<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12191" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12191?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T02:16:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43162">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c2d08d0bd5a5e8194211d633237b3bf1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3432e4bb6094b6dd7b08e8d620cc00e5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38295">
                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-M~Iepolt,

-.

Monday. July 11, 1988

Ohio

Country music singer sets her priorities
By Charles A. Masoo
She's buried J.C. James - . a
stage name others gave her - and
the Las Vegas footlights that came
with her.
Now she takes the stage using
her own name with her own style
and her own priorities. She's a
Christian, an American and then a
country-music artist in that order.
Now in its II th year, her "overnight
success"· story is still being wriuen.
Here's the latest chapter.
Cheryl K. Warner, an up-andcommg country music singer
whose roots are here in the Ohio
River valley, is riding the
popularity of a national music
release and her first album could be
finished by this fall. Her two
daughers - Natalie, 14, and Tiffany, 10 - are spending the summer with their graodmother, Mrs.
Ralph E. Warner of Sandy Heights,
Point Pleasant, who the country·
music singer affectionately calls
"Doll."
Gallipolis residents may remember a three-year-old girl who danced and who took formal dance
training. She's a product of Gallia
Academy and the Gallia city
schools.
Reached by telephone Friday
night in Chesterfield County, Va,
the .singer who will take the stage
for the.Virginia State Fair Sept. 24
at Richmond for one show was
ready 10 take out the garbage.
That's Show biz. ·
The two-sided 45. record was
released in June and Warner said 30

fan" and tather wno died last
percent of the stations playing it are
playing both sides. Music City AugusL The children support her
News magazine plans a story on the
career as does her mother, Edna,
and the head of her fan club, Naomi
~new face" of Warner in its August
tssue. The songs, "Don't TIDle Fly,"
Hatcher, who once headed L.orelta
Lynn's
Virginia fan club.
and "Did I Touch You," are in
"I felt J.C. James was somebody
regular rotation in parts of West
Virginia, Va., Maryland, Tennessee I'm noL I'm proud of who I am and
and Ohio, she reported.
I believe that shows in my music.
For Warner, a 5·2, brown-eyed By using my own name, more
avenues are open to me."
lady who admits 10 tipping the
Some people ~pare her 10
scales at 115 pounds if the
fudgedcles are in the freezer, the Brenda Lee. Others, like Richmond
(Va.) Times-Dispatch writer NorII years she's worked 10 be a
country-music star have been hard man Rowe, note, "On my lumlable,
"Don't Time Fly" comes over with
worlc and a learning experience.
the better comtemporary sound. II
One thing she learned was she
had outgrown the moniker J.C. is a song with a happy sound James one promoter gave her. She's with potential sing-along appealthe story of a girl happily in love."
made peace with the fact she's not
The new 45, Warner said, has
a woman country music singer with
a twang in her voice. She's going 10 heel! played and given away at a
Clarksburg radio station and its in
call the first album "She's No
the works to be played on a
Counterfeit Country Queen" 10
Parkersburg
radio station, Warner
once again show her critics she
·said
there
is
a potential car adverbelongs in the big-time arena.
tisement contraCt being finalized in
Also the title of her first big hit
the Richmond area in addition to
five years ago, the song succinctly
the state fair appearance. She can
sums up her desires: "Ever since I
pinch herself and know it's for real.
can remember, /1 had only one
"You're capable of having it all
dream -/Someday I'd become/ A
famous
country
music
queen.}While I was doing all the
things/A wife and mother must
do/In my mind I figured out/ Just
whar I could do.{Ibey told me I
By WILLIAM C. TROTT .
was crazy/They called me 'a
United Press International
counterfeit country queen,'{!'hey
MOTOWN MAYOR: Singer
said give up my foolish dreamJ But Stevie Wonder apparently Is
something deep inside me saidJ'Go serious about running for mayor
a-h-e-a-d, go a-h-e-a-d."'
of Detroit. Last month Wonder. a
Go ahead she does, this summer · Detroit native- who was a childwithout Ferr_el! Nida~. "he~ biggest hood star for Motown Records.
casually brought up the posslbil·
lly and during a weekend appear·
ance at a festival In Chicago, he
repeated his IntentiOns. "I'm not
making a formal announcemen!," he said. '"I wouldn't do
that In Chicago. 1 would do It In
Detroit. I'll probably run In
1992." Wonder also discussed
national politics, praising Jesse
Jackson. "He deserve~ any of the·
rights of any other American
politician,"
'"The
real
bottom Wonder
line Is ussaid,
having
a

. ..
.....
..•, . ..
.:· ·..:··.· .··:·.
'

·~.

'

.

'

.'
~ •'

\'

'\.

PRESENTED PLAQUE - Ethel Hart of the Modern Woodmen
of America, Camp 7230, BtirUngham, recognized Bob Hoeflich and
presented him with a plaque for conscientious and dedicated
community service at Sunday's annual picnic or the Camp. A
feature of the aflernoon program was music by Laura Hawthorne,
vocalist, a senior at Eastern High School. Door prizes were
awarded and games enjoyed liy the nearly a hundred members
and guests attending.

leader for all." Wonder dedi·
cated his Saturday evening con·
cert to the memory of Chicago
Mayor Harold Washington, who
died Nov. 25.
STARS OF CINCY: The city of
Cincinnati payed homage to its
famous sons and daughters dur·
lng the weekend as part of its
bicentennial celebration. Among
the 50 honored were ex tastronaut
Nell Armstrong, former baseball
players Pete Rose and Johnny

All-Star
game tonight

Page 4

me."

.

wh ite women.
" We th ink maternal mortality

s hould be given a higher priorit y
In the national health program.
It's not that we want less focus on
infant mortality , we ju st feel
there needs to be more attention
given to maternal deaths," said
Usa Koonin. an epidemiologist
with the Centers for Disease
Control In Atlanta.
Koonin assis ted the Maternal ·
Mortality Collabora tive, which Is
part of the pub! ic health branch
of the American College of
Obstetricians and GynecolOgists,
with its survey , which included 16
states. as well as New York City,
San Jose County, Calif., and
Puerto Rico.
The researcher said the data
collected did not list the dead
-womens' socioeconomic status
or prior medical conditions and,
consequently, the study does not ·
focus directly on the causes
behind the differing mortality
rates.
"But one reason why older
womens' death · rate may be
higher Is due to the chronic
diseases that occur with age...
and that Jhey may have had more

babies," Koonin said.
"We don't want people tobetoo
nervous about having baby at a
later age," Koonln said. noting
that even in the over·30 age
group, maternal mortality Is
"still pretty rare" in the United
States.
The study, published in the
Journal of Obstetrics and Gyne·
co logy , showed that ~6 percent of
the women who died during or
after delivery had Cesarean
sections. The data also suggested
overweight pregnant women had
a higher risk of death.
Koonln also cautioned against
being alarmed by those findings,
noting that allergies to anesthesla, diabetes and other medical
factors were not considered In
compiling the figures on c.
sections and obesity.
Compared with maternal
death statistics for 1974-78, the
stUdy found the rate of death
from direct obstetric causes
dropped from 1980 through 1985, ·
but death rates due to Injuries
such as car accidents and other
medical condlllons have

a

increased.

Rogers and polio fighter Albert
Sabin. "The thing that thrUis me
most about the whole event,"
Reams said, "Is that I'm here
with Roy Rogers. He represents
to America a wonderful role
model for kids. I know he did for
me."
A TALE OF TWO 21s: The
management . at New York' s
legendary 21 Club are suing a
Chicago restaurant for calling
Itself Cafe 21. '"They're using our
number," says Ken Aretsky of
the New York that feeds and
waters the rich and powerful.
"There Is only one21 and we want
It lo stay that way. I'm not
interested or
if It's
in Chicago,
California
Europe.
They're
trading off our Identification.' '
Val Saamer, an execulive at the
Chicago eatery, says his estatJ.
lishment came by its name
because its address Is 21 East
Bellevue Place and It's located In
the Hotel21 East.
ANOTHER JAPANESE EX·
PORT: Japan's Prince Aya Is
going to Oxford. The 22-year-old
prince, the second eldest son of
Crown Prince Aklhlto and third
In line to the Japanese throne.

· thought it would make a nice
retreat from Las Vegas, where
he usually perfonns. The house
had belonged to Fran!&lt; HeUowell
Jr•. whose grandfather bunt It In
1856. Hollowell does not know
whether the ghosts that purport·
edly haunt the place will stlek
around to meet Newton. "I can't
guarantee a ghost but I will tell
you this," he said . ."One night
some years ago my wife and I
were sleeping. I heard footsteps
coming from the kitchen wing,
passing through the dining room
and out to the hall. By that time I
was out of our bedroom and
shouting downstairs, 'Who's
there? Who's there? But 1 only
heard heavy footsteps." '

ft=======================::;EFFECTIVELY IMMEDIATELY
A IL:. l 0 p EN B UR N I N G.
IS BANNED IN 0 li·VE
T 0 W N S HI·p

·
J r er 0 f t hI BOGr d 0 f TrUSt88S
r1g~r;ad;u;a;t;ed~fr;o;m;G;a;k;u;sh;u;l;n;U;n;l;·;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;~
B 0 d

+ NOth' •"W.Z

\l\S\
J\l

· Itt,

~·

/J

....,.._

'e7.A

Thirteen percent of the mater·
nal deaths were attributed to
Injury, and researchers say
more studies are needed to
determine If pregnant women
are more prone to accidental
death than other females.
In 1979, the U.S. Public Health
Service set a maternal mortality
rate of 5 deaths per 100,000 live
births as one of its national heallh
objectives for 1990.
The July 8 statistics from
Centers for Disease Control show
that although the target has
almost been met for whites, with
the death rate now standing at 5.2
deaths per 100,000 live births, the
risk Is far higher for blacks and
other minority women, standing
at 20.4 per 100,000 live births ,
Koonln said.
The CDC rate for both whiles
and non·whltes was 7.8 death per
100,000 live births.
Koonln said the Maternal Mor·
tallty Collaborative' s figures
differ from CDC's because t~ey
were gathered only from certain
areas of the country and, In some
Instances. involved different
criteria.

--.-~----

·~~·---~------·-----

pipe. Water semce was reti-e.i lo!mt&gt;Dntll'ib
about noon Monday but.hBB been Interrupted
some areas of the village since that Ume. It was
hoped this momlng tbat necesl8l'y repairs would
be completed and water service restored to all
areas of the village.

UNEXPECTED PROBLEM - An eight-Inch
water main bunt about 8 p.m. Sunday at the
comer of Butternut Ave. and West Main St. In
·Pomeroy. Since then, Pomeroy VIUage workers
have been working noutop to repair the broken

Street light proposal given
.i n Pomeroy Council meeting
_j\n anticipated budget totaling mate . would cost the village
--.sreifor,JllilmertY!tll1989was .,, $15,484 ·for llghts ·on aluminum
approved Monday night by poles. In addition, the village
members or the village council.
would be required to pay a
A breakdown ofJunds compris- portion of ''aid to construction"
lng the total, according to Clerk- costs tolalllw $6.125.
Treasurer Jane Walton, is
Councilman Bill Young has
$280,5511n general fund; $185,000 been working for some time to
In street; $2,0001n state highway; get the power company to Install
$11,000, cemetery; $9,960.60, per· the new lighting system In tl'le
missive tax; $31,500, utilities; downtown area. The project calls
$2,000, recreation; $260,000, wa- for the removal of all lights from
ter; $89,000, sewer; $65,000, gua- along' the river side of the
ranty meter; $5,075, pollee pen- parklnglotandfromlhebuslness
sion; $48,000 , fire department; side of Main St. Altogether, 21
$4,589.40, second floor repair in mercury vapor lights would be
village hall building; $1,400, removed, to be replaced with 20
building fund.
high power sodium lights. The 10
Ron McDade and Terry Lloyd poles, which would each hold two
of Columbus Southern Power high power sodium lights, are to
were at Monday night's meeting be Installed between the parking
to discuss the expiring contract lot and the old railroad track
between the village and the properly. There would be no
power company for street light- lights on lhe business side of
lng, and also the replacement of Main St . The new lights are
old street lights In the downtown expected to provide more light
business section.
for a lower cost. The monthly
1~ regard to the expiring
cost for the new lighting system
contract. a new contract must . has been estimated at $1,965.16
now be prepared for for flnaltza- per month, as compared to the
lion before Aug. 20, the date of current $2,127 paid per month for
explrallon.
.
the old lights .
In regard to the replacement of
According to prior council
dOwntown street lights, two prop- meetings, the new lights would
osals were offered for council's h.ave. an old fashioned appear·
consideration. One proposal, for ance, although this aspect of the
Installation or lights on wooden project was not dlsc!lssed last
poles, would cost the village an night.
estimated $9,359. The other estlA decision on the lighting

WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Reagan told congressional
leaders during a half-hour White
House meeting Monday that he
wants to help the effort to bring
disaster relief to drought·hlt
farmers, the lawmakers said.
The four leaders of the House
and Senate Agriculture commit- ·
tees said IIley were heartened by
Reagan's support. The four Indicated they would Introduce a
bipartisan drought relief prop·
osal today expected to offer up to
$100,000 each In disaster payments to farmers and ranchers,
based on a portion or Iheir losses.
"I asked the president, was he
agreeable ... to work with us for
viable, helpful legislation. He
said he was," said House Agrlcul·
ture Chairman Kika de Ia Garza,
D-Texas. '"The president was
very supportive of the need . lor
general legislation.'.'

said.
Rep. Edward Madigan, R-IlL ,
said Agriculture S~cretary RIchard Lyng had reservations
about a couple of points in the
proposaL Despite that , Sen.
Rlcharil Lugar, R·Ind.. said.
Lyhg told the president '"this was
a pretty good piece of work."
Reagan at one point recalled
the 1936 drought thai he saw
while living In Illinois. "He
talked about animals dying,
crops being burned up," Madi· ·
gan said.
On Capitol Hill, House Speaker
Jjm Wright, D-Texas, said ef·
forts by the Congressional
Drought Relief Task Force were
"very close to perfecting" .a
package and the legislation could
be acted on this week.
''We would like to have this bill
ready for House consideration
before this week expires. If this
should prove lobe Impossible, we
Senate Agriculture Chairman shall plan to vote during lheweek
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said Rea- of July 26," Wrlghl said.
gan underscored the administraCongress will recess Friday for
tion's desire to help write a a week for the Democratic
drought relief bill.
National Convention In Atlanta .
:Earller, Leahy had raised the
Senate Democratic leader Ro·
possibility the drought bill could bert Byrd of West Virginia also
go to a floor vote yet this week. said he would like to see the
After the White House session, he · Senate pass a drought assistance
refused to discuss "arllflclal bill by week's end.
deadlines" for action.
Wright said the House task
'"I would rather take a few Ioree has followed five guiding
extra d~ys and have sometblng principles, Including directing
that works than have something tlie afd "prlmarfly . at ' family
that holds oulfalse hope," Leahy farmers," assuring there be "no

system was not made by council
·· Jastli:lght.. . ,.,, ~ .,
,
Two area residents, Frank
Porter Jr. and Sue Raub, were at
Monday's meeting to present a
proposed ordinance to preserve
historical structures In Pome·
roy. Porter has been to the State
Middleport Vllage Council approved an ordinance establishHistorical Society In Columbus,
as well as lo local banks in an meeting in regular session Mon- Ing a $3,000 litter control fund. An
effort lo drum up financial day night approved an a ordinance providing for the an·
nual codification of village laws
support for the endeavor which $1,119,210 budget for 1989.
woufd Include restoration of
Making up lhe estimated total was given a second reading.
Hoffman commended the Midbuildings. Passage of such · an budget for the next year are:
dleport
Fire Department, not only
ordinance would help saleguar~ general fund, $388,560; fire truck
for
a
good
job In selling off the
the Pomeroy's historic bUildings fund, $41,200; street mainte"nreworks
for
the Fourth of July
and give village council some nance' fund, $74,120; cemetery
control as to the type of future fund, $22,185; swimming paol celebration but for collecting
slructures that can be buill fund, $20,755; publiC transporta- funds to help pay for the display.
within village limits. Council tion, $198,285; water fund, He also commended Councilman
seemed In favor of the ordinance $156,050; water tank fund, Bob Gilmore who headed the
but will review It before discuss- $20,000; meter deposit fund. observance Including lining up
lng It In more detail al the next $6,000; sewer fund , $138,820; fire the program.
Hoffman reported that adver·
equipment fund, $20,105; eco- regular meeting.·
tlsements
will be placed soon for
1n other business. council ap- nomic development fund,
bids
on
lhe
sidewalk Improveproved renewal of a one·mill fire $20,150; miniature golf fund.
ment
program.
The mayor asked
levy. The proposed renewal must $13,000. Officials will make their
cquncllmen
to
c0me up with
be submllted·lo the county board approprlallons to the various
Ideas
for
a
safe
and
satisfactory
funds making up the budget In
of elections by Aug. 25.
Also approved by council was January. The village wlll now location where young people can
use skate boards.
the mayor's report of $2,270 In have the advantage of additional
A discussion was held on the
fines and fess collected. for the moneys coming Into Its coffers
from the new town Income tax miniature golf course which is
month of June.
located at Hartinger Park and it
The next meeting of council which went Into effect July 1.
was
reported that the revised
will be Monday, July 18, 7:30
Council approved the report of
permit
of the village to operate
Mayor Fred Hoffman showing
p.m., al village hall . .
the
course
,was approved In
Absent from last night's meet- receipts of $3,3551.441n fines and
Columbus
on
Monday . A request
ing was Councilman Bryan fees for the month of June and
Shank.

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
AUG. 5th
CALL DAVE OR BRIAN TO PLACE YOUR
lD IN
YEAR'S
CALL 992·2155 FOR DDAILS

-•

windfalls for major corporations
and wealthy Individuals," protecting consumers, and Immediate aid for livestock producers.
"Fifth, the bill cannot be a
budget-buster," Wright said.
Wright listed the main features
of the plan under consideration:
- Livestock producers would
be assisted by receiving surplus
CCC commodities, mainly hay
and feed grains now held In
storage. A ceiling would be
applied so that no Individual
producer may receive more than
$50,000 In benefits.
-Crop producers suffering
major losses would receive disaster payments. The benefit cap
would be $100,000.
-Drought-stricken farmers ·
would not be required to pay back
advance deficiency payments on
production not covered by disaster payments.
-The Farmers Home Admlnls tratlon would be encouraged to:
restructure loans .and delay
. collection of Interest and princi·
pal for drought victims.
The pre~ld ent will continue his
drought meetings Tuesday mornIng when he discusses strategy
with the Republican and Democratic congressional leadership.
On Thursday, Reagan will fly
lo Hllnols fOr I' first-hand look at·
Ihe effects .of the drought, touring
the farm of Herman Krone of ·
· Dliqrioln, who grows corn and
soybeans.

Middleport·approves budget

Ohio drought worst in 115 yeai-s:agency :,

THE MEIGS COUNTY F TAB
IS COMING ON AUGUST 12th,

26 Cants

A Muttimedie Inc. NewiPaper

Lawmakers are urged
to send · drought relief

..

verslty In Tokyo In March and
will do post-graduate work In
zoology at Oxford's St. John:s
College. He's leaving for Eng·
land In August and will live with a.
British family and take English
lessons until classes start In
early October. Prince Aya's
father and eldest brother, Biro,
28, also studied at Oxford.
A HAUNTING MELODY: Sin·
ger Wayne Newton recently
bought a three-story Greek rev!·
val house In Elizabeth City, N.C.,
slght·unseen. for $250,000, which
may or may not Include the
ghosts that haunt the place. A
Newton spokesman said he saw
an advertisementfor the house in
an aQtlques magazine and

1 SeCtion, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, July .12, 1988

People in the news

Bench.
singer Barbara
Daniels, opera
movie producer
Charles
Fries, poet Nikki Giovanni, laser
pioneer Leon Goldman, actres~
Julie Hagerty. Heimlich Ma· .
neuver lnventorHenryHelmllch.
television newswoman Edle
Magnus, sports announcer AI
Michaels, Broadway dancer Lee
Roy Reams, cowboy act or Roy

snacks, Including apples a11d
other fruits that are generally
accepted as healthy snacks,"
O'Connell said at a news
conference.
"Over the years we've put a lot
of effort Into proving that something that tastes as good as
chocolate Is good for you."
Krltchevsky's research, supported In part by chocolate
association funds but primarily
by lhe · federal government,
echoes the conclusions of two
Texas researchers recently published In the New England
Journal of Medicine.
1n his study, Krllchevsky
added a rangeofsaturated rats to
the diets or laboratory rats to
determine lhelr effects on blood
cholesterol. The results showed
that all saturated fats do nol'act
alike.
Cocoa bu Iter, comprised prim·
arUy of two saturated fatly acids
- Stellric acid and palmitic acid
- "affected the cholesterol lev·
els the least,!' he said.

enttne

RECOGNIZED-~A. Roland Eastman, right, wu reeoplzedfor
oulstandlng service to the community by the Modern Woodmen of
America, Camp 7230, Burlingham, and presented a plaque lly
Russell CuUums at Sunday's picnic or the organization held at the
Route 33 roadside park. Doris Eastman, wife of the honoree, looks
on as the presentation wu made.

Good ·news for chocolate lovers
NEW YORK tUPl) -The fat
In chocolate, though saturated,
does not raise blood cholesterol
levels and apparently poses no
Increased health lhreal Ia mil·
lions of chocolate-addicted
Americans, researchers said
Wednesday.
.''From the standpoint of physl·
ology it's not bad for you," David
Krltchevsky , associate director
of the University of Pennsylvania 's Wlstar Institute of Anatomy
and BiolOgy, said of cocoa b~tter,
the fat that gives chocola:le lis
gooey smoolliness.
"From the standpoint of psychology It's great for you ."
Richard O'Connell, president
of the Chocolate Manufacturers
Association of the U.S.A. In
McLean, Va .• said the natloa's
chocolatlers are concen.td abOut
"persistent myths" about the ~
healthfulness of chocolate, an $11
bllllon·a-year business.
"When It comes to nutrient
comparisons, milk chocolate
compares favorably wllh many

Vot.39, No.46
Copyrighted 1988

Clearing, mUd tonfght. Low
In high 80s. Wednesday,
sunny. High In the 80s.

•

e

..

Maternal mortality higher· in minorities
By REBECCA KOLBERG
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Black
women and other minorities are
twice as likely to die from
pregnancy-related compllca ·
lions and pregnant women over
30 are 2.5 times more likely to die
than thei r younger counterparts,
a repor t showed Sunday.
The Maternal Mortality Colla·
bora tlve, which collected data
from 1~ regions of the United
Stares from 1980 through 1985,
fou nd that the overall ra te of
mater!lal deaths was . 14.1 per
100.000 live births.
The researc hers ' findings sup·
port previous studies that indi·
cate a pregnant woman's risk of
deat h increases with age. with
women over 30 recording 31.3
maternal deaths per 100.000 live
births .
Pregnant black women and
o th er minorities had higher rates
of dea th from anesthesia compll·
c ations. tubal pregnancy and
both spontaneous and induced
abortions. contributing to a mate rnal death rate twice as high as

Daily Number
741
Pick 4
1476

•

CHERYL K. WARNER
when you have people around you
who believe in you,' she said. .
Perhaps the roughest date that
Warner recently played was righl at
home. She sang at the Vtrgina middle school· 14-year-old Natalie at. tends. "'l'hey loved it," Wl¥ller said,
adding she had come . prepared to
give the student several songs if
need be to win them over.
"I wasn '.1 sure they would like

..

Ohio Lotte~

· By THOMAS M. BURNETT
few more weeks.
corn has reached the tasseling
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "Soybeans run a IIIUe tater · stage, compared with 40 percent
The Drought of 19!!8 has sur- growing season than corn, so at this time last year. Fully 72
passed even the Dust Bowl days t~ere's still a chance for them," percent of the crop rated poor or
of the 1930s.
Hldy said. "There will still be very poor (36 percent In each
The Ohio Agricultural Statts- about a 25 percent 10 30 percent category) and 25 percent rated
tics Service reported Monday the reduction in yield (for soybeans)' only fair, while 3 percenl rated
drought was the worst since but corn, you're looking at a -50 good.
au thorltles began keeping percent IO 55 percent reduction, "
Soybeans are faring a little
weather records 115 years ago.
1\e said.
better and could be saved wllh a
According to readings from the
"It's going to knock the pins out good rain, the agency said.
federal agency's reporting sta- of a tot or (farmers) . we were
Many reports from northern
lions across Ohio, most of the just stardng to see the tight at the Ohio Indicated damage from
state's agricultural areas show end of the tunnel (after several spider mites, but the crop was
r.alnfall deficits of 6 Inches to 10 depressed years in ,the farm
Inches ~lnce April!.
economy). looking at good cash·
"Comparing the first six flow , and then this drought
months or this year wllh the first comes and knocks the bottom out
half or the driest years on record of the nest."
shows that 1988 Is drier than the
Hldy said It was too early to
worst drought years on records determine how many or Ohio's
Due to th~ ex Ireme dry
kept since 1873," lheagenc'y said. 88,000 farms would falllhls'year,
weather, t~e Leading Creek
A weak cold front moved bul said, ''Ohio loses about 4 Conservancy Dis trlct Is urging
voluntary conservation of water
through the state late Sunday and percent to 5 percent of Its farms
earl!~ Monday, but Kirby Hldy, a
annually, through normal attrlin both Meigs and VInton
Counties.
spokesman for the Ohio Farm tlon. Beyond that, no one can
The district receives Its water
Bureau Federation, said It was specillat~ . "
from five deep wells located at
"too little, too late" to save much
The Ohio Agricultural Stat is·
of the slate's bllUon·dollar corn tics Service said many farmers Cheshire near the Ohio River. At
crop.
have given up the thought of the present lime there Is no
Overnight rainfall, generally harvesdng any corn at· all.
Immediate problem with the
from 0.25 to 0.5 Inches - with a
Soli ·moisture rated 99 percent source ot water, but district
few areas receiving aa much as1 short and just 1 percent officials would llketoaskall their
customers to conserve water In a
Inch - did little other lhan keep adequate.
homeowners' era.. alive for a
About 3 percent of the s~te 's conscientious manner.

rated 25 percent very poor, 35 .
percent poor, 3~ percent fair and
6 percent good. ~bout 26 percent
of the state's soybeans were
blooming, compared with 46
percent at this tim~ In 1987.
Wheat yields, liowever, continued tos,tay ala good level last
week and the crop Itself rated
mostly fair to good.
Oat yields were reported to be
much lower than no~al and 61
percent of the states crop was
rated poor or very poor.

JJ ..
· '

will now be made for reinspection of the recreational facility so
that It can be put into use.
Councilman Gilmore also re·
ported that he Is receiving
complaints on the congestion at
the Middleport levee In regard to
boat trailers blocking the way so
that other boaters cannot put
·their boats Into the water.
Holtman said he will work on
correct'ing the problem .
Councilman James Clatworthy
reported that two property
owners want an unused street
right of way riear Logan St.
abandoned . The two property
owners will be asked to sign a
petitlort req uestlng that a bandonmen! and council will hold a
hearing on the matter.
The land will be .divided
-equally between the two property
owners If the location Is aban doned , the mayor reported.
Attending \he meeting were
Hoffman. Clerk Jon Buck, and
Councilmen Gilmore , Cla! worthy, William Walters, Jack
Satterfield and new councilman.
Paul Gerard.

,.,_.,,
'":;··"'·
~.

.. .
COMING SOON · • •

Rite Aid

Pharmacy

Conservation urged in Leading
Creek Conservancy District

~

~

· Officials request that watering
which Is absolutely necessary be
done between the hours or 8 p.m.
and 8 a.m. In order to level their
24 hour usage.
Dlstrlct officials feel that these
hours for watering will alleviate
problems wllbout mandatory
measures · having to be taken.
However, If voluntary conservation and dry weather conditions
conUnue, more drastic measures
may ll~ve to be taken by the
dlstrct.

BBOINS - Work hM bepn on 11)18e10111 new qaar-. lor Ute
Bile Aid Dra1 Store Ia Pomeroy, IU tile comer of Sycamore and E.
Mala Sta. The store Ia preaen&amp;l;y located In the former Stark
balldla1 on E. Main St . .

�•

Comment
111 Coun Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~lb
~v

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

,..,...,.,.=·=-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
•

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher;Conlroller
A

BOB HOEFLICH

General M1111ager

MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inl.and Dally Press

Association and the American

~ewspaper

Miller representative to visit

Grange inspection set

car maker

A representative from the office of Congressman Clarence
Miller will conduct an open door session from 11 a.m . to 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the courthowoe In Pomeroy. Anyone having any
questions concerning the federal government Is Invited to stop
by and discuss ·them with the representaUve.

Rock Springs Grange will have Its annual InSpection at 8 p.m .
Thursday at the grange hall.

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

'
District Masonic meeting
set

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
Monday; Racine Fire Department at 12:23 a.m. to Elm Wood
Apt,s. where lighting had struck; Pomeroy at 2:48a.m. to 1~
· Lincoln Heights for Michael Hubbard to Veterans Me.morlal
Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:43a.m. toMulberryAve.forTinaSiater
to Holzer Medical Center; Columbia Township Fire Department at 6:04a.m. to an electlcal fire at the Southern Ohio Coal
Company main office on Route689: Tuppers Plains at 7:05a.m:
to Reedsville for Craig Reed to Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 1: 11 p.m. to Page St. for VIrginia
Duckworth to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 6:49p.m. to
Cole St. for Sarah McCarty to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 9: 40 p.m. to Pearl St. for Celestino Cordero to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9:53p.m. to South
Third Ave. and Hartinger Parkway for Nell Warner to Holzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 10:22 p.m. to Route 143 for Dave
Cummings to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Tuesday. July 12, 1988

.•

The Daily Sentinel

tS:m~

Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They Should be le&amp;s than 300 words
long. All letters .are subject to editing and must be signed wltb name, address and
' telephone number. No unsigned letters will be Publtshed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Ohio Politics

WASHINGTON - The 1980s
brought a new wave of automobile horror stories - cars with
minds of their own that trigger
sudden, unwanted accelerations.
The Reagan administration
has apparently sided with the car
makers who claim their cars only
lurch Into trees, people or other
vehicles If the drlxerconfuses the
gas pedal with the brake.
This mistaken-pedal syndrome
has run so rampant among Audl
5000 drivers that some parking
garages In New York posted
sjgns: "No Audls." The New
Jersey Department of Motor
Vehicles only recently rescinded
a rule that no driver tests could
, be taken in Audl 5000s.
Despite t\lree recalls to tinker
with Audl 5000s, the complaints
continue to pile high. More than
1,800 complaints of runaway
Audls have been linked to at least

plagu~

400 Injuries and five deaths. All
Involve models wlt)l automatic
transmissions.
Rep. George Hochbrueckner,
D-N.Y ., can't swallow the ex pta:
nation of driver error. He asked
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Admlnlsiratlon (NHTSA)
to probe deeper. Hochbrueckner,
a former aerospace engineer,
thinks NHTSA Is reluctant to
challenge the claim of the West
German auto maker that tbe
problem sits behind the wheel,
not under the hood.
. Audl recalled the 5000 model In
1986 and Installed a shift-lock
mechanism, which forces the
driver to step on the brake before
shifting Into gear. Most of the
Incidents occured when the
driver shifted Into gear. Now. a
spokesman for Audl of America
says, "There Is nothing left to
Investigate."
Hochbrueckner Is not so sure.

In March, he pressed NHTSA to
force Audl to make publlc the
complaints, Including 400 from
owners of Alldls with the shift·
·lock protection . Our associate
Jim Lynch reviewed some of
·thOse documents. ·
Last June, Anita Galllson
backed her Audl 5000 out of her
carport In·Humphrey , Mich., and
the car lunged In reverse. It
sideswiped one tree and bashed
Into another before coming to a
stop.
Audl talked to .Galllson, In·
spected her car and filed 'this
report: "We must conclude the
driver was startled by the
scraping of her vehicle's mirror
against the house and lnadvert·
ently applied pressure to the
accelerator pedal."
This Is the way Galllson
described It to us: "It was like I

Impeachment talk
stirs up statehouse
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -In the dead of summer, when nothing else Is
going on. a 'good Republican's thoughts turn gently to -Impeaching
the governor.
·
At least that's what's happening at the Statehouse, where minority
. Republicans in the Ohio House of Representatives are planning their
; strategy for legally stringing up Gov. Richard Celeste, their favorite
,. pemocra\ic target.
·: • Some of the House's best legal minds are at work, trying to draw up
bill of particulars against the governor; whose administration has
~ J&gt;een beset by scandals, mainly stemming from unbldcontractsdoied
~ ~u t to political .allies.
.
:· · The most recent example Is at the Ohio Bureau of Employment
: Services, where at least a dozen job training grants worth close to $1
.; million were handed ou I to favored pollt!cal donors whose job training
&gt;(lrograms were questionable.
: . At least two of these grants were personally OK'd by the governor,
:. against the recommendations of staff and local community business
:: readers.
· ~ Ohio law makes it a crime to award an unbidcontra~t to anyone who
~ has contributed more than $1,000 to an official's campaign In the last
:~ two years.
"
·. • Whether th.e·Republicans can furnish· evidence to this effect against
· Celeste is open to question.
::: The first obstacle they will meet in their quest to ,lmpeach Celeste
,. will be House Speaker Vern Riffe, since a resolution must be
approved by the Democratic-controlled House.
Riffe Is no t particularly close to ·Celeste, and has expressed
· contempt for some of the things the administration has done.
·:· · But he already has said he will not tolerate any ''shenanigans" on
:' the part of Republicans to turn tht:House into an electlon-yearcircus.
., When it comes right down to it. any attempt to tar Celeste would rub
~ off on all Democrats facing election this year. including Democratic
·. House members.
:: And in planning to run for governor In 1990. Riffe hardly wants
:-celeste to go out in a cloud of scandal, since that would make It
·: difficult for a Democrat to follow him .
:• Nevertheless. for kick ing up some summer du st with their talk of
;: Impeachment. tbe Republicans have to be given an "A" for effort.
•' When they are in a distinct minority at the Statehouse, they have to
:•took for every chance to unsettle the Democrats, and they are.

..

:a

PESTRoY THE CRoPS,
E&gt;&lt;ECUTE T~E PuSHERS
AND REHABILITATE
THE USERS.

.

..

..

5USSIPIZE TtiE CRoPS,

EXoNERATE THE PuSHERS

ANP BLAME
THE USERS.

Just~Ce .SOUght

Bible school scheduled
The Hemlock Grove Church will be holding Bible school July
18 through July 22 !rom 6: 30 to8: 30each evening. aasses will he
for young people from the age of two through high school.

Gallia-Meigs free clothing
The Gallla·Melgs Community ActiOn Agency will hold free
clothing day from 9 a.m . to 12 noon Thursday. The· agency's
clothing bank Is located In the old high school building In
Cheshire.

tasks.
"There's too much work and a
lot of Injustice. I'm scared all the
time," says Gilda Prado, a
Bolivian whose pay was reduced
three years ago from $7.30 to
$5.80 per hour.
"When they cut our pay, they
gave us more work." adds
Radmila Radich, a native of
Yugoslavia, who says she was
once suspended for six weeks
because she refused to do someone else's work In adqltlon to her
own job.
Attempting to organize those
office-building cleaner's , In·
. crease their pay and Improve
their working conditions Is the
Service Employees Interna tional Union, founded early In
this century by Immigrants who
tolled for 12 hours a day keeping
buildings clean In return for $10
per week and the privilege of
living in dank basement
apartments.
Today, SElU ha s 850,000
members, but It has returned to
Its roots to mount a "Justice for

.·-

·.

~~Today in history

'·

0

L

The atmosphere, I suspect, will
be almost worshipful to Jackson.
("He's the conscience of the
party ... " etc.)
sO far, the Dukakls team has
been wooing Jackson. One· con·
sultan\, commenting on the cam-

Hospiu~l

.

Berry's World

report made

Admissions and discharges were reported by Veterans
Memorial Hospital for Monday.
Admissions were Leondls Lee, Pomeroy; Celestino Cordero,
Middleport.
,
Discharges were Clinton Faulk, Etta Cullums, Marte
Michael.

Storms do little to beat heat
By JEFF BATER

United Press International
Thunderstorms that slashed
the Atlantic Coast with strong
winds and scattered showers did
little to ease "beastly hot"
weather sizzling the East, while
heavy rain passed up the
drought-choked Farm Belt but
deluged Texas, where five people
drbwned In flash floods.
The chance of rain In Clncln·
nail tonight threatened to wash
out professional baseball's All·
Star Game at Riverfront St!lc_
dlum. In neighboring Pellnsyjvanla, on the other hand, It Is so dry
even golfers are praying for rain.
Storms raked the East Coast
from New England to northern
Florida Monday, unleashing
winds up to 70 mph In Maryland,
hall In Maine and more than 3
Inches of rain In Jacksonville.
Fla., the Natlonai 'Weather Service said. A storm knocked out
power to some 40,000 homes
around the natiOn's capital.
Some 15,000 homes and businesses In Washington's Mary- .
land suburbs were still wltilout
electricity today because of
.
downed power lines.
"We've had between 50 and 80
crews out during the night," said
Nancy Moses, spokeswoman for
the Potomac Electric Power Co.
"Restoration work Is going to
continue during the day."
Fqrecaster Hugh Crowther
said the rains brought the Atlan·
tic Seaboard a welcome but
slight reprieve from Monday's
triple-digit scorcher.
''Temperatures won't he quite
as hot as they've been but will
still be In th'e upper 80s and lower
90s," he said.
NWS . spokesman Harry Gor·
don said, "It's not going to be as
beastly hot as It's been, but It will
still be warmer than It should

Janitors" campaign not only
here In Los Angeles but also In
Atlanta, Washington, San Fran·
cisco, San Diego, Kansas City,
Philadelphia and other cities
throughout the country.
SEIU wants the nation's more
than 1 mllllon janitors to be paid
at least $5.50 per hour or $11,000
per year, an amount equal to the
federal government's poverty·
level Income for a family of four.
That hardly seems unreasonably In a city where offlce·bu lldlng
owners last year collected more
than $500 million In r~nts from
tenants and where commercial
real estate development Is so
lucrative that new projects
valued at more than $4 bllllon
.currently are planned.
But building owners and managers continue to resist the
"Ju~tice for Janitors" campaign
and to place pressure on SEIU
proponents like Aragon . "I know
I'm putting my family In danger
because I could get fired," he
says. '·But it's Important to
continue the struggle."

palgn's maximum be-nice-toJackson effort and Dukakls'
recent 10-polnt decline In the
polls, said, "You could have a
20.polnt lead in the polls. and It
would be worthless If you had a
divisive convention."

be.''

In downtown Baltimore Mon-

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPS 1411-MI)

A Dlv~ton of Multlmedt.._ Inc.

'

Published every afternoon. Monday
throu$Z:h Friday, 111 Court Sl., Po·
mcroy, Ohio, by th(' Ohio VaUey Pub·
Ushlng Company / Multimedia, Inc::••

Pomerov. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. SP·
cond cl.iss pi'J'Ia~e paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.
Mt&gt;mber : Unllro Press lnterna11onal.
Inland Dally Press AssOC'\atlon and lb"
Ohio N~spaper A5SOCiatlon. National
Adverustng fttopresentatlvP. Branham
NewspapPr Sales. 733 Third Avenue,
N('W' York. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: send address changes
to The Oallr Sentltlel. lU Court St..
Pomt'l'oy, Ohio 4~7e9.
SIJRSCKIPTION KATES

By Carrier or Moter Houle
One W('ek .... .......... .... .... .:.. ......... $1.2!i
On(' Month .. .'.............................. S5.4:5o
On(' Yf'ar ........ .. ....................... $65.00
SINGLECOPV
'
PRICE
Dally ................... .. .............. 25 Cents

Subscrltx-rs not deslrin~ttopay Ute car•
rler may remit In advan~ direct 10
The Dally Sfntlnel on a 3, 6or 12month
basil. Cr~lt will be «tven Cirri« each
week.
No subscriptions by mail permlttll!d In

areas where home carriE'I' aervlce ll

available.

..

,,

~&amp;ac..,..:.·
. ,............ lrlc:.

Malll!a.. crtollntlde Melp CouJ&amp;r

13 Weelts ......... ..... ....... ...... ....... $17.29
26 Weeks .................................. $34.06
~2 We@kl .................................. I&amp;I.M

Oulotd• Melp Coaolr

"Don't 'but ... ' me, man. Glmme your wallet."

.
.
The Meigs· Band Booster.s are making plans to serve .
breakfast at their booth at the Meigs County Fatr, If enough ·
workers will be avalla ble to assist In the booth during morning
hours. The boosters discussed the fair booth at their July
meeting. The pricing of food Items was also discussed.
It was voted by the majority of boosters present that the
purchase of special uniforms, such as !bose needed by the field
commander and majorettes , should be the responslbllty of the
student, since special uniforms cannot usually be passed on
.
from year to year.
Tony Dingus. band director, presented Information on this
year's band camp which will he held Sunday, July 24, through
Saturday. July 30, at Cedar Lakes In Ripley, W.Va. Cost of the
camp will be $71 per ,student. Any questions regarding camp
should be directed to Dingus.
.
The boosters also discussed the possible purchase of a
microwave, coffeepot or hot dogger for the group. as weUas the
purchase or a television or VCR for the football season
fundralser.
·
The next regular band boosters' meeting will be Monday,
Aug. 1. 7 p.m .. at the high school.

Night swimming Is being held at the Middleport Pool on
Tuesday and Thursday· evenings from 8 to 10 p.m. Children
Iunder the age of seven must be accompanied by an adult.
Admission Is 50 cents a person even for thOse having season
tickets.
·

"Love feast' Or 'blood bath'? -----------------Ben Wattenberg
supporters say they have already.
made the party more "progres·
slve" (i.e., liberal), and they
Intend to make it even more so.
That's not what voters want to
hear. Quite the opposite: The
perception of the Democrats
being too liberal has been at the
root of Democrats losing four of
the last five presidential elec·
tlons.
Jackson also exhibits certain
party-cr ashlng tendenCies. In
Boston, just before meeting the
putative nominee, Jackson said,
"In some sense, Mike Dukakls
and I have the challenge of
forming a new equation, a new
coalition, to take our nation to
another level of moral
consideration.•'
Huh? Jackson lost In the
primaries. What puts him In the
new-equation-forming business?
What happens If rank-and-file
voters get the Idea that a vote for
Dukakls Is a vote for Jackson's
new equation?
It's tricky. The Jackson con·
ventlon forces will likely brng up
at least two major resolutions cut defense, raise taxes - that
, the Dukakls majority will vote
down. Yet, while these are
Important Issues, the arguments
already seem like a pre·
programme&lt;! minuet, taking
place In a certain context and
atmosphere. The context Is that
there were about 40 Democratic
debates. and Dukakls did not
sharply dls11gree with Jackson.

Booster meeting held

Night swimming slated

for janitors_____;_R_o_be_rt_W_al_ter_s

square foot annually, they are
enormously profitable for their
owners. (The 52-story twin towers of Areo Plaza were sold In a
cash transaction two years ago
for $620 million.)
Many of the tenants are law.
firms whose senior partners bill
clients for their time at rates of
$200 per hour and up. Other·
occupants Include banks, securi·
ties dealers and high-priced ·
consultants.
Cleaning up their mess at the
end of the workday are crews of
underpaid, overworked janlters. ·
many of them Illegal immigrants
fearful that they will be deported
If they complain about Intolerable working conditions.
The typical janitor ~gins
works at 5:30 p.m. and is
required to clean three full floors
(about 30,000 square feet) in the
following eight hours - but
there's nqt always enough time to
do the job. As a result, many
janitors work "off the clock."
without pay, In the pre-dawn
hours to complete their assigned

EMS answers 10 rolls

The fifth annual 12th Mas9nlc District Association picnic will
be held at 4:30p.m. on July 24 at the Bob Evans Farm Shelter
House In Rio Grande.

was shot out of a cannon. I heard
a sound li)&lt;e the engine was
shifting gears and then It took off.
I had both feet o~ the brake. I
couldn't make the car go that
fast" GaUls on claims her Audl
5000 hit 40 miles per hour before
the trees .got In the way. Her car
waJ' totaled.
Hochbrueckner Is so unhappy
with NHTSA's work that he has
launched his own study of Audl' s
problem. He argues that the
premise of driver error doesn't
make sense because there are
more sudden·acceleratlon complaints about Audl 500s than·
there have been about any other
car In NHTSA's 28-year history.
The NHTSA "should take Its
blinders off," Hochbrueckner
says.
.~o
He suspects a hlgh·tech elec·
tronlcs malfunction, possibly
computer failure in the Audl' s
cruIse control.
An NHTSA spokesman said the
agency has already examined
the possible role of electronics
and continues to study the Audl
5000. The agency also has Investigated sudden-acceleration complaints In nine other car models .
besides the troubled Audls.
Hochbrueckner' s Investigation
:s supported by the Center for
Auto Safety, a consumer group
that accused the Reagan admln·
lstratlon of being soft on auto
safety.
Meanwhile, with more than 100
court cases pending against
Audl, the company has proposed
a settlement that would give
390,000 current Audl owners up to
a $2,000rebaieon the purchase of
a new Audl.
At least one of the seven
plaintiffs named In the class
action suit representing the
390,000 owners Is outraged at the
settlement offer. He told us, "It's
an Insult. The last thing I want t.:&gt;
do is buy another car from Audl.
I'd rather get $1 In a settlement
than credit toward another
Audi."

LOSANGELES(NEA) -Juan
Aragon faithfully sends at least
$50 every week to his wife In
Guatemala to help support his
family - but saving even thai
modest amount isn't easy for a
m'ln who earns only $4.25 per
hour cleaning office buildings.
Few benefits accompany those
low wages. Aragon, who left his
native country t;wo years ago In
search of a better life, Is allowed
only a single week of vacation
every year and has no sick leave,
~
no medical Insurance and no
retirement fund.
•
·: The state treasury is a little fatter than normal at this time of year.
"All we ask," he says plain·
:· with almost $600 million to start the new fiscal year.
tively, "is to be treated fairly and
:' Budget and tax officials reported last week that the state has $297 humanely by our bosses and to
·. million in Its General Revenue Fund, or checking account, and $284 receive a decent salary for doing
&gt; million in Its Budget Stabilization Fund, or savings account.
our work."
•: The General Revenue Fund balance Is considered within normal
But that's easier said than done
~; limits. and the so-called rainy day fund , or savings account, was · for the approximately 2,000 men
• esta blished several years ago as a cushion against hard economic and women who every weeknight
·: ti.mes.
clean the offices of some of the
:; There will be cries of "surplus" from conservatives whO believe the city's biggest firms, ensconced In
:&lt; state tax bite is too high . Llberals .wlll have their hands out, ready to chrome· and glass-sheathed of·
·. spend the extra monev.
flee towers.
Because space In those build:. But the Celeste administration appears to have done a good job with
:. it.s available resources. and Is not spending all the money It takes In. Ings rents for $25 to $30 per
•: On the horizon are growing health care costs and obligations to
~; health care programs previously financed from Washington. In
:- addition, new collectively bargained wage contracts with state
-: employees will eat up some of I he extra money.
.• There Is the prospect of an economic downturn late next year,
: according to Budget Director Lee Walker. And many of Ohio's
Democrats seem to know only
•: schools could be facing bankruptcy If the trend In local tax levy
two ways to describe their
:• failures continues.
quadrennial
convention - either
.; Like the wise sq uirrel. the Celeste administration has stored
as
a
"love
feast"
or a . "blood
~ something away for the winter ahead.
bath."
Democrats feel that history
shows the unity of a love feast
••
••
sets up victory. Alternatively,
:·
they believe that the chaos and
divisiveness of a blood bath
yields defeat. There Is a ratio·
nale. Much of the Image of a
•
~ Today is Tuesday, July 12. the 194th day of 1988 with 172 to
party Is formed during the
:·rollow . ·
·
heavily televised conventions.
·: The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
Americans show distrust of poUt·
' The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
leans who meet In order to beat
:• The e·:ening star is Saturn.
upon one another with large wet
-; Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They
fish. This month the Democrats
:•Include Roman emperor Julius Caesar In 100 B.C.; American
will probably have a love feast In
::Writer Henry David Thoreau In 1817; Italian painter and
Atlanta. They are pleased. The
'-sculptor Amedeo Modlgllanl In 18S4; photography pioneer
mantra is recited: "We've never
:;George Eastman In 1854; composer Oscar Hamrnersteln and
been more unified."
'-author-architect ·R. Buckmlnster Fuller, Inventor of the
Still, the love· feast may be
:•geodesic dome,ln 1895; comedlaq Milton Berle In 1908 (age SO);
oversold this time. There ought
:;painter Andrew Wyeth In 1917 (age 71); General Motors
to be another phrase Democrats
:-chairman Roger B. Smith In 1925 (age 63); pianist Van Cliburn
could wish for'- more combative
.:In 1934 (age 54); comedian-actor Bill Cosby In 1937 (age51); and
than a love feast and less messy
:·actress Cheryl Ladd In 1951 (age 37).
than a blood bath. How about a
.; On this date In history:
"bold bicker" !)r a "rhetorical
:· In 1862, the U.S. Medal of Honor was authorized by Congress.
wrangle''?
:: In 1933, a new U.S. Industrial code was established to fix a
The reason for such unorthod•. minimum wage of 40 cents an hour.
oxy Is Jesse Jackson. So terrified
:; In 1972, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota was
are the Democrats of a chaotic
· nominated as the Democrat candidate for president. He lost In
convention, or of black voters not
: November to Republlcan Richard Nixon.
turning out to vote, that they are
:· In 1984, Democrat presidential nominee Walter Mondale
In danger of bending over back; named as his running mate -New York Congresswoman
ward to be super-nice to Jackson. ·
~Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman to share a ·major U.S.
In general, It's fine to be
'• jlarty's presldenUal ticket.
super-nice. But Jackson comes
• A thought for the day: BuckmlnSter Fuller wrote, "The most
with baggage. He hss preached a
Important fact abOut Spaceship Earth: an Instruction book
mess~ge on the far left of the
· didn't come with lt."
•
spectrum. He and his most vocal

..

---Meigs news ·briefs-----------------.

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

Complaints to

The Daily Sentiuel Page-3

Poma'Oy-Middleport. Ohio

TutlldaJy, July 12, 1988

IJWeetu ..................... ,............ SIUO
26 Weetu .......................... ,....... DI.IO
~2 Weetu .................................. !11:7.«1

1. ....

·'

By United Press lnter.-tlonal
Several large timber fires
were
burning today In Alaska,
legislative package to help
where
flames have charred .
farmers In the Midwest, where
nearly
'half
a million acres, but
he Is to personally survey tl&gt;e
wildfires
that
have plagued other
damage Thursday.
parts
of
the
drought-parched
· The dry spell Is shriveling
West
were
mostly
contained or
young oat, corn. and hay crops In
under control.
western Pennsylvania, and at the
Firefighters declared a 1.@
Oakmont Country .Club In subur- acre blaze near Las Ve!l'as, Nev.,
ban Pittsburgh gro.ndskeepers under control Monday night, and
are trying to conserve water.
a. 400-acre fire . near Palm
"There's an old saying, ' I~ Springs, Calif., was surrounded
never rains on the golf course.
by flrellnes.
But f?r once, we're hoping It will.
A blaze In eas.ter'n· Idaho's
That s the last thing In the world Caribou National Forest ex·
that golfers usually hope for , panded from 925 acres to more
too," said Pat LaRocca, man- than 1,000 by Monday night, but
ager of the posh course that has winds died down from 50 mph
hosted numerous U.S. Open
championships.
In New York City, storm
damage and equipment failure
combined to cut electricity to
13,000 Staten Island residents
and a sewage treatment plant.
Beaches on Staten Island and
at Coney Island were expected to
be closed to bathers today
because of the llkellhood that
sewage destined for the crippled
Port Richmond Pollution Control
Plant would be dumped Into a
nearby waterway, the city
Health Department said:
''It would be like swimming In
a toilet bowl and one would not ,
want to do that," said Marvin
Bogner, spokesman for the
Health Department.
New Englanders came to the
ald of some O,hlo f.armers, where
the drought Is the worst for the
first half of the year since
authorities began keepln_g
weather records In 1873, the Ohio
Agricultural Statistics Service
said Monday .
Trucks from Vermont, 850
miles away. rolled Into Kenton,
Ohio, with 6,000 bales of hay for
about 165 farmers, Including 70
Amish families from Hardin and
Logan counties.

I Area death I
Allt5e M. Priddy

Allee M. Priddy, 76, Beech
Grove Road, Rutland, died early
Tueaday at Veterans Memorial
Holpltal. Arrangements are be1111 completed at the Ewing
Fueral Home In Pomeroy.

'

fl
J. •·

day, It hit a record 102 degrees,
while Newark, N.J., had 101,
Philadelphia reached 100, Boston
and New York City recorded 98.
and National Airport outside
Washington, D.C., reported 99.
A cold front 'reaching from the
eastern Great Lakes through the
mlddle Mississippi Valley and
Into the southern Plains brought
scattered showers and thunderstorms Sunday night and Monday to areas of the Farm Belt
struggling· i!l the throes of a
crop-devastating drought.
J
But farmers complained the
moisture would do little 10 help
the nation's corn crop. The rain
was "too little, too late" to save
half of the corn said Ohio Farm
Bureau Feder~tlon spokesman
Kirby Hldy.
Flash floods swe.pt dry
creekbeds In Texas Hill Country.
drowning four members of a San
Jose, Calif., famlly whose car
was swept along a flooded draw
near Sheffield, Texas. late Sunday. The father survived the
flood by clinging to a tree all
night until the water subsided.
officials said.
The rushing Guadelupe River
drowned a Boy Scout and caqled
away his scoutmaster Monday at
a crossing near Hunt, said Kerr
county Chief Sheriff's Deputy
Bobby Love The body of the
13-year-old ~yfrom San Antonio
was found Monday evening: but
the scoutmaster was still miss·
lng. he said.
More rains hit Texas ·e arly
today and the weather service
posted flash flood warnings for
parts of the stllte. Forecasters
said 5.37 Inches of rain fell In
HuntCounty Bonham Texasgot
4.53 Inches ~nd Dalla's had 4.11
4nches
Two. deaths In Massachusetts
Tuesday night and early today
were blamed on the weather.
Barbara Dambrosio, 65, of
Bradford, Mass., died late Mon·
day In a car crash that occurred
during a heavy rainstorm. An
unidentified 21-year·old Somerville, Mass., man apparently
drowned early today during a
storm In Upper Mystic Lake In
Medford, Mass.
·
Rain canceled pre·All·Star
Game festivities, Including a
home-run contest, at Riverfront
Stad!W'II Monday.
It marked the first time since
Jhe first week In April It rained
two straight days In drought·
stricken ·Qnclnnati, said the
NWS, which fol't!Casta 40percent
chance of rain for tonight.
The baseball commissioner's
office made no Immediate an·
nouncement on a plan In case of a
ralnout of the game.
In Washington, President Rea·
gan began a series of meetings
Monday to dlliCUss the drought
with an eye toward producing a

.

'

. ....

'

'

KENTON. Ohio (UP[)
Nearly " dozen tractor-trailer
rigs from Vermont rolled Into the
Hardin County fairgrounds Monday. carrying 6,000 bates of hay
and an undetermined amount of
goodwill to drought-sttlcken
farmers. .
Between 160 and 170 farmers,
lncludlng70 Amish families from
Hardin and Logan counties,
received the hay, said · Ed
1\:llngler, Hardin County's cooperatlve extension agent.
"It's nice to be part of some·
thing where I can see the
results," said Jim Galletti, a
driver from Barre, Vt. ''I'm able
to see It unloaded to the people
who need it. "
Tim Claggett, a horse breeder
from Bridgewater, VL. said the,
small size of Vermont's farms
made the project a little difficult
to organize.
"It's been a privilege for us In
Vermont to do this. It tak~any
farmers to !Ill U~J a truck In
Vermont,'' he said.
Claggett said overnight lodg·.
Ing, meals and tolls along the
New York turnpike were donated
to the group of 11 trucks ,' which
left Vermont on Saturday.
The drivers for the St . Johnsbury Trucking Co. also volunleered their time to make the
850-mlle trip to the Northwest
Ohio farming community • lo·
cated about 65 miles north of
Columbus, he said.
Claggett organized the hayllft
with the understllndlng that the
' Amish receive some of the hay ·
Claggett said he deals with the
religious sect because of his
horse breeding.
At least three more truckloads
ot hay were scheduled to arrive

In Kenton later In the week, he
said.
The Amish families and
members of 18churches later fed
the drivers and their lielpers at a
nellrby church.
"I hope you're as appreciative
of this as I am. It's not a case Of
Vermont giving out a surplus.
They're giving out of a need they
see down here. That's the beau!¥
of lt,"l\:llngler said.
· One of the drivers brought a
letter wrHten by a 6-year.old girl
from Pittsford, Vt .. to he dell~
vered with the hay.
"Dear Mr. and Mrs. Farmer: I
hope you enjoy this hay. Feed
your cows good wllh it . Love,
Amanda Jo Belbem." the letter
stated.
Peter Smith. a former Ver·
mont lieutenant governor who Is
running for Congress. r6de with
the drivers.
"It was unbelievable. Absolutely unbellevable,",Smlth said
in reaction to the hay lift. "One of
the great things about this
country Is that we areabfetoglve
and receive with dignity.
"When these trucks came
around the corner, the emotions
were extraordinary and hlgll.
People were crying, people were
cheering, people were praying. It
was one of the most extraordlnary experiences I've had In my
life," Smith said.
Smith said he was unprepared
for what he saw when he rode
through the parched farmland.
"It Is really brutlll. It's brown
and the ground Is like cement/'
Smith said.

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

rll'eS contained

gusts to 15-25 mph at the lower
elevations.
The lightning-caused fire burn·
log about 7 miles northeast of
Malad, Idaho, charred mostly
sagebrush and range land .
A forest spokeswoman said
about 75 firefighters were on the ·
lines Monday night trying to keep
the blaze from burning deeper
Into stands of Umber. There was
no estimated time of
containment.
A fire 10 miles east of the
trans-Alaska oil pipeline grew to
148,800 acres Monday, but not In
the direction of the on artery , ,
said Sue Mitchell, spokeswoman
for the Bureau of Land Management In Fairbanks.

..

Lottery

. CLEVELAND !UP[) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
741.
Ticket sales total!!(~ $1,255,607,
with a payoff due of $1,115,084.50.
PICK-t
1476.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$198,045.50, with a payoff due of
$89,273.
PICK4 $1 straight bet pays ·
$3.816. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$159.

Stocks
Dally olock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Bryce 1111d Mark SmHh
of Blunt, Ellis .1: Loewt
Am Electric Power .............. 28~
AT&amp;T .................................26~
Ashland Oil ........................ 73~
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Charming Shoppes ....... ...... .14~
City Holding Co ......... :......... 32
Federal Mogul. ................... 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 61%
Heck's lnc ........................... 13A
Key Centurion .................... 38~
Lands' End ......................... 283A
Umlted Inc ........... :............ 23"'
Multimedia Inc ................... 70'j4
Rax Restaurants .................. 4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ lilA
Shoney's Inc .. ............... ....... 27
Wendy's Intl ........................ 5"'
Worthlngton·Ind ................. 23~

.IJ

...

Most Westem

Hay' arrives in Ohio

•

•

·- J

~

r

'-

.,

~

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR TAB
IS COMING ON .AUGUST 12th
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
AUG. 5th
CALL DAVE OR BRIAN TO PLACE YOUR
AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 992-2155 FOR DETAILS
.- .. . . . .

'

•

.. ""

�'

·--· ....
Paga-4-The Deily Sentinel

Success comes fast
to two All-Stars

CINCIJiiNATI (UP!) -Forget
that baseballwtsdomaboutneedlng five years to evaluate a trade.
Danny Ja~kson calls his a
success after only eight months.
~ does Kurt Stillwell.
And .no one In either league
would disagree. Both players
have landed In tonight's All-Star
Game at Riverfront Stadium.
"The trade has been great for
me," said SIUlwell, now a short. stop for the Kansas City Royals.
"It's like a new life."
"I think It's been real good for
both teams," added Jackson,
now pitching for the Cincinnati
Reds. "I know he's doing real
well because I look at their box
scores all the time. I still have so
many friends there. There can't
have been a better endl'ng than
this."
Jackson, 26, llnlshed last sea:
son with a 9-18 record In Kansas

City. Stillwell was fighting Barry
Larkin for playing time in
Cincinnati. On Nov . 6, the clubs
made a deal. Jackson and
shortstop Angel Salazar went to
tile Reds for Stillwell and right·
bander Ted Power.
Stillwell. batting .261 with
seven homers and 36 RBI. no
longer must worry about playing
time. If anything, he may enjoy
opposing Larkin, who made the
NL team.
·
"I feel better and I'm playing
betier." he said. "I have more
security and therefore I have
more fun. That's the key lor me.
The more I play. the more I
relax. It was a tense sltuat lon
with the Reds. But really the
trade has worked out great for
both sides."
Jackson said he is enjoying his
new ~ltuatlon In Cincinnati. He
chatted Monday with right·

hander Mark Gublcza, a former
teammate who also made the
squad .
.
"The difference Is simply I'm
more relaxed," Jackson said.
"And of courSe they're scoring
more runs for me. I've always
felt I can be the type pitcher I

am ...

Stillwell became an All-Star as
a result of an injury to White Sox
shortstop Ozzle Guillen. The
switch leaves the American
League without a White Sox
player able to perform, though
Guillen will watch from the
bench.

also played himself Into tonight's Sox shortstop Ozzle Guillen.
CINCII'I'NATI IUP!).- About
Stillwell was with Cincinnati
All-Star game.
40,000 people paid $4 each to sllln
last
year and near the end of the
On Monday, Sabo edged his
the rain and watch 30 minutes of
season
was beaten out by Barry
All-Star batting practice Mon- way through a mob of people on
Larkin
for the starting shortstop
day, hundreds of photographers Riverfront Stadium's rain·
job.
That
led to Stillwell's off·
snapped thousands of pictures, a
soaked Astroturf to take a couple
season
trade
to Kansas City.
blimp circled overhead and Chris of swings In the batting cage. He
Now,
both
Stillwell
and Larkin
hit a home ru.n and 40,000 people
Sabo loved II .
. "Look, there 's my hero, Lance screamed. Sabo shook his head In find themselves All-Stars.
"Barry and I chatted a llttle bit
Parrish," said Sabo. "I used to disbelief.
today
and we congratulated each
watch him play In Detroit. But
Sabo, along with the 40,000
other
on having good years,"
fans, had hoped to w,atch several
I'm afral'd to go talk to him.
said
StUlwell.
"I like coming
"Look, there's Will Clark. He's All-Stars compete In a home run
back
to
Cincinnati
for this game,
In the locker next to me. It's hard htttlng contest after batting
I'm
glad
to
be playll)g
but
to believe. I think he's one of the practice, but rain forced cancel·
regularly
In
Kansas
City.
Tbere' s '':
latlon of the competition and also
greatest players In· baseball.
more
!II!Curlty,
and
therefore
"I tell you, It's exciting seeing washed out the American League
all these stars. It's neat. I don't batting practice. The rain did more fun for me there. It was a
create a new event, however, tense situation on the Reds."
feel I belong.
Back In the National League
belly-flopping. ·
"But," Sabo quickly added,
clubhouse.
Sabo watched · as
" I 'll take it."
A couple of All-Star pitchers.
Just four months ago, during Danny Jackson of Cincinnati and dozens of reporters crowded
spring training, the most Sabo David Cone . of the New York around established New York
was hoping for this year was to Mets, made belly-flop dives on a Mets' All-Stars like Darryl
make the Cincinnati Reds' roster sheet of plastic covering home Strawberry, Dwight Gooi:len and
Gary Carter:
as a utility Infielder.
plate and skidded 20 feet.
A few reporters wandered over
Over In the American League
As It turned ou~. Reds' regular
In
Sabo's directlori and the rookie
third baseman Buddy Bell got ' · clubhouse, Kansas City Royals ·
carefully
checked their
hurt just' before the start of the shortstop Kurt Stillwell was
nametags.
season, Sabo replaced him and trying to get over "shock and
"Hey, 'Detroit Free Press," '
played so well that the Reds dlsbellef" at being named to the
recently traded Bell. The rookie All-Star team on Sunday to Sabo blurted out. "I used to
replace Injured 'Chicago White deliver that pa.per."

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Atlanta
Braves outfielder Dale Murphy
won the ~8th Roberto Clemente
. Award, given annually to the
player who serves baseball best
on and off the field.
"I am honored to receive an
award of this kind,'' Murphy sa ld
of the honor named for the
former Hall of Fa me outfielder of
the Pirates who died during a
mercy mission to Nicaragua.
Murphy Is a two-time National
League MVP who Is struggling
on the te~m with the NL's worst
record.
"This has been an Interesting
year for me and the Braves," he
said. "I would say this has been
lhe highlight of my season."
Willie Stargell. who will serve
as the NL's honorary captain.
spoke several minutes after
Murphy .
"This has- been a very difficult
year for me. also." said Stargell,
who was fired as a Braves coach
earlier In the season along with
Manager Chuck Tanner. "But at
least he (Murphy) still has a
job."

Rose and said: "Whenigrowupl
want to be just like him."
Roseresponded: "You'reoffto
a good start."
The two men then shared a
high five.

Bos.ton right-hander R9ger Clemens will pitch aftE(r Twins
te!t-hander Frank Viola opens.
Kellv said he Is unsure how he
will· set up his ; pitchers
thereafter.

There are only nine NLplayers
hitting better than .300 at the
break, and just two are starting:
Cubs right fielder Andre Dawson
( .308) and Pittsburgh third base·
man Bobby Bonilla 1.303).
Only one NL player over .300,
Los Angeles outfielder . John
Shelby (.311) was not picked for
the team.

Kansas City's Gedrge Brett
made the AL team for the 13th
time. The first 12 came as a third
baseman. This year, he's going
as a first baseman. ,

NL Manager Whitey Herzog
has a few quibbles about
baseball:
"No. I is that 85 million people
vote for the All-Star teams.
That's not true. You get a lot of
guys who vote 1,000 tlm£&gt;s. ·
"The other one is that minorleague attendance was at an
all-time high last s£&gt;ason. Heck. a
lot or times a grocery chain bu~·s
all the tickets and you have a
sellout."

However, his locker In the AL
clubhouse Is betwe~n Mlnne~o· ..r
ta's Garv Gaettl and Boston's
Wad£&gt; Boggs both third
basemen.
"This year I'm a first baseman," Brett said. '·'But I never
thought I'd be here. Not with first
basemen In the AL like Pete
O'Brien, Kent Hrbek, Don Mat·
tingly, Mark McGwlre and Wally
Joyner. When our traveling secretary came up to me two
months ago and asked If I wanted
tickets to ttie All-Star Game, 1
asked him If ·he was crazy. But
when Tom Kelly picked me that
was a great achievl'ment..''

Boston third baseman Wade
Boggs. the AL's leading hitter.
was doing interviews with one
group of reporters while Reds
Manager Pete Rose. the major
leagues' all-time hit leader, was
doing Interviews with another.
The two men were nearlv back to
•
back.
Rose began to elbow Boggs and
the two pushed and shoved
joking!)' . Boggs then pointed at

The All-Star managers did
more than anno,unc£&gt; their starting pitchers · Monday. They
named who will follow as well.
NL skipper Whitey H£&gt;rzog
says Houston southpa": Bob
Knepper will follow Met rlghty
Dwight Gooden. Cincinnati lefty
Danny Jackson or Philadelphia
right y Kevin Grosss will be the
third NL pitcher.
AL Manager Tom Kelly said

Brett said he prefers playing
All -Star Games 1 In NL sites
because It gives him a chance to
visit new cities and stadiums.
Brett said he had never been to
Cincinnati before. Playing In ·
Riverfront Stadium, he says, will
reduce the major-league parks
he has not played In to Chicago's
Wrigley Field , Plttsburgh·'s
Three Rivers Stadium and Atlanta's Fulton County Stadium.

---

CLEMENTE AWARD- Atlanta Braves' Dale
Murphy, right, accepts the Roberto Clemente
Award Monday from Johnny Bench. The award Is

presented annually by Major League Baseball to
the player who best ex em pllfles the game hath on
and off the field. (UP I)

Minor league marriage
appears to be · working out
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPli For all its problems , the trial
marriage between the International League and American
Association may lead to a las tl ng
relationship.
"I think it's a grand experiment, " said Mike Tamburro,
president of .the Pawtucket Red
Sox of the IL. "1 think It enhances
the playoffs. But I've seen some
shortcomings from a financial
point of view."
'The Denver Zephyrs of the AA
know all about that. They have
logged more than 10.000 miles to
play IL teams at an added cost
Robert Howsam Jr. , the presi dent and general manager, estimates at $200,000.
"It's tough to get to Maine and
Pawtucket," Zephyrs Manager
Duffy Dyer said. "Youdon'teven
g~;&gt;t unpacked during the twogame series. You get ln. go to the
ball park, spend the night, play
tl(e next day and leave the next
morning."
Added Mike Beck. publiC rela tions director for the Maine
Phillles of the IL: "We did a West
Co~st swing with the Western
Division of the AmeriCan Assocla~!On and played 10 games In 10
.days In four cities .... Living out
pt.a suitcase Is one price you have
to pay."
Charlie O'Brien is a Denver
catcher recently called up the by

parent Milwaukee Brewers.
"I think it stinks." he said.
"It's the worst idea ever. The
travel is terrible. I haven' I talked
to one player who likes it and I
talked to a lot of players."
The aiUance was arinounced
during the winter months. TheIL
and AA represent two of the three
Triple-A leagues. the other being
the Pacific Coast League . The
clubs . one rung below the top
level, are affiliated with majorleague teams .
"One thing that benefited us
was that it got people talking
baseball in the winter months
when it is hard to get baseball lo
the people when they're talking
football or basketba ll." said
George Sisler, general mana ger
of the Columbus Clippers of the
IL.
The experiment will be discussed when the AAA clubs meet
this week In Buffalo In conjunction with the AAA All-Star Game
Wednesday night.
"I've heard noth ing but pas tlve
reaction," said Harold Cooper,
president of the IL and commissioner of the AAA -Alllance.
"There has been some negative
talk, like the Increase In transportation. but ·they're not opposed to the alliance .
"The players seem to like lt.
The umpires seem to like lt. If
this Is decided to go ahead with It,
I
. would recommend to go Into a

Autopsy e~pected on Watts
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UP!) The Clark County Coroner's
office said Monday It would be
several days before au topsy
re!Jorts were completed on amateur boxer Harold Watts who
died dJrlng the weekend after
suffering head Injuries while
sparring with a professional
boxer.
.
The coroner's office Is await·
lng a report on toxocology tests,
omctals said.
Watts, 24, died saturday mornIng wllen be was removed from
t

(

By GEOFF OSBORNE
Trlbuae Staff Writer
In the first two months of the
season, nobody took the Cleveland Indians seriously, but now
that the Tribe has recently run
upon hard times against Its foes
In the American League East,
"It's •not so easy the second
around, because now we're getting respect, " said Tommy
Spencer, first base coach of the
Indians.
Spencer, a Gallipolis native
who won 12 varsity letters In four
sports at Gallla Academy High
School before ~tartlnghls profes·
slonal playing career with the
Cincinnati Reds organization In
1969, said that the days are past
"when teams like the Yankees
could say, 'we can rest (first
baseman Don) Mattingly and
(outfielder Dave 1 Winfield when
we play Cleveland .' Because of
the change, lt'sfun to come.to the
ballpark now that we're a
contender ."
However, he warned that the
Indians would have to keep
things In perspective, as "this Is
a new type or success for us. a
transition from being last to
being a contender. We're a highly
emotional team, and the team
has to control that energy and
channel It properly. Because we
haven't been able to control all
that emotional energy, that's
why we moved from 15 games
above .500 Iearly In the season!
to three games above .500."
However, Spencer said, "the
Indians should finish In .the top
four teams In the AL East, but It
would be unrealistic to expect us

Murphy wins Clemente Award;
Boggs wants to be just like Pete ·

"'

life support systems at the
request of the family after Dr.
Lonnie Hammargren pronounced the athlete brain dead .
Watts recently moved from
Cincinnati, Ohio. to Las Vegas to
train for a professional boxing
career.
He collapsed and lost consciousness after severpl sparring
rounds Thursday with prates·
slonal boxer Jet! Franklin.
Hospital attendants say Watts.
who underwent brain surgery,
never regained consciousness.
I

·---

..

Pony League tourney
opens in Middleport

Lyle favored in British O·p en

•

MAC to include

all teams in
b(JSketball tourney

•

•

IS yoUR
HOIVIE
woRTH-

.

s&amp;o,oOO

''Be/tone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem...jind out
if they can .
help you too!''

Indians' Bell

at shortstop

OR IVIORE?

som

.

~

Hubbard tournament
continues in Meigs

Power shortage cause of Indians' woes

.

Zuvella replaces

to finish first. Alter all. we lost
assists. because If they do, that
101 games last year. and we have ~ tells me that people are taking
basically the same people on this
chances on them. I don't want
year's team. We're about a year
runn~rs doing that."
or two away from being a top
However. ·he said the Infield
contender."
leaves something to be desired.
The team
"We lack overall range on the
"We're not where we want to lntleld, which means the coaches
be, but we're making steps In have to position them. We need a
front -line shortstop along ·the
that direction." Spencer said.
And he told of some of those steps lines of an Ozzle Smith or
(Chicago White Sox shortstop)
that have been made In the
day-to-day performances of Ozz!e Guillen. but where do we
find one?"
some of the Indians players.
On catcher Andy Allanson:
Proud papa
" He's the top catcher In the
Spencer. who has been the
American League. It's an Injus- coaching ranks since ending his
tice that he wasn't named start· playing career with the White
lng catcher on the All-Star team. Sox in 1978 (when he played
On pitcher Doug Jones: "He center field for two months for an
made the team on the last day of Injured Chet Lemon), has
spring training. He has been a coached several ~layers who .
pleasant surprlse'for us. He has a have since graduated to the
change-up that Is a kind of a major leagues, among them the
Pirates' Jose Lind and the Cubs'
screwball."
"We have the potential to have Derrln Jackson, Lester Lancasthe best defensive outfield In ter, Greg Maddux, Rafael Pal·
baseball, with Cory Snyder In metro, and Gary Varsho.
"I feel like a proud papa when I
right field, (Joe) Carter in center
as John AJUzer, who coached Spencer's
SIGNS AUTOGRAPH - Gallipolis native
and Mel Hall In left," said see . those ktlis In the major
Lel)gl!e Senators team from 1961 to lt63, looks on
TommY, Spencer, center, first b!'"e coach of the
Spencer, a former outfielder leagues," he said.
at
·righ,. Spencer plans to be In town untO
Cleveland Indians, signs an autograph lor Aaron
lfe was Manager of the Year
whose coaching responsibility
Wednesday, when the Trlhe returns to practice to : :
Queen, son of Nancy and Randy Skaggs ol Rio
includes coaching the out- with the Cubs' minor-league
get ready lor the second hall of the season.
Grande, during Spencer's autograph session In
fielders. "Snyder has a great team In Geneva. N.Y . in 1987.
(Tribune photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
:~
the lObby at Ohio Valley Bank Monday morning,
arm, Carter has great speed and Before Geneva he managed the
the White Sox and the Cubs when
Hall ha~ great jumping ability, Cubs' farm team In Pittsfield,
Hank
Mass.
In
1986.
Peters (the Indians' newly which helps In catching potential
hired
general manager) called
Spencer .said he would like to
home runs."
·
Spencer sald that he's trying to manage In the major leagues, me," he said. "Now thatl'm with
the Indians, Ithink I've brought a
motivate the trio to elevate Its "but that's four or five years
little more exposure to the
defensive play to the level of their down the road,' ·wherever the
SYRACUSE- In action at the collected a total of ten hits . J.
Indians by being from here, now
offensive play (Snyder hit 33 HRs situation arises."
Bill
Hubbard Memorial Little Stump was tagged with the
that I've seen a few kids wearing
When he was hired as the
and Carter bild 106 RB!s last
League
tournament, Middle· Merchant loss .
Indians caps In town," he added,
year). He added, "I want their Indians' first base coach In
Drummer was the big gun at
port's
Cardinals,
Chester, Doctor
defense to improve and I don't . November, 1987, "I was Inquir- noting Gallipolis Is In the heart of
the
plate for Hubbard's GreenPizza of Athens and Syracuse's
want them lo lead the league In Ing into broadcasting jobs with Reds country.
house
squad, going three for four,
Hubbard's Greenhouse entries
including
two roundtrtppers to
all posted wills to advance.
lead
the
Syracuse
team to a 12-2
Chester had an easy night of it
win over the Albany Farmers.
as they picked up their win on a
In this contest, J. Northrup was
forfeit when the Mason Mudsox
the winning pitcher and he, too,
failed to appear.
The Cardinal's Jason Ervin picked up a homerun In the
ago, and the pitching has
On the plus side, Ron Kittle hit changes. Greg Swindell started
By ROBERTO DIAS
turned In a top-notch perfor- game. Northrup received help
struggled after heady begin· 12 homers until foot problems the year butwlnnlnglOof his first
UPI Sports Wfller
.
mance as he chalked up a from teammates T . Cleland, who
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Afterr n!ngs. Even theoveralldefensels · sidelined him. Kittle Is expected 11 decisions. but has lost his last
no-hitter against the Albany banged out a pair of singles, and
beginning to sliow signs of to be the fuU-time designated six amid rumors of a hidden
winning 16 of the first 20 games,
Merchants. Ervin walked only R. Grueser. who contributed a
Injury. The left-hander Insists his
the Cleveland Indians have fatigue, with even first baseman hitter In the second half.
four batters and recorded thir- base hit of his own.
Willie
Upshaw
making
atypl·
''The
homers
are
down
but
the
arm
and shoulder are healthy.
settled Into an anemic pace that
Scott Chapman absorbed the
teen strikeouts In a five inning
callv careless .errors In the past RBI are sUghtly up 1363 to358) ," but appears to have problems
'las Manager Doc Edwards reas10-0 victory . He also aided his loss and Albany managed only
weei.
say·s Edwards. "What's also a striding during his delivery.
sessing his lineup.
cause by rapping out two singles one hit, a first !lining home run.
John Farrell Is 9-6. Tom
hit
78
homers,
21
concern Is the fact that we're not
Cleveland
has
Cleveland has lost 39 of Its last
and a double as the Cardinals off Northrup.
fewer than this point last year. getting runners In scoring post- Candlotti, Rich Yett and Scott
• 58 games and Is 45-43 overall, 8 'h
Brook Jacoby, who has had tion for guys like (Joe) Carter Balles have been mediocre,
games · behind Detroit In the
American League East. Still, a . problems at the plate . since · arid (Cory I Snyder," says Ed· going a combined 19-17. bul
opening day, has six homers and wards. "Joe'sgot67RBI and you relievers Chris Codlroll. Jeff
year has made a. difference; at
Is 11 off his 1987 pace. Carmen have to wonder how more he'd Kaiser. Dan Schatzeder. Jeff·
the 1987 All-Star break, the
Castillo has no homers In just 80 have If we had people hitting Dedmon and Bill Laskey were
Indians were 31·56.
The recent tailspin has a ,ill bats, but he had six In 101 at aheadofhlmmoreconslstently." demoted or released after collecbats : in 1987. Mel Hall's two.
Both the rotation and the tivelv disastrous efforts.
MIDDLEPORT- Two games marching Johnson 's strikeout
number of causes. The team's
The
surprising
Doug
Jones
has
In
28~
at
bats
Is
six
below
bullpen
have
undergone
homers
In
opening round play saw Mason effort.
power output Is down from a year
20 saves while Don Gordon. Brad
his 1987 first-half clip.
post a 12-7 win over Eastern and
For Eastern. Hager was the
Havens and Jon Perlman have
New Haven down Zlde' sentry by losing hurler. working five in·
contributed. Bud Black. obtained
a 10-7 score in the seventh annual nings. In his stint on the mound
from Kansas City for Pat Tabler,
Big Bend Pony League Tourna- he gave upnlneor the Mason runs
has yet to show any consistency.
ment at General Hartinger Park on five hits and struck out eight
"I think we'll come back from
1n Middleport.
batt.ers. Adams, in relief. fin "My short jl1Jllle Is pretty the All-Star break better rested,"
John Johnson was credited Ished the game and he was
here for the IIFst tlme,and played
By REBECCA BRYAN
with the Mason win as he hurled charged with I he final three runs.
decent," he said~ ''The main says Candlottl. "Our pitching
UPI Sports Writer
In the Open for the first time In
six innings, was charged with all The Eastern pitchers walked a ·
thing Is getting the ball off the staff Is better than many think.
L YTIIA.M ST. ANNES, Eng- I974. I didn't make the last day.
seven of the Eastern runs as he total ofeleven batt~rs.
tee. My main objective Is getting The team Is, really. We're still In
"In 1974, I shook hands with
land (UP!) - The high point of
off
the
tee
and
keeping
the.ballln
a
position
to
do
something
In
this
fanned
two. walked four and
In the hlttlngdeparlment, John
Sandy LY,le' s first British Open Gary Player on the putting green
gave
up
four safeties. B. Kearns Johnson ledd' the winners with
play for the second shot to the division."
was shaking hands with Gary at the start of the week."
green.
Rumors continue to persist
came In to relieve him lor the three doubles and a single, Green .
Lyle won the Open at Sand·
Player .. Fourteen years later,
save
and allowed no hits while had a double and another hitter
"Here, you must keep out of the that a trade for pitching. a
Lyle Is back at the Royal Lytham wlch, England, In 1985, but
fairway bunkers. Wind Is the shortstop and left-handed power
named Jol]nson chipped In with a
and St. Annes-course as oneofthe · admitted his Masters victory at
main factor. The course Is is In the works. Hank Peters, the
base hit . Matt Flnlaw led the
ravoqtes to win the Augusta, Ga., In April had to be
p!aylngnlcely,andlfltlsllkethls . Indians' president, says "we're
Eastern cause with three base
his best.
championship.
(windy but mostly clear), 75 will always talking."
''The Open was the one which
hits and Murray picked up a
Lyle, iwho won The Masters In
''There Isn't anything brewing
be -a good score," Lyle said.
single.
April, 1,5 co-favorite with Spain's gave me Ihe most pleasure at the
The Briton said several play- right now," adds Peters. "And
In the New Haven win, Wes ·
Severl;lno Ballesteros to capture time, hut the Masters was the
TOLEDO.
Ohio
IUPll
The
ers
could
be
expected
to
handle
I'm
not
sure
If
anything
will
high
point
of
my
career
to
Bumgardner
went the distance
the title on the relatively flat
Mid-American
Conference
has
windy
conditions
well,
lnclud·
happen.
We
feel
we
have
the
the
finish
with
a
birdie
to
win
the
for
the
win
as
he
whiffed fourteen
links. i where the changeable
changed
the
format
of
ils
posl·
lng
Ballesteros,
and
defending
talent,
but
we're
the
ALEast
is
a
batters
,
allowed
four hits, seven
wlnds 'o!f the northwest coast of Masters, !hat will be
season
basketbllt
tournament
to
British
Open
Champion
Nick
tough
division.
We
may
not
be
in
remembered."
bases on balls and hit one batler.
England are always a f-actor.
include all nine teams.
a groove r'lght now, but we can
Lyle said the key at Lytham Faldo.
Bumgardner rapped two singles ·
"Mrr record at Lytham?" Lyle
Previously, only the lop seven in the win and Oliver. with three •
bounce back."
said. ! "I was 16 when I played,. would be getting to the green.
finishers in the regular season base hits. Mike Harbour with a
race quallfleP for post-season pair of singles. Zirkle's triple and
play, with the regular season Mitch Harbvour's single aided in
champ receiving a quarter!inal the New Haven victory .
bye.
•
\
Newell swung the big bat lor
'
The change In format. an- the losing Zide team as he
'
nounced by MAC Commissioner pounded out a homerun and a ·
Jim Lessig, was made after pair of base hits. Brooks took the '
recommendation by the league's loss as he worked four Innings
coaches. The women's tourna- with Newell coming on In relief
ment format will remain the forthe final two frames.
'
same, with the top seven
qualifying.
The lOth annual men's tourna·
]IIent will be held Friday, Satur·
day and Sunday, M.arch 10-12,
1989, with all games at Toledo's
Centennial Hall.
The eighth-place team will
play the ninth-place team In a
first-round game Friday at 11
a.m., with the winner of that
game facing the regular season
champ In a quarterfinal contest
later that evening.
Quarterfinal games will be
played at 1, 3, 7 and 9 p.m.
Friday, the semifinals on Satur·
day and the championship con·
If your answer is " yes " .
test Sunday .
you'll want to learn about out
The quarter finals of the
Home Oelender policy. It's a ·
women's tournament will be
deluxe homeowners package
hosted by the second, third and
wilh a host of built-in
fourth place teams at on-campus
coverage extras .. and it's
sites on Tuesday, March 7. The
olfered at low preferred
regular season winner receives a
rates Call us today.
bye.
The women's semifinals and
OOAN ~
finals will be at Centennial Hall
RNER -..;.'
March 11 and 12.
•urant:e 8ervJca•
''We are still attempting to find
the format which best fits this
214 EAST MAIN
conference," said Lessig. '.'Of
POMEROY
those conferences which conduct
9:92-6687
a post-season tournament,
nearly 75 percent invite all the
Slate Auto
SKIPPER AND RIB CREW - Amerlea'e CUp tlldpper Denali
Zealllftd off tile San Dlep COMt. A lecal ruling Ia due 10011 on tile
teams
to
participate.
Our
new
ln8111'811M
outcome of tile race tbat could decide the rate of the America's
eo-, cea&amp;er, and crewmen eallaroud saa,:~:a' MndBJ
"
Is
the
one
favored
by
our
format
Ia the "IIOfkall" rll: Ia pnparll&amp;loa for a
Sepeember
Cap. (VPI)
.__
_
_
llllllilii.i
........
'
basketball
coaches."
~·· CUpmldcll race apllll&amp;ellallellprMieluleiFq of New

Analysis:

I

three-yea r plan. instead of year
to year."
The alliance was created to
.
draw attention to the minors.
Teams play within their league.
then cross into the other league
for a few games.
" By playing interleague. the
fan is going to see 15 different
clubs rather than seven," Cooper
said. "We feel the monotony _Is
taken out of scheduling."
Previously, the top four teams
in the league participated In the
playoffs. Interest and attendance
lagged .
Tamburro said the playoffs are
diminished when teams compete
only within their league. The
team finishing first already has
proved itself the strongest club.
Now, the playoffs will resemble those of the major leagues,
with the top teams from each
......... '
league meeting forth~ AAA title.
'(,.
•
'
George Sisler, general man·
and Andre Dawson of the Cubs and Barry Larkin
PLAYERS - At the All-Star G .&lt;me workout
ager of Columbus, says the
o! the Reds. (UP I)
Monday In Cincinnati, are, from left, Giants' WID
majors are monitoring the new
Clark, Expos' Andres Gallaral{a, Shawn Dunston
format.
"The commissioner ot base,
ball's office has called the league .
EDDIE ALBEk7 FOR BELTON£
office a number of times to see
how we're going," he said. "We
may be the leader of something
the majors may want to try later
on.··
Michael Blllon'I, general manager of Buffalo oftheAA, says his
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
team benefits because the arranCleveland Indlaqs announced
gement provides the Bls.o ns with Monday that minor league in·
IL · rivals In Rochester and
fielder Pau't Zuvella will become
Syracuse, as well as with Columbus and Tidewater, affiliates of the team's n~tw shortstop, rep lac·
lng Jay Bell who was sent to thP
the Yankees and Mets.
dub's Class AAA team In Colo"We see a direct result from
rado Springs, Colo. Suoday.
ticket sales In Rochester, Syra·
Bell's batting average this
Bellone Is offerln&amp; a FREE ELECTRONIC IIURING TEST.
cuse, Columbus and Tidewater
season
slumped
to
.186.
In
series," he said.
Dl. IAIIICIN PICIIIN'S OFRCE
The Toledo Mud Hens of the IL ~ontrast, Zuvella Is hitting .291.
509
11111D AVL, •DDUPOIT, OHIO
Zuvella
will
be
wearing
are running 15,000 fans ahead of
·
TIIUISDAY,
JULY 14
number
10
on
an
Indians
uniform
last year. General Manager
when the team plays the MarinFIOM 9:00 • 12:00 (NOON!
Gene Cook says part of the
ers Thursday in Seattle.
UMWA aiiCI UAW PIOVIDEI
Increase may be attributed to
Zuvella,
29,
has
two
years
few ralnouts .
So take Eddie Albert's advice - visit the Beltone Hearing ATa'
experience In the major leagues,
Cook, a member or the Toledo
Specialist today for a FREE HEARING TEST Come in with
playing for the New York YanCity Council. adds that the
coupon for' test.
kees and the Atlanta Braves.
arrangement promotes his city.
Call Toll Free Number I-8()()-634-S26S for immediatc'llppointment.
Bell said he was "mad," "not
He said many people believed the
at
themforsendlngmedown,
but
Mud Hens were an Imaginary
..COUPON
at myself for not doing the job.''
club.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

1988

Tribe getting respect n~w,
coach says at All-Star break

All-Star festivities
washed out )
•

-·

..

TuNday,

Tuesday. July 12. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

'
•

eo,..,.,.,

•

•'

•

.

�Tufllday. July 12, 1988

The Daily S~ntinel

By 'rhe Bend

Tua1day. July 12. 1988.

Page-8

Construction underway
BJ BOB HOE·
FLICH
Pomeroy
Mayor Richard
Seyler reports
that construe·
tlon has been
completed on
the attractive stone wall, which
is located across from the Kroger
parking lot exit on E Main St.
The wall was constructed by
village workers so that the top
area can be planted with colorful
flowers, Mayor Seyler says, and
the entire project is now waiting
for the addition of the American
flag to the overall setting. The
flag, according to present plans,
will hang out over the river bank
and will be lighted The Kroger
Co. Is providing that part of the
setting.
By the way, MaY,or Seyler
reports also that resurfacing of
Main St., from the Nye Ave.,
traffic light downriver will begin
at anytime now and of course,
construction has started on the
new Rite Drug Store quarters at
the corner of Lynn and E. Main
Former residents, Aaron and
Iris Kelton will be marking their
54th wedding anniversary on
July 17. They will observe the
occasion at a lodge m the Blue
Ridge Mountains for a couple of
days. The Keltons now have six
grandchildren and two great
greatchlldren
Their address Is Route 1, Box
1610, Quinton, Va 23141
Iris writes that he uncle and
aunt, Mr and Mrs. Lyston Fultz,
who retired to Flbrida, are both
!II and would appreciate hearing
from home folks Their address
Is 380 Lanager Road, Venice,
Fla., 33595. Lyston Is formerly of
Middleport.

'

DNr Allll Landen: Your By·
Laws for In·Laws column rubbed
me the wrons way. Maybe I am
unusually sensitive because I have
three daUihters-in·law who have
bmt takiq advanl.fll!l' of me for
years. I know what you're thinking.
why do I allow it? Probably
because I don't want to put my sons
in the position of having to choose

Meigs County, Is visiting rela·
tlves having come In from his
home In Bradenton, Fla., espe·
clally for the wedding of his
granddaughter, Kerr! Beegle, at
Sacred Heart Church. John,
you'll remember a number of
years ago was editor of The Dally
Tribune In Pomeroy
Dave Crow, John Holman and
Anne Scarberry. all of Racine,
were among the adult education
graduates from the Tri-County
Vocational School They weren' t
included an an earlier list of the
graduates because an announcement from the school listed them
as Athens County residents
An event to be held July 29-30
which might Interest you.
Some 60 to 70 large band·
organs will be along the down·
town streets of Marietta on those
dates filling the air with the
"happiest music on earth.
Many of these band organs are
antiques and adding to the
attraction will be about 100 table
top organs on display and playing
for the public in a downtown
buildmg. A 1926 Allen Herchell
carousel will be offering free
ndes in a downtown park and 12
mini carousels from a private
coilection will be on public
dtsplay
The band organ feature of the
two day observance is a rally of
the Mid·American Chapter of the
Musical Box Socfetv.
Marietta residenis wlll add to
the flavor of the two days as
clowns, jugglers, and mimes and
popcorn, pizza and old-lime
lemon shakes will be available In
several locations.

sides.
In the

PATRECE CIRCLE

• 1e gets awar:d
CIre
Morehead State University has
announced that Patrece Elaine
Circle, Racine, is among those
students recieving a Morehead
State University Award for the
1988-89 academic year
The daughter of Carl and
Nancy Circle, she is a graduate of
Southern Local High School
where she was a member of the
National Honor Society. Circle
was the receipient of the Prest·
dential Academic Fitness Award
and the John Philip Sousa Band
Award.
To be considered for a Morehead Slate University Award,
applicants must be admitted to
MSU as a freshman or be a
transfer student, have a 2.75
grade point average on a 4. scale,
and have submitted an MSU
scholarhsip application
The
award Is renewable for up to lour
years if a minimum 2 5 grade
point average is maintained

It's I rue - you never miss the
water 'til the well runs dry -or
until a water main bursts. Do
keep smiling

Racine, Star
John Gilmore. formerly of
meet
Flower tips given at garden club granges
Racme Grange members were

Tips on conditioning !lowers
were given by Evelyn Hollon at
the recent meeting of the Wild·
wood Garden Club held at the
home of Janet Thetss whose
co-hostess was Faye Wiggins.
Mrs. Hollon suggested cutting
flowers at an angle inelther early
morning or evening hours . She
said the cut flowers should be put
In a bucket of tap water up to
their heads, stored In a cool place
and left either overnight or for
several hours
Among her timely gardenmg
hints she suggested disbudding
roses for larger blooms, keeping
faded blooms picked from annu·
als, pinching back petunias if
they get "leggy". diViding lr is
clumps, and checkmg ever·
greens for pests. She also read an
articlie on the amaranth and
cicadas
Prior to the meeting members
toured the herb and flower
gardens of Connie Hill Catherine

Miller opened the meeting with a
reading entitled " Patchwork."
Betty Milhoan gave devotions for
Heidi Elberfeld reading poems,
"If I Could Never Talk to God,
and " The Lessons of the Years"
Doris Grueser reported on the
mocking bird notlg that the bird
ts mostly gray with a black tali
and white spots on its wings, is
found in open areas, and ts noted
for its song. It will mtmic frogs.
crickets, dogs and humans and
sings at night
Peggy Moore had an arrange·
ment of roadside materials in
eluding Queen Anne's lace, lilies.
and phlox
Named to the year book
committee were Mrs Milhoan,
Mrs. Theiss. and Mrs Moore
[llext month a picnic will be held
at the home of Hilda Yeauger. A
pig in a poke sale was held and
refreshments served to the
members and guests Angela and
Eliza beth Miller

Auxiliary give scholarships
Three nursing scholarships
were awarded at the recent
meeting of the Women' s Auxil·
tary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A two-year $800 scholarshtp
was awarded to Robin Smith.
with one year $400 scholarships
being awarded to Terry Lauder
mill and Carla Ktmes The
recommendation for the scholar
ships were made by Mildred Fry.
the Rev William Middleswarth ,
Ida Diehl, Dr. James Witherell.
David Fox, W. S Lucas, and
Rhoda Dall~y . who served on the
committee.
A day on the town was set for
July 22 ·with dinner at Dale's in
Gallipolis. Members are to meet
at the hospital at 4· 30 p m Any

Chancey named
award winner
The United States Achieve·
ment Academy has announced
that Paula S Chancey has been
named a United States National
Collegiate Award winner in ele·
mentary education.
Mrs. Chancey, who graduated
summa cum laude from Rio
Grande College, was nominated
for this National Award by Paul
Uoyd, a dean of education at the
school. Mrs Chancey's picture
and biography will appear In the
United States Achievement
Academy Official Collegiate
Yearbook, published nationally.
She resides In Pomeroy with
her husband Rick and daughter
Melinda Jo.
Mrs. Chancey Is the daughter
of Ned and Sharon Swindell,
Shade. The ll'andparents are Mr
and Mrs. Howard Swindell.
Shade, and Mrs. Margery Dou

, •••• Albany.

•

member needmg a ride ts asked
to contact Carrie Kennedv . 992·
5074.
•
Named to the nominating committee were Mary Diamond,
Helen Hill, Mildred Fry, Clara
Burris, Betty Sayre and Mar·
garet McDaniel.
A family picnic will be held in
August.

guests and presented the pro
gram at the recent meeting of
Star Grange held at the hall.
Emma Adams. lecturer of the
visiling grange, had charge of
the program which mcluded
readings entitled "Senior Citt·
zens", "An Old Fashioned Car"
and 'Thumbs Up Twiddlers" by
Earl Cross; "Path Thai Leads to
Nowhere" by Mary V. Easter·
day; "They Call it America" by
Ruby Lambert", "Statue of
Liberty", "Blessings of Liberty,
"What a Fellows Thinks of Dad"
and "Will We Ever Leave Well
Enough Alone" . by Emma
Adams
Plans were made to set up
booths for the Ohio State Fair in
Columbus on Thursday, Aug 4.
with Opal Dyer. youthchatrman,
asking the youth to assist. Crafts
and materials were taken to the
grange hall on Saturday where
several members met to plan the
booths.
It was announced that Sundav
will be a picnic at the grange hail
followed by a commumty service
cleanup around the hall
The women's activittes com
mittee reported on five rules for
better hearing Ben Rife, legisla
live chatrman. reported on the
Meigs Local School Levy to be
voted on Aug. 2. H~ reported It is
a "no cost to the volers"levy and
will keep monies m the county
that wtll otherwise be sent to the
state.

name of fairness I hope

you wUI print by·laws for married
children. I'm sure I was not lhe
only one who was offended by that
column.- ANYCITY, USA
DEAR ANYCITY: You wtll be
happy to know that the column
was blasted from Maine lo Cahfor·
nia. not to mention complaints
from Canada, Mexico City, San
juan, Ho Chi Minh City and
Caracas.
Here is a composne of .the best
rebuttals:
BY·LAWS FOR MARRIED
OilLDREN
I. Please don't ask to borrow
money because "the folks have 1t ..
The same goes for our cottage 10 the
woods. the beach house, the second
car, the lawn mower. boat, etc.
2. Don't ask us to baby-sit. We sat
enough wtth. you. Stay at home
with your ktds like we did Or htrr
a baby-sitter

Chatter Club
meets in Chester
Susan Cleland hl&gt;sted a recent
meeting of the Chatter Club at
her Chester hl&gt;me
Dues and flower funds were
collected and officers' reports
given. Donna Fry received an
anniversary gift. Games were
played wllh prizes going to Linda
Hubbard, Elaine Quillen, and
Donna Fry. Belinda Adams won
the door prize Next meeting will
be Thursday night at the home of
Isabelle Couch. Refreshments
were served

SlindereUas meet
Cathy Hudson was the top loser
with Kay Morris as runner-up at
the July 4 meeting of Sl inderella
held at Five Points. At the July 5
morning class, Shirley Johnson
lost the most weight and Pat
Hysell was runner-up at the Five
Points class, while Dixie Sayre
lost the most weight and Brenda
Roush was runner up for the
Tuesday night Mason Class Jo
Ann Newsome Is lecturer.

trary. jimmy s day was made. There
wasn't a person m Slsht who wasn't
happy for him. It was something
that few of us in the bleachers will
ever forget -DEAN R., CALGARY,
ALBERTA
DEAR DEAN: What a glorious
example of basic decency. I truly
believe that given the proper sttmu·
Ius, mos1 people will react in a
loving and positive way.
And your letter also proves that
kindness is contagious.
Deltr Aan Laaders: Recently a
reader asked, "Is it possible for a
jew to become a Catholic priest?"
Your choice of Monsignor Oester·
reicher as "the. best·known uam·
pie" was astonishing. How did you
overlook the Archbishop of Paris,
jean· Mane Cardinal Lustiger? This
prince of the church who was horn
a jew may be the next Pope.
Only one jew in the history of
manktnd achieved a higher station,
and He did not have to convert. He,
too, was hom a jew. - EPPES A
MAVEN FROM LONG ISLAND
DEAR EPPES: Thank you (and
all the other mavens) who set me
straight. I .should have held that
letter until Father Theodore Hes·
burgh of Notre Dame returned
from his sabbattcal. Welcome
home, Ted As you can see. I missed
you

Community calendar
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Free
blood pressure clinic at Harrison·
ville Town House from 10 a.m to
12 noon Tuesday sponsored by
Harrisonville Senior Citizens.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
shtp Trustees meeting 7: 30 p m
Tuesd~y at Chester Town Hall
HARRISONVILLE - Harri
sonvlile Chapter 255, Order of
Eastern Star. will meet at 7:30
p m Tuesday at the temple;
officers may wear street dresses
PORTLAND
Porlland
P T 0 will meet in special
session at 7 p m Tuesday at
Portland Park.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce meeting
at noon Tuesday at th~ Trinity
Church in Pomeroy.

FRIDAY
SA[EM CENTER - Salem
Township Trustees will have a
hearing on the 1989 budget on
Friday, at 9 a.m , at the Salem
Fire House The public Is Invited
to attend
Past Councllol'!l
Past Councilors Club of Ches·
ter Council 323, Daugthers of
America, will hokl Its annual

'r

picnic and meelingat the home of
Sadte Trussell, 6:30pm. on July
13 Members are to lake a
covered dish, gifts lor game
prizes, and a lawn chair Table
service and beverages will be
furnished.

Bible school
Vacation Bible School at Silver
Run Baptls t Church will be
Monday, July 18, throughJuly22,
from 6 to 8 p m. All children are
invited

Retired teachers picnic
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association will have a
picnic at the New Haven, W.Va.
park on Saturday at ~p.m. Bring
a covered dish and table service

Blags reunion
The annual Biggs reunion will
be held Sunday at the Nathan
Biggs residence on Route 124.
Basltet dinner will be at 12:30
p.m All relatives and friends
welcome

Bible school
Vacation BibleSchoolat Po me·
roy Church of Christ will be held
Sunday through July 22 from 6:30
to 8 30 p.m. each evening
Director will be Ann Fields
Classes for kindergarten through
teenage. Everyone welcome.
Office closed
Planned Parenthood of Sou·
theast Ohio Patient Service~
offices will be closed Fr)day fora
staff meeting. Offices will reopen
on Monday at 8:30a.m.
Stnaer reunion
The Singer Family Reunion
will be held Sunday, July 24; at
the senior citizens building in
Pomeroy. Potluck dinner will be
at 1 p.m

lee cream soelaJ
The Salem Township Volun·
teer Fire Department will be
having its annual Ice Cream
Social on Saturday, July 16, from
11 a.m. untll7 p.m. The menu will
include homemade ice cream,
roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs,
potato salad, macaroni salad,
baked beans, pie and beverages
The M)dnlght Cloggers will per·
form in the evening. Prizes wUI
be given away.

Home visitor
Gloria Taylor Devellen, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor,
Route 1, Racine, has been home
visiting her parents She Is a
denllil technician ~rrently stall·
oned at the Naval Dental Clinic in
Norfolk, VIrginia.

I

.' .

.

.
'

ALISON MORGAN WOODS

Woods announce birth

_... _...
__

ANNIAI'N ....

slogan, "Don't sweat the small
stuff"'! It reminds me of a joke that
has been going around for many
years in one form or another: "My
wife and I have an arranaement
that keeps peace in the family. She
8fiS to decide the small issues, such
as where we go for vacations and
which house to buy. I gl!t to decide
the big things. such as do we pull
our troops out of the Persian Gulf
and gl!t tough with japan about the
imbalance of trade."
Don't you know it's the small
stuff that creates the big problems?
Wake up, out there. - OiEVY
OiASE.MD.
DEAR OiEVY: I ague. The
major issues are solved with rela·
lively no trouble. Examine your life
and you'll see that I'm right.

"

ret Joaephine Humer Patera
11tuatad In the Township of

Sutton, County of Molgs

Complaint demands judg
man1 agalntt the Defend·
ante, Warren L. Perrme,
Kathy Pamne. now known

and State of Ohto, and de·

II

bel Reed's Lot: lloonCll s. 82
dog 63' W 139 foetto the
Northweat corner of Mabel
Reed's Lot. thence 6 de·
gr ... 40' Wilt 667 feet to
the Northeut corner of Ceroline Rhodes Lot on the the
Nonh hne of Lot No. 6.
thence North 88 degr_.

32' Eoat 216 f11tto theN.
W corner of M R Wolf's
land. thence S. 6 degrees

58' E 776 teet to tho
North aide of the Buff1ngton
Island Road, the S . W
corner of M R Wolf's land,
thence along said road

S 87 dogr- 57' W11t 78
feet to the S E corner of
Mabel Read's lot to the
place of beg~nnmg, contain·
mg 3 and 11 / 100 acres of

land
Also tho following do·

scribed property situated m
Sect1on No 16, Town No 2.

Range No 12. Lot Nq &amp;.
Township, Me1g1
County, State of Ohio Be·
ginmng 1t the S E corner of
0 M Curt1alot on the south

•mase

were Tuesday vis itors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson and
Tammy and Iva Johnson.
Mr and Mrs. Jerry Holley,
Calvinlee, Jason and Iva John·
son, and Bill Dumltt, enjoyed a
cookout at the home or Mr. and
Mrs
Harley Johnson and
Tammy recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of
Richland. Ind. were July 4
vtsitors Of Mr. and Mrs Howard
Thoma.
Mrs Iva Johnson was the
Wednesday visitor of Mr and
Mrs. Charley Smith.

Mr. and Mrs Francis Foiev ,
Columbus, visited Mr. and Mrs
Sam Steimenrz recentlv
Mrs Esther Bt andau . Vmlon
was the weekend guest of Mrs
Lola Clark
John Ha1 mon of P01 tland
spent a week \lllh.Ius grandpat
ents, Mr and Mrs Millard
Christian rrrrnll\
Mrs Not m" Lee was 1hr
Sunday dinnr1 ![uest of Mrs
Frances You'l!t
Mr. and Mt' Doug Btshop
spent the \\r&lt;•krnd with hi• •l&lt;tl'r
in New York
Mr and Mt·s Bob Alkirt'
visited Mond.tv with Mr anO
Mrs Charles Alktre. Racinl' &gt;
Mr. and Mt·s Theo Hinds Q.~
Zanesville spcn1 the weekcno
with Mr and Mrs K C Welch!

.

'

the North aide of the Buf·
fington lal1nd Road, wn:h
the Eaat aide of the Pomeroy
Road; thence North 6 degr... 40' West 220 feet to
the Northeast corner of Ma-

line of Lot No 6. North 88
dogr- 32' Eut1384foll
from the southwest corner
of lot No 6 Thence North 1
degree 11' West 480 feet to
an 1pple tree on Mary E
Wolf's south line, thence

North 88 dogroos 27' Eaet

462 teet to the Northweat

corner of Ottey Cross lot on
the 110uth line of lot No 8;
thence 1long the south hne
of lot No 8 and the corpora tiOn lane S. 88 degrHI 32'

W 323 feel to the ptaco of
beginning. containing 3 46

acrn of land
·
Reserving to the State of
Ohio, however, all oil, gas,
cOal and other m1naral1 w1th
the right of entry for the purpoH of pr.aapectmg far, de·
valoplng, producing or oper·
atlng for the same and the
nght of occupancvy insofar
as the same 11 easent11l to
aa1d proapecting. developing, operating or producing
A lao reserved to the St1te of
Oh10, the u1e of streams
flowing through saad lends
or abu«mg upon the same,
and so made of the banks
thereof as w1y of neceasery
for the enjoyment and the
protection of such atre~~ms
from eros1on, contem1na
tion or deposit of sediment

DEED REFERENCE Vo·
lume 309. Page 311, Meigs
CountY' Deed Records.
Bids to be submitted by
prnentment to the office of
the Meigs County Commit·
s1oners at the Counhou18,
Pomeroy, Oh10, andtobarecetved by 11 a m on Wed·
neaday, Atlgust 10,1988,at

whoch tome they will be
opened and rHd aloud.
The real estate was ap-

prolood ot 121,050 00

The Meigs County Board
of CommiSSioners rea&amp;Nas

Mary Hobltetter, Clerk

17112.19. 2tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Melgo County
~~hrt. LCoso No

Kathy Morno, '"tho oum

46770
(

Probato
25898,

or on Uld property, tfany, be

the proceodo of the oele

You are required to an·

swer the Comploonl wHhin
lwonty·elght i28) doyo oftllf
the 1111 publlcotoon of thll
Notice. which will be pub·
lilhod once ooch w- for

six (61 aucceeaive weeks
The last date of publlcet1on
wiH remtrin on the 18th day

ot August, 1988, end the
lwenty·olght i28) days lor

answer will commence on
that data. In the case of your
failure to answer or other·
wise respond 81 requested
by tho Ohio Ruloo of Covi
Procedure. Judgment by d•
fault
will be
rendered
against you and for the relief
demanded in the Complaint

Dotod thio 7th day of July.
1988
larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts

17112.19,26,
181 2, 9, 16, Btc

MIDDL£PORT, OHIO
OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

ti· Z Ill mo

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NO 87-CV-328
OUVALFEDERAL
SAVINGS and LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Plaontoff
- VS JERRY A MILAM. otal
Defendants

COURT OF
COMMOIILPLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

In pursuance of an Order
of Sale to me d~rected from
1a1d Court m the above an titled ICtlon, I will expose to
sale at public IUCt1on on tha
front steps of the M11ga
County Court House on Fri·

day. July 29. 1988. at
10 00 AM of 18&lt;~ day, tho
follow1ng dHcribe\:t real es-

tate:
S1tuated m the Village of
Middleport,
County
of
Meigs. State of Ohio, and
bounded and descr~bed aa
follows. to wJt.
The follow1ng real estata
srtuated in the VIllage of
Middleport,
County
of
Metgs. and State of Ohio,
and bemg Lot No 298,

lower Pomeroy. now ~ncar·
porated uno the V11fage of

Mtddleport, Ohio
Current Owners Name
Jerry M Milam and Ehza
beth E M1lam aka Emma
Ehzebeth Milam
Address 811 H1gh Street,

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

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALl ENGINE

Howard E Frank,

Sheriff of

TO Warren l Perrine, whose
laat known addr••
696

w•
·Fourth Avenue, North BN,.

wick. NJ 08902
You ••• horeby notified
that you have

BAUM
LUMBER
CHESTER

446-7390

7-6·'11·1 mo.

BOGGS
SillES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvkt (ortttr for Ryan

Products

8 7 Fmane~ng on Yardman
Serv1ce on All Makes

We Honor MC/Oisc/Y11o

.. 18 'Billn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Naw H-l•ilt

&amp; Parts

Br~ggs

8t Stratton

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite

Jacobian

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mltlclleport, Ohio

992-6611

3 30. 87lln

Ma1ga County, Oh10
By Dann1s Retmar,
Attorney for Plaintiff
9806 Ravenna Road,

(P 0 Bo• 6711
Twonsbu•g. OH 44087
1216)426·4201
i61 28. 171 5. 12. Jtc
Happy Ads

;========:.

RACINE
GUN SHOP
NEASE HOLlOW RD.

GUNS- AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
Fallow

Signs
on Bashon Rd.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUS£. OHIO
Most Foretgn and
Domestic Vah1claa

l Or dy, l OrdY•'-·
11
look WhO'S
forty!
Frankie!!

Help Wanted

A/ C Service
All Mojor llo Minor

NIASE

Repairs
Certified Mechanoc

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Cert1f1ed Licensed Shop

S.25·tln

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, P-roy Ohoo

PAnENT REVIEW COORDINATOR
ac·

Veterana Memorial Hoapital. a JCAHO
credited, not· for· profit hospital. is looking for
a Patient Review Coordinator.
The Patient Review Coordinator will 111eaa,
plan. implement and evaluate tha hospital's
Quality Asaurance Plan and Infection Control
Plan. The Patient Review Coordinator wUt re·
view charta for appropriate utilization of Hr·
vicel and asaiat with providing patient a qual·
lty continuity of care after discharge.
Oualiflcationa include a Regiaterad NurH
with a cunent Ohio nuraing licenH. Prior
Quality A11urance and Utilization Review ex·
parlance preferred.
Pleue call or •nd a r•ume to:
Margaret Holm, A11iat11nt Admlnlatrator
Vaterana Memorial Hotphal
1115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 411769

(614) 912·2104
taUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPL YMENT

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

~Ito Tteulltllllo•

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
6·17-tlc

J&amp;L INSUI.A'IION
•FREE E~TES•
TIRED OF PAINTING?
Cover your home wkh
beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAINTEED vinyl
aiding.
lilt Prkts Anywhtrtl
ROIFING and SEAMlESS

GUlTERS

PH. 992-2772

&amp;·13-l•o.

WANTED Multi-TIIented
I will not be retponslbla for any workers ex p~~nenced WI one or
debt• eontnlcted bv anyone more of tM following Carpen
other than mnelf Angafia Mar· tllrs, brick. blodl &amp; concrete,
electrician• plumber~, heMing
cinko of Kelly's Korner
II 11r conditiOning; dry walling.
pilntera, wmmerael bu lh:ten.
and he.,y aq ulpm.. t op•ators
Also needed EqMrienc.d. tal
4
Giveaway
ented and eareer-oriented individuals to be prqect au~ln­
Mndlnta Send Naume or work
Old milk Cll'l cooler Call 8 u. hiStory. lncfudtngwhldttvpes ar
446 3413
work you have Mperience 1n to
At 1 IJox 247 Gallipolil. Ohio
Free firewood Cut 'four own 45031
Call 014-245-5047 1flor 5 30
PM
Maintenance person to INa - In
apartment co.,-.pleDC Clll 30448 week old kittens Call _
&amp;75-6104.
614·440.7100
_..;___ _ _ _ __

Free puppies nHxed CrownCrty
area Calllll14-2151111719
·~ Black lab puppiea 7 wkl
otd -3 males, 1 females Call
11114 268 t558 evenings

3·$ wk old ktttena Clill 614-

440·3341

245-5095

Part Beegle puppt• Good With
ch1ldran Call 814-985-4407

!Utother eat and 3 kfttent to good
ho~ Call 614-992-7774
Free ldttans 10 rwtponslble per·
son 614-992-2520 Wed -Sun

PH. 949-2B01
or Res. 949·2860

Bush Hog Farm
Equ1pment Dealer

E~ulpllttal

Ptrts &amp; Smile
:=;;:n;;:;n;~l·l· 86-llc

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-16-tln

p

18 Yaars

614-992-3711

6

roolh!lrs call

304-075-3848

TRIPLE P
EXCAYAnNG

Backhoe Work

•Will Do Hauling Woth
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Sarv1ce
•Junk Yard Bua1neas

w•NT TO 1\11 IYRECIID 01
JUNK CAR! 'OR TRUCK!

614-742-7617

Botw •n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or loare Mns2 ur-··aa ''"

HUDNALL
PLUMBING HEATING
&amp;

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry F1sh10g Supph

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hera
BUSINESS PHONE

lUll 992-65!0
RISIOINCI PHONE
16141 992-77!4

1/18/lln

SER~ICE
We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rad
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport, Ohio

1· 13·11c

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
• Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
~!•.k•IS

We Service

Cute, pllyful, ltter tremed ktt
tans 304-8715-4606 or 6756103.

Lost and Found

Tella

Past, Present and
Future - G1ves Advice
on Love. Marriage and

Business
tf You Are Unha,py •d
Don't Know Wh1ch Way To
lllf"n Com• I• For lllwica
- One Vmt Will Canwinca
You Then Is A letter Way.

$500 OFF With Thia Ad
LADY RACHEL'S
PALM READING
302 Wtst Unien St.

At ....

614-594-3310

6/21/11/1 ma

Howard L. Writesll

Fedar~~f. State, and ClvH Service
Jobs $111,000 • f79150 yr
Now hirlngl Call Job Center
1 619 185·6613axt JIIIIIBOH
24 hra.

LPN, Pl...ant Valllft' Nurtlng
Care Center saelung hcenMd
lPNs for Jllrl 'time employment.
medical and den ..l lntur~~nc&amp;
available If Interested call Kat hv
Thornton. OiractDf of Nur-'ng

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rtck Pe•aon Auct1oneer h
ceneed Ohio and Watt Vlrgml•
Estate antique, farm hquld&amp;tion tales 304-7:73-6785

Wanted To Buy

9

We pay cash for late modet dean

AVON

All areas Call Marilyn

13041675-5238.

EOE

AAE

CHARGE NURSE

P'H18nt Valley Nutting Care
Center. 100 bed skUiad nuramg
facility located 1n PomtPie.ant.
WVa Is seeking • reglsmred
nurte to assume the dlJ1iea of
luii.Jime eh•ge nu,. This
position 11 open immed1atelv.
call Kathy Thornton at 304-67&amp;5238 Pleesant Vallev Nursing
Care Center ia an equal opportunity employer and lffirmiUva
1ct1on employer
Now ,..ring demoNtnttors _
Chrlttmas Around The world
receiVe wHkty comrnillion no
collecting delivery rwceivt free
TV
R
• VC or....,., tnp to Hawaii
Supervtsor Pat Greenlee 304-

875-2885

Bill Gene Johnson
NOW HIRING
614-448·3672
Government Jobs shilled and
TOP CASH paid tor '83 modal unskilled in your auta. For
Buu:k·Pontutc,

1911

Eatlern

Ave. Gallipolis Call 614-446
2282

app1I cations c all (602199 5·
0682 ext 2608

Compl ... hou•holds of furniture &amp;: antiques Also wood &amp;
coal hBBtars Swain's Furniture
tt._"-''fe~~ '~~~1111 8o Olive. miles aKper1ance
Oood MVR
Want to buy Used furniture and can 614-882 7774 between
ant6quet wm buy entire houl8 900and400
hold furnisr,lng Marlm Wade·
meyer 1114-246-5162.
Needed male for tabor must be
purr:tual, nellt. responsibla, hve
Junk Cart wilh or without In Point Pleasant Call Capt
motors Call larry Uvaly-614- Sta•m« 304-876-2295

388·9303

BuYing turn~ture and appllance1
by the JMece or by the lot Fa.r
ptlcel Call 614-448-3168

13

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Standing t1mber or pulp wood

Call 814·387 7519

Calf ut for yoor mobile horne
msurance Miller Insurance

Wan1ed to Buy Standtng nmber

h., me hte health

NEW- REPAIR

949-2263
or 949·2168

6-10·88-1 mo

Call

014 379 2768

B1.1V1n~

daly gold sil....r coma
rillgl Jewelry. sterling ware. old
co1ns. l•ge ~rrency Top pn
cet Ed Burkett Barber Shop

2nd Ave Middleport. Oh 014992·3470.
Junk auto'• with or wtthout
motOt'l Call 614-992·5468

Mos1 Wells Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install 8o Serv1ce All Types
Water Pumps
6. 1. 88•1 mo.

Junk auto's Top price pain call
814-992 5848 after 5 p m

Elllplnvment

. TeleviSion Listentng Devices
Dependable Heanng Atd Sales &amp; Servic
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Av111ue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal
Mul~erry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio
·
8·131fn

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RURAND, OH.

SP.rViCI~S

11

Tour Gunk• Male&amp; female Our
top people earn •eoo..t120D
per Mek Salary to start plus
commia11on. Plaaslnt working
condittans A rNfly fun ptace to
work. Frlencly, n... &amp; dependa·
bfe are the requirements Call
1-614-286-8422. ask for Sue
Avon needl71.-di• toMIIAvon
Call 814-4411-33511

METAL

WORKER TRAINEES

No 8.11:parlenceraquired Training
on the job ReiDDIItion raqulred
l:llgh tchool greets tta• 17 30

Coii1·BOD-282· 1314. Mondov·
AM·2 PM
EARN EXTRA MONEY oloring

thtl Summer Ott out of the
ho..,.., become • Deity SMtlntl
PIP•
Aou.. open in
Mldcl•ort Call Boott at The
Sentln411 Office et 114-982-

'*''"

auto:

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

18 Wanted to Do

!NOTICE!
lNG CO nteomnenda 1tm you
do buaineaa wfth people you
~ know end NOT to tend money
througH tiM mall untl you have
lnvest.gat,ct the off~~rmg
Steel Building Dealership wh:h
MaJor Manufact:Urwr·Sal• &amp;
Eng1neet'lng suPPOrt Starter ada
furntshltd Some areas t.ken
Call (303) 7!9-3200ea:t 2401

Rea l Estate
31

e 14-245-&amp;313 TodoVI

Hou• for Sale Ranch lltyle 3
BR , 1'h baths, dmW'Ig room,
living room. ktt:chan. t car
gnge. 1~ ac lot, very n1&lt;:e
a!A)-dwi110n Rio Gran cia a&lt;:hool
system C&amp;ll anytime tor appt
Ill 14-446-2297

Modular on large lot 1n Mercerville CA. pool &amp; nrce outbuildIng Call 814-256-1288 or
256-6752
Bradbury Home ptua mobile
home clo:&amp;&amp; to Rt 7 by pass.
home has 5 rooms &amp; bath plus
laundry 10om Mobile home h•
ex pan do and be.. tlful bav window Call 614-992-6941

1985 Marlene Modular Home,
60x28 All electric, Ca 3 BR , 2
bat hi, great room. dtnlng room
To many e11tras to llat Must •e
to appJeCI•e 1415 000 owner
financing Call 6t4-446-1408
after 5 PM
1986 Redman Sectional home
28x56 3 BR , central air Move
to your tot Call 614-446-8594
attar 6 P~
Old• 3 BR~ ftory &amp; ~~. ful
basement, 1/2 acre Centenary
Call 014-440.3044
locllll:ad !i m1111111 from town-At
141 Over 2'12 aeres Crty
school• lend contract posdtbla
Call 614-446-9210 evenmgs..

2 4 BRs, lR dining, am k1t·
chen t bath garage wtth elec
opener N1c. n•ghborhood Crtv
limits SIHI sid1ng. new fence,
CA l•rge yard I 33,900 Call
6t4 44114983 -days 440·

28004ve

,08 Stata St Pomeroy 2 or 3
bedrooms carpeted No reuonabteofferrefuMd Phone814-

992-3725

In Rutland 6 rooms blll:h nice
location. \WII built No rent1ng.
leatung ar land com .. cta 614-

742·2880 .. o14-742-20o7

Fer •I e. Ran•t Property Dupl••ndt•ll•oniDt•lnRadna
Good monthly income CloMto
tchoola and ehureh• Easy to
~t Owner hu ~eloattd Call
614-949-2800 or after 6p m
61 4- 949 2228

1---,--..:....____ _

draperies. complete c•petltd
b..uh m large TV utility mom, full
batem81'1t. 3 acres a,d 1% acre
lake $125,000 unfurn11hed
$ 130.000 furnished Rt 7. Ave

Points mint condition Phone
614-992·2571
Secluded 10 room 2 stmy
hou• With 2 '1J bath deck
sunk·ln porch 2 acres RIVer
fronllge. In Syracust Upper
80's 814-992 5224 or 6t4992 8907 after f5p m

Investment Property pnced for
qUICk •II Ownet ntloC1111n9
needs to sail &amp;-modern one floor
plan houses One. 4 bedroom
and 4 two bedroom, full b•emenls I'ICentlv ~emodeled W1!1
sell any or all Will consider land
contmct to qtMtlified bu¥Sr Call
6t4-742 2728 efter 9 30p m
3 bedroom, bMement n ~
nnw aut·
bulld1ng, 2822 JeffBftOn Aw
Phone 304 675-7746
k1tchan, central a1r

Small 4 room house lot runs to
nven edge, low 20's 304-875Sl 00 a hour Odd jobs Call 3030 or 875-3431
814-258 1398
Owner movmg anxious to •II 3
Will do babi(Sitting m my home bedroom• 2 baths. fm11hed
St Rt 36 Call 614-446 4060 basement 81!1 per cenusaum•
ble loan, 304-87&amp;3030 or
HouiiJ painting &amp; barn rooh 675-3431
Rafereneefurnished Call after 6

014-446·0790

MustS ell n1ce 2 bedroom home
good locat1on:
Vlfl'd care brush cunlng light shown by appomtment, 304hauling some trwe tr~mmin~ 875 6639or 675-1553
and rem oW~ I Call Bill Slack .
2 bedroom • A 'frame one acre
614-992·2 269 evenings
with n1ce yard and shade trees 8
¥"' old s 22 000 00 304-675Hou • cleaning. spring dearung
1 165
painting call 304-882·3846
Pl\1.

st8 900 00

nf~JW'--...'ll
Garage S11lo-Ona Day Only!
T1..1esday July 1 2 9 AM S ~M 4

· · Pt ·preiuiilnt

farruhes Very 111!asoneble pnces
ant1ques ball cards clothing all
SIZtl lg med sm plus c hild

&amp; Vicinity
yard ule. July
14, 15,18 900am -n 7MII•
out At 2 by Flatrock Grocet'y
Aduh and baby clothing glass
ware mini washer alectrlc
111nge, Much, Much Much
m01e Come On Out II
3

family

......G"B11iiiolis ..........
&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sal•10:00 to 3 00, Tu"

6 W8d ,Juty 12.&amp; 13 Thera.d
betide IlLII Founl;lh, Motel on
At. 7 . hakf_. 111tt, ttrbl-.
olothal etc

Yard hl•2 mil• out Clark;

Ch"'ll Rd. July 13th. 14t~ •

Fod.... ltoto, • Cl¥1 8orvl01
... ne.aao . 171,110 yr

~

-of Clltl Job Cntr
f·I19·Bitl-t11h.._ J I410H.
241n

Homes for Sale

Will do any kmd of WOfk for

21&amp;&amp;

uoo

1/31 / 1 mo

Also

Business
Opportunity

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

ren'!l household hems and
apphancet 1 % mr1e out
George t Creak Rd from Rt 7
Watch for

....

,.

11th. I AM to 4 PM

llalotTfiura
• 6 Fri RR
I to3 · -

·;·o:;

Jurv

1 ~ 16
···;~,~-·Nice
clothing all sizes, craftt, link
refrlgeralor fto,..rs. much
more In Harrlaonvtlla. on New
Uma Rd Second hou• on left
July 15th and 18th 9 0().6 00
Henry Hartnwn . Ch•...-. Ohio
B1cycl• Mopeds, lawn mower
ct..,.. pfenle ta~a. cenmn9
jars, tvPIWrlttf elt10trlc Mwin
machine, 19 Inch T v Iota

mite 114-885-3839

'

o1

'11,:ot 11mt yard ale. July 14 •nd
9 • 3 Co Ad JO For 11t Run
g

3 mfl•. tum • onrno,.
Comolooy 3rd on Jolt
Htmm A•ldtnoe. Lott ot goad
ltamt plant ....,., tither price
ton. curttrtn1 etc
Rd

O.Orge's Crealt-1st hou• on

a~gns

.,...
. . ... . . ..
.-omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

ThundiY. 9

deoomlon1 untl O.o. Fun jobl
IWty pt., , _
k~ No
ooH.ctlor or dellwtfVI WOrk your
own hourJ, Now hrlrlng Demonrrt ..tonr Call Ietty C.rpenter,

PH. 742-2463

21

Help wanted

lolodl lrolool And etuol Soli
ChriltfNs Around the World

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Insurance

304·882 2t45

-

F1/lartctal

Ranch Permastone
Home, Birth panahng 3 bedroom. 2'h bath. 2 c• garage,
buih ., oven ll!ln ge .nd refrigeralor "one see lhrough fire
place. Complete wrth sheers and

South Eatt Ohio Ban Mfg Co
seeks qu~lified drNert, ap..J£..
..,..cants thould P0 1181 lo llowtng
Nest Apparan oo
M 1nunum 2 years and or 1 000

59

Wdl do beby•t11ng tn my horr.
Any lh1ft 614-992 6483

8 7K33

and newer u•d cars Smith current Itt of JObt and

Call Collect (304) 372-4331

FEATURING:
Riviera
Cabinata
Acllyaon Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
Peachtree Doors
and Windows

Government Jobs 118,040
859,230 yr Now hiring Your
area 805-887· 6000 EJ!I A·
9805 for current Federal hat

LOST In Oalllpollt, Sat Jutv
9th. 'Whhe Ohio Vall., Benk
envelope conUIInmg money It
found Pleaae Call 6t4-245-

I. H. leeglo, Ownor
Rt. I, Box 74-A. Rtply, W. Va. 25271

-

stytfng talon 11 •alung one
additional styhst who Is look1ng
f9r more ttw\ JUII anottwr job
Call Terri at 6t4-446-9610 for
details

ROOFING

B&amp;C DRILLING CO.

~
z

COST ANALYST

Immediate opening for an lfldl·
VIdual dnw1ng a chall.,gmg
posillon in a rural .-ttlng
Minimum requwements are an
Aaoei•e's Degr• 10 Account
plus 2 years coat .:peri.,ce
Excallenl benefits package
Pleue ,.,d resume and •1.-v
requtreman11 to Jano'a/ A Dlv·
Ilion of The ptllabury C) • p 0
Box 161 . Welhon, Oh1o 46892
Equal Opportunhy Employer

We~ 304-882-2114!

8

614-992 503SahMftpm Vary

reaso,.bte.

c•"'

LOST Black Lab male. Wearing
blue collar Lecta Mud Soc area
Call 814·250.1379

LOST Holstein IM8re Millstone
area 304-67~2640

Mother Df 1 ehlld will do
baby'srttmgmmyhomtM F Hot
lundu• and snacks provided
E xperieru:ed. dependable. Call

Talented, Creat1ve individual
wanted form axc::itlng
in
Advert•mg Sal• Call for an
appointment, 394-727 7886

Government Jobl S18,037 to
Sll9 406 lmmtKhate hlrlngl
Your • • Call 18fundlbla. 1
618 459-3611 Elct 1122 for
fadenll list 24 hrs

t
":;;:::::::;======~
I usedJ1mc.-aMink Chev -Oids lhc

NEED WATER?
CALL

c.:J

6 OD

after

9&amp;72

1-8 , mo pd

•Dozer •

Guinea plgatogtve MIV to good
hon. Call814-742-l174

6

&lt;. F. SCOTT

F2758

Hair Stylilts Acrolt Tha Street

KitMns lhtar ••mad. 304-676-

~\rZ
Midol..... t

It 4-949-20158

40114

Plea-.e" banary

SERVICE JOBS
Nowhlr1n9 Your Area 113,560
to $59.480 lm mediate openIngs Call 1·316 733-801112ext

Free to good home Full Blooded
Brittany Spaniel pups Call 614-

2 ea11, 2 kit1tnt Call614 992
6276

flr111

Seek1ng application• for ..If·
. .tlon &amp;: conyenlent
stOM PI PIH18n1 arM Send
r'flumll to Box Cia 157
c/oGalllpohl DailyTr.-...ne. 825
Th.rd Ave
Galhpollt, Ohio
45131

off

Deere. Naw Holland.

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

Authorizecl Servlte

perc~t

"AI Reasonable Prices"

-FRII I!TlMATIS-

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

bu11net1 •I e. June · July 2 50·

76

Authonzed John

For any of lhnuanflliS tall

3·11·"•

Going out of

614-662-3821

"Free E1t1mate1"

NO SUNDAY UW

Oeb.,.e Shop

Page 7

18 Wanted to Do

Help Wanted

tent lee _gas

3 Announcements

CUSTOM BUlLT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

operated House Plant
Alert Ught w1th tumng
Offer good 6/ 1 7 I 30

located Halfway between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan

11

Fomole Colll•type dog 10
months old Goodwfthchlldren

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Daalar for

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Denn1s Retmer Co , L p A

been~no~m~od~•~!;=-~===:.:::...-A
11

CAll AMY CARTER
or BOB'S ElECTRONICS

Church -Home-School
Free G1ft "Water Me

Appra1sed Value,
Cannot be sold for les1
than 2 / 3rds ot the ap
pra1sed value

•• • ower to tasy YHS.

PH. 949-2969

Moddloport. Ohoo 45760

567,600 00
TERMS OF SALE Cosh

&amp; "do

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-fAB
ROOF TRUSSES

11/2/llllt

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Announce 111 en Is

FEDERAL, STATE, AND CIVIl

~r===::::::::;==::;fTj;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;::::;i
GEARY
lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VHS TAPE
BODY SHOP
Lat usconwtrl !NstoldMowoes
550 PAGE STREET

~===:;::=:1:0:·8:·t:;t;:c

p

e

1·28·'18·11•

Pla1n11'ff

CosoNo 88·CV·73
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

By. Jud1th R. Werry.
Deputy Clerk

e

lhe liono end/or lnterooto'"

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
OIAMOND SAVINGS &amp;
LOAN COMPANY.

Defendants

Probate Judge

8 USIDeSS
serv1ces

gage named in the Com·
pla1nt be foreclosed and that

J.i. 11·1 ... 4

at al.

Robert E 8ucki

t...----:::----1----~-----1

Public Notice

••

Administrator of the estate
of Raymond A. Proffitt, de·
ceased. late of Route 1.r
Portland, OH 46770
1

(7112. 19. 26. 3tc

PH. 949-2168

WARREN L PERRINE,

OH 44641 wao appo&lt;nled

Probate Court
7 ) 12, Clerk,
19, 26, 3tc

olthiuctoon, lhotthe mort· 1

sure action
amounll
duo
Ploon1iffand
beallpaid
from

WILL HAUL
JUST_CALL!
992 3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOl L
FILL DIRT

Roy W Proffitt, 9155 Edl·
son Street NE, Louaaev1lle,

Jud1th R Werry.

1988. with mtereat thereon

marshalled and the real n·
tOtO tdll be qufotod ond 101d
property sold 1n the foreclo

DEN NV CONGO

Meogs
County Problte
Coun. Caoe No 26902.

tt29,139 911uofMarchs.

It a rate of *7.&amp;8, and COlts

Business
Services

"
On July 7. 1988. m the

._..t 1
Proft1tt, 61090
Portland Road. Racma, Oh1o
46171 wao appoontod Exo
cJutr~x of the 11tate of Allee
ewen Adams, deceased,
IRotodoPf 64424 Cemetery
oa · onland, Ohio

of Twenty- nine Thouund
One Hundred Thlrty-mna
and
Ninety-one
Cents

tho roghtto rO!oct any end all 5
Meigs County Com'moslionero
bids.

Public Notice

FIDUCIARY

45789. The prayer of the

330 feet to the Nonhweat
corner of M R Wolf' sland.
the Southeast corner of
Clara Ross lot and the
Southeast corner of Mary E
Wolf's Lot. thence South

Public Notice

On July 7, 1988. m the

boon oulgnod Cooe No 88
CV·73,ondlspondingrnthl

Sutton

Deltr AM Landen: I have always
belteved that first Impressions can
have a powerful effect on how
people jud&amp;e us. Please read on and
tell me if I am wrong.
When I was growing up I was
very blond. No one took me
seriously. I believed tt was bcatuse
blondes are presumed 10 be dumb
Then I began to wear glasses.
Suddeilly, people asked me questions and paid attention to what I
said.
.
Recently, I read a survey by a
viSion center in Dallas. It said 79
percent of the corporate recruiters
and fashion·image consultants
found that glasses imply intelli·
sence. Stxty·nine percent said they
believed glasses create a profession·
al ima&amp;e. Eighty pe_rcent thought
thai glasses lielp the wearer to focus
on making a power statement ·
during a business presentation.
Do you believe, given the findingS
of this survey, that I should darken
my naturally blond hair, since the
dumb-blonde iJnaBe cancels out the
brainy
of my glasses? TEXAS QUESTION
DEAR TEXAS: Intelligent folks
know that all blondes are not
dumb and that people who wear
glasses are not necessarily smart.
Why cater to the dummies•

Queen Bees meet

Warren l Pemne, etal. De ·
fendanta. This action has
Court of Common Plea&amp;
of Meigs County. OhtO.

:feet
s. 87fromdogr67' W 692
the Intersection of

3

Loan Company. Plaontlfl. vi

Augut10. 1988. tho follow·

ton Township, Meiga County, SUte of Oh1o, bounded
end d•cribed aa followa.
Beginning It the Southeat
Cf;trner pf Mebtl Reed's lot

Chris and Alicia Woods. Pome·
roy, announce the birth of their
second child, a daughter. Alison
Morgan, May 7 at the Holzer
•
Medical Center. The infant
•
weighed seven pounds, four
ounces and was 21 inches long.
Sherr! Smith and Lisa Hoffma~
Maternal grandparents are gave a demonstralion on food~
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans, with an internatlnal flavor at the
Portland. Maternal great · recent meeling of Queen Bee4
grandmothers are Ada Van Me- 4-H Club held at Sherri's home. •
ter, POrtland, and Bernice
Plans werp discussed for moEvans, Gallipolis.
ney making projects Including a
Paternal grandparents are bake sale Demonstrations at tho!
Mrs. Mila Woods, Pomeroy, and fair were planned Next meet in~
the late William James Woods II. will be held Tuesday night at thi
Pomeroy.
home of Kellie Ridenour at whicQ
Mr. and Mrs. Woods have a
time the members will learn the
son, Corey, age three.
rleht way to wash hair.
•
\

307 09 ond 307.10 of tho

16, T-n 2. Range 12, Sui:

Harrisonville visits
'

Dafendent in the action an

,.crlt.ad a follows, to-wit
81tueted in Sect1on No

Visitors over holiday weekend
Mr. and Mrs Jack Elam. Mr.
and Mrs. LesUe Frank. Sarah
and Matthew. Mrs Gladvs Tuck·
erman and Dorothv Reeves were
July 4 visitors or'MI 3nd Mrs.
Eugene Haning aud Ronald.
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy and
Daniel, and Mr and Mrs Char·
ley Smith were Sunday evening
visitors of Mr and Mrs. Gene
Lambert, Charlotte, Clint, and
Sherry Abbott of Flatwoods
Mr. and Mrs Terry Johnson

t~lod O&lt;omond Savongs •

tng rNI estate
The followtng deacrtbed
real Illata of the late Marga-

Children show sides of kindness
Dear Ana Leaders: I want to
share with you and your readers
one of the mos1 touching experiences of my life. It occurred last night
at a Uttle I eagne game,
Our son's team is made up of 7·
to 9-year-olds. "jimmy," one of the
members. is handicapped. He has
Down's syndrome. The lad was up
to bat, and for the first time, he hit
the ball. Although he was tassell
out at first base, he kept running.
And then it happened. Every specta·
tor at the game stood up to cheer
him on. When jimmy reached
home base, all hts teammates
rushed over to 8ive him a pat on the
back and tell htm he was terntic.
In a world where people have
come to believe that most children
are cruel and unfeehng, this was
undeniable evidence to the con·

NOTICE
The Board pf Commlsatoners of Meigs County.
Oh•p. pursuant to Sections
fer for ..Ia on Wednesday,

Ann
Landers
o.wtlt 7

Public Notice

Ohto Rev11ed Code. will of-

By-laws for the whole fa~ily
l. Don't drop in unexpectedly. If
you can't telephone or haven't been
invited, wail until you are.
4. Don't expect to have all your
holiday meals over here. I know
our house is bii!I!Cf than yours. but
you could have the ramily over for
Thankst!iving or Christmas or East·
er brunch if you wanted to.
S. Don't invite yourself over
when we are entettaining. If we
want to include you, we will let you
know.
6. If your kids nted new clothes,
buy them. Don't ask us to llike the
children shopping
7., Don't call us in tbe middle of
the night to set a grandchild out of
jail. We had enough of that sort of
thing with you.
8. Please teach your children how
to behave when they visit in our
home. Thts means no walking on
the fumtture, no playtng tag in the
house and sliding on the varnished
floors. And tell them not to help
themselves to whatever they lind in
the frid&amp;e
9. !.et your children know that it
is not polite to look in the bureau
drawers and ask. "Can I have this?"
10. Please get your stuff out of
our house. It's been several years
now and I could use the space.
Dear Ann Landers: What ktnd of
fascist provided you with that cute

Public Notice

'

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

•

�·---~

Page-s-The Daily Sentinel
32

~

·51

LAFF·A·DAY

56

Household Goode

1972 'Mndsormobilehom~~ wH:h
2 c• g•-e-• .nd 5 acr•. C.ll
61 ._318-9352 before 1 PM.
_,,, Sell-1979 Uberty mobile

home. 3 lA .. 1 Nth. undlfpino
ning. Good condition. Alldng
881100. Neg: C.ll 814-38119~.
'
'

Umed o.AI Mdroom suite end
d ..k. Arty ••onable off• considered.
be seen at 495 Oak

c.n

N.w 'Mon mobile ho,.. with
•JIMdo. Sta., Nfrlger~~tor,
dlah!Maher, ai'r condtrtoners. all
new c•ptt. Entire hoi'M in
eKceUent eo ndltlon. Moving.

.

1340.
Air conditiorw, 7&amp;00 BTU.
llllt:el. cond., •1 SO. Uvlng room
a~lta, ellCII. cond ., •175. C.ll
814-4411-2390.

l\lluat Sell. C.ll 614-4411-3852
or 446-2912.

Mobile home with 2 i'I)Omt
·a dded on. Clll 814-742-3149.

1 •• 70 Schutb:. 21x32 g.age.
front poteh, badl deck. 1 . 11
a cr... Caii614-898-S345.

1· 11

1985 Holly Paoli. Ux84, 2

1988 two bed room mobUe
home. 14JC70, for •Ia or tent,
304675-7988.

44

1 hiS with

2 SR .. unfurnished mobile
home. Priwta lot on At. 61&amp;
AC . Adutts only. Cell 81-i-4484807 or 4"1-2102.

1 Ox12 add on. woodburner,
w••hlr•nddryer, air co net. must
be , m~d. 304-895-3602.

2 Bedroom tnller for rent Call
614'411-9847 .. ,411-9521'

33

Furnished 2 BR. moblia horne. 2
mUee from Gallipolis on Rt. 141.
Call 614-4411-4109 Or - 3792740.

1970 V'i'lndsor,

Farms for Sale

48 acre fa'm. midway between
lldvveft and Rio Orande on SR.
5! • . 838,900. Call 6145238~58.

fWmTribble Road, 7mile~ftom
Rt. I2M.. onCounty, 3"h: acrM,
Hau• Md buildinga. eel 304755-7290.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 acre and up building lots and
rnodu .. r horne sites. Tuppe,.
Plalnt·Outster

~oWter,

2·2 BR . mabllehoiT1IIII·Oriewith
a•p~ndo lvlng room. Nice coRd,
Call 814-4411-6725.
2 bedroom mobilahorr. Mlddl•.
port, Ohio, referenoe .,d .ecurity depoait required, 304-8823267or 304-773-6024.

'

For ,.,t Of' llle do~a wide
trtller, prMtelot. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, AC, front poteh, Galltpo.
lis F.rrv 304-178-3087.

44

roett.Nay

to 11ch lot. 814-985-3594.
50 acrea with fre~ gas. Just 7
mJhts from Pomeroy on St. At.
143. Price. S21,000. Call814992·6239.
Big Foot Park, Gallipolis .
10,0.40 lot o,....looking Rac-

coon Creek. 8x18 deck. \Nltter,
sewer. efectric. Shown b¥ appointment Only. Call 614-6986345.

16 acres for •le. Beach Grme
Rd.. RutMind. Gn well, momhly
income offwelf. $10.000. 614992-3901 .
Ashton, large building lots,
moble hornet permitted, public
...,.ter, also river lou, Ctvde

Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2336.
Beaatllul river lotsoneacreplus,
public
Clyde Bow.n, Jr.
304-575-2336.

war.-.

LOTS. one acre. 1..,61 wooded.
cttv water. Jericho Road. owner
fhwncing, goad terms, 304372-B&lt;OOSor 372-2575.
Two 1 1cre lots with pt.blic
water . Jerrye Run Road.
$ 4,900.00eilch, consider trade.
304575-2383.
0

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.
Adutts only. Ref. required. No
petl . Call 814-445·0338.
Hou •· Rodney Village II , J BR .,
unfurnished. $250. Call 446441tli after 7 PM.
Unfurnished 6 room hou~e . 1 112
bath, g• furnace, storm window. gldge. Adutts. No pets.
Oep. &amp; ref. Call614-448-2543.
J BR . ranch with g.-age. Rodney VIllage II. $275 a mo. plus
dep. HUO appi'O'Ad. Call after 4
PM-814-:JBS-8824.

Unfurnished 2 SR .• 1 bath, niiW'
furlllce. wall-to-111111111 c•peting.
range. washer-dryer hookup,
replacement Mndowl, new wir·
in g . •225 a mo., $225 dep. C.ll
61 44411-R EAD.
Nice 2 possibly J BR . house in
Midcleport. AC .. dishwasher.
garbage disposal. full basement.

Call 61 .... 448-9206 after 5:30

PM.
Unfurniahed t]ou• fQr rent. 2
bedrooms, carpet Nice and
clean. No inside pets. Deposit
required. Call 614·992·3090.
large 2 bedroom, sun room.
wastv:M·dryer hook- up, completely md1100rated, adults pr•
terred. No pets. RllfM'8nce.
8210 month plus deposit. 222
N . lrd. Middleport. Ohio. 614992-3189.
J ¥try nice hou•s. One. 4
bedroom. and t"'-'0, 2 bedroom,

·reference and depoeit
814-742-2728.

~~~quhd.

2 bedroo:n ranch style. buih in

kitc:h en ~ry nlee. 2 mil• from
downtown G•llipoUs. •275.00
plus depolit and rtferencn. call
304876-3855.
In Middleport Ohio, 3 bedroom
house furnished. 304-882·
2&amp;116.
T~o room cottage furnished.
udhiee paid. •sa weak, lingle
P.t"on. call 304-8?!-3100 or
1711-5509.

All electric home. full siH
b... m.uandgange. 304-11753217.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 • 31A. All utff~loo pold•copt
el..-idty. Conwenlent bcMion.
Coif '11 oi-UB-8888 0&lt; 4464008.
Fur_._ 2 lr mobUe ho,.,
AC. LD'C IIH et UK on
..... •111 ...... •n5 Dopoolt.
Coli 11ol-256-1117.
'

lEe"•"

Trttll• lor - · At. 681. 21ft, 1
b .. h. C111114-4U•a18:1.

53

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
hou••· Pt. Pl . . .nt•ndGallipo111. 814448·8221 .
2 bedroom fumishad apt NIIW'

H""en, refe~Wnce 11nd security

deposit required, 304-8823267 o• 304-773-6024.
Bllech Street, Middleport, Ohio,

2 bedroom furnished I!PIIrfment,
utlttiel paid, 18f.-nces. Phone
304-882-2586.
'

New ground floor 3 rooms and
b.th, c•ptted. washer•nd dryer
hook up, pOftlh, prlwte pukfng
end entr~~nc::.. 304-875--'1580or
8711-1982. •

45

AI)Brtment
for Rent

2 BR . apts. 8 clolltt. khthenappl . furniahed. Waeher-Dryer
hook-up, ww c•.-t. niMI'ty
,.&amp;nlltd, daek. Ragancy, k1c.
Apto. Call 304875-8104, or
875-5388 or 875-7738.
New completely furnished
apartment .&amp;. mobile horne in
city. Adutts ontv. P•ktng. Call
814,411-0338.
BEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 536 Jocl&lt;son
Pike from $1831 mo. Wllk to
shop and movlll. 614-4462588. E.O.H.
Broot(slde A.panmants: located
offBuiiN'NieRd. - 1 BA . sPacious
aplrtrnents with modern Idle hen
and washer-d,.,.r hookups, cable.~ taleuislon avaiJ.ble. Call
11 ...... &amp;-2127.
Up .. lrs unfurnished apt. Clrpeted. utilhtes t»ld. No children.
No pet•. Call 614-446-1837.
11 Court St.-2 BR ., 2 baths,
klttc:hen furnished, w / w c•pet·
No pets. Off stl'tllt parking.
Sl25a mo. plus utilities. Dsp. &amp;
ref. Call 814-446-4928.

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Second
Aw., Gallipolis. t126 .a mo.
UtilhiM paid. Single m1le. Shwe
bath. Call448-4418 efter 7 PM.

54 Misc.

c.n.r.an•s U•d nre Shop. Over
1,000tir•. siZIH12, 13, 14, 115,
1 e. 16.15. 8 ml• out At. 218.
Coll814-258-8251 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo p.,l&lt;.
Roua 33, North of Pomeroy.
Ren111 tr~fl•• · Call 614-992·
7479.
Space for small trailet'S. All
hook-ups. Cable. Alsoeffldency
rooms. air and cable. M•on.
W.Vo. Call 304-773-5651.
Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Femity Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, w. Va.
304-675-3073.
Trailar s.-c• for .ent, Locust
Road, Rou• One, 304-8751078.

Merchandise

Furnished apt. •1!50. UtRttles
paid. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second Aw .. Gallipolis.
Call 446·4416 after 7 PM.
Apartment. 2 BR ., unfurnished
$175. Water patd. 1138 Saco nd, GalllpoUs. C.ll 446-4418
after 7 PM.
Furniahed effictency apt. ·3
rooms &amp; beth. Carpet throughout. PrMite &amp; quiet. Adults ontv.
Coli 61 4-4411-4607 or ((62602.
Furnished apartment in town for
rant Call 814-448-1423.
2 OR. apt .-Rio Granda. Wiler 6
trash paid. $225 a mo. plus
deposit. Call 614-245-9378.

Luxurious Tara Townhou•
apartments. Begant 2 floort, 2
OR ., ful bath upmirs. pow:lar
room downstatrs. CA., dlsttwuher, dispoul, privete ·entrance, privattt enclo•d patio,
pool, playground. Utilities not
inCluded. Starting at &amp;299 par
mo. Call 614-367-7850.
3 rooms &amp;: belh upstair' apt.
Unfurnished. Utilities Inducted.
·Aduhs only. No pets. Call

81 ol-4411-2683.

Rio Grande. Nice 2 SR . Refrig ..
.tow &amp;water furnished . $225a
mo. No pets. Call 614-4468038.
2 BR . apartment. Caii614-3BB9064.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroOm fll)artmentt at Village
Manor and Rivertide Apart·
ments in Middleport . From
$182. Coli 8U-992·J787.
EOH.
Apts, for rent.
Carpeted. Nice aetting. Laundry
facilhlas antllltlla. C.ll 114992-3711 . EOH .

.-11

Newly redecorned ap.nments
Millable. utiffttes
1225.
per month, depolit Mqulnd. Dill

81ol-lltl2-5724 ...... 8:00 ..
992-5119.
2 bedroom .,ts. Middhlport.
111B-1185.J* month. 2 .wtd4
becham hou.. In Pomeroy
•oo. U0~8225poi-. A"
perttr fu mlehed. Ae...,.ce ,.
qul•od. o., 81(·11112·2381 ...
...... 814-982-1723.

5 room unNrnllllod opt. 81oi812-U34 or 304-882-2518.

1

.-.-.....--

~

.-......,.,...;.;.........:;.

&amp;
61

Uv

..

tng room ILIIlM· •199-e619.
Bunk bod1 w..
"h boddl"It 11 g 9.
Fun lize mattress 6 foundation
starting. Recliners
etartln.._ • •99
.
B99
USED· Beds. dre11ers. bedroom
auites," •199-e
, Desks
complete Un~
wrtnger Wllsher, a299
of uaed fumlturw.
NEW· Westel'n boots· $3Q.
Workboots $18 6 up. (Steel &amp;
ott toe). Call 514. 446. 3159 ,
8

County Al&gt;pllanco. Inc. Good
uood
and Mo
TV sets.
on op~:.llancn
8 M
8PM
...
Op
10
•
n u•ru
Sot • 61•~~w
.. •1•9
•
• 9 • u27 3•d.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
000D USED APPUANCES
WMhers, dryers, refriljJif'ltors.
r1ng11 . Skaggs Appliances .
Uppe. River Rd. belldo Stone
Cr• Motel •1• •••7398

,•--v ·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofu and chairs priced from
$395 to 19911. Tabl• 1150 •nd
up to 8128. Hlde-o·bod• 8390
to •59&amp;. AecUner~ 1225 to
t375. LlimPt •21 to 1125.
Olnl'ttlls t109and up to t495.
Wood tabte w-8 chelra 1285 to

Farm Equipment

Top quality hydraulic oils
greases. fuel oils • motor oils bferm equipnwnt. Call 8urllle Oil
Com..,.,. 1114·441-"119.
Whita farm tractors cost plus
&amp;%. 5'ders Equipment. C1ll
3 04675-7421.

63

Livestock

j--------5 tKu••· O..t of r:-stUI'II &amp;
Call814=-448-1943.
~tar .

Babv pigs for llle. Clll 614949·2017.
HerBford Bull 50 cents lb; also
ponv•. 304-875-2038.

Building Supplies

64

Building Motonalo
Block, brick, •....,., pipet, windaws. llntals, etc. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614'"5121
2 ....,..
'
Concrete block•· all sllel· ""'rd
del"- M
•·
Df
'"'FY·Co ..a•oneand.
Gallipolis Block
123h Pine
St
G 111
"
a polis. Ohio. Call 614-4462783.

Hay

&amp; Grain

Hay 91 .76, Straw $175, Sholl
corn•6.50per100. Call8:00to
12:00 Mor~an"a Woodlawn
Farm, 304-9 ? ·2018.

9 &amp;:BSurplusBulldingSuo-•iea· do ws. btth '"
:Doors.••••
wtn
tubs.
comm'-"""'. moldings. lumber,
paint, • miac auppllaa. Call
614-446·8772.

Auto's For Sale

1982 Z 28 Ca maro, 118 000
mil •· eu t o.. Blf,
· t·toPI. Looks
'
like new. 88250. Call 614-4469887.
1986 DodgeOmni SE . AM-FM,
AC. PS. P8, Cruloe. Eacal. cond.
Low milas. C.ll61'44"2858
oh• 8 PM.
~ -

Pets for Sale

Groom .·and Supply Shop·Pet
Groommg . All breeds ... AII
sty!•. lams Pat Food Dealer
Julie Webb Ph. 814-448·023 1 :

1988 Chevy Cavali• RS SW.
Fled &amp;. silver. 36.200 mil•.
Auto,, PS. PB, AM·FM. Tltt.
.,ulto, AC. C.ll814388·8240.

Oragonwynd c.ttery Kennel
CFA P.-siM •nd Sin_. kh~
""'· AKC Chow puppl•. New
Himel.,_ ldtWne. -Call 61

1984 Buidc. Century Llmfted.
V-11. auto. , AC, Tih, cru.._,
poM:r locks, AM·
4- 38 ..8240 ·
• ·

~ =owar •••·
1795.
1100
to t375.
. ==:..L5;;~;·~Cu~L~,~3~7~,20=0=mi;;:I;;:•;:·;;:Ca::jll
Hutch•Dtsk
to&amp;OO
Mdup up.
Bunk ~=4=48-~3~S4444=o~fi=•=7P=M:

bttdt compl.. w-mlttfel"'
t295indupto8315. Batrybedo
., 10. Molt..._ o•'"'• """'•
tu Wor twtn t lB. firm • 78. an d
*"B. Ouoen aatl 8225, King
$350. 4 d r - ch . . $89. Gun
cabinets 8gun. llbv mlltlestH
•36 •
led fnlm•
$30 • King fromo •110. Good
... ectlon ol bedroom sutlel
msta~ cabinets, headbolrds uO
and up to

•41.

S

NAFU® hy Bruce Beanie

1);411[

•20

90 O..,s lime •

c•h with
•proved craclt. 3 Mil• out
luiiVIIa Rd. Open •m to Spm
Mon. tt.ou S•. Ph. 514-((60322.

new ....

•-r ......

•41100. Good
cond. Call 114-388-9702 after
I PM .

1984FordTempo,.,to.,.,eo'2789. 1184 Ford E-rt. ~
spd .• ni..,,1899. John's Allto
Salu. Below Holldly Inn·
K.-.auga.
.
1983 Ol•v•er Yo-.
Auto .. air. Coll814-379-27211.

f.mlll, oo,.._d •bl•. Every
d., Ioiii•. !Iii mile out Jerri·
elM&gt;. 304-8711-1410.

_____

"I think he'l be a TV evangellet .men he
grows up. All he ever does Is ask for money."

'•

·-~~---

---

I

&amp;4 W.O.

Vans

1915 P'tymou-. Voy8g• Mini
Van. 38.000 mil•. lDaded. Clll
oft• 8 PM. 814-4411-2803.

1982 Dodge Ch•gar. AC. Excet Interior. good bodv. Runs
good. UOOO. Clll 8142661834 oflor 8 PM.

1979 Olflly4W'D. ~ton Scott's
Otle .,.ck .. e . Good cond.
I 3100 Of' - - b l • off• Clll
514-387-0832.

1979 Dodge Omnl. VfllfY good
cond. 4 spd. t,.nsmlu&amp;on.
88110. Call814-258-8251.

1978 Joop CJ-6. E110al. cond.
Caii814-317·7B97.

1979 Manta C.lo. •llywhHII.
niMI' ttr-. ntJW b . .ry. AC,
erul•. AM-FM-Ciee. •1100.
Coli 81ol-387·7215.

1975 wn equipped fOr flahing.
hunting. c1mplng. New brlk81,
paint )ob, 318 motor, head••·
·~ 8~4-892·8881 .

1971 Toyota Coralfa. Rune
good. •aoo. Call 1114-2455091 .

1979 Joop CJII . H• .. op. 360
onglno. Coli 114-992· 7214 0&lt;
814982-3224.

~;:::;;;;::=::;::==~
~ao

1987
Mercodoo
250 89711.
s. 82000.
1974 Cllwy
pi-p.
Coli
814-44&amp;.0338.

74

1979 Cor ...·tte. t-top. bl.ck.
Excel. lhape, llr. low mH•. Call
81 44,8-1273.

Motorcycles

1983XL800R. bcal.concl. Coli
attar 8 PM. 114-441-4473.

1987 01 ...... ·1,000 mM•.
1985 Skyhowk-53.000 mH•.
1982An.·73.000ml•. 1983
Colt -40,000 miles. 1981
Chavette-79,000 mHaa. 1902
Cllovotte·S..OOO mH•. 1977
Toyota Coro41•7B.OOO mil•.
Best off• Cell 814-8771 or
448-1980 ave.

1980Suzuk1560. 12,000mll-.
Good cond. 8800. Coli 814441-1210.
1978 Model XL 125 Honda
1300. Call814-2,5-5047 ofter
5:30PM.

1987 Buzuld Quad Racer 600.
New co nd. Many exues. Call

1978 280 Z. runs grMI. Body
felr concltlon. t825. Cell 814448-117:7 b8tWIM 7 ftt 8 pm.

614446-7821.
1981 Hondamatlc 400. Call
514-,48-5978.

1977 Thu-d. 2 _
..
73.000 octuol mil ... $1900.
Call 81 ol-2511-1239 lifter 5 PM.

1980 Yomoha din bike. Call
8144411-2350.

1151 H•lov OovklsonPonlleocl
Reeenttv o'Afhlluled. Aho mite
port&amp; '3000. 814-9,8· 2293
evening&amp;.

61~245-9231.

A

ED HOT b•galnsl Orug dul·
ers' c1rs. boets, plen• rep'd.
Su•pluo. You_r
Buyoro
Guide. C1J 805-687-1000. Ext.
5-4&amp;82.
: - : -Po
:-:-:------19 8 2 n·•·· Flr~'rd Lo·•·•
~ _,. · IIU.u.
Good cond. e2400. Clll 814-2&amp;8-1932 or 2415-9221 .

*'""·

197S 800 Honda Twin, overhead Clm motorcycle. Excellent
lhJI)t. 014-188-,3011.
1981 P•sport Motorcycle.
77ec. Lowmlleegs.1800mllee.
814892·7719 011onlnga.
1979 Kowoukl KZ 760. Good
condition. Alldng •aoo. 81ol992·1&amp;08.
1181 v.,.tt,. 750cC Vlrtigo, lo
rnA• 4.!81, axe cond. whh two
~al-o, 81,000.00. C.ll 30ol876-7371

Red Hot b•-'nsiDR~ doolers'
·~ ...Cklr·
cart. bo MS• ..,.., • .-po'd
plus. Your ""•
•-a
~-, Gui•·.
-...,..
11)80"orv
"17·6000 •-.
~' 8-9800.

18811 XR 200 A dirt bike, good
cond, 87110.00. 304875· 2,95.

*"·

197BCIIrv•• Lolar.,. Hoor.
New b•Wy.
brekas• .-lnt
Job. 114-892·7214 or &amp;14l82-3224.
-:::::-::-~--::::-:--::---:1988 Mus.., a. 289, ' -·
Callafter5p.m. 814-992·1198.

1187 Hondo Rebel 460. block.
81 mllea. exc cond, price
82,000.00. 304-876-7157 o•
176-1533.
19711 KowiHkl K24000. 1780
mllee, IIIIG"r00. 304-1718747.

1972FordLTD
. Goodoondtion.
81
Call 4-982·15782.
1979 ChOOiy Subu.t&gt;.,, Robult
""'
en..,.ne. 9 pueeng~r, •clllent
1concltion. 814-912-n8BIIVen_".;:•::· : - : - - : - : - - - - 42 000
19815 4Fard
,
mMe~.
tpMd.Elcon.
bleck httrkn.
grev interkM'. Excllanl oandlion. $3300. Call 8,. 2••
131
~ ·e.
- - - - - - -- - 1170 Novo sa. 380. 4 - d .
11100. Call 114-992-8119.

...

17ft. cemper tor •I e. 304-7736277.

'

a

....

7:30GCil Ill Hollywood

(

.())Judge
Ill of Far1une Q

Home
Improvements

tDIC-.IInt

I L~eopaftlyl Q

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncondhlon~~l llfllime guar...
tee. Lo~ reftnnCM furnlthed.
r;-.. Htimat11. C.U collect
1-81 4237·0. . 11. dlrf or night.
Roger•Basament
Waterproofing.

..

..,

a vldeoCotlrtlry
·&gt;·~·

'.

,,
;

·~

'

'

•

SWEEPER and IIWing Mtchlne
reetk._parts.edsu. . . .. ptck
up and delivery, Devil Vacanm
Cleaner, one half mile up
Goo- C.eok Ad. Clll 114448-0294.

ALLEY OOP

l!laoebiH t;1

CZl ()) NoVa Nova tracks the
recent diiiCOIIejol an
exploding star.

1111

Boats and
Motora for Sale

21 fl. """'lnor cnrloor. 198"
_.,.
"'
aanws, eta. 3!0 V-8 eng.,
8. Vfi!Y low hou,..
.100. Coli 30ol-727-8890.
wtda be..,., elleteatronl~ gaUev.

;-m

1173 Stor- 17 fl, Trlhul
-wfltltop.,d-. Nowly
....,. ...._ 121 HP lvenrulle
Motor.
with Getcw
'hll•. $3800. Coli 814-2881318.
12ft. oklmln..., bolt. 3 •oto
llld ..._ 1110. th .,.d h. .
lri"""OO. 840.
11 ou. ft.
rolt-at.... .,00, Ph- "1ol742!'2307.
v

Com.,._

-ry

0-

14 ft. low . . . · e. a
HP .,d troH•. 81 olIN-2784.

al "-ltvflle Now

-Ia

EEK &amp; MEEK
1HE2: r:?.aS LUW'S

Tree &amp; St"'"P •mowal. shade •
shrlDo. Azoli01, ""'lcit. top soil,
stone. •.cling. Don' 1 Landec . -. 114-448-91148.

1:05 (I) MOVIE: They Died with
Their
On (NA) (2:20)
1:00 (l) 700 Club
CZl (!) Struggloo for Poland
Look at the 1905 revolts thai
lollowed the Ru66o-Japanese

HIS IJAME ...

RON'S Telavl•lon Service.
Hou• c.tls on RCA, Quaar,
GE . Speciollng In ZonMh. Coli
304-678-2388 or 814-44624114.

. War.~

Ill

1918 lroc 221. Nd. AM·FM
. , _ , AC. PI, PI, dt ""ool.
301 V-1, 21.000 mlln
810.000.00.CIII-I:OOPM:
304-112·2254.

c• T"""'r Movie 1;1
IIJ Lllrry Klng Lhlel
0 MOVIE: Terrible Joe
Moran (NRI(1:4D)

·"

&amp;::Ia (!) Pro IIHc~ Volloybal

"~

Starks L8w nand Shn., Service..
304·8711-3958 ..,· 304-5782903.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON'S APPliANCE SERVICE,
houoe call oorvldna G E. Hot
Point, w11hers,l dryers and
110\oel. 304-1?1-2318.

!i&gt;A'l IGN'T THAT A
PIT &amp;Llw. I&lt;IJNNIN&lt;iAmLJND L.-CI06E ~-

Aoofin·g. fr•mlng. bMhroom •nd
kitchen lrtltllladone. e4 ectfcll.
concrete,bridl and block laving.

Men'a from Vemura Baach,
CA(T)
New Countty
10:00
Straight Tolk
G (2) il5) Summer
Sllowce.. Look at how
A,.,icans are going to
I!!;Ovide care lor the elderly.

'

'(e.G, ~L.IT :t "'NOW
THAT D06': HE J.DVEG

....... ---~--·-·-----

Cabe:~as .

Q

10:30 tD Calebrf1y Ch.r•

,.,,g..

(!) Water Skiing International
Tour from Orlando (T)
(ZJ !OIIIndlrt
m II]) Jefforaon•

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

11:00 tD Rlmlng1on Stoele Steeled
wilh a Kiss. Part 1
G Cll Ill
1121 1111 Nawo
&lt;IJ P.O.V. Based on the
autobiOgraphy of Nlcar~uan
· authOr Omar Cabezas . Q
(!) lllgn Off
IDI!])LoveCannoctton
IIJl Moneyline
IIJl Twtllglll

Michelt's R.. klentlll Air Conditioning 1nd
tlon. , .
ch•ga and repair •rvlce. 304458-1785.

1211 VldloCourrtry

1 JEST GOT

MY

CARll;R'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pfne
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-441-3888 or 8144,6-((77

84

NEW

SCALPEL!!

m

I CAN'T HARDLY
WAIT TO TRY
'ER OUT!!

z-

o -ock ..,...nta

lit.

Specialty of the House
You Can Ill I Star
11:05 (I) MOVIE: Dodgo Cl1y (NRJ
(1 :44)

Electrical
Refrigeration

a

Residential or commercial wW·
ing. New aarvlca or
Ucen•d electrlcilft. Estimate
free. Ridenour ElectriCIII. 3046711-1786.

rep••·

11:30•(2) alllloat of Careon
(!) flporiiCanter (Lj

•w -·

milD Nowl)wld Game

1Di 8porll Tonlgh1

General Hauling

•a 'Diamondl' caa .....

Nlgltt Mike Ia hired by
huabend, Ch~stina by the
wife In morttal dlapute .(R)
IIi Tripper Jolin, M.O.
0 Alrwolf The Horn of
Plenty

Dillard Wiler S•vke : Pools,
Clote•os. w•l•. Dollvory Asoy·
tirr.. C.ll 114-441-7404-No
Sum.,. c.tls.
J &amp; J Wacer l•vlce. Swimming
PCtols. cistern•. wells. Ph. 8142olll-9288.

taA-nMigl12:00 tD Piper Ch- Han Goes

''

Home
(!) lntltle lfle

R &amp;. A Water $1r~ce. Po ole
cltter'ns, wells. Immediate :
1,000or 2.000galfonede1Mry , :
Call 304-875-8370. .
'· ,
Pad Rupe, Jr. W•r S...vice.
PtJole, cls•rns. Wills, Clll 1114-

441-3171 .

.

e!llNigll-t:l

Schuler w&gt;omer ta.uNna. Jim•
Schuler 114-742· 1478 ar
Everette Schuler 114-742·

PEANUTS

3068.

ell-•.

Upholstery

SCRAM-LETS ll NSWERS
Quiver - Filch - V8tpll - Wooden - DIVORCE

"

'·

WHAT WOULD YOUR
FANTAS'( TEAM BE.
CH ~RLIE 8ROWN 7 .

,.''.
I'
••

A TEAM THAT DOESN'T
HAVE YOU ON IT !

Ill·····~

e!ll'l'.. Out

I....
MOVII: llelum Of
01
eo $'7.'!' ' ·
u •'IJdliUd'
8 -

IIi~ Movie (1:40) Q

,,"

OlclgiOINigltt
1:00 tD .........Allen
(I) .... Of ltlhalallfc llporla
Alnlttaa lA)
(I) t..ft C.w1e0Uan

•,.
'·

.. '

'

aiNoalw. . Now
12:30e(2) Gil LM1 NightIJINkl Leal&amp; AUt
(I) R""'*'' lrltlllaolng (R)

eo eurtle'a Artlllll

•'.

&lt;

An officer was trying to conv~ce a private to re-enlisi. ."We
feed: .clothe a~d keep you company, just as if you were marr~ed . The p11va1e announced, "I want a DIVORCE!''

BRIDGE

NORTH
.10 7 ~
.AQ1061
t78Z

When you have taken all the sidesuit tricks that you can against a suit
c~tr~c.t, the only place left to get a
tr1ck" m tbe trump suit itself. But you
have to keep your thinking cap on to
know when the right conditions exist,
North used a Jacoby transfer bid
(two ~amonds) to tell his partner he
had fiVe hearts. Then two no-trump inVIted game. South declined but still
placed the contract in hearts the
known 5-3 fit. After the king of SPades
lead drew the discouraging deuce.
West switched to the 10 of clubs. De·
clarer won tbe jack and played a heai_t
to dummy's queen. East took the klnji,
and West then took two more spade
tricks. The defenders now had "book '
needing one more trick to set the co~­
tract. West reasoned that declarer
could not hold more than the ace of
clube. (With A-K-J In that suit, declar·
er would have played them out to shed
·a spade from dummy before attacking
trumps.) With seven high-card points
in the black suits, declarer had at least
eight in diamonds to bring him up to
no-trump opening strength. U that
wore A-K·J, East would have the

~11-11

.Q Z

.J

I.
--.

.

EAST
• 962
•Kao

WI!'.ST

tA KJ 3
9

·~H

+10 3

.1098~3

.K764

SOUTH
+Q84
.7 3 z
tAKQS4

.,

·A~
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

Wu!
Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlft

Eut

Pass
2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT

Pass

Opening lead:

+K
'

q:u::ee::n::-b;::u::t-;:lt:-:w::o::u~ld:-n::-o-:t..,.ta""k-e-a""'tr""'i""'ck,...""'SoJ ··
the best chance for tbe defense was for
East to hold a spot-card In the trump
suit that could be promoted to the setting trick. The three of spades bit the
table and East set the contract with
his lowly eight of hearts.

·
:
•
,

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Junta
6 Send off
10 Sprightly'
11 Like some
coats
13 To do
with sound
14 Old-

..

2 Highly
excited

3 Cry of
success
4 "The

.

Greatest"

5 Reader's
' stand
6 Point
womanish
of view
U Chap (sl.)
7 Hebrew

16 _Welght

18

'·

Yeeterday'a

measure
- 8 Primary 23 Big 9 Woman's · Theory

WUrntt

· (suff.)

cloak
12 • ... go
down

'

..
AD8wer

36 Senior

•

•

citiZen

24 Grli1.11y
. (Ger.)
25 Plain
37 Genn
to see
and
26 Kitchen
Gorcey
alcove
39 "Hannah
27 Repulse
and_
29 Proper
Sisters"
31 Unyielding 41 Little
32 Draw out
Valerie

••

28 Satanical

29-Aykroyd
30Winner's

..

word,
in cards
31 Billow
33 American
writer

. 34Newsman
Koppel
35Arabic
letter
38 River
In Hades
40Small egg
42 Welcome

J

.. '

word
431pso-

44 Set of thr•~e~irt-irt-t45 Rushes off

..

.,'

11nstance
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here' a how to work It:

.-

.'

AXYDLBA·AXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
.apostrophes, the length and fonnatian of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
•,
CKYPTOQUOTE
7-12

ei!Jl Twilight zw

~

•.

Ill NowiNighl

'

Wauersan'e W1ter Heu ling.
re•aanable rates, fmrMdl•e
2,000 &amp;allon dollwfY,
pools. woll. no. ctl 304-8762919.

PGA Tour (R)

ll)CitHra
(Z)IIIgnOff

.

•..

DOWN

Ill Magnum, P.L

THE GRIZZWELLS®

..

1

ffi

IDi !venlng Na Crook •Ill! Chose

878-7121 .

1'

22 Time
again to
period
the - "
23 Hit hard
(Psalms)
24 Fortlfl·
17 Now (It.)
cation
20 Menu
27 Region In
entree
Gr. Britain

author Omar

Ak••
Tree TrimrnlngMd Stump
RemDVId, free ntlrnat•. 304--

82

~~TTER5

19 Manifest
21 Adherent

IIJl NIWI
(!) P.O.V. Based on lhe
autobiography of Nlcar~uan

cHI!.PI2!E.N.

3

a

ill

esdmatM. 304-87~2440 .

Mowrey' s UpholstMing_earvlng
trl
21lll•'- Thebttt
Aborlomt11ftln--•d I• aauntyar•
fumlt- uollo-lng. cou
21011!&gt; M-.r. .. . .,.. 304·178-4 114 for hoo
lng. • - trim. ••c oond. eltlmlln:.
3Q4..711-3101 .
t

m01 MOVIE: 'Kidt Oon'l

Tell'

Fetty Trae Trimming. II~P
r,mo:--1. Call 304-875-1331 .

f ~-:-:--=--=------­ 87
1118 E-rudo 110 II!&gt;. 18 h
Ellbtldo bolt and troll•. oil
•:t-OO. 304-1711-3118.

rnmer

first Qhild; lollow antics oi
lunatic reiiOI'IslaH.
• II]) MOVIE: Altum of 1
Man Called II«H (PG) (2:09)
(!) PnmeNows
lBl MOVIE: The Big Sleep
(NA)(1:54)
0 Tales of tlta Gold
Monk., Borgora or Bust

Pllnting: Interior • EJCttrlor.
Free estm.tes. Call 114-44&amp;. .,.
83«.
.'

Pump aal• 111d eervk:e. 304995-3802

•c c•

Plll,tlau.. Couple In 40s has

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES·
Septic tank pumping. $90 per
lood. C.ll 1· 800.537-9528.

Mostwellacompletede~meday.

WHkt;l

Ill • (() ...jor Leegue

eo- Soptlc T.... . 1000
gal .. 1500g.t. MdJet Aarat'on
..,...,, Foctory trolnod · shop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PfUSES, Jacksan, Ohio. 1-IQ0537·9528.

or cabte tool drHIIng.

7:35 (I) Andy Griffith
8:00 (I) Crazy Uke 1 Fox Eye In
1he Sky
G (I) all MOVIE: 'Eight le
Enough: A Blldfortl F'111111y
R111t1lon' NIIC Movie of tho
(!) CliNk: Summer

$16\l...
76

115) WhHf of Fonune

Miller
·
Alrwou Piece ol Cake
Stereo.
Crook and Chaoe
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith

FRANK AND ERNEST

I' 1· 1 1· I' 16 I' I' I' I

James Jacoby

i0 a.m.,

'

by fdl•ng in the missing words
you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS
.

e •~··M·l·

•liD Star Trell
IDi Moneyllne
eiiJ

--'--.J.'-.J-'-...1..---1

&amp;

IDJNewl

10ft. truckcamperandapop-'4f

Ro•rv

New•

8:35 (I) CIIOIIIumolt
7:00 (l) Aemlnalon 8tHie
WomenofSteele
e (2) PM ...gulne
(!) 8pottoCanter All-Star
Salute (L)
Ill ~lnrnent Tonight
CZl (!) MecNolll Lehrer
No~:OO)
e!IJ
'o coun

tent camper. Priced r ...onably,

I I

L -.1..

CD dl)llogln~l H11011
IDi lnaltle Poll1fca '88

1979 Cllovy truck w/lllde-ln
c.,.,., BoUtin axcel. cond. Call
814-2511-8812.

85

'"''*

bedding ,

.__., ah• cauah•1 ch•rs,

73

~

a

6 1ol-~811-3549 .

1978 Ford F100t&gt;lcl&lt;up, V-8. 3
aplld. good condttlon. Phone
30ol-87fl. 1988. '

•c c•

From the "didja ever notice"
department: The person who

-,.:..-;:=-..:,...;....::..,_-J, ~:W~~ least, usually knowsr
TOEVVI
a 19 I
I 0 Complete the chuckle quoted

(!) Nfgfttfy lualneu Aepon

IDl

-.1..-.1..-.1..- ·

L._..__

lBl Jon.....,.,,
You Can Ill 1 Star

1977 Ford. 4x4, %ton, 4 tpoed
trans.. 410 eublc Inch engine,
new 8 ply
v~ good
concltion, $·1 4-849-2237.

1179 Ford F100, •oond owner,
300 elx cvt. 811.000, exc cond,
•1.100.00 firm. 801 Ford
mower Ike new tiOO.OO. Phone
Soatt HuffmM 304-875-1918
home 304-19&amp;.3081.

~--..l!riEirT;_;,I~,....:.,YI---11 ..~

Cartoon Expreu
Fanchlngo

~ lnaftle the PQA Tour

8t Camp. .

81

f

Ill •wABC-Q
CZlllody Eleclrlc

Motors. Homes

wv.

1981 Pontiac Bonn. BroughMft.
Full - · dl.... Call 814448-3044.

.,.,ci.

79

5

1:05 (I) Fllher Knon Blat
1:30. Cll 115) NIIC Nightly Newo

-a-,-~-o.-oto--Cei-1.-.- -...
-..,-.-S-o~

•

---r-T..::or.
· a:..;:..u..:o;....:..J
. j :..

lBJ~Tim.,.

~

..
.• ."

LOSRYE

:r. I 1 I I . -

• ()) Ill .1121

CDI!Jl Happy Daya
IDi 81tow811 Today

1985 4 c:vl.. 2.0 Htw Cavell•
engine. auto. Clll &amp;14-379-

1978 30 ft . Cruise Air Mator
Home. Fully contained. electric
genef'ltor, •IMP• 8. 814-992·
279•.

1"h ton Ford Tructc, 1144 liMe
body, Gaod Condhlon. Antique
or working truck, •1,950. See•
Sidlrt Equipment, Hendlrson.

eo.-.

18114
aylorl&lt;. ..,.., V-8.
r,od lltt'o ••· 87110.00. 3047
, 78-l 8l
1979 Hondo Clvlo, • ., . . 123
P•k Drlvo, sitting In fl'ont

PICKENS
FURNITURE

I

CZl Owl TV 1;1

1982 Detsun pick-up. •1200.
814-742-24(2.

Cle•n. T•ke p•rtial trade.
84500. C.ll 51ol-379-2882 ..
379-2337.

m . _ 304-771-IIR.
1171 ,ord Thunderbird
8800 00. 304-f7L•IIO8
'
-·
..
• 711-8101

J • 8 FURNITURE ·
1411EntwnAw.
4
Ul. 8 d-or
ch.... $114.15. 8 pc, wooden
dlnn•1. .ote• .,18.15.

r

(!)Dr. Who

a

::::

•

(!) Spona\.ook

0

S©ltc:illA-L££tr~·

_ _ _ _ _;__..: Edited by ClAY I . POUAN _..:........:...........:.::::.:_

11.'011 tD Big Valley Days ol Wrath

Usod rr.....-... AI - ·
nlllylnspected. 30d1¥10UII'Intee. Clll 114-448-0IH. A•
builclng .-labia

1977 Jeep CJ·7, both tops •
white epokes, 11200.
1988 Hondt Nlghh-. now
ex,..,st he.ter. 1100 milea.
11400 or best off•· Call 8143811-8908.

tlr•.

-0.

New 1nd u.-d furnltura 1nd
•ppllcances. C.ll 114-441·
7572. Houre t-1.

TN!lke for Sale

w~

1188 01• , . _ , tit - l n g
wltool, .... , . _ ..d
d - . , _ ..d - ..... · -

VtAi., FurnlluN

beds.

1987 Chi'Vy CeYall• Wagon.
Front whHI df'hle. 4 cyl.. auto ..
AC. EllCel ruMina cand. Call
81 4-((8-85,2.

).!1841"1~UIOWIII G.T. euto.. AC.
._ Y ..- 11-4218.
'II Plymouth 1\trlllno Duew
@kg. 2 daor h81chNok, PI and
PI, air oond, outo. AM-FM
lteNO. 2 nM front the, ao
OOnd. coli oft• 4:00PM 3041711-2211
'

•ee.
............

Dlneltls,

1884 Ford Eecort. Dla•l.
'2200, Colll14-448-4010.

1982 Pont!K J-2000. 4 cyl ..
crutle, tit. AM. 'JI(Ygoodcond.
Truck topper lor lhortbedtruck.
C.ll 814-4,8-9882.

71

TUES,1, JULY 12

. eall (I)NowoIll

Ch•y VI tan pidl- up. Recentty
reatured bodf. nWI '*nt, m.ny
portL 350. 'opd. 81,000
mil•. Aunt gr. .. Sh•pl Call
8144411-7849- 5 PM.

1987 Lincoln Town car.
•11.000. Excel. cand. Call

Hau for Sale. "-II 81•379.. ,
\.oCII
...
2639.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Rustic
and Bevel .:I Up Siding
• Deck Mat•ials
GUM"antlted Quality
CETIDE, INC ., Athans-814·
594-3578

56

LIVe,lud

CROss• SONS
U.S. 36 WMt Jackson, Ohio.
614-288-8461. .
Masaey Ferguson. New Holland
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; S.vtc.. 0\lei40 used t1111etors to chooea from
&amp; complete line of ,.....,.. &amp; uaed
equipment. Largest election In
S.E. Ohio.

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
0IIve St., OallipoNs.
NEW
. . I pc.' wood group- S399.

2 bedroom

Apartment for rent. • 2215 a
month . Depostl .-quired. 6149 92-5724. Attar 11pm Of' 9125119.

22,600 and 16,000 btu air
conds. 1986 X ReO Honda. Ping
pong table. Pooltlble. 304-8763279.

55

51

Fo~rm Slliiilllf:s

WOoden picnic Ulble whh steele

One BR unfurnished apt. New
c•pet. Range &amp; refrig. fur·
nishad. Water &amp; garbage paid

72

*

PORTABLE SIGNS: Lighted
S199; non-lighted •199. Free
deltwry-lett•• ltru July 11th.
WV 1-800·842-2434 Ohio 1·
800.533-3453 onydme.

20 cu.ft. deep-·· 3048755663.
.

7ot2·2373 oft• 4p.m.

Woukl like to trade houae In 1917 Ch•y 4
Sed.,. NewMiddleport for .-nail farm . Clll palnt· drel. duel exhaust. 11bult
Ro~ Davis &amp;14-992-6095.
engine &amp; trllflsmlsskHI. Cd
614-378-2424.

SURPLUS, DENIM, ARMY.
RENTAL CLOTHING. Camou·
fltge green. black whH:e Metr~
polltan clothing. Political, busi·
neu. advertising~ d apeci altles.
Noveltv T~lhlns, caps. whol•
sele. and ,.11111. Sam Some·
rville's. Ri . 21 Ravensw&gt;od,
Fri .. Sat .. Sun .. Noon-8:00PM.
Call 304-273-8888.

Young coul)te looldng to rent
home whh garage, preferably·In
rural ••• •0\.md Gallipolis. Call
814-4,11-1965.

Rent

For Sale or Trade

1 0 vrs. Qld Oult'ter hor11 · m.sre.
11 yr. old gelding. Broke good.
Pigs for •Ia. Good 'NIIternstyle
saddl• for sle. Call after 4p.m.
814-992-2703.

Singer nwlng rri.ehine, Rove!
tYpewriter, make-up
m1rror. prllsure canner. 814843-5190.

47 Wanted to

1977 Monte Carlo. Gaod oond.
81200. Cell 814-2811-1288.

1870

Auto's For Sale

1918 PDndac. 2 cloof-, h•d top,
shlrp lind flit. •11500. 614-

1911 M:m• Cerlo-twa tofte
maroon. PS. Pl. AC, CC,
AM·FM·COOI. Coli 81444114011 att. I PM.

Want to trada lull size M.,tag
w11._ • dryer in 90od con&lt;Htionforapsrtrnent llzewasher•
d.... of aqual '"'""· Colt 814446-9280.

m~nuel .

Full size bed complete wllh box
springs and mettrns, eKe oond
304-675-3128.
•

71

Auto's For Sale

1986Ch-a• 2.2-..to.,lir. PS.
· P8, eun roof, AM.fM tJpe, new
t~. Extd Sh•P· Talce pertl.t
trade. ••eoo. c.u a14-37g..
2882 0&lt; 379-2337.

59

BMble doll hou• whh furnltu~.
bath. •lon. g~. doll clothes.
girls bicyalas, old records, slt·n·
..... C.ll814·258-8796.

Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; bath.
CleM . No pets. Ref. &amp;. deposit
required. Utilhies furnished.
AdUlts only. Call 614-448·
1519.

2 Br. apt . 6 1 room efficiency
apt. All utilitiet l!a ublepeld Cell
8144411-8723 ofte• 7 PM.

Musical
Instruments

71

lir. PS. PI, AM·FM.

Aluminum window liN nngs
32" woodan door, 430 J .o '.
tractor·wide front. Call 8144411-3413.

9582.

Store bulding 30x80 on Rt. 35
Henderson, W. Va. 1114-446-

Shopllordo. 1

Glassburn's Farm Market-S R.
180 n. . Porter. Wa wetcome
Food Stamps.

87~9681 .

46

~

bi,Mt{

1984 Chwy. Calobrlty. Auto ..

Wheelchairs-new or used, "3
whllel . . elac:tric acoo~ . Call
Ro..,. Mobllty collect, 1-514-

•

~~~~~~;;;;;;~;:r,;;::;:~~;;;;;;~;~ 7NIS.
ling for perfs. C.ll 114-317~:,;::;;:;;::::;:::=;:;:::===

58

For "le: M•ytag Wringer
W•thlr. Excellent condition.
$100.814-982-21558.

Trail• Sp6Ce.. 1 mHe out Neigt..
borhood Rd. •so per month.
C.ll 614-4411-1340.

~

Merchandise

Tolovlllons. VCR. '74 9 pas·
sanger Vol"""-g~ bus. Aegis·
tel'ad Poodle. • 2 BR. hou• In
coul'll:ry. Call 1114-448-1978.

Space for Rant

1·tJ..

Eleetrlc Lo~NMY Organ. Mint
condttJon. •700 firm . New
heavy duty exercise bike •7&amp;.
114-992·2571 .

Buy or Sail. Riverine Antlqu.s,
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Houn : M.T,W 10..m, to lp.m ..
Sunday 1 to lp.m. 814-982·
2526.

Rooms for •nt-week or month.
Starting at •120 • mo. Gallla
Hotol- 81 ..,411-9580.

1 BR . ept. ne•rHMC . 1 adult. No
pets. Call 614-448-4782.

57

Antiques

frame no.oo. Alumn 0111nsion
ladder. Areplace acreen. 304875-1199.

O.,oslt twquired. Ca11814-4484345.

a......

AKC

Apartment
for Rent

Pomeroy an ct Middleport apartments. •1110 Dlus utilftiel. Clll
814-992-8019. after 7p.m. call
814-992-71511 '

~mno.r

r

·

white and 2 bliM* male~ and 1
black tamale. Shots stwtad and
wormed. 304-458-152$.

rqom

Rent

]

Mauntlin

1100.00
each, readV July
27,
Cur pupplas.
stock,
304-8711-2686. .

'&lt;71Y.TH se~·...

BUDGET TRAN SMIIIION·
Used. rebu lttall typslls. o...an.
1M 30 dlr;'t minimum. Prloee
191 6 up. Aebult tofqUie
oonwrted •• low •
e39.
St.,dlrd cluch•. preeiure
. . . . . throw-outbe•W... ....
typet 12 mot. Wlri'Mty. lflt buy
junk benlmiaalona. Call 304878-4230,. 814·378-2UO.

~~

"Spring is sprung, ·
992-7479.
the grass is riz.
1974 0\1mpion 14x85 tot81
.. eetric:. underpenning and perThe lawn needs mowing,
tially furnihMd. will considlf
2 pc. living
suite. 8100.
lrllde. ••. 900.00. 304-578and
here
you
iz!"
Call 814-4411-3791 '
2383.
2 bedroom nil• on lot at ~G~~ii~~~~:::-r-;;=;:=;::=:;::==1 Phlico refrlgntor. good cond~
SouiNide. d•lllodwetl w~h ·-I 42 Mobile Homes
tlon. $100. Clll814-4,5-7881.
with awrWng and
und•pfnning. t 11.900. 814-

bedroom.

~ss~

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

'

EVE NINO

II male Chihuahua puppies. 8
w.eks ofd, •125.00 e•ch. 304-Registered orighwl

COI;S

Auto ~ru ·
lit. Accell0ri81

76

For sala. AKC Miniature
Schnauzert. Wor,..d, shots.
Call after 4p.m. 614-949·2714.

VIRa f•nlture
Sofl; •
chair-•240, regular
8199; •II bedding •Ia priced;
used sn ~n.n_._., p~
ranges; .IMshlrs; dryerSJ refrigerators; freeu•s ; di1h11;
shetvft; color con-..e tv's. All
item~ at diacount prl~. Leya·
W.lys alwlya w.looma. Op~n
dally Mon.·Sot., 9· 8. At. 141 In
Centenary-Y. mHe on Uncoln
Piko. 514·446-3168 .

Television
Viewing

OH,r CMI'lll::H ~ -rn~ ...

IIVer'lir\gll.

AKC Regimtred Golden Retrlwar puppi•. 6 Mlkl old.
Have had all 1h0ts. 304-882·
285-4.

107 wood folclng Chairs. Excel.
c:ond. Somepalrsoft!NO&amp; thnte.
Call 1114-2415-15204.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r:====~--------------~-~--------~::==~:r~~~~~~----,-----~----------~~~D~a~ily~Se~m~i~nei~-~P~~~~g

BORNL

18ft. fiblr----boatWilhtNII«
1326. Pflone 304-175-1141

Beautiful Amllt'icen Eskimo
Spltz · UKC Purple Rlbbon ~eglotot'od. 0100 oocll. AKC
Cock.- SpM1iel pup1. C.ll 11~
3911-8890.

Sofa. Nlco. uo: Call 514-UB-

· -~;~~J~u~~12, 1988

Boats and
. . Motors for Sala

2 hou•· lralned t=.t'rets • cage.
Call 814-441-2192.

Qttv.. 1tter 1 PM. can 1114-441-

0191.

1988

75

KIT 'N' CARL\'LUI by lArry Wrl1ht

Pets for Sale

Beagle pupa for •Ia. 11 wkl.
old. •25 ..ch. Call 814-441·
0373.

7444.

for

T~y.Ju~ ·12,

Ferreu-•25. ParHeet • com·
~- set· UI)-•20. Double rabbit
Cagiii· •10. Dog hOUIIS-1215
ooch. C.ll 81ol-446-13&amp;4.

High prieet got you doWfl1
Chect: us out for Low Prieee &amp;
Quality FUrniture &amp;. Carpet. E.:Z
credit with •proved credit.
MDIIohan FurnltuNI-114-448·

pump. 05.000.00. 304-8753 . .8.

-----·--------~

Pomaroy- Middleport. Ohio

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 2xeo. 2 bedroom. Trailer for
ule. ' in Vinton . Ohio. Price
negoCIIIble. 814-742-2010.

-

RQCCZCCXQA

SXAWZUC

X J

QU

)

'

...
••
'-'

..

.
'

TUDHXDA

,.,

WHATEVER MAKES FOR

..''

DEAUNG wrrH 011iERS EXHILARATES; WHATEVER
MAKES FOR DEAIJNG WITH ONESELF DEPRESSES.-

JOSEPH JOUBERT

.'

.,

QAMK

MZ A W

KQN

Cryptoq•ote:

,,

DAAQKDAHZ·

EZZR.-VDMJDBDU
Yetterda7'1

J

ZALQKYZAJ;

XAHUZDCZC
GSZJSZU

A Q

.. ··~·-

'r

...

�I UBIOBY, .IUI'V I .t, Ultsts

r-omeroy-MICICIIepOrt, Ohio

Marietta closes out its year-long bicentenniw celebration
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
United Press International
The yearlong bicentennial ob·
servallon In Marietta, the first
permanent settlement In the
Northwest Territory comes to a
close this weekend. '
Activities In Marietta begin
Friday to mark the 1788 lnaugu·
ration of Arthur St. Clair as the
first governor of the territory and
continue through Sunday with a
rededication of a monument

marking the westward
movement.
Top country musics tars wlllbe
performing in Brush Run Parkin
St. Clairsville for Jamboree In
the Hills Saturday and Sunday.
It was 19 years ago that Ohio
native Nell Armstrong walked on
the moon. This Saturday and
Sunday, the Festival of Flight at
the Armstrong Museum near his
hometown of Wapakoneta com·
memorates that lunar landing.

The Pottery Festival will be
held Thursday through Saturday
in the Ohio Ceramic Center
between Roseville and Crooks·
ville, Perry County. A Pottery
Lovers Show and Sale will be held
Friday and Saturday In
Zanesville.
· An Old·Time Fiddlers Contest
will be held Saturday at Sauder
Farm and Craft Village near
Archbold, Fulton County.
Roscoe VIllage, a restored

Poople in the news _ _ _ _ _ __
By WII:.LIAM C. TROTf
United Press International
BUDDHISTS AND TANKS:
Zen devotee Patrick Dully was
the star of an eclectic parade In
Worceste~; Mass., to celebrate
the opening of a- Buddhist conven·
tlon and the U.S. Constitution.
The "Dallas" star and Cmdr.
David Cashman of the USS
Constitution, the 11at1on's oldest
battleship, were grand marshals
of a parade Sunday that featured
.thousands of Buddhists and
Army tanks from Fort Devens.
Duffy is one oflO,OOO Buddhists In
town for a convention of the
Ntcheren Soshu Soka Gakkal
Association, the largest lay Bud·
dhlst organization In tbe nation.
He's been a member of the group
since he w~s a senior at the
Un iverslty of Washington, where
his wife, Carlyn, Introduced him
to the organization. '
NADER GOES HOME: Ralph
Nader's latest crusade Is di·
reeled at his hometown of Wins·
ted, Conn. Nader got Interested
when town officials voted to tear
down Mary P. Hinsdale School,
which he attended while In
grammar school from 1938 to
1942, despite an offer to lease It
for $1 million over 12 years. " This
is so profoundly stupid," Nader
said. "To replace a building like
that costs $2 million at $100 a
square foot and they turned down
a $1 million lease. So they turned
down a $3 million deal." As a
result , Nader, who lives In
Washington but maintains his
legal residence In Winsted, will
conduct a six·month lnvestlga·
tlon Into the local government to
determine. if residents are satis·
lied with their representation.
Nader said the town fathers were

guilty of "mismanagement, lack
of planning and officiousness ...
obstinacy, Ignorance and polltl·
cal ego- tripping." Officials, how·
ever, say the school was In poor
shape.
TV POLITICS: Ted Koppel and
the people at "Nightllne" don't
· Intend to yield to Michael Duka·
kls's request for a change In the
·seating arrangement for an
Interview. The Democratic pres!·
dential candidate had been scheduled for t,hls week but now says
he wants to sit next to Koppel at
his desk, rather than be remotely
Interviewed by camera in
another room, as GMrge Bush
was on a Tecent "Nlghtllne"
Interview. Bush blamed the
set·UP for causing him to refer to
Koppel as "Dan," as In Dan
Rather. Koppel does occasion·
ally share his desk - as he did
with Gary Hart - but only when
the stat( thinks It appropriate.
But executive producer Richard
Kaplan says It's too late for
Dukakls to ask for changes In the
rules. "This universe (of presi·
dentlal politics) has two people In
It - Bush and Dukakls," he said.
"You have to treat the two people
In that universe the same way.
Now he (Dukakls) Is making
demands. It just wouldn't he
fair." ABC and the Dukakis
camp are still trying to work out
something.
OLIVE OU. ALA IACOCCA:
Leelacocca is taking a little time
out from pushing Chryslers so he
can promote his family line of
olive oil. The Iacocca clan runs
VIlla Nicola Limited, purveyors
of Italian "extra virgin" oils and
red wine vinegar. The olives and
grapes come from Iacocca' s 11th
century stone villa In Tuscany,
Italy, which he named after his

late father. He's In Chicago this
week promoting his products at
the International Fine Food and
Confectionery Show. When he
first boug~t the estate four years
ago, "We made a lot of olive on.
and wine and didn't know what to
do with It," lacoc.c a said. So he
came up with a solution and a
sUck new business venture. He
says that while he likes a good
Arnerlcan hamburger, It'll never
take the pia ce of a real Italian
meal.
GLIMPSES: Some 800 fans on
the verge of hysteria were
awaiting Sflchael Jackson at
London's Heathrow Airport as he
arrived for 13 concerts In Britain
and Ireland. Jackson's Luf·
thansa flight was 50 minutes late
because of air traffic congestion
over West Germany .. : Oliver
North, who goes on trial Sept. 20
In the Iran-Contra scandal, spoke
at a $150·a·plate barbecue Satur·
day at a country club In Midland,
Texas, as part of a fund· raising
swing to bring In money for his
defense fund. But a group of
protesters was outside the coun·
try club making a statement that
combined politics with cuisine:
they were passing out baloney
sandwiches ... Michael Reagan,
the president's adopted son, says
he did nothing wrong In making a
commercial for a diet "patch"
that has been banned by the
Federal. Drug Administration.
The long-running commercial
for the mail-order diet aid at first
seems to be a genuine talk show
with Reagan as the host "I
auditioned as an actor and was
hired .to do the job," Reagan told
the Dally News of Los Angeles.
"It could have been baby bottles.
I knew it (the producn from
nothing. What do I know?" -

Quirks in the News_~----"It's given the public something to talk · about," said
Howard.

By United Press International
astrologer quits
LA GRANDE, Ore. (UPI)
An astrologer just wasn't In the
stars for Union County.
Jenny Nicholson quit her con·
troversial job as county as trol·
oger 'before ever advising officials, saying the publicity
brought her so much business she
can't afford to keep the volunteer
post.
Nicholson resign!!&lt;~ Monday,
five days after taking tht' job and
a day before county commission·
ers planned to rescind the contro·
versial appointment.
"The ensuing controversy has
given me so much publicity and
so many new long-distance
clients that I no longer have time
to be your volunteer." Nicholson
said in her letter of resignation.
Nicholson's appointment last
Wednesday stirred up so much
controversy in the rural county
that the commissioners sche·
duled a special meeting today to
deal with the issue.
Commissioner Bill Deering,
who originally proposed the Idea
of appointing a county astrol·
oger. had l-sald Nicholson could
advise the county. on the most
propitious time to apply for
federal grants.
He said Monda y that some
''fundamentalis t Christians"
had accused him of "dabbling
With the occult ."
County Judge John Howard
said .that despite Nicholson's
resignation. the three-member
county panel would still vote to
rescind the appointment.
C~unty's

-~-

All's well that ends well'
NAIROBI, Kenya iUPI)- The
independent Kenyan , govern·

Public Notice

Public Notice "

FOR SALE .
SHERIFF'S VEHICLES

$75.00
1 1976 Buick · Skylark.
Minimum bid: 876.00
1 1982 Chevrolet lm·
palo. Minimum bid:
$76.00 .
Vehides may be in·
spactad during daylight
hours at the Meiga
County · Garoge, Rock
Sprin(ll Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio, by making an ap·
pointment with the Seriff' 1 department.
Vehicles to be sold "Ao
l1" with no guarantees.
Outoide of envelope con·
talning bids muot be
cleerly marked as to whet
vehicle being bid.
The Board of Melg~
County Commi11ionen
rwr •• the rllht to .ltlllf or NIICit ..., or eA
bids.
Meig1 County
Commlaotonen
Mary Hobtltetter, Clerk
171 12. 19, 2tt

Pursuant

to SeC1ion

307.12
O.R.C. the
' Meigs County Commis·
sioners
will
receive
sealed bids until 1,2 noon
on Wednesday, July 27,
1988, in the office
of the Meigs County
Commiisioners lo~ted in
the Courthouse. Pom·
eroy, Ohio, withbidstobe
opened ot 1:30 P.M . and
read aloud for·the ale of
the following vehideo no
longer in u10 by the Sh8f·
iffo department:
1 Homemade camper
traUar: Minimum bid:
*100.00.
1 1983 Plymouth 4-dr.
MlllltwM IIIII:

uoo.oo

1 1979 Pontlec Sunblrd.
Minimum bid: •711.00
1 1977 Chevrolet Con·
cours. Minimum bid:

'

Free lunches barred for waldng
prisoners
PITTSBI.{RGH (UPI) There's no free lunch anymore
for some prisoners In Pittsburgh.
Inmates had been served free
grub while awaiting court ap·
pearances in the past year but
city officials say the practice
gobbled up the $15,000 food fund,
which won't be replenished.
It cost the city about $65 a day
for sandwiches. soup, potato
chips, puddings, mllk and soft
drinks for the prisoners. But the
$15.000 budgeted for the free
lunches at three lockups has run
out, prison officials said.
And Louis DINardo, deputy
director of the Public Safely
Department, said authorities do
not expect to reinstate the. free
lunches.
The lunches began several
years ago for prisoners awaiting
arraignments anti other hearings
when It took longer to process
prisoners, not the four to six
hours It takes today, officials
said.
Assistant Pollee Chief Mayer
DeRoy, who Is charge of the cell
blocks, Issued an order todlscon·
tlnue the·lunches Thursday.
The program has caused prob·
!ems for the city In the past, when
angry prisoners threw food at the
walls, detention officers and
other prisoners.

ment seems to be recovering
from a 7·year·old "colonial hangover'· that would make William
Shakespeare proud.
In 1981, Kenyan leaders
branded the English versions of
Shakespearean works as too
colonial and banned them from
the nation's schools.
But President Daniel Arap Mol
announced the return of the
classic English writings Sunday,
and instructed the Ministry of
Education and Kenyan Institute
of E:ducatlon, which approve
scbool texts, to put the Erigllsh
bard back on the exam syllabus.
The president said he saw
nothing wrong with Will's works.
The English texts of the Ell·
zabethan poet and dramatist had
been dropped from Kenyan
schools In a move described by
tire education Institute as "get·
tlng rtd of the colonial hangover
In lndej)j?ndent Kenya."
But Mol described Shakes·
peare as an "international
figure,"
Mot cautioned the ministry
against hasty condemnation of
foreign books, but said they
should be carefully blended in
school courses with the work of
African writers.
. Though Shakespeare's original
English texts were banned, three
celebrated Swahili versions of
Shakespearean plays were
widely read in Swahili courses In
Kenya.
The translations of "Hamlet,"
'"''he Merchant of Venice" and
"Julius Caesar" were done by a
former Tanzanian president, Ju·
llus Nyerere.

Public Notice

to 1 r . .olution
adopted by the Board of
EduCition of lhe Meigs Local School Oiltrict... County
of Malgo, Ohio, on "tho 19th

doy of AprH, 1988, thorewHI
be tubmiHed to the qu•Mfied
oloctoro of 11id oc110ot dlt·
trict at the election to be
hold on the 2n~ d- of Au-

••I•
places of voting therein, the
It the

qu•tion of luulng bondl of
lllid boar6 of oducltlon In

tho oum of 1&amp;00, C)OO,

Kids learn from boxes

for

the purpo18 of irnprov•
ment1. renov1Uons 1nd ad·
ditk»ne to school t'1cllitill.
end providing eq.,lp,_t;

furnlshlngo ond olte Impro-

vement• thertfor. •"d of I•

-prlncl·
efllld

The meJiimum number of
years
during which the
bonds wHI run 11 two (2)

veers and the ntimated av·
erage additional tax rate.

outside of the ten-mill limitation, to pay the lnter•t
thereon and to retire the
11mo. 01 i:tnlfitd by the

county auditor. Will be two
and seventy
hundredths
(2. 70) mills ' per dollar

II 1.001 of ttx valuation,

which amounts to

twentv~

o...n canto (10.271 for eoch
one

hundred

Four IDPS losers

doll••

(1100.001 of taa valuation.

Tho polio wHI baopon from

-·------

many oC us are turning our
thoughts toward outdoor chores.
Tbne to paint the house, wash the

Windows ...
But In our haste to get the Job done,
acctdents can- and do - happen.
And prompt medical attention Is
cften called for.
1bat'a when you can can on Pleasant
Valley Hospital Emergency Care
Center. We're open 24 hours a day weekends and holldaya, tool And you
don't need an appointment to get the
p1umpt and proper attention you need

room doctors and nurses.
We11 even send a fuU repon of
your Emergency Care Center visit to
your farnlly doctor so that he can
provide :You with the proper follow-up
care.
Proceed with caution with your
wann weather chores... and t{ you do
need us, we11 be here.
A1 the Pleasant Valley Emergency
Care Center, every emergency - btg
or small -Is Important.

~Emergency C11re Center

__

-----··-"' -·- ...

----·- --·------

----~-

------ ·-··---·---

,_

•

2 Section, 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middlepo;:t. Ohio, Wednesday, July 13, 1988

Board members . show temper in meeting
By BOB HOl!:FLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A meeting of the Meigs LOcal School District
Board of Education ended ~bruptlyTuesday night
when tempers of some board members flared ·
during a discussion on athletic league
membership.
Discussion on whether the district should
remain In the Trt-Valley Co11ference League or
rejoin the Southeastern Qhlo Athletic League
appeared to be calm and routine for the most part
!!Dill Gordon Fisher, . athletic director of the
district, was asked to give the results of an
Informal survey which he had conducted among
parents, students, coaches and the
administration.
Prior to the survey results from Fisher, board
members, Robert Barton and Larry Rupe, had ·
stated that they had open minds about membership In either league. Rupe said he bad found the
preference of people he had talked to on the
problem about equally divided. Barton said he
had asked for public opinion on league preference
but had received few repUes. He stated also that If
it were a big issue In the district. a large crowd of
parents would have been on hand tor last night's
meeting.
Board president, Robert Snowden said that he
. had never favored membership In the Tri·Valley
Conference League. Meigs Local untU several
yeqrs ago had been a member of the SEOAL. The
fourth board member present for the meeting,
Jeff Werry, compared league membership to an
educational experlence Indicating that young
peole would be better served with the challenges

o! the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League.
Fisher was asked to give the results of his
survey and these figures Indicated strong Interest
among those surveyed of remaining in the
Tri·Valley Conference and Fisher spoke on the
Importance of young people knowing successes
such as they experience in the Tri·Valley
Conference.
Snowden then emphatically charged that the
survey was not au thorlzed by thE' fivE' member
board of education and alleged thai Fisher has
sollclated opinions favoring continuance of
membership In the Tri Valley Conference.
Snowden said that he did not even know of such .a
survey being conducted: that he had just "found
it''.

Fisher firmly denied having solicited anyone's
vote in favor of the Tri-County Conference and
stated that .he had conducted the survey because
he feit the board wanted it done.
Rupe said that Fisher should not be chastlzed
for conducting the survey. Rupe indicated that he
had been one of the board members requesting the
unofficial survey at the last board meeting .
Barton became obviously quite angry and told
Snowden that he, too, had requested Fisher to do
the survey at the last meeting. Barton told
Snowden also that he (Barton) had just as much
right as Snowden to request a S\lrvey and that he
was gettlng."slck and tired" of Snowden's telling
the board \vhat to do.
Barton then started' to leave the meeting room
with Snowden shouting at him telling him to go
ahead and walk out oq the meeting. Barton,
however, stopped and commented that he was

-------

only going to' get a drink of water. Snowden told
him to keep walking and leave the meeting.
Barton refused then to leave to get the drink of
water and returned to his seat.
Snowden then called for adjournment statlrig
that the mj"etlng was out of order. There was no
motion forthcoming from the other three board
members for adjournment. Snowden then de·
ctared the meeting adjourned and left the room.
At that the session ended.
Before the athletic league problem developed'
with board members, several residents, mostly
coaches, had expressed calmly opinions on the
membership. some favoring continuing In the
'T ri·Valley Conference and some suggesting
rejoining the Southeastern Ohio Atnletlc League.
In business prior to the abrupt ending of the
meeting, the board accepted the resignations of
Gall Waddell, a substitute teacher; Gay Pippert.
vocal music teacher, and Martha Vennarl, high
school guidance counselor who Is retlrlng.lt was
agreed to sent a letter of commendation to Mrs.
Vennarl. Granted leaves of absence for the 1988·89
school year were Carolyn Snowden and Donna
Jenks.
The board approved requesting approval from
the State Department of Education for calamity
days, Jan. 4. 8, and 26, for all schools due to
Inclement weather; Feb. 15, Salisbury, and May
24, Rutland, both due to utility failures .
Contracts were approved for several businesses
to provide supplies and services for the next
school year Including; gasoline, oil and anti·
freeze. Ashland Oil; student accident Insurance,
Davis-Quickel; fleet insurance. Downlng·Childs-

. .-

Mullen· Musser; milk and dairy products, Valley
Bell; Ures and tubes , Meigs Tire Center, and
bread and bakery products, Heiners.
It was agreed to join for the next school year:
The Coalition of Rural and Appalchian Schools,
cost of $250; SEO·SERRC, special educatlo·n
services, $1, 795.50; COG·SEOVEC, cooperative
purchasing, $1, 795.50; Educational Technology
Services, $1,410.75: EMRC, Educational Media
Resource Center, $4,873.50, and the Ohio. High
School Athletic Association for the high school and
junior high school.
The board adopted a resolution for uniform
Implementation of curriculum and adopted a
classroom observation-evaluation form for cerd·
fled personnel. the form reducing the paper,work
to be completed from seven pages to two pages. AI
a vote of three·tO·one. with Rupe casting the
negative vote, the board approved a student
evaluation procedure. The procedure was pre·
pared wilh teacher input and provides more
avenues for grading over the six weeks testing
program emphasized In the former policy.
Snowden was nominated for a position with the
Southeast Region Board of the Ohio School Baords
Association. The board approved !Iancia! state·
ments of Treasurer Jane Fry and approved a 25
percent temporary appropriation. Cinda Harris
and Judy Crooks were hired as co. advisors for all
of the high school cheer leading groups for the next
school year.
Interim Superintendent James Carpenter pres;
ented the recommendations acted upon by the
bOard.

Select committee to review drought

plane 10111e of the old blacktop from tbli street.
Pomeroy VIllage and GTE North joined efforts to
pay for the paving project.
·

What to do about vandalism In meeting of the executive board.
Chapman also announced a
Pomeroy's mini parks was dis·
cussed Tuesday In the July meeting ihe morning of July 19 of
a "core group" of ·community
meeting of the Pomeroy Area
group members. Chapman said
Chamber of Commerce.
that a lack of communication
Anne Chapman, local business·
woman, pointed out that the between groups such as
Chamber, ·the Merchants AssociChamber of Commerce Is respon·
ation and VIllage Council makes
slble for the upkeep of the parks,
while the village pays the $100 It difficult "for the left hand to
per year rent to the property know what the right Is doing." By
having a core group made up of
owner. But unless the parks are
two Individuals from each com·
going to be locked at night,
munlty organization, projects
Chapman said, the Chamber Is
can be better organized and
wasting Its money for upkeep.
Lights In at least one of the duplicated efforts eliminated. By
parks have been broken, the tops combining Information, It might
have been broken out of two also be possible to come up with a
trees, and flags hav.e also been community calendar of events
stolen, The vandalism seems to around Pomeroy and the sur·
roundiJII areas of the county,
occur in the early morning hours,
Chapman said, so If the pollee Chapman added.
It was reported by Sherr! Hart,
department would lock the parks
a bout 10 p.m. each night, then chamber secretary, that letters
regarding the proposed state
someone else could unlock In the
mornings. Chapman also sug· revitalization grant for Pomeroy
have been sent to all businesses
gested the posslbllty of using
In
the area, and that she has
summer youth workers through
received
two reepolllt!ll from the
Carl Hysell'• office to maintain
letters.
Bualneases
can now ex·
the park, with siiJ.IL!I'VIslon for the,
peel
a
personal
contact
regard·
youths.
lng
the
iJ'ant
proposal,
Hart
said.
Tom Reed, former vice presl·
\Hart al110 Introduced summer
dent and currently a member of
youth worker Vanessa Young
Chamber's executive board, conducted Tueaday's mettlai - In ' WhO will be helplnll In the
cbamber office for lh.e lleXt few
place of President Paul Gerard
weeka. With Yoq, !he chamber
and VIce Pr811dent Dlllk WITllll!l'.
Reed said he would diiCIIII the office may be Jcept open Tuesday
matter of tbe parka at the next throuch Friday from 8 to 4:30

from our
professl!&gt;nal staiT of
highly trained mtergency

•

enttne

By United Press International
The National Weather Service
says two more regions of Ohio
dropped Into the extreme cate·
gory this week. putting about
two:thtrds ·· of the stale 111 that
category.
Meanwhile, House Speaker
Vern Riffe established ·a select
committee to review the situation lor possible legis Ia tive
remedies.
The NWS said the balance of
. the state - the North Central;
Northeast, Central Hills and
Northeast Hills- are In a severe
drought, according to the NWS'
Palmer Drought Severity Index.
So~ thwes t and Sou thei!,St Ohio
moved Into the extreme cate·
gory, while the Northeast, which
was the last area where the
drought was ·only moderate,
dropped into severe.
Tlie Northeast region needs 6.2
inches of rain -In addition to Its
normal rainfall - to emerge
from the drought, while the South
Central region needs an almpst
unattainable 13.4 inches of rain.
The crop moisture index,
which measures short-term crop
water needs, showed soil mois·
lure conditions were excessively

Vand8Iism to· Pomeroy mini-parks topic
at area Chamber ~~ Commerce meeting

r;JUj PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Malga, Ohio
"""" M. Frvmvor.
Dlroctor of Eloctlono
171 ?, 12, 20, 27, 4tc

":...""·_:_

Vot.39, No.4&amp;
Copyrighted 1988

PAVING WORK UNDERWAY- The do-·
town bloob ol Main.Street In Pomeroy are being
repaved this week. But before.the pavlaJ can take
place, workers for lhe Shelly Company have to

After the fall•••

oold dote.
By Order of tho Boord of
Education of tho County of

-

at y

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

n av..," ,w .......,c..c..twa. ......,a -'tM"•••••Yde)tHea,at..
....., "'.,., • 1• ...11.1 ' J •• • .. Ml• v.~or....,..," n'·'*l''s.q,co,

--·-

•

$998

6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p,m. on

,.

Page 4,.6

25°/o OFF

~!ll.~.~i!.~

Showers, humid tonight.
Low In high 70s. Thursday,
showers. High In the mid 8os.

3096

"JULY SAVINOS''

fs summerttmel And that means

ticle XII. OhtO Constitution.

purst.~ent

Daily Number
029
Pick 4

°

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
Notice is her1by givtmthat

gult. 1988,

canal towninCoshocton.holdsan will be held Friday through the Hancock County community
Americana Festival Saturday Sunday at the Richfield Coliseum of Mount Cory.
and Sunday.
In Summit County.
Lantern tours will be offered at
Also on thlsweekend'sagenda:
nie Inboard hydroplane racing Schoenbrunn VIllage 1 ~ i,!ew
A Sweet Corn Festival will be at ihe River Regatta Friday Philadelphia, Aug. 13 an
pt.
held Thursday through Saturday through Sunday in Steubenville is 10.
C
b
1urn us
In Lodl, Medina County. An Ice · to be televised nationally.
Ohio Village In
Cream Social will be held Satur·
A Swap· A·Thon Friday offers entertainment Saturday
day at Buell Island In Lowell, through Sunday at the Mahonlng and Sunday afternoons with a
Washington County.
County Fairgrounds In Canfield different topic each day.
An Air Show Thursday through Includes a car show, swap meet ·
An Agricultural Dinner C:nd
Sunday at the Lawrence County and flea market.
,
Dance will be held at the hlo
Airpark near South Point tea·
The Ohio Renaissance Festival VIllage July 23. Reservations are
lures military aviation displays winds up Saturday and Sunday required and can be made by
and model airplanes.
near Wilmington. Knights, jous· calling 614-297·2606.
The Great Balloon Race and ters, jesters and minstrels will
The Summer Meadow
Fly Days Friday through Sunday entertain In a re·created 16th Meander and Picnic Saturday at .
Includes five hot-air balloon century Tudor village.
the Caesar Creek State Park
races and ground displays at the
The Tri-State Fair and Regatta near Waynesville Includes a
Wadsworth Airport In Medina Includes professional powerboat guided three-mile hike. The
County.
racing on tile Ohio River, along weekend program at the park's
The Gateway Arts and Crafts with festivals tn the Ironton· Pioneer VIllage focuses on sold I·
Show will be held Friday and Ashland·Huntlngton area ers and !ifttle[alExhlbll
1
Saturday at Courthouse Square through Aug. 6.
..
~ec ,
In Sidney, Shelby County,
TheNatlona!AntlqueRaceCar
Biennial II at the .Contem·
The Aurora Farms Market In · . Meet will be held Saturday and
porary Arts Center In Cincinnati
Aurora, Portage County, hosts Sunday at the Tuscarawas
Is a bicentennial exhibit by 10
tl!e Amerlc.ana Crafts Festival, County Fairgrounds In Dover.
Ohio artlst,s Friday through Sept.
3·
,
an early 1800s theme craft show,
An Old Car Show will be held
Friday and Saturday and·July 22 Sunday at Century VIllage In
"Brass Rubbings Is the theme
and 23.
Burton, Geauga County.
of the display at the Springfield
The Plecemakers Quilt Show Art Center Saturday through
Folk· A-Fair Saturday and Sunday at the Ohio State Fair· will be held Sunday at the Aug. 17 ·
grounds tn Columbus Is a look at Delaware County Library,
A Basketweave Exhibition will
Ohio's rural heritage through Delaware
1be on display through July 31 at
music and crafts.
Weathe~ permitting, wheat · the Dairy Barn In Athens.
The Brook Park Home Days threshing will be held Sunday
A National Painting exhibition
will be celebrated Friday afternoon at the Carriage Hill with works by 93 contemporary
through Sunday In the Cleveland Farm near Dayton. An Old· American artists will be dis·
suburb.
fashioned square dance will be played at the Butler Institute of
The Kelleys Island tour of held at the farm Saturday night. American Art In Youngstown
homes offers Island visitors an · Zoo·pendous Fun Day Sunday through Aug. 21.
opportunity Saturday to see at the Metroparks Zoo In CleveThe C!ln;!on Art Institute In
homes with past and present land allows visitors togetcloseto · Canton otters the Ohio Designer
charm.
, the animals. .
C~~ftsmen through Ju!~ 31.
The New Spirit Music Fest ·.. A Day Lily Show will be held
Honore Daumlere Is dis•
Friday through Sunday In Cuya· Sunday at the Kingwood Center played at the Allen Memorial Art
hoga Falls Is an outdoor show of and Gardens In Mansfield.
Museum In Oberlin through Aug.
Christian gospel music.
The Mount Cory Community 14 ·
ThePappabelloAntlquesShow Festival will be held Monday In
The Akron Art Museum· dis·
play Is "Robert Colescott A
Retrospective" through Aug. 14.
At the Toledo Museum of Art
are: "Ornament and Object,"
through Sept. ,24, "The Work of
OXFORD, Ohio (UPI) - A problem·solvlng and the survival Walter Chapman," through Sun·
researcher who says children skills needed to function success· day, and "Henri Riviere Prints"
through July 31.
become consumers at a young fully and responsibly.
''We
have
found
that
the
best
age Is studying cereal boxes anp
other modern artifacts to find out way to help kids learn to ·think
Jo Tyree, Bonnie Johnston,
about the "real world reading" critically and solve problems
Is
to
have
them
Peggy
VIning, and Maida Long
successfully
that children do.
'
participate
In
the
real·
life
sltua·
have
been
the top losers for the
"No doubt about It, kids are
tlons
facing
·
consumers,"
she
past
three
weeks of TOPS Club
consumers," said Mary Melvin,
·
said.
570.
who Is an education teacher at ·
The activities In the book call
Runners-up for the meetings
Miami University. ,
on
students
to
make
consumer
were
Llnnle Belle Aleshire, Shlr·
Melvin's office at Miami's
decisions
related
to
earning,
ley
Wolfe,
Julia Hysell, Gertrude
Hamilton campus Is filled with
saving,
sharing
and
spending
Casto
and
Mary Roush. Winners
cereal boxes, which she said are
frequent sources of consumer money, Melvin said. She said the of the fruit basket were Mrs.
book Is written strictly with Tyree, Mrs. Vining, and Imogene
Information for children.
children,
and how they learn to Humphrey.
"They start at a very young
read,
In
mind.
A funny money auction will be
age, progressing from the back
"We
need
to'help
our
clllldten
held
at the July 26 meeting.
seat of a shopping cart, through
learn
to
sort
through
these
Reguiar'
meetings of the club are
the back aisle of a toy store, to the
messages
and
make
their
own
held
at
the
Coonhunters Building
back lot of an automobile dealer·
on
the
Rock
wise
and
effective
decisions,"
Springs Fairgrounds
ship," Melvin said.
Melvin
said
.
at
7
p.m.
each
Tuesday.
''Throughout childhood ,
youngsters are bombarded with
advertising, visual, written and
Implied, and (they) are lnflu·
enced by ... paren1s, peers and
television personalities," she
ALL
said.
·
Melvin and several colleagues
WEARING APPAREL •••••
have gathered material about
the reading habits of children
SWEATER SHELLS ....
.....
Into a bOok for teachers called
"Kids Are Consumers, . Too!
"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"
(Real·World Reading and Lan·
guage Arts)." •
According to Melvin, the book
3RD STREET
949·2800
RACINE, OHIO
responds to concerns that schools
MASTERCARD- VISA- GOLDEN BUCKEYE
should teach creative thinking,

Ohio Lottery

AL wins
All-Star
game, 2-l

each day.
June Ashley, representing the
Pioneer and Historical Society,
reported on events to be held July
30·31 In observance of the 125th
anniversary of the Civil War
Battle of Buffington Island at
Portland. The Union army was
victorious at Portland over Gen·
era! John H. Morgan and his
troops on July 19,1863. Brochures
a bout the upcoming events are
avalla ble at the Chamber office
or at the museum, Ashley said. ·
Actual events will be held at the
Buffington Island Park ·on State
Route 124 at Portland, exept for a
Civil War Military Ball which Is
to be held theeventngo!July 30at
Southern High In Racine. There
Is no admission to the general
public for any events. except for
the ball which costs $9 single or
$15 a couple. The commemora·
lion Is being sponsored by the
Pioneer and Historical Society.
Anyone wishing addltlonallnfor·
matlon may call between the
hours of 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. ,
Tuesday through Saturday , at
the museum. The number Is
992-3810.
Mary Powell announced that
brochures for the musical' 'Eden
On the River" on Blennerhasset
Ial,and, are now available Ill the
Cbamber office. Performances
for the musical begin In August
and Powt!ll said anyone planrilng

·==.,.-...---------.--~""-'"'-'"'·'---·~·--~·

and Natural Resources (Dwight
dry across much of the state.
Chairman of the select com- Wise, D-Fremont), Financial In·
mittee will be William Hinlg, stltutions !Ronald Suster, D·
D·New Philadelphia, with Re-. Cleveland) and Economic Devei·
publican leader Corwin Nixon of opment and Small Business
(Troy Lee James, D·Cieveland) ,
Lebanon serving as ~ vJcechairman.
and Reps. Thomas Johnson,
R-New Concord, Robert Corbin,
Members will include:
R·Dayton. L. Eugene Byers,
Speaker Pro Tern Barney QuilR·Loudonvllle, William Bat·
ter, D·Toledo, and the chairmen
of various committees: Ways chelder, R·Medina, and Joseph
and Means IDean Conley, O- Haines. R·Xenla.
Cana! Winchester), Agriculture

Groups' support appreciated
for July 4th fireworks funds
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff·
man today expressed thanks to
all those who ·donated towards
the cost of the July 4 fireworks
display and to the Middleport
Fire Department for taking
charge of the fund raising
campaign.
The fire department received
donations from Fruths Phar·
macy, Dairy Queen, Manley's
Sunocp, King Builders, Dr. Dayo,
Dr. Kennedy, Brown and
Snouffer Fire and Safety Equip·
ment, Blue Streak Cab Co., Kays
Beauty Salon, Dr. c7nde, Bahr
Clothiers, Hudnall Plumbing,

Mill End F?brlcs, Middleport
Department Store, Central Trust
Co., Western Auto , Carter
Plumbing, Pat Hill Ford, Dr.
Pickens, Middleport American
Legion, Blue Tartan, McClure's
Dairy Isle, Twin City Machine
Shop, Farmers Bank and the
Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
department.
The mayor stated that In
addition to being In charge of
fund-raising and setting off the
fireworks display , the fire department also donated $900 of
their funds toward the cost oft he
fireworks .

to attend a performance should
consider making reservations as
soon as possible. Seating capac·
tty has been Increase(! this year
to 1,000 but the musical Is also
being advertised nationally, Po·
well said, rather than just
regionally. A toll free number,
1·800-525·5900, is available for
ticket Information, she added.
It was reported that .the recent
free Pomeroy concert by the
Ohio University Communlver·
sity !;land, sponsored by Bank
One, was a success, along with
the Art In the Park project.
Chamber members said they felt
Court St. was a better location for
the concert than the parking lot,
because the buildings provided
shade lor the audience.
Finally, Rick Blaettnar, of
Rick's Fire and Sa(ety Equip·
ment presented Chamber with a
fire extlngulsher for their new
office on East Main In Pomeroy.
Blaettnar also gave a brief
accounting of his 'business, reporting that In addition to selling
equipment, he services any type
of fire extinguisher, large or
small, and has many contracts
with small businesses In the area
as well as several larger Industry
contracts.
Tuesday's meeting was held at
the Pomeroy Trinity Church.

DONATION INSTALlATION -

Rlolc Blaettnaer, owaer of

Rick'• 111re and SaleiJ Eqatpment, llutliernut Ave., Pomeroy,
donated a lire extlniQII!her le the new office of the Pol)leroy Area
CUmber of Commerce. Blaettnar lqtalled the exdn11Jisher
Tuellday alter-n,
.... .. ,.

411' .....

__

._..........

•'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="172">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2762">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38297">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38296">
              <text>July 12, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1141">
      <name>priddy</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
