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                  <text>Page-12-The

Sentinel

Ohio

•

CARPET &amp;
LINOLEUM SALE
1 ROLL BROWN
ONLY $$9 5 SQ. YD.

5

ROLL
VINYL LINOLEUM
ONLY
20 ROLLS ARMSTRONG &amp;
CONGOLEUM VINYL
LINOLEUM .

'

"WE'R~

ONLY

$5 4 5

PORCH &amp; PATIO

MEN'S AND BOYS'

TURF SALE.

Boys' sizes a to 20. Mtn's 30 to
42. Good stle&lt;lion of colors and
styles.

- 12' WIDTH

30°/o Now
19.95 Swim Trunks .:..... 16,97

SALE

Save

111.95 Swim Trunks ..... l8.37
112.95 Swim Trunks ..... l9.07
11 S.9S Swim Trunks ... 111.17

$395 TO $695 SQ. YD.

ANNI~ERSAR~

BED SHEETS

RECEIVED

1/2 PRICE

DRESS SHIRTS

S2719

Save 30% during dur Anniversary
Sale. Neck sizes 14112 to 18.
Short sleeves, solids and neat
patterns.
S17 Van Heusen Shirts ..... S11.90
S20 Van Heusen Shirts ..... $14.00
S21 Von Heusen Shirts ..... $14.70
S22 Van Heusen Shirts ....,S15.40

·.
ANMI~ERSAR~

ELECTRONIC SPECIALS

· Auhtersary
Whirlpool
Sale
large Capacity
Automatic
Washer

. Reg. 5549.95 ....................... Sale S449.00
I Only Magnavax St~rea System ·
Reg. 5279.95 ........................ SaleS179.00
2 Only Crown AM/FM ~assette pla~er

Anni~ersary

Sale

$27700

Reg. '34.95 .......~ .................... Sale s 6.00
2 Only AM/FM Personal Receiver
Reg. S29.9S ............................ Sale S23.00
1 Only Craig AM/FM Cassette Recorder
Reg. '84.95 ............................ Sale S68.00
Many other Craig Products at

lf2

REG. 1995.00

6 PIECE SET
Solid spruce sofa, &lt;hair and
rocker. Two end rabies and - ·
cofftt table. Blue print uphols·

BARGAIN

· MEN'S
DENIM
JEANS
ll... by Wronglor, Smw

(ily

complete 6 pc. Set .

S19.95 and S22.95
Jeans ......................... '12.60

S26.95 and S27.95
Jeans ......................... S16.50
S29.95 and S32.95
Jeans ......................... 518.60

SALE PRICE!

PRICE

BOYS'
CASUAL SLACKS

AIIIIIWERSARY SALE I

SERTA BEDDING
!~!!.1~-~0RT S9_9
'"""•¥lot - ' Toio. hll,

SERTA SLEEPER

·'

-

.........

a.o.li

$299

ANMIIfERSAR1 SALEI

MEN'S NECKTIES

Boys Summer Shorts

Regular sa.50

Sizos a ta 20. lig llylu and color s•·
lion - caordinoto with !mit shorh solo
priced.
BUY ONE PAIR
GO ONE PAIR

A good Hloction "' rtHy tiid
tits ond lour-in-hattth. Saiki
colors and neot poHintl.
Ia

Sf3.50

40°/o

SAVE
Buy Now for Father's
Day Gifts

1/2

PRICE

ftll iD Sol
10 Yr. ........,

PERFECT SLEEPER

•wallaway Recliners
•Rocker /Recliners
•Electric Power Recliners
Durable decorator fabrics for
years of enjoyment.

I(

AMMI~ERSARY

• • • ..,.

SAifiMOS

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

Solid colors, stripes and novelty patterm.
Coordinate with bays shorts. Salt j!riced.

BUY A PAll

OFF

GET C»NE ·1/2 PRICE

putting into effect the Intermediate Nuclear
Forces (INF) treaty. (REUTER)

GTE to complete switchover
to new digital system June 4
At the same time Saturday,
ALBANY - Phone users in
Albany's "698" exchange will GTE phone technicians will
Inaugurate new digital systems
take a step Into the future
for the Jackson and Wilkesville
Saturday when GTE North Inc.
completes a $1.1 million service exchanges. Those projects, cost·
ing almost $3 million, involve
improvement program .
More than 1,400 customers will more than 6,000 customers resid·
ing in a 364-square-mlle area of
join the high-tech era of digital
phone-call switching and !lber Jackson and Vinton counties.
"Albany's new ultra -fas t
optics at 2:01a.m. That's when
technicians wUI maRe the switch switching system features new
to a new digital processing services, faster processing of
system.
calls and clearer connections,"
Testing of the new electronic said Ramey.
equipment and fiber network has
Phone users may notice the
been under way for some tlme familiar dial tone has a higherand wlll continue after the pitched electronic sound when,
they use their phones for the first
changeover, said Phil Ramey,
time Saturday morning, he said.
Athens district service manager.
Otherwise, they will make
The Albany exchange serves
local calls the same way as now
more than 1,400 customers In a
.,.. by dialing the seven-digit
91-square-mtle area of Athens,
· numbers.
Meigs and Vinton counties.

"A state-of-the art fiber optics
network will play a major role in
the new system," said Ramey.
"This cable will provide the link
between Albany and the base
computer in Athens and the
pathway to the outside world."
Optlonal Custom Calling servi·
ces, known as Call Forwarding,
Call Waiting, Three· Way Calling
and Speed Calling, also will be
available here for the first time.
"This new compu t er·
controlled switching sys1em provides about a fivefold increase·in
call-handling capacity over the
existing electromechanical sys·
tern," Ramey noted.
In addition, It will pave the way
for Equal Access Aug. 27. This
service enables customers to
select a long-distance company
Continued on page 16

Forecast calls for additional
dry weather throughout Ohio
By RICH EXNER
United Press InternaUonal
Below-normal precipllat ion
and high temperatures arecreat·
ing water-supply problems
throughou1 much of Ohio, and
forecasters say there Is little
relief in sight
Alan Ringo, an hydrologist for
the National Weather Service in
Cleveland, said Thursday both
the shor l-term forecast through
June 9 and the long-term forecast
through 1he end of June call for
"below normal'· precipitation
across ·'Ohio.
The forecast through August
calls for normal precipitation,
bul Ringo said normal preclplta·
lion will not be enough to solve
growing water problems In many
areas.
Dating back to Nov. 1. when
yearly water counts begin, the
slate had just 15.88 Inches of
precipitation, 3.58 inches below
normal, through April.
Complete May results were not
yet available, but Ringo said
statistics for the Cleveland area
would basically mirror those of

most areas In Ohio, and rainfall
'was 1.97 Inches below normal for
the first 30 days of May .
"It's approaching critical con·
ditions," Ringo said. "With soil
moisture. any growth rates will
be limited."
''Not everyone has had a good
soaking rain that we normally
would have this tim e of year. If
thiS conlinues, we'll have IQts of
problems - more so for places
that use ground water. It goes
into last year."
Several southwestern Ohio
counties, for example, have
imposed restrictions on the days
and times residents can use
water to sprinkle lawns and wash
cars. Many of the restricted
areas depend on wells for water
and the lack of rain has decreased the amount of well water
available.
The Indian Hill Water Works,
which serves several Cincinnati
suburbs, has limited sprinkling
in areas that depend omwells
because water works officials
say in recent days customers

Economic index figure up 0.2. percent

WASHINGTON 1UPI) -The
government's monthly index of bureau's revised estimates show
leading economic indicators rose a 0.1 percent drop in the Index,
a weak 0.2 percent in April and following an 0.4 percent slump in
revisions of previous estimates the fourth quarter of 1987.
The bureau's Index of cOincf·
for the first quarter of 1988
showed two consecutive quarters dent indicators. a monthly esti·
of decline, the Commerce De· mate of where the economy Is at
partment reported Wednesday . · the moment, was unchanged In
.
With nine of the lllndicators April at 175.2.
The Index of lagging indica·
available, the department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said tors, a compllation of statistics
the Index lncr~ased 0.2 percent to used to confirm the previous two
192.2 from March to April, less of estimates, decreased 0.4 percent
an increase than had been in ApriL
Analyst.s had predicted today's
anticipated.
The bureau also revised its
estimate oft he March increase to
0.2 percent, down from the
previously reported 0.8 percent,
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
an indication the nation's ecoSupreme
Court Tuesday struck
nomic expansion is weaker than
down
as
unconsdtutional rules
was thought.
that
an
Indiana
company says
The bureau said changes In
kept
It
from
selling
Its ethanol In
estimates of outstanding credit
Ohio.
caused a large revision, a sign
· "it's good for us," said Don
consumers are not using their
Evans,
general manager of the
credit cards as much as the
New Energy Corlf. ol Indiana.
bureau had antiCipated.
Longer work weeks, a larger "Potentially, It could be worth $1
money supply, lower unemploy- m!lllon a year, but the real
ment, changes in prices for raw benefit Is to not exclude us from
materllils and briSker orders of the market."
In the opinion written by
. factory equipment all helped
raise the AprU Index, the bureau Jusdce Anton in Scalia, the court
unanimously ruled that an Ohio
said.
But slower deliveries to busi· law that granted tax breaks to
nesses, falling stock prices and producers of et~anol violated the
slower paces of building permits clause In the Constitution that
and orders for consumer pro- prohlbts Interference In Interducts all subtracted from the state commerce.
The law gave the tax breaks
Index, the department said.
For the first quarter, the only to !)reducers of the corn-

some key differences bu t real·
firmeddeterminatlontocontinue
work toward substantial arms
reductions and a general lm·
provement In relations.
Reagan restated his 'belief a
Strategic Arm s Reduct ion
Treaty ,. or START. is possible
before he leaves office, and said
that "progress ha s been made"
on thorny issues . including verifi·
cation. but he refused to be
specific .
But the president refused to set
a goal of finishing a START
accord in the next eight months,
saying that during the Moscow
talks "we set no deadline ... I am
dead set against deadlines ,"
"Tne treaty is ready when it is
a good treaty .... And that's what
we'll do , Instead of setting a
deadllne, " Reagan said. And he
added a cautionary note - "A
START Treaty is Infinitely more
complex than the INF Treaty,"
Gorbachev , who held forth fort
y, hours, called the INF accord
" a sign of movement into the 21st
Continued on page 16

have been using water raster
than the system can supply it.
Officials do not want to cut
deeply Into stored water.
In northeastern Hamllton
County,where a lot of new homes
are being built , restrictions on
sod and grass seeding have been
imposed because sod and seeding
requires a lot of water.
Water officials say If there is no
rain by the end of the week,
sprinkling restrictions will be
imposed in northeastern Hamilton County. A ·new water pumping station for that area Is under
construction, but will not be
ready un til next year.
And las I week . the Dublin City
Council passed a law imposing
$100 fines on people who sprinkle
their lawns or wash their cars on
weekends and holidays.
This spring's drought has compounded long-standing water
supply problems in the affluent
Columbus suburb, which has
experienced explosive residential and commercial growth In
the past five years.

Composite index of

Leading Economic
Indicators Index

monthly report, watched for la rly, spurred by dramatic In·
early Indications of where the creases in exports.
economy is heading, would be
The government last month
more optimistic . Lawrence reported unemployment In April
Chlmerine, chief economist for dropped to a 14-year low of 5.4
the WEFA Group in Bala Cyn- percent while the March U.S.
wyd, Pa., Tuesday predicted a merchandise trade deficit
moderate 0.6 percent Increase.
shrank to a three-year iowof$9.7
The report Is usually revised billion, fueled by record exports.
because several Indicators fre·
The estimate for total annual
quently are unavailable when 11 growth In the- nation's gross
is first released.
nalional product for the first
Other recent government sur- quarter was revised upward to
veys have shown the economy 3.9 percent on the basis of the
growing steadily, if not spectacu- unexpectedly strong exports.

1967=100

Court overrules · ethanol decision

tlolt-..,

"""....... $299 ,.. Ill
$399 ,.. Ill
'10 I' •-Y. $399-111 •Totti
"''"!!
.
•IS I'. '"""""

.,

••

(orll&lt;l

.,.., """"IJI11II
OITHO LUX

Si•• 29 to

Reg. S16.95 to $17.95 ....Sale 510.50
Reg. S19.95 to S22.95 ....Sale S12.90
Reg. S24.95 to S26.95 ....Sale S15.60

$7 4800

'

llrins

h

by Doltota. Storm laden by Lot.
3a. Not ..... in • ..., stylt.

Sutpender jeam, distress dyed pants, novelty slacks. Sfims, regulars and student
sizes.

Living Room Ensemble

~"~~~shionl.

SPECIAL OROUPI

Rogular and eKira largo sins
in solid tolors, 11101 tolor combinatians. le Tegre, Baja,
Breakers, J. J. Cochran and
others.
BUY A PAIR
GET ANOTHER PAll

Anniversary Sale Pricas

Whirlpool

EXCHANGE DOCUMENTS - Soviet General
Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and President
Reagan ex~hange ~ocuments ratifying and

..-.., :}ll
. SPICIAl SAUl
' -~ -~ , ·- MEN'S
~~ SUMMER
~ 1l:i SHORTS

SALE

I Only Sanyo Rack System

Whirlpool Laundry Specials

SALE

Sale Prlee

$959 to

2 Sectklns. 16 Pages 25 Cents
i\ Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

By HELEN THOMAS
showcase of the third Reagan·
UP! White House Reporter
Gorbachev summit i!J.. DeMOSCOW (UPI) - President cember. provided a ceremonial
Reagan and Soviet leader Mlk- flourish to a round of talks
hail Gorbachev, capping their marked by symbolic and sub·
fourth superpower summit, 'to- stantlve progress toward imday put into force a historic arms proved relations.
reduction agreement with a bold
In ornate St. Vladimir Hall at
declaration ''the era of nuclear the Kremlin, Reagan and Gorba·
disarmament has begun."
chev celebrated their achieve:
''The first llnes have already ments to date and vowed to press
been written into the book of a on toward a pact reducing
world without war, violence or long-range nuclear weapons that
nuclear weapons," Gorbachev Is still bogged down in political
said as his talks with Reagan and technical complexities.
The exchange of ratification
drew to a close. "I believe that no
one can now close that book and documents for the INF pact,
put It aside."
approved by the Senate only two
Reagan, at a summing-up days before Reagan arrived in
news conference. hailed the Moscow on Sunday, provided a
formal completion of the Inter· convenient stamp of success fora
mediate Nuclear Forces Treaty summit said to have been
and reported that "progress has marked by steady progress in
been made" toward a sweeping U,S.·Soviet .relalions but no draagreement to slash the super- · malic breakthroughs .
Both leaders held news confer·
powers' strategic nuclear arsenals in half.
ences after the signing ceremThe signing of the ratified · any, but before the Issuance of
treaty to eliminate medium· the final communique on the four
range nuclear weapons, the days of talks that glossed over

New summer styles in
solids and prints. Sizes
8 to 18 and 38 to 44.
Reg. SJ2.00 to 534.00

MEN'S YAN HEUSEN"

enttne
INF treaty signed; ··
disarmanent begins

LADIES'
BLOUSES.

Twin Sheet Set .................... Only 515.99
Full Sheet Set ...................... Only 524.99
Queen Sheet Set.~............... Only 526.,9

Mostly clear tonight, low in
mid 60s. Thursday, partly
cloudy, high near 85, chance of
rain 30 percent.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 1, 1988

•

Reg. 57 .00........ Sole 55.59
Reg. 58.50........ Sole '6.79
Reg. S1 0.50 ..... Sole 58.39

c-dinated bed. sets indudl OM fitted lhltt. one
flat shHt and two standard pillowcases. AH art ,..
iron percale in an array of prints.

BUY A SHIRT
GET ONE

-GREEN, BROWN or IVY

JU$1

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

Dryer

at

Quality ao.d elegance by
lorraine and Texsheen. In
beige, black, blue and
white.
Sizes 32 to 48.

ANNIIfllfERSARY SALE!

Select your favorite styles from our big selection regular sizes, big sizes, tall sizes.
Regular prices $5.'15 to $32.95.
FOR THIS SALE

electric

Vol.39. No.18
Copyrighted 1988

•

Camisoles

SPECIAL!

.,

'3300

e

SALE

Swim Trunks

Blue, pink, peach or
beige bath towels,
hand towels and
· . ·: wash clotlls. Stock
· up and savel

Pick 4

CELEBRATING WITH FANTASTIC SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE"

Towel
Special
FREE!

531

SQ.YD.

ANNI~ERSARt

Buy One•••
Get One

Daily Number

Page 6

$39 9 SQ.YD.

Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale

.Ohio Lottery

Lakers
rout Dallas

SCULPTURED CARPET

DON'T MISS THIS SUPER
CELEBRATION.••• ''SAVINGS"

l

•

derived gasoline additive that
were In states that haa reciprocal
tax-abatement measures for
Ohio ethanol producers. Indiana
began phasing outltsethanol tax
breaks In 1985.
New Energy's South Bend
plant produces about 65 million
gallons of ethanol a year, Evans
said. Despite the victory In the
nation's highest court, the company was less than ecstatic, he
said,
''The up side was not that
great, and the !potential) down
side was unbearable," he said.
''We couldn't afford to lose."
The ruling also preempts simIlar measures in llllnois, Kentucky and Tennessee, he said.
"It's not so much that we gain
In Ohio, but we don't lose the

right to sell In some of these other
states where we have markets
and where we would like to do
business," Evans said.
The Archer-Danlels·Midland
Co, and the Pekin Energy Co.,
owned In part by Texaco, together produce 5QO million gal·
Ions of ethanol a year in llllnols.
That firm stands the biggest
chance of gaining as a result of
the ruling, even though It did.not
join New Energy's suit against
the state of Ohio, Evans said.
''The (state legislature of)
Ohio excluded New Energy from
the state." he said. "(The law)
was passed specifically to screw
us, but I guess the other produc·
ers didn't have !\. big , enough
appetite to take on the ·state of
Ohio."

185
180

175
170
J F M A
1988
UPt Graphic
MONTHLY REPORT - The lederal government's monthly
Index ol Ieadl111 eco~lc Indicators I'OIIe a weak 0.2 percent In
April, and revlalo111 af previous eeUmates lor the lirsl quarter ol
1888 lflowed two co...cullve quarters ol decline, the Commerce
Depanment said today. (1JPI)

�.Wednesday, June 1. 1988

Commentary
The Daily ·Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF T.HE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
Is:
ffi;:::} ,.,__..___--,-, ....--d'•.=o
~v

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

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Amer ican Newspaper PubiJshers Association .
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. Allletlers are subject to editing and must be signed with name. address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In _. .
gOOd taste. addressing issues, not personalities.

Remembering the
·Pumpkin Papers
By ARNOLD SAWlSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Growing up, some e vents remain just below the
sutiace of memory, always ready to be recalled into sharp focus by
some esoteric cue. For many of us who remember the 1940s,
"Pumpkin Papers" does it.
.
The announcement last week that Whittaker Chambers' farm.near
Westminster, Md. , had been designated a national historic landmark
brought back a flood of memories under the label "The End of
Innocence."
When World War II ended in 1945, those of us too young to fight but
old enough to know what had.happened believed that the forces of evil
had been destroyed and that the world was readY to enter an era of
peace. prosperity and justice.
,
The courageous Russians, who had turned the Nazi tide in Eastern
Europe at a price of lives in the millions, were our allies . China, freed
of the Japanese aggressors, seemed ready to emerge as a great free
nation.
The.dash of Ice water was not long coming. Suddenly, what Winston
Churchill called • the Iron Curtain divided Europe and China's
Interrupted civil war resumed . Stalln and Mao replaced Hiller and
Tojo as international vlllians.
The Red Menace, which we vaguely knew had terrified our parents
in the 1920s, reappeared in the United States. The House Committee
on Un-American Activities wentcommunist hunting, making a lot of
noise but bringing back few scalps. True believing anti-communists
believed the committee. Others viewed It as a political circus at best,
a threat to free speech and thought at worst
Then came the Hiss-Chambers case. The Impeccable and upright
Alger Hiss, a model of Eastern establishment respectabiity ·and
diplomatic professionalism, was publicly accused of carrying on a
secret life of communist allegiance and Soviet espionage. His accuser
was the rumpled, dumpy Chambers. a writer and confessed former
communist who seemed to many to be intent on expiating his sins by
smearing everyone he ever knew .
The Pumpkin Papers were microfilmed documents Chambers said1
he hid In a hollowed-out pumpkin on his farm north of Baltimore in the
late 1930s, and the photographs of committee sleuths peering at
Chambers' garden as it they had just discovered the fateful evidence
were a forerunner of the staged "photo opportunities" that are a
·
mainstay of modern press agentry
The documents actually proved nothing, but the episode became a
symbol for the entire drama that was climaxed by a ·tense public
confrontation between Hiss and Chambers and the former State
Department official's sworn denial of the spy charges. That Is what
Jed to Hiss's conviction for perjury.
When Hiss went to prison, many who had expected the courts to
vindicate him were either converted to the belief that treason was
rampant in the government or they mute~ their doubts . Denying the
existence of subversion after the Hiss trials became suspect in itself.
, What followed, as often happens when dissent from any quarter is
muffled, was overreaction. Guilt by association, blacklisting and
jingoism tainted political discourse In the United States for most of
· the next decade.
_
What came to be .called "the McCar thy era" ran Its course by the
1960s, re-emerging In less virulent form in th e 1980s. But for those
Innocents who had their first sip of ideological politics 40-plus year
ago, the words "Pumpkin Papers" evoke a taste that never will be
completely forgotten.

Berry's World GATE

:az

-·

WASHINGTON - The man
who will head U.S. Inspection
team s verifying whether the
Soviets obey the Intermediaterange nuclear forces treaty has
plenty of reason to be skepticaL
Brig. Gen. Roland Lajoie knows
how far the Soviets will go to
cover their . tracks when they
break their word.
Lajoie saw the Soviets at their
· worst in 1985 when they murdered one of his men in East
Germany a nd then tried to
weasel out of the blame. The
victim was Maj. Arthur D.
Nicholson, part of a 14-man
military liaison team authorized
to observe the Soviet military in
Ea,st Germany. The United
States and the Soviets have an
agreement allowing military observers In ·East and West Germany, and Nicholson was performing his duties under that
treaty.
The reaction of the Soviets
when confronted by Lajoie was
typical of their operating philosophy: The best defense is a good
• 'offense. Routinely, whenever
they have been charged with
violations of past arms control
treati es, the Soviets have
trumped up charges about alleged American violations of the
same treaties.
In the case of Maj. Nicholson,
the best defense was to blame the
Americans for the death of one of
our own. The truth was, Nichol-

son had been conducting a legal
surveillance of a tank shed in
Ludwigshist, East Germany,
when a jittery young Soviet
sentry gunned him down.
In 1985, Lajoie was a colonel,
and chief of the observation team
in East Germany. In 1986, he
became the U.S. military attache
in Paris. He was recently appointed to head the On-Site
Inspection Agency, a newly
created organization that will
oversee American Inspection
teams charged with verify!IIg the
INF treaty. Lajoie was in Geneva
last week working out the final
details of verification to satisfy
Congress, so President Reagan
can take a ratified treaty to the
Moscow summit May 29.
Lajoie had been on a Sunday
outing with his family March 24,
1985, the day Nicholson was
killed. He returned home to a
ringing phone. It was a sergeant .
at the Berlin office who told him
that the Soviet External Relations Branch (SERB) had reported "there had been an
accident" involving Maj. Nicholson, and that Lajoie was to report
to the chief of SERB at the site.
We recently obtained the confidential Investigative report of
the murder, including 23 pages of
Lajoie's recollections of the
events of that day.
He first went to his office and
called SERB. A major told him to
report immediately to Ludw!gs-

lust. He didn't know that Nicholson was already dead and that his
driver, Sgt. Jessie Schatz, was
being held.
Lajoie and other Am~rican
officers sped to Ludwlgslust,
averaging 160 kilometers an hour
on the Autobahn. Near the scene,
a Soviet SERB officer met them
in a jeep and escorted them to the
site. " He had a particularly
somber look and said, 'Please
follow me.' So we got liack In the
car and followed him. I Immediately had a bad feeling," Lajoie
told investigators.
It was dark, and the scene was
illuminated by lights from Soviet
military vehicles. Lajoie was
told to walt for the head of SERB,
and while he waited, another
Soviet officer spilled the news.
"One of them admitted that Maj.
Nicholson had been shot and
killed," Lajoie said. He headed
for Nicholson's body, but Soviet
officers blocked his path and told
him to wait until the SERB chief,
Gen. Pereversev, arrived.
Pereversev was there within
five minutes and led Lajoie to a
group of Soviet officers. The
American Immediately recognized Gen . Krlvosheyev, the
cheif of staff for all Soviet forces
In East Germany. The presence
of such a heavy hitter told Lajoie
that the Soviets knew they had
made a big mistake.
"The general said the guard
had fired at the legs, but the
round had hit Maj. Nicholson and

... ANOo~THe . ·
MQ:JD oF THIS 4-tft
SUI&gt;i?RI»~R SUMMIT

. ~~N~NAND

6oRMCKElV, We'~
.ReRJRTIHt; LMi? F~M ...

killed him ," Lajoie recounted.
The general then went on the
offensive, telling Lajoie "this
was a mandatory discharge of
(the sentry's) legal responsibilities and the Soviet soldier was
obligated to do that and had no
recourse. He said that the fault of
the Incident lay with Maj, Nicholson who had failed to heed (the
sentry's) warning." (Schatz, Nicholson's driver, later testified
there had been no warning.)
The general then "protested
this serious departure from established procedures. At that
point, I inteFrupted him and said,
'General, you have kllled one of
my officers and you are
protesting?"
"Gen. Krlvosheyev didn' t miss
a beat and continued talking
about holding me personally
respons)ble for deliberately worsening relationships between our
two countries," Lajoie said.
Krivosheyev and Lajoie then
dis puled whether the area was on
the Jist of places the Americans
were allowed to observe. It was,
and Lajoie had maps to prove it.
But the Soviet general argued
otherwise.
All the while, Maj . Nicholson
lay dead, with his face In the dirt.
"Even In the darkness, on the
camouflaged shirt, a hole and
some collected blood could be
seen on his ,back," Lajoie said.
When he got close enough to see
Nicholson, he accused the Soviets of shooting him In the back.
In reality , It was an exit wound.
Nicholson had been shot in the
stomach as he ran toward his car
to escap_e the firing sentry. .
One of the Soviet officers
ventured the most absurd statement yet: "He was shot as hew as
charging the guard."
"I gave him an Incredulous
look, like an unarmed officer
would be charging an armed
guard," Lajoie said.
· Lajoie was not allowed to claim
Nicholson's body that night. But
he was allowed to take Nicholson's unhurt driver, Sgt. Schatz,
with him when he left at midnight, nearly eight hours after
the shooting.
Before Lajoie left, the Soviets
pulled one more stunt from their
bag or tricks. They tried to make
him sign a statement of their
version of the killing. Lajoie
refused.
To this day, the Soviets have
refused to take the blame for
Nicholson's murder.

. ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
American Legion team did not
get off to a very auspicious start
in the 1988 season as they
dropped a Memorial Day twlnbill
to Marietta by scores of 12 to 6
and 6 to 5, the latter an extra
Inning affair.
In the opener, the visitors
ripped off five hits, good for four
runs, in the first frame and were
never threatened by the Meigs
crew after that.. Eddie Collins, on
the mound for the home team ,

~~
.-t&gt;
() lMibyNO. tnc:

"Notice the growing number of people who
are doing what the pope does upon ·landlng:"

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, June 1, the 153rd day of 1988 with213 to follow ,
The moori Is waning, moving toward Its last quatter.
The morning stars are Mars, Jupiter
Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign ot Gemini. They Include
Jacques Marquette, French Jesuit priest and expJQrer of the
Mississippi, In 1637; Mormon leader Brigham Young in 1801; English
poet John Masefleld in 1878; bandleader Nelson Riddle In 1921 (age
67); actress Marilyn Monroe in 1926; actor Andy Griffith in 1926 Cage
62); crooner Pat Boone In 1934 (age 54); actor-comedian Cleavon
Little In 1939 (age 49), and rock musician Ron Wood of The Rolling
Stones, In 1947 (age 41).

atrd

.,

&gt;

fundamentalists, the champion
of whom is Ronald Reagan. Talk
about astrology at the NatiOnal
Association of Religious Broadcasters, and they'll exorcise you
off the podium. The ramifications of an evangelically supported political leader living by
Linda Goodman's Sun Signs Is
mind-boggling,
If a right-wing conservative
leader of the free world can
espouse as ethereal an Idea as
astrology, what's next? Reagan
astral-projecting hln\self to a
sleeping Mikhail Gorbachev and
whispering in his eat of arms
treaties?
Consider the possibilities of the
Moscow Summit held on a
mountain-top when the planets
are right. The negotiators hold
hands, consult a few 11o1ayan gods,
hum a little, and come up with a
plan lor world peace. I can think
of worse ways to negotiate. Like
The People's Court, for example.
Extend this idea, If you wlll, to

•

""'

runs with the remaining three
coming by virtue of Meigs
miscues.
Meanwhile, Brian Warden
kept the Meigs bats under control
for the most part allowing the
locals only slx safeties, the biggle
being a three run homer by Brent
Bissell. Mark Bradley was the
big man at the plate for the
victors with a four-bagger and
two singles.
In game two, Marietta scored
an unearned run in the eighth to
break a 5-5 deadlock for the

sweep on the day . Mel,gs jumped
out to a 2-0 lead in the first frame
but It was short-Jived as the
Marietta gang posted three of
their own In the second . Meigs
tied it again and were holding a.
one run lead but could not hold
the visitors at bay and they tied It
in the seventh and then picked up
the winning run as the result of a
fielding error In the eig!Jth.
Brett Saxon led the Meigs
batsmen at the plate with three
singles and Matt Heidorn was top

gun for the Marietta crew with a
triple, double and single.
Commenting in the games ,
Coach Kramer attributed crucial
errors that resulted In runs
scored by the visitors . "'Our
hitting started to come around In
the second contest l)ul we still
failed to get the big hit when we
needed it", Kramer said. " I'm
not going to Jet these games
dictate the rest of the season. We
will bounce back. We have a good
club and we·wil] score runs thl.s

•

year We need to work much
harder on our defense ."
Kramer had high praise for the
play of Brent Bisselll and Brett
Saxon both defensively and offensively . He also staled that he was
well pleased with the performance turned in by Stev~ Horner
on the mound.
Saturday Meigs will travel to
Athens for a double header at the
high school field. and will enter- :
ta in Wellston in a double header
at home on Sunday .·

Cards edge Astros; ·rookie ·blanks Reds

I

·

-

~ ~:

'I

\
CUBS MN - Cubs' shortstop Shawon Dunston, left, who made
the final putout of Tuesday afternoon's game against the Reds In
Wrigley Field, flips the ball into the glove of rookie pitcher Jell
Plco after the Cubs' 4-0 win. Pico, who was recently called up from
the Cubs' Iowa minor-Jea1111e team to replace Injured hurler AI
Nipper, struck out six to pick up his first major league win. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

,

Majors

•
•
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Ea"

San FrudMe
C1ncln ... l

\\' L Pet. GB
33 16 .61:1 -

New Vork
Clt&gt;Vt&gt;IMd

2~

.'II 19 .6!0

Dt!trolt
Bm.ton

~K

t5
Z6
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Mllwaukf'

Toronlo
Balllmon-

2Cl
22
2-t
!9
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.:120 221h

Wt'!lit

Oakta.nd
Mlnri!!Sota

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19 S2

Tet.ll.!l

Kw.n!M.&lt;~ City

ChiC4l'O
Seattle
California

.100 .521 ~
.S 10 9!,
.olfQ U

A3R 1l
.431 l!l lf.
.373 18%

Tllf!!lldaq '!f ftnulhl

Torontel, Mllwau 1ft 0
Kllna&lt;; City I . Cln-elandl, 11 Inn.
Min neso&amp;a R. Tn:u 1 '

/You "'Il ol-2) ,.1:15 p.m .
Baltlmol'f' (8a1Lud 1· 1) att

suuk-

lftankhtoadti-2), I :SS p.m.
~troll

Chlca•o (Bitllrer t-Il at

(Morris -'"fl). 1:lS p.m.
Kanf!IL'l City (8annl'lter i-4) at
C'll'\leland I Bal l e~~ H), 7: 3~ p.m .
Milwaukee (BirkiM'ck H) at Toronto (F11UU.A~ 4--3), 7 t~ p.m .

(Guzman 5-:1) al Mlnm!iota
(Viola 8-1 ), 11:15 p.m.
ThursdiQ''aGamf.!K
Toronrlo at Best on, nlpt

Texu at Chlca«&lt;), aiJhl

the boardroom. Or the staff throw of America, we'd forge a '
meeting. Instead of months of whole new view of compatibility.
subterfuge and scorekeeplng, We'd ally ourselves according to '"
culminating In shouting matches positions on the great planetary ,.
and threats of demotion, we scheme. "Well, if you're a '
could consult the stars, see whose Pisces, then, hey, OK. How can ,
birth signs match up, maybe all we not get along?"
go out In the yard and stand next
And here I thought we were
to an evergree!l tree for psychic over the "What's your sign?" ·.:
energy, and walt for inspiration times. I thought most 9f us,
to come.
especially people like the ReaIf the idea did catch on with the gans, had pitched that line out
right-wing crowd, maybe prayer with heavy gold che.ins and 1 ~
In school would take a back seat polyester shirts open to mid: ·. ,
to a dally reading of the news- navel.
paper horoacope over the school
Or perhaps the Reagans were
Intercom. Tests could be post- otherwise occupied during the
polled to a better day, Ditto era some of us were experimentathletic contests and cheerleader ing with astrology and other
tryouts. "A Nation At Risk" beliefs now lumped Into the
would be seen as just a mass , history we call the '60s. Maybe
national achievement test taken they discovered It just as we
on the wrong day,
forgot about it.
Could this finally mean the
How Ironic. While·the Reagan
political merging of liberal and kids were trying things like ballet
conservative factions? Rather and yoga, the Reagans were
than seeing each other as ar- throwing campaign fund-raisers
chenemies dedicated to the over- and thinking the kids were weird.

Calllorma..a M!llwau kte, nlrhl

SeattJe at Kama'll Clly. a IJilt

NATIONAL LEAGu•:
Eaot
W L P~t .
New York
l41S .• t
Plllllburxh
H Ill .ltn
St. l..oul\"1
t&amp; ~• .no
Clllca«o
!5 !l4 ,SJf
MontrraJ.
23 !5 .11t

GB
4~

M%
9

10 %
19 1!11 .ffl4 lol

\\!I;'Pil

'l7 '!0 .574 -

Golf toumey
set Saturday
The Fourth Annual Mason
County Emergency Medical Service Golf Tournament is scheduled
for Saturday al Mason's Riverside
Golf Course.
The tournament is limited to the
ftrst 144 entries received by the
comminee. Tournament Chainnan
Herold Nonon said Tuesday that he
has received 79 intrees, about half
of what the tournament had by this
time last year.
The players will be divided by
handicap into four groups.
Friday evening a meet-the-team
dinner is scheduled for 6 p.m. After
dinner, refreshments and a pulling
tournament are planned. Entry-fees
are $40 per player, with the
proceeds going to the Mason
County Emergency Medical Services. The fee includes green fees,
can, prizes and two dinners. Hole
and tee sponsorships will be sold
for $100. For further infonnation
call 773-9527 or 773-5204.

Signs new contract
By Unlled 'Press lnlernatlonal
The New Jersey Nets signed
President and General Manager
Harry Weltman to a multi-year
contract. Weltman, 53, joined the
Nets before the 1987-88 season.
He previously served as GM of
the Cleveland Cavaliers and St.
Louis Spirit of the ABA.

Transactions
Baseball
Baltbnore Announeed
owner Edward Bennett WIJU-

amolllepped aside as president
and will be replaeed by vice
preaklent Larry Luccblno.
Montreal - Sent .....,nd
baaeman Johnny Paredes to
ladlan"P,,U• ol the Amerlean
A.oclat10n (AAA): reealleol

•

Caoey

Candaele

lndlanapoU. .

Oltcaao 4, Onclnnui I
Die~

San

II. Philadelphia 0

San Franc:IIICD II, Mo nbul 2
j\l..lla II, Plltthlll"lb I
N~

York 5, LoM Mll;ele!l.f, II Inn.

St. Loul!l

t , .Houllon 7

We_._.,!l Gamf!ll
Clnclnratl CBrownlna UJ al Chlt!"'O (Maddux.A·l), 2:%1 p. m.

Lo• An ~f'JII (Belcher S.2) at New York .
(Ferralldtz 1-t),'7:S5 p.m.
San Dlep (Grut 1--4) at PhiladtlpNa
f K . GrOll!! 5-1), 1: 3S p.m.
Pllt"*rth (Flsh~ f-1) at Atlanta i Z.
Smtih ! -3), 1:tl p.m.
Sl.
(O'Neal Ui llt Ho11~on
(Danrin !-4 ) , IIi: !5 p.m . .
OliCIICI at N~ York, •liN
St. Lou .. at PhiiMel ..... a, nl(llt
Monl~llat Plai. . ll'll. nl ...
Minar I.e .~~fEW Sc:en!!!

TueiMIIQ''ll &amp;ea•s
l..o•Mvll~ !, 'rotedo I

N•MIIIe ltl, Columhual
Rlchmo_. at Pawtuclr.rt, !IUI'Ip., $1h
han., rain
Tldew~l@l' Itt Oklahoma Clly Undl,
pJIId., rain
Maine -t, Omaha 3
Paw,W!IId 4, Iowa I
Ro~~r I, Bull• S, II Inn.
lndiMapelbl; I!, Srraoellfl II

Texa.~

Phl.lad~pNa

'ntftlda)''~

25 • •418 ..
'3 :n .4f0 )!,\
Ill 3! .380 1&amp; \-tz
18 :It .3411 11
Bell ults

'D•n••ht''• Game.~

BaltimOre 12,SelilleS
Nf"W YorkS, OaklandO
Bokton ol, Callklrnlal
WedDeMIIQ''!!i Game&gt;;
New l 'ork (Hud.olon ,.. J) at Oakland

or chicken pox infections could •
contract Reye's Syndrome, ,
which might lead to death or '
permanent brain damage.
:
The Food and Drug Admlnis- :
!ration, the Surgeon General and '
the · Centers for Disease Control
all pressed for warnings on ,
aspirin labels - but OMB re- •
jected their authoritative sclen- •
tiflc evidence and sided, Instead, ,
with the aspirin Industry, whlch •
was concerned about losing
sales.
Indeed, after the Harvard
School of Public f!ealth analyzed
OMB's response to 51 studies
proposed by the Centers for
Disease Control during the mid- "
1980s, It concluded that "OMB ·
has delayed, Impeded and
thwarted governmental re- ·
search efforts designed to
answer public demands for infor- ·
mation on serious public-health '
questions."
It is too late to change the •
Reagan administration's course,
but the next president must take
steps to restore OMB to its
legitimate status as a manage- "
ment agency- not an intruder in
policy decisions.

San Dlep
1\.tl.nta

~

l.G••

Chiuro IIJ, Def:rGit 1

!

27 21 .513

Ho•Nloft

AMERICAN LEAGUE
By Unik'd Pre~~slnlll'r lilt kl•l

Reagan news was in the stars.__Sa_~_a_h_Ov_e_rs_tr_e_et:
Well, you could have knocked
me over with a yellow clipping of
"Your Dally Horoscope."
Ronald and Nancy Reagan are
about the last people on earth I'd
have suspected of caring where
the earth was In relation to other
plants,. much less consulting Its
position to see if it was a good
time to sign a nuclear-missile
treaty.
It's not that I'm saying an
interest In astrology Is anything
to sneer at; It's just such a llbetai
idea. Astrology Is commonly
associated with the ieftlsh
fringe; harmonic convergents,
for heaven's _sake,
And I use the word "heaven" in
the more traditional sense, not in
the more recent portrait of astral
projection and near-death experienpes, where one hurtles down
a tunnel towards deceased loved
ones.
.
.
But the whole Idea Is hardly the
province of the conservatives,
much less with conservative

suffered the loss , t.:olllns, who
worked just over three frames, Is
a very capable hurler but could
not get the bail where he wanted
It as the very experienced
Marietta batsmen (at least live
players are college students)
teed off for six earned runs
against the righthander.
Matt Bond, a young rookie lefty
from Gallla Academy, came on
in relief and worked the final
three plus Innings and was
tagged for three more earned

'

Budget office blocks data ___R_o_ber_t~_a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Be- tiohs that Imposed even tighter Indians. Citing "apatheUc recause few chores infuriate more restrictions. As a result, the law spondent behavior," OMB kaled
people than dealing with govern- · that was supposed to ease the the study.
ment forms, there should have paper-work burden on harried
Item: OMB refused to allow
been elation across the land when citizens was transformed Into a the Commerce Department's
Congress approved the Paper statute that frustrated the .free Economic Development AdminWork Reduction Act of 1980.
flow of in formation between Istration to evaluate the efficacy
Written specifically to "min- those people and their of making federal grants to
Imize the federal paper-work government.
Impoverished communities.
burden," the law replaced the
Aggressively exercising Its
Item: OMS quashed a Public
antiquate Federal Reports Act of new-found status as the govern- Health Service proposal to study
1942 as the principal statute ment's "Information czar," the relationship between reducspecifying government record- OMB has displayed an aversion tions In the government's antikeeping and reporting require- to legitimate research projects poverty program and increases
ments. The new law also gave the that might conflict with the In infant mortality in some
White House Office of Manage- president's agenda or discomfit locations.
ment and Budget unprecedented his friends In the corporate
Item : The Occupational Safety
power to determine whether the world.
and Health Administration
collection of information by any
Item: Disturbed about reports sought to gather data about
department or agency Is "neces- of high rates of birth defects and · wood-dust exposure that has
sary for the proper performance miscarriages among pregnant been linked to nose, throat and
of Its functions" and whether it women working at video display stomach cancers among those
"will have practical utllity for terminals, the National Institute working In plants where timber
the agency."
for Occupational Safety and Is processed into various proMoreover, the law gave the Health planned to study whether ducts. OMB vetoed the effort, on
OMB director absolute authority VDTs posed reproductive health grounds that it constituted "unto disapprove of any proposed hazards - but OMC scuttled the approve·d information
government program to collect project.
collection."
or disseminate information If it
Item: The Indian Health SerIn other instances, OMB had
did not comply with OMB's
vice, which Reagan has sought to meddled unjustifiably in more
interpretation of the statutory
abolish, attempted to conduct a substantive matters - including
guidelines.
systematic evaluation of its a case in which It quashed
President Reagan's appoindelivery of medical services to warnings to parents that children
tees a tOMB promulgated regulagiven aspirin following Influenza

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Marietta Legion takes pair from Meigs nine,. 12-6, 6-5

lnipection team head works familiar turfBy lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 1. 1988

i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~--------------~~~~==~~~--------------~~~==~~ .

•

from

Denwr e, Rlcllmolld 1
We.--1\Y '!I Game~
Rh::hmcn.. M Dl!•wr

Toledt at LoulnUir

Colllll'lllu~t ..

NMIMIIc'nclewater at OIIIMoma Clly
Iowa ai Mal.e

OmliltaM Pawh.:bt
Buffalo U Roctte.&amp;er
tncl....,.a. at Srracu~~e

..,..,...,.sGam"'

Ridlmelld a&amp; Den~r
Teledo at Lo•IB\'IIIe
Colurnhl• at N•hvllle
'nd!waler .M Olllahom. Chy

Iowa a1 Maine

Omahaal PIIWI.Cket
Buffalo ld Ro~h..ter
latlanapoiiA at 1 racu ..

s

Todd Worrell worked 2 1-3
innings to earn his leagueleading 14th save.
Knepper, 6-1, began the game
with a 1.28 ERA , lowest in th e
majors. He allowed eight runs,
though oniy two earned, in six
Innings.
The Cardinals took a 1-0 lead in
the first. Vince Coleman and
Smith reached on errors by first
baseman Glenn Davis and second baseman Jim Pankovits.
Coleman scored on Tom Pagnozzi's infield s ingle.
Houston wen t ahead 2-1 in the
seco nd on Alex Trevino's two·run
double.
St. Louis scored five unearned
runs In the fourth . Tony Pena
opened with a single and took
third on Jose Oquendo's two-out
double. McWilliams grounded to
to third, but Chuck ·Jackson
overthrew Davis for a two-ru n
error. Coleman singled,. before
Smith lifted a 2-0 pitch over the
left-field fence.
"Our defense allowed six runs
10 scor&lt;' ." Astros Manager Hal

' By LEN HOCHBERG
.
UPI Sports Writer
Ozzie Smith, a seven-time
Ail-Star and six-time Gold Glove
shortstop, Tuesday night belted
his first home r11n since the 1985
National League Championship
Series.
Smith hit a fourth-inning threerun homer to propel the St. Louis
Cardinals to a 9-7 triumph over
Bob Knepper and the Houston
Astros. In his 11-year career,
Smith has 14 homers - all of
them right-handed.
"I was just happy to hit the bail
hard," sai d Smith, whose last
homer was the pennant -winner in
Game 5 of the '85 League
Championship Series against Los
Angeles. "I just guessed right
because Knepper varies his
speed and is cool and crafty."
Larry McWilliams, 4-0, allowed four runs over five Innings.

OU cage camp
still has openings
Amy PrItchard
, head at
coach
of
women's
basketball
Ohio
University and director of the

~~~~u:~a;h~st~~~~al!r;a~~i

some openings available for this
year's camp, which runs from
June 12-16 and July 17-21.
The cost is $185 per camper, or
$165 for any group of five or more
campers who register together.
For more information, call the
Ohio University Workshops Office at 1-593-1776 or Amy Prltchard at 1-593-1193.

Seibel, Smith
named All-MOC
Rio Grande seniors Trey Seibel
and Rob Smith were named to the
1988 Mid-Ohio Conference allstar squad.
Seibel, a first baseman, joined
fellow infielders Chris Brown
(Mount Vernon) , Rob Edwards
(Malone) , Jim Herman (Tiffin),
Amner Reyes (Mount Vernon)
and Rob Tyson (Walsh) .
Rob Smith, an outfielder,
joined Ohio Dominican's Lance
Baker, Malone's Tom Crank and
Mount Vernon 's Todd Weber.
Other a II- stars ' include
catchers Tim Blasczyk (Mount
Vernon) and Brian Murtha (Ohio
Dominican), pitchers Audelle
Cummings (Ohio Dominican),
Kevin Hammons (Malone) and
league MVP Jeff Kuder (Mount
Vernon) , and designated hitter
Joe Montanaro (Tiffin).

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ninth when Brunansky hit hi s:
seventh homer of the year.
Houston 's Gerald Young closed
the scoring with an RBI doubl e.
Elsewhere in the National
League, Chicago blanked Clncin- •
natl 4-0, San Francisco belted :
Montreal 9-2, Atlanta blitzed
Pittsburgh ll-1, San Diego routed
Philadelphia 8-0. and New York·
edged Los Angeles 5-4 in 11
innings.
In the American League, it
was : Chicago 10, Detroit 1;
Toronto 9, Milwaukee 0; Kan sas
City 6, Cleveland 3 in 10 inni ngs ;
Minnesota 8, Texas 6; Baltimore
12, Seattle 5: Boston 4, California
3; and New York 5, Oakland 0.
Cubs t, Reds 0
At Chicago, Jeff Pico. fired a ·
four-hitter in his major-league
debut as the :JO-day suspension of
Ci ncinnati M~nager Pete Rose
ended . Pico, 22, handed the Reds
their fourth straight defeat and
12th in 27 games under interim
manager Tommy Helms. Andre
Dawson hit his llth homer. hi s
first since May 13.

l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;llll;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oA

1

C

RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE

Lanier said. "Some teams go
through a tough period, but we
made fundamentaf errors on
fundamental plays. You can't let
a team have six runs when they
shouldn't have had any ."
Houston cut St. Louis's lead to
6-4 in the fifth on Billy Hatcher's
seco nd homer of the season, a
two-run shot.
"I can't believe this place (The
Astrodome),'' St. Louis Manager
Whitey Herzog said. "It's become a homer haven now . What
did they cha nge here 7 "
" I .just got a hold of one,"
Hatcher sa id. "Everyone gets
lucky once in a while. "
The Cardinals scored twice
more in the seventh. Tom Brunansky stroked an RBI single,
exte nding his hitting streak to a
league season-high 16 games .
Pagnozzi si n gled home
Brunansky.
Houston closed to 8-6 in the
seventh when Davis singled In
one run and Worrell's wild pitch
allowed anoth"er.
St. Loui,s took a 9-6 edge In the

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�Page- 4-. The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

The

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

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Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND STREET

. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY

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Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Meigs Athletic Boosters conduct annual spring

spor,t~

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomeroy,-Middleport, Ohio

fete

Blue Jays blank Brewers 9-0
behind Stieh; Indians beaten

~

ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs hi gh
school athletes from the boy's
and girl's track teams , the girl's
reserve a nd varsity soltb all
squads and the reserve and
varsity base ball to;&gt;ams were
recognized and honored belore a
sparse turnout at the high sc hool
cafeteria In the final awards
banquet of the school year.
Master of ceremonies Jim
Soulsby introduced the various
coaches w!lo prese nted let ters,
pins , plaques and trophies to
members of each sport. Jim
Oliphant, boYs track coach, gave
awards to Dennis Boothe, Derek

Cremea.n s, Scol Edmonds, Bracy
Korn, Brett Little, Tony Miller,
Shane Phlllips, Rod Brewer and
Mike Van Meter . Tony Miller and
Dennis Boothe were given special recognition for the most
Improved In field eve nts and the
leading scorer, respectively .

Wagner, Pam Whaley and Missy
Woods. Kloes, Jennifer Taylor
and Henderson were named to
the AJJ.TVC team and special
awards went to Whaley and
Nelson tor most Improvement
s hown in field and running event s
and to Jody Taylor and Render·
son for mas t points scored in field
and running events.
Presenting certifica tes of
achievement to members of the
reserve baseball team was
Coach John Porter. He presented
Eric Heck, . Keith Mattox, Troy
Qualls, Kevin Taylor and Jason
Wright to those assembled .

Gordon F isher, girl's track,
introduced Nancy Baker, Nicole
Bunch, Les ley Carr, Jodi Custer,
Traci Ell Is, Dee Henderson,
Tracy HysE'II Tammy Kauff,
Wend i Kioes , Missy Nelson, Tina
Riffle, Atny Rouse, . Jennifer
Tay lor, Jody Taylor Amy

•

Only four members of the
varsity unit were present for
awards given by Coach Roger
Foster and Coach- Cliff Kennedy.
Mike Bartrum, Jeff McElroy,
Joey Snyder a nd. Chris Stewart
were awarded pins and Keith
Mattox , of the reserve squad.
was given praise forbis work as a
member of the varsity team In
t he latter part of the season.
Bartrum set a new school record
for strlkeoutts (214 in four years
a nd was accorded All·TVC honors. He had the best won·los t
record in the TVC (6-1) and the
lowest ERA for tbe season (.120) .

Stewart was presented a trophy
tor the most put·outs on defense,
recording 54 at the second base
posit ion.
Coach John Arnott Introduced
the reserve soft ball squad
members present. Receiving
certificates were Chris Rich·
mond , Tracl Richmond, Heidi
Caruthers, Kathy Lambert and
PamHaggy.
Arnott presented awards lo
Teresa Johnson, Julie Baity,
Margie Baker, Margaret
Rhodes, Tammy Wright, Marsha
King, Shannon Newsome, Tara

.

Humphrey, Elise Meier, Kim
Osborne and Kristen Stanley .
Wright was recOgnized for being
selected to the firs t team Ail-TVC
dream team and Johnson and
Baity for receiving honorable
mention to the all league squad.
He presented plaques to seniors
Baker, Baity Johnson, Rhodes
and Wright.
Mike Parker was given recog·
nltlon as baseball manager by
Coac h Foster and each of th e
coa ches expressed thetr thanks
for the support received from
various persons during ·the year.

Impressive field assembled for race
NORTHFIELD (UPI) - In·
dian Alert, the track-record
holder at Toronto's Mohawk
Raceway, has been Installed as
the 3-1 early line favorite to win
the $100,000 Battle of Lake Erie,
the showcase pacing event at
Northfield Park Saturday night.
The elght·horse tleld has been
called by General Manager Tom
Aldrich "undoubtably the best
field of pacers, top to bottom,
ever assembled In the 31-year
history of Northfield Park."
The entrants have won a
combined $3.9 million, the most
earnings In any single race,
or harness , in Ohio

I

racing his tory .
Lis ted as 7-2 second cho ices
behind Indian Alert, who drew
the Inside post position, are
Jaguar Spur, the 1987 Little
Brown Jug champion, a nd Stone·
bridge Skipper, the ·fastest aged
horse (4·year·old and older) In
North America last year.
Indian Alert paced a 1:53.2
mile at Mohawk May 6 for Doug
Brown, the leading driver on the
Ontario jockey club circuit; who
will drive. Saturday.
The average best winning time
tor the field is 1;52.8, nearly,.two
seconds faster than the North·
field track record otl: 54.6.

Special of the Weeki

BARBECUE

\

S1.24

CLOSE, BUT NO CIGAR- The Indians' Ju6o
Franco Illes past lhe first base bag, but Kansas
City first baseman George Brett takes the throw

WITH FRIES ...... S1.79
MOST IMPROVED- Tony Miller (I), most Improved In field
events &amp; Dennis Boothe (r), leading scorer in boy's track.

Women's
.qualifier
canceled

TRACK HONOREES - Missy Nelson, most improved running
events; Jennifer Taylor, AII·TVC 100-meter hurdles; Jody Taylor,
most points scored In field events; Dee Henderson, Ali-TVC In 1600and 3200-meter runs; and Wendi Kloes, All -TVC and winner of
eighth varsity letter.

•

EUGENE, Ore. &lt;UP! ) - Joe
Falcon of Arkansas and Vicki
~uber of Villanova llkely will
reaffirm their places as the ·
nation's premier middledlstance
runners at tbe NCAA Track and
Field Championships.
The meet runs Wednesday
through Saturday at Oregon' s
Hayward Field where Ga II Dev·
ers of UCLA and Carlette Guidry
of Texas are also expected battle
for supremacy In the sprints and
long jump.
Falcon and Huber, both jun.
lors, have dominated middle
distances this year and should
have little problem winning.
\
Both scored double victories in
the mile and 3,000 meters in
March at the NCAA Indoor
TOP PITCHER - Senior
Championships. They will Jlmlt
Mike Bartrum, Ali-TVC &amp;
themselves to one event apiece
leading pitcher in league.
this week.
Falcon of Belton _ Mo. , is
entered In the 1,500 meters and
his qualifying time or 3: 35.84 Is
Rain Is forecast for the first
the world's fastest this year. day , which is to begin (I p.m .
Thursday, he will run a qualify - PDT) with the men's javelin and
Ing heat for Saturday's final.
conclude at 8:10 p.m . with the
Huher will run the3,000and her women's 10,000.
NCAA qualifier or 8: 53.07 is
Devers and Guidry are each
nearly 15 seconds faster than that entered In five events and will go
of Oregon's Penny Graves, the head· to· head In four - 100
meters, bolh sprint relays and
second fastest qualifier. Huber
long jump. Devers will also
was to run a qualifying heat, but
It was canceled and she will compete In the 110-meter hur·
Instead run only In Friday's final.
dies , an event In which she shares
The meet's first two days will
the American record . Guidry, a
consist of qualifying heais, with
freshm~n.
run the 200
only three individual titles de- meters.
l:lded -women's 10,000 meters,
Their performances could de·
termlne the women's team
decathlon and heptathlon.

will

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CHICKEN BREAST..........................l.~a. ..... 3.09
HOMEMADE MEAT SALAD ............~~!.....;.. 89&lt;

16 SUCIS -

12 OZ.

KRAFT CHEESE .......... S1.87
ALL TVC HONOREES- (1-r) -JuDe Baity&amp;: Teresa Johnson,
honorable mention to AII·TVC team, and Tammy Wright, nw'Ded to
first team TVC.
champion. UCLA, bolstered by
deep and powerful sprinters, Is
heavily favored to win the men' s
title.
After expected victories at the
NCAAs, Falcon and Huber will
concentrate on the Olympic
trails In July at Indianapolis.
Falcon said he overextended
himself In 1987, leaving him In

Lakers rout Mavericks, 119-102

bad shape fo r the summer.
"I ran well indoors and out·
doors, but after the NCAA I was
just wrecked," he said.
Falcon says he is comfortable
at · any distance up to' 10,000
meters, but he wlll run the 5,000
at the trials _.
Huber will tackle the 3,000 at
the trials, where she will com·
pete against Mary Decker Slaney
for one of three Oly.mpic spots:
"I think Joe Falcon Is an
Olympics away from being ready
for world competition," Arkan·
sas Coach John McDonnell said.
1
' He's a great prospect but he's
only 21 years old. He's not ready
to mix it up with more expe.
rlenced, advanced people. He
needs two years and some
international competition to get
him ready for a meet like that
(the Olympics) ."
Huber says her college success
could raise unrealistic hopes.
"I worryaboutlt," she said. "I
want to run well. A lot of people
expect me to make the Olympic
team. They don't realize that just
to make the trials Is sucb an
accomplishment. That puts a lot
of pressure on me. They don't
realize how difficult it is."

INGLEWOOD , Calif. (UP!) Los Angeles can advance to Its make the las !break, we get the
The Los Angeles Lakers re· seventh league championship early lead."
gained control of the Weste rn series In tbe decade with a
The 6·foot-9 forward scored 10
Conference final Tuesday nigh t victory Thursday night at Reun- points in the third period as the
by regaining th'e lr shooting ion Arena. Game 7, If necessary, Lakers bullt a 92·71lead entering
touch, which they had thanks to would be Saturday at the Forum, the final quarter. Dallas got no
the fastbreak and the Forum .
where the Lakers are 9·0 against closer than 14 points thereafter.
The defending champions, the Mavericks in the playoffs.
Magic Johnson cont.rlbuted 20
shrugging off two weekend losses
assists and 15 points for the
at Dalla~ that saw them shoot·
"I don't think they have any
Lakers, while Kareem Abduijust 46 percent from the floor , leprechauns like the Boston Jabbar had 21 points and Byron
sank a sizzling 60 percent of their Garde.n, but they definitely have Scott17. A.C. Green finished with
attempts In Game 5 en route to a something," Dallas guard Ro· , 10 rebounds for the Lakers.
119·102 rout of the Mavericks .
lando Blackman said. "It's a
Mark Aguirre led tbe Maver"We have a motto: We're just feeling that !bey ha:ve, that they Icks with 31 points, Derek Harper
not going to lose at ·home," said thrive on ."
added 19 and Tarpley 18.
Lakers Coach Pat Riley, whose
Ignited by the awesome fastLos Angeles - Its longest run
club Is 8-1 at the Forum during break that had vanished In In the two games at Reunion
the playoffs. "Our best game ha s Dallas, the Lakers shot an Arena being 6 points - reeled off
been the first game of each series Incredible 73.7 percent from the 15 straight In a 20-4 burst
and each 'squeeze game."'
floor (14 or 19) in the second
James Worthy led the . Quarter to take their command"squeeze" on the Mavericks, Ing 17·point edge at Intermission.
scoring 18 of his 28 points in !he
The Mavericks, meanwhile,
llrst half as the Lakers raced to a sank. just 36 percent of their
64·47lead en route to a 3-2 edge In attempts, and were outscored
the best·Of·seven series.
31·20 In the period.
For the first time In the
Worthy, who shot 69 percent
matchup, Los Angeles beat Dal· from the floor in the first two
STOH ifOUIS: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.111.-S p.111~ Sat. 9 am.·l p.m.
las on the boards, owning a 47·40 games at the Forum but only 46
"OUR PRICE- MOST REASONABLE"
rebounding advantage Tuesday percent in Dallas, hit 12 of 18
night. The Lakers held Roy shots Tuesday nlghf, Including 5
Tarpley, who averaged 16 re- of 6 shots In !he decisive second
bounds In the first four games , to quarter.
a series low 11 -and just 3in the
lAO., OHIO
"The transition game set tbe
first half.
tone," Worthy said. "When we

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in time to retire Franco in Tuesday night's game
in Municipal Stadium. The Royals won 6·3. (UPI)

LendI
.advances
in French ·
Open play

ADOLPH'S
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GOlDEN DEliCIOUS
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BATHROOM TISSUE ••••~!~.:~~ S1.99

By TOM WITHERS
runs in the fifth off Mark Jerry Reuss , 3-2, blanked Detroit
UPI Sports Writer
Knudson to build an &amp;·0 lead. on six hit s over seven innings.
Although Toronto's Dave Stleb Kelly Gruber tripled under the Frank Tanana, B-3, was the loser.
was concerned about his stuff glove of a diving Glenn Braggs in
Royals 6, Indians 3
before tbe game, the right- right fi eld to score Rance MulllnAt Cleveland, Bill Bucknet
hander 's repertoire a lmost lks . Gruber :Scored when Jim broke a JOth·inning tie with a
worked to perfection Tuesday Ganter's throw sailed into the sacri!ice fly, and Scotti Madi'son
night.
Toronto dugout .
and Jamie Quirk added RBr
Stieb faced one batter over the
George Bell put Toronto ahead s ingles helping Kansas City.
minimum for hiS· first career 9·0 In the seve nth with an RBI Starter Mark Gubicza, 6·5, was
one-hitter to lead the Blue Jays to single. The loss was Milwaukee's the winner_Steve Farr picked up
a 9·0 triumph over the Milwaukee worst of the season.
his third save in relief. Cleveland
Brewers.
Elsewhere, Chi cago routed De- reliever Dan Schatzeder, 0·2,
B.J. Surhoft spoiled . Stleb's troit J0-1, Kansas City topped took the loss.
·
perfect game with a fourth - '&lt;?Ieveland 6·3 in 10 inn ings,
Twins 8, Ranger s 6
inning single.
Minnesota edged Texa s 8-6. Bas·
Ar Minneapolis, Greg Gagne
During his pregame warmup, ton nipped California 4-3, Balti - highlighted a three-run sixth
Stleb said he felt uneasy because more bla sted Sea tt)e 12-5, and inning with a two·run homer to
of a sore shoulder. " I was a little New York blanked Oakland 5·0.
help rally Minnesota. Juan Berbit leery about how I was going to
In the National League, it was: enguer. 5·3. scattered three hit s
throw when I was down in the New York 5, Los Angeles 4 11 in relief, and Jeff Reardon
bullpen, " saidStleb, 7·3. "But my In nings; San Diego 8, Philadel- worked one inning fo r his 13th
shoulder loosened up, and I had a phia 0; Montreal 9, San Fra n- save_ Texas reliever DaleMohor·
good first Inning. After that , I cisco 2; Atlanta 11 , Pittsburgh 1; cic, 2·2, took the loss .
was throwing mostly curve balls St. Louis 9, Houston 7; and
Red Sox 4, Angels 3
and sliders for strikes." ·
!Chicago 4, Ci ncinna ti 0.
At Ana heim. Mike Smithson
"Nine runs did It," said Stleb,
White Sox 10, Tigers I
shut ou t California over seven
who struck out five in earning his
At Detroit, Ivan Calderon, innings for his first victory in
sixth straight victory. "That Gary Redus and Ron Karkovice nea rly a year, a nd Marty Barrell
pretty well set !he stage for what all homered to power Chicago. co llected tb ree hits
I had to do."
Toronto' s six-run second in·
ning was a welcomed surprise for
Stleb and his teammates. who
FOR GIRLS
have had trouble scoring all
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL LARRY R . MORRISON
season.
GYMNASIUM
"It was a big boost for us to
JUNE 27 thru June 30-9 AM.· 1 P.M. each day
come up with those six runs for
The camp is open for ail Meigs County girls who will be in 4t h
· Dave," Toronto outfielder Jesse
through 9th grades next fa ll. Registtation fee tor the camp will
Barfield said. "This is the kind of
be $40 per person.
win that this team can use to
Each person will be awarded a camp t-shlrt at the end of the
week. There will be medals, ribbons, trophies and indi vidua l
build momentum ."
awards tor different age groups
Barfield returned to the lineup
INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION ON FUNDAMENTALS AND TEAM
after nearly three weeks on the
CONCEPTS WILL BE STRESSES.
disabled list with a sore left
Sponsored by Meigs Athletic Boosters
wrist, and contributed an RBI
(For more inlormatlon call Coach Foster at
single In four at-bats.
Meigs High School, 992-2I58)
Stleb has thrown two two·
hitters, and Tuesday's victory
REGISTRATION FORM (Please Print)
tied him with Roy Lee Jackson's
1984 club record for most tri NAME _________________________________
umphs (6) in May _
Toronto pounded Brewers star·
AGE------------ GRADE (next fall) __________
ter Chris Bosio, 6·6, for six
straight hits and six runs in the
ADDRESS _______________________________
second .
Tony Fernandez doubled home
the first two runs with a bases·
PHONE __~----------------~----------loaded double down the right·
field line. Ernie Whitt and
PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE ------~~~~----­
(WHAfTEAM J
Barfield each singled home a
run, and Lloyd Moseby's sacriSllffiT SIZE:
COST: $40.00
(check or money order)
fice fly scored Nelson LlrLano.
YOUTH: S M L
Fernandez scored from second
ADULT: S
M
L
XL
on Bosio' serroron a ground ball.
MAIL TO: Roger Foster, Camp Director
Tbe Blue Jays added a pair of
C/ o Meigs High Sch~ol, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769

. AREA CAGE CAMP

~~~{:~
'\

The Daily Sentinel Page- 7·

PARIS (UPI) - Top-seeded
·Ivan Lend!, trying for a third
consecutive French Open title,
advanced to the quarterfinals of
the $3.9 million tournament today by defeating John McEnroe
6-7 (3·7), 7-6 (7-3), 6-4, 6-4 In !he
completion of their fourth -round
match.
The match had been halted
Tuesday night with Lend! leading
4·21n the third set. He maintained
control in the third set and in the
fourth set he conceded merely
one point on his pwn serve.
Lend! was much sharper that
the man who was struggling In
drizzle and darkness Tuesday
night. McEnroe served well, but
was caught repeatedly by
Lendl's precise passing shots.
The victory took Lend! one step
closer to his third consecutlve
French Open title, and evened his
all·time score against McEnroe
at 14-14.
"He just hit an Incredible
amount of lines, " McE;nroe said.
"I've never seen a guy hit so
many, on every kind of shot serves, approaches, he was hitting the lines on everything.
"I believe It 's part of being a
great player to get !bose breaks.
He could easily have missed six
or seven of those shots."
Lendl said the drlercourtwas a
factor in his overnight
transformation.
"Yesterday I found ' It very
hard to find the groove because It
was wet and the court was
playing inconsistently," he said.
"I felt pretty good on my serve. I
started hitting some fi~st serves
as opposed to yesterday ."
Two-time champion Mats WI· 1
lander and American teenager
Andre Agassl today were to play
their raln·delayed quarterfinal
matches. Wilander faced Spa·
niard Emilio Sanchez, the 12th
seed, and Agassi, !he ninth seed,
was to play Argentina 's Gull·
Ierma Perez·Roldan.
Wllander beat Sanchez 8·6, 3·6,
6-0, 6·2 in their last meeting, a
1987 Davis Cup semifinal.
Agassl and Perez·Roklan have
never played each other before.
Agassi, 18, Is .t he youngest
American to reach a Grand Slani
quarterfinal since 1968, whjle
Perez·Roldan is the youngest
Argentinian to appear in a Grand
Slam quarterfinal.
Wimbledon Champion Pat
Cash, the fourtb seed, lost to
Soviet Andrei Chesnokov 2·6, 6·2,
6-4, 6-3 In a fourth·round match
completed Tuesday. In the final
set,Cash complained It was too
dark.
In women:s quarterfinal
matches, Argentina's Gabriela
Sabatini defeated Canadian
Helen Kelesl 4-6, 6·1, 6-3, In a
match marred by a line dispute.
Trilling 5·2 In the final set,
Keleslsaved three match points.
She was awarded the advantage
In tbe e(Jhth aame, but Sabatini
Insisted one of Kelesl's shots
earlier In the rally had been out.
'

.

'

NO WAY! -Tennis star and 16th-seeded John McEnroe angrUy
dt..putes an umpire's decision during his quarterfinals match
against top-seeded Ivan Lend! In the French Open Tuesday. Poor
lighting stopped play at 7-6, 6-7 and 2-4. (REUTER)

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�Page- 8-The Daily Sentinel

Monster 'ff!4nia
invades library
Mark Wade, known as the
"School Show Professional" , will
present a program for the Meigs
County Libraries, June 4, at 2
p.m. at the former Diamond
Savings and Loan building.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wade, is a full time ventriloturvy look at the legend of the
quist who tours with a new
Lock Ness. Mark uses children
educational entertainment proout of the audience to become
gram each year In Ohio, Indiana,
"talking monsters" themselves
West VIrginia, and Kentucky.
before summoning his fiendish
The all new Monster Mania friends from the laboratory of the·
program will lead the children on
Mad Scientist. To round out the
a magic carpet ride through the show Mark Introduces one of the
monsters of folklore and legend. · most mysterious legend of all
After a spooky opening with a times BIG FOOT! The kids will
Wolfsbane flower , Mark Introdu- learn (and laugh) at how BIG
ces one of his anchor characters, FOOT got his name. Besides all
Leroy, the Loch Ness Monster. this there will be lots of other
Mark and "Leroy" take a topsy- surprises.

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. weekend and at tended a family
Robert C. Bailey, Sr., Included reunion there.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McCrea and
Mr. and Ms. Howard Meadows
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Rowe of and Mrs . Harley Smith, Ka"
Deland, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. nauga, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wayne Zurcher, Tim and Monica Smith , Rock Springs, were reot West Columbia, W. 'v a .; Mr. .c ent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. John Zurcher, Pome- Charley Smith.
roy; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Mr. and Mrs. Leslle Frank,
Mattox, Mark, Keith, and Sandie Sarah Beth and ·Matthew spent
Pomeroy, and Corey Carnahan. last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Chester.
Eugene Haning and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Balely, They also visited Ivan Carman,
Sr., visited In Minerva over the Peach Fork.

Wolfe Pen
personal notes

I·

ex s
'

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN WHOLE
14-17-LB. AVG .

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams
Pound

'

Saturda,, June 4th ··
Horse &amp; Wagon Rides for the.Kids
on ~aughan's Old Fashion Wagon
From 1P.M.-S P.M. Old fashion
Country Music ·

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
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Kroger Meat
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�~~~~J~u~ne~1.1988================~~~~~~~~~~~~~~0~h~~~------------~----------~~~~~~~~~~!!11

By The Bend

DAR meeting conducted recently

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 1, 1988
Page 10

Beat of the Bend

Sister has zest,
sense of humor still ·
By BOB HOEFLICH
There's nothing wrong in living
to be 82, or 92 or 102 - 11 you can
keep your mental faculties,
some semb·
lance of health
and
your
sense of humor.
Well a
former Meigs
resident has done this, so far.
She Is 82-year-old Sister Clara
Grueser, a nun who Is living at St.
Anne's · Holy· Family Home In
Melbourne, Ky.
'
Sister Clara has two sisters
here, Christine Grueser and
Emma Broderick of Pomeroy; a
brother, Mark Grueser of Shade,
and several nephews and greatnieces and great-nephews living
In Meigs County.
From May 2 through May 12,
Hollywood Invaded St. Anne's
Convent using the setting- wi th
many changes, no doubt .:.. to
film "Ralnman", a new movie starring .Dustin Hoffman and
Tom Cruise.
Sister Clara proves she hasn't
zest for llving with the following
poem she wrote In conjunction
with being on the scene:
Hollywood Comes to Saint Anne's
Hollywood came to our
Convent, St. Anne,
. To film a new movie called
•'Rainman'';

Who could have dreamed that

of the screen,
On our property would ever t&gt;e
seen?
Yes, DustJn Hoffman and Tom
Cruise, too,
Have come to make a movie.
That's true!
With gigantic trucks and equip·
ment they came,
Bringing more things than one
could name;
Their plans had been made,
and everyone knew,
What special job was theirs to
do;
A number of rooms were
selected for use,
And the .work crew had no time
to lose;
They took our Convent furnishIngs away,
And fitted the rooms to go with
the play; ·
·
Such a change they made, no
one could guess,
That the filming was done in a
Convent, no less;
"s tars· ~

They covered our motto. You
can see If you look,
And In its place Is the name
Wallbrook;
The parks in the back were
completely changed,
To go with the story, they were
rearranged;
A new wall was made and too,
more sidewalks,
A pond with green plants and
lined wl th rocks;
A place for ducks to swim
about,
They were filmed , too, without
a doubt;
Our slooping driveway, bordered by oaks,
Has been photographed by
many folks;
But never before by a Hollywood crew,
It wasn'l the easiest thing to
do;

When all the shooting of film is
done,
The cleanup job will have
begu n;
Putting the Convent all right
once more,
·
Moving the furniture and
clean lng the floor;
Will be the job of the Hollywood
crew,
For this , l believe, they
pledged to do ;
Bu t after Hollywood again
moves away,
Memories of "Ralnman" with
us will stay. ·

'

ACADEMICS - Portland Elementary School
students who received academic awards for
having the highest overall average In each class
were, I to r In front, Jessica Cooper, Ashley
JANET STILTNER

CHARLO'ITE HART

Rutland Al~mni scholarships
awarded ... .. w1th pies to come. t
Four scholarships were
awarded by the Rut)and High
School Alumni Association at the
banquet held Saturday night.
Recipients were Marilyn Haddox, daughter of Richard and
Nancy Lambert Haddox,
Athens; Charlotte A. Hart,
daughter of Jack W. Hart and
Maxine Herdman Hart, Pomeroy; Kimberly Noelle Pool,
daughter of Debra J . Turner
Pool, Upper Sandusky; and
Janet Lee Stiltner, Cheshire,
daughter of Joseph R Edwards.
The four girls are all members
oftheNationalHonorSocletyand

have Impressive lists of extracurricular activities In their
respective schools. Their grade
point averages are above a 3.5.
Marilyn Haddox, who will be
graduating from Athens High
School, plans to attend Ohio
University, Athens, In the School
of Education In preparation lor
becoming an elementary school
teacher. Among her honors have
been being named an All·
Academic American and to the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League. .
Charlotte Hari will graduate
th's month from Meigs High
School and w111 begin at Rio
Grande College In the faiL She

Kelly Parsons, Southern High
School student, Is a patient at a
Columbus Hospital where he
underwent · surgery Monday.
Kelly recelveed a serious back
Injury In an accident involving a
four -wheeler. Only 17, Kelly will
be in a cast for some three
months recovering. You can send
cards to him at Room . 991,
Unlverslt.y Hospital, Columbus.
As a part of their holiday
weekend observance, some people puUed up flowers from the
new plimtlng boxes placed In the
Pomeroy business section recently In attempt to make the
town look more attractive. Others destroyed two young trees In
the Court St. mini-park. Small
wonder that we lose the Incentive
to try to Improve ourselves.
Thinking that God will get 'em
for that, may help us to keep
smiling.
l~

'
i

WINNING SCIENCE TEAM - This team of
Meigs eighth graders placed first In the state and
eighth In the nation In the National Science
Olympiad. Pictured with their teacher, Rusty
Bookman, they are left to right, froot, Barbie

BROOKE S. V ANOY

~

A surprise graduation party
was held recently at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church fellowship hall
honoring Dena Watson who graduated May 22 from Southern High
SchooL
.
Attending were her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson, her
grandmother, Mrs. Cora Grindley of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Grindley, Mark Grindley,
Mitchell Grindley, Mr. and Mrs.
Ryan Grindley, Eric and Sarah,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Townsend,
Ed Grindley, Mrs. Wanda Roush
all of Columbus.
'
Mr. and Mrs . Roger Grindley
ol Lima; Mrs. Sharon Kincaid
Michael and Melissa of Point
Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. Robert

Davis, Hartford, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. James Miller, Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Armes, M1nersv1lle; Mr. and Mrs. Dewlght
Hill, Rayan and Ty, Tracey
Beegle, Matt Harris, all of
Racine.
Gl fts were presented to the
honored guest.

WANT
ADS
WORK!

992-2156

====""'

Swing Choir.
Janet ·Lee Stiltner graduated
from Kyger Creek High School
with a 4.0 grade point average.
As a part of the talented and
gifted program she has attended
Rio Grande College during her
high school years and plans to
contlr)lie her studies there In the
fall. She will be majoring In
elementary education. Among
her honors have been being
selected for Who's Who Among
American High School Students,
and Who's Who In Music. She was
the recipient of the Holzer
Science Award lor her school .

&amp;ience team
wins honors
in national
• •
compennon

•

Theresa Bush, Todd Rizer, Jenny Sellers, Jamie
Evans and Brlanne Proflltt. Back row, I to r,
Jamie Rizer, Denise Roush, Steve Triplett,
Jessica Codner, Jamie Smith and Leah Matson . .

FIELD DAY WINNERS - A girl and boy from
each grade at Portland Elementary School were
seleded as outstanding field day participants.
The winners were, front row,l io r, Steve Boso,

Portland School awards given

The Meigs Junior High School
physical science team placed
first In the state of Ohio and
eighth In the nation In the
National Science Olympiad, according to Rusty Bookman,
teacher.
All of the eighth grade science
students took the examination
which Included 50 questions. The
grades of the top ten students
were combined to make an
overall score of 452 out of 500..0ut
ol the 31 schools competing In the
Olympiad In Ohio Meigs Junior
High was llrst. The local team
placed eighth In the nation out ol
the 496 competing schools. This Is
the second year that Meigs
Junior High School has
competed.
Tara Gerlach scored 49 out of
50; Frank Blake and Heather
Davenport, 48; Robby Wyatt and
Barbie Anderson, 47; Joe McEIroy,46; BobbyVance,44; Sharla
Cooper, 43; Rachel Rousn, 41,
and Paul Sharp, 39.
The science department also
received the governor's award
for excellence In science education, Bookman reported.

Athletic, academic, attendance and good citizenship
awards were presented at the
Portland Elementary School during an awards assembly.
Super scholar
academic
.
'
awards went to Jessica Cooper,
first grade; Ashley McKinney,
second grade; Greg McKinney,
third grade; C. J. Harris, fourth;
Michelle Harris, lifth; Jamie
Smith, sixth; Summer Groves,
LD, and James Parsons, DH.
Good citizenship awards went to
Mandy Lang, !lrst grade; Jayme
M111er, second; Greg McKinney,
third; Robin Gillispie, fourth;
Bonnie Lawson, filth; Penny
Gillispie, sixth; Summer Groves,
LD, and Roy Powell, DH.
Awards for being tops In
specific areas of study In the
various grades went to: spelling-Steve Boso, first grade; Lindsay
Smith, second; Amy Rizer,
third: Gabe Smith, fourth; Bonnie Lawson, fifth; Christie
Cooper, sixth; Ronnie Johnson,
LD; Alice Lewis, DH: language-.

Billie Jo Sellers, first; Jenny
G1111spie, fourth; David Pickens,
Sellers, second; Amy Rizer,
fifth; Rasche! Rowe . sixth; Marthird; Denise Roush, forth;
shall Wolfe, DH
David Pickens, fifth: Rasche!
Jamie Smith was named stuRowe, sixth; Bryan Sublett, LD;
dent of the year; Penny Gillispie,
Chris Hamm, DH; reading -- top citizenship award; Christy
Tommy Smith, first; Lindsay Cooper received the student body
Smith; second; H1llery Harris,
award and M1chel1e Hilrrls was
third; Robin Gillispie, fourth;
named the school's top speller.
David Pickens, fifth;. Christie School Patrol awards went to
Cooper, sixth; Zorah Hensley, Jessica Covert, Christie Cooper,
LD; Nick Fitch, DH; sciencePenny Gillispie, Leah Matson
health--Hillery Harris, third and Jamie Smith. Winning pergrade; Robin GIIUsple, fourth;
fect attendance awards were
David Pickens, fifth ; Christie Jessica Covert, sixth grade;
Cooper, sixth; Eddie Willis, DH;
Bobby Moore, LD; Erica
writing--Jason Roush, first;
Ginther, Tony Sellers and Gabe
Zach Ward. second; Emily Duhl , . Smith, fourth grade. Honor roll
third; Gabe Smith, fourth; Scott students lor the entire year were
Carsey, fifth; Rasche! Rowe,
Jonathan Dalley, Ashley McKinsixth; Craig Wolfe, LD; Forrest ney, H11lery Haris, Greg McKinTeaford, DH; mathematics-- ney, Josh Roush, Jessica Cooper,
Patty Lawrence, first; Amanda Steve Boso, Billie Joe Sellers,
Smith, second; Hillery Harris, Tommy Smith, C. J . Harris,
third; Robin G11lisple, fourth;
Jamie Smith, Jamie Evans,
David Pickens, filth; Christie Jessyca Hatfield and Erica
Cooper, sixth; Craig Wolfe, LD;
Ginther. Outstanding Chapter I
Chris Hamrn, DH; social studies- student was Stephente Roberts.
· Hillery Harris, third; Robin

WAHAMA'S AFTER PROM PARTY
COMMITTEE
i .~

pleased to announce that, due to the
overwhelming support from the following
business.es, professional establishments and
general community, these prizes were given
away at our After Prom Party on May 20th.

Numerous students were recognized for their accompllshm.ents at the annual Eastern
High School Senior Awards Day
assembly held Friday afternoon .
Receiving awards were : Larissa Long, DAR Good Citizen·
ship; Maralyn Barton, Holzer
Science Award; Mark Griffin.
Marine Reserve Scholar Athlete
Award; Terry Newsome, April
Ritchie, Rio Grande R.O.T.C.
Scholarships; Mark Griffin, La rissa Long, Army Reserve Scholar Athlete Award; John Klein,
work study student of the year.
Christy Lambert, senior cafeteria service award; Amy
Bissell, business award; Heather
Finlaw, Jayne Ann Ritchie, Chris
Spencer, Lori Burke, Amy Connolly, Terry Newsomf, Christina
Barber, Amy Bissell, Lisa
Driggs, Renee Kaylor , of!lce
assistants; Marilyn Barton, Tim
Lawson, Gary Holter, Chad
Cook, Mark Mann. senior advisor
service .award: Chad Cook, W111
Pooler, art awards; Maralyn
Barton, Tim ·Lawson, Amy Bissell, Trina Barker, Larissa Long,
April Ritchie, Renee Kaylor,
math awards; Amy Hager,
French award, Bobble Jackson,
home economics award: Tim
Lawson, Joe Young, Industrial
arts and
dra fting awards:
Marilyn Barton, David Rice,
Shawn Bush, science awards;
Amy Bissell, Renee Kaylor, Lori
Burke, Larissa Long, Maralyn
Barton, Chad Cook, Amy Connolly, Ruth Nutter, Trlna Baker,
Tim Lawson, Jodi Schaekel,
Kelly Thompson, National Honor
Society Awards; Jodi Schaekel,
Carolyn Barton, Patti Wood,
Tracy Branch, newspaper
awards; Marilyn Barton, band
John Philip Sousa Award; Renee
Kaylor, chorus award and English award.
· Amy Hager. Mary Edwards,
Trlsha Spencer , Kendi Utt, tutor
awards; Amy Connolly, editor:
Gary Holter, Larrlssa Long,
Crtsty Newlun, Terry Newsome,
Jodi Schaekel, Gina Turrlff,
Patti Wood, yearbook awards;
Maralyn Barton , social studies
award; Trent Upton, Ohio University Certificate of Merit; Tim

..

•Fisher Portable AM/FM Stereo System with Cassette
.l'l_ayer I Recorder and CD Player •Zenith Black &amp; White
Television •Luggage • Ray Ban Sunglasses •Electric
Typewriter •T-shiru •Free Movie Rentals •Free Hair
Cuts •Cassette Recorder •Camera •Cash eu •Jewelry
including Small Diamond Ea"lngs •Gift Certificates for
Shoes, Clothes. Etc. •Hair Styling Products •Many.
many moral

THE AFTER PROM PARTY WAS DEEMED SUCCESSFUL BY
STUDENTS, PARENTS; AND THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY.

to, I to r, Penny Gllflllple for citizenship, Jamie
Smith for student-of-the-year and Chris Cooper,
the student body award.

SIXTH GRADE - Special sixth grade awards
were presented at Portland Elementary School

We Wish To Express Our Sincere Appreciation

A tour of the log cabin and
smoke house moved last summer
to the Rock Springs Falrgrouds
was taken by members of the
Middleport Child Conservation
League prior to a social and
business meeting held at the
grange haiL
The group enjoyed a wiener
roast. The Mother's Prayer and
pledge opened the meeting with
Nancy Morris giving devotions.
For roll call member gave a
favorite time of the pas t. Bonnie
Scott was welcomed as a new

RAYANYOUNG
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Young,
Sidney; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lambert, Middleport; Mrs. Elmora
BoiCe, Myrtis Parker and her
mother, Norma Parker, and
Norma Goodwin, allot Pomeroy .

A summer picniC was planned
for Noah's Ark Park on Sunday
A summer luncheon combined
with a swimming party will be
held at the home of Janet Eblin
on July 26. Attending besides
those named were Cheryl M1ller
Linda Faulk, and Fond~
Thomas.

Mother, daughter banquet Scouts hold recent fishing derby

POMEROY
Oavll Quk:kellnsurance
Clark"s Jewelry
Bank One
Elberfcldo Deporlmenl Slore
&amp;ndy'1 Bout Ique
Clly Loan
Top ol"lbe Slairl
C Ill J Auto· Pomeroy &amp; Mason
PoweU'a Supennarktt
Tewkobeny Barber Shop

Rack a CAnon Crow
Frod Crow
Downlntl Chlldo
Mll1luertte Sh...

·

The: VIdeo Touch
Chapman· a Shoes
Sonny Clockner
Farmers Bank
Pomeroy f"ICJwer Shop
Brogrnn W-.~mer Insurance
K &amp; C Jeweler
Hartley &amp; Bennetl
Mlcko Barber Shop
Callery Hair Art
Swisher &amp; Lose he
Fobrlc: Sl1op
Lynn Meadows
(Wilh Empll"e Fum!ture)

held at First Baptist

MIDDLEPORT
Sears Catalog Slore
DaltyQueen
Klnp Bullders
The VIdeo Touch
Bohr Clolhlerl
llaya Beauty Shop

Middleport- Shop ·
Centnd 1hlol ol Mlddleport
ln~leo

HONORED - Jenny Cowdery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Cowdery, ReedsvUie, has been named to the Nallonal
Honors Band which will perlonn In Knol&lt;vllle, Tenn., on June 8.
Jenny Is a member of Tri-M, Who's Who Among Musicians, the
show choir, chorus, women's chorus, all county-band, the District
17 Honors Band, the All Ohio State Band, and the Eastern Concert
Band. She also plays basketball and Is on the track team. She plans
to major music following graduation from Eastern High School.
Lawson. Eastern Local Educa tion Association Scholarship;
Mark Griffin, Jodi Schaekel,
physical education awards:
Mark Griffin, Melanie Mankin,
Tv an B. Walker Athletic Awards;
Stephanie Otto, seventh grade;
Lisa Golden. J1ll Chichester,
eighth grade; Sandy Foster,
Jason Hager, Toby Hill, Toby
Curtis, grade nine, and Diana
White, grade JJ, attendance
awards; Renee Kaylor and Tim
Lawson, Danforth Award as
outstanding senior girl and hoy;
Maralyn Barton, Ohio Regents
Scholarship; Larissa Long, Renee Kaylor, Tim Lawson, Jody
Schaekei, Boards of Rents
award; Tim Lawson, Rio Grande
Honor Scholarship; Renee Kay lor, Wright State HonorsSchoiarshlp; Joe Young, Hocking Technical Prinlctpal"s Award;
Maralyn Barton, Appalaclachian Electric Power Co., Mt .
Vernon College, Elks Lodge and
Holzer Medical Center Scholarships; Keith Karschnlk, Jodi
Schaekel , Mike Martin, David
Rice, Tom Hunter, Vance Jones.

CCL meeting conducted

to the Following for their contributions!

Mothers of Twins hold meeting
Ofllcers were elected at the
recent meeting ol the Mothers of
Twlna Club held at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Elected were Janet Eblin,
president; Gall PatriCk, vice
president; Debt Gilmore, secret~ry; ElolseDrenner, treasurer:
and Barb Logan, newsletter.

Anderson, Heather Davenport, Tara Gerlach, and
Sharla Cooper; second row, Bobby Vance, Robby
Wyatt, and Frank Blake, and back row, Joe
McElroy, and Paul Sharp. The other member of
the team was Rachel Roush, not present for the
picture.

Graduation party held at chruch

Young birthday
The lOth birthday of Rayan
Young was celebrated with a
swimming party at the Royal
Oak Resort recently. Guests
enjoyed swimming In the Indoor
pool at the recreation halL
Afterwards Rayan was presented with gifts and pizza and pop
were served. Later In the day, the
group had a cookout followed by
a hayride around the grounds
~nd countryside.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
William Young, Billy Young,
'ferrl and Tracy Fife, Bea Lisle,
Alicia Haggy, Megan Clark,
Mandy Mills, Pete and Samml
Sisson, Jennlter and Jason Lawrence, Kelly Swisher, Anne
l)rown, and Mr. and Mrs. James
hawrence. Unable to attend were
Chanda Mulford and Sherr!
Sisson.
Others presenting gifts wer~
Carolyn Richardson, Kettering;

plans to major In mathematics
with a minor In computer
science. She Is an Academic
All-American and listed In Who's
Who In American High Schools.
Ktm,berly Pool w111 grad11ate
from Upper Sandusky High
School and has enrolled at Ohio
Northern University where she
w111 pursue a degree In pharmacy . She has been active with
the school's scholarship team
and was a member ol the 1986
All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir
and a marching member of the
Ohio Youth Choir which particlpated In the Rose Bowl Parade In
1987, as well as a part of the 1988
Washington D. c. Showtlme

his campsites on both si des of the !hat same year 17 salt mines
were In operation on both sides of
river are now ma rked.
He reported that Ephrlam the river.
A gift was presented to Ervin .
Cutler was the land agent for
23,000 acres in Washington, Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, regent,
Athens and Meigs County . As for presided at the meeting. Peggy
the Ohio River, he said that it Is Moore led In the pledge to the
not now the srream It was lri 1700 flag . The national defense report
because of the system of locks was given with comm ents on the
and dams which have added " lesson of Douglas Ginsburg--If
depth . He spoke of the 1700's you use Illegal drugs 1t may come
when the water was clear and back to haunt you 2U years from
now." The good of the " Just Say
clea n with large fish.
In those early days when 'No'·· campaign was noted .
Officers ' reports were give.n.
people moved Into an area and
planted crops, the adults and The regent noted thai trees had
children would be given guard been planted at the old courtduty assignments from planting house at Chester and the Meigs
to harvest to protect the fields County Infirmary. Sharon Jewell
was welcomed as a new member .
from wild animals, Ervin said.
Nextmeetlngwillbeheldat the
He noted that tn 1819 the first
coal mine opened In Pomeroy . home of John and Mar y Rose
David Bradshaw was the mine with each member to take a fla g
owner and the coal was sold for25 or wear a flag pin . Mary Kay
cents a busheL In 1886 Miners- Yost, acting chaplain, closed the
ville had two coal mines. and In meeting with prayer.

Awards
assembly
held
at school

MARILYN HADDOX

KIMBERLY POOL

Rutland Alumni meet, announce scholarships

Venoy birthday
Brooke Suzanne Venoy , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Venoy,
celebrated her first birthday
recently at a party hosted by her
parents.
Cake and punch were served to
the guests Including her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Venoy and Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam
Demosky, Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Rose, Ryan and Jeremy, Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Grover and Dee, Mr.
and Mrs. David Demosky, Tim
De mosey, Jon Rees, David Rees,
Danny Rees , Brent Houdashelt ,
RobynVenoy, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
\lenoy, Jacob and Joshua.
Sending gifts were her greatgrandmothers, Mrs. Lillian Demosky and Mrs. Myrtle Grover,
Terry Wayland, Mrs . Connie
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
ijoudashelt, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Haggy , Brad and Stephanie.

/

McKinney, C.J. Harris and Summer Groves, In
back, Greg McKinney, Michelle Harris, Jamie
Smith and James Parsons.

Walter Ervin of Athens, a
self-described history hobblest ,
tal ked on "The Pioneer Farmer"
at the May meeting of Retu rn
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
Ervin talked about the land. in
1787 and what has happened
since that time. He said that The
Ohio Company is with In the
watershlp of the Ohio River. and
that In 1750.thewh1te man wa s the
Intruder . He referred to the
diaries and letters from the first
settlers as an Invaluable source
of early Information but noted
that few of the early travelers left
any written information on their
trips.
One of the first trading posts
was at Coshocton. he said, and In
1750 there were 800 family unit s
there. Ervin also talked about
Washington's travelers in 1770
and of the diary he kept of his trip
along the Ohio River. Several of

Foreman &amp; Abbolt
Hertlaae House/L&lt;&gt;ck&lt;r219

JohMOn"l Variety Slore
Fn.lh Phannacy

Comer Collecuons
Dan'o
Mlddleport

Department Store
Brenda"a Boutique

P'UmHure Ill J...,lry

I

A mother-daughter banquet
was held recently at the Middleport First Baptist Church with
about 85 persons attending.
Sarah Fowler and June Kloes
were co-chairmen for the banquet with Sharon Seddon giving
the table grace. Rhoda Hall had
the welcome, Sarah Dawn Owen
had devotions on prayer
The program opened with
Donna Grueser reading an open
letter to a daughter and . her
daughter, Tracey, giving a response. Cathy Riggs and daughters, Claudine and Tina, presented a mother-daugllter
reading, and Amber and Autumn
II

.

and Meredith and Carrie Crow
had a song.
Another reading ·entitled
"Mother" was given by · Mrs.
Grueser, Edna Wilson, Helen
Bodlmer, Sarah Fowler, Mrs.
Riggs, and Mrs. Seddon.
Potted plants Were given as
door prjzes. Mrs. Fowler and
Freda Hood crocheted miniature
baskets of nowers which were ·
given as favors. Recognized
were two four generatlom of
families, Oulda Chase, Frances
Youna, Sheila Roush, and Stacy
Roush: and Beulah White, Betty
Gilkey, Kitty Darst, and Ginger
Darst.

'

Cub Scout Pack 246 of Sallsbucy recently held a llshtng
derby and picnic at the Isaac
Walton Lake. Winners were Josh
Leach, llrst In longest: Bert
Mash, second, and Brent Whaley, third.
Leach also won the prize for the
shortest as well as the most , a
tbtal of 18, with secollds going to
Brent Whaley and Shawn Harrison, both catching eight.

Other scouts participating
were Chris Ball, B1lly Young,
James Geiger, Timmy Peavley,
Steven Hysell, Josh Witherell,
Jamie Broderick, Mlck Barr and
Vincent Broderick.
Leaders, were Bill Young and
Jeannie Witherell, were assisted
by several other parents. Young
conducted games lor the
youngsters.

Ice cr~ social being planned
Trinity Church of Pomeroy Is · 992-3777, 992-3222, or 992-5480.
taking advance orders lor homeFlavors are chocolate, van1lla,
made tee cream. Orders should
lemon, peach, pineapple, strawbe placed before June 8 by calling
berry, banana and orangepineapple.

member and was presented a gill
from the past president. For
June a family picnic w111 be held
at the roadside park on Route 33.
Thelma Sines and Clarice
Kennedy were hostesses lor the
meeting. Mrs. Sines won the
traveling prize. Other members
attending were Helen Blackston,
Linda Broderick. Bonnie Scott
and Peggy Harris . Ashley Thomas was a guest.

Ernie Baker. Ann Buckley, Krls
Heines, Elizabeth Bryant, quiz
team: Renee Kaylor , president;
Patti Wood. vice president; Maralyn Barton, treasurer; Chr is· ·
Spencer, secrelar y; Jodi Schaekel, Cristy Newlun. Tim Lawson,' ·
Amy Connolly, Lori Burke, Keitli
Karschnik, student c ouncil
awards; Maralyn Barton, Tim
Lawson , Larissa Long, Trent
Upton, ·Renee Kaylor, Kelly
Thompson. presidential aca-· '
demlc fitness awards; Jodi
Schaekel, Trina Barker , Trent
Upton, Kelly Thompson , Tim
Lawson, Lori Burke, Amy Bls, .•
sell, Larissa Long, Renee Kay:_
lor, salutatorian , and Maralyn
Barton, valedictorian, top ten: '
student s.

..
Wilson shower :
.. -·,.
ts gtven
Kara and Diana King recently·
hosted a bridal shower honoring :
Shelagh Wilson, bride-elect of ·
John Porter, at their home tn ' •
Racine.
A blue and yellow bell theme
was carried out
...
Attending and presenting gifts"
were Mary Porter . Charlsse· ·
Knight, Gloria Michael. Susie ..
Fischer, Misty Swisher, Goldie -·
Pickens, June Ashley, Evelyn '
Foreman, Juanil~ Sayre, Julia .
Norris, Helen Holter, Evelyn :
Holter, Leanna Clark, Judy
Clark. Wilma Reiber, Mildred
Shuler, and Connie Little.
Refreshments were served to
those attending. Games were ·
played with prizes being won by ..•
Mrs. Shuler and Mrs . Reiber •
Helen Holter won the door pri ze·:.'

Mei2s Pr_om
Pictures

~Bi~BiBiBi.~&amp; -

WHERE: Pomeroy Village Hall Auditorium
(!hot's tho old P-roy High School

~uilding

on last Moin SlrHil

WHEN: Sahrday, .ltN 4, anytime between 4 and 9:30 p.m.
JUST WALilN-NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

COST: 16.00 far 2-Sx7's in folders and 4 wallets
PAYABlE WHEN TAKEN - OlDER AS MANY SETS AS YOU WANT
REI'OSITIOIING fOI. EACH SET
COUPlES •••SINGLES. •• JUST fllfNDS
Our 11th y•r of
doing Meigs High
School Prom Pictures

Charlene and /Job Hoeflich

The Photo Place
•

.

�•

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomaoy Middl8port. Ohio

June 1, 1988

.---People in the news- Breaking· cycle of co-dependency
By WILLIAM C. TR01'r
United Press International
BRJGJTI'E MISCARRIAGE: Actress Brigitte Nielsen
s uffered a miscarriage in Rome and did not have an abortion as
the Hollywood rumor ml11 had indicated, says her boyfriend,
New York Jets star Mark Ga.sdneau.
NiPisen , 25, the striking ex·wife of Sylvester Stallone, was
r eported hospitalized. suffering from unspecified complica·
lions. and Gastineau flew to Rome over the weekend to be with
her. the New York Dally News said.
Gastineau . who is in the process of divorcing his wife, Usa,
told the newspaper, "A lot of people wish bad things on us. We
bot h love each other more than anything else In the world . I wish
e veryone would love each other as much as we do then they
would not be worrying about us . This miscarriage has nothing to
do with us not starli ng over again a nd having another baby ."
A spok~&gt;sma n for Nielsen sa ld s he had been making a movie,
" Domino. " and was ordered to bed bY a doctor after
complaining of being weak.
SAMANTHA'S LEGACY: The mother of the late Samantha .
Smith , the Maine school girl who was making frie nds In the
Soviet Union when President Reagan st ill co nsidered it an "evil
e mpire. " is off to Moscow for another peace mission. Jane
Smith was invited last week by Valentina Teresbkova. the
Soviet Union 's first female co smonaut who now heads the
Friendship Society, to atiend a peace conference while Reagan
and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev are meeting.
The Friendship Society is dedicated to exc hange programs,
much like the Samantha Smith Foundation. Mrs . Smith will be
back in Maine Monday for the annual ceremony honoring
Samantha , who was killed with her fat her In 1985 in a plan e
cras h. Sama ntha had become something of a roving
am bassa dor after she sent a plea for peace to Soviet chlefYuri
Andropov and he invited her to tour Russia .
CROSBY COMEBACK: It was deja vu in Anaheim, Ca lif., on
Memorial Day when rock singer David Crosby gave a one-hour
concer t to c lose t he American Booksellers Association
conven tion .
sby. who is putting his life back together after a drug problem
that landed him in a Texas pri so n, appeared with a five -piece
band and performed two songs , "Compass" and "The Monkey
and the Underdog," about his 10-year bat tle with drugs .
thought I was go ing to die on drugs," Crosby said In
introducing "Compass, " "a nd when I finally did wake up, I was
over joyed. It's li ke coming out of a coma ." He writes about his
"co ma " in " Long Time Gone," which borrows a title from a
Crosby , Stills, Nash and Young song a nd will be published by
Doub ledav in OctobPr.
far the ioudes t ovations from a crowd ofl,hOOco nve ntloneers
ca m e for Crosby 's performances of songs from the CSNY era
like "Wooden Ships" a nd "Lo ng Time Gone."
Crosby showed his gratitude when, ~ fter a prolonged ovation,
he sai d, " Words people! Us ua lly when you try to si ng something
wit h a ny words to it, somebody will yell 'Boogie!'"
GLIMPSES: The Me morial Da y Rlverfest in Austin, Texas.
featured a ser ies of celebr it y jam sessions. Carlos Santana
played with th e Neville Brothers a nd Bonnie Raitt joined Joe
Walsh , who wa s recording a live album . For the show's finale ,'
the host band, the Fabulous Thunderblrds, were joined by
Wals h, Raitt, Santana and an unannounced guest, Stevie Ray
Vaughan, broiJier ol T·Birds' guitarist Jimmie Vaughan ...
Lawrence Stone, :J6, of Seattle wa s named the world's best wine
s te ward in a n In lerna tiona! competition In Paris . Stone, who has.
worked a t the Four Seasons Olympic Hotel si nce 1984 . a nd the
ot he r co mpel itors were blindfo lded for the contest In which th ey
exh ibited their knowledge of France's wi ne and vineyards :

Beneficiaries returning
to work OK in guidelines
•

A recent change In the law has
tive) du ring which t hey continue
extended the period during which
to receive disability benefits
benefits m ay be au tomatically
regardless of t he amount of their
reinstated for Social Security earnings. Social Security may
disa bility be neficiaries who refi nd t hat a beneficiary Is no
tur n to work but a1·e unable to
lo nger disabled in the first month
keep working because of their
he or she engages In substa ntial
d isa billt y, according toEd Peter·
ga inful act ivity after the trial
son, Social Secu rity manager In
work per iod. If so, the henefl·
At hens. The reentitlement period - clary receives benefits for that
Inc reased from 15 to36mont hsas
month and the following 2
of January 1, 1988.
months.
"This shou id he a trem endous
"A person who must stop
help to disabled be neficiaries
working during t he automatic
who want to attempt work but are reenti!lement period because of
fear ful o f losing t heir benefits if hIs or her disabll ity may resume
!heir impairment fot·ces them to receiving benefit s without filing
stop working," Mr. Peterson a new a pplication. All the person
said. "Under this rule, they. will
has to do is let us know and
be able to receive a benefit c heck
benefits ca n start rtght up
for any month during the reentl- again," Peterson said. "Also, as
tleme nt period that they are unde r the old law, Medicare may
unable to perform subst a ntial
continu e for al least 39 months
gain ful work."
after the tria l work period."
Social Secu rity d isa bil ity be·
The automatic reentltle ment
n"eflts are paid to people who rule Is just one of a number of
have a physical or m ental Social Sec urity provisions de·
disability which is expected to s igned to make it easier for
keep t hem from engaging in any disabl ed henefi"Claries to return
sub, tan tial gai nful activity for at
to work. Th e change Is Included
least a year o r to resu lt In death.
In I he Omnibus Budget Reconclll·
Benefits start with the 6th full a tlon Act of 1987, enacted ·De·
month after t he onset of disabi l- cember 22, 1987.
ity.
Pet erson said that people who
• To help disabled Social Secur- have questions about their rights
Ity beneficiaries who wish to u nder the new law should ca ll t he
r~t urn to work, the law provides
Social Secur it y office. The telea trial work period of up to 9 phone number is 992·6622.
mont hs (not necessa rily consecu-

ServiCe to Blennerhassett reduced
PARKERSBURG, W .Va.
!UP!) - Warring ferryboat s
chuggi ng toward Blennerhassett
Island may be no more, with
River City Tours a nnounci ng It is
dropping the service because of
failure to make a profit .
River City a nd Rubl e's Stern·
wheelers have been co mpeting
for the business to take tourists
from the s hore to the Ohio River
Isla nd be tween Parkersburg,
W.Va .. a nd Belpre, Ohio, for
sometime and the war worried
local and park officials, who said
the feuding could drive away
customers.
Robert Cline, president of
River Cit y, sai d his company has
stopped scheduling the Is la nd as
a stop.
"The ferry service has not
been profitable for us," Cline
sa id. "As a matter ol fact , It has
been a huge los s to us."
Cline said he sc heduled his
boats to leave Parkersburg ev·
ery half hour- twice as often as
competitor Ruble's was supposed to sc hedule trips under a
contract with t he Blennerhassett
Historical Park Commission.
But Cline said Ruble's left the
city every half hour. which did

not tec hnically violate the con·
tract that set only minimum
launchings but strained River
City's business.
Jim Todd , director of the
Blennerhas sett commission ,
said he chose not to change the
contract .
"We left It that way so (as) to
avoid any kind of restraint of
trade action," Todd said.
Todd has tried to mediate the
ferry dispute, but the two companies appear unwilling to coope rate . He said he hopes the state
Public Service Commission wUI
settle the matter.
He said his chances with the
PSC are "very good," and he
accused the park commission of
playing favorites with Ruble's.
' 'I'm not sure why," he said.
However, Todd said evidence
of the ferry war has not reached
the tour ists, 1,000 of whom made
Sunday the biggest day In the
park 's his tory .
But the director said the feud
cou ld hurt local support ol the
lstan(l park.
"No one likes to he· Involved
with anything that Is a little ·
messy ," he said . "I would say .I
have a real mess on my hands
her e ."

Dear Ann Landers: The enclosed
column, by Melva Arditti, appeared
in the Sacramento Bee. I believe
your millions of readers could
benefit fro m it. Do you agree? If so,
please print it. - A SACRAMENTO
READER
DEAR SACRAMENTO: I do,
indeed. Thanks for sending it on.
BREAKING lH ECYCLE OF
CQ.DEPENDENCY
jane Zeiger cringes every time the
song "People" comes on the radio.
When Barbra Streisand warbles.
"First you're half, now you're
whole," Zeiger says, "it's like an
anthem for co-dependents."
Zeiger, a licensed clinical social
worker, says the concept of co-dependence came out of the field of
alcohol a buse, where spouses of
alcoholics were called "co-depen·
dents." Through the years, the
definition has broadened.
"It's about relationships and· let·
ting the other person's behavior
affect your self-esteem," Zeiger ex·
plained. "It's also being obsessed
with trying to control the other
person's behavior, while assuming

responsibility tor that perso n's
needs."
She gave as an example the
woman whOse husband has gotten
sick from drinking and passed out
on the Hoor at 3 a.m. Not only does
she dean up the mess and pqt him
into bed, she sets the clock for 6
a.m. so she can call his boss with an
excuse for her husband's absence.
"There is nothing wrong with
helping," Zeiger said, "but co-d.,.
pendency is helping to the extent
that you lose yourself in the
process. The co-dependent thinks
she's being helpful, but she's only
postponing her panner's inevitable
facing up to the truth of his
addiction."
While men can be co-dependent,,
women are far more susceptible. " I
think we're culturally programmed
to be the caretakers," said Zeiger:
"It seems natural for women to
sacrifice themselves for the family."
Co-dependent behavior is not
restricted to panners of alcoholics.
Any chronic problem, from gam·
bling to overeating or a history of
losing jobs, can produce co-depen·

dency in a partner. It has an
ad,dictive quality that makes it
almost harder to disconnect from
than alcohol .
The cure for co·dcpendency is to
first detach yourself from the rela·
tionship. This is easy to say but
hard to do. "Let him feel the pain
and deal with the consequenre;."
The second step is learning to
take. ca~e of yourself. It's 'like
lookmg mto a mt rror and domg
for yourself
the things you 'vc
bt-en domg for htm .

an

Zeiger also recommends counsel·
ing and groups such as AI·Anon:
"You must learn to say, ' I refuse ·to
rescue you anymore.' "
Dear Ann Landers: l just com·
pleted the process of finding my bill
amid the ads, order blanks and
junk they put in the envelope.
I have decided it is time to light
back. I may not accomplish any·
thing but I will ·feel better. From
now on when I send in my check I
am . going to enclose all the stuff
they send me. Let them look for my
check the way I had to look for

The Daily Sentinel

Jeff Gilland, Jason Shuler.
Fifth Grade: Sabrina Congo,
Corey Hill, T racy Picket t,
Brandy Roush.
Sixth Grade: Stephanie Sayre,
Sam Shain.

Lesse Little, Crlssy Snider, Jessica Smith .
Second Grade: Ryan Grace.
Matt Hill, Nicole Hill, John
Matson, Matt Riffle , Danny
Sayr e.
Third Grade: Jesse Ma y nard,
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH Ryan Norris, Bobby Writesel,
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Jennie Scarberry.
The sixth six weeks grading .
Fourth Grade: Fohn Card,
period honor roll at the Southern c hris Gilbride, Jason Hudson,
Junior High School has been Paul !hie, Craig Knight , Jonna
announced. Making a grade of 8 Manuel, James White.
or above In all the ir s ubjects to he
Fifth Grade: Grant Circle,
na med to the roll were:
Jason Ervin, Scott Grace, Kevin
Eighth Grade: Jeff Allen, !hie, Shannon Morarlty, Kendra
Carlton Drummer, Sarah Duhl, Norris , Courtney Roush .
Michelle Friend, Todd Harrison,
Sixth Grade: R yan Adams.
Jody Hayes, Andy Hill, Velessa Jason Car penter, Beth Clark,
Hunnell, David !hie, Robin Ma· Jenny Cleek, Rac hael Hensler,
nuel, Trevor Petrel, Jenny Var· J ennl Hill, Ryan Holter, Brandi
ney, Stacey Theiss, Brenda Hunt. Mallory, Freddie Mat son, Marcy
Seventh Grade: Bethany Bass, Mathews, Jeremy Northup, Mike
Nicole Beege, Todd Grace, Nikki VanMeter, Marlo White.
!hie, Misty Hayman, Heather
LETART FAILS ELEMEN·
McPhail, Angela Mills, Darrell TARY HONOR ROLL
Sayre, Michelle Stobart, Kerl
The six th six weeks grading
Whitaker, Kyle Wickline, Shawn period honor roll at the Letart
Wolfe, Valerie Connolly, Julie Falls Elementary School has
Hill, Ray Proffitt, Rachel Rose, been ·announced. Making a grade
Barbie Roush.
of B'or above In all their subjects
RACINE ELEMENTARY HO. to be named to the roll were:
NOR ROLL
Second Grade: Nathan
The sixth six weeks grading Hensler. Kristen Hill, Julie Hunperiod honor roll at the Racine nell, Jackie Proffitt, Travis Ran·
Elementary School has been som, Jennifer Roush. Stacy
announced . Making a grade of B Warden, Rane tta Wheele r,
or above In all their sublects to he Christy Durst.
named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Adam Roush ,
First Grade: Jennifer Ca· Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre, Va·
rleton, Joshua Ervin, Suzanne nessa Shuler.
Evans, Jody Hupp, Josle Jarrell,
Fourth Grade: Jason Barnett,
Amy Johnson, Bobby Jo)mson ,
J e ff Gilland, Jason Shuler.
Jeremiah Johnson, Kara King,
Fifth Grade: Sabrina Congo,

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

side the envelope you use· to mail your ballot. ·Your
name and add rea a must be legible on the outer envelope. Failu.re to provide this information will render
your ballot invalid . Only one ballot may be voted in
person or by mail by any voter. Votes in envelopes
containing more than one absentee ballot will not be
counted . Ballots and envelopes may also be obtained
from your local FmHA office.
The slate of nominees for Athens. Meigs and Vinton
counties are listed in the ballot below. The qualifica·
tions of peraons voting are described in the "Voter
Certification Statement' '. For fun her information regarding voting and voter eligibility, see the County Of·
fica listed below. FmHA elections are open to all eligi·
ble voters without regard to race, color, religion , national origin. age, political affiliation, marital statu s,

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52 Weeks ............... .. ...... .. .-... ..... $66.56

OUtside Metp County
13 Weeks ............... ,_ ................. $I8.20

26 Weeks ..... ........ ...... ............... $35.10

52 Weeks ... ............................... $67.60

BOBBY RAHAL FOR COWMBIA GAS:

"THERE'S ASPECIAL AniTUDE
WINNERS HAVE. ISEE IT IN MY TEAM.
AND IN
"In racing, winning is a team effort. It's the same at Columbia
Gas. But their wins are counted in delivering natura l gas
energy to thousands of homes and businesses day after
day. Everything they do is aimed at supplying our needs ...
safety, efficiently and economically. You can see it In the way
they answer service questions and handle problems. And
they are as quick to respond in their way as my team is at the
track . The two teams also share something else: the drive to
be the best. In ra,cing, !hat goal is measured in victories. At
Columbia , it's measured in service."

NEW LISTING - Harrison·
ville - 23 acres vacant
eround. water &amp; elec. available. Buy Dart or all! Want
$8,000 00 lor the whole th·
in g.
NEW LISTING - lender
LovJng Care always shows!
You'll see the results of the
excellent upkeep here ... a
well kept home, beautilully
decOJated, lovely grounds,
everything 1n tip top sh ape
by people who took PRIDE 1n
thei1 home and hate to part
with it. Approx. 47 acres
with 2 ponds, huge 36'x22'
family room w/fireptace. sa·
tellite dish, 2 car brick gaJ·
age, central air and much
more. 2 baths, 2 large bedrooms, part basement. 6
room br~ck ranch in good tocation! ASKING $89,000.00.
MAKE OFFER.
ST. RT. 338 - River front
property with a n~ ce cabin.
Has a lull basement, 2 bed·
rooms, sun porch with a river
view. Fru~ cellar, approx.
42'x30' metal storage building. ASKING $27,900.00.
POMEROY - PRICE RE·
DUCED! Neat home with 2-3
bedrooms. New carpeting,
corner lot. Small pnce Bi g bargain! $14,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Excellent Jo.
catKin' 2 slory home located
near pa1k &amp; poor. 2·3 bed·
~oom~ original woodwor~
new sidin&amp; iireptace and
much more! Nice big l111el tot
Wants $32,500.00.
PALMER STREET - House
wnh potential. 2 apts_ in !llod
condnion. Upstairs rented for
$175.00/ mo.
downstairs
rented tor $200/ mo. also has
a garage apt that rented for
$225/ mo. NOW $20,000.00.
IF TREES ARE WHAT YOU
WANT on a lot suitable for
building then this is il! Visualize the house you've at·
ways wanted on this I acre
shady lot. Elec. a• ail able.
ONLY $2,500.00.
ST. RT. 611- 10 acres va ·
cant ground w~h some
wooded area. Has a great
building sne w~h some road
frontage. Call for more inior·
mation. ONLY $10,000.00.
LISTINGS NEEDED! Wt hiWI
buyers for llelp County
proptrtl• 111d nlld holllll
to alii - Clll Today! Wt
nMd your PfopiiiJ to aelll

''real world."

Henry E. Cltllnd, Jr.
992·6191
Jtllt Truaatll ..... 949-2660
DOttie Turn• ..... 992·5692
TIICJ Rilllt ....... 949-3010
!Iff let... " ... ' ... ' .. ' 992·2259

~

~

PARTS

CARTER'S

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

NEW AND USED
PARTS
742-2315

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

5·2·1 mo.

-

DENTIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS. lATHS
-EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINVL SIDING A ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING A APT . PROJECTS

Sl i'IICJ.: 19119

OUSil ST. SIUCVSl

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Po!Mroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Aleo Tr••••lulll

or at

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTlAND, OH.

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It lepair.lt"

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

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
1/22/88/Ho

SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY
Racine.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Repeir1

NIASE Certified Mechonic

PH. 742-2463

CALL ~92-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

5 / 31 / 1

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
HILPIIG YOU RUOV!ll
YOUR tNVmMBIT

6-17-tfc

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Molt Foreign end
Domootic Vehlcloa
A/C Service
All Major lo Minor

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING .
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•Ualltwtiillt

•Tinar/CultivatOf

•Easy to Opoutt

•Mekea Oerden &amp;. Y1rd
Care • Snepl

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2160

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

Phone 949-l!2CI2

3-ll·Hn

Canttied Ucenaed Shop
5-25-1 mo. pd.

MANTIS
Precision
Gardenin1
System

IhwN-Wt
"Free E1tlmotee"

NO SUNDAY CAW

That Fit Your locly
FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

161 North Second
Mldtltpert, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2D SESSIONS

We C•rry Fishing SuppU"

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bille Here
..,, - IUSINfSs-NIII£'

S35

FOR IJORE INFORMATION

742-2455
RUTLAND. OHIO

EXCAVATING

(6141 "%-6550

IESIDIHCI rHONI

WANT fO IUY WIICIID 01
JIM CliS 01 TIUCIS
-flEE HTIIlmFor
&lt;GU

.y"' ..... ..,.;..

614-742-2617
...._

9 ...............

16141 "1-7754

1/28/ Hn

5·12-'18-1 mo.

B&amp;C I.DRILLING
CO.
H........ Ow•r
Rt. l, lox 74-A. lliply, W.Va. 25271

Call Collect (304) 372-4331
Molt Walle Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary D rilllng
Wa Also Install &amp; Service All Types
Water Pumps
6-I·'A·I

fOR

GUYSYILE, OHIO

614-662·3121

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Perla &amp; Sar.ll

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

CALL

OPEN

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

U. S. RT. SO EAST

ftrt1 E41IP•••t

st., lari111

.......

PH. 949-2969

Alllllllllll:l~ llli'IIIS
3 Announcements

YARDMAN &amp;ECHO

Located Halfway

Y•d Sale. June 1·3, 9 ·1' 'h mi.
out Orch•d Hill. Uniform tops.
clothes· kldl 2-12. HouMhold
gooda.

Ylrd 181e. Thurs. &amp; Fri. June
21Io3. 9·5 . Cori·MIIl Rood batwten Rodn-r • oora. Clothing.
lots hou•warret, good alec.
cook stow, ~m~ll amount of
horw *ewing equip. Ev.n' a.
183 T••• Road. 2 family ,-rd
Hie. June 2. 3 • 4 . Time 9-2.

a.

-Rt.7&amp;Buhan
NEW &amp; USED MOWDS
B. 7 FlnMCIIng On
Yardmut
Soniat On AI Mlbs
Wt H - MC/DIIC/VIIa
....... tfn

a

e.

4. 5

Infant clothing. Jtrol•. home interior, 23
w..t Mein. Chea'*a. Betide of
e~rrvout.

Y•d Sale. 1741 ChMhom A ...
Lo'ls of dothlng&amp; miscellaneous
ltema. Juno 1 -2-3 . 9 til B.

June 1,2,3,1lo 4. Contonorv· 4

family, clothes. Avon. he..er,
bowll'ng bllh. wldt rlnge of

items.

218 Third Ave. June 1st. 2nd. a
lrd. Huge Indoor ,-rd .. Ia. Lots
a lots of goodl•.
June 1.2. • 3. 1150 Chlllic:othlt

Rd. 18 cu. ft. ~efrig.,.tor.
hou•hold Items. adu It &amp; childNn clothing. Bedtpre1dl &amp;
drep81.

Vwd Sai•Sttu....,, June 4 , 9
AM·? Furnhure. wick•. wniti•. mtdldne cabin.c;, light
fbttuNS, wooden lheNet:. w.l·
lpap.-&amp; much more. First hou•
on Romev Con Road.
Vll"d Sai•June 3 &amp; 4.
9-fJ. Patrtot Rd .. Patriot, Ohio .

Antler~

Garage Sale: Fridey. June 3 &amp;
881:., June4. Flnthou•onltttle
Kyg• Roed. just off Rt. 7 .
Antiques. dotll. Mo11
chiM, 1 101 of 1&amp;" plowo, 3.
point hhch. clothing. aalt &amp;
PIPpert. &lt;Uehel. misc .

Ro••

Garage Sale: Furniturw, guns.
lin.,., dlshel, clotting. • loti
mloc. 841 Third Avo . Thurodoy•
Frldov.

Ffldav. Juno 3rd. Rain dot•
Mon .. June lth. 9 :00 AM -5 :00

•W....... Service

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ANGIE TAYLOR
Yi111

a Wed. 1107 Teodort Ave .

•Junk Yerd Buill-

IOGGS

OWNED &amp; OPIItlTID 1Y

a11

Moving 18ft. Odds 8t ends.
Pieces of furniture. Mon .. Tues.,

Vard Sale: OIMswere, cloth!ts.
lots misc . Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9·&amp;.
21 28 Chathom Avo.

1-2-1 mo.

Authoriutl Jahl Detri,
New Holland, ltnh Hog
farm E.,iponent
Dtalor

(A~~ 949-2414

PM. CtotllinO"'ilolno· ltttloboya
lo tlrfL .-a. IIo mena 1Jo

woment. gl ....-re. nldc-niiCII:t.

Orcll.,.

Hll Rd., 4th hou• on
right aft• Sholltring tum ott.

Yard Sale: June 1·4. B AM -5

PM. '-' milo paot N.Q.H.S.. SR.
160.

2 Famly.June 2 &amp; 3. 9·4.
PIIYpen. clot~ houaahold a
rile . t mile north of shopping
plaal. Rt. 7.

3 Famly OarageSale-Frt. &amp; Sat.
1'h mila out Rt. 141 . Golden
clnlporioo.
Two "-mllv-O&gt;rn« Third IIo
Spruce. 1·5. Thuro. IIo Frl. Nloo
clothlna-bov'• ICelvin Klein•
).ns) 31w; boy'1
girl'•·•"
3-4-S, m«~'s. ladl-. young
glrfo. Mlac. houaohold .

a

•s

Four F•mlly·1 1
Second Aw .•
Olllipola. s•uniiY. June .. _

1 ·5 . Baby·chlldren. men &amp;.
women's clothlno. houlllhold
ltanw. mlac. furrfture. couch.
bod. din- 101. d•k •
clltk'. t&amp;l eoch. Como ••IY ·

t...,

l'•d Sato: W.d., Thu .... IIo

Fri.

Nol1hCioy St .. Vinton. Alittle of

-.ytllintf

Ju,. 3nl, l'ridOlf only, til 7 PM.
Qlganlc S family . Lot a of _.,.
thing. At. 7, Addloon.
4 Femllv Yd. Saie:Frldor, June
3rd. 3 mla, out 1•1-Jqhnl.ane
rllklenoa.

4

Glv811Wtly

FridoJI, 3nl. Con..,ary Townhoull. Drapu, badlpreed.
theetl, ellverwera. Milk•••
tlalloo. home • - • · ollltmp.
T.V.

I lordlr Ooll..,oaa pupo. Y•d late:Mioc. June 4: 1·4.
We•od.
,..,. to 110· Coli · _,,.,
~
•
~ Fourth A....
114-:111-HlO
~... ~

IUSINESS

31• I . - II.
h-er
...... City Hall

ANN'S

Gift Shop I loy Ston
Colllt:lon Items, Clowns
Action Toys, lluaiCII
Toys &amp; Trlnklt BOltn
Open 10 AM . to 4 P.M.
Mon. thru Fri. or by
Appolnt"**t

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

5-19·' ... 1 1110.

olo~ttopool.

. LUBE-OIL-FILRR
WltU

Ofl. Oil $14 9S

Brakes, Muffler, Air
Condition Chtc:ked
and Refill,
Minor Repairs.

NEWELL'S

1 1 Help Wanted
GOVERNMENT JOBS .
t16.040 - f5~t230 / ~ . Now
hiring.

Your 1rea.

805-1587·

6000, ext . R-10189 for current
Federal list.

Complete hou•holdl of furniture II antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal hetltera, Swain' 1 FurnrtuN
&amp; Auction, Third II OU...e,
61 .. 446-3159.

EARN tt much 11 f&amp;OO.OO
Weekty. IISembtylng Products
In yoor home. Send Mlf lddr-..ed , stamped envelo,- to:
Hom-=~•. P .0 . Bok 9008,
Huntington, W.Ve. 25704.

Went to b1.1y: Ulld furniture .,d

Tour Guidet·M•ea. fem.la Our

Will buy entire hautehold furniShing. Martin We~
mever. 814-245·6152.
antique~ .

Junk Cart with or without
motcn. Call Larry Uvelv-814381-9303.

Buying furniture .-.d eppliar~ces
by lhe piece or by the lot. Fair
prices. Call 814-••te· 3158.

top people ••n tB00-et200
per week. Pleeant working
conditions. A re env ~" IJtKeto
work. Friendly, neM • deptricllble •• the requirements. Cell
1-614-288-8421. ask for Sue.
FEDERAL, STATE ANO CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS
.

Coli 814-448-0175.

NOW HIRING. Your ar ...
'13.650 to 169.480. IMME·
OIATE openings . Call t (31 51733-6082 ext. #F 2758 .•

Buyinq dally gold. tilver coins,
rings, Jewelry. sterling ware, old
coins. l•ge currency. Top pricn. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middlepot1, Oh. 814992·3478.

Echoing Me160w1 R"ldental
Center, Athens. Ohio hat Immediate openings for full-time &amp;
part·1imt RN'S II LPN'S . For
further inforrNtion • applicetions call 614-593-8074.

3 FemHv· 23 Pine St., June 2, 3.
&amp; 4. New &amp; uud Brand r.me
ctothet size 7-B drMI clothel,
jaMs, 1 wedding dreu-w ll-aNp-

•Dozer • leclthoe Work
OWIU Do Heu!Ing With
Dump Truck

or loawt

TAYLORED TANS

&amp; Vicinity

Verd Sale. June 2, 3.

""

WANTED

and newer uted cars. Smith
8\idi-Pontiec. 1911 Eeat•n
Aw .• Gllllpolla. Catl 614-4462282. '

Want to buy ~edMobileHoma~ .

·······G·amp·oris····--· ---

family . O.lldren

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

992.nll or

Cal 16141 992-7204

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

1· 28-'BB·Ifn

z
M. KOCH. M.S.
a: LISA
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
:z:: 417 Second A-. Box 1213
z Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

COMMERCIAL

Serv tLI"

·al&gt;o 7 paid aaoo-10111 1011 f250.

listening Devices

GENERAL

book. Clll •

EIIIP loy Iltt:lll

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH J*d tor '83 model

FOUNO :IIack with white ,
Sh-atw Dog. Mild. 1lze. Ne•
city Hmft1 on old 180. Hlrd collar.
No l.D. Coli 8t4-4411-3073.

ve•

•

VALLEY LUMBER

Dependable Hearing Aid Sales
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Aces

OWNEI: GREG I. IOUSH

t,'t•.

9

Old upritht Dl8no. Pl..,s good.
eon 614-99:!· 3100.

2 Chow dogs. Good with
children. 7 monttw old, 1 black
r.mllle. t red male. Phone
614· 992· 7507 "' 814-992·
6500.

1955 W1h~tm1

., .. 992-6400.

cenaect Ohio and WHt Vlrglnle .
Enne. 1n1~ut. f•m. liquid•·
1ion ., ... 304-nl-15785.

Cutrl ldttM• to c;v...,ay . 2

meta. 2 ftlmlle. ,,i-992· 3989.

Wanted To 8uv

Authorized SerYice
&amp; Parts
Brigs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
WHd Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

v.w.

S·%6·'11· I mo.

ll12:f ll-tfc

Rldt P•••on Auction.,, 11-

We pey c•l'\ ior late model cfNn
used c.ra.
Jim Mlnk Ch., .-Oidllnc,
Bill Gene John1on
614-U6·3172.

Long h•ad gray kitten, 304773-5842.

Services

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

992·2259

Mele puppt. 4 montht old. Plf't
Pit Bull .,dport Sh.,t..d. Good
wfth kldo. 6t4-992· 3223.

2 m.. e 2 female puppiel: mixed
mille. 30~1576-7883.

CLRSSIFIED

Real Estate General

POMEROY, OH .

Free puPcN•. 6 Wks. old. Call
lt4-441-4477.

161 1 11c

992-2156

eoa

Good lift-over yard ..leltenu to
9fve .Wty. Mul1 tlke Ill. C.ll
11 .. 441-0770.

long Hair 8 wb. old kitten1. 5
111-1 wMo. 6t .. 992· 5885.

teria to vote.

9

&amp; Auction

OnefemMeCalioo cet 1 yr. old. 1
m .. e kttten, 8 wkl. otd. Give to
good home _ 814-992-7382.

hold.
By submitting this ballot. I attest that I meet the cri-

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

e. Meln ri..QII;,I;lil;,l""',l

Giveaway

To good horN!, 5 Colll•tvPI
puppi•. I weeks oM. Call
814-98t5-4291 .

New York , New York 10017.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By earner or Motor Route
One Week ..... .. ............................ $1 .25

CALLS

Regulations requires that all eligible voters for fmHA
county or area committee elections meet the follow·
ing eligible requirements: (a) be: farmers or IPOUHI of
farmers: and (b) have their principal farming operation
within the county or area of which the election is being

•

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally sentinel. lll Court St. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

SUNDAY

VOTER CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
Subpan W of Pan 2064 of Title 7 , Coda of Fedora!

Corey Hill. Tracy Pickett,
Brandy Roush.
Sixth Grade: Step hanie Sayre,
Sam Shain.

Happf
Annlversarv

NO

Read the Best Seller
Read the

You Survived

Published evf'ry afternoon, Monday

Day ar Night

4

6 Lost and Found

Happy Ads

t liSPS 14!1-BiO)
A Dlvl" lon of Multimedia. lne.

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

Please detach his notice before voting ballot.

sex, and/ or handicap.

The Daily Sentinel

"At R-blt PricH"

CECIL GILLOGLY .... ..... .............. ..... ................ I
GENE A. HINES ... ...... .................................... I
C. E. SHERIDAN .. .... ,.. ....... ........ ... .... .. ........... I
DON P. SMITH ........................... .. ............. .... . I
' ONLY VOTE FOR 1 CANDIDATE

cret ballot. This blank envelope ahould be placed in~

5

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•candidates

you do not vote in penon you should mail your ballot
inside a blank envelope marked ballot to ensure a se·

Are you struggling with decisions
about sex and needing more informa·
cion ro help you make them? Ann
Landers' newly revised boo~ let, "Sex
and the Teenager, " can be like talking
ro a good friend To receive a copy,
send $.1 plus a self-addressed,
scamped No. 10 envelope (45 cents
postage) ro Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, Ill. (J(K,J/.(}562

CUSTOM BUILT

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION
BALLOT FOR COUNTY COMMITTEE MEMBERiS)
State [Nama) Ohio
County (Nama) Athena.
Molga. VInton

1988. The ballot below must be filled out, detached
and mailed and received or returned in person to Pomeroy County Office, 105 BuHMnut Avenue, Po·
meroy. Ohio 45769, not later than June 30, 1988. If

their bill. ·· GffilNG EVEN IN
DALLAS
DEAR GffiiNG: Happy to let
you have your say. And now may l
have mine' If the magazine folks
would please quit putting pesky
reorder blan ks in every 10 pages ....

through Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy , Ohio, by th e Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Po meroy,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Public Notice
The Farmers Home Administration (fmHA, county

GAMBIER Nicholas K.
Riggs, of 143 Mulberry Ave. ,
Pomeroy, was alnong 214 men
and 160 women who graduated
last Sunday from Kenyon College
In Gambler.
Speaker for Kenyon's 160th
commencement was political
cartoonist Jim Borgman. Borg·
man urged the class not to cower
In the face of other people's
expectations ol them. Borgman
assured graduating seniors they
could sllll be themselves In the

l

Ill Court St , PtllllfO'I. Otlio U7"

committee election this year "will be held on June 30.

Kenyon
grad named

Famny members present to
see Riggs receive his bachelor's
degree In English were his
parents, Keith and Barbara
Riggs; his slsll!r, Andrea Riggs;
grandmother, Mlna Swisher; un·
cles, Charles and Don Swisher;
and family friends, Jeff Adkins
and Stacey Vasselaney.
Riggs graduated from Meigs
High In 1984.

D~nll,

NOTICE OF ELECTION

13

•
us1ness
Services
-·------

PHONE
992-2156
Ot Wntt
Stnti111ll t1nsilied Otpl

Ann
Landers

Meigs County school honor rolls announced
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
The sixth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Southern
Junior High School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all iJielr subjects to he
named to the roll were:
Eighth Grade: Jeff Allen, Carl·
ton Drummer, Sarah Duhl, MIchelle Friend, Todd Harrison,
.Jody Hayes, Andy Hill, Velessa
Hunnell, David Ihle, Robin Ma·
nuel, Trevor Petrel, Jenny Varney, Stacey Theiss, Brenda Hunt.
Seventh Grade: Bethany Bas s,
Nicole Beege, Todd Grace, Nikki
Ihle, Mls ty Ha.y man, Heather
McPhail , Angela Mills, Darrell
Sayre, Michelle Stobart, Kerl
Whitaker, Kyle Wickline, Shawn
Wolfe, Valerie Connolly, Julie
Hill, Ray Proffitt, Rachel Rose,
Barbie Roush.
RACINE ELEMENTARY H().
NOR ROLL
The sixth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Racine
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
First Grade: Jennifer Car let on, Joshua Ervin, Suzanne
Evans, Jody Hupp, Josie Jarrell,
Amy Johnson, Bobby Johnson,
. Jeremiah Johnson, Kara King,
Lesse Little, Crlssy Snider, Jes·
· sica Smith.
Second Grade: Ryan Grace,
Matt Hill, Nicole Hlll, John
Matson, Matt Riffle, Danny
Sayre.
Third Grade: Jesse Maynard ,
Ryan Norris, Bobby Wrltesel,
Jennie Scarberry.
Fourth Grade: Fohn Card, Chris
Gilbride, Jason Hudson, Paul
Ihle, Craig Knight, Jonna Ma·
nuel, James White.
Fifth Grade: Grant Circle,
Jason Ervin, Scott Grace, Kevin
lhle, Shannon Morarlty, Kendra
Norris, Courtney Roush.
Sixth Grade: Ryan Adams,
Jason Carpenter, Beth Clark,
Jenny Cleek, Rachael Hensler,
Jennl Hill, Ryan Holter, Brandl
Mallory, Freddie Matson , Marcy
Mathews. Jeremy Northup, Mike
VanMeter, Marlo White.
LETART FALLS ELEMEN·
TARY HONOR ROLL
The sixth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Letart
Falls Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above In all their subjects
to be named to the ron were:
Second Grade: Nathan
Hensler, Kristen Hill, Julie Hun·
nell, Jackie Proffitt, Travis Ran·
som, Jennifer Roush, Stacy
Warden, Ranetta Wheeler,
Christy Durst.
Third Grade: Adam Roush ,
Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre, Va·
nessa Shuler.
Fourth Grade: Jason Barnett,

Ohio

Firm . Wom~ns clothet-aize 16.
18 IIo 20. N- IIo uiOd drau

sho• (nWt Connie~) size 9
mad., 81 10 med., PUI'IIS,
1lacks-lize 18 &amp; 20, blou'"·
size 40 II •2.
3 motion
uerci1ing bike. jogger t,..dmill.
table&amp; cheir1, 1 hide-a way bed.
dishes, children S mensclothet.
2 Vlcu nw ciMn•• &amp; much

Se••

more.

In Porter, 3 Femtty . Beside ME
Olurd'l . Sat. Clothet, hou•plantt. furniture . toots. misc.

10·1

Lerg~~

yard llle-3 milet on
Uttle Bullskln Rd. PDrtl -crlb.
lots of lldl11 clothes-sb:e 14.
Allo:1979 VW Rabbitt. Thurs ..
Ffl .. IIo sat. 9·1
2

Moving out of tllt•Sale:Fri., a.
511. 9 AM·S PM. Nekt 10 Clav

Trail.- behind Jeff's Cerryout.
Pomeroy. June 1st. 2nd. 3rd.
Lost dov a1 . .- b~ tO :OO.
15 :00. Wood burner, quit, an·
tiq-.. buffet.

Arbeugh Addttion, Tuppers
Plains. Ohio. June 2nd, 3rd, 4th.
Clothes. toy•. toofa. antJq~
furniture. glove~. dishes.
June 1st. 2nd . .nd ltd. 9:00.
5 :00. 1'-l'k-btd hm-. Re . .
Trtiler hitch co mp~.... OOUCh
endcheif. wt•"-· maos-MI .....
adutt .nd chlchn clotting and
loti more. lDclled wert o1t Rt. 7
by-c-u.% mile on St. Rt. 124.
in a beige 1nd brown hou•
,behind RogM" H.,.llll Oar11ga.

3 famllet . .AIM 1, 2. 3.
Furnhure. applences. etc. SUver
Rldge~d . 293Rt. 7north. l.tlet
Eastern High School. ShNtl
!Mtdonco. 61 .. 985-4402.
June 2"d. 3rd. 4th. 124 Union
Aw .. Po "*DY. verierv ot ltemt.
lnduding fUrniture.

School·lower Rt. 7. 2 .-tlque
Mahof~:ny

end tlbl•.

ntw

colontal door cornice- 150.
French Provincial d1'81ser. detk.
chairs. lemps. houllhold items.
ViRa In Centenary hM a complefllllneofnew&amp; uaed furniture
lll app. It \llfd •le pt'icel.
Mattreu •le two weeks onlyfull size •49.95. Rt. 141. 14 mi.
down Unooln Pike. big tan
bulld6ng behind lest D'lliler on
loft. 614-448-31 58. Mon.-Sot.,
9·&amp;.

·······po·mero;;···········
Mh,tdleport
&amp; Vicinity
Patio s.r .. June 2nd, 3rd. and
4th. Several tWII•. Flrsthou•
past Methodist Church in

June 2nd and 3rd. Aadnt.
Yellow BUlh Rd. IS f.mli• at
Ubby Fishers and Carolyn
Ad-.ns. Doors. weed ....r. rug
shampooer, hedgetrl,.,.., pool
tlble. cloth" end misc.
Having huge Y8rd andbMemant
••• on June 2nd lind 3rd in
Min. .vllle, St. Rt. 124 at
Grindlv home. H....e mll'ly tt.ms
to 1811. Home Interior. cr.rts.
bicycle, curtelns. clothing.
flo'Nitr pots ., d m8ftV ottter.

Items.

4 families. Emwson Johnlon
ratidenca at Pordend. Junt 1·4~
9:30-? ,.IYtaQ wringer Wlllt..,
clothing.
'
3 family ¥Brdtale. 011.-ry St.,
sv ... cu•. June 1.2.3.

Ch81ter.

June 2 ll'ld 3 . lridgamm St.,
Syracuse . Furniture. baby'
clothes. cu~ns. bookl. 9-4.

June 1,2 ,3. Rlzar .... Rt. 12• in
Minenville. 4 ~amity . FurnH:ure.
antlquee. lot of new ., d ueed
items.

Garage •Ia. Thur. Fri. June 2
and 3. Furnltu,., bebr itltmt.
chlldrens clothing. mi.: . Off
New Uma Rd. Rutland.

Juno 1, 2,3. 29001 Boo hen Rd ..
Racine. 114-949·3095. Car.
firewood . furnhure, gi . . Mrtt.
clo1hel, miiC. Rain c ..ct11.
Shirley Stephenson.

2 fomltv. Mov t .,d 2. 277
Uneoln St. Cl tower, fana.
tprNds cur1alns. O.lldlwtt Md

Rutland. S•lem St . June 1· 4 .
Ftvefwnlli•. Antlquea, bedding.
appliances , clothes . toys ,
dlthel. furniture. garden trector
and equiP"*''· tool•. IIIWn
mower. ttrollar. slip ser8Per. etc.

aduh clothing, ICnlc* kMCke.

furniture, tool1 .
Sale at Robinsonacl....... East

Second St.. Ponwov. 0 . June
3-8. 9a.m.-•p.m. Uncllllmed dly
ciMnlng, rentals. unitol'fN .nd
towals .
·

4 family ~rd •le. June 2.3.4 .
Two ...,d 111•. June 2.3. 9 -4 . h .m.·5p.m. Turn at Memory
Freezer. motorcycle, storm Gardens Cem.cery. Ant hou•
door. clothn. Riggscr111 ebow · on loft. Bobv bod. lodl• blovcla.
dr•• form. lots of mite .
E1ttem High.

Jurw 3.4. Randv lo1ton1 on S R
181,4 11\1 mH.. ~T . P. tCMillrd
R..tavitlo. 9-5. Antiquo bod.,d

dr•..,,

wood s1owo. dolls. orgift, •ir hodtey-. mattr1111 end

box sprlng1. clothlle. toys end
misc.
June 2 ,3 . 9a.m. Rutland Rd . v..
mile off Rt. 7. Nattw\ Biggs
Ruktence .
June1at end 2nd on Salem St ..
Rutland. TV, ice cr..n hear.
orgM. con'IDU(el', TuptMfWirt.
knick kneckt Md mo,.,
Moving •••· Appll ..c., furni1.n, ml~e . 8tart1 M., 31 thru
Junt 3. 9a .m.· 5p.m . Second
hou• pitt Naz _ O.Urch ;,.

Rutlond.

June 1 a 2. 250 Mulberry Ave.
Beside Pomeroy Element•ry
School . 10 AM·3PM
Cerpen•rendmllc. toola. riding
tr1C1or .nd lecettori-. chain
MW. mMy Olherttems. June 4th
on!y. 9·1. Ilrinkolo. 4th ond

Butt•. New Heven.

&amp; fomlloo. Juno 2 and 3. h .m.

til 4p.m. 112 Rutlond St ..

Middleport , Oh. Children•
clotMe, mite. , . , ..
June 1 and 2. College Rd ..
Sy,.cu.. 10e.m. • ·3 p.m. 20
lnch glrlo blcvclo. Bmm and
Iuper 8 movie proj«tor and
screen, clotHng, mi.: . Stereo
component •Y•t•m with
speM:If'S.

5

f.,tl¥

'jOid 1tte.

Fri. tnd Sot.

Juno3 ond 4. 1·4•- dor . Lota
of atoo n l • - ~-clothing.
Aero• from l'of• llun Churcll
on CGuntv Rd. 30.

Large • famlty •Ia. New Uma
Rd ., lpPfOk. 1 mile from H•r~
sonvilla. Furnitu•. "-'stone
wtiHis, tim, bik•. dothlng.
dishes. books, etc . .tuna 2,3.4 .

Yard •le M the Ron leeafe
rllidenoe. 1 mile IMt of Recfna
on Twp. Rd. t05 jull ofl SR
124. Wotch tor litn•· CubCadM
mo~ end o'thlr mite. l.wn
equip.. 7 -Sox
truok
hou•hold hwm1, end clothing.
Junt 2,3,4. 9a.m.·lp.m.

eo

Oer~tge

ttr•.

•I•.

Jun• 2 and 3. 1111
Brown Nsidenot. New" Uma Rd . ._
Rutland.

...... "PfPTeasanc··&amp; Vicinity
Big ytnd oolo, 30,31 ,1,2,3: 5
days. Dishes, cloth•. Home
lntarior. boat end t,.il•. utility
t,.ll•. 4
mo1orcvcte.
fumlture, lots m6tc item.. Cr011
A.A. n'cltcs from
Scttool.
follow ligns. 10:00 til 7, 304678-4647.

wh...

•al•

5 famly ,..d aalo, 2314 J.ftor·
aon Ave. 10:00 AM • 4 :00PM.
ltlrting Wad. June 1 thru June
4th.
YerdSIIe. Juna3&amp; • . 110Main
St.. New H•en. furrWturt ,
swimming pool. ecannar. lfock·
Ide fertoe, diiMI. tlrll. n.w
lt:ems, mite.
Chutt:H S1le, WM II n-.,..
clothlna21 end 10 centt, Kill' I
Berber Shop 100m 3.

llg Y..O

We can

Salo, Rt, 2 Ch.t•ton
Road on ..rt 1 ml• from City
llmtts. June 1,2,3 .

rtDIIII

core
huter cores.

also acid boll
Dut rid liaiCH'I.

can
rod
also

Gill IIAI:I.

PAT HILL FORD
112·2181

Middleport, Ohla
1·13·tfll

Yard Salt. Thun &amp; Fri. 18
lurdMII Acldn.
Y•d Sal&amp; Frldty JUM 3, 2111
Mt. y_.,. A... 1:00 tilt 1.

-

Clla1011olato. June I. tO:G0-1. 4.
ml• Iouth lit. 1:1. Antltlutt.

tu-.ootor TV, 1147 ,.,._

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

gllltWire, dltMI • .,,.Int.

•pll-.

totoofhnlclt-tlteh

ll

pluo- -

·

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
11

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
44

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

51

Apartment
for Rant

Household Goods

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

a white TV.
825. Wood tllbte &amp; two cfleirs.
• 40. 275 Hl;lequln books, 160,
Tru-tone stereo with
•eo. See•t 25t So. Fourth Awe.
17•• ZonHh bloclc

METAL WORKER TRAINEES

Apartment for rent. $2215 a
month. Oepoaft required. 814-

No eaperl.nct requlr.t. Training

992-5724. After 8pm or 992·
1119.

on the job. Reloe.tkm required .

•u•

High oc:hool g.ado
17-30.
C•ll 1·801).282-1384. Mondoy·
Thurod .... 9 AM ·2 PM.

N.wty Ndecorated apert"*'ltl

walllble. Utilita peid. •22!5.
per month. depotit 18quired. Call
814-992·5724 •Iter 6:00 or
992·51 19.

~m.nanoe JNr•on for aparl ment compu to live ln. ExpelfenOI
required. References.

Coli 304-f7&amp;-5104.

1 bedroom ept. for rent In
Middleport. 1160 month plua

Lad, to lw -ln. Mosdy for
CO"'PMV. Free boll rd . For more

UIIHiel. 81~992· 5546 or 814949·2216.

Otlvrmotk&gt;ncoll fl4-446 ·34 19.

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
hout~~a . Pt. Pl ....nt•ndGaltlp~

Poail:k&gt;n Avelllbi• P•t~ tlme :
Ctntor of the ' 'Our Hou ..
Mui*Am" . Out tel include: Coo~ing tours, cat•loguing of
coflect6ons. prep.,ing cis playa &amp;
co-orclnMing of special awents.
Must be eblato w«k 'Neekends.
Atlpond to : Beth V•ndewalller.

u•. 814-448-8221 .

87&amp;-8512.

Golllt&gt;ollo Chamber of Comm.... P.O. 8o• 4f5 O.IIIP&lt;&gt;IIo.
Ohio, 45U1 . Appllcotlon oc-

2 room fu ml1hed apt, prtvate

both, utH~IH Jllid. 117 N. 4th
Avo. Middleport. I -304-BB2·

c:epqd until potltion is fllled-

25IWI.

"I know your estimate is just
a ballpark figure, but Yankee
Stadium didn't cost this
much!"

,_,.kiona Awllml• Ole~:arv De.,.,.,.,.,, Scenic Hilla Nursing
Cen..r. No ell:perience necll·
aery , We wll tl'llin. AI you need
Ia Miretoworka willingne.. to
leern . Apgtv In person .
weelut.,s·B: Olm to 4 :30 pm .

538 Buckrldga Rd. 44f.7150.

Position
Open-pert-time
Registered
NurM. Contl'lct,
Whh

thiPren•ICIInlc. Appllcatlono
will be token through Juno 8,
1988. for ·f urth..- infort"Ntlon,
call the Galli• County Heahh
Daiplrtn...t at 441-4612. ext.
292. Equal Opportnity

£mployor.

Need ext18 C81h this summer?
Become • carrier for The Oaity

Tribune. Carrier needed for
Spring VeRev ere•Oek Or ..
Httdl Dr .. Meple Or .. Cell The

Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

lNG CO . recomm.-.da that you
do busln•s with people you
know, and NOT to 18nd morMPf
through the mel untl you hMte
inwest~llted the oflering.

Dolly Trlbu,..448·2342.

Real Eslale

Help Wanted

Pinon experlen01d In Plumbing
~ndlor He•ing Mid air conditioning. Mus1 h.-,e at lent 10
experience. Apply in person bet.,.,.en eight and five.
wMct.rs. •d from eight end
12 s.turd-rs. C.rt•'• Plumb·
lng end Hto.. Inc.• Fourth and

v-••

Pine. a.NipoNs. Ohio 46831, an

-:rtoyer.tn Certer's
c.

Equ.l Employment Opportunity

Plumbing
1n Htg ..
wll not dlscriminnt aglinlt any employee or
IPP"ctnt tor employment be·
CIUM of race. color, religion.
n•lonlt orgln Mlcettrv or sex.

Held someone to • • down old
hou• (in Vinton) for the lumber.

catl81 .. 388·8327.

Now hiring drivers. M•ke up to '
•• • hour plus mii88Qe &amp; tips.
Appt, now Domino's J:ti.ue.

H* Stytiatl. Across The SlrHt
atying ...an il IHking one
Hditional stylist who is looking
for more th_.. Juat another job.

Coli T•rlll 81"4-448-9510 for

d.tiMI.
Oowrnment Jobs. '11,040 •at,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
. . . 805-187-8000 8Xt. A9801 for current Fed.,.! lltt.

wee•

Excelltnt
for JPIIfe time
••mbly work; electronics.
011fta. Others. Info 1 -15041
8•1·0091 Ext 3026. Open 7

doll•·
Job hunlng? Need ~ 11lill1 We
trlln people tor jobl 11 Auto
Mlchenicl. C.rpentera. Electridana. Food S.vtce Workers,
El.ctroniCI Technkiens. Industrill Meln"n•nce Workers,
Nurtlng A11....,.11 and Ordaru-. M.chlnistl, and Welders.
Aegls•r now for cl•. . begin-

ninll July lith. C.ll Tr;.County

Vo ... lo... AduM Contor ol814713-3111 axt. 14_ A verietv of
funding toun:H to pay for
training are .valllble for those

lllglllie.

IWp n•ded In pridte home.

Coro tor lldorly. 209 S. 4th,
..ddeporl. 01y llhlft.

AVON • AI IN•. Cell Marilyn

WI- 304-882·2846.

LPN, Pl_.l Vall"f Nursing
Clre C..ter INking licen•d
LPNtfor ~ 1tmeemployment.
medlc.l .nd dentel intuRince

owlll&gt;l•.lllntore.,.d coil Kothy

'ntomton. Olrectcr of Nursing.

(3041875·5238. EOE·AAE.
AVON ell ere•: Shlrlev Speers.

30..e?fl.a29.

Baa, .._r nMded for 2 children

In New ~ •ree beginning
JYnl 8. Clll after 7:00 PM.

304-IB2·2427.

12

31

Homes for Sale

Tuppers f'tlins-3 BR .. eat-in
kitchen. I•Dfl living room. N II
basement. garage. 111 electric.
centmt air. Call after 5 PM.

814-448·7498.

For Sale or Rent-3 SA . hou11
with attached gnga CA. No
pets. Oep. &amp; ref. required. 39
Olillicothe Rd. Call 614-448-

2683, 9-6 d,;iy.

2 bedroom, 2 bath!, 2 c•
garage. I~!~Vel lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, Mtelite. clol8
to Meigs High. Gall 614-992-

3254.

108 Stlte St. , Pomeroy. 2 or 3
bedrooms. carpeted: No 1'881onable offer ref\J1td. Phone 814-

992-3725.

6i'oomt, b•h.newt,carpeted.1
floor, fhlt lo1, quiet location,
deck po..::h, priv•cv fenClB, In
Rutland. 614-742-2007 or8147 42·2880 for appointment.
In Chester area, 3 bedroomS, fuH

b•ement, fireplace. central air.
Call614-986-3810.
Home for sale or rent. C.ll

814-992-2484 or 992·2291.

5 room1, bMh. large back Ylrd.
Hat been reduced. Good shape.

Call814-992· 7244. Makeolfor.
Small 2 bedroom hou• with
b•aement, completly remo-

dolod, chv. 117,500.00. 304675-8331 .

3 br. 2 beths. full fln;.hod

basement. new furn11ce &amp; central •ir, gert~ge. fenced yard. low
60's. 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave. Pt.
Pleeunt. 304-875-1774.
3 bedrooms. •II electric, centel
air. heH acre lot. Gallipolis Ferry,
low 40' s. 304-675-29 32 after

4:00pm .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1980 Baron Prince has 3 bli".,
1% bathl. new lntertherm heal
pump. lnc;ud• I 2&gt;&lt; If oulbu ll&lt;f.
lng• BM20deck. Before you buy
a mobllehomeyoumult •ethls
one first! V. Smith. R.E. 814-

25&amp;-8251 or 814-445-8808.

1973 Marllllne. 2 BRa. awring.
Call after 8pm. 814-446-9346.

14x70_. AIIIIectrlc. 3 BR .. 2 fuH

baths, window AC, ceiling fan,
stowe, wether-dryer. Call after I

1983 Shuttz. 14x70, 28M30

women " my home. 15 years
••perience. Tuppers Plains eree.

el4-887-3402.

front porch, beck
declc. fl 4-742·2997.

fireplace.

1979 Pot riot. I 4•f0, fireplace.
1air. 911 furnace. nice ship e.
U995 firm. fl4-843-5185.

13

Insurance

1973 Champion, 14x70, tot1t
electric:, und•JM"·ming .. d hook

Call us for your mobile home
ln•ur•nce: Miller Insurance.
304-882 -2145. Also: auto.
Mme. Hfe. he•hh.

up. 304-5711-2383.

1970 Windsor, 12:11:85 with
10Jt12 add on. woodburner,
w••hltf •nd dryer, •lr cond, mull

bo mowd, 304-895-3802.

18 Wanted to

•tJv-'"lnl: In

" .. 44fl. I 55.

Do

my home. C1tl

Carpenter looking for extn~
wort!. Rea.on1ble n~tea . Cell

ollor 5,30 114-949·2481

Wll do Mtr(llttlng lnyout home.
V.y Nllalale .,d afford•ble.

814-.. 2·18S8.

PrMte home en lnd bollrd for

3BR,4mll81fromHolzeronSt.
Rt. 180.$250mo. plua•c.dep.
CaU814-446-1189.
Hou 18 for 18nt in Pomeroy. CIU

814-992-8144.

Furnished Rooms
------,---Furriohld room-919 Second

Aw .. Gallipolis. 1125 e mo.
1Jtlllt181peid.Singlemale.Sh••
bath. Cell446-4416after7PM.

Rooms for "'nt~ ._...ek 01 month.
Starting It 8120 a mo. Galli•

614-985-3581 .

For rent. 1 bedroom hou~eln the
Ha.-t of Maton. •125 plus 160
Rouw 2 good locMion mu_. 1M
to eppreclate, •38,100.00.

30 4-&amp;7&amp;-24e8.

Store corner of Second • Pine,
1•00 sq. ft. Off atTeet perking.
$360 a mo. plus utilhies. Cell
81 .. 44&amp;-2325. 446-4249.
Large commercial bulding on

Rt. 7 clo• to Rt. 36. Large
parking aree. CaU 814-246-

6024.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P•k.

Rou• 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 814-992·

7479.
2 SR . Nice • clun In Eureka.
I 200 • mo. Dep. ntqU Ired. No
polo.

C.ll 814-24&amp;-58e3.

Fwn .. hed or unfurnh:hed 2 BR.,
cebte. water·sewage p"'d. AC.
Foster's Mobile Home Park•

814-4411-1802.

Furnished 2 BR . mobile home for
rent. Adutts only . No pets.
Natural gas heM:. Cell 81ol-317·

7438.

.

Spece for arnill tn~ilers. All
hook~ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air and cable. Meson,

W.Va. Call304-773-5851 .

Spacious mobile home loti: for
rent. Femily Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gellipolit Ferry, W . Va.

304-87!&gt;3073.

•PK•

Trailer
for rent. Locust
Rold. Route One. 304-675-

1071.

14x70, 2 BR .. w/welk •round
lt&lt;Mt-mlcroweve. bultt in stereO. g•dtn tub. shower ltll.
8226 a mo. e mil• from
Gelllpoli• on 218. Ref•e'lcea

"'Ciui&lt;od. C•ll 814-255-1393.

Merchandisr.
51

Household Goods

2 BR., urrfurnlohld. Ill olec. 2
mil• out Rt. 688. Prhme fat.
C.ll 81._4411-4807 or 4411-

2802.

Olive St., Golllpoilo.

2 BR. tnlil.-. •200emo. ~mile
past Bob NlcCormld on 588.
City

11483.

schools. Coli 814-44&amp;-

2 bedroom mobile home In
Syracu •· •150. per month plus
utilitl ... deposit. 114-992-

5732 altar 5:00pm.

Two bctm'oom furnlehed trail«,

C,.bC'"k Rd. *200.00month.

dep01tt r.c~ulred, no petl. furnish own utlltl•, 304-t75-

l 20f.

.

I 2&gt;&lt; 60 all electric. 2 bedroom

mobile home, 11A mil• out
Millstone Road, $250.00monlh
plus depotlt. exc cond. 304-

44

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 82

NEW- 6 pc. wood group- 8399.
Living room suitet· t199-1599.

Bunk beds with bedding. *199.
Full lim mattrese B. foundation

sUrting- t99 . Recliners
ltlrtlng· 199.
USED- Bldl, dr•••· bedroom
tuitet, •199-•299. Dealls.
Minger Mlher, • complete line
of ulld furniture.
NEW· Wet*n boots· t 30.
Worlcboott 118· &amp; up. (Steel •

oolt tool. C.llf14·448-3159.

County Applll'lce, Inc. Good
uM epDII~ncet end TV Mta.
Opon BAM to 8PM. Mon thru

Sot. 814·448· te99, 827 3rd.
Avo. Golllpollo. OH.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Weshert, dryers, refrigerators ,
rengea,. Sk eggs Appliances,
Upper Riwer Rd . betide Stone
Crett Motel. 81ol-448-7398.

Apartmant
for Rent

1970 Kirk 12&gt;&lt;86. pllono 30._
773-5828.

2 BR . epta. I closet~, kh:chenappl. furnished. W•lwr· [)ryor
hook-up. ww c•pwt. n8Wfy

painted, d•dc . Re~cv. Inc.
Apts. Cell 30oi-875-773B or

f7fl.5104.

New Completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home In
·city. Adults ontv. P•ldng. Cell

814-44S.033B.

BEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 J•clcoon
Plko from 1183 1 mo. Wllk to
shop and mOYI•. 814-44fl.
25S8. E.D.H .
Brooktlde Ap. . nwntt: Located
off BlA..,IIeAd.- 1 BA . IPICiOUI
apartment• wlthmodlrn ldtchen
and wesher.cfryw hookups, c•
ble tet~Nillon ev•llllbte. C.ll

Sofas and chllirs priced from
•39&amp; to 8995. Tabl• 150 •nd

up

10

$126. Hld••·bodo $390

to 159&amp;. Recliners 1225 to

137f. Lompo U8 to 1125.
Dln.ne~

8109 and up 10 ••915.
Wood table w-8 chairs 8285 to

1796. Dook $100 up to 1375.

Hu1Ch• $400 1nd up. Bunk
bed• comphn:e w-mlttretMI
•295and up to 8398. Bllb¥ bedl
t110. Matt,...., or box springs
tu• or twin 168, firm 178, end
*88. Queen te1a •225, King
1350. 4 drawer chest 889. Oun
cabinets 8gun. Bib¥ mettrna..
135 &amp; •45. Bed hm• $20.
830 • King frlme t&amp;O. Good
selection of bedroom sutt ...
m ... cabinets. headbaerda 130
and up to 866.

atarl. $900
44&amp;-1528.

'.

t;.;;::=;;;~~:;:~::T::;=:::;:=~:;:===l
58
63
Pets for Sale

Mhr:ed hav for •I• "eady to be
cut. Call614-245-6418.

7PM.

Hay in fleldfor•le. $1 .10pet'
bale. Call 61ol-742-2476 Of

BiQ 2 Bedroom Rustic home

For friendty, courteous and
profellional Heir Stylists. come
to the INdar ... FIESTA HAIR

FASHIONS. 322 Second Avo,
acro11 from park, 81,·446-

9152.

Guns for S.I&amp;-Winc:hester Centennial ModM 18, 30-30 rifle.
gold lnlllid. Remington Game

Ma"" 30.01. Mo dol 7eD wKh

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
Peralen end
Siam.. lllt1ens. AKC Chow
puppies. New Himal..,.an kittens. Call 614-446-3944 aftlf

AKC Cock• Spaniel pupa. shots
lt.tlrted. Wormed. 1160 each.
Call 81"·388-8890.
Full blooded Beagle puppies ~r
111e. Red • 'lll&gt;tlhe. Copper
noted . 8 wkl. old. t60. each.

C.ll614·25&amp;-8278.

&amp;

Busineu
Opportunity

Own fOur own eppertl or -"oe
ttore. choon from : Jean·
lportawe1r. Udl•. Men· a,
•c:::NI... ·Met•nlty,lergeSiUI,
Nil, 0...-re•-Aaroblc. Brlclll, Ungll'le 01 ac~aearl•
-·Add -rift II\'...... d
_ , IJIC'-lllorno. H&lt;llfll!llk.

CII..L Lte. II Mlallll&amp; forlftU ,
1'*1 lor. LtvL C.mp h'ilfl\'
H... Or..,lcoll\' Or....,, Lucio.
2000 Cllhn. Dr 113.11
one ...... dtlltln•. muMI tl•
"'ldllg ......... "' f~mly ....
lt..._ ...,. . pri. . .-l.,.blo
for 1011 quoilly o - •"'"*tv
from 111. ., leD. Over
210 brenda 2tOO styles.
117.to0to 12l,to0:1n-torv.

trelnlng. fktu,., eh',.e, gr•nd

oponln• ole. Con ooon IS don

llllr. McComb, 14041824-0010.

.... '

clean hev.

$1 .25 on

57

1987 Ford Te'mpo. Pay bal.,ce
due. C.ll 814-446-8199.

Musical
Instruments

125. Call 814-4-4fl.88e5.

Crapp1e, Minnows • Triploid
Gr..s C.rp. Del : Tues., June 14
It Southern St•tes Co·op in Pt.
Pleeunt from 12-1 PM. Clll
304-675-2780 to order or 1~

800.643-84391

BUiineu desk. •8&amp;. Sewiog
mechine in cabinet, •so. TV
wood cebinet (repair) •35. C•ll

814·446-83 27 or 614·446·
2118.

'I HPMvor......,a 40gol. •nk.
1300; comDI• oak dningroom
"let • 600: 2 turrrtabla dl..: joclcy
let wfth 1peek• •400;complete
bunk beds 871; completes Ingle
beds t&amp;O; bew cooler 8400:
antique radio. TV. end turnteble,
•1 0 ••· •nd other mlaceUaneoua

Homo. C.ll 81 .. 992-7888 "'
304-87&amp;-8999

1979 City Tri-Axle Aluminum
dump trail•. Cell 614·448-

9379.

PIANO FOR SALE

WANTED: Responalble party to
auufM anti monthly payments
on pieno. Seelocaly. call Credit

Meneg.-1-800.447-4288.

KlmbtU console pieno-cheny.
1% ve•• old. t1500. can

814·448·-349.

8419.

••dlo
11\&lt;oic. 81 .. 448·0f87.
Jeff Wemsley instruc1or, 8 1....
Kohl• •nd Campbell console
pi.,o, •rv good cond for home
or church, priced 8 1,700.00.

Phone 304-87&amp;-2B48.

58

6118.

•w·.

For •le: 1 ironspiNiltteir..wy, 1
phone.mate enswering mechine. 1 cordi•• •ltphone. 1
11t of 121nch double plows. Call

814-742'2931 .

New 10 ft Setelltte System.
remo1e control , Installed

1991.00, 30 ...75-5477.

4x8

utility tmil•. 304-8?5-

2119.

I.H . cub tl'lctor 1nd eultiVIItor,
tide moMr end plow. Seer~

77 Ford LTD. 81,000 ·actuel
mH•. Nice body, clean Interior.
(k)od tires. Mechenlcally 10und.

Coil 814-245-6040.

8741, eve's.

1971 Camara. Auto. trans.

Soec:l&lt;l1 wook only. *795. First
come. Coii814-44S.1815.
Red Hot bargains! Drug dealers'
cws, boats. pl.n• 18PO'~ . SurPiul. Your arH. Buyers Guide.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

IIIBOil-897·8000 Ext. S-9eD6 .

For •le. STRAWBERRIES. Free

BERRY PATCH . M.•r Rd. Mo!ld8V flru Saturday, BAM·IPM.

Coli 814-44f.Be92 or 614245-5178.

StNWberri•. Doug Roush . 2
mil• beck of New tteven.
You-pick, we-pick. Stlrtlng Mev

31. Clll304-882-2237.

Sti'IWberri•· PIck your own.
Call Cl1ude Winters, Aio

Gronda. Ohio. 814-241-5121 .

Stmwbetrl•ff. You pick, SOcqt,
we plclc $1 .25. 15 mil• South
Pt. PI•-• Rt. 2 . WitCh for
tlgna. Clyde Bo....-n Jr. 30457f.2338 or 578·2808.

1978 Chrysler LeBaron 4 door,
new J*nt, frM, IO«ted. •1600.

., .. 992·7214. •

Red H01 bargains! Drug dealers'
c••·
plen• repo'd . Sur·
plua. Your Area. Buyers Guide.
boltl,

lll806·887·eDOO Ext. S-9805.

1980 FIM h•dlop conwrtlable
X19, AM·FM t1dio Clllllfte. &amp;MC

cond. col 1ft• 5:00, 304-8752e35.

f '" Ill

Pon.blellghted atgn with letters

1299. Froo delivery, WV• 1·
801).842-2434; Ohio 1-8()().
533-3453.

sII 1111 Itt!s

&amp; LIVI!StUI.k

con (&amp;141 448-3076.

A~D,

u..d &amp; rebuilt ell types. Guaran·
tfte 30 days mintmOO'l. Prices
S 99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torques
conwrted as .low u S39.
Conversion kit-S-10'• &amp; C·10's
over drt.re to 350' s. We buy junk
trlnamlsstons. Call 304-875-

with ahO'MJr, hot water heater,
ten dem wheels, twin gn tan k:s
with 30 lb each, ew ning. phone ,

'18 Ch•ette. 4cyleulo. • door,
eond. ealdng 8750.00. 304-

875-2231.

TNcks for Sale

usutilttill.

44f.412f.

1971 lnternationet. 2 ton.
flatbed. New .ubber, nM paint.

Coli et4-25f·1941 or 81425fl.f574.

e

Improvements

1211 VldeoCountry

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifatime guarantee. LocM referencea furnisMd.
Free estimates. Call collect

I · 81 4-237·0488. d"f or night.

RogersBa•ement '
Wlt•proofing.

ALLEY OOP
I'M HUNGRY:

I WISH WE H"D

SOMETHING TO
EAT!

SWEEPER end IIIIWing mechlne
repair, perts, and auppliaa. Pick
up and deiMJry, Davia Vac:uum ·
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georgoo Cr"'lk Rd. C.ll 6 1._
448-0294.

Concrete Septic Tenks - 1000
g•t..1500g ... andJetAeration •
IIValem. flctory trained repeir

ahop. RON EVANS ENTER·

flfUSES, Jackson, Ohio. 1-80().

537-9528.

ROI'I EVA~S ENTERPRISES ·
$90 per

load. Call 1· 800-637-9528.

a.

M•aonry-Brlck. block. stone
Free Mtlmate. References . Call Bill Oenny-614-256fireplece~ .

EEK &amp; MEEK
IF caJ REAU.H VJAklT lHE:
G£NEI&lt;AL o:JT.. IIJ MY 00~1~..
'd:X.I'R€ eotJIJA
HAI.!t 10 RE$00"
:10 MILITARY
Kf(aJ ..

1749.

Painting: Interior &amp; E~erior.
Free estimetes. Call 814-448-

B344.

Jim's Odd Jobs
Sundecks. aiding. paintin~. roof·
lng, carpenter work. trailer re·
pair. Free Estimates. Call 614-

em WE: CQJT HAV!:. ~£

RIGHT 10 ltvVACf: ~~AMA,

'.:fll.lAlOR

WHO'S

I WAS R£FI:RRIIJ$

10 11-1~ JUSnC€
DEPARrMQJT

TAlKIOO
' ABCX:JT
PAtJAMA.?.

y

(1 :37)

11J Riptide Boz Busters
1211 Naaltvllte Now William
Lee Golden, Debra Snow
1:05 CD NBA Belke1baU
.
8:30 til a Cll Need ol the Cl111

RON ' S Tel ewision Service.
Hou• calls on RCA. Quazar,
GE . Specialing in Zentth. can

romowl. Coli 304-675-1331.

Ro•ry or cable tool drilling.
Moat Mils co mpletedslmeday.
Pump ula and service. 304-

Darlene and Sarah vie for the
attantlons ot a cute new guy.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

(R)

WERE THE COCOA BEANS

HAVEYOWE&lt;OT
DECAI=FE"I NATED":?

OREiANIO\.lLY

GROWN.,

CI".D WA5 RIG-HT WHEN
HETOLDMET05nCK
TO L-EMONADE .

896-3802

304-f75-395e or 304-5782903.

Michael' s Residendal air condi·
tion and mfrigerJtion, mcharge
and repair .-vice. l.&amp;on. W.Va.

19B7 Ford 180 Conversion Van .

14.000 mn ... loeded, tile.
c:rut.., ~r windowe • locka,

AM·FM·C.II. 351·HP ongina,

CHoCOLATE'

25¢A_.....
WP
.,.............

304-4511-I 785:

82

I CAN GO

TO

THAT
QUILTtN'

Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or 614-

;'
I'

•

Hor CHOCOLATEi

25¢A CUP

..

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

mr CfioCOL.ATE'
25¢ A CVP
,,,.__,.

~,_,,. ~ ,

....

BARNEY
,NO WAY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

AMY SUE
AN' BESSIE
WILL BE

BEE

II

AN' THAT SPELLS
"HAIR PULLER"
FER SHORE !!

••

THAR--

445-4477

duel •ks. Fl• steele lelther

Interior. C.ll 814-258-8327,

8-5 Mon.-Fri.

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
198&amp; Toyat• ·h4 truck short
bed. &amp;lpeed,chromeroll._.snd
bed r1111. Bladc~hrome module

~-·· AM-FMc••neatlh'eo.
off rood liglllo. llrlpo. 42,000
mM•. Extra shltp. $7000 firm.

Residential or commercial wiring. NeoN service or repein
Ueen•d electrlcilrt. E:nimet8
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

THE GRIZZWELLS®
I &amp;aliA 6t:T

60S~-\, 'FA\.1~-~A ...:I'M

304-57&amp;-2348.

Furnlohld lflld- opt. Corpet
lllroug!IOUI. - · • qulot.
Two building Iota with County Slnalewotling-ontv.Col
Wilt•, on Jerry'l Run RoN .-: et&lt;J:4411-4f07or 44fl.2.02.
Apple Grow, W. VI. 30ol-1762383.
furnlohld .........4
b•h.1 or2o41MI.No-.loc.
Beautiful river lots one.areptuL dep. • rol. I'ICIUirld. Coli tl4public weter, Ctyde 8o.wn, .Jr. 4411-0444.
304-575-2338.
Oroctout living. I ...d 2 ......
LOTS. one 8CJ"8, I~Wel wooded. room epertments tt VIllage
clly wat•. Jericho Roed. OW1*' Menor and Nwr.W. Allert·
flnenclng. good terms. 304- menta In Mlddlip:ort. t\om
372·8405 Of 372-2578.
n 12. C•ll 814·912· 7717.
EOH.

tuy Teckllr. k'l ~condition.

1982 Chw •wheel drtwtruek,
VB. auto, .tO.OOO mil-. .e xn...

CD Gil Nan
till D il2l Till EquaNzar A

•e.60o.oo. 304-812·3178.

ORient Water Service: Pool1.
Wells. Oeliwry Anytime. Call 814-448-7404-No
Sunday callt.

74

J • J Water Service. Swimming
pools. cittlllrns, wells. Ph. 814-

• Croolt Ifill a.-

Motorcycles

General Hauling

~

~ ..,

~iaterns,

3 wheel• ATV. Vorygood oond .
1700 or bolot olfw. C.ll 81444f.702t.
181M Honda Nlghttwwk. 7000
mil•. Aaklng t1295. C.lll14-

Paul Rupe, Jr. W.ter Service.
Pools. cisterns, welll. Cell 814.

379-2220.

63

EJICel.

Cor-

2 Pinto - - . 2 - • a form
equlpmont. Coll814-24fl.54t2.

Nlc•-lng. Llundry
foeillloo OVoilll&gt;la Call 81 ..
882·3711. EOH.

I ..... old robblt• f4 •ch.
Lop.eorod. 4wk. old- e10eoch.
3 yr. cld Alpine Non.., _..
chlln brM • g...lo- UO or
b. . ""·· Call 114-44fl.4810.
"They're aU auditors for the IRS?!"

40to60Chlclc.,.eppr&lt;&gt;~&lt;l

yew

- - - - - - ..'
cld. 304-418-1578.

PEANUTS

445-3171 .

etterson' • Water H1u ling
reasonab4e rates, lmmedlet~
2.000 gallon dellwry, cisterns.

1884 HO&lt;tdl 2008 3 wheol•
wMh 11alt and 11 ,_-good
oond. Col oftlf 4 PM (1141
441-1813.

pools.
29 19 ·

11111WIII' Dov~onPon13100. 080. CAll 814-14122thvonl.,...
--~---

IIOry (IIR) (2:00)

10:30 Cll ,._.... Snapaitoll
mAllltll Hun~er: Mr
Cellle'a llockln' Trace the
co,_ or noled Jazz singer
Albini Hunter, lrom her

.

cond. LDt of .,,.,_
•2100. Cllll1oi-4C6-3083.

18111 IWIOV Dov~on 8upor
Glide. Good oondlllon 114-7422e711.

-11. etc. coil 304-57&amp;-

87
Upholstery
-------- ·~
Mowrwy'1 IJDhalstering ~erVing
tri countyarH 23~••· Tt1ebnt
In fumlturw upholstering Call

304 · 671 · 4154 for ·free

e•tkna1el.

VIetnam's underwortd to lind
her brother-Ill

10:20 (I) MOV11!: Vlelnlm War

A &amp; A WMer Service. Pools,
clatern1. wells . lmmediete 1,000 or 2.000gallonsdelivery

Call 304-f7&amp;-8370.

(I) D Cll Chin• Inch
Cherry fOllows Dodger Into

mld&gt;vestem family's dream
trip tuma Into 1 nlghtmere.
0 t!.-tng Nawa

245-9285.

.lm II.._ . 30._1175-8088.
Uvilltodc

(l) IDI Daya end Ntghta
ol Molly Dodd Molly finally
meets lhe mysterious
neighbor In t2·F. !;I
(I) top Rank Bollllig
(I) 0 Cll Hooperman Mo
beCOmeS enamored ot a
handsome actor doing
research for 8 rote. (R) 1;1
(1) Tlta Infinite Voyage Learn
hoW DNA dictates similarities
and differences In living
·lhtngs.l;l
(!) llkleUI DialOgue:
Nlghtllne/...,_llm
Ravlllted
1111 D il2l Jaka and the
Felman McCabe, an
eyewitness, refuses to rely
on what he saw. (R)
milD MOVIE: OHth Trap
ill LMJ King Llwl
11J MOVIE: Dllllra In Dealh
(NR) (1:55)
1:30D()) 1151Bere Sara's mom
vlslta, but a1ter a taw hours,
she paet&lt;a her bags
...:~r-IRI
(I) DIll Step Mil
Story Judy pressures Slap
for comml1m8nt; then he
heara Nel-'s request. Q
• New Country
10:00 CD Strltrlhl Tell&lt;
D (l) 1111 Till 810111 zoo
Joe promtns conditional aid
to a hurt and homeless
student. !;!

85

AeEl tt\2..

laJ DIDH'T &lt;5£1" A
~ ~~ PROM ... '_,...,_

-19~.-8--~-.-uM---Int--Nd...----7--oo. . ~w~---------------

2 b•oom Apt1. for Nnt.

1 bldroom lu....,...lfflllionov
IPI• 1 - l r l ••· · wlh 2
- -·
llllelt•lur-.
E.
Moln.
Pa
-. 114-182·8215
"'114-982-3123 .

Buy

D

1977 Ford 4x4 3.4 ton, 4 tPMd
tren.,..lion. 410 cubic Inch
enalne. n.w 8 ply 11r•. 114-

30..19&amp;-3130.

62 Wanted to

9:00 CD 700 Club

875-1786.

CMe t•ctor with lttlc:hmenta.

r-.

1;1

fl4-lt2-8551 .

10.2237.

til•. nMr county Wllllter, 200
'tdl oft biD top roed, evenings

7:35 (IJ Andy Grtlllth
8:00 CD Crazy Like 1 Fox It the
Shoe Fits
a (l) 1151 Highway to
Heaven Young boxar puts
his ·career on the line and
faces unhappy trulhs. (R) 1;1
(I) 011 Road Racing Mickey
Thompson's Championship
Grand Prix from San Diego,
CA (R)
(I) a Cll Growing Paino
During his tonsillectomy, Ben
has an out of body
experience. (RI Q
CD Plaguea Look at the
history ot epidemic disease
and pullhe current AIDS
tragedy Into context. Host
Baruch Blumberg discusses
earlier epidemics. Q
(!) The lnflnha Voyage Learn
how DNA dic:tates slmHarllies
and differences In living
lhlngs. C
till mll2l MOVIE: The Dark
Cryata.!, Pert 2 (PG)
liD ulle North .
aJI PrtrrtiNIWI
tB1 MOVIE: Tlta Hunter(PGI

a

379-2418.

CARTER'S PLUM81NG
AND HEATING

Oep.•

MOVIE?/
,,

"8'"1---;H"om..,.--a--- '

., 4-4411-0139.

•325emo.
ref. Coli 81

7:05 Cll Andy Griffith
7:30 a()) (I) Hollywood
Squoraa
(I) Scholeatlc Sport•
America (l)
8Cil Judge
liD) Wheel of Fortune 1;1
G) «D WKAP In Cincinnati
aJI Croaaflra
il2l 1151 Jeoperdyl 1;1
tBI Bemey Miller

[)JNNf:R AND A-

Services

7121 .

111rldng.

WHAT EVER
HAppEI\IeD To _,

Hunters Special 8 ft. trUcker
camper $400.00. Call Leonerd
Krebs. 304-675-,185.

Tree trimming end ltlmp .emoVII. fTee estimate, 304-875-

Up••tn unfurniahed ept. C.r-

E.,_

icheere

IIJ Alrwoll The Oeadly Circle
1211 Crook and Chan

Starks law nand Shrub Service,

61 .. 4411-2127.

NO peto.

a
a
a

FRANK AND ERNEST

30.. 773-59B8

p~.mping-

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

th e

•

be· ....

low to form four $ltnple words

I I I I 1I
NIGEOL
2

1

I

NEHC H

I

_ ~---...:.)I :.....:,...:.1':...,::....:1.:,...._.jl

~

.-;.ID:._;UI...;6W.:. .;.:IN_E:,I-11

,

t
•

My 'grandad -would rather watc h
a n old war movie than our
·
hometown ball team . He s ays
r-~---------, he 'd rather walch somelhi ng he
. R 0 H "0 I R
knows we - .
5

,;

I

~...,,:.:....:.1,...:.;...,:1_;:,l"'''"..,l"e:--l C)
_..L_l..-l.-J.L....L._.1
l

Co mp lete the chu&lt;kle quoted
bv ftlli ng in the m•sstn'J words

vov deve lop lrom step No. 3 be low

e

a

contllined, stow 4 OOrner wh:h

Septic 11n k

Ed ited by .CLAY R, POLlAN;

~eo rron ge letTer$ of
0 lour
scrombled words

I VOU 8E61N STAI\IN6

THE BACK DOOR EARL'f
IN THE MORNING, ••

ANP '(OU STARE ALL
DAV UNTIL SUPPERTIME ..

IT MAKES

FOR

A LON6 DAY

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
• Should- Crept - Force - Torque - FOA OTHERS

a

oven, rwfriget'Btor, furance, bath

1981 Olds Cutle11 Sup,.,me,

11.600.00. 304-882·3815.

PM 1814)44f.B913.

I 1 Court St. ·2 8R.. 2 b•ht.
klttc:hen furnlahld. w / w c•pet.

YOU l.OV~ HIM

WERY OfllER D\Y'

17ft. Skylark camper. fully oalf

F81ty Tree Trimming. stump

Somo .. ,__304-f7&amp;-4173.

1978 Ford Custom, • """"'
drive truck. goodcond. withnevw
tlr•. 1•.600 firm. Call eftar 4

Downtown-Modern 18R., camPiete khchen, AC. c•pet. Call

BUT YOU NE.Vl&lt;R

SO!'&gt;~T 1'1-11:. iRU'Tk ...

•

304-578-2398 or 614-446·
2454.

72

Pitod, utiiHioo pol d. No chlldron.
No pets. Clll 814-4411-1837.

QF COOR~. YOU

Ff:AR YOU WIU...
SfOP l.OVI~uHIM

e

4230 or 614-379-2220.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers '

WORD

(I)

1981 Dodge engine, alent 6,
225. GuaranUied good . $150.

1987 Pontiac Grind AM, SE,
whi1e with gray Interior, IOided.

AM·FM c•.,ette st.eo. good

deap freeze. 304-875-3024.

iNBA Tod.ly
a Cll ABC Nawa 1;1
CD llocly Electric
(!) Nightly Bullneaa Report
liD)
il2l CBS Newa
«J1 Andy Gltfflth
aJI lnokltl Politico •sa
tB1 WKRP In Cincinnati
You can Be a Star
8:35 Cll Carol Burnett
7:00 CD Remington Steele A
Good Nights Steele
(l) PM Magazine
(I) Sportacanter (l)
Cll Entertainment Tonight
CD (!) MacNaR/ Lehrer
NawaHour (1 :00)
Cll Paopta'a Court
liD) Ne1n
«JJ M'A'S'H
aJI M-ytlna
G2l 1151 Wheel of Fortune

- -&amp;-Accessories
------

1984 Ford Mus•ng. 4 1pd..
t3499. 1983 Ford Fairmont.
IUto.. 8 1499. John' 1 Auto
Sale1-A1. 7-below Holiday-Inn.
K..auga.

44&amp;-8077, summer openings.

Individual gutt.r lessons, b•

Auto Parts

1984 Chrysler Laser_ PB, PS,
AM·FM-C.u Jtereo. 4 cyl.
Excel. cond. 14800. Cell 614-

1979 Mo. . Carlo T·Top. 1979
Now Yorker. Call 814-44&amp;-

monog.,. 1-800-447-4288.

bogs for plclclng. TAYLOR'S

Winch•ter Aoto-THier. Homelite powar
Cell &amp;1.f..992-

71 Auto's For Sale

ginners. llflous gui1aris1. Brunl-

R•pona:lble perty w~nted to
eaume 1na1 mon1hty 111vmen11
on pl~no. Seelocelty. Call credh

. 1978 Dodge 4 WD, 89.000
mMes. 11.000. 15 ft . Sh1111a
camper, 1700. C.ll 8 14-25f.

Transportation

1983 Tr8ns AM. blk. w/gold
trim. ch•coal interior· clean, like
new. 306 HI-Performance en·
gine. new rima '"Manto Carlo
Style-Doredo". c•..ne stereo,
air. 47,000 milet. t7.000
negotiabl•indudes leather le
btll. 4 eMtra meg trims. floor
m•ts. Clll614-245-9572.

Bowen. Jr. 304-575-2338.

Nicetv furnl•hld tmll hou...
AduKI only. Ref. "''Uirod. No
...... C.ll 111 .. 4411-0338.

Good

Setin Maid of Honors dress-light
burgundy. Worn once. Size
9-10. Pold teo now, will sell for

month. Clll 814-843-5188.

Homes for Rant

Ve. 304-882·2403.

44f.4347 .. 441·4748.

Fioi&gt;·Pond Stoclclngl
Hybrid Bluegill, Ba...

Call (8 I 41

Letart. W.

Baby Ferren1. 304-875-4103.

304-675-8620.

L.ot for rent in Ponlend whh
treiler hook-up, weter well. plav
•-=-c• for chlldr.,, 170 per

41

h~ .

1431 .

3 purebred Beagle pupa, one
mel a and female lemon color end
one mele 1nd fenwle black end
white, 850.00 ••ch. Phone

Acreage

Ken I ~Is

6 acres standing

Puppinl304-875·7324.

!J ecrH ,.ry private, good hou•

21

814-742·3058.

8927.

mobile homes _,..mtrt_., public
.,.. •.,. 11t9 rllter lots. Clyde

•

&amp; Grain

.,.gon. 304-875-5679.

s - . . ..,d h.,ciCIIPped. Elom
llomel14-.. 2-e873.
• Ashton, l•ve buldlng lotL

f llldllml

Hay

Ta~eo ICOpl3·9·40. Remington
Wing Master 18 gM.Ige, modal
870. Stevens Fevorlte 22 rifle
model71, gold lnleid. Winch•:
lllr 30·30, model 94. 12 gauge
Remington pump, modal 29.
Amid eo Ro11i S.A. Ove,l•nd 12
guege M•gum do~le barref.
Bro"Nnlng model 71, tilwer inlaid, 348 cal. Most gura have
....,r been firod. Coll614-266·

Cotfio~.

Melanie refuses to join lace
when she's teased about her
ttrst bra. 1;1
(!) Dr. Who The Romans,
Part 2
G) «D Happy Dayo
QJIIIhowBiz TOday
tBI Facti of Ufe
11J cartoon Expreoo
1211 Fandango
1:05 &lt;II Flllher Knowo Belt
8:30. (l) 1151 NBC NlghUy Newa

WE SE-TTER
GE T CRACKIN'.

S© ~~ lA- ~ r, ti'S" GAM I

Cll tiJl .. 1121

CD Degreaal Junior High

BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·

64

AKC Blue fem1le DoberrMn, 16
months old. C•ll 814-446·

good cond. f7.000.00. 304773-9508.
Lots

2 a•tv Gooto, 304-895-3630.

CFA Hlrnel.,.n,

1 9 82 Knox 12x 70, 3 bedroom•.
all electric, m oltty furnished.

35

Uvestock

B70-9881 .

bUIH an your site. 81 3.995&amp; up.

f~m .

•

(I) Sportolook

44&amp;-9349.

Wheelcheirs-new

or ueed. 3
wh"'ed electric acootert. Call
Rogers Mobilty collect, 1-614-

1151 Newt

Be Gl•oport 165 I 20 HP 10
u•d only one summer whh all
•ccauories. 87500. Call 814-

Groom. and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All braeda ... AII
stylet. lamt Pet Food Deeler.
Julio W•bb Ph. 81._448-0231.

Ceil 814-25&amp;-8251.

EVENING
Ou11awa

16ft. fiberglass boat on tmiler,
40 HP Johnson engine. electric

76

Cellehan's UHd Tire Shop. Over
1.000tirn. tins 12, 13, 14. 1 5.
18. 18.5. 8 mil• out At. 218.

WED...JUNE 1

r:~~:t~~'

1:00 CD Big Valey Teacher ot

t27.500. Coli 304-727-8890.

Buy or Sell.. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Matn Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M,T,W 10e.m. to 8p.m.,
Sunday 1 to 8p.m. 614-992·

C.ll 1·614-885-7311 .

Space for Rent

Boats and
Motors for Sale

26 ft . BayNner cruiser. 1986
wide beam, all Med:ronic. geUay ,
canwaa, etc. 350 V-8 eng ..
sleeps 8 . Very low houf'l.

Antiques

Misc . Merchandise

•

' ?9 Honda Hawk, 400 c c,
windshield . blac~·aharp .
15~0 . 00 .
Phone 304· 875·

• ()) (I) •

1415.

54

a... ter_.

75

Good gea range, 304-875·

53

Television
Viewing

1\ffilZ. AU.,TH~ MeAL AIJO
wm VOU~t TIUT

6768.

-.~::--:--:------VIRA 1n Centen•ry now h• 1
complete line of new • used
furniture Ia apPiances at very
low. low priaM. Tebl•. reclin·
..... brill heedtx.rds, WIISherl,
dryers. etc. Mett.._ ul•2
weeks only·fulllize. •49.95. Rt.
141 , 14 mil• down Un~X&gt;In p;lle.
big ten building behind lut
trail• on left. HDurt; 9·6,

5 room lpt, unfumtshed, refrig.,.torend stove Included. •clltts
only, no pats, 304-675-2835.

46

Y&lt;&gt;J ~ 11&gt; ~1111&gt; l.orr11 A tefi.Y
t-1."-RV&lt;l'b Cltl, 00!\'T ~tiE t\iM ~u.o:t\S
'fo ~~AY WIT\1.

RefrtgeratOf' • stow, hervatt
gold. Call814-388-8295.

2528.

Hotel· 614-4411-9680.

6 room end bath. 238 2nd. St.
Pomeroy. 1160 month, alsowtll
land contnlct. 814-986-3837 or

'I~Wf&gt;

Middleport.•

pots, coli 304-87S.37S8.

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

1979 14x70 mobile home. Call
814-245-5851 etter 5 :30PM.

elderly men or

Homes for Rent

5711-2233 or fi7f.2483.

g . .9e. 1.6 acr•. central air.

tt.e room for

41

deposit. 1.. 992-7352.

PM. 814-448-7009.

Situations
Wanted

OowntoWf'l modern 1 bedroom
apt, c•~ed, . no childr.. , no

t~;=:::::;r,~~====1'";~:::;::::::;~~::~, 45

21

speak••·

The Daily Sentinei - Page, 15

Motorcycles

1985 Honda ATC. Big Red. likl ,•
nM. us.t vwy little. 11300. •
Cell S 14-985-3538. Paul Kerr.

Mon.·S.t. Coli 81 4·4411-3158.

2 furnished apartments; 1 fur·
Nthed mobile home. 304-8763900 between 2-3:30 p'.m.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 1. 1988

remarklble start In 11107
through her heYdaY In lhe
111201 and 1830a and her

comebiCk.I;J

• VldiiCou lbf
11:00Cillllmtngllln IIHte Now
You SIMIIItt. Now You Don't

DCil til Dill Ill DID
ill Nan
Dtlll ~Cot-lion

:=-

" Success has nolhing to do with gains or accomplishments
tor yourself," said the famous comic , " what counts os what
you do FOR OTHERS."

BRIDGE

NORTH
+AKQ

O.t·"

•w

James Jacoby

• QJ 9 3
+J B75 2

Delicate
bidding

+1098 5
.K9874

By James Jacoby

+3

WEST

EAST
+JH 2
• QJ 3 2
t A65
+Q6

• 8 72

SOUTH
+63
• A6 5
t K 10 4
+AKI094
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

In standard bidding, new suits by
the responder below game are forcing
bids (unless responder has passed orig·
inally). A very useful extension of this
concept is that when responder bids
.two new suits and then supports open·
er's suit, opener cannot pass until at
least a game contract is reached. This
understanding was useful to North·
South in arriving at the best contract
in the current deal.
After responding one diamond and
then bidding two spades, North was
happy to bid three clubs with the
knowledge that South could not sud:
denly pass. If the heart strength in
South's hand were K·Q·9 or K·J·9, or
even A·J·x or K·J· x, South might con·
tinue with three no-trump, but with
only the ace for a beart stopper, South
was right to cue-bid the heart ace.
When North showed a second control
in the · spade suit, South showed his
king of diamonds. That was enough in·
formation for North, who then bid six
clubs. But what if South had the same
hand with the K·Q of clubs rather than
the A·K? In our view, with only 12
high-card )&gt;9ints he would not bother

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I

+

Pass
Pass
Pass

+
+
3+
6+
2

3

Soutb

I+
2+

2 NT

s•4+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: 'I 7

----

-

--

+-

·-

to show the king of diamonds . J:le
would simply bid four clubs over three
spades, and North would settle for five
clubs.
•
On a bad day, six clubs would be unlucky since West might hold three to
the queen. Fortunately this day the
sun was shining and the slam made,

~~by.THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
l Epic
l Use a top
5 Cleverly
2 Zeal
stylish
3 Handsome
9 Bluenose
fellow
10 Pieces
4 •-- of
of wood
Aquarius"
12 Run in
5 Split
neutral
6 Divide
13 Actress
evenly
Stritch
7 "Make 15 Show
double"
approval 8 "The sky
16 Hebrew
is falling!"
letter
she said
17 Mil. rank 11 Schnozzle
18 Corne to 14 Napoleon
20 African
home,
antelope
for a
21 Remove
while
from
16 Floor part
a text
19 Swerve
22 VCR type
23 Caddoan
Indian
24 Novelis~
Kesey
25 Cupid ·
27 Deal in
28 Owl cry
29 Olsen of
football
31 Donkey
32 Be human
33 Nat Cole's
"-Young"
35Come

22 • A -- for
29 Battle·
Adano"
field doc
24 Walter
30 Pollution,
or Deborah
in a way
26 Ishmael's
34 Utah city
boss
36 Nest egg
26 Grandma
account
(abbr.)
37 Tennis
27 Her term

to pass
37Ruckus
38Small
fmch
39 Different
40Rat41 Abound

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -Here's how to worlt, it:

611

AXYDLBAAXR
· JsLONGFELLOW

•

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 formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
' 6-1

YG VJ E

ROY

0 L W Y,

HOPXY

PK

••

CRYPTOQUOTE

E J C

XPRRXY

R 0 Y

OCGRPGZ

AJM

A J J X
B J

MY

z- Penny for
YOIJ/I TltouaM

KDLGPKO
DMJWYMQ
Yeeterdaf'a C17Ptof1Uote: LlTI1.E EFFORT, LITl'LE
RESULT; BIG EFFORT, BIG RESULT. rrs AS SIMPLE AS

• You Can Ia • 81llr

11fAT. -AlFRED ARMAND MONTAPERT
•'

0 Alrwollbaathlrlln s•eo.

,.

�'

Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 16 The Daily Sentinel

,..--Local news briefs--.. Heavy rains drench New Mexico, Texas
Meigs subsidy payments arrive

By United Press International
A heavy downpour that
drenched New Mexico and
stra nded a slew of motorists
shifted east and soaked Oklahoma and Texas, where nearly 10
inches of rahi fell during eight
hours in one count;;, leaving
streets under water as deep as 16
feet today and forcing residents
to evacuate their homes, offlclals
sai d.
The northern part of Comanche County In the heart oft he
Lone Star State.was doused with
9.3 Inches of rain In an eight-hour
period frorn a downpour that
began TUesday,authorities said.
An undetermined number of
evacuations were ordered and

Meigs County's three local school districts received a total of
. $572,794.85 as the May State School Foundation supsldy
payment alter deductions for employee and teacher retirement. Amounts received by each district incude Eastern Local.
Sl25.319.4l; Meigs Local, $321,909.97, and Southern Local.
$125,565.47. In addition, the Meigs County Local Board of
Education received a direct allotment of $29,904.94.

Apprehended by authorities
William G. Trail, Pa r kersburg. was turned over to
Parkersburg police after being apprehended In Middleport over
the weekend.
Meigs County Deputy Sheriffs, Jimmer Soulsby and Dan
Levingston, along with Middleport Pollee Office Bill Miller
apprehended TraiL According to information received by
Sheriff Howard Frank, Trail was possibly in Meigs County at a
Middleport residence. The residence was put under surveil·
lance and when the subject left the home in a motor vehicle, a
traffic stop was attempted. Trall jumped through the vehicle
window and fled on foot lor about 150 feet before officers, who
gave chase, caught him. According to the sheriff's office, Trail
was wanted on alleged arson and endangering life charges In
Parkersburg.

JNF pact...

The Big Bend Midget Football League will sponsor students in
the Junior Olympics track meet this year.
Maximum age for participation is 18 and a planning and
practice session will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Mejgs
High School track . At that time there will be an information
period lor parents and for anyone In terested in paricipating,
there will be a ·$10 slgnup fee.
,
Those who plan to participate are asked to come prepared to
practice. Coaches will be on hand to work with the participants .
The district olympic track meet wil be held on June 11 at Rio
Grande.
All those signing up to participate Saturday will be given a
special T-shirt. to wear in the competition. Any student In Meigs
County is eligible to take part and can enter thrtoe events at the
district meet.

GTE to ...
Continued from page I
to process their .. l·plus" calls.
A ballot will be mailed to
Albany customers early this
month. Users wUI be able to
select a preferred long-distance
company and return and ballot to
GTE by July 13.
"The changeover wUI start at
2:01 a.m. and be completed In a
few minutes," said Ramey. "We
are pleased to offer this technologically advanced system to our
customers."
The project will mark the
biggest change in telephone
technology here since dial service was inaugurated In 1953.
Before then, all local and long·
distance calls were manually
connected by operators, he said.

Pomeroy police probe mishaps
Pomeroy Pollee investigated two accidents Tuesday _
The first occurred at 10:25 a.m., on E. Second St., when a car
driven by Peggy Musser backed into a car driven by Kenneth
Hartley of Pomeroy. There were light damages to both vehicles
and Musser was charged with Improper backing and no
insurance.
The seco nd accident occurred at 12:36 p.m. on Mulberry Ave.,
when a motor home driven by Cecil Throckmorton, Dayton,
sideswi ped the car of Neva Cleek. Racine, parking on the
avenue. There were medium damages to the sides of both
vehicles and Throckmorton was cited on a charge of falling to
control.

Eleven cases were processed Tuesday night in the court pf
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
·
·
Fined were Johnny Evans, Portland, $25 and costs, failure to
pay old fines; Gregory Hicks, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
destruction of property, and $213 and costs, assault; Robert
Thorla. Portland, $313 and costs, concealed weapon; Brett
Friend, Long Bottom, $63 and costs, expired plates.
Forfeiting bonds were Bruce Bissell, $63, expired plates;
Kathleen Fryar, Syracuse, $43, improper backing; Car! Roach,
Pomeroy, $63, failure to control; David. Malloy, Long Bottom,
$63, expired plates; Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse, $~. speeding;
David Duffy, Syracuse, $63, traffic light violation, and Linda
Jewell, Racine, $43, Illegal left turn.

A rummage sale will be held
Friday and Saturday at the
Grace Episcopal Church Parish
Hall. across from Pomeroy Vll·
!age Hall.

other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the .
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are fo be held ' In the
conference room of the MultiPurpose building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to the class
size limitation. ThOse wishing to
register may can the health
department at 992-6626 and they
should be prepared to Indicate a
preference of Tuesday or Thursday evening class.

·,

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1st THRU
SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1988
10:00 A.M. • 3:00 P.M. ONLY!

ALL BEDDING AND VEGETABLE
PLANT FLATS ••. REG. saoo
NOW

'

A weekend revival will be held
Thursday through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. each evening, at the Faith
Tabernacle Church on Bailey
Run Road. Rev . Danny Vance
will be the evangelist.

$3 00 EACH

While Supply

Lasts

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH.

992-5776
ANNOUNCING

TOM PEDEN'S

Stricks
Da1ly stock prices
(As ollO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

_,.

Am Electric Power ........ ..... 28\i,
AT&amp;T ............ .......... .. ......... 27~
Ashland 011 ........................6714
Bob Evans .......................... 17~
Charming Shoppes ............. .!!%
City Holding Co ................... 31
Federal Mogul .................... 37""
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 63
Heck's Inc ........................... 1'4
Key Centurion .................... 38'1.
Lands' End ......................... 23%
Limited Inc ........................18:V.
Multimedia lnc .................... 66
Rax Restaurants .................. 4~
R0 bbl &amp; M
11"
ns
yers · ........ ....... "
Shoney's Inc.. ...................... 25
Wendy's lntL ...................... -5¥.
Worthington Ind ............ -•--- 21 \i,
(Bob Evans fourth-quarter earrtings are s.~6/share, vs.
$ 20
y
· /share. ear net earniDp
r-ar_e_s_1_1sh_are_,_v_s._s_.7_6_1_11h_are_)_ _

I

and two brothers: Rex O'Brien of
Virginia Atkinson
f
'B .
. P omeroy an d F ran k O nen o
Columbus.
Becky Zurcher, presiden t of
He was preceded In death by
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta one brother, Vern O'Brien, and
Kappa Gamma, received word one sister, Linnle Leifheit .
recently of the death of long lime
Services will be Friday, 1:30
Alpha Omicron mel'!lber, Vlrgi·
nia Atkinson, McArthur. Mrs. p.m ., at the Spence Funeral
Atkinson died after an extended Home in Canal Winchester. Bur·
lllness .,She was a retired music tal will be at Lithopolis. Calling
teacher who taught in the Vinton hours at the funeral home will be
County Schools from 1936 to 1977. · Friday from 12 to 1:30 D.rn.
She Is survived by a son and
daughter·in-law, Ted and Ann
New summer hours for the
Atkinson, and a granddaughter,
Shannon Atkinson, all of Far- Pomeroy Library went Into el·
feet today. During the summer
mington, Maine .
months the library wiil be open
from
9 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Mondays
Charles O'Brien
through Saturdays. There will be
Charles O'Brien, 84, of Lake no evening hours. There are n~
Placid, Fla., died Sunday at changes for the summer months
Sebring Hospital In Sebring, Fla. for the Middleport Library.
Born Feb. 29, 1904 in Bedford
Township In Meigs County, Mr.
O'Brien was the son of the late
John and Fay O'Brien. He was
Veterans Memorial
retired from Gooding AmuseTuesday Admissions - David
ment Co. and was a member of Maynard. Point Pleasant,
the ma sonic lodge and the shrine. W.Va.; James Owens, Pomeroy;
Among survivors are his wife,
Rosemary Raub, Pomeroy; Pa·
Alma, and a step son, Lewis
tricia Asbeck, Pomeroy; James
Meier of Lake Placid, Fla.; two Freeman, Pomeroy.
,
sisters, Etta Cullums of Pomeroy
Tuesday Discharges - Perry
and Ada McClary of Columbus;
Stegall, Opal Barr.

Hospital news

HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

HAS BEEN EXTENDED. SALE ENDS SAT., JUNE 4TH
ROCK BO'ITOM LOWEST PRICES ON EVERYTIDNG
• OLDSMOBILE • PONTIAC &amp; BUICK MAKES!

1988
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

t'!Zi; _ NEW 1988

. ~PONTIAC

'

,=.

SIOCtiP-&lt;4S

=

FIERO

"WELL·ECliJIPI'ED"

•

"AUTO-AIR"

999.

''BUCK FOR A TRUCK''

=
"""

Sloek • B-:ll

......

NEW1988
BUICK
ELECTRA

Help Support Ripley's
4th Of July Celebration!

1988
PONTIAC

GRANDAM

Ur.tTED
1.CWIED"

"2·DR. &amp; 4-DR"

$17,994.

1988
CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

'MIEJIICA'III OASIIWI"

"AUTO~Aifr

NEW 1988 S.IO PICKUP!

$1Jto--GoTollltp~
R..,-.4111 OIJMtj-o. ~1101

-.

12.~0

1987
BUICK
REGAL
''2.floa('

ALL SEATS 52.50

BARGAIN NIGHT TVESJII.T

Tooo--..·

$10,932.

IOTo

a--

$8,488"

T•Pidln Ctllvrolll•OP atlt•PoNIII:•

BAMIAIN IIMTIII£ES SAT &amp; SUN

IS To

"-Foom

888'

NEW1988
CHEVROLET
SPRINT

888'

New hours listed

I

627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
PI!. 446-1699

Burlingham Modern Woodmen
are having a cookout on Saturday, starting at 6:30p.m. , at the
southbound park on Route 33,
Bring covered dishes and lawn
chairs. Members. friends and
neighbors welcome.

Weight control classes begin June 7

I

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern Star, Middleport, wlli
honor 25·year members at the
regu tar meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Ali 25-year members
are asked to be present. Officers
are to wear street clothes.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Tuesday; Rutland at 2:52a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for John
Martin to 'Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 11:20
a.m. to \ianderhol! Road for Bruce Hager to St. Joseph's
Hospital; Rutland at 1:34 p.m. transported Carl Dennison from
Hili St. to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 7: 18 p.m. to
Southern High for Johnny Johnson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:15 p.m. to Laurel St. for Jimmy
Freeman to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

I

Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m., at ·
the township building.

Baseball

Daily Number
704
.Pick 4
82ll
Super Lotto
4-19-23-2842-44

draft begins

Pages 3-4

..

e

Vol.39. No.19
Copyrighted 1988

•

·.

at

Variable cloudiness tonight,
chance of rain 40 percent, low
In 60s. Fr !day, partly cloudy,
highs in mid 70s.

•

enttne
2 Sect ions, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 2, 1988

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Water line project is
curtailed by red tape

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

'

The Pythlan Sisters will have a
yard and bake sale Friday and
Saturday,10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,at the
Ken Young Building in Tuppers
Plains, next to the post office.

EMS has five calls Tuesday

Area deaths

final statement, saying some of
Reagan's aides rejected a Soviet
draft that included the phrase
"peaceful coexistence" - a
phrase that long rankled U.S.
conservatives as an acceptance
of Soviet domination of the East ·
Bloc.
The Soviet wording, Gorbachev said• "would have been a
very Important statement," and
he added, "I believe we have
missed a chance to take an
important step forward toward a
civillzed relationship."
Reagan, in a 35-minute session
with reporters, acknowledged he
had reacted favorably to the
initial Soviet draft, but said he
rejected It after his advisers has
pointed out "ambiguities" he did
not specify.
The president went to some
lengths to emphasize the warm
personal relationship he has
developed with the Soviet leader.
asserting that Gorbachev is
"different" from his
predecessors .

Sou tit Central Oh lo
Today: Sunny, with a high in
the lower 90s . Northwest winds 5
to 15 mph .
Tonight : Mostly clear, with a
low between 60 and 65. Light west
winds.
Thursday : Partly cloudy, with
a slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms . High near 85.
Chance of rain Js 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Fair through the period , with
daiily highs in the 70s or lower
80s. Overnight lows will be
mal nly In the 50s.

Texas ..
Rain was scattered from the
northern hall or the Pacific Coast
into eastern Washington and the
Idaho Panhandle.
Heavy .thunderstorms In the
Southwest flooded roads in New
Mexico Tuesday, stranding
scores of motorists and drowning
one man.
Caleb Chandler, pollee chief In
Clovis, N.M .. said three men
tried to walk away from a stalled
car on a flooded street at about
2:37a .m. and were washed away.
Two were rescued. but pollee
found the body of Macarlo
Lavota, 33, of Clovis, at a c~lvert
about9: 30 a.m., Chandler said.
In a six-hour period, 3.281nches
of rain fell at Clovis, the NWS
said.

&gt;

A fishing derby will be held
Sunday at the Ru !land American
Legion Hall. Cost to participate Is
$2 per pole. Prizes for the most
and the largest wili be awarded.
Bveryone welcome.

Mayor processes 11 cases

The Meigs County Department
of Health will begin a series ofslx
weekly classes on weight control
a t 5:30 p.m. on June 7.
Those ta king part will have a
choice or nights for the classes.
either Tuesdays or Thursdays,
and claasses are free to Meigs
County residents.
Attendance is required at only
one two hour session weekly .
Classes will Include nutriant
e,llucation, stress management,
weekly weigh-Ins, relaxation
techniques. recipes, diet recall
sheets. exercise tec hniques and

Weather

Continued from .page 1

century,". and said, he, too ,
believes a START agreement is
possible in the waning months of
Reagan's term.
The Soviet leader also discussed a disagreement over the

MFL will sponsor students

posted over northern Texas .
Forecaster Harry Gordon said
the heavy rain In central Texas
caused flooding at Caldwell.
Cross Plains and Dublin . Low lying streets In Cisco and Eastland were closed by flooding.
In Caldwell, thunderstorms
hurled hall and winds that gusted
more than 50 mph and downed
trees and knocked out power,
Gordon said.
Rain showers and thunderstorms flailed early today from
western Iowa and Nebraska
across Kansas , eastern Colorado, Okla~oma and central

famllles were taken to a local
high school gymnasium. a sheriff's spokeswoman said. "At one
overpass, we got 16 feet (of
water), so I'm not for sure how
high lt Is In all{heseptaces, ... she
said.
No Injuries were reported but
"a lot" of cars stalled In the
floodwaters .
"But we have not had anybody
trapped. They've managed to all
get out," the spokeswoman said.
The National Weather Service
posted flash 'flood watches this
morning across north-central
Texas, the Edwards Plateau In
the central part of the state,
Texas hill country, and western
and central OklahOma .
Local flood warnings were

Ohio Lottery

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
"I guess you jus t have to go
thro.ugh A to get to B," says Don
Poole, manager of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District. in
regard to a U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Farmers Home Ad·
ministration regulation that is
hindering the progress of a
proposed water line extension.
Poole, who questions the need
in this case to go through A, is
upset that the district's proposed
Phase IV extension wlli be
slowed down by several months
due to the requulrement. But he
vice president comptroller; Bob Hennesy, C&amp;S
SAME SERVICE, NEW NAME- Commercial
admits he has no alternative but
vice president; Dean Evans and Don Crance,
·&amp; Savlap Bank of GaiUpoUs is getting a new
to comply with the regulation
members of the board of directors; Scott Hinsch,
name. As of July 1, C&amp;S along with 16 other First
which requires that publlc notice
C&amp;S president; and Connie Freeman, senior vice
National Cinicinnatl Corporation wili be know as
be given when prime farmland or
president and cashier.
Star Bank. Makingthe.announcementWednesday
a floodplain wil1 be altered by an
at the Down Under were (L toR) Alice Stover,
FmHA funded project . even
tho,ugh the regulation has notlllng to do with project construction, engineering or design, or
with people.
Will Affect 140
Tuppers Plains-Chester has
applied to FmHA for financial
assistance amounting to $623,000
CINCINNATI iUPI) - First diverse capabilities to current reflect "the continued growth of
to extend water lines into six
National Cincinnati Corp., a $5 and potential customers."
First NationaL"
rural areas including Silver
billion bank holding company,
Added First National chair"Now at the $5 billion mark in Ridge, West Shade, Kingsbury
announced Wednesday It Is man Oliver Waddell, "We total assets, the corporation Road .• Court Street, Letart Falls
changing the name of alll7 of its wanted a distinctive name that operates 17 banks in three and County Road 53. between the
banks to Star Bank.
was not geographically Umlting. states," he noted. "This Is a size Athens and Meigs County line
'"Star' is not your·tradltional.
Also, Star Bank Is short and easy and a scope that deserves the near Lottrldge. The proposed
bankerly sounding name," adto pronounce and our research visibility and focus that a single Phase IV extension wil1 affect a
mitted First National president shows it h¥ broad appeal and name will offer. "
total of 140 new customers.
Mark Johnson. "But a survey
positive connotations to both
Waddell said officials of alll7
Altogether, only about seven
indicated that 'Star' incorpo- customers and Investors. In banks voted unanimously in acres of prime farmland In the
rated all the positive attributes
addition, It offers good promofavor of the name. change.
Court Street, Letart Fails and
we want to communicate to the tional characteristics."
"We believe that each of our West Shade areas may be afmarketplace."
The new name wili take effect banks rec'ogn !zed the benefits of fected by the Phase IV project.
First National, whose main
July I. However, the holding a distinctive, shared name," said The prime farmland issue, acbank Is the First Nallonal Bank company will continue to operate WaddelL
cording to Poole, resulted from
of Cincinnati, has been buying
First National owns 11 banks in the government's fear . that by
as First National Cincinnati
banks throughout Ohio, Indiana
Corp. Company officials said Ohio - First National Bank of Installing water lines along farm
and Kentucky In recent years
stockholders may later be asked Cincinnati, Ohio State Bank of land, the owners of that land,
and all those banks haveretained
to approve a corporation name Columbus, Preble County Bank whether they are farmers or not,
their original names.
of Eaton, Miamlbank of Fair- might use the land for something
change incorporating "Star."
"Right now, with 17 different
Company officials said the born, Commercial and Savings other t~an farming _ "This of
names. customers may not recname ·'Star'' was selected from Bank of Gallipolis, Second Na- course,'" says Poole, "would be
ognize our strength, " said John·
tional Bank of Hamilton, destruction of a valuable Amerimore than 100 potential names .
son. "The new name will help
Waddell said the main reason Farmers &amp; Traders National can resource" In reality though,
communicate our broad and
for the name change was to Bank of Hillsboro, First National most of the seven acres which
Bank of Ironton, Portsmouth would be affected by the con·
Banking Co., First National structlon of Phase IV, "are no
Bank of Sidney and First Na· . longer farmlands anyway,"
tiona! Bank &amp; Trust Co. of Troy . Poole explains, "but lawns at
The company also plans to open a people' s homes. "
bank In Cleveland in September.
For this reason, Poole cannot
In Kentucky, First National understand FmHA forcing the
owns Newport National Bank public notice requirement and
and Peoples Liberty Bank &amp; holding up a water line extension
Trust Co. of Covington.
to rural areas where water Is
In Indiana, the firm owns First sorely needed and wanted by
National Bank of Aurora, Peo- residents. (Residents of Silver
ples National Bank of Lawrence· Ridge began their quest for
burg, Second National Bank of Tuppers Plains-Chester water
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ever, continued while reservoirs
Richmond and BentonvUie State back in 1968 when a few custo·
Governor Richard Celeste di- were being refilled, officials said
Bank of Fayette County.
mers signed up with the district.) .
rected units of the Ohio National Wednesday.
Guard Wednesday to deliver
Some 325 million gallons run
water supplies to several areas in through the system on a norma I
Ohio suffering from water day, but 381 million gallons were
shortages.
used Monday and 425 million
Water supplies throughout the gallons Tuesday, said W. Dale
state have dwindled due to a lack Wegrlch, director of the Cleveol rainfall and recent high usage land Public Utilities
levels.
Department.
Water trailers, which contain
More water would ba ve been
400 gallons of water, are cur· used Tuesday, but reservior
rently located in or being dell· levels fell so low that pressure
vered to Adena, Jefferson County significantly dropped in some
(three trailers); Morristown, areas and water service was
Belmont County (two trailers); completely cut off in other parts
and North Royalton In Cuyahoga of the system.
County (two trailers).
The communities Involved
The Ohio Disaster Services were Parma, Parma Heights,
Agency Is monitoring the slate Seven Hills, North Royalton,
for other possible areas with Broadview Heights, Brecksville
water sorlages.
and Independence.
The Mliitary Support Division
"We got some August weather
of the Ohio National Guard aisols over the holiday weekend and
on standby to provide additional usage really took off unexpect· .
emergency water supplies If edly," Wegrlch said.
necessary.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and the Cleveland
Oflicials Pre.Jict
DiVIsion of Water asked resiEnd To Problems
dents in the areas of reduced
Cleveland Division of Water pres sur~ ·to boll drinking water
offl~lals say they expect the
and water used for food
water shortage in seven of the 70 preparation.
communilles thl!y serve to be
"We have found no evidence of
eliminated by tonight.
contamination, but spot contarnl·
One main line carrying water nation can occur" when there are
GROUND BROKEN ' - Ground was broken Tueaday for the
from Lake Erie to key reservoirs dllterent levels of water pres·
newest adtiiUon to &amp;he GaiDa County economic commaalty. A
had been closed for repairs, but sure, said Ernest Cedroni, corn·
Daley Queen will be loea&amp;ed on State Route 7 between Kmart 1111d
water offlchils suspended the missioner of the Division of
Lam's Garden retta!lraat, owaed and opera&amp;ed by Pbyllla 1111d
work, allowing an additional 60 Water.
Cedroni said that with the
Walter Loveday. Tile ceremoay Included area busbleu 1111d
mnuon - gallons a day to flow
added
capacity, there should not
pvermnental officials, pictured here, amon1 &amp;hem City Manarer
through the system serving more
Dale lman, City Comml.ulon Preeldent Dow Saunders, State Rep.
than 1.5 million people. The work be any more problems .
"I do not expect this to reoccur
Jolynn Boster (D-Galllpolls), Scott HIIIIClh pl'tlllldeat of Commerwill not resume until the fall:
this
summer," he said.
cial BDd Savings Bank, Chamber of Commerce Executive
A lawn sprinkling ban, how-

First National of Cincinnati
changes name to Star Bank

Guard transports
water to several
Ohio cotnmunities

(

•

.
I

"If hundreds or thousands of
acres of prime farmland were
involved, I could understand this
requirement, " Poole adds.
Also to be affected by Phase IV
construction Is an undetermined
amount of floodplain ln. the same
three areas .
'Another Requirement'
As far as the floodplain issue is
concerned, Poole says the water
district has agreed to not install
any new taps after water line
construction, if the tap location is
in a floodplain. "This is another
requirement by FmHA." he
says, and the reason for this
requirment is to slow growth In
floodplain areas in an effort to
limit recovery costs to the U.S.
Government In the event of an
actual damaging flood .
Poole feels the patience of the
140 customers waiting for water
lines is wearing thin because of
governmental rules such as the
public notice requirement.
The 140 customers have a!·
ready notified Congressman

Clarence Mllier of the slow
movement on the proposed
Phase IV extension, and, says
Poole, Miller has contacted
FmHA asking them to pick up the
pace and get things going.
Although the regulation requirIng public notice of impact to
farmland and floodplain is part
of the National Environmental
Policy Act, which was enacted In
1983. the last water line extension
for Tuppers Plains· Chester went
through farmland and floodplain
without notice to the pub! ic.
Poole says he was told that public
notice was not required for the
last extension because the application for FmHA funding was
submitted prior to the 1983
enactment. Poole points out
however that the water district
was also "permitted a change
order in the last project without
an envl,onmental study_"
·Seeks Comments
FmHA Is inviting written com·
ments from the public on (1) the
Continued on page 7

Juvenile ·facility
may be located
in Meigs County
Initial plans are In the works to
locate possible sites in Meigs
County which might be suitable
for construction of a juvenile
corrections facility.
The Meigs County Commissioners received a letter Wednesday from the State Department
of Youth Services, whlcltoutlined
some of the preilmlnary criteria
for a site selection.
The commissioners are in
agreement that Meigs County
should enter the competition for
at least one of two juvenile
corrections facilities to be built
by the state. One of the facilities
has been designated for Southern
Ohio and the other for Southeastern Ohio. Both facilities are to be
used to house only juveniles from
the Southern Ohio area , In an
effort by the state to keep .rural
juvenile offenders in a rural
atmosphere rather than sending
them to urban areas.
If Meigs County were able to
secure at least one of the state
facilities, it would mean jobs for
the county, and might also mean
that Meigs County would be
eligible for a larger share of state

•

capital Improvements funding.
Eariler this year, Meigs County
received only about $13,000 In
capital Improvements funding
for a Buffington Island Memor·
ial, while Athens and ' Gallia
Counties received allotments in
the millions.
According to the letter from
the state, a series of publ jc
meetings in communities which
have expressed interest In the
projects will be he! dover the next
three to six months. Actual funds
for the projects are not to be
released by the state until July
1990.
Comm lssioner Richard Jones
said efforts will be made In the
very near future to Involve other
community leaders In the e!fort
to secure at least one of the state
facilities for Meigs County.
It was reported by the commlss loners that reclamation is un·
derway at the county landfill and
is expected to be completed
within the next 30 days. The
landfill was closed down by the
health department on May 15. A
solid waste transfer station at the
Continued on page 7

secretary Beth Vaudawalker Gracellne Cotton, fonner owner of
the propertr, lllld Cbarlee 1111d Rebert Gilmore of Dairy Queen of
Ohio, 1111d Cllarlee IUtehen of Middleport Dairy Queen. Tile
fuU·servlce l'tllltaul'llllt will sea&amp; a lllld employ approximately 18
ye,....rouad. Coaatructloa will bepa Immediately on the MM,ooe
project, which Ia expected to open around sept. 1. Fundln1 Ia
through CAS Bank of Galllpolll,lllld Carter 1111d Ev ana ot Galllpolil
is the lftleral contractor. (Trlbllae photo)

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