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Page-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Lafayette Day last obsenred
some 30 years ago in Gallia

In Our Town:
By DICK THOMAS
GALLiPOLIS
lt's been
about30yearstell me . if I'm
wrong - since
there's been a
Lafayette Day
observance at
Our House Museum. 432 First
Ave . Now, 1 don't think we ever
had an offlcia l La faye! te Day . as
such.

May 15, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

E . Holzer Sr .. purchased Our
House in 1933, refurbished it and
reopened it as a public museum
on July 4, 1936. This May 30, Our
House will officially open for its
52nd tou r ist season. The Holzers·
gave Our House to the Ohio
His torlcal Society in 1944, as a
memorial to the French Five
Hundred.

for the la te John Clendenin .

Market ... '-"_ _:c:.:.o:::nt::.:in:.:u::ed:.:..:lr.::om:.:.:..::p:.:a::ge~D:..::.: _I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-::::::-::-:~
All four of the week's most
active issues were sue h dividend
plays.
AT&amp;T gained IY, on the week to
27 11.- IBM slipped Y, to llO:Y, .
Among other active blue chips,
General Electric fell y, io 39 ')(, ,
Woolworth fell 3% to 52%,
American Express fell Y, to 23%
and Ford Motor gained l to 48\&lt;4.
Murray Ohio Manufaciuring
soared 16",
; 5211,
_The company
n 0
74
rejected a $48-a-share takeover
bl"d ,·n,·ti'ated by Etectrolux of
·
Sweden.
Long Island Ll'ghii"ng gai'ned

permission to increase rates .
On the American Stock Ex·
ch.ange, the Am ex Market Value
index fell 3.87 to close at 297.94,
while the National Association of
Securities Dealers index slid 6.94
to 372.48.

Declines led advances 569-232
among 1,026 issues traded on the
Amex. Volume totaled 43,471,035,
shares. compared with 49,761,590
traded a week earlier and
66,464,150 traded in the same
week a year earlier.

This weekend, they 're holding
the Antique Steam and Gas
West
Engine Show at the
Virginia State Farm Museum.
north of Point Pleasant. But. it
Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat .
won't be the same without
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1UPI) - $ 2_82 ; No. 2 shelled corn $1.97:
Howard Schultz who died last
The average cash grain prices
8
1
b
year. Schultz always ted the
No.092 oats $1.7 ; No. soy eans
(per
bushel)
paid
to
farmers
by
$
parade of farm machinery with
grain elevators in the principal 7· ·
steam engine. 1 saw a picture
his
When you see " SuperAmerSouthwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
marketing areas of Ohio after the $2 .76 ; No. ", shelled corn $1.92;
the other day in the Point
ica '.' you normally think of a gas
market s closed Friday until the N 2
Pleasant Register of Walden
s tation-grocery store, as the old
o. oats nol .available; No. 1
markets open Monday:
b
$7 07
Roush and the engine. Howard
timers called them . Now. Ash·
Schultz
was
a
former
Mason
"1%
to
10%.
The
companY
said
·
r;::============
s=oy::e:a:n:s=·=·======iland Petroleum , a s ubsidiary of
County Circuit Clerk. We spent Thursday It was near an agreeAshland Oil, ha s a new motorves·
many an election night together. ment with New York state under
'
set, old timers ~ailed them
By the way, does .anybody which It would abandon its
towboats, called "SuperAmer·
know who belongs to that bright completed but unlicensed Shoreica , " a 4,200 horsepower
· red Porsche 944 we see driving ham nuclear reactor in exchange
towboat.
··
around town ? The license plate for receiving tax breaks and
The vessel was named after the
retailing di-vision which operates reads : "TOP DOG."
Confidential Services:
500 high volume "stat ion-s tores"
If HEARING is your problem- and you f'eel that
Birth Control
in 17 states. SuperAmerica cost
$3.5 million. is 150 feet long. has a
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
V. D. Screening
45 -foot beam , has accomodations
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
Cancer Screening
for 13 and normally operates with
HEARING
CENTER.
We
have
many
referral
Pregnancy Testing
a crew of 10. She is a sls tershlp to
motorvessels Valvoline and P au I 1 sources for assistance and you may qualify
Sliding fee scale. No ani' refused services be&lt;ause of inability to pay.
Blazer .
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is

But, the ~'rench general vis ited
the Our House tavern on his visit
to Gallipolis, on Ma y 23 ,1825. The
event was s ponsored by the
French Colony Chap ter. Daughters of the American Revolution,
on the Sunday closest to May 23 .
I remember _Sunday, May 20.
1957, my first day with the Athens
Messenger. One of my first
assignments was to cover lhe
event at Our House. I don ' t recall
much about it other than it was
. sponsored by the French Colony
Chapter. DAR . and one of the
persons who worked hardest to
:prepare for the shindig was the
late Iris Miller.
·
. The event was scheduled in the
:garden behind Our House, but
There are three new part-time
rain forced activities inside dispatchers at the Gallipolis
where John and Chr is Epling Police Department. Well, at least
sa ng from the stairwell to a two are new. Dorothy Hall is
good-sized crowd gathered on the back after running Dorothy's
first floor. Tha,t evening t co- restaurant , in the 400 .block of
vered a Vesper service on the . Second Avenue , same spot where
·parkfront. That service was in the late Jack Hackworth and
charge of Lucille Rymer. Callia Laura (now Byers) operated a
Cou nty Extension• Agent. home fine eati ng place for years. The
economics.
seco nd dis patcher is Debbie
Marquis de Lafayette arrivc·d Rogers. a former Lawrence
at Gallipolis, May 23. 1825. County sher iff's dispatcher. The
a board the s teamboat Her ald. He third part-tim er is Chris Rhodes,
was greeted at the land ing b}' who, when he isn't dispatching,
General Nathanie l S. Cushing, works with the Gallia Cou nty
James Beale. Esq .. Peter Me- En1ergency Medical Service.
nager and Colonel Lewis Newsome. He was escorted to Our ·
A former Ga llipolis policeman
House, the tavern of Henr-y was in town last week, taking the
Cushing. who wast he host for the exam ination for police officer.
genera l' s visit. ·
Roger Thomas would like to
The genera l spent two and a come home. He left here two
half hours at Our Hou se before · years ago for Ca lifor nia, a nd has
conti nuing hi s journey 10 Ma- been on the police force at
rietta. At Wheeling, w. Va., the Roseville. Ca lif .. a town of about
river was so low that General 30,000.
Lalayeltc and his party left the
boat, went overland to BrownsA co uple of weeks ago 1 did a
vi lle, Pa .. and on to Pittsburgh, story on Gene Houc k and the July
where the general conti nued his 1945 si nk ing of the heavy"cruiser
trek to Boston. The Gallia Free USS India napolis in the P-hilip·
Press of May 26, 1825, carried a pine Sea. When Houck told me
detailed account of Genero t the s tory, he mentioned a nother
Lafayette's visit.
Ga!Ua Countia n who was on the
The structure called Our House record breaking run from Hundid not get its name unlil shortly ter's Point, Calif., across the
before Lafayette's visit in 1825. Pacific to Diamondhead, Ha·
The house was constructed in wail, carrying stra tegic ele1819 by C.D . Green as a hotel. men ts of the a tom bombtoTinian
Gree n later, constructed t11c old Island.
Hen king d~elllng on Court
Robert .1. Sheets, who lives at
Street. Our Hou se got its name 557 Hilda Drive , was on ihe
from ) Is second land lord. Henry Indianapolis, as fa r as Hawaii, ,
Cushing. The first landlord was when she made the. crossing in 74
Walter Newman. a Pennsylvania hours and 30 minutes, a record
native who though he was only 16 that still stands. Red Sheets was
yea rs old at time, participated in in t h~ Navy three years, eight
the Battle of Poin t Pleasant and months and 28 days, was a
later purchased the ground on ·s hipfi tter first class and worked
which the Tu -E ndie-Wei Mansion as a welder, pipelitter and as a
House was built.
sheetmetal worker. The "J " js
But, Henry Cushing was the for Jackson. Sheet s left the Navy
one who dubbed the tavern, Our October 1945 and returned to the
House, and when asked why. it Libby Hotel, which he ma naged
was so na med. he replied. " It is
the only hotel. and it is used by all
of us."
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING
General Lafayette was noi the
SEASON
only famous personage to visit
COMPLETE LINE Of VEGETABlE
Our House. In 1851 , it was graced
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
,by the presence of the famous
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
Swedish Nightingale Jenny Lind.
And, then there 's the story a bout
HANGING BASKETS, AZALEAS,
·a man, later Governor of Ohio,
fRUIT TREES &amp; SHRUBBERY
who rode his horse up the steps
OPEN DAILY •·5-SUNDAY 1-5
and into the taproom at Our
House, demanding a glass of
buttermilk. Our House was later
.called the Rising Sun lnn.
SYRACUSE - 992-6776
The late Dr. and Mrs. Char les

our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
be deprived of better hearing . Let us be your ad·
vocate.
CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-7716

DILES HEARING CENTER
326 W. Union St., Athen$, Ohio 45701
(614) 594-3571
1 ' 800-2~7-7716
We feature aids from:
HEARING TECHNOLOGY, INC.

Page 5

Super Lotto

POMEROY:
236 E. Main

992-5912

st:,· 2nd Floor

e
' Vol. 39, No.7

•

at

en tine
1 Section.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 16, 1988

•Copyrighted 1988

10 Pag'lio

A Multimedia Inc.

25 Cents

Naw~p•per

Ohio Senate to handle
waste issues Tuesday

GALLIPOLIS:
414 S11ond Ave., 2nd Floor

446-0166

8:30 io 5:00 Monday-Friday 8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Wednesday
8i30 to 12 Saturday
.
Closed Thursday
ALSO: Jackson. Chlsapla_ke, Athtnt, Chillitothe,logan &amp; Mc~lhll'

Whetsel, left, and Jerry Call flank Dr. G. Robert
Bowers, center, assistant superintendent of
public Instruction for the Ohio Department of
Education.

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) The Ohio Senate will meet in solo
session Tuesday in hopes of
finding a handle on a pair of
controversial e nviro nmenta l
Issues, paving the way for
summer a djournment next
week.
The Senate Energy, Natural
Resources and Environment
Committee will try to advance
bills dealing with solid waste
disposa l and transportation of
hazardous materials, but their
passage is by no means assured.
At the 'same time, the Senate
Education Committee ha s scheduled a hearing lor a hotlydebated bill dealing with the
evaluation of teac hers under
limited contracts.
Two separate Senate subcommittees will be meeting Tuesday
morning to try to assemble
acceptable bills on garbage dis·
posal a nd hazardous material s
transportation. Both have been
passed by the House bu t in
entirely different form.

The hazardous materials bill
failed to make it out of the
three-member subco mmltiee
last week because of a dispute
between Gov. Richard Celeste
and chemical manufacturers.
As passed by the House. the bill
required advance notification of
all shipments of hazardous mate·
rials and allowed the Public
Utilities Commission or Ohio to
designate the routes to be
traveled .
But the manufacturers and the
PUCO negotia ted a compromise
which allowed industry to keep
the state apprised of s hipments
of dangerous cargo with an
annual report and quarterly
updates on the contents, amounts
and destination s of such
shipments.
Celeste intervened, said the
ma nufa cturers , and insisted on
more detailed listings.
The bill also provides for sale
routing of hazardous shipments,
and Increased training of firelighters to combat leaks and

spills of toxic chemicals.
Senate President Paul Gil·
lmor, R-Port Clinton. said he
hopes the hazardous materials
bill will be ready lor a floor vote
during the wrapup May 24·26,
along with the solid waste disposal bill.
Th at proposal, also rewritten
from the House version. Is
undergoing a mendme nts in a
subcommittee cha ired by Sen.
Gary Suhadolnik, R-Parma
Heights.
As passed by the House, the bill
provided lor co untywide and
regional planning lor landfillS
and Incinerators, incentives lor
recycling, requirements that old
landfills meet modern erigineering standards, background
checks on landfill owners to
protect against organized crime
Infiltration, and higher dumping
lees to discourage out-of-state
trash.
But the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency, the state
Co ntinued on page 5

Education official tells Rio
·-gpads to-prepar.e~ for~·.· ehange 1984 OLDS. DELTA 88 ROYAtE BROUGHAM

4 door. white with red cloth interior, VB engine. air cond., AM -FM -cusette stereo, power se$t, power windows, power locks, tilt. cruise. delay
wipers, wire wheel covers. Real nice locally owned trade -in! A little heavy
on miles. but eKcellent shape!

MAY 1988 N.A.D.A. AVERAGE RETAIL S7425.00
MOTOR CAR BROKERS SPECIAL PRICE S$495.00

Blue on blue, 3.8 ·engine, automatic trans.,

interior, air con-

ditioning, AM·FM cassette stereo. power
power door tacks,
power windows. tilt. cruise. rear defog .. oo!Ner mirrors &amp; just
29,000 mil~siExtra clean ona-ownar local

$899 5

br.akas. air conditioning, AM-FM-cassatte stereo. sliding rear
~endow, rear step bumper, body side molding . Nice local trade-

on .

$4995

1983 FORD RANGER XLT. TRUCK

long bed, red end white. cloth Interior, 2.3 engine, 4 - d trans ..
AM·FM oteroo, sliding rear window, red liner, toolbox , bad rails,
radial tires and more. Nice clean local trade-in.

$4 2 9 5

5-in-1 lawn-Bav.

l'h11 ,,. l•wn·loy ~pr.,..C mowlf
"" • tt• .... ~ •• S "'"•• •ut

RIO GRANDE- William Todd ing change has berome the order
Johnson, a graduaie of the of the day and that America must
Emerson E. Evans School of brace for that change,
Business Management, received
·'The change in the work world
the "Ou \standing Academic Is perhaps the most dramatic
Award" for 1988 during ceremo· example," he said. In order lor
nles marking the 112th Comthe nat ion to keep its competitive
mencement at Rio Grande Col· edge, Bowers added, governlege / Community College ment assistance to private
Sunday. May 15.
schools such as Rio Grande
Johnson, Rt. 2, ' Patriot, was College is a must.
presented with the award by Dr.
" Higher education must trans·
Ray Boggs. Vice Prestdeni for form itself to meet the needs of
Academic Affairs. Boggs said returning studeqts, and as a
Johnson "singularly represents result, government must keep
the scholarly achievements of private schools operating."
Bowers' comments preceded
Rio Grande."
Graduating summa cum
the conferral of degrees to the
laude. he earned a perfect 4.0 graduates. Upon completion of
grade point average in his work his address, the board of trustees
toward a Bachelor of Science conferred the honorary degree
degree in accounting. In addition Doctorate of Public Service upon
to his academic achievements.
Bowers.
Ceremonies concluded with the
Johnson was instrumental In the
traditional circle on the green
operation of the Rio Grande
Corporation, a campus-based and the singing of the alma
company operated by students in mater.
Prior to the commencement, a
the school or business.
Over 250 baccalaureate and baccalaureate and founders' day
program was held on the college
associate degree graduates re·
celved diplomas during the after- green. Invocation was given by
noon commencment ceremony the Rev . Paul F. White, campus
chaplain. A memorial prayer
- an event that capped a
weekend of activities designed to was offered by D~. Keith R.
honor students, alumni, trustees , .Brandeberry, member and past
friends and guests of the college.
president of the Rio G~ande
"The only thing we as Amerl·
College Bo!!rd of Trustees .
Meigs County graduates, by
cans have to offer in the world
marketplace," commencement school, include:
speaker G. Robert Bowers said.
Sehool of General Sttldles and
"Is Intelligence - an ability to Uberal Arts, Bachelor ol Science
Degrees- Nancy L. Morrissey,
build bet Jer products and to do
39451 Sumner Road, Pomeroy.
the job better.
School of Education, Health
Bow~rs, who serves as Assist·
and Physical Education, Bacheant Superintendent of Public
Instruction for the Ohio Depart- . lor of Science Degrees - Cindy
Jo Allen. Rt. 2, Racine; Pamela
ment of Education. said sweep·

J. Chancey, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy; Nancy K. Circle, 31975
Circle Road , Racine; Patricia J .
Duffy, 107 Wehe Te'?face, Pomeroy; Ricky Dawn Edwards, 368'h
N. ThirdAve., Middleport; Darla
L. Kennedy , Nelson Road , Rutland; Shirley A. McDonald,
30315 Old. Dexter Road , Dexter;
MichaelS. Miller, 49990 Portland
Road, Racine; Mary E. O'Brien,
34560 Township Road 366,
Pomeroy.
School ol Mathematics and
Natural Science, Bachelor ol
Selence . Degrees - Linda \1.
Smtth, 28704 State Route 124,
Langsville.
Emerson E . Evans School of
Business Management, Bachelor
of Science Degree - Ricky E.
Barton, State Route 681, Reedsville; Cheryl A. Riffle, 38636
Leading Creek Road,
Middleport.
School of Education, Health
and Physical Education, Associate of Arts Degree - Suzanne
A. Thoma, 103 Wolfe Drive,
Pomeroy .
Holzer Sehoul ol Nursing, ASsociate of AppUed Science-Nursing
- Tahnee Jo Johnson, 35744 New
Lima Road, Rutland; Andrea C.
Riggs, 143 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. ,
Sehool ol Technology, Associate ol · Applied ScienceElectronics
Sherman D.
White, Racine.
I
Associate ol Applied ScienceManufacturing Technology JeffreyS. Frank, 49074 McKenzie
Ridge Road, Racine.
Associate of Applied ScienceMedical Laboratory Technology
- Aleshla L. Holsinger, 67917
State Route 124, Reedsville.

FIRM GIVES HELPING HAND - The cost of

moving a cabin buUIIn 1829 to lbe site oltbe Meigs
County!Falrgrounds waa alleviated ..,mew hal by
a recent donation from Southern Oblo Coal
Company's Meigs Division to lhe fair board.

Talking In front of the cabin are
Bradford,
treasurer for the board, on the left, and Davld P .
Barker, personnel manager lor Southern Ohio
Coal.

,.

Southern Ohio Coal Co., donation
helps Meigs Fairboard move cabin
The Meigs County Fair Board
has cabin fever, so to speak, and
Southern Ohio Coal Company ha s
helped alleviate the board's pain
somewhat.
The "pain" referred to Is
actually the cost of moving a log
cabin to the Meigs County
Fairgrounds and adding a new

roof to the structure.
Alter the board acquired the
cabin, built in 1829, It cost about
$8;000 to move It to the lair·
grounds from adloinlng property, according to Wally Brad·
lord, treasurer and concession
manager for the Meigs County
Fair Board. The board also is In

the process of adding a cedar
shake roof to the one-room
structure, to make it more
authentic and to protect it from
t~ weather, Bradford adds.
A.ctonation from Southern Ohio
Coal's Meigs Division toward the
project recently was presented to
Continued on page 5

Complete deal to end uprising

.,ooot ...., .... ,;......... ~ ..
rNirh cruhhrNI•••· Mllf.stwt•igAiHol\ IOII'It•limiu4 ~l"ffr..lon rt·

.Nil llid .............,.d

~. . . . . ., ,. ...... ,....,...... - · i t

lht fiiMitt ................, 1ft·
P• ••" rt H . . . . . for
tatro ytan o doptn.Wt s•wkt.

r,

1985 FORD F2SO 4X4 TRUCK

361 VB. " 4 speed trans .. power steering and brakes, AM-FM

stereo, .tiding rear window, -gooseneck plate in bed, electric
brake control, 10 ply radial tiroe. nice locally owned truck.

$

1982 JEEP J-1 0 4X4 TRUCK

Long bed, six cylinder engine. 4 epaecl trene .• power stearing and
brakea, AM -FM stereo, white spoke wheels, n- tires. chrome
bumpera.

$399 5

STRINGTOWN, Okla . (UPI) . ing, officials said.
- Convicts who rioted and took
They then quickly agreed to lay
eight guards hostage to protest
down their weapons and release
overcrowding agreed to end a
the last two guards at 9 a.m. COT
three-day siege by releasing
today, 30 minutes after the
their last two captives today in
arrival of a bus that Is to take the
return for transfers to another
inmates to another state priSon,
state prison, officials said.
Corrections Department spokesThe deal was struck late
woman Anita Trammell said.
Sunday after a day of off-and-on
"This Is the package," 'Tram·
neaotlatlons with the estimated
mell said. "Right now, every·
20 Inmates who began their fiery 1 thllli Is done."
revolt Friday night and took over
"They've had a quiet night."
a section of the medlum·eecurtty
Neville Massie, an executive
Mac Alford Correctional Center.
assistant to the director of the
The prisoners, who released
Oklahoma Department of Cor·
five hostages unharmed Satur·
rectlons, said about three hours
day, freed the sixth Sunday night
IJefore the schllduled release ..
In return for the 50 pinta of Ice
"We're of counte hopeful that It
cream, 50 Coca·Colas and five
will be resolved quickly as
cartons of cigarettes that they
planned but we understand these
demanded throughout the upr!S·
kind of situations take time. We

.,

.,

Tonight, variable cloudiness. Chance of showers.

18-1~42-14-38-6

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

The versatile

915·3301·

3622

Johnson named outstanding graduate

long bod, V6 engine, automatic trans .. power steering and

CHEml

334

Pick 4

PROCFSSIONAL - The processional of the
platfonn party at the 1121h Commencement at Rio
Grande College/ Community College marches
down the college green Sunday. Ushers Jody

1983 GMC S-1 S SIERRA TRUCK

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Daily Number

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

'•

Indy 500
qualifications

Market Report

Family Planning
It Makes Sense •••

Ohio Lottery

are prepared to do some more
talking if necessary ."
Corrections Department Capt.
Louis McGee, the hostage freed
Sunday night, emerged from the
burned-out priSon section "tired
... but In good health. He's glad
it 's all over with," Trammell
said.
The convicts made assurances
that the two remaining hostages,
Sgt. Harold Yoder and Officer
Ronnie Scott. were in good
condition and had been led, she
said.
The name of the Inmates' new
prison was withheld for security
reasons, Massie said. The con·
victs, apparently fearing reprl·
sals, demanded that television
crews videotape them as they
Continued on page 5

TOURNAMENT OFJI'ICIAUI - Toumamenl
ofllclala til'- year durtq the "'l 'oad" Brlcklea
Hor-'tee Toomey were (L loR) Harry Bailey,

ville), aecre&amp;IU')'.ftllurer of the Ohio Bo!Wihoe
Pl&amp;cben AIHclatloa; ud Carl "Cricks" Ileariel. See a&amp;ory ud addltlollal photo. on pap 4. ·

Carol BroWD (Lancuter), Francis Asher ( LucM\

·~

I

�Monday, May 16, 1988

.Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVc;JTED 'fO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

tsm~ ~'--"""T""•~d •.=.
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Uniled Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association a nd Ihe American Newspaper Publishers Association.

WASHINGTON - Unwholesome beef may be landing in
American supermarkets be·
cause of a new slaughterhouse
Inspection system that changes
the way Inspectors check for
di seased carcasses.
The Department of Agrlcul·
ture is testing the new stream·
lined Inspection system, SIS, In
four meatpacklng plants. Under
the new system, government
inspectors have turned over
many of their duties to the
employees of the meatpacklng
companies.

o~erlook

Speclllcally, the company in·
spectors now look for filth such as
dirt and manure where bacteria
can breed. The USDA Inspectors
look for disease.
Government Inspectors workIng under the SIS method reported last year that they were
having trouble discerning cysts
and other unhealthy conditions In
the heads of cattle, according to
internal USDA documents ob·
talned by our associate Stewart
Harris.
Sources Inside one of the plants
say the situation has not changed

Anderson and
va_nA_t_ta_

disease ___

since last year.
The evidence of disease may be
obscured under the SIS inspec·
tion method because the USDA
inspectors now don't see the
cattle heads until company meat·
packers have spllt open the heads
with a cut through the cheeks.
That cut sometimes obliterates
the lesions and cysts that warn
the USDA Inspectors of disease.
Under the traditional Inspection
method, the USDA inspectors
sllced the cheeks themselves .
Tape worm cysts and eosinophilic myositis can be found In

LETTERS OF OPINION a re welcome . They should be less than 300 words
long A U Jette1s are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number No unsigned letters wUJ be published Leiters should be in
good taSUI, addressing Issues, not personall t,les.

Reagan's faint
embrace of Bush
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - President Reagan's endorsement of Vice
President George Bush last week, variously described as "terse" or
"lukewarm," may have been Just what the soon-to-be-nominated
Republican presidential candidate needed.
There was an undertone of shock in the stories about the president's
failure to give Bush a rousing sendoff, and some very skeptical
reporting, of the Bush campaign's contention that ltgotexactlywhat It
asked fol from Reagan.
, ·
But that may JU St be the truth.
S1x months ago, George Bush's biggest problem was to win the GOP
nomination. He d1d it mainly by emphasl7Jng his links to Reagan, his
part as a mostly silent but active partner in the political enterprise
that won two national elections and made major Inroads Into
reversing the social welfare and business regulation climate of
previous Democratic admlmstrations.
Bush took and may continue to take some lumps for that strategy.
Both Alexander Haig and Sen. Robert Dole belabored him during the
early stages of the primary season for refusing to clearly state his
personal position on the Iran arms sales, among other Issues
Bush simply stonewalled them and other crltlcs, declaring he had
spoken his mind privately to the president and was not about to
breach that confidential relationship
Apart from his personal feelings, Bush had good political reasons
for stressing loyalty to Reagan in hls nomination campaign. To get
the nomination, he needed the Reagan loyalists In the conservative
center of the party because others were going lor the far right and
moderate middle He got what he wanted and locked up the
nomination in an amazingly shan time.
Bush Is not the first vice president to run Into this situation. Twenty
years ago, Hubert Humphrey's supporters, sure that he could not
have supported Lyndon Johnson 's Vietnam policy, pleaded with him
to Jay out his differences with the president and shuck off the burden
of anti-war sentiment that was tearing apart the Democratic Party.
Humphrey wa1ted until the party's regulars, who backed Johnson,
had given him the nomination He finally did try to state his own
position on Vietnam, but It was such a straddle between a declaration
of Independence and an LBJ loyalty oath that he gained very little In
his ill-starred 1968 campaign.
It is not news that the Bush campaign strategists, aware that no
sitting vice presidentln 152 years has won the presidency, are looking _
fqr a way to Implant the image of a candidate who is his own man and
•
not the outgoing president's tame poodle
Bush' s handlers obviously saw the advantages of an endorsement
from the preslden t, but they also could see the pitfalls of an embrace
so warm that the vice president emerged as Reagan's total creature.
In pther words , they wanted the positive spin loyalty to Reagan
afforded during the RepubliCan contest for the nomination, but did
not want Bush to carry all or Reagan's negatives Into the general
election where Democrats also get to vote.
So It Is entirely plausible that Bush got what he wanted from
Reagan: a short, business-like endorsement and a good luck wave
from the outgoing president.

Letters to the editor
Expresses appreciation

"What was the other suggestion you had ... ?"

Who caused the deficit
The embittered Don Regan
now tells us that poor Nancy
Reagan, frightened almost out or
her wits by the March 1981
assassination attempt on her
husband, took to consulting a San
Francisco astrologer as to the
dates on which It would be safest
- or most dangerous - for him
to travel. And It appears that,
where possible, her husband
good naturedly Indulged her
wishes In such matters.
Just as these revelations were
enlivening Washington's spring
Silly Season, the Labor Depart·
ment reported that the nation's
clvlllan unemployment rate fell
in April to 5.4 percent - the
lowest level In 14 years.
Question for thoughtful readers: Which of these stories do you
think Is likely to have the bigger
Impact on George Bush's election prospects in November?
The plight of the Democrats
would be comical If It weren't so
desperate. Their whole act con·
slsts of portraying America as In
economic ruins, from which it
can be rescued only by their

patented combination of cheap
money, punitive taxes and go·
vernment checks for all.
Yet here is this wretch Reagan,
who actually dared to cuteveryb·
ody's taxes, presiding over the
65th month of the longest ·economic boom in post-war history,
with Inflation well under control
and unemployment still falling
month by month! As Hugh
Johnson used to say, It's enough
to bring tears to the eyes of a
brass Buddha.
You know just how bad things
must be for the Democrats wlien
they start complaining about the
size of the federal deficit. That's
like W.C. Fields leading a temperance parade. Theirs after all
Is the party that invented deficit
spending.
Nevertheless, one makes do
with what Is available; so nowa·
days people who never used to
show the slightest Interest In
such statistics are bewailing the
vast deficit that "Reagan has run
up.''
Federal deficits are the result

ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
diamondmen closed out the 1988
baseball campaign with wins
over Federal Hocking and Alex·
ander in action this past week.
This leaves the Marauders
with a 15-9 overall record for the
season and a 12·4 slate within the
TVC, good enough for a second
place tie with the Trll1lble
Tomcats. Wellston won the title
as they posted a 15·1 record ln
co nference play.
On the road against the ,
Lancers, hurler Keith Mattox, up
from the reserves, picked up a
win as the worked four frames on
the mound ln a 13 8 victory
During his stint on the rubber he
was tagged for four hits, walked
four men and struck out five and
was charged with two runs.
Relievers Kevin Oller, Bryan
Durst and Chris Stewart finished
the final three in~lngs Me1gs and
Wes Young worked behind the
· plate
The Marauders pounded out
twenty one h1ts against the
Lancer mound staff as Wood
absorbed the loss for Federal
Hocking Mattox and Durst led
the Fostermen at the plate, each
going four for four, all being
singles. Brent Bissell and Terry

the muscles of the cheek. A
condition known as cancer eye
can also be detected In glands
found Inside the cheeks. The
appearance of these conditions Is
an early warning flag to Inspectors that the en tire care ass
should be carefully checked.
Besides obscuring the signs of
disease, the company "cheek
droppers," as they are called,
Increase the risk of spreading
disease to healthy cattle because
they do not always sanitize their
knives between cuts, according
to a list of problems that
government inspectors at the
Monfort meatpacking plant In
Grand Island, Neb., gave to their
managers last summer. Sources
In the plant tell us the problem
still exists.
,
The complaints about SIS "
· come from USDA lnspe&lt;;tors in
the plant But top officials at the
USDA and Monfort tell us that
the plant workers are trained to
recognize diseases . The workers
sanitize their knives In hot water,
wash their hands and change
their aprons whenever they deal
with diseased tissue, said Dr. •
Rod Bowling, Monfront's vice .•
president of quality control.
•
Government Inspectors allege
In Internal memos tha: they have
also found abscesses, hair and
even cactus spines on cattle
tongues that have been pro- •
cessed for human consumption
The contamination was missed
by the company workers, the
documents say.
Cheek droppers are supposed
to feel cattle tongues to detect
abnormalities, but the llst of
problems cited by USDA Inspectors last summer at the Grand
Island plant Included the all ega·
tion that workers were not
examining the tongues
consistently.
"

William Rusher

differing on the size of the
Increases, their official position
was always to favor higher
defense expenditures.
It Is on domestic expenditures ' ..
alone that the Democrats have
steadfastly opposed the pres!·
dent, and here their pressure has
always been for more spending
- and, as a result , for the huge
deficit we see.
In this campaign year, the •
Democratic Party Is stopping
just short of calling for higher
taxes as the way to narrow that
detlcit. Michael Dukakis speaks
of raising taxes "as a last
•
resort," which Is a polltican's
:
!
cautious Newspeak for a tax
hike. But he had better be 1
careful. According to Gallup poll
•
conducted for the Los Angeles
!
Times, not only all four of the
:
voting groups Gallup Identifies
•t
as ''Republican-oriented''
1
groups would be "less llkeiy to I
vote for a candidate who sup- '
ports a tax Increase to reduce the
federal deficit."
••
But maybe Dukakls consults
astrologers, not pollsters.

!

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sports Writer
WilliS McGee wound up work·
ing on his day off, and the
Cardinals were better off for it.
McGee singled home the winning run with two out in the ninth
Inning Sunday afternoon to hft St.
Louis to a 7·6 victory over the
Atlanta Braves.
Cardinals Manager Whitey
Herzog had given McGee the day
off after the center fielder played
all of Saturday's 19-innlng loss to
the Atlanta Braves
McGee, slowed by a sore right
leg, welcomed the rest, but It
wasn't until he came off the
bench that the Cardinals could
breathe easier.
"I never ask for a day off- I
come expecting to play, '' McGee
sa1d. "I didn 't complain though, I
could use one. "
Playmg less than 12 hours after
completing the marathon game,
McGee drove home home Tony
Pena to cap a two-run Inning.
McGee's heroics erased Ge·

A special thank-you to the
RSVP volunteers who baked pies
and cakes, helped at registration
and In the dining room; to Dan
Smith lor hls volunteer services
as auctioneer- and to the cooks,
janitors and office staff who did a
great job in cleaning up, cooking
and all the other work there was
to do In a short time period to
make the evening a success.
At this time, I would alsollketo
express our appreciation to Scott
Lucas and Jackie Starcher at
Veteran Memorial Hospital for
their assistance In providing
meals at the Center and hOme·
delivered meals during the twoweek period the Center kitchen
was closed.
Eleanor Thomas

Majors

Today in history
By United Press lnlerntOtlonal
Today Is Monda y, May 16, the !37th day or 1988 with 229 to follow .
The moon Is new.
The morning s tars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They include
Wllllam Seward. secretary of state whose purchase of Alaska from
RussJQ In 1867 for $7.2 mllllon was called "Seward's Folly," In 1801;
banker and United States vice president Levi Morton in 1824; David
Hughes, inventor of the microphone , In 1831 ; a~tor Henry Fonda in
1905; bandieader Woody Herman In 1913; entertainer Llberace In
1919; New York Yankees manager Billy Martin In 1928 (age 60), and
actress Debra Winger in 1955 (age 33) .
On this date In history:
In 1804, the French Senate declared Napoleon Bonaparte emperor.
In 1871, US Marines landed in Korea in an unsuccessful attempt to
open the country to foreign trade.
In 1929, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded
the llr$t first Oscars.
In 1969, the unmanned Soviet spacecraft Venus-5 landed on the
,urface of Venus.
In 1987. the Infamous garbage barge Mobro 4000, Its 3,200 tons of
trash rejected by three states plus Mexico, Belize and the Bahamas
during an eight-week, 6,000-mlle odyssey, returned to New York; Its
trash was incinerated on Long Island, where it originated, four
months Ia ter.

An odorless, colorless, and
possibly cancer-causing gas is
slowly seeping into hundreds of
homes In Ohio.
Radon gas Is a natural by·
product of decaying uranium
deposits found In rocks and soil.
Under normal circumstances
this gas would dissipate freely
Into the atmosphere, however it
has recently been discovered
that unnatural levels of radon are
trapped In the basements of
newer homes and other well·
Insulated structures with cracks
or unsealed gaps in basement
floors.
The Ohio General Assembly Is
taking an active interest in this
Invisible gas. Public demand lor
more Information about radon
gas and recent tests Indicating
radon levels may be dangerously
high In the Statehouse have
resulted ln the Introduction of
legislation, HB 705, and the
Initiation of a public Information
campaign by the Ohio Depart·
ment of Health.
Under HB 705, the state health
department would be required to
conduct a statewide radon test·
ing program to determine the
extent of the problem this ra·
dloactive gas Is causing In Ohio.
Although Independent radon testIng has been conducted In several
Ohio cities, the sponsor of the blll
indicates the HB 705 would
provide the health department
with consistent data regarding
the l&gt;revalence of radon across
the state.
The proposal would also require licensing for Individuals
engaged in radon testing or
selling radon testing equipment.
A variety of kits to detect the gas
are now available In stores and
concern Is growing ·about the

accuracy of these devices and the
validity of their results . In
addition, several services have
developed that specialize in
conducting radon gas tests to
detect accumulations of the toxic
gas.
HB 705 would also require
distributors to undergo statesponsored training courses as a
means of ensuring unltormlty of
radon testing. Current language
In the blll would appropriate
$210,000 to the health department
to pay for these training courses.
Realtors and homebuilders are
also concerned about the accuracy of methods to detect radon
and the current level of Incorrect
Information about the Invisible
vapor. In one area of the state,
homebuliders r'ecently conducted a seminar showla,g how
radon leaks Into a hom~· and
lllustratlng techniques to prevent penetration by the gas.
Some real estate companies have
begun recommending radon test·
lng to potential home-buyers and
construction contracts may soon
contain disclaimers to avoid
liability If radon Is detected.
Currently, the only known
health effect associated with
exposure to elevated levels of
radon Is an Increased risk of
developing lung cancer. Accord·
ing to the U.S. EPA and the US
Centers for Disease Control,
between 5,000 and 20,000 lung
cancer deaths each year can be
attributed to radon. The risk of
developing lung cancer from
radon exposure depends upon the
length of exposure and the
concentration of radon.
The two most popular,
commercially-available radon
detectors are the charcoal canis·
ter and the alpha track detector.

Both of these devises are exposed
to air In a home for a specified
length of time and then sent to a
laboratory for analysis. Other
testing techniques may be per·
formed by professionals trained
In radon detection.
In addition to testing for radon,
there are other steps Individuals
may take to reduce the radon
risk: stop smoking or discourage
smoking In the home; spend less
time In areas with higher concen·
tratlons of radon, such as a

Sen. Jan M. Long
basement; open windows and
turn on fans, whenever practical,
to Increase the air flow into and
through the house; and, keep any
crawl-space vents In a home fully
open all year.
For more Information about
HB 705 or to receive a free copy or
a US EPA brochure about radon,
please telephone or write to State
Senator Jan Michael Long, Ohio
Senate, Statehouse, Columbus,
Ohio, 43266 or call (614) 466·8156.

""'' u

I. Pet
GR
1! 6117 '!2 H .611 ~
\II

N~

V11rk

Cleveland

21
19
19
IS

IJ.Hrolt

8011ton

Mllw~uMce

TGronto
Baltimore

1&lt;1 AOI
1&lt;1 .511
16 .5U
21 .fl7

~lJt

S'A:
.f ~
!)

5 31 .131 19
w~•

O~~okbuld

'al 10
tJ 11

Cblcaao
Tn.u

Ill 11

12t 52t 1
Ul l lq
451

Kaa111t1 City

IC II
1:1 II ,4U

Se~~ollle

II H
14 U

!I"

10
.f21 II
)78 12 Yt

Cleveland 8, Mllwaullee 1
l'Unnl!lota 7 Detroit I

(btca!Jo 7, T•ronl• ;\
Oakland 1\, laiUmoN! 0
Texu t, K•n•11 City 3

INDio\Ni\POLIS (UPI) - Quallfylnl!
order for the 12nd lndl.napoll8 5&amp;CI, with

Oaklllfl d 7, Balllrnnre 4
t, Toronlo 5, II banlnp

posMion, drt¥er'11name, make of car and

Mllwautlee I, 0e"Yeland 5

quallf)'lns apeed.

Kan . . C::Hy 5 Texu -1
MondQ"'A Games
Sullie (Moere Z.4) at Nrw Verk

{Candelaria 4-!) , 1 30 p m
Oak .... (DM.v"' 1-1) at &amp;!lion (Sellen
0-3).':31pm.
Toronlo ~Hlleh ... !J) a.t Chlca~a (Horton
J-5),8 :stpm.
Detroll (Tencll 1·0) at Mllwaullee
(Bol!lo S-3), 8 3~ p m
Kan!811 Cltr (Bannkt.er ~J.:l} al TuaN
(KIIpa5-2),11 !15pm
TuesdC) '" Games
Seattle .d Nt'w Vark, nlr;hl
Dt'irctk at Mllwadlet', nla*K
Olcqo at Cl~tland, ftiJhl
Texu at Tor...to, nl&amp;fll
Callfur~al&amp;t

hlilmOI'\!, nl1ht
Oakland a1 BaslM, nla:hl
K.aft . . City at Mlnrl!!lol:a, nl1hl
NATIONAL LEAGUE

"""

New York
Pttlllhu~

Ollcqo

St. t.uis
Mollln!al
Phlladripjja

21 II

.,._

Hou!lion

II U

SMFrancl~

II Ul
II\ Ill

551

Ul

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Jll

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...
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""

Allan \a

21! 1911 n1ph. 2 " ·Dan"¥ Sl.lllun,
,Penske-Chevroll't, U8UI mph. 3, W·A.l
Unser Sr., P easke.Chn Nll'l, 215 !70
mp•
Sf!tonl How
.a, \\'·Marlo Mdretll, Lola.Chevroltt ,
ZU .• 2 mph. ~. N Un~er Jr., ManhO.evrolet, 214.186 mph. I. Arle Luyen
tb'k, Lola.Co~tworth , 211 111 mph
nlrd Row
1, Scoll Bra)'IDn, Lola Buick, U2.6Z4
mph !!, Emenon lilltlpaldl , MarchChevrolfi, :u uu mph. t, Derek Daly,
Lala ·C6S ~rlh,

21% 2'11 mph
Fourth Row
10. Mlcllacl i\a*eltl. Marclt-Co~tworth ,
'l10.183 mph II , Randy Lewli!l, Lf)la

llt.n• mph U, Roberto
Guerrero, Lola-Coswertll, :zo&amp;.tSI mph .

lAM Anlf'Je!l
Clnei••U
San DleKO

Flnt Row
I W Rick Me•s. Petl!lke Chev rnlct,

Cotnvorth,

WLPcl
GB
Ullt7iU I~ ,Qt I
IS 11 514 IIV.
l't II 41% 1
II II ,toll 8
n: 11 1&amp;4 IDYr

We~t

•

Lo•llvUie (A/\ )4, Rochester!
NulwUie (AA) 8, SJNCIIte 4

Indy 50 list

Chlca~~:o

!

Den~r (A A) :1
Pawtucket 5, Oklahoma Clly(AA )3
Tidew..ter 2, Richmond I
Sulda,y's Re1111ts
Columbus n, Tolrdo 1
Denwr (AA)e, Malne5
Pawluck8 s. Oklahoma Clly cAA ) o
'ndewater t, Rldamond I

aa Nashville IAA J
Oklaltoma Cit)' (A.A.) at Maine
Denwr (AA.) at Pawhd.~
Columhu8 at Tolfdo

Nf'w \ 'ork&amp;, California 2

••

Maine t,

Roclle~Rr at

Minnesota 10, Detroit'!

I

Phl..,delpHa lit San Franci!ICO, nlr;hl
lnternaUonal Lear;ue
S.urd..,.'l JI.Hulb
Loabwtlle (AA) 8, RocheMer I
Syncui!P- 7, Num-llle (AA) I
Toledo 4, Columhu5 2,

syracu.~e

Sa IIIII,V'A Reult s
Sraillf&gt; II, BoAt lin 7

•

Montreal ac Los Anrelm, nl!tftl
New \'or• at San Dlep, allfll

Monda,y'a Gamel!
Lou II! vile (AI\ )

New \ 'orkll, Ot.llfarnla2
Bw\on 3, Se.ttle 0

I

Berry's World

PIHI!Ib.,sh at Hoallton, night

AMERIC!\N LEA.GUE

S..turd~'" Res ulltt~

••

raid Perry's two-run homer In
the top of the ninth Inning that
had given the Braves a 6-5 lead.
McGee said he wasn' t looking
for any particular pitch from
Bruce Sutter, 1-l, whom he called
"a n idol of mine "
"I was jus!looking for the ball,
not for a certain pitch," McGee
said.
Herzog said he used McGee
"because he didn't have to run ,"
with the bases being loaded and
two out
Ozzle Smith bunted leadil)j; off
the ninth for St. Louis . Sutter
fielded the ball and had time to
get Smith, but he threw the ball
over first baseman Perry's head
Into right field , allowing Smith to
advance to second
"About the worst ball I threw
was to first base," said Sutter,
the former St. Louis ace reliever.
After Tom Brunansky flied out,
Bob Horner walked and Pena
followed with a line shot off
Sutter's glove that rolled into
center field, scoring Smith to tie

'l'\leMQ'• Games
81. Loul11 at Chi cap
AU&amp;nta at Cincinnati, nlkht

B)' Unltd Press International

Calllor~a

Radon gas regulations studied

At home against Alexander,
the Marauders turned eight hits
and five Spartan errors into a 10-5
victory on Saturday
The Initial Meigs score came in
the first when Terry Fields, on a
hit and run play, singled home
Brent Bissell who had reached on
a fielding error.
The home town lads picked up
three more in the second after Ed
Crooks had walked and Bryan
Du.rst was safe on another
fielding miscue at short. With
two down and the runners at
second and third, the Spartans
chose to give Bissell an Intentional pass and pitch to Wes
Young. The strategy move backtired, however, when Young
slammed a triple to right center
lor three RBI' s

Scoreboard ...

Mln.el\ota

To The Editor
As Executive Director for the
Meigs County Council on Agmg, I
would like to take this opportunIty to tha nk ALL candidates (or
their representatives ) for their
generous donations (over$500) to
the Meigs County Senior Cillzens
at Candidates' Night, and to
other contributors from the audience. There were 250 in attendance, with 21 candidates, or their
representativ es, present
I would like to extend our
appreciation to the contrac tors
( K &amp; J Construction, Great Bend
Electric and C &amp; C Plumbing &amp;
Heating), for lhelf cooperation in
arranging their work schedule so
that the kitchen and dining room
could be ready for use by noon
that day.

Fields rang In with two singles
and a doubl e apiece and Jeff
"Cheez" McElroy had three base
hits . Kevin Oller, Nick King,
Chris Stewa&lt;V1ind Wes Young
each chipped In with a single . .
Ma ce, of the Lancers, had
three ol the losers seven safeties .
Llnescore:
.
Meigs .. ........ 214 120 3 -13 21 0
FHHS .......... 100 142 0-8 7 2

.38S 11

Solt.lurd"'f' RCIIullS
Honlun I, Chlcq:o I

San FranctteO 3, Nfw York 'l
Clnda. . ll, Ptlt!lbuf'Jit 3
Lo11 AnJei• S, PlllladelpHa2
san Dteao l, Mnlreall

Filth &amp;.w

13. Xfvkl Col•· Mareh·Coaworth,
2tUS2 mph 14, W Tom Sn~a. Lola
Jud.. 208 Ul mph. II, Pltll Krue1er, 181M!
March-Coznvorth, tt8.212 mph.
Sld1 Row
18, DtckSimon, Lolii.CO.worth, 2\17.n~
mph . 11, Teo Fabl, Man:t..Por~K~he,
207.144 mph. 18. Rich V•ater. lt87

•tn mph.
Se¥ealh Row

M~h-Cosworth ,

It,

Rn••

811ndq'a
• Cinda•ll 7, I'RIIbur'lh I, II lnnlnp

81. Lo•ll 'J, Atlanta I
Chi cap J, Heualon I
Loe An lfll•l, PblbWiflr ot

s .. Dtep 1. Moalrell
SM P'raadsee I. New

York I

... .,.• a..m•

A&amp;IMIY (Cottman 1-t) at Clncln•tl
{Jirow••ri·IJ,1:11 P·•·
PkiiiNirth (Wall 4-1 ) al a . . .
lon (Oelllllat-1),8.11 p m.

·~

~:liMtrNIAIIIC

.f 0

"Fred, csll me later at the office, will ya?
I'm doing a power lunch with my
ASTROLOGER!"

'

I
I

'•
l

.

R-Soon

A.lda&amp;IHIII.

1!1111 Mareh-

Coeworih, 211 14tmpiLM,IImCrawlonl,
Lola lkllell, 211.114 mph. tl, W·Bobbt'
Rallal, Lo .. .,Judd, t:GK SU mph
R-roelde W·fonner wln•r

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

the score. Luis Alicea then
grounded to sllDrt and Andres
Thomas threw home. Catcher
Bruce Benedict relayed the ball
to third and Horner was tagge d
out.
Horner, however, stayed in a
rundown long enough for Pena to
advance to third Jose Oquendo,
who pitched four Innings in the
19 -lnning game and played cen·
ter field Sunday m place of
McGee, was walked intentionally
to load the bases McGee, hitting
for Tom Lawless, then burned his
former teammate Sutter
In other games, Cincinnati
edged Pittsburgh 7·6 in 12 in·
nings , Chicago nipped Houston
2·1, Los Angeles thumped Phila ·
delphia 9-2, San Diego shaded
Montreal2·1, and San Francisco
beat New York 5·1.
In the American League, It
was: Seattle 11, Boston 7; New
York 9, Ca lifornia 2; Minnesota
10, Detroit 2, Oakland 7, Baltimore 4; Chicago 6, Toronto 5, 11
Innings; Mllwaukee 9, Cleveland
5; and Kansas City 5, Texas 4.
Reds 7, Pirates 6
12 innings
At Pittsburgh, Pinch hitter Bo
Diaz hit a sacrifice fly In the 12th
inning lifting the Reds over the
Pirates. Dlaz lofted a fly to left
field to make a winner of John
Franco, 1-3, who pitched three.
scoreless innings. Barry Jones ,
1-1 was the loSer
Cubs 2, Astros 1
At Houston, R lck Su tel iffe fired
a five-hitter and Jerry Mumph·
rey doubl~ home a run and
scored another to lead the Cubs
past the Astros. Sutcliffe, 3·3,
walked four and struck outfive In
collecting his fourth complete
game of the season. Danny
Darwin, 2-3, took the loss for
Houston.
Dodgers 9, Phlllles 2
At Los Angeles, Rookie Tim
Belcher hurled a six-hitter and
Kirk Gibson keyed a seven-run
fourth with a three-run double
leading the Dodgers in a rout of
the Phlliies . In reglstenng his
first complete game, Belcher,
3-1, matched a career-high with
eight strikeouts, while walking
four
Padres 2, Expos 1
At San Diego, Shane Mack
singled home the tie-breaking
run In the seventh innmg helping
the Padres edge the Expos. Mack
grounded a single past second
base off losing pitcher Jeff
Parrett, 3·1. Andy Hawkins, 4-3,
went seven Innings for the
victory.
.
Giants 5, Mets 1
At San, Francisco, Kevin Mit ·
chell homered and drove In three
runs to give the Giants a sweep of
their three-game series with the
Mets. Mike LaCoss, 2·3, stopped
New York on one run over seven
Innings. Sid Fernandez, I-3 in
seven starts this season, allowed
four runs In 51·3 Innings and took
the Joss.

Twins rip Tigers;
Indians lose, ·9-5

BOBBY RAHAL
(Qualifies Sunday)

Mears
earns pole
• •
posttton
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
Rick Mears mastered difficult
conditions to set Indianapolis 500
qual ifylng speed records, while
Mario Andretti's legacy of mls·
fortune continued at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Mears drove the lastes t fourlap qualifying average In Indy
history, guiding his Fenske·
Chevrolet to an average of
219.198 mph Saturday to earn the
pole for the May 29 race. Mears
set a one-lap Indy speed record of
220.453 mph on his llrst lap,
circling the 2~·mlle oval in
48.825 seconds on a day when
every driver complained of
slippery track conditions.
"As hot as it got, I doubted we
would have reached this speed,"
Mears said. " It was getting very
slippery. I used up the freshness
in the tires on the first two laps
After that , It was just a matter of
surv1vai. 1 had to change patterns and adjust the throttle In the
th1rd lap because It was so
slippery On the fourth, I just had
to hold on."
Mears, whose pole triumph
was worth $100,000 in money and
prizes, completed a front-row
sweep lor the Roger Penske
racing team, the first time any
owner has owned all the cars In
the row. Danny Sullivan and
defending champion AI Unser Sr.
wlll join Mears up front ln the
72nd Indy race All three cars
have a Chevrolet-powered
Fenske chassis, an Improvement
on the uncompetltlve 1987
version.
"This Is a dream. It's just a
credit to the whole team and the
way Rick, Danny and AI work
together," Fenske said. "This Is
a real payback. We've got three
great chances on race day ."
Before a crowd of nearly
200,000 people, Mears, 36, of
Bakersfield , Calif., earned his
fourth Indy pole, tying A.J. Foyt
and Rex Mays for the most ever.
Mears previously took the pole In
1979, 1982 and 1986 and won the
race In 1979 and 1984.
"It has got to be one of the best
things I've ever done here,"
Mears said of the record. "The
pole here has always been
special to me. The very first
Indy-car pole I ever got was here
in '79, so this place has been
special for me. The lap, too, also
holds very h lgh."
Mears and Andrettl set unofficial marks In a week of prequallfymg practice, with Mears
achieving 222.827 mph and An·
dretrt reaching 221 565 mph.
But trouble has been Andretrt's
constant companion at Indiana·
polls, where the 1969 winner has
lost because of legal battles,
late-race engine failures and
crashes or near-crashes in the
past 10 years. Andretti, the first
driver to attempt a qualifying
run , made the race at only214.692
mph AndretU said improper
deanlng of oil, spilled In a
practice crash, by Tom Bigelow,
made the four,,tll turn too slippery
for his qualifying run.
"I'm very disappointed be·
causeUSAC (the U.S. Auto Club)
should
warned to
us and
given
us the have
opportunity
go or
not
go," Andretti said. "It changed
the conditions In that corner
dramatically. I think it's unfair
because my run pulled a lot of It
off the track. That helped the

By BILL WOU.E
UPI Sporls Writer
According to Kent Hrbek, gooo
pitching begets good hltllng and
the Minnesota slugger set a
powerful example Sunday in
Detroit.
Hrbek led a five home run
attack with his lOth and 11th
homers of the season, helping
carry the Twins to a 10-2 victory
over the Tigers. All of Hrbek' s
home runs have come in the last
J 9 games .
"! didn ' t hit a home run the
llrst 16 or 17 games," Hrbek said
" That's maybe the longest
stretch of my career. Our guys
are pitching pretty good bali
games for us lately and that's the
key.
"It gives the hitters a chance to
do some things."
Frank Viol;l, 6-1, gave up seven
hits in six Innings for the victory
"We've pitched good the last
10-12 days," Minnesota Manager
Tom Kelly said alter his Twins
remained 10 games behind AL
West leader Oakland "Any time
you take two auto! three from the
Tigers In Detroit you're doing a
good job "
Hrbek' s first home run came
w1th a man on in the third and
broke a 1-1 tie. Hrbek, on a
10-game hitting streak, made It
5 2 by lining another homer to
right In his next at-bat against
Jack Morris, 3-5 and winless m
his last seven starts.
Randy Bush opened the fourth
with his fourth home run and
Morris hit Gene Larkin ln the
side of the head two pitches later.
Larkin was removed from the
field, conscious but on a
stretcher, and taken to a hospital
for X· rays and observation.
"He got hit. I was pitching
mslde," acknowledged Morris.
"I gue•s that was the best
brush back pitch there is.
"I don't hit guys, but I do pitch
Inside. It was a fastball that went
up. He was moving Into the ball
He couldn't get out of the way "
Tommy Herr hit his first
American League home run in
the eighth and KirbY Puckett
followed with his fourth of the
season
Elsewhere Sunday, New York
stomped California 9·2 , Oakland

Limited enrollment
available for camp

.

handled Baltimore 7-4, Kansa s
City edged Texas 5-4, Milwaukee
derailed Clevelanll 9-5, Seattle
outscored Boston 11 -7 and Chicago nipped Toronto 6-5 in 11
Innings.
In the National League . it wa s;
St. Louis 7, Atlanta 6; Ch1cago 2,
Houston 1; Los Angeles 9. Ph•la·
delphla 2; San Diego 2, Mon trea l
1; San Fraqcisco 5, New York 1,
and Cmcinnati 7, Pittsburgh 6 m
12 Innings
Yankees 9, Angels 2
At New York, Charles Hudson
hurled a four-hitter and Cia ud ell
Washington and Dave Winfield
homered in the seventh mnlng Ia
power the Yankees . Hudson , 4-1,
walked none and struck out two
Chuck Finley , 2-6, was knocked
out after 31 -3lnn ings He y1eided
four runs on four hits and one
walk.
Athletics 7, Orioles 4
At Baltimore, Mark McGw~re ,
Jose Canseco and Walt Weiss
ripped home runs to spark
Oakland Curt Young , 31 , scat·
tered four hits over six innings
and Dennis Eckersley went 1 2-3
Innings fo'r his 13th save as the
A's improved to 16·4 on the road.
Mark W11Uamson dropped to 1·2
Royals 5, Rangers 4
At Arlington, Texas, Danny
Tarta buU hit a grand s lam and
Wlllie Wilson was 4 for 4 wnh a
solo homer to help Kansas City
break Texas' e ight-game winning streak Mark Gub1cza. 4-4,
worked SIX innings for the victory
and Gene Garber went two
inmngs for h1s fifth save. Charlie
Hough, 4-5, took the Joss
Brewers 9, Indians 5
At Milwaukee, Robm Yount
and Joey Meyer homered to lead
the Brewers who snapped a
five-game !Osing streak. Bill
Wegman . 4-4. gave up four runs

'

on six hits over f1ve innlngs and

Paul Mirabella pitched four
Innings for h1s first save. Scott
Balles, 2 4, took the loss for
Cleveland.
Mariners U, Red Sox 7
At Boston. Dave Valle stroked
a two-run tnple to highlight a
four-run mnth inning and help
Seattle snap a four-game iosmg
streak. Mike Jackson, 11, went 1
2·3 Innings for the victory . Lee
Smith fell to 2-2 After Jim
Presley 's two-out single snapped
a 7-7 tie, Valle tripled to center
for a 10-7 lead
White Sox 6, Blue Jays 5
At Chicago, rookie Dave Gallagher hlt his first major league
home run with one out In the lith
to lift the White Sox Gallagher
homered into the left-field upper
deck off Mark Eichhorn. 0 2.
Bobby Thigpen, 1-3, hurled one
inning for vjc tory

ATHENS - Limited enrollment Is available in the Ohio
University Basketball School
during the first session (June
19-23) and the second session
(June 26-30). according to Blliy Hahn, school ramp director and r-:::==========~
head basketball coach at Ohio
University.
The Daily Sentinel
The camp Is open to boys
(USPS 145-!Nili
entering grades 5·12 In SepA.
Division
of Multimedia, Inc.
tember, and the cost Is $185 ($165
per camper If five or more hand
Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday. 111 Courl St., Po
in applications In the same
meroy, Ohio, by the Oh io Valley Pub·
envelope) .
llshlng Companyt Multimedla, Inc.,
Enrollment for the third sesPomeroy, Ohio 45769 , Ph 992 2156 Second class postage paid a t Pomeroy,
sion, which will be In early July,
Ohio.
was recently closed for that
Member Unl!ed Press [nternatlonal,
session.
Inland Dally Pt ess Association and t he
' For more information, call
Ohio Newspaper Association National
assistant coaches Randy Roth or
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales , 733 Third Avenue,
Kevin Purcell at I-593-1200 or
New York. New Yo rk 10017
1202 or write, c / o the Basketball
Office, Ohio University, Athens,
POSTMASTER· ~nd address changes
to The OaUy Sentinel. 111 Court St .
OH 45701.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

All-Star forms
now available
CINCINNATI - All-Star ere·
dential request forms are now
available from the Commissioner's Office or the Reds ' Publicity
Office.
-'Ali requests are processed by
the Commissioner's Otflce and
b
must be returned to that oftlce Y
June 3.
For more information, contact
Of
the Commissioner's flee at 350
Park Ave. , New York, N.Y.
10022, (212) 371·7800.

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~~::;~;

;~~

r------------J-============~

other cars."

Tom Binford, the speedway's
chief steward, said Sunday he did
not know an oil-drying agent had
been applied to the pavement.

Calendar
llull;'b.U

Atlanta 7, 81 Lollla I, It lnnlap

~

Meigs scored three in the
fourth as the result of a free pass
to Bissell, a base on errors to
Chris Stewart and Jeff McEI·
roy's round-tripper over the left
field fence.
Pinch hitter Enc Heck walked
in the Meigs llfth and was driven
home by Young's base rap over
third for another Marauder tally .
The final two came for the
winners in the six th on McElroy 's
mfield hit , another Spartan error
that put Nick King aboard and
Bryan Durst's sacrifice.
Federal Hocking scored one In
the fourth frame after Denny
Jarvis tripled and Derek Rey nolds singled him home. They
picked lour in the final Inning by
virtue of three free passes, a
Doug Keiter Single and a double
off the bat of Douglas .
Other hits by the Marauders
bes ides the afore-mentioned
were two singles by Durst and
one by Nick King .
J31ssell, the wmning pitcher,
whiffed eight a nd walked six as
he went the distance. Kelter was
charged with the loss.
Llnescore:
AHS .... ... ... ooo roo 4 - 5 5 5
MHS .......... .. . l30 312 x -10 8 0

Cards nip Braves 7 -6; LA
wallops Phils; Astros lose, 2-1

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

of an imbalance between re·
venues and expenditures. As to
revenues, not only must Congress approve all revenue·
raising measures, but under the
Constitution these must all origl·
nate In the House of Representa·
lives - which has been under
Democratic control from Day 1
of the 11 Reagan revolution."
Similarly, all expenditures must
be authorized by Congress; the
president cannot spend one fed·
eral nickel on his own. Who, then,
Is "responsible for the deficit"?
To be sure, Mr. Reagan called
tor a big reduction In taxes and
got it. But would revenues have
been larger If taxes had remained high or gone higher?
Experience suggests the exact
opposite.
Defense expenditures rose slg·
niflcantly ln Mr. Reagan's first
five years, also as he requested,
with the beneficial results we
now see as the Russians return to
the bargaining table. But did the
Democrats oppose such In·
creases? On the contrary, while

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ollio

Marauders top I ancers and
Spartans to end baseball play

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pom~y-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, May 16, 1988

System may

•

~ertc•Leape

Se•"le .a Nf!w York, 1:11 p.m •
OAkland M Bo.ton. 1: II p.m.
Tor•o at Clllt.ap, 1:• p.m.
Detroit at Mllwaakee.I·U p m
1.1111- CI&amp;J al Teu1, I:JIS p.m
NaU1nll Leque
"tl-. .. Cl•d•.-&amp;1, 1:JI p.m.
PKI. . I'III a1 RMIIIH, 1· 11 p.m.
New Vor• al Ru Dlep, II •Dl p.m.
Philadelphia 1M Baa FrucltclO, JI:U

J .m.

New Vorll (Goo*n Ml &amp;I Sa.n IMep
(Grun N), 11:11 p.m.
PhllaHI.::- a (Raw~ I·IJ M
SuF,... 0 (... tcheiS.I) , IO•!Ipm.

SALES - SERVICE • TESTING

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFRY EQUIPMENT
172 lou th Second l•••
llldlleport, o•l• 45760

PH. (614) 992·7075
Gar Snouffer - 992-7446

"

•

•

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, May 16. 1988

42 take
•
part ~tn
horseshoe
tourney

.---Area news briefs---. Twenty-seven die in bus crash; probe begins

_,I

-

"TOAD" BRICKLES - Columbus "Toad" Brickles, lor whom
tournament is mim ed.

-

Metgs County Emergen~y Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend, two on Saturday and seven 0 n Sunday.
Saturday at 12:23 a.m., Pomeroy to New St. for Paul Garnes
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 7:16a .m. to
Route 248 for Betty McCain to Camden-Clark Memorial
HospitaL
Sunday at 9:57a.m ., Racine to Route 124 for Jasper Powell to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 10:30 a.m. to Elm St.
for William Martin to Veterans Memorial Hpspital; Pomeroy at
12:39 p.m. to Condor St. lor George Kauff to \leterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:02p.m. to Wright St. lor Marie Francis
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:15p.m. to Spring
Ave. for Audrey Arnold to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 3:59p.m. to Goegleln Road or Francis Goegleln to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 10:16 p.m. to Depot St.
for Troy Durham to \leterans Memorial Hospital.

Ohio Senate...

By United Press International

Thunderstorms created strong
Winds and large hall Sunday as
they moved through northern
Ohio as other parts of the state
enjoyed the warmest day of the
year.
High winds damaged two
barns near Archbold In Fulton
County In northwest Ohio and
hall covered the ground in
Medina In northeastern Ohio.

from "Toad" Brlckles. Holter ls one
of two local entrants in the tournament.

A nominating committee was
appointed as follows: Judy Willi·
ams (992-5866), Dave Jenkins
(992-3671) and Hap Ingels (742,
2182). Anyone wishing to serve as .
an officer Is asked to contact the
nominating committee before
the next meeting . The league
includes Southern. Eastern and
Meigs school districts in Ohio and
Mason and New Haven areas In
West Virginia. Officers may be
parents or members of these
communities who would llke to
help with this program.

• LOCAL ENTRIES - Tommy Mankin and Roy Holter, local
: entries.

Winds gusted up to 50 miles an
hour in the Toledo area as the
start of the night's racing program was beginning at Toledo
Raceway Park, and the rains
made for sloppy track.
John Richards, director of the
Fulton County Disaster Services
Agency. said two funnel clouds
were spotted In the n!Jrthwestern
Ohio county early Sunday even·
lng, prompting the National
Weather Service to Issue a
tornado warning. He said two
barns were damaged during that
warning.

a

Students currently in the
fourth and fifth grades who will
not be thirteen (13) by September
. 1, 1988. are eligible to participate
as football players or cheerleaders. A head cheerleader advisor
will also be elected May 26.
Practice for all who participate
wlli begin the last week In
August.

B CLASS WINNERS - "B'' class winners
Frank Wisecarver of Adamsville and John Brown

CLASS A ACTION -Elden Sarhaugh, left, and Max Roseberry
'
: · in Class A action.

.•
·'

~;Lakers trip Jazz
I•

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPl Sporl• Writer
:: The Los Angeles Lakers solved
: the Interior defense Of the Utah
· Jazz by dispatching 7-foot-4 ccn-·
• ter Mark Eaton to the exterior.
Wlth Eaton.theanchorofwhat
: Lakers Coach Pat Riley calls
' "the best defense In the league,' '
: on the bench with foul trouble,
· Los Angeles blew open a · close
: game Sunday to pull even In the
best-&lt;:&gt;f-seven Western Confer·
ence semifinal.
• The Lakers defeated the Jazz
:113-100 in Game 4 at the Salt
: Palace, powered by a 23·9 run
"late In the third-quarter with
· Eaton on the sideline wtth four
: personals. Los Angeles turned a
: 65·56 mld·perlod deficit into an
·· 84·76 advantage entering the
. final quarter.
"It was Important that we
:esta blished something ln the
"third quarter, that we played as a
team and gave a team effort,"
I

said Lakers Coach Pat Riley.
"The only upper hand we have Is
two of the last three games are in
LA. But that doesn't mean
anything. We still have to defend
our home turf."
Game 5is Tuesday night at Los
Angeles and Game 6 Thursday at
Salt Lake City.
,
In the other Western Confer·
ence semifinal, the Dallas Mav·
e,rlcks routed the Denver
Nuggets 124-103 to tie that series
2·2.
In the Eastern Conference
semifinals, The Atlanta Hawks
defeated the Celtics 110·92 to trim
Boston's edge to 2·1 and the
Detroit Pistons moved up3·1 with
a 96-77 triumph over the Chicago
Bulls.
At Salt Lake City, James
Worthy scored 29 points to pace
the Lakers, with Magic Johnson
contribu tlng 24 points and Byron
Scott and Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
20 each.

Mount Union goes
to NCAA regionals
ALLIANCE- GalllaAcademy
graduate Jill MUler, now of
Chesapeake, and her teammates
on Mount Union's softball team
finished the Ohio Athletic Confer·
ence tournament as runner· up to
champlop.Musklngum College on
Saturday, May 7.
Miller, a junior, finished the
regular season with a .222batting
average, played in 28 games,
scored 13 runs, received 20 walks
to top the team, had four RB!s
and committed four errors In 93
chances as a third baseman.
The Purple Raiders, who fin·
!shed the season at 22·11 (10·6
OAC) played Muskingum Col·
lege In the NCAA Division III
Central Reglpn tournament
Friday.
'

South Central Ohio
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with a slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms. mainly dur·
ing the evening. Much cooler
with ·a low near 50 and winds
becoming northwest about 10
mph. Chance of ra! n 30 percent.
Tuesday, becoming mostly
sunny with highs of 65 to 70.
Extended Forecast
Wedneaday through Friday
Fair with a warming trend
through the period. Highs will be
65 to 75 Wednesday, In the 70s
.Thursday and 75 to 85 Friday.
Lows will be In the 40s Wednesday and the 50s Thursday and
Friday.

The league has also agreed to
organize and sponsor a Junior
Olympics track team for compe·
!ilion this summer.
'
Anyone desiring more lnlor·
matlon on the football or track
prpgrams may contact any of the
above listed or any league
officer .

of Lancaster, right, receive first- and second·
place trophies from Brlckles.

Contaminated fish are found in Ohio River
CINCINNATI (U P! ) - Fish
taken from the Ohio River after a
1 million-gallon diesel fuel spill in
Januarywerecontaminatedwlth
low levels olthree chemicals. the
Ohio River Valley Water San ita·
lion Commission says.
Laboratory tests showed wai!eye, sauger and smalimouth
bass contained low levels of
naphthalene and two other com· .
pounds, ORSANCO officials said.
Officials In Ohio, Pennsylvania
and West Virginia were consider·
lng Issuing a warning against
eating fish taken from the Ohio
River. as well as the Mononga-'
bela Rivet near Pittsburgh,
where the Jan . 2 splll from an
Ashland Oll Co. tank occurred.
Scientists said there are no

Weather

federal sta ndards for co nsumption of fish containing naphtha·
Jene and related compunds.
"We're on the cutting edge of
research ," Jerry Schulte. OR·
SAN CO field coordinator, told
the Cincinnati Enquirer. "EvPn
the researchers don't know ."

Officials said th ey were in the
process of gathering information
on the chemicals ' possible health ,
effects. But they recommend
using discretion in deciding
whether to eal the fish.
"If it tastes funny or smells
funny. I'd advise not ea ting it."
r-~-----------S;..c;.;h;.;u;..lt;..e..;s;..a..;id;..._ _ _ _ _ __,
'

I

Toledo results

TOLEDO. Ohio CUP])- Ms La
Mirage overcame 5Q mile-an·
hour crosswinds Sunday night to
win one of. the divi sions of the
Ohio Sires Stakes for 4· and
5-year-old trotters at Toledo
Raceway Park.
Chris Boring drove Ms La
Mirage over the sloppy track In
the rain and strong winds In 2: 02
1·5. Ms La Mirage, In her first
start of the year, posted a 1·2
length win over Noble Score with
Erlkas Impulse coming In third.
The second division of the Ohio
Sires Stakes was the night's ninth
race and much of the bad
weather had ~ calmed by that
time.

NOW OPEN FOI SPIING
SEASON
COMPLETE LINE OF VEGETABLE
· &amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
GERANIUMS NOW IEADY: HANGING IASIIETS, AZALEAS,
FRUIT T11£ES &amp; SHRUBBERY
OPEN DAILY •·5-SIIIDAY 1-S

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE - 992·6776

· Bradford by David P. Baker,
· personnel manager for the
· company.
The cabin has a fireplace with
a stone chimney and some
furnishings. It will be on display

1

William Martin, Jr.
Wllllam Isaac Martin, Jr .• 16,
.Elm St .. Racine, died Sunday at
·veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
·lowmg an extended illness.
• He was born In Parkersburg,
:w. Va., a sonofWilllam and Nora
Martin and spent his early life in
Parkersburg. He moved to Ra·
, cine In 1982.
~ He had been a long-time;•
tnember of the Racine Boy Scour
troop. .
, Surviving are his father. Wll·
!lam Martin of Parkersburg; his
mother, Mrs. Nora Brown Mar·
tin of Racine; · a sister. Summer
Groves of Racine; his maternal
grandmother, Mrs. Evelyn GUll·
4nd, Racine, and several aunts
and uncles.
: Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Tuesday at the Spencer Funeral
Home In Belpre with the Rev.
Roger L. Grace otflclatlng. BurIal will be In Rockland Cemetery
at Belpre. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 4 to 8 this
l!venlng and from 10 a.m. until
the time of the services on
Tuesday.

CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237-7716

DILES HEARING CENTER
St~

Athens, Ohio 45.701
1-800-237-7716

We feature. aids from:
HliARING TECHNOLOGY, INC.

I
'

'

•!

•'There are no Injuries that we
know of." he said. "There are
some power outtage( and trees

To end miUTiages

Dissolutions of marriage have
been requested In Meigs County
Common
Pleas Court
by Norma
.Jean
Snyder,
Pomeroy,
and
James E . Snyder
Jr., Pomeroy;
William
M . Baumgardner,
Pomeroy, and Florence A.
"We got quite a bit of hail," Baumgardner, Bidwell.
A divorce has been granted to
said Medina pollee dispatcher
Ronna Davidson. "It looked like both parties In an action by
about an Inch around. And then Sandra K Duffley agahlst Ml·
there was some little bltty hail.
and Phillip
"It was coming down llke.rain.
LaComb have been granted a
It was heal(y," she said.
&amp;he said she hadn't heard of
Tammy LaComb
has marriage.
been resof their
any power outtages, but added dissolution
"I'm worried about my own car. tored by the court to her former
name Fortney.
A cold front wlll sweep east of
Ohio today, putting an end to the
showers, Cooler air will flow Into
the Buckeye State with north-to- Open boule tonight
northwest winds tonight and . A science fair open house will
Tuesday. Warmer weather Is be held at the Pomeroy Elemenexpected by the end of the week. tary School thls e evening with
The weather map late Sunday the doors opening at 7 p.m . .All
night showed low pressure north exhibits of the fair will be in
of Lake Huron, with a cold front place. Trophies are being
across southeast Michigan to awarded to the top three winners
Mtssoui'l and Into low pressure In each room with a trophy also to
over western Texas.
be awarded to the best of show.
That cold front will corss Ohio All parents and school patrons
today, and by tonight will.extend are Invited.
from low pressure north of Lake
Ontario through western Pen· Announce choir concert
nsylvanla into Arkansas.
The Meigs High School Choirs
Skies will begin to clear tonight will present a concert on Sunday,
as lows fall into the mid 40s to low at 3 p.m., in the high school
50s. It will be sunny Tuesday with auditorium. Groups which will
highs In the 60s.
perform will be the choir, the
Madrigals and the Chorallers.
Fair weather is expected Wed- under the direction of Gay
nesday through Friday. Highs Pippert. The public Is Invited.
will range between 65 and 75
Third wednesday
Wednesday, In the 70 Thursday
Members of the Third Wednesand between 75 and 85 Friday..
day Homemakers Club will meet
. Lows wlll be In the 40s Wednes·
day and in the 50s Thursday and at the community building at 9
a.m. Wednesday preparatory to
Friday .
their annual trip. This year the
group will be going to Lancaster.
continued rrom page 1
down."

A llttle earlier and on the other
side of the state, heavy rains and .
hail hit northeastern Ohio, coverIng the ground and denting some
cars In Medina.

ch~=~~a\~~~r::h·

SuperLottodrawlngisestlmated
at $3 million.
Also Saturday, there.was one
tiCket sold bearing in order the
winning Kicker numbers - 3, 5,
2, 8, 1, 3- for a $100.000 payout.
There are four tickets with the
first five numbers in order,
making them worth $5,000 each.
Sixty-six tickets were sold
carrying In order the first lour
numbers. They can be redeemed
for $1,000 apiece.
Worth $100 each are the 629
tickets bearing in order the first
three numbers. The 6,177 tickets
carrying In order the first two
numbers can be turned In for $10
apiece.

Seeks court action
Central Trust Company, Ga Ill ·
polls, has filed a foreclosure
action In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Thomas K
Woods and Mary L. Woods,
Middleport.

Complete deal..

continued rrom page 1

boarded the bus, and officials · uprising.
.
.
agreedTrammell said about 15 g~ards
During the ta keover, the rebel· armed with shotguns went mslde
llous Inmates. armed with home- the prison compound Sunday
made knives set fire to four morning, but did notconfrontthe
'
·
buildings and' threatened to kill convicts .
their hostages before releas ing
Later. two convicts led Yoder
five of them Saturday.
jnto the prison yard, holding hhn
They then threatened to cutoff by each arm and paradmg hi~ m
the fingers of their remaining circles in vie": of prison officials
hostages until prison officials on the other ,Side of a chain-link
delivered ice cream and soft fence. Yoder s hands appeared to
drinks to the IJ€steged cellblock be bound as he walked gingerly in
at the prison 100 miles southeast the apparent attempt by his
of Oklahoma City. Two prisoners captors to show he wa s
were slightly hurt during the unharmed.

.---....:C-'-------''----------------

Thank you to those who
voted for me and a very
special Thank You to those
WhO devoted long hOUrS and
. hard WOrk fO my
•
re•eIec.tiOn.

Phl"ll"p M• RobertS
.

a~"ee~~~f o~~~r! ;~~~~ d~;

pute has been reached in the case

ing to direct children off the bus
even while he was trapped
behind the steering wheel with
his clothes aflame. Pearman. an
assistant church pastor and the
Hardin Cou nty circuit court
clerk, was presumed killed.
The school-type bus, .o nce
yellow but now a twisted tangle of
black metal, was taking home
teenage members of the First
Assembly of God Church in
Radcliff, Ky., from a da y at the
Kings Island Amusement Park
north of Cincinnati.
State Medical Examiner Dr .
George Nichols said his preliminary au topsles on 22 of the 27
bodies showed ali died of smoke
Inhalation before they · were
burned .
·
The charred bodies of 19
females and eight males were
removed from the wreckage of
the bus Sunday afternoon

MEIGS CO. ENGINEER
Pd. for by Comm. to Re-elect Philip M. Roberts, Walface Bradford. Trus ..

Wise and;R;u;pe;a;g;a;ln;s;t
Martha Joan;N;at;h;a;n~;;;;;;;~~~~44;0;60~Su;n;ny~H;ol;low~R;d;.
Wise.
rio~!J. ;J;a;ne;A;.
, ;Co;o;lv;il;le;.;Oh;io;·;~

Announcements

during the Meigs County Fair,
scheduled for August 16·20, Brad·
ford says. Individuals wlll dem·
onstrate the crafts of yesteryear,
such as weaving and spinning,
Inside the cabin, he says.

Area deaths

If HEARING is your problem. and you feel that
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
HEARING CENTER. We have many referral
sources for assistance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should
be deprived of better hearing. Let us be your advocate.

326 W. Union
(614) 594-3571

CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
ticket was sold bearing all six
numbers In Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing lor a $3 million
jackpot, Ohio Lottery officials
said Sunday.
The wlnn)llg numbers were 6,
14. 18, 19, 38 anil"l2.
The 133 tickets with five of the
six numbers are worth $1,000
each while the 5,805 tickets with
four of the numbers are worth
$74.
The top prize In Wednesday's

trapped those killed, witnesses
said. Many managed to burs tout
the rear emergency exit.
Jason Booher , 14, who was
silti ng nea r the back of the bus ,
said he saw a motorcycle and the
truck speeding toward the bll s.
''I heard the bus driver scream
and saw a motorcycle and a truck
coming tOward us," he said.
"The next thing I saw the
motorcycle crossing the medfan
to the northbound lane and going
away . And then the fire spread
from the front of the bus to the
back."
Another survivor, Wayne Cox,
14, said "a lot of people on the bus
were sleeping when the accident
happened. We all started trying
to get off the bus as the ftre
became hotter. I guess that kept
me from getting burned."
Another witness said the bus
driver, John Pearman, was try·

:Southern Ohio...

'1\vo-time Ohio Sires Stakes
champion Overcomer trotted the
fastest mile of the night, a 2:01, to
win by 21 -2 lengths over another
champion. Mondo. Tantallon
Winnie was third .
Overcomer was the OSS 3year-old champion in 1986 and
the 4· and 5·year old winner last
year, while Mondo was last
year's 3-year·old champion.
Sunday night's crowd of. 2,665
wagered $263.910.

I

won't have anything to say unlll
tonight."
A blood test was taken from the
truck driver Larry Mahoney, 34,
of Worthville, Ky., as · he lay
critically injured at a Louisville
hospital after Saturday night's
collision.
No charges had been flied
against Mahoney. State police
trooper G~en Walton said the
results of the test to determine
the drug or liquor content In his
body at the time of the accident
will not be released for several
days.
•
''There were J'1!ports that the
driver of the truck was Involved
in an accident In the northbound
lane, sending his vehicle Into the
bus," Walton said. "But we found
that not to be the case."
Trooper Jim Mudd said the
pickup was traveling north In the
southbound lane on Interstate-71
about 75 miles northeast of
Louisville. He said 11 was "·just
totally unexi)lalned' ' how the
truck was headed the wrong.way .
The collision Ignited fire and
explosions aboard the bus within
seconds, creating an inferno that

One 'has ticket with all six numhel'8

Northern Ohio hit by
hail, winds Sunday

The Big Bend Midget Football
League, Inc. met recently, final·
!zing a successful first year. The
league's next meeting Will be to
elect officers for the upcoming
year. This meeting will be held at
the Jaycee's headquart.e rs In
Pomeroy on Thursday, May 26,
at 8:30p. m.

re~pective ly,

continued from page 1

attorney general's office and the
The blll, sponsored by Rep.
governor all complained that William Healy, D·Canton, re·
Suhadolnlk' s rewrite took many !l!!ll:es school boards to hold a
enforcement teeth away from the hearing and give specific reasons
EPA.
for not rehiring a teacher who
Sen. Charles Rutts, D· does not have tenure (a continuCleveland, vowed to try to Ing contract).
restore House provisions to make
Senators have been Inundated
it a stronger bill.
with mall from both sides of the
The Oh lo school boards, admin- Issue. The Ohio Education Assoistrators and Ohio Department of ciation, representing teachers,
Education are In pitched battle believes they have the right to a
agalf\st school teachers over the fair hearing If they are to be
House-passed bill on teacher dismissed.
eva Iuatlon.
School administrators fear the
That bill, which passed the , legislattpn will tie their hands,
House a year ago, is on the brink and they have said It wtlllead to
of a vote In the Senate Education "instant tenure" for unqualified
Committee, which meets Tues· school teachers.
day evening.

Big Bend MFL to
meet on May 26

ONE OF TWO LOCAL ENTRIES - Ezekiel
Mills of Huntington, W.Va., and Roy Holter of
Pomeroy accepts first-and second· place trophies,

CARROLLTON, Ky. (UPl) Federal Investigators began today the grim task of trying to
determine why the driver of a
pickup truck was In the wrong
lane of an Interstate highway,
slamming into a church bus and
killing 27 people.
Forty peo(lle, most of them
teenagers, were injured In the
head-on crash. It was one of the
deadliest bus accidents in U.S.
history.
A five-member team from the
National Transportation Safety
Board gathered at a hotel In
Carrollton, six miles north of
where the accident occurred.
The bus. carrying 67 people,
mostly teenagers returning from
an outing to an amusement park.
burst into flames when the fuel
tank apparantly ruptured.
&gt;'We have to document as
much as we can, talk to wit·
nesses, document the road,"
safety board spokesman Alan
Pollock satd today. "We will look
at the background of both drlv·
ers, the history ofmaintenance of
both the truck and bus. For us It
takes quite a while. We probably

EMS has nine weekend calls

Forty two entries were recorded in the second annual
"Toad" Brickles horseshoe tour·
nament held Saturday at the
Middleport courts.
Horseshoe pitching · enthusl•
asts from West Virginia and Ohio
participated, with thl! farthest
coming from Fairmont. They
vied for trohpies and money In
the event which was under the
direction of Harry Bailey and
Carl "Cricket" Searles.
Six classes, A through F. made
up the competition with the
"novices" in the F class and the
more experienced in the upper
classes. To determine the level of
competition, each player was
required t11 pitch 100 shoes and
their classification depended on
the percentage of ringers they
made.
Some of the better known
competitors In the horseshoe
pitching circles were Max Roseberry. of Marton, 1983 Intermediate World Champion, Law·
renee Miller, of Chillicothe. 1983
and 1985 Senior World Champion
and John Brown, Lancaster, 1986
Class C World Champion.
Two local entries were Roy
Holter, who took second place In
Ciass F competition, and Tommy
Mankin of Pomeroy .

E COMPETION WINNERS- Brickles, center, Huntington, W.Va., for first place In the Class E
presents trophies to Ken Willems of Kenova, . competition.
W.Va., tiir second place and Charlie Stanley of

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Byron HUes

Stocks

I

Former Portland area resident
Byron S. Hiles, 70, of East Brady,
Pa., died Thursday at Clarion
County Hospital In Clarion, Pa.
following a lengthy illness.
Mr. HUes was born AprU 9,1918
In 'Perryville, Pa., a son of the
late Clarence and Sarah HUes.
He was a retired laborer with 37
years experience and was a
member of the labor union In
Beaver Falls, Penn.
Survivors Include two daugh·
ters. Robin Yeany of Rimers·
burg, Pa. and Sarah HUes of
· Bangor, Maine; two sons, Bar·
ney HUes or Long Bottom and
Jerry Durnell of Greenville, Pa.;
one granddaughter, Jennifer
Yeany of Rimersburg, Pa.; and
three brotllers, Fred HUes, with
whom Byron Hiles made his
home, Waller Hiles of Toledo and
Jack Hiles of Phoenix, Ariz.
. Besides his parents, Mr. HUes
was preceded In death by another
brotller, Eugene HUes.
Services were held Saturday In
Rlmeraburg, Pa. and burial was
In Mt. Hope Cemetery In Conner·
atltln, Pa.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Muk Smith
or Blunt, Ellis .r. Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26'!1j
AT&amp;T ................................. 27%
Ashland Oil ........................ 70%
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Charming Shoppes .............. 1011.
City Holding Co .. ... .............. 32
Federal Mogul.. .................. 38'!1j
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .. ... ...........61%
Heck's Inc ........................... !%
Key Centurion ............... .....39%
Lands' End .. ........... .. ........... 24
Limited Inc ........................18\4
Multimedia lnc ...................66%
Rax Restaurants ................. . 4~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 11
Shoney's Inc .... ..... .............. 24)1
Wendy'slnt1 ................ ....... . 6%
Worthington lnd .................19)1

H08pilal news
V eterana Memorial

Saturday Admissions - Paul
Garnes, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Ml·
chael Smith, Ruth Cbiles, Irene
Wilford, Edith Schwab. Lesley
Gibbs.
Sunday AdmissiOns - James
Ohlinger, Dexter; Kathryn Fe!·
ter, Pomeroy; Jasper Powell,
Racine; Audrla Arnold,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Gary
Withrow, James Ohlinger, Ralph
Day, Wilda Brinker.

A SPECIAL SECTION ABOUT HEALTH CARE
IN THE TRI-COUNTY AREA IS COMING
FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1988
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1988
'

FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL YOUR LOCAL AD REPRESENTATIVE TODAY!

Point Pleasant
R'lister

675-1333
Steve or Vicky

Gallipolis
Tribune

Daily
Sentinel

446-2342

992-2156

Larry or Chip

Dave or Brian

I

\

'

•

�.-

'

Monday. May 16. 1988

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, May 16. 1988
.
Page-6

'10 l't.AU IN AD CAlL 'f2·21S6
MONDAT thu• FIIDU I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I ....M. U~tt i l NOON SATURDAY
CLOUO SUNDAY
O'(I•IC•u

Brenda Bolin and Lola Ha rrison hosted a recent meeting of
the Chatter Club held at the Bolin
home.
Dues and flower fund s were
collected and officers' reports
were given. A birthday gift was
presented to Delores Whitlock
and an anniversary gift to Mrs .

Past Councilors meet
Past Councilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, met recently al the
Hensley Store building. Long
Bottom, with Mae McPeek and
Ada Bissell, hostesses .
Laura Mae Nice, president,
conducted the meeting reading
the first four nurses of Timothy,
and leading In the Lord's Prayer
and pledge given In unison. Inzy
Newell had the secretary's re·
port, Thelma White, the treasurer's report.
Readings lnc!!Jded "Friends of
Mine" by Mrf."White; "Success·
ful Meeting" by Erma Cleland;
7Sprlng Cleaning" by ·Marcia
Keller; "God's Own Child" by

Lora Damewood; "Do You Know
About the American Flag" by
Ethel Orr.
Hostesses served refresh·
ments and games were con·
dueled by Alta Ballard and Lora
Damewood. Door prize was won
by Ada Bissell's granddaughter,
Judy Holter, a guest.
Others attending were Margaret Amberger, Goldie FrederIck, Pauline Ridenour, Opal
Hollon, Jean Frederick, Betty
Roush, Sadie Trussell, Elizabeth
Hayes, Margaret Tuttle, Charlotte Grant. Guests were Bonnie
Landers, Sandr,a White and Mel·
ody Roberts.

People in the news
By CONNIE MAXWELL
United Press International
STAR GRO&gt;LOCK AT BASH: The backstage scene at
Atlantic record' s 40th anniversary concert was a ver itable
"Who's Who" of music business Insiders. There was Bill
Graham yelling at Led Zeppelin to "get the hell on the stage, "
when Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and Jason Bonham lingered In
the photographers' tent before the group's reunion set.
Bruce Springsteen's band enjoyed a night off from the Boss,
who was nowhere in sight. Famous musicians caused traffic
jams In the narrow corridors. Groupie author Pamela
DesBarres mingled In the wings with the rock 'n' roll great. At
Kooper, Pink Floyd's David Gilmour. ex·RoWngSionegultarlst
Mlck Taylor, Deep Purple bassist Roger Glover, and Paul
Stanley of Kiss were there, although they didn' t perform.
ATLANTIC REUNION ENCORE: Stephen Stills and ·
Graham Na.•h revealed backstage that the quartet, yes, that
one, has been recoi-dlng a reunion record. Stills and Nash said
David Crosby joined them along with Nell Young to revive the
hit group. "We set up ln Nell's barn and just played," Stills said.
"It's always good chemistry with Nell," Stills added. with
Nash quipping, "It's like juggling four bottles of nitroglycerin."
Young didn' t show for the Atlantic bash but CS&amp;N reunited on
stage, following an effusive introduction by Michael Dauglas,
·who called them the "essence of the Woodstock Generation."
But Nash mocked nostalgia with a message on his T·shlrt:
"Stills, Young. Nash and Crosby- It's time for a change."

~

A GHOST WRITER IN THE SHADOWS:- Charles McCarry,
who quiet Jy assisted former White House chief of staff Donald
Regan with his tell-all book. doesn't like to discuss his
collaboration on " For the Record: From Wall Street to
Washington."
"I'd prefer fo r our relationship to remain entirely
confidential, " McCarry told The Washington Post. "I didn't
want any credit, but at the last minute, they (publishers
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich) insisted on listing me In lhe
acknowledgements. Which Is fine."
Regan, however, says, "Let's !ace it. They liked the fact-thai
Charles was associated with me." McCarry. a former CIA
agent and longtime novelist and magazine editor, dislikes
Interviews and told the Post that tape-recording his voice Is
tough: "I had this brain Implant when I was ln the CIA which
makes me Impossible to tape. "
CHAIRMAN NOT BORED ON STAGE: Frank Sinatra
revealed his soft side in a rare television appearance, telllng
Cable News Network Interviewer Larry Klag of his
decades-long stage fright. "I swear on my mother's soul, the
first lour or five seconds I tremble every time I take the step and
I walkout of the wing onto the stage. I keep thinking to myself, 'I
wonder If It will be there when I go for thefirstsounds that! have
to make, will It be there,"' Sinatra told King last week.
"OJ' Blue Eyes" defended his friend, Nancy Reagan, saying
she Is a big help to President Reagan despite criticism she
wields too much power. "f don't know about how much power
she might hold over the president or how often they discuss his
problems .... None of us know that. I would say that she Is a great
help to the president. "

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Public Notice

SERVICE AWARDS - Employe recognition
was a feature of the observance of National
Hospital Week at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Here Scott Lucas, admlnstralor, presented a 15
year pin to James Dailey. Others receiving
awards were from the left, Betsy Weaver, 5
years; Janice Evans, 10 years; Ginger Pratt, 5

years; Unda Patterson and Lois Clelland, 10
years. Others eligible for pins were Winifred
Marcinko, 20 years; Phyllis May and Isabelle
Couch, 10 years; and Jane Hess, Pam Gilland,
Ella Jane McDaniel, Linda Hudson, Karen Clark,
Martha Meadows and Connie Kaylor, five years.

"

Hospital service honored by VMH staff
In observance of National
Hospital Week, the Women's
Auxlliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital served cookies and
punch In the lobby.
At a recent meeting the group
also discussed the mock disaster
drill held Thursday . Information

on the planned renovation of the each month In the afternoon .
A new scholarship committee
lobby was given by Scott Lucas,
administrator. Mary Dimond led . is to be named by the board .
In the Auxiliary prayer to open Auxiliary members who want to
(he meeting. New by-laws were go into nursing are now eligible
given to the board members for
lor the scholarship. Next meet· •.
review. Regular meet lngs were
lng will be May 17 at 1:30 In the
changed to the third Tuesday of conference room .

_:_ if the home is less than five
years old, or
- if you have soft or acidic
water, or
-if water sits in the pipes for
severo I hours. "
The only way to be sure of
the amount of lead in the
supplied water Is to have the
. water tested by a competent
laboratory. Testing is espe·
ciaUy important to ap!r!·
ment dWellers
because
flushing may not be effec ·
tive in high-rise buildings
that have lead· soldered cen ·
tral piping.
Use only the cold water
faucet for drinking and for
use in cooking or preparing
baby formula, and to rUn the
water until it gets as cold as
it is going to get before each
use . If there has recently
been major water use in a
household, such as showering or bathing, flushing toi·
lets, or doing laundry with
cold water, flushing the
pipes may take 6 to 30 sa·
conds; it not, flushing the
pipes could take as long
as several minutes. Each
household should check the
plumbing to see If lead
pipes, solder, or flux have
been used 'in the plumbing
that provides tap water, and
to ensure that new plumbing
repairs will use lead-tree materials .
For additional information
you may contact the Middle·
port Board of Public Affairs
during the hours of 9 a.m . to
4 :30 p.m. Monday thru Fri·
day et 237 Race St .. Middleport. Ohio 46760. Bnd ob·
tain a free booklet
on

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244

-

teer chairman, and Betty Sayre, treasurer. Other
officers unable to attend are Mary Dimond, vice
president, Carrie Kennedy, recording secre!ary,
and Jessie White and Helen mn, gift shop
chairmen.

Thi1 notice is a periodic
announcement to the con·
suiting industry concerning
Ohio's Smell Operator As·
sistance Program. The Small
Operator Aasistance Pro·
gram has been in existence
for over eight {8) years. It is a
Federally funded State oper·
ated program administered
by the Ohio Department of
Natural R&amp;Jources, Division
of Reclamation. The pur·
pose of the program is to as·
silt Ohio coal operators
whose annual production ia
100.000 tons or le11 in the
acquisition of hydrologic·
/ geologic studies which are
required when apply for a
strip mine permit. Consult·
ants are utililed to perform
these studies, Consultants
that are used must be in·
eluded on a 1111 of approved
consultants which is main·
tained by Small Operator
Assiatance Program. Any
con au It ant int11rested in app·
.. lying to be includ11d on the
list or who wants further in formation concerning the
program should contact the
Small Operator Assistance
Program.at the following ad·
dress:
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
Division of Reclamation
Small Operator Assistance
Program
Attn: Don Povolny
Bldg. B-3, Fountain Square
Columbus, Ohio 43224

Harrisonville happenings
Louise Householder, Glouster, Florida. Her mother, who spent
recently called on Louise the winter there, returned to
Meigs County with her.
Eshelman.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
Dora Cooper of mineral recently .visited her sister Ora . and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanley a
Carsey. Kathryn Weaver also Saturday at the home of Mr. and
visited Mrs, Carsey.
Mrs. Franklin Townsend,
Lori Patterson spent a week In Westerville.

Homes For Sale By~·­
Government

Phona; (814) 285-8829
(5} 18, 1tc

WANT ADS GET

From Gov't from $1 plus rep~taxes. Nationwide!
FHA, VA, HUD, more •• Assumable propenies available without credit
check. Available by U.S. Publk: Law 93-383. Also tax propenies. Phone ror
inronnation 216-453·3000, Ext. H6053

/

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DIAMONDS

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,..

Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser'iic4

;:::=~'C:"'-

~
z

::r:

-

:i:~-~-"­
,,.,_
,_
··-~

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1-13-tfc

11--..:..::

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

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

\

\

*

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

168 North Setond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Cerry Fishing Supplies
Pay Your Phone

and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
16141992-6510
RISIOINCI PHONE

JIFFY

BABY
QUILT

1

764: FluHy
easy·to-make crib
cover is stuffed strips
• of fabric. Combine
remnants or use
coordinated colors.
Directions, details for
quilt about 44 x 55".
$3.25 PLUS $1.00
1 P/ H FOR EACH
PATIERN ORDERED.
OFFER GOOD
THROUGH
OCT. 3t, 1988
Send to; Reader Ma11.
Dept. 0000 Box 4000.
Niles MI. 49t 20·4000.
Print Name, Address,
Zip, Size, PaHern Number. (NY &amp; Ml residents
add sales tax)

Card of Thanks

54 Misc. Merchandise

We woul l1ke to
thank everyone for
the many kindness
extended to us at
the time of our
sons' accidsnt and
Matt's death. Every·
thing is deeply ap·
preciated and will
always be remem·
bered.
William Weaver
and Famil
11

SEE OUR
BEAUTIFUL
SELECTION OF
SILK FLOWERS
AND
ARRANGEMENTS

Cliff's Place
POWELL ST.
MIDDLEPORT

992·5496

Help Wanted

ATTENTION: WOMEN AND MEN
SALES MANAGEMENT-TRAINEES
$18,000.00 TO $23,000.00 1ST YEAR
AVERAGE

If you won1 an oppor1unily 1hll com'!' rarely in a person's lilt·

time, then you owe 1t to yourself to 1nvesllaata. .

1. Responsible/CAREER-MINDED (prof• ovtf 22)
2. Aw•si¥e/HIGHLY MOTIVATED
3. 4 yurs full· time workin&amp;(ulos) uperience or coltece dt&amp;rM
Pfolllled.
4. Must be out o1 town 5 nl&amp;trts per wlft. 40 hO&lt;Jr worh -h
Due to uponsion, Notional Cooporlllon wrth moro thiO 950 Rtllit Slloppin&amp; Con1w locatio01 h• illmtdlllt opononp for m•
turo. Pfollsslonol !II•· orionttd wom., and mon. Compllltlvt
Sol lOY pluscommission. Expensuilowmce foryour ell and mo-,
tal. with coopoollt btnlfita. CHMCE FOR ADVANCEMENT.
Retail, jowelry. cosmotlc ul• or mwhtina/tllchin&amp; bach·
17011nd helpful. and llllm.. lloors now free to travel. GREAT CAR·
EER RE-ENTRY OPPORTUNITY!
For pt&lt;sonal int.,.iow call John C. Hail's office TOLL FREEot I·
800-523-1514 or i·I00-762·9503. Monday thoat&amp;)o Thursday.
bttwlln 1:00 o.m.·7:00 p.m. ONLY! PI••• coil on or boforo
Thursday. May 19t~ 1988.1n Wosl Vir&amp;inio coil 1·8110-543·5940.
E.O.E . M/f

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

WANT TO IUY WRECIED

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

OR

JUNK CARl OR TRUCKS
-FRIE ESTIMATESFor any of these senit~s call

Also Transmlulan
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

614-742-2617
letwHn 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or. leave M~~·~ -.tfn

6·17-tlc

t 6141

Real Estate General

Care Center seeking licensed
lP Ns for part time employment.
medical and dental insuran.qe
available. If intera&amp;1ed eaiiKalhy
Thornton, Director of Nursing.

Famlly- ~ntenary

T . houte.

Clothes. dishs, water bed. misc.
itemt. 18-17. 8;30· 6:00.

------Pomerov......... ..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
We buy quiht . Pre 1950's. Any
condition. ($5 -t400) . Need
now. Call 614-992·6657.

v.w.

PARTS

608
E. Moin

. ..::,:;:;:,:..:,.:,.a
POMEROY, OH .
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Vacant ~nd
on CR 4. Rutland Twp Approx.
l 55 acres .ol wooded iilld
Some timber, m~erais, electric
availa~e A.~ KING $ll.225.00
NEW LISTING - SYRA·
CUSE- II a neat home with
a nice lot is what you are
looking lor. this is it' 3 bed·
roms. elec. heal, 1 car garage, rear deck. all the com·
fort s ol home' $35,900.00.

HARRISONVILE- Just oul
ol town. Almost 3 acres ol
rollin g cleared ground &amp;
hookups lor home or mo b1le
home. Water. eiec., &amp; septic
.on site. ONLY $6.000.00.
PRICE REDUCED - Country home on I and 2/ 3acres
lot. Home in good condrtion
w1th 3 bedrooms, new car·
petin&amp; insulated. aHached
garage, storage cellar. MAKE
OFFER $25,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - This· 2
story home shows the work
lhal has been do ne. Anice
kitchen. lots of closet space.
3 bedr ooms, dinm g room , 1
and 113 baths, level lot. REDUCED TO $26,900.00
POMEROY - Older 2 slory
home wrth gorgeous wood·
work lireplace and mce cal&gt;nets in kitchen. 3 bedrms..
huge lamily room. dining
room &amp; equ1pped kitchen.
Central au , garage &amp; storage
tluildin~ · MAKE
OFFER
$39,900.00.
FOR SALE: "Gramps' a prge
winning Bass' Cralty, hard lo
get a hook into' We'll also sell
yoo the large pond he IN es in
wnh other small fish! And. yes
the house. lfs very large, too.
7 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 2baths.
Huge family room wrth a 'iew
ol "Gramps" home We doubt
yoo 'li stay in the house,
thou~ when "Gramps" IS biting! Approx. 3 acres. SELLING
PRICE: $46,000.00.
POMEROY - Nicely remodeled hOIJie m town. Could
be 2 unit ~partment. Sellers
may help w1th linancing.
WANT $18,500.00.
LISTINGS NEEDEDI We hiVe
buyers tor Meies County
properties and need homes
to sell - Call Today. We
need yoor property to sell!
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949·2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992·5692
Trocy Riffle ....... 949·3080
Office............... .992· 2259

f1]

R~R

Wedemeyer'• At.etion Servic,.
nailable 8t your convenience
and locations. Marlin Wedem8';'er Auctioneer· 814· 2465152.
Rlek Pe•sDn Auctioneer, u.

eensed OhiO and West Virginia.

Estate. antique. f•m. liquids·
tion sales. 304-773-6785.

9

Wanted To Buy

we pay cast1 for llrtemodet cleen
u1ed C.s.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oid:s Inc.
Bill Gene John1on
614-445-3872

· &amp; ASSOCIATES

•

Home Health Care
Agency ·
We Provide Care For The
Elderly In Their Home.

NURSES AIDES.
ORDERLIES. LPN's
Hourly or live·ln
Arrangements

BONDED • INSURED
Covered With Workmen's
Compensation

742-2315

PH. 614-992-2657

5·2·1 mo.

4-20-' 88 l mo.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uaed cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiec:. 1911 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis. Call 614·448-

2282.

Complele houl8holds of furni·
ture &amp; ant~ues . Also wood &amp;
coal heater•. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third 81 Olive,
814-446-3159.
Want to buy: Used furniture and
antique•. Will buy entire house·
tlold furnishing . . Marlin Wedem-ver, 8t4-24S.6152.

Junk Can wrth or without
motors. Call taFrv Livefy-114-

388-9303.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

.

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Brius &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
.
Weed Eater
Hom elite
Jacobsen

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prius 11

· PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPlY
Middleport, Oh.

NO SUNDAY ULLS

992-6611]. )0.17 tin

4-16·86-tfn

_____....;._ _,_,1

BOGGS

FOR

SALE

Cash paid for color .tolid state
' late model portabte TVS for
pens. Call 614-446-43;!5.
Wan...,_. Leon Luckie~ 4-H Club
needs a good uaec:t refrigerator.

Call 304-4&amp;8-1997.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
·form Equipment
Dealer

Built On Your Lot
ON SALE NOW AT
SEARS IN MIDDUPORT

fttM EqalpMtll
Ptrh &amp; Strtrie

614-

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

TAYLORED TANS
That Fit Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

PH. 949-2969
Dealer F.-

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Located Halfway Be·
tween R1. 7 8o Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

20 SESSIONS $35

CA~;~I 949-2414 .

8.7 Financing On

Yardman

OWNED &amp; OPIIATID IY

Se"i" On Ail Makes
We H011or MC/Disc/Viso
4·18.'881fn

ANGIE TAYLOR
8 I I Vine St., Racine
5·12.'88·1 mo.

Lar us

(at!"'''

thou ohl Mawtts
&amp; Slidel-"Owtr te H1Y VNS.

CAll AMY CARTER
or IOI'S EL!CTIONtCS
'

11/ 2/'IJ.tfc

Announce ill en ts

HElPING YOII IECOVII
YOUR llVEilMINI

SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY
Racine, Ohio 46771
Phone 949 -2202

446-7390

Be number 300 5n th• numb•

one U.S. 1ndwin t100wor1hof
tree produetl. For more lnforrre·
tlon call M1ritvn WeiiVer-304-

WANTED

DEAD 01 AUVE
•WIShers •Dryara
•Ranges •Freezers
•Rafrlgerators"Must • Ropoil'llolo"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
985·3561
We Service All Makes
1/22/11/tfn

Want Ads

~W.a'tlwll'on

Thay'MII1c AI 'IWI

882·2645.

•f•

Racklce

end f•t with

Ooh•• Tebl«• .,d e.vap "Wa·

tar Pills" avsi11ble Fruth

Ph•n-eev·

4

Giveaway

Free mi•ed pu ppl• to good
3 be•tlful puQI:N-. blldl: and
white spotteid . Fur·ry end
lt.a)gho. 3a"-l75-8133.

Mile Old Englilh Sh_.g. No
PIP... flt~l. llk•lddl. good
watch dog. Coll814-742·2414.
Wood lith 1trip1, good for
ftr.vood, f~c:e. or lattl~. 304-

1711-2408.
Lott of old ntwiPIIP.. for
304-175· 1391.

-ding.

'·

•.

12

Situations
Wanted

Room and board. Eldflfly o'n.;.
Personal care. Rea5onable. 614-

13

..

Insurance

Call us for vour mobile ho~
insurance: Miller Insurance:
304· 882-2145 . Al!o: au~'
tlome. life. health.
~

Buyin(l deify gold, silver coins,

Jlm·s Odd Jobs
•; ·
Sundec:ks. !iding, peinting, roo.{inq. e•penter wotlc. t.-iler re·
P••r. Call 614-379-2416. - ..

rings. jCIWalry. sterling ware. old
coins. l•ge currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett S.rber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614-

992-3476.

------

11

..

Sewing. &amp;Iterations. mending.

Call 814 - 992 · 70Q-4 :'1
Middleport .
I

----~----------- 1

Elllployl!lent
Serv;ces

I wHI mow iawns at 11 reatonillbl ~
r11te. Call 61~992 · 5085after 5 1
p.m.
t

A &amp; B. Odd jobs you need it~
can do it. Auto, lawn or home.' ·

Help Wanted

free estimete. 304-773· 5045. ;

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

Fin ancia I

S16.0.t0 • 169,230/ yr. Now
hiring. Your area. 805-887·
8000, ext R-10189 for current
Federal list.

21

EARN as much •

S600.00
Wefttv. auamblying ProG..Icta
in vour home. Send ... , addrMIBd. ~tamped envelope to:
Homeculfts. P.O. Box 9006.
Huntington. W.Va. 28704.
GET PAID for reading bookll
1100.00 per till e. Write: PAS E33N . 161 S. LinoolnWIIv. N.
Awora , II 60s.t2.
Hafp Wanted-Houri'( Clinic Aide
needed pert· time in t.mitv plan·
ning afflee. Must hwe high

school diploma or equivalency:
good communle•lon lldlls;
cu111cy with fi~res; be dependable. org~r~ized, and r811pQMible.
Training wailable for meture
indivktlal who il ""'tttve to
reprod.JctNe heatth need:l of
dients. looldng for som.one
who il •lf..mothlaled and CM

•c-

need

arises. Mutt hattte reliable trans portation an d bewll ing to trwel.
Weeekd..-. evening .. d s.turdllf houn are to be expected.
Send r•ume, induding 1wo
employment references to
P1111ned P•emhood of Sou·
theast Ohio, 398 Richland
Avenue. Athens, Ohio 45701 .
by Mav 23, 1988. PPSEO Is an
Equ.l ()pportuntty Employer.

AM. Apptv in perton.

SALESPERSON · E.tebllshed
ComJ*Iy looking for •lepenon
to ... , JMitor Suppll• ll
Equipment to . . .blls-Md account.; Athwl1. Jtcbon, Meig~.

a

0.111&amp;
VInton counti•. Mu•t
be tell awter . Send Nlume 1o:
Bo~t Cl1 149, c/ o Oalllpo411 Deity
Tribune, 825 11'11rd Aw .. Galllpolla, Ohio 415831 .
Hair Styhts. Acrou The Street
stylng •lion fl aNidng one
ltddillonal stylist who 61 tooldng
for more 1hlft iust anothw job.
Call Terri It &amp;;~446-9510 for
delaill.

home. Coii11"-9BII-4188.

Office help wanted -Typing.
communication slcill1 requif.ed.
Send 1"8sume or ntormetion to:
Box 148 c/ o Gftllipolili Oeity
Tribune. 825 Third ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45831 .

18 Wanted to Do

.N ow •king applieltkmt for
night JhHt •t Subway. Open tl 2

3 Announcements

Federal, State. CNil Service
Jobs. Now tliring. your are1_11
$13.560 to $69.480. Immediate openings. Call 1 -316· 7338062, ext . F29 38.

to Buy· U•od mal&gt;le
home•. Call 614-446-0175.

grow in 1he pOJition H

lmm MOVIES &amp; SLIDES to
VMS TAP!

Advance your carMr by accept·
ing the rewar(ing position , pf
StOre Man,.ger with HAAB .
MAN 'S HOME CENTERS. ·'he
right candidate will have a
minimum of four ~·• of retail
store management experi.nce
and or a degree In Busi~
Admini~ttration ,
Hardware bt,lilding suppliM prort.lct knOINIedge desirable. Proven IN.d e!·
ship 1kills essential. Exceii'"Jl
beneftts. if vou are looking for a
chall.,ging aperiooce with a
growth c:ompeny. appl'( toda, ltv
sending your ret1ume to: C. Stan
Hardman. President, Hlrd~
Home Center1. 8o10: 969.
Spencer. W. Va. 25276.

.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

WOODEN BUILDINGS

SECRETARY

Candidate 1hoi.Jid POIMII good
secretary akUia an dposh:Ne work
attitude. Require ability to c;omPOI8 quality correspondence
and take dictation
...
(ahorth.,d desifedl . PermeruWtt
posilion in Jackson Coumy.
Send resume to P.O. Box 46iRevenswood. WVa. 28164. tF

Wonted

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

614-662-3821

AVON all areas; Shirlev Spears.·
304-67$.1429.

992-7204.

Buying furniture and appliances
bv the piece or by the lot. Fair
prices. Call 814-448-3158.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

3 Styles
and
Various Sizes

13041875-5236. EOE-AAE .

Get .paid for reading bookal
S 100.00 per title. Write: PASE
·517 N. 161 S. lincolnway. N .
Aurora. Ill 60542

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

P. E. MILLER

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT
NEW AND USED
PARTS

NEW LISTING - Chester .
area - Vacant land. Approx. 20 acr es ol wooded
land. Great hunllngor building s1te. $10.000.00.

5026: Heirloom
samplers, 5 in all,
includes the 2 shown
plus Baby, Friendship
&amp; Anniversary.
Transfers &amp;
instructions for
counted stitch, color
guides.
$3.25 PLUS $1.00
9 /H FOR EACH
PATIERN ORDERED.
OFFER GOOD
THROUGH
OCT. 31. 1988
Send to: Reader Mail.
Dept. 0000 Box 4000.
Niles MI . 49t20·4000.
Print Name. Address .
Zip. S1ze. PaHern Num·
ber. (N Y&amp; Ml residents
add sales tax)

Roger Hysell
Garage

,.. ,.... eon 201 -584-5695oltfr

May 13-23. 9-4 . 3 miles out
BulavilleRd .·off0id160. Watch
for algns.

8 .

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

Former Po int P leMMt eoupkt
now INing in New Jersey
seek ing INe in baby.rtter for 2
pretchool.-s. Somelighthoute~
work required, room and boer.d
plus 8150.00 per ¥Wek. l'lfOt1
tmok•~tnd reference~ required .
One yetw commitment p;e.

LPN. Pleasant Vailley Nufling

5·2·, mo

New Ko1111s Built
••Free Estimates''

NO SUNOA Y CALLS
l·ll·tfn

•FREE•ESTIMATES•
IF NO
CALL:
U7·75

742 -2455

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Water. Gas. Electric, Sewer &amp;
Drainage Lines, Road Building.
lAnd Clearing. Footers
Comphrte Mobile Home Setup1
Fill Dirt - Top Soli · Limestone
SMAll or lARGE JOBS

AVON • Alf areas. c811 Marilyn

.. "·· .............................

RUTLAND. OHIO

10·8-tfc

COUNTRY
· CROSS-STITCH

ln11alled

Eml'w.ltiMtlc. mouvallng indi·
vidual• fof th e -following positiont: Activity director .,.d ••·
s iltant for Skilled Nursing
F1 cility. CertificM:ion p.-eferred
but not neceuarv. Send RetltfflO
to Amerie•e Pomeroy Nurting
and rahabil it «~ ti on Cent4r,
36769 Roekspringe; Rd,. Pqrr{.:
roy , Oh io . Attent ion : Jan
Buskirk.

6:00 PM for local intarviMy.
serious epplicants only.

&amp; Vicinity

Septic Tanks and leach Beds

Help Wanted

Weav&amp;r 30..,.882-2645,

·-· ·· --Giillip.olis ___ .......

3

367-0317

814-

$20. 304-675-2&amp;37.

I

•Makes. Garden &amp; Yard
Care a Snap!

Rd. C.ll

lo11 • Man's hiqh tchoal clu•
ring Tu· Endi·Wet·Park. Reward

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

•lightwei'ght
•Tiller/ Cultivat or
•Easy to Operate

FOR MORE INFORMATION

FOUND.Poodle type bleck wtth
tome white. Very friencttv . On

446-9650 .

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

MANTIS
Precision
Gardening
System

11

Lost and Found

Neighbor~od

-az: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

"--·-·-

..

11 - 11-. f\1 I ' C I I -

01 - o
,._
_,.,.

Givaaway

Need good u..d baby bed.
Plea" nnd reply or •a : 7 33
Third Ave ., Gallip otis, Ohio
45631 .

c, Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

n - -R...

1··-~
:::.......;::.::..

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
· NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
LEGAL NOTICE
SMALL OPERATOR
ASSISTANCE PRDGI!AM

Fischer; grand a Ide, Delmer
Wllson, several former grand
appointments, past grand of!lc.
ers, past deputy grand matrons,
past grand representatives, dis·
trict representatives, Sally Nel·
son, Cancer; Gall Dew. ES·
TARL: Chloris Gaul, heart; past
matrons and past patrons of
other chapters.
A red and white color scheme
was carried out In the dining
room. White bud vases wlth red
roses were used on the tables
co¥ered In white with accents of
red streamers and hanging pots
of fern completing the decor.

\

__

4

II11====~~~~~~;;.~~;;;:::==:;16
;Television
Devices

,.
,.

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

PAT HILL FORD

Public Notice

.Evangline Chapter inspeaion conduaed

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

-

-~

...

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

15} 16: 161 16; 171 16. 3tc

honored Masons, 50 year
members of Evangeline Chapter, Grace French, Nan Moore,
Lee McComas, and Es ta Reese of
District 24; and district officers,
Margaret McNabb, vice presi·
dent; Ann Price, secretary, and
Kathy Johnson, treasurer.
Also presentell were General
Grand Chapter appointments,
assistant to the Grand Warder,
Elsie Schoenlan; members of the
Grand Chapter committee, ere·
dentlals, Elsie Schoenian; eductional Joan study, Clayton Smith,
appointees to the deputy grand
matron, grand page, Barbara

. ...
..._
~-

n;::r.:,o-

BINGO

LEAD ANO YOUR OR INKING WATER .

Annual inspection of Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, was held recently
at the Middleport Masonic Temple with Teresa Canterbury,
worthy matron, and Bob King,
worthy patron, presiding.
Distinguished guests were
Howard I. Shull, pas! grand
patron, District 25, and .Pete
Quick from Oklahoma.
Inspecting officer was Mary
Porter. grand conductress.
Other guests were Aileen
Hughes, associate grand conduc·
tress; deputy grand matrons,
Juan!la Ward, District 24, and
Martha Porter, Dlslict 25; grand
representatives, Kathleen Mingus, Delaware In Ohio; Emma
Polen, Nova Scotia and Prince
Edward Island In Ohio, and Betty
Dalton, Washington In Ohio.
Presented ,were worthy rna·
Irons and worthy patrons of other
chapters; past matrons and past
patrons of Evangeline Chapter,

--..----.....- ·--·
----·-

IE.

~-·

and

Mother, daughter
dinner planned
AUXILIARY RECOGNIZED - Recognized
and presented corsages as a part of National
Hospital Week were these Women's AuxU!ary
officers, lelt to right, Clara Burris, secretary;
Mary Folmer, president; Louise Bearhs, volun·

-c
··-'---

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

-

__
_
·--.......
::::::.-:::_
_
_
n--......
••
,._
,_
_
_
,_
"--·-··...,.
.,_,

1- CO..ol'1- loo - . .

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 7

Business
Services

Business Services

THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT
WATER DEPT.
The United States Envi·
ronment Protection Agency
(EPA) sets drinking water
standards and has determilled that lead is a health
concern at certain levels of
exposure . There is currently
a standard of 0 .050 parts
per million (ppm) . Based on
new health information,
EPA Is likely to lower this
stamt~r~ significantly.
Pari: of the purpose of this
notice is to inform you of the
potential adverse health ef·
facts of lead . This is being
done even though your wa ·
ter may not be in violation of
the current standard.
EPA and others are con·
earned about tead in drink·
ing water. Too much lead in
the human body can cause
serious damage to the brain ,
kidneys, nervous system ,
and red blood cells . The
greatest risk. even with
short-term exposure. is to
.voung children and pregnant
women .
"Lead levels in your drinking water are likely to be
t:&gt;highest :
~ if your home or water sys·
tam has lead pipes, or
- it your home has copper
pipes with lead solder,

__..._.

l ell!phon ~ e ;q :hon .gllt ...

•-c
...,.
,.,
-~

:::,"o':~...: '::.;.:':.:::;;::::.:!. •••4o•·

Memorial services for Ruth
Erlewlne with the draping of the
charter were held at the recent
meeting of Harrisonville Chapter
255, Order of the ·Eastern Star.
A poem on friendship was read
In tribute to Mrs. Eriew!ne and
the group had a moment of
silence in her honor. Bernice
Hoffman, worthy matron, pre·
sided at the meeting welcoming
the deputy grand matron, Mar·
tha Porter, District 25. Past
matrons, past patrons, and ho·
no red I')!asons were pre sen ted
and welcomed. A practice ses·
slon was held for inspection held ·
Friday night.
Refreshments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice, Mrs.
Frances Alkire, Mrs. Frances
Young, and Mrs. Norma Lee.

Beth Weaver lost the most
weight In the Tuesday morning
Five Points Sl!nderel Ia Class and
there was a tie between Cathy
Hudson and Betty Dill for the
most weight lost In the evening
class. In the teen class, Melissa
Foster .lost the most weight and
was accepted into the sUm-'n·
trim program for having reached
her goal weight. She received a
special ribbon and certlfiate. In
· the kid's class, Amy Smith lost
the most weight. At the Mason
class, Joan Vaughan lost the
most weight with Audrey Clark
being runner-up. Jo Ann New·
some is Ject urer.

N •

....
on ...
on •
ot &gt;•

-·... -·..........
..----·
--. ... ---..--. ....

. .......... .........
............. .,... . ............... ,.,•. ..........
c .. o ~• H•o•••

OES has meet

SlindereUa meets

ol •

~

Harrisonville

The annual mother-daughter
banquet of the Racine-Portland
Branch of the Reorganized
Branch of the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ Latter
Day Saints held at Shoneys In
Ripley, W.Va.
Attending were Jocelyn Bal·
ley, Kelly Bailey, Goldie Rad·
cliff, Janice Danner, Sandy De·
. Moss, lla Roush, Diana Duhl,
Sarah and Em Uy Duhl, Becky
Evans, Melanie Adams, Linda
Evans. Anna McHaffie, Lucy
Taylor, Sherr! Roush, Trlc!a
Roush, and a guest, Frances
Foster.

I O.OYI.

0 . . ...... o•••• ...,.,.
' ' '"'
....

~

home of Mrs. Harlls Frank with
Mrs. Tom Spencer serving as
co-hostess .

Chatter Club meeting held

JO.OU

a......

,._.,, .. ,,,,. • .,,.,..,. .. . _

Grange inspeaion condu&lt;.ted
Annual Inspection of Star Junior Grange was held recently
with Meigs County Junior Deputy Westina Crabtree as the
Inspecting officer.
' Others present and participat·
lng were Denise Shenefield;
Crystal - Vaugh an , Bridget
Vaughan, Bryan Colwell, Scott
Colwell, Ashley Colwell, Chip
Macomber, Mike Macomber.

!Q.OYI

~-·

Riverview Garden Club meeting-held
p

- --

. ,,.. _

The annual mother-daughter
and "Mother Mine" accompan- all women 80 and over.
banquet of the Pomeroy Uni ted
Ied by Martha Hoover who also
Preceding the program a poMethodis t Church was held re- read several funny tales children tluck dinner was enjoyed wlth
cently at the church.
had writ ten concerning their Janet Meadows asking the blessDorothy Downie and Ruth
mothers.
. ing and guests were Introduced.
Moore were in charge of the
Evelyn Clark and Myrtis Tables were decorated -with pink
program . Scripture was taken P ar ke r presentd hanging and white streamers and white
!rom the book of Ruth, wi th Mrs . . baskets to Ada Warner, oldest tapers. Jackie Hildebrand made
Downie reading from her grand- mother, Cherie Williamson, the the table favors of lace and
mOther's book, and Mrs. .Moore younges t mother; Kathy Price, beaded crosses.
had several readings on mothers the mother with th e most childAs a tr!bu te to the 100th
and grandmothers.
ren present, and Janet WITllam- birthday of Irving Berlln, the
Kathy, Stephanie and Stacey
son, the youngest grandmother. women closed with singing "God
Price sang th ree songs,
Flower s were also presented to Bless America" accompanied by
" Mother", "My Mother's Wa ltz"
Paula Welker.

Mrs. Young displayed several
wild flowers which she )lad
gathered. She also told the
members how to transplant wild
flowers, good locations, growth
without spraying or fertilizer,
and how they bring beauty to
flower gardens.
To conclude the program, Mrs.
Michael Williamson, Eric Mont·
Ernest
Whitehead and Mrs.
gomery, Chelsea Montgomery,
Denver
Weber
conducted a game
and Linda Montgomery. junior
on wildflowers awarding several
leader.
~
During the meeting, the prizes. For roll call members
members decided to sell candy to . named and displayed a wild
rai se money to help on the cost of llower.
Mrs. Okey Conolly , president,
members planning to at tend
welcomed
Mrs. Jay Long, a
junior Grange camp in July . The
guest.
Mrs.
Young
read "TheSun
group played a game and made
Upon
The
Road"
lor devotions:
.
gifts lor their mothers .
Cards were signed lor several
sick friends.
Plans were made to meet at
Stahl's Nursery at Little Hocking
Harrison. Susan Cleland and Thursday at 6 p.m. for a tour of
Cindy Hutton rec!eve door the n~rsery. Members plan to
pr izes. Games were played with _ have dinner out alter the tour.
pr izes going to Isabelle Couch, Mrs. Long won the door prize.
Donna Fry , Susan Cleland, De· Refreshments were served to
!ores Whitlock, and Janice ;Fetty. those named and Mrs . Donald
Rel'reshments were served. Myers, Mrs. Nola Cline, Mrs.
Mary Stare he~ will host the next Herman Grossnickle, Mrs . Ro·
meeting.
nald Osborpe, Mrs. Donald Put·
man, Mrs. Lyle Balderson. and
Mrs. Paul Thomas.

RATES

..·-............. l_..
...,.... . ........... . _, .....
....·::...._
... ..._ __
.• ,._,,
.. .....
, ......
......,........
.,_
........___
.................
..............
................
_ ....... . _, ............. ·-=-·
..... ......
,.._.......... .,.,....
......
.......................

Mothers, daughters, gather for banquet _

A program on wild flowers was
presented by Mrs. Ray Young at
a recent meeting of the River·
. view Garden Club held at the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

o-.."*"
Jot.. t11.040 .
t59.230 yr. Now hiring. Your
. . . 8()1.687·8000 ext. R·
9805 for current fed•• Ust.
Full or

~- llmeRN

a..,.,vt.ar.

7-3:30 shlft. LPN 3·1;:30 lnd
11· 7;30 ohlft. 75 bod ICF-8 NF

Business
Opponunity

I NOTICE I
•
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHl
lNG CO. recommends mat 'yoli
do busln•• with people · yoU
know, and NOT to 11md moneY,
through ttle mail untM you hav.:
investigMed the oHering.

Food butinen for •le. All'
equipment end raeeiptJ. In l\o1id- '
dleport. Seriout enquiri• ontv:
pl..... Write Oaity Sentinal. Box 1
729 T. Pomeroy. Ohio 457&amp;9. 1

'

Belt One Person Busine11 1
Can be operated pan-time orl
fult· time. Service accounts with'
nem•br.nd productJ. No sel-1
ling, low 0\IM'head. Minimum:
investment, call 1-800·255.,
5725 en 6031 for a local l
~pointment .

1

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

- - --.,..-- - -----.:
Tupper!! Pleilis-3 Br . eat-ill'
kitchen. large IN/ng room. ful~
basement g•ege. all electric}
cent~;al

air.

can

614-4411-7491.

attar

5 PM .:

;

Big 2 Bedt'oom Rustic hom~
b.Jilt on your site. S13, 995 8t up.•
Coli 1· 614-B811-731t
FOR

SALE

0 R R ENT· 4 '

BR .. ranctt . large INing room,:
khchen, dining room, full base-,
ment &amp; garage. Fult'( carpeted
jsome newl . Natullll gas, citY!
Mter. citv schools. No pets.'
~ef
&amp; dep. requlrfd. Calli

!!~~!,8~.0;:e~,;:e!ny~im:~

3 BR . home. Nice flat lot in~
Evergreen . E11cel. g Arden J
125. 000.MAke offer. Call 614-1
446-1420.
i

1985· 3 BR ., 2 b•ho. 24•401

Secttonal. One acre of land 1
132.000. C.lllt"-388-9305. 1

• •

Unfinished houn with 'lz b•e-1
m.,t on one acre.more or•
IM•wit h fruit t,.... Close to:
Tvcoon lak• t10,000 or best,

long t•m c•e1ldlity tooldng tor
nurMI to join aur dlllaMeds•ff
who • • oonwuln.d to provtding

off•. Must 1111. c.ll 814·· 44a..
2 107· 0.Vs. 245-l&amp;eo.Ewn. '

quality . . .. 111- clfl Portty
Conr11d, O.O.N. for lnt.v6M.

---~------:_1
ADriel• Rm. owr looking
CODn Ck . WDDded. ..clud~. 3
IIA ., 2 8A., CH/ A.C, 2 ac: .. boc

IIIHe. Ohio. t·1t"-H7-3158.

448-7195.

Ree-l
·...
. .Arcacla
. •collont
bo- dock. Easy •ccillsto river. Mav:
nlftt
,
..
-.nme
Center, Box A Mein St., Cooi- finance. 148.900. Call 614--

�t'age- t!- rhe uady :sem1ne1
31

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Homes for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

4 Br. horne, 2 bllfha, CA/ H ·

Blocll garage. On Cttac ~m Ave.
131, 90 0. Call 614-44 6-2386or
~6-0322.

2 BR . ranch, 'I} aa-e. restricted
Affordable, t26. 00.0 . Msg.#
614-256-6200. days.

3 bedroom hou sa. 1. 9 acres. On
Rt. 7 . ApPointment Or;'llv . 614-

9 92-8332.

Government homes from $ 1. fu

repair), Del inqU8flt tax property.
Repossessions. Call 805-887·
60 00 Ext. G H 9 805 for cu rren t
rapo list .

Government Homes from $1 .00
(u repair) . Repos. back t&amp;.ll ·

propeny and morel Caf1 ·1-518469-3 546 Erl. H 16 22 ior
listings.
Owner
sferred,
pr ice re-2
dueed. $tran
42.000.
2 bedroom.
bath, el.ct ric heart pump, u•·
age. 427 ~th AlAI . Gallipolis.
Ohio. Hocking Valty Realty. Will
Co-op. 614-446-6663. 8146 9 2-525 2. 614-75 3- 3081 .
4 bedroom house. 1 'II b .. h. 770
Ask St . MiddltJport, Ohio. Must
see t o appre ciate. Cell 814-99-

Oeap hQute fo r tale. 011-er
t7000. spef1t on repairs , needs
finished. Aslt,ng 86600. Make
offer. must 11111. Can be seen at
101 Pleasant Ridge. 614-992-

2479.

Three bedroom. Bl-level home,
electric, sitl.eted on 1 a~Ya.
Nfw lima Rd., Rutland. Re·
duced 838,900. Cell Hobstenw
Rellty, 614-742-3092.
t~l

Nice 3 to 4 bedroom home in
Svn~ou ea. On large lot with river
frontage. 15x30 whetter house.
Very nice lot owrlooking river.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

large building lots.
mobile homes permitted, public
lfttotlter, also rftter lots, Ctyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2336.

1 J1h acrM· By owner with
14x70 Mobile Home. Call 814387-0403.
1979 Duke Crown Royal~
14x70, 2 BR .. washer-dryer,
mlcrov.eve. CA. porch•. underpinning. Partt;' furnished. Call

814-448-0911 .
24x52 Double wide. Oood oond.
s1a,500. Cell 614-26&amp;-9a93.
1986 Redman Sectional home.
28x58. 3 BR :. central air. Ready
to be moved. Call e14-4468694 after 6 PM.
2 8R . mobile home. Awning, out
building. Call after 6 PM,
814-44&amp;-9a46.

1985 Nashua 14JC60, 2 BR ..
centrel air, unfurnis hed. set up
on rented lot . E11c11M. cond. Must
sell. Call814-258-195a. mornings M-F. Ser. &amp; Sun. anytime.
19 69 Schuh:z 12d5, 3 BR. new
c;:erpat, gas heat. ext111 nice
throughout. Call 614-446 ·

0175.
1967 1 2x65 P1rkvl.ey. 2 badroom , 2 bath. $4000. OBp .
lnclud• bletcks and underpnning. Cell 614-742-2357 or
614- 742-2a96.
19 71

New Moetn and land.

304-87!;.7669.
19 82 Knox 1 2x 65, all electric. 3
beckoom, 1 furnithed. rest of
trailer completely fu rnished including wutt.and dryer. porch
and undarpenning. Very good
cond. 87,500.00. 304-773·

9608
1983 Uberty 14.1154
.
home, all electric, 2 bedrooms.
bath, rent1l iot; 304-875-7853.

44

A!lhtetn,

Rentals

PICKENS
2 BR . apts. I clo181s, khctlenappl. furrished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up. ww carpet. newtv
painted. deck. Regency. In c.
0&lt;

875-5104.

41

Homes for Rent

Nicely hm,.shed small house.
Adults only. Ref. required. No

,..• . Call 614-448-0338.

3 Rms. &amp; bath, unfurnished. $50
dep. $165 per mo. 6 mo. leae.
142 Fourth Ave., Qallipolit.
Prefer lingle ladv or geml8men.
Call 814-445-3667.
3 Br., 1 '/.1 bat hi-Eureka. 8260
per mo. Dep, required. C.ll
614-446-4222. bat-en 9·5.
Hou,a and 70 acu•t for rent in
West Columbia area. 1200
month. 8200deposit. Call814-

304-678-2466.

Small unfurnished hou11 , clean.
good local ion. prafercou.ple one
child. no petl, 3218 Howard
Aw. 304-875-8621 .
a bedroom hou1111. furnished or
u nfu rnil:hed. •350.00 month
plus deposit. Maton. W.Va.
~04-773-6081 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BR . Nice a clean in Eureka.
1200 a mo. Oep. mquiracf. No
pets. Cell 614-245-6863.
2 8R .-Neer Leete. Ref. &amp; dep.
Adu Its. t1 25 1 mo. Garden.
Clean. Cell 614-446-7754 or

643-2844.

New Completely furni a ~ed
apartment &amp; mobile home In
city. Aduha only. P•klng. Call

614-448-0338.

:5~'l!Wu~~~~=~rJM;":

SON ESTATES, 536 Jackson
Aka from • 183 • mo. Walk to
1hop end mo\riea. 814-4462568. E.O.H.
Brookside Apartments: Located
aft BllavlleRd.- 18R . spacious
apartments 'IIWith modern kitchen
and washer-dryer hookups. c•
ble tel..-ilion .vailebla. Cell

814-448-21 27. .

Updlra unfurnished apt. Car·
pMII!Id. utilities .-ld No children.
No pets. Call 814-446-1837.
Downtown-Modern 1 BR ., complete kitchen. AC. carpet, Cell
61 ~448- 01a9 .
Furnithed efficiency. 1145. Uti~

hloa poid. Shore both. 807

Second. Gallipolis. Call 614448-4418 aft• 7 PM.

Garage IIPt .. furnished. $226.
Utllltie1 paid. 29% Neil, Gallipo-

lis. Call 614-448-4416 altw 7
PM.

11 Coun St.-2 BR ., 2 baths,
klitchen furnished. w / w c•pet.
No pets. Off atreer: parking..
a 326 a mo. plus utiliUea. Oep. &amp;
&lt;Of. C•ll814-448-4928.
Garege ~~p•rt~t-3 rooms &amp;
balh, w i d. air. Clean. No pets.
Adult1 onfy. Call 614-4411·619.
Nice 1 BR. apt . Ranr!. refrig.
garbage
fumi1hed. Water
paid. Oepoait required. Call
814-.48-4345 after 6 PM.
2 BR .. all utiHiesinduded. •aso

814-448-1802.

New apartmllnt . 1 BR . Sto\18 &amp;
ref. $285 utltiti• pd. 241
Jeckwon PUce. Gallipoltt. 44&amp;4416after 7pm.

2 SR . mobne home-Additon
area. Must hava references. Cell
614-387-7188.

2 Br. apt. Ac.. downtown,
redecorated. •390. Utllltiea
paid Deposit required. c.tl

2 SR . furnished mobile home
and a1 BR . hou•furnithed. Cell

814-448-4109&lt;&gt;&lt; 378-2740.

1 2.1180 · Edge of town on 518.
Carport, gaa heM, air. ttove S.
refrlg. No pats. No children.
Prefer senior adulta . 1140
monthly ph~• utllitiM S. depqsit.
Call 814-448-7124 before 1

PM.

Furnished. In 5-tract..e. Oepolit
•nd raf.-ence required. Call

814-992-7880.

2 BR . furni1hBd mobile home.
uooa mo .Pus •100dep. plu•

utllhleo. Call 304-878-10 80.

Trail.- for rent, 2 bf' 12x801. 1 1/J
miles out Millltont Rd. Apple
Grove. WV. 1250. per month.
plus Depoait. Phone 304-576248a or &amp;76-22aa.

Apartment
for Rent

814-448-2129. 8:00 AM-4:00
PM.
Furnished up:atein a room apt.
Utilitiea paid. 94 Locu~t. $210
per month. •76 dep . Cell

814-448-1 340"' 448-3870.

1 BR . furnished or unfumilhed
apt. in Middleport. CaU 614-

992·6304"' 448·1B9B alter 5
PM
.

Exc cond. '86 Flttmmlng 14x80.
lived in 8 montht, cathedral
calling, lev-olor blinds. ceiling
fan , g.-den tub, vinyl unct.pen·
ning. blocks. 2 tet of stepa.
hurriCM18 tie downt , 304-675· 6841 .

33

Farms for Sale

5 room unfurnished. Ups•in
apt. for tent. Cell diiV•· .1 14446-7672. aftM 5 PM, 448-

1980.

Furrished room-919 Second
A\18 ., Gallipoll1. 8126 a mo.
Utilitiet paid. Single male. Sh••
bath. C.ll 448-4416efter 7 PM.
Rooms lor nt~t- INEiek ar mon1h.
"lrting at $120 1 mo. Gllllfa
Hotel-614-448-9580.

46 Space for Rant

34

Business
Buildings

Sulfnen buHdlng in Maaon. W.
Y1. 30C-773-5785.

36 Lots

llo

Acreage

lot wtth run~l w.ter ..
Appl• Grove. phone 30C-5781Y.r

Gracious Uving. 1 and 2 bedroom apartr-nents at YHiege
Manor and Rlvefaide Apart·
menta in Middleport. From
11 B 2. Call 814-992· 77B7.

EOH.

2 bedroom Apt. for nmt. -C.rpeted. Nice Httlng. ._... ndry
facitlt• available. Call 1141 bedroom furrished affeclancy
ept. 1 ul)l18in apt. with 2
bedrooms. Kltctlen fur~ahed . E.
Main, Pom•ov. 814-992·8216

3 loti on C.d.- St. In New
Hllvlfl, WV; 11otll 107lc100it.;
2 loti ere100.100ft. each. Will
sell all for 115,000. Cttv Wllt.end .wlige av•Meble. Call b•

t_., 4-5 p.m. :104-112-2847.

LOTS. one a~Ye, lwei wooded,
ci1v weter. Jericho Road, ow.ftnendnogoodt..-mt. 304-372·

1405 .. 372·2578.

SWIMMING POOLS • S988

liuge 31 ' oYIII pool with deck.
fence &amp; fitter . Installation &amp;
financing availabl e. 1-80().345-

1987 Regel 19 ft . open bow.
186 hp. low hours, extra dean .
a04-743-3109 or 743-a1 10.

Matching couch &amp; chair. Navy&amp;
balge. 1200 Call 614·446-

1974 Drifter houte boat. 4a ft,
exc cond. completefy tn:tored,
ao4-743-3109 or 743-1110.

Mobile home lot. 60 ft. or
small•. 920 4th, Galllpolt.
876-water paid C.II44&amp;-441S
afte.- 7 PM.

COUNTRY

MOBILEHomeP•~

Space for amall treilen. All
hook-ups. Cable. Ntoeffldency
rooms. air and cable. Malon,
w .va. c.n 304-nl-&amp;851 .
Spacious mobile home lots tor
rW~t . Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. O•Uipotla Ferry, W. Va.

PM. 814-44&amp;·0155.
9J~:12

Carpet remnants 8&amp;0
while tuppUea lett Mollohan
F11niture, Upper River Rd.,
Kenauga . 814-446-7444.
King size water bed. 12 drawers,
mirror, lights. padded 111ilt,
semi-waveTus. $400. Call 614-

949·2801 .

0125. Call 814·367-0322.

For Sale: bur* bade. bar stool•.
electric r1nga, chest of drawers,
stereo. lawn mo-r. Call 61-4-

986·4198.

Wettlltrn style b.- wrth 2stools.
Solid oak. IJald t500. new. 1811
for SHiiO. Call 614-696-1227.
Dlnnette set, end teblea, eoff"
table. lamps. TV HI, phone
304-676- 7a15 eft.- 8 :00PM.
Queen siz:em•«reu. bo• lf)rings
with frame. Portable diahw.. her. good cond. 304-6756,1 50.

53

Antiqueg

Unlimited free Kodak film, plus
frGO 35mm cam•• with werrenty , Toll Free 1· 80().4336312 124 houn) .

Ap1111mant for rent. •221 1
month. Dlpolll reqWred . 814992· 5724. Aft• lpm.

Nlwtv red~tad ap•rt,.,tt
ll'aillbla. Utllitiee pe;icl. 1225.
p•month, depo.tt required. Call
814-992·&amp;7Uift• 8:00.
5 room •nd blth apt. for lint.
Third flour. Nice. •175 plus
utlitl... depo.tf, Aet .... ca ,..

qullod. 814-"2·8028.
APAR'TMENTI. mobile homM.
hou. .. Pt. P1-m.nd0alllpo-

lil. l14-448-l221 .
Apertmanta tor

UOO.

.m.

304-17&amp;-

Apt. for rent 117 N.Fourth 81
Mlddl~ . Ohio. 2 bMiraama

turnlhMd ..,., also 2 room IPt.

304-182-2111.
-.,.,nwnta mHendllr.on. 304' 17&amp;-1972 aftlr 5 p.m .

•

•

King site "Mterbed fo r lila.
f 17 5 firm. Call 614· 992·3640
after 3 :30P-.m .

s~ th

~~~;::~:;~==~:::r;.~~;~~·;~~~~

Dune Buggy tod .oe. Bull fo•

61 Farm Equipment

Soler Blenket for 24 ft. round
pool . U18d 1 'Niek lest year.
1~0. Call 6 14-696-1227.

Fer-son l..ctora bush hog. tn
-·
load lhiP'!I- Cell 814-446-

344.

3 ..... int hltchwood• ...."-r. Used
••
,..,_
1 yr. Uke new. • ...ao. Call

55 Building Supplies
Building Material•
Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels. Me. Claude Winters. Rio Grenda, 0 . Call 814-

245-6121 . -

Concrete blockt· all sil81- ~rd
or deliVery. MasontBnd. Gallipolis Block Co., 123% Pine St .,
Gallipolis. Ohio. Call 614-448-

2783.

1875FcwdMu-g.goodcond,
*:100.00. 304-875-5938.

ter &amp;p.m.
NewHolland7ft. h.ybine, John
0.ere 34 fon~ge hervntar with
hey and corn hNd. lith ••c

1981 Caprlct Cleulc ttation
-.gon. good thlpa, 304-77315867 ett.r 5:00.

00 nd

30 • 27• 4215

~

'

~

.

P•rt• for 460 JoM Deere dozer,
ell Hke niYI, one front cron b.• 500:00. One ra• croll b•

230 C..e baler, New Idee corn
picker gnrvltv bad. 30 lnct.
Gravely mo•r. a04-882-2422
John Ohlinger.
12 HP Economy Power King
with 48" mowar grader blade.
turning &amp; potato plow 12, 500;
12 HP riding Cftvelv with 50"
mower. snow blade 8t tuming
•fter 6 p.m.

AKC Reg. Gern.n Shepherd
puppies . Black. tan &amp; tilver.
heel. stock . 8250 each. Call

Control weeds end tmell brush
With an a'll Ford tl'8ctor, 6 fl
mower. $1 ,9&amp;0,00. 30C-882-

plow *1700. 304-175-4435

19B7 Coi*Hv. good oond.low
~04-

mll•ge. call after 5:00,

878-225B.

1977 Buidl Regoi, V·B auto,

AW. dereo, •7911.00or ttade for
fold upurnper. 1979ptymouth
che~p haa bad motor. •295.00.

304-578-2218.

304-175-1998.

' 90 VW Rabbit. geeoline...eellent 111 around cond!1ion,
11 ,500.00. See2300Jefferaon

304-878-2396"' 875-5654.

63

AKC Mlnature Oechihund
puppy. 7 weeks old. Red male.

PIOf tor 181a. 145 each . Call

Trucks for Sale

72

Uvestock

t150. C1ll 614-448-8927.
Beegle. 1 yr. old. Good rBbbil
dog. Female. Spayed. Had all
shots. 114-992-7867.

Female burro fur •I e. t 100. Call
614-992-&amp;594.

orAinlal mil-. very good 1ruck,

-Tw_o_hona--,-lo-,-.-,..-8ot-h_k_l_d

tuto. tran1., one owner truck.

AKC registered miMture Daehahund puppies, 8 'Nfteks old.

broke. C•ll 814- 992-2703.
PIMI4 Call afcer 4 :00pm.

12500. Call 114-448-40411.
19BI Oodp 0 -100 pldlup. 4

Regiltered App1looee horae and
colt, good riding hone, ~~

tpd.. 6cyl., 14499. John's Auto
Sai•Rt. 7- below Holict.y-lnn.
Keneuga.

0200.00. Phone 304· 7739688.
AKC r'1Qillterad Collie. female,
Sabia, 16 weeks old. $12&amp;.00.
304-372-8390 Ripley. WVa.
AKC registered German Shepherd puppiea , shots and
wormed. wtchecked. after5:00
PM, no Sundays, 3Q-4-876-

575-6489.
Registered Appaloa. Mare, 10
old. good wtth children.
phone 304-773-11771 or 304-

ve••

8B2· 2810.

64
Musical
Instruments

Hay

llo

1978 OodgePiclcup-a18, auto.,

*375. 19BI Mud• 8 -2000,
plc:lwp. *&amp;BOO. Call 814-992·
5 30ol or 448-8888 aft• 5 PM.
NeoN 1981 Jeep Comm1ndla
Sporttruck. Black/liver ttrlpH.

Hor . .. 304-17&amp;-a180.

4 apd.. S.W.8. C.ll 814·2588327-&lt;1111'•· 448-2848-nlghll S.

Grain

&gt;Mitkenda .

Calll14-245-5482.

a

Corn ground.

Call 814-448-8480.

Uke niYo' Bundy Trumpet. 614Soy ...... 304-878-11088.

1910 OoclgotNCk. 311, 3 apd ..

54 Misc . Merchandise

Be number 300 in number oneln
Unhed States andwln 8100.00
oi frM products for more
inforn.tionceiiMarltynWeaver,

e.

M1ny BtiU. Sharp. C.ll 11-4-

EJtcerclse bike. Umer and speed.
Good condttion. 140. Call 614-

304-B82·2846.

698-1227.

882-3110.

Transpurt at ion

.

Wanted : R"ponslbla party to
u1ume 1n.ll monthty payment•
on plan o. See IOCIIIty. Call
Manager at 618· 234-1306
envtime.

ladiM golf clubt, Ram Brand by
Pro Shop. Blue and whha bag
with can. U1ed about 8 tim•.
Uke new, 8150. Call 814-69&amp;-

Electric 40 inch almond range
tor sale. 2 ovens. Uke new.

16 cu. ft. f1'881.-. 304-875-

5376.

Signs: Portllble lighted and
non-lghted. •199- a 279. Pav
half-balance 30 den. Free daliv·
ery and latters W. VA. 1-800.
842-2434 end Ohio 1-800-533-

3483.

..h.t.
duel W'lks, 380. .. to. 81000.

PS. PB. Call 814-448·1816,
8 PM·448-1244.

•II"'
61 Farm Equipment
U.S . 3&amp; West Jackson , Ohio.

814-288-8451 .

Mesaey ,..rguaon. N8"N Holland.
Ruth Hog Salea &amp; Service. Over
40 uaad t .. ctors to choo.e from
Ia complete line of new 8t uted
equipment. Largest •lectlon in

S .E. Ohio.

830 C.ae dlasel tractor wil:h
baler, mowing machine • raike.
83850. 240 lnternatlonll with I
ft . F11il mower, 82495. Owne.will finance. Call 614· 286-

8622

Full size, gold hwed, sofa bed,
good cond , S50. 00. Wide
wheelchol• *100.00. 304-875-

Jim' s Farm Equip. Center
Rt. 36 W.· GIIIIpollo. O.·Call
8 14-448·9777
•
Fence po11 and ,.lis. cedarpealed- 7-8 ft. tong, b•b wire,
20 UMd tracton, plowa, disc,
wh.eel. 3 / pmower ted d.,... Over
1000 new and uaed. rMw
arrival- 600 New Delu• tools.

For Sale
Splnet-Contde Piano BlrgaJn
Wanted: Rea:ponslble p.,y to
takeover low monthty pe'(menea
on splnet-conaoleriano. Can be
Hen loealty . Cal Mr. Whfte,
1 · 800.32.7·3345 ext. 101 .

1984 Chryaler Laser. PB. PS.
AM -FM·Cats Rereo. 4 cyl ..

1917 C.maro. V·8. Mlto. tnlna ..

Utility orellw.304-175-2169.

4'00.

equip. for U.ll•. Elec:tricbntkes.

&amp; LlVBSIUCK

CROSS S. SONS

U Hlul trucks and trailer• for
rent. a04-87&amp;-7421 .

71 Auto's For Sale

E.col. cond. 14800. Call 814448-4347"' 448-4748.

3ft. entry door. 614-992-3369.

tr. .....

1 row tobacco •tter, made by
Holland. 2 row corn planter with
3 point hitch, made by Mlnnea·
polls MCtline .. Call 114-3170397 after 6 PM.

I ==========:.J.:=========~
Bruce Beattie

1978 Fo•d Thunderbird. Low

614-258-1704.

Vans

llo 4

W .O.

1987 S· 1 15 Jimmy Sl..-.. Clas·
ole. 114,800. Coli 814-379-

198&amp; Toyota 4•4 lluck lhon
bed. 5 apMd. chromeroftbarand

looge. Fully equlppad. Call 114448-7672· 0ovt. 448-1980 AI·
ter I PM.

1912 Plymou1h S11pporo- Sllwr.
6Jpd ., meg wheals, •ir. 72,.000

mlloo. Good cond. U800. Call
614-448-1954aft• 6'30PM.

1973 Pontt.c Venture. 4 dt., e
cyl., auto. Oood co nd. A.klng

1400, 010. Call 81 4-445·
8729.

paclc81Je. Loaded. Calll14-448-

7389.

1982 C8m•o. V·l, auto. Good
cond. 7&amp;. 780mll•. 14200. CIIR

814-388-9003.

1985 Ch4Mit111, ...,d., •2199.
1984 Ford Escort, ttand ..
81999. John's Auto Sei•·Rt. 7
below HoiW., lnn-K.n-..a.
Hondll Accord UCI. 118t. Blue.
Standard tranamt111lon. C.ll

814-448-2125.

boat~,

1974 Vol-gon. Modll412.
814-":Z.5402.
.
1912 Pon11oo

F~ollkd .

Call 814-"2·1723- Sp.m.

NEW· -..... boo,. UO.
Wo-011 t11 llo Up. llltoll S.
.......,. Coli 114-448-3159.

1111

CouniV ~ Inc. Good

lion lnol drlwo r-11114-MS-2171.

Op• I M lo II'M. Mon II!N
.... 114-448-1198, 827 3nt.
AIM Gllllpollt, OH.

'*'•t
•n 1178 Ch..,y Monzo.
Rune good, low mileage. Call

Ford Eloort lt•tlon

- - lftd TV . . ..

Ancient practical jokes.

814-9t2·5311.

Squaroo

(J) Mojor League lleuball
u.gulne
8(1) Judgo
Gil WhHI of Fortune 1;1

FRANK AND ERNEST

IIJ)Craullrw

&gt;'!

ToY

9484.

IZ.:,~rrdyii;J

•

e &lt;ll WKRP In Cincinnati

U\

"'"'

....~

30 ft . Am.-ican Traveler 5th
wheel camper tor •Ia. King 1ize
bed, fu II bMh. Usad very little.
Excellent condition. 16000. Call .

7:35 (!] IInford ond Son
8:00 aJ Crazy Llko o Fox The
Geronimo Machine
aJ 1121 Happy Blrlhday,

e

Bob •• SO Slorw lllode 50

I

&amp;14-912-2479.

'\'HII Bob Hope's 851h

I

.'

Star craft camper 24 ft . fu ltv •If
contllned, roll out awning. air
cond, lots of aepeclal feat&amp;nl.
caU ao4-IIS75-&amp;86a after 6 :00

blr1hday and his 501h
anniversary wHh NBC will be
celebrated by James
Stewan, Lucille Ball 8nd
others, from Burbank. (L)
(J) .IIubal
(i) 8 (I) MacOyver
Anemptlng 10 help a friend,
MacGyver winds up In a
labor camp. (RII;I
(!) Aclventura loOk at
Indonesia's oceans and
Islands, peoples and ways.

I'

•

PM.

ALLEY OOP
Services
Home
Improvements

·i

e1121 Kale a Allie Kate
and Allie take a client who
won'1 pay 10 small claims

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Unconcltionel llf•lme guarantee. Local reference. furNahed.
FrN ntimat". Call collect
1-514-237-0488. dll\' "'night.
Ro g • r s B • s e m e n t

court:J.I;I
liD W
rworl&lt;o The story
of a young Japanasa woman
who lived wl1h an American

,.

W~t:erproaflng.

-··

~~~:~"'*;t-c~h'~'"~'~•~m~oduEiof

*""· runi:
good. 1880. :104-876-&amp;543
af.

t1r e p.m.

(1:28)

BE kliCE.10 KAVE A

Geo•gea Cnoek Rd. Call 614-

&amp;I &lt;ll MOVIE; Alrplonei(PGI

REAL KITCHUl CA61~T
FOR A CHAklG£ ...

448-0290.

, .... 1500gel, .,dJaiAarlllon
1y110m. Feel..., .,.lnod ...,.,
1ho1&gt; RON EVANS Ejii'II!R·
PRISES, Jactcton, Ohio. 1-BOG537·9128.

(1 :261

8:01 (!] MOVIE: Sergeant YOII&lt;

RON EVANS ENTI!RPRISES·
Soptlc t•k pumplniJ- •10 ,_
lood. Caii1 · B00.637-9628.

1748.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

PWnllng-30 .,... ex..,ience.
lnlarkH- &amp; uterJor. Commardal
• RIOid.,llol. Call 814-2589327.
RON'S Televltlon Service.
Hou• calli on RCA. Quaar,
GE Spaclallng In Zentlh. C.ll

DL.Ji...U DULL!

TH I5 15THE

! HOPE IT!:.

DULL ! NOTHINEC

DUI...I...EST

EXCITING-ON
THEOI.JT51CJC,

EXCITIN:T
EVER HAPPENS

304-6711-2398 "' 814-448·
2464.
Feny Tree Trimming.

(NR) (2:141
1:30 fill •1121 Deolgnlng Women
Charlene's dream lakes 1ha
en11re Sugarbllkers s18H back
to WWII. (RI
· ~00 (J) 700 Club
(i)
(I) MOVIE: 'A
Whlopor Klllo' ABC Monday
Nlglll Mollie I;!
(!) An Ocean APII11Q
fill •1121 Newhef1 Dick Is
Conned Into hoS11ng a
181elhon and winds up a one
man show.(R) !;I
liD In CelebratiOn of

e

Matonry-Brlek. block. stone •
flreplac11. Free •tlmllte. Ret.,.
encee. Call BIIIOenny-81 -4-258-

HOWSE

IN

TOWN .'

AROUND

lturnp

BE:CALl5E I'T!5

5TII...L..DUI...I...
IN HERE .

HERE.'

Wrfghl's lrue Identity and
lmpUcallons. 1;1

liD 1H1 N-•
101 !_.ng Ntowo
e &lt;ll Bonny HUI

Cl _ . , ..........
AN' TO THINK
YOU GAVE UP YORE
ALL-DAY-SUNDAY
CARD GAME IN
LUKEY'S BARN

Plumbing
llo Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

10:30 Ill Cloocl Fllhlng Pon Erie
Welloya. Babe fishes
walleyes on Lake Erie and
suspended cra.,Piaa on
Minnesota 's Rainy Lake.
liD EUftiiiHn Joumlll (0;30)

e&lt;llJoll8roone

•

1111-

Motorcycles

llo

1885X10 3&amp;0 End.noY•mahe.
Come with hllmclt . LDw ml-

Electrical
Refrigeration

•aoo.

1117 Harlew- Oevkllon 11 3 . 840
mHa
£xctl. aond. c.JI 11444&amp;-1118.

1976 Y-1 500 TT. Good
cond. *500. Coli 114-441·
_23_80_
.------1987 K.wtukl Ttclte 4
........ 250. Coli 114-. . 2·

7847.

dr·--

···s.

1114 Horlor - - BLHTC
Loaded with

K-

_1_1..
_7_4_2_·2_1_34_._ _ _ __
NOWOPEN
Rl. 35 Cyolo 111-. - · •d
-IIIIo lor
luruld.
v-ollo. w.
llluy ...1 and u.de ulld blkn.
-304-178-4130.

Ho-.

1179Ho-750.bl"'*wllh.od
pin

strl~tH.

new b•tt••v.

17110.00. :104-175-17111.

R• idantial or commercial wirIng. New tervice or repairt.
Ucented .Jactrician . Est imate
free. Ridenour Electrlcea, ao4875-1781.

B5

General Hauling

:·
..

Bo.11 and
Motora for Sale

28ft . ................ 1118
wldo boam. 1111-ranlo. gtlloy.
oamM, •c. 310 Y· l

Ml-·

•1- 1 . Vfi/IY low houn.
.27.1100. Col1304-727-8110.

•1121

z-

Meek
e &lt;ll Lave eor.-.cllooo

.

11:GI~~IE: YHroiiM
(RI (2:16)

Sunda'f colla.

"

11:30

a J W••r Service. Swimming

~a,

clscarns. wellt. Ph. 614-

245-9285.

R • R Water Sarvice. · Poola.
cisterns, wells . lmmedi ate1. 000 .. 2.000gtlontdll ....y .

(R)

Plul Rupe, Jr. W.., Service.
flbOia, cisterns. Willa. Call 114-

uftNII•••Ing.

ntifN'tN,

Part I

.(%) ......, •• d Qame

,.

Watteraon' a Water H•u ling.
reaaonabla ratN , immedllte
2.000 gallon d•Wrv. cft:tern1.
poola, 'NIIII, etc. c .. 304-578-

Mowrey'a Uphot.twlng ..-vmg
trl oountv•rea23ya. .. The best
In furniture
Call
304 - 178- 4 114 for tree

IHI Mlognum, P.l. Deja Vu,

,.,.•

448-3171.

Upholatery

~=-­
•t.:lnel;l
, P.l.

iiJ ~part. Tonlghl
•ID'H...... CI8Late
Night Hunlel' goes
undercover to track an
ObHoslvely driven punker.

·:.•

Call :104-875-8370.

87

1111 Tonight Show

IIIII

·•••

•

',,

...
::

• r

,,
•

••
••
••
•

DOWN
1 Nigeria's

·

post

capital

6 Dilute

2 Glorify

11

Building
block
12 City
in Iraq
13 Bridge
expert
14 Reach
15 "...man
- mouse?"
16 It follows
printemps .
18 Dr. Ruth's
topic
·19 Bug, of
a kind
24 Lacuna

211

Italian
city
Addition
outcome
Reddy's

.•

3

Cleansing
· agent
4 Award from
the Que en
(abbr.)
5 Contract
option
6 Use chips
7 Somme soul
8 Make cluny
9 Memorable
period
10 Turncoat
17 Tout's
tidbit
20 Black

·,

Yesterday's
27
28

29
31

Answer
.
· .
Seragho 35 Ventrolchamb~r
oqUist
Sans krot
- . We n ces
s c h ool 36 C tty
R e pulse
m NR
Coal
39 M u s1cal
~cuttle
m easure

.

AND IT

·.

°

Brooch

42

ti o n "

Before

24 Impudence 34 S panish 44 Fenci n g
26 -

., Am- "

tac-toe

.

province

d u mmy

30 Graven
image

31 Mr. Solo

.,

of

"Stars Wars"

32 Request

'

1---1--+--

what your
country ..."

..

37 Annex

.

38 Neckline
shape

39 Assail
43 Think
411 Attica's
market

place
e.g.

47 Spur

•.

piece
device

DAD..Y CRYPTOQU&lt;YI'ES - Here's how to work it:

5116

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

CRYPTOQUOTES
NTR
PQF E XR

W R E

OJ

NT R

C QUE

FOG

J

a o

VGRONAF

SA'/5 THAT
NOAH LIVED

..

QO

UEND Y UOO F,

0

CTQ

E

U EN R

NGDOW

NQQ Z

J DR-

QGN

NQ
I

IR

T08E NINE

N T R

B E S N E Y 0

I-IUNDRED AND
FIFW

.

4 ~i!t
21 Scot's c ap 33 Attr
22 Parseghian
ac- 4 1

23

48 Signaling

,.,

J

ACROSS
1 Cabinet

Francloco Mime Troupe, a
group whose history raflec1s
25 years of SOCial pro1es1 In
America, ro profile&lt;!. 1;1
Moneytlne
1H1 TWilight
Night of 1hB

e aJ

"

·t:!lew•"td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

46 Arsonist,

Dllerd Water Service: Pools,
Cisterna. Wllllt. Oeltverv Any-

time. Call 814-448-7404-No

NORTH
~1$-81
+ AK10 9742

...
+75
the suits split nicely, 'il's time to figure
+ A Q6 3
out what you can do if the key suits
misbehave. At first glance, Ieday's WEST
EAST
six-diamond contract looks easy, with +Q J 8 3
+ s
a good chance for an overtrick . Never- . Q86 52
" 1093
theless, there are pitfalls, and declar· +4
+ Jl083
4 KJ 5
+ 10 9 8 7 2
er trapped himself in one of them.
After wiMing the opening trump
SOUTH
lead, South immediately played anoth·
+
5
er high trump, and West showed out.
" AKJ74
South could not afford to give up a
+ AKQ 962
trump trick lo East, since East would
+4
surely lead right into dummy's A·Q of
Vu lnerable: Both
clubs, eliminating an entry before thP
Dealer: South
......, swt was establlabed. So South
cubed one more high diamond and Wtst
Nortb East
theo played A·K of spedes. Alas, East
ruffed the sec:ond spade. Eventually, Pass
Pass
despite taking a successful club li·
PallS
Pass
Pass
- . declarer bad to concede down Pass
•
one.
Pass
Pass
South can succeed if he guards . Pass
apillsl a bad spade distribution. At ·
Opening lead: • 4
Irick two he should lead a spade to the
ace and then ruff a spade. This loses is high diamonds and give up a diaoaly if be Is overrufled by West, but molld 10 East. The ace of clubs will be
there 1s little chance that West bas a the entry to dummy and he will have
slqleton spade, since he dido't lead it. plenty of tricks. The problem with
After ruffinl a spade, declarer can playing a second high diamond before
ruff a beart to dummy and ruff anoth· testing spades is that there wiD not be
er low spade. The spade suit is .Ow . enougl! ways of 1etting to dummy t_o .
good and all declarer bas to do is play establiSh the long spades when the smt
•
breaks badly.

(J) Mlojor Loeg• BIMbaH'o
~~ Hill Taka Me Oul
10 1ha Blllplrk

a

~:
•

2811.

75

w fill

(!)Sign 011
liD T1011P1f8 Tile San

lllgo. Call &amp;14-4411-8763.

1IB2 Nlght-k 450 Honda.
1.000 mi-. Good cond.
Boetric: ......... *15. Colll14448-4018.

a~ (i) •

·•

34 "-not

11:00 Ill RemllogtOn SIHie S1eela
Your Hea11 Away

••

- YA WN$

BRIDGE
When your contract looks cozy if all

29

fill ea Cegney 1
Cagney and Lacey discover

Starks L..wnand Shrl.t) Service.

84

Com pIe 1e 1he chuc kt e Quo ted
by fdl1 ng 1n the m1~5mg wo1d5
you develo p from step N o. 3 below.

Inward -

burglar attamp1. takes refuge

In onlcas. 1;1
10:00 Ill Strllgh1 Tillie
(!) 1'111 .......

448-4477

74

G)

Sciantists have
many liife·:sal•ing vacc1ne s, b ut
I s till think 1hey s hould lind somelhi ng to
th e s p re a d of
YAWNS.

26

896-3B02

Cor. Fourth and Pine
lloiiiPCJIII. Ohio
PhoM 814-.. 46-3888 or 114-

·.

I

1--T,-'-::r,.....:.,,.::...;.,,6,.:.:.,.,,7:--1·
L- l..- .l..-.J.-...1...- .L._..J

•a
Bungling burglar botches his

Rotary or cable tool drlllng.
Most Willi compiMed s*"• diiiJ'.
Pump ••• and tervica. 304-

82

Mother tryi ng to cons ole hf.'r
confused teenager; &lt;~ As you get
,....,-------~ older, you 'llli nd tha t good sense
A GT E E N
is easier to have -- -·."

Amerlce'eWUdllle
iiJ) Lany King Llvel
EIHn- I Lutz
1:30 fill

.lou'"Lacey
"' 1;1

.......,o. Call :104-876-1331 .

514-"2· 8851.

78 Dodae 4 wheel

lamA£
101
NoIHI MOVIE: Joe Kldd lPG!

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEEPER and MWing machine
repair, parta, and auppll•- Pick
up and deltv.ry, Davis VICUIM'n
Cle•ner. one half mila up

~nwllh111nniiii. T..,...,..

• ..,.,,

e

Travel t ..II.-·Richardlon 1956.
Modll Rop\bllc. Aoldng *700. .

bed railat
.
off r ..d flthtL
mila EICira S'*P-

Good

oondttlon. towmn-. four JPMd.

e&lt;ll M•A•S•H
7:05 (!] Andy QrlffHh
7:30 aJ (J) Hollywood

304-875-39511 "' 304-5782803.

1985 &lt;hnd AM· V·8, LE

co--

tultas, •181-*299. Oealf.ll,
wringer Wither, a oompletellne
of u•d furnftu•.

1978 !llev..,O• % lon, good
cond, phone 304-182·2919.

1980 R•- H.T. eomertible.
E.ICel. cond., 5 spd ., low mi-

19B8 eam.o zae. wllh
.,.._ 27.000ml-.-ont
Col1114-"2·7147.
1B78 ..... ... aoln .....
mlloogo, .-y good oondlllon.
11200. Call 114-115-3501 or
814-. .2·3BII.

.......... *91.
UIIEO. .... · -· bedroom

86 510 tnck. eJttended cab.
304-875-5375.

21&amp;a after 3:30PM.

plan• ftiPO'd . lur·
plut. Your ara 1.,.-• Guide.
111805-8B7·1000 Eat. 8 -1808.

a.

814-948-U01 .

Call 814-3B8-8240.

Rod HOI .,_gllnal 0rug doll. .'

Bunk beda wtth Ill dCng- 1119.
Full . . m...,.... a found•lon
st.,tlng - ••
Recliners

1978 Ch"'y l'a ton tilt

73

1981 Clt..-y Celilberity Euro
Sport. v.e, 33,200mll•. euto ..
1&gt;£. PS. PB, AM·FM.C.n.. tilt.

en.

SWAIN
.WCTION S. FURNffURE 82
OIW. St., Gllllpolla.
NEW· I pc. wood group. *389.
Uvlng room tultee· 1111-1111.

Call 814-448-7522.

milet. Good cond. *2500. Cell

1978 Buldl. Y•8. 231. Coli
114-448-3021.

51 Household Goo;ts

1 979 Oodao pickup. 4 whell d•.
Call 814-448-7887.
1978 a...,y R.,moro. 55,400
mi. 351-VB. AI&lt;. Good Nbb•

Farm Supplrr.s

1227.

naw ..vhlte spoil:•. tirel, paint.

448-4482.

PIAN 0 FOR Sill E

1227.

'88. Sand
any In for. Dailv
to: BoxTrlbCia ~
147,
c/ oQelllpollt
u,., 8215 Thitd A\M., Oehlpolll;
Ohio 45831 or call wenings
SNAFU(~) by
904-787-3418, RL

corn, 12.00 bu, c.JI 304-

icheero

Conc:retll Septic T.-.la • 1000

1985 01..-y pldlup Custom
delu•. Full aRe. 8 cyl .. 1uto..
AC. PB, cru.... No ruat. Clean.

For rent-Hay

1:35 (!] Luve It To Buver
7:00 (J) Remington Sleele Steeled
with a Kiss
8 aJ PM Megezlne
(J) SporlaCentor
(jJ EMert81nmont Tonlghl
8 (I) Poople'o Court
(!) liD MocNellj Lohrwr
NewoHour (1 :00)
Gil Nowo
101 Moneyllne
•1121 01 WhHI of Fortune

Call 814·448-4848.

I :!500. 1979 FOfd F 1 DO, V-8,

l--r.,~_. . :A.r.15_,.:W:.,IR_.:.:. .H:.;_.I~~_ ~.!,

Gil •1121 CBS Nowo

1982 36ft. 5th wheel Coachmen camper. U1ed 2 winters.

B1

J

liD Body Electric
101 lnoldo POIItlca '8B
1H1 iYKRP In ClnclnnoU
• &lt;ll Andy Qrlfflth

3811-?1117.

Ch•v . V-8, .,to. ""' ··

1977

Gil 1111121

ol Bill Danco
(i)
ABC N - !;I
(!) Nightly Bulllneu Ropon

1976 21 ft .Empire Camper.
Sleeps 1. Self-con•inllf wtth

naw •nt. n8W' ur-. 48,000

•

Iii a..t
8 ())

614-245-8204.

814-379-2240.

M

be-

low to fo·rm four simple word!

Pan 1

79 Motora Homes
&amp; Campers

1918 Oodae one ton, steel bed.
dump truck. 81000. Arm. Call

t~e

of

liD Coloraoundo
101 ShowBiz Today
1H1 Facb al Llle
e &lt;ll Happy Deyo
8:0&amp; (!] Lo..,. II To Ieaver
1:30 e aJ 1121 NBC Nightly Nowo

Call 814-317-0223 "' 245-

'75 Chewy Mona. '79 abt cyl
engine with newly Nbultt trlln•
mission. ~ur 1 :i Inch a totted
wh..ta. will teU all or Plrl.

0 fou
Rearrange fen e rs
r scra mb led words

GAMI

(J) Spol'lllook

Used&amp;rabulhalltypea. Guara'n·
tee 30 diiVI minimum. Prices
199 &amp; up. Rebulh torques
converter •• low at $39. Conversion klt-S-10's&amp; C-10'sover
di'rve to 360'1. We buy junk
tr•nsmiukms. Cell 304-87642aO or 61C-379-2220.

1968 18 ft. Smoky .camper.
Sleeps 6. Oood c:orid. Self·
COnlllned. 11260. CaU 814-

~

Ed ltecf b~

(!) Dr. Who Plana1 o l Gian1s ,

0988.

1971 Cadllloc. :104-875-10M.

7985.

2894.

AKC Registered male English
Butldogs. 6 wkl. old. Shots a.
wormed. Brindte&amp;whita. t700.
Call 814-446-1354.

57

• (J) (i) • (I)

GI)Ntowo

trensmilllont.
81C-446occurs
flrlft . Call
We buy
Junk

.... *2360. Clll814-286·8622.

Q. ~ WORD

1:00 (J) Big Volley Earlhqullka

Olda., Buick. Pontiac. O'lavy.
ctuwy truCk, Ford; atryalertrantmiulont (u'Md) are internallylnspected&amp;c•rv 3000mi.
or 30 d.,. warrenlv (whichever

400 2bl, v· 8. 304-576-

IUIO .,

992·2772.

lauinet wh:h ruttte and accestorlea. cell 304-676-1204 after

'•

1979 Pontlllc Flreblrd . .pa. pb,

oak. uoo. 814-949-2801 .

5703.

ulld ap

•eoo.oo.

Hay wagon 1nd 5 ft. pull type
dloc. Phone &amp;14-992-2216 ef·

Dregonwynd CeHery Kennel.
CFA Himai!IVIn. Persian and
Slamt~~-e kitten1. AKC Chetw
puppiae . New Hlmalavan kittent. Call 814-44&amp;-3864 after
7PM.

2528.

Old child' a roll top desk. Small.

t'od

814-742-2128.

8 100.00. 72tnlck tho•18 inch
$400.00. Will .01 all "' """·
a04--675--1078.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds .. . AII
stylaa . lams Pet Food Dei!IIM.
Julia Webb Ph . 614-448-0231 .

1978 Ptymou1h Val0111. runs

good.
body.
• 87 "8"5.
0~
••

*160.00. Two ''"""""' lllllldt
Pets for Sale

1978 ptymouth Fury. Ex-State
~ighway Pltrol c•. 400engine.
call 814-992-5024.

0.

TNU DAllY
ft'\1
PUULII \:J ~

EVENING

ca-u'"'o:-G::-E-:T:-::T::Rc:A-:N:-S:CM~IS:-S::I::
O:::N·

71 Auto's For Sale

ule. Call614-742-2186.

56

MON., MAY 16

Call &amp;14-992·3319.

Auto Parts
llo Accessories

76

4883.
Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Streat. Pomerety.
Hours: M.T ,W 10e.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sundt~'{ 1 to 6p.m, 814-992-

Trailer spec• for nlflt, Locust
Ro•d. Routa One, 304-875-

2Phvllcl., flmlfydesint•torant
. Large hou• with posalble
Intent to purch. . starting July

\

8891 .

992· 7292.

M

~

0946.

814-246·5125.

WhirlPOOl Weiher. 4 cycle. real
nice. JIMfect working condition.

304-676-3073.

47 Wanted to Rent

*45~ .

The Dilily Sentinei- Page-9

Television
Viewing

angina. boat hM no 1itlt, free
with purch ... of trail.-. 1150
firm. Calll14-441-9803.

OROER NOW · PAY LATER

"'814-992-3523.

1178

231l.

Oak dining table with claw legs.
Oak pedettal fern 111and. Portabl e sew ing machine. Cell after 4

Boats and
Moto111 for Sale

Bau Track• Bantam, 2 men
boat . Mot or Gu ide Trolling Motor. Sa•• Die Hllf'd I'Ji lfi ne
battiiJY, Eagle Mack On a Graph.

Homame Gen . . tor, 2200watt.
17&amp;0. 1% ton chain fell . 1 'h ton

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

8Dat trail• 18 fl . long . Good

or used. 3
wheeled el.ctric tcaoten . Call
Rogeu Mpbilty collaet. 1 -6148 7 -9661 .

614-992-3860.

1076.

992-3711 . EOH.

40 acre•· 12 mi. from town.
Victorllr'l tloul8. E•cef. shape.
Barn, pond, fenced. wMI, •~
becco baa. Call 814-258·
1658, even.
3

1 7" Zenith black &amp; white TV.
825. Wood table&amp;: two chairs,
840. 276 Harlequin bookl, 150.
Tru-tone stereo wh.h spe11ken.
$60. See at 256 So. Fourth
Ave., Middleport.

Electrical Treadmill bv Roadmetter. 2 speeds, 'Witllking and
jogging. UOO. Call 814-698-

7479.

304-882-29 ....

Quality furniture and carpet at
Low Prices. Financing aVflllable.
Mollohan Furnh:ure · Upper
River Rd., 614-446-7444.

,., mo. Call 814-448-4222.

Route 33, North of, Pbmeroy.
Renlll tl'llllws. Cell 114-992-

1978 Governor. 12x65, 2 bedrooms. total electric, fulf¥ c • pe~ed. cent ral lli r. 2 porCh-.

Dinettea , beds. beddin g .
dressers, cheat. couches. choin.
tampa. coff&amp;e-end t:abl•. Ev&amp;ry
day Special1. 1h mile out Jerricho. 304-875-1450.

75

Monday, May 16, 1988

t hape. Also nic. bolt , 75 HP

FURNITURE

Bet-en 9-6.

Furnished or unfurni::hed 2BR .,
cable. Wllter-..wage paid. AC.
Foster's Mobile Home Park·

44

J S. S FURNITURE
1415 Eastern Ave.
living room suites I 179 &amp; up.
Bedroom suites $399 &amp; up .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri&amp;hl

Wheeh:hetrs- ~ew

iou1 size ng.
pipeBolt
wrench
ea. 614come-alo
cut••·
Var·

Valley Fur niture
New and used furnhuru and
appll ean ces . Call 614-446 75'72. Hours 9-5.

Apartment
for Rent

Apto. Call :104-675-7738

Rou• 2. good location must •e
to appre c iate. 838. 500.00 .

12K60 Valiant Mobile Home
w;th poreh in Crown Cily. 2 BR ..
furnished. Set up 8t readv to
move Into or can be moved.
Excel. cond. Call614-44&amp;-0276
afler 6 PM.

C•llahan's UsBd nre Sho p. Ovet'
1,000 tires. size1 12, 1 3, 14, 1 &amp;.
16, 18.6. 8 mH• out Ac. 218.
can 6 14- 25&amp;-6251 .

0322.

t:;:;;:;:::::;;:::;:::::::::::T-:::=======j

3bedroom, 8x12storage btdg. 1 992-5621 .
acre Gall. Ferry. hellt pump.
priced $50's. 8'/z pct. allumabte SmaH unfurnished houee. Clean.
Good location. Prefer coupleloan. Moving out of state. Cell
for appointment . 304-675- one child. No pets. a218 How, ard Ave .- 304-675-8621.
8264.

32 Mobila Homes
for Sale

GO OD USED AP PLI AN CES
Wu hers . dryers, reff igeret on.
n n ge1. Sk aggs Appli ancu.
Upper River Rd. beside St one
Crett Motel. 614-446-7 398.

90 Oeys same u c•h with
approved credit. 3 MHee out
BlAavllle Rd. Open 9em t o 5pm
Mon . thru Sst. Ph. 814-446-

"Women's lib has finally
arrived. Now ETHEL forgets
our anniversary."

5714.

1 677LincolnHelghts, Pomeroy.
For •Ia or rent. Call 614-9854103 after 4:aO pm.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Sofas and chairs . priced fro m
839 5 to S996. T• bfes S50 an d
up to • 125. Hide-a -beds 1390
to IS9 6. Re cliners 1226 to
S 376. Lamps 128 to 1126.
Dlnerte1 1109and up to 8496.
Wood table w-6 chairs $285to
$796. De1k 1100 up to a 375.
Hutches S400 and up. Bunk
beds c omplete w-mll'ttl1t i S81
1296anduptol395. Babfbeds
S11 0. Mattresses orboK !ll)l'ingl
full or twin sea. firm $78, end
sse. Cll,leen sets t226. King
$350. 4 drawer chest 88'9. Gun
cabinet• 6 gun. Babv mlltt,..l8t
S35 &amp; 146. Bed frlm• $20.
sao &amp; Kin g fram e S60. Good
selecl ion of bedroom suiles,
m ...l c abinets. headboards s ao
end up t o 165.

2 bedroom, 2 births, 2 car
9Mage. lwei lot o n Rt . 33,
Swimming pool. satelite, dose
to Meigs High. Call 814-99 23 254.

3 bedroom an d birth. All el ect ric.
Ranc h home. 1 aere with 14x 16
ou tbu il ding in Syracu se. 6149 9 2-529 3 aft &amp;f 4 :30.

51 Household Goo ds

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Old house &amp; almost 3 ~ •eres .
Ru,.l water, electric. Ch •htre
To wnship . Grea l location .
56,000. Call 614-367-7 51 2 .

Monday, May 16. 1988

YEARS

OLD..

ta:aoea~

z-

111 L8to Nlghi-

Dhld I 11 7I?1M .

(I) Lave Cor•oeollo.t

I R D 0
CYAAYEUW
YMterday'a Cryptoquote: THE GREAT THING IN
THE WORLD IS NOT SO MUCH WHERE WE S TAND, AS
IN WHAT DIRECTION WE ARE MOVING. - ' O.W.
.HOLMES

I

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�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. May 16, 1988;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IN CELEBRATION OF OUR
'·

Ohio Lottery

•
Reds WID
•
third tn
a row, 4-2

Daily Number
615
Pick 4

2689

Page 3

•

e

WE WOULD LIKE TO EXPRESS OUR APPRECIATIO TO
OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS WITH THESE GREAT SPECIALS!

at

Vo1.39. No.8
Copyrighted 1988

NEW CROP

CARDINAL
ASSORTED FLAVORS

I

1f2
GALLON
U. S. FANCY
GOLD or RED DELICIOU~, ROME
WINESAP, IDA RED or JONATHAN
I

•

APPLES

f

l
•.

••

•'t
~

{
'•.

FAMILY PACK

•'
••..
~

POPSICLES

•

3 LB.
BAG

•'
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ll

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
51VD DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( &amp;"::::)
AD PRICES
GOOD THRU
MAY 21st

•

t

MUST PROVIDE .LDEI BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S UCEISE

I

I

.•••
&lt;

•
'•

I

''

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A CARDINAl: AFFILIATED SUPERMARKET

•

•
I

•
POPPY DAYS- The annual sale of poppies by
the auxiliary units of Feeney· Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, and Lewis Manley Post 263,
American Legion, wilt be held Friday and
Saturday in Middleport. Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman is pictured with representatives from
the two groups. Seated beside the mayor are
Tricla Tobias, Junior Miss Poppy, and Jessie
Hoolen, Poppy Princess, representing the
Feeney-Bennett Auxiliary; at the rear, I tor, are

Mrs. Pauline Greathouse, viCe president and
poppy chairman olthe Feeney-Bennett auxiliary;
Mrs. Margaret Bowles, president of Lewis
Man ley Auxiliary' and Mrs. Lula Hainpton, poppy
chairman lor the Lewis Manley Auxiliary.
Members of the Lewis Manley Auxiliary will be
distributing poppies only on Friday while
members of the Feeney-Bennett Auxllliary will
distribute them on both Friday and Saturday In
the Middleport business section.

Southertl . Dt.stn•ct
~~e ·abolt.shed

u.A. '

_,

Betty Baronlck, Bryan Shank
and Franklin Rizer. were op-

by board Wii:r{~u~~~n~~~o:;~:~~!~E

Several · positions were abol- and tire supplies, as other Items
Ished effective at the start of the needed for operations during the
next school year when the next school year. The board
Southern Local School District approved an assurance measure
Board of Education met In · providing that Chapter I
regular session Monday night.
teachers wlll receive the same
Abolished were the positions of benefits as other teachers of the
supervising principal, talented district.
,
and gifted coordinator, and aide
Christy Caldwell was named
jobs at the junior high school and junior high cheerleader advisor
Syracuse Elementary School.
for the next schoo) year and the
Free and reduced meal prices treasurer was authorized to seek
were modified for the next school candidates for supplemental conyear and action taken on the tracts Including assistant varsity
security of student records . football coach, assistant boys'
Aides and secretarial jobs were varsity basketball coach, assistIncreased from six and one-half· ant girls' varsity basketball
hours a day to seven hours. The coach, freshman basketball
high sehoul secretarial. post re- coach and junior high football
coach. Appllcants should be
mains at eight hours a day.
Treasurer Denny Hill was residents of the district, should
have an Ohto.teachlng certificate
authorized to advertise for fleet
Insurance, food service. gasoline and should hold the necessary

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- The state Controlling Board has pumped $97
mllllon in reserve human servl·
ces funds into welfare andd
Medicaid programs to stem
aprojected shortfall in those
areas.
Patricia Barry, director of the
Ohio Department of Human
Servlces, told the board Monday
that the state's Medicaid pro·
gram (health care for the lndlgent) would be $155 million short
of funds by June 30.
Barry said projections show
another $100 mllUon to $110
mUllan shortage In fiscal 1989
because caseloads have ex·
ceeded es tlmates made when the
budget was passed In June 1987.
Much of the difference is being

Pomeroy Village Council voted
Monday night four -to-lwo to
reject the latest proposal from
Middleport regarding the devel opment of property on Pome·
roy's West Main St. for the
purpose of building two new
businesses.
Those voting against the proposal felt Pomeroy was being
made the middle man in a
situation where a middle man
would not be necessary.
Discusses Memo
Discussion on the subject be·
gan with Councilman Bruce
Reed reporting a memo which he
received from Attorney Patrick
O'Brien on behalf of Middleport.
According to the memo, Middleport wants Pomeroy to do 'the
billing for the sewage servlce
from the two businesses. even
though Middleport will be providing the sewage service and
·
maintaining the lines.
Pomeroy Vlllage would charge
an annual fee of $100 per month
for the sewage - $40 frQ!!l one
business and $60 from anotherpayable in advance. Starting
July 1, $600 would be due for the
remainder of 1988. On Jan. I,
1989, $1,200 would be due to cover
the 12 months of 1989, payable
directly to Pomeroy.
The Villagl&gt; of Pomeroy would
then send the money to Middleport to cover Middleport's costs.
Yearly increases would be
negotiated each year after Dec.
1, 1989, with a maximum lnrease
of 10 percent each year.
According to Reed, the busl·
nesses have agreed to pay the up ·
front fees, so no money would
actually be coming from Pomeroy funds .
Oppose Proposal

posts~£I~~~~~~~~~ffue~~1~i~k1~~~

.

quallflcatlons in sports medicine
and CPR.
Jay Rees was employed as
assistant girls softball coach and
the board agreed to have the
industrial arts area, the gymna sium, locker room , stage and
stage storage area at the high
school painted. It was agreed to
pay $750 for materials for new
sidewalks at the Syracuse Elementary School with the school's
PTO members to provide the
labor. It was agreed to repair the
furnace at the Racine Elementary School this summer at a cost
of $26,875.
Attending the meeting were
board members, Charles Pyles,
Dennie Evans, Gary Wilford and
the Rev. Charles Norris, Supt.
Bobby Ord and Treasurer Hill.

Medicaid funds are
transferred by board

12 COUNT BOX

enttne
1 Sect ton, 10 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy Council turns
down Middleport offer

.'

3 LB.
BAG

ICE CREAM

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 17, 1988

TEXAS ONIONS

•

Variable cloudiness. 'fonlghl, mostly cloudy , slight
chance of rain. Lows near 50.

made up frQill an $80 mllllon
contingency fund established by
the General Assembly for just
such a situation when the budget
was passed. The rest will come
from unspent funds within the
agency and from federal
allocations.
Almost $17 mUllan in reserves
were diverted for aid to famllles
with dependent children, and
another $13.8 mUilon was funneled into general relief.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, RCincinnati, a member of the
board and chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee
which rewrote the budget, said
the department's problem is
"enormous."
Barry said Gov. Richard Ce·
teste has instructed her to "look
within our own budget" for the

money to make up theshortfallln
1988. But she said no decision has

been made on what to do the
fiscal year which begins in July.
Responding to sharp prodding
from Aronoff, Barry said the
department will review the reimbursement formulas for hospitals and nursing homes, and the
payment rates for pharmacies.
She did not rule out Increasing
the co·payment for Medlcalct
recipients.
"Every avenue is being explored for the reducing state
expenditures for providers,"
Barry said.
Meanwhile, House Speaker
Vernal .Riffe Jr. ordered the
House Health and Retirement
Committee to begin an lmme·
dlate review of the problem and
Continued on page 5

billing at all. Clerk-Treasurer
Jane Walton also questioned
Pomeroy's involvement.
Pomeroy wlll be providing the
water to the businesses and wlll
charge the businesses according
to the meter readings.
·
But since the businesses have
already agreed to pay up front
the money being requested by
Middleport lor the sewage, "why
shouldn't the businesses just pay
the money directly to Middleport?" asked Wehrung, "Instead
a! complicating the situation by

Goodyear,
union reach
•
tentative
agreement
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
Un !ted Rubber Workers union
reached a tentative agreement
today with Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co., less than two hours
before l5,000 workers were to
strike, union sources said.
No negotiations, however,
were scheduled In a strike by
4,700 workers against Firestone
Tire &amp; Rubbber Co., which Is In
its third day.
Officials at two URW locals , in
Akron and Union City., Tenn.,
said their negotiators reported
from a meeting with Goodyear
negotiators that a tentative
agreement was reached.
· The Union City Dally Messenger said It was told of the
settlement In a telephone call
from Local 878 president Mike
Stanley.
"We have a new tentative
agreement," The Messenger
said Stanley said. "The strike
has been averted at this time and
we will be bringing it back soon
for rat!flcatton of our
membership.·'
Bill Breslin, preslden I of Local
Continued on page 5·

paying to Pomeroy and then businesses either but still ma inPomeroy turning around and taifled that there was no reason
paying Middleport."
for Pomeroy to bill for the
Although Councilmen Bruce sewage and then send the money
Reed and Bl!i Young 'were in to Middleport.
Other Business ·
favor of accepting Middleport's
proposal as written, they were
In other business, Council
not opposed to revising the agreed to accept the services of
proposal once it was formally Attorney Bernard Fultz , who has
rejected by the majority of offered his services without pay,
council. However, no official to file an action on behalf of
action to revise the proposal was council in Meigs County Common
taken last night.
Pleas Court. The action would
Wehrung said it was his feeling request a declaratory judgment
that all parties involved in the regarding the village's purchase
development project should have of property from Mayor Seyler.
·lnvolvi?d Pomeroy . Council in The mayor was not present for
negotiations from the beginning. discussion between council and
Instead, said Wehrung, Pomeroy Fultz.
council members had to read
Last October, council passed a
about the proposed development resolution au thorizing the pu rIn ~the newspaper when Middle- chase of abandoned railroad
port first suggested that Po me- property from the vicinity of Nye
roy should give the property to Ave. in Pomeroy to thevicinityof
Middleport for annexation.
Dock St. in Middleport. The
Against 'Giveaway'
property is owned by Mayor
Pomeroy was opposed to gtv- Seyler and was to have been
ing the property to Middleport purchased by council at a cost of
from the beginning and had $35,500.
asked Middleport to provide the
After passing the resolution,
sewage to the two businesses. council realized a conflict of
However, when this suggestion interest might be involved. In
was initially made, it was Mid· order to determine if a conflict of ·
dleport 's contention that it would interest existed, and if the
be illegal for them to provide purchase would violate law, the
sewage service outside their Ohio Ethics Committee was
corporatiOn limits.
contacted for an opinion. HowAs recent as two weeks ago, ever, explained Fultz, the reply
recounted Mayor Seyler, Middle- #! from the ethics committee did
port was asking Pomeroy to give not really clarify the matter.
them 40 percent of the Income Because of thi s, Fultz suggested
taxes collected from the two filing the court action for decla rbuslnesses. However, Pomeroy atory judgment, if council still
Council deemed this an unaccep- wanted to pursue the purchase.
table arrangement and agreed
In FuU Agreement
that Middleportshouldcollectfor
Council memb'ers were in full
the sewage since they would be agreement to pursue the purproviding th e service, and Po me- chase, since, noted Councilman
roy should keep the income tax. Reed. council had tried all along
Councilmen Reed and Young to purchase the property directly
were in favor of accepting · from the railroad company.
Middleport's last proposal since. However, the price quoted counaccordlng to Reed. it was essen- ell was at least double what the
tlally what Pomeroy had wanted mayor eventually paid.
all along and they did not want to
It was pointed out that the
lose the two businesses over a mayor did not become Involved
technicality such as the billing personally In the matter until he
procedure.
· learned he did not own the
The other council members railroad r ight-of-way going
Continued on page 5
said they did not want to lose the

Southern clain;tS
Class A District
baseball crown
By SCOTI' WOLFE
SenUnel Staff Writer
CHILLICOTIIE - A Mike Hill
sacrifice fly drove home Kenny
Turley with the winning run to
preserve a hard-fought bat tie by
senior hurler David Amburgey,
who hurled a two-hit, 14 strikeout
performance enroute to Southern's 7-3 extra inning District
baseball championship victory
over the Lucasville Valley Indl·
ans on the Unloto High School
dlamond ·Monday evening.
Following Hill's blast in the
ninth inning, Southern went on to
score three more times and
knock Valley starter Michael
Vorhees from the box, givlng
SHS hurler Amburgey some
breathing room for the last half
of the ninth frame.
Southern Improved Its record
to 18-5 overall to post the most
wins ever by a Southern team,
and as a result stays alive in
tournament play, advancing to
either Lancaster or Zanesvllle
for first round Regional play next
Wednesday at 4:30. Southern, the
Chllllcothe Upper bracket
winner, faces the winner of the
Gnadenhutten Upper bracket,
which will be either Shadyside or
Conotton Valley. Valley is 17-11
overall.
Mlck Winebrenner, fourth year veteran of the diamond,
said as he smiled from eartoear.
"Wow, this was a super win! I
can't give our kids enough credit
for coming through when they
have to. Every player played a
great game. Mike Hlll did his job

to put us ahead in the ninth and
the defense held in the bottom of
the inning:"
"I have to give 'Burg ' (Amburgey) a lot of credit for pitching
such a great game with just three
days re&lt;l. He went all nin e and
seemed to get strong as the game
progressed. I checked with him
every inning to see how his arm
felt and he kept ass•lring me it
was fine. In fact a' ·"r the game
he said . . 'Coach I could have
pitched at least a couple
more' .!"
Winebrenner cont.lnued, "Normally we try not to pitch anyone
without fou r days rest, because
we've been In a position where
Shawn (Cunningham) , Mark
(Porter) ,or Roy (Johnson) could
pitch in between. Dave wanted
the ball and tonight and hed id the
job. I'd also like to commend
John Riffle for doing a great job
behind the plate. After he came
back from knee surgery no one
thought he'd do the line job he's
done. Not one passed ball in nine
innings and he threw a couple
runners out at second."
Things weren't always so rosy
for the Tornadoes, who started
the game mired down by the
powerful pitching of Vorhees .
Vorhees fanned five batters in
the first two innings as did
Amburgey for the Tornadoes .
With a great pitching duel In the
forecast, everyone was surprised
In the second i!lning when South·
ern first got on the board .
In that frame senior Shawn
Continued on page 3
I ~

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