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                  <text>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

;

·~

�Tuesday, July 28, 1988

Comm·e nt
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court S&amp;reet

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
~lb

.

•

rs:m~ rn......~._....,..,r'T"'E::c::: .=.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
. Asslsiani Publlaher/Controller

BOBBOEFUCH
General Manarer

A MEMBER ot The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Assoclalion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Is sues, not personalities.
·
·

..

•

Porreoy-Middleport. Ohio
Tueeday. July 28. 1988

DrugS concealed in conunon products
'

WASHINGTON- Pick a product, any product, and it Is likely
that a drug smuggler could use It
to ship illegal narcotics Into the
United States. From baskets to
fish to tennis rackets \o tomb- ·
stones, nothing is too sacred or
too mundane for a clever
smuggler.
That is apparent, judging from
a confidential report we have
obtained listing common con·
cealment methods . .It was produced by the El Paso Intelligence
Center, a Texas-based unit run

thods by sharing stories of
bizarre finds: ·
-Hand-woven raffia or palm
fiber baskets from Jamaica have
been found with marijuana carefully stuffed into each tube-like
strand. In three seizures of palm
fiber , straw baskets and m&amp;ts, a
total of 53 pounds of marijuana
was scooped out.
-Alert U. S. Coast Guard
agents In Seattle tested a 12-volt
auto battery by placing a metal
bar between the positive and
negative terminals. When they
got no reaction, they tore the
battery apart. A smuggler had
stuffed drugs inside the celis.
-Another smuggler with a pen·
chant for batteries had an even
better Iteam. ·He took apart "D"

~n:~~a~J~ga~:f~;~;,e;,t c~~:
toms Service.
The report, distributed to select ~rug enforcement agencies,
alerts them to concealment me-

.

Fundamentalists object to
Scorsese film on Christ

Junkin returns
to old grid post

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Nate Newton weighed In at 331
pounds, confounding team off!.
cials who placed Newton on a
strict diet and exercise program
designed to cu! his weight to 300.
The extra weight means a $775
fine for Newton, who Is being
!lned$25foreverypoundover300
· at his weekly weigh-ln.
"He's an enigma. He's hard to
figure out," line coach Jim
Erkenbeck said. "He's just an
ugly·looklng guy, but his perlormance Is excellent."
Newton, a third-year pro from
FloridaA&amp;M,said, "Allldldlast
night was get down on my knees
and say 'hey, God, I'm going to
quit eating and go every day as
hard as 1 can. • It I fall, I fall, butl
know one thing - my weight will
go down."
Defensive tackle Danrzy Noonan said he was fined for hitting
Newton In the head with New·
ton's helmet during Saturday's
practice. Newton was sent to a
local hospital and required eight
stitches to close a gash in his
head:
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!) - .
Bengals Co.a ch Sam Wyche is
ROCHESTER, Mich. (UP!)relieved there were no injuries Defensive end Reggie Rogers Is
during Cincinnati's annual In· playing like the first-round draft
trasquad scrimmage, and says choice the Detroit Lions made
he's not worried about finding a hlm In 1987, but Coach Darryl
starting free safety.
, Rogers is keeping his enthusiasm
Wyche said the . scrimmage In check.
was apparently ''the first time In
''This game Is still down and
the team's 21 years here that we distance and we haven't had any
came ou I of the scrimmage with of that yet," Darryl Rogers said.
no inJuries."
"I could say Reggie's working
The biggest question during harder but one year ago it was
training camp last weekend was exactly the same thing In trainwhom Wyche will choose as Ing camp. I think he'll have a
starting free safety.
better year, but there's no way of
"If you look around and see knowing for sure. I can't evaluthat you have no one to choose ate his progress until we gethim
from, then you worry. We've got in a game.''
some people to choose from and
Rogers was all but given a
we've got to get them ready," starting job In c~mp , as a rookie
Wyclu~ said.
last year, but numerous factors
The Bengals open the NFL contributed to a poor season.
exhibition season Saturday Personal problems Included an
against the Los Angeles Rams in aggravated assa~rlt charge, law
the Hall of Fame Game at suits involving two former
Canton: Ohio.
agents and the disappearance of
his sister for several ·days, and
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. Rogers spent 30 days at a clinic to
(UPI} - Dallas Cowboys guard undergo emotional counseling.

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
cell flashlight batteries and Inserted smaller "AA" batteries
Inside. Then he packed heroin
around the "AA" batteries and
closed them. up in the "D"
battery casing. Anyone testing
the batteries got .a charge be·
cause they were hitting the " AA"
batteries inside.
-u. S. Customs mail Inspectors in Miami got suspicious
when they smelled fresh glue on
the covers of used books. A
smuggler had placed highly
compressed cocaine between
thick cardboard layers of the
book covers and glued them
together. In a tacky twist,
Colombian dealers chose a ship-

...AND Gi:UD LUCk,
MR. T~RN2UR6K .

By DAVID E. ANDERSON
United Press International
A group of fundamentalist ministers, Including Bill Bright of
Campus Crusade for Christ, are seeking to block release of noted film
director Martin Scorsese's film "The Last Temptation of Christ."
~e ministers, who say they haven't seen the film, object to the
film s stress on the human nature of Jesus.
· Scorsese's film. which runs some 2 ~ hours, Is based on the 1951
novel by the Greek writer Nlkos Kazantzakls, best known for his book
"Zorba the Greek."
The book raises one of the knottiest problems in Christian theology: ·
The question of how the divine Christ and the human Jesus are to be
understood.
In the book, Kazantzakls portrays Jesus as struggling - and
sometimes resisting - God's will for his life, which is to be the
Messiah. The "last temptallon" of the title is the temptation to reject
being the Messiah and remain fuUy human.
According to some religious leaders who have seen the film, which
was written by Paul Schrader, the movie is "one of the better
translations of a book Into a film."
.The fundamentalists. at a Hollywood, Calif .. news conference in
mid·July, said they wanted Universal Pictures to abandon plans to
release the movie and to despooy the film.
,
The Rev. Tim Penland , one of the leaders In the effort to block the
film , said its release "could be very damaging to the cause of Christ."
They insisted, however, they did not view such demands as
censorship.
.
But all of them refused invitations to a screening of the film for
religious leaders.
ATLANTA (NEAl - Eight
According to the fundamentallsls, they object 10 the film because
years ago, in the summer of 1980,
they believe it portrays a "mentally deranged and lust-driven man
conservatives confident of a
who ... In a dream sequence comes down of!the cross and has a sexual
Republican victory in the pres!·
relationship with Mary Magdalene."
dential election were busily forOthers, however, did calli! censorship.
mulating policy initiatives to be
" It is lamentable thai there Is an attempt at real censorship going
Implemented aftet' taking con·
on here and no matter what they call it, thalis what It is, .. said the
trol of the f~eral government,
They were drafting book·
Rev. William Fore. who heads the (!Ommunications division of the
National Council of Churches.
length reports, holding confer en·
Fore, who was among a number of religious leaders Invited to a
ces and Informally exchanging
pre·release screening of the movie, called "a good film but its not a
ideas on how to integrate their
blockbuster."
proposals into the agenda of an
"It's not going to be a major box office smash, .. he said, "and It's
administration they were certain
going to be heavy going for some people."
would soon come to power In
He said the doctrinal issue both Kazantzakls and Scorsese seek to
Washl~gton.
draw out Is a real one,
.
Their assumptions about the
"The doctrinal question _ whether Jesus being the Messiah
outcome of the election were
depends on an act ofwlllor not ... that particular concept (that It does) - cetrect, and the preliminary
Is consistent with a great deal of Christian thought."
work they did was especially
"Bul it is not consistent with a 'high' doctrine of the Trinity and the
valuable in helping President
pre-existence of Christ with God the father through all eternity .. " Reagan quickly Implement a
Fore said. "lt is a classic theological dispute that has been going ~n
conservative program.
for 2,000 years."
This year, however, there Is
"I tis a perfectly legitimate issue and an Importan-t one, .. he added.
virtually no such activity on the
But Bright told the Hollywood news conference he had "many
right. Instead, the pattern of1980
sleepless nights" after seeing the script for the film .
has been embraced by the left as
"How could anyone do this to the most wonderful man who ever
liberals (many of whom prefer to
call themselves "progressives"
walked the face of the earth?'· he asked.
The fundamentalists said they would mount a telephone campaign
these days]' prepare for the
in which their followers would call Universal stuidos 10 protesl the
expected ascendancy of Demofilm, put pressure on local theaters not to show the film and perhaps
cratlc presidential candidate Mi·
engage In picketing of theaters that did.
chael S. Dukakls.
Fore noted that "their objections are likely to bring more attention
and noterlety to Universal and the film" than otherwise would be the

By United Presalnteraailonal
KIRTLAND, Ohio - (UP!) Mike Junkin of the Cleveland
Browns, returned to Inside linebacker where he played in
coUege, says he has put last
year's, failures behind him.
"I enjoy playing Inside," Junkin said. "I'm looking forward to
the season. What's passed Is
Passed.''
After the Browns selected
Junkin with the fifth pick In the
flrst round of the 1987 draft,
Cleveland Coach Marty Schottenhelmer compared the Duke
star with Jack Lambert. Schottenhelmer said he tllought Junkin would have little trouble
switching from his college post!ion of Inside linebacker · to
outside.
But Junkin missed the opening
of training camp last year, not
signing. until Aug. 10, and was
slow to gain playing time. After
the strike, Junkin injured his
wrist and finished the season
with just seven tackles.

ment of children's story books,
Including "Pinocchio." The
books, in Spanish, concealed 20
pounds of cocaine.
-Severaf hundred grams of
cocaine have been found In
camera-film cartridges.
-ANother tried-and-true method Is to gut a whole fish, Insert
drugs in the mid section then
repackage the fish to look
undisturbed.
-Machinery is a favorite hid·
lng place. A 115·pound stash of
hashish was found In the cyllndrl·
cal tubing components .of wood
lathes arriving In Los Angeles.
-A Colombian stalue to the
Indian god Chlpcha was not too
sacred for use by drug Ira!·
tickers. An Inspector hefted the
statue a:nd thought It was too
heavy. The statue didn't simply
have cocain inside. The statue
was cocaine. A smuggler had
molded 2.43 kilograms of cocaine
and a bonding substance Into the
shape of the Indian god .
-Another technique Is to hol·
low out the handles of wooden
tennis rackets and flll them with
heroin. The tip-off Is unusually
heavy handles and the odor of
fresh glue. Pakistani officials
tore apart a shipment of 1,000
tennis rackets bound for Holland
and found cocaine In 200 of them.
-U. S. Customs Inspectors In
New York noticed inconslsten- ·
cles in the documents accompanying a concrete tombstone. An
X-ray revealed hashish packages surrounded by wire mesh
and sealed In the concrete. The
smugglers had gone to the
· trouble of Inscribing the tombstone with a name and portralfof
the dear departed.

Left agendas reflect hopes.__----.....:..:.Ro=b.:::.!..-'ert~W&lt;~a=lte~rs

'

I

case.

At the party's nominating
convention here In Atlanta, the
Institute for Polley Studies unveiled Its agenda, published in
the form of a 422-page book tilled
"Winning America: Ideas and
Leadership for the 1990s."
· The ambitious "social reconstruction" program advanced by
the Washington-based IPS In·
eludes a $50 billion reduction in
the $300 bllllon annual military
budget, increases in taxes paid
by the wealthy, and adoption of a
standard 30-hour work week with
no reduction in pay.
.
The New York-based Demo·
cracy Project has been working
on not one but two books. The
first, "Ideas That Work: 60
Solutions for America's Third
Century," was published prior to
the convention and proposes
"ways . to lower utility rates,
reduce toxics, advance child
care and train welfare recipIents, among other policy
solutions."
A more ambitious volume,
·"Blueprints for America: Transition '89," Is characterized as an
"agency-by-agency transition
reoort to the 41st president." It

wlll not be publlshed until after suggests, the 21-member Com·
mission on Trade and Competithe autumn election and will be
tiveness was organized and
based upon what Democracy
Project President Mark Green
headed by New York Gov. Marlo ·
'
jokingly describes as "years of M. Cuomo.
The book's publication date
creative exile."
Green's organization and the was advanced specificallY be·
Economic Polley Institute both · cause its sponsors wanted a role
in shaping the campaign debate.
recently sponsored Washington
conferences to consider a broad Their prescriptions. range from
array of policy' alternatives for rescheduling and eventually
the next president.
writing off Third World debt to
"Success or failure of the next ) sharply reducing domestic
administration may well depend spending on defense. agriculture
on the actions taken In the first and entitlement programs.
The Heritage Foundation, the
100 days - the traditional "honeymoon" period, which sets the Washington-based conservative
tone for the new adminlstra· " think tank" that established the
lion," notes the Washington· standard for such endeavors with
based EPI.
the .1980 publication of Its 3,0110"VIgorous pursuit of a clear page "Mandate for LeadersMp,"
agenda could revive nat tonal arid published a followup report In
International confidence in 1984, and It's preparing another
volume this year -but that will
America's future. A hes1tant,
uncertain beginning could en- be principally a retrospective
courage the forces of political assessment of the Reagan years.
But no organization appears
stalemate," adds that group.
Another set of progressive enthusiastic enough about the
policy options recently was pub· candidacy of putative Republi·
llshed in a book titled "The can presidential nominee George
Cuomo Commission Report: A Bush to prepare policy options
New American Formula for a for his administration.
Strong Economy." As the title

~=: o':.:I~ea!; inth~~~e.:~~~~=e
Warren of Lake worth, Fla.,

Warren, who ls gunning for his
thtrd PBA title, has toppled 6,296
pins.
Marc McDowell of Madison,
Wis., who was the 1986 PBA
Rookie of the Year, moved from
13th place Into the No, 2 spot. The
former collegiate Ali-Ame~loa
from West Texas State Unlver·
sity has a pinfall of 6,138.
After winning his fourth PBA
crown just a month ago, Tom
Crites of Tampa, Fla., was In

lea. The first Italian-American Is
on the Supreme Court. Blacks
are making headway In politics.
Aslan-Ameticans will lll&lt;ely
dominate the next generation of
No!;&gt;el Prize winners ln the
sciences. Jews don't even bother
to complain that there ts ' no Jew
In the so-called Supreme Court
"Jewish seat." We might have a
Greek-American in the White
House. If we don't, It may be
because he Is perceived as too .

I

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Transadions

Callfol'

OaklM•

*•

"····......... "'...
••eta

Ollup .a Me•rell.
New t'eriiM Phu..lphla

Eul
55 •
42
51 41
41 II

,.m.

we-....·.o&amp;IIHS

&amp;er_llo_.

By Uatkd P1W1 ..
.tMERICAN LIAGUB

liberal. but not because of his
heritage.
These days pundits wonder
about how the next decade will be
characterized. We've been told
that the '50s were "silent,'.' the ,
'60s "revolutionary," the '70s
"self-actualizing," and the '80s
"greedy." We ought to look at it
differently. Forget the adjectives and look at what's happenIng. Maybe the '90s will be known
as the Decade of the Ethnics.

Today in history

v

....... I.,_ "l-1') .a San Dh:p

BasebaU

lolllon

Berry's World

Heights, Ohio, who like McDo.well seeks his first PBA tour
victory, was In fourth place with
4,122 pins.
Joe Berardi of New York City,
who has already won two PBA
tournamt~nts this year, clung to
the fifth spot with 6,009 pins.
The top 24, cut from the
original field of 160, were to bowl
16 more match games today
before being pared to the top five
tonight for the nationallytelevised championship final
Wednesday night.

Scoreboard ...

It's all Greek to us ________:__Ne=--n_W_a_tte_n_be~rg

This Is a column about \ethnic·
So look at It my way; The early
ity. True to my own ethnic settlers In America were people
heritage I offer hoary advice: from northwestern Europe EngKeep your eye on the bagel, not land, Scotland, Wales, Ireland,
on the hole.
Holiand, Germany. I declare all
There has been much attention the rest as "ethnics," Including
paid to the ethnic/racial Impor- blacks, , who also came here
tance of Jesse Jackson's candi- early, but typically In slavery,
dacy. He Is the first black to be a and many of whom fill In the
serious presidential . player. I ethnic black on census forms as
don't like the substance of "Afro· American." Bu such a
Jackson 's politics, but no one can reasonable definition, John
take anything away from his · Kennedy, of.Irish descent, would
dynamic candidacy, and its not quality as ethnic. In any
symbolic and positive contribu· event, both of his parents and all
·uon to American democracy.
four of his grandparents were
The attention paid to Jackson's born In America.
achievement, however, has
Michael Dukasls Is a genuine
tended to downplay something ethnic.
else that Is at work, and quite
Just a year or so ago It was said
· remarkable.
that many voters, particularly in
Gov. Michael Dukakls of Mas· the South, wouldn't vote for a
sachusetts wlll be the Demo- man named "Dukakis." Well,
By United Press International
cratic nominee for president this well. Today Dukakls is leading
Today is Tuesday, July 26, the 208th day of 1988 with 158 to foUow.
year. Right now he Is solidly Bush in the polls in some
The moon is waxing, moving toward its fuU phase.
ahead of George Bush In the Southern states. Moreover, other
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
polls. His parents were Greek stories are coming ln. One voter
The evening star is Saturn.
immigrants. If elected president, was recently quoted thiS way:
Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include
he'll be the first "ethnic Ameri· "My father came over from
artist George Catlin, painter of American Indian scenes, in 1796;
can'' to live In the White House, Italy; Dukakls' father came
playwright George Bernard Shaw in 1856; Carl Jung, founder of
at least by my definition.
from Greece. I like that."
analytic psychology. in 1875; novelist Aldous Huxley in 1894; poet
I offer my own definition
There are 1,555,340 people of
Robert Graves In 1895; Tennessee Sen. Estes Kefauver, who led the
because experts have not been Italian ancestry In the South
1950-51 Senate Investigation of organized crime, In 1903; comedian
able to agree on one. In fact the alone. The total Greek-ancestry
Gracie Allen in 1906; actress VIvian Vance In 1912; actor Jason
"Harvard Encyclopedia of population Is 954,856. We also
Robards and movie producer Blake Edwards, both in 1922 (age 66}; · American Ethnic Groups" offers have Azerbljanls, Bosnian Musfilmmaker Stanley Kubrick In 1928 (age 60}; storyteller Jean
14 different criteria that may lims, Carpatho-Rusyns and Frl·
Shepherd in 1929 (age 59); rock star Mick Jagger in 1943 (age45). and
define ethnlcity, Including "geo. slans. The Harvard volume
tennis player Vilas Gerulaltis in 1954 (age 34) . '
graphical origin," "language or counts at least 106 ethnic groups
dialect,'' ''food preferences,'' - not a bad coalition If a
On this date In history:
.and "shared traditions, values candidate could put It ogether.
In, 1847, Liberia became. a republiC, and AfriCa's first sovereign,
and symbols."
Suddenly, strangely, It seems as
black-ruled democratic nation.
Of course, one can make the
If Bush Is being penalized beIn 1941, Gen. Douglas MacArthur was named commander of U.S.
case that all Americans except cause he comes from a elite
forc~s in the Philippines .
native American Indians are WASP family (born, as one wag
In 1967, tour days of racial rioting In Detroit ended with 39 people
ethnics. But that makes "ethnic" puts It (with a Silver foot In his
d!!ad.
·
a near- mean lngless word. It's mouth).
·
In 1984, "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson" became the
not. In the everyday political
first network television show to be br(l;!dcast In stereo.
Things are changing In Amerargot, it has real meaning.

Rookie of tile Year, knocked

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l1atla.al

runs .

"When you're struggling, it
seems you run into good pitchIng.'' Pirates Manager Jim Ley land said. "When Tudor had to
make a pitch tonight, he made
it."

Basketball
The Atlanta Hawks Monday
won the first game played by a
professional team In the Soviet
Union. The Hawks, playing with·
out Dominique Wilkins who just
joined the team, beat a team
comprised of All·Stars from
Soviet Georgia 85·84.... Chicago
Bulls forward Scottie Pippins has
undergone successful surgery to
repair a herniated disc In his
lower back. Pippins, a first. round draft pick last year, is
expected to miss the first month
of the 1988·89 season.

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Tudor's control was the difference in the game, according to
Cardinals Manager Whitey
Herzog.
"There hasn't been anything
wrong with the way he's been
throwing, " said Herzog, refer·
ring to Tudor's arm problems
earlier this year. "He just threw
better tonight. He had better
location with his pitches."
Tudor said he stayed more
within· himself when hlsarm was
.
hurting.
"When It was sound again I
started overthrowing," he said.
"I worked with (pitching coach)
Mike Roarke on it and tonight l
made more qmillty pitches than
I've been making."
Elsewhere , Philadelphia
edged New York 3-2 and San
Francisco defeated Los Angeles
3-1.
In the AL, It was: New York 3,
Milwaukee 2; Minnesota 5, Toronto 4; Chicago 6, Seattle 5;
Boston 2, Texas 0; and California
2, Oakland 1.

(USPS 1&lt;:&gt;960}
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,UNDER THE CAR.,

PhiiUes 3, Mets 2
At Philadelphia, Juan Samuel
singled In Darren Daulton to
break a seventh-inning tie and
help the Phlllles send the Mets to
their third straight loss. Don
Carman, 7-5, scattered six hits
over seven Innings. Bruce Ruffin
finished for his second save. Mets
starter Ron Darling, 10-7, took
the loss.

302 Wnt

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New York , New York 10017.

Giants 3, Dodgers 1
At San Francisco, Kelly Downs
hurled a five-hitter and Kevin
Mitchell belted a game-winning
homer to lead the Giants. Downs,
10·8, posted his sixth victory in
his last seven decisions as the
Giants won their sixth straight
home game. Fernando Valenzuela, 5-8 and winless in his last
seven starts, Is the only active
Dodger pitcher with a losing
record.
·

SportS briefs

a

AMDI•..
........

The Daily Sentinel

Pirates skid continues; M ets
d
Ph l
rop 3-2 tilt to
i adelphia
By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
John Tudor won his lOOth game
and kept the swooning Pitts·
burgh Pirates in sync with the
National League Eas !-leading
New YorM Mets.
The Mets, who fell to Philadel·
phia 3-2 Monday night, and the
Pirates, who lost to the Cardinals
5·1, are in the midst of respective
three- and four-game losing
streaks. The Pirates had won 12
of 13 before their C'frrent streak.
The Mets, however, have lost
nine of their last 14.
Tudor, 5-4, had been thwarted
his last five outings in his bid lor
his 100\h triumph.
. "I was just happy to get the
win," Tudor said "It's been
frustrating trying to figure out
why I was making such lousy
pitches."
Tudor gave up eight · hits,
s\ruck out four- including Andy
Van'Siyke tllree straight timesand walked none In his fourth
complete game of the season.
Loser Bob Walk, 11-5, had a
personal six-game victory streak
snapped.
During the Pirates' four-game
skid, they have scored only six .

.,,

discuss. what, If any , changes '
were needed with the lights. They .
will be adjusted while the Cubs
are on a 10-game road trip thatbegins Tuesday.

CHICAGO (UPI) - The Chi- special events to commemorate ballwill be sent to baseball's Hall
cago Cubs held their first wor- the moment. The lights are set · of Fame In Cooperstown, N.Y.
kout under lights at Wrigley atop the roof along the first and
"I wanted Bllly Wllliams to hit
Field Monday night and declared third base lines.
the first one," Dawson said.
the last holdout ready for night
''The only difference is they
"That's not really a home run."
baseball.
have lights coming from the
In attendance at the function
Approximately 3,000 Cubs fans back," said outfielder Rafael was National League president
paid $100 apiece to attend the Palmeiro, comparing Wrigley to A. Bartlett Giamattl, who found
festivities surrounding the first . other parks. "I didn't think they the atmosphere to his liking.
official use of the lights. Chicago would shine this much. Hitting,
"I think the future of Wrigley
Cubs Care - a drive for cancer you can see real well."
Field Is secured by the addition of
research at Northwestern HospiThe festivities began with an this modern convenience." said
tal - received the benefits.
autograph session and. once the Glamatti. "When the novelty
The first night game at Wrigley lights were fully Illuminated at disappears, there wlll not be
will be Aug. 8 between the Cubs 7: 50 COT, a home run contest much of a change."
and the Philadelphia Phillies. was held .
Glamat\1 said he was in ChiThe Cubs will play six more night
Hall of Famer Ernie Banks cago for another reason but "I
games this season and 18 next teamed up with current Cubs wasn't going to miss this.
season.
outfielder Andre Dawson to beat
"But I think the big night will
Wrigley Field Is the last Hall of Fa mer Billy Williams and be the eighth," he said. "Everyb·
major-league park without current second baseman Ryne ody I have ever met in my life
lights, forcing all games to be Sandberg 7-1. Dawson had all wants a ticket."
played in daylight.
seven home runs for his team,
Cubs General Manager Jim
The Cubs practiced for less with Williams getting the other.
Frey said he would talk to the
than an hour under the lights
Dawson hit the first ball out of players after the workout to
after more than two hours of the park under the lh&gt;:hts and that

It .. .Ill ~~
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41 • .Ill 11

(Cet~J.I),IJII,.a

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practice with the lights In preparation lor Ule first official night
game on AugustS with the Phlllles. (UPI)

Lights tunted on first time at Wrigley Field

1985 PBA,

r~=-~=-l~er~:!M~'1:%~!~~~
do~:u~i:~:~:r~hewayfrom24th
slonal BQwlers Association place, Jim Pencak·of Richmond
$150,000 Hanvner Open.

FIRST TIME FOR LIGHTS - Chicago's Wrigley Field Is under
the lights for the first lime ever Monday night. The Cubs look

POMEIOfl

·-............
I

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992•2094

..

�Sentinel

The

Boston hikes winning streak
to 12; Twins defeat Toronto
By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Wrller
Trying to end BQston's winning
streak under Manager Joe Morgan is hard enough, bill Texas
found out Monday night that
doing It against Roger Clemens is
nearly Impossible.
Clerriens, 14-5, allowed three
hils and struck out 14 Rangers
over nine Innings In bringing the
Red Sox a 2-0 victory, their 12th
straight. The right-hander has
now struck out at least 10 men In
a game 11 times this season and
32 times in his four-year career.
"! didn' t want to be the one to
kill this streak," Clemens said.
. "It was hot (In the 90s all !light)
and I'm exhausted. I must have
lost eight or nine pounds. But I
Uke pitching In this weather."
Hot Is the perfect word to
describe the Red Sox, 12-0 under
Morgan.
Boston stayed 1 1-2 games
behind the division-leading New
York Yankees and moved within
a game of the second-place
Detroit Tigers.
" We thought Roger would be
out after the seventh inning, "
Morgan sal d. "He Is amazing. He
was losing It in the late Innings,
but he always seems to find a way
to win."
Clemens outdueled Charlie
Hough, 9·111 who went the distance, allowing four hits and one ·
earned run.
•'Charlle. Is always a great
challenge," Clemens said after
hurling his seventh shutout of the
season. "He had his knuckleball
dancing. When we scored our
first run it was like we.had scored
t!llrly runs."
Clemens, who leads the league
In strikeouts (219), shutouts, and

complete games (10), needs but apiece as the White Sox snapped
39 more strikeouts to equal the their four-game losing streak.
Boston single-season record of Jer..Y Reuss, 7-7, allowed 10 hits
258 set by Smokey Joe Wood in and two walkS In 6 2-3 Innings .
1912.
Bobby Thigpen earned ·his 21st
"Both guys pitched real good," save. Seattle starter Mike Moore
said Texas manager Bobby Val· fell to 4-11.
entlne. "I thought Clemens was
Yankees 3, Brewers 2
as good as I've seen him. He was
At New York, John Candelar!ll
throwing fastballs in the upper . pitched a three-hitter and Don
edge of the strike zone.
Mattingly cracked a two-run
"Charlie pitched a great game. homer to help down Milwaukee.
A couple of ground bails got Candelaria, 11-6, struck out six
through and that was it."
and walked one In his sixth
Hough was helped by four complete game of the year as the
double plays, but was finally Yankees moved ahead of Detroit
touched for a run in the seventh. by one-ha If game. Ted Higuera
Dwight Evans siftgled with one Jell to 7-6.
out, moved to second on a walk to
Angels 2, A's 1
Mike GreenWell, and scored on a
At Anaheim, Call!., Kirk
two-out single from Jody Reed.
McCasktlJ, 8-5, pitched a threeTodd Benzinger singled to start hitter In his fourth complete
the eighth, moved to third on a game of the season and Wally
fielding error by second base- . Joyner drove In the winning run
man Curtis Wilkerson and scored with the first of his two doubles.
an unearned run on Wade Boggs' The Angels broke a 1·1 ile In the
sacrifice fly.
fourth when Johnny Ray scored
Elsewhere, Minnesota nipped on Joyner's double _ off .Dave
Toronto 5-4; Chicago edged Seat- Stewart, 12-10.
tle 6-5; New York downed Mil·
waukee 3-2 and California deTrack and Field
feated Oakland 2-1.
A
duel
between Scotland' s Tom
1n the National League, it was:
McKean
and multi world recordPhiladelphia 3, New York 2; St.
holder
Said
Aoulta of Morocco
Louis 5, Pittsburgh 1 and San
over
1,000
meters
Is expected to
Francisco 3, Los Angeles 1.
highlight the lAC Grand Prix
Twins 5, Blue Jays t
meet
Friday night at the MeaAt Minneapolis, Kirby Puckett
dowbank
Stadium in Edinburgh,
doubled in two runs with two out
Scotland.
In the ninth Inning to cap a rally.
Yachting
AI Newman singled and Randy
Pied Piper and Stripes were
Bush walked before Puckett
the first two boats across the
lined a pitch from Tom Henke,
finish line in the Slst Chicago to
1-3, to the right-center field fence
Mackinac Island race and Sassy
to make a winner of Jim Wlnn, appeared headed for a close
1-0.
third. Chicago Yacht Club offiWhite Sox 6, Mariners.5
cials said Pled Piper, which
At Chicago, Dave Gallagher
and Greg Walker highlighted a finished first last year In record
time. cr&lt;lssed the finish line at
10-hit attack with three singles 2:13.11 p.m. EDT.

Sports briefs

By The Bend

after easily winning his semlfJ.
nals match against Aaron Krick·
stein Sunday that he would not be
upset if he never won another
tournament.
" Why do I have to win another
one? I don' t have to prove
anytjling. I've already won everYthing. I'm just playing for fun,"
the top seed said.
But after beating Gomez for
the $50,575 first prize, Connors
amended his tune. "I 've taken a
lot of crap over the last3l -2 years
about not winning (a tournament) . At least now I can say It's
only been 25 minutes since my
last victory.
"It feels a lot better now having
won this tournament than if! had
lost it."
Connors joins Guillermo VIllas
as the only other player to win
this tournament three times.
Connors won it in 1976 and 1978
·when the championship was ..on

The Daily Sentinel
.

-

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.

Tuesday, July 26, 1988

Page-5

Campground offers
youth (garden spot'

TEE BALL - This Is lbe Downing-Childs
Insurance 1988 tee ball team. Members are, first
row, I tor, Ashley Hoschar, Grant Abbott, Ryan
Well, Ashley Hannahs, Ryan Prall, Justin

Hoscar, Brandon Werry; second, I tor, Chandra
Moon, Nick Detwiller, Andy Davts, P. J. Erwin,
Michael Williamson, Billy Soulsby, Jeffrey
Brown with Coach Roger Abbott.

NCAA probe underway at UK

LEXINGTON, Ky. tUPI)
University of Kentucky Pres!'
dent D.avld Roselle said Monday
he · was "saddened" that the
NCAA alleged a "serious" viola·
tton In the men's basketball
program and Is investigating 10
other suspected Infractions.
Roselle told a news conference
he had received a letter Monday
from S. David Berst. director of
enforcement for the NCAA. noli·
fylng an "official Inquiry" containing one allegation concern·
lng a package allegedly
containing $1,000 sent March 30
from assistant Kentucky basket·
ball coach Dwane Casey to the
father of UK recruit Chris Mills.
In hi$ letter, Berst said "It
appears reasonable to expect
that the NCAA Committee on
Infractions may find a violation
of NCAA legislation."
clay. Last year the surface was
The letter also said "approxi·
changed to hard-court.
lnately 10 additional allegations"
"He was just too overpowering will be submitted to the univer·
for me today," sat d Gomez. a slty In the next 30 days, but it did
28-year-old from Ecuador who not specifY what the allegations
never had a break opportunity would concern.
the entire match. "I think he
''We will defend the basketball
thinks he has the legs of a program against any unfounded
20-year-old Instead of a 35-year- allegation, but we will take full
old."
responSibility for. any wrongdo·
Gomez ' only triumph in 10 lng judged to have occurred,"
career matches against Connors Roselle said.
came In 1982 when Connors
While Roselle declined to say
retired at 5-0 In the first set of the what Kentucky's response to the
quarterfinals at Hamburg. The Casey-Mills allegation would be
most memorable match between pending the completion of a
the two came In 1981, when university Investigation, Roselle
Connors beat Gomez 7-6 In the . Indicated the significance of the
fifth set of the third round at the charge.
U.S. Open.
"What the letter Is, Is a.charge

.Connors cops first title in 4 years
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Jimmy Connors has fun playing
tennis and while the pressure of
emerging victorious is a thing of
the past for the all-time wlnnlnges t player, winning a singles final
feels a lot better than losing it.
With the temperature more
than 100 degrees on the court,
Connors ended a four-year
drought by disposing of Andres
Gomez, 6·1, 6-4, in 72 minutes
Monday to capture the $415,000
Sovran Bank Tennis Classic at
the new Washington Tennis Center.
Connors had not won a tourna·
ment since October of 1984, when
he defeated Ivan Lend! to win the
Tokyo Indoor championship. In
between his last two victories.
Connors had lost 11 straight
finals.
·
Connors, winner of a record 106
singles championships- includ·
log 8 Grand Slam titles - said

•

•

of a wrondgolng, and a serious videotape. Casey has filed a $7
wrongdoing at that," Roselle million lawsuit against Emery
said. ''What I would say to the Air Freight Corp. and Its em·
Kentucky basketball fans Is the ployees .J:tily 8, alleging their
University of Kentucky has a reports to the newspaper damwonderful ·winning tradition In aged his reputation.
basketball and It would be our
The letter fromBerstindicated
attempt to rebuild that tradition,
NCAA Investigators had decided
whatever comes out of this, to there was enough evidence the
continue that tradition, whatever package did contain the $1,000
comes out of the NCAA when !twas delivered totheMilis
investigation."
home for the allegation to be
Berst's Jetter said the NCAA forwarded to the Committee on
would set a deadline for the Infractions.
university's response after the r.~;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii
other allegations had been
submitted.
Roselle said while Lexington
attorney James Park Jr. had
fully Investigated the Casey·
Mills affair for the university,
nothing would be released until
the other allegations had been
Investigated as welt Roselle said
he had no Indication what the
Preferred drivers deserve
additional allegations entailed.
preferred rates. Check
"We knew that representatives
of the NCAA were rather t.ho·
out our MEDALIST AUTO
roughly investigating our proPOLICY
.
gram In considerable detail,"
Roselle said.
·
The charge stems from a Los
Angeles Daily News report that a
package shipped from assistant
Casey to Claud Mills, the father
of Los Angeles recruit Chris
214 EAST MAIN
Mills, accidentally opened at a
POMEROY
Los Angeles handling center of
992·6687
an air freight company and 20$50
bills were discovered Inside
along with a videotape.
Both Casey and Claud Mills
have denied the package contained anything other than a

The Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly, Inc., campground facilities are growing In leaps and
bounds to provide a "garden
spot" for young people of Ohio
and West Virginia.
The church campground Is
owned by 57 supporting Churches
of Chrlst·Chrlstlan Churches In
Ohio and West Virginia and was
first started when the assembly
purchased the former Bedford
School property at 39560 Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy. Origl·
nally, the churches purchased
the six room school building and
almost three acres of land. The
building was remodeled and
there were additions to the
structure.
However, In 1979, the Bedford
Community Recreation Center
was purchased along with land
being added to bring the land
total to over 36 acres, much of
whlch Is beautifully wooded
territory.
Each of . the participating
churches has a role In planning,
development and operatlonofthe ·
campground. Each church may
send Its minister and two men
who become the governing body.
From this governing body, the
executive committee which consists of the chairman, secretary,
treasurer, program director and
their assistants and five trustees
Is selected. The representatives
from the various churches meet
four times a year as does the
executive committee.
And--you'd better believe that
women of the participating
churches a !so play a vita I role In
operating the camp for the six
week period each summer. The
women meet at the same time as
the representatives and they
take on projects such as kitchen
and equipment needs as well as
featiJres which might make
chu;·ch camp a bit more comfor·.
table. These women are known
as the "Willing Workers" and
often point out to the male
representatives nPeds that might
be over looked wlthou t the female
touch. Only ljist year. the women
replaced curtains In the dining
room and provided new mattress
covers for all of the beds.
Attendance at the camp this
year has been excellent..so good,
In fact, that camp records were
broken one week when l4 regis·
tration requests from young
people had to be downed down.
The camp could just not accom·
modale all of the appllcants.
There are two types of camp
available to young people at the
location. One Is the "First
Chance' •camp for children going
Into the third grade and who
might have. a little dltflculty In
being away from home. Sessions
for these first campers are from
Sunday afternoon until Wednesday. However, the camp Is ·
proving popular with the younger
age group also and two sessions
for :•Ftrst Chance" campers are

planned for next summer. The
"older" youth campers attend
sessions for an entire week.
starting on a Sunday afternoon
and concluding on the following ·
Saturday morning.
The emphasis Is, of course, on
volunteer workers and teachers.
but the assembly does hire a cook
and an assistant cook, two Bible
college Interns and a maintenance man so as to form a good
foundation for much of the labor
which must be done to keep camp
operations moving along
smoothly.
Youth who attend the camp for
a full week are asked to make a
contribution of $45 a person and .
the "First Chance" campers are
requested to rna ke a $22
donation.
And what do the campers do to
occupy the week? That's easy.
They have Bible classes where
they are taught doctrine and Its
application to their lives. They do
memory work and Bible drills as
well as music and drama.
On their first night at the local
camp, they are divided Into
"family" teams with each team
having both a male and female
leader. Tiley plan a Bible drama.
talent night, stunt night, and a
big campfire, provided there
Isn't a drought. In the evenings,
they hold a vesper service on a
hillside of !be campground. They
sing and hear an inspirational
message. The final group event
of each evening is the prayer
circle of "famUies".
But it certainly Isn't a case of
"all work, and no play". There
are the usual team games
Including ball and this year a
fantastic' lnground swimming
pool was added to the campground facilities. The swimming
pool was the gift of a benefactor
and what · with the heat of this
summer. the pool has easily
become the most popular spot on
the grounds. However, a small
canteen operates during certain
periods of the day offering a
vareity of refreshments--and
that loo, Is not · lacking In
popularity with the young
campers.
A new shelter in an attractive
wooded area Is nearing comple·
lion. and a committee has been
appointed to present Ideas and
drawings for a cabin which can
be used year 'round. And, of
course. there's always Murphy's
Law. The assembly learned
recently that the sewage system
on the grounds must be replaced
and this is no minor matter. The .
project is In Umbo . right now,
however, because a huge rock In
the area makes work impossible
until after the camping period is
completed.
But what with the interest and
enthusiasm for the camp, the
future of the Assembly, which
started out in West VIrginia with
rented camps which were
quickly outgrown, the fu lure
looks great!

Eblin presents flower program
"Knowing, Growing and ShowIng Flowers" was the topic of the
program presented by Thelma
Giles at a recent meeling of the
Fernwood Garden Club held at
the home of Helen Eblin.
Among the flowers she dis·
cussed were gladiola, cannas,
lilies, begonias. rpses and shasta
daisies. Suzanne Warner presided at the meeting with
members giving the club collect
In unlston. Mrs. Giles had devo·
lions readlng ."The County Fair"
by Ruth Underhill, and "The
Sounds of Freedom" by Esther
Bowman. For roll call members
answered by showing a flower
specimen brought from home.
Officers· reports were given
and next year's program books
were discussed. A tour of Pat's
Posie Patch was planned for fail.
It was reported that In the
Garden Path a brochure which
had been submitted by Ida
Murphy was reviewed. The art!·

SHELTER - This new shelter In an atll'acllve wooded are~&amp;
Is nearing completion at the Christian As11embly campground,
as one of the Improvements at the site this year.

cle stated that over a hundre(j
tree species make their ~orne in .
the Smokey Mountains National ' ·
Park, some of which are eight
feet In diameter. Ninety-five
percent of the park is forested
and nearly forty percentofthatls
virgin forest. The various uses of
tree bark were also mentioned.
Next meeting was announced . ·'
for Aug. 16at 7:30p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ with Mrs.
Warner to be hostess. Mrs.
Murphy was chairman of il white •'
elephant sale. The Lord 's Prayer ·
In unison and a prayer by Evelyn ..
Thoma closed the meeting. Re- " ·
freshments were served to those
named and Wilovene Bailey,
Marjorie Purtell. and guests,
Summer Giles and Hazel
Stanley.

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•·

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r;::::::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::::; ,

,.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The U.S. Department of Agricu~
ture. Farmers Home Admlniltra·
tion (FmHA) annoui)C8II that the
Tuppers Ptains-Chaot• Wat•
District has applied for FmHA fi·
nancial assistance to ext.,d its
watllf svitem (Phase IV Exton·

.

...

.'

sions) in sevan rural areas known

as Alfred Road. Court Street.
Gold Ridge. Kingsbury Road. Letart Falls, Silv8f Ridge and Wast
Shade.
· ·
The proposed project of about
1 7 miles of pipeline, a . water
tank and pump station modifi·
cations is to . be lo~ated in
Athens and Meigs Counties,
Ohio.
The proposed amount of FmHA
financing is 8623.000 and the
total estimated project cost is
S639,000.
FmHA has prepared an envi·
ronmental assessment for the
project and finds that the pro·
posal will not significantly effeet the quality of the human

., •

· •·

environment and that ther•
fore preparation of an environ-

mental impact statement is not
necessary.
State Director

Farmers Home Administration

DRAMA - These campers rehearse a drama

Federal Building, Room 607
200 North High Street
Columbus, Ohio 43216

part of the program at the Christian Assembly

e~·~n~tl~re~c~am~~p~as~a~C~a;m;;p;gr;o~u;n~d;.~~--~~~~-~-~-~~;;;;~~~~~~~~
France graduate fl
N
which they presented before. the

~f!. \USt

Rita Birchfield France of Surf·
side Beach. S. C .. daughter of
·Alex and Janey Birchfield of
Rutland, recently received an
associate degree in general bus!·
ness from Horry-Georgetown
Technical College. She was
placed on the dean's Jist with a
3.66 GPR.
Rita has been a civil service
employe for eight years at
Myrtle Beach AFB. She worked
full time · while attending school
full time. She is an active ·
volunteer with the Outdoor Adventure Program at the base.
During the January to March
quarter, she received two
awards· the billeting employe of
the quarter and the morale,
welfare and recreation volunteer
of the quarler.

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1987 FORD TEMPO
2 DR. CL

Air. power seat. power lock.
auto. trans.

~;g5

NOW $J995

1986 OLDS.CUTLASS
CiliA 2 DR.
Auto., air, 6 speed, tilt, cruiae.
WAS
'8995

NowS7595 ·

1986 FORD
TAURUS LX

•

Power seat, power lock, tilt·
I cruise. cassette.

~~~oo NOW $9295
1986 MERCURY TOPAZ
GS 4 Dl.

Air. auto. tnns.

~;:8

·NowS62.95

1986 FOlD ESCORT
PONY 2 Dl.
WAS
'489&amp;

'

towS3995

1986 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
WAS
'6295

NowS3995

1984 FOlD TEMPO
4 DR. GL
WAS
'4295

.1986 CHEVROLET
Z-28
WAS
'7995

NowS5995

1983 OLDS 88
2 DR.
WAS
'6995

1986 BUICK SUMERSU
2 DR.

V~&amp;.

WAS
'6996

1986 CHEV. CAYAUEI
4 DR.

Auto .. air.
WAS
'899&amp;

NowS3995

1983 MERCURY
GlAND MARQUIS
WAS
'8996

1914 BUICK CENTURY
..ITID
WAS
'41186

NOW$3995

1983 OLDS 88
4 Dl.

auto. trans .• air, curia•

/tilt.
WAS
'899&amp;

NowS3295

NOW$4995

1971 VOLKSWAGEN

lUG

•owS3695

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$495

1987 CHEVY ASTIO
·CONVERSION VAN

~;~oo

.

..

NowS12,800

1987 FORD RANGEl
412 XLT ·
v,e speed.

~;:5

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NowS7495

1986 FORD RANGER
Y-6, 5 ........
WAS
•7995

NowS5995

1 984 NISSAN 414
PICKUP
WA8
'699&amp;

NowS4995

1979 DODGE RAM
CHARGER
WAS
'39811

NowS2895

- With keyboard ac.mpanlment, a
III'HP of campers lelll'll new, upbellt spiritual

By RV88ELL KISHI

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif.
(UPI) - MindY Duncan, _ a
16-year-okl trom Newberg, Ore .•
was crowned Miss Teen U!!A
Monday nllht In ceremonies
capping a pa,eant that IBW the
flrat-ever dlaqualltlcatlon of a
conti!Jtant.
Duncan, WhO IBid she hopei to
~e a drua and alcohOl abuse

•

CONNORS TRIUMPHS - Jimmy Conors signals victory after
defelltlnJ Andres Gomez I~ the finals of the Sovran Bank Tennla
CJIIUie Monday In Wublngton, D.C. Connors won hie first
ioul'llllmlll&amp; victory In four years by beatlnJ Gomez In straight
lets, i-11UitU·4. (VPI) ·
~

•

•

THE MEIGS COUNTY F TAB
IS C lNG ON AUGUST 12th

music at the local Allembly camp.

Oregan girl wins Miss Teen
counselor. received the lllJI honor
over runners-up representing
New York. Louslana, Dllnolland
Alabama.
The 5-foot-3, 103-pound high .
school junior will receive 166,000
111 cash plus a persnal aervlces
contract valued at an additional
S18.000 and prlzel Including a·
fiYe-year supply of sbampoo and
a new Jeep Wrangler.
)I

~

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS
AUG. 5th

HELP WANTED
LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

For 11odtm fully equipped JIIIYII·
cltn's office labo11tory. Qulllfl·
oetlons necuury: IT (ASCP),
nil versed In Instrument operltllon and trouble shootlnc. Com·
Pttent In all lab areas. Exoellent
benefits. Weekends off. APDifln
Ptrson to or oell 446·9620, Till
ledlcll Plaza, 203 Jackson Pin,
Gallipolis. between 1:30 A.M.·
5:00P.M.

~

CALL DAVE OR BRIAN TO PLACE YOUR
AD IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION
CALL 992-2155 FOR DOAILS_ _

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

..••'.
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�rzlll I

The Daily Santinel

Tu•day. July 26, 1988

Battle of Buffington Island

Lovers should bury the evidence

The beginning of
Portland's battle
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
The 125th anniversary celebra:
, tlon of the Battle of Burrington
Island, commemorating the UnIon victory over Gen. John Hunt
Morgan and his Confederate
·' troop&amp; at Portland on July' 19,
1863, will take place Saturday
and Sunday.
The event, sponsored by the
Meigs County Pioneer and Hls"torical Society, is expected to
:.attract hundreds to the smatt
community on the Ohio River.
· The highlight will come on
· Sunday afternoon with a Civil
· War battle enactment under the
direction of LCdr. Gordon R .
Bury or the Sons of Veterans
Reserves.
· Stnt residing In Portland are
··.descendents of families who
·uved there during the Infamous
Battle of Buffington Island.
·Among those descendants are
~iitstorlan Gayle Henderson Price
who lives In the house which was
;built by his grandfather In 1874.
:· Land for the Buffington Island
park was a part of the Price
.JamUy hokltngs In Poruand and
was donated by Norma Peoples,
.a descendant of the Price family.
· · Price who began his teaching
career In Portland In the fall of
1933, the year the Buffington
.Island Memorial was dedicated,
: ~as alway~ had an Intense
·illterested In events of the Civil
:war which took place there.
- As a young man he began
.Interviewing family members or
.friends of those who actually
·witnessed the Battle of Buffington Island and compiled a series
of stories of personal Incidents
.a.nd exp!lriences reflecting how
the war affected those Hving
'there at the time of Morgan's
repu~.

·

.. Below are several of the stories
:Written by Price.
• · Mol'lan's Headquarters was
the .William Middleswart house
about a mile north of Portland
:village. The Middleswart home
had been constructed tn the
1860's and was somewhat pretentlous!or the limes. About600men
camped close to the house that
-night; however the family had
lleen advised to leave and spent
the night with the McClenathan
family In Lauck's Run.
. Ironically, they got in some of
the thickest shelling next mornIng. Mr. Mlddleswart liked to tell
ln after years how he hid his gold
!rom the raiders. He pulled a
fence post and dropped the
money In the hole and put a big
rock over H. He joked that the
Raiders' horses trampled all
'pver his cache.
William Mlddleswart was
forced to act as a guide for
Morgan's men as they were
leaving the bottom. He related
that hewllltngwentalonguntil he
was letting down a ran fence near
the White home on Red Hill Ridge
when, in the confusion that
ensued, hewasabletoslipaway.

,,
'

I

: A Haadsoole Man. A boy by the
name of Bradfield was at the
Mtddleswart home the even lng
that Morgan occu pled the premises. Years later when Bradfield was visiting the Middleswarts he said that he saw Morgan
standing looking out of the
window or the dining room.
Bradfield said, "Morgan had
black hair and was as handsome
a man as I ever saw ." At that
time Bradfield was about 14
years old.
That evening a cannon was set
on tbe Mlddleswart Cemetery
filii. Also two ·small cannons
were set up on two little bu ties
located on the Anderson Price
farm. Charley Price was a boy
about nine years old at that time
and he said he sat under an apple
tree near the Paynter House and
watched them shoot the cannons.
The cannons were shot In the
direction of the lord over which
the Rebels were trying to pass.
•
'
.• Cuttlns the Hag pole, An
American flag was !lytng In front
of the town school. It was feared
that some of the Raiders would
take down the flag so some of the
ciUzens sent Charles Price with
auger to bore down the pole
liecause they feared that If it
were chopped down the sound
would bring the confererates to
the ICene.
,
Young Price was cautioned not
to·dull the auger by boring it Into
tbe ground. T!Jat admonition only
al«ted him to that posstbtltty. In
~ner years, he said "l would
never have thought of boring
hole&amp; Into tbe ground If they had
not mentioned it." So every few
slepl he bored a hole Into the
grOWid.

Deu ADa l.aaden: Several years went on until the end.
ago I read In your column about a
A widow does not need this kind

Virginia territory, and brought
across to the Williamson premises to be sent on their way .
Some days prior to the raid,
, Grandma Sally Price went to the
barn to milk one evening. They
were living at the head of
Buffington Island. She noticed
blOOd dripping on her trom the
loft above the cow. She grabbed a
scythe and yelled for whoever
was there to come down .
AMY CONNOLLY
A run-a-way slave, wounded In
the legs caine down. She bandaged him up and entreated him
to leave before morning as she
did not want the mnttla, who
Amy Connolly was honored on
were on guard, to find him on her her 18th birthday recently with a
place.
party at the home of her parents,
He told her that some of Warren and Connie Connolly.
Morgan' s men · were close and The occasion also marked her
that strong forces were on their · graduation from Eastern fiigh
way and that In two or three days
School.
the army would be crossing at the
Refreshments were served
Buffington Ford.
bullet style and Included relish
Grandma Sally Price sewed
trays, sandwiches, chips and dip,
her gold and silver pieces in cloth party mix, cake, punch and
and hung them from her waist coffee. Attending were Deryl,
under her skirts.
Doris and Amy Well, Okey and
Janet Connolly, Joe and Eloise
Hiding the Horses. Morgan's Connolly, Bob, and Carole
men took all the good horses they Barber, Kevin Barber, Krlstl
could find.
Hawk, Steve Barber, Mike ConW111 Price, was eight yeats old nolly, Mary Frecker, Alta Dill,
when Morgan's Raid took place Renee Kaylor, Gregg Hibbs,
here. His father, Henderson Harlts and Delores Frank,
Price, took him and his best · Cathy, Jared, Janet Spencer, Sue
horses into a place called Lone- Suttle, Freda Larkins, Clyde,
some Hollow about a mile from
Karen, and Crystal Morris, and
home. Will and the horses were Dick and Jean Morris, all local.
left In a grapevine thicket all that
Out of town guests Included
night and until some time the Kevin Morris, Nags Head, N. C.;
next day. The family proudly told Tom, Vivian, Brad, and Tommy
for years how the brave little l?DY Zlgan, Terry, Tamml Brandon
saved the horses from Morgan.
and Nicholas Covert, and Ken,
Betty Barber, all of Newark;
Sallied Out to Get the Cow. Bernest and Martha Bruch, ML
Lemuel Bogard was living on the Vernon; Minnie Pecora, Marvin
Wntiamson farm where the fam- and Clara Krider, and Roberta
ily was employed by the William- Brow~tng, all of Columbus.
sons: T)te farm was midways or
Buffington Island. Some of the
Raiders came through driving
cattle ahead of them. When these
men came to a cow belonging to
the Bogard family, they sallled
out and swooped up the cow into
The Rev. Don Archer, who is
their bunch.
returning
to pastor the Alfred
When Bogard, a small boy, saw
Church
for
another year, and
what was being done, he ran after
Mrs.
Archer
were
honored with a
the cow and caught her by the
dinner
at
the
church
Sunday.
bell strap. He pulled her out. The
Attending
were
Russell
and
soldiers laughed at him and In no
Eloise
Archer,
Nina
Robinson,
wny offered any harm.
Clara Follrod, Charlotte Van
A Dead Soldier. Susan Bogard, Meter, Lloyd . and Doris DlilinLemuel's mother, was baking ger, Dan, Kirk and Dantelle
pone when a Confederate rode up Spencer, Ricahrd and Florence
and asked her if she would give Ann Spencer, Nellie Parker, Tim
him some of that pone. She gave Spencer, Gertrude Robinson,
him some and he thanked her. Marta and Todd Dillinger, Mike
Then he said, "I expect we are Robinson, Hobart and Alma
going to get In It down there . You Swartz, Will Poole, Sarah Caldhad better come down after It's well, Fannie and Bob Bernard .
On the Sunday before at the
over and look." The next day
church
a large crowd enjoyed the
after the battle she did go and .
clown
ministry
of the Rev. and
saw the soldier whom she had
New
Mrs.
Archer.
Afterwards
·given the bread lying there dead
Testaments
were
given
to
20
on the field.
young people. Refreshments of
He Trembled. Bobby White cookies and soft drinks were
was making shingles In the served. Church vtsltlors Included
Mlddleswart woods when he Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bernard,
heard some Raiders approach- Bearwallow Ridge, and Mr. and
ing. He lay down close to a log Mrs. Jack Bernard, Dayton.
Bill and Dorothy Robinson
and took a stlcl&lt; and worked
were
honored on their 50th
enough leaves over his body to
wedding
anniversary recently
conceal himself. Soldiers passed
with
an
open
reception held at the
so.close to him that he could have
church.
Hosting
the affair were
reached out and touched them.
their
children,
Marleen
Donovan
He said that he was so frightened
and
Wilbur
Robinson.
Many
that he trembled and his heart
friends
and
relatives
attended.
stood still.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Very near this spot In later
Lloyd
Brooks were Mr. and Mrs.
years, A. E . Mtddleswarlfound a
Kevin
Brooks and Hallie, Columsmall silver sword. Tradition has
bus,
and
Mr. an'd Mrs. Randall
It that a Rebel soldier was killed
Smith,
Barberton.
on that spot.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hender(To be continued In tomorrow's
son
and Edith Harper visited Mr.
paper)
and Mrs. Bill Wood, Zanesville.

situation that I thought could never
happen to me. Well. it just did.
1be man I loved dearly and was
marrjed to for 40 years died
suddenly. We were everybody's idea
of the perfect couple. Never was
there a word of gossip about us. I
always felt loved, cherished and
special. Now I am crushed.
Immediately after the funeral I
went to mE husband's office to
clean out his desk, In the process I
ran into letters that left no room
for doubt He had carried on a
IO!IB"~rm affair with a woman I
know. lbere was no mention of a
parting of the ways, so I assume it

of pain. My husband's death was
easier to take than this blow. Please,
Ann, tell your readers that if they
are leadiiiJ a double life to destroy
the evidence. I am a total wreck
over this discovery, and it didn't
have to happen. No city. please. Just
-BEREAVED AND GRIEVING
DEAR FRIEND: I've dealt with
this problem before. Too bad your
husband didn't see that column. I
implore all spouses who are cheat·
ing to be aware of the pain that
could result from your immoral
conduct. For heaven's sake, if you
are dumb enough to write letters.
bury them before they bury you.
Deu Ann Lllnden: If I could ask
you to give live words of advice to
everyone who may ever have to go
Others presenting gifts and to a hospital, they would be:
cards were Doris Deeter, Edna BRING ALL YOUR MEDICINES
ALONG!
Lt fe, Florence Wyers, Ken and
Unless you have your medication
Dan Fausnaugh, Mike and
Rhonda Collins, Vernon and with you, or have it accurately
Mary Maxey, Ted and Marjorie memorized, you could be lethally
Connolly,' John and 'Mildred underdosed, overd.-1, crossd.-1
Krider, Norman and Eunice and even misdiagn.-1 by doctors
Midkiff, . Bob and Karen Baker, who are forced to guess.
Ahgle Morris, Lettie McCain,
I've spent hours with patients
Terry and Linda Kaylor, Herold trying to identify "a little, round.
and Josephine Osborn, Ronnie white pill, I think it starts with D.
and Mary Grace Cowdery, Erma My doctor knows, but he is in New
and Erma Jean Connolly, Mr: Zealand."
and Mrs. Martin Morris, Faye
Please, bring in everything you
and Jim Watson, Ernest and take and let us read the labels. And
Maxine Whitehead, Sandy and
Tammy Roberts, Ellen and Jose- while you're at it. carry a Iist of
phine Wells, Ray and Janice your allergies. - EXPERIENCED
L.P.N. IN LA CROSSE, WIS.
Young, Alvin and Barbara Tripp,
DEAR LA CROSSE: Potentially
Carl and Sara Dill, Walter and
Kathryn Evans, Charles and life-saving advice. Thanks for shar·
Betty DIU, Dick and Sharon ing.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
Folmer, Bobby and Linda Fos42-year-oll!
single mother. I have an
ter, all local.
Russell and Katherine Krider, adolescent son who caw pro6'
Findley; Rick, and Peggy lems at home and at school.
McKinney, Columbus; David
When I was married my husband
and Debbie Barber, Hebron; was physically abusive. I am now
Larry and Cathy Grey, Elizabeth involved with a married man who
City, N. C.; Warner and Frances never brings me flowers or sends
Halley, Galltpolts; Les and Con- me a card on my birthday. Even
nie Cornwell, Athens; David and though I gave him a Christmas
DebbteEvans,'lnkster, Mich.
present last year he never gave me

Connolly birthday celebrated

Archers honored
at church dinner

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern High
WEDNESDAY
School Athletic Boosters meetMIDDLEPORT Feeney- h;tg, 7:39 p.m. Thursday ai the
Bennett Post 128. American . high school.
Legion, and ,Its Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday night at 7:30
POMEROY- Open lead meetp.m. The legionnaires w111 met at Ing of Meigs Chapter of AA 7 p.m.
the old post hall, while the Thursday at
Sacred Heart
auxiliary will meet In the annex. Church, Pomeroy. with a guest
There wtll be no dinner at this speaker.
meeting.

OH. 44141 woo oppointod
Admlnlotrotor of the oototo
of Ray""'nd A. Prolfht, doceaood, toto of Route 1,
· Portland, OH. 41770.
·
Robert E. Buck.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press Iniernatlonal
FOUR FACE'! OF ELVIS:
Elvis Presley fans are divided
into factions over how they want
their hero remembered on a
postage stamp. "The Elvis Presley people ... are divided into four
factions," U.S. Postmaster General Anthony Frank said tn San
Francisco, where he was speakIng at the annual meeting of the
Society of Real Estate Appraisers. Frank says one group wants
a picture of a · young, pure
Presley before he started a busIng drugs and food while another
bunch - Frank calls them the fat
faction - wants a more realistic
portrait "on a larger stamp."
The other factions are those who
believe Elvis Isn't dead and the
anti-drug lobby.
ROUGH SAILING FOR CAPT.
CONNER: Dennis Conner didn't
have a good weekend on the low
seas of San Diego harbor.
Conner, the defending America's
Cup skipper who lives In San
Diego, watched both of his

By: Judith A. Wo"Y.
Deputy Clerk
(?) 12. l9. 28. 3tc

me ever again. '

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY..OHIO
DIAMOND SAVINGS •
LOAN COMPANY,

1

Your son needs counseiing,"too.
See \hat he gers ir.
,,
What are the signs of alcoholism?
How can you tell if someone you iove
is an alroholir? "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
How to Conquer It" will give you the
answers. To receive a copy, send $3
and a se/f-addrt!ssed. stamped busi·
ness-size envelope (45 cents postage)
to Ann Landers. P.O. Box I 1562, Chicago, Ill. 60611.()562.
ANN I.AMIERS •
Cl1988 los Angeles Tim6s Syoditatl and

C.oaiOrs Sjndicaca

•

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
·. FIOUCIARY
On Ju!y 7, 1988, in tho
Moigo County Probote
Court, Caoo No. 26,888.
Lethe L. Proffitt, 51090
Portlond Road, Rocino, Ohio

45771. wu 1ppointad Exa·
tt.. lltlta of Alice
Jewett Ad1ma, dece•ed.
cutrix of

toto of 64424 Cemetery
Rood,
Portland,
Ohio
4&amp;770.
Robtrt E. Buck,
Problta Judge

Judith R. Worry, Clerk
(7)19. 26

Football report
RACINE - Southern Local
Football Coach B111 Hensler
requests boys of the varsity team
to report to the high school
football building for helmet fit.
ttng at 2 p.m. Monday.
Farrar reunion
JACKSON - The 17th annual
Farrar reuhton will be held on
July 31, at the farm pf li:rnest
(Junior) and Bess M11Jer at the
shelter house on Sternberger
Road In Jackson.

Plaintifl

vo,
WARREN L. PERRINE,
et al.,

DefenCS.ntl

Cue No. BB-CV-73
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO: w.... L. """ino, whoM
loot kMWn oddr•o wu 696

to strike

Founh Awnue, Nonh Bruns-

. Warren L. Per~IRa, at al •• Da.t endenta. Thia Ktion hM

2 5ElOtANrS
°/o OFF SUMMER SLACKS!

RACN
HAMST FES11VAL SEPT. 17111. ANY.
ONE WANIIfG TO Mt.JIE IESEIVA110NS FOI ASTAND ORTO
ENTER PAIADE PltO.. 949-2100 OR 949-2140.

.

"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"
NEW POOL - Two campers, Dustla a'nd 11m NaUer of
Parlrersburg, .w. Va., survey lbe new pool at tbe Chrlllllan
A-mbly campgrounda. The pool, a ctft to the campground, Is a
•peclal bleulng what with tbe heat of tbl.t ewnmer.

RACINE
DEPRTMENT
STOlE
3RD STREET
RACINE, OHIO
MASTERCARD -VISA- GOLDEN BUCKEYE

'

•

~
ond hll _.., popuTho Moig&amp; County Commlo-

"""'roc-

t ...ctaleu

thlln 110,000.00.

tho County wit dioponse
with customary advertising

and enter Into informal bid·

oionn hove dot...,;nod acCO&lt;ding to pr-ionl of tho
Ohio lloviood Codo lor conlrocto looo 110,000.00.
tho County wil dio- with
cuotcmiiV odv-ing and anter into informal bidding. Such
bidl -will be b8Md on the lo-111d- coot lor work to
bo porlormod, Tho Moigo
County Commiooionn ,...
. , . the right to wohleoll bido
lor wh,..,., couoo d••·

ton
must compl
. . the " ReOuolitlod
mooonov
_, 1or· Quotation" form
:'o1111!1o ot the Commiolioner'o OffiCI ond VII- Holt.
Comrectora muot pr-o 1
aocond pogo giving 1 briol hil·
tory of their ..porioneo, idontlly tho pat throe (31 jo.. per·
fanned, ond provide tlweo
F
3 ._...~_ ret.
toor~
Moigo County Commiolion..., Courthouoo, Pom.-ay,
Ohio 46789, 1 -od...,.
lope not tot• thori 2:00P.M..

County Coulthouoo, Commio-

J%..,:...or(,j wil bo ,.. Bocon provolllng wagoo for
lect.t boo.t 011 aapori.,.... Moigo County.
b'odo ,.._oncoo, ability tD
Ehhor o Performance Bond
oonop\«1 project on-time and for 100% of tho comroct

mined.
Pl.,., opocific:alionl, and location ol tho project •a111oll..
blelor m~ • tho Moigo

lion••
Office. Pomavy,
Ohio. omd Mldcl- VHI:
-·

Hall bahueen the houri of9:

A.M. and 4:00P.M .. Mondlv
through Frid1111. AI HIREO
ltbor muot bo paid Dovio-Bocon prllililinfl
Meig1 County,

!,!,.u-;, ,...::,:·

in

r7 1988

on theSuch
low•t
colt
ding.
bido•nd
will belt
bo blood
lor work to be performed.
Tho Molgo County Commlo·
oionoro ..,._.e the right to
wolve ol bido lor whotevor
cauoo dot&amp;&lt;minad.
Plano. opecifleationo, and
location of tho project ore
ovoiloble lor inspection at
the M•lg• County Court·
houoo. Commiooioner' oOf·
fice, Pomeroy, Ohio. bo·
tween tho houro of 9:00 A.
M. and 4:00 P.M., Monday
through Frld.ly. All HIRED

d otal COlt emon-....,....
'" t
·
moQ. Approodmlllo otortl!'ll
dale for conmuction w11 bl
Auguot 10, 1988, with com-

million••· and Village of

Either a P.tormance Bond
for 100% of the contract
price, or Poynient Bond on

Pom•oy. are equal oppOrtunky emptoyera.

the pert of the Contractor for
Courthou•
100% of tho eomroct price,
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
wll be required with the in· 17' 1 3 19 28 3tc
formol bid.
' ' ' ·
Oualifted mMOnry contrw:No ·
tors muot comploto
"Ro- '• ___
P_u_b_lic_ _t_tce___

tho

Ouotation" form [..

giving

jobl performed. and provide

three (3) trodo roleroncao.
Forms must be returned to

tho Meigo County Commiosionera, Courthou•. Pom-

Ofoy, Ohio 45769, in asaolod
envelope not lotOf than 2:00
P.M, JulY 27, 1988.
ControctOI'(ol wiH bo oolectod baaed. on oxp.,..ience,
trade roforoncoo. obiliiy to
complete project on-time

FormsmJaberltUmedtothl
Melga Coumy Col'niMJion.

ASPHALT P,AVEMENT
The COUnty of M'eigs il a
recipktnt of HUD Community Davolopmtim Block Gront

and on-budget, and total
coat estimate. Approximate
starting date for construe·
tion will bo Auguot 10,

!undo oworclod by tho Ohio

Department of Development

tor tho Sutton Township

Trustee~. to repair and rMur·

facowhhoophlh Wolohtown
Hm Rood (Township Rood
1161.
.
m•o. Approoimllo otanlng Tho Meigo County Comm10-

d•e for COftltnlcdon wl be

1988, whh completion e•·

peCted

weekol.

four

within

mioolonoro.
and Sutton
Townohip Truoteeo. are equal
opportunity employers.
Moigo County Commisoionon
Courthouse

CourthOUIO
Pomeroy, OH. 46719
171 13, 19, 26, 3tc

--in

_ , - Complaint whhin
tw.,ty·light (281 day a after
the loot pubUcolion of thio
Notice, which wHI bo publlohld 'onao ooch week lor
o1x (IJ oucclinlvll weeks.
The lMI dote of pubtlcotion
wHt
on tho 18th day
of Auguot. 1188. and the
-ty-light (281 d.lyo for

,.,lin

1nawer wll commence on

thot date. tn tho cue of your
,lollure to onowor or othar·
will roopond 10 roqu•to4
by the Ohio Rut• of Civi
Pr.-uro. judgment by d.l·
toult wHl bo rendorod
agoinat you and lortho rollol
domonclodlnthoComplllint.
Dotod thlo 7th dey of July,
1988.

cordng to pr~ of the
Ohio RIVila:l Codll for contriCII lou th., t10.000.00.
tho County wil dio- with
cuotomsry odv-.ng ""' ontor into 1n1ormo1 bidding. Such

bido w11 bo boo.t on llio
t.-t and- coat lor work
to. bo p-m.t. The Moigo
County Commlooionn ....
.,. the right to ,.,..,. ollliido
for wh•- bouoo d••·
mined.

Pl.,., oplclficotlono. ond location olthoprojoctoroiYII•
blo lor inopoctlon Ill tho Moigo
County Courthouoo, Commiolionor'o Office. Pom.-ay,
Ohio. ond Pom.-ay Vllogo
Holt, - . . . , the houro of
9:00A.M. end 4:00 P.M ..
-~~~~ tlwough Frldor, AI
HIRED lobor muotbopsid Do·
Larry E. Spencer, vio-Bocon ..-..oiling
Cl•k of Courto Molgo County.
m
12. 19. 2e:
Etttwr.a Performance Bond
IBI 2, 9, 18, etc
tor 100% of tho com11ct

-•lor

price, or PavmenLBQnd on

--:--c-----::----1 2
Public Notiqe

In Memoriam

NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR INFORMAL BIOS
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISIIONERS CDBG
FORMULA GRANT
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
HANDICAPPED ACCESS
TO STREETS AND
SIDEWALKS

:rho County of Mllgo to ...
cipiont of HUD Community
O.VIfa., nMI: Blodc Orlr'lt
lunda . . . . . . bv tM Ohio

Dlpata;aaq qt Developmn

lor tho Vllag~ot _ _ . to
-231MbrwnpaCOI-

oor.,.. ___ _

•VINYL SIDING
oALUM.INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING (0 •
Now ~~ lult
"Free Estlmateo"

PH; 949·2801
or les. 949 •
2860
NO SUNDAY CAW 3-ll·tfn

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Ct"Y Fishing Suppli
Pay Your Phone
and Cable IIIIa Here
' IIISINISS PHON!
16141 992-6110
IIStOINCI PHON!
16141 992-7754
I/2S/Un

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
Howard L.

Wrltestl

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
.
In m""OIJ of Ray L Prof!itl of
Ricin • otlio lllio jiiiSOd My
to bowlhGodonJutr 1!,1911
Ht is sadly llliSSid .., ••• IItty

and l•ily and tri•dl.

a=---=Pu....,bl'""i=-c:,.Sa""le.--• Auction

PUBLIC AUCliON

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CIBBning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7-14-'81-1 mo. pd.

BINGO

THURS. EVE., JULY 28, 6:00 P.M.
Howes Grove Park, Belpre, Ohio on
Washington Blvd,
We'll hiVe one estate plus a partial estate
1nd others. .

player, desk w/mirror, stands, comple~ lull bed,
sheets liners, blankels, bedspreads, curtatns, pots &amp;
pans, Pyrex dishes, all kinds of lamps, clolhing, lawn
Boy lawn mower, misc. tools, Fenlon &amp; olher glassware knick knacks, puzzles, books, record.s, wood e~t
IMiders Dlils lois ol Christmas decorations Irom tlte estate &amp; Oil's Department Store plus lots more furniture
&amp; milo. items &amp; household goods.

PAtRICK H. BLOSSER, AUCTIONEER
"

LIIC, 199.a, Pb. ~a.n45
Tns: Clll1 or Clllck w/ID.

lot

sllllt for loss or ICCidents.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Authorhod SarYict
&amp; Ports

U. S. RT. SO EAST

Briggs • Stratton

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

..

3-311-'87 lin

Tans Past. Present and
Future- Gives Advice
on Love, Marriage and
Business.
I Tov lro Uohappy .,.
Don't lnow Which Way To
Torn Cooooln lorl... lco
OooYish Wll Comlilct
Too Yhort h Altttor Way.
$501 OFP Whh thl! Ad
LADY llCNEL'S
PALM lEADING
lOt Woot llnloa St.

-

Alii•

614-5..·3310

Free Gift .. . "Water P.Jia

Please" b•ttery
operated HouSe Plant
Alert light wi1h tuning ·
Off• good &amp;11 - 7 / 30
~--· ,

&amp;:~

;

'!:!

C. f. SCOTT
IIi.......

GUN SHOP
NEASE HOLLOW ID•

GUNS· AMMO
GUITARS
STRINGS
ftillow SlgM
on lalhan ld.

PH. 949-2161
7-S·'II-1-

home.

BACK TO SCHOOL
STUDEN1' ONLY
SPECIAL

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

'25.00 Perm

Deolerfor

For 121°0
Cut &amp; blow Dry

CHESTER
986-3301

NOW THRU

S~PT ,

3

KAY'S BEAUTY
SALON
7/20/81-1 mo.

aduM tem.le,
orange • white. Call au. «a.

I

WHks old. t

&amp; hell dov w~h ktndor..,._..
child. .Contlct Rill IW19P.

14-2411-1178.

5 ltlvlng Mn• and e
ll(lillls. C.ll before 2 :30 PM.

GhM~wt~¥

814-445-8720.

Howard L Wrltestl

Kin••
to gtweway to good
home. Lttter v.inad. Cell 114-

Mltu•lldot rwedecl tobabr'41-2
P,.·1Chooler1. Aft~·::·
enlngs Lf1 to 1 t :30PM. Mu11 e
dltpendabla Loa.wd ane
1
from town .on 588. Cell &amp;14-

We Honor Mt:/Disc/Visa

4-11-'A tlo

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ROOFING

NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

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

SER~ICE

1-28-'88-tfn

1 rUe kitten, bleek. 0111 .tter I

317·0149,

9 blk Germ.n Shep~ puppill
Nld¥ for a nice honw. call

304-1711-H69.

·

Cute, piayful puppl•. 7wk.told,

mo1h• BIKk Lib.

Mall lltW with ~lftaetiont tq:
Aouon.. Troclng Ca&lt;p.. Atth:

NIASE Certified Mech.,ic

PAT HILL FOlD

CALL 992-6756

Repairs

"DOC" VAUGHN '
Certified Licenaed Shop

WANT 10 BUT

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

For tiny of th•uor•ictt call

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

BetwMn ' o.m.-6 p.m.
or Loowe Mll•-

4·16-86-tln

WRIC~IO

JUNK CARl 01 TIUCII

614-742·2617
2· 1 rt:· BB·tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Rt. 124, P01111roy Oltia

- Addon• and remodeling

-Roofing and gutter work

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

REPAIR
"1•1 Tra•••lulo•

work

(FREE ESTIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

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

eftar 6 PM.

FOUND-Addilon Pk .. pert Ia•
gl• dog-bl.::k • white , brown
fKe. C.n be ...., It Ouenton
Line l'llidence. Cell 114-317-

Go-""""'
*58,230 yr.

7

jabo. It 8.041! .•
Now hlrtna. Y~r
805-e17-IOOO txt. R·

. .,.
9 801 for current Fed... lt.t; :

WJIII:,.. Md ~rt ~me ldtch.in
help ,..Mel, lnquife MICountry
IOtchan, A..:lneorCIIII14-94f..
2324.
.. ~
,__. sorMOne to Ny with Md
help eare tor eldetty man In hll
ho .... 814-992·5114 or 114

992-7119.

'

AVON • AH ..... Call M•ltyn
we
..... 304-112-2145.
'

Yard Sala

......'Pt.PTiiiisaiit ··....
8t Vicinity

lmm•dlate

openlng·Uitr~~ '­

Sound end/cw Nuct. . Meclaa;i

1'11'1-···

Tachnologiat. Ole ve• ·~
rllnCI required. Clll pNSonnal
alrl,.
Vot11111 HootiltOI.

·-··-·--·····. -··· ··--· ---· -·· .... 304-1711-4340. E.O.E.IA.A.E.
Y«d Sale Fridov Ju!y 29, 129
Third and Mary StrHtl. New
HIIVen. Home Interior dallier
qufttlng ktt1 ol item1, clothes
and mite .

8

Plumbers. l*nttra. c•!*'ltn.
rooflrllndll". .lllboi"M"e.Sif
Ro••t 1317Dhlallrelt, Polm
9:00 ~115:00 Mond""

thru F&lt;ldoy.

HIRINOII

Govern"*'t loba - your eraa.•·."
11 S,OQO.tl8,000. Colt i$021 1

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

838-1203,

AI&lt;* P•••oo Auctio-. 11- 12

canted Ohio and Wast Virginia.
Eftlte, emlq-., f•m. llqWd•

.

Wanted

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Coli Collect 13Q41 372-4331
Most Wells 0 rilled In On a bay.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install • Service All Types
Water Pumps
6-1-'11·1 mo.
____ .Television Listenin&amp; Devices
Dependable Hearin&amp; lid Sales &amp; SeJVic
Hnrin1 Evalultions For All Aces

9

Wanted To Buy

Wa piYCIIhfir lltl model ciNI'I

'*'·

uaed
Jim Mink Chev.·Oidllnc.
Bill GenaJohniiOil

114-441-3172
TOP CASH pold lor '13 model

Room&amp; Bo1rdfoflldlrfypereon
In my home. Lg. room • b•h.
Raa1onabla. Call 114-:ZIGIS()Jt.
~"

c.r..,t..,/ romodtllng. Expor.,
lncad. honllt. . . . ana~~~ •. ErM

tlta. Alfl. G.M. Gordon, 81.C,.

4•&amp;-BIUIYininga.
Thank· You.

wm c•• for elct.~ in thair
Eastern -home. C.ll 814-441-2510. ~ ~ .

and nawar l.llld Clf"l. Smith

Buick-Pontiac. 1911

Avo.. Goillpollo.
2282.

Cell

114-441·
.

Complete houaehokll oi fur•

13

Insurance

15

Schools
Instruction

.
. '·
''
'

. I

•~"' )

Le•n toba aOourmetE~teOJtivla

CHEF

~

~

.lobi while tr8inlng. Governr.
ment finendll • • lwlable to
qaallflad. Call Kay It 304-372!
Buying dally gald, 1llwr coln1, 2932, Cullln•rv School
rfnga,J......,.,, ..Ung ware, old W•hlngton.
~ '\
coins. 111'911 OJtwncy. Top _priCII. Ed Bwleltt 81rblr Shop.
RE-TRAIN NOWl • lo

2nd. Avo, Mldcltor&gt;ort. Oh. 11 4- IOUTHEASftRN BUSINESS:
992-3471.
COLLEGE, 129 Jodos.., Pike.
Ohio lnltructio,.l G..m Deadlint Aug. t9. COil 445-4317.
Reg. No. 88-11·10518 .
Junlc.euto'•· Top prj• peln. C.ll
at4-192-1141oftor 1 p.m.

for-Ooltto

Ctth
qulho.Olld
Ap-·:•itctd.Of -any
condition. Coli It H2-IBB7.

i I !jill

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

/llil'lil

;)1:1 vII. I'

... •17 Second Avanue. Box 1213
! Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

11
tfn

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

CUSTOM
ti1'EIIOI DESIGN

PH. 742-2463

.

..'•"

ture • antfqUII. AIIO wood &amp;
oo81 h111t«1. Sweln'• Furrtifure . Call u1 for vour· mobile h~
&amp;: Auction, Third • OIIYI, Insurance: Millar ln1urance,
414--.,6-3159.
304·112-214-5. Al•o: autor;
Went to buy: Used furniture end ho1"111, lffe. heefth.
.ntfquas. Will buy entire hou...
hold furnillhlng. M•lln Wade-

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

13

...

·ar

Rt. I, Box 74-A, Riply, W. Ya. 25271

or at
Veter1ns Memorial Hospital .
Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy, Ohto,_

' '

tion . . . 304-n:J-5785.

Buying fumltute and appl.,on
bv ._, place or by the lot. F*
prlceo. Colt 814-4411-3151.

l~~glt,

·::.

Situations

381-9303,

B&amp;C I.DRILLING
CO.
H.
Owner

FEATURING:
Riviere
Ceblnett
Rollyeon Vinyl
Replecement
Window•
Peachtntt Doon
and Window•

Coli Ttrrlotlf4-446-951-0 for

!Dot: 3malo8ol&lt;llopu.-.On0td
Oext!tr Ad. er•.ln Dex•r. Ohio.

114-949-

·•

Hair StyHit•. Acroa The Sn.-:
1t-;ting ulon 11 aeeklng one
edditk»MI at-.4111 who lllootd""
for mont than jult enothlr job .
d ...llo\

Of

..

Mon.-Fri. Call 114-445-814,3

7814.

Junk Clrt wtth or w;thout
moton. Coli Lorry Uvoly-114-

• •Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators'
"Muot It Repairable"

-~

oldsandup. Country MrE.-..Cioof110'1 ere• Ad. eon 114-

6 Lost and Found

mever. 11C-241-It12.

NEED WATER?

Bt!irolnlng In my ho,..l yt.

Need metu,., r•PDRIIbi• ~­
son tobabvlit nawltOrn,.llartlng
flklvem·b lr. · G•lllpoll1 ar ...

OR

-FIIIISitMATIS-

,~

Walnut tree. 304-175-515151 .

5-25-tfn

"A 1 Reasonable Pri1es"

Sholbvwlle. Ky. 400115.

445-0804.

lt4-949-2193
2089.

All Major • Minor

pluac•IIIGW~M• .

cros..., 304-17&amp;-215 27.

Lost: In Ch•ter. mila Beagle.
White with brown and bl-* on
h..t. ..,.._,. to Ollp. can

Moat Foreign and
Domattlc Vehicles
A/C SaNica

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do H1uling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard BusinHS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Puppies, Shephlrd 1nd Heel.-

614-8911-1407. R-rd.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

304-n:J-5331.

Loat: Walk• dog. Answer• to
Aulty. Lost in Snovwlle end
Derwin •r•. tf
foul'l:l cell

SYRACUSE. OHIO

hou.ty,....ge.

Aobertl. P•k. 804MIInStrwt.

Pit 8 .. 1 pup. -~- t 2 wlco old,
lookl like 'Spuda McKinzie',

oho•

441-0500.
' '
SERVICE PERSONNEL·
Servicing olk w.,.., d_....
m.tta of ruuo,.l A•ll Chltn
ltONI In your arM. P.-t-dnl..

hiWI

wcwnwd, ..,..,. 304-8911-3110.
Puppi11.

..

bun

moatly black ,

Coll614-742-2428.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
con racl1ators · and
heater cores. We can
also acid bDil and racl
oul radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks•.__

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tlc

Oeytime M~:Pt~r needed In
Con-ry. Rot. .... ..._ Colt

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

DEAD OR AUVE

1.._ d.

Plrt· -inl .~ WM!id. Pr.t•·
llbl., In my homa. Rlt;t Qrwute

114-446-4134.

CALL

•Seamlau Gutter
•Roofing
•Vinyl Siding
•Roofing
•Home Roofing
•Wood Crafts

lhoukl l'lllply with ..-

""" or work hlltory to: P.l).
Box 371 ...,.....,.__ Ollio
46et2. ATTN: Sal• Monlllt~·

• •· 2 days• week. 2'hv.• 1111.

304-171-3378.

WANTED

985-3561

wc:wnen

PM. 114-441-7t37.

8 .7 Finendng on Yardman
Service on All Mak•

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, Oh.
992-2725

1-6-81-1 "'·

We Service AU Makeo
1122/Wrtn

....t..... l!nloy 10% "''I&gt;

PH. 949-2969
Locoted Hallway bo·
tween Rt. 7 &amp; Buhan,
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Service Cenlor lor Ry..
Product•

1850

Roger Hysell
Garage
BAUM
LUMBER

A-..

~911 county • - · AltPI•nt
mu.t 1\MN pt~~Viouaoubid. •••

2 tlaer ttrlped malt ldtttnf• 1
ortn~. 1 gray. IPPI'OX. 10

8· 8-1 mo. pd.

CUSTOM BUILT
PRE-FAB
ROOF TRUSSES

OUTSIDE BALES REP.
WANTED
~~
won•d lor flo
Ooitto.

1822.

614 -992-3711

7-1:1·'

RACINE

l-3·'86-lft

llliltlli "'·

18 Years
Church-Home-School

110.~

C.ll 814--379-24315.

,.,,, &amp; ,.,....

992-6611

llftiMI to 1

Advortlolng Sot•. Coli for ...,
.....
-t. 1 -80Q.727-78111i.
or 30._727·718&amp;.

r.nr~endwa'renumw­
our field. E..,tenalte;l JMft~

Male 10 .... old block k -.
Colt lt4-317-0S82.
~

Ttl..,tod. Crtllhlo lndlviduo~
wen11d for.., .citing c. . ....,

lmum comNttton on 1 low
ticket. Item. Ewwyone II a

Giveaway

Slam- father, C.lica motMr.

Equipment Deller
fmt E4•1t•••J

Middleport, Ohio

wndlllzed WinkMr·Thompson
F•m. c.ll M•on County lh•
riff or 304-175-4088.

4

Bush Hog Farm

6·10-8&amp;-1 mo.

SMITH'S SEAMLESS
GUnEI &amp;
COIIImUaiOIII
- · Jeffr., .... ~
11. 1 101 116, Y.mlll
614-742-2235

mattress w/lrame, 2 good refrigerators, end tables, Ia·

tlon ...cNna to.,... end conviction of pen;on or penon. thllt

BOGGS

949-2263
or 949·2168

IIH ISTIIAIIS

Good couch &amp; chair, new queen size box springs &amp;

ble &amp; floor lamps, gas cook stove. recliner, 4 pc. bdrm.
suite, dryer, 2 dinette tables &amp; chairs, portable color
lV, dressers, melal beds, kids desk, old rocker, record

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

~;:::=======::;r;::;;;;;;;;;.;~;;~

10-8-llc

tho Mkklopwt

polmo -

,__

B ustnes
.• s
·s·
.•
ervtces

3 Announcements

ll/2/11-tlt

(4

The Meip County Com-

lionera have dllrtenriih'ltd ac-

tunity employers.
Maiga County Comrnillion••

·

hietory of their ••perience,

idomlly tho poot three !31

114-2411-I313Toctorl

REWARD •tOO.OOfo(lnfor,...

1 brief

NOTICE OF REQUEST
FOR INFORMAL BIDS
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS CDBG
FORMULA GRANT
SUTTON TOWNStilP
WELSHTOWN HILL

ers. CourthouM. Pomeroy,
Ohio 46789, In·a oeolad _..
lope not lot• thin 2:00P.M.
Jutv 27. 1988.
Co.1a~ol wil bt ,..
lectat baled on •perience.
trodo , . . _ . _ ability 10
_.,... 0 project on-line ond
on-budgot. ond total coot.,;.

5. 2.a . 1mo.

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

the Ccw111 iniDA•
Contractors muot
..._.. ._nd-glvlnga
brief hiotory of their •pori.,.,., idontifythepooC-(3)
jo.. performod, end -"lo
tlveo (3) trodo ,.,1.,.....

•• , Office.

CAll AMY UITEI
or IOI'S IUCTIOIICS .
446·73'0

Homellta
Jacobsen

Moigo County Commiooion.. oecond -

decomioiW untl O.c. Fun lObi
Pony ...... Froo • - ldt. No
oolloctiori"or doiMryl Wook your
own hDUrL Now Nrinl Demon.t,.ton. c.lt Betty c.,.._,,

••Y

550 PAGE STIEET
MJDDLEPOIT, 01110
OPEN 1:30-6:00 P.M.

100% of the contract price,

the Commiutonar• • Office.
Contractors mult prepare a

llar.tl Brolwl And .._, hll

ChrinrMI Around ... Workl

VMS TAPE

, Wood Eoter

complete the "Aequast for
Quotation" form available at

Help Wanted

lot uuonwlfttho~toldMo•ioo
&amp; IIi.. "'" to
YHI.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

will bo required whh tho inoxpoctod whhln four formal bid. ·
Quolifiod c:Ontractora muot
14 w-lThe Meigs County Com-

GEARY
BODY SHOP

Tecumuh

pillion

11

Arlllllllll Li: 11, &gt;"It I·,

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUDES to

price, or Payment Bond on

tho port of the Contnoctor lor

---- ------

The Daily Sentinel Paga 7

Business
Senrices
l•;:=======:;rr::;,;;~~~~~::;l

labor mult be paid Davis·

... ..-..

wag.- for

Dip..,..., Dev......,_
"""*""''"-"""'""'",...

•

11 .

Central Bulin..
Compllion of the project Wll 100% of tho eomnet price.
mae the emWe • • ec:ca•· will be required with the in·
blo to tho llh\llicolv honcl- formol bid-

41719.
Tho County,
proyor ofOhio,
tha 1---o:---:-::~:-:-=-Public Notice
of
Mligo
Complaint
domondo
Judg·
mont against tho Del..,donta, Wanon L. Perrino,
NOTICE OF REQUEST
KJithy Perrino, now known
FOR INFORMAL BIDS
11 Kathy Morrio, In theoum
MEIGS COUNTY
of Twenty·nlno Thou•nd COMMISSIONER&amp; CDBG
One Hundred Thirty-nino
FORMULA GRANT
ttn~
Nlnoty-ono Cento VILLAGE OF POMEROY
1129,138.91)ooo!Morch9,
SIDEWALK
1988, whh intw•t thereon
IMPROVEMENTS
at o rete of .,,18, and cooto
The County of Melgo lo o ••
of thloaction: thlt tho mort- cipiont of HUD Co""""""'
::::,:"'~~~ho.. ~~:;; =.~s:;'*tho 'l;:
thl 11.,1 ttnd/or lm-u In
of
or on Mid property, Hony. bo lor the VII- of Pol•....., 10
mar-lod and tho roll eo·
thl ContiOI
tetotltll bo qulotod and uld oonry
property ootd In tho forlclo- Bulin. . OiolrlcL
..,,. octlon ..,d all amoumo
Tho Motgo County Commlodue Plotntlll bt pold from o1on.. holoe ctot...,;nod ac-

~
.

'

'
Diltrict. the pan of the Contractor for

1•ton.

Public Notice

Public Notice

wick. NJ 08802.
August tO, 1988, with com- cording to provisions of tha
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
You oro hereby nptillod . pl•ion expected whhin four Ohio Revised Code tor con- . (7) 13, 19, 26, 3tc
that you hove boon named a · (4 w-).
1 _ _ _ _ _;,._~-..L.---------1
Dlflnclont-ln the action on·
The Molgo County Com· I"
lhlod Dltimond Sovlngo • mlnlonoro. and Vlll1111e of
Loan Company, Plolntlll, vo. Middleport, are oquol oppclr-

the proceeds of the sale.
You •re required to an-

revolutionary 65-foot catamarans hit the skids. On Saturday,
the Stars and Stripes wing-sail
catamaran limped Into shore
after a hole was punctured In its
sail. On Sunday, Conner's softsan catamaran lost its mast and
had to be towed In for repairs.
The two mishaps were Conner's
ltfth and sixth accidents this year
and couldn't have come at a
worse time: former America's
Cup skipper Ted Turner was due
In Monday for a VIP sail a board
the two boats. And all this
happens just two months before a
scheduled match race with New
Zealand.

Public Notice

ovolllblo It

Public Notice

._

Pomae ov-Middleport, Ohio

qualt for

boon uolgnod c... No. 88·
CV-73. end to pending In tho
Court of Common PI-

stops of the "Joshua Tree" tour.
MALmU FIRE SCORCHES
SPIELBERG: The fire that
seriously damaged Steven Spiel·
berr's home and spread to th,atof
director Walter H111 may )),av~
started In a room containing film
canisters In the Spielberg house.
The damaged estimate for Spiel·
berg's Malibu beachfront home
was $210,000 and Hill's house was
30 percent destroyed after sustaining $120,000 In damage. No
on~ was home In either house
(Spielberg is tn London working
on his latest "Indiana Jones"
movie with Harrison Ford and
Sean Connery) at the time of the
Sunday evening fire. Authorities
mE RATTLE AND HUM OF haven't determined the cause of
ROCK 'N' ROLL: U2 fans are the fire but have ruled out arson
excited about autumn. The band and It was not immediately
Is finishing up a double album known If any valuable film
· part live performances, part memorabilia were destroyed.
studio- for an Oct. 11 release. In
FIRST LADY TO COMFORT
early November, the Irish VANDERBILT: First lady,
rockers' concert film, "Rat tie Nancy Reagan q ulckly added a
and Hum," comes out with New York trip to her ttlrlfrary so
. footage from the Los Angeles, she could attend Tue•day's funNew York, Dublin and London eral for Carter V. Cooper, son of
fas"ton designer Gloria Vander·
bllt. CQOper, 13.!Cmct~ hjmselfby
jumping frQW,.tll~ 14th floor of his
mother's
New York apartment
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A suggest that a strike by 1,700
Friday.
A
spokeswoman • for
half century of labor peace at hospital workers would not ImReagal!
said
first lady was
seven major hospitals teetered pact on tbe 1,300 patients in these going to NewtheYork
"to give
today on the brink of as trike that hospitals."
comfort_
to
a
dear
and
old
friend. "
leaders of 1, 700 hospital workers
warned could cause a Hsevere
Monday, Splain, a trustee of
crisis" in the city's health care. · Local 250 of the Hospital and
With talks broken off and a Health Care Workers Untoa, ,
strike set for 6 a.m. PDT, union said, "I am sorry to report that
~
-..;: '
'
leader Mark Splain said of no further talks are scheduled.
( :1/, l l / i (
hospital managers, "There Is rio
I
"We're only hours away from
531 JACIISGit Pitt£ - RT.35 Wt:ST
evidence they are convinced that the first community-wide hospiPlhani441·411M
a stril&lt;e could cause a severe tal strike and the hospitals have
IIAII&amp;.\IN
i!ATIN£ES ~T/SUN I 'liED"
crisis.
'
'ALL• S£~TS 12.50
· ,
refused to come to the table and
"It Is Ignorant and arrogant to bargain."
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY S2 , 50

~orkers

Probate Judge

one.
I would just love to put on a
pretty outfit and join him at a nice
reslaurant for dinner. Instead, ev·
ery · two weeks we meet for 30
minutes of meaningless sex. I end
up feeling degraded and mad at
myself.
I cannot change the past, but I do
have control over the future. What
in the h«k is'wrong with me. Ann
Landers? · .. A SAD LADY IN
DISTRESS, COLUMBIA, MO.
DEAR SAD LADY: I can answer
your question with two words: low
self-esteem. You don't believ~ you
are good enough to be treated
decently so you settle for a shoddy, ,
self-deprecating relationship.
Tell this slob to take a hike. Get
yourself into a counseling program
and stay with it until you can look
in the mirror and say, "I AM
somebody. No man is going to use

People in the news

Hospital

in

· A BIOOIIy Slave. Many records
attest to the fact that during the
Civil War times many slaves
Wl!l'l! brought across the Ohio at
llllfflnlton Island. Some say they
~ ileereted on the Island, then

Wildwood
FOREST RUN
Garden Club meeting. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at home of Hilda
Yeauger; picnic to be held.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Ju!y 7, 1988, in the
Moigo
County Probtto
Court, Caoo No. 26902,
Roy W. Prollln. 9116 Edi-

ton Street NE, loutleville,

Community calendar
TUE'IDAY
Special
MIDDLEPORT meeting, Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Tuesday at temple; work In EA degree, refreshments following meeting.

Tu•dey. July 26. 1988
Pul.lic Notice

Ann
Landers

____ ____ ·---""

------·

1/31/1 ....

Holp Wanted

' *~.

18 Wanted to Do •.~;

•

�•
--~-----

---·----------r-

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

"':t

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . ,.comrnendt thM you
do butln... wtth people vou
know, lnd NOT to .-nd monev
thfough the l"IWil untl you h.we
inwstig.. td the offering.

"The· Cat ate ffiY MiCk ey
Mouse watch!"

90 Days ..me II e•h with
approvod cradit. 3 MU• out
BullVille Rd. Optn 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sot. Ph. 814-448·

~I 814-448-3044.

Off At. 7bv-P.••Hou•. mo.,.le
home, •tellitedlsh. Both hom•
wrY nice. baa~tituBocatlon. Call
814--992-1941.

S•alfice. 2 BR . home, 1 acre. 2
m'• pea•d Vinton Schoot.
Cdmplell!lfv remodeled. New
wiring, lights, windowt, blo"""in ~ lntulM:Ion, plumtHng, kJtchen
cabinets, c•pet throughtout,
drtpet 61 hlert. Also washer / d ·
rfll'· stova, Nfrig. G•den IPOI.
S 23,000. C.ll81 '-:J88-8482or
388-9884 tll10 PM .

'

.

for Rent

2 bedroom harM. all el-=tric.
c•peted. p.1rt b. .m.m. 4 mi.
from city, on SR 218. Call
814-258-9380.
Hou•lor ..,1 can be u.cl • 2
..,...
3 4 BR 2 batho 2
kftCh:."'i.;ndry 1 '&amp; It~•
room. c.ll 814--•4~7026 .

8 room hOu• on t.-m. t75. 8
•
.,
room h ou•. Col' 30 .... 87 ~:~~·
4
8 10 .
.7 Spr...::::e Street· hou• on
bealllful quiet side dreel, two
bedrooms, n...., g• furr-.e-.
n...., wtrir1.g, niiiN window.. bult
In .., g~, lir•ekf•t
tront &amp;
back porchn, wathlr / dryer
hoolc~up. Y•CI maintenance.
Contlct 8011•rd Ubrery, 614448--7323.

b•.

81~448-1358 .

Awlllbl1 August 1st. Call 814742-2427.

t-

Briel&lt;. 4088 oq. 11..
12
roOms. 5 bdrma, 2 'h baths.
1~x28 family room. l•ge kitchen. pantry, lauldry room. 5
Mlk~in elollts, 28x26 g . .ge,.
1Q•18 workshop, 12X25 ttor·
age bldg. 1.62. aaet. Fantastic
Nlflghborhood. By appointment
61~448-1903.

3 bedroom country horns. Anachad gngo. Oopooit ,oqulrod.

Hou• for

..m

In ~lddltPort.

3

bedrooms, 1 blth. utHity room,
flmily- room. nice carpet. c~ntnll
air. S211L per month plus 1150.
dopoolt. Na poto. Coif 11~992·
8558 doyo or 11~192·1151
evening~ and \!Weklndl.
Pomeroy. good loealian. 4
room, 2 IMdroom hou•. ful
ba.ement, g.-.ge. g• furr~tCe.
S125. month . References
needed. Sentinel. Box 7291...

1

108 State St., Pomeroy. 2 Of 3
bedrooms. c•ptttd. No ,. .. on able off11r retu•d. Phone 814992-3725.
Hou• for •le by owner : Syra cu-... Ohio.% • ere. 3 bedrooms,
LA. FA. kitchen with dining
tpiCI. 1'h bBth, fireplace. w -w
c: •pef', finished g1111ge.. concretll driveway . Asking
64!,'/00. or bMI offer. 814992-7198.

2 bedroom home, in Racine.
La"ge lot on dead end St. Total
electric on el59 month budget.
City water, sewage and cab'e.
Ou11J111rea. good neighborhood.
'!Milking dl••nca to .::hoots and
business. Rutoneble price. Will
Land Cantl'llet wlttt 10 per cent

·' . "'

-

r~;::;;==::;=:;::;:-r.ii=T,;=.;;:;;::;:===1
44 A
41 Homes for Rent
partment .

~~------~--~m

81~448-2359 .

::"\

~;::

3 'BR .• utlttv. g•aa• kttch.,
with appl1nces. Excellent opportunity. Price to 11811. Call

Flttwoodt area of Po.,..ov.
l..lfga 2 ttory home. new ldt·
chen. b .. h room, c•1•ting on
half acre lot. 135,000. Cllll

~

~

I,

Homes for Sale

Oldlr 3 BR., story • VJ. full
buement, 'h aae. Cent.,ary.

•

~~(- . . __ --c.•,!

•ft•

80•21. All ..ectrle,. Ca. 3 BR ., 2
room, dinirig room.
Tom.,.,.•xtrattolst. Must..
to •precialte. 145,000, OW'*
finallelng. Call 614--44~1408
aft• 5 PM .

."

.

Going Cretl supply busin. . in
Pomeroy. Stock and fixtures for
•le. C.ll 1114--992-3837

blltha, great

LAYNE' S FURNITURE

Ic• ~,.........,._Ill( .... . .,. .;. ; ;_;. ; ;";. .'._____..;;

For Sal• or Le••Com,....dal
Bull&lt;fng suitable for anv type of
butln... Off ttiMt j)llrldng.
Forn.ly S.r' • Super Market
Third &amp; VIne. Gallipoh, Ohio.
Coli 51~448-8030.

1985 Marlwtte MollJiar Home,

rang•• · Skaggs Appllanc.t,
Upp• Ahler Ad: bllide Stone
Crtet Molet. 814·446· 7398.

Sof• and chairs pric:N .from
U95 to •9915. Tablte 1150 and
up to t1215. Hid•a-btdl •390
to tEi96. Rldin•• S226 to
t376. lam~ S28 to S126.
Dinlllta S109'andupto *'95.
Wood table w -6 chairs $285 to
t795. Oetk t100 up to S375.
Hutch• t400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mllltre..es
t295 •nd up toS3915. Baby bedll
t110. Mattr..,•orbox springs
full or twin sea. firm '78, and
US. Queen sets t225, King
t360. 4 drawer ch•t tB9. Gun
cabin•• e gun. Bilby m.. r•••
135 &amp; 846. Bed ... .,.. .. $20 .
UO lla King trama S60 . Good
selection of bedroom suites.
mllal cabinets. heldbosrds t30
and up to sea.

1

Real Eslale

2 very nice hou••· 1175month
plus mf•ance and deposft re quired. 81~742-2728 .

Nice 2 bedroom hou•. Nice
cs-petlng. cabinets, neighborhood. Mldcleport. 1114-9921858.

2 bedroom. depofhandref•Mlcea required. located behind
Krodel Park. 304-1175-1881 after 8 :0oPM.
Two room cot•g• furnished.
utilitiee paid. $68 week. lingle
person, call 304-875-3100 or
8711-6509.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

J lit S FURNlTURE
1416Eaat•nAve.
4 drewer ch•t. $48. !i driWar
ch•t. 164.96. 6 pc. woad1111
Furnished apt. New . Ne•HMC. 'dinnette sets, 8199.96.
1 8R. U95, UIIIHioo paid. Coli
PICKENS
44&amp;-4418 aft• 7 PM.
.
FURNITURE
Furnished efflceney apt. ~3
rocm• • bath. C.rpet through- Dinettes, beds , bedding,
out. Prtwte 81 qut.t. Single dr•ters, chllllt, couches, chairs,
w~ng .-rton only. Call 614-lamps, eoffe•end tables. Every
4 48-4107 or 48-2102.
diV Specials. Ya mile out Jerricho. 304-675-1460.
Nice furnished ap1.· 4 rooms It
bll:h. Olntl'lllv loCIIt:IKI: Ref. It Siop &amp;_Check out O!Jr Inventory
. ooc. dop. IOCIUirod. No - · Coli of qualitv furnilure • car pet for
11 ~448-0444.
low prices. 6 pc. wood su'i t•
t 399. 6 pc. oak dinette- S225,
FUrnhlhed 111artment in town. aJt loop c•pllt atari:ing 81 S8. 9!1
0111114--«~1423.
a yd., commercial c•pet-$3.99
1 yd . largeselectionofroomtizt
Furnhlhed up.-lrs 3 room apt., remnanta. No job too big or
utiHioo pold. 94 Locuot. $210 small. Fin .. cing 6 instaii .. Km
per monlh. t715 depa.h. Clll availabla Mollohsn Furnhure,
81'-"448- 1 340 or 4411-3870.
Upp• Ahler Rd .. 446-7444.
APM'tmentt .., d hou••· C. II
30~57&amp;-5104,

VIRA'S FURNITURE
Enteralnm.-n centen, computer
dask, wardrobel-mttel • wood,
bedroom tuite1 , 111 new
mettrMIH-ule priced, rafriger·
Gracloua ltvlng. .1 and 2 bed- atou, frMRera, reng11, washers
room !lpllrtments at Village &amp; dryers. Much more. All at
Manor and Riverside Aplri- , discount prices. Rt. 141 in
merrtt In Middleport. f1oom Centenary·V• mile on Lincoln
•1 82. Coli 814·992· 7787. Pika Opan Mon.-Sat. , 9-6.
EOH.
614-4411-3168.

2 bedroom Apts. for 111at.
C a r -. Nlco oottlng. loundry
hciUiiel avlllable. Call 814992-3711 . EOH.

Sears Kenmore Side· bv · side
urlrig.-freNer, self defrosting.
Good condition. Clt1an. like
new. Call 614-446-4942.

New lv redeconrted apartments
IMIIIable. Utlltt,_ paid. 1225.
Pit month, depoth: required. Call
11 ~992·6724 o11or 8,oo or
992-6119.

Kanmore w.. her. Extra nice. 2
speed. S95 firm . Also GE dryer,
2 cycle. .Not very old. Works
pBrfact. t80. 614: 3&amp;7-0322 .

2 be*oom apts. Middleport.
$185-S185.per month. 2 and 4
bedroom hou•• in Pomeroy
• •· t200-t225 per month. All
furnl•hed. Ref•ence requlntd. Day 1114-992-2381 evenings 614-992-8723.

APARTMENTS. mobUe homn.
hou. .. Pt. Plea~~ntandGallipo­
li•. 1114-448·8221 .
2 bedroom furnished apt New
tt.Ntn, reter.-.ce and security
deposit required. 304·8823287 or 304-773-6024.
Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,

2bedroom furnished apanment,
utlhite paid. PM•ences. Phone
304-882-2686.
NoW accepting applications for
2 bedroom apartments. fully
C3peted. appliance~. water and
treat. pickups providad. Mainte~
nanca free living cl01111 to shop.
ping, banks and schools. For
more informltloncatl304-8823718. E.O.H.
Clean na.v 3 room. bath, car'p8hld, w.sher &amp; dry~~r hookup,
ltove &amp; refrigntor furnished,
rent ..gotiable with good ref•·
ances, 304-676-1982 or 8764680.

1986 total electric.2 bedrooms,
1'h ba1hs, exe cond . Grueser
t:a ne, Camp Conley. Point
Pleasant.

45

Farms for Sale

Big rMIW 3 BR . home. built on
vour lot mly . $16,994&amp;. up. Cell
61 4-886-7311 .
1 0 5 private acres with easy
ne.- Gallipolit Ferry, new
3 bed room home, workshop, 2
extra lots with wells for Mil on
or building, $70.000.00. 304675-4631 .
IICCMI

2 BR . apts. 8 closets, kftchenappl. furnished, W11her-Oryer

hook-up, ww c•pet. newly
From S176.
painted, deck.
Regency. Inc. Apts. Call 304876-5104, or 675-&amp;386 Ot'
8711-7738.
New completelv furnished
apartment 6 moblla home In
city . Adults ontv. P•king. Call
814-448-0338 ,
.

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Second
AVl'l ., Gallipolis. S125 a mo.
UtiUtiet paid. Single male. Share
bath. pill448-4416after 7 PM.
Rooms for rent-week or month.
Starting at 1120 1 mo. Galli a
Hotoi-814448-96BO.
Furnished rooms In countrv
home with utilhles' .-id. adutt._
t 300.00 monlh, 304-11715·
7 541 evanlngs.

46

.

Space for Rent

BEAUTlFULAPARlMENTS AT
8UOGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 5311 Jackson
Pike from S183 a mo. Walk 10
shOp and mo..Aet. 814-4482568. E.O.H.

COUN.T!I'f MOBILE Home Park,
Aou• 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Cell 614-9927479.

Ashton, largo building IIJts,
mobil11 homos prtrmitted. public Upstairs unfurnished lpt. Car~
water, also river lots, Ctyde pete d. utilftiel ,:.id. No ehlldren.
No ...... Coli 11~448-1837.
Bowen. Jr. 304-57&amp;.2336.

Space for WNII t .. ll- All
..., _
hook-uoo. .....
~-ble. Alooeffld.....-w
.... ..... ,.
rooms. air and Clble. Mlson.
W.Va. Csll 304-773-66151.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Beautiful river lots one aae plu8.
public water, Clyda Bowen, Jr.
304-578-2338.
LOTS. one acre. level wooded.
city water. Jericho Road. owner
finlncirtg.. good . terma, 304372-8405 or 372-2578.

1 1 Court St.•2 BR .• 2 blths.
lditchen furnished, w / w c•pet.
No pets. oH llraet parking.
I 3215 a mo. plus udlties. O.p. It
..t . Coli 114-448-4928.
Furnished- 3 roomii ·&amp; blth.
aean. No pet•. Ref. • dllpOitt
raquired. UtHfUes fumllhed.
Aitult• onty , Call 81 ...4481619.

Two 1 •ere lots with public
water. Jerry• Ru 'n Road,
t4.900.00each.conslder Jrada. .
Furnished apt. S:150. UtiHilill
304-678-2383.
paid. Shere bBih. Single male.
Four lots, Greer Rd. 304-875- 919 Second AYII,. Clalllpolt.
Call 448-4411after 1 PM.
6412.

Spacious motHie hOme lots for

Renlals

luxurloue Tara Townhou•

41

Homes for Rent

Nlcetv futnlthed IfNI hou•.
Adulto anlo. Rot. Nquftd. No
pOlo. Coli 81~448-0338.

21A.1'lzofdouble. 120St•teSt.
t22&amp; monthly. Ref•enCN &amp;
.-:. di!Jiolit requiredkCall814-448-0254.
2BR ., g-e. Ool&gt;aoll61otma.
...t. Coli 11~448-1318.

3 IIR . hou• fn M•on. W. v •.

DepOift llquhd. t3001 mo. •
1· uiiiHioo. Coli 81~448-3U4• ·

.....,_. . .. 1!1.118... 2 ~aon. 2

-.. -· --d

lA .. fu I battf"u ....... s. powd•
room downdllrt, CA.. die~

- · ·· dlo_.. . . . - ....
potlo.
pool. ....... ~~~...
lncludid. -.tM'IIna et t289 pw
mo. Call 114-311~7110.

Fu rnlthed efflclenc:v·9 20
Fo•""·
Golllpalle. nao.
"• paid. Call448-4418-7
UtH~

PM.

Nice
BR 41'1
""'·miWOI•.
I
t - 2fum.
.. from-~·
Gol
llo. No -

· t2ZI mo.

11~448-1038.

I

53

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Rlv•lne AnHques.
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy .
Hours: M.T,W 10a.m. to 6p.m.,
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-9922526.

54

Misc. Merchandise

Wheelchairs- new or used. 3
wheeled electric scooters. Call
Rogers Mobilty collect. 1· 614870·9661 .
Tow motor forklift. ·engine hoist.
pe11at iack &amp; L· sealer. Office
desk-executive &amp; secretarial,
time clock, 6 ton Amana heat
pump &amp; furnace. Call614· 4462359.
Must Sell- 14 karat gold nugget
bractet. Recently appraised tor
81400. fir st person with $600
ownea it. Call 614-367·0596
after 7 :30PM .
New riding lawn mower-36 ln.
Wanted to buv-chrom e rail
for B ft . truck. Call 614· 446·
2222 .

54

76

Fuel oil haMar, 60,000 btu
compl.e:e with tank 12150. 304875-1412.

Two ~•dwoOd corn• cablntlts
8276.00 etch or both for
S600.00. man.tels.
Five 4 ftPhon.e
. h•dwood
firaplace.
304876-8530.

79

~~CI=,,..:::":-::·:.,.:·=====;:::====:;:====~~

Sen trNdmlH with ·tpeed •Pall'"
dometer tSO .OO . 304-11751504.

61

1978 142 XL Franklin Skitter,
good condition. G·BC·Prenti ce
loadar, good condition on 1966
Chev. truek. 1969 GMC Tan·
dom truck. fair condition, new
log bunks. For more information
call 614-266-1362 or 2561288.
Electric wheetchair, new, with
removable arms &amp; elevating leg
rest. Battery powered. Call
1!114-446-6478.

Citation freeu,, 11 eu ft. 2ve••
old. $300.00. KMC miaowave
with turntabla and stand,
noo.oo. Welsh bebf atroll•
blue and red 836.00. Atl u:c
eond, 304-675· 7209 or 67676~4.
.
Chicom folding stock. Kallfhnikov rifle,V.'ayne
7 .62Bryant
mm, 304like
new-1300.

64

3 wheeled tr i-cart , now, battery
powered . pneum11tic tires, rear
wheel drive. Call 614 ~ 446 8478.

Portable dishwast.er- S30 .
6.000 BTU air c.ondltioner-3
mos. old,pald $216, take best
offer. Baby baulnette-"$15
Str'O ifer- 810 . Cah 614-245:
9237.
Trail• 12x.61!i. total electric.
*5150.0. Satellite, taoo. Tools.
what-knott, cloth81, furniture.
Csll 614-245-5487.
Floor ufll for sale. Height 23
inches, wktth 17 inct111, length

Hay

&amp;

Grein

Shtll corn, whe81 hwt .. dst..w.
Dolly from a,oo till 12,00,
M.org~n Woocl.wn Firm, At.
35. 304·937·2018.

Concrete blocks· all sizes- yard
or delivety. Masonalind. Gallipolis BlOck Co.. 123% Pine St.,
~aiHpoiis, Ohio. Call 614-4462783.

Soy beans. olts. •rsw and t.-v.
304-871·11081.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Rustic
and Beveled Lap Siding
• Dectc Materials
Guaranteed Quality
CETIDE, INC .. Athena-814594-3578

11 rlllSIJIIILIIIIIII
71

Auto's For Sale

RED HOT b•gahql Dn1g deal·
bolts, pl111t1 rep'd.
Surplut. Your area. Buylrt
Guide. (1) 801 ~ 687- 1000, Ext.
5·4582.

••' c••·
Pets for Sale

Groom and Suppty Shop· Pet
Grooming . . All breedt ... AII
styl81. lams Pel Food Deal•.
Julie Webb Ph, 614-446-0231 . '

1985 Buick &amp;kylar~ 4 dr., P&amp;.
P8, AC , stereo. cloth int.-ior.
Good condklon. Call
0~77.

e14~441·

1879 Monte C.rlo. Light blue.
t3000 • it. Mutt IN. Call
614-448-6741 .

Dragonwynd Cattery Kenntl.
CFA Perslsn and Siam•• kittens. AKC Chow puppi111. New
Himalayan kittens. Call 814448-3844 aft• 7PM.

1978 Z 28. Ecel. cond. 13800.
Call 114-387- 710!1.

American Eskimo pups. UKC
Registarad. $100 each. Call
614-388-0890.

1985 Pontiac SuntHrd-like new.
41 ,000
auto .. AC. tilt.
AM · FM atereo. Ctill 814-388·
8240.

mil•.

Mvna "Bird with new IIN'ge cage
and stand. S300. for all. Call
614·742•2655,

1986 Chwy CeiiWier RS Station
Wagon. 38,200 mil•. •uta.,
aui11. tilt. AC, AM-FM st•eo.
Cell 614-388~8240 .

Two Norw&amp;gian Elk Hound
puppies, h~~t~e had shota and
wormed, 304-895-3926.

1979 Monte Carlo. Exr:el. cond.
New brak•. 327 engln .. 202
heads, Elderbrock lnt1kt/EIIte
serieavalvecovers.&amp;eircl 'eener.
Lots of extra. dual exh•tt.
12200. Csll 614· 379-2424.

Baby Rabbits, 86.00. Purebred
Rex 110.00. ,Phone 304-896·
3610.
AKC registered .Airdale 'pups,
large brpad , all shots and
wormed, &amp;126.00 each, 304875-n71 .
Original registered Mountain
Cur, natural iree dog, Kimm•
blood lin&amp;. 6 week old puppite
8100.00 aach good for squirrel
or coon hunting. 304-6762686.

Fruit
Vegetables

1977 Cam•o. V-8 , auto. trent..
PS. PB . Coli 814·448-1815.
eft• 6 PM 448-1244,
1981 AMC Concord SW. I cyl.,
auto. No ru ..: Runs good.
$1800. C1ll 614·388-8478.

11n Ford LTD. Aunt gr..t.
Look good. Interior gaod. Must
sell. Call614-241·11040.
1988 Plymou):h Valiant. PS., i.
auto. 12.900 ml•. S2800. C.ll
114-2111· ~1!JB'Z.

Canning tomato• for sala. 83
bushel. you pick. Bob Morris,
Letsrt Falls, 0hio. 614-247·
3421 .
'1
For Sale or Trade

1981 Plymouth SIPporo. one
owner. ..,., goad condition.
12200. 1871Dodge210Van~
ton, new tlr•. runs good.
11000. 1850 Dodge
plclt·u ...
.. ntfr•or-•nl~ ~
~
• •· •~-H
..., -,
condition.
t2100
' f4-441· 34119.

•••lei•

r,•d

Sell or trade-3 horsllll· for boat
motor. air condition•. orpidlup

_.=-:----::----1179 Monte Carlo, T-top.

n-

loage. Vary - d oond. " ' porto. eon 11&lt;1-441-4412.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
~t.

tnll• spaces,

'!Miter &amp; ...,.,., fumlthld. locutt

Rd. At. 1, 304-57&amp;-1071.

. . . -...

.__,

1983 M.taury Wogan. e cyl..
Mo. Very aoo4 aancl. f2100.
Coli 114·44-4412.

c:-'

1910 Oodga Dlplomot. 2 dr.,
outa.. laodocl. f11tll. 1888
Ch•ette. auto.• AM·FMoCau.
2 dr.. t2395. CaH 114·4418887.

Mcrr.handi st:
51

Household Goods

1171 Plymouth Vol!-. 4 dr.
Collt14-248-tua.

•eoo.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Olive St.. Gollpallo.
NEW· I •c: woad pou.,.. 1399.
Living room suh• 1119~1599 .
Bunk Mds with bedding- S111.
, FuU sin mMtr. . • foundation
at•rtlne · Sll. Reallnera
Nrtlng. t91.
UIED· leds, dr•s. .. bedroom
suites, 1198-1219. Detkt,
wring• Wath•. a complelel6ne
of used furnfture.
NEW· w.. tem boots- S30 .
Workboota 118 • up. (St ... &amp;
10ft to... Call614· 446· 31&amp;8.
County Applianoe, Ina. Good
Uled appll .... ~d TV 1«1.
O,tn lAM ta ePM. Mon tm
Sat. 81•·448·1899. 127 3rd.

Aw.,GallfpoMI. OH .

.- 1141&amp; ~Cfllf&gt; I!)
~OOATE: A&amp; f~ A!1

. 1987 Mltcury Lynx 138, lots of
extras. sharp, 304-871-6331 .

ITGOf;~ ...

1979Granlda1977FordThun~

1975 Monte C.rlo, eac cpnd,
·AM -FM e•sert.. 87,000 mil•.
01.500.00 . 304· 773·5284.

72

82

policeman Ia tall volcetau

Ill Pclelt:eHeae

• Ml'h... Now

8:20 Ill~ 11110811

e

I JJsr CIW'T ~fM 10
e£rA~fJJD .. .

Rfd Hat b. .llnol Orut doll•o•

1811 V 81 Honda in mint cond.
514· 448·4134.

711

Boats end
Motori for S1l~

11)8011-117·-·111. 1 ·1100.
1881

o... ""'"""""

flury. 4

'-ire

1987 Pontloc 1000. 4 da,ar. 4
cvl.. fullv oqulppod. 30,000
mlf• with niW radial tira
nooo. eon 514-tU-2111 of·
til' 5:00pm.
1. . . c...... rfd. 2.1 ... fuol
1-lan. VII,
11,000
. . . . - · t10,000. Coli
304-771-5144 .. 114·112·
2118.

T--

"I !lon't consider the operatiOn a auc:ce.
unless he lives long enough to pay."

..

85

eo'

HP motif, 11 ft.. new
bln_.y. OMdoond. Trll•· new
.... Coli 114-441-4110.
1171 R.ng• 1111 bcm, II HP
lvlnrude motor, tNI • trim. 2·8
gil. llnb. 2 nM bllt•l•. new
trolling motot, drive on trail•.
ftWI tlr•· IJDIII. oond. Call
..,tlma. 81~388- 8711.

- ......

,-. ........
mot•.

17ft. flllorgl . . bloo llaot. 211va

1 1I HP
Pilla MtN'J.
114-111·1722 or 1114·112·
3~28.

·

iiJ Llrny King U..l

I WONDER WHAT KIND

OF A SUMMER CAMP .
NA.STY WENTTO.

YESTERDAY I

GOT A L-ETTER
FROM HIM. ...

'

9 Pwlnll lnvltltionlrl Dog
~ From Cueeny Park, St.
tours, Mom

1:30 iiJ Pro lltclr Volleylrlll
Woman:s from San otego.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

e~o.m

1111 New Counby Holly Dunn
10:011 (J) Bblght 1'1111

A51&lt;.1NG( ME iO .5END
HIM. A ~ WITH A

(J)

FILE IN IT.

e (J) Wrtywrrallllng

Janey ttops breast leedlng,
end Hope goes bact&lt; to her
~~R)I;I
(J) P.O.V. A surprisingly
candid view of men's feell~s
women Is onerad. 1;1
a1 Evening Newt
0 Alrwoll The Girl Who Fell
From the Sky
.

-•rd

1111 CIOOir end ChiN
10:30 (J) Celtbfltr Cllefa

(J) Wlllr lllllna lntemationtl

BARNEY
JUGHAID'S IN
YONDER GllTIN'
READY FER

Tow frOm uns1ng. Ml
(!) !all1ndar1
.II)...,.._.

HE'S
WARMIN'

m

Trill_

• w (J) ew 1111 e1121
~~~~(!)
P.O.V. A aurprlalngly
candid view o1 men· • leellrljjt
-ard women 11 mt.rad. 1;J

e II) LMe Cor.nu~an
~~-&amp;me
w~'Me .

35 Convent

0 T.... of lira Gold

36Gained
37Hoodwink
39MWtary
setting

• You c.n II 1 81ar

11:211)) IIOVIIi 1'11 GIMIIIftd
. . , ... Kid (Rl (1 :46)
11:30ew • Tonlghlllrow

1Jll::;·G1

wallt. lmm•di•t•·
1.000 or 2,000 gllons d,tivery.
Csll 304-175-8370.

to har or help when

murder•'£&gt;

=a..
III:

hoi

87

Upholstery

Mawr..'o

.,,''

I

E L 0

.·..·..

F I Z E L

I

UK _ OZHOR

• YZTLK

.'

TSOU

RLS ZC

D GIN L

'

llunniiie

·
-...
.....
l'lil.......
ft (Nil)Ill
(1:154)

eoTriiW!IZoire

N

AIC

IAUHSO

(J)
11111118Mrg (R)
(J) Lowe Oilltlalllft

u..-oorlrlg -"'t
far froe ·•
I

C U H

12dl. (I) • I.MIIIgllt wllh
IJiiJil ~.........

•loeumyaree21.,.•a Theilen
In furniture I.OIIIw....,lng. Cal

304·175 · 4114
Mtimlt•.

7-16

DI;IPGA T-(A)

MElt PO ALL TJ.IE WOitK?

.

''•

CRYPTOQUOTE

• Miertaan M a · · w
12:011~
FN11 Advice

Dump truc11 doi'-Y and mowing phone 304·•71·
31 0 .

.,

7111

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the t11ree i:s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fotmatio~ of the words are all
· hints. Each day the code letters are different.

Huddlt olllra Knlgllt

OR I.IIIIERE A L.ITTLE 61RL
IS SENT TO LIVE Wrrll
IIEl AUNT, AND TIIEV MAI&lt;E

.,

'

P.L

-Tlllll
-~of
Ill
I Jolin,

PEANUTS

-~

'

AXYDLBAAXR
. II LONGFELLOW

Nlgllt

-

28 French
river
30 Malicious
32 Custer's
.Comanche,
e.g.
33 Penetrate
38 Porker
39 Tuition

..

(l)

lo-Dii.:='cea
1..1t1
Friend ol CIVIItlna.•

.Paul Rupa. Jr. Wet• Servkle.
PoeM. cis1•ns, wells. Call 114·
4411-3171.

.'

DAILYCRYP'roQUOIU-Here's bow to1·•ork It:

•t§l;l
·~
o-

R Wet• Swvloe. PHis.

clst~rnt ,

...

woman

IIOnlrer Pttol. Port 2

J • J WM• lerviOI. Swimming
pools, cisternt. wells. Ph. I 14·
246·121&amp;.

•Ks

dJ I MIDI caak Pries uta The

11:11 (J) llgn ott'

Wattenon's Waler Haulhl"
, ...onllllle ,.... lmmedl••
2,000 gallon delivery. c1atern1o
110011. w.a, elo. all 304·171·
2111.

.AQ10842
.109762

Clnlry Sidon

THE GRIZZWELLS®

General Hauling

.J43

Moore role

11:00(1) Aemtrrglolo 81Mie Steele

Electrical
Rafrigaration

By James Jacoby

-

.75

23 Atfectatlon
25 Before
(Lat.)
26 Within
27 Noggin
29 Actor Genn
30 Bombay
..,.._+-+-+--,
· title
. 31 Andress
film
34Grampus

~~~1111
VldloCounlry

UP!!

...

EAST

40 Diacriti·
cal mark
41 Gaelic
42 Being (Sp.)
43Gennan
river
DOWN
1 Rental sign
2
Vivacious
12 Sagacious
14Apple
3Not
believe
fBncier
4 Sailor's
15Skill
assent
111IndiBII
16 My, It's
II Squander
mulberry
cold!
6
Ending
21
Early
auto
17 Half
for
expect
22
Not
a score
7 Question
an eye
18"You23 Flyer
My Lucky 8 Contest
joiner
24 Burden
Star"
10
Bear
27 Dried
19Chlnese
13 Eat away
fi:uit
creative
principle
20Suburb
or Parts
22 Roger

1943. c

(1:41)Q

...

.76432
.632

WF.'IT

ACB.OSS
1 Bye, In
Soho
5 Virginia
of tennis
9 Pahn leaf
10 Clergyman
11 Go for

e OIIOVIl: 'lallllar'
Cl8 TUHdly Movie (AI

Oill•d W.ier Servloe: Pools.
Clst11rns, W.. ls. Delhr.., Any·
tlma Call 814-44f-7i104--No
Sund., ellis.

R •

.

Thla ~aode praaama a
1919 to

'

.K85

by THOMAS JOSEPH

profile of Polish Jewry from

1111

.J963

Crossed
signals

becomes emllten

with 11ar. (AJ a

Retidential or comm•clal wlr·
ing. New 1 HA~Ice Of replifa.
Licensed eltclfician. Estm.te
free. Ridenour EleotriCIII. 10487&amp;-1711 .

~

...
"'...1..,..
- · ··
lor!'
plua........
Your A,._
lhlde.
- · PI, 1'8, I'W.
172
N. 2M.·M I M - -ef14lt2· 7071. .t7BI.

S.

1986 CR2&amp;0 . Good cond .
li1,000. Call 1114· 2158-1414 or
258-1127.

1178 CXIOO cuttom wtter
aaalod. 11.000 mHoo.•aoo.oo.
30•8711-2241.

neighbor

-

•s

CROSSWORD

e

(J) ilaa'!lr.llnsl
Maddie's ponntl hendaome

(J)

,.

~tl-88

NORtH
• AQJ85

~

(!) (J) 81iuggllllar Poland

Excavating

84

e

(J) Ful Houle Joey
daclclao to leave the gong,
convinced he's no longer
needed. (R) 1;1
1:40 Ill Melor Lugue IIMIMtll
1:00 (J) 1011 Club
(J) !Ill In lira 11811 of lira
lllaht Pollee Chlal must deal
wtih a gr~·~ murder and his
lormar nemetla,_l;l

START

f.;;;::;;:;;:::::::;;::::=:::
74 Motorcycles

3138. P1ul Karr, Ch•t•, Ohk).

:"~
Pit~ a- A cunning

SCHOOL TO

1978Dodge.4whMidrlv•.bNt
r•onlble altllt', cell 30iii·I76_1143 after 8:J)O.

lltYia. t1000. C.ll 814-181-

e

Angela and Tony ptsy
matchmaker but are baffled
by the re11Uit1. (Rl C
W (J) Nova Lciol&lt; ii how
pilotS and planes adapt to

when hit flmlly Ill murdered.

78 CJ 7. auto.. 8 cyl. Hard top.
Engine rebulh. Ne•dl body
repak. C•lll!l14·448-21&amp;1 .

3 whHI•. 1181 Honda ATC.
1."- Red. Like new. uled very

(J) Clllllc llunriMr
'
(J)
(J) Wllo'allra Bon?

1:30 (J)

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

.7

Fox and

brllny nephew must
outamart CCII'IIPIIIW to beat
murder rap. (A)

1

CAR.TER'S PWM81NO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pin•
G•lllpolis, Ohio
Phon• 814-446· 3888 or 11.._
448-4477

1975 Yin equlppsd for fishing.
hunUng. camping. New brlk•.
pllnt job, 318 motor, hesden.
e100. 1114-882-8881 .

1 Fo1

e (I) !IIIII- Mattock's

Plumbing
Heating

83

c::J/ IJIIe

..
•.

SOUTH
North was confronted with a diffi.K 109
cult decision on bis second round of
.AKQJ1094
bidding. It had been easy lor him to respond one spade after partner's open.AQ
ing heart bid, but now East bid two diVulnerable: Neither
amonds and South cue-bid three
Dealer:
South
diamonds. North elected to jump to
lour spades - not a perfect choice, West
Nort._ Ealt
but If the strong biddinl by Soutb implied spade· support, then a jump in . Pass
2t
spades was a good way to describe ex- Pass
Pass
Ira values. In any event. that made it Pass
Pass
easy for South to ask for aces and bid Pass
Pass
six hearts.
Opening lead: • K
Now watch how fatigue caused the
. ...
defenders to miss an opportunity to
set the slam. West led the king of dia" L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J
monds. East knew from the bidding
that declarer could not have a second
diammd; he also knew that a spade obvious preference lor spades. He li;;
from West at trick two would give him nally decided that the opponents must a ruff to set the contract. So he played have had some kind of biddin1 mishai! :
~ dlscoura1ing deuce on the opening and that his partner in f~ct had the ·
lead, expecting bis partner to make club ace and maybe even the queen. so ·
the obvious shift to spades. But look at he shifted to a club at the second trick. ~
the trap tbis set for poor West. He too That concluded the deal, and the con' ·
figured out that South could not have a tract was made, but I believe the dis·'
second diamond. But he also asked cussion may still be cmtinuing be;
himseU why East bad not played ·the tween East and West about the .
diamond queen under
the. king
as a~ defense.. . .
•
.
.

VldloCounlry

1.'110 ~

8t

Vans 8t 4 W.O.

1110CN ZIIO Elelnor~dlrtblk&amp;
81~ 742-2323.

•

...

Jsck of all tfld•, home h.nct,
man, repaira. addttions. remodeling, 1· 304-273-2701 between 9:00 and 5:00 1..,•
m•uge

1982 Toyota station wagen,
good running cond. S,1.000.
Book cue teo. 304-896-3422.

'1883 Honda 8 f t - 800. Like
n~, f1 100. Call 114-892·
2881.

iiJ CrautiN
talnab '

HYI&gt;RA('Ji ON p~~
S'r~Ei, TI"IE fLACifOLE:
AT CENTER SeHOOL., TtfE
IN F,%NT OF
iUILI&gt;I

Michlllt'a R..idential Air Conditioning and refrlgereUon, r•
ch•ge snd reps., servk». 304468-1766.

Tandem· Mae truck &amp; Tandem
low boy trsU•. Good cond.
•&amp;760 or wil! tell teperlte. Cell
114·448-B038.

73

.... ..

fit SToPPEP AT THE'

Ak11t1 Tree Trimming 1nd .8 1ump
Remove!, free e.tim ..-. 304875-7121 .

1981 Jeap pickup. I cyl. . 4spd.
Body in grNI shape. ne~N 8 ply
tteel btlted radials with white
lpoke wheels. S4000. CH 614388·8471.

James Jacoby

I I ,&amp;or~=tdyll;l

:t TAIL..EP HIM A'i
~EOUESTEI&gt; • • ·

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
housa call aerviclnO GE. HM
Point , wash••· dry11r1 and
stoves. 304-5711-2398.

1914 Nltean King Cab. Dl•el,
high mhaat. tltt. PB, AC. new
fibwgl•• toppar. t2496. can
81C-441 ~ 8738 .
.

Ill llmey lllller
• CIOOir lftd Clr.IM
(J) lurfar lllgulne
• (J) Jtrrlge .

Star.. Lawn and ShNb S.VIcl.
304-117!-39&amp;1 or 304·1712903.

1971 4 WD Chevv "h ton
plat:- up. Recently restored body,
nM palm, msny new parts. 350,
4 tttd. Runs gr81l. Sherpl Call
814-441·7841.rter &amp; PM .

BRIDGE

7:30. (I) (J) Hollywood
8qu8NI

Fr~E

Rotary Of cable tool drlting.
Moll wells compl .. td samedt~Y·
Pump sal• and s.-vlce. 304996·3802

Trucks for Sale

e®T'~

iiJ llanoyllna

- you

'

My uncle is alway8 going to the doctor lor some real or im·
agined illness. His wile had a bumper sticker printed wh1ch
read, "I'd Rather Be AILING ."
. .

q_llll

Fetty TrW Trlmmln" ...,,..
removal. Call 304-871-1331 .

19•8 Olds F-8&amp;. 4 door, one
own•. &amp;8,000 •ctuel mil111,
0800.00. CoH 304-882-3432.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWER$
Biting - Mangy - Draft - Levity - AILING

Ntw~:'J!'OOl
.(J)
•• Coutt
~
W*l of

RON ' S Talevlsion ,81rwlce.
House calls on RCA, Queur.
GE. SpecisUng in Z~nlth. c.M
304-&amp;7S-2398 or 114·441·
2464.

d«'"'d. Call aft• 6 :00 PM.

·_:•

(J) ll!iMrlllr- Tonlgh1
(!) (J) IIU IIIII leNw

E••

~87&amp;-5686.

.J

...- ...'

eWPMIIIIv'M
(J) 8~ OIIICI- (Ll

Carpentry/ Remodeling.
rienoed. hon•t. r... onabfe.
Fr~e nts. Aefl . 0 . M. Oorclon1114-446-8958, ew.,.lngs.
Thank You.

8 cyl engine and transmlstlon.

Comple1e •he chuckle quoted
by fillit'19 in the mi,sing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

7:00 (J) AlllllrrgiDII 8IMie A
Pocketful ol StNII

Painting: lnt•ior • EICtertor.
Fr• estlmat•. c.n 114·....._
8344.

04.~00.00 . 30~176· 8816 .

I ._.1.-..1..-.1.-.J.L-..J.-.J

• You C.. II 1 81ar

81~388-9003 .

304-578-3073.
Spac• for

'*

1985 Chal'roiM Cavali•. auto,

1983 Pfvmouth Scamp pldtup.
Real good condition. With
~tmp• top. Only 40.000 mil•.
$2900. Call 614-2&amp;8-11261 .

1982 Cam•o. V-11, auto. Good
cond. 77,1100 mi. S3100. C.H

Canning tomatoes already
pi~ed. U .OO a bu.- vour contaif'!er. Baughman' s Farm-?
miles •· of Gellipol it on SR . 7 .
Call 614-266-6536.

59

RON EVANS ENTERPRIIE8Septie tank pumping- sea
load. Coli 1-1100·537· 1528.

1987 ford Tempo. t7000. Call

1978 Orauda. I cvL Ext ...
cond. *1460. Call 114·256·
83119 or 4411~ 1797 ,

Individual guitar lassons. be ginnMs, seriout guitarist. Bruni·
cardia Music, 614-446-0687,
JeU Wamslev instructor 614446·8077. summer opening•.

1983 luldtC.ntury, at, v-8, a-c,
COnd. 304-675-2938.

1984 S·10 pickup truck. A•
sumelun. C11i &amp;14-448-8786.

1981 Oldl Delta 88. 360 uto..
air, fuH pow11r. Good cond.
S1600. C11ll 814-441-87110.

Peavev .Musician Mark Ill amp,
built tn efl!lctS, 4 twelve bottom,
GuHd guitar, 8600. Call 614·
388-8221.

Conaete Stplle Tanks - 1000
v• .. 1&amp;oo gal. and Jet A••~
svnam. Factory traln.:l r•*
ohap. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jocl&lt;oan. Ohio. 1·100637·9528.

Credlt Cera· 1978 Omnl, 1978
Honda Civic. 1976 Plmo. 1974
Buick, 1980Vol•a.1981 Granad•. 1983 Escort. 1 187 "
Chevet:te, 1983 Colt. Ae•on•
ble mil•. Re•onlble offer or
bMt. Call 81 .. 4418·1776•dJI¥'1,
441·&amp;9BO·tven.
81~446 - 8199 .

Musical
Instruments

1878 Chary Nova. 2 door, V·B.
air'"' cond, PS, PB. dual a hM.Ist,
lll'shocb, stereo. 38,000actuel
mil-. exc eond,
3~57&amp;·4230 doyo or 575·
4883 eveninp.

Air cond, AM·FM radio, CL pkg.

I

~~~~

1988
SIMP•sw..-lfl
&amp;. E.cel.pop-up
aand. ,c1mpw.
t2100.
.Coli 114-218-1932. .

G--

1878 Dodge CoM, 304-6767437.

_

i1J IMide Pellllce 'II

SWEEPER and s.-lnt m..ttine
repair, p.,t. and tuppll•. Plak
171·2&amp;01.
up lftd deUvery. Davil Vaeuum
Cleaner. one hilt mn. up
'82'0odae Mirada. PS, PB, AC.
C - Rd. Col 81~
~a7a-145B .
. 441-0294.

C·C, IXC.

I

.
-.

........

-I"

aeacu• II) lloglll'l Heroel

t•.

•s.ooo.oo.

"Inflation is going up," a rnan

said to his companion. "Last night

f--r,FOTUIT
_:;,,.,..:..,:1_:"ls..:..r--1 G)

e

a..,..

Building Materials
Block. brick.. sewer pip111, windows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Cali 614246-6121 '

Ill NIC ltghtly Newt

/JIInelde tile PGA T-

ARLO AND JANIS

1t'1 8 Dodge Omnl, 4 door, 4
•Ptld. att cond, s&amp;oo.oo. 304-

t
I•

Iordered a steak and told them to
.-- - - - - - - - . . , put it on my credit card. and -

(J)
(J) MC -1;1
(!) 1oc1r 111 clllc
(J) Nlglrllr II lnuo Aeport

Moto11 Homes
8t Camper~

I

3

• ..111~11110

Auto's For Sal•

1-_._________

Building Supplies

&amp;

oc-l!lpNu
(J)

I I I' I I

T_:;.1..:..-rl-"1
EEJ C
1--r,
I . . . .-1 ~t-

i1J IMwlliT_,
Ill Qood , _ .

&amp;".

458~1002 .

58

• I I ) " - D.lyo

t:».

I

RADNIG

FUPFY
f---i-1
..,..12 '-rl-,1---1 j

:EPart~~
Et.. Dominators,
5

1.1*

Canning j,..., 304-773-5976 . .

the
be-

'

I

(J)~

1981 Yllow.toneCountryCiub ·
Tr•el Trlil•. Mint oonlll:ian.
C.ll 114CROSS' a IONS
.:'ltiZ CutiMs Supreme. 2 door. LoMied w•h
U.S. 31 Wen. Jaeklon, Ohio. V6. auto. atr. •3000. firm. C.ll . 992·3102 llh• 5 p.m.
114-288-8411.
81 4.181· 43 17 lift• 11:00.
camp•. GoodCOPid.
10
Mus., F•. .ISOn. NIW Holl.nd,
Bulh Hog 1111• • S.V6al. Ov• 1915 Chrytl• lmp_.ll Crown. flOG. C8ll 304-1182·2103.
40 ullled b'IGtor1 ta choo11 from 81~742·2323.
•
11711CrulaaAirmolar-20
• compl•• line of new •
11.. cr- A. ,.,....,, Lalllfd.
~qulpment. largett Mleetion in
1917 Omnl. Auto .• AC, PS, PB, Coli 30~882·3237 all• 5 PM.
S.E. Ohio,
ll'ld mor1. 12,000 mllte. COitlidtr trede. 114· 742·30208fl:er
F•rm ~quipment for Nl&amp; tt.., for l .p.m.
S!!!VII.I'\
••1•800 lb. round btl ... Call
514-388·817e.,
1977 Oldt Cutl. . lroughm.
-Pff, Air, CNile. Low mllllf8. 81
Home
Whit• f.-rn tr1ctors co•t ptut go~d oondhlon. Call 614·881·
Improvements
Sid•• Equlpmn. Clll 3849.
304-8711-7421 .
Aed Hot b•gWnsl Orvg d•-'••
c•t. boltl, plan• repo' d . lur8ASEMEN.T
piUI!. Your ...... Buyers Quide,
WATERPROOFING
,
63
Livestock
1 ·101-117~1000 Ext. 8~9801.
Unconcltionll Hf«lme ou•en- •
Local ret•~noet furnlllted.
1 !N7 Mustang, e eyl.. auto.
Free a.tlrMt-. c.. ooll•
Sell or tfld• 3 hor .... for bo• *2000. 1976 wrochd Dodge 1·51~237- 0481. d .... motor, atr eondft6on•. or pldlup 7103. 0400. Call 11~992· R o g t r t l a t • m • n t
Wlt-oaflng.
tNdl. Call 1114-2511· 1124.
·Farm Equipment

I

·-

fl.,,....

12 ft Seonv CMnper S300.00.
Honda 186 three wheeler
$200.00. 304·882-3236.

57

71

Reorronge letters of
0 four
scramb led words

1:00 (J) llg Vllley Miranda
• (J) (J) • (J) \lit • Ol

•••'s.

2 compound bows both Jennings, 1 forked UghteningJunior Befw. 1 Shooting Star,
304-175-6809 .

56

Auto Parts
&amp; Acces10rl11 ·

.Vim:on Auto Sllv~t~•Ute Pl'tl
for Am•iCM • Foreign c••·
Aa•onllble Pr1011. Call lt43811-&amp;oe2.

Mobile home 10x86 total elaetric. bHn compl•efv remodeled
t4,000.00. 1981 GM 1211bod
dump truck will sell whole Oi for
Patti with excellent holtt, 304675-6512 between 3:00 end
3' 30.

WORD
&amp;AMI

PUULII
----~-- 1~11•~ ~y CLAT I . ,OLLAN

EVE NINO

pi•• •

Food Wsgon, 304-675-4281 .

S©~~1A-LG£trs~~

TIIAT DAllY

low to form four simple words .

BUDGET TAANSMISIION ·
Ut .. a rllbuUt .U types. QUill.,..
1ee 30 dl¥1 MnlnMun. PriOM
S99 • up. Aebuitc torque~
converted 11 low •• t31.
Stand•d clutch•. pr•..,.
throw~au1 be.tnat. AI
typ~S 12 mos. warranty . We buy
junk nnsmila6ont). CaH 3048711-8758 or 114-378-2220.

D

The Daily Sentinai-Page-9 -.

Television
Viewing

BOstland

un
'"''"""
trl-hMrl17fl.
140
hp
inbo•d
outboft.
welk ttlru
win*hitkl. .,..., good cond.
04,100.00. 304·871-3123.

Aefriger Mor. o ffic d•k.. Millar
tniht70,000gllfurnac&amp; 1970
GMC long wheel b•eton truc:k,
1970 camp•. •laeps 8, 4
chrome · whuls for Ford or
Ptymouth, 20 lb. L .P. g• tllnk.
high chair, 2·67 multlng bo·
diet. underpinning, 15,000
Warm Morning g• he .. er. C.n
be s•n on Happy Hollow Rd. oH
SR 124 and New Uma It
Rutlll'ld.

55

BORNL

Motort for Sllle'

21ight gray reclln•• for18l&amp;llke
new condition. Both for 1300,
614·90· 2202.

C\lt.

Gibson upright frt!I8Zor, 19 cu. ft.
Graat sh111Je. S300. Call 614446-1603.

75

JUT 'N' CARLYLEII by Larry Wri1ht

Misc . .Merchandise

rer~t.
Famlty Prld• MotHI•Home ~:2:2:;n:"":•::·:C:•:II:6:1:~:9:9:2:
·3:4:5:8:,.L':ru=ck=.:C:•':'8:1:4:-:25:8:·:1:6:2:4:.=Jt1100.
Call 614·441-1741.
P•k.. Glllipotlt Ferry, W. V1.
1177 Oldl Cutl-. high ml-

-·---:------

Aplf'tment, 2 BA .• unfumlthld.
t175. w..... plld. 1138 s.
con:l, Galllpolh. Cell .&amp;41-o\4 18
lfter 7PM.

Double bed with mattress and
box springs, exccond, 304-6756606.

plrt.,.

1974 Ch a mpion 14x66 total · 2 bedrl)l)m mobllehomePJiiddl•
eleetrte. underpent:'ing 11nd pnr- port Ohio. ref«ence and securtialty furnihsed. will eonslder itv deposit required, 304-882trade, &amp;6 .900 .00. 304-578- 3287 or 304-773-6024.
2393.
Apartment
for Rent

WMher &amp; dryer. Both for S100.
Call 614-256-1176.

Houe converted Into 1 &amp;. 2 BR .
apartm~~~ts. c.n be rented •
houte or •pntl ap~rtmentl.
Call 81~448-7021.

Dowmown 1 bedroom apt,
furnished. c.-peted. AC. adults
only, no pets, call after 4 :00,
304-875-3788

44

--------0322.
Valle, Furniture
New Jind uted hlrniture and
•pplicances . Call 614· 446 '7672. Hour• 9-6.

2 BA . apartment. All .utllt._
Peld.Call814-441-1723aft..-7
PM.

Pbmeroy. 2 bedrooms. baek
yord, pertly fumlthed. Securtty
deposit, Mfllt'.,ce rM:juired. Call
814-992-BBIISafter 8:00pm.

down. Call 614-423-8257 after
4 p.m. for appointment. tf no
answer Call 814-949-2946.
, 2 II 3 BR. Au utilities peideotcept
elltCf.ricity . Conwniant location.
24x60 double wide home on Call 614-448-8558 or 44850JC110 lot. screened poreh. 4008.
utility bldg. fenced yard. Clifton,
Mobile Hom .. for rent. Call
wv. 30'-773-5157.
814-446-0527.
3 bedroom home. 1 1h baths.
c erpeted, central air and heat, 2 - 2 BR. trailers for ..mt. Nice
located Point Pleasant, 304- cond. Call 814-448-8726 . .
67§..2702.
1b;!i6 furnishad plus water.
8200. O..p . 1 or 2 people. No
patt. Rt. 7-3 ml,.. south.
32 Mobile Homes
Gallipolis. Call 614-446-0822.
for Sale
12xBO unfurnished. central air
on Rt. 36. C.ll 304--875-9780
19 ad BayW'iew 1 4x70wlth 7x21 or 814-446-4369.
ex pando, 3 BR ., 2 full baths.
fireplace with 10 acms of Furnished 2 BR . mobile home,
ground. 19x20 2 ear garage. AC. Located at K &amp; K on Eastern
S2 !i,OOO. Call 614-4A6-8760.
Ava . Dep. &amp; Ref. mquirad. Call
614-256-1187.
1988 Hou• trail..- 14x70. 3
bedrooms, 2 blllh. Set up on
3 bedroom trailer for rent in
rented lot. $16,000. can 614- Svracu• . 614-992~ 7889 aftM
992-7103.
6 :00.

33

USED APPLIANCES

Waahen. dry••· refrig•ators.

\~l
_j(~-

Opportunity

31

Household Goods

GOOD

Businass

!lp.m.

51

· Pomeroy-Middle!JOI1. Ohio

TWIIday. July 26, 1988

Tu11dlly, July 26. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY
21

---·--~-·-·-. ,. ---------------------------- ---

\

B.
YLLNRLZ
' Yeetlel 'q'a Crrptotaote: I SAY BANISH BRIDGE;
LET'S mm SOME PLEASANTER WAY OF BEING
MISERABLE T09E111ER. - DON HEROU&gt;
r'

•

'

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

T!J81 clay, July 28, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Indiana
declared drought disaster •
•
area; Great I.akes hit by stonns

-Local news briefs----.

•

Continued from page 1
on SR 7, near Addison. Troopers said the coJUsion occurred
when a car driven by Sandra K. Patrick, 20, of Rt. 2, Patriot,
attempted to pass Rebecca K. Phillips, 26, of Rt. 1, Rutland, as
Phillips attempted to make a left turn. Damage was minor to
bol)l.'{ehiclelt .No one was injured. There was no citation.

traffic signals. .
draught began to make an
By JEFF BATER
As much as linch of rain fell
Impact on the vital waterway,
United Preu IDteraaUonal
within 30 minutes In same areas,
the Coast Guard said.
Indiana has become the fifth
But the lower Mississippi was
state to be declared a drought weatber officials said, but the
disaster area, and heavy rains storms weakened after leaving likely to begin drapplng again
have dramatically boOSted the the city and the rain had little this week, Lt. Cmdr. Janice Gray
The Salvation Army will hold a free clothing day on Thursday
level of the Mississippi River but effect ott Illinois' drought· said.
from 10 a.m. until noon. All area residents in need of clothing are
"T)ie bump came through,
the waterway will likely resume withered fields.
welcome to come.
"Too
bad
we
don't
have
any
we're
gatng In the other dlrecdropping, officials say.
corn
growing
In
the
Loop,"
Uon,"
she .said. "August Is the
As . severe thunderstorms
meteorologist
Richard
Brumer
dry-up
season around here. It's
pounded the Great Lakes region
said.
going
to
be continuing," she said
with rain, hall, and tornadoes
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Recent
heavy
rains
In
the
of
the
river
's problems.
, Monday, experts In Michigan
Monday; Middleport at 7:57 p.m. to Beech St. for Joyce
released estimates that lasses to · Midwest and Plains raised water
Since early June, hundreds of
Crabtree to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10:51 p.m.
TEACHER - FUneral ser·
farmers In the state ranged from
levels on the Mississippi River by baraes have beell grounded an
to Third St. for Edna Pickens to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
vices for Mrs. Edith Ulllan
"'
$500 million to $600 mUIIon. and almost 6 feet during the past
1
Rutland at 11:37 p .m. to College and Locust Sts. for Evan
Lambert Forrest, 85, Route 1,
said that the restoftheCorn Belt week - to tlielr highest levels the MissiSsippi heeause of ow
Wiseman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; At 3: 27 p.m. ,
Middlport, who WIIS retired
since ear IY J l!!le, when . the water levels.
wasn't.!arlng much better.
Wiseman was flown by LlfeFlight to Ohio State University
after teaching 53 years In
The N ationa! Weather Service
,NATIONAL
SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT7·27-88 .
Hospitals.
Salslbury Schools, lllelgs
said afternoon storms struck
County, and In Mason County - nationwide, sparing only the
Schools, will be held at 1 p.m.
Pacific Northwest,' Montana and
Wednesday at the Rawlingsnorth-central states. Reports of
All girls, grades seven through 12, interested In playing
Coats-Blower FUneral Home
damage
were widespread, from
volleyball at Eastern High School should report for a meeting
ln Middleport.
winds destroying a chicken house
Friday , 5 p.m. ,in the high school cafeteria.
in Arkansas to lightning punch·
ing holes In a Miami airport
runway, officials said.
continued from page 1
Thunderstorms created havoc
In Chicago durtng the evening
said It was unfair to bludgeon
bill to Reagan.
rush hour. forcing motorists to
"I need my colleagues' coope,r- farmers Into enrolling In the
deal with flooded viaducts and
Eastern Star services· for re·
atlon ," Leahy pleaded. " I will insurance program. The House
power outages that kn·o cked out
tired
teacher Edith Lillian Lamnot let this bill become a bill would a llaw all draught ·hit
farmers to get low-cost federal bert Forrest, 85. of Route 1,
Christmas tree."
Nine farm and commodity loans this year, not just those Middleport, who died Sunday at
Holzer Medical Center, will be .
organizations circulated a letter with crop Insurance.
Continued from page 1
During the Monday briefing, held 8 p.m. tonight ITuesday) at
on Capitol }Jill seeking removal
of a House provision that would Lyng presented Reagan with Rawllng-Coats·Blower Funeral did . not fare as well as Its
condition worsened slightly; torequire farmers to buy crop ·pictures of crap damage In Home.
bacco rated very poor to poor.
Mrs. Forrest's' funeral will be
Insurance for the next two years severa,l.states.
The potato crop rated poor to
held
1
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
"Pasture
and
hay
are
In
very
if they 'receive drought aid this
bad condition, causing real prob· funeral home with Mr. Robert fair. Potato harvest just began
year.
~SNOW . -RAIN
f?}]l SHOWERS
A spokesman for the National · !ems for livestock farmers," the Purtell offlating. Burial w1llbeln with about 4 percent. The proFRONTS: . . Warm "Cold · . . Static "Occluded
cessing tomato harvest was
Gravel H111 Cemetery, Cheshire.
Association of Wheat Growers . secretary said.
barely started and the summer
Friends may call at the funeral
Map shows minimum temperafiJres. At least 50'1'. ot any shaded area os forecast
apple harvest was underway .
to receive preciJ&gt;tation indiCated
.
. ·
UPI
. , home from 2 to 4 and 7'to 9 p.m.
· The rafnfall for the week ended
Tuesday.
WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms wUI be
Monday· morning at 8 a.m. was
scBtlered aht,ad of a cold front over portions of the southern Plalft!!i,
Widely varied, ranging from
I he lower Mliflllslppl Valley, the Ohio and Tennessee valleya, and
County,W. Va.; a sister, Juanita
Owen Games
about 6 \7 Inches In Columbus to
mland areas of the northern and mld·Atlandc Coast states ..
.Spencer, Cleveland; two broth:
·barely more than 1 Inch In
Showers
and thunderstorrils will also be scattered over the south
Owen W. Garnes, 73,1535 Nye ers and slsters,in-law, Marvin Dally stock prices :
Fremont.
.
.
Atlantic Coast states and eastern porllobs of the Gulf Coast atates.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Ave. , Pomeroy, died Saturday at and Betty Mollohan and Ernest
In some areas, such as Calum· ·
Widely scattered thunderatonna will develop near Lake Superior
and Garnett Mollohan, all of Bryce and Mark Smtih
Veterans Memorial Hospital ..
bus, Wooster and Delaware, Ias't
and
across the mountain areas of the western states.
Mr. Garnes were born at Florida, .and several nieces and of Bl~nl, Ellis &amp; Loewl
week's rainfall surpassed the
'
Bidweil on Sept. 15, 1914, a son of nephews.
total that had fallen since the
Mr. Mollahan served In the Am Electric Power ............. 27% beginning of the growing season
·the late August and Louise
Jackson Garnes. He was a army during World War II and AT&amp;T .... ...... ......... ..... ... ......26% Aprll1. ·
South Central Ohio
Fair Thursday and Friday,
Ashland 011 .... , ........... ...... .. 72Jj,
maintenance man and was an the Korean Conflict.
All areas of the state, however,
Tonight: Generally clear, with ·with a chance· of showers and
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
employee of the State of Georgia.
Bob Evans .. .. ........ .. ............. l7
were showing growing-season · a low In the mid 60s. Light thunderstorms Saturday. Highs·
Surviving are a soil, Thomas R. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Charming Shappes .. ............. 14
deficits, ranging from less than 2 n·o rtherly winds.
. will be near 90 Thursday and In
Garnes, Denver, Colo; a brother, Home with the Rev. Glen McMll·
City ,Holding Co ................... 34
Inches In Youngstown, ColumWednesday: Mostly sunny. the low or mtd 90s Friday and
Harry Garnes, Pomeroy; five Ian officiating. Burial will be in Federal Mogul. .................... 42
bus, Cincinnati and Ripley, ·to · with highs In the mid 80s.
Saturday. Overnight lows will be
· sisters, Hattie Dyer, Mabel Miles Cemetery , Rutland.
Goodyear t'&amp;R ................... 59%
more than 8 Inches In a bout a
Extended Forecast
In the mtd or upper 60s.
·
Fowler , and Frances Soloman, Friends may call at the funeral
Heck's Inc ........................... 1% half-dozen reporting ,p~tnts.
Thursday through Saturday.
ali of Columbus, Edith Burns, home . from. 2 to 9 p.m.
Key Centurion ....................37%
· Lands' End .. .. ..................... 28%
to;ew York City, N. ·. Y., and Wednesday.
Co nstance Craig, Pomeroy; six
Limited Inc ........................ 23%
grandchildren, · and several nle·
Multimedia Inc ............ :....... 73 ·
ces and nephews. Besides his Gladys Shumway
Rax Restaurants .... .-............. 4~
parents, he was preceded in
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .... .. .. 12
death by two wives and a brother.
Shoney's
Inc ................. ..... . 11%
Gladys M. Shumway, 93. for·
Nir. Garnes was a veteran of merly of Lorig Bottom. died Wendy's Inti ... ..... ...... ...... .... 5%
World War II having served in Monday at the Pomeroy Health Worthington Ind ................. 23~
the U.S. Army. He belonged to Care Center .
(Shoney's ex dlslrlbudon today)
Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled
She was born In the Keno area
American Veterans, and the of Meigs County on Man;:h 21,
Forest Run Baptist Church.
1895, a daughter of the late Elmer
Services will be held at 1 p.m. and Rose Caldwell Worthen. She
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral · swnt most of her life In Cal !for'
Monday Admissloqs-Sally
Home with the Rev. Gilbert nia before ret)lrning to Long
Moore, Pomeroy; Jennifer
Craig officiating. Burial Will be Bottom to make her home with
Shuler, Pomeroy; Ralph Day,
in Beech· Grave Cemetery. cousins, Dana and Lettie
Pomeroy .
.·
Friends ma y call at the funeral McCain. Other survivors include
Monday Discharges-Dewey
home anytime today.
two sisters-in-law. Evelyn Bar- Lyons, Pomeroy; Sally Moore.
ringer. Belpre, and Edna West·
June Stover, James Heaton.
fall, Athens, and cousins, · Nor\
man McCain, Long Bottom: Gail
Eugene Mollohan
McCain, Coolville; Evelyn Per-· Lottery numbers
Eugene I. Mollohan, 67, Third rin, Gulfport, Miss .. and Gordon ·
Announcing
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon·
St., Syracuse, died Monday at the Caldwell, Helene Goeglel n and
day's winning Ohio Lottery
E;l mwood Village Nursing Home Fay Kirkhart.
A member of the Keno Church numbers:
In Ashland , Ky.,followlngashort
Dally Number
of
Chrlst, Mrs. Shumway was
il110ess.
827.
A carpenter, Mr. Mollohan was preceded in death by her hus·
Ticket sales totaled
born July )3, 1921 at Frametown, band, VIctor, in 1972.
$1,142,'324.50,
with a payoff due of
Friends may call at the White
W. Va., a son of the late Bernard
$496,270.
.
Mollohan and Edith Mollohan . Funeral Home In Coolville from 7
·
PICK·4
.
to 9 p.m. Wednesday. Graveside
McCoy Sarson.
. 0603.
rites will be held at 2 p.m .
Survivin g are his wife, May;
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
two sister.s a nd brothers-In-law, Thur5aay at the Chester Ceme·
Bettv and Earl Caldwell, Ohio, terv with Mr. Eugene Under· $189,817.50, with a payoff due of
$85,423. •
.
a nd ·Mae and Dennis Ross, Clay woOd officiating, ·

Ohio Lottery
Reds, Braves
split pair

Daily Number
982
Pick 4
9513

Page3

•

EMS .has four calls Monday

.

'I

Eastern Star
ser..vice set

Reagan ...

I
I

I
I

for Edith Forrest

•I
I

Rain is ...

I

·Area deaths

•

Vot.39, No.6&amp;
Ci&gt;pyrighted 1888

By LYDA PHn.LIPS
UPJ Business Writer
WASHINGTON - The .nation's economy
withstood a $5.5 billion lass because of the drought
In the farm states and grew at an annual rate of 3.1
percent In the second quarter, the Commerce
Department said today.
The department's Bureau of Economic Analy·
sis said Its advance estimate of real gross national
product, the nation's output of goods and services
adjusted for seasonal variations and Inflation,
Increased · $30.2 billion, or 3.1 percent, In the
second q uart(&gt;r.
This follows a revised 3.4 percent. or $33.1
billion, annual rate of Increase In the first quarter,
the bureau said. The previous estimate was a 3.6
percent Increase.
,
Analysts were expecting taday's report to shaw
GNP grew alta seasonallyadjusted annual rate 9f
3 percent to 3.8 percent In the second quarter.
"It's basically a pretty sweet report," said
Robert Ortner, Commerce under secretary for

economic affairs.
Inflation also picked up, according to two
measures the bureau uses toadjustGNP for price
changes. The fixed weights price Index jurnped 4.)
percent In the second quarter, the highest since
the third quarter of 1982, and the Implicit price
deflator was 4.2 percent, the highest since the first
quarter of 1984.
Ortner predicted Inflation for the year -would be
about 5 percent. "Admittedly, that's mme titan
we'd like to see," he said.
Farming took a heavy blow In the second
quarter, losing $5.5. billion In crop and livestock
production beclf\lse of the searing drought with
the worst effects yet to come.
Ortner said the drought had knocked 0.5 perceM
off overall GNP growth In the second quarter.
Personal spending slacked off In the second
quarter, rising only $14.4 billion, compared with a
$28.1 billion Increase In the first quarter. Most 'Of
the drop was blamed an slower sales of clothing.

But exports continued to shore up the nation 's
economy. Real net exports of goods and services
increased $18.9 billion In the quarter after a $17
billion jump In the first quarter, the largest
increase since the first quarter of 1980, the
department said.
Most of the Improvement In net exports came
from a $9.4 billion drop In Imports, compared with
an increase of $9.9 billion in the first quarter, the
department said.
Ortner called that a "dramatic gain ... that has
given the economy a tremendous shot in the

TORONADO

o/0

"LOADED"

$15,988'
1988
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE LE

''

II

-~-\
-

---~
--· · - .,

Personal income jumped $65.8 billion, mostly
from higher wages and salaries, compared with a
$44.6 billion hike In the first quarter.
The Reagan administration has set a goal of 3
percent growth in GNP from the fourth quarter of
1987 througlt the fourtlt quarter of this year. The
economy need grow only a modest 2. 7 percentfor
the rest of . the year to reach that target, the
department said.

Southern Board··expresses
thanks for workshop support
Southern Local School Bo~ .
meeting Monday night In regular
session, passed a resolution
thanking local banks, Bank.One,
Farmers Bank and Savings Com·
pany and Home National Bank,
for donations which made It
possible for a group of Southern
teachers to at tend a special
·writing workshop In Cincinnati.
The donations paid for motel,
travel and food expenses for the
teachers Who will use the Jnformatlo.n !!atltered In Cincinnati to
develop a model for
new
writing program to be Imple·
mented ln the Southern Local
District.
The board also conducted the
following other business
matters.
-Approved Debby Greer's resignation as speech therapist
with the understanding that the
position of speech therapist will
not be reftlled at this time.

a

FiNANCiNG

,I
I

NEW '1988
PONTIAC

I

-20 GRANDIiiPRIX.
"OVER

"POWER EVERYTHING"

i
I

Cl.J'I'LASS SUPRIMIS,
&amp; BUJCK REGALS IN STOCK!"

$13,688"

'

1

OltlaJUIIIII• Pantllc .... Inc.

~Mtifi.-Fd.

1:36a.I!I.ID I p.m.
811., 1:30. 8 p.m.

,

,

AXED RATE

FINANC1NG

Cl OlEO IUIIAY

At.21 SooMI · -.v

475 Sdl Clud! Si.

$12,988'

~

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On

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NEW 1111 EMIAS$V

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TOM
PEDEN
a.-.

I

APR

GRAND PRIX
.-·?' s

I

RAYDISTRmUTED- Fred Peterson, county
ex tenalon agent for Hancock County, Illd., carries
two bales of bay to a storage slle al the county
falrii"Ountls In GreenHeld Tuesday. Farmers In
South CaroUna donated lhe 80-100 tons of bay,

(UPJ)

.

Rain helped, but droughtls
far from over, officials say
By United Press International
Three regions of Ohio moved
from the severe to moderate
draught category because of last
week's rains, but the worst
.drought In recorded Ohio history
Is far from over.
The National Weather Servi·
ce' s Palmer Drought Severity
Index, which measures soli mots·
ture, showed the Northeast,
Central Hills and Northeast Hills

LIBERTY CENTER, Ohio assess the general economic
(UP!) -Lt. Gov. Paul Leonard impact that the drought has had
san the state needs to give a on the state.
higher priority to the plight of . "The gravity of the situation Is
migrant farm workers who are greater than we expected," Leounable to find jobs because of the nard said.
effects of the drought on Ohio
Earlier Tuesday. Leonard
crops.
spoke to workers at a migrant
"If we turn our backs on farm camp near Bloomdale In
migrant farm workers, we're . Wood County, where 65 migrant
turning our backs on Ohio workers are staying after pick·
farms," Leonard said Tuesday Ing cucumbers.
during a visit to the Migrant Rest
Today Leonard was to travel to
Center in Henry County .
Bryan for a radio talk show, tour
a Williams County Iandflll and
. Leonard's visit was part of a
twa-day tour In northwest Ohio to attend a business meeting with

which was trucked by volunteer drivers from
United Parcel Service. Despite recent ralns,tltere
Is sdll a drought In many areas of lite Midwest.

received some temporary relief
from the rains, wltlch ranged
statewide from slightly more
than 1 Inch to more than 6 ~
Inches for the week.
Ha'1{ever, extreme conditions
..:.. the lowest category - con·
tlnued In the Northwest, West
Central and South Central re·
glons, the NWS said Tuesday.
Mare Importantly for farmers,
the crop moisture Index, which

Power lines dawn in Racine

$15,988.

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

SHORTIEO nE!T~DE

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

~

..... -..... ...... ,oo,~_ .. .

,~

I

TOM PEDEN

CheYrolet • Oldsmobile~ Pontiac • Buick,tnc.

Open Mon.·Fri
8:30a.m. to 8 p.m Rt. 2t South · Ripley
Sat. 8:30 • 6 p.m. 475 South Church St.
CLOSED SUNDAY

,,

Phone:
372·2844
422·07!8
344·~7

•'

-~

.('

NEW 1111 SHERROD
COHYEASION YlNS

~ II•N-1111••"'

'" I,,. II••"':

a

-Approved
speech service
agreement between the Meigs
County Board of Education and
the Southern Local Board of
Education at a cost of $3,400.
-Approved the Southeastern ·
Ohio Automobile Club to provide
driver's education training In the
school district at a casto!$100per
student.
-Approved Southern's mem·
bershlp In the Ohio High School
Athletic Association.
-Approved Don Smith ~a$ a
substitute bus driver.
·
-EmplOyed Ronnie Qulllen as
freshman boys' basketball
coach.
-Employed Bill Hensler as
girls' varsity assistant basket·
ball coach.
,-Employed Tony Deem as
seventh and eighth grade girls'
basketball coach.
-Employed Mike Edwards
and John Porter as asslslanthlgh

school football coaches.
-Employed Scott Wickline
and Jimmy Wolfe as junior high
football coaches .
-Approved Melinda Smith as
a substitute custodian and cook.
-Approved Mattie Teaford
and Ann Boso as substitute
cooks.
-Approved Southern's partie I·
· patton In the Educational Tech·
nalagy Services, Nelsonville,
· which will provide teievlston and
. vi!!~ eg_l!lpJilent far the district
at a costof$.55per student for the
1988·89 school year.
·
-Adopted modified Southern
Valley Athletic Conference rules
for game behavior.
-Accepted Kim Pltilllps' re·
slgnatlon as junior high volley.
ball coach.
.-Approved an advance draw
of $100,000 for the district by
Treasurer Dennie Hill through
the county auditor.

·Leonard says migrant·farm
workers una~le·- to find jobs
'

measures short-term crop water
needs, showed bettl'r response to
last week's rain.
The Index Improved to slightly
dry conditions In the Northeast.
Central, Central Hills, N()rtheast
HillS and South Central countles .
The rest of Ohio also showed
some Improvement. Only the
Northwest remained in Ihe excessively dry category, while Ihe
Continued on page 7

Man killed
Local news briefs -_, in
Rt. 2 ·wreck

.

;, 2·DOOR LUXUIIY"

. APR
FIXED RATE

'

1

.I .

Last month the administration raised Its goal
far overall growth from 2.8 percent to 3 percent.
Lawrence Chlmerlne, chief economist for the
WEFA Group In BaJa Cynwyd , Pa., had predicted
second-quarter growth of 3 percent to 3.5 percent.
Chlmertne said Tuesday the continued strong
expansion would make the admlnistrat Ion's goal
of 3 percent growth "more credible."
"But I still think the second half will be
weaker," he said.
Chimerlne predicted the drought would knock
only about one-tenth of a percenta·ge point off
annual economic growth and would add about
one-tenth of a point to Inflation. "They won't l1e
big numbers," he said .
Robert Parker, associate director for national
economic accounts at the Commerce Depart· .
ment's Bureau of Economic Analysis, said
estimates of the drought's impact on GNP would
be better for the third quarter after hard surveys
of the damage are available.

arm. "

Is This The Kind Of Truck
You Usually Ride In?

1988 .
OLDSMOBILE

1988
BUICK
PARK AVENUE

2 Sections. 16 Pegu 25 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

GNP shows 3.1 % gain in second quarter

??? QuESTioN;???.

WE'VE GOT THE NUMBERS YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR!

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, July 27, 1988

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

..

Low In

•

a1 y

Stocks·

Hospital news

lonl~hl.

Highs In mid 80s.

Free clothing day scheduled

Eastern girls to organize

Clear

60s. Thursday, mostly sunny.

About 1,150 Ohio Power customers In the Racine area were
,wltbout electricity Tuesday morning because limbs !rom a huge
tree came down on power lines. At about 6:25 a .m.,llmbs from
the tree which Is IQCated an Third and Elm Sis. In Racine,
caused twa power ltnes to burn In twa and there was some fire In
the process. Power company linemen cut dawn a third Itne due
to the danger of the situation, reported ·Ron Ash, manager of
Ohio Power's Pomeroy office.
Power...was restored to about!IOO of the affected customers at
7:21a.m. The remaining customers had power restored at 11&lt; 04
a .m .
Ash said It was necessary to trim tbe tree back as much as
possible.
He said the Racine Fire Department was first on the scene
and that firemen were extremely helpful In securing the area
for the Ohio Power workers.

Pair charged with June 27 theft
Johnnie Evans, 27, of Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, Racine, and
Thomas R. Haskins Jr., 27, of County Road 28, Racine, have
Continued on page 7

'·\

By MARY J. LEWIS
OVP News Staff
A 45-year-old Point Pleasant,
W. Va ..man died Tuesday nlghtln
an au tomoblle accident on S]t 2
Gallipolis Fer~,~, when the car he
was driving collided into a semi
driven by a. Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va. man.
According to the West VIrginia
'State Pollee, Raymon L. (Buck)
Randolph of Fairview Road was
driving north one half of a mile
south of the road's lntersectlon
with SR 36 when hla 1988 Ford
Mustang ran under the semi
driven by Steven R. Layne, 32, of
Rt. 1 GaiUpoUa Ferry, W.Va.
Layne was backJni Into his
driveway when the 10: 30 p.m.
accident occurred.
,
Randolph was killed InStantly.
A paasenaer ln Randolph's car
Continued an page 7

\

local tarmers.
At the Henry County center,
Leonard explained some of the
recommendations he and other
members of the Drought Assist·
ance and Relief Team will be
making to Gov. Richard Celeste.
"We need to elevate the priority of migrant farm workers,"
said Leonard, who heads the
DART. "These workers are
reeling the effects first. We have
to reverse our priorities."
He said some migrant workers
are coming to Ohio with no
Continued on page 7

.,_ .
: ·~

r

.•''
;

BONORI!D -

Individual

Bend PoDJ

Le.... Tolll'llallleal awards went lo Cbrla
Slewart, left, u lbe loUI'IItll1leal'a Moat Vala.,.ble
·Player aad Terry McGuire, who garnered the
moa~ blla, &amp;alii•&amp; seven In IS at bata. 'l'be
I

'

Mlddhpart Yaab bluketl Rullud lu&amp; niP&amp; t-0
for tile ltlll title followln1 a aerlea of rata
p01tpoaemen111. See story and additional photos
onpD&amp;IIf.l.

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