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The Daily Sentinel

and students oft he Rejoicing Life
Christian Church in Middleport
are announci ng their second
annual kindergarten graduation
and awards ceremonies for

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Cheese and rice
d!s tr!bu tion, through Ga ll!a Me!gs CAA and the Meigs Cooperative Parish, will be Tuesday ,
from 10 a .m. to approximately 2
p.m ., at tbe Meigs County Fair·
grounds, the Racine American
Legion Post, Tuppers Plains a nd
Pagev!lle Fire Stations. In Gallla
County, distribution will be from
noon to 2:30 p.m. at the Gallla
County Fairgrounds, Bidwell Mt.
Ca rmel Baptist Church, Guiding
Hand School, Mercerville and
Crown City Fire Departments.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonvi lle Senior Citizens Club
meet Tuesday, at 7 p.m., at tbe
townhouse.
ANNUAL CEREMONY
MIDDLEPORT - The staff

Atkins
visit family
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atkins,
Mercer Island, Washington spent
a week with his mother Stella
Atkins and Aunt Miss Ruby
Diehl, Sunday dinner guest at the
Atkins home were Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Atkins, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Kloes and Mlcheal Kloes,
Syracuse, Danny Riggs, Columbus, Paul, Lisa and Linda Riggs
of Athens. Also visiting on
Saturday were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Schantz Sliver Springs
Md. and Mrs. Elwin Diehl of Red
Oak, Iowa.
Mrs. Velma Long of Columbus
spent a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Millard Christen recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball of
Colubmus spent the weekend
with Mrs. Frances Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
visited over the weekend with his
mother Mrs. June Hayton Catlettsburg5, Ky.
Mrs. Nellie Lowe spent several
days visiting her son, Patrick
and wife of Akron, and her son,
Roy and wife of Columbus. Roy
was hospitalized from a car
accident.
· Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley,
local, and Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Stanley, Athens, visited Mr.· and ·
Mrs. Franklin Townsend of
Westervme.

Annual

grades one through six for 7 p.m.
Thu rsday at the Rejoicing Life
Church. Open house at tbe school
will be held Immediately follow Ing the ceremon!es. The public Is
invited.

Hill birthday

MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meeting Monday at tbe
Burkett Barber Shop In Middle. port; social hOur and trading
session preceeding the 8 p.m.
meeting.

Ashlee Michelle Hill, daughter
of Richard and Wendy Hill, Long
Bottom, celebrated her first
blrtbday on May 18.
A family cookout was held at
the Hill home with cake and Ice
cream being served. Attending
and presenting gifts to the
youngster were maternal grand·
parents, Ronnie and Bonnie
Ransom, Scott and Travis, and
Sherrie Ervin, paternal grandparents, Helen Hill. Kathy and
Luke McDaniel, James and
Adam, Sharon and Mark Matson,
John and Jilllan, Ron Hill, Joyce,
Toby, Stephanie, Micah, Eric
and Daniel.

ASHLEE HILL

Proposal rruuie ready

lddy golfers announce wznners

Community calendar
MONDAY
EAST MEIGS- Ameetlngfor
citizens interested in sa ving the
Eastern High Sc hool at hletic
program will be held Monday , 7
p.m., at the high school.

Monday, May ~3. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

A game of 18 holes called
"bingle, bangle, bungle" was a
highlight when the Jaymar La·
di es Tuesday League met on
Tuesday at the course. Winners
were Mary Froendt, Karen Face-

Named director
Karen Hemsley, daughter of
Mr.s. Eliza beth Hemsley, 707
Coilege Road, Syracuse, has
been appointed to Musklngum
College's Residence Life Staff as
resident directorJor Kelley Hall.
Hemsley Is a student at Muskln·
gum College In New Concord. ·-

TOPS chapter travels
Severa l members of TOPS 570,
Pomeroy, tra veled to Westerville Saturday to attend the
TOP'S Area Recognition Day.
At recent meetings Lennie Bell
Aleshire, Frances Ha ggy and
Nel lie Grover have been the top
losers with Na ncy Gillespie being
the runner- up and Mrs. Aleshi re
winning the fruit basket.

Annual Inspection of Harrison·
ville Chapter 25, Order of the
Eastern Star, was held during a
recent meeting at tbe temple.
Bernice Hollman and Dana
Hoffman, wortby matron and
patron, presided. Distinguished
guests presented ~re Al lee
Ryder, past grand matron; Martha Porter, District 25, deputy
grand matron; and grand represenlatlves, Emma Polen, Anna
Jane Hawk, and Kathleen Mingus. Past matrons and past
patrons of otber chapters were
welcomed, along with past matrons. past patrons of Ha:rrlslonvllle Chapter and all those having
grand appointments as well as 50
year members.
Bernice Rifle was presented
her 50 year pin. Margaret Bell
Weber was Initiated into the
order. Re freshments were
served followin g the meeting.

SAR giving
out honors
POMEROY - The next meet·
lng of Ewings Chapter, Sons of
the American Revolution, will be
held at the MeigS County Museum. Butternut Ave., Thursday,
May 26.
A meal will be served at 6: 30
p.m. followed by the meeting at
7:30 p.m. Reservations for the
dinner are to be made )ly calling
992-7874. Guests are welcome to
attend.
The chapter will present Its
Good Citizenship and Law Enforcement Medals to two area
men . Induction of a new member
will be held. The program will be
Maj. Curtis Atkinson of the
ROTC unit at Rio Grande College
speaking on the Battle of Gettys·
burg In tribute to the 125th
anniversary of Ibis battle. A
report will be given on the state
conference.

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose
two· more
player8

Daily Number
202
Pick 4
2953

Page 4

The radiating surface of the sun 18
called the photosphere. Just above it
is the chromosphere, which can be
seen only during an eclipse.

•

People In the Pomeroy area
should promptly · report any
changes that may affect their
monthly benefits, Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in
Athens, said recently.
People who do not report may
become overpaid and have to
return some of this money later.
Also, they may have to pay a
penalty.
The most common cause of
overpayments - In 6 out of 10
cases - Is too much earnings
from work.
Some payments must be with·
held from a person under 70
whose 1988 earnings exceed a
certain amount : $8,400 If the
person Is 65 through 69; or $6,120
If the person Is under 65. If a
· person goes over the limit, $lin
benefits is withheld for each $2 of
annual earnings above the limit.
Also, there Is a monthly test that
applies in the first year of
retirement.
There are different rules ,
which Include medical consider-

atlons, If a person works while
getting disability checks.
A person should let Social
Security know If he or she starts
or stops working or If 1988
earnings will be higher than
reported earlier. A person should
do this any time during the year
there Is a change. The easiest
way to report Is by phone.
Also, Social Security should be
notified of certain other changes
that often lead to overpayments
such as:
death or marriage;
medical Improvement of a
disabled person;
a student 18 or over stops
attending school full time; and
a parent or other payee no
longer has custody of a child or
other beneficiary ,
More Information about reporting requirements can be
obtained at the Athens Social
Security Office located at 221-~
Columbus Road. The telephone
number Is 992-6622. The office
hours are 8:45a.m. to 4:30p.m.
Monday through Friday.

The Wahama Alumni Association Is taking reservations for
their annual Alumni Dinner and
Dance to be held Saturday, May
28, at the National Guard Armory
just nortb of Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
A "renew old acquaintances
hour" begins at 5 p.m. with
dinner, by the Wahama Band
Boosters, following at 6 p.m. This
year's program wlll be given by
the Wahama High School Drama
Club. The dance, open to the
public, will follow dinner at
approximately 9 p.m. with music
by tbe "Mud River Band."

Tickets for the dinner and
dance are available at all tbtee
locations ot' People's Bank 'tn
New Haven, Mason and Point
Pleasant, W.Va., 'the Gingerbread House of Gifts In Point
Pleasant, and atK&amp;C Jewelers In
Pomeroy. Or call JoAnn Taylor
at 304-773-5177 after 5 p.m., or
Phyllis S.cott at 304-882-2202 for
reservations.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
ANGIE CAMPAIGNS: Actress
Angle Dickinson was on the
campaign trail In her native
North Dakota during the weekend. Dickinson, a Democrat,
attended a $25-a -plate fundraiser Saturday for the reelection campaign of Gov.
George Sinner at the Grand
Forks Country Club. "He's very ..
very likeable. A terrific guy, "
Dickinson said of the governor.
"I don't go out and say who I'll go
out for this year. I walt until i
really believe in somebody, then
I'll go help them." Sinner thinks
just as highly of Dickinson.
"She's a real, real North Dakota
person." he said. "She thinks like
we do. She has the same
sentiments we do. I'm just
thrilled she came back to celebrate my birthday (he'll be 60 on
May 29) and help me with my
campaign." Dickinson, 56, Is a
native of Kuim, N.D., and last
visited the state In October when
she was Inducted Into the Nortb
·.. Dakota Hall of Fame In Bismarck. It was her first visit to
North Dakota since she and her
family left the. state In 1942. "I
consider North Dakota my foun dation," Dickinson said. "I'm
made of good stock but I really
tbink of myself as a Californian."

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
An administrator for the new
village Income tax, which goes
into effect on July 1, wa s hired
when Middleport Vlllage Council
met In regular sess ion Monday
night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that he and Dewey Horton had
reviewed the applications for the
new position and he recommended tbe hiring of Carol
Cantrell who has been working in
a similar position at Rio Grande.
Cantrell was hired on a unanim·
ous vote by council. She will be
paid $14,400 annually.

I OZ. SitE

69

Mayor Hoffman also report~d
that the Cable Communications
Group which provides cable

l'tfiJ.
OF14

SALE CLOSING - Representatives of Bank
One and the Melp County Ubrary Board of
Trustees met Monday to complete transfer of the
. former Diamond Saving and Loan buDding at 216
Main St. Pomeroy. The building, all Its fixtures
and lurnlshinp, were purchased by the Ubrary
Board for $150,000. Pat Holter, board president,
and B. T. Grover, Jr., president, Bank One,

JERSENS
DRY SKIN
LOTION
REBUWI DR

9
ARRID

STEIGER BEATS DEPRESSION: The NBC movie "Desperado: Avalanche at Devll's
Ridge" Is a landmark tor Rod
Steiger. The former Oscar
winner Is emerging from four
years of depression In which he
had convinced himself he
couldn't act. "It Is good to be
back at work after four years of
deep depression, " Steiger said.
"I don't know what brought It on.
Maybe It's a matter of the
chemical phases of your lite, the
problems that strike you In Y.OUr
30s, 40s and 50s, each decade
bringing changes you have to
adjust to." Steiger says he took
the role of a heavy In "Desperado" to prove to the Industry
that he was still around but he
had to be convinced by his wife,

--------- ----·I

.

--

JACKSON IN INDIA: A newspaper In New Delhi says Michael
Jackson Is planning an eightshow tour.of India In December.
The Dally Mall said Jackson,
accompanied by a 75-member
entourage, some 49 tons of
equipment and his pet chimpanzee would dedicate his opening
performance to India 's first
prime minister, Jawarharlal
Nehru. It said the montblong
visit had been approved by the
Foreign MiniStry after an approach by an entrepreneur
named Indu Patel and that
profits · would go to the World
Wildlife Fund, anti-drug groups,
and an antl-apartbeld group.

CHECK THE

KOIIAK COLOR
PRINT
FilM
rm flf-H fiN..

EXTRA DRY SLIDE-Ill
AMTI·PEIISI'IIIAIIT
DEODORANT

agent and business manager. "It
was a turning point," he said.
"There comes a moment when
you must accept the challenges
of life and 'regain self-respect by
doing something. He also has a
movi e, "The January Man,"
coming out soon.

Athens, N.A., seated front, completed the transfer
before other representatives, Ruth Powers,
librarian, and Bill Nease, Bank One, Pomeroy
Branch manager, seated; and standing from the
left,. Don Mullen, C. E. Blakeslee, Pat Mills,
trustees;·· Carson Crow, attorney; and Theodore
Reed and Wanda Eblin, trustees.

Meigs Library trustees plan
to relocate facility next year

EXI7lA DRY

. 111 oz.
IIZE

• •

to mcome tax position

I'LAX
DENTAL :
RINSE
REQUWI OR 10FT 11M11T

All classes graduating In a
year ending with an eight wlll be
observing a reunion this year.
Reservations must be made by
Tuesday, May 24.

HOT FUN FOR AYKROYD:
Dan Aykroyd Is still singing. His
upcoming movie, "Great Outdoors." will feature him singing
the old Sly and the FamUy Stone
hit " Hot Fun in the Summertime'' with Sam Moore, formerly
of Sam and Dave. He also joins
Wilson Pickett (who Aykroyd
says was one of his earliest
musical Influences) on "Land of
a Thousand Dances"). And, of
course, Aykroyd appeared in his
Elwood Blues persona last weekend at tbe Atlantic Records 40th
anniversary bash performing
with both Pickett and Moore.

enttne
•

Association plans .alumni dinner

Partly cloudy, low In mid
40s. Wedn esday, sunny, high
In mid 60s.

•

at

e

Report social security changes

-People
in
the
news-inspection held
for chapter

A proposal for expenditures of
Title 6B monies for special
education In tbe Southern Local
School District is being prepared
by J oyce Thpren, R.N .. local
district coordinator. Residents
may have Input into the proposai
by contacting Mrs. Thoren at tbe
high .school, 9 a.m to 3 p.m.
Monday through Friday of next
week.

meyer and Nellie Wright. President Eiizaberh Lohse requested
mem bers to report to the club 10
minutes earlier each Tuesday.

CUTEX

PERFECT COUJR

f99

279

L'OREAL

MAYBEUIIIE

EXCELLENCE

BRUSH BLUSH

99

19~

SOFT &amp; MATUIIAL
HAIR t:tiLDR

FOR NAILS
MSORTrO
SHADES
IDI/11 CHOICE

WAll iii
Trl'f ,.,. fJI'l

Allllllml"""'aa:r

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Ll brary
Board has purchased the two.
story brick structure on Main St.
In Pomeroy, formerly occupied
by the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co., and following extensive expansion and renovation,
plans to move the Pomeroy
collection there sometime next
year.
The Meigs Ll brary Board of
Trustees met Monday to complete the tranfer with represen ta.
lives of Bank One,-Athens, N.A .,
which acquired the building
when the deposits of the D! amond
Saving and Loan were purchased
In 19!!6.
Construction cost of the build·
!ng In 1979 was $275,000.
The library board purchased
the building, all the fixtures and
furnishings, for $150,000
That amount had been accumulated by the Library Board
since 1984when theOhloLeglsla·
lure provided for more money for

small libraries and designated a
percentage of the state Income
tax to their support.
The money received this year
from the state wUI go toward the
expansion and renovation project. Plans call for hiring an
architect within the next couple
of months and being ready to go
Into the project in early 1989. ,
The Pomeroy library will continue operating In the Carnegie
bu Udlng on Second St. until the
work Is completed.
Pat Holter, Board president,
noted that a feasibility study had
been done by the architectural
firm of Burgess &amp; Nlple on the
existing library building which
has been outgrown, and the
Diamond Savings and Loan .
building, to ascertain which
buUdlng could better be modified
and expanded.
Accord lng to the study, she
said, It was decided that the new
site was the better choice to meet
the p'r ogram since no excavation
for an expansion could be done at

tbe present location due to thl'
cliffs behind the building.
B. T. Grover, Jr ., president of
Bank One, Athens, N.A., in
commenting on the sa!~. noted
that the sale price Is considerably below the bank's purchase
price as well as the price for
which It has previously been
offered for sale, because of the
promising community benefit.
"This Is our way of helping the
MeigS Public Library Board
attain Its goal of providing more
spacious and attractive quarters
for Meigs Countlans," Grover
said.
He explained that the difference between tbe $225,000 which
the bank carries on their books as
the property value and the
$150,000 purchase price Is a
donation to the community.
According to Mrs. Holter, the
former Riverboat room In the
first floor of the building will
remain a community room , be
used for chlidren's programs,
and arts and crafts activities.

•

television service for the town
has asked permission to send a
representative Io a council meetIng. It was agreed that the
representative will attend the
June 13 meeting and Mayor
Hoffman asked council members
to have all of their complaints
ready to prese nt tbe representa·
live at that time. Recently,
council voted to employ a company to do a study on the
feasibility of constructing a villa ge owned television - cable
service.
The mayor rl;'ported that there
will be a district public works
meeting on Thursday In Zanesville and that Meigs County
Engineer Phil Roberts wlll represent the village at that ses·
sian. Kim Shields, village consul·

ta nt, wili represent tbe town at a
later meeting in Barnesville.
Both meetings Involve State
Iss ue II funds .
Council went on record as
opposing the regional rate proposal placed before the Public
Ut ilities Commission of Ohio by
the Consumers Counsel asking
for tho se rates to be established
acros.~ th e region by Columbua
Gas of Ohio. Officials indicated
that they prefer to negotiate their
ow.n ·contract with the company
on natural gas rates to be
charged in the community.
Attending the meeting were
Ma yor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Jon Buck, and council
members Horton, Jack Satterfield, William Walters, James
Clatworthy and Bob Gilmore.

Eastern boosters want to pick
up tab on athletics and band
money making activities that are ment with the Eastern Local
By NANCY YOACHAM
normally held every year. Cur- Teachers Association. If these
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Eastern Local Band and rently the boosters have $5,8651n contracted positions were given
Athletic Boosters proposed Mon- their account which, according to to volunteers, instead of to
day night In a special meeting their figures, would be enough to certified teachers. the board
with the board of education to finance the fall athletic season. wQuld be liable to grievance
pick up the tab to keep the The boosters propose that assist- procedures by the teachers'
marching band and athletic ant coaching positions be union . Board members explained that they could not
programs In operation through- handled by volunteers.
replace
a paid person with an
In addition to other smaller
out the 1988-89 school year.
person under bind ing
unpaid
money
making
projects
sugDue to the recent failure of a
union
contract.
proposed 12.4 mill levy for the gested by the boosters , the
The position of approximately
school district, and the resulting possibility was raised of a $25 to
25
teachers In the sc hool district
Insufficient general fund monies $50 assessment per student Inwas
also taken in to consideration
for next year 's operation, East- volved In sports to raise addi·
by
the
board. Those teachers
ern Board In Its regular meeting Ilona! funding . It was noted that
have
signed
a petition asking .the
last week passed a resolution special arrangements could be
hold
to their original
board
to
made for students who could not
eliminating extracurricular acdecision
to
eliminate
extracu rtivities, Including athletics and afford the assessment.
ricular
activities
until
the proThroughout the discussion. the
marching band, as part of an
posed
levy
for
the
district
passes
overall process to cut spending school board maintained that
in
November
.
next year. Many other spending they "could not pick and choose"
Teachers pointed out that !bey
cuts were also included In the extracurricular activities, but
are
not against sports or any
that all extracurricular activiresolution.
other
extracurricular activities.
Members of the band and ties would have to be funded In
but
they
fear If these programs
athletic boosters , other con- order to be fair to all students. continue despite the financial
cerned parents, students and Said board member 1.0. McCoy , status of the district, then voters
teachers were In attendance at ' 'We must give an opportunity to will be less Inclined to vote In
last night's meeting to discuss every child In the district, not favor of Increase d tax es.
just one group. "
the board's action.
The school board figures total Teachers also pointed out that
In regard to athletics, the
they are being limited in the
boosters are proposing to pay the personnel costs for athletics and coming school year to only $25
salaries for an athletic director, an other extra-curricular activieach for the purchase of classhead coaches In all sports and the ties at $30,807. The explained that . room supplies, in addition to
cheerleadlng advisor, on a · their total figure Includes several other classroom reductions .
"sport to sport" basis, as ex· assistant positions, In addition to
Teachers feel !bat by reinsU!tpial ned by Jill Holter, president head positions. Certain assistant lng extracurricular activities,
positions must be Included in the
of the athletic boosters.
total
, explained the board, be- the district would be elevati ng
Holter pointed out that the
those activities to a level above
boosters raised approximately cause these positions have been
Continued on page 10
$17,000 last year with just the negotiated Into the master agree-

Maxxam Group agrees tO buy out Kaiser Tech Limited
SAVINGS EVERYDAY ON
COCA-COlA PRODUCTs
AT RITE AID
8 PACK
12 OZ. CANS

·THIN PRETZELS
SAVINGS EVERY DAY
IN EVERY AISLE
SHOP RITE AID 70DAYI
RITE

11 OZ. PICG.

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586
·,

.,

By Charles A. Mason
: KaiserTech Limited has agreed,
subject to shareholder approval, to
be acquired by Maxxam Group
Inc., .company officials announced
today.
The New York Tunes News Ser·
,vice ~ today that the stock
cash breakdown would put the
terms of !be sale at $871.9 million.
Pat Gallagher, company spokesman at the Ravenswood works, said
the proposed buy out raises
:questions about the pending sale of
that facility in Jackson County. He
.had no comment on tbe New York
:Times News Service report.

About 400 people from Mason
County
work
at
Kaiser's
Raveruiwood worlcs.
"Cenainly there are maRl
questions lhan answers at Ibis
P.?,int," Gallagher said lhis morning.
'We are proceeding under the assumption that the plant is stiU up
for sale."
He added that tbere have been"
a number" of bids made on the 30year-old fabrication plant that
employs 1,800 people. The accompanying smelter plant employs
about 500 people and is not immediately up for sale.
The merger transaction would

quire the allirmative vote of at least
twcrthirds of of the shares of
KaiserTech common stock they · KaiserTecll common stock not
hold, company officials said.
owned by Maxxam, company
KaiserTech and Maxxam have spokesman Robert Irelan said.
executed . a definitive merger
"Maxxam has been advised by
agreement under which a newly Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. and
fonned subsidiary of Maxxam will Paine Webber Inc., Maxxam's
be merged into KaiserThch and financial advisors, that they are
KaiserTech will become a sub- highly confident they can arrange
sid_!!lry of Maxxam.
the financing necessary for MaxKaiserTech plans to call a special xam to consummate the merger,"
meeting of its shareholders to vote he said in a p~ statement.
on the merger agreement "as soon
Gallagher S81d Salomon Brothers
as practicable." The company cur- • of New York has been retained, on
rently believes that approval under a separate matter, to review bids on
aPI'hcable . pelaware law will re- the Ravenswood Kaiser fabrication
have

stockholders

rece1vmg

$19.375 in cash for each share of

plant
The merger agreement was approved at a special meeting or the
KaiserThch Board of Directors held
Sunday. The Maxxam bid was
recommended at lhat meeting by a
special committee which had been
appointoo earlier in the month 10
consider proposals to acquire the
entire company, Irelan explained in
the prepared statement
The KaiserThch Board received
an opinion from Salamon Brothers
that the amount received by the
shareholders is fair, the company
official said.
Kaisetrech and Maxxam also

agr~ that tile annual meeting of
KaiserTech shareholders scheduled
for Friday will be convened.
However, the meeting will be successively adjourned for 28-day
penods. Stockholders will be called
10 vote on the merger agreement
~epending on when one of three op,
uons occurs first: the special mcctmg of stockholders, the termination
of such agr~em ent or Oct 3 I, 1988.
Irelan Said KaiserTech and MaxXllf!l have agreed to request the
Umted States District Coun in
Delaware to hold in abeyance cer·
tain pending litigation between the
two parties.

:S outhern faces Conotton Valley in regional . tilt Wednesday
By SCOTI' WOLFE
Seatlnel Staff Writer
RACINE -The Southern Tornadoes of Coach Mlck Winebrenner enter Class 'A' Regional
Tournament play at Zanesville
Municipal Stadium (Old Minor
League Park) Wednesday at 4: 30
where they meet the Conotton
Valley Indians In the first round
of Ohio's Sweet Sixteen baseball
competition.
· Soutbern Is currently 19-5,
alreadY having posted the record
lor most wins by ' a Southern
team, and Is on the verge of a
possible 20-win season.
The Tornadoes are a close knit
bunch at seniors and teammates
I

that have bee playing good ball
together for quite some time, a
key to their success.
Ambul'ley Touch
Also the Tornadoes have been
riding the crest of the wave
behind the super pitching talents
of Ali·State tlrebatler David
Artlburgey, who owns an outstanding .042 ERA. Several tl.~es
the senior has hurler 15 strikeout
games.
In his last two outings he has
recorded a one-hitter and twohitter, missing a no hitter by a
couple pitches.
Amburgey should be effective
come Wednesday due to a week-

long rest as past experience
shows that he Is that much
stronger with the long break.
Coach Mlck Winebrenner said,
"If we play a good defensive
game and get a good game trom
David Amburgey, we can play
with them as they are compare·
ble to Trimble or Lucasville
Valley and some other teams
we've beaten this year."
. We must Improve our defense
though as we've made too many
errors, Including two four-error
games that luckily did not hurt
us."
Indians Are 11-5
Southern will have to face the

likes of pitching ace Allen Gal·
lagher, who sat out the district
championship game and much of
the last two-plus weeks with a
jammed pitching hand. Lefebvre
hurled the 8-7 win over Shadeyslde after Shadeyslde led 7-0 in
the fourth Inning.
CV Is now 17-5 overall.
Gallagher has been known to
have chronic control problems
but has gotten by on his smarts .
and aggressiveness. He Is not a
power pitcher, has average
speed, and has a good curve. He
often gets behind in thecountand
Is ()!tern pushed to lull count
situations .

He Is not afraid tousethecurve
In any situation Including a 3-2
count and accordln to the scout·
ing report, "Can't throw It by
you" and "You can see his curve
coming."
Gallagher,however, , fields his
position well as he has great
speed. He uses know-how rather
than braun to win ball games and
has been successfu I throughout
his career.
Coach Winebrenner said, "Gallagher Is a good athlete and a
smart kid. )ie ioves to play the
game and he was the Valedictorian of his class. He's not
overpowering,but consistent and
~

I

persistent . He has a good curve
·that he'll throw at a ny time. He's
also super qui ck and we must
keep him off the bases. He ha s a
good bat."
Good Contact IUtt&amp;r
Gallagher Is the lead-off batter
and good contact hitter. He can
bunt well and Is mainly a pull
hitter. He utilizes his speed well
and Is Intimidating on the bases.
Next In the lineup Is Ben Miley ,
a solid second slot hitter that has
somE: defensive problems at
shortstop, but can run well and
also Is a good contact hitter.
Ken Novak Is the CV power
Continued on page 4

�The Daily Sentinei - Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

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

~~

~~

,...,..._,._--,-,....,.....,c::J,..,.

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB. HOEFLICH
Ge.neral Manager

A MEMBER of The Uni ted Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPIN ION an&gt; welcome. They sh.quld be less rhan 300 words
long. All letters are subje&lt;&gt;t to editing and must be slgnf.'d with name. address and
telephone number. No unsigned leuers will be published. Letters sho uld be In
good taste , addressing Issues. not personalities.

The politics of
teacher tenure legislation
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ~ Eleven years ago, state Rep. Michael Stlnziano,
D-Columbus, pushed through the Legislature a bill providing for the
. evaluation of sc hool teachers and procedures for getting rid of
Incompetent ones.
That bill was vetoed by Gov. James Rhodes. who said it would cost
too much and would hamstr ing local boards of education In setting
standards for reta ining or firing teachers.
Nothing more was heard about the proposal until a year ago, when
the House passed a similar bltl providing for evaluations and
hearings for probationary teachers, and requiring that reasons be
given for non-renewal of their contracts.
House Bill330, strongly opposed by school administrators, has been
languishing in the Republican-co ntrolled Senate ever since because
the GOP normally will back management cschool boards 1over labor
·(teachers) .
; ·Recently, hordes of administrators have paraded through the
Statehouse wearing buttons with an X-ed out ''Instant Tenure" on
them. They say the bill would put probationary teachers on an equal
!ootlng with their more qualified colleagues.
Teachers. wearing buttons proclaiming the "fair dismissal" bill,
.have joined the fray .
: Despite the objections of Sen. Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro,
~hairman of the Education Committee, the bill apparently will be
reported out this week at the Insistence of the OOP leadership.
How come? Timing Is everything.
House Bill330 might never have seen th e light of day , except it is an
ideayhas come. Translation: this is an election year. and there are
points to be scored.
·
The Ohio Education Associat.ion, representing about 90,000 school
teachers, is backing the bill, and It has an ability to exercise
considerable Influence In selected slate Senate contests.
Example: the association played a part in the narrow election of
Sen. Scott Oelsiager. R-Canton, two years ago. Oelslager. a member
of the Education Committee, has helped get the teacher tenure
measure untracked.
Two other Repubt lean members of the Education Committee, Sens.
Grace Drake of Solon and Eugene Watts of Columbus, will be targets
of the Democrats later this year as they seek re-election. The OEA
would be In a position to help them under the right circumstances.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima, also Is up for re-election and seems
.ready to support the bill if the proper amendment is added.
· Senate Republicans, their 18-15 majority under selge, are looking
:tor every edge. There are 12 Republican seats at stake, compared
·with four Democratic ones.
The GOP Senate leadership. plus Watts and Cupp, has advertised
education as its No. 1 priority, e mphasizing teacher evaluation and
competency . It could hardly turn its back on this bill.
. James TI!Ung, the mastermind behind the Senate Republicans'
:campaign, confirmed the logic of a relation ship with the OEA In this
•election year.
·
: : "It would be foolish to deny that if we did something to help a group
' that we would appreciate their support." said Tilling. "We have
never turned down money from those to whom we have been helpfu 1."

.•~

l..etters
to the editor
.

.
-..
·-

'·

Socialized medicine

••

;. We read ana hear quite often
·• where health insurance Is always
; going up to such a point where
., many people can no longer afford
•'• It.
:: In many cases one stay in a
: hospital can wipe out a person's
: life savings and I know In some
, cases where this has happe·
:. nened , and to me this is a great
~ injustice fo r something like this
i: to happen in this great country
;- we live in.
-' Most of the time when a person
: loses all they have to a hospital or
; a nursing home, they are our
• senior citizens. the ones who
,: have made this country so great
,: and I believe so many of them
~: have
already sac rificed
• enough.We should remember
' that all of us one day will be a
: senior citizen.
: When a person goes into a
• nursing home so many times, I
: l&lt;_now, they have to give all their
:• money and"home to the nursing
~ home - everything they have
:: worked for ali of their lives and
~pga ln most of these persons are
;'1iur senior citizens. I know for a
:··:tact that so many nursing homes
;::Jlharge more than I even bring
f .ftome In a month and they call
t these homes non -prof it
&gt; organizatIOns.
• When a person enters a hospl : -Jal so many times before they ask
the patient's name, they ask how
they will pay for the service. 1
believe many times they think
: more of the money than the
: person's health. Medical care in
; this country is getting to be a big
"· problem for a lot of people. One
, thing I really believe would help
: solve this problem is socialized
~ medicine .

r I know thts a dirty word for
.: anyone In the medical profession
"' but so many foreign countries
have had socialized medicine for

•

many years and their citizens do
not lose everything because of
medical care. If our country
would have socialized medicine,
I also believe that many more of
our young people getting out of
high school would have the
chance of getting Into a medical
school and becoming a doctor or
getting Into the medical profes·
sion. I really believe a lot of our
young people would make great
doctors if they only had the
opportunity.
Our government should take
more Interest In saving lives
Instead of taking lives . We put a
lot of money into weapons to
destroy . If our government
would put just a portion of this
money into saving lives, we
would have enough money to
have socialized medicine and
none of our citizens would lose
everything they have.
When John Kennedy was pres!·
dent he tried to get socialzed
medicine In our country but I
believe the people In the medical
profession and the Insurance
companies got their high priced
lawyers and got It voted down . If
your polltlcans really wanted to
do something for the citizens of
this country, I believe this is one
thing they should really take into
consideration.
I cannot see any justice In
people losing everything so the
rich can get richer and in many
cases this Is what really happens.
In closing. I really believe this
country needs socialized medicine and this would help bring
this country back to the principles it was founded upon justice for all.
Tha'nk you.
Robert Burton
26 Cave StPomeroy, Ohio . .

Lakers top Mavericks in West opener

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, May 24, 1988

INGLEWOOD, Calif. iUPI ) The Dallas Mavericks, who spent
last weekend waiting for the Lo s
Angeles La kers to advance tot he
West.e rn Conference final, spent
Gamel watching the defending
NBA champions breeze past
them.
The Lakers, employing their
fastbreak about as well as they
have in this year's playoffs, had a
relatively easy time Monday
night in defeating Dallasll3-98 at
the Forum.
"We played good defense and
that allowed us to get out and run
and get some good shots," said
Magic Johnson, who had 19
points and 12 assists for Los
Angeles . "We are a lot better
team in the up·lempo game."
No kidding. But watching the
Lakers play Uf;l·tempo on this
night came as somewhat of a
surprise. After all, they were
coming off a grueling sevengame series with Utah and had
two fewer rest days than Dallas,
which had not played since

The presidential ·finalists, ______:By:.._J_ack_A_n_de_rso_n
WASHINGTON - The presidential race has narrowed to
three finalists. Since the winner
will have a powerful Impact on
our lives, we should certainly get
to know them before choosing
among them .
With this in mind, we have put
each one under the magnifying
glass and we have tried to focus
on the private man behind the
public image. Today we appraise
George Bush.
He's an authentic American
aristocrat, blue blood, blue chip,
who was chauffeured to day
school, was sent to prep school
and was graduated from Yale.
His mother's father bunt a
railroad, played championship
polo and founded golf's Walker
Cup competition. His father's
father headed a steel company.
Yet, George Herman Walker

Bush Is not the pampered diletta nte he might appear to be. He
left prep school at 18 to become
the Navy's youngest pilot In
World War II. He flew a flamin
torpedo bomber over the Japanese island of Chlchi-shlma,
refusing to ball ciut until he had
completed his bombing run. He
was' rescued and rejoined his
squadron Instead of Invoking his
option to go home.
At Yale after the war, he was
Phi Be(a Kappa and captain of
the baseball team. He then
packed his wife and new baby
into a red Studebaker and set out
for oil country. If he never quite
acquired the look of a rough-andtumble Texan, he rolled up his
sleeves and played the part in the
West Texas boom fields. He
earned a .small fortune on some
dog-and-cat ventures that paid

off.
But from boyhood, Bush had
his eye on the White House. The
idea of publlc service was bred
into his bones. He moved up the
political ladder -congressman,
senatorial candidate, United Nations ambassador, Republican
national chairman, head of the
first mission to the Chinese
mainland, director of the Central
Intelligence Agency, vice president - as If he were training for
the presidency.
Intimates agree that Bush's
life is founded on God, home and
country. He is a devout Christian,
a family man and an unabashed
patriot. The word friends use
most often to describe him Is
udecent."
As a politician, Bush has also
demonstrated a chameleon's
ability to adjust to political
(i&gt;l~- 1'&lt;0111M91M-'!Rfi6,WAII
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~

THE OFFICIAL SOili~ AFRICAtl '11$101'1 OF 1\EA~E~ f#,tl\FES'TS

me.u= lO m$19ENi RW. SOTAA

change. He is a pragmatist who
has learned how to weave enough
ambiguity, evasion ~nd obfuscation Into his postures so that he
won't alienate · any major
constituency.
He is now trying to move
dellcately out from under Ronald
Reagan's shadow, striving alternately to bask In the president's
triumphs and evade his failures.
This has left Bush in the posture,
unsatisfying to all, of halfcompleted, retreat. Yet, those
who know him insist he would
never compromise his basic
values. An exhaustive ex&lt;~mlna­
tion of his political past reveals a
defender of thE)'tree market who
Is suspicious of governmen~
solutions.
He possesses a businessman's
passion for balanced books and
efficient operations. He would
reduce the federal budget by
tightening the purse strings. He
would look for the most cuts in
social programs, but he is willing
to trim "some defense
spending."
Bush sees a government role,
though. In helping U.S. firms
become what he calls "competitively efficient." He also wants to
hold down taxes "to the minImum necessary to ensure a safe
society, allowing each lndiv !dual
to have more money and freedom
of choice on how to spend it."
When It comes to foreign
policy, Bush Is a hardliner who
would continue to strengthen the
nation's defenses on land and sea
and In space. He would avoid
sltuattons llke the Iran-contra
affair and refuse to negotiate
with terrorists. He would stay
tough with the Ayatollah Khomeinl, Intervene to defend democracy In Central America and
crack down on drug traffickers.
·He would not be a great
communicator nor great Innovator, his admirers agree. But Bush
would likely be a solid. sensible.
competent president who would
hold the government largely on
its present course.

Let'S keep America

great~___B_e_n_~_at_te_nb_er...:::.g

A wonderful debate is infusing
the intellectual community and
has spilled over Into our national
politics at just the right time. The
issue concerns the Decline of
America.
The trigger of the argument
has been the publication of a
long, academic book entitled,
"The Rise and Fall of the Great
Powers: Economic Change and
Military Conflict from 1500 to
2000," by Professor Paul
Kennedy of Yale.
Kennedy's theory : Great powers come Into being because they
have the most prosperous economy. Using this economic might,
they build a powerful military
force to take political and economic. advantage of other nations. But- here's the rub- the
costs of major military and
geopolitical power are enormous, and the great power gets
dra ~ned economically, victim of
what Kennedy calls "Imperial
overstretch." Thus weakened
relative to other nations. the
great power succumbs, usually
militarily, to another power, an
economically rising one, because

most rapidly aging society and
will soon pay the piper when
pension and health costs soar.
Wrong because America, remember, defends Japan - a
country located In a dangerous
neighborhood.
But wrong even more because
Kennedy doesn't really understand Amerlca.._He's an Englishman. He emigrated here as a
young adult. My sense is that he
hasn't got ttiewholemessage yet .
The American empire Is nat
like earlier European Imperialisms. We have sought neither
wealth nor territory . Ours Is an
imperium of values. We have
sought to boost a community of
Ideas - political democracy,
free market economics, and
science and technology. These
days those values are advancing,
not eroding.
Seen In that light, America is
not In decllne. No way. Our
foreign pollcy has been designed
precisely to help other democratic nations become more
prosperous. That Japan and the
countries of Western Europe
have become competitors Is the

It hasn't been burdened by costs

of empire. Kennedy cites examples: Spain, England, France,
Holland.
What makes Ke11nedy's thesis
provocative Is that he thinks It's
happening to the United States now. Our adversaries in this
contest, he says, are not the
Russians, who are also in economic trouble, but other industrialized nations, particularly
the Japanese, who are beating us
economically. The task of our
leaders, says Kennedy, Is to
manage our decline gracefully.
He says we ought to cut defense
spending and reduce our global
commitments.
It's a useful argument- even
though it's wrong, wrong, wrong.
Wrong because America Is
spending proportionally much
less on defense now than earlier:
about 6 percent of the gross
national product vs. about 10
percent in earlier postwar years.
Wrong because our standard of
llvlng Is still way higher than the
Japanese. Japan is a nation
hampered by archaic retail and
farm policies. It is the world's

September 1990.
Chrysler Corp. currently is
providing air bags as standard
equipment on five top-of-the-line
Dodge, Chrysler and Plymouth

I

Berry's World

I
I i

,_j;

AGUmRE DRIVES- Dallas Maverick forward Mark Aguirre
drives to the basket against the Lakers' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
during first-period action In the first game of the Western
CConference finals Monday night In Los Angeles. Agt!lrre missed
the shot. (UPI)

MAC honors 10 in
first hall-of-fame
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The
first Mid-American Conference
Hall of Fame was chartered
Monday, uniting 10 of the conference's former coaches, players
and administrators.
The Inaugural class Included
the league's first commissioner,
David Reese , a dentist who
administered the conference's
affairs !Porn his office in Dayton.
The late Reese served as
commissioner for 18 years until
his retirement In 1964.
Plans call for four to seven
people to be inducted In subsequent years.
Other charter members
Include:
Ray McCallum. led Ball State
to two MAC titles while playing In
the 1979-83 seasons . He Is currently an assistant basketball
coach at the University of
Wisconsin.
Doyt Perry. a football coach
a 0d athletic director at Bowling
Green between 1955-70. He is
retired and lives in Bowling
Green during the summer and
Fort Myers, Fla ., in the winter.
Ted Kjothede, gave 28 years to
Central 'Michigan as an athlete,
basketball coach and at~letic
director. Kjolhede lives In Mount
Pleasant, Mich .

good news, not the bad news.
Would we really be better off if
those nations were still poor?
Surely not; they are our allies.
So why is Kennedy's book
useful? Because it has made
American politicians think
afresh about America's role In
the world. American polltlcians
aren't allowed to talk about
gracefully managing America's
decllne. Voters won't stand for lt.
So politicans are forced to figure
out ways not to let it happen.
Thus, Democrats chant their
mantra: "We'll make America
number one economically
again." And Republicans chant:
"We'll make sure America stays
number one as the geopolitical
leader of the free world."
Number one economically.
Number one geopolitically. Soon
our pollticlans , stimulated by the
Kennedy thesis, are going to
nottce the commonality of these
themes and say. "Eureka. let's
be both." That Idea will form a
consensus and capture the votes
of all the Americans who want to
be number one. Which is most of
us.

models. Ford offers the option in
one Ford and one Mercury
model, while GM offers it on one
Oldsmobile model.

"Yet it was one of our better
transition games," Lakers . as ·
slstant coach Bill Bertl&lt;a- said .
"We (rani as well in the first half
as we have In the playoffs."
James Worthy, who hltl2 of 17
shots for 28 points. finished off a
number of breaks for the Lakers.
who won their lOth straight
playoff opener. Byron Scott
added 23 points - 8 coming In a
key third -quarter surge .
Los Angeles won despite being
outrebounded, 39-31. Roy Tarpley of Dallas came off the bench
to lie James Donaldson's club
playoff record with 20 rebounds.
"Even though we lost the battl e
of the boards we forced them to
take shots they didn't want to
take," Lakers Coach Pat Riley
sa id.
Game 2 ,of . the best-of-seven
series is scheduled for Wednes day nlghi at the Forum. The
scene then shifts to Dallas for
contests Friday night and Sunday afternoon.

Ron Johnson, a defensive back
and four -year starter for Eastern
Michigan, also played with the
Pittsburgh Steelers. He is a
licensed real estate broker living
in Detroit.
Ara Parseghian , played for
Miami and played one season
with the Cleveland Browns before becoming the Redsklns'
coach in 1950. Parseghian lives in
South Bend. Ind .. and Marco
Island. Fla., and does CBS
college football programs.
Kermit Blosser, OU. coached
longer in the MAC and won more
championships for Miami than
any other co in the conference.
He stepped down as golf coach
following the 1988 season.
Chuck Ealey led Toledo to
national prominence as quarterback from 1969-71 with three
undefeated seasons and three
bowl victories for 35 straight
victories. He played with the
Canadian Football League for
five years and lives in Mississauga, Onterio.
Manny Newsome holds Western Michigan's record with 1,786
points, earned during the 1961 -64
seasons. He earned a doctorate
and is dean of student activities
at the University of Toledo.

Velarde, Milacki are honored

'

GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!) Columbus shortstop Randy Velarde and Rochester righthander
Bob Milackl have been named
players of tile week In the
International League .
Velarde batted .458 In six
games Ias'l week, whlle gettingll
hits. Including one homer, and
driving In six runs. For the
season, he has a .272 batting
average and has driven In a
league leading 26 runs .
Milacki Improved his record to
5-0 with a complete game effort
and lowered his ERA to a league
best 0.81. In one game last week,
he allowed six hits and one run.
In the American Association.
Buffalo third baseman Denny
Gonzalez and Denver righ-

!bander Tom Filer won player of
the week honors.
For the week, Gonzalez hit .480
In six games, with 12 hits.
Including two homers, and drove
in seven runs. For the season. he
has a .328 average, five homers
and 24 RBI.
Filer appeared in one game
last week, allowing three hits ,
one walk and striking out six to
raise his record to 4-2 and
Improve his ERA to 2.10. He went
the distance In last week's
appearance.

By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Writer
Baltimore's Mike Boddicker,
with the most losses of any
American League pitcher, Monday night faced Oakland's Dave
Stewart, tied for the league' s
most victories. So how badly did
the Orioles lose, you are asking?
Shame on you. Baltimore
scored six runs of Stewart dming
the first three Innings, and
Boddlcker ear ned his first vic·
tory since la st September 4 as the
Orioles defeated the Athletics
7-3.
BaltimorP extended its win -·
ning streak to three straight.
while Boddicker, 1-8, s napped a
c1 ub-record 13-game losing
streak.
"It' s definitely a weight off
your shoulders," said Boddicker,
whose last victory came against
the 1987 A's. "Everybody's been
kind of tight. You can' tplay tight.
We need to relax a little bit. "
Oakland dropped its third
straight game. with Stewart, 8-3,
losing to Baltimore for the fourth
straight time- and second in ten

days.
"Baltimore ' Is always a good
hitting team," said Stewart. who
dropped his third consecutive
de~ is ion. "When you go out there
35 or 37 times as I plan to do this
season, hopefully things like
tonight are not going to happen
very often."
Oakland Manager Tony LaRussa said he was not overly
concerned with the recent play of
the Western Division leaders.
"We've lost three games before ," LaRussa said . "This is not
a crisis."
The Orioles, who won for ju st
the second time in 20 road games,
almost found themselves in a
crisis situation whenBoddicker's
arm stiffened up durlngpregame warmups. The rightbander barely survived the min!mum !Jve Innings necessary to
earn a victory.
"Mike just couldn't get loose, "
Baltimore Manager Frank Robinson said. "He just gutted !tout
through five innings. and I told
him that was enough."
In the •bottom ?f the ninth.

Tigers, Mud Hens tie in exhibition tilt
TOLEDO, Ohio CUP!)- Larry
Herndon lifted a sacrifice fly In
the ninth Inning Monday night,
giving the Detroit Tigers a 3-3 tie
with their Triple-A affiliate. the
Toledo Mud Hens, in an exhlbilion game called after nine
innings because of rain.
Jim Morrison led off the ninth
with a walk, moved to third on a
single .by Dave Bergman and
scored on Herndon 's fly ball.
Officials called the game after
nine Innings when rain began to
fall, drenching the crowd of
11,138.

rt===========:tl
"CCI BLAZER"

The Mud Hens. of the In lerna uonal League, went ahead 3-2 In
eighth. Billy Bean singled, stole
second, moved to third on a wild
pitch and scored on Ray Palacios' single.
The Tigers opened the scoring
in the second. Tom Brookens
doubled, advanced to third on a
wild pitch and scared on another
wild pitch. Jim Walewander's
solo homer In the third gave the
Tigers a 2-0 lead.
The Hens scored twice In the
second to tie the score. Singles by
Scott Lusader, Paul Felix and
Mike Brown scored one run.
After Felix was caught stealing.
Donnie Rowland singled home
Brown.

22 LONG RIFLE
SHELLS
BRICK OF 500

S1195
EBERS GULF
949-9200
RACINE, OHIO

SE Missouri State
eyes new league
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) Southeast Missouri State plans to
move to NCAA Division I in most
sports and seek admission to the
Ohio Valley Conference, Athletic
Director Marvin Rosengarten
said Monday.
"We'll make a formal bid right
away but I doubt if it could be
acted upon before December,"
Rosengarten told The
Tennessean.
The Cape Girardeau school's
board of regents gave the goahead to upgrade athletic pro·
grams from Division II and to
seek affiliation with a Division I
conference.

Bengals sign Walker

'

"Speaking of decaying infrastructure WOW!"

Tarpley, Aguirre and Rolando
Leading 56-53 two minutes Into
the third quarter , Lo s Angeles
Blackman had 18 points apiece
broke free with a 20-10 burst that
for the Mavericks. Kareerri
featured a pair of 3-polnters and
Abdui -Jabbar contributed 17
another jumper by Scott. John , points on 7 of 10 shooting for Los
son helped conclude the run by
Angeles .
Seeking to become the llrst
outwrestling Tarpley for the ball
In a pile of players, leading to
team since the 1969 Celtics to
A.C. Green's layup that made it
repeat as champions. the Lakers
76-63 with 2:28 left in the period . built a 41-32 lead on Michael
"I think the offense really Cooper's 3-pointer with 9:45 left
staggered in the second half and · in the second quarter. However,
the Lakers didn't have to move
Los Angeles did not hit another
on defense ," the Mavs' Mark basket In almost six minutes .
Aguirre said. "We didn 't move or
While Los Angeles missed 9
run like we did in the first half.
straight shots , the Mavericks
and when you let the Lakers get
compiled a 15-1 run for a 47-42
dunks and fastbreaks, it really edge with 4:19 to' play in the
gets them going ."
period . Dallas was powered by
The La.kers canned 13 of 19 Tarpley. who had 10 rebounds in
third-quarter shots and commit- 18 first -half minutes and helped
ted just 2 turnovers to take an
deny the Lakers a second shot In
80-69 lead entering the final
the run .
period .
The champions, though, reDallas. 0-7 at the Forum during
sponded with 8 unanswered
points - Worthy capped the
the postseason. never mounted a
challenge In the fourth, trailing
burst with a fastbreak dunk off a
by as much as 100-83 with 5:47
feed from Scott- and ied 52-49 at
remaining .
· halftime.

Orioles top red-hot A's; Indians lose

Victory in the air-bag battle___R_ob_er_t~_a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) -The
of air bags, recently proclaimed
nation's sixth largest provider of "victory in the 19-year-long seeautomobile Insurance has made
saw struggle" waged In all three
Its policyholders an offer they
branches of the federal
can't refuse - It will give them
government.
$300 apiece If they select the
His claim is partially valld, but
air-bag option when buying a new the auto makers also can declare
car at any time In 1988.
victory because their footBecause several of the nation's dragging was part of a successful
leading auto makers are offering strategy to buy themselves time
substantial discounts on air bags before air bags become
purchased with new cars, the mandatory.
special bonus offered by the San
In the mid-1970s, for example,
Antonio, Texas, insurance com- General Motors Corp. offered air
pany known as USAA could pay bags as an option on its largest
for the entire cost of the safety cars for the sole apparent reason
feature.
of proving that they were unpopuMoreover. USAA's discount lar. By pricing them at $1,300
and incentive package also In- apiece and doing almost nothing
cludes free replacement of any to promote their sale, GM made
air bag deployed either because its point.
of a malfunction or following an
Similarly, Ford Motor Co. in
accident.
the early 1970s denigrated air
That unusual promotion Is bags as "complicated" and
notable because It marks the end "costly." In the process of
of a legal, econo!lliC, political and stalling, the auto makers almost
psychological struggle of almost certainly contributed to thoutwo decades' duration over the sands of unnecessary deaths and
efficacy of air bags.
Injuries annually.
"The battle ... Is now offJclally
Now, however, the situation
ended," the president of the has · changed radically. More
Motor Vehicle Manufacturers than 500,000 autos with lnllatable
Association announced earlier restraints already are on the
this year . MVMA and its road, and federal law requires
members had long resisted the · that 25 percent or all new cars
effort of public agencies, private sold In the year that tJegan In
safety groups and Insurance September 1987 be so equipped.
companies to mandate the InstalThat figure wUIIncrease to 40
lation of air bags on all new cars. percent In the year beginning
Ralph Nader, probably the September 1988 and to 100: percountry's best-known advocate . cent in the year beginning

Thur~day .

CINCINNATI tUPI) - The
Cincinnati Bengals Monday
signed third-round draft choice
Kevin Walker, a linebacker from
Maryland.
Terms of the contract were not
disclosed.
Walker, a 6-foot-2, 238pounder, led Maryland In tackles
with 172 and In quarterback
sacks with 14 last season.
II

loans Subject
To OYalillcation
Of Bonowet
Non-Rerundable
Application Fie .

I

Oakland turned a 7-2 game Into a
thriller by scoring once and
bringing the tying run to the
plate. Tom Niedenfuer relieved
to record the final out and notch
hi s fourth save.
. "You always sweat." Robinson said. "Things have bounced
the wrong way for us a few times
this year. Nothing seems to come
easy ."
Elsewhere. Seattle whipped
Boston 14-3. Chicago edged
Cleveland 3-2, Milwaukee outscored Toronto 9-7. Minnesota
upended Kansas City7-5 and New
York defeated California 5-2 .
In the National League: Houston 3, Pittsburgh 0; and Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 3. The game
between the Atlanta Braves and
Chicago Cubs was postponed
because of rain.
Mariners 14, Red Sox 3
At Seattle, Jim Presley drove
in five runs and right-hander
Billy Swift recorded hi s second
straight complete game victory
to lift Seattle. Dennis "011 Can "
Boyd fell to 5-3 as he allowed six
runs In the second inning. Swift,
4-1, yielded eight hits.
White So• 3, Indians 2
At Chicago, Ozzle Guillen
doubled home Mark Salas In the
sixth inning to lift the White SOx .
The triumph s napped Chicago's
seven-game losing streak. Melido Perez, 4-1, allowed six hits
an~ two runs over 6 2-3 innings.
Bobby Thigpen earned his seventh save. Tom Candlotti, 6-2.
went the distance for Cleveland,
yielding nine hits.
Brewers 9, Blue Jays7
At Milwaukee, Odell Jones
relieved Injured starter Teddy
Higuera after one · Inning and
allowed two hits In five Innings to
help down Toronto. Jones. 2·0.
allowed one run and left with a 7-2
lead . Dan Plesac pitched the
final I 2·3 innings for his ninth

save. Toronto starter Todd Stottlemyre. 1-6. took the loss,
surrendering five runs on five
hits in 2 2-3 innings.
Twins 7, Royals 5
At Kansas City, Mo., Gene
Larkin singled home Gary Gaettl
with two out in the eighth Inning
to lift Minnesota. Keith Atherton
improved to2-1 and Jeff Reardon
pitched out of an eighth-innili_g
jam to collect his eighth save.
Brei Saber hagen, 5-5, lost for the
th ird time in four outings.

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�Tuesday, May 24. 1988

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Reds down Cards; Larkin,
Durham forced out of lineup
dout. Pena scored on Tom Wrigley Field.
Pagnozzl' s single, and
Rljo
Nixon was named Sunday to
relieved Rasmussen.
replace Chuck Tanner. who was
Jose Oquendo walked and In the middle of his third season
pinch hitter Terry Pendleton was with the Braves. Atlant;~,12-17, Is
credited with an infield hit when In last place In the NL West with
McClendon couldn't handled the league's worst record.
Treadway's throw from second.
The Braves finished last In
McClendon was given an error as 19136, fifth It\ 1987 ·a nd were
predicted to fare poor ly In 1988.
Pagnozzl scored from second.
McClendon, however, got two Still, Nixon said he was go ing to
of those back with his homer in try to make the Braves winners
the seventh of! rellevet Bob · witllout major changes.
Forsch.
Atlanta Is tied lor last In the
"It was nice to see those eight league In batting with a .228
runs up tllere the way we've been average. It ranks 12th In pitching
strugg ling," said Helms. whose with a 4.87 ERA. one full run
club climbed into a third-place worse than tihe next lowest ERA .
tie with San Francisco, four
''We are going to make do with
ga mes behind NL West lead ing what we've got here," Nixon
Houston . "NOI\', if we can just said. "We are going to try to do
stay In the thick of things until we some different things, but It wiH
get everyone back."
take time. Hopefully, not too .
National League Roundup·
much time.
"Our big guys have got to start
ByJOEILLUZZJ
contributing. This Is a transition ,
UPI Sports Writer
a rebuilding type team. But
Tile torrential winds and rain we've stlll got to win some ball
at Three Rivers Stadium made games. keep the interest up."
Houston outfielder Gera ld Young
think of The Wizard of Oz. To
Pittsburgh pitcher Jim Gott, the
weather s uited Fright Night.
Co ntinued from page 1
"I
thought
I
was
go
ing
to
}lave
home run of the season as the
hitter In the third slot. The 6-4
Reds banged out 13 hits off four to click my heels three times to third baseman can run well and
get home," Young said Monday Is a fastball hitter. He has trouble
C.a rdinal pitchers .
Dennis Rasmussen. 2-4, broke night after strong winds and Inside and with the curve.
a persona l three-game losing·- heavy thundershowers cut the
Firstbaseman Cooper Is a
streak by recording his first Plrates·Astros game a half In- decent hitter, but lacks speed and
victory since April 19 when he ning short witll Houston winning Is the top RBI man . CV puts the
3-0.
shut out San Francisco on four
runners in position, the relies on
The winds lifted and swirled Cooper to bring them home.
hits . He went 5 2-3 Innings and
received relief help from Jose Infield dirt and debris around
Leftftelder Lefebvre, the backwhile the Astros batted In the up pitcher, has a good arm, but
Rijo and John Franco.
"I ·ve been havi ng trouble ninth inning, and umpires halted can be pitc hed around the
play before a pitch was thrown In corners and lays off the Inside
get ling through six or seven
the
bottom of the Inning.
heat.
inning's this year," said Ras "This
should have happened
Alterman, Vltagalnlo,a nd Wilmussen. who gave up stx hits and
three runs. "I don't think I made when we had Halloween Night on loughby round out the lineup. The
Friday the 13th, " said Gott, who latter has a lot of speed and will
bad pitches. but they }lit it .
"I was disappointed I didn't go pitched the top of the ninth and bunt effectively ,putting the
longer, but It was great to get the said hts major concern was threat of a bunt In the 1·2 slots.
trying to stay on the mound.
Some notes of Interest are that
victory because we've been
"
Ja
son
(the
villain
In
the
HalloCV
will not sacrifice the runners
struggling. I think I've had four
ween
movies
)
should
have
been
along and with a 3·2 count with
runs to work with my last four
here. It was like the Witches of less one out will steal third base.
starts."
They will bunt but not for the
The Reds jumped out to a 2-0 Eastwick."
Mike Scott scattered four hits sacrifice.
lead in the second Inning off
Fleldwlse, CV ha s had Its
Card inal s tarter Jose DeLeon, and Rafael Ramirez, Chuck
3·4. Durham led off.with a walk Jackson and Jim Pankovits each problems but has played good
a nd went to second on Buddy drove home a run for the AStros. enough to have a fine season.
Scott, 6-0, held the Pirates to Coac h Winebrenner commented,
Bell's single to left . Both runners
two
hits over the first six Innings. "We need to be able to put the ball
moved up on a wild pitch.
He
walked
three and struck out In play and make them field it .
Durham scored on a ground out
Juan
Agos
to was scheduled. I'm somewhat optimistic that.
four.
by Paul O'Neill and Bell came
Scott
to
start the ninth, we' ll lllt, but at the same time
to
relieve
home on Jeff Treadway's sacrl·
but
because
he
did
not throw a know we've been streak hitters. I
flee fly .
pitch.
Scott
was
credited
wltih a think that once we adjust to
The Reds added four runs in
tlllrd
complete
game
and
second
Gallagher. we'll be ready to play
the six tll, the Inning Durham
shutout.
a good game. We must get
suffered his Injury after get ting a
Pittsburgh starter John Smi- baserunners In scoring position
base hit .
ley,
3-4, allowed two runs on six and rely on our speed, just as
O'Neill's single scored one run
hits,
M'alked two and struck out they will try to do."
and Terry McGriff singled home
In seven Innings . Pitts·
three
He continued, ''I'm concerned
, two more. Kal Daniels drove
burgh
has lost Its last four about our defense, but think once
· home the final run of the Inning
meetings with Houston.
we get over the jitters and the
off reliever Steve Peters.
A ralnout In Chicago delayed excitement we'll be O.K. We
The Cardinals knocked Ras. mussen out with three runs In Russ Nixon's Atlanta manage- must keep our cool and get off to a
their half of the sixth when Tom rial debut, but he'll get a double good start. Most of the kids have
Brunansky singled, went to third dosage of the hapless Braves never been In this position or
on Tony Pena's double and today when they play a double- played on fields as nice as what
scored on Bob Horner's groun- header against the Cubs at we've played on lately . It 's new
to them and to me, but I nope the
kids find out they like it."
How To Gel There
According to the way you took
at It, either all roads or no roads
•
lead to Zanesville. The stadium Is
Wednncb;r'11 OamM
located on old route 40 west.
Baseball
Baltimore a1. Oak)Md
One can travel via the four lane
Mllnu ~e Ill DetroM, nlpt
By Unl.,.d Pre11 lnl l'rllltlo•J
OeYel•d
a&amp; Chlc.,o. niKfll,
by
taking 1-77 at Ravenswood to
Ea~~lernDIYIIIkln
Mlnre~tGia Ill Kan~n Cllf, nlahl
W I, Pet. 08
I-70
and on to Zanesville. This
Torun&amp;o at T~u. niKhf
Plll"' ht~· k et
!I 11 .JSl RaMIAn at ~llllloP! niJN
Is all four lane, but Is the
route
Ttdl'wnltr
IK 11 .5 14 I ~
New York at Calllornla. niJh&amp;
Hlchmond
11 n .t31 4%
longes
t route.
NA.1'H)NAL LEAGUE
Mn llt('
17 '!3 .t%5 5
Another route and posslbley
Wt'!ik•rn Dlvl!llon
•
W L P~ t. GB
fo lumhuli
26 17 .605 the
shortest Is by taklrig-route 13
New 'hrk
30
II
.732
Rorhe!lf.er
'!tl 11 .&amp;OS Pltt!!hu l'lh
%S lA, .511 I
north
of Athens to Zanesville.
Toledo
t l 2 1 .100 .,,,..,
Sl. LouM
%1 2! .~811 It
SyntCU!OI'
l ol 2ll .333 ll lfr
This
route
Is quickest but Is
Chi C&amp;JO
20 21 .4M II
AM E RJ CAN AS90CIATION
Mont~al
111 n .ue II Y!
·
extremely
curvy.
1-:U..~tern Ulvllllon
Phll. .dpN a
15h .W I4
W L P&lt;-1. GH
The next option Is to take route
lndlallap.
26 Ill .391 ZS IIi .Ill Ho••on
Bulfalo
7
towards
Beverly and then 339 to
24 17 .581
Yt
Lo8 An pin
n n .n1 r
l.eul!i\1l lf'
n 21 .51! Slfr,
Ct11clnat4l
2Z %1 .U2 4
McConnelsville
and up.
Nuhvlllll
~~ u .ut 1Yt
Sail Francisco
'lt t l .312 4
Wes~rn DIYI!IIon
Whatever
the
route. all roads
San t:Mecv
1$ 27 .SS1 II %
Iowa
i:J IK .561 Atlanla
12 n .3ttl 1t
are
part
of
the
tournament
trail.
OmMa
'tl lfl .A37 I
MndMY'! Rell\lll ll
11 u .4'l5 5',1
Probable Starters
AUinlalll Cllllcqo, ppd., r~l•
Ill U .Ut fi
· Ho•lll.on S, Pkt.oh.aq:ll 0 (ll% lniL,
Probable starters lor Southern
Mnl'lllay '.• Re!lult!'l
called hy lnlln)
S)'ruru .~ .t, BuUalo 2, 11 \nn.
will
be Amburgey and talented
Ctncln..al
~.St. lAW. 3
fl&amp;rl\elltPr 2, lndiiiiUipOiill)
"'''M!ttdlf'8 Gamet~
catcher
John Riffle, the burly
Malr.e II, low!l 4
Ali!UIIa (P .Smith l·t and ~\~leo t-0) a t
Om.ah ll 7, P awh., llft 0
power
hitter.
C hl~ap ( MoJer !-4 and Nipper ~ t), 2,
Columhu 11 7, lAul.n -tlle I
I : OSp.m.
At first Is talented Ken Turley,
Tl-*walfT 7, Rldlrncu:.d ' (comp. ol
llo••on
l Ryan
f.l!)
at
Pit. .
llll!'lp. Kanlt' )
and
To!ld Lisle at second base.
OOrxh
lDrabek
4-3),1:05
p.m
.
'ndewater 4. Rlc~ hmnllll I
Jeff
Caldwell wtlf most likely
TuewdQ'IJ Game~
San Dlep (.loiWII S.S) iU Montre-MI
Maire aal.lc'nYCr
(undedded),
7:SSp.m.
anchor
shortstop and the speeds·
ndewatfT al IO'IO'A
SlUt f'rartct.,... IKrukow 3-'!) at New
Paw,~~~:kftal Oldahoma Cit)'
ter
hopes
to get things going on
York ( Ojeda •·%), 1:al p.m.
Hlc&gt;hmo nd at Omaha
the
basepaths.
LoN An p!les CHertfiiMr &amp;-~) at
lndlllrlliPttll.ll al ColumhuH
Philadelphia (Rufflns-tl, 7: 311 p.m.
Louhu111clal Roclll oet~ter
Mike Hill handles third. with a
ClaclnMii (Robluon ' •3) at Sl. Loub
Nulw llle at Syracl'UM
CCw
prn&amp;er
1-t),I:U,.m
.
strong
outfield of Shawn Arnott,
8uUaJo at TGioPdo
W~ dnnchlf 'l Gamea
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chris
Stout, and All-District
ClnclnnMial 84. IAtds
t::Ut
•
/Uianla al Chlca&amp;:o
player
Barry McCoy. All 9 are
" ' 1. Pet. GB
Hoa•on al PIU... rth. nltht
New Vnrlll
f:IIII .H7super
hitters.
Su Dlep at Mlo ntreal, nlpt
O.trott
M U .tM 1%
!:iu Frandltco Ill New Yerk, niP&amp;
Game time Is 4:30.
l:t~·t:land
!7 II .1!8 I ~
Lo11 Allldettal PIIUidelplllla, nlpal
lkt!ilon
u 111 .no s
ST. LOUIS tUPI) - Reds
Interim manager Tommy Helms
is alarmed at the rate his team Is
losing its front line players.
·'It seems we get someone
injured every night ," Helms said
Monday night after the Reds lost
the services of shortstop Barry
Lar)&lt;In and first baseman Leon
Durham during an 8-3 victory
over the St. Louis Cardinaals.
"I 'm not sure what lineup we'll
have tomorrow. "
Durham, a recent acquisition.
from the Cubs, suffered muscle
spasms in his back and was
forced to leave the game In the
sixth. Larkin, the club's leading
hitter with a .320 average,
reaggrevated a hamstring Injury
and exited In the first inning.
Durham and Larkin join third
baseman Chris Sabo and catcher
Bo Diaz on the sidelines, while
infielder Nick Esasky is on the .
disabled list.
" I feel we'd be in the thick of
things if we were healthy," said
Helms, who is managing the
Reds for suspended Manager
Pete Rose.
Lloyd McClendon. who replaced Durham, hit his first

....

.

.....

%2 2G .llH
18 25 .tit

Toronto

""' D

Oaklatld
Tu:Aii
Ka~~ !IU

•

City

MlnM ~ob

tl !I .SI!

7

II U .415

I

SuHW

Callfor• •

17

Clli£a~D

n

Mtu.. !Q''• RtA•II

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J, Clenland 2

Mllwaullf'~

Calendar

H .174 -

19 U .US I
II U ,·U t I~
11 U .4!! 11 \oi

Chlcaco

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday. May 24. 1988
.
Page-5

;~

.Beat of the Bend

Community calendar

:: Pomeroy Alumni reunion
scheduled Saturday night

HORNER SAFE - The Cardinals' Bob Horner
Is safe at first as the wide throw from the Reds'
Jell Treadway Jl,'ets past Lel)n Durham in the

fourth inning of Monday night's game In St. Louis.
Horner was given an Infield hll on the play. The
Reds won 8-3. (UPI)

Indy track closed Monday
for final 500 adjustments
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)- Me·
chanlcs continued making final
adjustments on their cars Monday In preparation for the final
practice session before the 72nd
Indianapolis 500.
The 2 %-mile oval at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
was closed all day for the first
time since opening for practice
May 7. The only remaining
practice session is a two-hour
period on Thursday. traditionally known as Carburetlon Day,
even though cars no longer use
such a device.
Speeding cars send a highpitched whine through the legendary racetrack during practice sessions, but Monday's
silence emphasized tile empti·
ness of the 539-acre facility.
Crews that have worked along pit
row the past two weeks now work
Insid e the concrete garages of
Gasoline Alley.
"We're just checking everything. hopefully making It so we
don't have to do too much after
Carburet! on Day ," said Clive
Howell, crew chief for defending

champion and four-lime winner
AI Unse r Sr. "Now that the speed
thing Is over a nd done with, we
want to concentrate on 500
miles."
The 33-car field was filled
Sunday when Rich Vogler
bumped two-time winner Gordon
Johncock In his final qualifying
attempt. This year's field will not
match the nine former winners of
th.e 1986 . tineu p, but eight past
winners return, including pole
sitter Rick Mears, four-time
winners Unser and A.J . Foyt,
Marlo Andrettl, Danny Sullivan.
Bobby Rahal. Tom Sneva and
Johnny Rutherford .
Cos worth engines have won 10
straight Indy races and 20 of
Sunday's starters will use them.
Chevrolet engines will power six
cars, Including the five fastest
qualifiers. Three cars will use
Bulcks and two will be powered
by the Judd engine, while Stan
Fox runs with a Chevy V-6 and
Teo Fabl uses a Porsche.
Twelve drive rs wlli use the 1988
Lola chassis while live others
race with the year-old model.
Eight drIvers wltl guide a 1988

March, while two use a 1987
March and three others drive a
two-year-old March chassis. The
front row of Mears, Sulitvan and
Unser will use the specially
designed Penske chassis.
Last year, Cosworth engines
powered the seven top finishers.
Eleven cars were running at the
finish and ail were Cosworths.
except for a Honda driven by
eighth-place finisher Jeff
MacPherson.
Andrettl, the 1969 winner. was
the last foreign-born racer to
take the checkered flag at Indy .
Eleven of this year's starters
could end the domina lion by
American-born drivers. They
Include native- Italian Andrettl,
Brazilians Emerson Flttlpaldl
and Raul Boesel. Roberto Guerrero of Colombia, .Ludwig Helmrafh Jr. of Canaqa, rookie Tero
Palmroth of Finland, Holland
native Arle Luyendyk, Scottishborn Jim Crawford, Irishman
Derek Daly , Italian Fabl and
West German-born Dominic
Dobson, the fa stes t rookie In Indy
500 history.

•
Seoul police looking for terrortsts
SEOUL. South Korea tUPI) South Korean pollee are searchIng for terrorists who may have
already lnftltrated the country to
prepare for violent attacks during the upcoming Summer Olympic Games, news reports said
today.
Acting on a report from Japanese authorities, the South Ko·
rean National Pollee Headquarters has Intensified Its search for
members or supporters of the
Japanese Red Army terrorist
group, the English-language Korea Herald reported.
"There Is a possibility that
people connected with the Japanese Red Army have already
Infiltrated Into the country to
dis rupt the Seoul Olympic
Games, " the Herald quoted an
unnamed pollee source as sayIng. The Olympics open Sept. 17
and run through Oct. 2.
The intensified search was
prompted by a Japanese news
report that officials found a post
card from South Korea In the
Tokyo apartment of allejled Red

Army terrorls t Yasuhtro Shibata , 34. whowasarrestedMay6.
The postcard read "I am In
Korea now. Streets· are crowded
with people. I wish I can make
another trip to Korea ," the
Japanese newspaper Yomlurl
Shlnrnum said In lis Sunday
editions.
Officials believe Shibata was
one of nine Red Army members
who commandeered a Japan Air
Lines Boeing 727 on March 31,
1970, on a domestic flight and
forced It to fly to Seoul then to
Pyongyang, the North Korean
capital.
South Korean pollee have
begun checking Identities of
Japanese and Koreans living In
Japan who have recently arrived
In South Korea and are Inquiring
about their reasons for traveling
to Korea.
South Korea and Japan have
re~entiy agreed to coordinate
security for the Olympics to
block terrorists from trying to
enter Korea through Japan.
But the Herald said South

Korean pollee were not notified
of the postcard by their Japanese
counterparts. The South Koreans
apparently learned of the post·
card through the news report.
In Washington, the U.S. State
Department said It had "no
Information" to support a Toronto Sun story that North Korea
was planning to disrupt the Seoul
Olympic Games.
Shibata was alleged to have
lived In North Korea after
hijacking the JAL airliner In
1970, but slipped back Into Tokyo
and was living there when he was
arrested May 6.

By BOB HOEFLICH
· Alumni reunions are about to
burst out all over -and It's not
even June- so a
couple of updates on iwo of
them
The Pomeroy
High reunion
will be held at
6:30 p.m . Saturday at the Meigs High School
Cafeteria. Circles will serve a
buffet dinner. Joe Struble will
again serve as master of ceremonies for the program per!Ojl
following dinner and all teachers
from Pomeroy High are being
especially Invited to attend this
year's reunion. A dance will be
held beginning about 9 p.m. and
this will be by Omega Sounds- a
d.j . type of presenta tion - witll
music from the 40's, 50's and
60's.
In the Interlude between the
dinner and dance, color photos
will be taken of the reunion
classes and those classes tilts
year begin with the class of 1908
and every five years thereafter ..
All local alumni are asked to
report to the cafeteria at 6 p.m.
on Friday to decorate and he! p
will be needed In cleaning up
following the dinner so that the
cafeteria can be converted
quickly Into the dancing area .
Now - the deadline for reser·
vat ions will be Thursday. Tickets
are $10 each and may be
purchased at Swisher and Lohse
Pharmacy or at Francis Florist.
Also reservations can be made
with Association President April
Smith by calling 992-3483.
The reunion of the Middleport
High School Alumni. Association
will be held also on Saturday
evening and will also Include a
.. dinner, prngram and dance.
Dinner will be served at 6:30p.m.
at the Meigs Junior High School
Cafterta and then the dance will
take place tn the auditorium.
Tickets can still be purchased
at the Sears Store. The cost lor
dinner, dance and alumni dues
for one Is $11 and $22 for two
alumni members. For a alumni
member and a guest, the charge
Is $20. The deadline Is fast

apprachlrtg so do stop by Sears.
-l--

Is It too early to remind you
that two popular Middleport
couples will be observing their
50th ·wedding anniversary with
an open house from 2 to 4 p.m.
Sunday at the Middleport Church
of Christ? I hope not.
Staging the open house are Don
Grueser, Chicago, and Debra
Gerlach of Middleport, and being
honored -are their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Grueser, and !heir
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Brannon .
Leah Whitlock, former Mid·
dleport resident who now resides
in Kent, has been seriously Ill in
Akron City Hospital. Following
her discharge, she is now staying
with her sister, Della Mae
Summers, also a former resident , now In Ravenna. Cards
may be sent to Mrs. Whit lack at
6228 Roselawn Ave .. Ravenna.
Oh., 4426li.
Marie Turner of Langsville
and Ernestine Posley of Ewington got together to · make the
Triple A trip to the Tulip Festival
In Holland, Mich., May 12-15 and
enjoyed It thoroughly.
They .visited Wlndmllllsland.
the Wooden Shoe Factory, Dutch
VIllage and Bonners, the world's
largest Christmas display. and
they loved the golden oldies
presented by the stars of Lawrence WelkIn concert.
The All Meigs County Fair
Chorus, under the direction of
Bruce Wolfe, . will hold its first
meeting and rehearsal from2 to 4
p.m . Sunday at the Pomeroy
VIllage Hall.
All chorus members and their
parents are urged to attend since
music, general Information and
plans wtlt be discussed as well as
the rehearsal schedule for the
group. The new chorus will be
appearing at the annual Meigs
County Fair In August.
1 want to e ncourage Mr . and
Mrs. Leo Taylor to " put on a
happy face" . You ca n do It
without me, I'll betcha .

Bradford banquet held
''Jesus, the Llgnt of the World ''
was the theme of the annual
mother-daughter banquet held
recently at the Bradford Church
of Christ.
The social room was decorated
In blue, yellow and white with
love lights as centerpieces on
each table. Wooden heart candleholders with candles wo&gt;re used
as favors at each place setting.
Dinner was served to approximately 65 mother s and
daughters .
Following the meal a program
was held In the auditorium.
Special recognitilons were
handled by Madeline Painter and
Carolyn Nicholson. Ruth Durst,
pianist of the church since the

TUESDAY
.
POMEROY- Cheese and rice
distribution, through Gallia ·
Meigs CAA and the Meigs Cooperative Parish. will be Tuesday,
from 10 a .m. to approximately 2
p.m .• at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds, the Racine American
Legion Post, Tuppers Plains and
Pagevllle Fire Stations. In Gallia
County, dlstrlbu tion will be from
noon to 2:30 p.m. at the Gallla
County Fairgrounds, Bidwell Mt .
Carmel Baptist Church, Guidi ng
Hand School. Mercerville and
Crown City Fire Departments.

\'tt.DGL \0
poUC'l
HOLDER~)

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Friends · and Flowers Garden
Club will have an open meeting
Thursday at 7p.m.at the Rutland
Metllodist Church. The program
on herbs and their uses will be
presented by Ruth Erwin o! the
Chester Garden Club. Door
prizes will be awarded and
refreshments will be served. The
public Is invited to attend.

Reilnal meting
ATHENS - Garden clubs In
Region ll of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs will have a focus
session on Ikebana arra nglng
June 3 at the Athens County
WEDNESDAY
FOREST RUN - The Wild· Extension Office at the Athens
wood Garden Club will meet at County Fairgrounds. Aury Holt
noon Wednesday for a potluck will be the instructor.
Materials needed lor the morndinner at the Forest Run Church.
ing session are Moribana conTHURSDAY
tainer, a low bowl, a needlepoint
POMEROY -The May meet- holder, two or three branches
ing of th e Meigs County Demo- three feet long, and three to
' crat lc Party has been changed to seven round flowers.
the fourth Tllursday, May 26. at
For the afternoon session those
7:30 p.m . at Carpen ters Hall, E. attending are to take two containMain St., Pomeroy . At this time, ers, two needleport holders. four
new Centra l and Executive Com- or five branches three feet long
HONORED - Southern !Ugh School Senior Class Valedictorian
mittees will be organized.
and round flowers.
Heather Shuler Is one of nearly 200 tap ranked high school seniors
MIDDLEPORT - The staff
Coffee and Iced tea will be
being honored by WSAZ Televlson 3's salute to the Best oft he Class
and s tudents of the Rejoicing Life served. Those attending are to
of 1988. She, along with other lop scholars of the area, will be
Chr istian Chu rch In Middleport take a brown bag lunch. Fee for
featured In public service announcements which were videotaped
are a nnouncing their second the workshop ls $5 a nd reservaduring a luncheon held on May fat the Huntington Museum of Art.
a nnual kindergarten graduation t,lons are to be sent to Lucille
a nd a wards ceremonies for Macomber, Route I , Radcliff,
grades one through six fo r 7 p.m. Ohio 45670, by Fr !day.
Thursday
at the Rejoicing Life
Des and Jon! Je ffers of Harrl·
sonvllle are announcing the birtll
of their seco nd child, a son.
Nat llan Eugene. born April 2 at
the Hol7.er Medical Center . The
Infant weighed seven pounds and
one ounce and was 201nches long.
Maternal granddparents are
Delbert Eugene and Barbara
Murray of Pomeroy. Paternal
gra ndpare nt s a re Bernice
Jeffers of Middleport and the late
Louis Eugene Jeffers. Great
grandparents are Mrs. Ada Mu rray of Smithburg, W. Va. and
Frank Ca ptel na of, Charles ton,
W. Va . The Jeffers have a
daughter, Katie. age three.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club
meet Tuesday, at 7 p.m., at the
townhouse.

Jeffers birth

HERE'~ A~ALE

"FORf YOU
IN THE .

eLA~~IFIED AD~

* THANKS *

VINDA BIGGS

TO ALL MY FELLOW M~IGS COUNTIANS
WHO WORKED FOR AND SUPPORTED ME
DURING THIS PRIMARY ELECTION.
WITHOUT ALL YOUR DILIGENT EFFORTS,
I COULD NOT HAVE DONE SO WELL.

Biggs wins
pageant titles

Vlnda Jean Biggs, sophomore
at Me igs High School, has won 30
age ot lU , was pre!Seuted a
queen titles along wlt"h being
Precious Moment figurine.
named runner-up In several
Also presented gifts were pageants, according to her par·
Sherry Smith, newest Christian; ents, William and Carolyn-Biggs.
Helen Kibble, oldest Christian Pomeroy .
present; Becky Amberger, new Queen titles won In pageants
est mother; Betty Silvers, tcra Include
Mis s Hemisphere
veled the farthest; Tressle HenBeauty.
Miss
American Internatdricks. traveled the least
lnal
Beauty.
Grand National
distance.
Beauty
of
New
York, and FaJackie Reed and Mrs. Durst
shion
U.S.A.
She
also holds the
sang together and a candlelight
title
of
first
runner-up
In Miss
service was presented by th~
World
of
Wheels
of
Huntington,
ladles of the congregation. Delores Frank had devotions en- W. Va. She has served as a
titled ''A Mother's Dedication to llostess at several pagea nts In
her FamUy and to God." To close Ohio. She recently placed In the
the program, the group sang top 10 in beauty, sportswear
"The Light of the World Is model and talent in a contest held
In Akron . .
JesUs. "
In July_she will compete In the
Nat tonal Pageant for Miss HemIsphere at Miami. Fla . She is the
granddaughter of Nathan and
Bette Biggs of Pomeroy. Her
nah and Mary . Ice cream, cake, sponsors ha ve been area
coffee and Iced tea were served. merchant"'.

Church Group II meets

Sincere and Deep Thanks To All.

-

ROBERT H. "BOB' EASON

....

Paid for by Committee to Elect Eason, Joan Musser. Trns..
Mulberry Hts .. Pomeroy.

ifF

NATHAN JEFFERS

Hard-WorkingUghtweight
STIHL TRIMMERS AND BRUSHCUnERS

@:
fS -52
FS-81

CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL 1988 GRADUATES/
MAY GOD BE YOUR

ouR

Church. Open house at the school
will be held immediately follow Ing the ceremonies. The public Is
invited.

GUIDE THROUGH LIFE.
GOD BLESS YOU!!

VILLAGE
CUT
RATE
31D STIEET

FS-66

• ~7.1 cc engine;oniy 10.5 tbs.

• 20 cc engine

• 11 .51bs. loop; t31bs. bike

• 23 cc engine
• t3.91bs. Iooc: t4.31bs. bike

•Electronic ignition for sure starts •Anti-vibration system lets you
work with less fatigue •Variety of cutting attachments •Centrifugal
clutch •Bike or loop handles on most models •Fire-safe muffler.

10 ~

I 3t .tel II %

Ralllmorc-

·-

Southern ...

Scoreboard ...

Mll-uk ee

By The Bend

I, Tarnn&amp;n 1

Ml•. .ota7, Kaa1M C1ty 5
Sullie 14, IIHtMI J

New York I, Califon.. 2
Kalltnore 1, OaiiiUd I

'hleMiq'aOameA
Mllftllllf!e 1n1fi' " • u Dil!trnlt
(Aie.:P del' •t), 7: 11p.m.
CIII'IWIM. 48wl ..e ll 11-11 a&amp; Cltl~ap
I LaPoint H), l:a p.m.
.
,..,_. ICenltl 1·1 1 at. ' Tnu
IHIIofard J.O),I;SJ p.m .
Mln~neta ILea f-S) a&amp; Han•• Cl&amp;y
(LelbnuuH W ), ll: 35p.m.
BHton ISmM'-on .. ,, Ill Seatle
(Cam~~~ !-1), JI ::SJp.m .
New Vorl! (Leiter 1-t) Ill Calllornla
(AicCaiWII '!·3),111::11 p.m.
Ball-.nore 1nhiB t-tl at Oak·
bind {0.11\iHOI !- It , II: II p.m .

Scioto results ·

BIR,ball

Am erlcu

Let~~tt~e

Mll,.,.ukee a1 Detrol, '7:!5 p.m.
Cll!Yeland at Chlcqo, 8: Jl p.m.
TorOftlo M Texu, 8: :U p.m.
Ml•lft . . a1 ku.., £11,.,11:31 p.m .
Boston at 8eaiUt, 11: 11 p.m.
New Yorllll Callorala, lt:U p.m .
llalltmore llil 0•lduld, It: II p.m .
NMMIJLeapt
AllaMa llil Chi~ t, 1:11 p.m.

Rn•o•llt PM&amp;Ibl111t. 7: 11 IJI.IIL

Su Dlep a1 MoMrell, 1: II p.m.
Saal'r•el~~ee a&amp; New Yo,., 1:11 p.m.
Lot Allp!IMal Pll ...elpllla,1;Q p.m.
aacta.al M II . ..... 1: II p.m.

..._..

NBA.PiaJoft'B
N• IIUhM IIC!IIIetllled

Ol)mplc

Colondo 8prtep, ec.Jo. -

Olymptchtdl

Me•'•

Rockt!J

stul!yCupFt-.11
Edmonton at Boltoa, '7:11p.m.

.,...

Parll -

. Tu...

.

The U.IMB mllllo11 f'ri!llCh

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - C
U Ater beat out Alumvlew
Special by a neck Monday night
to win the co-featured sixth race
pace at Scioto Downs.
Driven by Dan Ater, C U Ater
picked up his fourth win In
seventh starts this season, post·
lng a lifetime best clocking of
1:56 for the mile and returning
$4.80,$2.80 and $2.40. TriPasslng
finished third.
Fan's Falcon captured the
co-featured ninth race, covering
the,mile tn 1: 563-5 toretum$3.40,
$3 and $2.20. G T Ditto finished
second and String of Lights came
In third.
Monday night's crowd of 2,614
wa11ered $279,618.

TH
YOU
FOR YOUR SHOW OF
SUPPORT FOR ME IN THE
RECENT PRIMARY ELECTION.
It Is Truly Appreciated.
DR. JAMES P. CONDE

When you need us. we'll be
there ... with prompt, con·
ctmed insurance service. We
always try to be friends you
can depend on. Call us today.

I\

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

MEIQ.S COUNTY CORONEl

·State Auto

Paid for by the Candidate, 33499 Wills Hill Road,
Pomeroy, OH. 45769.

lnsurCw+anlt•

.

STIHJ.:
lt. 33, 607 N. 2nd St.

Mason, WY 25260

•

�Tuesday, May 24, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

.

'

Tuesday, May 24, 1988

Officials search for hijacker who escaped &amp;om plane .
CARTAGENA, Colombia
(UP!) - Pollee searched man
grove swamps near the Carta
gena airport lor a hijacker who
leaped from the rear exit of a
Colombian airliner shortly after
It made a surprise la nding to end
a bizarre 1,300-mile journey
around the southwest Caribbean
The man, who claimed to be
dying of AIDS and was armed
with grenades and a pistol,
hijacked the Avianca Boeing 727
airliner Monday morning, freed
Its 131 passengers, then forced
the plane to Panama, the Island
of Aruba and back to Colombia
before fleeing the jet.
After landing at Rafael Nunez
International Airport Monday
night. the hijacker ordered the
flight crew to taxi the plane to the
end of the runway, where he
jumped from the rear of the jet
and fled Into a mangrove swamp,
pollee said
Pollee equipped with spotlights
searched the swamp between the
airport runway and the Carib
bean Sea at Cartagena, some 400
miles southwest of Aruba
The hijacker's abrupt exit
from tbe plane ended a 12 hour,
1,300-mile odyssey In which he
demanded $100,000 and told au
thorlties he wanted to fly to India
via Cuba.
He seized the jetliner at 7 15
a m. shortly after it took offfrom
Medellin, Colombia, then or-

dered the plane back to that city
to drop off the passengers He
!hen forc ed the three-man flight
crew to take him to Panama.
The plane landed at 10 a m at
Omar Torrljos Herrera International Alrporl outside Panama
City, where the airline promised
to meet the hijacker's demand
for $100,000 If he flew to the
Caribbean Island or Aruba
The jet departed Panama at
1· 15 p m and landed 2 ~ hours
later at Oranjestad, Aruba, a
self governing member of the
Netherlands kingdom off the
coast of Venezuela
There, the plane waited on the
ground for nearly three hours
before' taking off again at about
6:10p.m without the money on a
flight officials believed was
bound for Cuba.
But the pilot, Capt Luis
Gutierrez, said In an Interview on
radio station RCN In Bogota that
"Once In the air, he (hijacker)
Instructed us to sneak back to
Cartagena."
The pilot said authorities In
Aruba refused to even talk to the
hijacker
Gutierrez said the man threatened the flight crew In Aruba,
telling them, " 'I have nothing to
lose because I am seriously Ill,
but you do "'
In Bogota , civil aviation officials Identified the hijacker as
Albelro Jimenez, and said hewas

a Colombian citizen
Gutierrez said Jimenez
cla imed he was dying of either

cancer or AIDS.
''He acted sick and crazy bu tin
some ways he knew what he was

MANAGUA, Nicaragua iUPI)
- A week before the expiration of
a 60-day cease-fire with U S backed rebels, President Daniel
Ortega softened his stance and
offered to extend the truce a
month
Ortega, yielding on another
previously non-negotiable position, said Monday the govern
men! would allow the rebels,
known as Contras, to receive the
nearly S4S million In non-lethal
aid approved by Congress
through a private contractor
The leftist Sandlnlsta govern-

ment previously demanded that
the aid be disbursed through a
neutral organization
The cease-fire, part of a
nine-point peace plan signed by
the Sandlnlsta government and
the Contras March 23, went Into
effect April 1 and Is due to expire
In one week.
Ortega said Monday the government "will offer unilaterally
to extend the cease-fire by
another 30 days."
The offer softened an earlier
threat In which Ortega said that
If the rebels and the government
failed to extend the cease-fire,

ORTEGA TALKS TRUCE - NlcaraiJUan
President Daniel Ortega announces a unUateral
extentlon of a truce with the U.S. backed Contra
rebel lo allow more lime lo negoUate a peace
treaty. A new round oftalks Is set for Wednesday

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the army would "launch a
military offensive greater than
anything (the rebels) have seen
before ''

Ortega said the army still
"reserves the right to defend
against Contra attacks."
"If the war resumes, It will not
be because of the Nicaraguan
government," Ortega said "The
responsibility will lie with the
United States government and,
therefore, with the Contras. "
The next round of peace talks Is
scheduled for Wednesday
through Friday but the rebels
and the government have fal!E!d
to agree on a site

but location Is not ap-eed on. At the news
conlerence In Manacua Monday, Ortesa was
joined by his brother, Gen. Humerto Ortega, chief
of jlandlnlsla nesotlator aad Defense Mlnllller.
REUTER

BEIRUT, Lebanon I UPI) -At
least 19 people died In fierce
battles between rival Shiite Moslem militias In Beirut's southern
suburbs In the last two days while
Syrta and Iran reached a deadlock In negotiations to end the
bloodshed
In another development today,
the pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad
orgganization urged Western
countries with hostages In Lebanon to start direct negotiations
Immediately with kidnappers
who are bellved to hold 16
captives In the southern suburbs
Islamic Jihad said the continued fighting In Beirut between
the pro-Syrlan Amal and proIranian Hezbollah militias Is
causing pressures which could
lead to the "liquidation of all the
captives."
"The Islamic Jihad Organization advises the countries which
care about the safety of the
hostages to start direct negotiations Immediately In order to
ensure their safety," the group
said In a typewritten statement
delivered to the offices of a
Western news agency In the
eastern city of Baalbeck.
Syrian negotiators refused
Monday to allow Iran a securtty
role In Beirut to end the clashes,
and a previouslY unknown group
threatened to attack Iranian
targets to protestlran'spresence
In Lebanon.
Pollee and security forces said
eight people died today and
another 31 were w.ounded In the
fighting, bringing the casualty

toll In 21 days of fighting to 245
with more than 1,000 wounded
In Its statement, Islamic JIhad, which claims It Is hOlding
Americans Terry Anderson and
Thomas Sutherland, was apparently speaking about all the 16
foreign hostages held In Lebanon The statement Issued
today did not Include a photograph of a hostage.
In the past, the Islamic Jihad
has cautioned that Its statements
are always accompanied by
photos of the hostages as an
evidence of their authenticity.
"This situation will lead to the
liquidation of all the hostages and
to throwing their lifeless corpses
- ., "the one-page statement said.
A political source suggested
that the organization could not
procure a photo of the hostages
because of the continuing fightIng In the suburbs
The 16 foreigners missing In
Lebanon and believed held hostage by pro-!ranlan Shiite milItants Include nine Americans,
three Britons, one of whom Is
Anglican Church hostagenegotiator Terry Waite, whO
disappeared In January 1987
while negotiating for the release
of Anderson and Sutherland; one
Italian, one Irishman, one West
German, and one Indian.
In a telephone call to the office
ofa Westernnewsagencylnwest
Beirut late Monday, a caller
Identifying himself as a member
of the previously unknwon "Islamic Action" group warned:
"We will attack Iranian Institutions In Lebanon If Iran's Intervention In Lebanon continues."

"We will take hostage all
workers at Iranian Institutions
on Lebanese territory and attack
all people linked to the Iranian
Embassy," the caller said
There are at least ~.000 IranIans In Lebanon, Including 1,000
Revolutionary Guards, based In
southern Beirut and the Bekaa
Valley In eastern Lebanon, who
began arriving In the war-torn
nation In 1982.
Political sources said intensive
talkS between Damascus and
Tehran aimed at ending the
fighting were deadlocked
The sources said Syrian officers turned down a proposal by
Iranian diplomats during a meetIng In west Beirut late Sunday to
deploy a joint Iranlan-Syrtan
force In the suburbs tomalntalna
cease-fire.
The Syrians "refused any
Iranian peaceful role," said one
political source, who requested
anonymity Iranian officials last

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PASSENGERS SURVIVE - Tbe Boelns 727
Flight 828 took olf from the Costa Rica
International Airport Monday, climbed :IQ feel,

Witnesses said the plane burst
Into flames. But an airline

The rebels have objected to
holding the talks In Managua site of the previous two rounds complaining they were virtually
Imprisoned In their hotel and not
allowed to move freely. They
have requested the talks be held
In Sapoa, a village near the Cos~
Rican border where the' -lnltial
cease-fire agreement was
reached.
Ortega said the next round,
aimed at a permanent end to the
8-year-old war, must take place
In Managua "because this Is
mandated In the Sapoa accords."
Ortega also said he accepted a
proposal by Organization of
American States' .SecretaryGeneral Joao Baena Soares to
allow the OAS's Panamerlcan
Development Foundation to contract private com pan les to bring
"humanitarian aid" to the
rebels
Earlier, thi! Sandlnlstas insisted that the International Red
Cross deliver the aid , but the
Contras said they wanted a
private company to do 11.
"We accept a contracted company, as long as It Is a serious,
responsible firm," Ortega said.
, Since the last two rounds of
talks, the rebels have replaced
lhelr chief negotiator and announced that Contra military
chief Enrique Bermudez would
attend. They said Contra leader
Alfredo Cesar would~ replace
Adolfo Calero as head of the
delegatibn
Cesar has reportedly sided
with Bermudez In recent weeks
In the military commander's
feud with other members of the
Contra political directorate and
some of his own officers
The announcement that Bermudez would attend the talks
came as a surprise, given his
constant opposition to the Sapoa
agreement and refusal to participate In any previous
negotiations

week said they opposed the
announced deployment of Syrian
troops to put down the fighting
through military force.
Tehran opposed the Syrtan
plan, arguing It could lead to the
release of the 16 foreign hostages
before "fulfilling the purpose for
which the-captives were taken,"
one source said.
"Iran also wants guarantees
about the political and military
future of Hezbollah once the
Syrians have taken control oflhe
suburbs," the source said.
A security source said Syrian
troops In the city of Baalback, a
HezboDah stronghold 52 miles
northeast of Beirut, were placed
on alert Monday.
Tile source said the Syrian
military command brought In
some 1,000 soldiers as reinforcements In the city where Hezbollah Is believed to have some
10,000 fighters and supporters.

then broke Into three parts and burst Into flames.
All 21 passengers and crew survived with the
majority of the passengers suffering only minor
Injuries. REUTER

spokesman said the fire was
confined to a wing that broke off
In the crash, the first in the
40-year history of the airline.
Only two passengers were hurt
In the 5 p.m. accident. A flight
attendant suffered a broken
ankle and another person had a
less serious Injury that was not
specified, the airline said Hospital officials said both were
treated and released
Witness Martha Grace Quezada said the "plane crashed on
Its belly just as It left the ground
with the tires bursting and the
undercarriage collapsing."
"The pilot lost control of the
plane and It crashed against a

wall bordering the main highway, ending up In a coffee field,"
she said "The plane broke up
Into four parts. "
She also said smoke poured
from one of the turbines and the
plane "burst Into flames as the
passengers escaped through the
escape exits."
An airline spokesman In Miami
said, "One of the wings came off
and there was some fire on the
wing, which was already separated from the fuselage so there
was no explosion on the
aircraft."
U.S . Embassy spokesman
Mark Krlschlk said there were
eight Americans on board

By MARK KURAMITSU
TOKYO (UPI) - Bowing to
strong U S. pressure, Japan Is
considering scrapping Its plan to
Impose a 100 percent surcharge
on U.S beeflmports, a top ruling
party leader said today.
''The government and party
now are studying substitute
measures for the surcharge to
protect domestic dairy farmers
and citrus growers," Shlntaro
Abe, secretary general of the
Uberal Democratic Party, told a
meeting at a Tokyo hotel.
Abe declined to disclose details
of the study, but party sources
said It Involves an Increase In
Import duties levied on U S. beef
and financial assistance to Japa nese farmers.
The United States negotiators
have said they are opposed to a
surcharge but willing to accept
some type of Import duties .
The surcharge plan was the
main snag In U.S.-Japanese
negotiatiOns to liberalize Japa nese Imports of beef and oranges.
The United States opposed the
Idea and demanded Japan open
Its market.
A Japan-U.S. agreement under
which Japan was allowed to
maintain quotas on beef and
orange Imports expired March
31.
~
The United States submitted
the case to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, a
Geneva-based multilateral trade
body, earlier this month for a
ruling.
Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita has said through his spokes man that he hopes the dispute
will be solved through bilateral
negotiatlollS before a meeting
with U.S. President Reagan In
London June 3.
Under a GATT ruling In
February, Japan was asked to
remove Import quotas on 10 of 12
farm products but Insisted It
would continue to control Imports on two of the Items, starch
and powdered milk.
The sources said there remains

strong opposition within the
party to dropping the surcharge
scheme. The LOP, which has
been In power ever since Its
formation In 1955, depends heavIly on support from farmers.
A round of talks held In Tokyo
last week between US. Deputy
Trade Representative Michael
Smith and Japanese negotiator
Yasuo Goto of the Agriculture
Ministry broke down over the
surcharge Issue
Smith told reporters after the
one-day session both sides remained far apart and "It's up to
Japan to make new proposals to
break the ice
"We have a legal and a trade
policy problem with It (the
surcharge)," Smith said.
Smith said he opposes the
surcharge In part because, unlike an Import duty, It can be
adjusted without notice.
In addition to the strict beef
Import quotas, Japan Imposes a
25 percent tariff on b&lt;?ef imports
to protect the domestic Industry

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL
186 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1614) 992-7328

OFFERS
FULL and PART -TIME
CHILD CARE and
PRE-SCHOOL SERVICES
Now Enrolling For
Summer and Fall
Children 3 to 12 Years
Title XX Subsidized
Sliding Fee Scale
Limited Enrollment

CALL NOW

I

"COIIIRATULAnOIS TO AU t988
SOUTHERII Hill SCHOOL SEIIIORS"
STOll HOUIISI ... thru Fli. 9 1&amp;•5

,....,

S.t. 9 e.111.-1 p.&amp;

"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

Ill Sillll
t4t·IMO
UCI. . . .
!IIIAS1IICAII - YISA - 111.111 • ilfl

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 16, 19BB. the the
Meogo Count; Probate Court,
Cese No 25699, Dale M
Kautz, 35537 Route 7 North.
Pomeroy, OhiO, 46769. was
appoented Executor of the !II·
tate of Ina E Kautz. deoeasud.
late of 35537 Route 7 North.
Pomeroy, Meigs County,

Ohoo
Robert E Buck,
Probate Judge
lena K Nesselroad, Clerk

(51 24. 31 , (61 7 31c

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May 10, 1988, 1n the
Metgs
Cou11ty
Probate
Court Case No 25848, Ann
Wilhams, 118 Umon Ave,
Pomeroy Oh1o 415769, was
appomted Admimstratrix of
the estate of Sara W Willis.
deceased. late of 118 Umon
Ave Pomeroy Ohio 46769
Robert E Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad. Clerk
151 17. 24, 31, 31c

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY,
221 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Platnttff

VS

Kenneth F Molz , et al ,
Defendants
Case Number 87-CV-326

NOTICE OF SALE

As Shenff of Me1gs
County. 0 h10, I hereby off&amp;J
for sale at 10 00 AM on
Fr1day the 24th day of June,
1988 A 0 . on the front
steps of the Me1g1 County
Court House, Pomeroy,

Ohoo, the following descnbed real estate
Parcel 1
The foliow•ng real estate
Situated •n the County of
Me1gs •n the State of OhtO
and 1n the Townsh1p of
Rutland and bounded and
described as follows
Being In Sect•on No 26,
Town 6. Range 14, Oh1o
Company's Purchase Beglnnmg at the Southwest
corner of the farm known as
the Arthur Stout farm 1n
Rutland Township, County
of Meigs, State of Ohio;
thence aut along the public
highways 20 and 9/ 16
rods; lhence beanng west
of north 15 and % rods,
thence wast 16 rods to the
" West line of the said Arthur
Stout farm than~;:e follow\ •ng~&amp;idlineSouth16rodsto
t
the SoulhwBBt corner of tfle
: placa of beginrung, contam , mg 1lt4 acres more or lass
"
Also, the following real
4 estate Bemg m Section No.
\ 26. Town 6. Range 14 and

9

~ ::~~:~~f a:~t:!~edu~~1eot

.....,_~

Notice

279. Page 689 , Meigs

County Deed Records. Parcel No 5
Parcel 3 .
Also. the foilowmg real
estate Situate m Fraction 32.
sa1d Rutland Township,
County of Me•gt and State
of Oh1o, to-wit
Beg1nn1ng at the Southwest corner of Fract1on 32.
thence North along the West
line of Fract1on 32, etghty
rods, thence east 10 rods,
thence South 80 rods to the
South hne of Fracteon 32.
thence west 10 rods to the
place of beginnmg, contammg 6 acres more or less
Reference Doed· Volume

Page 689 , Meogs

County Deed Records, Parcel No 6
Parcel 4 •
Also, the following descnbed real estate situate in
Fract1on 33 , m sa•d Rutland
Township, Metgs County
and State of Ohto to-wit
Begmnmg at the Southeast corner of Fract1on 33.
thence North 80 rods,
thence WEst 22"h rods.
thence south 80 rods,
thence East 22Vz rods to the
place of begmnmg. conta•nmg 1 1 25 acres. more or
less
Reference Deed Volume

Page 689, Meogs

279 , Page 689, Meig1

Compeny't Purchase.
thence E11t 23 rods and 16
hnka to the center of the

o 279, Pogo 6B9 , Meogo

OPENING MAY 23, 1988

: links South from the Northeast corner of Fraction 32
~ Town 8. Range 14 of the
; Ohio Company's Purch•e.
• on top of the hiH. thence

Beginning 34 rodland 19

, South 60 degraoo Wool 62

rods to a etone. lhenceeouth

10 degraoo Well 17 rode lo

a _privata roact. thence South

, 23'11 degraoo Wool along u,,

, center of Utd roed 14 r~;

•-lhenoe Iouth 4 rodl aM 19

••d road, 1henca
E"fl 62 rodo, thence North

linkl elong

11-·-__ _

County Deed Records. Par-

Public No1ice

dollars (860 ,000 001 Said

real estate 11 to be sold for
not leu than two th~rds
{2/ 3) of the aforesa•d appraised value Cash 1n hand
on the date of sale
Sa1d sale 1s subJect to
approval by the Common
ftleas Court, Me1gs County,
OhiO
Howard E Frank,
Shenff of
Me1gs Countv. Oh10

APPROVED

Fred W Crown Attorney
for the Farmers Bank
and Sav1ngs Company
Pomeroy, Oh1o
(51 17. 24. 31 3tc

Parcel 8 .
The followmg descr•bed
real estate sttuale 1n the
Townshtp of Rutland ,
County of Me•gs and State
of Oh1o and bounded and
descrtbed as follows
Begtnnmg m the center of
the road at the Southeast
corner of Allen Braley's land
1n fract•on No
32. and
SecttonNo 26 , Range14of
the Oh•o Company s Purchua, thence North 10
degrees West 40 rods.
thence North 19'12 degrees
East 28 rods and 18 hnks.
thence north 27% degrees
east 12 rods thence north
531fz degrees EAst 12 rods.
thence north 18 rods and 15
hnks, thence west 110 rods,
thence south 27 degrees
!!est 17 rods . then~ south
12 degrees east 9 rods,
thence east 75 rods to the
place of beglnn•ng, containIng 50 acres
The above •s the same
premtses conveyed from
Allen E. Braley and Wife to
W R Jordan and w1fe by

deed dalod May 9, 1905and
recorded m Vol 93 at pages
430 and 431 of the records
of deeds of Meigs County.
Ohto.
Reference Deed Volume

279, Page 689, Meogs

County Deed Records. Par
eel No 12
Parcel 9
The followmg descnbed
real estate 1n the Township
of Rutland, County of Me1gs
and State of Oh1o. to·wlt
Begmn1ng at the northwest corner of the northeast
quaner of Sect1on NO 26,
Town 6 and Range 14 of the
Oh1o Company's Purchase
running thence east 4 cha1ns
and 69% hnks to w1thm 20
feet of a stone the southwest
corner of a 70 acre lot
formerly owned by Amos
Bradley, thence outh 37
dogrees east 4 chams and 26
hnks. thence south 12 de
grees east 2 chams and 24
ltnks to a post, thence West
7 chams and 39 hnks to
apost, thence north 23 rods
to the place of beg1nntng,
contaimng 3% acres, more
or less, m Rutland Town
shtp, Me1gs County, Oh1o
Reference Deed Volume

279. Page 689, Meogs

County Deed Records. Par
eel No 16
Parcal10
The followmg descnbed
real estate Situated 1n the
Township of Rutland,
County of Me1gs and State
of Oh1o and 1ft Fract1on 32,
Section 27, Town 6, Range
14 of the Oh1o Company' 1
Purchase. and begmmng at
the northeast corner of a lot
of 36 acres deeded by Jobes
Hubbell to Charles logan,
thence watt 4§ rods and 7
hnks, thence south 54 rods
and 11 hnks to • stake.
thence south 49 3/t degrees
west 14 rods and 1911nks to
e stake, thence south 19%
degreea watt 6 rods and 2%
llnlcs to a stake, where a
hickory tree 8 Inches 1n
diame1er bears south 23%
degrees eas1 20 links ;
thence ea1t 68 rodtend 4 Yt
hnkl. thence north 68 rods
and 6 links 1o the place of
beginning, contaimng 20
acres, mora or le11
Reference Deed Volume

279. Page 6B9, Meigo

County Deed Records, Parcel No.1 B. andVolume298,

Pogo 193, Meogo County

Deed Records
SubJect to an 011 and
leaae recorded m Volume

u•s

6. range 14 of tho Ohio 72, pege 297 of lhe Leaaa

Recorda of Meigs County,
Oheo and all other . . .
r~ghts of ways. and
rood. then.. South 13 rode menta.
other leesn. 1f any, of
and 16 hnka; 1hence West 23 record
rods and 18 links, thence
Said reel etlate 11 com·
North 13 rods and 15 links
monly known u betng
to the place of beginning.
18 3 20 acres, mora or less,
contemlng 2 acrea. more or formerly owned by Remona
Ills.
Key Compton Se1d real
Also, enother peace of lend aetate ll located 1n 1he
ad)olr!lng tho obovo troot Northeut Quarter of Secbeginning 31 rode South. 71 tion 28. and Fractions 32
roda and 22 links west of the and 33. Town Number 8,
Northeast corner of Section Aange Number 14, In RuNo 21. Town 8 and R""ll" tland Town•hip , Melga

LEGAL NOTICE
The Pubhc Ut1ht1e1 Comm•sston of Ohto has sche·
duled several local publtc
haanngs '" 1ts Case No 87·

FOR
SALE
3 Styles
and
Various S11es

WOODEN BUILDINGS
Built On Your Lot
ON SALE NOW AT
SEARS IN MIDDLIPORT

61

78

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

&lt;.:J

Mumapal Courtroom, Se·
cond Floor, City Hall, 8 East
Washmgton Street, Athens.

Ohio;
WELLSTON - Thursday,

rHI estate lays north end

center of the road, thence
north 5 dagr"' w•t 8 rodl

State Route

to

21

rodo and 10 llnkl 10 the aut of Leading Crook. Ohio
124 runs

through the oouthern por-

and 11 llnko along oold rood

tion of r•l •tete tn Section

a •take, thence w•t

about 23 rodl to o point
north of the beginning,
thence south 8 rods and 9

'

Town1hip Rood 1Bt

Nna through a portton of
real alate In Sectktn 26 and
1n Frect1on1 32 end 33 The

CUSTOM BUILT

"At leasonobte Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tfn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAll ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Hallway Benveen Rt 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

8 7 Fmancing On
Yardman

Serme On All Makes
We Honor M(/Dosc/Yo50
4- t8· BB tfn

992-6282

-

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1-28- 88-tfn

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Wori&lt;
•Win Do Hauling W1th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business-

WAN! 10 IUY WRECKED OR
JUNI CARS OR IRUCIS

--FREE ESTUWAT!l--

614-742-2617
lofw- 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or loan Mtssaqt

2-1D-'88· tfn

or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Oh10

TA YLORED TANS
That Fit Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

20 SESSIONS

OWNED &amp; OPIIIATID IV

ANGIE TAYLOR
811 VIne St., RoCine
5 12 '88 I mo
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Awnua. Norwalk. Oh10

NEW PHILADELPHIA MondBY. June 6, 19B8 at

Now HomH Built

"free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Ras. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAllS

3-1111n

m. at Pyle Center. Peyton
Rooms A and B. Wilmtngton
College. Ludov1c Street. Wd
mmgton. OhiO,

GEORGETOWN - Thursday, June 9, 19BB al6 30 p
m at the Georgetown F~re
Department, Mount Orab
P1ke, Georgetown, Oh1o,
MEDINA- Thursday, June
9, 1988 at 830 pm 81 the
ounol Rotunda.
Med~na
Mumapal Buildeng. 132 North
Elmwood Avenue. Mechna.

Oho&gt;,

ENGLEWOOD - Frodey.
June 10, 1988 at 1 00 p m
at the Council Chambers.
Government Center, 333
West Nat1onal Road. Englewood, Ohio,

COLUMBUS - Monday,
June 13. 1988 at 1 30 p m
at lhe OH•cet of the Publie Utdtt• Comm•aston of
Ohio, Eleventh Floor, Borden
Budd•ng, 180 East Broad
Street Columbus. Oh•o.

GREEN -

Thuraday, June 16 1988 at
6 30 p m at lhe Alumm
Room, Third Floor, Un•verstty Un1on, Bowhng Green
State Umverstty, Bowling
Green, Ohio
The amount
of
lhe
revenue increase requested
by
the
applicant
11

f63.264 ,000 The major is-

sues m the case are:
(a) the determination of
the company ' s workmg cap·
ltal allowance.
(b) the eppropnate allo wance for the company's
labor expense.
(c) the detarmmatJon of an
appropriate rate of return,
(d) to what e~ttent, if any,
should the company• s rete
bands be con1ohd1ted.
(e) whether ratn •hould

$3 5

u~P;~ 949-2414

Room A. 1BO Molen

166 East Hogh Stroel. New
Ph~alelphi&amp; Ohoo.
WILMINGTON - Thurs
day. June 9, 19B8 at 1 30 p

LOST

Aeg11tered

Appaloosa

mMe grev with wh1te tllps &amp;

black spat1 Route 588 Rwword
offered C•il 614-446 2222

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Peerson AuctiOneeJ h·
censed Oh1o and We~t V1rgtn1a
Estate anttque f•m hqu1da·
tion •• .,. 304-n3-5785

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNER, GREG 8 ROUSH
&lt;'h
GENERAl

••· '

CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

•

COMMERCIAl

• CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp; SAT l-IS

,E)(TENSIVE REMODELING
•VINV l SIDING &amp; ROOF ING

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt 12 4, Pomeroy Oh10

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

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

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repa'ir and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out rad1ators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc
\
\

MANTIS
PreCISIOn

\ I

Gardemng
System

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT
NEW AND USED
PARTS
742-2315
5-2- 1 mo

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES
Heme Health
Aaency

Care

We Provide Care For The
Elderly In Their Home

NURSES AIDES.
ORDERLIES. LPN s
Hourly or L1ve-ln
Arrangements

BONDED - INSURED
CovtWed Wrth Workman's
Compensation

PH. 614-992-21157
4-20-'8.11 1 mo

We pay cash for late model clean
used c.s

J•m Mink ChiN Oidl lnc.
81!1 Gene Johnson
8 14-448 3872
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and neNer u•d eMs Smith
Butck-Ponhac, 191 1 Eastltt'n
Ave GalhpDIIs Call 614-44&amp;2282
Complete houMholds of furl'll·
ture &amp; antique• Also wood &amp;
coal heaters Swa•n s Furnttu.e
&amp; Auct1on
Th~rd &amp; OUve.
814 448-3159
Want to buv Used furnuure and

anttqu&amp;l W1il buy ent~re houae-

hold furniShing Marhn Wed&amp;mfliyBI' 614-245-5 152

Junk cars whh or ~rthout
mot«s &lt;All Lanv Uvetv-814-

388 9303

furni"ture and appliancet
by the p1ece or by the lot Fan
pl'lc:et Call614-44&amp; 3168
Buy~ng

Uonel Trains-en gmes cars &amp;
acceuones Call 614 446

2627 after S PM

u.ad l wheel b1ke Cell
814-448·3858
40 fl mobile ho,.. In good
eondrtion Ci11814-4"6 871153

Tobacco plan1s needed
614-367-7760

------.;....---tl

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Tiller /C ultt11ator

8u'flng datly gold sliver coins
rings jewelry ••ling ware old
coms. l•ge currency Top pnc• Ed But"kert Barber Shop
2nd Ave Middleport 01'1 614992 3478

Emplovment

•Easy to Operate

11

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS
S16, 040

S59 230/ yr

Now

htring

Your •r• 805-687
8000, IJtt R 10189 far current
Fed•el hat

EARN as much as S600 00

Weektv nsembtylng Proc*Jets

1n your home Send self •cf.
dre11ed, stsmped envelope 1o

Homecraft1

P0

Box 9006,

Huntington W Va 25704

Tour Gu1des·MIIIe &amp; female Our
top people earn $800..81200
per week. Aeaun1 working
eondittons A really fun place to
work. Fnendly neat &amp; depll'ldable are the requirements Call
1-614-286-8421 Ilk for Sue
PARTnME Sl5000
FULl. TIME · $75 000

13 yr old Jewelry Mfg Co
seeks en•gebc 1811 stlrtet to
represent accu with local reta1l
ers No d... ct ~ales Call 713-

&amp;83-9393

Manag•illl poSitiOn open for
Gelhpolts •ree Reantent1al cou-

ple needed Pref• older couple
All houSing &amp; expense• proVIded FOJ appointment cafl .tter

5

PM 814-BO&amp;-n48

NOW HIRING
Your area
$13 550 tD $59 480 IMME·

Doolor
E••IP••nf

flr111
Putt &amp; 111'' m

5 2 1 mo

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

ear &amp; able to meet the publ1c
Must apply 1n parson TopMges
paid Carpet land of Galhpohs
181 Tlmd Ave No e"penence
needed-Will train

614-662·3121
Farm £qu1pment

Announccmcnls

324 E MDin St
Pom•oy
lel11nd C1tr Holl

sell1ngretall IIOOJCO\Mnng Mu1t
hiVe drivers llce11sa a reliable

FEDERAL STATE AND CrYIL

742-2456
, RUTLAND, OHIO

ANN'S

Serv1ces

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aulhomod John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

•Makes Garden &amp; Yard
Care a Snap'

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

Call

Aggressive Salesparscm needed

•Ughtwe•ght

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

PARTS

t / 22118/ tfn

992-2196

HOUSING &amp; APT PROJECTS
';I\(,.. Jlj(,IJ

v.w.

We Service All Makos

PAT HILL FORD

•METAL BUILDINGS

'1'12·7611 or
'1'12-7513

985-3561

6-17-tft

FOR MORE INFORMATION

DIISIY ST, SJUCUII

Wanted To Buy

WANTED

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must lo lopa~rablo"

I

9

For any of thtst serviCts coli

DEAD OR ALIVE

Hullbn County Adminmrauon

6 30 p m at Counal Ch.nbers. Seamd Floor. New Philadelphia Mun1apal Buildtng.

Lost and, Found

Cash, pe1d for color .,hd state
late model pDr11bie TVS for
!)llrls CAll 614-446 4325

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

PORTSMOUTH - Thursday,June2 , 19B8a)6 30p

NORWALK - Thursday,
June 2. 1988 at 6 30 p m at

6

Day or Night

CARTER'S
PlUMBING
&amp; HEATING

L1censed Clinical Audiologist

4

Giveaway

Kittens

2 black 2 gray. 2
orange 1 t1ger Cell 614·245·

5818

Mon thru Fn or by
Appointment

2 dog~ less than one vear ofd 1
mDattv black 1 tan Fnendly
Coli oft" 7 PM, 814-388·8895

Call (614) 992-7204
Wlool•ol• &amp; llotcol
5- t9- 88-1 mo

3 grey kitltnl 5 wks old Litter
trained Cell 614-446 9369

Beautiful Puppy fluffy blactc
andwhne 8wkl otd 304-15758133

SERVICE JOBS

OIATE open1ngs

Call 1 -

1315)733 8062 . . . . . 2758

Position Open Registered
Nur11111 Contract part-time wrth
the Prenatal Chmc Applications
w1ll be taken through Fndav,

May 27, 1988 For further

mformation cell the Gelha
County Health Oep•rtmont at
614-446-4612 ext 292 Equal
Opportunity Emplovet
E 111cuttve Secretary PDshiOnEKP8fll!lf1C8 Requtred The pOll·
t1on ~ulres word proeessor
computer general Dffice m•
ehmsrv e"perl.,ce ShDrthend
not n!lquwed b.lt cons1dered a
plus Legal lnturance. Finanaal
exper1enee cons1dered a plus
Vacat1ora lie* pay , msuranoe
etc Available WDrk week
Mondev-Fnday No weekend or
even1ngt Salary negotiable
~as lid

on quallfiCIIttOnB Wrrtten

ruume only &amp; must be recer.ted
b¥ 6 27-88 Ref•ences S. salary
r~Uirements requwed Itt per·
sonal mlervlll'tN· MIV mclude
wrth rusume Reply to Box Cia
151 c / oGalhpolis Detly Tr.bune 825 Thtrd Aw Gallipolis
OhiO 45631

Public Notice
be deSigned to encourage
customers to mtgrate to tha
company's Usage SensitiVe
SaN Ice,
(f) whether the company ' s
proposed residential lifeline
servece should be approved,
(g) the quality of sarv1ce
baing provided by the com·
pany to its customers.

(6) 17. 24. 2tc

Real Estate General

'(al'li Sales
~·'t.'li
lllLPIHG YOU RECOVIII
TOUR IHVDIMDII

SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY
Racone, Ohio 4677t
Phone 94!1-2:!02

PLUMBING &amp;. HEAONG
161 JIOl'th Sotond
MiMitiOff, Ohio 45760

14 of the Ohio Compony'• County, Ohio, and all of oald

Purchase. t~ce eut 23

BISSELL
BUILDERS

S-2• ' II·\ mo.

L1stemng Dev1ces
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~on1io•
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

~

June2,1988at1 30p mat
the Council Chambers, Se·
cond Floor, Wellston City
Bu•ldang, 203 East Broad·
way, Wellston, Oh10

m at Counc•l Chambers
Munic1pal
Second floor.
Budding, 728 2nd Street,
Portsmouth. Oh1o,

lot'S ELECTRONKS
446 -7390

IJ / ZI II ttc

Wednesijay,

ATHENS - Wednesday,
June 1, 1988at6 30p mat

coiDnt
avwks Call
old614-992
kitten• 7412
V•noU.
ertingt- or 614-985-3329 dey1

YH5.

CAlL AMY CARTER
or

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-698-7157

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
IX

Council Chambers. Second
Floor. C1ty Hall. 233 West
Center
Street. Marton.
OhiO,

BOWLING

TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and Sell Used
Cars
AlBANY AREA

10-8-tlc

MARION- Tuesday, May
31. 19B8al6 30p m atthe

June1,1988at6 30p mat
the
Aud1tonum of
the
Mercer County Courthouse.
Mam and Market Streets.
Cehna, Oh1o.

tD taty

Doaltr For

of the Appltcat•on of GTE
North
Incorporated for
Authortty to AdJust Its Rates
and Charges and to Change
Its TartHs, for the purpose of
provtdmg an opportunity to
mterosted members of the
pubhc to testify 1n the pro
ceed1ng Tha local hearings
will be held at the followtng
times and places

Bu~ding.

&amp; SUtltT GYtr

Giveaway

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1307-TP-AIR, In the Malter

CELINA -

Lit 111 Cot!_qft thosa oltl Movtt~

Middleport. Oh.
992-88t

·-·--.:::t-

Consolidated Aad Corporalion also has a track which
runs acron the soulhern
portion of real estate located
m Sect1on 26
Sa1d r eal estate was ap
pratsttd at SIXty thousand

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES lo
VHS TAPE

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

,
It_.........,._,
-~=
= ""\~ ·--

feet to the place ot begin Ring, contammg 111.. acres,
more or less
Also. the follow1ng p•RCe
of land 10 Section No 26 ,
Town 6, Range 14 of the
Ohto Company's Purchase.
begmmng on the East hne of
Zelpha Stansbury's 44 rods
and 6 hnks NOrth of the
Southeast corner of J 0
Mtller lot. thence north 97112
degrees aast 27 rods and
12%: hnks, thence west 26
rods and 16% hnks. thence
north 25 rods and 12 hnks to
the place of begmmng, conta1n1ng 3 and 9/ 1Oths acres
And be1ng the tame property
conveyed by C A McGhee
to Charles McGhee by deed
dated Jan 11 , 1930, and
recorded In Book 126, at
Page 368 Deed Racords of
Meigs County, Oh1o
Reference Deed Volume

cel No. 1t

County Deed Records, Par·
eel No 8
Parcel 6
The followmg descnbed
real estate sttuatad m Rutland Township Matgs
County and State of Ohio
and being tn Section No 26,
Town &amp;. Renga 14 of the
Oh•o Company's Purchase.
to-wit Begmmng 1n the
center of Inter County H1gh
way No 124 at the Southeast corner of a 3 88 acre
tract formerly owned by J
0 M•ller. thence north 83
degreet and 30 mmutes east
along the center of sa1d road
344 feet to a pomt opposite
the center of a pnvate road.
thence North 15V• degren
West along the canter of said
pr~vate road 299 feet.
thence North 191/a degr"'
West along the canter oha1d
road 297 feet, thence North
11 degrees West along the
center of sa1d road 54 feet,
thence Nonh 1 degree Weat
along the center of S81d road
3651/z feet, thence South
86 1A degrees Wut 311 feet,
thence South 9% degrees
East 1018 feet to the place
of beg1nn1ng. contatntng
7 63 acres, more or l•s
Reference Daact._ Volume

.........

Public Notice

279 , Page 689 , Meigs

County Deed Records , Par·
eel No 7
Parcel 5
Also the following real
estate m Sect1on 26. sa•d
Rulland townshtp, Me1gs
County , State of Ohto,
tow1t
Begmn1ng at the
Northwest cdrner of a 3 25
acre tract owned by C A
McGhee. thence South
about 130 rods to Leadmg
Creek, thence In a Westerly
d1ract1on along the creek
about 60 rods, thence North
46 degraas West about 30
rods, thence North 66 de
graes West about 30 rods
thence North 10 degraes
East about 17 rods, thence
North 16 degrees West
about 10 rods. thence North
58 degrees west about 18
rods to pubhc road. thence in
an easterly dtrect•on along
satd road about 20 rods and
to M P1erce' s southeast
corner, thence north along
P•erce's Ealit line 43 rods.
thence east to the place of
begmmng containing 66 20
acres, more or tess
Except approximately 17
acres ty1ng south of State
Routa 124, descnbed as
Parcel No 2 1n a deed
recorded •n Volume 294,
Page 407, Me1gs County
Deed Records
Reference Deed Volume

279

··----·
: :::-:!:."t::."'

Notice

109 rods and 19 hnks to the
place of beginmng contam·
mg 31 Y2 acres. more or less
Reference Deed Volume

279

:::::::..."""..:=-

1' - -~

U-•'U--1-

Reference Deed Volume

B8 / 100tho acroo

. --.... _,__
··-. __ .....
~

"', _,
.,....,_
701-·-·

M7_,
..... ..

County Deed Records, Parcel No 10
Parcel 7 .
The followmg real estate
11tuated m
Meigs. •n the
and in the T~:~n';;,~dip
Rutland and bl
detcribed • followa
Begmmng 31 roda South
and 76 rods and 22 links
West of the Northeast
cornar of Section 26. Town

• County Deed Recorda. Par: eel No 4 except 3Yz acres
•
Parcel 2
r..
The followtng real estate
~ snuated •n the County of
Me1gs. in the State of OhiO
• and in lha Township of
, Rutland, and bounded and
described 11 follows

HOUIS: MON.·SAT. BY APPOINTMENT
CALL 992·6494
NEW PATIENTS WElCOME

1l-....__,,

··- · - T'l &amp;e1111 ....
11- f f - To Do

Miller and the eaat hne of
Zllpha Stansbury. thence
north 69 rods and 6 l1nks.
thence north 79 Vz degrees
1
East B rods and 13lh l1nkl.
: thence South 12 degrees
\ east 61 rods and 20 hnka to
~ the center of the road.
thence west 21 and 9/ 16
rods to the place of begm nmg Save and except a lot
of 13.4 acres owned by J 0
, Miller, conta1nlna 3
1
11

ANNOUNCES THE RELOCATION OF
HIS 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT
DENTAL PRACTICE TO
441 GEN. HAITINGER PARKWAY
ACROSS FROM VAHHAN'S CARDINAL STORE

,._,.,_

:::::::!':.".:r'

:~-

~ --·-r

If -&amp;...-'1-

279, Page 689, Meogs

Japan may scrap plan
to impose surcharge

LARRY D. KENNEDY D.D.S.

ALL DEVON 20°/o OFF
S5°0 BARGAIN lACK

992-2156

__._,.,.

Aulhonzed Semce
&amp; Parts
Bn'fs &amp; Stratton
ecumseh
Weed Eater
Homeilte
Jacobsen .

n-"-•-·
=--·-.
-- -·...-. ·•

H1-c;_,

U I ,-IIioO-

---

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

..... _

·~__.....,-

::·~-:r.

""'' ...........

j

,.1'1 _-_ ...... .

,.

~;:" - • l H o "'

_ '""'"''

: :=;=:._

,_
-_--T-_

-...

· - - . . . . . . . , , . , ..... .. I I:M&lt;O

"'.........,_

.Islamic organization urges nations to negotiate
BY RIAD KAJ

TO PlAU AN &amp;0 Ull 991 1156
MONDIT thry flto.U I AM. to S ~ M.
I l lit Unt1l NOON SAIUIDA'f
CLOSID 5Uff0lf

By WILLIAM CESPEDES
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (UP!)
- All 28 passengers and crew
survived the fiery crash of a
Costa Rican airliner that rose 20
feet Into the air, then plowed Into
a coffee field during takeoff from
the San Jose airport. Only two
people were injured.
"We began the takeoff normally, then the plane suddenly
crashed, the seats br.oke lose and
we saw flames and smoke," said
Dora Greencall, a passenger
from Miami and one of eight
Americans aboard the flight
Monday.
Flight 628 of the Costa Rican
airlines, LACSA, climbed about
20 feet, then crashed In the coffee
field about 650 feet from the end
of the runway at the Juan
Santamaria International Alr
port,l2 miles north of the capital.
The Boeing 727, c arrylng 20
passengers and a crew of eight,
was taking off on a flight to
Miami via Managua, Nicaragua.
Civil Aviation Director Carlos
Viquez said Investigators today
were looking for the cause of the
crash

Business
Services
==~;:;;==:;ii~========iT.:::=:::;:;:;:::::;:::;;:=:;16

4

hours after the hijacker seized.
the plane on a domest~c flight ·
from Medellin
•

28 passengers sunive Costa Rican jet crash

Ortega offers unilateral truce before expiration
By DAVID KffiBY

doing," the pilot said.
The plane landed In Cartagena
at about 6:50 p m., nearly 12

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DeWITI, BROKER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERIES CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY, SALES AGENT
IL------../.~~~~-------.1

SALES &amp; SERVICE
W• C•rrv Fllhing Suppltel

Pay Your Phone
and Coble Bills Here
IUSI..SS 'PIIUNr
(6141 H2-6550
llllODICE 1'110111
(6t41 997: ~!!.,4

- · Gallipolis -&amp; Vicinity
Something fDrEveryonel Rain«
Shin• Big tan building behind
lesl nil• on J.ti 1A mHe down
Uncotn ptk•Rt 141 at Cent•
nary. TDolt turnku,., lvys babv
items. 1Pif'd1e bik• Memorial
D•v flo\Wrs Much. Much,
Morelli Mon , 23 thru 811 , 28

---- ·'Pomeroy -Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

---.. .,t.. PT&amp;iisant
&amp; Vicinity
Household goods cloth1ng,
ball¥ clothes Tues-Wed 2 008 00 P~ Rt 87 1'/z mil• from
At 2

Llrgeyardul., Wedonly 10 DO
till 7. 2 fuel oil stows plus twa
275 gill tanks wflh each one,
150 00 Plf •• Bicycle 1 yr Did
I 50 00 Typawrittr, •dding
chine. clothes, Horn. 1ntarior,
glass'Nire YM'iaha 100Encllr~~
A·1 cond S400 00 Utllltv nil•
1200 00 V hul Fury 14ft ., 4'1t
row boat with treil• end Oint

m•

1300 00 1t710owokoeChlol

Hugeg~~:age•l• 25.28,27 CD
Ad 21 Ch..., llgn .. Unens.
...,.... toys. Mr COffM, new
ml••· clothH. ...,_ dtlhn.
utAttyctrt•ndot.,..miM: Items.

4 whael driVe S1 400 00 wtth

n.w tires co...:h 121 DO good
Cross RR tricks frorn •ala
School follow sign• 304-6758852 "' 675-•147

!

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

Free

S40 or more Country

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

45

Wic*;er. HMfe • party or take

ar den . Country decorator ,
baskets, &amp; btaas. New to this

part-time AN'S and LPN'S . For

1975 Honda 38(11'. I.Liw miles.
uoo. 114-986-4418.

SWIMMING POOLS - 1988
OROER NOW · PAY LATER

1982 Honda Night Hawh 860.
for safe or .,.de. $800, 014992-0337.

Hu ge 31 ' owl pool wrth de~.
fence &amp; filter. ln1U1IIation &amp;
financing avallatWe. 1-800-3460946.

1961 Her lev OavidsonPtnhead.
03600. 080 . CAll 614-9492293evenin9•-

Big 2 Bedroom Ruttic home
buitt on your tile. 11 3,995&amp; up.
Colt 1-614-888-7311 .

'83 Honda 650. water cooled.
ahaft drive. 5.400 miles. like
new except tires. f1,250 .00.
Evenings 304-576-2349.

Video. Apply In parson. Monday-

Frl dev .

Spadou1 mobile home lott for
runt. Family Pride MoblleHoma
Perk. Gallipolis Ferrv, W. Va.
304.675-3073.

lndlv.idual to perform cleaning
s ervice~ at Vinton, Oh io Post

Office. Contaet Postmaster614-388-9990.
Babvsitter in mv home in Rio
Grande. Start June 6th. Call
between 4-8 PM or IMVe name
&amp; numbe,.--614-245-5030.

Trailer spaces tor rent Locust
Road, Routa On e. 304-8751076.

Maintenance person lor apart ·
ment oompl811 to liv&amp; in. ExpeMenoa
r-.u ired. Referen ces.
CAll 304-676-5104.

47 Wanted to Rent

Hair Styli1ts . Across The Street
1tyllng &amp;Ilion is aeeklng one
additionol ot ylitt who ;.looking
for more than just enolher job.
C.H Terri et 614-446-9610 for
details.
Government Jobl. S16,040 •
$59.230 yr. Now hiring. Your
•e• 805-687-8000 ext. R9806 for curren1 Federal lilt.
Fullorpart-timeRNSupervitor.
7 -3:30 thifl. LPN 3-11 :30 and
11 -7:30 shift. 75 bed ICF-SNF
longt•mcarefaeilitylookingfor
nu ..... to join our dedicateda•ff
who are committed to prol(iding
qUIIrtv c•e. Ple•11 call Patty
Conrad. O .O .N . tor interview.
New ~M~ge scale. excellant benefit pttekage. Arcadia Hurting
Center, Box A Main St .. Coolville, Ohio. 1-814-667-3158.
Government Jobe t18 .037. to
t&amp;9,405. Immediate Openings I
Your area. · Call (refundeble)
1· 518-459-3811 EKt, F1822
for application.
Federal. State and Civ il Set&gt;vice
Jobs . How hiring. Your area.
$13, 550 to e&amp;9,480. lmme-

"I'm Mrs. Dillahunt from
down the Street ... my hus. b an d t e 11S me YOU ' re an
actress!"
~;:;::::;;::==;:::;;:::;=:r";;;::~~~~~~~~

I

31

Homes for Sale

- - - - - - -- -Unfinished houte with 'h b••

ment on one aa-e-more or
les• 'Nilh frun· tro... CloiO to
'f.ycoon lake. * 10,000 0 , ••• 1
._.
oHer. Mu 1t
Cali 014-4462107-Diyl. 246·5800.Even.

•II.

2 BR ., AC. Completety 18m adoled. Colt 614-4441-200~ for
more information.
~

bedroom, 2 bathl, 2 car
garage. level lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool. satellte. clo:se
to Meigs High. Call 014-9923264..
3 bfldroomand bath. All elfiCtric.
Ranch horne. 1 acre with 14~~:16
outbuilding in Syracu1fl. 614992-5293oftor 4 :30.

openings. Call1 -315-7338082 e~~:t . F 27&amp;8.

108 State St .. Pomerov. 2 or 3
bedrooms, c•pettd; No ,...on able offer refused . PhoM 614992-3725.

J..dy to live In and c•e for an
eldertv woman in Svracose.
Ohio. Light houll8heaplng_Must
hwe good reference. S .. arv is
negotiM»&gt;e. Call colleet 614388-8740.

Good loca1ion. Rt. 2 Apple
Gfo\18, must •• to appreciate,
$38.500.00, Call 304-5762468.

d~ate

AVON - AU areae . Call Marltyn
we,.,er 304-882-2645.
LPN. PfeaAnt Valley Nursing
Care Center seetcing licen!Md
LPN1 for .. rt dme emplovment.
mtdi~l and dental insu111nce
awallable. If lntereated call Katt,.,
Thornton, Director of Nunll'lg.
(304)078-5236. EOE·AAE .
AVON all areas; Shirlev Spe•s.
304-875-1 429.
Advance your career by accepting the rewarclng position of
Store Manager with HARDMAN'S HOME CENTERS. Tho
ri~ht candidate will have a
m1nimum af four.,.., of retail
store man~gement eJtperlence
end or a degree in Bulin ell
Admlniuratlon, Hardwarebuilding suppli• prociJct knowl·
edge desirable. PrO)Ien t81derahip stdllt euential. excen.,t
benefit I , if you are loohlng fore
challenging pperi1111oe with a
growth compeny. apptr todl\l' by
tending vour returne to: C. Stan
Hardmen, Prnldent, Hlrdm.n
Home Centert, Box 989.
Spencer. W Va. 26278.
THE PT. PLT. REGISTER
h• route openinga in most
•eas If vou are 11 yn old or
olderand~t toe•nvour own
money or are retired .. dwant 10
...n PtM money M'ld vet JOme
ec ... dta too, call Scott at the
Point Pleasant Regl!t• . 304075-1333
Situations
Wanted

12

3 bedroom hou• on 4.6 acres in
country with pond. A11umable
loon. ciii304-77:J.6401 .
Small 2 bedroom houiiJ with
ba .. m,ent , completly remo·
deled, city, 817,500.00. 304675-8331 .
Han nan Otltrict baa~ttfu I 3
bedroom brick rlncher on 26
acrea Move~ togentlerolllnglaiut.
Separate 4 car g•age. cell•
other out buildings. pl.-rty we ...,_ will sell all or pan, 304- 74:l4043.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
2 mobile homes-8 acr• fapprox.). Set· l4). ready to live in. 3
miles wett of Centerville.
814,000. Call 614-444-7316,
Col.

1980 Baron Prince mobile
home. 3Bedrm .. 1V:bltht.new
lnter-Therm heat pump_12'x15'
out building and 8'x20' deck.
Virginia L SmH:h, R.E.. &amp;14388-8826, 260-82~1 . 4460808.
1971 12.&amp;0 complotoly hnnilhed lr'llltr lor .. le. Call
814-440-9423.
1979 24xl52 double wide. Good
cond . .,3,600. Coli 014-268-

9393.

1970 SkyNne Mobile Horne.
12x80 3 bedroom, air, porch,
und•pinning, good condition:
Mu1t be moved. 514·949·
3090.

Will batJistt in mv home for
daytime· working parents.
Monday - Fr.iday . fJ1 4 -992 2245.

Small, 2 bedroo,...., porch. air
cond. g• furneca. quick •le.
11 , 900.00. evening~ 30 ... 6762349.

Insurance

1973 Champion, 14x70. total
electric. underf*1nlng .. d hook
up, 304-578-2383.

13

Call u1 for your mobile horne
insurance: Miller Insurance,
304-882 -2145. Al1o: auto.
home. life. health.
18 Wanted to

Do

1970 vvtnd1or, 1 2xll5 wrth
10x12 Md on, woodburner.
wether and d,.,..,, aircond. must
be m0'.18d. 304-895-3602.
33

Farms for Sale

1 35 aa-e1 · Approx. 20 acrn
bottom land. thi1 yew19.000ib.
Would like to babv sH: in mv tobacco
b•e. Large bwn a.
home. Call 614-3fJ7-7847.
outbuHding. Mtf hook· up &amp; nice
Babnittlng: In mv home. Call homesite. Calll14-281-1774.
61 ... 44&amp;-2155.
11 acre farm , tobaccoltliotmen1 .
Wiler, trail• hook-up. 211.1
Private Outv Nurting in home or Citv
mi.Crab
Ck . Rd .. W. Va.
ho1pM:al. Certified &amp; nrferences. • 1 5. 000. Colt
614-379-2221 .
Coli 614-1143-2718.
C.rpenter iooklng far extr1
work. · Re•onabla ratn. Call
.... 15 :30 514-949-2,451

35 Lots

Ulwn Mower Repairs
&amp;..w n Servioe
SmiU Garden• Plowed
304-075-1553.

A1hton. large building lots,
mobHe homes permitted. public
~Nattf, 1110 rNer lots. Clyde
Bowen. Jr. 304-576-23315.

Ftn ancial
21

Business
Opportunity

&amp;

Acreage

LOTS. one ecre. l~el wooded.
city w.lw. Jet"icho Road, owner
flnandng good terms, 304-372840! or 372-2578,
9 acu11 very privlte, good hou•
ait111, n. . oountr Wlter. 200
.,ell ott bleck top rottd, evenings
304-678-2349.

Beantful riftr leMa oneacn plus.
public water, Clyde Bowen, Jr.
304-078-23341.

1983 Cutt(ll'ft bultt bea~ty lhop
14~~:32 . Fully tqulpped.
E.,... cond. or will llltl equip.
......... Colt 304-175-3211 .

Han'*' District bearttltl 2 aQ'e
plus lou. re•onabty priced.
smell down f)ft'ment, iow inter·
no mu ... 304-743-40.t3.

bu..,..

31

Homes for Sale

Old hou• &amp; almon 3 aar•.
Au .. l weter, electric. 01•'*•
Town•hlp . Great loce1lon.
...ooo. Coli 814-317-7512.
3M .. • • kttch.n. t.rge LA,
1 ~ bllth. 1 acre l.,.d_ Alldng
•18,000. Colt 014-742-3108.

ent

Two room cot•g• furnio•-d,
,..,
utiliti• plid. 8 8.00 week.
single penon. call 304-8753100or 175-5509.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

904-787-3488, Ra.
Wanted to rent modern clean 3
bedroomhomeinPolntPiosant
area . Retired couple, ellC refwencet, !)hone 304-675-7486.

Merchandts e
51 Household Goods

2 BA . Nice &amp; clean in Eureka.
S200 .e mo, Oap . .equlred. No
..... Colt 614-246-6863.

and dryer. S210 month, plus
deposit and utillt .... 614-992·
7479.

SWAIN
AUCTIO.N &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipollt.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- *399.
Lkling room ,uites- $199-$599.
Bunk beds with bedding- *199.
Full ti:re mettrea &amp; foundation
1tarting - 899 . Recliners
ltllrting- 199.
USED- Beds. dr•Mrl, bedroom
suites, 8199-$ 299. De1ks.
wrtnDer washer, a oomplete line
of u•d furniture.
NEW- Wntern bo•,ta· *30.
Workbootl •18 &amp; 1:p. (St... &amp;
toft tM) . Call 814-441-3159.

Two bedroom furnished tteiler
Crab Creek Rd. 8200.00month:
dep01it nNIUired, no Pf.rtl, furnilh own utiiH:iee, 304-8751208.

County Appliance, tnc. Good
u•d appliances end TV ..,,,
()pen 8AM to 8PM. Mon thru
Set. 814-446-1899, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolit. OH.

Furrbhed or lllfumi1hed 2 BR .,
cable. WIIAr· tewage pel d. AC.
Fo1ter' s Mobile Home Parke1 4-446·1602.
2 BR in Addison aroa . Must
hwe rfllferenca . Oepotit re-

quired. Call 614-387-7868.

2 bedroom. fumi1hed. W81her

44

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryer~ . refrig. .tort.
ranges . Skagga Appliance•.
Upper Riv~tr Rd. betide Stone
Cr81t Motel. 814-446-7398.

Apartment
for Rant

2 BR . epu. 6 closeta, kitchenap pl. furnished. W•her- Cryer
hook-up, ww carpet newtv
pain•d. deck, RagiW'Icy, .
Apts, Call 304-676-7738 or
875-6104.

.,c.

New completelv furnlahed
apartment II mobile horN In
city. Adu ttl onty. P•klng. Call
614-448-03341.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 636 Jack1on
Pike from *183 a mo. Walk 10
•hop •n d movi... e 14-4482668. E.O.H.
Brooktide Apartrneott: Located
off BLJavlla Rd.- 1 BR . ..,aclout
_,art menta wfth modern kltch en
and wa1her-dryer hookups. c•
ble televi•lon avaHable. Call
614-448-2127.
Upstairs

unlumi1h~

apt. Carped, utllitiet paid. No children.
No pett. Clll 814-4411-1037.
Downtown-Modern 1 lA .. complete kttchtn, AC, carpet. Call
814-4441-0139.
11 Court St.-2 SR .. 2 bathl,
klllchen furnished. w / w c•pet.
No pets, Off street parking.
t325amo. plu•udlh•. Dip. II
ntf. Call 814·446-4921.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
So fa• and chairs priced from
•395 to 1995. Tabl• •so and
up to *125. Hlct.e-bedl t390
to 1696. Recliner11 t226 to
t376. Lamps 128 to t126.
Din....,. t109andupto 1496.
Wood ..ble w-1 chllira •211 to
t795. Desk 8100 up to 8376.
Hutch• t400 ..,d up. Bunk
bed• complete w-m.nres ...
8296anduptot396. Baby beds
t110. Mattresses or bo~~: epring•
fuN or twin •ea. firm 878. and
•ea. Ou•n aeta 122!, King
t350. 4 drawerch•t S89. Gun
cabinet~ 6 gun. BlbV mattreuM
S36 &amp; *45. Bed fnm• t20.
*30 &amp; King frame 860. Good
selection of be*oom tulte•.
me1'11 cabinets. hndbolrdt *30
and up to *15.
90 Oav• ume as cash with
approved a-edit. 3 Miles out
lt.lavlle Rd. Op• 9am to &amp;pm
Mon. thru Sat Ph. 814-4450322.
Vau., Furniture
New and u•d fltrnlture and
applicances . Call fJ 14-448 7!72. Hours 9-5 .
J &amp; S FURNITURE

1415 Ea1tern Ave.
• drMWr chest, *48. IS draw•
chat. *54. 96. &amp; pc. wooden
dinnette Mts. t189.96.
1

Garage apartrnent-3 rooma II
bath, w / d, air. Clean . No pets.
Adu Its only . Call 814-4451519.
Nice 1 lA . ipt. Renr S. refrlg.
Water
garbtge
paid. Depottt requiNd. Call
814-448-4345 olter 6 PM.

fumithed.

Furni•hed upaaiu 3 room apt.
Utilttiet paid. 94 Looon. U10
per month.
75 dep. Call
814-448-1340 or 448-3870.

*

Newly redecor11ted furm.hed, 2

Br. 4158 Second Aw. •225 Plf'
mo. Sec. o.p. II ref. Adutt1. No
Call 814-446-2235 or
448-2681 .

'*'·

1 BR . &amp; 2 BR . apt. Park front.
downtoYIIn Galllpoll1. Call 614448-0268 or 448-3819.

PICKENS
FURNITURE
Dinettea . bed•. bedding ,
drese~ra. chest, couch•, chair•.
l1mps, coffee-end tabl•. Enr;
dav Speclet1. Vz mile out Jerri·
cho. 304-175-1460.
Quality furniture and c•pet at
Low Prices. RnMdng avella~&gt;' e.
Moltoh.. Furnttu,. - Upper
Rhler Rd., &amp;14-44.7444.
17" Zenith biiCk &amp; whtte TV.
*25. Wood Uble a two chain,
040. 276Harl-lnboallo. no.
Tru-tone ttereo whh speaken,
•so. See at 258 So. Fourth
Aw .. Middleport.
Refrlg .• doulbeown nmge, ·n•h
compactor, &amp;' fteenr. Call &amp;14.!
448-19150. betlllilen 8 a 9 PM.

Furnlohod 1 8R .. UtNhleo polcl
No children. No pete. •190per ·
mo. •so dep. 1 mos. 1..... 158 Oueen ttze water bed. mirrored
helldboard, lbt drawera. semlStoto 9t. Coii614-440-3U7.
waveleu. Alking *300. Call
FlioGNndlare•1 a. 2bedroom 814-448-16011.
epartmenta for rent . Celt 8143 pc. ltvrng' room 1uit. Good
245-9575.
cond . 1100. Colt 814-388Furliahed apt.- 1 Br. •235amo. 8737.
Utilitiel paid. 120 4th. Ave .•
Gallipolis. C.ll4411-44 1hftor 7
53
Antiqu•
PM.
Furnithad Ap.nmant-4 roomt &amp;
bllth. 1 or 2 adultl. No pets. Sec.
dep. &amp; ref. required. Call 0144441-0444.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riversk:le As*'t·
ment1 in Middleport, ~rom
S182 . Call 514· 992-7787 .
EOH.

'

Buy: or Sell. Atv.lne Antiquet
1124 E. M.Wn Str.... Ponwoy:
Hours: M.T.W 10a.m. to 6p.m.,
Sundl'f 1 to 8p.m. fJ14-9922528.
54 Misc. Mer chan dis a

Kh'g si:re air bed. Thick padded
rallt. 8 drawer pedMtal. 3 •ta
lhHfl. 8250. CaN 614· 949·
2909 .
7 pc. Dark Knotty Pine Den
Group Set. In nice condition. Tan
flowe red. 8160. 814· 98&amp;3610.
4x8 ft utility trailer, flat bed or
panel style. call 304-882-2411
after 6 :30pm.
Garage to be removed for
m8terlel1, call 304-876-31 ~0.
New 10 ft Satellite System,
remote control. in1talled
S995.00, 304-676-6477.
AM Merket Jet up, Rt. 36
South. every Wed. starting May
25, $3.00 ch•ge, 304-8758213 or 875-5963.

61 Farm Equipmll!"t
850 Ford t .. Cior, 1501 Ford 7ft.
mower, Nl h.,. lllke. 15ft. buah
hog. 1 roweubfvalor. heavydu ty
blade. can 814-317-7840 after

21'M.

P.-ts for 450 John De.- do:rer,
all like n.w. one fr~ crou b•
1600.00. One ,... CfOII b•
1150.00. Two aprodcllt shields
1100.00. 72tr11ck•ho•111nch
MOO.OO. Will •II all or part,
304-171-1071.
Whtta' • Tractort. 26 to 180 HP.
at.olute doallfl cott plus I per
cent. Compare our price~ before
you buy. Siders Equlpmmt.
Henderaon, W. Va. 304-6757421.
12 hp Et:!onomyPowerKingwith
48" ~oiN8r deck, grad• blade.
tuming plow Md potato plow,
U .IIOO.OO. 304-175-4436 otter 6:00PM.

Uvestock

55 Building Supplies
Reg. pu,. breed Umoulin bu lis

Concrete block•· all lizea- yard
or delivery, M•on•nd. Gallip~
lis Block Co., 123% Pine St.,
Gllllpollo, Ohio. Coli 614-4462783.
56

Pets for Sale

Groom and S1,1ppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
1tyles. lama Pet Food Deater.
JulleWabb Ph. 614-446-0231 .
Oregon~ Cattery Kanne4.
CFA Hlmalavan. Persian and
Siam... kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New Himall\l'an kit·
tena. Call 814-445-3844 after

7PM.

for •te. Galllpotil, 0 . 114-21581187.
Palamlno Gelding- gehed, gentle. 11 yr~ . ord. 2 antique
•dell•. v.., good cond. Cell
614-317-7770.
Very gentle pony wll:h •ddle.
1200. Colt 014-388-8737.
2 Regisared Polled Simmental
ve•llng Heifer· 1-Full blood.
1-% blood . Btn Bickers, Double
8 Ftrm. 614-357-7727.

Regiltltred % .4r'lbitn mM•, 8
v•••
old. t11500. Sire IBN
Sonryn AHR0124814. DlmCJ

Blahara Amalra IAHA-2A
0165082. Alto Red Bone puppies. •125. each or trtde for
QU!W, 814-742·2412,
Tannes. . Wa••· Ali bladl,
-.a11u1. 4 .,.. old. u~o.
Saddle. bridle, new halter,
0120. 814-988-4288.

8 hegle pups, 8 weeks old, 4 3 Suffolk YfiN •heap noo.oo
malet, 1 female, good hunting tech. 3 YfiW lamblt11.00each.
1tock, *2!.00 nch. 304-8715- 304-878-1174.
2231 .
57

Musical
Instruments

Individual guttar '••on•. b•
ginners. IBI'IOUI guitarilf. Brunlc.-dll Muaic, 814-441-0117.
Jeff Wamtley instructor. 814448-8077. tumm• openings.

64

&amp;

Hay

Grain

65 Saad

&amp;

Lead vocalist ~nted for local
rock bend, call 30 ... 675-6027

after 4:00pm .
71 Auto's For Sale

&amp;

Plctc your own straw,_.riet,
HapPY Hollow Frvit F•m. Gallipolis Ferry, 304-076-2020.

Farm Supp iii!S
&amp; L1vesloc,
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 35 W•t. Jacbon. Ohio.
114-288-1461.
Fer.,ton, New Holland.
Bu1h Hog Sal•&amp; Servh:.. 0v•
40 used t111ctors tochooet from
&amp; compl• line of n.w • uaed
equipnwrt largest •action in
S .E. Ohio.

M•_.,

.Jm'a Farm Equip. Center
3~ W.-QIIIIpollt, 0 .-Coll
014-441-9777
r.nce post and t1Ha. cedarpeeled- 7-1 fl . long. blf'b wire,
20 ua.d t,.ctort. plowt. dlac,
wheel, 3/ pmowrerteddWI. 0¥.1000 new and u•d. tMw
.,~. eoo NIIW Oelu• tools.
Rt.

1978 ptymouth Fury. h ·State
Highway Patrol car. 400engine.
Clll 014-982-5024.
1918GTO. New .. Int. irnend
b•ttry. Needa tome work but
h.,. to Mil. Will •crifice.
304-882-2821 .
1970 Maverldt. Runs good .
*260 or belt otter. &amp;14-742·
2431
1981 VW Rabbit. Fuel Injected.
Oood concltion. t1600. 014992-7348.
'80 VW Rabbit, g•otina. eJilcel·
len~ ell around condition,
•1.500.00. See2300Jeffer•on
304-175-2398 or 175-5664.
1980 Flat h•dtop convertlable
X19, AM-FM radloc••ette, axe
conct. clllolter 5:00. 304-1782636.

198401dto,lta88Lux•d.-., 4

door, 8 cyl, while burgendv

interior ., d top, uc cond.
•a.ooo.oo firm. c•h onty.
Evening~ after 8:00 pm, 304875-1127.
1978 T1Mird-rcl. PS, I'll ,
AM-FM casNtte. air cond,
cr.... liking •1.200.00. 304876-1082
1980 Oldl 98 Regency, 4 door,
PS, PB,1ir, po.,..rwi!'dow•door
lodr;, 10-40 •-'• St lowmileege,
extM clelf'l, M,500.00. 30~
175-2195.
1980 VW Rabbit. g•otlne,
excellent all wound condition,
*1.500.00. See 2300 Jeff•ton. 30 ... 875-2398 or 8755664.
1981 EtCOrt ._gon. tl500.00.
runa good. 304-875-1167.
1980 Monti! C1rlo, V·8 .uto,
good cond inside and out.
74.000 ml•. 11 ,800.00. 304-

1977C.m•o-v . a. auto. tranl .,
PS, Pl. Coli 814-441-1618.
aft• 8 PM-44&amp;-1244-

1979 Mon• Cwlo. Clll 814448-1741.
For Sale or Trad•1972 ,.Dnte
Carlo. Loobgood. Needa wGrk.
c.ll 814-44&amp;-8919 alkforAon.
1977 Olclo. Wrecked fron1...,d.
•aoo. Call
014-441-8081 .

1978 Plymouth Volore. Sl.,t 6
englne• .,to.. AC, Pl. AM·FM.
power brill•. Excellent condl·
tlon. Sllwr ! rod. Colt 614-8430030.
1973 Ford Gll..:le. Rune good .
GNIIt work c•. •3!0- . Clll
114-4441-1743.
1884 VW .tmo OL "'""""· 5

opd .. 4 ctr .. """' · 13800.
Coli 014-387·010hlt• 6 PM.
1987 8·10 b l -. 2 10itl II"'Y·
F\llly iooded. Aoldng 112,900.
Coli 014-37.2320.

.,_k.

17.000
18SS lufdl
mlat- T1ke CMr plymlntt. Call
014-448-1478.

tr. •Its.

&amp;

Vans

4 W.O.

1---------1987Ford 110 Con...,.lonVan.
14.000 mil•. l01ded, tile,

cruloo.- wlntlowt.loolto,

1968 Banner camper, sleept 6,
self contained, exc. cond. Havfl
to see to appreciate. t800.
304-876-8991 or 675-7328 .

!I!!

Starcnft 24ft Cllmper, fully •If ~
contained, roll out ewnln9. air ~
cond. lots of special fe11ture1,
call afttH 5 :00 PM, 304-6755863.

@Cheers

FRANK AND ERNEST

.

BASEMENT
W"TERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Locel refflntnces fur.,.hltd.
Free estimet81. C•ll cOllect
1·81~237~0488. d.,. or night,
Aoger•Basement
Waterproofing.

I

•
!
ALLEY OOP

SWEEPER and .ewing machine
repair, parts, end suppli•. ·Pick
up and deUwry, Davit VaDJum
Cleaner, one hell mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 514- .
448-029~
'

170.

1982 Ford 4o4, 4 opd.. V·8
161100. C.H bol-oo
1:30-8:30 PM. 114-317-0231 .
1978 4 WD Rom CI!•IIOt'·
01500. Coli 814-441-0812.
1988 Toyatl 4•4 truck short
bed.la.-d.chromtrolberand
bed ralle. •ack-ctwomt module
wh8111. AM-FM caeaatte stu eo.
off rGIMI Hghta, strips, 42.000
mH•. Extre sharp. 11000 firm.
I 14-182·1551 .

Ch•y A.tro Con\oWIIon
n.w, low

1987

•

•"

l_-=====--:_~~~=-----=-:J !

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
DID YOLJ HEAR 'THAT
MISS WILLICI&lt;~ GOING

11-tE G;WY6HE!s GOING

CAN YOLJ IMAGINE HOW

TOMARRY IS A
T E.ACHER1 TOO.

OBNOXIOUS 7HEIR KIDS
ARE c:;QING- TO BE':!

R:!GETMARRIED~

----..r

I

' ( • ...,Jo'

I

I "

·.

COME ON IN,
ELVINEY-

CARTER'S PLUMBING
A NO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gtilipoti1. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or fJ144"-4477

BRRR-IT SHORE IS
NIPPY OUT
THIS MORNIN'

NIPPY OUT1
NIPPY IN !.

••• '.1 ...... opHd
tnne~ . 410 eubfc inctt

8 PIV

14t·2Z37.
1878

CJI--

*•- 81~

hont ...... doolt

top. 304-.75-1433.

e. 4
drl\lo, 30.000

11om. olont

., . . , Dodge

_... 4 -

mM•.

3123.

pm.,

~~

Motorcycles

1180 lu1uW

Homes for Rant

3~171-

-ICIE. Loolao

good. lllunaiQod- noo or b•t
Off•. Coli 114-:111-1475.

•-w.

1177 Mo. . Cotto. Oood ......
Cotll14-2141-1211.
Rid Hat borgolnol Drug dill.,'
c... ~
I"'I'''cl. lurplua. Your • • .....,, Guidi.
111101-117·1000 !Jet. 1 -1101.

Ill••

1178 . . . . lo lot... """
mlooo., """ good oo-loo.
11200. Coli 114-. .1-3801 ..
114-. .2-JIH.

1113 HD- 710
Eull. oood. 11100. Coli 11431..12:11.
11UKa

'1810L10 . 4cyl ..

-Colt .......
· -· ..""· 18110.
114-2141-1124.

1114Hoodo - ' - k. 7000

mi-. Atldng •f211. C.lll14-

3711-2220.

'

l

,_5 -r-D
;.;_;.;.R
-=E:.---.-l,..,::
.!
,.
j -=l,...;R
I
I
I
.:
1

Woman just returned to a coun·

~ry area alter a !rip lo a nearby

I

ci1y : " The air is so bad
r --:--:--:--::--::--::---,
SOB TU E
dares you to !"

I

r-TI6;--;I-..,Ir-.;.,-I.;:..T.I7:--I
. _L_---l.
L-.1·--'-~.J.L----L

e
8

0

there , it

Compl~te

.the chuckle quoted

by f1llmg

1n

you develop fro m

the miss•ng wOrds
!.t.ep

No . 3 below.

..

PRI NT NUMBERED LEITERS I
IN THES E SQUARE S

,, "

I

UNSCRAMBLE LEITERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Doctor - llomarJ - Hutch -

•

Whaler - AROUND

One wo'!'an to another a1 an exerc ise class: " I've started
a new rotation d1et of my own . I eat every time I tum AROUND."

BRIDGE

NORTH
+AK5 2
• 6 52

James Jacoby

'•

,_,._.,

• J 63
.AQ9

Figuring out
the right order

WEST

EAST
• Q 10.

+J9 8 3

.KI

• J 987

+K 8 4 2

•s

By James Jacoby
Declarer won the club lead in dum·
my and lmmedilotely played a heart to
his 10. West took the jack and played a
heart back. Declarer won East's king
with his ace. The queen was now a
winner, but what about the lowly
three-spot? Theoretically it could he
ruffed with 011e ol dummy's clubs, but
il declarer tried to cash his queen,
East would ruff.
"Why didn't you bid three notrump?" North remonstrated . That ol
course would have worked, since the
normal low diamond lead from West
makes dummy 's jack a stopper. But
the highly unlikely lead of the dia ·
mond king would pin South's queen,
and now the suit would run when West
continued with a second diamond.
More power to the defenders, if they
could come up with that sequence of
diamond plays.
But South was rethinking his play.
"Even though three no-trump might
make, I should make this contract."
Perhaps you alert readers also saw
the trap that declarer set for himself.

+At0975

.142

SOUTH

.7 6
.... Q 10 3
+Q
.KJI0863
Vuln&lt;!rable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I+
2
3•
5•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

+

Pass

Opening lead:

'

+o

"All I have to do," continued South, "is
finesse my queen of hearts when I first
lead hearts. Then I can play tbe ace
give up a heart loser to West, and ~
able to safely ruff the fourth heart
with a club in dummy." South was
right, and although his realiza lion
came after the fact, he Is not likely to
make this mistake again.

.,

Tony vows revenge on the
obnoxious kid who
rear-ended his van. (R) 1;1
IIJJ
a1 n•e Magic, Cha~le
Brown Charlie Brown
•
disappears into thin air,
Woodstock gels a big head.
and Lucy is all up in the
clouds when Snoopy turns
into The Great Houndlnl.
CD !Ill Major League
BeMbell

...,

9:00 (]) 700 Club
B (]) IIJ) MOVIE:

Ri'

'Deoporodo: Avalanche ot
Devll'a
NBC Movie of
llloWCil • Cll -.lighting
Maddie has a date with a
mystery man and David is
frantic. (R) C
(!) ill 'ranftlne Specltll
Examine the new realities for
the NATO alliance foilowlng
the treaty. C
1111 li)IIJ MOVIE: 'Nightmare
atB-CreN'CBS
T~M-1;1
@ Llltry King Live!
I!! MOVII!: llllood Alley (NR)
(1 :55)
1:30 New Country
10:Dil (]) Straight Totk

. •...

'

.

.. '

mNawa

IE Monumontl to Fllfure:

Electrical
Refrigeration

Amarlce'a Prloon Crllio
Stele prison systems
nationwide are facing the
crises of mandates to
improve condl11ons and
overpopulated prisons, which
are tailing to dater crime. r:;J
«J) Evening Nawa
I!! Alrwolf Natural Born
aci'OOkondChlee
10:20 W MOVIE: Bod Boya (R)
(2:03)
10:30 (]) C.lebrlty Chell 8obby
Bora and Eartha Kilt
(!J Tony Brawn'• Joumel

General Hauling .

Dillard W.tor Service: Poola,
Cittefnt, Wells. O.ltverv Anytime. Call 114-445-7404-No
Su nd.,. calls.
J • J W..er Service. Swimming
poola. cisterna. W18llt. Ph . 114241-9215.

.•

A &amp; R Water Service. Poolt,
clatern1 , wellt .' Immediate l . DOOor 2.000gallon•deUvery,
con 304-1711-1370.
,

.,
•
•
•'

CiJ

ern

1111

eo

!Ill-•
Lialller Side of 8polta
(!)

SORR't' ABOUT TI-lE WA'f M'f

j.lAIR LOOKS. MA'AM .. I
WASI4ED IT Tl115 MORNING ...

- - - - - ----

NOT BETTER, BUT

DIFFERENT..

(l)DtiemmMof
DINnMmont Till value of a
1otel elimination of nuciler
warheads II diiCUIIMICI wi1l1
thirtaen experta In arms
~.t- and l1!!bflc
(I :00) r:;J

lii'it.l&amp;lt

OMane...
ilJI TWIIaht

z-

avouCenlle81ar
11:30 e (]) ill Tonlgllt Bilow
~=ullr

Upholstery

MowtWy"s Uphofttering tefv/ng
trlcountyarea 23~en . Th "'l best
In furniture uphol.,...ing. Cali
304 -178 41S4 fo~ fne
••tlmatet.

-

Gourmet Steele

em

PEANUTS

Watterton'l Watlr Hauling.
re•onable rate•. immediate
2.000 gallon deiMtry . cisterns,
pool1. well. etc. ell 304 57&amp;.
2911.

-·-·-..

ilJINIWI
VldloCountry
11:00 (]) Rllllinllton IIHfl

a

·'•

Paul Rupe , Jr. Weter Ser'-"CI. .
Pools, CIUtrna. WWIII. C11 \ 614- 441-3171 .

87

I

Ii

HECK O

f--r;.....:ll;.-:....Ir-.::-11.,..----~·

Melissa and Ellyn compete
lor the al18nlions of the
same man. (R) 1;1

1977 -

Mlalne. HW

GARTET

CiJ • Cll lhlrtyiOIMihing

Residential or commercial wlr·
lng . New service or repalrt. ,
Ucen•d electrician . E1timate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304875-1786.
85

form fo ur simple words

a

· Yen Mark H. Ukl

miles. •13,900- 114-981·
4411.

rhe

e

I

Tree trimming and 1tump ntmoval, free ettimlrte, 304-87S.
7121.
'

&amp;

of

8:05 W NBA Beokelbalt
8:30 CiJ Ill (I) Who's !flo Boll?

RON'S Televiaion Service .
Hou• calli on RCA, Ouaar,
OE . Specialing in Zentth. Call
304-!78-2398 or 814-4482464.

84

10

Edited l:ty CLAY It P O L L A N - - - - - - -

@ PrlrnaNewo
@ MOVIE: Jawa 2 !PG) (1 :57)
I!! Riptide Mirage
a Nallhvllle Now Faron
Young

Jim'e Odd Jobs
SUndeck1. tiding. painting. roofing. c•penter work. t111ller repair. Fr" Ettimat"- Call 814379-2416.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

a

chief.(R)
(!) NHL Hockey
CiJ Ill (I) Who'a ll1o BoM?
Samantha announces that
she and her new boyfriend
are going steady.(R) r:;J
(!) ill NOva Cameras go
behind the scenes to reveal
the new art of illusion. 1;1
1111 lll!Dl Buga Bunny
Myllery Special Bugs com6s
within a hare's breadth of
being dubbed Public Rabbit
Number Ona when a sarles
of mistaken Identities
involves him in a mini crime
spree . 0
.
Ill !Ill WkRP In Cincinnati

1H I'S ec:o; Si¥T"S 111£. aLY
VJf¥-f 10 ~II£ IIJ UF£...

Painting: Interior &amp; Exterior.
Fnte estimate~ . Call 814-4468344.

Squareo
(!)All-American Putting
Seriea From Hampton , VA
DCil Judge
IIJJ Wheel of Fortuna I;!
181Ill WKRP In ClnclonaH
@ Croooilre
CD IDl 1!51 Joaperdyll;l
@ Bemey Miller
VldeoCountry
7:35 !lJ Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) Crazy Uke a Fox Sunday
in the Park with Harry
D (]) 1151 Matlock Top TV
producer's accused of killing

a network's programming

GRANNY SAID WE
HAD rt;Q IN TH'
DIRECTION THE
SUNSETS!

Concrete Septic Tanks • 1000
gal., 1S00glll. and Jet Aeration
aymm. Factory tr11lned repair
thop. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PAISES, Jtckton. Ohio. 1-800.
537-9528.

AM·FM-C:att. 381 ·HP tllgine,

on-.

7:05 !lJ Andy Griffith
7:30 a(]) CiJ Hollywood

Home
Improvements

dual ...... Fl• ...... luther

Interior. Call 114-2!1-6327.
8-5 Mon.·Frl.

a Crook and Chlse

Servi ces

B2

Vallo~ Judgement In

/illnelde the PGA Tour
CiJ Ill (I) ABC Nowe 1;1
(!) Body EIICirlc
ill Nightly Buolnooo ReP!Irt
IIJJ III!Dl CBS Newo
CD I]]) Andy Grllfllll
@ lnlllde Polltlca '88 ,
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
You Can Be e Stor
6:35 !lJ Leeve II To Beaver
7:00 (]) Reming1on Steela Etched
in Steele
D (]) PM Magazine
C!l Sponaconter
Cil Entertainment Tonight
(!) ill MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (t :OO)
,_,
Q (I) Poaple'o Court
11JJ Newo
Ill I!]) M'A'S'H
@ Moneyllne
IDl 1151 Wheel of Fortune

1980 International Tranttlr II.
big cam engine. recemty overt..led. good 1hape. 1974 Frueha~f Van. 48 ft. x 13ft. 14 in,.
Fetty Tree Trinwnlng. dump
good shape. Call afl• 8 PM, remo,.l. Call 304-87~1331 .
. , 4-843-2813.
'
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
1880 Chevy pick- up truck with Most wells completed•amedl¥.
topJ*. Excet cond. OrAiniel Pump salea and service. 304paint. 12360. C.ll 514-'245- 896-3802
5221
Starb Law nand ShrtAJ Service,
1973 Ford pick-up truck. 4 304-575-3956 or 304-67f..,.a~ wtth topper. Runagood.
2903.
.1100. 014-94.. 2477.
Mich..rs R.. idential air condt.
1971 El Cimino, good cond, tion end refrlg•atlon. rechwge
11.1100.00. 30.4-0711-09341.
and repair service. Leon. W.Va.
304-468-1765.
1979 Custom Ford truck. 15 cyl
390, topper lnduded. good Daves Service and Repair.
conct. n.ooo.oo. coll304-&amp;75- Plumbing. huring, air cond.
~-\39.
304-676-3614.
73

I

a

Winnebago, 18ft. 50,000miiM,
aleap• a. good tires. e cvl. auto
tran1miltlon by Ford ,
I 4,300.00. Evenings 304-6762349 .

Masonry-Brldl. btoclc, tlone &amp;
flraplac•- Free •timate. Refer·
encet. Celt 811 Oennv-614--25&amp;-

Good enaln•.t01 .

low

(!) SportoLook
(!) Owl TV 0
ill Dr. Who balek Invasion of
Earth, Part 4
181]]) Hopp~ Days
@ Show81z Today
@ FIC11 ot Lite
I!! Cartoon Expreu
Fandango
8:05 !lJ Allee
8:30 D (]) 1151 NBC Nightly News

1978 35fl. Troplcana with expando. AC. 14600. 614-7422460.

1983Colobrlty, PS. PI, AC. AT,
•c cond. V-8 engine, *1500.00
down •h OOAr ~"*'Ia. cell
..... 4:00pm. 30~575-2040 .

1977 Chevy 4 WD. J,\ ton. 400
lltnlll block. Everything new.
Ext,. sharp. Calf 114-3889081

•

WOlD
GAM I

wo rds be-

four

a

RON EVANS EN~R I'RISESSeptlc tenk pumping. t90 par
load. Ca111-80~537-9628.

1985 S-10 truck. PS. Pl.
AM·FM-Coot, 4 tpd . .4900.
Coli 245-6025. botaro 3 PM. "'
446-3951tfter 3 PM.

0 Rea rrascrambled
ng e letters

D (]) CiJ Ill (I) IIJJ CD IDl
1151 Nowo

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

675-737~.

Trucks for Sale

TUES., MAY 24

'~~:t~~, S©R4tllA-LG£trs~

Heaven

Call 014-448-0720 or 5938331 .

81

•

8:00 (]) Big

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1986 Dodge Chorgor Shelby,
fuel inj. turbo, AM-FM, AC, sun
roof. •c cond. tl5.000.00.
304-273-3001 '

74

Nicely furnlahed am .. ho\118.
·~ · •
~ R~
~· No · :roc;rrw~t• for .nt, 304-871- · • 00 '
••· ooqu-.
3 00
..... Coli 14-441-03:11.
-:---:-'---:-:-=-:-:-:--,3 lr .. Hi b81,._E..,.,.a. *250 Apt. for ..nt 117 N.Faurth 91:
PAiddhp art, Ohio. 2 bedroom~
por mo. Dop, roquf~ Coli
fumlhooct opt, lloo 2 room opt.
514-4411-4222, b o t - • ·e .
304-IIZ-21111.
Modlfn 3 BR . hou• for Pint: or
AlelnP.criot. t210a mo .• t100
d.... Cal1 014-448-1340 ... 45 Furnished Rooma
448-34170.
Fur'*hed room-111 leoond
For..,.t, 1 bedroomhou•lnthe
Aw .. Clolllpolio. U25 I "'1'He_. of Maaon. t12151111ut teo
UtHWiol Olllllloalo molo. I hill
dopotlt. 014-892-7382.
both. Caii441-.U11oltor7PM.

For Sale

Fertilizer

Tr onspu r Ialton

Fruit
Vegetables

Auto's

72
To ..cco bate, 1 100 lbs., Gallla
Co . C•ll 614 -251-1556,
evenings.

Want ID tent, modern clean 3 Tobacco Planta needed. Call
IM*oom home in Point PIHMnt 114-317· neo.
area,· Retired couple. excellent
reference•. phorw 304-8767486 . • .

58

71

Television
Viewing
EVENING

~~~~~~~~~~~;::~:;:;:;::;:::~:;:~~ Mercrui•r.
Low hour11.
Uke
nevw. Skii1, wern11nty,
&amp; morel.

63

Building Materials
Block, brick. aewer pipet, window•. llnttlt, etc . Cl .. de Winleu, Rio Grande, 0 . C,ll 614246-6121 .

CVTOF~

19871mperial V174. w / 130 HP

Cl lllflrl..,._ '"'

3 HP rototill•. 8100. Call after 6
PM . .814-448-7211 .

M'{ Ll pt; .v:E

26 ft . · Bay finer cruiser. 1986
wide beam, all eleetu:We, gellffY,
canvtl. etc. 360 V-8 eng..
•leaps 8 . Very low hours.
• 27,600. Coli 304-727-6890.

Rt!lll dl:;
41

Ht!dl Esi.Jtt:

r

'88. ·Send anv in for. to : Box Cia
147. cl oGallipollo Dally Trlbuna, 825 Third A..... Gallipolis,
Ohio 46631 or call evening•

75

2 Nelinert, tmalltables. 2 doors.
hot plate, ladi• bicycle. h•dback boob. bench. misc. ftams.
Coli 614·448-3521 .
Comrnerciat
10 Gravefy
mo.,..r·
plus more. Newly
rebultt.
call
614· 448-8762.
2 otrollon &amp; Jenny Und cradle.
Call 814·448-8735.

OH,lHeY'~~
A~, !!OT IQl

1984 Honda XL125S. 1475.00,
' " at 73 Burdette Addn.
304-675-2694.

HALF PRICEI Flashing •row
1ign1 *2991 Ughted, non-arrow
12891 Unlighted *2491 Free
letters! See loc.tly. c.n todavl
Factory : 1 (800)423-0183.
anytime.

••t.

fOod
for •le. AM
equlprr.-t and rwceipet. In
IWddl..,ort. S.iout tnquirl•
ontv p l -. Write Daily Sentinil, lox 729 T, Pomeroy, Ohio

.ana.

Homes

R-

- J..rge hou• with p01!1ible
intent to purcha• 1t.rting Jutv

o .. •

J . O, 6150 C do:rer Serie•
11241632 with ripper. Newunder carriage, rebuilt tren1.
019,000. Coll814-384-6270.

Twa builclng lots wtth Counry
wet•. on Jerry's Run AoH at
Apple Gr0\18 , W. Va. 30._157&amp;2313.

I NOTICE f
THE OttO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . ..commendt thet vou
do butin . . Vlltth people you
know. end NOT lo -'d moMV
through the mal untl tou hwe
lnllfttlg•ed the oft•ing.

rr•l•.

41

fo

2 Ptrrsician familydes ire1 to rent

C&gt;

()

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BORNLOSE :-----~------------------------~::~~r:::~::~~--~~r--------------~~~~Da~il~y!Se~nt~nei!:~P~~~9

Wheelchairs-new or uied. 3
v.oheeled electric scooters. Call
Ro ger• Mobittv collect, 1·614870-9001.

Space for tmall trl ... arl. All
hock-ups. Cable. A11oefficiency
rooma. air and cable. Maton,
W .Va. Call 304-773-5651

Help Wented· Colonv Theater &amp;

Tuesday, May 24, 1988

Motorcycles

Room• for ftlnl-waeh or month.
Star1 ing at S120 • mo. Gellia
Hotel-S 14-448-9580;

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P• k.
Roule 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailer•- Call 814-9927-479.

fur1her information and applic&amp;tiont call 614-59 3- 8074.

74

54 Misc . Merchandise

46 Space for Rent

Echoing Me.tows Resi dental
Cen ter, Alhens, Ohio has imm•
dillte openinQIII for fu!Hirne and

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ ~Y Lury Wria•t

Furnished Rooms

area. Consuttanu needed. Call
614-379-2.28.

Tuesday, May 24, 1988

-~r:;J
ill
' "·'·a.me
e!lll
.,

~=~=CIILIIIII
Nlgltt Mike and Chttltina gat
strandld In an Did cabin

....
AXYDLBAAXR
I&amp; 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 letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all - '
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
._,
CRYPTOQUOTE

5-24

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A L K E

NXRGXN

AX

.A L K E

KHJ

ELX

KH J

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A X

JP

PDF -

AMEL

JMXN

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APFRJ

MN

KRTXFE

VPF

ON

PELXFN

FXZKMHN

MZZPFEKR. WMHX

Yenerdaf'• er,ptAiqaote: FACE TO FACE WITH

ETERNITY, THE GREAT miNG IS TO WALK GRANDLY

TOWARD rr.- OElKE .

•

'

'

.

�Page- 1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.---Local news

Tuesday, May 24, 1988

Eastern bf?OSters.. , _co_n_u_nu_ed_fr.;,..om_..::.:pa..:g.;,..e1:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
briefs~ classroom
instr uctio n.

Memorial Day services announced

Mem,orial Day services will be held by Ra ci ne Amer ica n
Legion Pos t 602 a nd will be held a t the Greenwood Cemet a ry a t
10 a. m . Mond ay a nd the Leta rt Falls cemetery a t 11 a. m.
There will be a s peaker a nd the South ern March ing Ba nd will
participa te. A dinner will be he ld at the Racine F ir&lt;' Sta tipn.

Hoffman says BB guns are out
Middl eport Mayor Fred Hoffm a n reminded reside nts that use
of BB guns in the village is prohibited.
He said that compla ints have been received about the use of
BB guns aga inst an imais and proper ty, and that pa rents will be
held res ponsible for use of these guns by their children in
a ddition to the juveniles being cited to juvenile court. He asked
for the cooperat ion of residents in controlling the use of these
guns by minors.

•

Postal pre-test training slated
Th e pre· tes t pos ta l examination training sessions announced
last week by the U.S. Postal Service will be held Friday at the
St. P au l Luthera n Church in Pomeroy. ·
The sc hedule for those planning to attend the pre-testing
courses prepara tory to taking the postal exam and who have
ca lled the Middleport or Pomeroy Post Offices to register is:
those was a las t nam e beginning with A through L will report to
the c hu rch at 9:30a .m. and those with last names beginning M
throug h Z will report at 1:30 p.m.
.

Patrol probes R t. 7 mishap

and the possibl ity th at increased
Several parents ma inta ined
time with no thing to do might
that by eliminating extr acurricu- lead some student s to turn to the
lar activities, sport s i n~Jl!i"ilcu ­
use of drugs or a lcohol were also
lar, the school boa rd would be dl s'cussed .
. "et'od lng th e s upport base" for
Super intendent Dan Apl!ngd!d
the levy a nyway . These pa rent s point out that the district would
noted that the majority of at- no t lose its right to participate In
hlet ic boos te rs who voted for the tournament action next year, Jf
levy in May, wou ld.llkely change th e di strict mu s t withdraw from
their vote in November if sports s ports thi s year for financial
were elimina ted.
reasons.
It was pointed out by a teacher
Said McCoy, "Don't get the
tha t such actions would be proof i&lt;jea that we 're five people
that extra curricular activit ies against you. because we're not .
wer e c on s id er ed ab o v e We' re out of money." Another
acade mics.
boardmember pointed out that
-All those at · the meetin g "we're just holding our own.
seemed to a gree that th e stu- There 's no money for anything."
dents, es pecially those who will
One gentleman suggested that
be sen iors next year, would be . the board publish a statement of
the ones hurt most by the the district 's financial situation.
elim ination of spor ts, marching "That might be considered by the
band and othe r extracurricular board," said Superintendent Dan
activities.
Apllng, who also noted that prior
Th e effect on the school spirit to the May elect ion, a series of
· of the students, the motivational meetings were held to inform
as pect of extracurricular act ivi- Eastern voters of the school's
ties In maintaining high marks, serious financ ial problems .

Area deaths
Burgess Mullins

Th e Gallia-Me lgs Pos t of the StatE&gt; Highwa y Patrol
in ves tiga ted an accident at, 4:15 p.m. Monday on SR 7, near
Pomeroy.
Troopers said Rita Lewis. 49, Pomeroy, s(Opped in traffic and
her pickup truck was hit from behind by a ca r driven by William
Dyer, 25, Middleport. The patrol cited Dyer for failure to stop
within the assure d clear distance.
Lewis and a passE&gt;nger, Mark Lewis, 9, Pomeroy, were
injured bu t not treated.
The patrol cited Elizabeth Ritchie, 25, Rt. 2, Coolville, for
fa ilure to yield the right of way after an accident at 4: 55p.m.
Monday on CR 26, east of SR. 7, near Pomeroy.
.
Troopers said Ritchie pulled from a driveway and her pickup
truck collided with a car driven by Terry Patterson, 23, Racine.
No one was injured. Damage was moderate to both vehicles.
No one was cited in a onE&gt; car accident at 9 a.m. Monday on US
33. near Pomeroy. The patrol said a car driven by Melinda
Jones 25. Culloden, W. Va. went off the road, s triking a guard
'rail. Th e re was minor damage. No one was injured.
A deer caused an accident at 2:30a .m. Monday at the junction
of CR 28 and
CR 29 in Meigs County. The patrol said John
Burnett , 18, Rt . 2 Ravenswood ,W.VA. swerved to miss deer and
his car went off the road, striking a highway sign and a bridge.
Damage was minor. No one was injured. There was no citation .

Burgess Mullins , ~2. of Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, died Sunday at his
home.
He was born on Jan. 1, 1926 in
Toney, W.Va., a son of Pearl
Mullins and the la te Hark
Mullins.
He was preceded in death by
one brother .
Survivors include his wile,
Thelma Mullins; four sons,
Larry E. Mullins of Brookside.
Fla .. Leslie E . Mullins of Gastonia, N.C., Loren W. Mullins of
Columbus, and David A. Mullins
of Gallipolis; three daughters,
Mrs. Judy Sanders of Gallipolis.
Mrs. Yvonne Wilfer of Gallipolis.

I

Apllng al so pointed out tha t
there were many more parents at
last night's meeting to di scu ss
the loss of athletics and band
than were at an earlier meeting
when a representative from the
State Department of Education
,was present to explain the
sehool's financial problems and
the need for additional taxes .
After a two-hour discussion,
the board went into a one-hour
executive session to discuss the
parents' proposal. Upon returnIng to open session, the board
announced that only the reinstatement of "all extracurricular activities'· would be accepta ble, and that legal ramifications
of financing the activities on a
time schedule would be researched during the next few
days.
In the Initial part of the
dlseusslon, the board had explained that funding for some
positions would be needed up
front from the booster s, because
by law. the clerk· treasurer must
certify certain monies available
at certain times.
Another special board meeting

and Sandra Paden of Bidwell; 19
grandchildren, nine greatgrandchildren; four brothers,
Willie F rye! of Lyburn, W.Va .,
Arnold Mullins of Chapmanville,
W.Va., Roosevelt Mullins of
Roosevelt, W.Va. , and Edward
Mullins of Gallipolis; three sisters, Mrs . Ida Hagerman of
Marlon, Mrs. Fergie Gillenwater
of Kanauga, and Minnie Cline of
Gilbert, W.Va.
Services will be Wednesday at
11 a .m. at Fellowship Chapel
Church in VInton. The Rev .
Elmer Geiser will officiate. BurIal will be in PIne Grove
Cemetery .
Friends may call the McCoy -·
Moore Funeral Home Tuesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.

has been set for F r iday, 7 p.m., a~
which time the results of the
research will be presen ted to
parents for consideration in ,
hopes of reaching a workable
solution .
Also at Friday's meeting, the
amount of millage to be placed on
'the November ballot Is to be
determined and a resolution ·
passed making the amount official. Board members Indicated
that the millage requested would
again be 12.4 mills, although no
vote on the amount of millage
was taken last night .
A final comment from board
member Susie Heines wa s that
"It's a shame there isn't a
booster group for academics. "

.NATURE'S

IOPOUND
COLD CUPS
100 cr. 7 OUNCE
80 cr. 9 OUNCE
50 cr. 14 OUNCE

1~2.
1.99

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
435 2ND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS
446-8084

106 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
992-2635

320UNCE
SURE GLOW
CHARCOAL

SAMSUNG COLOR TV &amp; VCR
19" DIAG. COLOR

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S19600

TATOSKINS
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ONLY

S23900

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vos

PaOI'IIN MOISTVIZEil

ORlWOPACK

25" DIAG. STEIEO IUDY

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$466°0

TllEATMENT
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S26600

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY
NOW IWO LOCAnONS .
GALLIPOLIS &amp; MIDDLEPORT

'

Clear, lows In mid 30s tonight.
Frost possible. Thursday,
sunny. high near 70.

en tine

Vol.39, No. 14

2 Sections. 16 Pages

Copyrighted 1988

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

215 Cents

Committee OKs tough
version of trash bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPt) -A
tough version of a solid wa ste
disposal bill that hits the pocketbooks of out-of-state tras h haulers and has environmentalists
s inging Its praises apparently is
on Its way to the floor of the Ohio
Senate Thursday.
The bill has an interim stopover today in the Senate Finance
Committee for a check of fees
and appropriations Inserted
Tuesday in the Energy, Natural
Resources and Environment
Committee during a five-hour
session that dealt with 53

1968 and 1980:
Also strengthened was the
s tate attorney general's office in
inves tigating the possible crimi·
na l background of landfill
owners from outside Ohio. The
s tate's attorney was given more
money, s ubpoena assistance and
a provision forbidding convicted
felons from managing a landfill
until five years after their prison
term is over.
But the committee also approved several amendments for
the County Commissioners Asso-

elation of Ohio, g iving local
governmeents flexibllty to site
landfills and plan for solid waste
disposa l.
Sahli said he was not s ure his••
agency has been given enough
money to oversee the upgrading
of old landfills to modern
standards.
But he said the new surcharges
of $75 a ton for out-of-s tate waste
and $15 a ton for in-s tate garbage
will furnish an es timate d $240
m!ll!on for th e state in cleaning
up Super fund s ites- abandoned
toxic wa ste dumps.

amendments.

NEW OWNERS - Kenny and Brenda Nelgler
are the new owners of Backstreet VIdeo In
Middleport. The Nelglers purchased the business,
located at 320 North Second Ave. from Ed Adkins.
The name of the baslness Is being changed to

Uptpwn Video. Uptown VIdeo will be open Monday
through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. All top
movies will be featured and new releases will be
received weekly.

Spanking banned

•
ID

Ohio schools

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) With former aU-pro tackle Dick
Schafrath leading the Interference as he did for the Cleveland
Browns 20 years ago, the Ohio
Sena~e voted Tuesday to ban
cOrporal punishment (paddling)
In schools.
Local school districts, how·
ever, would have the option of
retaining spanking as a disciplinary tool if, they follow the proper
procedure by the fall of 1989.

our teachers in the trenches," he
said.
Thomas Katzenmeyer, legislative aide to Gov . Richard Celeste,
said the governor was "delighted" with the btll's passage. It
was a recommendation of the
Governor's Task Force on Domestic Violence.
Originally, thebillcalledforan
ou trlght ban on corporal puni$hment. Under a compromise, the
ban will commence in September
1989 unless a local board of
The' btU passed narrowly on an education passes a resolution
18-14 vote, one vote more than keeping corporal punishment.
Before passing such a resolu required, and went to the House,
where consideration is not ex- tion, the board would have to
create a task force of teachers,
pected until next fall.
Schafrat_h , a Republican from parents, admlnlstrator.s, school
Loudonville, conceded he partici- employees, psychologists and
pated In a violent sport, and physicians to study appropriate
acknowledged that he was once d!sc!pllnary measures in the
the designated paddler In his · schools.
lf the task force tlnds that
school.
"It's a cowardly act and a sign paddling is appropriate, the
of weakness to hit anyone," said board could vote to retain it.
Schalrath told his coUeagues
Schafrath, adding that "violence
In any form is not the answer to that only 8 percent of teachers
anything."
·
use spanking as a disciplinary
But Sen. Eugene Watts, R- measure, and that Cleveland,
Columbus, said paddling can be a Cincinnati and Columbus have
deterrent to bad behavior. "We banned it and found d!sclpl!ne
cannot deny a disciplinary tool to improved.

Sha!rath said paddling may
have long-term psychological
effects on -pupils. He said they
may be paddled for being late.
wearing muddy shoes, chewing
gum or stuttering.
"Studies show there are no
benefits to physical punishment," he said. "I believe in
tradition, but I also believe in
change when it's for the better. If
we didn 't have change, blacks
would still be slaves, women
would not be allowed to vote and
we'd still be stoning adulterers."
"These 'students are not being
paddled for chewing gum or
talking In class," said Watts ,
citing statistics which showed
280,000 assaults and 12 times that
many other crimes take place in
schools In the United States each
month . ·
''We need to promote dlsc!pl!ne'
in our schools," agreed Sen . Lee
Fisher, D-Shaker Heights, " but
we need to send a message that
physical violence Is not acceptable. We can be tough, but
compassionate. It 's no badge of
honor or courage that Ohio ranks
among the top states in the
country . In ·the number of
paddllngs."

Most of those amendments
toughened the House-passed ver·
sion, including a $75 per ton
surcharge on garbage brought
into Ohio from another state to
help pay for the cost of cleaning
up hazardous waste in the
Buckeye State: The fee approved
by the House was $4.50 per ton.
The committee' s unanimous,
bipartisan vote sharply contrasted with actions of two weeks
ago, when Sen. Gary Suha dolnik,
R-Parma Heights, the ~ommit­
tee chairman, released a weakened substitute bill which angered Democrats and the Celeste
administration.
"The bill's much stronger
lnow), and we' re happier for
that," said Richard Sahli, deputy
director of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, followin g
Tuesday's meeting.
"On balance, It ' s a real s tep
forward,· •said Stephen Sedam of
the Ohio Envlromental Council,
adding his organization has no
plans to suggest changes. " It's a
lot stronger than we thought It
was going to be."
The committee generally
s trengthened the hand of the
director of the Ohio EPA, particularly directing him to order
s tate-of-the-art engineering Improvements lor 65 substandard
landfills constructed between

Tenure bill clears
Senate committee
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) With school administrators resisting until the bitter end, an Ohio
Senate committee early today
approved legislation giving probationary school teachers certain rights In ct·Jsmlssal
proceedings.
The bill, which entitles nontenured teachers to an evaluation and a report of their
deficiencies before dismissal,
cleared the Senate Education
Committee on a 6-3 vote after a
nightlong meeting Tuesday.
The lull Senate is expected to
vote on the controversial measure later this week. It already
has been passed by the House in
different form.
Key to the bill's adoption was a
two-hour closed-door meeting
among the Ohio Education Association, school administrators
and Senate Republican tundra I sers and commit tee
members.
The OEA, representing some
90,000 school teachers, has
sought the legislation for more

than a decade. The Ohio School
Boards Association and the
Buckeye Association of School
Adminis trators , strongly opposed, won several amendments
making the bill more palatable to
school admin istrators.
"We feel we have come up with
a very worka ble a nd fair bill, "
said James Lyon, lobbyis t for the
OEA . "I think It's a b!llthathelps
both teachers and boards of
education. "
Warren Russell of th e BASA
said his organization felt " comfortable" with amendments to
the House-passed version glvlng
school administrators more flex Ibility in dismissal s and restrictIng the Issues which fired
teachers ma y later take to court.
There already are provisions
In the law for dismissing
teachers with tenure, or continuing contracts with local boards.
School admin-I strators claim the
dismissal procedures for probationary teachers should be in
collective bargaining agreements and not in state law.

Commission to probe incident

r:ffi:-:;§1

ONLY

at

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE
992-5776

WROL :;:;: S W ' t
~ J. · 2!~ ®EiiufW ·Kin. ~

1~2

e

CLOSE FOR THE SEASON
SATURDAY, MAY 28

rr.l

CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS

•

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
All Bedding Plants REG. •a.oo
NOW S5
Hanging Baskets REG. •m , •w NOW S4
Geraniums
75&lt;EAcH

ONEOFTWO
CHEVY S-10
IN PRIZES!
TRUCKS!
6 AUTOMATIC WASHER &amp; DRYER SETS
5 SHARP TV'S • 20 SHARP VCR'S Rita_-.. ,..._

PRESTO

Page 3

Velerans Memorial ·
Monday Admissions · ~ Dorothy Gilmore, Middleport ;
Evelyn Schuler, Middleport;
Helen Miller, Pomeroy .
Monday Discharges - Lethia ·
Lyons, Erla Christopherson .

WIN

Ronald Gall Cain, 22, Racine,
and Tinni Jeannette Boggess. 17.
Pomeroy.

Daily Number
560 .
Pick 4 ""\
8503

CLEARANCE SALE

begin at 12 noon. rain or shine.
PenneL. Smith, Athens, will be
judge and John Elswick of shade
will be announcer. Greg Dunfee
will be ringmaster .

License issued

in Boston

Hospital news

-----Announcements----Meeting tonight
The Meigs County Litter Control Advisory Board will meet at
7:30 this E&gt;vening at the Utter
control office, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy .
Plan horse show
The 26th annual Shade School
PTO horse show will be held on
Monday, Memorial Day, with 19
events scheduled. The show will

Ohio Lottery

Blackout

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Elections Commission
has agreed to decide whether
former Gov. James Rhodes violated election Jaws two years ago
by using political action committees as extensions of his own
campaign.
At Issue is $148,7'73 the Rhodes
committee donated to seven
different PACS during his campaign against Gov. Richard
Celeste in 1986.
Some $108,190 was given to a
group called Citizens for Decency and Health, which created
a furor late in the campaign by
placing a series of newspaper
advertisements accusing Celeste
of using tax money to support
homosexual rights.
Rhodes, who lost to Celeste by
a large margin, never raised the
issue himself.
The commlsston Monday dism-Issed other charges by the
Secretary of State's ot!lce that
Rhodes and the PACs concealed
the nature of the contributions by
not spelling out in detail how the
money was used.
The commission ruled unanimously that by dlscl01lng the
contribution&amp; and ~xpenses In
post-election reports to the secretary of state, there was no
attempt to conceal them.
However, the commissioners
agreed to decide whether state
Jaw governing PACs Is strong
enough to . cover the Rhodes
situation - whether a PAC ts

acting as a second campaign
committee when It accepts donations from a campaign to promote the candidate.
State law says a candidate can
have only one campaign
committee.
"PACs seem to be described
relatively briefly and controlled
almost not at all," said Commissioner Merom Brachman.
Donald McTigue, an attorney

for Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown, said allowing such dona tions would lead to campaign
committees "laundering" their
campaign money and allow candidates to have PACs do their
dirty work.
"It's a way for a candidate to
distance himself, to see an
opponent exposed on an lssue, yet
distance disavow the attack,"
McTigue said.

Middleport Swimming
Pool will open May 28
The Middleport Pool will be open on Saturday, May 28, under

the mana1emenl of Laura McCuDoagh. Admlulon on Saturday
will be free.
After Saturday, dati)' admlslllon will be $1 per student; $1.50
per adalt and S.iiO per preschooler. Pasaesfor the summer for a
single penon are S21. Pas- for two people In a household are
$40, with S5 for each additional funDy member.
Wblle ~ebool Ia In seulon, &amp;be pool will be open Monday
lhroulh Friday from 4 to 8 p.m.; Saturday from 12 noon to 5
p.m.; ud Su ...Q' from lheoa tot p.m. Belinaln1lune :18, tbe
pool will be open Moaday throqb Saturday from 12 noon to 5
p.m. and oa SundQ' from 11 noon to 8 p.m. Nlptntmmtnr will
be held every Mo ...ay, Wedaesday and FrldQ' from 8 to 8 p.m.,
depeaciiDtr oa the weatber. Admlulon for algbt IIWimmlllr will
be S.iiO per per- aad Ull per penon with a put.
Swlmmlncl-u will beJin on .June 20. Tbe t•tructor will be
Laura McCullourh. The co1t for lea- will be SU for the tint
child and SlO for the aex t ohlld.
Re•llnr of the pool Ia 125 per hour and parties muot be booked
In advuce.
Tile telephone. aumber at the pool Ia an-881111.

.

OPENS TUESDAY -Thomas Do-lt Center, 847
Bob McConnlck Rd., Gallipolis, a new hardware
store, opened for business Tuesday momln(. Jim
Thomas, president, satd dates for a grand opening
sale will be anaounced later. Store hours for the

general publiC wUJ be Monday through Saturday,
from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Sunday, noon unlll6 p.m.
except Sunday, MJQ~ 29, when the new facility will
be closed In observance of Memorial Day.

Racine man hurt in accident
A Racine man was Injured In a
one car accident at 10:35 p.m. on
Sharon Road, just south or
Portland Road, In Lebanon township, Meigs County. The accident
Is stUJ under investigation.
The State Highway Patrol said
a car driven by Robert Lawson,
Jr. ,18, Racine, went off the road,
and overturned after striking a
bridge abutment. Damage was
heavy.
Lawson was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at Pomeroy.
The patrol Investigated
another Injury accident at 10:30
a.m . Tuesday on SR. 7. near
Hobson.
Troopers said a car driven by
Mildred A. Farmer, 48, Pome-

roy, pulled out to pass anothercar just as Frederick L. Burney,
31, Pomeroy, started to make a
left turn and the vehicles collided. Burney was cited for an
improper turn.
Both drivers suffered minor
injuries and were not Immediately treated. A passenger in
the Farmer car, Debra Snyder,
34, Cheshire, was Injured and
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mark Glllllan, 27, Rt.l, Reedsville. complained of an injury,
but was not treated, after an
accident ·at 11:05 a .m. Tuesday
on SR. 7, at Success Road.
Troopers said Gillilan was
headed south, making a left turn

onto Success Road, when his car
was hit from behind by a van
driven by Donald A. Deluca, 25.
Rt. 1, Vlncent, Ohio. Deluca, was
cltewd for failure to stop within
the assured clear d!stanc.e .
Edward Thacker, 16, Rt. 1;
Middleport, was cited for no
operator's license and not wearIng a seatbel t a Iter an a'cclden tat ,
6: 28 p.m. on Keller Road, near
Rutland. Thacker complained ot
. an injury but was not Immediately treated.
The patrol said Thacker's car
and another vehicle driven by
June R. Soulsby, 59, Pomeroy,
collided on a curve. Damage was
moderate to both vehicles.

I

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