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Monday, April 25, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-'the Daily Sentinel

..--Local news briefs__.. Showers, thunderstorms move eastward
Breeding arrested by police

P,Y United Press International
-Rain and a few thunderstorms
extended today from northeast
Texas to southern Kansas and
~2"~s we. re scattered • .long the
Y".'.' Coas~m southeast Texas
to the Florida Panhandle.
Snow advisories were in effect
today for the mountains of
Montana east of the Continental
Divide and the northern mountains of Wygmlng, the National
Weather Service sald. Three toG
inches· of snow was expected in
the mountains and foothllls of
Montana. Between 5 and 8 inches .
of snow was forecast In the
northern mounta ins o( Wyoming
above 8000 feet.

JaniceK. Hatfield Breeding, of Middleport, was arrested by
Lt. John King and Cpl. Rick Johnson of the Middleport Pollee
Department Saturday night after- an alleged shooting Incident
in the Cedar Bar In Middleport. Breeding had attempted to
shoot Ersel Blevins.
Breeding has been charged with felonious assault and
carrying a concealed weapon. Th'e Incident Is under
investigation by the Middleport Pollee a nd the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.

Reynolds arrested by deputies
Terry M. Reynolds. of Kingsbury Road In Pomeroy, was
arrested by the sheriff's department Monday morning after
being stopped on a routine tra!f!c s top. The Washington County
Sheriffs Department haS charges of contempt or court a nd
interferr!ng with custody agalnst .hlm.

FBJ. ;?ntlnued from page 1

Advisory board meets Tuesday
The Meigs County Lil ter Control Advisory Board will meet at
the Litter Control office Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. Members are
asked to attend .

Me ius
"'e' ... - - - - - - - - Co ntinued from page 1

Pomeroy unit went to the West
Matn,Street res idence of Lester
F'lelds who was treated but not
transported.
The Tuppers Plains squad
answered a call at 6:56 p.m. to
the residence of John Olscar of
Umberger Ridge, who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and at 10:29 p.m. the Rutland unit
. transported Ruth Erlewtne from
her Main Street residence to
Veterans Memorial -Hospital.

I

Four calls were answered on
Sunday, the first at 3:31 a.m.
w~en the Middleport unit tra ns·
ported Ricky McClellen to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Mattie
Warner was taken from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
5:12 p.m. and at 10:54 p:m. the
Middleport unit tran s ported
Harry Garten to the Holzer
Medical Center from his res idence on Bradl)ury Road .

Area deaths

Ruth Erlewine

l
.

Garnet Herdman

Ruth G. Ertewine. 72. of Main
Gamet M. Herdmaq, 64, Route
St., Rutland, died Saturday
even1
.
. Leon, died atll29
: p.m. Saturlng at Veteran s Me morial day,Apri123,1988,atherhome.
Hospital.
She was a member of Pine Grove
Born Nov. 15, 1915 in Leon, W. Church at Leon, a member of the
Va., she was a daughter of the Feeney-Benncu American Legion
late Floyd and Iva Thornton Auxiliary for more than 20 years,
Howell.
an honorary Kentucky Colonel, a
She was a retired merchant, member of the Mason County
having been the owner-manager Democratic Women's Organization
of the Rutland Hardware Store and committee woman of that orfor 23 years. She was a member ganization for more than 20 year.
of the Rutland United Methodist . Born Apri!IO, 1924 in Leon, she
Church where she was treasurer was a daughter of the late Elza and
for 27'h years. and was a Alta Matheny Miller.
member of the United Methodist
She was also preceded in death
Women. She was a past matron of by three brothers.
She is survived by her husband,
Harr!sonviUe Chater. 255 of the
Order of Eastern Star. and past Ephrum G. Herdman; one daughter
president of the Rutland Garden and son-in-law, Bonnie and James
, Club.
Matheny, Leon; two sons and
Survivors lnclu de her husband, daughters-in-Jaws, Darrell and
Harvey Erlewine. of Rutland. Mary Ann Herdman, Leon, and
whom she married March 16, Golden and Anna Marie Herdman,
1940; one daughter and ·son-ln- Point Pleasant; two sisters, Mrs.
law. Joetta and David .Eskew. Alben (Velsie) Roush, Pomeroy,
Newark; and ( h r e e Ohio, Mrs. Mildred Meade,
grandchildren.
Columbus, Ohio; two brothers,
llesides her pare nt s, she was Ralph Miller, Point Pleasant, John
preceded in death by a daughter. R. Miller, Newburg, Ind.; eight
Karen Ruth Erlewine.
grandchildren,
four
greatServices will be Wenesday, 1 grandchildren.
p.m.. at the Rutland United
Graveside services will be conMethodist Church with Rev . ducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday, April
Robert Mussman and Rev. Park 27, at Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon,
Russell, both officiating. Burial with the Rev. Louis A. Bussell and
wiU be In Graham Cemetery in the Rev. Johnnie Hayman officialNew Haven, W. Va. Vlsltmg ing. Burial will follow.
hours at Hun ter Funeral Home, , Friends may call at the CrowRutland, will be 2 to 4 and7 to9 on HusseU Funeral Home Tuesday afTuesday. Eastern Star services ter 4 p,m. In . lieu of flower~.
will be held at the funeral home donations may be made to the Mt.
at 7 p.m. on Tuesday evening. Flower Emergency Squad.
Friends may also can at the
church for one hour prior. to the
funeral on Wednesday .

James Bailey
James B. Bailey. 86, New Hope
Road, Chester. died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol lowing a brief illness.
Mr. Bailey was born May 9.
1901 in Meigs County. a son of the
late Henry and Nora Wills
Bailey. He was a member of the
Chest er Church of God.
Surviving are his wife, Verdle;
two daughters, Mrs. Charles
(Joanna) Lanham. Belpre. and
Mrs.·Paul (Janice) Poar. Rend·
erson. W. Va .; a brother, John
Bailey, Pomeroy. and several
nieces and nephews. Also surv,vlng are four grandhclldren and
flve great-grandchildren.
lleslde his parents. he was
preceded In death by two broth·
ers and two sisters.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m .
Wednesday at the EwlngF'uneral
Home wllh the Rev . Gilbert
Spencer and the Rev. Don Co"'bs
offlclating. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 4 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday. Burial wUl be In Mount
Hermon Cemetery .

Two players pick all
Super Lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) _: Two
players picked aU.slx numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Saturday night, making them eligible to claim equal shares of the $6
miUion jackpot.
The names of the players wtn
be announced after their winning
tickets are validated by lottery
officials. a lottery spokesman
said early Sunday . The players
wUI receive the winnings In 20
annual pre-tax payments of
$150,000 each.
The winning numbers drawn
Saturday were 1, 2, 21, 29. 31 and
39.
In addition to the top prize
winners, 117 players picked five
of the numbers to win $1,000each,
while 6,367 players selected four
of the numbers to win $86 apiece.
Ticket sales for the weekend
drawing totaled $4,726,861, whlle
the prize payout totaled
$6,664,562. Wednesdal&lt;j'S jackpot
will be worth $3 mllllon.

LAST WEEK'S AD SHOULD HAVE READ

4 &amp; ·5 BUCKLE ARCTICS

S15
SIMON'S PICK·A·PA
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

'I

Showers and thunderstorms
wUl extend today from the lower
Mississippi Valley across Tennessee and Alabama Into South ·
Carolina. Georgia and northern
Florida, weather service spokesman Lyle Alexander sald. Showers and thunderstorms will also
be scattered over Utah. Colorado, Nebraska and eastern
sections of Kansas, Oklahoma
and Texas.
Clear skies covered the Great
Lakes region and portions of the
Ohio Valley early today, Alexander said. These clear skies will
allow temperatures to drop to
around the freezing mark in
some areas.

don't do," Revell said in the June covert enemy operations in11 deposition io the committees tended 'to influence political
tnvestigatlng the Iran-Contra events, and alleged the harrassscandal.
ment was timed to coincide with
North. fired from his White pending congressional votes on
House post when the scandal Contra aid, the documents show.
exploded into public view Nov.
In FBI Interviews, North also
25, 1986, wa s Indicted March 16 claimed polltical enemies went
with three others on felony to the extreme of poisoning his
charges of conspiring to defraud dog . Friends said he confided
the government by diverting that he thought his dog was kllled
millions of dollars to the Contra by two journalists wrltlng artiguerr!Uas from secret sales of Cles about his Contra operation,
U.S. arms to Iran.
but associates of North·later said
his
dog died naturally of cancer.
North's attorney, Brendan SulJivan , refused to comment on
North's gradually er oding
Revell's testimony or newly
released FBI documents. But the credibility with FBI agents can
be traced through the flies and
bureau flies sh·ed new light on the
accounts
from ,sources familiar
lengths to which North went to
with the bureau's probe. For
shield his secret Contra support
net\York during a congressional example. North told investigators he would turn over the tag
ban on official U.S. military
numbers nf the alleged surveilassistance to the rebels.
According to the documents, lance cars, but when pressed
North met with two FBI agents at later he said he had lost them.
During the May interview,
his White Hou se offlce May 9,
1986. to complain about alleged · North furnished the FBI with
names of the people he consiharrassment and surveillance
from political adversaries chal- dered prime suspects in the
lenging his support for the. alleged harrassment ~ampalgn.
Contras. The agents initially
believed him, the documen ts
The first was Jack Terr-ell. a
mercenary who had trained
show .
Contra troops In Central AmerNorth sta ted that he was being
ica but later defected from the
followed by unidentified people
rebel movement, complaining of
in at least two rental cars, that
corruption and human · rights
his own car was vandalized, that
abuses. Another was Daniel
his tires were stashed, a nd that
Sheehan, chief lawyer for the
key a ssociates in his Contra
network were being sued on cl vii
non-profit Christie Institute. who
filed a multimillion-dollar civil
racketeering charges in a bid to
lawsuit in Miami accusing 30
disrupt their support for the
rebels.
defendants, Including leaders of
North's Contra operation, of
North argued the events consticomplicity in a 1984 bombing that
tuted an "active mea sures campaign, " a term referring to
killed an American journalist.

Freeze or frost advisories were
In effect early today for lower
Michigan, Northern fndlana,
Ohio and northeast Kentucky .
Clear skies also prevailed this
morning across \he South Atlan tic states, Tennessee and from
western Texas to Southern
California.
Temperatures early today
were In tile 40s and 50s across
most of the nallon. Readings
were in the 30s in portions of the
Ohio Valley. Temperatures were
In the upper 20s and 30s from the
Great Lakes across the northern
Plains to the northern Rockies.
Temperatures were In the' 70s
over Florida and along the Gulf
Coast to southern Texas.
Thunderstorms were scattered
Sunday night from western Okla·
homa to south central Texas.
Some of the thunderstorms In
Texas were severe.
Several Injuries were ~eported
when strong thunderstorm winds

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted Saturday: None.
Saturday Discharges: Jayce
Leonard, Ralph Day, Eleanora
Redman, and F'red Willison.
S\lnday Admissions : Goldie
He ndren, Pomeroy ; Mattie
Warner. Pomeroy .
Sunday Discharges: Phillip
Donovan, Robert Snowden, Shirley Stephenson, Norma Godwin,
Lawrence Scarber ry.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 26¥,
AT&amp;T ... ............ ... ........... .... 27J.l
Ashland on ........................68Y,
Bob Evans ................. ......... 171;. 1
Charming Shoppes .............. 11% ,
City Holding Co ................... 31 •
Federal Mogul.. ................. .40%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................64'1.
Heck's Inc ........................... l'h
Key Cen turton ....................41 '1.
Lands' En~ ......................... 22%
Limited Inc ........................ 19%
Multimedia Inc ................... 65¥,
Rax Restaurants .. .... ............ 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 11
Shoney 's 1nc ....................... 24 Ya
Wendy's Intl ........................ 6%
Worthington lnd ................. 20%

ROBERT E.
BEEGLE
FOI

SHERIFF
•CAPABLE
•HONEST
•EXPERIENCED

H. llr CMIIdlle. Boo 72.
11 11• St. lllclne. Gllio 4sm

no doubt in my lieart. my heart ls
pure. I am innocent, innocent,
innocent and God is my witness."
The audience hissed as Demjanjuk sald it was "very painful
for me to sit here and hear the
terrible tragedy that befell the
Jewish people because of Nazism. ... They died a terrible
death and I hope they all reached
heaven ."
Oemjanjuk winced occasionally as Blattman delivered his
impassioned plea lor death by
hanging before the courtroom
crowd of an estimated 400 people.
some or them Holocaust
survivors.
"The accused was no small
cog," Blattman said. "He was a
major crlmlnal against humanIty and one of the arch-henchmen
who wielded his acts against the
Jewlsh people. He stood at the
gateway to the inferno. where he·
went about his duties with
unparalleled zeal and
enthusiasm."
Trebllnka survivors said "Ivan
the Terrible" sliced off women's
breasts with a sword as they
were led to the gas chambers,
gouged out prisoners' eyes and
once ordered a forced laborer at
the camp to perform necrophnta.

I AM INTERESTED IN
OPENING A
DAY CARE CENTER
IN THE RACINE AREA
If Anyone Is In Need
Of A Service Of This
· Type Beginning lh
May. Please Contact:

DAYTIME-949-241 0
AnER 6:30-949-2450

baseball
roundup

South Central
Today. mostly sunny. High In
the mid 60s. Variable winds less
than 10 mph .
Tonight. mostly clear. Low ln
the mid 40s. Southerly winds less
than 10 mph .
Tuesday. mostly sunny and
pleasant. High around 70.

. Ex ten !led Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Cool through the per iod . .
Chance of showers Wednesday
and Thursday and fair Friday .
Hlghs in the upper 40s and 50s
Wednesday and Thursday, and 55
to 65 Friday. Morning lows in the
mld-30s to mid-40s Wednesday,
and mostly in •the 30s Thursday
anci Friday.

START WITH

Ohio Lottery
/

Daily Number
302
Pick 4
3440

Page 4

•

at y

e
..

Vot.38, Na.247
Copyrighted 1988

.

\

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
While many residents may be
looking forward to the warmth of
summer, Middleport Village is
making plans for the Christmas
holiday ·season.
Meeting In regillar session
Monday night, Middleport VB·
!age Council heard Mayor Fred
Hoffman express thanks to a
number of
businesses . and
individuals whO have donated
towards the purchase of n.ew
Christmas deebrattons for the
town. Oo~irtfons and pledges total $3,47 and In order to get a 40
percent !scount on the new decorations, the mayor ordered
them before April 1.

Donations and pledges for the
new decorations include: $1,000
from Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
American Legion; $200donal!ons
from Consolldated Communications Group, Central Trust, Or.
R. R . Pickens. Heritage HouseLocker 219. and the Holzer
Clinic; $150 from the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home;
$100!tomDr.JamesSchmon. the
Blue Streak Cab Co., Western
Auto, Manley's Sun&lt;JCO, Valley
Lumber, Pat HUI Ford, Fruth's
P1Jarmacy. the American Legion
Auxiliary and Columbus Southern Power; $50 !rom King
Builders. Carter's Plumbing and
Heating, General Tire Sales, the
Dairy Queen, Ingels Furniture.

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POMEROY

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April26, 1988

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Foreman and Abbott and the
Friendly Tavern with· $20 from
the Cedar Bar and Lounge and
Mrs. Clarice Erwin .
Anyone else wishing to make a
donation to the fund for new
decorations may do so at the
office of Mayor Hoffman.
Mayor Hoffman also extended
thanks for a $1,000 donation from
area motorcycle riders to provide playground equipment fo r
Diles Park.
Council passed a resolution
declaring the seat of Allen Lee
King on council vacant. The
resolution states that Klng has
not attended a council meeting
for 14 months and that he was
given a 30 day notice of the

Impend ing action to vacate his
Include a vlsil by Dav id Baker,
position butdld not respond to the new director of the Ohio Departnotice. Council has 30 days to ment of Development at the
make an appointment to fill the Meigs County Emergency Medivacancy with the appointment cal Training Center in Pomeroy
going to Mayor Hoffman if the at 4 p.m. About 2:30p.m., George
group does not make that ap- Ferguson who Is knowledgeable
pointment in the time slot. on processes to be followed by
Council President Dewey Horton communities in establishing
said that it Is Important to get the · their town -owned television cavacancy fiHed since vacation ble sys terns will be at village hall
time Is coming up and the sixth and on Thursday afternoon also,
councilman is necessary In order an individual who was active in
to sometimes to have a quorum the construction of the Middl i .
so that meetings can continue at port Swimming Pool, will be in
during vacation time.
town to inspect the pool for
Mayor Hoffman announced deterioration and make recomrequested representation at sev- mendations on corrective. steps.
eral meetings which will take The recreation commission as
place on Thursday. These will well as village o!flclals will meet

attend that inspection .
Mayor Ho!!man announced
that the traffic light at the corner
ofNorthSecondAve. and Walnut
St.. which was damaged recently
by a tractor-trailer, will be ready
to be put back into place this
week.
Cou ncilman Bob Gilmore re·
ported on progress belng made
on the installation of the mlnla·
lure golf course at Hartinger
Park. Roger Williams was employed as manager of the course
with Teresa Cremeans to serve
as his assistant. The two will
start at the minimum wage of
$3.35 an hour . According to plans,
corpponents or the course s hould
Continued on page 10

Jng In the first quarter.
"Economic activity wa s better
balanced, with strong growth in
consumer spending, business
fixed Investment and exports."
he said.
Intiatlon as measured by the
GNP report' s Implicit price
deflator was 2.4 percent In the
first quarter. according to the
department's Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Non-residential fixed invest-·
mentlncreased $22.7 biHion or 21
percent from the third to fourth
quarter. All of the increase came
in -the producers durable equipment purchases. especially
computers.
The 32.5 percent increase in

producers durable equipment
purchases was the largest since a
39.5 percent Increase ln the
fourth quarter of 1983, according
to the government .
Personal spend ing Increased
$23.6 billion In the first quarter in
contrast to a $16.1 billion decU neIn the fourth quarter .
Durable goods purchases rose
$11.7 billion with more than half
of that increase in purchases of
motor vehicles. Non-durable
goods purchases fell $0.4 billion
while service expenditures Increased $12.1 billion, the depar tment said.
·
Real net ex ports Increased $3.6
bllUcm from quarter to quarter
Continued on page 10

Youngstown receives emergency ·school loan ·
AUcTION FIND- Attending auctions Is a hobby of John Veith
o! Story's Run, and Saturday at a sale at Chester, he found In a box
he purchased this !ramed 1914 Ohio llcepse plate wllh the number
1. Anyone have ln!onnatlon about It?

Ea. P(.

enttne

By DAVID VESEY
goods and services while removUPI Business Writer
lng the effect . of inflation, was
WASHINGTON - The econ$21 .8 billion compared with a
omy grew at an annual rate of2.3 . ~44.9 billion or 4.8 percenfhlke in
percent in the first quarter. with
the final three months of 1987.
personal spending, non All figures were adjusted fo r
seasonal variations.
residential Investment, exports
and a continued buildup of
''The figures show a strong
lnventories contributing to the
economy still on a vigorous
Increase, the government said
growth track." said Norman
today.
Robertson, chief economist of
Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh.
In a report that accompanied
the prellmlnaryfirstquarterreal
"The slowdown in GNf' growt11,
Is a temporary situation," he
gross national product estimate,
the Commerce Department also added. "We can look for mucli·
said corporate profits after taxes
more rapid growth in the second
rose a revised 2.6 percent in the and third quarters."
fourth quarter of last year.
Robert Ortner; under secre_ 'fhe first q_u arter rise In reaj
tary of Comp~e.,rc~. a11reed th.at .
GNP, which places a value on all the GNP figures were encourag-

BOY QUALITY AND STEEL
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Nation's economy shows 2.3 percent gain

LAWN-BOY STEEL DECK

ONLY

• Cloudy tonight. Chance of
s howers, thunderstorms. Low
near 50. &amp;aln likely Wednesday.

King's post ·vacated by Middleport Council

------Weather------

Demjanj uk .. .._c_o_nt_ln_u_ed_f_ro_m_p_a_ge_1_ _ __
Trebllnka did take place and
there was a hangman tthere
named Ivan who brutalized people, but that hangman was not I.' '
Oemjanjuk said in his native
Ukrainian, which was translated
Into Hebrew for the court.
"Last week, you. your honors,
pointed to me as 'Ivan the
Terrible.' That is a grave mls ·
take.· a very grave mls takt
because I am not 'Ivan the
Terrible' and the most just
witness to this is God himself who
knows tht I am Innocent. I have

SVAC

destroyed two mobile homes
near Whitt in north central
Texas. At Mineral Wells. Texas,
60 mile an hour wlnds · were
reported and a large tree blew
onto a power llne.
Winds gusted to between 60 and
70 miles an hour In Hood County,
Texas. southwest of Fort Worth.
Thunderstorms near Menard,
north of Juitctlon. produced
one-Inch diameter halL Wind s
gusts were clocked at 55 mph at
Hobart.
Ralnshowers were widely scattered over Nebraska and Washington state Sunday night bu t
dissipated early today. Rain
·occurred over northern New
England with some snow In
northern Maine.
Rain and mountain snow fell
early today over the Rckkies of
northwes t Wyoming and_western
Montana. An inch of snow fell at
Great · Falls. Mont., between
midnight and l a_.m. MDT.

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services announced recently its Intent to "extend Into
the next generation for EMS'' by
sponsoring students to a sports
Injury clinic for local high school
students. The clinic will be held
June 19-22 at Ohio University in
Athens and the clinic staff will be
. he.: 'led by Charles "Skip"
Vosler, A.T.C. "head athletic
trainer at the university. Local
students are being sponsored by
EMS in cooperation with the
Meigs County Juvenlle Office.
Four students from each of the
county's three high schools wlU ,
have the opportunity to attend
the three-day clinic. Upon completion of clinic activities, partielpatlng students wiH p~ovlde
their local high school athletic
programs with trained persons
"to assist coaching staffs and
team physicians during practlce
sessions and games." said Robert Byer, EMS director, when
he explained the program to the
Meigs County Commissioners.
Supervision of the students wlU
be offered l)y Meigs EMS personnellf the schools so choose. As In
the past, EMS personnel wiH also
offer assistance at the various
athletic events throughout the
school year.
Hopefully , said Byer. this
program wiH' ·encourage at least
some of the students who partlpate into entering some aspect of
the medical field." Participants
will gain exposure to an a!Ued
medical field through athletics.
They- will gain basic athletic
training skills and techniques for
..the prevention and care of
· athletic Injuries while under the
supervision, encouragement and
direction of wen qualified instructors and supervisors.
The Sports Injury Clinic Program will consist of Information
on the athletic training profession, educalion, routes of certification and job opportunities. It
will also include tralnllli In

injury prevention, management
of medical emergencies. anatomy, use of computers in record
keeping, taping labs and athletic
Injuries; recognition, treatment
and rehab! Uta lion.
"We feel by exposing the
students to an allied field we wiH
be giving them a background of
medical knowledge from which
to build a career while assisting
fellow students and taking part in
the various athletic programs of
their schools," Byer said.
"We hope to sponsor an update
prior to the 88-89 school year .lor
our personnel as well as the
students and coaches of their
schools, in order to get the
program of! on the right track, "
he added.
Coaching staffs and athletic
directors at Eastern. Southern
and Meigs High Schools have
offered full approval of the EMS
sponsored program. said Byer.
Plans can for the selection of
junior and senior students to
participate in this year's clinic.
Eslimated cost to send students
this year Is $3,600. The sponsorship program 'is be on-going, year
to year.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state o! Ohio has approved a
$1 .7 mUUon emergency loan to
the Youngstown City School
Dis trlct to offset revenue losses
from the bankruptcy of the Hunt
Steel Co. ln 1985.
The slate Controlling Board •
approved the two-year loan
Monday.
To help repay the loan, the
school dlstrlct has a 9.5-mlll
property tax levy on the ballot
next week .
State officials said thai if the
loan is not repaid in two years.
the state will penalize the school
district and begin to take payments out of Its school foundation
allotment.
James VanKeuren, dlreotor of
the Division of School Finance
with the Ohio Department of
Education, said the state has

weeks ago when David Baker.
director of the Ohio Department
of Development, said a verbal
commitment had been made'
with the Unlted Steelworkers of
America that the state would pay
for half the cost of the analysis.
The analysis recommended
against the buyout and Baker
said the union would have to foot
the entire $115,000 cost of the
study unless the state helped.
Both Baker and Joseph Marinucci, assistant deputy director
for business development, apologized for not consulting the
board ahead of time.
Marinucci said 2.000 jobs were
at stake and there was a time
tlmit for undertaking the buyout
study. He said since then. a
management group has expressed an interest in purchasing
I he plant.

The board a lso approved a
$12 .5 million project involving
the relocation of the University of
Cincinnati's College of Applied
Science to a suburban site.
The college, whlch teaches
engineering technology. has
been seeking' to move out of its
88-year Q!d downtown Clncinnatl
bulldlng since 1974 and has been
looking for property for the last
six years.
A new building will be built and
three others renovated at Edgecillf College - a girls' school
whlch was once part of Xavier
University.
The state has appropriated
money for the move since 1981
but a suitable site was recently
obtained.
A university spokesma n said
the move is expected to take
place by the fall of 1989.

OPEC seeking ways to stabilize prices

VIENNA (UP!) - . OPEC's
pricing committee sought ways
to stabilize oU prices In a meeting
today before an unprecedented
session with seven non-OPEC
nations, but made no immediate
decision on proposals to cut oil
production.
1 The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries' fivemember pricing panel committee ended Its talks after three
hours.
The pricing committee SaudiArabla, lndol!esla, Venezu ela, Algeria and Nigeria - was
scheduled to meet with the
non-OPEC delegation from Mex Ico, Egypt, Angola, China, Malaysia, Colombia.and Oman at 10
p.m.
"So far, so good," OPEC
President Rilwanu Lukmall said
of the pricing panel session. "It
Soulh Central Olllo
Increasing cloudiness today, was a very good meeting. "
But Lukman, who also Is the
with highs nea.r 70. Cloudy
tonight, with a chance of showers Nigerian ott minister, indicated
and thunderstorms and .a low nothing had been decided, alnear 50. Rain likely Wednesday, thOugh he said "we have Ideas"
to put to the non-OPEC producers
with highs In the upper 50s.
The probability of precipita- In an attempt to stabilize shaky
tion is near zero today, 50 percent oil prices and possibly even boost
tonight and 70 percent them l)y cu ttlng the flood of
petroleum on world markets.
Wednesday.
··
Asked if any concrete actiOn
Winds will be !rom t~e southwest at 10 to 15 mph . today and had been taken, Lukman merely
smiled.
variable near 10 mph tonight.
Alaerlan Oil Minister llekaExtended Forecu&amp;
cem
Nab! was equally enigmatic.
Thundar lllrOUih 81dlll'llar .
·'We
have been able to solve the
A chance of showers Thursday
problem,"
he told journal Jats,
and Saturday, with fair weather
but
he
refused
to elaborate.
on Friday. Highs will ranae !rom
A delegation source fro~ the
1the lower 40s to the lower 50s

Weather

loaned $3.76 million to school
districts. Including Cleveland,
which have lost revenues because of bankrupt companies.
VanKeuren sald 21other school
districts are In debt to the state
because of an Inability to raise
money to pay their bUls. and the
state :loan fund has to be
replenished. He said almost $6.2
million has been loaned since
July 1987.
The Controlling Board also
voted to pay $57,650 for an
analysis of the feaslbiUty of an
employee buyout of LTV Steel
Co.'s Warren plant.
Approval came on a 5-2 vote
despite objections that the analy·
sis was contracted for and
completed prio·r to Controlllng
Board approval - a violation of
procedures .
The Issue was carried over two

pricing committee said OPEC
was discussing five possible
options. but that mutual produc·
tion cuts already had been ruled
out.
The most likely poss!b!Uty was
that the non-OPEC producers
would agree to some sort of
production cut and ask that the
13-natlon oU cartel observe Its
current commitment t~ ltmlt
production to 15.06 million barrels a dav.
World oU prices are between
$16 and $11 a barrel on the open
market -below OPEC's official
$18-a -barrel price.
Another possibility waR that
the status quo would be preserved until OPEC'S regular
June meeting when there would
be a good chance the non-OPEC ·
countries would be invited back.
While U.S. Energy Secretary
John Herrington has criticized
the purpose of the blla teral talks,
others. including a representative of the Texas Railroad
Commission, watched with Inter- ·
es I and concern over whether the
two sides would reach a production cut accord as a first step to
becoming a "super-cartel ."
rr. as analysts say, modest
produclion cuts could raise prices by $1 a barrel over current
levels. Americans could be payIng 5 cents to 10 centS more for
gasoline t~ls summer.
With a weak dollar encouragIng more Americans tortravelln
the United States this summer,
'"an agreement with correspond·

lngly higher prices could clearly
lead to Inflation and will certainly not help the U.S. economy." said one European energy
analyst.
The aim o!theOPEC talks with
outside producers was to reach
an agreement on production
curbs that could bolste'l- the price
of oil, which had flipped from an
early 1980 high of $41 a barrel to
around $15 a barrel In recent
months.
The session comes In advance
of a full-fledged "consultative"
meeting of the OPEC cartel
Thursday that could be turned
into an emergency conference to
take action on pricing and
production.
OPEC Is the Arab-dominated
organizalion whose two on price
shocks In the 1970s outraged
gas-guzzling car users and threw
Western government budgets
Into turmoil.
With petroleum · discoveries
ranging from the Gulf of Mexico
to Canada to the North Sea,
OPEC no longer has a stranglehold on the world oU market - a
problem complicated further by
the nearly 8-year-old war between two of OPEC's strongest
members, Iran and Iraq.
The meeting between OPEC
and non-OPEC countries "may
be historical,' • said Lukman.
According to some estimates, a
production pact between OPEC
and non-OPEC countries could
lead to a virtual super-cartel of
oU producers, sending petroleum

prices toward th e early 1980s
level.
Failure. on the other hand ,
could result in prices cras hing in
the next few months and deal
pe~hapsa morta l blow to OPEC's
hope of regaining the dominance
it held for so long over tl:le
International oil m ar ket.
Even with an agreement , there
was no certainty OPEC co uld
recapture that power.
Among tho se absent from the
VIenna meeting were Brita! nand
Norway with their r iches of
North Sea oil. the United States
with its vast Alaskan resources,
and the Soviet Union, the world's
-leading producer of oil. Another
complicating factor was the
Internecine conflict within OPEC
Itself between Iraq and Iran in
the oil-rich Pe rsian Gulf.
In December. OPEC reached a
makeshift accord to limit Its own
production to 15.06 mliilon barrels a day for the flrst half of this
year to defend the cartel's
$18-a-barrel price. But Iraq rejected the agreement on grounds
It should be allowed to produce as ·
much as its enemy, Iran.
The situation wa s made more
turbulent in January by a sharp
500,000 barrel-a-day rise In nonOPEC production to around 22.5
mUllen barrels a day and reports
of spreading cartel discounts
thatdrovedownon by as much as
$4 on world markets by midMarch. OPEC output is running
around 17 million barrels a day .

�Tuesday, April 26. 1988

Comment

..

EAST MEIGS - Dlustrious
flreballing senior righthander
David Amburgey hurled a onebitter over the Eastern Eagles as
the Southern Tornadoes whipped
up a· 5·1 SVAC triumph over the
hosts here Monday.
Southern's win gives them a
shot at the SVAC title with !10 8·2
record, while Oak Hill is 9-1.
Eastern's title hopes dwindled,
but nothing short of a miracle
could allow them to win with a 7-4
league slate
As in the first meeting between
the two clubs, It was an all out
pitchers duel forfourlnningsand
statistically . throughout the ga·
me.Amburgey and E;as tern' 8

Tuesday, Apri126, 1988
o o I

How the Cabinet views

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - Before Su· conducted sensitive discussions,
per Tuesday, George Bush had "working hard and doing his
few admitted fans among the homework well " !or these
men and women who have missions .
shared the Reagan Cabinet with
An aide io Donald Regan said
him. Now, it is not surprising that
his boss appreciated Bush's input
the Cabinet members, all Repub·
and was hlg~n the efforts of a
Ucans, have nice things to say Busi:Hed 1982 las)&lt; force on
about the man who has the immigration, drug and economic
nomination in his grasp.
problems in south Florida.
Meanwhile, Washington is
But when our associate Dale
Van AIta surveyed 33 current and
waitln'g for Regan's book on his
former Cabinet members In
White House years, due out In
mid-February, the majority po- several weeks, to see how he
litely dodged the request to deals with Bush. A source who
assess Bush, or they criticized · has read t'he manuscript says
him off the record.
Regan Is even-handed about
When we asked for "examples Bush, though his book will do
of policy decisions or actions in nothing to dispel the notion of
which the opinion or work of Mr. Bush as an outsider. That is a
Bush made a difference over the reputation Bush himself has
past · seven years,' ' only five
nurtured in his protestations of
accepted our Invitation.
innocence regarding his role in
Two of the five~ Secretary of the crucial decisions about the
State George Shultz and former Iran-contra arms deals.
White House chief of staff and
The ·two men willing to put
Treasury Secretary Donald Re· themselves firmly in Bush's
gan - SJ&gt;Oke up only after Bush camp before Super Tuesday
had the nomination sewn up.
were former Secretary of
The No. 2 man at the State Energy James B. Edwards and
Department, John Whitehead, former Secretary of Education
spoke for Shultz. He said Shultz Terrel H. Bell.
was "an admirer" and that Bush
Edwards told us: "I think
undertook "substantive policy George Bush, and I sincerely
trips" for the president. He mean this, will make one of the

111 Couri Sireei
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~l:h
ts: m~
~v

r"T""L..J ......
- . - • ........,.c:~

..=o

ROBERT L . WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslsiani Publlsher/ Coniroller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A 1'/IEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ifERS OF OPINION are welcome:- They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters'are subject to editing and must be signed wilh name, addret~sand
telephone number. No unsigned let1ers wtll be published. Le1ters should be In
g.ood taste. addressing Issues, not personalllles.

Bennett: Schools
still need improvements
By TAMARA HENRY
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Public education has Improved slightly In
the last five years, said a report released Monday, but Education
Secretary William Bennett chastized schools for "not doing well
enough fast enough" to raise standards.
Bennett evaluated the state of American education in a report to be
presented to President Reagan on Tuesday.
"American education has made some undeniable progress In the
last few years," Bennett said in the report. "The precipitous
downward slide of previous decades has been arrested, and we have
begun the long climb back to reasonable standatds.
·'But we are certainly not doing well enough, and we are not doing
well enough fast enough. We are still at risk," he concluded, referring
to the controversial report, "A Nation At Risk," which warned
American schools were sinking into mediocrity .
Reagan asked Bennett in March 1987 to assess the nation's
educational progress in !he past five years since the National
Commission on Excellence in Education's report was released in
1982.
That report sparked numerous education reforms, including
stiffening of high school graduation requirements, changes in
curricular content and ieglslatioh to improve teaching standards and
schoolleadership.
·
But Bennett said, "The absolute level at which our Improvements
are taking place is unacceptably low. Too many students do not
graduate from our high schools, and too many of those who do
graduate have been poorly educated. Our students know too little, and
their command of essential skills is too slight!'
In · his assessmen't. "American Education, Making It Work,"
Bennett said the results are based on consultations with leaders in
education and other fields, written views from hundreds of
Americans and the Education Department's research staff.
The good news, said the report, is that test data show bla.ck and
Hispanics are performing better on college entrance examinations
such as the Scholastic Aptitude Tests and the American College
Testing Program.
But des.plte Umprovements In key skill and subject areas. such as
reading and writing, the report said Improvements are "disappoint·
lngly slow" and at "excessively low levels of achievement."
A separate national study by the department found improvements
In the academic program offered and selected by students.
A comparison of tran:;cripts ol15,000 high school graduates in 1987
with those of a comparable group of I982 graduates found Jess than 2
percent of the 1982 sample had completed the academic program
suggested in "A Nation at Risk." In I987, 12.7 percent of graduating
students hail done so.
When foreign language and computer science classes are omitted
from the tally, Improvement is more dramatic- from 13.4 perc~ntof
1982 graduates to nearly 30 percent in th!'! 1987 sample.
"A Nation At Risk" had criticized the "cafeteria-style curriculum"
that included physical and health education, work experience and
personal service and development courses.lt suggested a curriculum
of English. mathematics, science and social studies, computer
science and. for college-bound students, two years of a foreign
langugage.
For further improvements, Bennett said American educators must
define curriculum and Improve its content, provide disadvantaged
students with more rigorous courses, recruit and reward g~
teachers and principals, and institute accountability throughout the
education sysll'm.

THER~

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Trashing

7

Early in 1980, as the presiden·
tial contests began to take shape,
the people in the Carter-forPresident campaign were hoping
- really hoping - that their
Republican opponent would be
Ronald Reagan. After all, Rea·
gan was known then as a
right-winger and a bit of a far-out
conservative kook. AU Reagan
could get in the general election,
the Carter people reasoned, was
Republican votes. What scared
the Carterites was that a Repl\blican moderate, not Reagan,
might get the nomination. Such a
candidate might get Republican
votes and also plenty of independ·
ent votes - and even some
Democratic ones. Someone. for
example, like Howard Baker. Or
Bnb Dole.
Or George Bush.
Bush, in fact, made a pretty
good run at it In 1980. He beai
Reagan in the Iowa caucuses,
and in primaries in Massachu·
setts, Connectic~t. Pennsylva·
nla, Washington. D.C., and Mich·
lgan. Finally, he was forced to
drop out of the race. a' viet 1m of
the Reagan juggernaut.
Comes now 1988. Bush will be

...

.,. :'v-

HE'S OUT- North GaiUa runnerShaneSmlth, sliding, Is tagged
out at home by Southwestern catcher Joeh Halslop In the lop oflhe
second Inning of Monday's SVAC game In Vlnion. Though the out
play on Smith preserved a 3-2 IDghlander advantage at the time,
the Pirates were able to sustain an offensive started In that Inning
that bypassed the IDghlanders 18·11.

.•''

MusT BE

North Gallia defeats
Southwestern, 18-11
North Gailia junior Greg
Glassburn picked up the gamewinning RBI with a sixth-inning
single to score teammate D.J.
Saunders and give the Pirates
their second win of the year, an
18·11 comeback win overSouthw·
estern Monday atte,rnoon In the
village park in Vinton.
Glassburn's single came on the •.,
heels of Saunders' game-tying
RBI single, which sent Shane
Eas thorn across the plate to tie
the game Il·ll. Glassburn ended
the game with 'a 4-for-5 perfor·
mance at the plate, while Saund·
ers went 3 lor 6.
The Highlanders held the lead
in the early going, taking a 3·0
advantage after the Jlrst inning
and a 5·2 lead after two innings.
One of the Bucs' two runs In the
second came on a solo home run
by third baseman Don Mays, who
went 2 for 5.
Other hot·hlttlng Pirates in·
eluded Todd Petrie, who went 3
lor 5, and Easthom, who went 2
for 3. Among the Highlander

....'·
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(,.!.,"

"I've got an idea. I think I'LL start a street
gang. "
,

Today in history
By United Press Jnierna&amp;lonal
Today Is Tuesday, April 26, the 117th day of 1988 with 249 to foUow.
The moon Is moving toward its fuU phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn. 1
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
naturalist John James' Audubon In 1785; South Korean statesman
Syngman Rhee in 1875; author Anita Loos In 1893; ltudolf Hess, Adolf
Hitler's deputy, in 1894; inventor Charles Richter. responsible for the
Richter Scale of earthquake measurement, In 1900; novelist Bernard
Malamud In 1914; architect l.M. Pel in 1917 !aae 71);
actress-comedian Carol Burnett In 1936 (age 52) ; guitarist Duane
Eddy in 1938 (age 50), and pop singer Bobby Rydell in 1942 (age 46).

weal! hy upbringing has never Carter people were fearful of a
before been a tlandicap for an
Baker-Dole-Bush sort of cand'i·
aspiring president; consider dacy have not gone away. For ·
Kennedy and Franklin Roose·
good or for Ill, George .Bush is
velt. And Bush has been closely
indeed intrinsically more moder·
scrutinized for seven years while ate than Reagan. And even at the
the·serious scrutiny of any of his
height of his popularity. Reagan
potential opponents is yet to scared away some voters who
come.
felt his conservatism was too
But there are some other rigid and doctrinaire. Structu·
things at work that the Bush· rally speaking. Bush can pick up
bashers ought to consider. It is some of these mlddle·of·the-road
indeed true that Bush does not voters. even II they are not wldly
seem to call forth passionate impressed with his less-than· .
response. And intensity and bulging kit of charisma. In short,
passion among voters count for a Bush may be able to get censer· ·
great deal in a tight caucus or vative votes because of his
primary situation where voter Reagan connection, and inde·
turnout is a crucial determinant.
pendent and some Democratic
But it counts lor much less in a
votes because he's not· Reagan.
general presidential election
Of course, an election is never
where turnout is far higher and the sound of one hand clapping.
fairly consistent. Thus: If a voter The voters will have a choice. If
had fell 99 percent passionate- lhe Democrats nominate acandi·
positive about Ronald Reagan date who will be able to appeal to
and now feels 51 percent the moderate center of the
passionate · posltive about electorate, that candidate may
George Bush, he or she will still well be competitive with Bush.
be likely to vote for Bush. and But if Democrats should perhaps
that vote will still count as just be dreaming that they've got a
one vote. We count votes, no . weak. wimpy. boring, elil ist,
passion.
guilty loser as an opponent Moreover, the reasons the they're wrong.

!\sleep at the (nuclear) Switch_R_o_be_rt

..
.' .

··PEACH BOTTOM, Pa. (NEAl
- Nobody ever said working in
this rural community was excit·
in g. Indeed, the only commercial
enterprise for miles around is a
garage that appears to specialize
in collecting wrecked and rusted
autos.
The sole road into town cuts
through a desolate, heavily
wooded ravine. The rolling farm
land throughout surrounding sou·
theastern Pennsylvania induces
a sense of tranquUity among
residents and visitors alike.
But that bucolic setting doesn't
justify falling asleep on the jobespecially among those working
in the control room &lt;&gt;f a nuclear
power plant.
That's exactly what was hap·
pening. however. at the general·
lng station here, where a pair of
nuclear reactors each produces
slightly more than 1,000 meg· ,
awaits of electricity.
According to the Institute of
Nuclear Power Operations, an
Industry-sponsored safety organ·
lzatlon, tbere were occasions
when only one person was In the
control room. At other times, the
control room was ·more ade·

.
quat ely staffed -but everybody
present was asleep.
Dozing on the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.
shift was especially common, as
were rubber band lights, maga·
zlne reading , and other
distractiqns.
In unprecedented crit lclsm of a
nuclear power plant. INPO ear·
lier this year said Peach Bottom
was "an embarrassment to the
industry and to the nation." The
"grossly unprofessional behav·
lor by a wide range of shift
personnel," said INPO, ""reflects
a major breakdown in the man·
agement of a nuclear facility."
Both units at the power plant
were ordered closed early last
spring by the Nuclear Regula·
tory Commission. But neither the
NRC DQr INPO appears Inclined
to examine the broader question
of employee dereliction of duty in
an Industry where workers'
failings can have terrible
consequences.
The problem is not conftned to
Peach Bottom. The Critical Mass
Energy project of Public Citizen,
a Washington, D.C. public Inter·
est group, has Identified dozens
of slmUar situations. Among

tnem:
- In 1987, a shift supervisor
!I he person in charge of the
entire plant) was found asleep in
his office at the Davis·Besse
nuclear power plant in Ohio. Two
years earlier, a pipe leak at Ohio.
Two years earlier, a pipe leak at
the same facility went unde·
tected because the person as·
signed to monitor the cooling
system was asleep.
- In 1980, two control room
operators were found asleep at
the Dresden plant In Illinois.
Security guards have been found
sleeping at nuclear power plants
in Florida, Arkansas, Mlssls·
sIppI, M l nne sot a and
Pennsylvan!~.
- Scores of nuclear power
plant employees In North Carol·
ina, California. Arizona, Illinois,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Mis·
slsslppi, Oregon, Virginia, New
Jersey and other states have
been arrested by state or local
law enforcement officials on charges relating to the posses·
slon, use or sale of drugs.
- During construction of the
Seabrook plant in New Hampshire, almost 300 workers have

I

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AMERICAN LEAGUE
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&amp;•ton S, MIIMukee 1
Tueld.y'11 Ganw11

Kanl!ll8 CHy (lelhnn&lt;l 1·3) at Nt"W
York (Leiter :J.O). 7:!11 p.m.
SeaUie !Moore H) at Clneland
(Candlotd S.O), 7: 35p.m.
Callforala (WIU 1·1) llC Detmlt
1Koblnt10n 1·~). 7:JS p.m .
Oald.Uid (Davl8 J.l) at Toro•o f~llel!

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BldUmon! (Mursan ~~ at Mlnla!·

Dav is to reach first safely,!·!.
After running the bases a
winded Horner walked leadoff
batter Ken Turley, then gave up a
2·2 count double to Shawn Cun·
ningham. After getting the next
two batters to pop up Eastern
elected to walk Jeff Caldwell
intentionally to load the bases as
he had the only other hit untillhat
time. Amburgey who had
grounded out both times worked
Horner to 3·0, then Horner fought ·
back to 3·2, bu r the 'Burg
slammed a three run double in
the gap on the next pitch for a 4·1
SHS lead.
Southern added a solo run in
thP seventh via an error and Todd

...... (lepil 1-1) .. Clll~ (PHrw.
t.f), 11.:31 f.m.
MIIWIIIM llee (Bo• .. 3-1) at Te11a" (0.1·

Meigs' Marauderettes cap·
tured eight first plilces and nosed
out the Lady Cats of Trimble
79-76 to take team honors with
Not'th Gallia finishing a distant
third with 7 points In a meet at the
Rocksprings facility. Trimble
picked up an equal number of
blue ribbons with the ~!rates
getting no closer than a second
place finish.
Senior Dee Henderson con·
ttnued her steady performance
and gave the Meigs team two
golds, one in the 1600 meter run
with a time of6: 17.9 and the other
in the 800 meter event at 2:50.7.
Jody Taylor. for Meigs, finished
ahead of the field in the lorig jump
with a leap otl4feet 3 inches and
sister Jennifer ran the 100
hurdles In 18.9 seconds to cop top
honors in that event.
Missy Nelson · was the only
other singles winner In the 800
meter r1,1n as she nosed out two
other Meigs runners with a time
of 68.9 seconds. The Marauderetles picked up three relay
wins. In the 800 relay the
combination of Taylor, Johnson,
Nelson and Rouse posted a time
of 2:06.9; Taylor. Taylor,
Wagner and Rouse took the 400
relay in• 57.3 seconds and
Wagner. Nelson, Rouse and
Kauff, with a time of 4:53.5,
h~aded.Jhe?~ fi~~~es went to
eco P ac
Whaley (high jump); Johnson
(100 hurdles); Wagner (400 meters); Jody Taylor (100 meters);

1-l);&amp;:Up.m.
NaUonal Le~
ClnciiiMII (R. &amp;bla10a f.l) at Mont·
real (\'O\m'WIIf.l ), 1:31 p.m.
New York (GHden 4-0) AI Atlanta
(Gia\'IH 0.S. 1: iflt , .m.
Phlll.f'lpllla (GrMII l·l) at Houlton
(8toU I-ll, 1: :!IS p.m.
Chlcaco (MaHux 1·1) at Ln t\npl~
(Le.-yl-l),ll:llp.m.
St.
(Tudor H) ai San IHep
(Show t-J), 11:11 p.m.
PtttlllhiM 'Ill (8mUq 8-~) at Saa FranciiCO U&amp;euchel s.t), 11:~5 p.m .
Bulrtball
NJJA Pl-olh
No 1am• ~eheduled
l1'lllll

Le•

.......

CamRn, N.J. - DoiiO\'an R~deck \'11 .
Lai'I'J Aleutwler, II r.1n•d llea\'pel&amp;ht

"'"'

Hock e)'
Stanley cv, Pla,yoff•
8eoo ... Round
New oler~~ey at " '•Wnaton, 'I:S5 p.m.
Botttonal Monll'f!lll, 7:31p.m.
Soc:cer
MISLPia)'tlf•
FlrltRou•

No aama chedllle•
Tenm•
rrud prb. &amp;oui'IAmeal.

Boftton (Boyd IUJ a&amp; (;II leap (Pcerezl·
0), A: Sl p.m.
,
Mlhnu ter (8oAkt S.l) at Te!laJJ
(GuuniUI t-1 ), H: 3S p.m .

•

•
•

Oakland at TorOIIlo, aiJW
Baltimore .aMifltno&amp;a, nlaht
8o11ton at Chlcqo, nlpa
Mlht'IWkee I&amp; Te.u, nlpt
NATIONAL LEAGUE

Eul

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No rams ~~tlledtllled
TueldiG''• Games

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11 fl .1D 117.1881
II II ' ,Ill 1%
I t .IH 1%

Hau•o•

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aacta..cl (R. Robt-a t-1) at
MoMrul fY•---• t-1), 7: II p.m.

New York (Gooden 4-1) Bt Alluta
(GIIft'lntH.1:4tp.m.
Pllllldei,...a (Grou H) at Hou•on
cae.u J.t), B:Sip.m.
Cblt!ap (Ma•• S.J) at Lo1 Upln
(lltlow HI.

11:11 p.m ,

PIUP .... (8mlley t-i) II 8U
Fnuleteco (a-ciNI I-t), II:JI p.m.

w,._..,. .

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I

Wemee'a tnaer•·

011110 Tuml In abe NFL Draft
J'lrltroulld
J, Oaclallll Rickey Dlun, dh. Okla·
horna. It, Mlaml, &amp;lc M•nwrew, de,
Ollle8tale. II, Oewtlaad, a1•on1 Charlton. lb. florida.
Round 2"
ft, De&amp;roM (tram Ku. . C•)'), C~rill
Spldmaa, lb. Obi• State. II, Ondn ..ll,
I!'Jbert (lckq) W•odA. rh, Newad•l.aA
Vepa. II, Clfttel_., Mld~l 01!1111
Ptrl')', ill. CltmiOL
Roulll3
H, AIIMia, AlaBipiDD.It.Ob .. state.

Si', Ct..elaMII, llnla Walller, lb, Mar:r·
a.iftl. ft, NV Gl•tl, lheldoa Whl&amp;ll, dh.
Ml~l (Ohlo) . U. PhOI!IIb:, Tom Tuaa,
Oltlo Slate. '11, Clewl•d. Van
WllkrB,Ib. ......

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Ohio lUIIe• Ill. Of!W!Iud, bthoftJ
III&amp;)'IO£k. d' Wlllllolt8alem.

Ut, Oaclallll, llerb Wellfr, I, IOwa.
Itt, Oarla_.l, P•l.ht,_, I• Texaa.

(Lif!•JZ.I), ll:tSp.m.
St . . . . ('1-...r 1-11 a&amp; San Dlep

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NFL draft

Wednt'!Whltf'~ Oame..
Kae!IM (;tty at New York, nlpt
Callror.aa • Oeti'OII. nl~
Sea&amp;Ue 11 C1en1Md, nlaftl

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C.l Pll'titr, wr,

Wellston pitcher Andy Graham
potential run was cut short,
scattered seven hits over as
however, when Wes Young flied
many Innings and his teammates
to right and Snyder was doubled
played flawless defense behind
off second.
him to post a 5·0 shutout of the
Wellston got two aboard in the
Meigs Marauders at the Rockspfifth on a walk and a Brian
rings diamond.
.Kilgour single but failed to score.
The win ups the Rocket record
In their half of the Inning, Jeff
to an overall 15·0 on the season
McElroy singled with one out for
the Marauders but the speedster
and 11·0 in Trl Valley Conference
play. It will, undoubtedly, enable was gunned at second on a steal
the Wellston nine to retain their. at te mpt by catcher Chris
number one rating in Class AA· Gra ham .
poDs and an but assures them of
Then came the sloppy sixth.
the TVC crown.
Jeff Hendershott bunted his way
Senior righthander Mike Bar· on and reached second on an
trum of Meigs turned in a sterljng overthrow at first on the attempt
performance on the mound, also.
to get him out. Bartrum made
He allowed only five hits with Scott Scharfenbarger pop to
three of them coming in the second. Then Mark Williams
disastrous sixth frame.
sliced a single to rlghtfor an RBI
After Bartrum had put · the and Allan Hammond follo~ed
visitors down in order in the first,
with a double in the gap between
Meigs mounted a minor threat "left and center for the third
when leadoff batter Bryan Durst Rocket run. Andy Graham
drew a walk, Brent Bissell walked and Chris Graham went
popped up to third and Bartrum down on a grounder and it
drUled a single to left. Matt seemed the Maraupers would cut
Baker reached on a fielder's short the rally. However. back to
choice when Graham went to back fielding_ errors allowed two
third lor the second out. Graham more runs to cross and one could
then fanned Chris Stewart to end almost see the handwriting on
the inning.
the walL
Wellston managed to get one
Meigs gave it one more shot in
baserunner in the next two their half of the sixth when
frames as the Marauders held Bartrum and Matt Baker hit
them in check. Meigs, them· back to back singles with one
selves. did little better getting a down . Stewart then lined a shot to .
base hit In each of the two pitcher Graham who doubled
innings, leaving both base· Baker off first and that was all
runners stranded.
she wrote as both sides went
In the upper fourth, Joe Wit· down in order in tne seventh.
tkamp led off with a single, the
Graham, as the winning
first Rocket hit, and promptly pitcher, fanned but two batters
stole secood. Bart rum uncorked and walked only one but' the
two wild pitches allowing the defensive play of the Rockets
runner to cross with the visitor's was outstanding as they kept
first tally. Regaining his control, their cool on some tough putouts.
Mike then settled down to fan
Bartrum whiffed an even do·
three of the next lour batters he zen and gave up four free passes
faced.
but was hurt by those few
With one down in their loilfth,
moments of wildness. the three
Meigs' Joey Snyder hammered a Marauder miscues and some
Graham pitch to the left field baserunnlng that was not up to
fence for a double and It seemed par.
the locals would tie the score. The
Snvder' picked up a single in

addition to his double and Bar·
trum recorded two base knocks
to lead the Meigs hitters. Ham·
mond's double and singles by
Kilgour, Hendershott. Wlttkamp
and Williams accounted for the
Rocket hits.·
Uneseore:
Wellston ... ... ... 000 104 0 - 5 5 0
Meigs ....... .... ..000 000 0- 0 7 o
The Marauderet te reserves
won one and lost one in action last
week against Belpre and Well ston .
With Kathy Lambert on the
mound ·and Heidi Caruthers
behind the plate against the
Golden Eagles, Meigs posted an
11·9 win, their second in four
games thus far .
Meigs hitters were Lambert
with two singles , Tracie Rich·
mond with one, Kristin King had
two and Amy Johnson one.
Lambert was credited with 2
RBI's and King and Johnson one

Lisle single.
Eastern put _runners on In two
Innings, bu t failed to c apitalize.
Mark Griffin had the lone EHS
hit, an infield single In the sixth.
John Riffle pounded twocs:n·
gles, Amburgey a triple, ad·
well, Cunningham and Lisle each
with one hit apiece.
Eastern plays Its Alumn:
Wed;:~da~~ ~~e~h~~~~a ~~th:
este
g
Y·
ern and Eas~rn play a JV
double-head er uesday n1ght at
Eastern ..
li:,~core.
_ __
u te~~n ... .... ... .. 000
OOO 130 1_ 5.6. 3
100 0 1 1 1
Eas
............ .

'.

1

Custer Kloes
(shot put);
cus);
(3200 Woods
run) (disand
Jennifer Taylor (300 hurdles and
200 meters).
Ellis (l!lngjump); Bunch !shot
put); Baker (discus) and Doidge
(300 hurdles) came in third in
those events while Wagner (long
Baker
Bunch

llow Open for Sprl11g

s.a....

COMPUTE UNE OF YEGOAILE
. &amp; IODIN&amp; PlANTS AND
GEIANIUMS NOW IUDY.
IIANGIIIG WilTS, AZAlEAS.
Filii' 'IllES &amp; SHIUIIEIY
OPIN DMY .. 5-SUNDAY 1·5

HUIIAID'S
GIDIHOUSE
nuall- tft·S77'

each.
Chapman was the losing
pitcher for Belpre as each
pitcher recored one strike ou t
each.

win

TUPPERS PLAINS - A last
inning thriller lifted the Eastern
Eagles to a 7-6 win over the
Southern Tornadoes here Mon·
day evening to move Eastern into
second place in the SVAC race.
With Eastern trailing 6·5ln the
finale, Trish Spencer led the
inning off with a sIngle, Amy
Bissell walked,Lisa Bissell
reached on an error to load (he
bases, then Toby Hill reached on
a fielder's chOice in which a
dropped ball at the plate allowed
Spencer to knot the game, 6·6.
With the bases still loaded Hill
walked Edna Driggs to force
home the winning run after a
very hard-fought game by both
clubs .
Earller Southern took a 3-0lead
..In the first, but Eastern managed
to pull close in the third at 3·2.
Southern added an insurance
run in the fourth when Tpnya
Ingles walked, Shelly Wine·
brenner walked, and Tracy Bee(discus) and Kauff (800 meter)
gle singled home a run, 4·2 .
each posted fourth place finishes.
Eastern 116'unced back to lead
Trimble's Berry, taking the for the first time In the fifth when
shot put event with a 28 foot 9\'.i
Edna Driggs singled,MeiMankln
inches toss and the discus with 83 sacrificed her to second, Amy
feet 11% inch · throw, and Day, Bissell walked,Llsa Bissell sin·
Who cai)tured the IOO meters in gled,Bnnnle Koenig knocked
14.6 seconds and the 300 hurdles
home a run on an error.and
in 50.9 seconds, were the double Spencer singled home another. A
winners for the Cats.
third run carne home on a passed
In a close encounter against
ball.
Trimble the thinclads of Coach
Southern bounced right back to
Jim Oliphant pulled out a 69·68 go ahead 6·5 In the slxth.Again
win.
Ingles walked, Wlnebren11er
Meigs pulled down seven first
reached on an error as no one
place finishes. five seconds and covered first on a ball hit back up
four thirds in the meet. Chris the middle. Beegle singled to
Smith took top honors In the long load the bases, Bridget Bing
jump; Dennis Boothe had a
reached on an error to force
double win in the shot put and
home one run, then Tammy
discus; James Savage grabbed Holter knocked In the go-ahead
the blue in the pole vau It; Brett run.
Little raced to a win in the &amp;K1
This set up the heroics for the
meter run; the 3200 meter relay Eastern nine's dramatic win in
team of Scott Nelgler. Kurt the seventh.
English, Rob Jacks and Shane
Eastern hitters were Lisa
Phillips finished first as did the Driggs, 2·3 with two singles·
1800 meter relay combo of ; Trish Spencer.2·4 with two sin·
Neigler, Smith, English· and gles; Mel Mankin, Bonnie Koenig,
Jacks.s
Toby Hill, and Edna Driggs
Nailing down second place singles.
finishes were Mike Van Meter in
Mankin and E . Driggs wre both
the shot put, Tony Miller on the
discus throw, Bracey Korn in the
pole vault, Neigler for the 400
meter dash and Scott Edmonds
In the 800 and 3200 meter runs.
EAST MEIGS _ Any Inter·
John lurdette \~~~h j~m~o .. estedalumnlarewelcometoplay
Derek remeans
an
in the annual Eastern-Alumni
meter hurdles), Rob Jacks (400
beh ldWed
meter dash) and Shane Phillips baseball gam~ to
e th hnigesh·
day afternoon at 5 p.m at e
(3200 meter run) all had third
school.

'·

Against Wellston, the Marau derettes committed a whopping
22 miscues as they suffered a
28·I5 defeat in a game that mu st
have taken forever to play . The
Meigs nine only managed five
hits off Faught, the winning
pitcher and Lambert, for Meigs
gave up seven to the visitors.
There were forty-one freebies
issued by both pitchers durin~:
the game and the Wellston crew
had four miscues .
Hitting for Meigs were Kristin
Stagley, Angle Black, Kathy
Lambert and Amy Johnson ail
with singles and Chrissie Richmond with a triple. K. Mullins led
the Rockets with two singles.
Lambert , Black and Johnson
each were credited with an RBI.

Eastern girls capture
7-6
over Southern

Meigs girls thinclads cops
tri--meet; boys down Trimble

WeAt GerrMa)'- Me.'l!lln&amp;l!r-.tlo..t

/1101:111 (VIola 1· 1) .II: IS p.m .

•

....

Majors

'

'

been fired for drug and ai N&gt;hol
abuse.
Last mont h. 17 Pt&gt;a'£h Bottom
employee, ""'''" dlschat'gt&gt;d or
suspe.tded hl'caus(' thi'V ;II ·
legedly WC't'C' using drugN.' Last
autumn, six Peach Bot 1om
workers w&lt;'r~· indicted oh drug
dealing charges. 1n subsequ('nt
trails, two wcrl' acquitted but the
other four wcrp convicted or
pleaded gu !It y.
'
Dealing with thosC' probll'ms
has been cllfficult for p 1., 1ch
Bottom's :I.O!lO employ!'C's anc!for
the Philadelvhi.J EIC'Ctrir co ..
which operatC'&lt; the facilltv. Shift ·
superintendl'nls. operation su·
pervlsors. contml room op&lt;'ra ·
tors and plant managers all ha\·&lt;'
been reassignC'cl, disclplinC'd or
dismissed. .Earlier this ~Nr.
Philadelphia EIC'ctrlc's ch,1ir ·
man and president both an·
nounced their resignations.
Notwithstandli!g thos~ do a ·
malic actions, the Peach Bottom
plant remains closed moreth'an a
year after it was shut down b\"
federal regulators :..., and lh~
Industry remains beset bv t ht.&gt;
Intractable problt.&gt;m of dP, 11ing
with wayward wo 1'kcrs.

hitters, Joe Hammond was 3 for
5, pitcher Zane Colley was 2 for 5,
catcher Josh Haislop went 2 for 6,
and Steve Tarbet! was 1 for 2.
Tarbell, the third baseman,
was c haslng a foul pop In the
second inning when he stepped in
a rough spot on the field and
twisted his right ankle. Taken to
Holzer Medical Center by private
car, he was treated and released
lor acute ankle strain.
In spite of getting rninimal help
in the field (the Bucs committed
nine errors), winning pitcher
Kevin Smith pitched a complete
game, struck out 15 and walked
one. Colley, who was tagged for
the loss, also went the distance,
struck out seven and walked 10.
The Pirates, who picked up
their first conference victory in
nine tries, will play a doubleheader at Wahama on Saturday.
IJne score
North Gallla ... 02Jf433 ~'-18·15·9
Southwestern ... 321 140 0-11·8·6
WP- K. Smith
LP-CoUey

Scoreboard ...

•'

_Wa_lte_rs ••'

'

..

llush-bashing~..------B_e_n_W&lt;_at_te_nb_e~~
the Republican nominee. Bush
has done to Dole In 1988 what, in
1980, Reagan did to 'Bush; he
wiped him out.
·
Of course, the sharks are
circling. Bush, they say. is a
preppy wimp. He is a boring
speaker - Nembutal with a
resume. He sold his manhood to
Ronald Reagan in an elght-yea·r
spasm of vice-presidential syco·
phancy. He engenders no passion
among his supporters. He has
Iran-contra skeletons in his
closet. When it was still a
Bush-Dole race, one well-known
Democrat told me, "Dole beats
any Democrat ; any Democrat
beats Bush."
We shall see. The rap on Bush
is much overdone. Every vice
president in recent times has
become a caged poUt ical eunuch
-but in those Instances where he
became president, he was able to
act vigorousiy - consider John·
son, Nixon. F'ord. We've also had
plenty of presidents who were
less than dazzling public speak·
ers: Carter, F'ord, Nixon and
Johnson, to mention some recent
examples. History shows that an
Ivy League education or a

Steve Hor ner locked horns for a
combined 23 strikeouts.
Amburgey walked away the
winner with I4 KO' s to his credit
and just one walk. Horner
suffered the loss with nine strike
outs and two walks , with s ix hits
registered against him.
· Southern scored once In the
fourth on a Caldwell \Is Ingle, a
sacrifice bunt, stolen base, and
overthrow at third, the score 1·0.
In the bottom of the Inning
Eastern bounced back with its
only positive note as Horner
reached on an error, stole se·
cond, stolelthird and came hOme
on a error that allowed Kyle

Rockets blank Meigs, remain undefeated

..

-

•

..

ABoUT IT.

··--·-·-··
..

" IMI.,.ffEA, "'-C

finest presidenls this country has
George Bush will be an excellent
seen. "
president. .. He is a very inlelll·
h' 'I d hi
gent, personable and dedicated.
He praised Bus s . ea ers p
leader. He Is a man of the highest
In the area of reduc)ng the
amount of regulations that we . moral principles and his family
had" when Bush servfld in 1981 as . members ail reflect the fact that
chairman of the Presidential
he is a family.. man and a
Task Force on Regulatory Re· dedicated father .
li f
Secretary of Housing and Ur·
eBut former Secretary o! State ban Development Samuel R.
Alexander Haig has been ltighly ·· Pierce, Jr., was ""!ore measured
crit leal of Bush's role with that
in his response. But he pointed to
a record that demonstrated that
very task force . Dufing the heat
of his own presidential campaign
Bush "has been a very effective
last December, Halg charged
vice president who has contrib·
that Bush took two and a half uted substanllally to the developyears to produce a 126-page ment and ex~.ution of adminis·
report. Haig said, "It's a big, tratlon policy.
thick report. Bul it's not as big or
Agriculture ~retary Richard
thick as the regulations that
E . Lyng said, Bush has been a
remain on the books, untouched
splendid vice president and a ker,
to this day."
member of the Reagan team.
Bell praised Bush for the same But Lyng cautioned that he did
task force. In a typed , two-page
not "Intend to indicate a personal
preference among the candl·
letter Bell wrote us that the task
Ioree had provided recommenda·
dates . . It is my intention to
uons for his department "con·
support the Republican nominee
cerning administration of stu·
strongly."
,
dent financial aid programs and
Defense Secretary Frank Car·
guaranteed student loans."
luccl had his press spokesman, J.
According to Bell, Bush "had a
Daniel Howard, write a letter:
"Mr. Carlucci believes that it
deep and genuine Interest In
providing access to higher educa· would be Inappropriate for any
sitting secretary of defense to
tion to needy students."
Bell wrote, "I believe that
take part in the ongoing political
debate. Please be assured that
his reluctance to answer your
questions in no way should
reflect upon his opinion of the
vice president. On the contrary,
Sectetary Carlucci holds the vice
president in the highest regard."
U.N. Ambassador Vernon Wal·
ters responded through a letter
from Rose Sue Bersteln. his
press spokeswoman: "The am·
bassador is a personal friend of
the vice president, for whom he
has great respect. He does not
think it appropriate for him to
answer the questions you have
pqsed-ln your letter."
Finally; former Secretary of
Health and Human Services
•
Richard S. Schweiker said he
'
didn't want to respond because
he is currently president of a life
Insurance trade association that
doesn't support candidates.
Schweiker told us. "However. I
certainly will say that I enjoyed
serving in President Reagan's
Cabinet with Vice President
Bush and have always found him
to be a man of keen intellect and
· strong loyalty whb is dedictated
to serving the people of the
United States."

SOME WAY I CAN PARDoN
OLIVER NoRTH IN SfCRET
WrTHoVT ME KNoWtNG

Berry's World

~--·

Bush_;___.:,By_J_ack_A_n_de_rso_n

...

I

- ..

Amburgey's one-hitter defeats EHS, 5-1 ;.

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

.

The Daily Sentinei-P..Q.-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1·2.
For Southern Tracy Beegle
was 2-4,Holter and Patrece Cir·
cle were 1·3 with singles, and
Carol Fisher had a triple.
Amy Bissell was the winning
pitcher with six strike outs and 4
walks in going the distance to
pick up the win.
Crystal Hill also pitched a
super game,but came up short
despite striking out four and
walking six .
Eastern Is now 8·5 overall and
6-3 in the league which is good for
second place behind Kyger
Creek.
Coach Pam Douthitt said, ·'We
hit alot better tonight and played
much better all the way around.
We have seemed to put it all
together as this was probably our
best fll·around game of the year.
It W'fapretty good game by both
clubs. "
IJnescore
Southern ... ..... .... 300 102 0-6·5·3
Eastern ... ... , ... ...002 030 2-7·8·4

Alumni game set

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r;p;la;c;e;f;ln;ls~h;es:·~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;,
ELECT

ROBERT H.
"Bob"

*EASON
REPUBLICAN
FOR MEIGS COUNTY

ENGINEER ·
Paid for '111 the CollllllilW io Elect Ed&gt;D, Job Nuuer,

Hts,

•

\

,

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 26, 1988

Pomeroy-,-Middleport, Ohio

.Boston trips Milwaukee, 5-l

OUT AT THIRD - Mllwau kee third baseman
Paul Moiilor,Jefl, lags out Boston's Ellis Burks In

the llflh Inning of Monday night's game In
Mllwau kee. Burks was the second Red Sox runner
to be thrown out 'at third. (UPI)

:Oilers sweep Calgary, 4~ I ;
Detroit ioppl~s St. Louis, 3-l
By DAVE FREDERICK
•
UPJ Sports Writer
Shame on those who lauded the
Calgary Flames as the league's
new powerhouse, succeeding the
Edmonton Ollers.
The Ollers completed a four·
: game sweep of_ the NHL 's
. regular-season champions Mon: day night with a 6·4 triumph In
the Smythe Division flnal.
In another Stan ley Cup quar·
: terflnal series, Detroit beat St.
. Louis 3·1 to take an Identical
: series lead in the Norris Division
final.
·. In the Wales Conference, the
' Washington Capitals and New
: Jersey Devils face each other
· tied 2·2 in the Patrick Division,
;. and the Boston Bruins lead the
,:Montreal Canadlens 3·1.
•:
"Our penalty-killers deserve
1
::;aiot of credit," Oilers co-coach
:'John Muckier said. "They were
&lt;outstanding."
· The Oilers allowed the Flames
·. to score on only one of six
; power-play chances after ~hu t·
' ting out Calgary's power play In
:.came 3.
·
•: Monday, the Oilers managed
:·only 17 shots on net but made the
·most of their opportunities . Mark
Messler and Craig Simpson led
the team with a goal and two
.• •

MILWAUKEE (UP!) - Bos·
ton Red Sox pitchers have the
Milwaukee Br~wers ' number
this season, and In most innings,
that number is zero.
Milwaukee has lost all five of
its games agalns t Boston thiS
season, scorirtg a total of five
runs in those games. Monday
night, Bruce Hurst threw a
six-hitler, and Brady Anderson
and Marty Barrett each drove In
two runs to lead the Red Sox to
their sixth straight victory, 5·1
over the Brewers.
"Over the years I've done so-so
against Milwaukee, but tonight I
had some luck with them," Hurst ·
said. "I had some pretty good
pitches tonight."
Hurst, 3·0, pitched his first
complete game of the season,
walking none and striking out
eight.
The)3rewers have a .161 (25for
155) batting average against
Boston this year and have been
shut out three times.
"They have pitched pretty well
against us, " Milwaukee manager Tom Trebelhorn said. "It's
nothing tricky, they just got us
out. I've got no complaints,

By The Bend

runs on the board late in the
they've pitched welL"
Boston's pitching staff leads game to give our -pitchers some
the American League In ERA at breath-ing room."
Rick Cerone doubled to lead off
2.34. Roger Clemens shut out the
Brewers Sunday, giving up only the third, advanced to third on a
three singles ·to ou tduel Milwau- flyout. and scored on Anderson's
sacr·i!ice fiy, .givlng Boston a 1·0
kee's Ted Higuera 4·0.
"It's kind of hard to have a bad lead. In the fifth, Barrett singled .
staff with Roger on the team." hom e Anderson for a 2·0 lead.
Barrett has a six-game hitting
Hurst said. "We pitched well.
They pitched well too - (Bill) streak with eight RBI and eight
Wegman pitched a great game runs.
Boston made il 3-0 in the
tonight and Teddy [Higuera)
seventh after Anderson doubled
pitched great yesterday."
''He frustrated me a lot," with one out and scored on Ellls '
Milwaukee's Bill Schroeder said Burks' single. In the ninth, Mark
of Hurst. ;,I felt like I had never Clear walked home a r un, and
batted before. He ·doesn't throw Barrett's sacrifice fly made it
&lt;
as hard as Clemens. One thing he 5-0.
Greg Brock broke up the
does do like Clemens, Is he's
shutout with an RBI doubl e In the
ahead of you all the time."
Wegman, 1·3, allowed three ninth.
Monday's game was a make·
runs on six hits and four walks In
6 1:3 Innings. In Wegman's losses up contest, after Friday and
this season, Milwaukee has Saturday's games were rained
scored a total of fwo runs. Last out.
Bostqn reliever Lee Smith was .
year, Wegman finished12-11, and
in 10 of his losses, the Brewers not with the club Monday . He
returned to his home In Castor,
scored a total of 15 runs.
fora family e mergency , and
La.
" We're getting very _good
pitching, " Boston manager John was expected to rejoin the Red
McNamara said. " We're execut· .Sox Tuesday at Chi~ago.
ing and we' re able to get sol)'le

Tuesday, April 26, 1988

Page- 5

....-A little instruction ... - - - - -.. . . A. special Insight

assists while Grant Fuhr stopped start since suffering a groin
26 shots.
injury in the first round .
"If they had won tonight! think
"I' was a little rusty," Hanlon
the ser ies may have gone srx or said. "But I don't worry about
seven games, " Edmonton's injuries . I got wrapped up in the
Wayne G ret~ky said. "Every- game too much to think about
time we scored it was suc h a big anything else."
goal for us."
The Red Wings can win the
The defending Stanley Cup best-of-seven series Wednesday
champions buil t a 4-0 lead before night at Joe Louis Arena, where
the Flames made a game of it the Blues have yet to win this
year in six games.
·
with two goals.
"We can't take the series for
" We started slacking off after
we got· that fo ur-goa l lead," granted," Detroit Coach Jacques
Muckier said. "We were not as ,Demers said. "Wedohavetolook
aggressive as in the first period at our home record as an
bu t got out of it in the third period adva ntage over the Blues ." •
and played welL"
Devils at Capitals
Mike Bullard, a Calgary sniper
At Landover, Md., Washington
shut down by t he stingy Oilers and New Jersey enter Game 5
defense, credited Edmonton's having amassed 519 penalty
quick start in the series- on ti:te minutes in the series. In Games 2
road.
and 3, when a total of 393 minutes
"We just got some bad breaks were called, the Devils won
in th e fir st two games In our handily . In Games 1 and 4, in
building, " Bullard said. ''Y.ou which the Capitals avoided encan look at that game (2) we lost gaging the Devils in intimidation
In overtime. It kind of turned the warfare, Washington came away
whole thing around."
with victories.
The Oilers will face the winner""
Bruins at Canadlens
of the St. Louis· Delrolt series f,;t
At Montreal, the Bruins will try
to break a famed jinx . Boston Is
the Campbell Conference title.
Red Wings 3, Blues 1
one game away from its first
At St. Louis, Gerard Gallant playoff series triumph over the
scored two goals and Glen Canadlens In 19 meetings since
Hanlon made 27 saves In his fir st 1943.

Carl Lee of the Minnesota VIkings, gives a little
bowling Instruction to his son, Dominique, during
the Big Brothers, Big Siswrs Bowl for Kids' Sake
Saturday In GBIHpoUs. Lee, a Marshall University
graduate, was the guest bowler for the event, and
WJEH provided live coverage . from Skyline

Rio players, team stats ·given
Mary Lynn Dutey has emerged
as the top hitter and Billie ,Jo
Stephenson the leading pitcher
for the softball team at Rio
Grand e College / Co mmunit y
College.
Dutey. a senior. Is a four-year
veteran of the Redwomen squad
and Is currently centerfielder.
She holds a bat ling average of
.Mo. recording 12 hits on 40 times
at bat In 14 of the 22 games the
Redwomen have played thus far .
In addition, she has recorded
two RBis this season. A math and
accounting major at Rio Grande,
Outey Is the daughter of Jean M.
Qutey of Iro11ton.
• Stephenson has pitched 16
aames (95 innings total l and
allowed 137 hits. She has , also
posted 25 strikeouts this season.
Stephenson has a .275 batting
average this season, making 16
bits on 58 trips to bat. In addition,
she leads the team with RBis (12)
and has five triples to her credit.
A three-year memller rtf the

Redwomen team , Stephenson Is
a junior maj oring in physical
education. She Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William Stephen·
son of West Union.
Junior Amy Roush. who has
played In a ll22 ga mes, currently
has a batting average of .294,
having made 20 hitson68 times at
bat. She has also recorded five
doubles and nine RBls for the
Redwomen. playing third base
position .
In addition, Roush has pitched
six games (nine innings total)
and allowed 29 hits. She also has
six strikeouts on her record.
A physical educatloJI major,
Roush is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph D. Roush of
Cheshire.
The Red women are 2·20 overall
entering Wednesday's hom!' doubleheader with MQrehead State.
The team Is scheduled to con·
elude its season on May 2 at
Concord College In Athens,
W.Va.

and Dave Puzzuoli at nose tackle.
The acquisition of Blaylock
may mean the shifting of All-Pro
Hanford Dixon to strong safety to
replace the released Ray Ellis.
Also, veterans Chris Rockins and
AI Gross, free agent Will Hlll and
the draftees will clash for roster
spots at safety.
Schottenheime.r said he got a
phone call from Dixon Monday
night .
"l spoke to Hanford and I said
that he should get ready to play
strong safety," said the coach.
" He sa ld, 'I don't know , maybe
free safety.'
"When Hanford's career at
cornerback Is near its end, he
wants to switch to free safety.
When his career at free safety Is
over , he wa nts to b~ the coach."
The Browns previously traded
their fifth· and sixth-round picks.
Gash, a 5-foot-11 , 205-pounder
from Hendersonville, N.C .,
played free safety in four seasons
with the Buccaneers. He totaled
133 of his career226 tackles last'
yea r, and admits he will be
challenged In making the switch.
"All I'm asking for Is a
chance," he said. "Every year
I've been here, I've had a
different defensive coordinator. I
wiii become a better player
(working under one coach) . I'm
excited right now.
"I was sitting here debating
what to do with my lite. I will
graduate this semester (with an
engineering degree) on lime. All
I'm asking for is a chance."
Schottenheimer characterized
Gash as an aggressive player
who will have th~ opportunity to
win a roster spot.
"He's a very physical player,"
said the coach. "We feel be's a
player who can step In and
contribute. (Defensive backfield
coach) Bill Cowher worked him
out and was impressed. He will
be in competition at strong
safety."
Slayden Is a long shot to make
the team unless veteran quarter·
back Mike Pagel is traded.
All rookies and selected vete·
rans will report for a five-day
minl·camp beginning next Sun·
day , The regular training camp
Is scheduled to start July ~1 at
l,aketand Cemmunlty CeiJete

marry
have a familyperson.
becauseI
I'm notand
a well·adjusted
llunked classes in high school, have
been fired from jobs and was
court·martialed in the service. I was
told that I wa• a loser. I lj&gt;elieved it
and fuimled the prophecy.
It's too late for me but it's not roo
late for millions of others to begin
to treat their children with respect.
Parents should remember that they
·are training their children for life
and for parenthood. The way they
are treated is the way they will treat
their children: The cycle is unend·
ing. - j,A. IN KY .
DEAR ).A.: You do yourself an
injustice. The insight and under·
standing rellected in your letter
suggest that you might make a very
good parent.
Thanks for a letter that deserves
to be taken serious! y by every
parent · who wallops his or her
child. Toq often such behavior is an
automatic response to anger and
frustration.
Dear Ann Landers: Women are
forever asking, "Where are the
desirable men?" Men ask the same
question about women.
Both sexes tend to categori7.e
within the first few minutes of
meeting somebody new. They en·
gage in a winnowing-out process, to
eliminate the "undesirables." Un·
fair? Maybe. Realistic? Yes. Here are
some of the categories:
Tall or short
Fat or skinny
American or foreign
Rich or poor
,
College graduates or high school
dropouts
Aggressive or wallflower
Swingers or waltzers

Lanes. The bowl-for-pledges event was the first of
two fund raisers the group has planned. The next
will be a goH tournament on May 7 at Riverside
Golf Course In Mason, W.Va . Anyone wishing to
participate may contact tournament coordinator,
Gene Wood at 446-4159.

~~:""::::::::::~------------= 0

3-R's
For Continued
Highway lmprovemer.ts
FOR

MEIGS I
COUNTY• ·
1.

-FOR RESURFACING WITH

T.

2 .ROBERTS -

FOR REPLACEMENT

OF BRIDGES.

Philip M.
Roberts
REPUBLICAN

MEIGS COUNTY ENGINEER
OVER 21 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN HIGHWAY,
BRIDGES, CONSTRUCTION &amp; MAINTENANCE.
Pd. for bY Comm. to Re-elect Philip M. Roberts. Wallace Bradford,
Treas .. 44060 Suny Hollow Rd .. Coolville, Ohio
•

PLENTY OF BOWLERS - The annual Big
Brothers, Big Sisters Bowl for Kids' Sake was held
Saturday at Skyline Lanes in GaJUpolls. During
the 7-hOur event, bowlers from several civic
groups and area businesses&amp; took part, raising
money for the local
Brothers and

'

third rounds, respectively, and
tabbed defensive end Michael
Dean Perry of Clemson In the
second round .
Cornerback Anthony Blaylock
of Winston -Salem was the fourth·
round pick while select Ions In the
fifth and six th rounds previously
were traded.
"We ha ve added al hletic abli·
lty ·and speed to th e defensive
side of lhe ball," said Browns
Coach Marty Schottenhei(ller. "I
don 't preclude anyone winning a
roster s pot. "
The progress of Cha r lt on and
Walters may permit Schottenhel·
mer to move disappoin ting
second-year line backer Mike
Junkin Inside while vetera ns
Lucius Sanford, Anthony Griggs,
Eddie .Johnson a nd Clay Mat ·
thews will be pushed by the
rookies as welL Both Johnson
and Matthews a re considered
trade bait.
Perry, along with Chris Pike,
obtained in a tni de from Phila·
delphia. may assume the startIng right defensive end role held
by 35-yea r-old Car l Hairston. The
rookie also will battle Bob Gollc

Ann
Landers

Dear Ann Landers: This letter is
Boozers or drys
for every parent. Before you hit 1 Smokers or nonsmokers
you r kid, ask yourself: Why am I
Good dressers or sloppv
doing this?
When I get through sizing them
I am a 4().year-old man who has up. 1 go back to playing poker. vivid memories of being slapped, hit F.A.Z., ARIZONA
with a rawr strap and beaten with
DEAR F.A.Z.: Both _males and
a belt I was told that I was no females lose out when they rule out
good. I didn't understand what that prospects based on irrelevancies rity. generosity ~nd the ability to
meant. How could I? I was only 6.
s uch as fat or skinny, rich or poor.
conun unicate are the things that
I never married and since I've
never had children of my own one
Skinny women sometimes get fat. count in a relationship. But you
could make the point that 1 don't Rich men can lose their money. can't determine if these are present
know what it's like to have two or Smokers can quit and drys can stan by looking at a women between
three screaming kids in the house. I drinking.
poker hands. I'd say you've stacked
acknowledge that this is true.
Kindness. patience. loyalty, Integ·
the deck against yourself, mister.
Maybe I'm lucky that I didn't , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

:Browns
select seven defensive
.
players in two-day NFL .draft
' BEREA, Ohio iUPil -Seven
:defensive players are among the
:10 playe rs taken by the Cleveland
Browns In the two-day NFL
draft, clearly signalling a wide·
open training camp this summer
and significantly increasing the
Chances of veterans' losing their;
;roster spots.
I
· The Bro~ns finished the draft
having secured a total of four
defensive backs. two line·
backers, one defensive end. two
wide receivers and one
quarterback.
In Monday's seventh through
J2th rounds , the Browns picked
linebacker Thane Gash of East
'rennessee State, wideout La·
:.Jourdain "J.J." Birden of
Oregon, safety Danny Copeland
qt Eastern Kentucky , safety
Brian Washington of Nebraska,
wldeout Hendley Hawkins of
Nebraska and quarterback Steve
'Slayden of Duke.
· Cleveland used its first live
draft picks to take defensive
players. Sunday, the Browns
picked linebackers Clifford
Charlton . of Florida and Van
Waiters of Indiana in the first and '

The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the bend
DMSION CHAMPS - iThe Edmonton Oilers
leave their bench after defeating the Calgary

Just when he felt better

FlameS Monday night to win the Smythe Division
final. The Oilers beat life Flames in four straight
games. (REUTER)

Eight-year-old Brandon Smith
is heartbroken.
He received a spiffy Huffy
20-lnch, gray and white bicycle
as a reward for working so hard
at his studies.
·
He got the bike
last Thursday
and then be·
came ill. On F'rl·
day when he
went to a build·
log to check out
his new bicycle at the Smith
property , he discovered It was
gone.
His mother , Shirley, says she
will be glad to pay a reward if the
bicycle is returned. II you have
any Information, do call Shirley
at 992·3289 .
•• ' '
Hemlock Grange women at
Hemlock Grove wtll be glad to
work on your quilt for you or
,make you a complete quilt .
. Women working on a moneymaking project, have a couple M
9uUts completed now !Nhlch are
offered for sale. Or, Ihey will
piece your quilt or if you have the
)op done, they ' ll finish it up for
you.
• The women -l4 were on hand
for last week's session - meet
each Wednesday to do the quilt·
lng. If you' re Interested call
Muriel Bradford at 985·3974.

•

Dowler competes in All-Ohio event
Mary Dowler of the Rio Grande
women' s track team placed first
in the qualifying heat of the
1500-meter run at the Ali·Ohlo
Track Championships at Miami
University last Friday.
Overall, Dowler finished the
even~ in seventh place with a
time of 4:52.37. The first place
finisher ended with a time of
4:39.50.
Dowler also finish ed in th e
3000-meter event with a time of
10:46.92.
'
Other competitors from Rio
Grande's women's team were

Amy Dixon, 400 hurdles, 68.60, with a time of 45.09 and the 4x400
and 100 hurdles, 15.49; Tammy relay squad was fifth 13:24.30) .
Edwards, 100-meter run, 13.06;
Other teams participating in
Atsuko Yamaza ki , 800-meter the event were from Miami,
run, 2: 57.04; Gina Klichenman , Bowling Green, Ashland, Witten1500-meter run, 6:43.94, and berg, Ohio University, Central
800-meter run, 3: 12.64; Sherry State, Wooster , Baldwin ·
Cook, 200-meter run, 27.79.
Wallace, Ohio State and the
In ·the men's competition, held University of Akron.
Saturday, Brian Lugenbeel fi'n·
The men's team will compete
!shed eighth In the 5000-meter April 30 In the Mid-Ohio Confer·
run. His time was 15:53.55. Tim ence finals at Cedarvllle .'Partlci·
Warnock was ninth in the event paling teams are Rio Grande,
with a time of 15:57.03.
Malone. Walsh, Cedarville and
Tony Fatica was seventh In the Urbana . Maione was won the
10,00()-meter run (35:44.6). The MOC track crown continually
4x100 relay team ended seventh since 1971 .
·

WBNS-TV awanied OSU contract
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUP,l) central Ohio and around the
WBNS·TV of Columbus has been state, a chance to get to know
awarded the exclusive three· John Cooper and the Ohio State
year rights to televise the Ohio football program. "
State University football coaches · The show will be televised at
show.
11:30 p.m. on Saturday in Colum·
The announcement was Mon· bus beginning this weekend with
day night by James L. Jones, a special following the Buckeyes'
OSU director of athletics.
annual spring game. During the
"We're looking forward to season, the show will be seen In
working with WBNS.TV on the same time slot beginning the
John Cooper Show," said Jones. Saturday preceding the first
"WBNS has presented us with a game . on Sept 3. and running
quality package .that will allow through the Saturday night of the
Ohio State football fans, both in Mlchfllan game on Nov. 19.

SHARE LIFE

oUH

,' '

~-u-oGE
pOL\C'1

{

'

t '· CLOFH ;,

When you nHd us, we'll be

'

~ Robbie Wyatt an eighth - contest was .t:larbara Anderson,
jrader at the Meigs Junior High with Frank Blake being given an
School, rEjceived a superior rat· e~ceilent, and Michelle Scott, a
t,na on his science project and a good, on their exhibits. Meigs
•pecial award at Saturday's
Junior High School was the only
State Science Day competition
school In Southeastern Ohio to
beld at Ohio Wesleyan In
have !our parUclpants. All fo.u r
Delaware.
received superiors in the local
· Wyatt won the Air Polutlon contest as well as the district
Control Association of Ohio's
judging to quality to participate
IJli!Cial award along wtth a $100
in the state competition. Rusty
savings bond.
BoolaJ:tan and Jessie Vale are the
Also receiving a superior In the
teachers.

GIVE BLOOD

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
Pomeroy Senior Citizen Center

: 0-5:3

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6687

.....,_

Statoluto

i

F

''

'

If you watch the concludin g
two-hour Magnum PJ . next
Sunday evening, you may spot,
eight-year-old Courtney Mullen,
daughter of Major Sean and Katy
Mullen.
The Mullens Jive in Honolulu
where Major Mullen Is stationed
at the Tripier Army Medical
Center. The family has been in
Hawaii for four years.
Courtney is a friend of a young
lady, Martina, who played T.C.'s
daughter In a r ecent segment of
the Magnum show and It was
through her Influence that Court·
ney got to be an extra in a
wedding scene which Is~ part of
Sunday evening's show.
Courtney is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen of
Middleport and Mrs. Maxine
Russell- of Syracuse.
••••
Evelyn Knight is at the new
Western Hills Rehabilit ation
Center and is making so me
Improvement. Cards can be sent
to her at the center which Is
located at 3 Western Hllis Road ,
Parkersburg, W. Va. 26101.
••••
We thou ght we had made
progress when we got the dial
'phOne - wrong again -we can
now dial · a · porn. Do k ee p
smiling.
,

Science fair wtnners
'named from competition ·

there ... with prompt, con·
cerned insurance service. We
always try to be friends you
can depend on. Call us today.

WEEK
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home or the office. Call or visit
us today.
.CX&gt;NnNIINTAI..
AIIWNE.

Twill. ('ach pc .... 1249

.....
IJ1B

12!19

1199

Qu('('n set ........... '7!19
Ktnr:, J pr , llt"t ..,.. "''99

lf89

F'ull . rach pc ......

~9

S}}900
'NIN EACH PIECE

E\t•n •'&gt;~a l!"''rtll.llll tjUallt)
C(Nnfnrt !ll&lt;llt~?:s~s m 1111
So'lle- dllnnK !hi' QPeall t\TII! . Qu,
beit ~u"" ·
Choo!;lo trum
mu.lll•lll't"dlr• 11r ~ ~-~ ~un

Ll'lm-s t

too.

structK'In All.,.,th ""'•lflltl:l.lin._rd'
de!ij..'!l :md 100% lrw-rqwlr c011on
fdl l'llhniSI!"rll flw.~ Aifo ptlrj&gt;8
mll)'

fl('lt'r be rt1'1Catti1. 10Mn'r

ll'llnthtll Rl'fat Uko'

YOU'VE EARNED A

STFARNS It FOSTER.

~·

·~
~~

OPEN

•~a~r~n llrtMir!mr/xt

FlEE
PAlliNG
FOE
DEUVEIY

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
992·6454
992·2039
POMROY, OHIO

.,

9 TO 5

DAILY .

9 TO 8
MON. &amp; FRI.

I

'

~·

�'. -·
,Page-6-The

Daily Sentinel

Community calendar
TUESDAY PORTLAND - Portland PTO
meets, Tuesday , 7 p.m .
. POMEROY - Meigs County
Lltter Control Advisory Board
nieets at the litter control office
Tuesday, 7:30p.m .
·

WEDNESDAY

Tuesday. April

'' Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Republican Womans Club candl·
date night, Wednesday , 6 p1 m.,
MPlgs High :ichQol cafeteria.
Covered dish dlnnl!r with meat
and beve'rager to be furnished .
Take ta ble service.

TllURSDAY
REEDSVI LLE - Riverview
Garden Club meets Th ursday, 8
p.m., home of Mrs. Harlls Frank.
Cohostess is Mrs. Tom Spencer.
Mrs, Ray Young presents
program .

RACINE - Revival w111 -begln
a t the Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Mile H111 Road. Racine, continuIng through May 1 with evangelist to be Rick Murphy of ·
Columbu s. Services will be hPid
POMEROY - Free · clqthing
at 7 p.m. each evening with the day at the _Salvation · ttrmy
public Invited.
Churc h, is Thursday, 10 a. m . to
noon , all residents in need of
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev. c lothing are welcome.
Char les Norris of Racine wil l be
evangelist for revival services a t , BRADBURY
Meigs
Silver Run Baptist Churc h Women's Fellowship of Meigs
through April 30. Special music County Churches of Christ meet
Will be presented by the Gabriel Thursday, 7:30 p.m ., Bradbury
Quartet on Apr ll 26 and 29 a nd by Churc h of Chri st.
the Way Marks on April 30.
Services start at -· 7:30 eac h Commodity dis tribution
· evening.
Free cheese and dried milk w
be distributed by the Community
FOREST RUN - Wildwood
Action Agency a nd Meigs CoopGarden Club meets Wednesday. era tive Parish for people with
'{: 30 p.m ., home of Evelyn ye llow or green food ca rds ,
Hollon.
Tuesday , at the usual sites.
HARRISONVILLE - Mlssion- beginning noon in Ga llia County
ar_y meeting Wednesay , 7:30 and 10 a .m . in Meigs.
Deadline 1
p.m ., Harrisonville· Holi ness
DeadlinE' for horseshoe throwCl[urc h, spea kers will be Bill and
ers
to sign up for the "Toad
Naomi George, representing the
Brlcklcs
Open" Is May 7. Entry
· Davis' of Mexico.
fee is S10 a nd inc ludes scoring.
POMEROY - Regular meet. The open will be held May 14 in
ing of Meigs County Library Mjddleport. E nt tys may be sent
Board, 1 p.m.. Wednesday , to Car l E . Sear les, Box 19.
Farmers Bank meeting room .
Middleport, 457110, or to Harry L.
•
Bailey. 1126 East Main St.,
POMEROY - Meigs Coun!y
Pomeroy, 45769.

Meigs County .property transers
Compiled by
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Court House
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Wayne C. Hoyd and F'reda L.
Hoyd, 5 acres, to Wayn~ C. Hoyd
a nd Freda L. Hoyd, Columbia.
Everett Leo Bachn er a nd Ka ·
thryn L. Bachn er, Pt. Lot, to
Senpa l Dunkin, Midd lepor t
VIllage.
Edna M. Swick, 80 Acres, to
Robert S. Swick and Betty J .
Swick, Rutland.
Ronnie Vance, parcel, to Ran dall Adkins and Mary Adkins.
Rutland.
Diamond Sav. and Loan Co ..
Pt. Lot , to Larry E. Compston
and Gloria .J . Compston, Middl e·
port VIllage.
Donald B. Pullins dec'd, aflid. ,
Anna G. Pu llins. Chester.
arth a Haggy, parcel. to
anhy E . Morris a nd Angela L.
Morris , Salisbury.
Luci lle Murray, lot 4. to Lee
Roy Simpkins, Sr .. Rutland.
Carla Harder nka Carla Wha·
ley, l acr e, to Clet us Todd
Harder, Berard.
· Freda E . Buckanan, Freda
Buchana n, 3 acres , to Ronald D.
Lascar and Judy L . Barber.
Olive.
Glen 0. Deeter a nd Doris May

DeetN, parcel , to Glen 0. Deeter
and Doris May Deeter, OllvP.
David Allen Reed. right of way,
to Ohio Power Co .. Salisbury.
Vernon J . Eva ns and Ha rriett
E. Evans, right ' of way. to O.P.
co. , SatJsbury .
Margaret A. Wyatt, rig ht of
way, to O.P. Co., Sallsb u1y.
Harold E. Hysell. right of way,
to O.P. Co. , Salisbury.
Harold H. Blackston and Helen
_E. Blackston. 'right of way, to
O.P. Co., Salisbury.
Forest .. Gangwer and Sandy
Gangwer , right of way. to O.P .
Co. , Salisbury.
Rich a rd L. Butcher a nd San dra K. Butchel', r ight of way, to
O.P . Co. , Sa li sbury.
Hughie L. Ogdin and Patsy A.
Ogdin, right of way, to O.P. Co.,

26, 1988

Fellowship day

Salisbury ..
Norma n L. Price. right of way,
to O.P . Co., Salisbury.
Homer D. Goeghin and Mabel
M. Gocghin, right of way, to D.P.
Co., Salisburv.
Esl her De.Moss, Richard DeMoss and Richard 0. DeMoss.
right of wa y, to O.P. Co.,
Sallsbul·y.
Mabel Moore, right of way, to
O.P. Co., Sallsbu r·y.
Richard B. Payne aJHi Sher ry
).. . Payne, parcel correction
deed, to Raymond L. Ca nter and
Leig h A. Canter, Sutton.
J ohn R. Mc Kenz ie. parcel, to
Brenessa Phillips, Pomeroy
Vii lag c.
Howard E. Meyers, 1 acre, to
George A. Cot tom. Rut land .

planned by group
A planning session will be held
for May Fellowship Day sponsored by Church Women United
of Meigs County on F riday, l: 30
p.m ., at the Racine Baptist
Ch urch . Key women of member
chu rc hes are asked to attend the
· planning session.

J

L

ll•Jbolr

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

ENOS THURS.

STORE HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 'I a.m. -5 p.m.; Sot. 'I a.m.· I p.m.

Social Securit y is taking aim at
the widespread public misconceptions about the Sot;tal Security system with a nationwide,
multimedia public Information
campaign, according to Ed Peterson, Social Security manager
In Athens.
"The campaign is des igned to
educate the public about how the
Social Security program works
to provide' protect ion to workers
of all ages and tl)eir fam ilies now
a nd In the future. It is ex pected to
help di~ pPI myths such as:
'Social Security Is going broke ,'"
and the underlying message Is.
" Social Security ... It Never Stops
Working. "
"We will be emphasizing three
basic messages to tell the whole
Social Security story, " Peterson
said. "They are: Social Security
Is financially stable int o the
foreseeable future ; Social SecurIty provides a package of protection that Includes retirement,
disability , and survivors insurance benefits, and Social Security was nev er Intended to be I he
sole · source of retirement in-

14 - Hoylo o..1n -~ • f•rtlllaer

il.tll jlllil,il rlli l

eds.

\ 11!1 II / 'I 1I 111

I

J

I

71-AnJ• tot ....
72. - TIUdq lor ....

n-v-••wo·.

I'

O•ll• County

ArM Code 814

117-C311-V....n

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
2:00P.M . MONDAY
2:00P.M . TUESDAY
2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M . THURSDAY
2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

a•s-Aia Gr!lftde

:1111-0uyon Q}lt.
143-ArebleD!It.
3'71-Welnut

12-lto;- ...."'
13-lrta~rlft•

1 4 - · - - , _...

A- Coclo :104

··-'-

11-WIIIIIII

1711-l't. , _

l'llrMICIY

171- AIIPio aoo..
773-M_.
•2-N•H.... .

-~~843- POI'II...
247-Lattrt Fell
1141-11-•
742-R-d
ee 7 --Caotvl~

71~ • Motor HomM

11--..
·le-llllllo, TV.
Cl """*
· 17- MiolioiiM-1

M...,c... wv

MolgoCauncy
Aroo Coclo 114
112-MIIId._.,

71-Boeta a Moto .. tor • •
'71- Auto Perte a Accee110n.
77-Auloll ......
71-Complna E., • .,..,

11-Holp-111

To Do

S•·r v itt"
11 -Home lmprowment'

lilidlil.l.il

Ill~

IZ-Piudl~g

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hero
IUIINfSS PHON£
16141 992-UlO

RISIDEHCE PHONf

21
Opportunlty
22- Monllf to LHn

•-Gon-Hou~e

II IIIDI:III• Ham. Rep. ·

23-Pro,.llohll Servic.l

•!

•WII Do Houting Wllh
Durnp -Truck
•Wrecker Service

•Junk Yard Bueine11

WANT 10 IUY WIECHD OR

JUHI CARS 01 TRUCKS
-'lREE ISTIMATISfor any ol then nnic• call

614-742-2617
letw- 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
ar

L"'" ~-~-~ -""

J&amp;L
INSULATION

We can repair and recore radiators ·and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators, We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

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

FREE ESTIMATES

CALL 992-2772
GARAGE &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PAT HILL FORD

ROOFING &amp;
GUTTERS
4-11·1 mo. d.

992-2196

6-17-tfc

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING
•DoJer • Backhoe Work

•r

RI!DIATOR
ERVICE

Roger Hysell
Garage

16141

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
-JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

Middleport, _Ohio
1 -13-tfc

l&amp;L
INDEPENDENT
CARPET
CLEANERS

74'2·3171

f

NURSES AIDES .
ORDERLIES. LPN's
Hourty or Live·ln
Arrangements

BONDED · INSURED
Covered With Workmen· s

Compan1ation

PH.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319

So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

Robert E. Buck,

1-~B-' 88 - tfn

Probate Judge

Lena K . Nesselroad, Clerk

a... MOYtlS &amp; SUDIS lo

(41 26; {5) 3, 10, 31c

YHS IAPI
.., .......,, those old Mo•ios
&amp; Stidot

o•• lo oosy YHS.
CAll AMY (ARTER
or IOI'S IU(OONICS
446-7390

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
·Want Ads

11 / Zrii·Hc

614-992-2657

4-20·'88 I mo.

SMALL ENGINE
REP All
Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Bri,s &amp; Stratton
ecumseh
Weed Eater
Hom elite
Jacobsen
VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.
992-681\ .)O.IJ tin

MIKE LEWIS-OWNER
Rt. I, Rutland, Oh. 45175
4-11-'11· t ....

.

J

We Prov· Care For The
Elderly In Their Home.

742-2451

Meigs County
Probate
Coun, Ceaa No. 26804,
Jamoo B. Thomao. 148 Lincoin Hill, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 wu appointed Exa·
cutor of the estate ot Grace
E. Gardner, deceased. late
Ot Rutland. Ohio.

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DtWiH, BROKER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES CALl:
CHERYL LEMLEY, SALES AGENT

E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES
Home Health Care
~ency

The Best Technique
In Carpet Cleaning

NOTICE OF
APPOiNM ENT OF
•• FIDUCIARY
On AptH 1 8 , 1988, in the

•

P.

BINGO

Public Notice

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or les. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS
4-16-86-ttn

.

17-Uphololrt

•!

. SUBTRACT.. THOSE THINGS
GATHERING DUSt
'1\DD'' DOLLARS
~~
-:~.t-:::..-~, TO YOUR POCKET

•''

•'

l

1. Match the first two digits
(K·O to win $10.

I

•
I

2. Match the first three digits
(K·I·C) to win

3.

4.

•

$100.

•

'

the first four digits
(K-1-C-K) to win $1,000.

Match

Match the .first

t

fiVe digits

(K-1-C·K-E) to win $5,000.

The winning i&lt;fcker Number is drawn
immediately following Super Lotto drawings.
The method of playing and w inning Super
__.Lotto remains unchanged.' To win ''The Kicker"
SAY YES TO "THE KICKER"
when your Sales Agent asks if L-:f_our number must match the w inning Kicker
Num ber in exact order, starting with the first
you want to play. Or use your
tvvo digits moving left to right (see below).
· Super Lotto bet card and check

SUPER LOTTO
05 09 20 25 36 40

KICKER YES
123456

5.

:•

all six digits
(K-1-C-K-E-R) to win
$100,000. .

Match

'

••
•

Kic~r prizes of StO and $100 can~ ctaimod
at any Lott&lt;ry Soles,Agent. For priz.. of
S1,000 and more )'OU must obtain a Claim
Form from any Sole&lt; Agent for ~nt by
check from' Ohio Lottery hf!i!dq. - ..
ltxl can play S..pcr Lotto and "Tiie Kic~r"
&lt;Very dey; drawing$ ere held each Soturdoy
and W&lt;dnesday ni!Jht on lV.

Lottery proceeds benefit Ohio schools.
An equal opportunity empjoyer. ·
e 1988 T1i&lt; Ohio Lottery

.'

WITH A'

••

••'
'

I'

•••
•
l'
''

614-742·2355
.

4 -11 ·'87· 1 mo .

Will

do Federal
and State
.Income Tax,
.typing,
bookkeeping,
· and Notary
Service.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window.s

•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

FREE ESJIMA T£S
JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

3·28·11·1 mo .

•FREE•ESTIMATES•
IF 110 AIISWEI
367-7560-

Announcements

992·2264

3·21-' 87·1 mo.

.... ...

"Free Eatimatea"
PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY UllS
3-11-tfn

Am ••rching for ir'lformetion of
AIMander Bigg1 of Ch.. ter area
who died 1861. Had sons Aaron.
AI• . T, John William .,..d girls
Rachal, Susan, Lucett8 in Bash.,.., Chetter, Tuppen Pl•lns. Is
there a Biggs r.union each
aummer1 'Nhen1 Also . . . chlng
for d.. cendents Dr. John Cornell Wid Christl.n• who died

Call 9'9 2-2156-

''

''
I'

and locations. Merlin WedemiP{ttr Auctkmeer- 514-245- ·

..

5152.

Rick Pt1raon Auctioneer, licensed Ohio and W..t VirginJ11 .
~state. antique. 1•m. liquldll·
ttOn .. ,.., 30 .... n3-6785.
';

9

11101.

Giveaway

We pay Cllh forl ..amodel cte.:.
used c.rs.
.
Jim Mink Chev.·OI• Inc. • r
Bill Gene Johnson
.,

Sheep dog. 5 mos. old. FemMe.
To a good home. Catl814-387·
0869.
"'

TOP CASH paid for '83 mo~
and n.-wer uwd
Smtth
Bulck-PontiK, 1911 Eeat•n·,

4

TWo black part Greet Dane pups.
One mel&amp;. one famal•. Good
watch ~Mga, gentle. In delf*ale
need of 11 good home. Phone
&amp;1•· 7•2·2367 or 814-742·

2396.

114-446-3872

c••·

Ave .• Oalllpotia . Call 61~••• r

~ -• .

2282.

•. ''1

Compl8te "Outeholdl of furni·
t ure a. MtiqUfll. Also wood &amp; '.'
coal hHtwa. Swain' 1 Furniture , ·
• Auction, Third &amp; Olive • •

6t4-44tt-3159.

.•

6 Lost and Found

W~t to' buy: Used fllmiturwend ,: ·
anttques. WHI .buY entire ~uH· ,
hold furnishing. M•rlln Wed&amp;: '- '
1
meyer, 814-245-!5152.

LOST. l•ga lll'lount monsy in
small folded brown pap• blig In

Junk Cars with or wtthoot ·
motor.. Call lar~ Uvety -814!- "•

1100. billa, Point Pt....,t Oalli.
potls •r• Wedn11dav. Will reward for return, 304-ltl-3111.

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

Ubr.rv·Yellow• whtttTomCit.
Coil 304-882-3722.

Used Mo.bileHom... C.ll1 -814·
446-0175.

,.

386-9303.

.

DEAD 01 AUYE
•Weahera •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigeratora
"Mont II lopalr,.lo"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

985-3561
We Service All Makee
1/22/11/lfn

'

c

Old 1800'11og cabin orhou .. t a•

r•tore. C.l1 814-245-9448. , .,
FOUND : N••r NM HaY en
'-

----- :

LOST: O.lm•tion .,..,.ing rM
coli•. F LJI grown mctle. Call f!uyinQ daity gold. 1ltv• coins.' ·.,
11n.u•. rBWelry. ltertln g were. 04d
30,..176-6501 or 871·3100.
co1n1, llrge currency. Top pric•. Ed Iurieen: S.rber Shop
2nd. Ave . Midclaport. Oh . &amp;1.:
7
Yard Sale

992-3471.

.., '

-·---··Galliiiolis ......... .

[ IIIJIIiiV illl~lli
SI!IVICI!'

&amp; Vicinity

''

'

"

..

· WANTED

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

...... ,.

PH. 949·2969
ECHO
Located Halfway Be·
- n Rt . 7 It Baehan
&amp; USID MOWOS
B.7 Financing On Yardman '
S.vlco On All Makos
We H - MC/Disc/Vise
4-11-' Uifn

J&amp;L
INSULATION
HEATING

&amp;

COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 99

.

i

•

.
3 Ftmltt·ColarTV. IMnrnower.
emlquoo, toto of clothing. 0 ld

•

110 In Port•. Wod.-Sot. 388·

BB20.

Mov.,g Sei•Eiec. stow. reftig.,
rock•. chlh, .m:lque
dining teble. blue b•h room(co...,t•ol Coil 114-256-le&amp;l.

ch•t.

1- - - - - - - -

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.. ... ..... ... .... ... .... ... ... .... 1::--:-:-:-:--:--:-:---We bJy qultts. Pre 1950's. Any
condition. 115-lo\00} . Need
· -- Colt 114-992-114157.

Moolnlloi•TIIu•t. lo Fri. , APril

AM-I PM. Sooond
A10 DOpt.·Tu_. PloiM.

28 •

8, I

ttWI• up from OIWige TowMhlp

i
~
z
-

Needttd: Assistant Director of

Nursing far 100 bed skilled
nurtlng fKIIIty . Must beRN with
good IMdlflhip &amp; m.,~..,.,t
alcMis. EN::-'Ient .-1-v &amp; benef· ..,.
ita. Apptv 11 ScMic Hills Nursing
Contor, ~1. 2 Box 262. Bi•olt.
Wanted Maneg•: Fult service ·''
stvllng •lon. Wag• pkas com- ·

mission, peld hOikl~ •

.......Pt.PTeaaiint ......
&amp; VicinitY

we•

tlon. lnsu,.,oe .,•hbl... Appfv :
1UOO .. APIH2101Woll , Aptil27.
'
Hair Heppenlng Stv..o Salon.·· ·
Uvw Bridge P1are .

- - - - - - - - - 1.,•
WOuld vou lk• 1 n.w look for :

Dtpendlblt Hearilll Aid SillS &amp;Servirct Garage hi•Raln 011hine. Fri.,
April D . 2 mA• out 81'00d Run
c:1 Nearina Evaluations For All Aats
Rd. from I'IIP!tpo 1t1om l'tonc.

bo-

tprlng1CtiiMiiryKayoonaubnt ,
for •lr•lodol- 114-llla-8238.

1

RegiltlrtdNur18WMt .. im...,. ~ . :

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Glrio clofhoo, oloctric- • • clltetv tO IUPI':Y- the ftM ~~
toblo. ontiquo
lo knlalt Hotr., Clnlc Wefght Aellu:tkln· •

-417 Second A-.., Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

8

Licensed Clinical·Audioloeist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

kniCikl.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

or at

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulbeny Hils. Pomeroy,

U·

Wedemeyer's Auction Serviceavailable at your con-.,..,nienoe ,

1873-18n. Woul!l ropoy POl·

tage spent. H.C. Harle. 227
Elmwood, Topeka,' Kene11

Listenin&amp; Devices

'''

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.. ·... ·po·merov·....... ···

..w

•

8

3 Announcements

Margaret Parker

I

1

•

HILLSIDE
MUZILELOADING
SUPPLIES
Black Powder Supplies
"Modern Ammunition"
CAN ORDER "Modern"
GUNS ON REQUEST
At Reasonable Prices
lt. 1 U Across
Happr Hollow lood

614-662-3821

YAIDIIAN &amp;

CLASSIFIED AD

I

••

PH. 742·2833
Open Monday thru
Saturday
12 Moon till 8 P.M.
Corner of New Lima
Road &amp; Bryant Street
Rutland, Ohio
4-12-'88-1 mo.

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.,

'SALES
SEIYICE
U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Water. Gu,
Sewer &amp;
Drainage l in ea. Road Building.
Land Cle•ing, Footers
Complete Mobile Home Setups
Fill Dirt · Top Soil · llme•tone
SMAll or lARGE JOBS

MIDTOWN
VIDEOS

BOGGS
&amp;

p.,,. &amp;

I

CHARLIE'S

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Authorized Jam Dtorit,
Ntw Holland, l~sh Hog
Farm Equipment
Doalor
firM Eq•IPMtlf

The Ohio Lottery has added a
new kick to Super Lotto. "The
Kicker," a six-digit, random ly
selected number imprinted on
e-~ery Super Lotto ticket. For one
more dollar you can p lay ''The
Kicke(' whenever you play
Super Lotto, and get five more
Wi'f'IS to win. But if you don't
pay the dollar, the Kicker
Number you didn't play cou ld
be drawn. And wouldn't that
be a kicker!

Heating

M-EIIIclrlal a R.trtg.miDn

-lluein••

837-luH.

a

U-E--g

Business ·Services

-l

•

U-tlw-

:11-LololoAcrtM•~
:11 -"MI Ettete WMtld ..

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ... .

3RD STREET
949-2800
RACINE, OHIO
MASTERCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE

168 North Second
Mid.oporl, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

the box marked "Kicker K:' On
Player Activate d t-Aachin'es just
insert another dollar when the
screen asks if you want "The
Kicker."

a - w..Wd to luy

n-~~otorc¥Ct•

-RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

•

come, so all wor kers s hould plan
for their own fi nancial future by
supplementing the ir anticipated
Social Securit y benefits."
" Young people who worry
about whether Social Security
wUI be there when they' re ready
to retire don ' t realize that It
protects them right now . Currently, some 38 million people, 1
out of 6 Americans, receiv e some
sort of monthly benefit from the
Social Security Administration.
And about 40 percent ol them are
non-retirees. In addition, more
than 126 million workers- about
95 percent of today's workforce
-are paying Into Social Security
and will one day reap Its
benefits," Peterson said.
Mr. Peterson said people who
would like to know the "whole
story" about Social Security can
order a free copy of the campaign
booklet , "Social Securlty ... How
It Works For You" by calling
SSA's toll-free telephone number
1-800-937-2000 or by writing to
Social Security, Pueblo, Colorado 81009.

-

34--·· .... .

41 -Farm E.-•n.nt

32-Ma..a.. HOtMI tor Sale

33-f-11&lt;1111

"OUR PRICE - MOST REA SONA BLE"

discussed th e possibility of purc hasing a dishwasher for the
kitc hen.
Frank Ih le ha d the opening
prayer . Kathryn Evans presldl'd
at the ri'IPetlng with Coleen Van
Mete r a nd Dorothy Roach giving
the secretary and treas urpr's
repor ts. Clay Tuttle had the
closi ng prayer. Refreshments
were served by Hazel and Bud
Wilson and Clarice Erwin to
those named' a nd Glen Evans,
Thelma Byer, Willard and Nettle
Boyer, Geneva Tu tile, Doris
Carter, Bill a nd Flo Grueser,
Raymond and Farie Cole, and
Dorothy Baker.

Social Security takes aim
at public misconceptions

•v •• •••••

--Oalllpollo

1: 10 1i 9 : 10 ~ CIA IL '( .

ll h'

31-H-II&lt;Ioto

' \I

FRI DA Y thru THURSDAY .1

the me mbers repeating the club
co llect. Wllovene Bailey gave
devotions. For roll call mem bers
named an item which co uld be
used as a mulch . A program on
deep mulches was given by Id a
Murphy who talked about what to
use and how a nd when to -use it.
Followi ng the progra m , a
rec ipe exchange was held with
He len Eblin as chairman. The
Lord 's Prayer was given and
refres hments served by the hostess to those na med and MarJorie
Purtell, Id a Mu rphy, and Thelma
Gi les.

shou ld be congrat ulated ·a nd
appreciated lor their dedication
to ex celle'nce and achipvement."
sa id Dr. Geroge Stevens. executivP director of the U. S. Achieveme nt Academy .
The Acade my selects USAA
winners upon the exclusive recommenda tion of professors.
coaches, counse lors or other
school sponsors and upon the
Sta nda rds of Selectio n se t fo rth
by the Aca demy. The criteria for
selection a re a stud ent 's acaaemic performance , interest and
aptitude, leadership qualities.
responsibility, enthusiasm. moU•
vat1on
to learn and lmprov~,
ci tizenship, a ttltude, and cooperative spirit, dependability, and
recommPndation from a profes&lt;;Or or director.

tor each

•A claaaitied advertiaement placed in The Deily Sentinel (exI'Tcept -:- c:lauified display, Butineu Card and legal notices)
will I
in the Pt. Pleasant Register and the Galli·
polis
reaching over 1 8.000 homes .

APRL 22 lhru 26~

Arnold named to USAA

The Uniled State Achievement
Academy a nnounced today that
Sherry Arnold ha s been named a
U.S. National Collegia te Award
winner in natural science.
The Academy recognizes Jess
than 10 percent of all Am erican
co llege s tudents.
Miss Arnold , dau ght er of Bob
and Bonnie Arnold. Pom eroy.
attends Ohio Universit y. She was
nominated for the award by
Professor Ha ger ma n. Her resume wi ll appear In the U. S.
Ac hievement Academy Offic ial
Collegiate Yearbook. published
natlnally .
·
" Recognizing a nd supporting
our youth is more important than
ever beforE' in America's history.
Certai nly United Sta tes Ac hiev~ ­
ment Acade my award wi nners

Aat-. are tor oonMcutl~•runs, braltln up Clllyswill bl d'llf'9*d

"Price of ed for all capitallettl!llrs is double price of ad cost.
"7 point line ·t ype only used.
•
"Sentinel is not responaible for errors after tin t d-v. (Cheek
for errors first day td runs in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m .

d-v after publication to make correction.
•Ada that must be paid in adv.nc:e are:
Card of Thanks
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Sales

Homebuilders club meets
Project work was t·eported on
at the recent Home builders Class
of thP Middleport Chu rc h of
Christ held a t the c hu rch.
. It was noted tha t the carpet ha s
been installed In the library a nd
that all of the she lves are in
place. A stool was al so purchased
for the· library. A $100 love
of~rlng was taken lor a famil y in
the church, running boards pro·
vlded for the church va n, a nd
flowers for the altar on Palm
Sunday and Easter.
Plans were discu ssed lor the
mother-daughtPr banquet and
$25 given on that with a gift also
being furnish ed. The class also

"Free ads - Giveaway and ~un d ads under 15 words will be

run 3 days et no charge.

Fernwood Garden meets
Plantings at the Zion Churc h
a nd Wolf Pen signs were planned
when the Fernwood Garden Club
mel recently, at the home of Id a
Murphy.
The group also discussed a Irip
to the Halfi eld Gardens a t
Circlpvllle on June 28. and the
recent county and regional meetings a ttended by several
members. Evelyn Thoma will be
hostess for the next meeting to be
held on May 17 at the Zion
Cl\urch.
Suzanne Warner presided at
the meeting which opened with '

0· 11 WORDS II · :II .WORDI 21·:111 WORDS .
17.00
11,00
14.00
110.00
...00
u .oo
111.00
113.00
18.00
121 .00
IZI .00
113.00
110.00
Ill .00
1 MONTH
133.00

•Receive $.80 discount for ads paid in advance.

5:11"1ACKSON PfKE -RT.35 WEST
Phone 446 - 4524

ill I 1]1! 'I!

' t DAYS
3DAV8
I ::lAYS
10 DAYI

"Ads O\ltsi de Meigs, Gallla or Mason counties mutt be pre·
paid.

SAl 3 SUU
ALL SEArS 12.50
1l NIGHT TUESDAY ~2 . 50. ,,

"Mother's Day Special"
Coming Monday, May 2 thru Saturday, May 7

A I: II
RATES

POLICIES

OARGA H~ ~HNE£5

Watch For Our

!.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

Auctkl,._, Col. Os• E. CNck.
304-111-14:10. lie. No. 7&amp;4-

18.

,_.ogram. If lntlf..,_. 0111 1144411-5244.

w..tH.

'-•on

...

to work in •

I

Goillpollo ollloo. Send ''1'1¥· ,
r-..nw to loa Cle 1o\1, Olllllpo. • '
Ill Doll\' Tntauoo. 1211 Th~dA ,.,, • '
Qalllpollls, 0H415131 .
) 1 ,,
LPN-ADDIY In parlor! to: Th1

,f ' )

Mocloif Pl..., 203 Joaltoon

r1

l'lko. Oolllpolio. Ohio, " " ' - e
AM. 4 :JO PM.

_,.

�- ·---'
Page- 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

1 1 H alp Want ad

44

Hair Stylilta. Aero .. The Street
llyllng tllon it a•tdng one
addtklnel styfist wko il looking
Call Terri at 614-448-9510 for
details.

Main, Po m•ay. 614-992-8.215
o• 614-992·35 23.

Assembl&amp;r$ w.n1ec1. Eern monav .. sembling Tec:ktf Be..-t.
Free inforJMtlon . Wrh: t : Jo.EI
Enterpri••· P.Q . Box 2203.
Ki11lmmee, Fl. 32742·2203.

Two-four b'droom apartment•
in Pomeroy, Depotit rvqulred.
Call 614-992-e723 otter 6 :00.

'

Nice one bedroom -.partment
with •ppli~ncas , c•pet, and
waah•-drver hook- up. In nice
neighborhood in Gallipolis .
S220. per mom~. Cllll614-4469510.

Government Jobs. '16,040. 8 59, 230 yr. Now hWing. Your
area 805-887-6000 eXt. R98015 for current Fedartl ldt.

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
houses. Pt. PleasantandGall lpo1;. 614-446-a221 .

Excepting appli cations for b.perl en c ed nursing auistants
t~rough 4 - 27· 88 . Contact
Amerlcer &amp;Pomeroy, Nursing
and RehetHiftat io n Center.•No
Phone callt please. E.O .E.

Part time RN Supervisor. day
ai'Hft. ICF-S NF long term care
facility . Arcadia Nu,..ingCenter,
Main St .• Cool\t illtt. Ohio 45723.
BabVsfttM needed for 2 and 4
ye .. old. Mature with •perienee. Call 614-992-6566 or

Beech Street, Middleport. Ohio.
2 bedroom 1urntahed apt. utiliHas Plld. referencesanddepolft.
304-882· 2666.

f-----------r-----------

81~992- 3033 .

31

AVON · All are&amp;s. Call MeriJvn
Weaver 304-882-2645.

Situatiops
Wanted

SWimming pool, uteUte. close

tO Meigs High. Call 614-992·
3254.

3 bedroom hou.e. 1.9acr•. On

~ - 7. Appointment ontv. 614:992-e332.

3 bedroom ,... th. 169 Beach
St. ;--Midcleport. Single b•h.
Cky lot. 01a, 500. Call e14• 992-2806.

I now have en o pening for a
elderly women o r men in my
prnrate home. 17 yr1. ex~­

rience. Tupper•
614-667-3402.

Plains

fOJ sale or rent, 1477 Unooln
Heigh1a, Pomeroy. 2 bedroom.
living room, ldtctlen. Call 614985-4103.

Oihi.

Investment property for aale.
Remodeled rental hou~M . 2 br
with bMement. city . $17.50p.
304-675-6331 .

8abytitting in my home. t~J:O .
location. Aw111'( from road . with
pl-v tquipment. Ref. Provided.
304- n:~-5&amp;18 .

13

Insurance

Call us for your mobile home
insurance: Mill'er Insurance,
304-882· 2145 . Also: auto.
home. life. health.

18 - wanted to Do
Jim' • Odd Jobs
Sundecks. tiding, painting, roof·
ing. carpentM wOf'lc. trailer repair. C!ll 614-379-2416 . .
Cleaning-House !t offices. Reference~ . Call 614-446-8788 or
245-6363.
Will haJI My kind oft rash Mcept

bodies. 820 pickup load. Cali
304-675-6462 or 675-7274.

Cfll

lawns rut and trimmed . Call
61~446-9391 .

J &amp; R'1 Roofing- Sieling &amp;
remodeling. Will build gerages.
&amp; outbuildings. Minor carlJenter
work onrv. 18 years nperience.
Coli e14-4411-8327 0&lt; 44e1912.

Would like to do houaecle.,ing.
C!ll 614-379-2168.

Will do mowing and complete
yard service. painting &amp; small
c•p.,try work. Price depends
on 10b. Call 614-4411-6342.
Day Care Services provided. All

tlaclble hOurs. P11rt or full time.
Large fenced yard. Ref..-encas
prowldll!ld. Cell 814-446-9402.

Prime location Rt . 2, Apple
Grove . Next to Goodvear. k&gt;cks
dam project, full size basement
forced ' air furnace, nice lot.
County water available. Priced
to sell. $38.600.00. Call 304576-2466.
3 bedroom, 2 baths. full finahed
basement. ni!IIW' furn~tee and
central air, garage, fenced yard.
Low GO's. 2414Mt. VernonAw.
pt, Pit. 304-875-1774.
1Vz story. air, 3 bedrooms,
living, dining. family toom. new
kitchen with renge. disposer,
dishwasher, oak cabinets, convenient, 304-675-6027.
3 BA ., hou• trailer- extra room
buitt on. AH alec., W8!1har-dryer,
nove, refrlg. Slttlng-ShadVWater-Camping erea. t7000.
Call 304-575-29a7 or 675e079.
6 rooms, 2 bllt hs. basement.
906 22nd. St. low $60's. Call
304-675-e676.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1988 Redman S.ctionll home.
28x58. 3 BR, central ai'. ready
to be moved. Cllll 61~4468594 after 8pm.

Carpent..-looking for extra work
with reasonable rates. Call after
5 :30 Pl\.1·614· 949· 2461 .
Lawn mowing &amp; odd jobs.
Ae81onable rate1. C811614-992•
3490.
R &amp; B. Odd job1 you need it we
can do it. Auto. lawn or home.
free e&amp;tlmate. 304- n3-5045.
Will live In end c'lfe for elderly
p.-son, experienced, after 5:00
call 304-895-3960.
Lawn Mower Rep airs
Lawn Set'vices
~ mall Gardena Plowed
304'675- 1 653.

1986 .14.:80 Nashua. 2 Bedri;)Om, unfurnishad. E.:l'll. cond.
Set up &amp; ree6f to move into.
812.200. Cell 614-258-1953.
M- F AM only, Sat .- Sun .
anytime.

21
'

1984 Fisher mobile tuJmo. 2
beci'ooma. 1 V2 baths. Beaut ill I
built-In feat:urea . Call 814.-4464291 evenings.
Government homee from $1 . lu
repair). OelinC!u.tt tall property.
Rapo1...1ions. Call 805-6876000 Ext. G H 9 8015 for currant
repo list.
1978 1 4x70 Bayview Trailer for
sale. Has 7x22 ft. expando, 3
bedrooms , 1 'h bath. Nice.
Priced to sell. Phone 304 7735445., 304-n:l-9181.
Skyli.ia 10•50. 2 bedrooms,
completely refurbished, exc
cond, c•h only or trade for
vehlcl• $1 . 900.00. 1 - 304a63-e155.
1973 Flamingo, 12x86, 3 bedroom•. panneled, deck. unit air
cond and underpenning In·
eluded, $6. 500.00. 304-6752679.

Financial
Business
Opportunity

'86 Fleming mobile home. mcc
c;ond. 304-675-5841 .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do b.Jsin•s with people you
know , •nd NOT to .,.d money
through the mail until you hwe
lnvestigsted the offering.

41

1988 Fleming Mobile Homa
E rccel. co nd. Call 304-8765841 .

33

Farms for Sale

Gentleman's Farm-68 acr8!1.
Small grocarv store wl1h excel- . mostly paature and woods.
tent meet &amp; dell dept. Inventory Restored, two-ltotyhomeover·
&amp; equipment. Help wit~ financ· kloklng Racmon Creek. Urge
ing equipment isavallable.leate barn, work shop, grainary. etc.
on building II open. In Gellipotla. Call 814 - 388 · 8610 for
Ohio. Serious inquiriee only appointment.
pl ..se. Catl 614-245-5559 Of'
446-1543.
168 acres, Rutland township,
remodeled 3 bedfoom house
with 1'h b11th1. 2 b•ns. 3 other
Wilding~ , pond. free g•. min.,.
al1 included. Call after 5p.m.
614-742-2348.

Rea l Eslal c

Homes for Sale

Furnished

room· 919 Second
A\18. , ~lllpolls . $125 a mo.
Utilities paid. Slnglemale. Sh.-e
bllth. Cab- 446-4416after 7 PM .

Homes for Rent

46 Space for Rant
Nicely furnished amaH house.
Adults ontv. Ref. required. No
pets. Call 614-446-0338.
::
F-u,-n7"is7"hed"7":H7"o-u-so-.-:3-:B=R:-.-:2::9-:N;-ei:
Ave .. Gallipolis. 8225 a mo. Call
446-4416 after 7 PM.

2 BR ., unfurnished-1 mile -218.
S 200 rent . $1 50dep. &amp; ref. One
chHd Cell 614-4411-96B6.
Nice one 8R ·.. furnished house.
No pets. Ref. 81 nc. dep.
required. Call 614-446-1769.
2 BA , large liv lng room, yard.
l.,ndry, patio, on Spring Ave.
No pats. Deposit. Call after 6,
614-992-6886.
Nice 2 bedroom home. basement, large vard. linooln Hts.
$ 176. Reference and deposit
requh'ed . 614-992-5053. Awll abt e May 111.

Mo bite home lot. 60 ft . or
•mall•. 920 4th, Gallipolil.
$75-...-..ter paid. Call 446-4416
after 7 PM.

Small unfurhishfld house. CleM .
Good location, Prefer cou pie 11
chil~ . · No pets. 3218 Howard
Ave., Pt. Pleasant. Call 304675-6621 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
In Eure41:e-2 nice &amp; olean 2 BR .
mobile 'hom ... $200&amp; S 225 per
mo. ,Oep required. No peta.
Adult!l only . «All 614-2455863.
Mobile home for ,.,t, Call after
2 pm . 614-4411-0527.
Trailer ior rent. Call after 5 PM,
e14-445-42 26.

2 bedfoom1. furnithed or unfurnilhedtrail•. weakly or monthly
deposit required. 304-6751206.
Mobile home. 2 DR .• AC. t. mite
out.SandHill Rd . Call 304-8753834.

43 Farms for Rent
LEASE OR RENT, 27aaee crop
l ... d and eo acres pasture.
304-675-4045.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . apu. 6 cloaets, kilchen.,pl. furnished. Wather-Oryer
hook-up, ww carpet newly
peintec:l. deck, Regency. Inc.
Apts. Call 304-675- n38 or
e76-6104.
New complauly furnished
apll'tment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adults only. Parking. Call
614-445-033B.
BEAUTIRJL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES. 636 Jackson
Pike from $193 e mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 614-4482568. E.O.H.
Brookside Apartments: Located
off B..AwHieRd.-1 BR . s"PM:ious
ap.-tments with mode. n kitchen
and washer· dryer hookups, c•
ble television avall~e. Call
6 14-445-19 32.
Upstairs unfurnished apt. carpeted. utllttlll paid No children.
No o••· C!ll e14-4411-1637.
Downtown-Modern 1 BA ., complete kitchen, AC, c•pet. Call
614-4411-0139 .
Unfurnished apt.-2 BR . 8185.
Wlltlll!lr' ~id Stove &amp;reftig. 1138
Seoond, Gellipolle. Cell 4484418 after 7 PM.
Furnished efficiency. $146. Uti~
ltl• paid Sh•e bath. 807
Second. Gallipolis. C.ll 8144411-4416 otter 7 PM.
Garage apt., furnished. 8226.
Utllh;• pold. 29'h Nell. Gelllpc&gt;111. Coli 614-446· 44 1e otter 7
PM .
.

53

51 Household Goods
. SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE e2
Oliva St .. Gallipolis .
NEW· 6 pc. wood QfOUP· $399 .
Living room sui1es- $199-8599.
Bunk beds with bedding- S 199.
Full size mat1reu &amp; foundation
starting · $99 . Recliners
starting- $99.
USED- Beds, dressers, bedroom·
suites. $199-8299. Desks.
wringer wash•. a complete line
of used furniture.
NEW· WeatMn bootl· 830.
Wotkboots 818 81 up. IStael &amp;
soft toel. Cell614"·446-3159 .

Huge 31. oval pool with deck.
fence 8. filter. Installation &amp;
finan cing available. 1· 800-3450946.

Retbed1ilt t111iler. C.ll 614-3889e86.
DIRT CHEAP DIAMONDS.
Emeraldl end Sapphires. 25
stones for 825.00. All real, Call
111 806-6a7-6000 Ext. OX·
1000.

Portable signS: lighted and unlighted, S199 · ·$379. Free
delivery end letters. W.Va. 1B00-642-2434. Qh;o 1-80().
533-3453.
Queen size mattr••• and box
springs. like new. 304-676-291a.
Double bed, 2 piece. carpet
(grey and beige) like ntrN . Clll
304-675· 5996 !her 5:00

4xft utility tl'liler. 304-8762159,

.

Harvest gold 18ft . ..trig. w /lce
mak81' &amp; stove w/ r.-.9e hood,
1465. French Pro\1. dimngroom
auitewhh 8' hutch &amp; chairs. Beat
offer. Call 614· 446-2610 after
5 PM .
Hotpoint upright freezer. C811
614-4411-2975.
King- aile five piece bedroom
auile. Large sectional sofa. All
excellent condttion. Call 614·
949-2763.
.

Pets for Sale

949-2763.
a hp Or.., ely. plow. mow...
tiller, anow blade. fiXC cond.,
304-675-2685.

8206 Deutz tractor. E.:el c:ond.
Ae•on for atllln~tOwn• reti-ed. Call 304-8715·5827.

63

1 lth Annual BentiiP( Pi8 Sal aWad.. Aprl ?:7. 7:3
PM.
Fayette Co. falrgroundl, Wa•hlngton Court Haute. Selling
200 head - Duroes, H•mpDwoN. H.,.-.~ Yorks, Banows
6 Qlta. Rem ember the cit-.no
pion barrow at 1he Ohio State
fair plus the chlmpion at
Fayette, Green &amp; Ros1 were
purc:h11ed at l•t
ule.
Rog• B.nt:l., 3112 Aell!ld Rd.,
Sabino. Ohio. 513-584-2398.

ve••

Querterhorseathoroughbred. 3
yr. old M•o. U6o. toll &amp;142511-1566.
One riding hor11 II. .one pony,

.

:6:\13.""V

1976 Monte Carlo. 360, 4 boh:
main with 3/4 cam &amp; head,. ..
11000. 0 .8 .0 . Call 304-8756786.
Red Hot b•geinal Drug deal••'

6 wk. old bel&gt;( c:hlckL SMVOf
ltced Wy., dottl, Benld Rodct.
white rocka, pullelt, Rooatert.
Coli 614-2511-6413.

Dragonwvnd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalavan, Perai., and
Siame~e kittens. New AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614-4483844 after 7PM.

Registered Paint Stallion ter·
vice. a..,tHul d.-k bro..vn Tobiano. APHA·R OM llrWia blood
line; Fee t75. Call 81.a-9492052.

57

Bill\'
nv
ch;ckons, •40. Call 614-9923287.

oo•. -

Spinet-Console Piano Bargain·
Wanted: Responsible party to
takeover low monthly PIYments
on spinet plano. Sea locally . CaU
ao0-327-3345, e•t. 102.

ve••·

Bundy Trumpet. Uted 2
0200. C!ll 614-445-2e6B.

Wanted: Reaponslble p.-ty to
take over low monthly payments
on spinet pieno.Seelocalty. Cell
80().327· 3345 ext. 102.
lndlvktual guit• lessons. Beglnn8111, Seriou1 Gultarilt. Brunlcardis Muillc. 8 14-44&amp;-0687.
Jeff Wam11., instruCtor. 814448·8077. limited Opening~.

"'-'.._ HA~ V
'5/&gt;..Y~

•

c••·

64

Hay &amp;

n

• rJI til all&gt; 1111 • c
1111 Newa
IDI ShowBir Today
1B1 Facts ol LHe
Ill (l) Happy Days

,

•

·-

6:30 D

•

bl•lngl and ball joints. Black
with burgendy Interior,
• 1,600.00. 304-e75-5438 .,.
til&lt; 4 :00.

til D(l) ABC Newa !;I

(f) Nightly Bualne" Report

till 111 1121 cas Newa
llll Body Electrtc
IIJ)Inalde Polltlca '88
fBI WKRP In Clnclnnea ·
Ill Cll Too Close for Comfort

•

7:00 (II Remington Steele
D rJ1 PM Magoztne

til Entertainment Tonight
11 (I) People'• Court
(f) l1ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
1111 News
IDI Moneyllne

Auto Repair

,•

Ill a21 451 Wh..l of Fortune

'

1986·Vellow Stone Camper. 30
ft . lots of extres. like new. Call
304-895-3465 oft"' 6 PM.

'..''
'•

Home
Improvements

•

BASEMENT
WATER PROORNG
Uncondttional lifetime !f.IBr.-.·
tee. Loc.t references furnished.
Free ertlfMtel. Call collect
1-614-237-04aa, diiV or night.
Rogers Basement
Wllerproofln g.

ALLEY OOP
I T&gt;&lt;OIJGHT
"IOU SAID SHE

SWEEPER and sewing machine
rll)llir, parts. and auppliee. Pick
up and delivery, Davia Varuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgas Creek Rd. Cell 8144411-0294.

WASA

unu

01.!&gt; I.AflY?

.

,.'

Mli88E SHE'S
BEEN TAI(IN'
VITAMINS, OR
SOMEll-tiN'!

~:

Trenehing-re81onablerat•· water, electric. gas, drainage lin81.
PipeS. fixtures et di1count. Call
e 1.4-4411-860a,

vo•. u

Grain

Good ear corn. •2. 10 • bu. Call
614-245-5515.

Tr ansporla l1on
71 Auto's For Sale
1979 Pontile Sunblrd PS. 2. 6
litter • cyl. Runs good. Good
Interior. 11100. Call·814-44110212.

Siding. overhang gutter~. storm
doors &amp; windows. Free est~
mote. Call 614-4411-6070.

TH£R£ ARE SIIVGLES MRS
.. .'SitJGLES I.O££KEJJDS ."..

1982 Ford E100rt Wagon. 4
tpd., AC, AM-FM-Cau., new
tir~, &amp; blttery. 75,000 mile~ .
Good cond. *2188. Cell 304-

Concrete Septi~ T.,ks - 1000
gal. , 1600gal. andJetAenrtion
tystem. Factory trained repair
shop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PAIS ES, Jacklori, Ohio. 1· 800537·9528.

800 Clle buHdaur. 1984 Ford
pldcup F 250. 351. 4 spd. CR
250 Honda Eltlnore. Call 6144411-3040.
19B1 Rarvllnli Flat. 10 ft., 2
Spreed. With sidN, high bows.
n • •rp. EliCellent concltion.
Cell 614-949-2455.
1973 Datsun pick· up. Top~. 4
speed no IHk:a. Good running
cundition. ~ ' 8180. 1978 4x4
ptymouth Tr•ll Dutter. Nice.
Auto, air, lm·fm. •1475. Clll
614-986-4366.
79 Ford F2iO 4x4. Call Henry
v..M•••· 304-n:J.553a.
1974 Ford truck. automltlc. air,
.,gina •omndlllonod. good,....
1750.00. 304-675-5761 .
1982pldwp.Con bos..,OI160
P•lc Dr., Pt. PIHtant. 8600.
Con 304-676-6221 .

Vans &amp;. 4 W.l).

73

,.,dad

1 187 Ford 160 ..
oonwraion wn. 14.000 milea. fl•
IIIII 8o llllher Coptlln cltlifl Ito '

ve••

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-6715-1331 .

E.V~ERf. ~

cr Slk.Gl£5

HAH! 1*-Y OO~'T

PJ..L lAOOI-\100 MJD

EVEN kOOI.O WHAT
11-1£ ~D MtA~

00100 1H IIJGS

10&amp;11-\E.R ...

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
l TI-IINK SOMETHiNEis WRONG
WITH OI..IR COLOR1Y. r WAS
WA10-IINC:. A SHOW LAST NIGHT.. .

Plumbing
&amp; Hoating

YOW

PEOPLE IN IT
WEREPif.JK.

""

WATCHING 'I

5HOW."

COLOR TV.

\ r---....r

I

..' ' .

COSBY

SOMETHING'S
WRON&amp; WITH YOI..IR

THE

I

1 988PI\'"'l"'lhVOVIIiler BE . air.
PB. PB. PO lodlo, tM. AM-FM·
C.ll. rHr defrQIIt, running
bo-. 39.000 mi •. EIICal.
oond. Call 304-6711-7438 otter
6 PM.
1971 Dodge-- 8 c:yl.. 3 sod.
on column. 11100. Coli 614-3118-

• 1'-'. . ' '" "

BARNEY
I'D LOVE

·,.

Excavating

'..

Bllctchoe&amp; Dump Truck Service.
C.mentWmk- All klndi, I8Wers.
Ae•onabl e priC*. Call 614388-9686.

I

TO

BABY-SIT FER YE,
MIZ LEDBETTER,
BUT--UH··

I

BUT, UH-WHAT 1

SHE DON'T KNOW WHAT
A HAND FULL IS

UH -- TOOfW
I GOT MY
HANDS

FULL

1985 Dodge DIYione Turllo.
Oootl aond. Coli 114-4411-8664
lflw 6 PM .

., ..

1982Ch•IM. 2&lt;11'. Yerygood
oond. ctullh • llrllc•.
'1000. Call 814-682-11440.

Cal_,.

1985 O.wy
Eu&lt;o
Sport, V ·I. 2 ... 33, 200 miM.
Bh•p. Auto.. ,U:, PS, Pl.
AM·fM·Caaa.. Iii. Call 614318-1240.
1977 Plvmoutll. V-1. Oood
cond. ..00. Call 114-4417712.

\.
\

1 814 Montt Corlo-12.000
mM•. white with red lntlriar,
luok• - • · oonoolo. AC. PI,
Pll. 111, cruloll, A.W.L. tlr•.
I MOO. Coli 114-H7·0132 or
441-9230. .
1181 c;onc!Ord W110n. 1111.
arulll. AM-I'M. Alldng 11100.
Colt 614-4411-0208.

2 bedroom Apt. for I'Wit. C.r·
·
- · Nlco
focMhleo
!Yelloottlng.
obi a CaH'-'ndrv
814- ·
992-3711 . EOH.

Eddie wasn't above faking an attack to get
to the head of the line.

1981 01•. Dolto II Royelo.
71000 mMa Florlcll . .: E JCel.
lhlpo. 12800orbodtlor4WO,
V-1 . .loop ortn.ck ofeq ..lvolut.
Cell 304-675-2241 .

9N9.

19100.ovv 4x4pldwp. PS, PB,
5&amp;.000 llctUIII mil•,
ooild. Aloo Oll¥or - " '· Call
614-379-2788.

••'*·

Electrical

•

Motorcycles

• fM 6UtffiiER. Bm:5
HI!&gt; -gNAIL$...

Genoral Hauling

Dtllwd W•• Service: Pools.
Cilterns. Wells. Delivery Any lirft!. &lt;;ell 614-4411-7404-No
a.tndav catla.

1982 Yomoho 760 -lm
Good oond. Call614-245-1192
oft• I PM.
1177 H.D. Sp-tor. 11600.
Coli 114-4411-4014.
1113 Hondo XR 200 A. Oood
oond. 14115. Call 814-3177105lflor I PM.

oo-

11• Cll 1211. - •
nM .,atno. 1860. Call 614I81-B741.
Hondo C8900 fully dr-od,
~ale eoundt. nM tlrM, many
...... 304-182·3397.

tor•••

117'1CX1500. ex c. oond.
tNdo. e100. Flrm. 304-1764090.

01

''

---....,..,.--,-,
. ' ..

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

I

e

@NIWS
(II Lighter Side of &amp;porta
till Atoska at Wor Examine
the occupation by Japanese
forces of the Atlu and Kiska
Islands in Alaska during
World War II.
I!JI Monayllne
Ill (l) Lova Connection
11:30 II rJI 451 Tonight Show
()) Sportoeonter (L)

tllChoerl

e (I) Nlglltllno 1;1
1111 IIII!JI CIS Nowa Sfi'ICIII
Election coverage
(1)1 Sporto Tonlgftt
Cll Newlywed a.m.
12:00 CD Buma end Allen
(II I n - the PGA Tour (R)
til Nlghtllne 1;1
IIIII&gt; "Foii Quy
till Magnum P.t.
I!]) Sign Off
OINeweNitlht
111 MOYfE: 'So Fine' cas
Lete Movie
Cll Twilight Zone
12:20 CI1 MOVIE: Town (NR)
(1:58)
12:30 (II .IMk Bannr
• rJI 1111 Lite Night with
Dllvtcl Lottennen
(II Boat of Americtln Mueclo
MlgUine
til Love

AmMiol (R)
Newltaad Glme
e(I)IIDnOff
MOVII: Gentl~••m,.~e~tnn PNtor
ondu (NR) (1 :311
lUI lllllde Politico .. .
181 TWIIIgllt
World of
Hll Own
CD ctwlle'e Angela
1:30 Cll LauNIInd Hllrdy
• rJI ~ ••pplng

z-

PEANUTS
. ~-!ERE'S TilE WORLD WAR I
FlVIN6 ACE IN lol15 50PWITH
CAMEL ZOOMIN6 nutOO!iH THE
AIR 11161-1 OllER FAAHCE ...

'

'

e

EVERII'~IN6

TAU61-IT iO !-liM

IN TRAININ6 SUDDENLI(
COMES &amp;ACK .•

1

LIKE, DON T

LOOK DOWN

...

...
•...,.-.Iuper

(I) IOMtttsalt •nd

lowt of

1'lt¥lrl

{

Cll.!..._~

IMi;rt"'i~
2:00 (I) fOG CUI
(J) lplltll Ilk (R)

•

Ill Kung h Soul II the
Warrior

e (l) MOYIE: Troullll Man

'
f

10:30 &lt;D Celebrity Chota
'
til Major L.uguo Ballbllll'o
OrNtell Hila
1!]1 Tony Brown•• Joumol
Cll Jattareono
1t:OO(D Remington S -

I

•

edin;'!ellll.

Japan find a Weotern look
but different cultural rules .
(1)1 Leny King LIYel
9:30181 Newo
10:00 (II Straight Tall
D rJI 11J1 Crime Story
Torello's efforts to nab Luca
are thwarted by crooked
authorities. 1;1
(f) Sign Off
l1ll Newo
(1)1 E..,.lng Newt
181 Balllbell
10:20 Cii MOVIE: Night Paooag1

..

(AI (1:40)

. ·-

...z~u

--

...

+J 109874

·---

WEST

,•a

+A 8;

,.

EAST
+JIJ
.JI073

.·-'

+s2

+AKQ3
+J8632

+IUH

SOUTH
+QU

An extremely careless declarer
.KQ9U
might flgure out a way to lose one dia+&amp;
mond, two spades and a trump trick in
+AKQ7
today's deal. That would be one away
Vulnerable: East-West
in four hearts, quite a pathetic result .
Dealer: South
Fortunately for North, declarer South
was none other than Careful Charlie .
Norlfl Eul
When the contract is safe, Charlie is a
great believer in going after all the
Redbl. p...
Pass
tricks that aren't nailed down.
Pass Pass
At trick two, West switched to "
trump. hoping that South had club losOpeniiTg lead: t K
ers that he needed to ruff. Charlie
played low, capturing East's \0 with
his queen. He then played a spade .
West ducked and dummy's kmg won
tbe trick. Declarer ruffed a diamond,
'
played A-K-Q of clubs lon which he
threw all of dummy's spades) and then lenders w"re l eft tO ,;, for South's
ruffed his little club with the four of queen of spades with West's spade ace •
hearts. When anqther diamond was and East's trump jack.
played, East shed a spade. and dcclarAlthough the contract e&amp;M&lt;•t ffillly
er ruffed '" his hand with the eight of .. be defeated, the. defenders m1ght take • .
hearts. A low spade was now· ruffed . another tr1ck if West avoids playing a
with dummy's ace. When stlll anothe~ trump, sine&lt;' dedarer
be hard put .:..
diamond was played, East had tJ ruH · to plact' r::ast with .four trumps wit.~ ·
In fronr ~~ declarer. S&lt;luth made hi ~
out the assiStance oi a trump lead ·
nine of hearts end hi• king, and :he d•· from ""•st.

2.

·.

...."

...-m

..

.

MovleD
1!]1 Fronlltne Americans In

(J)

·"'

I I I I I I I· I

Heckle - Bogey - .HJrky - Oneway - GO /o WORK
"' Every morning, " said the ad executive, " I look through the
list of the richest people in. America. If I'm not on it, 1 GO to
WORK. "
'

by THOMA$ JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Emmy
or Tony

1 "Omnia
Yincit -"
(Vergil)
II Epic

2 Indian

9 Vinuous
10 Weaken
12- bellum
13 African
antelope
14 Cheer
15 Year (Sp.)

16- u.s.

Pat. Off.

17German
city

'

39 Sheep's cry

ACROSS

tower
3 Prudent
4 "Catcher
in the-"
5 Pieman's

Yesterday's Allawer

patron
6 Lofty site

18 Spanish
painter
7 Unseen
protector
21 "Mum," e.g.
8 Minimally Z2 Bitter
10 Railroad
23 Rock group
car
24 Leather
11 U.S. emblem
type
15 Mine
211 Pat or

19 Swedish
river
20 Israeli
mt.n. range
"21 Sapient
ZZ Shopping
place
23 Dory, e.g.
24 Malleable
25 Storehouse t;;--t--t--

27 French
seaport
281talian
city
29 Plumed
bird
34 Stocking

••

26Common

suffix
27 Slavery
30Asner and
Sullivan
31 "...-and
thy staff..."
32Henpeck
33 Chinese
city
35 Czech river tn+-t36 Ultimate

-.
"

.. '

·-

•.

function

37- noir
38 Desert
sight

.·.

'

. DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI'ES- Here'a bow to wort It:

'Ill

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

(II Scllolllotlc 8portl

Wett8fson' • Water Hauling,
r. .onable r1rt11, lmmediMe
2.000 allllon delivery, clttwna.
poolo, well, •c. coli 304-57112919.

Mowrlf,''s Upholnaing s.-vlng
trt DDUntylr. . 22y.... The t.t
ln l.lrniture urholrtftg. ean
304 ~ 175 - 4 54 for free

To

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1:00 I)) Boll Of Qroucllo

Rupe. Jr. Wet.- Service.
Pools, ci•t•ns, wlllt. Catl8144oa&amp;-3171.

Upholstery

@) _g~;c:~~~~~ LEITERs

ecm.--uon

...,I

87

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

• Cll Twilight z-

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

R • R W.ter Service. Pools,
ci1t1rns, . wei Ia . lmmedlate1,000 or 2.000g.tlontdlllvary.
Coli 304-6711-8370.

e

By James Jacoby

Banbell
7:35 Cii Molor L11gue BallbiiH
8:00 (II Cro1ibow
D rJI 1111 Ma- Matlock
travels to London to conduct
a mock re-trial. (R)
til II (I) Qrowtng Paino
Coach Lubbock vants his
wrath on _Mike when Mike
guts the coach ftred. 1;1
(f) l1ll Nova Travel to the
Soviet Union for a took at
science, technology today. 1;1
11m IIIIIJ Houoton Knlgh\a
La Fiamma and Lundy are
slumped by the motiveless
murder of a family. 1;1
(1)1 PrlmeNewo
1B1 MOYIE: The Ca-ayo
on QIHigan'ololond (1:14)
8:30 Ill Lett Frontier
til ell&gt; Just the Ten o1 Uo
Coach Lubbock uproots his
lamlly to teach at an al~boys
prep school.
9:00 1))700 Club ·
til 11.(1) China !ietich
Several -young wonien
become unsung heroes in
lhe crucible of Vietnam. 1;1
(f) Wnt Ylrglnll
Qubemltorlol Debate
11m IIIIIJ MOVIE: !Shoring
RiciMird' cas Tueodlly

e

pools, cisterns. wells. Ph . 614-

74

.,

~·omplele

'

lne chuckle quoled
.
_
•
•
.
.
.
by f1llmg in the m1ssing words
.__.__....__..__.__..._~ you develop fr.om step No. J below.

Ill Cll Major I.Mgue

c

Rnidential or comm•cial wiring. New a.vice or rt~pairt .
Ucenaed eler:trlcill!ll. Estimate
free. Ridenour Eledlrical, 304675-17B6.

~411-9286.

C)

IIIIIJ 1111 J....,.rdyt 1;1

e

·'
'I

&amp; Refrigoration

85

"

Nailing down
10 tricks

D rJI CIJ II Ill 1!11 Ill a2l

lou-. Coll61~2611-6327.

13 Coun St.-2 BR .. 2 b•hl.
ktltchen furnished. w / w c•pet.
No pots. Off ltreet pr~rking.
I 326 • mo. l)lus utllhloo. Do!J. llo
ref. Col! e14-4411-4926.

r
r6"1rl_TI_NIIr,;.,-AI_M-,I_.,

Overheard on location of filming a new movie: "That producer
.
has made so many· turkfY' he
r---:--:-:--::--:--:-:--'"1 could be made an honorary

.AI2

(1 :30)

11

WKATWERE

AND ALL ")1-jE

\

I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
GlllllpoHs, Ohto
Phone 81~446-3888 or 6144411-4477

84

CR().WS

~.

. ·-

Starks Tree •nd Lawn Service,
IIW'n c•e. landlcaping, stump
removal. 304-576·2842 or
5711-2903.·

83

LCOK

SlmlfS [:¥WCE.S... SIOOLE.S
PIOJICS .. .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most Willa completedsamed-v.
Pump 18laa and III'Vice. 304895-3802

82

:.!
I. I. I. ,

-r.T-,A_R,-H_Hr--11
.15

James Jacoby

fBI Berney Miller

RC remodeling. Odd jobsCarpentry. Free estimates. Call
614-38a-8491.

New 1188 Jeep Comm.,ctte
apomruck. Bl.ck wilh sitver
ltr!o-. 4 apd. &amp;.W.B. 88600.
CoH 614-2611-6327.

PLACM
Ii
r-,1)
.-1
-.1-.:1.;:-1
I

1:os m Andy artttlth
7:30 D rJI til Hollywood
Square•

lit (I) Judge
till Wheel of Fortune 1;1

1186Cavollor-4c:yl.. 6opd .• AC.
light blue. 39.000 mil•. 15700.
c.n 304-675-2745.

1974 Ford F-100 IUJ* csb.
V· 8, IUto. trllftl , 8850. Call
6 14-4411-4045.

"'

NORTH
+K1097

(1)1 Croasnre

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• calls on RCA, Quazar,
QE . Specialing in Zenith. C.ll
304-5711-2398 o• 614-44112464.

TIGTRY

BRIDGE

(II NHL Hockey

•

Se rv1ce s

.•'

the

below to form four simple wordt

iIIICll M•A•s•H
Cheers

EEK &amp; MEEK

Trucks for Sale

Rearrange letter5 ,.of
0 four
scrambled words

(II SportaCenter (L)

•n Olds. folr cond, otter 4 :30
cell · 304-175-5369 "' 6757651 .

72

- - - - - - - E4;rod loy CLAY I • .POLLA!! _.;__ _ __

8:35 CI1 Corol Burnett

Brick-Block Work· Found.tion1,
trldl: ven..,, flreplac-. ntpairs,
rwtmtiona &amp; 1maW jobl. Free
eatirNt81. 215
u:perlence.
Call614·248-9652.

675-6609 or 675&lt;10a7.

rJ1 1111 NBC Nightly Newo

li, Inside the PGA Tour

'
•

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

WDID
lAM I

I

&amp;:osm Allee

'

:nc:'~. ~:~·c.~::

'76 Chrysler New York
Broughm. air, tttt, cruise, PB.
PS. vinyl top. le•her interior.
1!1110.00. 304-675·4144.

PUIZLII

I

(II Sport1Loo1t
(f) Dr. Who Keys ol Marinus
l!ll Owl TV Q

Painting. body work. tuna-upbrllkes, etc. Minor mechanic
work. C.ll814-446-7572.after
5 PM -4411-6441 .

81

S©tt&lt;lllA -~r..trs·

TltlT DAILY

8:00 Ill Crary Like 1 Fox

=

1974VoiQ..,..gonBeetle.1100

1986 Dodge Dlytons Turbo Z.
loldad. SliARP. 17. 700.00.
1983 Dodge 800 ES. loaded.
• • oond. 14.500.00. now ~rn
bcnh en. mu1t •II make an
off• on either. 304-87&amp;-63011.

TUES .. APRIL 26 •
EVE NINO

~0-9,.,66_.c-:::-::-::c:-:-:::-:-:=:::-::-::-

boats, pl~n• .epo'd. Sur·
Plul. Your Are&amp; Buyers Guide.
I 1)805-687-1000 Ext. S-9805.

Call614-4411-2222.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Lot and ~age wflh traltw hook
up, c., be '"" In f&lt;Mn dlraon.
~~
St or cell 304-

83 01111 Fir.,•• otatlon wago".
83 Buick !llcylork. 84lynx. Sell
or Mde. C•ll 614-26&amp;.1270.
1978 T-Bird. PS., PO. AC.
AM-FM-stereo. t1000. Clean.
Call 614-388-8418 between
10 :30 AM-9 :30PM.
1977 Olwv 4 \\0 : Needs
repair. 81200. 360Chevvtruck·
motor • 4 spd. trans. E.~eel.
cond. Call 614-3811-9686.
I9S 9 Try.,..ph TR3 Sphfire.
Completely restored. Excel ·
cond. •3500, Athens, Ohio. Call
814-692-4838 ott or 6 PM.

brakes, new tit81. ni!W wheel

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... All
styles . . lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph , 614-446-0231 .

Musical
Instruments

...

co~

'81 Olda Cutla11 Supreme. new

Livestock

Stallion. Service AQHA. lncentJve Fund Patorrino Stallion.
Offspring avalable for Wtspeotfon. NOQHA etlgable. - 1100.
6 1 4-949-2465.

h"'

2 11ory . 3 Bocl&lt;oom hou• whh
nM .,_.,. and worbhop ln
Ch•IWeVInogo. Call614-367·
0138.

1 S&amp;OOIIvertrHtor, plows, grain
*Ill, poll driver. 13.110. 3600
Ford wfth Dvna Bounce mo\Wr.
$49&amp;0. Ownerwll finance. call
•
28
u14- 11-6522.
Mataev Freg•aon 186 diMet.
Good oond. t4000-Ftrm. Call
614-3a&amp;-9364.

An1werin g machine tor set e. Call
304-675-14B•.

Busine!lsCio!l&amp;d·Selllngceramic
molds, bisque. glues, &amp; stlllns.
Price reduced. Call 304-676719a.

WMT

•

The Daily Sentiniii- PIIge-9

Television
Viewing

Cell
614-446We oov
junk

tee 30 d8VS minirt'IJm. PriC811
t99 &amp; up. Rebuilt torques
converter ea tow as 839. Conversion kit-S -10' •&amp;C-10'aover
dirve to l&amp;O·s. we buy junk
trlnlmhsions. cajl 304-6754230 or 614-379-2220.

3010 J .D . - Sh arp, J . D. ploWI, 6~4-992-6307aft•4:00pm .
grain drin, h8¥ bitt•. raik .. h~
conditioner. 85400. Owner will 1988 Crown Victoria. I 10,000.
~-11 •1•28 "522
One owner. 22.000inll•. 1983
II
nMce..... " f.ogo
·
Ford Ranger. *360.0. One
Ford 503 side delivery l'llke. o,..n•. 66.000 mila Cell 614Ferlf..lion 8 ft. Dyn,.BalanC8 1-::9-::9-::2:·2_3:::7:--4.---:--::--:---:
Mower. 2 t'Nefvelnd'l Fer~ son
High Cl..-ance Pfowa. John 1978 Plymouth . Aunt good.
Oe•e 24T hav bal•. Ford Body good. 4 nM tlr81. $7150.
subsalt•. All equipment: in 0 • C1tl 114-992-8843 or tee It
cellent OQndltlon. Phone 814- 735 Beech St., Mlddeport.

56

Good used upr~ht freezer. Call
614-446· 1412 Of 446-7382.

a.

tranlmilllona.
occurs
ftrtt) .

1966 M-c:u::bc,Mo"ntclo~. PD.
...
"
PS. AC. 87.
mil•. 114915.
RC·A VCR VHS. 1126. Cell
614-446-6271 .

U Haul trucks and trailers for
rent 304-675· 7421 .

Sofa• an~ chairs priced from
&amp;395 to 8995. Tables $60 and
up to 8126. Hlda-a·bedl S390
to 8596. Recliners $225 to
$375. Lamps S28 to $125.
55 Building Supplies
Dinatt" t109 and up to $495.
Wood table w -8 chairs $285 to
S795. Desk S100 up to $375.
Building Materials
Hutche~ $400' end up. Bunk
Block, brick. MWer pipes. win·
beds complete w ·mattresses
dows, lintels. etc. Claude 'Mnt296Mdupto $395. Baby beds
ter!l, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614$110. Mettrenesorbox !JPrings
246· 5121 .
full or twin 868. firm S78, and ·
$88. Queen sets 8225, King
Concrete blocks- all aizes- vard
8360. 4 drawer chest S69. Gun
or delivery. Mason sand. Gallipocabinets 6 gun. Baby mattresses
lis Block Co., 123'1!1 Pine St.,
'35 &amp; 8 46. Bed frames $20.
Gallipolis. Ohio. Call 614-446$30 &amp; King frame S50. Good
27a3.
selection of bedroom suit8!1,
metal cabinets, headboards $30
end up to 865

Dinettes , beds . bedding .
dressers. chest. couch8!1, chain,
lamps. coffee-end tablaa . Every
dl'r' Specials. 'II mile out Jerr~
cho. 304-675-1450.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S . 315 West Jackson. Ohio.
614-2811-8451 .
Ma11 av Ferguson, Neww Holl~nd.
Buth Hog Sal• Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line of nM' &amp; u1ed
equipmant. Larga.t ll!l4ectton in
S.E. Ohio.
I.H.C. bel•. Model 27. $450.
~~:~615·2511-1616. No SundiiV

Oldl.; Buick, PontiaC(_. Chevy,
Ch..,y truck, Ford. Olryshwtr.,•misskms (u•edl are inter·
naly Inspected It carry 3000mi.
or 30 d-v Wllrranty (whichever

BUDGET
TRANSMISSION·
Used &amp; rebuih:
all typas. Guaran·

Ford tractor with 4 ft. flnillhed
mo-. 12250. Plows. 0250.
Disc •2915. CultN•tor. 11915. 2
row mrn plantar. Owner will
finance. C.II614-2B6-8522.

Hayward Perftex 8lltended cycle
pool filter. Setf Priming pump.
Will sail sep•ately. Call 304675-7393.

PICKENS
FURNITURE

61 Farm Equipment

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

71 A.uto's For Sale

One w~ite prom dreas, lim 6·6
petite end one black prom drMs,
size 7. Both worn once. 614986-4366.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliance• .
Upper RNer Rd . beside Sto'ne
Crest Motel. 614·448· 7398.

J &amp; S FURNITURE
141 6 Eaatll'n Ave.
Uving room suites $179 81 up.
Bedroom suites S399 &amp; up .

~~=========:;==:;::======::!~

Sears Power MiserS electric hot
water heater. Used 9 months.
$100. Call 614·256-1436.

Set ChildC.eft books. •100.00.
New . 304-882-2301 .

90 Oeys same as cash with
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Ruleville Rd . Open 9am to 15pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814· 446·
0322.

76

SWIMMING POOLS - 0988
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

2 prom gown1 for sai.,..Gunl"''f
sack. !ize 3 &amp; 5. Worn once. Call
614-446· 7923.

BORNL

19 ft. St•craft. 110 motor
w l tnil•. c.n 814-44&amp;-3797.

Cellah.-.'s Used Tlre Shop, Ovw
1, 000 tire•. sizes 1 2, 13, 14, 115,
16, 18.5. 8 mH• OUf At. 218.
Call614·2511-6251 .

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appllancts 4 end TV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

/

54 Misc. Merchandiso

Used Leroy 125air camprMsor.
Neadt aome repairs. Sea at
Mlddi®Ort Village Garag·a . Park
8. High Sts.

...

18 ft. Cruiser Inc.. 2 2 HP
Mera.uy motor &amp; trailer. $900.
Cell 614-4411-9686.

0

Montgomery Ward 14,800 BTU
air conditioner. Used 1 veer.
Asking S300. C•ll 814·2156·
1911 .

Merchandise

0

-..

Pomeroy- Midcleport. Ohio

1&amp; ft. V-hull Gllltron boat with
86 Mere. • trlil•. Vf!IY good
cond 11900. Cell 614-44117345.

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques.

ft . 117/ 18fn.
$30 each.
Channlllf
Steel
I beams-8
ln .xtin.x8
tron-10 ft . $20 each. can
e 14· 387· 7619 after 6 PM.

.

Tuesda~April26.1988
.

Boats and
Motors tor $ale

26 ft . Savllnor crulsar. 1968
wide beam. al electronic. gall~ .
CIN'IYII. etc. 3150 V-8 .,g,,
IIMPI 6 . Very low hour1.
1?:7.500. CoH 304-727· 6890.

1124 E. Mfin Street. Pomeroy.
Hours : M .T.W 10a .m. to &amp;p.m ..
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 61 • · 992·
2S2e.

Space for smal trailers. All
hook-ups . Cable. Alsoefticieru:.y
rooma. air and .cable. Maso n.
W.Va. Call 304-773-5651 .

Trailer Iota, Rt. 1 Locust Road,
back of K &amp; K Mobile Homes,
304-676-1076.

75

Antiques

Round kitchen table. Captain's
lounge bed. drape~~. odd chairs.
Call 614· 256-1788.

Spacious mobile home Iota for
rant. Famitv Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, W . Va.
304-676-3.0 73. '

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by lArry Wright

Valley- Furnrture
New and uted furnh:ure and
applic•n C81 . Call e 1 4· 448·
7572. Hours 9-5.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. North of POmeroy .
Rental trailers. Call 614-9927479.

4 room hou.e. $100 a mo ..
unfurnithad. SA 87. Utilit ies
81ltre. Call 304-458-1042.

Garage ap.-1ment· 3 rooms S.
beth. w / d, llir. Cleen. No pats.
Adults only . Call 81...,446·
1619.
Mo'*n 2 Bedroom home, att·
ached g•age. cao •• to golf 60 acres· 'h mile off 1eo past No. I:-N:--_--o-na-:lle:--:dr-o-om--e-.t-.-.-:-In
court• &amp; swimming pool.
Fenced in back yerd. Call 614- Gallla H.S . 835,000 or beat Mlddeport. Furnilhed or ·unfur·
nilhod. Cell 614-992-5304 or
olfor. Call 614-4411-6960.
4411-9818.
4411-8898 otter 5.
site • trail• for • • on
) Bridl home for •le/ rent. 3 BR ., Camp
Blue Lake • Raccoon Crwk.
Fumlshod llpl ., 1 8R . 607
41'11 baths. full b•ement. Lo· J .H. Hooch• · 304-675-4078.
Second, Galllpolll. t2215 a mo.
cal: ad • 486 Jacklon Pike. Cd
814-4411-1 192 or 4411-4364.
2 !CI"M · Rt. 160. Drilled well"&amp; Utllkl• oold. Call 4411-4416
rural w•t•· • · ConQ'etl nail• oft• 7 PM.
3 BR .. 2 b.M. 1986 Se .. lonol. pad. Numerout fl'ult trHI .
1 aa"e o1 tend 832000. C.l 110.500. Clll614-388-1354.
In RloO..,do. nlco28R, 1226
mo. Re~i01f'8t01', stOYI • wat•
814-3811-9305.
No pots. Call 61420 acr• for llle. Hamlodc furnlohod.
0.. . Daell 21101"/. 38A .. w / 32 Grove area. Electricity, wat•, 2 4411-6068.
acr• -, Ewllka on At. 7. New building sit•. Call 81...,992·
2 tur•hld IIJtt.: 1· 4 roorftl II
c.p... Jult painted inside&amp; out. 72a7.
.
1· 3 rOOf'l'll &amp; po.ch. Lo~tld
P""lel bosomont 8ol1orogebldg.
131.000. Call 814-4411-2205,
- • • 4111'-11 Sooond A...
Ashton. l•ge bulclng lots. Totll
eiiC.. IIC. dtp, llqUNd.
mobile homea. J*mttted. public
2029 Ch•hom- 3 BR .. _,,,., wat•. al1o rlv• lots. Clyde Adulla ontv. No pM:a. Can
114-4411-2236 01 4411-2681 .
•lr cond., nM" roof, eluminum Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2331.
tiding._ . Excetlent condition.
I 31 , 00':). Coli 614-4411-2206.
1% aae lot wh:h rural water It Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedAwte Grove, phone 304-878- room epartrNntl at VIII age
~or and Alv . .ide Apart·
4 SR .. ,.,c:h stvlo. 2lJn baths. 2383.
m•ts In Mlddlepof1. From
centr~l
&amp; air, on Chatham.
1 31.1100. Cell614-4411-3617 or Hou• lou, Oolllpolll Fo.-ry, 1216. Including. utllltl•. Call
614-992-na7. EOH.
4411-2388
304-675-6908.

31

F urnishad R.oo ms

R~om!JI for rent· INil!lek rY month,
Starting at S 120 a mo. Gallia
Hotel-614-446-9580.

1

1988 C,_ridge14x70, 2 BR .,
2 b•hs·g•den · tub. cathedral
Painting (811terior or Interior)
ceilings, total elect., undwpint:xcel. work. Real rea1oneble , ning.largeporch. Call814-448ratas . Call Mark-814· 245· 9653.
9581 .
1963 Ubony 14•60. 2 BR ..
Will mow l.wnt In Gallipolis (in furnished. 89500. Call 814town) . Call 614-446-3858.
3e7-0651 otter 6 PM .
Babv sitting in my home for anv
age, from 9-5. For mo,r e inform.
Coli e 14-388-9835.

Rentals

2 bedroom, 2 baths. 2 Cllf
garage, leYel lot on At. 33.

FEDERAL. STATE ANO CIVIL
&gt;ERVICE JOBS. ·
Now hirin g, your are•. $ 13,550
lo 869. 480 imm8diMe o penings, C•111-(315)733-6062 ext
F2938.

12

Homes for Sale

45

Tuesday, April 26. 1988

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rant

1 bedroom furnished aft'edency
apt . 1 upsbirs apt. with 2
bedrooms. Kltchen furnished E.

for mora thM just another job.

'

•

One letter stands for another. In this sample Ail ll8ed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apostrophes, the lenith and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlffe't'ent.
CRYPTOQUOTE
DJ KU

ZTU

•

..•

RBBUHRHZRXDU
.

xu

RBBUHRH"'&gt;-AUHRBUA.-GP'AC XIBJM

AUHRBU
ZRXDC

zJ

..

YeeteniaJ'a Crti*HIIIOte: YOU'VE GOT TO BE
Pam'Y OLD TO REMEMBER WHEN TV AcnJAU.Y
SHOWED TilE HAlF-TIME AT FOOTBAlL GAMES.ROGER SIMON
•

•

'

.

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

......-Local news· briefs___,
EMS has six runs Monday
· Meigs Cou nty Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 12:33 a.m. to Scout Camp Road for
Linda Pearsons to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at
5:25 a.m. to Minersville lor Norman Terrell to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:05a.m. to Roush Lane for
Bruce Yeauger to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 7:·43a.m.
to Dexter for Glada Davis to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Pial ns at 2:03 p.m. to Alfred for Dorothy Robinson to
Veterans Memorliil Hospital; Racine at 5: 26 p.m. transported
Loretta Jones from an auto accident on Route 124 to Veterans
Memorial Hospi ta l.

Bush to speak in Marietta
VI ce President George Bush, Republican presidential
candidate, will he appearing in Marietta on Saturday . Richard
E. Jones, chairman of thP Meigs County Republican Executive
Committee, announced the vice pres ident's appearance this
morning.
Vice President Bush will visit Marietta for approximately
three hours and will be making a speech at a downtown rally at
4:30p.m. , Jones said. Anyone wishing to see and hear the vice
pres ident is urged to attend the rally.

Director to visit Meigs
David J . Baker, director of the Ohio Department of
Development, will be In Meigs County on ThurSday for a 4 p.m.
meeting. The Meigs County Commissioners have announced
the meeting will be held in the conference room of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services office. The EMS office Is
located directly behind Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Director Baker has requested that the commissioners,
mayors and councilmen of each village, presidents of the
boards of township trustees, along with presidents of the local
chambers of commerce, be present for the meeting.
· The commissioners are .urging as many of these people as
possible \o attend Thursday's meeting. ·

Free clothing hours announced
The Gallia·Meigs Community Action Agency will hold free
clothing day Friday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the hokld high
school building in Cheshire.

Announce plans.. for
. event
Plans for the fourth annual Drug-Free Entertainment Night
at Meigs High School were announced today. Sponsored by the
Meigs Tee!Jage Ins tltute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Other
Drug Abuse (T.I. ), and Helpful, Understanding, Growing
Students (H.U .G.S.), the event will be held this Friday evening.
Coordinating tlie event are Meigs High faculty members Kathy
Reed and Jeannie Taylor.
Hours for the evening have been set for 7:30p.m. to12: 30a .m.
with registration lor a talent show to be held between 7:30 and 8
p.m. in the main lobby of the schooL The talent show in the
Larry R. Morrison gymnasium will begin at 8 with a dance and
c6ance contest to follow in the cafeteria. These events are for all
ages and Ernie G. Anderson of WKEE, Huntington, W.Va. , will
be the disc jockey for the dance.
·
Refreshments will be served free of charge and the only
requirement for the evening is that no chemical be used before
or during the evening.
Categories lor the talent show Include air bands, comedy
skits, dramatic skits and poetry, live musical entertainment
and a miscellaneous category. Prizes are $50 for first place, $30
. for second place and $20 for third place.
A number of local merchants and professionals have
contributed merchandise, gilt certificates and donations to be
awarded as prizes for the evening's event.

House destroyed by blaze
,.,

An unocu pled hous~ a·n Route ~1 was destroyed by fire
Sunday morning. Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Departrnef!l
was called to the fire at the older frame house at 11:10 a.m. The
owner of the house ltves out of the rounty and spokesman for the
fire department was not sure of thE' own!'r's name. The
spokesman said that someone driving by saw the flames and
called the fire department . Origin of the blaze Is unknown. The
s pok!'sman did not know If the house was lnsur:ed.
A fire at 6: 44 p.m . Saturday !'venlng at the Barb Boling
residence on Park St. in Middleport was a stove on !Ire, report!'d
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst.

Syracuse working on water lines
Syracuse VIllage will pe replacing water lines on Route 124,
east from village hail, starting Wednesday and continuing
thr ough Wednesday of next week. Water will be off at different
times during the days of work. ·

K ;ng's s·e at
&amp;-

Continued from page 1
""----:------

arrivE' on Friday . At first. the Mayor Hoffman said that em·
miniature golf course will be ploy!'e should be hired by June 1.
open from 5 to 11 p.m . on week A discussion on the new tax
days and 1 to 11 p.m. on brought out that the tax will he
Saturdays and Sundays. A small deducted from the pay of people
building need!'d at the site Is working In Middleport and that
expected to be moved there this no one will be required to f;l,QY the
week and a fence has been community ~&gt;ersonal Income tax
Installed around the area where In two .towns.
the park attraction w11l he
conta !ned. The course Is ex· ' Councilman William )Walters
peeled to he open to the pubilc In discussed the danger~ helng
about two weeks.
created by bicycle riders travel·
· Upon the recommendation of ing the against the traffic on
Councilman Jack Satterfield, streets of the town ..
council voted to advertlse for an
Income tax administrator for the
Al_!ending the meeting were
new village Income tax which Mayor Hoffman, Clerk ·
will go Into effect on July l. Treasurer Jon Buck, and Councilmen Walters, Gilmore, Satter·
field, James Clatworthy and
Horton.

Stocks

Announcements

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )

Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 2611&lt;
AT&amp;T ......... , ....................... 27'4
Ashland 011 ........................ 68'&gt;fl
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Charming Shoppes .............. 11%
City Holding Co ........ ....... .... 31
Federal Mogul. ................... 40'4
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... ............ ., 65
Heck's Inc ...... ........... ... .... ... 1'&gt;fl
Key Centurion ................. ... 40 3,1
Lands' End ......................... 22%
Limited Inc ........................ 19',1
Multimedia Inc ............... ..... 66
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 10~
Shoney's Inc ......... ............... 25
Wendy 's Inti. ..................... '.. 6~
Worthington Ind ........ ......... 20¥8

Club to meet
Candidates' Night, sponsored
by the Meigs County Republican
Club, will be held Wednesday
evening, starting at 6p.m., at the
)'delgs High School cafeteria.
Meat and drinks lor the pot luck
meal Will be provided. Bring
your own ta bleservice.
Hymn sing

A hymn sing wtll be held
Saturday , 7 p.m., at the Poplar
Ridge Church.
Softball toomey
A softball tournament will be
held In Middleport on Aprll30 and
May 1. For Information, call
Gene Wise at 992·6224.

Tuesday, April 26, 1988

Late winter snow covers South Dakota
By United Press International
An April snowstorm blanketed
the Black Hills of South Dakota
and parts of Minnesota and
Nebraska, while thunderstorms
swept through Dixie, where a
tornado struck In Georgia and
hall as large as tennis balls fell In
Alabama.
As of late Monday, 7 to Slnches
of snow covered the ground a I
Deerfield in western South Dakota , with 5 to 6 inches at Lead.
Early today, Rapid City was 4
inches deep In snow, 3 falling
within three hours Monday night.

I

Area· deaths

Charle~

Wise

Charles Clayton Wise, 55, of
Circleville. died Sunday ·at Mt.
Carmel Medical Center in
Columbus.
Born Jan. 20, 1933 in Pomeroy,
Mr. Wise was a son of Rev. Cecil
and Leona Bailey Wise of Ru tland. He was retired as the
owner -manager of Bud 's
Produce.
Besides his parents, Mr. Wise
Is survived by two daughters,
Pamela Liska of Connecticut and
VIcky Wise of Circleville; two
sons, Charles Wise of Ashvtlie
and Scott Wise of Circleville;
four grandchildren; one sister,
· Rosalee Wise of Rutland; and
on!' brother, Phil Wise of
McConnelsville.
He was preceded In death by
his wile, Donna Dunn Wise, in
1985; one son, Terry Wise, In
1986; and one brother, Junior
Wise.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wed·
nesday at the Wellman Funeral
Home, 1455 North Court, Circleville, with Rev. Doyne Wiggins
officiating. Burial will' be In the
CongregatiOnal Cemetery in Oak
Hill. Friends may call at the
funeral home this evening from 6
to 9.

Dr. H.B. Thoma!!
Dr. H.B. Thomas, 85 , of Ft.
Myers, Fla., formerly of Gallipolis, died Sunday following a short
tliness.
Born Oct. 28, 1902 In Niles,
Ohio, he was a son of the late
James Thomas and Sara Ann
Tompkins Thomas.
His first wife, MaryS. Thomas,
preceded him in death in 1973;
and a second wile, Opal Thomas,
survives.
Also surviving are two sons.
Dr. James Thomas, Oxford. and
Dr. John R. Thomas. Ft. Wayne,
· Ind.; and grandchildren Katie,
Amy and Bill Thomas, all of
Oxford, Ohio, and Megan and
Brett Thomas, of Ft . Wayne, Ind.
He was preceded in death by
two brothers ;md one sister.
He attended schools In Nile,
Ohio and graduated from Iowa
Medical School in 1933. He was a
general pracilcloner In Gallipolis
for over 50 years and Mlped
formed Medical Center Hospital,
and was Instrumental In combln·
ing it with Holzer Hospital.
A life memher of the HMC
Foundation and a trustee·emerl·
tus, he was awarded a Fellow of
the American Academy of FamIly Practice and was a 50-year

1\J

Brisk winds drove tempera- and across southern South
tures to between zero and 15 ·~ Dakota.
above zero In the region, the
A winter storm watch was
National Weather Service said. A posted for southwest Minnesota.
winter storm warning was posted Forecaster Lyle Alexander said
several Inches ·of s now was
for today.
Three to 6 Inches of s now expected there today .
covered the ground in northeast
Showers and thunders torms
Wyoming and 31nches was on the extended from eas tern and cen·
ground at Valentine In northern tral Nebraska to western Kansas
Nebraska. Around midnight, vis· early today.. A severe thunder·
lb1llty was down to a quarter· storm struck the town of Pl easa nmile in nearby Ainsworth.
ton, Neb. ,late Mond ay, dropping
Snow advisories were In effect golf ball-size hall .
for northeast Wyoming, northw·
Southel'n thunderstorms Ma n·
est and north central Nebraska
day unleashed a tornado tha t
plowed through two south Gear·
gla towns, demolishing a fire
station and damaging homes.
The twister touched down in
Bemiss, just north of ValdosUl,
, memher of the Ohlo•State Medi·
about 10: 2"4 a.m., and then struck
cal Association and the Ameri·
Naylor, several miles east of
can Medical Association.
Bemiss, at 11 a .m ., Lowndes
He was a member of Aladdin
County sheriff's dispatcher
Shrine Temple In Columbus, and
Danny Weeks-sa id.
was a 50-year member of the
There were no rep or ted
Benevolent and Protective Order Injuries .
.
of the Elks In Gallipolis. He
Matt Tourtellott, 20, said high
served on the City of Gallipolis
winds whlpj&gt;ed through an open
Board of Education. and was Its window at his house near Bemiss
president .
A memorial service will be
held at First Presbyterain
Church, where he was a member,
at 11 a .m. Saturday, Rev . Leslie
J. Shear officiating. In lieu of
flowers contributions may be
made to the Holzer Medical
Center MaryS . Thomas, RN, and
H. B. Thomas MD, Nursing Fund.
The family will greet lre)nds at
the church following the memor·ial service.

•

as the twister howled over head
a nd "trashed my slsier's bedroom and the kitchen."
" It got real black, " he said."!
would swear to God the wind was
blowing over 100 mph. My
next·door neighbors had a shed In
their back y&amp;rd. They don't have
It anymore. It go t ripped up." '
Weeks described the damage
in Bemiss as " moderate" but
said if was . "severe" in Naylor,
where the 'storm demolished the •
town's fire department build ing .
and damaged several homes. :
Thunderstorms n!'ar Atlanta :
caused Hartsfield International ·
Airport, the world's busiest, to
suspend operations for about 30
minutes during the afternoon,
sa id Jack Barker of the Federal.
Aviation Administration
Tennis bail-size hall damaged :
homes and automobiles In Ala · ,
bama at Montgomery and Hope
Hull during th e . afternoon .
Baseball-size hai l was reported
at Wadley, Ala.
In a six-hour per iod ending ·
early today nearly 2 inches of ;
rain fell ir1 Savannah. Ga.
•

Ohio Loitery
Daily Number

.

Funeral services for Mrs. Lucy
G. Barringer, 76, Reedsville, who
died Friday at Veterans MemorIal Hospital, were held today at
the White Funeral Home in
Coolville.
Born in Meigs County on Aug.
2, 1911, Mrs. Barringer was a
daughter of the late ·samuel H.
and Sophia Deeter. A homemaker, she attended the Joppa
Methodist Church.
Survivors Include her husband.
Floyd R. Barringer; three sons
and daughters-In-law, Floyd F .
and Elizabeth Barringer; Gerald
R. and Evelyn Barringer, and
Dorsel and Mary Barringer, all
of Reedsville; three daughters
and sons-In-law, Betty and Harry
Kearns, West Columbia, W. Va.;
Donna IDol) and Jack Gt bbs,
Letart, W. Va. , and Lorrl and
Danny Smith, Reedsville; a
brother, Ivan D. Deeter, Ma·
rletta, and two sisters, Mae Otto.
Pontiac, Mich., and Thelma
Balanes, Royal Oak, Mich.
Besides her parents, ' she was
preceded In death by a daughter,
two sisters, three brothers, a
granddaughter and one great .
grandson.
Olftciatlng at Tuesday's servi·
ces was Pastor James Rankin
Roach and burial was In Weatherby Cemetery.

~SNOW

9356

Page 3

•

FRONTS:

II Warm

"

at

enttne

Vot.38, No.248
Copyrighted 1988

2 Sections, 16 Pages

- ' Static , . Occluded
Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% ot any shaced area is torecast
to receive precipitation indicated
.
·
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will extend
from ·s outhern VIrginia across the Carolinas and Georgia to
Florida. Showers and thunderstorms will also occur over . 1
southeast Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and eastern Kansas. Rain or
snow will extend from Wisconsin across Minnesota and northwest .
Iowa to South Dakota and Nebraska. Showers will be scattered
over Vermont and northeastern New York.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Linda
Pearsons, Long Bottom; Nancy
Watson, Reedsville; Norman
Terrell, Racine; Glada Davis,
Des ter; Gertrude Pellegrino,
Tuppers Plains; Mary Page,
Langsville; Dorothy Robinson,
Coolville; Addle Buck, Pomeroy ; Aretta Montgomery ,
Racine.
Monday Discharges -Raymond Justice, Henry Beaver.

To My Democrat and
Republican Friends

I NEED YOUR HELP
Ask for a Republican
Ballot on May 3rd

HELP MAKE A CHANGE
VOTE

ROBERT E. BEEGLE
Sheriff ·

Pd. forb Can d., 66 6th St.,

Racin~

Oh.

Supreme ·Court rules.
on child support issue

UPHOLSTORY - Brian Sharp discusses
furniture coverings with his employer, Lynn
Meadows at Empire Furniture In Pomeroy.
Sharp, a senior at Eastern ID$'h School, is
studying In the marketing education program of
Meigs Ingh School. John Blaettnar Is the

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court ruled 5-3 today
states may not Impose criminal
sanctions against parents who
are delinquent In paying child
support unless It Is shown
"beyond a reasonable doubt " the
parent is financially able · to
comply.
.
But the justices, responding to
concerns about the growing child
support crisis In this country,
said civil penalties designed only
to pressure parents Into paying
support are cons tltutlonai even if
they shift the burden or proof to
the delinquent parent.
The ruling came in a challenge
to a California law , which was
struck down by the Court of
Appeal of California on grounds
It violated the Constitution's due
process clause.
The high court did not decide
whether the California law met
constitutional standards, but In·
stead remanded the case to a
lower court to determine
whether the statute was criminal
or civil in nature .
Writing for the majority, Juslice Byron White said due process Is only required when a
defendant faces punishment for
his actions.
"An unconditional penalty Is
criminal in nature because It Is
solely and exclusively punitive In
nature." he wrote. "A condi·
tiona! penalty, by contrast Is
clvll because it is speclfic~lly
designed to compel the doing of
some act."

marketing education coordinator for the program
which Is available to all Meigs County HighSchool
seniors. Meip Ingh School juniors may enroU In
one academic course of the program during their
third year In high school.
·

Two .sailors confinned dead
NORFOLK, Va. (UPJ) - At
least two sailors missing 'since
thil submarine USS Bonefish was
crippled by a lire and explosion
three days_ago were .confirmed
dead on board the vessel, a
family minister a relative said
today.
''They found Marshall
(Lindgren) on board ," said the
Rev. Bill Hill, pastor at Sfthany
Baptist Church. Hill was answer·
lng the phone at the Pisgah
Forest, N.C., residence of
Lindgren's 'parents. Lindgren,
21, was a petty officer lst class.
Cynthia Williams, sister of Lt.
Ray Everts Jr. of Naoma, W.Va.,
said officials visited her parents
this morning and confirmed that
Everts was dead.
Atlantic Fleet officials in Nor·
folk have not confirmed the

deaths, although Pentagan offl·
clals in Washington said an
official announcement '!¥aS ex·
peeled later In the day. Also
missing was Petty Officer 1st
Class Roher! Bordelon Jr., 39, of
Wlllts, Texas .
The three had been missing
since Sunday's explosion and !Ire
filled the submarine with toxic
'
fumes and smoke.
The deaths
were the Navy's first submarine
fatalities In 20 years.
Adm. Carlisle A.H. Trost, chief
of naval operations, said the
m tssing men 'may have died
while saving the lives of their
colleagues after the submarine
was rocked by five explosions.
" All three of those Individuals
were on watch In the ship's
control room and were last seen
there,'' Trost told NBC News.

Bush would 'confront
congress' if elected

Jlatton s... ·
Continued from page 1
while Imports Increased $7.5
billion compared with $13.7 bll·
lion in the last quarter ol1987.
Real state and local govern·
men t pure hases of goods and
services increased $1.6 billion In
the first quarter, down from a
$5.9 billion hike In the fourth.
Real residential (!xed invest·
men! fell $4.8 billion In the first
quarter compared with a $3.5
billion increase In the fourth
quarter.
Federal government pur·
cl)ases declined $22.3 billion In
the first quarter compared with
an Increase of $11.3 billion In the
fourth . De!el)se purchases tell
$5.9 billion while non-defense
purchases fell $16.5 billion.
Rea,l final sales Increased 2.6
percent or $24.4 billion In the first
quarter compared with a 0.9
percent Increase or $8.9 billion
hike In the fourth quarter.
Real business Inventories In·
creased $57.9 bl11lon In the first
quarter, down from the fourth
quarter's $60.5 billion Increase.
Non-farm Inventory Investment
fell $13.2 billion In the first
quarter while farm Inventory
Investment Increased $10 .6
biUion.

I AM INTERESTED IN
OPENING A
DAY CARE CENTER
IN THE RACINE AREA
If Anyone Ia In Need
Of A Service Of This
Type Beginning In
May, Plean Contact:
Loan• Subject
To Oulftft~tlon

otacm-

25 Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

~SHOWERS

Cold

Rain tonight. Low near 40.
howers Thursday. IUghs in mid
50s.

•

•

-RAIN

047

Pick 4

Lucy Barringer

'

DAYnME--949·2410
Am" 6:30--949-2450

I

Indians
• •
remam
. In
first place

CINCINNATI (UPil ~t:e
President George Bush ys if
his bid for the presid cy is
successful, his White House talf
would consist of "new p
le"
wtlltng to confront Congress.
"The election, a lot of It as far
as I'm concerned. Is going to be
(about) new peoplE'," Bush said
Tuesday at the Ohio Association
of Broadcasters convention.
"Project change; not radical
departure from phtl060phy and ·
from the programs that have
worked, but revitalization by the
election process.
"I don't think we can do it , If
you're going to lead, to do it so
that we always have to meet
Congress half way. I think to lead
you're going to have · .to have
some confrontation with Congress," the vice president said,
adding that he wants "people to
serve, not to profit."
"I hope to lind people respect·
fU Iof the Uli !ted States Congress,
but who also would be •ocates
tor the programs or the phlloso, phles that I will be running on."
Bush, who Is_ closing In on
securing the Republican presl·
dentlal nomination, said he Is
now "campaigning through the
rest of the primary states,
showing the flag and going to the
.
key states."
The Ohio primary Is Tuesday
where another 88 Republican
delegates will be up tor grabs &gt;
Bush, who said It appears
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Du·
kakls will garner the Democratic
nomination "barring a dramatic
. turn of events," said the maln
campaign Issue will be the
country's f!Jture as It heads Into
the 1990s.

"I sense an Isolationist ten·
dency on the part of the people,
but I don' t helleve the American
people are isolationists. I belive
they understand and accept the
international responsibilities
thrust upon us," Bush said.
.
The vice president called unilateral culs of the nation's
defense system "simplistic,
naive and short-sighted."
Earlier Tuesday In Lima, the
vice president pledged to con·
tlnue the light against tllegal
drugs and recommended the
death penalty for operators of
underworld drug rings.
About 3,000 people applauded
Bush's recommendation in a
speech at the Lima Clvk Center.
"I would like to see the death
penalty for drug kingpins," Bush
said. ''Let's see If the Democrats
can stand up and do something
"

"So It may be that they simply
ensured that everyone gofclear,'
and they themselves didn't make
It. "

The 219-foot-long submarine,
which carried a crew' of 92, Is
tethered to a rescue ship, the USS
Petrel, I60 inues off the Florh;la
coast. Twenty-two sailors were
Injured in Sunday's Incident.
The Petrel will assess the
damage and determine how to
proceed with towing operations.
If the damage Is not too severe,
the boat probably will be towed to
Charleston, S.C., where the Bone!lsh Is ba&gt;ed, the Navy said.
Also standing by were the
salvage ship USS Holst, the fast
frigate USS McCloy, the guided
misstle frigate USS Carr and the
aircraft carrier USS John .
Kennedy.
The Boneflsh left Charleston
April 16 on a training mission In
the Caribbean. The Navy uses Its
four diesel-powered submarines
to simulate Soviet craft in
manuevers with U.S. warships.
The Soviets operate about 100
diesel subs .
The lire erupted In the forward
battery compartment while the
Boneflsh was about 50 feet below
the surface of the Atlantic on an
exercise with the Carr and the
Kennedy.
Non-nuclear submarines use
their diesel engines while on the
surface and their quieter electric
motors, powered by large batter·
les; while submerged.
The Bonellsh surfaced and Its
crew !led to the Carr. The Injured
were taken aboard the Kennedy .

.

"These distinctions lead up to
the fundamental proposition that
criminal penaltles may not be
Imposed on someone who has not
been afforded the protections
that the Constitution requires of
such criminal proceedings, in·
eluding the requirement that the
offenlle be proved beyond a
reasonable doubt. "
Chief Justice Willlam Rehn·
qulst and Justlces Sandra Day
O'Connor and Anton In Scalia
dissented, concluding that child
support proceedlrgs are ''civil as
a matter of f~eral Jaw" and thus
never subject to the due process
clause.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, who
joined the court in February did
not take part. ·
'
In other action, the court:
-Sent back to Oregon courfs a
case Involving whether the state
can d!'ny unemployment benefits
to drug counselors fired for
taking hallucinogenic drugs as
part of a native American Indian
religious ceremony. The court, in
a 5-3 decision, ordered the state
court todeterminelltherellgious
use of peyote Is prohibited by
state Jaw. .
-Ruled unanimously the Railway Labor Act does not entitle a
railroad· employee to be represented In a grievance procedure
by a union other than his own.
-Dismissed a case involving
attempts by the u.s. Postal
Service to fire a mall carrier w)lo
had failed to deliver thousands of
pieces of mall. The decision
leaves intact an appeals court

ruling reinstating the employee
who failed to make hi s appointed
rounds because he was. a compul·
slve gambler . The Nat !anal Ass a·
elation of Letter Carriers main·
tal ned the worker had recovered
and was lit ~o return to work.
The courts ruling In the child
support case likely will force
many states to review their child
support laws, which typically
presume !hat a paren t can
comply With a child suppoi t
order unless he proves
otherwise.
The laws are designed to
increase the co llection of chll~
support, more than $3 billion o
which goes unpaid each year,
according to the Department of
Health and Huma n Services.
Cnlics of such laws have
argued that the state bears the
burden of proof and must show
that a delinquent parentis able to
make required paymen ts. However, the high court said, the
stale need only bear the burden
of proof if Its purpose is to punish
thedelinquentparentratherthan
merely force compltance.
The case invoived _Philllp Fei;
ock , who was held m contemp
and ordered tomake~ayments to
his three Children ilvmg In Ohio
or go to jail. The contempt order
was overturned by the California
aprrl\cou~\ ·
Alt S
e oc an 15 w11e, , a ue,
were divorced In 1976. Under a
divorce decree gr~nted. in
Orange County, he was reqwred
to pay $75 per month for each
child.

Dukakis scores another solid
victory; still 'looking ahead'

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Mas·
He added, " It's not how much
sachusetts. Gov. Michael Duka, time you spend living in Washing·
kls, boosting his front-runner ton that makes the difference;
status with a soltd victory In It's your values, It's the quality of
Pennsylvania, said Wednesday the people you pick, your ablllty
there are still "important prim- to work with the Congress and the
aries ahead ."
Amerlc;m people .... If the vice
But Dukakis, Interviewed on president wants to debate those
the three major TV networks, , Issues, If I do win the nomination,
Indicated he will he running more I look forward to doing it."
against Vice President George
Dukakls crushed civil rights
Bush, who has all but wrapped up leader Jackson by a roughly 2-1
the GOP nomination. than Demo- ratio In the Keystone State
cratic rival Jesse Jackson.
Tuesday, giving the Massachu·
Asked about polls showing he setts governor his fourth straight
would beat Bush If the election major primary victory and mak·
were held tOday, Dukakls said, ''I ing him the runaway favorite to
don't ... spend a lot of time claim the Democratic presiden·
looking at polis .... This Is going to tlal nomination .
he a very competitive race."·
According to United Press
He was also asked about International's count, Dukakls .
Bush's primary criticism, that would have 1,115 of the 2,081 votes
he lacks government experience,
required at July 's Democratic
particularly in foreign affairs.
gathering In Atlanta, compared
" I don't know what good to 779 lor Jackson.
But Dukakls refused to claim
experience Is when you sit there
next to the president and do the nomination Wednesday .
" It's never wrapped up until
' nothing .when they sell arms to
the ayatollah (of Iran) for It 's wrapped up," he said.
hostages," Dukakls said, refer· "We've got Important primaries
ring to Bush' s sessions In the coming up."
He repeated that when asked if
White House Cabinet room.

he has decided who would tie his
running mate.
"At this point the only thing
I'm considering Is a couple of
very important primaries, " he
said .

MICHAEL DUKAKJS

Four of ·Ohio's 20 representatives seeking
.
reelection facing primary opposition May 3
EDITOR'S NOTE: This Ia the
fin! dlllpatch In a foul'-part
l!ll!rie8 by United Press lnterna·
tlonal's Ohio staff on the upcomIJII Ohio primary. Today'a artl·
e1e llze8 up the primary contests
for
U.S.
House of
Representatives.

Ohio's congressional delegation,
Is retiring after 30 years at
service and Is sending forth his
son, Robert, to try to retain the
seat.
Young Latta, 32, Js helng
challenged In the Republican
primary by Ohio Senate Pres!·
dent Paul Glllmor, 49, of Port
By RICH EXNER
Clinton, and Fremont's Rex
United Preas International
Damschroder, 38, son of former
A veteran state legislative state Rep. Gene Damschroder.
leader will try to end a congresIn the 20th District In Clevesional dynasty In northwest Oh lo, land, live-term Rep. Mary Rose
while the perennial "bad hoy" of Oakar faces a challenge In the
Cleveland politics Is attemptlng Democratic primary from
to unseat a veteran Ohio con· former Cleveland Mayor Dennis
gresswoman In the May 3 Kuclnlch.
primary,
The winner of the
Only four of Ohio's 20 represen- , Da msc hroder·GI I lmor· Latta
tatlves · seeking re-election are race In the sprawling 12-county
faced with primary opposition.
district of northwest Obio will
The excitement Is In the 5th face Democrat Thomas Murray ·
District, where Rep. Delbert of Sandusky In the fall.
Latta, the senior member .of
The district Is one of the most

•

'•

..

••

conservative In the nation, but That Is Latta 's home county , and
Democrats are not counting out It is In Gillmor's Senate district.
Murray, especially If the RepubLatta, in reference to speculallcans bloody themselves in the
tion that Giltmor might want to
primary contest.
run lor governor In 1990, has said
It appears they are doing just
he would be committed to Can·
that.
gress, even though Glitm1&gt;r has
The race has been tlght, with
promised to drop gubernatorial
Latta and Glllmorconsldered the
plans If he Is elected to Congress.
front-runners. Lalla has the edge
Glllmor, meanwhile, has run
In the extreme northwest comer
on his 22,year record In the Ohio
of Ohio, especially In Fulton
Senate, saying his ability to work
County, where Republicans are
with Democrats Is a plus In
Irate at Glllmor because he
trying to win election In
helped put the eastern halfofthat
November.
county In a Democratic rongres·
Damscbroder Is the only one or
sional district In 1981.
the three candidates who said he
. Glllmor's Senate district In- . would have voted to override the·
cludes the eastern halt of the 5th
recent presidential veto of the
Congressional District, so he Is
Civil Rights Restoration Act ,
well-known· there. Damschroder , They do agree on some thlnp
will draw votes In the Fremont
-namely that the nation's No. 1
area.
· problem Is thP federal deficit and
Wood County, the most popu·
Continued on page 16 "
lous county, should he the key.

•

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