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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. July 18. 1988

.-----Meigs news briefs---___;,._______________---;
man •;niured
;n .Wreck
Me i.n:s
"'0'
'J
•
A Long Bottom man was injured in an accident Saturday at
10:35 p.m . In Chester Township on S.R . 248, three and one-half
miles east of the junction of S.R. 7, according to the
GalUa·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Lawrence B. Collins, 24, was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by a private vehicle. He was later treated and
rele(lsed.
He wa&amp; driving east when he lost control of his 1986 Ford
Ranger pickup truck, which ran off the right sldeofthe road and
into a guardrail before overturning. The patrol charged him
with DWI.
·A West Virginia man was cited In a car-truck accident
Saturday at 11:55 a.m .. in Salisbury Township on s ,R, 124.
Greg S. Dentner, 38, of Pliny, W.Va., was cited f9r failure to
yield ·a fter his 1980 Chevrolet C·10 pickup truck forced Lisa G.
Miller, 17, of Rutland, to hit a guardrail.
Miller , driving a 1984 Plymouth Turlsmo, was driving east
when Dentner pulled from a private drive. Miller, trying to
avoid hitting the truck, went of! the right side of the road and hit
a guardrail.
A Kentucky man was cited In a motorcycleaccldent::;aturday
at 5: 45 p.m. on U.S. 33, less than a mile south ·of the
Meigs-Athens County line.
Kenneth A. lies, 22, of Dayton, Ky., was cited !or failure to
control after he rode his 1988 Yamaha motorcycle Into a ditch.
He was riding·north when he lost control ina left-hand curve.
He went off the right side of the road and into a ditch.

Shooting reported in Rutland
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department received a call at
about 2:48a.m. Sunday of a shooting at a private residence In
Rutland. Upon investigation the department found Duncan E.
Mazingo, 24, of Rutland , had shot James L. Mash, 31, ofS.R.143,
Pomeroy, in the leg with a .22 caliber rifle. Mash was taken by
E MS to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated and
released. Mazingo was charged with negligent assault and
brought to the Meigs County Jail. He was later released on bond
to appear In Meigs county Court at10: 30 a.m. Monday.
At about 10:00 p.m . Sunday night the sheriff's department
responded to a call in the vicinity of the Ravenswood Bridge
where two juveniles had beaten up another juvenile. The victim
was transported by EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
matter has been turned over to county juvenile authorities.
Tpe sheriff's department recei,ed calls of two pickup trucks
near Pomeroy being destroyed by fire Sunday morning. The
trucks were located about one-half mile apart. A 1974 Chevy was
located on County Road 18 (Kingsbury Road) near Pomeroy
and a 1980 Ford was located on County Road 19 (Rock Springs
Road ) near the intersection of Peach Fork. Both fires occurred
about 2 a .m. Sunday and Pomeroy Fire Department assisted on
both calls. Arson Is suspected and the state fire marshall has
been contacted. Anyone knowing anything about these fires is
asked to call the sheriff's office.
Also occurring early Sunday morning was a breaking and
enter ing or the Ashland Service Station In Harrisonville.
Cigarettes were taken. The Incident is under Investigation.

Police investigate accident
Pomeroy Police Department reports a two-vehicle traffic
accident took place on West Main St. in Pomeroy about 7 p.m.
Sat urday. Involved in t he accident were Dana Daniels, 28, of
GalUpolis, and Connie Grimm, 24, of Pomeroy.
Daniels. driving a 1987 GMC station wagon, was traveling
east on West Main when Grimm, driving a 1973 Volvo belonging
Ia Mark Haley, of Middleport, struck the Daniels' vehicle from
behind. The Daniels' vehicle sustained light damages. The
vehicle Gr imm was driving sustained moderate damages .

G 1m
It d b p
p
f
,
r m was c e
Y omeroy o1Ice or no operators
. liCense, expired license plates, flctlc)ous license plates, no
Insurance·and assured clear distance.

Diane Shutt, taken to Holzer Medical Center; at 10:19 p.m.
RaclnetoSandyDesertRoadforJohnHarman. taken to Holzer
Medical Center; at ll: 23 p.m. Middleport to Elm Street for Sara
Johnson, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Sports physicals set

Football meeting set

Boys and girls Interested In participating In sports at
Southern Junior High and High Schools should report to the high
schoolfor physical exams according to the following schedule;
Thursday, July 21, seventh grade boys, 5:30 to 6: 30 p.m .;
eighth grade boys, 6:30 to 7:30p.m.; freshman boys, 7:30 loS: 30
p.m .
Friday, July 22, sophomore boys, 5:30 to 6:30p.m.; junior
boys, 6.: 30 to 7:30p.m.; senior boys, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Monday, July 25, seventh grade girls, 5:30 to6: 30 p.m.; eighth
grade girls, 6:30 to7:30 p.m.; freshman girls, 7:30 to 8:30p.m.
Tuesday, July 26, sophomore girls, 5: 30 to 6: 30 p.m.; junior
girls, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.; senior girls, 7:30 to 8:30p.m.
Students should wear shorts and bring completed examination ~ards which are available from the high school.

Eunice A. Bradfield .

Miss Eunice A. Bradfield, 98,
BELPRE- Daisy E. Clark, 78, New Lima Road Rutland, died
1013 Ridge Stree,t Belpre, died Sunday at Kimes Convalescent
Friday at Camden Clark Memor- Center following a lengthy
ial Hospital , Parkersburg.
illness.
Mrs . Clark was born in Par·
Miss Bradfield was born De·
lla nd a daughter · of the late cember 2, 1889 at Harrisonville a
James and Minie Icenhour Wat- daughter of the late George W.
son. She moved to Belpre In 1951 · and Gerlinda Johnston
where she was a homemaker . Bradfield.
She was a member of Belpre
She was a school teacher and
Chu rc h of the Nazare ne.
secretary, a member of the
Her hu sband of 50 years, Ralph Methodist Chicago Temple, Har·
D. Clark preceded her in death as risonville Grange, past member
did two sons , one gra ndson, two of R&lt;o&gt;turn Jonathan Meigs Chap·
great grandchildren. three broth- ter of D .A. R.
ers and three sisters. .
In addition to her parents she
She is s urvived by two sons, was preceded In death by two
James M. Clark, Little Hocking s lsters, Miss Addle Bradfield and
and Ernest W. Clark , Belpre; one Rhoda Priddy, three brothers,
daugher, Mrs. Charlie (Kat hy) f4obert. Burt and Herb Bradfield.
McDaniel. Belpre; 11 grand·
She is survived by three nieces ,
c hild ren, 17 grea t grand children, Eva Clapha·n and May Bruce
one brother, Wallace Watson. both of Fremont, Ind.,and Rhoda
East Palestine. Ohio; three sis- Smith. of Swanson; special
ters, Emma Bess, Mrs. PauU,Je friend, Pauline Atkins, Rutland
Cornell and Mn. Lucy Powell all and several cousins.
of Wellston; two half-sisters,
Funeral services will be held
Mrs. Darlene McCune, Beaver Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at
Fal ls. Pa., and Mrs. Frances Ewing Funeral Home with the
Hughes, We)lsville.
Rev . O'Qulnn Kelly officiating.
Funeral services will be held Burial will be In Shipment
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at the Cemetery, Harrisonville.
Spe ncer Funeral Home, 220 Main Friends may call at the funeral
Street. Belpre, with the Rev.
home Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7to
Robert L. Stewart officia ting. A 9.
seco nd service will be held at 2 ·
p.m . at Stiversvi lle Commulniiv Homer B. Smith Sr. ·
Homer B. Smith Sr., 54, of 318
Church. Burial will be In the
Lasley
St. , Pomeray, died Sun·
Chu rc h Ce metery. Friends may
day
at
Ohio State University
ca ll at the funeral home today
Hospitals
after a lengthy Illness.
from 4 to 9 a nd on Tuesday until
Feb.
17, 19341nPomeroy,
Born
time of ser vices.
Mr. Smith was a son of the late

• CLIP COUPON •

L-~-------~----------------~

Middleport
Dair1.1
Queen ... Dairy Queen

Reagan ...___..;.&lt;F_r_o_m_R_E_A_o_AN....:·~P=ag::.:e:...::I:...&gt;_ __
ga n had no pub Iic activ ities
planned in the week that the
Democrats nominate Massachuset ts Gov. Ml chaei Dukak Is lo be
their cand idate in this fall's
presidential e lection .
But Reagan wlil not be darmant during the fall campaign,
Sometime after VIce President
George Bush is nominated at the
Republican Natio nal Co nvention
in August, R eagan will be on !he
campaign circuit in an effort to
elect the man who fought him for
the Republican presidential nom!nation in 1980. Noactivepolltlcal

program.
Reagan also used his address
to deliver a pre·emptlve rebu!tal
to the themes expected to reign In
Atlanta, advising Democrats to
"keep In mind" that after Inherit·
lng an economy "In a mess "he
has presided over a reco~ 67
months of expansion the lowest
unemployment In y~ars and a
surge of investment and
·
innovation

Stocks

I

r--;::::=·====::::::::::W:;;o:;;r:th:lng=t~on=In;d::..:..:..:..:..:..:.. :.. ·;2;4~:~~

Ij

'
SALES • SERVICE • TESTING

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE ·I s•RIJY
EQUIPMENT
lllr

campaign
role, however,
Is expeeled for Reaga
n until after
the
traditional Labor Day kickoff.
In his weekend radio address,
Reagan called the choiCe be·
twe&lt;o&gt;n Dukakls and Bush "a
his toric opportunity" to reject
the liberal approach "that nearly
wrecked the economy the last
time the Democrats were In
charge" and Instead choose the
co ntinuation ofhisowneconomtc

-- ---

m .... Second a......
••••pert, Olllo 45760

PH. (6 l 4 ) 992 •7075
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MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

•
•

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Porch &amp; Floor
Enamel
Aetlstl wear, wuther and
peeling. Popular coto,s.

colors.

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yeiK!wing . While.

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Whr!eand

popular colors .

Gallon

5 99

Interior Latex
Semi-Gloss Wall &amp; Trim

Proyides _a hard glou finish.

Per1ec1 for woodwork. doors. kuch&amp;n

$

10

and balhroom walls.
Wh!teanel

99

popular colors

Water line replacement was
the topic of discussion at Monday
night's meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.
John Anderson, village ad min·
lstrator, was at the meeting to
discuss replacement of the water
line on Mulberry Heights from
the corporation line to the fire
hydrant at the entrance to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
In June alone, there were 15

•

leaks on the Mulberry Helg)lts
line. If the vlllage can afford the
replacement, then the old line
will be replaced with a larger.
six-inch PVC l!ne which should
wear Indefinitely.
Similar line replacements are
also projected for other areas of
the village, as time and the
village budget allow.
Council Is In favor of replacing
the Mulberry Heights line once It

Is ascertained from Village
Treasurer Jane Walton that
funds are available.
Walton was absent from Man·
day's meeting. Councilman Bill
Young was also absent.
Present In addition to Ander·
son were Mayor Richard Seyler
and Councilmembers Betty Bar·
onlck, Larry Wehrung, Bryan
Shank, Franklin Rizer and Bruce
Reed.

·

Gatton'

Rust Topper
surface

$

699
Ot.

112 Pin!
Ru&amp;l Topper

Best Exterior
Latex Solid Stain

10•

Good adi'IIIJon and &lt;Uabiitr. UH on
wOOdbe..,., ,
renee&amp; and mote.
Oallal

Best Exterior Latex
Flalllouse Paint

Best Interior Latex
Flat Wall Decoration

Creal" 1 durablraat finish.

Provldlt I Clutlblt, Wllhablt

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Semi-Tranaparent Stain Gloaa Hauae Paint

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Enhlncn W I'IOIICII " ' Mlural

t&gt;eaulrotwoal.

UM on elderiof surfacee lh

'1.0"

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anv room.

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Satin Gloss Enamel
St-'n·reliatant tlnilh can be

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'

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY
.
CO.
992-5020
405 fiOIIH SICOWD AVI.

•DDUPOIT, OHIO

t;

-

$

3 911

'·
SALE
CONTINUES
THROUGH
JULY 23,
' 1988
PAY TJIEIB IJIAU ttaroap wHII t11e1r 11u1re of. the

- 0... -

11011. TIIIU •••
OPIII'riU 7 P.M.
SlTIIIAY .
nus P.M.

'.

COU.Ecr MONEY F!)R PROJECT - Four
young Syracui!Ml residents look It upon themi!Mllves
lo coDed money Monday to help with the
operation of the Syracui!Ml park. The village has no
way of reneratlng money for the operation of the
park. The park fund was Increased by $131.32

•

-·-- t i:~.:._

Hetloa wouJtl lie repaved. Jaelnmealal Ia

-

-~ for the

workfar oat plllaa wltb GTB Nortb ull the Ylllqe
wu Ted Reed, loeal l'elldeat aad pretldeat o1 &amp;be
Farmen Baak and Savtap ComiNIDJ'. Pletared
are 1-r, FOI'J'ell P. Tanler,GTE ealfseetlag
aupervtsor, network faolllllea, Mqor 8e)rler,
James G. LeDay, district muarer, and Ted

repavlllg If the dowotowD IIIGCka of Mala ltreet Ia
Pomeroy lloadll wileD IIley p1'81ealed Pomeroy
MayDI' Dick ..,.._. wltb . a cheell for Pl,801.
Pomeroy Vlllap II to PQ tile bllaace ao&amp; to
exc"' Ill,. . . Tile pavlllg'trBI a combined effort
by tile lelepboae eompuy ud Ptmll'oy VIllage
whereby 111a1a ltree&amp; lhroqiiPomeroy'a buataeu

_ _ ,;,~'l

- --

Reed.

1\1

through the efforts of the four younplers .
Pictured presenting the money to Mayor Eber
Pickens Monday were, l·r, Laura Fryar, Heather
McPhail, Mayor Pickens and Christina Eyn9n.
Absent was Stacey ~helss.

New housing construction up
WASHINGTON (UP!) - New
housing construction rose 5.1
percent In June after a 12.6
percent plunge in May, with the
Northeast showing the most
volatility or any region in the
nation, the Commerce Depart·
ment reported today.
.. New construction on private
housing bounced up 5.1 percent to
a seasonally adjusted annual
rate of 1.454 milllon units, the
largest increase since February,
the department's Census Bureau
said.
But that was not enough to
make up ground lost In May when
new construction fell a revised
-12.6 percent from April. the
department said. John Tuccillo, chief economist
for the National Realtors Associ-

Rhodes cleared '
of any wrongdoing

S1ops rust and prov1des
patntable

conditions for cloud seeding have .
not occurred.
Forecasters said Ohio may get
more ral~ this week. The fore cast calls fora chance of showers
today through Thursday, with
·fair weather returning Friday
and Saturday.
Hot and muggy conditions
were prevalent across the state
Monday·. High temperatures
ranged from 95 at Cincinnati toSS
In Mansfield and Toledo. The
mercury climbed to 931n Youngstown, tying a record for July 18 .
set in 1952.
Cooler temperat1lres were
forecast for remainder of the
week. Highs are expected to be
mostly in the 80s with lows
ranging from 55 to 65.

Forbes said the Democrats
. would try to solidify and persuade the white middle class that
voted for President Reagan to
support the Dukakls· Bentsen
ticket.
Forbes said any gains Jackson
might have made out of the
private negotiations would
accrue to all Democrats, and to
the poor blacks, whites and
His paniCs whom he champions.·
The Cleveland council 'leader
said voter registration drives
must be financially supporred by
the Democr&amp;tlc party In order to
be successful.
Bentsen was the first to bring
the Ohio delegation the news,
shortly after noon, that the
sparring between Dukakls and
Continued on page 10

$ 899 •

Gallon

ern suburb of Columbus.
The thunderstorms also
downed trees and utility lines and
caused spot!JI power outages in
some areas.
Only light rainfall was ~e­
ported In the area of Wilmington.
where a weather tnodlflcatlon
conpany hired by drought.
stricken farmers remainded on
standby Monday, waiting for
proper cloud formations that
could be seeded by pilots.
Atmospherics Inc. of Fresno,
Calif., was hired to stimulate
rain by a group of farmers in
Clinton, Highland, Fayette,
Warren. Greene, Clermont and
Brown counties. But since crews
arrived In southwestern Ohio
Thursday, the right weather

rule:s. ''

Gallon'

Exterior 011 Base
House &amp; Trim
Sta!n·reSIStant.
Whiteonty.

10-0z.

$

Use on drywall, j)laSII!r, bnck,

produced one-half Inch to one
Inch of rainfall across the Buck·
eye State. In many locations the
Rain, glorious rain, fell on rainfall was the most since
much of Ohio Monday, drenching Easter Sunday, April 3, NWS
parched crop lands and thirstY said.
lawns and gardens and helping to
Gallla County received 0.8
replenish water supplies of cities Inches of rain Monday .
and towns In many areas of the
Buckeye Rural Electric restate.
ported several minor storm
But Monday's rainfall was not related outages in Its service
enough to end the drought that area, a spokesman said.
had left many areas nearly 10
At Columbus Southern ElectInches short of precipitation · ric, no outages were reported in
since March, the National
Gallla County, bu I one did occur
Weather Service reported.
In Middleport.
Monday was the wettest day
While some areas got only light
since early April for much of the
rainfall Monday, others got a lot.
state, according to the weather The greatest amount reported to
service.
the weather service was 2.7
Generally, afternoon and evenInches at Reynoldsburg, an eastIng showers and thunderstorms
additional rain, as predicted.
will be falling some time today.

Council discusses water line
replacement at .Monday meet

•

Interior Latex
Flat Wall Paint

"cooked" on the vines when hit
by the sun. Fjowever, it was not
all In vain since Hill Indicated
that the rain will help the pepper
crops of upriver farmers. Hill
commented that his corn corp
was practiCally completely lost
due to the drought.
One resident of" the Rock
Springs area reported a record·
ill!! of one·half Inch of rain In 45
minutes during M6nday night's
rain. A resident Langsville reported"only a very brief shower
while Rutland reported heavy
rainfall.
Monday night's rain did help to
lower temperatures and Is expected to provide some relief for
lawns and flowers. The relief of
the one rain Is only temporary,
but residents are hopeful that

ATLANTA (UP,!) Sens. joked that the producer, Rep.
Lloyd Bentsen and John Glenn Douglas Applegate. D-Ohlo, had
smiled and embraced Monday mls·spelled Bentsen's name. He
like the old friends they are, and · said Applegate had 10,000 or the
often ornery Cleveland City collectors' Items left over.
Bentsen called Glenn "one of
Council President George
Forbes said Michael Dukakis the giants In the Senate," and
won the Democratic presidential wished him happy birthday.
Glenn was celebrating his 67th
nomination fair and square. ·
Those were just two signs In the birthday, and received a white,
Ohio delegation to the Demo- two-dr&gt;eker cake decorated with
cratic National Convention tnat a space rocket, cardinals .and
.
.
,
.,..~PPY days'' may be here again carlljltions.
lD the form of ., a unified and
:Forbes, a black leader who Can
enthusiastic Democratic party. . be caustic. preached unity fol·
Bentsen, the Texas senator lowing the accord reached by
who aced Glenn out for the vice Dukakis and Jesse Jackson.
. presidential nod, visited the Ohio whom Forbes supported for
delegation to make sure there pf!!sident.
were no hard feelings.
"It had to be that way," said
Thl!re weren't.
Forbes. "Michael Dukakls won
Glenn held up a bumper sticker more delegates, so he is the
that said "Dukakls-Glenn" and nominee. You can't change -the
'

Parent's Name - - - - - - - - Date ________ Time· _ __

Provkles good, evan
cove&lt;age. Non-

or out. Assorted

·Long overdue rain fell in Meigs
County Monday night.
While some parts of the county
were hit by only a brief shower
other parts were well doused by
the rain which came too late to
help some falling crops In the
truck farming area of Meigs
County.
Don Richard Hill reported a
ralnfa11 of three inches Monday
night at his upriver farm.
Tomato pickers Tuesday
morning had to quit picking
because fields were a mass of
mud. Hill said that the rain would
be more harmful than helpful to
the remainder of the tomato crop
because the tomatoes will be

Address - - - - _ _ _ , . - - - - - I
Phone No. _______ Age, _ _

Exterior Latex
Flat House Paint

26 Canto

A Muklmodia Inc. Now-••

Ohio Democrats show unity
as '88 convention commences

SERVI!iTIIR® PAINT

•

By Sentinel Staff
and wire reports

YourName _____~----

700 NORTH SE(OND

1 Soctlono, 1 0 Pagea

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. July 19. 1988

Meigs receives long overdue rain Monday

1~-------------------------1 Owl's Name __________

was preceded In death by two ·
Infant brothers. ·
Services will be Wednesday, 1
p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home,
with Rev. Lloyd Grimm Jr.
officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
fr&lt;!m 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on Tuesday.

enttne

•

*Grand prize: Win ll 26
inch boys or girls 10
Speed Bike from Western
Auto of Middleport.
Just clip the entry cou·
pon below ar\d drop it off
at the Dairy Queen.
No purchase necessary
- Need not be present to
win.·

There were 19 calls answered Saturday and Sunday by local
emergency units the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
reported·.
The following runs were made Saturday. At 12:33 a.m.
Middleport to Page Street for Virginia Duckworth, taken to
Holzer Medical Center; at 1: 23 a.m. Orange Township Fire
Department to Union 76 Gas Station on SR 7 !or gas leak; at 9:49
a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy Heallh Care Center for Audrey
Smith, taken to Veterans ·Memorial Hospital; at 9:50 a.m.'
Syracuse to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Lora Parmlter, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 11:08- a.m. Middleport to North Second for Janet Ward,
taken to Holzer Me~ical Center; at 6: 04 p.m. Scipio Township
Fire Department to a brush flreonSR681; at 8:25p.m. Rutland
to SR 124 for Gilbert Maynard, taken to Holzer Medical Center;
at 9:44 p.m. Middleport Fire Department to Africa Raod for a
gas leak; at 10:39 p.m. Tuppers Plains to sR248, auto accident,
Larry Collins treated but not transported.
Sunday at 2:56a.m. Rutland to New Lima Road for James
Mash, taken to Veterans Memorial llospital; at 10:44 a.m.
Tuppers Plains to SR 7 for carl Matlack, ·treated but not
transported; at 11: 11 a.m. Syracuse to Bridgeman Street for
Helen Savage, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 12:23
p.m. Middleport to Park Street for Amber Armstrong, treated
but not transported.
At 1:16 p.m . Pomeroy to Lincoln Heights for Ruth McCarty,
treated but not transported; at 1:39 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
Blake Road for Chester Gorrell, taken to St. Joseph Hospital; at
1:50 p.m. Pomeroy to Swindell Road for James Hunnah, taken
to O'Bieness Hospital; at 9:52p.m. Pomeroy to LasleyStreetfor

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a,m,)
Am Electric Power ... :.~ ....... 27%
AT&amp;T ............. ...... .. .. .......... 26%
Ashland Oil .... ............ ........ 75~
Bob Evans .......................... 17~
Charming Shoppes .............. 13%
City Holding Co ................... 35
Federal Mogut ...... ........ ...... 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ :.......... 60')8
Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
KLey ~nturion ........ ............ 38~
ands End ......................... 29~
Limited Inc ........................ 24%
· Multimedia Inc .................... 72
Rax Restaurants .................... 4
~bbi~ &amp; Myers .......... ...... 11~
. oney s Inc ........................ 28
Wendy's I n II ........................
.
5')8

Vot.39, No.&amp;O
Copyrighted 1988

Variable cloudiness tonl&amp;'ht,
lows win mid 60&amp;. Chance of
rain 30 percent. Wednesday,
highs In mid 80s, chance of
rain 80 percent.

•

e

Children up to age 13
· now have the chance to
name the owl locatld in
front af the start. Cantest starts July 18th,
and ends august 14th.

Emergency runs reported

Enamel

Pick 4
,0014

Page 4

NAME THE OWL
CONTEST!

Veteran's Memorial Hospital has announced Its weekend
.
admissions and discharges.
Admissions Saturday were Walter Plott, Okeechobee, Fla.;
Jeff Sayre, Reedsville.
•
Discharges Saturday were Joseph Sisson, Larry Hess.
Admissions Sunday were Rachael Roush. Pomeroy; Frank
Walford, Vinton.
Discharges Sunday were Mary Nichols, Jeff Sayre, Walter
Plott, Leondus Lee.

All purpose. quick
dry ina. llud mdoors

479

ANNOUNCES

made

Spray

Daily Number

DAIRY QUEEN

Meigs County Board of Elections will be open for absente~
voting starting today, July 18, for th_e Meigs Local bond issue
and Alexander tax levy. The board of.elections will also be open
one Sat\lf(lay, July 30, from 9 a.m. \!Dill noon.

been employed In Pomeroy by
the United States Postal Service.
He was a Korean War veteran
and a member of Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion,
the New Haven, W.Va. chapter of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
the Pomeroy Fire Department
and Pomeroy Emergency Medl·
cal Service. He was also a
member of the Forty &amp; Eight, the
Fraternal Order of Eagles Chapter 2171 and theAthenschapter of
the Umpires Association.
. Survivors Include his wife,
Ruth Ann Smith of Pomeroy; one
son and daughter-In-law, Homer
B . Smith Jr. and Rita Smith of
Pomeroy; five daughters and
two sons-in-law, Rebecca Ward
of Racine, Diane Shutt of Balli·
more. Md., Mr. and Mrs. Gary
(Susie) Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Howle (Teresa) Jeffers and
Connie Smith, all of Pomeroy;
seven grandchildren, Raymond
Ward, Jessica and Tommy Shutt,
Patricia Smith, Sarah Jeffers,
Christopher Brlzel Smith and
Brandon Grover; two brothers,
Harold Smith of Pomeroy and
Fred Smith of Middleport; three
sisters, Phyllis Vanlnwagen of
Pomeroy, Geraldine Spencer of
Syracuse and Ana VanGunde of
Columbus; and several nieces
and nephews.

•

MIDDLEPORT

-Area d e a t h s - - - -Pearl-and-Oma
- Smith.
- -He-had- -----In addition to his parents, he
Daisy E. Clark

Reds
triumph

There will be a football meeting at Southern High School for
all boys Interested In playing Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the football
building.

Absentee voting beginning

Iiospial report

Ohio Lottery

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) The Ohio Elections Commission
Monday unanimously dismissed
charges that!ormer Gov. James
A. Rhodes broke election laws In
1986 by setting up a secret
campaign committee.
Secretary of State Sl1errod
Brown alleged that Rhodes oper·
ated the antl·gay Ohio Citizens
tor Health and Decency as a
second campaign committee In
bill race against Gov. Richard
Celesle. Ohio Law. for accounta·
blllty purpaaes, limits candl·
dates to one committee.

"It was clear that the Rhodes
committee sanctioned, approved
and funded .(the anU:gay com·
mlttee)," elections Commll·
sloner Harry J. I.enman said,
"b\lt that was not the II sue. "

a lion, said he was looking for ''a
very small change" from the
May annual rate of 1.384 m,illion
units.
,
Single !am Uy housing saw the
most Improvement, rising 10.2
percent to 1.098 million units,
after falling a revised 8.9 percent
In May, the depar lment said.
Apartment construction, typl·
cally volatile, fell 8.2 percent In
June after plunging a revised 21
percent In May, the department
said. For construction of five or
more units, the annual rate of
296,000 projects was the lowest
since June 1982 when the rate was
l04,000.
In the Northeast, new housing
construction was up 17.6 percent
In June after staggering 22.6
percent in May and 8.6 percent In

April , the department said. The
South and the West showed more
modest Increases, but in the
Midwest new housing was off 3. 7
percent.
Builders took out more permits
for future construction In June, a
sign they may be more optimistic
about their ability to sell new
housing later this year.Permlls
overall were up 3.7 percent to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate
of 1.489 million units. Permits
were up In all sections of the
country except the West, which
showed a 0.8 percent dip.
Discounting seasonal variations in annual rates,149,000 new
construction projects were
started In June, up 6.8 percent
from the May figure of 139,500,
the department said.

-l.DCal news briefs-Ascs issues drought advice
Clfunty executive director Dave Fox of the Meigs County
Agricultural StabiUzatlon and Conservation Service, said "
farmers should prepate now to apply fbrdrought a ld so they will
be ready to show eligibility after pending legislation Is

enacted."
."We probably won't have the details of the drought assistance
for several weeks, " Fox said, " but there are some things
producers can do to help make sure they get the benefits of any
new leglsliltlon. "
"For example, appraisals and m~surements will be made
when necessary by lhe ASCS on drought-damaged crops before
they are destroyed or harvested to salvage for feed,'' Fox sa ld.
Crop production evidence should be maintained for a crop
sold or stored off the farm, accordlllJ to the director.
"Producers may have to leave representative strips for
appraisals If they are unable to walt for ASCS approval," Fox
added.
Production records for nonprogram crops,such as fruits,
vegetables and other commercial crops should be maintained
for current and previous years, said the director
'The bottom line," Fox said, "is don't destroy any evidence
you may need later to prove your eligibility for benefits."
(Continued on paie 10

,j •
-.....;.---·~·-

-

.....

•

I·

�TuBiday, July 19, 1988

•

Comment

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. OhiO

.

WASHi NGTON - During staffers stili shake their heads
much of 1985, the White House over Heckler's track record at
staff stuggled to rid the Cabinet home.
•
of Margaret Hec kler.
Donald Regan, former White
The secretary of health and· House chief of staff, told us that
human services was appointed in . Heckler was strictly a political
1983 and quickly l)ecame a n . appointee In the first place. "We
embarrassment to the adminis- did need a woman in the Cabinet
tratlon- a token woman appoln- at that point. " Regan said, " and
tee who sources say was in over she was very frankly pushing for
her head managing the nation' s the job."
most expensive department.
In 1983, Heckler had just lost
The solution, arrived at In 1986, her Massachusetts seat in the
not only pushed Heckler out of House of Representatives, and
the Cabinet, It pushed her out of she wanted to remain In
the country. Today , Heckler Is in government.
"She tried, but she wasn't up to
political exile as the U.S. am bassador to Ireland.
It," Regan said. "It became
A top HHS official who worked · more an~ more embarrassing,' '
with Heckler said he was stunned as Heckler tried to manage a $280
by the decision. "When I heard b!!lion budget and 130,000
she was going to be the am bass a- employees.
:
dor, I predicted we' d be at war
In his book, " For the Record,"
with Ireland within 18 months." Regan said Nancy Reagan was
U.S. affalrsarerelatlvelyqulet the force behind th.e ouster of
on the Irish front, hut HHS Heckler. He claimed the first

DEVOT·E D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASONAREA

•

~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'I'1'
Publlshe~

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

1

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspa per Publishers Association.
LETTE RS OF OPINION a r e welcome. They should be less than :no "VOrds
long. All le tt er s are sub ject to edl1ing a nd mus t be signed with name, address and
tel ephone number. No unsigned letters will be pubUshed. Letters should be In
good tastE', a ddress ing Issues, not persona lities.

Design, timing crucia~
in .automobile industry
By JAN A. ZVERINA
United Press International
DETROIT - How well a car is styled and how soon It gets to the
showroom floorowill be crucial in determining a carmaker's success
.as. the Americans, Japanese and Europeans fight for sales in the U.S.
luxury car market, a study release(! Monday said .
.
·'J ust being good enough Is no longer good enough," said James k
Matey ka, vice pres ident of Booz, Allen &amp; HamUton, a New York
market research firm. " So the challenge really means Introducing
new .models and efficiently refreshing existing ones that are
·absolutely at the top of the class."
Mateyka, in an address to the 1988 Automotive News World
Congress In Detroit , said his studies show that car buyers regard
styling and performance as the most important factors in a purchase
decision.
Therefore, he said, automakers will have to stress those factors
wh!!e striving to shorten their product development Urnes .
"Consumers can tell, " he. said. "Our reserach shows that within
Iwa vears car bu ye rs know whether a new vehicle is a winner or a
loser, and they vote wllh their purchase dollars."
Mateyka said his study found that car buyers now place less
emphasis on quality, only because quality levels among carmakers
have increased so dra matically in recent years.
Re pair, du rability and dealer service also ranked well below design
and performance, the study revealed.
Like other indu stry analysts , Mateyka predicts a tough battle for
· automakers, especially as the Japanese move f!&gt;r the first time into
the large and luxury car market- once the exclusive domain of the
Big Three carmaker s - Ge neral Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and
Chrysler Corp.
Japanese carmakers, once considered a threat only In the small car
market, also plan to compete heav!!y in other segments, like sport
.
utility vehicles and minivans.
Mateyka cans these markets the "profit core" of American
carmakers, noting that the Japa nese are transforming the U.S.
market.
"The days when each company had its own market turf are
disappear ing," he said at the congress, hosted by the weekly industry
publiCation . ' 'They are being replaced by direct product-to-product
competition, which is rapidly spreading to such profitable segments
as light trucks and vans, feature -loaded medium cars and even
luxury models:"
Instead of offering incentives or rebates to sell cars, Mateyka said
American carmakers must move new ideas into the marketplace just
as Japanese carmakers have done.
"The winning au to industry strategists in the 1990s will be those
· which can offer stellar models against foreign products aimed at the
profit core," he said.
·
1.• ' " .'

l'l)' U• kld Prt .. ...... •n•MI
AMf:R I('AN U:I\GUE

'

Finale set for L.A. oil
LOS ANGELES (NEAl~ Now discovered the oil after sinking
takJng shape hefe 1$ a truly an exploratory well at a 4-acre
titanic power struggle - the site it owned.
political equivalent of the enter·In the late 1960s, Occidental
tainment extravaganza for agreed to trade that land to the
which Southern Ca!!fornla Is city in exchange tor a 2-acre
famous.
.
parcel. At the time, the municl·
The cast of characters includes pal government specified that
a claque of liberal political Occidental's use of the property
consultants in the unlikely role of was to be "limited to·the right to
paid advisers to a multinational drill" tor ol!.
otl company, a crusty 9G-year-o!d
That should have resolved the
corporate executive and virtu- matter, but the controversy It
ally ail of the city's Democratic spawned has raged unabated and
power brokers.
unresolved for approximately
Potentially at stake is nothing two de.cades In the City Council
·tess than future political control and Its various committees, at
of the city, The already strained the Ca!!fornla Coastal Commlsa!liance between two powerful slon, throughout the state' s court
voting blocs here could be torn system (including three appearasunder during the clash.
ances before the California SuAt Issue is the right of Los preme Court) and In assorted
Angeles-based Occidental Petro- other forums.
Although the well would not be
leum Corp. to drill for oil at a
2-acre site in the city's fashiona- s ituated either In Santa Monica
ble Pacific Palisades section at Bay or on the adjacent beach, It
the northern edge of Santa would be located directly across
Monica Bay.
the street on the Inland s!deofthe
Occldenial's Interest In an Pacific Coast Highway.
underground formation, which
Occidental's proposal to encould contain as much as 60 case the drilUng rig and assomillion harrals of ol!, dates back elated apparatus In buildings
to 1966, when the company designed to look like a Spanish

NN l'Orll

'

Today in history

~

~

lnstltutlona!lzed political movement representing a clear alternative to the one-party system
with two names" (i.e .. "Democratic" and ''Republican").
Further backing for the Idea of
Jackson-tel!lng-the· truth ·f rom
his recent actions: As part of his
endless campaign he Is busing an
estimated 10-15,000 followers Into
Atlanta to demonstrate; he has
set up major platform debates;
he may have his own name put in
norri!natlon for vice president. As
he says, "We go to Atlanta not to
reSt but to work. ' '
Nor is his just a last-minute
conventjon operation. Earner,
Jackson operatives were able to
get seven state Democratic conventions to Insert pro ·
Palestinian language In !~state
platforms. And, bowing to pressure from Jackson delegates, the
Democratic National Committee
has changed its rules for future
nominating cycles.
Under the new rules, the
number of "PLEOs" (Party
Leaders and Elected Ofl!c!ais)
are reduced from 650 to 400, and
the winner-take-all "direct elec·
tlon primary" has been el!ml·
nated In favor of proportional
representation. Each change
would help Jackson substantially
In a future bid for the presidency.
If Jackson is saying what he
'means, and means what he Is
sayi'l&amp;· then what?
The!\ II should be an Interesting
convention, with two separate

agendas. Jackson - wisely by
his lights -will he promoting his
never-ending campaign for a
more radical Democratic Party,
gaining a billion dollars worth of
television time for .himself and

Q.f4 ,1ft1

Tor Ollila
Baltlmorp

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HALL SCORES -Indians' Mel Hall 'lld~s Into
home plate In the second lnubog ul theil· ganic

Monday at llu• Oakland Coliseum. Hall scored
lroml!rst ba.st1 011 a lhi'Owlng error by A's Carney
Lansford. Ul'l

Baii~teros cops British ·open
differPnt than th" other," Price
said. "Thi" one I played a' well
as 1 could. I have enough
confiMn&lt;'" 'n my ability to win a

champ ionship."
The Ballesleros·Price duel In
the final round left the other
championship co ntende rs in the
background.

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Ann~ric•

I.e ape

Cldl'&amp;p at B&amp;IUIItOft, t, 5:t5 p.m.
Cl~elud at Oak•IHI.%, l:ts p.m.
Teu• at New York. 1: JI p.m.
Mhll'l!IUJia at 8otl011. 1 : 3~ p.m .
Kan• Cly 11 Ml..,..kl!e,
p.m.

\:JI

Safety and Health Administration for Its purported !allure to
report hundreds of Its em·ployees' job-related Injuries and
Ulnesses.
To enhance Its image and
Improve its chances of gaining
access to thE: oil, Occidental has
recruited Mickey Kantor, one of
the city's most po!!t!cally wellconnected lawyers; Joseph R.
Cerrell, a veteran campaign:
consultant; and· the widely.- re•
spected Washington, D.C., pollti·
cal management firm of Doak,
Shrum and Associates.
Leading their opposition Is the
highpowered political organlza·
lion that dominates campaigns
on Los Angeles' West Side. Its
leaders Include Reps. Henry A.
Waxman, Howard L. Berman
and Mel Levine, all California
Democrats.
The conflict between ·Occidental's supporters and detractors
will reach a climax when the
city's voters· choose between a
pair of opposing ballot propos!·
lions In November - but the
reprecussions from that vote wl!l
be felt here for years to come.

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•*' tleld

Snow receives

CAP'l'URES

after chi pping his shot near the cup on the 18th hole to hold his lead
over Nick PrlC&lt;' ul Zimbabwe and win the British Open golf
championship Monday . Ballesteros flnlshe.d the four rounds with
an eleven-under-par 273. ltEUTER
·

By T.C. wri'HERS
field.
UPI Sports Writer
Barrett's two·run homer, his
The Boston Red Sox are finding
first home run of the year, put
sound fundamentals and oppor- Boston ahead 3-2 In the fifth, but
tune hitting mixed with a little Minnesota tied the score 3·3 on
luck can produce a winning Dan Gladden's RBI siligle In th e
difference .
sixth.
The surging Red Sox won their
Elsewhere In the American
sixth game In a row Monday League: New York crushed
night, 6·5 over the Minnesota Texas 7-2, Mllwaukee thrashed
Twins, and have become con- Kansas City 6-1, Detroit routed
tenders in the American League SeatUe 12·3, Oakland blasted
East race. They are 5-0 under Cleveland H ; and Toronto clobformer third base coach Joe bered California 12-2.
Morgan. who became 'the club's
A•a 7, bidIIIIIs 2
inter 1m inanager when . John
At Oakland, Stan Javier went 5
McNamara was fired at the
for 5 and scored twice and Jose
All-Star break.
Canseco hit his major league"We certainly had our luck
leading 25th homer to lead th&lt;&gt;
tonight, ali of which we created' Atlllet!cs. Roojde Todd Burns,
by . ourselves," Morgan said.
2-0, scattered seven hits for the
"We're doing the little things,
victory while Scott Balles (ell to
!Ike the relays."
7-9.
Boston used both offensive
Yankees 7, Ransers%
prowess and defensive gems to
At New York, Joel Skinner
subdue the Twins.
!doubled In two runs during a
The Red Sox used relay plays five-run first inning to spark the
to cut down two Minnesota
Yankees. Loser Paul Kilgus, 7-9.
runners defensively and set up failed to survive tbe first inning,
tbe go-ahead run with a sacrit!ce surrendering five runs on five
and a sacr!l!ce fly. They scored hits. Yankees starter Richard
the eventual game-winning run Dotson, 8-3, benefitted from the
on an error.
quick New York scoring binge
DenniS Lamp, 4-3, was the and was the winner .
winner despite allowing four hits
Brewers e; Royals 1
and two runs in two Innings of
Tigers 12, MarJners 3
re!!ef. Lee Smith earned his 13th
Blae .Jays 12, Anr;els 2
save despite permitting an RBI
double to Tim Laudner In the
ninth.
The Red Sox also got help from
The Daily Sentinel
newly acquired Larry Parrish, ,
who was released July 8 by
IVSPSU5-M)
A Dlva.lon et M•ltlmedla. Inc.
Texas. Parrish started at first
base and was credited with the
Published every afternoon, Monday
game-winning RBI in the sixth
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the OhiO Valley PubInning when his sacrifice fly put
lishing Company / Multimedia, Inc. ,
the Red Sox up 4-3. Parrish had
PomOI'ey, Ohio 45169, Ph . 992·2156. Se,
cond clas s pOstage paid at Pomero.v,
never played first at any level or
Oh.io.
organized ball prior to the game:
Minnesota's Gary Gaetti Is
Member : United Pr ess International,
InlandD~ily Press Association andt he
Imp~ssed with the Red Sox
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
under Morgan. "I know Joe
Advertising Repr~entallv e, Branham 1
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenu (',
Morgan from talking to him at
New York. New York 10017.
third base. " said Gaettl, a third
baseman. ·'He's a straight
POSTMASTER: Send address chanRes
to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St.,
shooter, the kind of guy I'd like to
Pomeroy, Ohio 4.')7f9.
play for. I'm sure his players are
going to repond to that."
SVIISCRIM'ION RATES
II)' Canif'J" er Motor Roate
The Twins had gone ~head 1-0
OnE' Wpek ... ...... , .......... .. ............ .$1.25
in the first on an RBI single by
One Month ............... .. ................ $5A5
Ont&gt; Year ... .. ............................ $65.00
Kent Hrbek, who went 4 for 5.
SINGLE COPY
Mike Greenwell's run-s.cor!ng
PRICE
single, the first of his three hits,
Dally ................ .. ... .............. 25 Cen ts
tied the score In the bottom of the
Subscribers not deslrln!;l:tQpay the carfirst.
rier may remit In advance direct to
Boston snuffed out a potential
• The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
Twins rally in the fourth by
week.
throwing out Greg Gagne, who
No subscrlpflons by mall perrrllltEd In
was trylng to stretch a one-out
area s where home carrier service Is
double Into a triple. The well·
available.
executed relay went from center
MaltS.bo&lt;rip&lt;lofts
fielder Ellis Burks to third
. IRsitlt Melp Coanty
baseman Wade Boggs via second
13 Weeks .................................. $17.29
26 Weeks .. ................................ $34.06
baseman Marty Barrett.
52 Weeks .................................. 166.56
In the eighth , Greenwell
Ou&amp;shl~ Mt'ip County
started an Inning-ending double
13 Weeks ....... . ....................... .. . $18.20
26 Weeks .. ........ .................. ...... $35.10
play with a sliding catch in left
52 Weeks ....... ........................ ,.. $67.60

suspended sentence
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
State University running back
Carlos Snow was given a suspended sentence Monday after
pleading no contest to a d!sor·
der!y conduct charge stemming
from an altercation with empleyees of a tavern.
MuniCipal Court Judge Sidney
Golden found Snow guUty, senienced him to 30 days in )all and
fined him $250. The judge then
suspended the jail term and
reduced the fine to $125.
Golden said the amended sent·
ence w!l! stand as )ong as Snow
pays the fine anA'! court cos!s
within 30 days, has ,no criminal
convictions for one year, and
does not enter any of six liquor
establishments run by the
owners of the tavern In which he
was arrested.
The employees said Snow and
others would not leave the
establiShment when ordered after fa!!lng to produce proper
Identification. A scuffle then ,
ensued.
"It'~ scary, a funny feeling,"
said Snow. "This was my first
time in court and ILw!ll be my
last."
Ohio State Coach John Cooper
said as far as he Is concerned, the
matter Is closed.
"Carlos ts ready to go,'' said
Cooper. "I'm glad to get ali of .
that stuff behind us so we can get
on with playing football . "

Is Jackson lruthfui? _____:_____B_en_~_a_tte_n_be_rg
Consider this strange view of
politics: Unless you have reason
c,TAH~ to think that a candidate Is not
o.i 7 ~
' telling the truth, assu~that he
~'"'~~ ·IIIIIs telling the truth.
Until notified otherwise (which
wUI come In a moment), let us
assume that Rev. Jesse Jackson
ts telling the truth on most
matters.
. Now, despite the fact that Gov.
Michael Dukakls has far more
than enough convention delegates to get nominated, Jackson
Today Is Tuesday, July 19, the 201st day of 1988 with 165 to'follow. has refused to conclude his
campaign. This has caused what
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The mor ning stars are Mer.cury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
has been described as "growing
exasperation" in the Dukakls
The evening sta r is Saturn.
Those born on this date a re under the sign of Cancer . They Include camp. And here Is our truth test.
Here Is what Jackson said on
Samuel Colt, American inventor of automatic firearms, In 1814;
!"rench painter Ed gar Degas in 1834; accused ax murderer Lizzie July 9, 1988:
Borden (she was acquit ted) in 1~60 ; Dr 1 Charles H. Mayo, co-founder · "Ours is an endless campaign.
of the Mayo Clinic, in 1865; former Sen. George McGovern of South Those who look for the campaign
Dakota in 1922 (age 66 ); football player-actor Roosevelt "Rosey" to end are lacking a s~nse of
Grier In 1932 (age 56); singer Vikkl Carr In 1941' (age 47), and tennis history .... I'm continuing to build
a progressive coalition .. .. The
star Ille Nastase in 19% (age 42 ).
threat is not that we are going to
walk out. The treat Is that we
On this date In history: ,
In 1848. ' 'bloomers," a radical departure in women's clothing, were may stay and expand and build
Introduced to the delegates of the first women's rights convention In and grow and make a differSeneca Falls, N.Y., They were named after Amelia Jenks Bloomer. ence.''
Listen carefully. Jackson says
In 1918. the end of WorW War I approached as the German army
he wl!l campaign endlessl;t to
began retreating across the Marne River in France.
In 1969, John Fa.lrSax of Britain arrived at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., buUd a progressive coalition \hat
wUI expand, and sooner or later,
having become the firs t person to row across the Atlantic alone.
• In 1984, Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York was chosen as Waiter capture the Democratic Party.
Mondale' s vlce·presldentlal running mate at the Democratic This theme Is echoed by officials
or the Rainbow Coalition, a·group.
National Convention.
dominated by radical activists.
A thought for the day: Poet Robert Frost said, "Education Is the Rainbow national director Jack
ability to listen to almost anything without losingyourtemperoryour O'Dell has said, '' ... the Rainbow
Coalition wUI be set up as an
self-confidence."
·'

1

.us •

48 42

!Wiftlll'8 Dtl.

dispute_....!..!R~ob::!::.!.er!:...!t~~a=lte::.:...:::rs

mission has hardly assuaged the
Californians opposed to Industrial exploitation of the ir
coastline.
The negative reputations of
both Occidental and its aging,
hard-driving bOard chairman,
Armand Hammer. are another
source' of hostility toward the
project.
Occidental's chemical subs!·
diaries repeatedly have refused
to accept the responsibility for
cleaning up abandoned indus·
trial wastes in the Love Canal
area of Niagara Falls, N.Y. The
site became notorious In the late
1970s when water contaminated
by carcinogens seeped Into the
basements of area homes.
Moreover, the allegedly unsafe
disposal of toxic and carclnogenic wastes by Occidental units
has been an Issue In White
Springs, Fla.; Taft, La.; La-.
throp, Cal!!,; Montague, Mich. ,
and elsewhere In the nation.
Another Occidental subs!·
diary, the country's largest
meatpacker. known as IBP Inc.,
recently was fined almost $2.6
million· - a record -seitlng
amount - . by the Occupational

ss n .sAt

Oaklud

out, it didn' t need a messy
divorce or a spat ·with Don
Regan.
In a recent Interview with our
associate, Dale Van Alta, Regan
said it became clear that Heckler
could not handle her job and was
a potential liability kto the White
House. "I was getting outside
advice from people who had to
deal with the HHS (that) she just
wasn't cutting the mustard and
the whole thing was going down
the tubes and we were going to
have major scandals, so, how to
get rid of her? I tried to do it
nicely .''
Regan said that before Heckler
could be pried from her Cabinet
seat, she "really hacked up my
reputation on the Hili." Regan
took the brunt of Heckler' s
wrath, because President Reagan can't fire people. "I had to
wear the black hat, because
Ronald Reagan, so help me,
cannot call a person In and say,
'Look, I'm sorry, but this thing
just isn't working. We're going to
have a part company.' "
Heckler' s problems with man·
aging 'a massive budget were
compounded by personal quirks.
She al!egedly exasperated Re·
gan with her inab!l!ty to be on
time. On one occasion, wheQ she
showed up late to a meeting at the
'White House, Regan was In the
midst of telling a joke. He was
allegedly miffed when President
Reagan Interrupted to acknowl·
edge Heckler's arrival.
One former top HHS official
said Heckler ran HHS like a
"second rate" congressional of·
!ice. The source said he spent
much of his time 't rying to find
replacements that Heckler
would approve for open jobs In
the department. " It was always
'acting this' and 'acting that.'
She couldn't make up her mind,"
he said.
We asked Heckler what she
beUeves was the reason that. she
was removed from office. She
"respectfully " declined to
comment.

W L P tt , GB
if .... -

HtMIIb&lt;l!

Cl ~latld

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
lady was uneasy about the
appearance of Heckler's ongoing
divorce.
Our associate, Jim Lynch,
Interviewed a dozen HHS staffers
who worked with Heckler. Most
of them speculated It was Regan
who didn' t want Heckler around.
In early 1985, wh!!e he was
treasury secretary, Regan appeared on the NBC " Today"
show and mentioned the Social
Security Trust Fund, which is
part of Heckler's department.
Forever absorbed with her pubHe Image, Heckler was incensed
that Regan had strayed Into her
spotlight. She reportedly chewed
him out after the show . Later, a
Regan aide called Heckler' s
chief of staff with instructions:
Keep Heckler under control.
If the administration was lookIng for a reason to ease Heckler

.....

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

Heckler's 1986 departure welcomed

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb

Majors

Tuesday. July 19, 1988

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Red Sox capture
sixth ·win in row;
Indians lose, .7r2

Scoreboard

•

The Daily Sentinel

~s:m~ r'T"L-.AL....-r't~d•. -

h

his cause. Dukakis will be
promoting his own candidacy,
trying to accommodate Jackson
without agreeing with his
policies.

-Berry's World

Plan toomey

"Captain, I wantto /save the ship so ican look
for a job in THE REAL WORLD."

' .

There will be a men's soft.ball,
ASA sanctioned Class D national
qualit!er In Logan, Ohio on July
23-24 at Mingo Park. Five na-'
tiona! berths will be given along
with three team trophies and
Individual tiophll!ll to the first
place team.lf 20 teams enter, the
first place team will also receive
$75 for trave!expen8ell. Bails will
be furnished and the entry fee Is
$85. All teams must be ASA
sapctloned and legitimate Class
D teams. For more Information,
contact Mike Spackey at 1-3859372.
I

•

~'

�Tuuday, July 19, 1988
0

U. S. selects final
four for boxing team.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. CUPI) Now that the nation's top ama·
leur boxers have been pared to a
12-man Olympic team, U.S.
OlympiC coach Tom Coulter says
they can better prepare to wln
medals at Seoul.
The team was selected from
the best 96 boxers who competed
In the OlympiC Trials that began
July 5. The final four spots were
filled Sunday In the second day of
the Box·Off.
- ''This has been a very difficult
two weeks for I!Verybody," Coul·
ter said Sunday. ''It'll get a lot
better when we get out of here.
Now the controversy Is going to

stop."

""" ~·

The past four days were
especially difficult. Coulter was
named head coach Thursday
night, replacing Ken Adams, who
was suspended for allegedly
· assaulting another amateur boxIng official. Also on Thursday,
three boxers were disqualified
from the Box·Off because they
tested positive for drugs at the
.trials.
On Friday, Sugar Ray Leonard
as he Is brushed back to second base In third Inning as New York
quit
as an advisor to the Olympic
shortstop Kevin Elster appUes the tag too late. Cincinnati won the
team because he said he was
game, 2-1. UPI
being Ignored by the coaches,
and because he thought U.S.
Army coach Hank Johnson
should bave been named head
coach. Johnson agreed with
Leonard, criticized Coulter and
DANVERS, ·Mass. (UP!) - A has refused an offer· to serve as
new victory has assured Colleen an assistant.
Walker she won't repeat her old
A few disputed deCisions
performances at the U.S. enabled politics to overshadow
Women's Open.
the 15 fights In the Box·Off even
In
three
tries
at
the
Open,
more.
worked three Innings to pick up
. Coulter, a 57·year·old tavern
his second save. Bryn Smith, 6-6, Walker has failed to make the
cut. But Sunday's triumph at the
owner from Syracuse, N.Y.,
was the loser.
Boston Five Classic was by eight
can't walt to get the Olympic
Cubs 8, Giants 3
she
finished
with
a
strokes
and
boxers and alternates to training
At Chicago, Vance Law singled
tournament
record
14·under·par
camp,
which begins Saturday In
In two runs during a slx·run
2'14.
For.t
Bragg,
N.C.
eighth Inning that helped Chi"It
will
be
a mellow camp,"
cago end their flve.game losing
Coulter said. "These are mature
streak. Craig Lefferts, 2-6, took
the loss. Pat Perry, 4·2, gained
the triumph despite yielding
MIDDLEPORT - The rain ..
Kevin Mitchell's 12th homer In
the eighth, which put the Giants came down in torrents breaking
a month long drought and no one
ahead 3·2.
really seemed to mind that the
Braves !H, Phlllles 8-4
pony league tournament being
At Philadelphia, rookie Ricky held at General Hartinger Park
Five games Saturday and four
Jordan hit his second homer tn was washed out.
Sunday got the 1988 Kyger Creek
two days to help Philadelphia
It was the tiotlom of the third Little League tournament under·
beat Atlanta In the second game inning and New Haven held a 2·1 way over the weekend.
and gain a split of their double- lead over Pomeroy In the conso·
Action will resume this evenheader. In the first game, Andres
lalion game when play was . lng, weather permitting.
Thomas raced home with the
halted . .New Haven had posted
Saturday, Point Pleasant Peowinning run in the 11th inning
two runs In the first after Mike ples Bank beat the Gallipolis Red
when first baseman Greg Gross
Harbour had been hit by a pitch, Sox, 8·5. The Racine Cards
dropped a throw for an error to stole second and scored on aWes bounced the Orioles, 17·6 while
give the Braves a victory.
Bumgardner single. Bumga· Pt. Plaeasant PSM downed Nel·
Phillies starter David Palmer
rardner, In turn, stole second and sonvllle,12·1. Coolville Bank One
5-6, was the winner In the second
rode home on Milch Harbour's defeated Mason VFW, 13·8 and
game. Steve Bedrosian earned
base hit.
finally the Mason County County
his 16th save. German Jimenez
Pomeroy plated one In the first Bar Association edged the Galli·
0-3, was the loser. Bruce Ruff!~
on Jason Wright's single. his polls A's, 3·2.
suffered the loss In the flrstgame
steal of second and a fielding
In Sunday'sgames, the Middlewhile Charlie Puleo Improved to
error
that
allowed
Wright
to
port
Cards blanked the Tuppers
2-3.
.
.;;core.
·
Plains Bears, 10·0. The Cards D.
With Pomeroy at bat in the McLoud led off the game with a
lower third , Eric Heck led off homer. The Bears David Koenig
Reds 2, Mets I
At Cincinnati, Danny Jackson with a single, Joe McElroy had fanned 12 batters.
•
In the second game, Cheshire's
allowed three hits over 5even drawn a walk and Wright was at
Innings and Cincinnati overcame " lh~ plate when the game was Bobcats edged the Gallipolis
hitiE&gt;ss pitching for five Innings postponed. Play will be resumed Yankees, 10·8. Cheshire's Matt
by Sid Fernandez to defeat New from that spot on Wednesday • Rhodes went three for four with
York. Jackson, 11 ·5, struck out evening. weather permitting,
six and walked three. John starling at 6 p.m., according tp
Franco pitched 1 1·3 Innings for tournament director Perk Ault.
his 17th. save. Fernandez, 5·7,
struck out five.

,,

'

OESTER BEATS THROW - Cincinnati secondbaseman Ron
Oester b als the throw from New York flrstbaseman Gary Carter

Dodgers continue hot.spree;
Reds slip ..past NY Mets, ·2-1
By MICHAEL J. SULLIVAN
UPI Sports Writer
Tim Leary Is convinced less
rest is best for his performance ·
and Monday he supported his
own theory with his National
League-leading fourth shutout of
the year.
Leary pitched a five· hitter and
Mike Marshall homered to lead
off the ninth Inning Monday night
to spark the Los Angeles Dodgers
t o their sixth straight victory ,1·0
over the St. Louis Cardinals .
"I'm getting to pitch more
now," Leary said. "I'm feeling
more comfortable."
Leary. 9·6, pitched with just
three days rest for the second
time this season. He also·threw a
s hutout In May at Philadelphia
when he had the short rest.
"I prefer to go on three days
rest, because I get more s tarts
that way ," Leary said. "I feel
fine."
Which made the Cardinals bats
Ill.

"We can do nothing with the
bats, absolutely nothing," Her·
zog said. "Damn , you can' t win
without any runs . "
The Cards were shut out for the
lOth time, mos t in the National
League, and they have scored
just 328 runs. second fewest in the
NL. Las 1year , they were blanked
only live times and were not shut
out until Aug. i 2.
Marshall drille d a 1·1 pitch
from Todd Worre ll, 4·6, into the
left·fleld bleachers for his 12th
homer.
"!hit it a little bi t off the end (of
the bat )," Marshall said. "I hit It
good , got good extension. But thi s
is a big ballpar k and I wasn ' t s ure

.
if if would go out. "
Leary, who had an 8.18 ERA
against St. Louis in two previous
starts this season, improved to
9·6. He struck out four and
walked one in his sixth complete
game and has pitched 16 straight
scoreless innings.
The right·hander did not allow
a Cardinal to advance beyond
first base until there were two out
In the seventh. Terry Pendleton,
who had reached on a fielder's
choice, moved to second when
Tony Pen a beat out an infield
single. But Leary Induced Luis
Alicea to ground out to end the
inning.
St. Louis' Bob F&amp;sch, who was
making his fourth start, allowed
no runs and two hits In five
innings. Larry McWilliams came
in and yielded two hits in three
Innings .
Elsewhere, Houston defeated
Montreal 6·1, Chicago ·stopped
San Francisco 8·3, Cincinnati
slipped past New York 2·1,
Atlanta beat Philadelphia 9-8 In
II Innings In the first game and
fell to the Phillies 4·1 In the
second, and San Diego at Pitts·
burgh was rained out.
In the American League, It
was : New York 7, Texas 2;
Boston 6, Minnesota 5; Milwau·
kee 6, Kansas Cit y I; Detroit 12,
Sea ttle 3; Toronto 12, California
2; and Oakland 7, Cleveland 2.
A.stros 6, Expos l
At Montreal, Kevin Bass hit a
three· run homer to help Joaquin
Andujar win his first game In
more than a year. Andujar, 1·4,
lasted six innings, giving up six
hits, one run, walking three and
s triking out none. Danny Darwin

Walker looking
forward to Open

Pony tournament
rained out Monday

By The Bend

athletes and they will respond to
that. These guys will come
together."
The 12-man team consists of
super he-avyweight Riddick
Bowe, 201-pound Ray Mercer,
178-pound Andrew Maynard, 165pound Anthony Hembrick, 156pound Roy Jones, 147-pound
Kenneth Gould, 139·pound Todd
Foster, 132-pound RomalUsEllls,
125-pound Kelcle Banks, 119·
pound Kennedy McKinney, 112·
pound Arthur Johnson and 106pound Michael Carbajal.
The U.S. boxing program has
come under fire since diSappointIng showings tri the 1987 Pan Am
Games and In a dual meet
against Cuba early this year. But
some of the Olympic boxers with
great amateur experience fore·
cast success In Seoul.
"I think we'll do great as a
team," said Banks, a world and
Pan Am champion who made the
team with two disputed decisions
against Ed Hopson over the
\feekend. "I'm expecting our
team to wln 80 percent of the
gold."
Go111d, a 1986 world champion,
added: ''The lmportant.thlng for
all of us to do now Is io go to Seoul
as a team -a team- and bring
home gold and celebrate."
The U.S. team has much to live
up to. The 1976team won five gold
medals and, after the 1980
boycott, u.s. boxers won nine .
gold medals In 1984- the year of
the communist bloc boycott.
With the top-ranked Cuban team ••
planning to boycott Seoul, the top
competition will come from the
Soviet Union, East Germany and
host South Korea.
"Our medal chances wiiLall
depend on our draw, what comes
out of that machine and what
bracket we will be ln." Coulter
said.

New pastor arrives
The Rev. O'Quln Kelly Is the
new pastor of the Syracuse,
Mlddleport and Harrisonville
Presbyterian Churches. He began hls work In the area July 1.
Offices for the Presbyterian
Ministry are located on North
Fourth Street, Middleport.
Rev. Kelly Is also serving as
coordinator for the Hanging
Rock area which Includes Presb-·
yterlan Churches In the nine
southeauernOhloCounties.Rev.
Kelly and family restde at 2990
Thlrd Street, Syracuse.
Prior to coming to Meigs
County Rev. Kelly served parIshes In southern Ohio, eastern
Tennessee and northern Florida.
A south Texas native, Rev.
Kelly graduated from Texas

IRONTON Lower Ohio
River Valley Basin Chapter 8 of
the ArchaeologiCal Society of '
Ohio monthly meeting will be
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the Star Bank
building in Ironton.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Chamber of Commerce will
·meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Middleport VIllage Hall.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Troop 249
Boy Scout Committee will meet
at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Drew Webster Post39, American
Legion home In Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Dance wlll be
held' Friday, 9 to 12 p.m., at
Eastern High School. Everyone
welcome.

•

KC Little League tourney
.features 9 weeken4 ,g ames

Physical exams
slated July 21

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
High School Athletic Director
Gordon Fisher announced today
that physical examinations for
all students who will participate
in the fall sports program (le:
football. volleyb·aJi, cross coun·
try , cheerleaders) will be con·
dueled at the high scho()l on
Thursday, July 21, beginning at
10 a.m.
It Is imperative that athletes
at tend this session as no make up
dates are anticipated. Doctors
James Conde and John Ridgway
will be the attending physicians.
Mr. Fisher also stated that
football players will be fitted for
helmets on Thursday at noon.

-

two homers, The Yanks Eric
Clary had a homer In the top of
the fifth ..
In game eight, Syracuse
Greenhouse downed the Tuppers
Plains Tigers, 16·10. J. Northup
homered for Syracuse.
In the final Sunday tilt, Pt.
Pleasant Napa downed theGalll·
polis White Sox, 7-3. Napa's
Jamie Stewart had a two·run
homer In the third.
Monday·, It Wi!S supposed to be
PSM of Pt.Pleasant vs. Fruths
and Coolville · ,vs, Gallipolis
Senators. &gt;-\
' ,.
This ev!!n.lng, the Middleport
Cards are slated to play Racine II
at 5:30 and Cheshire's Bobcats
take on Wilkesville at7. Syracuse ·
battles Bidwell at 8:30.
Wednesday, Napa of Pt. Plea·
sant meets Rutland at 6 while
Peoples Bank meets Racine I at
7:30.

University to work as a
shelltlsb biologist with the Coastal F!_sber~ Dlvlllon of the
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. He later served as a
fishery biologist with the U. S.
Fish &amp; Wildlife service throughout tbe southe11.11tern tJ:os.
Following graduation with a
masters or Divinity from Colum·
bla Theological Seminar In
Atlanta, Rev. Kelly continued
study receiving a Doctorate of
Ministry degree !rom McCormlck Seminary In Chicago.
A former president of the
Sou then Ohio Draft Horse Associ·
alton, Rev. Kelly and family
continue to be Interested In the
promotion and use of draft
· horses.

SATURDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Ri&gt;ck
Springs United Methodist
Church Is having an Ice cream
social on Saturday, .at 5 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

SUNDAY

••
j

\

POMEROY ..,: •The Singer
family reunion will be held
Sunday at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy. Potluck
dinner at 1 p.m. Family and
frlends 'welcome.
RUTLAND .:!.. The 20th annual
reunion or the Taylor-Harper
families wlll be held ' Sunday at
Forest Acres Park In Rutland.
Potluck dinner will begin at 1
p.m. Those ' attending should
bring table service and beverage
for their family. For more
Information, contact Ruby Rife
at 992-3464.

piCnic or the Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League wlll be hetd Monday, 7
p.m., at the clubhouse. All
members and families are asked
to attend. Bring a covered dish,
table service and drink. The club
)VIII provide the meat.
Bible IIChoills
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School at Pomeroy Church of
ChriSt will be held through July
22 from 6: 30 to 8: 30 p.m. each
evening. Dlrectof will be Ann
Fields. Classes for kindergarten
through teenage. Everyone
welcome.
POMEROY -Vacation Bible
School at Silver Run Baptist
Church will be through Friday,
July 22, from 6 to 8 p.m. All
chlldren are Invited.
CARPENTER - Bible School
at the Mt. Union Baptist Church
will be through Friday, July 22.
from 9 to 11 a.m. The church Is
located off State Route 143 on
County Road 10 CC1.1rpenter Hlll
Road) , two miles south of
Carpenter.
POMEROY - Bible School at
the Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Church, 75 Pearl St., will be held
through Friday, July 22,1rom 7 to
9 p.m. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible school will be held at the
Middleport Wesleyan Bible HoD·
ness Church through Friday,
July 22. Classes will be held from
7 to 9 p.m. each evening. The
pastor, the Rev. Roy McCarty
Invites all children of the community to attend.

SILVER RUN - Vacation
Bible school at the Silver Run
Baptist Church will be held
MONDAY
througll Friday from 6 to 8 p.m.
POMEROY - The annual
each evening. The school is open
. to all children.

TueSday, July 19, 1988
Pega 5

-, -People in the news------·

A&amp;M

REV. O'QUIN KELLY

Community calendar
TUESDAY

The Daily Sentinel

CHESTER - Chester Com·
munlty Bible School wlll be held
July 25-29. 9 to 11 a.m .. at Chester
United Methodist Church.
Classes will be from nursery age
through sixth grade.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church of Christ wlll hold Vacation Bible School July 25-29 from
9: 30 to 12 noon each morning.
Classes will be for ages 3 through
junior high. A carnival will follow
classes on July 30 from 11 a.m. to
2 p.m. This year's Bible School
theme Is "Champions For

Jesus."
·Taylor· Harper reunion
RUTLAND - The 20th annual
reunion of the Taylor-Harper
families will be held Sunday,
July 24, at Forest Acres Park In
Rutland. Potluck dinner will
~egln at 1 p.m. Those attending
should bring table service and
beverage for their ramny: For
more Information, contact Ruby
Rife at 992·3464.
Senior picture pickups
,
ROCK SPRINGS - Seniors of
Meigs High School can pickup
senior pictures at the high school
from 9 a.m. t.o 2 p.m., Mol)day
through Friday of this week.

events was a dinner and dance at New York primary, said he had
The Breakers mansion to benefit no Intentlon of attending the
the Newport County Preserva· convention as a spectator. ' 1
tion Society and her country's don't believe that the mayor of
own Royal Oak Foundation. But the city of New York should ever
some of the Newport elite refused be a political spectator In a
to at tend The Breakers solree·on convention, " he said. "That ·
·grounds the princess was not a would mean I'd be on the outside
suitable representative of the with my little nose pressed
royal (amlly because of her against the window looking ln. "
divorce and well-publicized ro· As for Corrigan, 81, he's making
mantle affairs. "All of us, Ithlnk, his first trip to the Emerald Isle
would rather have had some since his historic wrong-way
other guest of honor," said a flight 50 years ago. He landed
Newporter known for his strict Monday In Dublin wearing the
standards, who said he spoke for same flight jacket he . had on
about 30 or 40 of hls peers. ''Who when he made his notorious trip
could admire her for any while trying to get to California.
reason?''
SINGING FOR UNCF: Whit· ·
ney Houston's lone U .S. concert ~----------­
in 1988 will be an Aug. 27 benefit
at New York's Madison Square
Garden and It will be thE'
fulfillment of a family tradition.
The show Is a benefit lor the
Unl.ted Ne'gro College Fund - a
cause that her her mother, singer
Clssy Houston, and her cousin,
Dionne Warwick, have both been
Involved ln. Houston says one of
the first times she sang In public
was at age 14 during her mother's
UNCF benefit COQCert at Carnegie Hall.
KOCH ON THE OUTSIDE:
Instead of going to Atlanta,
where all the Democratic big·
wigs are, New York Mayor Ed
Koch ht:&gt;aded off to join Douglas
"Wroag Way" Corrigan In Ireland. Before heading out, Koch
urged Michael Dukaids and
Jesse Jackson to work together
even though he has been left out
of the presldent·maklng process.
Koch, who backed AI Gore in the

By WILI4AM C. TROTr
United Preee Inter nat tonal
SELlECK A Brr: Tom Sel·
leek, outfitted In a cap and jersey
No. 14, took batting practiCe with
the Baltimore Orioles Sunday
and was the target of a little
baseball humor. The athletlc"Magnum, P.I." star, who once
was a basketball player at USC,
is In Baltimore making a movie,
"Her Alibi." He showed up at
Memorial Stadium Sunday to
take a few swings, hitting a
couple of batting-practice home
runs. Howevl!r, he made the
mistake of putting off two Minnesota Twins, AI Newman and
Mark Davidson, when they &lt;!Sked
for his autograph. So Newman
found a towel, filled It with
shaving cream and left It where
Selleck would be sure to grab it.
Sure enough, when Selleck fin·
!shed hitting, he went for the
towel and wiped shaving cream
all over his face. "I got my
revenge," Newman said.
RED RETURNS FROM COI.r
lAPSE: Red Skelton collapsed
during a benefit In steamy
Honolulu on the eve of hls· 75th
birthday but returned to the .
stage as Millon Berte led the
audience In singing "Happy
Birthday" to him. Skelton told
the audience he felt Ill and tlien
apparently was overcome ·by the
heat when he fell Into the arms of
the sound crew at a March of
Dimes benefit. Two doctors from
the audience tended to Skelton
until emergency workers could
give him oxygen backstage.
Skelton was conscious the whole
time and refused further medical
treatment. While Skelton was
Offstage,
audience Berle
and Came
took OUt
overOf the
the
microphone until Red made It
back .for the birthday salute.

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~~~;;;;~

RACINE MERCHANTS HARVEST FESTIVAL SEPT.
17TH. ANYONE WANTING TO MAKE
RESERVATIONS FOR A STAND OR TO ENTER
PARADE PHONE 949-2800 OR 949-2140.

'

PRINCESS PANNED IN
NEWI'ORT: Princess Margaret
didn't have enough snob appeal
for some of the tony crowd In
Newport, R.I. Margaret, sister of
Queen Elizabeth II, repacked her
82 suitcases and headed back to

.

"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"

~~~~rls:~~c~f~~~~o~';:d~~~

RACINE DEPARTMENTRACINE
STORE
OHIO

town's attractions and made the

3RD STREET

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the annual Middleport Block
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J~dlvlduals

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Se.fJj
or groups wish·
tng to display or sell items such
as arts, crafts or food are asked
to contact Teresa Kennedy at
992-6494 or 992-2026.
. Tentative plans call for a
two-day celebration with Sunday, Sept. 11 activities being held
at Hartlnger Park.
Music, food, softball. basketball, golf and swimming are
some or the activities planned for
Sept. 11.

af:U OJ

1(~~,
\'-'

0 tlifl.tr
/~·
;j5 (~

re~

-Quirks in the news--__,;.____

.B in•plloilg-

White Houae to ret special TON !UP!) - Forty-six years
shipment: SALT LAKE CITY ago Monday, on July 18, 1942, a
!UP!) - President Reagan will record deluge occurred at Smeth·
soon have 18 gallons of his port, Pa., as 30.7 Inches of rain
favorite. flavor Ice cream -jelly · fell In just six hours, National
bean.
Weather Service records show.
The jelly bean lee cream was
The downpours and resultant
air-freighted Monday night to flooding In Pennsylvania were
Reagan after Sen. Jake Garn, devastating, the weather service
. R-Utah, said It passed -the taste said.
' test.
A year ago Monday, cool
"On a scale of 10. I'd give It a weather prevailed in the western
10," said Garn.
United States, with seven cities
The Snelgrove Ice Cream Co. reporting record lows for the
made 70 gallons of.the tee cream, date. Including · Alamosa Colo.,
flavored with cherry and orange · with a low of 38 degrees. The low
and packed with tiny jelly beans. of 52 at Bakersfield, Callf., was a
and handed out free samples to
employees, state officials and
reporters before wrapping Rea·
gan's batch.
But Garn said at least some of
Reagan's 18 gallons will be
missing' 'after the Secret Service
tests the lee cream."
Richard Snelgrove received
the Ice cream order from Reagan
about two weeks ago when he and
other congressional candidates
were In Washington, D.C., · to
meet with administration
officials.
He said the shipment Is the
company's second presidential
order. Snelgrove Ice Cream Co.
also sent a shipment to Franklin
D. · Roosevelt, he said, during
Roosevelt's first term In office.
. Out of tbe paat: WASHING-

Get 'em
whi it's hot.

record for the month of July.
Residents on both coasts
slogged through another day of
muggy heat Monday, but longawaited heavy rains bathed
dusty Midwestern farm fields,
snapping the stx·month drought
In parts of Iowa and leaving."the
worst of the summer behind us,"
weather officials said.
On the West Coast, the temper·
ature 908red Monday to a record
113 In Redding, Call!.. and
Eureka, Calif., tied. Its recoril
high for the date with a relatively
warm 67. The normal high for the
time of year Is 60.
•

•

Jack M. Levine, D.O.

•

•

.:;tnnounces tlie opening of liis practice in

If you are ano have a safe
driving record. we probably
can save you money on your
car insurance. with the
Medalist Auto Policy. call us
today.

At

reat. Savings
Too!
Price reductions on the Simplicity 3000, 4000, 5000, 6000, and
7000 Serles.lawn tractors with floating mower decks for the
smoothest possible cut. Hydrostatic drive available on 12 thru
20 HP gear drive on 8 &amp; 12 models. . .

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SYRACUSE T·BALL TEAM · Members of the
Syracu!M! T·ball team are, from' left to right. Top
Row: J~rod &lt;:Jay, Daniel Bable, Cara Allh,
Autwnn Thomas, and Adam Cumings. Second

Row: Matthew Warner, Donnie Prbfflll, Matthew
Ba ble, Lee WIIUams, Jeremy Fisher, and m lsslnJ
Is Jason Cundiff. Co~Ulbes: Ray Proffitt, Unda
· Fisher, mlsslnr Is Rex Cumlnp, Sheila Proffitt,

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
. 992-6687
ttat• Auto

ln••·C..,elll••

(jenera! Su'lfery
at ·

Pfeasant 'J/afky :Hospital
Sidte211

·'

Correction

$ 795

It was Incorrectly reported
that lfarrlsonvUle Chapter No.
255, Order of Easlern Star, will
· observe frlendsblp n'-ht at the
temple on July 23. It lhould have
beetll'fPOI'Ied that Har~vllle
Muonlc Lod8e No. 411 will
observe frlendlblp night on July
23, beginning with a pot luck
dinner at 6: 30 p.m.

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
"WH~t f11rlu 1"' 6tgul #H ,., "

•th &amp; MAIN

IEEDSYILLE, 01110

'

''
v

\'

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS COMING ON AUGUST 12th
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
AUG. 5th

Suine patients
MMUfag tMoutJn 1'ritfoy
8:30a.m. . 5 p.m.

llH t!U~~· ·~·· FJ .HOSPITAL
CDil {304) 6,75·1460 for appointments

CALL DAVE' OR BRIAN TO PLACE YOUR
AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITIOW
CALL 992·2155 FOR DETAILS
l

•~

..•
•

•

•
•

.'

�'-98

Pomeloy-Middlaport. Ohio

6-The Deily Sentinel

Tuaaday. July 19, 1988

'
•

·Richards to Democrats: 'We can do ·better'
ATLANTA (UPI) - Texas
Treasurer Ann Richards
.sounded a clarion call to the
··Democratic National Convention
and the country to reject divide
and-conquer RepubliCans and
elect Michael Oukakls, . who
. knows " we can do better. "
With stirring words for her
party and biting barbs for the
GOP. Richards declared in her
: keynote speech at the convention's opening session Monday
night, "Our strength lies in the
men and women who go to work
every day, who struggle to
balance family and jobs and who
should never, ever be forgotten ...
Interrupted 55 times by enthu·
slastic applause, the 54-year-old
_politician outlined the party's
philosophical ambitions in the
highlight of the first of the
four-day conclave. which also
saw the forging of a peace pact ·
between Dukakis ann his chief
rival, Jesse Jackson, and the
political rehabilitation of former
President Jimmy Carter.
As the gavel banged down to
open the quadrennial convention,
the predictions of a Democratic
Party working as one for the fall
campaign started coming truebecause Dukakls and Jackson
announced they had resolved
their dltrerences.
More than 5,000 delegates and
alternates packing the ,Omnl
· Coliseum joyfully waved
banners. donned boate~s and
·cheered speakers who · confi·
dently Insisted the White House,
after eight .years of President
Reagan. Is ripe for the Democratic ptckiil~t.
Even the size of the Omnl, the
smallest arena the Democrats
have chosen for a modern na·
tiona! convention, did not disturb
the happy party faithful. The
. Ohio delegation is seated In the
stands, not on the floor, but Peter
Rizopulos, a delegate from Ak·
ron. said, "This Is . my ·first

C&lt;&gt;nvention; this Is so much fun , I
don't care where I sit."
Tonight, delegates are to take
up the party platform, and
e&lt;&gt;nslderation ,Is likely to be
notably shorter and less acrimonious because of the ca,ndldates' rapprochement.
Jackson had been threatening
floor lights on as many as 13
platform planks, a debate that
&gt;Vould have cut into the prlmetimellot set aside for the Chicago
civil rights leader's convention
address tonight.
After six days of skirmishing,
W'bi"b bad clouded blue-sky assessments of post-convention
u nlty, Dukakls and Jackson met '
for a long breakfast Monday and
later appeared together to say
they had agreed ·on a subject
dearest to the runner-up: his role
In the campaign after this week
despite the selection of Texas
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen as Dukakis' s
running mate.
The agreement's exact nature
was unclear; Dukakls, the Massachusetts governor, was satisfiEd to say only, "I want Jesse
Jackson to play a major role In
this campaign. ! want his supporters who are o~t there by the
rn.lll!ons to be deeply involved in
this campaign. They are going to
be an essential part of the
coalition we build beyond this
convention."
.Jackson responded. "The excitement · we feel in AAtlanta'
tooay is that hope has been
unleashed op 'our nation."
ln related developments:
~-The convention voted to
adopt key rules changes sought
by Jackson to require all states
with primaries to pick convention delegates by the size of a
candidate's popular vote. Tbe
rules go Into effect In 1992.
-House Speaker Jim Wright of
TeJ&lt;as was elected convention
ch.airman by acclamation despite tbe concerns of some Demo-

crats over a House ethics committee probe of his financial
dealings.
-The man who was the early
favorite lor the presidential
nomination, former Sen. Gary
Hart of Colorado, turned up not
as a last-minute hopeful or even
as a delegate but as a columnist
for the Scripps-Howard newspaper group.
Richards was the first woman
to win statewide office In 50 years
when she was elected Texas
treasurer In 19&amp;1. Chosen last
month by the Democratic National Committee to deliver the
keynote address, she was lauded
as a dazzling speaker with a
stinging wit freely applied to
Republicans.
Her reputation preceding h~r.
enthralled conventioneers
flowed onto the already
crammed floor Monday night
and cheered as Richards,
dressed In cool aqua, offered a
gentle plea for her "near!y
perfect" granddaughter Lily.
"I just hope - like her
grandparents and her greatgrandparents before - that Lily
goes on to raise her kids with the
promise that echoes In homes
across America: That we can do
better. And that's what this
election's all about."
Carter, basically abandoned to
the trout streams near his home
In Plains since his 1980 defeat by
Reagan, was welcomed lleartlly;
as the orchestra played "Blue
Skies," the former Georgia governor beamed his famous grin.
"Our. party Is best equipped to
meet the challenge ol change
because we are the party of
change," he said. "We are the
party of diversity. Look around
this hall. you'll see all the
beautiful variety that makes
AmeriCan strong and special and
great ....
"Let us go forth from this
convention united behind our .

candidates and our Ideals - and
with our eyes ·on the prize."
Carter found a warm reception
despite having to follow RIchards. who said that Dukakis
telephoned her after the speech
to say, "He thought I was great,
but he said he wondered what he
woulcl say now since I took ·a ll of
his lines. "
ntchards, IntrOduced to the
strains of "Deep In Jhe Heart of
Texas," her corona of white hair
shining under the television
lights, got a big laugh about a
minute Into her speecli when she
poked tun at Vice President
George Bush's claim o!Texas as
hi~ adopted home state.
With her sugary Waco drawl,
she said, "I'm dellahted to be
here with you thLI evening
because after listening to George
Bush all these years, I figured
you ..needed to know what a real
Texas accent sounds -like."
Later, another laugh arose
with the crack: "Poor George.
He was born with a silver foot In
his mouth."
Loud cheers and applause also
greeted her mention of Dukakis
and Jackson, but a reference to
Bentsen - "my friend and
teacher" - was received with
little enthusiasm exceptfrom the
Texas .delegation. Some Minnesota delegates began chanting
''No Contra aid,'' referring to the
senator's past support for U.S.
111111tary aid to the rebels in
. Nicaragua.
·
In her 35-m!nute keynote, Richards, a college debate champion, wove together down-home
expressions, passionate explanatiOns of Democratic traditions
and touching excerpts from a
letter she received recently from
Lorena, Texas, woman who
told of her struggle to make ends
meet and said, ''I believe people
like us are forgotten in
Anlerica."
"Well," said Richards, "of
course you believe you're forgotten. Because, you have been.
"This RepubliCan administration treats us as lfwewerepleces
of a puzzle that can' t fit together.
They've tried to put us Into
compartments and separate us

a

NOTICE OF
coal and other mineral• wrth
APPOINTMENT OF
the right of entry for the purFIDUCIARY
of prolpiCting for. d•·
poae
On J"ly 7, 1988. In the veloping,
producing or operMeig1
County Probate
Court, Cau No. 26902,

Roy W. Proffitt, 91&amp;&amp; Edi-

son Street NE. LouitiiVille.
OH. 441541

away Monday. AI right, Jesse Jackson supporter
Richard Shorter, of East Orange, N.J., holds up
hls sign. (UP I)

Bentsen looks ·forward to Bush job
ATLANTA (UP I) -Sen. Lloyd
Bentsen, D-Texas, said today he
has no hesitation about taking
over George Bush's job because
the vice president now is very
much "part of the process."
Contrary to some Democratic
claims that the soon- to-be Republican standard-bearer has had
, little clout In the Reagan adminIstration, Bentsen credited Bus~
in part for making the No. 2 slot
more substantive ..
' "There's been a change In the
job of the vice president," said
Bentsen. "Now he' s been put
inside the loop, he is privy to the
memos going on and off the
president 's desk.
"He' s a part of the process
pow," he told ABC's "Good
Morning America" program.
&lt; Making the rounds on the early
-morning news programs, Bentsen was also reminded that Bush
had set aside many of his own
more moderate views when he
teamed up with President Reagan in 1980.
. With a laugh, Bentsen said,
"Let me say, I haven't accused
anyone of 'voodoo' economics, "
referring to the highly publicized
Public Notice
FOR SALE
SHERIFF'S VEHICLES
Pureu•nt to Section
307.12
O.R.C.
th,e
M&lt;!lga County Commia·
aionera
w~l
receive
.....d bidl unt~ 12 noon
on Wedtleadey, JulY 27,
1988. In the office
of the Meigs County
Commissioners located in
the CounhouN, Pom...,.,. Ohio, wlthbidltobe
CJt*Nid 111 1:30 P.M. ond
tMd llloud tor the ule of
the fDIIowlng vtlridea no
In UN by the Sher·

!!'!""

ml~-

1 Hemeniedl

e~~mper

terrn coined by Bush in his
unsuccessful run aga lnst Reagan
In tile 1980 presidential race and
abandoned upon becoming Rea gan's runnllig mate.
Bentsen, tapped by Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls to
share the Democratic ticket and
looking toward to nomination
Thursday , night at the 40th
Democratic Nat.ional Convention. also explained that his
Sen&gt;~te votes to support the tax
cuts of Reagan's first term, and
military support for the Contra
rebEls In Nicaragua , though at
odds with policy positions of
Dukakis. were based on the
situation at the time .
At the same time, when asked
if he would again endorse a
Contra support proposal, Bentsen Indicated that he might.
pointing to a Senate resolution
last week that held out the threat
of 1urther military aid If the
San&lt;l!nlsta government did not
come to the negotiating table in
goo&lt;! faith .
'':1 voted for a resolution the
other night thai in effect was
sup:POrting, in a way, a rather
veiled threat I would say to the

Public Notice
trailer. M iiiimum bid:

$100.00 .
1 1983 Plymouth 4-dr.
Minimum bid:
$300.00
1 1979 Pon.t iac Sunblrd.
Minimum bid: $76.00
1 1977 Ch-rolot Concours. Mi11imum bid:

$76.00

t 1976 Buick Skylark.
Minimum llid: *76.00
1 .1982 Cnevrolet Impala. Minimum bid:
176.00
Vehidls moy be inspected during doylight
houri II
the Meigo
County Garage, Rock

Sandinistas, if they didn't clean
up their act aQd turn that thing
around, there was still a possibilIty that Congress would reconsider Contra aid and add some
military aid," he said on CBS
''Good Morning.''
While supporting Reagan's tax
cut tn 1981, Bentsen told ABC,
"At that time, the .economy
needed the stamina to get ·moving again. But it was not
anticipated at that time that
Reagan would at the same time
make as big a defense buildup as
he did make."
"After that I voted to see if we
couldn't close that gap in the
budget," he said .
Bentsen's selection upset Jesse
Jackson and triggered a preconvention standoff, partly· because the civil rights leaders
considers the .67-year-old Texas
senator part of the establishment
and partly because he was not
notified In advance of the
decision.
The tall, wealthy senator will
seek another term In the Senate
and the vice presidency at the
same time, a precedent set by
Lyndon B. Johnson In 1960.

Public Notice

·Public Notice

Sprinlia Road, 'Pomeroy,
NOTICE OF
Ohio, by making on ap- I '
APPOINTMENT OF
pointment with the Ser, FIDUCIARY
lff'o depo{lment.
On July 7, 1188, In the
Probete
Vehid11 to be aold "Ao Mel111 County
Ia" with no guoran1-. Court, CNe No. 26,181
Outoicle of envelope con- Lethe L. Profltu. 1110.0
Portllnd Road, Rectrre. Ohio
taining bido muat be 4tln1.cleerly marked 11 to whet cutrix of the eppointlld
eotate of AMce
vehicle being bid.
Jew«t Adomo, dec-od,
The Boord of Meigs ••• of 114424 c-•orv
Ponllnd,
Ohio
County Commiaoloneno Rood,
raserveo· the right to oc· 411770.
Robin E. Buck,
cept or reject any or 111
Probete Judge
bids.
Judith
R,
Wony Clerk
Meigs County (7) 19, 28
'
Commlaalonero
Mary Hobottrtt.., Cletk
12, 19, 2tc

E••

m

was appointed

ating for the ..me and the
right of occupancvy intof•r
u the ume it ntential to

oald prospecting. develop-

Adminiltrator of the estate ing, operating or producing .
of Ravmond A. Protfi.tt, de- Al1o rnerved to the St1te of
ceased. late of Route 1. Ohio, the uae of ttreams

flowing through oald lando
Portland. OH. 45770,
or abutting upon the same.
Robort E. Buck, and
so made of the bankt
Probate Judge
11 way of oec•Arv
By: Judith R. Worry, thereof
for the enjoyment and the
Deputy Clerk

·

171 12. 19, 28, 3tc

Public Notice

Plaintiff

vs.
WARREN L. PERRINE.
et al.,

Dafqndants

KEYNOTE SPEAKER- Alin Richards, Texas state treasurer, .
delivers the keynote address at the opening session of the
Democratic National Convention Monday. (UP!)
from each other. Their political .
theory is divide and conquer.''
Delegates screamed their loudest approval when Richards
accused Republ leans of lying to
the nation and defended Democrats as keepers of truth and
compassion.
"For eight straight years; the
leader of the greatest nation in
the free world has pretended to
us that he cannot hear our
questions over the noise of the
helicopter," she said. "We have a
lot of questions. And when we get
our questions asked, or there's a
leak, or an investigation, the only
answer we get Is, 'I don't know,'
or, 'I forgot. •
"You wouldn't accept that
answer from your children!" she
exclaimed to knowing laughter. ·
... 1 wouldn't. ... We're not going to
have the America we want until
we elect leaders who are going to
tell the truth- not most days, but
every day - leaders who don't
forget what they don't want to
know.''
Demilcrats, she .c oncluded,
"didn't tell us things were hard
because we were difference or

isolated or special Interests.
They brought us together and
they gave us a sense of national
purpose .... They did not lie to
us.,,

Austintown man is
Super Lotto winner
CLEVELAND (UP!) - An
Austintown man Monday redeemed a Super Lotto ticket
worth $6 million and will receive
20-annual payments of $240,000
after federal withholding taxes,
an Ohio Lottery Commission
spokesman said. ·
David F. Cormell was the
holder of the only ticket for
Saturday 's drawing with the
numbers 5, 8, 10, 14 , 18 and 35.
Some 4.2 million of the $1
tickets were sold.
There were 160 tickets containing five of the six numbers. worth
$1,000 each. And 7,784 tickets had
four correct numbers for a $62
payoff.
Wednesday's jackpot will be at
least $3 million.

Call No. 88-CV-73
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO : Warren l. Perrine, whose
last known addre11 was 596
Fourth Avenue, North Bruns-

wick, NJ 08902,

You art hereby notified
that you have been named a
Defendant In the action en·
titlltd Diamond Savings II
Loan Company, Plaintiff, vs.
Warren L. Perrine, et'al., De·
fendllnts. This action hili&amp;

bNn uaignlld Case No. 88·

CV-73, and is pending In the
Court of Common Plen
of Meigs County. Ohio,
46769. The prayer of the
Complaint demands judgment against the Defend·
ants, Warren L. Perrine,
Kathy Rerrine, now known
as Kathy Morris, in the sum
of Twenty-nine Thousand
One Hundred Thirty-nine
and
Ninety-one
Centt

(829, 139.91)u of Marchi,

1988, with interest thereon
at a rate of $7.158, and coals
of this action: that the mortgage nwned In the Complaint be foreclosed and that
the liens and/or interests in
or on said property. if any. be
marshalled and the real es-

tate t~la be quieted end 10ld
property sold In the foreclo, sure action and all amounts
due Plaintiff be paid from
tha proceedl of the sale.
You are required to an-

swer the Complaint within

twenty-eight (28) days after
the IUt publication of this
Notice, which will be published once etch w8ek for

the number of disputed Issues to
"l don't think It' s over yet, "
be presented to the delegates at said Kristin Farr, a Jackson
the Omnl Coliseum.
delegate from Redmond, Ore.
Late Monday, a source famil- "The platform still needs to be
iar with those talks said a worked out and the things that
scenario had been discussed that are Important to Jesse need to be
would give both sides victories on. in there."
Issues In line with the main thrust
"The platform Is already largely the product of negotiations.
o! the party in this election.
A plank caiHng for more and those negotiations will conassistance to health pro~ams tinue," agreed Dukakis delegate
for mothers and children was a David McDonald of Seattle.
likely winner for Jackson, while "(But) tf Dukakls says this Is
Dukakts might prevail on a what be wants, then he has the
strong defense position, the votes here to get It"
source said.
Alabama state Sen. Michael
Of the 13 issues on which Figures, who heads his state's
Jackson supporters on the 185- Jackson delegation, said resolumember platform committee tion of the minority planks issue
flied dissenting reports, their would determine how unified the
leader focused on four: raising Alabama delegation would be.
taxes for the wealthiest Amerl"All I want Is for a fair
cans, a five-year freeze on ORportunity to be heard and my
defense spending, a commltmetit views on the Issues received and
to a "no first use" policy with respected," Figures said.
regard to nuclear weapons, and
The talks between the two
Palestinian self-determination camps were being led by former
as an essential part of Middle Rep. Michael Barnes, D-Md., on
East policy.
behalf of the Dukakis campatgh, ·
Jackson delegates said they and Eleanor Holmes Norton,
were concerned about getting former head of the Equal Emtheir Issues before the full ployment Opportunity Commisconventlon and were awaiting__sion, representing Jackson .
word from the national
They were broken off by
campaign,
Jackson last week· after Tues "We're just following our lead- day's announcement bv Dukakis
ers," said , the Rev. Edward that he had chosen sen. Lloyd
Freeman, chi!'! of the Kansas Bentsen of Texas as hi• running
Jackson caucus.
mate.

THE

HOLZER CLINIC
Meigs Co. -iranch
Main Phone Number Has Been
·Changed

(6)

succeuive weeki.

The leat date of publiCIItion
will remain on the 16th day
of Augult, 1988, and the

twenty-eight (28) days for

antwer wnl commence on
that date. In the cue of your
failure to answer or otherwise raspond al requMted
by .the Ohio Ruloa of Civl
Procedure. judgment by de·
fauh
will be rendered
against you and for the relief
demanded in the Complaint.

Dated thio 7th day of July,
1988.

Larry E. Spencer.
Clerk of Courts

17112. 19, 26;
181 2, 9. 16. 6tc
Public Notice
NOTICE

lume 309, Page 3 't1 , Maigs
County DHd Records.
Bldo to be oubmltttd by
prenntment to the office of
the Meigs County Commissioners at the Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio. and to be r•
celved by 11 a.m. on Wed·
nesdey, August 10, t988, at
which time they will be
opened and reed aloud.
The. real e1t1te wet ap-

preioed at U1,060.00.

The Meigs County Board
of Commistioners reterves
the righ1 to reject any and 411
bids.

Meiga County Commission••
Mary Hobstetter, Clerk

(7112, 19, 2tc

The County of Meigs il a r•
cipient of HUD Community
De\.!8opment Stock Grau
fundi awarded by the Ohio
D e p - of Otwelopm.,.

COf''*' end other vltllecceu
points within the Middlaport
Central Bulin•• Dillrict.
Compl•ion of the project w11
make the entire 1rea acca•ble to the phylicllly htnd·
capped and frail eldarty population.

Ohio Revita:l Code for con·
tracts lela than •10,000.00.
the County wiD dilpt!IW8 with
cultomary advertising .w ent• into informll bidding. Such
bidl wiU be beHd on the Jo.
west and bel1 C08t for work to
be p..tormed. Tha Meigs
County Commissioners res·
erve the right to waive til bidl

wh,.,.,.,
mined.

couoa deter-

fur

Plano. oopecificatlona, and to-

cation oftheproiec'lareavlil•
ble for inspection at the fttejgs
County Courthouta. Commit·
lion_. a Pffice. PomtlrO"f,
Ohio, amd Middleport v•age
Hall belweenthehouraaf9:00
A.M. and 4:00P.M .• Mondey
ttwough FridBV, AI HIRED
labor .,..._.st be paid Davii-Be·
con prwailing wag• fof
Meigs County.
Efther a Performence Bond
for 100% of the contract
price, or Payment Bond on
the pan of the Contractor for
100% of the contract price,
will be required with the in-

available at the Commitaioner' s Office. Contractors mutt
prep•e a second page ghting a
brief hiltory of their 81Cpai-

the Northeast corner of Mabel Reed's Lot; thence S. 82

dog. 53' W. 131 foouo the
ltorthwnt cornar of Mabel
Read's Lot: thence 5 degrees 40' Watt 657 feet to
the Northeast corner of Caroline R hodea Lot on the the
North line of Lot No. 6:
thence North 88 degrees

Ouatifiod

m...,ry controc-

enco. Identify the paat thr.., (3)
jobo p.tormod. aod provide
throe (3) trade reler.-. ...
Forma mull be rotumod to the
Meigs County Commission-

era. Courthouse.

Contractor(s) wil be se-

locted

bMed

on axperl•u:e.

trade references,

ability , to
com~eta project: on·time and
on· budget, ond total cootaatlmate. Approximate staning
for construction wil be

August 10, 1988, with com~lltion

expected within four

(4 weeki).

·

The Maiga County Commissioners, and Village of
Middleport, are equal oppor·
tunity employert.
Metga Countv Commistion••
Courthou•
Pomeroy, OH. 46769
(71 13, 19, 28. 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR INFORMAL BIOS
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS COBG
FORMULA GRANT
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
SIDEWALK '
IMPROVEMENTS

W. corner of M. R. WOlf's
land; thence S. 5 degrees

tha

:.,_ North side of the Buffington

lolond Roed, tho S. W,

corner of M. R. Wolf's land:
thence along taid road

S. 87 degr- 57' Woat 78

Pomerov.

Ohio 45769. In o sooted envelope not later than 2:00P.M ..
July 27. 1988.

32' Eaot 21 6 foot to the N.
58' E. 776 loot to

The County of Meiga il a r•

of HUO Community
feet to the S.E. corner of
Mabel Roed'o lot to tho O..etopm.,. Blod&lt; Grant
place of begll')nlng. comaln- lunda awarded by the Ohib
cipiont

ing 3 and 1 1 /1 00 acres of
land.
Alto the following detcribed property situated in
Section No. 16. Town No. 2.

D e p - of Dtwelopment
lot the Vllage of
to
repair tnd instill concnta m•

Township, Meigi
County, State of Ohio: Beginning at thl S. E. corner .of
D, M , Curtl1lot on the aouth

liontn h.ve det~rminad .cconlng to proviolono of the

Range No. 12, Lot No. 8,

line of Lot No. 6. North 88
degr- 32' Eut 1384 feet
from the aouthweat corner

of Lot No. e. Thence Nonh 1
degrH 1 1' WHt 480 feet to
an epple tree on Miry E.

Wotfa oouth line; tllonce
North 88 degr- 27' Eaot
330 fHt to the Nonhweet

corner of M. R. Wolf• land,
the Southeat corner of
Clare Ro11 Lot end the
Southeut corn11r of M1ry E.

Wolf' a Lot: thence South
482 feat to the Northweat

corner of Otte', Crosalot bn
the eouth Una of Lot No. 6;
thence 1long the south lint

::..,.:., &lt;;.,~=
or'o Office and v•togo Hell.
ContriCt"" mu11 pr-o a
-.ndpoges;vingobrieltolstory of their oxperlanco. ident ...
.., the Pill ttor.., !31 jobo P"'"
formed, and provide thl..,
(31 trade referon0111. Forma
muot be returned to the
Mooigo County Commiloion-

~ ~~.."':'

Porn-

oonrv oldowolklln the Centrlll
~uotn•• DillrlctThe Moifll County Commio-

Ohio Ravload Code fur con-

tracto ._. th., ttO,OOO.OO,
the County wll diopenoo with
cuotomoryedv-lngondon1111' into iofomlll lokldlng. Such
bidl. wl be blood on the

-and-

lorto be performed.coot
The Moltll

Couwnlula .a ,...
-tile right to - · .. bldo
for wh•wwr ca~ae dlt ...
County

min...
"
Pt- opeciflootlono, Olld to-

oftheproject.-e..,llti-

blelor no~ octton • the Molao
County Courttoou-. Ccommi.....

Porn-Porn-.

Olll~J~,

Ohio, ond
Vllll(ll
Hall. thl hou,. of
9:00 A.M. ond 4:00 P.M ..
Mondlov tlonough F.... AI
HIRED lobar
be pold Do- ·

oflot No. hndthlcorporation line I. 18 dig.-- 32'
w. 323 fHt to 1he pi- of .Molgo
. . . . . . ""' . . . Mgollor .
County,
beglnnlna, -nlng 3.U
Elthlr • P.Pwoti1blaomornoonce Bond
oaraaotfond.
Aeaervlng to the &amp;tete of fur 100% of 1he aontr.at
01116, however. oil oil """ rtriae. or P1vment fll'tnd nn

mu•

The Daily Sentinal Page 7

Business Services

..::0::

ltt uscetnwtrt tt.sto141•witt
&amp; lli., .,., to••Y vm.
or

c:~-~IE~~:cs

BISSELL
BUI LDE.RS

Products

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U.S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OIRO
614 •662 • 3821
Authorized John

i:&gt;oero, New Holland,
Bush Hog Form
Equipment Dealer

fir• E••IP•uf
Ptrh &amp; Str•~•

1ope not lot• ttoon

2:00 P.M .
wil be se-

lactal *ed on 8'tperience,
trade rllferoncao. ability to
co~ project on-time and

PH• 949 " 2101
or Rtl. 949-2860

~:.!:'1 ~1~~!0:

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16.86-tlri

B&amp;C B.DRILLING
CO.
H. IHgle, Owner

TRIPLE P

Call Collect (3041 372-4331
Most Wells Dril.led In One Day. ·
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install S. Service All Types
Water .P umps

on-biodgot, end total coot aotlm- APfl'oxlmato . otootlng
pillion expected w~loln

(4woolos).

four

The Meigs County Commiuionera. and Village of
Pom•ov. are equal oppor-

tunity omployen.

Meig1 County Commbsion•s

. Courthoul8
Pomeroy, OH. 46769

(71 13, 19, 26. 3tc

funds awarded by the Ohio
Department of Development
for the Sutton Township
Trulteet to repair and retur-

The Meigs County Commissionars have determined ac·
cording to provisions of the

Ohio Rovlslld Code for con-

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

WANT TO BUY IIRICKID OR
JUNK URI 01 TIUCKS
-IIIE IS!IIIATISFor any of thtses•wi(ts call

614-742-2617
Botw•n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or lean Mess-

2·1s-:"·aa-tm

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and guner work
- Coner81e work
- Plumbing and eloctrical
work

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C.

YOUNG

Ill

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

tracttleu than 610,000.00.
the County will dispense
with customary advertising ·
and enter into informal bidon the low"t and ~t cost
for work to be perfonned.
The Meigs County Commis·
sloners r&amp;lerYe the right to
waive all bids for whatever
caul8 datermined.
Plana. apecificaHons. and
location of the project are
n"ailable for intpaction at
the Meigs County CounhOuae, Commissioner's Oflice, Pomeroy, Ohio, be~

).! 3-' 88- lin

Public Notice
second page giving a brief
history of their experience,

Identify the paot throe (31

jobs performed. and provide
three (3) trade references.
F.orms must be returned to
the Meigs County Commis·
sioners. Courthoul8. Pom-

eroy, Ohio 45769, in 1 oeeled
envelope not later than 2:00

P.M., July 27, 1988.

Contrlctor(s) witl be se1-""'""n the hours of 9:00 A. lected based on experience.
M. end 4:00P.M .. Monday trade referencei, ability 10
through Friday. All HIRED complete ~ project on-time
labor must be paid Davis· and on-budget, lll!nd t total
Bacon prevailing Wag as for coat estimate. Approximate
starting date for ·conltrucMeig1 County.
Either • Performance Bond · tion will be August 10.
for 100% of the Contract 1988. with· completion exfour
(4
price, or Payment Bond on pected within
the part of the Contractor for weeks).
The Meigs County Com100% of the contract price,
and Sunon
will be required with the in- mittioners,
Township Tru.teet, are equal
formal bid.
Qualified contrac1ors must opportunity employers.
complete the "Request for Meigs County Commission••
Courthou11
Quotation" form available at
Pomarov. OH. 46769
the Commi~tioner' s Office.
Contractors must prepare a (71 13, 19, 26, 3tc

8

ltr----_::;:::::;::;::;::;::;::;::::_.-___,

PUBIC AUCTION
DUE TO THE HOT WEATHER
NOTICE TIME CHANGE
EDNA PARSON AUCTION LOCATED
ON 338 IN ANTIQUITY, OHIO

SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1988
NEW TIMi 8 A.M.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
DAVID WORKMAN, APPRENTICE

61

p
AUCTION

AN11QUES 8o
HOUSEHOLD MISCELLANEOUS
Beaullfut walnut victorian pier mirror with drawer and marbJe
top, Chippendale •tyko &amp;ecretaoy bookcase, mahogany book-

case with carving and clawtoat, stack bookcase with desk, 5
stack oak bookcaie, oak bookcase, 3 piece Art Decc bedroom suite trimmed In blue glasa, beautiful art glass lamp.
beautiful large painting on canvas signed Trintin, wilnut61eg
tabla. Duncan Phyla round tables, 9 piece Waterfalls dining
room auita, klll:han cabinet, Empire dresser, painted Oak
dresser, 3 piece bedroom auite, wardrobe, iet ol 4 chairs,
painted oak wash atand, 4 piece Waterfall&amp; bedroom suita,
Gossip Bench, aplnet desk, !0 place 1930's dning room
suite, Sellar kitchen cabinet, ~ piaco bedroom suite, lmoke
aland, largo . Birdseye maple hi-boy, with c!awlaat, largo
mahogany libraoy table, marble top tabla, Mission Oak porch
oa~ VIctrola, niglot stands, Maytag wringer washer, woo1&lt;
tabla, 2 ae11 of tubs, Motorola ector TV, 2 piece Mohair nvlng
room suite, elaoawara, White Depression, Homer Lauhling
Was.hington Colonial place, Daprasllion Glaao, lots of
181 o1 Chrlabnu Rosa China, greenstone pileher, orillllbol
va10, bool&lt;s (StDdards Laclura). Chartea Dickens Work plus
others, man lie clock, Hot Point refrigoratar, o40"elactrlo range.
poll, pano, sewing machine, atone jars, etocks, wooden
airplane, plus much mora.
Bri•g .4. LoWII Clullr &amp; St.oy All Day/
CONDUCTED BY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON
M-n. WV
773--678&amp;
Uoenuln W11t Virginia l 01\lo 16688
OWNERS:Loonord • Rita Lewia
TERMS: Coah or Chock with J.D.
No! Reoponolble For Aooldonll Or Loll 01 Praporty

9

Wanted To Buy

We peyc .. h for late model clean
Ul8d C«l .
Jim Mink Chev .·Ohlalnc: .

Bill Gene .,.lohnsoo

814-446-3872 .

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN
PH. 742-2463

Howard L. Writesel

CALL

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Rt. 1, Box 74-A. liply, W. Ya. 25271

949-2168

7-14.'88-1 mo. pd.

TOP CASH poid lor '83 modtl
and newer uaied c••· SmHh
Iuick-Ponti.:, 1911 Ellltern
Avo, Gollipollt. Coli 114-4412282.

Compt• houtlhotds of fur,U.
ture • .,tiqutt. Also wood &amp;

coal h.at .... Swain'• Furnitunt
Auction, Third • Olive,

&amp;

114-441-3159.

W10t 10 buy: U1ad furnitu .. lftd
antiques, Will buv entiN hou•·
hold h.Jrnlthing. Marlin Wedem...,.,, 814-246·6162.

Junk C.rs whh or without
mo1ort:. Call Larry Uvety-614388·9303.

Buv'ng furniture and appli1M1CH
the pi.ce or by 1he lot. Fair

by

prl-. Coli 814-441-3158.

Want to buy u•d roof 1l..es.
Coli

304-372-4099.

Wtnted to Buy-Uted mobile
homes. Call 61~-446-0175 .

Roger Hysell
Garage

Television Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid ~les &amp; Setvi1c~
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Buyin9 daily gold, silver cains.
rings, Jewatrv. sterling ware. old
coint, large cumncv. Top prices. Ed Burkett Barbel' Shop.
2nd. Aw. Middleport. Oh. 814-

1:3

Junk aiJ'o's with or without
motort. Call 814-992·6488.

-

Junk IUIO'I, Top price pein. Call

C!J

-a:

Rt. 124, Pomeroy. Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Triumlulu
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 44fi-7619 or (614) 992-2104
::.::: 417 Secood AYetJue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631•

z

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

6-17-tfc

992-3478.

814-992-6848after 5 p.m.
Qultts

Cash p1id for antique or niW
quihs. ApDiiaue. pieced. tny
cordkion. Calf 614-992·5887.

f 111WI11VIllt!lil

Blt4GO

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

St;IVILt;'

11

CUSTOM BUllT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949-2860

top people earn 8800.11200
par week. Salary to ttlrt plua
commlulon. Planant working
conditions. A realy fun place to
work. Friendly, neat 6 dependable .,. the requirements. C.ll
1-814-286-8422, ask for Sue.

CHESTER
7-6-'11-1 rioo.

NO SUNDAY

Help Wanted

Tour Guid111-Male• femsle. Our

BAUM
LUMBER

"Free Estimates''

METAL WORKER TRAINEES
No .. ,.,lenca required. Trlining

GUN SHOP
NEASE HOLLOW RD.

18 Yean
Church-Home-School

Free Gih ... "Water Me
Please" battery
operated Hot.!se Plant
Alert Light with tuning
Otf• good 6 / , - 7 / 30

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/C Service
All Maior &amp; Minor

GUNS· AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS

on the Job. Rllocttion .equirad.
High school grads age 17-30,

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUU, OHIO ·

RACINE

\h.y;;I,,
~··: 1 ,..: . :_

Repain

Follow .Signs
on Bashan Rd.
PH. 949-2168

NIASE Cartifled Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Conifoed Ucttno•od

C. F. SCOTT
Middliport

Coii1·80D-282·1384. Mondoy·
Thurodoy, 9 AM-2 PM.
EARN EXTRA MONEY ckJring
the Summar. Gat out of the
house. become e Daily Sentinel
piPer c•rler. Routt&amp; open ln
Mlddlap!)rt, Call Scott at lhe
Sentinel Oftice at 814·992·

2155.

Borldl Broke! A.nd Blue! Sell
Chriltmll Around the World
decorttions untfl Dec. Fun job!
Party plan. Free 1300 kJt. No
collection 01' dallwryl Work your
own hourt. Now hiring Damon·
stnltors. Call Betty Carpenter,

e t4-24&amp;-5383 Todoyl

Pl!!N~~~!~G
SALES

&amp;

SERVICE

We Carrv Fishing Suppli

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Hera
BUSINESS PHONE

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorized Servi(e
,&amp; Parts

SER~ICE

We can repair and recore rodtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks. ·
PAT HILL FORD

Brigg1 • Stratton

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

VALLEY L~MBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio

992-2196 .

16141 992-6510

RESIDIN Cl PHON!

Middleport,

992-6611

(6141 992-7714

3·3D-'171fn

1/78/ lln

J&amp;l INSULAnON
•FREE

ESTIMA TES•
TIRED OF PAINTING?
Cover your home with

beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAINTEED vinyl
siding.
·
lest Prices Anywhere!
ROOFING and SEAMlESS
PH.

LOCATION: Located on
Road, Letart Fans, Ohio. Watch for slg ns. From Pom·
eroy, Ohio, go 10 miles east on Rt. 124 toRt.
338 go 6 miles eastto Letart Falls, Ohio. Watch
for signs.
·

MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

NEED

GUTTERS

I:,;;'!'~

W.

5 / 31 / 1 mo.

168 Norlh Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio ·45760

Public Sale
S. Auction

SATURDAY,
JULY 23, 1988
10:00 A.M.

Public Sale
S. Auction

tion - ' •· 304-n:J..57811i .

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

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGlS
"At Reuonallle Prim"

Ju~~~!i

8

hfii:::=i~~~~~:=itTr=:=======::~:==iTr~~=~==;:=~:;=~========:;i Rick PewJOrt Auctioneer. 11,,.,. VHS TAPE
to
BOGGS
Custom Bu•"ldt·ng
conoodOOoloond-tVi&lt;ginio,
Eatale. antique, f•m. liquid•

tors must complete the "Re-

The Meigoo County Commio- ding, Such bids wit ba band

sion. . have determined accorclng to provisiona of the

Oflio Reviled Code, will of·
fer for aale on Wednesday.
Augut 10. 1988, the following real estate.
The following described
real estate of the late Marga·
ret Josephine Hunter Peters
situated in the Township of
Sutton, County of Meig1
and State of Ohio, and described 111 follows. to-wit:
Situated in Section No.
18, Town 2, Range 12. Sut·
ton Townthip. Meigs County. State of Ohio, bounded
and dncrlbed as follows:
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of Mabel Reed' 1 lot

gr881 40' Woot 220 loot to

will
beof
required
with the
in·
1oQ%·
the contract
prtca.

fonnolbid.
Qualified m810fVY contrac-

loco w~h Hphalt Welshtown
lortlooVilageofMidol_.tto Hill Road (Township Road
lnote1123 curb ramps on atroot 11 8(.

tors must
the form
"Re307.09 and 307.10 of the. qu81t
for complete
Quotation"

S. 87 degrHI 57' W. 692

the pen. of the Contractor for

Public Notice
•
Public Notice
NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR INFORMAL BIOS
NOT.ICE OF REQUEST
MEIGS COUNTY
FOR INFORMAL BIDS
COMMISSIONERS COBG
MEIGS COUNTY
FORMULA GRANT
COMMISSIONERS CDBG
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
FORMULA GRANT
WELSHTOWN HILL
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
ASPHALT PAVEMENT
HANDICAPPED ACCESS
Tho County of Meigs ~ a
TO STREETS AND
recipient of HUD CommunSIDEWALKS
ity Oovolopmont Block Grant

formal bid.

feat from the lnteraection of
the North side of the Buf·
fington Island Road, with
'&lt;the East side of the Pomeroy
Road; thence North 6 de-

Public

·

The Board of Commis·
sionera of Meigs County,
Ohio. pursuant. to Section•

Sutton

This Number Has Been Changed
To Make It Easier For You To
Contad Us~ We Apologize For
Any Temporary Inconvenience.

protection of such 1treams
from ero1ion. contamlna·
tion or deposit of 1ediment.

DEED REFERENCE: Vo-

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DIAMOND SAVINGS 1!o
LOAN COMPANY,

Democrats to debate three minority
planks, with no 'rancor or discord'

YAWNS, SO SOON - The CDI\Vent:!on Is only
minules old ~nd yawns are already evident as
Rosemary Otlenweller of Patterson, N.J., yawns

Public Notice

Public Notice

the

ATLANTA (UPI) - Democrats will debate three minority
platform planks pushed by the
Jesse Jackson campaign and
vote on two today but there will
be no "rancor or discord" in the
unified convention, the party
chairman said.
Because Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Oukakls, .who ·WUI win
the party's presidential nomination Wednesday night, and Jackson, his closest rival, have
smooth~ over their differences,
the presentation of Jacksonbacked planks to the convention
will allow his backers a chance to
speak their peace before all the
delegates.
Party Chairman Paul Kirk told
reporters debate and votes would
be held on planks proposing
higher taxes for the rich and a
policy of "no ltrst use" of nuclear
weapons.
The politically touchy Issue of
the Middle East, he said, will be
debated but the minority plank
proposing "recognition, territortal compromise, and selfdetermination for Israelis and
Palestinians" will be withdrawn,
avoiding a vote.· The Jackson
camp had concentrated' on
. another minority report - a
five-year freeze on defense
spending - but Kirk did not
Include that plank as one to be
offered for debate.
''There Is no Issue tbat Is going
to be debated, although strongly
felt by both sides, no Issue Is
going to be debated with rancor
or discord," said Kirk, adding
that throughout the campaign,
discussion of Issues has been
"civil, constructive. positive and
beneficial to our party."
''That's the tone you'll hear,"
Klrkadded.
'
. Kirk also said because the
convention will open earlier than
originally scheduled - 3 p.m.
EDT Instead of 4:15p.m. - there
will be extra platform debating
time and extra time lor "both
campaigns to speak In support of
this solid but brief, direct and
progressive statement ol priori·
ties and platforms of the Democratic Party."
Jackson Monday st~~naled a
full debate "over the soul of our
party," saying a-t a news conference after a nearly three-hour
unity meeting with OukakLI, "No
doubt there will be debate and
dellberatlon on tomorrownlaht."
But the preacher-politician declared, "Debate and deliberation
sttrs the soul of our democracy.
, ... We will cll!blite policy, priorides and direction."
Jackson forces · had flied 13
possible minCII'Ity planks j)y
Monday. but rep)'elentallves ol
the two camps discussed limiting

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

19.1988

992-2772

Tells Past. Present and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love. Marriage and
Business.
H You Are Unhappy and
Don't lnow Whidl Way lo

c..... In For •d•'ce
Gnt Ylltt Will Conwlnct
You lloort h A lot... Way.
T~rn

-

$$00

OFF With lhlo

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

PALM lEADING

Annou n;;e menl s

Ath-

3 Announcements

302 WHt Inion St.

614·594·3310

5/ Zl/1111 nt(l

Howard L. Wrlt111l

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
· Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-21'68

. 6-10-18-1 mo.-

1-28.'88-tfn

•Seamlen Gutter
•Rooting
•Vinyl Siding
•Rooting
•Hom, Roofing
•Wood Crotts
FIR ES!IMATIS

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnEI &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
OWIIRo Jeffror Sodth
lt. I 101 136, VINTON

614-742-2235

Ad

LADY RACHEL'S

6-13-t mo.-

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

GEARY
BODY SHOP
550 PAGE STREET
MIODlfPORT, OHIO
OPEN l:ltl-6:,00

WANTED
DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It Rapalroble"

Would like 10 correspond with

whrte gentlman 50·80 yn;. old.
Wrtta Box 996, New Hften, W.
Va.

4

Giveaway

1 cat A 2 kittens- 1 orange &amp; 1

black. Call 814-246·6818.

Puppies, mother black LAbredor.

304-17&amp;-3378

Male Beagle dog. Approx. 3 vrt.

old. C.l16t4-387-7t11.

Olw to good hon.. f•mlle
Aultrallan Shapt.rd. 7 month•
old. Full blooded. Born with 1
1¥'1· Very lovfng ., d thY. CIU
la-247-4555 or 114-247·

4856.

TWo 4 month old femal•. Collie
and Bard• Collie mixed. Will
give to good homes. Cell 814-

247-4555 or 8t4-247-481&amp;,

Pwt laeala puppy, 8 month•
old. Call 11 .. 992-2802.

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Maln18nanoa person to livt· in
apartment eompl~~~:, Call 304-

675·5104.
FEDERAL. STATE. AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

Now hiring. VourAr.... $13.560
to •&amp;9.480. tmmedillte OJ*t·
ings. Caii1-316-73:J.ID82ext.
F 27158.

T1lented. Cre1tive individual
wanted for an axching career 'In
Adverttslng Salet. Call for an
•pp&lt;MntfT'Int. 304-727· 7885.'

SUPER VIS Oil OF TRANSPOR·
TATION, GALLIPOLIS CITV
SCHOOLs- QUALIFICATIONS:

l.
~-J

E"')•lence in aupervislon of
pasonnel, knowledge of bus
malnten~nce and m ec:haniGf.
org~~nilatlon ~ and communication tlclllt. Apply It the Board o.f
E,ducation Office. , 11 State
Street, before Juty 22. 1988.

Cliffside Golf C1ub is taki0g
appUCMions for P8rt-timesrack

b• http. Applictnts must apj)ly
in person at the Golf Courtt

located at 100 Oitfaide Dr,.
P.lllpolis. Allapplicantsmustbe
21 vaars or age or otdar.
Hair Stylists. Across The Street
styling salon Is aeeking one
additional 1tyll1t who is looking
for mote th10 ju1t another job.
Call Terri at 6,4-448-9510 for

details.

·

Goverf\mel"'t jobs. $16,040 .
869.230 yr. Now hiring. Your
aret. 806-687-6000 Ext. A·
9805 for current Fedemllist. '

&amp;•v workl E~teell.,t payi A•·
temble products at ~lome . Call
for informltion. 504·14, . 8003
Ext. A-5010.

The Meigs lo eel School District
It currently ••ld~applicetio,.
from ct~rtlfied IP ·CM~tl for an
AlliiiBntV•slty oeaiiCoach
for lhe 1988-89 school vear.
At&gt;r,licants must t'lold a valid

Oh o a aching certMicMe and for
coaching position• must mem
cartlficttlon r~uirement1 of
Ohio for aports medicine and
GP,.. Peraon• lnternted should
con•etJim Ctrpeneer, Superinterldent of Meigs Local SchoofJ,
It 021 South 'Third Aw. fn

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

98S-aS61

We Service

7-tl-'11-1 mo. d.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL --JUST CALL!

WANTED: Multi -Talented
~-· experienced in one or
more of the following: Carpen•r,; brick. block. &amp; concrete:
electricians: plumbers; hHtlng
6 llr conditioning; dry walling;
pllintars; cortman:lll builders;
end he.,yequlpment QPif'ltort.
Alto needed: Experienced. •I·
anted and c ... ar-orlantad Individuals to be proiect superin·
hmdents. Send r..ume or work
history, induding'Nhich type1 or
work vou hiMI experience in. to:
Rt. 1 Bol( 247. (bllipolis. Ohio
4583,.

Middleport, Ohio

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·fl69

haler,.,
YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

· Locotlld Holfwey be·
tWHn Rt. 7 l!o 811h1n.

· NEW &amp; USED MOWUS
Sorvla Ctnt.- for Ryan

. Pro4ucto
8 . 7 Financing on V•drNin

Service on AI MlkH
Wo Honor MC/DIR/VIsi!,;

' * • •·

r• ~ - ·

,.__ ,4-tl·'·fli
.. ,.

6

Lost and Found

Found: k.,t on TMit RoM on

As per A"lde IX, Trensflraand
Vacencl•. Section 8,
of thl Negotil1ed Aer•
baiMienth MLTAandthelo•d
of Education. the Mligs Local
School Oittrict It posting lhll
fo•owlng ~Mcancl•fof tts r.tu·
tw •echlng ltaff: ll'llrd Grtch

Po•:Jt

JulY t4. Colt 114-992-aiOO or
114-992-71107.
Teacher at Rutland Elementary
Lott: flmlte brown PDmtranltn.
Loot JulY t lth from honw ot
30040 Old Dl•llr Chuoah Rd.

(one ..,.., only), Nth Qrtde

Ta.cher 11 Ruttlnd Element~+J

(orw ,...,. ontv•. Slllf't Clrlde
TeiCher at Aut'-nd llenMnllf¥

11-rd. Cell lt4-H8-IIIt autdonco Cou-or 111 Moir.'
High Schoal. VoOII Mus c
Tooctoer 111 Mlllll Junior Hlglo
I.Dtt; yellow male ktntn ••lng School. ond Moolp
School
whll•flll
olo• end
I Math f"nch• 11
10 CDdnft at.tlon. ......rd. Horrlol'ftVI!o .,d llutllnd El•
114-992-27114.
m.._.lchoala.
ootlact.

ool•.lw,...•.

a.,...,
•

HI""

'

�.,

•

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted .

Tomato pick... 'U.SO P4H' how
plua • .1&amp; bldtlt. JhnO'Irien.
l14--2n-20III,

Ore• ,.,

54 Misc. Merchlll'l dise

Fa.nilhed room-918 Second
A&gt;A., Oaiiii)Ohs. •128 1 mo.
Utiliti• ~I d. Sin ale Mill• Sh . .

Wheelcheirs·new or 111td. 3
whMied electric tooo••· Calli
Rogoro Meblty COllect, 1·114870-9111.
.

Rooms for ,....t· "Mek or month.
Starting -' •120 1 mo. Ollila

aeeking IIIP......,...... In 1he
Melg~ .,d swraunclng county
are..

45 FurniShed Rooms

blth, C.II4U..4(11atter7PM.

INSURANCE SALES
Old ••bliehed oo,._..y

Hotel-11444t-9180.

plrOducta end

l•ot cuetomer bae. Vert
u niq. . mw...ing avttem.

Fringe ben.rltt and incent+w
. program•. Flnt 'fll'• potllntill
$22.000. 0&gt; t31.000. For

46 Space for Rent

plf'aonll in.,._, ..-.d rwme
and addleta 10 Mr. Frandlco.
The Dolly Sondnal, Bo• 729U.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo P•k.
Rou• 33. Nor1h of Pul1'lM'V'f.

il••·

Pomeroy, Ohro.
AVON • AI

Ren•l t ..
7479.

areu. Call M~tilyn

we- 304112-21415.

Spec a,.... for ...11 t,.l.t"' All
hook;~a. Clblt. AIIOiffldenc:y
roome. air Md ceblt. "AMon.
· W.Vo. Call 304773-5151 .

Sound/Nud . . Medical Tech~. ya• ..,_....,ce
reqult' ... (:Ill penonnel offiCII

nolaffllt.

1'1-.,t VIII .. Hoopllol, 304
675-4340. E.O .E./ A.A.E.
Bal:rf.ttt.r in my home , M•on.
W.Va. for 3 ll'td 5 yr. old. Dey

t'!ouf"'. c.l130"-773-5081 aft.,

"Oh no- not again!"

4 PM.

Situations
Wanted

32 Mobile Homea
for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2. 3 BR. AN utllltloo pold•cept

Room a Boerd foreldlrtY person

1984 electric 14xl0 F11t., 2 electricity, Con...,.ilm loctlton.
BR .. 11&gt; both. f10.000. ilonlld Coli 614445-8558 « 445ReuOI'III&gt;&amp;e. Call 814-2158- lot·
.. ld¥' to moW Into. Call 4008.
8509.
114251-1927""onl1- - - - - - - - : - - : - : : TrMier for rent. At. 68t,t. 2 BA, 1
1911 Sehultt m•ll• home. 2 both. Cali 11444t-1483.
13
lnsuranoa
8R .. CA. 08.000. Call oltor 9J - - - - , - - - ; __ __
PNI. 814-441-8&amp;04.
Moble Hom11 for rent. Cl!ll
11 444t-0527.
Cati Ut for your mobile hon. 19n Fod. .l 1hl5. 3 BR ..
inaurence: Miller Insurance, t011t tlec .• exn nice through 2 BA. fumlahed mobile home. "h
304·882·2145. Alto: auto. outnM¥c•pet.goodwa.her6 mle pns N.G.H.S. on 110.
hon., life,. h.-tth.
dryer, vinyla und•rplnnlng, t18&amp; a mo.. 125 O.p. Call
ron go • ..trig. Froo doiNory • 81 ..385-8838.
Itt up. 87960. Call 8,4-448Schools
15
0175.
Tr•ll• for ..nt or •I e. On nica
a en lot In country, •100month
Instruction
1978-14470 mobile home. 3 plus utltllea. l1ot.-992-3209 or
bedrooma, fire pliCa. $10.000. 614992-7167.
Clll 114-992·3847.
La•n to be a Gourmet Executive
3 be*oom 1reil er for rent In
CHEF
.
1974 Olamplon 14xl15 tcul s, ...., • . &amp;14-992·7689 lifter
Job• while t ..inlng. ao...rn- electric, underpenning and plr·
meOt flnandal aide ewllable to tlalty turnlhlld, wll consider &amp;oOO.
.,...ilflod. Coli Kar:ot 304372· trode, •&amp;,900.00. 304578· 2 bedrooms, fuml1hed. t100.
2932. Cullinary School Df 2383.
depOiit. nao. per month plus
Waihington.
utiKiol. Call 814992-3122.
1970 wtnd.ar, 1 2x65 with
10x12 add on. woodburner, 2 bedroom mobil a OOme Mlddl•
18 Wanted to Do
wether and ~, air cond, mutt port, Ohio, Nference and •c:urbo movod. 304S9t-3102.
Ky dopoolt JOqulrld. 304882·
3287 or 304773-102•.
1978 Wl-or 14o70 3 bedHou• cl.ning letVices. Refer- rooms, 2 b•hl. cem.l lir, good 2 bodroom. fllmilhod. total
ence. IIYiilabl&amp; Glllipolis. pt, cond. prk:ed on ln•Riction. el ectrlc:. mobile home. 304-875Pleaaent • M•on .,.... C.ll 304875-2510.
6&amp;12"' 1711-3900.
304-175-2766 or l?e-4668.
1982. 12x70 Knox. All oloc.. 3
Bab,litting In my home. Rt. BR • .,.ry good condition. take 44
Apartment
7-Lower River Aold. Reatona• 011'11' Jllymenta. 304-178-2121.
for Rent
ble rlt.._ Gl8.t with kids. Call
814-.4t-4745.
1979 Holly P.k, 1 4ll70, 2 2 lA . ~t~tl. I cloaets. kh&lt;:hanbedroom•. ~der.,.nrwd. centnll appl. fu nfthed. W•her- er,..r
Wit~ do bebrlitting_in my home.
air, po1Ch, all llactric. Cell hook-up,
ww c•pet. ntMiy
An&lt;; lhift. 814-992-6483.
304075-7979.
painted, declc.
Ffom $175.
Rogoncv. Inc. Apu. Coli 304
Yard c ... brulh wtting. light
87e.5104, or 87t-1386 co
hauling. eometl"'ltrimmingand
875-7738.
10mo""l' 8111 Slock 814-992· 33
Farms for Sale
2 269 evenings.
New completely furnished
IP•rtment &amp; mobile home In
48 acre f•m. midway betvueen city. Adult• onty, P•king. Call
Bidwell
and
Rio
Gr•dt
on
SR.
hnanc1al
814441-0338.
564. 136,900. Call 304-5238558.
SEAUTIFUL APARlMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKBig new 3 BR . home. bulton SON ESTATES, 531 Jockeon
21 .
Business
your lot only. 816,994&amp; up. Clll Pfke from t183 e mo. Walk to
Opportunity
11488t-7311 .
shop end mo• . 114-4462568. E.O.H.
Ftrm Tribb4e Aold, 7mll• from
Rt. 82 M•on County, 3Vzac::re•. Ups•h'• unfu rnlthld apt. Car·
I NOTICE I
peted, utflltl• pthl No children,
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8LISH· Hou• and buildings, eat! 30~
No ..... Coll814441-1837.
lNG CO . ..co.,...,.,dl1hlt you 756-7290.
do butln- with people you
know. •nd NOT to •nd molll"f •.,.---;:;:-=~:=:--- 11 Cou• St.·2 8R .. 2 bllha,
ldhchM furniehed, w/w c•pat.
through 1M mail untll you h.w 134
Business
No pets. Off 1treet perllfng.
in vett~M thl'ofl•ing.
Buildings
*32&amp;amo. plueuiUIU•. Dip. •
orf. Cll111 .. 445-4928.
Men or Women fntlrated In
w orking fuH or pert-time in ~rect
sal... Sorneonee•ilymorivated Chuweh BW.ding for sei•Bids Fur•hed- 3 rooms &amp; bsth.
who enjoys meeting people. will be accepted for,...Mt. Zion Cle.,. No pets. Ref. • deposh
Send resume to: Bolli Cia 158. Chu..::h Bullclng only for •mo-- required. Utflhiet furnished.
c/ oOIIIIpotisD•ilvTribune; 825 val and ciMnmce of land. The Adutta onty . C1ll 814-446Third Ave.. Galllpolla, Ohio chu.ch it located in Glllia 1519.
45631.
County at . t~ interHction of 1 BA . apt.nearHNIC. 1edutt.No
White Hollow and Mt. Zion
RoM. Bleil are to be .m to: ...... Coli 814445-4782.

49

J----------

Atheha Dittrlct Methodilt Un·
ion, P.O. Box 87, The Plaln1.
Ohio 46780. All bidl mutt be in
by Augu•1 . 1988.

31 Homea for Sale
1985 Marlette Modular Home.
60x28. All olectrlc. Ca, 3 BR .• 2
baths, greet ·room, dining room.
To many extret to lilt. Mutt tee
to appcecitte. S4!i.OOO, owner
fiMnelng. Call 814-446-1408
after 5 PM.

Older 3 BR .• story &amp; '12. fuR

basement. 1h acre. Canten.-y.
Call114-448-3044.
Located 5 mil• from town-At.
141 . Over 21JJ acres. Chy
ac hoofs. Land connct poMtlble.
Call 814-446-92,0 evenings.
Ho u• hea 5 rooma. bath. large
11141111-in cloltt, laundry room.
MobHe h~ ha1 ced• lined
clo•ts. 2 bedrooms in a beautiful location off Rt. 7 by -pau.
Coll614992-1941. ·

Businftl buMdlng In Middleport
lor •I e. E.ceUant for Phytican.

Dentin or ott.. Large lvlng
q.. rtars abo\41 . This •• money
mak•. Priced for quk:k •le to
aettle estate. Owner can h'!lp
finance if needed. Clll614-9922403. 114-992-2780 or 114992·2181. Ilk for Jack or
Oobbie.

35 Lots 8o Acreage
1 acre and up building Iota and

modular home site1. Tuppers
Plains-Oiester v..ter, roaMev
to each lot. 814-9815-3694.

Building lot. All utlitielavailable. Prhllte, welki.,gdle.. nceto
town. Phone 814-992-2343.

For Sale orRent-1978Holtypark A1hton, large buldin.g lots.
14x70. Good cord. Call 814- mobile homll permitted, public
water. also · river lots. Clyde
245-5876 or 245-9249.
Bowen, Jr. 304876-2336.
Owner Moving a anxiou• to
sell-4 BR .• 1 beth. full batemant, BeauUful rilfer lots oneacreptus.
total el~ .. inground pool. pl.blic weter. Clyde Bo\WI'I, Jr.
304.-575-2336.
Grinde View Hgts. Mid
Nogotlbl&amp; Call 81425t-1448 1- - - - - - - - - - - or 268-6219 anytime.
LOTS. one acre, lwei wooded.
city weter. Jertcho Road, owner ·
3 8R . hou•. Fencad in bad! fin1ncing. good terms, 304·'f'Urd. tn good cond. Call 814- L3-:7_2_
·B
_4_0_I5_o_r_3_7_2-_2_&amp;_71_._ _
448-3718.
1~
1\No 1 acre loti wh:h ~ic
108 State St., Pomaroy. 2 or 3 water. Jerrya Run Road.
bedrooms, c•~td. No
~ 4. 900.00each. considart .. de.
nabfe off• fllfu•ct. Phone 814- 30~678-2383.
992-3725.
1- - - - - - - - - -

•40'•

,...o-

Seduded 10 room, 2

75

Furnkhed ••· $160. Utlities
~id.

Sh. . b8th, Single rnele.

919 Second Aw., Galllpofis.
Call 441-4418 after 7 PM.
Apertment, 2 BA .• unfurnilhed.
t175. Water paid. 1138 S•
eond, Gollipollo. Coll445-4416
after 7 PM .
2 BA. apt.-Rio Grande. Weter &amp;
tresh paid. $225 a mo. plus
depoolt. Calll14445-8237.

Luw:uriou• Tan Townhou•
epartm&amp;ntl. Elegant 2 floors. 2
BR .• ful bMh ul)ltlin, pov.der
room downataln, CA ., dis hwll her, dis pottl, privllte .,..
tren ca. prflllte enclo•d patio,
pool, pll'ftround. UtiNtiBI not
lnctudld. Starting at •299 per
mo. Clll 814-387-7850.
Furnished effleiency -920
Fourth, Oalllpoll1. t180. Utilities peid. Call448-4418 after 7
PM.

Nlee 2 BA aet· Water. refrig. &amp;
stove fum. 4VJ mi. . from Galllpolil. No pets. t2Z5 mo. Call
614445-8038.
2 BA . apllrtmenl Bict.wll ereL
Coll814388-9054.

2 BA . epartmant. All utlitlel
p•d C.lll14-448-8723 aftM 7
PM.

-=---:--::-:---:--:-::-:---:

Gracious living. 1 ,anjl 2 bedroom . . rtmanta at Village
Manor and RNerside Ap.tmenta In Middleport. From
1182. Call 814-992-7787.
EOH.

ltory

For lease

Merclinntlise
51 Household Goods

CIIMI 1CJp. talA

- ·a,. -·

76

d,__.,

Sofu ond cholro priced from
•386 to f998. Tobl• 160 ond
up to •121. Hld. .·bedl t390
to •596. RIC'Iiners 1221 to
8375. LlmPt t28 to t 126. 55 Building Supplies
Dlnattaa t109 end up to t49S.
Wood table w-8 chlin U85 to
t795. O.tk t100 up to •3715. Building Nlalerlals
Hutch• e400 and up. Bunk Block, brick. ...,., pip•. winbeds complete W·Mit1M... dow1. linte11, etc. Clalde Wlnt2915and uptot395. Blbybedl
Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814e110.Matt,...•orboii1Pflnp 245-5121.
·
ful or twin t88, flrm 178, •nd
• 88. au ..n .... t221. lOng Concrete btoclcl- all tlzlt,. yard
t360. 4 drawer chelft tea. Gun or delivery. Meaon..,d. Glllipocabinetalgun. S.bymatt,.._ Us Block Co., 123'h Ptne St .•
035 • 145. Bod fnlm• 020, Oollipolll. Ohio. Call 814445tlO &amp; King hme e10. Oood 2783.
aelectkJn of bedroom suites, 1--::=:=::-:-:-::-:::-:::=::-:-::-metal cabineta, head"'*dl t30
WESTERN RED CEDAR
end up to t8B.
• Ctt.nllll Ausdc
ond - o d Lop Sieling
90 Dlya aame 11 Cllh with
• Deck Mllterlals
~prowd credit. 3 Mllea out
GuerMtHd Oullily
Bulwlle Rd. Opan hm to Spm CETIDE, INC., Athenl-814Mon. thru s ... Ph. 814-446694.-3&amp;78
0322.

t••·

Vallev FurnhuN
New and ul'ld furniture •nd
eppllcances . Call 814-4487572. Houre 9-5.
J . S FURNITURE
1415 EasternAw.
4 drawer theft. •48. 6 drawer
chest. tl54.95. 6 pc. wooden
dinnette seta, $199.96.
PICKENS
FURNITURE
Dinettel, beds . bedding ,
drestera, ch•t. eouchel, chain.
lamJ)I, coffee-end •bl11. Every
day Spec!-'•· ~ mile out Jerrieho. 304675-1410.
VIR1 Furniture
Sofa &amp; ehair-•240. r_,ular
$899; ell bedding sale priced;
used all dlnett.... •le priced;

B &amp; B SurplusBulhlngSuppii•:Doors. windows. b•h tuba.
comrnodel, moklings, lumber,
p lint. &amp;. mite aupplin. Cell
81444t-8772.

56

•tvl•·

Oragonwynd Cattery

Kennel.

CFA Per1lan M'ld Siam. . kft·
ten1. AKc; Chow puppies. New

Hlmoloyon kittono. ·Can 614
44t-3844 oftor 7PM.

Night Champion Coon Dog. Out
of Em mont Brush Creek Blue &amp;
ranges; wethers; dryer~; llfrig- · younger blldt • tan vr / scr..rnEagle blood line~ . Call
erators; freerers; dishes ; lng
shefvta; color console tv's. All 814445-9780.
items at dilcount prlcas. laya- Weeki w..ue Kennei-Wnt
ways alway• welcome. ep., Highland
white Tefriert AKC
dlity Mon.-Sit., 9-8. At. 141 In Puppies- trNII
Cenbtnary- 1..'. mile on Lincoln 614-387-0124. &amp; sn.rt. Call
Pike. 814-448-3158.
Umed oek •bl•8chalra, Walnut
bedroom 1ulte. chest, oek
chairs, canning f.trt. weights &amp;
bench. Coli 614387· 7209.

8 Boston Terrier puppi•. Ready
in 2 weekt. Oepoeit will tKtld.
Call before 6 PM, 814-3877422.

2 ferule full blooded Pekkl. .

Good uMd color TVi for •'•·
Coll61•· 446-1149.

pupo. 5 wko. old. Call 614·992·
3037.

Good Ullld Phllco aide by •Ide
refrig. .tor, Aweado. •1&amp;0.
Colll1425t-6477.

Bas ...t pu ~· Fren cie
Bonodum. 614-887·3868.

Colored TVI·rtbult. 26" consol" &amp; 19" portatl•. Call
814445-2713.

AKC D•lamatlon p.~ps. t12a.oo

each. Relldy after July 1 s.
304937·2368.

10 pc , choc. brown pit group.
$600firm. Call814-448-7015.

tiel birds, t30 etch. Call 304-

New Mtgic Chef 30" electric
ronge-Aimond, 8250. Calll14
367·7698.

57

53

Antlquea

AKC

Booolo pupo, 830 eoeh. Cock•

675·2019.

Musical
Instruments

a

• renungo

I J)

•I•.

1811 Iuick Cont ... for
Good condition . 814·982·
2201.
.
1918 Corvette Convertible.
327 • ~11 11•2•7
4111.
~
~ ~ •

1oao C.el..ctorw/10 ft. buth

tdelor w/cuttt.tor • mowtng

1881 Ford 1 - o Y·8 .,d
.,to, Nlcholln .,.., -v good
cond.l14245-816711ftor&amp;o00
PM.

'

'

'"'"'notlonll -

.....

8271
tor, nav tlr-. n.w bueh hog.
02388. S90 Dovld - tor. •3180. New I ft. pul type
buoh J1o9. h-y clutyg,. bo•.
1880. Ow- .... ... Coli
11421t-112Z.

1913 l'l&gt;ntloc:

304-171-4312.
'71 Docloo Chorg•. "'"'· 0350 .
304671-7270.

2 ho1'81 trtlll•. Qood oorKI. New
paint. Call 304-882·3231.
Ford fwm nctor. Uw poMr •
hydr.,llc. Roal ol-. Coli 304
571-2321 or 171-2101.

,o

8N Ford with tide mcJMr ..
niM' owr riclng c:lu1Ch. Cell lifter

9 PM. 304875-1 388.

Liveatodt

1171Ta~ru• Camper. E~eeHent

948-2017.

VOUfll MaiiMd Ouckt for Mit.
114-742-28113. .

1r,msporlali'lll
71 Auto's For Sale

81

REO

... c...

bo ... .,..,. l'llf'd .

Surplut. Your ar... 8uyer1
Qlldo. 11) IOt-687-1000, ED.
9-41582.

Trucks for Sale

1971 Chovy llhorodo pickup
with - · AC. Pa. PS. n tlrol. Aoldng 12700. Call 814445-3870.
1818 Ford
- · mi-.
Lorlet
JIOckogO.
bodF280
llnor. ·7.·000

we...,_ •

th.mlntm
running
boerd. lime •• new. Call
814215-8757- 4o30PM.
1173 DotoiMI oick· .... UOO.
Call 81 ...48-1?21.
1171 For.J F 110 4•4. EDN
1DOI boo. 4 sod. U 100.
Call 114-445-0812• . Oltt. 27.
317.038hltor I PM.

dl-.

1884
King cob,
high m l - tilt. PS. AC. n lllloral- · 12486. Coli
81~4e.2431.

71 Chwy t,.... f410. Call
11 ..317·7291.

1171 ~ ton. Dlwy plakup, n.w
boJiv with 1887 olldoln compor.
Both Hkl now. Call 814-2&amp;1ltJ12.
1877 Ford, ....... ton. 4 '!'!'...
trine., 480 cubtc inCh enOtne.
. - I ply - · V.y good
cordtlon. 1141148-2237.
1911 • cyl. - . - Chov·
roltt. 1 owner. 1181 FOur door
c•. Call 81 ..9853139.

Otdw•-·

Vans 8o 4 W.O.

1----------

..ulppod lor llaNng,
hunting. cemplng. New brek•.
job. 311 - · · hood••·
1911 Stetlon Wagon O.wrolc paln1
Caprice. colllptlble tNrd Mat In 1700. 1141192.e8s1 .
re•. f3000. Call 81444t- 1179 .loop C... H-op. 310
8239.
011glno. Coli 11 .. 982·7214 or
197• Oodgo Dort Nrlngor. 2 81 ..S92·3224.
dOor, 311-VI. eutarnatlctransmluion. 1ood condition.
Motor cycles
80,000 oelull mil•. ., 100. 7 4
Call81 .. 44t-870iolt•IPM.
1971 -

f----------

1878 Monto C.lo. AM·FM-, 1915. CR280. Good eond.
Coli, AC, all - · ti~. nloo t1.000. Call &amp;1421t-6414 or
ood ...... Coli 114 21 ._,. 27_
44t-401 .
1--------1811 v - . 700 -lum.
18710ocJoeAopenSE. 2dr.. l Condy Apple rod. Loll &lt;&gt;f
eyl., .,to.. PS. PI, eruloo. llr. a..-. Sholl clrlvo. Coli 614
70,000
n.w frel, Cl.-. 3-2424
11200 llrm. Call 11444t- 1-:-::'=r-=--·=~-==1141
t881S..1.-ci MocluJI . 1200ec..
1811 Sulek SIJyllrk. 4 "ctr .. PS. US HP.. lholt drM. 03000.
PB. AC. -oo. cloth ._rlor. I ·COJI~-::8_1~"':-3_1_1-_S_7_43_._ _ __
dirt bike.
Good oordlllon. Call 11 .. 44t- 1183 JCR 100 01177.·
Good cond. Newly rebuilt.
n Mon• C•lo. Good oonJII. uoo. Calll14-215-l224.
tlon. fiOO. Col1304-17t-7807. 1877Ho. . 710. Nlooblko. Soli
or trOdo lor alckuptruek. Alldng
1111 ChowrGIIt Covoll•. 4 dr. 0700. Coli 614·4•1-9369
Aoldng 011100. Coli 814445-S083.

'"-· 1

ml•.

-

Pbln1 PI-nt. 2 .torv hou•. 3
8R, L;R. DR. full biiMment
finished. g . . ge. ctnt.. l eir,
price reduced to t40't. 304875-1833.
Hou• for •te in Middleport.

Owner financing. t25. 000.
814-992-2801 or 614·992·
8983. •
Uwge 2 etory in Middleport.

EKcellent locetion . 4 apart·
ment1. Jutt flnilhed remodeJ.
lng. Good lncoma procluc•.
WOuld make 1 goad home for
aldwly. Prlcod lor quick lifo to
settle ..eete. Owner c.. h..p

"""""'"-·
-JJIJI·Othorr-·
... olio
Cal 814
1192-2403, I 14112-2780 or
814-H2-2111. ooklorJock or

o......

On .,.d oonnct. • raome and
both. On UnCJDinHololltL , . , _
rtJOI. Nlco yw4 Coli 114-8111'
4103-SoOO.

Renlals
41

OH, Otf···· :I CAN'T ~EMEMBf~

d.,.,

Wtf~E

MY

ecoLOGICAL.

lVI CtiE WAS !

v-""

iPllpa•a• ces
Sutnmtr
Slightly cracked

Minneapolis lamlly; optimist
and fearful slcleklck.

•

a

MOYII!: '1111 Men Who
Too Much (NRI (2:00)
11J MOYII: Polt&lt;J'a (R) (1 :34)
• NMiwlle Now
1:30 ()) .IJ)I'ull NouN A
~

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• c.h on f'CA. Oua•r.
GE. SpooiiiiOv In lonltll. Coli
30417t-2318 or 114-U8·
2484.

EEK &amp; MEEK

-'IV Wlclowtd

sportiCaatttr tries to raise his
little girls. (R) 1;1

1:00 (J) 7GO Club

Fetty TMe Trimming. ttlftfp
ron\.,.1. Coii:!M-175-1331 .

• CJl ()) elll lllll •c

=~Ndonll

Rotary or cable tool ctr•ng.
Mottwelltcompl...dllmtctav.
P\lmp .... and llrVIce. 304895-3801

(!) (!)

,

2- " '··-·f-\'Wd.

fullln-

e room. LMtgnllfe. t200. rnonlh

241• Mt.

llluo dopoolt. lWo op-d
,.,_ _ lOll- c:.ll 814
112-7211or 114-742-3141.

1711-1774.

Double Wide on prMte tot. 3

ttou• fo&lt; Ill• lloduiod Prtco.
Call 30.._17t-2701 llfto lpm.

bdnn. 2 bot ... AC. "'"" porcll,
Ooltloollo Forry.
utlltltl.
c:.ll 304-175-3087.

b·--·

3b•*-"·

n_.

fu..n•

,......., •az.ooo.oo.

.,d

v.-Aw.. Pt . ....... 304-

~lor I'Giand

Follow ellorta of !he Polllh
people to
new country

rorve

amld~,l;l.

Starks UwnMdlhr~ Sentlce,

IIJl LlnY Klnil Uvel
1-.30 Cll Pro lluGh V-,tleH
Men's from Seal Beach, CA

304·175-31111 or 3048782903.
liON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
oo1 - v oe. ttot
Point, WII hers, dryers and
....... 304875-2398.

~Newc-try

Ak.iTr•Trlmning81'1dltump
Re.-. froo """"''"· 304878-7121.

I..OCJI&lt;. ATi111e PICTU!le OF
MS. WHEN I WAf&gt; eaRN

'IOU WERE.

SORNWITH

MU~TACHE

OOP6.,.

IT'.5 A PICTURE OF MY

W~N&amp;

FATHER WHEN HE WJ-6

PICTURE.

dltlturlllnQ

0 lllleha ack Preaantt A
VflfY Cerelul Rape

Ill c..oll Inti Cllul

Plumbing
8o Heating

10:11 &lt;ll MOV11: Nevada 8mllh
(NRI (1:18)
10:311 (J) Caleb lilY Cltllt
(l)w- lkilnl '1111 Masters
from c.noway Gardena. GA
(T)
(!) l!nllnclera
• (II) JelllraOttl

CAR1ER'8 PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Ooii-.Ohlo
Phone 814441-3881 or 814
44t-4477

83

aNewa

11J IIIChaack PtaMnta

Excavatin,g

Anlmll Lovlra

Ill 'lldloCoWttrY
11 :011 (J) llemll111101111111e Thou
Shllt Not Steela
•(J) ()) elll a •a

......

Trenching Mrvlce. watw, 111
and electric InN buried. 304773-IS38.

;;::::::;;:;:::;:::;::;=:::=·
84
Electrical

Cll (!) Con ••nlkln Night In
ReviiW Nightly wrap-ups ol
thl 08mooJ aile and
RepubliCan conventions.
.(II) Lovl Col•leellon

8o Refrigllfation

......

R•ktentiel or commercial wtrlng.
- • or &amp;tlmMe
ropolro.
Uceneed
tiiCirtcilft.

•

free. Ridenour Elltalrlcel, 304175-1788.

~=~-What'
s
thl Box

85

O'Clock
• You can le 1 liar

Waneraon•• Water Hauling•
re•on~~ble r1t11, hnmediMe
2.000 · - dallvwy, clo•na
PooiL woll, otv. col 304-17t2111.

In

11J HIIChcack Pn etnta Four

Gan•al Hauling

11:30·!::!=--01
Clraot1
Cl)
(L)

-

())
(!)

.,

..

I~V ~;~
a~P.I.

•t::fc•llll QMe

Ia-• ='cea!Mil
beet&lt;

Night Cllftlllnl'l lind
1n10 .,_ biz by an offer Jlhe
C111't Jtlula, (R)
Tqp If oltllln, M.D.

a
~PromiMI
a• Anott
:L~i':rdy
.--~ M

"'

PEANUTS

12:00 (J) ..... CMI8 '1111 Source
llliMWI . . I'GA T- (R)

..

=~r~
I
......

J.IERE'S TilE SOOK

SUPPOSED TO
SOMMER ..
CALLE!?

)

Uphollterv

...-.

118alllg (R)

li.F&amp;LIDIDR
Ai~~-~~~,

In
,....... _ · - "for
" '·froo
Call
104·178·4114

r

:At .

I, ·-

DIWkl I
IJ)IItla 1118 a

Mow...,·• Up-Inti IIOrVing
trloountyorMII,..._ Tllobeo1

'

15Nasty
glance
9 Sole
10 African ,
fox
12 Actor
Griffith
13 Hindu
incarna-

I'

r

.'

2Wayne
Western

3 Vivify
&lt;i Susan of
"L.A. Law"
15 Embank-

ment

·'

..

-

Yesterday's Auwer

7 Think
- ·-18 Employ
27 Flower
1
about
21 "La Boheme" 28 Subse115 Slapstick
8
Authentiheroine
quently
item
city
22
Emphatic
29
Join
in
16 Yale
10 Sprite .
23 Narrative
34- Pan .
student
11
Non-paying
2&lt;i
Niggard
Alley
17Notin
profession
215
Measure
35
Elsie's
any place
15 Confined
(Brit.)
sound
19 Border
20 Vinuous
21 Speck
of dust
22 Gossip
23 MiniiBCule
Z&lt;i Boundary
25 Ball movie
26 I (Ger.)
27Woman's

•

..
.~

.

..

•.

......

cloak

30 Part
of RSVP
31Parls

•.-;

··•

1!0880n
32 60 sees.

.'

.. .

33Newsroom

employee
35 Make
money
36 Filter
37 Fonnerly
38 Refuse

...
... ·,
•.'

..

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Herers how to work it:

P.O.V. T1ke a dlaturblng

12:a0. Cll • 1.811 Nlglll wlllt

•us•

river

DOWN
1 Destroyed

71111

'•

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

oiAIDS~.tl

OF ~E O'URBER't'ILLES"

87

39Ew-opean

.ACROSS
1 Cast off

look II IUrvivllllta; chronicle

'

.'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

vow

look at survlvallels; chronlclil
of AIDS pltlent. 1;1
'
IIJ)I__,. Newa
IIJ AJrwotl Dlaoovery

BORN.

CROSSWORD

6 Alfonso's
tion
queen
1&lt;i Courtroom

10:00 CJ) Btnllght Talk
(!)Niwa
.
(I) P.O.V. Take 8

MORTY MEEKLE

Michell"• Rooldondal Air Cond~
tiD..,_ ond rofrlg-lon, ,..
chorgo Ond -lr ....... 3044118-1768.

30H.

..,..,,_-d,.,.,

MOVIE: '1111 Killer Elltl

aJ PillliiMIIMI

Carpent,Y/Remodetlng. EJtperilncild. ho,.tl, ,..onebte.
FrH ..... Rift. Q, M. CID«tan814441-81111.... n-..
Th~nk You.

lchullr _ . , lloulln&lt;i. Jom•
Schuler 114·1•2·2478 or
Everette Schuler 814-742·

2 ~oom .
floollup. 247 N. 3rd. lillddoport.
Adu Itt _preferNd. Reference.
1118 pluo dopoolt. 114892·
, 3118or 21t-1311-3tl2.

(II)

(POl (2:02)

448-~171 .

Three BA hou• · in counlry.
•200mo. t10Dd-..otlt. Ref•·
enc• l'lquired. 304-171-4433
or 304875-2138.

JMperdyt 1;1

find why members ·or
Franklin axpedlllon were lost.

. . . . . . . . 11 ...41-9848.

.KJ4
WEST

Tony and Sam1nlha aech get
a100 at the same i:ler
teen hellQOUI. (R)
(!) (!) NOva SC!en eta try to

nee • st~P •mow!. lhnM •
thld&amp; IMCIIna. muiiCh, atone.
top ·101. lldllj.. ,._. .. Don"•

• A 10
tK 7&amp;2

EAST
The enterprising declarer is always +Q
.K4
looking for better ways to take tricks. . .QJD78
•tu
In particular, he does not like to leave tQ 10
+AtU
things to chance when they can be cer- +.Q10 D 6,&gt;
+A173
tain. So look at today's four-spade conSOUTH
tract Does it seem that South was too
.AI09872
aggressive in going right to four
•Kss
spades? Although he has only eight
tJ85
high-card poinll, North's opening dia·
+2
mond bid increases South's chance of
Vulnerable: North-Soutb
taking tricks with the J ·8·5 of diaDealer:
South
monds, and South's spade suit comes
alive when partner supports it.
Wett
Nortll Eut
After the opening lead, there was ·
plenty of work to do. Declarer won his Pass
It
Pass
heart king and led a club to the K·J. Pass
2•
P...
When West played low, he guessed Pass
Pass
Pa..
right to put in dummy's jack. East won
Opening lead: • Q
the ace and returned a heart to dum"
my's ace. The king of clubs was played
'·
and a diamond discarded. Declarer ~~------------~
now had the option of taking a spade club from dummy and ruffed. Then be •
finesse, guarding agsinst a possible K- rufled his last low heart. Then eame a
Q-4 witb East. That would be tile right . spade back to his ace and another • ·
play If the only problem on the deal spade. Lo and behold, East was on lead
was ensuring that the defenders did · with the spade king, and hearll and •
not lake more than one trump trick. clubs were uhauatetl. from the dum- ,
But there was also a precarious dia- my and declarer's band. There wu
mond situation to be dealt with, with nothing for East to do but cash the diapotential help in the defenders' trump mond ace and let South make his thin
holding. So declarer played tile low game contracl

()) .Ill Wllo'ltllllloe&amp;?

""'' - · -· Call 11444t8344.

'J.IJ.U

65 3

aa.m.yM-

lndilcreat eex llleraplsl. (R)
Cll Clllllc ...._..

Polntlngo Interior 6 E,..rlor.

NORTH

By Jameo Jacoby

llan~rt~~•

Fox
• (J) dl Matlock MCl¥18 star
Is eccuaed of murdering his

no

.J

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

.(11)118iTNk

\llleniOft
• V1clloCountry
1:00 (J) Cruy Ulcl I F01 Desert

PIUI Rupa, Jr. W... r Ser\llce.
l'l&gt;olo, clewrno. wollo. Call 114-

2 or 3 BR . Coll81444t-1218.

-·

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

James Jacoby

I:.:.:

~ vtil'

R • R W- 8oMco. l'oolo,
cisttrnt, wells . lmmedlate1,000 or 2.000gollonodallvory.
Call 304-1711-6370.

Mlddloport. AC .. d~l.-ohor.
oorllogo dlooo•l. flll b-......
Ooll 81 .. 4•t-9205 llftor 5o30
PM.

Complete lhe chuckle quoled

~'i;.IIJ) Wheel ol

CllMIJIIIeHlNIU

RON EVANS EN11:11PRISES·
Septic tank P,..PIIlll'
per
lood. Coli 1·800-1137-1821.

J • J W•r l•vlco. Swimming
poolo. cl••no. wollo. Ph. 61 ..
24t-9211.

Nice 2 POflibly 3 SA . ftou• in

I

BRIDGE

.Ill Judge

..,..lr

limo. Call 814441-7404No
tklndav calls.

Adutts onlv. Ref. l'llquired. No
...•. Call i144.t-0338.

deli bar and dessert bar," the
man said to his date. "How much
do 1- -?"

'""~!:00)
.Ill
•• Court

I]) 8uffw ~lne

J

01&gt;- SoptJc T.,ioJ • 1000
gll .. 1600gal. ond.lot ol.orotlon
- · Foctooy troln ..
ohop. liON EVANS EN11:R·
PRISES. Jocklon, Ohlo. 1·80C).
537·9628.

Cl1t1rns. Welts. Del~ Anv·

Ni cefy fu miahed 1ma11 houee.

7

•i,=:::•

.......

~\~

OloJV• C.ook Rd. Coli 81.._
448-0294 .

82

.

.,

.

• c..oll Mil ChiiH
7:05 Cll Andy Ortfllth
7:30•(J) ()) Holl)wood

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
~condltlonll llfotlmo guoron·
too. Loco! .ofnn-lurnlohod.
fr• e81tmetn. c.JI oollect
1-11 .. 237-0481.
night.
Roger1811emtnt

Dillard Wlter hrvtC'jl; Pools.

Homea for Rent

"Well, we want1othesalad bar,

Cleave - Wound - Sworn - Loafer - DOWNFAll
Grandpa explained a household budget to my cousin: "II
your outgo exceeds your income, IIJ~i~n your upkeep will be
your DOWNFALL."
·

a

hou• with 2YJ bath, deck,

1unk·in ·porch, 2 aer11, River
frontage. In SyNcu•. Upper
80'1, 814-982·5224 Of 6149 92·1907 after &amp;p.m.

I I I 1

•

:

;

I

. (L)
()) lnlllllll••tt Tonlgllt
Cll (!) MICNII/ ~

Home
Improvement•

72

HOT borgolnsl Drug iJOIJI. 73

1

r-------,
1:-,-,.1VISLEW
;_;1'-s"-TI"--;lr--TI--1 0

I])

20 lt. . .f.con111nod. Clll 304
171-2321 or S?e-2106.

SMEPEII •d -lng nwchiM
ropolr, - L ind IUJI)III•. Pick
.., .. d d-.y, Dwlt
Cltln•. one h1lf mile up

0

Bobv alp for •le. Call 114

I

I

•YouC.Iel1181'
1:351J) CIIOIIklrMII
7:011 (J) RltltlnQIOtt ltHitJ Lofty

condition. Calll14742·3174.

w-...-..g.

N.._

63

()) .Ill ABC Nlwa 1;1

Stwltl

1981 Ford F110 XLT LMiot. &amp;.
Condition. Call 304-773-9105.

EQ-.

........ ...... _ ...... coJII.
n old. 304875-2S68,

iS·

(!) llody 1!11 clllc
(!) Nlllhllr lntlneH ll_.t

Ph ... bc. """

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While firm tr8Gior1 coli plu• Chovy I&gt; ton pick-up. Rooontly
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304171-7Ul.
380. 4 ..... S1,000
ml• Jluno . .lit. lhorpl Coli
514445-7148- &amp;PM.
8 N Ford t ..otor n_. ahalst
menlfotd. pipe • muffler.

-·

.
_
_
_
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.
l:!y filling in the missi ng wol-ds
L....I.-..L.-1--....L.-..L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

iJi lnllde 1111 PGA Tour

Trewl t•ll•·1984 CoachrtW'I
Clt..lc: 32ft., AC, ewnlng. Uke
- · Coli 814-21t-17117 oft•
4o3DPM.

hog. f431Q. M•ooyHorrllponr

mochlne, good •hope. 099&amp;.
Ow... will ~~- ... Coli 11 ..
28t-812:t

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1:311 • (J)
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3

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llopl'l llenlee
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a • ...._•.

1171 Doltal Robblt. good fllol
mH ..... 19n VollrO . .tion
~n. httah and pot11ble •c~
304-171-3077.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-PM
Grooming . All breeda ... AII
lama Pel Food Dealer.
Julio Webb Ph. 11444t-0231 .

Machine; Pert 4

71 Auto's For Sale

61 Farm Equipment

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TUES.. JULY 19

•CJl ()) elll 111 •o
:dllllwa

l•'*
· -..·11..
-178-2220.
Call 304
1711-4230

Dining room tlbl•8 chelrs,
chest. •
buffet. bed,
nlvht - n d, S•olllto clloh •
oqulp..-t, Calll14256· 1932.

Moore' a Chapel Centennial
Pl .... with pld:unt and history.
110 ooch. Coli 30487t-2262
"'575-2203.

Auto Pam

bulldl. .

.O Rearrange

Trouble

IUOOIT TIIAN IMII810N·
Utld • rebult Ill t,pM;. Gu•en·
. . 30 dlift minimum. ttr1011
1119 • ..,. Robull " " ao,......d •• low • •39.
Standllrd clut:~h•. pr--..,.
pi- 6 1 - t b e - AI
typM 12 moe. WlfNitty. 'II• buy

1&amp;. 000 ITUIIircordtlo-. CoH
814·441-1811 b•tw.en 10
AM· 6 PM.

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8o Acceuori•

1977

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- - - - - - - Edllld by CLAY I. rOLLAN
TlllT DAILY

EVENING

Muot'""
buying ..... boo1. loot
ollor.
Call 3114-175-7127.

ch..,.

LAYNE'S FURNfTURE

M

.

' 11• llnklr 170 " ' ln-llootd,

Oldor modollntorprloo mil,
uFold- down uClmiMI',
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bedt, new canw1, t310. Whfte
c»nt Mte unlfarma. . . 8. bab\1
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SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
OUve St .. QalllpoMa.
' NEW- 8 pc. wood group- t3BS.
a •
livl
99•
m
· • 19 .,... 1 v199
1 with
bedding- '
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starting· t99. Recliners Sill baby -ac:ocb Md thr•
starting- t99.
UsED- Beds. dratMrl, bedroom two-,e• old peecodq, Call
suites, t199-t299 . Desks, 814-985-3656.
wringer Wlllh•. a mJmplete line 21 . 000 BTU Glblon Air Condi9f uitd furniture .
·
NEW- Western boots· flO. tloner. 1250. Call 814-1922
Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
728.
toft toe) . Caiii14-446-31S9.
1 room air cOnditioneF. 1100.
Cqunty Appli.,et, Inc. GOod Call 814-985-3611 or 114ultd appllanCM end TV Mit. 19-:-a_s-..,3_5_7_6_._-:-_
. .,--Open SAM to ePM. Mon thru
sac. 814-446-1119. 827 3rd . Antique woodburnlng cook
1tove. green ·• cream, top CMtn,
A
G ~ 11 o111• 0 H.
\Ill. • P
priced low. 304-178-71541
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ovonlng1.
Wllhers. dryer,, refrigerators, Full ~ b~ _.
"h bo
ranges. Skaggs Applience 1 •
II
......co •• 't""ete Wn
Upper River Rd. bMide Slone springs lr'fd mattrwu. Ea:el.
CNit Motel. 614448-7398.
cond. Coll304875-3521:

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• . Call 304-l?e.72118.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Television
Viewing

c.......

400 w.tt 10und •v•m. 4-110
._.n •PMk•• complele wtth
Snllk•l Shv.. mlcs. nandl
lkleal for Goapal Graup.chutah
sound ......,). 01200. Coli
&amp;1444t-231111ftor 8 PM.

May•g Wringer wether, .,21.
Electric IIOW t&amp;O. Nfrkl...or
t140, amall Warm MDinlng
Stow teO, Block .,d white
conoolo 125. 2 opoco 9M
hllllten e25 e~eh, 2 half bedl
t31 each, •ble with 4
115. •-n ....,_ 140. Riding
mo....,.r 11 HP. 42 in. cut. new
en...!ne t600. 814-992·3122.

Bom and
Motora fDr Sale

1171 ......ft Cobin
3011 Mer. Crulllr out4rlvo. lui

Stenclng •am roofing. 7 piecee
LEASE for altON or officeiJ'ICI. of
Male iron. 3· "I" beams.prox Z,OOO sq ft. Cll• futMCI dlffarent
tlz... sh ..ls of
cem•l air, 1501 Jett. .on
lnaulalon-Lota. CMI 814-38e.
...... 304875-1431.
1821.

in my home. Lg. room • b.th.

Real Eslale

liT 'N' CAIILVU:e.., Larrr Wrta~t

OMC tn.to. 1 &amp; 11.
aluminum bed- nil whh or
without btd. 1971 Mack tractor
with 18713011. llummlttn111or.
SpiCious mobile honw loti for· Callllftor I PM, 11421t-832&amp;.
rent. r=.m11y Pride -..oblle Home
P•k. Golllool~ Ferry, W. Vo. Plz• Equlonwlt tor Sele. Call
304175-4407.
304875-3073.

lmmadl8te openlno·Uitra·

12

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tue1dey, July 19. 1988

Pomlloy-Middleport. Ohio

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10-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

..---Local news briefs... - continued from page 1

Patrol probes injury mishap
The State Highway Patrol investigated an injury accident
Monday at 12:40 p.m . In Meigs County, on SR 338, just west of
mile post 21, in Lebanon Township.
Troopers said Crystal L. Folmer, 18, Long Bottom, Ohio,
suffered a minor visible Injury but was not Immediately
treated. According to ibe patrol, Folmer lost control and her
pickup truck went into a ditch and overturned. There was no
citation.
No one was Injured in another Meigs County accident Monday
at ?: 27 p.m.on US 33 in Bedford T01ynship. Troopers said Lyle R.
Sinclair, 39, Shade, Ohio, slowed tor a left turn. Behind him,
Terry L. Holley, 22, of GalllpoUs, was unable to stop. His car
struck the back of the Sinclair vehicle. There was no citation.
One driver was cited in a two-car coUision Monday at 5:10
p.m. at the junction of SR 7 and SR 681, In Meigs County. .
Troopers said Kirk P. Flck, 18, of Long Bottom, was southbound
on SR 7 when another vehicle driven by Rhonda L. Dunfee,
Reedsville, puUed Into the path of Flck's car. No one was
Injured. The patrol cited Dunfee tor failure to yield the right of
way.

List dates for physicals

0.

Boys and girls interested in participating in sports at
Southern Junior High and High Schools should repprt to the high
school for physical exams according to the following schedule;
Thursday, July 21, seventh grade boys, 5:30 to 6:30p.m.;
eighth grade boys, 6:30 to 7:30p.m.; ninth grade boys, 7:30 to
8:30p.m.
Friday, July 22, tenth grade boys, 5: 30 to 6:30p.m.; eleventh
grade _boys, 6:30 to 7:30p.m.; twelfth grade boys, 7:30 to 8:30
p.m.
Monday, July 25, seventh grade girts, 5:30 to6: 30p.m.; eighth
grade girls, 6:30 to 7:30p.m.; ninth grade girts, 7:30 to8: 30p.m .
Tuesday, July 26, tenth grade girls, 5: 30to6: 30p.m.; eleventh
grade girts, 6:30 to 7: 30 p._m.; twelfth grade girls, 7:30 to 8:30
p.m.
Students should wear shorts and bring completed examination cards which are avalla ble from the high school.

Pleads guilty in court
Duncan E. Maztngo, 24, of Rutland, charged with negligent
assault In connection with a shooting early Sunday morning in
Rutland, pleaded guilty to the charge Monday In Me·tgs County
Court.
Mazingo was sentenced to 30 days in jail, which was
suspended to three, fined $250 and costs, placed on probation for
six months, and ordered to pay restitution.
Shotin the leg by Mazingo was James L. Mash, 31, of S.R.143,
Pomeroy . A .22 caliber rifle was used In the shooting. Mash was
taken by EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released.

Ohio...

Continued from j&gt;age 1

Jackson was over and "we have
put II all together."
Calling it "the politics of
Inclusion," the Texas senator
and soon-to-be vice presidential
nominee carried the word to the
183-member Buckeye delegation
directly from the final negotiation meeting among Dukakls,
Jackson and other top-level
Democrats.
''We w~re .meeting with Governor Dukakls and ( the) Reverend
Jackson," said Bentsen in explaining his late arrival at Ohio's
Plerremont Plaza Hotel head·
quarters, "and we have put It all
together."
.
A noisy and lengthy cheer
erupted from the delegation,
which was nervollsly optimistic
about the apparent schism be
tween the Dukakls and Jackson
fQrces."
'This is th~ birth of a coalition
of Inclusive politics that is going
to put It all together in 1988,"
Bentsen told the delegation. He
furnished no details on the
accord.

Bentsen termed the agreement
"a reaching out- saying to some
of the Democrats who voted tor
(President) ' Reagan: 'Come
home.'"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) American Electric Power Co.
Monday reported second quarter
net earnings of $118,785,000,
compared with $117,326,000 for
the same period In 1987.
Earnings per share for the
second quarter . were 61 cents,
unchanged from last year.
For th~ 12 months ended June
30, net earnings were
$531,686,000, down 3.2 percent
from last year's comparable
earnings of $548,988,000.
Earnings per share for the 12
months were $2. 75, a decrease of.
9 cents or 3.2 percent from $2.84 a
share a year earlier.
The per-share earnings for
both 12-month and 3-month periods are based on an average of
193.5 mlllion shares outstanding.
W.S. White Jr., AEP chair·
man, said the 12-month earnings
and earnings-per-share figures
would have been $600,549,000 and
$3.10, respectively, had !lot Columbus Southern Power Co. , a
subsidiary, taken a write-off In
November 1987 o( a previously
disallowed amount of its investment in the Zimmer plant In

Announcements
REAcr meeting
Tlie Meigs County R.E.A.C.T.
will hold a special meeting
Friday, 7:30 p.m., at Pleasers
Restaurant. Ali members are
urged to attend.
Better health club
The Rock Springs Bet
Health Club is having a picnic on
Thursday at 12 noon at the Rock
Springs Un !ted Methodist
Church.

rer

Lellon to meet
. Racine Legion will meet 7: 30
p.m. Thursday. Several items of
business will be discussed . Refreshments will be served !oUowing the meeting.

•
Farmers receive hope after Monday's ram
By .JEFF WOODS
United Preu International
Cool summer rain gave longsuffering farmers reason to hope
for an end to the drought In parts
of the Midwest, while a heat wave
blamed for at least eight deaths
tormented much of the rest ofthe
country.
Scattered showers and thun. derstorms drenched some farm
fields In Kansas, Missouri, Iowa,
Indiana, Wisconsin, IIUnois and
Ohio since the weekend, and with
more rain !orecast this week,
drought watchers were optimistic for the first time In months.
Showers and thunderstorms
raked the nation early today,
striking In Wyoming, Colorado,
South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, the Ohio Valley, the lower
Great Lakes, Pennsylvania, Vtrgtnta, New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland and Georgia.
Showers were scattered from
New Mexico across Arizona .

EMS hu two calls
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports two
calls Monday; Pomeroy at 11:04
a.m. to Pomeroy-Americare
Nursing Center for Lora Parmi·
ter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2: 20 p.m. to
brush fire on Braun Run R4ad.

____ _j._
......---~--

~--·-------- -··~·-

Ohio Lottery

Reds humble

son, 44, who has a farm 6 mlles
west of town.
"In town ... It rained like
crazy." Richardson said. "Then
we turned off onto our road and It
was nothing but dust. That's how
scattered 11 wa·s ."

Mets, 11-2

Daily Number
251
Pick 4
3405

Page 5

I.Ditery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
.Dally Number
479.
Ticket sales totaled
$1,153,648.50, with a payoff due of
$409,716.
PICK-4
0014.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$192,095, with a payoff due of
$86,615.
.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,880. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$490.
•

.

.........

_ . -; - - - - - -.............~

-...~.....

•

,..,.

-

e

at

Vol.38. No.&amp;1

2 S.C1iono, 18 Pog• 26 Centl
A Multlmodialnc. N - - ·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. July 20. 1988

Copyrighted 1988

Soybeans may sunrive;
com· crops destroyed

,.

r···•

.......

Farmers are "ecstatic" over
this week's unexpected rainfall
in Ohio, but while II offered some
hOpe for soybeans, it came too
late to save much of the state's
b!Uion-dollar corn crop.
For many.'llreas of Ohio', II was
the first significant rainfall since
Easter Sunday.
Columbus received 0.62 Inches

ATLANTA (UPI) - Exactly
what Jesse Jackson wants and
what he will get remain open
questions that may shadow MIchael Dukakls's presidential
campaign until Election Day.
The fiery civil rights leader
and his army of followers have
been promised a "major role" In
the fall campaign by the Massachusetts goVernor, but spectncs
have yet to be worked out.
As part of the Dukakis-Jackson
peace pact announced Monday,
the run11er-up's constituency of
blacks, young people and
workers are to be reflected in the
m~keup of the Democratic National Committee. DNC
members are to meet Friday to
elect a new chairman and Jackson has sent signals that he might
like to see Paul Kirk replaced,
possibly by his convention man·
ager, Ronald Brown.

Austintown man is
Super Lotto winner

Heavy lbiuadentonns poui·
ble toalcbt. Low In 7k. Cbaac:e
of rain 'IG pereent. Tlaunday,
hlp Ill 1108, chance of raiD II
percent.

•

By THOMAS M. BURNETT
United Pre~~~ laternalloaal

Weather

southwestern Ohio that had been
deferred pending settlement of
litigation.
White Indicated that the improvement in 12-month earnings,
after excluding the Zimmer plant
write-off, was mainly the result
of:
-Increased residential and
· commercial sales primarily due
to a return to more normal
weather in the first quarter of
1988;
·
-Steadlly increasing Industrial sales reflecting the stable
economic recovery in AEP's
seven-state service area;
-Reduced interest expense
and preferred stock dividends
due primarily to refinancings.
White noted that retail sales
have been favorably Influenced
by AEP's "Constructive MarketIng" progr_am, which encourages
Innovative ways for .c ustomers to
use electricity more efficiently
or at a lower cost.
White added that the decrease
in revenues was attributable
generally to a decline In sales to
wholesale customers resulting
from a highly competitive wholesale energy market _and lower
rate levels ·reflecting recent
reductions in fuel costs, federal
Income taxes and financing
costs.
American Electric Power Is
the parent holding company of
eight operating electric utilities
providing service to 7 million
people in Ohio and six 'other
east-central states.

Heavy rains brought floodwaters yields by 25 percent In most
that were up to waist-high in places, but "the good 11ews Is
Clovis, N .M., streets, weather soybeans could come back to
o!ficlals said.
almost a normal crop. It depends
In Atlanta, Neb., more than 5 on August."
In Iowa, weekend rains of up to
Inches of rain fell In an hou ~
4
¥..
Inches mean that "the worst
today shortly after midnight .'
the
summer Is now behind us,"
of
More than 1 ~ inches of rain
fell Monday at Fond duLac, Wis., said Harry Hlllaker, the state's
nearly an Inch at Rockford, Ill., chief climatologist. ·'For a small
nearly 1 ¥..inches at Fort Wayne, part of the state, the drought may
Ind.. and more than 2 Inches be over.''
The showers are widely scatoutside Columbus, Ohio.
' ·'This one really perks things tered, however, and "some
up," said James Newman, a farmers reap benefits while
professor of agriculture at some places get no rain at all,"
Purdue University In West La· National Weather Service forefayette,- Ind. "I wouldn't say caster Brian Smith said.
''There's still a big 7- or 8-lnch
we've broken the drought, howdeficit
of rainfall in the Midwest,
ever. This will restore surface
and
that's
hard to make up with
soil moiSture. To get out of the
scattered
showers
and thunderlarger problems affecting
storms,"
Smith
said.
"For the
ground water and river flow,
we'll need many weeks of normal · most part, we're still stuck In the
rain. But that's possible this drought."
Nearly 3 Inches of rain fell In
year."
Newman said the 6-month-old La Plata, Mo., but"wedldn'tget
drought already has cut com a trace," said Beverly Rlchatd·

Some
•
questions
unanswered

Bentsen licked off a list of
CLEVELAND (UPI) - An
areas In which he said Republi- Austintown man Monday recans are deficient, Including deemed a Super Lotto ticket
education, housing welfare and worth $6 million and will receive
health care. "We want to say that 20-annual payments of $240,000
this country of ours is ready for a after federal withholding taxes,
change," he said.
an Ohio Lottery Commission
With Sen. Howard Metzen- spokesman said.
bauni, D-Ohio, Its author, smll· · David F. Cormeli was the
ing In the background, Bentsen holder of the only ticket . for
commended legislation on its Saturday's drawing with the
way to Reagan requiring com- numbers 5, 8, 10, 14, 18 and 35.
panies to give 60 days notice Some 4.2 mllllon of the $1 tickets
before closing a plant.
were.sold.
''This nation Is ready · for a
There were 160 tickets con tal nchange from an administration ing five of the six numbers, worth
that gives 30 days notice to $1,000 each. And 7,784 tickets had
(Attorney General Edwin} four correct numbers lor a $62
Meese and will not give 60 days payoff.
notice to the American worker,"
Wednesday's jackpot will be at
he said.
least $3 million.
Glenn called Bentsert "a man
of great principle, Integrity and
accOmplishment.'.'

AEP reports earnings up ·

Tuesday. July 19. 1988

'

Monday, the highest dally rainfall since May 5, when 0.661nches
tell. The totals Monday generally
were a half-Inch to 1 ¥., inches,
with a few Isolated areas getting
more than 2 Inches.
The showers continued Tuesday, mainly over Central and
Southern Ohio, with some areas
getting as much as 1 ¥., Inches.
"We're· ecstatic," am Swank,
executive director of the Ohio

Farm aureau Federation, said
Tuesday, "but the com crop Ia
too far along to respond ·vel'S'
much. It may look better, and It
may have greener leaves, but
unless it's at a certain stage of
development (the rain) won't do
much good.
.
"On the contrary, It will help
soybeans quite a bit. Soybeans
are a different plant, able tci
Continued on page 8

Meigs DHS votes to strike

RECEIVES DONATION - The Columbia
Township Volunteer Flre Department received
an economic boost recently In the fonn of a $4110
· donation from Soulbern Ohio Coal Company's
Melp Division. The donation was presented to
Jim Gaston, fire chief, and Danny Jordan, lire
tighter, by Dave Peterson, safety supervisor for

Stocks

·· ·. . ,. . . . . . ,. . .,_._

the Melp No. 2 mine. Tbe lire department
services the mine as well as Us surround in&amp; area,
Peterson says. Currently there are tour members
of the department who work for Southern Oblo
Coal. Jordan is an em gloyee al the Melp No. i
mine. From left to right: Dave Peterson, Jim
Gaston, and DannyQ'ordan.

r'-t'-r---r-'1..._

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

Am Electric Power .............. 28
AT&amp;T ................................. 26'!4
Ashland 011 ........................ 74';4
Bob Evans ............ , .......... ... 17';4
Charming Shoppes ............... 14 60
City Holding Co ................ ... 34
F ederal
. . Mogul.. .................. 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... :........60%
Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
Key Centurion .................. ,.38'!4
Lands' End ........ .............. ... 29'!4
Limited Inc ........ ,............... 24%
Multimedia Inc .. ................. 72'h
Rax Restaurants .................. 4';4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11%
Shoney's Inc ....................... 27%
. ~SNOW
Wendy's lnll ........................ 5'j4 ·
Worthington Ind ................. 24%
FRONTS: "
Warm

Sou lb.Central Ohio
Tonight: Variable cloudiness,
with a sUght chance of showers.
Lows will be between 65 and to70.
Winds light ~nd variable. Chance
of rain Is 30 percent.
Wednesday: Variable cloudiness, with showers and thunderstorms likely. High tempera·
lures will be in the mid 80s.
Veterans Memorial
Chance of rain is 60 percent.
Monday Admissions - Sarah
E¥1ended Forecast
Johnson, Middleport; Dewey
ThurSday lbrough Saturday
Lyons, Pomeroy; Belinda
Achanceo!showersThursday, Roush, Pomeroy.
with fair conditions friday and
Monday Discharges - Allen
Ssaturday. Highs will be In the Eichinger; Andrew Lemley, Jo80s, with lows mainly In tyhe 60s seph Leach, Rachael Roush
Thursday and ranging from the Helen Reynolds, Mateo~
mid 50s to the mid 60s early Ginther, Dorsel Miller, Sidney
Friday and Saturday.
Burton.
.------------------------~

Hospital news .

''This Is not something we want
to do, bu I our backs are to the
wall," said Larry Robinson,
· president of the collective bargaining unit of the Meigs County
Department .of Human Services.
Robinson reported this morning
that the bargaining unit voted In
a meeting Tuesday night, to
reject the last proposal from
management and to strike.
The bargaining unit's Intent to
strike notice was to be mailed
this afternoon to the State Employment Relations Board In
Columbus. According to Page
Lewis, liason otflcer tor SERB,
the effective strike date would be
ten calendar days after the day
SERB receives the notification.
- - UDBDICATION ,...;_ The Butflnlton Island
Moaument placed there by the Oblo Wstorlcal
Society and dedicated In the fall of 1933, will be
re-dedicated In ceremonies at lbe park al 11 a. m
on Saturday, July SO. Parllclpatlog In lbe

ceremonies will be representatives of numerous
patrlotrlc organlzadUoas along with Ll. t::mdr. '
Gordon R. Bury olf the LSo• of veterans
RMerves, and leader of the battle re-enactment
group.

That would bring the strike date,
tentatively, to Aug. 1.
Seventeen bargaining unit
members were present for Tuesday's m~ting, It was reported.
Officers tor the bargaining unit
said they were not at liberty to ·
report the actual strike vote at ·
this time bu I that the vote would
be released soon.
"It's unfortunate we have to go
to this extent," Robinson said,
adding that It Is because of
"management's unreasonable
position" that the bargaining
unit voted to strike.
·
Five tina! contract Issues remain unresolved. According to
Michael Swisher, director of the
. Meigs County Department of

Democrats laud Jackson address .
I

.

ATLANTA . (UPI)
Ohio's the greatest s~ches made In
delegation to the Democratic. history.
"He reached out and touched
National Convention boiled over
every
American, inviting them
with excitement about Jesse
...
to
be
a part o!that patchwork
Jackson's Tuesday night adquilt.
It
was a call to the best In
dress, saying hewlllhelplead the
every
American."
presidential ticket to victory In
"When (Michael) - Dukakls
November.
Rep. Louis Stokes of Cleveland watched that speech tonight, he
termed it one of the greatest must have had some second
thoughts about his choice," said
continue to be more eloquent political speeches In history.
Stokes,
referring to Dukakis' s
The.tlelegates
reacted
as
they
than anything said or done here
choice
of
Lloyd Bentsen tor vtce
today because it Is at once a returned !rom the Omnl, site of
presjdent.
compliment to the valor .and the convention to a lavish party
"I thought It was historical,"
courage of thousands or our hosted by Ohio House Speaker
agreed
state Rep. C.J. McLin of
soldiers and a monument to the Vernal Riffe Jr. at the PierreDayton,
Jackson's campaign
sa.c rltlce of those who died here.'' mont Plaza HoteL The party
chairman
In Ohio. "I think Jesse
That sarpe day the McCook featured huge tables of food and
monument which Is located not In drinks, and entertainment by the Jackson's speech tonight laid out
• the framework, not only tor the
the park but along the roadway Tommy Dorsey Orchestra and
Democratic partybutforcitizens
Four
Freshmen.
the
leading to Portland was rededias a whole. It was political yet not
"It
was
a
very
powerful
cated. A brass plaque telling
· poUtlcal. It was a blueprint we
about General Daniel McCook's speech,'' said Stokes, head of the
need to go forward.
role In the Civil War and the 21st District caucus and a top
"One patch won' tdo It," McLin
Battle of Buffington Island Is on , black congressional leader, "one continued. "We've got to take all
that I think will equally rank with
Continued on page 8

Buffington Island Memorial
ceremonies - slated July 30-31
...._/

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senllnel staff Writer

@a SHOWERS

-RAIN

"Cold

. . Static

fW Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderslonns will extend
from New England across North CaroUna and from the lower
Great Lakes across the Ohio Valley, the Tennessee Valley,
Alabama, lbe lower two-thirds of tbe Mississippi Valley, the upper
Texas Gulf Coast, Kansas and southern Nebraska as well as over
southern and central Florida.
·

· memorial In the park took place.
The governors of both Ohio and
West Virginia were there along
Rededication of the Buffington with numerous other dignitaries
Island Memorial in the Buffing- from across the state.
ton I~land Park and the McCook
The Hon. Thomas A. Jenkins
monument which Is located along congressman from the lOth Disthe roadway to Portland will be a trict, was the keynote speaker
part of the 125th anniversary and quoted those famous words
celebration of the Battle of from Lincoln's Gettysburg AdButtington Island planned for the dress as he spoke to the nearly
2,000 persons gathered at the site
weekend of July 30-31.
Both monuments were erected that cool October day.
by the Ohio Historical Society. It
"We must agree that this
was In the fall of 1933 that the monument of stone and mortar,
dedication of the large stone mute and Inanimate as It Is, will

Human Services, the last offer
made by managment was "tbe
best otter" f!lanagement will be
making and the union "should
not anticipate any additional
meetings."
However, Robinson said the
union Is hoping managment wUI
change Its position and go back to
tbe bargaining table within the
upcoming days and try to resolve
the situation before the .strike
begins. He said the bargaining
unit Is concerned about the effect
a strike could have upon the
public that is . served by the ·
Department of Human Services,
"but we want our grievances to
be heard," he concluded.

our patches together and get a
beautiful quilt that will keep us
all warm."
"It was just terrific," said
delegate William Bowen, a black
state senator from Cincinnati.
"He touched all the bases.
"He gave inspiration to a lot of
people, and not just at the
convention," said Bowen. "I
called home, and people were
crying with excitement about
that speech. He (Jackson) has
grown and developed In a lot of
ways. It he were white, he'd be
the presidential or the vice
presidential nominee. He's aU
about the American dream."
"The Jesse Jackson that spoke
tonight has the capacity to lead
our ticket to victory," said
Stokes. "I watched the white
delegates and I have never seen
the rapt attention on their faces.
They couldn't walt for the next
word to come out. He reached out
to
In this
"

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Ingels Furniture, Empire, Clark's, Bank One,
Farmers Bank, Racine Home National Bank,
Central Trust, Veterans Memorial, Kroger's,
Vaughan's, Eagles, Bill Childs, Karen Facemeyer, Nancy Hill, Janet Nibert, Becky Triplett, Lanny Van Meter, Bob Freed, Bill Nelson
and all the participants.

J. ·'

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b.l5''111 6 98·''
I UOO MINirv1UM

TERM

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DLF'O~d 1

YIELD

FIRST TEAM - Thla wu tbe !IDe up for the
first mt•n w.- aoftballleam, fonned 23 year•
ago wltll the help of KeaD,J Wtntu who hu been
wltb the team ever since. Froat row, I to r, are Jill
(Warner) Pu&amp;h, Manba (Pu&amp;h) Ruuell, Brenda
(Michael) Wckel, Terry (Ferrell) Cozart, Connie

32 DAY ........... 5.50
91 DAY ........... 6.00
6 MONTH .. : ..... 6.75 ................ 6.96
1 YEAR ........... 7.05 ................ 7.28
2 YEAR ........... 7.50 ................ 7.76
3 YEAR ........... 7.65 ................ 7.92
4 YEAR ........... 7.80 ................ 8.08
5 YEAR ........... 8.00 ·................ 8.30

LAST TEAM - The !all mt•o Mia- lloftball
team will play their final home 1ame In
Mlaenvllle oa Tbaraclay evenla1 at 8: II p.m.
Maldq up the team are, froat row, I tor, Melanie
Manldn, SheJIJ Stobart, l:.aorte Wayland, Sollja
Steele, Dreama Bentz, Sue Fl-y aa'd Pam Wbaley.
Back row, ! to r, are Coach Bon Clark, Melanie

Lyo-. Leuae Clark, Leelee Duddlo1, Krlaten
Pape, Bebeeca Wiles, Coach Mike Kl- aacl
Coaeh Kenny WJalu. Wlatu hal been with tile
team lllnce It waa OJ'Ianiled a year• a&amp;o. Team
members not prt!MDI for lbe picture are Denile
Olbeout, Sarah WUes and Marsha King.

Coach of ·2 2 years to retire; squad will change

'500 MINIMUM DEPOSit .

By NANCY YOACHAM
·Seabel staff Writer
Yin 1966, while I was serving as
counselor for the Methodist
Youth Fellowship In Minersville
and Syracuse, we bad aeveral
teenage girls Interested In softball. After M.Y.F. meetlnp,
we'd go to Bob Louks' ball
diamond In Syracuse and prac~- The Interest was lfl!at and
we soon entered the Point Plea·
sant, w..Va. Girls' J,.eague where

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-

Warner, Janloe (Manuel) Lillie, Mary (Ferrell)
Fl-y and Coaeb Wlnl•· Back row, I to r, ar
Barbara (Fiaber) Webbelmer, Katby (Francis)
Reed, Bea Bacldel,. MJ!rDyo (Brown) Wllllamll,
Debbie (Wolfe) Miller, Aane&amp;le (Warner) Robertson and Ruth (Winebrenner)
. Shain.
.

--·

•

-

•

we competed tor five years. That
was the beginning of the Hit'n
Misses sqftball team," says
Coach Kenny Wiggins.
Wiggins, who bas been with the
Minersville team from the very
beglnniJII, Is retiring at the end
of this season. "I just.can'tkeep
up with tllem anymore,' • he says
with a smile and a shake of the
head. To be retired along with
Wiggins Is the team name, Hlt'n
M!ases.

A few years later a junior
Wiggins, with the help of others
involved with early girls' teams divisiOn was formed and for the
In Melp County, Ol'Janlzed a past 18 years, an average of 16
Meigs County League for the teams of girls aged 10 through 18
have participated each summer
girls.
In 1971, the first Meigs Senior In organized lea111ea In Melp
Girls' League included the Hlt'n . County.
A home field was provided tor
Misses and teams from Fares t
the Hlt'n Misses, first by the late
Run, coached by Sue Grueser;
Pomeroy, coached by Frank Christy Elaer, on top ,of MinersSeth; and later New Haven, ville Hill, and for the past 20
years, by the late ·'l'ommy EdW.Va., coached by Bob Ayers.

--

nam~ .

wards at the famllar site on S.R.

124 In upper Minersville (lovIngly c ailed "the hole" by the
girls who play there, because the
field Is In a low valley visible
from the highway).
Since the team's formation,
''many Individuals have helped
the teem and promoted girls
softball in Meigs County,lnclud·
lng the Sutton Township Trustess, Dan Smith, moma and dads.

.,
'I

relatives and friends, as wen as
the late Christy Elaer and Tommy
Edwards," Wiggins says.
But now, after 23 years of
competition, this is tbe Hit'n
Misses' final year with the last
home game scheduled at Minersville this Thursday at 6: 15 p.m.
"Any and all of our former team
members, numbering well over
12S, are Invited to stop by for the
game," Wiggins says.

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