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                  <text>Page-14- The Daily Sentinel

Up to 10

• •
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IDISSIDg 10

ferry capsize

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAUGHLIN, Nev . tUPll -A
casino ferry boa t ra rrylng pass~ngers across the Colorado
River between Nevada and Arizona overturned Tuesday night,
dumping about30 people Into the
last moving water.
Capt. Joe Anderson of the
Bullhead City . Ariz. , Fire De· .
partment said 20 people wt&gt;rt&gt;
pulled to safety almost Immediately, butnineoriOotherswere
missing.

Joe Harri ngton, administrator
of the Bullhead City Community
Hos pital, said the nos pltal had
been placed on alert to treat the
Injured . He said lour of Injured
were en route to the hospital ,
apparently suffering from shock
and trauma .
Anderson said th e accident
occurred about 9 p.m . when a
casino ferry boat c apsized near
the dock of the Edgewater
Hotel-casino. one oftwoLaughlln

Wednesday, July 13, 1988

resorts owned by Circus Circus ambulance criws.
Enterprl.ses.
Laughlin Is a boomtown Io·
Anderson said three ambulan· cated on ·the Nevada side of the
res from Bullhead City were sent 'Colorado River where casinos
to the Nevada side of the river to . line the shore shoulder· to·
assist. He said eight fire depart· shoulder. Virtually every casino
ment divers were In the water has a fleet of ferry boat s to
within a few minutes to rescue transport c ustomers and hotel·
and search for the victims.
casi no e mployees betweerj
A spokesman at Mercy Ambu· Laughlin and Bullhead City,
lar.ce Service In Las Vegas said whi ch Is loca ted directly across
at least two divers were en route the river.
from Las Vegas as well as air

Ohio Lottery

Reds trade
two
. Expos

Daily Number
722
Pick 4
6488
Super Lotto

Page4

Partly cloudy, mild tonight.
Low In high 60s. Friday,
clearlnr, partly cloudy. High
·
In the 90s.

4,5,6,36,37 ,44
Kicker

399276
!•• . •• •

e
11M11TIS16 ITEM POLICY
Each of theM adventled items is required to be readily available for
aale In eaoh Krogtr Store, eKc:tpt 11 specifically noted in this ad . If we
do run out of en IKtvertiud item, we will offer you your &lt;lholca of a
compareblll kem, when available, reflecting the aame savings or a
ralncheck which will et'ltitle you to purchase the advenised item at the
a"-tloed pfico willlln 30 days. Only one vendor coupon !Nill be
accepted per item purchased.

Vol.39, No.47
Copyrighted 1988

•

at

1-lb. Pkg.

Gwaltney
Great Dogs
1-lb.

-

Pa~ing

•

(SOLD BY THE PIECE ONLY)

Because the athletic and band
bqpster organizations have
raised the necessary money to
exterally fund fall sports and
academic extracurricular actlvi·
ties, the Eastern Local Board of
Education hired several staff
members for the programs at a
special meeting Wednesday.
Hired were Arch Rose as head
footb.l'll coach; Ron Hill and Don
Eichinger as assistant football
,., coa~jles; ,_E!tn Ball as_,marcblng_ ~
' band director; Mrs. "l'.raxine

New Jersey
Blueberries

Bing Cherries

LB.

99 (

Buy One

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Luck's
Pork &amp; Beans

6-COUNT

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Freezer Pleezer
Ice Cream Sandwiches

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The Shelly Company Is just about finished
blacktopplnl the downtown bloclul of Main St. In
Pomeroy. Pomeroy VIIJare aad GTE Norlb are
sharln1 lhe coals of the blacktopplnr expenae.

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IN OIL OR SPRING WATER
CHUNK LIGHT

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DIET PEPSI FREE, PEPSI FREE,

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Pizzas

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

10.1-10.8-oz.

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mlnary drawings of the proposed elevator for the
courthouse. The elevator Is deemed necessary by
the commissioners to serve the handicapped and
elderly citizens of the county for whom climbing
the many courthouse steps is either extremely
difficult or In ~orne cases impossible. Dittoe has
estimated costs for the elevator,, Including
architect's fees, at about $125,000.
If estimated costs are reliable, then the
commissioners are considering using this year's
county allotment of• Community Development
Block Grant funding to pay for the elevator's
construction.
·
A final decision on the elevator must be made bv
about Aug. 1. In order to meet state application
deadlines for CDBG funding .
In other matters. the commissioners okayed a
request fr.om County Court Clerk Linda Bentz to
attend a demonstration of a computer system in
Sylvania, Ohio; approved a sheriff's department
transfer of $1,500; and approved a secondary
credit line on the bond Issue for Fisher's Big
Wheel, as requested by counsel representing
Mellon Bank, trustee of the bond Issue.

Whitehead as elementary choir
director; Mrs. Gina Tlllts as
yearbook advisor and James
Huff as 12th grade class advisor.
Since no one from the certified
staff, as oflast night, has applied
for the positions of head volleyball coach, assistant volleyball
coach, and assistant football
coach, the board has directed
Supt. Dan Apllng to advertise
outside a! the district's certified
s.tafL..to. ~.flU. these positions.
~
,.

Persons interested In being considerated are to contact the
superintendent's office at 98fi·
4292.
The board .~?,Proved the Brown
and Snouffer · tl.fe and Safety
Equipment Co. to Inspect and
service the district 's fire exttngulshers for the new school year
and set Friday, July 22. at 6p.m.
as the dille and time of the
regular July meeting to be held
at the high school.

a

TrafOc bas been backed up throughout the town
wh~ lhe pavlng has been underway, and It Is
expe&amp;ed to be completed soon.

COL.UMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Doctors monitoring the condition
of Ohio's , first artificial heart
recipient hope a human heart can
soon be found for the patient now
In crlllcal condition.
A team of three surgeons'
Wednesday at Ohio State Unlver·
slty Hospitals Implanted the
popular Jarvlk·7 Into the chest of
Lowell Goddard, 49, Columbus. It
Is the first time doctors have used
fhe artificial device In Ohio.
Doctors said Goddard's heart
was so weakened by cardiomyopathy that they didn't think he
. could survive another day with·
out the device.
They removed his heart and
put In the artificial heart during a
seven-hour operation. Goddard's
. crlticlal condition Is normal after
such a procedure, Drs. David
Myerowttz and Kevin Murray.
two members of the surgical
team, said at a news conference
following the procedure.
The Jarvlk-7 Is a temporary

device to keep Goddard alive
until a donor heart can be found.
Doctors decided on the artlflcal
heart because no human heart
was available.
Goddard could live for several
months on the device, "but we're
hoping to find a donor soon," said
Murray . "The longer he has It In,
the risk of Infection and blood
clotting Increases. "
"Our goal is to get him a new
heart, hopefully In a couple of
weeks," said Myerowltz. "We'll
give the device a chance to work
and give him a chance to recover,
to get In better shape to with·
stand the transplant operation."
Goddard has been a patient In
the hospital lor about a month
and has been on the waiting list
for a heart transplant· since
February.
"I think he has a shot. I
wouldn't have given that "much
last night," Myerowltz said.
Seattle dentist Barney Clark
was the first human to receive an

artlflcal heart : He lived 112 days
after undergoing the prQ~:edure •
in 1981 at the University of Utah ·
Medical Center.
:
osu Hospitals Is one of ~'6 ·
medical centers with feder,al ·
government approval to use the
Jarvlk· 7 and one of two In the •
nation with Its own on-site :
training program for surgeons. :
They have been training to use
the device for a bout two years.
Murray, former acting director of the University of Utah's
artificial heart laboratory, has
extensive experience with the .
Jarvlk·7. He heads the Jarvlk·7 program at the OSU hospitals '
division of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery. He was ap·
pointed an assistant professor of
surgery at Ohio State In July
1986.
Myerowltz Is co-director of the
hospitals ' heart transplant
program .
Twenty-nine heart transplants
have been performed at the OSU
Hospitals In the last two years.

154 Cub Scouts learn··Jesson
of ou~doors at Camp Kiashuta

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Columbus man becomes first.
Ohio artificial heart recipient

~

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26 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

the way... - - - - - - - . . Eastern Board names staff hirings

Pint

lb.

. .'·

2 Seciion, 14 Pagn

provide more width for the road. He said lhle has
also agreed to try tocleim off the road following
cattle drives. Any widening of the road would be
on county property, Roberts added.
Roberts also has been In touch with the Sutton ·
Township Trustees concerning Wessel Road,
Township Road 137, a quarter-mile connector
road between County Roads 30 and 34. Roberts
said he has q\!)?Stioned the trustees about allowing
Wessel Road to be put on the county road system,
then paving the road with a double seal to give
motorists In that area an alternate route oftravel.
The trustees have Indicated, Roberts said, that
they might be wllling to turn the road over to the
county, or else let the county do the paving and
then the trustees continue maintenance of the
short stretch of road .
Roberts called the problem on County Road 30 '
"a give and take" situation among everyone out
there."
He also said the paving of Wessel Road to
provide an alternate route "would be a, good
Improvement for that community."
Blll Dtttoe, of Burgess and Nlple, Parkersburg,
W.Va., presented the commissioners with prell-

will be no 1989 litter contra! program In the
county.
The problem of widening a stretch of County
Road 30 was discussed by the commissioners and
County Engineer Philip Roberts.
.
A few weeks back, the commissioners received
a petition signed by over 70 local residents
requesting the widening of the county road.'
Complaints about datly cattle drives over the
narrow stretch of roadway were also Issued at the
.. time the petition was presented.
Roberts said he has been "talking to both sides "
In the matter, meaning some of the residents whO
signed the petition and to Charles Ihle, the farmer
whose cattle are driven down and across the
roadway.
Roberts said he believes enough footage Is
available to widen the particular stretch of road In
question, but that widening will require the
moving of utility lines , Including a Tuppers
Plains-Chester water line, a Columbia gas line
and a privately owned gas line.
Roberts. reported that Ihle has been very
cooperative and has agreed to move a fence to

FRESH

NORTHWEST

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday. July 14. 1988

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News stall
General fund estimates In tbeantlclpated Meigs
County budget for 1989 show a $36,000 deficit . .
Figures presented In Wednesday's county budget
hearing by the Meigs County Commissioners
anticipate a general fund totaling $2,271,027 next
year. However, expenditures for next year are
anticipated at $2,307,385.
A deficit of $3,498.1s also anticipated In the dog
and kennel fund budget lor 1989.
" The commissioners discussed only tne general
fund monies which they have l urlsdlct!on over.
They did not discuss the anticipated budgets for
other agencies of the county. They did however,
point out that this mid-year budget proposal Is
only anticipated, based upon county operations
from the first of this year, and that the budget
figures prepared at the end of this year will be the
true budget for 1989.
It was pointed out that $76,713 In state revenue
has been Included In the anticipated budgetforthe
county's 1989 Utter control program. However,
unless the county can commit by Aug. 31 to a
$12,000 local match for the state funding, there

Serve 'N' Save
Sliced Bacon

Chuck Roast or
Chuck Steak

•

Meigs General .F und faces $36.,

KWICK KRISP OR

U.S. GOV'T
GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF
BONELESS

•

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"'f'"8lll»U 4£1':1J!t b IS

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The htlls are alive this week
around Camp Klashuta near
Chester. Cub Scouts numbering
154 and ranging In ages from
seven to 11 are attending the
annual M-G·M District Cub Scout
Dliy Camp.
Safety Is the name of the game,
or the theme If you will, at this
year's camp which Is under the ·
direct Inn or Shirley Smith, local
,
scoudng volunteer.
Wolfs, Bears and Webelos, the
names of the different clib scout
ranks, are partlclpattng In a
variety of projects at camp from
woodworking to !Jul coUecttng to
knot tying to BB-gun safety and
more.
Two special visitors to camp
this week were State Sen. Jan
Michael Long (D-CirclevUle)
and State Rep. Jolynn Boster
(D-Galllpolls).
Long !llscusled the state lawmaking process· With the boys
and explained to them how young ·
people juat like them can present
an Idea to their 10vernment
reJreRntallves If they believe

their Idea should be a law. Long
visited the camp Tuesday
morning. •
Among other things, Boster
discussed with the boys dllrtng
her visit Wednesday afternoon
the different oftlclal state com·
memerattons, such as the state
flower, the state bird, and even
the state rock song which Is
"Hang On Slcxipy."
And both state officials urged
the scouts to always be respectful
of the· nl!tlonal and state flags .
In appreclatlnn of their visits,
Long and Boster were each

Infant returned
Tbe newborn lafaal kidnapped

frcm Cabeii-Bunllllpaa B•JPital
Ia Baldlllpon, W.Va., hu been
Maned to •• 11111'11'111 paren&amp;a.
UIIIIIQ Mu111, born Molldq 10
UaU ud 0.1. Mu111 on Unoo~
Collat;y, W.Va., 'II'U lddDapped
on Taeeda,. 8ee •tory, pace If.

presented with a Camp Klashuta
tee shirt.
Another special activity this
week has been the geology class.
Carolyn Summers, a geologist
from Belpre, prepared a selec·
tlon of rocks and ores for study by
the scouts. Many of the sped·
mens were found . around Ohio,
bu I others were from as far away
as Australia.
But the highlight of the week,
according to the scouts that Is,
was Water War Day. Held
Thursday afternoon, the boys
were divided up Into groups,
given water guns and an endless
supply of water, and turned loose
to try to find and capture the day
camp flag.
Allin all, day camp week Is a
time for fun, friends and learn·
' lng. But come this weekend,
when camp Is over, the boys wtll
resume their normal routines
GEOLOGY - He:r, IIIIa Ill rean, l•lereallall
while cub scout leaders and
Melp, Gallla ud Muoa C•ll Senla at....Uq
parent volunteers wbQ flave been ·
th.. -k'• dq camp a&amp; Camp lluhula, are
on the job all week .at Klashuta,
learln1 lha&amp; 1eotop caa be lnlereaiDI ud ftm
will ~It the sofas for some we 11
deserved rest and relaxation.
Robert Smltb, a&amp; rlpt, an .M.O·M dlll'"1
&lt;'(

too:

cl••

comm...loaer, .. teaclllll1 lbe
with the ·
u•t.=ace of vehudeer parent illelpera. Carolya
!lammen, a polollalltcm Belpre, preparelttllt,
rocb ud ores whlclllhe boJ• are learnln11 about,
for pre~~e~~la&amp;loa a&amp; lhe camp. '1:

�. Comm"ent
;•

Thursday, July 14. 1988

Page-2-TheDailySentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 14, 1988

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••

The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street

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

•

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'(gJ~ ~ ..,..~

.... .......=--

•
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•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubUsher

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·Globetrotting Shul~ laden with gifts

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manaser

AMEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

WASHINGTON -Almost everywhere Secretary of State
George Shultz travels, gilts
await him. He files around the
world with his bulging bag of
presents, like Santa Claus on
rewind.
Alter six· years as a foreign
diplomat, S)lultz could open his
own International museum.
Imagine the secretary of state
wearing a Liberian· tribal gown,
sipping Russian vodka and lean·
lng on a carved cane from Zaire.
. That Is the curious picture that
would result If ShultZ actually
used some of the many gilts he

•

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

receives.
Shultz can keep only the gilts
that are worth less than $180. He last such auction was held In 1980;
must turn over the more expen· when 182 gilts from the Carter
slve presents to the General administration fetched more
Services Administration or dis· than $55,000.
A GSA employee told our
play them at the State Department while he remains in office. associate, Jim Lynch, that
The ·GSA channels them to the executive-ievel ofllclals, tnclud·
Ubrary of Congress, the Smith· . ing Shultz, occasionally buy back
sontan Institute or another ap- their gilts at a lair market value.
What do foreign heads of state
propriate agency.
The GSA also stockpiles some give to the secretary of state who
gilts In a 400-square-Ioot vault. has everything? We obtained the
Once the vault starts to bulge, the list of the dozens of gilts Shultz Is
GSA has the option ol putting tbe ' free to keep !rom the 26 countries
gilts up lor public auction. The he visited last year alone.

They

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome.
should be less than 300 words
long. All let ters are subject toedUing and must be signed with name, address arid
te lephone number. No unsigned letters WiU be publlshed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing I$ !lUes, not personalities.

~Washington Window

~EPt,OF

~; Reagan
••

:~as
•
··•.
••

••

mellows
•
tune runs out
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter

HUMANITIES
LllEb.Tu~

1-'\STOR:y
LA"'EiU~&lt;ie

~·~~y

3: . WASHINGTON. (UP!) -

President Reagan Is mellowing as his
: White House years are coming to an end.
,
. ; He is taking a much more philosophical approach to foreign policy
~· and moving cautiously, having suffered setbacks and enjoyed some
~;triumphs.

·~

His biggest triumph Is hurdling the wide chasm In East-West
::relations and opening a new chapter In superpower relations. His new
found frl&lt;"ndshlp with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has helped to
bring about the new arms accord to ban medium· and short-range
~ f'nisslles from their arsenals.
• Even In terms of Iran, the president Is turning the oth~r cheek
: where he might have been taken a different approach In the past.
• :When a reporter suggested that there was opposition In the country
,' 16 giving compensation to the families of thevlctlmsofthe Iranian air
, bus downed by the U.S. Navy that took 290 lives, Reagan said:
! "I don't feel that compassion ever sets a bad precedent." ·
,
Precipitous action Is no longer In his book. He Is moving away from
r center stage without any last minute attempts to rock the boat or stir
' up . his supporters. When the Sandlnlstas expelled the American ·
ambassador and seven U.S. envoys from the embassy In Managua,
Reagan responded wlth a tit for .lat, ousting an equal number of
Nicaraguans diplomats from Washington.
He did not promptly announce that he would seek to revive the
' Nicaraguan rebels. known as lhe Contras. to go back Into battle
·
. armed with a new U.S. package of weapons.
,. Instead, ht;&gt; took time out to weigh his options, knowing that with
&lt; time running out. the lawmakers. outraged as they may be, will be
, reluctant to rearm the Contras for a U.S.-sponsored war.
~ :: On the domestic side, Reagan also disappointed some of his more
• ..:onservatlve supporters by picking former Pennsylvania Gov.
' :Richard Thornburgh, a well known moderate, to replace Attorney
·General Edwin Meese.
·
~. ·: The president appears to be seeking middle ground on a number of
;. Issues. He Is more compromising, less feisty and more resigned lo the
• lieed to get bipartisan support for whatever Is possible on his agenda
~:. )lefore he leaves office.
, •' Former White House chief of staff Howard Baker, who tell his post
~ .r'~cently , had urged Reagan to take a more cooperative approach to
, Congress and on a number of prickly issues. Apparently some of the
"-i : advice has taken hold.
'· There Is not much more that the president can achieve either
;. domestically or in foreign policy in the coming months . But he does
:: )HI joy campaigning and ·throwing up the warning signals against
·&gt;Massachusetts Gov . Michael Dukakis. the expected Democratic
,~· :eresidential nominee. whom he has brandl!d a "liberal." a label he
( )&gt;elleves he has taught the voters to shun.
.. ·He has d.eclded to give his time and energy to electing Vice
: 'President George Bush, his heir.apparent to the Republican crown.
:: :· So as he goes into Ihe twilight of his presidency. Reagan can look
~~• l;(ack on a hard line conservative beginning and a more moderate
: ending.

..

,. .

.. l.etters to the editor
'
Softball holdup
' · Dear Editor,
~ : 1 am writing this in regards to
he girls softball league of Meigs
••• ••· i~nd
Mason. Until this year It was
~ · : Nielgs and Mason Girls League,
: l!ut because of a lot qf problems,
lt was changed, sothattheycould
;.. keep the girls who should have
~· f;one on to Senior ball, on the
) Junior Teams.
: . ;: Most of the teams in the league,
• were teams that played agains t
; ~c h other for the past few yelfs.
! The team that was really making
•neadway and really sho•vlng how
', •lhey've
•
Improve d .over t h e Iast
, : few years, is the Middleport
i •busters. Even the Dusters took
} :Sheir bumps, bru ises and losses
j ;(s they got better. This year It
~ ·l\'as changed to Big Bend Girls
!: ~eague, so that the older girls
uld stay In Junior ball, withOut
••. e'ovote
•
of the girls Involved or a
!· ,ay of the parents of the girls.
&lt; ll"be Dusters went undefeated
last year, winning the league and
~. league tournament. But, they
' have all played hard, to get
l. •lYhere they are. This year they
: . 1lnly played a few league and
• •league tournament. Bul, they
: : }lave all played hard, to get
: : where they are. This· year they
· •only played a few teague games
:jnd the rest were,forfelts. These
~ther teams ·dldn I want to play
, jjgalnst the Dusters. Some. the
: )arne teams that played against
• t)lem last year. When It came to
• lhe league tournament which Is
~ tieing held this weekend, because
~f the Dusters ability, that every
• one of them gained through a lot
• of hard work and the saine
:: bumps and bruises that every
:; team just starting out gets, they
were not allowed to participate In
~ the league tournament. Several
f . teams threatened to not get in the
" · ·: tournament, If th~Dusters were

.; :a

'

i.

t

a llowed ln. This meant !hal the
league was going to lose more
money by letting the Dusters
play, than Ihey would If they kept
them out. The girls on the
Dusters ball team paid their
entry fee at the beginning of the
year the same as all the other
tee r.1s l1 11d to do. But. n')Y' J.he
[)u ;~ l r r "' r r"' &gt; ~i lf pena . iz&lt;~"l 'lnd
kept out o' tht. ieae; 1r&gt; .u'l nam~nt be·~ a liSe of comp 'atnt.· trom
other ·e.,-ns. "f~P Du"e', hav.~
worked hor~ to hw&lt;! cvm~ from
where th~y were a few }eorsago,
to where they are today. As far as
the younger,· smaller teams who
were afraid to play the Dusters
because of the fear of Injuries, I
can understand that, but I also
feel that something should have
been done at the beginning of the
league to have kept them from
going against the Dusters and a
couple other teams who are also
gaining potential and have good
ball teams. But, no, the Dusters
are the ones who have been
penalized. I wonder where the
good sportsmanship and the fun
of playing ball have disappeared
to. The girls only did their best
the past few years and only
wanted to do their best, or they
wouldn't be where they are
today. To be penalized for this Is
wrong, and I think an ' Injustice
has been done to the Dustets that
can never be made up for. I guess
no one wants a team that their
town can be proud of, unless It's
their team. And no matter how
'many other tournaments, the
Dusters are allowed to get In, it
will not make II up to these girls,
what has been done to them by
their own league.
A Dusters' Parent
Mrs ..Linda Hawley
659 Oliver St.
MtJdleport, Ohio

The president of Kenya bes·
towed upon Shultz carved elephant and rhino statues, 6pounds
of Kenyan coffee and a ring of
semi-precious stones. From
Senegal, Shultz got two caftans
and a sUver filigree Jetter opener. Germany's minister of
foreign affa.lrs gave the secretary a crystal decanter, glasses
and a wooden candle pyramid.
Israeli and El Salvadoran
leaders tried to educate Shultz.
Prime Minister Shimon Peres
presented Shultz with the book
"Jewish People, 4000 Years of
Survival." El Salvador Pres!·
dent Jose Napoleon Duarte gave
Shultz an autobiography,
"Duarte, My Story."
Along with the .. traditional
tribal gowns, the foreign minis·
ter for Liberia loaded Shultz
down with a small model of the
national museum, a traditional
head scarf, two sUver rings and a
doll. Colombia's leader gave
Shultz $100 worth of pink, longstemmed roses. South Korea
went to work on Shultz's wardrobe, giving him 4 yards of sUk
and several pieces of costume
jewelry. From the attorney general of Nigeria, Shultz received a
small Ivory lace adorned with
elephant hair.
The most common .gift for
Shultz last year was a cigarette
box. He got silver-Inlaid boxes
from France, Mexico and India.
Evidently, nobody told the do·
nors that Shultz doesn't smoke.
Footnote: We asked the State
Department what gifts are given
to foreign diplomats who visit the
United States, and they refused
to tell us. Apparently the gilts are
either states secrets, or they're
too tacky.

Ohio's consumer protection laws .Jan Mt~:;
"lilt sounds too good to be true Ohio's consumer protection pro- dangerous condition when It Is
... It probably Is." Those who gram, the Consumer Sales Prac- not, nor substantially underesll·
keep this In mind when shopping . tlces Act that prohibits decep- mate the repair or service costs.
or listening to a high-pressure tive, unfair, and unconscionable Similar rules apply to the repairs
sales pitch generally protect sales practices acts. Sellers of all other consumer products.,
themselves against fraud. In cannot make false or misleading
Other Ohio. laws that protect
addition, Ohio has several laws statements about the nature of consumers Include the following:
that protect consumers against their businesses, products, or
- The Anti-Pyramid Sales
misleading or deceptive business services, or their prices. "Un· . Law: Get-rich-quick schemes
practices. The attorney general, conscionable" sales practices that require consumers to pay a
the state's chief legal olllcer, Is Include taking advantage of a lee to obtain tlie right to r.ecrult
responsible for the enforcement person's Illiteracy, handicap, or other Investors are Illegal In Ohio
of these laws. Attorney General Inability to understand the terms and all other states. Operating
Celebrezze has filed a new rule of a sale, selling goods or like chain letters, pyramid plans
that, If approved, wUI further services when the supplier knows are mathematically Impossible
protect Ohio consumers. The the consumer cannot afford to complete. While those who
proposed rule would require them, and selling goods or Initiate the scheme benefit, later
advertisers to substantiate their services grossly In excess or the Investors inevitably lose their
claims.
usual selling price. All advertise· money.
II a company bills Itself as the ments must list any special
- The Business Opportunity
"world's largest" retalfer of a limitations and ralnchecks must Purchaser's Protection Act:
certain product, the company be offered to customers who Another get· rich-quick scheme Is
should Indeed be the "world's attempt to buy an advertised the business opportunity ven·
largest" seller of that product. Item that has sold out. All ture, which requires a large
The proposed rule would require consumer transactions In Ohio Initial down payment In exthe substantiation of claims are governed by this act.
change for assistance In starting
Another consumer protection
about goods and services sold to
a hew business. This act requires
consumers. Sellers would be rule Is the motor vehicles repairs that disclosure statements prorequired to maintain evidence to or services rule. The attorney viding background about the
back up their claims about their general's office receives more business be given to the buyer
products and to produce this complaints about automobiles before any agreements are
evidence or documentation upon than any other product. All signed and mandates a five-day
request by the attotney general. mechanics must follow certain cooling-off period that allows the
This rule wUI not only protect speclllc procedures, Including consumer to cancel the business
consumers from false or reckless providing the consumer with an opportunity transaction If he so
misrepresentation, but It also estimate If the anticipated cost desires.
will protect sellers from unfair exceeds $25. The mechanic must
- The Home Solicitation Sales
get the permission of the consu- Act: Anyone who buys a product
competition.
A public hearing wUI be held on mer to continue repair work If the for over $25 from a door-to-door
the proposed rule at 8:00a.m. on cost Is to exceed the estimate by ales representative or at a place
Tuesday, August 9 at the State more than ten percent. A repair that Is not the company's regular
Office Tower In Columbus: The sbop cannot charge for repairs or place of business has three days
rule must be approved by the services you did not autbortze. to change his or her mind for any
Joint Committee on Agency Rule tell you repairs are necessary reason and leagally cancel the
Review (JCARRJ before It goes when they are not, tell you contract. The consumer must
Into effect.
certain repairs or services were cancel the deal in writing and the
The proposed rule will become · performed when they weren not, seller then has ten business days
a p~rt or the cornerstone of tell you that your auto Is In to pick up the product and return

..

Making the
WASHINGTON (NEAl Avoiding the rancor and dlvls.IVe·
ness that often has marred
similar reform efforts In the
past, the Democratic party has
made substantial changes ln.the
rules under which it selects Its
presidential nominees.
The new rules wUI not affect
the virtually completed 1988
selection process but wUI bring a
slgnlltcant additional measure ol
democracy to the party's presl·
dential nomination contests In
1992 and beyond.
The new procedures were
adopted without dissent at a late
June meeting here of the Democratic National Convention's
Rules Committee. They still
must be approved by the lull
coventlon later thl&amp; month In
Atlanta, but that step Is regarded
·
as only a formality.
News stories about the Rules
Committee's action generally
cast It as merely another phase In
the maneuvering between the
party's putative presidential nominee, Massachusetts Gov. Ml·
chael Dukakis, and his lone
remaining challenger, the Rev.
Jesse Jackson.
Those accounts suggested that
Dukakls acceded . to some of,\

nomin~tion

any money already paid.
- The Prepaid Entertainment
Contract Act: Consumers who
sign contracts with health spas,
dance studios, diet centers, dat·
lng services, and martial arts
training schools also have a
cooling-off period during which
they can cancel a contract. If a
contract is properly cancelled
under th'l! rules of the act, the
business must make the refund
within ten business days or the
consumer can sue for twice the
amount owed plus attorney fees.
-The Odometer Rollback and
Disclosure Act: It Is Illegal to
alter the mileage reading of a
motor vehicle before selllng 11.
Accurate mileage disclosure
must be made to the buyer.
All Ohio consumers should be
aware of these laws so they can
protect tllemselves against de·
ceptive business practices. Fa·
mlllarlty with consumer protection laws enables both businesses
and consumers 't o understand
their rights and responsibilities.
In the marketplace. Anyone who
has a problem with a product or .
service should first notify the
company In writing and give the
company a chance to relnedy the
situation. If a complaint cannot
be resolved directly with the
business Involved, Attorney Gen·
era! Celebrezze:s Consumer Protection Division can be contacted
toll-free at 1·800·282-0515.
If you have any comments or
questions on this or any other
issue of Interest to you, please
feel free to contact my office by
writing State Senator Jan Ml·
chael Long, Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio, 43266, or
call (6i4) 466-8156.

fairer __Ro_be_rt_W&lt;_a_lte_rs

Jackson's demands to enable of the Democratic National Com- primary delegate slots commenJackson to claim a victory that mittee of their superdelgate surate with their performance.
Thus, the contender who fin·
might offset some expected set· positions.
!shes
first with 40 percent of the
(StU! enjoying that privileged
backs. But other factors, equally
vote
In
a m•ltl-candldate prim·
or more Important, also were status, however, will be 80
ary
would
receive 40 percent of
percent of the Democrats In the
Involved.
the
delegates
- not all of them Dukakls Is a strong believer In House and Senate, the chairman
procedural fairness and would and vice chairman of each state's while the second-place finisher
have been likely to endorse this Democratic party, all Demo- with 20 percent·of tl!e votes would
year's reforms without any urg· • cratlc governors and assorted get 20 percent of the delegates.
The Democrats. haye been
lng !rom Jackson. Moreover, the other politicians.)
denigrated
by some lor contlnu·
Five states (New Jersey, PenRules Committee action was only
ally
tinkering
with their delegate
the most recent development In a nsylvania, Maryland, West Vir·
selection
process,
but Its lmpor·
struggle for Internal democracy ginla and Illinois) and Puerto
tance
Is
Illustrated
by this single
that dates back two decades.
Rico this year conducted pres!·
of what It
striking
explanation
The Democrats' 1968 conven· dentlal primaries under a
lion took the extraordinary step winner, take-all loophole In party does:
At the beginning of this year,
of calling for a maj9r overhaul of rules that undermines the Demothe delegate selection rules that crats' commitment to the con· more than a dozen Republican
long enabled big'clty bosses and · cept of proportional nnd Democratic contenders were .
offering thetlloSelves to tbe voters
other political Insiders to manl~ representation.
as the nation's next president.
The Rules Committee eliml·
ulate the process while slmul·
The
two parties' delegate •selec·
taneously disenfranchising rank· nated that loophole and man·
tton
rules governed the process
and-file party suppor1ers.
dated universal acceptance of
by which that choice now has
More than 15 percent of those the proportionality that assures
been narrowed down to two men.
casting their ballots at this year's those who do not place·flrst In a
convention will be "superdelegates" - politicians given automatic votes wltbout being requb:ed to enter any primary or
Tocjay Is Thursday: July 14, the 196th day of 1988 with 170 to
endorse any presldentlar
follow.
candidate.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
That number will be slashed to
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
10 percent In 1992 because the
The even~ star Is Saturn.
,
new rules strip all 363 members

Today in history

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bicycle tour crosses

Ohio to .Zanesvllle
- ..-

LIKE A JETLINER - America's Cup skipper Dennis Cnnner
sails his state-of-the-art snlid wing sailboat, with a WiJig simUar In ,
shape and size to a Boeing 757 jet aircraft wlniJ, olf the San Dleso
Coast in preparation for a possible September 1988 match race for
the America's Cup against challen~Jer Michael Fay of New
Zealand. The specific legalities of the race have yet to be decided
on by a New York judge. (Ul'I)

-

Tom Fleiner of Manslleld, Mike
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) About 300 bicyclists riding across Kll~ane ol Greenwich and Gethe country In a fund-raising rald Lackey of Ci nclnnatl.
effort ex pee ted to arrive In
Flelner, 38, has only one leg. He
Zanesville today after spending lost hts right leg at the thigh In
Wednesday night at a higl\ school 197,4. He had sprained his right
west of the capital city.
knee on the kick starter ol his
The 307 bicyclists, ranging in motorcycle. The sprain went
age from 13 to 72, planned to bad, gangrene set In and the leg·
)eave Westland High School this had to be amputated. He swims
morning enroute to their next every day .
overnight stop In Zanesville. ·
Lackey said the bicycle trip is a
The group also plans overnight great way to the see the country.
stays In Wheeling, W.Va., Ohio"Each day Is a new adven·
pyle, Bedford. Chambersburg, lure," said Lackey. "It's a new
and Lancaster, Pa., arid Collings- seeing experience, unlike when
wood and Atlantic City, N.J.
you're In a.car. You set the pace
The trek left Seattle, Wash., and draw on the beauty of the
June 5 with a goal of arriving In area.''
Atlantic City July 22.
"It's the people that really
The bicyclists represent 35 make It Interesting," said
states, with five of them coming Mavec. "The people In the small
from Ohio - Troy Yun!Cer ol towns have been especially SUP'
Gallon, Ken Mavec of Euclid, portive. Each town has Its own
flavor, uniqueness."
This trek will pass through 13
states, 110 counties and some 450
communities.
''I cim't think of a better way to
MASSENA, N.Y. (UPI) - A
ship steward who climbed from a see the country than from the
PoUsh freighter onto a lock In the seat elf a bicycle," said Yunker,
St. Lawrence Seaway was ex- who graduated from high school
pected to travel to Chicago, In June. "This has been an
where he will stay with relatives experience I'll never forget."
The trek Is sponsored by the
until he decides whether to
American
Lung Association,
detect, authorities said.
Jerzy Osiecki, 23, or Poland, with bicyclists lining up sponsors
crawled onto the lock from the who pledge contributions for
Polish vessel Ziema Chelmlnska their efforts. SUpport vehicles
at 12:17 a.fll. Wednesday and a are traveling the bicyclists.
By the time they arrived In
shipmate handed him a box of his
clothing, said Ron Carnes, dep- Columbus. they had pedaled
uty chief of the Border Pa(JOI 2, 765 miles In 38 days, an average
of little more than 72 miles a day.
stationed In Swanton, Vt.
"He hasn't made an official
asylum claim," said Carnes. "I
think he wants to get some advice
from counselllrst."
Osiecki was held for Illegal
entry near the lock In Massena,
about 160 miles northeast of
Syracuse, until his relatives
came up with $2,000 for ball and
. purchased a bus ticket to Chicago
for the seaman, said Carnes.
"Everything Is done. We had to
buy him ~unch because he didn't
have any money," said Carnes.
"We're going to be taking him to
the bus station sometime this
afternoon."
The situation was being
· treated as a "fairly routine"
Illegal entry case, said Amy
· Otten, spokeswoman for the
Immigration and Naturalization
Ser'vlce olllce Ill Butllngton, Vt.
TX
A deportation hearing will. be
' scheduled In Chicago, she said.
"He told us a little while ago
that two others jumped off the
ship In the Weiland area and one
· other jumped oll the ship in
· Hammon, both In Ontario," said
Carnes. "He's at least the
fourth."
A Polish couple was seeking
asylum In Cana_cla after jumping
from the ship Into the Weiland
· Canal Tuesday, officials
confirmed.
Kaztmlerz Stepien, 32, and his
wife, Anna, 29, jumped from the
Zlemla Chelminska near Lock 2
· of the canal. The couple from
Gdansk was turned over to
Canadian Immigration officials.
· Theldentityoftheotherperson
· who lied the freighter was not
Immediately known. but the
Border Patrol had confirmed
that four people had jumped ship,
said Carnes.
"He jumped. In Hamilton. Apparently no one picked him up
yet, but he's In Ontario," Carnes
said_.
Osiecki had a landing permit
· when the ship was In Cleveland
and had been on shore. Carnes
said. He said he did not know why
the seaman decided to continue
Reg.
with the voyage until he arrived
9.95
In Massena, but said It may haore·
lncluclea
had something to do with the
Helldphonee
other sailors leaving the vessel.
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Thursday, July 14, 1988

Page-4-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

American League wins AAA

Reds make a deal
for Jones, Pacillo
CINCII'o'NATI !UP!) - The
: Cincinna·u Reds WednesdaY
: traded outfiE&gt;lder Tracy Jones
. and pitcher Pat Paclllo to the
. Montreal Expos for three ml·
nor league players.
Catcher Jeff Reed and out·
: fielder Herm Winningham wlil
· be placed on the Reds roster,
: rE&gt;plilcing Jones and pitcher
· Jef!Gray, who has been sent to
: Class AAA Nashville. The Reds
also acquired pitcher Randy St.
. Claire In the deal.
:. Reed hit ,.220 in 43 games for
·: Montreal. before being de• moted June 30 to Class AAA
.: Indiana polls, where he· hit .318
•: in eight games. Winningham
: hit .233 in 47 games for the
,· Expos, but was sent to Indiana·
~ polls last weekend. And St.
·: Claire was 0·0 with a 6.14 ERA
; in six games before being sent
• to Indianapolis, where he is 0-3
· with ('ight saves and a 2.87
ERA.
., .
Jones, whose play has been
limited this year because of a
: sprained ankle, is hitting .229.
; Paclllo was 1·3 with a 5.06ERA

BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP I) Tacoma second baseman Ed
Jurak scored from third in tile
topofthenlnthlnnlngonanerror
by Phoenix shortstop Tony Per·
ezclllca Wednesday night to give
the American League team a 2·1
win over the National club in the
first-ever_ Triple A all-star game.
Jurak, hitting .314 lor Tacoma
of the Pacific Coast League, led
off the ninth with a triple to right
field off Joe Boevero!Richmond
of the International League.
Catcher Bob Geren of' Columbus
of the International League hit a
sharp grounder which Perez·
chic a was unable to handle as
Jurak scored the winning run.
Jurak was named most valua·
ble player In the game. played

.

:,,:;.on

~~:eutbait.

g~e,

~ore a selloutcrowdotl9,500at

Much like Tuesday night's big
Pilot Fleld. The game featured league Ali·Star classic, the in·
the top stars of the American augural Triple A all-star game
Association, International featured good pitching, with six
League and Pacific Coas 1 National League hurlers striking
League paired off on teams out 11 American League hitters.
based on their parent club's The final score was Identical to
major-league affiliation.
the major-league All·Star game,
The game had a number of which the AL won 2·1.
firsts, Including an appearance
The American League took a
by the buxom kissing bandit 1-0 lead In the third when
Morganna, .of Columbus, Ohio, Syracuse Chiefs shortstop Eric
who kissed and embraced her Yeldlng reached first' on an error
first-ever minor league player by third baseman Marty Brown,
before the start of the bottom of advanced to second, and was
the second lnnin~,:. She ran down singled home by Syracuse teamthe first base line and kissed mate Gerlnomo Berrora.
outfielder Benny Distefano of the
The lead held up until the
host Buffalo Blsons to the deligllt bottom of the seventh when
of the crowd.
Tidewater third baseman Gregg
Jeffries, a top New York Mets

too

pr.;lSpect and Baseball America's
two-time minor-league Player of
the Year, belted a waist·high
offering from Edmonton reliever
Urbano Lugo over the right field
fence.
Despite giving up the game's
-only homer. Lubo was credited
with the win while Richmond
reliever Boever took the loss.
National League starter David
West, anolher top Mets prospect
with a 7·3 record with Tidewater,
went three Innings and gave up
two hlts,lncludlng the first Triple
A all-star game hit to Oklahoma
third baseman Tom O'Malley.
American starter Roy Smith,
11-6 this season, hurled two
Innings of perfect ball, striking
out two.

West competes for National Junior title
TRACY JONES
Traded to Expos
In six games before being sent
to Nashville, where he had a
3.95 ERA In 13 games.
Gray had no record and a 3.86
ERA In five games.

phio fishing report
~·: COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) x:'l:he weekly fishing report from
,;:::Ihe Ohio Division of Wildlife:
..,..: .
Central
~!:Alum Creek: Fish the conOu·
~;'!'lee of Blacklick, Big Walnut
.-)nd Alum crreks for carp, some
.~i!malimouth bass and some sau·
~ geye. Use strawberry dough
1,/ balls or corn for bait. Fish with
.,· ,small crankbaits for the smal·
"' •!mouth bass and the saugeyes.
.~ ~ Carp are also biting In the
. _, •. reservoir
·
.
•j -·
""·-. O'Shaughnessy
Reservoir:
;. Fish in the upper end of the
? · · reservoir, north of Home Road,
:i .:•tor carp. Use dough balls made
:; ;;from Wheat ies cereal, straw- :
·• -~berry dough balls or corn for
:; .,:::J&gt;ait. Fish on the bottom. Channel
:j~ •!atrish can also be caught fishing
the bottom with night·
;:~. _trawlers, chicken livers and

Thursday, July 14, 1988

Musklngunl River: Fish from
the Ellis Dam to McConnelsville
for channel and flathead catfish.
Use chicken livers, minnows and
bluegills for bait. Fish for spotted
bass using crankbaits and
spinners. Fish In the river near
Zanesville for freshwater drum
using soft crayfish, night·
crawlers and crankbaits.
Southwest
Grand Lake St. Marys: Fish at
night lor channel catfish. The
best baits are nlghtcrawlers and
soft crayfish fished on the
bottom.
Paint Creek Lake: Large·
mouth bass fishing is fair.
Anglers should fish at night using
plastic worms and splnnerbalts.
Channel catflsll are biting at
night on nlghtcrawlers, soft
crayfish and leeches.

SIOUX FALLS. S.D. (UPI) Brad Jenkins of Rancho Cordova. Calif., hit a two-run homer
In the second Inning and doubled
In another run In the sixth to lead
the West to a 12·5 win over the
East in a Nallonal Junior Baseb~ll Championship game Wed·
nesday night.
In a second game David
Gandolph of Greenwood, Ind ..
struck out 17 as he pitched the
North to an 8·2 victory over the
South.
The West, 3·0, plays In Friday's
gold medal game against the
North, which Is 2·1. The Bronze
medal game Friday matches the
South, 0-3, against the East, 1·2:
The tournament features 64 of
the country's best 16· to 18-year·
old baseball plavers.
The win for the West squad
went to pitcher Mike Smedes of
Laguna Hills, Calif., while Chris
TaclkofFrederick, Md., took thE'
loss.
For thE' East.'Mtckey Kernes of
Hancock, Md., homE&gt;red to drive
In thrE&gt;e runs. He has a tourna·
ment rE&gt;cord 11 RBI In thrre
games.
In the North-South game Gando iph allowed 6 hits and 2 runs in
the game. Losing pitcher Rusty
Rugg of Downsville, La., pitched
six Innings, allowing 4 hits and 4
runs, walking 6and striking outS.

For the North Dan Dreasky of.
F ,lint, Mich., was 2 for 6 with a
run scored, Jack Johnson of
Chicago was 1 for 4 with two RBI
and Steve Sadeckl of Kansas
City, son of former major
leaguer Ray Sadeckl, had a hit, a
run scored and two RBI.
For the South Scott Pugh of
Abilene. Tex .. was 2 for 4 with
four RBI.
The tournament is run by the
United States Baseball
Federation.
The federation Wednesday
night named 23 players to Its
U.S.A. 'J unior National Team,
which will be coached by Bernie
Walter, coach at Arundel (Md.)
High School.
The team will go on to Rapids
City, S.D., and will play an
International series July 26
through Aug. 1 against junior
teams from Taiwan, Canada and
American . Legion Post 22 in
.
Rapids City.
When the round-robin tourna·
ment Is 'over 18 of the 23 will be
named to the World Junior
Baseball tea.m which goes to the
world championships in Sydney,
Australia, In December.
Here are the 23 players named
by region:
North- Doug Bennett. rhp·lb,
Springfield, Mo.; Darin
Dreasky, 2b. Flint, Mich.; Dave

Fabyan .continues to
lead Ohio Amatuer

Lake Erie
•' ~ "
Northwest
Walleye fishing In the Western
: ·-:.-.. · Flndlay Reservoir No. I and
~·.
No. 2: Reservoir No.1 offers good . Basin Is spotty. Anglers must
:):-.catches of crappies in the nor· travel farther for good catclles.
.,. theast corner. Crappies range The best areas are north of West
:: between 9 and lllnches. The best Sister Island, south of Middle
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!)- The and 14th last season. made the
Sister Island, the reef complex,
-~·Dalts are minnows fished below
Shaker
Run Golf Club, site of the turn at two-over par. He bogied
s ;Qobbers or small spinners. Some Toledo water intake and Kelleys
1988 Ohio Amateur, e.vened the the !58-yard No. 11 but regained
-:lt. %-Inch bluegllls and a few Island.
Fish are being caught by score Wednesday with 144 of the stroke when he birdied the
,..::-I:alleyes can be caught In the
195-yard No. 14.
o,jame area. Reservoir No. 2 casting weight-forward spinners Ohio's best golfers.
His back nine fell apart on the
During the first round Tuesdav
.. -·orrers good catches or channel with worms or trolling deep
424-yard
No. 16. His second shot
course
surrendered
seven
the
_. catfish . Drift fishing in deep diving lures. Trolling is best
found
a
bunker
and his shot to the
scores
of
under
par,
Including
a
.. ·water is the best method. Fish when it is hot and water is calm.
green
fell
short.
From there the
course
record
tying
67.
:: ioward the east side of the Flsh the deep water 30 to 35 feet.
21-year·old
golfer
chipped 10feet
That
all
changed
Wednesdav.
Walleye fishing Is rated good In
~· reservoir. The best baits are
past
the
cup
and
two-putted
lor a ·
Only
two
golfers,
Anthony
Mol·
""".minnows, worms and &lt;:utbalts the Central Basin. Fish from
double
bogey.
Ilea
of
Columbus
an
d
Doug
;;:fished on the bottom. Some Rocky River to Conneaut, but
"1 thought I had a good shot (on
Ashtabula and Conneaut offer Hauenstein of Aurora, were able
:li;~alleye and a few largemouth
second
shot) but the ball rolled
to
break
par
over
the
6,934-yard
the best fishing. Fish seven . to
:;;~ass also can be caught by
and
landed
In the bunker. Maybe
eight miles out In 70feet of water. course.
~;G;~s ling along the north shore.
1
didn't
take
mv time with the
• Barry Fabyan of Worthington.
When fishing near Rocky
3~se spinners lipped with night·
· River, fisll one to two miles out. who· tied the course record on shot. On a courSe like this, you
- :erawlers for bait.
can'ttake anything lor granted. I
Breslers Reservoir: Look for Trolling deep diving lures Is the Tuesday, ballooned toa4-over 76. did and It cost me."
but
continued
to
hold
a
twoZ,·tlllr to good catches of large best method. Some smaller wal·
The tournament was to con·
•• '"bluegill around the pump h.ouse !eyes, 14 to 16 Inches, can be stroke lead with a !·under-par 143 tinue
today, winding up Friday.
total.
... In the southwest corner of the caught fishing from the shore of
The
144-player
field was cut to
Fabyan,
a
Wake
Forest
senior,
:: ·t;eservoir. Try using small Edgewater Park In Cleveland.
the
top
60
golfers
for today's
said
he
thought
he
played
well
: /;~~orms and larval baits fished Anglers may also catch some
The
top
40,
including
lies,
action.
Wednesday
despite
his
score.
::..;':Oelow bobbers In about 8 feet of yellow perch and white bass
will
advance
to
Friday's
final
"I
really
didn't
play
tllat
much
"""-water. Anglers drift fishing are while fishing lor walleye.
different today," he said. "I just round.
:r' catching channel catfish in the
-had
a couple putts that wouldn't
:• deeper part of the reservoir using
Ohio River
fall. When you shoot a 67 ,It seems
::: II'Orms and cutbait.
Fishing is slow on the river like
THELEADER
everything falls."
right now because of the drought.
Two sllots back of the leader
~· · ·
Anglers fishing In the Pike Island were Mike Emery of Massillon,
~;:' ·
Northeast
.
area in 13i!lmont County can Bill Lundeen of Findlay and
~;: Leesville Lake: Leesville Is a
""':•Peal muskie lake. Fish near the catch a few smalimouth bass and Steve Parker · of Akron. Four
::. ;f!ropoffs lor big muskles using white bass.
golfers were tied at 146, including
Use artificial baits and deep· Dave Brzozowski of Dayton, Jeff
:0 (Jeep-diving lures. Walleyes also
•: can be caught using drep-dlving running lures while fishing In the Junk of Washington Court House,
:; lures or drifting spinners over early morning and evening. Fish Mollica, and Joe Podolski of
:. the sandbars. Fish for large· on the bottom for channel catfish, Worthington.
using cutbalt, nlghtcrawlers,
:::,_~ mouth bass using rubber :-vorms
Fabyan, whoflnishedsecondin
chicken
livers or blond baits.
:,: and jigs.
the NCAA championship In 1987
..
Mahoning River: This river
'• running through Trumbull and
~· !~ortage counties, is a good place
~lo fish for channel catfish. Fish In
·~~lie evening using chicken !Ivers,
*!J!:ightcrawlers or cutbalt. Some
~ . ~alimouth bass can be caught
...~ • u'slng white twister tails. Pan fish
•
-; . such as bluegill and crappies can
•Free Estimates
.....•. pe caught near the bridges using
: ·:Pfl.lnnows and redworms.

f
....

Gandolph, lhp, Greenwood, Ind.;
Brent Gates, 3b, Grandville,
Mich.; Mike Matheny, c, Rey·
noldsburg, Ohio; Scott Staho·
vlak, rhp, Grayslake, Ill.
Squth - Greg Blosser, of.
Sarasota, Fla. ; Reid Cornelius,
rhp, Thomasville, Ala.; Steve
Dean, of, Ada , Okla ,; Charles
JohnsonJr. , c, Fort Pierce. Fla . ;
Klkl Jones, rhp·if. Tampa, Fla.;
Marc Pisciotta, rhp, Marietta ,
Ga.; Rusty Rugg . lhp, Downs·

ville. La.
West - Joe Furukawa, If,
Anaheim, Calif,; Tyler Green. of,
Denver. Colo.; Ryan Klesko,lhp,.
Westminster, Calif.; Bob O'Don·
nell, rhp, Tucson, Ariz.; Steve
Solomon, of, Los Angeles; Troy
Talman, c, Napa, Calif..
East Joe Gmltter, 2b,
Trenton, N.J.; Mickey Kerns, ss.
Hancock, Md.; Chris Sinacorl,
rhp, Wantagh, N.Y.; Pat True,
of, Crofton, Md.

· DOES YOUR CAR PULL
• TOTHELEFT
OR THE RIGHT?
Could be It needs the tront end aligned. let us
check It out and straighten it KleQUied.

FRGrrr-BND
NOWONLY

.$1995

Includes:
• Comber Adjustment
• Toe Ad]ustmenl
• Shock Absorber Check

JIM COBB:
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CADILLAC
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f&gt;ass fishing Is good In the upper
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;:; ,!lark using crankbalts. Fish the
.. "ilom area for muskle and wal·
: :·)Jiye. The best fishing Is near the
! .1'9Ck ledges·and sandbars.

...
•

We r..tuN collillon

......•'

: 1aymar golf
: 'tesults given

..

•.

:.;: · ' · A blind bogey was held when
•· ~t.he Jaymar Ladles Tuesday
•leagut' met at the club.
::::;: Winners for the day, 18 holes,
- ~ere Nellie Brown, and nine
holes, Sue Arnold. A scramble
was announnced for Aur. 18 at
the Riverside Clu,b. A gulf and
potluck party was llnnouooed for
this Sunday at !he JayliUir Club.

ntp~lr

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.,

UPI Sports Writer
MIAMI (UPI) - The Miami
Dolphins SIJiled their No. 1 draft
choice, linebacker-defensive end
Eric Kumerow of Ohio State, to a
tour-year contract Wednesday
marking the earliest date lnelghi
years that a Miami top pick has
reported to camp.
Kumerow, 6·foot·7, 255 pounds,
was tile 16th player chosen in the
draft. Terms of the deal were not
released, but Kumerow's agent,
Herb Rudoy, said the agreement
Is better than the four-year, $1.6
mUIIon deal signed by Miami's
No. 1 choice a year ago. Last
year, Miami took defensive end
John Bosa with the 16th pick In
the draft, and he missed 41 days
of camp In a holdout. Kumerow
missed three days.
Late Wednesday, the Dolphins
also announced they had reached

Ballesteros

an agreement with George whose development was further
Cooper, a fullback from Ohio slowed by the players' strike,
State. Three draft picks remain Miami was .tntent on getting Its
unsigned: second-round choice top picks In on time this year.
Jarvis Williams, a safety from
"This year we have a week less
Florida; sixth-round pick Melvin to get tlilngs done than we did a
Bratton, a fullback from Miami; year ago,'.' said Charley Winner,
and eighth· round selection Louis Miami's director of pro person· ·
Cheek, a tackle from Texas nel. "There was an urgency to
A&amp;M. Bratton Is recovering from get It (the contract negotiations)
knee surgery and likely will not done. Eric wanted to be in camp,
play this season.
coach Shula wanted him to be In
''We're very, very satisfied camp."
Miami Is counting on Kumerow
with the numbers," Rudoy said.
to
bolster an anemic pass rush
•'To negotiate the deal took about
two months, but the last few that registered only 16 sacks In
weeks It's been slow. I came In non·strlke games last year. He
here today determined to gel 11 · initially will be used standing up
done."
in the Dolphins' base defense,
The. Dolphins, who have five and in a stance on passing downs.
"All the distractions are out of
pre-season games Including a
game with San Francisco in
London July 31, opened camp a It's
time toKumerow
play some
ball."Now
The
the way,"
satd.
week early this year. Alter last most Important part right now is
year's long holdout by Bosa,
start learning,
At Ohio State, Kumerow had
eight sacks In his senior year and
four forced fumbles, along with
holes in an outward 36, one over 73 tackles. For Miami coach Don
S)mla, avoiding a prolonged
par.
•'On this course you can get off
bytop
a No.
pick
was a
to a nice start In the prevailing holdout
relief. No
pick 1has
repor.ted
wind," Nicklaus had said Wed· earlier to the Dolphins since Don
nesday. "The first three holes McNeal reported on time In 1980.
are downwind, you should be
Kumerow practiced briefly
through them In even or under Wednesday, and was to be ready
par.''
for today's practice - the first
Favored players with later full-squad workout for the team.
starts Thursday Included Nick · There are eight unsigned vete·
Faldo and Sandy Lyle of Britain rans, Including wide receiver
and American · Paul Azlnger, Mark Duper. . 1
runner up to Faldo last year at
"We're just so much further
ahead now than we were last
Mulrfleld, Scotland.

l~ads

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, Eng·
land (UPI) - Spain's Severlano
Ballesteros collected five birdies
to stand at 5-under-par after nine
holes In the opening round of the
British Open Thursday, one
stroke ahead of American quail·
fier Greg Bruckner.
Bruckner, a native of Manhat·
tan Beach, California, who has
won two tournaments on the
Asian Tour this year, notched
two eagl~ and a birdie for a
4-under-par 31 at the turn.
. . Bruckner coped successfully
with blustery winds and mist that
ljescended on 1ihe Royal Lytham
and St. Annes course for the start
of the '117th British Open after
three days of relatively calm
weather.
Ballesteros, 31, whose first
Open victory in 1979 was at
Lytham, set up his fast start with
birdies on the first three holes.
The Spaniard birdied the sixth
hole, a 490-yard par five, a hole on
which Bruckner collected his
first eagle. Ballesteros also blr·
died the seventh hole.
Three· time tournament ,
winner Jack Nicklaus, playing In
his 26th consecutive Open, blr·
died tile first then dropped a shot
at each of the second and third

year at this time, " Shula said of
the rookie slgnlngs. "The thing
you
envision
is Graf
(second-year
linebacker
Rick)
on one
side, a big. strong, good athlete.
then this guy (Kumerow) on the
other
Not side."
accustomed to sitting out
practices, Kumerow drove to St.
Thomas University for about 20
minutes Monday and watched
the Dolphins work out.
"I know with the sophisticated
defenses that they run, to come In
three or four weeks late, you're
not going to have a handle on
what'sgolngon,"Kumerowsald.
"You need three weeks to get
I comfortable). Instead of miss·
lng three or four weeks, I wanted
to get il'l here now."

The source of the word "mausole- The World Almanac. The ~mb, one of
um• was a marble tomb built by Arte- the Seven Wonders of the World, ...._
misia for her husband, Mausolus, an built in what is now southeastern Turofficial of the Persian Empire, notes key. Mausolus died in 353 B.C.

rr:=======================:;
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given that on Saturday, July 16th,
19BB • at 10:00 a.m., a public sale will be held at 105
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio. to sell for cash the follow·
ing collateral: ·
19B6 Ford Mustang LX aFABP26AOGF127795
1980 Buick SS# 4N694AH412139
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company reservesthe right to rejec:tany
or all bids submitted.
Further. the above collateral will be sold in the condi·
tion it is in with no expressed or implied warranties given.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 614-992·3293

lr~i~~~;=====~ii~~~gg~~g~g~~~~gg~~~~~~i
SUMMER
. CL£ARAN,C£ SALE

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Guard Mark Baker of Dayton
Dunbar High School tailed to
,train the minimum scores onhls
college entrance tests ana will be
Ineligible to play his freshman
year at Ohio State University.
Baker will be the fourth OSU
basketball recr,ult In the last
three years to miss his freshman
year because of academic problems, the Columbus Dispatch
reported Wednesday.
Baker, a 6-foot All·Ohlo guard,
signed a national letter of Intent
last November.
Two years ago, Randy Doss of
Chicago sat on the sidelines, but
he saw limited action ·last year.
Two of coach Gary Williams's
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are Eli Brewster of Columbus
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The Daily Sentinel Page 5

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.: volleyball
:assistant coach
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
:university of Cincinnati Wednes·
·day promoted assistant women's
volleyball coach Darrell Morken
to head coach, replacing Mike
• Ungenfelter, whO Is trying out
for the U.S. National volleyball
team.
Morken has been an as~lstant
for the past year, following one
year as an assistant at Miami of
Ohio and one year as head coach'
at -Northside High School in
Muncie, Ind.
' Morken, a member of Ball
: State University's volleyball
team from 1982·85, played In two
' NCAA final four tournaments.
, He's a native of Milwaukee,
where he went to Whitefish Bay
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Thtnday. July 14. 1

.·

Thursday, July 14, 1988

Drought task force considers restriction
l:UL.UM.t!US. Ohio (UP I) The chairman of Ohio' s Drought
Assistance and Relief Team
Wednesday directed his task
force to check on the ·s tate' s
authority to order restrictions on
the use of scarce·water.
Responding to Ohio's worst
drought since weather record keeping began In 1873, Lt . Gov.
Paul Leonard also told his team's
members to come up with
legislative recommendations for
water allocation.
RepubliCan Sen. Ben Gaeth of
Defiance, a task force member
and chairman of the Senate
Agriculture, Commerce and Labor Committee, suggested that
cloud seeding, scheduled to begin
today In seven southwestern Ohio
counties
be considered
statewide.'
And Gov . Richard F . Celeste
announced activation of an Ohio
Emergency Management
Agency operations center to
coordinate responses to the
drought.
·
· "We jUst want to put some food
for tholight O!l the table, " Leo·
'nard said at the start of Wednes·
day's team meeting. "There are
no plans to call the Legislature
,back Into session, but we can't
· rule that out down the road."
: The federal government has
' Indicated It will expedite leglsla · lion to make distressed farmers
; "as whole -as possible," said the
team's chairman.
• "The aim Is to put aid Into the
: farmers' hands about the same
: time they would be selling their

.

crops," he $ald. "It's far too
premature for the state to make a
declslononf!nanclalald.Andl'm
not sure the money Is even
available."
Tony Logan of theOhloDepart·
ment of Agriculture proposed the
state work with commercial
lenders.
"We might be able to Induce
them to roU over their loans (to
farmers ) another year If they
could be guaranteed their Interest (by the state)," he said.
Gaeth cautioned that care be
exercised, however, In providing
any relief. •
'The turkey farmer needs one
thing,- the hog farmer another,"
he said.
"Whatever we do should not
be a rob-Peter-to-pay-Paul
situation," agreed Leonard.
Allee Walters of the agrlcullure department saldJO,OOOmore
bales of hay would arrive in Ohio
today, making 75 ,000 bales dO·
nated by out-of-state farmers
since the drought began.
"But the hay's a drop In the
bucket," she said. "We need to
get feed grains. "
Task force member John Stevenson of the u.s. Department of
Agriculture and the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
Service, estimated Ohio's
farmers have enough feed grain
In reserve to last one year.
Leonard gave the team two
weeks to verify the state's
authority to mandate usage
restrictions, "in a worst-case

~ Southern .:farmers,

scenario," ~nd to formulate
legislative proposals for water
allocation.
''Should the state have a plan If
local governments can't or won't
make those d~lslons (regarding
restrictions) ? asked Leonard .
Maury Walsh, deputy director
or the Ohio Environmental Protectlon Agency, responded that
local governments need strong
control over restrictions.
"There are 1,600 community
water supplies In the state," he
said. "Each community Is a!fected differently. But we should
at leastbeabletoglvethem some
guidance.''
If It's determined the state
. does not have the authority to
order restrictions on water usage, "then we'd have to think
about legislative action," Leo·
nard said.
Gaeth said the state of South
Dakota has a cloud-seeding program that Increases Its preclpltalion 10 percent annually.
"It's proved to be technically
satisfactory," he said. ''This is a
possible solution, an~ we would
::e..remlss If we dldn I look into
But meteorologist Lou Ramey .
also a team member, said
favorable weather conditions are
neededforcloudseedlngtowork.
"It could Increase our preclpl·

tation by 10 percent," he said,
"but there's also the posslblllty It
could decrease It by 10 percent.
South Dakota has had lawsuits
and other legal problems with it.
"You need cloud formations,"
added Ramey. "We haven't had
any favorable conditions (for
seeding). No guarantl!e of any
sort can be made."
Logan said the state already
has been approached by a
California company that, tor
$125,000, would seed clouds over
an area of 5,000 square miles.
"They could have two planes
here within 10 days "he said.
Richard W. Babb of the Ohio
Farmers Union said farmers and
agribusiness Interests have
raised $70 000 on their own to
seedcloud~overGreene Ointon
Fayette, Highland , 'Brown:
Warren and Adams counties.
"The planes are due In tomorrow," he said, "but I unde~stand
the radar won't be arriving until
Monday."
A toll-free telephone number
for the state emergency operalions center will be announced
"within a reasonable time," said
Leonard .
The center will serve as the
primary focus for state drought
planning efforts and for respond·
lng to developing water
shortages .

BIG ONES at BIG SAVINGS

.racers repay _hay
idebt, with interest
: CHARLOTTE,N .C.IUPI)-A
· convoy of tract or-trailer trucks
assembled along pit row. at the
Charlotte Motor Speedway today
awaiting the green flag to begin a
• - dramatic race that will deliver a
• . sacrificial gift of more than
:: 30,000 bales of precious hay to
suffering Mldwes t farmers.
• Despite parched pastures In
;• arid Southeast, farmers are
, digging deep to help their north·
ern counterparts who came to
their aid during the drought of
1986.
;. "They're sacrificing and at the
•• same time they are wondering
-: what the future will bring," said
• Johnny Pickler who is coordinating the 12 trucks of hay donated
from Stanley County, North
Carolina farmers . "The drought
has hit us within the last month
• and farmers have already
•• started feeding hay that Is
•: usually reserved for the winter."
,• Race teams NASCAR drivers
• were to lap the speedway after
··- receiving the green flag from .
; : N.C. Gov. Jim Martin and pilot
• · the 60 donated trucks on a 10-hour
: : trip north across the Appalach;.; tan mountains to drought ·
·: .stricken farmers In Ohio.
": The event, dubbed the "Hay~- ride 500", is a reverse twist on a
.;·. similar event in 1986 when 20,000
: • bales were hauled ffom Ohio to
' the drought;strlcken Southeast.
·• · More than 44,000 bales were
pledged by farmers in North
Carolina, South Carolina and
_: Virginia, but speedway spokesman Tom Cotler said they don't
have enough trucks to haul it all.
"This is the repayment of a
debt and it looks like we're going
to repay with Interest, " said Bob
: Latford, publicist for the race
- team that sponsors driver Terry
•: 'Labonte. "We are taking care of
;- the people who took care of us. A
tot of these farmers are race
fans ."
.
DrlverswhoworkforNASCAR
': racers Labonte, Ken Schrader,
• Buddy Bakker, Jimmy Means,
• Greg Sacks, Mark Martin, Hoss
: Ellington, Ricky Rudd, Bennie
.- Parsons and Kenny Bouchard
will pilot the rigs.
The hayride route takes the

Ohio

•

5-mlle-long convoy of big rigs,
which normally haul expensive
race cars, north on Interstate 77
through Virginal, mountainous
West Virginia toward Its destination at the Mid-State Grain
Terminal in Columbus, where
the hay will be distributed to
needy farmers .
Ohio Isn't the only state suffering. The nation's breadbasket Is
empty. First the spring rains.
failed to arrive and now the
searing heat of summer has
baked the land. Seeds that
managed to germinate have
produced dw11rf plants.
From the Great Plains to the
once fertile Missouri-Mississippi
River basin farmers face the
grim prospect of either selling off
their herds or watching them die
of starvation.
The Ohio Agricultural Statts·
tics Service reports the drought
Is the worst slhce authorities
began keeping weather records
115 years ago.
Hay fields and pastures are
bone dry, with 81 percent of the
hay and 89 percent of pastures
rating poor or very poor and the
state's b!Uion-doUar corn crop In
jeopardy.

flonl-

Stock t 85911, 4 doara, IOdin,
dri\10, 4 eyl., air cond., 11110. 1r0nl., AIMFM
radio, 110110 tope, rodlol-.- - WAS
NOW

13995

CROWN VICTORIA

Stockl1 1720,2-.•. - . . Y·8,olrcond.,
.tnyt roof, auto. IIWII., PS. PB. -win-

-..power
wheel,

ooa~ power-~-. lilt
cruiH control, AMIFM radio, racfilf

ll'es.

NOW

WAS

112,995

$34995
Whila Supply Lasts
NO RAIN
CHECKS
.

'

POMEROY HOME· &amp; AUTO

1181'.0 Ulpe,

NOW

$3499

NOW

NOW

$4895

'5995

z-.. -·

SIDck tl111fi0,
4 C¥~ .. •
oond., canv. roof,IIUIO. II'W., PS,.PB,_,
wlndowa, powor ctoor lockl, Uk whHI. AMI
FM radio, rodlol Urn, buckot-•.
WAS
NOW

$14,799

1981 JEEP CJ·S

Stock.89111.2ctoora,4-dri\IO, V-8,4
speed, PS, PB, AINFM radio, IIMIOiapo,
314 ron pickup, long widlt bed, Atar JtiP
bumper.-··
NOW
WAS

Stock t 85571, 2 dooro, hard top, 4 -~
drive, 4 c:yl., alalld. trona., PS, PB, Ukwlloti,
AM rodlo, bucket INIO.
WAS
NOW

1983 GMC JIMMY

15999

*2999

'"'win-

1982

1982 DATSUN 310 GX
Stock I 11841, 2 - I . !rant- driWI, 4
CVI., air cond., 4 speed Irani., AMFM redia,
stereo tape, radial Urea, budmr IHtl, , _
window defog.
WAS
NOW

*2999

SIDclt 11 73422. 2 - . . - · e eyl., air
cond., auto. lnlnl., PS, PB, poworwt-.
tillwhHI,auioeallllrOI,AINFM-.attroo 1ape. radial - · woila, buclott
ooata. rearwindowdotog.,
WAS
NOW

-··..,roof.
$5995

*6999

. POMROY I OH.

A par t:y In observance of the
birthdays of James Allen Smith,
five, and Andrew Robert Smith,
·two, chUdren of Robert and Sue
Smi~ of Racine, was held at the
home of their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Cunningham,
Hemlock Grove Road. ·
Afarm scene cake, baked and
decorated for them by their aunt,
Brenda Cunningham, was served
with ice &lt;:team and iloolaid.
Cards cmd gifts were presented
to the yotmgsters by their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J .. A.
Smith, ldr. and Mrs. James
Cunningllarn, Harry, Brenda and
Greg Cunningham, Larry and
Virginia Lee and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Jo Jm Foster and family,
Wendell, and Peggy Ervin and
family. Nike Cunningham, Charles. Mary and Jeremy Wolfe,
Terry and Paula Brown, Roger
and Ru t:!J Young, Nathan and
Paity Pickens, Charles and MarY ~st, and Mildred Ihie.

1978VWVAN
'
Stock I 88212, 3 daora, 4 whHI
drt.,, .,
cond., · - · trw., AI'MM rldla, radial
Urea. buckot - ·
dotog.
WAI
NOW

•

*6995
1983

Z28

Slockt111181, 2doara,aaupo, Y·8,airmnd.,
auto."'"'"·· PS, P8, till-, CIUllO conll'af.
AI'MM rllfla, 110110 tope, 111dlal Uroa, wNto
toner, buckol18111, gaugoa. T·IDpo.
WAS
NOW

16995

- . 80141,2 - . . - · frontwtootl
drive, 4 eyl., PS, PB, AINFM radio, • tope, radiallrH, buc:Mt - · - w i doiDg., ...
NOW
WAS

$6999

1986FORD

-·

WAS

'9995

II

'•
•

NOW

$9295
•'

Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
: $3.62; No. 2 shelled corn $2.98;
' No. 2 oats $2.85; No. 1 soybeans

•

: $9.05.

.•

•

•'
•
•

Loans Sub]tct
To Ouialification

:

or Borrower

•
,,
•
\

EOBERT SMITH

Murrays gather
for
reunion
The families of Charles and

roof.

17995

The best laid plans of mice and
men .... ·
•
The air conditioning which was
supposed to be Installed and In
operation for last Saiurday
night's teen dance at Pomeroy
Village Hall just didn't materialIze. A worker hurt his back and
the Installation was postponed.
Parents staging the dance since It was a very hot night were given a helping hand by the
Pomeroy and Rutland Fire Departments who provided smoke
blowers for the auditorium windows and Gordon Fisher brought
In a large fan - these things
provided some relief - and the
parents extend a big vote of
thanks for the help.
Dan Whitaker . of 90 Rock,
Athens, will be deejay for this
Saturday night's dance - and I
am avoiding the air conditioning
situation until I know for sure
that It's Installed and running.

RECEIVE CERTIFICATES - These area
residents received certHicates after completing
the 600-hour course in air conditioning/heating at
Buckeye Hills Career Cen~r. Shown In the front
row (L-R) are Charles Kinder, Bidwell; Lewis
Steiner of Gallipolis; Brad Erwin, Jackson;
instructor Darrell Day; and Gene Brownln~ of

••

tlon, contact Adult Services at
245;5336.

Dave Crow, John Holman and
Anne Scarberry, all of Racine,
were graduates from the accounting computing classes at
Tri-County Vocational School's
Adult Education Program. Holman and Scarberry were also on
the adult education honor roll
compiled on June 24.

Margaret Murray held their
annual reunion 111 the home of
Charles &lt;l. and Debra Murray.
The group had a roast of wild
turkey k:llied by Charles H. and
Charles 0 . Murray . Hayrides,
volleyball, games and camping
were en joyed. Services on Sunday morning were conducted by
the Rev _ David Kautt with Julia
Kautt le.adlng a hymn sing.
Atiendingwere Ron, Anna and
Jennifer Russell, Tyler, Texas;
David, • .Julia and Joel Krautt,
Oklaho!Tla; Jay, Mary and Lacey
Russell. Crlsty Long. Fort
Worth, "'Texas: Adrian, Jill and
Reese ~hile , Dallas, Texas;
CharlottE and Wilbur Rowley,
Jr. , Ironton; Mike, Denese,
Heather • Benajmln and Ashley
R,owiey, Columbus.
Keith. Angle, Amber, Jorden
and Setlh Keller, Ironton; Rad·
rick, Janace and Jeremy Rowley, Kansas; Mlnada, Jack,
Eddie and Brent Simms, Natalie,
David FCJOCe, Ga1UpoUs; Charles
o.,Debra. Mary Ellen and David
Murray. Albany, and Charles H.
and Margaret Murray,
Pomero;y.
'I

Northup. In the second row are Ken Farmer of
GalUpoUs; Larry Smith, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ;
David Blake of Gatupolls; Paul Chadwell,
Middleport; Paul MuUins of Oak Hill; and James
Wamsley Jr., Pomeroy. Not pictured but
completing the course is John Bowman o,r
GaiUpolls.

~~~~~====~~
Think of the possibilities if you could not read,
DANGER. CAUTION or NO SMOKING signs .. . if
you ere a parent with a sick child, suppose you could
not read the labels on a medicine bottle.
Functional illiteracy among out-of-.school adults
is a serious and socially harmful problem. One out of
five Americans lack the literacy skills and knowledge
needed for coping successfully with day-to-day liv·
in g.
The Meigs County Public Library has receivedan
LSCA Title I Grant. from the State Library of Ohio to
be used to recruit and train volunteer tutors to help
teach reading to adults needing this kind of help .

VOLUNTEER! I !

Happy belated birthday to
Flora Bailey, 620 Hartinger
Parkway, Middleport. She
marked her 87th yesterday. July
12.

Call the Pomeroy library, 992-5813, or the Middleport
library, 992-5713, and do your community a service.
Paid from lSCA Title One Grant Fund
L

MEIGS COUNTY
PUBLIC LIBRARY

I

•
••

Gettlng through Pomeroy the
past couple of days has really
been a hassel! A necessary evil
for the sake of improvement, but

~

200 b ~ ' St·t S1.

. y

POt\.fl .lt OY. 01-t .

;
:

•

17H So T lu h l t\n·
1'i 7 fn

~H D DI.I : IJORT .

OH

•

y

1"." (1() .

7

to vacation
-out
aweek
hassel.
Would have
beenofatown.
good
. Do keep smiling. ·

l-~~~==================~~~~~====='I:'J:c-:1x:I:;========:::':J':I2:·'::1 :'

====

ELLIOTT'S
SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

''
JAMES SMITH

Slinderellas meet
In the July 4, 5-Polnts Class
Cathy Hudson lost the most
weight and Kay Morris was the
, runner- up.
In the July 5, 5-Points Class
Shirley Johnson lost the most
weight and Pat Hysell was the
runner-up.
In the July 5, Mason Class
Dixie Sayre lost the most weight
and Brenda Roush was the
runner-up.
New members are always
welcome and you may receive
information on.classes by calling
JoAnn Newsome at 992-3382.

Da~is

•

Steck t 8&amp;141, u cyl., PS. PB. AMIFM radio,
radial tires , 112 IDn picl&lt;up, lang bod,
reer step bumper, gaugoa,lildlna ,_g~a ...
WAS
NOW

RIO GRANDE - Several area
residents recently received their
certificates from Darrell Day,
Instructor of the 600-hour course
in air cyndltlonlng/ heating of·
fered through the Adu It Services
program at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
The course Included Instruction In the theory and application
of basic principles Involved In
conditioning of air, cooling, heating, filtering and controlling
humidity. In addition, operation
characteristics of various units
and parts, blueprint reading, the
u:se of technical reference manu-·
als and the diagnosis of malfunctions were covered. Extensive
Instruction was given In the
overhaul, repair and adjustments of units and parts such as
pumps , compressors, valves,
springs and repair of electric and
pneumatic control systems.
This course and many other
. skUI training courses will be
· offered. In the·fall. For program,
financial aid or other informa'

In the past District Six shows
have been highly successful, one
year having over ~ head of
registered Holsteins paraded ~
fore the judge.

Birthday patty held_.for brothers

*3999

Steck I 82338, 2 doo111, 4 wh..l driYO, Ucyl.,
4 speed trans., PS, PB, AtM.... radiD,IIefiO
tape, buckataeall, gaugea.
WAS
NOW

$4895

The Dl:strlct Six Holstein Show
will be held this year In conjunction with the annual Jackson
County Fair.
The show wiii be Monday, July
18, at 7: 30p.m. at the fairgrounds
in Weilst&lt;Jn. District Six Includes ·
Adams,
Jackson, Lawrence,
Pike, Scioto, Gallla and Meigs
Counties_

MUSTANG LX

1976 FORD F250 4X4

$1995

Now II you do decide to
attend the class instead of paying
a fine, you are to take the blue
copy of y&lt;Jur ticket as well as the
white proof of attendance form.
These are necessary to verify
· that you c:lid a!lend a class.
And, there are regulations at
the class center and these include: no smoking In the classroom; no food or beverages; no
children, and po admittance
after a particular class has
started.
This is the ileglnnlng of the
third year of operations of the
classes -doesn't seem that the
law has been in effect for that
long, does It? In the past two
years of &lt;lperation, many people
have ch&lt;&gt;:sen !be class route over
paying a fine - 618 violators. In
fact, have viewed the required
film.
'

•

• $8.89.

'

bucket Matl. ,

WAS

*15,995

gra~

.

$10,495

'
••'

•

Central Ohio: No. 2 wheat
; $3.66; No. 2 shelled corn $3.04;
: No. 2 oats $2.82; No. 1 soybe~ns
• $9.02.
West Central Ohio: No.2 wheat
:, $3.66; No. 2 shelled corn $3.04;
· ; No. 2 oats $2.85; No. 1 soybeans
. • $9.07.
•: Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
; ' $3.511; No. 2 shelled corn $3.06;
: No. 2 oats not available; · No. 1
: soybeans $9 .06.
•• Trends: No. 2 wheat, sharply
·: higher; No. 2 shelled corn,
: sharply lower; No, 2 oats, un: changed; No. 1 soybeans,
• sharply. lower.
.

GRAND MARQUIS

Slockte7471,4-.•. - . . v... uconc1.,
.tnyl ""'', 111110. irana., PS, PB, wtndowo, power dOo&lt; locka. II ~1, ani•
a&gt;n1n&gt;l, AINFMrllflo, rodillllool. wlillt Will,
rw-diiDg.
NOW
WAS

1988 CHEVY CAVALIER RS

Your Choic:e

992-2094

WAS
NOW
--·.--~·

ntdio, radial tires, white walla.

Steck • 11990. 2 dooro, coupe, llanlwtootl
drive, 4 eyl., air cond ., auto. trona., PS, PB,
AJNFM radio, radial tires, budctt aeata.

600 E. MAIN ST.

*"'·--.

Steck 1170541, 3 doorl, lldln, frontdrive, 4 CJI., 4 IJ)Hd lrW., AIMFM rldlo,

*10,495

t. ·.•

PS,PB,-wlldo • · - - radio,·- .........

daoflodll.lit""""·--·~

111,995

flonl-

WAS

\

- · v... lir ..,...., 1111¥ """· - · -..

Steck I 88001, 4 dOO!I, hartflop,
drive, 4 eyl., aland. trano., PS, PB, AINFM

*4495
....\.

WearinJi! your seat belt Is st!ll
the law In Ohio but therelsstlllan
alterna tl "e
get ting Uood
you violate
law.
The a Iternative Is a
which Is 11e1d
the secor.o
of Pomer&lt;Jy Village Hall which Is
the former Pomeroy Senior High
School or. East Main St. .
Eric C:hambers conducts the
school and classes for the rest of
the summer are on July 23, Aug.
· 6, Aug. 20, Sept. 10 and Sept. 24 .
You can attend sessions on any of
those day sat9:05, 10: 05and 11:05

Slocllt82011,2clclcn.-lllp,lnlnl-

a.m.

WAS

f

Area residents
get certificates

The big alterr1ative....

..

;;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ; The average closing prices (per
• bushel) paid to farmers by grain
elevators In the principal marketing areas of Ohio Friday:
. Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
: $3.54; No. 2 shelled corn $2.98;
: No. 2 oats $2,70; No. 1 soybeans
•

Beat of the Bend
By :JIOB HOEFLICH

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 7.·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

r:-~

I J

'$268

visits home

Yn. Seaman Tina D. Davis has
$pent the past ten days here with
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Davis. She recently returned
from deployment In LajesAzores
with Patrol Squadron Eight.
While stationed there she received lhe Navy Achievement
Medal, the second highest peacetime award given. She also
received the Sailor of the Month
award for March.

RCA CAMCORDER

WHIRLPOOL 30" RANGE

25' COLOR TV

.

GIBSON WASHER

S969
.

GIBSON DRYER

GIBSON
SELF-CLEAN RANGE

*

VILLAGE

PHARMACY
992-6669
271 NOilH SECOND
MIDDUPOIT, OliO

. Freeur
M o del E0 22 PR

$249

S299

No-Frost
Refrigerotor·

a

0

S999
'
CROSLEY

SHARP 26"

STEREO COLOR TV

RCA COLOR TV
u

CU. FT.

FROST FREE
REFRIGERATOR

SEE US TOOAV
*CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
* SUNDRIES
PRESCRIPTIONS

19" COLOR TV

$
GIBSON

S597

$369

RCA VHS
VIDEO RECORDER

SHARP VCR

$169

FREEZER

ELLIOTT'S

CROSLEY

Remote Control Wireless

8 CU. FT.

S277

S399

49

$239

DEHUMIDIFIER

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Saturday 9 to 7
Friday 9 to 8 - Sunday 1 to 6

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

f

'\ !

�..
Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 14, 1988

Do shcies.go

me

BUG HUNT - If you want to start a bug
coUeetlon, you have to find some buga. That's just
what cub scouts at Camp Klashuta are doing this

week. It's up the hlU and Into the woods for scouts
and their leaders. Look out bugs!

h---- People l•n the news
.
-------------By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
STING OF THE RAIN
p1DRES'T: Rock musician Sting·
on the soap box these days
•••ernp&lt;m~ to save a rain forest
South America. He took a
iltmPak from his U.S. tour to
Kennedy Center In
'i~~!s~~~:a~t&lt;l~theTuesday
night, singwith 200 British schoolchild-

in Yanomamo, '' a musical
11

hat will benefit rain forest
· ion groups. Sting beInterested · In rain forests
traveling across Brazil with
filmmaker Jean-Pierre
"We flew over a red
" he said at a news
lint•ere:nce. "The man that! was
had been there 10 years
before and said that It had been
rain forests. I was really mad."
Sting said individuals have a
responsibility to save the world's
natural resources. "We have a
nice stereo speaker but at what
price?" he said, referring to teak
wood derived from tropical rain
forests.
•RADICAL REVISITED: Tom
-'ayden, the· '60s radical turned
Galifornla legislator, returned to
Ills native Michigan to promote
~Is new book but not everyone
was glad to see him. Like his
Wife, Jane Fonda, does so often,
J;layden drew a protest !rom
ifeople still angry about his
~ampalgn against the VIetnam
War. A dozen veterans- includ!Jtg one carrying a sign. proclaim·
~g " Hayden - You Still Stink"
~ marched outside the Royalty
House restaurant in the Detroit
uburb of Warren Tuesday while

Hayden was Inside getting a
warm reception from more than
450 people at a luncheon for
"Reunion: A Memoir." Hayden
says he looks l?ack on his radical
days with a sense of perspective.
"There came a change of life, a
change of age and I found I was a
middle-aged man," he said.
"Like it or not, I was In the
establishment ... I'm not the
sa me angry young man I once
was. I regretbelngenveloped Ina
kind of rage."

lodging the piece of apple caught
In Hecht's throat . "Senator
Kerry got out of the elevator,
sized up the situation Immediately, applied the technique,"
Hecht said. "Then about two
minutes later, doctors were
summoned. Th.ey said I was blue
In the face. I think I passed out: I
give my everlasting thanks. (to
Kerry) and gratitude. My wife
wants to talk to him. " Kerry Is
chairman of the Senate Democratic Campaign Committee,
which has targeted Hecht for
MARGARET IN NEWPQRT:
defeat In the November elec·
Princess Margaret Is In New· lions. After Hecht profusely
port, R.I., butshewants tokeeplt thanked Kerry for his good deed,
a low-profile visit. Margaret Kerry said, "Now can I go back
arrived Tuesday night from
again to being partisan?" Hecht
Canada on a Canadian Air Force said he doesn't know the Heimplane amid much secrecy. "We'd
lich maneuver but that will
like to show her Newport and change. "I'm going to learn," he
that's (with secrecy) more or said. "You bet."
less the way we'd like to do It
O'TOOLE IN COURT: Actor
because if there's a bank of Peter O'Toole and his exphotographers waiting for her, . girlfriend have renewed their
she won't even get out of the legal fight for custody of their
car," saldJamesJ. Coleman, the 5-year-old soh, Lorcan. O'Toole
princess's Newport host. Little is testified behind closed doors
known about her Itinerary other Wednesday In Freehold, N.J.,
than that she will tour the city's giving· what was described as
historic sites and attend a charity "fairly emotional" testimony by
dinner-dance Saturday to raise
the lawyer for the child's mother,
money for two historic preserva- Karen Somerville O'Toole. At
tion efforts, Britain's l)Jatlonal issue are changes In a previous
Trust and the Preservation Sojoint custody agreement under
ciety of Newport County.
which the actor and the mother, .
who uses O'Toole's name even
POLI'DCAL HEIMLICH MA· though they never married,
NUEVERING: Sen. John Kerry, alternated custody of the boy
D-Mass., put partisan politics every three months. In April
aside when he saw Sen. Chic O'Toole failed to return Lore an to
Hecht, R-Nev .. choking In a
his mother as scheduled after a
Capitol hallway. Kerry stepped London stay, touching off courIn and performed the Heimlich troom disputes on both sides of
maneuver on his colleague, dis· the Atlantic.

13lood pressure drug shows promise
said. ·
Journal of Medicine.
In the study , researchers gave
To test whether long-term use
half of the 59 heart attack of the drug would actually
I'
patients captopril, gave the other decrease the rate of congestive
i BOSTON (UP I) - Heart~ ­
half a phony substitute and heart failure and therefore the
~ck survivors may be able o
followed all the patients for a death rate, the researchers have
~educe their risk for co ngest e
hear t !allure by taking a high . year, comparing the sizes of their begun a five-year study that will
hearts .
Jilood pressure drug tha t appears
eventually Involve more than
The patients who received 2,000 patients.
(o prevent a progressive enlargement of their hearts, researchers captopril showed no significant
The Survival and Ventricular
' ay.
increase In the .size of their Enlargement Study or SAVE Is
A preliminary study Involving
hearts , while those who did not being conducted at 4llnstltutlons
59 heart attack patients found receive the drug showed some in the United States and Canada.
increase. the researchers re- Itis scheduled to be completed by
lhose who received the drug
ported in The New England 1991.
¢aptopril fo r a year following
their attacks were much less
likely to experience the enlargeent of their hearts.
Dr. Marc Pfeffer, an associate
rofessor of medlclnear Harvard
Medical School who headed the
~tudy , said the findings suggest
~atlents who survive severe
~earl attacks may benefit' from
/'O'!g-term treatment with the
t'rug .
.
;. "The implications are that It
irl"ay be best to treat people
~efore they have problems if they
are destined for heart enlarge·
lnent," said Pfeffer, who Is also a
rdiologlst at the Brigham and
· omen's Hospital in Boston.
But Pfeffer said the findings,
leased Wednesday , must be
nsldered preliminary until
m"tlre research Is done. He Is
ljeadlng a large study to deter·
rp1ne whether the drug actually
reduces"the long-term death rate
~mong heart attack survivors.·
1About one-third of heart attack
rvivors are at risk for develop. g progressive ventricular dlla ·
Pf lr r·uc 1
t; tlon, In which the weakened
lieart slowly en larges and even·
K&amp;nM'Itl M.:Cuffouth. ........
Ca.._ flllfle. fii .Ph
Ronald H•nlnt- A Ptl .
t\lally often fails, Pfeffer said.
Mon rh,u Itt 1:00AM . to 9 P.M.
'{:aptoprU apparently prevents
Sunday 10,00 A. .M . 10 4;00 P.M .
the enlargement by reducing
PRESCRIPltONS
PH . 992·29&amp;5
Ftlendly Servin
stress on the weakened heart by
E M11n
Pomeroy, Oh.
dilating blood vessels. The drug
blocks a hormone that constricts
the blood passageways, Pfeffer
t

t

. hef dOseS 0 f
H tg
drug may help
"transplantS

·

TIWRSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Inspection
ot Rock Springs Grange, 8 p.m.
Thursday at the hall.

---

Ann
landers

CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day by the Gallla -Meigs CAA 9
a.m. to 12 noon Thursday;
agency's clothing bank Is In old
high school building at Cheshire.

FRIDAY
SALEM 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.

It only aers worse. I don't know
what is going to happen, Ann; but I
hope I live to start my life over. DEAD END IN VIRGINIA
DEAR VA.: Your only hope is
joint cou09eling that works, or else
llfl younelf out ofthat marriqe.
If you can't locate a counselor or
a family service 811f0cy experienocd
in this area. contact the National
Coalition Against Domestic Violen!X'. lt will refer you t!) support
groups and counseling programs in
your area. The toll·free number is
(lm) 333-SAFE or write to P.O. Box
15127, Washington, D.C. 20003·
0127.
Your letter should put to rest
. once and for all the crazy notion
that women-beaters stop when they
marry. A man who punches and
slaps his girl around during court·
ship will knock the daylights out of
her after the knot is tied.
What are the signs of alcoholism?
How can you tell if someone you love
is an alcoholic• "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
How to Conquer It" will give J'f'U tlu!
answers. To receil'e a copy, !ii!nd SJ
and a No. 10, Sl!/f-addnssed, stamped
envelope (45 cents postage) roAnn
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago.
/11. 6061 [.()562.

MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128
sponsored square dance, 8 to 12
Friday at annex, Mills St.. with
True Country Band providing
music.
- Melga County Game
Proleetor Keith Wood dii!Cull8es with cub scouts at
tbls week's da,y camp al Camp Kluhuta, ihe
upeet1 of coDHrvatlon and safety In the wild.
Althoqb the cub scouta are always very attentive .·

SUMMER CLEARANCE
CONTINUES
DRESSES
REDUCED

LADIES

BLOUSES
SALE PRICED

SUMMER

PURSES
REDUCED

CHECK THIS OUT -Cub scouts Joe Hill, Mike
Andenon and Alex Wade help each other adjust
their safety glasles which they were given al
Camp Klaahuta. Scouts attendln&amp; day camp this
week at Kluhuta are learning that whenever you

.CHILDREN'S

!1

\uh the Meigs County Fair
All articles for judging must be
lelis than a month away, res!· In the senior fair buldlng by noon
dents are encouraged to prepare on Aug. 1.5. Judging will take
projects now - to get ready to place that afternoon. Judging"
show what they sew, to takew!Jat criteria Is 1.0 percent for appearthey make, for display In the ance; 50 percent for workmandomestic arts departme~t ex- ship, 10 percent for style, and 30
hlblt In the senior fair building on percent for materials.
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds,
In addition to ribbons and
Aug 15-20.
There are classes (or every- premiums for first, second and
thing from aprons to aJghans , third In each class, four "best of
from Jadieswear to leathercrafl, show" awards will be given. One
from maternity clothes to for children and adult clothing,
market baskets - a total ·o f 97 another for needlecraft, knitting,
different areas, to be exact, a . and crocheted Items, a third for
class for every creation.
quilts, and another for rugs and
And Janet Kobientzand Esther hobbles.
Mays are ca!Ung for more
In the children's clothing dlvexhibits from more exhibitors to islon, there are classes for
tlll their goal of a bigger and cotton, cotton blends, and fancy
better display tor the fair of '88. dresses for children, mlscellane·
They emphasize that there Is ous garments for boys, t-shlrts,
no entry tee for exhibiting, but shorts, coats and jackets, and
exhlbltorsarerequlredtoholda miscellaneous children's
membership ticket. As with all clothing.
entries domestic a"r ts must be
The adult clothing division
reglste~ed In the fair board Includes classes for dresses ,
secretary's office on the fair· cotton or, cotton blends, fancy.
grounds before 4 p.m on Friday, formal and better dresses lnclud·
Aug. 12.
lng knits, ladles' blous"s, skirts,
'or course, all exhibits must be t·shlrts, capes or coats, ladles'
the work of the exhibitor. Each shorts, slacks. suits, and jackets;
~sonlsllmltedtonotmorethan
men's shirts, jackets, and trousone entry In each class. Articles ers, maternity clothes, practical
which have been awarded a , and fancy aprons and miscellanpremium In the past two years ousclothlng Items.
are not eligible for entry.
The needlecraft division offers
·
classes In crossttltch. embroidered, and crocheted plllow·
cases, applique, cross stitch,
counted cross stitch, crocheted,
quilted, pieced and printed,
crewel, candlewick, and stencUed cushions; along with

SUMMER WEAR

SALE PRICED

Super Savings!
COMPLETE STOCK

~

~ 30°/o OFF

5 UJ I 5 HER L0 H5E

OFFER
GOOD
THROUGH
MONDAY
JULY 18,
1988

lise woodworking tools, safely glasses are a must.
Tbe G&amp;J Store In Pomeroy, Southern Oblo Coal
Company and several local power companies
donated safety glasses for each boy In attendance
at the camp.

Community calendar

thoughts toward outdoor chores.
Time to paint the house. wash the

Windows ...
But In our haste to get the Job done,
acctdents can- and do- happen.
And pn:mpt medical attenuon Is
often caDed for.
That's when you can caD on Pleasant
. Valley Hospital Emergency Care
Center. We're open 24 hours a day..:.
weelrenda and hollllaya. tool And :YOU
don't need an appointment to get the
prompt and PR!JICr attention you need

Slqer reunion
POMEORY - The · Singer
Family Reunion will be held
Sunday, July 24, at the senior
citizens · building In Pomeroy.
.Potluck dinner will be at I p,m.

care.

OJ'FQI!I -IIIIIJipoztant,

l.li1I PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

W

Office cloeed
POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio Pa·
tlent Services offices will be
closed Friday for a staff meeting.
Offices will reopen on Monday at
8:30a.m.

from our
profeiJIIIDnal staff of
hlghly trained emergency
room doctors and nurses.
We'll en!D !lend a fuD report of
your EweJg~ Care Center VISit to
your family doctor so that he can
provide you :wttltth~ proper follow-up

Proceed wtth caution with your
wann weather chores ... and If you do
need us. we'1l.be here.
At the Plaeant Valley.Emergency
Care Center, evay,eu:teigency - big

~mergency Core

Center

.

,I

POMEROY - The annual
Biggs reunion will be held
Sunday at the Nathan Biggs
residence on Route 124. Basket
dinner will be at 12:30 p.m. Ali
relatives and friends welcome.

POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School at Silver Run Baptllit
Church will be Monday , July 18,
ihrough July 22, from 6 to 8 p.m .
Al,l children are Invited.
POMEROY - Vacation Blbie
School at the Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church will be held thls
coming )Yeek, Monday throll(b
Friday, from 7 to 9 p.m. eaeh
evening.

POMEROY - The a.nnual
Tuttle reunion will be held
Sunday at the George Collins
residence. Dinner will be at noon,
Bible schools

fp;PO;;;M;E~R~O~Y-r.iVia~ca~t~lo~n~·~B~ib~i~eiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~iiiiii~~

GALLIPOLIS
----------

THE FURNITURE CAPITAL Of:
OALLIA, MEIGS AND MASON'
COUNTIES WITH OVER 1J
FURNITURE STORES IN THE
AREA TO SERVE YOU...- I

"

ALL SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 1 WEEK

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club will
sponsor an open dance on Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at the
senior citizens center · In Pome·
roy. Caller will be Jerry Cochran
of Fairmont, W.Va. All western
square dancers are Invited.
SUNDAY
LANCASTER - Descendants

. '•

Begin Meigs Fair projects soon

After the fall•••

fs summerttmel And that means
many of us are tUIIIIng our

School at Pomeroy Church Of
Christ will be held Sunde}
through July 22 from 6:30to11:30
p.m. each evening. Director will
be Ann Fields. Classes tor
kindergarten tHrough teenagl!.
Everyone welcome.
•

NEW HAVEN - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers Association will have a picnic at the
New Haven, W.Va. park on
Saturday at 6 p.m. Bring a
covered dish and table service.

By ROB STEIN'
UPI Science Writer

TIMEX
WATCHES

lo their vlsllors, lhey wouldn't let Wood get away
without showing them the handcuffs he carries lo
use on Individuals who don't understand the
Importance ol wUdllfe coll8ervatlon and safety.

of the late William and Lydia
Matlack of Long Bottom will hold
a reunion on Sunday at the
Lancaster Fairgrounds. Basket
dinner at 12:30 p.m. All relatives
and friends are Invited.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Ice
cream social 11 .a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday at Salem Center fire
station sponsored by Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Department; sandwiches, salads, baked
beans, pie and beverage. alsQ
available. Midnight Cloggers
will entertain In the evening.
SALEM CENTER- The Sa·
lem Township Volunteer Fire
Department will be having Its
annual Ice Cream Social on
Saturday, July 16, from 11 a.m.
until 7 p.m. The menu will
Include homemade Ice cream,
roast beet sandwiches, hot dogs,
potato salad, macaroni salad,
baked beans, pie and beverages.
The Midnight Cloggers will perform In the evening. Prizes will
be;given away.

chlnson Cancer Research Center r;:;;:;;~~~;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;ft
in Seattle found marrow trans- l1
plant patients had a greater risk
of suffering a major complication If their blood concentrations .
of the Immune suppressor cyclosporine were low.
"The Implications of our study
are that cyclosporlne concentration should be monitored In
patients undergoing bone mar·
row transplantation. In patients
who have low concentrations. the
implication Is to Increase the
dosage," said Dr. Gary C. Yee,
now an associate . professor of
pharmacy at the University- of
Florida in Gainesville.
About 2,000 patients undergo
bone marrow transplants each
year In the United States for a
variety of diseases, most commonly leukemia.
Although patients routinely
receive cyclosporine and other
Immune system suppressants,
about 25 percent to 50 percent of
patients suffer from a complica·
lion known as graft-versus-host
disease. The complication in·
volves immune system cells
from the bone marrow attacking
major organs of recipients.
In a new study published
Wednesday in The New England
Journal of Medicine, researchers
periodically took blood samples
from 179 bone marrow transplant
Jllltlents to monitor their levels of
cy""blosporln~.
· .
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT
'The researchers found the
'ower the concentrations of the
drug , the greater the risk the
patients would experience graft·
versus-host disease, Ye9 said.

· LADIES

-.

Community

to waste or chari

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
CERNED IN BRISTOL. CONN.
is in the private sanitation business.
DEAR CONN.: SOmething is
He picks up for malls and other
wrong sOmewhere. A spokesman
stores. Sometimes he brings home
for Thorn MeAn told us that it is
useful items that have been thrown
company policy to throw away
shoes only when a single shoe from
out to make room for new goods.
Almost every month my husband
a pair is missing. or the pair is
brings home a big box of shoes
mismatched (different sizes), or if a
from the Thorn MeAn stores. Each shoe is defective.
shoe is split up the side so that it
Slashing good shoes and tossing
cannot be resold.
them jn the dumpster is against
Ann. when I see these perfectly company policy. Shoes that don't
good shoes ruined it makes me sick. sell are donated to loeal charities.
My friend who works in an area
By the time this letter appears in
emergency shelter tells
that tliey , print I doubt that your husband
are in dire need of shoes for men, will be picking up any more slashed
women and children. My grandfa· shoes from Thorn MeAn. The home
ther•.. who is a shoemaker, has offi!X' is going to check the stores in
offered to fix the shoes that are your area to make sure that the
salvageable. I'm sure other people unsold shoes get to charities that
in the shoe repair business would need them.
help if they were asked.
lieu Aan Landers: I have been
I wrote a letter to the president of married for eight months. These
the company but he did not reply. have been the worst eight months of
Meanwhile, · perfectly good shoes my life. Stran~~tiY enough,· to look
arc being sliced.
at us, you would bet''that we are the
Can you persuade this company ..happiest couple in town. "Ed" and I
to stop the foolish practice and . are attractive, outgoing profession·
donate those shoes to shelters for als with excellent incomes. We have
the homeless? Please try. ·• CON· a lovely home and two new cars. In
publicEdtreatsmelikeaqueen.
At home, he is both physically
and mentally abusive. I have no
one to blame but myself, however.
The abuse started well before we
married. If I went into detail about
the beatings you'd think I was
making it up. If you met Ed. you
By ROB STEIN
would not believe my story. He is
UPI Science Wrller
totally charming. I can't count the .
BOSTON(UPI) -Boosting the
number of women who have told
me how lucky 1am.
. levels of drugs that suppress the
immune system may Improve
The reason f'm writing to you is
the chances of success among
to warn other women. Men who
bone marrow transplant pa·
are abusive will not change after
tlents, a new study suggests.
·
. Researchers at the Fred Hutmarnage, no matter what they say.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Ohio

--.-

Practice resumes
..
POMEROY - Summer practice tor the Meigs High Band will
resume on Monday. The schedule.
lor next week Is: Monday,
woodwinds; Tuesday, brass;
Wednesday, percusalon; Thursday and Friday, tuU band. In
. addition to the above gr&lt;?ups, the
flags nand rifles will meet all
•! ,, week. All practices are from 10
1' a.m. to 12 noon. Anyone needing
more InformatiOn may call Mr.
Dlnp~s at (304) 675-7770 or

t

992-71.1.

..
.,

painted,. embroidered, and crocheted tableclothes. There are
classes for pot holders, dressed
dolls, latch hood wall handlngs,
stuffed toys, and lace net
darning.
In the knitting division, there
are classes for afghans, sllpover,
button, and baby sweaters, while
In the crocheted division, the
classes are for stitch or granny
square afghan, potcorn stitch,
hair pin lace, ripple crochet
afghan, shell stitch and Navaho
stitch afghans, bedspreads,
vests, capes or ponchos, or
c r o c h e t e d t r I m n; e d
handkerchiefs.
Other crochet clas.ses are dollies, baby afghans, sweater sets,
crocheted potholders and other
miscellaneous items.
The always popular quilt dlvislon has classes for appUqued,
cotton patchwork painted, em·
broidered, and baby quilts, as
well as comforters which have
been tied or knotted, and quilted
wall hangl,ngs.
In the rug division, there are
classes for loom woven rugs as
well as a miscellaneous class.
In the hobby corner. where all
pictures must be ready to hang,
there are classes for pictures In
candlewick, cross stitch, CPlored
embroidery, needlepoint,
crewel, counted cross stitch,
latch hook , along with handmade
purses, ceramics, macrame,
stenciling, wood craft, leathercraft, decorated wreaths or
swags of grapevine or other
natural materials, and market,
wall or other baskets.

OUR PARTS DEPARTMENT
IS NOW OPEN· ON .
SATURDAYS FROM
8 A.M.-12 P.M. FOR
· YOUR CO

'.

}------:

MAKE

Chicken wings,
spaghetti,
homestyle solJll',
meatballs in sauce,
~rtt::..r~_ vegetables,
mirii shrimp,

fish

~

~~~bits of,......,..'""',,. . . . . .

fried clams,
etc.,

etc.

JIM COBB

CHEVROLET•OLDSMOIILE•CADILLAC

SOl EASt lUll

614-992-6614

Po.IOY

Check your local
White PillS For the
Ponderosa nearest
you.

Cli988 1\lndemsa, Inc.
The n&lt;W Grand Buffet at
parriciparing ateakhouies only.
Certain items availablt·on ~tlectfd day$.

' '

•

�·Donor liver split for "tWo
CHICAGO (UPI) - The liver
of a 1-year-old Illinois boy who
was killed In an accident has
provided life for two Infants In an
unusual surgical procedure In
which the organ was spUt for
separate transplants.
The two .recipients, 7-month·
oJd Jaclyn Manr061! of north
s uburban Crystal Lake and 12·
week-old Joseph Kovach of west
suburban Geneva, were listed In
critical condition late Wednes·
day at the University of Chicago
Medical Center.
Kovach's condition was less
stable than Manrose, hospital
officials said. T))e baby boy
underwent additional surgery
early Wednesday to control
bleeding.
The surgical procedure
marked the first of Its kind In the
United States, hospital officials
said.
" Doctors are ' optimistic. It's
still way too early to give a
prognQSis, but everything seems
to be functioning properly,"
hospital spokeswoman Jill Gold·.
man said.
The "unusual surgical procedure" was conducted Tuesday
after a donor liver became
available, and doctors realized
there was enough of the''Organ to
spUt and transplant It Into the two
Infants, who had been on a
walling list, hospital spokesman
Jphn Easton said.
The donor liver came from a
1-year-old Illinois child who was
killed In an accident. Manrose
received approximately two·thlrds of the donor liver, while
Kovach received the other onethird .
A team of doctors led by Dr.
Christoph Broelsch, head of the
liver transplant service at the
University of Chicago, began
transplanting the liver Into Manrose at 8: 30 a .m . Tuesday and
then gave the approval for the
second operation.
Kqvach, at 4.2 pounds, Is the
smallest Infant to ever undergo a
liver transplant. He has had
several other medical problems
and complications, Including
open-heart surgery.
"The smaller child needed a
liver In a pretty good hurry . It
was fairly urgent for bin!,"
Easton said.
"It worked out well In this case,
because the donor liver Is used In
segments. and the doctors had a

"alpbJ' 1-antl-trypaln deft·
clency," a deficiency of.a protein
In the blood serum that occun In
one out of 1,000 newborns. There
Is no cure for the disease, which
occasionally leads to hepatitis
and cirrhosis of the liver.
She Is the daughter of Bob and
Kathleen Mani'Oie and has a
twin-sister, Megan, and a .

brother. Christopher, 5.
Kovach suffered from neonatal cirrhosis of the liver. He Is
the son of Donald and Patty
Kovach.
...
The operations were done at a • ':
cost of about $150,000 to each ,
Infant, and both children were ·
covered by medical Insurance,
Easton said.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
11

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Can Seat 2 or 4
Comfortably

WAS $229$1
· NOW

WAS

PLAINTIFF

'

-~-H1'.1::1::1.

79

This dropleaf opens
to 43x50 and
closes down to
23x50. The bench
fits neatly under
the table. ·
ALL FOUR PIECES

5329

'

roy. Ohio. re1erves the right

Eastern locol School Dil-

trlct dair81 to receive
sHied bids on the following :

The Farmers Bank and Sav-

USI•ness

'1~:::;."";:.
r~.:~:l:· of
Ltbtonon. County of Moigs

road

toodinv

1rc1m Ha ·

roctionllonglhonortlwtyond
...-oo~v- ofNiclroad
toodlng from Hozool to Old

Town onthelinebotw-land
fQrmely owned by Ked Liole
end Norma U.le and C. L.
Aj)thorson end N. Autlwoon
aad J. A. Smkh end lily
Smith to the OMt llide at tho
PllbliC
road 1-g IYom
BoohM to Portland, the piece
qf beginning. containing 20
,.-.mora orr• EXCEPTING ott cool, oil,
911 and other mln•olo uncler·
11tng the lbovo d•albod pre-

J.n.

399

1982 and 3.00 acres

along County Ro•d 31 , fron ·
tlge of real e1tate to be 1ur·
ytyed at 1 later date.

REFERENCE Volume270
111'11" 483 Meigs County
qead ReCords:
'"' ·
~Term&amp;

of Sale ; C11h tor

n\&gt;t Ieos than two-third&amp; of
tl_ia epproload volue of four
tloouund five hundred dol·
hlis IS4,500.001.
~
HOWARD E. FRANK,
~
SHERIFF OF MEIGS
"
COUNTY, OHIO
.:XI 30: 171 7, 14, 21. 28:
181 4 6tc

PINE FINISH APPLIED
TO HARDWOOD
Table is 42 x 42 and
extends ta 66" with
twa twelv.e inch leaves.

,
',.

••

Public Notice

• NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
· OF THE TEN .Mill
C::
LIMITATION
" NOTICE is horeby given

Now$549

.R 0 . Box 2127- H1gn Poon,t. NC 27261

1)\at pursuant to a resolution
adopted by the Boo~rd of

'

of the Melgo Lo·
cal School District, County
Of Meigo, Ohio, on the 19th
day of April, 1988, therowll
~ueation

HEFTY
COUNTRY OAK

bit 1ubmitted to a vote of the

~pie of said AleJCander Lo·

Both these sets include a
2" thick oak edge. One
has a clipped corner, one
is a square round.

c;lol Election to bo hoi d in tho

7 PC. SET .
WITH 6 LARGE SIDE

••en•
of the ten mill limite·
t!Pn, lor tho benefit of

CHAIRS

trlct tor the purpoee of cur·
rent axpeneet.

REG.

NOW

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ROOFING

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7-13-'88-

lin

Want Ads

Never "'Itte B Vacallon
They Work AI Yell1

992-2156

not exceeding 6.8 mills for
uch one doNar of valuatlon.
which amounts to eixty·

.

I

992-2196

Middleport,

ceived iri the Trea~urer'IOf­
fice by 12 o'clock r'!OOn on:

18 Years
Church-Home-School
Please" battery
operated House Plant
Alert Light with luning

89 Fiecal Veer. Said Board
of Educltion r81erv81 the
right to accept or reject any
and all parts of any and all

bid&amp;.
171 7. 14. 21. 28. 4tc

---~-~---- ---- -·~-·

RUTLAND
- ·-·-··---·. - ·'

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CIBaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-2161

949-2168

7-14·'88·1 mo. pd.

•Seamless Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts
FlEE HTIMATES

S-'ITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnER &amp;
COJISTRUCTlON

OWIIR: Jeffrey Smith
Itt. I BOX IU, WHITON

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

SYRACUSf. OHIO

Moat Foreign •nd
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major 8a Minor

614-662-3821
Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,

Repair~

NIASE Certified Mechanic

far• E••l•m•at
Ptrtt 8 Servi11

CALl 992-6756
"DOC" YAUGHN
Certified licensed Shof, ·
.
S-2H n

1·3·'16-11&lt;

·Roger Hysell
Garage

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway be-

992-7121

•FREE ESTIMATESe
TIRED OF PAINTING?
Cover your home with
beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAINTEED vinyl
siding. ·
Best Pri&lt;es Anywhere!

c. F. scon

8. 7 Financing on Yardman

ROOFING and SEAMLESS

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Service on An Makes

We Honor MC/DiK/VIso

GUTTERS

~

-·orl

4·16-86-dn

BINGO

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTO.NE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

~t.

WANTED : MuHI·T•Iented
workers
in one or
mo.. of the follouwing: Cerpen·
brick. blodt, a cqncrete:
tloctrid..o: plumbon; h-Int
a ol• oondlt-.g; dry wolllng:
peinttrs; conwnerci~ buldera;
Md ~uipnMnl tJtWWM:Ofs.
Also n
: l!qwilwtaed. •I·

.,.,_lenced

entld end c•.,·ort.nted indi·
vlduolo to bo prqoc, ._in-

tendlntt. Send ,....,. 0t work
hhtory, including wHdt ton- or

7 &amp;: Bashan.

Service Center for Ryan
ProdtKh

C-18·'111 tin

HUDNALL
&amp; HEATING

PLUMBING
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PH. 992-2772

Giveaway

1·28-'88-tfn

•Dozer

a. Backhoe Work

Dump Truck

We Carry Fishing
I
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE
(6141 U2-6550

RESIDENCE PHONE
16141

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bu1inesa

WANT TO IUY WIECIID OR

REPAIR
Authariud Strvi&lt;e
&amp; Parlt
Briggs • Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite

Jacoblen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mid~~r~~:·, ohio

JUNK UIS 01 IRIICIS
- fREE ISIIMATES-

For any of thnts•• icn caU

614-742-2617
htw•n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or leovt Moss-

z.' !r.''lll·tfn

DEAD ORAUVE

Veterans Memorial Hoapital, a JCAHO ac·
credited, not-for· profh hoopital, is looking for
a Patient Revi- Coordinator.
The Patient Rev!- Coordinator will aaaeaa.
plan, Implement and evaluate the hoepltal's
~ Quality Al8urence Plan and Infection Control
r Plan. The Patient Ravl- Coordinator will re' view charta for appropri~e utilization of 18r·
vic• and aaalat with providing pstlenta qual·
·• lty continuity of care aft• dlschlll'ge.
; Quallfiestlons Include a Raglatered Nurl8
with a current Ohio nursing license. Prior
Quality Auuranceand Utilization Review ex·
perltnce pref•recl.
Pleue call or send 1 resume to:
Margaret Holm, Aaaiatant Admlnietrator
V~erana Memorial Hoapltal
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
~~(61411112·2104
...._ __.,E A
RTUNITV EMP YMENT

•Washera •Dryen
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It Rtpairablt" .

lEN'S APPU6NCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We SeNice All Makes
112 2/81/lfn
Tills P18t, Pr-nt end
Future ..:. Give&amp; Advice
on love. Morrlege end
BUll-a.
II I • Ani..41PI •II
Dooo't . . . . . . . . . .., ,.

,.,. ,_...... Aftioo
-a..o¥hltUC-Ioa
1.. -ohA-Wey.

•s•&amp;ADY
OFF Wltll """ Att
IACHil'S
PAlM ftADIIIG

A..._
....,.• ..Jill

J02Wost .... St.
iltV.IIIIIG.

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearina Aid Sales &amp; Servid
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

z
-

I NOTICE I
"
THE OHIO VALIEr PUILISH·

,....._,do

lNG CO.
ihot you
do
with poopto you
llnaw. •d NOT to _.d mon.y
through the m.. unit you hMte. •
invHtig.red t hi offering.
•

bu-

Staal Bull ...~uolonhil&gt; with :

Mlfor MMu
•·SeiM •
El)glneering auppon. Still• eels
furnlahed. SoiM ............
Coli 130317511-3200ai. 240t . ~

work you hwe ..~in. 10:
1 Bo• 247, atlpotlo. Ohio
411831.

Re.tl bl.ilr:

1711-5104.

4- 8 . . - old kittens. Coil
114,4411-7100.
1Ji Black Ltb. P't~JPII , 7 wkl.
otd.-3 ....... 7 ......... Coli

814-28&amp;-1888....... lngo.

3-9 wk. old kittens . Colt 8144411-3341 .
ftH to good home-F~IIIooded
Brittany Spaniel pupt. C.ll 814-

FEDERAL, STATE, ANO CIVIL 31 Homes for Sale
SERVICE JOBS
--------,--------

Nowhlr6na. YourArtlli. •13.150 Hou• tor Stir. A•c:h ltyle. 3
to .58,410. lmmedl ... OJ*'· BR., 1Yt b•hl. dining room.
lngo. Cotl1·31t· 733-S082 nt. living room. k-on. 1 . .
F 2758.
gareg.. 3,4 IC k)C, wry nice
Rto o,.,dt ~~:hOot •
Talented. Creative lndtvktuel - - Colt . .yttmo lot ........ wented tor an .citing c. . . In 814-448-2297.
AdverUtlng Sat•. c.JI for en
oppol-. 304-727-7885.

,...,,.won.

245-8096.
2 f...-e hou• kilten1. Would

like to go to •me home. Cell
814-44S-10t0.

2 CMI, 21dttent. Call614-992·
8275.

Ouin• ptgt togtve IINI'f to good
- - Col1814-742-3t74.
Mate ktu.n. 14 · • • • otd to
good home. Colt 814-992·

3577.

.

BrownandUtnCoondog. Young
pup. Coli 814·992·2025.

IOttans Ita fnMn.t. 304-1754084.
Warm morning coli and wood
hooter. 304-578-2333.
Frw firewood fot cutting, 11h
mite oul Jericho Road, 304-

878-7187.
Lovely brown end white Beagle.
8 - • old, 304-882-2089 or
eome•• New Hlvan, W. Ve.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: In Gall-. Slit.-July
9111, WhMo Ohio Yellov Bonk

LDst .July 11th In Leading Creek
ntu• Rd. area. female Beegle
puppy. Appro,.. 10
old.
BlliCk. brown end W'lite. Cell
814-742-2249:

'*•·

8

13

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Insurance

Rick Pe•aon Atte1toneer. li·
cenl8d Ohio end West Virginia.
El'tllte, antique. f•m .. liquidation ..... 304-nl-5785.

18 Wanted to Do
We payeuh for tete model clean
ul8d ~*• ·

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
end lliW'If llled CIWI. Smith

Bulck·Ponli.:, 1911 Ealt•n
Ave., Glltllpotio. Cell 814-4482212.

Complete hou•holds of furnf.
ture 6 antique•. Also wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swain' • Furniture

a

Auction. Third

814-448-3169.

Junk

CJ

------------------'

At.

Car~

a

Oltve.

with or whhout

moton. C.ll larry l..iYety- 814-

•Will Do Hauling With

Busin••
Opportunity

Jim Mink Chev.·Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Johnson
8 t4-418-3872

SALES &amp; SERVICE

TIUPLE P
EXCAVATING

21

Mllnttn1nce per~on to live· ln
ap.n:mem: compla~~ . Cell 304-

en-..lope eon•lnlnr money. tf
fou..S Pleau Col 814-2459572.

J&amp;L INSULADON

DHier for

tween

111-off.

PH. 992-5682
6-17-tfc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

Dabble Shop. Going out of
butin- Ill• June · Julf' 2. 150 ·

LOST: BID La'b. ·m .. e. W.•iftg
blue coHir. lecta·Mud Soc erea.
.Colt 814-258-1379.

or

mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

If you are thinking about
bull!lng- 1.. Ul thow VOU the
beiUty of our model white ced•
log home. ContaaiJohnA Lindt
Turner. Ohio Rlwr RuatNtCed•
too homos. CS•kChoptl Rd. Coli
8f4-31S-9189.

4

1111-lona oo,_,tent

•-=

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Aleo Tra•••l.,lt~

CHESl'EI

7-6-'88-1

3 Announciements

Frnarrcrr.l

lot .....

liON. Pt. pt.....,t at'81. Send
to: lOx Cia. 187
•c/aGotllpotio O.llyTrlxnw. 821
Third AIIO.. Goltlpolll, Ohio
44163t.

An rw un ce 111 en Is

- · d-ing.
""""' d.Wng. •
polntln,.
col 304-182-38441.

lt. 124, P-oy Ohio

BlUM
LUMBER ·

614-742-2235

CUSTOM BUllT

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE

Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

-

My"""·

- d o bobvoittlnt in""-·-·
e14-912·54411
_

Follow Signs
an Bashan Rd.

Day or Night

_.V~

; PATIENT REVIEW COORDINATOR

I

NEW- REPAIR

WANTED

;
;
•
'•
'
;

NEASE HOlLOW RD.
GUNS· AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS

~\~

WAS.'1099

RUTLAND FURNITURE. CO.

RACINE

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M . Frymyar. Director

Doted July 6. 198B
28. 4tc

•
•

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-tln

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport r Ohio

1717,14.21.

$899

or Res. 949-2860

"At Reasonable Prkes"

992-6282

Educotion of Molgo County.
Ohio

NOW AT RUTLAND

PH. 949·2801

Offer good 8 / 1 - 7 1 30

, Buy Order of the Board of

'!':30 o'clock P.M.

4 HEFTY "WINDSOR"
SIDE CHAIRS AND 2
BEAUTIFUL ARM CHAIRS •.

llewllotMsWt
"Free Estimates..

Auauot 1. 1988 . .
The bide wit boforthe8B·

7-13·'18·1 mo. d

A.M. and remain opan until

131 .
The Poll&amp; for said Election
-!viti be open at 6 :30 o'clock

Home. of the Grate Guys· Where You Get Great Buys

,

PAT HILL FORD

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp;·HEATING

eight cents 1*0.8811or each

ASl9.95 Value

.··-· ---··· __ ____ __,_._.

We can repair and re·
core radiators ond
heater cores. We can
also add boil and rod
out radiators. We also
rtpoir Gas Tanks:·

Said tax baing an addi·
ttonal tax of 6.8 milia to run
for three (3) years at a rate

SET INCLUDES

STACK
TABLES FREE
-WITH THE
PURCHASE
OF ANY
TABLE &amp; 4
CHAIRS OR
TABLE &amp; 6
CHAIR SETS.

SERVICE

Alexander Loco! School Dis·

This 84" Table will seat
6·8 people comfortable.
F1111tures a 2" thick solid
oak edge with a mar
resistent Formica top : .

SET OF 3

,

•It uolod bid&amp; &amp;holt bo re-

1·1-'H-t ... '

Howard L. Writesel

tlleroin. on Tuesday, the 2nd
day of Auguot. 1988, the
tlu•tion of levying o tax. in

5999$799

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

GUN SHOP

!FREE ESTIMATES I

P_recinct of Columbia. Ohio.
lit the regular place of voting

one hundred dollars of
~aluation, for three yeafl

,_

Specification sheets are

available at the Treaaurer't
Office.
In order to be considered

.

wo•k

c.t School District ot o Spe-

Yoar Cholee

_____ ... _______

Fuol: Fuel Oil; OH. Greeoe:
Tir• • Tubes.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

-PI~o~mbing end electrical

Free Gift ... "Water Me

~

WAS $699

FURNITURE
INDUSTRIES .

"

B."kory

producll; G11011ne; Diesel

ond
StateinofSac:tion
Ohio. 26. Town I~=:::=:=::::::=:=:::::=iTir=:::;:;;,:;=.:;::::;=:;:;r;:========;1
Situate
r
3,Rango11;11eginningonthe
lmmMOVIIS &amp; SLIDES to
GEARY
811111 llide of the public rood
VIIS TAPE
~-~ """'Boohan to Port·
CARPENTER
111 utconnrllhoteoldMo•ios
BODY SHOP
t.,.r on the Uno-- J. A.
&amp; Sli.. over to tiBY VHS.
550
PAGE STREIT
Sjnlth ond Lilly SmMh and Ked
SERVICE
CAll AMY CUTBI
IMDDlEPORT, OIUO
Uole and Normo Lille; thence
- Addons ond r..odeling
or 101'5 RECTRONICS
. - . along tho e.t
- Rooflng end gune• work
446-73qo .
OPEN 1:30-6:00 P.M.
side of said road to the lnt•·
- Conaete work
11121"U·tlc
B.Z.Il-1 ~o.
Hoi to Old Town; U..celn an
. . . ooly end nootl o•teoly eli-

SET

u.s.

.......

p~oductl:

Doiry

Public Notice

Pomeroy, Ohio the follow· l----::=:----:::-.....1..---....;.-~~;_-.1----------l

P!lblie

ARROWBACK
EARLY AMERICAN

· Six eomfor111ble all wood high back oide ehal11 with
gn1cefully turned back spindles and legs around a
4Zx66 in. high pr•aure laminate table top (containing
two 1 Z ln. removable leavesl. Per !act for a family of 4
or 6, this distinguished dining group will add warmth
and beauty to your ho;•·
.

--···---~

The Board of Education of

withdrew the above colla:
teral prior to ula. Further,

stclion of ukl road end the

1 PC.

EARLY AMERICAN STYLING AT ITS BEST

~

teral wll be sold in the con·
dltton it Is In with no ex·
preaaed or implied warran·
tie~ given.

to bid ot this sale, end to

conveyed to Bruce Flaming

42-2211

submitted.
Funher. the above coli•

10:00 1.m .. OST on the
atepa of the Coun Houae in
Aid County i" the Village of

. EXCEPTING 2.38 acres

Usi•s lhr Clnssifirds
I.as E.nsy a$...

ings Company reserve~ the
right to reject any or all bids

12thdoyofAuguot,1988at

.......

NOW .

6-10-11-1 ....

Ohio, to sell for cash tho fol·
lowing collateral :
1986 Ford Muotang LX
17113, 14, 15, 3tc
aFABP26AOGF127795
Public Notice· ·
1980 Buick
SS 4N694AH412139
The Farmers Bank end
NOTICE TO
Savings Company, Pom•
BIDDERS

rqll;eend the right to mine end
f'lmOV8 the same which are

5&amp;49

~-~

YOUNG'S

WAS~~~$369

WAS

·-·-. - -

949-2263
or 949·2168

Public Notice

Pomeroy,

-ing oppl ... -

NEW -REPAII

.....

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE io hereby given
thet on Saturday, July 18th,
1988, at 10:00 a.m.. a pub·
iic ula will bo held at 105
Union Avenue,

VS
BRUCE FLEMING ET Al
: DEFENDANT
, • NOTICE OF SALE
Purouant to on Order of
Sile iuued by the Common
.,_ Court of Meigs
County. Ohio, I will offor lor
lila at public auction on the

•

An outstanding Colonial value featuring 2 36 in.
Square-Round table that extends to 48 inches for
extra space. The top ia aurfaced with 8IIIY care
mar-resistent laminate surrounded with four solid
wood mates chairs in a warm country oak finish.
The perfect dinette for the hom a where style and
durability are a must.

.~

Public Notica
IN THE COMMON
~LEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
NO . B7 CV 246
K~NNETH LAWSON.

ROOFING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cl811ning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

18 Wanted to Do

Help Wanted

-~ a..-t And atuot sool
C h r - Atound tho Wo&lt;ld
decontlorw untl O.c. Fun )obi
P.ty plen. ,,.. 1300 kit. No
collection or delhlefrl Work your
own hourt. Now ,.Ina Oemon.t.. ton, Cell a.tty C.penter.
814-248-1383 Toctovt

lle.-t!LWritesel

~~-

C'-i/ied pop• CtWer the
/olloK'in1 re(eplaone aellan1~• ...

m-:-:-·.

SMALL
APARTMENT
OR KITCHEN
3 PC. SET.

·--·---ESr..-z-

·--

........ ... .... .. .•
......
·----.----..- ·-· .,. ,. .... -..... _;::-'---··-- .. --...
.. -....---.. -......... 1111-:;:.::::::::::..-· . -· --·

answer."

,

a

and a 2-year-old, Easton said,
addln&amp; "both are !llive and well."
The second was conducted In
France, and the liver was transplanted Into a 40-year-old and a
54-year-old, Easton said. Those
two recipients died.
Manrose, I(VhO wel&amp;hl 10
pounds, was suffering from a
hereditary disease known as

14, 1988

MOIIUY ..._,._,I A.a. '' 5fA.
1 Ul. u.tiiOOM s.tn.aw
C\CIIt .._.,
..c:... ... _ ... ___ _.

CANTON, Ohio (UPI) -The
Stark County Medical Society Is
challenging a refusal by Stark
County commissioners to allow
AIDS patients In a county-owned
nursing home.
Commissioners have said the
Molly Stark Hospital near Canton does not have the facilities to
treat patients with acquired
Immune deficiency syndrome or
a means to protect other patients
from the disease.
However, medical society doc· ·
tors argued that since Molly
Stark wa s once a sanitarium for
tuberculosis patients, It should
be equipped to handle patients
with Infectious diseases.
Doctors also said since Molly
Stark is a tax-financed hospital,
it should not be able to reject any
patients , including those with
AIDS.
Infectious disease · specialist
Dr. William Hoppes of Canton
s aid the medical society ls
attempting to address a statewide and nationwide problem
regarding the placement of AIDS
patients.
State records show that there
are 600 to 700 AIDS patients In
Ohio.
That number is expected to
grow. to 5,000 by 1991 , said Dr.
Thomas Halpin, chief of the
Bureau of Preventive Medicine
for the Ohio Depar tment of
Health.
Halpin said hospita ls that care .
for AIDS patients are beginning
to feel the strain on staff and
finances.
· And there are currently no
facilities In the state that will
accept AIDS patients on a long
term basis, he said.
In a letter to commissioners,
the medical society said that
A:IDS patients are forced to stay
In hospitals, at a great expense,
while Molly ,Stark would be less
costly as an Intermediate care
facility.
County Administrator Steve
Singleton said It would be too
costly for the county to accept
•'any large group of new patients,
not just those with AIDS."
In response to the medical
society's letter, Singleton said he
was " not sure It requires an

-- ,...,_......_ ..___ --- -·-------- -·-··--··

Both operations were conducted
In Europe earlier this year with
adult donor livers.
The first was conducted In
west Germany, and the liver was
transplanted Into
23-year-old

chunk lett over that fit well Into
the smaller child ," he said.
The procedure to split a liver
and transplant the segments Into
two ~tlents was done twice
previously, according to Easton.

Doctors oppose
county refusal of
AIDS patients

·

Thursclay, July

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Seutitel

Stanclng timber or pulp wood.
Colt 814-387· 7519.

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

Buytnv deity gold. sltver coint.

FEATURING:
Riviera
Cabinets
Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
PeachtrH Doors
and Windowa

rlnga, jewefry, llerlingware. old
!=Qin., 1•08 currencv. Top prl. Ed Burkell Borbor Shop,
MidcloPort Oh. 814Junk Mlto't W'lth or withOut

mo ..... Coli 814-992-1148e.
Junk auto's. Top prloepatn. Clll
114-912·5148 eft• 5 p.m .

'"?:; or

()alto
C.11h .,-d for

CUSTOM
INTEIIOR DESIGN
11

NE
CALL

B&amp;C ..DRILLING
CO.
H. . . . Owntr
Rt. 1, lox 74-A. lliply, W. Yo. 25271

Call Coiled 13041 372-4331
Molt Welle Drilled In One DaY..
Air ind Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also lnetaH • Service AR Types
Water """'PI
·

l"'q~ents.

Bicyel•. Mopeda, l.wnmo\MI: ,
Georgi's Creek· 1tt hou• on clarinM, pimle 18bte. c~mninD
right Ill or RR trlcke. Wed .. jers. tvpewrtt•. electric .ewing
Thurs., a Fri. 9 to 3.
.
· machine. 19 inch T,V.. lot• of1
misc . 8t4-988-3839.
O.rat• S.te-Falrtlelcf.Centenery
Ad., Thure .• Fri., a Sot. Bobv First tima yard .re. July 14 and'
ilemt. nail glrllclothel, mioro- 15 . 9· 3. Co. Rd. 30. Forest Run
Rd. 3 ml•. tum • Ollmot9
w.v., tats.
Cemetery, 3rd placa on left.
1otTimot Fri. &amp;Sot. 9to8. MIIC. Hemm Aesklence. Lota of good
CheiP. YJ mle out Georgt't itemt, pl1nt ~ da, fit her pria8
toye. curUMnt. etc.
Ctaok Ad.

·,

Muttf..ftmly Y•d·O.age Sal•
SMurdor-Juty 11. 9·1. Rein ,.
Shtne. Alclng tMn moww.

a ... "'llliPt.

..

c.ll

Suo.

.,m_.

:rl\ ..... eow.rct aou•: •• n.

"ccht on Hal o :• Hoflow
Rd. Friday. - -- Il-l .
Y.,. lolo lor Bit 4 Churdl· Oo
turn

to Mlr..,.e, Ohio, Itt on
Co•·MM=et wile Ad. 00 app, 2

mt ..

_lof_do,..•-LDt'

troll• on right.

Mfcfdl-.
ot Tho
- · --Colt- Icon
.. -In

- h lolo-July II, 18, 17.
401
Filth~.... ~ ..

2118.

Fridoy July 11 only. 9·4. Behind'
Oracle School in Autt.nd. Ohio.'

So rbcn;Y..tlti•Tutnllftet
" " llottlii.tllght• in lllo o .....

EARN EXTRA MONEY cUtlna
tho
!lot aut " ' tho
- · - . D o i l y ....· - ()fflco ..

Henry Hart AWn, ChiJI..,, OhiO

mention, 'Ia
mill from At. 7 off Oeorg~'a
Crllk Ad.·llolly Do. , _ 11igM
to !lolly Do.

,..,.,,n
t,. ..........

1·114-288-41422. IOk for

July 15th and 18th. 9:00.6iOO:

........ too much IO

TourOuidiii-Mele• fenwle. Our
top , . . . um U00-*1200
per Wool Solaoy to . - pfue
COIIWi I tloa. . . . . . . warWng
oondl'lkMII. A ,...., fun piece to

ble •e

Y•d s.. e-2 mil• out C•k
Choptl Ad .. July 13th. 14th a.
15th. 9 AM to. PM.

lteml. rotatll•. medium tla crefta. •'"· Meet ....,., chllcl·~·" ·
cege, colllole ttereo. ottwr ren end women. clothes.

Help Wanted

won.

&amp; Vicinity
..................................

1•and 15. Ch.t•McLetn
dothlng [mono,IOCII-.- 0-11. July
bolhnlom flo~n~, ho-ld SR 12• Racine. 1·15. Antique•',.

i llliJIII'JIIII'III
~r:r v 1r:r ~:

14Z·Z4~~;s

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

MW

quito. Appllq... - . •nv
condition. Colt 81 992-51187.

PH.

.......Gallipolis .......... .. ..... Pomeroy...........:

Wanted to Buy Stendtng nmbltr.
Call 81 4·379-2718.
Wanted to Buv·UNd mobile
homes. Call 114-448-0175.

Products- W. MAIN, RUTlAND, OH.

sa...~

Buying furnhu18 .,d tppl.,c:es
bV f'le piece or by 1he lot. Fair
price~ . C1ll &amp;1 .. .U8·3158.

(6141446-7619 C)f (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
GaHipolis, Ohio 45631

Building

t..c.

""'rd

3811-9301

114-812~

l1f mtoc. •

nM botly·ttemo • otolhol. Jutr

14. 11&amp;18.

a - -...........

v... se1o. e......,.. .1u1y 11th
cor,., 3rd and Horton lt.
M11on, W . .Va.

,..
...
__
--·=

'.

Frl.80(,8un.2Fom"'Y.,.Ioto.

..._
.....

Miter - · - - M d •d aulbW end Mo.

.......

�•

•

Paga 12-The Daily Sentinel
31

Hom•

for

Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

......
(

....""'

be•oom aulte, chest, o ..

choirt, conning jon. wolalott B
bench. Cell 114-387·7201.
Good u•d color TVI for tale.

Cellll14-4'411-1149.

Couch. lo..,e ..... chair, 2 end
•bl-. coif.. t.ble/gl111 lnlert
" - ........... bod wllh mltol
frame.wlde coaueu-wood

.wo b1$oom .coNge tit 12B

Pl...antllrHI,HII'tlloocllllg.

~~d--loo.
VInyl
ond_w_

h
-.... bo• •"'"' • '""''
· - · Coiii14-3BII-1192S.

..-iold to_.. at much 1111 •en
tho u..r - - P I - Vollor
...... he. 304-8711-41DO.

-=-tOWWI on a.,.. C,_. Rd. C.H

'

: 114-. . .1382 ....... 1 PM.

•• Mleet

Sell-1179 Ubwty mobile

Buv or s111.

44

Mobile. HomBB
for Rent

28 31ft. AftutiNtlotpold...Copo
efectrkfty. Oon*'ient loution.
Coli 514-4411-8558 .. 441140011.
Trail• for llllnl. fl1. 588. 2 BA. 1

btth. Ctllll14-446-11483.

2 Bfl .. unfurnished mobile

: ....., MQon mobile ho11W with

ml•fromGIIIIpotlsonR1. 141 .

• --do. " - · Nfl'igo&lt;otOI',
• dl•-•""'· II&lt; condM- ••

Coli 114-446-4109 .. 3792740.

, ar 4411-2912.

1-----------------2·2 BA. moblleho"'""onewith
••~do

lvlng room. Nice cond.

Clll 114-4411-1728.

: 11• Schukl moble home. 2
, IR .. CA. ti.OOO. Coli- 9

• POll. 1114-4411-81104.
• ---------------' 1977 f e - 121111. 3 BR ..

: t0181 •ec .. nt• nice through
• out. n.w c•pet. oood wee her &amp;

• dryer. vinrte und.,plnnlng,
' '""80 fo IWirlg. F- d - . , B

: _. up. 17150. Ctll 114-446-

114-448-0527.

1974 Olompion 14•81 totol
ol-lc. -penning end II"'·
tWiy furniheed. wtll conlkler
...d.. te,900.00. 304-5711.. 2383.
: 1981 two bed room mobile
home. 141170, for • • or liMit,

2 -....... lumllhod. tctol

priced on

fnspec~lon.

304-11711-2180.

33

Fanns

tor Sale

. 154. t31.900. Clll 304-5231551.

40aaefarm-O.isAo.d. 1300
lb. tDbiiCCD • •· HM1nln Tnce

Schod Diotrict. Clll 814-25111888, 2511-18115.

Flfm Tribble Ro~. 7mll• from
At 82 Melon Countv, 3YI acna,
Hou• Mld buldinp, eel 304-

755-7250.

35

1 acre Md up buitding Iota M d
modut.r home 11m. Tuppen.
Pl-'n•-O.•w ..wtiH', roadway
to ear:h kJt. 114-985-35M.
16 acr• for ~Me. Bledt Grow
Rd.• RutiMd. 0.. wall. monthty
inmme oft wen. •10.000. 451~

192-3901 .

Apartment
for Rent

2 8Ft apts. 8 closels. kitchen• pl. lu rolohod. W•""'·IJO&gt;O&lt;
hoolc-up, ww carpet, n ewtv
pointed. dodL Rogoncy. Inc.

lots.

mobile honwa permitMid. public
~-. elso rlwer lou. Ctyde

So_.,, .II'. 304-576-2338.

ee .. tllul riwr .tote one ecre plus.
pt.mllc weter. Clyde Bowen, Jr.

304-576-2338.
LOTS. one aaoe, IM wooded.
dty w.tw. Jerlcho Aoed. owner
flnMtcing. good term•. 304-

Adutt1 onlf. R!lf. required. No

...... Coli 114-448·0338.

61 4-4411-2127.

No ..... Col1614-446-1637.

11 Court St. -2 RR .. 2 bahs,
lditchen furnished, w / w c•p•1.
No pets. Off s11Mt parking.
t325amo . .. ustmlities. Oep. &amp;
ftlf. Coli 814-4411-4928.
Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean . No pets. Ref. &amp; depoti1
required. Ulilldes furnished.
Adu Its only. Call 814-448-

e•

Furnished ••· &amp;150. Utlll:ies
pMd. ShiiN b.rh. Single male.
919 Seoond Ave., O.llipolla:
Cell 446-4416 after 7 PM.
2 BR .. unfurnished.
n7&amp;. w...- paid. 1136
cond. GellipoUs. Call 446-4416
•her 7 PM.
.

s.

Furniahed- efficiency •pt .-3
rooms &amp; bath. Carpet throughout. Private &amp; quiet. Aduftlonly.

Cell 814-446-4807 "' 44$.
2802.
Furnished apartm&amp;nl in town for

plll\'9&lt;ound. Utllltlot not

mo. Coli 614-367·7850.
3 rooms &amp; bll'h upsteirt apt.

Unfurnhl,..d. Utilities Included.
Adu hs o ntr. No 1)811. Call

•

Move • weter fumlehed . •:zz&amp;a
mo. No pets. C.ll 1514· 44e-

-

-~ dr.': -~· eon

.... ~. 4 ....,
" '1:00
' - or
114-IIZ-17

5 11
1_•:..;•:..;2_·_ ..:.1 : . : · - - - - - 2 bedroom apts. Mldll..,ort.
0n &amp;. 4 t1811-t111.'*mO&lt;IIh.
3 _,.oleo 2ond4
~JfO&amp;IU.MdtwL2hdrOOM. bMoom h~ in

tt2·ll118.

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

-114-742-2728.
tl MldiitJPIIrt ONe. 3 Mdroom
hou• lu&lt;nloltod. 304·882·
28118.
AI olocttlc bo-. ful o11t
•--ond-o.I0+8783217.

h*--........._.

Self-defrost 11trigera1or t110.
1ida by side refrtgerMM 1100,
40 omp oloctric . &lt;~ngo fiOO.
speed queen. wringer wa1her

'May•g WrlniJM' washer, &amp;125.
refrigerator
Electrtc at0\18
t140, tmall Warm Mor•g
lEASE for storlt or oHiee space. St«Mt tao. Black ~nd white
approx 2.000 1q ft. g• fu,.ce console &amp;21. 2 apace HIM
cent•l •ir, 1506 Jefferson heaters $25 aach, 2 hatl' beds
llvd .. 304-875-1436.
131 eech, 11ble with 4 chlirs

•eo.

tll5, town ........., 140, Riding
rrioWIH" 1 1 HP, 42 in. cut, Aft~!
angina 1800.814-992-3122.

Merr.handr se
51 Household Goods

suites, t199-t 299. Desks,
wrlnger"wesher, • complete line
of uted furniture .
NEW- Western boots- e30.
Workboots t18 &amp; up. !Steel &amp;
soft 1oe,. Cal1814-446-3159.
County Applance, Inc. Good
used appllancn and TV aett.
Open BAM to IPM. Mon 1hru

501. 1114-4411-1199. 627 3&lt;d.
Ave. Gallipolis, 0 H.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
WHhers. dryers, refrigemor1.
ranges . Skeggs Appllences.

Up""' R""" Rd. bealdo Stone
C&lt;ott Ollotol. 614-4411-7398.

SURPLUS. DENIM. ARMY,
RENTAL CLOTHING. C.mou·
flage green, blecll: white Metropolitan c:llothing. Politic.!, bust.
n... a~rtillngendspedalties.
No\181ty T-shlrts. caps, whol•
sale, end nrt1il. S8flo\ Somerville's, Rt. :Z1 RIIVMwood,
Fri., Sat., Sun .. Noon-8:00PM.

Coli 304-273-&amp;656.

20 cu.ft. deep tre.e. 304-1575-

5183.

22,500 and 15,000 b1u air

condl. 19 81 XR80 Hand• . Ping
pong ..ble. Pool•ble. 304-175-

3279.

Gravefy wtth mov..et. plow and
sulkey. Magic Genie Organ. call

aft• 5 ;00. 304-576-2183 "'
5711-2101 .
Fireplace fire screen, glass
doors. fits openings 32Hx38W.
125.00. Fireplacet~s 110.00.

304-875-1199.

BMtery pawend rkllng toys. one
jeep .,,d one mo1orcycle.

·• ''

luutlful Am.,lcon &amp;klmo

•

AKC a.,.,.n Sh.....do. 1
tnd 2 bloclc mola end 1
bloclclomolt.lholl-ond
womwd. 304-48..15211.

19112 Dodge Cllorgll'. AC. E•·
ool. - · ll"od body. RuiW
good. f2000. Call 114-21611134tft•5PM.

WANTED FOR SlW SERVICE
mille Sa.. Point S.a.MM, 304882·2741 .

1979 Dodge Omnl. V~~ry good
cond. '4 spd. tftlnamlulon.
t850. 1:1111114-2511-11251 .

67

1987 M•codoo 250 s. 12000.
1974 Chwy pldoup. t975. Cell
1114-4411-0335.

--

gin-.. """"'IJUIWIIt........
'"...
et4-446-01187.
-lout
!IaJoie.
Jeff Womoloy lnotructor 814-

- ' " ··

4411-8077. -

C.ble Nllton spinet pllr'lo, IH'Oo

, ......... .,....od.1,200.00.

dt¥dmo 304-8711-3842 ,...,.
'""' 875-5881 .
Bundy Clorinlt t1715.00, coM
oft., 5 ,30 POll 304-875-1118.

59

For Sale or Trade

Would like to trade hoult in
Mlddl ...... fol' """II fo&lt;m. Col

Ao- Dovlo 114-182· 1091. ·

F IIIli SlltJtJII!;)

II.

'795. Dook t!OO up 10 *375.

Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
bedt compl.te w-m.nret ...
• 29!5a"d up to e39&amp;. Blbtt beds
t110. Ma1tre .... or box JPrings
ful or twin tl8, firm t78. and
• 88. GJ11n seta t221S. King
t3&amp;0. 4 drawerch•1
Gun
cabin... 6 vun. Bit./ mattret ...

•es.

t31 It t45. •d hm• e20 .

•so. Good
bedroom suftea.
mlriBI caaMnets, headboards t30
., d up 10 I liS.
·
King frame

Hl~ton of

c•h with

IIPII"""'d e&lt;lllt. 3 MM• out
Bui.. Me Rd. O,.on S.m to 8pm
0Mon
322.
~
. thru Set. Ph. 014·441- I
Vall., Furnfiunt

61

CROSS. SONS

U.S. 35 Wnt Jeckton, Ohio.

814-286-8451.
Mouoy fe&lt;guoon.- Hollen d.
Buoh Hog Sola • S.vlco. o-

1177 TtlllndiiiMrd. 2 OWIWL
71000 octuol mil•. ttiOO.
Colll14-256-11239 oft• 5 PM.

llo Blodo Co .. 123'h l'lno St..
Gollloollo. Ohio. Clll 814-448·
2783.

Su rpfus. Your are•. Buyers 1---~-----------­
Guldo. 111 8011-897·8000. E•~ 1995 Plvmouth Voojog• Mini
$-4562.
Von. 31.000mllot.Looded. Coli
oftt&lt;l PM. 114-4411-21103.
19112 Ponfloc Fl.-d. L.oodod.
OOOd ccnd. U400. Cell 1114- ·1 978 Jo~ CJ·5. heel. eond.
2511-1932 .. 245-9223.
Coll814-3117· 71197.

1182 Pontloc J.2000. 4 cyl..
cru-..1tlt. AM, wry good cond.
Truck 1opper for thort bed truck .
Coli ""'4411-9582.

1172 Chevy Novo. 307onglno.
'350. 1:1111114-2511-1189.

594-3578

'711 FO&lt;d Yin, Y·8 302 Mftc,
cuooomlad lnoldo. body good
lhiiPe. Nrtl gNal. •1.000.00.
304-1711-7421.
1 971 Dodgo. 4 whool dl'lvo, boo1
,.•onoble - · coil 304-1175111142 tfter 5,00.

74

MotorcvciBB

8275 lnternlt5onel dleeel tl'llc-

-v

lor. new ..,_, new buah hog.

• 2315. 9.1 0 David Brown tree-

to.. 13510. Now II ft. pul t lluoh hog.
..,tv a•• ..,,,
•aso. Ow,. wiN flnence. Call
814-2111-1522.
White f...-n tractora coat plus

5%. Sldo&lt;o Equlpnwot. Coil
304-8711-7421.
42 Inch rklng mower, ploww.
roto
s';Cie tia', $800.00.

till.-.

1978 Otry.l• LaBa,ron. 4 door.
NIIW battltry, dres, brlk•, paln1
job. 114-182·7214 "' 114992·3224.

1181 Ford Escort. 4 Z.OOO
mi-. 4 s.,-d. Week ex1erior.
gr., interior. Eacell.-t condi·

63

19115 Pontloc. 2 doo., hd top,
thorp end fMt. f1500. 8147 42·2373 oft• 4p.m.
•

1970 Novo SS. 350. 4 opood.
tteoo. Coll814-992·1119.

oonvo. 304-175-2039.
12

ve• aid Pinto M••· •d.sl•

and bridle wiU ride or work

64

Hay

8t

0&lt;

Grain

Hoy f1 .75. Strow •17&amp;. Shol
corn ee,l50 per 100. C•III:OOto
12:00 Morgan's WoodiiiWn

,..m, 304-137·2018.

71

Auto's "-r Sale
rv

19113· OW.ol• YO&lt;IIot.
Auto. , el&lt;. Coi1814-371J.27211.

...,b.,. "'leo •710. Clll 814114!1-2437.
1981 VW Rebl&gt;it. Fuel lnjoctod.
cloth ....,..,, bltciL tiOO.
n-ltblo. Collll14-182·7341.

•lr.

1111 Dido F•l.,.., tilt -lng
whool, tope Pit¥or "'d Ndlo.
d - lnoldo ond out. 90od a•
m l - 304-773-5131.
11114 Bur'* Skvlwlr. V·8.
~little c•. •710.00. 304711-11718.
1171 Hondo Civic. con •e123
P•k O&lt;lvo. - g i n - " ' d .

1118 l&lt;oc ZZI. &lt;Od. AM·PM
==========-l=========~ · AC. Pl. Pl. . . whool.
305 V· ll. 28,000 mlloo.
t 10,000.00. Coii_B,OOPM,
304-882·2254.

. .

1981 P.. _ . MoiO&lt;CYCio.
71':c. Low mMoogo. 1100 mllot.
II 14-182·7711 ovonlngl.
1979 Honda HMWit. eherp.

.410.00. 304-8711-117118.

175 t - whnol•.
UIIO.OO. 304-1711-2704.
1971 CUllom BOOCK. 15.000
........ e...Uont ..... •700.00
or will nde lor car or truck.
304-11711-2241.
1182 Cuotom CB 100 Hondo
!Me. V.Uev custom
undlr c• recliNer wier httch.
304-1711-1314.
• • 01

76

Boete and
Moton

for

Sala

28 ft.boom.
"""'""'
- - · Doll"''.
'9115
wide
olloloct&lt;onlc.
canwe, ale . 310 V-1 eng.,
II. v.., low hoon.
•27.1100. Clll 304-727·8890.
1171 17'Ao lt. Ooryelw CNIHf.
140 HP Clwy,._ moto.. Coli
1114-4411-7211- 5PM.

··=·"

1173 · - 17 fl. Trlhul
loot wlllltap"'d-. Now)J
- .. 125 HP -Nio
Mot...
ComploM with Clot..
11-. tJIIOO. Coli 114-21111318.

1171 Doctao Cot-. lcyl,
arto, elr, ' doo., UIO.OO.
304-8711-1011.

14 ft. Low IHt - · 1 .1
- ....... HP .,d ..... 114912-27114.
.,..-,....,.----1113 Buldo c..,.... 88.000 llfl. ft ...... _ _ _ tftlll•
mla U,IIII.OO. uc ccnd, t321.. Pho• 304-1711-7141
304-8,._21 ••

1111

good fuol

c.... ciutor.

ao-

104-8,.3077.

Point. wethert, dryers •n..P
., __ 304-178-2398.
,•

UNd Fu&lt;nlturt. 304-1711-1410.

"One last C!eman!l Till! the atew8rellls 1
want a palr or ~lr lflght wlngal"

-~ORTY

DtM~~IO.

M'{ PAP i3-AAl=EP Al-LOVER :roe PrM~IO'G

GHOEG. lOP 'f\'IAI.

I'

CARTER'S PLUMBING • i
AND HEATING
, r,
1

:

7,14

Oolllooiii.Ohlo
I
Phone 11"'4411-3818 ., 1·1 44 ....4477
•.

••

83

.'

E IUlllvatin g

"

Trenclting IIIMCI. waw. t•

end oloctric 773-IIJI.

&amp;

.

buried. 30"'-·
:

ChlltgM Focus ia on the ·
lmpacl of a single lnvenlion,

the prlnti;y;!~· 1;1
1111 e1121
I LICIJ
Lacey lrieo to help abused
children; David propoSOB to
Chrtatine. (R! 1;1

Elactrical
,,
Rafrigaration • :

IJIIIvenlng Newo

10:20 (J) MOVIE: Talk Force (NR)

t..._ Aldonour Eloctriool. 304'.
1711-1781.
&lt;

General

Hauling

......

(1 :56)
10;30 I]) TBA

:rHE GRIZZWELLS®

(l)laotendera
• liD Jelleraona

1

P'IT'S TRIJE, MOnlE1&lt;.•6Ui'ffil~
\.IV~

11;00 I]) llamlngton . _ .

WI'T\1

J. J w- s..-.Swl'""""'
PGGit. cltwns. w.ll1. Ph. 114-

• (J) ctJ • (I) 1111
1111,.....
(l) Young at HNrt

1,0000&lt; 2,000goM-doliwo&lt;l,.
Coli 304-11711-837lJ,
.'

Makute ,

Ill You can a. a Sllor

l'ooll. clt. .nL wollo. Call 'l"'f
4 .... 3171.
.
.1..

WattetaOft' a W•ter Heu nne.

78

,.

Upholatery

--·

~

"'"*- ·-·

104·171·4154fo7 heo
In
QIH

11 Rhode
Island's

motto
12 Shun
13 Outlandish
Ill Allowing
alcohol'
16 Dumbo
trademark
18 Wallach .
19 Quit
21 Sea (Fr.)
22 CoUection
23 Abby
or Delbert
2" Annex
28Amerlcan
patriot
27 Chaplin's

or

~

"

II Clipped

8 A CosteUo
7 Best

8 Earthly
10 " -- is
believing"

14 Merit
17 Moslem

~OneonOne

:.PEANUTS

Pear Sweetheart,
Remember our

evening in Paris?

We

in the

rain, and you got

an.wet.

Because I had
the umbrella.

.

PJ.
l f~Q
a.II~"H:! cae ....

ellll

Nlglll
II mUtderld the limO IIIII Wll riding In
eoplc 1111. (RI
Ill TNJIIIBf Jolllt, M.D.
ill AlNillt Till Deadly Circle
aiAIIIIfiiMM.alllnl
12:00 I]) l'llplr ChiBB Tanura r.

Denied

(I) l l a - TNOII

CtrallrtiB

From Hamp1011, VA (T)

ctJ Nlgllllne g

Yesterday'•

Anawer

title

20 Rational
23 Com27 U,n-

panion
24Justlfy
211 Whole

friendly

28 Links
gadget .

number 30Meailder
28 Just
31 Hoisting
a minute!
device

320ne of
the Golden
Horde

36Command
position
38-- Tanguay

.W Nonsense!

prop
28 Sitter's

companion
29Table
scrap
30Pick
33Minlng
fmd
34Tumer
or Koppel
311 Hooray!
37 Beer
39 Furious
41 Russian
river
"2 Of sound
&gt;&amp;3 Salver
«Designate
1/J,

II 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 fonnation of the words are aU
hin~. Each day the code letters are diff~nt.

11:30. (J) '1111 Bell Clroon
(J)=--(L)

.

Become
a Benedict

AXYDLBAAXR

Monkey Mourning Becomes

,..,, Rupe, Jr, W.., ler....

'

II Aperture
9 Wanders

2 Vacillate
3 Egg-shaped

• 1121

GJMona,une
®TwllghiZill Tale• or 1111 Gold

cfs .. rn1, w1111. lmmedlat~·

10118.

1 Breed
of dog

(f)llgnOII

R • A Wotsr 1 • - · Po.W,

Ew•-

ACROSS

•llll .._ Cor.Mcllon

~

lchuler ..-~. .. ........ ...!'\...
Schul., 1114-742·2471' ..,,
Schul., 1114·742·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DAD..YCRYPI'OQU9'J'FS- Here'allow to work It:

ucenoeto Steele

us..

I

DOWN
1 Seafarers

1211 VldaoCounlly

SAID &gt;Oil COill.D aJ:1E At-ID

2.... 92115.

'

(J) Auto Racing
ctJ • (I) llolltouH Q
(l) till ,.....
fl) Tile Day !he Unlv.aroa

fl111den1ill or earnr"Mreltll WJ}·
lng. ....leo ......., • .
Ucented eleclrldlr'l. £tt.,...e

B6

round Welterweight. Sugn
Button Kearney 11·1·1,
STKO vs Dar&lt;yl Anthony

half·brothe&lt;~.(R)

THAT MEAN
HAWKINS
DOG?

OL'

•

84

ill Tlturoday Nigh! Flg!U 10

8:30 e CJI 1111 Night Coun Dan
panics when ·he experiences
impotency. (R)
I!I..,_.WHk
1211 New CounlrJ
I 0:00 I]) Streight Talk
eCJI ldl LA. Lew
Brackman's mother dies,
leaving him her este1e and 2

';

Cor. Fourth and Pine

(R)
11}1 LaiTJ King Llval

16·8-2 8TKO

.

Dump ...,.. d - . ond buih
hog _ .... , p - 304-8713110.
,t

Parts
&amp; Acceaorl•

:JOE

Mldlool't A•-lol Air CondltloNng ond '""'-"'" ~
• " - ond......,. otMco. 3044118-1715.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

M'{ DAD ONCE MeT
-iEP Wll-L-IAM6.

Drake promotes Sam to
&amp;Kecu1iva status, throwing
Sam a curve. (R)
&lt;D (f) Mylleryl Holmes
comes out of hiding after
three years to find a
murderer.
all •1121 Simon and Simon
To help his cllenl; Rick musl
learn up with the competition.

a

MEEKLK AND WINTHROP

M'{ DAD ONCE M£;T

•

•

to

,.a. M.,.mot~ll.-ofni. Pick.,.

ellJ 1111 Chetra Evan

------------------~·
RON'S APPUANCE SERVIC!.:
hou• coli MMcing GE. Ho) .

,.......,................n •.,.,
,._..,_.,,..,..

Uke n.w dlnlnf room suha·l
ch•rt·tabl•llght4MI chln1 ca-

lilY_.. bu'*
ca.,... ..
.._edbe•

.

2,000 giMon , _ , . , ........
PociL-.oto.oaf:J04.57t
2111.
'
'i

Auto

(NR) (0:26)
1;00 I]) 700 Club

•ru.....,nandShnb &amp;et&gt;Ace.•

87

lpoclol

and recollection, 1hls
program eKamines the
disturbing loyally ahd
singlomlndedneoa of Japan's
World War II suicide pilots .

••

72118.

-...... 1177 Yotaro ...... .._. · - . . . . . 304-8711_1\_llnd_blellclo.

FOR A HEADA&lt;H£ '?

Deeth By way ol Interview

JIUmp Nl• end IM'\Iice. 304! ·

--wllh-- --. ·-·--··
... _.......... .........,.. ,..... ..,...

• 1111Dolool -

paper.(R)
(f) Kamikaze: Mlallon of

Ratlry or cable tool drllin11 ~

82

CROSSWORD

counuror to avoid writing •

I TPJ..K 10 W tuFt~­
IT kJE.Vt:R FAIL'S

tKQ

+QJ612

I

w-

WHAT C:O &lt;rW IX&gt; ·

.K B 3 2

+

e {I) MDVII: •1tte

all e 1121 41 Houro
1111 PrlniiNawa
till MOVI!: Tile Pelrtftacl
F"- (NRI(I ;23)
a Naalrlllle Now
1:30 ellJ 1111 A Dlflerent
Denloe volullllllra ao school

Mo.t...Utcompletedumtdar:

1114
18 .... ln-llaenl,
I• plus
out-bo8d. AI ac
"""•·
O..ot
oond.
•
Cell
., 4-4411-12112.

Fl..._,.,. fllniiJirdodt•d

dt¥ Specl•. Y, mMt OOU ........
cho. 304-8711-1410.

7.. 1+

lmptlltor' ABC Thllflllay
NlaltiMoM
(l)"TTIe Day !he Untv-.
ChlltgM Learn how new
knowtedge creoted a conllicl
between ruson and faith. Q
(f) Vlc!ory II Sea

J:

~....,

••• Com- 400 -·
'""""' IO't ......... t"'o. _,..., trlnt. • • condl.
r.~ u.soo.oo. 304-.711- 104-8.,..1101 .

Olnettee. bed•. bedding.
....... ehllt.couch•. chlifl.
IM'fpt, co.,.......d llbla Every

e ........... ..... Tt-tA~s

Ql VldaoCoun1ry
7;35(J) MLB laoaball
1;00 I]) Crazy Uka a Fo•
Requiem lor I FoK
• (JI 1111 Tile Coeby lhow
Cliff chellengea his friend to
play a French outdoor
bowling game. (R) D
(I)

RON'S TelevltiOn Serwlc8.
HQU• celt on RCA. 0u1Mf7. t
OE. -ollng In lonllh. Cell •
304-1'711-2318 .. 111 4-4411j .
2414.

1917 Hon• CriOO. axe can:l,
.,,700.00. 304-11711-1780.

-~-

PICKENS
FURNITURE

· ~~~~L&amp; .

Tree • •tu:np 111mO'AI...........
.......ng. -loh. ...,...
1011 san, •••• ~a. Drift'•
LondoO.ot. II 14-44$.18411. : ·

7390 evening~.

1987EtconO.TWhlto,5o-

Jaopanlyl I;l

TEMPfRATU~e.

NORTH
+A6

.A

I........
IIJ Cftlllltra
I z.:.,

/ &lt;::HAf&lt;!T AND
you TAJ&lt;E HIS

Polntlog' hto&lt;IOI' B E-lof.
...- . . . Clll 114-44418344.
•

1711-7121.

1 978 Chry .... Cor-a. Oood
WO&lt;k C«. •eoo. Coli 814-593-

nice c•.
whh all •tre•s.
814-949-2877.

I'l-L UPPA~ HIS"

All••
Tr• Trimming • d Sturhp
flemovel. fr• nttmetet. 30,4-

a..,,

tlon. '3300. Coli 114-28111318.

5 horlltl, Out of . ~11UN
. . tor. C.lll14-448·1143.

4831Mytlme.

1979
Suburban. Rebuilt
engine. I ~ger. IJCCelent
condttlon. 114-992·778911\fenlnga.

Aim 5'00'M 304-1711-7235.

Uveatock

Honda 500 t1...C bike, excel.
conct. Lowe 15 '"- aluminum
CII"'OI, like new. Call f14-448-

ap.., Fro111
Lancashire, England: First
Rounq (R)
• (I) Judge
&lt;
Wheel of Fonune Q
liD Major Leap
(J) 1lllltlllllh

pum-

304-875-39111 "' 304-5711;•
2103.
I I

au.,....
1118011-887·1000 Elot . S·9800.

......

RDN EVANI ENTERPRIID-·
t90 .,..
lood. 'Colt 1·100.837·9528. •

19BI Hondo 110 3·whool.,.
Hl-lo '""Ill- V~~ry gcod cold·
tlon. •eoo. Callll14-318-9010.

0

.,6

7;30 e (JI Ill Hollywood

Con-• Sopdc Ton a . 1OoO
gel .. IIOOgol. 011d.,.. Aofotlq_~
·
- ·RON
feotO&lt;y
I!OlnodEN~'!f
~~
sbor&gt;
EVANS
PRISES, Jochton. Ohio. 1· 15 37·1128.
"'~'

Red Hot b•plnsl Drug dul•s'
._.s, bo .... plln• repo"d. Surplus. 'IOuf Area
Guide.

.

WEST
EAST
+JI3
+K 107
By James Jacoby
• J 10 5
t861
tJI09753
The 1ame can be cruel, particularly I +K 9 7 5
+103 .
I
0'
when the partnership presses to an ag·
SOUTH
gressive contract with duplication of
+Q9852
values. In today's deal, North and
Q94
South were using the bidding system in
tA2
which an immediate two-qver·one re·
•As
sponse commits the partnership to
Vulnerable: North·South
gettln1 to &amp;ame. After South had bid
Dealer:
East
two hearts, North could simply raise ·
to three, setting the trump suit and . Weal
Nortb. Eu1
leaving room for slam exploration.
Pass
South was right in thinking that his
Pass
Pass
partner bad some slam Interest. How·
Pass
Pass
ever, was it right for SOuth to bid as
Pass.
Pass
much as he did?
Pass
Pass
Sou1h had 16 hlgh·card points, but ·Pass
more important, he had a strong
Opening lead:. 8
trump holding (A.Q). He also had aces ·
in both minors. So he cue·bid four dia·
moods, and then, even after North bid 1 '-----------------------.....J
only four hearts, continued by showing
his ace of clubs. That was enough for made the odds for making the slam
North, wbo forthwith bid six hearts. poor.
Tbe 's lam was not hopeless. On a good
There were many wasted values in
day, the club king would be onside, the combined cards. After readiJIIi this
hearts would divide 3-2, and the spade ezcuse, you have probably gueued
suit would behave (either the king with that your hapless colwnnist wu the
East or the suit dividing 3-3). Still, poor devil who got to slam and went
n~ing all those favorable breaks set.

7:05 (I) AnciJ QrtfiHh

4 ....0294.

8911-3802

2811-6522.

Lead

Cltentr, one half mile u'Jt'
- - Croolc Rd. Call 8,14-

1910 v..-• ..., bike. c.11
1114-4411-2350.

01-•

_

Too much
to hope for

1211 Crooll and ChiN

Fetty T- Tri-g. .,..,., :
.._..~.Coli 304-8711-1331. '.
1187 luu.ld Quod R - 100.
New cond. Many ••••· c.u
1114-446-71121.

7
_

_

BRIDGE

ill AlrwOII And a Child Shall

SWEEPER end sewing

1979 Chwy
to. ....
AutOiftlttlc. Call814-2411-91101.

t~lt.n.

AI lllnw

1979 Joop CJ5. H.,dtop. 380
onglno. Collll14-1192·7214"'
114-992-3224.

_

Ha turned lo h1s lnend anll Sighed The future isn't what
it USED to BE."
'

lia.meyMIHer

---hod.:c:o-

Septic tonk

.

IIJMol..rllne

.....
...-...Coli
1·114-237·04118. dOlO or lllght.

1030 C.e1..ctorw/10 ft. bush
hog. f4350. M•sey Harris pony
tf'lctot w/cultM1or • moMng
machine. goad shape, e991.
Owner wiH finen ce. Call 814-

ah•.

blnoo. HI

1175 - oqulppod 10&lt; fiohlng.
hunting. complng. N- .,... .._
pelnt jab, 318 motar, heed••·
t700. 114-182-8981.

_

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Harbor _.. Midge - Knife .,..- Unless - USED to BE
An old·tlmer sat ~n a park bench wa!~hing lhe people p&amp;Ss.

•1121 1111 Wheel of Fonune

\,
·'

Coli I 14-446-87011 oft• 5 PM.

• Channel flustic

CETIDE. INC .• Athens-1514-

Vans &amp; 4 W . O • .

I I I 1I

.

1111 Newa
•liD Taxi

'.••

73

era· c•a. bo..s. plan• Np'd.

•ocas_.

~-~:C(~) Ulnr

..

m.ct~lr:.i
,..,..,
'*'"'
Md ouppll•. PI'*
up ... d-"'· Dovlo ve ... un

r

• (I) People'• Coun

'·
,,

RED HDT btogolnal D"" dool-

.

(llln--.n Tonight

Unoondllionll llt•lrM . . ,....;

111.000.00. 304-11711-1880.

111

Compl~te the chuckle quoted
by ftlllng in rhe missing words
L.--L--.1...--L--.l........J___J you develop from step No. 3 below.

I

(J) Sportac- (L)

~.,

•e. Locol

(I)

Announcement made in IO(;al
department store: .. Attantion
.
customers . We have a special in
.----------------~ our ladies departmenl, where our
---rH~A;.....:.T~G::...:u~N.....--IInngerie is - - ...

Elomenta'It~':"'
eCJI
PM
ziiMI

~839.

11711 FO&lt;d F100plcloup, v.a. 3
...,r. good colllltlon. Phone
304-8711-1 I 18.

I"

7;001]) Rlflllng1on SMM

••Jt.

IAIEOIIENT
WATERPROOFING

F AL E Y

1
1
I'. 1
~
.
.
.
. ..

11J 1 - Polllca 'II
1211 You c.n a. a 1:38 1D Clral 1umett

,..,_body,

Home
lmprovaments

Ii

FEGOB

~

ellll llogan'l lleroel

11711 30 fl. cnl~oo Air Mo,t;.'; ·
Homo. FuRy ccn,.lnod, ol~.
O.fNy y, ton.Pk:;k-up. A•cem:~ gerwator, 1181111 1. 814-1.
now poiM, .,..., 2-.
· • .'
.,...._ 350.. 4 tod. 81,000 .,..,..,.----------------'' '
mN• Runo fiNM. 8h•pl Call 10ft. truck oomOO&lt;endoPOII'UII''
II 14-4411-7849- I PM.
-~ • . . _ . "'lood ,..o,.b!Y..
1114-1811-3141.
:
11177fo&lt;d,4o4.~tol\ 4tf!OOd
- L . 480 oarblc Inch engine. 17ft.Com.... to&lt;•lo.304-77:J.·
8 olv - · V~~ry good 8277.
•,
ccndltloo. 61 .. 94!1-2237.
----------------., '
1971 Holldtlv R - • 22 It'
1912 o.t:aun pldc-• 11200. trwtl 1,.11•. twin
ltlf~
1114-742·2442.
conln.r, A... hitch. nlo8.1
304-11711-1314.
•
1981 lbc cyl. - - ChW·
rdet. 1 owner. 1181 FourdO.or
111-o ••· Coli 1114-IBII-

81

2

I 1 I I 1.

I

&lt;D .,_ llactrtc
W.Nlgldly ltralneu Raport

e

eom...,y. e14-4411-41 19.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
••d Bo¥elod lop Siding
• Dido Mot.-iols
a ........, Ouolkv

Sal

Roatrtlteement
W-pot&gt;OIIng.
!:

Top quality hydreultc olla,
D'"ooot. fuel oilo_6.motO&lt;oltb
f•m equlpmenT."CaiiBurtlle Oil

1250.00. 304-468·11138
4511-17211.

Con&lt;:rett blodcs· •II eiHt· yard
or delivery. Muon~~nd.Gelllp4&gt;

fo r

- '' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 18BI ~ul Ranger pickup

1972 Chevy. Rune good..,..good

246·5121 .

..a..-

ru..,..

Who

21Jgh18r
llde of 8porta
e (I) ABC Newo Q

. ~i

AtHELX

1----i--1=.:.:1,:...;:.1,-=..1---l

.
ill Certoon !xpNII
f:OSID Flllltr ~ lnt
1:30 ellJ 1111 NBC Nlgh!IJ Newo

•

1917 Lincoln Town cer.
'17.000. Excel. concf. Cell
814-245-92311.

Hereford BUll &amp;0 cerrts lb; also

1ers. Alo Oren de, 0 . Cell 814-

T

wv.

1174 Doctae D•t Swinger. 2
door. 311-98. •tomatk: 1ran•
miuJon. good condition,'
50.000 octuol mil•. ., 100.

S.E . Ohio.

72

1987
mM•·
1185 Skyh1Wk·l3.000 mil•. 19118 fo&lt;d pldoup. RuM good,
1182 Ari•· 73.000 mH•. 1183 body.- w..k. Collll14-112·
Colt·40.000 mlln. 1981 5943.
Ch-•79.000 ...... 1982
0._...-14,000 mlee. 1977 1Y.Iton Ford Truck. 11• ..,...,
Toyolll C...oh-78.000 inll• . ..,ely, Good Condition. Mlq•
le01 oil• Coli 1114-17711 0&lt; .O&lt;WOfliogtnrclr. t1 ,950.1HM
4411-8180 ovo.
lldo&lt;l E q u - -do&lt;lon.

40 UHld t•cton ta ahoo. from
• complete Hne of new 6 u•d
equipment. t.argnt selec1kmln

0. 114-H2-Z311W·

. . AP'AR1M!NTS. moblt homH,
· 3
-.l'tPI-ondOolllpo.
fo&lt;- or-"i04-'hr Ill. 114-4411-1221.
lt74.

•-•mloolon.

1911 D~o D"''toioo Tonbo z.
Fully oqulllllod. 311,000 mil•.
Sh•P· •&amp;500. C.H 1114-37112430.

-portly
- t20Q.t225
. ,..
fu-Nd. ....
R.-oo
eniNs 114-1192·11723.
""'"*""end Mldd- opon·
m-L t I 10 plua utlklot. Call
114-182·1011. eft« 7p.m . coM
7 _51_1_· _ _ __
1·1_1_..._18
_2-_

1157 Chwy 4 dr Sed.n. New

1114-2411-5&amp;118.

Po::'%1

q. . . .

a

11179 T·Bi&lt;d. e.. o1. ccnd. Nmo1or, brak•, lhoc:ks, 1tret. c.n

Fann Equipment

1415 het.-n Aw.
4 dr8Wer
e.q. IS drawer
th•t. tl4.H. IS pc. wooden

dlnnotte , ....

Sal

1981 SU1kln Wegon Chwrol•
Coprice. ccU.olblo t'*d Mot In
- · '3000 Coli 814-4468239.

l1 1Jt~,llli:k

New and used furnh:unt and
appUc..,ces. Call 814-4487572. Houra 9-5.

J Bll FURNITURE

s fo r

01-·•.ooo

Mint
condttion. •100 firm. New
heavy duty ex«dte .,ke t75.
114-182·2571.

-

•

I
I

.

.llll " -

1979 rlol
viJ
nice. IMII tol!!i
Indo. Collll4-448,2181. '

uto

low to form four simple words .

all .1121

(I)

o.,.
IJIIIMwiiiTod-r

(f) Dr.

&amp; Campers

Cllm.....

poln•*.._ duol ......,... rollullt
on gino •
Cell
814-3711-2424.

0.-.

IIIINewl

Hom•

21 ft.
~~=·-=~=~·:·=
~ ====::;=========~ •11711
..._. 8oth

2 f - o lui blooded Min- l l w b. old. Collll4-182·
3037.

Eloctric Lo-.

79

&lt;D v..,...
. of !he Mimi

Colll14-2411-tiri8.

A

•

I

.I]) Ill •

Ntall. eq•lll• ..., conttae

71

14ir•~ ~V

I

'"'*
· -..-"4-37!1-22201
. .. Coli 304''
• 711-4230
Moton

r~~:t;~' sc~r\t&lt;Kl }A- L£ £ ~s ® GAM I
CLAY R. POLLAN __.;,__ _ __
O four
Rearrange letters of the
x:rombled words be·

WOlD

1;00 I]) Big Vlley Explosion, Part

. . ., I . Bolk&gt;ontllnod. c.p.
. . ..,g. duol •to. Rllo•

FO&lt; Soi•Aogltto&lt;od bloch B ton
CoQn Hound P•OL Coli 1,30 '""114-4411-2438.

Musical
I nltruments .

THURS., JULY 14
EVENING

W I - 18ft. Eacol. cond:

.. .... p_ ....... 11wllt.
old. '25 e - Coil 814-44110373.

Roglotorod,
· AICC
lpltz-UKC t100
Purpl•- RibbonCodo• Sponiol ...,.. Coli 1143BH890.

8

aooa

3 ton mobile hame elr cond unk,

Building Mooorloll
Blodo. b&lt;icll. pip•. win·
dow, lintolt. ooc. Cloudo Win·

WM~T~tt.J

21' '""Com ..... Sl-11.
colllltloo. t1500. Coli 11f
387.0140.
'

t 50.00 uch. 304-875·4367.

Building Supplies

Television
Viewing

He EITH!i!Z -:.AID THii

~KlACK8fCRI'T'IC.IKE:CKe2T-

114-2511-1812.

1984 Mu ..... g O.T. auto .• AC.
Coli 814-1811-4218.

55

Auto Perte
&amp; Accenorlea

11171 Olovy truck w/olldo-r..
c.,.... loth In_.._ co net. Cell

·e.u

..b\1 plgo lo• •lo. Coli 814945·2.017.

uoo.oo. 304-1711-5381.

Sofas and chili,. priced .. om
• 395 to *995. Tabl• 110 and
up to 1125. Hid~•·bedl •310
1o t595. Recliners 1225 1o
t375. Limps 128 to 1125.
Dinettas t109•nd up to 149!5.
Wood tllble '4111·8 ch•• t2861o

a

Dnogc- Cltto&lt;y ICtnnol.
CFA ......... end ~~- k~·
11tns. AKC Chowpu,.,._, New'
Hlmol- - ··
1144411-3844 oft• 7PM.
,.,._ t25. , _ _ • co ...
pl. . oot·..,.t20. Double &lt;Obblt
·-tto. Doa "'"'-·t25
eoch. Col814-446-1354.

614-992·5830. A-. _Goegloln

10.000 BTU 110 volt. 614992·7141 .

R
-1\\1'7 I? 'rutaPrAit.l 5f'I;.AK1t.l~ ... 1

The Daily Sentinei- Page--13

(J)~

Pot Food Dlol...

Whirlpool Air conditioner.

Rent

BORN L

-12moL--y. ~tlaoY

JuNow.bbPh. 814-446-0231.

15'h Cu. F1. freezer. Phone

$85. 814·742·2362.

t30

lt'jlot. ,....

CB radto.

For ule : Maytag Wringer

Pomeroy· M~port. Ohio

.,.... ........ aut.,...... . .

Su""" Shop-PM
All breedt ... AII

waah«. Excetl.-.1 condi1ion.
$100. 014·992·2558.

For Lease

90 Deys Mme •

t..ge 2 ' 1 com, "'" room, 5119.
............ bo'*·up. com· - l y ,.d_od _.....,,,
pf...., ' " "
Ut. . . pllld. *221.

'""""· "" - · ...,..,..,

box-•so.
b..,.

b..,. bod.
c l - . j-l•v.
j..,o, ooyo. 1:111814-245-9801.

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

Nice end AP«tmen1 for r.nt. •2215 •
Dot&gt;ooll month. Dt!&gt;ooll ooqul&lt;ld. 11141"-112·•3010
·
192·5724., After 8pn., 182·

•2
10
- ..... · 814222
N.
3rNI.,
IIIIMtiiiDP._
Ohio.

Honda SR E•preu moped.
t110. Remote MagntMUC 26''.
Twin box 6 mettr'lls. •215.
Toyota pan •. can 814-44&amp;7019.
.

814-4411-1985.

49

ond

Sale

Muat tKJHia. 1171.00. Phona

24 ft. ebove ground pool. Call

Young couple loolling 1o ren1
home with garage. prefentbly in
rural .,... around Gallipolll. Call

...,t. Cell814-446·1423.

••d. .... ... ........•.

mim, mndl

Truck tool'

18R. apt.nearHMC. 1aduh.No

...... Cell ., 4-446-4782.

"'1-·Col] •·

srw..

ott.. 8 '"'· 814-4411-3996.

W.Vt. Coll304-773-5111.

••rting- 199.
USED-- lads, dressers. bedroom

fedflt- IWIIIeble. Call 814-

c.....

Sn .... s

Space for II'NII tlail.._ AI
haok-upt. Cable. Altoeffidency
rooma. air and c:able. Mason,

a..,k bodt wMh boddl"'!' 1199.
Full liu matt..._ Ia found .. lon
starting· &amp;99 . Recllneu

Unfumllhod llou• tO&lt; - .. 2 982·3711 . EOH.
illledroanw,
ol-. Nl&gt; -

400 WMt IIKind system. 4-110
...n sPM~~•s campi• wllh

l"'J HP rototMI«. g • cookatove.

Dot&gt;oolt ooqul&lt;od. Cell814-44114346.

3 IIR. ,_c:h wRh 1•-ae. Rod- Oraclow living. 1 .. d 2 bed"" VIII- II. U75 t mo. pluo
ep~rtmenh at Viltlge
, .... - · - d . Cllloft•4 room
Manor and Rhrlrtide Aoart·
~M-B14-381UI24.
manti fn Middleport. ~ram
ttBZ . Cell 014·992·7787.
Mce 2 po•lblw 31A . hou• In EDH.
- -· AC .. dlo-....,,
a.tMaelll~. fulbMem«rt. 2 bedroom Apts. for rent.
CoH 1114-44.. 1205 lifter 5 '30 C•po•d. Nice oottlng. Lound&lt;y
PM.

country. Celll14-4411-5171.

canning j... bug light. Call

Olive 81 .. G•lllpolis.
NEW· 6 pe. Wood 9'0UP. 1399.
Uvlng room suiteS· e199·$59.9 .

Dolt- • ""· Col 81,4-4411-21143. 8038.
~

~ . IT MV$1'
BE~~
~~ISIOK .

Tolovlllono. VCR, 74 9 poo.
11nger Volldv.egen bus. Regt.
lltred PoOdla, &amp; 2 BA. hou• In

S p - for Rent

ono BA unlurnlthod opt. Now

814-4411-2 583.
~t"llt._

tractor-whM front. Call 614-

Pets for

Grooming.

4411-3413.

Furnlahed room-119 Second

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 62

.oom hou•. 1%
fu,.c.. ltorm win- Rio G&lt;~ndo. Nlco ~ 8A. Rot.lg.,

dow. g.ag• Adults. No

Aluminum window ewnlnga.
32" w - dco., 430 J .D.

Furnished Rooms

1519.

UnfunWhed I

b•h.

45

47 Wanted to

Bfooklide Apwtments: LoCated
Gff R~avlleAd.- 1 BA . sp~eious
apartments with modern ldtch en
and wesh.--dryer hootlupt. c•
ble telwtsion available. Call

pool ,

Neely lumlohod omoft hou•.

11&lt;ound t1oc&lt; 3 .oomt end
blth, c•~ted, ..wshar'anddryer
hook up, porch, priyate p1rtdng
and emrane~. 304--87S-4580cw
175-19112.

Stono buldlng 30•80 on Rt. 35
Henderson. W. Va. 014-44691182.

814-446-0338.

fnduded. Starting at 1299 per

Rent

304-BU-25111.

304-6711-3073.

Rent nls

for

Wheelchalr1-new or ~o~sed. 3
'wheeled llectric tcootM's. Call
Roger. Mobllty collect, 1·614870-9811.

uUttlee Dlhl ..t.... t.ea. Phorw

New completely furnished
.spanment A moiMie hon. in
city. Aduha only, P•ldng. Call

2 BR . apt.-Rio Grande. Waler It
Two 1 M:l'e lots with public: tra•h paid. $225 a mo. plus
water. Jerrys Run Road, dopoalt. Call 614-245-93715.
t 4,SH)0.00each. eanskler nde.
Lux..-ious Tara Townhou..
304-5711-2383.
apartmen1s. Elegan1 2 floors. 2
BA ., fu I b•h upstlirs, po..der
room down•tain, CA., dishweshllr, dlspotal, pr;.,.1e entrance, prtvllte endo•d patio,

Homes

Beodl StNet. Mlcldl""""- Ohio.
2bo-lumlthodaponm-.

Spaclout mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
P•k. GaiUpoUt ferry, W. Ve.

372·8405 .. 372·25711.

41

32117 .. 304-773-5024.

Apt•. Coli 304-875-6104, .,
875-5388"' 675-7738.

Apart~nt.

Ashton, l•ge bulding

UMd ll&lt;o Shop. Ovo&lt;
1,000tl&lt;ot. · - 12.13. 14, 16.
10. 11.1. 8 ml• out Rt. 218.
Clll 814-2511-8211.

CDUIIITRY MD81LE Home P•lr.
Rou• 33. North of Pomeroy.
Ren•l t,.llers. Call 014-992·
7479.

c•pet. Range &amp; l"'llfrig . fur.
nlshed. Water • gari:Jege paid.

&amp; Acreage

Lots

Clllth~n' •

814-2511-8582.

Upnin unfumlshed apt. Car·
peted. utiliti• paid. No children.

48 Kt8 f.-m. nriftNI/y bei:Nten
BIIMrell Md Rio Gr. . . on SR.

ttwen, . ,.,ttenCt Md •Girfty

depolit required, 304-182-

8512."' 675-3900.

BEAUnFULAPARTMENTSAT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
Wlndocll'.
. SDN ESTATES. 538 Jochooo
10.:12 ..:ld on. woodi:J.mw, Pike from $183 • mo. Walk to
waaherand~.llrcond, must
lhop and movies. 814-448be m -. 304-8911-3802.
25118. E.G.H.
cond,

54 Misc. Merchandi1e

electric. mobile home. 304-676-

44

•

Z bedroom tt.emlshed apt New

48

. -::---::-:---:::-1970
121181 wMh
rOOtN. 2 btthl:, CentMI • • good

Apartment
for Rent

(ldeol to. Goopol O&lt;oup&lt;:hurch
oound ._1. t1200. Coli
814-4411-2311- 8 PM.

• 304-8711-7988.

1978 W I - 14•70 3 IJod.

25211

2 bodl'own moblt hcmt Mlddl•
Port. Ottio. ..terence •d •c:urity depolh: llllquired,. 304-882·
321170&lt; 304-773-5024.

, 0175.

: 121tl0. 2 bedroom, Trder tor
1 ula ''" Vinton , Ohio. Price
• negoclalllo. &amp;14-742·2010.

Hour" M,T,W
to 8p.m .•
1 to 10t.m.
Sunotoy
8p.m. 114-992-

A•.. Oolllpolla. 0125 o mo.
UtN~Ioo ..ld, Slnalomolo. ShbM h. Call448-4(11ofte• 7 PM.

. ~------------ 1-------------M~bile Homes for rent. 0111

• 1984 .. ectric 14d0 AI,_, 2
: IR .. 1~ b•h. t10.000. Rented
1 tot-t'UCIJ to mow Into.
C.U
81"'2511-1127 -lngo.

A~v«tne Arniques.

1124 E. Olloln St-. Po-ov.

t"T.~~~~~==~~j.!~~i;;=;==::===i

homo. "'M&gt;te lot on Rt. 588.
' ning.. Good condll:ion. AaWno AC . Adults only. Celll14-446' eBIOO. ~ Coli 114-3811- 14_80
__7_:"'::...:4.:..411-:..2:..11:..0::2:..
.--91144.
Furnished 2 BR. mcl&gt;llohomlt. 2

• aceltent condftion. Moving: 111a1et Sell. Cltl 114-441-3852

Antiquea
.;

drought."

• - · 3 IR .. 1 b.,__...,.

l n.., c•l*, Entire home In

53

"This is the third year of the
42

.- 1172--moMehcmowlth
• 2
fiND&amp; I mlnutn tram

Plkt. 114-4411-3181.

a._,.

Umodoolo•b1•8ch•o. Welnut

••

Mobile Homea
for Sale

58

mle on Uncoln

14. 1988

IUDOET TRANIMI~,I':j·
UtodB-ItoM-.
. . 30 do¥• min-. , _
......... Rollull · aofWIIFtld •• tow •
tJI.
Standlrd ctuiDh•. p,.....,.

l:illlt'T

UllbERS'fll~b 'll'A~

..._ _ .....,, d&lt;yoq; ""'"'

.._......, niMI' fu•u• .nd
cont• ·• oir, , _.. loncod ~,d,
ff'
J.OO. 2414 Mt. Vernon
1
"!· Pit, col 304-8711-

32

I

eratora: fretura : dlth .. ;
thehel; oolor co.-. tv"t. All
teem~ et rltcount .,.._, Laye~
w~s afwe¥s welcome. Optn
~oily Man ..Sit.. 9·8. Rt. 141 ln.
Ceii&amp;¥1NII'y· 1,..

Thursday, July

Clll(:.J~~J2r ~

•&amp;11; elf bsd•ng -'• prtcM:
... od 1M ... _
..., -

3 b•*oam. 2 .,_..., fuNinthed

~c':.

78

KIT 'N' CARLYLES It)' U.rr, Wrlaht

Building Suppli•

VIAe Furntlu,.

11115.

_._ Emn -oae
UZ.OOO.OO.
1 ' 1 - Vollt¥
Roolly,
he. 304-1711-4100.

66

SCft B clt*· t240, &lt;OIJUiw

2 M*oom ''A •• tr.me. one acre
wJih-JWd•d--8
,.. - nz.ooo.oo. 304-8711-

rwo """ budg .. priced h on - • 33 t11 Henfanl. 1M go

Household Goods

'-.&gt;

I

-..., leH tice 2'e 1 dl oom horM.
t11,100.00. 10od loeMion,
..............,. 304. , .. . . . . 11711-1113.

-to .,. ,. __
= :=:.:=-m:'.off-.,
=

Thursday, July 14, 1988

Pomeroy Middaport, Ohio
61

..

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P011J'ENESS IS A LIBER/.TING CONSTRAINT. rr MAKES rr POSSmLE TO SAY
.EVERYTHING THAT RUDENESS COULDN'T. ~
RADECKI
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'

�-

Paga 14-Tha Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 14, 1988

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio
'

.---Meigs news briefs----. Infant returned,
Open burning banned
Meeting In regular session Tuesday. the Chester Township
Trustees banned all open burning In the township until further
110t1ce. Residents will be advised when burning can be reswned.

Hospital report made
Veterans Memorial Hospital 71ade its Wednesday report of
admissions and discharges ,
· Admltled were Maxine Wingett, Racine; Wilma Bartlett,
Athens; Emerson Wells, Pomeroy.
Discharged was Dorothy Jenkins . .

Emergency caUs reported
Four calls were answeresd by local units Wednesday , the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reaports.
At 8:27a .m., Racine took Bessie Russell from Route 124 to
Veterans .Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 10:'37 a.m. took
Maxine Wingett, Elm St. . to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
1:47 p.m. took Cllffort Plants from the Stonewood Apartments
to Veterans Memorial and at 6:31p.m., Pomeroy took Emerson
Well from Route 7 to Veterans Memorial.

Special meet4ng announced
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will meet In special session at 1
p.m. Saturday at ·the Middleport Temple. Work will be In the EA
Degree and refreshments will be served. All Master Masons are
Invited.

kidnapper in custody
HUNTINGlON. W.Va. (UPI)An infant taken from Cabell Hun·
tington Hospital was returned this
morning, and federal Jaw enforcement autbori!its said a 26-year-old
Ohio woman has been charged with
kidnapping in the incident
Donald and Uilda Mann's baby,
about one-day-old when she was .
abducted Tuesday at 12:20 p.m. ,
was returned in.early this morning,
said hospital spokeswoman J~
Ferguson. Physicians 'found the m
fant to be in good condition.
Linda German, of Wheelersburg,
Ohio, was arrested on fedaal and
state charges or kidnapping, FBI
agents told FergusOn. She will be
anaigned in Huntingl!ID today.
German is accused of entering
CabeU Huntington Hospital on
Tuesday and removing the infant
from the facility's maternity unit.
Ferguson said she was un· ·
authorized to discuss the alleged ,
kidnapping.
FBI officials told Ferguson that
information given by a relative or
German's led to the woman's ar·
rest The infonnation reponedly ·
came through a telephone botline

set up afrer the infant's disap-

pearance.
Ackkional details of the events
leading to German's arrest were not
released.
Mter making the arrest, fedl'l'al
and State authorities conducted a
~ of in~ews in order to
make a positive identification of the
baby.
The four-day-old infant was
retUrned to the Huntington hospital
at about 4:30 this morning, · Ferguson said.

Entertainment
planned
Another free evening of entertainment will be featured Satur·
day night, starting at 7:30p.m.,
at the Racine Shrine Club Park.
Country Blend and · the Bend
River Boys bands will be tea·
lured. · Bring lawn chairs. Re·
freshments will be sold. Everyone welcome.

n
. ---d
.IMJiii"'

Cost free bonds discussed
during Meigs Local Schfol
Board meeting on Tuesday
Patrons of the Meigs Local
School District can provide
$500,000 absolutely free of any
additional taxes for the district
or they can permit that amount of
money to be sent to the Ohio
Department of Education In
Columbus probably for use in
some other school district.
That Is the gist of a presenta ·
lion by Meigs County Auditor Bill
Wickllile when he appeared be·
fore the Meigs Local Board of
Education Tuesday night .
Wickline pointed out that resi·
dents of the district voted In a
four mill levy some years back to
pay off classroom facilities
bonds. The county must continue
to collect those four mills of taxes
each year but the entire amount
is not needed to pay off the
Indebtedness.
Therefore, residents of the
dlsll'lcl at a specta.Lelection on
AUg. 2 will be given an opportun·
ity to vote on a 2.7 mlll• tax free

of Edu'catJ•on.

O'i (
------Area deaths------ approves new b u dee
·Conrad Roosh

cbureh. New Haven, with the Rev. p.m. at the Uuidmg Star Advent
Conrad Roush, 74, Mason, died George Weirick officiating. Burial Christian Church, Letart with the
Rev. Clifford Ramsey officiating.
Tuesday, July 12, 1988, at Veterans will be in Graham Cemetery.
may
call
Thursday
from
Friends
Burial will follow in Evergreen
Memorial Hospital after a short ill- .
6 to 9 p;m. at the funeral home. A Cemetery, Letart.
ness.
DAR service will be conducted at
Friends may call Thursday, from
He was preceded in death by his 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the funeral 7 to 9 p.m. at the Foglesong
wife. Lyta Hanson Roush; two home.
Funeral Home, and one hour prior
brothers and one sister.
to service.~ at the church.
He is survived by one daughter,
Ema E. Cornelius
Connie Swartz, Auburn, Wash.; one
sister, , Maxine Darst, North
Erna E . Cornelius, of Locust Thomas Bentz
Carolina; two brothers,. Willis of
St., Cheshire, died early Thurs·
Washington, D.C., Emeroy of day morning at Holzer .Medlcal
Thomas Bentz, 76, formerly of
North Carolina.
Pomeroy,
dledWednesdaymorn·
CenteF. Arrangements will be
Friends may call from 7 10 9 announced later by Rawling. tng In Orlando, F1a.
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral Coats· Blower Funeral Home.
Born May 11, 1912 In Pomeroy,
Home in Pomeroy. The funeral will
a son of the late Michael and
be Friday at I p.m. with burial fol·
Esther Bradshaw Bentz, he was
lowing at Beech Grove Cemetery Hiram Pauley
a member of the Enterprise
in Pomeroy.
Hitam Webster Pauley, 84, United Methodist Church.
Letart; died Wednesday, July 13,
Surviving are his wife, Corde·
Lelah Powell
1988, at Care Haven of Point .lla 'curtis Bentz, Orlando; two
Lelali Jane Powell, 92, New Plcasarit.
daughters, Marjorie Mullins and
Haven, died Thursday, July 14,
Born July 9, 1904 in Letan, he Brenda Fitch, · both of Orlando;
1988, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
was a son of the late Alonzo and three sons, William and Junior,
Born Aug. 29, 189"5 in New Maggie Rollins Pauley.
both of Orlando, and Michael of
Haven. she-was a daughter or the
He was a machmist for the Willshire; several grandchild·
1a1e William and Olevia Jane Bum- Goodyear Aerospace in Akron, ren; a sister, Marjorie Bowen of
gamerPoweU.
Ohio. He was a member of the Pomer-oy and a brother, Willis
Also preceding her in death were Guiding Star Advent Christian
Bentz also of Pomeroy. Sisters·
two sisters, Mary West and Lilah Church. He was a descendent of In-law and brothers-in-law are
Powell, a brother, William H. Zachariah Rollins and Wiltiani
Sarah· and Carl DIU and Mrs.
Powell.
Roush families, early Letart Dorothy Sheets, and William
She was a school leaCher, and Pioneers. Most of his adult life was Lowen, all of Pomeroy. Several
taught school for 14 years in spent in the Akron- Cleveland area
several West V'rrginia Schools, 42 before moving back to Letart in . nlecesand nephewsalsosurvlve.
Memorial services will be held
years at Wahama High School, and 1970.
for two years at Eastern High
Survivin~ are a close companion,
at the PineSaturdaylntheCbapel
Castle United MethoSchool. She was a member or the Mable Nremeyer, Letart; five atlla.m.
dist Church In Orlando. Contrlbu·
Sl Paul Lutheran Church, Bend daughters, Mrs. Margaret Stilwell,
In his memory are to be
Afta Sewing· Club, New Haven Santa Maria, Calif., Mrs. Dorothy lions
made to the Christian Academy
Garden Club, West Virginia Adams, Desert Hot Springs, Calif.,
Fund. Pine Caslle
Teachers Association, National Mrs. Juanita Hiltabidle, Atwater, Scholarship
United Methodls t Church, 731 E.
Education Association. She was a Ohio, Mrs. Luella Franks, Alliance, Fairlane, Orlando, Fla . 32809.
coordinator of Wahama Alumni Af- Ohio, Mrs. Jane Fear, Ravena,
fairs. She was a member or the Ohio; two sons, Donald Pauley,
DAR.
Edmonton, Ky., Webster Pauley,
Surviving are 011e sister and Deerfield, Ohio; two step-sons,
brolher·in·law,
Ernestine
and Noonan Christensen, New York, Dally stock prices
Homer De Pue, Sharpburg, Ohio, a Gene Christensen, Baltimore, Ohio; (As of 10:30 a.m.)
sister·in-law, Mrs. Louise Powell, one step-daughter, Mildred Stcssce, Bryce and M,ark Smllh
New Haven; three nephews and Suffield,
Ohio;
three
step- of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
one niece; eight grnnd-nephews and grandchildren; 17 grandchildren;
three grand·nieces.
three step-great-grandchildren; 18 Am Electric Power .. .. ......... 27¥,
AT&amp;T ....... ... ....... ........... .. ... 26')5
Services will be Friday at I :30 great-grandchildren.
p.m. at the St. Paul Lutlleran
Services w~U .be Fri~y at I :30 Ashland on ......................... 75
Bob Evans ..... .... .. .. ....... ...... 17'!.
Charming Shoppes .. .......... .. 13%
City Holding Co .. .... .......... .. 33¥.,
Federal Mogu 1.... ...... .. .. ...... 41%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ..... .....61'!.
Heck'sinc .... .. .. ... .. ... ... ... .. ... 1lf.
Key Centurion ....................38'!.
Lands' End .. ..... ... .. ....... .. ... .29%
Limited Inc .... .. ... ............... 24%
Multimedia Inc .................... 71
Rax Restaurants ...... ........ .... ..4
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) polntment over Sen. John Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 12
Democratic State Chairman . Glenn's absence from the party's
Shoney's Inc ........ .. ...... ...... .27%
.:James Ruvolo says Oh lo dele· presidential ticket "within 48 Wendy's Inti.. .................. .... 5%
gates to the Democratic National hours."
Worthington lnd ................. 24%
Convention will bury their disap''That disappointment wllJ
(Worthington was recently
evaporate pretty quickly," Ru·
added to Standard A Poor' sllst of
volo told reporters at a pre· the nation's top 500 companies)
convention briefing Wednesday.
"Forty-eight hours from now,
we'll be over It, basically."
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
' Ruvolo referred to Gov. MlRedeem this ad for
top prizes in Ohio's Super Lotto chael Dukakls's choice of Sen.
FREE ADMISSION
Lloyd Bentsen of Texas for vice
and Kicker games both went
to
unclaimed In Wednesday night 's president, shunning Glenn, Ohio
Tri-State
draWing, a lottery commission Democrats' favorite son.
Greyhound
Park.
spokesman said today.
"John Glenn Is not the vice
The Super Lotto jackpot was presidential choice because they
Oneponon
worth $3 million and the Kicker
(Dukakis' campaign) need to win
·top prize was $100,000.
Texas," said the Ohio chairman.
Expires 11(31/88.
• The winning Super Lotto "They know they can win Ohio
numbers were 4, 5, 6, 36, 37 and without John Glenn."
44. The Kicker number was
Ruvolo said, however, that he
399276. ·
expects ample financial help
SPECIAL EVENT
the Dukakls cammpalgn
El g hty-tw0 p1ayers p1c ked fl ve from
now that Glenn will not be on the
of theSuperLottonumbers to win
11JESIMY, JULY 1!9
$1,000 each, while 3,756 players ticket. "I told them they either
selected four of the numbers to needed to give me a lot of money
MounlaiReer $priiJI
win $96 apiece
or John Glenn," he said. 'They
Clluic 111 "-ood
Super Lotto ..tlcket sales total . , didn't
me Glenn, so now I
IIIM~ .... IIIe
"
$3,109,002. while the total prize
lllllall'slapdop.
payout was $442,576. The lack of a
top-prize winner Wednesday
night means Saturday's Super
Lotto jackpot will be worth at
least $6 million.
Five players had the first live
Kicker numbers, which pays
$5,000; 42 had the first four,
111 S.Collll St., P...ny
which pays $1,000; 502 had the
fir-' three, which pays $100; and
YOUI lfiDEPMitn'
4,878 bad the first two, which
AGDm SIIYING
pay• $10.
C..U. ... IItfll . . .
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$5f2,650 and the prize payout
s•EJI61
totaled $i65,980.

INSURANCE
•oscOUin

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

....

•••,.,..,a"

bond Issue. If they approve the:
issue which means absolutely no~
new taxes, the district willreceive $500,000. The $500,000-tf: ,
the Issue Is approved by voters-:
will be turned over to the district·.
and it Is stipulated that the:
money can be used only for~ .
permanent Improvements - ·
that is, Items which wiJIIast for:
five years or !110re, Wickline;.
reported. If the voters of the•~­
dlstrlct turn down the tax free;
bond Issue at the Aug. 2 special ~
election, then the entire amount ~
of money collected Including the:•
$500,000 must be sent to the State••.
Department of Education by the:
county budget commission, :
Wickline pointed out.
}.
Twice previously, voters of the ..:
district have approved slmUar :w
tax free bond Issues which t.·
resulted In thedlstrictbeingable ~
to benefll the first lime by ~
$1,000,000 and $300,000 on · the '
second time around.
:•
Interim Supt. James Car pen· ~·
terreportsthatallstofperman· ·.:·
ent improvements which can :•
become reality through the tax '
free bond issue ts being :·
compiled.
;:

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Page4

•

at y
Vot.39. No.48
Copyrighted 1 988

Preside~t

•

2&amp; Centt

A Multimedia Inc. Naw.ilper

.

to me."
.
The trip marked the first time Reagan publicly
specified what be wants tn drought legislation. He
already bad given approval to the $5.5 billion
effort Introduced tn Congress, which was worked
out In bipartisan discussions between congres·
slonal leaders and the administration.
Aides said the president's comments; including
his criticism of any lawmaker trying to attach
special-Interest language to the blll, were
Intended to keep Congress from bogging down In
amendments or bloating the price of the bill.
House Speaker Jim Wright, D·Texas, has put
the drought measure on the House calendar for
action when Congress returns from Its weeklong
recess for the Democratic National Convention.
Agriculture Secretary Richard Lyng, who
accompanied Reagan Thursday, said the bill sent
to the Senate floor appeared "fairly close" to the
original package.
The House committee made a few changes,
·
·
·

Including a requirement for farmers who get
disaster aid this year to buy 'c rop Insurance the
nexttwoyears. The committee also voted to make
all stricken farmers eligible for low-Interest
Farmers Home Administration loans. Currently
loans go only to those with crop Insurance.
In addition, the Agrk:ulture Depariment
announced all 114 counties In Missouri had been
declared natural dlsas ter areas because of the
drought, making the FmHA emegency loans
available.
Reagan lolned Herman Krone and his son, Rick,
In examining drought-shrunken com and soybean
fields at the DuQuoin State Fairgrounds In
Southern Illinois. A pole showed the com ~hould ·
be well above the president's head, but it was only
chest-high. Reagan plucked a tassle from tbe top
of a corn stalk and walked with the Krones to a
soybean field where the plants were shln·high. In
a normal year, they would be between3 feet and 4
feet tall.
"What I saw was not a pretty sight, " Reagan

Zanesville and Wheeling, W.Va.,
and U.S .. Q3, connecting .Columbus, Chllllcothe and Portsmouth.
"However, the Appalachian
Highway (U.S. 50 from Belpre to
the junction of S.R. 32 west of
AJbany, and S.R. 32 from there to
ClnclMatl) should help," he
added.
"Cleaning up the two-lane
bottlenecks on U.S. 35 will really
open up southeastern Ohio,"
Snyder said, me11tlonlng _that
"when you get behind 20 semi
trucks,ltcreatesa problem when
your shipments of parts can't
reach their destinations on time.
or you can't get as· many
shipments to their destinations in
the same day.
"Another of the challenges
facing us Is to set your own
commUJ)j_ty fnteres ts aside and
work for qte good of the area. You
can't have towns fighting each
other, because It takes too much
money for one community to
attract an Industry. If you set
aside your own community Inter·
es ts and work for the good of the
area, everyone will get a piece of
the pte."

He mentioned that "Industries .
and corporations do a lot of
research, which takes time and
lots of money. Therefore It
behooves I,IS to help them as
much as possible, because they
aren't just looking at justonectty
or one county. Remember, this Is
no longer just a national economy. It's a world economy. and
you need to think along those
lines.''
Snyder told .the audience that
"three·fourths of my top busl· .
ness prospects come from the
F,ar East, be they Japanese,
Korean or from Hong Kong. 1
would rather see American cor·
poratlons doing all this, but the
Japanese are paying corporate
taxes and Investing In our
communities."
He said that "opportunity
knocks and doesn't beat the door
down, so you've got to go where
the money Is. If there aren't jobs
here, people leave the area. •'
Before the meellng ended,
SEORC golf tournament winners
were announced. The flrst·place
team of Buddy Bell, Scott Downard, Dennis Eberts and Jim

Kammer would be "combined" reductions which have taken
with recent emission reductions place at Mitchell. The source of
at Ohio Power's adjacent 'Mit- lower sulfur coal for Kammer, as
chell Plant at Moundsville,
proposed, is to be worked out by
W.Va. In effect, Kammer would
Ohio Power, Ormet and Consoli·
receive a credit for Mllcbell' s
dation Coal Company, the cur·
lower emissions. Plans like the
one proposed for Kammer·
prop·
Mitchell are allowed under osal is unique In that It Is thought
EPA's final emiSsions balancing
to be the first emissions balanc·
policy published last January.
lng proposal submitted to EPA
The emissions balancing plan
under the January 1988 policy
for Kammer-Mitchel! Is based on statement.
proposed sulfer dioxide reducThe Kammer plant's impact on
tions at Kammer and a credit for
the local econOf!IY Is critical. The
previous actual emissions teduc·
plant was builtin the late 1950's to
tlons at Mitchell. It would work
provide the electric energy needs
this way: fuel switching to a ·Of the primary aluminum smel· ·
lower sulfur coal would cut ter at Hannibal, Ohio, now owned
Kammer's annual suffer dioxide by Ormet Corporation, which
emissions frOm 1!50,000 tons to pays Its principal operating and
approximately 102,000 tons. In
maintenance costs.
aoditlon, a credit of 45,000 tons
"The fate of the emissions
would be applied for actuaJ . balancing plan will dictate the

re~~!'IP.f~~~~r~~~~!ri

then told 85 farmers and local officials Invited to a
briefing under two cottonwood trees. '.'Stunted
corn, sparse bean fields, withered plants starved
for water, struggling to push their way up ,"
Reagan said disaster rellef ITIJlSt allow
drought·hlt farmer~ to keep the crop subsidy
payments they already have received this year
and must open up aid to those such as fruit and
vegetable growers who normally do not qualify
for any federal farm benefits.
Reagan also said Lyng would lead an
interagency fact·flndlng team on an 11-state
survey trip next week to assess the damage of the
.
drought.
"The heartland of America desperately needs
more rain," Reagan said, "We can't make It rain,
but we can help to ease the pain and that's what
the federal government will do."
Lyng said the team wlll go to Ohio, Indiana,
Tennessee, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, North
Dakota. South Dakota, Minnesota, Michigan and
Wisconsin.

ALL TEL .customers
as.k ed to send forms

WILLIAM B. SNYDER
SEOIW speaker
Pope scored a net total of 286 and
won $50. The runner.up team of
John Derrow, Dave Frame, Jim
Gettles and Dick McGoon scored
a net total of290andwon$25. Two
teams :(the Charles Adkins, Dan
Davies, Mike Harford, Ike Wise·
man team and the team of Dan
Coli, Eric Dahlberg, Chet Har·
less and Bob Manion) tied for
third with a score of 292 and won a
new package of golf balls.

Utility seeking 'emission balance' plan
Ohio Power Company has
asked the West VIrginia Air
Pollution Control Commission to
approve an "emissions balanc·
lng" plan aimed at saving some
2,200 jobs at nearby aluminum
plants that rely on electric
energy from Ohio Power's
Kammer Plant.
"I believe ·we have found a
solution that will avoid a serious
blow to the economy of the Ohio
Valley from Moundsville, W.Va.
to Marietta. Ohio," said Charles
A. Heller Jr. , president of Ohio
Power. "We hope to answer
satisfactorily any questions the
environmental authorities
have."
The plan must be approved by
both the West VIrginia Agency
and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
Under the plan, future sulfur
dioxide emission reductions at

•

· tours drought-stricken midwest

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan,
having walked through sun-blistered fields with
Illinois farmers, says he Is Itching to sign drought
relief legislation - and Congress· has taken the
first step to send It to him.
One day after being confronted with dozens of
amendments threatening to slow the process, the
House and Senate Agriculture committees pushed
through them Thursday and wound up with bills
very similar to the "core" legislation flied early
this week. The Senate panel sentlts btu to the floor
for debate, and the House panel gave tentatlve
approval and agreed to meet again July 26.
Reagan made a flying tour of llllnols and Iowa
Thursday and called at each stop for speedy
action to help drolight·strlcken farmers, who face
"theworstnaturaldlsaster slncetheDustBowlof
the 1930s."
"(Lawmakers) know there's a time pressure on
.It," the president said In a broadcast interview In
Davenport, Iowa. "I thlnkH's ready to go through
and, of course, I'll sign tt the minute It's delivered

By GEOFF OSBORNE
OVP News Staff
"Set aside your own communIty Interests and work for the
good of the area," said William
B. Snyder, rna nager of the
economic development dlvlslon
at Columbus Southern Power
Company, at Thursday nig~l's
Southeastern Ohio Regional Development Council (SEORC)
meeting at Falrgreens Country
· Clu'btrnm''J"ckson.
Snyder, speaking to an au.
dience of approximately 200
persons, discussed Japan's role
In economic development for
southeastern Ohio, mentioning
that T&amp;S Trim In Athens Is the
only Japanese-owned manufac·
turing firm 1!1. this quarter of the
state to date. He said that Honda
Is planning to put a plant that will
R)anufacture transmission parts
somewhere In the area,· "but I'll
. let the state and the company
announce where and when."
He said that "proximity to
Interstates ts one reason these
firms haven't settled her so far,"
meaning the area bounded by
I·70, connecting ColUmbus and

1 Section•. 1 0 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 15, 1988

Reagan wants ~lief bill

Partly cloudy, humid tonight. Low In 'lOs. Saturday,
partly cloudy. mgh In the 90s.

entine

Set aside special interests, ·
.S nyder tells SEORC crowd

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Meeting In regular session r;•••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Tuesday night, the Meigs County II
Board of Education approved a
$445,308.65 budget for the 1988-89
school year.
Included In expenditures of the
budget total are: administration, ·
$303,159.66; coordinate - actlvl·
ties, $18,160; special services,
$500; supplies, $20,749.26; equipment replacements, $971.83; con·
tract and open order service,
$30,414.90; fixed charges, $68,753,
and capital outlay, $2,600.
The county board approved
issuing bus driver certificates to
the following drivers oft he Meigs
.A DAY
Local District: Esther Black.
Leta Hall, Evelyn Hobbs, Jackie
King, Cora Loftis, Emily Manley, Ida Martin, Linda Morris,
Angela Sellers, Pauline
A DAY
Snowden, Fredrick Thomas,
Shirley Wilson, Norman Wood,
Ronald Wood and Wanda Jean
Wood.
tylembershlp in the Coalition of
Rural and Appachian Schools for
the next school year was ap·
proved along with courses of
study for voci'tlonal home eco·
992-3524
nomics, business law, business
education (non·vocatlonal) 1 and
391 WEST'MAIN STIEET
cosmetology 11. The board acPOMEIOJ, OHIO
cepted the resignation of Barbara Brown as a speech·
10 AM·8 PM MON.-SAT.

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ALLTEL's Western Reserve
Telephone Company customers
are being asked to send In their
enrollment forms for the Inside
Wire Repair Plan.
The enrollment offers the cus·
tamers the opportunity to maintain their Inside wire plan a.t the
new rate of$1.00 per month, or to
discontinue the plan.
If the plan Is discontinued, the
customer will become responsible for all repairs to the inside
telephone wiring at their own
expense.
If the Inside Wire Maintenance
Plan Is continued, ALLTELIWestern Reserve wUI repair your
Inside wiring anytime and as
many times as a problem arises
at no addU tonal cost.
Those customers who do not
turn In the ballot or respond by
telephone or In person to our
business office will be automatically terminated from the repair
plan effective September 2, 1988.
Since 1983, the Federal Com·
rnunlcattons Commission (FCC)
bas lnstlluted several changes tn
the telephone industry.
Under the FCC plan, effective
January 1, 1987, all telephone
facilities up to the customer's
home or business wlll stUI be the
responsibility of local telephone

companies such as· ALL TEL.
However, the telephone outlets
or jacks and all wiring connect·
ing them to the telephone box
outside the building are now the
responslbiUty of the owner or
occupant.
As a result, customers must
choose to either repair the wiring
themselves, contract the tete
phone company or other quail·
fled organizations to repair the
wiring and pay for each service
call, or utllize ALLTEL's Inside
Wlm Maintenance Plan for $1.00
a month.
If customers have questions
about the plan, they are urged to
call ALLTEL!Western Reserve
at (614) 349·8551.
ALLTEL!Western Reserve is
part of the ALL TEL Corporation,
one of the nation's leading
telecommunications companies.
ALLTEL provides local telephone service to nearly one
million customers in 19 midwest·
ern, eastern and southern states.
The company also has subsidlar·
ies or investments In companies
that provide cellular telephone,
wide area paging and fiber
optlc·based long distance ser·
vice, equipment supply and other
te lecomm unlcat ions· related
businesses.

price of electricity for Ormet and
whether Ormet can continue to
operate," tl)e Ohio Power pres I·
dent explained.
"Since electricity is a major
and indlspenslble part of produc·
lng aluminum, electricity costs
significantly affect aluminum
production costs. If the plan Is
approved, Or met's electric costs
are expected to remain stable .
The smelter, In turn, would
remain competitive In national
and world markets. The 1,500
jobs at Ormet and the 700 at
Consolidated Aluminum Corporation (Conalco) are hanging In
the balance," Heller said. The
Conalco plant, located next to
Ormet. uses Ormet's product as
Its raw material.
Ohio Power Is an electric
utlllty subsidiary of American
Electric Power.

,-Showers ·b ring litde relief &amp;om drought
By KAREN LEE SCRIVO
Unlled Press Jnlernatloaal
Scattered ihunderstorms provlded a taste of relief for parts of
the thirsty Farm Belt but the
spotty rainfall did little to break
the "long, hot siege" wilting the
region gripped by drought and a
stlftlng heat wave.
More hot, dry weather Is
predicted for the nation's mtdsection where drought conditions
plague lhe Great Lakes region,
the Ohio and TeMessee valleys
as well as parts of the northern
Great Plains and the Rocky
Mountains, according to the
National Weather Service's 30·
day drOUJhl advisory. ·
The only areas given a belter
than even chance for extra rain
durtnr this period are along the

.,
'"

--------

Gulf Coast arid the Southwest, It
said.
'This sort of situation needs a
major change in the (weather)
patternandtherelsnolndtcatlon
of any changes," Harry Gordon,
a NWS meteorologist, said today.
"It looks like a long, hot siege."
Gordon said anoiher blist of
hot air w•• expected to drift
across the Midwest lnlo Nebraska, central Texas, western
Iowa, Missouri and southern
Illlnola today, llftlna tempera·
tures again In the lOOs, Gordon
said. ·
Gentle rains fell on central and
eastern North Dakota and
northwestern Minnesota early
this mornlft«, he said.
Spotty thunderatonns gave
parta of the Fann &amp;It • brtP.f

respite Thursday but the mer·
cury shot up past the 90s again
west of the Mississippi River and
In parts of the East and South.
The storms stretched from
Iowa across the lower Great
Lakes to Pennsylvania and wesl·
ern New York state, but provided
only minor relief from the
drought. Showers also extended
from SoulhCat"QUna acrossGeor·
gla, Florida, Alabama, Mlssls·
sippi and southeast Lollillana
Thuraday night as well as from
Nord! Dall:ota' lntonorthernOklahome and from soutbem Wyom·
inl acrou ColOrado, New Mexico
and aouthwest Texaa.
Mlchtaan alflcultural officials
said the condition of tb11t state's
com crop waa twice as bad as In
the .11!11t of the nation, and the

continuing drought sent prices
soaring again Thursday on the
Chicago Board of Trade. .
James Novinger, a farmer
wlthabout1,000acresofcornand
soybeans In Kirksville, Mo., said
the hot, windy weather ts drying
up the corn pollen and preventing
fertilization.
Some Ohio farmers gratefully
accepted 50,000 bales of hay
hauled In the "Hayride 1500" by
Southerners on a mission of
goodwill.
Seventy·flve tractor· trailers,
many driven by stqck car racers,
rumbled Into Columbus Tburs·
day evening to complete a
12-hour journey from CharlOtte,
N.C., with the prec12us hay for
dlstrlbu lion today to cattle starvlng In the drought.

MAKING THEIR POINTS- VIce Pre1Jdent George BUlb pointe
to tile lraalla ambM•dor durbl1 a ehori speeeh Tbul'llday to the
Ual&amp;edNaUans' SeoarttrCo. .cllOD the U.S. dowala1 ofulrulan
Je&amp;l!ller over the Penlan Gulf. Bullh'sspeeeh wu preceded by a
two-bour addNu by Iran's Forelp Mlnllter All Akbar Velaytl,
botlllm. ( VPI)

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