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Wednesday, June 1, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 16 The Daily Sentinel

,..--Local news briefs--.. Heavy rains drench New Mexico, Texas
Meigs subsidy payments arrive

By United Press International
A heavy downpour that
drenched New Mexico and
stra nded a slew of motorists
shifted east and soaked Oklahoma and Texas, where nearly 10
inches of rahi fell during eight
hours in one count;;, leaving
streets under water as deep as 16
feet today and forcing residents
to evacuate their homes, offlclals
sai d.
The northern part of Comanche County In the heart oft he
Lone Star State.was doused with
9.3 Inches of rain In an eight-hour
period frorn a downpour that
began TUesday,authorities said.
An undetermined number of
evacuations were ordered and

Meigs County's three local school districts received a total of
. $572,794.85 as the May State School Foundation supsldy
payment alter deductions for employee and teacher retirement. Amounts received by each district incude Eastern Local.
Sl25.319.4l; Meigs Local, $321,909.97, and Southern Local.
$125,565.47. In addition, the Meigs County Local Board of
Education received a direct allotment of $29,904.94.

Apprehended by authorities
William G. Trail, Pa r kersburg. was turned over to
Parkersburg police after being apprehended In Middleport over
the weekend.
Meigs County Deputy Sheriffs, Jimmer Soulsby and Dan
Levingston, along with Middleport Pollee Office Bill Miller
apprehended TraiL According to information received by
Sheriff Howard Frank, Trail was possibly in Meigs County at a
Middleport residence. The residence was put under surveil·
lance and when the subject left the home in a motor vehicle, a
traffic stop was attempted. Trall jumped through the vehicle
window and fled on foot lor about 150 feet before officers, who
gave chase, caught him. According to the sheriff's office, Trail
was wanted on alleged arson and endangering life charges In
Parkersburg.

JNF pact...

The Big Bend Midget Football League will sponsor students in
the Junior Olympics track meet this year.
Maximum age for participation is 18 and a planning and
practice session will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Mejgs
High School track . At that time there will be an information
period lor parents and for anyone In terested in paricipating,
there will be a ·$10 slgnup fee.
,
Those who plan to participate are asked to come prepared to
practice. Coaches will be on hand to work with the participants .
The district olympic track meet wil be held on June 11 at Rio
Grande.
All those signing up to participate Saturday will be given a
special T-shirt. to wear in the competition. Any student In Meigs
County is eligible to take part and can enter thrtoe events at the
district meet.

GTE to ...
Continued from page I
to process their .. l·plus" calls.
A ballot will be mailed to
Albany customers early this
month. Users wUI be able to
select a preferred long-distance
company and return and ballot to
GTE by July 13.
"The changeover wUI start at
2:01 a.m. and be completed In a
few minutes," said Ramey. "We
are pleased to offer this technologically advanced system to our
customers."
The project will mark the
biggest change in telephone
technology here since dial service was inaugurated In 1953.
Before then, all local and long·
distance calls were manually
connected by operators, he said.

Pomeroy police probe mishaps
Pomeroy Pollee investigated two accidents Tuesday _
The first occurred at 10:25 a.m., on E. Second St., when a car
driven by Peggy Musser backed into a car driven by Kenneth
Hartley of Pomeroy. There were light damages to both vehicles
and Musser was charged with Improper backing and no
insurance.
The seco nd accident occurred at 12:36 p.m. on Mulberry Ave.,
when a motor home driven by Cecil Throckmorton, Dayton,
sideswi ped the car of Neva Cleek. Racine, parking on the
avenue. There were medium damages to the sides of both
vehicles and Throckmorton was cited on a charge of falling to
control.

Eleven cases were processed Tuesday night in the court pf
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
·
·
Fined were Johnny Evans, Portland, $25 and costs, failure to
pay old fines; Gregory Hicks, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
destruction of property, and $213 and costs, assault; Robert
Thorla. Portland, $313 and costs, concealed weapon; Brett
Friend, Long Bottom, $63 and costs, expired plates.
Forfeiting bonds were Bruce Bissell, $63, expired plates;
Kathleen Fryar, Syracuse, $43, improper backing; Car! Roach,
Pomeroy, $63, failure to control; David. Malloy, Long Bottom,
$63, expired plates; Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse, $~. speeding;
David Duffy, Syracuse, $63, traffic light violation, and Linda
Jewell, Racine, $43, Illegal left turn.

A rummage sale will be held
Friday and Saturday at the
Grace Episcopal Church Parish
Hall. across from Pomeroy Vll·
!age Hall.

other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the .
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are fo be held ' In the
conference room of the MultiPurpose building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to the class
size limitation. ThOse wishing to
register may can the health
department at 992-6626 and they
should be prepared to Indicate a
preference of Tuesday or Thursday evening class.

·,

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1st THRU
SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1988
10:00 A.M. • 3:00 P.M. ONLY!

ALL BEDDING AND VEGETABLE
PLANT FLATS ••. REG. saoo
NOW

'

A weekend revival will be held
Thursday through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. each evening, at the Faith
Tabernacle Church on Bailey
Run Road. Rev . Danny Vance
will be the evangelist.

$3 00 EACH

While Supply

Lasts

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH.

992-5776
ANNOUNCING

TOM PEDEN'S

Stricks
Da1ly stock prices
(As ollO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

_,.

Am Electric Power ........ ..... 28\i,
AT&amp;T ............ .......... .. ......... 27~
Ashland 011 ........................6714
Bob Evans .......................... 17~
Charming Shoppes ............. .!!%
City Holding Co ................... 31
Federal Mogul .................... 37""
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 63
Heck's Inc ........................... 1'4
Key Centurion .................... 38'1.
Lands' End ......................... 23%
Limited Inc ........................18:V.
Multimedia lnc .................... 66
Rax Restaurants .................. 4~
R0 bbl &amp; M
11"
ns
yers · ........ ....... "
Shoney's Inc.. ...................... 25
Wendy's lntL ...................... -5¥.
Worthington Ind ............ -•--- 21 \i,
(Bob Evans fourth-quarter earrtings are s.~6/share, vs.
$ 20
y
· /share. ear net earniDp
r-ar_e_s_1_1sh_are_,_v_s._s_.7_6_1_11h_are_)_ _

I

and two brothers: Rex O'Brien of
Virginia Atkinson
f
'B .
. P omeroy an d F ran k O nen o
Columbus.
Becky Zurcher, presiden t of
He was preceded In death by
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta one brother, Vern O'Brien, and
Kappa Gamma, received word one sister, Linnle Leifheit .
recently of the death of long lime
Services will be Friday, 1:30
Alpha Omicron mel'!lber, Vlrgi·
nia Atkinson, McArthur. Mrs. p.m ., at the Spence Funeral
Atkinson died after an extended Home in Canal Winchester. Bur·
lllness .,She was a retired music tal will be at Lithopolis. Calling
teacher who taught in the Vinton hours at the funeral home will be
County Schools from 1936 to 1977. · Friday from 12 to 1:30 D.rn.
She Is survived by a son and
daughter·in-law, Ted and Ann
New summer hours for the
Atkinson, and a granddaughter,
Shannon Atkinson, all of Far- Pomeroy Library went Into el·
feet today. During the summer
mington, Maine .
months the library wiil be open
from
9 a.m . to 5 p.m ., Mondays
Charles O'Brien
through Saturdays. There will be
Charles O'Brien, 84, of Lake no evening hours. There are n~
Placid, Fla., died Sunday at changes for the summer months
Sebring Hospital In Sebring, Fla. for the Middleport Library.
Born Feb. 29, 1904 in Bedford
Township In Meigs County, Mr.
O'Brien was the son of the late
John and Fay O'Brien. He was
Veterans Memorial
retired from Gooding AmuseTuesday Admissions - David
ment Co. and was a member of Maynard. Point Pleasant,
the ma sonic lodge and the shrine. W.Va.; James Owens, Pomeroy;
Among survivors are his wife,
Rosemary Raub, Pomeroy; Pa·
Alma, and a step son, Lewis
tricia Asbeck, Pomeroy; James
Meier of Lake Placid, Fla.; two Freeman, Pomeroy.
,
sisters, Etta Cullums of Pomeroy
Tuesday Discharges - Perry
and Ada McClary of Columbus;
Stegall, Opal Barr.

Hospital news

HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

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New hours listed

I

627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
PI!. 446-1699

Burlingham Modern Woodmen
are having a cookout on Saturday, starting at 6:30p.m. , at the
southbound park on Route 33,
Bring covered dishes and lawn
chairs. Members. friends and
neighbors welcome.

Weight control classes begin June 7

I

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern Star, Middleport, wlli
honor 25·year members at the
regu tar meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Ali 25-year members
are asked to be present. Officers
are to wear street clothes.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Tuesday; Rutland at 2:52a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for John
Martin to 'Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 11:20
a.m. to \ianderhol! Road for Bruce Hager to St. Joseph's
Hospital; Rutland at 1:34 p.m. transported Carl Dennison from
Hili St. to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 7: 18 p.m. to
Southern High for Johnny Johnson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:15 p.m. to Laurel St. for Jimmy
Freeman to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

I

Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m., at ·
the township building.

Baseball

Daily Number
704
.Pick 4
82ll
Super Lotto
4-19-23-2842-44

draft begins

Pages 3-4

..

e

Vol.39. No.19
Copyrighted 1988

•

·.

at

Variable cloudiness tonight,
chance of rain 40 percent, low
In 60s. Fr !day, partly cloudy,
highs in mid 70s.

•

enttne
2 Sect ions, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 2, 1988

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Water line project is
curtailed by red tape

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

'

The Pythlan Sisters will have a
yard and bake sale Friday and
Saturday,10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,at the
Ken Young Building in Tuppers
Plains, next to the post office.

EMS has five calls Tuesday

Area deaths

final statement, saying some of
Reagan's aides rejected a Soviet
draft that included the phrase
"peaceful coexistence" - a
phrase that long rankled U.S.
conservatives as an acceptance
of Soviet domination of the East ·
Bloc.
The Soviet wording, Gorbachev said• "would have been a
very Important statement," and
he added, "I believe we have
missed a chance to take an
important step forward toward a
civillzed relationship."
Reagan, in a 35-minute session
with reporters, acknowledged he
had reacted favorably to the
initial Soviet draft, but said he
rejected It after his advisers has
pointed out "ambiguities" he did
not specify.
The president went to some
lengths to emphasize the warm
personal relationship he has
developed with the Soviet leader.
asserting that Gorbachev is
"different" from his
predecessors .

Sou tit Central Oh lo
Today: Sunny, with a high in
the lower 90s . Northwest winds 5
to 15 mph .
Tonight : Mostly clear, with a
low between 60 and 65. Light west
winds.
Thursday : Partly cloudy, with
a slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms . High near 85.
Chance of rain Js 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Fair through the period , with
daiily highs in the 70s or lower
80s. Overnight lows will be
mal nly In the 50s.

Texas ..
Rain was scattered from the
northern hall or the Pacific Coast
into eastern Washington and the
Idaho Panhandle.
Heavy .thunderstorms In the
Southwest flooded roads in New
Mexico Tuesday, stranding
scores of motorists and drowning
one man.
Caleb Chandler, pollee chief In
Clovis, N.M .. said three men
tried to walk away from a stalled
car on a flooded street at about
2:37a .m. and were washed away.
Two were rescued. but pollee
found the body of Macarlo
Lavota, 33, of Clovis, at a c~lvert
about9: 30 a.m., Chandler said.
In a six-hour period, 3.281nches
of rain fell at Clovis, the NWS
said.

&gt;

A fishing derby will be held
Sunday at the Ru !land American
Legion Hall. Cost to participate Is
$2 per pole. Prizes for the most
and the largest wili be awarded.
Bveryone welcome.

Mayor processes 11 cases

The Meigs County Department
of Health will begin a series ofslx
weekly classes on weight control
a t 5:30 p.m. on June 7.
Those ta king part will have a
choice or nights for the classes.
either Tuesdays or Thursdays,
and claasses are free to Meigs
County residents.
Attendance is required at only
one two hour session weekly .
Classes will Include nutriant
e,llucation, stress management,
weekly weigh-Ins, relaxation
techniques. recipes, diet recall
sheets. exercise tec hniques and

Weather

Continued from .page 1

century,". and said, he, too ,
believes a START agreement is
possible in the waning months of
Reagan's term.
The Soviet leader also discussed a disagreement over the

MFL will sponsor students

posted over northern Texas .
Forecaster Harry Gordon said
the heavy rain In central Texas
caused flooding at Caldwell.
Cross Plains and Dublin . Low lying streets In Cisco and Eastland were closed by flooding.
In Caldwell, thunderstorms
hurled hall and winds that gusted
more than 50 mph and downed
trees and knocked out power,
Gordon said.
Rain showers and thunderstorms flailed early today from
western Iowa and Nebraska
across Kansas , eastern Colorado, Okla~oma and central

famllles were taken to a local
high school gymnasium. a sheriff's spokeswoman said. "At one
overpass, we got 16 feet (of
water), so I'm not for sure how
high lt Is In all{heseptaces, ... she
said.
No Injuries were reported but
"a lot" of cars stalled In the
floodwaters .
"But we have not had anybody
trapped. They've managed to all
get out," the spokeswoman said.
The National Weather Service
posted flash 'flood watches this
morning across north-central
Texas, the Edwards Plateau In
the central part of the state,
Texas hill country, and western
and central OklahOma .
Local flood warnings were

Ohio Lottery

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
"I guess you jus t have to go
thro.ugh A to get to B," says Don
Poole, manager of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District. in
regard to a U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Farmers Home Ad·
ministration regulation that is
hindering the progress of a
proposed water line extension.
Poole, who questions the need
in this case to go through A, is
upset that the district's proposed
Phase IV extension wlli be
slowed down by several months
due to the requulrement. But he
vice president comptroller; Bob Hennesy, C&amp;S
SAME SERVICE, NEW NAME- Commercial
admits he has no alternative but
vice president; Dean Evans and Don Crance,
·&amp; Savlap Bank of GaiUpoUs is getting a new
to comply with the regulation
members of the board of directors; Scott Hinsch,
name. As of July 1, C&amp;S along with 16 other First
which requires that publlc notice
C&amp;S president; and Connie Freeman, senior vice
National Cinicinnatl Corporation wili be know as
be given when prime farmland or
president and cashier.
Star Bank. Makingthe.announcementWednesday
a floodplain wil1 be altered by an
at the Down Under were (L toR) Alice Stover,
FmHA funded project . even
tho,ugh the regulation has notlllng to do with project construction, engineering or design, or
with people.
Will Affect 140
Tuppers Plains-Chester has
applied to FmHA for financial
assistance amounting to $623,000
CINCINNATI iUPI) - First diverse capabilities to current reflect "the continued growth of
to extend water lines into six
National Cincinnati Corp., a $5 and potential customers."
First NationaL"
rural areas including Silver
billion bank holding company,
Added First National chair"Now at the $5 billion mark in Ridge, West Shade, Kingsbury
announced Wednesday It Is man Oliver Waddell, "We total assets, the corporation Road .• Court Street, Letart Falls
changing the name of alll7 of its wanted a distinctive name that operates 17 banks in three and County Road 53. between the
banks to Star Bank.
was not geographically Umlting. states," he noted. "This Is a size Athens and Meigs County line
'"Star' is not your·tradltional.
Also, Star Bank Is short and easy and a scope that deserves the near Lottrldge. The proposed
bankerly sounding name," adto pronounce and our research visibility and focus that a single Phase IV extension wil1 affect a
mitted First National president shows it h¥ broad appeal and name will offer. "
total of 140 new customers.
Mark Johnson. "But a survey
positive connotations to both
Waddell said officials of alll7
Altogether, only about seven
indicated that 'Star' incorpo- customers and Investors. In banks voted unanimously in acres of prime farmland In the
rated all the positive attributes
addition, It offers good promofavor of the name. change.
Court Street, Letart Fails and
we want to communicate to the tional characteristics."
"We believe that each of our West Shade areas may be afmarketplace."
The new name wili take effect banks rec'ogn !zed the benefits of fected by the Phase IV project.
First National, whose main
July I. However, the holding a distinctive, shared name," said The prime farmland issue, acbank Is the First Nallonal Bank company will continue to operate WaddelL
cording to Poole, resulted from
of Cincinnati, has been buying
First National owns 11 banks in the government's fear . that by
as First National Cincinnati
banks throughout Ohio, Indiana
Corp. Company officials said Ohio - First National Bank of Installing water lines along farm
and Kentucky In recent years
stockholders may later be asked Cincinnati, Ohio State Bank of land, the owners of that land,
and all those banks haveretained
to approve a corporation name Columbus, Preble County Bank whether they are farmers or not,
their original names.
of Eaton, Miamlbank of Fair- might use the land for something
change incorporating "Star."
"Right now, with 17 different
Company officials said the born, Commercial and Savings other t~an farming _ "This of
names. customers may not recname ·'Star'' was selected from Bank of Gallipolis, Second Na- course,'" says Poole, "would be
ognize our strength, " said John·
tional Bank of Hamilton, destruction of a valuable Amerimore than 100 potential names .
son. "The new name will help
Waddell said the main reason Farmers &amp; Traders National can resource" In reality though,
communicate our broad and
for the name change was to Bank of Hillsboro, First National most of the seven acres which
Bank of Ironton, Portsmouth would be affected by the con·
Banking Co., First National structlon of Phase IV, "are no
Bank of Sidney and First Na· . longer farmlands anyway,"
tiona! Bank &amp; Trust Co. of Troy . Poole explains, "but lawns at
The company also plans to open a people' s homes. "
bank In Cleveland in September.
For this reason, Poole cannot
In Kentucky, First National understand FmHA forcing the
owns Newport National Bank public notice requirement and
and Peoples Liberty Bank &amp; holding up a water line extension
Trust Co. of Covington.
to rural areas where water Is
In Indiana, the firm owns First sorely needed and wanted by
National Bank of Aurora, Peo- residents. (Residents of Silver
ples National Bank of Lawrence· Ridge began their quest for
burg, Second National Bank of Tuppers Plains-Chester water
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ever, continued while reservoirs
Richmond and BentonvUie State back in 1968 when a few custo·
Governor Richard Celeste di- were being refilled, officials said
Bank of Fayette County.
mers signed up with the district.) .
rected units of the Ohio National Wednesday.
Guard Wednesday to deliver
Some 325 million gallons run
water supplies to several areas in through the system on a norma I
Ohio suffering from water day, but 381 million gallons were
shortages.
used Monday and 425 million
Water supplies throughout the gallons Tuesday, said W. Dale
state have dwindled due to a lack Wegrlch, director of the Cleveol rainfall and recent high usage land Public Utilities
levels.
Department.
Water trailers, which contain
More water would ba ve been
400 gallons of water, are cur· used Tuesday, but reservior
rently located in or being dell· levels fell so low that pressure
vered to Adena, Jefferson County significantly dropped in some
(three trailers); Morristown, areas and water service was
Belmont County (two trailers); completely cut off in other parts
and North Royalton In Cuyahoga of the system.
County (two trailers).
The communities Involved
The Ohio Disaster Services were Parma, Parma Heights,
Agency Is monitoring the slate Seven Hills, North Royalton,
for other possible areas with Broadview Heights, Brecksville
water sorlages.
and Independence.
The Mliitary Support Division
"We got some August weather
of the Ohio National Guard aisols over the holiday weekend and
on standby to provide additional usage really took off unexpect· .
emergency water supplies If edly," Wegrlch said.
necessary.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and the Cleveland
Oflicials Pre.Jict
DiVIsion of Water asked resiEnd To Problems
dents in the areas of reduced
Cleveland Division of Water pres sur~ ·to boll drinking water
offl~lals say they expect the
and water used for food
water shortage in seven of the 70 preparation.
communilles thl!y serve to be
"We have found no evidence of
eliminated by tonight.
contamination, but spot contarnl·
One main line carrying water nation can occur" when there are
GROUND BROKEN ' - Ground was broken Tueaday for the
from Lake Erie to key reservoirs dllterent levels of water pres·
newest adtiiUon to &amp;he GaiDa County economic commaalty. A
had been closed for repairs, but sure, said Ernest Cedroni, corn·
Daley Queen will be loea&amp;ed on State Route 7 between Kmart 1111d
water offlchils suspended the missioner of the Division of
Lam's Garden retta!lraat, owaed and opera&amp;ed by Pbyllla 1111d
work, allowing an additional 60 Water.
Cedroni said that with the
Walter Loveday. Tile ceremoay Included area busbleu 1111d
mnuon - gallons a day to flow
added
capacity, there should not
pvermnental officials, pictured here, amon1 &amp;hem City Manarer
through the system serving more
Dale lman, City Comml.ulon Preeldent Dow Saunders, State Rep.
than 1.5 million people. The work be any more problems .
"I do not expect this to reoccur
Jolynn Boster (D-Galllpolls), Scott HIIIIClh pl'tlllldeat of Commerwill not resume until the fall:
this
summer," he said.
cial BDd Savings Bank, Chamber of Commerce Executive
A lawn sprinkling ban, how-

First National of Cincinnati
changes name to Star Bank

Guard transports
water to several
Ohio cotnmunities

(

•

.
I

"If hundreds or thousands of
acres of prime farmland were
involved, I could understand this
requirement, " Poole adds.
Also to be affected by Phase IV
construction Is an undetermined
amount of floodplain ln. the same
three areas .
'Another Requirement'
As far as the floodplain issue is
concerned, Poole says the water
district has agreed to not install
any new taps after water line
construction, if the tap location is
in a floodplain. "This is another
requirement by FmHA." he
says, and the reason for this
requirment is to slow growth In
floodplain areas in an effort to
limit recovery costs to the U.S.
Government In the event of an
actual damaging flood .
Poole feels the patience of the
140 customers waiting for water
lines is wearing thin because of
governmental rules such as the
public notice requirement.
The 140 customers have a!·
ready notified Congressman

Clarence Mllier of the slow
movement on the proposed
Phase IV extension, and, says
Poole, Miller has contacted
FmHA asking them to pick up the
pace and get things going.
Although the regulation requirIng public notice of impact to
farmland and floodplain is part
of the National Environmental
Policy Act, which was enacted In
1983. the last water line extension
for Tuppers Plains· Chester went
through farmland and floodplain
without notice to the pub! ic.
Poole says he was told that public
notice was not required for the
last extension because the application for FmHA funding was
submitted prior to the 1983
enactment. Poole points out
however that the water district
was also "permitted a change
order in the last project without
an envl,onmental study_"
·Seeks Comments
FmHA Is inviting written com·
ments from the public on (1) the
Continued on page 7

Juvenile ·facility
may be located
in Meigs County
Initial plans are In the works to
locate possible sites in Meigs
County which might be suitable
for construction of a juvenile
corrections facility.
The Meigs County Commissioners received a letter Wednesday from the State Department
of Youth Services, whlcltoutlined
some of the preilmlnary criteria
for a site selection.
The commissioners are in
agreement that Meigs County
should enter the competition for
at least one of two juvenile
corrections facilities to be built
by the state. One of the facilities
has been designated for Southern
Ohio and the other for Southeastern Ohio. Both facilities are to be
used to house only juveniles from
the Southern Ohio area , In an
effort by the state to keep .rural
juvenile offenders in a rural
atmosphere rather than sending
them to urban areas.
If Meigs County were able to
secure at least one of the state
facilities, it would mean jobs for
the county, and might also mean
that Meigs County would be
eligible for a larger share of state

•

capital Improvements funding.
Eariler this year, Meigs County
received only about $13,000 In
capital Improvements funding
for a Buffington Island Memor·
ial, while Athens and ' Gallia
Counties received allotments in
the millions.
According to the letter from
the state, a series of publ jc
meetings in communities which
have expressed interest In the
projects will be he! dover the next
three to six months. Actual funds
for the projects are not to be
released by the state until July
1990.
Comm lssioner Richard Jones
said efforts will be made In the
very near future to Involve other
community leaders In the e!fort
to secure at least one of the state
facilities for Meigs County.
It was reported by the commlss loners that reclamation is un·
derway at the county landfill and
is expected to be completed
within the next 30 days. The
landfill was closed down by the
health department on May 15. A
solid waste transfer station at the
Continued on page 7

secretary Beth Vaudawalker Gracellne Cotton, fonner owner of
the propertr, lllld Cbarlee 1111d Rebert Gilmore of Dairy Queen of
Ohio, 1111d Cllarlee IUtehen of Middleport Dairy Queen. Tile
fuU·servlce l'tllltaul'llllt will sea&amp; a lllld employ approximately 18
ye,....rouad. Coaatructloa will bepa Immediately on the MM,ooe
project, which Ia expected to open around sept. 1. Fundln1 Ia
through CAS Bank of Galllpolll,lllld Carter 1111d Ev ana ot Galllpolil
is the lftleral contractor. (Trlbllae photo)

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

• I

Page-2-The Daily Sentinet
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. June 2. 1988

·nukakis: Dry, but competent

.

By Jack Anderson :
J

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

ts:m~

~v

r"r\......1.._-.-•........,c:~ ..=.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A ME.MBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF" OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
Jong. All letters are sUbj ect toedltf ng and must be signed with n ~me, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lette rs Should be In

good tas te, addressing Issues. not personalities.

May leaders;
November losers
ByARNOLDSAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - When Gary Hart returned to the presidential
campaign late last year after a seven-month absence, the public
opinion polls installed him as the favorite forth~ 1988 Democratic
nomination.
Poll-literate political observers warned against placing major
credence in the Initial response to Hart's return, suggesting that the
former Colorado senator was simply getting the benefit of the
notoriety that surrounded his original departure from the race.
About three months later, having won primaries nowhere, Hart
was out of the game again.
Now we have Gov. Michael Dukakls, the odds-on favorite to win the
Democratic nomination based on actual delegates won, running more
than 10 percentage points ahead of Vice President George Bush, the
Republican nominee-apparent. in "trial heats" of the general
election.
The question is, are polis In May that ask people how they wlll vote
in November reliable?
ThankS to research by Sarah J . Burke published in U.S. News &amp;
World Report, it appears that springtime Gallup Polis in presidential
years have done a pretty good job of predicting winners.
In the 11 elections between 1948 and 1984, Gallup's trial heat polls
conducted in May have been correct seven times, or 64 percent of the
time.
The misses were in 1980, when Gallup had President Jimmy Carter
ahead of challenger Ronald Reagan by 9 points; 1968, when the poll
found Hubert Humphrey 6 points ahead of Richard Nixon; 1960, when
the May trial heat had Nixon leading John F. Kennedy by 2 points;
and the famous 1948 disaster, when Gallup had Thomas Dewey a full
11 points ahead of President Harry Truman.
But before anyone makes Dukakls a 2-1 favorite towln In November
1988, It should be pointed out, as the magazine did, that two of the four
, Gallup misses were in the three elections in which Incumbent
presidents were not candidates. Thus, the May leader in 1952, Dwight
Eisenhower, did beat Adlai Stevenson, but the spring front-runners,
Incumbent vice presidents Nixon and Humphrey, lost In both 1960 and
1968.
That obviously Is statistically insignificant sample, but betting folk
who hang big hunches on small hooks might see Bush as the 2-1
underdog inasmuch as 1988 Is a another no-Incumbent contest in
which a sitting vice president is tryingtosucceed his boss. That hasn't
been done since Martin Van Buren was elected to succeed Andrew
Jackson in 1836.
The difficulty Incumbent vice presidents have succeeding their
bosses has been noted many times since Bush entered the 1988 race,
but it may be counted as a tiny edge for him that he does not go Into the
summer as the public opinion poll leader, as did Nixon and Humphrey
In their losing campaigns.
All of this may make grist for the mill of political handicappers, but
no legitimate pollster would dare suggest that the outcome of the
November election can be determined with certainty in May.In fact,
If the 1988 elect ion is as close as 1960 and 1968, the J?Oiitakers may have
trouble calling a winner in October.

Letters to the editor
Extends thanks for support
Letter to the Editor:
The Pomeroy Youth League
would like to extend our thanks to
the people In the community and
the business community that
support our ball program. Without your donations of money or
time, this program could not

flourish as it does. Again, thank
you for your support on Tag Day,
May 14, and thanks to all our
sponsors.
Pomeroy Youth League
Mike Young, President
Dennis Ault, VIce-President
Roger Abbott, Treasurer

Ber~y's World

WASHINGTON - In the priD!lkakis comes across as dry
vacy of Washington's smoke- and dull, but competent. Yet
filled back rooms, Democratic those who know him unanimleaders achnowledge that they ously agree he Is a politician of
have been choosing poor candi- broad gauge, deep thought and
dates for president. In 1976, lofty vision.
Jimmy Carter was unknown
He not only believes In the
beyond Georgia, untested in American Dream; he has been
national politics and unqualified living it. His father, Panos
for the job. Then, the Democrats Dukakis, arrived on these sbores
nominated Walter Mondale who at the age of 15, penniless and
was quailfled, but boring.
unable to speak English. Within
Now they are about to nomi- eight years, Panos Dukakis was
nate a candidate as unknown as working his way through HarCarter and as unexciting as vard Medical School. He lm-·
Mondale. Michael Dukakis has pressed In his son that America Is
emerged too suddenly from na- . "the land of opportunity."
tional obscurity for Americans to
Prodded by his demanding
really get to know him.
father, Mike Dukakis became a
We looked into this virtual straight-A student, a Phi Betta
unknown who wants to be presi- Kappa graduate of Swarthmore
dent of the United States, and College and a cum laude gr aduhere is our appraisal:

"I could care less about the high court's ruling ... I still don't like getting
this familiar with my suspects."

Although It is too late to look for
a new site for the Summer
Olympics scheduled for Seoul.
South Korea, we should at least
look at the circumstances that
will be surrounding this Sept·
meber's competitions. There
may be much more to this
upcoming event than simply
athletics.
In several ways, South Korea Is .
a country In transition. For one,
democracy has finally reached
the peninsula. On December 16,
1987, Rob Tae Woo was elected
president by direct popular elections, a first in the history of
Korea. On April 26, 1988, 299
members were elected to a new
National Assembly, completing
the transition to a fully demo·
cratic form of government.
Beyond these promising political
developments, South Korea has
now joined West Germany and
Japan as an emerging economic
world leader, with exports accounting for about 40 percent of
Its Gross National Product
(GNP).
Of course, a strong South
Korea is what our foreign policy
has historically encouraged. After the Korean war, the United
States agl'""d as part of the 1954
Mutual security Treaty to help

Summertime, and the livin'
apprehensive. My friend tells me
easy. Fish are jumpln', and the her baby is walking everywhere,
cotton is high. Yourcousin's ric)l, likes to chew on electrical cords
and her guest room's good· and will probably wail a lot for
too kin'. So hush, little relative, his daddy, who's staying home.
don't you cry.
"Oh, but don't worry, he's the
My best friend comes in the best baby, otherwise," she says.
morning, for three days, with her "Just make sure you don't leave
one-year-old. I'm trying to work anything plugged in."
up a gracious greeting, the one
Maybe being on the scenic
my mom used for summer vacation route wouldn't be so
visitors where she smiled so hard bad, but I am employed by a
It made her eyes squinch up and television station that allows no
you couldn't see the terror in · days off in either May or July,
them. But I'm having a harder those being "sweeps" months as
time than usual, because I just well as prime vacation-travel
waved good-bye to an older months. The management has
brother who lived here on his explained "sweeps" to me as
spring "few days off'' like a kid at being tlmi!B that people with
camp. Only this time, thecounse- · viewers diaries in their homes
lor in charge of Recreation was either watch Us or Them, so Us
me, and he wouldn't cooperate. haveo to really scramble so that
He wouldn't tool a leather bil- They don't watch Them. What It
lfold, grill eggs on a tin can or go means to me personally is that if
on a nature hike. He would, I die, the management sen,ds a
however, follow me around like a car around for the body and
dog, watch the clock until I got off props me up on the set anyway.
work, and watt for the dinner bell
There's no time for entertain·
down at the camp kitchen.
ing guests who have nothing but
And I have reason to be

HOW MISS MANNERS

WOULD HANDLE
TKlS?

'

protect South Korea. This has lions, I suspect onewouldflnd the
meant the commitment of about heavy hand of North Korea.
40,000 U.S. troops to the region. Miffed at Its failure to get other
The U.S. troops are universally communist countries to join
viewed by our free world allies as them in boycotting the Summer
vital to the peace and stabliity of Olympics, North Korea appears
Northeast Asia. Yet, some of .. determined to undermine the
South Korea's youth have not staging of the games by its more
seen It this way. Recent events, successful neighbor to the South.
Getting back to the thrust of the
though limited In nature, suggest
new unrest and political turmoil students protest, the idea of
may be In store for South Korea reunification· of the two Koreas
in the months ahead. Violent has never been seriously consistreet demonstrations this past dered by the South Korean
government given the hardline
week took a strange new turn.
nature of their northcommunist
Demonstrators, who bad in past
ern
neighbor.
North Korea Is
years called for the ouster of the
essentially
.
a
communist
dicta"military dictatorship," have
torship,
controlled
by
Kim
II
once again gained the attention
Sung.
He
Is
plainly
jealous
of
the
of the world press by demonstratIng for two new themes: reunifi- favorable attention South Korea
has been receiving from the
cation of North and South Korea.
On May 19, several thousand Olympic Games and finds him·
young protesters chanted anti- self in a position to do little about
American slogans and engaged it. If he resorts to tactics similar
In fierce street clashes with riot to last November's bombing of a
pollee as they attempted to reach South Korean airliner to frighten
the U.S. Embassy in Seoul. The visitors away from South Korea,
protesters claim that It has been he risks the wrath of internathe presence of the United States tional Indignation and retalla·
military that has prevented lion. If he allows the Seoul
North Korea and South Korea competitions to proceed without
from again becoming one coun- Incident, he riskS continued Inter·
try. If one were to look behind the national isolation and obscurity.
scenes to determine the origin of South Korea's reputation soars
these "spontaneous" demonstra·

Southern hospitality isn't easy

I WONDER

.'

impulse while he used his analytical prowess to penetrate the
system he wanted to reform.
Though he avoided the corrup- '
tion, he embraced the liberalism
that also characterizes Massachusetts. He might even qualify
as a flaming liberal, except, of
course, Dukakls never flames.
He has a capacity for reducing
provocailve liberal orthodoxy to
mundane facts and arguments.
A group of University of Utah
political scientists has conducted
a thorough examination of Dukalds' record for the Voters Caucus,
a non-profit voter edu·cation
group. They say Dukakls a&lt;lvocates government solutions to
the problems that ail America
and is wlillngtoraisetaxes to pay
for more federal solutions.
He believes strongly, for example, that "the government must
actively intervene In the econ·
omy and attract and promote '
new businesses with federal tax
dollars to develop and create
needed employment here In the
•~
United States."
On foreign and defense policy,
Dukakls adheres to the liberal •·•
line: against U.S.intervention In ':
Third World affairs; against ·.
military intervention in Central ·
America; for more limits on
armaments; for a "substantial" ··
reduction In nuclear arms and '
against underground nuclear
testing. He would halt research
on Star Wars and reduce funding
for the space program. Politi·
cally, he might be described as ·
Ted Kennedy with eyebrows.
Of small physical stature,
Michael Dukakis seems to be
larger than he Is, through knack
of carriage. Those who know him .. '
believe he will live up to the•"
Illusion.
'"'
Footnote: The Voters Caucus·,;
Is a non-partisan, non-profit,
all-volunteer group founded by
the International Platform Asso-•
elation to promote voter educa- '·
lion. Jack Anderson Is president
of IPA.

..

.An Uneasy Setting for gameS Cong. Clnrence Mille&lt;

Is

r'

ate of Harvard Law School. Yet
he found time to play the trumpet
and participate In athletics.
Dukakis was revolted by the
rough-and-tumble of Boston politics, yet inspired at the same
time by the sophistication and
Idealism of his hero John F .
Kennedy. He has explained his
choice of politics as a career: "I
was bound and determined to
remake the Democratic Party in
Massachusetts to reflect what I
saw In Kennedy."
If Dukakls lacked the Kennedy
m~tgic, he faithfully pursued in
his humdrum way the Kennedy
ideal. There was a note of
equable dignity that characterized Dukakis, the reformer. He
demonstrated his ability to suppress his sense of outrage and

'

time.
I think I might be able to take
summer company In stride, even
while I'm working a GO-hour
week, If my mother hadn't been
from the South. There, hospitalIty is a birthright, something to
be more proud of than straight
teeth. I've seen her work all night
at the railroad station, then come
home to the visiting kin and cook
up apple pie, mashed potatoes
and pan-fried pork chops. At the
end of the week, too tried to wash
tier face, I've still seen her hang
one their car as they leave,
gasping out, "What's your
hurry? No need to rush olf!"
My relatives and friends know
I am her daughter. They can't
Imagine such a sparkling hostess
with a solvenly kid who can't
stock the freezer or put clean
sheets on the gui!Bt bed before
they pull up in the drive. They
don't understand why I wouldn't
want to, once again, park 3,00().
automobiles-away from tlie en-.
trance to our nearby theme park,
plow through a sea of sweaty,

,,

worldwide. Faced with these 1
options, It appears that the only · ,
means open to Kim II Sung to •,
accomplish his desired ends is to
orchestrate protests in South
Korea that would appear Internal .
lh nature, and by so doing make ·
the political environment so
volatile and confrontational that. ,
other countries may think ,twice .. ,
about participating.
.
South Korea ·knows that the -·
hosting of the Summer Olympics
will be their giant coming-out .. ,
party.In Seoul, a massive digital ,
clock has been on display for the . •
past two years and has been 1
counting down the days until the
games begin. When the Olympic , ·
torch is lit on September 17, no "
one can be certain what might be ,
seen. Not since Munich has the , ,
potential for terrorism been so .
great. With this threat In mind,
the United States and every other " •
country planning to participate ,
in these Games must take every ·,.
step possible to mlrilmlze the risk
involved. We must do all we can 1
to help ensure that the Summer .
Games are conducted in a secure
setting and showcase the new •
South Korea, the South Korea . '
committed to democratic principles and a democratic future.

.o l

Sarah Overstreet ·.
whining bodies, and see It for the ,
429th time. They can't compre- ..1
bend the mentality of someone ;,
who saves every Saturday just to •
wash underwear, whose Idea of a
pleasant Sunday is a four-hour
nap. So they come, and I try. ,
Which brings me to the subject ;
of where I wUi spend my own
vacation. My brother ought to be ..
just about in fu II· swing down at ·
his job by the time I roll into town ,
wondering when dinner Is. At
least with him, I can use the Mom '
guUt. "Remember the time Mom .
cooked supper for all the folks
after the car ran over her and the ·
stray dogs ate her groceries?" •
Or perhaps It wUi be the bevy of •
cousins, all from the South with ·=
the same dreaded legacy to =
uphold, who don't have any ;
better sense than to come home •
from work, fix me pan-fried pork :
chops, and hang on the car when I :
leave.
•
One thing about vacations, and •
guests. When you're from the ••
South, paybacks are murder.
:

f

•

,,

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
,

Former Mason
area couple's
son awaits draft
call from majors
~

•

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Thursday. June 2, 1988

..

•
•
•
••

By Charles A. Mason
Mike Matheny waited most of
Wednesday for a telephone .call that
could have catapulted him into
rnajor league baseball through the
summer free agent draft. When "the
phone call" hadn't arrived by late
afternoon, Mike did something ap.
propriate: he took extra batting
practice with his old high school
coach.
"He's really dedicated," said
Judy Matheny, his mother.
The Reynoldsburg star high
school catcher could call Mason
County his second home. Mom and
Dad- Judy and Jerry Matheny were childhood sweetheans in
Leon. Mrs. Mathen;r graduated
from Point Pleasant High School in
1962; her husband, now an operat·
ing engineer for !gel Construction
Co., Columbus, was a PPHS
graduate in 1961.
Mike's paternal and maternal
grandparents still live in Leon.
They are J. Atmar and Edna Math~
eny and Warren D. and Luella
Keefer. Matheny said he just
recently visited Leon and caught up
with the latest happenings.
Grandmother Matheny is a long.
time Cincinnati Reds fan, the
mother-in-law said.
Being a professional baseball
catcher is the 17·ycar-old Mathe·
ny's dream, a dream that took a
step farther when he tried out at
Cincinnati's Riverfront Sladium
recently with I0 other ~A~tehers. He
handled the 94-mile an hour
fastball from his position behind
the backstop. This past high school
baseball season he dominated.
Mike turned in a .439 batting

average during Reynoldsburg's 21·
5 season. He was named First Team
All League, All District, All State
and also r~eived !he Ohio Capital
Conference Most Valuable Player.
Seventy·nine percent of the run·
ners who tested his arm found their
attempt to steal was just a big out.
Understandably, it was the notifica·
Lion about possibly being named in
the professional baseball summer
free agent draft that had Mike worried Wednesday.
There had not been "the" phone
call - yet. His mother said that
phone call hadn't come but there
had been plenty of telephone wellwishers who had touched base with
Mike.
If Mike doesn't turn pro he has a
full-ride scholarship to the Univer·
sity of Michigan on which 10 fall
back. He'll play baseball there.
Like other outstanding athleteS
today, Mike has several choices in
his future.
"I want to play professional
baseball sometime in the next two
. years," he said in a telephone interview before leaving the house for
the batting practice. Mike has
noticed several scouts this past
year. He wants to sign a contract
that will guarantee he will go to
college if he does tum pro. He said
a $100,000 signing bonus was not
out of the question.
The 6-3, 190-pound Matheny
said if he gets a bonus, he'D sock
the
the 3.0
future.
He
wiU money
eitheraway
takeforhis
grade
average to Michigan or bit the
minor leagues. His mother, although naturally concerned about
the decisions in front of her son,
will back his decision. She not only
•

amourit. '

1

Defending champ Lendi
evened his lifetime record with

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Action resumes
in French Open'
PARIS (UP!) Doubles
partners Steffl Graf and Gabriela Sabatini become opponents today when they play a
semifinal match of the $3,9
million French Open.
Unseeded Nicole Provis plays
13th-seeded Natalia Zvereva in
the other women's semifinal. The
women's final is scheduled for
Saturday.
West Germany's Graf, the
world's top·ranked female, enters with an 11-2 lifetime mark
against fourth -seeded Sabatini.
The Argentinian, however, has
taken the last two matches,
Florida grand prix events on
cement and clay.
"When I play Steffl, I have
nothing to lose, and I go for it ,"
Sabatini said. "Now I know I can
beat her, and I know I can beat
her again. "
Graf, meanwhile, appreciates
the challenge Sabatini offers.
"It's always more interesting If
you have a cbailenging match in
prospect," Graf said. "That
¥10Uid be nice for a change."
Soviet Zvereva, 17, chalked up
the most stunning upset of the
tournament when she ousted
second-seeded Martina Navrat!lova in the fourth round. Australian Provis, who turns 19 in
September, defeated seventhseeded Claudia Kohde·Kilsch
and No. 15 Sylvia Hanlka. both of ·
West Germany .
Wednesday, top-seeded Ivan
Lend!, in a vivid display of the
pinpoint accuracy that has made
him the world's best tennis
player, crushed John McEnroe in
the completion of a rain-plagued
match to reach the quarterfinals.
Lendi lost just one point on his
serve In the final set of the 6-7
(3·7) , 7-6 (7-3), 6-4, 6-4 triumph
over the 16th-seeded American,
wllose athleticism and court
artls try were subdued by the
hard serve and crisp passing
shotJ of the twQ'time defending
champion.
"lle just hit an incredible
amo1111t of lines," McEnroe said.
"I've never seen a guy hit so
many, on every kind of shot serves, approaches, he was hit·
ling the lines on everything.
"He must have had 12 In one
set. That's an unheard -of

WAHAMA WHTE FALCON BASEBALL TEAM - Wahama plays Morgantown St. Francis Thursdal in the West Virginia s!ate high
school baseball playoffs. Team members include: Wes Bumgarner (14), Mike Harbour (8), Bar~ Davis (9), R1ck K~arns (23), Sean G1bbs (11),
Brian Decker (1) Bob Kincaid (16), Jeff Henry (20), Troy Meadows (13), Bob Ash (21), Dave S1gman (IS), Rob Gnmm (27), Tom Knapp (18),
Tom McDermitt '(17), Justin. Crandol (10), PJ. Gibbs (30), Rodney Bumgarner (25), Troy Sigman (41) 1 Shannon Barrett (28), Mitch Harbour
(19), Brent Fields (7), Tbe coach is Gordon Spencer.
·
,
his mother, but an avid fan, too. Dad. Actually, he's a dual-sport athShe only missed Mike's perfor- lete. Mike was co-captain of
mances at Chillicothe and Mount Reynoldsburg's baseball !Cam and
Vernon this year because of the dis- quarterback for the school's
tances to travel, and as far as pro football team .. However, basketball,
baseball, she said, ''We encourage which he's played in the past, was
it.
.
out, Mom said. "You have to have a
"Of course you do have con- break."
cems. I trust in the Lord that
Mrs. Matheny was impressed
everything will work out," she said. with Mike's future at Ann Arbor atMike's been playing baseball tcr visiting there. "I was very ims1'nce he was 10. ·He settled into
ed ·lh th am us "'e ere
press Wl
e c P · "' w

CHIEF. E·Z-LINER
24' )( 15' Sw1m Area
31' X 16' Outsrde Otmenstons

4ft deep

INSTAUAriON ••I.ABif

McEnroe at 14-14 , and advanced
to the French Open quarterfinals
for the fifth consecutive ye~r .
"You really don't aim for the
lines, It just happens, " said the
native Czechoslovakian who is
seeking to become a U.S. citizen.
"Once you get into the groove you
hit deep, and If you hit deep you
hit some lines."
Third-seeded Swede Mats Wilander and ninth-seeded Andre
Agassi of the United States
advanced toward a semifinal
clash. with Wllander enduring
considers bly more trouble in his
quarterfinal Wednesday.
·
Wllander overcame early mistakes and rallied to defeat
.12th-seeded Emilio Sanchez of
Spain 6-7 (5-7 ), 7-6 (7-3), 6-3,6-4 in
a four-hour siugfest, while
Agassl needed just over two
hours to outclass fellow 18-year·
old, Gulllermo Perez-Roldan, the
15th-seeded Argentinian, 6-2, 6-2,
6-4.

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1988 SCHEDULE FLEA MARKET
MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS .
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JUNE 3·4·6
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For lnformalitll Cal: 13041 422·4169- 16141 742-2112
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,,

Mason, WV

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday. June 2, 1988

Cleveland drafts Hamilton baseball ace
ltft-IIUicled pitcher.
l 'l, Bo!o!ton, Tom Fl&lt;of'her, WIM:onsin,
ldt-h1611ded pllcher.

Majors
By l 1nltt&gt;d Prt"S!I lnlnrMi lorw.l

1!1, PltbihtJ'Ih , Au!!odn M~UU&amp;han : Ho·

rtzon (Sc.-otiNiale. Ark . I HS, shortstop.

1\/tiEHit'AN LEAGUE

1-t,

Ell!&gt; I

15. SIUI FtiUicl5eo (from Clncinr.tll .
Roycf' rtay&amp;on, ~t. Her rurd ( In atewood,
C'ltllf.) KS. Mort•op.
Ill, OU.lalld, Slanlry Royf'r, Easllf'rn
1111!\0l!l, catetltr· lhlrd

rllht-handed plkher.
:lll

MJnlli'Mollt
Tl'll:ll!l

'll tJ .531
25 2.5 .SI)O
~I '!If .flU
23 t9 .4U
21 '!!!. .1:!9
19 :1'! .:n:l

K~tnliiUI f'll)

t 'hh:•ro
California

Ill. Kaut!lis City , VtrnDn Walker.
.Jacluion\'Uif ( A.rlz . ) tiS, outUelder.
19, Montft'it.l , David Walnhou!Jif, \1' a,; hl nrton ~ate, rt~~:ht ·h IUided pltch('r.
to, Minresota, John Ard, Malllllet&gt;
(PalmPlto, Fla 1 .rc, rl,;ht-h andt'd
plkhrr,
U , Nc&gt;w Vorl!. Met s, David l"roctor,
A. ll l'fl County (luha, Kiln ) JC, rlghl·
hllflded pltc ht- r.

1.5 .70ti -

t
lt \i,
I :I

n• ,

14
n

\\'l'dnl.'!MII\Y '!I Re!SuUs
Oakll&amp;n d " · Stov. l'urk 3
~·~lit 4, Baltimore 3
Dlotrok I , Chl cMI{O ll
flf'vt-1 ~tnd .5, K11n!Wi City 4
Toronlo 7, Mllwau ~ \!
Minnesota 1, T~JUL'I I
Thunwlay'11 Games
Torpnlo (Nu ... t fl. I) ilt Bolton ( HU I'!il&amp;:4), 1 :3$ p.m .
TexlUi (Hou&amp;h -1-6) atChl caro / Pe rn~

~:!.

p~her

U. st. Louis, Br11d Duvall. VII'JI'inill
Tech, rill:hl·h anded pitcher .
U, MIIWllu Ire, Alexanll!r Fer nm d~t.
Pat·e I Miami) liS. rl~tht·handf'd pllc he.-.
25, Torpnlo, Ed SiiNfUC, St anford ,
lhlrd h&amp;.'M!mlln.
'!8, Detroit , Rlt!()ft Rrof{llll, Wa.t.erlown
(Conn. I HS, flr!il hill'ieman .

St•auk&gt; (Swift :1- 1) al Kan!Wi City
( I'OWtr I· I), K: :Jl) p .m .
Clll lllor .. a ( Finl ey :J.Ii) at Mllwuu}l&gt;t•
(,Jona. S.O), R: !l$11 m

Calendar

f'rldll.)' '~ G11meo~

Tor o.. o Ill Bo!llon, nt jtl!t

n,., rolt. nl~c

Bas !' ha.ll
A.mt:rlcl*f! League
:u p.ltl .
p.m
SeutliL' lit KUII!Wt flly.lk35 p.m .
[ ;a lllorlll a Itt Mllwau ket", ~:35 p.m.

New \ ' ork at DaiUmnro•, oi p;hl
Oakland at Mlnr..!flotll, night
Tc1u'" "t Ch i cago, niRtat
Callfornlaa.L Mll~~o·a~t k ct•, night
Sei&amp;IUc ut Kan~~&amp;Sl ' lty, night
NATIONAL LEAGUt;

Toronl~;~llt Bos lon, 7:
Tell liN 1d C hi c~o, ~ : 311

l\l' lll~nallA!aRUe

t:hl caii:O at Nt&gt;w Vork, 7: :15 p m
St l,.l.l o lt; ~tl Philadelphia. j : 35 p.m .
Monc..ld at PIUJ&gt;ibur«h. 7: 3S p .m .
RasW&gt;th.ll
NBA Playoffll
LA Lat.kt•ni Ill DaJI~~_,. , II p.m .
Bo:dnl

ELUI

W L PeL

Nt•w l'urk
t•llti!llu!ll: h
St. Loul!i
(lllugo

CB

:J.I 16 .GHO 30 21 .3811

Monlreiil

I I,;

tt t~ .a2t

1~

'!6 :U .i20
::3 :a! .-169

K

to

Phlb!.d t:lphlu

~

St. LoW!-~ ( trcm NeW \ 'ork VIUI

J(et!l( ) , John Erklui, Ullnols, riRtK ·Iu.lldt&gt;d

I) , 14:30 p. m.

l ' l ~&lt;'llt&gt;IIUid 1d

b~&amp;Heman .

17, aeo.·•tand (from SIUI Frand!W'o) ,
Ch IU"~ NRp, Unl!o't-nltyoiCo n ~dlcut,

W t'N I

Ol!lklan d

f;f'aUk:

St!ankt, Constantino Martinez,
of Tam,-, tlnll b~&amp;Wmll.n .

Unlu~ulty

W l Pn, GB
33 17 .Gfil 3~ 19 .6:'7
.. ,
't!l ~ .51:! 3~-,
25 'Z2 .:U'l 61't
~ '!3 .51(1
7h
t:J t9 .IH II
II -10 . U6 t'!l'1:

N( ¥t York
Cl"""lan d
Dt•troh
BUloiton
MIIWMu kPe
T&lt;1ro .. o
Ba.lllrnore

10~~

. ~1 7

13

fonU nPnWI A.merlca."!

\\'l"'ot

!&gt;lupt'r Ft•ltlherwelRfit Tick&gt;
New l'ork- GlnoC~Ionnhu, \I!; . Mlb
Grow

Lofl i\n ~~:el~
~ 1!0 .~:1 Hou !ton
'l7 '!~ .:i:JI
I'"
S an t ' r1LIId...._·o
'lli 'Z6 ,:;oo 4
Cln clnlllll I
U 2,. .UI 6~,
A.clancw
17 31 .:154 II
!&lt;iiUJDi ei{U
Ill 33 .353 ll 'tr
Wednt•!o.:h,y'!O R~ulls
('hlc·aan6, Cl ncl nmll l
San l&lt;' r•n CISL'() :t, Montn-al I
Alll,lli.JI 1·1, l' ltt!ilu I'RII 'l
Lo!o An ~·I~ .J, Nt&gt;w \ 'ttrk :1
Phlludclphlli 9, SIU1 IH c~o i
St . Loul11 3, HouHion !, 1.1 inn.

U~~:hl welll:ht"

New York- Edwl11 KoM.rlo .,.,. Ri ck)'
Lt·hmt&amp;rl
Mlddl ewel~~:ht"

Nt•w Yllrk - Rl t•hurd Bur1on vs Ti m
Knl,;ht
Ulympic'N
F~· e u e \lll e, N.f. U.!'i. F.asll"rn
01) Qtplt· Dux InK Trlallll
Hou fOton - U.S. \\' ~ ll· r n Olymplt•
fkudnf{Trlu.ls

Thu l"'dll,¥'!11 l.i11mes

BowUn~
lA~ Vell:~t.'i,

Nt•v - Sl40,010 l~ huwho at
Oouhl ~~ Cla.'i!•k
Go lf
Potoola(', Md. - $1100,000PCiA. Kt&gt;mJI'I'r

C'hh:a.t:o tSt•h lraldl :1·2) Ill No•w \ 'urk
(Coni' 1· DJ , 7:Ja p m .
!olt . IA uls ('J'Udor 1· 1) al Plllllld el
ph1a (C11. rn111n :l-!1) , '1 : :15 p m.

Toledo,
"'""

Ohio - St75.000 LI"GA ,J~mh·
Farr Tol{•do f'IILiiSic
"'
Suct·tor

Monti.• a! iHt•lllpn I 3) ul l"ilt.!hln:h
I Walk S-3) , 7: 35 p m .
Frlda..y',.. ('Jamt'!oi

MISI.. Pl ll)'ofll&gt;i
No Jl:ll11U'fo&gt; !tl'hl'duk'd
Tl'nli"
Pill'~- 1:1.9 million tTt•n t: h Opeu
'l'rlick a nd Fh•ld
F.uJI'en r, Ort&gt;. - NCAA. Tnuli 11nd F1cld
('h !UltpiOil'!hlp!o

Cblcua-o ut Ne-w \'ork, nl11:111
St. Lool!i ac Philadelphia, nll{hl
Monll'f' at at Pl11,i10 ~'!~:h . n lll:hl
A.llunw. at San Dl e«1), n l){llt
Clnc•lniiUI at Los 1\na-ch:s, nl~t
Hnu!ilon ttl SJUJ Frant'h&gt;C'o , ni,Rhl

Draft List
1\u... t•hllll Frt•o" I\J.:t•nl Drull

Transactions
I

L!~;t

t1rl'tt Kou11tl

Blu;;«'~llil

1, Slln Dl t•I(O, Andy Hl'ntos, U nh t-r~"t ll) o f

1\oi'tton - P.hte t•d pltt•hM' " 't'!i (:ardnN
on !ht l lkll0' dlsahlt&gt;d lhd; aC'IIvatrd
pttc her Z.ch ( 'row·b lrom ruwtatkct ol
dH• Inh•rnalloml LeMRtJI.' (i\i\A).
Oakland - OplklnL•d pl lt'ht'f' Todd
Burns to Tm:oma o r lht' Padlh foa... t
).('qltt'ti\AA); IICihat ed t'llll'herTr.rry
S«i&gt;l nh1tt·h ln•n lht• dl!lll hlt&gt;d II !it.
·
Phll;ldelphla- A.ctl~al I'd plh'h(lf Mlkr
Madelu: lrom the dli&lt;iahiMt ll&gt;~ t and !it•nt
him to Malf'l•olthf'lntcortiUioral Leagut•
IAA.i\) n n a rf'hahllltatlon M~;IKIImf'nl
Sl'aUit• S l~d f!'i' l""lll( l'fll fir!&lt;il:
hl4.&lt;;('man Stl'\'f BultxJnl; M'nl l'f'IINcr
Dt· n~ Po•H•II to Cai FJ' of lh«&gt; Padfk
( 'otti'il Le~ (i\1\,\)
Tornnlo- ActiVL!III'd lnft r ldc r llrtanny
IA't' from lhr dl~hlt'd lbt: opdo ... d
11\fl e ldr r i\ltx lntan&amp;t&gt; to Syntt'U!tl' ol thl'
lnt e rmllcuul lA&gt;ap•• (i\AA).
llal't kl-lh aU
Or tin del - Numt•d M11ll Guokll" t·Oat.t·h.

t: ~· nn~;\1111.- . rl~thl · h !andt•d

pllt•her
2, ( levc hUid . MW"k LL&gt;wli't, ll amilton
{Oh lo 1 JIS, :ohor t!&lt;it op.
3. ,\thlnt u, Sti'YI' Avpry , .Jnhn F .
KJ' I\J., tl,t (TH,y lnr , Mlda } H.". h•lt·IHttuk•d
p itl.' hl'f.
I, Ba.ltlmo.,-. , Grt'll:l( Obon. i\uhu m
Unlv••r.lilly , rlll:hl· h!Ulck&gt;d pltt•h t'f'
!1, Lo,. An ~tool~. 1\ill Rt•nt•. Cal Stat f'. l.n!i
An~ t'S. riKht.fundC'd plh•htt.
6, Tmla~; , Monty fo'~trii,.. OklllhPma
~ule , !ihorl.lilop
7. llou!ilon, Wllllr A.m;lt'y. Plainvlf'w
ITI'"IUI) HS, :&lt;ftorllliop.
II, Cal ifornia. .ltm i\h hott. Mlctu~~:an.
lt•ft ·hlUJtlt•t.l p lkht•r
9. {lllcuo t 'llhN, 1) Griffin,

NEW YORK (UP!) - As
expected the San· Diego Padres
se lected Andy Benes, a right handed pitcher from Universi~
of Evansvllle, first overall Wednesday at the major-league baseball free-agent draft.
The 6-foot-6, 230-pound Benes
ear ned a 16-3 record, striking out
188 batters in 146 innings. The
junior from Evansville, Ind .. had
13 complete games while allowing on ly 1.42 runs per game.
Tlle Cleveland Indians, picking
second, chose Mark Lewis, a
shortstop from Hamilton High
School in Ohio. Lewis batted .600
and belted 24 homers with 64
RBI.
"Usually clubs try to get the
bes t available player," said Bill
Murray, the director of Baseball
Operations for the Commission·
er's Office. "It's notllke basketball or football where you draft
for position."
Atlanta followed by picking
Steve Avery, a left-handed
pitcher from John F. Kennedy
High School in Taylor, Mich.
· Avery was 5-0 with an 0.40 ERA
hi s senior year He s truck ou t 81
batters in 35 innings.
Baltbnore took Gregg Olson, a
right -handed pitcher from Auburn Univers it y. and Los Angeles selected local product Bill
Bene, a right-handed pitc her,
lift h.
Texas named Monty Fariss, a
shortstop from Okla homa State;
Houston, Willie Ansley. a shortstop from Plainview High School
in Texas; and Ca lifornia chose
Jim Abbott, the one-armed
pitcher from Michigan who won
the Sullivan Award as the na·
l ion 's top ama teur athlete, with
t he No. 8 pick.
The Cubs chose Georgia Tech
shortstop Ty Gr iffin; the White
Sox took Ok lahoma Sta te third
baseman Robin ventura; Philadelphia, Pat Combs, a left handed pitcher from Baylor; and
Bosto n took Un iversi ty of Wis-

G~o:!a

TPch., ~Drt!ilop.
10. O.lc• ~tJ~:o \\'hilt• Sux, Rotlln Vf'ntura,
Okllthunut. Sl11.h•, third h!L.. •mun
II. l' hi1!Ui c lphi "- I' at fomhs, Bu.\/ lo r,

consln left-bander Tom Fischer metto, Fla.: the Mets named grabbed another rtght -handed
as the 12th pick .
right-hander David Proctor from pitcher, Brad Duvall from v irglPittsburgh named Austin Man- Allen County JC in lola, Kan .; St. nla Tech .
Milwaukee. ·picking 24th, took
ahan, a shortstop from Horizon Louis, receiving compensation
High School in Scottsdale, Ariz .; from the Yankees after the Jack Alexander Fernandez. a right Seat tie took University of Tampa Clark signing, picked John Er- hander from Pace High School in
f!rst baseman Constantino Mar- leks, a right-handed pitcher from Miami; Toronto selected Stantinez; San Francisco, using Cin· the University of Illinois; and ford third basema n Ed Sprague,
c Inna tl' s p lc k due to the Reds r~w~i=th=l=ts::;o:w:n:;s;;e;;te:;c:;t;;;io;n;·;S;t;.;Lo;;;u;is~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====;
signing Eddie Milner, picked
Royce Clayton, a shortstop from 1
St . Bernard High School In
Inglewood, Calif.
'Oakland named Eastern Illi·
nols catc her-third baseman Stanley Royer as the 16th player;
Clevela nd, select ing Instead of
San Francisco because the
Giants signed Brett Butler,
named University of Connecticut
right-ha nded pitcher Charles
Nagy; Kansas City went for
outfield help in Vernon Walker
from Jacksonville Hi gh Sc hool in
Arizona; and Montreal grabbed
right -hander David Wainhouse
from Washington State.
Last year's World Ser ies cham"Across from Holzer Medical Center"
pion Minnesota Twins took rightALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN JOINING
handed pitcher John Ard from
ARE URGED TO ATTEND•
Manatee Junior College in Pa l·

ATTN.: CLEVELAND BROWNS
FOOTBALL FANS!!
There will be meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Chapter of
the Cleveland Browns Backers
Club at 7:30 P.M. on Friday,
June 3rd in the Community
Room of the Ohio Valley
Bank, Jackson Pike Branch.

Model tOO by Realistic•

Save •200

1099°0
Reg .

Wellston group to
present card s~ow
The Wellston Ohillco Society
wi ll present a baseball card show
and collector's co nvention Monday, from 4 to 10 p.m. at St. Peter
and Paul Parish Hall in Wellston.
Baseball cards, comic books.
albums, coins and autographs
will be availa bl e a t the show .
Admission is 50 cents per person
or $1 per family. There will be
hourly door prizes.
For more information, call
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POMEIOf, OHIO

eT-tso by

33%3915
Off

Thursday. June 2, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Toledo course is of championship caliber

Kemper Open has
156 participants
POTOMAC, Md . (UPJ) Double-bogeys in consecutive
rounds on the tricky ninth hole of
the Tournament Players Club at
Avenel last year helped convince
two-time Kemper Open cham -'
pion Greg Norman to skip this
year S tournament.
However, 1987 Kemper Op~n
champion Tom Kite, seeking to
become the only golfer to win a
PGA Tour event each of the past
eight years, today begins defense
of his title.
A field of 156 golfers, vying for
the $144,000 first -place c heck, Is
entered for this year 's $800,000
Kemper Open. Formerly held at
the nearby Congressiona l Country Club, the Kemper will be
played at the 6,864-yard, par-71
TPC a t Avenel for the second
straight year.
Leading co ntenders to unseat
Kite as Kemper champion Include Chip Beck and Lanny
Wadkins, second and third, respectively, a mong 1988 money
winners, and Curtis Strange,
win ner of last week's Memorial
To u rname nt. No previo us
Kemper Open winner in the field
- including two-time champion
Craig Stadler, Fred Couples, Bill
Glasson, a nd John Mahaffey possesses a s tyleswell-suited to
the TPC at Avenel, which rewards accuracy and finesse, and
penalizes heavy-hitters.
"You:re not going to hear me
bad-mouth the golf course," Kite
sa id. "!Bull there's no question
we pla yed the golf course too
ea rly last year- I think even the
biggest proponents of this golf
course would agree to that.
Unfortunately, it puts the course
a nd the tournament and the
sponsor In the awkward position
of tryi ng to defend someth ing
that, given proper time, might
not need any defending."
Kite praised the course's
balance.
·'There are some holes that you
can attack - and you'd better
at tack them - but then at the
sa me time, th ere are some other
holes that you have to pla y
cau tious and very conservative.
So many of the golf cou rses we
play are re latively easy, and all
of a sudden you get to a golf
course where you have to play a
li ttle conservative, it throws a
wrench In a lot of people's
ga mes."
Kite has won at least one
tournament .every year since
1981, when he was tabbed the
To ur 's P layer of the Year. He ran
away with the 1987 Kemper title,
wim11ng by a tournament record ·
tying seven s tro kes over Howard
Twitty a nd Chris Perry.
Kite said he hopes to e_x tend the
s treak.
"I'm trying to do it every
week," Kite sa id. " If It continues, it co ntinues. Sooner or
later, it 's going to s top. I
certai nly want it to go a little
while longer."
The bespectacled Kite Is the
PGA's · third all-ti me leading
money winner with $3,686,029,
1

Charges against
Morganna dropped
BALTIMORE !UP! ) - The
sta te Wednesday postponed Indefinitely trespassing charges
aga inst Morganna Roberts, the
·'Kissing Bandit'' who las t month
jumped onto the playing fi eld and
planted a kiss on Orioles shortstop Ca l Rlpken Jr.
"I'm free. free, free a t last ,"
said Roberts, a busty profes·
s lona l dancer from Columbus,
Ohio "! felt I had two things
going for me, liberty and
justi ce."
Roberts; 35, was arrested May
2 after dashing on the fi eld during
a sold -out Orioles-Texas Rangers
ga me a nd k 1sslng Rlpken, the
21s t professional baseball player
to receive her prestigious
smooch.
The Memorial Stadi urn crowd
of 50,000 roared Its approval.
Baltimore was mired in a horrendous slump and Roberts said
she was merely trying to help the
team win.
' 'The nig ht I ran out to kiss Ca l
Rlpken was Fantastic Fans
Night and I sure am a baseball
fan ," said Roberts, part-owner of
a minor-league baseball team.
"There were leprechauns out
there, magicians were out there.
Ali i did Is what I'm known for .
"I just wanted to take some
pressure off the team and let
them know the fan s were behind
them lOOpercent," she added .

Georgetown ousted
By United Press International
Matt Hyde and John Patterson
each slammed two hOmers to
power Grand Canyon over Geor·
getown (Ky.) 15-5 in an elimination game of the NAIA World
Series. Grand Canyon next plays
Lewis-Clark State. St. Xavier
(Ill .) won 5-4 to elbnlnate Dalla~
Baptist. St. Xavier will meet
Oklahoma City Thursday .

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 5

trailing only Jack Nicklaus and
Tom Watson.
Kite has won 10 PGA Tour
events In his career, was the
Tour's 1981 leading money
winner, and won the Vardon
Trophy for leading the Tour In
scoring average In both 1981 and
1982.
However, Kite has struggled
this year, ranking 19th on the 1988
ear nings list with $241,021.
"It' s been a little bit of an
Inconsistent year." Kite said.
"I've played well at. times- very
well at times -but by and large
it's been a little bit rough."

54c. ........ .

TOLEDO, Ohio !UP!)- Tour·
nament directors trying t.o lm·
prove the poor sister bnageof the
$275,000 Jamie Farr Toledo Classic would be gratified to heardefending champion Jane Geddes .
''The word Is get ling a round
about this golf course," Geddes
said. "It's a championship
course and c hampion s hip
courses generally bring In championship players," Geddes said.
The Jamie Farr, which begins
Thursday, has had its share of
changes. ranging from the sli e of
the purse to the 6,221 -yard
course.
Tournament directors have
Increased prize money and
spiced up prelbninarles with a
celebrity · pro-am that inCludes
the tournament 's namesake. and

a ski ns game with the pros.
The Jamie Farr began In 1984
as a $175,000 event . General
c hairman William Lambeer said
tournament of!iclals )lope to
continue raising the prize.
"The purse Isn 't still at the
level Judd (Silverman) and I
would like It to be at ," Lambeer
said.
Geddes pointed out that the
Toledo event may suffer because
it lies between two major tournaments, the $325,000.Cornlng Classic and the $300,000 Rochester
Classic.
"I think that 's what Toledo has
suffered from, a kind of thing
that happens with new tournaments who are surrounded with
so many good tournament s In the
sum mer. that players have to

take breaks at certain Urnes."
Geddes said .
" Hopefully this year we can
get the field that Toledo deserves," she said. "From a player's standpoint. there are few
natural breaks In the schedule
and you have to take· advantage
of them to rest and relax,"
Geddes said.
"Whenever you have a new
tournament that sits In the
middle or lhe summer, well, It 's
tough to get a lot of the better
players In that tournament. " she
said.
To make the temptation strong
the tournament increased thIs
year's purse by $50,000. The
wi nner will get $41,250, compared with the $33,750 c heck
Geddes won las t year.

Other things have cha nged
besides the prize money .
Shortly after last year's event
a fire des troyed part of the
clubhouse. Rebuilding was dela yed and a pavilion tent will
serve as part of the food area.
Some cosmetic work was done
to the course and to a lake near
the c lubhouse. More water hazards will be added In the fal l.
Player s who return in 1989 will
be greeted with a new club housE'
and a new name on the course as
the layout will be called Slone
Oak Country Club .
The property was sold earlier
this spring bu t the new owners.
Cavalier Proper ties Corp.,
elected to retain the old na me
until the 1988 tournament is
completed.

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�Page- 6 - The Daily Sentinel

Franco extends
hitting streak to
20 straight games
By Len Hochberg
UPI Sports Wr iter
Clevela nd ' s Julio Franco has
fas hioned a 20-game hitting
streak , lo nges t in the ma jor
lea gu es this season, rather
quietly.
The India ns second baseman
extended his streak Wed nesday
night by smack ing a lead-off
homer th at propelled Cleveland a
5·4 triumph over the Kan sas City
Royals.
Although not ye t neari ng Joe
Di Ma ggio' s 56-game stre ak,
F ranco has become a bit edgy.
"Peo ple a re starting to ta lk
a bout (the s treak ), and th ere's
pressure ,' ' Fra nco sai d. "It's
get ting h_ard already, even
though I know a lot of players
have had longer streaks.
"l 'm gla d I got a hit my fi rs t
time up beca use I di dn ' t have to
think a bout it the res t of the
ga me."
Cory Snyder also clubbed a
solo home r , his lith, to help Scot t
Ba iles imp rove to 5·4. Bailes
allowed four runs on eight hits
over 7 1· 3 Innings . The left·
ha nder s truck ou t two and
walked two. Doug J ones ear ned
his 12th save.
"Talk to Jo nes, because I
stunk.'' Bailes said. " I didn' t
have good stuff. I struggled
every inn ing. '·
.Jones said he, too, had troubl e.
s pecifically wit h the wind . "It is
hard to pitc h whe n there's
wra ppers blowing a ll over the
p lace, " Jo nes sa id . "But
1catcher) Andy Al la nson helped
me concen tra te."
" It got hairy and wi ndy out
there the e nd of the ga me, "
Clevela nd Manager Doc Edwa rd s said. " Bu t Doug got the

Thursday, June 2, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

job done.''
F ranco's harrier came on a 3-2
pitc h from Floyd Bannister , 6·5.
Four of Franco'sfive hom ers this
season have been hit off Kansas
Ci t y pitching.
" The only two bad games I've
had this year (have been)
against Cleveland," Bannister
said.
·
Cleveland Incr eased its lead to
3-0 in the second . Snyder led off
by send ing a 1-0 pitch to left·
ce nter field for hi s 11th homer. A
wal k, a single and a sacrifice set
up Jay Bell's RBI groundou t.
Kansas .City got on the board in
the third , loa ding the bases with
none out on singles by Frank
White and J im E isenre lch, and
Bailes' fielding error. Willie
Wilson fouled out, but G~o rge
Brett walked to fo rce in a run.
Danny Tar ta buli grounded In to a
doubl e play to e nd the inning.
"We've lost a l ot of ballga mes
by one or two runs," Kansas City
Manager Jo hn Wat han sa id. " We
get close bu t no ciga r . It's no
fun."

Kansas City pulled to 3·2 in the
fift h on Bill Pecota 's RBI single.
Ron Kittle's RBI fielder 's choice
in the bottom of the inning made
the score 4-2.
The Royals closed to 4-3 in the
sixth on M.! ke Macfa r lane's sac·
rifice fly. The Indians res ponded
in their half with Bell's runscoring gr oundout.
Kansas Cit y got its last run on
Kevin Seltzer's RBI ground out in
the eight h.
E lsewhere in the American
Lea gu e, Minnesota drubbed
Texas 9·1, Detroit pounded Chi·
cago 9-3, Toronto bested Milwaukee 7-2, Oakland nipped New
York 4·3. and Sea ttle shaded
Baltimore 4-3.

Mahler,·Braves trip Pirates; Reds lose
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
If only Rick Mahler co uld pitc h
on one day '.s rest, the Braves
might become respectable. In
the las t 24 day s, Mahler has
accu mulated 41 perce nt of Allan·
ta 's total victories this season.
Wednesday night, he received
.more than ample s upport. Gerald Perry paced a 19-hU at tack
with five hits, helping Mahler to
his seventh straight victory, a
14-2 pounding of the Pittsburgh.
Pira tes. Atlanta improved to
17-31 with Dale Murphy contrl·
bu tlng his firstgane -wi nning RBI
of the season.
.
Mah ler earned one victory ou t
of the bu llpen du ring his streak,
and yielded 11 hi ts against the
Pira tes, while improvi ng to 7-4.
The right- hander .. capped lt.i s
recent run wi th his firs t complete
game this season, wa lking none
and striking out three.
"They came out swi ng-ing their
ba ts, a nd everyth ing they swung
at they hit. " Pirates fi r st base·
ma n Sid Bream 'sai d. "They hit it
hard , and they hit it In the holes ."
Atlanta scored six r uns in the
fifth to bu ild a 9-0 lead of! star ter
Brian Fis her, 4-2, who surrendered 12 hits. Ken Oberkfe ll
reached firs t on shorts top AI
Pedrique's error, and Perry
foil owed wit h his fourth ho!l]er of
th e season. Oberkfel! scored four
runs in th e game.
Murphy. who had four RB I.
walked and scored on double by
Dian J ames, who took th ird on
righ t field er R.J . Reynolds's
error. Ozzie Virgil hi t an infi eld
single, James holding at third.
Andres Thomas delivered a
sacrifice fly, and Ron Ga nt
drilled a two-run shot, his fourth
homer of the season.
Atlanta opened a2-0 lead in th e
fi rs t on Murphy 's two-run triple.
The 19 hits were the most against
Pit tsburgh since July 1, 1983
when St. Lou is registe red 22.
In other games, Chicago
tripped Cincinnat i 6-3, San Fra n·

cisco nipped Montreal 2·1, Los
Angeles clipped New York 4·3,
Philadelphia ou tlast.ed San Diego
9-7, and St. Louis edged Houston
3-2 in 13 innings.
In the American League, it
was : Oakland 4, New York 3;
Seattle 4. Bal timore 3; Det roit 9,
Chicago .3; Cl evela nd 5, Kansas
Cit y 4; Toronto 7; Milwaukee 2;
and Mi nnesota 7, Texas I.
Cubs 6, Reds 3
At Chicago, Greg Maddu x, 9·3,
gave up five hits in 8 1·3 innings,
and Ryne Sandberg hit two home
r un s to lead the Cubs to a
t hree·game sweep in Reds Ma n·
ager Pete Rose's return from a
30-day suspension. Goose Gossage got the fi na l two outs. Tom
Browning, 2-3, a llowed three
r uns in six inn ings.
Giants 2, Expos I
At Montreal, Will Clark br oke
up a no-hi tter with a seventhinning home run off F loyd
Youmans, 1·4. Clar k's 12th home
r un of the season tied th e score
1·1. Jeffrey Leonard doubled and
scored the winning run. Kelly
Downs, 3·5, left th e game after
six innings beca use of back
spasms. Craig Lefferts worked
three .innings fo r his fou rth save.
Dodge rs 4, Mets 3
At New York , Br ian Holton, the
seco nd of fou r Los Angeles
pitchers, a llowed one run on
three hits over four innings,
helping the Dodgers avert a
t hree-ga me sweep. Holton, 2-0,
ente red the ga me in the third
after starter Tim Belcher was
ejected for hitting Kevin Elster
with a pi tch. Sid Fernandez, 2-5,
las ted 6 2·3 innings, surrendering
fi ve hits and three runs.
Pbillles 9, Padres 7
At Philadel phia , pinch hi tter
Luis Aguayo broke a tie with a
two-run, two-out single in the
eighth inning, lifting the Phill!es
in a game delayed twice by rain.
Philadelphia had tied the score in
the eighth when Chr is James hit
his eighth hom e run of the
season. off r eliever Lance

Alicea doubled off Jeff Heathcoc k, 0-3, and Lake singled to
right fie ld. Steve Peters, 2·2,
pitched two Inn ings , a nd Todd
Worrell worked one lor his
league-leading 15th save.

McCullers, Q-4.
Ca r dinals 3, Astrm;2
At Houston, pinch hitter Steve
Lake singled home Lui s Alicea
from second base with two out in
t he 13th inning to lilt St. Louis.

':We've only had five (s tarter s ) score, bu t four is unus ual,"
said Boston Assistant Coac h
Jimmy Rod gers, who will take
over for K. C. Jones next yea r.
" Th en, again, this whole series
has been unusual. "
Johnson opened over time with
a layup to give Boston a 94·92
lead. Dantley sank a free throw
and converted a 3-poin t play that
put the Pistons up 96-94 with 2:52
rem a ining.
Thomas added two free throws
and a his final basket sent Detroit
up by 6 points. The Celtics
conver ted 2 of 12 shots in
overtim e.
That completed a night in

DOWNING CHILDS
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INSURANCE
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third quar ter. Bos ton led 54-40 at
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The rest of the game the Celt!cs
hit 25 percent.
"We had a lot of eas y shots. "
Bird said. "We just couldn't put
the bail in the hole . We've got to
start . ma king some baskets,
that 's wh at is hurting us.

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Swimming lessons to .be -offered
London Pool in Syracuse will be offer ing beginner alJd
advanced beginner swimming lessons starting on Mond ay .
Adva nced beginner class will star t at 10 a .m., followed by
beginner class at 11 a.m . Cost will be $12 per two-week course .
For Information, contact the pool at 992·9909, or Held! Cobb at
992-3402. ..

Six defend ant s were fi ned Wednesday night in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
They are Hollis Rupe, Cheshire, $16 and costs, speeding;
Mark A. Cas to, Pomeroy , $425 and costs and three days In jail,
driving while intoxicated; Rudye Sherfield, Dale Oty, Va., $425 ·
and costs and thre~ days in jail, driving while intoxicated;
Teresa Wise, Middleport, $100 and costs , assault; Ter ry
Michaels, Pomeroy, $100 a nd costs , destruction of property;
Johnny L. Evans, Racine, $10 and costs, disobeying a traffic
device; $25 and cos ts, ex pired operator's license, and $25 and
costs , open container.

Midwest Steel lays off eight

Tools, wiring said stolen
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank reported Wednesday that an
investigation is underway of a theft over the weekend of tools
and copper wiring from a construction company which had
equipmen t on Laurel Cliff Road. Some copper wiring has been
recovered and authorities are trying to determine If It Is part of
the wiring stolen from the contructlon company.

EMS has four calls Wednesday
p r~p

ch"Q".

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesd ay; Middleport at 12:26 p.m. to Broadway St. for C.P .
Williams to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 3: 25
p.m. transported Patricia Barrett from· an auto accident on
North Second Ave . to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
10:14 p.m. to Ball Run Road for Rober t Boynton who was treated
but not transported; Racine at 10:26 p.m. to Route 124 for
Franklin Lemley to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

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Cancer screening clinic June 22
Since only 12 patients can be accepted for an upcoming cancer
screening clinic, all Meigs residents !ntersted should make
appointments Immediately .
Norma Torres, nursing director of the Meigs County Health
Department , reports that the department will be conducting the
cancer screening clinic, paid for by levy funds, from 9:30 to
11:30 a.m. on Wednesday, June, 22. The clinic will be held in the
health department offices at the multi-purpose building,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
The American Cancer Society w!ll provide educational
materials and support during the clinic.
Appointments for the June 22 clinic will be on a first come,
first served basis with only the 12 persons to be acceepted. The
clinic will attempt to provide the pap smear, hemoccults,
urinalysis, height, weight and blood pressure data , and a
generalized health examination.
Dr. Zinea Dayo will be donating her services at the clinic and
Mrs . Phyllis Bearhs , women's health care technician, will be
coordinating services at the clinic.
Cancer is the second cause of death in Meigs County . EarlY
detection is stressed by the clinics. The seven warning signals of
cancer are change in bowel or bladder habits; a sore which does
not heal; unusual bleeding or discharge; thickening or lump in
breast or elsewhere; indigestion or difficulty In swallowing;
obvious change in wart or mole, and nagging cough or
hoarseness.

Retail sales down in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI ) Retail sales in Oh lo were down t3
percent In April; compared .with
March, but up 11 percent from
the corresponding month in 1987,
the Ohio Council of.Reta!l Mer·
chants said Wednesday.
The biggest drop from Ma rch
came in the northwestern and

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Impacts of locating the proposed
project within the lndentifled
prime farmland and floodplain
areas, (2) alternative project
sites, and (3) methods of avoid·
lng or reducing prime farmland
and floodplain Impacts and ha·
zards if no practicable alterna·
live to the proposed sites is
Identified.
Affected project areas are
described In detail by FmHA a ~
follows: along court Street (Sutton Township Road 125 ) from
County Road 30 to the north end
or Court Street ; along Kingsbury
Road (CountyRoad18) from U.S . .
Route 33 to about 1.5 miles
northwest; in Letart Falls and
along State Route 338, Letart
Township Road 95 (about 300
feet) and
Road 623

(about 0.75 ' miles); and along
West Shade Road 1Chester Town·
ship Road 156) from near Township Ro&lt;id 83 to about 1.1. miles
southeast.
For the next30days, Interested
parties may send comments to
Bernard T. Chupka, state direc·
tor, FmHA; Federal Building,
Room 507; 200 North High Street;
Columbus, Ohio, 43215. The tel~
phone number for the agency Is
614-469-5606.

Gorb achev took note of the
advances made In four summits,
telling Reagan , " Over the past
three years our two nations have
come to know each other better.
They have really taken a better
look in each others eyes and have
a keener sense of need to live
together on this beautiful planet
Ea rth."
Reagan, before the brief Kremlin farewell, bade goodbye to the
staff of the U.S. Embassy. The
Gorbachevs waved to the Rea·

gans as their limousine pu lled
away from the Kremlin for
Vnukovo airport.
Before making their remarks,
the two leaders and their wives
chatted amiably with the hel p of
Inter preters, gesturing , laughing
a nd touching e;~ch other occasionally to stress a point.
The first lady and Gorbachev 's
wife, Ralsa , displayed none of th e
chilly attitudes that marked
much of their ti me together. Mrs.
Gorbachev presented Mrs . Rea·
gan with a large, bouquet of red
flower s.
On Air Force One enroute to
London, White House chief of
staff Howard Baker said the
United States was disappointed
there was not more progress on
strategic arms, tel ling reporters,
"Of cou rse we had hoped we
could go fur ther than that . We
came out just a bout where lt wa s
predicted."
With no breakthroughs to re·
port on ar ms control or other
crucial areas in the superpower
relationship, Gorbachev and
Reagan both chose to stress th e
goodwill produced by the pres!·
dent 's 93-hou r stay in Moscow ,
his fi rst trip ever to the communist capital.
"1 hope you wi ll have. pleasant
memories" of the Moscow visit.
Gorbachev told the Reaga ns.
"When you return to America,
please conveny to the AmeriCa n
people bes• wishes from the

-

people of the Soviet Union."
Reaga n struck an even more
personal note . "Ou r time here
has a llowed us to know your art
tr eau res and your people ...
people wh o were willin g tQ share
with us th eir exper iences. their
fears, their hopes," he said.
In ll sentimental gesture, the
pres ident took his wife, Nancy,
on a br ief late-night vis it to the
floodlit Red Squar e Wednesday
after attending a perform ance of
the Bolshoi Ballet and dining at a
co untry d ach a wi t h the
Gorbachevs.
·
During the visit to Red Square,
Reagan was full of praise for the
Gorbachevs' hosp itality during
their2 ~ -hou r dinn er . He said the
Soviet leader a nd hi s wile had
been "very war m and hosp!ta·
ble." Asked to co mpare U.S. and
Soviet hospi tality, Mrs. Reagan
laughed and said , " They ar e
a bout the same. "
Once in Red Square, the
president and his wife were
cheered by a crowd of about 1,000
on lookers . The Reagans waved
and smiled in acknowledgment.
Reaga n a nd Gorbachev
wrapped up their fourth summit
Wednesday by putting into force
the Intermediate-range Nuclear
Forces Treat y, t he first arms
pact to eliminate an entire class
of nuclear missiles . Gorbac hev
hailed the treaty , sayin g, "The
era of nuclear di sar mament has
begun ."

House to concur in Senate version of bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio House of Representa·
tiw&gt;s was expected today to
concur In the strong Senate
version of a solid waste disposal
bill and count on Gov. Richard
Celeste to veto objectionable
sections.
Sponsors concerned with the
constitutionality of some tough

sanctions against out-of-state
garbage said they would prefer
that the governor cancel those
provisions rather than reopening
a fight with the Republican·
controlled Senate.
The House was to convene at 1
p.m.
"Our consensus at this point is
to concur lin Senate amend·

JU venile-----C_o_nt_In_u_ed_fr_om_pa_g_e_l~~­
former landfill remains a possl·
bll!ty the commissioners said.
Engineers are presently developIng preliminary plans for a
transfer station. Commissioner
Jones said he has heard nothing
negative from the engineers
regarding recently completed
soil testing at the landfill.
Jones, who represents the
commissioners on the District 18
Public Works Integrating Committee for the disbursement of
State Issue II funds, reported
briefly on a meeting of the
committee held last week In
Zanesville. Jones said although
suggestions for the committee
were made at last week's meet·
lng, no actions could be taken.
Another meeting has been scheduled for June 22 in Marietta, at
which time the Dis trlct 18 executive board will be formed from
members or the integrating
committee.
In other business, the commissioners appropriated $9,832.54
for the county's dog and kennel
fund for opera! Ions during the
last six months of the year.
A request from Jaymar Coal
Company to renew a permit to
use salt brine for dust and ice
control on property In Salisbury
Township ·was approved by the
commissioners. A public meet ing Is not necessary for a permit
renewal.
A meeting with state represen·
tat!ves of the Farmers Home
Administration Is to be held

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions- Cha·
rles Williams, Middleport;
Frank Throckmorton, Dayton;
Leona Hubbard, Syracuse.
Wednesday Discharges - Patricia Osbeck, James Freeman,
Lewis Taylor.

Friday, 10:30 a.m., at the local
FmHA office. Commissioner
Jones said he would be in
attendance.
Finally, Meigs County Prose·
cutlng Attorney Fred Crow III
presented a comprehensive pian
for the county community cor·
rect!ons program and the commissioners appointed the follow ·
lng members to the corrections
board: Howard Frank, Meigs
County sheriff; Gerald Rought ,
Pomeroy police chief; Sid Little,
Middleport police chief; I. Car·
son Crow, assistant prosecuting
attorney; Phil McKinley, adult
probation officer;' Arthur W.
Nease, manager of ~;lank One,
Pomeroy ; Teresa Tyson Drummer, legal secretary;
Hank Oeland, realtor; Jack
Williams and Larry Powell,
businessmen; Karen Wheeler,
homemakert George Nesselroad, A.E.P.·Oh!o Power employee; . and · David Koblentz,
commissioner. Koblentz was
named chairman of the local
committee.

Market report
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALI'8
May 28, IIIII!
C~TTLE PRICES: Feeder Steers:
(Good and Choice) 111111-100 IIIL 111.11-118.00;
500-710 lbe. :11.00.78.01; Feeder Helfen:
(Good and Choice) llllll-11811bo. 11.•112.00;

IMO-lVO lbo. M.GII-11.88; Feeder Bulla:
(Good and Choice) IJH.IOO lbo. IILG0-118.01;

IMO-lVO tho. 51.811-78.00: llack to Farm
Bulla: 420.00-788.01: Sla•cMer Bul.. :

(Over

lt!Ot lbo. ) H .Ge-.UO;

StaurJ!ler

Cow1: UtUitlea H.to-51.11: Cannen and
Cullen U. 7HII.II: Sprlnrer Cows: (By
&lt;he Head) llt.. .tllf.ot; Cow and Call
·Pain: (By ... \Jnlt) UI.Df.7SI.ot; Vello:
(Choloe and Prime) 64.oo-t:C.II: Baby
c ... ,., (By lhe Head) ll.lt-181.11: Baby
c... ,., (By the Pouadl Bt.Df.IIUO.
HOG PRICI!S: Hop : (,1, Barrow1 and
Glltsl 108-ut tbl. 10.00: Bllleber Sowo:
3Ut·IUI; B•cher Boars: ll.lt-31.00;
F'eeder Pip: (By tho Head) IO.OIU7.10;
&amp;BEEP PRICI!S: Old Blloep: 18.8f.
r'l.lf: F'eed..- Lambl: II.Ot-IUO; Gollo
by lbe Hood: Jt.Bf.M.ot.

ments), with the general a greement that th e governor will
remove (tjle objectionable provi ·
s!ons) ," Rep. Freder ick Deering, D·Monroeville, chief sponsor
of the bill, said la te Wednesday
after a series of day -long stra· ·
tegy sessions among the interested parties.
The Ohio Environm en tal P rotection Agency and th e office of
state Attorney General Anthony
Celebrezze Jr. believe a ban on
importing out-of-state waste a nd
a $75-a· ton import surcharge,
both inserted in the Se nate, are
unconstitutional.
Because the bill, passed by the
Senate las t week in its toug hened
form, contains an appropriation,
Celeste Is entitled to mak e ite m
vetoes without jeopardizin g the
rest of the bill. which provides fo r
long·range planning for la ndfills,
incinerators, recycling and other
trash disposal methods at the
local govermnent level.
Aides were in contact wi th the
governor Wednesday night to
secure his approval of the veto
arrangement. Celeste was In
washington attending a roundtable discussion of science and
technology Issues.
Some House Democra ts a re
concerned they would " look bad"
politically if they remove d the
tough sa nct ions.
"We wan t to take th e Senate
version and have the gove• nor

veto those items, " said Rep .'
Joseph Secrest, D-Senecav!lle,
who chaired a subcommittee tha t
wrote the House version. " We
don't wa nt to open it up for other
issues wi th the Se nate ."
If the Hou se were t o reject the
Senate version of the bill, it wou ld
go Into a joint co nference com,
mittee for negotiations.
"This will el im inate a lot of
extra legislative activit y tha t
could furth er stall the bill," said
Deering. " We thi nk it's a good
bill without those other provi·
sions. and it does exactly what we
wanted it to do whe n we sent it
over there .' '
The House al so was to co ncur
in Senate c-han(leS to a fireworks
regulation bill .
But no act ion was schedu led on
the other matter ho lding up
s ummer adjournment - a bill
regulatin g the tra nsportation of
hazardous mater ia ls on the high.
ways and railroa ds.
Th at bill was sent to a HouseSe nate conference committee
last week. but th e Senate has yet
to name it s co nferees .
Nevertheless. manu factur ing,
chemical and trucking industry
representatives met privately
Wednesday to work on lan guage
for notifyin g the govermn ent of
hazardous sh ipments - the only
issue hangi ng up pa ssage ol the
bill.

Announcements
Wilson reunion
The John Wilson reunion will
be held Saturday at the Syracuse
Municipal Park, beside the ten·
nis courts. The reun io n will start
at 12 noon.

\

REACT meetin g
Meigs Cou nt y R.E .A.C.T. will
hold their monthly m eeting F ri·
day evening. 7:30 p.m., at Pleas·
er' s Restaura nt in Pomeroy . All
members are urged to atten d.

Free entertainment
· Trustees to meet
Free musical entertainment
The Orange Tow nship Truswill be offered Sat urday night at tees wil l meet Monday, 7:30 p.m .,
the Shrine Pa rk In Racine . The in regular sessio n. at the home of _
Bend River Boys Band and the Dorothy Ca laway, clerk. .
Country Blend Band will per·
form. Music will start at 7:30 Sutton Trustees to meet
_
p.m. Refreshments will be sold.
Sutton Township Tr ustees will Bring lawn ch airs.
meet Monday, 7: 30 p.m., at the
Syracuse Municipal Building .

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•

continued
from
page 1
__
__
.....,:._;:....__

much more slowly than is re·
qulred by the real situation both
in our two countries a nd in the
whole wor ld ," he sai d.
Reagan - speaking In th e hall
decorated wit h a' fr ieze of St.
George slaying a dragon focu sed on ac complishmen ts he
saw made du rlrig the talks,
sayin g: "I would like to think
that our efforts durin g these past
few days have slayed a few
dragons and advanced the strug·
gle against the evils that threaten
mankind ."
Reaga n also as ked ·the Soviet
leader to c ar ry a personal
message to the Soviet people
from him and first lady Na ncy
Reagan .
''Tell them .- too, we will remember all of ou r days their
faces, the faces of hope, hope fo r
a new era In human history , an
era of peace between our nations
and peoples."

HOME

JIM C.O BB
MAIN ST.

•••

northeastern portions of the
state, according to a council
survey .
Among the eight sales categories in the survey, food for
consumption off premises
showed the greatest decline, the
council said.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
MOSCOW !UPI) - President
Reagan a nd Soviet leader Mlk·
hall Gorbachev ended their
fourth summit tod ay with hea rt·
felt farewel ls stressing hopes for
peace, but Gorbachev urged
Reagan to speed the expansion of
U.S.-Sovlet relations.
Reagan headed to London
shortly after 11 a.m. (3 a. m.
EDT) for an overnight stay and
meetings with Prime Minister
Margaret Thatc her and other
British officials.
A steady drizzle, the fi r st rain
since the summit began Sunday,
and a band pla ying American
military marches accompanied
the presiden tial departure at the
end of a visit that had its difficult
and touchy moments.
"Our dialogue has not been
eas y, but we mustered enough
realism and political will to
ove~rome obstacles and divert
the train of U.S. ·Soviet relations
from a dangerous track to a safer
one." Gorbachev said In a
farewell in the Kreml!n's .ornate
St. George's Hall.
Gorbachev said since the
outset of their relationship,
''We've come a long way. "
However, ·the Communis t
Party boss gently chided the
president for the sometimes
plodding pace toward normal
and more relaxed relations. The
dialogue has. "so far been moving

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Page 7

•
news briefs--. Reagan, Gorbachev complete fourth summit

Although Midwest Steel in Pomeroy laid off eight workers on
Friday, Plant Manager Mike Little says the posslb!Uty exists
tha t they could be called back "if work picks up."
Little says the lay offs of the eigh t workers "should be all
that's necessary' ' The layoffs came about, Little says, because
heavy work which had been done by Midwest Steel has moved to
Georgia, and the local company is now doing only lighter work.
Midwest Steel is a fabricating plant for materials used in
railroading and mining.
Little said Midwest Steel hopes to possibly pick up some
lighter work from other companies. Until then, the company
w!ll maintain its current level of 20 workers.

Pomeroy

YOUR.INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

~Local

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Six fined in Middleport court

Pistons within one game of NBA finals
BOSTON (UP!) - Is!ah Tho· fran chise moved fr om Fort
mas , dete rmined to escape his Wayne , Ind., in 1958, with a
wor st bas ketball nightma re, victory Friday nigh t at th e
fou nd som e peace of mind Si!verdome. Det roll leads the
Wednesday night.
series 3·2.
He scored 35 points to pace the
Detroit. which snapped a 21·
Det roit Pis tons to a 102-96 over- game los ing streak at the Bos ton
ti me victory over t~e Boston Garden in Game I, has won two of
Ce ltics in Game 5 of the Eas tern the three games in this series
Co nference final. The outcome pla yed on the parquet floor.
moved Det roil wit hin one victory Game 7, if necessary, is Sunday.
of its first a ppeara nce in theN BA at Boston Garden.
fi nals.
" It's all or nothing for us
Last yea r , Thomas commit ted F r iday night ," Det roil Coach
a n egregious sin, th rowing a bad Chu ck Daly said . " If we don' t win
pass th at Lar ry Bi rd intercepted It Friday, I don' t want to came
a nd allowe d the Celtics to win back Sunday.''
Ga me o of the confe rence final.
Adrian Dantley scored De·
HP made s ure things worked out trait' s first 4 points in overtime·
differen tly this time .
· a nd fini shed wi th 18 points. J oe
" If I hadn' t had the experie nce Dumars added 18 point s for the
of Ga me 5 la st year. we probably Pistons while Bill Laimbeer had
would not h ave won Ga me 5 this 17. Thomas was 14 of 30 from the
year.'' Thom as said. " I said If floor.
we're going to lose. I 'm going to
Only five players scored for the
go down shoo ting. I didn 't care if Ce!tics, who endured a dreadful
1 took 30 sho ts. I was either going shooting night, h ltting 38 percent .
Larry Bird had 27 poin ts (9 of25
to shoot us out of II or shoot us into
it ."
shooting) and 17 rebounds. Kevin
"Last year in Ga me 5 he made McHale added 26 points, Dennis
a boo-boo," said De t roi t 's John Johnson 23, Robert Parish 18 (5 of
Sal ley. " This year he did it 15 shOoting) and Fred Roberts 2.
Starting gua rd Danny A!nge
right. "
The Pis tons ca n advance to Went scoreless, playing 47 min·
the ir first NBA final since the utes and missing 6 shots.

Thursday, June 2, 1988

391 WIST MAIN STIIR
POMROY, OliO
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"••
•

••

�I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-S The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 2. 1988
•

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8AM EDT 6-3-68 :

Plains, Atlantic Coast areas drenched
By United Press International
Thunderstorms that dumped
heavy rain over the Plains and .
mid-Atlantic Coast lost some of
their punch, whlle the South and
desert Southwest braced for
another round of heat today.
National Weather Service fore caster Harry Gordon said
temperatures today wlll reach
the 90s from Mississippi across
Georgia and North Carolina and
over southi!entral and western
Texas. He said highs over the
desert Southwest will be In the
90s and reach to atxiut 110.
At 2 a.m. It was 78 degrees In
Phoenix and 70 in Atlanta .

Thunderstorms diminished In
size and strength Wednesday
evening across the Plains and
over the central Atlantic Coast,
but a small cluster of storms
doused Bat on Rouge. La .. with an
inch of rain In less than an hour.
·the 1\'WS said.
Rain showers and thunderstorms remained this morning
over the northern Rockies,
northwest Texas, Oklahoma,
southeast Kansas, southeast
LOuisiana, southwest Mississippi, Iowa, Nebraska, South
Dakota, southeastern North Dakota, western Minnesota, lower

One person has grand prize ticket
Saturday's grand prize will be

CLEVELAND iUPI) -There
was one grand prize winner in
Wednesday night 's $3 million
Super Lotto drawing, the Ohio
Lottery Commission said today The winner, who has one year
to 'surrender his ticket, will
receive 20 annuallnstaibnents of
$120,000, after federal taxes are
subtracted.
There were 104 people who had
five of the numbers, worth the
usual $1,000, while $75 goes to
each of 4,675 people with four of
the six numbers correct.

$3 million.

The winning numbers were 4,
19, 23, 28, 42 and 44. The winning
Kicker number was 267721.
There was one ticket that
matched all six digits of the
Kicker number. in order, which
is worth $100,000.
Five tickets had the first five
n4mbers, worth $5,000; 52 had
the first four, worth $1,000; 493
had the first three, worth $100;
and 4,919 had the first two, worth
$10.

William George Trail, apprehended In Meigs County on a
warrant from Parkersburg,
W.Va., waived extradition to
Parkersburg when he appeared
Tuesday in Meigs County Common Pleas Court. Trall was
remanded to the custody of the
Meigs County Sheriff until he was
picked up Tuesday evening by
Parkersburg authorities.
- In other common pleas court

matters, an action for declara tory judgment has been filed by
Pomeroy Village and Mayor
Richard Seyler against the Ohio
Ethics Commission, Columbus.
A notice of appeal has been
filed In the case of J. Marcus
Fultz, Pomeroy, against Elmer
Waltz, chief, factory and building
inspection.

No one hurt in
one car accident

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Co urt to Paul Kenneth Arthurs,
53, and Louise Hilda DeLong, 53,
both of Portland; Dale Ray
Little, 20, and Sherrl Rena
ijysell, 25, both of Middleport;
John William Leach, 26, and
Julie Lavina Hysell, 19, both of
Middleport; Andrew Michael
Weaks, 23, Crystal River, Fla.,
and Joy Lorraine Foster, 23,
Pomeroy; Anthony Brian Riffle,
21, and Laren Mae Wolfe, 22, both
of Racine.

Michigan, northeast Ohio, Pen·
nsylvanta, northern Virginia.
Maryland, New Jersey and southeast New England.
Rain fell along the coast of
Oregon.
In a six-hour period ending
early today, 2 Inches of rain fell
at Baton Rouge. 1 %Inches fell at
Wrightstown, N.J . and and more
than an Inch fell in Homestead,
Fla.
Central Texas was Inundated
with 12 Inches of rain Tuesday

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wednesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
704.
Ticket sales totaled $1,431,386,
with a payoff due of $308,751.50.
PICK-4
8211.
PICK -4 ticket sales totaled
$225,112, with a payoff due of
$101,315.
PICK·4 $1 straight bet pays
$3,900. PICK-4 $1 box bel pays
$325.
Super Lotio
4, 19, 23, 28, 42, 44.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,004,245.

.,

Long Bottom
news notes

•

.•
•
•

..•

Weather

Several senior cl tlzens of the
Long Bottom community joined
a group of Meigs Countians for a
trip by charterd bus to Springboro for a a matinee performance of "Hello Dolly" at the
LaComedla Dinner Theatre. In
the group were Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek, Garnet Hensley, Mary
Andrews, Esther Bukey, and
Eileen Swain.
Mary Andrews has returned
from Columbus where she went
to help care-for her grandchild·
ren who have been Ill.
Sympathy Is extended to the
family of the Rev. Glen Deeter
who died recently after a long
illness. His wife, Doris, a daugh·
ter and her. husband, Mr. and
Mrs . Earl Hunt and family,
Keno, survive.
Whitney and Wesley Larkins
have spent the past several days
with their grandparents, Mr. and
- Mrs. Dorsal Larkins.
Mike Bissell and children,
Pomeroy, were recent visitors of
Mrs. Ada Bissell and Kenneth.
Steve Holter, Bremen, Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Holter, Presque Isle,
are here, visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Holter and Judy.
The Rockland Pythlan Sisters
now occupy the former Hensley
store owned by Mrs. Mae
McPeek. Renovation and redecoration are being carried out by
Harlan Ballard, Stanley Wells,
Alta Ballard, Mrs. McPeek and
others.
Bill and Dorothy Thurston are
here for the summer after
spending the winter months In
Columbus.

•.

c·.:;.ISNOW
8RAIN
FRONTS: 11 Warm "
Ia

.'

::

South Central Ohio
~SHOWERS
Tonight, variable cloudiness
Cold
..
Occlude~ ;
with a chance of rain, a tow
Map shOws minimum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area'" forecast
around 60 and northeast winds 5
receive preCipitation indicated
·
UP I, :
to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40
percent . Friday, partly cloudy
TODAY'S WEATHER MAP- Showers and thunderslonns wUI
with a high of 70 to 75.
e&gt;:tend over the mld·Mlsslsslppl Valley. Showers will reach acr0118
Extended Forecast
northern New England. Rain wUJ · e&gt;:tend over the Pacific
Saturday through Monday
Northwest.
Mostly sunny days and clear
nights. Moderating tempera- r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
tures, with highs in the 70s over
the weekend and around 80 on
Monday. Nighttime lows will be
in the mid-40s to lower 50s
Saturday In the 50s Sunday and
Monday .

Static fW

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A surlll'lse birthday party was
held for Mrs. Mildred Hauber
Sunday.
A decorated cake inscribed
"Happy Birthday, Mildred" with
54 Ughted candles adorned the
cake. The group sang "Happy
Birthday", games were played
and prizes awarded to the
• winnerS.
Cake, ice cream. sandwiches,
chips and punch were served to
Mrs. Mary Bowles, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Bowles, Nicholas and
Jenny, Mrs. Delores Hawk and
Robbie, all of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs . Dave Dailey and Rae Lynn,
Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence . johnston and Jeremy,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sinclair; Mrs. Ora Sinclair, Sumner Road.
Bud Adams, Deanna Rock·
hold. Scott Hauber, Long Bottom, and the family of Mrs.
Hauber, Paul Hauber and Melody Roberts.

POMEROY

THE FOLKS AT BOB'S MARKET WOULD LIKE TO SHOW THEIR APPRECIATION TO THEIR
MANY WONDERFUL CUSTOMERS WITH A SALE OFAl.L SALES!

~

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SWEET &amp; JUICY TEXAS

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TOP SOIL (40#).................................2.19 ....:.........................11.99
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Mr. and Mrs. Earl Steiner of
Warren were weekend guests of
his mother, Mrs. Marie Steiner,
Middleport. The Stelners were
returning home from a trip to the
mountains of North Carolina .
Mrs. Steiner Is the supervisor of
the Cancer Society of Trumbull
County, and Mr. Steiner Is an
assistant professor at the college
In Big Rapids, Mich.

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54ft Prloe

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FLORIDA VINE RIPE

&amp; f'd'?

,ij~jJ ~ ?:d!,m
.·

TOMATOES
LB.

$199

BASKET

Very Good Selection To Choose From Including
• Begonias • Geraniums • Impatiens • Marigolds
• Petunias • Vegetable Plants • Etc.

s1.50
.........SALE PRICE.....99~
•
FULL FLAT..... ;.REG. $1 0.00 .......SALE PRICE .....$6.99

Reunion

OTHER POTIED

planned

REG. PACKS ....REG.

ACCORDINGLY

The sixth annual George Holter, Jr. family reunion will be
held Sunday at 1 p.m at the home
of Jim and Karen Holter Werry,
Morning Star area, Court Street
Road.
There will be a basket dinner
with barbecued chicken provldi!d. A shelter Is available In
the event of rain. Those attending
are asked to take family pictures, stories, and other items of
Interest for sharing the heritage
of the Holter family . The Morning Star-Nease Settlement area
is where George settled and he
and his wife, Anna Marla Ramsburg, are buried at the Gilmore
cemetery a long wl th numerous
other fam!ly members. .

ALL 18 PACK ITEMS
R.C., DIET RITE
UPPER TEN, DR. PEPPER
A &amp; W ROOT BEAR

99t.

12 Pack 12 Oz. Cans .........

Located Just 1/4 Mlle North
of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Food Stamps Accepted For
Purchase Of Bulk Garden Seed
and Vegetable Plants

~~ $5~

MIX OR
MATCH

ALL HANGING BASKETS
M.ANY VARIETIES TO
CHOOSE FROM
REG.

'11

88

$ 99

NOW

SALE IN EFFECT WHILE SUPPLIES LAST/

Open 7 Days A Week
8 a.m. - 9 p.m.

Seeks divorces

Monday - Saturday
9 a.m.· 9 p.m.
Sunday

Earl Wines, Middleport, and
Susan Wines, Middleport, have
tiled In Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court for a dissolution of
their marriage.
Granted a dissolution were
Rebecca A. Romine andLarryV .
twmlne.

Phone (304) 773-5721 or 773-5900

•

4-H news _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
THE OUTSIDERS 4-H Club has held two
meetings rece-ntly. The members present

discussed projects, plans for the summer,
noted.
Attending the party were Mr.
a campoul, and a fund raiser. - Timmy
and Mrs. Alfred Cozart, Mrs .
Members of the class at tending Trlpl€'11,
reporter.
Doris Rogers, Calvin B. Simp· the 45th reunion at the school
TilE STARLJTERS 4-H Clubmel on
son, Anna Tyston, David A. were Jean ·Carnahan Alkire, Mar
ch 19 at the home of Sharon Riffl e.
Brewer, Betty Hoback Brlckies , Racine; Anna Timmons Tipton, advlsor. Six members were ln attendance.
Virginia Bentz, Mildred Rysley , Columbus; Doris Hayman Rag· The group discussed community service
projects. tund raising projects and elected
Deibert Smith, Butah Nelgler, ers. Columbus: Kathryn Sellers tofficers.
Officers tor 1988 are: President.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pickens, Mr. Heater, Parkersburg, W. \Ia.; 'chad Cook; VIce President, Tim Lawson;
Sherry Wolfe; Treasurer, Gary
and Mrs. Otis McClintock, Mr. David Allen Brewer, Portland; Secretary,
Holter; Health Reporter, Jarod Spencer;
and Mrs. Paul Ervin.
Betty Hoback Brlckles', Ga!llpo- Safety Reporter, Adrla Frecker, and
Others joining the group were Us; Calvin B. Simpson, Seymour, Recreation Leaders, J a nel Spencer and
Marty Holter. Elizabeth Lawson,
Marilyn Brewer Beall, Janealea
Indiana ; Otis McClintock, Ra- reporter.
Wells, and Mrs. Bonnie Theiss. cine; Mildred Talbott ·cozart,
MEIGS COUNTY MARVE~ met
Pictures were taken and refresh· Youngstown, \llrginla Bentz, onmE
April 16 with 12 members and two
ments served. Greeting from Portland; Delbert Smith, Ra- advisors attending. JoEUen Cran e and
Davis gav e demonstrations.
Mrs. Elanor Turner Drlze, Am- cine; Mildred Rysley, Baltl· Bridget
Mernbers discussed the popcorn sale and
bridge, Pa. ; Mrs~ Doris Pickens . more, Md.; Bulah Marr Ne!gler, getting a speaker on drugs a.nd airoOOI.Jackson, and Mrs. Thelma Ours Racine, and Harry Pickens, Mandl Stleets, reporter.
KelUngerburger, Dublin, were Racine.
THE MEIGS COUNTY BETTER U-

Vl!STOCK DAlBY 4-H Club met on AprU

20 with 6 members and two advisors In,
attendan ce. The group made plans for the
upcoming year a_nd elected the following
officers: President, Btent Rose; Vice
President. Mike Parker; 5ecr~ry. Jerry
Smith: Treasurer, Jill Tay lor; News
Reporter, David Smith; Healt h Chair men,
Jeff Rose and Chuck Parker: · satety
Chair men, Nora Eastman and Paul
Smith; Recrmtlon Leaders, Laura East·
man and Joe Parker. The member s
v iewed a videotape on " Proper Milking
Procedures" . - David Smith, reporter.

THE COUNJ'RV CRri'I'ERS held two
meetings recently. Items of business
disc ussed at both meetings Included
popcorn sales, 4-H Camp, and a recreational trip. The proJect lesson covered part
of the First Aid project book. The group
pl~nned an outing to the Carnahans to see
the rabbit farm. - Jenny Varney,
reporter.
Welcome to KID CONNEctiON, a new
4-H Ch,!b;wht ch m~ in AprU at t~hom eof
Becky Baer, advisor. Debbie Grueser is
also an advisor. Twelve members at·

l

.

'

THE OOUNTRY BUMPKINS met recently at the home of SUI and Linda
Schultz. adviSors. Eleven member$ al·
tended and officers were elected. They
are: President. Ruby Burke: Vice Pres ident, Mike Hoffman; Secretary , Trlda
Burke; Treasurer, Jason Miller, News
Reporter, Christy Lambert. The members
discussed raising and structures or good
pigs. - Christy Lambert, reporter.

THE BLUE RmBON RIDERS met
recently at the home of Robert and
MarQyn Meier wUh slx members attend•
lng. A riding session was planned and the
membesr painted hors~ on sw~at,o;hirts.
Reports were given by Becky Meter a.nd
Ann Rlfn e. A riding session at the
fairgrounds was planned for the next
meeting, workJng on showmans hip. Shelly Metzger, feporter.

COPYRIGHT 1988 ·THE KROGER CO . tTEMS AND PRICES GOOO SUNDAY,
MAY 29 , THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1!188, IN WUPOI.IIMDHI•tOT 5I'Otn
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

MMfiTlllD t11M rouCT
E1ch of rheH 1dvenlsed ltemt It required to be teaclly 1\ailable for sale in aach
Krogar Store, e•cept 11 spe&lt;:ifically noted in thiJ ad . If we do run out of an
adwertiled item, wt!l wNI oHer you your choice of 1 comparable item. when· ave~able ,
reflecting the 11m1 savingt or 1 raincheek which w~! entitle vou to purcha~e the
ldwenilad item 11 fhe advertiled price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon Will

be accepted per itam purchased.

ggc

Treet
Luncheon Meat.12-oz.
(IN THE DAIRY CASE}
INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES KROGER
IN OIL OR WATER

~~:~~~
FROZEN

:~:::i~h

... ···~5 5c

•

,~ 89 c

~~i':kOats .. .,,~ 1°

~

9

$J9 9

Interstate · ·
French Fries ....... s-Ib.
FROZEN PEAS, CORN OR
Kroger Mixed
Vegetables ........ :.20-oz.

?~J:::=~~d."$299.

89C
~~t:•Mix
59 c
23C
~~~~:ir~~~- ....... 59 c
HUH

QUARTERS

::~::rine . .

COST CUTTER
Macaroni &amp;
Cheese
Dinner.' 1.2s-oz.

'

49
~::u::C~tree .~;$ 5

~~~n:!'c~::~ ,.,~ J19

69 C
99c
49 C

Kroger
Brown Sugar ...... 2-lb.

·

i::~eCJu:!.

l-lb.Pkg.

U.S. INSPECTED
Chicken Lag
b.
Bag
Quarters ....... 10-l
CASE SALE ALL VARIETIES

Valaydala 8-Paks
Lunchmaats s-oz. Ea.

ALL FLAVORS 12-0Z. CANS
Big K .
Soft Drinks ....... 12-Pak
FROZEN
Rannder's
Beat Patties ....... 5-lb.
6
DRUMSTICKS,
PRIME
PARTS 8- THIGHS, 6-WINGS
Pardue - .
Fryar Pack........... lb.

,

$J97

Cost Cutter
Egg Noodlas ........ 16-oz.

Country Style
Sliced Bacon

ggc
99c
.., 99 C

Kroger
10-X Sugar ........... 2-lb.

.

Kroger •
Orange Ju1ce ......46-oz
can ·

,3

~~~:~~ise 32&lt;,7 9C

......

Avondale
Pear Halves ........ 16-oz.

89C

FROZEN
Cost Cutter
Orange Juice ...... 12-oz

5399
5549

Kroger
Stick Bologna
Paund

.

$449

89C

l_

. I

1ended the meeting when offi cers wll!'re
Installed In a candl elight ceremony. Heath
Well gave a demonstration on the roods of
the four food groups, RefrEShment s were
served by the advisor. A work day ro pi ck
up litter was planned for the nex t meeting.
-Erin Krawsctyn, reporter.

Trust Kroger for Low
war house Prices •
Everyday!

Hauber birthday

CIIEVROLET-OLDSMOBU.E·
CADILLAC

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reunion class has gathering
Mrs. Jean Alkire, Racine,
hosted a gathering of members
and guests of the Racine High
School graduating class of 1943
following the annual alumni
banquet at Southern High School
Saturday evening.

night and ear)y Wednesday,
flooding homes In Comanche and
washing away a pre-fabriCated
metal building that housed a
craft company and a cabinet
shop, officials said.
No Injuries were reported but
"a lot" of cars stalled In the
floodwaters, sheriffs officials
said.
Sheriff' s dispatcher S1,1e
Ormsby said the rain stopped
early Wednesday and about 100
res !dents who were evacuated
from their homes because of
rising water were able to return.

Licences issued

No one was Injured in a one car
accident at 3:50p.m. Tuesday In
Sutton Township, on Morning
Star Road, near the Intersection
of Pine Grove Road, according to
the State Highway Patrol. Troop_e rs said Janet S. Fetty, 32,
Racine, lost control on a curve.
Her car went off the road,
strlkllng a fence. There was no
citation.

Thursday. June 2, 1988

'

•

�•

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 2, 1988

Pomeroy alumni meet, award scholarships
More than 400 Pomeroy High
School alumni and guests attended the 70th annual reunion of
the Pomeroy Alumn!Associatlon
held at the Meigs High School
cafeteria Saturday night.
Highlights of the reunion Ineluded the recognition of the Rev .
WaidRadford oftheciassof1916,
the oldest alumni attending, the
presentation of reunion classes,
and the a \Yarding of scholarships
of $400 each to Marjorie G.
Baker, 1988 Meigs graduate, and
Patrece Elaine Circle, graduate
of Southern High School.
Marjorie Is the daughter of
David P . and Susan L. Baker,
Middleport', and wllibeattending
Ohio University in the fail. She
plans to major in aero-astra
engineering. She ts. a member of
the National Honor Society at
Meigs, is a
Scholastic AllAmerican and Is listed In Who's
Who Among American High
School Students.
Patrece Circle will be attend·
ing Morehead·State University at
Morehead, Ky, where she wlll be
a physical therapy major. She is
a member of the National Honor
Society and has been active In ·
numerous school acttvtttes durtng her years at Southern High.
Joe Struble was master of
ceremonies for the banquet.
Traveling the farthest were Alice
Finlaw Cappel of Ontario; Wil·
ltam Carman, Fair Oaks, Calif. ;
Nelda Drenner Maday, Fort
Myers, Fla.; and Harry Ralph
Carman, Haughton, La.
Retirt ng president, April
Smith, thanked the officers and
committees for their work on the
reunion and presented Struble
with a gift for hts many years as
emcee.

Charles Gibbs , formersuperin·
tendent of Pomeroy schools, was
introduced and spoke briefly.
Thl' Rev. Mr . Radford had tile
invocation. Reunion classes recognized were 1923, 65th; 1928,
60th; 1933, 55th; 1938, 50th; 1943,
45th; 1948, 40th; 1953, 35th; 1958,
30th; 1963, 25th; and 1968, 20th.
Officers elected for 1989 were
Earlene Renshaw Bumgardner,
president; Charles Kitchen. vice
president; Yvonne Beal Young,
secretary-treasurer; and Judy
Wehrung Werry, assistant
· secretary-treasurer.
Named to the executive commtttee were Tom Smith, Dan
Morris, Mary Scott Wise, Robert
Burton. Advisory committee
members are Aprll Chasteen
Smith and Yvonne Beal Young.
Music for the dance which
followed the banquet was provtded by Omega Sound.
Returning Alumni
Alumni from out of the
county returning for this year's
reunion included:
·
Hortense Genhetmer Frankel,
Belpre, 1925; Marcella Fisher
Karnes, Ralston Russell, Colum·
bus; Margaret Hobstetter
Baker, Dayton, Mary Gloeckner
Horton, Connersville, Md., class
of 1928; Charles Winebrenner,
Marietta, Cecil Heilman, Can·
ton, class of 1929.
Dorothy Winebrenner Whaley,
Shade, class of 1931; Harlett
Ewing, Columbus, class of 1932;
Edith M. Bowen Witt, Chapel
Hilt, N. C.; Hobart Young,
Sidney; Mary Russell Dye, WllItam Henry Harrison Dye, Evanston, ll1.; Carrol H. McKenzie,
Geraldine Ables Scott, and Helen
Williamson Boster, Galllpolls,
class of 1933.

Willard Wilson, Ducnan Falls;
Otto Kennan , Orient, class of
1934; Charles Graber, Charles·
ton, s. c ., Chester Roush, Colum·
bus; Evelyn Roush Seelig, Wes·
tervtlle; class of 1935; Jeanne
Hines Leltwller and Edward
Leitwller, class of 1936.
Juanita Warner Gibbs, Circlevllle; Harry Ralph Carman,
Haughton, La .; Charles Richard
Crow, Warren; Nicholas V.
Raub, Sr., Elizabethtown, Ky.;
Don F . Leifheit, Springfield;
Betty Story McConnaughey, Cln·
ctnnatt; Alice Flnlaw Cappel,
Ontario, Canada; Helen Spencer
Rife, Cheshire; Helen Carmen
Spahr. Dayton; Milton Houda·
shell, Galitpolls; . Virginia Deval
Jobuke, Oregon, Ohio; Ruth
Brown Tate, Middleburg; Theda
Martin Clark. Lancaster; Roger
Quisenberry, Sarasota, Fla.;
Kimball Hite, Findlay; Jeanne
Wllltamson Hundley, Gahanna,
Don Mllier, Sunnyvale, Calif.;
Don Leifheit, Springfield, all of
the class of 1938.
Wilhelmina Maler, Wester·
ville; Grace Winebrenner Jar·
vts, Huntington, W.Va., class of
1939; Harold Heilman, Bellefon·
talne, class of 1940; Wllllam
Carman, Fair Oaks, Calif.; AI·
thea Relhel Strong, Wllkesville,
class of 1941; Earl Teaford,
Columbus, class of i942.
John Matson, John R. Stout,
Columbus, and Iva James Tunstull, Detroit, Mich., class of
1943; Eunice Hill Jones, Colum·
bus; John and Barbara Scholl
Weeks, The Plains, class of 1945;
Eleanor Smith Walter, Toledo,
class of 1946; Betty J. Hellman,
Columbus, class of 1947.
Gerald Custer, Irene Custer,
Chardon; Raymond E. Paulson.
Jeanne M. Paulsen. Annapolis,

The Office of Records has
released Rio Grande College and
Community College's Spring
Quarter 1987-88 honor roll. To
achieve honor roll status, students must earn a 3. 75 grade
point average (on a 4.00 scale)
during the quarter.
The following students from
Meigs County !"ere listed: Allen
G. Arnott, Middleport; Paula J.
Chancey, Pomeroy; Jennifer L.
Couch, Pomeroy; Belinda Deem,
Middleport; Patricia J. Duffy,
Pomery; Sharon R. Edmonds,
Rutland; . Jeffrey L. Fields,

Pomeroy; Gina D. Follrod,
Pomeroy; Cheryl D. Halley,
Middleport; Matthew S. Harris,
Racine; Lisa M. Henderson,
Guysville; Toni M. Hudson,
Racine; Rebecca J. Johnston,
Langsville; Charlotte M. Lyons,
Racine; Karen S. Lyons, Racine;
Nancy L. Morrissey, Pomeroy;
Mary E. O'Brien, Pomeroy; Lori
K. Ritchie, Coolville; Carol A.
Smith, Middleport; Linda V.
Smith, Langsvtlle; Terrie A.
Starcher, Racine; Ann E. VanMatre, Pomeroy; and Paula S.
Winebrenner. Syracuse.

992-2156

W. Va.; Evelyn Flck Young,
Sidney; Nelda Drenner Maday,
Fort Myers, Fla.; Frances
Roush Weber, Columbus; June
Whaley Van Vranken, Norfolk,
Va.; June UnroeAdams, GalltpoUs, Bruce Scholl, Chtlilcoth'e,
class of 1948.
Llly Glrolamt Strickland,
Woodvllie, class of 1951; Charles
W. Hamm, Indianapolis, Ind.;
Geroge R. Buckley, Zanesvilie;
Ted Scott, Wesiand, Mich. Sue
Struble Cramer, Marton; Barbara Wehrung Martin, Chicago,
111; Patty Cline Hall, Marietta;
Sally Bartels Ayhers, Athens;
Barbara Hatfield Scarberry,
Henderson, W. Va. ; Don
Drenner, Pipersville, Pa.;
Mildred Stockton Bernard, Cool·
vtile; Betty Qualls Peguese,
Ecorse, Mich .. class of 1953.
Ray Shasteen, Gaithersburg,
Md.; Bill Hysell, Columbus; Bill
Qualls, Galltpolis; Earlene Ren·
shaw Bumgerdner, Mason, W.
Va.; Bob Roberts, Uniontown;
Bob Eastman, Gallipolis; David
Boney, Little Hocking; Bob Hill,

10°/o DISCOUNT

TO THOSE 60 AND OVER
ON ALL PRESCRIPTIONS.

FRIDAY

HARRISONVILLE -;- Scipio

SWISHER LOHSE

day at Pagevllle Township
Township
Buttdtng. Trustees , 6 p.m. Fri-

Pharmacy
l(enneth McCullough. A.Ptl.

Oldest Florist
.,

ctlarln FHffte. A.Ph

AoNIId Haning. R Ph
Mon lhru Sat 8 00 1&gt;. M. 10 9 P .M.

352 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Oh.
PH. 992-2644

.

Sunday 1 O·OO A.M. to 4 :00PM .
PF!ESCRIPTIONS

'·

PH . 992 -2955
Friendly Serv•ce

E Mnin

"Often Imitated - Never
Duplicated"

Pomeroy, Oh.
till 9

2-4 CAPSULES
REG. S3.99

S1 6l4 .0Z.
JOHNSON'S
AND

JOHNSON'S

SWABS
•

-

\

FS-81AVE
23cc

$359

FS·86

25.4cc

95

Flexsl:l!el Comfort and Quality

Outstanding Recliner Values
Recliners with more quality
and comfort than you thought
possible at this price, with
Flexsteel quality throughout.
Frames are kiln-dried hardwood,
doubie·dowelled, comer blocks
glued and screwed. Flexsteel's
iiletime·warranted seat spring.

S29900
Sleek bentwood arms add a fresh
look to this recliner wrth rts
smart channel tufting. Choose
recliner or rocker-recliner.

,,"

$344°0

(;

"·-··

VILLAGE PHARMACY

614-992-6614

271 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6669

308 EAST MAIN

with the participants. Anyone 18
a nd under is eltgtbie to

POMEROY

600 EAST
MAIN ST.
'

.

'

POMEROY

FLEXSTEEC
FIE U'IIOI 5 IE W FlJIIT\R
FORGET ••• FATHER'S DAY JUNE 19, 1988

EMPIRE OF
POMEROY
992-3307

108 WEST MAIN STIEEI
•

.

Generous arms and deep tufting
underscore this chair's picture
of elegant comlort. Choose
recliner or rocker-recliner.

NOW THRU 6·11-88
BRING IN ANY OlD
(DOESN'T HAVE TO RUN) AND WE'LL
TAKE S40.00 OFF UST PRICE OF ANY BRa CUllY, SIZE
FS-81AVE AND UP. NO OTHER DISCOUN1S wnH TIIS OFFER.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

•

r~p;a;rt;tc;tpa;t;e;.;;;;;;;;;;;;!!;;;;;;~;~;;;;;.-;;~--~---~--~-~~-----~iiiiii~~~~:i.~~~
.•

EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band
Boosters emergency meeting
7:30 p.m. Friday at high school;
this will replace regular
meeting.

•

Farewell
POMEROY - A fareweil get·
together wlil he held at 6 p.m.
Sunday at the Sacred Heart
Church Auditorium In Pqmeroy
honoring Msg. Anthony Glanna·
more and Sister Jan who have
been transferred to the Ironton
&lt;lrea. Parishioners and friends
ll"re Invited . Light refreshments
will be served.

•

'

t .

. .•.

.

POMEROY, OHIO

¥ani sale

Rutland Church of God Is
'p&lt;&gt;ns•orillg a yard sale on Friday
the church. Everyone

.

."&gt; -

PlNASONIC
MICROWAVE

~:-r

.... , .

.;:.

-AT, PRICES 'YOU',~tAN . ,.r·
I

GIBSON
WASHER

,

••

GIBSON

GIBSON
DRYER

SELF-CLEAN RANGE

r· 'i --

•. . .,.,. ,

~

l.,~

$249

$97

'
"it'

No-Frost

Refrigerator·

:..,..

Freezer

.

Modot ID2ZPI

$999

$

.'

~:&gt;;

'

POMEROY - Junior Olympics track participants to meet at
the Meigs High School track at 10
a'.m. Saturday. Registration will ·
tie taken for participation In the
district meet on June 11 and a
practice session will be held.
Coaches will be there to work

' Committees for guest day to be
held onJune21 were named when
t~e Jaymar Ladles Golf Tuesday
U.eague met the Jaymar Course
WJth Elizabeth Lohse, president,
in charge.
; Norma Custer and Velma Rue
.,Yere named to serve as cochairmen on guest day. Winners
are 18 holes of play were Sue
Arnold, low gross; Julie Hysell.
low net; Elizabeth Lohse, low
!lutts, and Mary Bowen, chip-tnl)ote. President Lohse is request·
!ng ail women of the group to
report at the club house no later
!)Jan 8:30 a.m. on Tuesdays In
preparation for tee off time at
S:45a.m.
t
"

•

BEATS OUR PRICE~! t

Water permits
RRACINE - Quantity water
user permits for Racine restdents needing additonal water
for such things as filling swim·
mtng pools, watering and
gardens and other uses wljere
larger amounts of water are
needed are now available ..Appil·
c_atlon and payment for such
permits are to be made at the
billing facility in the Racine
Department Store.

WHIRLPOOL
WASHER &amp; DRYER

RCA 19"
COLOR TV .

RCA
CAMCORDER

SHARP 25'
TV

•.

•
,,,,

249
RCA VHS Video Record
'

$597
SAMSUNG
VCR

---------

WIRELESS

~

::-...--.-:--'1

• Infrared Wireless Remote Control
eHQ Picture Enhancement
e 4 Event 14 day Timer
a 1 1 0 channel Cable

'•

$199

$369

SHARP
V.C.R.

AIR
CONDITIONERS

WIRELESS REMOTE
CONTROL

FROM

$239

.'

S189

•
•
•
•

&lt;

•

••
•

~

r

'·"
''
•

IIOIISE IMRFUIWINC?
CUAJI UP Willi
ClASSIID ADS

\

.. .

'.

RCA
COLOR TV

•

_.1-.:-1--=-"~

•

~!Jh:.

$199

$969

Lady golfers
results given

$344°0

SAVE S4ooo

992·2094

#

Simple lines say it ail: this
chair Is designed lor comfort
and relaxation. Choose
recliner or rocker-recliner.

I

$389 95

TIMEX
WATCHES

$252

Track reglstrat Ion

ALL BRUSHCUnERS

OFF

150 COUNT

CHEVROLET •OLDSMOBILE •CADILLAC

RACINE - Piano recital Sun·
day, 2 p.m. by students of June
Buchanan at. Racine First Bap·
t!st ' Church. Refreshments
served foilowlng program.

•

FREE WITH

25°/o

Q-TIP

SUNDAY

The Thicker It Is, the Better STIHL Cuts lt. It's
Stihl's Way of Helping You Over Pow~r the
Underbrush. Try A Super Brush Cutter Today!

GOGGLES AND
SHOULDER STRAP

CREST

TARTAR CONTROL
TOOTHPASTE

JIM COBB

Community calendar

SEE US TODAY ••••

Meigs County' 1

NE PER DAY
REDUCING
PLAN

OUR PARTS DEPARTMENT
IS NOW OPEN ON
SATURD,AJS fR·O·M
8 A M 12 p M fOR
JOUR CONVENIENCE

•OHIO WELFARE
•PAID
•COMPENSATION
•P.C.S.
•GENERAL RELIEF
•MEDIMET
•BOILERMAKERS
•AD·VACARE
•UNITED MINE W.ORIERS

FLORIST

·~illage Pharmacy
June Sa~in

Gaillpo!ls; Woodrow Wilcox,
Over 300 alummni arid guests Rife. prest"dent; Rl c hard Rtfe. sanna Kitchen, West Jefferson; sandusky
; Charles and Thelma
Patty
Young
Joetta
Eskew.
Newark;
Dreama
·
vice
president;
attended the 59th annual Rutland
Riggs , Roseville; Vernon Alvis,
High Schooi•Aiumint Associaton Clark, secretary, and Dollie Blankenship , Proctorville ;
banquet held . Saturday evening LRucas dTurner, trdeassu rebr. The ~tp~~~. g~~~~~·P~t;h~!~Y J~I, ~raerk~~:a~~~~n:~.~s~. : ~~t~~
in the Rutland Civic Center.
utian area gar en c1u s pro·
and Kathy Jeffers. Albany ·, Mar·
ided
II ers for the dini ng Delevan, N. Y.; Gary and Becky
Robert Smith gave the wei·
ow
v
S
tables.
Drenner. Palatka , Fla.; Mary tha Balton Agler. Columbus;
come and presided at the bust·
Attending
from
out
of
the
Fallon,
Patriot;
Dennis
SchilLurene
Kennedy,
Galena
;
am
ness session. Reports were given
county
were
AncU
Cross,
Jackllng,
Crestwood,
Ky.
;
Leroy
Hicks,
Vinton;
Thomas
Brewer.
by Carolyn McKnight Dalley ,
son; Eleanor Williams, Circle· Kessinger, West Melbourne, Springfield; Dave Rice, Whee·
secretary, and Charlotte Harris
ville;
Dean Will, Columbus; Fla .; Robert-A. Brown, Sr.,Betty lersburg; Gene Grate, St. Cha·
Harper, treasurer. Devotions
Glenna
Griffith, Atlanta, Ga.; Harris, both Columbus; Charles rles, Mo.; Daniel Gillenwater.
were given by the Rev . Herbert
W. Va.; Robert E.
D
I
DI"ll • Bo w11 ng Green. Perry, Holland; Naomi Schoon· Tornado,
Grate.
ar ene
Smt'th, SheibyviUe, Ky.·, Pam
Hamdan·
over,
Granville;
Dana
Biuton,
K
P
W
She
efi
ld
Smith explained the condition
n e • Delma' Vermlliton; Beulah Smith, Cln· and Frank Colwell, Vinton ·, Me·
Ny.;I H· ·II Columbus·
of the roof on the civic center and
oe
yse
•
•
!anie Dudding, Shade·, Opal
the association voted to gtve $800 Nelson Mcconnelsville· Danny cinnati·, Max Bolen, Pataskala;
'
Lebanon. ' Dwight Hazel Sheppherd, Columbus; Ro· Dyer, Bidwell·, M.ike Johnson,
to the center for needed repairs. Holliday
'
"'bra Pool,
Upper
Brown. st. Albans.' w. va.; naid Siders, Manchester, Mo.; Ewt'ngton·,
S d k R'""'b
M
Mid
A collection of $575.92 was taken
1 eyer.
Kathryn
Shultz,
Shirley
Merril1,
Karen
Meadows.
Bidwell;
an
us
y;
o
er
·
to add to the scholarship fund.
both
of
Columbus;
John
Clark,
Gladys
Amsbary,
Gallipolis;
Mi·
dietown;
Carl
Bower.
ChtlllJim Thomas . explained the ·
Jackson; Dee Easter, Galena; chaei Borgan, Pataskala; Marie cothe, and Dinah Gryszka.
scholarship fund operations and
announced the winners of four
James
Lanning,Nitro,
Fa frborn;
Da. lt~P~h~ll~il~p~s,;L;a;n;ca;s;te;r;;;C;a;r;oi;P;a;c;k;,;A;;th;e;ns;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
nlel Dawson,
W. Va.;
$200 scholarships as Marilyn
Marvin
Davis,
Akron;
Vesta
Haddox, Athens High School;
Kimberly Noelle Pool, Upper Canode, Senecav1lle; June Hy·
sell, Grove City; Bob and IWsem- ·
.
Sandusky High School; Charlotte
ary
Pope,
Newark;
John
and
A. Hart, Meigs High School, and
Janet Lee Stiltner, Kyger Creek Jenea Dyke, Fairborn; P. W.
Will, Charleston, W. Va.; Vivian
High School.
Roil call by classes taken by
Ga.; Burnie
Jones,
Knapp,Armuchee,
Springfield;
Harry ,
Carolyn McKnight Dailey indl·
Plummer,
Carroll;
Irene
Tom,
cated that 206 alumni were
present and eight teachers were
Athens; Kahle Vance, .Waverly;
Bill Buck, Point Pleasant, W.
•
••
•
•
recognized. Door prizes donated
Va.; Donna Ford, Marion; John
by businesses were awarded and
the group sang the Alma Mater
Stanley, Glouster; Blanche Ed:
wards, Cheshire; William
with Catherine Colweli SheneBrown, Venice, Fla.; Reva
field accompanying. The Full
Woodruff, Columbus; Ruth
Tilt Band provided music for
QMQUALITY
Bower, Chiilicpt!!e; Edwin Neldancing.
SERVICE
MilTS
son, Goldie Nelson, Wooster;
Classes holding reunions were
Ronald and Marjorie Rife, AI·
1928, four present; 1933, 11
bany; Bill Coy, The Plains;
present; 1948, 14 present; 1953,
Maxine Dyer, Bidwell: Gary
four present; 1968, 28 present.
Officers for next year are Ronnie Saxton, North Lewisburg; Ro·

WE FILL PRESCRIPTONS AND
DO THE BILLING FOR THE
FOLLOWING.....

Cut Brush Down To Size
•

Rutland Alumni meet, announce scholarships~~~~~~~...,

Columbus, class of 1954.
Florence Bearhs Wood, Cool·
vtlle; John Strickland, Wood·
ville; Robert F . Parker, Marietta; Anna Icenhower Alloway,
Belpre; Dorrence Hess, Clinton;
Fay Thomas DeWees, Grove
City; Margaret Clark Shreve,
Cincinnati; Wilma Ohlinger
Acord, Hebron; Dale Arnold,
Albany; Rachel Roush Gorman,
Columbus; Robert Will, San
Antonio, Texas, class of 1958.
Gene Romine, Pickerington,
and Sheila Strauss Eastman,
Gallipolis, class of 1959; Chuck
Kitchen, Mason, W. Va., class of
1960; Mike Roberts, Akron, class
of 1961; John L. Shasteen, Jack· r--__2~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~:.____
son; Jean Casto Hilton, Parkers·
burg, W. Va. , class of 1962.
Doug Moore, Sandy London
Moore, Tom White, Charleston,
W. Va.; Dick Well, Fredericktown; James W. Gilbert; Geroge
Starcher, West Columbia, W.
Va.; Jane Douglas Dagett,
Mount Vernon; Charles Diehl
Rutherford, Lawrenceburg,
Ind.; Ramona Compton, Athens,
class of 1963.
Karen Miller Gilbert, Springfield; Fred Sisson, Gallop, class
of 1964; Pam Crew Napper,
Pataskla; class of 1966; Jewell
Price Neeley, Columbus, class of
1967; Beverly Beaver Smith,
Marcellus, Mich.; Charles D.
Hysell, Ashley; Marla Grueser
Byllicki, North Cant!)n; Carla
Norton King, Mason, W. Va.;
Cathy Fultz Telzrotw, Hudson;
William R. and Sandra K. Fetty,
The Plains; Loring Vaughan,
Silver Peake, Nev.; Sharon
Young Roush, Mason; Linda
Owens Sigman, Coolvlile, class
of 1968.

Honor roll announced at RGC-CC:;~th~i~~:~~e~~~~~~~.~:~~;.

Ohio

'"'

1105

•

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. June 2, 1988

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

announce the relocation of their

3·11-tfn

Open House
Sunday, the fifth of .rune
Nineteen hundred and eighty-eight
12 noon to three o'clock In the afternoon
441 General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio

GIRLS' POLY-COnON

CO-ORDINATE
GROUP
.
(PINK &amp; YELLOW)

7-14
Blouses ·
Skirts
Pants

SALE

$6 75 -$16 25

SAFARI T SHIRTS

'21.99

S11.2S
S16.SO

REG.

19.95

SALE

$688

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 7
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

'\

•Tiller / Cultivator
•Easy to Operate
•Makes

Garden &amp; Yard
Care a Snap!

PH.

742-2463

6/ 31 / 1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16·86·1fn

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

3-30-87 tin

GEARY

8mm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VHS TAPE

BODY SHOP

Itt Ul
old Mo.;..
&amp; 51idtl ovor IO oosy
YHS.

CLRSSIFIED RDS

are

8

II 711

Real Estate General

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO .
1198·88
An Ordinance to Establish
the Position and Salary of In come Tax Adminiatrator.
Be it ordained by the

992-2156

Middleport as follow a:

Sec. I. That there i1 hereby
created the position of in come tax edminiltrator in
the Villogo of Middleport.
Sec. II. That the Income
Tax Administrator shall be
r81ponsible for the administration and collectton of income tax in the Village of
Middleport 11 outlined in

• •

Ord. 1196·88.
Soc:. Ill . Thot tho oolo'Y of

the Income Tax Adminiltr•

to• ohell be t 1200 per
month.

Sec . IV. Thot thil ordinMco

io h81oby decl•od to be on

om•voncv In order thot ••
qui'omento of Ord. 1196·88

can be Implemented in a timely m.,n• .
Sec . V. This Ordinance
thall take effect and be in
force from and after May 23.

1988.

Paned the 23rd doy of
Moy. 1988.
Att..t : Jon P. Buck
Cle•k

Dewey M. Horton

Protident of Council

16) 2, 9

•

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

Saturday, June 4, 1988
10 A.M.
Located at 725 Chestnut Str,eet.
Middleport, OhiO

Council of tho Village of

last

utn Thundo1v

night, May 26.
I ha VI lost 2 cats ift lhl
past• WHk, 0nt I found
diad, lhl - obove has
not bttn found. In less
than a wHk six cats in

lhl Monkey Run area
hare tither liNn found
diad "' missing. If
havt any
call 992·3633,
Owens.

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: Duncan Fife table
and 6 chairs, recliner, 4 barrel back chairs, 2 old rocking
chairs, oak bookcase on large castors, Victorian mirror,
dental cabinet, desk, Garman dental cabinet field type.
Victorian chest, 8 gun cabinet, same as new Kenmore
washer &amp; dryer, Unlco freezer, 2 air eondilioriers, 2 refrig·
orators, eleclric raasi8B, queen size bad, ta&lt;e table cloths,
mixeno, pots Md pans, Noratake dinnerware, figurines,
sleeping bag, molal desk, painting, ponable sewing ma·
chine, shovels. fishing gear, musical intruments trombone
and trumpet, pluo much more miscallaneous.
GUNS: Old BB guns, Colt model 191 1 A1 45 Acp. Govt.,
Rem. Model 121 Fieldmastor Acp . Cal. 22, Rem. Model 11·
20gauge, Rem. Model11-16 gauge aportman. Rem. Model
11·12 gauge sportman Polychoke, Rem. Model740 30-06
Spftd, Mauser model 98. 280 Rem. ·Custom, Mauser Model
98 7x57 MM Custom, High Standard Cal. 22 (Spon'a King),
FN. 300 Weatherby CuaiDm, Walther P. 38, Browning BT.
9&amp;-12 gauge, Rem. Mod. 11 Banet 20 gauge, Rem. Mod.
11- Barrol16 gauge, 25 Cal. Plltot asia.
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON, 7'13-5785
OWNER: PATSY G. INGELS
r"""'' Cuh or Oltck wllh 1.0.
Not rtoponolllfo IDr
0&lt; lou ol property.
Llconood &amp; Boncltd In Ohio oncl WV

-

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS 8o BATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMOOELING

•VINYL SIOING 1!. ROOFING
•META~ BUILOINGS
HOUSING &amp; APT . PROJECTS

~ n· rF

l\lri9

-nil

"""*''*.....

AUCOONEEII'S NOTE: a . NIInt/ ...prlm•fl""
CCIIerc:tliorn tJI hM' MM huuttd, Dt. C+df . . .. n... ~~ .,. ;, nk»

loans Subject
To Qualification
or Borrower

Non·Aolundable
AppHcation·Fae Applies

,-.

S3$

SESSIONS

CA~P;~.R 949-2414

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Jack Jordan has sold his farm and will offer the farm
equipment at public auction ..Directions: State At.
33 to Athens County Road 80 (2 miles south of
Shade just before Pratt's Fork). Signs will be
posted.
1988 Ford F250 Heavy 'A T. 4 wh. dr.. 460 w/ 51h wheel tn
bed (ball hitch). 30.000 orig m11es in excellent condition
!Reserve), Ford truck bed /mer, Ford 4600 tractor, 51 hp
1578 hrs.); Leyland 270 tractor (80 hp) w/ AII ied 60 loader.
ford 532 Balel', Ford 16" 4 boll om plow. 6' Ford stump
jump'er bush hog 6' bush ho&amp; 3 pt. round bale mover, Ford 3
pt. posl au ger. Ford 501 sickle bar 7' mower, Ford 4 row
planter adjustable widths (fi berglass fertilizer boxes). Ford 3
pt. ground driven wheel hay rak ~ Massey Fertguson sem1·
mount mower, Gahl 560 hay wagon. 16' Redi·Haul Dawson
gooseneck flat hydrauliC dump tra1ler w/ electnc hoist, 2
wheel m11orary trailer for water tank. 3 pt. boom pole. Case
manure spreader, New Idea manure spreader (excelle.nt).
gravity wagon, 6' HO swovel blade, lnternatinal3 pt. PTO Silo
blower &amp; pipe, New Idea flale chopper. sprmgtooth 3 pt. cui·
tivalor. 6' 3 pt. dose. 3 pt. single bo11om plow, 5th wheel stock
trailer.
MISCELLANEOUS: 250 gal. fuel tan~ hydrauloc wood spli11er
w/2 way cylinder. large tratler type wood splitter, 3 hp rotctiller, 2 wheel pu Ill awn cart, suitcase weights, hydraulic cao
hoist in floor center pos1. stock rims for Ford 'A truck. Ford
roll bar. tires, hydrauloc lih arms &amp; brackers for Ford 6000.8
full rolls/some partial rolls barbed wioe, load binder. log
chains, comealon&amp; cham hoost, chain binder. pipe wrench,
pipe vose, 3-5' turn buckles, implement seat, SS table, SS 2
bay sink on stand, Sealed bulk m11 tan~ delaval mtlk com·
pressor, metal gates, cream cans. squorrel cage blow~r,
wood/coal stov.e. metal f1le cabinet, si!'weral Home lntenor
wall arrangements and few household items.
GUNS: Bolt action, lube fed 22·New Haven, Conn., 12 gauge
singl.e shot.
ANTIQUE SURREY seats two, open, new shaHs·. seals reu·
pholsiered, repainted in A·1 condition.
TERMS: Cash or check w/ pos~ive I. D. N~t responsbiletor
loss or modents. lunch woll be available. NOTE: All
equipment is in excellent condition. t11ctors and truck
top quality·tield rudy.
OWNER: Jack Jordan
AUCTIONEER: Pat Sheridan
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
PH.: 592-4310

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Buainesa ~ ·

WANT TO IUT WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FREE EITIMAIESfar any of these serviltt call

614-742·2617

DUSKY ST., SUUUSI

Bttwun 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or Leave Messaae

992-7611 or

2- 15:'' 88-tfn

PLUMBING

&amp;. HEATING

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S760
SALES

&amp;

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410

SERVICE

We Cany Fisking Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
.. .,. - IUSINESS-n!ON£
16141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10·8·tfc

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

NOW HIRING . Your area.
$13,650 to S69.480. IMME-

DIATE openings . Cell 1 ·

1315)733·6062

••t •F 2758.

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major&amp;. Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

HELPING TOU RICOVIR
TOUR INVESTMENT
SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY
Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone 949.;!2[12

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUIIiMN

"ard

Announcemenls
4

We Service All Makes
1122188/lfn

8 kittens, e wkl old. Mo•ttv
malae.. Mo1tly orange. Call614-446-1822.

.......G.alliiJons····· ·····

Giveaway - Old Sink. First hou•
on Rt. 218 on right. Call

&amp; Vicinity
............. ·-·. -----------------

Young mete Beagle mix. Wonderful wi1h child;en, Call 814-

2&amp;3. 9-6. COI'a-MIII Road be-

61 4-446·127 4.
44&amp;-4479.

Give away Kitten• to good
home. Call 614-448-3454.
Good letl·aver yard sale items to
give awtiy. Mu1t 18ke all. Call
Free puppies . 6 wks. old, Cell

614-446·4477.

Yard sale. Thurs. &amp; Fri. June
t\l'&lt;lllan Rodnerr&amp; oora . Clothing,

lots houtiiiW•e•. good elec.
cook ltow. 1m11111 amount of
horN dr.wing equip. Evan's.
Yard Sale. June 2. 3, &amp;. 4 . 5
hmily. Ollldren &amp; infant clothing, ltroller, home interior, 23
Wett Main. Cheahire. Beside of
carrv01..1t.

JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and Sell Used

Cars
ALBANY AREA

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE

614-698-7157

s.a.•aa.t mo.

v.w.

Collectors Items, Clowns
Action Toys. Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 AM . to 4 P .M.
Mon. thru Fri. or bv
Appointment

Calll614l 992 - 7204
Whol•ai• &amp; Relcil
'
5·19·' 88-1 mo.

LUBE-OIL-FILTER
With 4 Qls. Oil $1495
Brakes, Muffler, Air
Condition Checked
and Refi II,
Minor Repairs.

PARTS
BEETLE-BUS
RABBIT

NEWELL'S
SUNOCO

NEW AND USED
PARTS
742-2315

CHESTER, OH I 0

5· 2· 1mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage

985·3350

5·25·1 mo.

PuppiM to give away. Cell

June 1,2, &amp; 3 . 160 Ch'illicothe
Rd . 16 cu . ft. refrigerator,
hou~~thold items, adult &amp; children clothing. Bed1pr8ed1 &amp;
drapes.
Y•r d S a I• S atufthrr. June 4, 9
AM-7 Furntture. wick•. van;.
ties, medicine cabinet, light
fbcturft, wooden shefva1. wallpeper &amp; much mont. Flrathou•
on Roctley Cora Road.

l,-n-do_o_r,..v-.,"'d-s"'ot..-Fr-;..s..:..-.-.J-u-ne
3 4 10 AM 3 PM R0 dn

Antique Yard Sale-June 3 &amp; 4.
9-8. Patriot Rd ., Patriot, Ohio.

Whirlpool dryer.
2 Famltv garage •le-SaturdiV.
June 4 . 9 to 5. 327 LeGrande
Blvd
·
7 Family-At. 36-Below Eu::on
stlition at Rodney. Bet.,-kids·
womens-mens clothes, storm
doon &amp; windowt, misc., used
Kenmore w•sher. Thul'li ., Fri., &amp;
Set.

614-246-9657.

WANTED -Good f•m home for 2
yr. old female German SIHtph ..d . Call 614-446·3539.

2· 1

vr. old

mala Dalmatians.

Cal! 614·256·6021 .

Cute kitten• to giveaway. 2
mol~

2 femole. 814-992·3989.

Old upright piano. PI IV• good .

Cal! 814·992·3100.

2 Chow dogs. Good with
children. 7 months old. 1 black
female. 1 red male. Phone

614·992·7507 or 614-992· Garage Sale: Friday, June 3 B.
6600.
. Sat., June 4. First hou .. onlittle
To good home, 6 Collie-type
puppie~ . 8 weeks old, Call

614-985·4291 .

One famaleCelicocat 1 yr. old. 1

male kitten, 8 wks. old. Give to
good homo. 614-992·7382.
Long Heir 6 wks. old kitteil1. 5
Blega. 1 white. 814-992-6886.

Black Labrador Retriev&amp;r. AKC
Registered. 5 ye.,s otd. female,
very gentle end loving. 614667·3462 afiM 6:00p.m.

Kyger Ro.-d, ju1t off R1 . 7.
Antiques, dolls, Mon Rose
china. 1 set of 1 8" plows. 3
point hitch, clothing. salt &amp;
pepper,, dishel. mlec .
Garage Sale: Furntture. guns.
linens, d .. hel. clothing, &amp; lots
mite. 641 Third A.... Thursday&amp;
Friday.
Yard Sale: Olau\Wre, clothes,
lots ml1c. Thurs. S. Fri. 9-4.
2128 Chatham Ave.
Friday, June 3rd . Rain dat~
Mon .. June 8th. 9 :00 AM-5:00
PM. Clothing-allliaa-littleboy•
&amp; girla. teen1. S. mens &amp;

women1. giUI•re, nicll-nack•.
Orch•d Hill Rd ., 4th houl8 on
right after Sho-ring turn off.

6 Lost and Found
FOUNO : Biack with white,
Shaggv Dog. Mid. size. Ne•
cfty Nmit1 on old 160. Hed coli•.

No !.0 . Call 614-44&amp;-3073.

Vll"cf Sale: June 1 -4 . 8 AM-5

PM. IJ4 mile put N.G .H.S ., SR.

160.

Huge Moving Sale: Entire
small applianCM, curtain•. rugs,
dlshel, clothing. Iota of houaehold and decor. itam1, boys bike.
mac111me hanger• . June 3. 4. 5.
9 -8 . Keystone Rd . -Vinton
(across from VInton Elem .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

e

9

Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446·3872

and newer u1ed Clll'l. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, '1 911 Ea1tern
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 814-448-

2282.

Complete houaahold• of furniture &amp; antique•. Also wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swain's Fumiture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive.

014-446·3159.

Want 10 bl4y: Used furniture end
. •ntique1. Will buy entire household furni1hing. Marlin Wede·
me¥•'· 614-246-5152.
Junk Car• with or wtthout
motor1. Call larry Uvely -814-

388·9303.

Buying furniture and eppllan(!81
by tha piece or by the lot. Fair
prices. Call 81..,"46-3158.
Want to buy uaed MobileHomes.
Call 614-446·0176.
WANTED: Good Ull!ld Exercise

Bike. Cal/614·245·6026 ofler 6

PM.

Buylnq d•ity gold, ailwr coins,
rings , Jewelry, st•ling ware, old
coins. l•ge currency. Top prices. Ed Burqtt Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614-

992·3478.

1956 Wlhama year book. Cell

614-99 2·5400.

Employmenl
Serv1t:1:s

PH. 949-2969
halerf•

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AIIO TrtiiiiiiUiOI
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

6-17-ttc

Located Halfway Between At. 7 8o Baahan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 .7 Financing On
Yardman
Service On All Makes
Wt Hanor MC/Disc/Visa
4-18·'18 1fn

NEED
CALL

B&amp;C I.DRILLING
CO.
H. IH!Jit, Ow111r
Rt. 1, Box 74-A, liply, W. Va. 25271

Call Collect (3041 372-4331
Most Wells Dl'illed In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install Ill Sarvice All Types
Water Pumps

YaJd Sa\e-6-3, 4 . 725 Pine-Rio
Granda Est .. Rio Grandlt. Ohio

9·1

· ·
Grange
Hall. •

'

fill

3 Famify CWage Sele-Fri. &amp;. Sat.
1Vt mile out Rt . 141 . Golden
draperies.
Four Famitv-1145 Second Aw .•
Galllpoll•. SaturdiV. June 4.
8-5 . Baby -children, men &amp;
wom.,·a clothing, hou ..hold
item•. misc. furniture, couch,
twin bed, dinette let, desk &amp;
ch1lr, $55 each. Come ••tv.
Yard Sale: Wed., Thurs .• &amp; Fri.
North Clay St., VInton. A little of

everything!

Juna 3rd, FJidev only, 1il 7 PM.
Giganic 5 family. Lots ot everything. Rt . 7 . Addison .
Large G••ge Sele:Thun., Fri ..
Radios, mowers, clothing, misc.
Morg~n Cent.r Rd., JA ·mite off
180. Blue r•nc:t. 1tv1e honw on
right.
4 Famly Yd. Sale:Fridey, June
3rd. 3 miles out 141 -Johnlane
residence.

Friday, lrd. Centenary Townhou•. Drapea . bedspread,
1haet1. 1ilverware. Mikau
dishes, home interior. oil lamp.
T.V.
Yard Sale:Misc:. June 4 ; 8 ·4 .
Adrian Aw. off Fourth Ava ..
clo" to pool.
June 3 &amp; • .

e Ctl ,

h . chest
freet.at . bunt. beds, lnfhrtable
boat w / elec. motor&amp; ace. . crib,
20" boy1 BMX bicycle. misc .
hou•hokf ttem1 . 1 mi. north of
Addison. Rt . 7.

JOBS .
t16.040 · t59.230/ y&lt;. Now

hiring. Your •r•. 8015-8871000. ext . A-10189 for cur*tt

Fednltlot.

EARN u much aa 1100.00
W.oldy, •-mbiVIng Pr....,.ll
In your horne. Send
•ctcha•d. •mD«t tnwlo(JI to:

_,f

Sat.· 160 acrou from Bidwell
School. hems: furniture. baby
clothec, mattress &amp; spring•.
roll-away bed.
3 Family Yard Sal•lotl of
e•cellent dothing-chlldntns a.
aduhs. Friday &amp; Saturday, June
3rd &amp; 4th, Starting at 11 AM,
Friday &amp; 9 AM, SaturdiV - Rain
or Shine. 1 mila out Ingalls Road
off SR

218.

Y.,d Sai•June 3 &amp; 4. Frf. S. Sat.
3 femHI• . 671 Jay Oriw . Lots af
chUdren'a clean cloth11. IQUIIre
dance 1ho11.
Yllf'd Sei•Sit ., June 4th. 8 :00.
87 O'lillioothe Rd. Canning
inf.nt girl clothn (some like
newl. toy1. misc.

j••·

Yard Sal~1 1 3 Second A\lit . 9 -2 .
June 3-4. Kids clothes 0·6.
stereo equipment. misc.
Two famitv·Saturday. June 4th.
cea, furniture, clotheaand more.

Yard Sai•June 3. 3 mll81 &amp; 8
tentt. out 141 .-•t Centwlary.
Clothin~, 1et of Pfaltz:graff
di1hes. Jlt'W8rly, furnfture, IM~~~~~n
moWIItf, chain hoist. chain .-w.
3500N winch. vw thing, Iron
kettle. g till 5.
Yard Sai~June ltd. &amp;. 4th.
Practically giving sway : an·
tiquea. babV Items. houtehold
item•. end anythingelae. Largest
Sal.e wer. 481 Jackson Pika.
Look for •an with beloons.
Yard S~e-Fri . &amp; Sat. on BidwellRodney R:d., ju1t off Rt. 36. 9
AM-4 PM.

·······po·m(lrov...... ·....
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Oon'1 mi11 this th'es family yard
sale. Mi11• Junion .. d Men' s
clothing in e•ceflent oondtkln
Medicine cabinet. end table.
sho-. a few Avon bot1t.. and
other miscell.,eous items. Good
priCIIi. Saturday, June 4 a1 773
Grant St .. Middflt:lort, 9 a.m. to 4
p.m.

.aoe.

Huntington, W.Va. 21704.

June 3 .4 Aend¥ Boston• on SR
681 , 4 'h: mil• from T.P. tOWIIrd
Reedlvlle. 9 · 6. Antique bed and
dre1 .... wood stow. dolls, organ, 1ir hockey, mattres• and
box springa. cloth•. toy 1 and
mile.

tao.

3 Famlfy-23 Pine St., June 2. 3,
&amp; 4. New • used IIWld ,.me
clothes lin 7 ·8 dr•• clothe•,
jeans, • wedding dr•••wMJ...IIIp-

5 femlli11 . June 2 and 3. 9e.m.
IHI 4p.m. 162 Rutland St ..
Middleport. Oh . Children•
clothel, mite . Items.

Help Wonted

Pllr•on · e~eperlenotd In PfunDing
.,d/ or He•lng •d el, condltlonlng. Must h.,. •
10

.._t
In .-r.

,.. . •parlll'tCI. ~

son bM:wHn -'ght •nd ftw,
Melc-,1. Md from efaht end

12 8Muol"¥o. Carlor' o 'Plum!&gt;

lng and Htg.• Inc.. Fourth and
Plno, OolllpaiL Dlllo 4111131. on
Equol Em""""".,t Opportunity
emlkMr. C.n_.a Plu'*ng
..d Htg., In c. will not -ml·

-tsk¥n-

.......... -towoe

Of

becoppll-1
. . . of "''
•c-. color, r .. lglon.
natloMI orgln ttnc•ry or ••·

u""' ctr...
Conni•J

&amp; family ~rd Ale. Fri . .,.. d S1t.
June 3Md 4 . 9 -4each .t.y. lots
shoes lnew
•IN 9 of extrl nla.lun6or lin clothing.
med., &amp; 10 m.t.. pu,...l,
Acrou from For.at Run Church
sleeks-lin 18 &amp; 20. bloull•· . on County Rd. 30.
tin 40 • 42. a... 3 motion
exarcillng blke. logg• treadmill I t~mity . 1541 Sycamore St ..
table&amp; chatrl.l hldHiwaybld. Middleport:. June 1.2.3. lnf.,tl
dilhol. children A mona clo-. to llrge
2 wounw d., . . • much R.tn c.noel1. hou•hold ltema.

..

•II•.

mo ...

10·7

Y.,d Sele:Frldov. June 3 . 8:30.
517 M..noHa. 4 Family . 441-

9tl27.

2 LMga yard 111•3 , . . . on

llnll lllloldn Rd. Porto..,lb,
loll of lldl• clothel·t 4.
Aloo:I87V VW Rebbllt. Thu,..,
"''" • Sol . • . ,

June 2nd .,d 3rd. 118 S . Third
St .. Mlddl....... Flt-ot folo .,..,,
nice things:.
3 f11mlly . Ju,. 2. 3. 4. Smoll
•PphnCII, tDt1 of giMiwr~~~re,
mile. tiiJma •nd freebl11 . 303
st., Pomeroy.

w_..

TriM• behind Jetra Carryout.
Pomeroy. June 1tt, 2nd. 3rd.
Lut doy .1 . ... bog. 10;0().
I:OD. Wood bur-. quit. on·

lnclutting furnitunt.

:

June 2nd and 3rd. R•cine,
YeUow Bush Rd. 6 famil i• It
Ubb't' Fis.,ers and Carolyri. '
Adam•. Doors, weed eater. rug
shampooer, hedge trimmer. poot
'tllble, clott.s and mi.IC.
Having huge yard and basement

sale on June 2nd end 3rd in
Mineraville, St. Rt. 124 at •
Grindty horne. Hava manv h:em•
to 1811. Home Interior. crehs, ·
bicycle. curtains , clothing.
flov.Mr pots and many other
items.

June 2 and 3. Bridgeman St.,
Syracuse . Furn it ure , baby
clothes , curtains, bookl. 9·4.
Glrege sale. Thur. Fri. June 2
end 3. Furnitu~. b•h¥ item ... ·

children• clothing. miiC .
New Lima Rd. Rutland.

OH ~

•

2 family . MIY 1 and 2 . 277-..
Uncoln St. C8 tower. f.-.s.
spreads cun~ins . Childrena .-nd
adult clothing, Knlclc knacks.
furniture, tool• .

Sale•tAobinsonsCI ..,. .... E•lt
Second St .. Pomeroy. 0 . June
3~ 8. 9a .m.·4p.m . Uncl~mecl dry..
cleaning. Mntals, unifor"'- end'"
tolflo81s .
..
4 famity yard Mia June 2.3.4.:
91.m.-5p.m. Turn 11 Memorv ·
Garden4 Cemetery . First houat
on tsft. Bllh¥ bad. ladi• bicycle.
dr•• form. lot1 af mite.

Large 4 family •Ia N.w UrN
Rd., appro•, 1 mile from Herr ~ .

1onville.

Furnitulll ,

Keystone ~

wheela, tires. bikM, dothing. ~
_d_is_,..
_·bo
_ oks
_._
et_c._J_u_n•,..2.:.:·.:.3:..
.4,..:

Ytrd Ala at the Ron Beegl•:
retidence. 1 mile eatt of Racine
on Twp. Ad . 105 Jult off SR
124. Watch tor ligna. CubCedet
mower .nd other miiC . l.wn
equip.• 7 · 50•80 truck tires.
hou.ehold h:em1, •nd clothing.
June 2.3.4 9a .m,-5p.m.
Garage 11le. June 2 and 3. Bill.,
Bro'NI'I rnidenoa. New lima Rd.,•
Rutland.

Beside Po1t Otfica in Tuppe,.
fltain1 . Friday. June3rd. At Tony
Jon• retidence. R1in or shine.

9:0().7

3 family. June 3nl end 4th .·
Behind Meiga Fairground. Many
i1:ent~ , .,me new.
Junel. 9 :00..?Ciothel, go-cert
Coondog, misc. Rizer rwsidenoe
on Lovett Rd,. Portland. &amp;14!

843·5466.

CoHill table and 2 end tabl• .
double lan~ry ~~ . wood •hut·
ter1 for 4 window!, 2 electric
fans . 2 fireplace fronts. 1 oak
with beveled mirror. Lots more.
June 3rd and 4th. 10:00-6:00.
32602 Minersville RdOO. 3 .
(Forest Run Rd .J
S~rturd.., . June 4th hom 9 :00
am tilt d•k. On Old 33, Pl41
Fairgrounds. first hou• on lhe
right.

3 familie1. June 3rd and 4th.
9:0().7 Children• clothes. riding
lawn mo!NM. cam.,. . lot1 more.
21h miles pelt Southern High
School on Rt. 124.

Fridav. June 3 . Syrtcuu, beside
Larry' a Grocery Nice. claen girls

Arb•gh Addition, Tu PPIFI

Sot. 9 AM·S PM. N.,t 0&gt; Cl"'
Sc:hooi·Lo- AI. 7. 2 ""'!que

a-. - -......· ·om~que
fumlt-.

Plolno, Ohio. Juno 2nd.

5:00.

.......Pt'PTeasiint······
&amp; Vicinity
.. .............................. ..
5 family .,erd sale, 2314 Jetfer.
•on Ave , 10:00 AM - 4:00PM.
... rtlng Wed. June 1 thru June

4th.

Yard Sale, Jun•3&amp; 4. 110 Main
St., New Hilven. Furniture 1
1wimming pool, scannltt', stoclcade fence. dishel, tires , ne¥11'
items, mise.

Yard Sale. Friday June 3, 2
Burdette Addn.
Olurch Sale. Wed &amp; Thura, ;
clothing 26 and 50 cents. Hall' s
Barber Shop room 3.
3 famity -..rd Hie. FridiV June
3rd, 8 :30 to 3:30, JunctfonRt . ~
and 87 home of larry King, lott
of mise it•m•.
~
Rig Y•d Sale. Rt. 2 ChiM'I•ton
Road on left 1 mil• from Ctty
limits, June1 .2,3.
'

Y•rd Sale. Thurs &amp;
Burdette Ad dn.

Fri. 85

Yttrd Sale. frid~ Jun• 3, 21 11
Mt. VtKnon Aw. 9 :00 till ?
Yard Sal a Fri and Sit. 202 Hlgtl
51., Pt. Ptt; 01 . ..,.,., -.rniture
clott-, linans, cumins •nd
mitc: .

tiQue """"·

Moving out ol ..., . .....,, ......
Mehqgany end •bl•. niW'
colonial door cornlce- •IG,
Frendl Prowlnd.. .....,, d41k.
chain, tempe, houllhold IIams.

June 2nd. 3rd, 4th. 124, Union
Aw .. Pomeroy. V•iety of items.

clothing. misc. anictes. 9 :00..
Patio Sale. June 2nd. 3rd. 1nd
4th. SeYerat f.-nllilf, Firs1 hou~&amp;
put Methodlat . Church in
Chnter.

Garage Sale: June 1 &amp; 2.
8ul..,llle-Poner Rd .. 8 mile~ Off

In Pon... 3 Fomly. looldo ME
Church. Sit. Clottt., hou•P'.,t•. furnku,., toole, mlac.

3 famili• · June 1. 2. 3 .
Furniture, appliance~, etc. Silver
Ridge Rd . 293At. 7north, leftat
Ea1tern High School. Sheets
residen~ . 814-985-4.4 02.

4 families. &amp;nenon Johnao-'
residence at: Penland. June 1 -4.
9 :30-7 Mavtag wringer Will her:
Yard Sale-Friday, June 3 . 9 . clothing.
AM-4 PM. 203 B111tlani Dr.
3 family yerdllle, 01•rv St ., ..
Much mltcellanaous. clothing. 8
Syracu•. June 1.2,3.
windows. 8 lton"n windOW I.

carpenter and misc. tool•. riding
tractor and acce~sori11. chain
IIW, m1f1V ot:her ltemi.Junt41h
only. 9-8. Brfnkn, 4th and
Butler, N.w Haven.

18 .. 20. -

June 11t, 2nd, and 3rd. 9 :00.
5 :00. Bunk-bed fnlmn, Aee~e
Trailer hitch complete, couch
and chair. washer, mag~ wheel•.
adult and children clothing and ...
lots more. Loc .. edwelt offRt. 7 ..
by-pill, Yz mile on St. Rt . 124. ...
in a beige .,d brown hou•
behind Roger Hysell Garage.

Side Walk Sale-Isaac'• Auction
Houl8. Fri .• June 3. 10-6. One
Day! See large Adtodeys paper.

Firm. Wonwna clot'-·-'ze 1 8,

GOVERNMENT

-

Yerd S•I•Wed., Thurs., &amp; Fri.
Green Terrace Trail• Perk. Cen·
tenary, Oh.
·

10·6. 520FourthAY&amp;. App!lcen·

Glganic Moving Sale-Saturday,
8 AM .. 136 Sooond A"". T. V.,
beds. recliner, sewing machine
in cabinet, sweep•. trumpet.
dresser. curtain•. sheet1. II·
1tltch qultt books, deco cake
pans. children·adutt clothing.

olzo 7 paid tl10().wll/ ooll t2SO,

11 Help Wanted

Homecraha, ft.O. lu

School/.

much mo ...

used ccwa.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Rt. 124, Pomoray Ohio

Y•d Sale-Men, ladiee and childrena clothing. babV furn . &amp; misc .
Frid., &amp; Saturday. 9 -7. 260
Jackson Pike.

FridiY a1 Mefford 's in Vinton.
9-? 16 gallon 11one ; ... hou~e
flowers, clottlea . Mile.

Middleport, Ohio
1· 13·tfc

ANN'S

9·6.

218Third Ave. June 1st. 2nd. &amp;
3rd. Huge indoor yard sat&amp;. Lot1
&amp; lots of goodies.

814-266·1793.

We pay Ctlhfor late model dean

Gift Shop &amp; Joy Store

ViRa in Centenllf"r! h.. a complete lineofnew&amp; used furniture
&amp; app. at .,erd •le prices.
Mattress _,e t'NO week• onlyfull size 849.95. Rt . 141 , 1/4 mi.
down Uncoln Pille, big t.,
building behind last trailer on
left. 614- 44~3168 . Mon.-Set.,

June 1. 2.3.&amp; 4 . Centenary- 4
family, ctottles. Avon. heater,
bowling ball•. wide 1111nge of
items.

PAT HILL FORD

Behind City Hall

Ellion, 814-669·4881 .

7 eute kitten•· 7 wkl. old, litter
trained. Solid colors &amp; lt:ripes.
All colors Malea &amp; females. Call

614-446·8843.

Rick Pa•son Auctioneer. licensed Ohio and Wes1 Virginia.
Estate, antique, f•m. liquidation ..... 304-nl-6785.

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 I. Main So.
Pom«oy

.,.,d

ule.
Ewington Ohio Town Hou•.
FridiY June 3, 9 :30 to ?. Donne

Bngla pupa to giveaway, Call

TOP CASH p.aid tor '83 mode4

TUNE-UPS, IRAKE

10 to 16 famitv

YMd Sale. 1741 Chatham Ave.
Lots of clothing&amp; miiCellaneous
items. June 1· 2-3. 9 till 5.

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

992-2196

Need elttra cash this summlf?
Be come a carrier for The Oaitv
Tribune. Carrier needed for
Spring Valli'¥' ~r.,.O ak Dr.,
Hilda Or., MIPI• Or .. Cell The
Daily Tribu,..-448·2342.

Giveaway

8

DEAD OR ALIVE

com~y .

S&amp;\85

houMfui -Furniture, large &amp;

RADIATOR
SERVICE

to 1~-in. Mostly for
Free OO.rd. For more
information cell 6, 4-446 -341 9.

lady

M_.K£ 04.0 ff.£ l Lfl(f AK.I&gt;G
SHOf ~~HIM N Tt-l CtASSf LD~

SYRACUSE. OHIO

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It Ropoirablt"

LATE SEASON SALE
SATURDAY. JUNE 4, 1988. 9:30A.M.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

~

~
•
·

WANTED

PUBUC AUCTION-FARM EQUIPMENT

OaiUr
Clanifird
111 COUfl St., PomtfOy, otlio 45769

20

•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

11/ 2/'11-Hc

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DeWITI, BROKER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERIES CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY SALES AGENT
71

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write
S.nlinel
Oept.

FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work

.-':1"-.

446.7390

Read the Best Seller
Read the

8

That Fit Your Botly

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNER, GREG B. ROUSH

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

MIDDLEPORT MORNING CLASS - Graduation lor these
Middleport kindergarten children will take place at 7 p.m. on June
10 In the school gymnasium. Pictured with their teacher, Paula ·
Whitt, and aide, Janice IJsle, they are left to right, front, Tommy
Roush, Ian MoDen, Lee Fllchpatrlck, Missy Cremeans, Chris

TAYLORED TANS

OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY
ANGIE TAYLOR
811 Vine St., Racine
1·12·'88·1 mo

MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742· 2455
RUTLAND ,

CALL AMY CARTER
or IOI'S ElECTRONICS

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

The Daily Sentinel

FOR MORE INFORMATION

'"!!'"'''"""

6-2-81-1 mo.

t[il

I

614-446-0770.

Middleport, Oh.
992-6611

SSO PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

work. Friendly. neat 6 dependab'e •• the requirement•· C.ll
1-814-288 -&amp;421, .. k for Su•.

Far111 EquipMent
Partt &amp; s.,,....

•Ughlweighl

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

;jiALit) &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

FEDERAL. STATE AIIIO CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS

614-662-3821

MANTIS
Precision
Gardening
System

RUTLAND, OH.

Tour Guides-Male&amp; f~le. Our
top people earn 1800-t1200
pM week. F'te~11nt working
conditions. A reellv fun place to

BOGGS

Authoriud John Deere,
New Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohi

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

REG. 18.99-124.99

JEANS
SALE

EAGL!S CUJB-POMDOY, OH.
THURS.: 7 PII-EB 6:45

BLOUSES
ONE GROUP CREAM &amp; TAN

PLEATED

992-6282

ONE RACK LADIES'

MEN'S WRANGLER

ELASTIC BACK Reg.
DENIMS
su.99

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

BINGO

SKIRTS
SALE

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

J.28.'88·tfn

MEN'S BLACK HENLEY

:~~:99

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN,

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

2T-6X
Blouses
Jumpers
Suspender
Pants
Skirts

-

NO SUNDAY CAllS

You are cordially invited to attend an

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

J: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
z Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631

PH. 949-2801 or Res. 949-2860

dental practice.

$1 050

~

New • - luilt
"Free Estimates"

Dr. and Mrs. Larry D. Kennedy, D.D.S.

second row, along with Jason Chaney and Paul Castaneda, not
pictured, make up the afternoon kindergarten class which will
graduate June 10 at 7 p.m. They are pictured with teacher, Paula
Whitt, and aide, Janice Lisle.

-az:

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•

MIDDLEPORT AFI'ERNOON CLASS - Kathy Diles, HaiH
Blower, Shaun Roush, Ryan Pierce, Justin Burris, Bethany
Boyles, and Seth Rawson, front, left to right; and Bridget Johnson,
Stacey Brewer, Scott Johnson, Brant Dh&lt;on, Renee Stewart,

0

Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser•1ictl
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Me---

Sole. 28015
3rd. 4th. . V0&lt;d
Drive, Friday end IMurdev.

~./

Carport Sole. Juno 3nt, 4th. 9·1
1Ae R•ldon•. IV- Blvd.,
A•eine.

. Frld.,.. June 3nt. 1:00 to 1:00'

rein or ,..,. .. directly behind
Beale Schoof. loti Of
Ewrythlng.

�•

Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel
11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

Maintenanoa peraon for apart ~
ment complex to ltv. In E111p•
rienoa
required. References.
Call 304-875-5104.

• 360 a mo. plus utlfitlet. Cell

Cell 614-388-8327.

Cook needed :HI -Wav Inn , Ka• nauga. No phone calls please.
Apply In person-Afternoons,
Mon .~ff'l .

Third
Ave, Ga!Upolis, 1~;;:::;:;::;::;:;::;:;::====-~~~~~?1;;~~~~
une.
Ohio 825
45831
.
32 Mobile Homes
42 Mobile Homes
Scenic Hills Nursin9 Center is
for
Sale
for Rent
now accepting applications for
full time laundry person for
BVenjng shift. Apply In person
2 lA . Nice &amp; ciMI'l i"' Eureka.
Mon.- Fti., 8-4 :30.
1973 Markline. 2 BR &amp; awning. $200 a mo. Oep. tequlred. No
Call after 8pm. 814-448--9346. ..... Call 114-245-5a83.
}iatr Stylists. Acrosa The Street
styling salo.n i1 •eking one 14x70, All electric. 3 BR ., 2 full
8dditlonal stylist who il looking blll:hs, window AC, ceiling fan.
44
Apartment
for more than Just anothAr job. stow. wisher-dryer. C.ll lher 5
C811 Terri at 614--446-9610 for PM. 814-4-46 7009.
for Rent
details.
Ex.cellent wagers for !IP8re time
8ss&amp;mbly work; electronic•.
cmfts. Others. Info 1-(504]
641 -0091 Ellt 3026. Open 7
dll'j'S .

12JC63. 2 BR . mobile home In
good cond. Call 814-446· 7603.

1983 Shultz. 14x7ri. 2tb:JO
gnge. 1.6 acre.. central air,
fireplace. front porch, bade
dock. 6 14-742·2997.

Job hunting? Need a skill? We
train people .for job•· as Auto
Mechanics. carpenters. Electri·
clans. Food Slf'vice Workers.
Electronics Technidans, Indus· 1973 Champion, 14x70. total
trial Maintenance Workers. ehtctrlc. underpenning end hook
Nursing Assiltllnts and Order- up, 304-5762383.
I
lies. Machiniata, and Welders.
AegistBr now for claues begin- 1910 Windsor. 12x86 with
ning Juty 5th. can Tri-Coumy 10x12 add on. woodllurner,
Vocetiol'llll Adu It Center It 814- washer and dry..-, air cond. muat
753-3511 ext. 14. A variety of be m.,.d, 304-a9S.3602.
funding sources to pay for
training are available for those 1982 Kno• 12ll70, 3bedrooms,
eligible.
all electric. mostly furrQhed.
good cond. 07.000. 00. 304Help needed in private nome. 77J.950a.
C&amp;re tor elderly. 209 S. 4th,
Middlepon . Oey shift.

AvoN .

All areas.

ean Marltvn

WeiNfJr 304-882-2845.

35 lots

LPN, Pleasant Valley rtJraing
Care Center seeking licen•d
LPNs for pan time employm9111,
medical and dental insurance
available. tflntwr..Wd call Kathy
THornton, OirBCtor of Nursing.
13041675·5236, EOE·AAE.

&amp; Acreage

40 acres- 2 mobile homn.
Raccoon Ad, 1000 ft. fron18ge.
$38,000, negoti_,.e. Cell 304622·7279.

River tot &amp; mobile home. Crown
City- 1986 14x70 With 8" side
well. 7x2• expansion, 3 BR ., 2
304-675-1429.
full bat... all ~ec., pert furBabv sitter needed for 2 children , nished. 129.900. Clll614-886In New H~~Ven area beginning 8855.
June 8, call aft• 7:00 PM,
54ac:rn. 1200sqLa~re ft. mobile
304-aB2·2427.
hon-., pond, tree gal. 138,000.
A)meroy arN. &amp;U--992-6385
between 8:00..10:00 pm.
12
Situations
Wanted
Ashton, llf98 bulding lots.
mobile home• permittad, public
Have room for elderlY man or VIIB111H', also river lots, Clyde
woman in mv home. 15 veers Bowen, Jr. 304-678--2338.
experience. T"ppera Plains area.
9 acres very privata, go &lt;XI hou•
614-667·3402.
site1. near county water. 200
'Ids off black top road. evenings
~04-5762349.
13
Insurance

AVON all area; Shirii!Jif SpMn.

Call us for your mobile home
insurance : Miller l'nsurance.
304-882-2145. Al1o: auto.
home. life. health.

Two buildng lots with County
Wllter. on Jerrv·• Aun Road at
Apple Grove, W. .Va. 304-57~
2383.

18 Wanted to Do

Bealttful rtver lots one acreptus.
public weter. ctyde Iowen. Jr.
304-5762336. .

Babvaitting: In my horne. C.ll
614-446--2155.

LOTS. one acre .
wooded,
cjty wettr. Jericho Ro.d, owner
financing. good tenns, 304372·8405 or 372·2576.

....,el

Will do batr;'litting In yourhome.

V«v reliable and affordable.
614-992-8858.

Prtvete home care and board for
Senlont and hondlceppOd. Elem
Homo 814-992·6873.

21

Business
Opportunity

41

Homes for Rent

Hou• for IIM1t r. Pomeroy. Call
614-992·614-4.
6 room and bath. 238 2nd. St.
A)meray. *1 60 month,. also will
t.,d contNct. 814-985-3837 or
814-9811-3581 .
A-Frame for rent. RMwoodl Rd.
Cafl 614-992-5988 •fter 8 :00.
Like nav, 3 bedroom r11nch
home In Rutt.nd ...._ 1276. per
monttt Phone 614-742-3171 .

Real Eslale
Homes for Sale

Tuppers Ptaina-3 SR ., eat·fn
kitchen, large living room, ~~~
basement. garage, •II electnc,
central air. C.ll .tter 5 PM.
614-4467498.
For Sale or Rent-3 BA . hou•
wtttranached u•aoe. CA. No
pets. Dep. &amp;: ref. requit-ed. 39
ChllliC01he Ad. Coli 614-4462583. 9· 5 dolly.

c•

2 bedroom, 2 baths. 2
garage. 1..,.1 lot on Rt . 33.

Swimming pool, aetelite, clq•
to Meigs High. Call 614· 992·
3254.
6 room•. bath, newtyc.-p&amp;ted. 1
floor. ftlll: lot. quiet locstlon.
dedc porch. privacy renee. In
Rutlsnd. 81 4-742-2007oo 814742·2680 for •ppointment.
In ch .. ter arel. 3 bedrooms, full
balement, flrepl~ee. centnlair.
C011814·9BII-~$10.

•I•

Home for
or rent. Call
81 4-992-24a4"' 992·2291 .
5 rooms. bllth, l•ge back yard.
H11 been red.Jced. Good shape.
Coll614· 992· 7244. Mokooff•.
8 room hou•. 2 utlitybuildiogs,
:1,4

~c:c--:-:----o--=-:-

Hou• for rent on 218. C.ll
814-448--7208.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do buslneu with people you
know and NOT to stnd mof'IIIV
throu9h the mail until you hiiVe
lnwatigllted the offering.

31

Renl als

Nlcetv furnilhed small house.
Adutts onty. Ref. required. No
pets. Call 614-448--0338.

Fmancial

acn. R•duced to •"- Call

614-742-2022.

Smell 2 bedroom hou .. with
basement, completly remo·
deled. chv. •17. 5110.00. 304675-6331 .
3 br; 2 births:. full flnilhad
b... ment, nlrN furrwce &amp; cen-tral air. garage. fenced yard, low
eo· •. 2414 Mt. V•non A~o~~. Pt.
Pl-1. 304-8711-1774.
3 bedrooml. all Mectrlc. c.wml
air, hlff ecrelot, GalllpobFerry.
low 40"L 304-8711-2932 oft•
4:00pm.

,,

t..ge commercill bulding on
At. 7 clo• to r:Jt. 315. Large

Space for II'TMIII trailers. All
hook-ups. C.ble. A11oefficiency
rooms. air and cable. Mason.
W.Va. Call 304-773-5851 .
Spacious mobil'i""'honle lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, W, Va.
304-675-3073.

Satin Maid of Honors dress- li~ht
burgundy. Worn once. S1ze
9·10. Psld 150 ~ew . will ooll for
S25. Cell 614-446aS65.
.

Trailer spaces for rent. LDoost
Road. Rout&amp; Ona. 304-8751076.

Fish-·Pond Stocklntf
Catfish, Hybrid Bluegill, Bau.
Crappie, MinnoW'S &amp; Triploid
Grass Carp. DII: Tues., June 14
at Southern States Co-op in Pt.
Pleasant from 1 2-1 PM. Call
304-675-2780 to Order or 1-

Merchandise

Rou• 2 good location must . .
to eppreclete. 138,600.00.
304-5762486.
2 bedroom~. air cond. Sand Hill
Aosd. 304-87S.3a34.

42 Mobile Homee
for Rent

2 BR . apts. &amp; closets. kltch_..
appl, furnished, Wllhet-Drver
hook-up, ww carpet. newtv
painted, deck. Regency', In c.
Apto. Coli 304-675· 7738 or
6711-5104.
New completelr furnished
apanment &amp; ~le home In
city. Adults ontv. P•ldng. Call
61 4-446033a.
BEAUnFUL APAR"IMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JAC~ ·
SON ESTATES, 538 Jecl&lt;oon
Pike from S183 a mo. Wllk to
shop and moW.. 814-441258a. E.O.H.
Brookside Apart.,.,ts: Located
off Bulevlle Rd.- 1 8R . sp~clous
apartments wfth moct.rn kitchen
and waat..dryer hookupa, c•
bl e telwN:Ion avdable. C. II
814.4462127.
Upatlin unfurnished apt, Carpebtd, utlUtiel _pel d. No children.
l\lo ..... Call 614-446-1637.
Oowntown-Mo dern 1 BR ., complete kitchen, AC. c•pet. Ca:ll
614-4-4601 39.
1 1 Court St. ·2 BR ., 2 baths.
klitchen furni•hed. w / w c•pet.
No pets. Off street p1rldng.
132&amp;amo. plusutilitl•. Dep. &amp;
nrl. Cell 814-4464926.
a-rage epartment·3 rooms &amp;
bllfh, w / d, air. CIMn. No pets.
Adults only . Call 814-4481619.
Nic• 1 BR . apt. Range&amp;. nrfri~
furnished. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit requfred. Call
614-448--43•&amp; after 5 PM.
RloGrandearu-1 &amp; 2bedroom
apartments for rent. Call 814245-9575.
Furnished apt. - 1 Br. 1235•mo.
UtlliUes paid 920 4th. Ave .,
Glllipolla. Cell 446-441 6 after 7
PM.

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St. , Qellipolia.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399.
living room suite• ~ $199.$599.
Bunk beds whh bedding· $199.
Full aize mattress &amp; foundation
starting - $99 . Recliners
starting· $99.
USE[). Beds, dretl8ft, bedroom
suites. *199-$299. Desks,
wringer washer, a complete lina
of u811d furniture.
NEW- Western boots· $30.
Workboots 818 &amp; up. !Steel &amp;
• ......,. Call 614-446·31 59 .
County Appliance, Inc. Good
used applianceS and TV sets.
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-4461899. 627 3rd .
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances.
Upper River Rd . bas/de Stone
Crest Motel. 614-A48--7398.
LAYNE"S FURNITURE
SOfas end chairs priced from
1395 to 1995. Tables S60 and
up to 1125. Hide--a-beds 1390
to S696 . Recliners 8225 to
$376. Lamps S28 to 8126.
Dinettes t109and up to 8496.
Wood table w-6 ch81rs S286 to
1795. O.sk $100 up to 1376.
Hutchaa 8400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mattraa~~ts
S296and upto8395. Baby beds
$110. Mattreun or box springs
tun or tvlrin 188. firm 878, end
188. Queen aet:s 1226, King
1360. 4 drawer chad 869. Gun
cabfnm8 gun. BaiJV rnattreues
136 II • 46. Bad frames • 20,
$30 &amp; King frame 8 60. Good
eelectlon of bedroom auites.
metel cabinets. headboards 830
and up to 185.

............
90 Days •me as ca•h with

lpprowd credit. 3 Miles out
Bulevllle Rd. Open 9em to 5pm
Mon. chru Sat. Ph: 814-••e0322.
Valley Furniture
New end uted furniture and

applic1nces . Call 614-•487 572. Hours 9 -5.
J &amp; S FURNITURE
1411 E11twn Ave.
4 driiWer chest, 148. 5 drawlf'
chatt, 1&amp;4.9&amp;. I pe, wooden
dinnetw Mtl. 1199.95.
PICKENS
FURNITURE

New spacious 2nd floor, one

BR ..apt.app, AC. 1225amonth
plus utilitlea. Adu ft1. Mf.-. and
Me. dep. required. Call 8144411-4249. 4462325.
One BR . apt. , 2nd ftaor hcing
P•k on Second A.... App, AC.
M.tJi occupancy 2 acl.llts. 1175•·
mo. plus utiltll11. Ref•. &amp; Nc.
dep . .-quired. Call 814-4462325. 448-4249.

OlneUn , beds. bedding ,
dres-s. chelt. couchea. ch!Mrs.
IamPI, coffee-end 11bl•. Every
diri Specials. 1/t mile out Jerrlcho. 304-876· 1 460.
Quality furniture and car"' at
Low Prien. Rnancing available.
Mollohan Furniture - Upper
River Rd .• 614-4467444.

Nice 2nd ftoor 2 DR . apt. central
downtown. AC andapp. 8210a
mo. plus utllltl•. 2 aliJfta &amp; 1
child. Refer. &amp; aec. dep. required. Call 814--446-2325,
4464249.

17'' Zenith blac;k &amp; white TV.
S25. Wood tlble &amp; two chairs,
$40. 275 Harlequin book&amp;. 150.
Tru·tone mreo wtth tpNkert.
850. So- 266So. Fourth Aw.
Mlddlsport.

G1r19e Apt. Furnilhed. *225.
Utilit•• .. id. 29'h: Neil, Oallipe&gt;
Ill. Call 4.6441 Bolt• 7 PM.

Re1Yig8flltor Sa stove, harvest
gold. Cell 614-3ae.a295.

FurNahed effidancy apt. Car~
throughout. PrNite &amp; qUiet.
Single wortdng penon only. Call
614-4464107 01 4462102.
Furni1hed lf)lrtment·4 rooms&amp;:
bMh. 1 or 2 1cl.l ltl . No pets. Sec.
d ep , &amp; ref. required. Call 814446-0444.
Gramous living. 1 and 2 bedroom apanments at Village
Manor and Rtven:ide Apartmorns In Mlddlepon. From
1182. Coli 81 4 · 992· 7787.
EOH.

2 bedroom Apta. for rent.
Cor.-d. Nlcooottlng. L.aurdry
sveHobl• Coli 6149 92·37 1 1. EOH.

lecll~lel

1 bedroom furnished lffeclencv
ape. 1 u,.-lrs apt. w lth 2
bedrooms. Kh:chen furnished. E.
Main, Pomeroy. 814-992·6215
"'814-992·3523.

A.-rtment for rent. 1225 a
month. Depoolt roqulrsd. 814992·6724. Aft• 8pm or 992·
5119.

VIRA irJ C•ntenarv now has a
compl~tte line or new &amp; used
furnlturw &amp; appliances It very
low, low prices. Tables, recliners, brass headboards, washers.
dfYin , etc. Mattra11 •1•2
wetks only-full size. $49.95. Rt.
141 , 1/4 mile down Uncoln Pike,
big tan butlding behind lett
trailer on taft. Hours: 9·8.
Mon.·Sat. Csll 614·446315a.
Good gas range, 30tt..8751415.
Cowch and chair, goad cond.
$200.00. Call 304-675-1994
after 4:00PM.
53

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M,T,W 101.m. to 6p.m.,
Sunday 1 to 6p.m. 814-9922626.
54 Misc. Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Larry Wrigh1

i

New KSOOO OriM genen!ltor.
Bergain price. Will furnish spec.
&amp; price on mquast. Call 814-

256·6613.

Amana 28 c1.i: ft . deep freeze .
EJtcellent condition . Cell 814446-4229.
Winchester Roto-Tiller. Home-lite power •w. Call 814-992·
5116.

svelloble. UtiiKiel pold. •225.
per month,depo.lt 18qulfed. Call
61 4-992-&amp;724 olter 8:00 01
992-6119.

Furnished 2 BR . mobile horne for
rent. Adu Its onty. No pets.
Natu ... l gu h. .. Call 814-3177438.

1 bedroom apt. for fWit In

2 BR .. w / w.lk around
stow-microVI!II'va, bultt In Itarea, g•den tub. shower . .11.
1226 1 mo. 8 mUM from
GalllpoNs an 218. RefiNMON
roqulrod. Cell 814-25&amp;-1393.
14~e70.

2 BR .. um..rnllhod. oil olec. 2

1mobile
2&gt;110 oil
oloctrtc.
-"""'
hornl.
HI 2ml•
out
Mllotono Rood. 1250.00 monlll
plus dtpoltt, •c oand. 3045762233 or 5762413.

THURS.; JUNE 2 •

•IIIINewe
w (J)

_..
~
t) -

71 Auto's For Sale
PIANO FOR SALE
WANTED: Responsible perty to
a11umesrnell monthly .,.vments
on piano. See locally. Call Credh
'llsnossr1 · aOo-447·4266.

1$84 Chrysler Laser. PI, PS,
AM·FM·Cua st.-eo, 4 cyl,
Excel. cond. •4800. Cell 614-4464347 or 446·4746.

Kimbell console pi~no-cherry .
1% Y••• old. $1500. Call
614-4469349.

1987 Ford Tempo. Pay balance
due. Call 614-446a199.

Responsible party wanted to
assume
monthlr .,.vments
on pitll"to. See locally. Call credit
msnossr 1·800.447-4288.

1984 Ford Mu1111ng. 4 spd.,
a 3499. 1 983 Ford Fair mont,
.,~o .,
81499. John's Auto
Sai•·Rt. 7-b~ow t-foliday-lnn,
K8nauga.

.,.,..11

5900 BTU air conditioner. NI!IW
condition. $150. Phone 814949-2644. Alao 1 Beagle pup,
out of good ttock. 150.

New 10 ft Satellite System.
remote control. Installed
$995.00. 304-675-5477.
4~~:8 utility trailer. 304-8752159.

Portable lighted. lign with letters
•299. Free delivery. WVa 1.
n642 2
a o~
• 434: Ohio 1 ·800.
533-3453.

77 Ford Lm. 81,000 actual
ginners. Mrious guitarist. Bruni- mile~. Nice bocfv, cl.., Interior.
cardia Music. 814-4•&amp;-0687. Good tires. Mechanlcalty sound .
JeH Wemshrv instructor. 614- , Call 814·245-5040.
446-8077, summer openings:.
1983 Tran1 AM. blk. w / gold
Kohler end Campbell con1ole trim. charcoalint~rior-clean. like
piano, very good cond for home ntw. 305 Hi-Pertornwu:e enor church, priced 11,700.00. gine, new rims ..Manto Carlo
""""" 304-6762848.
Style-Dorado' ', C81Mtte stereo.
air. 47,000 milea. 17,000
negotiabl•indudes leether Ia
58
Fruit
bra, 4 extn!l mao trlmt. floor
mats. Call 814-245--9672.
&amp; Vegetables ·
For •lo. STRAWBERRIES. Free
boxes for picking. TAYLOR'S
BERRY PATCH. Kerr Rd. Mon·
d-r f'lru Satuldev, BAM-BPM.
Csll . 614·446-a692 ' or 814245·&amp;17a.

24,000 btu Sen llr COnd wau l ~------~--­
unit, •250.00. GufurMcewith Strawberries. Doug Roush. 2
miln back of New Haven.
sheet metal, $200.00. 304- You-pick. we-pick. Starting Mev
675-7746.
31. Coli 304-aB2·2237.
Air cond_. 11,&amp;00btu $150.00.
Mater Cut lawnmo~r 21 Inch Strawberrin- Pick your own.
cut 1 year old $100. Both exc Call Claude Winters. Rio
Grsnds, Ohio. 614-245-51 21 .
cond. 304-aa2-23a2.
M,ale Ferrett $36.00. One com.
mode chair t&amp;&amp;.OO. 74 Chevy
lila .... llharp 8350.00. 304·6752637.
King li• bed, •mi waveless. 3
set1 sheets, plda. t300.00 or
make offer, 304-676-6939 .
Golf Clubs, new metal woods,
1, 3.&amp; 5 woods. 8165.00. 304675-1804.
Air Cond 8 ,100 btu 1160.00.
Zenith colored TV ftoor model
1160.00. Girls 20 inch bike
840.00. 304-6763976.
Buck atove, medlam Insert, axe
cond; 2 ton Lennox cent,.! air
con \61ft. Moving must 1811, bett
reasonable offer, 304-8767488.
Se1r1 pool tibiae, ball• •nd 10
pool otlcl&lt;s. 304-875-.1804.
55 Building Supplies
Building Matertall
Block, brick. Sewer pip81. windows, lintela, etc. Claude Wint..-s, RiO Grande, 0 . Call 614245·5121 .
Concrete blocks- all sizes. yard
01 delivery. Mea on •nd. Gatlipo-.
lis Block Co., 1231/t Pine St ..
GslllpoHo. Ohio. Call 61 4-446·
2783.
STEELE BUILDINGS
Must teU 2 steel bu II dings from
Cancellation. Brand new, never
erected, one 11 40x40. Will •II
for bMance ov.ed. Call DAN
1-aoo-527-4044.
56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-448·0231 .

•tvl•-

Oragonwynd Cattery Kenn~ .
CFA Himal.n, Persian and
Siames• kittens. AKC Chow
puppiM. New Himalayan .kittens . can 614-446-3844 after
7PM.

Farm Supwlies
&amp; L1vcs luck
61 Fann Equipment
CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S. 36 West. Jadcaon, Ohio.
614-2868451.
MIIIIV Ferguson. New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal .. &amp;. serv;ce. Over
40 Ul8d tllctors to choOJe from
&amp; comptete line of new &amp; u11d
equlpnwlt. l..r'gnt •lectlon In
S .E. Ohio.
Jim's Ftlrm Equip. Caner
Rt. 35 W.· Golllpollo. O.·Call
6 14-446-t777
Fe,ce post and ralls. cedarpeeled· 7-8 ft. long, barb wire,
20 u•d t,.ctors, plows. disc.
wheel, 3/pmowet"Wddere. Over
1000 new and used. New
errMI· 500 Now Oolu• I oolo,
tr. •••·
Mauey Fer gerton t,.ctor, baler.
1'8lke, 6 mow.r, 138&amp;0. 0 17
A C tl'lctor, Sh•p. with Vermer
round baler. 112150. Owner will
flnonco. Call 614-2866522.
Fer~JUeon 30 f•m tractor wh h
equipment. Good condition. Cell
614-4461420.

2010 JD t,.ctor with beler.
ralke. mowing machine. post
drlvor, f4760. Big 1130 MF,
low hour~, Verflllt'eround bel•,
• 8200. Ownor will lnonce. Call
614-286-6522.
Ferguson tractor w / bellv
mower, *24&amp;0. NH Oyn1
Bounce mowing machinl.
.796. 8 ft .
hog, 1250.
C.ttle stock .. ckl. UOO. Call
614-286-8522.

bu""

Whho's trocton, 26 to 1 80 HP.
absolu• deeln cott plus 5 per
cem. COmpare our prl011 before
you buy. Sid- £qulpmont.
Hendlraon, W. Va. 304-t757421.
C••• tNctOf wtth ettachmenu.
304-aB!I-3530.
Small squire bller. Ford side
aide deiMrv hav •ke.
roeoonobl&amp; 304-675-4023.
mo~Ntr ,

AKCCoeller Sp.,iel pups. shots
started. Wormed. *150 each.
Call 614-386-8890.

62 Wanted to

Full blooded Beegle puppi" for
sale. Rad &amp; lollflite . Copper
nosed. 8 'Nks. old. 150. each.
Call 614-2666276.

Hay Tedd•- In good condition.
Jim Burgoos. 304-875-6086.

Buy

A~C aluo ferneloDober . .n. 16

63
Uvestpck
monchs old. C•ll 814· 4•8- , _ _ _ _ _ _;__ __
6927.

1977 Caniaro. Auto. trans.
Special1 weak onty, 8795. Fir11
co,-.. Call614-446-1815.
1984 Honds Civic. AC. AM·FM·
C111. Goodc:ond . Call814-2459109.
1984 Mercury lynx SW, std ..
stereo. nice. 82199. Jahn'a
Auto SaiM. Rt. 7 b~ow Holiday
Inn, Kanauga.
Red Hot bargaln.t Drug deal••·
c••·
boats. plan• repo'd. Surplus. Your area Buyers Guida.
111805-6a7-8000 Ell. S-9805.
1978 Chrysi!W LeBaron 4 doar.
naw paint. •re..loaded. I 1600.
814-992·7214.
Red Hot bargains! Drug dealera'
c••· boetl. plane~ repo'd. Surplu•. Your Area. Buyers Guida.
111805·687·8000 Ell. S-9a05.
1978 Ford FIMtl . New tires and
bMwry, new .,.Int. good condiiton. C.n be 18en at 37890 Peach
Fork Rd., Rt . 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
45789.
19a3 Oldsmobile Regency 98
four door. Loaded. Cell 614247·2402.
1980 Fi• h.-dtop conwnlable
X19, AM-FM radio cauene, eiCC
cond. coli olter 5:00. 304-6752636.
19a7 Pontlsc Gr111d AM. SE.
white with gray Interior, load ad.
Sam••• new. 304-675-4173.
1981 Olds CutlaM Supreme.
• 1.800.00. 304-8a2-3616.

(J)
AIC Newe Q
CllllodyE"-

(!J Nlghlly lluelneee Report

111

Auto Parts
Accessories

8:31 (I)

eWPMMigezlne

Cll (!J MICNelf/ Lehrer
,...,.Hour (1 :00)
• (J) l'lo!H'• Cou"
1111 NIWI
.liD M•A•S•H

iiJ Moneyllne
•111 1111 Wheel of Fortune

ilchu,.

iiJ Alrwoll Where Have All

79 Motors Homes
&amp; campers

the Children Gone?
Ql Crook 1nd Chau
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30. ()) (J) Hollywood

FRANK AND ERNEST
E~tJfe ('JEVE~ GETS TI~ED oF
IMITAT
oi.P BArfgAL.L. PA~f':Sf

1973 Tet'ryTravel Trail«. 27ft.,
c•petad. good concitlon . Call
814· 992· 7641 or 614-742·
3054.

lque,..

(l)lpHdW.(J) Judge

I

Hunten Spedel 8 ft. trucker
camper *400.00. Call Leonard • ,
Krebs, 304-67S.11a5.

1111 Wheel of F""- Q
.liD WKRP In Clnclnn1t1

101 Croseftre

.IIIIIIIJiopllrdyiQ

®IIIMIIIH

Services

1211 VldeoCountry
7:31 (I) Andy Griffith

1:00 Ill c..., Uke e Fo• Is

'.
~ --

•

There a Fox In t11e House?

• w 1111 The eo.by Show

The Huxtable lamlly goes to
t11e mall, but Rudy gets lost.

BASEMENT
' WATER PROOANG
Unconcltlonel IH«ime ~lrll'l­
we. Local m.-en081 furnished.
Free eltlrnates. Call- coii8CI
1·814-237·0488, dor or night.
RogersBaaement
Waterproofing.

&amp;? &amp;n. l'oolll..

ABC Thrndlty Night Movie
INR) (1:40) Q
Cll An l)aMn " " " Q
(!J Com,.IIH EXplore the
dally life of a Russian
farming famHy. C
1111
Wllltln'
CBS Repona Elcamlne tl1e
plight of nearly 1,000,000
Vlelnam veterans who
condnue In a fight against a
llttle-kriown disease called
Post Traumalle Stress

SWEEPER and IeWing mechlnt
pan1. and auppll•. Pidc
up and delivery, Devta VaCJJl.ln
Cleaner, one h11f mile up
Georges Creak Rd. Call 8144460294.
Concrete Septic Tanka - 1000
gal., 1500gM. andJetAeratlon
syatem. Factory trained repair
shop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PAISES. Jackson. Ohio. 1-800..
537-9826.

ec .,.. w.u

•

EEK &amp; MEEK
IUHAT A Di¥1! MAI::.E.S \aJ
GLAD &lt;.OJ rosst.SS A SMALL.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES·
Septic t.nk pumping- $90 per
load. Csll 1·800.537-9&amp;28.

UVIOO. BRfATHIJJG R\RT OF
1HIS UUV£RSE. ...~9JT IT?

Muonrv~Bridc. block. ttone II
fireplac•. Free •timata. References. CaiiBliiOenny-814-266-1749.

Nlgllt FevertPGI (1 :59)

r~'T

~- ..

OPIIuwN•0 Rlpllde Girls N){lht Out
1211 NIIIIVIII Now Roger
Miller Hosl1
1:05 (J) MOVIE: Action In the
,._ Atllntlc INR) (2:07)
1:30
1111 A Dlllerent Wtlfld
Denise develops a crush on
her a11ractlve geology
prole810f..IR)
1:00 Ill 7GO Club
a ()) 1111 ChHrl Cliff falls
lor a plain-woman, whom he
transforms ln10 a beauty. (R)
Cll (!J Mt•hwJI Dalgllesh
finds his life In dat.:as the
truth unfolds. INRI
1111 •
MOVIE: •
neof
Fl... Cl8 &amp;peclll Movie Q
101 L.lny King Lillll
i1J ProlelllciMI QoH Kamper
Open,lrom Potomac.

e ())

Painting: Interior It Exterior.
Free estimates. C.ll 814-448-8344.

Jim•• Odd Jobl
Su ndecks. siding. peintln9.. roofing, c•penter work. tnuler rwpalr. Free Estimetn. C.ll 8143711-2416.

Fetty Tree Trimming. st~.mp
remo\el. C•ll304-875-1331.

72

Rotary or cable tool drlllng.
Most wells completed ..med-v-.
PUmp sele. and service. 304895-3802

8:30. ill 1111 Night Cou" Harry
1riiB to kiiP a hero from his

Starks law nand Shr~ Service,
304-6711-3958 "' 304-5782903.

all Moutlt of the SOuth Jerry

Trucks for Sale

1978 Ford Custom. 4 wheel
drHetruck. goadcond. withn.....,
tir11. 14.500 firm. Clll after •
PM 1614)446a913.
1979 Ford F1 60 pickup. VB,
&amp;Ito. good condition. 12000.
Csll 614-742·2760.
73

Vans

&amp;

4 W.O.

19B7Ford 150ConveraionVan.
14,000 mil81, loaded, tile,
crulte. power windows • locks,
AM-FM-Casa. 351·HP engine.
~11 tanka. Fl• deale leather
interior. Call 814-2158-8327.
B-6 Mon.-Fri.
1988 Toyota 4x4 truck 1hon
bed. l!lispeed. chromerollb••nd
bed l'llilt. Black-chrome module
wt\eels . AM·FM c••ne stereo,
oH rood Nghto. otrlps. 42.000
mil•. Extra Jhlfp. 17000 flrm.·
614-992·6651 .
1977 Ford 4x• 3A. ton, 4 speed
transml11lon. 480 cubic inch
engine, new B ply tlr•. 814..
949-2237.

•
I SPENT AL..L MCRNINGTRYIN6 TO Fl)( MY

WHAT's A

I DON'T KNCMI, BUT rrS

CRAMBLER&lt;-

VERY HAROlD FIX.

CRAMBLER .

az

Maryland (1st Round) (R)

aulc:lde. (R) .

-J,A rl ~»- 1,

. ,,/,,

CloWer spins Iunny tales.

10:00 Ill llrlltlht Talk

• ()) 1111 L.A. Llw The
defense In a shooting death
Ia a labor ol love to
Sltuentes. (R)
MOV11: A Gelhering of
NR) (1 :55)
Cll
.
(!J SOme Gioia Issues of
teenage -uallly.

BARNEY

Tr• trimming end stump ,.moval, fr" llltirnate, 304-8757121 .

OH !!

IT'S

REPORT CARD
DAY !!

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

LET'S SEE
WHAT WE
GOT !!

IT'S NOT WHAT

WE GOT--

IT'S WHAT I'M

FIXIN' TO 61T

pregnancy, perendng and

pregnancy prevention are
dlacussed, by locuslng on six
teenagers.
Ill
Knota Llndlng
May bll!!""'pted by NBA

·=

CARTER"S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Galllpoltl:, Ohio
Phone 8.14-446-3888 or 814446-4477
84

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

~;"~HIR

ill lvenlng ......

•.

1211 CniOk and Cllltll
10:30 Ill TIIA

•

(I) Drlglleclng IHRA Spring

R.. id8nthll or CO/Tm8fclal wiring. New ....-vice or repak's.
Ucented electrician. Estimate
frH. Ridenour Electrical. 304875-1786.
85

Nellonala, from Brlllol, tN
(T)
(l)IIMololo,etllll:"l: Jaupll
CMipb •• lnd the . , _ of
1M Mrtl1 Genelll' account of
creation 11 compared with
other cnallon stories. Q

••10®M
IT W..:i

COI-ICERI4"?

eiiDJe""-

General Hauling

&amp;Niwl

all VldnCao ••r
11:GO IJ) Remlrlglan . . . .
lbtr~Wd Slelll

OHler~ WMet'

SNAFUCII by Bruce Beanie
3 whHI« ATV. Very good cond.
1700 or boot oH•. Coli 6144467026.
1 t84 Hondo Nlght-k. 7000
mil•. Aoldng •1298. Call 814371-2220.
1118 8uzllld lntrudw 700.
Eac.t. cond. I.Qt of extras.
'2800: Coli B1 4-44630B3.

He4p WMted to cut h., tor h11f
1he crop. Call 814-2411-1876.
Hoy In told for solo. .1.10 por
bolo. Coli 814-742·2478 "'

~ 814-742·30M.

1114 Hondo 2008 3 wheolsr
with Nck an dell MWtlr•. good
cond. Coli oltor 4 PM 1814)
446-1813.
19611t.loyDovldoonPMMod.
131100. 080. CAll 814-94112 213 ....,lngo.
1988 Hondo ATC. •o Red. Like
new, &amp;11M wry little. 11300.
Call 114-9811-38311. Poul Korr.
Ch ......

s..-ulng h., tor llle. Call
Sl4-t4S.2288.

lloorrw tor rwnt·WHk or month.
~lng ot •120 o mo. Oohlo
Hotoi-814-44&amp;-IBSO.

'71 Hondo Howk. 400 cc.
windshield, bleok· sharp.
Oood cl- hoy. 11.25 on ueo.oo. Phono 304·878·
-on. 304-8711-8578.
87SB.
.:..;..:,::......_

____

Service: Pool1.
Ci1terns. Weill. Del Mn-y . Anylimo. Call 614-4467404-No
Sunday cMis.

We had spent the evening

~ lislening to a political candidate .

•
.
.
.
We all came to the same conclu · ·
. - - - - - - - - - - . s i o n ; he had the abili1y to be
K R V I F S 'sincere withou1 being - .

I~-~~:.:_:;1~_,;~6;.....:.,1...:...,1_-l O
. _.J
L-l-JL-1-l-.J

e

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f•ll ing in the mtSSH\.'J words
you develop from step No . 3 below .

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UN SC RAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Legion - Wench - Unwed - Horrid - WOULD WIN
My grandad would rather watch an old war movie than our
hometown ball team. He says he'd rather watch something
he knows we WOULD WIN .

BRIDGE

NORTH
• 732
•u2

Giving away
information

......

+KH
+AKQ5

WEST
+9B

By James Jacoby
Scientific bidding, which can show
exact distribution, helps the bidders
arrive at their best contract, but also
guides the defense in setting a contract when declarer is too high.
Alter North had shown heart support and a good band, South was happy
to ask for aces. U you delete the K·Q of
clubs in the North band and change the
K·J of diamonds to the ace, there
would be a very good play for six
hearts. Unfortunately there was no
play for it today. Off two aces, South
slOpped at five hearts, regretting being even that high.
When the diamond ace was led, East
followed with the three, showing an
odd number of cards. West knew that
it could not be a singleton, since dedarer bad shown six hearts and five
spades In the bidding (by opening one
heart and then bidding spades twice).
So It became easy lor West to lead a
dub at the second trick. Declarer, in
dummy lor the last time, led a heart to
·his king. But he now bad to lead a
heart from his band, and East took two
heart tricks to set the contract.
II West bad not been able to get the
count at trick one, be might have led a
second diamond. That would"have pr&lt;&gt;-

EAST

+84

•a

• A J 10
+to 5 s
+108754

+A98762

+J93

•.

SOUTH
+AKQJIO
.KQ7643
+Q

+2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Eut

Puo
Pass

2+
3•
4+
5
Pass

Pass
Pass
P•ss
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pus

+

Pass

Opening lead: + A
vided declarer with an extra entry to"
dummy, allowing him to lead up to the
K-Q of hearts a second time and make
the contract. As to the bidding, per- •
haps Nortb·South would have avoided
playing at the five-level if North bad "
bid two no-trump after South had bid ·
two spades. North would still have bid
four hearts eventually, but now South
might pass, thinking it unlikely that
partner would hold two aces.

~.ctttd'
JV
. by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

3 Wander

1 Conductor
Caldwell
6Composer

G"Ball

John
10Convex
mol(ling
11 Put up with
13 Fasten
14 Brink
111 "Fables in
Slang"
author
16 Shinto
temple
• 18 Place of
iniquity
19 Gregorian
21 Abandon
24Actor
George
28 Warn
29 Objet d'art
30 Art style
31 Assemble,
as troops
32Minimum
34Sty
37Bon38Apron,
of a kind
41 Cherish
43Guam's
capital
411 Kind
of bear
46 Copal
or mastic
47"- are
called •. ."
48Anxiety

ei!D l..ave CaroMICIIIDn

~~-Twenty

R &amp; R Watlr Sarvice. Pools,
cisterna, wells . lmrnedlate1.000or 2,000gollonsdollvory.
Coli 304-8711-6370.

Two
0 .Airwaii.Jennle

PEANUTS

P.,l Rupe, Jr. W•er Service.
Pools. cls•rns. wetla. Call 81 ~
4463171.

'I'ES. MA'AM .. M'( E'(ES
ARE 6URNIN6 ..

Watterson's Weter Hauling,
re11onable rltH, lmmedl.ce
2.000 gallon delivery, cisterna,
pods. wwll, etc. cart 304-5782911.

all You Cln Ia a liar
11:30 • ill Gil Tonlghtlhaw

l Rail bird

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

D-MINUSES ARE POLLUTIN6
T~E ATMOSPHERE ..

(!)OM on OM

l:!f§Q
~:,.:0:
P.l.

Upholstery

Mow.-y's Uphol. .,lng ..-vlng
trl countyarea23YIIrl. The best
In furniture Upholltarlng. C.U
304 - 871!1i · 4164 for free
astlmlltes ,

,,
I

_.J

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe-rent.

CRYPTOQUOTE

~=--(L)

1 TI-IINK ALL. T~ESE

1.111
Night Nlcale"l -~~~~ by
thugl, but ilhiiOMI only her
purM. (R)
Ill ........ P.l. l.elllr 10 I
Duchlll
all Amlrlc8n llaa•""

\

of frre"
6 County
in Ulster
7 Mr. Fortas ·
· 8SWTound
9Brink
12 Odist's
Ye&amp;terday's Answer
adverb
17 Yangtze 26 Bosh!
38 Contempttributary 27 Pinnacle
ible
19 Sea or 29 Pie filling 39 Dophin
snake
31 Chairman
genus
20 Kind of
40 "Alexfund
33 Abrasive
ander's
21 Insane
board
Ragtime-"
22 Chicken 34 Soft diet
42 Campaign- king 311 Esau's
ed
23 "Not a
country
44 Verbal
-cent!" 36 Lopez's
noun
211 Carney
theme

2 Eager
DAILY CRYPTOQUOI'ES-Here's bow to work it:

., .....

(l)llgnOII

4 Porter

DOWN

ew w ew • •az

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pool1, clswrns. Wlll1. Ph. 81424692a8.

87

I

I I I I
s

youth lrom committing

Michael's Re~klentill air condition and refrlg. .tion, rwch.-Qt!
and repair servtce, Leon. w.v •.
304-458-1765.

82

!

Disorder.

.liD MOYIE: leturtl8y

'79 two door Dbdge wRI trade
for old• car or plctc up. 304aa2-2714.

1982 Chw 4 wheel drtve trt.£k,
VB, IUto, 40,000 mil•. extl'lls,
U ,BOO.OO. 304-882-3678.

Grain

Cll MOVIE: •Surviving'

(I) •

rep~~lr,

;

c."" Burnett

(I) 8porlrtCenter (L)
(J) Entertrtlnment Tonight

8UDGET TRANSMISSION·
Used &amp; rebuilt ell typee. Guarantee 30 deva min1mum. Prices
•99 &amp; up. Rebultt torques
convened •• low •
•39,
Conversion kit-S -10'a &amp; C·1 0'1
OOAr drive to 350' s. We buy junk
transmissions. Call 304-6754230 or 614-379·2220.

Home
Improvements

I

7:00 Ill Remington a-. Hearts

1981 Dodge engine. alftnt 6.
2 26. Gutrantaed good. I 1 50.
Colll614)4-46-3075.

81

JIRNEK

SOJUT
1-..,::.,..ll
~,::....,::1::....:,,~.

.liD Andy Orllllth
iiJ lnlkll Polltlca '18
·® WIIRP In Clnclnlllll
1211 You C1n Be • Slrtr

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• cells on RCA, Ouaar,
GE. Spodollng In Zonith. Coli
304-5711-239a "' 61 4-446·
2454.

4••-

Hey 8a

•a cas ,....,,

78Chewtte, 4cvl.euto. 4 door.
AM·FM c•l8tle stereo. goad
cond, ISidng $710.00. 3048762231 .

19n Ford F150 •x4-. 1980
Toyota
1980 Kawa11kl
KX1 26. AU In good shop e. Call
814-992·3192.

64

.Cil

IJgiDr llkll ol Spona IR)

of Steele

1979 Monte CarloT-Top. 1979
New Yorter. Call 814--4•&amp;8741 . ......

I

J-.._,;.;H....;E..:N.:....T:......:lT--ll .._·.

. i

GAM I

the

iiJ ShowBiz TOday
!HI F•cta of Life

8:30 • W 1111 NBC Nightly Newt

WOlD

below to form fov r sirnp le words

Part 3

1211 l'lndango
8:05 (I) Flther llnowt lett

1

&amp;

rrange letters of
0 Rea
four scromblad words

I

II) C.rtoon EXPNII

&amp;5 HP Evlnrt.aie motor. Cell
1978St
14"hft.,
61
4· 256rcraftTri·hwL
1 1 17.
76

8
':!~:~:~'
'O@Rc$JlA-~£~~
_ _ _ __;;_..;: lditsd by CLAY I . POLLAN

•liD Happy Der•

18 ft . Cruiser Inc. , 22 HP
motor. 1600. Call
61 4-4469888.

Transporlalion

(I) (II)

Cll T8A
(!J D~. Who The Romans,

~ercury

Musical
Instruments

•

(I) llponaLOOk

...........

86 Gla10port 165 120 HP 10
used only one summer with all
accessories. 87&amp;00. Call 8144469349.

57

·=

8:00 (I) lllg Yeller A Time to Kill

18ft. fiberglass bo•t on tr11ifer,
40 HP JohnJon engine, electric
,..,. •goo firm. Call 1114)
445-1528.

Utllll• .-ld. llnalem.. e.lh••

both. Coh 44&amp;-441hltor7PM.

Boats and
Motors for Sala

tt:

0

Two bodroom lumlohetl t•ll •·
c .. bc.- Rd. •20o.oomonth. 46 Furnished Roome
depolit requlrld, no pets, fur" l1h own utlil:t.. 304-171- Furnlohod ....,.,.111 Socond
1208.
A.... Oolllpolo. •us 0 mo.

•

28
BlyHner cruiser. 1986
wide beam, all elecuonlc, glfll'f,
canwl. etc. 350 V-8 eng.,
sleeps 8. Vtii'V low hours.
127.500. Call304-727-8a9o.

2 fu~H ep•rtm.nta; 1 furnillhed mobile home. 304-87~
3900 behwen 2·3:30 p.m.
6768512.

mH• out At. sea Prtwte lot.
Coil 114-4-464807 or 4-46 2 room lumlohod spt. prlv2802.
b.h. utlhloo pold. 117 N. 4th.
Avo. Mlddlsport. 1·304-882·
2 BR . triMer. 120oemo. '~mNei"2 1~H;;;.i(;;;;-;;;;;~;;-;;t;;;t,;;;;;,
.... Bob McCormktl. on 188.
Cltr tchooe.. Clfl 114-44~ Uowntown moo--n,
1413.
apt. c•peted, no chlldlen. no
"""· coii304-B711-378S.
2 bodroom mobllo homo In
Syria~•. *110. per month ptus 5 room apt. unfurnllhed. ,.,..lgutltltle•. d epo1 1t. 114-882- ntor•ndstow Included. adutta
5732 oltor 5 :00pm.
only. no-. 304-1711-2836.

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

For •le: 1 Iron aplrelstairway, 1 lndhtidUII guitar l•sons, be-

phone -mate 8nawerirJg machine. 1 cordleu talephone, 1
set of 12 inch double plowa. Call
614-742-2931 .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

EVENING
75

Mlddeporc. 1180 month plus
utltloo. 814-992·5846 or 6149411-2218.
APAR"IMENTS. mobile hornoo,
hou. .. Pt. Pl-ntendGelllp~
llo. 814-446-8221 .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1972 Hondl460, 8350.00, exc
cond, 304-896·3335.

a~o~o-~8~4~3-~8~4~3~9~1~~~iii~-~~:·;·'~"'~·~·'~"~·~~::===T.;;;;;;;;;~

1979 C~y Tri-A•I•
dump tn!lller. Call 81
9379
·
1975 DOdge 4 wo. 89.000
miles. 11 .000. 16 ft. Shasta
camper, 8700. C.ll 814-2686459.

Thursday, June 2. 1988

1988

1976 CJ7 Jeep priced
$1,800.00 . 1974Jeepforperta.
304-675-7469.

Newty redecomed 1Pir1l'ftlnts

Furnished or unfurni1had 2 BR ..
calli• -.w.tiN'w.ewage paht. AC.
Foster' s Mobil• Home ParkI &lt;
814-446-1 802.

74

Tuco ICOp6 3 -9-40. R•mlngton
WlniJ! Ma11er 16 gauge, model

870. Stevena FM~oritll 22 nne,
model 71 . gokllnllld. Winchestar 30-30. model 94. 12 ga~ge
Remington pLmp, model 29.
Amadeo Ro1sl S.A. Overland 12
guage Magum double banel.
Browning model 71. silver inlaid, 348 cal. Most gu111 have
newr been fired . Call 61 4· 266·
1431 .

.

n ..usday, June 2,

Call 1·614-888·7311 .

Guna for Sai•WI'lch811er Cen·

"She's past the crisis...she
wants an update on the soap
operas."

'

Big 2. Bedroom Ruatic hom1
built an your lite . I 1 3,995.up,

tennlal Model 66, 30-30 rifle,
Qokl inlaid. Remington O.me
Mutef 30-08. Model 780 with

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom•P•k.
Route 33, North of Pbmltl'oy.
Rental tralll.,.-s. C.ll 814-9927479.

Echoing Meadows Residental
Center. Athens, Ohio hat imme-diate openings for full· ti~e &amp;.
part-time AN ' S !a LPN'S. For
further inforn"etion &amp; applications can 614-693-8074,

54 Misc. 1\oterchandise

61 4-446· 2325. 4464249.

Plrking area. C.ll 814-2455024.

Now hiring drfvers. Make up to
S4 a hour plus milaega !a tips.
Apply now Domino's Piza.

Respontlble babysitter In my
hom:t Mon .• Tun., Wed. S. Fri. in
Rio Grande vicinity. PlleaseMnd
resume &amp; re1el'llnon to: Boll Cl•
153. c/o Gallipolis Daily Trib-

46 Space for Rent
Store corner of Second &amp; Pin e.
1400 sq. ft. Off street parldng.

NAed aomeone to te• down old
houMt fin VInton) for the lumber.

Herald Dispatch Newapap&amp;r
needs C&amp;l'rlert for 2 rouWI·
Crown City ~rea . and Gallipolis
to Rio Gran de area. Must have
good mnsponation and be
bondable. Call Jnn MiiiM, 304526·2a30.

•

II

ATW
EN

GHV

VGK

CTE

PH

JWKWDGAPKJ

X G K 'A

RW

XGBGRSW

WKATYHPCTPBBWI

RYSCWD-SQAAEK
YsterdQ'• C17Ptoqaote: ENJOY THE LlTI'LE YOU

HAVE, WHILE THE FOOL IS HUNTING FOR MORE. SPANISH PROVERB

'

.

••

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="6437">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6436">
              <text>June 2, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
