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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 6, 1988

Local briefs...-----. Montana has record-high 109 degrees Sunday.
Continued from page 1

By United Press International
na tion was closer to average,
A day o(record-shatterlng heat ' with temperatures In the 60s and
In the northern high Plains was the 70s in most places and down
followed by overnight tempera' to the 40s and 50s over northern
lures In Montana in the 80s, New England and the Pacific
which is about the same as Northwest.
normal daytime highs for this
Temperatures at 2 a.m. today
time of year, the Natlonal ranged !rom 37 degrees at Sexton
Summit, Ore., to 85 degrees at
Weather Service said.
Weather across the rest of the Billings, Mont.

EMS has 10 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend; fi ve Saturday and five Sunday .
Saturday at 1:38 a .m.. Middleport to the pollee department
for John Hayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7:49
a.m. to Route 124 for Lynn Winland to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 12:54 p.m. transported Charles Ellis from
an auto accident on Route 143 to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland a t 3:20p.m. to New Lima Road for Darlene Spangler to
Vetera ns Memor ial Hospital; Middleport at 10: 20 p.m. to South
Front St . for Lllllan Dyke to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 6:23 a .m., Middleport to Fisher St. for Grace
French to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:06 a .m. to
Route 124 for Alleyne Rees to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 3: 50 p.m. to Route 124 for Louise Stewart to Holzer
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 5: 26 p.m. transported
George Stout from an auto accident on Locust Grove Road to
c amden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:32 p.m.
transported Floyd Weber from the above auto accident to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Hollywood mystery man
focus ·of federal probe
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
federal Organized Crime Strike
Force has spent 18 months trying
to determine If a Hollywood
consultant with reputed links to
Teamster President Jackie
Presser has been coercing film
and TV production companies
Into hlrlng him to guarantee
labor peace, It was reported.
The probe of corruption In the
entertainment Industry and possibly In the Los Angeles Pollee
Pepartment has Included subpoenas to such as flrmsas Sylvester
Stallone's White Eagle' Productions and has uncovered a leak of
sensitive Investigative material
In the department's organized
crime unit, the Los Angeles
Times reported Sunday.
The main target of the Investigation, Martin Barow, who calls
himself ·'The Rabbi," says the
allegations of labor racketeering

R.E.A.C. T. safety break successful
ThP Meigs County R.E .A.C.T. recently completed the most
successful Memorial · Day safety break In recent years.
Numerous travelers were served over the three-day period.
R.E.A.C.T. extends thanks to all businesses and Individuals
who contributed In any way to help them serve the public
through the safety break.
The next R.E .A.C.T. meeting wlll he July I at 7:30p.m at
Pleasers Restaurant . Anyone Interested In becoming a member
of R.E.A .C.T. is welcome to attend this meeting.

Peace activist to speak
William Sloane Coffin Jr.,
peace activist and head of lhe
largest peace and justice organ!·
zatlon In the United States. will
speak at an open meeting at First
United Methodist Church,
Athens, on June 16 at 8 p.m.
Sponsored locally by the Appal·
achlan Peace and Justice Network (APJN) In cooperation with
Ohio Sane-Freeze, Coffin wlll
meet with area cl.e rgy as well as
present a special program at a
dinner that day. On June 17 he
will have breakfast with Inter·
ested Ohio University faculty
members.
Coffin was active In the clvll
rights and anti Vietnam War
movement and this year has
become president and chief spokesperson for Sane-Freeze, a
recent merger of organizations
committed to a sane nuclear
policy and nuclear weapons
freeze. He brings an emphasis of
peace with justice.
After serving In the U.S. J\rmy
as a llason officer to the French
and Russian armies In World
Wjlr II, Coffin graduated from

'.

Yale University In government
studies, then worked for the
Central Intelligence Agency
three years before entering Yale
Divinity School.
For 18 years Coffin was chaplain of Yale University and In
1977 became senior minister of
Riverside Church, New York
City, resigning that post to head
Sane-Freeze.
For more than 25 years Coffin
has been active In the civil rights
and peace movements. He has
lectured throughout the U.S. on
reducing the arms race. In 1979
he held Christmas services In
Iran for the U.S. Embassy
hostages. During this decade he
has traveled to nations in North
and South America, Africa and
Asia promoting international
peace and human rights.
Coffin was In Moscow,
U.S.S.R., at the time of the .most
recent summit meetings between the heads of state of the
U.S. and the Soviet Onion.
For further Information or
dinner reservations call Bob
Gridley or Peggy Glsh at 614-5922608 or 593-5520.

Eric M. Robie
Eric Matthew Roble, 14, of Rt.

T, Bidwell, died Sunday morning

at Ohio State University Hospital
In Columbus.
He was born on Sept. 17, 1973ln
Galilpolls, son of Carroll Roble,
who survives, and the late
Barbara J . Shell Robie.
He attended Bidwell-Porter
Elementary School.
Other survivors Include a sister, Rachel Roble; maternal

grandmother, Mrs. Mlna Shell of
Point Pleasant, W.Va .; paternal
grandmother, Mrs. Erma Roble
of Bidwell; several aunts, uncles
and cousins.
Services will be Wednesday at
11 a .m. at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home In Point Pleasant.
The Rev . Bob Madison will
officiate. Burial will be In Suncrest Cemetery In Point Pleasant.
Friends may call the funeral
home Tuesday from 5 to 9 p.m .

are ridiculous, that he has never
been paid for hls services and
that he Is being framed by
anti-union forces in the entertainment Industry who want to keep
him from becoming involved In
the 3-month-old Writers Guild
Strike.
'1 know people," Bacow, 66,
told the Times. "If people come
to me, and they believe me, and
they trust me, Is there something
wrong with that?"
The Investigation has Included
unprecedented wiretaps on telephones of the LAPD's elite
Organized Crime· Intelligence
Divis ton, the Times said.
FBI agents reportedly eavesdropped on conversations In
which a veteran detective allegedly disclosed confidential
Information to Bacow and at
least one target of an unrelated
lnves ilgation.

hurls Reds
to 12-0 win

Daily Number

834
Pick 4

Page4

e
Vot.39, No.22

1872

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) -There
was no grand prize winner In
Saturday night's Super Lotto
drawing, meaning Wednesday's
jackpot will be at least$6mllllon.
There were 116 tickets with slx
of the numbers, worth $1,000
apiece, while 5,413 had four of the

Hospital

news

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Beulah White, Middleport; John
Hayes, Pomeroy; Charles Ellis,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Leona
Hubbard, Scott Whitlatch, Kenneth Baslm, Beulah While, .John
Hayes, Cindy Stalens.
Sunday Admissions - Grace
French, Middleport; Peggy
Hartman, Pomeroy; Alleyne
Rees, Racine; Leona King,
Pomeroy; Floyd Reltmlre, New
Haven, W.Va.
Sunday Discharges - Mary
Wallace.

numbers, which carried a $75
payoff.
The winning numbers were 8,
10, 15, 24, 26 and 36. Sales totaled
$3,574,413.
The winning Kicker number
was 470367, but no one was able to
collect the $100,000 lor hitting all
slx digits.
Five people had the first five,
which Is worth $5,000 apiece. As
for the rest of the secondary
payoffs, 62 had the first four
numbers, worth $1,000, 592 had
the first three. worth $100, and
5,870 had the first two, worth $10.

50

Stocks

1231

-RAIN
SHOWERS
:
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded ;
Map shows maximum temperatures. Atleast50% of any shaded area is torecast
to receive precipitation iro:ticated.
'
u~

R

ft

•

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will he
widespread across the eastern GuU Coast and Florida. Showers •
and thunderstorms will be scattered across the northern Rockies
and northern Plateau region with ralnshowers more widespread
across the Pac!Oc Northwest Into northern Calllor'!la. The rest of
the nation will have mostly sunny skies.

Weather

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

Am Electric Power .... .. ... :... 28%
AT&amp;T ........ ...... .... ... .. .......... . 27
Ashland 011 ........ ......... .. ... .. 68Y,
Bob Evans .... .. ........ ..... .... ... 17Y,
Charming Shoppes .. .......... ..10%
Jeffrey A. Miller, Syracuse, City Holding Co .. .. .............. . 31
and Darla Miller, Syracuse, have Federal Mogul... ..... ... ...... .. .38Y,
flied in Meigs County Common . Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .. .... ..... ..64%
Pleas Court for a dissolution of Heck's Inc ... ....... .... .. ..... ... .. . ~%
their marriage.
Key Cen turton .... .. ... ... ...... ..38'1.
•· Eva Ruth Bookman has been Lands' End ...... .. ..... ........ .... 24%
granted a divorce from Francis Limited Inc .. ....... ... .. .... ... .. .18%
A. Bookman and restored by the Multimedia Inc . .. ........ ..... .. .. 67
court to her previous name of Rax Restaurants ... ... ... ... ...... 4%
DeLancey .
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. .... 11
Francis Marie Matthews has Shoney's Inc ........ .. ..... ........25%
been granted a divorce from Wendy's Inti.. ..... ...... .. .. .... . 5Y,
Terrance Wayne Matthews.
Worthington Ind ..... ...... ...... 20%

Seek divorces

South Central
Tonight, clear, with lows of 60
to 65 and light west. winds.
Tuesday, sunny, with a high near
90.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
and a chance of showers Friday ..
Highs In the 80s and lows In the
upper 50s to lower 60s.

Dismiss court action

An action by Ohio Valley Bank
Company against Anthony E.
Cardlllo has been dismissed In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
A reciprocal action for child
support has been flied by the
State of Ohio and Mary Jane Hlll
against Royal Brooks
Leachman.

. I
Meeting tonight
Letart Township Trustees wlll
meet tonight (Monday), 7 p.m .,
at the town hall.

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp;SUN
ALL SEATS $2. 50
BARGAIN N[GHT TUESDAY $2.50

GOODWILL EXCHANGE- Four members of
the Japanese Gllu Prefectural Assembly Included
·Rio Grande and a Jackson winery as part ollhelr
United Stales tour. Dean Brown. vice president
lor student services and dean of students, guided
the tour of the Rio Grande College/Community
College campus. ¥ part of the Japanese
dlgultarles' visit, they also toured the Louts
Jindra Winery. Toasting lo the cultural ex·

changes were (L to R) Brown, Junjl Taguchl,
whose son graduated from RGCC, Makoto Mort,
executive director of Japan America Society of
Glfu, Tom Evans, mayor of Jackson, Tomolchl
Sugiyama, · Paul Harrison, RGCC director of
annual and planned giving, Jeanne Jindra,
hostess of the Jindra Winery, and Junlchl
Kasahara. ( OVP photo)

Nation's farmers suffer as
dry weather continues today
condition, compared to 33 perWASHINGTON (UP!)
Eleven percent of the cotton Is cent last week. In Indiana, 18
Louisiana Is In very poor concll- percent of the corn Is In poor
tlon and the 11J.tll.ana corn crop l.s . condJ\IoJI. and 3 percent Is_~~
suffering, the Agriculture De- poor. Last week, the figures were
partment said In a report Mon- 2 percent very poor and 10
day showing the effects of percent poor for corn In the
Hoosier state.
abnormally dry weather.
In addition, department off!·
In . the South, 11 percent of
clals, to ease the Impact of Louisiana's cotton crop ls In very
drought-like conditions, said poor condition and 26 percent is
farmers In 83 counties In Mis- poor. Last week, 2 percent was
souri and Illinois could begin very poor and 37 percent was
haying and grazing llvetock on poor. In Alabama, 5 percent of
their diverted cropland. Ordlnar- the cotton is very poor and 17
lly, farmers cannot use the percent poor, compared to a
setaslde land.
week earlier when 9 percent was
A preliminary crop condition poor and nothing was listed as
,
report frlll!l the National Agricul- very poor.
tural Statistics Service Indicated
Misslsslppl also reported an
cr-ops deteriorated In some areas abrupt decline. Five percent of
In the past week.
the cotton is very poor and 25
In Kansas, 38 percent of the percent poor. A week earUer,
winter wheat crop Is In poor only 5 percent was listed as poor

and none was very poor.
In Missouri, 23 percent of the
corn is Ustei1 In poor condition.
Thg. A,itlS._ulture Department
said MondAy that emergency
haying and grazing could begin
In· 48 northern counties.
In IllinoiS, 35 counties were
cleared for the haying and
grazing.
Montana has the poorest condition report for winter wheat.
Seventeen percent of the crop Is
very poor and 21 percent Is poor.
That Is a slight chanie from the
preceding week when 19 percent
was poor.
Arkansas, however, reported a
huge improvement. Last week,
24 percent of Its winter wheat was
In poor condition. On Monday,
only 6 percent was listed In that
category.

liquidation record ·$1.3 billion
accounts, rather than arranging about $2 million In deposits over
COSTA MESA, Calif. IUPI) The record $1.35 billion In Insu- mergers to keep them going.
the Insured limit of $100,000,
"This payout Is unusual be- · while North America·S&amp;L had
rance the government will pay
·depositors of two bankrupt savcause of the characteristics of about $700,000. Those depositors
the two banks," said Mary will share In whatever proceeds
Ings associations will take a
Creedon, deputy execu tlve direclarge bite out of the already
the FSLIC receives !rom selling
tor of the FSLIC. "There are no off the assets of the thrifts.
dwindling fund that Insures savtellers, no windows, you can't
Ings and loan accounts in the
"The lnsltttlons' problems
walk in and cash a check. Both stem from their assets," Creedon
United States.
Officials of the Federal Home · are money-desk operations."
said. "Before they were brought
None of the money going to under control, the banks engaged
Loan Bank Board said Monday
Insured depositors Is taxpayers' In speculative and risky spending
the two Institutions, North AmerIca Savings and Loan and Amerl· funds because FSLIC funds come programs," including such venfrom assessments on healthy tures as windmill-driven energy
can Diversified Savings Bank,
both of Costa Mesa, paid deposi- savings Institutions and sales of and the production of ethanol.
Bank board chairman M.
tors some of the highest Interest bonds.
Creedon said 80 percent of the Danny Wall said In Washington
rates In the nation and had been
losing hundreds of millions of 15,000 depositors at both banks that payouts will continue to he
are credit unions, other savings rare and only employed In cases
dollars over the past few years.
The board decided that, begin- Institutions and commercial "when there's no feasible alter·
ning today, the rederal Savings banks, and the average account native to a direct payout."
These were the ninth and tenth
and Loan Insurance Corp. will is about $90,000.
American Diversified had
pay cash to depositors for their
Continued on page 10

Reunion planned
The annual Hollon reunion will
he Sunday, 12 noon, at the
Chester Fire House. Bring a
covered dish and,table service.
Soltballloumey slated
Portland PTO Is sponsoring a
D-Ciass softball tournament at
the Portland Elementary School
on June 25-26. Entry fee Is $65 and
two softballs. First place lndlvld·
• ual trophies and team trophies
for'ftrst and second places wlllbe
awarded. For information or to
register, Contact Dennis Long at
843·5426 or Kenny Walbrown at
843-5309 before Wednesday June
22. Drawing wlll be June 22 at 7
p.m. at the school. .

FLORIDA
VACATION
6 DAYS

AND

5 NIGHTS

License issued

~

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Brady Edgar Sayre, 37,
and Donna Ray Stitt, 24, both of
Racine; Kenneth Ray Riggs, 20,
Reedsville, and !Crlsty Ann Newlun, 18, Long Bottom.

~

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Defense and Energy departments have failed to clean up
toxic waste Improperly disposed
at 161aclllttes, although drinking
water contamination at many
sites tar exceeds federal safety
standards, House Investigators
said Monday.
One "classic example" Is the
Army's Plcat!nny Arsenal near
Dover, N.J., where groundwater
levels of the probable cancercauser trichloroethylene have
been detected at 5,000 times the
federal standard, said Rep. John
Dlngell, D·Mich., chairman of a
. House Energy and Commerce
' subcommittee that Investigated
the sites.
·
The contaminants at the munl·
tiona faclllty, also lncludllli
cadmium, chromium, cyanide,
lead and selenium, were found 2
~ years ago to be threatening a

Pat Hill Ford Inc.

NO TIME SHARE

461 S. THIRD
MIDDLEPORT
992-21&lt;4J6

NO GIMMICKS

JUST FUN I I I

v
(

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senttinel News Staff
Ii appears that Pomeroy will
he getting 11¥0 new businesses In
the not too distant future, now
that Pomeroy Village Council
has okayed an agreement with
the Village of Middleport for
sewage service for those
businesses.
Pomeroy Vlllage Council ap·
proved last night in regular
session a proposal whereby they
(Pomeroy) would contract with
Middleport to provide sewage
service to the West Main St .
property which borders the Middleport corporation limits.
Pomeroy Is to bill the bust"
nesses for the sewage service
and then remit the payment to
Ml ddleport. This Is the same
proposal that came before council at their last regular meeting
but 11pon which no action was
taken.
Despite Mayor Richard Seyler's objections to Pomeroy being
middle man In the matter,
Councilmen Bruce Reed, Bill
Young, Franklin Rizer and
Bryan Shank voted In favor of the
proposal. Councilman . Larry
Wehrung sided with the mayor
and voted no. As acting clerk at
the meeting, 1\1\lng In for Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton who was
absent, Councllmemher Betty
Baronlck was not permitted a
vote.
May End Differences
Last night's acceptance of the
proposal may put to restdl!feren-

Meigs board
accepts five
•
•
restgnat·tons
Five resignations were ac·
cepted Monday night when the
Meigs Local School District
Soard of Education met In
special session.
They Include Lloyd Haggy, a
custodian who Is retiring; Esther
Lowery, a cook who Is retiring;
Kathy Rice, a teacher; Carolyn
Phillips and Pam Lones, substitute teachers.
The board approved a number
of appropriation modifications
presented by Treasurer Jane Fry
and granted leaves of absence for
the remainder of the current
school year to Evelyn Hobbs, a
bus driver, and Lynn Bookman, a
teacher.
The July meeting was changed
to July 12.
•
Following an executive session, the board appointed assistant superintendent, James Carpenter, as Interim
superintendent of the district,
and denied an assault leave
request from one teacher.
Board members attending
were Robert Snowden, Robert
Barton, Richard Vaughan, Larry
.Rupe and Jeff Werry.

ces which have ariSen between
Pomeroy and Middleport during
the last year as Hap tons tall and
Haycraft have tried to get tbe two
businesses off the ground. DurIng the year the two vlllages were
unable to resolve problems over
the property In question and how
sewage service to the property
might be provided.
BUI Hap tons tall, owner of the
property, Pat O'Brien. Haptonstall's attorney, and Dick Haycraft of Point Pleasant, W.Va .,
the developer and owner of the
two buildings once they are
constructed, were present at the
meeting.
It remains Mayor Seyler's
con ten lion that since the property in question Is In Pomeroy,
that Pomeroy should have been
consulted first about the proposed development, not
Ml ddleport.
Haycraft said he hoped "lay to

rest any ill feelings " he inadvertantiy caused by not coming to
Pomeroy first. He said It was
never his Intention to bypass
Pomeroy, but he just went where
he thought he was supposed to go.
He said he has only had personal
contact with Middleport on two
occasions, one of which Included
Mayor Seyler and two Pomeroy
councitmemhers.
Outlines Proposals
Haycraft outlined his proposed
project which Includes the buildIng of a Domlnoe' s Pizza and a
Subway Sandwich Shop. He reported that the plans have been
approved by the State o!Ohlo, his
credit has been approved by a
local lending Institution, and that
leases with Haptonstall, and with
Dominae's, have been arranged.
"I'm ready to throw dirt and
hang wood," he concluded.
O'Brien explained that HayContinued on page 10

Seat belt funds
top boards agenda
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) The Ohio Department of Education's request to spend $233,000 to
operate a seat belt education
program topped the agenda at
today's continued meeting of the
State Con trolling Board.
The board, laced with more
tban 190 Items on the agenda,
acted upon more than 110 Monday and planned to finish today. '
Approved were requests for a
loan for a minority business to
develop a fitness club In Franklin
County and the approval of $1.6
mUIIon to purchase a rallllneand
Its right, of way in southwest
Ohio.
The agenda was heavy because
state agencies are trying to
obtain their budgeted funds before the fiscal year ends June 30.
Carried over until today was a
request for $233,000 for the
education department to take
over full operation of the seat belt
education program.
Board member Rep. William
Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia,
asked that It be carried over
because he wanted more Information on the Department of
Education's plan to Install a
toll-free line at centers that
provide seat belt education programs lor motorists ordered Into
the programs In lieu of paying
floes for not wearing their seat
belts .
Till! Department of Education
has been running the 125 centers
In 73 counties since Ohio's seat
belt law went Into effect, but the
Department of Highway Safety
had been operating the telephones. Highway Safety has
asked the Education Department
to handle those telephones .

The board approved a loan of
$430,000 to the Gahanna Fitness
Club, Inc.. a minority-owned
business, to pur!:hase and renovate an existing building for a
health and fitness center In that
Columbus suburb even though
board member Rep. Robert
Hickey, D-Dayton, questioned
whether the state should Invest In
a health club.
"It seems that this kind of
business should be able to make
It without state help, " he said,
Sheryl Dickey of the Department of Development said the
department appear9!1 before the
Controlling Board after being
unable to get financing through
other means.
"Minority businesses are not
getting financing through
banks," she said. "Most minority
developers don't have a history
or a relationship for financing ."
On the rail issue. CSXTransporation Is abandoning nearly 30
miles of line between Midland
City and Greenfield In Highland
County. One request from the
Department of Development
would allocate $346,034 so the city
of Greenfield could buy that line,
while the second would allocate
$1,333,966 to purchase 390 acres
of land in Highland, Clinton and
Ross counties that make up the
right-of-way for the rail line.
Mark Barbash of the Department of Development said the
five businesses that grew up
along the line have come to
depend on the rails for their
work.
•They were developed on the
rail line. They've used the ralls .
Their customers are on thp line
Continued on page 10

Defense, energy departments condemned on toxic waste

FOUR SUN DRENCHED DAYS AND THREE SPARKLING NIGHTS WITH
BEAUTIFUL ACCOMMODATIONS ••• ONLY MINUTES AWAY FROM
.DISNEY. WORLD©, EPCOT CENTER©, SEA WORLD© AND CYPRESS
GARDENS ••• PLUS SPECIAL BONUS OF TWO ADDITIONAL TROPICAL
NIGHTS AT DAYTONA BEACH, NEW SMYRNA BEACH OR ON THE
OCEAN IN MIAMI BEACH.
A LIMITED TIME OFFER.

1 Section, 10 Poges 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

Pomeroy approves
•
sewage service deal

•

.

b:2 SNOW

•

Pomeroy-M-iddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 7, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Partly cloudy tonlght,Jow In
mld 60s. Wednesday, variable
cloudiness, high In mid 80s.

at y. enttne

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT &amp;-7-88'

Announcements

Cub Olympics
Cub Scout Olympics will be
held Saturday at the Rutland ball
field In Rutland. Registration Is
from 8 to9a .m. andeventswlllbe
held from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m . Entry
fee Is $1 per boy . Hot dogs and pop
will he sold.
Dance Friday
The Meigs County Senior Citizens will stage a square dance
Friday at tbe center on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, from 8 to 11
p.m. with Larry Hubbard provld·
lng the music. Those attending
are to take snacks for the snack
table. The dance Is open to the
public and admission to $1.50 a
person.

ripped through a campground ·
north of Denver, destroying a ·
camper and pulllng barbecue
grllls-out of their concrete pads, .
authorities said. The twister was ·
one of several tornadoes and
funnel clouds reported by the
National Weather Service ln the
50-mile stretch along Interstate :
25 between Denver and Fort
Collins.
A thunderstorm In western
Adams County, Colo. , produced •
high winds that demolished a •
trailer home, destroyed a grain. 7
ery and damaged a barn and ;
hOmes.
Strong northwest winds ac- :
com pan led cloudy skies and
scattered showers In the Northwest. Winds gusted to 54 mph at •
Agawam, Mass., early this ;
•
morning.
Strong and gusty winds also :
continued In the West. In Utah, ·
winds gusted to 59 mph at Milford :
Sunday afternoon and a lake .
wind advisory was posted for the ·
entire stat&lt;! today .
·

No Saturday winner; jackpot $6 million

I

Area deaths

Sunday, afternoon's tempera tures. reached as high as 109
degrees at Glendive, Mont. The
lows In the 80s In Montana are
about the same as the average
high temperatures for this time
ofyear, theweatherservicesald.
A total of fifteen clUes In the
north-central United States reported new record highs Sunday .
The high of 94 degrees at
International Falls, Minn., broke
the previous record of87 degrees
set In 1976. The high of 108
degrees at Glasgow , Mont., was a
record for tl)e entire month of
June.
Thunderstorms that produced
severe weather In Florida, Maine
and Colorado Sunday afteroon
weakened during the evening.
Showers and thunderstorms
continued mainly over central
Florida and along the central
Gulf Coast early today . Showers
and a few thunderstorms extended from western Kansas to
central New Mexico.
In Colorado Sunday, a tornado

Ohio Lottery

Browning

....

.
,..

..

. . ..

(

I

key drinking water aquifer but that. We're working as fast as we
the Army has failed to agree In can to get those sttes cleaned up.
writing to comply with laws We're not half-stepping on this
governing cleanup of the site, the situation at all. We're going full
report said.
speed ahead."
"Our Investigation suggests
The staff report blamed some
that military facilities are of the Environmental Protection
among the worst violators of our Agency's failures to force cleahazardous waste laws," Dlngell nups on Justice Department
said. "They've caused extensive constraints that have barred the
soli and groundwater contamina· EPA from suing federal hazardtion, both on their Installations ous waste violators or taking
and off.
administrative actions. Rather,
''The Defense Department's the report said, the agency bas
attitude varies between reluc- been left to "jawboning" In these
tant compliance and active disre- cases.
gard for the Ia w."
As a result, It sa:ld, the EPA
Dlngell charged that the Pen- "cannot negotiate with a federal
tagon has made efforts "to agency with the same leverage
escape compliance with the law, that It can with a private
even on Capitol Hlll," but did not company and ultimately cannot
elaborate.
force the federal atency . to
Asked about the repor~. Pen· correct the regulatory
lagon spokesman Glenn F1ood viola tlons."
said, "We have yet to review
The report said groundwater
~

contamination has been detected
at 13 of the 16 federal land
disposal laclllties on the EPA's
list of significant "noncompliers"- and the other three
facilities have failed to monitor
groundwater. It said 12 of these
16 sites have gone two years
without final enforcement
In thelast20montha, the report
said, the Defense and Energy
depllftrnenll each have entered
only one enforceable compliance
agreement.
The congressional report was
released less than a month aller
VIce President George Bush, In a
campalp speech, stressed tbat
"some of the worst offenders" of
environmenlal laws are federal
facilities.
"As president," he said, •'I will
Insist that In the future federal
agencies meet or ex~eed environ·
mental standards: The govern-

ment should live within the laws
u·tmposes on others."
The congressional report said
that at Holloman Air Force Base
In New Mexico, no groundwater
monitoring wells had been In·
stalled nearly three years after
InspectiOns showed serious contamination of TCE, arsenic,
soldlum cyanide and toluene.
Samplings at McClellan Air
Force Base near Sacramento,
Calif., It said, showed elevated
levels of triChloroethylene, as
well as arsenic, barium and other
solvents. Subcommittee aides
said the Air Force has refused for
live monthS to certifY It would
correct the waste disposal
problems.
At the Energy Department's
Portsmouth, Ohio, uranium enrichment complex, wute oil
spread Into the 1011 realllted In
TCE conlaminatlon at levels as

,

high as 790.000 parts per billionnearly 200,000 times the EPA
standard, the report said .
It also cited waste disposal
problems at the Army ammunl·
tion plant In Lake City, Mo.; the
Energy Department's gaseous
diffusion plant In Paducah; Ky .;
the Naval Weapons Support
Center In Indiana; the Army
ammunition plant In Joliet. Dl.;
the Marine Corp Air Station at
Cherty Point, N.C.; Reese Air
Force Base In Texas; the u.S.
Navy Public Works Center In
Florida; Ravenna Army Ammunition Plant In Ohio; the Iowa
Army Ammunition Plant; the
EnergyDepartment's Feed
Materials Production Center In
Ohio; the National Aeronautics
and Space Admlnl"tration's
White Sends Test Fli'clllty In
N.M.; and th.e Energy National
Engineering Lab In Idaho.
\

--~

�The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

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

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Tuesday, June 7. 1988,

No easy solution ____B.:._y_J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_a_n_d_J_os_p_eh_S_p_e_ar
WASHINGTON- The nation's
savings and loan system, reposl·
tory of almost $1 trillion In
savings and provide of most
home mortgage money, is In
seriou s jeopardy and could
collapse.
· Should this disaster come
about, America n taxpayers may
be called on to bail out the
Federal Savings and Loan Insu ·
ranee Coporatlon's insurance
lund that guarantees deposits.
The tab for this salvage project

could approach $100 billion.
Savings and loans have been
sliding downhill since 1982, when
they were "deregulated" by an
act of Congress, and they are now
reeling !rom a raft of bad loans,
poor management and specula·
ttve Investments. The true extent
of the damage is described in
stark terms In a highly conflden·
tlal, 1,200·page "supervisory
briefing" book.prepared monthly
by the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, the federal agency that

oversees the thrifts. The tightly
guarded documents are dlstrlb·
uted to only 12 top bank board
officials.
Our associate Michael Einstein
obtained the supervisory brief·
lng book prepared last July. It
contains a list of 183 "FSLIC
cases" and another 200 "slgnlfl·
cant supervisory cases."
Think of the first category as
S&amp;Ls that are already In the
morgue, the second as those that
are in intensive care.

Here are just a tew of the
alarming conclusions in the
sensitive document:
-Balling out the 40 weakest
savings and loans In Texas alone
would require an .average of
$173.4 million per Institution and
wipe out FSLIC's existing cash
reserves twice over. If Texas
citizens took on the task them· ,
selves, it would cost every man,
woman and child in the Lone Star
State $424.
-Balling out the 23 weakest
thrifts In California alone would
cost an average of $16~ . 8 million, ·
about $145 tor every person tn the
state.
-The more th;m $10.7 billion
required to deal with the terml·
nal thrifts In these two states
would deplete the sum recently
authorized by Congress to recapl·
tallze the Insolvent FSLIC
through the sale of bonds.
-The states with the worst
S&amp;L problems, counting both
FSLIC cases and significant
supervisory cases, are Texas,
California and Illinois with 112,30
and 26, respectively. Trailing
close behind on the bad cases list
are Louisiana with 25, Florida
with 17 and Arkansas with 13.
'A close examination of the
FSLIC cases offers Insight Into ·,
the geographic dimensions of the
problem. East of the Mlsstsslppl,
there were 55 of these terminal
lnstltutlons. Estimated cost to
the Insurance fund: $1.27 billion,
or an average of $23.2 mllllon per
thrift.
West of the Mississippi, there
were.127 such cases, projected to
cost more than $14 billion, or
about$107 mllllon per Institution.

A MEMBER of The United Press Int ernational, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION a r ~ welcome. They shmild be less tha n 300 words
long. All letters are subj ect to edltl ng and mus t bP signed wit h na mf', address and
telephone number. No unsign ed letters wlll be publi s hed. LE: t! Pr .. should be In
good tas te, addressing issues. not pcrsonalltle!?-.

Has ADA missed
the coming new wave?
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
· UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Ame rican s for I)emocratic Action. which might
be called the keeper of the New Deal flame, is getting ready to
celebrate "the res urgence of liberalism" at its 40th annual national
convenUon this weekend .
In 1948, ADA was at the cut.tlng edge of American political
liberalism. With founders like Eleanor Roosevelt, Hubert Humphrey,
John Kenneth Galbrallh and Walter Reuther. it offered the best that
the non·Marxist Left had to offer to as the country emerged from
World War II to an uncertain period of rebuilding and realignment .
Even though the United States was swinging toward conservatism
when ADA was founded - the Republicans had taken control of
Congress in 1946 and getting ready to takeover the White House loran
eight·year occupancy in 1952- the organization saw many of Its goals
achieved in its first 20 years.
It never had one of its own elected president, but much of the
·post -war civil rights and social welfare agenda it supported became
law under leaders ADA did not sponsor, John Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson.
,
Then liberalism began the decline ADA now is celebrating the end
of. From ADA 's point of view, the last two decades have been a rear
guard action against a rising tide of political react ion that crested In
the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan .
Since 1986, many observers have seen the ebb of conservatlsm ·ln
such developments as the recapture of the Senate by the Democrats,
the U.S.·Sovlet agreement on short· and mid· range nuclear missiles
and the movement through Congress of catastrophic health , civil
rights and a few other morsels of moderately liberal social
legislation:
.
The polls that show Democrat Michael Dukakis running ahead of
Republican George Bush alsocontribu te to ADA 's feeling that its day
Is coming again.
But If the new day of liberalism dawns, willits sun shine on ADA?
There is some reason to believe that the aging inheritors of the
itberallsm that seemed so advanced from the 1930s through the 1960s
· may be upstaged by a new generation of political progressives who
: grew up during the bleak years of the 1970s and 1980s.
: Jesse Jackson, for example. Many of his domestic proposals mesh
· with ADA policy, but his positions on the Middle East and other
' foreign policy Issues almost surely would make him persona non
grata with the group. Yet Jackson may be the highest visibility liberal
on the Amewrlcan scene today and he may occupy that position for
some time to come.
. Another who probably wouldn't fit the , ADA mold Is homeless
·advocate Mitch Snyder. While ADA probably might favor a big
'federally financed and operated program to help the homeless, the
prickly Snyder would ask for the money but insist the government
keep hands off the program . ADA also might not be comfortable with
· Snyder's medla·grabblng fasts and confrontation tactics.
If ADA finds the new liberalism has passed It by, it will be a kind of
star-crossed parallel to what happened to Humphrey . He tolled 20
years for liberal causes while men like Adlai Stevenson. Kennedy and
Jehnson had their shot at the presidency, and when he finally got his
chance In 1968. he found It wa s four years too late for an ADA·style
unabashed liberal to win the big pr ize.

\

States wrongly skew taxes ___R_o_be_rt__;_~_al_te_rs
SANTA ANA, Call!. !NEAl Like the residents of most other
states. Californians seldom give
much thought to the sales tax
they must pay every time they
purchase any of thousands of
Items. ranging from a bottle of
beer to a pair of shoes.
If they were moreawareofhow
that levy is structured, however,
many people might be outraged.
State sales taxes are universally
regressive, which means they
consume a far larger portion of
the financial resources of low·
and middle-income families than
of wealthy households.
"Imagine the political firestorm that state legislators
would face if they devised a tax
lhat explicitly took four or live
times as great a share of the
incomes of poor families as from
the rich," says a recent report
issued by Citizens for Tax Jus·
tice, a Washington, D.C, public·
interest group. "That is exactly
what state sales and excise taxes
do."
Regressivity is not limited to
sales taxes, however. Another
new report, from the American
Federation of State, County and

Municipal Employees, docu·
ments and existence of the same
phenomenon in the structure of
state Income taxes.
Many state governments, says
AFSCME, have been victimized
by corporate "propaganda ram·
palgns' ' suggesting that progres·
sh·e Income taxes would harm
their "business climate" and
their ability to attract Industry.
"This has led states In many
cases to deliberately skew in·
come tax cuts toward the
wealthy rather than !he middle
class or the poor," adds the
union's analysis.
Exacerbating the problem is
the fact that the trend In the
states is matched at the federal
level, where the personal Income
tax has been stripped of much of
Its progressiveness.
California's 6·percent sales tax
Is slightly higher than the na·
tlonal average, but the exclu·
slons tor food and other necessl·
ties place the state a respectable
seventh In Citizens !or Tax
Justice's progressivity ranking.
Atop that list, with the most
equitably balanced sales tax Is
Massachusetts. followed by Ver·

mont , New Jersey, Kansas,
Wyoming, Maryland, California,
Pennsylavania, Rhode Island
and Colorado.
(Not Included on that list are
the five states that Impose little
or no sales tax - Alaska,
Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon.)
At the bottom of the ranklngs,
Mississippi Is the state with the
most regressive sales tax, fol·
lowed by Tennessee, Louisiana,
Alabama, South Dakota, Okla·
homa, Utah, Arkansas, Texas
and Washington.
Most of them are among the 16
states that Impose sales taxes on
all food purchases - an expe·
clally regressive practice be·
cause food constitutes a rela·
tlvely large share of the budgets
of low · and middle·lncome
families.
"But there Is not a state In the
union that has devised a sales· tax
system that Is even close to
yeildlng a proportional result, :·
adds the report. "Indeed, every
state sales tax system is regres·
slve, sometimes astonishingly
so.''

California Is ranked first on

AFSCME's list of states with the
most progressive Income tax,
followed by Mississippi, New
Mexico, Maine, Rhode Island,
· vermont, New York, Oklahoma,
South Carolina and Ohio.
(Not ranked were 10 other
states that levy little or no
Income tax - Alaska, Connectl·
cut, Florida, Nevada, New
Hampshire, South Dakota, Ten·
nessee, Texas, Washington and
Wyoming.}
At the bottom of that list, with
the most regressive Income tax,
was Pennsylvania, followed by
Alabama, Illinois, Kentucky, In·
diana, Michigan, Maryland, Mls·
sourl, Colorado and New Jersey.
"While a number of states
Improved the progresslvlty of
their personal Income taxes last
year, the trend was far from
universal," says the AFSCME
report. Nebraska, for example,
transformed a progressive tax
Into a regressive levy.
Overall, the evidence Is dis·
maylng because of the tendency
to shift the burden of financing
government services !rom those
who can afford It to those who
cannot.

8 e_n~_at_ten_be_rg
Did U.S. or USSR change?_ _

~ Today

in history

By United Press International
Is Tuesday , .June 7, the 159th day of 1988 with 207 to follow.
The moon Is in Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mars , Jupiter and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
: British fashlonplate George "Beau" Brummel In 1778; French
• post·Impressionlst painter Paul Gauguin In 1848; actress Jessica
: Tandy In 1909 1age 79): Gwendolyn Brooks , the first black woman to
: win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, In 1917 (age 71); heavyweight
boxing champion Rocky Graziano In 1922 Iage 66); singer Tom Jones
In 1940 (age 48). and the funk· rock musician Prince In 1960 (age 28) .
On this date In history:
• In 1864, delegates meeting In Baltimore nominated Abraham
• Lincoln and Andrew Johnson to head the Republican presidential
•
• ticket.
; In I942, Japanese forces occupied Attu and Kiska in the Aleudan
Islands. U.S. forces retook the Islands one year later.
In 1982, Israeli jets bombed central Beirut while Israeli ground
forces captured Beaufort Castle and surrounded the Lebanese city of
Sidon.
In 1983, one day after Nicaragua expelled three U.S. diplomats, the
, Reagan adminiStration ordered six Nicaraguan consulates closed
: and expelled stx Nicaraguan dlpi~ats.

• Athought for the day: Dorothy Parker, who died on thlsdateln 1967,
wrote, "Wit has trutlt In It; wisecracking Is simply calisthenics ~th

words.''

'

8r()wning hurls one-hitter;
Reds maul San Diego, 12-0

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

As you h~ar about that swirling
and muddled Moscow summit,
there Is a question you should
ask: Who's changing, )1eagan or
the Russians?
You've heard about Reagan's
change: "For decades a strident
anti·Communlst, denouncing the
'Evil Empire,' but now calling
Gorbachev 'my friend,' outrag·
lng conservatives by pushing for
arms-control deals and acting as
drum major for detente."
Has the Glpper gone soft In his
dot·age? Hold on. Something Is
going on with the Evil Ones.
There are astonishing words and even some deeds -that most
Soviet experts thought they
would never see.
For Instance? Just before the
summit began I was at a board of
directors meeting of Radio Free
Europe and Radio Liberty. We
were briefed abOut the Soviet
"nationalities" problem.
It Is a problem most Amerl·
cans (and many Russians) do not
fathom. II Is often said that,
despite ideological differences,
the Soviet 1Jnlon and the United
States are somewhat alike continental superpowers with
large, diverse populations.
True? Not really .In addition to
the "Russians," there are over
100 distinct nationalities in tlie
Soviet Union, most of them
jealously occupying their own
turf. There are over 100 natlonall·
ties In America, but we are
scattered everywhere. Most of
the hundreds nationalities In the
Soviet Union speak their own
language and despite the attempt
from Moscow to impose cultural
''Russlflcatlon."
The hundred , nationalities In
America want their children to
speak English want their child·

ren to speak English and be good
Americans . America Is called a
"melting pot." Lenin called the
Soviet Union "a prison of
nations."
The Radio Liberty researchers
are superb scholars. They have
followed the fate of thOse lmprl·
soned nations. They now watch
with amazement as Armenians
and Azerbljanis take ,to the
streets against each other; as
Estonians (not dissidents, but
party members) demand eco·
nomic Independence, cultural
freedom, and the power to stop
Russians from emigrating to
Estonia; as the Kazakhs stage
riots; as the Crimean Tatars hold
simultaneous demonstrations In
several Soviet cities; as the
Ukrainians, In the official media,
denounce Stalin and demand a
halt to building nuclear power
plants; as Muslims names their
children "Ayatollah" while the
Soviet press reports that "under·
ground Islam" Is out of control.
Gorbachev didn't plan this. He
fears it. It's happening because
his policies o! "perestroika" and
"glasnost" let the genie out oft he
bottle.
Radio Liberty researcher Ell·
zabeth Teague Is a cautious
scholar of Soviet Ute. She talks
calmly of the possibilities of a
"revolutionary' explosion ... (due
to) centrifugal forces ... In the
non-Russian republics" perhaps
"leading toward a breakup o! the
Soviet Empire."
Researcher Bohdan Nahaylo
quotes an Armenian poet who
represented her people in talks.
with Gorbachev as saying: ''His·
tory Is replete with examples
where, having tailed to manage
nationality problems, multna·
tlonal states disintegrated."

Enders Wimbush, a Soviet
scholar and director o! Radio
Liberty, says "Glasnost has
unleashed nationalist senllments
that are proving hard to control,"
and that " ... there Is something
generic to Communism that
stimulates nationalism."
That's Inside the Soviet state.
Zblgnlew Br2ezlnskl says that
the occupied nallons of Eastern
Europe are In "pre·
revolutionary" condition.
Change. Big change - un·

leashed Inadvertently by Gorba·
chev's pollcles. You can say it's
happening because one 76-year·
old, lame·duck president
changed his mind about Russia.
Or you can speculate about a
likelier scenario. That the lame·
duck president, that dotty old
man, has seen a potential- only
a potential - for Incredible,
tectonic change In the Soviet
Union, change of a sort that Is In
America's best Interest, and is
acting to encourage it.

Berry's World

~~.;~~,
BROWNING GETS ONE·HI'ITER - Reds'
hurler Tom Browning, right, shakes the hand of
his catcher Bo Diaz after pitching a one-hit
shutout Monday night against the Padres In San

By JIM SOULSBY
"The Meigs American Legion
baseball program Is In jeopardy.
We obviously have some kids
·who aren't Interested In playing
the sport this summer." These
are the words of first year coach
Kevin Kramer after a double loss
to the Athens squad last Saturday
that puts the locals at 04 on the
season.
1n all fairness to Kramer, who
took the team after a several
attempts had been made to find a
· coach, he came Into the position
because of his experience and
enthu'Siasm tor the game. l! that
enthu slasm has waned, some·
what, it is very understandable
and partly due to circumstances
beyond his controL
First, out of seven high schools
in the Gallla· Meigs area only 16
young men expressed Interest
enough In the sport to sign for the
season. Of those 16, one quit for
personal reasons and one, It was
soon discovered, was past the
age limit . Then, from the 14
remaining players, Rob Young Is
on the disabled list and Dave
Amburgey has problems with his
pitching arm. Both are top-notch
players who, when not In peak
condition, are sorely missed In
the lineup.

New York •• sa. Louie. ntr~t

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To complicate matters In the
Saturday twin·blll, only 11 play·
ers appeared to participate and
in the second game of the day,
two of those had to leave because
of prom night leavlngjustenough
to field a team . One certainly
does not have to be a baseball
genius to see what a dlsadvan·
tage this proves to be for any
coach. Personally, I am in total
agreement when Kramer states
that they will be unable to
compete with teams such as
Chillicothe, Lancaster, Athens
and perhaps others under such
circumstances. l! more Interest
Is not shown, then the program Is
certainly doomed because those
who give It their all will become
discouraged.
·
Legion baseball Is a challenge
much greater than high school
play since many of the players
one faces are morematurelnage
and have more experience in the
game, some being college play·
ers. Perhaps this tact might
prove to be a factor In making a
decision to play or not. Then, too, .
the fact that the program ties up
most of the weekends during the
summer months might play a big
part In the decision and this Is
understandable.
But If you're out there and feel

Scoreboard ...

SATION..U. LEAGUE
Eut

~

pitches alll night, " Gwynn said.
~i.kel!l.Uiullng thei!Ul!f. Then.L ·
just stuck out my bat."
Eric Davis, who homered
twice, thwarted the · only other .
threat to the no·hltter, racing to
his right for a diving catch on
Shane Mack's sinking line drive
to center field ln the fifth.

104.
In ~he American -beague, 'it
was : Boston 3, New Yo rk 2;·
Baltimore 5, Detrolt2; Cleveland
6, Toronto · 3; Kansas Oty . 2,
Oakland O; Minnesota 9, Chicago
4; Texas6, Callfo rnia4; Seattle 2,
Milwaukee 0.
PhiUies 5, Expos 4
At Montreal, Lance Parris~
Browning, also helped himself and Mike Schmidt each drove In
at the plate contributing to
two runs to lead Philadelphia.
Cincinnati' s 17·hlt attack with a
Kevin Gross, 6·2, allowed four
two· RBI double In the ninth.
runs on eight hltts, and Improved
Cincinnati took a 2·0 lead In the
to 11·3ll!etlme against MontreaL
first inning. Kal Daniels singled
Steve Bedrosian earned his fifth
with two outs and Davis hit his save. Floyd Youman , 1·5, took
seventh homer of the season. The the loss.
'
Reds picked up a run in the
Mets 6, .cardlnals 2
.second on a double by Bo Dlaz
At St. Louts, Darryl Straw ~
and a two·outRBislnglebySabo. berry homered and drove In four
Daniels hit his seventh homer runs and Std Fernandez scat·
of the ·year, with one out In the · tered six hits over seven innings ,
thlrd,andDavlsfollowedwlthhls leading New York. Fernandez ,
second of the game to put the
Improved to 3·5 and Randy
Reds ahead 5·0.
Myers earned his ninth save.
Cincinnati got two unearned Larry McWilliams, 4·1, suffered
runs In the seventh. Sabd led off the loss.
with a single, and Jeff Treadway
Astros 10, Dodgers 4
was safe on shortstop Garry
At Los Angeles, Billy Hatcher
Templeton's error. Daniels doubled in the tying run and
walked, and Davis grounded into scored the winning run on Glenn
a double play . Paul O'Neill
Davis' single to lead Houston.
singled home Treadway.
Bob Knepper, 7·1, gave up five
Elsewhere In the NL, Phlladel· hits over six Innings. Larry
phla topped Montreal 5·4, New Andersen worked three Innings
York beat St. Louis 6·2, and tor his second save. Alejandro
Houston trounced Los Angeles Pena, 2·3, took the loss.

Meigs Legion drops two tilts Seattle Mariners fire Dick Williams

Ka•••

·~

Diego. Browning had a no-hitter until the Padres'
Tony Gwynn broke It up In the ninth inning as the
Reels beat the Padres 12-0. (UPI)

By TOM WITHERS
UPifu!Ml!! Writer
_
- ~t- took -one of the National
League's best hitters to deny
TomBrownlngtromenteringthe
history book.
The Reds left·hander was
within two outs of a no·hltter
Monday night untU Tony Gwynn
grounded a single between short·
stop Dave Concepcion and third
baseman Chris SaQ&lt;J.
Browning settled lor a one·
hitter, lifting the Cincinnati Reds
to a 12·0 victory over the San
Otego Padres.
"I didn't want to walk him In
the ninth," said Browning. "I had
trouble throwing strikes to him
all night ,'' walking Gwynn the
first iwo times, and gotng 3·0
before getting him to fly out. "I
didn't mind losing the no·hltter,
but I didn't want to lose the
shutout."
Browning, 3·3, snapped his
three-game losing streak dating
to May 16, walking three and
striking out three. Gwynn' s
singled through the left side on a
3·2 pitch. preventing Browning
from becoming the first pitcher
in the National League to pitch a
no·hitter since Houston's Mike
Scott In 1986.
Gwynn thought the pitch he hit
was probably a baiL
"I couldn't catch up with his

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that you have the talent and
ability to play and contribute
something to the effort, contact
Coach Kramer to sign and you
can rest assured that you wlll get
the opportunity to prove your·
self. For those on the roster at
present, you have the know·hOw
to play the game but you must put
forth your best effort to do so.
In Saturday's games, Athens
recorded a no·hltter In a 7·0
shutout in the opener and took the
night cap by a 14·6 score. In the
second game, Ed Collins led the
Meigs hitters with two doubles
and a single, Bryan Durst had a
double and single, Terry Fields a
double and Dave Amburgey a
single. ·
Tonight the team travels to
Glouster for a single game at
6:OOPM hoping to break. the
losing streak.

Riggs earns
fourth varsity
Kenyon letter
GAMBIER - Kenyon College
senior Nick Riggs, a graduate of
Meigs High School, has been
awarded his fourth varsity letter
as a member of the Lords
baseball team.
Riggs was third on the team
and eighth In the North Coast
Athletic Conference &lt;NCAC) in
steals with eleven, despite miss·
ing two thirds of the season with
an Injury . He also set the Kenyon
record for most stolen bases In a
career with ttfty.one. The team
captain completed the year with
a batdng average of .200 on six
hits In thirty at bats.
Nick, an outstanding player In
several sports at Meigs High
School, Is the son of Barbara arid
Keith Riggs of 143 Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy.
The Lords, with an overall
record of 12·25, completed the
year just one victory short of
their best season, 1981 when
Kenyon tallied thirteen wins.
Kenyon placed sixth in the NCAC
with a mark of 6-17. The Lord 's
conference victories came at the
expense of Cas~ Western Re·
serve and Denison.

SEATTLE - The Seattle Ma·
rtners, in sixth place In the
American League West, Monday
fired Manager Die)&lt; Williams
and named flrst·base coach
Jimmy Snyder Interim manager.
The shakeup was announced In
the wake of public criticism of
Williams by a number of Mariner
players, Including star pitcher
Mark Langston. The Mariners
were 23·33 and 16 games out of
first place entering Monday
night's game agalnsttheMilwau·
kee Brewers, coming off four
straight losses.

Summer league results

me because I consider both he
and Ozzle VIrgil good friends.
"This team needs to wjn . We
are a young team and we have to
get some confidence back and
that Is why we made the
change, " Argyros continued:
"We need to win and we need to
have fun and 1 don't know which
comes first. but we hope to do
both.
"This team needs to havp fun
more than anything else but it
wasn't happening this year."
Argyros said he remains open
minded about whether Snyder
will keep his new job. "We are
taking It one game at a time, " he
said, " and Jimmy has got it

Melp·Mason Pony
In the bottom of the final
League Swings Into Action
frame, Stewart reached first on a
The Middleport Yankees fielding error. Pbalin and Mitch
now .••
posted two victories In recent were given Intentional passes to . - - - - - - - - - - - - action as the pony league season load the bases. It was at this point
.,
got underway for the 1988 season. that the Yankees picked up their
In the first game against the wlnnl!lg tally as Brewer was
The Daily Sentinel
Eastern squad, the Yankees struck by a Wright pitch t61orce
(USPS U5-HO)
racked up three runs tn the first In the unearned run.
A Dlvllioa of MuiUmedJa, Inc.
Inning enroute to a 16-1 win.
Both teams deserve a lot of
Although only getdng five hits, credit for tlte effort they putforth
Published every afternoon, Monday•
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po- .
the winners worked the opposing and are certain to face each other
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Putr'
pitchers for eight walks and had . In a rematch before the end of•he
llshlng Company / Multimedia. Inc.,
three batters get aboard as the season.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2151i Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
result ·of being hit by pitches,
Ohio.
which helped contribute to the
Syracuse Pony League
ones lded score.
Member: United Press Internationa l,
Squad Downs Eastern II
lnland
Dally Press Association and the
Jeremy Phalln, on the mound
The Syracuse pony league
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nat ional •
for Middleport. went six innings, team opened Its season with a
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.:
striking out thirteen Eagles and fine start last Tuesday by whip·
New York, New York 10017.
giving up butonefreepass to pick ping Eastern Two 6 to 1. Behind
up thewln. D.J . Herman came on the sixteen strikeout perfor·
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
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in relief In the seventh and mance by winning pitcher Andy
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!1.
fanned three batters for the Baer, the victors scored five first
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By
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The first four batters of the
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walked tour In his five Inning game hit safely for Syracuse,
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stint on the mound and reliever giving them momentum they
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Chris Adams came on to finish never lost. Baer led the hltdng
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The only Eagle hits were Taylor boomed a triple for the
week.
garnered by Murphy and Adams, Winners and Arnie Dugan and
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who had a single each. Yankee Jamie Anderson rapped a single
areas where home carrier service Is
hitters were Chris Stewart and each.
available.
Scott Whobrey'wlth a two· bagger
Baer, going the distance, gave
Mall Subocrlplleaa
apiece and D.J. Herman, two up just two hits, a triple to Smith
lllllde Metp County
singles, and Mike Cremeans with and a double to Burnette, and
13 Weeks ... .................... .......... . l17.29
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walked two batters . Durst took
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the loss for Eastern as he and
Ouloide Meip Councy
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It was a pitcher's duel as Chris reliever Smith combined to whiff
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Stewart of the Yankees and twelve, walk five and allow stx
52 Weetcs ......................... .... .. ... l67.60
Jason Wright of Pomeroy took safeties.s

tourney dates set

the mound
againstofeach
.other.
When
the smoke
battle
had
cleared, the Middleport Yankees
emerged the victor by a 2 to 1
score.

Once again the Syracuse Fire
Department will sponsor the
little league tournament honor·
lng the late "Bill" Hubbard at the
Syracuse diamond. The action
will get underway on Tuesday,
July 5, with pairings and draw·
lngs sto be held on Friday , June
24, at 8 p. m. at the Syracuse tire
station.
Conditions of the tournament
are as follows: Twenty dollars
and a fifteen player roster with
uniform numbers and players
names are to be submitted and
must be In by the June 24th
deadline. Teams must have
played together as a unit all year
and Pee Wee players may be
added to fill a roster. Trophies
will be awarded tothetopfour (4)
!lntshers.ss
Please send your rosters and
entry fee to Jeff Hubbard, Box
242, Syracuse, OH 45779. Make
checks payable to Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department. If
not mailed prior to June 24th,
they must be submitted on that
date. ,
For further Information call
992·2909, 992· 7181 or 992· 7177.

To the many fans present and
to the participants, this had to be
one of the most exciting games
they had witnessed. Stewart, in a
brilliant effort, recorded a nohitter as he whiffed 21 batters,
Issued three bases on balls and
hit one batsman. Wright, on the
other hand, was charged with the
loss but he, too, turned In a
magnificent performance allow·
lng just two hits, fanning 14,
walking one and also hitting on
Yankee. Both hurlers went the
full seven Innings for their
respective teams.
Middleport drew first blood
when Shawn Hawley tripled In
the fourth frame and rode home
on Stewart's sacrifice grounder
to first base. The only other hit of
the game was recorded by
Jeremy Phalln on a bunt single in
the fifth.
Pomeroy picked up and un·
earned run In the top of the sixth
to knot the score and Middleport
was held scoreless in the lower
half of that frame. The battle
contlnued Into the seventh with
the visiting Pomeroyans being
set down by Stewart's pltchit\i.S

Bill Hubbard lL

Williams, 59, who had an·
nounced after last year that this
season probably would be his
last, was unavailable for com·
ment. Ozzle Virgil, thethird·base
coach, was also dismissed.
Team owner George Argyros
said he told Williams the news.
"I have all the adinlratlon In
the world for Dick Williams. He
is a wonderful piece of baseball
history and couldn't have taken
the bad news better," Argyros
said. "He couldn't have made It
easier on us. He Is absolutely first
class all the way. It was hard for

r;;;;;;;;;;;;=======~===========~

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STARTING AT

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NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMERS

WE WILL CLOSE SAT., JUNE 11, 1988
DUE TO DAUGHTER'S GRADUATION FROM
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606 EAn MAIN

POMEROY

992·209.

.

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday. June 7, 1988

Indians ·s nap Blue Jays winning streak

STAYS IN DUGOUT - New York Yankees manager Billy
Martin keeps his hands to his lips as he watches Boston beat his
leam ·3-2 al Yankee Stadium Monday night. To his left is Yankee
coach Ml ke Ferraro. Martin said after the game that tomorrow he
will be back on the field doing his job, Instructing the pitchers and
arguing with umps and all the things a manager Is supposed to do.
(UPI)

OA C will survive
Tigers defection
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
The Ohio Athletic Conference
will survive Wttt.e nberg's upcomIng defection to the North Coast
Athletic Conference, Musklngum's Jim Burson, dean of the
OAC basketball coaches, said
Monda y.
' 'We're losing a really good
member ou t of our league and
that's disappointing, " said Burson. who just completed his 21st
year with the Muskies . "Competing against !Coach) Larry Hu~­
ter and Wittenberg has been very
goOd for us from a status
standpoint and it's going to have
an impact on the league.
" But, even though we los t a
c herished member, I don't see us
crumbling. With the members
we have left, we still ha ve very
high respect around the country
a nd I don't see us losing that."
Burson, a member of the
NCAA's Division Ili Basketball
Committee, was instrumental In
Wittenberg's being picked to host
the Division 111 men 's final four
1 he next two years.
"When the league (NCA C)
formed, we got some bad vibes ,"
sai d Burson. "over some things
that were said about the OAC.
·'But, at some point, you've got
to rise above your per sona l
feelings," said Burson. "If we
had to do it over again, we 'd stili
do it (back Wittenberg fo r the
tournament) . It (the tourna ment) will be good for our area .· '
Wittenberg's move is expected
to · get final approval at Thurs- .
day 's meeting of the school's
Board of Trustees. It will not go
into effect until the 1989-90 school
year: with the Tigers competin g
th is coming season in the OAC,
their 73rd year In the conference.
." We knew It wa s coming," he

sal d. "They were looked at when
the league was fi rs t fo rmed. The
las t two months, there has been
so muc h talk, you knew it was
go ing to happen.
"We knew their president
(William A. Kinnison) wa s
a lign ed with those people
(NCAC) mentally . Kenyon and
Oberlin are tremendous academica lly. The others are good , too,
maybe just as good, but don 't
have the sa me reputa tion.
" If you as ked our faculty to
vote, they 'd vote to align with
those people. too," added Burson, who hold s a doctora te from
Ohio State. " I wouldn't, but I'm
differen t than most faculty people are . How important . are
prestige, image and those types
of things?"
Five of the cu rrent members of
the NCAC are form er Ohio
Conference sc hools:
Denison,
Kenyon, Oberlin, Ohio Wes leya n
and Wooster.
,
Wittenberg's departure will
drop the OAC , once a 14-member
conference, down to e ight :
Baldwin-Wallace, Ca pital, Heidelberg, Marie! ta, Mount Union,
Musklngum . Ohio Northern and
Otterbein. The NCAC , with Earlham of Richmond, Ind., also
joining, will have nine. The
others are Case Western Reserve
and Allegheny (Pa. ) _
"I don 't think there's going to
be any more moves," said
Burson, who feels the OAC either
will rem a in at eight teams or
expan d to 10 for better
scheduling.
Although no eminent OAC
expa nsion is imminent., Burson
mentione d John Carroll~ Ashland, Findlay and Wilmington as
schools who had Inq uired in the
past about co nf ere n ce
membership.

By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Writer
The last thing on reliever Mark
Eichhor n's mind was balking ina
run agai nst Cleveland. Even
worse, the balk haunted the
Toronto right-hander tWice.
Eichhorn hit Ron Washington
with a pitch with the bases loaded
and balked home two runs in the
s ixth inning Monday night, helping the Indians snap Toronto's
six-gam e winning streak w1th a
6-3 victory.
"I didn' t even think about
coming to a s top," the Blue Jays
pitcher said. " I figured every thing was OK. If they called It a
balk, It's a balk. I'm just very
surprised."
Brook Jacoby went 3 for 3 with
a solo homer and twoRBitoback
John Farrell, 6-3, who allowed
two r uns on nine hils, struck out
one and walked four over 6 2-3
Innings. Doug Jones struck. out
four to earn his 13th save.
"After having a couple of
rough days In Detroit, the guys
really bounced back," Cleveland
Manager Doc Edwards said. "He
!Eichhorn ) didn ' t stop. He just
got In the heat of the battle. It
seemed hitting Ron might have

mouth whe n he dropped Hear ns
twice In th e third round.
A s idearm right und er the chin
sent Hear ns flat on h'ts back with
a glazed look In his eyes. Most of
the crowd of 8,541 a t the Las
Vegas Hilton were as shocked as
Hearns.
·
Hear ns rolled over twice and
rose unsteadily when referee
Richa rd Steele's cou nt reached
eight.
Hearns was defense less , and
Barkley finished him off with
four punches. The final one, a
chopping right, sent Hearns
sprawling through the ropes.
Steele s topped it at. 2:39 of the
round .
Barkley, 28. Improve d to 24-5
with 16 knockouts . He was taken
to Valley Hosptia) to close the
cuts after the fight. Hearns, a
29 -year -old from Detroit,
dropped to 45-3. His other losses
were to Ray Leonard and Marvin
Hagler.
Hearns. the only boxer to win
titles in fou r weight classes, said
he would need some time tO'
decide if he wants to excerslce a
rematch clause In the contract.
"Basically I want to go home,
relax and enjoy myself," Hearns
said. "Now I know what my
oppOnents felt, and what goes
around comes around one day .It
wasn 't easy being four-time
champion."
Hea rns was In control of the
bout before hew as clipped. Using
a jab a nd shott left hooks; he kept
Barkley at a distance and sliced
him up. Barkley was cut on the
left eyebrow In the first round,
his mouth bled in the second and
he was sliced over the right
eyebrow in the third_

By The Bend

thrown him off."
and four s trikeouts. Jerry Don
!eated Chicago 9-4, a nd Seattle
With the score tied"2-2, Jacoby blanked Milwaukee 2-0.
Gleaton got four outs for his
seco nd save. Steve Ontiveros fell
In the National League, it was:
and Ron Kittle drew one-out
to 3-3.
.
walks In the sixth off Toronto Philadelphia 5, Montrea l 4; Cln·
Rangers 6, Angels 4
starter Mike Flanagan, 5-4. Cory cinnati 12. San Diego 0; New
At Arlington, Tex ., Oddlbe
Snyder doubled down the left- York 6, St. Louis 2 a nd Hous!Dn
10, Los Angeles 4. McDowell drove In two runs and
field line, scoring Jacoby.
"I've been struggling, so havRed Sox 3, Yankees 2
Jose Guzman fired an eightAt New York, Bruce Hurst
hitter to lead · the Rangers.
Ing a good night is definitely
Guzman, 6-4, went the distance
good, " Jacoby said. " But this combined with Lee Smith on a
was a wild one."
six-hitter, and Mike Greenwell for the fourth time this year. He
walked two and struck out eight.
It was es pee tally wild for drove in three runs with a double
Eichhorn, who had not balked In and a home run to lead Boston. · Willie Fraser, 4-5, gave up seven
hits and six runs In 5 2-31nnings.
his last 19 relief appearances. Hurst, 7-3, struck out six. Smith
Twins 9, White Sox 4
However, with Domingo Ramos pitched the ninth for his seventh
At Chicago, Tim Laudner hoat b a t, Eichhorn balked twice save. Yankees starter Neil Allen,
giving Cleveland a comfortable 2·1, worked five innings and gave mered twice and Kirby Puckett
6-2 lead.
up eight hits.
drove In three runs to lift
Orioles 5, Tigers 2
"I guess It depends on this
Minnesota. Juan Berenguer, 6-3,
(umpiring) crew," Eichhorn
At Baltimore, Cal Rlpken Jr. pitched 2 2-3 innings for the
said. "ll's the first time we' ve hit a three-run homer and col- victory In relief of starter Frank
lected three singles to lead the VIola. Reliever Bill Long
had (Rich Garcia's) crew."
Eichhorn was called for his Orioies. Jeff Ballard, 2-2, scat- dropped to 1·2.
Marblers 2, Brewers 0
third balk of the game ' In the tered nine hits over 8 2-3 innings
seventh.
and Tom Nledenfuer got one out
At Seattle, Scott Bankhead,
" Mark didn't stop on his balk in for his sixth save. Jack Morris , Mike Jackson, and Mike Moore
the seventh," Toronto Manager 5-7, gave up 10 hits and five r uns combined on a four-hitter. BankJlmy Williams said. "But he did over 6 1-3 Innings.
head, l-2, worked the first six
on his second."
Royals 2, Mariners 0
innings, striking out seven.
At Kansas City, Mo., Steve ' Moore worked the ninth to pick
Elsewhere, Boston edged New ·
York 3-2; Baltimore downed Farr combined wlih two reliev- up his first save. Milwaukee
Detroit 5-2; Kansas City stopped ers on an eight-hitter pacing starter Don August, 1-1, went 7
Oakland 2-0; Texas outscored Royals . Farr, 2-0, allowed six hits 1-3 lnnnings In his first major
Ca lifornia 6-4; Minnesota de- over six Innings with two walks league start.

·-

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
president of a bookstore chain
says base_b all great Willie Mays
charged $10 for autographs dur.ing a promotional stop on a
book-signing tour .
· "I didn' t take a dime," Mays
told United Press International
by telephone from his Palo Alto,
Calif., home.
Mays, a member of the Hall of
Fame and one of baseball's most
beloved players, made a threeweek nationwide tour this spring
to promote his book, "Say Hey :
The Autobiography of Willie
Mays," which included a stop
May 20 In Washington.
Robert Haft, president of the

Williams will keep
IUinois track post
URBANA, TIL !UP!) -Assistant Illinois track coach Willie
Williams confirmed Monday that
he will stay at Illinois after
having turned down the Ohio
State head coaching position.
"The track program at Ohio
State has been strong over the
years, so it wasn't easy to turn
down ," Williams said. "I talked
things over with (Director of
Athletics) Neale Stoner last week
by te lephone from Oregon (site of
the NCAA Championships) , and
I've determined that It 's In my
best interests to remain at
llllnois.
"I competed here, and I've
really developed some strong
personal ties, both with the
sc hool and with Individuals."
Stoner praised Williams, saying, "We are very pleased that he
has decided to stay . He has
certainly made a strong contribution to our men's track program. We look forward to Willie
Williams completing his career
here.' '
Williams returned to his alma
mater in June of 1982 following a
s uccessful 11-year stint at Gary
West High School.

Crown Books discount chain,
says Mays apparently became
angry when he was asked to sign
baseballs and gloves along with
his book.
" We never Imagined Willie
Mays would ever ask our customers for cash," Haft sa ld Monday from his office In Landover,
Md., a Washington suburb.
A mother said her son, Kevin
Ewoldt, 11, began crying when he
learned he would have to pay $10
for Mays's signature.
In a tetter in last Friday's
Washington Post, Eileen
Vaughan of Kensington, Md .,
wrote that against her better
judgment she gave her son the
money . After getting Mays's
autograph, vaughan said her son
told, "He must be really poor."
"I thought, yes, yes, he sure
is," Vaughan's letter continued,
"poor In pride, mean Inspirit and
devoid of dignity. "
Mays, who played for the
Giants in New York and San
Francisco before ending his
career with theNewYorkMetsin
1973, said the situation was
significantly different.
''At end of book signing, all the
books were signed," he said.
"People came up to me and said

Scioto Downs
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI)
Fans Falcon captured the . fea tured eighth race pace at Scioto
Downs Monday night , covering
the mile In 1:56 4-5 to beat out Tri
Passing by a neck.
C U Ater finished third .
The winner, a 3-year-old son of
Falcon Almahurst, paid $4, $3.20
and $2.60 In posting his ninth win
in 13 starts this season.
J.J . Leader won the seventh
race, kicking off a 10-4-6 trlfecta
combination that was worth
$7,678.40. lma Chip was second
and Hllan Time showed.
A crowd of 3,302 wagered
$305,849.

He credited his corner with
firing him up after the second
round, following a trip to the
corner by ringside physician
Donald Romeo.
"He (co-trainer AI Bolden)
said, 'he's picking you apart,lfhe

let him pick you apart, he's goint
to beat you," ' Barkley said. "He
said, 'step up the pace and go for
it." '

Barkley charged Hearns from
the start of the third round but
was losing the round big until he
dropped Hearns.

they paid $10 to have balls signed.
I said, 'OK,' and they put the
money on the table. I didn ' t take
the money. I left the money right
on the table."
Mays, 57, said had he seen the
youngster crying he would have
made sure the boy received an
autographed ball for free .
Haft, also in a letter to the Post
published Monday , called the
Incident an "embarrassment."
He said company officials have
tracked down everyone they
could find who paid for Mays 's
autograph and returned their
money.
Haft said had Crown known
Mays would charge for autographs "we never would've invited him ."
"The shame of it is he's a role
model for a series of generations," he said. "And it ends up
being a pel ty act. He has
diminished himself greatly. It's
just not the thing we want our
customers to say, 'My role model
took 10 bucks from me."'
Told of Mays's version of what
happened', Haft said he stands by
his account.
Said a Crown employee who

By BOB HOEFLICH
Meigs County played a role In
the telethon held for Children's
Hospital In Columbus over
weekend.
Charles
chen, owner
the Dairy Qu•~en
Brazier in·
dleport, thrnnc•h
contrlbu lions
Meigs Countians had raised $1,234 lor the
telethon and he traveled to
Columbus to present a check for
the amount on the show . Incidentally, the amount turned over to
the fund drive was the largest
from any Dairy Queen in Central
and Southern Ohio - and that
Includes some 60 of the
establishments.
Marie Bush of 49740 McKenzie
Ridge Road, Racine, was the
winner of the mystery farm
contest In the Sunday, May 29
edition of The Times-Sentinel.
There were 17 entries correctly
identifying the farm as that of
Dan and Donna Jean Smith.
Marie won the $5 cash prize via
the lottery route since there were
so many correct entries.
The Meigs High Sc hoot Class of
'88 will be presenting AnEventng
of Theater at 8 p.m. Friday in the
Larry R. Morrison gymnasium
of the high school. Admission will
be $2 for adults and $l for
students.
Essays from fifth graders
around the county who took part
in the yesteryear program In
April will be on display at the
Meigs Museum this weekend as a
part of the annual Heritage
Weekend observance.
The yesteryear program was
conducted by members of the
R.S.V.P. durtng which time
students were Instructed in such
subjects as candlemaking,
breadmaklng and genealogy.
The students then wrote their
essays telling of their learning
experiences during the program.
By the way, you shouldn't get
too hungry when you attend
Heritage Weekend activities.
The Modern Woodmen of America, Burlingham, will be serving
luncheon type foods along with
homemade Ice cream, across
from the museum, on both
Saturday, starting atll a.m., and
Sunday, starting at 11:30.Andon
Sunday, starting at 11:30 a .m .,
the Pomeroy volunteer Fire
Department will be holding a
publiC chicken barbecue at the

Stanford surprised
5-3 in college series
OMAHA, Neb. IUPI) _Mark
Beck struck out 13 In a four -

left fielder Brian Johnson robbed
Keith Kaub of a grand-slam with

hitter, and Cal State-Fullerton ~a;;!;;;;c;a;tc;h;;at;;th;e;f;e;n;ce;. ;ilii
took advantage of four errors In It
the sixth inning Monday night to
defeat defending-champion Stanford 5-3 in the second round of the
College World Series.
Stanford, 42-23, will play Miami (Fla . 1 at 8:10 p.m. EDT
Tuesday in an ellmlna lion game.
The winner of the StanfordMiami game faces Cal StateFullerton, 43-16, Thursday at 8:10
p.m ., and a victory will put the
Titans. 1984 champions, into
When you need us. we'll be
Saturday's championship game.
there ... with prompt, con·
Also Tuesday, top-seeded Arizcerned insurance service. We
ona State faces Florida in an
always try to be friends you
elimination game, with the
can depend on. Call us today.
winner to meet Wichita State
Wednesday night .
Beck, 10-6, allowed just one
single and two walks after Ed
Sprague's homer in the third.
"The umpire was giving me
the outside corner, and I was
throwing It there," Beck said.
214 EAST MAIN
"My arm felt real good.".
POMEROY
Mike Mussina, 9-4, held the
Titans to lour hits with six
992-6687
strikeouts through the first five
Innings. In the sixth, two errors
Stat• Auto
by third baseman Sprague and
lnsur-•
one by shortstop Troy Paulsen
COMpanies
loaded the bases. With one out,

flre station which Is just a hop,
skip and a jump from the
museum on Butternut Avenue.
Are you a "super senior"?
A golf tournament for "super
seniors" - that's 60 and over will be held at the Jaymar Golf
Club on June 16 and all area
golfers are Invited - provided
they fall Into the age category.
For details, call Bob Freed,
992-2044, or Bill Childs, 992-6312.
By the way, Bob says that the
tournament is open to the women
also - that is, those who are
willing to admit to the age
qaulflclation.
Maria and Herb Elliot of the
Rutland Emergency Squad were
pictured in Monday's Sentinel
receiving a $600 donation for the
squad from the Meigs Division of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co. The
information stated that the Rutland Unit is a part of the
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Services. Not so, instead
the Ru !land Unit Is a part of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services .
Judy Dixon, 37909 State· Route
124, Pomeroy, recently comple!ed an intensive sales training
course offered by Longaberger
Baskets, Zanesville.
The two day seminar was one
of 12 being sponsored this spring
in major cities across the country
by the company which has been
credited with reviving the nearly
lost American folk art or quality
basket weavering. With three
plants in northern and central
Ohio, Longberger has 750 employees involved in making these
one-of-a-kind decorative and
household baskets. The baskets
are individually crafted tram
hardwood maple and each basket
Is hand-signed by the weaver who
created it.

Chester UMW meets; topic expanding vision
"Expanding Our VIsion of a
Just World" was the title of the
program presented by Mrs.
Eliza beth Hayes and Mrs. Clara
Conroy at the Thursday meeting
of the Chester United Methodist
Church.
Purpose as explained by the
leaders was to expand the vision
of a just society, to recognize the
Interdependence of the world
community in regard to global
economic issues, and to acquaint
each person with some, of the
economic issues that affect
women and children.

Scripture was taken frorri Luke
6 and Matthew 25. It was pointed
out that justice Is rooted In the
very being of God according to
ChriStian tradition. The Biblical
basis of justice for the poor, for
the oppressed, and for those who
have lost their freedom Is clear
and obvious, according to the
leaders .
In the New Testament, the
concern of Jesus and his apostles
for the poor is evident, they said,
noting that Jesus himself was a
poor person from a poor part of
his country. His mission was to

work among the poor, sick a nd
socially oppressed. Mrs . Hayes
and Mrs. Conroy spoke of Jesus
work among the poor and noted
that ioday more than 35 million
Americans live below the poverty level, most of them being
women and children.
The program leaders proposed
that in this world where widespread poverty persis ts in the
midst of alluence, then justice
mean s that the poor should have
Immediate access to basic resources of food, clothing and
shelter. They called for sharing
as God has given and participatIng In programs which promote
economic justice
According to the International

Garden Clubs plan
landscaping project
Plans for participating In the
landscaping of Capitol iiquare in
Columbus, along with the International Flower Show, "Ameraflora' ', to be staged there In 1992
were announced at the spring
meeting of the Jackson District
of Garden Clubs of Ohio hell) at
the Roadway Inn in Cillicothe.
Several Meigs County
members attended the meeting
presided over by Margaret
Graves, district director. Mrs.
Joan Wikel, state president, and
Mrs. Doris Dyer, second vice
president, were at the meeting to
report on state plans. She noted
that 14 scholarships were
awarded last year to students
who are studying landscaping or
related subjects.
She also reported on the state
projects noting Ameriflora,
marking the 500th birthday ofthe
discovery of America by Christopher Columb1,1s. It will be held
·at Franklin Park, an area of 150
acres, and Is expected to draw
flower growers and ·gardeners
from around the world.
Mrs. Dyer announced various
symposiums and landscape design schools which will be held

Labor
Organization,
the leaders
said, there
are 1.25 billion
people
who are seriously poor and 700
mUllan who are destitute. They
around the state this year, along listed statistics noting that 42
with the holiday show scheduled percent of the population In Asia,
39 percent in AfriCa and 27
for Nov. 11 in Columbus.
During the morning severa l percent In Latin America live In
mini-presentations were given poverty, with over hail of the
including Mrs. Day Trainer who children In some areas of the
talked on lilies, Mrs . Betty world expected to die of hungerBrown on the " Air We Breathe'' related Illnesses.
It was pointed out that the life
and Mrs. Joseph Vanmeter on
''You can Do It.'' Members were expectancy in developing counurged to be creative and imagin- tries Is about 48 years while the
ative In planning their gardens figure in Industrialized nations Is
noting that gardens reflect the 75 to 78 years.
· As for unemployment, the
owner's personality.
leaders
commented on the demGuest arranger for the afterise
of
many manufacturing
noon was Mrs. Daniel Marlops,
plants
and
other traditional sourmaster flower show judge of
ces
of
jobs
as large international
Youngstown who gave a procorporations
close down outgram entitled "Roadside to Your
Roadside."

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Regular
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday; refreshments served following
meettng.
LONG BOTTOM - Flame
Fellowship Chapter meeting 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday at MI. Olive
Community Church with Jerri
Vincent, Akron, speaking; President Suzanne Bush Invites
public.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
school at Racine First Baptist
Church through Friday with
classes from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
Clsses offered for three year olds
through ninth grade.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners wlil meet at
8 p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Walter Crooks with Mrs.
Grace Pratt as co-hostess.
THURSDAY
POMEROY The Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall. A sign
language lesson will be given
following the meeting.

"Bellone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem...jind out
if they can
help you too!''

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS Outdoor
dance at Eastern High School, 9
'to .midnight Friday, by the

Bellone Is offerlnaa FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TEST.
Dl, IANIIN PICON'S OFFICE
509 SOUTH THIID AYE., MIDDLIPOU, OHIO
TH..SDAY, JUNE 9

Woodmen to serve
The Burlingham Modern
Woodmen In cooperation with the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society will serve food on
Heritage Weekend In the garage
across from the Museum.

FIOM 9:00·12:00 (NOON)

•wA AND UAW PIOVIDEI
So take Eddie Albert's advice - visit the Bellone Hearing Aid
Specialist today for a FREE HEARING TEST. Come in with
coupon for test.
Call 1011 Free Number i-800-634-5265 for immediate appoifllment.

COUPON
••

Sandwiches, chlclten and noodles, and !JOmemade pte, aloD&amp;
with. beverages will be for sale,
startblg at 11 a.m. on Saturday
and 11:30 a.m on Sunday .

. ·••

•

moded plants In highly Industrialized areas of the U. S. and
open new modern ones in developing countries .where labor Is
cheaper. Poems and prayer by
Mrs. Hayes and Mrs. Conroy
closed the meeting.
Mrs. Betty Lue Moore was a
guest. Twenty-sick and shutin
calls were reported. Mrs. Marilyn Spencer presided at the
meet ing when it was noted that
$107.05 was made on the recent
bake sale.
A picnic was planned fer July 7
at Kathryn Mora's home at noon.
Table service and drinks will be
provided. Each m ember is to
ta ke a covered .dlsh .

POMEROY - Return Jona"
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet at 12:30 Friday at the home
of Mrs. John Rose, Bas han Road.
Members are to take some
flag-related objects. A musical
program will be presented by
Miss Laura Hawthorne. Hostesses wllll1e Mrs. Rose, Mrs. A.
R. Knight, Mrs. Joseph Cook,
Mrs. Dwight Mllhaon, Mrs. Gary
Moore, and Mrs . Michael
Elberfeld.
Water permits
RACINE - Quantity water
user permits for Racine residents needing addltonal water
for such things as. filling swimming pools, watering and
gardens and other uses where
larger amounts of water are
needed are now available. AppUcatlon and payment for such
permits are to be made at the
blUing facility in the Racine
Department Store.

NEW
.
SHIPMENT-

SUMMER CLOTHING

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BARGAI N MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $2 . 50

..

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A

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-

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•

531 JACKSON PikE - Rf.35 WEST

-STARTS

Racine Elementary
awards presented

Field day winners In each
grade were presented awards at
the annual Racine Elementary
School awards ceremonies held
at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
Getting awards for field day
achievements were Jesse Little,
Cyrstal Rose, grade one; Ryan
Grace, Misty Hysell, grade tM&gt;;
Ronnie Jones, Debby Ash, grade
three; Jason Hudson, Faith
Rose, grade four; Scott Grace,
Sherrie FrederiCk, grade five;
Robert Rieber, Marcy Mathews,
grade six. Receiving perfect
attendance awards for the school
year were Chad Clark, grade
two; Bobby Wrltesel, grade
tllree; Craig Knight, grade four;
Scott Grace, Jimmy Randolph,
grade five, and Freddie Matson,
Tabitha Willford, gracde six.
Special recognition was given
students wllo were named to the
honor roll for the entire year. ·
Allen Crisp, the Rev. Roger
Grace and David Amburgey
provided assistance In staging
field day activities and refreshments on the last day of school
were provided by the P.T.O. The
Racine First Baptist Church
permitted the school use of Its
facilities for awards day
ceremonies.

..

fjaD~~~~~~~~~~,

Fellowship meets

Members of Trinity Church In
Pomeroy has busy getting ready
Dish towels for the Ohio Valley
for their annual homemade ice Christian Camp were presented
cream social to be held on June 16 at the May meeting of the
and 17. Advance orders for Women' s Fellowship of the
quarts of ice cream are being Meigs County Churches of Christ
taken at 992-3777, 992-3222, or held at the Bradford Church.
992-5480. Cos tis $2 a quart and the
Jeannette Carter had the welavailable flavors are chocolate, come and recognized Renee
vanilla, peach, lemon, pinepap- Stewart of the host church.
ple, banana, strawberry and · Devotions were given by Bessie
orange-pineapple.
King of the Bradbury Church
using Psalm 100. Mrs. King gave
June is bursting out' ali over a very informal commentary on
and soon we'll be roiling out those several of the well-loved hymns
lazy, hazy,crazydaysofsummer and their composers. Marge
- sure, you can walt - mean- Purtell presented the program
time, you keep smUing.
with the theme "What is a
Mother?" listing 12 duties of a
good mother. Mrs. Carter conducted the business session with
Mrs. Stewart giVing the closing
prayer. Refresh men Is were
Easternb Athletic Boosters to seved in the social rooms of the
help raise money for extra- church .
curricular activities at Eastern;
dance contest to be held.
POMEROY -Square dance at
Meigs Senior Citizens Center, 8 to
11 p.m. Friday with Larry
Hubbard providing music for
dancing; those attending are to
take snacks for snack ta bie; open
to public.

.•

••
-

'•

Community calendar

EDD(E ALBERT FOR BELTON£

TRRJMPHS - lraa BarldeJ' Madll Thoma "Bit
Maa' • Bear• sprawlbll throup the repes In Mollllay Dilbt'a WBC
title bout at lhe LM Ve1u IDUoa to win lhe mlddleweljJbt Utle.
Barkley won by putt1n1 Hear• away with a third-round knockout.
(UP I)

Tuesday. June 7, 1988

•

Page 6

Meigs County has role in
Children's Hospital telethon

was at the store at the time pf
Mays's appearance: " He told
people '$10 for a n autograph,'
those were his exact words.
When I found out, I couldn' t
believe it. "
The employee, who requested
anonymity, said no Crown employee wa s involved in collecting
money.
"The bookstore was charging
for his autographs after they ran
out of books, " said Lisa Kite!, a
publicist with Simon and Schuster , which published the book.
"Willie says (a store employee)
was standing right next to him"
as fans paid lor his autograph.
The book-signing brought
about 700 sales in just a few
hours . The book retails for $17.95
but Crown sold the books at a
'
discount.
During a similar book-signing
In New York, Mays bought books
for seven boys with learning
disabilities who waited In the
rain for an hour to see him. The
boys wrote Mays letters of
thanks, one of which said, "How
will we ever repay you. Mr.
Mays, you are my biggest fan."

The Daily Sentinel

:.4

Beat of the Bend

Mays denies he took money for autographs

Iran Barkley cops middleweight crown
LAS VEGAS, Nev . tUP[) Ira n Barkley 's biggest regret on
the best night of his life was that
an old friend wasn't around to
hel p celebrate.
''There was a good friend, not a
frie nd , more like a brother ...
Davey Moore ," Barkley sa id
after separating Thomas Hear ns
from his senses and hi s World
Boxing Council middleweig ht
title Monda y night.
Barkley, speaking at the pos tfight press conference, then
dropped his head and cried over
the F r iday night death of Moore,
a form er WBA junior mlddlew~ight champ. Barkley was one
of Moore's sparring partners
when Moore was champion and
ttte new middleweight champ
was devas tated to learn Moore
wa s killed In a freak auto
accident.
Moore and Barkley both live d
irt the South Bronx In New York.
·"We traveled everywhere together," Barkley said. " He was
like a brotller."
·Moore was killed when his car
rolled down a hili and over him
after he sUpped to the grond
t rylng to stop it in front of his
HOlmdel, N.J ., home.
.; Barkley, a 4-1 underdog, put
Hearns down twice and was
declared the winner when referee Richard Steele stopped the
lxlut at 2:39 of the third .
Hearns put Barkley's accomplishment in perfect perspective .
"You know ·what you did
tqntght? You outhit the 'Hit
Man,"' Hearns told Barkley .
"My guns failed me, they just
jammed on me."
Barkley, a club fighter for
nearly his wllole career, was
bleeding from both eyes and the

•

•'

DAILY

FREE PARKING
FREE DEUYEIY

9to8

MON. &amp; FRI.

THIRD &amp; OUYE

GAWPOUS, OHIO -

,,

446-3045

...

�Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO

-

Tuesday, June 7 1988

P~oy-M~~d~I~~~·~O~h~IO~----~~--~------r;.~~~~Tiw~~D~•TI;;y~~~~~~

Meigs County school honor rolls
BRADBURY HONOR ROLL
The fifth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Bradbury
School has been announced
Making a grade of B or above In
ail their subjects to be named to
the roll w.er_e
Fifth Grade Robbie Baker
Vanessa Compston Kevin Lo
gan Jon Mattea Becky Meier
Melissa Wilfong Adam Wyatt
Willey Childress Sam Cowan
Becky Diles David Eakins
Chuck Legar Walt Williams
Sixth Grade Beth Buskirk
Jennifer Fink Dawn Hockman
Brian Penhorwood Heather
Burch Amity Dixon Ann Rlffie
Matt Stewart
DH Ronnie Diles Chris Lane
Kenny Napper Bobby Thomp
son Kelly Smith

HARRISONVILLE ELEMEN
TARY HONOR ROLL

CHEMOTHERAPY -Peggy Hartman of West
Shade Road Pomeroy receives her chemother
apy from Dr Elaine Beed Columbus oncologist

Tbe fifth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Harrison
ville Elementary School has been
anno11nced Making a grade of B
or above In all their Subjects to be
named to the roll were
First Grade Erin Dillon Mat
thew Dillon Randy Han lng
Johnny Herdman
Kristina
Kennedy Jennifer Lambert Me
Janie Mat thews Anna Parker
Jason Preas! Franco Romuno
Shannan Stev&lt;&gt;rs
Chari!}
Whitcraft
Second Grade Michelle Bts
sell James Chapman Joseph
D Augustlno
Scott Dodson
Robin Donohue Tina Fraley
Rusty Haning Oarence Hat
field Jeremy Lowe J&lt;&gt;sslca
Wheeler
Third Grade Laura Arix
Jessie Blackford Joshua How
ard Timmy Stearns
Fourth Grade Amber Ben nett
Bethany Cohee Marla Hall
Gary Stanley Donald Yost
Fifth Grade
Roger Arlx
Johnny Lane Melissa Vance
Sixth Grade Mtsty Frum
Jonathan Vance Timmy Vance

who Is beginning her third year of coming to

Veterans Memortal Hospital to treat cancer
patients

Oncologist makes weekly visits
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer

•

The care and treatment of
cancer patients continues as a
major concern of 'veterans Mem
orlal as the hospital moves Into
Its third year of making available
locally the services of a Colum
bus oncologls t
Three years ago when Dr
~Iaine Beed made her first trip to
Veterans to consult with cancer
patients there was some ques
tlonas towhetherpattentstakmg
chemotherapy and other cancer
treatment programs would want
to come to a doctor who was In
town only one day a week
Using the old emergency room
at the hospital lor her office Dr
Beed first saw one or two patients
on the day she was here The
growth and acceptance of the
program soon made the room at
the hospital too small for her
practice and she moved Into the
medical clinic bu ildtng across
from the hospital
Dr Beed who practices at St

Ann s Hospital m Columbus and
IS a consulting staff member at
Veterans comes to Pomeroy
every Wednesdav Two trained
oncology nurses Debbie Wolfe
R N and Tammy Ball R N on
sta ff at Veterans assist Dr Beed
who now sees a dozen or so
patients on every tnp down
Both nurses agree that as
easier on the patients for the
doctor to come to Pomeroy
eliminating the necessity for
pa llents many who do not feel
well to have to travel long
distances for their treatments
Every patten! Is referred to Dr
Beed by another doctor She
sometimes first sees the patient
In the hospttallollowing surgery
Other times the referral Is
directly lor outpatient
treatment
As explained by Dr Beed
oncology Is a sub speciality of
Internal medicine Her role Is to
make the decision about chemo
therapy requirements and ad
minister it always working In

cooperation and coordmat10n
with surgeons internists urolo
gists gynecologists and radla
lion therapists to the best benefit
of the patient
Curren tiy she says there are
about 50 different kmds of drugs
which fight cancer a 11 given m
different ways many times
depending on the disease how
s ick the person Is his age and
what stage of advancement the
cancer is
Some patients are seen every
week others once a month every
three months or even once a
year
In chemotherapy several com
bmaUons of drugs are usually
used admlnstered either by vein
or orally according to the
oncologist Laboratory work IS
handled at Veterans
The good news a ccordmg to
Dr Beed Is that about 50 percent
of cancer patients are now being
cured through the combination of
surgery
radiation
and
chemotherapy

MIDDLEPORT ELEMEN
TARY SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
The fifth six weeks grading
petiod honor roll at the Middle
port 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 Zeb Batey Philip
Burch Austin Carr Jessica
Evans Jennl Howerton Jessica
Johnson Sarah La1 kms Patrick
Martin Joshua Price Josiah
Rawson WilHam Scanlon Mell
sha Swisher Kyle Werry Tlf
!any Allensworth Zac Batey
Jessica Cale T J King Beth
Knight Joshua Lynch Robby

·Meigs County poet's corner.._______
OUR LIVING GOD

He could have saved H s only son

God Is not dead he s just silent
Because we have failed o obey
His grace dOth abound In a I people and

All He would have kneel and pray
No He Is not deaf when we call Him
And Ht' Is nor blind to our need
To anger H~ s slow though we fal er

HE KNEW

&amp;&gt;fore God ror us all Christ doth plead
Yes He Is alive though all others
Tru e to nature long since turnE.'dto dust

Dur Saviour arose on that fateful day
tlnd serve Him I w 11 and I must

"' Our God is no dead

He s jus1 s len

He loves ot'l HIP loves us

tft&gt; waits

so n uch

for us all kind and patient

The hem of His garment to ouch
Oh He Is alive I can wl ness
f'or I found Him one Rlorlous day
When my lite was so dark and hope ess
I m glad that I knelt down o pray
And ru~; o His word and His promise
Jesus heard and answered my plea
Then came ne-w hope and light ness
As the Llgh house to the lost sailors at
... Yes Hft s alive though all o hers
True to nature IORfit since urned o dus t
Our Saviour arost&gt; on that fateful day
And servr Him I "" II and I mus
- By Mr11. A.lpha Douglas

sra

31600 ParevWe Rd Pomeroy Oh

TAKING ANOTHER LOOK

If we today could only see
Ourselves a!l others do
SOme thing!! I kn ow would nl"'l"d a change
As wr strive for something nt"N
Our past would be an e)(.ample
Of thE' way we used to be
Until the Crace of God above
Made a change hat all could see
Gave to us a new round hopr
\\It h a chance to cleanse wl1hln
The heart and soul that ran afoul
or Satan and his sin
To redeem and start a I re anew
That all ga\e up as lost
But dldn I reckon with the power
Of Jesus and the Cross
... SO now we take another look
" And others ma)' look too
We care not what they see thas 1 me
But were proud It s something new
For when we saw the wa)' we we e
The choice was ours to choose
We gavP our I ves to God above
Far we had too much to lose
He did His be!t He always does
With rower yet to spare
And I help is needf'd anytime
We can call and He II be there
.._ So all the friend» who knE!'ItW us !hen
We hope will !See the change
1f the life they Uve sees no relief
With God s help thl"Y can re-arrange
-SubmiUed by Olen 0 H•rrl&amp;m
Pomeroy Ohio

I'LL ALWAYS LOVE MY LORD
I love my Lord because He saved me
I U love my Lord forever more
1 love my Lord for what He gave me
Heaven s home on blissful shore
f trust ln Him because He loves me
l II trust In Him each lime I pray
Ill know at last when time Is over
Why He 1et Jesus die that day
I love my Lord for\11 His kindness
I II love Him more and not forget
The tlme I wa110 tar In darkness
His UKht had never reached me yet
The time WhPn 5atan blurred my vision
UntU my mind could see no sin
Until the da)' when Jesus found mtc~
And I u.w the shape that I wa s In
1 love my Lord because of Jesus
1 U love Him more each day I live
J II never forget but always remember
Why His Son He had to give
Why wtlh power at His disposal

I

But ]('I Him die on th e Cross of Calvary
To prove te s battle could bp won
- Submitted hy Olen D Harrlsoo
Pomeroy Ohio

1 can see Him now My Savaur
On hli' Cross or Calvary
Suffered bled an d died that da)
To save and set m e free
SavE' th e soul Ihat hE' onct&gt; gave
En ru sted 10 my care
One I had neglected
Since the time He pu
h&lt;' e
l can sec Him no"' so wor led
That I might fail o hear
The voice of H s fo giveness
As He wh sp ered In my ear
The feeling or con! en men
As He put my mind o rest
Know ng r I hecdt&gt;d no
l "-OUid fall thE' est
But soon a smile showed on H s facf'
H s words I hca1 d each onr
HE' knew He had redeemed a sou l
God s one and only Son
One hat by H s deat h hat day
Had ,51ai ned a home up here
G vl n ~ back he sou l and glorlf) ng
The one who put 11 !here
-SuhmiUed hy Olen D Harrlsoo

Pomeroy Ohio

Wt know t s nat us(' tor tharllmE' is past
But s ll I s don I hurl us to wl:sh

1\ THOUGHT 1\T DAYS END

Just a thou~ hi at end of dav
Of Jesus and His l ove
Just a thought at end of dav
Of God s Heaven up abo e
Just a thought or wha took placft
Is relif'f for mr to know
T hai Jesus dt"ath on Calvarv s Cross
Gives mr a place a ~o

-SuhmiUM hy Olen D Harr~on
Pomeroy Ohio

THE RETURN

Amid the hi Is and mountains
0 er I he valleys an plains
Mt&gt; I In~ snow and Ice will leavC'
WI h help of warm spring rains
As ene to all lh(' l'yPs can SeE'
Of beauty to behold
Of thi nGs tha have lain dorman
But have survived he cold

Just a thou~ht of wha He did

Leaves no dOubt In m nd
fhal whpn Ht&gt; ooked nsidP my hPar
Ht&gt; kn('W what He would find
So He rcoplaceclthC' stony heat I
When I knell to confess
With a new one fu I of lovt&gt;
On(' of H s very best

Thf' n.''C'S eaf out In grand array
The meadows hey turn grN"n
L I le flower s arc here and therE&gt;
Addln~ beauty t o th e sct'nP
ThP lltt e streams are on the rise
Their banks they may o er Dow
Ju st look aro1.1nd he 1 me Is her e
When God puts on H s show

And now ('JJCh day brln,gs back thC-'
houRhl
Of 1he prke HE' had o pay
Thl' blood Ht&gt; shed a Ca lvarv
To bright en up mv wav
Tha my eves once dark w th s n
Are opened now to see
The fu ure and wha It wil hold
SOmedav up th&lt;rf' for mf'
-submitted b)' Olen Harrisoo
Pomeroy Ohio

And wa!&gt; the warm h of sun takes o er
Will change each day for free
This beauty that surrounds us
Tha God w\1 1&lt;'1 us seEWill bring con entm£'nl to us all
Knowln~ I m&lt;' has pUJ; I
The co d has gonE' a ong wl h t m("
But spr n~ is he e a las
-Submitted hy Olen D llarrtsm
Pomero) Ohio

Pub11c Nottce
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFFS SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
IN 'l'HE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY
221 w..t Second Street
Pomeroy Oh1o 46769

RELIEF IS NEI\R

THE OLD 1\ND THE NEW

How many of us remember back
When you took up h&lt;' old cane pole
Behh d th e barn dug a can of worms
And head ed fo the Old Flshin Hole?
How yo d sl on the bank and r4:'lax
Neath the shade of an o d willow tree
And let your though s wander thru half
open eves
As your bobber was al you could Sl'@
Maybewa ched as hebreezerhovedbran
ches above
And the clouds drifted laz ly bv
Cont ented to be just whE'rt&gt; you were
But yoUr houghts were up In the sky
Wishln~ tha t maybe somE" future day

You d be abl e to fly Ike a bird
1 hen you could visit those far away places
And see about things you have heard
But alas th e wander ng mind r(.)turns
You1 bobbea ls no whe c n s ght
You see the pole you set in the bank
All bent and the line stretched so tigh
Wha dO you do but grab up the pole
And try your best ro hang an
Finally the line goes slack all at once
And you know your bi g fish Is goneThere s nothJng to do but bait up aga n
Lay back with closed eyes once more
What better way to enjoy yourself
But shucks they don t do II no moce
Now II s boats motors and four whrel
drives
For the creeM are now all oo small
We head for a lak e many miles away
Or we can t catch any fb:h at all
We ve maps to get there and charts a
read
Depth finders and gauges all kinds
Those new fanR:led things turn the like In
side out
And lei s you see just what you wUI find
Bu

ake Into mind thes e things we have

now

Rodti and reels but nary a pol e
I still like It best when I was a boy
And fished In the Ole Sw mmln Hole
Whrn your car~weretcw with no worry
of time
And you fished when you wanted to tlsh

r

Just a prayer Is all lakes
ro reach your God each day
ThE' lin e Is always open
And you do not have lo PaY
ThE' 1 mE' 1 akes to make a ca
Is he time It tak es 10 knrel
And you 11 no Ice when 11 s ovt&gt;r
How much better you wiH reel
Your burdt&gt;ns w I be llftOO
In y~r hl'ar you U feel gao::l
BecausE' h(-" talk yoo had with God
Was heard and understood
The things He sa d for vau to do
At first you cou dn see
UntO He said what vou could hav('
And all of It for trl'f!

Phuntlff

VS
Kenneth F Molz et at

Defendants

So if and when vou need r elief
Don be afraid to ask
R£'member with I hE' one abo \ E'
Ther e s nont&gt; too great a task
He s standing Just outside heart s door
But t h~ knob Is an your hand
Turn hE&gt; knob and let Him In
Set your sl~~:hts on Clory Land
-Submitted by Olen D Harrbu•
Porn s-oy Ohio
Does God really har me
When I kneel down to pray

The followmg real estate
11tu1ted m the County of

Meigs In the State of Oh•o
and In tho Township of
Rutland •nd bounded a!ld

dHcrlbed u foHowo
a .. ng In Section No 28
Town II Range 14 Oh10
CompMy o Purch•e Be

Does He know my feelings

And the need to hear my prayer
Or does He know when trouble strikes
Just look and I II be thert&gt;"

gmn1ng at 1he Southw•t
corner of the farm known aa

Publtc Nottce

Z lpha Stansbury

thence
north 69 rods and 6 I nks
thence north 79112 degrees

Eaot 8 rods and 13 v. I nks

thence South 12 degrees
east 61 rods and 20 hnks to
the center of tha road

Knowing God and who He Is
And all He gave to mt"
My prayers I know He s heard each one
Or today where would I be'

SO I thank Him lor the time He took
And for always being therE'
Each lime I felt the need to kneel
And for hearing every prayer
And if and when I f'ver make It
To His Heavenly place
J U know He heard my greatest prayer
For He proved It by His Grace
-SubmiUed by Olen Harrison
Pomeroy Ohio

The fifth stx weeks gradmg
penod honor roll at the Salem
Center Elementary School has
been announced Mak ing a grade
of B or above In all their subJects
to be named to the roll were
First Grade Tara Butchet
Andrea Dunfee Clinton Hen
drlcks Lori Kinnison Aaron
Morris Jessica Priddy Bridget
Vaughan
Second Grade
Leigh Ann
Canterbury J R Ktnmson Mat
thew Metheney
Amanda
Napper A J Vaughan
Third Grade Stacy St ivers
Jenny Ervm Andy Myers Jo
Sandy Amv Cleland Carrie
Harmon Tim Lewis
Fourth
Grade
J a l!,e
Gannaway
Filth Grade Kim Janey Su
san Page Crystal Vaughan
Sixth Grade Matt Clark Ja
son Dellavalle Andrea McDo
nald Tanya Thornton

CALL 992-2155 FOR
DETAILS AND INFO.

thence South 80 ods to the
South I ne of F act on 32
thence wut 1r rods to the
piece of began nng contam
10g 5 acrea more or less
Reference Deed Volume

Pago 689

Me1gs

County Deed Records Par

rods to the place of beg10
ning Save and except a lot
of 1 :4 acres owned by J 0
M1llar
contatnina 3

eel No 8

88/100tho acres
Reference Deed

Volume

279

Page 689

Me1gs

Parcel 2
Me1go In tho State ol Oh o
and. 1n the Township of
Rutland and bounded nnd
descrtbad as follows

Baginmng 34 rods and 19
llnkl South from the Nor
theaat corner of Fraction 32

Town 6 Ronga 14 of tho
Oh1o Company 1 Purchae
on top of the htll

South 80

~agr001

thence

Parcel 4
Also the follow1ng des
cnbed real estate situate tn
Fraction 33 10 sa1d Rutland
Townshtp Ma1gs County
end S1ate of Oh o to wit
Begmnmg at the Sou
theest corner of FractiOn 33
thence North 80 rods
thence WElt 22 V1 rods
thence south 80 roda
thence Eaat 22 V2 roda to the
place of beg1nn1ng conta n
ng 11 25 acres more or
tess
Reference Dead Volume

279

Pogo 889

County Deed Records Par

cal No 7
Parcel 6
Allo the fotlowmg root

Wnt 112
rode to 1 stone thence south
10 dagr001 W11t 87 rods to

County

a _private road thence South

towit

23'11 dagr001 Wnt o•ong tho
center of sa1d road 14 rodl

Me go

ntete tn Sectaon 26 u1d
Rutland township Me g1

Stole of Ohio

88Q1nn1ng et the
Northwe~t corner of a 3 26
ecre tract ownttd by C A
McGhee thence South

obout 130 rods to Leading
Creek thence In o Wooterty
direction 1long the creek

obout60 rodo th.,co North
4&amp; dogr001 Wut obout 30
rodo then.. North 68 de
gr001 Waat obout 30 rodl
thence North 10 dagr001
Ent obout 17 rods thence
North 16 dogr001 Woot
about 10 rodo then.. North
58 degr001 waat lbout 18
rodo to public road thence in
on oMtorty diroction olong
ollid rood about 20 rodl and
to M
Pterce 1 aoutheut
corner thence north along
P1erce 1 East hne 43 rods
thence a•t to the place of
beglnn~ng

containing 86 20

Pubhc Nottce
acres more or less
Except approximately 17
acras tv ng south of State
Route 124 descnbad as
Parcel No 2 n a deed
recorded n Volume 294

Paga 407

Me1gs County

Deed Records
Reference Deed

279

Page 689

Volume

Me gs

County Deed Records Par

eel No 8
P•rcel 6
The follow1ng descr bed
real estate Situated n Ru
tland TOwnsh p Me1gs
County and State of Oh•o
and hemg 1n Sect on No 26
Town 6 Range 14 of the
Oh o Company s Purchase
to w1t Begmmng m the
center of Inter County H gh
way No 124 at the Sou
theast corner of a 3 88 acre
tract fo merly owned by J
0 M1ller thence north 83
degrees and 30 m nutes east
along the center of sa1d road
344 feet to a pont opposite
the center of a pnvate road
thence North 15 /4 degrees
West along the center of sa d
pnvate road 299 feet
thence North 19 V2 degrees
West along the center of satd
road 297 feet thence North
11 degrees West along the
center of sa d road 54 feat
thence Nor1h 1 df'gree West
along the center of sa d road
366 v) feet thence South
86 A degrees West 311 feet
thence South 9 V2 degrees
East 1018 feet to the place
of beQinmnq cont11010p

__
··-Of
• ··-0.
•
...
••
.........- .....
·--·••
•• ••
·-- ..............-· _
u---.
.
--··...
.
--··:---·
.. -··--··....
-c-•
-·-......_ .,__.._.··.
."·-.. .........·--_ ··• ,._,._
••

_,.;._.

_,_._..,

)

_ ---

_

=~

:tt,::,o_

•

Q .... _ . , . __

C 1111

J ed ptJfe• cove

lte

follow rat e lephrlllll eA"chanse•

~~-

:-::"!:':1

- ~­
• o ....

•

c-..

"

~·

"

II

"

·-

--~~

.,

-~~
-l"'.c:tll-

--~

11

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
Must Be Ropa11able

....

., .......

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Serv•ce All Makes

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Haul ng W1th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Serv1ca
•Junk Yard Bus~ness

-

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

J:

z-

6 17 tfc

VAUGHNS
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE OHIO

Television ltstenmg Oevtces
Dependable Hearmg Atd Sales &amp; s.,,,icd
Heartng Evaluattons For All Ages

z LISA M KOCH M S
a: licensed Chmcal Audiologist
~ (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104

Rt 124 Pomeror Oh•o

1122/ 88/ tfn

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

0

417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Galltpolts Ohto 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy

TUNE UPS BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and Sell Used

JUNK CARS OR 1RUCKS
-FREE ESIIMARSFor any of these serVIces call

Most Fore gn and
Oomest c Veh cles
A /C Sarv1ce
All MaJOr &amp; M nor
Repa rs
NIASE Cenifiad MechaniC

614-742-2617

CALL 992 6756

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Cert f ed Ltcensed Shop

614·698-7157

WAN! 10 BUY WRECKED OR

letwun 9 om 6 pm
or Leo.. Mnsoae
2

DOC VAUGHN
~

ur. 88 fn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10 8 tfc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Dooler For

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway Be
tween Rt 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 7 F1nancmg On
Yardman
Sen11e On All Makes
We Honor MC/DIIriVISo
4 18 88 ttn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authonzad Serv1ca
&amp; Parts

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Br ggs &amp; Stratton

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

7 63 acres more or less
Reference Deed

279

Page 689

Volume

M••u•

County Deed Records Par

eel No 10
Parcel 7
The follow1ng real estate
situated 1n the County of
Me gs n the State of Oh1o
and n the Township of
Rutland and bounded and
descnbed as follows
Begtnn ng 31 rods South
and 76 rods and 22 lmks
West of the Northeast
corner of Sect on 26 Town
6 range 14 of the Ohto
Company s Purchase
thence East 23 rods and 16
hnks to the center of the
road thence South 13 rods
and 15 hnks thence West 23
rods and 16 Inks thence
North 13 rods and 15 hnks
to the pi ace of beg n n ng
contammg 2 acres more or

less
Also another p eceofland
adJOining the above tract
begmnmg 31 rods South 76
rods and 22 Inks west of the
Northeast corner of Sect on
No 26 Town 6 and Range
14 of the Oh o Company 1
Purchase thence east 23
rods and 10 Inks to the
center of the road thence
north 5 degrees west 8 rods
and 15 I nks along sa d road
to a stake thence west
abol t 23 rods to a po10t
north of the beg nning
thence south 8 rods end 9
feet to the pface of begin
nlng contammg 1 ;,. acres
more or leu
Also the following ptece
of land tn Sect1on No 26
Town 6 Range 14 of the
Oh1o Company s Purchase
begtnmng on the East line of
Zelpha Stansbury a 44 rods

and 6 hnko NOrth of the
Southeast corner of J 0
M liar lot thence north 97 Y2
degrees east 27 rods an4
12 1'2 links thence west 26
rods and 16 v,~ links thence
north 25 rods and 12 hnka to
the place of beg nmng con
ta1n1ng 3 and 9 / 10thsacr81
And bemg the same property

conveyed by C A McGhee
to Charles McGhee by dead

(Continued on Pag&lt;' 71

dated Jan 1 1 1930 and
recorded •n Book 126 at

CHECK

Page 368 Deed Recorda of
Me1ga County Oh1o
Reference Deed Volume

279

Page 689

Meigs

County Deed Records Par

cat No 11

Parcel 8
The following deacnbed
real estate situate tn the
Town1h1p of A utland
County of Me gs end State

Condtlton Checked
and Ref1ll
Mtnor Repatrs

HEWELL'S
SUNOCO
CHESTER OHIO

5 15 1

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPlY
Mtddleport Oh
992 6611

Pubhc Nottce
descr bed as follows
Beg nnang an the center of
the road at the Southeast
corner of Allen Braley sland
n Fract1on No 32 and
Sect on No 26 Range 14 of
the Ohto Company s Pur
chase
thence North 10
degrees West 40 rods
thence North 19 V2 degrees
East 28 roda and 18 hnks
thence north 27 12 degrees
east 12 rods thence north
1

53 V, dogroeo EAst 12 rods
thence north 18 rods and 15
hnks thence west 1 1 0 rods
thence south 27 degrees
East 17 rods thence south
12 degrees east 9 rods
thence east 76 rods to the
place of beg1nn1ng conta n
mg 50 acres
The above IS the same
prem ses conveyed from
Allen E Braley and w1fe to
W R Jordan and w1fa by

deed dated May 9 1906 and
recorded m Vol 93 at pages
430 and 431 of the records
of deeds of Me1gs County

Oho
Raference Dead Volume

279

Page 689

Me1gs

County Deed Records Par
eel No 12
Parcel 9
The follow ng descnbed
reel estate 1n tha Township
of Rutland County of Me1g1
and State of Oh1o to wtt
Beg1nnang at the northw
eat corner of the northeaat

quarter of Section NO 28
Town 6 and Rang1 14 of the
Oh o Company s Purcheae
running thence east 4 chains
and 69 12 hnks to w1th10 20
feet of a atonethasouthwnt
corner of a 70 acre lot
formerly owned by Amos
Braley thence South 37
degree• east 4 chaansand 26
hnks thence south 12 de
grees eaat 2 cha ns and 24
hnkl to a post thence Wast
7 chams and 39 I nk1 to
a poat thence nonh 23 rods
to the place of begannang
conta n ng 3 h 1cres more
or leSJ tn Rutland Town
1h1p Meigs County Oh•o
Reference Deed Volume

279

Page 1189

SERVICE

Records of Me gs County
Oh o and all other ease
mants r ghts of ways and
other leases
f any of
record
Se d real estate as com
manly known as bemg
183 20 acres more or less
formerly owned by Ramona
Kav Compton Sa1d rae
estate 11 located In the
Northeast Quarter of Sec
t on 26 and Fractions 32
and 33 Town Number 6
Range Number 14 n Ru
tland Townsh1p Me gs
County Oh10 and all of aa d
real estate lays north end

eoat of Leadmg Creek Oh o

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S RT SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Said real eatete wes ep
pra1sed at IIJI.ty thouund

814-387 7118

Mothw Rabbit

814-367 0331

a. 4bunnles

Call

Part• &amp; :~err!t~•

614 662 3821

BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT
NEW AND USED
PARTS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
AI Reosonablo Pmes

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Ntght

Public NottCB
real estate 1 to be sold for
not less than two thnd.s
12 / 3) of the aforeaa1d ap
pra sed value Cash 1n hand
on the date of sale
Sa1d sale 1s subject to
approval by the Common
Pleas Court Me1gs County

OhiO
Howard E Frank
Sher ff of
Me1gs County Oh1o

APPROVED
Fred W Crow Attorney
for the Farmers Bank
and Savings Company
Pomeroy Oh10

HElPING Y0tJ RECOVIR
YOUR !NYESIMINI
SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
Phone 949

K1ttens 7 weeks old
tra n.:l 304-676-7242

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E Ma1n Sr
Pom•Of
8th nd &lt;•ty Holt

6 Lost and Found

B

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

Help wanted

9

TAYLOIED TANS
That f1t Your Body
FEATURING
SUNTAN A
WOLFE SYSTEMS

20 SESSIONS

$35

CA~~R 949·2414
OWNED &amp; OPEIIAIED

n

ANGIE TA VLOR

811 Y1ne St Rtt&lt;tne
5 12 811-1 mo

~on

Wanted To Buy

and newer uaed can Smith
Buldl Pontl.c 1911 Eanern

Aw Gelllpolo Cal 614 4462282

ture B. Wltiques
Al1o of
wood
Comptete
houteholdl
fur"'a.
coal
hellters
Swain 1 FurnituN
1!. Auction Th rd &amp;: Ohve

cos Coli 814-•48 3158

WANTED: Good used Exero•
8 ke Clll61 4 245-5028 after 8

~t'l V ! Lt~~

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUDES to
VHS TAI'E
11

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERIES CALL
CHERYL LEMLEY SALES AGENT

319 So. 2nd Ave.

'

Help wanted

m..,._ m.,

13th.

Hlir Stylists Acron The StrHt
styling Mlon fl INking one
addltlonoi IIVflot who llloolllng
for mor1 then just II'IOther job
Call Terri at 814-448 9110 for
d.ttllt
Job hunting7 Need a sk1117 We
tra~n people for lobi u Auto
Mechanics C.penten El.ctriCiartl FooJ S.Vice Worker•
Electronics Technicians lndu•
trial Meintenlnce Worken
Nurstng Alll....,tl and Ot'dlr
II• Mlchlni111 and Wllders
A•gis.,. now for c:l••• blg•nn ng Juty 6th Call Tri-County
Voe.t10 ..1 AdultC.Oteratl14753-31511 ext 14 A ver1My of
funding sources to pay for
training are ..,all lib!• for tho•
elg~ble

Lade the skills? Nled a job7 W.
train people for Jo• u machi-

Tr&gt;Countv JVS

814 753-

01

Eny Work EJC:.el.rt

P~!

As

..mbla prodlcts 11 hon. C.ll
for .nfor..,..tlon 504-84t 1003

Ellt A 15010

M1ddleport, Oh1o
I 28 88 lfn

67&amp;-5608

117840 to 119 485

n1m.

diM8 Hlr1ng Call JOB CEN"TER
I 5184583811 Elct G228•

for Fed.,.l LIt 24 hrt

.,o

P
plever wanted for Mt
Tabor Community Church tf
1nteretted call 304-895 3082

12

Sttuattons
Wanted

Room&amp; board fore(derty person
1n my home Bid patient or
hendicep lMga room II bt1h
Call 814 256-8509

Have room for elderly man or
woman tn my home 1 S ye••
expw1ence Tuppltft PlatntarM

814-867 3402.

13

Insurance

Call us for your mobile home
Miller Insurance
304 882 2145 A.lto auto
home life heah:h
lnsur~nce

1B Wanted to Do
lnt«IOI' 111:'111r10r You name It
Profe11ional painting. 14 VI••
e~~;penence

ReMonabte

Coli 814-255- I 224

rat••

Pl'iltate horne c:•a end boMI for
S•mon and h.,diCIIJped Elem

814-992 11873

Homo

Gl¥8 pi~noCa•• oKeyboerd•nd
org• '-•on• in my ho""' to
beg1nn_.. act.tanced ttudents
and lilllh Also IBach chording
.,d tren1po11ng tf intere~ted

est! 814-992 6403

WRI do bib¥ lining In our home
1n SyracuM Will p ck up 1nd
deUwer your chHd H nMded.
O.riat.., hom. Ref.,...ce Cllll

814-992 8&amp;59

Lawn Mower Rllpairs

l.alwn S.-va
Garden Plowed

Phone

304-17~Ui153

21

BustniiiSS
Opportunity
t NOTICE

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends th• you
do businMI wtth .-,pte you
know .,d NOT to ... dmoney
through the mllil untl you t\•e
the offering

-lg-

31

Homes for Sa Ia

Tuppers P111n•l 8R •• 1n
Mitch., large ttving room.
b...ment geraga. d alecfrlc.
centtoi sir Clll oftor 5 PM

fu•

8 I 4-446-7098

Hou• for •1•1ZVIntonStreet
1 1:t ttory fr1m .. n..- c•pet
llWt roof fuN b. .ment dt1
achat g.-.ge with t~ sheet.
fencad m bade. .,.rd Good
condttian Clll e 14-.&amp;4&amp;.8824
after 5 JO PM

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

Pomeroy

Middleport

8a

VICinity

ViR• n Centenary h• • corn.
pletel n•ofnewa u1ed furniture
S. IPP •t .,_rd s.tle pnctl
Mattreu tale hwo 11-'11-'eeks onlv
tuMslzet49H Flt141 l.r.mi
down Uncoln Pike. big 1M
building behind lilt trlilfH' on

Ylt'd Sate June 9 10 11 Held
by Jopt:JI' U M W at Mary Har 1
r.s denceonSt Rt 881 41'T1JI•
east of Tupper"~ Phlins 3 .-, rrwl•
II-'IIIIIISt of Reedsville 9 00-4 00

9-8

VardSaleatOelongs June 6th
7th find 8th St Rt 143 1m Ia
from Sr Rt 7 8 00-5 00

loft 814- .. 6-3158 Mon. Sot

Movint&amp;ai ..Wed •lhurt 9tltl
4 Off R1 180 on At 1554 15th
hauM Stgn• &amp;.ottar...,.1hlng

Thr• l'omtty Sot•Wot-

mloroweve couch •bl• st•
reo clotttlng Henry Skidmore

At 110 Wid. 101

,_

June8t~11th

I!

June 8 910 138 Condor 51
Pomeroy From 10 5 Var ety of

homo

2 fam lies June 9 10 9 00
15 00 8au m AddhtOn Route 7
behind Sit• ng Rink Riebel
r• dence Storm door pmg
pong tabte. good clothing rnlsc
Alin can eels
!S farmly b•em.,t ule Larry

Vwd Ssl... uno I. tO I 5 PM
I 'I milo out Clwk Cll11&gt;ol Ad
Olgontic Gorogo Sol• Dobby Dr

or 101 S ILECOONKS

JUDY DaWITT, BROKER

Me demonstrators needed for
Chrlstnwt Around the World
Gr.at Pt .. Free Suppfi ... 304-

BuYing tumtture and 11ppl~ncn
by the piece or by the lot F• r

f liillliiVIIII'Ill

992-6282

(30.)875-6236 EOE AAE

388-9303

quito Appl'- pieced any
condition Celll14 9921857

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

LPN. Pla-nt Vallev Nuulng
Car• Cent.,. ..tkmg licensed
LPNt for ,-rttim• anploym.-.t
me&lt;Mcat and dent.l inturwtct
avail*'• tf tnter-d cell te.thv
Thornton Director a1 NuriH'Ig

Junk Cars with Of' Without
motors Call Llrry Uvely 814-

Cash paid for antique or new

CALL AMY CAlm

AVON All areas Cal "11rilyn
Wowor 304-882 2645

mevor 814-245 6162

0 Br., res ct.nce Thurtday and
June 9th and 10th
9 00-7 00 MMy n ce rttml
Pelt Letar1 Falls tlgn turn left
first Iaine 2nd hou• on nght
Fnd~¥

01•....,•

GOVERNMENT JOBS • dllhM (tomeMtkluell Souv
118 040
Ul 230/ yr Now .,.1• collection of 8.tt • Pep-

hiring

SOUTHERN HILLS R E. INC

ASSISTANT Potltlon requires
eo wpm good -bal &amp;
wrmen oommunic.tlon lldlls 3
ye•s ex per enct Suc:c.. dul
cMdid.te rnult btiilbl•to th nk
lo!}lcally make lndvicl.laiJudg•
ment: priorhl:te woril 11'1 w()l't(
efficient._, 1nd lndependentty
Must be abl•to workVII-'-'841 under
pressure Compu., and word
proceumo skills helpful R•
epontlbilttl•lncludt auilting a
8
lgarMnt ••"
matn~nlng field empt~e rotter ..-yroll distribution ana-r
ing phone end grnting the
public Job shllring p011tion
Hourt are 8 to • 30 P M eYifV
T.hursdtr and frict.w" Md every
other W.dn..ttl¥ Send fftume
to SEOEMS R1 4 Bo• 144
Glll1polil Oh 45!31 by Juna

IVt&gt;lng

2nd A,. MiddiiPort. Oh 814- Wed lth a. Thurt 9th Juat off
141 Uncoln Pika It Centenary
992 3478
4th trail• on t.tt Lots of
--,thing ChG..ltl

'Ill"'' ......

A•g•teNdD ..k::ian for
Contract Work.. 8 Ms ...ere et
18 50 per hou plus nul.-ge
M.ternel•ndCtllldHe.tthcoun
Mlting Call Nornw Tor,., at
Mt 91 County Health Depart
ment 814 992 8828

Want to buy Used furnttu,. 1nd
enttquea Will buy entire houl8
hold furnishing Marlin Wert.

BuYing d11ly gold 1 tver co ns
rings jewelry aerllng ware old
coins large cu..,.cv Top prl
c• Ed lurkttt Barber Shop

lit ..
olli ......
&amp; Sli4tl • - to IDIJ VltS

w.,.t.s

814-•• 6-3169

PM

11 2 lllfc

Townohlp of Rutland

304-77~5788

614-4•&amp; 3872

p&lt;

BINGO

ooln

9805 for current Fed. .t lilt

AOMINISTRATIVE

TOP CASH paid lor 8 3 model

Open 10 AM to 4 P M
Call (614) 992 7204
Whoi11olt &amp; lotad
5 19 88 I mo

INSURANCE CLERK Pot1hon
requres 45 wpm acrurately
goodverbel &amp; writUln communi
cation tldlls working knowledge
of medical terminologv. Sue
cessful cendidltemuttbe highly
org~niZed
Computer and / or
word process ng stcillt helpful
Aeapontibilill81 Include follow
mg up on patient bUIIngs
compU18f 1nput tQ hesp petient
IC:COUn11 up-to-dlle MtWMing
corrnpondence rtl.ting to pe
t1entacc:ounts Temporary pw1
time posit10 n Hour~ •• 8 to
4 30 P M every Mon&lt;t.v Tue1
day WednMdtY • Frida¥' Send
resu!TW to SEOEMS Rt 4 Box
144 Gill polis Oh 45831 by
June 13th

3151t e11t 14 Summer qUirtlr
begins July 5th

A ck Pe•son Aue110neer licen .. d Ohio and W•t Virgin a
Estate ant que f•m liquid•

Mon thru Fr or by
Appo ntment

BOfedl Broke! And Bluet Sell
Ctlr ltrNI Around the World
decorat ons untl Dec Fun JObl
Party l)l~n Free t300 k t No
collect on or delivery! Now
hlrang Supenya1011 in Traln1ng
and Demonrt,.tort. Call Betty
Cupenter 814 Z45 15383
Todl\'1

We pay cnhfoU,ate model clean
used cars
J m M nk Chev Olds Inc
Bit GeneJohnson

Goft Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items Clowns
Act ton Toys Mustcal
Toys &amp; Trtnkel Boxes

o - n . - 1o11o oteooo
t59 230 yr Now hiring Yaur
Wll 805-8871000 EJCt
R

GOVERNMENT JOBS

nists In our machln1 tMes
program Ne •IV 1YWY product
of IndustrY from cornltllcll 10
turbines • m1d1 eft tw uting
machlnt tootl or "*ng machIn•
mMiewfthmechlntltooh fntt.
mach~ne tr11d• P'ogrlm you wll
leM'n how to ull-' vwloustyptt of
machmery such a• lathe drill
pr•s. mill ng machine gr1ncflng
machine and punch pffts W•
h.,. a variety o1 fundingsaurc11
IYIIIabte for elio'tlle IPpilc:Mtt
Call tMAduH Education Center

ANN'S

446 7390

..

htter

LOST Brown Duffle bag with 4
VCR tep es Ia college pipers On
776 Coil 810 379 2250

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIAllY
On May 18 1988 the the
M01111 County Probote Court.
caao No 26899 Dolo M
Kautz 35537 Route 7 North.
Pomeroy Oh10 46769 appoint til EIIIICulor of the •

dottara ($60 000 001 Sa1d 151 24 31 181 7 3tc

Call

Racme Oh o 45771

Pubhc Nottce

Probata Judge
Lena K Nenelroad Clerk

Chow

Whne mother cat Of' white krtten
304-17! 7422

16)17 24 31 16)7 4t

Robert E Buck

:12

Kittens 6 mal• 3 females
Cute and cuddly Call 814 8435328

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4 16 86 tfn

5 cute pupp • to good home t:
Bloodhound

742-2315
52 I mo

992 6983

814-992 7107

v.w.

Parcet1 0

thence wMt 46 rods and 7

BOGGS

Male pup 4 mos old Mothef
Benj type med um • ze Cell

PAT HILL FORD

The follow1ng described
reel eatete 11tueted 1n the

of 36 acrn deeded by Jobaa
Hubbett to Chortaa Logan

One Rtgf'lt month old kitten p11r1
S enu11e Call614-446 7100

Free ldorabht kittens Call 614-

State Rou1e 124 is the
southern boundary of this
real estate n Sect on 26
Townah p Road 181 runs
through a portion of reel
estate 1n Section 26 end in
Fractions 32 and 33 The
Consolidated R1 I Corpora tate of Ina E Kautz deceM ad
t1on also hal a track which t•e of 36637 Route 7 North.
Moigo County
ru na acroaa the southern Pomeroy
port1on of rnl •tate located OhiO

tn Section 28

GIVeaway

Far111 Equlpmenl

Me gs

72 page 297 of the Lease

4

Old color RCA TV Good p1e1ure
tube Mlhoganv cabinet Call
814-448 I 469

II

County Deed Records Per
eel No 18 and Volume 298
Page 193 Me1gs County
Dead Records
Subject to an oil and gas
lease recorded n Volume

Announcements

Authomod John Deere
New Hollond Bush Hog
Form Equ1pment
Dealer

cat No 16

PurchMe end beg1nning at
the nonheut corner of a lot

'il\ I I

We can repau and re
core radtators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d boll and rod
out rad1ators We also
repa11 Gas Tanks

County Deed Recorda Par

SectiOn 27 Town 8 Range
14 of tho Ohio Compony 1

mo

RADIATOR

Melgo

County of Meiga and State
.gf Oh1o end 10 Fract1on 32

METAL BU LD NGS
HOUS NG &amp; APT PROJECTS

PARTS

Inks thence south 54 rods
and 11 I nks to a stake
thence south 49 11.r. degrees
west 14 rods and 19 links to
a stake thence south 19 V2
degrees west 5 rods and 2
lmks to a stake where a
hickory tree 8 nches 1n
d1ameter bears south 23 !12
degrees east 20 hnks
thence east 58 rods and 4 z
links thence north 58 ods
and 6 hnks to the place of
beg nn ng contatnmg 20
acres more or len
Reference Deed Volume

Page 689

CUSTOM K TCHENS &amp; BATHS
•EXTENS VE REMODEL NG
•V NVL S 0 NG &amp; ROOF NG

:;:

Pubhc Notice

279

6288lmo

992-7583

16141 992 77$4
I ?8

SSD PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
OPEN 8 30 6 00 PM

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

RESIDENCE PHON!

J .10-17 tin

b•br,titter In my
home Mon Tun Wed • Fn 1n
Rio Gf'IWide vanity Pl .... lend
retume !a references to Box Cl•
151 c/o Gallipolis O.aty Tr e..
une 825 Thifd Aw Gtthpolis

GEARY
BODY SHOP

~
;;:

168 North Second
Middleport Oh•o 4S7b0

16141 992 6SSO

RMpon~~bla

PH 742-2463

992 7611 or

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Btlls Here
.,':'r .- IUS!NEll PHONE

526-2830

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Middleport Ohto
1131fc

985 3350

Harald OIIPitCh N8WIJ)Ipar
needs cerrl.. for 2 routet
Crown Chy erea and a.lllpolil
to Rio Grande erea Must have
good transportation end be
bondlble. Call Jean MIter 304-

Telephont1 S•l• P•soo ~ntH
Call 614-.46-2087

992 2196

We Ca v F sh ng Supp es

Homel te

Pubhc Not1ce
iC ontmued from Page 6)

$1495
Brakes Muffler Atr

mo

Ohio 46831

DUSO 51 SYUCUSE

52

W1th 4 Qh 01l

FEATURING
Rtvtera
Cabinets
Rollyson Vmyl
Replacement
Wmdows
Peachtree Doors
andWmdows

FOR MORE INFORMATION
742 2455
RUTLAND OHIO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Jacobsen

•l ghtwe~ght
•T tte /C ut vat or
•Easy to Operate

LUBE-OIL-FILTER

&amp;:holng Me ldowa All dentll
t.ntar AthenL Oh o has lm~
diat• op., ngt fo fullt me a.
part tim• AN 'S S. LPNS For
further ~nforrn.t1on a. ~ppllce­
tians cell 814-593-8074

L.----------:------,;;;,;;.;.;..;.;;;;;;-'1

•Makes Garden &amp; Vard
Care a Snap

5 26 88 1 mo

25 1 mo pd

Now hiring drtven Mak • up to
14 1 hour plut mila.ge &amp; tips
Appl'-';' now Oom no·• Piz•

Custom Building
Products W MAIN, RUTLAND, OH

MANTIS
Prec1s1on
Gardenmg
System

Cars
AlBANY AREA

Call 814-318-8327

I H IHgle Owner
Rt 1 Bo• 74 A Rtply W Yo 25271

Most Wells Dnlled In One Day
Atr and Mud Rotary Dnlhng
We Also Install &amp; Serv1ce All Types
Water Pumps

_,_
-- ---·-

Roger Hysell
Garage

Need someon• to • • down old
hou• (In VInton) for tht lurrbef

Call Collect (3041 372-4331

·--~~~~ --

;;: :e,o-

m-

B&amp;C DRILLING CO.

1-'1...

Business Services

of Ohio and bounded and
I

Help Wanted

Mdlfoport Doy ohlft

._._ ....

RATES

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3 II tin

FOR PAPER
CARRIERS FOR
DAILY SENTINEL.
ROUTES OPEN FOR
3RD, 4TH, 5TH,
6TH STREETS IN
MIDDLEPORT.

11

Help n•ded in prMite hom.
&lt;:are for elclerty Z09 S 4th.

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

CASH

Pubhc Nottce

279

Business Services

Now Homos Built
Free Est•mates

thence west 21 and 9/16

thMice South 4 rods ond 19
the Arthur Stout form It Iinke along llid road 1h•nca
Rutland Townehlp County EMt 82 rods thence North
of Moigo State of OhiO
109 rodl ond 19 tlnb to tho
thence aaat llong the public place of beginning contllin
highways 20 111d 9118 ing 31 V:t acr• more or I••
rods then.. beM'Ing woot
Reforon .. Deed Volume
of north 1 II and !\ tocll
278 Pogo 189 Moigo
thence - • 11 rocll to the County Deed Records Por
W•t gn• ol the olid Arthur cal No &amp;
Stout form thence follow
Porcal 3
lng ••'d line South 111 rods to
Atao. tho fottow1ng real
tho Southwaat corner of the eatate 1ituate1n Fraction 32
pteco of beginning comllin
utd Rutland Townohlp
lng 1"' acr11 - • or loll
County of Mo•gs and Stole
Allo tho following rNI of Ohio to wit
ntate Being In Section No
Beginning ottho Southw
211 Town II R.,ge 14 and nt cor- of Fraction 32
beginning 11 the louthwHt thenoe North liang the W..t
cornerohlotownodbyJ 0
Uno of FriCtion 32 eighty
Miller and the Nit line of rodo thence aoat 10 rocll

Does He give a second thought
Tht&gt; way my life wUI go
Or does He think I II figure out
The an.swers I should know

-

Pomeroy

SALEM CENTER ELEMEN
TARY HONOR ROLL

The fifth six weeks grading

The follow ng real estate
Situated rn the Cou ntv of

House

period honor roll at the Rutland
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 Kristen Brown
Robby Diddle Andy DQg:l Ben
Fowler Kelly Gilkey Amanda
Hays Chaslty Hess Matthew
Justice Waylon McKinney Aly
son Patterson Macle Pierce
Tanya Powell Brandy Stanley
Heidi Stewart Clayton Tromm
Clark VanMatre Kasey Willi
ams Jason Young
Second Grade David Ba nks
Carley Chasteen Tony Dugan
Brandle Elliott EmilY Fowler
Brandee Gilmore Nathan Half
hill Billie Jo Hysell Stephen
Hysell Jill Lemley Danlelle
Peckham
Tabitha Powell
Charla Roach Jonathon Rtfe
Lisa Snodgrass Jon Stewart
Missy Titus Melissa Wtlllams
Sandra Young
Third Grade Chad Bartrum
Jessica Counts Brooke Oatley
Elizabeth Ellis Shaun Fife
Frank Herald Angel Kelly Ml
chelle Miller Amanda Musser
Arlc Patterson Ashley Roach
Beverly Stewart
Jamie
Williamson
Foul th Grade Phyllis Clark
Jeremy Coleman
Timmy
Priddy Lon Fl'ussell Ctndl Ste
wart Candice Walker Roxane
Williams
Fifth Grade NICole Bell Tra
vis Grate Royden Hawkms
Cynthia Roush Carne Wtlllams
Bridget Davis
Stxth Grade Lorn Burnem
Amte Elliott Rachel Hysell
Missy Jeffers Jason Miller
DH Jenny Garey
LD Keith Arlx Joev Kemmer
Zeb Thoba ben

RUTLAND ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL

for 1ale It 10 00 A M on
Fr~day the 24th day of June

Oh•o tho fottowlng deo
crlbed real aatoto
Percei1

Or does: He turn His back on me
And look the other way"

The fifth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Pomeroy
Elementary School has been
announced Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roil were
First Grade Recheil David
son Holly DeLong Ricky Hysell
Dwight Icenhower Ben Molden
Chandra Moon Jennifer Morris
Hope Neace Stefani Pickens
Helen Rice Cortney Scarberry
Bonnie J Smith Brandy Snider
Nikki Stanley Joshua Whitley
Melissa Darnell Carrie Bran
ham John Michael Davidson
Jessica Hamllton Jennifer
Heck Michael Krautter Jessica
Laudermllt Jessica Matson Ra
chel Reeves
Second Grade David Ander
son Lauren Anderson Sara
Craig Clay Crow Wendt Da
nlels Hetdl DeLong Amy Hayes
Steven McCullough Christina
Neece Wendy Shrlmplm Chm
Stobart Jared Warner Jessica
Wright Jennifer Yeauger Ml
chelle Ramsburg Wayne Barn
hart Michael Brown Danlelle
Grueser Erin Haggerty Ron
Hirth Canance Miller Amy See
Sheila Nease Anna fhompson
Roy Powell
Third Grade Tara Grueser
Joe Hill Julie King Shawn Kmg
Erin Krawsczyn Jessica McEl
roy Josh Phalln Stacie Reed
Krista Sargent Nate Sisson
Stacey Price Taryn Doidge
Whitney Haptonstall Joshua
Harris Chadwick Molden Kim
berly Petrie Jodie Stsson Adam
Smith
Fourth Grade
LaDeanna
Grover
Su1.anna Henderson
Jeremy Honaker Monty Hunter
Jessica Stobart Lee Wlldams
Travis Abbott Megan Clark
Corey Darst Israel Gnmm Bert
Mash Palma Wiles
;Fifth Grade Reggie Pratt
Jason Taylor Adam Krawsczyn
Julie Young Sarah Anderson
Travis Drenner Tara Erwin
Jeff Darnell Lisa Yeauger
Jl;'red Hill Kelly Grueser Adam
Sheets Michelle Ward Benny
Ewing
Sixth Grade
Tracv Fife
Jeremy Grimm Tony Roush
Mandy Slaven Beck! Hoffman
Brad Anderson Damelle Crow
Sandy Morris Cassie Nease
Stephanie See Jack Stanley Jeff
Tracy
Erin Warner
Ellen
Watson
D H I Adam Barton
D H II Scott Autherson Carl
Carmlchal Eulonda Rumlleld
Michael Reltmlre

County Deed Records Par
cet No 4 except 3 '12 acres

Court

\

POMEROY ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL

Case Num bor 87 CV 328
NOTICE OF SALE
As Sheriff of Mo go
County Oh o 1 hereby offer
1988 A D on the front
stepo of the Melgo County

YES HE HEARS

Smith
Second Grade Melissa Cop
pick
Ginger Darst Patrick
Gerard James Hudson Collin
Roush Scotde Sellers Matt
Williams Michael Wyatt Dusty
Andrew Rachel Asllley Jason
Childress
Brad Davenport
Brandon Smith Mariana Staats
Tory Swartz Nancy Whaley
Third Grade Ryan Bareswilt
Paul Epperson Anna Fink Na
than Goodwin Michael Parker
Darrick St Clair Stephanie
Stewart Christi Williams Ryan
Baker Amy Clonch John Kelly
Libby King Brandl Meadows
Fourth Grade
Jill Burch
Chris Chapman Alison Gerlach
Brent Hanson Laura Penhor
wood Paul Pullins Kenda Rey
nolds Erin Smith Butch Brad
shaw Michael Little Nicky
Mills Tanya Phalln

Your ar•

80&amp;-117

p . . / Cream• • Suo•e.
Good Hlection

1000 •t II 1011tforcur- thing. etc
l'od ... tlot

TourOuiM Male
top people ....
I * wHk.
oondttloM A r~ fun piiiCa
wo"- Frienclv .... • . . . . . .
ble are tha '*IUhwnftl Call
t 814-218 1421 Ilk tor Suo

Clo-

,....,.t

. . . . .d-

AIRCIIAFT MAINIINANOE

Lewn ,.,..,. ~nd metnt.nanoe of
rap ond jololoGrolt- -of.

r.

"Pomeroy

Middleport

&amp;

Vtcintty

Sol ... llo ~onoCI_.._

5 fomty ,.rd11lo. tttlthSt &amp;
131 Lewis St New Hw.n June
7 llh Antiques Home Interior
Tupperwere dlthel •II sin
clo-g. tumlt..,. 1-rv
Y•d

s ... Thus •

frid-v

Eoot rlirviM Aoed Camp Coni.,
No Sooond It- , _ 0 J&lt;lno bib¥
ctothlnItems hou• hold m.ec ..d
.:perienwnllldld.MVI1behlah
3
I
to
m
4tt
111
Unclstm•
dtv
j
-::-:-:':~-:-:-:----­
odlool pod Colt I AM.Z PM.
st-int - - .,d Vflllf SAio. Wtd Juno I lOt
Mon~ Thundlll' 1 1100-211
t-a
flrot St Apt A
1314

�--"""'""---Page- S- The Daily Sentinel
31

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

H o m es for Sa le

51

LAFF-A-DAY

SmaU houtll, Gallipolis·

One
bedroom plus Nu rPfV, n8'N
w indows &amp; vinyl tidin g. new gas
furMce &amp; centra l air cond. Smal
lot Located 8 9 Mill Creek OrNe.
All for S21 . 900. Drive by then
call 6 t 4- 44&amp;-7037 to •e.

VIRA in CM te n ary now has a
co mplete · line of new &amp; used

2 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
garage. lave! lot on At . 33.
Swimm ing pooL 1111teHte. close
to Meigs High. Ca ll 6 14- 9 923254.

sp~ciou1

h hardw
ca binets,kitchen
famiwit
ly room
wood
ith
woodburning fireplace. lots of
closet spBc·e. 'w rap around deck.
carpo rt. co ncrf!lte driveway.
baument , beau tifully landscapad, a real ste al at 137,500.
Owner will co nsi der &amp;and co il'
tract to qualifled buyerait otak e
other pr opert y as pan ial tred e.
Call 6 14-992·5053.

............. ~'' '''*"'"'

"How would you like all your
hair back?."
for Rent

for Rent

Furnis hed or unfumis hed 2 BR .,
cabl e. water-18Wage paid, AC.
Foster' s Mobile Hom e Parle·
6 1 4-446.. 1602.

Go vernment Homes from S 1. (u
repair) . O.l inquent
pr_o perty .
Repossession a. Call 805-6876000 E.-t. G H-9805 for c urrent
repo li at.

Furnished 28R . mobilehomefor
rent. Adv Its only . No pet s.
Nature! gas heat'. Call 614-387·
7438.

4 bedroom ho ul8 1'h bath,
be&amp;Jtifu I lig ht oek woodwork. in
Middleport. Good neighborho od. Ckli ck possession. 614992-5714.

miles out At. 5B8. Private lot.
Call 614-446-4607 "' 4452502.

•'l

2 OR .. un1urnisned, all elec. 2

Mobile Homes for Rent. Call
614-446-0527.

For •le: rental property , 3 unit a,
all presenttv nmt•d. Call 614949·2BOO o' 614-949-222B.

Mobile Homes for Ran t. Call
614-446-050B.

GOVERNMENT HOMES h-om
$ 1.00 (U repair) f oreclosures.
repos, •• dallnquent properties.
No"' sell ing most areas call
1-316-736· 7375 axt 2P WV H.
ior current lat. 24 hi's.

2 BR . Mobile j'!om e on Bob

McCormick Rd. Call 614-4469669.

2 bedroom mobile home in
Synu::u • · $150. per month plus
utilities . deposit . 61 4 -992·
5 732 after 5:00pm.

3 bedrooms. all electric. cental
air. half 'ere lot. Gallipolis Ferrv.
low 40' s, 304-675-2932 after
4 :00pm,

12x80 furnished. air, wired for
'NII&amp;hof-dryer, carpeted. S225.
plus ~ecurttv depollft and ref8fance. 2 bedroom furnished,
t 160. plus deposit. Small aff._
cien cy apartment. available
soon. All Syracuse ~trea. Call
614-992-7680 "' 614-992,
8 236 after 5:00.

32; Mobile Homes
for Sale
1979 14x70 mobil&amp; ~me . Call
614-245- 5851 af11tr 5:30PM.

3 bftdroommobila hom11 for rent.
1% bath, nica. Nice nllighbor·
hood in Middleport. 614-992·

12lc83. 2 BR . mobile home in
goQd cond. Call 614-445· 7603.

5858.

I

l2d0 all ehtetric, 2 bedroom
mobile home. 1 1/t mllee out
Millstone Road, t2150.00 month
plus d41J)osit, exc cond, 304576-2233"' 578-2483.

19 71 Schultz. 1 b65 trailer. 2
BR .• Good cond. Parttv f\Jrnis hed. 85500. Call 614-446-

29B1. !.om 10 AM-9 PM.

1983 Shuttz. t 4x70, 26x30
acre~ . c entntl air,
fireplace. front porch, b·ack
dllck. 614-742-2997.
g .-age. 1.8

1970 Skylin e. 12x80, 3 bedrooms, air conditioner. Good
co ncfttion. Call 614--949-3090
"' 614-247-3644.

2 mobile home lo1t and 2
bedroom g . .ge apt ior •le ()II
rent. each lo1 I 86.00 month,
g•agaapt &amp;200.00 month . Will
sail 824.000.00. Near the Yout
on Rt. 2. c all 304-875-3002
between 9:00 am· 7 :00 pm.
Mon-S at .

1973 Champion. 14x70, total

electric. under!*lning and hook
up, 304-578-2383.

1982 Knox 12x70. 3 bedrooms.
all electric. mo11ty furnished
g ood cond. 17,000.00. 304773-9508.

1974 Freedom 3 bedroom m~
bl111 home, all electric. S3.500.
firm . LocMed GallipoUs Ferry.
304-BB2·26B8.
1987 Oakwood mobile home
lndudingTrane heat pump, king
siz• water bed and dinette set.
Located on lo1at Frazi•• Lana in
Lesage. WV11 In ple. .nt. quiec
neighborhood. About 10 minut1111 from Galllpolt. lDdc.s and
011m ior completll information
c ell Huntrington 30~ 782-2727
Of Poin1 Pleasant 304-6752044.

Used 12x60, 'IOtal electric, Jack
. andJUI 3 bedroom mobile horne,
price 8 5,000.00 firm . lnctudes
d elivery, Also, h1111e other used
mobile hornet for sale. C.ll
304-676-3002 bet,..en 9:00
am and 7 :00pm Mon-Sat .

1970 Windsor, 1 b65 with
10 • 1 2 add on, woodburnlfM',
was hill' 11nd dryer, air cond, must

44

5119

614-992·5724 alto• 6:00 or
992-5119.
Be•ch St,, Mlddlepon. 2 beef.

room furni1hed IIMrtmant. Utlllti• paid, rehrence required.
304-882-2566.

&amp;

40 aCT et· 2 mobile homes.
Raccoon Rd. 1000 ft. fr ontage.
$38. 000, negotiable. Call 30452 2-7279.

54 acres. 1 200 1quare ft. mobil e
homtl, pond, 1rll8 gas. 038,000.
Pomeroy aren. 614· 992-5365
betwe11n 6 :00-10 :00 pm .
Ashton. lerge building lots.
mobile homes perm itted, public
vwt ttr. also river lots, Ctvde
Bowen, Jr. 304-578·2336.

9acree very priwte, good hou•
sites, nelf county wat11r. 200
.P• off black top rOad. evenings
30 4-576-2349.
Tw o building lot i with Co unty
wat er, o n J11rry's Run Road at
Ap ple Grewe. W. Va. 304-576-

2 bedroom apartment for rent. 2
bedrooms. 2 bat !'\a, on Third St ..
Middleport. No pets. •126. plus
doposil . Call 514-992-2679.

2 bed&gt;oom, furnl1hed. Utilltl111

paid. $250. per month. 307
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy. Call

614-992-2645.

BaaJtiful rive r lots one acre plus.
public water. Clyde Bowen, Jr.
304-576- 2336.

L.OTS. one acre, ltNel wooded.
city wa11H', Jericho Ro1d, owneJ
financing, good termt. 30 4372-8406 o• 372-2676.

Homes for Rent

Nlc.ty turni1hed small houM.
Adutta onto;'. Ref. required. No
pot•. C.ll 114-446-033B.

Rou• 2 good loceUon must 1M
to epp,.ciate , t38,500 .00.
304-576-2411.
Hou• In country Llrlllrt, W. Va.
304-B82-2018.

42

2566.

2 bedroom furnished apt New
Haven, reference end teCllrlty
deposit req.ulred , 304-882·

3267 or 304-773·5024.
Upstairs unfurnished apt. Car·
peted. utilities p~id No children.
No petl. Call 114-446-1837.
Downtown-Modern 1 BR .. complete kitchen. AC. carpet. Cell
514-446-0139.
11 Court St.-2 BR ., 2 b1ths,
klitchen furnished, w / w c•pet.
No pets. Off •t...t parking.
S 325 a mo. plu1 utllittes. O.p. S..
nof . Call 614-448-4926.
bl!lfh, w / d , air. Clean. No pet l .

Adults onty. Call 814· 448·
1519.
Nice 1 8R . ept . Ranr 6 refrig.
fuml1hed. Water
garbage
paid. Oopoolt requited. Call
114-446-4345 ofter 5 PM.
Furnished efficiency apt. C.pet
throughout. PrMn• &amp; qullrl.
Single working person only. C.ll
814-446-4&amp;q7"' 446-2102.

Rentals
41

2 room fu rnlthed apt, pri1111t11
bath. utllttiet paid. 117 N . 4th
A\18 . Middleport. 1-304-882·

Garage apart,..nt -3 room• &amp;

2 383.

2 bedroom mobile home Mid&lt;tl•
port. Ohio. •1erence 11nd lieu rMv dopooll roqu ltod. 304-BB2·
32&amp;7"' J04-nJ.5024.
R.,t Of' Sllle 2 and 3 bedroom
turnUwed mobile homn phone
304-575-3900 or 575-5512.

-

Furnilhed apartment·4 room1 S.
bllh. 1 or 2 aclJtts. No pets. S. c.
dep, 6 ret'. required. Call 614445-0444.

Furnish" uPttlirl 3 room IPt.
Ulllilloo pilei. 84 loCllll. t210
1'0' month. 0 711 dfll. Cell
814-446-1340 Of 446-3870.

F.nnlohed officloncv. 701 4t~.
Gollipolio. •175. UtMilloo pold.
C.ll 448-441 hit or 7 PM.
Ed,. nice, 2 HR. E~eelent
locetlon. Aef. 6 •~· dep . Call

114-441-1260.

Mobile Hom1111
for Rent

Brookside Apartments: Lo cat11d
oH8ulaviHeRd.- 18R . spac ious
apartm11nts with modern kitchen
and wuher-dryer ho~ups , cabl a telavision available. Call
614-448-2127.
1 bedroom furnished effeciency
apt . 1 ups•irt apt. whh 2

bedrooms. Kitctutn furnished. E.
Main, Pomeroy . 614-992-6215
"'614·992-3523.

45

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-9, 9 Second
Aw ., Gallipolis. 8126 a mo.
Utilities psid. Single male. Sh•e
bath. C.ll448·4416after 7 PM.
Rooms ior rent-weak or month.
Starting at $120 a mo. Galli a
Hotel- 61 4-446-9580.

46

Space for Rent

Store corner of S11oond &amp; Pine.
1400 sq. h . Off street parking.
• 350 a mo: plus uUities. Cell
614-446-2325. 448·4249.
large commercial building on
At. 7 clo• to Rt . 36. Large
psrking area. Call 614-2455024.

COUNTRY M081LE Home P•lc.
RouWJ 33. North of Pomeroy.
Ren•l ...n . .. C.ll 614-9927479.

Gtaclout living. 1 end 2 bedroom •nmenu It Vlllege
Menor and Rhtertlde
menu in Middleport. From
$182. Coli 514-992 -7787.
EOH.

.-.,1ft.

2 b•dfoom Apts. for rent.
C w -, Nico •nlng. L.. "'"
tocllilloo ...lllblo. Coli &amp;14992-3711 . EOH.

,.... _ .

~

_ _ ....

~

-...-t'- ..

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiqufts ,
1 1 24 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours : M,T,W 10a.m . to &amp;p.m ..
Sunday 1 t o &amp;p.m. 6,4-9922526.

54

51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION S.. FURNITURE 6 2
011\18 St., Gallipolis .
NEW- 6 pc. wood groupo 1399.
Ljving room suit... 8199-$699,
Bunk beds with bedding· 1199.
Full site mattrea a. foundation
s tarting · $99 . Re c lln11rs
atarting- 199.
USED- Bedt. dressers. bedroom
suites. $199-t299 . Duks.
wringer weshel'. 1 campiet11line
of used furnfture.
NEW- Western boots- $30.
Workboott e1s a. up. (Steel &amp;
•oft toe). Call614-448-3159.

County ApoKanco. Inc. Good
u~ed appliances and TV sets,
ap.., BAM to 6PM. Mon """
Sot. 814-446-1899, 827 3•d.
•
G
~ve . ollipollo. OH.
GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

Wuhers. dry•a. refrlgeqtOf•.

range1 . Skaggs Applian cet,
Upper River Ad. beside Storw~
C'"t Motel. 614-445-739B.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
styles. lams Pet Food Deal•.
JuUo Wobb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

Wheelchairs-new or used. 3
wheeled al&amp;etric 8COotera . Call
Rogers Mobilty collect. 1· 614B70-9661 .

Dragonwynd Cattery · Ken,.. .
CFA HimaiiiVan. Persian and
Siamaaa ktttens . AKC Chow
puppies. New Himal-van !cit·
ten s. Cali 614-446-3844 aft11r
7PM.

Fish--Pond Stocking!
Catfl1h, Hybrid Bluegill, Bass.
Cr1pp.._ Minnows 8. Triploid
Gra11 Carp. Del ; Tues., June 14
at Southern Statea Co-op in P1.
Pleasant from 12-1 PM. Call
304-175-2780 to order or 1 ·
B00-84J.B4391

Full-Blooded Chow-Chow puppies. Call 1-304-676-2174after
6 PM.

9 ft. Spun A'luminum dish, 65
d11gree LNA. Uniden 6000 receiver with actuator. remote
control!. $660. Firr'n. Call 614-

Cavalieri CaUery-Himatayan .
Persian kittens . CFA . Vet
c h11ckad. Healthy ch•mpion
lint'l!l . 125Q &amp; up. Call 614·24159376or 446·2971 .

New K6000 Onan generator.
Bargain price. Will furnish spec.
S.. price on request. Call 614256-6513.

ADBA Reg . Pit Bull pups. $50.
Call 614-448-83114.

448- 743~ .

COckec' Spaniel puppiu; tim•
Iavan ktttens; all Registered.
Shots ttarted and wormed. No
checko. Call 814-992-2807.

8 HP Troybih tiller, len than 8
nrs. running, 11000. Firm. Call
814-3BB-B745 .

8a1Jv Ferretti, 304-676-4103.

Whirlpool washer It dryer. $150,
ncreatiorwl vehicle. Kawasaki.
portable 2800wlltt power plant,
1975 GMC ll.lmp truck-12ft.
botU6000 / 0BO. 1975 Tovota
Dickup., auto. C.ll 814-4487019.

57

Musical
Instruments

Sofn and chairs priced ffOrn
$395 to 1995. Tabl• •so and
up to •12&amp;. Hid•• ·bed• 0390
to 1!5915. A11clinert t225 to

1375. Lllmpt $28 to t125 .
Dinettes 8109andupto 1496.
Wood tlble' w ·&amp;chairs t285 to
1795. DMk •100 up to 13715,
Hutch81
f400 and
up. Bunk
!Mdt
complete
w -m11tre11es
U95and up to 1395. Bebybeda
1110. Motttooooo O&lt;bo• IP•Ing•
lui or twin oes. flrm 07B. lind
t88. Ckl"n .-ta •225, King
1350. 4 dr8Werchan •ea. Gun
cobin0118gun. llobi'm111101,..
135 11o U5. Sod !nom• uo.
130 llo King fnmo OliO. Good
sel.::tion of bedroom suttes,
meflll c.blnm. h•ildbo•d• 130
end up to f85.
............
90 Days MMII as C81h with
approved credh. 3 Mil• out
BuiiYIIIo Rd. Opon 9om to 5pm
Mon. I~'" Sit. P~. 114-4450322.

58

24 ft . aU aluminum round pool
with all ace. Set of t&gt;Mn beds.
860. Coli 814·246-5243.

For

II&lt;

Fruit
Vegetables

•le. 5TRAWBERR1ES. Free

bo~tes

for pldting. TAYLOR'S
BERRY PATCH . Kerr Rd . Mon1hru Saturday, 8AM-8PM.
Coli 614-448-8692 01' 814246·5178.

Strawbl!rri81 . Doug Roush . 2
miiM back of New Haven.
Vou · piclc. W'I·Pick . Starting MeV
31 . Coii304·8B2-2237.

Looking for old paving bricks, in
good condition. Call 614-949·
2093. evenlnga only, if you have
any to give •way.

Strewberriea· Pick your own.
Call Claude Winters , Rio
Grande, Ohio . 614-245-5121 .
Jam berri", phone orden. you
pick we pick, Doug Roush. 2
mil• out New Haven took tor
signs. 304-882·2237.

Fir8W'ood. lfab, cut . 110. pickup
load. 614-992· 3847.
Clim11trol bl!droom air conditlonllf. Usftd 3 montlu . Like new.
11 30. 61 4·985-4395.
SO per cent discount! Fle1hing
arrow signa S2991 lighted.
non -arrow $2891 Unlighted
12491 See locllly, (Banners.
""wo'k oigna. ove•nno dolfti"'VII
1(BOOI423-018:llnytime.

61

Mele Ferrett $36.00. One commode choi• 055.00. '74 C~OIIV
Nove, •~••o63&amp;o . oo . 304-8752 6 37.

Farm Equipment

CROSS 1o SONS
u·s 35 w
J 11 ck
Oh
.
.
lOri,
lo.
814-286-8451 :
Massey Ferguton. New Holland,
Bush Hog s .. ea&amp; Service. ov.,
40 UMd hectors to choose from
&amp; complete line of news. ul8d
equipment. L•gast lltectlon In
S E Ohl 0

..t.

Buck •tove. medl.-n insert, ellc
cond: 2 ton Lenno:~~~ c entral air
con untt. Moving must !1811, best
reasonable offer. 304-875 7486.
6 ton Whirlpool whole hou1111 air
condh:loner, f 500. or 1rade for
equal value. AmiQue COkll macnine for small bonles 1200.
304-676-9704.

•

Jim' s Farm Equip. Center
At. 36 W.·GalllpoUs. O.·Cell
114-448-97n
Fence pos:t end 11111, cedarpoolod- 7-B ft. long, bwb wl&lt;o,
20 u•d trectors, pkJwa. dlte.
wheel, 3 / pmower'*«::ders, Over
1000 new and u•d . N..v
arrMI· 600 New Delu• toolt,
tr. llllltt.

Ferguson tractor w / bellv
mo....,..r, $24150. NH Dyna

Bounce mowinq machine,
$795. 5 ft. buo~· hog, 1250.
Cattt. stock
1100. Call
614-286-6&amp;22.

•ck•,

6 ft . ro•rv dlak mo¥118f. 3 pt.
hnch, 11800. C.ll 814-3BB8270.

1983 Mortz12 ft. StockT111iler.
Excellentcondttlon. t1600. Cell
814-992-59B3.
Whitlt 't Tractort. 21 to 180 HP.
abloluw deal. . cost pfual!li per
cent. Compare our prl011 before
you buy, Sfdet'1 Equfpnwnt,
Hendlrson, W. Va. 30-4-875-

1421 .

ea..

1973
5808 backhoe,
endoed8lt, wet~abo\11 average
condition. 24 .. &amp; 31' bucketa.
010.000. 304-46B·1542.

63

LivllStock

1-- -- - - - - - Aegit:tllr.d Tennes ... Wilking
Horl81. SUIIIon, 12
••v
keeper and exceU.n trtil horse,

ye••·

2 brood mares, 9 and 11 ye.-s.
13,000 for all, \NIII accept
p~yments ov• time to right
ho,... Cln •e othprlng. Call
114-854-5126.
FISH- - POND STDC Kl NGI
Cetflsh, Hybrid Bluegill. Bill.
Cropplo. Mlnnowo. llo Triploid
GrlltCirp. Oei.: Tuea .. June14
at Southern StitH Co-op In Pt.
PI_,! from 1 2-1 PM. Coli
175-2780 to ordof o• 1-80().
843-B4391
Pull•• for •I e. 3 moa. to 8 mo1.
old. Pu,. lwod. EJCC. cond. C.ll

Hay

&amp;

Grain

For Sale: Hay to be cut. Call
614-379-24&amp;6.
Hay in field for •I• 81 .10 per
bale. Call

61.-.742-2476 or

814-742-3086.
Good cl..,.. hay , 81 .26 on
wogon, 304-175-5879.

Transport ill lOll
71

Auto's For Sale

1983 Trans AM. blk. w / gold
trim. chllrCOIIIinterlor-cl..,.llb
n~ . 305 HI·Pwformsnce en.
gine. new rims "Monto C.lo
Styi•Dorado'' , c•..ne ••reo.
elr. 47, 000 mlln. 17.000
negotial&amp;-includ• IHI:Iwr le
bre. 4 htm ,..g trimt. floor
mett. Clll 11-4-245-9572.

7l

Auto's For Sale

Red Hot bargain II Drug dellers'
c.s, bollt, plene~ repo'd . Surplus. Your Area. BuyMs Guide.
11180&amp;-5B7·IOOO e... s -9B05.

1979 Fo•d T-BI•d. N- 24 lncll
bo., 10 opeed. C.ll 814-9863931 ... 814-985-3B39.
1988 Camero. V 8 cyl., 327. 2
door. air, auto. Call 304-8822704.
1970 Corvette. D•k green with
d•k green Interior. 454, auto ..
1978 Corvette. White with red
Interior. Auto.. loaded. 114247·4B51 .
.
1·984 M•a.~rv Lyme . 4 cyl. 4 IP·
4 Oft plus hatchbKk. New
exha~1t, !Jnder 41,000ml. v..,
good condition. $3200 080.
Coli 114-198-1240.

19 81 VW R ebbit. 01-1. red
cloth interior, tun roof, good
tiret . 11300. Call 01 .. 9927348.
1980 Fill herdtop conoArtiebfe
X19. AM· FMradiocatHtte. low
mileege. Exc cond. catl after
5:00,614-446-7672.

'75 Mona body 79 six cyl
engine for Mle or trade. 304875-1998.

BUY GOVERNMENT Seized
VehidM from t100.00. Fordt.
Ch .,.,._ Corvanet. ttc. For Info
ctlll12i31925-9908txt 2508.

0
'76 Custar 60,000 mllet,
wrecked, engine, tranmlaalon
••collent, 304-895-3100.
1978 Ford tru:::k Carrier 304875-5B21 .

1982 Ch-. 2 doO&lt;. otlck.
good oond, 304-175-3540.
1982 Mercury Lynx, 4 cyl, auto
trans. 4 door plua h.tchbeck,
AC. wry good cond, color red,

U.OOO.OO. Anglo CUno 304176-1448.

72

Trucks for Sale

197&amp; Peterbilt 400 Com. Jake.
1973 40ft. Cllv tnillr. 1973
FrUIIh&amp;~f. 23,000 with Job.
1985 5·10, 37.000 nii•-Soll
for l01n \.elue, t4000. Celt
814-388-8748.
19 78 a...,y 11:1 ton pickup.
Exeat c:ood. U395. C.ll I 14388-9735:

1980 VW. Coli 814-446-0749.
1980 Ditton Vllith 1talle bed.
new Rlldi•. 4 cyl., 4 spd.,
42.000mi•. 02700. Cell 114446-4412 ... 245-6647.

8 good uoed IM&gt;k tho. Size
1 h24.5. C.lll14-379·2243.
1979 Ch111y 'hton. ano .• 1978
Ch.vy 1/:lton. -..to., 1979 Chevy
1
/Jton, standrd. 13000 for all
three. Oood contltion. 114949-2801 . No Sundov ••II•.
1980 Nlsl8n Dahun truck with
topper. 5
gr.,. condition.
304-675-5133.

•.-d.

'lfi Ford truck Ranger, 4 cyl, 6
_... 13.000.00. 304-1753073 oftw 8:00.
1984 Ford 1&amp;0 XL PS. PB. air,
tilt, cruile, ruMing bo•dl.
40.000, col1304-882-2293.

eve·,,
-:-:-=------ 1971 Clm•o. Auto. Wlf'll.

'79 Fo•d F210, 4x4, cell Hon,.
v ..Mot•• 304-773-5538.

Spociol1 wook only, 0788. Flr11
como. Coli 814-446-1615 or
114-446-12441111• 8pm.

73
4
1----------

1984Hondo Civic. AC, AM-FMC.••· Goodc:ond. 0111814-24&amp;9109·
- - - -- - - - - 1984 Mercury Lynx SW, std .•
IMreo. nice. 8219.9. John' s
Auto 511•. Rt. 7 below HDIIUy
Inn; Kenatge.

---,----=------1978 Jeep Wl(lo_,, 4 WD .
81495. 0111 after I PM-81-4441-0110.

a

Motors Homes

&amp; Campers

1972 Champion Cless A motor
home. 360 engine. 89,000 mi.,
15,000 DBO. Cllll 614-3BB·
87411.

d

•fl•

•

4

: '2 7

1981 Toyoll Cell~ OT. Low
mR..... E -. oond. Cell 304875-113211fter15 PM.

•

1980 a.b... UliO. llood
Cond. Clood g• mlloogo. Cell
114-446-81108.
1871 Mon• Corio. Y· l . IUtO..
complotlly _._.lod.l••100 IIIII• on mol«, 11100.
1171DodgeColt. 4oyl .. 4epd ..
good v• nil1011o. •1000. Coli
614-448-1112.
Black llogold 1180Mon•C~rlo,
AM -FM , ...o. f23t8. Ctllll14441-0261.

" The cost containment study came In

30 percent over budget?"
(

ichaera
9 Alrwoll Desperate
Monday
12!1 Crook and Cheoe
7:051]) Andy Grifli1h

New long wheel biH cemper

shell. two tone blue. Sliding
front
bubble windows end
rol ou1 window wtth ~~;reent.
Gat cnember door wtth key ,
•128. Fl•m. Coli &amp;14-448·
7g85.

gl••·

FRANK AND ERNEST

UNEM PlOY ME NT

1979 Nomad. 26 ft . Call 814387-01103.

\I

No,

"ans •~
y,
"'

W. D.

1987 Ford 1150 Convertlon Van.
14.000 mil•, loaded, tile,
cru .... power windows• locks,
AM-FM·C.SJ. 3111 -HP •ngine,
._,.. tanks. Fl• Jteele lutMr
lnte•io•. Coli 814-25B·I327,
8-5 Mon.-Fri.

1975 Dodge Spo""""" Roytll
v .... 1895.00 Call 514-7423118. Must •11 to appntelete.

81

Home
Improvements

Jo~

•to.

74

Motorcycles

off!:F? .. excePT

ALLEY OOP

Concrete Septic Tanks • 1000
g,.., 1500gll. and .Jet Aeration
sydem. Factary tr8ina:l ..,_.,
ohop. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jedtoon. Ollio. 1-BQO.
537-9528.

RON EVANS ENtERPRISES·
Septic link pumglng- •go p•
lood. Co111-BOO- 37-962B.

(2:05)

a

Masonry-Brick. block. lfone &amp;
flrep•c•. Fr" tlltlmate. Refer-

""""· C.IIBIIIDennv-614-2561749.
Palndng: Interior &amp; Exterior.
Fnte •tlm~tes. Call 614-446·
B344.
Jim's Odd Jobs
ing. c•pent., wc.k. trail.,. ,..
pair. Free Estlmetes. Call 614379-2416.

RON•s Television Service.
Hou• Cllll on RCA, O....mr,
GE . Specialing in Zenith. Call
304-575-2398 or 114-4482454.

Fetty Tree Trimming, thmp
rom.....,l. Coll304-875-1331 .

THAT OI.N ONLY M~N
ONE THING; ... I'M
IN TROUBLE .

LOOK AT 11-'E ~16:-,
KAP P Y 5-Q.JN ON
Hl5 FACE- .

HERE COMI0'3 '!OLJR
KID BROTHER.

Rotllry or cable tool drilling.
Mo1twellscomPMtedumedav.
Pump S81" •nd service. 304895-3802

Michaal's Residential air condltton and refrig.-atlon. rechar911
and rei'-ir IHvice. leon, W.Va.
304-458-171115.

..

,.,.. ,....

Tr• trimming end ahmp lltmo-

~

val. fr• 1111mate. 304-8757121 .

.'

'

acid rain in the Western

•• N a.IOI • .,.

BARNEY
WHAR'S IH'

DON'T YOU LIKE
YORE BIRFPAY

DADBURN
BANJO?

MUSIC,

\~
)

o

PAW?

CARtER 'S PLUM81,.Q
AND HEATING
COr. Fourth end Pine
GslllpoMI, Ohio
Phone 114-446-3888 or 614446-4477

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wir·
lng. Ntw service or repairs.
Ucensed electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 3041711-1781.

General Hauling

poofa. cls•rnt, VWI!IIt. Ph. 814-

245-9286.

A 6 R WMer Service. Po olt,
cisterns. wells. lmmedilte 1.000 or 2,000gllon•deliwry.
Coli 304-17,5-6370.

1980 150 Suz..,. Good cond.
0800. Calll14-318-1478.

Pa..l Rupe, Jr. W•r Service.
Pools, ci1tern•, wells. Call 614-

tir•.

1870 Hondl 31!0. NoW bOitery,
1.-. Md rune good. 17.000
mH•. noo. c111 114-2474292.
'78 Hondl - · 400 cc,
. .10.00. Phone 304-17517111.

win dthleld . bJ ack· sharp .

1983 Oldl. - . . LX Wllgon.
M.,v optlone. Excol. cond.
U800. Coli 114-446-1830.

'II Hondl 210 Rebll•eoo.oo.
304-1176-2818.

· 1981Mu...,gLX Hllclllteck, 4
opd .. 4 cyl.. ttlr, crulle. AM-FM
ttereo. IIDMr door Ioeila. can
11 ~446-1431 .

1112 Hondtt lntenlllo lloldw·
lng. - · Cl ..d ioto ot
cltr-. Pllono 304-175-8087
1ft0&lt; 5:00PM.

re•tonable rates, immediate
2,000 gallon delivery. cisterns.
poolt, wall, ete. cell 304-6762919.

87

PEANUTS
.'

ALL RIGHT, LUC'(, LET'S LOOK
ALIVE OUT TIIERE! BE READI(!
ATTENTION!CONCENTRATE!

Tf.lAT'S A GOOD QUESTION ..
6

i

..

Upholstery

I

"-'-"~~' f.r:~~'-"""""';A,i

Mowrey' s Upholswlng wvlng
trl coumyarea23w-•a. Thebel1
In furnhunt uDholtWrlng. Call
304 - 878 · 4114 for' free
••tknatel .

'

z-

o

446-3171 .

Wetteuon ' • Wat•r Hauling,

region of the Uni1ec:l Slates.
Does acid rein exist? Whal
are lis causes? What can be
done? !;I
Ill &lt;Ill Benny Httl
1!J Evening Newo
Q!l Crook and Chilo
10:30 ()) Celebrity Chafe Nancy
DussaultfVan Johnson
I]) Major League laubel
(lJ Tony Brown'• Joumel
(fJ Tile Water of Ayole
Examine how a majority of
new water systems In the
Third World are breaking
down wtthln a couple of
years, some of tho
successes, and why.
ID &lt;Ill JefllfWona
IDl Nawo
Q!l VldeoCountry
11:00()) Remington StHit Steele
on Approval
D W Cll D (I) Ol Newe
(lJ Acid Rei-• Explore
the conlroversy surrounding
acid rain in the Wealem
region of lhe United S1atos.
Does ecld rain exist? Wha1
are ils causes? What can be
done? Q
(fJ Sign 011
&lt;Ill Love Connection
i!J-yllne
IDl Twilight
AlrwGII Windows S!ereo.
Q!l You Can Be • llllr
11 :30 II(]) Ol Dectllon 'II New
Jersey Primal)' coverage
(J)IpolteCanW (L)
(I)Citeerl
(!) The Wiler of Ayole
Examine hoW i flllljority or
naw woler systems In the
Third World ere brllklng
doWn within 1 couple of
yeare, some of lhe
IUCCII-1, lnd why, •

e

JIll. J Water Service.. Swimming

1114 Hondl 2008 3 wllell•
wMh rock .,d oil good
cond. Coli oflor 4 PM (t141
448-1113.

9:30 Q!l New Country
10:00 (J) Straight Talk
(I)
(I) tltfrtyaomethlng
Elliol and Nancy turn lo a
therapist tor help wtth their
marriage. (R) Q
(lJ Newo
(fJ Acid Rolnbowo Explore
the controversy surrounding

a

Stark1 Law nand Snr~ Service,
304-175-3956 "' 304-576·
2903.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

8:30 (I)
(I) Perfect Stro~gere
When Larry plays plumber,
· ha winds up flooding lhe
apartment. (R) Q
9:00 ()) 700 Club
II (1) Ol MOVIE: 'A Letter
to Tllree Wtvoe• NBC Movie
of the Week INRI (1 :40)
(I)
(I) Moonllglltlng aavid
runs tho risk of losing
Maddie for gOOd alter Sam
proposes. (R) Q
(lJ (fJ Frontline AIDS
palionts caught in a
· government battle over
paymonl of treatment. 1;1
®I el121 NBA BeakeiiNIII
i!J Lerry King Llvel
9 MOVIE: Portnoy'o
C'ompiolnt (RI (1:41)

a

Su nd•cb. siding, painting, roof-

82

7:30 D W Cll Hollywood
Squereo
Ill (I) Judge
®I Wheel ol Fortune !;I.
Ill !Ill WKRP in Clnclmati
1!J Crooofh
llll121 Jeoperdy Q
IDl Be-oil
Ol Jeopardy! Q
12!1 VidaoCounlry
7:35 (J) Andy Griffith
8:00 ()) Crary Like 1 Fox Fox and
1ha won
D W I!)) Matlock Matlock
defends an investor accused
of murdering a company
owner. (R)
(!) Boeabell
(I)
(I) Who'o the Boot?
Tho family is shocked by the
sudden death of Tony's
lather in lew. !R) 1;1
(lJ (JJ Nova Explore the
development of a new snack
fQOO._.. en inex8C1 science. 1;1
®I IIII!J Houoton Knlghtl
La Fiamma and Lundy
investigate ambush murders
of Vietnamese people. 1;1
Ill &lt;Ill MOVIE: D..,e, Pert t
(PG13) (1 :t0)
I!J PrlmeNews
9 Riptide Wipeout
12!1 Neohvllle Now Michael
Martin Murphey, Desert Rose
1:051]) MOVIE: Villa Rldee (R)

a

SWE EPEA and sewing m.::hlne
repair, JMirls. and suppli•. Pidc
up and deltvery. Davit Vacut.m
Cleaner, one h•lf mile up
- - C•Hk Rd. C.ll 8144411-0294.

198t Toyotl 4x4 truck short

bed. 5•.-d.chramerollbarand
bod .olio. •IICk-cltrtme module

Nt:VER

THE oNe f~oM
.
EP Mi:ESe, Of COUfi!S:f:.

·,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Uncondhk»nll lifal:irnl gueran••· Local ref.-c• furrWshed.
Free estimates. Call collect
1-514-237-0488. d&lt;~i"' night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

I- 1VIE

TURNI:'P C&gt;OINN A

/

Services

Dillard Wtrt• Service: Poo~s.
Cisterns, W•lls. O.liwry A,ny.
tlmo. C.ll 114-448-7404-No
Slandlf\' calla.

••

·a

For sal• cyHnder head for Honda
Accord. Al1o nlldilllor, Jlllrter. S..
AC ' candensor. Clll 114-448·&amp;729.

1981 Olcll CUCIIH Supreme,
.1.500.00. 304-BB2-3116.
1982 Ford Etcort station..wgon,
po. pb, good c:ond. •1800.
304-875-2967 oft• 5 p.m.

1;1

7:00 ()) Remington Steele Steele
Among the Living
W PM Magazine
Cll Ente!llllnment Tonight
(lJ (fJ MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1:00)
(I) Peoplt'l Court
®I Newo
ID &lt;Ill M'A'S'H
I!J Moneyllne
IIII!J Ol Wheel of Fortune

4230"' 114-379-2220.

79

(I) ABC News

(lJ Body Electric
(fJ NlghUy Buoinaeo Report
®I IIII!J CBS Newe
ID &lt;Ill Andy llrllfHII
I!J lnelde Politic. '88
IDl WKRP In Clnclnnau
12!1 Vou Can Be o Star
6:351]) Carol Bumett

o...,.

1U2 Chov 4 wltool drM truck.
VI.
40.000 miM. ••trat.
•1.1100.00. 304-8&amp;2-3171.

~411t
lA:
t

• ()) Cll .. (I) ®I .1121

drlwto350' a..We1Juyjunk
tran•mls1ion1. Cell 304-67~

85

L7.v

•

OlNews
(lJ Ow! TV 0
(fJ Dr. Who lhe Web Planet,
Part 2
ID &lt;Ill Happy Daya
I!J ShowBiz Tocllly
IDl Focto of Lila
9 Cartoon Expreee
12!1 Fandango
6:051]) Leave It To Beaver
8:30 D ()) Ol NBC NlghUy Newe

BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·
Uted &amp; rebuitt al tys-·. Guarantee 30 days minimum . Pric:w
$99 8t up. Rebulh torq.,.s
conwrted as tow •
$39.
Conwr~lon kit-S-10's &amp; C· 10' a

1984 Ford Tompo IIUC. 4 • ..
good cond .. 03200. 1979 Morcury, 2 dr., 31.300ect.. l mil-.
ee.e. cond .• •1100. 1110
Ch-•· a dr .. AT. AC. AM·
FM-C.o. ~good oond .. 112110.
Cell 814-446-081211klt&gt;rlob,
I PM.44• 7122.

·- .........

Raarronge lette rs of
0 four
scrambled words

WOlD

GAM I

tile

be·

loYf' to lorm fovr sirnple words

6:00 ()) Big Vlley The Young
Marauders

I£ Ill

Com ping- lor •lo. Equipped
with fllhlng equipment, cooking
.-111. 111-poted. 1800. eon
114-982-8881 .

SNAFU® b• Bruce Beatta' e
'

TUES., JUNE 1

r:~~:~:~' S©it&lt;l\llA-~ttfS~~
__;_:_:...:.;.:.;___;:_.= ldhod bv CLAY I . ,OLLAN

EVENING

Auto Parts
Accessories

wh....'. AM-FM c....neaareo,
off n&gt;Od lghlo. otrlpo. 42.000
mil•. Elt• 1t..p. •1000 firm.
114-992-5551 .

btds . bedding ,

cho. 304-175-1460.

II&lt;

1985 Chevy CaprQ Cla11tc.
IDodod. 27.000 mR•. bcol.
cond. t7391. C.tl 114-311Udy Kenmorewashlngmachine
9731.
good cond 160.00. Necchi
---------sewing machine .8!5.00. 3041973 Now . Cuttom f*nt, 350
175-2052.
engine, IUto., _,1ft ktt, heMert.
~==========:J..::::::::::::::::~:::_I'otsofctworne,
-.c. 11800Firm.
Cell 114-387-7191
.

._.,s, ch•. couch-. chairs.

•bt•.Ev"Y

2010 JD t111ctor whh bel.,,
r'llllke, mowl11g machine. port
driver, M760. Big 1130 MF.
low hours, Varnwre round blllrM,
8 6200. Owner willlnanc:e. Call
614-286-8522.

1979 Monte Clrlo T·Top. 1979
New Yor..,. Cell 114-44~
1741 ,

PICKENS
FURNITURE

lamps, coff~ d

Ferg~~rson 30 'Inlet or&amp; bulh hog
in exceHent condition. Call 814446-4344.

d_,

1 hospital bed. exceu.,, co ndi·
tlon. 1126. 1 Heavy Duty
Elkectrolux Sweeper with accessoriGB, IIkeniW, 5100. 1 ttei'eo.
2 1peaken. $35. 1 Home Ba1e
C.8 .. 120. Coll814-992·5383.

J lo S FURNITURE
1415 e..tern Ave.
4 drewer ch•. 168 . 5 draw•
.~ ... 084.95. 5 pc . wooden
din..,..""· U99.95,

dl¥ Sptdlls. 'It mile out Jerri·

Fann Equipment

64

Vetl-v Furniture
New and used turntlu,. and
applicences . Call 114-448·
71572. Hours 9·5 .

Dineu.. ,

61

Wanted to buy goQd used
t•umpot, 304-875-1066.

75 Monte Carle. t450. Bottle
g• heatert, $76. each. Aiding
lawn mot.Wr, needt c:erburetor .
Call 614-3B8-B647.

The Daily Sentiuei - Page- 9

Television
Viewing
•

14 ft. Sta~aft boat. 2;0 hp
Mercury motor and 1200 lb cap
tr8ilar. phone 304--675-2916.

Angus Bulta, yearling 1nd 2 ve•
old, re~ for service. Sch•r·
broc* Farms, Cl.,-ton, Ohio.
513-837-4128 dovo; 513-837·
3 994 evenlngt.

. ·

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

..,

Individual guitar l•sons, beginners, !lllrious guiterlst. Brunicardil Music, 814-446-0687.
.Jeff Wamslev inttrl.Etor. 814446·B077, 1ummer openings.

'81 Ford 4)(4, 63.000 miles.
$2,260.00. 304-876-3073 after 8:00.

'{0\)

19691411 Ebblido. v~ ... 1. 19B5
50 hp Evenrude and tl'lliler,
•2.450.00. No calls aher 9 :00
pm. 304-575-31B5.

814218-1413.

Stereo cabinet AM-FM radio and
8 tn~ck and record player, boys
1 6 in. bike. Cal/304-458-1997,

Tr111iler spaces tor rent. Locu st
Road. Route On e. 304-675-

Merchandise

56

Callah.,'s Used Tire Shop. Ower
1. 000 tires, liz•• 1·2, 13, 14, 1 6,
16, 16.5. 8mil&amp;~ ou1Rt. 218 .
Call 614· 256-8261 .

Big &amp; BR . O..kota f•m home
built on your lot. 131, 995 &amp; up.
Call 1-614-B86-7311 .

Trailer kJt. with lergeverd, about
13 miles touth At. 2 1rom
Hogsett locks. Greenbottom
Leugearea. phone 1-304-762·
2330.

STEELE BUILDINGS
Must 1811 2 steel buildinos from
CanceUation. Brand n8'N. newr
erected. one is 40x40. Will sail
for balance O\Md . Call DAN
1-B00-627-4044.

Misc. Merchandise

Spacious mobile nome lots for
rent . Famity Pride Mobile Home
P•k. Galligolis Ferry, W. Va.

1076.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Rustle
and Beveled Lap Siding
• Deck Materials
Guaranteed Quality
C ETIDE . INC ., Athens -614·
694-3578

Antiques

lnduatrial Hydraulic Auger drill
mounted on truck. Will trade for
good water well rig. Call 614·
888-7311 .

949-2216.

houses. Pt. Plalll8ntendGalllpolis. 814-446-8221 .

Acreage

53

1 bedroom apt. in Mid(feport.
$150 pflf month plus utilities.
Call 814-992-6545 or 614-

APARTMENTS. mobile ho mes,

Lots

New completely furni s hll d
apartment S.. mobile nome in
city . Aduhs only, PMki ng. Call
614-446-033B.

BEAUnFUL APARrM ENTS AT
8l/OGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 53&amp; Ja cks on
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and moviet. 614-4482568. E.O.H.

Concrete blodts- al! sizes- yard
or deltvery. rY~uonMnd. Gatllpolis Block Co., 1 231fz Pin11 St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio. Cell 614-446·
27B3.

Used Ra!nbowSweeper for sal e.

Call 814· 992·6883.

304-876-3 73.

New tv redecorated apart mints
a~eilable. Utillti• paid. e225.
per month. deposi1 requtred. call

614-367·0322.

, . - - - - - - - -, - Due to Divorce-RepoSsessed
Singer sawing machine. Sold
nfiW ove.. $800. Assume balance
of 1154.40. Can be seen loca!ly.
Call collect : 419-758-1768.

1\JA\

1 4 ft V bottom boat with t111il fJI'
and 7'h hp S••• motor 304876-5B21 .

Building Supplies

Building Mat•rlals
Blodt. brick, sewer pipes, windowa. lintels. etc. CIMtde Winten, Rio Grandi!. 0 . Call 614245·5121 .

Kenmore washer &amp; dryer pair,
will sell seperate. $250. Call

875-5104.

Space for small trail err. All
hook-ups. Cable. Altoeflicienr:t~
rooms, air end cable. Meson.
W.Va. Call' 304-773-5651 .

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment for rent. 8225 s
month. Oepotlit requlr8d. 614992-5724. Aft11r 6pm or 992-

be moved. 304-895-3602.

35

2 BR . aptl. 8 closets, kitchen·
appl. furniahed. Wuher-[')w'yer
ho ok-up, ww carpal, nEM~/y
pll!ioted, deck . Regency , tn c.
Ap~ s. Call 304-~75 · 773B or

814-446·3375.

J0sT

Buick s•vl•dc.
11 .100. 77 Ford Econline ven
01 .100. Boot 18 ft . 65 HP
E... nrude. 304-875-6357.

76

55

... IT'$

n .ooo. ee

50 !Mitt Almo amplifier Chat·
Ianger. GE answering machine.
304-675-1 4B4.

Green vinyl&amp; couc h with 2 chairs
ior office or waiting room. Ca ll

t-==========:r::;::::;:::::::::::::::
-1
42 Mobile Homes
44 · Apartment

Boats and
Motors for Sale

7 3 Buick. tow mileage. 40,000.

hall . 304-675 -4602 befo re
11 :00am or ah11r 10:00 Pl'fl·

95" Blue sofa &amp; chair. Ca ll
814-245-5214 evenings.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

HJ ft. Cru-.r In c.. 22 HP ·
Mercury motor. f 600. Clll
814-446-9688.

etc, su iteble for .,nail c hurch or

Living room ' sun. Excel. cond.
0200. Call 614-446-2390.

Tuesday, June 7, 1988

28 ft . Blyllner crullltr. 1986
w ide beMI. all electronic. glllley.
canws. etc . 350 V-8 en g..
t leeps I . VrMy low hourt.
027,500. Co11304-727-8890.

PA system. s peakers. amplifier,

S60. Sea at 26 8 So. Fourth
Aw.. Miditleport .

For sale or ren t, one bed--om
hou.e on Peaooc k St. . Pomeroy.
S t25.00 per mo nth or S6500.
Call O ' Bri en an d Crow Rutty
614-992-2720 Of 614-99 22389.

75

Dinnett set $200.00. Wooden
almofl n 8'N, 304-67 5-3900 or
676-6512.

Wo od tabl e &amp; t wo ch air1, 840.
275 Harlequin bo o b . S 50 .
Tru· tone stllr80 wit h speakers.

B room hou ae. 2 utHity bu ildin gs,
'4 acre, Re Wced to • II. Ca ll
6) 4-742-2022.

KIT 'N' CARLYLEIIl by Lan-y Wrl1ht

10 ft . LUXOf Satellite s yllem
w ith remote co ntrol •75Q.OO.
9x 1 2 m eta! lawn building
t 10o.oo. 1 en Olcts cutle•s
new paint and vinyl top, good
rno1or and air co nd $ 1,500.00.
Hard map le dr op luf t ab'e. 4
c hairs , hu tc h $500.00. 2 tum
ta ble mixer and s peak• disc
jockll¥ aet: 1 400.00. D111ft beer
cooler fgood tor .ee room) half
price S400.00. 304-875-6999
"' 614·992-7686.

Moving Sal•3 pc. custom bu ilt
fjvi ng room luite-5500, 3 en d
tebles-1 100. 3 pc den tu r n$ 250. queen si ze bedroom lOt ·
$400. kitc nen tabi e/ 6 chair s$ 75 , c h air - $50 . po o l
tabl&amp;-t 100, white w rought iro n
porch furn -S BO. Call 6 14-446·
2190.

Nice 3 BR doi.ble wide &amp; lot in
Thurman. Call 6 14-24 5-5843.

Misc. Merchandise

Uniden SMellite all remote, GE
refrig«ator. 30 4-675:-69 37.

furnitu re &amp; applianOM at very
lo w. low prices. TabiM , teclin·
m. bra ss hell(lbOards. was hen .
dryers. etc . Mattress sale-2
we eks only-full size, $ 49.95. Rt.
141 , '14 rn ile do'M'I Uncoln Pi ke,
big tan bu ilding behind last
trail ..- o n 111ft. Hour"' : 9· 6 .
Mo n.-Sat. Call 614-4;46-3 158.

For Sale or Rent· 3 SR . house
with attached garage. CA. No
peta. Oep. &amp; ref. require d. 39
~illlooth e Rd. Call 614-. 4 4&amp;2683, 9-6 dally .

Midcttoport. Be autifu l 2 yr. ol d.
total electric. bi- level home, 2 or
3 bedroom, larg!J livin.groom,

54

Household Goods

Tuesday, June 7, 1988

..

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Daugh11r
(J)Inelde the PGA Tour

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Complete lhe chuckle quote d
by loll in g in . the missing words
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Backer - Rigid - Hutch - Prefer - RICHER
Two youngsters were engrossed in a mock wedding
ceremony . One asked , " Do you take this person for richer or
poorer?" The other youth replied , " For AICHER!"

BRIDGE

NORTH
+ J 9 75 4
'f 2
tiO 75
+ K 10 9 3

James Jacoby

Early slip-up
was costly

"9 8 7

By _James Jacoby

+K 96 4 3
+J 8 6

4-~11

"

EAST

WEST
+ 62

+Q3
'fK6 S4
• QJ 8
+AQ4 2

SOUTH

North was right to pass one heart
+AK 108
with only lour high-card points. Alter
'fAQJIO J
East had been doubled in one not A2
trump and West had rescued to two di+7 5
amonds. i t still seemed right to pass
Vuln er able: Both
since the lead of the singleton heart
Dealer : Sout h
was attracti ve. When South bid two
spades, ii was clear to r aise to t hree,
West
Nortb East
Soutb
aqd many players would even bid lour
i 'f
with the North hand . Not to worry Pass
Pass
i NT
Obi.
2t
Pass
Pass
South was happy to take it on t o game.
2+
Pass
3
Pass
Bu.t he needed to play it a little better.
Pass
Pass
Pass
On the opening lead, East played the
jack of diamonds and declarer took
Opening lead: 4
the ace. He played A· K of spades.
pleased that the queen fell. Then he
played ace and queen of hearts, shedding a club from dummy. East won the
heart king and returned the eight of di- ·was lost at trick one. II South simply
amonds. When West took the king, it allows East to win that trick with the
was obvious that the only tricks re- diamond jack. there is no longer com maining were in the club sui t. He munication between the East and
played the club six, and East took t wo West hands . West would not be able to
lead through dummy's club king, and
club tricks to set the hand.
As is so often the case, the contract the gamo would be ""ored up.

.4.

+

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Coarse file
1 Snatch
3 Brixton
5 Dilute
brew
10 Australian 4 Bunch
marsupial 5 Idler
6 Chorus
11 Existing
member
12 Map in
7 Even up
a map
13 Charger
8 First mate
14 Language 9 Old Glory
color
of
Katmandu 10 Cousins,
e.g.
(abbr.)
15 Roman
16 Swiss
statesman
river
17 Burn
17 Ace, e .g.
18 Cyst
18 Cable
21 Anatomi- 19 Knife part
cal tissue 20 Penury
24Abide
21 Plac-; in
26 Embellish
I Down
28 Clothing 22 Dutch
size
cheese
29 Haphazard
31 Fodder
32 Seine soul
33 Make a
primary
decision
3' French port
36 Part of
a course
39Junto
42 Verona's
river
44 In the least
45 Reef stuff
46Gamma
follower
4 7 "Y'all come
back, - ?"

.'

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...
Yesterday's Anawer
23 Deserted 36 Calabria
25 E(\joying
cash
sanctuary 37 Seaweed
27 Short
product
literary 38 ~·encing
work
dummy
30 French 39 Bounder
40 Devoured
word
34 Emulate 41 Checkbook
Mr. Chips
abbr.
35 US-USSR 43 Unknown
agreement John

•

.

·- ...

DOWN
I Part of

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEs- Here's how to work it:

617

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

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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.
~RYPTOQUOTE

'

6-7

BHYQ R
GAY
y p

w

J B

HARQR

p y Q

P Y Q E B

H"R

HA R

TYJDL

A W C P

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A W S J H

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HAJDLB .

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LYXHARV

Yeaterday'a Cryptoqaote: WHEN IN DOUBT, TAKE
ALL TilE TIME YOU NEED TO GET ALL THE FACTS. DONALD LAIRD

•

�Page- 10-The Daily Seminal

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, June 7, 1988

---Local news briefs----. Minnesota cotmttunity sets heat record
EMS has 13 calls Monday

By United Press International
Thunderstorms hung over the
South and showers fell alo ng the
chi lly Pacific Coast today, while
unseasonably warm weather
cloaked the northern Plains.
Readings in the upper 90s were
reported as far north as the upper
Great Lakes and North Dakota
Monday. A high of 96 broke a
29-year-old record In Williston,
N.D ., t he National Weather Service said.
· ·

Thirteen calls were answered by local units Monday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Servl~es reports.
They Include: 12:42 a. m., Middl eport to North Second Ave. for
Rhonda Meredith. to Veterans Memoria l Hospital; Pomeroy at
J:U a .m . to Union Ave. , Roy Eblin taken to Veterans Memorial;
Tupper s Plains, at 10:56 a. m. to Route 248(or Kenneth Bissell, to
veterans Memorial; Racine a Ill : 54 a .m. to Route 338, Herbert
Miller, to Veterans Memoria l; Rutland at 12:01 p.m., Larkins
St. , Raymond Dwitl to l;eterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 12:20
p.m. to Ebenezer St., for Ca rol Norton, to Hqlzer Medical
CPnter; Raclne ·a t 1:37 p.m., Jo hn Hunnell takeri to St. Joseph
Hospita! in Parkersburg; Tuppers Plai ns at 1:59 p.m. ta king
Lydta Chevalie r from Tuppers Plains to St. Joseph Hospita l;
Pomer·oy ar 3; 15 p.m . for Gladys Powell, Main St ., to Veterans
Memoria l; Syracuse at 4: 19 p.m . to Hubbard St., for Ma rcia
Karr, no treatment; Racine at 7:09p.m . for Alban Taylor, to
Vetera ns Me moria l; Middleport at 7:12p.m. fo r Violet Brewer.
·to Veterans Memorial; Tu ppers Plains at 7:44 p.m., Lola
Gri ff in, Tuppers Plains to Sr. Joseph Hos pital; Rutland at 10:10
p.m. to Star Hall Road for Pauline Perry, taken to Holzer
Medical Ce nte r .

Temperatures
climb into 90s
around Ohio'

Probe theft of lawn mawer
Theft of a ridi ng lawn mower and a $elf-propelled walking
mower from a s torage building at a Racine residence was being
investigated today by the department of Meigs Sheriff Howard
Frank. The mowers were stolen from the storage bulldlng
between midnight and 5 a. m. this morning. Anyone ha vi ng
information on the theft Is asked to contact Sheriff Frank.

NPR covers

an Olympiad

Pomeroy Council ..:onunued from pa ge 1

of the arts

cra ft is going -to front the money pay $39,000 for the installation
needed for Midd leport to ex tend a nd new sidewalks that would
their sewage lines from the Sears have to be constructed.
Store- Fruth Pharmacy building
When that wasn' t acceptable,
to Dominae 's and Su bway. _ Middleport then wanted us to
"There will ·be no cosl~ to e ither split the two businesses, they
vi lla ge," O'Brien pointed ou t. would take one a nd us th e other,
Once sewage is installed, Domi· sa id the mayor. Then they asked
noe's ha s agreed to pay $40 a for 40 percent of our income tax
month a nd Subw ay $60 a month from the businesses, he confor the service to Pomeroy. tinued, and now it's down to
Pomeroy wou ld th en remit the Pomeroy acting as the middle
monthly $100 cost to Middleport. man in collecting the annual
O'Brien sa ld it was his under· $1,200 sewage fees . "And all this
sta nding from ta lking to Middle- is go ing on," Seyler declared,
port Mayor Fred Hollman that "while Middleport is illegally
Midd leport did not wa nt to set a providing sewage service'' to the
prccede nI of providing sewage to Sears· Fruth buUding without an
businesses or residences outside easeme nt for th e private propthe corpora tion. and that a erty where the sewage line is
signed contract on this matter located.
'Another lssue'
might eliminat e future problems
O'Brien
called thls allegation
of havi ng to do for one what you
"a
nother
issue"
and pointed out
do for anoth er.
that
the
former
owner of the
Seyler still disputed the Idea of
SearsFruth
building
wa s respon·
·'going around the Mulberry
slble
for
whatever
sewage
hoobush " when it wou ld be
"simpler" for Hayc raft "to just kup now ex ists.
Haycraft again stated that he
pa y Middleport directly" for the
was
sorry for any problems
service.
"They I Middleport) won't let which were caused by not ap·
proaching Pomeroy first , "but I
me do that ," Haycraft said .
O'Brien the n explained the just went wh.e re I was told." He
proposed agreement in greater did not say who told him to go to
detai l. poi nting out thai "Hay- Middleport instead of Pomeroy
cra ft Is to bear installation regarding the Pomeroy slte.
He pointed out that if Pomeroy
expenses wt!ile Pomeroy is to
provide the service by wa y of a would not handle the billing and
third part y co ntract with Middle· remit to Middleport, and Middle·
port. " Pomeroy co Uects, 0 ' Brien port would not accept hls money
said, '' because it Is the governing directly, then the proposed bus!·
body," then pays to the provider nes ses would come to an imme·
dlate end.
which is Middleport.
O'Brien agreed that MiddlePomeroy will have to bill the
port
·'may have been unreasona·
two businesses for water fee s
ble''
but pointed out that Middleanyway , O'Brien pointed out ,
p
ort
"has done all the
and since sewage fees are
compromising
while Pomeroy
included on water bills, " It will be
has
he
ld
firm."
O'Brien
sald that
no a dditional bi lling fo r
basically,
Pomeroy
will
be get·
Pomeroy ."
ling
wlth
the
third
party
contract
Won't Be Liable
Wehrung questioned Haycraft " what you wanted all along,"
The ma jorit y of members of
about Po meroy's liability for the
Pomeroy Council agreed that
monthly $100 if the businesses
were to close after a time. ''They Pomeroy Is getting a fair deal
and voted to accept the agreewon't close," Haycraft said, but
ment. "lt's up to you, not me, "
he assured Wehrung that if fo r
Mayor Seyler sa id to council
'orne reason they dld close, that
after the vote was taken.
Pomeroy wo uld not be liable fo r
sewage costs since there would
be no service being pr-ovided. He
sa id he wo uld Include In any·
Continued from page 1
agreemen t that prior contracts and they get the ir raw materials
would have to be honored by by rail, " he said. "It would cost
ot her bu si nesses which might them more money If they had to
move into the buildings.
use trucks."
Seyler stated that his dislike of
Among other requests. the
the proposal did not mea n he was Board also approved:
against the two businesses, but
- $100,000 for the Attorney
that he was extremely dissat is- General's office for a helicopter
fied with the treatment Pomeroy to assis t In locating ma ri juana
has received throughout the year crops .
long procedure.
- $82,250 to make improve· ·
Seyler said It was not right fo r ments In the elevator system ln a
Pomeroy to be in lroduced to the facult.y·staff building on the
pro ject through newspaper hea d· Cleve land State University
lines stating that Middleport campus.
would have to annex Pomeroy
- $75,000 for a Department of
property for two businesses or 40 Development study to see how
jobs would be lost.
bes t to use the former General
When Pomeroy. refused the
Motors properties In the Clncln·
annexatio n proposa l and asked
nat! suburb of Norwood.
Middleport to co nsider providing
- $671,375 to pay for the work
the sewage service, continued
at the Ervin J. Nutter Center on
Seyler, Middleport sa id that by
the Wright State University
taw, they could not do this, ''even
campus which will be enlarged to
though we all knew this wasn't
more easily handle the 10,000
true." Then, said Seyler, Middle·
seats around the arena and add
port agreed to hook up the
concession and s torage space.
sewage llne If Pomeroy would
- $183,000 to the Anderson
Medical Services, Inc.; of Dover,

Seat ...

Area Deaths
Joseph Bailey
Joseph R. Bailey. 58, 12 Rich·
mond St., Lehigh Acres, Fla .,
formerly a dairy farm operator
near Rutland , died Monday at the
Southwest Regional Medical
Center ln F lorida following a
lingering illness.
Mr. Bailey was born Oct. 16,
1929, a son of the late Russell
Glenroy and Bessie Gardner
Bailey. He was a member of the
Bradbury Church of Christ,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, Middleport; served
on the board of directors of the

International Falls, Minn., set
a heat record, with a 92.5,
marking the third consecutive
day and the fourth day this month
for record-breaking tempera·
tures in the city near the
Canadian border.
Ron Hull, who runs a motel
about 40 miles south of Internationa! Falls, called the heat wave
" unbelievable."
"There are no alr conditioners
because it seldom gets hot here.
- If we ever ge~hot weather, lt ls
usually in August," he sald.
Records also were set In
Alpena, Mich., 95, and Flint,
Mich., 93. The hlgh for the nation
was 108 at Glendive, Mont.
Temperatures were In the 70s
in the northern Plains region
before dawn today, forecaster
Hugh
Crowtht&gt;r said.
By United Press lnternatlorial
stagnant
weather pattern ls
A
Temperatures climbed Into the
what
kept
the
north-central Uni·
90s in Ohlo Monday, set ting
ted
States
~nseasonably
hot
record highs in Cleveland, Mansfield, Zanesville and Findlay .
Cleveland's 92-degree reading
was the highest temperature
ever recorded there on June 6.
Mansfield and Zanesville both
set records for the date with
91-degree readings while Find·
lay's 93 was a new standard
there.
However, the-highest temperaWASHINGTON tUPI) - Na·
ture among major cities In Ohio
tiona! Public Radio wlll provide
M~nday was a 95-degree reading
coverage on more than than 350
ln Toledo, but that was not a events celebrating the evolution
record, National Weather Ser- of ari in the 20th century at the
New York International Festival
vice officials said.
A cold front located northeast of the Arts beginning June 11.
of Ohio Monday night wa s
Op its "Performance Today"
expected to remain stationary program (check local listings)
today , allowing temperatures to NPR's Kathryn Loomans will
climb Into a range of the mld 80s anchor reports on the monthlong
festivaL
·
to mld 90s again today .
However, cooler air over cenPerformances Include a Cen·
tral Canada was forecast to move tral Park concert with Placido
southeas t toward the Great Domingo, an all-Duke Ellington
Lakes today, helping push the evening and performances by
·cold front southwest and Into the symphony orchestras from ChiBuckeye State tonight.
cago, Montreal, New York, Phi·
Highs on Wednesday are ex· !adelphia and St. Louis.
pected to range from the mld 70s
Extensive NPR coverage also
to the mld 80s.
is planned for a look at 20th
The extended forecast calls for century theater, with dozens of
fair weather Thursday through directors, playwrights, actors
Saturday. Highs wlll range from and theater companies particithe upper 70s to the lower 80s pating. Jason Robards and Col·
TIJursday and Friday and be- teen Dewhurst are scheduled to
tween 80 and 8S Saturday. Lows perform ln two plays by Eugene
O'Neill.
will be In the 50s.

f

Farmers Home Administration
and was a veteran of the Korean
Con filet.
Surviving are his wlfe, Mildred
Ohlinger Batley, a former Meigs
High School teacher; two sisters,
Lots McElhinny of Middleport,
a nd Fauna Nelson of Pickerington; two nephews and three
nieces.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home In Middleport wlth Mr. Bill Carter officiatIng. Burial will be ln Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p:m. on Wednesday.

-

anything. This In-between
weather Is ridiculous. We should
either have summer or winter."
The . strange June storm
created havoc on San. Francisco
Bay Area freeway commutes,
with fender-benders caused massive traffic jams, pollee
reported.
San Francisco reported a hlgh
of 57, ll degrees below normal,
and officially recorded .29 inch of .
rain, but some areas reported as ·
much as .80, while others re· .
A few thunderstorms hovered malned dry :
"It's rainy and unseasonably
over central Nebraska.
In a slx·hour period ending cold, a winter storm that is very
early today, nearly 2 Inches of unusual for this month, more like ,
rain fell at Albany, Ga.
January," NWS forecaster Cr!s ·:
Temperatures thls morning Taylor said.
,
were ln the 50s ln the Northeast,
Other record lows were set ln ,
the 40s and upper 30s in northern Bakersfield, Calif., and Pa- : ,
NewEngland, andthe40sand50s ducah, Ky., while San AntoniO ·
In the Pacific Northwest.
-- and Topeka, Kan., !led records. :
On Monday, record low
Bakers!leld's 47 was 2 degrees :
temperatures were set or tied in below the old mark set In 1954. In •
at least flve cities, with a Paducah, a 50-degree reading :
46-degree reading In Sacra· was 3 degrees under last year's ·
mento, Calif., breaking a 47· record.
degree mark that had stood for
San Antonio tied a 1946 record ,
101 years.
wlth a 59-degree reading, and .
In California, BB·slze hail fell Topeka's 47 degrees tied a mark ,
In the Mount Tamalpais area of set ln 1935.
:
Marin County and snow fellln the
Crowther said much of the Sierra .
nation would swelter wlth high '
"It's obnoxious really ," sald temperatures hitting the 80s and .
DlanneQutnnofHeavenlyValley 90s. Highs will be ln the 60s and
resort In South Lake Tahoe. "The · 70s west of the Continental Divide :
snow just kind of .flies in the alr, from the Intermountain region to :
on and off, and doesn't do the Pacific Coast, he said.
Mondav. brought relatively cool
anci wet weather to the Northwest , flung scattered showers and
thunderstorms across the Sou·
theast, an J chilled the alr In the
Northea 't.
Th&lt;&gt; NWS said showers and
thunders torms lingered over
southwest Georgia, southeast
Alabama and northwest Florida
early today, with showers falling
in Northern California and the
Pacific Northwest.

I

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM J;:DT 6-IHIS

Institution violated many federal
regulations, Including rules on
loans to one borrower and
conflict of Interest.
A $40-mllllon suit flied by the
FSLJC is pending in U.S. District
Court, charging the chairman
and other executives of North
America with fraud, breach of
fiduciary duty and gross
negligence.
Both Institutions are part of the
FSLIC's management 'consignment program, under which the
government transfers control of
troubled savings and loan tnstltu·
lions to healthier institutions.
However, after months of assesslng the banks' problems, the
board decided on liquidation.

Pick 4

Page 3

4820

•

e

at y

Vol . 39. No. 23

f:·.":lsNOW

c

•

:

FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold

~SHOWERS
. . Static

1f11 Occluded

Map shows mirimu~ temperatures. At least 50"4 of any shaded area is forecast
to recelve prectprtaUon indicated
UP!

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will be
widespread from southern parts of Alabama and Georgia Into the
eastern Gulf Coast and Florida. Showers and a lew thunderstorms
will also be widespread from the central and northern Pacific
Coast region Into the northern Plateau and northern Rockies.

------Weather·-----South Central Ohio
Today: Mostly sunny and hot,
with highs between 90 and 95. ·
Winds mostly northwest 5 to 10
mph.
Tonight : Becoming partly
cloudy, with a low between 60and
65. WlndsvarlablelOmphorless.
Wednesday: Variable cloud!·
ness, wlth high temperatures in

the mld 80s.
Extended Foreclllit
Thursday through Saturday
Falr during the period, with
highs ranging from the upper 60s
to the upper 70s Thursday and
from the upper 70s to the mld 80s
Friday and Saturday. Overnight
night lows will be In the upper 40s
or in the 50s.

r--------------------------------------

RETIRING - An engraved silver dish was
presented to Muriel Bradford, fair board
secretary, when lite Meigs County Falr Board met
Monday night. Capable and pleasant, Mrs.
Bradfonl has served as secretary for lite board for
12 Meigs County Fairs and In addition, worked ln
the lair board ofllce during the fair of 1975 and will

/

Am Electric Power ............. 28%
AT&amp;T .............. c.. .. .............. 26'4
Ashland Oil ...... ................... 69
Bob Evans ....... .................. .17V.
Charming Shoppes _............. 11 \1,
City Holding Co .................. . 34
Federal Mogul.. ...... ............ _:18
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .64%
Heck's Inc .......... .... .... ......... l%
Key Centurion ..................... 38
Lands' End ........ ...... ...... ...... 25
Limited Inc ......................... 19
Multimedia Inc .................... 66
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ...... ...... ll~
Shoney's Inc ....................... 25V.
Wendy's Inti.. ........................6
Worthington Ind ................. 20%

Hospital news

loanl Subject
To Oullliftcation

ot Borrower

------------··--- .... ---·----

be working in the office during the 1988 fair with
her secretary's duties' being taken over by Mary
Radfonl Gilmore. Presenting the gift to Mrs.
Bradford in honor of her retirement from the
secretarial post is Falr Board President Bill
Radfonl.

Cold front
moves over
Ohio today
By United Press International
A cold front moving across
Ohlo today was expected to keep
temperatures about 20 degrees
lower than Tuesday's record
highs ln parts of the state.
Highs Tuesday were near 90 for
a second consecutive day, but
today's highs were expected to
range from 65 to 70 ln the
northern part of the state to the
mid 80s In the south.
Record high readings for June
7 were set in Youngstown,
Findlay, Zanesville and
Mansfield.
Youngstown ' s 88 degrees
topped the previous mark of 87
Continued .on page 7

Racine to
hold July 4
cele-bration

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, FJlls &amp; Loewl

2 Sectiona. 16 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

26 Cent•

New~aper

Hazardous waste hill
heads to Ohio House
t

-RAIN

Chance of showers 60 percent .tonight . Low ln 60s.
Thursday , cloudy, chance of
raln 4G percent.

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 8, 1988

Copyrighted 1 988

50

Stocks

Veterans Memorial
Admitted -Roy Eblin, Pomeroy; David Triplett, Portland;
Kenneth Bissell, Long Bottom;
Gladys Powell, ReedsvUie; Allee
Brlckles, Pomeroy; Alban Taylor, Racine.
Discharged - James Boyd,
Gilbert Fitzwater, Gary
Michael.

Daily Number
988

50

Liquidation... Continued from page 1
depositor payouts by the FSLIC
since 1981, and will reduce the
$3-bflllon fund to less than S2
billion, not enough to cover all the
Insured deposits at the 3,200
ins titutions overseen by the bank
board.
Last month the General Ac·
counting Office, the lnvestlgatlng arm of Congress, estimated
that more than 500 of those
Institutions were Insolvent, and
more than 200 "hopelessly
Insolvent ."
Creedon said the thrift closures
were attempts by the government to control deposit rates . At
the time of Monday's closing,
North America was paying an
average deposit rate of 8.53
percent, well over the 7.08
percent national average. Amer·
ican Diversified's rate was 8.64
percent.
"Ins tltutions which are rate
leaders create a demand for
others to compete with them, "
Creedon sald, adding that such
high rate-paying Insolvent thrifts
have artificially been driving up
the cost of money for healthy
thrifts.
Creedon sald North America
went broke because of "unsafe
and unsound business practl·
ces." She said lt grew rapidly by
aggressively soliciting high -cost
jumbo certificates of deposit that
were invested In high·risk real
estate, loan participations and
time-sharing Investments. The

Ohio Lottery

Pistons
•
surpnse
Lakers

The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department and Ladles Amdllary are busy preparing for the
1988 Fourth of July festivities . ·
Committees have been formed
to handle each aspect of the day's
activities and things are beginning to take shape. Among some
of the activities planned for the
day, so far, Include - a parade,
games, chicken barbeque, evenIng variety show and fireworks
display.
Directing the variety show will
be Bruce Wolfe and Ann Layne,
assisted by Lee Layne and Jeff
Sharp.
Thls year's show Is tilled
"Americana ." The show wlll be
held at 8 p.m . at the Southern
Junior High School and ls free to
the publiC, although donations
will be accepted at the door.
Thls year's sow wlll feature not
only firemen an ladles auxiliary
members, but also talented en·
tertainers Including the Midnight
Cloggers, and soloists VIrginia
Bentz, Karla Smith, Loretta
Smith and Melissa Layne along
with sounds from the 1950's and
60's, country music, broadway
. tunes, and sounds from the 80's.
Emphasis Is being placed on
this year's parade, which will
. again be held In the morning of
Monday, July 4. Organizations,
clubs, ball teams, church groups,
dance groups, twirlers, bands
_and Individuals are asked to take
part in the parade. Interested
people wishing to register for the
parade are to eontact Dennis
Wolfe or Bruce Wolfe. Bruce
Wolle may be reached at 949·2404
after 4 p.m. on weekdays. I
f

..

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UP I) - A working.
A spokeswoman ln the office of
House-Senate conference committee has reached an agree· Senate President Paul Gllimor,
menton notification for shipping R-Port Olnton, said no date had
hazardous chemicals through been set for the senators to return
Ohio, and sent the bill up for floor to act on the blll. It could possibly
action.
be next week, or the week after,
The committee worked out the but not this week, she said.
differences Tuesday In the blll
The amendment, which pretty
regulating shipments of hazard- much follows one, offered by·Sen .
ous substances. The House Is to Robert Burch, D·Dover, gives
act on the blll Friday morning, the Public Utilities Commission
but the Senate Isn 't expected of Ohio guidelines on deciding
back In session this week.
what materials will require a
Conference committee chair· notification.
Shippers would have to notify
man, state Rep. Frederick Deer·
lng, D-Monroevllle, who . spon- the Ohio Emergency Managesored the measure, said he felt ment Agency, formerly the Ohlo
comfortable with the bill and Disaster Services Agency . It
expected that It would pass both would be up to the Emergency
Management Agency to notify
chambers.
The Senate had been scheduled communities of the shipment.
There would be no advance
to meet Tuesday only if the
conference committee report notification lf the items were
was ready, but that session was being shipped within 24 hours
called off Monday since the after the order was received , but
conference committee was stlll the shipper would have to notify

Dukakis locks it up
By United Press lnternallonal
Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukakls, holding to a quiet,
steady course from Iowa's snows
to California's beaches, now has
enough national convention dele·
gates to take the Democratic
presidential nomination on the
first ballot.
. Dukakls, 54, swept 1988's last
four primaries Tuesday - Montana, New Mexico, New Jersey
and California - and those
victories put hlm over the
"magic number" of 2,!Mll votes
neces~ary for nomination at the
Democratic National Convention
In Atlanta July 18-21 .
In Los Angeles, where he was
savoring the capture of the
nomination , Dukakls looked
ahead to the autumn's general
election campaign against Re·
publican 'vloe President George
Bush, telling an exultant gather·
lng of supporters:
"Every day between n9w and
November, the American people
wlll want to hear how we Intend to
bulld a strong and vibrant future
for our country. They aren't
Interested In slashing attacks.
They want to judge our positive
ideas for a change,'' he sald.
"My friends, what a golden
opportunity this ls for us. What
an opportunity for America to set
our course for the next century,"
the governor said.

Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, 44 , Dukakls's lone rival ln
the race since mid -April, congratulated the governor In an
evening telephone call.
"I called to wish him congratu·
lations and we'll have follow up
talks," Jackson said ln an
Interview. Earlier, when the two
men appeared on ABC 's "lljlgh·
!line," Jackson said, "Michael
Dukakis ls due very special
congratulations for several baste
things." Jackson said.
·
Continued on page 7

"In r~cent years the public has
responded to our plea to keep
their pet restrained, and we have
seen a decline In bites nationally ,
sald Reuter. "Nevertheless,
much ls still to be done to
eliminate the hazard to our
employees and other citizens
who might be bitten."
Reuter said that all dogs are
territorial by nature, and even

the most gentle pet will bite If It
feels Its domain Is threatened by
the presence of a carrier or other
person. "With a little care, a pet
owner can not only protect our
carriers, but his or her pet and
pocketbook too," he added.
Reuter stressed that the Postal
Service protects Its carriers
from dog bite hazards. Among
remedies In situations when a pet
owner falls to restatn a dog ls
interruption of home delivery to
the residence or, ln come cases,
to entire neighborhoods . The
Postal Service will also seek to
recover worker's compensation
damages and provides counseling to carriers who have been
bitten and who wish to seek legal
action against the dog owners.
Reuter said these policies
underscore the Postal Service's
commitment to protect Its em-

ployces, and added that pet
owners can easily meet their
responslbllltes to control their
pets.
"We suggest tha t pets be kept
away from the mmailbox and
areas the letter carrier uses for
access · to the property," sald
Reuter. "If the pet cannot be kept
behind a secure fence , the owner
should restrain lt wlth a secure
leash or tether or at least keep
the pet lnslde the house during
the usual hours carriers are
making their rounds ."
Reuter concluded, "We try to
do our part by stressing aware·
ness of dog bite dangers to our
carriers, but ,we rely heavily
upon the support and cooperation
of the community to help us end
these painful and costly
Injuries ."

Ohio wells may go dry by
August if drought continues
By United Press International
While farmers are waiting in
vain for rainfall to save their
parched crops, the state has
Issued a warning that people who
depend on wells for drinking
water could be ln trouble by late
summer.
The Ohio Department of Natu·
raJ Resources said wells have
fallen 1 to 4 feet below levels
normal for this tlmeofyear, with
ihe drop last month seven times
more than normal.
If the state doesn't get large
amounts of rain this s11mmer and rainfall is normally low this
time of year - some wells could
go dry by late August.
The drought this spring came
upon the heels of nearly 18
months of below-normal rainfall.
Heavy spring rains are needed to
keep wells refreshed through
periods of little rainfall.
"It would take a hell of a lot of
raln to see water levels come up
in the summer months," said
David Cashell, water Inventory
supervisor lor the ODNR. "Most
large communities probably
won't have a problem now, but
down the road, In September and
August, I can't say."
About 45 percent of the state's
residents, Including some In
cities, depend on well water . .
Meanwhile, theOhloAgrtcultu·
ral Statistics Service reported
Tuesday that soil moiSture was
rated short ln 77 percent of the
state, adequate In 22 percent and
surplus In 1 percent, with the

I

)

For substances shipped between 24 and 72 hours after the
order is received, the shipper
would have to notify the EMA by
telephone and follow lt up in ·
writing within seven days.
The sh lpper would have to
notify the EMA in writing for
orders shipped seven days after
receipt of the order.
Deering said these guidelines
were worked out with and agreed
to by all Interested parties. They
Included manufacturers, cheml·
cal companies and the trucking
industry .
John Duffy of the PUCO said
the EMA was chosen to be
notified because of its
experience.
"It 's had a system in place for
several years beca use of the
Continued on page 7

Postmaster asks dog owners
t~ restrain pets, aid carriers
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
With the arrival of warmer
weather, Pomeroy Postmaster
Tom Reuter has asked dog
ownei:S to help protect letter
carriers, utility workers and
other citizens from the dangers
of dog bites. Reuter sald that
nationally, more than 3,000 letter
carriers were bitten by dogs last
year .
•

HONORED FOR SERVICE - Fred Goeglelo, a member of the
Meigs County Fair Board for25 years, was honored when the board
met ln regular session Monday night- Fair Board President Bill
Radfonl presented a plaque to Goegleln ln appreclallon for his
work In getting the historical log cabin moved onto the Bock
Springs Fairgrounds. The plaque was hung In the cabin Monday
night along with a second plaque honoring Jay Hall, who owned
the historical cabin and presented It as a gift to the falr board.
During ceremonies held at the cabin Monday night, Goegleln was
also presented a llfetbne free entry ticket to Melp County Fairs in
appreciation for his long service on the board. It was the first such
llcket ever Issued by lite board.

the EMA ln writing within seven
dayss after the shipment was
made.

•

adequate mostly confined to the
Northeast.
In lhe major corn and soybean
areas of Ohlo, rainfall since the
start of the growing season April
1 is only 30 percent to 50 percent

of normal.
One grower, Jim VanTI Iberg of
Celina, sald grain farmers are
already looking at lOsing 40
percent of their corn and soybean
Continued on page 7

Councll wants $20,000
for repaving project
If General Telephone Com·

pany wlll provide $20,000 to
repave Maln St. ln the downtown
business section of Pomeroy,
then Pomeroy Vlllage Councll
will make up the difference of the
paving costs, not to exceed
$10,000.
General Telephone offered to
pave the street lor lite vlllage In
order to remedy problems
caused some tlme back by the
installation of underground telephone cables. The telephone
company had pledged about
$17,000 for the cost of the paving
job. However, lt was learned
recently that $17,000 will not
cover all lite work that needs to
be done, Including planing off
existing pavement and realign·
lng manholes.
The job Is expected to cost
more In the neighborhood of
$30,000, and the telephone com·
pany feels It cannot cover that
much of an additional cost.
Therefore, II the paving Is to be
done correctly, lhe vlllall! will

have to come up with a portion of
the needed fi.mds .
After discussing the matter in
Monday night's meeting of
Pomeroy 'village Council, lt was
decided that the village should
opt for a part of the costs, since
$10,000 would be a lot less than
looting the _entire bill them·
selves. If necessary, Councilman
Larry Wehrung suggested the
village borrow the $10,000. Whether or not the telephone
company wlll be willing to spend
an additional $3,000, over and
above the $17,000 originally
pledged, ls unknown. MaY.or
Richard Seyler sald he would
discuss the matter · with the
utility company.
· If General Telephone and
Pomeroy Village work out an
arranlll!ment, Maln St., from
Sycamore to the lower end of the
parking lot, would be resurfaced.
Finally, Council accepted the
mayor's report of $2,529 ln lines
and fees collected In May.

·--.

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