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                  <text>Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r--Local news briefs---.

Twelve die
on highways

EMS has 10 weekend calls

By United Press lnternallonal
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
today that 12 people, Including a
9-month-old boy, were killed In
weekend traffic accidents .
Jared Tedore, 9 months , Arcanum, killed Sat urday in a twovehicle accident on Route 5711n
Mi ami County .
Also killed this weekend were:
Friday night
Oregon: Beatrice M. Eucha·
nan. 72, Oregon. when a truck
crashed hea d·on into her .;ar
along Route 2 in Oregon.
Saturday
Fairfield: Michael P . Eucha·
nan, 17, West Chester, when his
motorcycle crashed along a city
street.
Mansfield: Milton R. Givens,
24, Crestline, when the car he was
driving overturned on a Richland
County road .
·
Lorain: Clarence D. Thompson. 20. Lorain, when his car,
which was being pushed, was hit
by a third vehicle on a city
streeet.
Xenia: Beatrice B. Brennan,
79 , Xenia , when the car she wa s
riding in wa s Involved in a
three· vehicle accident on a city
street.
Findlay: Ronald N. Deardoff,
55, Oakwood . In one-car accident
on Route 68 In Hancock County.
Leipsic: Bicyclist Michael
Turner. 8, Lelpslc 1 when struck .
by an automobile on Ohio651n the
city.
Independence: Patricia A. Lento. 38, Garfield Heights, when
the motorcycle on which she was
a passenger struck a guard rail
on an exit ramp off lnterstllte 77.
Coshocton: Denny L. Albert son, 19, Coshocton, when the car
In which he was riding went off
the side of the road and hit
another car on a Coshocton
County road .
Sunday ·
Norwalk: Bryan G. Boroff. 20,
Norwalk, in one-car accident on
Route 61 .
ChllllcotllE': Charles F . Elliott.
62. Chillicothe, when his motor·
cycle was s truck by a car on a
Ross County road .

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 ca lls
over the weekend; eight on Saturday and two on Sunday .
Saturday at 1:19 a.m. , Pomeroy to the Count ry Moblle Home
P~rk for Richard Thornton to Veteran s Memorial Hospital ;
Middleport at 9:31a .m . to Railroad St. lor Lewis Taylor to
Veterans Me morial Hospital; Middleport at 12:23 p.m. to North
Second Ave. fo r Don Lunsford to Veterans Memorial Hospit al;
Ra ci ne at 12: 24 p.m. to Pearl St. forOlivio Saltsman to Veterans
Memori al Hosp it al; Pomeroy at 1:10 p.m. to Highland Church
Roa d for Doris Arnold to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at
1: 45 p.m. transported William Deem from an auto accident on
Route 7 to Vetera ns Me morial Hospital; Syracuse to3: 55 p.m.
tra nsported Eugene Mollohan to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 7: 40 p.m. to DeWitt's Run Road for Mary King to
Veterans Memorial Hos pital.
· .
Su nd ay at 12 a.m., Tuppers Plains transported Ron Craft
from a n auto accident on Route 124 to St. Joseph 's Hospital;
Syracuse at 4: 44p.m. to Rose Valley Road for Re~cca Moore to
v etera ns Memorial Ho s pital.

Man held on rape charge
Dal e F. Riffle, of Bunker Hill, Pomeroy,ls being held In Meigs
Co unt y Ja il after being c harged in Meigs County Court with
ra pe. The rape allegedly took place Saturday . Bond lor Riffle
has been set a $10,000. A preliminary hea ringlncountycourt has
been set for 2:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Non-farm employment up
Manufa cturing employment was unchanged In May,
however, Ohio's nonfar m employment rose by f/,000 jobs during
the sa me month, according to the Ohio Bureau of Employment
·
Services' monthly employer survey.
To tal em ployment as measured by the employer survey
rPac hed a new record high of 4.674 million in May, up from 4.667
million in April. Since May 1987 .. nonfarm payroll employment
has risen 2.5 percent , representing a gain of 113,000 jobs.
Manufacturing employment was 1.009 million In May, the
same as the April level. Both the durable and nondurable goods
producing sectors were unchanged, with durable goods
·
employment at 736, 000 and nondurable goods at 363,000.
Nonmanu!acturing Industries added 7,000 jobs during May,
reac hing a new total of 3.575 million . The largest gains were
5,000 jobs In service industries and 2,000 jobs In the retail trade.
Th e wholesale trade and the finance, insurance and real estate
sectors eac h added 1,000 jobs. Employment was unchanged In
min ing. Transportation. public utilities , and construction
employment was down by about1,000.
Since May 1987. Ohio ha s added JJ3,000 jobs , with nonfarm
payroll increasing from 4.560 million to4.674 million. Most of the
increase WilS in nonmanufacturing Industries, which added
108,000 jobs.
.
The fastest rate of growth over the year was 9.1 percent In the
construct ion indu stry, which a dded 16,000 jobs. Other Industries
with above average ra tes of growth over the year were services
Cup 4.3 percent), finance, Insurance. and real estate cup 3.5
percen t), retail tra de (up 3.0 percent) and WhOlesale (Up 2.8
percent). All manufacturing Industries added jobs over the
yea r, excep t mining, which fell by 3.8 percent.
Manufa~turing employment in May was 5,000 jobs higher
t_han a year earlier, when factory employment was 1.094
million. Em ploy ment In nondurable goods was up by 6,000 from
!he May 1987 1evel of 3547,000. Durable goods employment was
unchanged from its year ago level.

Licences issued
A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Richard Doak Helton.
~1\ and Pamela Kay Wallace, 30,
both of Dexter.

Some 77 tickets matched five of
the six numbers , and are each
worth $1,000. And 4,306 tickets
matched four numbers lor $91
each.
Super Lotto sales totaled
$3,402,784.
The Kicker number was
826,770, a.nd one ticket matched
the number for $100,000.
Kicker sales were $598,857.

Minnie Wooten
Minnie Wooten of 22 Kurtz St.,
Ath ens, form e r Ca rpenter area
res ident, died Sunday morning at
Heartland of Jac kson !oUowlng a
brief illness.
Mrs. Woolen was born in
Lucasvi lle, daughter of the late
William E . a nd Ella Thomas
Ryerson. She was also preceded
in death by her hu sband, Ander·
son Wooten. one son, Dean
Wooten, one daughter, RaeDel
and five sister s.

.I

She was employe d at Shelte rIng Arms Hospital and retired
from O'Bleness Hospital. She
was a member of Athens County
Senior Cil izens. and at tended
Athens Free Methodis t Church.
Mrs. Wooten was well known
for her crochet work. Her designs
included the Lord 's prayer and
the American Flag. which s he
donated to chu rches and va rious
organtzallons.
She is survived by on e son,
David Wooten of Dexter; three
grandchildren and two s te p·
gra ndchildren.
Services will be held Wednes·
day a t 2 p.m . at th e Blgony·
Jordan Funeral Home In Albany,
with !he Rev . William H. Straus·
baugh officiating. Burial will be
in Sta ndish Cemetery. Friends
may ca ll at the funeral home
Tuesday fr om 6 to 9 p.m.

Franklin Oldaker
Franklin L. "Gentle Be"n"
Oldaker. 47, of Hartford, died
Saturday at the Veterans Mem·
or tal Hospital, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Oldaker, formerly a carpenter
and member of the Carpenters
Union Local 1159, Is survived by
his wile Rosemary Oldaker, also
of Hartford, a daughter, Mary Y.
Ross, of Middleport. Ohio and a
son, Philip F. Oldaker, of
Hartford.
He Is also survived by five

'.'-' - -- ----

899

826770.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$598,857.

9894

Page 3

perce.nt.

e
Vol.39, No. 36
. Copyrighted 1988

•

at

WING WALKER -With part of the 1,500 paid
attendance watching, Jim Dorsey pre pares for
his "wing walking" stunt on a 450 Stearman,

piloted by Darrell Montgomery. The action took
place during Sunday's First Annual Gallla·Melgs
Air Show at the Gallla·Meigs Regional "Airport in
Gallipolis.

' .

ON DISPLAY- One of the airplanes on display
during Sunday's Gallla·Melgs Air Show at the

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Paul Gerard has been ap·
pointed by Middleport Mayor
Fred Hollman to flll the unex·
plred term of Village Council·
man Allen King. King's term wlll
expire Dec. 31, 1989. Gerard's
appointment was made at Mon·
day night's meeting of Middleport village Council. Council
·unanimously approved Gerard's
appointment.
Lester L . Errett, vic epresident of the Point Pleasant ,
W.va. based cable televis ion
company, Ri!kln-C.C .G .Inc., for merly Consolidated Communica·
tlons Group Inc ., was present at
Monday night 's meeting to dis cuss in person, two letters which
hehadsenttocouncii.According
to Information from Errett, on or
before Sept.1 of this
c.C.G.

will be offering subscribers a
local acces s channel lor use by
community, governmentlll and
educational entitles in the area.
The cable company expects to
o!!er a variety of services to local
community groups and busl·
nesses through this additional
service.
Errett also discussed com·
plaints against the cable com·
pany which have been brought up
many times. In the past at
Middleport Council. Errett and
council formulated a complaint
procedure whereby any Middle·
port cable subscriber wishing to
complain about service wlll go to
the office of Mayo.r Ho!!man and
fill out a standard form. Errett
will then oversee collection of the
forms and work "hand In hand"
with council to try to address and
eliminate legitimate service

problems. Errett presel)ted Department of Natural Resour- program for the elderly and
council with a sample of a ces' Division of Watercraft. The handicapped. Additional funding
complaint form .
vlllage Is proposing to use of $46,186 from the federal level
The cable company has in· Division of Watercraft funds to and $68,607 from the sta te level
stalled a new telephone system build a floating dock facility, will also be applied for . Council
by which to better handle In·
refueling faclllty, steps, picnic authorized Mayor Hoffm an to
coming calls, Errett reported.
a nd oulslde entertlllnment a reas file for the remaining two grants.
Difficulty getting through to the · on the Ohio River. Reiser Is In
A letter fr om State Rep. Jolynn
company by telephonE&gt; ha s In the c harge of plans lor the proposed Boster. D·Galllpolls, was read
pas t been a major complaint
public boating facility 'and has and discussed. In her letter,
from cable subscribers.
estimated costs at $99,440. The Boster apprised the village of
Als o, in an effort to eliminate
vlllage is hoping lor 67 percent of · plans by the Ohio Department of
concerns over billing, Errett said
the needed funding from the Youth Services to build !aclllties
thate!fectiveAug. 1, instllllation
Division of Watercraft. It has In Southern and Southeastern
of a new data system should be
been Intimated that the U.S. Ohio, andadvlsedthevillagewho
complete and a monthly billing
Army Corps of Engineers might to contact If Middlepor t Is Interprocedure will be enacted In
be willing todlvidetheremalning ested In entering the competition
Middleport. rather than bi·
one-third of the costs with the for one of the youth facilities.
monthly billing .
vlllage, with the village's share
John Hood, on behalf of the
Archite c t David Reiser,
being provided through lnklnd village park commission, was at
Athens, has been asked by the service.
last night's meeting to ask
mayor for more Information
The village has already app- permission to schedule an "aprelating an upcoming grant prop·
Jled for a $38,025 grant for the preclatlon week'' for business
osal from the village to the Ohio local taxi service through a people and merc han ts in the

By JEFF BATER
United Press International
Scattered showers provided
little relief from the worst
drought since the Great Depres·
slon as barge traffic jammed on
the depleted Mississippi River
and Southern soybeans were
added to the endangered crop
list.
Rain fell In scattered places
• around the nation Monday , Including Texas and an area from
the east Carolinas across the gulf
coastal states, but It didn't wash
away the worst dry spell In a
half·century.
Scattered showers and thun ·
derstorms today extended from

GaiUa-Melgs Regional Airport was this L-16 Air
Force Aeronca·made model.

By EDGAR SIMPSON

f.l~iiJrf:ii~~~~;-"iTOLL -

Month:.s_.._P_o.:ckets of drought have taken a heavy toO on
without rain have produced gaping cracks In the
southerp Texas, especially on cal tie and feed.
ground of this livestock watering pond on the
(UP I)
Chaparrosa Ranch near La Pryor, Texas.

Doctors debate Medicaid expansion

South Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear with a
low near 55 and light and variable
winds . Tuesday, partly cloudy
with a high In the lower 80s.
Eldended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A slight chance of showers
Wednesdaya and fair Thursday
and Friday . Highs will be mostly
In the 80s and lows 55 to 65.

CHICAGO cUPI) - Citing
gross Inequities among states In
the Medicaid system, doctors at
the American Medical Assocla·
tlon's ·annual meeting argued for
a $24 million expansion of the
joint state-federal program to
guarantee even· handed care for
the poor.
But other doctors debating the
proposal for a national Medicaid

Stocks

'
·--·- - - -- -

..........._

25 Cents

vil la ge. Hood said the park
comm ission wishes 10 show appreclatlon to the businesses and
merchants for past support and
assista nce by opening the munlc·
ipal pool to them during off
hours, perhaps during the week
of the Fourth of J uly . Council
approved Hood's request.
The problem of park ing at the
pool area was also also discussed
but n o so I u ti on s w ere
fortll coming.
In regard to the mini-golf
course wh ich ha s been con·
structed at Hartinger Park, It
was reported that the village Is
still awaiting state approval of a
permit to operate the facili ty.
It was reported that an ex tension on the vlllage's sewer
improveme nt project has been
requested from the Ohio F. nvlr ·
Continued on page 5

Arizona across New Mexico Into
western and south central Texas
and dotted the northern Rockies,
western Soutll Dakota and
northwest Minnesota , the National Weather Service said.
Rain showers and Isolated
thunderstorms moved ahead of a
cold front across north Florida.
Dry weather prevailed elsewhere east of the Mississippi
River ..
Early ·morning temperatures
dipped low lp the Midwest, which
perspired under a dogged heat
wave last week. In Youngstown,
Ohio, It fell to 45 degrees, tyi ng a
record low set In 1970.
Mississippi Gov. Ray Mabus

toured his state's pa rched farmlands by helicopter.
"It Is the worst drought that
Mi ssissippi has experience d In
my life time and one of the worst
ever recorded, " he said.
Will McCarty, an agronomist
with the Mississi ppi Coopera tive
Extension Service, said, " There
is still tlmetomake a cotton crop,
but the clock Is winding down ."
About half of Mi ssiss ippi 's 2.5
million acres of soybeans has not
been planted.
"II we don't get a rain in 10
days, It will be disa strous for the
soybeans crop," said agronomist
Nathan McKinney. "It's bad,
bad. bad."

North attends rally in Charleston

Weather

Hosoital news

1 See1ion. 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, June 28, 1988

Scattered showers provide
little or no relief in Midwest

Installation set
Semi-annual lnstllllatlon of of·
fleers of the International Order
Of Jobs Daughters will be held
this evening at 7:30 p.m . at the
Middlepoprt Masonic Temple.
Members of the Masons, Eastern
Star Chapters and family and
friends invitE'd to attend.

Joseph Arden Miller, 92, of
Little Hocking, died Sunday
evening at Marietta Memorial Dally stock prices
Hospital.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Mr. Miller was born December Bryce and Mark Smith
21, 1895 In Little Hocking son of of Blunt, Ellis lo Loewl
the late Joseph and Nelle Bartlett
Miller. He was also preceded In Am Electric Power ............. 2872
death by his first wtre, Emma AT&amp;T .......................... .. ..... 26')(.
Clark Miller. his second wife, Ashland 011 ........................ 70%
Hazel Clifton Miller, three Bob Evans ..... ................ ...... 17
brthers and one sister.
Charming Shoppes .............. 13'Vs
He was a retired mall carrier, City Holding Co ................... 32
member of Little Hocking Unl· Federal Mogul ....................39%
versallst Church, Little Hocking 'Goodyear T&amp;R ..... ..... ........ .. 65
Historical Society, Little Hock· Heck's Inc ........ .. .............. ... 1%
tng Senior Citizens and Cody Key Centurion ..................... 37
family descendents.
Lands' End ............... .......... 27',4
He Is survived by a daughter Llmlted.1nc ................. .. .....23'1.
and son·ln·law, Jane and Ber· Multimedia Inc ......... .. ......... 69
nard Rauch , Little Hocking;
Rax Restaurants ...... .... ........ 4%
grandson and wife, John and Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ... ..... 11%
Susan Rauch, with whom he Shoney's Inc ... ...... .............. 26'12
lived, Little Hocking; grand· Wendy's lntl ..........................6
daughter, Dr. Elaine Rauch, Worthington Ind ................. 22%
Little Hocking, two grandsons,
Jamey and Jeramy Rauch, Little
Hocking.
feterana Memorial
Services will be held Wednes·
Satun!ay Admissions - Etta
day at 10 a.m. at the White
Ethridge Funeral Home, 121 Lee Collums, Pomeroy; Don Lllls·
Street, Belpre wtth the Rev. · ford, Corning; William Deem,
Long Bottom.
Donald Wilcoxen officiating.
Satun!ay Discharges - None.
Burial will be In Rockland
Sunday Admissions - None.
Cemetery, Belpre. Friends may
Sunday
Discharges - Mildred
call at the funeral home Tuesday
Fry,
Ethel
Lambert.
from 7 to 9 p.m.

en tine

Paul Gerard appointed to Middleport. C;,"~;;~il

I

brothers: Johnnie L. andOthoC.,
Thomas A. Oldaker, all of Hart·
ford; Adam F. Oldaker, of Mason
and Douglas T. Oldaker of West
Columbia. His surviving sister Is
Mrs. James Ruby Greene, of
Hartford.
Ser'VIces will be conducted' by
Reverend Clyde Fields at Foglesong Funeral Home Tuesday at 1
p.m. Following the services,
Oldaker will be burled In the
Faltvlew Cemetary.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Monday at 6-9 p.m.

Increasing cloudiness tonighl. Lows in mid 60s. Chance
of rain 20 percent. Wednes·
day , •arlable cloudiness. High
in mid 70s. Chance of rain 20

Pick 4

Council to meet
Syracuse ~ lllage Council .will
meet tonight (Monday) , 6 p.m.,
at village hall.

Kicker

Joseph Miller

Daily Number

Reunion Sunday
The annual Circle reunion will
be held Sunday at the Larry
Circle residencE&gt; on Carmel Road
near Racine. A potluck dinner
will begin at 1 p.m .

Lottery numbers

Area deaths

Ohio :Wttery

Tyson
relains
crown

Announcements

Plan fish fry
A fish fry and garden tractor
pull, sponsored by Scipio Town·
ship Volunteer Fire Department,
will be held Saturday at the !Ire
department In Harrisonville. The
fish fry will start at 5 p.m. Costs
per dinner will be $4 for adults
and $2 for children under 12. The
tractor pull will start at 6 p.m.

No one has winning lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
were no jackpot winners In
Saturday night' s draw ing of the
Super Lotto. meaning Wednesday's game will have a top prize
of at least $6 million, lottery
offic ials said Sunday .
The numbers were 1, 3. 27, 34,
37 a nd 39.

Monday, June 27, ,1988

stllndard argued that statE'S
should continue to be free to
decide how much they can pay
for medical aid to the Indigent
and which people they want to
assist.
The proposed Medicaid stand·
ard would be adjusted for Income
factors In each stllte, but all
people whose Incomes put them
below the poverty level would be

Eastern hoard seeks
continuing levy in fall

KIDS

10ANDUNDEA

EATFR.EE!
With ..ch ~uti mut purehiM kid$ can
choo•lrom Hot Dog and Frlet Of
Hamburger tnd Frtea or s.lld Bullet,
and our AII-You-Can·bt Sundae Bar

·--..

________. _

11 Included, tool

YOUK CHOICE:

a.....

· SC'u anc1 MHibana

F
Chlckon
Sirlaln Tips • Fried Fllh Fillet

,,,,c.

If/~

r

jr'

All Family Night Dinner Spedalt Include baked potato,
Sfll~ Bufflll, Wlm'l roll aM bl,ltlet.,.

FR.EE

AI.L·YOU·CAN ·EAT

SUNDAE
BAR.r

Incl uded with rotH Family DIMer
Sp&amp;clat, ll'a a great way to top
off a graatl'l'llllll

The Eastern Local Board of
Education, In regular session
Monday night, conducted the
following business:
-ApprovE&gt;d . a resolutlori calling for a continuhig levy, In the
amount of $12.4 million, to be ,
voted on at the regular election
·
Nov . 8, 1988.
-Accepted, with regret , resignatiOns from Mrs. Grace Weber
because of retirement and Mrs.
Valerie Ransbottom because she
Is moving from the area.
-Approved with minor
changes, the student handbook
for use In the high school and,
where appropriate, for the elementary schools.
·
-Approved the following pol·
Icy statement for talented and
gifted students: In accordance
with Section 3313.21 O.R .C., It Is
t)le poUcy of the Eastern Local
Board of Education, Meigs
·County, that those students who
are gifted, as defined by Rule of
the State Board of Education
(3301·51-15), and who are en·

•
l.O-.---t--

rolled In grades one through 12,
shall be Identified annually.
-Authorized thE' treasurer to
advertise for bids lor baked
goods and milk products, and for
transportlllon and bus fleet
suppiiE&gt;s.
-Joined the Southeastern Ohio
•Voluntllry Education Cooperative Organization (SEOVEC),
for the 1988-89 school year
renewed membership with Edu·
catlonal Technology Services ,
Ohio Department of Education,
for school year 1988-89, and
lalned the Southeast Ohio·
Special Education Regional Re·
sources Center (SEO-SERCC),
for the 1988·89 school year.
-Approved amended appropriations for fiscal year 1988.
-Met In executive session to
consider the possible appoint·
'11enl/employrnent of personnel.
-SetJuly7,1988at8a.m. fora
special board meeting, the pur·
pose of which Ia to deal with
jleraonnel matters and the set·
ling of appropriations.

--------

•

entitled to the governmentflnanclal assistance lor medical care.
The AMA 'board of trustees
estimated that extending Medl·
cald In this way would provide
asslstllnce to 27 mllllon people
currently Ineligible for govern·
mentlll health Insurance and
would boost the cost of the
program to from $52 mUllan to :
$76 million, based on 1988 figures.
The board of trustees report
criticized the present Medicaid
program for being unequal from
state to stllte and for spending too
much money on long-term care
for the elderly at the expense of
acute care for the Indigent.
In the proposal, presented at
the AMA's annual meeting of
delegate doctors representing
stlltes and a bout 70 specialty
organizations, the trustees said,
"It Is well recognized that the
societal cosiS In addressing the
needs of the uninsured are large.
The cos IS of leaving the problem
unresolved, however, are and
will continue to be even larger."

Some papers late
Because of a malfunction In the
folder-cutter unit of the press,
some of the Sunday Times·
SenUnel papera were late llelng
delivered by city and motor route
carrlera Sunday. Dellverly of
The SenUnel may also be delayed
durtna the early part of tllla
week. The muapment ub
aubscrllera to be patient untO all
Jll'llll npalra are completed. at
wlllch time nonnal boura of
dellverly will be nanmed.

----·· -·--·------ -- + --·- - ·

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)Former'White House aide, Oliver
North, called for a Republican
sweep in the November elections,
saying the "liberal Congress" has
begun to dismantle "lhe progress"
made under the Reagan administra·
tion.
North, under indictment for hi s
key role in lhe Iran-Contra scandal,
made his remarks Monday night at

Antiques
reported
stolen
Numerous antiques of undeter·
mined value were stolen sometimE' Saturday night or early
Sunday morning from the Spring
Ave. home of Pomeroy resident
Helen Lyons.
According to a report from
Pomeroy Pollee, they were not
advised of the breaking and
entering and subsequent theft
until 12:10 p.m . Sunday. Before
leaving the home, thethelves had
cut the telephone line In the house
so that Lyons, who Is In her 90's,
was unable to call for help.
Authorities reported that three
unknown subjects, they think all
men, entered the Lyon's home
through a side door by the garage
sometime during the night. En·
try to the home was notforced, a
pollee department spokesman
said.
One of the subjects held Lyons
In a bedroom while the other two
ransacked every room In the
home. Lyons was not harmed
during the robbery, but articles
stolen from the home Include a
Tiffany chandelier, which the
!helves cut down from the
ceiling, clocks, glassware, a
brass music box and a jewelry
box . Some o! the Items were
considered priceless, pollee
report.
Herman Henry of B.C.I. was In
.Pomeroy Monday ~assist with
the Investigation. P lures were
taken · and the hom was dusted
lor fingerprints. owever, accon!lng to a pollc department
spokesman, law officials suspect
the thelves were wearing co !ton
gloves. The Investigation will
continue pollee said .

,

a Republican fund-raiser in Charleston.
Standing before a huge American
. flag that served as a backdrop on
the stage at the Charleston Civic
Center, North drew stailding
ovations from the crowd of about
650, which featured Republican
Gov. Arch Moore and several state
department heads, at both the
beg inning and ends of hi s speech.
Billed as an appeal to "Commitment, Trust and Family," much
of North's remarks were political,
centering on a pro-conservative
philosophy and hardline attacks on
a "liberal Congress."
"If Thomas Jefferson founded
the party; then people like Mondale
and Dukakis have dumbfounded
i1," North said, in lhc same intense
style that drew him widespread
support during his six-day testimony before a congressional investigative committee last summer.
"This liberal Democratic Con·
grcss is scling out freedom across
1he world."
North's vist 10 Charleston
spawned a minor controversy in
West Virginia, and both protestors
and supporters continued their ef-

forts up to the Lime of his 45minute speech.
Pro-North and anti -North forces
faced each other peacefully across
50 yards of pavement outside tpe
Civic Center. In a protest organized
by the West Virginia Central
America Network, about 50 people
sang songs, waved wooden crosses
and held up placards.
Strains of " We Shalt Overcome"
competed with chantS of " Ollie,
Ollie" from the conservative
demonstration, sponsored primarily
by the West Virginia College
Republicans. Holdin g up signs
printed ou t by a computer LO television cameras saying " Baseball, Hot
dogs, Apple pic, Ollie North ," the
group cha nted anti-communist
slogans and ushered people inside
10 the theater where North was to
speak.
"North is advocating that it is
okay to take the law into your own
hands," said Rick MacDowell, one
of the spokesma n for the Central
Americ a Network. "We think that
is wrong. There is a lot of ar.
rogancc in the Republican Party for
them to bring in Oliver Nor~l to
fund -raise for them."

~w~~N- Fonner While Ro- aide Oliver
North, the key flp~e Ia the lru-coamucaadal, addreaaea a crowd
of about 880 Monday nlaht darllla a Bepabllcan fund-railer In
Charleaten, W.VL (UPI)
•

I

�Tuesday, June 28. 1988

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS

~r:h

ts:m~

0~'

.-T'L.-JL-..,...1

~v

THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~d.~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association. ·
LETTERS OF OPINrDN are welcome, The;· shou ld be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subjec t ro editing and must bE" signed with name, address and
telephone number . No unsigned l etters wtll be published. Letters shoul d be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalllles.
'

Letters to the editor
A reminder...
Dear Readers:
The weather is strange as is a
lot of other things. 1 hav e read in
the paper and heard on the news
about these rain dancers being
brought in. I believe people have
forgotten that God controls the
weather, and everything else.
Maybe God Is trying to get people
to wake up and realize that ''He

God~'

is the one that they tthe
people) should ask for help.
Maybe if people would get on
their knees and cry out to the
Lord. that He would help them
out of this Drought, and Wo rs hip
Him, like they should. I believe
Ho would change things. Because
Prayer does change things.
Doris Richmond

Bush official
under scrutiny
WASHINGTON - A finance
chairman fdr the George Bush
presidential campaign Is under
scrutiny in a broad congressional
Investigation Into possible ethics
violations In the South Pacific.
Fred Zeder is the former
ambassador to Micronesia and
now a regional finance chairman
for Bush in Micronesia and
Hawaii. The Hawaii millionaire
Is a close friend of Bush's and has
been widely rumored to be a
candidate for a cabinet post in a
Bush administration.
While he was ambassador,
Zeder was apparently treated to
a British Airlines flight, paid for
by a London power company that
was courting business In the tiny
Paclflc nations that make up
Micronesia.
State Department o!flclals can
accept free transportation in
some cases If it qualifies as
official business. But the flights
in question apparent ly took
Zeder and his wife to the 1984
British Open golf tournament In
Scotland.
Zeder did not report the round·
trip tickets from London to
Edinburgh as a gift on the
financial disclosure forms he
flied with the State Department.
But a record of the flight is
included In the bankruptcy proceedings of International Power
Systems Co. I IPSE CO I , Zeder' s
apparent host.
IPSECO built two expensive
power plants in Micronesia before going bankrupt In 1986.
Congressional Investigators
have since determined that IPSECO may have greased its way
Into one of the projects by
handing out questionable payments of more than $1 million to
local o!flcials.
Zeder told our associate, Jim
Lynch, that he never allowed
IPSECO to fly hini or his wife
anywhere.
A House subcommittee has
asked . the General Accounting
Office to examine the flight and
some business deals struck by
other former U.S. of!lclals In
Micronesia. The GAO will look
into possible violations of gover nment ethics regulations.
Those regulations say State
Department officials can't accept gifts or favors from anyone
who expects something in return.
The zeder' s flight, as recorded
in IPSECO's records, occured
during a time when IPSE CO was
expanding Its operations to the
United States by adding an office
in Hawaii. One year before the
!llght, zeder authored a cable
which some congressmen believe helped IPSECO seal the
controversial deal to build the
massive power plant for the
island nation of Palau, a U.S.
Pacific Trust Territory. The
telegram, sent to the U.S. Embassy In London on May 23, 1983,
concluded, "The government of
Palau should be able to meet Its
scheduled debt service obligation In llght of present and future
funds granted to the government
of Palau by the United States
government."
London banks backing the
power plant have since made it
clear that they interpreted the
telegram as assurance from the
United States that ,Palau could

pay back the $32 miliion cost of
the plant.
Zeder and State Department
officials claim the telegram was
misconstrued and that it did not
promise U.S. backing of the loan.
Palau Is now buried deep under
that debt and has yet to make a
payment · on the power plant,
which engineers estimate could
have been built at almost half the
amou nt IPSE CO charged.
zeder told us he never supported the IPSECO plant a nd
denied that he ever took a
"nickel" from the now-bankrupt
London firm.
He recalis going to the British
Open in 1984. The tournament
started that year on July 19, the
same day as the IPSECO Illes
record the tickets for Zeder and
his wife. Alter we talked to
Zeder, a State Department official called us to buttress Zeder's
account. He said that alt hough
Zeder didn ' t recall the flight , he
definitely would have reim bursed the company if it had
occured.
David Pullen, an accountant
for the Brit ish liquidation firm
handiing IPSECO's bankruptcy,
did not know weather zeder ever
paid IPSECO for the $300-plus
trip.
Zeder was recruited by the
Reagan administration in 1982 as
the president's personal representative for Micronesian Status
Negotiations. The position gave
Zeder ambassadorial status until
he resigned last year to work for
Bush.

By JEFF HASEN
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTIC CITY , N.J . (UP!)
- Mike Tyson's answer to
intense media coverage of his
personal life was an equally
brutal assault of Michael Spinks.
"My obligation is to be the
ultimate professional no matter
what happens," Tyson said Monday night after he recorded the
fourth quickest knockout in heavyweight championship history,
throwing previously unbeaten
Spinks as ide at I : 31 of the first
round of the rlcnest bout ever.
"All my life has been chaos,
but the job has to be done." ·
Began In March
Tyson's distractions since
March included printed allega·tions of wife beating, the death of
co-manager Jim Jacobs, a
squabble with co-manager Bill
Cayton and the obvious wooing
·by promoter Don King.
Tyson, who weighed 218 1-4,
attacked first , throwing a right
that was blocked by Spinks. But
the crowd of 21,785 at the
Convention Center roared as
Tyson and Spinks threw .Jneffec-

.Ffnding relief 'for fanners_' __se_n._Ja_n_M_.L_on_g
As the severe drought con- rupt by giving the farmer first
tinues to destroy crops all across priority liens against the fa il ed
the Midwest, the state and operation. Under current law,
federal governments are making . farmers sta nd in line with ot her
some progress toward offering credito rs as grain they deposmore relief programs that will ited , but were not paid for , is
help farmers who face long-term liquidated! as a part oft he assets.
financial problems. It is now Not only will the farmers be first
estimated that the drought has in lin e, but the bill also in creases
destroyed 30\'1 of Ohio's corn, reimbursements t.o farmers out
soybean, and wheat crop. If we of a state indemnity fund from
do not get a lot of rain very soon, the current 80% to 100 per cent.
the crop loss can only worsen.
The bill also prohibits dealers
As l report ed last week. all but from accepting grain when their
a lew Ohio counties have been liabilities exceed their assets.
au thorized by the Agricultural sets criminal penalties for dealStabilization and Conservation ers who accept gra!n when they
Service (ASCS) to allow emer- are aware of impending bank·
gency haying and grazing on ruptcy, and prohibits the grantset-as ide acreage Idled for one ing of a grain license to the owner
year under a government crop of a facility that has filed for
program. In a new development bankruptcy in the previou s five
this week, ASCS decided for the years.
flr.st time to authorize haying on
Other leg islation Is being introConservation Reserve Program duced In the state legislature in
(CRP)lands that are idled for ten response to the immediate
years. Another way for farmers drought crisis . I am coto find hay for their livestock is to sponsoring SB 419, introduced
call the Ohio " hay hot line" at this week, th at would temporar1-800-686-7246. Governor Celeste ily authorize the State Treasurer
is also investigating a proposal to invest an additional S20million
from an Ohio Congressman to in Agricultural Linked Depos it
allow harvesting along highways loans for farmers suffering the
and on other state and federal adverse effects of the current
lands.
drough~.
Because of the drought, the
In addition, 1 plan to introduce
Ohio Senate added to its agenda
this week a bill that revises grain legislation to offer emergency
handling laws to the advantage of loans to farmers unable to get
farmers. HB 557 protects Farmers Home Administration
farmers when gra in elevators low-interest loans because they
and produce handlers go bank-

do not have federal crop insurance. I am looking at the
poss ibility of establishing a state
guarantee fund that will use $40
million from the Ohio Liquor
Profits Fund .
Other legislative action may
result from a recently created
task force headed by Lieute nant
Governor Leonard and including
representatives from the Ohio
EPA, the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, and the Ohio
Disaster Services Agency. This
int eragency ef!or! Is aimed at
coordinating state-level pro gram s in order to provide as
much assistance as possible to
farm ers. The task force is
looking at possible means of
immediate assistance to farm ers
and at long-term planning so that
we may better manage our water
resources in the future.
Because of the drought is a
national crisis a nd most farm
programs are federal In nature,
the federal government, too,
must respond to the farmers'
needs. A federal task force has
agreed that action should be
ta ken once an assessment of the
damage has been made. Among
the task force recommendations
to the Department of Agriculture
are the following: to restructure
loan payments for farmers: to
immediatedly implement and
expand feed-assistance programs for livestock producers:
to allow harvesting of crops such
as oats planted on idled farm-

land: and to guarantee farmer
income regardless of whether the
farmer had government supported crops.
The Ohio Farmers Union has
also called on the Department of
Agriculture to take steps such as
guaranteeing maximum

de fi ~

ciency payments, immediately
implementing ail disaster program provisions, enacting a
two-year f!]Oratorium on farm
foreclosures, re-enacting provisions of previous disaster farm
programs, not allowing the dairy
support price to drop on January
1, 1989, and making soybeans a
urogram cmp.
U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Lyng met with
state officials from across the
country in Chicago this week.
Governr Celeste, Lt. Governor
Leonard, and Ohio Agriculture
Director Maurer attended the
meeting, where the current situation and possible steps that can
be taken to aid farmers were
discussed.
Any farmer who needs information on relief programs a vallable should contact the county
ASCS office, the local FmHA, the
Farm Bureau, or the Ohio
Department of Agriculture. Also,
please feel free to contact my
office at any time by writing
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Colum bus, Ohio, 43266, or call (614)
466-8156.

That wa s an interes ting half of
an interview Barbara Walters
had with Jane Forida on ABC's
"20 / 20." It was good to hear
Fonda apologize to American
Vietnam vetera ns for some of her
actions during the Vietnam War.
As "20/ 20" documented, in
Hanoi in 1972, Fonda made a
propaganda broadcast calling
American officers "war crim i·
nals ." She also was photo- ·
graphed, grinning. in the
gunner's seat of a North Vietnamese anti-aircraft. gun - the
kind that shot down American
pilots. Later, when returning
POWs said that they had been
tortured, she said "I think
they're lying. "
Talking about these incidents
on the program, Fonda ad dressed Vietnam veterans, ex plain-ing: "1 was tryin g to help
end the kUling, end the war, but
there were times when I was
thoughtless and careless about it
and I'm very sorry that I hurt
them. And I want to apologize to
the in and to their families."
That's a personal apology.
Fine. We believe ln redemption.
Fonda Is a glfted actress, entrepreneur and political activist In
a time of healing, it would be
churlish to remain distressed
about a woman of such talent,
once she has apologized for
grievous past errors.
But the Walters Interview
doesn't do that. Jane Fonda was
more than "t houghl ess" and
"careless." and she wanted
more than " to end the war."
Walters naively asked Fonda,
" ... when so many people protested the war ... why are your
actions today still being criticized? Why Is it stili do painful?"

There is reason for the pain.
Tens of mlllions of Americans
were against the war, just as
there were tens of millions
(includin g this writer) who supported it. But most Americans
who opposed the war were just
that - opposed to American
involvement in the war. When
they demonstrated their placards read "Negotiate now" or
"America out of Vietnam." But
Fonda, and some other radica ls,
had a different idea. Their
followers carried flags of the
National Liberation Front and
chanted "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh:

the NLF is gonna win."
Remember, our adversary
was the North Vietnamese totolitarlan Communist government, ·
supported by arms from the
Soviet Union, and they were
actively trying to kill American
boys.
What did Fonda think about all
that? The "20/ 20" program
barely touches it. Walters cites a
Fonda quote: "As a revolutionary woman I am ready to support
all struggles that are radical."
Walters then accepts without
further comment Fonda's response: "It was preposterou s

that I described myself then as a
revolutionary woman. I didn't
even know what that meant."
It Is hard to avoid a simple
thought: Fonda favored the
victory of the other side. Fonda
owes more than a personal
apology. She owes a polltical
apology for s upporting the
enemy; she owes a national
apology to the South Vietnamese.
Remember , that when the comrades invaded, South VIetnam
was turned into a totalitarian
slum, and fleeing 'boat people'
were 'drowned at sea.

"""' ' -

~- -·~=

t

~

•

•

SHORT FIGHT - Mike Tyson, above, makes short work of
challenger Michael Spinks as the champion retains hls
heavyweight title wllh a first-round knockout Monday night In
Atlantic City. (UPI)

'

Scoreboard ...
Baseball

•

•
•
•••
•

t\MEIUl'AN A."'S0fiATION
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REG.
1199.00

$8900

TWIN, EACH

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Full lea. pc.)l299 ............ '1 39
Queen Iset) 1699 ............ '3 29
King lsetl 1999 ............ '479
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3l00
$6900 1~99.00
TW~~~~ACH

REG.
1179 00
'

PIICI

~~~9.oo Full Siu Ita. pt.I ..... 1119
The Truck Is GoneThe Savings Remalnl

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Full (ea. pc.)S399 ............ '187
Queen lsetl 1999 ............ '477
King lset) 11399 .......... 1677
5115 Year Warrantr

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Su Franci!W.'(I 18, Atlanta!
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Lo~ An~t!l .a, Hou•on D
Montreal 6, St. Lo11M 3 1&lt;4 lnnlnAS
TuesdiQ''Il G111mes
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(M.11ddllx 13-3) , f:Oii p.m .
NI!'W \ 'ork ( FtrMnde&amp; :J.&amp;) at Pltt!'lhu ...,;h (FI,.I!r I-Ii), 7;3l' p.m.
Su DlelD ( M'hMmn H) at Clm.inrati
t·Jack!!Oa 7--41, i : 31 p .m .
San Franci!loee (Dow~,._;) at Atlanta

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Tul'lWI._v'11 Games

lletroil (Tt~~~~~n• 9-.e) ~t N.. w \ 'ork
I Khockon J.!li), 7:30 p. m .
Toronto !Clancy -1·81 a1 Balllmore
ITihh\!·-4), 7:35p.m.
(' lt'VC'I and { BMIIe~

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6-11) a1 Boston
(G~rdnt'r 1· 1), 7:35p.m .
fhlc..:o (Lo n~ '!·3) a1 kan~~~ fh)'
\Andf'non IJ.I). 11: :15 p.m .
TtXM.-'1 { (;.r.nt~~on !HI) Ill Sfo11Uif' tTrool
3-3), Jl: e5 p.m .
Mlnne11ota {BI)'II!l' en f.l) at flllliorN"
I Pl'lr)' 3-S). H: 10 p .m .
Mllwaulel' IAUkUIII :1-2) Ill Oaltll&amp;nd
Ubvl~ ~!1), U1:35 p.m.
WedDe!ldiQ''II Game~
Mllnu ..,e aa Ouklalld
Df'l ralt 11t New York, 111~

Ctnclnlllll - Name• Gt'Or!V !khPfk~l'
mMaft'r ol NMhYille ot thf' .tm~rlcan
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lo lhe 15--d ll(f dl!lll hfH I!AI; ali tv.teil
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Manhnl - 1\d detf RaJ I* Lee In lht'

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Plltlalltlphla - Slped wldf' ~cf'l\'~r
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Hockey
Phllldtlphla - Named Andy MauT&amp;y

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8eftf'f1ll m ... ~er aad Je• Perron hl11
IM"IIUUII.
Hor~ R•lnr
Thonnchtred Rada~~: Ali!IOCiatton of
North t\mf!rlca- Named Chris Sc:herf
a*tllnlllrath'e dlrtctor.
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l'lo'•mtd .lat:lt Krlly prallclent-dlreetor
ollllt! I Mill u.s. ~mplr Fr•tt.-al lo bf'
h e ld In Mlntrapollii.SC. P•l.

Scherger named Nashville manager

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live inside punches. Tyson coun,
tered a poor Spinks right" with a
right of his own . Seconds later a
left hook put Spinks to his knees
- the first time he wa s down in
his 12-year c:areer.
Spinks was up at referee Frank
Capucrino's count of four . Tyson
floored Spinks again with a right
to the chin seconds later. Capuccino counted to 10 and waved the
bout off at I : 31 of the opening
round . ·
"When 1 came Into the ring , 1
looked at his face and saw fear,"
said Tyson, who earned an
estimated $22 million while upping his record to 35-0 with his
31st knockout. "I looked for a
knockout .
" 1 knew It would be over in th e
first round. I'm just a better
fighter than he is. You can be
strong, but the power does n' t
have any value unless you have
the means of delivering lt to the
target."
First Pro Loss
Spinks, whose first loss in 32
professional bouts brought him
$13.5 million, was not ready to

seco nd-g ues s his strategy.
" Ma ybe I was a little anxious ,
but I came to fight ," said Spinks,
who weighed 212 1 - ~. ' 'He hit me
with a good shot early against the
ropes. 1 wanted to take the tim e
to come back for a second s hot. I
thought I'd catch him coming in.
Instead, he ca ught me with a
good shot.
" His body shots didn't bother
me a t all. It 's like f' ve said time
and time again- it doesn't take a
very hard shot to knock somebody down . He hlt me in a spo t
right on th e head where anybody
would fall back ."
The fasres t knockout in heavyweight championship hi story
came in 1900 when James Jeff.
r!es floored Jack Finnigan in 55
seco nd s. Michael Dokes knocked
out Mike Weaver In 1:03 in 1982
afld Tony Burns put away Jem
Roche ln l: 28 ln 1908.
Troubles Mount
Tyson's ou t-o! -the-ring difficu !ties mounted soon after he
married actress Robin Givens in
February . While Givens and her
mother, Ruth Roper , were pur-

chasing a New .Jersey mansion ,
Jacobs died oi leukem ia. Since
the Ma rch death , Tyson ha s seen
King try to wrestle awa y the
champion's loyalties !rom Cay1on1 .Jacobs' long-time partn~r .
Givens suffered a miscarriage
in early June, before Givens'
sis ter told a New York newspaper Tyson has s truck Givens
and stress ca used the the actress
to lose her baby.
Givens reportedly sued Cayton
earlier Monday , hoping to get
financial disclosures from the
manager.

"You guys are quick, " Givens
said after reporters asked her
about ihe supposed suit.
Youngest Champion
Ty son , the you ngest heavyweight champion ever, ca ptured
the World Boxing Councli title
with a second -round knockout of
Trevor Berbick in 1986. He won
the World Boxing Association
and Inter national Boxing Federation belts the next year when he
scored 12-round decis ions over
Bonecrusher Smilh a nd Tony
Tucker .

CINCil'iNATl IUPII - The
Ctnclnnat i Reds announced Monday that veteran minor league
manager George Scherger Is
coming out of retirement to
manage the Reds' Class AAA
farm team In Nashvllle.
Scherger will replace Jack
Lind, who was fired. The Nashvllle Sounds of the American
Association presently have a
38-39 record.
Scherger, who was either a
minor league manager or major
league coach from 1967 through
1986when he retired to Charlotte,
N.C., will be joining the Nashville
team later this week. UntO then,
Jim Hoff, the Reds' minor league
!ield coordinator, wlll serve as
Interim manager.
Scherger mana&amp;'ed the Nashville team in 1979 when the club

was a member of the Class AA
Southern League.

Soto going to LA
HOUSTON IUPI) - The Los
Angeles Dodgers Monday signed
free agent pitcher Mario Solo,
who was released by the Cincinnati Reds last week.
So to, 31, posted a 3-7 record and
4.66 ERA with Cincinnati. The
right-hander, who has experienced arm problems the last
couple of years, will join the
Dodgers ·Jn Houston today, and
will be examined Thursday by
Dr. Frank Jobe in Los Angeles.
Jobe performed shoulder
surgery in August 1986 on Solo, a
native of the Dominican
RepubliC.

WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!)- Ivan Lendl spent nearly
five hours trying to fend off the
c halienge of Mark Woodforde In
a five-set match on the grass
courts of Wimbledon. The
world's No. l tennis player
succeeded with mental
toughness.
Lend! walked away with a 7-5,
6-7 16-8). 6-7 14-7),7-5, I0-8victory
that took four hours and 46
minutes in the fourth round of the
$4 .3 million tournament.
"On grass I don't think you're
supposed to get tired physically," Lend! said. "The rallies
are not that long and I feel in
fairly good shape. It's tough
mentally, because if you make a
couple of mental errors it's hard
to come back.
"I think I can rebound for my
next match, even if it Is difficult
mentaily to play such a long
match . You have to play very
!!ght tennis, you can't afford to
lose two or three points here
because lt Is going to cost you."
Lend! will have a day off to
recover !rom It today, as the
tournament progresses with
three women's quarterfinals and
several matches postponed because of evening rain.
Eight-time champion Martina
Navrat!lova was to finish her
match against Soviet Larisa
Savchenko. The defending champion was trailing 4-2 in the first
set when the match was halted by
rain.
Jimmy Connors and Pat rick
Kuehnen were to play a tiebreaker In their interrupted
match. Connors led 7-5, 7-6 (9-7),
6-6 when they were forced to stop.
American Tim Mayotte and
seventh-seeded Frenchman
Henri Leconte were also halted.
Mayotte led 6-4, 7-6 (7-5) in their
fourth-round match.
The early dusk, rai n, and
marathon Lendl-Woodforde
match meant two-ti me champion
Boris Becker didn'l even appear
on court for his fourth-round
match against American Paul
Annacone. They were to take
court No. I after the Navrat!lovaSavchenko match finished.
In other women's quarter!lnals, Chris Evert, the No. 4 seed,
was to play sixth-seeded Helena
Sukova of Czechoslovakia.
"She's very dangerous," Evert
said ofSukova. "She's a big serve
and voUeyer and she beat me two
or three times last year. Grass is
one of her best surfaces. I think
It's going to come down to me
holding my serve, getting a lot of
first serves in, and to how I
return serve and how I pass."
In the oiher two quarterfinals
scheduled, top seed Steff! Graf
took on unseeded Frenchwoman
Pascale Paradis, and third seed
Pam Shriver played fellow
AmeriCan Zlna Garrison.
Garrison, the 12th seed, upset
!lfth-seeded Argentinian Gabriela Sabatini to reach the
quarters.
The Houston native admitted
she would have a Iough time
against Shriver, despite the fact
that Shriver is suffering from
mononucleosis.
"f think I'm going to have to do
It in the next malch, particularly
because Pam Is de!ln!tely going
to be coming in and attacking
me, "Garrlsonsald . "We'reboth
grass court players and I feel
good on grass and she does too.
We're going to be going at it."
If Becker beatsAnnacone, he'll
line up the quarterfinal match
against defending champion Pat
Cash. The two met at the Sydney
Indoor tournament last autumn,
in a match that Cash won on hls
way to the finaL
"If It happens, it happens ,"
Cash said of a contest with
Becker.

.•
•'

Lend) survives marathon 4th
round match; rain halts play

•

•

FEATURING

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Spinks is no match for Tyson

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 28, 1988

·What Jane Fonda didn't say__Be_n_W_att_en_be_rg

By lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Page- 4-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 28, 1988

Tuesday, June 28, 1988

Royals edge White Sox; NY
drops another to Detroit, 6-3
BY DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Write•·
F r:ank White displa yed skill
Monday nig ht with his ba t a nd
gl ove.
The Kan sa s Cit y second base. m a n led off the eighth inning with
his s ix th home run of th e season
lo break a tie and m ade a key
(i efe nsive play in the ninth as th e
Royal s edged the Chicago While
Sox 2-J.
In the ninth inning with Greg
Walker on fi r st base and Mike
Waod a rd on third, Royal s
c atc her Mike Macfarlan e threw
low as Walker tried Ia steal
seco nd . White char ged , scooped
the ball and threw home to nail
Woodard and e nd the g ame .
' 'The play was probabl y more

EXPLAINS SITUi\TION - Home plate ump;::ir
;:
e !i;.;i&amp;w
;.:~a:s:::::~:J
and two others called out
in the bottom of the first inning as a result of the
Gerry Davis explains the situation to the stadium
public address announcer at Riverfront Stadium
players batting out of order. The Padres sent the
; Monday night as Reds ' coac h Tommy Helms, left ,
R eds to their sixth straight loss with a 9·2 victory .
• and manager Pete Rose , right, look on. On e m a n
( UP I)

Lineup mixup costly for Reds
, CINC II'&lt;'NATl iU Pf ! - A li·
·ne up mix up cost the Cinci nna ti
l:!e ds a possibl e firs t-i nning ral ly,
l;&gt;u t a SPven-run Sa n Di ego seco nd
inn ing cost the Re ds th e ga me as
) hey lost to th e Pa dres 9·2
Mond ay night.
The Reds had two m e n on base
)l nd jus t one out . with Eric Davis
'Com i ng in

wht~ n

P adres m ana ger

:Jack Mc Keo n c alled th e line up
)'nista ke to the a tte ntio n of pla te
um pire Gerrv Davis. who imme(l!a tely halt ed pla y while the
Pnti rc umpiring c r ew sorted ou1
·Ule problem in the opening
inning .
Wha t had ha ppened was tha i
Reds mana ger Pe te Rose had
filled out a ne w card la te after
left fi e lde r Ka l Da niels , listed in
left fi e ld in the orig inal lineu p,
wa s una ble to play becau sE&gt; of a
s tiff nec k. Unforiuna tely fo r
Cinc inna ti, coac h To mm y He lms
co pied the ear lier line up, whi ch
Rose signed without c hecking
a nd took to the pla te before the

ga m e.
" 11 was

j u ~1 il

m ista ke, and

those thin gs ca n ha p pen," sa id
Rose aft e r wards, " but I do n't
th ink II affected the ga m e. The
o nly thing il affected was th a t we
lost Kal Da niels, bu t it had no
bear ing on t he sPve n run s they

scored in the second ."
W ith Barry La r k in on seco nd
a nd Chr is Sabo on fi r st a nd one
out in the fir st , Sa bo was ca lled
ou t as a n improper bat ter and
Dave Co llins , who ha d re pla ced
Da niels in le ft fiel d. a lrea dy had
popped out. So Da vis . next up.
was aut oma tica lly ca lled out and
Sa bo was n ' t credited with a n
a t-bal. Nic k Esasky forc ed Lark in al second to end t he Inning
a fte r Sa bo had le ft a nd La rkin
returned to fi rst.
Marge Schott , own er of the
Reds . questio ned genera l man ·
ager Murra y Cook a bout the
mixup.
"She told me she didn 't und er sta nd it, " said Cook . " and as ked

m e if those things should ha ppen .
r told her they shouldn't happen
after explaining i1 to her."
Tony Gwynn 's three,run hom er highlighted the Padres '
seve n-run second that kayoed
Reds s tarter Jack Arm s trong,
0·2, and gave forme r Red Dennis
Rassmusse n his fourth straight
San Di ego win, e ve ning his
record a t 6- 6 with a six-hit
seven-inning stint.

exc iting,

mo re

emoti onal ,"

Whil e said . "But it alwa ys is
whe n you win like th ai. Tha i was
a good pla y on m y par t and a good
play on Ma c' s part to block the
plate."
Woodard said he had to be
a gres sive with th e game on lhP
line.
·
"It was a good play . He came
a c ross the bag, made a good
throw and got m e. That was a
c hance we had to tak e. That 's
how t he play works, you get your
lea d and when the throws to
second, you la ke off.
"It 's a play where you ca n
really die. But if you make II,
e ve r ybody 's happy ."
Mark Gubicza. 11 -a, s ti-Ptched
hls personal winning strea k to six

gam es. Gubicza a llowed fo ur hit s
befo re Jerry Do n Glea ton r elieved to ea rn h is third save.
Chicago st ar ter Jerry Reuss,
6-4, had given up five hits, fo ur of
th e m s ing les. u nti l Wh ite
s la mmed a l -2 offer ing into the
le ft -fi eld s ta nds. It was his
seco nd hom e run this season off
Reuss.
White sa id ," [ haven' I hit hlm
Ihal well a t all. I' ve just got two
good pitc hes and hit th em bo th
for hom e r uns. ''

Elsewher e, Boston out scored
Cleveland 9-5, Ca lifornia wal loped Mi nnesota I6-7. Seattle
d e fea ted Texas 6-3 , Detroit
downed New York 6·3, Baltimore
s topped To ron to 6-2 and Oakla nd
be a t Milwa ukee 5-4 in 14 Innings .
Red Sox 9, Indians 5
At Bos ton , J ody Reed hit his
firs t m ajor-lea gue hom er to
highlig ht a five- run sixth innin g
a nd ha nd Clevela nd it s thir d
s tra ight d efeat. Dennis La mp,
2-3, worked 2 2-3 score less
Innings in re lief. J o hn F a r rell fe ll
to 8-a.
Angels 16, Twins 7
At Ana hei m , Calif, J a ck How ell and Bob Boone ea ch home red
a nd had four RBI to lead a 17-hil
a ttack. Kirk Mc Cas kill, 4-5, allowed 10 hits, walked one and
s truck out fi ve over fi ve innings.
F r ed Toliver fe ll to 0·1 and
outfielde r Dan Gl add e n hu r led a
pe rfect e ighth inning.
Mariners 6, Rangers 3
At Se at tie, Steve Ba lboni and

postsC'C:lson . get m e int o one. Th at

was fun ."
Mike Dunne. a-6. Ba rry .Io nes
a nd Ji m Gott combined to limit
the 'VIe ts to fi ve hit s. Gooden.
104 , gave up fi ve hits. three
walks a nd st ruck out ju st four
before lea ving for a pinc h hitter
In !he e ighth .
Bellia rd si ng le&lt;! hom&lt;' Si d
Brea m. who had a fifth-inni ng
leadot'f doubl e, to give P itts bu rg h
a 2-1 lea d m inutes be fore a
co nll'ovcrsy over a chang0d
wi ld -pit c h call de layed I he ga m e
for m ar(' th a n 15 minu les .

Aft er th e sing le. Dunn&lt;• hit a
gro und bal l to s hor tstop Kev in
Els trt'. who was bea ten to t he
seco nd-base bag b,1· a s liding
Bel liard . El s ter th en tried to get
Dunne a t firs t, but th e pit c her
bea t th e ll1row . Goode n then
walked Ba iT)' Bonds to load lhP
bases and .Jose Lind ca me to ba t.
Gooden' s fir st pitch to Lind
was a ba iL T he second pit c h
a ppeared to sail over a duc king
Li nd , and Belliard ca m e hom e on
the a p parent wild pitch , while
Dunne a nd Bond s a dva nced. New
YO J' k Ma nager Davey J o hnson
proteste d t he ba ll act ua lly
bou nced off Li nd 's ba t, a nd the
ump ires agreed afte r a le ngth y
disc ussio n.

" I didn ' t go by the replay ,"
Jo hnson sa id. " I t houg ht it hit
some thing. ICa tchen Gar:; rCarte r l didn ' t even brea k for the
ball, so I fi gured he felt it hit
something.
" Whe n I was up ther e wa it ing
fo r som eon(' toea I I ' om et hing, a

fo ul ball. ora hitbalte r . l s nw lhe
rep lay . 1t was obvious. l said ,
·Hol y m ac kera l~ Wh a t 's go ing on
her e . · 1 sa id fl o Runge a t hom e
plate) as k your g uys. It' s a n
impor tant play , a nd som e body
obviousl.v sa w it. "
Be llia rd re turned to t hird ,
s pa r king a long but un s uccessful
a r g ume nt b y Pitts bu rg h Ma nnage r J im Leyla nd , who filed a
p ro tes t wi t h t he Na tiona l
Lea gue.
· 'I would have carr ied through
with the protes t if we hadn't
won ," Ley land sa id." But I think
tha t we sho uld foc u s on th e fact
tha t we pit c hed grea t , we played
a g re a t ga m e and w e won 2-1 in
fron t of a grea t crowd ."
Goode n the n st ruc k out Lind
two pitc hes la ter a nd got Andy
Va n S!yke on a fl y ball out to
cc n ll'r to e nd the inning.
Dunn e gave up just three
sin g les in fi 1-:t innings but
s tr uggled I he e nlirP g ame, walkIng e ight m e n a nd hitting Gary
Ca rter wi th a pit ch. liP loa ded the
bases wllh three s tra ight walks
with one out in th e seventh , bu t
.Jo nes ended the th rea t by getting
Kev in Mc Rey nolds to ground into
a d o uble play.
Go t I cam P in for .Jo nps wi t h two

EMs has three Monday calls

ou t and runner s on th e co rner s in

the e ighth a nd struc k out Lenny
Dykst r a to e nd the inn ing . Got t
pic ked up his ninth save.
T he Mel s look a 1-0 lead in the
fi rst whe n Da v ~ Magad a n
single d hom e Wal ly Bac kman
fr om seco nd .
Van Slyke tied the score l ·l by
doubling home Lind. wh o had
si ng led a nd s tole seco nd .
E lsewhe r p in th e Nationa l
League. Chicago edged Ph ilade lphia 2-l , San Fra ncisco outl as ted
Atla nta 10-9 , San Di ego bl asted
Cinc innati 9-2, Los Angeles
bla nked Ho uston 4·0, a nd Mont ·
rea l down ed St. Louis 6-3 in 14
innings.
ln the Am erica n Lea gue it
wa.: Detro it 6. Ne w York 3;
Baltimore 6, To ronto 2; Bos ton 9.
Clevela nd 5; Ca llfol'ni a 16, Min·
nesola 7; Kansas Cit y 2, Chicago
l ; Seat lie 6 , Texa s 3; and
Oa kland 5, Milwauk ee 4 in 14
Inn ings.

.Jim Pres ley each homered during a five-run sixth inning to
s park the Ma riners . Scott Bankhead, 2-3, surrendered seven hit s
in seven innings, striking out
seven and wa lking two. Mike
.Schooler record ed two outs for
hi s second save. Paul Kilgus fell
to7 -6.

Wolf pleads guilty

Tigers 6, Yankees 3
At New York, Jaek Mortis
sca ttered five hits over 6 2-3
innings and Luis Salazar had
three hit s a nd three RBl as
Det roit de feat ed the Yankees for
th e fou r th consecutive tim e.
Mo r r fs , 7-8, st ruc k out two and
walked four and Mike Henneman
record ed hi s 14th save. John
Ca nd elari a Iell to 8-4 .

Cavs·will focus on
forward in NBA draft
CLE\i ELAND ( UP!) - Las t
week 's acquis ition of veteran
guard Darnell \ial e ntlne mean s
the Cleveland Ca valier s can
. focu s on a forward In Tuesda y's
. NBA draft.
The Ca valiers have the 22nd
pick In the firs t round , meaning
Genera l Manager Way ne Embry
Is lea ning toward the proverbial
s tra tegy of taking the best pla ye r
ava ila bl e.
"As us ual, we've done an

exhau stive amoun t of scoutlng
and we feel we'·re rea dy," says
Embry. "The draft is always
exciting, a challenge.
" Before (obtaining Valentine),
our needs we re a veteran guard
to bac k up Mark Price after we
los t Dell Curry (earlier In the
expans ion draft ). We think we
ha ve such a pta;rer in Darnell
Va le ntine. Now , we can look at
improving our frontcourt. "

Gary Wolf. of the Chester area, pleaded guilty Monday in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to a charge of drug abu se.
after entering Into a plea bargaining agreement with Meigs
Prosecutor Fred Crow III.
The charge against Wolf stemmed from ·an incident Aug. 23
last year, In which he gave a supply of Percodan to Barbara
Boling, without having a prescription.
Boling, having been identlfled by the Department of Human
Services as a potential drug abuser, possessed a restricted
medical card. Prescriptions on her medical card were only to be
filled at a pharmacy In Gallipolis and Wolf had received a listing
from Human Services which showed this status.
However. Wolf testlfied that Boling approached him for an
advance of medication. and said she would pay him back the
Percodan when she filled her regular prescription. Wolf agreed
to, and actually did, give Boling the medication.
A pre-sentence investlgallon and sentencing hearing for Wolf
is to be held in six weeks. At that tlme, the state will recommend
a minimum term of six months in a state Institution and
restitution of $5,000 to the Meigs County Law Enforcement
Trust Account.
Wolf must also appear before the State Pharmaceutical
Board.

•·

Orioles 6, Blue Jays 2
At Baltimore , Jim Tra ber and
Ri ck Schu s m ashed home run s
a nd Cal Rlpken Jr. add ed a
two-run s ing le to help defeat
Toronto. Jeff Ballard, 4-4, scat tered sev en hits over seven
innings to earn the win. Toronto
starter John Cerutti, 4-4, allowed
four runs a nd five hit s in four
Innings.

A's 5, Brewers 4
AI Oakla nd. Calif., Dave He nderson singled home Carney Lan sford in the 14th Inning w ith one
out to lift the Athletics. Dan
Pl esa c, 1-1, · suffered the loss.
Dennis Eckersley, 2-1, record ed
two outs for the victory .

Meigs County
Court News
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Monday, the court
found Brent H. Larkins Is men·
tally incompetent to stand trial
and probably will not be able to
stand trial within the next year .
The court also held, howevl&gt;r,
that Larkins did not meet the
criteria to be lnstltutlonalized.
Larkins was Indicted Oct. 9,
1987, by the Meigs County Grand
Jury alleging felonious sexual
penetration, an aggravated felony of the fourth degree.
The court declined to file an
affidavit for institutionalization
because according to the Ohio
Revised Code It must be used
only as a last resort.
A property dispute between
Harold E . Smith and James A.
Kroegel has been settled, and the
court has adopted their agreement as an order of the court.
The court also gave Dewayne
Stutler five days to pay his note of
$20,333.26 to Bank One of Athens
or It will allow the bank to
foreclose on his property.

:;:·::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::;:;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::;:;.;.:·:·:·:·:·

Am Electric Power ...... .. .... .28%
AT&amp;T .. ..... ....... .. .. ...... .... ..... 26%
Ashland Oil ................. ..... .. 10
Bob Evans ........ .. ........ ..... .. .I6%
Charming Shoppes .. .. .. ........ I3o/s
City Holding Co ....... .... ..... ... 32
Federal Mogui .. ........... .... ... 39Y,
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .. .. .. ........ ..63%
Heck's Inc ..... .. .... ... .. ....... .... ] 'l4
Key Centurion .. .. ..... .. ... .. ....36'!4
Lands' End ...... ........ ........... 27'l4
Limited Inc .. ... .... ...... ..... .... 2311.
Multimedia lnc ......... .......... 69~
Rax Restaurants .. .. .... .. .. .... .. 4\1i
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .. .. .. ...... 11\i,
Shoney's Inc .. ......... .. .......... 26%
Wendy's Intl ........ ........... ... .. 5)'s
Worthington Ind . .. ...... .. ...... 22%

, . ; ) Insurance

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Borrower

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Soullt Central Ohio
Today: Mostly sunny, with a
hi(:h In the mid 80s. Light and
variable winds.
Tonight; Increasing cloud!·
ness, with lows between 60 ano
65. Light southwest winds becom·
ing north. Chance of rain 20
percer.t.
Wednesday: \iarlable cloudiness, wllh high temperatures
between 75 and 80. Chance of rain
20 percent.
Extended Forecaat
Thunday lhrourh Sa&amp;urday
Fair through the period, with
highs In the 70s ano lows In the

50s.

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Announcement

IJ Stale Aulo

RACINE
DEPARTMENT
STORE
3RD STREET
949·2800
RACINE, OHIO

•

Divorces were granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Teresa Carr from
Ronald Carr and to Norma Jean
Snyder from James Snyder.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

STORE HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"

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Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Minnie
Thompson, vinton; Frank Wol·
ford. '\linton; Dale Riffle, Pomeroy; Adam Barton, Pomeroy.
Monday Discharges - None.

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Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
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BARGAI N NIGHT TUES DAY SZ . SO

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reading of an ordinance to add to
the village's codefied laws.
Council also received complaints of motorcycles being
operated reclllessly, especially
in the marina area of the village.
Mayor Hoffman said that anyone
wishing to file a legal complaint
against the motorcyclists may do
so. The mayor also said he would
instruct the police department to
patrol problem areas more often,
and would check Into the posslbil·
ity of quiet zone signs .

.;: :.:·:-:· : ·:·:-:-:-:- :-: -:::::~;·:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·: ·:·:::·:;:;:;:;:: .:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:-: ·:-:,:-:-:·:;:

Granted divorces

OOAN

sees to esca pe regu latio n.
year Issue for Democrats.
" 1 don' t think .Amer ican
The House is expe cted to take
up a separate plant closing workers wa nt to hams tring
American e nterprise," Hatch
amendment this week .
The Senate bill would require said. " Ma ndating notice of
companies with more than 100 la yoffs Is ove rregula tl.o n."
"U nde r these restrictive la ws,
employees tGgive60days' noti ce
of a plant closing In which at leas t it would be fa r more d ifficult for
50 people will lose th e ir jobs . It employers to pha se out falling
would also require companies to operations," he said, m aking
give advance notice of layoffs · American compan i.::s less a ble to
affecting a third of the workers or compete in g lobal market s.
But Sen. Edward Kennedy,
500 people, whichever is smaller.
Firms that fail to give suffl- D-Mas s., chairman of the Senate
clent notlce would be required to Labor Committee, sa id that of
the approxima tely 10 million
give employees back pay and
benefits for ea.c h day short of the men and women who have los t
their jobs since 1980, about half of
60-day notice and to pay affected
communities $500 for each day of them were initially laid Off
violation.
Exemptions would be provided
to cover unforseeable business
circumstances and to protect
faltering companies .
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah,
complained that the bill was
filled with ambiguities and would
have a "chilling" effect on
, SJl JACKSON PIKE - RT ,JS WEST
businesses, causing more comPftone 446-4624
panies to take operations over·
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/SUN &amp;~EO

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~I

Racine Mayor Frank Cleland reports that local firemen hosed
off village streets Monday night in preparation for the
upcoming July 4 celebration. Cleland notes that firemen used
water from the Ohio River to hose down the streets. He extends
his appreciation for the firemen's ingenuity. Racine residents
are still being asked to conserve water at their homes .

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Firemen hose down streets

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WASHINGTO N IUPI) - The D·Ohio, who sponsored the bill,
Se nate rejected Republican ef- called Kassebaum' s proposal
for tS Monday to gut a bill would " gut the bill" by creating a
requiring companies to give large loophole that e mployer s
employees advance notlce of could use · to circ umvent the
plant closings and layoffs - a advance-notlce requirement .
·proposal that could become a key
The proposal, Metzenbaum
election -year issue.
said, " would guarantee from
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, Rnow on there won ' t be any more
Kan ., acting on behalf of mos t · plant closings. Employers will
Senate Republicans, offered an
simply lay off workers bit by bit ,
a mendment to delete the ad- piece by piece, until there are no
vance notice requirement for
plants" left to close.
la yoffs, saying, "I believe there
The Senate voted 64·32 to kill
should be some flexibility and
the aJllendment and continued ·
options open to companies when
debate on the advance notice bill,
they have to make changes. "
which the business commUnity
But Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
opposes and President Reagan
vetoed last month when It was
attached to the trade reform bill.
The House voted 308-113 to
Continued from page 1
overr ld e· th e ve t o b u t th e Se na t e
vote of 61·37 fell five short of the
onmental Protection Agency .
necesary two·thirds vote.
It was also reported that the
Senate Democratic leader Ro·
. village' s anticipated budget for
bert Byrd of West Virginia then
I989 will probably be presented decld!'d to separate the trade and
at the next meeting.
plant-closing bills because the
Council approved the second
advance notlce pmvision is popu reading of an ordinance to
d
ld b
k
1
1 tl
establish
a $3,ooo
control
fund for the
villagelitter
and the
first r;a:r::an:::c:ou:;:;e;;;a;;;;;;e;;;y;;;e;;;ec;;;;;;;;;o;;;n;;;·

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services' reports three
calls Monday ; Pomeroy at 9: 53a .m . ·to Americare -Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Brian Hartman to veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pome roy at 6: 37 p.m. to Hidden Lakes for Nancy
VanMeter to Ve terans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:11
p.m . to the sheriff 's office for Dale Riffle to Veterans Memorial
Hos pital.

Sa n Diego, now just one g a me
be hind the Reds in fifth place in
the National Le ague Wes t,
handed Cincinnati its sixth
s traight loss and fourth In a r ow
on this home stand . The Padres ,
led by Tim Flannery' s three hlls
and three RB!s , will send Ed
Whitson, 7-5, to the mound
tonight against Reds left y Danny
,Jackson, 7-4.
All San Diego starters had one
BOSTON IU PI ) - His fir st
or more hits and sco red at leas t
major-league
hom e r came as
once as the Padres piled up 14
·
suc
h
a
s
urprise
Monday night
hits agains t four Cincinnati
th
a
t
Bos
ton
s
hort
stop
Jody Reed
pitcher s.
didn ' t ha ve time to enjoy the
cus toma ry tr ot a round the bases .
" I was r unning hard. just
trying to make sure I would
reach second base ," explained
Reed. "Then the umpire sa id
touch th em all. All l could say
was 'Oh my God ' ."
H.eed drilled a two-run s hot to
Cubs 2, PhtiUes I
highlight a five-run s ix th inning
AI Chicago, Shawon Duns ton
Monday, powering theRedSox to
hit a two-run to carry the Cubs to
a 9-o victory over Cleveland.
their third s tra ight victory. Rick
" I 'm a little gu y," joked Reed .
Su tcliffe 6·5 yielded nine hit s and
" If I don 't run around there
AI Nipper retired one bat ter fo r
quickly, they might think there's
his fi rs t major-league save.
something up."
Shan e Rawley , 5·8, was the loser.
Boston has now won seven of its
Giants 10, Braves 9
la s t nine games , scoring 73 runs
At Atl a nta , Brett Butle r col·
in thP seven wins . The Re d Sox
lected three RBl and three hil s lo
a lso have a .329 team average in
pace a 19-hit San Francisco
the ir last 13 games .
attack. Allee Hammaker, 4-l ,
" W e can 't really hold them
hurled 4 1·3 innings In relie f for
down, ·• said Cleveland center ,
the victory . Scott Garre lts s truck
field e r Joe Caner. "Righi now
out th e las t two batters fo r his
the Red Sox are just scoring too
TWIN-KILLING- The Indians' Ron Washington jumps out of
man v runs. "
fou r lb save. Atlanta starter Rick
the way of Boston's Jody Reed ~ he fires the ball to first base to
Mahler , 8-7, took th e loss.
Ellis Burks had three RBI and
complete a double play on a grounder by Boston's Wade Boggs in
Padres 9, Reds 2
Mike Gree nwell drove in two
the second inning of Monday night's game In Boston. The Tribe's
At Cincinnati, Tony Gwynn hit
runs to grab the . Am erican
Julio Franco backs up the play. The Red Sox won 9-5. (UPI)
a three- run homer to key a
Le ague lea d with 6I RBI.
seven-run second inning, powe r"We 're swinging t he bat s runs. ll ' s just a m a l ter if we ca n hut·!ing 2 2-3 scoreless innings in
i ng San Diego ove r Cincinna ti.
really good now," said Wade s core e noug h."
relief of starter Dennis "Oil Can"
The big inning followed a mixup
Boggs . "We know we can score
De nnis Lamp gained the win . Boyd .

by the
Redsplainyers
the bat
first
whe
n three
led inning
out of
turn . Dennis Rasmusse n, 6-6,
was the winne r . Jack Armstrong,
0-2, wa s th e loser.
'
Dodgers 4, Astros 0
AI Houston, Mike Sciascia
home red and Shawn Hillegas and
three r elie ver s combined on a
five -hitte r to carry Los Angeles.
Hillegas . 2·0, allowed two hits
ove r six innings. Alejandro Pena
went two innings for his sixth
sa ve. Joaquin Anduj a r, 0·3, was
th e loser.
Expos 6, Cardinals 3, 14 inn
At St . Loui s , Hubi e Br ooks hit a
three- run homer in the 14th
Inning lifting Montreal. Brooks'
homer came off Sieve P eters. 3·3.
J e ff Parrett, 6-2, who had surren·
dered a game tying home run In
the 13th earned the victory. Bob
McClure recorded his second
save.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-6

.--Local news briefs-- .Senate rejects GOP rider to plant closings

Pirates edge Mets 2-1 ; LA
rolls past Houston nine, 4-0
By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
The P itts burgh P irates overca m e a co nt rover sial fifth in ning
a nd gave reas on fo r it s fa ns to
drea m of playo ff action in
Oc t obt&gt;r .
Des pile having a r un nulli fied
in the fifth . the Pirates pos !Pd a
2-l vic torv tha t m oved the m
wit hin a 1·2 ga m es of the
s tr ugg ling first-pl ace New Yo rk
Me ts
"II seem ed like a pos tseas on
ga me. " sa id Pira te third ba sema n Bobby Bonilla . re fe rring to
the inte nsi ty and loud c rowd . "If
t ha i' s wha t it's like in the

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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�By The Bend
In the spotlight

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, June 28, 1988
Page-6

Get ready for summer's home canning season

By Cindy Oliveri
County Extension Agent,
Home Economics and 4-H
Food preservation season is
almost here. Using good eq uip. ment properly is a key to
preparing safe and hig h qua lit y
home canned food s. Check the
equipment you have on ha nd.
then add what you 'll need this
season. Here is a chec k lis t to
help you get ready .
Boiling water bath canner for
processing fruit s . toma t oes.
pickles and preserves. This simple canner, which can only be
used for acid foods , cons is ts of a
large pot, a lid a nd a m et al
basket to hold jars apart a nd off
the canner bottom. Us e any big
metal container with a lid if it is
deep enough to hold 2 to 4 Inches
of water over the jar tops with
space to boll freely.
Pressure canner for all lowacid vegetables, m e at, fish and
poultry. This canner, used properly, provides tPmperatures

hi g her than boiling wate r needed
to destroy th e bacteri a Cios tridium botulinum , which c an grow
in a low a cid m edium in a sealed
j a r and produce a deadly toxin .
With a dial g auge c anner , the
di a l s hows the amount of pres s ure and tempe rature in the
c anne r . You c a n have the gauge
che cked tor accuracy at our
office . we have set We dnesday s
as the day for pressure canner
ga uge te sting but usually can
a ceomodate you if tdhe bea nds and
tomatoes are rea y an you
ha ven' t had your canner gauge
tested yet. Just lii'ing the lid in to
our office . We recommend that
you replace dial gauges which
vary by I pound or more .
With a we ighted g auge canner,
the weighted gauge has no
mechanical parts a nd does not
need to be ch ecked for a c curacy .
This gauge " rocks", releasing
excess pressure. when the pressure reaches 5, 10 or 15 pounds of
pressure. Follow the manufacturer's inst r uctions e xactly to be

sure the prope r p r oce ssing
te mperature is reached .
Use a rack in a pressure canner
to keep j a rs apart - breakage
occ urs if jars are in direct
cont a ct with the canner. Some
press ure canners have rubber
gaskets to help seal the canner.
Replace gaskets which are hardened, shrunken or stretched.
Pressure saucepans or pres·
sure cookers are not recommended for home canning. This
dis a n ewthguid el Inehthtis yeahr anddls
ue 1o e 1ac 1 1 a eac mo e 1
and size of saucepan has a
diffe rent "correction" factor
(the amount of time you must
add to processing to get adequate
processing time) .
Canning jars and lids - use
only jars designed for home
canning; we do not .recommend
commercial, one-way packers'
jars such as mayonnaise jars
which maybreakduringprocessing or fail to hold a seal. Canning
jar sizes range from half-pint to
1-quart with either regular or

Where do kids get violence?
l)ear Ann Landers: This is for the
woman who was distressed because
her son shaved his head. I'd like to
ask. some questions aboutthe boy.
Is he disrespectful? Has he been
arrested for drunk driving? Has he
been kicked out of college for
cheating? Has he made his girl·
friend pregnant? Does he get failing
grades? Does he steal money from
your purse?
If you can answer "no" to ali
these questions, stop complaining.
You have a great k.id . .. RALPH N..
AlTORNEY IN OAKLAND
DEAR RALPH : Your letter
pointed out how much times have
changed. Today, if a kid isn't on
drul!$. doesn't get failing grades,
hasn't been arrested for drunk
driving or kicked out of college for
cheating, made his girlfriend preg·
nant or stolen from your purse he's
"great."
·
No mention is made of achievement Not a word about integrity, a
sense of responsibility, decency,
moralily or service to others. It's
enough that he just stays out of

·
troUble, eh? What a sad commen·
tary on our hme:'. Good Lord,
where are we headmg and who ts
gomg to take us there? .
The next. ieu~r may gtve us a clue
as to what ts atimg us and why.
Dear Ann Landers: in February
you prmted a letter about a toddler
'" Boston who was stabbed 17 tunes
by a S·year·old. You satd the chtld
probably got the tdea from watch·
mg TV.Well , let me suggest another
posstbthty. I shall do my best to
tone my letter dow~ because the
word~ to descnbe thts filth cannot
be pr~nted m ~ famtiy newspaper. .
_Th•s tr~h ts called Garbage Pat!
Ktds. publtshed by Topps Chewmg
Gum Company. These cards arc
obtamed when the k.tds buy gum.
They are traded back and forth and
the tdea ts to get a btg collecrton. .
I shall try to desert be some of the
cards I'm looking at. One is a
colored drawing of a child who has
been stabbed in the back. and his
head has been split open with ,a n ax.
The blood is gushing out. Another
card shows a child who has been

People in the news
By WILLIAM TROTT
United Press International
MAKING BOOK: Jonathan Winters is coming out wllh a
coffee'table book featuring 60 of his paintings. Winters, who was
an art student in his pre-comedy days. has titled the book "Hang
Ups." partially because clothes hangers are a continuing Iheme
in his works .
Another continuing themP is odd titles . s uch as "Two Birds
Watching Doris Day's Cat and Dog Drown," "Ame rican
Hooker. " "Three Bluebirds Full or Marbles . " " Thoughts of a
Hollywood Actor While Drowning in His Pool" and "White Rat
in the Garden . "
The book is due in October ft·om Random House. which
published his bes t-seiling s hort story collection. "Winter
Tales.·' and will someda:&lt; put out his memoirs. Random House' s
David Rosenthal described Winters's work thusly: "Whimsical
but often quite serious. He uses very bold colors . A Jot of the
pictures seem influenced by American Indian art." Eaeh
painting is accompanied by a Winters commentary on it.
MAKING MORE BOOKS: The duchess of York. Sarah
"Fergie" Ferguson. will be able to read her own book to het'
child next year . Fergie. who is pregnant with her first child with
Prince Andrew . will have two books coming from Simon 8r
Schuster in Augusll989 about a helicopter called Budgie.
Fergie, a licensed helicopter pilot like her husband. has been
working on the books with her editor in London for the past few
months. The tomes don't have t Illes yet but they will be aimed at
very young children and will be illustrated by one of Britain's
top children 's book illustrators. A portion of the profits will be
donated to charity.
O'NEAL SON IN TROUBLE: Grlflin O'Neal, actor·son of
Ryan O'Neal. has been issued a summons to appear in
Annapolis . Md ., for failure to meet the conditions of his parole
for his involvement in the 1986 boating accident that killed his
friend Glan-Carlo Coppola. son of director Francis Ford
.Coppola.
O'Neall wa s acquitted of mans laughter in his 1987 trial but
convicted of reckless boating and his lawye r says O'Neal hasn ' t
completed 400 hours of communit y se rvice or paid all of his
court fees as his sente nce requit·ed .
Prosecutors sav no court date has been set for O'Neal and his
lawyer says it would be tough to enforce the summons since
O'Neal lives in Beverly Hills.
MLK Ill CALLS FOR MORE BLACK VOTE: Martin Luther
King lll says he is appalled that nearly 4 million blacks in
California are not registered to vote. The son of civil rights
martyr Martin Luther King Jr. made a weekend swing through
California to pr.omote a statewide voter regl~tration drive by
the Center for Participation In Democracy .
"Get on the freedom train." King said Sunday at the Bethel
African Methodi s t Episcopal Church in San Francisco. "Look
how far we've comP from where we started."
King, 30. the e ldest son. Is a Fulton County commissioner in
Atlanta .
GLIMPSES: Debbie Gibson, the teen queen of pop radio, Is
growing. Gibson. whose "Foolish Beat" is No. 2 on the singles
chart, graduated Sunday from CalhOun High School in the New
York suburb of Merrick. She starts a nationwide tour In Boston
Friday .. . Davy Jones of the Monkees and his wife, Anita, have
announced the Sunday birth of their second daughter, Annabel!
Chartotle Jones. Hampshire. England . The baby checked In at 8
pounds , 7 ounces ... Tonsllltis and hay fever forced American
soprano Grace Bumbry to drop out of a performance of "Aida"
tn front of 15,000 spectators in London but Bulgarian soprano
Ghena Dtmttrova came out of the audience to replace her.
Olmltrova had been scheduled to sing Monday night's
performance of the biggest ever opera produced In Britain.
Bumbry said she hoped to recover In time to sing Tuesday night
tn a charity performance before Prince Charles and Princess
Diana.
·

(

wide mouths. No safe heat
process times have been developed for half-gallon (2-quart)
canning jars. Do not used
chipped or cracked home canning jars.
Two-piece lids consist of a flat
metal disc with a sealing compound around the outer edge and
a separate metal screw · band.
The lid Is used only once; the
screw band may be r!"used if It is
clean, unrusted and unbent.
Pf repare.lldds !ollo_w ing thhei mh anu acturer s 1rec1tons w c w 11 1
vary by brand.
Porcelain-lined zinc lids and
wire-bail with glass lids, once
used to seal jars, are on the "do
not use" list. These closures
require rubber rings which could
be used only once. Replacement
r 1 n g s are so Ion g e r
manufactured.
Old glass jars, particularly if
"blue" , may be too brittle to
withstand heat processing. Some
old jars are collector items and,
if they have lids, can be used to

wE INVITE

You ' 0 A

REVIVAL

s tore some food ite m s s uch as
pasta or rice but they ca n' t be
AT THE
used for hom e c annin g.
Other ut ens ils needed for hom e
canning include: ja r lifter, funnel, a pla s tic knif~ or spatul a,
c le an cloths, c l ea n towe ls.
at County .Rd. 31
knives , cutting bo a rd , tim er or
Bold Knob &amp; Stiversville Rood
clock .
PORTLAND, OHIO
Cannin g equipment need not be
Rev. Rick Weaver
new but be wary of old , used
EVANGELIST
equipm ent . Re placement parts .
such a s gauges and gaskets are
June 27th-July 3rd
no longerCahv a iikabl e for sofm e o Jd
7:00 p.M.
canners .
ec canners or p 1!ling and hairline c racks whic h
Special Singers Nightly
make the canner uns afe to usC'.
Rev. Roger Wilford
Antique canners are potentially
PASTOR
unsafe and should not b~e~u~s~e~d~.~~============

EEDOM
fR
GOSPEL MISSION

Tuesday, June 28, 19&amp;8
Public Notice

than 2 1 3rds ot the ap praised value.
Howard E. Frank.
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio
Dennis Reimer Co., L.P .A .
Bv: Dennis Reimet".
Attornev for Plaintiff
Defendants 9806 Ravenna Road,

SHERIFF,:S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NO. 87-CV -328
DUVAL FEDERAL
SAVINGS and LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Plaintiff
- VS .JERRY A. MILAM . el al

of Sale to me directed from
said Court in the above en·
titled action. I will expose to

CHESHIRE- Cheshire Chapter OES meets Tuesday, 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- Revival services will be held at the Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church In
Middleport through July 9, 7:30

front steps of the Meigs
County Court House on Friday. July 29. 1988, 01
10:00 A .M . of said dav. the
following described real estate:
Situated in the Village of
Middleport,
Countv
of
Meigs, State of Ohio. and
bounded and described as
follows, to wit :
The following real estate
situated in the Village of
Middleport,
County
of
Meigs, and State of Ohio.
and being Lot No. 298,
Lower Pomeroy, now incorporated into the Village of
Middleport, Ohio.
Current Owners Name:
Jerry M. Milam and Elizabeth E. Milam aka Emma
Elizabeth Milam .
Address: 81 1 High Street,
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Appraised Value,
be

sold ·for less

Ann
Landers

County, Ohio, 45771 .

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K . Nesselroad, Clerk

16)14, 21, 28 3tc

~r:========i1

Meigs County Probate Court,

Case No. 25840, Harvey Er·

P.O, Box 76, Rutland, Ohio
45775.

We Buy and ·sell Used
Cars

Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad. Clerk
161 14. 21 , 28 3tc

FULL AUTO

Robert E . Buck,

Meigs
County
Probate
Court, Case No. 19744, Jen·
nie I. Potts Bass. Snowball
Hill, Syracuse. Ohio, 45779,
was appointed Administra·
tor, WWA, of the estate of
William C . Potts, deceased.
late of Snowball Hill, Syracuse. Ohio, 45779.
Robert E. Suck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk

Public Notice

Also Trus~niuion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

OWNER, GREG B. ROUSH

992-2156

.,,.,_,
,,..

dinner.
Cost of highway rlp·of!s Is
going up: SACRAMENTO, Calif.
iUPI) - Highway robbery is
costing California a bundle.
Thieves ripping off aluminum
highway signs and guardrails
and selling them for scrap and
have ripped the state off to the
tune of $120,000 so far this year,
state officials said Monday.
"Currently, because the price
of aluminum has risen, we are
having increasing numbers of
thefts of aluminum guardrails,
bridge railing and signs," Robert
Best. director of the California
Department of Transportation,
said Monday.
And officials have set up a
special emergency number to
report such thefts.
State highway workers can be
Identified by bright orange vests,
Best said. Anyone else seen
grabbing a guardrail or snatching a sign shOuld be reported to
authorities. he said.
Meanwhile, the department is
considering a number of theft prevention measures, Including
using fiberglass signs.

each evening.

INSULATION
•FREE ESTIMATES•
TIRED OF PAINT! NG
Cover your home with
beautiful MASTIC or CERTAINTEED vinyl siding.
Best Prices Anywhere!
Roofing and Seamless
Gutters
Phone 992-2772
6-13- I mo.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
B. 7 Financing On
Yardman
Service On Ail Makes
We Honor MC/ Diic I Visa
4-18·'88 !In

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

CARTER'S

324 E. Main St.
Pomwoy
Behind (itv Hall

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp;Toy Store
Collectors Items, Clowns
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Bom
Open 10 AM . to 4 P.M.

992-6282

Mon. thru Fri. or by
Appointment

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Call (614) 992-7204
Wlloi"al' &amp; .. toil

I -28-'88-tfn

5-19-'88-1 mo.

BINGO

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

$14

Wilh 4 Qls. Oil
9$
Brakes. Muffler, Air
Condition Checked
and Refill,
Minor Repairs.

"At Reasonable Prices"

949-2801
Res. 949-2860

PH.

NEWELL'S

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VHS TAPE
Ltf Ul CCHIW,rt thou okt Mowlt1

VHS.
CAlL AMY CARTEl

&amp; Slidt( ovtf lo oaty

or 101'1 ELECTRONICS
444-7390

Georgia-Pacific's Vinyl Siding has the
same beautiful appearances as traditional wood clapboard. With Its subtle
woodgrain texture. you can see for yourself that Vinyl Siding readily compliments a
broad range of architectural styles and
treatments .

18 yrs.

Church-Home-School
Free Gift..."Water Me
Please" batt. operated
House Plant Alert light.
with tuning.

SSO PAGE STREET

MIDD11PORT, OHIO
OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

11/l/'U-ttc

11

PIANO TUNING

GEARY
BODY SHOP
6·2·88· 1 mo.

.
,
02
~

AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN

.

SHAMPOO, HAIRCUT
AND STYLE

SlOOO
ONlY

STOCKED IN DOUBLE 4 &amp; DOUBLE 5

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

6· 10· 88-1 mo.

Want to Buv Used Mobile
Homes - Call 614-.4 46-0175,.

GJiltl
CB!Ih paid for antique or new
quilts. Appliq~ . pieced, anv
condition. Call614-992-5657 .
Wanted : old feather trees for
garden club program. Catt 614-992-2219.

Employment
ServtGes

We Service All Makes
1/22188/Un

and re·
core •• ~: ••,... and
heater cores. ~e can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. ~e also
repair Gas Tanks.

11
EXCAVATING
•Dozer 81 Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service , _
•Junk Yard Busine11

WAN! 10 IUY WRECKED 01

JUNK CUI 01 TRUCKS

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE

For any of thtststnices call

Learn repair and maintenance of
prap and jet aircreft with e~~:cel ·
I ent ael ary and b&amp;nefita. No
e.~tperience need&amp;d. Must be high

614-742-2617
Betwoan 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or ltawt Mtssaao

2 -1!7'88-tfn

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
AI C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
RePairs

BOGGS
SALES

&amp;

SERVICE

U.S. RT. SO EAST
GUYS VILlE ' OHIO

"DOC" VAUGHN

614·662·3121

5· 25-1 mo. pd.

John Deere,
Farm fquipment

New HoUand, Bush Hog
Dealer

ftrM EquipMent

RUTLAND, OH.

Pertt &amp; Strvl~t
1· 3· 86 tfc

L..----....:o.::...:::.::.::..a.l

CUSTOM
,
INTERIOR DESIGN

PH. 742-2463

Avonneeds71adlestosei1Awn.

Cell 614-448-3358.

we are

work

looking for someone to

pert-time in our children's

clothing

AtltM1

614-594-3310

6121 / 11 / ln~a .

Announ ceme nl s
3 Announcements

evenings and
weakenda. H you ere a mature
indtvKltal who has hlld 18181

oxporionce or procticel expo·

rienoe (with your children or
grandehildrenl and ••• ;nterMted in worldng part-dme.
pl .... send resume to· Friends
Foraver. 400 2nd Aw. Gallipo·
lis, OH 46631

614-448-4431 .

Bartender and / or Barmaid
needed . Call 814-446-4758.

NURSING

HOME

ADMINISTRATOR
Poshkm available for a licenll!ld
long term admlnistnltor for the
Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant eree,
Send mume to:C.re Hav~ of
Pt. Pl. . .nt, W.Va. 2!550. In
confidence.
Baby.nter ~nted for 2 • .,.u
children in town . 1 d., during
\Wak 6 1 dllf on weekend. Call

814-448-3430.

Dabble Shop. Going out of
bu1inep •I e. June . Juty 2. 50 715 percent off.

4

Giveaway

Kit tent 10 gMt.way. Utter bo•

Mlnod. Call814-441-9319.

2 f-lo. Booton Beogto pupo.
Smart&amp; friencfv. Cll1414-371213t.
7 active khttns to good hOITIIS.
Whtte, bl.c:lr., orange. litter

lrolnod. Call814-288-1793.
I

LlboretOf'V Superviso.- for modllrn fulty equipped physic.n's
otfloa labo.. tory. QuallflCMionl
•oeeo•rv: MT tASCP). "PI"
ra.rt01 whh CAP inapettlon
helpful. Well weraed ~ Instrument openUon Md trouble
ahootlne. CompMent In 1111 lib
•••· Oood benaftta. Welle·
'"ds off. Apptyln pm~onto: The
Miette.- Pl... 203 Jack1on
Plk._ Ollllpolla, between 9 AM·

4,3QPM.

AppiiCitlorw will be aco111t•d

Jutv Ft,.t ttotl flru Tonth I10th!

tor

~k:e

Plun'bera and

Ploolttters. Aopllootlo,. ._be
'lc*ed up • the Ohio Stete
Emcktyment Offioa or at 2134
Qol to lt.. Port..,outh. Ohio.
mu11 be 18-25 y~~.-s
of age. EOE

..,..cant

Aef•enQft avellabfo. Call 814387-7598.
Will care for elderly In their ...,
horne. call 614-446-2427.

Pl-ivtte home cwetnd botrd for
Santora lf'ld hlf'ldicapped. Elem
Home 814--992-6873.
Y•d c•e, bruth cutting, light
h~l ing, some tr" trimmingS
and ntmOYtl. Call BMI Stack.
614-992-2269 evenings.

Will do hou• cleaning. yard
work and run errands. 304--675- ..,
2765 Of 876-4568,

Job hunting1 Need a skill1 We
train people for jobs •• Auto
Mechani~. Carpentera, Eteetriciana. Food Service. Workers,
ElectrotliCI Technicians. lndUstriel Meintenance Workers,
Nursing Assiata"ts end Order·
lies. l\4achlnistl, and W8iders.
Register now for etasses beginning July 5th. Call Tri-County
Vocational Aduh Center at 814-753-3511 ex:t. , 4. A variety of
funding sources to pay for
training are svaileble for those
Aligible.
Are you a singte parent} If you
are a single ptlrent or your
apouse Is totally disabled and
you want to devfttop job siOIIs in
order to be gainfully employed,
you mey be ell~ible for money to
pey for training in one of our 13
futl -time program1 at 1he Adutt
Education CGnter-.Tri-County
Vocational School. Call 614753-3611 &amp;ICl, 14 for lnformalion. Summer quartM begina
July 5th.
Government joba. 816,040 $59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
area. SOS-687-6000· Ext. R·
9806 for current Fedet111list.
Babfsitter nfH!ded in my hom~t
for 2 children aged 3yearsand 5
months. 5 days a week. approlt.
10hourae day. Starting October
3. Experience end reference
required. 614-992-3377 daya
and 614-992-653g ev~mlnga .
Company need1 persons specializing in housing industry. Car·
penters. roofers.a.ir conditioning
speciatist!l , eleetriciena.
plumbers, carpet layers . Call
304-863--8321 bet\1\Gen 12:00
and 7 :00. ask for Mary Beth.
AVON - All eraaa. Call Marilyn
WeiN8r 304-882-2845.
LPN, Pleasant Valley Nur1ing
Care Center seeking licenll!ld
lPNs for pan time employment.
medical end dental insul'lnce
available. If inter&amp;~ted ~II Kathy
Thornton. Director of Nursing.

Witl work for t2.00 I hour. Odd
jobs. Call 814·258-1398.

Financtal
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH -' '
lNG CO . recommends that vou
do busin•s with people you ,
know, and NOT to ..-.d money
throogh the mail unU vou have· •
,·
inveatlglltld the offering.

Ideal Buitding- Corner lot for Sale
or Lease in Gallipolla. Ohio. Call
614-245-5559 Ot 446-8Q30.
MANUFACTURED HOME,
SALES -Join one of Ohio's most
respected corporetlons as we
e.ltpand inro your area. A corn- ·
pensation package second to
none and In house finar:tcing of
our prorl.Jct. Sale~~ training provided. Strong math IPtltuda and
organizational skilla Mceasery. ' ·
Tell ua in brief repty your career ...
goals. Sal• Profenior-.1. P . o . ~
Bo11 392. Circi&amp;Yiella. Ohio
43113, AHn: RD .
Concession Trailar with pop
diapenser. Sno Kone machine, 2
basket gas deep fryer, 3 sinks.
freah end waste wat8f holding
tanks. Priced for quick sale.
814-992-7503 or 614-985·
3857.

•·
,.
•'
..

Large billboe·rd behind Silver
Bridge Plaze. 8150.00 rent ~

month or wMI tall for $2.000.00.
304-875-6999 or 614-992-,. •

7666.

======
·"•..
Real Eslate
;:;-.;--;-;-:'"""'.,..,-.--;=::--' •

31

Homes for Sale

1304)675-5236. EOE·AAE.

-..,..----,..-,-,---

Babysitter needed 1or care of 1
year old boy in our nice Point
Pleasant home. downtown area.
4-5 dava week;must hMte references and own transpo. and be
mature, dependable&amp; en ergatic.
Lt. houtekeeping req'd .
No
sitters with other kids or oute:ide
our home please. Salary-benefit
negotiable. Call 304·67S-3999
diVS. 675-8037 eve.

1985 Marlene Modular Home.,
60x28. All elec.. C"- 3 BR .. 2
baths, great room, dining room .· .. ·
To many extl8• to tist. Must ·~
to eppreciate. 145,000. Call ,

Ill OW IRING
Government Jobs. skilled and
unskilled in your area. For
current lilt of jobs end apptic•
tion call (6021995-0682 ext.
2508.

CRUISE SHIPS
Now hirtngl SummerandCereer
opportunities. E.ltcellent pay.
World Travel! Cell (refundflblel

1·518-459 ·3734 "'' P-2284
Secretary Reciptionist pO!Iition
avaHable. competrtMt benefits,
aome bookkeeping ex parienCA
required, send resume to Care
Haven of Point Pleasarn. Rt . 1
8o.1t 328. Pt. Ptt .. WVa. 25650.
Wanted baby artier in our home.
must be 16 to 18 yn. old,
e.lt perienced. 304-676-7534.
CHARGE NURSE
Plauent Valley Nursing Care
Center. 100 bed alcill«i nursing
facility located inPointPieaant,
wva ia seeking a registered
nurse to assume the duti11 of
full·rime charge nurse. This
potition is OPf!in immedilrtely ,
call Kathy Thornton at 304--675-5236. Pleasan1 Valley Nursing
Cere Center is an eqtMtl opportunity empiOV"r and affirmrtive
action employer.

12

Situations
Wanted
T&amp;T

Portable Welding. Catt after 5

PM. 614-843-0058.

13

lnsur ance

814-448-1408.

Rio Grand&amp;-Rerich atyle. 3 BR .•~ ·'
2 blths. femlly room . dining. ·••
room. eet-in kitchen, Ca. fir ..... . ,
place. Assumebte. Call 814- ·. '
245-9646,
I "&lt;

2 story home-Fiatwoodl are. ·
Pomeroy . New kitchen , b•
throom. ceilings S. c•peting.

Call 614-448-2359.

Tuppera Plaina-3 BA .. eM-in kitchen , large living room, fu!r '
b•ement. garege, all electric, · · ,
central air. Cell .-fter 5 PM.
614-446-7496.

•..

For Sale or Rent -3 IR . hou•
wkh anach«i g•age. CA. No
pats. Oep. &amp; rrlf. ntquired. 39
O.itllcothe Rd . Call 614-44~

11 _.

2583. 9-6 daltv.

ho,., file, health.

••
~ .~
~

;:

••

Government Hom .. from S 1, (u
repair) . Delinquent •• propeny.
Aepouesslons. ,C all 805-6876000 En. G H-9805 for current
repo list.
Hou•. 1877 lincoln Heights.
Pbmaroy. Call after 4 :30 weekd..,s, anytime weftends; 614--

'• •

::
,. .;.
•~
••

..
,:
..

•

2' or 3

•
": !

neble offer refused. Phone 614--

••

985-4103.

108 State St., Pomeroy.

bedrooms, c.-peted. No .. eao-

992-3725.

5 rooms, balh. Large back porch.
181C14. pantv enclosed. Re-duced for quick Mle. make offer.

Call614-992-7244.

Hou• for aele in Langsville.
Ohio. Out of high water. asking
S28.000. Call814-742-2745.
Rutland. 3 ber*-oom. central air,
vinyl siding, insulated, full
carpet. patio. gnge. wo.-k
room , feneed yard, garden
sp~ce. 832,000. 2 bedroom.
c~~rpon. nice houaa. 115,000.
614-992·6277

3 bedroom home. 9""9'· een-

Call us for your mobile home
insurance : Miller lnsuren ce,
304-882 -2145 . Also: auto.

'

1

tral air, c•peted, fenced beck-

yard, finished basement, out
bu tiding . Located CMter of Point
Ph~•sant . Priced right or make
offer. 304-675-6633.

l:=========~::::::::::::::::=.

store

LPN'S· Eern 814,000 for new
tlflldl. Over 20 paid dov• off tho
first year. Excellent heatth insu·
ranee ..,ail able. tuition reimbur·
tement. many other benllllffts.
Apply at Pinecr•t Care Center.
1565 Jackson Pike.

LADY RACHEL'S
PALM lEADING
302 WMI Union St.

Hsir Stylists . A.cro11 The Street
styting salon is seeking one
additional stytist who is looking
for more than ;ust another job.
Call Terri at 6l4--446-9510 1or
details.

own hours. Now hi•ing Oomon-

11111tora. Call Betty Carpenter,
614-245-5363Todayl

Business.
If You A•• Unllappy and
DIIHI't Know Which Way To

I will riot be rnpontible tor any
Listenina
debts eontfacted for by anyone
Dependable Hearinc Aid Salas &amp;Sen1!c' o1her than myltlt. Robert A.
Marelnko.
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

or
Veterans Memorial Hosoital
Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy,

Chrlstma• Around the World
decorations until Dec. Fun Jab!
Party piM. Free $300 kit. No
collection or delivttrvl Work your

P.-t-lime babyait:ter needed in
my home for 3 children. Call

ssoo OFF With Tills Ad

Help Wanted on D•irv Farrf',
Milking a.1tparlence hetprul. Call
after 8 PM-814--494--2080.

Monday·Thurtdev. 1-800·282t 3S4.

Tells Past. Present and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love, Marriage and

Turn Co111eln For Adwia
- One Vitit WHI Conwillct
You Thwelt A letter Way.

446·9878.

school grad. Call 9 AM-2 PM.

Bored! Broke! And Blue! Salt

Cenified Licensed Shop

%: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Glllipolls, Ohio 45631

Tour Guides· Male 8! fern~~! e. Our
top people earn S800-S1200
per 'N8ek. Salary to start plus
commi11ion. Pleasant working
condhions. A really fun place to
work. Frlandty. neat &amp; dependable ere the requirements. Call
1-614-286--6422. ask for Sue.

-fREE ElTIMAIEI-

SYRACUSE. OHIO

~ Licensed Clinical Audioloaist

Help Wanted

TRIPLE P

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Most Wells Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install 8t Service All Types
Water Pumps
6-1-'88-1 mo.

,.

992-3476.

985-3561

Call Collect (304) 372-4331

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DeWITI, BROKER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERIES CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY SALES AGENT

BuyinQ daily gold, silver coins.
rings, Jewelry, sterling Ware. old
coins. large currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614-

SERVICE

! LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

,.

1614) 992-65SO
RESIDENCE PHONE
1614) 992 -7754

lEN'S APPLIANCE

I. H. Beegle, Owntr
Rt. I, lo1 74-A, Riply, W.Va. 25271

Hours: Monday·Frlday, 8 a.m.·S p.m.; Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

WV

949-2263
or 949-2168

B&amp;C DRILLING CO.

C!J

Want to buy: Used furniture and
antiquea. Will buy entire house·
hotd furniahing. Marlin Wede-meyer. 614-245-5152.

Buying furniture end eppiiances
by the piece or by the lot. Fair
prices. Call 614-446-3158.

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

CALL

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY COMPANY

Complete households of furniture &amp; antiques . Also wood &amp;
coal hftatera. Swain'a Furnrture
&amp; Auction, Third Be Olive.
614-446-3159 .
"

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IP"'~- BUIIN!IS PHONE

WANTED

NEED WATER

Real Estate General

Point

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

5/ 31 / 1 mo.

FUll TIME POSITION FOR REGISTERED MEDICAl
LABORATORY TECHNICIAN ON ROTATING SHIFTS
Requires independent worker with capabilities in all areas of clinical laboratory. Excellent fringe benefits
Please Contact:
Cecelia G. Lisle
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

2282.

lt?Ri tln

CALL 992-6756

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

TOP CASH peid for '83 model
and newer used cars. Smith
Bui~ - Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gt~tlipolis . Call 614-446-

Carry Fiahing Suppliea

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We

NIASE Certified Mechanic

614-992-3718

We pay cash for late model dean
used cars .
Jim Mink Chev .·Oids Inc.
Bill GeneJohnaon

Junk Cars wrth or without
motors. Catl Larry lively-614388-9303.

ROOFING

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN,

E.O.E.

312 6th Street

168 North Second
Middl•port, Ohio 4S760

Authorized

614-992-2104

Phone 675-1160

j-7
-=t-

" I mo Pll

NORTHLAND DODGE

WHITE

~

Middt~~orl

·fifty-Year limited warranty.
Georgia-Pacific Vinyl Siding is so tough, it's
backed by a fifty-year limited warranty.
Forget all about blistering, cracking, pitting, corrosion. flaking and chipping, Those
days are over. But your investment is protected far into the future.

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

Howard L. Writesel

'

C,F. SCOTT

Are you good and looking for a way
to make more money?
IF SO, WE HAVE THE PAY PLAN FOR
YOU.
Our Technicians Make Up To
$16.00 Per Houri
DO YOU?
If Interested, Come In and Talk To Jim
Thompson or Bill Gayheart

1889 MOISE lOAD COlUMBUS OHIO 43229
WEDNESDAY
WILKES\&gt;ILLE - The Rev .
O'Dell Manley will be speaking
and Henry and Hester Eblin will
be singing at Mt. Olive Church
beginning Wednesday at 7 p.m.
The church Is located off SR 124,
back of Wilkesville. The public is
Invited to attend. Charles Jones,
pastor.

I

·

~

992·71111 or
992-7583

l-30-1711n

Offer good 6 / 1·7 1 30.

Help Wanted

1''''1'

DUSKY ST., 5YilUUSE

ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Briggs .&amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen
VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.
992·6611

992·2196

5-25-1 mo.

Wantell To Buy

614-446-3672

•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING 8o APT PROJECTS

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3350

9

•VINYL SIDING llo ROOFING

PAT HILL FORD

SUNOCO

Day "r Nighl
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16-86-Un

The look of
authentic wood siding.

BAT HS
•E)CTENSIVE REMODELING

LUBE-OIL-FILTER

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

or

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

•
-•CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp;

SMALL

J&amp;L

949-2969

6-17-tfc

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ric~ Pearaon Auctioneer. licensed Ohio and Weat Virginia.
Eatata, antique. ft~tm. liquidation sale~, 304-773-5785.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Dealer For
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway BetNeen Rt. 7&amp; Bashan

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

8

3-11-ttn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

R1. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Lost and Found

LOST Beegle. blk brown white,
fii'Jm.ate, approiC 10 yrs old,
belortged to the late Trov Southall, lest 10en TNT area, ple8:se
cell Chrisbl IVIcOaniltl 304-67S30H or 875-4380 .

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

~1\I.F

Roger Hysell
Garage

Half OobetrTIIIIn puppies, 304675-4312.

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

at which time all bids will be
opened at regular meeting .
J oyc e White. Cte1k

10-8-tfc

3869.

6

Middleton Eltatll will bll!l taking
applications for Hab. Spec. .
Tues.• Wed .. and Thurs. Interviews wilt be held on July &amp;th,
For more information catt 614-

N

Sears upright traezer. 304-675-

Now H-•• Built
"Frea Estimates"

7:00P.M. on July 5, 1988,

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

614-742·

4 mixed breed puppies, 9 ~eka
old, 304--675-6141 .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

The
Letart
Township
Trustees will accept sealed
bids on a Climatrol 23,000
BTU air conditioner until

992-.3410

Bedsr-rings . Call
232B:

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PUBLIC NOTICE

PH.

2 male. 2 female yellow tiger
kittens. 8 wks. old. Call 614367-0108.

l-26 -'81· 1 mo.

GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

!6) 21, 28; 171 5. 3tc

Part Poodle, 6 mos. old, Mala.
Call 614-446-3398.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
614"698-7157

THANA

Call 814-448-3210.

8276.

AlBANY AREA

OF CASH
IS BETTER

On Mev 31, 1988. in the

Witt do babvthting in my home.

Puppy to give llfoN8y to good
homo. Ve&lt;v b&lt;jght &amp; friendly.

10 wkl t old. Call 814-38B·

JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK

18 Wanted to Do

Giveaway

malotigO&lt;, 1 do . brown fomato.

Ohio, 45775. was appointed
E"""utor of the estate of Ruth

0 . Ertewine. deceBBed, late of

4

2 krt1ena to give rmav-1 gray

TUN£.UPS, BRAKE

lewine.. P .O . 8o.1t 76 , Rutland,

AHANDFUL

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

stores, candy stores or , novelty
shops where these cards are offered.
Tell the manager why you won't be
coming in anymore.
If your child has these cards. take
them away and explain why they
are bad to have. Make it plain that
hurting and killing people is not
funny and that nobody should joke
about violence and murder.

WED~ESDAY &amp; SATURDAY

APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On· June
8, 1988. in tho

Business Services

W•••••••v
ad Satur.ay
SPECIAL
GOOD

NOTICE OF

On June 8, 1988, in the
Meigs County Probate Court.
Case No. 25871, Maxine
Philson, Box 6. Racine. Meigs
County, Ohio 45n1 , was ap-pointed Executrix of the state
of Ben H. Philson, deceased.
late of Box 6, Racine, Meigs

16!14. 21, 28, 3tc

Community calendar
TUESDAY
VINTON - American Legion
pos t 161 meets Tuesday. 7:30
p.m . at the Legion Hall.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

sale at public auction on the

$57,500.00.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash.

_Quirks in the news __
Hnnt on lor elnslve Beat les
photo: SEATTLE I UP])
Listen up, Beatles' fans.
The owners of the Edgewater
Hotel are offering a free wee'
kend's lodgings for an elusive
photograph of John Lennon and
Paul McCartney fishing from
their mom during the Beatles
1964 stay in Seattle.
Richard Young. managing dl·
rector of the hotel that is
undergoing a
massive.
multimillion -dollar renovation,
said Monday he is not even sure
the photo exists. or If It ever was
really taken.
But employees at the hot£•1.
which overlooks Elliott Bay,
have long talked about seel11g the
photograph , which Young wants
to display to remind guests of the
Edgewater's colorful past.
"Not only will we display the
photograph In the lobby, we
would like to permanently display the phottograph in the suite
where the group st.ayed back In
1964," Young said.
Young said anyone who can
furnish a copy of the photograph
will be rewarded with a weekend
for two in the "Be a ties Suite" and

Twinsburg. OH . 44087

(216) 425 -4201
In pursuance of an Order 161 28; (7) 5. 12. 3t,

Cannot

run over and crushed by a car. Still
another pictures a little boy with 14
spikes going through his body.
The most disturbing card pictures
a child grinning after he shoots a
little girl. The dead child is lying on
the ground with three bullet holes
in her body. The boy is laughing.
Our 8-ycar·oid neighbor boy has
a Garbage Pail pos1er that shows an
infant stabbed with knives, hypodermic needles and swords. The
infant is wearing a target. The
caption on the poster says. "Have a
nice day."
At a time when so many children
arc being abused we do not need
this kind of trash that pictures
children as garbage. Please .usc the
power of vour column to alert
parents to this monstrous thing ...
ELLEN H. IN HOUSTON, TEX.
DEAR ELLEN· I wrote about
. . ·
Garbage Pad Ktds a few y':"rs ago
and was under the tmpresston that
we had gotten rid of them. Appar·
ently we haven't
I urge ail parents to refuse to
patronize drugstores, grocery

iP. 0 . 8ox 671)

Business
Serv· •. ces

Public

Public Notice

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

The Daily Sentinel Pllllte-7

Ohio

11 •

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'(ard Sales

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...... ·Gallipolis ... · .. ··
&amp; Vicinity
-.--.-- -·--- ... -------.. --.- ... ---Michigan Sale-50 Neal-Fishing
gear. 118reo, baby items. xxlarge
clothes, dr•P•. bedding, plant
stands.
VerdSai•July1 &amp; 2. 9-7. 1 mile
out 218. 0-.ildrens clothing,
misc., etc.
Yerd Sale-Lou of niot thtnga.
Wed., 29, Thun, 30, Fri .. July 1 .
Rein cancelled lilt 2 eds .
Glau•re, home int., SI!Miing
machine. Evert-thing nice. Lower
GArfield Extension.
Tues .. Wed.. Thurs. SmeH appllenees. Christmas decor ..
ctothel, mite . Corner of Hamil.
ton &amp; King Rd .
Thurs. &amp; Fri.. • Sat . Till noon.
Wedding drese. all kindi / IN%et
lldi• ieans. clothes, men's work
clothes. miiC. St. At. 790, ,AI
mile off Ftt. 218.

.. .... ·Pomero'i" ....... -Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Mort's Fltm, St. Rt. 7 , 1 mile
from Five PDints. June 1 3th·
17111 . 11 :00-7 :00. Clott.ing.
boo... colts. j.welry, r8dio,

-··

Baum-Caldwells' Vtrd Sale.
July 1 sttn d 2nd 11 1 mle Iouth

ol 'tuppors Plolno. Ohio on St.

Mo-.. -

R!. 7 .
lblby
lhru Mllll, both •""'· mtny
other ....... An good. no )unit.
pricodch-.

F"Ne family .,.rd sale: Juty 1 -4.
9 :00.8:00. New Avon. westerns. gemes. crehs, clothing,
freebies . misc. 5 mites ftom St,
Rt. 7 on Forest Run Rd .. 2 miles
from St. Rt. 124 at Bowman's
Run. Edwerds' tesidence. 614--

949·2116

July 1.2.3. 34618 Crew Rd .
9 :30-4 ·30
Gerag&amp; S11te June 29. 30 July 1
782 High St . Mlddleport . Ohio.
MirrOt$, bed and frame an~
coffee tabht. Iota Of nloe clothtls.
cheep and misc.

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~~in~~- ~%!,:,~~i~~:~~· ;;
2 1amily: Fri. Sat. Juty 1.2.
Adeline Snowden. College A ...e..
Rutland.
3 family yard sale. July 1,2
beside Summerfields ~esteu ­
rant in Chest•. 9em ril 4p,m.
Uniforms. likenewaduttctoth...
llt11e boysclothet. furnitura, and
much mon!l . Rein or shine.
Gar•ge sale . Whiteheads.
Reedsville. July 1.2. Lamps.
curtaina . childrl!nt , mens.
women clothing. "-4isc .

..
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"' •

: :

.. ,.

•

••
•r
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..,• ••'
· ~·

: •

.......PfPJeasiiiif ... · ::•

,.••I •
&amp; Vicinity
...... ............................

••
'.
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a.rageSale. Rain or Shine, J~ne
29,30 July 1, off At. 2 Uwine
Road follow li gns. celing light a,
antique bed. 8 trtdt pl.,.r,
chain, dishe1, IDVt, dothel.
Yard Sale. Frid't' July 1, 1 :00! :00, Aototll•. snow drea,
toaster owvtln, 't:hlldrens
choth•. 1.3
outl.. dHIII
Road.

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31

8- The Daily Sentinel

Homes for Sale

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

51 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

PI CKE NS
FURNITURE

G.E. w indow air conditioner.
5000 BTU. Call814-446·3549.

Dinettes ; beds . bedding ,
dressers , chest, couches. ~hairs .
lamps. coffee-end tables. Every
day Specials. 'h mile out J erri·
c ho. 304-875-1450.

Sanborn air co mpre11or ·
commercial 5 HP. 60 gal tank.
upright. 200ft. hot~~, snap-on air
regulator. •Hter, automatic oiler,
impact wranch 1h" drive. air
ratcher ~ drtve. 11500. C.ll
614-379-2743 after 5 PM.

Big 3 BR . Dakota fwm ho~
buil1 on your lot. $21. 996 8! up.
Call 1-61 4-88'5-7311 ,

Two or more: blltdroom full sie

basement. nice lot. excellent.
condttion, located 'At. 2, Apple

Grove . $38.500 .00. Phone
304-576-2486.

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE CO .
955 Seoond Aw.
Gallipolis, Ohio-614-446-1 17 1
Used sotas and chairs.

Two bedroom house. good location,

shown by appointment.

Phone 304-675-6839 or 304675-1553.
Hou•, One &amp;

v. acres,

5083.
By owner 3 bedroom ki-level ,
half acre, full basemehf, family

Houl!l for 111le, price reWced.
30 4-57&amp;-2 147 after 5 :00.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x70 mobile home, CA. und"'·
pinned, metal storage building.
Call 614-446·0234 after 6 :30
pm.

We buy used mobile hornes.
CAS H TODAY! 800-826-0752.
ext. 315. Ohio onty.
REPOSSESSED OoubiS'Nides.
4 availabl e. Only 51 ,000 down.

Repossessed 14Jt70's. $500
down . MID-OHIO FINANCIAL
SERVICE, 1-800-826-0752 in
Ohio. FREE DELIVERY.
1984 Fisher all electric, 2 BR ..

1v, bath on rented lot. Ready to
move in. Call 61 4-256-1927.

1986 Clayton mobile home.
141160. All electric, part tv fur·
nlshed, water softner, ref .• island mn ge·oven. 515, 000. Call
614-446-3041 before 4 PM .
1b:60, 2 bedroom, 1V:z baths.
new 18x1 6 poro h, outbuilding,
on 1 111 acre land. located on
Eagle Ridge. Will rent, sell or !1811
on land conuact with small
down payment. Call 614-949·
2617"' 814-423-5687.
1970 Windsor. 12x65 with
1 0111 2 add on. woodburner,
washer and dryer, air t::ond, must
be mowd, 304-895-3602.
Excellent t::ondition. 14 X 60
1986 Aeming, 2 bedroom,
ventidan blinds, block, underPinning, lot of 8!t tra1. must 1811,
Good Price! call 304-675--5841
evenings.
OUR LOSS YOUR GAIN.
19870akwood Mobile Home,
14 X 60. 2 bedroom, e•cellent
condition, completely furnished
kitch8fl, with G.E. Appliances
only $369.50 down and 1Bke
over payments of 5179.75 a
month. Must Sell Phone 30467&amp;-2044.
1984 Nashua 14X?Owith 7X21
ex:pando, 3 bedroom!~, large
bathroom-garden tLb &amp; separate
s hower, equipped kitchen ligHted bar, underpinning, t::en·
tral air. total electric, over 1Jut::re
lot. 2 car garage 24X28. Phone
304-875 : 5853 . Priced on
Inspection.
197&amp; Go~nor .1 2)(65 2 bedroom total electric. fully carP sted, central air, 2 porche~~ .
Phone 304-882-2944.
1974 Champion 14~t65 total
electric., undArpanning and partially furnihaed. wiU consider
trade, 16. 900.00. 304-5782383.

35 Lots S. Acreage
40 acr&amp;sw 2 mobile home1.
Ra ccoon Rd. 1000ft. frontage.
s 38. 000. negotiable. Call 3045 22-7279.
For Sah~diWelopment property
located JA mile from Rio Gran de
on St. Rt. 325. 140 acr• totll.
25 acrM wooded bordered by
Rio Grande College and Bob
Evans Farms. City and County
water. ~r and natural g•
avail able. Lots of ra.d frontage.
Property would be well suited for
housing development, golf
t::ourse. etc . Call 614-499·
3006.
1 acre and up building lots and
modular home sites. Tuppers
Plains -01ester water. roedway
to each lot. 614-985-3594.
Ashton, iMge bu Hding lots.
mobile homes J)f'tmitt&amp;d, public
'Mtter. also river lots. Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-57~2336.
Beautiful river lots one acre plus.
public water, Clyde Bowen. Jr.
304-576-2336.
tDtsfor •le. commercial, Hou•
and mobile home lou, Happy
Hollow Fruit Farm. Phone 304576-2028.
26 Acre1 of woods with niMIIy
bu ih cabin, 20 minute drive from
Po in t Pleatant. Owl Hollow
Road $25,000.00 Phone 3046 75-7771 after 5 :00PM.

14 X 70 2 bedroom mobile
home. Phone 304-875-7988.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 OR . apta. 6 closets, kitchen·
appl . furnished. Wather-Oryer
hook-up, ww carpet, nf!Wiy
painled, deck. RegM'lcy, Inc.
Apts Cllll 304-675-5104.6757613 or 875-6386.
New t::ompletely furni1hed
apartment 8&amp; mobile home in
city. Adults onty. Parking. Call
614-446·0338.
BEAUllFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 614-4462 568. E.O.H.

41

Homes for Rent

Rooms for ~&amp;n1 - IN8ek or momh.
Starting at S120 a mo. Gellla
Hotel-814-446-9580.

Fwnished- 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. No pet1. Ref. a. dep01lt
required. Utlll1le1 furntahed.
Adul1s only . Call 614· 448·
1519.

1 BR . apt. nearHMC. 1 adult. No
pets. Call 814-448·4782.
Furnished apr. Utllitill paid. Cell
beh~~~ten 9 &amp; 5. 814-448-9244.

Gradoue Hvtng. 1 and 2 bedroom lplrtnwnls at VIllage
6 room hou• in lan g~vllle t200 Manor and Rlversid• Al)vt·
in Middleport. From
per month. Oepoth and IP" menta
t182. C•ll 11•· 992· 7787.
ptti'Aid rl'ferenoe~ rwquired.
Phone 114-742-3149 or 814- EOH.
992-7285.
2 bedroom Apta. for ,.nt.
Carpeted. Nice tetting. l.alndry
2 bedroom hou• neat" fair· facilltl• available. Clll 814grounds. No pets. 814-992- 992-3711 . EOH.
3676.
Hou .. for Mnt with opt;on to Apartment for rent. U21 a
buy. 3 bedrooms, buift In kit· month. Depolit required. 814cMn, gartge, $215.00monthly, 992·5724. Alter 5Pf11 or 9925119.
304-882·2688.

Chevy transmistlon 400 turbo
$95.00. Parts for 1969 Chevelle. 304-676-3269 c•ll after
4:30.
Wrecked 1978 Rally Sport for
part&amp; good engine and other
parts. James Jordan, Jr., ChMt·
nut Ridge.

Cabbage, you cut. 20 cents a
head at John N. Hill1. Laten
Falls. Ohio. fli14-247-2842 or ,
614-247·3042.

Farm Suupl1es
&amp; Live stock
Ruger No. 1, 300 Winches1er
Mag um , single shot, Simmons
Sco pe . $250 .00. 304-675·
8141 .
15 t::u ft freezer 5140.00. New
DP rowing machine $90.00.
Red couch and chair $50.00.
304-875 ·23 0~ . '
Tan TV's, twenty dressersdesks. will sell one or all, misc.
Priced on inspection. 304-6756999or 614-992· 7666.
Sears 10 hp riding mov.er. new
battery , 304-882-2798.
900 lbs. tobacco allotment.
c heap, 304-675-7464.
Pilot wheel from Vall.., Bell
Steam Boat. Blue and Green
t1N8ed t::ommercial carpet 30
yds . Electric Ridgid pipe
threader. welder and vwelding
cable. One inch Torkwrench and
1 inch drive socket set. 23,000
btu windowaircond, two 1,000
btu Hell wall turnac• lP gas.
Phone 304-675-3753 or 8754417 after 5:00PM.

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS llo SONS
U.S . 35 Welt Jackson, Ohio.
614-286-8451 .
Massey Fergu1on. New HoiiM'Id,
Bush Hog Sel• &amp; Service. Over
40 uMd tractor• to choo.e from
a complete line of new &amp; uaad
equlpmenl. LM-ge~t •lection in
S.E . Ohio.
Ute modet AC 190 , lllriet·3
·1ractor with plows, tl'llnsport
disc, model-2400. lnternationll
round bater, S9850. Owner will
fin~~nce . Call614&lt;281-8622.

019 Allis Chalmw tl'llctor with
round bllllf', .6800. 930 Cue
with cab. 1300 hours. creem
puH with 7 ft. NH hiV bind.
t4960. Ownerwilltnanoe. Call
614-286-6522.
Used Alis Chalmers Hay Rake.
New tdea Manu.. Spreader.
International 1 4 Inch Dreg
Plows. Call 814-742·2348.

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes, windows, lintel1, etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 814245-5121 .
Concrete blodc.s· ell sizes- yard
or delivery. Mason Sind. Gallipolis Blodt Co .. 123% Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 814-448-2783.

Antiques

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Channel Rustic
and Beveled LIP Siding
• DeeM Materials
Guaranteed Quality
CETIDE, INC .. Athens-814·
594-3578

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1 124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours: M,T.W 10e.m. to Sp.m..
Sunday 1 to 6p.m . 614-9922526.

Walk Shaw Power urtt wtth In
and out clu1Ch. BltHt and idler
..... 814-378·6278.
New Holland 7ft. hiJ¥'bina&amp; New
Holland 362 gr.,..,· mbter. both
good concltion. 304-27 J-.•215.

Uvastock

22 .dairy cows. C.ll 614--6986512 after 9 :00pm.
Meat rllbb/ts, 15. each. C.ll
614-992-3717.
Am.-lcan Stanct.d Hor ... 7
ve•s old. Gelding, gentte. geit&amp;d, broke to aulky. 814-742·
2525.

Wheelchairs-new or used. 3
wheeled eteclrit:: scooters . Call
RO!J8!S Mobilty collec1, 1-614870-9581 . •

Mixed h., far •I e. Ov• 400
b81es. 81 .25 p..- bile or Ml for
$500. Cllll514-247-2724oltot'

Spac.e tor small tr11ilen. All
hook-ups. Cabte. Alaoeffidency
rooms, air and cable. Malon.
W.Va. Call 30~ nJ.-6851 .

Electrox lu• with power nozle.
Cleent Ike new. Call 814-388·
9993.

Oregonwynd cattery Kennel.
CFA Perai1n and Siam_. kit·
tens. AKC Chow puppiet. New
Himalayan kittens. Call 814446-3844 oft"' 7PM.
AKC Reg. German Shepherd
puppies . S150. Call 814-2456126 or 245· 5644.

30 bu Sovt&gt;oono, t7.00 bu,
304-876-5088.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

HALF PRICE! fl•1hing arrow
signs . •2991 lighted , non·
arrow. $2891 Unlighted, $2491
Free box letters] F'ree Jumbos!
See locelly. 1-800.423· 0183,
anyt;me.

GBOD USEO APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, ,.frig..-tort.
ranges . Skagg1 AppUancas.
Upper River Rd. betide Stone
Crett Motel. 814-441· 7398.
lAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofa~

and chairt priced from
$396 to S996. Tabl• $5() and
up to t125. Hlde-a·beds *390
to 8595. Rocllnoro 1225 to
8375. lompo 028 to 1125.
Dinet11t1 $1091nd up to •496.
Wood Uble W· 8 ch.Ws t285 to
1791. Detk 1100 up to 1375.
Hutch• •.ao and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mett""'"
S295and uptol396. a.t.vbeds
1110. M•ttfftliH or box springs
luft or twin U8, firm •18. IOd
•aa. Queen .... 1221. King
1350. 4 drawer chMt til. Oun
c.Wn ... 8 gun. a.bv m.n ...•a
135 &amp; 141. Bed frlm• 120,
t30 llo King homo 150. Good
"lec:tlon of badroom auh:H,
meW cablnett, headbolrds 130
and up to

Pure Bred Beagle puppiM. S25
each. Call 614-388-8721 .
AKC Cock• Spaniel pups, Solid
black mal• &amp; temal81. Shots
1tarted &amp; wormed. S150 each.
Also taking orders for buff &amp;
blonde cocker spaniel pupa &amp;
Americ1n Eskimo spitr: PYPI · Cal
614-388-8890.

1 036 Dvn•merk riding lawn
mower. rear disch•ge. electric
ttart. Good condition. Call 614448-6793.

Full blooded Beagle pups, t20.
1-530 Case beckhoe with 22ft. eael'l. Call 614-992-7280 after
trailer &amp; 1 Chevy ron trut::k, 4:30pm .
$7000. 2 bag mortar mixer,
asoo. 1 set of cutting torches, 2 parakeet•. male and female. 2
welder. office desk&amp; their oth• small cages. 2 breeding boxes.
ml1c Items. Cell614-317-781 1. $30. for all. Will not •perate.
614-992-3717.

Pig~

$20.00 to t30.00, Rice't
Pig Ftrm, Ten Mila first hou•
.... Ya~gar Chureh.

64 Hay &amp; Grain

6p.m.

Fre•A.B. Dick mimeograph
m*l 526 electric with counter
and heave steel bne cabinet .
When you buy the aupplle for
ume I have on hand. Call
304-675· 1187.

1- - - - - - Uke new Axaphone.t400.00.
304-882-3248.

58

Fruit
S. Vegetables

Devil Produce Marldtt. Now
open for buslneta. located . on
St. At. 35. Coiii14-44B-40SO.

I :::::::::::::::::::::Jl::::::;::::::::::::::::~
'"'

Y

1983 ChOYOtto, 40.000 mlloo. 4
apd. Good cad. 11800 or belt
offer. C.ll814-25f.1121 .
1984 Plymouth Turilmo, 2.2
.,to .. elf. 32.000 mi. MIV 11ke
c•-truek on tfllde. Call 81444f.0352.
1978 Rogol, V·8, outo. o1350.
Call 814-25f.5192.
1958 Chovy. UOO. Coli 51444f.9838.
19~ChrNy

..,eo.

1975 Oldlmoblle Cutlass Su·
pre me. Low m Heag&amp; Allldng
19110. Au no good. Bod¥ good.
..... Call 114-311-0401.
1979 Ford Pinto. Excel. cond.
Low mil-o. Coli 814-44f.
3037.
815MuntngConvenlb4&amp; 8cyl. 3
1pMd1 M1"y new Plrtl. M.,
top, lhlrJI. Call 114-448-4482.
1978 Ford Thu-rd. AC.
V"'Y good oond. •2100. Cllll
114--218-8704.
·
1970 Novo. •200. Good work

c.. Colll14-446-8941 .
Rod Hoi l&gt;orgolnol Orug deol. .'
c•t. boatt. plan• repo'd . .,r.
plut. Your ANa. luywn Guide.
111808-187-8000 bt. 8-9805.
1978 Chrytl• La loron. 4 door,
n_, paint, n.w
n._,
b....,, loodod. Call 114-1927214 or 114-182-3224.

*•·

1' " Pontloc La-•· 2 door
h-op. lh•p. ,.,, n 500. eo11
814-742-1373 .,.,. 4:00p.m.

•es.

198301dlmobllo. 4door9odW&gt;,
OOito" ~O'IIIolrvughom. V-8
Very good ao,..,lon. 114-112·
3307or 814-112·37114.

90 o.y, •m• as oath wfth
approwd c:redft. 3 Mil• ou1
Bultvlll1 Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon . thru Sot . Ph. 114-4460322.

1977 Chevy Mona 2 plus 2.
$1,100.00. 304-678-1703 b•
hvten 9:00and 11:00 PM.
1977 Ford Thunderbird, goo
cand. no rult. •soo.oo. 304882-2790.
1981 Dodge Omnl 4 speed,
$1.300.00. 2325 Jofferoon
Aw., Point Ple. .nt. W.Va .

1984 Olds Cutlaat Suprema, 4
door. low mHeege. 1984 Sulek
Rivera low mileage. Phone 30467~3753 or 875-4017 1fter
5:00.

Trucks for Sale

1971 Ford, 4x4, !A ton. 4 speed
trent., 480 cubic inch engine.
new 8 ply tires. Very good
C&lt;&gt;ndhlon. 814-1149-2237.
•
1983 ChOVy S-10, LWB·AMFM, air. I tpeed. V·8. cuttom
fiberglass topper, excellent co~
ditlon $4,500. Phone 8756159.
'80 Dodge Ram. 8 cyl 4 speed,
short wheel ba•. nep lide bad,
good cond, •1,600.00. 304575-7375.
1918 Whho frolght lnoo 40 It
fiM bed t,.llw, wry good concl.
304-175-2284.

Vans &amp; 4W.D.

73

1978Ford0&lt;-~PI.PI,olr.

74

1984 KX 80. Very good cond.
1100. Call 814-446-7U6.
1 985 Su1uki 051 1&amp;0E . E•cel.
lh'l&gt;•· Call 114-256-1811 .
Honda XA 80, 1981 . Good
cond. Hoi Point double own
range·gold. Call 814-448·
1950.
1978 Low Aider. new ,aint, tire~
and battery. Call 114-992·
7138.

Gange•: 2•x24x8 · •3995.,
24.32&gt;18-&amp;4595. lnclud• i21
9•7 tteel O'*'head doors. (1) 3
ft. attet ent_..CI door, painted
. ... roofing and alcHng, 121 2x3
windoWI, conttruction and 111•
included. Post-Fr.me Bullder1.
Athens, Ohio 814-692-2937.

14 ft. alu.-num Run-a·lout
Boot. 31 HP Johnoon looho,...,
1111 ...u•. 1110. Call 114-247·
4212 or 814-247·2277.

....

Rod H01 borgolnol Drug-...•
....
...,.... pi•• oopo'd. Sur·
pluo. Your AN&amp; ,....,. Guido.

76

J. S FURNITURE
I
1415Eo-nA ...
4 drM¥er ch..t, t48. 8 draw•
ch•t. •a4.95. 6 pc. wooden
din nett• a•tl, •199.95.

111101-187·- Ell. 1-11100.

83

Excavating

lncl.lstrlal 10" auger on truck.
drHI1 40 ft. for core drainage,
septfc &amp; etc. Sale/ mtde. Call
814-886-731, .

1174
two 304-19f.3057.

-

· phono

ALLEY OOP

85

EEK &amp; MEEK
Hf.'S AT iHt. UJD
OF HIS CABl£

~

r

I FALL
5TR.AI6HT
COvVNAND
!..AND ON

EXPECTED SOMETHING

MORE SCIENTIFIC THAN THAT.

Pu1lon Flowe( CBS
(IJl Larry King Lhrel
QJ MOVIE: The C011ch ol 1he
Y•r (1:40)
9:30 (!) Pro Beach Volleyball
Men's from Ventura Beach,
CA (T)
13 New Counlry
10:00 CD Slrtllgh1 Talk
(2) IIJ) Bummer

''

•

'"

WHAT IN
THUNDER
FER?

a

TueldarMovte

J

TH' POKER GAME
TONIGHT IS CALLED
OFF, SNUFFY

woman protection from her

IIQl IIIIIJ MOVIE: 'The

-

MY HEAD.

BARNEY

rela1ionship Is going. (R) E;l
(!) (l) FranUine Wily
couldn'1 1ha system provide a
husbend?

LET'S PUIY OVER

IN TWIN FORKS-THEY GOT A

WALK·IN CLINIC

e
ShowcaOI
(}) a Cll1hlrlyooma1hlng

Michaelleama 1ha1 the family
business Is falling . (R) 1;1
(!) I]JJ Newt
(!) Some Bobllo Die Three
families, each coping wi1h
1he loss of 5n infan1,
partlcipe1a In 1herapy which
es1abliahes a rela11onshlp
and aids In 1he grieving

process.

9 Evening Newo
13 c.- and CheN
t0:20 1D NBA Drill Recap
10:30 (]) ColobrHy Chilo Colleen
McCullotlghJPaul Sorvlno
Skiing '87 World
Championship from England :
Jumps (T)
(!) Tony 8rown'o Joumo~l
13 VlcleaCounlry

ro w-

THE GRIZZWELLS®
~mr.

MICROWAVED
$AI-MOO•.

61Jt.l1\.1~?

Reorronge , letters of · the
0 four
scrambled words below

I

ro

form four simple words

LA MPIE

a J Water Service. Swimming

I

t

hl:-,- ri~:. .U:;.I. :C.,.IE:-. . :NI-ll
.; ~

1111 Nen

.(i) ·=
ill

al...,.. ...... Die Three
iamlllea, eac:ll coping with

1he lou ol an lnlan1,
pertlclpete In therapy whlcll

P.,l Aupe. Jr. Water Service.
Pools. citterns. VllllltUs. Call 61 4448-3171 .

eatabllshea a rela11onahlp
and llda In the gnavlng

I

KORtiEB

PEANUTS

IHI Twilight z- Gin
aJ tllchcoclc PreHnll The

COMPOSE!(. HAD A
~&lt;.Atm. LIFE, DIDN'T HE?

Watterson'• Water Hauling,
NUonlble ratea. lmmedi•e
2,000 gallon d.UWry. cia.,nl,
poalt, ¥11811, etc. cell 304-171112919.

Mole
a1 You c.n • e lt8r
11:30eal 1111 Wlmblodan •aa
UPCIMM Tlnnlo
ClllponaCo- (L)
(i)CMn

Upholstery

ill
P.l.
-~1;1
ell]
Game

Mowrey's Up~ng 11rvlng
trloounty•rea23.-n. Thebett
In furnltuN uDholntrlng. C.ll
304-871 - 4fl4 for ftee
eatlmat•.

.::~O::.::.'cau....
Nlgbl 11 wotn111 hlreo Mike
and Ch~atine 10 lind child.

J

"

I0

may be a great healer, bu1 it's a
1errible artist. "

l--r~.:....:,..l....;,lr,S_,I&lt;6.:....,.1-i

Complete the thockle quoted
.
.
•
.
.
.
by fdl1ng in the mis5mg words
L-....1--L-.L-L.....J._.J you develop from step No . 3 be lo w.

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Toucan - Pitch - Ultra - Eschew - HOT WATER
11's hard tor foreigners to learn our language . How would
you explain that skating on th in ice can gel you in1o HOT

WATER?

BRIDGE

NORTH
.Ql0 85
.QH3
KJ
+Q 4 2

1·28-11

+

James Jacoby

Take charge
if you're sure

.9

WEST

EAST

.A

+42

.109 4 2
+10532

+Q98 76 4
+K 7 6 3

By James Jacoby

+AJ 9 5

SOUTH
+AKJ 763
Here is a tip from George Rosen.K B 7 6
kranz. author of "Tips for Tops" : If
+A
you are defending and know how to
beat the contract, take charge and
Vulnerable : Both
stop partner, in the clearest way possi Dealer: South
ble, from making an error.
In today's deal, you are West and
\\'est
Nortti East
Soutb
lead your singleton ace of hearts
against four spades. On this card your
Pass
3
Pass
partner plays the deuce , a discouragPass
Pass Pass
ing card, but perhaps a card suggesting that your side's source of tricks
Opening lead : • A
may be in the club suit. So you switch
now to the three of clubs. That play is
a suC&lt;!esS. Declarer plays low from will right now play back a heart for
dummy, and East wins the club jack. you to ruff.
He next plays the club ace. Is there
To wake up your partner to the ne- .
something for you to do now? If left to cessity of returning a heart, you.
his own devices, partner will quite should play the king of clubs under hia '
possibly try to cash another club trick ace. This play should be a clear signal
lor your side. Maybe that will work. that your opening lead was indeed a
But there is certainly a possibility that singleton, and partner should now redeclarer will ruff a third club, and you
turn a heart without fail to set the
yourself know lor certain that you can
contract.
beat the contract absolutely if partner

+ to a

+

l••.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 40 Mirror
1 Roman
statesman 41 Actress
II Old
Angeli
TV show 42 Check
9 Between ·43 Magnani of
10 Phase
"Open City"
11 Frost
DOWN
12 Explosive 1 Jeweler's
device
term
14 Radio's
2 Abbe's
Yesterday's Answer
Jane or
vestment
Goodman 3 Repeatedly 111 Mimic
30 Straighten
111 Malt-hops 4 "- to
21 Poet's
32 Sieg·
brew
Billie Joe"
..even"
fried's
16 Marsh
II Macerate 22 Court
killer
elder
6 Cereal
a lass
33Greek
17 Tsla, e.g.
plant
23 Wall
meeting
"18 Dice spot 7 See 3 Down
place
St.
19 Patriot
8 Imbue
38Capuchin
tenn
Hale, as 10 Cleave
monkey
24 Outdoor
a boy?
13 Office
39
Health
Z7 Duplicate
20 -· first
machine
resort
28 Wanton
22Ford
,.......,;,__,......~
a stream

23Heed
25 Singular
thing (sl.)

26 Ready for
business
27Dunce
29-diem
SO Mobile
home?
(abbr.)
31 Gotcha!
34 Picnic
interloper
311 Goody
with
bagels

36Joke
37"A-in
the Sun"
39 Starch
source

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

6128

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

proce11.
(!)Sign Oil
181]] Loft Connection
iiJ MD...,..,.

One old maid to ano1her: "'Time

L.==·=~-:;=·=~·:;:·....,
r

11:00CD Rtmlngtan SIMla S1eele
In the SpoUight

.(2) (i)

Ij

UTMAD

t--+1...:,...1;.;.,:.1:...:;.laM

10:50 ID II'OVIE: NOnNin... lo Tllllt
You? iPGl(1 :31)

pool1, cisterns, Milts. Ph. 814-

Schullr' a W•er H., ling. 2 4
hour service. Senk)r ditcount.
.Jam• Schuler 114-742·2474
or Everett Schu._ 814-7423055.

&amp;Kamine where their

! ':, ,

~TCHA
Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Cisterns. Wells. 081ivery Anytime. Call 814-448-740C.No
lund~ callt.

(}) a

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHATOOYOL.I
DO WHEN ICE
FORM50N
lOUR BALLOON,
FOSTER"!

8:30 (}) D Cll Perfect Str11ng1rs
Larry tries to convince his
bro1her he's 1he cl1y
edl1or.(RJ E;l
Ill! CBS Suinmer PllyhouH
EnHmble comedy aboU1 a
fabulously weal1hy
household.
&amp;:oo CD 700 Club
(2) IIJ) J.J. Starbuck J.J .
Is shocked to 1hlnk 1ha1
Tenspeed Tumer Is
double-crossing him.
Cll Moonlighting
Madelle and David try to

e

/~\

Electrical

General Hauling

7:35(1) Major Leagu• Booeball
1:00 (]) Crazy Like e Fo• Till
Death Do Us Part
II (2) IIJ) Maflack•Movie star
is accused of murdering his
indiscrae1 sax 1harapls1. (R)
(!) Ctaoalc Summar
(}) 11 Cll Who'o 1he Bou?
Sam Is 1hrllled when a
modeling job for Angela
.
leads 10 more work. (R) I;!
(!) (!) Nova Tour some of
1he most beaU1iful s1rue1ures
in the wo~d. C
IIQl
C CBS' Summer
PleyhouH Humorous look at
homemaking lrom apposi1e
perspectives of 1wo women.
181]] MOVIE: New Yoltc,
New Yoltc lPG) (2:17)
(IJl Prime-•
llJJ MOVIE: Serveant Yoltc
(NR) (2:14)
QJ Tallto of the Gold
Monkey
13 Naohvllllt Now

m

S. Refrigeration

87

Want to buy Wlrullhllld for

'll ...... ... ~ ...

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
COt'. Fourth and Pin a
O.IIIPGii1, Ohio
Ph.onl 814-446--3888 or 814446-4477

. . , • IIIII boot. E- '· oii,Po.

New and uted furniture and
applicanc•s. Call 114-448 7572. Hours 9 -1!1.

eo.-.....

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

R &amp; R WMer Servlca. Pools,
cisterns. wells. Immediate ·
1,000or 2(000g.Uonsdellwry.
Coli 304-875-8370.

V11U"f Furntture

BUY CIOYI~ NMt!fiiT lolrod
- · · , _ • 100.00. f'ordl.
ChiVyo.
l'or Info
colll213!t21-lt01n1. 2108.

82

2411-9285.

1980 1I ft. Evlnrudo boot whh
eo HP motor. 0011 l14-24f.
1830atk for hte or Jim.

me

Stlrks Law nand Shr!.b Service,
304-575-3955 "' 304-5752903.

C.,.l,

11ft. llj•boatwtthn.Her. 110
Mor. m-wlth-trlm. Coli
114-389-1124.

I'

Rotary or ci.ble tool drilling.
Mol1 Wltllt completed .. medrt.
A.lmp Illes and terYit::e. 304896-3802

J

1985 Altroglo01. Coli 8 14-44f.
4375.

,,.

Fetty Tree Trimming, dump
remo..el. Call 304-87 ~ 1331 ,

21 ft. layllner cruiMr. 1986
wide baam. all tleet'onlc. gaiiiV.

Me. 350 V-8 eng.,
,,...,. 1 . Very low hourt.
127.500. Coli 304-727-1890.

,,

Squartlo
(D Surfer M~t~ulne
DCil Judge
IIQ) Wheel ol Fortune E;1
IIJ) Craooflre
IIJl J•apardyl 1;1
® Bonoan
13 VldeaCounlry

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• calls on RCA, Qua•r.
GE . Spoclollng In Zonkh. Coli
304-676-2398 or 814-4482464.

RHidantial or commercial wir·
ing. 1\Jeo.N ...-vice or repatrs,
uCen..d electrician . Ettlrnete
tree. Ridenour Electrical. 304
875-1786.

Boats and
Motora for Sale

7:30 II (2) Ill Hollywood

.I\~··
'

Painting: ln1erior • EX1erior.
Free estimates. Call 614-448-8344.

19815 Honda t.-1 bikiKR 200A ,
••• oond, 1750.00. 304-8762495.

75

and Cheae
7:05(1) Andy Qrilfl1h

RON EVANS ENTERPRISESSeptic tank 'pumping- 890 per
lood. Coii1 -800-537-9628 .

84

18 lnah S.tbr. . . bolt wtth
trol•.
.., nomotor.304-87f.7141

I

Concrete Septic Tanks · 1000
gal .. 1600gal. and Jet Aeration
sy.tem. Factory tnlned repair
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, Jackson. Ohio. 1-800537·9528

At. 35 Cycle Sol•. S!&gt;oclollzlng
Honda, Suz , Ku. Yamllha.
Pwt•Servtc.-Repeln. We buy
...1 and t,.de uted blk•. 304-876-4130.

SurWII 210 ~- rae•. exc
cond n..,- r~~ced. h• lltNI.
01,300.00 080 . Call 304-6768811.

QJ Alrwoll Sins of 1he Past

13 Crook

SWEEPER and sewing machine
rept~lr, parts, and suppli11. Pi eM
up and deltvery, D~is V1culm
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georgu Creek Rd. cau 61.._
446-0294.

Motor cyclei

..00. Two 7 ft. ~-· door~
.78. Colll14-lt2·7141.

"Don't worry. You'll get .your shark
pictures_ We have a spare cagel"

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifllime guarantee. Local reterenoes furnished.
Free e.. irmlles. Call collect
1· 814-237·0488, d~ or night.
RogersBasernent
Waterproofing.

7:00 (]) Remlnglon Steele Laura
and Remlng1on 1ry 10 unravel
the mystery of a runaway
ear. (1 :00)
II (2) PM Magazine
(!) Sport1Center (L)
(}) Entertainment Tonight
(!) (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
Ill (I) Peaple'o Court
IIQ) Newo
1111]] Star Trek
(IJl Moneyllne
111 11J IIJl Wheel ot Fortune

~ Bomey Miller

Home
Improvements

71 Auto's For Sale

D-

race ..... ttie

1982 redC•m•o •3.200.00. 8
cyl, good c:Ond, 304-882-3338.

81

'78 Ford F1 80, 4 wheel drive.
a~to, exc running cond, body
rough, $1 .000.00. 304-8755335.

1914 Ford Eecort. Aul:o.,
I 2799. Jo hn' t Auto SII•·At. 7
below Hollct.v-lnn, KMIUI&amp;

197&amp; Leisure Time Chwrolet
motorhome, self concalned,
sleeps aiJl , lAwn Chief, 2'h hp
roto tiller, like rMI'W'. uttle Aatcel
eleeric wheel chair. Cell Ethel
Robinson, 614-448-3508.

1977 Monte Carlo 11 l1
1150.00. 304-875-7309.

.YOH

Services

Trans port at1on

57
'

1987 O'levelle Malibu. new
paint. newtv re-buitt 350•ut . on
floor. alum tlot•. will tl'lldeJeep.
Call aft..- 5 :00 pm 304-67639315.
Fiat H•dtop con...rtlble sportt
car, low mileage. Al't4-FM
Castette. new tires, excalent
condition. Phone 304-676·
2635.

HAV&amp; YOU CA\-\-ED
001'5 IIJ F~ ·

"AU.IEAU.IE

1986 Elite 27 ft. tnlwettmiler
awning, 1elf contllined. eJtCellent concltion ae. eoo.OOPhone
304-675-1558.

POOL SERVICE
Will clean once week. tupply all
chemical•. ~•II weekly charge,
reference furnlthed. trl Stete
Areo 304-6711-3533.

OPS. OOOGymPack, newcond.,
all acceuories, 8250. JVC ,atereo stand. $65. Call 814· 446·

Musical
Instruments

1 987 Cel ebrlty 13,300 miles.
good condition . AM · FM
cassetta. $9,500. call304-6765995.

1979 Jeep CJ5. Hardtop, 380
engine. Call 814-992-7214 or
614-992-3224.

AKC Reglster~d Basset puppies.
4 weeks old. $100. Francis
&amp;nedum. 614-887-3858.

B

lnolde 1ho PGA Tour
Cll ABC Newo E;l
(!)Body Electric
(!) NlghHy Buolneoo Report
IIQl
CBS Nowo
ID I]] Hogano Heroeo
(!Jllnokle Pollllco '88
llJJ Jelferaono
13 You C1n Be a Star
6:35 ID Carol Bumett

Terry Camper. 27 ft., nG'N
cwpet. 83000. Very nice. Call
514-992-7841 or 614-742·
3064.

RON"S APPLIANCE SERVICE,
hou• call set'Vicing G E. Hot
Po inc. wethers. dryers and
ltO\Iltl. 30C.6 78-2 39B.

Chtrine1. color TV. complete
queen size water bed. Call
614-256-6522 or 446-8184.

rSNAFU'"' b

W

i(}) D

1983 28 ft. Prowler. hhch &amp;
e'ectric b'ak.e control. $8600.
C.ll614-25f.9361.

1978 .,ulp..,d for flohlng.
hunting, camping. New brake~.
pllnt job, 318 motor, headers.
0700. 114-992-5881.

CIWtion. Clean. 2 . 5
fuel injection, AM· FM stereo.
47,000mHoo. UUO. Call51428f.8522.

819~

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliancet and TV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sit. 814-446-1899, 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.

Beegle pups, 9 wk1. old. $30
each. Call 614-448-0373.

84 cavalier wagon 58.000
milea. $2,600.00 Phone 304676-3044.

72
63

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental tf'llilers. Call 1114-992·
7479.

Universal gym pack . 2000
weight set. Mint condition. Call
814-245-9173.

1982 FordEtcort ltltion11111gen,
PS.PB, Good Concltion 11,600,
Phone 304-575-2967 aft"' 5
PM.

1 973 BLick. 4 goad tires. new
vinyl top, new plint, •1 .000.00.
304-882-3248.

55 Building Supplies

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
styles. lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

Nice 3 or 4 bedroom house In
Point Pleasant area . Phone 304757-9076.

WORD

•c

Callahan's Us_. Tire Shop. Over
1. 000 tires. llizes 1 2. 1 3 . 1 4. 16,
16, 16. 5. 8 miles out At. 218.
Call 814-256-6251 .

47 Wanted to Rent

TUES•• JUNE 28

T~~:~:~' sccrR~lA-~t-trS" GAMI
- - - - - '·- - Ed;tod b, CLAY R. POllAN --=------

6:30 II (2) IIJ) NBC Nightly Newo

79 Motors Homes
S. Campers

Store corner of Second lit 'Pine,
1400 sq. ft. Off 1treet parking.
$350 a mo. plus utiiH:ies. Call
614-448-2325. 446-4249.

Trailer spece for rent a1 Y Rt.fli2
&amp; 2. New Management. Phone
304-876-3818.

11 Court St.-2 BR .. 2 bM:hs,
lditchen furnished, w / w c.-pet.
No pets. Off stret1 perking.
s 326 a mo. ptu s utllh:iel. Dep. &amp;
ret . Call 614--446-4926.

.·

;5:;;6~=;P;e;ts=fo;:::r;S~a;l;e=

DowntOwn· Modern 1 BR ., complete kitchen, AC, c.-pet. Call
614-446-0139.

Television
Viewing
6:00 (]) Big Valley The Martyr
D t2l Ill G Cll IIQl Ill iiJ
IIJl Newo
(!) SportoLook
(!)Owl TV C
(l) Dr. Who the Time
Meddlers, Part 1
Ill liD Happy Dayo
(IJl ShowBiz Today
I]JJ Good Tlmeo
QJ C.rtoon Expreoo
13 Fandango
8:05(1) Fa1her Knowo Boot

Uted Tr~1missions . All internalty Inspected. 30 d..,. I guarsn·
tee. Cell 814-44&amp;-0986 or
304-876-6818 . Rebuilding
available

54 Misc. Merchandise

Trailer speca. for rent , l.ot::ust
Road, Route One, 304-8751078.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

EVENING

46 Space for Rent

Up11airs unfurnished apt. Car·
pMecl utilities paid. No children.
No polo Coli 614·446-1637.

Furnished efflctene., apartment:
3 rms. • b81h, c•pet throug~
out. private &amp; quill, tingle
working peraon only. Call 8143 BR with basement. 8 mil• 446-4807
or 814·446-2802.
north from Holzer Hospital.
Available July 1st. Ref..-.ce $t
Furnished apt.-2 BR. t200.
deposit. Call 614-446-0596.
Wa1er Plld. 131 Fourth, O.lllpo3 BR .. Rodn~ 11·829 Gr~~ham. lis. Call 448·4418 •fler 7 PM.
Call 614-446-4535.
Delu Jill 2 Nctroom, equipped
3 Br .. unfurnithed. Very nice. kitchen. private l)lrldng. No
Spacious. Built in kltChlliR plus pets. Sec. dep .. refer8noa. Call
dine-tte, for,_ I dining room, am 814-441·1250 aft• 8 PM.
porch. dol.ble garage. No pets.
$296 p4usdepoti1 &amp; ref. C.IIEarl Nice 2 Sr. apt1 .• water. llfr . .. &amp;
Tope. 814· 446-0690 -days , stove turn. 4 h mi. from Galllpollo. No pots. U25mo. 514-446446-0181-even.
8038.
1 SR . in Crown City. Ohio. Ne.11t
to Lodge Hall. S175 a mo. Call 3 rooms &amp; b•h uPtt.trt. JP1.
Unfurnlthed. utiltd• included.
514-446-1511 .
Adu b only. No pete. C.ll
Unfurnished 6 room hou•. 1% 814-446-2583.
bath, gat furnace. .torm windows. gertge. Adult• onty. No Nice furnished apt.-4 room• &amp;
petJ, Oep • ref. c.n 614-446- bit h. 1 ar 2 adu tu. No pe~~. Ref.
•
tee. dep. f«&lt;Uired. C.ll
2543.
614-446-0444.

•

Utiliti• .-i d. Single male. Share
bath. Call 446-4.t18after 1 PM.

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
P&amp;rk, Gallipolis Ferry. W . Va.
304-675-3073.

Nicely furnished small houae.
Adutts only. Ref. required No
pets. Cell 614-446-0338.

Nice '3 Bedrooms. lg. vard.
Kanauga. Cell 81 ... 4.\6· 7473.

room-919 Second

BORN LOSER

8

'"

Ave., Gallipolis. 8125 a mo.

Brookside Apartmentt: Loc.ted
off Bulaville Rd .w 1 BA. specious
apartments with modern kitchen
Md washer-dryer hookups, c•
ble tel81flsion available. Cell
614-446-2127.

Two 1 aoe lots with public One BR unfurnished apt . New
water, Jerrys Run Road , c•pet. RMge S. rGtrlg, fur·
$ 4.900. 00 each, consider trade, nished. Wat• &amp; garbage paid.
30 4-576-2383.
Oepo .. t required. Call614-446-4346.

Rentals

Furnished

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'TllltJb , A~ 'iov'

1 HP Well Pump with 30 gallon
tank. Can be used tlr deep or
shallow well. 1 year old. 5200.
Call 614-696-1227.

"Can 1 hane Pop's dessert?"

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Tuesday, June 28, 1988

'(bl)'l':~ tJJI' WEAI"-It.r'
PAIJTS U~~ 'Tl\A.T

275 gallon keroMJne tank wh:h
hand pump. 1100. Cell 814·
696-1227.

.....

53

76

KIT 'N' CARLYLEIID by Larry Wri&amp;~t

28 bulb Scandinavian Tenning
Bed. Call 614-247· 2216 before
4:30 pm and 614-992-3982
after 5 :00pm.

VIRA FURNITURE
Several truckloads of new and
used furniture have just arrived
this week With mo,.. coming in.
lois of bargains. Paul Bunyan
couch &amp; chair, $369-mg. 5899,
heavy duty bunk beds, $319·
reg. $689. Complll'telineofused
furniture andappliancefJ. Retrigere1ors. freez8fs, washers, dryers. bedding. chairs. lamp!. baby
.v
•
kems, compuler desk, book
shelves, color console tv 's, plus
~~=;;===::;=~~=''T----------1250 h . chain Ink fenC8 with all
[41 Homes for Rent
hardware and gat81. Complete
44 A part m ent
line of new and used tricycles
and bicycles !Orting at 819. 95
for Rent
&amp; up.
30, 4 bedroomhoul8forrentin
Racine. CAll 614-949-2666.
Open Daily
Monday-Saturday, 9 to 6. 3'1.!
Newly redecorated apartments miles on Rt. 1 41 in Centenary, v~
available. Utilities paid. 8225. mile on lincoln Pike, 614-44642 Mobile Homes
per month. deposit required. Call 3158.
for Rent
614-992-5724 after 6:00 or
992-5119.
New Emerson air t::onditloners.
Vinyl floor co\lftring- starting at
2 &amp; 3 BR . All utilities !)aid except
2 bedrpom apt! . Middleport. $2.99. Carpet starting at $3.99
etectrielty . Con..,.nient location
Call 614-448-8558 "' 446- 1165--$185.per month. 2 and4 a yd. Installation &amp; financing
bedroom houses in Pomet"oy available to qUIIified buyers.
4006.
area. $200-$225 per month. All Mollohan Furniture-Upper River
2 BR . mobile home in Crown partfV furnished. Reference re- Rd ., 614-446-7444.
quiri!Mt Day 614-992·2381 ev·
City. Call 614· 256-6520.
enings 614-992-6723.
limed Oak bedroom suite and
desk. Any reasonable offer con2 Dr unfurnished mobile home.
2bedrooms. Rent indudes cable sidered. Can be seen at495 Oak
AC, private lot, Rt . 588. Adults
only . Call fli14-448--4607 or TV, yard maintenance, laundry Drive . after 5 PM. Call614 · 446faciUtiM, tntsh collection, 1flle- 0195.
614-446-2602.
phone, equipped kitchen, work·
27 inch console color tv. E1tcel.
2 BR . all electric. Adults only . No in'g utilities. 614--992-8639.
cond. Best offer. Call 814-446·
pets. Call 614--387-7438.
Small g•age apartment for 1 7109.
2 BR . mobile home for rent. Call person. Patio, private entrance.
in Syracute. 8135 . per month J .C . Penney stereo. turntable,
614-446-9521 or 446·9847.
(Water paid) .. 614-992· 7680 or cass. &amp; 8 track with t::abinet. Call
61 4-448· 8342 after 9 PM.
Nice 2 Dr. mobile home. Upper 614-992-8236.
At. 7. Furnished. Water paid
$ 200a mo. Call 814-245-5818. 3 room furni1hed apartmem . No Gibson food freezer, $25. Needs
pats. Cell 614-949·2253.
minor repair. Call 614-446·
8941.
12x80, 2 bedroom, near Racine.
APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
Call 814-992-6858.
houses. Pt. PleasantandGallipo- Used HotPolnt elnctric range in
good condition. Call 614-446·
2 bedroom furnished mobile lis. 614-446-8221 .
3646 after 4 PM.
home with air and washer-dryer
hookup, SyJlllcu • · $225. per 2 bedroom furnished apt New
month. water paid. 2 bedroom Haven. reference and •auity Announcing Electrolu,; Grand
furnished in Syf'llcu!lllt. $160. per deposit required , 304-882· Opening authorized factory
outlet sales and service. Buffalo,
month, warter paid. 614-992- 3287 or 304-773-5024.
W.Va. 304-937-2272,
7680 or 614-992-6236.
Three bedroom all electric apart·
In Tupper Plains. 2 bedroom ment. Crab Creek Road. no can Queen sire water bed, solid oak
mobitehome with built on room, or dogs. Phone 304-675-6809 with 12 drawers. $500.00 .. exc
oond, 304-675· 7545.
new carpet, air condition. all altar 5:30 304-875-1087.
appliance~ , furnished. Also garSWAIN
age on nice lot. S225 month plus Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,
roierence and deposit. e14-378- 2 bedroom furnished apartment, AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
utilities pcaid. references. Phone Oliw St .. Gallipolis .
6278.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 8399.
304-882-2566.
living ropm suites- $199-8599.
2 bedroom mobile home Middleport, Ohio, reference andaecur· Apt. 4 rooms and bath, partially Bunk beds with bedding- $199.
tty deposit required, 304-882- furnished. utilities paid. $58 .00 Full size mattress &amp; foundation
per week, phone 30C.67S.3100 starting · S99 . Recliners
3267 or 304-773-5024.
or 675-5609.
starting- $99.
USED- Beds, dressers, bedroom
MobHe Homes. wll accept r.vo
children or working couple. Downtown rhodern 1 bed room suites. 8199-$299 . Desks.
apt. furnished, air cond. car- wringer washer. e complete line
,P hone 614-448-0508.
p etad, call after 4:00, 304-675- of u81'1d furniture .
NEW- Western boots· $30.
1978 14X10with 1,036 ftextra 3788.
Workboots $18 &amp; up . (Steel &amp;
living space. 3 bedroom
soft toe) . Call 614·446-3 159.
8200.00 month Phone 30445 Furnished Rooms
675-3044.

·""'_....,._

Tuesday, June 28. 1988

26 cu. ft . Westinghou• freezer,
ull8d 1 yr. Sofa bed. used 1 mo.
Sell or trade fora couple of beef
calves. Call 614-256-1431 .

High prices got you down?
ChecM us out for Low Pri t::es &amp;
Quality Furnitu"' &amp; Carpet. E-Z
credit with approved credit.
Mollohan Furnitura-614-446·
7444.

5 trail Ill'"

h ookups . Phone 30 4 - 773 -

room . lo~ 60's, 304-675-2307. ·

Middleport, Ohio

CRYPTOQUOTE

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Q T T X A T, U
YeHerda.f'a Cl')'pcuqaote: READING FICTION IS AS
HARD TO ME AS TRYING TO HIT A TARGET BY
HURIJNG FEATHERS AT IT. - WIWAM JAMES
A . L .

•

,, .

.. '•.•

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Judge to review McClease bail decis~on

No parole for 'Onion
Field' killer Powell
SAN FRANCISCO tUPI) "O nion Field " cop- killer Grego ry t: ias Powell was denied
pat·oie by the Ca lifornia Supreme
Co urt for· at least a nother 10
months bccnuse of the notoriety
he received in a best-se ll ing book
and hit movie. hi s la wyer said.
The newly co nse r va tive·
leaning high court voted 6-J
Monday to uphold a 1984 appellate court 's decisio n to revoke the
parol~ for Po we ll th at had been
approved in 1986 by the liberallea ning court headed by ousted
Chief Justice Rose Bird .
Powell will not be eligible for
parole reco nsi dera tio n again un ·
til May 1989. according to his
attor ney, Ka re n Snel l.
'·Once agai n a ha rd case has
made bad law." said Snell. " Had
It bee n any other person than
Powell, the co urt wou ld not reach
the sa me resu lt ."
Justice All en Broussard, who
wrote the 1986 deCision that was

surprised by Monday's ruling,
a nd that she may challenge the
ruling in federal court.
Campbell and his partner, Karl
Hettinger, were kidnapped and
taken to an onion field near
Bakersfield, where Powell fatally shot Campbell and fired at
Hettinger, who ran for his life
a nd escaped in the darknes s.
Powell's partner, Jimmy Lee
Smith, was paroled in 1982 and
s ince ha s been in and out of jail on
drug charges.
Hettinger is now a member of
the Kern County Board of Supervisors . Campbell's widow ha s
remarried and moved 10 north-

ern California.

Tuesday, June 28. 1988

NEW YORK iUPI) -.,. The
former Navy technician, ar·
rested for giving bla nk tapes to a
federal gran d jury a fter claiming
he reco rd ed conversations
among a dvisers to Tawana
Brawley that cas t doubt on her
s tory of abduction and ra pe, was
due back in court today.
U.S. Dis trict Court Judge Shirley Wohi Kram said Monday she
would review a decision by U.S.
Magis trate James Francis that
Samuel McClease be released on
$100,000 bail.
.
Government prosecutors have
contended th at McClease would
be likely to flee if released on
bail.
.The hearing was set for 9: 30
a.m. toda y.

McClease has claimed that the
Rev. AI Sharpton, an adviser to
Brawley , hired him to wiretap
his home and the home ar.d office
of C. \lernon Mason, one of the
black teenager's lawyers.
. He said tape-recorded conver·
sations would cast doubts on
Brawley's story of being kidnapped and raped over a fourday period by six whfte men.
Brawley was found In a dazed
s tate In November near her
Wappingers Falls, N.Y. , home
with a racial epithet written
across her torso.
McClease was charged Saturday with two counts of obstructing justice and one count of
perjury In connection with turning over blank tapes to the

federal grand jury.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Frederico Vlrella argued at the federal
court hearing Monday that
McCiease should be held without
ball because he had not complied
with gra nd jury subpoenas and
had received a misconduct discharge from the Navy in 1986.
Vlrella also said McClease had
been fired from various jobs
si nce leaving the Navy for either
being late or not showing up. The
suspect also has a history of
disappearing, the prosecutor
said.
McClease told WCBS-Tv that
the Brawley advisers considered
her disappearance "not to be a
kidnapping, but "acfually a
four-day party" in the area and

that they pressed ahead with the
sensational case for selfish political purposes.
Mason and Sharpton have
vowed to file a $100 million
lawsuit against thl' television
station, saying Its reporter and
U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani
conspired to orch~strate a fraud.
Meanwhile, a New York Times
WCBS·TV poll published Tuesday showed that an overwhelm·
tng number of whites and a solid
majority of blacks believe that
Sharpton and Mason, along with
Alton Maddox. another Brawley
attorney, have not handled her
case responsibly and are using It
"for their own personal
advantage. "

ANNOUNCING

notor iou s prison er whose nota·

r iety wa s revived by the showing
of a movie depicting his crimes,"

v iolence

on

release

s

L

A

s

E

UNDER THE BIG TOP

A

v

Vol.39, No.37
Copyrighted 1988

Clear tonight. Low In mid
50s. Mostly sunny Thursday.
lfighs In mid 70s.

•

..

enttne
2 Sections, 20 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, June 29, 1988

tugboats that run aground dally,
and Coast Guard officials said
stricter rules were needed to
~eep vital barge traffic moving
for the rest of the summer.
Tows were limited to 20 barges
in both directions on the river
from Caruthersville, Mo., to
v lcksburg, Miss., starting today,
and more res trlctions may be
imposed If groundings continue,
Coast Guard Cmdr. Michael
Donohoe sa ld .
There have been 58 groundings
on the river in June , Involving
1,072 barges, with three to seven
groundings a day sometimes
blocking the channel, Donohoe
said.
The Coast Guard and Army
Corps of Engineers met with

towboat Industry officials in
Memphis, Tenn., Tuesday, and
opinion was divided over
whether more restrictions were
needed.
Some tow operators saw no
need for more restrictions because river traffic has been
moving steadily, If erratically.
But Frank Stegbauer , president
of Southern Towing Co. in Memphis, said the Coast Guard was
too lenient.
''If you don't put regulations on
now, it 's going to get progressively worse and worse," Stegbauer said. "We've all got to
realize this and do something
about it. "
Officials in Minnesota considered a plan to tap lakes in the

a

~

IIIIPONTlAC:IIANDAM

1111FIEIOT·TOP

llvtOI'!ItUc. tlr CDnditlonlnr, POWtr t!Hrlng. powtr
brttu. AMIFM 11tf'to, strtlbtlt~ tlrn. tnd m!JI't.

" Litloflll-1~"

$9,888*
-Ai.-j.L----'-,'~

....

CAVALIER
t •r c ondllioniAQ, ~r s!Mt"lf!IJ. power

brat~. AMI FM 111fi'O, ""llwlll'dllrt~, ltld mort

$8,988*
P.
1111 Cut1111IIPre!M

•

I

"fr.. AhC_H...,"

1111 Qrllld Prix
Mol.. f,.. Ctf If lilt THrl

FREE son DRINKS
FREE POPCORN

~
.

-

,

ULE liCIUIII
IH.4tt.l:30 U,·IIIOO P.M.

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

Snell sai d Powell was not

Bones cut with
saw medical
•
exammer
says

$0,681•

iii C'
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CUTLASS

\

iUPIIEME

I
I

S.U,I:OOPJIMePJI.

\

FLAGS FLYING - Flags of the lJnited Slates
and the Stale of Ohio are flying over Bradford
Cemetery on .Meigs County Road 5, . thanks to
contributions from State Rep. Jolynn Boster, U.S.
Congressman Clarence Miller, and local rest·
dents who prefer to remain anonymous. One ofthe
oldest tombstones In the cemetery Is dated 1850,
making the cemetery at leastl38 years old. One

Individual who assisted In the flag projed said he
thinks this Is the first lime flags have flown over
the cemetery, with the exception of flags which
decorate Individual graves. ''This has been
done," the local Individual said, "In appreciation
of past soldiers and loved ones who are at rest In
Bradford Cemetery."

I

I

I

'

District 18 Public Works Integrating Committee with representatives made up of elected
public officials and non-elected
officials h!'ld their Initial organizational recently at the Ramada
Inn In Marietta.
District 18 Includes the counties and their respective s ubdivisions In Athens, Belmont, Hock·
lng, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Musklngham, Noble, Perry, and
Washington .
With the passage of State Issue
2, the Ohio General Assembly
passed legislation for the lmple-

mentation of House Bill 704.
The legislation establishes 19
districts for the allocation of
funds consisting of one to 11
counties. The legislation specifies the composition of each
Dis trlct Public Works Integral·
lng Committee In addition, for
any District with three or more
counties the law specifies how an
Executive Committee wlll be
selected.
The Dis trlcts with three or
more counties, lnitla'J projects
are recommended by the Execu-

..---Local news briefs•-Fireworks illegal - Seyler

ROCHESTER, N.Y. IUPJ)
About 25 human bOnes preserved
in a 19th century butcher's home
belonged to three middle-aged
homicide viet ims whose limbs
were chOpped off with a meat
saw, a medical examiner says.
Monroe County Medical Examiner Dr. Nic hola s Forbes said
Monday that the bones were
examined by a forensic anthro·
pologlst, who d!'termlned they
belonged to a man In hIs 50s and
two wom!'n in their 40s. The
victims, all of whom were white,
died between 20 a nd 100 years
ago.
The examination also dis·
closed that the man's right arm
a nd ri ght leg had been sawed
with a butcher's saw after the
v ictim was dead, Forbes said.
The cause of death remains
unknown , he added .

Mayor Richard Seyler would like to remind residents that
fireworks are Illegal in the Village of Pomeroy.

Income tax effective July 1

ANIC-•ull•ot- .....
IAV'"Gioo_lo_,__

SERVICE PARTS

Ordinance 1195-88, regarding the Middleport income tax,
becomes effective Friday, July 1.
Employers within the village of Middleport are rem lnded to
begin withholding the Income tax on that date.
Anyone having questions may contact the Income tax office at
992-2827.

Old school will be reopened

GINIIAL M01'011 COifiOIAnON

. -j

_

.. ___-............ _
.
..
1001-llw-

, ,,

GMQUAUTY

The Old Pomeroy Junior High building will be reopened one
more time so that anyone wishing to purchase an old desk or
other Items which have been Stored In the building by the Meigs
Local Board of Education, may have the opportunity to do f'O·
Acting Meigs Superintendent James Carpenter reports that
Continued on page 9

I, - - - -

-·---·-~--~

----

Thompson to divert Lake Michi- ~-mile stretch of the Ohio River
gan Into the Mississippi. Last at Mound City, Ill., for dredging
Thursday, Thompson asked the for at least three days beginning
Army Corps of Engineers to today.
The Corps announced that the
begll) the emergency diversion,
navigation
season on the Misand the Corps Informed goversouri
River
's six main stem
nors in Great Lakes states that It
reservoirs
will
close two weeks
is considering the request.
early
and
open
a
week late next
Tuesday , Michigan Gov .
spring
because
of
low water.
James J. Blanchard vowed that
In
Omaha,
Neb.,
the corps'
the state will lake lega l action, If
Missouri
River
Division
engineectec'. to block the plan.
' 'The dramatic recent decline· neer, Brig. Gen. Robert Ryan,
in Great Lakes levels shows that said water levels in the six
increased diversion could fool· reservoirs were at their lowest
ishly jeopardize the future of the level for this time of year since
lakes and our state," said Blan- they first were filled In 1967.
He said the navigation season
chard. "We will take whatever
steps are necessary to protect would be shortened from Dec. 1
to Nov. 15 this year. Next year's
this vital resource."
The Coast Guard closed a I opening will be delayed from
April 1 to April 8.

An anticipated budget of
$4,244,992 for fiscal year July 1,
1988 through June 30, 1989 was
approved for Southern Local
School District when the bOard of
education met Monday night in
regular session.
A breakdown of the total
budget, as reported by Treasurer
Dennie Hill, Included $3,554,400
in the general fund; $64,152,
principal's fund; $87,656, activity
fund; $32,124, D.P.P.F; $39,398,
Title XI-B; $147,909, Chapter I ;
$12,425, Chapter II; $706, drug
abuse; bOnd rl'tlrement, $38,500;
lunch room, $200,064; $18,000,
uniform supply (for workbooks
which must be reimbursed by the
students); and $49,658 In the
student activity fund ..
Substitute lists for the 1988-89
school year were also approved
by the board.
Approved as substitute
teachers were Cindy Allen, Bernadette Anderson, Joyce Back,
John Barcus, Nancy Basye,
Kimberly Batey, Franklin
Beash, Todd Bissell, Valerie
Black, Eileen Buck, Charles
Bush, Mary Canady, Judith
Crooks, Steve Deaver, Larry
Gibbs, Lucille Haggerty, \ilckl
Haley, Valerie Hanstine, Carol
Hare, \lerona Jones, Darla
Kennedy, Todd King, Randy
Koehler , Leda Mae Krautter,

David Kucsma, Barbara Lawrence, Fanny Lee, V lnas Lee,
Henry Lewis, Helen Maag, Jane
Manuel, Brent Marshall, MIchelle Mowery, Christy Nelson,
Steven Ohllnger , Kathleen
Parker, Patricia Parker, Fred
Penhorwood, Dortha Petrel,
Franklin Petrie, Kathleen Peyton, Jay · Rees, William Ro·
blnetie, Robert Shaver, Je((
Skinner, Connie Smith, Gregory
Spees, Frances Thomas, Carol
Tripp, Brenda Tyndall, Robroy
Walters, Rebecca . Wood and
Mary Woolever.
Approved as substitute bus
drivers were C.T. Chapman,
Tammy Chapman, David Curl·
man, William Downie, Joe
Drasko, JoAnn Newsome, James
O'Brien and Clarinda Theiss.
Approved as substitute
teachers' aides or secretarys
were Pam Diddle, Teresa TysonDrummer, Shirley Evans, Toni
Hudson, DebOrah Rizer , Susan
Roush, Peggy Hill and Alice
Williams.
Approved as substitute
teachers' aides only were
Tammy Chapman, Phyllis
Cross, Robyn Reiber and Teresa
Van Meter.
Approved as substitute cooks
were Barbara Chapman, Sharlee
Evans, Shirley Evans, Tessie
E;vans, Carol Hood, Janice

Lyons, Janet Manuel, Nancy
Neutzllng, Orsie Marie Norris,
Shirley Shultz, Mary Smith and
Allee Williams.
Approved as substitute custodians were Patricia Brown,
Charles Curfman, Shirley
Evans, Carol Hood, Toni Hudstm,
Janet Manuel, Nancy Neutzllng,
Orsie Marie Norris, Shirley
Shultz, Mary Smith, Sue Walker
and Allee Williams.
Approved as substitute maintenancl' man was Milford
Frl'derick.
Jay Rees was approved as
assistant boys basketball coach.
And because the board did not
receive applications from quail·
fled certified Individuals, either
employed or not employed · by
Southern Local School District,
for the positions of assistant high
school football coach, freshman
basketball coach, assistant girls
varsity basketball coach, junior
high football coach and variety
show director, applications from
qualified non-certified Individuals will now be accepted.
Accepted as tuition students
for the 1988-89 school year were
Raya n Young, fifth grade; Wll·
liam Young In , third grade;
Jenni Lynn Stewart, sixth grade;
Jessica Chapman, fifth grade;
and Paul Chapman, fifth grade.
Continued on page 9

Bush fully backs group's proposals
Public Works lntergrating
Committee members named

ltiiC:OitiCA
A~lomtl it.

north and central parts of the
state - at the height of the
recreational boating season -to
feed the shrinking Mississippi
River, which provides drinking
water to several cities, Including
Minneapolis and St. Paul.
Ron Nargang of the Minnesota
Department of Natural Resources sa id stx lakes In the state may
have to be tapped by mid-July tf
the drought continues.
"Nobody is too thrilled with the
Idea," Nargang said, noting July
Is the height of the-resort season.
He said the Army Corps of
Engineers would have to approve
any diversion of water into the
Mississippi.
A battle is brewing over a
proposal by Illinois Gov. James

Southent -board.approves
funds for new fiscal year

June 22 thru July 2nd

a

1ion is warranted.

-

at

N G

I

and

-~

e

•

Jackson County's Larcest Car Truck Event of the Year
OVER 300 CARS TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM

personal st ress he would exper·ience on release as grounds for
th e dec is ion.
"Th e court makes it clear that
while pub! ic outcry may properly
trigger reco ns ideration of a
parole gra nting decision, the
bOard must rely on evidence, not
public outrage to rescind pa·
role,· · sa id Van de Kamp.
The cou rt fou nd that the parole
bOard has co nsiderable power to
ca ncel scheduled releases of
Inmates, a nd that the lower
courts ca nnot interfere If there Is
•·some ev ide nce" the cancella -

·--·

..

Pick 4
1346

Page 3

By MIKE BERRY
United Press International
The Coast Guard Imposed
emergency limits on barge traf·
fie on the Mississippi River today
while Minnesota considered tapping lakes to feed the great
waterway depleted by the worst
drought since th e Great
Depression.
The Ohio River , meanwhile,
was closed today at Mound City,
Ill. , for dredging, and the government said the drought will force a
shorter navigation season for
Missouri River reservoirs, popular with boaters.
The Mississippi, already about
20 feet below normal and ex pected to drop another 6inches in
the next few days , Is clogged by

overturned Monday, issued a

for

Daily Number
914

Coast Guard ·limits traffic on Mississippi

strong ly worded disse nt that
att.acked th e pa role board rescissio n as poli tically motivated.
"O ne can no t help but suspect
that the Board of Prison Terms
decisio n he re is not the product of
impartia l adjudication. but an
emo tional re action to the prospec t of parole for a once·

Broussard wrote.
· Powell, 54, shot and killed Los
Angeles pol ice ofncer Jan Campbe ll in a n onion field near
Ba kersf ield in March 1963 after
kidnapping him a nd his partner
of f a Lo s Angeles street.
Powell was twice sen tenced to
di e. but the penalties were
overturned on a ppeal in 1967 and
1974. In 1977, the parole board set
a J9S:l re lease date, based on his
good be havior in prison .
The case became the s ubject of
the best-selling book "The Onion
Field" by Joseph Wambaugh,
which later wa s made into a film
with J a mes Woods playing
Powell
Th e showing of the movie
during an election year and
s hortly before his scheduled
paro le bl'ought a huge public
outc ry to have Powell kept In
prison.
Pelitions and campaigning by
!he n-Attorney General George
Deukme jian a nd then -Los Angeles Dis trict Attorney John Van
de f&lt;a mp brought a rescission of
Powel l's parole on the grounds
ll1a t new evi dence showed he
would be a danger to public
sa fety.
Acting tn their final week in
office a fter being denied confirma tion by voters in the Nove mber J98R e lectio n, Bird and
other court Iibera Is voted 4-3 that
re\'crsi ng Powell's parole was
improper. ruling that public
outcry could not be considered as
a factor in granti ng or denying
parole.
Bird a nd two liberal colleagues
were rep laced by three more
conserva tive justices appointed
by Deu km e jla n, who by then had
been elected gover no r.
van de Kamp, now s tate
a ttorney general. sa id Monday
he was "extremely gratified" the
high co urt ruling will keep
Powell in prison.
He cited the boa rd's concern
for his long criminal history,
dat in g back to 1949, his potential

Ohio Lottery

Connors
ousted

tive Committee, subject to veto
by two-thirds vote of the District
Integrating Committee. In this
case, the Executive Committee
must select another project as
the District Integrating Committee does not have the power to
submit projects to the State.
The following have been
elected by their colleagues to
represent them on the Pu bile
Works Integrating Committee
for a term of three years:
Co!lnty Appointees: The Karen
Harvey, Athens County; Robert
Olexa, Belmont County; William
Shaw, Hocking County; Richard
E. Jones, Meigs County; Glen W.
Dierkes, Monroe County; James
Waymer, Morgan County; Don
L. Kilts, Musklngham County;
John Foreman, Noble County;
Jim Brown, Perry County; and
Glen 0. Miller, Washington
County.
City Appointees: Sara Hen·
drtcker, Athens; Carl J . Mamone, Martins Ferry; Edgar E.
Dennis, Logan; Phillip M. Roberts, Middleport; Charles M.
Knowlton, Woodsfield; Galen
Finely, McConnelsville; Albert
F. lacovone, Zanesville; Robert
Ralston, Caldwell; John Tincher,
New Lexington; Nancy P. Hollis·
ter, Marietta.
VIUare Appointees: William
E. Gossett, Flushing; James
McGee, Powhatan Point; Paul
Wolvertson, New Matamoras.
Townahlp Appointees: Larry
E. Kldd, Meigs ville Township
(Morgan County); William E.
(Continued on page 8)

SAN FRANCISCO &lt;UPI) Vice President George Bush,
appearing to side more with
Democrat Michael Dukakls than
with fellow Republican Ronald
Reagan, supports the call to
extend federal anti ·
discrimination protection to
AIDS victims.
"If we want people (with
AIDS) to come forward, there.
should be anti-discrimination
guidelines,'' Bush said Tuesday,
backing a principal recommen·
dation In the report from the
president's AIDS commission.
Bush planned to conclude a
quick visit to the San Francisco
Bay Area today with a morning
foreign policy address before the .
World Affairs Council.
The prospective Republican
presidential nohnlnee toured NASA's Ames research center Tuesday and appeared at a pair of
private fund-raisers that a campaign spokeswoman said raised
$300,000 for his race.
Just one day after Reagan was
briefed on the sweeping recom·
mendatlons of his blue-ribbOn
AIDS panel, Bush did what his
boss did not by endorsing fully
the 240-page report by the Prest·
dent's Commission on the Hu·
man Immunodeficiency VIrus
Epidemic.
"I support It," he told reporters. ''I have looked at the
recommendations that call for
both an executive order, follow Ing up or simultaneously there
with some federal legislation. I
think It Is needed."
Bush acknowledged he had not
yet read the report but said he
backed all Its main principles,
Including the expansion of anti· 1
discrimination laws to people

with AIDS, a proposal that has
met a cool reception from the
White House.
"I'm endorsing the appproach," he salt!, conceding the
difference with Reagan.
Dukakls, the prospective Democratic presidential nominee,
congratulated the commission
Friday for a "comprehenslvl'
·and Insightful report" and Issued

his own call for "tougher antidiscrimination and confidentiality measures."
The report included 600 recommendations on how to cope with
the epidemic, including AIDS
tes Ung In the workplace. Reagan
has ordered that a plan be
produced within 30 days to
Implement many of the
proposals.

BUSH SPEAKS - VIce Presldeat Georre Bush speaks durlar a
news coafereace Ia the wllld lalulel at the N ASA·Ames Research
Center In Mountala View, CaiU. Tueaday. In the backlfouad Is aa
experbnental verlcal lhort talleol(lludlag airplane. (UPI)

I,
I

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