guard ahead of others
·The effect with Quayle would
the matter early ln his speech
In 1969.
was
an
apparent
last-minute
be
exacerbaled because he has
·Yet knowing he could count on
emerged
in his two Senate terms
a warm welcome today ln Hun- addition, In advancecopiesofthe
. tington, Ind., the 41-year-old text given to reporters on the · as an ardent hawk on defense
podium, the comment was Issues. and as pointed out by New
Q~ayle appeared likely to approach the Issue as he did with tacked on at the end; only in· Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean, a
'the supportive convention that copies distributed later did It
(See QUAYLE, page 3)

'

DISCONTINUED SETS

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED MINE WORKERS
BOILERMARKERS
PAID
P.C.S.
MEDIMET
ADVACARE

2 Sectlons,'H Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

. '

WAREHOUSE CLOSEOUT
ON MATTRESSES

CORNER OF THIRD

enttne

Convention ettds · race to White House hegins

~

Lifestvle

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 19, 1988

,--Nice horsey... - - - -..-------.
Simmons-med. Firm
Full Set (2 only)
Reg. S399.00 ••.••.. SALE S199
Beautvrest lmediuml
Queen Sets (2 only)
Rag. S$98.00 .".... SALE S299
King, 3 Pc. Set (1 only)
Reg. 5798.00 ."..... SA~~399
Stearns &amp; Foster Ex. Firm
Full Set (2 only)
Rag. 5458.00 '".... SALE S249
Queen Set (1 only)
Rag. SOLD ....... SALE 5299
Corrm&lt;t Comfort Splendor
$
Twin Set (1 only)
Reg. S498.00 """".SALE 199
King 3 Pc. Set (1 only)
let. S999.00 ....... SALE $499
Dynasty Silver
(Twin Set (1 only)
Reg. S$38.00 .......SALE $249
Queen (2 only)
leg. S899.00 •.•.••• SALE S399
King 3 Pc. (1 only),
leg. S1299.00 ..... SALE S$99
Suoer Plush
Twin Set (1 only)
leg. SS98.00 ....... SALE S259
Queen Set (1 only)
leg. S1199.00"... SALE S499
THE ABOVE WILL BE SOLD IN SETS ONLY!

Thunderstnrms, humid
night, low 69. Saturday, sea"· I
tered thunderstnrrns, high 88.

8736

---

I

Great for kitchens,
baMmtnls, bedrooms
and txtra storage.
Whitt and Almond
tnamal finish, · ·
lASE CABINETS, CHINA
CABINETS, UTILITY
CABINETS and
WARDROBES

20°/o

OFF

While New England and the
mid-Atlantic states enjoy a
breath of cooler air, the Great
Plains stlll suffers from the hot,
humid weather that bas ruined
crops and summer vacations, the
National Weather Service savs.
"It looks like Mother Nature's
air conditioner continues to work
In some pjlrts of the country,"
NWS meteorologist Dan
McCarthy said today.
The upper parts of the Mississippi Valley, the Ohio Valley to
the mid· Atlantic area as well as
New England will enjoy temperatures In tthe low to mid 80s over
the weekend and Into next week,
McCarthy sa ld.
But northern ·.Plains and the
central Mississippi Valley can
expect more of the same temperatures In 90s and Into the
lOlls coupled with high humidity,
he &amp;ald.
On Th11rsday, residents of the
Great Lakes and New England
basked In temperatures In the
60s, 70s and 80s while their
Southern counterparts sweltered
through heat that stagnated from
the southern Olito Valley to the
CaroUnas.
SQme of the thunderstorms
acr011s parts of the lower Great
Lakes and lower Ohio Valley
became severe 'Ibursday afternoon. Golfball-slzehall fell on the
north side of. Rockford, Ill., and

I.J

wind gusted to '10 mph as
thunderstorms moved near Remington, Ind.
Showers and thunderstorms ·
were scattered from southeast
Texas and western Louisiana
through eastern Oklahoma and ·
western Arkansas Into southwest
Missouri.

conditioners needed by citizens
who are at risk because of the
lingering heat wave, Gov. John
Ashcroft said Thursday.
There were .70 cases of heatrelated Illnesses In the St. Louis
area last week and at least 53 new
cases so far this week, the state
health do!partment reported.
Five heat-related deaths ocRain also fell southern parts of curred In Boston the past two
Iowa, from southeast Colorado weeks at a non-alr-coodltloned
Seventy-nine persons reported
and southwest Kansas through 'city-owned housing faclllty for
to a bloodmobile at the Meigs
the Texas Panhandle Into east- the elderly. The Boston Herald
County Senior Citizens Center ln
ern New Mexico.
.
reported Thursday that the manPomeroy Wednesday to contrlbMorning rain . In Michigan ager's office, on the bottom floor,
ute 69 pints of blood to the county
forced the overflow of many Is the only room ln the!!lght-story
blood program.
small streams and creeks . as bu !ldlng cooled by a lr
Twenty-four persons reported
Lansing measured more than 2 conditioning.
to give blood used by- friends or
Inches of rain. Lansing's drenchIn Indianapolis, Pauline H.
relatives and first time donors
Ing brings to 4 Inches the amount Felton, 82, and her niece, Georwere Jacquelyn A. Starcher,
that fell In August - nearly gla Jones, 69, found ilead ln the
Tammy Ball and Alan Reed.
double the amount that fell In home they shared. Authorities
Barbara F. Beegle, Jean A.
May, June and July combined.'
say they appeared to have been
Durst, Bryan Shank, Janet K.
But while New York City dead since Tuesday, whep
Peavley, Dortha P. Riffle, Mary
reported a high temperatureof82 temperatures reached a record
E. Davidson and Vanessa M.
and Duluth, Minn., a cool 66, 22 102. Windows and doors In the
Sidwell became gallon donors
records were set, mainly to the residence were closed and the
and James R. Dalley and J11net
south. •They Included 105 degrees one fan at the home was plugged
M. Ambrose became three gallon
In Ra,lelgh, N.C., and 103 In In, but not turned on.
donors. Attending physicians
Paducah, Ky.
James Milton, nephew of Felwere Dr. James Witherell and
Prisoners In North CaroUna's ton, said: ''I used to complain,
Dr. Wilma Mansfield. Beulah
Central Prisons ln Raleigh were 'Why don't you open this door, let
Ward and Naomi Lpndon were
treated to extra juices and noor some air In?' but they never
the nurses and clerical workers
fans lri llormitorles without air would."
Included Peggy Harris, Mary
conditioning, Warden Gary
In St. Louis, where the mer·
Nease, Jean Nease and Ed
Dixon said.
cury soared to 100 degrees by 2 Cozart. Workers from the coun·
''We try to make It as tolerable p.m., two construction workers,
ty's retired senior volunteer
as we possibly can," Dixon said. · Bobby Walker. 33, and Jack . program Included Marlon
The state of Missouri Is giVIng Eichhorn, 40, were pouring
Ebersbach, VIrginia Buchanan,
$50,000 'to the Human ~velop­ mollen asphalt onto a downtown
Dorothy Long, Emma Clatment Corp. of St. Louis lor air parklriglot Thursday.
worthy, Gertrude Robinson, Wll·

~I

The resolution mentions the
urges the governmental bodies In
historic nature of Galllpolls and West Vlrglnla todlllgently evaluthe commlsslqn' s concern for the ale the requesls of the two
economic development of · the · companies lo locate In Mason
area through ·tourism. It also
{See GALLIPOLIS, page 7)

.'

I.

BEST OF SHOW - Peggy Crane of Middleport
show award In a~t!stlc arrangements In lhe second flower show of
lbe Meigs County Fair Thursday afternoon. Her hogarlh design
depleted "Part of Yesterday and Today•· wl!h weathered wood,
dried dock and pink zinnias.

Area residents donate blood

(~

llam and Joyce Hoback, Jack
and Joan Sorden, Ph!lomena
Follrod and Gerald Wildermuth.
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority served the canteen.
Donors by community
Included:
Middleport - Timothy E.
Smith, Jean A. Durst, Peggy L.
Lewis, EstherM. Black, Kenneth
Imboden. Patricia F . Kitchen,
Edward E. Klichen, Jr.; Maurtsha A. Nelson, Sonya Clonch an'd
James R. Da!ley.
Langsv!lle - Ellis E. Myers . .
Minersville - Mary E. Voss.
Portland - Kelly R. Ginther,
Stephen H. Nease.
Athens - Dick Huffer .
Rutland - Martha H. Blackwood, Rita McDaniel, Mary E.
Davidson, Diana L. Ash, William
A. Blackwood, Tina Romine,
Donna Davidson. Donna L.
Williamson.
Reedsville - Sherrie Roush.
Alan Reed.
Syracuse - Tracie R. Hubbard, David F. Lawson.
Pomeroy -Pamela J. Miller,

·~,

'
Bryan S. Shank, Walter
R.
Couch. Lenora ,J. McKnight.
Brenda L. Cunningham, Tammv
Ball, Debra Mora. Don B. Cuilums, Janet K. Peavley. i'iancy
F. Freeman. Howard P . Logan,
Adell i.. White . Lois J. Wyant,
Marsha L. Barnharl. Marv K.
Spencer, Bllly.J. Spencer, David
M. King. Lawrence Leonard.
Virgil K. Windon. Betty J. Lowe,
Patricia J. Barton. Margaret Y.
Harris, Edward M. Cozarl, John
F. Snyder, Raymond F. Jewell,
Gerald E. Rought. Fonna K.
CuUums. Dan E. Follrod, Janet
Ambrose. Paul F . Marr. Darla N.
'thomas, Carolyn A. Charles .
Danny R. White. Anna Baxter.
James E. Witherell.
Racine - Virginia M. Bland,
Barbara Beegle, Marie A. Bush,
Charles W, Bush, Dortha P.
Rlrtle, Rhonda Dalley, Jacqueline Starcher. Don Beegle, Wlll!am H. Hoback, John D. Frank,
Louise Frank. Dorothy M. Sayre.
Dawna R. Grueser.
Long Bottom - L~ura L'
Hawley, Bruce Hawley, Henry
E. Bahr, and Vanessa M. SJdwell.

,,

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