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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Local news briefs...-. ___, Tropical stontt Chris leaves United States

Tuesday, August 30, 1988

Dig I 10-The Daily Sentinel

Continued from page 1

Parents still raising money
Parents In Eastern Local School District are still working to
raise money fl:lr this school year's extracurricular activities In
the diStrict.
.
The next Installment of funds needed Is $8,300 by Sept. 30, and
Athletic Boosters President Jill Holter reports that workers still
have a way 'to go to reach the goal by the deadline.
The concession stand at the Meigs County Fair ls usually a big
money mailer for Eastern, but this year's concession only
.raised $2,600, Holter reported. II had 'b een expected that about
$4,000 would have been made at the fair.
To raise. the additional funds needed, parents are planning
other money raisers In the next few weeks, beginning with a
soup and sandwich supper before this Friday night's Eastern Hannan, W.Va. football game. Serving will start at 6 p.m. In
· cafeteria and everyone Is welcome.

EMS has two Monday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports two calls
Monday morning; Syracuse at 8:19a.m. to transported Wendy
Triplett and Mike Sharp from an auto accfdent on Rout£&gt; 124 to
Plea$ant Valley Hospital; Racine at 8:28a.m. transported Amy
Patterson from the same accident to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

REACT team plans safety break
The Meigs County R.E.A.C.T. (Radio Emergency Associated
Citizens Team) will be having the annual Labor Day Weekend
Safety Break at the south bound roadside park on Route 33. The
safety break will begin at 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 2, and continue
·
around the clock until 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 5.
Free coffee, 11Qp, doughnuts, cookies, etc. , will be served
throughout the entire weekend . Purpose of the break ls to give
weary travelers an opportunity to stop and refresh themselves
before continuing on to their destinations.
· The safety break has the approval of both the State of Ohio and
the Meigs County Sher!ff'.s Department.

Juvenile charged after wreck
A juvenlle was charged by Meigs Sheriff's Deputy Brian
Bissell with failure to yield the right of way In connection with a
two-car accident which occurred Monday ' morning at an
Intersection of Route 124 in Syracuse.
The second car was driven by WendyTr!plett,18, Syracuse. A
passenger ln Triplett's vehicle was Mike Sharp, 18, Racine.
The three Involved In the accident were transported by Meigs
EMS units to area hospitals where they were treated and
released.
Both vehicles were moderately damaged and had to be towed
according to the deputy's report.

GM merges...

::U. S. rDor·es t
1

side companies make parts for it.
"It ls very important In such
consolidations to make sure that
one part of the business Is not
favored by management while
another is neglected," cautioned
Industry analyst Thonmas
O'Grady, head of Integrated
Automotive Resources Inc. , In
Wayne, Pa.
"You will see continued consol·
!dation in GM." predicted Mi·
chael Luckey, who heads hls own
consulting firm in Cresskill, N.J.
"That Is certainly one of IGM
President) Stempel's blg
themes. to keep as much produc·
tlon ln house as poosslble.
"The big outsourcing play that
we all thought would happen
really has yet to materialize,
although GM has lost quite a bit
of money In recent years ln its
components operations ,''
Luckey said.

~

continued
from page
1_ _
••• _
__
:........:.._

: pest week.
Forest Service spokeswoman
Jean Claybo said the agency was
. looking for temporary flreflgh·
• ters who could work for the next
7month, especially on two major
: !!res burning ln southern Oreg·
• on's timber country.
: National Park Service officials
: said Monday that fire-ravaged
Yellowstone will st~y open
through Labor Day, the tradl. tiona I end of the summer tourls t
• season, even though many roads
: are closed and llttle lodging is
; available.
A half-dozen major wlldflres
continued to rage over more than

450,000 acres of America's oldest
and best known national park,
but no developed areas were
threatened, Park Service spokes·
woman Marsha Karle said.
"We had a real quiet weekend," Karle said.
Cool, calm. weather helped the
8,400 firefighters - Including
2,500 Army troops from Fort
Lewis, Wash. - battling fires
that are spread throughout the
2.2-inUlion acre park and are
expected to bum until the snow
flies next month.

Area deaths
SeGu Burke
Funeral services for Scott
: Allan Burke, 13, 42230 Alfred
· Road, Coolville, who uled Sunday
: at St. Joseph Hospital In Parkers: burg, W. Va., w!ll be held at 1
, p.m. Thursday at the White
: Funeral Home in Coolville.
· Scott was born in Athens, a son
: of Robert and Gay Ann Douglas
: Burke. Besides hls parents, he ls
··survived by a sister, Lori, and a
. brother, Randall, both at home;
: paternal grandparents, Robert
· and VIrginia Burke, Tuppers
• Plains; maternal grandparents,
: Gerald and Eleanor Douglas,
· Route 2, Coolville; maternal
: ~feat-grandmother, Bertha B.
: Tuttle, Tuppers Plains; mater·
· nal ~feat-grandparents, R. E.
: and Martha Douglas, Route 2,
• Coolville.
• He was preceded In death by
: mate! nal great-grandparents,
• Mildred Douglas and Veri Tuttle,
· and paternal great·
: pndparents, Mr. and Mrs.
· Olarlel Burke and Mr. and Mrs.
: Sanford Swift, and an aunt,
Vlr8lnlit Jean Burke.
Scott was a member of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church. He was a 4· H c tub

Meigs County COUrt
A foreclosure action has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bank Ohe, Pome·
roy, against Mark Warner and .
Cindy Warner, Pomeroy, et a!.
Actions dismissed by the court
Include James W. Holland Jr.
and Diana L. Holland against
World Class Resorts, Inc., doing
business as Roval Oak Resort
Club, et al; and ·Martin W. Bush
against Nadia N. Bush.

To end marriages

Continued from page 1

"Instead of sell!ng separate
parts, we will be able to offer
complete subsystems," Ca·
meron said, noting this strategy
will allow the new unit to
Increase Its outside business.
Cameron said the GM units
currently sell to Asian and
European carmakers, and w!ll
bld for business from other large
· carmakers - Including Ford
· Motor Co. and Chrysler C0 rp.
"We will go for every piece of
: business we can-get," he ·said.
Industry analysts said GM's
announcement shows the No. 1
carmaker Is Intent on saving .
money by reducing Its management structure, which will have
been slashed 25 percent by next
year.
But It shows GM wants to keep
: many partsmaklng operations
. within the corporation Instead of
· "outSourcing" - or having out·

By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Press International
The weather system that was
once tropical storm Chris left the
United States early today after
blazing a trail of flooded streets,
, fallen trees, wrecked homes and
death from Puerto Rico to New
England.
The departure of the low
pressure center, however, was
not expected to mean clear skies,
as clo11dS and light showers were
expected to continue for most of
the East Coast untll Wednesday,
with some thunderstorms forecast for the .Carolinas.
"But it will be fairly pleasant
for most of the country, especially the central part of the
nation," National Weather Ser·
vice spokesman Brian Smith
said.
Scattered thunderstorms were
also forecast over portions of
Arizona, New Mexico and Texas
,
today.
Flash flood watches that were
in effect for New England and
· Southern California were can·
celed Monday night.
Smlth said the remnants of
Chris were over Maine about 1
a.m. EDT, heading northeast to
the Atlantic Ocean where the
storm was expected to die .
The storm clashed with a cold
front on the East Coast Monday
and the two systems dumped up
to 6 inches of rain along their
paths.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Charles E. Blake,
Pomeroy, against Karen L.
Blake, Havelock, N.C.
A dissolution has been granted
Janet L. Kuhn and George W.
Kuhn. Janet Kuhn was restored
by the court to her former name,
Williams.

Tbe nuclear aircraft carrle.r
USS Eisenhower collided with a
Span Ish freighter ln choppy seas
and heavy rains off the coast of
Virginia as the storm passed
Monday morning. There were no
Injuries, and damage to the two
vessels was minimal.
The storm bullt 50 mph winds
off the South Carolina coast early
Sunday, I hen turned inland at
Charleston and spawned at least
a dozen tornadoes. Including one
near Manning, S.C., that des·
troyed a home, killed a 78-yearold woman and Injured her
12-year-old granddaughter.
The storm dumped heavy rains
on most of the East Coast then
ran Into a cold front moving south
from Canada that already had
drenched parts of Pennsylvania,
New York and VVermont with 3
to 6 Inches of rain.
Storms left 3,800 homes with·
out power Monday night in
Washington and its suburbs, and
flooded creeks In southern Delaware, northeast Pennsylvania
and New Jersey. Power lines
were snapped ln Essex County,
N.J.
Winds were clocked at 55 mph
In Baltimore and 48 mph at
Wilmington, Del.
Eleven of the tornadoes hit In
North Carolina Sunday night and
early Monday, ramming an
empty 18-wheel tractor-traller
rig in to a building near States·
ville and demolishing a produce
stand near Goldsboro, but caus·
lng no Injuries.
·
"I seen'lt hit the ground about
3:30p.m.," said Steve Vann, 21.
"The wind got to whipping up
pretty good. clouds moving ln a

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Harry
Shain, Pomeroy; Eloise Stiles,
Middleport; Lois Paulev,
Pomeroy.
·
Monday Discharges - Esther
DeMoss, Dorothy Bradley, Cecil
Smith, Carlos Lynch, Virginia
Lightner.
·

Marriage licences
Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Bryan Lee Reeves, 19,
Chester. and Susan Marie King,
19, Pomeroy; Spencer R. Bucha·
nan, 58, Reedsville, and Edith F.
Botts, 67, Reedsville.

-----Announcements----Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
w!ll meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at
the high school.
Trustees to meet
Salisbury Township Trustees
wlll meet Thursday, 7p.m.,at the
township hall, RockSprings. Toe
public is invited.
Sutton Township Trustees will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., at the
Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.
Rutland Township Trustees
will meet in regular session
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station. The pubi!c
ls Invited.
Work meeting
Southern Athletic Boosters are
having a work night for fathers ,
to finish work at the football field,
on Thursday at 6 p.m.
Eastern Star
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern :;&gt;tar, Middleport. wlll
hold a regular meeting on Thurs·
day at 7:30p.m. Fifty-year pins
will be presented and 50-year
members will be honored. P.o·
tluck after the meeting and each
member attending should bring a
covered dish. Special entertainment Is planned for after the

member. and attended Eastern
Junior High School where he was
a member of both the junior high
football and basketball teams.
He belonged to the Eas t£&gt;rn Pony
Leauge and was a member of the
All Star Pony League Team.
Officiating at services Thurs·
day · wlll be the Rev. David
Prlntes. Burial will be In Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 10
a.m. Wednesday.

meeting:
Reunion Saturday
The Goodn!te reunion for famlly and friends w!ll be held
Saturday, startlng12 noon, at the
Zion Lutheran Church. Broad
Run, near New Haven, W.Va. A
covered dish picnic w!ll be
served at I p.m. For information,
call 992·3980.
Revival services
Revival services at the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene will
be held Aug. 31 - Sept. I with
David Canfield, evangelist, and
Jim and Cathy Sisson, ofGalllpolis, singing. Services will start 7
p.m. each evening except Sun·
day, when services will be held
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Grange
Star Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878 will meet In
regular session Saturday, 8 p.m.,
at the grange hall located on
County Road 1 in Salem Town·
ship. Harrlsonvllle Grange will
visit.
Club to meel
The. Wildwood Garden Club
wlll meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
night at the Forest Run United
Methodist Church. The annual
!lower show of the club wlll be
held.

tornado·llke motion, then It quit
raining. All of a sudden, It came
out of .nowhere. It sounded llke
someone throwing a match on
gasoline - whoosh."
NWS forecasters said the tor·
nadoes touched down and d!sap·
peared so quickly they were
unable to spot them on radar and
could not Issue warnings to the
publiC.
Mary Lemon, 78, was killed
and her granddaughter, Clllssle
Pearson, 12, was seriOusly Injured late Sunday when a tornado
wrecked Lemon's moblle home
near Manning, S.C., 65 miles
northwest of Charleston.

Fierce thundershowers pelted
Southern Calllornla mountain
tesorts and deserts Monday,
flooding roads and triggering the
derailment of a freight train
loaded with lumber and can111'4
peaches. authorities said.
Although no serious Injuries
were reported, a section of the
east-west Santa Fe Railroad
tracll that runs through the
desert town of Phelan was
expected to remain blocked off
for as long as two days because of
the derailment, s3!d Dana DeAn·
tonto, a California Department of
Forestry firefighter.
'

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low In
the lower 50s. Winds light and
variable.
·
Wednesday: Sunny, with highs
between 75 and 80.

0706

...

•

•

e
Vot.39, No. It
1988

at y

..•
•

By NANCY YOACBAM
Senllnel Staff Writer
.. Tuppers Plains residents have
:: two Choices, according to Jon
:: Jacobs of the Meigs County
-:: Health Department - take the
steps necessary to construct a
public sewage disposal system to
eliminate serious problems In the
community - or do nothing and
watt for the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency to force the
•' community to construct a publlc
:;, system.
About 40 Tuppers Plains res!·
• dents gathered In a public
• hearing last night at the Ru.tland

Fire Station to discuss the
sewage disposal issue. The meetIng was called by Jacobs.
As explained by Jacobs, the
problems In Tuppers Plains are
serious enough that EPA has
Imposed a building ban on the
community. The problems exist
because of soil conditions In
Tuppers Plains which prevent
drainage and untU the problems
are corrected, there will be no
growth In ' Tuppers Plains, he
said.
According to Jacobs, the. only
way to lift the building ban to
allow for development In

Am Electric Power ...... : ....... 27
AT&amp;T ................................. 24%
Ashland Oil ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 15¥.,
Charm Ina Shoppes ............... 12
City Holding Co ., ................. 31
Federal Mogul.. .................. 43%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 60\4
Heck's ....................... , .... ....... l
Key Centurion .................... 16'/,
Lands' End ......................... 26%
Ll mlted Inc ........................ 20\4
Multimedia Inc ................... 70¥.,
Rax Restaurants .................... 4
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. ... 12
Shoney's Inc ........................ 6}',
Wendy's Inti .................. ...... 6'h
Worthington Ind ................. 21\4

,...

..

"!:'

. ii

AN OP'DON - A deslp for a pinder·pump sewage system Is
explained by Chuck Maan, or Englneerinr .A8socla&amp;es, Wooster, as
a po881hle solution to sewage dlspoaal problems In Tuppers Plains.
Mann attended lui night's pul!llc meeting at the Tuppers Plains
firehouse •

§Eastern board
§extends teachers
gcontract one year
~

~ EasrernLocal Board o!Educa·
· ~ tlon agreed to extend the current

·:-contract with the Eastern Local
:.: Education Association for one
&gt; additional year, when the board
;: met Monday night In regular
.,.. session. The extension Is to run
.. from Sept. 1, 1988 through Aug.
·:· 31, 1989.
The following other business
•: ·matters were also conducted by
~·· the board during Monday night's
.;:session.
; -Employed Ms. Pam Dou&gt; th!tt, on supplemental contract,
/ as athletic director for the high
::.school for the 1988-89 school
.,. year. '
;: :...Employed Larry Coon, Ml·
t chael Miller, Carla Halley, Ricky
Edwards, Margaret Amberger
..: and Grace Weber as substitute
:; teachers, to be used on an as
-· needed only basts, for the 1988-89
year.

FOR ALL YOUR
ADVERTISING NEEDS
OR SUBSCRIPTION
INFORMATION •••·•
•

:t

-Employed as substitute clas·
slfled employees, Edna House·
holder as secretary, kindergarten· and llbrary aide; Nola
Young as cook, library and
kindergarten . aide; and Lila
VanMeter as secretary, kinder·
garten aide and cook.
-Employed Glen Easrerllng
as a substitute bus driver, on a
probationary contract, to be used
on an as needed basis only, for
the 1988-89 year.
-Employed Mr. George Gaga I
as Sophomore Class Advisor for
the !988-89 year.
-Employed Tammy Ranay
Capehart as Junior High cheer·
leader advisor for the 1988-89
year.
-Accepted the resignation of
substitute teacher Judy Crooks.
-Approved leave without pay
for Mary Bowers, from Aug. 2.2.
Continued on page 3

Local news
EMS has 3 runs Tuesday

992-2.156

~ Three emergency runs were made Tuesday by local units the
Meigs County Emergency Medlcai Services reported.
. At 11:28 a.m. Rut..nd to Leading Creek Road for Robert
Carson who was taken to Holzer Medical Center; at 12:13 p.m.
Middleport to Meigs Mine No. Two lor Jeff Maynard, taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 8: 32 .p.m. Racine to Station Two for
Craig Randolph, taken to Holzer Medical Center.

The
Daily Sentinel

Two fined in Pomeroy court
Two defendants were fined and five others forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were John M. DeMoss. Pomeroy, $63 and costs, no
(Continued on Pll«e.3)
lj

ae

3 Sections, 'Pareo .
A MuiUmedlalnc. New..,aper

Tuppers Plains, and to eliminate
the sewage disposal problems
overall, Is to construct a public
disposal system. If Tuppers
Plains does not construct a public
sysrem by 1992, the deadline
established by EPA forcommun·
lUes throughout the State to
comply with EPA sewage disposal standards, then EPA will
likely take matrers Into their own
hands and force construction of a
sysrem, whether residents feel
they can afford It or not.
Jacobs did not know for sure If
Tuppers Plains would be on
EPA's list ln 1992, bu the assured

residents at last night's meeting
that eventually, EPA would get
to Tuppers Plains.
Many Tuppers Plains res!·
dents have already undergone
great personal expense to cor·
reel problems on their own
properties. Jacobs said residents
could contln.ue handllng problems on an Individual basis If
they desire, bUt this "will notllft
the . ban" to allow for
development.
And even though some res!·
dents have already corrected
their sewage problems, once a
public system ls Installed, "eve-

ryone ln the banned area" ls
required by State law to hook on
to the system, Jacobs explained.
Chuck Mann, of the firm
Engineering Associates, Woos·
ter, was at the meeting as an
"unpaid consultant" to explain a
design for a grinder-pump sew·
age collection syst£&gt;m and wast£&gt;
water treatment plant, which
could be the solution to Toppers
Plains' problems. Mann's firm
recently engineered such a sys·
tem for Madisonburg In Wayne
County. Although Madisonburg
Is larger than Tuppers Plains,
Mann said the two communities

are very similar.
.
Mann quoted the total cost of
the Madisonburg system, with
nearly 800 commercial and residential hookups, at $3,184,000.
About 65 percent of the total cost
In Madisonburg was paid for with
money from the Unsewered Area
Grant Fund through EPA.
However, the possibility of
Tuppers Plains obtaining Unsewered Area Grant Funds to help
construct a system would be
"next to nil," according to Mann,
because that particular grant
program Is being eliminated and
Continued on page 3

Winds
hamper
firemen

(As of 18:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

(WHILE IT STILL IS NEWS •• )

enttne

•
sewage system meetr.ng

Dally stock prices

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, August 3-1, 1988

Copyrlghtod

Stocks

WE DELIVER
NEWS!!

Clear lonlghl, low In mid 58s.
Thursday, sunny, hlglw in mid
80s.

~

Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair through the periOd, with
high temperatures between 75
and 80 and overnight lows in the
50s to near 60.

'

•

;.. Insert

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

CALL

r ;

Pick 4

...•
the tire ratings would show the
public that lnconslsrencles exist
not only between tire companies
but among them as well."
Earlier this month, the Wa·
shlngton safety center urged
Secretary of Transportation
James Burnley to widely public·
lze the tire ratings In Interests of
consumer awareness. The CAS
won a court decision ln 1984
ordering the government to resume Its treadwear · rating
program.
The listings show, for Instance,
that the Amerl Classic radial
made by General Tire Corp. has
a tread life of up to 70,000 mlles,
while Its XP 2000Z G mOdel has
an expectancy of only 10,000
miles. Among Goodyear br~nd
tires, the Vector.radial achieved
a tread life of 56,000 miles, while
the Eagle GTS and Eagle VRS
tires were found to have a
treadwear rating equal to only
20,000 mlles.

Daily Number

601

Consu!ller group wants guide
DETROIT (UPI) - An Independent consumer group has
published a comprehensive tire
buying guide which the Depart·
ment of Transportation prepared
but has declined to widely
publicize, the group said.
The consumer guide, which
compares treadwear ratings for
p1 different models of radial
tires made by 17 companies,
shows a wide range In how long
new tires can be expected to last,
the Center for Auto Safety said.
''DOT has done Its best to keep
the lid on treadwear ratings,"
Clarence Dillow Ill, executive
director of the CAS, said, noting
that the agency has quietly
announced only once In the last
three years that such a buyer's
g11!de was available on request.
"DOT;s tread wear ratings con·
taln some real winners and losers
that co11sumers want to know
about when buying tires," Dltlow
said. "Widespread publication of

Ohio Lottery

1988 football
"'"..., .inside today

By ROGER BENNE'M'
United Press International
Erratic winds raised havoc as
thousands of firefighters battled
more than 60 blazes throughout
the West, and a fast-moving
grassfire raced Into a foresred
San Francisco suburb, gutting
five e~penslve houses and damaging two others.
,With Infernos raging over
more than 915,000 acres of
forestland In eight Western
states Tuesday, the worst dam·
age was In the posh Bay Area
suburb of Orinda, where Muses
worth $200,000 to $1 mUllan dot
the pine and oak studded
hillsides.
The fire was out within three
hours, and nobody was Injured,
but the damage was quick and
extensive.
"We have no damage figures
yet, but the (destroyed) homes
are on one-half acre to multiple
acreage parcels and are in the
$300,000 price range," said
Orinda Fire Capt. Greg Holmes.
Firefighters and equipment
from the California Division of
Forestry helped local fire departments keep the flames contained
to less than 15 acres, and officials
said the blaze appeared to have
been human-caused - perhaps
by fireworks.
In fire-ravaged Yellowstone
National Park, shifting winds
blew the 90,000-acre North Fork
fire over the Madison River on
Tuesday, threatening the town of
West Yellowstone 3 ~ miles
away, closing a busy road for
nearly two hours and sending
flames roaring toward Old Faith·
fullnnnearthefamousgeyser.
The flareup did not lmmedlately threaten the attraction,
but sent firefighters scurrying to
dig lines an!f "corner It In," fire
spokesman Bill Pldantck said.
Before It was beaten back, the
flareup blocked the path to Old
Faithful and forced visitors to
either walt It out or go hundreds
of miles out of their way to enter
or leave the park.
"Under these windy condl·
lions, there's a posslblllty It could
run towards Old Faithful and
present a threat later on,"
Pldanlck said.
Smoke continued to b!Uow on
the plateau above Old Faithful,
the most famous feature of the
natlon'soldestnatlonalperk,and
shrouded the area In a thick,
brown pall.
Nearly half a mllllon acres of
the park have been bit by fire this
summer.
Erratic winds also hit the Dry
Fork fire In Montana. The blaze
was one of the smaller of that
state's fires on Tuesday morn·
lng, Just 1,!500 acres, but "the
next thing we knew It had gone to
11,000," said Mike Ferry of the
Botae Interagency Fire Center.
"Wind pushed It Into some
standing dead and downed lodgepole pine and It just took off tram
there."
The Wolf Lake fire again
threatened Canyon VIllage, fore· ·
lng cr~s to spray foam on
buildings In case the flames Jump
Continued on page 3

ANSWERS GIVEN- Jon Jai'Obs of the Meigs
County Health Deparbnent did his best to answer
questions posed to him by Tuppers Plains

resldenla at a public meellnr last ntrht at the
Tuppers Plains
station.

fir

Child safety programs are
being emphasized nationwide
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stoff Writer
The well-being of children !sa
primary concern of the Meigs
County Health Department
which Is joining In a five year
effort of the National Safety
Council to cr,ange the way people
think and act about childhood
safety, according to · Norma
Torres, R. N., nursing
supervisor.
The emphasis Is to expand
chlld safety efforts around the
county, she said, through an
educational program.
Torres cited a recent national
survey commissioned by Child·
ren's Hospital National Medical
Center In Washington, D. c., In
which It was found that parents
do not understand the threat that
preventable Injuries pose for
their children.
It was noted that when parents
were asked to cite the risks that
concerned them most about their
children, 43 percent mentioned

Statistics show that nearly half
drugs, and 37 percent kidnapping, with only 21 percent men- of all deaths up to 14yearsofage
tlon!ng auto accidents, one per· are caused by unintentional
cent drowning, and one percent injuries. For every child who dies
of cancer, four die from Injuries .
fires or burns.
Yet, Torres said, referring to The leading causes of death In the
figures from the National InstJ· unintentional Injury group, are
ture on Drug Abuse for 1986, there · motor vehicles, fires and burns,
were only 57 deaths related to drowning, firearms, choking and
drug abuse Involving children poisoning, and falls.
For toddlers and pre·
underl8,whlletheFBihadonly
schoolers,
poisoning is a major
67 cases In which chUdren under
age 18 were kidnapped by area of concern to county health
officials.
strangers.
As Torres noted, young child·
Accidents remain the leading
cause of death, with more child· ren wlll eat and drink almost
ren dying from preventable anything - medicines, houseInjuries each year than from all hold · substances, Insect sprays,
kerosene, lighter fluid furniture
childhood diseases combined.
Nationally last year, nearly8,000 poUsh, paint, solvents, even
children 14 and under were k!lled leaves and flowers on
and 50,000 were permanently houseplants.
She suggests keeping housedisabled ln accidents, according
hold
products and medicines out
to figures presented by Mrs.
of
reach
and out of the slgbt of
Torres. This year one child In
curious
children,
preferably In a
four will suffer a preventable
Injury serious enough to require locked cabinet or closet. Since
medical attention.
Continued on page 3

M u lt f,na
• t wna
• l d rug ·crackdown ha f,•led
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Tons
of Illegal drugs and more than
1,200 suspected dealers are in
custody following a 30-natlon
landmark narcoilcs crackdown
covering most of the United
States, Europe and South and
Central America, officials say.
At a news conference that
colndded with Oil!! ln Bogota,
Colombia, Attorney General Rl·
chard Thornburgh detalled Tuesday a massive anti-drug operalion from Aug. 1·28 that Involved
border ralda, Interdiction of air
earners and boats and destruc·
tlon of mariJuana crops, cocaine
laboratories and secret airstrips.
The operation was coordinated
by the International Drug En·
forcement Conference, a coau:

tlon of Wesrern Hemisphere
nations dedicated to regional
efforts to combat drug
trafficking.
Thornburgh said the operation
was the first of Its kind to Involve .
·joint law enforcement efforts and
sharing of Intelligence among
nations.
In the past, he said, "Each of
the nations of the Americas has
been pursuing the war on drugs
In a more or less unUareral or
bilateral fashion.
"There has been, to be sure,
sharing of data and ISolated
cases of close cooperation, but
never before has there been sue h
syaremallc and comprehensive
cooperation."
The operation "sent a message

. '.

to drug traffickers ln the Western
Hemisphere that henceforth thev
will increasingly face the combined fury of the law enforcement agencies at all the nations
whose people they victimize,"
the ettorney general declared .
The project resulted In the
seizure of 11 tons of cocaine, the
destruction of 244 tons of marl·
Juana, 118,000 cocaine plants and
13 cocaine laboratories, more
than 1,200 arrests, the demoUtlon
of seven clandestine atrsrrtps
and the seizure of $3.8 mllllon ln
Illegal drug profits, he reported.
At a news conference In Bo'John Lawn, director of the
Enforcement Admlnllitra·
of !DEC,
on page 3
1

•
•

�Wednesday, August 31, 1988

Comment
-

The Daily Sentinel .
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE M:EIGS.MASON AREA

~lb

~mt:i.l

~v

,.._..__-r............. o=~..,;,.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
'Assutanl Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to ed!tlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned let Pen• wUl be published. Leners shbuld be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not pei-sonallties. ·

EPA penalizes Los Angeles
for air violations

-

;
'
'

By GEORGE LOBSENZ
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The government, prompted by violations
of federal clean air standards, is prohibiting the construction of
major new factories In Los Angeles- and similar penalties loom for
12 other metropolitan areas .
The construction ban, which also blocks the expansion of exlst!Jig
Industrial pollution sources. takes effect Wednesday In Los Angeles.
Neighboring Ventura County. Calif., and Chicago are expected to
face similar. penalties by the end of October, officials with the
Environmental Protection Agency said Monday.
Another 10 metropolitan areas run the same risk later this year:
Atlanta; Bakersfield, Calif.; Cleveland; Dallas; Denver; East St.
Louis, Ill.; Fresno. Calif.; Reno, Nev.; Sacramento, Calif.; and Clark
and Floyd counties In Indiana, which are suburbs of Louisville, Ky.
EPA officials said Dallas stands a good chance of avoiding a
construction ban because of recent revisions to Its air pollution
. control plan, but the other elites likely will be penalized unless
Congress intervenes.
The ban covers industrial facilities emitting more than 100 tons of
carbon monoxide or ozone-related pollutants annually. While the
econ,omic Impact may be minimal in some areas, EPA officials said
the restrictions have ''symbolic'' lmportance.because they will force
cities to confront air pollution.
The federal Clean Air Act requires such bans for cities that failed to
Implement adequate pollution control,plans lor carbon monoxide and
ozone by Dec. 31, 1987.
The construction bans were delayed because Congress passed
legislation late last year prohibiting the Imposition of any penalties
before August 31.
The EPA noted that a bout 100 cities currently do not meet federal
standards for carbon monoxide or ozone, but It said the Clean Air Act
does not require penalties simply for failure to meet the standards.
Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, saying the ban will not have a
major impact on the Southern California economy, called Monday for
more state and federal help In solving his region's pollution problem.
''While I believe our local governments and the Southern California
Air Quality Management District can do more to promote clean air,
we will not achieve our goals until· clean air becomes a state and
national priority," Bradley said 'In a prepared statement.
EPA officials Interpret the Clean Air Act to mean penalties should
be imposed only against cities not adopting pollution-control plans
tough enough to demonstrate a "good faith" effort to meet air quality
standards.
Environmentalists have questioned that interpretation. and EPA
Administrator Lee Thomas acknowledged the current law is unclear
about penalizing cities that failed to reach the standards by the
original deadline.
Thomas urged Congress to revise the Clean Air Act to state clearly
the steps states and cities must take to avoid penalties.
Congressional action has been delayed by Intense controversy over
proposals to require big reductions In sulfur dioxide and other
Industrial emissions linked to acid rain. It appears unlikely the
Impasse can be broken In the few weeks remaining In this legislative

WASHINGTON - Th,e filthy
rich Medellin drug cartel Is fast
turning the sad country of
Columbia Into another Lebanon
- a lawless haven for terrorists
and thugs.
·
That Is what the Central
Intelligence Agency states 1n one
of the most secret documents It
produces, the National Intelligence Dally. The NID, as It Is
known, Is a spy summary given
to president Reagan and fewer
than 100 top government policy
makers. The NID Is routinely
classified higher than "Top

Secret.''

The cautious analysts who
compile the NID try to avoid
raising premature alarms. They
don't want to earn a repUtation
, for predicting coups and wars
that never happen. But they have
been raising red flags about
Columbia since January, when
the cartel murdered Colombia's
most prominent drug fighter,
attorney general Carlos Hoyos.
The CIA regularly call Colombia "another Lebanon." The
ultra-secret NID and other Intelligence documents refer to "the
Lebanlzatlon of Colombia."
What does this mean? It means
a country with an Impotent

central government, and no real
law and order, where justice Is
meted out by death squads and
criminals of all persuasions. It
also means providing a safe
haven and logistical necessities
for the export of terrorism and
drugs.
The CIA has turned up some
highly sensitive Information that
suggests the MedeiUn Cartel was
behind the attempt to bomb
Secretary of State George
Shultz's care In Bolivia on Aug. 8.
The cartel gets most of Its raw
c~a from Bolivia and Peru for
refinement Into cocaine In Colombla. Cooperation between the
United States and Bolivia threatens to crimp the supply and,
assuming the cartel was behind
the bombing, It was sending a
message to Shultz to mind his
own business. Only days before,
a top figure In the Bolivian drug
trade, Roberto Suarez, was arrested primarily on evidence
provided by the United States. He
has been linked by U.S. lntelllgence to the Medellin Cartel.
The mafia-like Medellin Cartel
was formed In late 1981 by four
drug bosses who saw strength In
unity. Today, 80 percent of the
cocaine snorted up the noses of

On this date In history:
In 1887, Thomas Edison was awarded a patent for the first movie
projector, .a device he called a "klnetoscope," to "produce pictures
representing objects In motion."
In 1888, Mary Ann NichOls became the first victim of the London
murderer known only as Jack the Ripper.
In 1903, a Packard au tomoblle completed a 52-day journey from San
Francisco to New York, becoming tlie first car to cross the nation
under Its own power.
In 1954, Hurricane Carol lashed New England and coastal areas of
New York and New Jersey, leaving 68 people dead and damage
estimated at $500 million.
In 1985, the search for the "Night Stalker" killer, linked to. l4
California slaylngs, ended with the capture o! suspect Richard
Ramirez l:n East Los Angeles. His trial Is underway.
In 1986, an Aeromexlco DC-9 approaching ws Angeles collided with
a single-engine plane over Cerritos, Call!., killing 82 people Including
15 on the ground. That same day, a Soviet passenger liner with 1,230
people aboard collided with a cargo ship In the Black Sea, killing 398
aboard the liner.

''

vlcted cartel leader, Carlos
Lehder, was operating from the
Bahamian Island of Norman's
Cay·
Haiti may haYe been bought, '
too. A Miami grand jury recently
Indicted Col. Jean-Claude Paul, a
top Haitian military commander, on narcotics counts.
M111tary officers In Honduras
are named In highly sensitive
U.s. Intelligence reports as being
under the cartel's control. The
former Honduran ambassador to
Panama pleaded guilty last
month tn Miami to attempting to
smuggle 26 pounds of cocaine
Into the United States In coffee
bags In his luggage.
According to U.S. Intelligence
documents, the cartel ' Is also
believed to have bribed Sandlnlsta government officials and
contras - both sides of the
Nicaraguan civil war. ·
The cartel has also reportedly
greased the skids In Mexico,
Belize, Peru, VenezulaandEcuador. In Mexico, endemic corruptlon has aided overland shipments of cocaine that became
common when the United States
began to bust more ot the
\)cean-golng and airborne
shipments,

Tuppers Plains...
Oct. 1 &lt;if this year Is the last date
to submit grant applications.
According to Kim Shields,
Meigs County's d !rector of develnpii]ent who was at last night's
meeting at ·the request of the
Meigs County Commissioners,
other funding possibilities do
exist, Including grant and low
Interest loan monies through
Farmers Home Administration.
Shields said he would be happy to
approach FmHA about those
· funding possibilities. He also
mentioned the Economic Development Administration and the
Appalachian Regional Commission as possible funding sources,
and cited the Community Development Block Grant as a possible
source of a smallamountoffunds
to start the ball rolling, should
Tuppers Plains residents decide
to pursue the grinder-pump sys·
tern or even some other type of
system. State Issue II funds to
Meigs County are also a consideration. according to Shield.
However, both Shields and
Mann pointed out that although
partial funding for a public
, .dlsppsal system might be ob·talned, remaining costs would
have to be paid by someone. And
residents may definitely expect a
monthly user's charge no matter
what type of public system they
go with.
The Tuppers Plains system
would be owned by a sewerage
district, which would have to be
formed at some point, and the
monthly user's fees would provide the necessary funds to
'maintain the system. No definite
amount for a monthly fee could
be quoted by Mann or Jacobs,
although the rate for a residential property would differ from
the rate for a commercial
property.
With the grinder-pump system, residents could also expect
an Increase In yearly electricity
costs of a bout $15 to$20, both men
said.
Mann was reluctant to es ti·
mate total costs for grinderpump system In Tuppers Plains
"because I haven't been hired to
do al!ythlng." He said he could
only compare Tuppers Plains to
the size of the Madisonburg
project and come up a guess of
about $1.5 million for the total

Suit humbles swamp kings __~R_ob_er_t~_a_lte_rs
BELLE CHASSE, La. (NEA)
-:- For almost half a century, the
Perez family's domination of
political, economic and•soclalllfe
here In Plaquemines Parish was
a natinal scandal. Now, however, that era Is endlngw!th almost no public notice.
A 57-mUe-long peninsula formed
by the alluVIal deposits of he Mississippi River as It heads southeast
from New Orleans Into the Gull of
, Mexico, the Isolated, sparsely populated parish was an Ideal venue
for a backwater tyrant.
And the arrogant, despotic Leander H. Perez Sr. as the Ideal candidate to play that role as be accumulated extraordinary wealth and
power In Plaquemines from the
19als through the 19Ws.
Initially appointed to !Ill a judicial vacancy In 1919, Perez subsequently was elected district attorney - the office from which
he autocratically wielded most
of his power - and president of
the Plaquemines Parish Commission-Council.

Both Plaquemines. and neighWhen civil rights activists threaboring St. Bernard Parish voted
tened to march Into Plaquemines
as Perez willed. In one race for a In the 1960s, Perez designated te
U.S. Senate seat, the candidate
long-abandoned, myear-old, verPerez favored carried St. Bermin-ridden Forst St. Phillip, In the
nard by a margin of 3,080 to 15- farthest reaches o!the parish's
an astounding feat since there
swamps, as the detention center
were only 2,500 voters registered
for the troublemakers.
In the parish at the time.
Beneath those marshes lie some
Such performances enabled of Louisiana's richest oU deposits,
Perez to extend his political Inwhich ate rightfully the property
fluence to the state capital., Ba- of the local levee boards, agencies
ton Rouge, while his racist demaIn charge of drainage control
goguery made him notorious na-' structures. As Plaquemines' chief
tlonwide.
legal officer, however, Perez had
In one Infamous harangue,
the rights to all of the oU royalties
Perez Incited to riot 6,000 membtransferred to a group of corporaers of the virulently anti-black tions secretly controlled by his
Citizens' Council by warning · family.
them that they must act before
As early as the 1940s, the Lout"these Congolese rape your
daughters."
He enforced not only rigid segregation between blacks nad
whites but also divided blacks
according to the Intensity of their
skin.color. Thus "light colored"
blacks were separated from"dark colored" · blacks at Plaquemines public facilities.

slana Crline Commission alleged
that Perez "diverted to his own
private gain through subterfuge
Involving dummy corporations,
all of the mineral wealth of ...
Plaquemines and St. Bernard
Parishes."
But Perez's powerful political
allies had the commission decl~red unconstitutional and he
continued to rule the t.wo parishes until his death In 1969.
In a vain effort to establish a
family dynasty, one of Perez's
two sons became district attorney and the other assumed the
presidency of hte commissioncouncil -but they soon began to
feud, and no member of the famIly holds public office today.

HOME &amp; A

ANNOUNCES

Sa11~ust

Berry's World

Days

stressed that the drug seizures
were not the most significant
aspect of the project.
·'The primary success was that
we were able to do this ... In a
mutually supportive way," Lawn
asserted ..
Member nations of !DEC have
been t:rieettng since 1983, but 11t
was not until March that plans
were nailed down for the August
raids.
Besides the United States,
IDEC- members are Argentina,
Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada,
Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the
Dominican Republic, Ecuador,
El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and
Venezuela.
Nigeria also took part In the
effort, as did nine European
nations. Including Spain, Portu-

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Wint;)s...

:; Seeks divorce
,.

Christine Green,

M~lrose,

!' ~ass., !lled suit for divorce In
•· Meigs County Common Pleas
:; Caurt against Wlll)alJl Greene,
• Shade, Ohio.

'·.
'

.

ques
and. meeting.
answers given
at
last lions
night's
Shields
noted · the Importance of all

More showers and thunderstorms were forecast from Virginia south to Florida and along the
eastern half of the Gulf Coast, the
N at!onal Weather Service
reported,
Tuesday night. a cold front
dumped heavy rain along the
southern East Coast, especially
In North Carolina, and at least
two tornadoes touched down In
Tampa, Fla.
The heaviest rain In the Southeast was at Columbia, S.C.,
which received about 4 Inches In
three hours early today. On the
Gulf Coast of Texas, Galveston
got 1 % Inches In 45 minutes and
some street floOding was reported. Some 2 % Inches
drenched Tampa, Fla., and more
than 2 Inches fell at Savannah,
Ga.
The northern half of the nation

Eastern
....
Continued from page 1
1988 through Oct. 3, 1988.
-Modified .the current policy
on promotion-retention.
-Approved a mended appropriations for the High School
Fund and modified appropriations In the general fund.
-Accepted the recommendation from the Hali-Kimbrell
Company to apply for a deferral
of the Oct. 12, 1988 deadline for
comp.letlon of the required management plan dealing with asbestos Inspection, analysis and
abatement.
-Approved home Instruction
for two students.
-Met In executive session for
the purposes of discussing the
possible employment of personnel and matters relating to the
levy.
-Set Tuesday, Sept. 27, 7p.m.,
at the high school, as the date,
time and place for the next
regular meeting of the board.

was dry thi s morning.
Temperatures were on th e
mild side over most of the nati on
but cool readings In th e 40s and
lower 50s prevailed from nor th ern New England across New
York and Pennsylvania to Ohio
and parts of Mi chigan.
Southerly winds kept tempera tures close to the 70-degree mark
over theGreat P!alns as fa r north
as the Dakotas , much warmer
than the record cool mornings of
the last two days.
Temperatures from the RockIes to the West Coast were mos tly
In the 60s.
The NWS reported many
lightning strikes In North Carolina's New Hanover County Tuesday night and at least 5 inches of
rain near Wrightsville Beach .
The North Carolina Highwa y
Patrol Office In Wilmington wa s

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low
between 55 and 60. Winds sou"
theast near 10 mph.
Thursday: Sunny, with highs
between 80 and 85.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Fair Friday, with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms Sat-

ehild. ••

s truck by lightnin g as he was
dr ivi ng acr oss a drawbridge In
Wrightsville Beach, said Larry
Godl ey, a New Hanover County
sheriffs dispatcher.
Wright sville Beac h police dispat;cher S.D. Glenn said, " The
officer . . R.O . Pa r rott. was not
inju re d, bu t It sure scar ed him. "
The NWS reported urban floodIng throughout the county, with
man y Intersections and floodprone areas having as much as 3
feet o! wa ter . A shopping center
had 3 to 4 feet of standing water.

Hospital news

Am Electric Power ............. 27\4
AT&amp;T .................................. 25
Ashland 011 ........................35%
Bob Evans .......................... l5';.1
0 armmg
. Sh oppes ..............12¥.
City Holding Co ................... 31
Federal Mogui. ................... 43V.
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 60\i
Heck's ................................. Ys
Key Centurion .................... 16%
Lands' End ......................... 27~
Umlted Inc ........................ 20%
Multimedia Inc .......... , ........ 70%
Rax Restaurants ................... .4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11";.1
~on;y:s Jn~ ................... .-.... 6Ys
en Y s nt ........................ 6%

urday. Mostly sunny on Sunday.
Highs will be in the 80s Friday
and ranging !rom the mid 70s to
the tow 80s Saturday and Sunday .
Early morning lows will range
!rom the upper 50s to the mid 60s
Friday and Saturday, wi th lows
mostly in the 50s Sunday
morning.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS H&amp;-960)
A Division of Multimedia. Inc.

P ublis hed ever y a fl ernoon. Monday
through Fri da y, 111 Cou rt St., Pom er oy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Comp any / Multimedia , Inc. ,
Po m eroy, Ohio 45769. P h. 992-21 56. Seco nd cl ass )&gt;ostage pa id &lt;tl Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Continued from page 1

children like to Imitate adults,
she says medications should not
be taken In their presence and
children should never see adults
drinking medicine from. the
bottle.
She said household substances
are best in child resistant packaging since that does give some
added protection, and cautioned
against putting kerosene, anti·
freeze, paints or solvents in cups,
glasses, or soft-drink bottles or
other utensils customarilv used
for food or drinks.
Another thing Torres cauti·
oned about Is referring to medl·
cine as "candy." She said that
children should not be deceived
by having flavored medicines
called "candy" because when
they are left alone they may
locate the bottle arid eat or drink
Its contents.
Should a child swallow some
poisonous substance, a quick

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

Poison Center can get fast,
accurate information and assist ance, according to Torres. The
Center is open 24 hours a day,
seven days a week , and serves
central and southeastern Ohio
counties at no charge.
An ounce of syrup of ipecac
should be kept available tor each
child in the home, but Torres
advises that it not be given
except under the direction of the
Ohio Poison Center or a
physician.
She emphasized . the importance of making the home .
poison-proof for the pre-schooler .
Checking for harmful products
and seeing that they are stored in
a safe place. being sure that
as pirin and other medicines have
child-resistant caps or closures ,
and that no poisons are stored In
drinking glasses or pop bottles Is
Important to the safety of our
children , she concluded.

Me mber: Un tied Press Tnt ernatjonal ,
Inland Dally PresS Associ ation and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
AdvertiSin g Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sa les , 733 Third Av.e nue,
New YOr k. :-.l ew York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send a ddress changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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26\Veeks . ............. ............... $35.10

52

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1

their
options
before
it comes time
residents
being
well-informed
of
to make a definite decision.
Jacobs said he would mail the
Information to the re~ldents and
told them they could probably

992-3481

expect
meeting .
after theanother
first of ·public
the year.

-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''LABOR DAY SALE"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ASHLEY!

continued from page 1

RADIANCE YARN

gal. France, Belgium, The Netherlands, Britain, West Germany. Switzerland and Italy,
officials said.
In a related development Tuesday, a State Department report
cunduded the government of
Laos Is systematically and directly involved In cultivating,
producing and trafficking narcotics. Laotian officials denied
the charges.
The report marks the !lrst time
the State Department has alleged direct Involvement In the
drug trade as a "de facto
goverrument policy." The finding
means Laos should be Ineligible
lor any U.S. financial assistance
nor should the United States
support any request by Laos for
funds from any International
financial bodv such as the World
Bank, _offlclais explained.

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"It's not looking any better,"
he said. "We're having above
average temperatures and below
average precipitation, and
there's no relief In sight for
another 10 days. The winds are
really a factor at this point."
Dry lightning. he said, was In
the forecast tonight for norther~t
California

Page 3

Veterans Memorial
Admitted to Veterans Memorial Hos pital Tuesday was Penny
Pridemo re, Pomeroy . Discharged were Donald Collins ,
-----------------1Veather----------------rJ_u_d_ith__
B_In_g_a_nd__
w_l_s_P_au_t_eY_·~

Stoc·ks

Continued from page 1

- a road Into Yellowstone's biggest
·. village that Includes stores,
' lodging, restaurants and &lt;a vis.- !tors' center.
:, The south entrance to the park
,. remained closed, and officials
j· said they did not expect It to open
, today because of the dangerfrom
' flaming debris.
,•
In Idaho, where more than a
~ dozen fires charred about 70,000
acres, much of It valuable
t. Umber, a state of extreme fire
t emergency continued after Gov.
1 Cecil Andrus signed a declara+ lion that allows him to call out
National Guard troops.
,. The biggest fire was the
:· 17,000·acre Battleaxe fire burn~ lng In the Challis National Forest
&amp;i of central IdahO.
li Severa I other Idaho fires,
r· Including one near Hells Canyon
;. Dam In the Pavette National
' 1 Forest, blew out of control In the
r.. shifting winds Tuesday, and
t: millions of dollars worth o!
· timber went up In smoke.
:~ Ferris said meteorologists
;. were keeping close track of the
.,. weather In the fire areas, but the
~· news was not good.

I

continued from page 1

-

By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Press International
Heavy rain fell In part$ of the
Southeast and also flooded
streets In Galveston, Texas,
early today butthe northern half
of the nation was dry. Temperatures were cool from Michigan to
New England and mild
elsewhere.

cost In Tuppers Plains. ·
A gravity-type system would
cost much more, he added.
Jacobs told Tuppers Plains
residents they must deal directly
with their Orange and Olive
Township Trustees to develop a
plan of action for any type of
public sewage system. Once the
residents and the trustees have
decided on a plan, the trustees
may then seek assistance from
the county commissioners In
obtaining possible funding
assistance.
Jacobs read a portion of a
letter from the commissioners
which stated they would be
willing to help as soon as a plan Is
decided upon and their help Is
requested from the trustees.
Jacobs chastlzed the countv
commissioners for not being at
last night's meeting personally.
No trustees were at the meeting either. although Jacobs said
thatmight have been his fault for
not calling them personally to
Inform them of the meeting.
Several months ago. Jacobs
said he met with both sets of
trustees to discuss In detail the
sewage issue and the possibility
of Installing the grinder-pump
system In Tuppers Plains.
He said that after that meeting,
the Olive Township Trustees
went to the commissioners to
discuss the matter further, but as
yet, It Is the position of Orange
Township Trustees that they
have not been requested. by the
people they represent to pursue
the matter further.
IYiainly, last night's meeting
was held to Inform Tuppers
Plains residents of their options.
Shields suggested that as a
result of last night's meeting,
Jacobs have sized- down a
diagram of the grinder-pump
system to be mailed to all
Tuppers Plains residents. along
with Information focusing on the

Multinational ...

FRI. &amp; SAT., SEPT. 2 &amp; 3

Today in history
By United Press biternallonai
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 31, the244th day ofl988wlth 122tofollow.
The I;llOOn Is waning, ·moving toward Its last 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 Virgo. They Include
Italian educator Marla Montessori In 1870; actor Fredric March In
1897; entertainer Arthur Godfrey In 1903; writer William Saroyan In
1908; astronomer Sir Alfred Lovell In 1913 (age 75); lyricist Alan Jay
Lerner In 1918; comedian Buddy Hackett In 1924 (age 64); actor
James Coburn In 1928 lage 60); baseball player-manager Frank
Robinson, first black to manage a major league team, the Cleveland
• Indians, and black militant Eldridge Cleaver, In 1935 (both age 53);
• violinist Itzhak Perlman and rock singer Van Morrison In 1945 (both
; age 43), and actor Richard Gere In 1949 (age 39).

Americans arrives courtesy of
the cartel.
Behind that cocaine ts a legacy
of bloodshed. The cartel speciallzes In assassinating anyone who
gets In the way - particularly
any government officials who try
to stop the drug trade. The list of
the dead Includes 50 judges,
many government officials and
crusading journalists.
The cartel Is sitting pretty with
the help of the Colombian supreme court which, tn December
1986, threw out Colombia's extradillon treaty with the United
states. Under that treaty, drug
kingpins could be tried In the
United States where their brtbery, threats and assassination
won't work.
Those tactics do work In other
countries, however. Intelligence
reports charge that Panamanian
strongman Manuel Noriega was
paid protection money by the
cartel for shelter and laundering
money.
Evidence waslntroducedlntoa
u.s. court recently that the
Bahamian government of Prime
Minister Lynden o. Plndllng was
bribed to protect the cartel's
drug shipments through the
Bahamas. The recently con-

_V&lt;_an-----:A:--tt.,--a

The Daily Sentinel

EaSt remains cool; Southwest gets rain

(Continued rrcrn page ll
motorcycle endorsement, and Larry Powell, Racine, $49 and
costs, speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Robert Lemley , Pomeroy $43, assured
clear distance; Edith O'Dell, Reedsville, $63, failure to stop for
school bus; Randy Cutlip, Parkersburg, $63, traffic light
violation; Carolyn Neece, Pomeroy, $45, speed; Randy
Burchfield , Rutland, $63 .failure to control, $50, no financial
responsibility.

-

'AnOther Lebanon'_ _ _ :B=. y~Ja:.:c.:. :. k. :. .:A: . :. :n:. .: de. :. .:r. .:. so.:. :.n. :. . .:.:. an. :. . :.d.:. . .D: . . : .:. :.al-=-e

session.
If Congress fails to act. the EPA plans to move ahead with
regulations that would require states and cities to adopt pollution
control plans enabling them to comply with federal air standards
sometime between 1994 and 1996.
As for further penalties, envlrorumentalists said Congress probably
would enact a second moratorium to fares tall any more punitive
action by the EPA.
"(Lawmakers) may not be able to get their act together toagreeon
re-authorization legislation, but they are going to be under
tremendous political pressure to do something," said Bill Kleinfelter,
spokesman for the National Wildlife Federation. "You can't go hom•
to campaign for re·election with a construction ban hanging over your
head."
The Los Angeles ban affects all or parts of Los Angeles. San
Bernadino, Riverside and Orange counties. The EPA Is under C\)urt
order to disapprove the pollution control plan submitted by Ventura
County by Sept. 29, and a similar construction ban would take effect 30
days later.
The agency has made a commitment to rule by Oct. 1 on the
adequacy of pollution control plans for the Chicago area, which
Includes Cook, DuPage. Kane and Lake counties in Illinois and Lake
and Porter counties In Indiana.

Local news briefs--

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 31, 1988

I

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�The Daily Sentinel

Page 4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 31, 1988

Wednesday. August 31, 1988

Oakland outlasts Boston, l-0; Indians defeat Royals, 4-l
"Roger Clemens is just
By GERRY MONIGAN
another
man." said Stewart. " He
UPI Sports Writer
Against Dave Stewart. even pitched an exceil&lt;"n t bail game.
Roger Clemens was not enough which I knew hewas going to do. I
to push the Boston RE'd Sox into just wanted to be a little bit
first place in the American better. "
Stewart, who threw his second
League East.
Stewart outdueled Clemens. shutout of the season, leads the
and Glenn Hubbard squeezed major leagues with 14 complete
home the game' s lone run In the games. He scattered five hits,
sixth inning Tuesday night , lead- walked three and . struck out
Ing the Oakland Athletics to a 1·0 eight. Including the side In the
ninth.
victory over Boston.
Clemens, 15-10, has lost his last
Boston remained a half-game
behind first-place Detroit in the five decisions to reach his careerAmerican League East: The high total for losses. He finished
Tigers lost4-1 to Chicago. TheA 's August 0-5 with a 7.33 ERA after
expanded their West cushion to . going 4-0 with a 1.64 ERA In July.
nine games over Minnesota.
"They scratched for that run."
which lost 8-6 to Texas.
said Boston Manager Joe Mor·
Stewart, 16-11, Improved his
gan. ''That's just the way I like to
career record against Clemens to win them. with a squeeze play ."
3-0 with a 2.53 ERA . Clemens
Clemens struck out nine In 61-3
owns a 5.12 ERA in those games.
Innings, giving him a career-high

total of 257. With his next
strikeout, Clemens will tie Smo·
key Joe Wood for the Boston
franchise record . Wood taiUed
258 strikeouts for the 1912 Red
Sox.
In other games, Chicago
whipped Detroit 4-1, Milwaukee
dumped Toronto 6-2, Cleveland
thumped Kansas City 4-1, Texas
edged Minnesota 8·6, Seattle
thrashed New York 7-1, and
Baltimore clipped California 5·2.
In the National League, lt wa$:
Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 4; Los
Angeles4, Montreal2; New York
1. San Diego 0; Philadelphia 7,
San Francisco 5; St. Louis 9,
Atlanta 1; and Houston 7, Chi·
cago 4
Brewers 6, Blue Jays 2
At Milwaukee, Rob Deer ho·
mered twice and drove In five

Rio volleyball team prepares
for defense of MOC crown
Mid-Ohio Conference volleyball champion Rio Grande will be
looking to defend its title and gain
a berth in the District 22 playoffs
this season.
The Redwomen completed a
25-14 season in 1987. including a
9-1 finish In the conference to
capture the MOC crown. The
effort was made all the more
significant because the Redwomen only joined the conference
last year.
Rio Grande opens Its season
Sept. 9-10 in the Mikasa Tourna ·
ment at Elmhurst, Ill. Its first
conference encounter will be
·with Walsh on Sept. 17 at Lyne
Center.
·

'"The title will be very d if!icult
to defend and no one Is more
aware ot that than the Redwomen," Coach Patsy Fields com·
mented. " The conference has
improved tremendously In the
past two years and no team can
be taken lightly."
Lost to graduation was veteran
Laren Wolfe. an offensive hitter
who made the district 1\onora ble
mention list and conference
second team In addition to being
named an Academic All·
American. Returning are a solid
core of upperclassmen who will
kev the Redwomen's offense.
Senior Krls Cochran r5-7,

runs to back Ted Higuera, 12·8,
who allowed eight hits over 7 1-3
Innings in his lllth consecu tiye
victory ..
While Sox 4, Tigers l
At Chicago, Carlton Fisk went
3 for 4 with an RBl off Walt
Terrell, 7-11. Fisk, 40, Is hitting
.412 (21 for 51) In his last 14
games. Jeff Bit tiger, 2-4, threw 5
1·3 Innings. B&lt;!rry Jones earned
his first AL save.
Indians 4, Royals 1
At Kansas City, Mo .. Tom
Candiottl, 11-8, and Brad Havens.
who earned his first save, combined on a six-hitter. helping stop

Kansas City's four-game winning streak. Ted Power, 5-6, lost
. his fourth straight decision.
Ranrers 8, Twins 6
At Arlington, Texas, Cecil
Espy hit a two-run homer with
one out In the ninth off Juan
Berenguer, 8-4. Ed Vande Berg,
1·1, threw one Inning In relief of
Bobby Witt, who had complete
games In his previous eight
starts. Texas' Scott Fletcher
went5 for 5.
Mariners 7, Yankees 1
A Seat tie, Mike Campbell
combined with Bill Wilkinson on
a five -hitter and Scott Bradley hit

a three-run homer to hand the
Yankees their sixth straight loss.
Campbell, 5·8, yielded four hits In
7 2-3 Innings for his second career
vlctorv in the Klngdome. Rlchard.Dotson fell to 9-8.
Orioles 5, Angels 2
At Anaheim. Calif., Eddie
Murray and JoeOrsulakeach hit
a solo homer to help snap the
Angels' five-game winning
streak. Dave Schmidt, 7-3, scat·
tered eight hits and a walk over
the first seven Innings to post his
first vlctorv since returning to
the rotation Aug. 4. Dan Petry
fell to 3-6.

Rahal to leave racing team
COLUMBUS, Ohio fUP!) Bobby Rahal , closing In on his
thir·d Indy -car series champions hip, will leave the Truesports
racing team at the end of the
season to replace Michael An·
dretti in the Kraco garage in
California .
Rahal's decision, announced
Monday nighl. e nded weeks of
speculation he would leave
Truesports where he had been
. since the team was ~rea ted In
1982. .
Truesports president Steve
Horn said Tuesday the search
had already begun for Rahal's
replacement.

..

Phillies outlast Giants, ·7-5;
Reds' Jackson gets 19th win

League West.
By GERRY MONIGAN
ahead with a guy like (Steve)
UPI Sports Writer
18-game hitting streak,
Bedrosian on the mound, you'd
What Ron Jones doesn't know another Philadelphia rookie · better take advantage of it."
didn't hurt him Tuesday night, made his presence felt.
Philadelphia's Ricky Jordan
but It certainly damaged the San
Jones singled with the bases had his 18-game hitting streak
Francisco Giants.
loaded off reliever Scott Gar- broken. Phlllles reliever l;{ent
"I
don't
know
anything
about
relts.
Center fielder Brett Butler Tekulve made his 1,000th career
Somerset). named to the MOC ·
any
of
these
guys,"
Jones
said
of
bobbled
the ball for an error, appearance. He ranks second on
first team last year, is back as
major
league
pitchers
after
he
allowing
Chris
James to score for the all-time list, trailing Hoyt
setter. Lisa Schmeltzer (5·4,
a
7·5
lead.
singled
home
two
runs
In
the
Wilhelm, who appeared In 1,070
Lancaster), an All-District and
inning.
lifting
the
Phlla·
"I
was
looking
fastball
down
.eighth
contests,
and is second In games
conference selection, resumes
delphia
Phillles
to
a
7-5
victory
In,"
said
Jones,
who
has
only
and
pitched
in
relief. trailing WUwork at the middle position,
over
the
Giants.
"The
other
guys
in
16
at-bats
(
.188)
three
hits
helm's
1,018.
·
while Sharon Headings (5-7,
since
joining
Philadelphia
Fri(teammates)
are
giving
me
Reds
6,
Pirates
4
Plain Citv). an offensive hitter.
some
hints,
so
I
try
to
remember
day
from
Triple-A
Maine.
"He
At
Cincinnati,
Danny
Jackson,
Will see action in various posiwhat they tell me."
got It out over the plate, and I hit
19-6, became the league's first
tions, Fields said. Schmeltzer
It
up
the
middle
...
Jones,
playing
his
fifth
Jllajor
19-game winner, allowing five ,
and Headings are seniors.
league game, helped hand San
"We still have a chance, but we
hits over 8 2-3 Innings. John.
Sheila Brammer (5-8, Ironton)
Francisco Its sixth loss In Its last need a long rwlnnlng) streak,"
Franco earned his 28th save. ·
is the only junior on the squad
seven games and drop the Giants Giants Manager Roger Craig
Eric Davis hit a two-run single In
and Is expected to be a key
8 1-2 games behind first-place said. "We can't give away games
a six-run first off Brian Fisher,
blocker and hitter. Rounding out
Los Angeles in the National like we did tonight. When you get
7-10.
the veterans will be sophomores
Shelly Hoop (5-8, Coshocton).
who was chosen for the All·
Conference second team, at
middle and offensive hitter s lots; '
Chris Williams (5·8, Kitts Hill),
offensive hitter; Shannon Huston
(5-7, Wellston), offensive hitter;
and Lori Storer (5-2, Frankfort),
WAC lid-lifter.
By Maj. Amos B Hoople
ride the strong arm of QB Troy
backup setter and defensive
Wizard ol Odds
The Trojans, starting their Aikman to a 35-21 victory over '
position.
100th season, are led by QB San Diego State. Hak-kaff!
•.
Three recruits are expected to
Egad, friends! The beglqnlng Rodney Peete and TE Paul
add depth, Fields said. Teresa
Green. BC will give them a tussel THURSDAY, Sept. l
could well be the end of the
't
Zempter r6-0, Portsmouth) "will
before falling. It's UCLA. 31-24.
national title aspirations for
Brigham Younf 35 'YyCITIIng 28
see a good deal of action at the
BYU lost only one WAC game Southern
either Florida State or the Miami
Cal 3 Bostoo CollEge 24
middle position:" Fields said.
last year - to, you guessed It,
Hurricanes. They tangle in their
Lori Gampp (5·5, Sclotov(lle) will
season opener this Saturday Wyoming. They'll even the score SATURDAY, Sept. 3
be a defensive specialist. the
In this one. Look for BYU to win, Air Force 36 Colorado State 21
night (Sept. 3) on CBS-TV.
Akron 27 Northern rlllnols 17
,•
coach added, while Robin Sharp
The Seminoles, our pre-season 35-28.
Appalachian State 24 Citadel 7
(5·6), a graduate of Amanda- No. 1 choice In college football,
On Saturday, the Nebraska Arizona 37 Oregon State 11
3S Pacific 10
Clearcreek High School, can play
Cornhuskers, with one game Arkansas
are loaded both ways. RB Sam'
Ball State 30 Toledo :!1
setting and hitting positions.
under
their
belts,
should
have
mie Smith, often compared to
•'
Baylor 22 Nevada-Las Vegas 15
Fields explained that the dis·
Herschel Walker, guarantees a · little trouble when Utah State Clemson 28 VIrginia Tech 14
''
Duke 32 Northwestern 21
trict will have six teams in the
comes to town - make it 49-24.
solid FSU ground attack. And
East caroUna 28 Tennessee Tech 14
playoffs instead of four .
Coach Jackie SherrUI' s Texas Eastern Michigan 35 Miami (Ohio) 21
experienced QB Chip Ferguson
49 Montana State U
"'I'he district. just like the
Aggies stand 19·5 over the last Florida
can handle the passing chores.
Florida State 24 Miami (Fla.) 17
conference, Is a lot more compel· The Florida State defense Is
two seasons and a pair of those Fesno State 35 New Mexico 7
24 Tennessee 21
ltlve so t.he Redwomen must
superlative.
defeats came at the hands of Georgia
Holy Cross 35 Rbode Island 15
work hard and play well every - The Hurricanes, defending naLouisiana State. The Tigers have Illinois 17 Washingtoo State 14
game If they expect to make the
premier QB Tommy Hodson Iowa 33 Hawaii 20
tional champions and rated No.7
Madison 24 Navy 21
playoffs." she said.
back. But the Hoople System sees James
by the Hoople System, have some
Kent State 20 Youngstown State 17
Fields, who came to Rio
Kentucky 37 ~ntral Michigan 20
the Aggies winning, 22·17.
rebulldlng to do. Coach Jimmy
•.
Beach State 42 Boise State 22
Grande after 18 years of teaching
In the SEC opener, Georgia Long
Johnson- an amazlng41-8 (.836)
Maryland 37 Louisville 21
and coaching in Ohio and West
will enteraln Tennessee on Memphis State 17 Mlssisslppl14
In his four years at Miami- can
Virginia high schools, enters her count on star QB Steve Walsh, an
ESPN·TV. Vince Dooley has Mlsstsstppl State 21 Louisiana TeCh 14
Nebraska 49 Utah State 24
fifth season as the Redwomen' s excellent passer. But Miami
taken 19 of hls 25 Georgia teams North Carolina St . 30 W. Carolina 20
mentor. Team managers will be needs some help In the receiving
to bowl games, and he is shooting Pittsburgh 28 Northern Iowa 14
San Jose State 38 New Mexico State 8
Marcy Copley and April department.
for his seventh SEC title. Leading South
•
CaroUna 28 North Carolina 17
Morrison.
the Bulldogs are senior QB Syracuse 2fl Temple 20
Bobby Bowden, FSU's lmagln·
A&amp;:M 22 Louisiana State 17
Wayne Johnson and soph . RB Texas
RIO GRANDE VOI.LE\' 11 ,\LL
a tlve mentor, has lost some
Texas Tech 22 North Texas 15
19!111 :-ICJIE:Dl!LE
Rodney Hampton. Countering Tulane 14 Tennessee-Chattanooga 10
heartbreakers to Miami- in 1983
St•pl. 9-IO~Mikasa Toui'D!'y ............... 1\
35 San Diego State 21
:-;t•pl . 1[)-shawnt'e Stat!' ................ ..... A
for the Vols are Helsman candl· UCLA
it was by a 17-16 margin, and In
UTEP 42 Mankato State7
Stop I. li-"'alsh. AlderMon· Brouddu .~ ... H
date QB Jeff Francis and RB VIrginia Mllttary 27 E. Tennessee St. 10
1987 It was by 26-25. Both years
Sept. ·~'- .\'11. Vernon, Bluffton "'""'"' i\
St•pt. '!2 - Malone, Chatll&lt;ston ............. 11
Reggie Cobb. In a close one, give Vlral.nla 35 William &amp; Mary 17
Miami went on to win the
S('pl . U-f•mlr.al State, Fairmont, Ddl·
Wake Forest :'n VIllanova 18
it
to Georgia, 24-21.
national crown.
IIDCl' . . .... ... ... ...................................... H
West VIrginia 38 Bowling Green 21
Se pt. 27-0hlo Dumlnk:Ull .................. i\
Wisconsin 21 Western Michigan 13
The
UCLA
Bruins,
winners
of
This
week
Bowden's
Boys
are
Sep l. '!9 -U rhana, Slllcm, Shawnt'!'
six straight bowl contests, will
bent on revenging those losses
Statt• ....... ............................... ........... 11
Ot•t . .J ~ Mulorr .................................. i\
and
beginning
their
pursuit
of
the
Od . 7·11- Concorrl lu v ltalloml ............ A
Oct . 11 - 0hl o llnmlnlran .................... ll
national title. Our Florida rep,
Oct . 13-U rhjtlla ..................... ........... A
Sunny
JaxonvUle, sees the Semi·
Oct . ~ ~~Walsh, Mrrl'.fhu r!it ............... A
01'1 . 111-Ch atlloslon, Gh.•n\&lt;iilt&gt; ............ A
noles winning the nallblter this
Oct . 20- Capital. Sinclair ................... A
time, 24-17. Har-rumph!
Ot·t. 'n-.1\idcr~u~Broaddu~ \\'est I.J It
RIVERBOAT CRUISE
erty. Cur low, ~hrpherd
........ A
On Thursday night (ESPN),
Oct. ~3- Mt. Vernon .......................... H
Boston College entertains South·
Ol•t. n-Cl'darvllh•, llrnlson .............. A
Od . 29-Mt. St ..Jo,.cph. {'onconl, Wll·
ern California; and Brigham
plus TAU STACKS
niington ................... .......................... n
Young visits Wyoming In the
Nov . J.5-Dl!;,tricl t! PIK)·ulf"' ......... TBA
'"''·.

team. " Kraco owner Maurice
Kralnes said In a statement from
his Compton, Calif., office.
'-'We wish Michael lots of good
luck. Now we are going to pursue
the championship with Bobby
Rahal," Kralnes said.
"I've had seven wonderful
years at Truesports," said Rahal. ''I've been the beneficiary of
many special moments, probably chief among them winning
the Indianapolis 500 In 1986."
Rahal had changed engines
this season and had been a
contender on the CART-PPG
circuit, but appeared to be
having problems with it. He
"We wish Bob well, and now we dldn't ,wln his first race until at
have to look to a new era with the the Poconos Aug. 21.
Horn said Rahal's objectives
Budweiser Trues ports team,"
said Horn. "We have already changed, and so-did Truesports.
begun the search for a driver who Rahal said he would be making
will maintain the championship about $1 million with Kraco,
tradition associated with Trues· about twice of what he is making
ports racing since it was founded at Trues posts.
"We enjoyed tremendous sucIn 1982. Our driver will be
thoroughly capable of winning cess In the past and look forward
. the CART-PPG Indy car world to much of the same success In
series championship In 1989 and the future," said Truespons
co-owner Barbara Trueman.
bevon\1."
Andrettl has driven for Kraco · "I'm confident that Truesporets
for four years, but wants to go will remain a champion In the
lndy car series.
elsewhere.
Rahal leads the points stand"Michael Indicated several
months ago that he Intended to ings going into the Escort.200 this
pursue a Forumula One ride or weekend at Mid-Ohio Sports Car
another possible Indy-car Course.

....

By Uniled Pre!o!lllnterraltoml

AMERICAN L.EA.GVE
W L Pet .

GB

,. .. 57 .565 -

Detrlltt
Boston

'1'3 58 .55~
611 62 .51!3
II! tl7 ..504

\'ork
MIIWllu lilt&gt;
Nf'W

Toronl11
Clnehuad

1
Mit
H

6$ 67 .-1!!2 91),
• " 6!1 .-Iii$ 10 ~
-16 85 .351 %tl

Baltimore
We~St

11!1 50 _,2-1 73 511 .5!17 9
69 62 .52'7 13

Oakland
Mlhm!!!iota
Kan!rii.S Ctty
California

Texas
Cbkaxo

67 u .so&amp;
60 70 ..IIi%
511 7-1 A39

Seattle

5-I 79 .-1116 %!1
Tu~dltY'Il

Cht c a~~:n

m~
21~
24~

Ret!Jh

-1, llelrott I

MiJWitukee 8, Toronlo 2
Cle\·eland-1, HanMa..'4 City I
T'~xw;

Colll'Jif'

II, Mlanesota 6

Sl"a!tlr 7, Nrw York I
Baltlmunl 5, California 2
Oakland 11 Bo!ilon 0

·Wednt!sd 98'1'1 Games
Toro ... o(Fianll.gunll -11 ) at Mtlwaulil'C
{ 1\u,lll~ 7-6), \!::35 p.m .
Boston (Boyd 9-7) at Oil.klnnd (Dnvls
ll-1), 3:U p.m.
Delroll

( Morri.,

11-1:!)

at

Otl-

f McDowdi~IO)

,k: :It p. m .
Cle~o·e land (Swtndf&gt;ll 1-1· 12) at KJ\n·
!IllS City {Letl:randt 9-11) , 8:35 p.m .
c axu

Mln..,sota ( VIolu 19.(1) at Tt•.•uu1 (Kli&amp;'US 11· 11). 8:35p.m .
Nel'' \ 'arlo ( Rhoden • · 10 ) 11.1 Se aUle

I Runkhel&amp;d 7·8). tO: OS p.m .
Baltlmo"' (11bhN H2) at CaiUornh\
{Fraser 11·10), 10: 35 p.m .
Thuf!id""''MGames
Tl!ltas at Toronto, nlgh1
Mill''llUkee at Detr111t, ntghl
Kansv; CUyat Min~Esota , ni!(hl
BoMlon 111 CaiUorn.la, ni~l
NATIOSAL LE1\GUE
Ea11t
W L Pt't . GK
New \'ork
711 ~3 .:19~ PitiStlllrJh
71 61 .53tl 7 1 !
Mo.treal
66 65 .504 12
~ 6:1 .:100 l'llfl
Chlca80

1i"t

Sl . I.Alub;

61 71

Philaddphia

1H 77 •.fl:l U

.462

\\'P!&lt;OI
Lo s o\n gel es

77 5.f .:IM 71 61 .5311 6'-n:
69 63 .lit! II', ~
67 6&lt;1 .511 10

Hou.'!ion
San Fran cisco
Ci nci ru~ll
San Oirgo
At hmw

64 67 .4k9 13
-'5 8':' .W 321"1

'I'll eM ay '!I Ret; utt !I

('lndruattl6,

PIHIIIIII~J~:h

.t

1Al~An~les4 ,

MOnlrtaJ ~
New \ 'ork I, San Dit".o0
PhiJa delphia 7, San Fra.nd sco ft

St. Lollis 9, Allantu I
HIIU~On

7, Chlc•go .f

Wednt'!id~·~

G11.111t.'!j
S1U1 Oi t&gt;~ (H•wklns 12-10) ut Ne w
York (Ferrandl!.t ~10 ), 1:95 p .m .
Ch icagb {Sulclllh• JO. JI ) at Houlltnn
(Deshaies 9-10 ), 2:35p.m.
LoJ;~ Angeles (Be lcher 10-I J at MontmW
(0opNOn 3-Kl, 7:05p.m .
San FranciJW:o {Reu91 •hel rl·1J
at Phllade!P.Ia (Freenwn 0.2 ), 1:33 p.m .
MU!lhurg'h (Smiley 10·9) at Cincinnati

(Charllon O-eJ, 7;35 p.m .
st. Louis (Trrry 5·3)
!P .Smilh i ·l2) , 7:40p.m.

al

,\tb.nla

ThuMOdiiJ''!I G an1e!'l
No games schedu le II

Transactions
.

Cblcq:o (NLJ - CaJted up pjkllt'rl
Mike Capel and Mike Har~y.
outfltlder!l DoWR: Daacenzo and Holan 110
Roometto and cllleher Rick Wror. trcm
low• of lhe American ib»oclalion.
(AAA).
LoM "-~t.. l!li- Traded plkher Shawn
HIW~J• tb Chicago 'f or Rick Horton.
Houston - Activated c,..cher Alaa
Ashb)l; outrlr~d eatehcr Cralr Bll(gio
toTu !!CO nofPacllh: CoMtLeape (AAA).
Milwaukee - Activated picher Paul
Mira bella; optioned pitcher Tom Fllel' til
Denver o1 Amerk!an 1\stoeii&amp;Uon ( AAA).
New York (ALJ - Traded pitcher
Cedllo GuanU! to Tnas for pkcber Dalf'
MlohOrcl&lt;l.
Plt1sbu ~Kh - Rt'called Mortl!lllp Fell~.:
Fermin frGrn Buffalo of A~rn~rlcan
Association !A.'\A); outrt,;hted pitcher
Dan Rurkerto Buffalo.
Bw!ketball
U.S. Olympk team- Cut j(tlard Brian
Shaw.

CINCINNATI rUPI) -Despite
going 4-lllast season. the Ctncln·
natl Bengals have not made
wholesale changes for this year.
In fact. the 1988 Bengals are
basically lhe same cast of
characters who performed
poorly in 1987.
So, head coach Sam Wyche is
banking on Improvements from
within to turn the Bengals Into a
winner and save his job .
"The thrust of our team , with a
few exceptions, Is the same as
last year," acknowledges
Wyche. "We never believed we
should have been a 4-11 team last
season. We've believed all along
that we could Improve a great
deal by improving from within."
Only five first-year playersa~e
on this year's roster and none are
starters. Among the 24 starters.

Bwwball

Chica1 o (A I.) - RI'-J;~Igned oulflelcter
.terry Hairston; c alledupthl'rd ba'M'm"n·
Outfil'lder Carlos Martinez lrom Blr·
mln"'ttam of Southern Leape (AA ).

/\delphi - ~amed Andrew Bllumhacb
a ports lntormatlon di~Y&lt;:tur.
Sf'w OrleiUls - Announced ft!f.ll(llll.tlon
of auJ1tant athletic director MIU'k
Dusinl(, cross tounlry and track c o.~u~ h
Ken LeilhmM, IU!ihltanl ~lmmlna and
dlvln« coach Paul Brld&amp;erM and eqUipment manaur D11.ne Clement; promote II
ian WllldnliOn lrom a!llll.u ant to head
CfQil."i co01i:r,f and lrack coach; un·
nounced cencer Cllllord Langlonl and
KUard lkyaa Hubbard are lnellgUJie lor
the 1988-89 baskl!thallllf!ason.
We~il VlrJilalll. Stale - Nwned Pen:y
CaldWell ath.lellr director.
Football
Allanta - Claimed quarterback Hugh
Millen offwaiven; rt&gt;lei&lt;Wl!dquarlerback

Kerwin Bell.
Buffalo- Placed wide receiver F11p
Johnson, llnehlli!ker Carllon Railey llJid
A(lll;e tackk&gt; Bruce MunL!r 011 injured
I'Hl'fW'.

Cleveland - Traded linebacker An·
lhon.y Grlrp to Green KllJI tor" draft
elM) ICe.
iw.n Yf!r - Placedoffenslve lackkJ Dave
Sh.tdanl on Injured reserve; claimed
linehacli!•r Tim Lucas on wnh;eu.
Green Ba~· -Rcachedagrermcnl with
wide te&lt;letver PhilllpEp p!l; clalmedtl~tht
end Tr11.vlll Tucker olf wal\'ers; walvrd
lllrhadrr OrLandD IAMory; plut·••LI wldto
receiver &amp;!ott Bolton on Injured reserve.
lntllanapoli8 - i\cqdred Unehac .. er
1\nthuny GriJfK'I from Cle\'eluw:l for
undl.o;cloJted drafl c hr~lce; wllived DIM'·
hac .. rr Orlundo Lowry.
Kan~~BS City- Waived delemdvt' hack
Sherman Cocrolt: placed running hack
Chrbitlan Oko)'f' on injured re!lerve.
Li\ Rams - Al;:reed to terms whh
frf'e-aren&amp; quarlerbackMarkHernnan n.
MJnnes!U - Slped U~ht end Paul
f;offmtln: relelliCd dele~~sl\'e end Staf·
font ." 'ays. linehlWkers Sam Anno and
,Jr~e Cain, tight f! nd!l Rlle.f Wallon and
Brad BecluniUl, wide receiver Regpr
WW'rl. guard Rand)' RumUli!M!n and
!Miety .Jamie Fil~erald.
Srw England - WaivE-d punter Rlc:h
CamiU' tllo, n~ tackle Mike Rulli, safr.t,f
Derr1clo Uea&lt;Jir)' , cornl'rbllCk Howard
Fel(gtns, ce nter Rodney Lo8!1C!W, llnr·
hack e.- ,Jrrry McCa he, offensive I inem1111
Greg Ours and defensive end Slf!Wl'
~' ilhum ; pllu·ed quarterback Ton,y Ea·
lion, tight end Un Oaw!l)n. wld!'recl'l\'r.r
llrnnl!'t. Gadhols , defen~l\'e end Tom
Gl~on a nd linebacker Thoma~ Ben110n
on Injured reo~erve.
NV Jet~ - Oaimed linehackt&gt;r Rohin
Colr •nd df'lenshe !.'nil Ralph ,Janill off
Wl&amp;lvera; pblced llnehackt.1' Ken RoM!' b n
Injured res.&gt;rw; waive d wide rec:lllver
Darryl Peanon.
Philadelphia- Claimed ..,Ide receiver·
kk:k ft'tumerShawn Beal~ oil waiven;
releBMd \'ele ran n'Ct'l\'et Hon.Johnson;
plac:ed ce.ter Gerry Feehtry and tackk!
Mlllt Palc han on lnjun&gt;d ~en'*; rr·
runnlnl( baclt·klck rel .. ner Mark
ii~o·•' •• and d efen!llve end ,JOrllllh&gt;n

Style 161

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TALL.STACKS are coming to Cincinnati to cele·
brate the !'Queen City's" 200th Birthday celebration!

4' X 8'

STORM DOORS

.

.

Baseball
State Police plan to see k
· . warrants Friday against three
Wyche. " We' ve got qui cker.
of the Detroit Tigers
more versatile people back there employees
who allegedly sold tickets at
and a new scheme to take
Inflated prices to street scalpers
advantage of what they can do."
and pocketed the profits In a
Instead of Kinnebrew and Bill
"longtime operation" out of the
Johnson at the starting and
club office.
'
backup fullback slots, the BenBasketball
gals will have Wilson and rookie
Guard Brian Shaw of the
Ickey Woods this year. Both
University of California-Santa
Wilson and Woods are trimmer
Barbara was the final player cut
and quicker than Kinnebrew and
from the U.S . men 's Olympic
Johnson.
·
basketball team. The final roster
On defense, Wyche claims that
includes: Willie Anderson, Georlineman Jason Buck Is much
gia; Stacey Augmon. Nevadabetter !him last year.
Las Vegas ; Verneli Coles. Virgi"He Is proving to be a force on
nia Tech; Jeff Grayer, Iowa
the pass rush and he frankly just
State; Hersey lfawklns, Bradwasn' t a factor last year," said
ley; DanMajerle, Central Michl·
Wyche. •'We also have more size
gan; Danny Manning, Kansas;
up front with McClendon moving
J.R. Reid, North Carolina ; Mitc·h
ahead of Edwards ."
Richmond. Kansas State; David
The Bengals open the season
Robinson. U.S. Navy; Charles D.
Sunday at home against the
Smith, Pittsburgh, and Charles
Phoenix Cardinals.
Smith IV. Georgetown.

CROFT ALUMINUM

Hak-kaff!

•'

PH.

including punter and extra point
kicker. 20 were starters at the
end of last season.
Only one of this year 's four new
starters had to win a regular job
by beating out a returning
regular at tra ining camp. Defensive end Skip McClendon pushed
ve1eran Eddie Edwards into a
backup role.
The three other ex-starters
were training camp holdouts and
had never practiced with the club
this year before being releasedcenter Dave Rlmlngton, fullback
Larry Kinnebrew and free safety
Robert Jackson. The new center
Is Bruce Kozerskl. the new
fullback Is Stanley Wilson and
the new free safety Is Solomon
Wllcots.
"The biggest exception (to the
no-change roncept) is our run·
ning back situation," said

32" or 36"

.'

Sports briefs

Bengals eye winning season

Seminoles can defy the Hurricanes

Majors

The D~Uiy Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. lnctUdM Semon
and tt.rdwlra

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EACH

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, August 31 , 1988
Wednesday, August 31 , 1988

U.S. GRADE A

Perdue Whole Fryers

MEAT OR

Kroger Beef .Wieners

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

. JUMBO f2 SIZE

California Cantaloupes

Folger's ·

12-oz.

lb.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Each

PERDUE CUT-UP FRYERS LB .•• 69¢

11

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are ouse
rices!
TURDAY, SEPT . 3, 1988,

lr't. CAlUI'OLIS AND PO M ~RO~ STORES

WE RESERVE THE RIG HT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

'
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KINGSFORD

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' 78

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CHIP$ Full~~

1/2 Gallon

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Valley Bell

Borden Asst.

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Twin Pops

Kurtz

Hometeam

ADV£FIT1S£D ITEM POLIC'I'·Each of these advertised items is required to be rndily available for sale tn each Kroger Store, t)(cept as
speclfical1y noted m this ad . If we do run out of an adveniled item, we will offer you your choice of a comparable Item, when
available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price
within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item purchased.

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Peppers

12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... • 2.99

Cost Cutter
Vegetable Oil Spread~~~

P...t
Butter

General Mills 18 oz. box

I ICeS

FROZEN

79.~

Heifitz 10 oz. jar

•

Jiffy
Corn Muffin Mix ..... s.s-oz

Bell VIew Crunchy or Creamy

''----------"

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
COCA COLA CLASSIC,

BUY ONE

5¢ OFF LABEL, REGULAR

CCII

Cost Cutter
·
Orange Juice .............12-0z.
'

-

Prlo• parutnd tbrou&amp;b S.plember 4, 1llll8
We reserve the right to limit aD quantities.

'

100%
-lACK

Rt. 2 North

Point Pleasant, WV

{304) 675·1155 .

GUARAN1'EE ·

�Page

8-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 31, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rome seekS site for toxic waste cargo
LONOON fUPll- The Italian
long odyssey for the Karin B, dispose of the waste but no U.K. nated biphenyls, or PCBs, which
government today searched fora
which also has been rejected by
company has agreed to deal with cause cancer: substances that
porttounloadashlpanchoredoff
Nigeria, Spain, West Germany It, she said after a meel!ng with pose "a dangerous fire risk, " and
England's south coast and carry·
and Italy Itself. It promised to
Italian Ambassador Barish B!an· highly corrosive liquids .
lng more than 2,000tonsof Italian
rival the, 1987 saga of a barge chert, who objected to the rul!ng.
The Nigerian government
loaded with 3,000 tons of garbage
In a statement issued by the ruled the toxins were !llegally
Industrial chemical waste, which
has been barred from five
that traveled 6,000m!les and was
Italian Embassy, the Rome dumped and on June 10 seized an
gover!IQ1ent said It "understands Italian freighter, which It held
countries.
turned away by at least five
The company charged with
states and three countries before the preoccupations shown by the hostage until the Italian govern·
disposing of the toxic cargo will
finally returning to Islip. N.Y.. British government over ... the ment arranged for the removal of
where It was Incinerated and Karin B's cargo."
the waste from Nigeria.
be given ''the necessary Instruc·
lions" to allay concerns that
dumped.
"The Italian government will
Italy hired the freighter Karin
prompted British authorities to
Hinter Leitner, captain of the give the company In charge of B to remove the waste and
·deny the ship permission to dock
3,230-ton freighter, said via radio this operation the necessary dispatched It to the northeast
he was anchored 15 m!les off the . instructions so that such preoccu· Italian port of Ravenna, which
at Plymouth, England, the !tal·
ian Embassy said In a statement
coast of Plymouth, "waltl'ng for patlons are completely dlss!· has a plant suitable for destroy·
Tuesday.
orders ... which country or which paled, " the statement said but log toxic waste. But Ravenna's
mayor and local residents raised
The British government said
spot we can discharge this did not elaborate.
cargo." The port Is 180 miles
The waste, believed to be from an uproar and the ship was
the 2,000-plus tons of highly toxic
a number of European chemical diverted, first to Spain, then
Industrial chemicals, Including a
southwest of London.
carcinogen, aboard the West
The ship was under the watch companies, most of them Italian, Britain, where a waste company
·German-owned Karin B were
of the Royal Navy and the was Illegally dumped by an had said !t would consider
"essentially an Ita Ita n · envIronment a 1 group Italian firm betweenAugust1987 disposing of the material.
problem."
Greenpeace.
and May 19881n Nigeria near the
Andrew Lees, a toxic waste
The cargo cannot be dumped In
"Under our law, dangerous river port of Koko, 150 m!les west expert for 'Friends of Earth.
blamed weak British laws for the
the United Kingdom because It Is waste can be !rnported only If the of Lagos. .
.
By paying the owner of a field Italian decision to order the
not known exactly what the 10,000 exact composition of the wasle
barrels aboard contain, said
has been established," Bottom· about $100 a month to store the
junior Environment Minister
ley said.
waste, the firm was able to save
Virginia Bottomley .
An Italian company has ap·
millions of dollars In fees to have flr·~~~~~~iljiiji,~
The ruling continued a month· ·preached British firms to help ltproperlydlsposedoflnsophlstl·
cated Incinerators.
.I
An analysis of the 10,000
t OJ
barrels of waste In Nigeria, by a
team which included the environ·
mental group Frlendsof Earth,·
531 JACKSON PIKE· RT.J5 WEST
showed It contained polycholorl·

Bea

Get

Your

tl"cket

BOB HOEFLICH
If you're a Southern High
School football fan, you ·could
easily be Inter·
es led In a re·
served seat on
the 50-yard line
for all the games
this season.
This is
. possible!
From 6 to 8 p.m., Tuesday
night at the high school, some 130
reserved seats on the 50-yard line
- good for the en tire season will be sold at $20 each on a first
come, first served, basis. Those
purchasing the seats also ·will be
given pr!or!ty when the same
project !s carried out next year.
Proceeds from the sale will go
towards providing funds needed
for new bleachers on the visitors'
side of the football field.

A Rutland High School Alumni
Football Banquet will be staged
on Sept. 24 at the Rutland
Elementary School by the Ru·
t!and Fire Department.
About four years ago. the
departmeni staged a similar
banquet and at that time honored
the school's long-time successful
and popular coach, Jim Vennari.
This banquet, similar in nature,
w!l! honor Carl Denison , who
coached before Vennar! and was
also a teacher and scout for the
football team.
The banquet will start at 7 p.m.
and tickets are $7 each. I
understand, Vennari will be on
hand for the event as we!! as the
:high regarded Denison .
• See any fire departrrient
:;member for your ticket.

this week - you know - to give
people a chance to get relleffrom
the heat. No one figured that so
suddenly we were going to
realize the meaning again of
being "chilly". So the evening
hours have been cancelled this
week. However, the pool will be ·
open form 1 to 6 p.m. Saturday.
Most of us after a really torrid
summer are ready to accept
chilly, aren't we? In fact, a little
cool could well help us to keep
smiling.

T;rustees to meet

We Reserve· The Ri1ht To

Limit Quantities

STORE HotJRS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

WIN .YOUR
SHARE OF
OVER
'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES

EFF~CnYE

$200,000

SUN., AUG. 28 THRU SAT., SEPT. 3

IN CASH &amp;
vGROCERIES
Win $1 or $5 in
the Instant Winner
Game
Win up to $100 in
the Bingo Game

I

&amp;Ill'&amp; . . .

~-·1.10

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

...... u ...

627 3rd Ave., GaHipolis
PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

.

:areast Quarters~~•• 99&lt;

A NEW OR,..SED
GABOR UCK?

••

'

JIM COBB

T-Bone Steak ••••• ~·.. 359,
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ·

$

Drawing for three
(3) 1988 FORD
ESCORTS
. (1) MAGNAVOX
VCR Awarded At
Each Participating
Store

289

Smoked Sausage .•:. $199
KAHN'S REGULAR or BUN SIZE
$
Wieners •••••••••••••• !~. 149

Win one of the 16
popular ·
Supermarket
products on the
Instant Winner
Game Piece*
"Win-• receive • 1, f6 or one
of tixteen productteo indicated
on winnng game piece.

KAHN'S

Start l/our Set
of Beautiful
Salem EJttra
Hea~v Stainless

~Sliced Baton ••••••• ~. Sl ~ 9
FLAVORITE HALF

Boneless Ham •.••• ~. Sl 79

Fl~tware.

HOMEMADE

SELECT FROM
2 PAnERNS

Sandwich Spread.!~. 69&lt;

This Week's
Feature

HAS THE ANSWERS
WITH INSTANT
CASH REBATES!

It's been pretty hot weather, not very conducive to thinking
•about Christmas.
: However, in s pite of the
: weather, John Mohler, 28565 St .
R. 7, Middleport, has come
. tllrough again to undoubtedly be
the first to send his Christmas
· cards. Friends received them In
· the mail this week. Like you,
: probably, It's an effort for me to
; even think Labor Day .

TEASPOON
With each 86.00
· purchase (excluding
liquor and tobacco
products)

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

Potatoes .......... ~~.~s. $199
BROUGHTON
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••• $·149

• It doesn't seem possible but
: genial Leo Story will mark his
' 90th birthday anniversary on
Tuesday, Sept. 6. You can help
fam!ly members mark the occa·
. sian by sending along a card to
• h!m at the Maples. Apartments,
. Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Yep· Leo lives In town these da ys.

· GAL.

COUNTRY CROCK

As the result of making such a
: good showing at thecheerleading
· camp held at Ohio State Unlver·
: slty this summer, Tracy Beegle,
daughter of Don and Sue Beegle,
· East Letart, and a South·e rn High
School cheerleader, has been
Invited to make a trip to London,
, England In December.
: The trip Is being handled by the
; Universal Cheerleaders Assocla·
11on and only a bout one percent of
~ the cheerleaders In the nation are
::extended the Invitation to make
~ the trip to England at which there
·: will be a mayor's day presenta·
tlon as well as another
: perfOI'J!lance.
Tracy will leave Dec. 26,
returning on Jan. 2. She will be
. making the rounds soon to secure
financial sponsors to help with
· · the trip. Businesses, organ!za·
. tions and Individuals wlshlnj! to
help can send contr!bu t!ons !n
Tracy's name to the Racine
: Home National Bank.

(COMPLETER ITEMS AVAILABLE
THROUGHOUT THE PROMOTION
FOR ONLY $2.99~PER UNIT)

WEEKLY FEATURE
SCHEDULE
TEASPOONS

Shedd's Spread •••.':-. $169
BORDEN'S
SELLS .
$2
99
$149
Ice
Cream
•••••••••••••
Potato Chips ••••••••
5 QT. PAIL

12. 01.

BANQUET

Aug. 29 and Oct. 3
SALAD FORK

Sept. 5 and Oct. 1 0
DINNER KNIFE

Sept. 12 and Oct. 17
DINNER FORK

Sept. 19 and Oct. .24
SOUP SPOON
Sept. 26 and Oct. 31

Lotsa ·Pop •••••••••••••• 39&lt; Fried Chicken ••• ;:.o~. $249
2UTER

·····couPm·······• :·····couf\\1·······
#WIIOI· 50+1
,:

•

I

I

I

I

I

•

I

I

I

I .

• JELLO PUDDING •
3.12 • 3.75 oz.

• • • ••

.,;.----·-·------------~-1 1 ~"r!'.!:&lt;':.~

• • • • • ~ r•

KOOL-AID KOOLERS •
6PAI

• The best laid plans of mice and
· men ....
Last week, It was anbounced
that London Pool In Syracuse
• would be open from 3 to 8 p.m .

--

$

HILLSHIRE FARMS

KEN

D.O

--Sweepstakes

U.S.D.A. CHOICE PORTERHOUSE .or

Sirloin Steak •••••• ~·..

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

;

'

Fo11une
8, Food
Bonanza

Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet at 5:30 p.m. Friday at
the township building.

. _,_
. -.---

. . . . . .. ¥

'; Speaking of Rutland , the town
·Is sporting a new American flag.
:'rhe flag was secured through
· congressman Clarence Miller
and flew over the Capitol In
· washington, D. C., on July 25.

.

The Daily Seutinei-Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

h

t e Bend

1 By

•-

waste to Plymouth.
" Britain's waste laws are
notoriously lax ... this llasco, In
part, Is a direct consequence of
our government's complacency.

August 31. 1988

99C

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

TIDE DETERGENT •
147,01.

s599

-·~-~

'

Llllllt. I Per Cwt-

GOOtl Only At Powlll'a S... Velu
Gt1041 Sun.. Aut· 21 thru Sat. Stpt. 3 •
•

t

.............. ~-)

---

__, ....

----~-----------·--

__ ..,.. -------..-''-·---- -

e e

t • • .• I~ . .. . I . I I I

•

e

~
... -------------

i

"''""'~'~'' ·.. 1•,.

,

_______ __
;.,.

' '

f
.:..,_

�-'

Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 31. 1988

Your Independently Owned
Low·Priced Supermarket

--- BICi BEND

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel .
Wednesday, August 31 1988
Page-11

Going alone is tough, but best
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMrr QUANTITIES. PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY. AUG. 28
THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 3, 1988. USDA FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS ACCEPTED . NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

Home 01
--·

MT. DEW.

REGISTER TO WIN A
FREE GO-CART

~~STOCK UP FOR ~~

PEPSI FREE

~

DIET or REGULAR

Pepsi-Cola

r--Go:CART
ENTRY
FORM
I

I...,................................................. , .
~ I'IICIIItt •••••••••••••••••••..••••••••••.................

1
1

IIHIInetloepr-tewiii.Nopw....
...,.

-•Y· llollt lie II y-. .W •

DRAWING 1-sEn. 3, 1988

1

I

.

I

I
I

II

L---------------------•

8

49

16 oz.
BTLS.

•CHICKEN •BEEF FLAVOR

Seven Up •• 1.~·1-::.

$119

ALL PURPOSE
FRESH LEAN

White
Potatoes

H'US

Ramen
$
Noodles ••••• :;~:... 3
Kahn's
12 $
Wieners .....~~;~ 1499
.
24
.
VA~LEY GEM
. ,9
16 Oz.
SDinach
••••••
s~~·...... 7
LUSH'US
Kidney . ~:oz. $ 9
Beans.........~:;:..... 6
HPANOkV/ERB
,;: Oz.$ 6
or eans ••lifl••

Plus Deposit

DIET OR REGULAR

ALE

CAS

I Na~~~e ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,........................11!•••••

Ground
Beef

WINTER!
:~
---------~

t

'

'

.•,,9

,;~z

.

Navy Beans ••WI••
FOOD~ND

1 ~~b.

1

Salt1nes •••••••rttl\.

$ 99

6

LUSH'US

Italian
~:v.o
Green Bean~~'!.~.:· 5799
VIETTI

Hot Dog
,o~ oz.$ 99
Sauce ••••••••••• w.. 6
Stew ..c.-:1 · 1 099

MORTON HOUSE 1 ~~•·$

SHURFINE

Mushrooms ~~ $

Pieces/StemsC:!I!'~·

FULL CASE

·,

FULL CASE

O'Sage
Peaches·

12
oz..

29

FULL CASE

Blue lake

Coca-Cola

259€,~

24
oz.

JAR

Limit 1 With Coupon and $10.00 Additional Purchase.
Good thru Sat., Sept. 3, 1918

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

VAN CAMP'S.

Yellow
Pencils

Beanee Weenie
Umit 4 With c.,..n.
Gootl.lhru Sat., Sept. 3, 191111

~

7oc•$599®:,
Limit 1 With CMpOn.
Gootllhru Sat.,
3, 1911

CONTADINA

....,.,.... Spaghetti Sauce
280Z.

$14·9

llltlltiWI*Cr •••·
.... tin Set~ hpt. I, 19111

CHAMP

$299

Limit I With c..,.•.
Geod lhru Sat. lllrf, 3, 19111

MI. lAlOR

Mandarin
Oranges

.
Sl
~J:.~":
2
~,.(~,

13 Oz.
Cans

~

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON
ezno •PAYDAY •CHOC. PAYDAY
HOLLYWOOD

V.I.P.

Bags

Umit 2 With CO.,...
Good lhru Sat., Sopt, 3, 1918

Umit 10 With (ouptlft and $10.00 Additional Purchatt.
.
Good thro Sat, Sopt. 3, 1911 ,

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

NANDI BAG 30 GAL.

Tr~sh

89&lt;

4 ROLL
PKG.

20LB.
BAG

Limit 4 With CMpOn.
Geod lhru Sat., Sept. 3, 1911

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

1
1

Bath Tissue·

Dog Food

49&lt;

10 Ct.
PIC G.

NOITIIEIN

! ~- .Heinl Baby Food

I~~&lt;) 5JARs$1 ~

1202.$399

FOI

Unit 6

Good Tin Sat.

c...,.•.

3, 1911

Nestle Quik

La.$24

CAN

I am learning to trust, for the
first time in my life. I'm scared. 1
make mistakes. but they aren't
fatal. I have accepted the fact that
I'm human. No more playing Super
Mom. My children are learnmg to
be independent for the first time.
We are going through adolescence
logether. And we're going to make
it! Hallelujah! •· M. IN GLOUCES·
TER, MASS.
DEAR M.: Thanks for a wonder·
fully upbeat letter. I love your
can-do approach to life, and your
courage is sure to be contagious.
I'd like to recommend a book
that will help those who are living
· with an alcoholic or have the
problem lhemselves, It is "Getting
Better: Inside Alcoholics Anony·
mous" by Pulitzer Prize-winner
Nan Robertson;
Thts IS a potgnant and brutally
frank story of a highly successful
journalist who for years was a
closet drinker. Finally, through
A.A., she turned her life around.
Her insights are m~rvelous and her
story IS an tnsptratiO~. The pubhsh·
er IS Morrow. The pnce, $17.95. .
. Dear Ann La~ders: Please agam,
JUSt one more time, blast the slobs
who never send lhank·you notes. 1.

}asS reUniOn
' he}d
:,.• (h
ester
(
The annual reunion of the . Clayton Allen, treasurer.

Chester High School Classof1935
Class members attending were
was held Sunday afternoon at the Harry Bailey, Marie Hauck,
. Pomeroy; Roy Christy, Vlrgene
Forked Run State Park.
The group enjoyed a covered Elberfeld and Clayton Allen,
: dish dinner and an afternoon o! Chester; Edith Curtis, Akron;
;. visiting with
pictures were owen Damewood and Ronald
:: taken.
Osborne, Long Bottom; Walter
. During the business meeting Brown, Reedsville, Samuel Ml;. Evelyn Sedgwick gave the secre• chael, Portland; Evelyn Sedg•: tary 's report. Of!lcers elected wick and Mildred Caldwell,
• were Ronald Osborne, president; Tuppers Plains.
• Evelyn Sedgwick, secretary, and
Guests were Margaret Christy,
:~ (h
Raymond Elberfeld. Margaret
Ballev, Bill Matlack, Clarice
Allen: Lora Damewood, Ella
0 bo
C
Ml h 1 Ted
'
s rne. oraand cGertrude
ae '
Sedgwick,
. Kathy Freitag and daughters , Robinson. .
• Marv and Susan, North Canton,
spen't a few days here with their
aunt, Lucille Smith.
Dr. and Mrs . Billy R. Allen,
. Katlr and Bobby, Westerville,
were weekened visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Roberta Wood. Columbus, vi·
sited on Friday with Mr. and
: Mrs. Roy Christy .
Herbert and Sheila Clay of
CIISP &amp; SERVE
Georgia, and Jane Clay, Dear·
born. Mich. were guests of Mr.
and Mrs . Lando Clay.
SWIFT ECIIIICH·
Mr. and Mrs . Clayton Allen
visited on Wednesday with his
!ather, M. H. Allen, a patient at
: Highland Medical Center, Pres·
SMITHFIELD
• tonsburg, Ky.
• Mr. and Mrs. Jim Newell,
: Cincinnati, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
HOMEMADE
.Meek, and children, Mt . Sterling,
: Ky., Kathy Newell, Gallipolis;
and Kenneth Newell. Columbia,
S. C. visited their parents, Mr.
· and Mrs. Harold Newell having
KRAFT 16 SUCE PROCESS
·-been called here bv the death o!
: their grandfather , BlainE
AMERICAN
Newell.
CHEESE .............!1.!!L $1,89

·'..h ·ester •
. appentngs

Ann
·Landers

IVOIY

Twin Blade
Cartridge
6 CT.

PKG.

Dish

69' t'i-\
"?/~

Ullllt 4 With

""

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

...., .... .hirt

Raid .lnsedicldes

Cannidg .Jats

10 0%. CAN er UIGII

12Ct.$1 00
Off
Box

llllllt I Wltll C.,.•.
Sat~ s.,t. I, 1911

.... tllru

S ATFO

The first ·a nnual reunion of the
· descendants o! Dannie and Fil;&gt;s·
, sle Brlckles of Darwin was held ·
Aug. 21 at the Holiday school
' grounds on GII key Ridge with 85
: family members and friends
·.'attending.
·
• At the reunion were Carl and
' Letha Brlckles, James and Sarah
' Brlckles, Carol, Brian, David
'• and Melissa Bethschelder, Jesse,
: Patti, Dennis and Ryan Brlckles
' and Margaret Canter, Athens;
: Audra Hayes, Estelle Colburn,
; Floyd and Colleen Brlckles. Jim,
• Garoldene and Jamie Boyd,
: Shade; Pearl Gilkey, Donald and
; Betty Brlckles, Roy and Mabel
Brlckles, Dale, Angle, Nathan,
11nd Derek Brlckles, David and
John Brlckles, Edith, Missy and
Josh Leach, Pomeroy.
Others there were Danny,
Peggy and Pete Brlckles, Mid·
· dleport; George Gilkey and
: George Gilkey, Jr., New Marsh·
field; Sam, Evelyn and Robert
Cornelius, New Concord; Dale
.and 'l'eresa Jones, Mlkle :::ooper,
Shane and Colby Smith, LaRue;
:wayne, Jackie, Kim and Whitney
·, Smith, Caledonia; Mike, Barb
·and Mlkle Smith , Marion; Jeff
,and Patty Shaffer, West Pros·
pect; Robert and Lee Brlckles of
West Lafayette; Jay, Diana,
,Jayson, Jarrod, and Jesse Brlck· ~s. Coshocton; Stephanie, Jen•nlfer and Kristina Stover; Nancy
'Crossen, Galllpolls; Jeff and
Chrlstolpher Brlckles of Coneville; Duane, Laura and Brian
'Brlckles, Logan; Gale and
Nancy Bates, Charlie, Monlque,
'and Brandon Cornelius, Sam,
•Judy, Kelly, Alan, and Jennifer
:eor~llus of Cambridge; Earl
'and Faye Brlckles, Ashland, Ky.
and Paul · Brlckles, Vlnt Hill
'Farms, Va.

'

-~---

SHEDD'S

MINI•CROCIC
MARGARINE 1;;;f.9U!!~.. 99•
S&amp;F MEDIUM

$124 :

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Marr reunton
nducted
co

Children o! the late John and
Foresl Marr held their annual
reunion recently at the Shrine
Park In Racine.
Attending were Ruth and Leo·
nard Lewis, Massillon; Ruby and
Lewis Miller, Tuppers Plains.
Wayland and VIrginia Marr, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Marr and child·
re o, Melissa and Miranda, Lan·
caster: Paul Marr, Pomeroy;
Beulah and George Neigler,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
Miller and children, Sarah, Billy,
amid Ginny, Gallipolis; Shirlie
and Joe Cappo o! Waynesboro,
Va.; David and Tina Nelgler,
Racine.
Also attending were first cousin, Carroll Marr, his wife,
Barbara and daughter, Jo Elle·n
o! Chillicothe.

PBARMACJY

HEAD
LEnUCE .............~~.9..... 79•
"FRESH" 21'1 SIZE UP
PEACHES............... 2 Its. 98•
"FRESH"
CANTALOUPE ......\~.fJ....991

IEGUUI IANQUO

TV. DINNERS...................... $ 1.49
OlE-IDA
CORN ON THE COB •••••••••• 4 EARS $1.59
BIRDSEYE
10 oz. $1 39
PEAS w/
••••••••••••••
•
LUCK'S

PINTO BEANS •••••••••• !!.~!·. 2 /S1 •.19
IDAHO
INSTANT POTATOES •••••~~.!&gt;.z. S1.39
CHEF-BOY -AI-DEE
CHEESE PIZZA ..............~~~z. S1.69
DINIY MOORE
BEEF STEW ...................~~.~z. S1.79
QUAKER
OATS CEREAL................~!.~z. S1.59
MAIWB NOISE
INSTANT COFFEE ..........IJ..~z. S5.79
MAIIIIA WHITE
CORN BREAD MIX ••••••••• t.Y!•••• 45c
nr.PACK
.
BOUNTY TOWELS .............. S1.49
TIDE DETERGENT ............... Sl.29
• oz.
MR. JUICY DRINKS ........... 6/89c
-

ll

•

Special of the Week!
FISH &amp;.CHIPS'.:

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••• 2·•• S1.09
TURKEY BREAST••••••••••••• ~!·•• S3.29
SHREDDED S2.19 LB.
COOKED RAM •••••••••••••S!l.c!~.~·. S1.97

:Brickles
:reunion held

~ F1§:~ '~ k% ~

swear I wdl buy a dozen papers and
send your column to all my
relatives!
.
I am fed ~P w1th announcem~nts
for graduatlo.ns, sho~ers, wedd1?gs
and new bab1es. I wmd up sendmg
money because I don't know most
of the peopl~ well. enough to select
an approprtate Kl~· 1 never ~ear
DEAR SOFTIE: Here's your let·
from them - u~tll the next time ter. Start clipping, dearie. Your beef
they have so'!'ethmg to announce.
is plenty legitimate. 1 hope others
1 ~~-~ receive a .note recently. 11 who have been similarly abused
read. Dear Uncle. I .~nally gra?u· will clip it, too.
ated college, etc., etc. No mention
Take charge ofyour life and turn it
to ~r Aunt who s~nt h~lf a day around' Write for Ann Landers' new
shop~mg for the gJft. I ve been booklet, "How ro Make Friends and
marrted to Dear Un~e for 36 yea.rs Stop Being Lonely. " Send a check or 1
"At tho End of the .Pamoroy·Maton Bridge"
·· and my name hasn 1 · ap~red !n money order for $3.50 and a self-ad· 1
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992·2556
the obtts as yet, so 1 guess 1.m sttll dressed, stamped, business-size enve- •
here. If the graduate had wal~ for lope (45 cents postage) to Ann Land· 1
DearUncletobuyacard.andstgna
'
J/1.
ld h
ted
ers, PO
. . Box 11562, Ch1cago,
check; he wou
ave wa1 a very 606ff.(J562_
long t1me.
.
r-----------..~.,_------~-------Than~ for lettmg me spout ?IT,
An~. I m senous about sendmg
cop1-;s of your answer to all my
relatives. - AUNT SOFTIE IN THE
HINTERLANDS
•

MEAT SALAD .................. ~~·•••••• 89c

CANS

Instant Coffee

2'~::-Slf}

Large
Peaches

12

IIAXWDL

COlE • CAFFEI. REE
DIET or REGULAR

FRESH

Glendale
Pop

Green Beans

1

FULL CASE

ASST. FLAVORS,CANNED

16Y2 OZ.
CANS

CANS '

12

Hamburger 12 $
240z.
Ch •IpS •••••••••~r.·.

Dear Ann Landers: In response
· to "Strictly Anonymous, USA"
(whose husband drank like a fish),
you told her she was strong. bul
you diijn't encourage her 10 leave
him.
.•. If ~he has been supporting her
•· children without her husband's
:· help, il would be a lot easier to do
;. without him around. 1 know. 1did
~ it, but it was tough sledding. 1. too,
:" was so fed up that I had thoughts of
~ running away, but 1 just couldn't
;.. leave my kids.
:: We are stronger than we know.
: And we are noi alone. 1 am
;~ eternally grateful to AI· Anon for
f; putting me wise to myselF. 1 was an
,: "enabler" who remained in a mar·
:: riage for -17 years, knowing that 1
,'· n•v•r
• • lov-•
= th•• man. After he lost
~ three businesses and was found
•. guilty of a federal offense, 1 finally
~ said, "Enough! What could be
t worse than this?"
! 1 did not have the suppon of my
; parents. (They were afraid of what
: the relatives would think.) My
(: in·laws haven't spoken to me in
!' four years and may never speak to
:· me again. but that's OK. I gol into
-: the mess alone and I will get out of
l· it the same way.
1'

-

- - - -

--.....__-

p

• ••

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

'Pom~oy-Middleport,

Ohio

Wednesday, August 31, 1988

Wednesday. August 31, 1988

Hayman family gathers for reunion
The annual reunion of the late
George and Vera Mae Hayman
was held Aug. 20 at Portland
Park. Dan Hayman had the
blessing.
· Attending were Mrs . Gerald
Hayman, Keith Hayman, Beth
· Hart, Linda Jewell, Racine; Rick

Gleason, Point Pleasant, W. Va.;
Barbara Jewell. Curtis Lee, New
Haven, W. Va.; Phyllis Young,
Middleport; Don and Donna
Hayman, and Brian Hayman,
Laurel, Md.; Bob and Annie
Jewell, Letart, W. Va. ; Lewis
and Ruth Ours, Wellsville; VIrgil

r----------------------...;._,

Business Services

and Delorse Ours, Dover; Teresa
Lawver, Gahanna; Michael, Carrie and Mathew Ours, New
Philadelphia; William and Vlrg1.
nla Huffman, Salem; Mrs . Harry
Hayman, Pomeroy; Vera Mae
Mills, Pataskala: Judy Hrivnak,
Derek McCoy. Columbus; Beryl
and Ruby Wolfe, Hebron;
Rhonda, Kindra and Jennifer
Wolfe, Hebron; Lewis, Jerrod,
and Jonathan Wolfe, Hebron;
Margaret Carpenter, Stratton;
David Carpenter, East Liverpool; Ronald. Nina, Shannon,
Chris, Cory, Curtis, and Nathan
E
Ll
1 D
Carpenter, ast verpoo ; oris Rogers, Columbus; Dan,
Donna. Danny and Dena Sayre,
Racine; Bryce Sayre, Coshocton; Bethany and David Sayure,
Jackson; Dan, Faith and Tamara Hayman, Syracuse; Kelly
Havman and Juanita Sayre;
Racine.
.---------"'---

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP
Gently used
consignment
clothing for
children.

I P roperty trans fers I
CompUed by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Melp County
Court Hou.oe
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NOTE BURNING .CEREM9NEY - Regulars
attending the weekly Saturday night dances at
Pomeroy Village Hall Auditorium joined lor a
note burning ceremony at Saturday's dance to
mark the paying office of a note on air
conditioning installed in the auditorium where the
dances are staged. Exceptlor one$10 contribution

Giles, Jr. and Thelma Irene
Giles, Rutland.
Freda B. Lievlng and Beulah
Lieving Utterback, parcels to
Ralph J. Day and Retta K. Day,
Sutton.
Administrator of Veterans Af.
Monserrate Cordera dec'd, a!fairs, Lot 96 to Marvin G. Little fid to Celestino Cordera,
and Juanita M. Little, Salisbury.
Middleport.
Anthony Kopec and Dawn
Emily Sprague, Tracts to Em- Kopec, Lot 4 to Charles William
ily Sprague and Glenna Sprague, . Whittington and Lola Whittington, Chester.
Middleport Vtllage.
Jay E. StUes dec'd, cert. trans.
Leroy E. Vogler dec'd, affld to
to
Nettie E. StUes, Phyllis Hall,
Edna Aileen Vogler, Columbia.
Thomas E. Ball and Deborah Beverly Murdock, Roger Stiles
Ball, Parcels to Dwight E. and Patricia Arbaugh, Rutland.
Edna I. Da'\lldson, 4 A. to
Sturgeon and Terri L. Sturgeon,
Harold Carson and Donna Grate,
Sutton.
Howard Caldwell Ill, .37 A to Rutland.
Lewis Raymond Ervin dec'd,
Chrlsty J. Caldwell, Syracuse
affld. to Pearl Ervin, Howard
VIllage.
Walter R. Crooks and Emo- Ervin, Paul Ervin and Roy
gene Crooks, parcels to Walter R. Ervin, Racine Village.
Pearl Ervin dec'd, affld. to
Crooks and Emogene Crooks,
Howard
Ervin, Howard Ervin,
Middleport VIllage.
Paul
E.
r
vln
and Roy Ervin,
Judy Mlrks and George D.
Village.
Racine
Mlrks, tracts to Michael Moore
l;:hamberlaln, Columbia.
Howard Ervin, Nancy Ervin,
Steven R. Elfrink and Donna C. PaulE. Ervin, Wilma Ervin, Roy
Elfrink, parcels to Roger A. Ervin, by atty-ln fact, and Doris
Ervin, by atty-ln fact, Pt. lot 39 to
Carsey, Meigs.
Clair W. Giles, Jr. and Thelma Roscoe L. Wedge and Hazel M.
Irene Giles, tracts to Clair W. Wedge, Racine VIllage.

made on the air conditioning lund sent to the
Farmers Bank and Savings Co., young people who
attend the dances paid lor the $3,000 air
conditioning system by paying a little more to
attend the weekly dances during the swnmer. The
dances continue Saturday night with a change in
the hours. New hours will be 8:30 to 11: 30 o.m.

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Forest
Run United Methodist Church.
The club's annual flower show
will be held.
THURSDAY
RACII'o'E - A work night for
fathers will be held Thursday, 6
p.m., at the Southern HighSchool
football field. The work night Is
sponsored by the Athletic
Boosters.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, will hold a
regular meeting on Thursday at
7: 30 p.m. Fifty-year pins wlll be
presented and 50-year members
will be honored. Potluck and
special entertaining wlll follow
the meeting. Each member at. tending should bring a covered
dish.
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - A soup and
sandwich supper will be held
before Friday night's football
game at Eastern High SchooL
Serving will start at 6 p.m.
Proceeds will go towards extra ·
curricular activities In the
district.
MIDDLEPORT - A weekend
revival. with Jeff Smith, wlll be
held Friday through Sunday at
the Middleport Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church. Services will
start at 7 p.m . each evening.
SATURDAY
ATHENS - The Guthrie and
Story reunion will be held Saturday at the Athens County Fairgrounds. Basket dinner al 12
noon. All friends are invited.
NEW HAVEN, W.VA . - The
Goodnlle reunion for family and
friends wlll be held Saturday,
slllrtlng at 12 noon, at the Zion
Lutheran Church on Broad Run
near New Haven. W.Va. A
covered dish picnic will be
served at I p.m. Call992-3980 for
informa tion.

SUNDAY
RACINE - The annual Johnson reunion will be held at the
Shrine Park, State Route 338,
Racine, Sunday. There will be a
basket dinner at 1 p.m. followed
by an afternoon of games.
TUESDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Flame Fellowship will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Mt. Olive Community Church,
Long Bottom. It wlll be testimony
night.

presented and 50-year mem""r$ bring something for the white
will be honored . Potluck after the elephant sale.
meeting and each member attending should bring a covered Revival underway
POMEROY - Revival servidish. Special entertainment is
ces are underway at Pomeroy
planned for after the meeting.
Church of the Nazarene through
Sunday with David Canfield,
Reunion
evangelist,
and Jim and Cathy
NEW HAVEN, W.Va . - · The
Sisson,
singers.
Services will be 7
Goodnlte reunion for family and
p.m.
each
evening
but Sunday.
friends will be held Saturday ,
starting 12 noon, at the Zion Sunday services will be 10:30
Lutheran Church, Broad Run, a.m. and 6 p.m.
near New Haven, W.Va. A
covered dish plcn lc will be
served at 1 p.m. For information,
call 992-3980.
Library
POMEROY - September has
been designated as " fine free
month" at the Meigs Libraries.
Residents with overdue books
are encouraged to return them to
the library this month. Time and
place of the Pomeroy Library
children's story hour have been
changed. It will be held at the
Pomeroy Library at 10:30 Wednesday mornings throughout the
rest of the year instead of
Tuesday evenings at the Dla·
mond Savings building.
Barbeque
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Fire Department's Sixth
Annual Chicken Barbeque will be
held Saturday, 12 noon to 6 p.m.,
at the fire station. A garden
tractor pull will be held starting
at 2 p.m . and there will be
enterlllinment from 7 to 10 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
Grange
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet Friday, 7:30 p.m ., at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall. All
officers are asked to dress in
black and white. The annual
inspection will be held, in addition to judging of sewing, baking
and needlework contests. Rock
Springs Grange wlll serve
refreshments.
Pack meeting
POMEROY - The Sept. I
meeting of Pomeroy Pack 249
has been cancelled and will be
held Sept. 22.

Hours 10-4
Evenings by Appointment
2 miles toward Albany on
SA 681.

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

I QUI
III"'U

&lt;L05ED SUNDAY

.•,.,,1011

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

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............ ,,_....-·--___ ..,.

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........

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

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...

. . . . _ , . , . . , .. , . . , . , . _, CoO_n, DO O"'

-

IOCIPMIIIONP~Y

-

I QD PIIITU. .OU
I OCI PIll WIDfO,IDoU

- • oo• •ooo.,no.o.o
- &gt; oo • • noqa•

Public Notice

N .OCI

M ,llll

...Gil

010.1111

... ...
on .uo

•...oo

011 .w

UUIO

"" ··

tto.OD

oa.w

Cltwi/ied ptf~l cover rhe
foUowin.l 1eJ.epllor~e exchonge•···
-e... _
=-~:r.

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1 1 0CIAOO li.TURD.f.Y

----··~

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-~--­
m
-

Public Notice

43216, ADDRESS
UNKNOWN
John Jay Davis, address
unknown and who GWinot
be found or hia address as~
certain ad, and who is the pa~
rent of John Paul Davis, a
child. whose date of birth is

January 11, 1976, wilt take

111 ''

&gt;\JI1I ('' ('' l&gt;lf llll

rental rights and privileges
with respect to said child,
John Paul Davis.
John Jay Davia is required
to answer the Petition for

Adoption

w~hin

twenty-

eight (28) davs after the last
publication of this notice,
which will be published once
each week for she (6, successive weeki, and the lut pu-

"'~~

__
·-..u--.,. .. .._ ...

Public Notice

IN THE
notice that a Petition for
COMMON PLEAS COURT Adoption hu been filed in
· OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO the Probate Court of Meigs
CORNER OF MULBERRY County, Pomeroy, Ohio, by
l!o EAST SECOND
Lorraine Kay Gardner and
POMEROY
Terry Ray Gardner, Plaint·
PROBATE DIVISION,
ltts. requesting an order that
COURTHOUSE
Bald child be adopted. The
IN THE MATTER OF THE
1aid John Jay Davis i1 her·
ADOPTION OF JOHN
aby notified that if the de·
PAUL GARDNER
mend in the Petition for
Cue No. 25889
Adoption is granted that he,
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION John Jay Davis. will be per·
TO: JOHN JAY DAVIS,
manently divested of all paformerty of 4621 Refugee
Rd., Columbus. Ohio

·..
·-·., .....
.....
_....,,_
-~

__............................
.....
-··---·""·
.

ooOI.u

-.

DAY 11001111'1/ll iCoUION

_..,._

"'toTES

blication will be on October
5, 1988.

In case of. your failure to
appear on November 4.
1988, to answer or to other·
wise rHpond before No~
vember 4, 1988, John Jay
Davis will be pwmanently
of hi• parental
rights and privllega. wtth
respect to aaid child, John
Paul Davis. and the child,
John Paul Davia. will than be

divested

adopted.

WITNESS my hand and
the sui of thia Court thia
29th day of Augu at, 1988.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
and Ex·OHicio of the

Probate Cou"

By Lena K. Neuelroad

Chief Deputy Clerk
181 31: 1917. 14, 21, 28;
1101 6, 6tc

Pomeroy, Ohio

1b8 North Setond

Middleport,

Ohio

45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.
ll

We Carry Fishing Supp~

Pay Your Phone
_ ..nd Cable Bills Here

LEGAL NOTICE

IUSINBS PHON!
16141 99H550
RBIOINCI PHON!
16141 992·7754

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has. set
for public hearing Case
No. 88-101-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement practices and
policies of the Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of ~s Electric Fuel Component, and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m. on September
6, 1988 at City Council
Chambers. 218 Cleveland
Avenue. S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission.

:~~

$3 s

(

I

1111 . (

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269
VHS TAP!
CALl AMY CARTIIt
or BOI'S ELECTRONICS
446-7390

l l/1fS8·ttc

985-4141
References

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•R,e frigerators
\\Must Be Repairable"

We Service All Makes
1/22/88/lln

.

So lens 1050 rtding mower, potato plow, uttl tty tratler, tractor
bumper, 5 foot bushho~ air compressor.

MISC.

Zenith color TV. C1aft sman tool box on rollers, chain binders,
chains, electric motors, books, cleveaces, electric hand
tools, rebar rod. 1 lot ollumber, auto parts, house doors, pipe
fittings, moped for parts, misc. merchandise.
MICHAEL and MINDY HILl: OWNERS

JIM CARNAHAN: AUCTIONEER

Terms:

Cash
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property

SER~ICE

We con repoir and recore radiators and
heoter cores. We can
also acid boil on4 rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
&amp; Ports
Briggs &amp; Stratton

FARM FOR SALE

Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

183 ACRES, 2 BARNS
2 STORY FRAME DWELLING

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

IN RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
ON S.R. 124
Contac:t

992-6611'

Tecumseh

Real Estate General

8UVINI OR SELLINI AHOME IS AMAJOR
OPERATION! EASE THE PAINI CALL THE
eLELAND SPECIALISTS!

Middleport, Ohio

("'LolL

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

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

Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service

•Junk Yard Business
WANr TO BUY WRICIID OR
JUNM (ARS 01 TRUCNS
-fREE ISrlMATIS-

For ony of these services tall

614-742-2617
Between 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or leave Messaqe

Free to good OOma-- Yefiow
kittans. male, 12 weeks old. Call

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-379-2435.

949-2168

NEW LISTINGS- 130 acre farm 1ust out of Langsvtlle. Free
gas to house, barn, cellar. garage 4 bedroom older larm
house. ASKING $55,000.00.

._,
1"
I

MIDDLEPORT - Very ni ce and qut~ n~ghborhooo! Nice
home wrth 3-4 bedrooms, large kn chen and living room. Walk·
in closets, 1 car garag~ lull basernent and a nice large lot. SO
MUCH MORE' $45,000.00.
NEW LISTING- Rock Springs Rd.- Approx. 80 acres ol
vacant ground. Approx. 20 acres tillable. All minerals, water
and elec. available. Good hunttng land. $29.000.00.

LOST : In Cadmus-Watarloo

HAULING
SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985~4487
8-8-1 mo. pd .

BOGGS

SALES

Ht~lr&amp;d Dog wearing collar in
Mercerville aria. Call 614-2561688.

&amp;SERVICE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3121
Authorized John
Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Far111 Equlptllent

are.. Mala A11d Chow. Reward.
Call 61 4 -379·2730 or 3792292.

·call and describe. 614-949·
2540.
LOST, 2 year old female cat, Rt.
2 Flattock area. Monday Aug.
22. black with feet, stomach end
splashed on face. if found call
614-446-1530 or 446·5160,
REWARD.

LOST grey kitten with white flea
collar. 30th Street. 304-67~
1916.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Au5=tion

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1

Rick Pe arsor1 Auct ionaar. licensed Ohio and W.t Virgiflia.
Est11te, antique, f•m. liquidation sales. 304-n3-57B5.

INVENTORY SALE
Maran Fur Ag~mcy. 104 Brown
St. , Mason. W
Va. phone

304-773-5296.
All offerings may be aHn from
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Sept . 2
thru 5.
Antiques and collectables : sMtgum, rtffee pluols;: sheath and
pocket knives; rods and reelt;
uJid and. new traps; be• traps;
grinders; hand tools; color TV;
clothes; outboard motor; 'p ots
and pans: glaes and dlthware;
Trov built trector; glessY'Aire;
more it mea to numerous to
mention .

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major S. Minor

Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

VAUGHN

Certified Licensed Shop

5· 25-tfn

4-16-86-lfn

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

8/ 15/ Hn

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Complete Drywall
Service

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rates
56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446-3487

9

Wanted To Buy

u st~d car~ .

TOP CASH p&amp;id for '83 model

and nMNer uMd c:•s. SmitJ't
Buick-Pontiac. 19 11 Eaatern
Ave .. Gallipob . Call 814--4482282.

Rt. 124, Pomeror Ohio

JUST RIGHT FOR THE BIG FAMILY- 4 bedroom home sn·
ling on approx. 6.47 acres of ground. Nice big dining room,
carport, 1amily room and much more! $29,000.00.

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17 -tic

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

'

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN tN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now K•-• luUt

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101
or Rea. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CALIS

I .

Yard Sal~ 1063 Second Ave.,
Aug. 31 thru Sept. 5. All good
ciNn clothes. 26 cents each
item.
Thurs., Fri., Sat. 9·15 Familiet .
. 4 mi. !)lt1218 junction on Rt. 1
to..wrd Dam. Bedroom suite,
occesional tabla. bedding. low
seat. naw crafts, good clean
.clolhes, boy 12-14 and all sizet .
Comm see. Lots of goodies.
Garage Sale-Sept. 2. 3 . Hill·
Neal . From Holzar taka Rt. 160
to Kerr, go left to BidiNeiiRodnay Rd .• go right 311, miles,
large cream g•age on rigtrt. 8
track stereo-tepea:·w / lerge
1peeken. home int. , avon,
plants. boys 18 to 20 clothat,
ladies clothes. winter eoate-all
nice . tome nerw . Cali 614-3187·
7101 or 245-5840,

not accepting applications for
Waitresses. Waiters, &amp; Bus
Persons. Apply In parson at The
Down Undef R•taurant, 300
Second Aw .. Oalltpotts.

Thursdav &amp; Frid!IV- Rodney Pike,
4th house on rigtn , Bedding,
trunk, toys. ehildrent clothes &amp;:
antiques.
1 mi. out 141. Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Drapes. glass'Mre, bf elllcfest
tet. hand tools. dehumidifier.
clothing. mise. ·

---------------0

Excellent .::hool clolhB!I. mens .
wonw1s clothes. EverythingA -1
thape. Mise .. two tvs. toys.
Oon'1 miul Sept. 1 &amp; 2. 9 till ?
South on Rt. 7 to 218. appro• .
2 1/; mll• -lngalls Rd. , right'h mi.
WatcJ't for .,ellow ligns.

An outsUW'Iding new 100 bed
long term care facility soon to
open in Middleport. Ohio offers
the following m.,agernen1 opportunities. Direc'IOf' of admissions. director of activities. book
keeper. haute keeping and
laundry !a.!pervisor. Bring a com·
plated resume snd apply at
Bureau of Employment 58t'vlce.
45 Otiva St. GallipoUs, Oh .
Regarding 0v8fbrook Canter.

S mileoutRt. 218, 1st. 2nd. 3rd.
ChildiWI, adult clothing, houseJ'told, bedstaa¢ batr{ mattress .

Homamaken earn owr t1 0 per
hour part time. Earn free Ha waii.,. trip. Free trelnirlg. co.,.
mission up to 25 per cent.
Hi~hett Hoetass ewardll. No
detrvering or collecting. no J'tendlllng or service cl1arga. Over
800 Oynemldtems. Toys. Gifts.
Home dacor and 01rittrNI
Decor. For free catalog call
Friendly Home Parties 1- 80()..
227-1510.
Someone to live wittt elderly
person. VetrvlightJ'toull8keeping.
614-949-2106 or 61~949·
2819.

Thurs .-tst. . Fri. . 2nd.• Sat.-3rd.
off 141 at Centenary on
Pike, 4th; trailer. Hull &amp;
Browr~ stoneware. baby
adult t:lothing-25 cents,
t1 .00. lots mora
6 Families-Furniture, toys. children's elothas. J'tou•hold. Sat
9 -5. Unwood off Lake. Rio
Grinde.
Large variety of babV items.
boyt·14, girls-4. 123 KineonOr.

Sept. 3. 9-4 .

AVON · All arel!. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882·2645.

Old fashioned yard sale. First
on left off GIIOrge's Creelc
Rd . Thurs. &amp; Fri. 614-446·
8094.

SEMINAR
rnterior Doeorating Consuhant
with Certificate end Interior
Oecoratl"g Sewing Businest .
ReservatiC?nS. 304-623· 5672.
AVON. ell are11111! Shirley
Spws. 304-675-1429.
"HIRING"II Governmllflt jobs your area. 115,000 · 118,000.
Call (602)838-8886 akt. 1 203.
Babv sitter needed for 6 and 8
yeer old children. morning and
evening hours for shift workM,
cell afler 5 :00 304-675-7349.

Situations
Wanted

Verd Sale-Morn. til Dark. B43
Second Ave., Sun.·Sept. 4 &amp;
Mon .·Sapt. 5.

Big 5 family. Sap1embar 1st and
2nd. 1 0 :00· 5 ;00. Children's
clothes. odds an~ ends, furni·
lure. Rt. 7 , n8llt to State
Higtwvay Garage.
In Rutland. first houea on Beach
Grove Road. September 1. 2. l ,
4 . Clothing, toys, windows,
gutter pipe. 814-742-2397.
Sept. 2nd and 3rd Rutland St.,Middleport. Qaby bed. bas·
tinatte. clothes (inlanls to 14) ,
women ' s large sizita, walker,
books and more. Rain can eels.
Sept. 2nd. 3rd. 4th . Crew Rd .
(behind Fairgrounds) Pomeroy .
10:00-4 :00. Aduhand childl'ens
clothes. Watch fof signs.
Sept . 111, 2nd, 3rd at the
Harrison Smi1h residence on
Pine Grove Rd. Toys, u,ent ,
antique c•h register, ~ise .
bicycle.
Sept. 1st and 2nd. 9 :00.4:00.
36980 Rockeprings Rd.. Pomeroy . Ohio.
Saturd~ep i. 3 TrifougJ't Mon·
dey, .-.s·tpt. 5. 1 mh south of
Chaatar on St . Rt. 7, Kautz Farm
{in warehou•). Old disttes-,
formal gowns. much clothing,
horN intefiors, much. much
moral

September 1st. 2nd, 3rd. Frurt
jart, smllll applience. dia:J'tes.
clothing. etc. First J'toutB !)flit
Churcf't in Chester .
657 High St., ~iddleport. September 1st. 2nd. 9 :0().4:00;
September lrd , 9 :00.12:00.
Everything priced to sell.
September 1. 2. 3. Glass\IIA!Ire.
includ1ng DeprEfsslon and
Prf!l!lllld Glast. lots of misc.
Nelli' lha Meigs and G.eliia line,
Rt. 7 .
572 High St .. Middleport, Art.
Conant g.-age. Thurs, Fri. and
Sat. Sept. 1st. 2nd end 3rd.
Leonerd Bass residence. Syntcute Rt. 124. Thursdll'( and
Friday. September 1st and 2nd.
614-992-5006.
Sept. 1sund 2nd.·341 Rutland
St ., Middleport , Ohio. Rain or
shine.
Sept. 2nd and 3rd . 9 :00.4 :00.
Rlltlend. Sub-division 1/.o mi/e on
New Uma Rd. Petite lediBS,
men. &amp; children clothes. bedroom suite· mettress and boM.
spring!l, stereo . Nieinsky
Residence.
Sept . 1. one dav ontv . Beside
Pizza Dan's in Syrecu~~t . 8 :30.
3 :30 . Tupperware. clotJ'tas .
mom.

street

4 family. Item• too numerous to
mention. 4 milm out SR 143.
Sept . 2 and 3.

et. -Sept. 3 . 9 AM to 4 PM . 679
Jav Dr. Children's &amp; adult
clothes, ttoueahold items. etc .

Moving sale. Sept . 1 ·3 . 383
Perk St. Middleport. Little of
everything.

3 Family Yard Sale In
Marcerville.11oul8 below Hannan Tract:~ Grade School. Thurs ..
Fri., &amp;. Sat. 9·5.

Sept. 1· 1. 9 -?. EverythingcJ'teap .
Green and w.hita trailer in
Burlingham on SR 33 .

Fri. &amp; Sat.- All kinds of things .
Bitterswoet Dr ..first road to
right off 8ul..,illa from 160.
Centenary Townhouae·3 family,
Sept. 1 end 2 . Home interior,
clothes, dishes. miscellaneous
itemt.

Sept . 1,2.3 . 9 -?. Toys in 8)1CBI·
lent condition. ladie~~, mens and
ehlldrens clothing, furniture and
hou18tlold ltam1. books, Jewelry. crafts. l228f) Min enville
Hill . Follow signs. Hysell Res.
Beck toteJ'toolyardsaJe. Sept . 3.
9·4. Across from FarmEW'!!j: Bank
In Tuppers Plains. Jeans. girls
clothing, windows. etc.
Sept. 3. 8:00..4 :00. B East St.
IMonkev Run). Pomeroy . Antiques. jeana. hou~~thold items.
other clothing.

Yard Sai•M•rv layne's. Cheshire, Ohio. Sept. 1.2.3,4 . 9 AM
till 6 PM.

VeUowbusJ't Rd .. Racine. Sept.
1.at. 2nd. 3rd. Clothes for
everyone.

Insurance

3 Family · Thurs. &amp; Fri. Meaige's
Carryout beside Kanauga Driveln . 8-l.

Junk cars whh or without
motort. Call Larry l.ivaly-814388·9303.

Call us lor your mobile home
insurance : Miller Insurance,
304-882-2146. Also: auto.
flame. life. health.

6 Family· Honeysuckle Rd .-Old
Rt. 7. Addison. Collector bot,

Furniture and appll.,.oe&amp; by the
piece or en1ire houaehold. Fair
pr ices being p1ld. C. II 6t4-448315B.

.One day only . Nelson end
Redovian yard tala at Gary
Nelson 's res. on Flatwoods Rd.
FridevSept . 2. 9·5. Dishwuher.
house window with screens.
antique lolo'll seat tread mil.
blankets. lawn chain. gemes.
tovsandclott'tet. Men. womans.
childrens.

15

cOmplete households of turnt.
tur&amp; &amp; antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal tlaaters. Swain• s Furnitu ne
A Auction. Third &amp; Olive,
814.446-3159.
Wtnt to bUy: Uted furniture and
an1iquas . Will buy entire household furnishing. Marlin Wed&amp;
meyer. 614-2415-515~

Someone to live-In With elderly
lady part-time in Pl. Pleasant .
Call 614-446-4782 after 6 PM .
Will c.-11 for elderly man or
woman in ourttorne. 614-992·
6515.

13

Wanted to Buy- Go Cart. Call
614-44&amp;- 9824 evenings.

8( !8188

Roger Hysell
Garage

Tun., Wed.. 'Thurs . 9 to 7 .
Uncoln Pika off 141 It Carnenary. first white doublewide on
left . Umrtad display space. Dif·
fl..ent misc. ;terns added deity .

The Down Under R81teurant i:s

12

Middleport
8t. Vicinity

Giant Yard S.ee- Fri.·Sept. 2 &amp;
Sat.·Sept . 3. B-4. Avon bottles,
some anttques. lOts of dothing,
furniture, tools, misc. 'Ninnie
PJ'tlllipt Resid.·Second St ..
Bidwell.

Buyin9 daily gold, silver coins,

BINGO

Sept . 1 ,2,3 . School clothes·
much to choose fr.om. wash
basin w / eablnet &amp; all. craf'ls.
Wayne Phillips, Cecil KingBidwell Rodney Rd .. first off Rt.
664. Watch for tigns.

Male or Female to ive-in &amp; care
for 11ml-male in..,..lld. Call 814379-2770 efler 5 PM.

Government Jobs. S16.040·
$59,230 ~· · Now hiring. Your
area. 805-887-6000 EKI . R·
98015 for cunant Federal list.

···--··Pomerov--··-------

8t. Vicinity

Full· timalaandry position avail able. Must be able to work swing
shift. EXl!etlent benefit package
&amp; wages. Apply at Scenic Hillt
Nursing Canter. No Pttone
inquiries.

lo!i: 4 month old Beagle pup
August 24th In Middleport eree.
Copper noted. brown. tan and
white. 614- 992-6870•
Found: Cttedt book in Pom'eroy .

-----·-Gallipolis·······--·

AVON-Need 5 ladies to Sell
Avor.. Call 61~446-3358 .

Hair Stylins. Acrost The Street
styling salon is Meklng one
additional styUtt who is locking
for more than just another job.
Call Tarri at 614-448-9510 for
d&amp;lails.

Parlt &amp; S1t11lu

CARTER'S

F8mity pl.,ning agency needt a
trained individual to provide
medical andotticesupport t&amp;Ni·
ces in Gillie. Llwrence and
Meigs counti•. Part-time position requires Bllcellent verbal
communication t~cills; aceureev
witt! fl~res: knowttdge of and
tensitivity to reproductfve health
needs of clients; reliable trans·
portation; fl1111.ible houn to indude BVening. weekdll'f and
Saturday morning ~eh;edul" .
Sand lener of interest, retuma,
and two employment .. ferenc•
to Planned P•enthood of Southeast Ohio, 396 Richland
AWllnl.l8. Athens, Ohio 45701.
~September 7. 1988. PPSEO
is an Equal 0ppor1Ltnity
Employer.

lost : mala Weim•ainer. Largo,
gray , bobbed t-'1. In At. 33
Kingsbury area Thursday. Au·
gust 26. Familv pet, 614-9927201 .

Jim Mink Chev .-Oidt Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614446-3872

.. ~....

I

DO IT"

. PRICE REDUCED - MIDDLEPORT- Beautiful coloniai
home' Level lot, 2 car garage, has ornate trim, atlic studio
w/skylight. Well insulated. ONLY $57,500.00.

TRACY RIFFLE ....................... .. ...................... 949-280
JO HILL .............................. .... ...................... 99892~~m
OFFICE .................. ............. ··........................

SmaH female Wire

Most Foreign and

HENRY E. CLELAND .. ..................................... 992·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ................... ,; ...................... 949-2660

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-6674

"LET GEORGE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tnmrlsslon

DOTTIE TURNER ........................................... 992·569~

6 Lost and Found

We pay cash for lato model clean

POMEROY- Nice 2-3 bedroom home, llloor ranch with full
basement and 1 cat garage. Aluminum sidint Good condition. $28.000.00.

H&amp;R Block Is offering a Basic lng the course. Although thou·
Income Tax Course starting sands of job opportunities are
September 7th. There will be a available to qualified tax preparchoice of morning or evening ers, graduates are under no obll·
gallontoacceptemplcyrnentwtth
class!S.
H&amp;R Block.
The 75-hour course Is taught
Registration fonns and broby experienced H&amp;R Block tax
chures
can be obtained by con·
Instructors. Certificates of
!acting
Block at:
achievement and 7 .5 contln~ 618 EastH&amp;R
Main Street,

9month oldmaleBeegletogood
home. C•ll 614-992·2602,.

SYRACUSE, OHIO

tllDD!EPORT- Very nice and neat 3bdrm. home on a big
corner lot. Nice kitchen, F.A.N.G. heat and much more!
Owner may help wnh ftnancing! $32,900.00.

H&amp;R Block Tax
Course Begins• Soon

Puppies tc give to good home. 3
males. 2 ferrn~las. can 814--9854140 or 614·985-3829.

BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Day or Night

.·

NEW- REPAIR

BISSELL
BUILDERS

or Res. 949·2860
NEW LISTING- POMEROY- 1 floor plan home with 3 bed·
rooms, bath, N.G.F.A. lnewerl . Call for more detatls. ONLY
$14,900.00.

Free pu ppias to giva away to
good home. Call 814-446·
8041.

VAUGHN:S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

nAt Rtatonable Prices"
PH. 949-2801

Reunion
CHESHIRE - The descendants of James Clau.dlous and
Cicero (Finney) Hoffman will
have their annual reunion on
Sept. 4 at the Gavin Recreational
Area in Cheshire. A covered dish
dinner will be served at 12 noon.
If possible, all families urged to

part Dachshund
mos. old. 1 mixed
breed rnai&amp;B mos. old. Call
614-446-2611 .

femal~&amp;

3-30-'87 lin

CUSTOM

..

ROOFING

2 · , r=·as.tm

.

education unlls are awa
graduates successfully complet·

Howard L. Writesel

1-13-llc

Real Estate General

992-2136

Giveaway

FOUND :

Authorited Service

Paul Kloes or Bruce Reed At

Control y ·our Mtight · •ke " New
Shape Diet Pl.,." and HydreK
Water Pills. Awitable at Fruth

1 yr. old bird ®g. can 614-2561385.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 1988- 6 P.M.
Located liS mile out Oak Grove Road, Racine, Ohio.
The following items will be offered for sale:
AUTO
1978 Plymouth Volari, 1987 Honda 80cc.

weekend!. call, or holidavs.
Apply to the Mllldic:el ptaza 203
Jaelc•on Pike. Qtllipofit bet'Men 8 :30· 5 PM.

hair.reeonditloning treatment at
FIESTA. HAIR FASHIONS, the
Affordable Salon. Condittonerts
start at jtJirt t1 .50, 322 Second
Aw.. a crost from the park,
614-446-9152.

2 Oogs-1

8-22·1 mo.

985-3561

PUBLIC SALE

Part ·tlme Registered X-rav
Technician. Varied hour&amp;- No

Summer' s eofT'mlng to an end,

6 kittens· 1/ 1 Siamese to give
aw11y. Call 614-446-4287.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Opportunity
Yard car•. bruth cutting. light
hading. .ome tree trimming and
remowl. Bill Slack 614- 9922269 evenings.

an It's the perfect time to get

4

8-8-88-tln

let us convert those old Movies
&amp; Slides ovtr to easy VHS .

Help Wa"ted

Pharmeey.

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

8mm MOVIES &amp; SUD£S to

Hearing Loss
Is Not A Sign
Of Old Age.

t!H

3 Announcements

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

CHERRY

l /78/ Un

8

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
.:I: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

MARCUM CONTRACTING"

.OAK, LOCUST

1·3-11- 1 mo. pd

Announcements

7- 13''88- tin

HUDNALL
FIREWOOD
PLUMIING &amp; HEA nNG

'992-6857

licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

992-6215 or992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

fi

13

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1-12 L mo.

Chicago, Ill.-A free offer of special
interest to those who hear but do not
understand words has been announced by Beltone. A non-operating
model of the smallest hearing
' - . - - - - - - - - / aid Beltone has ever developed will
9e give~ a~solutely free to anyone
requestmg It.
Public Notice
It's yours for the asking, so send
NOTICE OF
.
for it now. It is not a real hearing aid,
APPOINTMENT OF
but
it will show you how tiny hear•
FIDUCIARY
ing help Can be. The actual aid weighs
On Auguot 29, 1988, in
the Melga County Probllte less than an eighth of an ounce, and
Cou", Cue No. 25980,
it fits completely into the ear canal.
Ruth A. Smith, 318 Laoloy
Strtte1, Pomeroy, Meip
These models are free, so we sugCounty, Ohio, 45789, WOI
geSt
you write for yours now. Again,
appointed Administratrix of
the ntate of Homer B.
there is no cost, and certainly no
Smith, Sr., deceased, late of
obligation.
Although a hearing aid
318 Looloy Stroot, Pomeroy,
Melgo
County,
Ohio,
may not help everyone, more and
45769.
more people with hearing losses 'lJ'e
Robe" E. Buck,
Probate Judge : being helped. For your free sample
Lena K. NeaNiroad, Clerk
.send you~ name, address, and phorj'e ·
181 31:.191 7, 14, 3tc
nwnber today to: Department , 8543~,
Beltone Electronics Corporation,
4201 West Victoria Street, ChicagO,
Illinois 60646.

MONEY SAVING COUPONS

-az:

!FREE ESTIMATES I

FARM EQUIPMENT

D·••-e•
,...Ol-00 .. u.•-,.
04.00
Of&lt;"'

&lt;.:1

Addona and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Con cre1e work
Plumbing and elecnical
work

992·5083

Advtrlisemem
TO PUC£ AN AD ClU. 992·21 S6
MONDAY tlwu FltblY I A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. Untll NOON S.ITUtD&amp;Y

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TAnoos
"' Slaer
2 Lincoln Terroce

Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Soruir•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

YOUNG'S
-

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

rings, j...velry, lferling ware, old
coinl, l.,.ge currency. Top price•. Ed Burkitt Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middleport, Oh. 614-

992-3478.

Elilplnymenl

Schools
lnstru ction

RE ·TRAI N NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, !529 Jackson Pike.
Ohio lntt~tionel Grant Deadline Aug. 19. Call 446· 4367.
Rag. No. 86·11 · 10658 .
Music Laston on all wood!Nind
instruments-Flute, oboe, cll·
rlnet. tax end batoon. Call Lora
Snow, 1814-266-1614.

S1:rvu:es
18 Wanted to Do
1 1 Help Wanted
EARN EXTRA MONEY during
the Summtr. Get out of the
hou•. become e Deity Sentinel
pap• c•rl~~~r. Aou•s opan In
Middleport. Clll Sco« at The
Sentlnef Office It 114-992·
2155.
COMPU'D!R REPAIR
Equipment raplfr nln ... On-

the-job and cl•room Mining In
rep~lr and "*"*"'"ce of equip-

ment. tl.:tronl• eyeteme end
mort. High eahool gndl. Mut1
be wiling t:a NeiGOel••wlth
consld•able travtl required.
Col11-80D-282-1384. Mondoy·
Thurod ... 9 AM-2 PM.

ties. tuppan.wre. •ble&amp; chairs.
edult.c:Mdren·babV clothing, littlaairlsdrauu to3T. Thurs .• Fri.
&amp; Sat. 8 AM-6 PM.
302 LeGrande Blvd. -Thurs. &amp;
Fri.-Sept. 1 &amp; 2. 9·4. Very nioe
aduttt &amp; cttildrent ctothas &amp;
jiiCkii!Jit, new crafta. &amp; misc.
Three Familias.

8 Family Yard Sale- 9 ·5 . Sept. 2
&amp;: 3. Clay Comm. Bldg. on
Lovers lana Rd.
4 Femify V•d Sale-Rodney.
Sept. 1,2. 3 on Bidwell Rd.
Clothing, ti'to81 , nice C8fp81.
elec . Move. mucJ't, much. more.
9 tHI 7. If rain-n•t waek .. d.
Yard Sale- Ft-iday-Sept. 2 . 8151
Fifth AIM. 9-5 .
Inside Sale-Sept. 1. 2. 3. 218
Third Ave. lots of goodies.
Come find your traesure.

Carpentry, remodeling. EKpe·
riencad. honest. reasonable.
Free ntimetet. Reference~ .
G.M . Gordon, 614-448-89158
evenings. 'Thank You.

Garage Sal•234 Jackson Pike.
Frld.,. 9 -6 . Cloth;e~, dishes.
curtains, rugs. mile golf dUba, &amp;
more.

Painllng • roofing &amp; carpentry
work bV the hour or job. Call
614-379-2418.

' Family-Antiques, furn., clothing. mite. Sept. 1, 2. 3 . 1 VII
mile on Cenc.nary Rd. Willi .me
r"ldencs.

Wanted to do Houte Cle.,lng.
EKperltnce &amp; Ref•enca~ . C.ll

··-----PO-merov·----------

814-246-9432.

Mather with 4 year old at horne
Mel do b1~ ~ing on Be• Run
Rd. Call 614-258-1691 .

Dozer •

a.cllhoe Work-180
C..e dorlf. Re•CII'IIble m...
bperlence opemar. Crema.ts

ConM. C.I81~25~171B.

Middleport
8t. Vicinity

Patic IIIIa Sept. 2· 3. 2 miles leh
at Darwin on 681 towards
Albany . Household Items ,
clothes. antiqUits. Quality items.

--·----pt -PTeasanr--·-&amp; Vicinity
1970 Windsor, 12M.65 with
10M.12 add on. woodburner.
wether and dryat , air cond. must
be moved, l04-89S.3602.
Yard Sale. ThurundFri, B:OOtill
1. 2418 Monroe Ave.
Yerd Sale. 6 mih• out Jerryt
Run Road, Apple Orc....e, Sept
1,2,3. New and ulld clothing.
Western Novel• and misc. 304-

576-2836.

Yard Sale. Thurt thru Sat. Rt. 87

bet~N~an Leon Baden Rd . and

Btden PrMbyterlan Church.
Y•d Sale. Ple. .nt Ridge Road.
Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va. Frid~
8 :00.5:00 and SMurd~ 8:00.

. 12:00.
Sept. 2nd. lnd 3rd. At l,.na
llaxc.r316MectlanlcSt .. Po~

~~~··~4~-milc.
~~~~-"-~-·~VO-od~·-~-un--

letr,lfltlng in my horne. Excel-

lent ...-• .,...,... AG• 3-5. Days.
At . 1 Kelly Or. George·• Creek
Rd. Call 614-448-0104.

Sept. 2 and 3 . 9·5. Church St..
Syracuse. Cloth;ing, pic ture
frames, furniture. elec. oven ,
and counter top stove . laml)s,
back paclc , books, ski rack, rnuch
more

Yard tale. Svreaue. Sept,
1,2,3. 9-5 . Gordon Floher Reo .
Toya. home deoor, ttc.

Y8fd Sale. Thurs end Fri. 2•20

Uncoln Aw .. wom1n eloth'ng.
Yard Sele, Thurlday, Frldav,
Saturday, 3203 Jec.. on Aw.
Yerd Sale Hermon P•k, Sept.
1,2,3. E"ervthlng re• cheap.·
Maternity and newborn cl•tMI ....

\

�Page 14-The Daily Sentinel
21

Pomoroy-Middleport. Ohio

Splc• for rent. trailar SPIICI!IS,
w1ter &amp; sewer lurnishttd.lowst
Ftd. Rt. 1, 304-675-1076.

l NOTICE!
TliE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommends that you
do bl.lsiness With people you

Homes for Sale

19 95 Marlette Modular Home,
60x28. All electric, Ca. 3 OR ., 2
bBths, great mom, dining room .

To menv ewtras to list Must !18e
to apprecil!lfe. $45,000, ownet"
tinancing. Call 614-44~1408
after 5 PM.

Beau-tiful Holcomb HHI, addl·
tiona! lot. 3 BR .. Ca . Call
614-446-0338

ponunity. Priced to sell. CHII

614-446· 1358. '
2-4 BR , LR, OR, small kitc hen.
1 b~th, 1 cargararte withopenRr.

Op9n BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-44~1899 , 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
GOOD

Mo(lllar home on large let in
Mercer~o~ilte.
Poot. AC , new
c!W'pet. Call 614-256-6752 or
614-245-9020.

Modular home on -lar!l e lot in
Mercerville, Pool. AC , new

carpet Call 614-25&amp;-6752 or

614-245-9020

2 BR ., houw. Mill Creek Rd.

Greenhouse business lind gift
shop for ute. Call 614-992·
6513 or 614-992-7609.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

· over looking Golf Course.
$18.000. Call 614-446-8373.

2- 1 acre lots. Rt. 160. Call
614-446·9373.

Myrtlo Drive-3 bedroom, 4 year
old home. garage. fenced level
yard, storage building. Call
614-446-1988.

1 % acre ground with g•age.
concrate floor . Near Svracuse.
55000. Call 614-992·63 13.

Patriot- 3 BR ., 2 baths, smnll
bsmt. on H'4 lot Ca ll 614-379·

2$63.

Brick and cedar rancll house. j4
' acres: in Bradbury behind
WMPO. Larqe 2 car garage, 3
bedrooms, liv ing room. central
air-heat, woodburner, water softener, newly remodeled large
kitchen w1th Jen Air Ranqe,
garbage dispoSH I. dishvvasheJ,
utility room , landscaped nicely .
Seen by appointment onl y. Call
614-992-6751 . 581 .500.
Home in cou ntry with land for
sale. Call 614-992-5848.
For sale or trade for houso In
country with 1 aere or more.
Prict~ reduced by' 56000. Ni ce. 2
story. 3 he droom. on pretty
stret . 1 lfl bath, full basement 2
car gara ge, near schools ~nd
shopping. Central hut and air .
862 Pear1 St ., Middleport. 614992-60 31.
2 storyhou:oe . 7 rooms. 1 1!1 bath.
full basement. n(llfJ wood furna ce. rewired. remodeled. 4.75
Rents_ Recently surveyed. Movinq. Must sell. $17.500. 614992·6506.

Ashton. large · building lots.
mobile homes permitted. public
water, also river lots, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-578-2338.
Be BUtitul river lots one aa-&amp; plus.
public water. Clyde Bowen . Jr.
304-576-2336 .

8EAUT1FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK-

SON ESTATES. 536 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 614-446-

2568. E.O.H .

11 Court St.-2 BR .. 2 baths.
klitchan furnished, w / w carpet.
No pets . Oft street parking.
S325amo. plus u111itles. Dep . &amp;
ref . Call 614-446-4926.
Furnished· 3 rooms &amp; ba1h.
Clean. No pets. Ref. &amp; deposit
required. Utilities furnished.
Adults only . 'C11II 614-448-

1519.

Furnished apt. S160. UtilitiBS
paid. Shere bath. Single male.
919 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Call 446-4416 after 7 PM.
lu~~:urious

25 acres Broad Run Road. New
Haven, Owner financing available. 304-882·3394.

Tara Townhouse
apartments, Elegant. 2 floors. 2
BR .. full bath ilpslairs, powder
roorn downstairs. CA., dis hwasher, disposal. private entrance. private enclosed ~atio.
pool. plll'(ground. Utilities not
Included. Starting at $299 per
mo. Call 614-367-7850.

Acrage with nice buAdlng sites.
5 miles off Rt. 87, 304-458·
1875.

Furnished apt. New . NearHMC.
1 BR . $295. Utilities paid Call
448-4416after 7 PM.

Lots, one acre. Level wooded,

cltywatar, Jericho Road. Owner
financing. Good terms. 304372-8405 or 372-2576.

Renlals
41

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.
Adu.lts only. Ref. requited. No
pets. Call 614-446-0338.
Newty remodeled 2 BR . rand'l
near Bidwell School. $300 peJ
mo. Call 614-3138-9783.

Apartments and houSI8s. Call

304-675-5104.

Furnished apartmont. 6225 a
mo. 1 BR . Utilities paid 920
Foruth Ave.. Gallipolis. Coli
448-4416 attor 7 PM.
•
1 BR . apt., n~J~N ·carpet, ling&amp;/ frost free refrigerator furnished. Water -garbage paid.
Deposit 19quired. Call614-4464345.
3 room apanment. $100 a mo.
Call 304-675-5104.

3 SR .. utility, attached garage.
large kitctten. all elect. 1 year
lease. First mo. rent &amp; r:leposrt.
Cal1614-446-1358.
·

446·0390.

1 BR . nouse ll)cated 11n1
Oustnut. $150a mo., $75dep .
Call 614-446-3870.

2 BR , garage apt. unfurnished,
liP pliances stay. In town. 8200&amp;
mo. $100 deposit. Call 614446-8067.

3 bedroom home. 1''! births.
c aroeted, central air-heat. located In Point Pleasant. call
304--675-2702 or 304-576·
2147.

3 BR . . 1 bath, 1 Car garage. Nice
yard. Gallipolis area. S275a mo.
Call 614-446-0475 balore 5

Modern one BR . furnished apt.
Deposit &amp; reference. call 614446-1079.

Hou ~for sale Cheap. 7 rooms. 1
bath, on half lot, 304-675--3114
after 6 :00 prn

Hou:se for rent. 2 bedroom. Nice.
clean. natural gas. 614-992-

1 05private acresw t easva ccess
Gallipolis Ferry . nP.W ~om~ also
2 lots with wells. S70,000. Call
304-675-4631 .
3 bedroom hom'eon41ou. Grfi!er
Ro ad. Hillvleo,.v. 304-675-4018 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
19 80 Bayview 14)(70. 3 BR ..
1 1h bat h, larqe living room with
firep l nc~. Good cond. Call 614446-e21 3 after 5 PM
2 BR . house trailer, 21ots in the
Villaqe of Vinton, Ohio. $8500.
Call ·614-388-8318
BaHington 12~~:65 : 1 1/2 baths. 3

BA . GOod conrt sesoo o r bP.St
offer. Call 614-446-1528.
1 9 69 Mobile Heme, 1 2~~:60, 2
13R .. large living roorn. den
remodeled inside &amp; out. $3500
C!l ll 614-256-1666after 5 PM ,
1980 Bayview, 14x70 with
7:c.21 ruq.mndo. 2 full baths. 3
brs . and firep lace. 19x.20-2 car
garage. s:ettlnq on 10 acres .
$ 25.'000. Call 614-446·8750.
Forest Pttr k, 12~t60, 2 BR .. CA.
deck All in good cond . Asldnq
56.000. Ca ll 614-446-0SOOor
44&amp;-71365.
Umd cont ract. large liv ing room
w / e.: pando room. 2 BR ..
w r wafl car pAt, air condition,
w l or wlthou lfurnlture. Nat. gas
furnace On privat e lot May rent
lot Call 5 to 8 PM. 614-4461409.

PM.

5858.

N9wly deoorated 6 room house.
Unfurnished. Oeposk: required.
No inside pets. Call 614-9923090.

1974 Castle Mobile Home,
1 211: 65. $ 20&lt;)0 Call 614-99261 08.

19 74 Ct1ampion 14.:65 total
electric, underpenninq. Fur·
ni~hed o r unfurnished. Ready to
move $6 , 500.00. 304-5762383.
Trnileran rfland. 304-675-7669.
Dra s tically rodueed 19 84
Schult. 1 4:..65. total electric. 2
bedrooms, r:at hedral coiling, 2
decks. 304- 67 5-7 113.
Flaminqo mob il ~ horne: 1 2:c65, 3
badrooms. oil ol~t r ic. 304-875-

2679.

141170 all electric htra , Price
reduced. '304-875-19 65 for
further intorrnetton.
1969 Tr::~iter re-dHCOreted, new
hot water and new electric
furna ce, fuel oil stove.
S4,600.00. Phone 394-675-

7&amp;49
33

Farms for Sale

I

for Rent
2 &amp; 3 BR . All utllitim pairl6'llcepl
electricity . Convenient location.
Call 614-446-8558 Of 4464006.
Furnished 2 BR . Ca , Cable, water
sewage J)aid. Foster's Mobile
Home Park. Call 614-4461602
In Eureka. 2BR . Aduhsonly. No
pets. s 200 3 , mo. Oeposn
required. References preferred.
Call 614·245-5863.

Nice 2 BR . mobile home, upper
At . 7. furnished. 5200 a mo.
Water paid. Call614-245-5818.
2 BA's. Adults on ly . No pets.
· 322 Third Ave.. Gallipolis Ca ll
614-448-3748 or 2!56-1903.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
ments in Middleport. From
S182 . Call 614· 992 . 7787.
EOH.

Efficiency, furnished, basement
apartment. $180, por month.
Utilities paid. Sin~le mate,
Pomeroy. 614-992·2545.
APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
hou!Jits . Pt. Pteasa"tan dGallipolis. 614-446-8221 .
Beech Street. Middleport, Ohio.
2 bedroom furnished opar1ment.
utilities paid. mforenr.BS, Phone
304-982-2566.
Now accepting applications lor
2 bedroom apanments, fulfy
carpeted, appliances. waler and
trash pickups provided. Mainte·
nance free living close to shopplng, banks and sch~ols. For
more information call·-304-8823716. E.O.H.
Downtown modern 1 bedroom
apt. furnished, air cond. Carpmed. Call after 4 :00. 304-6753?88.
Beech Street. Middleport, Ohio,
1 room efficiency ept, utilities
paid, ref &amp;fences required, 1.
304-882-2566.

1 4~~:70, 3 batfrooms. completely
furnished. washer and dryer. No
pets. Call 614-949-2253.
1- -_:._.:..:__:__ _ _ __
On B ' bedroom furnished apt.
2 bedrooms. Nice yard on river. conv. location: 304-675-2441 .
Middleport. Utilities included.
Call 614-992-5949 or 614-

992-9903.

Mobile Hom es for re"t . Evelyn's
Moblle Hor'tle Park, l(anauga,
Ohio. Call 614-446-0508.
Trailer for rent 2 br 12x60
accepling applicatton. witt IC·
cepl HUO Deposit &amp; ref.
r~uires . 304-882-2649.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . apts. 6 closetl, kiteh enappt furnished, WISher-Ofyer
hook·up, ww carpel. newly
painted. deck.
FTom 1175.
Regency. lne. AptJ, Call 304675-5104, or 675-5388 o;
675-7738.

7279

New coml)lelety furniahed
apartment &amp; mobile horne in
citv. Adull!ll only. PRrking. Call
614-448-0338.

30 acre fsrm on Raccoon Creek
or :salt house and one acre. Catl
814-245-9676.

llpttairs unfurnished apt. CarpMJd, utilk:les paid No children.
No pets. Coli 614-44fl.l637.

40 acrP.s Raccoon Rd .· Mobile
home ,5313.000. Call 304-622-

2 BR ., 2 bath apt. on Firat Ave.
o,posit &amp; referEtnce. Call 614446-1079

For Rent : Newly redecorated,
new windows two bedroom 2 . bedroom Apts. for rent.
house tor two people. No pets. .Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
No children . 1637 lin coln f acilitles available. Ca11 614Heights. Call 614-992-2304 992-3711 , EOH.
alter 8 :00p.m.
Newly redecorated apartments
3 bedroom home, full basement. available. Utifjties paid. S226.
304-882-3394.
per month. deposit requirad Call
614-992-5724 after 6:00 or
3 lar~e rooms and bath, nice 992-5 119.
location JBffer11on Ave .. ac:l.llts
o nly , relflr8nces and deposit
New 1 bedroom fu rnishad or
required. 304-675-3052.
unfurnished apartments. One in
Pomeroy, one in Middleport.
2 bedroom unfurnished house. Call 614 - 992-5~04.
30i"ih Second St, New Haven.
304-675-5276
Unfurnished apartment!!: in Middleport with refrigerator and
stove. 5135. to $1!50. per
month. Call 614-992-7511 .
42 Mobile Homes

Shtdt 12x60 with tip out 2
bedroom, tt;:~tal electric, undcr- Ni ce 3 BR , partially furnished,
pinmg. 1 2Jt 12 porch. Good . lg. yard. Kanauga. 614-44~
c9nrfition. Call 6 14-742-2984.
7473,
Must sell l acre la nd with 12x65
trai1Cf.12 ~~:24 addit ion, c ar port,
Bl r, woodburner, satilllt!) dish.
r hl rgofron t porch . Catl61 4-7422239af1er 5·JQpm.
.

Modern 1 BR . apt. Call 614-

•

45 Furnished Rooms
1:--:--,---,--- - - - - -

USED

Washers, dryers , refrigerttora.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances,
UppEtl' River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398.

ARMY SURPLUS jAdvartlsing
Speci.ttia, Busln-.s, Polhlcal,
Allltema) . Fri. Sit, Sun. Noonto
8 :00 PM. Sam Somarvtlle's
since 191114. Regular ermy
Issues, denim, rental clothing,
Jr. c1rnouflege blk .nd white.
Ford 1975 aale or trade. Junctlonl.ndependenee Road. Rt. 21 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
$395 to 8995, Tables SSO and
up to $125. Hide-a -beds S390
to $595. Recliners $225 to
$375. Lamps $28 to 8126.
Dinettea $109 and up to 8495.
Wood table w -8 chtirs 8285 to
$795. Desk $100 up to $376.
Hutchee S400 and up. Bunk
beds comphrta w -maltresses
$295and up to $396. Baby beds
$110. Mattteasea or box .springs
full or twin S68, firm S78, and
t88. Queen sets 8250 &amp; up,
King 8350. 4 drewer chest $69,
Gun cabinats 6 gun. Baby
mattresses t35 &amp; 845. Sed
frames S20. 830 &amp; lang frame
850. Good selection of bedroom
sUites . metal cabinets. head·
boards $30 t~nd up to $85.

304-273-5855.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block. brick, s8'Wer j)ipes, win·
dows, lintels. etc . Claurle Winters. Rio Gr~de. 0 . Call 614245-5121.
Concrete bloeka- all sizes- yard
or delivery. Mason san d. Gallipolis Blodc Co., 12J1h Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Otlio. Call 614· 4462783.

90 Davs same as cast! 'w ith
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Ad. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru S&amp;t . Ph. 814-448-

WESTERN RED CEDAR

• Channel Rustic
, and Beveled Lap Siding
• Deck Material•
Guaranteed Quality
CETIDE. INC .• Athens-614-

0322.

V1lley Furniture
New and used furniture a"d
applicances . Call 614-446·
7572. Hours 9-5.

894-3578

56

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Eastern Ave. ·
4 drlfNer chest, $48. 5 drawer
Ch85t. $54.9&amp;. 5 pc . wooden
dinnette sltfs, 8199.95.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Suppty Sttop-Pet
Grooming. All broeds ... AII
styles. laml Pet Food Dealer.
.:,.' le Webb Ph, 614-448-0231 .

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete household furnishings. % mile out Jerricho.

Dragonwynd Catterv Kennel.
CFA Persian amd Siamese kit·
tens. AKC Chow puppiBS. New
Himalayan kittans:. Call 614446-3844 after ?PM.

304-675-1450.

ViRa's Furniture
New sots: &amp; chairs-one to fit
every budget, bedroom suits.
chest. wardrobes, bookshelves,
wood di"ette setl, hutches,
washers &amp; dryers. deep freezers.
refrigerators. rangea . All furniture is at low cost Jrices: because
wa have no hidden cost Lav•·
ways excepted plua tinalicing is
available with approvad credit.
Rt. 141 - Cantenarv·'~ mile on
Uncoln Pike. Open 9 AM·6 PM.._
Mon.-Sat. SUNDAY- 12-6 PM.
614-448-3158.

Minature Dutch Rabbits, 4 mos.
old. Black male Pekl~gnese, 10
mos. old, $100. Call 614-742-

3168.

AKC Cocker Spaniel pups.
Blonde &amp; buff. Shots started &amp;
wor~d .
Vet. tested. S150
each. Call614-388-81390.
For Sale-AKC Registered Old
English Sheep Dog puppies:. Call
614-245-9575, evenings.

King size water 'bed. semiFor Sale-Ferretts. Different Co·
wavelms with pulse viberator. lors. Call 614-992-3229 .
Uke new . 8400. Calt 614·446· ·
6888.
6 week old AustraliMl Shepherd
puppies, ASCA doubla regis30" alec. range-harvest gold· tered. Btue merle and black
896. 30" &amp;lee. range-avacado tri-colored. Call 814·742·2386
green-$95. 30" gBS rangetop&amp; anytime.
bottom ovun-YIIhita- $150. G .E.
washer -895. \Mlirlpool dryer.
SiameSe Kittens . Call614·949·
S95. Refrig .·hatvest gotd frost
2290 evenings.
free-S95. Relrig.-...mite frost
frftft.S95. Refrig. 2 door·white· AKC Bauett Hound pups. 6
875. Hot water helder-30 gal .- wka. old. Mother and Father can
$ 65. Skaggs Appli~ces. Uppm be seon. Call814-667-8758.
RivEtr Rd .. 814-446-7398.
AKC ftegistered Schnauzer pupTwin bed with matching night
pies. 3 famatas. First shots and
stand. $60. Call614-245-9252 wormed. 8 'N&amp;eks old. S150.
after 3 PM.
Call614·b62-4761 .
16 cu ft deltfJ freeze, never used,
call after 5 :00 PM, 304-675-

Pure bred Siamese kittens. 8
weeks, Se&amp;l or Lilac Point. Call
61 4 · 992 · 7201 and leave
mMsage.

5711.

Queen size water bed completely padded $150.00. eKe
cond. 304-675-3087.

AKC registered PUPPias, Maltose $300 . 00 . Shlh·tuz
$200.00 . Cocker Spaniel
$200.00. Phone 304-8752193.

52 CB.TV, Radio
Equipment

57
25'' color console televisions for
sale. $100 &amp; up. Call 614-4462713.

Musical
Instruments

Trumpet, like new. $300. Call

Fdrlll Suppl11:s

1988 C'.lmero Z 28. T·tOPS.
loaded. Good cond. Prio8d to
11!111. Call 814-379-2741after 6

61 Fann Equipment

PM.
CR OS 9 lo SONS

U.S. 35 West. J•dl:aon, Ohio. Gowrnrnent Seized Vehich•
from •100. · Fords. Mercedes,
Mltet¥ Fergu lOll, New Holland. Corvette•. Chevya. Surplus.
Bu1h Hog Sal• &amp;. S.vtce. Ova- Buyers guid&amp; 1-806-187-8000
40 used tNetorstochoosa from Ext. s 9808.
&amp; compl ... line of naw • u.. d
equipment. Largest •taction In 1978 Chrysler Lebaron. 4 door,
S.E . Ohio.
AMN peil'lt, 'ires, battery. brakes.

614-2Bfl.6461.

Loodod. •1200.

614-388-8478.

Autos For Slle: Fore grelt deet
New tobiK:oo stickt· ul&amp;d one on • niMI or used c•. truck or
saason. Call814-266-1!1011 .
van, ••Kenny BallltJlmMink
Chevrolet-Oid•moblle, 614·
MFSOTrlctor. 16ft, h-r'Migon. 448-31172 or 773-6134.
6 ft . ~F Bruth Hog. lntern~~­
tlonal Hay Bll• No . 46. 3 point 1971 Volkl..-gon. $200.00.
12 inch plowt. 12600. 614- 304-675-2898.
667·6536 after 8:00pm .
1980 Spirft. AirCond, sun roof,

304-675-3696.

USED NEW HOLLAND

v.a

63

Livestock

1986 Ford Escort, AM·FM
CIISH1te , cruise S3,500.00.
304-882-2030,

DAIRY FARMERS

Veal producer wa"ting- "Farm
Fresh" calves 90-115 lba. HOI·
steins. 3.· 7 dll{s ·old. C:111 814-

245-5688.

Yearling Slmmental Bull. TenReSMe Walket hor• with uddle. C.ll614-245-9143.

8692.

U.S . No . 1 large yellow Freestone canning peach new availa ~
ble. Sobs 'Marlcut, Mason, WV.
Fresh from the Shenadoat'l Val·
loy . 304-773·5721 or 773·
5900. Canning apples, PHtl &amp;
plumbs available lata August.

Large house plants. tall table
lamJ). handi bed. glass shelf, atep
ladder, &amp; misc. Call 614-4468398.

19 87 Plymouth
0 4.!100.00. Phone

304-875-

2 riding horses. mares, phone
304-458-1587.

64

72

Hay &amp; Grain

Ground shell corn 86.50 p&amp;r
100. Premium alfalfa h-r. straw.
Mar~n· s Woodlawn Farm, Rt.
35, Pliny, 304-937-2010.

Trucks for Sale

1982 DattunKingCab. !i1.000
milea.atuo, PS, PO , rear window
defogger, l}ice truck. 304-875-

8758,

Pick up bods. F"crd Chevrolet,
long or shon. no rust, 30~875-

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

8286.

Dekala~Seed

corn. Taking aarly
orders to assurB a supply of voor
f8'Jorite tt,lbrids. Seed suppty
could be thort so tock In an early
aupply. Henry Ernest Kav. 3048 75-11506 after 8 pm.

1988 &amp;10 4.11.4 pickup, V-8.
AM-FM radio, 42,000 miles,
Wll asking $6,700.00 now
16,200.00. 304-875--4840.
'84 F-160 Ford 302 engine.
overdrive. Mltomatlc tranamis·
sJon. wlthorwllhouttopper. .ed,

06.300.00. 304-895-3689.

Transpo rl oIion

73

Call 814-286-6522.

Pm.l

0212.

1987 Chevy Custom Van .
loaded. Auto., trl-fold bed. 4
captain chairs. TV. extended
window roof. Call 814-4483428 dav or evening.
1981 Ford Bronco. V-8, auto.
trans. 74,000 miles. 83950.

1 991 Dodge Aries 4 dr. Sedan,
PS, PB. AM-FM·Calt., high
mileage . Well maintained.
11400 080. Call 814-4469700.
1987 Ford Ranger XLT. Take
over paymants. Call 614-682-

6506.

1972 Mente Carlo. Looks good.
Needs work. For Sale or Trade.
Cell 814-44&amp;-8819.

C1ll 814-256-6457.

Corvettes. Chevya. Surplus.
Buyers Guido. (11 8011-617·
8000 Ext. -10189.

1988 Ford

Eoeort GL Rog.

Mlnilture Pooch, femlle. Clll
814-388-9770.

614·245-9&amp;87.

1974 Dodge Wlndcw Van, :14
ton. Good cond. t1000. Call

614-446-8834.

1980 Ford F 250, 4x4. V-8. 4
spd .. PS. PB. Good cond. Call
814-388-8178.
19156 Willy Jeep. N81N paint.
Oood top with white spokit
wheels &amp; tire a tires. Call

614-367·0594.

1984% ton OodgaRemCuttom
V..,. PS. PB. lilt. AC. AM·FM·
T.V.. Pwr. door todct, pwr.
window•. One owner, rew tiret,
low mlleege. Book price
811.000., Mil $10,000. flrml
Call 614-992-2459.

~.,:r~'rn'Q' , : d ,.;::.,~:: 74

Space, Part I

())Nightly ll•lnna

Motorcycles

1------.:_____
1981!1 Yamaha 700 Maxlum,
shaft drive, CandV appht red, low
mtl•. SHOO. C.ll 814-3792424.

Trail.- tPIICe for rent on Garner·
Ford Rd. Call 614-24&amp;-6492.

cylinder, AC, cruiM. till, Pa
Good cond. S4400. Call 814-

.448-0177.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomet"ov.
~nlal trailers. Call 814-9927479.

1978 Ford Thunderbird, power
wlndowa moon roof, AC, du-'
exhutt. Vf!!V good cond. f 2400.

Call 114-2811-8704.

"This elevator mu~lc reminds me... l had a
dentist appointment today!"

".

Rum.. S1700. C.ll I14-37!J..
2787 oflor 8 PM.

1981 Yamlh1 1100 speclll.
New tires •d ban.rv. Good

condition.

742·301.'1.

At. 311 C,.to Sol-. porto-

1984Mon•Carlo,lowmlleeg•
T1ke over ptym«''ls. Call 304175-4150 or 875-15380.

. .

-

Honda. Klwluld, Suzuki M'ld

v-o. 304-8711-4130.

BRIDGE

'1\L.L.

EXI.S~NCS

rs A JoJcE'' ? ..

Home
Improvements

• CIOolt end Cl}llu
7:01 (I) And\1 Grtlftth

.-•

By Jamu Jacoby

7:SD e ()) Hollywood lq...-.a
(I) 11M of Set aII Ilie 8pofll

Arnlrtcl

00

(I)~

~

.(I) Judge

.!

........

Tonight

I afLGil =rdyll;l

~

'Nibd

i

•
I

0 PI of 111one1 Tennle
• VldeoCounlry

•

7:31 (I) . . . . Lugull.......
1:00 ()) Cruy Llkl 1 fox Sunday
In the Park with Harry

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING

• ()) 1111 011111 ii~c~~;J.a....,,lb!IHor'~.
Funny hoptl

Unoondit:ional lifetime guaran·
tee. Local referenc• furnlaheld.
Free fiStimates. Call collact
1-61~237-0488, dlti or night.
Rogers8asement
Wiler proofing.

Unk: Q -

(I) Qoldln

otympllna Dick Foabury and
Mlcttl King

(I)

e(l)

Gnl•-• Pllna

Juon'a akllll aa a
piiYChlllrtll .... put to the
ultimate teat (R) 1;1
(lJ ()) 8urvlvlt apaclal This
year round 110ry capture•

SWEEPER 1nd aewing m.a chine
repair, parts, and auppU•. Pi~
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one h•lf mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614--

446-0294.

wildlife )ll'lllering It •
w~Wt~ole.

Concrete Septic Tanks · 1000
gal., 1500 gal. and Jat Aeration
system. F1ctory trained repelr
shop. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PAISES, Jackson, Ohio . 1 -BOO.

ex-cop) creatn an elaborate

scheme to - 1 a novet.(R}

DPI.t4Newa
ill MOVIE: Nadia (NR) (1 :40)

EEK &amp; MEEK

AND OO.U BACK 1J ~.AL
...lHAt.JI::S, DAVE..JUI-\A'T'S

I:SD

HAPl=tiJ!OO,
L.ES ~. ~1'-JG

8344

RON'S Televlslo, Service.'
Hou• calla on RCA, Quazar.
G E. Speciallng in Zenith. Call
304-576-2398 or 614-446•
Fetty Tree Trimming. sturhp
remowl. Cali 304-675-1331 ~

-~~~-w co•••• Footbll Kklkoff

w•

895-3802

0 lArry ICing U..l
t.SD (I) PIIA IIOIIIInll

:MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

(I) • (I) .... Mawetl

THIS HA5 BEEN
ATEST. IF
THIS HAD SEEN

EMERGENCY,

I 1DHAVE
BE'EN IN MY
I=ORSCHE ...

AN ACTUAL ...

I

Plumbing ·
&amp; Heating

I

Slap agonlus over
deliVering tile verdk:l that hla
eon can't wrtta.(R) 1;1

81ory

AND50MILE5

OWTOFTOWN
BY NON.

·-Coulltlt
10:00 ()) ltnlgllt Talk

/

(I) ChtM leach
McMurplly confronts her
hatred lor a pregnant

(I) •

Vletnamete nurte. IR) C
Ill eiD W1NauJ lltnnle Ia
levered Into an lntemational
contraband
(R}

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT.ING
Cor. Fourth an~ Pine ,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phono 814-448-3888 or 614-

OE...tng

• CIOolt lOCI ChaiN
1G:20 Ill MOVIE: Till I a - INA)

l THINK l NEED
TO GIT ME A NEW
POSSUM HOUND

p:35)
10:30 (J) - . - - 8Mpallata

WHEN
OL' IIUI.LET
GOES·-

eo.~e-

Vldl aCoi

•

ataJ

11:00(J) llemto.IDIIIIIHie Blood
Ia Thlcl&lt;er than Steele
•

()) (I) (lJ

.Ill II§)

ea:a 1111 ....

Residential or commerciaf wirl
in g. New service or r9J)8ir t1
Ucensed &amp;lectricia"l . Eslimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304675·1786.

1!) . . 011

eiD " - Cooo..ctlon
Ollana,.,,.
ill Twltlghl z- People are
Alike All Over

Gener;·l Hauling,

0 Hlld aaak PPniNIIMIInntatl
•vouc.na. ....
11:SDe(J) Gl Tonight llllow

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Clnerns. Wells, Delivery Anytime. Call 814-446-740~No
· SU nd-.y- calls.

:llc:-'(L)
(!) 'TJIIIldln

J 6 J Watef Service. Swimming
pools. cisterns, Wftlla. Ph . ·&amp;14-

a i § l ;P.l.l
.
eo
ca.~
lpeclll
U.S. Open Tannla highlights

245-9285.

1: :;"":

R '&amp;. R Water Service. Pools
cisterna,. wells . Immediate:
1 , 000 or 2,000gallonsdolivery.
Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Fools, ci1terna, wells. Call 814-

. . . . . . . . Mipalllll
1:1:00 (J) Piper Chnl

446-3171 .

Clllp ....... AIMIIca

Water delivery. ' 1000 gallons.
Reasonable prices. Immediate

From Alcol, CA (T}

814-992·5275.

L----------........1

..!""....:......

i

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 Uncompro1 Clobber
mising (sl.)
5 Helen's
lover
10 Region
11 Comfort
12 Lacerate
13 Stock·
broker
14 Food plans
16 Deli item
18- Aviv
21 Salk
contem·
porary
22 Honshu
volcano
24 Black
25 Foreshadow
26 Cherubini
opera
28 Blazing
29 Donald
Duck trait
30 With
adroit·
ness
- 32 Snarls
33 Iterate
36 October's
gem
40 Paragons
41 Girl .
Friday,
e.g.
42 Cornice
and seckel
43- moss

5 " - Faces
Life"
6 Sigh for
Yorick
7 Radiation
unit
8 Chiller
9 Pulpit talk
(abbr.)
Yesterday's Answer
11 Flower
part
20 Path
33 Actor Torn
15 Novelist 21 Truck
34 Dutch city
Fleming 23 Flattery
35 - soup
16 Obsolete
(sl.)
(fog)
weapon 27 Historical 37 Slapstick
17 Residence records
prop
18 A people l!8 Swiss river 38 Oklahoma
of India 31 Food (sl.) · city
19 Abrasive 32 Equipment 39 Hire

DOWN
1 Spree

2 "We- not
amused"

3 Red or Coral L..J-.J.......J._,jDAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

8131

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

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

PEANUTS

8-31

FOUR, SIX, EtGIIT..

WIIO

SOUTH

tQB74

~ng,Gonzo

Pa~l

• 7 s3
tJ"98U

There's no pun intended, but skillful
.AK5
defense of a bridge hand Ia a tricky .
+642
bUaineu. There's certainly no doubt
tQ63
: tbat West 10t off to the correct open- .
Vulnerable: Neither
In&amp; lead with the queen of hearts.
Dealer: West
When declarer won the heart ace and
forced out the ace of diamonds, It W.tl
Soatll
North Ealt
might look easy to West simply to con·
2NT
2+
Pass
tlnue with a second heart. But doing so Pass
Pass
Pass
3NT
would represent lazy thinking.
Pass
West baa the responsibility of ana·
Opening lead: • Q
:lyzing South's bidding. The bid of two
no-trump wu only Invitational and
·should show 10-12 bigh-card points. .
'Declarer had the A-K of hearts and
Iprobably something in the black suits.
lf South bu as much as the king of
spades or the Q-J, there Is no defense defenders can quickly take four spade
that will stop three no-trump. But tricks. Even at the possible cost of an
what If declarer baa no more than the overtrick, West should take the
queen or jack of spades? If that is the chance.
cue, the defenders have enough spade
,
•
-!•m'!" Jacpby s boo/rs 'Jacoby ~
.trlclts available to set the contract.
So the right play Ia lor Weal to Bndge and 'Jacoby on Card Games
switch to a low spade catering to East . (written with his father, the late 1Js.
holding K-J, K-Q or ~aybe even five ' nld Jacoby) are now ave!Jable at
spades beaded by tbe king. The point boo/rstores. Both are publisbed by
to this appa~tly dangerous play is Pha~
liNTIN'RlSB """'·
that declarer bas nine tricks unless the
·

ill,._ John, Mb.

304-875-8370.

ar11

WE APPRECIATE'?

t•

ti:IO!I)_.., Dr• .....,.- Mr.
. . , . (Nil) (1:54)

Tt6ER5! TIGERS!

"*

12:10. ()) •
NfiiiiDiwlcl Laau....
(J) 11110 su•c• taW

Mowrey• 1 Upholstering wving '
trl cauntvlru 23ye••· The beet :
In furnftura uoho.... lng. C.U ,
304·878·41&amp;4 far tree •
ettlmet".

-----

=.lcale.

ill ....

446-4477

Upholstery

c-.

Buggy Si&gt;actllcular from
Naptea, A. (R)
~ ICpannenl;l
iiDl eiD Till lquaHaer A
)V()man Ia haunted by psychic
vlalona of a strangler. (R) .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells completed sam edav.
Pump sales and service. 304-'

hag mowolng. phone 304-175-.
3190
'

(I) Haacl of till

1:00 ()) 700 Club
e ()) G1 MOVIE:
'lleaperldO' NBC Movta ol
the Weelt
(I) AulD Racing Swamp

MtXH. DAkl ...
~

'

Andy will install jacks and
wiring. Contact Andy Batey at
R.~. 1. Middleport.

·

F-An aulhor (an

537-9528.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

D

ea ......... t111

1111

tKJ5
• 32

t•

OCrouflll

I

EAST

WEST
tA1096
.QJI0976
+A
' tt07

Clear thinking
guides defense

OMofiiVIIM
ill......,_
iiJ CIIICIII " OUit

1·11·81

tS2
.84
+KQJI098
tAKS

'James Jacoby

eo .;.;;o

you CAN'T IE

Akers Tree Trimming and Stumt:t
Removal. Free estimates. Call
304-875-7121 .

NORTH

,~...... WM11 of

$'f~JOU.S!

-·- ·-

"I'm •n animal behllvlor therapist, not a dog psychiatrist,"
the man growled. ":Thank goodness," sigh~ the lady, "I just
trained my dog to stay OF;..F.::lh::e_:C::O::U.::C.:..:H.:..:.- - - - - - ,

N·~~:.OO)
e(l)
aCaurt

01375. Call 814-

lnd ICO.IDf'lel l\fiHIIIte for

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(I) 8p a111CI- (L)
(I) Clll1'llll Allltr
(lJ ()) MIDIMI/ LAtlrw

Servi ces

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
housa call servicing GE, Hot
Point, wes!Mrs. dryers and
stoves. 304-676-2398.

bv fij lmg 111 the mtsSiflg words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

Afloat - Ounce - CUff - Uphill - OFF the COUCH

M ...

Pai"ting: lntarlor &amp; E lderior.
Free estimates . Call 614-446-·

:

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

• ... (I) Canll - -

'74 Harl.,. Sporster mototcvcle.
'77 1\1 BTR motor home. Phone
304-11175-6870.

87

Report

Compl~te _the chuckl.e quoled

·. V

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•YouCinlaalllr

1985 Malt•d RV, Ch8Yy drive ,
exc cond, e~~:tra convenieneea,
low milfNIQe. 304-675-4561.

dolivory . Call

A

W

.:=r•.•

Sep,tic tank pumping- $90 per
l01d. Call 1·800·537-9528 .

I .

16 . ...

.

s~

614-379·2430.

Call

I I I I
s

ei!JIIIagan'a
-••
·
t1J lnllcll PoiiiCI

1973life Premier 23ft. Class A
mot91 home. Generator. air,
Mnl"ng. Sleeps 6 . 87600. Call

85

ANDRO~I

7;001!_...... lgiDII . . . . . Steele

RON EVANS ENTERPRISE$-

1

.r-r:U~l,...:..:A...,.:.T_0;--11 • . "I went to get an aspirin and when

,

m:•ol8pCNti(R)
~ locly ~. . . . 1;1

1D .IDCII-

2

1

l

._,

• F81odango

8:01 (I) Allee
I:SD. ()) 1111 NBC Nightly -

1983 Jayeo c:arnper. 24'h ft .
awning, """bath on rented river
tot. Sha6t IN8tOfl campground.
Gallipolis Ferry. 814-44~8190
after 8:00.

,I

• 1 1 ~ 1came back the boss was gone," ex·
. .I
. . .
plained the secretary. Her co-worker
..---------,grinned, "Guess the aspirin - ."

&amp;Good nne.
iiJ c-~~preu

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

84

.
I

...:;.E

•o
~ Drly.
llllllllawllli T-,

1988 · 396 motor · 380 HP.
CraneCim, HV oil pump, many
Blltra's. Ch•ter, 1 mile east on
Rt. 248. 614-986-4468.

2454.

be·
low to form four simple words.

1~---r-i..,RI-=-1 ,.;..r ~--~1 i

relatlonalllps. 1;1

198301dsmobile98. Motor and
tranamission. 304-773-5651 .

ttle

.111 11

()) Dr. W1lo Sp8lrhead From

304-773-5867

Rearrange leHerl of
0, four
scrambled words

RE wN I K

ahynna. jN!ollay and peer

~~~~~iulon . C•ll 814-21!i8·

82

M

WED.. AUG. 31

(I) lpa,aLaok
(lJ DegriiUI Junior High
Themes: Dlsabllltlea.

GolctNing. fun dr ...od.
1987 Eocort GT "losdod" 1971
Uke niW' , Ext,. chrome. Call Watterson'• Water Hauling,
S7&amp;00. C.ll 814-4411-33150 or 814-446-7102.
re•onable rates, Immediate
304-1711-8189.
2,000 gallon deUverv. ciaterna,
pools. v-~ell, etc. call 304-&amp;711979 Uncoln Town C1r. Make 1973 Harl::r FLCH . Oood conci. 2919.
t1BOO.
Col
114-381J.B493.
off• . Call 814-379-28811.
1986 Buld&lt; Skylork. 4 door, llx 1881 8u1..i LT. 230 OE. Quod Dump truck delivery and bush :

Attractive, officn suh:e. Verv
privata. located in dowmown
Gallipolis. $350 per month. Call
814-446-3432.

~[b

1 9 82

81

WOlD
GAM I

e:OO(J) 11g Volley The e r - .
• (J) Cil • (I) a ea:a
1111 ....

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1983Ford F 150 4 WO,Iock out
hubs, niMI "'built 302 engine,
PS. PB, 4tpd .. toolbox. running
bolrdt, bed liner. Sh•pl• 6600.
Call 1114-448-8132 or 448-

Call

614-446-t358.

46 Space for Rent

H~:uizon.

1983 01evy Malltu Station
W,.gon, $3,900.00. 304-6754480.

1982 Buick Reg1l. •cceuorl-.
loaded. excel. cond. UBOO.
1 9 78 Ford lTD II, S1500. Call

,.,

1987 Caviller l 24, A.T .. AC.
titt. cruise, AM·FM cassette. sun
roof, Cl interior, 28.000 miles.
U,lOO.OO. 304-675-29 25.

4480

l==========:.l:::;;:;;:;;::::::::::;;;:;;~ mil•.
1985 Dodge
Ch•aor. 31,000
~
Good cond .. PS. PB, AC.
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

'74 Couglt, V-8. IQto. PS; PB.
air, •400.00. 304-876-5018.

For sale. Polled Hereford Herd
Buli. Gentle, good diiposition. 4
yn. old. Phone 814-992-7458.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Pamper yourself! Coma i" for a
great new" hairstvle. ASh8Tlpoo,
Cut &amp; Blowdry ls just $9.99 at
FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS, 322
Second Aw., across from the
park, 614·446-9152.

~II.TIQWI,L

The Daily Sentinei-Page-16

-

EVI!NINO

I

For1ge Equipment
One AC 782 chopper 2 row '85 Pon•lc Tempest, 4 door, 6
head; two NH 6 -717choppert1 cvl auto. nM tiffl, llhow room
row heed; two NH 718 chopper condition, 304-895-3441 .
1 row head; ana with electric
controls. One NH 3 point 707 197B Monte Carlo.
auto.
chopper 1 row head; one NH good cond, high mileage,
model 25 blower; one Kasten $ 1,000.00. 304-875-7375 af·
forage box; one Cobey forage ter 6:00
box. Keefers Service Center. St.
Rt. 87, ~on, W.Va. Phone '7B Ford LTD hir cond,
304-895--3874.
$700.00. UKC blk and tan
Coonhound pups $76.00 each.
304-895-3396.

1987 O.avy Cavalier. bl.::k
ea:terlor. gray intiBflor. 18,000
miles. 84950. 1969 PontiiiC
Con&gt;Artlble Bonneville, Sharp.
Runs good, loollt good . $2760,

Red R1spberrles~ Pick your own
or we pick. Taylor's Berry Patch.
Call 614-245-5064 or 446-

814·992·'

New Holland cornchopper..New '86 Chevette, auto, air, 40,000
ldaal corn picker, 730 C:.se mil•. 83,400.00. 304-676diesel trector tOr part1. Call 7964.

Bundy tf'umpet , same as new,
304-773--6923.

87 -9661 ,

Call

460 diesellnrernationll tflctor, 7214"' 614-992·3224.
wide front, PS, 3 pt .• with hay
concitloner bal•. ~OWl, corn 1989 GTO Conwnlble. Fair
pl.,ter e. bush hog. $3950. condition. 2 Datsun Trucks. Clll
Owner wUI finance. Call 614- 614-949·2545.
288·8522.
1983 Monte Cerlo wfthT-Tops,_
1255 Oliver dl ...l tntct:or, 4 air. cruise, litt. luto, pa, V8
.w heet driv8. late model. Sharp, engine. Call 814-98~4306.
S4850. Post drMir whh cv•nder
&amp; hoses, $595. Owner will 1978 Thu nderblrd. Good shape.
finance. Call 614-2811-1!1622.
Call 814-949-2290 evenings.

2526.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

lliiB8

-- - · ·-

~O?t;Mire

Uted Transmfuiont. All inter·
nallyinspect«&lt;. 30daysgueran·
tee. We buy tr1n•ml11lons. Call

71 Auto's For Sale

&amp; L1V8stuck

REO HOT bargalntl Drug deal·
ers' Clrl. bo&amp;tl. pl.n• "'t)o'd.
Surplus. Your area. Buyers
Guide. (11 805-887-8000, est.
S-4562.

58

M

~--==========~==========~ :availlbt&amp;.
614-446-0988. Rebulldil\g
.:.::::=Th:...u-..,---r-d~m-o_t_Of...,.
"llo

guhar lessons, beglnn~rs , serious guitarist, Brul·
card•s Music. 61 4-4~8-0687.
Jeff Wamsley Instructor. 814446-8077. Limited Openings.

Rooms for rent -waek or month.
Starting at 8120 a mo. Gall ia
Hotel-614-446· g590.

304-675-3073.

o

l~dividual

Furnished room -919 Seco nd
Ave .. Gallipolis. 8125 a mo.
Ulilit i~ ~id. Single male. Share
bath. Call 446·44 16after 7 PM .

$p1cioua mobile home lots for
;ent. Family Pride 111.1obll a Home
Park, Gellit:tolis FMrv. W. Va,

firm.

71 Auto's For Sale

Wheelchairs-n8'1N or used. 3
wheeled electric scooters. Call
Rogers Mobllly collect, 1 -614-

I WA»T Mlf'51"CIJ6S, !nroWIP TI(.~T

1985 Bayliner 19Y:I fl . 126 hp,

614-742-2126.
Buy or Sell. Riverine Anfiquos,
1 124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours : M,T,W 10a.m . to 6p.m ..
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 614-992-

/WNIV~R.L

1·0, very good mnd. t8.900.00

Artley Flute. Good cond. Call

Antiques

IT'!&gt;~"''

n

' ..

Television
Viewing

ter 6:00PM, anytlmeweekandl.

614-446-3929.

53

· sORN LO

818,500.00.304-875-615911-

676-3087.
Stove
~d rafrlgeretor •346.00. ~
Creaser 840.00. Metll cabinllt
t15.00. 2311 Lincoln Aw ,
Point Pleesent.

APPLIANCES

--- ~

1988 V.I.P . 22'/r ft. Cuddy
cabin . .tl!l4 Mercrulser Brev'o,
out drive. l•s "than 20 hra On
boal
lots of e~:tns,

for •I e. 304-458·

For Sale Sontegra Super Pllm
•- h
1 b
,.1 3
~ac linn ng ed. c
04-

, Pomeroy-Middieport. ·ohio-

-Wednesday, A

Boats and
Motors for Sale

76

used appll~~ncea and TV sets.

~;::;:=::;;::;:=====T~;::::;;::======:i
1
$33.9oo. Call 614-448-4963 34
Business
44 Apartment
dlP/. 446-2800 evenings.
for Rent
Buildings
City limit
s. N1ca
Steel
siding.
Newneighborhood
furnac e. CA.

1541.

County Appliance. Inc. Good

"This is too complicated .. .l
should have stayed in medical school."

75

Portlbfe lighted sign w-lettera
fJI299.; Free detivery . Offer expiru Aug, 28, WV 1'· 800-8422434' Ohio 1·80().533-3453
1nytime.
UtilltyTr~ller

Motorcycles

1985 Kawasaki 126 KX , very
good cond. 1500.00. 304-8953488.

34 inch Schwinn Meta Runner
1 O ~..,efJd Mountain Bib. In· ·
eludes air-pump, Wllter bottle,
back ,.ck, •at •tehet, Allenw·
renchs. lock and cllbla. 814986-3537 attar &amp;p.m .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Oalllpoh.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- $399.
Living room IUftes- $199-$599.
Dunk beds with bedding- $249.
Full lize mattress &amp; foundation
starting- S99 . Fhcllnert
staning- $99.
USED· Beds. dr•sers, bedroom
suit•. Desks, wringer washer, •
complete line of used furniture.
NEW- Western boots- 835.
Workboots S18 II up. lSteel &amp;.
soft toe). can 614-448-3159.

31. 1988

1988 250A Hond8 for uta
t1.000. AlsoSendehumid~i•
t75. 304-876-8182.

Sears IIWn n'tOYII!IM'. 14 horlt'
po.,...r, 42 Inch ' blade and dual
rear tires. Call 814-446-8241 .

51 Household Goods

Real Esl ale

3 BR .. utility, garge, kitchen
with appliances. EKcellent op-

Speed Queen lNringer wtlhef.
like new. '250. Call 814-3889821 .

Me rchandise

Augu~

74

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

Satelltte for S1la $&amp;00. Clll
81 4-448· 71197.

knDW. and NOT to send monay
through th(! mail untM you hiVe
inves1igated the otf..-ing.

31

54 Misc. Merchandise

46 Space for Rent

LAFF-A-DAY

Business
Opportunity

Wednesday,

(I) " - Oat 1111 I
IIOVII: Cit, Qodl (PO)

i(N:\f:'l

~­
~c.·

Q

II

oiNialll

U I Q K

JMDOUJM'E

SDGM

JDCO

CPMDEE

SDGM

D LZ

OUI

UCE

EUDMI.-UBZAG

C Z A

QD!

MICPUIA
KMDRIMJ

y.....-,•• Cl)ptuqaote: ONLY FOOLS AND DEAD

MEN DON'T CHANGE THEIR MINDS. FOOLS WON'T.
DEAD MEN CAN'T. - JOHN H. PA1'TERSON

C 1-

King,.,., WI Syndicllt. Inc. I

•

�•
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P•ga 16-·The Daily Sentinel

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Wednesday, August 31. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Ohio I.Dttery

Maraud~

open
season on road

OAD

Daily Number
235
Pick 4
8333
Super Lotto

Page 5

5-17-24-34-3743

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Vol.311, No.82

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at
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enttne
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, September 1. 1988

Copyrighted 1888

$

THOROFARE

s

Sauerkraqt t21t6 oz. e•s · 00 · Ml•ed ~eget1~ •• oz.· e•s •~ SO
THOROFARE
$ 0O THOROFARE PCS. &amp; STEMS ~ ~ OO
Slleed Carroll t2116 oz. eMS
Mushrooms t41 oz. CN~S • ;,
TIIOROFARE SLICED OR WHITE $ 00
THOROFARE ·
.
Ho11hty
t21ts oz. c•s
Slleed Potato11 t2/u oz. CAliS $ 00

S
S
4

THOROFARE

121t6

1
5

SA~E

A Multbnedla Inc. Newtp-r

oz. c•s $ SO

Green Llm11

t2/t6

OZ. CAliS .

Tomatoee

t21t6

THOROFARE
LO~ALTY

FRESH

79+

1 LB. BOXI

U.S. NO. 1
WHITE ALL PURPOSE

Ground
Beef ...

10 LB. OR MORE

~

hite Grapes ........ ,~~.... 69

LB.

(10 OR 12 LB. A~O.)

•Roact •$teak
•Ground Chuck
CHICKEN
.

$ 39

CALIFORNIA JUICY

·

.. · ~

NECTARINES·•••••••••••• It· 79
Juicy Oranges ,.,.tiJI..Yf. $399
YELLOW COOKING
Onions •••••••••••••••v.Lf..w. $499
TENDER SWEET CALIFORNIA
Carrots •••••••••••••••J~I~t¥. $149

•

~ALENCIA

LB.

.

49+
$4''

Leg Quarters ...wn.oMW •• ~,.
STOREMADE

· .

I

Sausage ·····~·······s.Y.t\••.
Ground Chuek m.,,.,.~.Jt·$149 FRESH
COUNTRY STYLE
Kale
Greens
........
Jt·
.....
79+
$699
Spare

COURTHOUSE PROJEcr PINDIHED Workers tor Danny's United Roollq Company,
Columbua and Athena, finished Wednesday with
repairs to the dome or the Melp County

CHOPPED

12

5

I

I

2

MEW CROP

BULK SLICED

(SLICED)

RED SKIN

Bologna
LON8HORN

Cfieese

89t

~,

BALLARD

Wieners
CRISPY SER~E

Baeon

8

0
4LIS. *1°

12

CALIFORIIIA CRISP

.... Haa~ Lattaea ·······"'·

'Les.FoR

quire fewer agencies.
Last year deputy registrars
handled 77 million transactions.
Den than said the state expects 30
percent of the people to choose
mall registration.
Agencies that are awarded a
two·year contract must be In a
free-standing location and not
part or another business. Coady
said this will eliminate reglstra·
lion service at 33 AAA Clubs In
the state.
"Some of the people who are
deputy registrars will not be
deputy registrars next year ·
unless they make a change,"

Coady said.
The criteria for selecting agencies will Include a full-time
manager, provisions for parking,
location, hours and experience of
staff. Coady said the state will
encourage new agencies to hire
workers whose agencies have
lost their contract.
"Our challenge Is extremely
grea\ In that we are to Introduce
and effectively Implement an
effective optional mail-In service
beginning Jan. 1, to change a
design of a system that Is geared
for failure on this day every
month," Denlhan said.

CourthoUJie, Equipment and scaffolding were
beq taken down about noon. The dome and the
roof ot the courtholl8e were repaired by the
company tor a total cost of $64,0~.

checks drawn on the same bank,
. wire transfers, U.S. Postal Ser·
vice money orders and the first
$100 of any other deposits.
Funds from local checks must
be made available by the third
business day after deposit and
money from out-of-state checks
or checks deposited In another
bank's automatic teller machine
by the seventh business day.
In 1990, the hold periods will be
further shortened to the second
business day for local checks and
the fifth. business day for out·Of·
state checks.
.
· Banks had said the long hold
periods were necessary to guard
against. bad checks and exces·
stve delays In transferring
checks from one bank to another.
But Gainer said banks were
receiving credit for 99 percent of
the checks within one or two
days. The law allows exceptions
to the shorter hold period for
redeposits or bounced checks and
for customers who have repeat·
edly overdrawn their accounts .
•'Congress separated truth
from fiction and arrived at a
solution which sets reasonable
and fair standards for checks

hokls," Gainer said. "As a result,
customers will no longer have to
fear being held up at the bank. •:
In 1986, the organization sur·
veyed 458 banks In 11 states that
showed 76 percent or the lnstllu·
lions held out·of-state checks tor
more thana week, and 20percent
for more than two weeks.
•
The survey also showed 53
percent of banks held local
checks for three to five business
days and 37 percent held out-ofstate cashier's checks for more
than a week, even ll)ough "people 11ay ~eavy fees thinking a
cashier's check Is justllkecash."
The survey also found that 17
percent of the banks held govern·
men I checks for more than three
business days.
The new .taw also requires
banks to calculate Interest for
lnterest·bearlng accounts on the
same day a bank receives credit
for the check.
The law provides substantial
penalties for banks that violate
..
the check· hold periods.
"Not many Institutions would .
want to risk the bad .publicity of ·.
breaking a federal law, " Gainer •
said.

Ninety-one receive checks on time

Ninety-one households In ces' employees became aware of ·of those cases had been removed .
Meigs County who rely upon 114 deletions sometime last Improperly.
general relief checks, and in week. according to Swisher's
The bulk of the deletions
some cases, medical cards, from report. The deletions were disco· occured during the week ol Julv
the Meigs County Department of vered when employees who are 25 through July 29.
·
Human Services, arefortunateto still working during the strike
lt took 56 employee hours to
be get ling their September benef.
matched the August payroll to make the necessa r y co rrections
lis on time.
the Septel)'lber payroll and real- to the General Relief payroll,
According to a report pres· !zed there was a dramatic Swisher reported.
ented Wednesday to the Meigs . change In the number of checks
"This Is a serious s ituation, "
County
Commissioners
by
Ml·
to
be
mailed.
Swisher
said. And althOugh he
" Hell, there must be a God ,"
chael
Swisher,
Meigs
DHS
dtrec·
Is
an
abnormally
high
rate
did
not
wish
to elaborate on the
This
said Incredulous paramedic Bob
tor,
during
a
period
of
one
work
of
deletions,
Swisher
said.
options
of
punishment
available
Downey who saw most of the
week,
91
cases
or
portions
of
After discovering the dele- to the department If 'the 91
'
survivors flee the burntngwreck.
"Nobody lives from something cases were Improperly deleted lions. employees then had to deletions are proven to have been
from the department 's compu- begin checking the deleted purpbsely made, he did sav
like this. But people did live.
There were survivors. · terized General Relief payrolL names for eligibility, since some "we're not ruling out any of the
The report by Swisher was of the names might have been • options available."
AmazJng."
The crash came three years prepared at the request of the legitimately removed from the · General relief eligibility is
commissioners.
determined by a certain time
payroll. After reviewing the 114
after the Federal Aviation Ad·
Department
of
Human
Servl
·
It
was
determined
that
91
Continued on page 7
cases,
ministration ordered an lnvestl·
gatton Into Pratt &amp; Whitney's
JT8D engines because of reports
that cracks In the combustion
chambers of one engine contrlb·
parched Interior.
By ROGER BENNETT
uted to a crash In Manchester,
the park and In the Teton
In besieged Yellowstone. one of wilderness.
England, In August 1985 that
United Press International
killed 55 people.
Despite Improved weathercon- the six major fires still burning
Yellowslone's largest blaz.e,
Pratt &amp; Whitney , after meet· dltlons that encouraged tlretlgh- · has been contained, but two
the 321,000-acre Clover· Mist fire,
lngs with the FAA and NTSB, ters struggling against major others. and possibly a third,
drew Ull a revamped list of forest fires In or near Yellow- merged and blazed out of control slowed down Wednesday night ,
but remained dangerous because
service procedures and malnte· stone National Park, at least two despite cooler temperatures and
Its close proximity to Cooke
of
calmer
winds
Wednesday
that
nance recommendations for the of the !Ires merged Into a single.
City,
Mont.
firefighters
said
were
an
encou·
engines.
Inferno.
raging
sign
In
the
nearly
twoFlight 1141 was powered by a
Spreading flames and new
"Almost '1 ,500 people fought It
modified version of the JTSD outbreaks pushed the total month battle.
today
and reported some pro"Right
now
It
seems
like
engine. In Atlanta , a Delta acreage ablaze today past the 1
gress,
but the fire Is not con·
spokesman said t.he three en· million acre mark - greater they're making progress besaid Iobst
tatned
yet,"
glnes on the plane, which was than the size orthe state of Rhode ,cause of the Improved weather
built In 1973, were ''fairly new'' Island -In the tinder-dry Amerl- conditions," park spokesman
Steve Iobst said. "I think the
and not original equipment.
can West
'
Flight 1141, which originated In
In Oregon, the state's blillest weather has firefighters encour·
Home
delivery
Jackson, Miss., tried to take oft tire will be allowed to grow until aged that some progress Is being
·
at 9:03 a.m. Wednesday but It reaches containment lines, made."
price lo increase
Fires
were
raging
over
480,000
crashed 1,000feet south otthe end while-vast areas of the state have
Home delivery price or The
at runway 18-Lett.
been closed to Labor Day acres In Yellowstone, where 22
Dally
Sentinel will Increase
percent
of
the
2.2-milllon
acre
Airport spokesman Joe Dealey campers, and hundreds of re·
tram
SUS
to$1.48perweekefpark
has
been
charred
by
12
fires
Jr., said the pilot, Capt. Larry crults are being trained to relieve
fectlve
September
4. It Is the
thll aummer.
Davis, 48, of Greenville, Texa'S, weary firefighters.
tirat
rate
adjustment
In over
Two major conflagrations told thP control tower by radio
With two new tires Wednesday
two
years.
there was smoke flilld fire lnalde In Montana and another In each over 100,000 acres - have
Carriers will receive a sl&amp;the plane and be was tryiJII to . Washington, 65 maJor blazes already burned together and
nltlcant
portion of the In·
abort the takeoff.
were aflame over 1.~.uo acres were· cloee to jolntne other
creaae.
Wlt1181. . on the ground said . lnWesternstatesoutsldeAlaska, nearby tires.
Single copy price will reThe 111,500-acre Red-Shoshone
tllefrolltotlhe~IUtedupand
where more than 2 million rieres
malll at 25 cents weekdays
tile cnft bare!¥ rolt off the
detolate scrub land wu beltlll tire hal linked up with the
and 50 cents on Sunday.
Continued 011 page 7
,. allowed to bum harmlessly In lhe ll2,500-acre Mink fire, bumln&amp; In

.NTSB will study possible
engine failure in Delta ·crash

JUMBO CALIFORNIA

Cantaloupes CT.
*849
Sirloin
Patties
••••
.11•'
'
·
··
NEW CROP WHITE SWEET
·
$
CUDDAHAY
Potatoes
or
Ya
...
s
.......
1
89+
Sausage ••••••••• J!\11'*···"··
.
.
$249
$s69 Russet Potatoes •••••• JfJI~H\.
Bacon •••s.Lf-.'11·
PREMIUM CHIQUITA
Lo •1n............ .• $169 8ol.en Ripe Ba~anas

way Safety and Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has undertaken since
1936," he said.
· Underwood said the system Is
designed to provide convenience
tO families and fleet owners by
allowing them to register only
once a year.
Where practical, It will also
allow agencies to combine with
driver testing and vehicle lnspec·
.lion and tilling agencies, he said.
The change also will affect the
state's 272 deputy registrars.
Tom Coady, deputy administrator for the deputy registrar's
service division, said the mall
reglatratlon provision will re·

WASHINGTON (UP!) Banks, beginning Thu,rsday, will
no longer be able to hold deposits
for weeks, collecting Interest on
the money and fees from customers who Inadvertently write
bad checks written on the held
funds.
A lederal law passed In 1987
goes Into effect Sept 1 and
severely limits the length of lime
a bank can hold deposited
checks.
"Banks will no longer be
al)owed to . play hide·and-seek
wll.ll ,..cus.lllmerS:. c~kllQ~."
said Leslie Gainer, a lobbylstfor
. the U.S. PubliC Interest Re·
search Group, one of the organ!·
zatlons that pushed for passage
of the new law.
The Federal Reserve Board
estimated banks were collecting
$290 million a year in Interest on
the held funds, Gainer said, and
added that banks were also
collecting $145 million In fees
ranging from $14 to $27.50 for
bounced checks.
The new iederal law requires.
all U.S, banks to make money
avalllible the next business day
for cash, government checks,

so LB. BAO

THOMPSON SEEDLESS

.Boneless Ham WHOLE
Chuck Combination Pak

.,

Federal law limits banks ·o n
how long deposits can be held

'89

Potatoes

LB.

FISHER

-

SALTINES

Because or the change, some
fees next year may be more or
less than .those In previous years.
Denlhan said. No one will reregister In less than six month's
time, and no one will pay for
more than a 17·month period.
Steve Underwood, the chief of
research and development In the
registrar's office, said the conversion Is the most sweeping
.since the deputy registrar system was esta bllsned.
"Each of those changes lndl·
vldually Is a major concern.
Combined they are the . most
aggressive, most Important
change the Department of High-

HOT PRODUCE BUYS

MEAT DEPARTMENT SA~INCS
..

TOLEDO, Ohio . (UP!) Gov. Richard Celeste directed
Ohioans who groan when It's that deputy registrars be · ap·
tlrnetorenewthelrautoreglstrli· pointed on the basis of competl·
lion will see an end to the long tlve contracts and not party
lines and short tempers that affiliation, he said.
frequently accompany the an·
Denlhan and other state high·
nual chore.
way of!lclals who held a briefing
William M. Denlhan, director In Toledo stressed that 1989 will
ot the Ohlti Department or be the tina! year that motorists
Highway Safety, said beginning will be required to tallow the
next year, 'II 11ew system will , ritual of visiting a deputy regtselbnlnate ·political ' patronage trar's office.
and the end·ot-the-month rush at
After a vehicle owner registers
deputy registrars' offices.
In 1989, theblrthdatewlllbecome
"Our challenge Is to Improve the deadline for renewal, at
thesystelnandtorernovepoUtlcs w)llch time motorists will have
!POrn the system," Denlha.n said the option to renew their reglstra·
Wednelday.
tlon by mall.

TIIOROFARE

S
$7OO
oz. c•s $6 OO

t21t6

·sneed Beets

.

New;· license renewal system effective·Jan. 1

PLENTY".

THOROFARE

.,
ZSedloaa, 14 foaceo

.

STOCK UP NOW-"YOU'LL

·"

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e

AU8USl28 THRU SEPTEMBER s

Partly cloudy lottla'hl, low Ia
mid 681i. Friday, partly
cloudy. tHigh Ia mid 888.
Chance of raJa 48 percent;

'

'

GRAPEVINE, Texas (UP!)Federal Investigators were glv·
lng a "hard look" to the engtnes
as the possible cause oflhe crash
or Delta Air Lines Flight llflln
which 13 peo~ died, but are
equally lnteretted In learning
how 94 people managed ioescape
from the burning wreck.
Lee Dickinson, a spokesman
tor the National Transportation
Safety Board, said the "black
box" flight recorders from the
Boeing 727·200 were recovered
and would be examined today at
the agency's headquarters In
Washington, D.C.
So tar, Dlcklnlon, said, the
only suggested cause of Wednes;
day's crash at Dallas· Fort Worth
International Atrpo~t was a problem with the jetUner's three
Pratt &amp; Whitney engines.
"We're obviously golD&amp; to be
taking a hard look at the power
plants (engines), but we're not
going to look at themanymoreor

any less than any other facet of
the plane," Dickinson said. "Our
lnves,tlgatlon will be a slow and
tedlou~ process, but we'll get the
Job done."
Thirteen people aboard the
jetUner bound for Salt Lake Citv
were killed In Wednesdav morriblr's"trash, among them three
members or one famtlv, two
other couples and two" flight
attendants, but 94 survived.
DJcklnson said that unlike the
last Delta crash at the airportFlight 191 In which 137 people
were killed on Aug. 2, 1985 Investigators wtll be able to
question flight crew members
and the many survivors.
''One thiDi we're very Inter·
ested In Is why somanv survivors
got out. It's quite unusual, .. the
NTSB spokesman said. "Hope·
fully the crew can tell us about
what they did and how they felt
and help us tit the pieces
together."

Local news-briefs---Patrol reports one auto accident
The Gallla-Melp Post, State Highway Patrol Investigated a
one ell' acclctel\t lt 21ao a.m. Tllllrlday on SR. 143 0.8 miles
nordl or SR. 7. Troopll'i sald'TIIItotiiY E. Erwin, 27, Shade, lost
control and his car went ott the rOad. striking a ditch and road
slp. No one wu Injured. Erwin was charged with driving under
tile lnfiuence and failure to malntaln~ntrol.
The patrol also was called to an auto tire ,at 2:50 p.m.
W~day on SR. 7, near Chetter, Troopers said Donna MIUer,
fl,.Pomeroy. was headed1011th when bel' li'IIIBulckcaucht fire.
T'lie Pomeroy tire 4ellll'tm1111t was called. Damage was
IRQderate. No one was bljured.
CodtlniiN on pace 7

Weather improves for firefighters

:at
4

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