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                  <text>Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Judge to review McClease bail decis~on

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

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

ern California.

Tuesday, June 28. 1988

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

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

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

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

ANNOUNCING

notor iou s prison er whose nota·

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

v iolence

on

release

s

L

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UNDER THE BIG TOP

A

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Vol.39, No.37
Copyrighted 1988

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

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enttne
2 Sections, 20 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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

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

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

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Snell sai d Powell was not

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Income tax effective July 1

ANIC-•ull•ot- .....
IAV'"Gioo_lo_,__

SERVICE PARTS

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

Old school will be reopened

GINIIAL M01'011 COifiOIAnON

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1001-llw-

, ,,

GMQUAUTY

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

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

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

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

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

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

ltiiC:OitiCA
A~lomtl it.

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

Southent -board.approves
funds for new fiscal year

June 22 thru July 2nd

a

1ion is warranted.

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

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

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Pick 4
1346

Page 3

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

overturned Monday, issued a

for

Daily Number
914

Coast Guard ·limits traffic on Mississippi

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

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

Ohio Lottery

Connors
ousted

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

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

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

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

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

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~~~~~J~uM~2~9~,d19;8~8~~~~~~~~~--------~p~~~~~=~~md==~;:ort~,~O~h=~~----------~--------------™~D~m~·l~y~Se~m~in_a__P_~~~3

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

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

~t:b .

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'qlv

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r"T"\,_1 '---

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c::;;•..==.-

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

I' AT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press lnternallonal , Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OP INION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are Subjec t to editing and mus t be s igned wlth name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wll! be published . Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalil!es.

Distrust pervasive
between presidents, Congress

Plan ready if big banks
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
government has a contingency
plan for a national emergency
should the giants of the banking
industry come near to collapse.
Recent nationwide attention
has focused on the savings and
loan ct'isis and maneuverings by
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board to bail out thrifts that are
near bankruptcy.
But a co!iapse of commercial
banks is potentially a greater
threat. Should one of the large
institutions go under, it would
cause a tidal wave of destruction
to roll across the financial
system.
Federal banking officials have
decreed , behind closed doors,
that before they would allow the
top 10 banks in the
to

broke, the feds would make them
wards of Ihe state.
A Reagan Administration
Int er-agency task force drafted
the plan for, in essence, national·
!zing America's biggest banks In

By Jack Anderson

fail_-=and.:..:.:....J~os:....:...L..ep_hS.....__pe_ar

depositors. Finding a merger
partner or buyer for a megabank In dire stra its would be
difficult, if not impossible, in a

crisis. And the payoff of Insured
depositors would be a horror
story, with deposits tied up for
months.
"It must be recognized that the
traditional methods ·of handling
bank failures are probably unworkable in the case of a banking
cr isis," says the closely guarded
report of the inter-agency task
force.
The traditional methods "re·
suit In the disruption of services
and would fuel the public perception of financial disaster ," the
report explains. "Assuming that
one or more of the banks in

a financial crisis. Represented

on that task force are the
Treasury Department, the Fed·
era! Reserve Board and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
(FDIC). Their plan was motivated by the possibility that
Latin American nations could
defauli on billions of dollars in
loans from American banks.
The task force concluded that a
collapse of major banks could not
be handled the way most minor
bank failures are taken care ofwith a merger or by paying off

~R I SHOULD WE?
~ caN("E?R~D

ABOUT JUNIOR'S
RElAOING

.

?

By E. MICHAEL MYERS

WASHINGTON &lt;UP I) - Long after American troops came home,
the vietnam War still rages, no tin the bloody paddies and sweltering
jungles of the tragedy-scarred la.nd, but in Washington.
The combatants are the president of the United States -Richard
Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan- and surely
either George Bush or Michael Dukakis- against the leadership of
Congress.
.
The divisive issue is restraining the executive authority of the
commander In chief to deploy the vast military and Intelligence
resources of superpower Amerjca, and his willingness and
obligations to consuil with and acl on the advice of a distrustful
Congress.
·
Lyndon Johnson' s deployment of American ground, air. and naval
forces in an supremely unpopular war , withouttheformal approval of
Congress, sowed a bitter legacy in relations between the executive
and legislative branches.
Over Nixon's veto, Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution of
. 1973 in an effort to res1rict a presiden1's ability to send troops into an
undeclared, undefined, and open·ended conflict. .
The law requires that once deployed. U.S. forces must be
withdrawn within 60 days from a situation involving actual or
!mminen1 hos~llties unless Congress authorizes an extension.
American naval and air forces are patrol!ng the volatile Persian
Gulf, on the edge of the Iran·lraq war, and men have have died in the
service.
But President Reagan has avoided the restrictions of the War
Powers Resolution by unilaterally deciding that it just doesn't apply,
thank you, to his Persian Gulf policy of naval escorts for oil tankers.
Congressional leaders have complained and blustered and
appealed for cooperation, but Reagan has stood firm. He has
·sometimes called them down to the White House for consultations,
but has refused to invoke the formal process of notification that
.triggers the resolution. And his supporters In Congress have enough
clout to derail efforts in the House and Senate to trigger it, too.
Senate Democrqtlc leader Robert Byrd of West virginia calls the
current law unworkable, and wants to change it so Congress gets a
·'guranteed, prompt vote that would decide if U.S. forces should stay In
• an area of combat, whatever the president does.
If it passes Congress, Reagan is sure to veto it as an assault on his
powers under the Constitution .
And he is sure to veto another bill nearing congressional passage
that would sharply restrict his authority to order secret intelligence
opera lions.
Reagan was required by law to inform congressional leaders In a
"timely fashion" of such covert actions as the sale of arms to Iran.
But because of a distrust of Congress -critics say It was also because
of the certain political opposition to an operation ultimately
condemned as ransoming of American cap1Jves - he concealed it
until It was revealed by the Lebanese.
The new restriction would require a president to inform at least the
top four leaders of Congress within 48 hours of his approval of a covert
action. There could be no flexibility of the "timely notice" that
resulted in Congress being shut out of the Iranian initiative for 14
months.
The national security landscape of the United States being
contested by 1he pres !dent and Congress is riddled with the cancer of
distrust.
From the tragedy of \I ietnam this distrust has metastasized - to
the bungled efforts to assassinate Cuba· s Castro: to the covert mining
, of Nicaragua's harbors thai prompted protests from U.S. aliles: to
- the bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut; and finally to the
political debacle that nearly consumed Reagan, the sale of arms to
Iran and the diversion of profits to the Nicaraguan Contras to buy
arms during a congressional ban on any U.S. aid.
Even with a new War Powers Resolution and a definite notice
requirement on covert actions, presidents will seek new avenues to do
as they wish to do despite the wishes of Congress. And Congress will
rise In fury and consider even more restrictive legislation.
The broad consensus of American foreign policy of the Eisenhower
years, resting on respect and a willingness to give an edge to the
experience of a war hero,. is one of the many casualties of \I letnam.
It cannot be restored and the disease of distrust cured by
straitjacket legislation, but by knowledge, mutual respect, and
leadership.

Today in history
By United l'ress International
Today Is Wednesday, June 29, the !81stday ofl988wlth 185 to follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are Mercury, venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They Include
William Mayo, co-founder of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., In
1861; astronomer George Ellery Hale, founder of the Yerkes and
Mount Palomar observatories, in 1868; actor-singer Nelson Eddy In
1901; Broadway songwriter Frank Loesser In I910; actress Ruth
Warrick in 1915 (age 73); actor Slim Pickens In 1919; and "black
power" advocate Stokely Carmichael in 1941 (age 47).
On this date In history:
In 1853, the U.S. Senate ratified the $10 million Gadsden Purchase
from Mexico, adding more than 29,ooo square miles to the territories
o! Arizona and New Mexico and completing the modern geographical
boundaries of the Un lied States.
In 1946, two years before Israel became a nation, British authorities
arrested more than 2. 700 Jewish Zionists in an effort to stop terrorism
In Palestine.
In 1970, the last American troops were withdrawn from Cambodia
into South vietnam.
In 1972, the Supreme Court ruled that capital punishment, as then
administered by indiVidual states, was unconstitutional.
A thought for the day: William Mayo defined a specialist as "a man
who knows more and more about less and less."

'

Koehnen eliminates Connors cc~~::. :~~:!~

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 29, 1988

jeopardy is a mong the nation's
top 10 banks, the typical ...
tra nsaction with another opera!·
lng institution would not be
feas ible due to a dearth of eligible
bidders (and) the necessity of
raising a lot of money under ~.he,
darkest financial scenarios ...
Ideally, the federal contingency plan woulp kick in while
the bank could still see the light.
The plan calls for the Federal
Reserve Board to use its statu·
tory authority to lend unlimited
amounts of money to fa!ling
institutions. Federal reserve
banks would collect old currency
and distribute new biils. Accord·
!ng to ·confidential documents,
those federal reserve banks have
about $19 billion in · unissued
currency. The Federal Reserve
· facility in Culpepper, Va., has
another $2.6 billion in currency to
use during an emergency.
The job of the FDIC would be to
create a new bank from what is
left of the. old one by forming a
holding company and giving It
capital to operate.
The government is wise to have
a plan · for the unthinkable.
Should one of the titans of
banking collapse, the resulting
financial turmoil would rival the
Great Depression. There are
about 15,000 commercial banks
In the United States, handling
more than $600 billion in transac·
!ions every day.
A run on one large bank would
probably spread like wildfire to
the other large banks. The vast
majority of deposits. in the
bi ggest banks are uninsured and
come from foreign sources. If the
money managers in those foreign
accounts smell trouble, they can
yank their money out with a few
keystrokes on a computer, leaving !he bank an empty shelL

Deserved recognition _____

CONNORS OUSTED - Jimmy Connors stre&amp;ches for a
double-handed forehand during his match against West
Germany's Patrick Khunen at the Wimbledon championships
Tuesday. Khunen won 5-7, 7·6, 7-6, 6-7, 6-3. (REUTER)

ACS tourney champs
are crowne~ Sunday
.

Jon Bentley, Kathy Gettles,
Brent Johnson. Krlsna Kool, Neil
Kool, Diane Lawson and Jordy
Shah were the singles winners In
the 1988 Johnson's Supermarket·
s/ American Cancer Society ten·
nis tournament , which concluded
Sundav.
Ben1ley defeated Jim Osborne
in the men 's singles-35 and older
division, 3-6, 6·3, 6·3. In girls '
singles 117 years old and
younger), Gel tles beat Amy
Huber 6-1, 6·4. ,Johnson won the
men's singles Iitle with a 6·2, 5-7,
6·4 match victory over Dave
Crow. Krisna Kool was the
in1ermedlate sIngles winner,
besting Mike Crow 6·4, 6·3. Nell
Kool, Krisna ' s son, showed Mike
Crow less mercy , as the younger
Kool prevailed 6-1, 6-2. Lawson
topped Shelly Haskins 6·4, 6·1 to
take the ladles' singles title. Shah
knocked off Beth Dunlap by
bea1ing her In back·1o·back 6-4
sets to take the Intermediate

The summit meet lng of the
leaders of the world's seven top
industrial democracies, the United States, France, England,
West Germany, Italy, Japan and
Canada, concluded last week in
Toronto on a note of self·
congratulation and praise. These
accolades were well deserved.
As the summit leaders noted,
the world economy today is
employment is on the rise, and
inflation remains restrained.
The international cooperation
and the sound economic policies
that 1hey have followed. Thus,
1he summit's final communique
stressed expanding the streng·
thening these policies.
Internationally, the commu·
nique called upon countries to
reduce barriers to trade, especially in agriculture products . l1
stressed the need to resist efforts
to restrict the international flow
of investment. Furthermore, 11
ratified the current efforts of
central banks to promote stabil·
ity in the value of the dollar and
international exchange rates.
The leaders also agreed thai

relief should be provided for the
poorest of the world's countries
in sub-Saharan Africia through
·such means as stretching out
debt repayments, providing in·
terest rate concessions, and
through partial debt wrlte-offs .
Moreover, the leaders called ·
for the reduction of barriers to
private enterprise withine coun·
tries as well, . by working to
improve and reduce such exist·
lng Impediments as tax laws and
regulations. Each country
pledged to work toward specific
goals, and for the United States,
!hose goals were to rafsc the
savings rate of its citizens and
improve our nation's competitiveness in the world
marketplace.
The economic policies that the
leaders called for are the same
ones that President Reagan has
been ·championing throughout
his presidency; those being the
promotion of freer markets and
reducing barriers for private
enterprise. The summit leaders
recognized that 1hese policies are
working and there is greater

1

progress toward t hcs e goals
worldwide. In fact, the summit
began with a U.S./ Japanese
agreement to open Japan's beef
and citrus markets to U.S.
exports.
Under this agreement, Japan' s
import quotas on American beef
and oranges will eventually be
abolished. As a result, American
beef exports to Japan alone are
expected to double over the nex1
three years. While this agreement by Itself will no1 solve our
trade imbalance with Japan, i1
does illustrate that progress is
being made in our trade negotia·
lions with the Japanese. How·
ever, perhaps the single most
important example of the world wide push toward fre&lt;er trade is
the U.S./Canadian free trade
agreement that is pending appro·
val by Congress. This agreement
would remove all tarriffs be·
tween our two countries over the
next decade and is expected 1o
greatly expand employment in
both countries.
Because the final communique
of the summit heaped praise for

Unglued by labels? Me too! __s_ar_ah_Ov_ers_tre_et
I would like to direct the
attention of American manufac·
turers and vendors to a very nice
wax that affixes labels to pro·
ducts better than spit cements
paper wads. From time to time,
I've seen this adhesive on labels
for cookware and other items,
but I have no idea what It's called
or who makes it.
If one puts a dot of this wonder
gum onto the corners of labels, It
will pretty well hold the label to
the product through a nuclear
holocaust. But the real miracle of
this little stickum is that when
the purchaser of a product exerts
only the slightest pressure, the
label will come right off!
I don't know why these labels
can withstand tornadoes yet
yield to gentle human tugs - I
am a verbal type who received a
C-mlnus In chemistry despite
turning in extra-credit titrations,
whatever those were.
Yet I like to believe some
scientist ou1 there was 'so smart
he or she Invented a substance
that responds only to pressure
applied by muscles never taxed
beyond opening car doors or
playing softball once a year at
company parties.
I call attention to this spaceage chemical only because 99
percent of American manufacturers have as yet not discovered
lt.
They are still laboring under
the misconception that to affix a
label to a product, they must coat
It generously with a mixture that
would hold an Ironworker to a
beam via a small dot on his
hardhat.
I am not singling out any one
manufacturer, you understand,
nor even any one flea-market
operator sticking labels on fine

antique furniture anywhere In
America. I can understand the
need to lesson the possibility of
theft.
What I can't understand Is
superglu!ng the dadgummed lab·
els on things like BOO-pound oak
wardrobes a moving team com·
pr!sed of Rockies I, II and l!l
couldn't steal; on the windows of
brand-new automobiles, when
the exact same sticker information resides safe in the sales
manager's office: and on new
water heaters.
My new water heater has Its
serial number clearly etched into
Its metal side. There is no way on
earth a dishonest plumber could
have walked into that plumbing
supply house and paid a different
price for the thing. And none of
the four labels stuck to my new
heater . had anything to do with
price; they were ballyhooing of
features, instructions on use, and
energy information. Did the
manufacturer think someone
was going to pull off those labels
and stick them on another unit,
just for fun? Can anyone be that
hard up for entertainment?
Yet I've just spent two hours
peeling labels off my new water
heater wlth an anti-glue solvent
aptly named Dadgummit! This,
after the original insults of three
days without a hat shower, the
charred debris from the old
water heater that ruined the
bathroom carpet, and hall a day
spent trying to find a plumber.
An open warning to whoever was
responsible for plastering those
labels on that water heater: I'd
Uke to slather a streak of that
glue on your backside and atllx
you to a city bus during rush
hour.
I propose a mass protest that

just might end glue abuse: and if
it doesn't , it will at least be fun
while It lasts: I suggest that
anytime we have to chisel away
ala label glued to a product, we
save the shreds and pack them
off to the CEO of the company.
We send them off in an envelop
marked, "Congratulations! You
are definitely a million-dollar
winner in our Grand Sweep-

stakes. Just peel off the label
inside and calli he phone number
beneath by midnight tonight, and
we'll send you a certified check
via return mail."
Then we open up the envelop
and pour a bot1le of Superglue
into it. Let them see how It feels to
try to get one of those dad·
gummed label s off, without tear·
lng up something.

Berry's World

ladies' singles crown.
In doubles ac1ion, the· team of
Johnson and Osborne won the·
men's doubles championship,
beating the team of Sea'n Baker
and Bentley 6·4, 6·4. Haskins and
Nancy Mu!l!ns took the ladles '
doubles title with a 6·4, 7-5 match
win over Lawson and Donna
Nease.
The team of Tom Hopkins and
Kathy Fry bested the Jearn of
Randy and Kelly Snider 6·3, 1-6.
6·2 to become the tournament's
best mixed doubles 1eam. The
team of Gary Fenderbosch and
Dr. Montrle won the Intermediate men's doubles title with a
6·4, 7·6 victory over Chip Hag·
garty and Larry Evans.
The Intermediate ladles' dou ·
bles crown belonged to the team
of • Kim Napora and Becky
Johnson, who beat the team of
Denise Miller and Shah. No score
was available for that contest .

IBI•ti8UI3-i), 7135 p.m.

Majors
what has been accomplished and
didn' 1offer man men policies and
initiatives. some have criticized
the summit as a do-nothing,
meaningless conference. How·
ever, such criticism overlooks
the underlying theme and
substance.
Therefore, while the summit
meeting didn't offer much in the
way of new pronouncements, it
did represent the coming of age
of the international exconomic
policies and leadership of Pres!·
dent Reagan. It Is interesting to
note that when the President
Reagan. l1 is interesting to note
that when the President attended
his fir st such summit seven years
ago, the world economy was in
disarray and initiatives.
However, in this final eco·
nomic summit of his presidency
the world economy is strong and
the other leaders wholeheartedly
put their stamp of approval on
the President's international economic policies. It was fitting
recognition for out President and
for the free enterprise policies
has has so successfully and
enthusiastically espoused .

that. ..

'

Scoreboard ...

C_o__::ng;:__._Cla_r_enc_e_M_ill_er

Cleveland (Can.ottt 7-IJ at Bol'ton

(Clemen" ID·~). 7::U p.m.
Ollc&amp;8o (Ptrez 11-4) IU KUIIlfl Clly

By United Pre!!- !II Inter •tlotllll
Amcrk.'IUl Lel\1{\M'
li:ut

\\' l Pel . GH
-16 ~ .6-n -4:1 31 .SHI 3

Del roil
Nf'w \ ' orlil

... 35 .5311
3M !II .5211

Cl~f'land

Bo11lon
Mllwauk!t'
Toro•o
Baltlmon'

6
7

SK 2M .50t !I
lN -II .-1117 II
~'l i~ .til t n
\\ rsl

Oakland

-17 !! .IlK -

,\Un~r,.;ota

H

K.an!liU\ City

38 37

Tex~U~

J8 38 .ttltl II V,
l4 10 .U!I I'!
3~ 13 .U7 IH•,
:m ~• .3flo 17%

01\ca~~:o

California
Sea&amp;lk'

32 .Hil
.51:1

-1
II

'l'uesda,v's Hf'!ull!'i
Dearolt G, N,.w Vork I

BlllllruOI'f' 7, Toronto 0
Bullion 8, flewl1111d 1
Chlu~~~:o -1, HIUI"'" Cltr :1

Tcu..;, 6. 8UUir 0
Mlntrsota 1!. L'llllfornlll ~
Mlll'liRU ... c ~ . Oakltt.nd I
WPdiM'IId 1\Y'"- Gllmf'!i

Mllwaulre 4"-'t• (l:~n &amp;-S ) Ill
IOind (Welch H). J : 15 p.m .

Detroll (Ttrn-11 ;H) Itt Nrw fork
(Dabon 7-3), 7:30p.m.
Tor!Miio (~y 2·1) at Baltmol'f'

Summer
League
results
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Cubs recorded two wins In
recent Pee Wee League play
downing the Pomeroy Cleland
club 11 to 2 and Mason's Mudsoxers 2·1. The double win maintains
the Cubs' unblemished record at
9-0.
Against Pomeroy, Willie John·
son, Jason Pangl!o and Clifford
Thomas hammered homers with
Paul Pullins going two for three
and Roger Barnhart one for two
a1 the plate.
For Pomeroy, D. Neutzling
and Jay Day each slammed
doubles.
Paul Pullins had both RBI,sfor
the Cubs In their win over Mason
as both teams played an out·
standing game. Pullins was also
on the front end of a double play
when he fielded a ground bail and
tagged the base at second to nip
the runner and then fired to first
to get the batter.
Jason Panglio and Donald
Goheen pitched for the Cubs and
Goheen was two for twq at the
plate. Cub Willie Johnson turned
1n a good defensive performance
for the victors.
Jason King had the only two
hits for Mason.
Girl's Softball
It was a slugfest between the
Middleport Angels and Mason's
entry as the Angels prevailed
24-16 over their cross river rivals.
A total of !forty three hits and
s lx teen errors were recorded by
both squads.
.
Leading hitters for Middleport
were Heather Burch, Sherry
Johnson, Ginger Fl ndlay, Wendy
Clark and Mindy Findlay. Zus·
pan and Kearns. with !our hits In

~~!.at

1811n rUler 1-e), II: a~ p.m .
Tellu (Hu~h '1-7) llt Sellllltl4!- (Moono -'·

K),II:DS

p.m.

Mlnre11oU cAncltr!10114·5) al CaiUorNa
(t'lnley 4-1\J, 10:36 p.m.
Tlwnwlll)l's G~omft!l
New Vork•J Cllkqo, •IPI
NA110NAL LE.4.GUE
Ebl

as

... 3~ .$47 8
17 lf .-187 ll'f,
35 to .167 u
3ii II .U8 13%

Mon&amp;~al

f'lllllllllldphla
Los

.

W L Pel. GB
.., !II .i'l'J -1s
.SM -1~

New York
PittllhurKh
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St. l.ouill

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-IS :II .SKI -10 J5 .5;t3 3\1,
J/1 37 .!WI'? 5\-1:

ClnclnraH

34 -II .4$3

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A.tlllnta

Sl U .4'111 II~
'!Ill 47 .aiM! lfi\1

Holilllon

. 'I\IN.Q'A

By REBECCA BRYAN
Ul'l Spot18 Writer
WIMBLEDON, England
(UPI) - The grass is always
greener if you're a winner.
Jimmy Connors, hailed as the
grand old man of Wimbledon last
week, said after his five-set
fourth round defeat at the hands
of Wes.t German 22-year·old
Patrick Kuehnen that the grass
courts of the All England Club
were rotten for him, anyway.
"It depends what you think
tennis should be played like,"
said Connors, who won the
Wimbledon title on the same .
grass In 1974 and 1982. "If you·
think tennis Is a · serve-and·
volley, hit -and-miss , one· shot
game, then keep (grass I.
"If you've come to know tennis
as something else, then don ' t
keep it. A hit-a nd-miss type game
has never been one that I really
enjoyed. Just serve and hit the
ball in the fence or serve and
volley one ball - even my style
when I won here has not been

fl l~

~ult.o~

L'hlt:a«o 8, Phllad~phlll ~
New \ 'o rlt 5, Plibhu rwh t
Clntin..tl-1, S•INep J
San Funclseu IJ . .4tlutM 7
Hou~o• •· Loll An pt~ 3
St. Loulft $, M.,.&amp;rul -1
We~ .y ,_.. Gamftl
Phlll.delpllla (Maddux I·D) at fhlcar;o
{Schlndll f.l), :l: tl p.m.
t.11 Anptel'l (lkuhi!'K!r 11-:n •t
Houlllaa !Ryan H) , ~:35 p.m.

San Fran"lttt• IKr'*ow f.t 1 ~ 1\lanla
(Smllll :l-7).1: tt p.m.
N- Vork (COne t -1) Ill Plll..... l"kh
(Walk R-ol). 7:15p.m .
San Dlep (Show ~Kl at Clnclnratl
{RobhtMt•l-1), 7:15p.m.
Molllllrf .. !M&amp;nlllft 7·'21 at St. Loul:o~
IMcWI\IIamll -1-3).11: 35 p.m.
Thunwlll)l'll Clamf'!l
San Ole~ at Cintln•tl

"-•!!ton at Nf'w VGrk, nl11hi
AUutJI .. Montrul, nlpt

Connors, who turns 36 In
September, fell to Kuehnen 5-7,
7·6 (9·7), 7·6 C7·2), 6·7 14·7), 6·3 In
a match that was interrupted
Monday night by poor light and
rain, then delayed for hours
Tuesday by a dismal drizzle.
He admitted that the All
England Club wasn 't likely to dig
up center court at his suggestion,
although the Australian Open
was switched last year from the
grass courts of Kooyong, Mel·

I

r

Boris Becker, All England
Champion In 1985 and 1986, faces
title holder Pat Cash in a battle
that both player s admit will
come down to serve a nd nerves.
Before the men get started,
defending women 's champion
Martina Navratllova, a victim of
the rain ·disr~pted schedule
Tuesday, seeks a semifinal berth
when she plays unseeded South
African Ros Fairbank on court
No. 14 .
Second seed Mats W!lander,
seeking his third Grand Slam
victory this year and his first
Wimbledon title, was to open
play on center court against
ninth seed M!loslav Mecir of
Czechoslovakia.
W!lander's compatrio1 Stefan
Edberg, the No. 3 seed, faced
Kuehnen. Thee two have never
played before.
.
The other men's quarter pl1ted
world No. 1 Ivan Lend!, a
two-time Wimbledon finalist but
never champion, against lOth·
seeded American Tim Mayotte.
Lend! has won all of their II
meetings, including a 1986 Wim·
bledon quarterfinal, but the tail
American was trying to keep a
positive attitude.
"J've never bea1en him in a

better,"

He said he would rather not
light a war with Becker, preferring to conserve his strength for
the semifinal and final that would
follow a victory.
" I hope I win easily. " Cash
said. "But whatever happens
happens. We'll both be trying as
hard as we can. I'm obviously not
to keen to give away my title. so
I 'II be trying my best, as 1 do In
every match ."
Becker, who put Connors'
comments down to posl ·defeat
disappointment, said he was
approaching the quarterfinal
with caution.
The 2Q-year-oid Wes t German,
who beat American Paul Annacone In straight sets Tuesday,
said he thought victory would go
to the man who "takes a chance
.
·
when he has to."
Mayotte predicted the match
would go to the stronger server.
" It 's such a toss-up," Mayotte
said. "It'll depend on how they
serve. Whoever serves well will

I

Pre~s

International
Golf
CoUege
Nick Price birdied the first
Washington State basketball hole of a sudden-death playoff to
coach Kelvin Sampson an· defeat Craig Stadler and Chip
nounced assistant coach Don Beck in the $424,000 Family
Newman has become a fuU-tlme House Invitational at Oakmon 1
coach,andassistantDaveHarsh· Country Club In Pittsburgh .
man's new assignment will in· Price won $100,000 in the two-day
elude more coaching In the gym event. Stadler and Beck each
and on the court .... The Pacific· earned $35,000. The fifth annual
lOconferenceannouncedAtizona tournament benefits Family
State's track program was House, a residence where faml ·
placed on probation for two years lies of hospital patients can stay
for 1! rules violations under while in Pittsburgh.
Coach Clyde Duncan, who was
Soccer
Czechoslovakia upset Ihe So·
dismissed this spring. The viola·
!Ions Included allegations Dun· viet Union 2-1 to win the 17th
can gave money to athletes for President Cup International
personal travel, falsified qualify · FootballTournamentatOlympic
ing Urnes for the 1987 NCAA Stadium in Seoul, South Korea... .
Track and Field Championships, The Austrian Soccer Association
at ntdl iilegf ally Pthrolvtided TtrhanspoS r· announced the 1988·89 season will
Devils can compete In track and
a on in or
a ees.
un
1988-89,
althoughe they
field
cannot compete off-campus . .. .
The Pac-10 also announced California has been foreed to give up
two football scholarships for the
1988-89 academic year because of
transfer rule violations. ... A
circuit judge in Columbia S.C.,
dismissed drug possession
charges against South Carolina
wide receiver Ryan Bethea when
the prosecu lion said the chief
state witness lied. South Carolina
Coach Joe Morrison sa ld he will
talk with Bethea next week about
returning to the team.
Football
The Philadelphia Eagles
signed veteran kicker Paul
McFadden to a one-year ~on·
tract. McFadden, a four-year
veteran, holds the Eagles record
for most career field goals, with
91.

win."

Iowa tops

T~ledo

TOLEDO, Ohio IUP[) - Dave
Meier hit a two· run homer in the
ninth inning Tuesay night to lead
Iowa to a 3-1 win over Toledo in
an AAA·Allance game.
Iowa scored an unearned run in
the fifth inning when Rick
Wrona, who had singled, scored
on an error by Toledo center·
fielder Dwayne Murphy who
dropped a pop up .
Toledo tied the game in the
eighth inning when Billy Bean
scored on a bases-loaded wild
pitch while George Vukovich was
at the plant.
Meier's homer made a winner
out of Len Damian, now8·5, while
Dave Cooper took the loss,

Chris Alverez delivered a one·
out, bases-loaded single In the
ninth inning Tuesday night to
give Columbus a 4·3 win over
Omaha In a AAA·Alllance game.
Alvarez also hit a two-run
homer In the third Inning, his
first of the year.
Omaha scored two runs In the
second inning when Dave Owen
drove in one with a double-play
groundout and Larry Owen fol ·
lowed him with a single. Jose
Castro doubled home the lhlrd
run in the seventh Inning.
Turner Ward drove In the third
run for co'tumbu s In the seventh
Inning with a single .
&amp;ott Nielson 00·3) went the
dis lance for Columbus, giving up
10 hits and three runs . Omaha
starter Al Hargeshe!mer wen! 6
1·3 innings, giving up five hi1 s
and three runs . Rich Thompson ,
who took the loss, went I 1·3
innings, giving up three hits and
surrendering the winning run .
He' s1·1.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS 115-HGI
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In~ .

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Sports digest ...

By United

grand prix tournament, but this
Is my best surface. I'm just going
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said.
The real Interest, however. is
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"I think it 's only natural that
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MICILIW... l .. l'lllSI DltVI SAfElY

�Wednesday, June 29, 1988
Wednesday, June 29, 1988

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11 0 West Main

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

Red Sox defeat Indians, 6-l;
Yankees fall to Tigers again

J
,.if.'!&amp;""--~

~

&lt;

...
•

•

,,
GREAT CATCH - The Indians' Joe Carter
makes a great catch on a line drive to center field
. by Boston's Todd Benzinger in the third inning of

Tuesday night's 'g ame In Boston. The Red Sox
dropped the Tribe 6-1. (UPI)

Schott gives Reds 'pep talk'
prior to 4-3 win ,over Padres
By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
, Cincinnati Reds owne, Marge
-5chott addres sed he r s lump ing
:warriors be fore Tuesday night 's
game, urging them " not to quit ,
to work hard with dedication a nd
come back,"
· And like any good soldier,
Tracy Jones followed his order s
to the letter.
. Jones didn 't qui t and worked
hard with dedlcalion. leadlngtoa
Cincinnati comeback vi ctory, 4-3
over \he San Diego Padres.
Pinch hitter Jones ca me to the
plate with the bases full and one
out in the ninth inning, th e score
3-3,
. But first, the Reds 1 who were

favored to win the Western
·Division last sea son onl y to fa ll
Into a second-half s lid e, were
riding a six-game losing skid
entering Tuesday and had crept
within a game of the fifth-place
,Padres.
: Manager P ete Rose, who for
years has been Cinc innati's fa ·
vorlte son, was beginnin g to Jose
his luster wlth the Impatient
fans ,
· "People have been say ing,
.'The Reds are out of It now.' and
:'Fire Pete Rose,' " Danny Ja ckson said, "It's not P ete's faul t
We're the players,"
And while the players were
getting a Patton· like speech from
Schott. where wa s Rose, th e
trusted field sergea nt , who led
his team to the battle !leld ?
: "I listened," Rose said , " be·
cause I've bee n in tha t situation.
standing in !rontolthe team , You
never know how they 1the players) will re act, and you don' t
know how soon. either,"

The Reds reacted by a llowing
the P adres to score th ree runs in
the first. not exactly the s tuff that
pep talks a re supposed to e licit.
Still , s tar ter Jackson, " fe lt
good out there,"
Cincinnati respond ed, somewhat,ln its half of the flr sL Ba r ry
La rkin s ingled and eventually
scored on E r ic Davis' single,
And when Larkin drilled his
ninth homer of the season off the
le ft -fi eld foul pole (a little luck
never hurts) , one out after Jeff
Treadway had singled, the Reds
had pulled even at 3,
All \h e while, Jackson was in a
groove, retiring 18 straight batters before Keith Moreland 's
· one-out s in gle in the ninth ,
Jac kson pitc hed his six th comple te game. of the season,
Da vis opened the ninth with a
s ingle off Ma rk Grant, 1-6. and
took third on Leon Durham's
si ngle. Dave Leiper relieved and
intentionally walked pinch-hitter
Dave Co ncepcion to load the
bases,
La nce McC ullers entered, and
pinch hi tter Dave Collins , flied to
short cente r fo r the first out That
brough t up Jones.
Th e count was full, the Reds
were down to their las t strike,
Jones fouled off one pitch, a
second , A third McCullers ' deliv·
ery was hit foul, then a fourth,
J ones wou ldn ' t qu it, and on the
fifth 3-2 pitch, he walked to send
home Davis with the winning
run.
Jackson , who improved to 8-4,
had vis ions of a title,
' 'The (fi rst-place) Dodgers aren' t going to play this way all
year. a nd I think we're better
tha n Houston and San Fran-

cisco," he said. "I still think
we ' re going to win it. This team
will bounce back,"
El sewhere In the National
Le ague, New York downed Pitts·
burgh 5·2, St. Louts edged Montreal 5-4, San Francisco walloped
Atlanta 13-7, Houston shaded Los
Angeles 4-3 and Chicago tripped
Philadelphia 6-4.
In the American League. It
was: Detroit 6, New York 1;
Baltimore 7. TorontoO; Boston 6,
Cleveland 1; Chicago 4, Kansas
City 3; Texas 6, Seattle 0;
Minnesota 8, California 2; and
Milwaukee 4, Oakland) ,
·
Mets 5 Pirates 2
At Pittsburgh, Darryl Strawberry and Kevin Elster each hit a
two-run homer to back Sid
Fernandez , 4-6, who allowed
three hits over eight-plus In·
nings , Howard Johnson added a
solo shot for New York,
Cardinals 5, Expos 4
At SL Louts, WHlle McGee
capped a two-run rally by scoring
on third baseman Tim Wallach's
fielding error, Montreal's second
error of the inning, with one out in
the ninth. Ken Dayley. 2-3.
pitched one-third of an Inning,
Giants 13, Braves 7
At Atlanta. San Francisco
banged out 19 hits. lour by Candy
Maldonado, for the second
straight game. The teams totaled
live sacrifice flies to tie a
major-league record , Atlanta
Infielder Jim Morrison threw 2
11·3 sc&lt;,&gt; reless innings In his
big-league pitching debut.
Astros 4, Dodgers 3
At Houston, BOb Knepper, 8·1,
allowed two hits over 8 1-3
Innings, Juan Agosto, . who
earned his first save, defused a
ninth-Inning Los Angeles threat
Mike Marshall hit his ninth
homer of the season for the
Dodgers.
Cubs 6, PhiiUes 4
At Chicago, Shawon Dunston
stroked a two-runslngleoffSteve
Bedrosian. 1-3, to cap a four-run
eighth Inning. Mike Capel Improved to 2-1 and Les Lancaster
recorded his third save.

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
The way the Bos ton Red Sox
are hitting, all they need from a
starting pitcher Is an adequate
performance, Tuesday night ,
Wes Gardner, normally a reliever. more than filled the
require ment.
" I just tried to relax and keep
my mind on what I had to do,"
Gardner said after allowing
three hits over seven innings In
Boston's 6-1 victory over \he
Cleveland Indians. " It's defi·
nltely different from coming out
of the bullpen. "
Gardner, thrus t Into the start·
lng rotation because Jeff Sellers
suffered a broken finger when hit
by a line drive last week, could
not have become a starter at a
better time. In \heir las t 10
games , the Red Sox have won
eight, scoring a total of 79 runs in
those ,victories. In Its last 14
games, Boston Is hitting a
collective .326.
With their fourth straight victory, the Red Sox pulled wlthln
one · game of the third-place
Indians, who have lost four
straight, in \he American League
East.
"I mentioned be!orewestarted
playing thes'e guys that we'd
played well agains t Baltimore
and Cleveland. " second baseman Marty Barrett said, "I said
everybody In the division had
played them already and we'd
get going when we had our
chance.
"I think the things that hap-

pened with Wade !Boggs' $6
million plalmony suit) and stuff
has brought us together."
Tuesday night, Cleveland 's
shabby defense contrlbu ted to
Boston scoring five U!Jearned
runs In the second Inning: Dwight
Evans hit a two-run homer to cap
the decisive live-run Inning,
"We haven't played weHdefenslvely the past two days," said
Cleveland manager Doc Ed·
wards , ''But we'H come out of it.

Defensive slumps are like hi tting
s lumps or any other kind of
s lumps.''
Boston 's Mike Greenwe ll extend ed hi s hitting s treak to 19
g ames .
Indians star ter Scott Ba lles,
6-7, allowe d six runs, one earned,
In 613 Innings,
In other gam es , Detroit
whipped New York 6-I, Baltimore blanked Toronto 7-0. Chi·
c ago nipped Kansas City 4·3,
Texas clipped Seattle 6·0, Minnesota clobbered Caltfornla8-2, and
MHwaukee downed Oakland 4-1.
In the Na tional League, It was :
Chicago 6, Philadelphia 4; New
York 5, Pi t tsbu rgh 2; Cincinnati
4, San Diego .1; San Francisco 13,
Atlanta 7; Houston 4, Los Angeles 3; a nd SL Louis 5, Montrea l
4,

Orioles 7, Blue Jays 0
At Balilmore, Fred Lynn drove
In three runs with hi s 13\h homer
and a two-run double, pacing the
rout The Orioles, a major-league
worst 22-54, won the first two
games of a ~er ies for just the
second time this season, Jay
Tibbs, 3-4, and Mark Thurmond
combined on a seven-hitter.
Tigers 6, Yankees I
At New York, Frank Tanana
combined with Mike Hennema n
on a live-hit ter, a nd Pat Sheridan
drove In fou r runs to lift Detroit to
Its filth s tra ig ht triumph over \he
Yankees In the last two weeks,
New York ha s lost10ofltslast14
games, Tanana, 10-4, allowed
five hit s. Rick Rhoden fell to 3-6.
White Sox 4, Royals 3
At Kansas City. Dan Pasqua
hit two home r uns and Greg
Walker added another, powering
Chicago, Starter Bill Long, 3-3,
allowed Kansas Ci ty four hits
over seven Innings, Bobby
Th lgpe n relieved In the eighth
and earned his 15th save. Long
and Thigpen combined to retire
the last 16 Royal batters.
Brewers 4, Athletics I
At Oakland, Don August threw
a four -hitter, Rob Deer shimmed

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HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

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Pomeroy- Middleport, ,Ohio

Cavs choose Keys
in first round draft
•

CLEV ELAND (U P!) - Th e
Clevela nd Cavaliers, seeki ng to
Improve thei r perimeter shootIn g a nd diversify their front court, picked forwa rd Ra ndolp h
Keys of South ern Mi ssissippi in
the !Irs! round of the NBA dra ft
Cleveland previously traded
its second· round sel ection to
' Phoenix In th e deal th a t br ough
Larry , Nance to the Cavaliers,
Cleveland had the 64\h overa ll
pick In the third and final round,
a nd took forward Wins ton Ben·
nett of Kentucky.
Keys, 22, listed as a 6-foot-9,
195-pounder from Collins, Miss, ,
averaged 13A points and six
rebounds In four collegiate seas ons. Cleveland General Mana ger Wayne Embry said Keys "Is
more like 6·7 and 205 pounds, "
Keys averaged 17 ,7 points and
7A rebounds his senior year , In
his junior. season, Keys led
Southern Mississippi to the
c hampionship of the National
Invitation Tournament and wa s
named the NIT 's Most Valuable
P layeL
.
·
He fini shed his career with the
Golden Eagles as th e school' s
fourth all-time scorer with 1,626
points and was fifth In rebounds
with 723.
"Randolph Is a fine perimeter
shooter, " says Embry. "We want
to surround (ce nter) Br ad
Daugherty with perimeter shoot·
ers and open It up, Brad has been
getting double· a nd tripleteamed and (point guard) Mark
Price need s to be complimented
outside,"
, Embry said Keys 's play re·
sembles ex-Milwaukee star
Bobby Dandridge while Cavaliers Coach Lenny Wilkens had
another comparison,
"He remind s m e of Alex
English, Every time he catches
th e ball. he' s ready to shoot, "
said Wilkens. "He shoots a

.Miami selects Seikaly in first round, draft

20-!ooter without a ny probiems
a nd has three-point potenti a l.
"At the Olympic tri als (In
Colorado Spr ings, Colo,), If ell he
did not try to do a ny ballh andllng
he fe lt he couldn' t, so tha t Isn't a
drawback,"
·
Keys will be used as a small
forward off th e bench, probably
backing up Na nce as we ll a s
cr ippling veteran Phil Hubba rd's
chances of making the rosteL
Embry stressed that Keys was
drafted for his shooting a nd not
lor added rebounding punc h,
although the Cavaliers were last
in the NBA with an ave rage of
40,3 re bounds a game,
"We expect to get ·Impr oved
rebounding from within, as Chris
Dudley gets better and (John )
'Hot Rod ' Williams pi cks up
where he had been after his
rook ie year." said Wilkens, " Williams needed more upper-body
strength last yea r, and that's
what he's been trying to build
up.''
Embry said he failed In hi s
attempt to conta ct Keys a fte r
drafting him,
"He wa s out fishing ," grinned
Embr y, "That's good, He'll fit
right ln. "
Be nnett, 23, of Louisville. Ky ..
Is 6-7 and 210 pounds , He mis sed
the entire 1986-87 campaign after
und ergo ing kne e surgery but
recovered to average 15.3 points
and 7.8 rebounds for \he Wildca ts
last year.
The Cavaliers project Bennett
as providing additional competl·
tion a t small forward ,

~U ;

re~ all ed

You Are Invited To An
Autograph Session July 1st
from 10 to 3
At The Pomeroy Kroger
Store With

DAVE
DILES
Co-Author of the New Book

\\Up Clo11 e11d p,,onel"

IT ,JUST TAKES A HOLE· IN-ONE on No.9 durlncthellntround
of play In Thundays' Meigs County Amerlcu Heart AaiiGCiation
Golf Tournament to win this 1988 Ford Escort LX from Tumplke
Ford of GaiUpoUs. Tournament tee off Ill at 1 p.m. at Jaymar Golf
CoMI'!Ie. With the new car are, Ito r, John Sang, of Turnpike Ford,
Slllldy lunareiU, tournament chairman, and Bill Nel11011,
Tll"'lllke Ford sales representative.

I

.

1

L

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

NB718

·=...

Cavaliers games
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Cavaliers and WOJOTV have reached an agreement
to televise the NBA team's
games for \he next three seasons,
It was announced Tuesday .
WOIO will air a minimum of 20
games a season, Including
playoff contests, said Cavaliers
President Art Savage.
"We're excited, and we look
forward to a long-term relation·
ship with WOIO," said Savage,
WUAB·TV had televised Cavaliers games the past eight
seasons,

. .. , - -

Ready-to-use water repellant for wood ,
concrete and other porous materials,
Use on leather, canvas and fabric, Dries
transparent and palntable, Two gallons,
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for industry, farm , home and workshop. Heavy
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with Trigger Nozzle

tire cord reintorced hose

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with super flexibility,
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Feimelly named to
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WOIO-TV gets

..
SPECIAL
PRICE

High-Back
Beach Chair

By United Press International
Billy Mlms. former a ssistant
coach at Chowan College In
Murfreesboro, N,C" was named
basketball coach at Barry Uni versity, Mlms coached Burger·
land International , of Cork, Ireland, and finished 32·11 to win the
Irish National League Championship In 1986-1987,
Also, Kenny Natt of the Fresno
Flames was named the World
Basketball League's Player of
the Week. The 6-loot-3 guard
averaged 22.2 points and grabbed
22 rebounds In five games.

TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI) - An
assistant Notre Dame women's
basketball coach, Bill Fe nnelly,
has been named women's head
basketball coach at the Unlve r·
slty of Toledo, It was announced
T~tesdav ,
,
~'ennelly w111 replace Tim
Selgo, who resigned to accept an
associate athletic director's post·
tlon at \he University of Toledo.
Fennelly , 31, was selected
from among 50 applications ,
• "This Is a very exciting and
challenging oportunlty for me
and my family," Fennelly said ,
Fennelly, a native of Davenport, Ia., has been Notre Dame's
top women's basketball asststan t
since 1986, he served as a
recruiter and scout and did
on-the-floor coaching,
His appointment must be
aproved by President James
McComas and the Board of
Trustees.

'3999

18" Electric Hedge
Trimmer $A I!SIS

Mims accepts post

THE
INSIDE STORY OF
NETWORK
TELEVISION
SPORTS . . ,

MIAMI t UP!) - Th e Miami
Hea t made 6-foot-ll Syracu&gt;;e
center Rony Seikal y the first
college draft choice In team
his tory Tuesday, ea ger ly grabbing a player they believe d would
be drafted before they got a shot
a t him
The Heat, which will begin pla y
this fall in the Midwes t Division.
then used Its second pick In the
first round. the 20th choice
overall. to pick DePaul shooting
guard Kevin Edwards , a na tive
of Cleveland . Se ikaly, a native of
Athens. Greece, was the ninth
player chosen in the draft
With three second-round selections; the Heat took 6-!oot-7
forward Grant Long from Eastern Michigan; 6-loot-6 small
forward Sylvester Gray from
Memphis State; and 6-foot-7
forward Orlando Graham from

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Cal Lolli 114!ach- Named Butch Cark'r
IU1 ustscant hMketbaJI (.'Oa c h.
Cal Stale Norlhrldj~:t' - N 1uncd Bill ~
Ktrren h.!M!h&amp;U ~'Oach.
Hol~lra - Sporb lnlonnauon dlrec:t or
1U1d kOif coac h Ou"topher tlumm
re!llpd IOIII!H.-ne ~~am e pOI'il !'l at Brown,

Terms of the GTE exchange policy available at Phone Mart.

RONY SEIKALY

Double-edge reciprocating steel blade
stays sharp, cuts bfanches up to ',{,",
Extra heavy-duty motor. N8716

haMkMhall coa.ch.

238 w. Main Street

Pazienza winner

16" Electric
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ward Ch~~tleN Smtih
11nd pard Gat)' Grant from &amp;at.tle.
Sealllf! - Traded 11. 1981 flr!'l -rouJMI
draft pick to Phl..del ... la.
Colle 1e
Barry - Named Billy Mlrn!'l men 'N

=- lei

•

He rman Wln-

nlnlhiUTl from lndiiU'Iapolls ollhe Amerlun i\!'!soclaUon(AAA).
Oakland - Placed lnlteldl!l' Do._
Je.•np on the 1$11-.v diM~t'd ll11t;
recalled plldH' t Jim Cor•t from Tt.ooma
nl thf! Pacifi c Cl)ul Lor~- CAAAI ).
BMkrtball
Den~r - Traded draft c hoice Vftnon
MulM!II, a ~rd, to !!'an Antonio for a
~ e ~1u.t - ruu!ld IlK&amp; dt11fl ~; hulce.
lA Ctlppen - Tl-adedlurward MJclu.ef
C~ R:e to Seattle IUid ruard Hf'r!ll"y
lH !il .. red forlrm~ Phlladel~a

smart

Auburn, In the third round , Ohio before transferring to De· forward to the m or~ physical
Miami p ic ked forward Na te Pa u L In his se nior year with the s tyle of play In the NBA, as well
Blue Demons, Edwards aver· as looking forwa rd to playing in a
Jo hns ton from Ta mpa.
" I think In our a b11lty to get aged 18,3 points, 5,3 rebounds a nd .league that ou tlaws zone
defenses.
Se tkaly. someone was looking out 3.9 assists per game,
"One thing you know lor s ure is
"I'm not really familiar with
over us," sa id Heat. managi ng
no
team has evC'r come lo the
pa rtner Lewis Sc haffeL "The them at all." Edwards said of his
league
and won a cha mpions hip
a bility to. get a pla yer wl t h the new team , " I k now they've got
the
same
year," h~ sa id " 'fhr
athletic skills. the ab111ty. an d the (Dway ne) Pearl Wa s hington and
only
wa
y
lor
us to go is up ,"
character, that 's what an expan- they picked Ro ny Seika ly. That's
abo ut it. It's a good feeli ng to be
sion tea m mu st have,
"There a re ve ry fe w centers In picked by anybody and I sho uld
By Unite d Press ln ~rnallon al
college bas ke tba lL To get a get a rea l c hance wi th a n
Vinny Paztenza, f1Ghll ng lor
player like this a t nine, It 's very expa nsion tea m."
lucky/'
Heat part owner Billy Cun- the !irst time as a junior
Se ika ly was a lout·· year starter ningham said he believed the we lterweight. stopped Fel ix
"The Cat " Dubray at 1: 34 of the
at Sy racuse, a nd finished his tea m had a so lid fir st draft.
"We' re t ryi ng to build a very fo urth round at Providence. K I.
career with a n average of 12.6
poin ts a nd 8, 0 rebounds per sound foundatio n for the ball club Pazienza , formerly a tight ·
weig ht, won his fJt·s t fight since
game, Inc luding 16,3 points and for the future," Cunn ingham
9,6 re bounds per game his sen tor sa id, " We're very pleased with losing his In ternationa l Boxing
Federa tion lig htweight title in
what we've done, Rony Selkaly Is
year.
FPbruary to Creg Haugen,
He runs the court well and at not go ing to co me In here and
·230 pounds , Is strong enough to ta ke over the fra nc h'lse arid
play Inside, Seikaly's wea- dom inate the league, bu t wit h
knesses are his pass ing a nd fr ee t ime a nd coaching, he will
throw s hooting, He had only 86 become a very good player,"
The pressure of be ing the !irst
assis ts In four yea rs of college
bas ketball, and shot 57 percent player se lected in fra nchiSe
from the free- throw line,
his tory did not seem to laze
~3 1 JACKSON PIKE · RT . 3~ WESl
Seikaly,
who said he was loo king
He Is the career rebounding
PhOnt 446 -4524
leader at Sy racuse, Is second In
BARGAIN MAT)NEES SAT/SUN &amp; WED
ALL SEATS ~ 2 . 50
blocked shots with 319, a nd fourth
GOOD USED
BARGAH4 NIGHT lU[S~Y S2 . 50
In scoring,
" It's like a dream come true ,"
WASHERS, DRYERS,
JUNE :Z41hru 30 _j
FI!I OA V thru fHURSOA Y~
s etkaly. 23, s aid, " I'm ecs tatic at
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
being pic ked by Mtam 1. I think
WIH E'It' IU11) 1:00 • 9!20 ""' DA1 l1
UJMJNG 1'0
$AT/SUH. WED M TINEH
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
that tn Miami 1 will really reac h
At.
'R'.t.
I ,00 I ' ' "
~n.J\.d'"'ft'ITE O !RJ
my potential because I'm going
to get a lot of playing time,
They 're going to s pend a lot of
time working with me. "
C::M.WYCMAA
7 ·10 1 g:oo DAI LY
Edwards, 6-!oot-3, did not ptay
FUNNY sms~ • 11(1) "1A.n11ru
627 3r d Ave., Gallpolis
high school ball until his se nior
FARM
U T(O. I'JIG
''"
'"'I
ye ar at St. Joseph's High In
PH. 446-1699
..., SPECIAL WEOIIESDI-Y Sl.M'IER KAT! ~ [[S n
Cleveland, then played two years •·L.....::H::O::U~I,:S:;..::.I.,::l:;:.M::::;··::6:.,:P:;,:.M::.:.·- I
of junior college basketball In

Buehall
MoMreal - Pl aced o"flelder Tim
Raines on lkl~· dl!lllhle d list rell'(llt.dh·P

HIIWklnll IO Philadelphia;

Need
advice?

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

ransactions
to •IUnf"

Tells The Real Story Of
Television's Sports.

(

a two-run homer and Robin
Yount added a two-r un triple to
pace MHwaukee. August, 4·2,
car ried a . two-hit ter Into the
e ighth, A's starter Storm Davis.
5- 4, retired 18 of 19 Brewe rs In one
stretc h.
'
Rangers 6, Mariners 0
At Seattle, Jose G uzman
hu r led a four-hit ter lor his firs t
career shutout, and Larry Par·
r ls h and Steve Buechele homered
to help Texas halt a thre ee-game
losing streak, Guzman, 7-6,
s truck out six and walked three In
his fifth complete game of the
seas on, Steve Trout fell to 3-4. ·
Twins 8, Angels 2
At Anaheim, Calif., Gene Lar·
kin homered and drove Jn three
runs and Bert Blyleven pitched
an eight-hitter to end the Angels'
three-game winning stre ak with
Minnnesota 's third triumph In Its
las t fou r games. Blyleven. 7-6,
struck out SC\'en and walked one
In hi s fourth complete game of
the season,

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

11fl99

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Quick , easy and convenient. Highest anatys1s
available In liquid. Backed by ScoH's no -quibble
guarantee. Covers 3,000 sq. ft. N3M

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Beetle Trap
Pheromone and noral scent lure beetles Into trap
vanes. Bail lasts all season . Replace annually. 16901

$A99

SPECIAL PRICE . .

Individual dealers may Um1t qua nlities .
Individual dea~ may not stodl a" items.
Some stares may restrict items to

cash and carry terms onty.

Hardware Lumber

HomeCent•s

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

can

405 North Second Avenue
MIDDLEPORT

\

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

•
PubllC

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

... ________.._____...___

Wednesday, June 29, 1988
Lottery numbers

The Integrating Committee berts, Middleport; Paul Wolver- . Committee for ratification~
also appointed a nine member ton, New Matamoras; James
Projects eligible for consideraCLE'v ELAND !UP I) - TuesSmall Governments Committee McGee, Powhatan Point; Joan tion are as follows : roads and day's winning Ohio Lottery
Weiser, Falls Township ( Mus ~ lowing to serve on the Executive (villages and townships under
bridges; waste water treatment numbers:
king ham County); and Joan Committee: Private sector re- 5,000 population) to recommend Beardmore, Warren Township;
and
Edward
Knowlton,
systems;
water supply systems;
Daily Number
Bearmore, Warren Township presentat jve, Robert V. Schul- projects from the district to the Woodsfield.
solid
waste
disposal systems;
914.
(Washington County ).
theis; VIllage representative, administrator of the Ohio Small
The Integrating Committee
flood control systems; storm
Ticket sales totaled $1.123,817,
County Engineers Appointee:
Paul Wolvertson, New Matamo- Governments Capital Improve~ voted to dispense funds to each
water
and
sanitary
collection;
with
a payoff due of $464,091.
Fr ed F . Bennett, Belmont ras; Township representative, ments Commission for statewide
county
based
on
the
same
for'and
storage
and
treatment
PICK-4
Coumy.
Wllliam Weiser; County repre- competitive consideration. mula as allocated to District 18 systems.
1346.
Private Sector 1\ppointment:
se ntatives - William Shaw, These representatives are: Ro~ by the State. This will permit the
President Olexa will appoint
PICK ~ 4 ticket sales totaled
Robert 'v . Schulteis, retired James Waymer, and Richard bert Ralston, Caldwel]; William county,
municipalities
and
townto
recommend
rules,
committees
$190,289,
with a payoff due of
engineer.
Jones; City )'epresentatives ~ Gossett, Flushing; Galen Finley , ships to determine project within regulations and operating proce$85.681.
The Integrating Committee Fred Bennett, Edward Know! ~ McConnelsville; Larry Kidd,
their own county and recom- dures for the Integrating
PICK·4 $1 straight bet pays
representalives elected the fol~ ton, Robert Ralston.
Melgsvllle Township; Phillip Ro- mend them to the Executive Committee.
$2,520.
pays
_ _ _ _ _ _ _,___ _ _ _ _ _...::___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - $ 1 0 5._PICK-4
_ _$1
_box
_ bet
__
_
(Continued !'rem page 11

Come And Save During The Kroger

••

ewa
ADVERTISED ntM POLICY

Continued from page 1
the building will be open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday, ami
that remaining items will be sold at the same prices as similar
Items went for In a recent auction. Someone will be on hand at
the building to assist with any purchases.

Community events scheduled
Area residents will enjoy Thursday's "Community HappenIng" in Pomeroy. A number of events have been scheduled
throughout the day by the Pomeroy Area Merchants
Association, in conjunction with Thursday evening's performance by the 1988 Ohio University Communiversity Band.
The merchants will be offering store specials during the day,
and by late afternoon, an "Artln the Park" exlbltion, displaying
the works of several local artists, should be ready for vlewlng!n
the .Court Street Mini-Park. Just a few of the artists who will be
displaying their work on Thursday include Jack Slavin, Regina
McClure, JoAnn Fetty, Nancy Yoacham, Nonga Roberts, Joe
Clark and Eugene Smith.
Food treats will also be In store with the Eastern Band
Boosters' fruit salad and taco bar and Rod Pullins at Main
Street Pizza offering "pizza by the slice." So plan to eat supper

. Pomeroy firemen make 2 runs

Kroger Store, except as specifically notpd ln this ad. If we do run out of an
advertised item, We will offer you your choice of a comparable Item, wMen
available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to
purchase the advertised item et the advertised price Within 30 days. Only one
11endor coupon will be accepted per item purchased.

COPYRIGHT 1988 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY, JUNE 26, THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1988, 1111
GAlllf&gt;llliS AJIIO POIIIliDY STORES.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

E

Red, Ripe
Watermelon .....

HALVES,
QUARTERS.
SLICES LB . 29¢

Each

Holly Farms .
Breast Quarter~

OPEN

Pound

Big K
Soft Drinks

·

12·Pak 12-oz. Cans

· · JULY 4th.

••

REGULAR
HOURS

U.S, f'!i"!,\I•T
CHOICE
N FED BEEF

DELlPASTRY SHOPPE

LAYS OR

Deli Fresh
Fried Chicken

Ruffles Brand
Potato Chips

12-Piace Barrel

6.5-8-DL

II

James Chase

Ruby Major

Pomeroy native, James Allen
Chase, 83, 400 Rogers Road.
Leesburg, Fla .. died June 18,
1988.
Born and schooled In Pomeroy,
he moved to Leesburg In 1962
from Silver Springs, Md. A
retired Internal Revenue Servlce
agent, he was a graduate of Ohio
Un lverslty , a member of Delta
Sigma PI fraternity, the Wa~
shlngton D..C. Chapter of Sons of
the American Revolution, and
the Meigs County Ohio Pioneer
and Historical Society.
He was also a Kentucky
Colonel, a U.S. Navy veteran of
World War II and a member of
the First United Methodist
Church of Huntington, W.Va.
Survlvors Include his sister
Phyllis C. Russell of Leesburg.
A memorial service will be
conducted by Ewing Funeral
Home late In September. The
funeral home will announce the
date.

Ruby Louise Major, 64, of
Bellefontaine. Ohio, died Friday,
June 24, In Mary Rutan Hospital.
She was born May 22, 1924, In
Hartford, W. ~~a. , to the late
William and Phoebe Mahon Lee.
She married Martin M. Major
Aug. 24, 1949, in Pomeroy, and he
survives.
· Also surviving are five daugh~
ters. Mrs. Charles (Janet ) Bland
of Huntsville, Sheila Little of
Bellefontaine, · M:rs. Emerson
tAngle) Little of Russells Point,
Mrs. Robin tJudy) of Russells
Point, and Mrs. DeWayne
(Sherry) Prater of Bellefontaine; two ·sons, Martin M.
Major, Jr. of Huntsville and
Robert E. Major of Russells
Point; four sisters, Mrs. Carrie
Bowser of Bellefontaine, Betty
Hawley of Middleport. Mrs.
Bonnie Proctor of Middleport,
and Mrs. Marjorie Stewart of
WestCoiumbia, W.va.; I6grandchlldren; and six greatgrandchildren.
She was preceeded In death by
a daughter, Linda Sue Major, a
sister, Mrs. Ova Douglas and two
grandchildren.
She attended the Pentecostal
Church south of Alger.
Funeral servlces were conducted Monday, June 27 In
Elchholtz Funeral Home with !he
Rev. Wilke Shepherd officiating.
Burial followed In the Huntsvllle
Cemetery.

Branch Fleming
Branch C. Fleming, 74, of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., died June 28
after an extended Illness.
Born March 2, 1914 In Wellsburg, W.Va., he was thesonofthe
late Ira G. and Eva Beaver
Fleming.
He was a strip-mine operator
in Meigs County before moving to
Florida in 1964. In Florida, he
was employed in the Broward
County Land Appraisal Office
until his retirement In 1984.
· He Is survived by hls wife
Madalyn Markham Fleming;
two stepsons, Mark and William
Markham. · both of Ft. Lauderdale; a sister, Nanga Roberts.
Pomeroy; two nephews, Mike
Roberts, Bath, and Bob Roberts,
Uniontown; one 'great~nephew;
and four great~nieces.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by his first
wife, Frances Dillard Fleming,
and a sister, Noretha Fleming
Funeral services will be held
Thursday, June30at2p.m. at the
Fairchild Funeral Home, 299
Federal Highway. Ft.
Lauderdale.

The Pomeroy Fire Department responded to two fires, one
Tuesday afternoon and the other early Wednesday morning.
The garage of Charles Nease, Bally Run Road, caught on fire
and was fully Involved when the fire department arrived at 4:43
p.m.. The firemen put out the fire but the garage was destroyed
and the house sustained heat damage. ·
Nease was In the process of tearing down the struct ure so the
only real damage was to the house.
Responding to the call were 13 firemen, three trucks and the
emergency squad.
An automobile caught on fire Wednesday morning on State
Route 33 and Kingsbury Road (County Road 19) .
The 1980 Ford Bronco, owned by Demma Gannon,
Middleport, was fully Involved in flames when the fire
department arrived at 12:32 a.m. The car was destroyed.
Ten men, three trucks and the emergency squad responded to
I he call.
Causes of the fires are unknown .

California
Peaches
Pound

R aci ne.

Am Electric Power ............. 28'J-&lt;
AT&amp;T ............ ................... 26%
Ashland Oil ........................ 71Y.
Bob Evans .......................... 16%
Charming Shoppes .............. 14 Y.
Cit y Holding co ................... 32
Federal Mogu l ..................... 40
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... .. ........ 64'J-&lt;
Heck's Inc . .. .... .. .................. ! %
Key Centurion .................. .. 36'J-&lt;
Lands' End .. ........ .. .. , .......... 27 'J-&lt;
Limited Inc ........ .. ...... ......... 24
Multimedia Inc .................... 70
Rax Res tau rants .................. 4 Y.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11 \-2
Shoney's Inc .. .... ................. 26%
Wendy's Inti.. ........ ·~ ............ 5%
Worthington Ind ................. 23V.

License issued
A marriage I icense has been
Issued in Meigs Cou nty P robate
Co urt to Lewis Humphrey, Jr. ,
and Dar la Ha lfield, both of Meigs
Co un ty.

WE INVITE YOU TO A

REVIVAL
7

AT THE

FREEDOM
GOSPEL MISSION
at County Rd. 31
Bald Knob &amp; Stivemille Road

Announcements

PORTLAND, OHIO
Rev. Rick Weaver

Grange meeting
Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet Friday, 7:30 p.m., at
the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Election of officers w!l! be held,
in addition to practice for degree
work. Racine Grange will serve
refreshments.

EVANGELIST

June 27th-July lrd
7:00 P.M.
Special Singers Nightly
Rev. Roger Wilford
PASTOR

THE RIGHT CHOICE

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when you buy THE
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June 1 . and August
31. 1988.
GLUCOSCAN is the Blood
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GETONE i

FREE!

FREE!
•
•

LARGE LUSCIOUS

Ga ry Wolf, who pleaded Ma t)day in Meigs Cou nty Common"
P lea$ Court to a charge of dr ug
abuse, is not Gary J . Wolfe of

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.

'%"

15-oz.

Clarification

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

Southern ... .._

TRIM

Kroger
Pork &amp; Beims

Stocks

Dorothy Bryson

Dorothy Allene McGuire Bryson, 64, died Tuesday evening at
her home at 419 Bascom Ave. In
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Mrs. McGuire was a member
of the All Saints Episcopal
Church and had retired from the
A complaint was fil ed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Sears Company In Pittsburgh.
by Mark J. Werry of Hemlock Grove charging Douglas Eblin.
She is survived by her bus ~
Jr., of Syracuse with vehicular negligence. The plaintiff Is
band, Clifford H. Bryson, a Meigs
asking for a judgment of $4,222.89 In addition to Interest and
County native; two daughters,
court costs for suffered damage. The case stems from an
Janice Bryson of Philadelphia,
accident on Rock Springs Road In which the defendant went left
Pa. and Ann Quigley of Boston,
of center and forced the plaintiff's car Into a ditch.
Mass.; one son and daughter-InDavid K. Snodgrass also filed for a dissolution of marriage
law, Clifford Charles and Donna
from Mary Beth Obltz. Both reside in Racine.
Bryson, Pittsburgh, Pa.; her
mother, Mrs. Ann McGuire,
Palmentto, F1a.; one sister,
_c_on_u_n_ue_d_f_ro_m_pa_g_e_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Christine, of Boston, Mass.; her
mother-In-law, Mrs. Weltha Bryson,
Pomeroy; sister and
Donald Dudding's resignation
The following other business Typewriter Shop. Athens. for
brother~ in- law ,
Betty L. and
typewriters and typewriter
as high school year book advisor was also finalized by the board.
'vernal
Blackwood,
Racine; four
· Brogan~Warner Insurance, maintenance; Helners Bread,
was accepted.
grandchildren and several nieWilliam Baer's resignation as Pomeroy, was accepted as pro- Huntington, W.Va., for bread;
ces
and nephews.
Valley
Bell
Dairy,
Point
Pleagirls junior high basketball vider of the district's student
Servlces
will be Saturday at
sant,
W.Va.,
for
milk;
Michael's
coach was also accepted. Baer accident lnsuran,ce, property InO'Brien
Funeral
Home In
was then hired as girls high surance and bus fleet Insurance. Ice Cream, Jackson, for Ice
Pittsburgh.
standard 011, Gallipolis, was cream; and Abbott Foods, Coschool basketball coach.
It was reported that a new accepted as the provider of No. 2 lumbus, for lunchroom supplies.
Also approved was the high
furnace is being Installed at fuel oil, dpesei and gasoline fuel.
A bus maintenance agreement school student handbook.
Racine Elementary. To ensure
The district's membership In
additional fuel savings. the board · between Carleton School-Meigs
approved the purchase of extra Industries and Southern Local the Council of Governmentsfor mecbanical work to Carleton Southeastern Ohio Voluntary EdInsulation for the furnace.
ucation Cooperative .&lt;COGAt the request of Diane Rice, busses was approved.
Brown and Snouffer Fire and SEOVEC) was continued.
home economics teacher, the
Present for Monday's meeting
board reduced her days of Safety, Middleport, was acex tended service from 20 to lO In cepted as provlder of fire ex tin~ were boardmembers Denny
order to save money which she gulshers and related mainte- Evans, Gary Wilford, Charles
wiil then be able to apply to the nance; Michelin Warehouse, Norrts and Scott Wolfe, Superincosts of supplies for the upcom- · Athens, for tires; Excelsior Salt tendent Bobby Ord and Clerk
Works, Pomeroy, for coal; the Dennie Evans. Boardmember
Ing year.
Charles Pyles was absent.

Judgment sought in court case

U.S. GRADE A

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

--Area deaths---

Local .news briefs...

The Communiversity Band will entertain on Court Street at 7
p.m .. under the direction of Ronald P. Socciarelll. Admission to
the concert. sponsored by Bank One, Is free.
So plan an enjoyable vis it to Pomeroy on Thursday. And bring
your law n chairs for the concert.

Each of these advertised items is required to be readitv a\l'ailable for sale in

Pound

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

in Pomeroy.

Friday And Saturday July 1st. And 2nd'.

Boneless
Ribeye Steak

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

The Ohio Uni~ersity
Summer Concert Band

NON RETURNABLE BOTILE, DIET CAFFEINE
FREE COKE, CAFFEINE FREE COKE,

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola

Ronald P. Socciarelli, Conducting

2-Litar

on Court Street
In Pomeroy
12-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ... $2.99

KROGER SHERBET OR

Thursday, June 30
7 p.m.

Country Club
lea Cream

The Public is invited to this FREE concert

%-Gillon
EJ(AMP\.E Sl2.q7
Or\Qinol Price
$9.oo
SOl• Price
$3.60
l ... tt1'lo

$&amp;Aii

Cle&lt;JIOnce Price

Go Krogering

Stores everywhere open July 4th

Bring your folding chairs for
an evening of rele~xation
and beautiful sounds.

305 UPPER RIVER ROAD l
GALUPOUS, OHIO

•

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�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

WE'VE
COOKED
UP BIG
SAVINGS

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

r:aA~ne ESteak •••• ~~. $3 99
$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

1
9
Chuck Roast ••••• !·~. 1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
·
$
9
9
8
Round Steak ••••• ! ~. 1.
U.~.D.A. ~HOICE
$

S1rlo1n Steak ••••• !

8
•·

PO

S·teak/Roast ....L!.•• $1 '39'

9
8
2

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••L!.•••• 49(

CHICKEN

Drumsticks •••••..L:-•••• 89 &lt;

COLUMBIA

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••• 69&lt;
12 OZ. PKG.

Bananas ••••••••••••••,3

lBS.

HANGING RO&lt;K GRADE A

· ·

Large Eggs ••••:;•• 2 /
BROUGHTON
·
$

$.

1

2°/o Milk •••••••••G~;... 139

Ice Cream •••••••••••• $1 09

Pie Filling ••••••••••••• •79 (

•12 GAL.

20-21 oz.

BORDEN'S FUDGE BARS, JET BARS or

DEL MONTE

CatSUP •••••••••••••••••• 99&lt; Twin Pops •••••••';;~ ••• 89
21 Oz. SquHzt or 32 Oz. Regular

Enioy REGAL
Microwave
cookware at
special bargain
prices!
End the mess in your mi·
crowave!
There's no
need to put up with spills
and handling flimsy
throw-aways now that
you can buy a quality
microwave item every
week for six weeks at terrific savings! Fashionably
designed and easy to
maintain, use these great
products
with confidence and enjoy these
unbeatable features:
•Use in microwave or
conventional oven to
410 degrees F. •Promotes fast, even cooking •Easy grip handles •Dishwasher safe
•Freezer to oven •limited lifetime warranty
•lifetime non-stick surface.

(

MAXWELL HOUSE

PURE SWEET

CHEER

VIETTI

COFFEE

SUGAR

DETERGE-NT

HOTDOG SAUCE

1470Z.$569
BOX ·

4/$1

- ·-

----~----

-

99&lt;
---------......---·

--

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smokers and nonsmokers when
they can but it doesn't always work
out,
My first roommate was a heavy
smoker and a compulsive talker.
The second was a real nut. He Utah prohibits
on
arrived at 7 p.m .. scheduled for a
billboards. Travelers in California
lung removal the following morn· cannot smoke on planes, buses or
ing. (Cancer, of course,) The man
trains. More than half the compa·
smoked continuously from the time nies in America have restricted
he arrived until he went into the smoking on the job.
operating room.
Not smoking may have snob
I was a smoker for SO years and appeal and be a status·indicator.
never realized how offensive smok·
Donald Garner, an expert in liabili·
ing can be to others until .I quit. It ty law at Southern Illinois Universi·
seems very unfair that nonsmokers ty, says that 2S percent of white-col·
must be forced to inhale smoke that
lar workers smoke, compared with
could endanger their lives. I believe so percent of blue-collar workers.
if enough nonsmokers raised a
Nonsmokers are increasing in
serious stink they would have their
way: Do you agree? _ DETOURED
number as well as irritability. In
FROM TOBACCO ROAD
time, I believe . we enraged non·
DEAR DETOUR: It doesn't al· smokers are gomg to force many
ways work that way. It has been - more smokers to qu~t: h~de or suffer
proven that smoking can be an eve~ greater humilmtton. Mean·
addiction and those folks who are while to paraphrase the quote by
hooked ;re in the same class with editor Horace Greeley: "A cigarette
alcoholics and drug abusers.
has a fire on one end and a fool on ·
According to Time magazine, 26 the other."
percent of American adults now
What are the .&lt;igns of alcoholism?
smoke, down from 38 percent 30 How can you tell if someone you love
years ago. But even those who is an alcoholic? ''Alcoholism: How to
would like to quit want to do it Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
their way and not be pressured by How to Conquer It" will give you the
laws.
answers. To receive a copy, send $3
The smokers. however, are find· and a No. 10, self-addressed, stamped
ing that public sentiment and legal envelope (45 cents postage) to Ann
eagles are making it more difficult.
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Forty-two states have passed laws Ill. 6lA511.0562.

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MEIGS SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED - Pic·
tured from left are Mrs. Elmora Boice, Scott
McPhail, Wendy Fry, Carson Crow. These two
upcoming freshman have been awarded the Rev.
Dr. Edward W.W. Lewis Scholarship. Mrs. Boice
hilS contributed to the funding In memory of her
husband and Crow Is the trustee of the funds. The
scholarship, awarded annually; was established

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Langsville with his wife, Barbra,
a nd chlldren, Melissa and Kerl.
-Francis A. Case, stores attendant at the Meigs No. 1 mine.
Case Is a resident of Middleport.
-Delmar G. Davis. mechanic
at the Meigs No. 1 mine. Davis
lives in Langsville with his wife.
Deanna, and has four children
and five grandchildren.
John Nlclnsky, Jr., mechanic
at the Meigs No.1 mine. Nlclnsky
llves In Rutland with his wife,
Velma, and has two c hildren and
Rock Springs Better Health
three grandchildren.
Club held their regular monthly
-John D. Schuler, moblllo
meeting on Thursday at the home equipment operator at the MelL .
or Ann Mash. President Lenora · No. 2 mine. Schuler lives In
Leifheit was In charge of the Rutland wlth his wife. Priscilla,
meeting and the contest was and daughter , Jamie Lynn.
conducted by Mildred Jacobs.
Reports were given by the
secretary and treasurer. A committee report was given on cards
which were sent to members or
the community who were Ill.
Plans were discussed for a
picnic to be held In July.
Blood pressure readings were
made by Lenora Leifheit.
Ten club members were pres·
ent for the meeting.

meeting held

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Completes course

&gt;

Private First Class Arthur W.
Wiley, son of Larry L. and Mary
C. Wiley of 216 Oak St., New
Haven, W.Va., has graduated
from the TOW and Dragon
weapon systems repair course at
the U.S. Army Missile and
Munitions Center and School,
Redstone Arsenal, Alabama.
The course provkl~s Instruction for students to test, detect
and repair the TOW and Dragon
weapon systems and related
equipment.
During the 19-weeks of train·
lng. students were also In·
structed In baste electronics.

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We Never Close"

4th of July
Seii-A-Bration
PEPSI - DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW
12 oz. CANS$

"' "' "' ~M
"'"' $ i8

~;;
X~

~

SUMMER APPAREL
GIRLS, LADIES, BOYS, MEN
No Layaways -

Visa/MaslerCharge/Discover

s49

CASE

FRITO LAY'S CHIPS

ALL
2 LITER
POP

99(

NOW

99C

REG. s1.39

ALL BRANDS OF CIGAREnE AT LOWEST PRICES
We Honor Cigarette Coupons

WE NOW HAVE BEER &amp; WINE CAiRYOUT!

ALL

l.

2

''
'

10 years
-Donna M. Davidson, clerk at
the Meigs No.1 mine. Davidson is
a resident of Rutland.
-Rodney D. Jones, general
inside laborer at the Meigs No. 1
mine. Jones lives In Pomeroy
with his wife, Linda, a nd daughter, Tamml.
-Harold Scarberry. faceman
at the Raccoon No. 3 mine.
Scarberry lives In Middleport
with his wife, Dorothea, and
children , Harold, Heather and
Michael.
5 years
Donna J. Branham, secretary
.t the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Branham lives In Pomeroy with
her daughter, Laura.

30°/o OFF

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Glen E . (Bill) and Dorothy ·
Robinson, Route 2, Coolville, wlll
be observing their 50th wedding
anniversary with an open house
at the Alfred UM Church Sunday.
July 10 from 2 to 4 p.m.
They were married July 11,
1938 in Greenup, Ky.
The occasion will be hosted by
their children Marlene Donovan
and Wilbur and Mary Robinson.
all local.
They have four grandchildren
and three great·grandchlldren.
The couple has requested that
gifts be omit ted.

In 1982 In memory of Dr. Raymond E. Boice,
Attorney Fred Crow and Coach Art "Pappy"
Lewis. McPhail and Fry were selected from about
40 appUcants from three Meigs County high
schoolS. The recipients are seleeted on the basis of
ACT/SAT scores, grade point average, extrac~r­
rlcular activities and a short essay on future
plans.

ALBANY - The followlpg
employees from Meigs County
are being recognized for their
years of service at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
this month:
15 years
-nonald E. Black, malnte·
nance supervisor at the Meigs
No. 2 mine. Black lives In

m

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Other performances scheduled
this summer include the Athens,
Meigs, Morgan, Albany county
fairs, the Ohio State Fair, and
many other community projects
and beneflls.

50th wedding
anruversary
to be noted

Coal company honors workers

:&gt;
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They will appear, Monday.
July 4, in the Rutland parade as
well as perform there at noon.
Monday evening at 6:30, they will
be going to the Middleport Dave
DUes Park for a show sponsored
the
of Middleport.

Food Shop and Car Wash

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The Shady River Shufflers are
looking forward to another very
busy summer wlth this weekend
starting their hectic schedule.
They will be entertaining the
guest at the Royal Oak Resort
Saturday, July 2.

44

'

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Shady River Shufflers set programs

OPEN 24 HOURS

Incredible savings
when. vou follow
our weeklv
schedule!
~

Shady River ;')fJt~tTTte'rS

MARATHON

Health Club

'

Ann
Landers

GLEN E. (BILL) and DOROTHY ROBINSON

HERE'S HOW TO
START YOUR
COLLECTON TODAY •
Each time you shop at
our store during weeks
1 through 6, you can
buy the week's feature
item. (You can also buy
any item at our regular
low retail price. During
the entire program,
additional pieces are
available anytime no aclclitional purchase
is required.

•

BAG

Dear Ann Landers: How's this for
an argun'lellt to teach sex education
in the schools, and perhaps in the
legislature as well? The following
appeared in the El Paso paper. I'm
endosing it so you can see that I am
not making it up.
LEGISLATOR DOUBTS RAPE
IMPREGNATES
HARRISBURG, Pa. - The l.egisla·
ture's chief abortion foe, Republi·
can Rep. Stephen Freind, said the
odds of a rape victim getting
pregnant are "one in several mil·
lion" because the trauma produ~
a certain secretion that kills sperm:
"That is nonsense," said Dr.
Richard Depp of Thomas Jefferson
University in Philadelphia.
Freind said that he will produce
medical documentation in about a
week.
I can hardly wait. Care to
comment?- HOLDING MY SIDES
IN EL PASO
DEAR HOLDING: Rep. Freind
ought to try his hand at fiction.
Please keep me posted. If he
should come up with any startling
scientific discoveries, I'd like to
lutow.
.
Dear Ann Landers: I was recently
in the hospital for two weeks in a
semi-private room. Until the last
few days my roommates were fine.
Suddenly the hospital had an un·
usual number of admissions and I
was given two smokers as room·
mates. They said they try to match

REGAL
MICRO·
WAVE
COOK·
WARE!

2

4 LB.

Non-smokers, smokers
clash in hospital room

DAIRY LANE

K YOU CHERRY or

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, June 29. 1988
Page-11

.

P~ICES EFFECTIVE SUN., JUNE 26 THRU SAT., JULY 2

$599

By The ·Bend

ON

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

3 LB.
CAN

•

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

....

FINEST GAS WITH NO ALCOHOL- MARATHON OIL AND
ALL MAJOR BRANDS
A Find Selection of Wine and Coolers and All Legal Beverages
Sold ot State Minimum Prices.
If We Sold It Any Cheaper, It would be..... "Against the Law"

FOOD SHOP &amp; CAR WASH
992-5552

120 EASI MAIN
290

POMEROY, OHIO

Slop in and Let Fran, Angie, Oebi, Rhea or Fred
Sene You.

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�Wednesday, June 29, 1988
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

'Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. June 29, 1988

.-----People in the news-----------__,
By WILLIAM TROTf
United Press International
, PRE-FIGHT FIGHT: Battlln ' Sean Penn wa s n' t scheduled
for a preliminary bout at the Mike Tyson-Michael Spinks fight
Monday night but he had an impromptu fight with one of his .
favorite opponents - anyone with a camera .
AI Pollock , a cameraman for WCAU-T'v in Philadelphia, was
!liming the celebrities at a pre-fight party at Trump Plaza in
Atlantic City, N.J ., when he said Penn attacked him. Pean and
wife Madonna entered the party but the media throng clearly
displeased htm so they retreated to the elevator, where Pollock
says he was kicked by Penn.
".He wound up and kicked me," Pollock sa id. "l turned this
way·and I caught him with a forearm, not on purpose, but I hit
him. He said 'Hey , what 's going on. here!' I'm not goirjg to .say
what I said because you couldn't print that. He went and he
pushed me up against the wall. I was pinned against the wall."
The less combative celebrities at the fight included Jack
Nicholson, Warren Beatty, singer Paul Simon, Btlly Crystal,
Judd Nelson, Rob Reiner, Stephen King, Malcom Forbes, Jesse
Jackson, Redd Fou , Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Jackie
Mason and Tyson's wife, Robin Givens.
GmL JUST WANTS TO HAVE A DEGREE: High school
dropout Cyndl Lauper finally got a high school diploma- albeit
an honorary one- with the Class of '88 at Richmond Hill High
School in New York.
'
Lauper, who attended four high schools before quitting in the
late 1960s before finally earning a general equivalency degree,
donned a cap and gown Monday night and dabbed at tears as she
accepted her diploma . She even had some advice, whlch she
delivered in her best Betty Boop accent: "In the words of my
grandfather, 'The more you Loin, the more you i&gt;in. '"
Her teachers remembered her as "Cynthia." a student who
had a tendency to skip classes. but said she looked much more
conventional than she does now in her wild·haired rock star
persona . "You can make it and you don't have to stick by the
rules," Lauper sa id afterward , " but this piece of paper is
Important."
VICTORIA SELLERS OUT: Victoria Sellers, the daughter· of
the late Peter Sellers, is going into intense drug and psychiatric

counseling after failing to live up to the conditions of her
probation on cocaine charges.
In Los Angeles. U.S. District Judge David Kenyon , who could
have tossed the 23-year·old actress Into prison for three years
but ins tead ordered she go to counseling sessions five times a
week. As she wiped at her tears , Kenyon told Sellers she must
learn to respect herself and see herself as a valuable person who
does not need to be "a slave to drugs."
Sellers was fined $500 and put on probation for three years in
1987 after pleading guilty to witnessing cocaine trafficking and
testifying against her co-defendants. However, she has flunked
one drug test, failed to show foranother and wasn 't making the
Installment payments on her fine.
·
BAKKERS WON'T GO AWAY: ,Jim artd Tammy Faye
Bakker just keep lurking around the PTL headquarters. They
were In the studio audience Tuesday for the "PTL Club"
television show . It was Jim's first time back since he left in
shame In the Jessica Hahn sex scandal but Tammy had been In
the crowd a couple of weeks ago.
But Tuesday wasn't a glorious homecoming- the Bakkers
weren't acknowledged by the show's hosts and cameras
panning the audience avoided the area where they sat . Bakker
says he wants to reclaim the PTL and save It from bankruptcy
and promised to have an announcement Wednesday in
Columbia, S.C., where a judge Is expected to consider who gets
PTL in a bankrupcty sell-off.
The Bakkers sat quietly until one onstage guest, discussing
sexuality, said, "Men are basically oriented around truth and
principle. And women want comfort." Tammy Faye couldn' t
help herself and blurted out. "That's not true. Women want
truth too." Jim reached over and squeezed her knee and said,
"Tammy, shush.""
GLIMPSES: How's this for a name?: Diamond Strawberry.
She was born Tuesday morning to Lisa and Darryl Strawberry
and weighed 6 pounds and 15 ounces. He' s the New York Mets '
star outfielder, which might explain the name selection. The
Strawberrys also have a son, Darryl Jr .... The guest list at the
White House dinner for Turkish President Kenan Evren
included Sid Caesar, James Stewart, Mike Wallace, Susan
Barrantes, who is the mother of Sarah Ferguson and designer
Alexander Julian.

~allipolis Bicentennial .group seeks .members
A concentrated membership
· drive by the GallipOlis Bicentennlal Commission will get underway during the River Recreation
: Festival in anticipation of the
· celebration of the 200th birthday
: 6f the city of Gallipolis in 1990,
. according to Dr. Donald M.
: Thaler and Charles!. Adkins Jr.,
Who co-chair the group.
·The Commission, es ta bUshed
._ by the Gallipolis Area Chamber
: of Commerce and offiefaNy rec·
: ognlzed by theGallipollsCityand
; the Gallla County Commissions,
: has been busy laying the ground· work for what promises to be a

memorable year in Gallipolis.
Membership In the Gallipolis
Bicentennlan Celebration Is
available to all, with membership dues over a three-year
period. Six membership categories have been established, each
payable annually in 1988, 1989
and 1990. They are:
-Apprentice- at $10 a year
-Journeyman -at $25:a year
-Blacksmith -at $5Q a year
-Craftsman- at $100 a year
-Silversmith- at $250a year
-French 500 - $500 a year
Funds raised from member- ·

ships In 1988 will be the basis for community to attend and express
the establishment of a variety of their Ideas for marking the city's
Bicentennial events and provide 200th birthday.
the necessary operational funds
The Bicentennial Membership
to plan a celebration that will not table will be in the city park,
oniy include area residents, but ·where commission members will
attract tourists from surround- be working with Chamber of
lng states to come to Gallipolis.
Commerce personnel throughout
The goal of the Commission Is the River Recreation Festival.
to generate an additional $2 Membership forms will be availmillion Into the local economy as able for area residents to coma result of the Bicentennial plete and Indicate their support,
programs.
as well as a questionnaire deveOne town meeting has already loped In conjunction with the first
been held, and another will be town meeting to solicit their
scheduled In the near future, choice of possible special events.
encouraging residents of the

:Tampico women reunited with her deaf-mute son
. CUIDAD JUAREZ, Mexico
: iUPI) - A deaf-mute mystery
child found wandering the streets
•last fall was reunited with his
' mother, ending a seven-month
for his Identity.
Jose de Jesus Garcia Aguilera,
who is believed to be 8 or 9,
brightened Tuesday when he saw
' his mother, Micaela Aguilera de
:Garcia, who took an 1,100-mile
· bus trip to Juarez from her home
In Tampico after seeing a televi' slon report about the mystery
boy In Juarez .
· The joyous reunion was in the
·offices of the child welfare
agency In Cuidad Juarez, across

the border from El Paso, Texas,
where the boy has lived since he
was found Nov. 7 walking alone
near a city park.
The mother said the boy, who
was known as Sabat because he
was found on a Saturday, hugged
and smiled during the reunion.
Workers at the National Program of Integral Family Development iDIF ) in Cuidad Juarez
had searched In Mexico for
Jose's parents since the child
was found.
Workers began to think Jose
might be a U.S. citizen and the
U.S. consulate entered the case

Quirk! in the news
Car jumps span as drawbridge
·opens: POMPANO BEACH, Fla.
iUPil - If you've ever worried
about being caught In the middle
.of a rising drawbridge, talk to
:Gary Darras.
, The 34-year-old Pompano
:Beach man had to gun the engine
of his 1978 Lincoln Town Car and
:jump the vehicle 8 feet across the
'Intracoastal Waterway Saturday
·night.
•

11

1 can't believe how close we

were to getting killed," said
'· Darras, who was with a friend.
"When that big old car came
down, It was like It fell out of the
sky. It hit so hard that sparks
.started to fly ."
· Darras said there were no
:warning sounds, and that he
:thought he had plenty of time to
·cross the bridge because the
:gates were upright.
The 16-year-old bridge opera tor closed the bridge after the
Incident and fled on his bicycle,
officials said.
. It was William Sills' second
: day of operating the bridge on his
· own after completing a one-week

and , primarily through the FBI
and the news media, his picture
was distributed across the United States in hopes his relatives
would see him.
Juana ita Barazal de Galindo, a
spokeswoman for the DIF in
Tampico, located 205 miles northeast of Mexico City on the Gulf
of Mexico, said Jose's mother
saw her son on television this
weekend and contacted her office. After speaking with the
woman and seeing a picture of
her child , Barazal said she was
convinced she was the mother.
Barazal said agullera de Garcia left Tampico by bus almost
Immediately to go to Culdad
Juarez to her son.
Jose cannot hear or speak.
Doctors who examined him said
he lost his hearing due to a case of
German measles shortly after
his birth. He communicated with

welfare officials through drawing and gestures.
Some of Jose's drawings pictured the wreckage of a plane
and the bodies of his parents and
two sisters and showed Jose
walking away from the crash.
He appeared to be more
familiar with American food
than Mexican food and he pointed
to the American flag and then to
himself and indicated on maps
that he was from Oklahoma.
Barazal said the mother told
her that Jose disappeared In
October. Barazal said the boy
apparently ran away from home
and hitchhiked to Ciudad Juarez.
The woman went to Monterrey,
425 miles north of Mexico City,
last and registered a missing
person's report with authorities.
"She did not have economic
resources to search for her
child," Barazal said.

training course, said Doris
Chrlsop, district manager of
Global Contracts Services, which
employs bridgetenders in Braward County for the state Depart- r-------------------------~
ment of TranSPQrtation.
Chrlsop said Sills llsted·his age
as 18 on his application. but
pollee said he Is 16. Company
policy and transportation department regulations require bridgetenders to be at least 18.
The only way the bridge can
open without the gates going
down is by bypassing normal
procedures or equipment malfunction, Chrlsop said . The
bridge may be opened without
WITH FRIES ............. $1.44
lowering the gates by inserting a
key Into the emergency switch.
Drought puts a crbnp In pot
crop: INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) There's one crop withered by this
summer's dr.ought that's meant
less work for state police - the
state's wild marijuana plants.
"At tho End of tho Pomoroy·Mason lridgo"
·'The we a !her has kept the size
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2556
of the plants down quite a bit,"
State Police Sgt. Jim Wallace
told The Indianapolis· Star
Tuesday.

~~~~

Special of the' Week!
FISH SQUARES

" 89&lt;

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Teamsters fight for control against federal lawsuit

SUCCESS PARTICIPANTS - Taking part In the SUCCESS
program at Buckeye Hills Career Center were, front from left,
Jeannie Hendrickson, Betty Bloomer, Instructor Donna Smith;
back, Carol Rhodes, Carolyn Wolf, Joyce Dill and Wanda Sharp.

SUCCESS program
helps displaced
homemakers get skill
S.U.C.C.E .S.S., which stands
for "Surviving Under Changing
Condit ions, Earning, Skilled and
Successfu I", is a six week program for individuals who were
previously homemakers, but are
now the primary wage earner.
Classes were held at the Meigs
County OCES office on Mulberry
Heights from April 17 to May 25.
Dorna Smith, Coordinator 'of
the S.U.C.C.E.S.S. program said
agencies and Individuals presenting pr,o grams to the class
were; Cindy Oliver, Meigs Co.
OCES office; Norma Torrez.
Meigs Co. Health Dept.; David
Baer, So. Eastern Ohio Legal
Service; Mary Eiowell and Kay
Hemsley, "Top of the Stairs"
Beauty Salon; Ed Peterson,
Social Security Administration;
Tom Reed , Gallia-Meigs JTPA;
Jane Snouffer, Meigs Co. Dept. of

Human Services; Loraine Newsome, Woodland Centers;
Emelyn Scarberry, Gallipolis
OBES ; Wanda Halley ,. Rio
Grande College.
The S.U.C.C.E.S.S. program
places emphases on bulidlng self
esteem, nutrition, decislon mak·
ing, stress management, grooming, career exptm;atlon and
more. Those participating in the
program were:
Joyce Dill, Meigs County:
Carol Rhodes, Meigs County;
Wanda Sharp, Meigs County:
Betty Bloomer, Gallia County:
Jeannie Hendrickson, Gallia
County: Carolyn Wolf, Gallia
County.
For more Information about
futu(e classes, call Dorna Smith
at 245-5336, Buckeye Hills Career
Center at Rio Grande.

KAHN'S 'FRANKS ••••••••• J.~~•.. S1.99
SWIFT ·ECKRICH
PEPPERLOAF ••••••••••••••• J.~~••. S3.39
SMITHFIELD
SHREDDED S2.19 LB.
COOKED HAM ••••••••••••• ~~m.L!.$1. 99
HOMEMADE
MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••• !.~•.-••• S1.69
KRAFT 16 SLICE PROCESS

AMERICAN
CHEESE ............. .L.l-01.. Sl.87

"NEW" GREEN .
CABBAGE ...............J.U... 2S'

SHEDD'S SPREAD

HEAD

MARGARINE
QUARTERS ....... J.J..ll, .. 2/98'
GRADE A BEAVER VALLEY

LARGE EGGS ..........~M.. I-9'

LETTUCE ............. ~i.CI.... 69&lt;
FRESH RIPE
TOMATOES ........~~JJ...,69'

MIS. PAUL'S

FISH FILLETS ................~~·M!·$2 .69
WHOLE STRAWBERRIES •••••• S2.39
•NUTE MAID
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••1.2.~.z. S1.79
BIG VAWY 2D OZ.

CAMPBEU'S VEGETABLE

BEEF SOUP ••••••••••••• !~.~!... 2fS 1.19
BOUNTY TOWELS ••••••• ~P.~!·•• S1.3 9
INSTANT NESTEA •••••••• t.n•.. S3.49
AIMOUR 5 OZ.
VIENNA SAUSAGE ••••••••• 2/S1.19
JUMBO

SHUI FINE 2 PACK, 24 CT,

SPOONS_, KNIVES, FORKS •• S1.19
NORTHERN NAPKINS ......... S1.S9
SOLO PLATES •••••••••••••• J}.H·•• S1.6 9.
REYNOLDS
ALUMINUM
FOIL
•••••••••
!}.~9.!!·••• 79(
AUNT JANE'S 10 OZ.
SWEET GHERKINS PICKLES •••• s1.29
FRENCH'S MUSTARD ••• !.~l•...... S9(
PRINGLES CHIPS ••••••••• !.~1••• s1.49
NABISCO OREO'S ••••••• J.6.~!•• S1. 99
JUMBO PACK 250 0.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

By PHILIP J. GARCIA
an at tempt to take awa y from the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - La- .Mafia asset s H has been able to
bor leaders nationwide are de- at !Bin."
nouncing the federal lawsuit to
Giuliani said the government Is
take control of the Teamsters, " not seeking overall control of
with some denyingdomlnance by the Teamsters union " but a
organized crime and all protest- court-appointed trustee wi th
Ing the government's "shameful power over the leadership.
attempt to destroy a democratic
"This would last only f'or so
union."
long as necessary to eliminate
"The government should not organized crime's Influence ove r
be allowed to Interfere In the the Teamsters, to put permanent
internal affairs of this or any reforms Into place and to return
other union," argued Weldon control of the Teamsters to (Its )
Mathis, general secretary- many honest working men and
treasurer and acting president of women," the prosecutor
the Teamsters, after theclvll suit explained.
was filed In New York and
Giuliani stressed today during
announced by the Jus tlce Depart- art Interview on ABC 's " Good
ment Tuesday .
Morning America" that union
"This International union Is not members have the right to
now, and never was, controlled choose Its leadership but not one
by organized crime," Mathis that breaks .the law .
"That really Is not ultimately a
declared In Montreal, where
·leaders of the 1. 7 million- democratic right that you have to
member confederation were elect a leadership that acts as an
meeting.
instrumentality of organized
U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuli- crime," he said. "You don't have
ani, who filed the government a right to select from a group that
action, maintained at a New is going to allow the union to be
York news conference, "The used for murder, extortion, for
18-member (Teamsters) execu- bribery, for corruption of public
tive board has allowed Itself to be officials."
corrupted by the Mafia. This Is
Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the
ranking Republican on the Se·
nate Labor and Human Resour·
ces Committee, who also appeared on the ABC program
South Central Ohio
today said he would approve of
Clear tonight, with lows of 55 to
action against individuals or
60 and light north winds. Mostly local unions but disagreed with
sunny Thursday, with highs of 75 the approach of going after the
to80.
entire national board. ·
Extended Forecast
"To brand the whole union a~d
Friday through Sunday
all
members of that union ... as
Dry weather with pleasant
bPlong!ng
to a totally corrupt
temperatures. Highs in the 70s
Friday and Saturday, and 80 to85
Sunday. Lows in the 50s.

Weather

DENIES TAKEOVER - Attorney General Edwin Meese, at a
news conference at the Jpstlce Department Tuesday, denied that
the goverrunen,l's suit against the Teamsters represented an
attempt to takeOver the union. UPI

Ex-.CIA agent
By PHILIP J. GARCIA
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - A
lawyer for the first person
Indicted in the Iran-Contra scan.
dal becauo.e of actions as a CIA
agent insists the dealings were
"entirely consistent" with the
policies of President Reagan.
Attorney Thomas Wilson, defending Joseph Fernandez as the
ex-agent pleaded innocent to
criminal charges Tuesday, complained that a.fter 20 years with
the spy agency his client now
"stands indicted by his government for crimes of which he is
entirely innocent."
The charges of conspiracy and
obstruction of jus!lce In organizing a supply network for the
Nicaraguan Contra rebels relate
exclusively to Fernandez's conduct In his official capacity,
Wilson maintained.
"It's a first In the history of the
United States," he argued.
"Throughout the time Mr. Fernandez served in Costa Rica, his
activities were entirely consist ent with United States' law and
with the declared policies of the
president of the United States.

ple~ds

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Secretary of State George Shultz's
three-day trip to Central AmerIca will play against a backdrop
of possible renewed lighting In
Nicaragua and a crisis in El
Salvador, the showplace of
American support.
Shultz arranged to fly today to
Guatemala and later visit El
Salvador, Honduras and Costa
Rica. He returns late Friday.
Notably missing from the list
of Shultz's stops in Central
America were Panama- where
the United States failed to oust
strongman Gen. Manuel Antonio
Noriega and does not recognize
the ruling government - and
Nicaragua .
A State Department official
said that Panama had never been
considered part of Central Amer·
lea and did not belong on the
lntinerary . However, the failure
to oust Noriega has become a

Under such circumstances, this
indictment Is a tragedy."
·
Of the eight people charged to
date in the sweeping investigation of independent prosecutor
Lawrence Walsh, Fernandez Is
the first indicted for actions as a
CIA agent. Under the altas
Tomas Cas Iillo, the l! .S. citizen
was the agency's station chief in
Costa Rica from July 1985 to
December 1986.
The grand jury hearing e~i­
dence In the scandal accused him
in a five-count Indictment June21l
of organizing and directing the
secret airlift that dropped weapons and other aid to the Contras
despite congre~sional bans on
official U.S. aid to the rebels
between October 1984 and October 1986.
Fernandez, who was pulled out
of his . post and forced Into .
retirement, also was accused of
lying and of concealing his role in
the operation from the Tower
Commission, the presidential
panel that first reviewed the
scandal.
If convicted, Fernandez, 51,
faces a maximum 25-year prison

sentence and more than $1.2
million in fines. He was released
without ball TUesday and was
allowed to retain his passport. A
status hearing Is scheduled July
14.
Fernandez contends he kept
superiors regularly informed
a bout his activities with Oliver
North, the central figure In the
Iran-Contra case: North, the
fired White House aide, was
Indicted March 16 with three
other key figures on charges of
defrauding the government In
the diversion of profits to the
Contra rebels from the secret
1985 and 1986 sales of U.S. arms to
Iran.
Defense lawyers for North
Tuesday asked the federal judge
overseeing the case to schedule a
hearing Into his handling of the
legal proceedings. Attorneys
Brendan Sullivan and Barry
Simon expressed concern to U.S.
District Judge Gerhard Gesell
that he has overlooked in his
ruUngs the possible exposure of
grand jurors and prosecution
witnesses to legally protected
testimony.

part of the problem Shultz will
have to deal with when he arrives
in the region.
In preparation for Shultz's trip,
Nicaraguan officials have criticIzed him for not coming to
Nicaragua, where U.S.-backed
rebels have tried to overthrow
the Soviet-supported
government.
In a news conference this
·week. Nicaraguan Minister of
the Interior Tomas Borge said,
"Mr. Shultz comes to pressure
Central American politicians
and force them to join a plan
against Nicaragua."
Borge said, "He has to deal
with us concerning Central
America. Yet he did not come to
Nicaragua, thus expressing,
once again, an unrealistic
policy."
One State Department official
compared Shultz's Central
American trip to his quick swing
through the Middle East In early
June, which was unproductive.
The State Deparlment official

called both trips "showing the
flag."
.
The official said that "showing
the flag" by Shultz is meant to
signal the · countries of Central
America that the United States,
despite setbacks, still considers
the region Important to Ameri·
can interests and that the Reagan administration, In Its waning
days, Is Involved In trying to
work out solutions for problems
In the region.
In El Salvador, administration
hopes for a return to a centrist
democratic regime have been set
back by the unexpected news
that President Jose Napoleon
Duarte Is suffering from terminal cancer. He is now being
treated In Washington.
One official in the State Department said, "The purpose of the
trip Is to refdcus attention on
Central America, to show support for the democratic governments In the countries he will
visit ."

Republicans modify closing bill
By MARY BETH FRANKLIN
WASHINGTON iUPI) - Senate Republicans managed to
modify but failed to alter substantially a plant-closing notification · bill, prompting Democratic leader Robert Byrd to try
shu ttlng off debate today.
Byrd, of West VIrginia, noted
the Senate had spent five days on
the bill when he expressed
dismay Tuesday over the debate's slow progress. He scheduled a cloture vote lor this
morning, conceding he was not
·sure he could gather the necessary 60 votes to bring debate on
the measure to a close.
The bill, opposed by business
leaders and President Reagan,
would require employers to give
60 days' advance notice of plant
closings and big layoffs. Democrats adopted the labor-backed
Jealslatlon as a key election-year

Issue.
After beating back several
GOP efforts to weaken the
popular bill this week, Its sponsors worked with some of the
critics Tuesday to address concerns. The Senate then unanimously approved several minor
amendments to specify how
employees should be notified, to
determine who Is responsible for
notification when a business is
sold and to clarify that 60 days'
notice is not required to tell
strikers they will be replaced by
other workers.
The Senate also agreed ad·
vance notice Is not necessary
when a plant closing or layotr Is
the result of natural disaster,
such as the current drought.
But the majority Democrats
rejected other GOP efforts to
weaken the bill. One was a broad
admendment tllat would release
employers from any advance--

notice obllgatiDns In the case of a
strike, even for employees not
Involved in the strike. Another
would eliminate the advancenotice requirement for layoffs
except In the case of employees
of firms Involved In hostile
takeovers.
A third, offered by Sen. Phil
Gramm, R-Texas, would allow
plants to close before the 60-day
notice period It more than half
the employees resigned, disruptIng the efficient operation of a
business. It failed 59-34.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, 00hlo, said studies show employees do not tend to leave their
job$ In mass numbers when
given advance notice, adding
that Gramm's motives were
''suspect'' because he is a major
opponent or the blll.
.
''I thouaht the whole purpose or
this bill was to give employees
time to look for new Jobs."

•

•

'o - r1 "si

I

lithotripsy
A revolutionary

approach to
kidney stone

treatment
that crushes stones
"
quickly, relatively
painlessly and
without surgery.
On Tuesday, July 12, Pleasant Valley
Hospital will bring to our community for
the first time a revolutionary method of
kidney stone treatment. It's called Lithotripsy. And while that may be a hard word lo
say, it makes removal of those excrutiating
· stones easier to manage.
In as little as 30 minutes, usiqg sound
waves instead ofa scapel, doctors can reduce
kidney stones to a fine sand, which can then
be passed painlessly through urine.
All of this without surgery. And that
means less pain and a faster recovery for
you.
And because Lithotripsy requires a
shorter hospital stay, and may even be perfonned on an outpatient basis, it costs considerably less than surgery.
We'll be using the stale-of the-an Domier
HM-4 Kidney Lithotripter, designed to
simplify the procedure for the physician and
enhance comfort for you. Here's how it

I'

•

works:
To begin, you'll be automatically positioned over a specially designl".d water cushion. Because water is the san1e density as
human tissue, the cushion allows focused .
wave ene~gy to be harmlessly transmitted Io .
the dense stone, crushing it into minute particles.
In most cases, recuperation is immediate, although your doctor will conduct a·..
series of evaluations to ensure properrecov- : •
ecy.
••
While the United States Depanment of-:
Health and Humll!) Services has reponed : -·
that 80 to 90 percent of all kidney stone cases t
can be successfully treated with lithotripsy, •
your physician can detennine for.sure if you
are a candidate for lithotripsy. ·
. Lithotripsy •• it's clearly the wave of
the future in kidney stone treatment. And
it's at Pleasant Valley Hospital today.

IJI.I PllASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

•v-.

The famify of professionals

'
'.

... a s hamefu l a ttempt to destroy
a democratic union."
John Cllmaco, general counsel
for the Teamsters , vowed withou t e laborating that the union'
would defend itself In court.
"We 're not going to litigate itin
the media," he said . "We' ll
litigate it in the courts. As Mr.
Giulian i sur prised all of us, we' ll.
surprise Mr. GluUani."
,
The government's 100-page·
complaint, based on an lnvestlga-:
tlon or more than two years ,
seek.s to prove a pattern of
corrupt activity rather than
Individual guilt on specific criminal charges. It nonetheless Ideo- :
tlfles 44 people as defendants, :
including the top 18 Teamsters•
officials.
Union President Jackie
Presser, Indicted on federal
embezzlement and racket~rin g
charges and on a leave of:
absence for medical treatment ,·
was rushed to an Ohio hospital :
Tuesday hours after the govern-:
ment announcement.
Officials at the hospital in,
Lakewood, Oh lo, would not reveal the diagnosis for Presser,.
who has undergone chemother-:
apy and surgery for lung cancer·
and who recently was found to:
have brain tumors. Hospital '
spokesman David Hopcraft said •
Presser arrived by ambulance
and was briefly in the emergency_
room .
" He's in serious condition but:
is alert and conscious," Hopcraft •
said late Tuesday. "Nothing has:
changed since he got here. :
They're doing tests and whatever
treatment is necessary."

not guilty

Shultz to visit Central America
By JIM ANDERSON

un ion, l think tha t's wrong,"
Hatch said.
Other Ia bar le aders sided with
the Teamsters bosses , however.
' 'In a democrat lc soc iety, labor
unions must be controlled by
their members and not by th e
government," said the AFL-C JO
in a written response. " If the
Justice Departmen t has evidence s ufficient to prove th at
officers of the International
Bro therhood of Teamsters or any
other union have
committed
'
federal offense, it should proceed
a gainst those individuals directly under laws which forbid
convicted criminals from holding union office."
The labor federation - whi ch
readmitted the Teamsters In
November after expelling the
union for corruption in 1957 said, "The civil (racketeering)
suit filed today against the
Teamsters is a clear abuse of the
government 's prosecu to ria I
power and is based on legal
theories which, if sustained,
would underm lne a free trade
union movement."
Agreed William Wynn, president of the 1.3 million-member
Unite!) Food and Commercial
Workers Union, "Government
control of unions Is evil, no
matter how the government
rationalized Its action. "
And Mathis , whose union sup·
ported Ronald Reagan In both the
1980 and 1984 presidential elections, concluded: "It marks the
lowest pbint of a Republican
administration in attacking the
working men and women of
America .... It's a vicious attack,

'

II

�Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel
7

·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

EASTMAN'S.. vourlndependently owned .
Low·Priced Supermarket

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

.Come Celebrate The
4th of July sa.,ingsf

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 16.

WIN A FREE PEPSI
GO CART

ORDERS
ONLY

.

REG. or MEAT
OSCAR MAYER

-ENTER AT THE STORE.

.

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE
DIET or REGULAR

Wieners

8

1-LB.
PKG.

16 oz.
BTLS.
Plus Deposit

limit One Carton With$ 10.00 or More Additional Purchase

FOODlAND

BUNS
FRESH CHICKEN

Leg

Quarters

HOLLY FARMS ·
GRADE 'A'

FOODLAND
HAMBURGER • HOT DOG

Sliced Bacon

Breast Quarters

12

. LB.

Buns

oz.

FOLGER'S'

Paper

Instant
Coffee

Towels

•
r

••

BOUNTY

••

..•

limit 1 Cost With
'10 or More
Additional

..

Purchase

r

••

PKG.

'

•

••

I

•

Fried Chicken

RED RIPE
NEW

;-. Head Lettuce

White Potatoes

JUMBO TREAT

GRADE 'A' MEDIUM
BANQUET

Watermelon

Foodland Eggs

Fried Chicken

•

Vanilla

Ice Cream

VAN CAMP'S

Pork

&amp;Beans

..' ..
'

.•
-

10 LB.
BAG
RED RIPE
CALIFORNIA

Strawberries

49

SUCED

WATERMELON ....................}.~;. 2 5

RED RIPE

Salad
Tomatoes

FULL
GALLON

18-22 LB;
AVG.•

TOP .SOIL
&amp;PEAT

(

DAIRY LANE

LARGE
GERANIUMS

CYPRUS MULCH &amp;
PINE NUGGETS

• 3. 4oL'-541NCH9 9 $ 3 s1o
BAGS

BAGS

POT

.

v

2°/o
Milk
PLASTIC
GALLON Umlt One With t10.00 or More Addlt

.

•••

ONE DOLLAR OFF
ON ALL RAID
. SECTICIDES
Goad tltru Satw.,y, .lltly t, 1tll
rchue

16 oz.
CANS
limit 3

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES. PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY,
JUNE 26 THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1988.
USDA FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
ACCEPTED. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

e LOCALLY AND INDIEPIENDENTLY OWNED

.••

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 The Dally Senttnel

Wednesday. June 29. 1988

Soviet delegates introduce presidential, legislative system
By GERALD NADLER

MOSCOW tUPI) -An extraoi
dinary Communist Par tv confer
ence moved behmd closed Krem
lin do01 s today for a SPcond day
of debate on Mikhail Got ba
chev s proposal to overhaul the
Soviet political structure by
introducing a presidential sys
tern with a strengthened
legislature
Although no JOurnaliSts were
allowed mto the PaiaceofSoVJet s
Tuesday Gorbachev's four houi
opening address before 4 991
delegates (o the 19th Communist
Party Conference was broadcast
along with excerpts from three
other speakers
Today's plenary sesswn was
also off limits to JOUrnalists and
only 20 minute edt ted excerpts
from speeches were an ed
Transcripts of the actual debates
will be made public only aftei the
conference concludes Its work
later this week Delegates have
reserved the right to edit th eir
remarks for the official public
record. meaning the transcnpts
may not Ieflect the true tone of
the closed debates
In one excerpt Gem g1 Razu
movsky. head of the credentials
committee. charged pubitc opm
wn had been Ignored m the
election of some delega tes to the
conference
"Openness and democracy m
general wet e charactens11c fo i
plenums of the party commit tees
eleci ong delegates
he said
· However, not everywhere and
not everybody turned out to be
ready fOI meanmgful conversa
tion With the people Sometunes
public opinion was not tak en mto
consideratiOn "
Gorbachev supporters have
complained the electiOns wet e
rigged In fa vor of consei vatives
In other reaction to Gorba
, chev's opening speech the Kom

somolskaya Pravda newspaper
said readei s had flooded its
conference hor Ime with critl
clsm of the speech and the
secretive way busmess Is bt&gt;mg
conduc ted
'A lot of attention ts paid to
political declaratiOns and very
lt!Ue to the mechanism of their
1ea l12allon
In any case I
t&gt;xpected more,' said OlegTimo
shtn from Mtnsk
fh e fn st dissonant not e of the
debate over the human costs of
Ies tructuring was sounded Tues
day by Dmitln Motorny a
delegate from Ktev m the Uk
raine, who expiessed fears over
th e threatened closure of fallmg
enter piiscs
The dtfftcult tOad for reform
was also underlined by the
appointment of Yegor Ltgachev
as conference chairman Liga
chev IS the No 2 man m the ruling
Politburo and has been publicly
Identified by reformers as the
leadmg conservative
Warmng that pollttcal reform
IS vital tf economic restructuring
Is to succeed Gorbachev called
lor a fundamental over haul of the
Soviet system of government to
res tram the all encompassing
powei of the Comm umst Party
Through Its five year plans, the
patty now directs and admmts
ters the co untry s economy
'One has to have the courage
to admtt today tf the political
system

1 em a Ins

lmmoblle, un

changed, we sha ll not cope with
th e tasks of perestrmka,' Gorba
chev satd
Gorbac hev s linkage of pohtl
cal and Pconomlc reform set the
tone for the lour day conference
- the firs t smce 1941 - that IS
co nsidered a key test of suppor t
fut the Soviet leader s policies
The main thrust of Gorba
chev s proposed 1 eforms ts to
boost the au thorlt:, of elected

deputies in Soviets' local, re
buro member and close adviser of how state bodies, from Soviets and glasnost learning to a I gue
glonal and national legislative to Gmbachev, told a news to courts, would be strengthened and (lebate and to tell each other
bodies that now have little or no conference Tuesday that history sufficiently to withstand pres the truth," Gorbachev said
power The party's ablllty to would recall the current gather
sure from party officials Less "That is of course, not little
dictate policy to the Soviets lng as "a conference of the ambltlous attempts In the pas tto
'But the processes of demo
should be sharply limtted, he democratization of Soviet strengthenSovletshavehadlittle cratlzatlon both In the centei
said
society "
Impact
and at the local level, are
"All thest&gt; changes can be r-~B~u~t~t~h~e~re~w~a~s~l~lt~tl~e~in~d~l~ca:t~lo~n~-_:.:"W~e~a~re:_!l~e~a~rn~l~n~g~d~e~m~oc:r~a~c~y:_~~~~~~~~·~"~h~t&gt;=sa:l:d=
sealed by legislative acts as
early as next autumn so as to
reorganize the national bodies of
powei after regular elections
next spring, ' Gorbachev said
Gorbachev also presented his
proposal for a normalllmitoftwo
five year terms for officials, a
TO PUC£ AN AD CALl ,92 2156
AATEI
MONDAY '"'" FltOAY 8 AM. to S PM
method of preve,ntlng a repeti
I A.M Unlll NOON SATUIOU
10&lt;111.
MOD
~---··
,... . . •oa MOl . , .
lion of the pastlengthy periods in
ClCISED SUNDAr
~~--- ...
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.._......
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..........
office
.....
.................
..
,~-·fll-.. _
m.. _ ,.. _ .. _,._.,.,......,
As part of a "radical renewal of
...........
....
...
.....
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the electoral system," Gorba
?,....
---~-,_
... .._. ...........
.,.
_
e.o-..
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..
..
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chev also wants a new national
.,.
,_
.............................
.
Clauljled pa1e• t::olli'!r l#rl!!
c.... . . . -··
legislative body with much
n--.....fo llowtn~ telephone ezcha n ~e•
"-'••greater powers to act ually gov
~.."';:.::=-...:::-l=:J:.:.r::.:;·::.:
.....
_,,_::'11,, --·-"-"

ATHENS Greece CUP[) - A
left -wing extremist group
claimed responstbthty for the
car bomb slaying of US Navy
Capt Willia m Nordeen and
warned in a statement pubitshed
today it would co ntinue to strike
at US targets until the last
American soldier leaves our
country
The pro-Moscow evenmg news
paper Ethnos said the clatm was
made in a five page statement
found at the door of It s edtton al
offices and was signed by th e
group November 17
A car-bomb ex plosion Tuesday
killed Nordeen the U S defense
and naval attache m Athens,
moments a lter he left his house In
suburban Athens m an armor
plated car Pollee found his body
10 to 15 yards from the vehicle
Witnesses told pollee they saw
two men on a motorcycle speed
ing away from the scene of the
bias t and pollee later found a
stolen Kawasaki motoi cycle
abandoned about 2 miles frnm
the blast

Et hnos today quoted the No
vember 17 statemen t as say mg,
'We dectded to stnke one of the
higher ranking agents of Ameri
ca n lmpetlaitsm who circu late in
steel plated cars
The sta tement said the group
'hit Nordeen m particular. '
because Amencan ImperialiSm
IS responsible for the Cyprus
tragedy and for Tu rkish claims
over our country 's sovereign
nghts
The refe rence was apparently
to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus
In 1974, and the occupation of
nearly 40 percent of northern
C~p 1 u&lt; by the Turkish troops
The s tatemen t warned that
Nove mber 17 would continue to
at tac k agents of the American
seccet serVIce working m Gn;ece
until the las t Turkish soldter
leaves Cyprus and the last
Ameii can soldier leaves our
country '
There was no immediate com
men t from the police or the U S
Embassy on the sta tement No
vember 17 takes it name from a
1973 student upn smg in Athens
agamst the military Ju nta that

-

....
_......

-~

-...__

__y.,··-

ID.UI
DOAYt
IIIIOIITI!

~- . .

.......- . . ......
_, ........... ..... """"'
~

~

er n than the present Supreme

1'1110
111110

.,. ...
. . ...

otiiiO

.... ...

0 ' - - 0 ... f t l - . . . . . -

. . . .-

. . e..··· tel--- .,. ..__
·-,_. :;=::.;:-===-- etw-:.....

-

ru==:.

m-=.

.. _ e . - - .

:i:!$"=~:::...--==-

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

ruled Greece between 1967 and
1974
The November 17 group has
claimed responsibilit y for 11
previous attacks against Ameri
can and Greek targets in Athens
since Dec 23, 1975 when Richard
Welch station chief of the
Central Intelligence Agency, was
shot and killed
After a bus bombrng Aug 10,
1987 mjured 10 US military
personnel, one American woman
CIVilian and a Greek bus driver, a
November 17 statement said the
attack was aimed at US mil
ltary bases in Greece
The latest statement delivered
to Ethnos did not mention the
bases Low key discussions on
the future of the American bases
ln Greece have been going on
between Greek and U S officials
for several months
Nordeen, 51, thrice-decorated
naval officer, was survived by
hls wife Patricia and 12 year old
daughter Annabelle He was
scheduled to have retired soon
a nd was planning to leave Greece
In August

A check made payable to
Vrllage of Syracuse m the
amount of $50 00 •• re
qUired as a deposit for the
documents The deposit wrll
be refunded to unsuccessful
brdders

The Vrllage of Syracuse
hereby notifres all bidders

that mrnonty busmeu enter
pnsao wttt be afforded full
opportunrty to submit b1ds lfl
response to thrs rnvltatron
and will not be drscrrmrnated
agarnst on grounds of race,
color, or natrona! orrgen rn
considaratrons for an award
Anent ton 11 drrected tot he

spacral statutory proves10ns
10 R C

41151

govorn1ng

16115 22, 29 1716. 4tc

25883 An apphcateon has

Pubhc Not1ce
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
TO All PERSONS IN
TERESTED IN THE ESTATE
OF Edward Newton Humph
ray, deceased tataof34331
Crew Road. Pomeroy OH
45769 Moogs County Pro
bate Court,
Case No
26882 An apphcatton has
been filed askmg to relieve
the estate from adm1n11tra~
tton saymg that the assets
do not ucaod $25 000 00
and the credttors Will not be
P'BIU d•ced thereby A hear
tng on the applicatiOn will be
hold June 30. 19B8, at

been filed aSking to relieve
the estate from admmtstra
t1on, sayeng that the assets
do not ••coed S25 000 00
and the creditors will not be
pr&amp;~udicod thereby A hear
tng on the application will be
hold Juno 30, 19BB. at
10 30 o clock AM Persons
know1ng any reason why the
apphcat1on should not be
granted should appear and
inform the Court The Court
11 Located on the 1st Floor of
the Me~gs County Court
House. Court Street at Se~
cond and Mulberry Pom
eroy, OH 45769
Robert E Buck,
Probeta Judge
lena K Nesselroad Clerk
161 22, 29. i7l 6

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

-'"-···-_=-=-· ..
..11'1--·-·-·
--·__.....

=-·-.. . .

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

~--=---·-

Dealer For
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
located Halfway Be
tween Rt 7 &amp; Bas han

tors 01 fo ul play - always a
possiblity '
PARIS (UP!) - OffiCials sus
After the emergency brake
peel a prankstet pulled an was pulled , engmeer Daniel
emergency brake handle 30 min Sautm 43 wa lked back to the car
utes befot-e a r unaway commuter tn which II was acttvated, reset
train rammed another train in an the handle and pumped air Into
undPrground station killing 59 the brake system a common
people m France s worst 1 ai l procedure on the suburb an train
disaster in 16 years
sys tem, Rouvillois said
){escue learns in the Care de
'I he train set off agatn and a
Lyon a major subway and I a t! mile from the station Saulin
terminal. worked steadily since Ieallzed something had gone
the Monday evenmg tush hou r wrong with the brakes and told
accident to reach the bottom of passengers on the m tercom to
the wreckage created when the move to rear of the train
brakeless tram hurtled at 50 mph
About 650 yards from the
Into a stopped tram
statiO n the train ran through a
In a tangle of metal, rescuers red stgnal, settingoffal arms as it
found 55 bodies, a fire depart sped along at a bout 50 mph on the
ment spokesman said Public downgrade runmng into the
health officials sa td four more station and ramm ing Into the
people died Tuesday of Injuries In co mmu ter train stopped at the
hospitals
terminal
Authorities said of 43 people
The moving tra in jackknifed
Injured In the crash 29 were and rode up and over the waiting
hospitalized late Tuesday. 12 of cars, spllttlng the light alum!
them In critical condition Their num bodies of the lower car
names and nationalities were not rlages open and dismembering
released
some passengers, witnesses
Phllippe Rouvillois, president said
of the National Railway Co that
The French National Assem
operates the commuter li a ins. bly observed a minute of silence
said the brakes on the Inbound honoring those kllled In the
train failed after an un scheduled wreck and In a passenger jet
stop at the 'vert de-Maisons sta
cras h Sunday in which three
lion five mUes outside Paris The people died
train stopped when someone
Assembly Speaker Laurent
pulled the emergency brake
Fabius said the country was " In
"There Is a llnk between the mourning ' President Francois
use of the alarm signal temer
Mltterrand. at a European sum
gency brake) which halted the mit In West Germany, said he felt
train In the 'vert-de-Malsons "pa in and pity"
station and the catastrophe,'
The accident was France's
he said
worst rail disaster since the June
Rouvillols cited three possible 16, 1972, derailment of the Paris
causes a technical failure, a Marseille express at Chateaubreach of regulations by opera
bourg in the souther n province of
ArderhE' Jn which 108 people died

lie-•

PH. 949·2801
or Res. -949·2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Rt

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

NEW &amp; USED MOWER!
8 7 Fonancong On

6 17 tic

log homes

Murheesboro Rd
Antioch, TN 37013

Just
12.

ST RT 338 - River front
property wrth a ntce cabin
Has a full basement 2 bed
room&gt; sun porch wnh a r• er
voew Frurt cellar approx
42 x30 metal storage buold
mg ASKING $27 900 00
POMEROY - PRICE RE
DUCEDI Neat home wtth 2 3
bedrooms New carpeton&amp;
corner lot Small pnce Btg bargaon 1 $14 500 00

More recently, a tram derailed at
Argenton sur Creuse In the cen
tral province of Indre Aug 31,
1985, killing 43
Transport Minister Louis Mermaz appointed a commission of
Inquiry to loves tlgate the cause
of the rail disaster
The Paris prosecutor s office
opt&gt;ned a "judicial information
against X." a legal procedure
used to br ing charges when an
offender's identity Is not known
The Improper acttvation of the
emergency brake was not speclf
ically cited ln the Information
Immediately after the accl
dent, about 250 firefighters and
rescue workers sped to the Gare
de Lyon, a major Interchange for
the Metro subway system and the
suburban and main rail lines
Rescuers labored with buzzing
metal saws to cut through
crushed train walls, and crawled ·
over the dead to reach Injured
passengers Inside, trapped men
and women waited
"We were afraid we wouldn't
get out," said Gisele Bernard,
about 55, who was recuperating
in the St Antoln Hospital
"!'here were so many people
who were even more tightly
confined than I was A man was
on my back and he said he
couldn't breathe When he
moved, t~at crushed me a little
more, " Bernard said
She said the train was packed
with passengers
"There was a grandmother
who got on with her little
granddaughter and sat down all
the way In so she was up against
the driver's cabin," she said " I
don't think she made It I think of
that llttle girl "

MIDDLEPORT- Excellent kr
catoon• 2 story home located
near park &amp;. pool' 2 3 bed
rooms ongmal woodwor~
new s1dmg fireplace and
much more! Noce big level lot
Wants $32 500 00
PALMER STREET - House
wrth potential 2 apt&amp; 1n good
condnton Upstaors rented for
$17500/ mo
downstalfs
rented for $200/mo also has
a garage apt \hal rented for
$225/rno NOW $20 000 00
••

13.
So they took time to talk with David about drugs.
They realize that In today's world he has probably been
approached by someone attempting to lure him to start
using uppert or maybe something even more dangerous.
They told David what drugia can do and how they can aHect
his future chances of having a productive life.
Now he can make the right decision If he's ever confronted
with it.
So why walt until tomorrow to talk to your children.
Talk with them today.

ST AT 681 - lO acres va
cant ground woth some
wooded area Has a great
butldtng stt e wtth some road
frontage Ca ll lo r more mlor
mat ton ONLY $10 000 00
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949 2660
Oolite Turner
992 5692
Tracy Rtffle
949-2807
Jo Htll
985-4466
Offtce
992-2259

J.li
'

'

l

992-2156

••
'•

"At Reasonable

You lhera Is A hHer War.

Day or Night

S500 OFF Woth This Ad
lADf RACHEl'S
PALM lEADING
302 Woll Unoon St

NO SUNDAY CALLS

ft14 -594·3310

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

Authonzed SeiY!ce
&amp; Parts
Bnggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homehte
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

Dtoltr

324 E Mo1n It

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items, Clowns
Actton Toys, Mustcal
Toys &amp; Tnnket Boxes
Open 10 AM to 4 PM
Man thru Fn or by
Appointment

9 o.111.-ll p.tn.
or l.ea¥1 MtsiCIIIt

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•FREE ESTIMATES•

TIRED OF PAINTING
Cover your home wtth
beautiful MASTIC or CER·
TAINTEED vmyl stdtn&amp;.
Best Pnces Anywhere'
Rooftnc and Seamless
Gutters
Phone 992-2772

DEAD OR AUVE

'

•

•

'

•
•'•

We can repatr and recore radtators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d bo1t and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refngarators
It Repoor,.le"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CAU AMY CAITEI
er IOI'S ELIC110NICS

SSO PAGE STREET

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

OPfN 8:30-6·00 P.M

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Announce111 en t s
3 Announcements

PLUMBING &amp;. HEATING
llol North Second
457ft0

Middlopart, Ohto

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Cerry Flshtng Suppllea

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Blll1 Here
IUSINESrPIIORr'
1614) ttJ-6550
RESIDDICE PHONE

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

We' \18 got pet~nants from
119 99 complete! No
appolntmenh·Just walk inl
Fl ESTA HAIR FASHIONS 322
Seoond A\11 acro11 from tha
,.rk 446 9152

Dabble Shop Going out of
bu1lneu •I e. June July 2 60
75 percent off

4

(6 t 4)

G1veeway

IUtwns to gtveawty Utm boJ1
trolned Colt 114-4411-9319

7 actlft ktt,_, to good homel
Whtte black or•nge, litter
troined Call8t4-21t t793.
Puppy to give IINrf 1o good
homo v.., brlaht • fr~oncly
Coil 814-4411-3110

2 ktttMs to give awey 1 g,.y
male tlg• 1 dr brown female
10 wks old Colt It 4-38118271

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

OWNllo GRIG I. IIGUSH

-:\'~

co~~~~~RS

Pon Poodla I moo old Molo
C.lt 114 4411-3388.

•

RESIDENTIAl
COIIIERCIAI

Z mol&amp; 2 lemotof.llow tiger

M

•CUSTOM KITCHINI. IAfHI
lfXTI!NirYE JIEMODRINO
•VINYL IIDtNQ. JIOO,.NG
•MnAL IUILDtNGI

HOUIINQ. APT PAOJICTI
Sl\&lt;f t. 1969

lillY ST. SUACIIII

992·7611 or
992·751

k~a

8 wb ol
3S7-0t01

Colt 114-

White klttons Coli 114448-1891 Of 448-0117

I

Lo. .obl. -

Llbor11torv Superv~sor for mod
e'" fully equipped physlcan •
office labo,.tory Oualificaclons
necea•rv MT (ASCPI
rlenoe wAh CAP mspect10n
helpful Wall ver~ed '" mstru
ment oper~~t10n end trouble
shooting Competent in all lllb
IN81
Good benllflta Week
en ell Off Apply ln J*lon to The
Medicel Plaza 203 Jackson
Ake Galllpol11 between 9 AM
4 JOPM

••pe

62almo

! 26-'11· 1 mo

Help wanted

Babyttner Mnted for 2 small
children in town 1 dav during
weak &amp; 1 diiV on "Neekend Call
614-446-3430

GEARY
BODY SHOP

Cars
AlBANY AREA

614-698-7157

11 /ffll-ttc

Requires independent worker with capa·
billtlesln all areas of cllniceliaboratory Exc&amp;lle nt fringe benefits
Pleaae Contact·
Cecelia G. Lisle
Veterans Memorial Hoapttal
116 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
814-992-2104

1- 13- tfc

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

446·7390

NURSING HOME
ADMINISTRATOR
Po11tion eva1lele fore hcenllld
long term adman11trator for the
Gallipolis Pt Pleasant area
Send resume to Care H.ven of
Pt Pleasant w Va 25550 In
confidence

992-2195
Moddleport, Ohto

l/22118/tln

Reliable responSible. compes
ltonlte Plf'lon to elt'e for lOwly
ehterly lady Weekend• S3 35 a
hr Call 6t4-266-847t

Own your own ap perel or shoe
ltore ChOOit rrom Je&amp;n
Sportswear ladles mens
children maternity large tiZ&amp;I
plrfite dancewelt' a•oblc. bridal hnger1eor accessom• etore
Add color an•lvti• Brand
l"'ffmM Uz Clatborne Health'le•
Ch&amp;11 lee St Mtdlale Fora
nza Bugle Boy lev1 Camp
Beverly Htlll Orgamcellv
Grown lucltt. over 2000others
or t13 99 one price des1gn•
multi t11w prtetng dtscount or
fam1ly thoe stOfe ReatH prtcea
unbehWv"able tor top qualtty
shoes normally Pf'iced from t19
860 Over 250 brandl 2800
stvles t17 900 tQ !129 900
inventory tnunmg f111tuNs atr
f•e grand operung etc Can
open 15 days Mr Morphtl
612 888-t009

An you • smgle parent1 If you
ere a smgle parent or your
spoute is totally diNbled and
you want to develop job skills'"
order to be gatntully employed.
you may be ehg1bfe for money to
pay tor tratn1ng tn one of our 13
full tlme programs at1he Adutt
Educatmn Cen1er Tn Countv
Vocaholllll School Cell 614753-3611 e11t 14 for 1nforma
tton Summer quarter begms
July 6th

Government JObs S16 040
S69 230 yr Now h1ring Your
area 805 687 8000 Ext A
9806 for current Federal hst
Babysitter needed tn my home
for 2childnm aged 3ve•s and 6
months 5 dey sa wee!(. eppro~t
10 houri a dav StartmgOctober
3 Expenence and reference
requwed 614-992 3377 davs
and 614-992 6539 evenmgs

Own your own ap perel or shoe
store choose from Je 1n
SportJwear Lad1es Men s
Ouldren Maternnv Large sizes
Petne Oancewear Aerobic. Br~&lt;
dal Ungerie or ecceuor1111
sto"' Add color analy111 Brand
nam• l1z Cla11Jc:wne H.l!l,.thte•
Cha~s Lee StMtchele. Forenza
Bugle Boy l.8'11t Camp Be\lerly
H1lls Orgarucally Grown Luc1a
over 2000 others Or 113 99
one pnce des1gn• multt her
pr1ang dtscount or family shoe
store Retatl pnces unbeUwable
for top quahty shoes normally
pr1ced from S19 to $60over 250
bt'andl2600styles S17 900 to
$29 900 utY81'1tory trammg
fi•tures aJJfiH'e grand openrng,
stc Can open 15 d8VS Mr
loughhn {612)888-4228

Compenv needs persons spec1al
1z1ng tn hout~ng tndustry C.l!lr
Per1ters rooters atr condit10n1ng
s pec• altets electricians
plumbers Carpet layers Call
304-863-8321 bet~Mten 12 00
and 7 00 aak for Mary Be1h
Pos1t1on avatlable $ unltmtted
earmng p01enttal$ Sou1hent
.l!ll'na fin eat mostexcltln9recre•
tlonal resort IS getting ready for
the season of fun vacBt1on
recreattona Now acceptmg ap
pltcattons Benefits with weekly
pev tf you are neat 1n appear
anoe energe1tc and enthustas
tic, contact Mr Anthony tmme
dhtely at 614 992 6488
9 00-6 OOp m to schedule an
ap pomtment
AVON All areas Call Manlyn
WaiNer 304-882 2845
LPN Pleasan t Vall"f Nursmg
Care Center seeking lrcensed
LPNs for part ttme employment
mediC.I!II and dental rnsurance
BVailable If Interested call Kathy
Thornton Director of Nurstng
13041675 6236 EOE AAE
Baby sttter needed for care of 1
.,eer old boy In our nice Point
Pteasant home downtown area
4 5 days week; must have refer
ence1 and own transpo and be
mature dependable&amp; energetiC
lt hou•lc.eepmg req d
No
Sitters wH:h other kids or outs. de
our home please S&amp;lary benefit
negotiable Cell 304-67~3999
days 675 6037eve

CRUISE SHIPS
Now htrtng! Summer and Career
opportunittes ElCCellent pay
World Travel! Call {refundable)
t 5t8-459 3734 ... p 2284
Secretary Reetpttonest poart1on
wall&amp;ble competrtMI benefits
some bookkeepmg 8.11 pet:"tence
requtred send resume 1o Care
Haven of Point Pleasant Rt 1
Box 326 Pt Pit WVa 25550

CHARGE NURSE
Pleasant Valley ,._.rsmg Care
Cen1er 100 bed skilled nursmg
facilhy located In Po int Pleasan1
WVa 11 seeking a registered
nurse to assume the dut1es of
full time ch•ge nurse Th1s
positron ,. open 1mrnedtately
c all KathyThonrton at 304-6755236 Plea&amp;.l!lnt Vellev Nun1ng
Care Center IS an equal oppor
tunity employer and affirmitiV'8
action employer
Now htrlng demonstrators Omstmas Around The World
racewe weekly corrmlu•on no
collectmg delrvery taceive free
TV VCA or even trip to Haw an
Superv11or Pa1 Greenlee 304675-2886
reenl

12

Situations
Wanted

Busonoss
Opportunity

Real Estate
31

Homos for Sale

Big 3 BR Dakota farm home
burtt on your lot S21 995 &amp; up

13

.. tta- lllriped

- · Colt 814-448-1010
AdM1 Computer for pertt end
gom.. Colllt4-992·7719
I

Applfelltiont will be accep•d
July Firoti1ot) lhruTonth t10thl
for Apprentice Plumben and
Apefltten: AppNcltions may be
picked up at the Ohto State
Employment Otfloe or 1t 2134
Galli• St Portsmouth Ohio
Appllcent mu.t be 18 215 ~ars
of aga EOE
Mldcleton E1111tH wHI be taking
oppllcotlona lao Hob. Speco
Tun Wed. and Thun Inter
VIIWI wll be h.d on July 8th
For morw lnformltion ciiii14446-H71
Htlp

w..twd

on O.lry Farm

••Pirl•ee helpful Call
oft• 8 PM 114-494-2080
~liking

Hair Stytittl Acr011 The Street
ttyllng Ilion ill Mfllktng one
addllkuwl ltyllst who il looldng
for more than IUit another job
Call Terri It 814-448 95t0 for
d ...u.

Job huntfng7 Need o o11117 Wo
train people fOf' )obi n Auto
Mocll.,lco
Et-~
cltna. Food lervloe Worllln.
BtctroniCI Tecflniai•l. lndu•
trlel Malnten1nce Worken.
Nursing • - • .,d Onl•·
N• llloclllnlota .,d Weldors
Rogtotor now l o r - - beginning July 8th Coli Trf.County
VOCOiloMI AduH C.O ... II S14753-3511 ollt 14 A vorloty of
f\lndlng IOUte• to PIIY for
trllning ara available for tlo•
ollglble

c.,,.,,..,,

17
31

Homes fur Sale

1985 Marlette Modular Home
60x28 All eloc Cl&gt;. 3 BR , 2
bltht: gre11 I'OOm dlnlflg room
To many 8Ktnts to ltlt Must •e
10 apprec11ta
S45 000 Cell
6t4-44&amp;-1408
2 s1ory horne Flatwoods are ..
Pom.l!lroy New kitchen b ..

thtoom ceallngs &amp; t•pettng
Call 614-446-2359
TupeJers Platns-3 BR eM 1n
k1tchen large hvmg room fuM
basement garage, all etectnc
centntl aw Call afutr 5 PIVI
6t4-448-7496
For Sale o' Rent 3 BR houWJ
wrth attached ger•ge CA, No
pats Dep &amp; ref mqu~red 39
Olell1mthe Ad Call 614-4462583 9 5 da.tv

Government Homes from S 1 (u
repatr) Ditlmquent
properly
Repossesa1ons Cell 805· 687
6000 Ext G H 9805 for current
repo hst

•u

House 1677 Uncoln He1ghts
Pomerov Call aft8f' 4 30 week
dii\'S anyttme weekends 614985-4103
108 State St Pomeroy 2 or 3
bedrooms carpMed No rea~~c;
nabla offer refused Phone 614992 3725
5 rooms b•h Large back porch
16x14 partly enclosed Reduced for quick sale make offer
Call 614 992 7244

Hou!l&amp; for sale tn langsville
Oh1o Out of htgh water askmg
•28 000 Cell 6t4-742 2745
Rutland 3 bedroom central atr
vmyl s1dtng Ins ul ated full
carpet pat10 garage. work
room fenced yard garden
space S32 000 2 bedroom
carport mce house $15 000
61 4- 992 6277

l~c~et~l~1~6~t~4-~8~8~&amp;-~7~3~1~t~~~-+~:::::::::::::::::::

~

~""'~_,.,.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
Vard Sale-Shlrlav Arrowood a
July 1 &amp; 2 St Rt 279 V2 mtle
out of Thurman Clothes furnt
ture m1sc: 9 5
Vard Sai•July 1 &amp; 2 9 ? 1 m1le
out 218 Chtldrens clothing.
mtsc etc
Yard Sal&amp;-lots of n1 ce th1ngs
Wed 29 Thurs. 30 Frt July 1
Rein cancelled last 2 ads
Glassv..re home lnt sew1ng
machme Everything nice lower
Garfield Exten11on
Tues Wed Thurs SmaH ap
phances Chrtstmel decor
clothes m1 sc Corner of Ham11
to nS. Kmg Ad
4Famlly June30 July1 2 Pme
St Ato Grande Home tnt lg
women 111Ze1 Children cloth .!!Is
toys fabrtc fu rniture
Everythmg Imag inable Rt 7
nt~~~t to Swen Creek Cemetary
Crown Ctty Ohto July 1 &amp; 2
tO 4

1----------------

Thurs &amp; Fn &amp; Slit Tlll noon
Weddrng dres s all ktnds/ stzes
lad181Jeans clothes man 's work
clothes mu~c St Rt 790 %
mtleoff Rt 218

4 Famtly George sCreekAd '11
mile from At 7 Thur1 Sat
Furniture appliances pool ta
ble waterbed mattress dog
house clothes glasswa re
crafts Iota mise free boll:
Fn July 1st Sat July 2 First
houte on little Kvger rOllld Just off
Rt 1 Ant~que s dtshes dolls
clothing tools fruit )Irs tires
sat:of16 plowswtth3pt h1tch
with 3 potnt hitch mt sc:

Five family \4trd sale Julv 1 4
9 00-6 00 Neo.v A\lon west
erns games crafts clo1hin g.
freebies m1sc 5 mrles fTom St
At 7 on Forest Run Ad 2 mtles
from St Rt 1 24 at Bowman 1
Run Edwards res1dence 6149492116

July 1 2 3
9 30 4 30

34618 Crew Ad

Garage Sale June 29 30July 1
782 H1gh St Mtddleport Ohto
M1rrors bed and frsme and
coffee table lots of mce clothes
cheflp and mi!JC
Ted Russell Minersville SR 1 24
4famtly July1 and2 At267W
Matn St Pomeroy M1sc rtem1
2 famtv Frt S.11t Juty 1 2
Adehne SnoVIilden College AIM!!
Rutland

3 famly vard sale July 1 2
bestde Summerfield! Restau
rant tn Ches18r 9am til 4p m
Untforms llkenB'N aduttclothes
little boys clo thes furnrture and
much more Ram Of stnne
Garage ullt Whit eheads
Reedsvdl e July' 1 2 lamps
curta1n1 chtldrens mens
women clothing M1sc
Motorcycle bicycles eurc11e
rower act ron max game tratl.l!lr
guages floor Jack stands m1sc
electr~cal 11ems adult and chtldren clothtng July 1 8 30 4 00
Rustle Hills
June 30 Juty 1 S1 Rt 124
Syrecuse Oh1o BedrOQm su
rte1 dtnette set drshwasher
c1othtng boat and lnul er m1sc
housewares
4 family Bedding d11h es furn1
ture humtdifter canntng Jars
clothes and more July 2
8 Bp m Roger Spencer StAt
33
Powell ntstdence 5th St Ae
cme F'tve family Friday and
Saturday July 1 2 9 7

lnsurartce

81g vard sale Happy Hollow Ad
off 124 2nd 3rd 4th Refr1ger
Btor May tag washer 10meth1ng
for everyone

Call us for your mobile home
msurance M1ller Insurance
304 882 2145 Als o auto
home life health

Large porch lillie July 1 and 2
Off At 7 on 248 tn Chester

Thursday Frtdav and Saturdav
June 30 July 1 and 2 1284
Po._...ll St
Middleport 9 4
Clothtng 3 wheet b1cycle. mrsc

Bartender and/ or Barmatd
needed Call614-446 /.,58

PAT HILL FORD

We Service All Makes

to

lol •• '"""' thou ..........
&amp; ltloloi oror to oasy VHS.

11

Rff~C111

WANTED

6 Il-l mo

We are looking for I(Wn80ne to
work part t1me 10 our chtldren 1
cloth1ng store 8\l'enmgs and
weekends If you are a matul'fJ
indtvl4.tal who haa had Mia~
ex perience or practical IXpertence (wtth your children or
gra ndchtldren) and are Inter
ested tn working pe" ttme
pleese send resume to Frtends
Fa rever 400 2nd Ave Gallipolis OH 4583t

12\Jmo

985·3561

6 10 88-1 mo

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES
YHS TAPE

985-3350

l11f."l8tffl

21

Avon needs 71adl81 to sell Avon
C•ll 614 441!-3358

CHESTER, OHIO

lstwHn

"lllusl

Bored! Broke! And Blue! Sell
Chris1m11 Around the World
decorat.ons unttl Dec. Fun JOb!
Parw plan Free $300 kit No
collaction or delivery I Work your
own hours Now h1rmg Demonstrators Clll B.tty Carpenter
614-245-5383Todovl

SUNOCO

614-742·2617

NEW -IEPAIR

$1 495

NEWELL'S

-FlEE ESTIMATES-

ROOFING

No expenence requ1red Tr1 mmg
on the Job Reloc.rt10n requtred
Htgh school grads age 17 30
Call1 800.2821384 Monday
Thursdav 9 AM 2 PM

Brakes Muffler. Atr
Condttton Checked
and Refill
Mtnor Repatrs

Far any of thett HrYI&lt;K col

Howord L. Writesel

949-2263
or 949-2168

Wolh 4 Qts Ool

Help wanted

METAL WORKER TRAINEES

LUBE-OIL-FILTER

WANT TO IUY WREUID OR
JUNK CAll 01 !lUCKS

5 19 88 I mo

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleenmg
Paintmg
FREE ESTIMATES

5-25 1 ma pd

Help Wanted

Wanted bat.;' sitter rn our home
must be 16 to 18 yrs old
El)(penenced 304-675-7534

TourGutdes Male l!de male Our
top people earn $80().$1200
per week Salerv to 111n plus
commls1lon Ple. .nt worldng
conditions A really fun place to
work. Friandlv neat &amp; dependa
ble are the requirement! Call
1~814-28(5 6422. ask for Sue

Cen1f1ed L1censed Shop

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Woll Do liouttng Woth
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Sennce
...... _
•Junk Yard Bustneq

Whol•ale &amp; Aetutl

11

CALL 992-6756
'DOC" VAUGHN

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

Call (614) 992-7204

Servtces

Most Fore1gn and
DomestiC Vehtcles
A/ C Serv1ce
All MaJOr Bt Mmor
Repatrs
NIASE Cortifiad Machamc

Far111 Eqalp•••t
P•rt• &amp; Serwlae
I 3· 86 tfc

PomofCiy

llltund l1ly Holt

Employment

SYRACUSE OHIO

Farm Equtpmtnt

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Quilts
Cash petd for antiQue or new
qUilts Applrque pteced anv
condition Call 614 992 6657

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

614-662-3821
John Deere,
New Holland, II!Jh Hog

) 30-17 lin

Buytn9 datly gold s1lver corns
rtnga tewelry •erllng ware old
coins large cur"'"ev Top prt
ces Ed Burken Berber Shop
2nd Ave Mt ddleport Oh 6 1 4992 3476

6-1 I mo

Authomod

Dh
992-6611

Want to Buy Used Mobile
Homes Call 614 446 0175

c.F. scon
Miokltport
614 992 3718

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

Mtddleport,

Buytng furmture and appliances
bv 1he p1ece or by the lot Fetr
prices Call 614-.446 3158

62;~

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Junk Care wnh or wnhout
motorl Call Larry Uvely 814388 9303

Otter good 6 / 1 7 / 30

6/ ll/81/ 1 1110

REPAIR

Want to buy Uaed furntture and
anttques Will buy entire house
hold furntShtng Marlin Wl'!ldemeyer 614-245 5152

18 yrs
Church-Home-School
Free Gtft 'Water Me
Please" batt operated
House Plant Alert ltght,
wtth tuntng

A"'on•

SMALL ENGINE

FULL TIME POSinON FOR REGISTERED MEDICAL
LABORATORY TECHNICIAN ON ROTATING SHIFTS

•'

Pomeroy, Ohio
,,

Don' t Know Whoch W"f To
Turn CoMtln For Advice
- One Yi1H Will Conw •ct

TOP CASH paid for 83 model
and newer Ul&amp;d cars Smith
Buick Ponttac 1911 Eastern
Ave Galllpohe Call 614 448
2282
Complete houwehokls of furnt
tu re &amp; ant.qUM Also wood &amp;
coal heaters Swain 1 Furmture
&amp; Auctton Th1rd &amp; Ohve
614-446 3159

PIANO TUNING

Bus1ness
If You Are Unh..py •d

•

•'

The Daily Sentinel

IF TREES ARE WHAT YOU
WANT on a lot SUitable for
buoldmg then lhls os tl' Vt
suahze the house you ve al
ways wanted on lhts I acre
shady lot Elec avatlable
ONLY $2 500 00

We pay cash for late model clean
used- cara
Jim Mtnk Chev Olds In c
BUI Gene Johnson
614 446 3672

Clinical AudtologJst

Tells Past Present end
Future - Gives Adv1ce
on Love Marnage and

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
Prtces"

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Alck Pearson Aucttoneer lice niBd Ohio and West Vlrglnta
Estate antiQue farm llqulda
t1on •les 304-n:J-6785

::1: (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis
OhiO 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

2711

Llcensed

~

1-28 88-tln

TENDER LOVING CARE al
ways shows' You II see the resutts of the excellent upkeep
here a well kept hom~
beaulolu\\y decorated lovely
grounds everything mttp top
shape by poople who took
PRIDE In ther home and hate
lo part wnh n Approx 47
acres wtth 2 ponds huge
36 x22 fam tly room w/fireplace, satelne d1sh 2 car bnck
garage cenlral atr and much
more 2 bat hs 2 large bed
rooms part basement 6 room
bnck ranch on agood location'
ASKING $89 000 00 MAKE
OFFER

B

z
a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

1-800-346-LOGS

742·:t4b:t

L1stenmg Devtces
Dependable Heanng Aid Sales &amp; ~...,;,d
(!' Heartng Evaluations For All Ages

992-6282

POMEROY. OH
992-2259
HARRISONVILLE- 23 acres
vacant gro•md water &amp; elec.
available Buy part or all' Want
$8 000 00 for \he whole thtng

PH.

LOST Beegle btk brown whtta
female approx 10 yrs old
belong•d to the late Troy Sou
thell last teen TNT area please
call Chr1sta McDaniel 304-876-3013 or 675 4380

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

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

One of Am&lt;ria's finest
lin.,., !WtlnJ at $13,800
Gnat """"'B potential,
will ROI tntcd'c:re "'lh
pr&lt;sent employment Jn.
•cstment fully ..curod If
you c:an pwdtase or mon
gage • model hom&lt;:, call
Bill Denidc. Toll Free

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Call Collect 1304) 372-4331

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

4 18 88 lin

Two whtte and black ve• old
lovable and playful cat1 call
aher 6 00 304-675 6224

Rt. 1, Box 74·A, Rtply, W.Va. 25271

Aleo Tranc111lttlon

Yardman
ServKe On All Makes
We Honor MC/DoS&lt;/VoiG

Brown and tan Coon dog pup.
ptes available end of July
304-875-3056

B&amp;C BDRILLING
CO.
. H. Beegle, Owner

124, Pomeroy Ohto

11

Gtveaway

Half Doberman pupplet 30 48764312

NEED WATER?
CALL

Roger Hysell
Garage

The Daily

6 Lost and Found

3 ll·lfn

PH. 949-2969

==.:6-=.., -

FEATURING
Rtvtera
Cabmets
Rollyson Vmyl
Replacement
Wmdows
Peachtree Doors
and Wmdows

Now
Budt
"Free Es1omates

10·8 tic

·T ripped emergency brake
in train accident killing 59 people
By BRENDAN MURPHY

4

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

dealership

frle at the offrce of the
Syracuse Vtllage clerk
treasurer

Middleport, Ohio

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN JN
INSULATION

992-3410

.. ,~
:-- ··-:~::iE:i:::..member Congress of People's 1~----------------~~~--~----------------.-JL--------------~r.~~:-~,~~~-~·~
- ----------------_j
Deputies would be elected every
five years and meet annually It
Public Not1ce
Publtc Notice
Public Notice
Pubhc Notice
would elect a sta nding Supreme
the prevailing rate of wages
Soviet of up to 450 members to
INVITATION
11 00 o clock A M Persons
FOR BIDS
to be patd to laborers and know1ng any rB4tson why the
handle Important matters of
PUBLIC HEARING
Sealed proposals wtll be mechamcs employed on apphcat1on should not be
sta te
The V1llage of Mtddleport
received by the Vtllage of public Improvements '"
granted ahould appear and
Ohto will conduct a public
The body would be headed by a Syracu 18 Oh1o at the offtce clud1ng th11 proJect
1nform the Court The Court
hearmg of the proposed
prestdent, who Gorbachev said of the Clerk· Treasurer. Syra
Each b1ddor shalt be re
ts located on the 1st Floor of
1989 v1llage budget on July
would oversee key foreign and cuse Mumc1pal Bulldmg qu1rod to f1le wrth his b1d a the Me1g1 County Court 11. t9BB, at 7 30 p m at
Oh•o unttl 12 00 cert•fied check or cashter s House. Court Street at Se~
domestic policy as opposed to the Syracuse,
Vtllage Counctl Chambers
noon ESDT, July 7. t9BB
check for an amount equal to
and Mulberry Pam
237 Raca St Middleport
current figurehead president, and at that t•me opened by fiVe percent of hts btd A cond
aroy OH 45769
The pubhc 11 tnvrted to at
Andrei Gromyko It noted th e the Clerk· Treasurer •• pro
performance bond 1n the full
Robert E Buck,
tend
president would head the De· vtded by law for all labor and amount of the contract shall
Probeta Judge
The budget w1ll be avatlabl e
material
necessary
for
con
be
requ1red
to
be
furnished
Lena K Neuelroad Clerk
for publ1c •nspect10n from
tense Council, a position now held structton of a boat launch by the successful btdder
July 12 through July 20otthe
by the general secretary of the and dock facttlty on the Ohm pr1or to execution of tho 16\ 22 29. (7) 6
M1ddleport Mayor• s office
party Gorbac hev
R1ver at Syracuse Mumc•pal
contract
Jon P Buck
The date for completion of
The pres ident could be elected Park accordtng to the draw
Clerk Treasurer
Pubhc Nottce
mga
and
speceftcatmns,
the
proJect
for
whtch
a
401
16) 29
or removed by the Supreme dated Aprot 14. 19BB. pro
permit has been obtained by
Soviet tn a secret ballot Like pared by Pholop M Roberts. the Village of Syracuse shalt PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
similar proposals floated re registered profaas10nal engr
be w~h1n 60 days after the
3 Announcements
TO All PERSONS 'N
cently by Gorbachev's suppor near Estrmated cost of the ex.ecutton of satd contract
TERESTED IN THE ESTATE
IS $80 000
Tho V1ttago of Syracuse OF Wood Cross Humphrey
ters It seemed to assume th e prOject
Contract document!. rnreserves the nght to reJeCt dacaasad Iota of 34331
head of the party would be the cludrng 1nstruct•ons to any and all bids
Crew Road Pomeroy, OH
president
Jan1ce Lawson
brdders. drawtngs and spec•
45769 M01gs County Pro
Clerk Treasurer bate Court
frcatrons for thrs work are on
Alexander Yakovlev, a PoUt
Case No
Under the proposal, a 2,250

1988

Business Services

11-·--

~=

=-==

Soviet, which now rubber
stamps party decisiOns

-

.,,.
IU•

·~-~w

::...o:..."'T.""....:'!:;..."'::".~::.::"'·o...

-

... ....

0.'1 ,.OROI II • ..,.PI II • - P I

··--'""' . . . . .-.. . ,._

000 ICIII

Group claims attache assassination
By RALPH JOSEPH

June

WUI work for S2 OOa hour Odd
lobo Colllt4 286-1398

PriVate home c•e and board for
Senta,.. end hendicappred Elem
Home 6t4-992 6873

Carport Sale-Juty 1 &amp; 2 Frt &amp;
Sat 9 00 6 00 462 Llrtat Dr
near Holzer Hosptal Clothes
sofa chatr Blue Devil )8ck&amp;ta
stertJO with speakers It m11c

Yard Sale- 1 1t and 2nd 3
Family At ?1n Cheshire
Yard c•e brush cu1t1ng ltght 1...::...:..::.:._...:_.:___:__:__.:.__
hauling some tre.l!l trtmmmga ESTATE SAL E Fr1 &amp; Sat July
&amp;nd remo,..l C.l!lll Bill Slack 1st and 2 nd 9 OG-6 00 An
614-992 2269 evanmg1
t1ques furniture dishes golf
clubs lawn molllltln clothtng
Will do house cleenmg Rutland Valuable mtsc 308 Sanders
D~
rove
:::.________________
Pomeroy Middlepon Mason I =.... 814-742 2404
Btg Garage Sale 2 Famtly
\NUl do hoult cle~nlng. Vllrd Northup 609 Scon Ln Thurs
workandn.tnerntndl 304-675- Frl
2718 or &amp;711-4818
Huge Yard Sai•July 1st &amp; 2nd
9 AM ttl 5 PM Anttques 1 lerge
variety of things A1 7 m
Cheshire Otuo across from
En on Statton at green houae

Ftnanctal

21

Business
Opportunity

IIIIOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO rec:ommendl thet you
do busln•• wfth people you
know, end NOT to 18nd monev
through the mall until you have
lnvestlg•ed the off•lng.

1--:___ _ _ _ _ __

4 Family Fri &amp; Sit 1st Sub on
right George 1 Creek Ad All
1'108 clean 6 modern thinga
~ ~..:.:_.:..:_::.__ _ _ ___:_ _
Garage Sai•One d., onty Sat
July 2 9 6 First &amp; lilt •le of
lde.. lulldlng-CornerlotforSale the.,.., lots of goodl• Cle.-.
Of Le•ln G111ipolls Ohio Call &amp; chNPI 2021% Chathlm Aw
&amp;14-2411-8859 or 4411-8030
Lorr, 4 Family Thurt Sat Rt
MANUFACTURED HOME 32 touthofRioGrande .. ml81
SALES Join one of Ohto 1 mo11 Adult &amp; chlldrens clothu all
rMpected corporations as we tires Many other tt1m11 Sail• e
expand tnto your ar• A com must ••I
p..,•tion piekage second to 1-------------------none and In hou• flNtncing of Y•d Sai•Thurt &amp;; Fn Nloe
our proc:M::t Sal .. nlnin11 pro- children aduh clothing 1 mile
vlded. Strong m•h aptitude and out Butavllle Rd
organlla,lonal skUh nec••rv
Tell us In brief repty your c•eer
goals Sal• Pro,..•lonel P 0
Pomeroy
Box 392. Clrcl..,lollo, Ohio
4)113, Attn RD

Loree blltboord behind Sllwr
llrldgo , _ I t80 00 ..,.t
month orwMIIItll for 12.000 00
304-178-1991 Of 814 992
7181
19 91 OM price shoe ttore or
110.120 f•hlon lfore! Open •
non-tr.nchiM ltt:ft with the
Liberty F•shlon• ach'antage

av. tJOo br~nd n~m• on.
tlma f • ln-.ntcry flxturM
buying trip tupplia fnstora
tt-'ningandmore C.llenytime
Slllrlov Hunter 409-132-5511

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

More 1 F1rm, St At 1 1 mile
from Ftve Points June 13th
17th t 1 00 7 00 Clothing
boob coat• jJ!IIIfelry .. dio

·-

Jutv. 1 and 2 Ch••r beside
Hrettou• ctott.. bllite cur
tains hot curlers T V
tuPPtf'\Wre

Tw o famrly b•n •le Oo to 1ll
health everything must go Of1
At 124 Brewer Ad Portland,
Ohio Watc h fm Signs A.n ttque
collectors rtems clothes d11hes
.wrd much more Edgar Brewers
res July "30 1 2 3 or till
e~ttery thtng 11 gone 9 1
2 famtlv vard sal.l!l Julta
Vaughan June 30 and July 11
33209 New L1ma Ad
Thursday and Frtday 1.S mile
South Mtddtapon At 1 Clothmg adult children and large
women Jeans tovs and mtsc
Cameras toys canner clothes
baby •tems odds 1n d eods Jutv
1st and 2nd at l &amp; l Ttre Barn
Pine Grove Road near Five
Po1nts
Movtng Sale .Jun.l!l 30 Juty 1 2
mtle up Ballfi'V Run Rd
Pomerov Brown and wh11e
naUer on rtght

l,4

Yard S&amp;!e July 2nd 3rd 4th
9 0()..? Corner of Thtrd and Elm
St across from ca r lo t Ractn.l!l
Ohro
Patto S&amp;le July 1st and 2nd
Netgler res1dence Brad buary
Rd M1ddleport tO 00 4 00
Yard Sale! Saturday July 2
9 00..5 00 55 S Second Mtddeport Ooors btnhroom f1x
tures F A gas furnace scrap
butlding supphM clothes cur
tams !lheet1 etc

-pt Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Ytrd Sale Fridi'V July 1 9 0()..
5 00 Ro1otillet l now tlfM
tou1er owven Ch i!dre ns
clsothet 1 3 mll81 out Sand H1ll
Rood
Ylrd Safe Frl 1nd S11 224 N
Perk Drive Everything chell)
YtrdSale FfltndSit Jutv1 1nd
2 2002 Mt V•non Ave
ewry1hing
Yard Slle. 5 Maple St Mnon
Frid8V and Saturday July 1 and
2 llt'ge stll ctathlng •nd mise
9 00 to I 00 Aain Cancels
Vlf'd Sale tnd Movlng Sale
2423 Uncoln Aw Fridav and
Slturdi'V lots of everything

�Page-18 The Daily Sentinel
31

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

Bradbury home plus mobile
home with neoN roof, patio, large
poreh, cis1ttrn and l..C. water.

setalltte dish and bea.Jtiful yard.

Coli 614-992-6941 .

tral air, t:•peted. fenced backyard, finilhed basement, out
bu ihting. located center of Point
Pleasant. Pr iced right or make
oH., . 304-675-6633.

304-676-2147 before 6:00,
675-2702 after 5 PM .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ext. 315c. Ohio only .
REPOSSESSED Oouble.vldes.
4 available. Only S1 ,000 down.

Repotoe...d 14x70't. '500

down. MID-OHIO ANANCIAL
SERVICE. t -800-826-0752 in
Ohio. FREE DELIVERY.
1984 Fisher ali electric, 2 BR ..
1% bath on rented lot. Ready ro
moVfJ in. Call 614-25&amp;-1927.
19 86 Clayton mobile home.
14x60. All electric, partly furnished. water softner, ref., is land range-oven. $15,000. Colt
614-448-3041 before 4 PM.
12x60, 2 bedroom, 1'h baths.
new 18•16 porch, outbuilding,

on 1112 acre land. Located o n
Eagle Ridge. Will rent, sell or ~~til
on land contract wkh srn:~11
down peymMt. Call 614-9492617
614-423.5687
or
'
·
1970 Windsor, 1 2x65 with
10x1 2 add on, · woodburner,
waaher end dryer. air cond. mu~
be moved. 304-895-3602.
1984 Nashua 14X70with 7X2 1
3 bedrooms. large
bsthroom-garden t'-*" &amp; separate
!lhower , equif'll'ed kit chen lighted b.-,Runderpinning, central air. totel electric, over YJ: aere
lot , 2 car garage 24X28. Phone
304 -6 75-6 853. Priced on
inspeCiion.
exp~nda ,

"Oh, Brewster'. Can't you
"orget
for j"ust ONE night
.1'
that you're a j"udge?.»

f------------r-----------,
42 Mobo"le Homes

44

for Rent

for

2 BR . mobile home In Crown
City. Call 614-256-6520.
28R . allelectrlc.Adultsonly . No
pets. Call814-387-7438.

40 acres- 2 mobile homes.
Raccoon Rd. 1000 h . frontage.
S 38,000. negotiable. Call 304522· 7279.
For Sale-dBVelopmenr property
located lA mile from f'io Grande
on St. R1. 326. 140 aaes rota!.
25 acres woodlld bordered by
Rio Grande College and Bob
Evan• Farms. City and County
watttr, •war and nat~ral gas
IIYailabla. Lot! of road fr'bntage.
PrOperty would be well suited for
housing development, golf
course. etc . Call 614-499-

3006.

1 acre and up building lot11 and
modular horne sites. Tu ppen
Plains-Otes1er Miter, roadway
to each lot. 614-985-3594.

2 BR . mobile home for rent. Call
814-446-9621 or 448-9847-i

Nice 2 Br. mobile home. Upper
Rt. 7. Furnished. Water paid.
S200amo. Cell614-245-5818.

1 bedroom apartment in Middle-port. 1150. per mon1:h plus
utiliti•. Cell614-992-6546.

2 bedroom furnished mobile

Small g.-age apartment for 1
peraon. Patio. prtvate entnm oe.
in Syr8culll. *135. per month
[water peicl . 614-992-7680 or

I - - - -- - - - - - -

814-992-6238.

home with air end wnher-dr-..,r
hookup, Svreoo 18. S225. per
month, water peld. 2 bedroom
furnished inSv~t~cu• . $160. per
month, w.!Jter paid. 614-9927680 or 81-4-992-6236.

For rent : Middleport. Unfurnished apartment. 8160 plus
utilities. 614-992·8059. After

hy depoait required. 304-8823267 or 304-773-5024.
Mobile Homes. will accept two
children or working couple.

Downtown modern 1 bed room
apt. furnished, air cond. ear·
p etBd, call after 4 :00. 304-875-

372-8405 o• 372-2576.
2 5 Acres of woods with newly
buih cabin. 20 minute drlvefTom
Point Plea~~~nt. Owl Hollow
Road 125,000.00 Phone 3048 75-7771 after 5 :00PM.
Two 1 acr8 lots. with public
'water. Jerrys Run Road ,
S 4. 900.00each. considet' trade.
304-57~2383 .

Renlals
41

304-675-1090.

2 BR . IPtl. 8 cloaeta, kitchanappl. furnished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww c•pe1. ni!PNiy
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apts . Call 304-675-5104. 6757613 or 875-6388.
_:___

45

___

Nicety furnished small house.
Adulta only. Aef. required. No
petl. Call 614-446-0338.
3 BR with basement . 6 miles
north from Holzer Hospital.
Avail8ble July 1st. Refet'flnce &amp;
deposit. Call 614-448-0695.
3 BA .. Rodnev 11-829 Graham.

Call 614-446-4635.

3 Br., unfurni1hed. VMy nice,
Specious. Built in kitchen plus
dinette. for!T\11 dining room, sun
porch. dolAJie garage. No pets.
S295 plusdap01it &amp; ref. Call Earl
Tope . 614· 446 -0890 -dav•.
448-01 61 -even.
Unfurnished 6 roQm hou•. 1112
bflth, gM fu rnace. storm window•. gar8ge. Adults only. No
pets. Oep S. ref. Call 614 -446-

2543 ..

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent-week or momh.
Starting at 1120 a mo. Gallla
Hotel-61 4-446-9580. -

614-446-0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTI\o1ENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

a

90 Dan 11me aiS cash whtl
approved credit. 3 MiiM out
Bulavilte Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph . 814-448-

0322.

Valley Furniture
New end used furniture and
applicances . Call 814 -446 7572. Hours 9-5 .

J l!o S FURNITURE

2-air condilionera-2 yrs . old.

BTU. $260. 1 0 y111. service
contract. Call 814-266-6471 .

0

Wanted to Buy: Good u!J8d small
planq. Call 614-448-4828.

'

46 Space for Rent

2568 . E.O.H.

Store corner of Seoond S. Pine.
1400 sq. ft. Off street ,_rking.
$350 a mo. plus utiUties. Call
814-446-2326, 44&amp;-4249.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Par~

RouM 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rentlll trall.-s. C.ll 814-992-

7479.

Upstairs unfurnia,kad ap1. Carpeted. utilities ,_id. No children .
No poto. Call614-446-1837.

Space for 1m1ll trtiiMs. All
hook-ups. Cable. Alaoetflclenev
room1, air and cable. Meson,

Downtown-Modern 1 BR .• com P leta khchen, AC. carpet. Cell
814-446-0139.

W.Va. Coii304-77J.6851 .

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

11 Court St. -2 8R .• 2 baths,
klitchen furrWthed. w / w carpet.
No pets. Off street parking.
S326 e mo . plus utintiel. Dep. 81
ref . Call 814-448-4928.

304-676-3073.

Trail• speces for nmt. Locust
Road, Route One, 304-875-

1078.

Trailer tpece for nmt at Y Rt. 82
• 2. New Management. Phona
304--675-3818.

One 8R unfurnithed ept. New
carpet. Range 8t refrig. furnished. Water &amp; garbage paid
Oepostt required. Call814-446-

47 Wanted to Rent
Nice 3 or 4 bedroom house in
Point Pleasant area. Phone 304-

1 BA . apt. nearHMC . 1 adult. No
peu, Call 814-446-4782.

757-9078.

Furnished apt. Utilities paid. Call
betW!!en 9&amp; 5. 614-448-9244.

r--...---------r-;;;~~~~:::~;::~~1
71 Auto's For Sale

1970 NoW!, 82«)0. Good work
car. Cell 814-448-8941 .

Furnished apt.-2 BR. 1200.
Water pal d. 1 31 Fourth, Gallipolit . Cell 448-4416 alter 7 PM.

51 Household Goods

Dfllu:~~t

2 bedroom. equipped
kitchen, private perking. No
pets. Sec. dep .. reference. Call

Rat Hardtop con...,..it)ja sports
car, low mileage, AM-FM
cauene. n...-v liret. excellent
condition. Phone 304· 875-

CROSS&amp; SONS

2835.

~ . s. 35 W•t JackiOfl. Ohio.

814-286-8451 .

1977 Chwy Mona 2 plus

Mauev Ferguson, NIYII Holland,
Bush Hog Sal• • Service. Ovor

Ruger No. 1 . 300 Winchatt8r
Magum, single shot, Simmons

tween 9:00 1nd 1 1 :DO PM.

40 usedt.. ctort tochooae from
&amp; complete line of ne.v &amp;. ut8d
~ulpment. Largest •lection In

Sco pe . $250.00. 304-875·
6141 .

~-E.

Tan TV's. twenty dressersdesks. will sell one or all, misc.
Priced on Inspection. 304-676--

19n

900 lba. tobacco allotment
cheap , 304-676-7464.
Pilot wheel from Valley Bell
Steam Boat. Blue and Green
tiNted commercial carpet 30
yda . Electric Aidgld pipe
threader, welder and welding
cable. One inch Torkwrench and
1 inch drive socket •t. 23,000
btuwindowaircond. two 1.000
btu Hell wall furnaces LP gaa.
Phone 304-675-3753 or 8754417 after 5 :00PM.

304-B82·3248.

round bll•. t5800. 930 Cate
w,ith cab. 1300 houra. creem
puff with 7 ft. NH hay bind,
1-11950. OwiWrwll finance. Cell

19l4 Ohlt Cutl•11 Suprema. 4
door. low mileage. 1984 Buic*
River• low mileage. Phone 304-

8?5-3753 o• 575-4017 oft a•

514-286-8522.

5 :00.

18eo Oliver tractor with mowing machine, ,.ke.. biller. plows.
diSc. cuttlvetor, corn ptanter,
I 3880. Owner wfll ftnanoe. call

1983 DlltiSun Station Wagon
55,0(10 mil•. 1988 Aatro v.,
30,000 mlw. Both good cond.
Week d~a c•ll 30~876-8080.
after hours c•ll 30~675-6860.

614-286-8&amp;22.

4441ntern~tlonel diesel tractor.

Nice, wtth International b•ler,
84260. Kohl• power plant, 4
c.yl •• g• engine. 12Q..210 voltt.

Solid w81nut gun'cabin&amp;t, holds
10 gunt. Solid pine dry link.
Antique Willi phone. 304-458·

72

• 1200. Coif 814-286-8822.

1078.

1985 Chovroleo A ... ~de PU
S-10, otd . Cell 814-... 6-0662.

H..,

Used Allis Chelmeu
Rake.
New klea Menu,. Spr•der,
International 1 4 inch Drag

Washer and dryer, wood 1tove.
couch and chair. bed. used
moV~~~~rs . 304-675-1553.

au

Walk ShM po&gt;Mr unit with In
1nd out clutch. S.ltt and ldl•
81~378-8278.

D.•-!·

55 Building Supplies

FM, air, 6 •peed. V -8, cuiJtom
fiberglass topper. ex cell Mil eondhion *4,1500. Phone 875-

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1. 000 tires. tl~e~~ 12, '13, 1 4. 1 5.
18. 16.5. 8 mil• out Rt. 218.

Coll814-266-8251 .

Livestock

Wheelchairs-new or uted. 3
wheeled electric tcootMs. Call
Rogers MobiHy collect, 1 - 61~

870-9881 .

Come celebr11te July 4th whh
"bangs:" ' at FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS! Haircuts atart at just
S6.99l 322 Second Ave, across
from the park, 448-9162.

Q,E . window air condhioner.

5000 BTU. Coll614·446·3549.
1-630 Case backhoe with 22 11.
trailer &amp; 1 Ch..,y ton truck.
17000. 2 bag mortar mixer,
8500. 1 set of cutting torch es,
welder. office d811k &amp; chair 01her
mite itemt. C•ll81 4· 367-7611 .
Clarinet color TV, complete
queen size water bed. Call
814-266-6522 or 446-6184.

Pullets tor •I e. Ready' to start

'

Americ1n Stanct.d Horse. 7
~·• I old. Gehlnv. gantle, o•
lted. jwolce to sulky. 814-742·

pupplos.

5335.

IH•v &amp; Grain

74

S150. Cell 614-245-

6126 or 245-6644.

AKC Cock• Spaniel pups. Solid
black mala~ &amp; females. Shots
startud &amp; wormed. 5150 e•ch.
Also tilling orders for bufl &amp;
blonde cocker spaniel pupa &amp;
American Eskimo spitz pupa. Cal

Honda XR 80, 1981 . Good
oond. Hot Point doiAJie oven
r~nge - gold . Call 814 -448 -

71 AIJ!o's For Sale

AKC Aegiatered Beagle puppies.
8 weeks old. Red and white. Call

2iourwheel••· Yamahe80and

614-992-6350.

1978 Rogal. V-1. .,to. $1350.
Cell 814-256-8192.

57

1958 Ch101y.
448-95i".

'

Musicel
Instruments

•900. Coli

eo. Coli 814-992-8350.

614-

1-3_0 4-_8_8_2_.3_2_4_6_' _ _ _ __
lgdlvidual guitar lestona, be1
•
- '- a n1
g nners, eenouagu;tar ..t . ru .

$1.300.00 OBO . Coll304-8765815.

75

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

304-675-1187.

2~ ft. BlyHner cruller . 1986
wide bum, an electronic. g.tlev.
Cln.,.l, etc. 350 V-8 eng.,
tiNPI 8 . Very low hours.

814-448-1250alter 6 PM .
Nlee 2 Br. apt ., water. 1111frig.. a
stove furn . 4'h mi. from Gafllpolls. No pett. $225mo. 814-448-

'27.500. Coli 304-72?-8890.
1S85 Aouoglua. Coll514-4464375.

992-7285.

2 bedroom houl8 near fair·
grounds. No ptrts. 614-992-

3876.

3 or 4 badroorn haute for tent in
Racine. CAll 814-949-2866.
Attracthle tpaclous retidence.

150 N. Sooord St., l\lllddl.,ort.

for rent , Completely redecorated . Elt-in llhchen. plenty of
cablnett, large lfving room. up to
three bedrooms. utilrty room.
tiled and carpeted floors, drtpes,
window air condhlonlng. WorkIng •dulta, no pets. 1250. per
month plus •curitydepolit. Call

614-992-5292.
Hou• for l'llnt whh option to
buy. 3 bedrooms. bult In kit·
chen, g er11g e. t2 1 5. 00 momhly.

304-882-2888.

Nice furnished apt .-4 rooms &amp;
bill h. 1 or 2 adults. Na pets. Ret.
&amp; •c. dep. required. Call

814-448-0444.

New Em..-aon llr condhloners.
Vinyl floor oowrlno- lbtUng ~

1111 a. .., Motlllu aonlc.
Super nice c•. very good

Will dean once week. supply all
chemicals. ~malt weeklvchqe.
reference furni1hed, 1ri State
Areo 304-675-3533.

t2.99. C.pet tflirtlng at t3.91
1 yd. lnltllll•ion
flMnotng
av•lllble 10 qa...llfled buyers.
MollohM Furnkure-Upper Riv.-

a

0182 . Call 814-992-7787.
EOH.

2 bedroom Apta . tor rent.
Carpeted. Nice te1ting. l.,ndry
faclllt._ ,avalteble. Call 814-

oondltlon..I 305

814-962-,719.

PM.

Orlvo. oftor 5 Pi\11. Cell514-446-

1t87 Cololbrlty 11300 mil-.

0195.

5119.

good colndltlon , AM · FM
ceeJit... 88.100. oall304-175-

J .C. Penney ttw.,, turm.ble,
ca... &amp; I tnlck with catMnet. Call

Newly redecorated apartments
availllblt. Utilities ptid. t225.
per month. depOIIIt ,equtred. Clll
614-992·5724 after 8 :00 or

5991.

514-446-8342 oflor 9 PM.

Olbeon food fre..,, $21!1. Needs
minor repair. Call 814-441-

992-5119.

8941.

Wroc:kod 1978 Rally Sport for

I

pent. good engine and other
Plrtt. JlmetJo,.n. Jr., Ol•tnut "ldge.

1. .7 a.JIOI1o Mollllu. • -'nt. newt¥ ...-. .. IIOeut. on
floor, •tum ...,.., wilt tMdNeep.
Coli oltar 8:00 pm 304-818'
3938.

Enterprising juvenile delinquents
make money in advertising.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Wlnt to buy Wlndlhltld for
1974 lwa doOf' No.... phone

304-968-3087.

/

QUIT

Q./1&lt; NE:XTA'MTEJR;·

AWRK:AWRK.'

I HClPE 'fOLI

AP.T/-IUR BINKLE ,
DOIN8H I5

POLLY WAANA
CRACKER! Awr&lt;J&lt;!
PRfOTTY I'OLLY!

DIDN'TQLJii
YClLJR ..x:lB AT

THE CARWA'S-1,
ARTHLJR.
I

/

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AI\IOHEATING

BARNEY

Excavating

AN' 1 GOT TO PUT IT

SOMEWHAR HE'S
BOUND TO LOOK!!

lnll.Jttrlel ,0.. auger on truck.
drills 40 ft. for core drainage,
septic &amp; etc. Sale/ tnllde. Cell

614-88.5-7311 .
B4

Electrical

&amp; Refrigera1ion

11

General Hauling

THE GRIZZWELLS®

CARi
BEAR

•o
~~~~­
(!lllgnon

Pwl Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools, cls•rna. walla. C.ll 614-

448-3171 .

fll

Schuler's Water Hauling. 24

~11chooak ,.,._

hour aervice. Senior diacoum.

3055.

Watltnon ' t W•ter Hauling.
renonable rates, Immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, citternt,
poola. well. etc. call 304-576-

2919.

PEANUTS
AND Wi-lEN Ti-IE'r' ASK 'r'OU
WI-I'( 'IOU CLIMBED TI-llS
MOUNTAIN. JUST SA'r'.
•' 6ECAUSE IT WAS TI-IERE ~ ''

Upholstery

eor.-aon
z- U!Ue

GJ=-•(!]) Love

5 i 'Mn'"TT

JemH SehuJer 814-742·2478
or Everett Schuler 814-742-

Complete the cl'wckle quoted

1

.
_
.
_
_
by fdl1ng in the m1ssmg words.
L--'---'---'--L--1-...J you dev-elop /ro m !&gt;lep No. 3 below

'

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Impale - Datum - Uncle - Broken - MAKeUP
One old maid to another: "Time may be a great healer, but
it's a terrible MAKEUP artist. 'r'- - - - - - - - - - - - ,

BRIDGE

AnnlofiNry

NOBOD'o'
NOBODV ASKS ..

WELL, IF

NORTH
• Q 10 3

.Q J 53
+AI08 52
South was one of those players reluctant to make a pre-emptive bid WEST
EAST
with an outs1de ace, so he passed orogo- · J 9 a 7 6 4
+K
nally. The auction continued with a hi - ~ • 2
• AK 4 3
zarre weak two-bid from West and a } t 10 6
tAK 9872
+ 64
forcing three-diamond bid from East. + K Q 9 7
Now South came in with three hearts,
SOUTH
which East doubled eagerly.
+ A 52
The tO of diamonds was the opening
• Q J 10 9 8 7 5
lead, covered by dummy's jack and
t 4
won by Easl with the king. East next
+ J3
played the spade king and was surVulnerable: Neither
prised when declarer won the ace.
Dealer: South
South played a heart and East won the
king. East now figured out that West
West
Nortb East
Soutb
must hold either the K-J or the K-Q of
Pass
clubs for his opening t wo-bid, so he
3t
Pass
2+
shot back the six of clubs. Does it not
Pass
Dbt
Pass
Pass
now seem apparent that when declarPass
Pass
er plays a second heart, East will win
Opening l ead: 10
the ace, play another club to his part- .
ner and get a spade ruff to set the contract? If that is what occurs to you,
think again. Declarer countered this
strategy by leading the queen of dia- for the needed spade ruff. Eventually ....
monds from dummy. When East cov- after drawing trumps, South look the .•
ered with the ace, declarer disca rded spade finesse against West's jack to ·
the jack of clubs. There was now no make his doubled contract.
way for East to get his partner on lead

+

I

3.

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 41 High point
1 Stentorian DOWN

5 G.L's

1 Teshu

home
Meara of
comedy
10 Riven
12 Iranian's
ancestor
13 Ranch
15 Ripen
16 YeUow
ocher
17 Bombay
title
18 Mysterious
20 His only
begotten

9

21

22
23
24
25
27
28

or Panchen
2 Russian
lake
3 Being
pushed
4 Scottish
river
5 Gambling
spot
6 Macoun, e.g.
7 Disfeature
8 Influencers
11 Carromancer's
business
card?
14 Break
Venetian
bread
hero
18 Bargain
Attractive 19 Wintry
Fish
product
Craggy hiU
Celt
Sordid
Matter

Updllee Tennte

oo=:;•-&lt;Ll
~TIA

.•
.'

-r
".

'

~

.... , ...

~

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

_.,..

f.#

~~·.

.

--~-

•·

. .. .. ..
,.

,
......

'

,.

·~

' •• 4

,1 .. • '

-

•

... • '

J.

*'

•o

a.m.

ll!:t:d~I.Me

Mow..y's Upho...ring ..-vlng
lrl ooumyaree 23yeart. The beat
In furniture uphola•ring. Call
304 - 875 - 4154 for free
estimates.

..

'

.

man's
title

..---r.--..-....,.,-

(Law)

29 Household
31 Dolt
'32 Syn.'s
opposite
33 Radiology
tenn
35 Rich
dessert
37 "Queen
-Day"
38 Everyday
language
39 Demolish
40Gennan
river

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

6129

Adclerly II deWmlnecf
1ft Old

jOb ( )

f1lend keep hlo

~

..

•

AXYDLBAAXR

is LONGFELLOW

''T

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

One

"

CRYPTOQUOTE
6-29
IAEUOWOY

AO

VEL

E

OYEM

E

YOZRVO

FOEYT

JYPXAU

S E L' T

J F

PU

. .....
EXO
TOW

,_

BRUUPLX

VDMDYOZ

.,

GMDIOY

~

p L

APT

JRUUDLADMO .

8 m l P.t.
·
;l

•'
• •

29 Billiard
shot
30 Ghostly
34 Breed of
cat
36 Turf
37 Holy

22 Pop
flavor
24 Color
25 SuffiX
with
tele
26 Fables
author
27 Covering

r.-r...,.....,.--

0111

Qll You Cell Be • Bllir
11:311 • (JJ «&lt;I Wimbledon '18

6-U-88

'16

By James Jacoby

UIEPL
Yeaterdaf'• Ceyptoqaote: HE WHO HUNTS FOR
FLOWERS WIU. F1ND FLOWERS; AND HE WHO LOVES
WEEDS MAY FtND WEEDS. - H.W. BEECHER

"

'

SEYH

~ 1 - King F . - Syold-. Inc.

-

..

K

c..-

DON'T

Coli 304-675-8370.

e Cll Speneer: For Hire

Spenser's lhe lllrget of a
bomber; Susan faces her
criale all alone.(R) D
®I • 021 WI"'IUY 'Sonny's
demented nepheW poses a
threat to Sleeigrlvts and
Vinnie. (R)
OE-tngNewt
ii))NIWI
i1J T1MI New Mtke IUimmer
Golden Lady
Qll
end ChiN
10:30 I]) AIMriCM 8nepolloto
• ilJI Jelleraono
Qll VidloCountr)'
10:35 (lJ MOVIE: High Noon (NR)
(t :251
11:00 Cil Remington Steele Sleela
at Y011r Servlcel
.I]) Cll (!) • (I) fill

675-1786.

B7

thefts.( A) 1;1
(!) (!I Amerlcen PlayhouM
Frustration of blacks and
problems of racial praductlce
are underlined. 1;1
IIDl
Cll T1MI Equalizer
When McCall Is kidnapped,
friends and foe tean;~ up to
lind him. (A)
11511Aroy King Llvel
iiJ Street Hewtc
1:30 81]) Ill) Deyo end Nlghll
of Molly Molly's new
boss doesn'l remember her
or what her duties are. (R) 1;1
G)PIA-ng
(Il • (I) Blip Mlxwllf
Story Slap, flghllng a
soil-esteem slump, plays a
near-lelhal bellgarne. (A) 1;1
CD New Country John
Anderson "Blue Skies ,t,galn"
10•00 I]) Stl'llght Talk
81]) Ill) Tho Bronx Zoo As
gang problems brew, Joe
clashes wllh the new civics
laacher. I;!

C1J

Residential or commercial wiring. ~ service or repain.
Licensed elecuicl.,, Estimate
free. RidAnour Electrical. 304-

B5

Dixie Denclklngo (PG) (1 :31)
i1J Tete• of the Oold
Monkey
Qll Noohvllle Now MCA
Comedy Nlghl
8:20 flJ MOVIE: Arrowhead (1 :49)
8:30 (Il Ill Cll Held of lhe Claoo
Class tries to gel Dennis to
clam up when he Is to
appear on TV. (R) 1;1
9:00 (IJ 700 Club
81]) 1151 Moma'o Boy
Gl Lighter Side of Sporto (R)
(Il Ill (I) Hooperman Harry
· poses as corpse to catch

perpetrator of funeral home

A
PARROT.

14 ft . •lumln..n Aun-a. Bout
Boat 35 HP Johnson Seahortt,

78

I

/

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

A &amp;. R Water Service. Pool!,
ciatern1 , wells . Immediate·
1, 000 or 2,000galfonadeliverv.

cond. 304-178-3801.

1ta2 Ford
,lo,_g.,
PS.Pa. Oo"'Concltlon n.500.
l'hono 304-8711-2S87 .... 8

Umed Oak bedroom autte and
d•k. Any ,.MONble oft• considered. Cln be aetn et 411 Olk

At3artment for rent. t225 a
month. Deposit rt~quired . 81~
992-5724. Allor llpm"' 992·

t1095.

1-rt ..

Rd .. 814-441-7444.

992-3711 . EOH.

VI.

OJPrlrne11)) MOVIE: W•.W. and lho

IT [X)b.'SIJ 'T

IMPRE5510NO"

82

245-9285.

Flberform 11 ft lnboerd outboerd 280 hp Mercruil8r,
power •erlng. power trim. axe

EEK &amp; MEEK

haute cell Mrvicing G E. Hot
Point. washers, drvers and
!fOWl. 304-578-2398.

eo HP mo1or. Coli 514-24&amp;-

ev~nlngL

m

RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pool•. cis1erns. wells. Ph. 614-

11 lndt leet:wMre bolt with
trill•. no motor.304-17&amp;-7541

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apertmenta at Vlll•ge
Menor and Rhlerakle Apartment• in Middleport. From

that chronicle a 1ourney up
lhe Amazon In 1898. 1;1
@)
1121 Jake and lhe
F81man McCabe must supply
alibi lor an accused jewel
thief and murderess. (R)
m (J]) MOVIE: Song of
lforwoy (Gi (2:22)

2903.

1180 11ft. Evlnrude bolt whh

11t nnor, .. eo. Colll14-2474292 or 8.14-247-2277.

Spc. Dramatized sequences

304-676-3958 or 304-&amp;7e-

11fl. lllj•bo•wllh1Miler.150
Mer. motorwtth povvartrim. Clll

5830 aak for Pete or Jim.

a

StarblawnandShrtJJ Servtce.

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Ciaterfls, Wells. Delivery Anytima. Call 814-446-7404-No
Sund-v ellis.

8 14-3a&amp;-9924.

1 BR .. 6 mot. lease. 1165 per
mo. 150 dep. 142 Fourth AYI.
Prefer single person. Call 814446-3867.

iProRocleo
(Il
(I) Growing Paino
There's trouble in paradise
when Maggia and kids
thraaten mutiny. (R) 1;1
(!) (!I Uzzle: An Amazon
Advenlunt - River Joumeyo

896-3802

But • Ski bo•t. Excel. shape.

8038,

Nice 3 Bedrooms. lg. v•nd .
Kanauge . Call 614-446-7473.

6 room hou.aln Lan,-ville 1200
per month ... Oepo•t and ap.
prcwed references required.
Phone 614-742-3149 or 614-

Boats and
Motors for Sale

slaughter of wild horses.(R)

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Mostwallscomplatedsamedav.
PUmp aeiH and service. 304-

B3

Suzuki 250 OJad r•c•. axe
cond nev• n~ced. haa utr~~t.

cardia Music. 014-446-0687.
Jeff Wamaley in 1tructor 814446-8077, summer openings.

Heaven Old ranch owner is
100 weary lo fight lhe

Gareges; 24K24x8·83995 .,

176-4130.
•e

2e8-85~2 .

Homicide

81]) 1151 Highway to

c.,.,, 614-446-9848.

Rt. 3&amp;CydeSBI•. Spaclalizlng
Hond•. Sut, Kat. Y•maha.

1988 Honda t'"ll blkoXR 20011.
cond. *750.00. 30+8752495.

47.000mll•. ueeo. Cell614-

llenoon
Qll VldeoCouniJy
8:00 ill Cruy Like a Fox Motor
II))

8344.

Cor. Fourth tnd Pine
Oalllpolia, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or 614446-4477

Pwt.Servlce-Repeira. We buy
sell and tr~~de UHd bikes. 304-

1984 ~""Y Citation. ete1n. 2 . 6
fuel injectk)n, AM·FM ttlreo.

EMPLOYMENT AS
we CAN GEr.

Painting: Interior &amp; Eiterior.
Fret estimates. Call 814-446-

1950.

814-388-8890.

/

EVAIIIS ENTERPRISESSeptic tank pumping- 890 per
load. Call 1-800-637-9628.

shape. Call 814-2156-1611 .

Tra11sportalion

WI-lEW, THAT
WAS CLOSI:!

RON

POOL SERVICE

1984 KX 80. Vory good cond.
noo. f-11814-247-2?24oftor . 0500. Coli 614-446-7446.
Op.m. 1
1985 Suz'*l 0S1150E . Excol.

Beegle pups, 9 wtl:a. old. 830
each. Cllll 814-446·0373.

58

Motor cycles

I
Mb1ed jhey for •I e. Over 400
balea. U.21!1 per b-'e CM' .. , for

Like new saxaphone. 1400.00.

Free- A .B. Dick mimeograph
model 825 electric with count•
and hMVe steel base c1binet.
Whan you buy the aupplle far
ume I heve on hand. Call

'78 Ford F150. 4 wheel drive,
a~to. exc running oond. body
rough, •1 .000.00. 304-875-

1840.

t

:l

537-9528.

Fetty Tree Trimming. sttmp
remowl. Ca11304-675-1331 .

814-992-7789.

Babv Calf for •le. 304-875-

.\

thop. RON EVANS EN'IER ·

RON'S Televlaion Service.
Houae c•lls on RCA, Quaur,
GE. Specialing in zenrth. Call
304-578-2398 or 614-448-

Berney Miller
Alrwoll An American

7:30 81]) (Il HollywOOd
SquarH
(I) Belt ol Scholaltlc Sparta
America
8Cil Judge
. IIDl Wheel ol Fortune !;I
1!)1 Crollflre
m 021 1151 Jeopardyll;l

Concrete Septic Tanka - 1000
ga._, 1500gel. andJet Aeration
system. Factory trained rBpllir

1979 Jaep CJ&amp; . Hardtop, 360
1979 Ch..,y Suburb1n 9 pes·
nnger. Aebuih engine. Excel·
lent condtt5on. 8 3900. Call

patt V:a~ger Church.

f

IT SA'($ WE'Rf ,
A) NEAA ib FULL

Ill) Wheel ol Fortune

Dream
Qll Crook and Choee

'\ ,,

o-~-

448-0294.

245ol.

engine. C.ll 614-992-7214 or

Pigt •20.00 to *30.00. Rico's
fltg F8rm. Ten Mile first hou•

64

8iiJ

FRANK AND ERNEST

Sv.EEPER and 18Wing machine
repair, parts. and 1uppll81. Pick
up and deliYery, Davis Vac:ul.fll
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614-

$700. 614-992-&amp;Sel .

814-992-3224.

2525 ·

AKC Aeg. German Shepherd

OP &amp;.OOOGymPack. newcond .•
all accessoriet, 8 260. JVC ate·
reo ttllnd, S&amp;l!l. Call 614-446-

19?5 lelsu"' Time Chevrolet
motorhomt, self contained ,
sleeps six. lawn Chief. 2 Vt hp
rolo IIIIer. Iike new. Uttte Aaacal

1976 ven equipped for fishing,
hurclng, camping. New brakes,
paint job, 318 motor. headeri.

258-1,187.

Oragon'N'I"d Cat1ery Kennel .
CFA Persian end Siameee kitlena . AKC Chow puP~Mes. New
Hhnal.yan kiltans . Cell 81~
446-3B44 after 7PM.

Ill 021

flat bed tl'llll•. .. rv good cond, · 9x7tteel overhead doors, ~1) 3
ft. steel entnmc:e door. pain•d
304-675-2284.
steel rooting and aiding, f2) 2x3
windows. construction end tax
included. Post-Frame Builders,
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
Athens, Ohio 614-592-2937.

'

Groom and Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds . .. All
•tvl•. lams Pet Food Oealttr.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-448-0231 .

Home
Improvements

2 4x32x8-$4595. lncludao 121

Reg.' Purebred Llmoulin bull tor

Pets for Sale

!Ill Newo
m ilJI Star Trek
OJ Moneyllne

1966 Whka lnllght lnoo 40 11

good cond. t1 .500.00. 304876-7375.

laying. Coli 814-256-5413,

56

NeweHour (1 :00)

a Cll People'• Court

'New Holllnd7ft. hiVblne&amp; New

Hie. ·~olllpollo. Ohio. Cell 814-

2528.

Serv1ces

Tree st..np remowl. ah1de &amp;
shrubs:. aeeding. stone, mulch,
topsoil Azalies. Don't Lands-

63

694-3578

(I) Entertlllnment Tonight
(!) (!I MecNeii/IAhrer

'80 Dodge A•m. 8 cyl, 4 IPHd.
short wheel b••· step tide bed.

good oondklon. 304-273-4215.

• Channel Rua1ic
and Beveled Lap Siding
• Deck Msterlals
Guaranteed Quality
CETIDE, INC ., Athens -814-

8 :00 304-895-3006.

6159.

I

15

~-,~.:..:....:..;,16,..::,1.,;7'-rl..::,~--j C)

81]) PM Mlllllllne
Gl SportiiCanter (l)

S 2. 200. 0. Call after

For 'S ale: Troy Bulh &amp; HP Tiller.
plows. disc, scraper blade,
buckel•ndpo• holedl..-. Call

Holllnd 352 grinder· mixer. both

I I'

Steelers

1 977 VW camg•· very good

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local rel•ncea ~rnished.
Free el11mates. Call colltlct
1· 814-237-0488, dlfl or night.
Aogert8asement
Waterproofing.

}

" whars lhe exact elevation of
:=. my home?" the woman Olllked'the
.
.
city enginaer. "I need to know If
_
.
.---------~ 1 have to use the special direcA L C YE
ltions lor m y - -.''

7:00 I]) Remington Sleele Scene

WATER PRO OR NG

1

. r-r-N:. .:.A;,. .1J~E_,x---1l
:;
..: ~:,

Qll You Con Be a Star

PAISES. Jaclcton, Ohio. 1-800-

1983 Ch..., S-10, LWB·AM·

614-992-5360.

2783.

27.

1977 Ford, 4x4, 1A lon,. 4 speed
trana .. 410 cubic inch engine.
nav 8 ply tires. Very good
condition. 81~949·2237 .

Ploro. Cell 814-742-2348.

11 foot alumn mNning, 304675-3504.

Trucks for Sale

I

OJ 1 - PDIItlcl '88

3064.

BASEMENT

I

KUQAE

a

1973 8uidc. 4 good tires, nt/1/11
vinyl top, new .-lnt, $1,000.00.

019 Allis Chalmer tractor wtt:h

MEG LIT

1---TI.:....;,..r~I;..-...jl

i

II)) Jelleraone

B1

I

m021

Terry Camper. 27 ft . nt/1/11
carpet. $3000. Very nice. Call
614-992-7641 or 814-742-

co nd.

th,

be
low to form four simple ·words

•

3041 bolo'" 4 PM.
1983 28 11. Prowl... hitch &amp;
etactric brake control. *6500.
Call 614-25~9381 .

Ford Thunderbird. goo

1981 Dodge Omni, 4 speed.
$1.300.00. 2326 Jefferson
Ave .• Point PleM8nt. W .V1.

with plows, r..nsport
disc. model-2400. lnterrwtionlll
round biller. $9850. Owner will
finance. Call 1514-286-8822.

Rearrgnge letters Qf
0 fovr
scrambled words

Belt of American Muacle
Mogezlne(R)
(Il
CIJ ABC Newoi;J
(!) Body Elec1rlc
(!I Nightly Butlneee Report
9J • 021 CBS Newt
18 ilJI Hogano Heroe•

882·2790.

Ohio.

~. modet AC 190 ...-ies-3

Saara 10 hp riding mo.....,r. new
battery, 304-882-2798.

1 979 Minnie Winnebago. onty
42.600mil81, new tlret, newAC
on camper &amp; motor. V81fy good
• cond. $8500. Cell 614-446-

cond, no rult. $600.00, 304-

t~Cior

6999 o• 614·992-7668.

2.

s1.1oo.oo. 3o4-e7&amp;-1?o3 be-

WES'IERN REO CEDAR

Buy or SeU. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours : M,T,W 10a.m. ~&amp;p . m ..
Sundey 1 to 8p.m. 614-992-

J4M4

f'! """"' " 0 · ""

61 Farm Equipment

~HOUlD K~OW-

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

tiJI.{fJT

Surveying Kit S200.00. Phorw
304-875-7771 after 5:pm.

Peavey PA System XR 600
mhcer ampt 2T 300 high fre.
quancy projectot. Uke new.

eleerlc wheel chair. C1ll Ethel
Robinaon, 814-448-3606.

Merchandise

. ~OU

loo · ~1

fl&amp;ge green. black white Metr~
politan clothing. Polhlcal. buelness. ectvenising andspecieltiea.
Novelty T-shirts, caps, wholesale, end retell . Sam Sqmervme·s. Rt . 21 Raventwood,
Fri .. Sat., Sun .. Noon-8:00PM.
Call 304-273-6655.

Concrete blocks- all tizes- YBrd
or delivery. M•on Mnd. Gallipolis Block Co .• 123'h Pine St~ .
Gallipolis. Ohio. Call 814-448-

8195.

4346.

FURTHER, I THII\IK

1

Edlttd tly CLA '( A. POL~AN

(!) Degreool Junior High
Voula r;nds out Lucie
.shoplifts; Stephanie meets
her soep opera Idol. 1;1
(!I Dr. Who The Time
Meddlers, Part 2
• (J]) Happy Dayo
OJ ShowBiz Tocley
® OOOCITimet
i1J Cartoon Expre11
Qll FMdango
6:30 81]) 1151 NBC Nightly Newa

L.I~TCN. CLOID,
6EF0RE WE GO ANY

I

52 CB. TV, Radio
Equipment

Antiques

81]) (Il • CIJ IIDl
1151 Newo
Gl Sportolook

4 :30.

Summer Specials: 18,000 BTU
air conditioner, $275. 15 cubic
ft . 141right freezer. Three 2 dOOf'
froat fNie refrigerators. Auto.
washers end dryers. Firestone,
Middleport. 614-992-1!1304.

WORD
GAM I

1:00 I]) llig Valley Plunder

O.avy transmission 400 turbo
195.00. Parts for 1969 Chevelle. 304-875-3269 call attar

28 bulb Scandinavi•n Tanning ·
Bed. Catl614·247·2218betore
4:30 pm and 814-992-3982
after 6:00pm.

Canning jars for •le. 614-98&amp;3566.

WED., JUNE 29

r:~~:~:~' '0@~4{\N\ -~t~S"

EVENINQ

Used Tranaml11iont . All internally in1pected. 30diiVSQUtrln·
tee. Call 814 -446-0986 or
304 -870 -6811. Rebuilding
available..

II

1-22.800 BTU S6oo. 1-8,000

Building Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipes, windows, lintels. ,rc. Claude Winters. Rio Granda. Q _ Call 614245·5121 .

53

•

675-4230 ... 814-3?9-2220.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Furnithed- 3 rooms &amp; beth.
Oean. No pets. Ref. &amp; depoah:
required. Utllitiet furnished .
Adults only . Call 614-4481519.

Homes for Rent

Sofas and chairs priced from
t396 to S99&amp;. Tables 150 and
up to 8125. H;do-o·beds $390
to $595. Recliners S225 to
t376. lamps 128 to 1125.
Dinettes 8109 and up to S495.
Wood table w-8 chairs 1285 to
$796. Desk $100 up to 8375.
Hutches 8400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w -mattreases
$295andupto8395. 8ebybeds
$110. Mattre11 n ur bo 11 springs
tul or twin S68. firm 178, and
sea. OJeen sets 8 2 25. King
S350. 4 drawerche~t 869. Gun
cabinets 8 gun. Beb&gt;( mattres181
535 &amp; S45. Bed frtmes 120.
530
King frame S50. Good
selection of bedroom suites.
metal cabinets , headboards 130
and up to , 65 _

'55o.oo. 304-576-2107.

Furnished room -919 Second
Ave ., Gatlipolil. $126 a mo.
Utilitiea p!lld. Single mel e. Shant
barth. Call448-4418 1fter 7 PM .

New co mpletaly furnished
apanment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adutts only. Parking. Call

Brookside Apartmentt: located
off BuhwHieRd.- 1 BA . specious
apartments with modern kitchen
end washer-dryer hookups, c•
ble televfllon available. Call
814-448-2127

LOTS. one aae, level wooded,
city water. Jericho Road. owner
financing, good terms, 304-

rooms &amp;: bath. nice
loeation, deposit S. references
required 1235.00, uttlities pel d.

Three

after 4 ,

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 19

Television
Viewing

BUDGET TRANSMISS.ION-

General Electric stow, dryer.

.

BORN LOSER

Uted &amp; .r ebuilt all types. Ouaran·
tee 30 dll'(t minimum. Price~~
$99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torq~l
corwerted as low as 839.
Standard clutches, pressure
plates &amp; throw-out bearings. All
types i 2 mos. warranty. We buy
junk tranamiationa. C.ll 304-

$150. 12.000 BTU Cell 614-

~a:.;, ';'1~2~-rn~~ll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

76

1 1 Oalr co nditioner. good cord.·

SURPLUS. -DENIM. ARMY.
RENTAL CLOTHING. Camou-

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

3788.

Apartment
for Rent

9a autlful river lots one acre plus.
public watttr. Clyde Bowen. Jr.

Cmt Motel. 614-448-7398.

304-882-2568.

14 )( 70 2 bedroom mobile
home. Phone 304-675-7988.

SON ESTATES. 536 Jackson
Pike from $183 il mo. Walk to
shop and moviM. 8 14-44~

s••••• Appliance•.

Upper River Ad . beside Stone

1415 Eastern AYI .
4 drawer chest, 148. 5 drawer
chest. t54.95. 5 pc . wooden
APARTMENTS, mobile h0itnea. - dinnette
seta, 8199.95.
hou!l8s . Pt. PteasantandGallipolis. 614-446·8221 .
PICKENS
FURNITURE
2 bedroom furnished apt New
Haven. ref•ence and •curity Dinettu , beds , bedding ,
deposit required, 304-882 dresser•. chest. couches. choira.
3267 or 304-773-5024.
lamps. cotfae-end tables . Every
Three bedroom all electric apart- day Specielll. 'h mile out Jerriment, Crab Creek Road. no cats cho. 304-6?5-1450.
or doga. Phone 304-675-6609
High prices got you doWf!'l
after 5: 30 304-676·1087.
Check u1 out for low Prices &amp;
Beech Street. Mlddlepon, Ohio, Quality Fur!Vtul'll &amp; Carpet. E·Z
2 bedroom furnished apartment, credit with approved credit.
Mollohan Furniture-61 4·446utllitiel paid. IV1erences. Phone 7444.

pot1, Ohio, reference and !8cur-

44

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryeu. refrig•ators .

7 :00call614-992-?611 .

2 bedroom mobile home l'tlliddle-

Ashton . large building lots,
mobile homM permitted, public
watM. also river lots. Clyde
Bo...en, Jr. 304-576-2336.

304-576-2336.

ent

2bedrooms. Rentincfudoscable
TV, yard maintenance, laundry
facilities, tr•ah collection, 1Biephone. equipped kitchen . working utilities. 614-992-~539 .

Pllono 614-446-0508.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

R

2 bedr~ apts. Middleport.
S 165-11 85.per month. 'j end 4
bedroom hou•• in Pomeroy
area. U00-8225 per month. All
pertly furnished . Ret. .nce ,..
quired. Day 814 -992-2381 evenings 814-992-8723.

2&amp; 3 BR. All utilities paid8kcept
eteutrichy . Conwnient locetion.
Call 814-446-8558 or 4464096-

In Tupper Plains. 2 bedroom
mobile home with built on room,
new carpet. air condition. all
1976 Governor 12X65 2 bed- appliances, furnished. Also garroom total electric, fully car- ( age on nice lot. 1225momh plus
peted, central air, 2 porchBS. reference and depMil. 614-3786278.
Phona 304-882-2944.

1974 Ch amrion 14d6 tOUII
Rf9CI:ric, underpanning and partially furnihsed, will consider
trade. S6, 900.00. 304-5762383.

Apartment

County Appllence, Inc. Good
used ap pliMlces and TV seta.
Open BAM to 6PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1899, 827 3rd.
Aw . Gallipolis, OH.

•a••"·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lany Wri1ht

3 67-0182. anytime.

Olive St .. GellipoUa.
NEW· 8 pc . wood group- $399.
Living room suit• - $199- f699.
Bunk beds with bedding- S199.
Full tizB mattreu 8t foundation
starting - $99 . Recliners
staning- 899.
USE 0- Beds, dreaser1. bedroom
suites . 8199 ~ t299 . Desks,
wringer walher, a complete line
of used furniture .
NEW- Western boots- 130.
Workboots 118 &amp; up. (Steel 8&amp;
soh toe). Coll614-445-3159.

Hou• tor sale, J)f"ice reduced.

We buy
uoed 800-826-0752.
mob;le homeo.
CASH
TODAY!

26 cu , ft . Wntinghou~&amp; freNer.
used 1 yr. Sofa bed. used 1 mo.
Sell 01 trade for a couple of beef
c alves. Call 61 4-256-1431 .

AUCTION l!o FURNITURE 52

Bv owner 3 bedroom tri-lwel.
half acre, full b•ement, family
room, low 60's, 304-676-2307.

om.

Used HotPoint electric r•nge In
good condition. Call 614-4463648 after 4 PM.

SWAIN

5063.

Call 614-446-0234 after 6:30

54 Misc. Merchandise

W.Va. 304-937-2272.

Ho u•. One &amp; 'A. ICI'&amp;J, 5 tr~~iler
!lookups. Phone 304-773 -

14•70
CA.
und...
pinned.mobao
metal home,
storage
building.

51 Household Goods

Announ::in4J Electroluk Grand
Opening authorized fact ory
outlet :sel•and Mrvice, Buffalo.

3 bedroom horne. g•age. cen-

Wednesday, June 29, 1988

Middleport, Ohio

••

..

I

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page- 20 - The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 29. 1988

Reds lose
to Padres

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
· 50Jo DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( 8';!:W: )
MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

I

I

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number

291
Pick 4
8255
Super Lotto

Page 3

I

Clear tonight. Lows near
record 50. Friday, Sunny .
Hlgllln 80s .

4-18-36-384142

e

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl St.•992-3471
A CARDINAL-AFFILIATED SUPERMARKET
Vo1.39. No.38
Copyrighted 1988

•

•

at

enttne
2 Sec1io~a. 16 PegM 26 Centa
A Multimedl• Inc . Newapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, June 30, 1988

Celebrezze asked to probe job grant scandal
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- A
state Senate panel has voted to
formally request Attorney Gen·
era! Anthony Celebrezze Jr. to
Investigate a job training grant
scandal In the administration of
Gov. Richard Celeste.
But tlte Inquiry still seems a
long way off, because the full
Senate and the Ohio House must
approve it. Celebrezze said he
w,ould Investigate if asked.
In approVing the resolution
Wednesday, 8·0, the committee
, temporarily bypassed an explo·
slve political situation, but that
seems glliranteed to resurface
when the Senate takes up the

lbs. or
(Smaller IJI\y:),
lb, $1.09) Fresh Lean

GROUND
BEEF

PEPSI
24 PACK

pound

Assorted Varieties

OPEN PIT

B.Q.

18 ounce boltle

question, probably later this will reconvene later this summer
summer.
to act on the resolution.
Majority Republicans rebuffed
"There's a real good chance
an attempt by Democrats to we'll be back," said Curt Steiner,
bring the activities of certain public Information officer for the
GOP senators under the lnvestlg· Senate majority caucus.
alive scrutiny of Celebrezze, a
The resolution's sponsor, Sen.
Democrat.
·Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, con·
In the absence of a directive ceded that in order for It to pass,
from either the governor or the Celebrezze' s in vita lion also will
General Assembly, the attorney
have to be extended to lnvestl·
general Is powerless under state gate criminal allegations in the
law to pursue any criminal General Assembly, to avoid a
Investigations, except In the political slant.
The committee will meet again
areas of drug trafficking or
July 27 to consider giving the
Medicaid fraud. County prosecutors are responsible for criminal · attorney general blanket author·
Investigations.
ity to Initiate investigations of
allegations of criminal activities
A Senate spokesman said It Is a
"distinct possibility" the Senate
in state government.

Th~t bill, also sponsored by
Pfeifer. originally called for a
special prosecutor to enter the
job training case, but Celebrezze
condemned that idea and said his
office needs the authority and
money to be a criminal watchdog
of the entire government, not just
Isolated allegations.
In a . series of articles, The
Plain Dealer of Cleveland ex·
posed 12 of 270 Job Training
Partnership Act grants awarded
by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services In 1984 and 1985 as
going to concerns operated by
contributors to the campaign
coffers of Celeste and the Oh lo
Democratic party.
The matter is under investlga·

WATERMELON

ECKRICH
FRANKS

•

16 ounce packaoe

$ 99

VAUGHAN'S PICNIC BASKET
•lO PCS. BROASTED
CHICKEN
•QT. COLE SLAW
•QT. POTATO SALAD
•HOMEMADE ROLLS

99
ONLY

CRUSHING ABUTMENTS - An Iron ball Is raised up and down
to cruall the cement abutments from the old bridge on Route 124
near LanJ!!ivUie. However, olllclals say this method Is not working

COLA
CAMPBELI!S
PORK &amp;BEANS

Assorted Varjeties

DEL MO.NTE
VEGETABLES
$

2 LITER

16 oz.
cans

Valuable Coupon

Regular or Light

ALL VARIETIES
CARDINAL

ICE CREAM

KRAFT

MIRACLE

•

I

--- -'--·--- --~--

_____ _ J. - - ~

-------

___

.......,..__

well and-blasllng may be required to complete the Job. The
abutments must be eliminated before construction of a new bridge
can take place.

No-relief
:in sight

RC
In Tomato Sauce

Cleveland, attempted to amend
Pfeifer's resolution to ask the
attorney general to Investigate
three other exposes printed by
The Plain Dealer on three
Republican senators.
White's amendment did not
name the senators. but contained
descriptions of confllct·Of·
'Interest stories printed by the
newspaper about Sens. David
Hobson of Springfield, Gary
Suhadolnlk of Parma Heights
and Stanley Aronoff of
Cincinnati.
The amendment sparked
sharp debate among committee
members. Democrats are
mounting a strong challenge to
Republican control of the Senate
In his year's election campaign.

County engineeer
will decide issue,
• •
comrmsston says.

16 oz.
The Price Of 12 oz.
Beef or Cheese $1.69 or All Meat

99.
RED RIPE

lion by the Labor Department.
the U.S. attorney's office, special
auditors l&gt;Y the OBEES and an ·
In-house OBES Investigating
unit. Celebrezze said he understands the FBI also has entered
the case.
Pfeifer and Celebrezze lndl·
catect It would cost the state at
least $500,000 to pursue the
Investigation.
Celebrezze said Celeste has
never formally asked him to
Investigate, but told the committee he believes the governor
would like to see an Inquiry.
"I don't think he's done anything to Indicate that he doesn 't
want to get to the bottom of this,"
said the attorney general.
Sen. Michael White, D·

--

WASHINGTON iUPI) -With
government forecasters offering
slight hope for a break In the
scorching droughl, Farm Belt
Democrats are turning up political heat for federal action to ease
the situation.
"We can't walt until we need a
hearse," warned Rep. Tim John·
'son, D·S.D., as congressional
debate warmed up Wednesday.
Tile government's 10·day, 30·
day and 90-day weather forecasts
.released Wednesday call for the
worst of the drought to move
from the northern Plains Into the
Midwest during July, with the
Ohio \1 alley getting the brunt of
It, and tlten to migrate intq the
Southeast.
"Both the medium OO·day)
and monthly forecasts have the
worst combination ot not and dry
In the Midwest, and to some
extent a little bit further south,"
forecaster Donald Gilman told a
news conference In Washington.
If correct, the forecast means
more punishment for the Midwestern corn crop, which Is enterIng a crucial growing stage and
desperately needs rain. The dry
weather also could jeopardize
soybeans In the Midwest and
South that usually reach their
flowering and pod·fllllng stages
!n late July or August.
Asked If the forecasts are
simply more bad news for
suffering farmers, Gilman rep·
lied, "I think you could draw that
conclusion." ·
He cautioned, ho'wever, that
the lq-range forecasts have a
55 pen:ent to 80 percent proba bll·
tty of accuracy.
The drought - the worst In 50
years lor many places - Is
searing crops In the northern
Plains, the Corn Belt, the Rock·
les, Texas, California and the
Sou lb.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senllnel Staff Writer
What to do a bout a petition
from 78 residents of the Racine
area to widen a stretch of Forest
Run Road (County Road 30) near
the Charles !hie residence, and
eliminate cattle drives on and
across the road, will be a matter
to be decided by Meigs County
Engineer Philip Roberts , accord·
lng to Information from the
Meigs County Commissioners.
The commissioners met Wed·
nesday afternoon with Ron Hoi·
ter, of Court Street In the
Morning Star area, near Racine ,
to discuss the petition.
Holter said he travels the road
In question on a dally basis and he
is "tlred of driving through a
barn yard to get to town." Holter
said that many other dally
travelers of the road agree wltlt
hlm that the cattle drive Is a
problem because lhle does not
clean the manure from the road
when the drives are completed.
Holter pointed out that manure
will damage the paint on a
vehicle If It stays on the vehicle
for very long.
He also reported that the
. matter has been discussed per- ·
sonnally with !hie and that IItle
has said he doesn't have to clean
the road after the drives .
Holter said he spoke with
Assistant Meigs Prosecuting AI·
torney Carson Crow about the
legal aspects of a farmer's
responsibility for cleaning off a
publiC road after It's been dirtied
by cattle, and he expects Craw's
determination on the question
right away.
Holter said he Initiated the
petition drive . to determine If
other residents of the area feel
the same as he does. He said he

could have gotten many more
signatures If he'd spent more
time gathering names.
Holter also pointed out that the
road at this point on Forest Run
Road is extremely narrow, Which
Is also a problem to motorists II
they tneet on·comlng vehicles,
especl~ily If the toad is sUck.
Two acclllents have occurred In
the Vicinity just recently, h~sald.
While gathering signature$,
Holter said he received several
suggestions from area residents
to alleviate the problem, from
rerouting County Road 30 to the
next gravel road "past the Stan
Johnson residence" to installing
an eight foot culvert pipe to be
used as an underpass.
Holter said he realized wha tever Is done will require moving
fences and electric poles but he
feels that as taxpayers, the
residents In that area and the
travlers on the road deserve
Improvement.
"We're spinning our wheels
here." Commissioner Richard
Jones told Holter, "unless we
present this petition to the county
engineer, since the matter Is
completely under his
jurisdiction."
Holter said he called the Meigs
County Highway Department on
at least two occasions but was
never able to reach the engineer.
He also pointed out that he and
other residents of the area are
concerned that the engineer may
be reluctant to take a stand on the
matter since the engineer Is a
relative of IItie' s.
Holter told the commissioners
he did not like having to complain, and he commended tile
commissioners for their serVice
to the county , "but It's time
something Is done about this." he
concluded.

•

Ohio holiday campers
advised of fu-e threat
CONSTRUCTION WORK ~ A conatructlon
worker for the J.W. Seldensllcker Ca., Inc., of
Reynoldsburg, Is at work on Route 124 aear
Langsville. An old brldlle Is
removed 1111d

-bridge will be consfi.ucted. The company was
awarded the contract by the Ohio Department of
Transportation lor lite lowest bid.

ORSANCO
Day being
observed
Ohio GQvernor Richard F.
Celeste has proclaimed June 30
as ORSANCO day throughout the
state.
ORSANCO (Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission) I~
an Interstate compact . water
poUutlon control agency created
jointly June 30, 1948, by the States
of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
VIrginia and West \1 lrglnla.
"It Is Indeed an honor for
Governor Celate to recognize
ORSANCO with this proclamaConUnue.d on page 9

beiO cl.-1 alCJIII
114
near Lanp~le and a lemperarJ brlllp erected Ia order lor the
oou&amp;ructlon of a aew brlllp to take place. Expec&amp;ed completion
date lor tile brlilp Ia October 11.
II

I

~.

f·

I

United Press International
The Ohio Department of Natu·
ral Resources says it will Issue
tickets to people setting off
cherry bombs, rockets and other
Illegal fireworks In state parks
and forests this the hoUday
weekend because of the dry
conditions which olllclals fear
could lead to fires.
"Traditionally, on a day like
the Fourth of July we've been
quite lenient. There isn'tgolng to
be any warning this year because
we've got too much of the land
susceptible to grass fires," said
Todd Ambs, DNR spokesman.
He said a ticket could result in
a maximum line of $100.
Despite scattered rain showers
In Ohio Wednesday, the depart·
ment's Division of Forestry
warned the drought plaguing the
state could pose a threat to Ohio's
19 state forests.
"II (the drought) continues
through September and October,
we could aee the worst fall fire
season we've ever had," said Bill
Schultzz, a forestry spokesman.
.)

"Last fall was the worst fall
season we've had since 1963."
More than 10.000 acres burned
last fall and rainfall since then
has been far below normal.
The fire threat Is greatest In
eastern and southeastern sec·
tlonsofthestate. The U.S. Forest
. Service has pinpointed the Appalachian Mountains as one of four
areas In the nation facing the
biggest risk.
Since most acreage under .
forest canopies Is still greeh,
grasslands currently are the
most prone to fire. If another
month passes without subs tan·.
tlal rain, "we wlll be on alert."
Schultz said.
State park managers are deciding on a case·by-case basis
whether to allow camp fires and
grUis, Ambs said. He advised
campers to check whether open
burning Is allowed In the parks
tltey visit.
Ambs said a portion of Alum
Creek State Park In Delaware ·
County ltas banned the use of
charcoal grills .

..

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