<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12202" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12202?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T04:47:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43173">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f86ba0b37eee1237b2fbad2ccc374e9d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>131e78c586a780e42f12829ca899586f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38328">
                  <text>••

Chicago grain

In Our Town..•..:· _ _ _ __
BY DICK mOMAS
GALLIPOLIS -"Last week I
wrote that Gallla
had the
distinction of
having recorded
1he highest
1em perature
ever in the state
or Ohio. The gove r nme nt
weather observer, Pete McCormick, at
Fairfield Station, recorded 113
degrees · on Saturday, July 21,
1934. just 54 years ago.
But, that was not the highest in
one sense of the word. It was,
and, II wasn't. 1 got a letter this
week from Mrs. Robert L.
(Annabelle) Caldwell, Rt. 1,
Gailipolls. Addison-Bulaviile
. Road resident who wrote, "According to my World Book
Encyclopedia , the highest
temperature in Ohio was near
Thurman in July, 1897. and near
Gallipolis July. 1934, 113 both
times, tliought you might like to
know."
After getdng that letter, I went
to Bossard Memorial Library.
dug up a World Book Encyclopedia, and found it was 113 degrees
on July 4. 1897, near Thurman
and 113 degrees on July 21. 1934.
near Gallipolis. That was the
only mention, no elabOration. So
you see, as the Britisher says, "it
was, and, it wasn't." Actually the
July 21. 113 degrees wasn't the
high. It only tied the previous .
high.
·
· Of course, I got my informal ion
abOut the 113 degree high from a
letter from Assistant Professor
Thomas W. Schmidlin, Ph.D.,
Kent State University, who is
conducting research for a book
on Ohio weather. Schmidlin
mentioned Pete McCormick
wanted to know where he lived,
where he kept his thermometer.
and that kind of stuf(. He wanted
a good photocopy of the Monday,
July 23, 1934 Tribune front-page.
Well, I've got that for him. Now
ail I've got to do is get hold of
Walter F. Walker, who several
years a go was a Boy Scout leader
and ask him, " Where did Pete
keep his thermometer?" I think I
remember seeing it in a special
box on a pole or fence in the shade
beh!nd his big house on SR 588 at
Fairfield. Pete McCormick used
to have a Boy Scout camp at
Fairfield. I'd almost bet that
anyone who attended that camp
could tell me where Pete's
thermometer was located.
After finding w)lall wanted in ,
the World Book, I decided · to
check out the July 4,1897 reading
riear Thurman. Not much luck,
despite 'the fact that at the ilbr.a ry
I found copies or the Weekly
Gallipolis Bulletin from 1897. The
paper was published everySaturdav. But copies of the July 3 and
Juiy 10 papers did not mention a
high of 113 degrees. The July lOth
paper had what I'd call ·a
one-liner which said it was 105
degrees last Sund ay, that
would've been on July 4.
Now, that Monday, July 23,
1934 copy of the Tribune tells not
only of the high temperature but
it also relates the story of the big
storm that broke the heal wave.
Subheads tolD t he story,
"Temperature Of ll3 Tops Earlier Highs Fully Ni ne Degrees."
And in smaller type, "Building
Unroored. Corn Laid Fiat and
Trees Tumble in Sunday Evenlng's Storm - Heavy Rain

July 24. 1988 .

Pomiii'Oy-Middlaport-Gallipolia. Ohio-Point Pla111nt, W. Ve.

Page-D-8-Sunday .:nmes-Sentinel

Comes With Strong Winds While
Thunderbolts Beat Tattoo on
Landscape."
The story lead said- All high
temperatures were broken during the weekend, which was also
marked by one of the severest
wind and electrical storms in a
decade or longer. Saturday's
Tribune reported the hitherto
unheard-of temperature of 109.
At 3 o'clock the mercury rose to
113. These are the readings of the
government thermometer at
Fairfield by Weather Observer
Edwin McCormick.
When the mark of 105 was
reached at noon Saturday, it is
believed that all previous re·
cords were shattered, while even
the Indians and the Moundbuilders may never have known
of temperatures ranging from
109 tol13degrees in this sector.
I won't lfO into any more detail
at the present time on the severe
storm that broke the heat wave.
Will save that until later .
I received only one letter this
week with the correct answer to
last Sunday's question, "Who
was master of ceremonies at the
June 12, 1938 dedication of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam 7" The
letter from Mrs . Hester Huishorst, 512 Fourth Ave., Galiipolis, said Dr. Charles E. Holzer.
That would have been Dr. Charles E. Holzer Sr., lather of the
chief of staff at Holzer Medical
Center. And, that was therlght
answer.
The senior Dr. Holzer was
president of the Ohio Valley
Flood Control and Conservation
Congress. Mayor Andrew Ciaoney, Maysville, Ohio, was vice
president. E.V. Rawn, Huntington, W.Va .. was secretary and
Reno Hoag, Marietta, Ohio, was
treasurer.
The Valley Congress was ofganized in June 1933 at a meeting
of chambers of commerce along
the Ohio River whose members
sought to promote a program of
flood control. They came up with
a two-part program for flood
control: "The tentative plans
called for first a long range
program of flood control by
means of conservation dams,
reservoirs and extensive reforestation and land conservation:
and, second, an immediate program under the reforestation
administration of the cdnstruct!on of dikes and levees along the
Ohio and its tributaries ."
At the time, the Corps of
·Engineers. Huntington District,
had completed a survey of the
Ohio Valley embracing embracing the subjects of navigation,
flood ' control and water power
development, and planned to
submit the report to Congress.
Corps officials and civic representatives agreed that "the federa! works program, embodying
President (Franklin D.) Rooseveil 's unemployment relief program," would provide the labor
for the realization or their goals.
And, that was the beginning.
Last week, when speaking
abOut the labOr force, on the lock
and dam construction, and how it
was made up. I neglected to tell
you about the wages they were
paying. Unskilled iab0rersgot45
cents an hour and skilled laborers received $l.i'O an hour. And,
in keeping with guidelines estabilshed by the National Industrial
Recovery Act, veterans with
dependents were given prefer-

ence regardless of their res!·
dence, over any other worker to
be hired.
Dr Charles E. Holzer Sr., was
not only master of ceremonies at
the 1938 dam dedication he was
the Ohio Valley's outstanding
civic leader of the 19306. '40s and
'50s, and Gallipolis' greatest In
history. But, that's another
story.

Stocks
..
;
Continued from page D-1

CHJICAGO iUPII- Grain and
soybean futures were mixed at
the close Friday on the Chicago
Board of Trade.
Soybean trading was choppy
with nearby months pos dng
losses. Trading activity was
relatively light as some traders
waited until a more detlnlte
weather outlook was available.
Traders said prospects for a
mostly dry weekend and the
chance for a return to hot
weather next week channeled

the company, topping the
$75-a-share bid from the Bass
group.
Among the active blue chips,
General Electric was down 2~ to
41~, Exxon was down 2\1! to 44~
and Union Carbide was down 1~
to 22%.
On the American Stock Exchange, the Amex Market Value
index fell 3.20 to close at 306.11,
while the National Association of
Securities Dealers index lost 7.24
to 387.35.
Declines led advances 521-316
among 1,049 issues traded on the
Amex. Volume totaled53,331.075,
shares, compared with 44,157,665
traded a week earlier and
67,971,410 traded in the same
week a year earlier.
Dome Petroleum led the Am ex
actives, orr 1-32 to 1 3-32. Wang
Labs class B followed, orr.% to
914·. Fir.st Australia was third,
down~ to 8Jis.
·

buytne Into new-crop soybean
contracts.
Corn futures finished lower In
all months as expected export
business failed to materialize.
traders said. South Korea did not
puchase 100,000 tons of com as
expected and traders could not
confirm a rumore_d sale of corn to
the SovWI Union. The lack of
followthrough buying also pressured com lower. Trading in corn
was mostly local In a nervous
atmosphere.
Wheat futures opened higher
on ne":s ~at China bought 250,000

tons ot sort red Winter wheat for
August delivery and India purchased 125.000 tons of wheat
under the export bonus prQII'am.
Wheat futures, however,
turned lower throuah the day as
traders liquidated their holdings.
Uquldatlon was !bought to be the
squaring of positions before the
weekend because of the uncer·
talnty of whether additional rain
will hit the MidweSt.
Attheclose.~ornwasoff% to4
%. soybeans off 12 to up20, wheat
off2 to up 1 and oatsoff9% toup2
'h cents.
· ·.•

1988 GALLIPOLIS SHR'INE CLUB
GOLF CLASSIC SCUIIILE·AIIACUPFSIIE GOII CLUB.
OPEJI (MOl &amp; _WOMIJII

GAWPOUS, OH.

29-27.3().4...17·2

•

at y
Vol.38, No.l54
Copyriplned 1888

enttne

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

1 Soction. 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July, 26, 1988

Official says
acid rain law
would cause
loss of jobs

J

BOOTH DAMAGED BY VEHICLE - The Melp Athletic
Boolllier food booth at the Pomeroy stadium was heavily dama~~:ed
over tile weekend by a vehicle wh&lt;Me driver left the &amp;eene without
. reporttng the Incident. Pomeroy Pollee Captain Joe Kirby, &amp;101111:

w!thMldclleportoffleerBIIIMlller,havetakenpalntaamplesfrom
a ouspeet vehicle and charges are penclln~t upon completion of lbe
lnveotlgatlon. Several people have been Interviewed regarding the
lpcldent and the lime of occuranee has been establl8hed.

COLUMBUS - The tremendous loss of jobs and economic
hardsbip that would result from
the premature passage by Congress of acid rain control legislation Is now being recognized even
by sponsors of such legislation,
an American Electric Power
of!iclal says.
"When you're proposing the
federal government set up an
expensive new national pr.ogram
to retrain, re-educate and relocate people, you're acknowledg·
tng that major economic dislocations and human misery are
going to result," said A. Joseph
Dowd, AEP general counsel.
"We fail to see how that kind of
program is a 'job protection
program.' Quite the opposite, It
Is really an unemployment program. The sponsors are confirming the devastating effect that
these proposals would have on
jobs and a U.S. economy already
c h a 11 eng e d by w 0 r 1d

·':f.en d.~~ on Ohio hi~ways _over weeke~d ::~r~::~f :m~:~:~u:p~~

:;...u Blt~~~o=:=:~~~n ~-~~~=~~~~~~.:~:~i~~:of -~~~~~d.~~·~~~::~a~;~~~~: ! ·g:~~tyon u.~ ... ~:-~~ ::rren
eight traffic accidents around the
Buckeye State this weekend, the
Ohio Highway Patrol said today.
Three were killed in a van-car
·accident on U.S 20 In North Perry
early Sunday morning.
The Lake County Sheriff's
Department said the accident
was still under lnvesdgation, but
that a van driven by Joh,n Loving,
33, of-Ashtabula collided with a
car driven by Edle Horvath, 20,

Killed were Horvath and a u.S. 22 In Fayette County.
passenger In her car, William
Ashtabula: Joseph T. Lorigan,
Gallagher, 24, of Madison, and a 26, Jamestown, Pa., when his
passenger In the van, Arlls D. motorcycle struck the rear of a
Ward, 45, of Geneva. Loving was car at high speed along Oh lo 85 in
In satisfactory condition today at Ashtabola County.
Metro General Hospital In
Trotwood: Lori Robbins, 22.
Cleveland.
Dayton, In a one-vehicle crash in
Also killed this weekend were: ·Montgomery County.
Friday night
Lebanon: Constance Howell,
None.
Saturday
49; Springfield, when the car in
washington CourtHouse: Mel- which she was riding struck a

Sunday
Akron: Thomas Mlller, 30,
Akron, In a one-vehicle motorcycle crash on Interstate 277 In
Summit County.
Ironton: Jason Smith, 9, South
Point, when his bicycle veered
into the path of a car on a county
road In Lawrence County.
Cleveland: susan Ciccollnl, 33,
Lakewood, whenhercarcolllded
with a van on Interstate 90.

Union official says strike·date def~ite
The Aug. 1 strike date for
employees of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services

988

' .

seems definite according to
Barry Bolin, of the Athens office
of the American Federation of

r--Local news briefs-·...,
'

Reedsville waman injured
A Reedsville-woman was -injured In a one vehicle accident
Saturday at 12:45 p.m., ln ,Lebanon Township on S.R. 124,
according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Sherrie L. Jones, 20, was taken bY the Racine EMS to St.
Joseph's Hosplta1fn·Parkersburg, W.Va. She was treated and
released for a scrape· on .her left hand and a cut to ,her right
elbow.
· Jones was driving west when a tire on her 1988 Chevrolet S-10
pickup truck blew out. The mishap caused the truck to run off
the right side or· the road and hit an embankment before
overturning and finally landing upright.
A Syracuse !han ·was cited In an two-car accident Sunday at
3:20p.m. at the. junctiqn of Rock Springs Road and Flatwoods
Road.
·
,
·'
·Raymond M. Litchfield, 37, was cited for failure to yield,
driving without a license and drtvlngwtthoutwearing a seat~lt ·
after his 1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo hit a 1984 Ford LTD driven
by Ray D. Little, 72, of Pomeroy.
Little was driving north on Rock Springs Road while
Litchfield was traveling west on Flatwoods Road. The report
said Litchfield failed to stop at the stop sign at the junction and
·
hit Little's car.

Loan assistance available
Melgs, Athens and VIQton County farmers who suffered
property damage or severe production loss !lue to drought
conditions beginning Jan. 1, 1988 through ,June 24, 1988, .and
continuing may be ellglble for emergency loan assistance.
This annoupcement Is being made bY David P. Urwin, county
supervlaor for the Farmers Home Admlnistratlon'for the three
counties, w)lo reports that the asalatance would come under the
Emergency Declaration from the Fanners Home Adminis!l'a·
lion, the rural credit Hrvice.of the United States Department of
Agriculture.
·
Farmers Home Administration loans to ell&amp;lble fa1111ers,
ranchers and aqtlllculture operaton are to enable them to
return to tbelr normal operatlona after bavlnJ sustained losses
resulting from natural ,dlaaatera.
Applications Will not be eligible for EM loans to cover
dama... and loaaea to any crops planted which .were not
Insured, but could have been Insured With FClC crop Insurance
or multi-perU crop Insurance.
Long and Intermediate term loans may be made tor
Contlnued on page 10

M/iiGS COUNTY
Mni1 i-Pt1rpmr: Hv.Jth
f-Jd/1/y, M!illn:r~J' H ,l/f _r.
PrHnt'F'rl)', OH .-992-21!)2

--

~

-

26 Ctnto

A Muhimtdlolnc. Nowopapor

..

ADDR~S-----------------~----­

AII proceeds to be usald for various projects of Gallipolis
Shrine Club.

Cloudy, $0 perceal eb-ee
of abowera toaiJht. Low Ia
upper eo.. Tue.day, rnOIItly
cloudy, 50 pereeat ebiiiiCe or
showers. JUch fa mld-808.

•

•

•

(;;ll!i.l G&gt;.: ( {!I H 1 1 ("'1')~1

. I

Super I.AJtto

PHONE II ~-------___;__ _ COURSE _ __

J.llk..,,m Co.: I~ H00 -2'S1·')S'i 1
M(:ig~ Cw I-H()(I.25:!-S'S'll

OH . -2~6 - JO?J

Page4

'

NAIIE------,.--------HANDICAP_ __

SUICtllE PHONE

J11ckl'1"-

8550 ,

FIELD UMITED TO FIIST 144 EJITIANTS

~ Ulllf! ENER(;[NCV

St.

464
Pick"

. MAIL TO: GAWPOUS SHII. CWI
1'.0. lOX 12, OAWPOUS, OHIO

Woodland Centers, Inc.

J()O M11in

top Angels

--------------------------------1111'11 RE - $40
.

Once in a while , something happens
'
.
that is difficult for us to cope with such
as: the loss of a loved one, divorce,
illness, a family, or fi'nancial crisis or
work-related stress.
Counseling can provide positive input,
and help us to sort our. options and
de·v elop a plan of action toward a more
favorable outcome.

jACKSON COUNTY

Daily Number

s••

"I"" Finaneing!

Vim"11 Pii·t:
( 1ullipt./i• . OH.-446 H(m

Indians

'
•

••n

See Harland
Wood, Jim
Coehran, DoD
Carter or Greg
Smith for On the

~1.2.

Ohio Lottery

FRIDAY, SEPTEJIIEI 2, 6:00 P.M.
. ..eCOOI·OUT
THE ftAM DRAWING
•COJ111STS
•AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTUliEI 3, 8:00A.M.
•GOLF &amp; can
•PilUS FOR SIX.TUMS
•lAG TAG
•DIINEI/FUN liGHT AT
•FOOD &amp; IEFBSIIMENTS
7:00
CLUI

Employee Counseling
Service

c, t /U.I! I t0l!N1"Y

,

•.

------ ·-;--·-..-M--.---. -------------------~----IF--~-.....:..--·--·•

-- ·-.---..- --·---·· -

--\/·-----,-.-~

State, Municipal and County
Employees.
The union voted last Tuesday
evening to strike and the 10-day
intent to strike notice was hand
delivered by Bolin on Thursday
to the office of Ml chael Swisher,
Meigs DHS director. The State
Employment Relations Board in
Columbus has also acknowledged receipt of the Intent to
strike notice from Meigs DHS.
Although the strike Is sched.uled to begin Aug. 1, Bolin said
the union would prefer to continue negotiating In the Interim,
With the hope that the strike
could be averted. "We ithe
union) feel we've been fair and
reasonable in our requests,"
Bolin said, Including both economic and non-economic issues .
Bolin said that Meigs County
DHS Is one of very few depart·
ments In the state which bas not
had a pay raise since 1984 when
county DHS offices left the state
pay system when the state
legislature deemed county DHS
offices as self-governing units.
"And even though the Meigs
employees still received their
step raises according to the state
·pay scale since 1984, those step
raises were just a small percentage lncreasa," Bolin said. "And
over 50 perc,nt of Meigs DHS
employees are already in their
last step," he added.
Bolin pointed out that county
DHS offices operate on "ceilIngs." He said that county offices
submit their annual budget proposals to the state DHS for
approval, and as long as the
county oHices operate "within
their allowable ceilings," their
operatin1 monies are reimbursed bY the state.
To receive the state funding,
each countY must 'l'llatcb a
percentage of the budget with
local monies. Me!p County's
DHS Ia currently over a $15
mffilon operation with Meigs

----:-------

County's share at approximately
$53,400, according to figures
from Michael Swisher.
Bolin, who worked with the
Washington County Department
of Human Services collective
bargaining unit on their last two
contracts, said that Wa~h!ngton
County received In their first
two-year contract, a$.32per hour
raise the first year and a $.25 per
hour raise the second year.
During their second contract,
Washington County's DHS
budget was tighter, Bolin said,
and union members agreed to a
wage freeze, pending reopening
of the contract once the department's new yearly budget 1'\as
approved by the state.
However, Bolin said, Washington County was one of several
counties In this region to receive
extra money from the state. The
extra monies, according to Bolin,
were derived from montes returned to the state from counties
which did not spend their entire
annual allotment of funds, or
ceilings. Vinton and Meigs Counties also received additional
state monies from !his same
.source. But the extra money was
received, Washington and Vinton
Counties both gave bonuses to
their DHS employees. Bolin said
he was told bY SWisher thai the
extra money to Meigs DHS was
used to purchase a telephone
system.
As far as the argument from
management that Meigs QHS
employees must be kept In line
with the salaries of Mefis court·
house empio3'ees, Bolln said this
Is like "comparing apples to
oranps." He said that DHS
employees must be compared to
other DHS emplOyees In the
state, not to courthouse emplOyees In the county.
Based upon a computer print
out from the state DHS, Meigs
County DHS wu ranked "12th In
the state In 1986 for case
worklOad," Bolin said.
~---- ~-

qu!rlng literally tens or thousands of workers and their
families to be uprooted, It might
be different. But we really don't
have such an emergency."
Dowd referred to a revised
clean air proposal announced
July 13 by Sen. George Mitchell
of Maine who said 26 other U.S.
Senators, mainly from states In
the Northeast, supported lt.
"The real Irony here Is the
scientists are saying 'the lakes
and streams of the Nortbeast
have reached a steady state and
are not expected todeteriora te In
the future as a result of the
present level of emissions,"
Dowd said.
He said AEP studies show the
revised Mitchell proposal W()Uid
resurr In 20-25 percent electric
rate increases for many Industrial plants which would greatly
impair their ability to compete In
world markets.
The revised Mitchell proposal
may even be more costly to
business and industry than his
Continued on page 10

Bush and Dukakis
busy campa1gnmg
• •

United Preas International
"This bas been a week we'll
Democratic presidential nominever forget ," Dukakts told
nee Michael Dukakls ended an reporters Sunday in St. Louis.
Invigorated post-convention · Meanwhile in Albuquer&lt;jue,
campaign swing by calling on N.M., Bush addressed the Navoters to join him in mailing his tional Federation of Business
dream for America come true.
and Professional Women Clubs
As Duka kls completed his and proposed the creation of a $2
three-day, five- state trip Sunday, billlon refundable tax credit &lt;&gt;1up
the Massachusetts governor's to $1,000 per child under age 4 "to
maIn opponent this fall, Vice recognize the increased costs of
President George Bush, spent famllles with children." The tax
the weekend crisscrossing the credit for low-Income famVies
country to rally support before would phase out as ramUies'
next month's Republican Na- Incomes rise.
tional Convention In New
Bush also suggested that em. players voluntarily offercert.atn:
Orlea~s.
Basking In his triumph at the benefits to meet the needs of
national convention that nom!· working parents.
nated him, Dukakis traveled to
"I would encourage employerbig and small towns during the sponsored child care, flexible
weekend, selling his proposal for work schedules and benefit plans
a partnership with Democrats to which allow workers to ch()()se
wln the presidency in Npvember.
Continued on page 10

Severe storms
hit parts of Ohio
By DAVID HARDING
United Preas lateraatlonal
Weekend thunderstorms
caused flooding around Ohio and
left farm crops looking like
they'd "been through a
shredder."
Storms, including a severe one
that produced hall 1 Inch In
diameter from Toledo to Fremont, dotted the entire state
Saturday evenlnJ. North-central
Ohio was pelted With stones that
were smaller but much more
numerous.
Many of the thunderstorms In
the north-central portion of the
state also contained heavy rain.
Two Inches fellln 15 minutes near
New London, and more than a11
Inch was reported to the National
Weather Service tn· numerous
other locations.
Some of the heavy downpours
caused brief flooding of streets
and drainage systems.
A alarm In the New London
area of Huron County contained
small hall that plied up3-4inches
deep In Fltchvllle, severely damaging com and soybean crops.
''There were banka like snow
drlftsofbailthestzeofmarbles"
said ·Huron County Sheriffs
Deputy Randy Sommers, who
was In his personal automobile
.

.

.

.. ···--·-··--·-····· ·--· .. w -· .... ·-··-· ·-'

on the way to a friend 's birthday
party when he drove into the
storm.
"It totally destroyed a couple
. of fields and crops and wiped out
a vegetable farm," be satd. "It
was really something to see In the
middle of July."
Sommers said he stopped at a
vegetable farm and sawthat.hail
stones had "gone right through
green tomatoes Uke bullets."
"If a man had been outthere.lt
would have taken his hide right ·
off," he said. "Anything that
looked like foliage was just
chewed up like It had been
through a shl'f!dder."
ln other areas of the 'state,
Saturday evening's thundersiOrms were much less severe
and.more widespread.
-Storms were scattered
throughout the eastern third of
Ohio Sunday afternoon but had
ended by evening.
Arotuld the NationRain cooled the sweltering
East and treated New England to
a taste of spring today, but the
West braced for yet another
onslaught of wildfires sparked by
heat and dry lightning storms.
The weekend rains dropped
Continued pn page 10

---- .,,-

�•

..
•

Comment
..

The Daily Sentinel

Controversy stJJTOunds parks celebration·
WASHINGTON- There Is no
lovl' lost bl'tween Interior Secretary Donald Hodel and his
underling, National Park Service
Director William Penn Mott Jr ..
Now, Hodel has lnltlatl'd wha t
appears to be a politically
motivated. lnvl'stlgation of Mott
1
and his special assistant; Loren
Fraser, because they are helping
a private committee pr omote a
celebration of the great outdoors.

~~ r"T"'-'L-...,..,,...,._c:~,....
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
PAT WHH'EJIEAD
Aut.laot Publlaber/CoolroUer

BOB HOEFlJCH
General Manager

In the tradition of Reagan

appointees to the top Interior job,
Hodel Is pro-development. Molt
Is a conservationist with a career
In parks protection spanning
more Ihan half a century.
The current tiff between the
two centers on the "National
Celebration of the Outdoors."
Interior Department corri'Spon·
dence we have obtalnl'd Indicates
that the department's Inspector
generalis Investigating the lnvol·
vement of Mott and Fraser.
Molt . Is on the organizing

A MEMBER of Tile United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AsBO!'Iatton and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They abould be leu than 300 words
-IOftl. All letters are subj ect to editing and must be 1l.gned wUh na me, address and
telephone Dumber. No unslrned. leuen wUI be publlshed. Letters should be In
pod taste, •ddreulng issues, not persooaiiUes.
.

Was this trip
really necessary?
ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

UPI Senior Editor
ATLANTA- As the Democrats left Atlanta after nominating their
1988 presklentlal candidate, many must have bl'en asking, "Was this
trip· really necesary?"
. The question does not Imply unhappiness with the host city. Atlanta
put on a pretty good convention, given Its resources and the
requirements of the politicians and the media.
The question Is whether everybody has lost sight of the basic
purposes of national political conventions.
This business all started 155 years ago when a couple of fledgling
political parties sent fewer than 200 delegates each to Baltimore to
nominate candidates and, almost coincidentally, to express their
views on current Issues. How many reporters WE're on hand Is lost to
history.
Last week, 5,332 Democratic delegates and alternates and about
tbree times that number of news people went through the modern
version of that ritual of democracy In Atlanta.
But If tbe form was similar, the substance was vastly different In
1833, the Anti-Masons and the National" Republicans really had
candidates to choose and policies to state at their little conventions.
In 1988, the Democrats In Atlanta, and next month the Republicans
In New Orleans, realty have nothing to decide. Michael Dukakls won
the Democratic presidential nomination In early June and George
· Bush wrapped up the GOP nomination earner In the spring.
~'urthermore , the Democratic platform was substantially
compleie weeks before the delegates ever arrlvl'd In Atlanta, and It Is
a good guess that there will be little or no change In the document that
Republican leaders bring to New Orleans.
And If It realty makes any difference on the outcome of the election,
Dukakls announced his choice of Lloyd Bentsen a week before the
Democratic convention. Bush may do thl' same before the GOP ,
conclave.
But the shows go on. The politicians publicly predict great matters
'will bl' decldl'd at the conventions, but they actually view them as
great showcases to display their n!'w candidates and as wonderful
opportunities to damn the opposition before national audiences.
The media, bless our hearts, go along with this charade In the faint
hope that the conventions, which are run according to minute-by minute scripts, will produce some surprises, or at the minimum,
some spontaneity. What we get Is 10 dull speeches and stagl'd events
.
.for every tidbit of excitement, eloquence or honest emotion.
The Atlanta convention made the real situation clear when the
delegates found themselves seated In an arena that Is perfectly
d~lgnl'd tor watching basketball or hockey and their national
chairman declarl'd the place had been laid out to be a television
siudlo.
I have bl'en to 12 conventions, Including some that were truly
I'Xcltlng, but the honest truth Is that we have reached the point now
where the delegates could mall their votes and ld!'as for the platform
to the party hl'dquarters and spend the convention week trylngout!or
Wheel of Fortune.
:With convention hotel rooms pushing $200 a night and cold meat
sandwiches fetching $3 or more, that way they might at least break
even.

letters to the editor
Reader responds to letter
•
' This letter Is being written In
response to a letter that was In
the papl'r last night, July 20th.
Evidently, one of the coaches of
lhe Meigs-Mason Girls League
doesn't know what has been done
to the Dusters Junior Girls Team
Ibis year. They all have trophll's
from the Meigs-Mason Girls
League from the years 1986 and
1987. I give Mr. Wiggins crl'dlt as
he's been a coach and stayed with
his team through thick and thin,
·and I'm sure he'd not have let any
of lhl'm be trl!ated the way our
team has been this year. I did not
say that the Meigs-Mason Girls
League did an Injustice to the
Dusters. My complaint was with
the way the tournament was held
right here In our own town and
the Dusters were not allowed ln.
S.everal of the parents of
members of thl' Dusters team
talked to the president of the
league here In Middleport, wha·
tever It Is being calll'd, and also a
vice president who apparently Is
oyer all the leagues In this area.
We as parents werl' told that the
IIi tournament at the end of our
season (which enl!ed June 28),
the Dusters should have allowed
to partlcupale since they were
members of a leaghe that they

had played In all season.
I did not m!'an to Imply that the
damage and hurt done to the
Dusters was, In fact, done by thl'
Meigs-Mason Girls League. We
knew that the coach of thl'
Dusters dropped out of that
league. I don't think any of the
parents and probably a lot of the
girls, don't. even know under
what league they were P.laylng.
There are never any write-ups In
the paper about this team. It's as
If the Jr. Girls League and their
games aren' I Important enough
to put In the paper. But, nevertheless, It's all water undl'r the
bridge now, as the hurt has
already been doni' to the Dusters.
We've heard several reasons
~hy the Dusters were not al·
Iowl'd . to participate In this
tournament. And, so, Mr. Wiggins, since none of the parl'nts
were given much Information as
to what league we were playing
In, even tbough we do know. why
we weren ' t allowed In the Jr.
League Tournament, maybe you
can furnish us with the rest of the
Information as to what the name
of our own league was. ·
A Duster parent,
Mrs. Linda Hawley,
659 Ollver St.
Middleport, Ohio

Trouble in Paradise?
"Js there trouble In Paradise?"
I_was very shockl'd to read the
report of the last Meigs Local
Board meet Ing. It would seem as
It the "Bobbsle Twins" are split.

Does this mean thattheup&lt;:om·
lng votes wm go 4 to 11nstead of
the historical 3-2 ?
R.E . Freed

Today in history
Today Is Monday, July 25, the 207th day ofl988 with 15~ to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its !uU phase. ·
The morning stan are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening star Ia Saturn.
TIIOie born on this date ar~ under the siiUI of Leo.

didn't take to heart the recom·
mendatlons of a presidential
committee on outdoor recrea·
tlon. '
Sources close to the probe said
Hodel appears to be on a !lshlng
expl'dltlon. No allegations or
charges have been made.
The only clue about the subject
of the Investigation Is contained
In a memo sent May 10 from the
Interior Department legal office
to Molt and Fraser advising
them to stop work with the
celebration committee until the
Investigation Is completl'd. The
memo also suggestl'd tllat Molt
1 and Fraser get themselves a
lawyer.
Our reporter, Dawn Larsen,
' talked to half a dozen park and
recreation leaders who are
ba!fil'd 1&gt;¥ tile probe IIJld see
nothing Illegal or unethical about
, Mott' s or Fraser's activities. One
said he· thought Hodel was
·"trying to nail Fraser tor someth,lng, Qd embarrass Mott along
the way bl'cause they obviously
can't unload him." The 79-yearold Mott has close ties to Reagan
from the time that he served as
'd irector of California .State
Parks and Recreation under
then-Governor Reagan.
Another park and recreation
leader suggested that Hod!'I may'
be trying to hamper the celbra·
tlon because It needs private
donations, and he has a pet
project competing for the same
money.
"Take Pride In America" Is
Hodel's anti-litter campaign,
which urges tourists to take care
of federal parks. Critics have
dlsmlssl'd, It as public relations.

DAVIS HURT AGAIN
Claclllllll&amp;l centerfielder Erkl Davis Is attended by trainer Larry
Starr after being hit with a Pascual Perez pllch In

crlbe their own political views as
liberal. Even among reglsterl'd
Democrats nationwide, the fig·
ure only rises to 27 percl'nt.
The delegates to the Atlanta
convention, however, are something else again. Unpopular as
the term "liberal" Is, fully 39
percent of the delegates apply It
to themselves. And whl'n It
comes to specific Issues, liberal·
Ism fares even better. SlxtySI'Ven percent of questlonl'd
delegates, for example, told The
Times that they thought a tax
Increase would be necessary In
the next four years (though 65
percent agreed with Dukakls
that the party's platform should
not mention this! ) .
Democratic strategists, In acknowledging their need to repat·
rlate as many former Democrats
as possible, have persuaded the
media to call those lost sheep
"Reagan Democrats. " 111, doing
so, the Democratic l!'aders and
the media may be kidding
themselves. Alternatively, they
may be kidding us. In either case,
the term "Reagan Democrats"
Is seriously misleading.

Thai Is because It Implies that
the voters the Democratic Party
Is wooing so strenuously were
loyal Democrats until Ronald
Reagan came along. If so, their
defection might. be attributed
merely to Reagan' s• formidable
personal charm, or to the appeal
of his allegedly "simplistic"
solutions for pressing national
problems, and It would be reasonable to hope that they might
come·home once Reagan's name
was no longer on the ballot.
But the truth Is that the vast
majority of these so-calll'd "Reagan Democrats" have been off
the Democratic reservation
since the mid 196os. It was they
who, by casting their votes for
Nixon or Wallace In 1968, left the
Democratic candidate, Hubert
Humphrey, with just 43 percent
of the total. And It was these
same "Reagan Democrats" who
In 1972 turned their backs on the
Democratic Party In such
numbers that George McGovern
wound up with only one state
(Dukakls's Massachusetts) and
a mere 38 percentofthevotesslightly sm.a ller than Barry Gold·

. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
pennant chances of the Clncln·
nat! Re~ are fading fast.
After losing three out of four to
the Montreal Expos at Riverfront Stadium, the Reds find
themselves 10 \(, games behl11d
the pace-setting Los Angl'les
Dodgl'rs In the National League
West.
Sunday, Cincinnati let a 3-0
lead sUp away In losing to the
Expos, 5·3, d!'splle · a great
pitching effort by rookie Jack
Armstrong. Armstrong, who was
llfU:d afle.l' walking the leadoff
batter In the seventh Inning,
Gralg Nettles, limited Montreal
to two hits In six Innings while
striking out l'lght and walking
just one.
·
"Armstrong · pltchl'd a Ire·
mendous game," said Reds Man·
ager Pete Rose, "but I thought
he was losing It In the sixth and
seventh. He was only getting his
fa st ball over, not his off-speed
stuff, and he was losing the
velocity on his fast ball.
"Then, when hewalkl'dNettles
'on four pitches, I knew I had a
rested buUpen and decided to go
with Dibble. And II. didn't work."
It took exactly five pitches by
Dibble to turn the game around

water's pl'rcentage In 1964.
In short, most " Reagan Demo- .
crats" haven't voted Democratic
as a regular proposition In nearly '
a quarter of a century. (Though It
Is true that just enough of them
supported that born-again South·
ern Baptist, Jimmy Carter, to
help him eke out a razor-thin ·r
victory over the lackluster Ge·
raid Ford In the post-WatergatE'
yea~ 1976.)
The correct term lor this 1
crucial swing block In modern
American politics Is "social
conservatives." They don't
share the traditional R.epubll·
cans' concern over balanced
budgets or lower taxes ..But they
are convinced that It was the
liberals who presided over and
encourage the whole tide of
disintegrative permissiveness
that has swept. over our country, ·'
threatening the foundations of
the family Itself- and much else
besides.
They wm vote Democratic
again only when these Issues
cease 10 preoccupy them - or
when they can be persuaded that.
lhe Democratic Party has

New small business loan programs· . topic ;•
Small businesses are the backbone of the American economy.
A record 24,671 new businesses
were created by Ohio entrepreneurs In 1986. In the future, eight
out of every ten jobs will be
created In small businesses. The
State of Ohio has numerous
programs to assist small busl·
nesses, such as the One-Slop
Business Permit Center that
coordinates and expedites the
necessary permits for the startup and expansion of businesses
an dprovldes assistance In preparing the necessary forms. The
Ohio Small Business Development Center brings local
Chambers of Commerce, educational Institutions, the Depart·
me nt of Development, and the U.
S. Small Business Admlnlstra·
tlon together to provide counsel·
lng and training seminars to Ohio
entrepreneurs. The Ohio Depart·
ment of Development has estab·
llshed two new loan programs
that reinforce the state's com·
mltment to helping small bus!·
nesses succeed In Ohio - The
Ohio Enterprise Bond Fund and
the Ohio Mini-Loan Program.
The Ohio ·Enterprise Bond
Fund Is a new financing program
tor commercial, Industrial, and
manufacturing projects. It Is the
largest program of Its ktnd In the
country. The new bond fund,
backed by repayments to the
liquor bond fund, wOI provide
loans ranging !rom S500,000to$15
million to small· aitd mediumsize businesses tor the financing
of Jlxed assets. The fund can
provide up to 90% of a project' s
cost.
Such long-term, flxl'd rate
financing tor real estate and
equlpmenl projects Is generally
only available to firms which are
publicly traded. Small· and
medium-size companies often

....

~

Sen. Jan M. Long

cannot get access to the national 25 employees. Loans wUI \&gt;e lor
capital markets because they projects costing less than
establishes Ohio as a leader In
cannot obtain a bond credit $100,000, which are usually too
financing commercial and Indussmall
to
qualify
for
other
loan
rating. The Ohio Enterprise
trial 'projects. The Mini-Loan
Bond Fund 'Will be a means for programs. The minimum. 1011n
program shows our commitment
these companies to receive amount Is $10,000. LoanS'must
t&lt;; the, ~r&gt;llllesl of companies.
crl'dlt enhancement, giving them . provide some economic ben!1fit
Companies Interested In either
to the company, for Instance by
access .to capital markets.
program can contact the Ohio
Eligibility for these .loans will generating additional sales,
Departll1~!lt of Development at
creating a greater market share,
be based on public purpose;
(614) 446:5420. Also, feel free to
projects must show job creation maintaining , existing jobs, or
contact my office by writing
.
or retention. Elfglble projects creatln,g additional jobs.
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
These new programs .reflect
Include, but are not llmltl'd to
minority- and women-owned bu· Ohio's faith In the future of small· - Ohio ~nate, Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio, 43266, or call (614)
slnesses, critical state buyouts, and medium-size businesses.
466-8156.
Industrial job creation/ retention The Ohio Enterprise Bond Fund
projects, corporate headquar·
ters, retail development, joint
ventures, and public lmprov!'ment projects related to eco·
nomic development.
The other new program Is a
pilot project made possible by
one million dollars allocated by
the General Assembly . The Ohio
Mini-Loan Program Is designed
to help very small businesses
tjlat typically cannot be assisted
with existing state and federal
programs. At least halt of the
money must go to women· and
minority-owned businesses. The
pilot project wUI be available In
three target areas of the state
that are economically troubll'd.
One area Is the Lawrence and
Scioto County region In Southeast
Ohio.
A major objective of the
Min-Loan Program Is to help'-.
clients establish and build bank·
lng relationships. the program
will provide an Incentive tor Ohio
lenders to make small loans to
these firms by guaranteeing 45%
:. • &lt;;)I·# &amp;-.. -·, 11..
of the bank's loan amount. The
c . . .,....._tooc,
small bus!Jiess wUI obtain lowInterest loans for growth capital
and will establish a track record
ITEM: OUR NATIONAL PARKS
with their local bank.
ARE OVERCROWDED
Businesses eligible tor lhls
program can have no more than

·Berry's World

v

the seeoad IBnlllg of play here Sunday . Davia look
first b - and scored a run durlnglhe Inning but
later left the game. Montreal won, 5-3. (UPI)

Reds pennant chances fading fast

Those 'Reagan Demoerats'___w_a_lia_m_R_us_he_r
From Its outset, the forces that
dominate the Democratic Na·
Ilona! Convention In Atlanta have
had one central slrateglc aim: to
reclaim, as far as humanly
possible, the support of those
components of the old Roosevelt
coalition that have strayed from
the Democratic fold - Sou·
therners, Catholics, uethntc" voters In general, and Western
whites In the lower economic
brackets.
That's what was behind Ml·
chael Dukakls' s choice of a very
conservative Democratic sena·
tor from Texas -Lloyd Bentsen
- 'a s his running mate. That's
why Dukakls was willing to risk
angering Jesse Jackson, who Is
anathema to most of the above
groups. And that Is why It has
been absolutely Impossible lo get
either Dukakls or his ranking
campaign officials to concede
that Dukakls Is a liberal, or that
his pollcles are llberal pollcles.
Recent polls by The New York
Times demonstrate how vllallt Is
for the Dl'mocrats to keep away
from the word "llberal." Just 20
percent of American adults des·

By DAVE FREDERJJK
UPI Sporlll Wrller
·While his San Francisco Giants
and the si. Louis Cardinals were
busy throwing !Is Is at each other,
39-year old wonder Rick Reuschel was throwing nine score·
less Innings.
R.euschel pltchl'd the Giants to
a 5.() victory Sunday In a game
marred by two bench-clearing
brawls. The fighting oversha·
dowed the first shutout and
complete game of the season for
Reuschel , 13-5, who had 12
complete gamE'S last year. He
allowed seven hits.
'1'm getting too old for com·
plete games, but I'll take It,"
Reuschel. said. "The key Is that
they were hitting balls at people
today. You need that when you
don' t strike out anyone."
Will Clark's hard slide In an
attempt to break up a double play
at second base started the first
Incident. Clark, who gave the
Giants a 5.0 lead with his
flllh-lnnlng, three-run homer,
singled In the eighth and slid Into
second basemari Jose Oquendo.
"Oquendo kneed me and said,
'What are you doing?,' while I
was still on the ground," Clark
said. "When I got up he slappl'd
me on the head."
Clark went alter Oquendo and
Cardinal shortstop Ozzle Smith
jumpl'd Clark and the benches
emptied.
"Ozzle took three good swings
at me and missed all threl'
times,'' Clark said with a grin.
Clark and Oquendo were
ejected, and two pitches later, St.
Louis reliever Scott Terry joined
them for throwing close to Mike
Aldrete, causing the benches to
empty again.

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
committee for the celebration
with people ,such as newsman
Walter Cronkite and Garden
Club of America President Jane
Ward - hardly a group of
subversives.
But the organization Is a minor
embarrassment to the Reagan
administration. Conservation·
lsts and parKs advocates organ·
lzed the outdoor celebration
privately after theadmlnstratlon

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Giants shut out C~ds; fight
mars tilt; Dodgers win again

Page 2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio
Monday, July, 2&amp;, 1988

1

111 Couri Slreel
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTs OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

Poma-oy- Middleport, Ohio

a Iter he Inherited a 3-11ead from this season.
Armstrong. Ruble Brooks ham''I wasn't at all surprised when
mered Ills second toss about450 Rose took me out after I walked
feet over the screen In right Nettles," Armstrong said . "I
center to tleltat 3-3, Tim Wallach don't second-guess him, because
followed with a ringing double to he knew I was tiring after losing
left center ;md Tom Foley a little off my fastball . There was
singled to right, Wallach stop- no way I should have walkl'd
ping at third.
Nettles after striking him out
That was all for Dibble, side- twice. It was a big mistake on my
arming Frank Williams replac- part."
Pascual Perez, who received
Ing hlm on the mound. Williams
got Nelson Santovenla on a short credit for his seventh victory
fly to · center, Wallach holding against four losses with six
third, and lhen struck out pinch Innings of three-run, three-hit
hitter Andres Galarraga , bring- · pitching, talked about the Reds'
Ing another pinch batter, Wal· third Inning, when they scored all
of their runs on just one hi~.
lace Johnson, to the plate.'
" I knew the squeeze was one,"
Johnson smashed a ball back lo
Williams that glanced off his he noted of the final r~n of the
glove for a
single, Wallach Inning .. when , Ni ck Esasky was
scoring the eventual winning credited with a st!'al of home. " I
saw the runner break at third and
run.
"I s hould have had that ball," tried to throw high and Inside, but
said Williams. " lt hll In the the ball jumped too soon.".
As the ball sidled · to the
webbing of m y glove a nd
bounced out. And II I hadn' t bac ks lop, Esasky rompl'd In with
gotten my glove on it, (Ron) the run that made it 3·0.
Earlll'r In the lhlrd, Eric Davis
Oester would have gottl'n to lt ."
took a Perl'z sinker In the groin
But the damagE' had been done
and a · terrific pitching perfo r- t ha t felled him and 11'11 him
mance by Armstrong wa s
rolling in Intense pain. He stayed
wasted, the Reds settling for a 3-3 In the game, though , took second
spilt on the horn!'stand. Thl'y now on the first of two Perez balks and
are just .5()()at 24-241n Rlv!'rfront scored on P a ul O'Neill' s single.

Scoreboard ...

'

..Chleqo a,. s.. Dleaez
'

Majol'!l

. .

l.U""~Mplesl,

• AMERICAN LEAGUE ,_ .,,,, ' ·~··
Eu t
'~·'·'"•• .,.,

~~ ~ P;~inlf

'
;

""'"'"

:

Mllwaulir.e
CII!'Weland

•

Toronto
Balltmore

N_.Yorll
BM.Ion

•
',
;

55
54
II
48

.. 5I .ttl 8
31 li .JII tS
;J.•.! .'.J
- ... - 4 -~ __ ,.,

II 310 ... ;o ·::·

sa

Mluuata

41
f4
.Q
Jt

Chl&lt;:a~o

'

IS. ,

.11,1\J

Bosto• II , Cllii ~JO S
Oall.land4, Ddrolt I

Ball !mOre 11, Ml•nes• !1KMuN City I , New Yt~rk5

''

••
•'
•

Callfonh I, Oevel"*' 4L

.....,.• ae.• •

ao.... :s. Olleap '

Mla-..a&amp;al. llallknoft I
New York II, Kan•• CICJ' 8
Te!~ u 1. Mll,...kee 4
Clt¥e1Ud I, rallfor•• ~
Oal!lud I, Dflf'CIII I

. . . . . .. Gunet
Mltwu let
pen 1-11-' New Yoril:
( Can~lartal .C ), l : at p.m .
To..... Ciey •11 .. lll•~~e~oU (Lea•
.a ) , A: I$ • . m.
SeiiiiUe (Moore t-Il ) IIO.I c• (Rea !II
f.1),8:11p.m .
IIMion CCitmet~llli- IIM Teut !HoiCila
t-11), !I:Q p.lll.
Oaldutl C8tewart 11-tl at Callorllla
! McCMIIIIIH). ll: st • .m.
'heedlllf'l G•rnes
Mll..,...,_e ali New Yort. •IPI

jiB

''•

Baltborelltanel .... •lillrl
KM• CltJ II Del nit. •IPI

•

OUIIDcl al Calllor_.a. aiJIII

'

•
•

•
I

'•
'
'

''•

.

'
\
~
J

'

....... ,..........

Toi'OII.- 11 IIIIa--. .. ....
hii&amp;Ue .. Clllup, .. ....

NATIONAL U:Ml t.IE

Eul
New l'orll

nw.ra•

........
......
.............
Moarell

t..u.... .....

WLPd. GB
.. • .Ill 11 41

.1n z

M 41' .JU !I
I I . All II
U If .ta IJ
.tt U
II

.t.

11' • •
• . . . . . . . . . Jill
. . . Jll 1'
Cl.ta.al
41' N .Ill •'li
I • .....
G II ... lll,i
.tau..
M 11 .1M a

.......a.e.

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

....irull, a ........
S..FrMdleof,ILLnMI

Ailllllla I , Hew Y•rlll

,...

"&gt;ido I

.&lt;:lHI

T1'8118actions

Texas 7, Mil.,.~ -i
TorotioS,h•tueZ

,... . . . 0 .. 8e • • •

}

n., .....

1\ Y. t.~.rul/;

5t ,,lfl
.418 ···
~
..
I:J,..-'
Je .3tH fll~

Satld'IIIQ' ' Bitetull·s

'

·-~·

,.~'\ssr ·' l ll.

• •e
~
• A3-

Kaa. . CIC J
(.:aiUorNa
T""'
~

u:n 1
t&amp; .Ill rT"', ........... "-1
U .HS ,....J...II. . ,A
47 .1. ~~ ~
11,... .•11·, 1\ 1r11 ,
4

WNt

OUiand

.....

1

Pllhhllll l
Bo•!loa 'I, PhlladelpNa I
SU.tay 'a R8•11h
-Au..llta 4, New York t
~fo M piN l, Pll Uri:IU II h I
Monlrul5, anct••U 3
Su f'undate 5, 81. Louis 0
SUI Dlep i, Oll cqo 1
Mllladelplllal, HoultOn 4
'
•
MondiQ ' a Gam"
New Yorll tDarUn~ 10-fil ai Phlla·
d411ailia (Ca rman U),l: Sip.m.
l"\U-~11· {W'.. t 11-4) a&amp; fit. , . . .
(Tudor f.J)_~ 1: IS p.m .
Lo• Aill!"et ( Valenauel ~ t--11 ae San
FTan~l«• (Dow• 1·8),18 :15 p.m.
TtleedQ'a Gamea
C1nclallltllll AIIMt&amp;a, :t, twt·• lpt
New l'orhiPIIIIadelphla.ntp.
lblcqo at Moalre ... nlaft
PKhhrthi HM. lAW, alahl
Bo•aloa at Su Dle80o niJIII
Loa Allf!lea at s .. Frandlc•. niat-1

I

Sports briefs

I

Cycling
Jeanni e Longo won th e
women's Tour de Franc.e lor the
second consecutive y!'ar , defeat·
lng two-time winne r Marla Can·
Ins of Italy by 1: 20. Longo
completed the 12 stages of the
525-mlle race In 22:41:38. Canlns,
who had won the event In 1985·86,
was the only woman within 13
minutes of Longo. Vlrglnle La·
!argue of F r ance won the final
stage, a 40·mlle run fr om Cha·
ville to Paris.
Golf ·
Britain 's Mark Mouland, who
broke both legs In a head-on car
crash two years ago, scored a
one-stroke victory over Des
Smyth of Ireland In the $250,1100
Dutch Open at Hllversum . .. .
vermont 's Bob Lendzlon
clinched the deciding point
against Britain as the United
States retained the Johnny
, Walker PGA Cup at The Belfry
Club at Sutlon Coldfleld ,
England.

"At some politt, somebody's
got to take the .lnltlatlve," said
Smith, sporting a swollen and cut
lip from a Candy Maldonado

punch. " You can' t let people
walk all over you."
Oquendo said he wouldn't have
mind I'd Clar k's aggressiveness I!
he had been trying to throw the
ball.
" I was just trying to get out of
the way," he said. " I just got
mad. If he keeps sliding like that,
he's going to have trouble with a
lot of people."
Addl'd Clark: "lt's just good
hard baseball. That's how I was
raised, to give 110 percent. "
Elsewhere, Atlanta downed
NI'W York 4-2; Los Angeles edgl'd
Pittsburgh 2-1; Monlreal defeated Cincinnati 5-3; San Diego
nlppl'd Chicago 2-1 and Phlladel·
phla whipped Hou ston 6-4.
In the American League, It
was: Boston 3, Chicago 2; Minnesota 6, Baltimore 1; NewYork10,
Kansas Clty8; Oakland 1, Detroit
0; Texas 6, Milwaukee 4; Toronto
6, Seattle 0 and Cleveland 9,
California 2.
Bravi'S 4, Mels 2
At New York, Jim Morrison
drove In two runs and rookie
Ge rman Jimenez collected his
first major-league victory. JImenez , 1·3, limited the Mets to
four hits In five Innings and Paul
Assenmacher notched his third
save of the season. Sid Fernan·
dez fell to 5-8.
Dodgers 2, Pirates 1
At Pittsburgh, Sieve Sax went 3
for 4 and drove In both runs to
lead Los Angeles to Its third
straight triumph. Sax's third
single of the game with two out In
the seventh scored Dave Ander·
son and mad!' a winner out of
Shawn Hillegas, 3-2. Brian
Fis her droppl'd to 6·7.
Expos 5, Reds 3
At Cincinnati, Ruble Brooks
smackl'd a two-run home run and
pinch hitter Wallace Johnson
capped a three-run seventh In·
nlng with an RBI single lo pacl'
Montreal. Pascual Perez, 7·4.

.•

allowed t hl'ee r uns on three hils
a nd T im Bur ke ear ned his ninth
save. Rob Dibble dropped to J.l .
Padre'l 2, Cuboo 1
At Chicago, Jimmy Jones and
Mark Davis combined on a
tlve-hltter and John Kruk homered to lead San Diego. J ones ,
7-8, walked orie and struck out
one over eight Innings and Davis
pitched the ninth lor hi s 17th
save. Rick SuJclltfe, 7-9, dr opped
his four th straight decisio n,
lasting eight Innings, allowing
five hits, walking three and
striking out four.
PhliUes &amp;, Alilros f
At Houston, Mike Schmidt hila
three-run homer In a lour-run
seventh Inning to help snap
Houston's six-game win streak.
Schmidt' s blast was the 540lh of
his career and the lOth of the
season. Kevin Gross, 10-6, al·
low!'d eight hits and surrendered
four runs over seven Innings and : •·
Steve Bedrosian pitched 1 2·3....
Innings tor his 19th save. Mlkl'
Scott dropped to 9-3.

....
.------------------------- ·:
The Daily Sentinel
( USPS 145-HJ)
A Dlvli!!ilon of Mullbnedla.

lnt·~

Publis h~ every afi Cf'n()(m, Monclay
through F riday, 111 Cou rt St . Po
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vall ey P ub - .. .J
lts hlng Company / Multimedia, Inc , , ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. ~'2-2156. Se
·
cond dass postage paid at Pl)mefmt,
OhiO.

Member: Un ited Press Int er na ti onal,
Inland Da lly Press Assoclallon and t he ~, ~
Ohio Ne ws paper Associat ion. NatiOnal
Advertising Repr esenta tive, Branha m
New spaper- Sales, 733 Thir d AVf'RUP, • '
•.!
New York , N('W York 10017.
POSTMASTF.R: Send address c-hangE'S
to The Dally Sentblel. 111 Coul1 St., · "
Rlmeroy, Ohio 457~ .
.

.....

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Moter Route

, .i
One Week ... ... ....... ..... :... ......... : .. $1.2:) . __ ,

One Month ........................... SS 45 ,

~

One Year ..... ..... ..... ... .............. $65.00
SINGLE COPY
"
PRICE
·,'1
Dally ...... .. ..... ...... ,.. ............ . ·25 Ce nts •• -{ ,

Mets honor Seaver

Subscribers not dcslr lng topay the c-a rrler may r emit In a dvance direct t o
T he Dllll y &amp;&gt;ntlneron a 3, 6 or l2 m ont h
bas is. Credtt will be gtven carrle1 e ach
week.
·

:
·~"''

Seaver still owns the Mets
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tom
·. '&gt;Seaver, who helpl'd lead the New one-season record for victories
• .,
York Mets to their first World . (25 In 1969) . complete games (21
No subscriptions by mail perm itted in '
Series championship, Sunday In 1971) and strikeouts (289 In
areas where born e {'BTI' Ier servl&lt;:e Is ~ · ~
1971).
available.
· ,
had his No. 41 retired.
The
6-1
rlghl·hander
tired
five
"lt has been a lovely 48 hours,''
".::':.;~.!':::.',
Seaver said Sunday morning one-hitters for the Mets and look
a
no-hitter
Into
the
ninth
on
three
13
Weeks
....
...
..........................
. sn.29
before the start of the "Tom
occasions
.
Seaver
threw
a
no26Weeks
..
..
...........
..
......
....
......
.
$34.0G
Seaver Day' ' ceremonies at Shea
52 weeks .. ....... ......................... $66.56
r for the Reds on June 16.
hitte
Stadium. "Today should be the
Outside M elp County
1978, shutting out the St. Louis
13 Weeks ......... .. .. .... .............. · $18.20.
Icing on thl' cake."
26 Weeks .. ... .. .... .. ........ ..... ........ S35.to
Seaver said he was mosl Cardinals 4-0. No Mets pitcher
5
. _ _.1.;::2:w:e:eks= ..:...:..:...:...:.. :...:...:..:·· .:.. :...:...:$6:7:.00=:. "
honored by having Iils numbl'r on ~h.!a:_s~e~ve~r~hu~r~l~ed~a~n~o-~h~l~lte~r:_
lhe Shea Stadium left-field wall
alongside those of Gil Hodges and
Cas!'y Slengel.
"If there Is anything exciting
about having No. 41 relirl'd, il's
having It next to No. 14 out
there,'' said Seaver, referring to
the number worn by Hodges, who
e ndl'd his playing career wllh the
Mets and later managed them. " I
learned how to be a professional
from Gil HOdges. Tha('s the
Importance of No. 14."
Seaver said Hodges was thl'
catalyst for lhe success of the
••
1969 World Series champions.
•
"We had a good group of young
players and we were solidified
when .Gil came along, " Seaver
said.
Seaver, 43, nearly returned to
Children up to age 1:J
the Mels last season but was not
now have the dtatKe to
satisfiEd with his performance In
nomt the owllocatH in
a tryout and decided to rl'llre. ·

,::!'::,'.

..

MIDDLEPORT

,

DAIRY QUEEN
ANNOUNCES

NAME THE OWL
CONTEST!

'!'he live time 20-game winner
and three-time National League
Cy Young award winner (1969,
1973 and 1975) recorded ·hls 300111
major-league victory when he
defeated the New York Yankees
for the Chicago White Sox on
Aug. 4, 1965.
"Winning my 300th gam!' Is the
most memorable moment from
my standpoint, " Seaver said.
Seaver said he had visualized
facing Dave Winfield days before
the game and had plannl'd to use
the Yankee outfielder's own
agresslveness against him.
"I had wanted to get him to a
3-2 count," said Seaver, who had
had a 4-1 lead' and was facing
Winfield with two out and men on
first and second. "I stepped off
the mound and looked at the
runner and Winfield struck out on
a changeup and I was out of the
Inning."

If HEA~ING is your problem- and you feel that
hearing aids are priced TOO HIGH for your
BUDGET - then please contact us at DILES
HEARING CENTER. We have many refe"al
sources for assistance and you may qualify
whether you are regularly employed or not. It is
our hope that NO ONE who can be helped should·
be deprived of batter hearing. Let us be your ad·
vocate.
CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-237·7716

frnnt of the stortl. Con·
test starts July 18th,
and ands august 14th.

•Grand prize: Win a 26
inch boys or girls 1 0
Speed Bike from Western
Auto of Middleport.
Just clip the entry coupon below and drop it off
at the Dairy Queen.
No purchase necessary
- Need not be present to
win.:

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

Owl's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Your Name __________
Address
.Phone No. _ __,..._ _ _Age _ _
Parent's Name ·___ _ _ _ _ __
Date _ _ _ _ __ _ Time___
• CLIP COUPON •

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

Daint

Queen

Middleport
Dairy Queen

DILES HEARING CENTER
326 W. Union St., Athans. Ohio 45701
(614) 594-3571
1-100-237-7716
We feature aids from:
HEARING TECHNOLOGY INC.

992·3322
700 NOITH SECOND

"'

IIIIDDlEPOIT, OHIO

,,

�·--

--- MondBy,Ju~.26.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

.,

1988

Swindell records
f:~t tritllllj)ll irt _

-- ..

about two months.

SWINDELL ENDS SLUMP - Cleveland pitcher Greg Swindell
raises his arms In relief after winning his first game since May 30.

....

Swindell gave up two runs, six hits to the Angels as the Indians won
the game 9-2 at Anaheim Sunday. (UP I)

Washington's Wilburn, Grant hold out
By United Press International
Two starters from the Wa shington Redskins Super Bowl
XXII championship team cornerback Barry Wilburn and
defensive tackle Darryl Grantbegan holdouts Sunday, when the
balance or the team's veterans
reported to training camp.
Also a bsent from Dicl&lt;inson
College at Carlisle, Pa.. was
former All-Pro defensive end
Dex ter Manley, who was "ex·
cused" from reporti ng by NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
while the league continues a
probe into Manley's suspected
drug abuse.
"Whenever guys who have
played for us aren' t here, we're
go ing to miss them," Coach Joe
.Gibbs said. "But there's another
side to this game and I don 't have
a nything to do with it. A guy has
to be happy with his contract. I
don't want him here if he's not
ready to go."

The team announced four
players had agreed to terms.
Sta rti ng middle linebacker Neal
Olkewicz agreed to a two-year
deal; s tarting outside linebacker
Monte Coleman agreed to a
two-year pact; reserve outside
·unebacker Mel Kaufl)'lan agreed
to a two-year contract; and
reserve defesive end Steve Ha·
milton agreed to a one-year
co ntract. No ter ms were
a nnounced.

Wilburn and Grant are veteran
free agents whose contracts
expired at the e nd of last sesson.
Wilburn, 24, entering his fourth
season, led the NFL with nine
interceptions In 12 games during
tha stTikl'-interupted 1987season.
Wil burn received $102,000, less
tlla n half the league median
s alary, las t seasf&gt;n.
Grant, 28, a six-year sta rter
entering his e ighth season, joins
fellow tack le Dave Butz to
spea rhead Washington's r un d!'lense. He received $265,000 last

season.
Rozelle took his action against
Manley after meeting with the
player for more than an hour at
league headquarters In New
York. Rozelle barred Manley
from reporting to training camp
while reviewing new Information
about the suspected drug use.
The commissioner, empowered
to fine , suspend or ban players
for drug use or other actions
deterlmental to the "Integrity"
of the league,lsexpected to make
a decision regarding Manley this
week.
At Plattsvllle, Wis, the Chicago
Bears announced the signing of
veteran linebacker Ron Rivera ,
reducing their number of un·
signed,players to t.wo.
. ,
Wide receiver Willie Gault and
quarterback Mike Tomczak rl'maln ·unsigned and far from an
agreement, according to Bears'
officials.
·'We've got to prepare the team
.the way it Is ," Coach Mike Dltka
said. "If they don' t (sign). I'm
pleased with the way the team
Is."
Rivera, a fifth-year pro out of
the University of California,
moves immediately Into his
starting linebacker spot on the
right side. He replaced Wilber
Marshall, who signed as a free
agent with the Washington
Redskins.
Otis Wilson was moved from
the right to the left side, Mar·
shall's former spot, with Rivera
taking Wilson's right side slot.
Wilson was moved to the left side
in pari because he Is left-handed .
AI Anderson, Ind, the Indiana·
poUs Colts, with the signing of
their top draft choice, Chris
Chandler, now have what Coach
Ron Meyer calls "four competent National Football League
quarterbacks" in Chandler,
Gary Hogeboom, Jack Tr udeau
and Mark Herrmann.
" I envision all four of the

Elliott moves within
3 points of Cup lead ,
LONGPOND.Pa.IUPI) -Bill
Elliott moved ·to within three
points of the Winston Cup ser ies
lead Sunday, when he beat a field
of 40 drivers in the $463,720 A.C .
Spark P lug 500 at Pocono Inter·
national ~peedway .
Elliott, who July 2 won the
Pepsi Firecracker 500 at Day·
tona Beach, Fla., won his second
straight race, by 8.2 seco nds over
Ken Schrader.
Except for one pit stop when he
momentarily lost the lead to
Darrell Waltrip on lap 180, Elliott
held the lead in his Ford
CO()rsMotorcraft stock car since .
lap 128.
·~It 's a good win for us," Elliott
said . " We haven't won here In
awhile. I thought the car was
running well all day long. I had a
go(KI feeling when we had a good
practice run (Saturday.)
Davey Allison finished third.
Gebff Bodine, who won theM Iller
High Life 500 at Pocono last
month, finished fourth, followed
by Waltrip and Morgan
Shepherd.
Richard Petty was right behind Elliott from lap 130tolap162
hut engine problems forced him
out of the race on the 163rd lap.
The victory for Elliott was his
third overall this year on the

NASCAR circuit and· the third
victory at Pocono for the veteran
driver. He won this event and the
Miller High Life 500 at Pocono In
1985.
The triumph drew Elliott
within three points of Rusty
Wallace, who leads In the' Win·
ston Cup point standings with
2,363 points. Dale Earnhardt is
third with 2,315 points. Elliott is
seeking his first Winston Cup
championship.
' 'From here on in, we still have
to work hard," he said. "We'll
have to do the best we can and
hope we're there at the end for
the Winston Cup."
The race also featured a red
flag from laps 94 to 105 to collect
debris and to repair the wall on
the first turn. Lake Speed and
Derrlke Cope were forced but of
the race In an accident that
involved six cars.
After the accident, the race
was halted for the first time since
1986, when rain brought out a red
flag at the Miller High Life 500
that year.
There were nine different
leaders In the race and six
caution flags covering 37 laps.
The race was run In four hours,
four minutes and 10 seconds, with
an average speed of 128.866 mph.

quarterbacks being on an NFL
roster after the final cutdown,"
Meyer said.
However, he dldn' t say all four
would be on the Colts roster.
Hogeboom has been the starter ,
since being acquired from Da-llas, but his playing time has been
severely limited because of InjurIes. Trudeau led the team In most
of Its games during the past two
seasons. Herrmann, a product of
nearby Carmel and a standout at
Purdue, was acquired as preswnably the No. 3 quarterback.
As for Chandler, rookie rarely ·
start.
Meyer said Chandler, who
signed what Is believed to be a ·
four-year, $900,000 deal over the
weekend, will see action In the
first pre-season game against
Tampa Bay Aug. 6.
General Manager Jim Irsey
called the pact "the best given to
any third-round pick."
The Colts signed one veteran
free agent and placed another on
waivers.

Indianapolis signed Harvey
Armstrong, a nose tackle who
has been with the team since
1986. The Colts also relinquished
all rights to seven-year defensive
back Ray Ellis, who joined the
team In April a!ld played for the
Cleveland Browns the past two
years.
Still unsigned are offensive
guard Ron Soil, wide receiver
Matt Bouza and kicker Dean
Blasuccl.
At Kirtland, Ohio, Michael Dean
Perry handled questions about
his very big brother much In the
same manner he did opponents
during drills in the Cleveland
Browns' first practice of tral nlng
camp.
Perry, a defensive end from
Clemson and the Browns'
second· round p~(&lt;. discussed the
weight problems of his brother,
defensive end William "Refrigerator" Perry of the Chicago
Bears.

Connors to battle
Gomez ·for crown
WASHINGTON (UP!) - AI·
though Jimmy Connors has the
chance to win his first tourna·
ment in four years today, the
holder of a record 105 singles
titles says he won't be upset If he
never wins another
championship.
" I guarantee you I won't blow
my brains out (If I lose) ," said
lopseed Connors, who faces No.3
Andres Gomez In the finals of the
$415,000 Sovran Bank Tennis
Classic at the new Washington
Tennis Center.
."Whatever happens, happens.
I've won all my titles- five U.S.
Opens, two Wlmbledons, one
Australian Open. If I don't win
another match, who cares? My
pressure days are over," said the
35-year-old, who has not won
since December 1984, when he
beat Ivan Lendl at the Tokyo
'Indoor Championship. ''I make a
hell of a good living out here .. .
And I'm having a darn good

The match was scheduled for
Saturday but was delayed until
Sunday due to rain- pushing the
final to Monday.
.. Down 4-3 In the first set,
Connors took over the match,
winning the last nine games. The
left-bander broke Kricksteln In
the ninth game, coming to the net
'to put away a backhand volley,
and then served out the set.
Krlcksteln, 20, who at age 16
was the youngest player to win a
Grand Prix event, has won only
one set In his four career
meetings against Connors .
"I have greatdlfflcurty playing
Jimmmy. He Is the hardest guy
on the clrcut for me," Krlcksteln
said. "He keeps the ball low, and
keeps me behind the baseline.
It's hard for me to use my
forehand the way I like to."
Krlcksteln, who ran around his
backhand all night, was unable to
handle Connors' serve and volley
game. Connors broke Krtsteln all
tbne."
three times In the second set,
Connors, who hasn't lost a set Including the final game at love.
in the tournament, disposed of . "I dori't know what happened
No. 4 AaronKrlckstein, 6-4, 6-0, In out there," Connors said.
71 minutes.

AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
SERVICE .
S1895 PLUS PARTS
AIR CONDITIONER SPECIAL
S6 95 PLUS F•REON
Special Discount With This Ad
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
~
~~-,"~'

~

was pre'sented her

i)'-•? 6'-ITW

.

Descendents of the late Grovet Bolivar; Lisa and Jessica Carmi·
and Locle P. White held their chael, Akron; Audley and Pat
sixth annual reunlbn recently. at White and Terry, Wooster; Mike
the Little Creek Park, South. and Gina Baker and Beau,
Charleston, W. Va.
Millersburg; Judy Spitler,
Gifts were presented to Ralph Dwayne, Dane and Darrell,
and Wilma Ballard, married the Cambridge; Ralph and Wlinna
·longest; Rydel and Brenda Van Ballard and Dave, Long Bottom.
Dyke, the newest married couple
Kelll Clelland, Pomeroy;
as well as traveling the farthest Rydel and Brenda Lee Van Dyke
to attend the reunion; Thelma of Kansas City, Mo.; Clayton and
Eddy, aide's t woman; Junior Hill, Mae Jones, South Charleston, W.
oldest man; Lisa Carmichael, Va.; Aaron and Fran Jones, St.
youngest girl; Josiah Pauley, Albans, W. Va. ; Mike Jones,
youngest boy; Paul and Donna J . Wooster; Joel and Karen Pauley,
Baker, most family members Jessica, Melissa and Josiah,
present.
South Charleston.
Officers elected for the 1989
Junior and Doris Hill, Foster,
reunion were Robert Baker, W. Va.; Janet Dalton, Foster, W.
president; Grover White, vice Va. ; Grover White and Serena,
president; Donna J. Baker, se- Long Bottom, Pau I and Donna
cretary; and Thelma Eddy, Jean Baker and Roger, Kathy
treasurer.
. Troyer and Ryan, Killbuck; Bob
The reunion will be held on the · and Karen Hunter, Cody and
third Saturday In June at the Lindsey, Glenmont; Elvin and
Little Creek Park, South Charles- Lucy Ennis, St. Albans; Harold
ton, W.Va.
and Mazie White and Barbara,
Attending were Thelma Eddy, Elkview, W. Va .
Killbuck; Russ and Betty Dean,

.•

..

'·

j

..
•.

•

JENNIFER ARNOLD
for demonstrated academic
promise.
Bostick was a class officer and
member of the student council.
In addition she participated In
choir, French and pep clubs and
basketball team. She attends the
Racine Baptist Churc!).
Bostic plans to major In
nursing at Rio Grande.

Picnic held
The annual picnic of Friendly
Circle, Trinity Church, was held
Tuesday evening at the home of
Allee Globokar, Mason.
Elaine Freeman offered table
grace. A report on the ill and
shutlns was given and for the
program each member contrlb,
uted a poem, reading, humorous
thought or· commentary.

EAST MEIGS - A meeting of
all boys Interested In junior high
and varsity football in Eastern
POMEROY - The an nual
Local School District will be held picnic of the Ken Amsbary
7 p.m. Monday In the high schooL Chapter of the Izaak Walton
gymnasium.
League will be held Monday, 7
p.m. , at llle clubhouse.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
MIDDLEPORT -Oh KanColn

''

·'•

.

-:

.'.,•'
•

.,.
..

:.

I

r

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE'HA~E HEARINI AIDS"

"

\
Football report
RACINE - Sou !bern Local
Football Coach Bill Hensler
requests boys of the varsity team
to report to the high school • ··
football building for helmet fit.
tlng at 2 p.m. Monday.

Council plans for battle celebration· ·
Plans for participation In the · Chester Council will partie!: ornberger was reported home
125th anniversary celebration of pate In the rededication of the from the hospital.
A letter was read from Evelyn
the Battle of Buffington Island on Buffington Island Memorial and
July 30 were made when the at 11 a.m. In the rededlcaiion of Ramey, state councilor, an·
Chester Council 323, Daughters the McCook monument. nouncing that Leona Barnhard,
of America, met recently at the Members are being asked to state vice councilor, has resigned
wear white and to advise Erma · from her office, and that Evelyn · •
hall.
Drohem, Tiffin, has been •
Keith Ashley, chairman of the Cleland of their intention to appointed.
observance for the Meigs County
Mary K. Holter thanked
Pioneer and Historical Society, participate.
Thelma White, councilor, pre· members for cards, calls, visits
outlined plans for the event sided at the meeting attended by and food during her confinement. ·
which commemorates the Union 29 members. Nellie Werner and
Members were reminded to
victory over Gen. John Hunt Dorothy Ritchie were reported take gifts for the tables at state
Morgan and his troops at Por- hospitalized while Goldie Krack· session to be held in Cleveland to
tland on July 19, 1863.
the Aug. 2 meeting. Helen Wolf
was pianist for the meeting.
Refreshment were served by
Faye Kirkhart, Sadie Trussell,
Carol Hupp, and Rachael, FJddy ·and Jerri Myers. Johnny, Adam Marcia Keller and Lora Damewood to those named and Alta
and Sharon Hupp, Jeremy,
and Jennifer, Carroll.
Jaime, Jarod, Jessica, and
Mattie B. Hill and Clark c. Hill, Ballard, Inzy Newell, Bonnie
Jenna, Jeff Belt, Long Bottom.
Columbus; Norma Slayton, Dela - Landers, Laura Mae Nice, Mar·
Carol Cline and Seva, Lee
ware; Mandy Snyder, Connie garet Tuttle, Ethel Orr, Esther
Marcum. Willy McKinney, ShlrRansom, Paul Snyder, Tony and Smith, Ruth Smith, Erma Deley McKinney, Jonathan McKlnAngelo, Marengo; Verelene land, Mae McPeek, Opal Hollon,
ney, Patricia Smith, Leroy ForeSebo, Cleveland; John Henry and Doris Gruser, Eliza beth Hayes,
Jean Frederick, Ada Bissell,
ster. Tony Forester' and
Ginny Olne, Sandyville, W.Va .;
Beatrice Forester, Circleville;
Earl and Sarah Baumgardner, Sandra White, BettyYoung,Octa
Charles and Helen Wolfe, Linda
Tom, Jay, Mike, and Christina, Ward , Iva Powell, Eva Robson,
and JoAnn Baum.
Black, Jason and Larra, John
East Springfield, Pa.

ri;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

+ N0thih

\l\IS1\
~e._ J\1

1

·

I1/D' ~~
··

lt\, ~

~ (.~

IC..~'t)
\''

'e7.A

\

•

fr~nch

6-1000x20
2-900.20
6-750K16
IN GlUT SHAPE
CALL
RUTLAND FUINITUIE
742-2211

·~

MIDDLEPORT Special
meeting, Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7 p.m , Tuesday at tem·
ple; work In EA degree, refresh·
rhents following meeting.
·

....

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

1

RUTLAND- A Kids' Crusade
will be held this Monday through
Friday, 7 to 8: 30 p.m ., at the
Rutland Nazarene Church.

TUESDAY

CROWN CITY
King's
Chapel Church has Rev. Earl
Whllmore In services Tuesday,
7:30p.m.

Beaver family gathers·for reunion

TRUCK TIRES
FOR SAU

.

~

RACINE - The Southern LOcal Board of Education will meet
Monday, 7 p.m., at the high
school.

CHESTER - Chester Community Bible School at the
Chester Un lied Methodist
Church will be held Monday
through Friday, 9 toll a.m. each
day. Classes will be offered for
children nursery age through
sixth grade.

Club meeting Mondaty evening
at Burkett Barber Shop In
Middleport; social hour and ·
trading session preceding the 8
p.m . meeting; coin auction and
refreshments.

-~

OES chapt~(hofi6FS

I

MIDDLEPORT - Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church of Mlddl!'port will be In revival Monday
through Sunday with services at
7:30 each evening.

Church of Christ will hold Vaca·
tion Bible Sc hool for children
ages three through junior high,
this Monday through Friday,
9: 30 to noon each day,

..... .

...

£t111•~·-••lllll

The strongest system of power lines
in the world.
As a part of American Electric
Power, that's how we deliver
the most economical electricity
to you and your family.
Thday and tomorrow, electricity
is your best energy value.

CENTERPOINT - Center·
point Freewill Baptist Church
Bible school Is Monday through
Friday, 7 p.m. , classes for
children, adults.

Future actiyities planned

Snellfhr - 992-7446

feef and~runs
into your
house?

Community calendar
MONDAY

The lOth annual reunion of the
Charles and Fannie Wolfe
Beaver family was held July 9at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds In
the grange hall. .
Thke 83 attending enjoyed an
afternoon of hymn singing led by
John Cline, and music from a
group of singers from Delaware.
TablegracewasglvenbyRussell
Cline.
Recognized
presented·
gifts
were Mattieand
Beaver
Iiili, 85,
oldest woman; Russell Cline, 81,
oldest man; Ernest and Flossie
Bush, longest married, U years;
John and Jerri Myers, newest
married, eight months; Jenna
Hupp, five weeks, youngest girl;
Johnny Myers IV, 11 weeks old,
Gifts· for the Fesdval of Shar· look. She said that poverty is youngest boy.
Earl and Sarah Baumgardner
lng to be observed on Sept. 24 and wide-spread in the world and
the Athens District United Meth· especially affects women and and family of East Springfield,
ot11stWomen's!Deetlngtobeheld children, and that Increasingly · Pa. were recognized for having
on Oct.l at Logan Trinity Church jobs, farms, and small bus!· traveled the farthest. Adult door
were the topics of discussion at nesses are lost causing whole prizes went to Russell Holsinger,
Leona Cline and rona Hupp, with
the Tuesday meeting of the families to beCome homeless.
Alfred UMW held at the home of
The group took part In reading children 's door prizes going to
Gertrude Robinson. ·
and discussing the program, Jody Wolfe, Angela Snyder, ~e
It was noted that the money ''Expanding Our Vision of a Just Marcum, Tabitha Perez, Rooffering at the annual meedng World." All agreed that there are berta Forester, Crystal Holsin\viii go for homeless children of no easy answers to the problems ger, and Rachael Hupp.
Two of the six sets of twins In
Brazil, while the supplies offer· of social justice. As Christians we
lng will go tor Good' Works, !he~•. . mpst continue to slrlve for a just the family were present, John
and ·Jay Holsinger and Robert
In Athens. A final decision "on"" and peacetul world,!! was noted.
gifts will be made at the Augus~ : 'J'he hostess ~erved refresh-. and Roberta Forester. The five
meeting.
ritent$' of Ice cream and cake to generation farnlly there conEleven shu tin calls ~GJ;t {f!;;. t,hllst' 'nltftjed and to Nine Robin· sisted of Mattie B. Hill, 85; Helen
ported at the meeting btJ!le 10· son, Charlotte Van Meter, Sara R. Wolfe, 57; Linda Black, 39,
members attending. Mrs. Robin· Caldwell, Florence Spencer,· Jerri . Myers, 21, and Jennifer,
son had the prayer calendar and Clara and Osle Follrod, Martha five, Adam, three, and Johnnyll
weeks.
selected Elaine Ayers. Wesley Poole, and NeiUe Parker .
The 1989 reunion was set for
Theological Serlllnary, Snowhlll,
Next meeting will be Aug. 23 at
July
8.
Md. The group signed a card fQI' the churctr. Thelma Henderson
Attending
were John I and
her •
-.. ~,..,., l::t·-•• -~~~~ ...,...,.
refreshments and
- r -:_ 1, ....
, Thelma Henderson· IBiol• "
He • Harker will lead the Wanora Beaver, John C. Beaver,
report on poverty and Jlo~~~- 'Pr~!n --on Bible books, Ruth Bill Baumgardner, Tabby Perez,
John Perez, Lori Garnes, Jack
ness using the New World (}UJr : and Esther. and on South Africa.
., '
·~
Jude, Mary Kesterson and Dl·
•llf·IP ••• •'ane, Pomeroy; Don Manuel,
Ernest and Flossie Busch, Bobby
Joe and Tessie Wolfe, Melissa
Teaford, Jody Wolfe, Mary
~
••
•
•
Grace French, In obserYance lflld served In other offices. Smith, Loretta' Smith, John Tll·
of her 88th birthday and In always giving dedicated work to Us, Janie Forester, Robert and
the Order.
recoignltlon of her 70 years as a
Roberta, Racine·.
continuous memller of thEl, Order
Mrs. French's father gave her
Russell and Leona Cline, Syraof Eastern Star, was . honored petition for membership Into the cuse; Grace Holsinger, John and
recently with a party at fter home Order of Eastern Star on her 18th Jay, Charles Holsinger,' Reeds·
by the past matrons and officers birthday· and she received her 70 ville; Russell and Freda Holsln·
of Evangeline Chapter 172, Order year membership on her 88th ger, Crystal Holsinger, Mary
birthday.
of the Eastern Star.
·
Gillilan and Brandy Reeves,
She was presented with a
Others present for the occasion Chester; rona Hupp, Rocky and
70-year Eastern Star pin by were Jen Chesher, Euvetta Bech·
Emma Kay Clatworthy , past tie, Kathryn Knight, Naomi
matron and treasurer of the King, Kathy Johnson and daugh·
chapter ; who noted Mrs. ter, Jessica, Farle Kennedy,
French's many years of active Twlla Childs, Virginia Bucha·
service. Mrs. French served the nan, and Bessie King.
Grand Chapter of Ohio as deputy
A decorated cake with plnk
grand matron In District 25 In roses was served with orange
1935, was worthy matron 1!11938, sherbet Ice cream punch.

BROWN I SNOUFFER
FilE I SAFm

114 million

Bank
unrestricted
~;,~~~~~~~ii~ThisNational

White fat!f!il.rkunion held

SALES - SERVICE -TESTING

what Has

College-Community College Honor's Scholarship.
The Honor's Scholarship Is
awarded to the finest student
from each area high school. This
scholarship recognizes students
for past achievement and current aptitude. Arnold's high
school program was considered
an exceptionally heavy college
preparatory schedule.
Arnold was a member of the
high school National Honor Society, French and pep clubs,
science and computer clubs, and
quiz bowl team. She participated
on the volleyball, basketball and
softball teams and was selected
to ·represent Southern High
School for the American high
sehool mathematics, American
history and chemistry examina·
lions. She Is a member of the
Forest Run Methodist Church.
She plans to major In physical
science or mathematics education at Rio Grande College.
Bosdc, daughter of
.''and Linda Bostick. 27870
Grove-Dorcas Road, Ra·
, has been awarded the

ANGElA BOS11CKi' ·.'I' ~H

r-;:=========::;
171 .... Sec ••• ,,.,
Ml ··spsrt, OW. U760
Pll. 16141 ttl·7075

Monday, July, 25. 1988

Page-5

Jennifer Arnold and Angela
Bostick, 1988 graduates of Southern High School, have been
awarded scholarships to begin
their studies this fall at Rio ·
Grande.
Jennifer Arnold, daughter of
Stacie and Marcia Arnold of
43815 Forest Run Road, Racine,
has received ·the Rio Grande

Sweden maintains
pace in Cup race

EQUIP•tn

T_he Daily Sentinel

Two receive RGCC scholarships

straight, frocn May 11 to June 3,
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI)
Pitcher Greg Swindell's long, dry the longest streak In the Amerl·
can League this season. John
swnmer stretch ended Sunday.
Shelby
has the major-league high
Swindell pitched a six-hitter to
this
season,
hltdng In 24 consecubreak his elgl\t-game losing
tive
games
for the Los Angeles
streak, helping the Cleveland
Dodgers.
Indians to a 9·2 romp over the
California scored In the first
California Angels with eight
Inning
on Qllll Davis's sacrifice
strll&lt;e outs and no walks.
In completing his eighth game fly.
Cory Snyder singled to lead off
in 21 starts, Swindell, 11·9, won
for the first time since May 30, the second and SCQred on Willie
Upshaw's ·double. Upshaw, who
when be defeated Kansas City.
"I knew I'd get It," the has 10 RBI In his last eight
left-bander said. "It was just a · games, took third on Brook
matter of time and runs. I've Jacoby's groundout and IICOred
been pitching good. It's been on Chris Banda's sacrifiCe tty.
Washington ' followed with his
behind me since !he All-Star
second
hOiner of the season to
break. I was kind of searching.
"During the bad stretch, I make the score 3-1.
With two out In the third, Hall
didn't feel Ill&lt;e I had anything on
the fast ball," he said. "Now I've slammed hla fourth homer of the
go tit back and It's jwnplng. Ever year, Into the right field seats.
since the break's been over, I've Snyder wapced and scored on •
felt s(rong. I've got my mind ,,Upshaw's..,Ie.
JliCti¥1Y's lllll!le scored Upshaw
back on pitching, lnsteacj of just
to ~ - the Indians a 6·1
throwing."
Angels pitcher Willie Fraser ,advantage.
Devon White's seventh home
didn' t fare as well.
Cleveland jumped on Fraser, run of the season, In the sixth
6-10, for the first six runs on eight ·Inning, cut the deficit to 6-2.
Jacoby'$ · RBI single and Wa·
hits ln .hls four Innings.
,,
shlngton's sacrifice fiy gave the
"I had to stay with hinn a, little l' · !ndialls two more runs ln . the
longer than I wanted tow!}~ t~,e ,.,.eighth off Sherman Corbett.
shortage In the bull pen, salt!
Hall's RBI single In the ninth
Angels manager Cookie Rojas. " 'increased Cleveland's lead to9·2.
"I had no chOice. He's given up a
•.
lot of home runs. He gets behind.
Amtrlc:y Leape Roundup
In the count and throws a fast ball
The BO&amp;lon Red Sox have
and then, boom."
provided Joe Morgan with a
Fans booed Fraser when he storybook start to his major·
came out In the fourth Inning.
league managing career and that
'·
Ron Washington and Mel Hall has them battling tor the Amerl·
added solo homers oft Fraser, can League East lead.
''!'his falrytale business ha~
the Indians scoring three times In
the second and third Innings.
put us right In the thick of It,
Cleveland's Julio Franco Morgan said. "Now we have to
doubled with two out In the fourth get serious."
·;
to extend his hitting streak to 20
The 57-year-old Morgan landed
games. He Is batdng .400 ( 34 tor · his first major-league managing
85) In that span.
job July .14 when he replaced
The second baseman hit In 21 John McNamara at the start of
an 11-game homesland. After
Boston beat Chicago 3-2 Sunday,
he hasn't lost yet.
The Red Sox have won their
last 16 games at Fenway Park
and have moved to to within 1 %
By Untied Preas laternatlonal
Henri Leconte and Guy Forget games of Detroit and New York,
staged a tonnldablecomebackto the American League East
defeat Mats Wllander and And· leaders.
ers Jarryd, 4-6, 9-7, 6·2, 6-2,
Sunday to keep French hopes
In other games, Minnesota
alive In the Davis Cup semifinals topped Baltimore 6·1, New Y.ork
against Sweden.
nipped Kansas City 10-8, Texas •
Sweden, the current Cup tripped Milwaukee 6-4, Oakland · 1
holder, leads 2·1 with the two edged Detroit 1·0, and Toronto ·'
final singles set for Monday on blanked Seattle 6-0.
the red briCk clay court at
Bastad, Sweden. The winning
Twlu 6, Orloletl 1
team will face West Germany In
At Minneapolis, Randy Bush
the final.
Sweden, which has not lost a belted a three-run home run In
series at home since 1981, Is the eighth Inning to pace
bidding for a sixth successive Minnesota.
berth
In the
the final.
France
hasn't
reached
final since
losing
to II
the United States In 1982.
Leconte, looking for a measure
of revenge for his devastating
loss to Wllander In the French
Open final, faces Wllander In the
first singles Monday, followed by
Wimbledon champion Stefan Ed·
berg against Yannlek Noah.
Eric Jelen took only one hour
and five minutes to beat Slobo,
dan Zlvojlnovic, 6-2, 6-2, an~ ,
complete a 5·0 victory for West
Germany over Yugoslavia "hi':
their semifinal.

B.y The Bend

· VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ,

'

CALL (614) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244

.'

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

.'

•

�·· Paga 6-The

Daily Sentinel

Monday, July, 26, 1988

Burke annual reunion ~eldi

Not just a housewife; a job
Dar Allll Lande~ I am so tired
of all those ignorant people who
rome up to my husband and ask
him If his wife has a full·time job or
is she "just a hC!WieWire."
l'kwe print this letter and shed
aome liabt on this sorely underval·
ued oca~pation. Thank you. I'll
sian this - NO, I'M NOT JUST A
HOUSEWIFE(CALIFORNIA)
DEAR CALIFORNIA: On behalf
'Of your enormous sisterhood I am
prinliJ18 your leiter with pleasure.
Thanks l'or a job well done.
JUST A HOUSEWIFE
Here is my job description:
I am a wife, mother, friend,
confidant, personal adviser, lover,
referee, peacemaker, ·housekeeper,
laundress, chauffeur, interior derontor, prdener, painter, wallpaperer. dos groomer, veterinarian, manicurist, barber, seamstress, app,ointment mana8er. financial planner, bookkeeper, money mallal!l'r,
personal secretary, teacher, disciplinarian, entertainer, psychoanalyst.
nurse, ' diagnostician, public rtilations expert, dietitian and nutri·
tionist, baker, chef, fashion coordinator and Jetter writer for both
sides of the family. I am also a
travel agent, speech therapist,
plumber, and automobile maintenance and repair expert. During the
course of my day, I am supposed to
be cheerful. look radiant, and jump
in the sack on a moment's notice.
From studies .done, it would cost
over $75,000 a year to replace me. I
took lime out of my busy day to
write this leiter, Ann. because there
.are still ignorant people who believe that a housewife is nothing
QIOte than a baby sitter who sits on
IJ;er behind all day and looks at.
soap operas.
If I could afford to pay someone
to do all the things that I do, I
'Would be delighted to go back to
working an eight·hour day with an
hour for lunch and two 15·minute
breaks.

What do I aet out of my job in
the absenct of a salary? Joy, happ~
ness. hugs, kisses, smiles. love,
self·respect and pride in knowing
that I have done a full day's work
lo ensure the physical and eD~~~~ion·
al well·being of those I love.
Now, if you still w.ant to dassify
me as just a housewife, go ahead.
Dar Ann Landers: I have been
employed in a number of homes for
the 8j!ed. After 22 years of worki~g
with healthy, convalescing and ill
elderly patients, I can predict with
almost 100 percent accuracy which
individuals will receive emotional
support from family and friends.
The residents who smile, initiate
conversations, enjoy the activities, ·
listen attentively to others, read the
newspaper, watch the news on TV
and Keep up with current events .
will receive mail daily and be
visited often by friends and rela·
rives.
· Residents who are critical, nep·
tive, dominate conversations with
details of their illnesses and their
children's shoncomin~. and en·
gage in angry, loud telephone
conversations seldom have visitors.
I believe it is fair to say that those
who have no friends on the inside

Tax man delinquent
SAN ANTONIO (UPI)
Bexar County Tax Assessor·
Collector Rudy A. Garza, who
regularly puts the bite on delln·
quent taxpayers, spent part of
the weekend at a city judge's
office because he forgot to pay a
tralflc ticket.
But he's got an explanation. ·
Garza was arrested at his
home about 4 p.m. Saturday for
falling to pay a ticket he received
June 14 for driving 67 mph In a 55
mph zone.

Ann
Landers

_
... _
a......,

--t\NN~
z

I

•

didn't have any friends on the
outside.
Than.k you for letting me express
an unscientific opinion. - MARY,
RN;1tNP · IN RICHMOND, VA.,
AND A FAITHFUL READER
DEAR FAITHFUL READER: I
appreciate your "unSclentilic" opinion. Often those are the best kind.
In my opinion your observations
and conclusions have a great deal of
merit. Thanks for sharing.
Takecllllrgeofyourlifeand turn it
around' Write for Ann Landers' new
booklet, "How to Make Friends and
Stop Being Lonely. " Send a check or
money order for $3.50 and a self-ad- ·
dresst!d, sramped, bU$iiii!SS·size enYelope (45 rents postage) to Ann Land·
ers, P. 0. Box II 562, Chicago, Ill.
«Xi/ HJ56l.

•

"I got It jus I before I went on
vacation In California," Garza,
59, told the San Antonio Ught. ''I
thlnkiwasonmyway to the bank
to get some travelers' checks. I
put It away and was gone a couple
of weeks and I forgot about it."
The tax assessor said he
received notice that a warrant
Issued for his arrest last week but
"put It In my briefcase and forgot
about lt.''
A magistrate set an Aug. 22
court date for Garza, who was
released on a personal recognlz·
ance bond, to appear lri Munlcl·
pal Court. His fines total $60.

•

•

SELECI'ED -Jeffrey Thomas, cranclloa of Mr. and
Mn. Edgar Thomu, Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, hu been
selected for memberlhlp Into
the Oulll&amp;andlnl College Studenll of America. Thomas Is a
sophemore In lhe College of
Busllless a&amp; Ohio Ualverolty.
Membership selection Is
based on academic and exira
currlcul!u' achievements. The
organization recopbes scholarshlpachlevemenlandleadershlp qualllles among lop U.
S· colleie stud~nts. Thom1111 Ill
the son of John and Patty
Thomas of Portsmouth.

Wolf Pen personals ..
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah Beth and Matlhew of
Texas RoadwereSundayvlsltors
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning
and Ronald.
·
Donald Giles was a visitor last
"'

NEW YORK (UPI)- Amerl· generations.
cans 45 and over are optimistic
"Eighty-five percen I .of the
about their financial future In middle generation of 45 to 54
retirement, despite concerns . years old Is similarly satisfied."
about Inflation and lack of
The Transamerlca Life Com·
knowledge about long-term pan les Retlremen I Report, ''Two
health care, a report on tandem Generations View Their Finanpolls of middle and senior gener· cial Future,'' was conducted and
allons said Monday,
interpreted by New World Deci·
: "Ninety-one percent of the slons Inc., Kendall Park, N.J.
senior generation of 65 years or
"The surprise In the survey
mort' is completely or somewha! was that contrary to popular
satisfied with current standard belief. the 65·plus people are
of.llvlng," said the report on the optimistic that they will be able
household surveys of 500 to handle their own. finances
members of each of the two when retiring," John C. Pollock,

• ,week of his grandparents, ,_ Mr.
'and Mrs. Clair Giles.
Robert Reeves and Brandl of
,,,.Chester were Sunday visitors of
: Dorothy Reeves.
··
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Robert Reed of
H~mloc'k Gvove were Sunday

, .,

.........
..,

...,
.1:".::=..·.:::
=::=':

=-.::

~
... _
_ &amp;::::;no--r•

=-":"."":.."-:; --r•.aoe~=.:=;:
--·-

...

....

111.•

.....
.., ..

'".. ••
.

Ofl.

-

.....

_
--

Public Notice

Public Notice

PRUEBJ-~~:NbCRE

.::-=, ;-'...,_'t

QUALIFICATIONS JRFQ)
ARCHITECT/ENGINEER
SERVICES
The Moigl County Commil1987

we ,.......,.. 'Of FV

CDBG fomtuto

o....

Fundi from the Ohio Dopttt·
mont of Devolopment 1o redoolgn onc1 - - the goroge
door -"'11 of the Ruttond
Emagan:y R8lcue Squad.
The County io ln1.,..od 1rt..,.
qumg-of .. orchltoot/ongin- 1o provide n UIV - • to indudo the loJ.
towing:
'Prep. .tlon of final det by~-

s ·

..,:..
once. l*'f&lt;lr"*"co. ond . . feet: thence South 5 deg.
pacity. Tho typo of.,periont:OO
doolrod w« Illite and _ . 24' Eut 83 feet totheptoca
compiont:OO, doolgnlng public of beginning, containing 19
flr• ond EMS I!'Oieclr. fitld acre~, more or Ina.
The above description WM
ouperviolon ond bid procureaoued in ...,.. of timelncost. ond quality of work Ca·
pacity wil be w-od lntonna
of 1taff experience end time ·

~!'"'n~
Cou~

.......

;!

'Approval

of

Public Notice

port• and final payment• to
contractor
Procedur• for eelection

LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown SpouM, H sny. of
of en architect/ engineer will
be In 1ccordance with pro- Johnie C. Donlhutt II. whose
leot known oddr . . ll Route 2.
curement requirement• of

10-

8ox 3711. Point Pl-ant. Weot
Ylrglnil 255110. h• onf.
orod
or pl..t I&gt;( Oc·

Ohio CDBO Small Ci1ioo
Hondbook ond proviliono of
the Ohio Rovilod Code.
-18.1988. toocomplolnt
Real Estate General lltod lnCivl,l!clion-No. C2·880660
""' Unlnod DlotridinCoull
tor the Southern
Diatri&lt;t of Ohio, Euum Dlvllion, Unl1od Stot• of Amor·
ice. Plolntifl, VL JohnioC. [)o.
nahue n. "' ot .. o.tenc~ont ..

-

SYRACUSE - Really nice
ranch type home. 3 bedrooms, equipped ki!cher1
and a yard lor the kids. Gar·
age, storage building and
many other nice leatures.
Call for your showing today'
ASKING $42,500.00.
VAlleE RD. - 72 acre farm in
the coutdry, nr!ll farm house,
barn and ot)ler outb.rildin;r&gt;. 3
bedrooms, ~rii'J)US woodWIJ~ many un~:tue Jeatures.
Also free gas to house. AMust
See! $49, 500.
CHESTER 248 - Choose
the site you like! I acre lots
with 150' road lrontage.
Many sites available- TPC
water available aoQ elec.
available. ONLY $5,000.00
ea.
SYRACUSE - If a neat holl\i
wrth a nice lot is what yoo are
too!Qng for, th~ ~ rt! 3 bedrooms, electric heat, I car gar·
ag~ rear dec~ all lhe comforts of home! $3~900.00.
DANVILLE- Like new modular in a lillie town in the
country, 2 car garage wrth
shed and on a nice lot. Plus a
9'x47' add on room. PRIC~P
TO SELL $31.900.00.
'.

MIDDLEPORT- Nicely remodeled home on a good
street in
I~
bedrooms, bas•em."''~!_Rea!IY
Cute! PRICE ~tuiJCtl
' $22,900.00.
BASHAN • KENO RD. - Ap·
prox.· 50 acres ol vacant
land. 20 acres gently rolling
tillable. Balance ~ wooded.
Home srte has~eptic, TPC
water, electric II&lt; phone lines
on sile. Road frontage.
$35,000.00.

ru,..--

POMEROY - Frame house
with uppe1 &amp; lower one bed·
room apartments. Good rental
investmentl $DI.OO/mo. income potentia. ASKING
$14,500.00.
"LlS1JNGS NEEDED"
We h•• bu,.rs for Mtlp
Co. pioplrty end n11d
homes to sell. Cat! today.
'We Need Your Proplrty
to Selll"
IIEIIIY E. CIILAND

nKIIIIry.
I

l
l

2274. ,
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
Syracuse, Ohio 46179

Failure to respond to the
complaint will r•urt in an

ALBERT R. RITCHER .
AuiiiOnt Uni1od S1oteo
85 Marconi BOulevard

Columbus. Ohio 43216
Telephone: 1614)489-6716
(71 t1. 18, 26;
(8) t, 8, 16. &amp;tc

992-6191
, _ , ........ -949-2668
httlo , _ _ 992·5692
, ...., liffll-.. 949·2107•
Jo HI-····-·· 915·4466
Offlct ····-··- 992·2259

The following real estate,
being in Syracuse Village,
and in 1 00 Acre Lot No.
296,
Sutton Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, and de·

acrlbed as 1ollowa:
Beginning at a 2 inch pipe
on the aoutheast corner of 1

9.6 ocrotroct of land dHdod

from John McCoy 10 Archie
Lee. recorded In Doed Book
No. 239. Pogo 763, Deod
Recorda o1 Meig1 County,
Ohio: thence _ , 348.66
teet: 1honce North 13.9
fee1, the piiCI of beginning
for thi1 detcriptk&gt;n; thence

South 78 dog. 11' Woo1 100

efREE ESTIMATES•
nRED OF PAINTING?
Cover your home with
beautiful MASTIC or
CERTAIN'tEED vinyl

ROOFING

al~og.

,..~. ~

-fijf.Prf{T~htrtl

lQOF'"&amp;;wuaam
GUnERS

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

94'1·2168

7·14-'81-1 .... pd.

RACINE
...:-GUN SHOP
HOLLOW RD.
.,,

·AMMO

GUITARs ··,,

STRINGS ~

Fallow Signs
on

Bashan Rd.

PH. 949-2168

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authoriud Sorvko
&amp; ,.,,,

Briggs • Stratton
TecurMeh

Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobian

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY .
Mlddlt!tel't, Ohlq
992·6611

:J.JO. '17 trn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, 01110 .
Molt Foreign and

Domlltic Ylhictaa
A/C SeNiti
All Mojor Ia Minor
Repolrt
NIASE Cattlliod Mechonlc

CALl 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Uconood Shop
'
5-25-tln

Cenlfled

Roger Hysell
Garage
••. 124, l'ei81tey Ohla

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AIM Trt...llllea
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
6-17-Hc

Howanl L WrlteMI

ROOFING

NEW- IIPAIR
Gutter•
Downepoutl
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2163
or 949·2161

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

i•••l• Ptlcts"

"At ...

.PH. 949·2101

or R11. 949-1160
Day or NJPt
NO SUNDAY CAllS

4-16-86-tln

Call 814-379-2431.

..,prox.

1 ldutt lemll..
whitt. Clll 814-441-

ready tor a nice home. call
304-17&amp;-11159.

Cuto. ptoyfut puppl•. 7wko old.
aa

u~

pup...,.,.

Bu.alne11.

Pit B...l
12 wkl old.
lqob like 'Spuds McKenzie',

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

· - 304-713-13~1.

PH.

6 Lost and Found

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

lura COMt I• Per AIIYktl

- o.. Yltlt n c-•

New llomosluilt

$sao OFF With Thh Ad
LADY llCIEL'S
PAUl BlDIJIG .

"Free E1timates"

A"'-

or Res. 949-2860

302 W"t Union Sl.

PH. 949·2801

1121/1111

ale dog-Ill- • wh~l . br.-.
face. C.n be .-n at Ouenton
Lone mldenoo. Colt S14-3S7·
7884.
WrlltMtch found In plr-.ng lot
II Big Whool. Clot! II&gt; ldonilfy.
114-742·2328.
Lost: 3mlle8eealepupe. On Old

•Washers •DIVers
•Ranges •Freezers
oRefrlgerators
"Mutt le Ropalrabil"

11 ·Years
Church-Home-School
FrH Gift ... ''Water Me
Ptouo" blnory
operlted Houle Plant
Offer good 6/1 • 1130

IIISINESS PHONE
16141 9U·6SSO
IESIOINCE PHONE

. C. F. SCOTT

Mi.........

614-992-371

16 t41

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

~.
CUSTOM BUILT
PRE.fAB
ROOF TRUSSES

BAUM
LUMBER

CHESTER
985-3301
J.i·U·I mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-B·IIc

•Seamless o ·unar
•Roofing
•VInyl Siding
•Roofing

•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

-Addon1 •d r...-.lng
-RDoflng llld IUlt• w•k

-·

· -Can.,...work
-Plumbing and •IIGI:rl_.

!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992-7314
P-roy, Olllo

7-13.'88· lfn

att~N~

in your .... P.-t-tlme.
hourfy-.gt. lllutc•eii~OI.
MoH -w1ih .... lfl...lo,.to'

Aoilon,. Tnulng Corr,.. Ann:
Aobertl. P•k. 804Me n8treet.
Sholby ...lo. Ky. 40CMIII.
•

H-'r Btyllltl. Ac:ra.. The Strht
ltyllng Ilion It •lklng one
additlonel .tyllst who • looking
fOr more th1m lull MOther job.

Colt T•rlll 514-44&amp;-9510
dlllila.

for

Go~Mrnrn~nt Jobs. •18.040 ' • .
tl8.230 yr. Now hirtng. Your
era. 805-187-1000 &amp;t. R9805 for cun.nt Fedenlllilt.

INSURANCE SALES ·..,.

Old . . . blllhed oompeny

•m•1

Welt,..s end psn •m• khch..,
hllp ,..dMI. Inquire It KDuntry
Kitchen. Reclneorc.. ll14-949-

2324.

9

Wanted To Buy

We ~yc11h for lltl model dMn

Mink ChOY.·Oidl rhc.

TOP CASH pold tor '83 model
and newer uMd c... Smtth

Bulck-Pontlec. 1911 Elfte!n
Ave., Olllipolis. Clll 114-441-

2282.

Compl• houllhokls of furnf.
tu,. &amp; entlqtlls. Also wood &amp;
coal
Swain's Furnhu..
&amp;

""*•·

Auction.

Third •

.

614-742-2235

'25.90 OO .Penn "

saso

NOW THRU SEPT. 3
KAY'S BUUTY

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

Daaler for
YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO
Lo011t1d Halfway be·

tween Rt. 7 • Duhon.

.........

ltlw1111 t ........

12

Situttions
Wanted

Room&amp; Board forelderty person.
In my ho,.. lg. room &amp;. bath.

au,tng furnltu,. and eppllenctl
by fie ~Ieee or by -.elot. Ftlr
prlcel:. C111814-441·311JI.

Will c.,. for elderly In their
home. Cell 814-446-2590.
:

won•d to Buy: Uud IBM
typewriter and ~d lactl• right
h anded gotf clubt. Celt e 14-

---------

446-9209.

C•l us for your mobile horne

13

Insurance

ln1uranee: Miller ln•urance,
304·882· 21 46. Also: auto,
hon., lite. health.

15

Schools
Instruction

.h.l nk auto's

motofl, Call

Le•n to be a Oou"""t ExecUtive

114-992-5848aftlf I p.m.

Quit•
Cash ~ld ror antlaut or ..w
qulho . ............
onr.
concltlcln. Call et H2·SII7.

i-

lr: pli 1'1111'"1
1

'

, 1 I' I

\i I 1 I'

5onico ("'lor for lyan

11 Help Wanted

SERVICE

614-742·2617

HIAINOII

Oovernm.rt Job• - your 1rt1.
•1 5.000.118.000. Colt 11021
8311-1203.
.
''

Cwper:tfV/remodlllng. Exper•
!need. honnt, ••on~~ble. Free
Junk Cars with or without 1111. Refl. O.M. Gordon, 814- ,
motors. Cell Lerry Uvlly·I14- ..41-8958 fMinlngt..
38S.8303.
Thank You.

1118 N. 2nd
Middleport, Dh.
992·2725
7 20/11-1 mo.

WAHl TO MIY WIICIID 01
JINI CMS 01 TIIICIS
-Fill UTIUUSFor any If thlluoroictl

9:00111115:00 MondiiV

CHEF

Jobl white t'rlinlng. Govern- ,
matt fi,.ndal aide evallllble to .
qUIIIfled. Cell Kay It 304-372-

2932. Cullinery School of·

W•hington.

RE·TRAIN

NOWI

SOUTHEASTERN IUSINES~ ,
COLLEGE, 529 Jeckton Pike.
Ohio lrl•tructlonll Orent O.act
line Aug. 19. Call 448-4367-. .
Reg. No. 811-11-10558 .

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

SALON

•WUI
Dump
•Wrackor Service

Plea~~nt,

thru Frldlf¥.

Aeeson•ble. t•ll 114-25 8·
S509.

.h.lnllauto'a. Top llriot peln. Cell

BACK TO SCHOOL
nUDINTONLY
SPECIAL ..

Ao"lt 13170tlioStreet. Point

Warlt to buy: U•d fumitu,. end
~nttqUII. VVIII buy entire hou•·
hold furnishing . M•lln Wecllm.,..., 814-245-&amp;1&amp;2.

GUnER &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

It. 1 lOX 136, VINTOII

Plumb.-.. pelnters. c•penteri,
roolenend ~nl lebcners. See

OIIVII,

514-441·3159.

Fill ESTIIIATIS

•Junk Yard Bullnn1

CARPENTER
SEIV1CE

SERVICE PERSONNEL·

S.-vh:lng .. k flower depin.
merus of N .. ic:NI R...ll Chllfa

nz.ooo.

992-6282

YOUNG'S

81~

v

Bill Gene Johnson
114-4.. 8-3872

For s21oo
Cut &amp; blow Dry

1-21-'88-Hn

from town on 588. Call
446-0500.

to n1.000. For
PIIICN.t tnllnrlew, •nd
end .liddreu to Mr. Ft'lndteo.
TheOalty Sendnel. Boa729U, '

Jim

OWNR: Joffror s.ith

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

'·

MdUIIIIIICfr .. ededtobebr~ 2
Pfii·IChoo'ert. Afternoons &amp; tv·
tnln~ up to 1 1:30PM. Mu11b1
depenclllble. loceled one mile

unlq .. m•llltlng ily ...m. •,.
Fringe benefits and lnoentlve
pr..,.mo. Flrot yo• r&gt;o1&lt;1n1lol

used CII'S.

U. S. RT. SD EAST

PLUMBING
.&amp; HEATING

Appll.-ionl nowb..ng 18k.,. It
OBES In Oellipols for the fHIW
Pomwoy-MickiiPort Domino's
Plz•.

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Sills Hare

.~ · ,t!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CARTER'S

su•.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BOGGS

• ,.,.. &amp; 11111111.

m -t b•'*· FrM rent • w . . .
to right - •· Cllll 814-24&amp;-

We Carry Fi1hing

SMITH'S SEAMLESS

fu• E41IP••••

V1ll Produc:• looldng for hu •
b..dlwlf1 to run..,. oonttne-

seeking •Pftltn11thle In fie

PLUMBING &amp; HEA TlNG
168 Norlh Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Alert Light with tuning

We Service All Makes
1122/88/tfn

Equipment Dealer

Dlytirne btibyoii'Or lA
C.OIIn..-y. Ref. Nqulred. Call
S14-44&amp;-4134.
'

Pomlf'oy. Ohio.

!fEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

GUYSVILE, OHIO
' 614-662-3121
Authorized John
Deere, N- Holland.
Buoh Hog Farm

Horvoy. eon 814-44&amp;-

7148.

Meigs and surrounding county
.... Ore• new products and
l•ge Olstomlr b••· lily •

•

DEAD 01 AUVE

andy

Db1tr Rd. ar•.lnDex•r. Ohio.

J.il·tfn

lila

Middleton Estlt... An ICF/M.R
Ftlolity 'Nil be acc.ptlng applir
Cltlon for LPN'S o.n Call. C.ll

Cell 114-742·2428.

NO SUNDAY CALIS

614-594-3310

WANTED

. &amp;:10.81-1 ..:-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Fret klttlena to a good hoMe:
SiiiMN fM...,, Cllico mother.

Puppi•, mottw
304-87&amp;-3378.

H You Art Un~" •II
DN't lnew wt.id; Wll'f I•

Business ·Services·
Howanl L. Writ...l

Male 10 wk. old be liCk km.n.
Coll814-387·0682.

mo•tly black, hiiVI been
wormed, phoN 304-8115-3810.

Future - Givaa Advice
on Love, Marriage end

Send Resume To:
Kim Shamblin,
Radiology Supervisor
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-2104, Ext. 237
E.O.E.

J&amp;L INSUUTION

Telephone •••· Experi..,cl
pNf-d. Worlc tr.om home. CIIH
114-75&amp;-S714.

FOUND·Addl_, Pk .. poll s...

E.O.E.

GROWING RADIOLOGY
DEPAUMENT NEEDS
FULL OR PART TIME
TECHNOLOQIST
EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS

••· 2d-v .. w•k. 2'hye•old.
• holf doy wkh klndorchlld. Co'*ct Alii Bilton.
114-241-1171.

9 bile German Shepherd puppl•

(6141992-2104

erty situated in the State- of

Farm. Clll MMon County Sh•

182 .

Tatta Past. Prooant and

Ohio

a... Manev•·

P.n-time t1t11r ...,.ted. Prlferebllf In my hom.. AJo Q..,.de

2 doll' 11rtped male ldtllns- 1
orange, 1 gNy.
10

7 411.7 'I" 'll

Pon.noltlh.

411f52. ATTN:

tlon fueling to•reetendcomtic-

Uon of JMnon or .,..on• thlll:
vandllllr•d Wlnkt•-Thompson

o10nr. •

hu Tlo«o h A . , , . Way.

REGISTERED
TECHNOLOGIST

REWARD •100.00for Informo·

w.eb old.

Veterans Memorial Hospital, a JCAHO accredited, not·for-profit hospital, is looking
for a Social Services Director.
The Social Services Director will be responsible for the continuity of care and social services for the acute care and long
term care units of the hospital.
Qualification• include a ·Bachelor of Science Degree in Social Work with a current
Ohio llcan·aa to social work.
Please call or send a resume to:
Margaret Holm, Assistant Administrator
Veterans Men:~orial Hospital
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

371

Box

Smetl pupltt• toO~IWiy. Clll
814-446-3398.

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

min-

wom.w should reply wHh reS16111 or work, htet:O!)',to: P .O .

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

'0%

proapect end •• ,. number OM
In our fi•d. EJCI*.. :ctd "'.., 01

GriM
Dane. Female. can 11.f..44111132 after I PM.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

SOCIAL SERVICES DIRECTOR

Yotumo168. Page311 of1ho
mon- ncordl of Meigo
County. Ohio. which ..-t·
g11g11 io a ''"' on the fol.
lowing detcribect real propOhio and deecribed ea follows, to wit:

A11110 u11 r;e 1111:111:.

0

~ (614) 446-7619 fl( (614) 992·2104
- 417 Second Avanue, Box 1213
! Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·
or at

Counael for Plaintiff

En)oy

Imum comml11lon on • low
tlcll• tt.m. Ewryone il •

3 Announcements

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Attorney

Room 200. U.S. CourthouOI

praying lor toroc:tooure of a
1110rt9-u• deed J«A)i did '"

E.Moini.AII
POMEROY. OH.
992-2269
NEW LISTING- Approx. 55
acres of ground w~h a nice 3
bedroom ranch home located in the county but only
15 minules !rom town. Gar·
ag~ pat10. new k~chen cabi·
nels, equipped k~chen , 80%
tillable land. Many other features. $45,000.00.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The U.S. Det&gt;•b•-t of Agricu~
ture, Fa..-s Home Adminlltration (FmHA) annou.- that the
Tuppan Plelno-CheR• Wilt•
Diotrict baa oppUad for FmHA finoncial 81siltance to eldand Its
wet• oyswn (PhMe IV Extenolonlllnknown
• Alfred Road, Coutt Streat.
Gold Ridge. Klngobury Road, Letart Foil, Silv• Ridge and Wei!
Shade.
The propo1ad project of about
17 mlleo of pipeline. a wilt•
tank and pump 1tatlon modlfl·
cation• 11 to ba loc.ted In
Athen1 and Melg1 Countie1.
Ohio.
The propo1ad amount of FmHA
ftnencing il •823,000 end the
tCital astlmll1ed project COII1 il
8839.000.
FmHA ha1 prapored an anv~
ronmontal aueament for the
profect end flnda that the pro.
poul wHI not elgnlflcontly af·
feet the quolhy of the humon
onvlronment ond thot thw•
fore praporiltlon of on -lronmentellmpoct-em...t 11 not

furniat*l by H'o mer Hy1811.
Reg~t. .d Surveyor No.

United Statal Attorney

~

prograoo

.. ....,.,...

4
Giveaway
. . Television Listening Devices
Dependable Heari111 Aid Sales &amp;Se~vic•
Heuing Evaluations For All Aces
GfvtiWIY 2'Y.I: yr. old

D. MICHAEL CRITES

-ioners, Courthal!M. Pom-

Meigs CountY Commilsioners not IM«thlln·Wednf!llday.

Won•d fo&lt; ... Alii- 0111111,
..-1111 aounly ar-. Applh:lnl
mult ...,_ prwlou:l outllde•l•

rift • 304-17&amp;-4088.

Judge

th8 .. t---=- County Commil-

tilds and award of con1rocto Augul13.1988.114:00 P.M.
'flold lnopec1ion during ,(7) 1a. 26: 181 1 3tc

construction

WAN11!0

United States Di1trict
Approved:

REP .

OUTSIDE SALES

-

in -p.,;~~~~:,, •I Plltial ere to tubmit their , ....
1:1on of contract•
~· to t~ . RFQ to the

atruction
•Aisiltance in analyzing

¥1••

Most Walls Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install 8t Service All Types
Water Pumps

r-idoill obtllnlrtg the ti- EntiY of DofMIIt. Judgment
Decree In Forecloaure.
ghtl1 Ioiii scorolrt the ovolua· and
HOUSI: OIIERJI.OWING?
aale of the mortgaged proplion pn&gt;t:OOO.
erty
and
extlnguilhmWit
of
It io ln1po&lt;Unt thn ~his proCLEAN UP WITH n..,
ject be in111- and com- all interest lin nld property.
JOHN D. HOLSCHUH
plotod immediotely.
CI.ASSIFED ADS .t 1
lnt....ted parta ere in-vMod'10 oollure o R-eot for
a...Jificotlona package from
11 Help Wanted

oroy, !)hlo 46769. lnt_...od

11 aiatance

fHt: 1honce North 6 dog.
24' Woot 83 feet: thence
north 87 dog. 11' Ea11 100

a-

CWUpoh. AllappiC*11bl mull be
21
of .... or olcMr.

Call Collect (3041 372-4331
Public Notice

Ooll Club lo ""'nv
lor - '•time 1n1c*

bor holp. ................... ...
In ~ It fie Gotf Cou•
locotod ., 100
Dr ..

Rt. 1, Box 74-A, Riply, W. Va. 25271

Public Notice

mont. Thio project wll be •

Cliffside

B&amp;C I.DRILLING
CO.
H. Bwgle, OwMr

::-c:.,.
..... ::

~r!:":l.

Help Wanted

. . . CIItk:tM

CALL

Cl.,.ifict#A pqe• eotrer aM
follotlilJif leltpkcnw ucha•~•...

t:'c::':\.

11

N

-·

!il=-

and

Mr. and Mrs. Kent Wolfe, 516
Carroll St., Waverly, are an·
nounclng the birth of their first
child, a seven pound, 11 ol'nce
son, Ryan Robert, on June 21 at
the Chillicothe Hospital.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Wolfe of Racine,
and maternal grandparents are
Lois and Stan Evans of Dunkirk.
Local great-grandparents are
Eldon Kraeuter, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. Hilton Wolfe, Sr., also of
Racine.

... ,

I OIOOITOI

• ·•
111..
t»-•

~~==-

tlons to bidders.

Wolfe birth

•

.•.o.n
. .,.

"1 clo~

*Preparation

All SEATS $2.50
' ·
BARGAUi NJGHT TlJESDAY SZ.50

· State Director
Farmara Home Adminltt ..tlon
Fedorol Building, Room 807
200 North High Strellt
Columbuo, Ohio 43215

'"'"'"
...,_,.
INTI
••

~- -

an approve
•• 1 1010
of Ohio
'·
*btlmetes of qu.ntldll
endcoltl

. By WILLIAM C. TROT!'
United Presslnlernatlonal

'

_,, ........

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

'PI

,. Su~me~~~.Giles is spending this
BRIAN C. JACOBS
JOHN R. WILLBARGER'" , ' W~eftMth her grandparents, Mr.
Brian C. Jacobs, son of Tl·
Marine Lance Cpl. John R. . an4~~ ..9a1r Giles.
,
mothy R. and Linda F. Priddy of Wlllbarger son of ·Allee ·' E •: " Ml'&lt;nanq Mrs. Roy 0. Smith of
33385 Hysell Run Road, Pome- Wlllbarger'of Portland has 6een . Ro&lt;'lt'sphngs Road were Monday
roy, Ohio, has been promoted In · awarded a Merltorl~us M.:S!;', ~e,y~I\Xrig visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
the U.S Air Force to the rank or while serving with 1st Marine Ch~~le&gt;i S~ith. .
·
senior alrnian.
Division Camp Pendlton Calif.
.Mr. and,Mrs. Eugene Haning,
Jacobs ts a crew chief at Moody
A M~rltorlous Mast' Is . an Qoroth* ' Reeves and Gladys
Air Force Base, Ga., with the official recognition from f Ma'· 'Tucker(nall were recent visitors
347th Aircraft Generation Squad· rlne's commanding officer rpr of Mr. and Mrs. Rober! ~e~ves
ron.
superior Individual perfor· and family, Chester.
His wife, Christine, Is the mance. It Is Issued In the form of ,------~----­
daughter of Roger E. and Helena a bulletin published throughOut
L. Riggs of Rural Route 1, the command, and a copy is
Rutland, Ohio.
entered in the Marine's perman·
He Is a 1985 graduate of Meigs ent service records.
Local High School, Pomeroy.
A 1985 graduate of Southern
High School, Racine, he joined
the Marine Corps in September
1985
BARGAIN 'lATIN££$ SAT/SUN I WED

... · ·...-·
. ···...RATE.

··.,_l'--··.-=......-·""-.
----_..
..... . .___
.
.
.
.
..
- - ............._
_........__
!'o.....
•--__
--···--·-·
___
. __
_=_==-... ...... --

lions

People in the news

Health club meets

TO NU AN,. WI. "2·11S.
MOitDU thnl fliii&amp;T I Ul. t• 5 P.M.
I J.A Ullltll NOON SAI'UIOI.Y
UCISII saMAr

lign drowlngo ond •l*'lflca-

------In the service _______, .=~~~~a~~~~rs of Guy .~argent

Americans attitudes,· vtews on rettrement finances

Common or not providing crowd
control for the event.
EXPOSED: Multimillionaire
ROLLING ON WITH RIVERS:
Jack Kent Cooke, the owner of
The first thing Joan Rivers had to the Washington Redsklns, gets
do for her role In Nell Simon's raked over the coals in a story
"Broadway Bound" was slow aboul his short marriage to
down her machine-gun tongue. Suzanne Martin Cooke In the
'.'That was the biggest worry of Washingtonian magazine. Mar·
the producers when they offered tin, 30, says Cooke, 75, had her
me the part." she told the New abort pregnancies twice before
York Daily News. ~~rm con- they were married and that she
scious of lhat, to make sure I'm was to have had a third the day
· understood. This woman after they were wed last year, but
wouldn't speak rapid· fire." To she couldn't go through with lt.
keep her stand-up comedy skills She told Kitty Kelley, known for
honed, Rivers will be playing her scathing biography of Frank
Woody Allen's hangout, Ml· Sinatra, that Cooke Is a cranky,
chael's Pub in New York, three a buslve tightwad who has yet to
times a week In August. And she acknowledge the child she had
has olher projects to keep her 11nd that he called her "Susan"
busy. "I'm wrttlng another book because he didn't like "Su·
and I'm writing a screenplay. zanne." Martin goes on to say
I'm always writing a screen· that she found Cooke In bed with
play," she said. ·"I have lots or another woman once and lhat he
energy, thank God."
bought her a $35 wedding band
PROTESTING WILLIE'S PO- Instead of the $350,000 diamond
LITICS: Another pollee depart· ring he'd promised. "He'd say ...
mentIs considering protesting at 'You've got to have a man to
.a Willie Nelson appearance. depend on, because you're not
Pollee from across the state are very bright,"' Martin says. Their
expected to show up in Warwich, divorce is pending and money Is a
R.I.. when Nelson plays two big, big issue. "I want to make
weekend shows. The pollee con· sure my child gets a trust fund,
slder It a slap In the fact that and that we can live In a styleNelson played a benefit last fall the same style that his other
to raise defense money for children live In," Martin says.
Leonard Peider, an IndIan act!·
GLIMPSES: Mary Hart, out to
vl,st convicted of killing two FBI prove she can do more than host
agents In I975. Now the pollee ' 'Entertainment Tonight," takes
union In Boston Is mulling over her act to Resorts International
two options - picketing at In Atlantic City, N.J., where she
Nelson July 31 concert on Boston will appear on the bill with Don
Rickles. She sings and dances
and says the show will be more
representative of her talents
"Elizabeth Hayes, Chester, than was her act In Las Vegas In
hosted a recent meeting or the April ... AngusScrtmm Is the Tall
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club. Man, the homicidal mortician In
' For devotions Jean Wright "Phantasm II," and says his
read a meditation from Gulde- character Is not like other horror
flick fiends.
posls' and Eva Robson had a
reading from the Upper Room.
"End of a Perfect Day"was read
HELP WANTED
by Mrs. Hayes, and Iva Powell
LABORATORY
SUPERVISOR
had a reading from a prayer
For modern fully equipped physihook.
cian's office laboraiOJI. Ouallll·
The program Included a read·
cations necessary: IT (ASCP),
lng on WD-40 as a tl't'atment for
well versed In instruJMnt optl'll·
arthritis. It was suggested that
tion and trouble shootlna. COtnlll,e solution be sprayed on lhe
petent In all lab 11111. Excellent
affected area of the body for
benefits. W..unds off. Ap.Pir in
relief. Nara Hartman had prayer
parson to or cell 446-9620, The
and refreshments were served
Medical Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike,
by the hostess. ravors were
Gallipolis. between 8:30 A.M.·
miniature crocheted cups filled
5:00P.M.
with candy.

Business
Senrices

Th~ first annual

Quirks in the news ·
By Un lied Press Internal tonal

Burke reunion and Wilma Burke, Edf Donna, ,'
was held recently at the home of Rachael and Tara Burke, Frank,
Michael Burke with 62 persons Ryan and Chrtstopher Burke, •
at~ndlng.
'
Joe, Susie, Amanda and Jessie
The group enjoyed hayrides, ·Burke, Jim, L.lsa , James Manson
horseshoe pitching, and games. and Ashley Burke, Jan Burke. all
Prizes went to the oldest attend· of Cambridge.
Jng, James Burke, Purvis, Miss.;
Robert and Vlrglnla Burke,
David Burke. Ft. Meade, Fla., Bob, Gay Ann, Lori. Scott and
who traveled the farthest; Ruby Randy Burke, Jeff Amos, Jerry,
Burke, Alfred, the most grand· Joyce, Trlcla, Sherry and Greg
children; Robert and VIrginia Burke, Ruby B11rke, Michael,
Burke, married the loogest; Marilyn, Jeff, Jennl, and Matt,
Anthony and Debbie Fields, and Ruby Burke, Buck, Dorothy
and Adam Calaway, Bobby
Norfolk, Va., newlyweds.
Atending were John and Judy Joann, Robbie, JeremeCalaway.
·
Heald, Keene, Texas; JameS and all local.
Claudine Burke, Purvis, Miss.;
Next reunion will be held at' the
David and Linda Burke, Fort home of Buck and I)orothy
•
Meade, Fla.; Anne Williams, Calaway.
White Springs, Fla.; Morgan and
Three carloads of the family
Jane Organ!, Pensacola, Fla.;
went to Middleton Doll Factory
Anthony, Debbie and Amanda and Fenton Glass Co. on the day
Fields, Norfolk, Va.; Don, Char- after the reunion I;! king along a
lotte, Doug and Cindy Burke, picnic lunch. In the evening the
Alexandrla, Va.; Jim and Betty family gathered for supper at
Burke, Carmichaels, Pa.; Bill Michael Burke's farm.

The Daily Seutinai-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater corH. Wa can

ENIN EltliiA MONIY 41rlng
thl lummer. OM out of the

aha aclcl boil and rocl
out radiators. We tilso
repair Gas Ta"•·

Mlddlepo~t.
loott- at The
• - ·Call
Aou•
In
a - . . Ofllao ot 114,H2·
Z111.

-·--.Dolly&amp;..,_

PAT HIU FORD
992-2198

Middleport,

GEARY
BODY SHOP

550 PAGE.STIIIT
. .DIIPOIT, OliO
OPEN 8o311·6oll0

Mol-- -

to ..... In
·
- ............ Coli 3045711-1104.

18 Wanted to Do

�- -- -

·- - --- --·---- ...
Page 8

•

The Daily Sentinel

18 Wanted to Do

LAFF·A·DAY

VIRA11 FURNITURE
Enteraln,..,tcent. .. cornputllr
dMk. ....,.r~m-1&amp; wood.
bedroom •ulttl, all new
mlttNI.... •Ie priced. Mio-t-

Mors. freezen.
• dryers. Much more. All .t
dieoount prloltll. Rt. 141 kl

een.,_.,.'.4

mMe on Uncoln
Plko, Op., Mon.·Sot.. 9-8.
8 14-448·31 58.

8uainOpportunity

SWAIN
AUCTION flo FURNITURE 82
Olive St., O.llipo"-.
NEW- I pc . wood group- •399.
Uvlo\o . _ ooitoo· t119-t599.
Bunk beds whh ~ding. *198.
Full sin m-"retl • found•ICm
starting · 199. Aecllnert
... rting- 199.
USED- Bedl. dre11•1. bedroom
suitea, e199-t299. Oe•ka,
wringer w.•h•. 1 oompl. . line
of uild furniture.
NEW- w....n boot•· .30.
Wo,.booto t 18 flo up. (Stool &amp;
•oft toe,. C.lll14-448-31&amp;9.

I NOTICE I
lHE OliO VALLEY PUIILISH·
lNG CO. NCOmmtndl 1h.t 'fOU

do buUn- with p«Jppe you
kni!M', and NOT to .-n.d money
through the I'Nil Unll you h.,_
invett~Med

the oHering.

s ...

For
or LI~H-())m""I'Ct •
BuHdng auibible for .ny 1J1J8 of
butin.... Off ,,,... .,.rking.

Formerty Birr's Su~ M.,k8t.
Thifd • Ylno. Oolllpolia. Ohio.
C.ll 814· 44&amp;-8030.
Going Craft supply- bu linea• in
Pomeroy. Stock and fb:ttn~s for

Real
31

t;;:;=:;::::====r:::::::::::i
8t

c•JMt•d. central ai~ tnd hut,
located Point AIMint. 30...
8715-2702.

1986 Marlette Modular Home,
800128. Alloloctric. Co. 3 BR .. 2
bM,.., gree1 room, dining room.
To .,..,., IIXINI to M.t. Mutt Ill
to IPJH8cl... e.cs,ooo.
finlncing. c.tl 814-446--1408

ow..,

5 PM.

Old. 3 BR .. 11ory a VJ . ful
b-ment,' 111 acre. C.ntenary.

Coll814-4411-3044.
3 BR. houll. Fenced in btck
.,.,-d. '" good cond. C.ll 61444f-3718.
Off;Rt. 7by-pass-Hou•, mobile
home. •tell he dish. Both hornet
very nice. tHautifullocation. Clll
6, 4-992-8941.
SacrHiee. 2 BA . hoiiW, 1 acre. 2

mil• paslld VInton School.
Completely remodeled. New
wiring, lightL window.. blown·
In Nulation, plumbing. kitch.-.
cabinets, c.,..t throughlout,
ch~et&amp; SheerS. AltO'tMtlher /d ryer, ltOW, refrig. G•den IC)Ot.

• 23.000. C.ll614-388-84820f
388-9814 til 10 PM.
3 BR ., utHity, gange. kitchen
with appliances. Ew.c&amp;llent op-portunity. Ptice to Mil. Call
814-448-1358.
Ratwoods area of Pomeroy.
Large 2 story home. new kilchen. bath room, carpeting on
half acre lot. $35.000. Call
614-446-2359.
Brick, 4068 sq. ft., total 12

rooms, 5 bdrms, 2YI baths,
1 BM:6 family room, large kit·
chen, pantry. l!klrdry room. 5
walk-in close1s. 28x26 garag a.
10 x18 workshop. 12x25 storage bldg. 1.52 acres. Fantastic
Neighborhood . Bv appointment
614-446-1903.
108 State St., Pomeroy. 2 or 3
bedrooms, carpeted, No I'BUonable offer rafu•d. Phone 814992-3725,
In Middleport, 7 rooms with 3
bedrooms. 6 large clo•ts. garage. kitChai'l ~rtially furnlahed.

Call 614-446-8816 ..
Hou• for •I• bY, owner : SVI8 ·
cuee. Ohio. 1Aacra, 3 bedrooms.
LA. FR. kitchen with dining
s~ce. 1 Yz b ..h. fireplace. w·w
carpet finished gartge. co~
crete driveway . Aaking
$45,700. or bast oth... 814. 992·7196.
Main. free eXt. 3 br !Wich family
room w-b fireplace. cen. 1-c.
nice lot. large deck. wooden
st0111ge bldg. Priced mid
Owner must •II. Make !WI offM.
(304! 675-7438 after 6 p.m.

•so•.

,24x60 dolble wide home on
50w.1 10 lot. screened porch,
utility bldg. fencedvard. Clifton,
wv. 304-773-5157.

32 Mobile Homes
fo.r Sale
1980 Bayview 14w.70 with 7x21
flx plllndo. 3 BR .. 2 fuN baths,
fWeplac e with 10 acre• o f
ground. 19Jt20 2 car garage.
$25.000. Call 614-446·8760.
1974 01ampion 14x65 toul
~ectrlc, underJIIH1ning and partially furnihSBd, will coriaider
trade. $6, 900.00. 304-5782383.
1970 Wilidaor. 1 ~65 with
10JC12 add Dn, woodbumer.
Wll her and dr'tllr. aircond, mu at
be mo1.41d. 304-896-3802.
1982. 12x70 Knox. All alec. 3
BR , wry good condltMln. tlke
over peyment1. 304-676-2926.
84 Schuttz 14w.85, 2 br, excltf..
lent cond. Plu1 two uaated
decks. 304-875-7113.

Farms for Sale

Big n.w 3 BR . home, bult on
your lot only. ,, 8,994&amp; up. Call
814-886-7311 .
.
10 6 priWte acr• witfl HIY
accen ,..., Gallipolis Fer rv. niiW
3 Mdroom ho,., worklhop, 2
ex till lot• wtth wefl1 for nil.,.
or buldlng, t?o.ooo.oo. 304875-4831 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Be.,dfutrMr iotll oneac=--plua.
, p!Mic w.t•. Clyde Iowen. Jr.
304-1715-2331.

LOT&amp; .,. ocn. 1_, woodocl
cityMW• .Mrlc:floAoM. owntr

. . . . .,. good •rm.. 30437Z·I401or 372·2178.

two 1 .acre loll with p .... lc
wat•r. Jerry• Run Aoed.
1 4.100.00each, co,..adern.de.
304-1715-2383.

Fou• lot~ 0.- Ad. J04-171J.
8412.
f

-

-

44

A•hton. lwge building lou.
mobHe hon.. ,_.mfttad. public
watw. also rfiiM km. ctyde
&amp;ov.en. Jr. 304-17~2331.

Esta:~

3 bedrC)()m home, 1'12 , baths.

33

Acreage

R~nlols

Homes for Sale

oft~

35 Lots

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . •••·. 8 cto.... kitchenappt. fumi•hed, W•her-Dryer
hook-up, ww cerplt. nOW"Jv
paln•ct. dldc. From 817!1.
Regency. Inc. Apt1. Clll 30.._
875-&amp;104. or 875-6388 or
17B-n3B.

New completely furni1hed
,41 Homes fQr Rant aPMtment
&amp; n'IObUe home In
city. Aduttt only. Perking. Call
Nicety fu rftahed amlll hou•. 8 14-441-0338.
Adults ontv. Ref. required. No
petl. C.ll 81,4-44~0338.
.'· BEAUnFUL APAR'IMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
Nice 2 pouibly 3 SA. hou. In SON ESTATES. 538 Jocluoon
Mickleport. AC.. dl1hweaher. Pike from •113 a mo. Walk to
g.-b~editpo•l . fuUbutment.
shop and moviea:. 814-441Coli 814-4411-9205 oltw 5:30 2188. E.O.H.
PM.
Up-irs unfurnished apt. Car2BA .- 1,-, ofdo .... e. 120St•teSt. poled...llhloo .. Id. No dllldoon,
• 225 monthly. Referanc. IIi No .... C.ll 814-4415-1837.
dtpotk .equtred. Cal11144411-0254.
11 Court S,. -2 BA ., 2 '-:'-.
ldhchen furnished, w / w cw~
2BR ., g . .ge. dapoeit.1stmo. No pe11. Off atrHt pt~rling.
..... Col1814-4411-1318.
$325 • mo. pluautlltti11. Dip. &amp;
nrt. c.u 814-448-4921.
3 BR. hou• in M•on. W. Vs.
O.poalt .equired. •30oa mo. IIi Furnished- 3 rooma &amp; bath.
ur:1111;.. C.III14-446-31:M.
Cl-. No pm. Rof. flo dopooh
required. Utilltie1 ftunlthed.
2 bedroom home. ell electric, Adutt1 onty . CaU 814-446c•peted. part baemem . 4 mi. 1119.
from city. on SR 218. Call
814-268-9310.
1 BR. apt. nearH MC . 1 adutt No
POlo. Coll814-448-4782.
8 room, Langsville. 8200. month
piUI deposit. 1\NO appi'O\IBd Furnl1hed apt. 1110. Utllttlea
ref•enc• l'equiNd. Call 814- r:aid. Shara bllth. Single male.
982· 7285 .. 814-742·3149.
919 Second' Ave .• Gallipoll•.
Call 441-4418 after 7 PM.
3 bedroom country homa. Attached gnge. Depoelt 18Qulred Ap1rtm11nt 2 BA ., unfumilhltd.
Awilable August 1st. Cell 814- •1715. Watar paid. 1131 5•
742·2427.
eond. Qolllpollo, C.ll 4411-4418
after 7 PM.
Hou• for •nt in Middleport. 3
bedroom•. 1 bMh, utltty room, Lux:uriDus Tara Townhouae
famlty room, nice carpet, central apilrtrnant1. Elegant 2 floors. 2
air. t286. per month plul •150. BR. , ful bll:h updaira, po-...d•
daposit. No pets. Call814-992- room down1talr•. CA .. dis·
8658 dll'fa or 814-692-5158 hMther, di1po11l, prfvtte en·
evenings and IMiekMds.
tt11nca, private enclo•d .,_tio.
pool, playground. Utilities n~
Pomeroy. good localion. 4 Included. Starting at $299 per
room, 2 bedroom hou~e. fuJ mo. Call 814-387-7850.
basement. garage. 9• furnace.
$125 . month . RaferBnces FYrniahed efficiency . 920
n eed&amp;d. Sentinel, Box 729l.
Fourth. Gallipolil. &amp;180. utili1M paid. Call448-4418 after 1
Double Wide on privtte lot, 3 PM .
bdrm. 2 baths. AC. front porch.
Gallipolis Farry. $326&amp; utilities. Nice 2 BR apt. Water, refrig. &amp;
Call 304-675-308'/.
stove fum. 4% mi .. from Gallipolis. No pets. $226 mo. Call
2 bedroom hou• Camp Conley 814-446-8038.
S200. depolit; $160. month .
References required. 304-676- 2 BA . apanment, Bidwell area.
2'829.
Call614-388-9054.

•c.

2 BR . apartmant. All utilitiBB
pol d. Call 81 4·4411-8723 after 7
PM .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 81 3 BR . All utHhiae paid except
electricity. Convenient kK:ation.
c•n e1 4-44&amp;-8&amp;58 "' 44114008.
Mobile Hom• for rent. Call
814-448-0527.
2· 2 BR . trlilers for .ent.
cond. Call 814-448-6728.

Ni~

1 .b515 fumi1hed plus water.
t200. O.p . 1 or 2 peopte. No
petl. Rt. 7-3 mil• Iouth,
Golllpolis, Call 814-4411-0822.
1 2x80 unfurnished, centrel air
on At. 35. C.ll 304-675-9710
or 814-4411-4389.
Furnls~ed

2 BR. mobile home.
AC. LDcated at K &amp; K on Eastern
Avu. Dep. &amp; Ref. nsqulred. Call
814-258-1187.
3 bedroom trell er for rent In
Synu:u•. 814-992·7689 after
5 :00.
2 bedrooms. furni1hed. S100.
deposit, $160. per month plu1
utillliea:. Call814-992·3122.
2 bedroom mobile home Middl•
pon, Ohio, raf. .nce and IMCUr·
ilv deposit required. 304-8823287 or 3o4-n3-&amp;024.

44

FurNshed .,t. Naw. Near HMC.
1 BR. $295. Utilities ,_ht. Call
448-4418 after 7 PM.

2 bedroom apt1. Middteport.
S185-,185.p• month. 2 lind 4
bedroom hou•• in Pomeroy
area. 8200.'225 per month. An
partty fu n'lished. Reference rwquirad. D"l81 4-992-2 381 ...,_
onlngo 81 ,992-a723.
PorMroy, 2 bedrooms. bide
yord. partly fumistlld. Sea.rity
depod, Mf-.ce required. Call
814-912-8881 after 8:00pm .
APARTMENTS, mobile hornet,
hou. .. Pt. Pl••ntandO.II~
Iii, 814-4415-8221 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
$0111 lind ch.ain priced from
1398 to 1988. Tabl• teo and
up to t125. Hide-a-be• t390
to 8596. Redinen 8226 to
•37&amp;. Lamp• 121 to •121.
Dinettft t101and up to •49&amp;.

Wood tabiew-8ch*•l281to
179&amp;. O.tk •100 up to t378.
Hutch• e40o and up. Bunk
beds compl•• w·mattruNI
8296andupto•39&amp;. BlbVbedl
$110. M.tlntS'" or box: apringa
fuH or tvvln t88. firm 178, and
$88. OuNn Mil t22S, King
$350. 4 dfawerch•t t89. Gun
cablneta 6 gun. Sabot ml'ttrn...
$35 &amp; '45. Bed fram•' 120,
• 30 • King .fl:am• •so. Good
aalec:tlon of bedroom 8llhes.
metll Clblnets, headboards t30
•d up to 885.
90 Oaya uma 81 c•h with
approvad crB«&lt;t. 3 Mil• out

22.900 BTU
yq. old. I

yr.

814-2515-1471 .

76

nu.o•

10 pc. choc. brown pit group.
$600 firm. Clll814-448-7016.
W11her &amp; dryer 1et- t1 215.
Stareo-$60. Cell 614-446·
7399.
E8rly AmericiWI couch, chair &amp;.
ottoman . Gold colored. Good
cond. t90 for alf. Call614-379·
2809.
Stop &amp; Chftck out our inventory
of quality furfliturn &amp; carpet for
l.ow prices. 8 pc. wood SfJits8 399. 5 pc. oak dinette- $225.
cut loop carpet ltlrting at $6.96
a yd .• co rrmerciel carpet- t3.99
a yd . Large selection of room size
remnants. No job too big or
small. Financing &amp; installation
avallabte. Mollohan Furniture,
Upper River Rd .. 446-7444.

53

ally or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
HDun: M.T.W 10a.m. to Bp.m.,
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 614· 992·
2528.

New riding t.wn mow.r-38 ln.
cut. w...d to buy&lt;hrome fill
for 8 ft , truck. c.ll 114-4412222.

Furnished Rooms

Furnl1hed room-919 Second
Ave.. Gallipolla. n 215 a mo.
Utllltiea: j:aid. Singlarnale. Sh••
bath . Call448-4418after7PM .

Two hardwood corner cab/nett
8275.00 each or both for
$500.00. Rve 4 ft. hardwood
fireplace mantels. Phone 304875-6&amp;30.

•pe•

se. . treadmill with speed
dometer 850 .00. 304-&amp;.76·
1504.

Rooma for llnt.week Of month.
s..rtlng at .120 • mo. Galli•
Hotol-114-448-9580.

for

Electric wheelehM. niW, wh:h
remo-.eble Irma &amp; elewUng leg
Nit. Blttery powered. Call
814-448·1478.
3 wheeled tri-cart, new, benery
powered. pneurMtlc ,.,.., ...
whMI drive . Can 114-44&amp;8478.
Girla Junior clothing for _.._
Excellent co ncltlon. Slzea 3 and
5. 814-949-2880.

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS flo IONS
U.S. 35 Woot J o - . Ohio.
814-2811-f411.
_ . . , .... _ , - Hollond.
BuoltllogSoloo• - Ovor
40 UMd t•ct~n to c:ttoo. from
&amp;complotollneof-&amp;uood
oq..,._._
•loctlon In
S.E. Ohio.

IM-

mil• with MW ..... tfts.
07000. Coli 814-Bi2·2181 of·
twi:OOpm,

c.-.

11188
rod. 2.8 ..., 1uo1
I JectiOn VI T -._ \11 000
.::... Aowng
Coli
304-773-1144 .. 814-912,

o\o.Obil. .

211ght gray redln81'1for lila. like
new condition. Both for 1300.

• 14-949·2202.

Moore's Chapel Centennial
Plates with picture and history.
t 10 eoch. C.ll 304-5715-2212
"'576-2203.

I

~63~::;:liv;:.::;1!11;::o:::;c:k==

f I oll!&gt;IJilrldllllll
71 Auto's For Sale

Guaranteed Quality
CETtDE. INC .. Athen•-614·

66

1 1• Buck Sky lor •• 4 If&lt;.. PS.
P8 , AC, 1111reo, cloth imerlor.
Good conditfon. Call 814-4460in.

Pets for Sale

pi••

Groom and ' Supply ShOp-Pat
Grooming . All breeds... All
styles. lams Pet Food Dealef.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

1987 Camaro Sports Cou...
PS, PB. 00 . AM-FM· C.•s.
reclining teatl, v.&amp; fuel injection. Clll 614· 256-6000

Dragonwvnd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Pl!lfsian ilnd Siamese kit·
tens. AKC Chow puppies. New
Himalayan kittens. Call 6144.6-3844 attar 7PM.

1986 Chevy Cavaller· type 10
CL. standard, 4 cyl., 2 tone
paint. CC, PS, P8, AC. AM-FMCau, deluxe cloth intaior .
38,000miiBI. $5600. Firm. C.ll
304-875-7342.

6 Boston Terrier puppies. Ready
in 2 w&amp;eks. Deposit will hold.
Call before 6 PM, 614-387·
7422.

AKC Pomeranian pup, tiny,
choc .. femal&amp; 11150. 3 •duh
Pomeranians-all Three- t200.
Coll614-4411-8927.
·
Myna Bird with n..-v large cage
and stan d. $300. for all. C.ll
814-7.2-285&amp;.
Two ~rweglen Bk Hound
puppin. have hid ahots and
wormed. 304-816-3928.
Baby Rabbit: .. ee.oo. Purtlbred

304-895-

AKC registerad Ainlale pupt,
large breed. all shots and
wormad .. 8126.00 eec:h, 304875-nn

57

Musical
Instruments

Peawy Mu1iclan Mark Ill 1mp.
built in effects. 4 twelve bottom,
Guild gui1ar, 8800. c.n 114388-8221 .
lncffvldual guitar leuol'll. beginners. •riou• gui11rtst. Brunlcardit Music. 114-4.1-0187,
Jeff Wamsi41Y Instructor 114448-8077, turnm• openlnga..

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Canning tomatoea already
picked, t4.00 a bu .·-Jour container. Baughman' s F•rm-7
mil• s. of Gllllpolla on SR 7.
Call 814-281-1138.

Furnished rooms In country
home whh utllfti .. peld, adults.
'300 .00 month, 304-1767541 8Yening•.

1979 Monlll Carlo. U~h1 blue.
$3()00 81 il. ~II liee. Call
614-448-8741 :
1 182 ToycM Celica GT. AC, PI,
5 .... . Coli 814-218-8439.
1983 Chryll., "E"' cl111.
44.000 ICtl.lll mil•. Calt 814448-2188.

1 978Z28. Excol. cond. UBOO.
Colll14-387·7108.
1911 Pon11ac Sunbird-llk~ niiW'.
41,000 mil•. a~to. , AC. tilt.
AM·FM owoo, Coli 114-388-

82!10.

1911 O.IIVy CalM• AS htlon
Wagon. 31,200 mil-. Mlto..
.,uloo, 1Ift. AC. AM-FM • -·
Colll14-388-1240.
.
1978 Ford LtD, 2 * ··smooth
Nming. hlah mH-.o. AC. Call
814-2415-1248.

1985 Toyoto T...... I dr. lift
b.ck, I spd., AM-FM-C..a.,
front dr. 33 MPG. !~~elll. cond .
Coll814-4411-0891 .

' 82 Doclao Mlroda PS. Pl. AC,
304-17J., 418.

1978 Chwy Novo. 2 doe&lt;, Y·S.
air f)Ond. PS. Pl. dual ut. ..n
elr lhocb, ...-.,. 38, OOOach.lll
mM-. BllC aand. ee.ooo.oo.
304-1711-4230 dovo "' 87154813wonlngo.
1983 o,., d Pril. good cond.
Must •• to app,.cl.. hlah
mlle•g•. 13,300. 304·8713211
1187 ptymouth Horizon, 5
opood. G .. C . U,OOO. 304-17154481L

1980 Oldl CU111U Sup.. me;
1988Chw. lmpOioSujJOI'..,...
COJI\t'l'lible. 304-875-2719 ef.
tllll" 6 p.m.
1 983Buiclc Century,at, v-6, a-c,'
c-e. •~c . co net 304-875-2938.
1978 Dodge Colt 304-8757437.
1985 Chewrolet Cavalier. auto.
Air cond. AM·FM radio. CLpkg.
.4.100.00. 304-878-8115.

Trucks for Sale

-

,_nogotlolllo
...............
with good •ol•-~

- •. "304-871-1112 or 1714880.

Downtown..,. : 1 bedroom apt,
lumlohod. cwpot_,, AC, oclllla
o..,, no...._ c o l - 4 :00.
304-178-3788
-

CNdH Cero- 1178 Omnl. 19711
Hondo CIVic, 19711 PlniO. 1 174
Buick. 1980Volore. 1911ad •· 1813 facort. 1187
a. ....... 1813 Colt. Re...,. ble mR• Ae•c.tlble offer or
boot. Coli 814-4411-8778-&lt;10'1~
448-8980 .wn.

-

..

8ldea Annle's
atater'e d~nklng p!'obiem
problem lor IIMI whole

r,::

•

I,

Aotlry or cable tool drilling.
Mo1t well•completed1ame ct.y.
P\lmp NIBI •nd s.-vk:e. 3048911-3802

Plumbing

1117 Ford Tempo. 17000. C. II
114-4415-8111.

1981 Oldo Doltl 88. 380oulo..
air. lui po_.. Good ·aond.
• 1500. .Coli 114-4415-87SO.

1171...,. -.ulpped tDrfleHng,
hundng,. allmPfng. N..- brak-.

1:01 (]) MOYII!: The Po-n
Alwep Fllnga Twa (NR)
(1:53)
David, Wlllle end Mark bad
dreams. (R) 1;1

t:OO (J) 700 Club
• (J) 1111 MOYll!: 'Deliberate
ltr8fllllll', Plrt 2' NIC
Moncler Night It ... Movlel

'.

i llllllllrdo World Open .

i

I

pelnt )ob, 311 motat. heed••·
e700. 114-882·1111.

X.,_,
100.
old. AM-

UIO. Colte14-441-071:1.

1---700-·

~11~ r Lll dllli IS I!

"1

l'lymo... , .... 4
· , .. , ., I'W. lnquiN 172

N. 2nd.·ddl-l'h0 .. 114-

tl2·7078. . ,...

.

rr WOULD

(!) Amei!CMI Mllltlra

LOOK SILLY,
A PRE~ DENT GoOING
TO COLLEGte.

NOT IF I'M
ELECTED

I

PR~DENT.

•

'/

.•

RetrolpBCIIYe study ol
Ellington·s 1Ift and wortcs.

1;1

1111 ellill llu T- USA
Dick Ctarlc &amp; Tracy Scoggins

I

hott, 1rom IIMI Orange
Pavlllon on IIMI grounds of
11M1 National Orange ShoW In
Sen Bamardl"!'l CA (L) I;J
11J1 Larry King UVIII

,,,
~'\1'1

Ollo&gt; ilH_..J

thiOU· tol'l\

0 l'mne TltM WNIIIIng

14 Nipper

:r.::;c.,.,.

Wollo.

OoiM&lt;v

J • J W.., S.vl-.lwlnwnfng
....... clo•n~ ....... Ph, 114241·1211.
R • A W- l..tco. ........
cte•rne. wetla. Immediate.
t.oooor 2.000Jol,..dol-.,,
Coli 3114-1711-8 70.

Paal Au.-. Jr. W•r lervloe.
l'llolo......... wollo. Colll144415-3171.

w - ·Houlng. Jomoo
. _ ot 814-742-2475 or
- - .. _
.. 114-742·
-

W•ltet'aon's W... r Hau lng.
,...CINibte ,._, lmmldl-.

z.ooo ...... - · ...
paclo.
2111. - · .... ••IIM-II7S.

llfilll
llloo 238 '

Dum~ _ . dol'""" ond buolo .
hot _mowl... p - w.tl7e.

· Colll14-378-

2111.

a.- cf!rlblllo.

1e10et1 110
B14-74Z.UI3.

1e11 CXBOO c u - 1187 _ , Lyn~~ G&amp; lot• of ooclod. 11.- ml-.1800.00.
............. 104-178-1331.
1-78-1141.

31110.

87

•.

Opening lead: • J

L-----------------------~
-·
West covered wlth the ace. Returnina ::

to his hand with a trump, he played the ·,
dub queen and ruffed out the club. ·;
jack. He ruffed a diamond to his hand · · •
and played his three high trumps. ,
When it turned out that the defenders' -.
trumps were 3-3, he was able to take
all 13 tricks. His score of 710 was
clearly better than the 600 scored by ·
all those in three no-trump.
·'

..

'

..

.

'"'

Koop

7 Sitar
music
9 Under-

• "11.,

.·
- '·.
•

..

.,

onic, e.g.
Muldoon's

I~~·ltCUOR
Man's Fancy
.

.

z-voung

=:aock

'
.'

'

"54"

-'3 Fanning
Implement
DOWN
1 Spoke
at length

.•. ,
.•

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOOE!I-Here'l bow to wort It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

~·

,._The

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,
apclltrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Eacb day the code letters are different. .
.

CRYPTOQUOTES

IIIYouCanlea-

PEANUTS
IT IF '{()U
WANT TO ..

F

I•Ifill
se:~c::.

SEE?IWCKS

POH'T LOOK 60011
IN J.IATS ..

'' '

Q D M 'K

T J MD G

•llllngal'ld lllnlc rollblr.(ll) ·
Ill TllrP IF '. lllln, IILD. LOng
Ago, fw AWfl!t
.

"'

.AI...Ilft ........
11:00 (J) ...,., CliMe Declllons,

•,

Plrtl .

304·17B·4114 lo• f•oo

'

,.

(J) LNT lu ••11 Dltrolt
Cilllltc lrOm DHrbom

KTC

YTJFK 'W

YGFZBD
•'

N111t1 Hun11r lnd McCaN
MIR!I ll'lntiCIIIIr lor an

I,

'

•'l

(J) a::~~- (L)

'I'OU CAN TR'(

..

"

...

7-ZI

11:11(1) 111gn orr
11:30el! Slleltotear-

.
z:t,._.,__ ·'·
In turnltUII u•ala• ••· 0111
'.
'.

--·

2.•
Pass

ICCIIIICI hlndar or halp our

I '

MowlltY'o....
Uphcl- - •
lri_nly

.,

29At ease

conaUtutlOnal rlghll of the

I

- ..

It.

27 Sty

OrN1Mt Hill '88 World
Serlll: Meta va 0r1otn
CD We IW PIDPII Do

,,

3081.

Pass

I.

.&amp;2 Toody and

(I) llljDrl HIP• lel&amp;biiH'a

r

1t
4•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

.&amp;1 Napole-

.......

.-ny.

1+

, I

Soalh

resort

11:00f.~:nmi:III'C'IIan"N:r- In the
• &lt;Jl Cll • (I)" ill e1121

...... Call 814-4411-7404-No
lund_. clllla.

Pass
Pass
Pass

Eoll

.&amp;0 French

(1:33)

Dillard Wet• l•,..ce: Poole,

Norlh

product
38Bringjoy

• VIda aCountrr
10:31(1) MOYII: c.t'a E,. (PGI3)

c-

Weol

36Health

Lady Constllnce Lytton's
oonvlnced ol need lor
oonlrantlttonallllctlcs.

THE GRIZZWELLS®

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

35Deer

CDialtet111era

Gen•ll Hauling

..

tKQI09842

21~

33Japanese
park
lU lmlta.te

10:30 (J) c:-utlonl

86

... .

Yesterday's Anewer
sized
23 awnan 30 Muslim
17Swagger
10 Top o.ff
being
decree
19 Sunder
12 Ward off 2.&amp; Taciturn 31 Write down
20 Butt
15 Elec. term 25 Implore 32 Cry of
18 Seed
27 Vigor
surprise
coating
29 Rick
37 Peruvian
22 Separating 21 Confined
Mears
city
•
25Palm
22 Ennlne
is one 39 Card game
or nut
26Duck
or Tlge
16Devoured

10:00 (J) I• lgllt T.tk
(I) luparhuta 1987 Curry
vs McCallum from Las Vegas

!ils~~ewa

TH 1 CHURCH ROOF

11 Wrath

28Grampus

(!) St.ouldl r to 8houlcler

PATCHED UP

SOUTH
tK6
• A Q 10 9

2 Frankie's
ACROSS
1 Not cooked
second
.&amp; Cui-demate
3 Drill
7 Sitarist
for oil
Shankar
.&amp;Phase
8Voyage
5 Alder lree
10 Kiel
6A "no-no"
or Suez
for Dr.

8:30 • New Country Skip Ewing
'The Coaat of Colorado"

• Croolt IIIII ChiN

1. . V81 Honlloltomlntcond.
Colll14 441 4114.

1lllllo- ·-BOO. Uu
- · 11100. Coil 114-lt2·

1111 -

or

MORTY MEEKLE AND

'

~·

t763

CROSSWORD

13 P8118ed

9,1111 Championship from
1.88 Vegaa: Semifinal (T)
CD The 11toty l!lfllhh
TriOS the aprud of EnQtlsh
through Brttloh ColanlaiTsm.

,•

~.

EAST
tQH
H
tJIOSZ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

eNaa~~vt~~eNow

''

~1'-11

•s

tJI098
.7 32
I K97
tAJ5

The one-club opening and one-dia·
mond response were normal. South re·
bid one heart, and North tried one
spade. When South continued with two
clubs Instead of bidding no-trump, it
was obvious that both hands had rufflog values. So North shot out four
hearts.
The deal was played In duplicate
competition, and North-South did
quite well. Three no-trump was the
most popular contract, making exact·
ly three when West led spades. But
look how well South did in four hearts.
He won the king of spades and led the
club king, rufflng in dummy when

ellll ...,..,_.

1978 Clronodo. &amp; cyl. &amp;eel.
cond. t14110. Coli 114-2111- -=~--:----8
. ,.78Dodge.4--. boot
8311"' U&amp;-1797.
,... ....... olfw, 0.. 304-17111143oflw 1 :00.

Spec. ror .-nt. trail• epee-.
water A . . . . ,,,.,_.. Locu•
Ad, At. 1, 304-87.. 10711.

(1 :40)
0 TIIBI ol the Gold
MIM*er Pilot, Part 1

EEK &amp; MEEK

m••••

a. Heating

.

1:30 e C2l 1111 The Hogan Family
A atuher-typl film gives

Mlcloool'oA•IdontloiA~Con,._

82

-

.

aJfl••aANIWI
IHI MOYII!: Murphy'l Lb (R)

'.

NonT•ooT•Immlng.,dStomp

r'IW'i, ,..,..r.. adcltlon&amp; rert'IOdoling. , ·304-273-2701 ....
tWien e:oo and 1:00 ,..,.

~-MOYIE: Collet to

eMil (Pill (1 :34)

0 AlrWOit Hawke's Run

P M - Caoo.. or- oontrol.

.........

:"iii;JIIill -

.

J•c:k of •• trld •• harM h . .clr

,

crlspbread factory and 8
veterinary clinic far p!lvlleged

',..

'.

1112- C

__.

.

THE OFFERIN'S
WAS SOOD SUNOAY
AN' SIX FEU£RS

w--__

-

CA.TSA...,.I

' .•

1 Ill XA 100 Hondo dirt bl ...
Good oond. -lv ••bull.
• 3011. Coli 814-2111-t 124.

-----... - ---

Mli~ EVIiR'YONIO
HASTA &amp;"':!; FOR

••••

WJ;'M

fit.

lrlelid.(Rl D
(I) Amerlcll'• Cup The 2511\
Dllanu: The End ol an Era
(I) elll AIC _ , Ntgllt

~~
.~
I;! CleogNpl1ie
~YlsH .

ARE \1JIJ KIDDING

en white
814-

1188 CA210. Good cond.
I 1.000. Coli 814-21&amp;-S4 14 "'
2111-1827. •

"I will now read 'War and Peace.'
.. .Want to see me read It again?"

'

lhape,

78 CJ 7, &amp;ItO., I ayl.
Engine •bult. ,.....,
,.,..,_Co11&amp;14-448-aW1.

46 Space for Rant

1----------

'

'

'

Jeoplfdvll;l

ellen tor a blind

':

1981 Joop Pickup, 8 cyl.,4 opd.
!'::
In grellll
ntM 8 ply
...1. with

74 Motorcvd•

51 Household Goods

.

Jacoby

When you and partner hold upwards
of 26 high-card points and have bal·
anced distribution with no eight-card
fit In either major, you will probably
end up playing in three no-trump. This
is usually the right contract. But if either band Is unbalanced with voids or
singletons, there can be serious transportation difficulties. It may then
work out well to play in a 4-3 trump

7:31 (I) ....., Ottlllth
1:00 (J) Cruy l.lke 1 Fox Year of
IIMI Fox
e C2l !Ill ALF Overprotactlve
ALF tries to be -'!11-eye

,,

11onlng ond ,..,.lgOIO!Ion. ,..
...... """ ....... ooMC&amp; 3044118-1781.

..... . . -• . t40oo.
388·8478.

• VldaaCoul'ltlr

NORTH

By James Jacoby

aa.n•ari

oF

,•
-' '

RON:S Television Servlc•. ' '
Hou• cal• on f'CA. au.ar,
BE .. Spoelojlng Iii Zonlth. Coli
304-1715-2388 Of 114-44&amp;2454.
'\ .
••
Fetty Tree Trimming. ltump '
remowl . Clll30~675-1331 .
•

1171 'Hon Ch..,Y,plckup. ~
body with 1987~ dolncom
,
Both Mke n.w. Call 114-2 1&amp;182,

1884 1-10 of&lt;*up tno:k. Ao....,,1_,. C.ll814-448-8781.

t&gt;JsArPE~ANce

,

C.•pont'Y/Romodollng. E rlenoed.' ho.-t, ,....,..bfe.
F111e eat&amp; Raft. 0 . Ptl. Gordon114-4411-ltll. _ .....
ThWik You.

R e - . fNo ootlml1oo. J04171-7121.
'

11~4&amp;-&amp;738,

:.TJ::..
I ~r.1f

. . .1'

tAH2
.KJB
+AQ8843

Succeeding
in a 4-3 fit

.....,.IMG.,. lluball

I THif'J/( l i STAN!»
fo(l. '' fA.s'i

1'

Pol-g: lntorlor flo · - ·
.... - -- Coli 114-44118344.

1 171 4 'WD Chewy 'A ton
pick-up. Aocontly ..,,_d body,
n• •Int. menyntw s-na.310.
4 opd, RuM greOI. Shwpl Coli
814-4411-7848oftoo I PM.

18M N._, King Cob. Dloool.
high rnleaga. t11, Pl. AC. niW
1 1 - - ""'""' 12488. Coli

(I)

lf'JVESTEI&gt; CAS'H ~

1979 Monti C.lo. Ekcel. c:ond.
New brill•. 327 engine. 202
h_,s, Bchttbrock Intake/Elite
terleewlw co ...... •el..,.,.
Lot• of . . . . dul4 P:h.. llt.
t 2200. Coli 114-3711-2424.

..,.,.,.ta.
...,...,d
c•·

/

'

72

1.71 ...... 780. ...... good.

• ..,..ho.....

RON EVANS ENTI!A PRISE&amp;·

Soptlc - • Jl'll"olnll' *10 10011. C.l11·8fl0.137· 9128.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou• clll Wvicing Q E. Hat
Point. waahen. dryen and
.._ . 304-5715-2398.

Now accepting appiiCit:lonl for
2 Mdroom
lull¥

3 room. blth,

oyotom. l'loiOooy .....,_, ohop. RON EVANS !N'II!A·
PAI8ES. Jockoon. Ohio. 1 -801).
537-lllll.

6 cyl engine end •ran•mission,
304-&amp;75-5888.

a M - - - - 0011 .,._
4MI042

MIN

eo-•
Ton• . 1000
gil.• 1100glll.andeiii:Aamlon

Starks Lawn and ShrW Service.
304·8715-3958 .. 304-57152903.

304-882·2588.

... _

•

"'

&amp;optic

..................rill ......

_

'·

.'

REO HOT bwgoinol 0"'1 doof.
.,.. c... boatl.
NP'd.
Surplua. Your erea. Buy.rs
Guido. 111 8015-887·1000. EKt.
8-4112.

594-3578

,.,.

.
'.,.

Shell corn. .,.,... h., ~tndatrew.
Dolly .. _
8:00 til 12:00.
Morgan Woocl..,n hrrn. ftt,
31. 304-937-2018.

~ames

lqiiWI

.,

Hay &amp; Grain

~~Ill) Wheel of

e

'I

'

BRIDGE

••

IHIIe1118J MHlet
Croolt and Clleu
7:01 (]) AntiJ Olllftth
7:30. (J) (J) Hally wood

. .1.1.

. ..
•·. .
.'

night because he thought someone was under the bed. The
bartender told him to cut the legs OFF the BED . .

•GDI18rTnlo:
IIJII•ane,ltlt

.'

I

~·

Nt•-::-J!:OO)Court

• (I)

.. '

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Aflame - Frock - Bushy - Wisdom - OFF ihe BED
A bartender helped to cure a man who couldn't sleep at

(I) l!t111118111n..,t T0111ght
CD (!) MacHII/ Lehrer

I

Whtll farm tr.cton oo•t plus
Sidlrs Equipment. Call
304-1711-7421 .

Concrete blocks- all liZe•· 'VIrd
ordeUwry. M•on•nd. Gllllpolla Blade Co.. 1 23'/i Pine St.,
Galllpotia, Ohio. C.ll 814-4462783 ..

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Ru1tic
and Bevel .. l.lp Slclng
• De«* Material•

.

,.,•

Co mplete the c11uclde quoted
by f1lllng in t he missing words
you develop from s1ep No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

7:00 (J) Retnltlgtlh'1 . _ Steele
Your Heart Away
·
.(2)PMM..trJM
(I) lpott Cllllal (L)

;l

,.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTHS IN
THESE SQUARES

e Yau c.n le a Slllr

''
'''

64
Building MMerial•
Btock, brick. MWet' pipet~, windows. lintels. etc. CIMide Winloti, Rio Grltnde, 0 . Call 114245-5121 .

·=
s-·

8

.'

My uncle Is always going to the
doctor lor some real or imagined
illness. His wife had a bumper
slicker printed which read, " I'd
Rather B e -."

lO

• .....J
L.-.1..-..1.-..1.-..J.L......L.

1:31(1) Cenll - -

'

j.

T I VL E Y

ill
Cll ......
• 4D llogMI'•
...0.1
IIJIInlkM Polltlea '18

..'•
..

I% .

I I

I

CD lloclr l!lealriC
(!) llglltiJ lualneu Report

1111 Y...O,....Oil!ICountryCiub
Trev41 TNilw. condition.
LMIW wll:h . . . . . Clll 114-

I I .,..•

hs~T~;_;1...:.,1:;:.6....:;1r:-~.--l

~~~&amp;(R)

'
..
'
'

1

•

1:30. C2l Ill) NIC NIQhllr Newa

~·:

...'"

TAROF
~

.

oc-I!Jpraa
.,.rid
...To ..__

••
•

••••fl

SI~IVILI':.

I

1.111 (J) Lee.. It

11M
pop-f.4t campu.
Sloopo B. Euol. cond. t2800.
Coli 814-2511-1132.

1182-~t!J2ofl•. p.m.
:::-.- .:....;=----'----.,..

G A MN Y

Good

.

Am.._. •

2891.

a •c

ll!:'r=
1H1
Tlmn

I'

'

1987 Pllnttoc 8000. 4 ...... 4
(JI'I,, fu ly oqulppod. 30.000

.

Plrt4

TURN IT OFPH

th e

be-

T I B I NG

• C2l Cll • Cll
(I) lportal.o«
CD CDiaNOundl
(!) Of. Wl1o The Dominators.

ALL ltiGHTo AL-R&amp;ADVo

WOlD
GAM I

low ra form four simp le words

•

EVENING

8alvea•U• ,.n.
FOr~p c•a.

Floor ufa for •I e. Hliaht 23
Inch•. width 17 lnctl•,length
221ndl~, C.lll14-9112·3458.

Phon~

MON., JULY 25

!II Heft

I II Ill St, ,1,1111' ~
,\ [I vl".llll.k

n;e letters of
0 Reorro
four tera mbled words

1:00 (J) lllg Ylllley Ladyklller

·· - - Collet431
1 --

Beech Street, Mlddleporl, Ohio.
2 bedroom furNihed apartm.m.
utflhl• paid, r.f.-ncn. Phone

Ct. .

a.

'::~:t:~' S©~Q{l}A-~£tf'Ss
Edit•d .. y CLAY I . POLLAN

Ot !lll~ ' "• • TV1 .~1••&lt;~ GI ·"•' lno rtWnrlh TX

Ju'*
· -...
Coli 116-87811"'
a14-378-ZIZO.

2 bedroom fu.,.,..had apt New
Haven. reference and •curfty
deposit requlr1d, 304~ 882 ·
3287 Of 304-773-5024.

ci!J*.t, appll..-•
treah plc*upa provided. M-'nll·
nan .. frM ~wing aloaa to lhop..
ping, blftkl end achoolt. For
mONI lnformlt:ton call 304-812·
3711. E .O.H.

ft.. nM

Auto Partl
Accauorial

Vimon Auto

R&amp;JC 110.00.
3610.

•

.
. 30 ..., .....~-·ete&amp;up.
11
• ........... a• low •
131.
SUndllrd clutDh-. pr•.,,.
plaw •tlwo¥11 outhtW.Z. All
lyfi001Zmoo.-owo1J. ' o ...y

after 7:30 PM.

American Eskimo pups. UKC
Registered. S100 each. Call
814-388-0890.

Antiques

A~ .

BUDGET
TAANSMIIIION·
u
•.,._.,
.. _ __ _

Mull Sell- 1 4 karat gold
tncl• . Aea.ttly . p...IN for
*1400. Flrlt person with "00
- - ~- CoH 814-387·0891

55 Building Supplies

Dinettes. beds . bedding ,
dra_.., cheat. couchea:. chairs,
limps. coff. . and tabl•. EVIllY
dav Specl• . 1h mile out Jerricho. 304-175-1450.

•I

..... Col1114-4411-4110.

Valley FurnituN
New and uled furniture and
appllcances. Call 814-4467672. Hour~ 9 . 5,

PICKENS
FURNITURE

t ••

bltWV. Qood cond. Trd•· nww

Towmotor forldlft. ... .,._holst.
pollOI 1... flo L·ooolw. Olflco
cf..k.... cutM • eecrewlel.
tJme dock,. 5 ton Amen• h. .
pump • furNce. Call114-44•
2368.

Food Wagon, 304-87&amp;-4281.

J &amp; S FURNITURE
14115 Ealltern Ave.
4 driiWBr chwt, $48. 15 drawer
chett, $64.9&amp;. 15 pc . wooden
dinnette seta. t199.96.

mot.-. 11

10 HP

Coli

Television
Viewing

'(e;;, I'D ?AY
'i'OV 00~11-\ITaY

..

··=·" ,,

* oordtkt,_.,
:Z
...,..,_.ble

..,... ........ •eoo.

••

11M
out-boefd
• .U n tt .. lfi..Merd.
._ plua
toollw. Groit cond. 13100. Coli
114-448-UiZ.

night - d . •h •
ooulpnwnt. Colll14-2115-lt3Z.

Bui ... Mie Rd. Open 9am to lpm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-4460322.

Furnished efflcency apt :-3
rooms &amp; bath. Carpet through- 54 Misc. Merchandise
out. Prtvate a. quiltt. Single
working Jlllrlon only. Call 8f4448-4807 or 46-2802.
-Wheekhliu-new or used. 3
wheeled eiBCiric acooters. Call
Nice furnished apt. · 4 rooms &amp; Rogera Mobitty collect, 1-614bat h. Centrally located. Ret. a. 870-9881 .
18C. dep. ~~~qufred. No pat1. Call
6, 4-4411-0444,
Standing ••m roofing, 7 pieces
of angle Iron. 3· "I " beams·
P\Jrnished ipartment in town. different alzea, 1haets o f
Call 814-446-1423.
in1ulation-Lots. Call 814-3889826.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom IPinments at VIllage
Fuel oil heater, 60,000 btu
Minor llld Rtvenide · Apart- completlt
with tank $250. 304menh in Mlddlaport. From
1182. Call 814-992-7787. 875-8412.
EOH,
Kitchen cabinets w·bu ill in oven
2 bedroom Apt1. for rent. 60" table w -benc:hes &amp; hutch:
Carpated. Nica11tting. Laundry Bicycle. 304-176-1494.
facHitiel avllilable. Call 814Mobile home 10~~:86 total elect·
992-3711 . EOH.
ric, been completety remodeled
1181 QM 12ft bed
Newly redecorated apartments 04.000,00.
aVIillble. Utilitiel paid. $225. dump tru:k wllltsll whofe or for
per month, depOiit tequired. Call part1 whh e!Ceellent hoitt. 304814-992-8724 after 8:00 or · 11175-6512 ~ween 3:00 and
3:30,
992·5119.

45

Apartment
for Rant

Upper_Motel.
River 8~
Ad.4-441-7398.
be1lde Stone
Cr•t

8oell and
Motorl for Slle

Dining room tabl•l ohlirl.
buffot. bocl d • - · ehooc. •

"So far all he ever grows 1s ....
tired."
0000 USED APPUANCES
W•h••·
dryera, refrlg ...orl,
rang... Skagga Appllancas,

DrBII EM k'alha
Baot Fo• Looo
Open and own your own ladi•

1000tcpb&lt;ondotcchoo•"""'
ouch 00 Esprit Fooonu, c.tol;,., KooOI. Lovt Ouibock Rod.
Coca Coli, HelithtM. Au..
Toga, BrVIIn. Carters, etc .
e 19,975 for camP• PICbg..
For frH brochure c.. M•l.,,.
Fllhionaat 1·904-786-4111.

711

County Appli11not. Inc. Good
used appll.nCM end TV Mta.
Op• BAM to IPM . Mon thru
814-4415-1899. 127 3rd.
Ave. Oafllpolil, OH.

Sll&amp; Clll 614-992·3637 efter
5p.m.

orchildren' 1appar.. •tore. Three
pricingconceptaa:vlil.ible: Ngu·
oft..prioe: ·or
113.
99
lar prlca,
(end
'"') 'M•Imum
price.
Over

KIT 'N' CAIILYLE~ lly Larry Wrtald

51 Household Goods

--·MI......

F111 dllcldl
21

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

N F J Z
0 T

VFKDGTYQD
ZEJ

KEVD

C

EN

.,.

LQDTK
Y D F J B

MEBDMWDG .

WDGEQZ

YeeterdaJ'I CqptoQaote: CULTURE IS TO KNOW
THE BEST THAT HAS BEEN SAID AND THOUGJIT IN
THE WORLD. - MATI'HEW ARNOLD

.....,

.

..
. ..

.•..
,; ·

.,

.'

.,.•

�Page- 1o-The Daily Sentinel

r---

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Severe storms strike parts of Ohio...

Local news briefs... - -

. \

Continued from page 1
reorganizing the operation to make it more effective.
Applications for emergency loans may be made Immediately
at the local FmHA Office. Applications lor physical and
production losses will be received until March 14, 1989.
Benefits of FIY)HA programs are available without regard to
race, color, creed, sex or marital status. Further Information
can be obtained from the Pomeroy FmHA Office located at 105
Butternut Ave.

temperatures to the 70s In
northern New England and to the
80s and lower 90s In the East,
which baked In a heat wave last

Bush...

EMS has 10 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the w¢ekend; seven on Sunday and three on Sunday.
Middleport at 12: 51 p.m. to Front St. for Lily Dyke to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutlanq Squad 44 at 12:53 p.m. to the scene of
an auto accident on Horner Hill for Rene, Donald and James
Stratlin who were treated at the scene; Rutland Squad 40 at
12: 56 p:m. was called to assist at the above ac~ldent; Tuppers
Plains at 12:55 p.m. to an auto accident on Route 681 East lor ·
Courtney Jones who was treated but not transported; Racine at
12:57 p.m. transported Sherrie Jones !rom an auto accident on
Dewitt 's Run to St. Joseph's Hospital; Racine Fire Department
at 12:57 p.m . was called to assist at the above accident;
Pomeroy at 10: 34 p.m . to Route 68lfor William Fisher to Holzer
Medical Center .
On Sunday, Pomeroy at 1: 08 p.m. to South Sixth St. for Clero
Baker to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 4:.34 p.m .
to Walnut St. for Debbie Faulk who was treated but not
transported; Salem Township Fire Department at 5:37 p.m .
·· received a call which was later canceled to a field fire on Bowles
.Road.

Bush made stops Saturday In
Memphis, Tenn., where he
viewed the drought·lbwered Mls·
slsslppl River, and Tampa, Fla.,
where he spoke against narcotics
trafficking and reiterated his
support lor the death penalty for

l.fllC' l says
O'JJ
I

•

"That means the country's
business and Industrial customers would have to pick up the
extra costs of power plant

Hospital news

Charles E. Pauerson

I

Charles E. Patterson, 49, of Rt.
Edith Lillian Lambert Forrest,
_
4,
Pomeroy, died Sunday at
85. Route 1, Middleport, a retired
Veter
M
1 1 fiM it 1 f
teacher in the Meigs and Mason
ter
a
~~~~f
nr:~~.a
--.P a .aCounty schools, died Sunday at
Born
Oct.
23,
1938
In Madison,
the Holzer Medical Center.
W.Va.
he
was
the
son
of Bernice
Mrs. Forrest was born at Silver
Welch
Justice
of
Rt.
3, Bidwell,
Run. She had been a teacher for
and the late Harvey Ray
53 years. She taught In the
Patterson.
Salisbury Schools of Meigs
He was a retired mechanic and
County before retiring. She later
u.s.
Army Veteran.
taught . in the Masqn County
In addition to his mother.
schools and retired a second
survivors
include a stepfather,
time.
Vlrgll
Justice
of Rt. 3, Bidwell;
She was a member of the
two
daughters,
Charlene PatterMiddleport Business and Profes·
son
of
Rutland
and Charlotte
sionai Women's Club, the Ohio
Patter.
s
on
of
Daytona
Beach,
Education Association, Middle·
Rev a
Fia.;
his
former
wife,
por t Chapter of the Order of
M
Eastern Star and was a member
usser of Pomeroy; three brothof the Bradbury Church of Christ.
ers, Johnny Lee Patterson ot
Bidwell. · H. Ray Patterson of
Surviving are a son, Bill Centerburg, Ohio, Larry S. Pat- '
terson of Worthington; three
Forrest of Hennepin, lll; two
sisters,
Mrs. Joe (Mary) Storts of
daughters, Linda Stobart of
Centerburg,
Ohio, Mrs. Darrel
Middleport, and Barbara Hysell,
(Linda)
Nelson
of Dexter and
Columbus; two grandsons, three
granddaughters. three great- Mrs. Kenny (Brenda) Davis of
gr andsons, two great - Vinton.
In addition to his father, he was
granddaughters, and several nie·
preceded in death by one brother.
ces and nephews.
Services will be Thursday at 1
She was preceded In death by
p.m. at the McCoy-Moore Funher parents, Isaac and Maude
eral Home in VInton with the
Lambert; her husband, Homer
Rev. Dewey King officiating. The
Ca s h ,Forrest; a great ·
Vinton American Legion Post 161
granddaughter , and a daughter,
will conduct a military graveside
Virginia Sayre.
service.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friends may call at the.funeral
Wednesday at the Rawlings·
home Wednesday from 2 to4 p.m.
Coats· Blower Funeral Home
with Mr . Robert Purtell offlclat· and 7 to 9 p.m.
ing. Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Ce mete ry, Cheshire. Friends
Max Brickles
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Max Eugene Br!ckles, 68, of 627
Tuesday .
East Market St ., Washington
Court House, died early Sunday
Gladys Shumway
morning at the MI. Carmel
Medical
Center In , Columbus
Gladys M. Shumway, 93, Long
after
failing
in health for several
Bo ttom, died Monday at the
years.
.
Po merov Health Care Center.
Born April 9, 1920 In Nelson'Arra ngements are being com·
ville, he was a son of the late
pieted at the White Funeral
Eugene
and Ethel Courtney
Home in Coolville.
Br!cktes. He spent most of his
adult live in Washington Court
Gladys Powell
House and his early life In
Pomeroy. He graduated from
Gladys M. Powell. 80, Reeds·
Pomeroy HIgh School where he
ville. di ed Sa turday evening at
was a prominent athlete. He was
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
a state highway patrolman and
lowing a n extended illness. •
he retired in 1983 from employ.
She was born in Washington
ment at the London Correctional
Co unty, a daughter of the late
Institution .. He was a member of
El mer. a nd Cl'ara Cline DeVol.
the McNair Pcesbytertan.C hurch
Mrs. Powell attended the St.
In Wa~hlngt·on Court House and a
Pa ul United Methodist Church at
U.S. Army veteran of World War
Tuppers Plains and was a former
lL
member of the Daughters of the
Survivors Include his wife,
America n Revo,lutlon.
Hazel Starkey Brlckles; five ·
Surviv in g are three sons . Nor·
sons, William, of Columbus,
va l (,Jiggs) Pa rkersburg; Robert
Charles'. Daniel and Lynn Joe, all
L. of Vi enna, W. Va., and Ray
of Washington Court House, and
Powell, Reedsvllle; tHree daugh·
David, of Lawson, Mo.; nine
ter s, Ruth Shields and Geraldine
grandchildren; one great grandSmith, both of Newark, and
daughter; one brother, Robert.
Norma Savel, Parma ; two sisof Washington Court House; and
ters, Eliza beth Foster and Hazel
three sisters, Mr. Melvin (Olive)
Thomason. both of Marietta; 24
Smith, of Pomeroy, Mrs. Morris
grandchldren and 24 great,
(Alberta) Haning, of Nelsonville,
grandchildren.
and Mrs. Ruth Jewell, of Coal
Besides her parents, she was
Grove.
preceded In death by her husServices will be Wednesday,
band, George, in 1974; a daugh·
1:30 p.in., at the Kirkpatrick
ter , Virginia Woolard, a brother
Funeral Home, 554 Washington
and a sister.
Ave., Washington Court House,
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
with Rev. Francis Hoffman off!·
Tuesday at the White Funeral
elating. Burial will be ·ln High·
Home in Coolville with the Rev.
lawn Memorial Gardens, WaBill Lowe and the Rev. Ralph
shington Court House. Calling
Sampson olflclaltfli~ Burial will
hours at the funeral ~orne will be
be In the Tuppers Plalu Chris·
Tuesday from 4 to8p.m. In lieu or .
tlan Cemetery. Friends may call
flowers, memorial contributions
at the funeral home from 2 to 4 may be made to McNair Presby.
and 7 to 9 p.m. today.
terlan Church.

people who commit drug· related
murders.
Alter finishing his campaign
swing, Dukakls seemed genuinely pleased with the large
receptions he received In Texas,
California, North Dakota, Missouri and Pennsylvania.
"! hope we can harness that
energy and diversity and really
make a difference," Dukakls
said.

Continued from page J

• • • - - _ _ _ : _ . . : _ __ _

Super Lotto sales totaled
$4,293,699.
.
The Kicker number was 314,801
and one ticket matched the
Veterans Memorial
number Cor $100,000.
Saturday
Admissions-ChaFive other tickets matched the
rles
Patterson,
Pomeroy.
first Clve digits and are worth
Saturday
Discharges-Sarah
$5,000, 65 tickets matched the ·
first four Cor $1,000; 592 tickets Johnson, Dwight Medley.
Sunday Adinlsslons-Clero
matched the firs I three Cor $100,
Baker,
Middleport.
and 6,308 tickets matched the
Sunday
Discharges-Nolle.
llrst two Col' $10.

Area deaths
Edith Forrest

UJ•

earlier proposal because It appears to place an even greater
cost on the nation's commercial
and Industrial power users
through promising a 10 percent
limit ori rate hikes to residential
customers.

No one claims Ohio jackpot

week. Maine enjoyed 00-degree
weather, and a thunderstorm
cooled Miami to 72 degrees
Sunday. tying a record set In

Continued from page 1

the benellts they need," Bush
said. "Employers must demonstrate more flexlbllty, sensitivity
to family needs. "

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
jackpot In Wednesday's drawing
of the Super Lotto will be at least
$9 mUllan because there was no
top-prize winner Saturday night,
lottery officials said Sunday.
Some 128 tickets, however,
matched five of the numbers
drawn and are each worth $1,000,
and 6,606 llckets matched four
numbers for $74.
The numbers were 2, 4, 17, 27,
29 and 30.

Monday, July, 26. 1988

Announcements

Open meeting
An open lead meeting of the
Meigs County Chapter of AA will
be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Sacred Heart Church In Pomeroy
with a guest speaker to be a
feature.

scrubbers. There's 'no one else to
pay It," Dowd said.
"More to the point, what good
fs a 10 percent cap on a worker's
electric bill If he has no job
because of plant shutdowns or his
company has gone out of
buslnes·s?"
·
For the first time, Sen. Mit·
chen also now proposes a new
federal tax on power generation
with power plants which emit the
most sulfur dioxide paying the
highest tax, Dowd said.
Dowd said such an emissionbased tax will result In the same
electric customers bearing both
the brunt of the proposed tax and
the power plant control costs.
too.
·
·

1953.
A 4-lnch downpour flooded
streets and basements In Putnam, Conn., and In Holyoke,
Mass., a 30· by 50·foot section of
the roof or a Sears Roebuck and
Co. store collapsed under the
weight of heavy rains Sunday
morning.
No one was hurt because the
store was closed at thetlmeofthe
accident, which followed a 2-lnch
deluge. Sears officials said
nearly all the store's contents
were damaged or ruined.
"It looked like a bomb went
off," police officer Gerald Sulewski said. "There was water
everywhere.''
The worst of the Western
wildfires raged In and around the
Yellowstone National Park In
Wyoming, forcing the evacuation
of 3,000 campers and workers
and the closing of the south

1 ____;;_
_c_ontl_nu_ed_from_pa_ge_
entrance.
Flres"devoured 9,600 acres In
Yellowstone while a 22,650-acre
blaze In the Bridger-Teton National Forest burned to the park
boundary and a 35,000-acre fire
blackened backcountry on the
park's eastern boundary near the
Shoshone National Forest.
"But overall, the park Is open
and accessible," Yellowstone
spokeswoman Joan Anzelmo
said. "There's smoke In the air,
there are some unusual eondltlons, but Old Faithful Is open."

Daily .Number
827
Pick 4
060~

Page4

•

Firefighters were preparing
lor another wave or wildfires
with more drY heat In the
forecast.
"We've got a very hot, dry air
mass over the Northwestern
states and northwestern California, with temperatures soaring
Into the 100s the next few days.

.
Vol.39, No.116

.

at

Clear tontrbt, low In mid
60s. Wednesday, mostly
sunny. !Dghs In mid 808.

•

enttne
1 Saction, 10 Peg• 26 Centa
A Multimlldia Inc. Newapap.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 26, 1988

CopyrighMo( 1888

Hoffman urges councll .to push for facility

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 7·26-88

.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sendnel News Staff ·
Middleport VIllage Council
should find a goixl site for a
juvenUe correction center and
push for Its acceptance.
This was the advice of Mayor
Fred Hoffman Monday night at a
regular meeting of Middleport
V!Uage Council. The advice followed a report by Councilman
Paul Gera~d on a meeting
dealing with lhe planned new
correction facility held In Athens
lasi week.
Representatives from eight
counties attended that meeting
held by the Ohio Deepartment of
Youth Services. Present for the
session from Meigs County In
addition to Gerard were the
Meigs County Commissioners
Richard Jones, Manning Roush

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

Ohio Lottery

Cubs work
out under
new lights

~SNOW

-RAIN
1;.,/'JsHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map ahOWt mirjmum temJ)Iraturat. At teut 50% of any thldld aru 11 fai'ICUI
10 receive precipitatlon Indicated
UPI
WEATHER MAP - t'howers and thunderstorms will be
scattered over Florida, the Georgia and CaroUna cout, Norlbern
New Enrland and nortbeaat N.ew York State. A cold front over the
Midwest will bring IICattered showers and thundentormll !rem
Mlchlpn across the lower Ohio and middle MissisSippi valleys to
northern Mississippi, Arkanaa&amp; and nordt central Texaa. Widely
scattered afternoon thunderslonns will continue over the
southwestern slates and will be most numerous In ·the mountains.

11

N

and David Koblentz.
and would operate that facility chlorlnallon can be added. The
Gerard said that in the eight
receiving funds from other coun- Initial payment to Conrail wlll be
county area In the past year, 307
ties using the facility.
$450 witjl an annual payment of
juvenU~s committed felonies and
Gerard Indicated that Meigs $350 thereafter.
57 of those were confined to County could not financially
Council gave the Mud River
correction facilities through the manage sue h a faclllty but said
Band permission to play at the
Department of Xouth Services. that he believes the county has a
Dave Diles Park on Saturday
At the present time, all correc· "good shot" at a facility which
nights from 8 to midnight on a
lion facilities are north of Colum· would be built and operated by
trial basis with hours to be
bus and the plan Is to locate new the State of Ohio. Those confined
adjusted If those set last night are
facilities In SOuthern Ohio. The to such an Institution would not
too long. Councll gave the third
Jeglslaq.lfe has approved be violent offenders and It would
reading to an ordinance provld·
$11,000,000 for the new facilities be not be a maximum security
lng for the codification of new
with two 50-bed Institutions ap· · unit, Gerard reported. Funds will
· ordinances and approved the
par en tly favored over one 100 bed not be available for the project
ordinance. Plans were made for
center. Four to five acres will be untll1990.
ordering six trash containers-needed lor one facility which
In other matters, councll en- concrete with steel lids - to be
Ideally would be bullt and·oper· tered Into aq ·agreement for a
placed about town. Cost of the
a ted by the State of Ohio, Gerard right of way on the Conrail
containers,
to be paid for through
1
said.
properly near the village sewage a litter grant, Is about $335 each.
. Other proposals are that a lagoon. ThIs would allow . the ·
Each container weighs approxicounty or several counties would town to put electrical and water mately 450 pounds.
go together and build a facility lines to the lagoon sO that
A discussion was held on

ordering some type of play· Inspector wlll be asked to return .
grourid equipment for the Diles to conduct another Inspection.
A firm employed by the village
Parktoget tllatphaseolthepark
started. Council has $1,000 from to prepare a plan for a vlllagethe motorcycle group to help and owned cable television service Is
perhaps, more contributions will in touch weekly by telephone,
be for!llcom Jng, Mayor Hoffman Mayor Hoffman reported, and
Indicated.
wlll have the complete plan on
Mayor Hvlfrnan was autho- how the project could be carried
rized to transfer the lol at the out as well as the cost factors
corner of Mill 'SL, and Second when the study Is finished. It was
Ave., known as !he Rawlings lot agreed that all councll members
and owned by Crows more will c9ntact Meigs County Englrecently, to tile developers who neer"Phll Roberts In regard to
will construct a facility for the wrapup work needed for the
new Family DoUar Store.
village annexation project deal·
The mayor also reported that lng with the Hobson area.
Attending the meeting were
the the miniature golf course at
Hartinger Park has been reins· · Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck
peeled by by lhe state. The and Councilmen Gerard, Dewey
Inspector Indicated several cor· Horton, William Walters, Jack
rectlons be made. Those have Satterfield and Bob Gilmore.
been taken care of and . the

Eastern board ·extends . pacts

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 26~
Ashland Oil ........................ 73%
Bob Evans ........................ .. . 17
Revlva:I underway
Charming Shoppes ............ ..14';1;
Middleport WesleyanBibleHoCity Holding Co ................... 34 .
llness Church Is In revival today
Federal Mogut.... :............ .. .42%
(Monday) through Sunday. AI- Goodyear T&amp;R .... · .... .. .. .. .. .. 59 71'"ternatlngspeakerswlllbePastor
Heck's Inc ........................... 1')1,
Roy McCarty and Creed Tho·
Key Centurion .......... .. ........37%
mas, or Oakland. Services will
Lands' End ............ .. ... .. .... .. 28%
,
begin' at 7:30 each evening,
Limited Inc .......... .. .. .. ........ 23% .
Soudt Central Ohio
tng, becoming partly sunny.
following youth services which
Multimedia Inc .......... .. ........ 73 ·
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a 50 Highs will be In the mid· 80s ·
start at 6:45.
Rax Restaurants .................. 4~
percent chance of showers and
Extended Forecut
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 12
thunderstorms. Lows will be In
WednesdiQ' dtrougb Frld!Q' ,
Club plans picnic
Shoney's Inc ...... ................. 2631. the upper OOs and winds southw·
Generally fair weather, with a
Wendy's Inti .... , ................... 5% est around 10 mph, becoming chance or showers and thunderWlldwood Garden Club will
Worthington lnd ................. 23~
northwest by morning. Tuesday, storms In the south Wednesday
meet for a picnic Wednesday,
(Ashland 011 announced third- mostly cloudy with a 50 percent andThllrsday.Highswlllbe85to
6:30 p.m., at the home of Hilda
quarter earnings at $1.02/share chance of showers In the morn.. 90 and lows In the mid to upper
Yeauger.
vs. $.66/share)
60
-----------------------------------· _ . _ _s_.- - - - - - - - - -

' of financial problems In
In light
Eastern Local School District,
Eastern Local Board of Education and Eastern's OAPSE Chap·
_ ter No. 448 have agreed to extend
the current non·cerdfled employees' contract for one additional year, to Sept. 1, 1989. The
agreement calls for no changes
In salaries or language. Eastern
Superintendent Dan Apllng re·
· ports · that In special meetings
last week, a tentative agreement
between OAPSE and the .board
was reached Wednesday night,
OAPSE members ratified the
tentative agreement Thursday
• nli-1 Qd on Friday night, th_e
bOifQ approved the contract
extension.

------Weather----;__

In addition to approving the

!

Rain is
welcomed;
corn still
critical

OAPSE contract, the board also -Amended appropriations.
conducted the following other · -Approved an advance of funds .
business matters on Friday for the State Teachers Retire·
night.
·
· men! System.
-Met In executive session io -Approved an advance draw of
discuss personnel matters and
monies from the county auditor,
matters related to negotiations.
-Employed Rita Williams as -Approved exchanging the curjunior class advisor, Carol rent four port multiplexer for an
Brewer as freshman class advl· eight port multiplexor, thus
sor and Pam Douthitt as head Increasing the computerization
volleyball coach.
capabilities of the district by 100
-Authorized membership In the percent.
Ohio High School Athletic Associ- -"Approved going to a money·
ation for the 1988-89 school year.
saving alternative premium pay-Adopted a new evaluation form Ing method for dental Insurance
for use with .classified premiums,
employees.
··
-Set Aug. 11, 6:00 p.m., at the
-Retained the Brogan,Warner high school, as the date and time
Agency to provide a student for a special meeting, 'primarily
accident Insurance 'plan for stu· for the purpose of dealing with
dents for the 1988-89 school year. personnel matters.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Agricultural Statistics
Service says that dessplte last
week's rainfall - more than 6
Inches In some places - most
. Ohio farmers consider this year's cprn crop lost.
But the federal agency said
Monday the outlook appears a
- little brighter forseybeans.
In Its weekly crop and weather
report, the agency said Ohlo
farmers. suffering through the
worst drought In at least 115
years, were quite happy to be
forced from their fields last week
by the unexpected rainfall.
As of Monday morning, soU
!ember. The other states are stU!
moisture
was rated short In 54
· investlgatlng the matter.
percent
of
the state, adequate In
However, regulators In Ohio
46
percent
and surplus In 1
and eight other states are holding
percent. However, many areas
REAGAN SPEAKS TO REPORTERS - Fresldent Reagan
Chubb liable ·for all appllcatloils ·
were
reporting the soli was dry 6
speaks
to
reporters
Monday
after
signing
legislation
Implementreceived before the June 15
Inches
beneath the surface even
Ing
U.S.·Canadlan
Free
Trade
Agreement
and
crellllngthe
largest
deadline.
though
all the rain had been
trade
relationship
In
the
world.
(UPI)
The Insurance guarantees
absorbed.
payouts If the amount of ralnfa.U
But even with last week's rain,
fell below certain levels. How·
many
farmers still consider their
ever, critics say Chubb wanted to
corn
crops
to be a total failure,
see how bad the drought would be
the
agency
said.
before It announc.ed, In mid-July,
In many parts of the state, cor'l
that It would not prdvlde
had
already surpassed the critiprotection.
cal
stage of pollination and
Fabe estimated his departfar'mers were beginning to
ment could be forced to pay $1
"green chop" - cutting up the
million for Chubb'.s legal fees If
Immature
plants !or sllage.
Its Investigation was later ruled
The
crop
rated 37 percent very
substantjally unjustified.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres· over the sha~ of drought legisla- poor, 38 percerit poor and 22
The department has scheduled !dent Reagan, renewing his
tion. The White House released percent fair, essentlolly unhearings In nine Ohio counties
pledge to protect farmers from letters lrom the president to the changed from the previous
th~ week to take testimony from
excessive drought loss, Is wa~n· House and Senate committees week's 39 percent very poor, 39
farmers.
lng Congress at the same time to commending their efforts and · percent poor and 21 percent fair .
The delay by the new law get rid of Items he thinks do not
realfl.r.mlng his Intention to take Root worm damage was showing
forces farmers to decide whether
belong In disaster relief ''whatever actions are necessary In some fields.
to accept Chtibl)'s offer of a
legislation.
to protect America's farmers
On the brighter side, soybeans
double premium payments or
C~ngrfl§slonal
leaders plan from excessive losses during this Improved significantly · during
walt to see II the department can floor voles In the House and drought."
the week, with some reports of
hold Chubb liable.
Senate this week on drought
He added, however, "I am fields planted one or two months
.relief. The House and Senate concerned tlia t, due to the ago finally emerging with last
Agriculture committees called unde.nlable pr-essure to produce a week's rain.
meetings today to put finishing bill as qulckl:y as possi\Jie, some
The·crop rated 18 percent very
touches on their plans.
provisions were Incorporated ln. poor, 33 percent poor and 40
The legislation, similar In both the current J!ouse and Senate · percent fair, up from the prechambers, Is expected to cost versions of the drought bill vious week's 25 percent very
between $5 billion and $8 billion, without adequate review. Consepoor, 35 percent poor and 35
paying farmers 65 percent of quently, each version of the bill percent .fair. Additionally. - 9
their usual Income for any loss contains features ihat are !neon· percent fell Into the good cate·
CLEVELAND (UP!) - National City Bank officials said exceeding 35 percent of a crop slstent with the drought relief gory, compared with 5 percent
with a $100,000 ceiling on ald.
objectives I sEt forth."
the previous week.
about 12,000 Ohio Bell Telephone
The
Senate
Agriculture
ComThough
Reagan
did
not
detail
However, reports of spider
Co. customers paid their monthly
his
objecllons,
it
was
understood
mittee
debated
lnconcluslvely.
mite
damage were Increasing
phone bills at the bank's more
change
.the
he
meant
p
rovislons
to
give
today
proposals
to
throughout the state.
than 90 branches during the !Irs!
The oat harvest was slowed a
week o! July, but the bank lostlls formula to give more help to special treat.rnent to soybean
farmers with the worst losses. farmers and a Senate provision
little by the rain, but the crop ·
records of those transactiOns.
improved slightly, advancing to
National City estimated the Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., to allow ethanol producers acpressed for an even larger cess to cheap surplus corn.
21 percent very poor, 36 percent
value of the transactions at a bout
On the NBC "To~ay" program poor and 34 percent fair from the
$500,000. The !&gt;ank paid Ohio Bell change than Chairman Patrick
Leahy, D·Vt., expected, arguing today, Lyng said there "are a previous week's 26 percent, 39
the money, but telephone company officials say they have no hard-hit farmers need the number of thillgs that we would percent and 29 percent .readlngs.
like to see not added" to the
Hay and pasture began to
payment stubs to Identify the money.
The House Agriculture Com- legislation. Asked to be specific,
customers.
make a comeback as fields
Although those customers do mittee, also meeting today, was Lyng said.· 'There ·s one that h.a s turl)ed green once again. Hay
not owe any money to Ohio Bell, expected to debate the question to do with giving btesubsldles on and roughage supplies were 36
they will h~ve to prove tbey paid of the aid formula ~nd whether to corn to ethanol plants.... We percent very short, 50 percent
think that tllat would be a
their bills through National aty change the dairy support price.
short, 13 percent adequate. and 1
•
Reagan,
meanwhile,
met
for
30
We think that some o! • percent surplus.
mistake.
by taking their receipted bill to
the bank branch where they paid minutes Monday with Agricul- the e~panslon ol the livestock
Hay's very poor percentage
the money. The bill should show ture Secretary Richard Lyng, feeding could set precedents that dropped from 49 percent the
the teller's stamp marking It as Interior Secretary Donald Hodel could be troublesome ror us for a
previous week to 40 percent last
time and very week, while pastures' very poor
paid. U the customer bas lostthe and administration budget dlrec· long, long
receipt, he or she must at least tor James MUter tQ discuss a expensive."
percentage dropped from 7J
Senate Agriculture Committee percent to 50 percent.
state what day they paid the bill. drought task force's 10-state,
Bank olllclala will then try to find 13·farm lour of Midwestern crop Chaii'ITU\n Pat rtck Leahy, D·Vt.,
Sugarbeets benefited quite a
'
asked his colleagues 111 a floor bit !rom the rain, rating gener.
a record of the transaction In damaee. ·
It was alter the bleak report speech to help him send a clean ·ally from poor to !air. Tobacco
teller records, bank spokesman
that
Reagan expressed concern
Contlnued on page 10
Dave Talbott said.
Co.ntlnuecl on paee 10

Probe hampered by new · state law
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPn -An tlves would testify and the
Ohio lnsurance· Department In- department would then Issue a
ves ligation Into a New Jersey ruling.
Insurance company's effort to
Under the new Jaw, however,
avoid liability for $350 million In the Insurance Department must
drought Insurance Is being ham· gather enough evidence to prove
pered by a new state law.
n'o t only had a law likely· been
Department Director George violated, but that It would most
Fa be said the· provision In the likely win Its case In a court.
insurance and tort · reform law
. The Chubb Group sold ·about
pafsed by the legislature in $390 million worth of drought
October ma~es the state liable Insurance In Ohio and 9 other
for an Insurance company's legal states, with Ohio farmers applycosts II a court finds the depart- ing for 627 poUcles worth $12
ment had Investigated the com- · .million In coverage.
panyt without "substantial
Chubb contends Its agent sold
justification."
more Insurance than was autho"l'hls law really does have a rlzed. The Insurance company
chUIIng effec,t on us," Fa be told has agreed to provide only about
the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "The $40 million In ~overage to about
(Insurance) Industry jammed 1,000 farmers In the 10 states,
. down the leglsla ' ors' throats, In a returning payments worth twice
strong lobbying el!ort, strong the premiums to 6,000 other
language that requires us to do a farmers.
lot of discovery before we can
Ohio Is the only state among
even-hold a hearing...
the io that has a substantlalTh.e department · previously justification provision. Regula·
would hold an admlnlstrallve tors In Iowa and Indiana have
hearing Into a particular prob- filed charges against Chubb and
lem. During the hearing, consu- have scheduled administrative
mers and Insurance representa- hearlnts for August and Sep· .

..

-Local news briefs--

'
•

'

.
null\ Yte\d
f,.ttect\Ve An

•

.
.d at rnatuntY ·

. August 3\, 1988.
'fbis offer explres

interest pal

There is a substantial Interest penalty for early withdrawai•Compounded
daily.

Call BANK ONE
for mora Information
593-6681 or
1-800-824-6954

BANKEONE.

Eighteen Tholl$llnd People Who Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS. OHIO. NAIOIIE PART OFTHE CAIIINC TEAM

'

'

Member FDIC

Driver charged with D WI
Danny R. Kesterson, 36, was arrested Monday night for DWI
by Pomeroy Pollee. Kesterson was transported !rom the
Pomeroy Pollee Department to the · Meigs County Jail by
Sheriffs Deputy Kenny Klein . .As Klein and Kesterson were
about to enter the sheriffs office, Kesterson fled from Deputy
Klein and ran west on Second Street with Klein In pursuit. Klein
apprehended Kesterson at the Intersection of Mulberry and
Second st.r eets.
An escape charge has been filed against Kesterson by Deputy
Kleln.Kesterson was already wanted by the sherltrs department on a bench warrant.
The sheriffs department also reports vandalism at the Peace
Fellowship Church at Antiquity on Frlday.evenlng about 6:52
p.m. A window In the church was broken but the building .was
not entered.

Patrol reports one accident
The driver was Injured In a one car accident Tuesday at 2: 35
a.m. on Mill Creek, 1.4 miles north of Gallipolis, accordIng to the
Meigs Gallla Post, state Highway Patrol.
Troopers said William D. Cantrell, 18, 662 Fourth Ave.,
GaiUpolls, lost control, and his car went off the road,
overtumlne Into a ditch. The vehicle also struck a concrete
culvert. Damage was heavy.
The patrol cited Cantrell for drlvlne under the lnflqence.
Cantrell was Injured and taken to Holzer Medical Center,
where lie was treated lor facial contusions and abrasiOns.
The patrol alao lnvestlaated an, accident Monday at~: 59 p.m.
Continued on paee 10

Reagan renews
pledge to protect
nation's fanners

Paid phone
bills lost
in shuffle

.J

;

·~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="172">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2762">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38330">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38329">
              <text>July 25, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="889">
      <name>brickles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5350">
      <name>forrest</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="228">
      <name>patterson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="32">
      <name>powell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4018">
      <name>shumway</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
