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•
' .

•.

Pege~10 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1, 1987

--weal briefs:---. Bob 'Evans restaurant sales up 25 percent
Racine Council. to meet ·
Racine Vlllag~ Council will m~t in regular session tonight
tMondayJ, 7 p.m .. at the Shrine Park build ing.
b

EMS

report.~

emergency runs

Meigs County Emergency Medical Se rvices answerro fi ve
ca lls over the weekend, thr~ on Saturday and two on Sund ay.
Saturday at 8:48 a. m.. Middleport to Loga n St. for Cleland
Siders to )leteran• Memor ial Hospital : Middleport at 7:51 p.m.
to South Fron t SL for Barbara·Bolin g who was treated but not
tra nsported ; Syracuse at 11:21 p.m. to Coll ege S!. for Vera
VanMeter who was trea ted but not t ransported.
Sunday at 12: 16 a. m., Middleport to Brow hell Apts. fo r Ronald
Pickens who wa s no lransported; Tuppers Plai ns at 9:33p.m.
transported David Wolfe to Vetera ns Memorial Hos pi tal.

Not guilty plea entered

••

Corbett Eugene Ra tliff, 1~ . of Route 7. Middlrport. had hi s
Initial hearing thi s mornin g In Meigs Coun ty Com mon P leas
Court on a grand jury lndirlmenl for fr lonious assault. The
Indict ment was handed dow n May 21 in co nn ec tion with an

Incident May 9outs ide a Middlepo rt bar in which J ohn 0. Blake,
22. also of Middleport. was stabbed in t he neck . As reported by
Paul Gerard of the Meigs Cou nt y Prosecutor's office, Ra tliff
enterro a not guilty plea lo the charge and was released on a
$5,000 recoglza ncc bond. Trial wa s set for 9 a.m. July 27 .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ,....
The opening of 24 new Bob Evans
F'arms ' resaurant s'in fi scal year
1987 helped boost net sales for the
year 25 percent over the same
period last year.
Fisca l 1987 sales wer e $327,160.
comparro with $262.682 the year
before, the company said. Ne t
incom e was $21.470 or 90 cent s a
share, comparro with $20,575, or
92 cents in fisca l1986.
Bob Eva ns Far ms' board of
directors declared a 7·cents per

knowing the feeling of being
discouraged for not be the best
there is.
In closi ng, Louk s stressed the
need to ask God for His help in
guidance and accomplishment of
goals. She closro with the poem,
"A Cr~d for Today and Every
Day" by Anna Marie Edwards.
Se lect ions by the Eastern High
Concert Band , dlrectro by Wil·
iiam Hall, preceded the f,and '~

Hospital news

Meigs Sheriff Howard F' ra nk reports his departmenl had a
busy weekend. mos lly domestic violence re lated siluat ions.
Saturday at ~): 20 p.m. deputies wt&gt;re ca lled to a res idence on
Ohlo681 just outside Reedsv ille. Th~per son wh o called reported
a man was fighting with relat ives.
At 6:08 p.m ., deputies were sent w a domestic dis pu le in
Reedsville whc r ~ a woman' s ex· hu sba nd was allegedly ca using
damage to her home. Deputies were called back to t he res idence
at 9: 20p.m. and arrcsled Kennclh E. Rockhold on·a domestic
violence charge. Rockhold is being held in jail until his Init ial
·
appearance In Meigs Counl y Court.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions: Marie
Wal di ng . Raci ne: Rodn ey
Spires . Ches hir e.
Salurday Discharges: Charles
Kl ein, David Talbott , Chester
Young, Neal Bonecull er Jr.,
Anne Davis .. Betty .Roush, Wil·
!lam Whitlock
Sunday Admissions: Rober!
Rinehart, Middleport ; Catha AI·
varada, Racine; J ohnni(l Mea d ows, Ma son, W.Va.; Kenneth
Cund iff, Syrac use.
Sunday Discharges: Raymond
.Justice. Paul Stei nmetz Jr ..

On Sunday, deputies responded to two domestic violencE'

Racine on a warr&lt;a nl iss ued by Meigs Count y Co ur l for fal\ u re lo

appear on an earlier citation.
Deputies received a r0 porl Satu rday ni ghI of va ndalism to a
pickup tru ek ncar the Hobson ·yards. Also Salu rday ni ght ,
deputies had a repor t of shooting taki ng place ncar the Ritchie
Bridge on Ohio 338. No one was found upon arr ival at the scene.
At 11 :20 p.m. Sunday, depu ties were ca lled to The Cove
night club outside Pomr ro.v w hr r f' three pat r ons wcrC' rt'fu sinp;
to leave at clos in g time.

Marriage license fil ed

tn

Meigs

A marriag:(• Ji o ·•nsC' has bf•en is surd ln Meigs Count y Probate
Court to Mark F'rPd f'r ld rmon, :\4, Albany. and Brend a Kay
Stanley, 30. Albany.

:South Filth Ave .. Mlddleporl.
'dl!'d Sunday at Holzer Medical
;cenler followin g a brief Illness.
Born Sept. 5, 1914 at Cheshire,
'he wa s a son of the late Sa muel
:and Erma Folden Baker. He
worked 37 .v.ears for Columbus
:and Southern Ohio E lectric Com·

i

pany before retiri ng, and was a

)member of Mlddlepo rl Chu reh of
iC hrlst. He wa s a U.S. Army
!veteran of World War 11 , and a
'member of FeC'nev -BCn neH Pos t
:128 of the Amcrlc.an Legion. tile
:veterans Of F oreign Wars and
:the Disabled AmNica n Vetr
irans. He al&gt;o ~lo n ged to the
~elg s Co un t.1· Coonhuntrr s
~Associ at ion.
' Survivors lnrludf' his wifr.

borothy• For th HakPr , a nd tw o
d.oughtf. rs , Kath y a nd Angl'lla
:Baker, all of Mldd leporl; tw ~
slslers. Mrs. Es t her Gurdon of
):heshlre and Mrs. Juli:l Lee of
·Addison: two brothers, All en
:Saker of Ga llipolis and Charles
;Baker or New Bos ton: One
~lster· ln - law. D&lt;'lcir Forth
of
.
Middleport ; and SC'\' f'ra \ ll JC'C'f'S
itnd nrphPws.

.
~

&amp;-sides hi s parf'nt s. hl' was

precrocd in d~ath by a daughter,
Beverly Rae. and two brothers,
Theodore and Robert.
Se rvices will be 2 p.m. Wedn es·
day al Ihe Mi ddl epor t Ghurch of
Chr iS! wi th AI Ha rl so n official ·
in g. F ri ends m ay call at
Rawli ng·Coats.-Rlower F un eral
Hom e on Tuesday fr om 2 to 4 and
7 to Ha nd at !he ch urch for one
hour prior to services . Bur ial will
txo in Mou nd flill Cemetery in
Ga lli polis. Memorial co ntribu ·
lions for Mr . Baker may br m adf'
'to Middleport Church of Christ.

Sallit· L Cadit'
Mrs. Sal lie Louise Cadl e. 79. of
lOft fr nter Ave., Shrewsbury,

W.Va ., died Sa turday al Charles·
ion Area Medical Ccnl er. Mem·
oria l Divisio n, alt er a long
il ln ess.

A nat ive of Lltt lc Rock. Arkan·
sas, s he was bor n Nov. 25. 1907 1o
thr late .John and Sara h Payne
Elrod. She was a housPw ire and 1;1
mrmbC'r of the Holin rss Faith.
Surv ivors inc lu de one daugh·
ter, Mrs. Thelma Banks of
Pomero.r : one bro ther. Cli ne
Elrod. Morga ntown. K)' .: sl'
grandch il dren: 14 gr~at grand·

)Wheelchair-bound girl
\charges discrimination
' CANTON. Ohi o iU P tt- Hall)'
Reusser sa~s despil e her ballli'
;with spina blflda. whlr l1 has left
:her In a whcclcllilir. sh1• Is a
~o rmal person.
• "The o nl~ lhln g th'" does n't
!work Is m~· Jrg:.;, " said thr lR·
~ypar - old s{' n\or at Can ton Mrl\in·
' l~· High SchooL "Wh)' should
. !they put barriers up for me just
lberau se m~· Jrgs won ' t work '! "

The barrier Reusser is Irving
!to cross Is the high sc hoo l sta ge
~uesday
nig ht to gN her
ldlploma.

iha~~~~ pr'~~~i~,;~o:·;~~ ~~~~s~~
;wh~l her chair onto lhP stage

\would be dangerous. Reusser
jclalms discriminatio n.
' ·Her lawye rs wi ll meet tod ay
'-'·lth the srhoollaywers to decide
'how to handle i hc complaint.
!{oily expects to know later toda y
,If she will get her wis h. She has
been thinking about s kipping the
ceremonies II she Isn't allowro to
wheel her chair across the stage.
"It's discrimination , plain and
'simple." she said. " Just like
'telling a black person he ca n't
walk through the graduation lin e
beca~se he' s black.
Blosser has said he feels Holly
1

••

• • J!_

•

-

would br safrr If shr wcrr not on
the stagr.
" WC' believe that it presents a
hazard to Holly," said 8\ossrr.
" WP'rt' not tryi ng to deny Hol!y
anv rh ing. Wr want to make sun"

can do th is sa fr l ~~ and
proprrly without a ha zard to
heo·."
·T m trying 10 change thin gs.
no I only for my self but fo r ot her
prople going to McKinley." she
said . "ll's only going to take !11•e
mi nules a nd I think I dese rve
th at five minut es - after wor king m)' butt off for 12 years.
·· I 'm not ask ing fo r a favor or
anything else, .. she said. " This is
a rule that should have been
changed a long time ago."
Holly had attendro Mass illon
sc hools. but after the s ixt h grade,
she tra nsferred to Canton , In the
sa me county. because the facll l·
tics for the handlcappro were
better.
" I'm a normal person. The
only th ing that doesn't work Is
my legs," she said. She has the
support of the Ohio Lega l Rights
Ser vices, whose alforney Susa n
Tobin says the school is prohl·
blte d from discr imin a tion
against wheelchairs because It
seeks froeral funds.
\\ 'C

'

stan ce" for the entrance of the66
class members.
The Senior Hi gh Chorus. di·
reeled by Valerie Ransbottom.
presenled " Peace Be With You",
" Ma ybe So meda y" an d a
member of the grad uat ing class,
Tara Woods, sa ng a vocal solo,
"We Must Say Goodbye".
On behalf of the se nior class.
Rona ld Todd Clay, class presi·
dent , present ed an engraved
plaque to Richard Roberls; su·
perint cndent of the district who
has resigned. in apprecialion of
his work over the past years.

Invoc ation a nd bened ict ion
were by the Rev. Robert Sand·

ment entered a new market,

Memp his, Tenn.. during 1987.
The new market add ed three
r~u te sales represe ntatives and
brought to 87 the number of Bob
Eva ns Farms sa usage sales
representatives . Also, . fuli.Y"
cooked ham and cheese bJ SCUll s
and sa usage and biscui ts were
introduced in sel ected market s

Phil
Niekro
sets
mark
Page 3

1
during the year.
The new products will be
brought into a ll Bob Evans
F'arms markets by th.e •end of
fiscal 1988, the c-ompany said.
Plans to begin selling a brownand·serve sausage under the
Owens Count ry Sausage label
are also under way, the company
said.
The company's annual s.hareh·
oldre's meet ing will be held Aug.
10 at th e Bob Eva ns Farms in Rio
Grande.

Ohio Lottery

,.

Daily

u nited Brethren Church wilh
Monsignor · Anthony Gianna ·
more. pas tor of Sacred Hea rl
Chu rch in Pomeroy, deliver in g
the bacca lau reale address:
" Life: A Gift and a Task"·
Clay gave the welcome wit h
Lee Ann. Robinson, class vice
pres ident . int roducin g the c~ m ·
men cement speakers.
High
School Principal Dr. Dan C.
Apling recognized the 10 top
scholars of Ihe class and pres·
ent ed the Class of '87 to Supt.
Robert s with M rs. Carolyn Sus ie
Heines, president of the Eastern
Local School Dist rict Board of
)::ducal ion, conferring diplomas
Kristi Hawk. class secre1ary and

•

winner Saturday

CLEVE LAND. Ohio iUPi l The Super Lotto jac kpot for
Wednesday night will be at least
$6 mit lion because no player had
a winning t icket Saturday night.
Ohio Lottery Commission offi·
cials sa id $3,326,828 worth of
tickets were sold, bul no ticket
had the numbers 7, 13, 26, 36, 40
an d 42.
However, 96 had five numbers.
meaning each ticket is worth
$1.0DO. The 4. 466 that had four
nu mbers is worth $85.

5,000
7,500
10,000
12,000
18,000

9:30 TO 5:00
MON.-SAT.

BTU
BTU
BTU
BTU
BTU

115
115
115
115
230

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ............. 26 ~
AT&amp;T ........ ................ ... ...... 25~
Ashland Oil ........................ 62\2
Bob Evans Farms ............ .. 25 34
Charming Shoppes ..... ...... ... 25\io
Froeral MoguL ............... ... .42Y,
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 6611.
Heck's Inc ...................... ..... 4\2
Limited Inc... ........... .... ..... .40 ~
Multlmrola Inc ................... 53\1
Rax Restauranls ........ ..... .....
Robbins &amp; Myers.. , ................ ll
Shoney's Inc ....................... 27\io
Wendy's Inti . .... :................. . 9Y,
Worthington lnd .................. 20\l

5*

bring to that office

25 Centt

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•

"1 think that kind of question Is totally speculative, ..
the governor said when as ked If he would yield to
Glenn's candidacy. "I'm looking at this fi·om the
standpolnl ofwhethcrDickCeleste Is a candidate. and
that's the perspective I'll pursue It fi·om in my
conversations with John or anybody else.
" I have to believe that I'm as ready as any of the
other people who are runnin g or I wou ldn't be
running," Celeste said when asked If he Is "ready" for
I he presidency.
The governor said he has t·eceived favorable and
unfavorable reaction to his potential candidacy. "I've
been encouraged by some people and I' ve been
discouraged by some people," he said.
One of the discouragin g remarks, Celeste
half· joked. Is that "I hav en't been canonized by my
hom etown press ... The Plain Dealer In Cleveland has
not given Celeste a sofi ride In its u·eatmenl of his

Pomeroy VIllage Council Man·
day night gave the fh·st reading to
an ordinancetoraise salaries of the
mayor, clerk-treasurer, cou ilcll·
mPn and members of I he board of

".

pubHc affair s, retroactive from

Jan. L
lf passed. the ordinance would
increase the mayor's annual sal ary·

..... .

•••••o,,,,, ....

Exterkif"t
Latex no

administmtion.
The gover nor sa id he want s to m ake sure Ohlo' :;

progress can txo sustain ed during his aooence for a
campaign, thai he can co nvey a message applying his
sucr.ess In Ohio lo the nallon. and lhat he has a
"reasonable" chance of winning.
Celeste said lhl' 1988 Demoo·atic presidential
co ntest is "a race without a rabbit lfrontrunner/lti II "
and he has time to make up his mind. "I think It' s
going lo tHk&lt;• me some time," he added.
The governor said his vis its with European business
leaders were "Int erest ing and timely" because or the
devaluation of lhe America n dollar and an
In creasingly protectionist attitude on the part of ttxo
gover nm ent .
He said tho foreign rosiness leaders found Ohio a
"pm·t icularly all ract lve" place to trade.

S82'l check to John Tillis, president
the b!Uld
boosters. Tillis says the money will beusedtoasslst in
the pun:h11&lt;e of uniforms and Instruments.

fr om $3.000 to $3.6011; the clt~k·
treasurer's from $8,400 to $10,(ffi;
councilmen from $10 per meet lng to
$21 per meeting: and mem bers of
the board of public affairs from $~1
per meeting to $10.
Mayor Richard Seyler reported
that repairs to the Pomeo·oy·Mason
Bridge are slightly ahead of
schedule. He said the pier on the
Ohio side or the bridge ll; flnl&lt;hed
and workers are now on the West
Virginia side. The bridge has bl.'&lt;'n
closed for repairs since March 30.
In other business. cou nell gave
the first reading to an ordinance to

enact the vuiage·s codiflcallon
books "' prepared and submltled
by thr Waller H. Drane Co ..
Cleveland: and passed n resolullon
lo trans fer S8.000 from rhe wa ler
departmen t bud get back Int o the
village general fund. The transfer
will reimbu rse char ges of workrr' s
compert&lt;ation, for thr water depru1ment, that werededuct!'d from
the ,.village's February tux settlement by the county audit or.
Council accepted a bid fi·om
Byers Chevrolet . Columbus, of
$11.869 for a new pollee cru L•eo·.
Only Cou ncilman Larry Wchrung
voted no on accepllng the bid.
Wehrung explained that he was not
agalnsl pu rchus lng a new cru Lw
but he would prefer to purchase th"
cruiser from a local auto dealer,
Instead of going out·Of·town. Coun·
clil plans to advert ise the vill age's
old cru Lser for sale.

Councilman .John Anderson r&lt;•
ported he Is making a lis t or n~ed
street signs for the vUiage. Cou ncil·
man Bl'llce Anderson volunteer&lt;id
to assist In prepru·atlon of the list.
Clerk·Treasurer Jane Walton said.
the village will be nnanclally abl e to
P~&gt;rcha&lt;e the signs In the fall .
Finally, council discussed a call
received by lhe mayor from Ohio
Department of 1i'ansjXlrtatlon re
presenta tlves, telling him or thetr
plans to Include blacktoppin g from
the U.S. :1:1 fOUl'• lane to Ihe end Of
NyeAvenu e on their 1988sohedulc.
The mayor suld he would rather
OOOT blacktop the village's Main
St. Instead. Council uwtoed with Ihe
mayor that paving from the
fouo' iane down Nye Ave. ll; s till in
good shape. The mayor sugges ted
he and rouncll dlscuss tlie matter
with ODOT before !heir 1988
schedu le Is finalized .

""'Good

SAV£83.00

OFF MFR. SUG. LIST PRIC£

SAV£83.00
OFF MFR. SUG. LIST PRICE

SAVES2.00
OFF MFR. SUG. L/Sr PR!C£

SAV£83.00
OFF MFR. SUG. LIST PRICE

Interior Latex
Flat Wall Paint

Interior Latex
Semi·Gioss Wall &amp;Trim

Exterior Latex
Flat House Paint

Exterior Oil Base
Gloss House &amp;Trim

Ideal for apar1ments and he·

Great savings on our sem•·gloss
pain!! WMe on ly.

White only Easy soap and

quen~ JM!intod rooms. White

only. fr. sug. l1st price $8.99.

Mfr. SlJg. list price$ 12.99.

water clean·up.
Mh. sug.list pr1ce $10 99

Econom1c while gloss pam! 1!1ea1
lor the extenor and trim~~ your
hOme Wh~e only
Mlr aug. hst pnce S13 99.

sa~~on

s10~~on

ss~!on

sean

SAVES6.00

OFF MFA SUG LISfPRICE

SAVE87.00

OFF MFR SU(; L!STI'RrCE

The l*lect durablt linlshl
AYailallle In hundre&lt;l! ol

eustom·mi-td cOlors.

Mlr. IUQ . list pi' ICe $19 ~.

$1299

SAVE'1.00

SAVES1.50

OfF MFA SUG usrPRJCE

OFF MFA SUG LIST PRICE

Besl Alkyd

lle$1 EDoxy Appliance

Spray Enamel
Prottm against rust, IOfms
a hard ana~ 11nrtl!. 15

popular st1adts
Mlr. ti.J!I . bt pnce $2.99

$1~,

Spray £11111tel .

cr.. tes. strong. impact ·
rnrstanl enamelllf'lrsh

Auorttcl eOhn

M!1 sug ltsl puce S:l 99

$~2~z

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.

405 N. 2ND

992·5020

CONVENIENT

By CRAIG WEBB
WASHINGTON iUP!l - Un·
cle Sam has the economic
equivalent of a hangover, ex·
perts say, and his ronditlon Is
going to get worse.
Aller a first quarter In which
the economy ·grew markedly
laster than normal, recent signs
point for the gross national
product to rise at no more than
. half tbe pace II did In ttose first
three months or the year.

economists predict. Some ana·
lysts forecast no growth at all .
The latest signposts of the
economy were expected today
with the release or three repons
on new home sales. business
productivity, and manufactu r·
ers' shipments, Inventories and
orders.
Monday, the Commerce Department reported the seaso nally adjusted annual rate of new
construction rose a puny 0.4

perccnt in April. Single- family
home buildin g and some retail
ronstructlon made up fo r a slide
In multUamlly and publi c build·
lng, the government said.
Sln glefamlly home co nstrue·
lion has supported the consti'Uc·
tlon Industry In recent months,
as high vacancy rates and lax
cha nges made multifam ily
housing and office construction
less lucrative.
Now even construction for

one family homes may bepctl•r·
ing out. Mortgage rates starl ed
rising · rapidly in April. going
from 9.14 percent at lhc early
part of the month to 10.5percent
by month's end.
Those rate Increases In tum
caused the annual sales pace for
existing homes todropl percenl
in April. Many economic ana·
lysis said the sales rate for new
homes probably fell .1 percent lo
' percent tha t sam e monlh.
"In effect, higher mortgage

rates are dampening what cou ld
have been an exceptional spring
sales market, especially for
flrst·time home buyers." sa id
John TuecUio, chief economist
for the National Associat ion of
Reallors.
Tuccillo now forecasts horne
sales overall will drop 7.2
percenl from the first quarter to
the second or this year.
The outlook for manufactur·
lng L&lt; equally di m. Businesses
Increased their ln venlorles by

$00 billion In the fi rst three
monlhs of 1~87. then saw the
lnOatlon-adjusted sales pace fall
2.2 percent.
Experts say the result has
been that Inventories, which
provld!'d almost all the propel·
!ant for tlie fl rst·quarter rise In
the gross nallonal product, w!U
not be mu ch or a fa clor at all in
the second quarter. Most econo
mists said the Iot a! va lu e of
In ventories probably fell about
0.:! peo·ccnl In ApriL

Southern board approves substitute list for new term

House

Paint

"""'

Daily stoek prices

Celeste said he hopes hean dG ienn cansit down and
discuss tlie campaign within a w~k. and he lefl little
doubt wit h reporters that he wllltrytotalkGlennout
of running.
In addlt ion, the governor answered "no" ro a
question as to whet her anything in h~ personal life .
would preclude him from being president. as it did for
former Colorado Sen. Gary'Hart.
Glenn has Indicated he will consider anor her run at
the presidency In 1988 if he can get rid of a lingering
$1.5 million deb! from his ill·fated 1984 bid for tlie
Democratic nomination, which ended In March of
that year.
Celeste supported Glenn until he abando ned Ihe
race. Asked what has changed, Celeste said, "I've
had four years to be governor of Ohio. The relative

flbtlf•ldt

Sizzling
Summer Savings
· on Paint!

Louery numbers

with a payoff due of $590,178.
PICK-I
l9:l3.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$184,1i10, with a payoff due of
$83.157.
PICK ·4 $1 st ralght bet pa ys
$2.052. P1CK4 $1 box bet pays
$171.
••
Super Lotto
42, 36. 7, 40, 13. 26.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$:\,326,828.

1 Section. 10 Pages

2. 1987

Experts feel U. S. economy will get worse later in year

Sou th Central
Partly cloudy tonight with a
slight chance of thunderstorms
this eveni ng. Low in rhe mid 60s.
Li ght sou thwest wind. Chance of
r ai n Is 30 percent.
Partly cloudy Tuesday wilh a
chance of thunderstorms. High In
t hf' mid ROs. Chance of rain is 40
percent .
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wedn esday through Friday
Seal! ered thund ers tor m s.
warm and 'humid Wednesday.
Highs In the ROs and lows In the
60s. Clea ring and cooler Thurs·
day. becoming less hum id.
Mostly sunny with pleasant
temperatu res Friday .

917.
Ti cket sales rora l!'d $1,414 ,232.

thunderstorms

Pomeroy council approves
first reading for pay hikes

JAYCEES MAKE DONATION - The Melp
County Jaycees have donated S822tothe MelliS Senior
and Junior High Band Boosters DrADRI&lt;allon. Steve
Bachner, left, president of lhe Jaycees, presents the

Weather

CLEVELAND tUPII - Sa tu r·
day 's winning Ohi o Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporia'
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -Gov. Richard F .
Celeste says he's st U! weighing the pros and cons of a
presidential bid In 1988, but he says Sen. John Glenn,
D·Ohlo, Is not one of the factors standing In his way.
Celeste Indicated Monday that although talk of a
Glenn presidential candidacy Is being rcvived. he will
not yield to Ohio's senior senator and, In fact , believes
he would be a superior candidate and president .
Celeste called reporters In to discuss his recent
two~k IJJslness·famUy trip to Europe, bul once he
delivered a monologue on that subject, the questions
were all about his presidential ambitions.
The governor said It ~unlikely that he and Glenn
can .both be candidates. sin~ both draw from the

Y............ S269.00
Y............ S379.00
Y............ S479.00
Y............ S559.00
Y........... $619.00

EIIJerfelds

and

likely Wedne;da,y.

Celeste won't back away from Glenn in race

IN STOCK •••
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!

Mdgs J un ior High seventh and
eigh lh grade athletes, cheerlead·
ers and coaches are have a
sw imming part y at Middleport
Poll on Monday from 6: 30 to 8: 30
p.m. Sevent h graders, bring a 16
oz. bag pota to chips: eighth
gr aders. bri ng 12 ca ns pop. no
bottles. Any question s. ca ll .992·
6212.

Showers

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June

AIR CONDITIONERS

Swim party set

children and t hre~ great great
grand children.
Serv ices were held 11 a.m.
today (Monday! at Cook F'uneral
Home Chapel, Cedar Grove,
W.Va., wit h Rev. He rbert Adk ins
a nd Rev. Charles B l a nk~ns hip
officiating. Entombment was In
the Kanawha Valley M~mo rial
Gardens Mausoleum at Glasgow.
W.Va .

No

Showers and ..ttamderstonns
likely tonight. Low 6.~ to 711.
Ch!Uice of rain 111 percent

•

at y

urer. led the turni ng of the tassel.
. Vol. 36. No. 272
. Copyrlghtod 1987

Number

448
Pick 4
0261

sam~e~bas;e~o~f~
p~po~rtJin~O~h~i~
t~ would besu~on
the sameo,~a~n~d:ev:en:les:s~Uk:e:ly~t:h:at~-~;j~~w~hi~c~h~w~e~w~ourld
ticket.
hav~

Vivian Powers.

Area deaths
:Raymond M. Baker
''• Raymond M. Baker. 72, of 21i:J

plans to add a carryout service at
Bob Evans F'arms ' restaurants
in the coming fisca l year.
The company's sausage seg·

~(LSt~r11
... ~C~on~ll~·n~uro~fr~o~m~p~a~g~e~1------------------~~~~~~~~~~::=:~::~:;~=the best that they can ra ther than selection, " Pomp and Circum· ers pastor of the Mount Her mon Susan Sabra Swa in, class treas·

Sheriff reports activities

calls. one at F: nterprlse and the oth er at Reedsv il le.
At 7:05p.m. Salurda y, d(•pu ties arres iPd Paul E. Wilso n in

share· dividend payable today to
shareholders of record May 8.
During 1987, the company also
took control of Owens Cou ntry
Sa usage Inc. and one or Its
restaurants in Longview. Texas,
bringi ng the total number or
restaurants in operation to 17&gt;,
compa rro with 150 at the end of
the period in 19a6.
A number or new It ems. such as
taco salads and fr esh-fruit plat ·
ters. were added lo the resrau·
ra nt menu . The compa ny said it

OFF THE STREET PARKING

MIDDLEPORT

Southern Local Board of Educa· Joy~ Back. Todd I&lt;Jng and ers wre Charles T. Chapman,
lion nnallzed sub;tltute lil; ts lor the Franl&lt;lln Petrie Jr.
· Tammy Chapman. James O'Brien,
coming school year when they met
Employed as sutxstltute cooks Joe Dras ko and·William Downie.
Sa turday morning In regular were Carol Hood, Barbara Chap.
Teachers Charlsse Knight and
session.
man. Shirley Shultz, Marie Norris. Kathryn Hill were employed by the
Employed by the board as Janet Manuel, Mary Smith. Tessie board on cont inu ing cont racts.
suootitute teachers were Angella Evans, Sharlee Evans and Shirley
Salaries for all prlnlcpals In the
Baker, Ros e Ann Jenkins, Randy Evans.
district were updated. The salary
Koehl&lt;!". Leda Mae Krautter, Bar·
Employed as sub;tltute custodl· for principal Is paid In addition to
bara Lawrence, Vinas ~. Patrl· ans were Pat ty Brown. Shirley the regular teacher salary. Ele
cia Parker, Fanny ~. Dortha Shultz, Mary Smith. Carol Hood, mentary school and the junior hi gh
Petrel. Christy Nelson. William Janet Manuel, Charles Curtman, school principals' salaries were
Robinette, Eileen Buck, Sue Grace. ' Marie Norris, Toni Hudson. James raised by the board to $6,ll0 for the
Helen Maag, Michelle Mowrey, O'Brien and Shirley Evans.
1987-88 school year. an Increase of
Employed as substll\lte busdriv· approxima tely $360. At the high
Charles Norris. Mary WooiE'Ver,

school lcvel. the principal's sa lary
received a $L:iXl increase.
In rela ted matters, lhe board
raised the salaries of h~ad volley·
ball coach, head cheerleadlng
advL&lt;or and head softball coach, all
at lhe high school ICIIel. from
$1.~8.24 to $1,588.10. This Is the
same sa lary as head baseball
coach. The board Increased the
salary for junior hi gh cheer leading
advL&lt;or from $532.~ 10$973.41. the
same a• coaching positions at the
ju nlor high lcveL By this action, the
board equalized the coach ing salar·

Arms hearings resume; Abrams testifies
By E. MICHAEL MYERS
and JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP)] - Con·
gressk&gt;nal Invest lgators stopped
just stort of accusing Eillolt
Alrams of lying about his role In
sro'et aid to tho! Nicaraguan rebels
when they told the assistant
sro'etary of state he had "a lot or
explaining to do" at today' s IranContra hearings.
At:cams. the administration's
offiCial point man lor the u.s .•
backed Contra rebels, was called
today as the first wltne;s In the fifth
week of hearing. Into covert
American arms sales to Iran and
tbe diversk&gt;n or money to tbe
guE!'rUia9 at a time when U.S.
military aid to them was U)egal.
As assistant SI'CI'etary cl state for
Latin America, the combative
defender cl President Reagan' s
policy In the region Is the hlgheslranklng current U.S. o!lldal called
to lesllfY to the coneresslonal
committees probln&amp; the case.

•

The committees are exploring
the chain ,or command from the
Contra Operation In Central Amer·
lea to the halls of power In
Washington. and new Information
about an active OA role In the
secret rebel supply network has
raised moJ'I! questions about who In
the pollticaJ hierarchy gave the
orders.
In testimony released Monday
anw being censored bytheOA, the
committees heard the former CIA
station chief In Costa Rica detail
privately last week how be gave
crucial Intelligence lnl'llrmatlon to
the Conlra supply airlift even
lhougll Congress had banned such
actlvhy from October 1984 to
October 1986.
Jose Fernandez, wto did his 0 A
work undl!r the alias Tomas
Castillo, contradicted earner stat.~
menls by At:cams and OA o!lldal
Clair George In testifYing at a
closed sesslcn Friday undl!r Umlted

Immuni ty from prosecu tion.
-Abrams' stalement Ihat he di d
Abrams has denied knowing not "know anything about this
anything or the Iran arms deals, but private network" for the Contra,.
the committees are more con· Investigators note he worked
cerned with his denials regarding closely with Lt. CoL Oliver North,
aspects of tbe Contra network.
the fired National Security Council
The questions looming before aide al the heart of the scandal.
today·s hearing focused on:
-A brams' statemC!ll Ilia\ he
-A dirt airstrip In Costa Rica often discussed the "sou tliern
used to refUel cargo planes for tlie front" of rebellion In Nicaragua
Contras. Abrams said he did not ' wit h Tamil;. There are questions
know about It until It was built, hut about the legality of that ,role. ·
Lewis Tamil;. who was ambassa·
"He has a lot of explaining to do."
dor to Costa Rica at the time, said Sen. Sam Nunn, D.Ca ., said on the
last week that Abrams discussed cve or today's hearing. "He ha&lt;
the airstrip before It was carved out givCIJ Inaccurate Information."
ot tbe !rush near tbe· Honduran
"I think yru'il lind that he had
border.
more knowledge than he revealed
-Abrams' early statements tliat to the various committees (when)
he knew not hing of ot her countries he test Wied before," agreed Sen.
provldlng money for the Contras. William Cohen, R·Malne. He said It
He later acknowledged he was the was possible, however, that
o!flcial who solicited a SID millton Abrams could have teen mlsln·
contribution from the sultan of formed by . others and did not
Brunei, a donation that was losf. lntentk&gt;nally plan 10 deceive
u nLU May because It was directed to (:mlgress.
tlie wroog Swiss bank account.

les. 11 wa• also point ed out lhe
chet:~lead lng adv lsors' positions
are year· round job; and shou ld 1M'
equal to that or coaches.
The ooard will txo adveo·tL• Ing
within Southern Dist rict for the
hiring of Individua ls to fill four
su pplemental positions. The board
has vacancies for two varsity

football coac hes, boys reseow
basketball coach, boys fres hman
ha•kct ball coach, girls reserve
ba•kct bal l coach,junlor hi gh girl&lt;
ba• ketbal l coach and junior high
chcerlcadln g advL•or. These posl·
lions were posted within the schools
but no teachers applied for the jobs.
Cont lnu!'d on page 6

Ohioa11s favor 65 mph
(,1NCINNATI !UPI) - The latc&lt;~t Ohio l'oll rt·ports thai most
. Ohioans favor ml&lt;ilng the Spt'Cd limit on mrallntl'T'slat&lt;&gt;&lt; to 65 mph
for both c!U's !Uld I!U'ge truck.;.
The poll rele101ed Monday, ...Ud ii~ percent of the ""pondents
favored raising the llmK to 65, whil e 41 percent favort.! ke&lt;op!J!g tiM•
Umk at 55. Sev"' p!f'oont ..Ud k should he ralstod to 60.
Barliw 1tt&amp;&lt;l ye!U', when k p111&lt;Sed a new highway spt'lldlng hill,
Cool!fu;s gave statoo the rlgllt to ml&lt;ic their •P"'-11 Ibn it to"'' high a•
6.~ mph on sectlonH of Interstate hiKhway outHklc dt"" of 50,(Xltl
pop!Jiatlon. Twenty-!4x stat"' have ralo!ed the limit.
The Ohlo Gen!f'al A""""'liy loi considering two "''parate spt'&lt;'d
limit lillH. Undw a proposal hy Sm. David Hotf!on, It ,~pringfle ld,
the limit woold he 65 for car• Md 115 for truck.&lt;. ,u_., lnclutiLod art•
strooger ponallle!! lor most spJcdlng violations.
1\ hlU sptlfL'lOf'cd In too "'"'"" hy ltep. em Stl'•n, ll·i\kron. would
st'i hoth llmKs at 65 and woold prohibit poUuc from Issuing warning
ticket.&lt; to !lOme S(J&lt;!IJIUS,
But Gov. Richard Cel.,.te has vol&lt;:cd 110; opposKion to roll&lt;;!ng the
speed limK, Haying to do Sf! woold lead to roorc aecldents and
!njurkJs.
The most roomt Ohio Poll was conduded ootw•'Cfl AprD 23 and
May 9. A random sample of 818 adults from throogh the state wa&lt;
lnlervlcwed, an~ resuls are a«:urale to wMhln plu .. or mlnus-3.5
percent.
Males were strong supporia's or the lnU'ea&lt;c while women
favored 55. Blacks are also strooger proponents of the 65 mph lim II
than while&lt;, lhe poll loond.
011""
!llrongly favoring the in&lt;2'.... e to 6ii on f'liral
tnterslates, lhe poll ..Ud, w,..e .l,ll.to 29-year·ohls, Ohloar&gt;i with
Income over $41,000 a year, college-educated people and Ihose with
profession!'! or managerial o=patlort,.

'""'ps
l

�Commentary

The

~o ' Page-2-The Daily Sentinel.
Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio ·

Tuesday, June 2, 1987

Phil Niekro sets -mark;. Reds beaten, 8-6

·

B~

The Daily Sentinel
•, 'l

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERES'lll OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~j:b.

sm~ ~L-.-•I"T"l::::!d• ~
~v

..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
As.•Mant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press l nl ern allonal. l nland Dally Press
Association and the Ameri can Newspaper PubUshPr s Assodatjon.
LITTERS OF OPIN ION an; wclcoi'Tli' They should OC. less than lXl v.·ords
long . Allie! IN s ar(' subj('(llocdltlng and mJ JSI br&gt; s l~-:nOO wll h na me, address and
telrphonc numiJer . No un sig ned letter s wlJI b&lt;.&gt; p.: bll .&lt;.hed . Letters should be In
~oodta s r•• ,

1!ddr £&gt;sslng Issues , not personalJtles.

June 1988: Answers
•
or more questions
WASHINGTON - I f recent his tor y Is any guide. we should have a
pretty good Idea a year fro m today who will be the 1988 Democratic
and Republican candidates for pres ident.
With the arguable exception of 1976, the likely major part y
standard bearers have either clinched the nomination or built an
almost unbeatabl e lea d before the fin al big primary day on th e first
Tuesday of .June, which next yea r falls on the 7th.
But there are some signs already that 1988 may not be like most
recent presidential years. To begin. it is the first tim e since 1968 that
the Incumbent president Is not ru nning fo r re-election. That alone
changes the polit leal picture, not only for the party that now holds the
Whit e House but for the opposition as we&gt;! I.
Another major factor is the absence of a conse nsus front - runner
among thr Democrats and the potential problems facing Vi ce
President George Bush, seen as the Republican in the most stra tegic
position to wi n the 198!1 nomination .
But Bu sh has some problems, both long and short range. The most
Immediate Is the congres sional and special prosecutor's Iran
arms -Contra aid inv es tigation s.
• The official goal of these Inquiries Is to find out what happened in
: those under-the- table foreign policy exerci ses. but there are plenty of
: people who see pollt lcs In th e House and Senate inves tigations.
Pres ident Reagan would be the obvious target of those who seek to
: make partisan hay In the situation, but there could be serious
· consequences for the vice president If he or hi s staff are linked to any
kind of provahtr hanky-panky .
. And even without the I ra n- Contra affair, Bush Is not really secure
· as a Republican fron t- ru nner. In 1980. he was perceived as the
ca ndida te of the GOP moderate wing , the so- called Eastern
es tablishment.
Hr has gone to grea t pains si nce to ingratiate himself to the
· Republican ri ght, but t·h('re ar(' plenty of political obser vers who
bcllrve the conser vat ives w ould drop him cold II someone like Rep .
. •Jack Kem p or former Sen. Paul Laxalt m ounted a cr edible campaign
for the nominal ion .
• Meanwhile. there ar·c or will be some other ca ndidates In the fi eld.
· such as Sen. Robert Dol!', former Gov. Pierre du Pont of Delaware
· and former Gen. Alexander Halg who might make Inroads Into Bu sh's
moder ate co nstitu ency.
Such a split could Wv id" the GOP dclegat('s widely enou gh to cloud
the ou tcome as the primaries and ca ucuses wind down. lea1·ing the
decision to the national co nvention.
On lh&lt;' l'qually cr owded Democratic side, there Is no real
front -runner and probably never· was except in term s of Gar y Hart 's
wide name recogni tion.
Now, .Jess e Jackson probabl y Is the most widely known pot ential
candidat e. and aside from his populist-liberal politics. thN e is very
little to &lt;il'monstratr t hat thr Dem ocratic Part y is prepm'l'&lt;i to
nominat e a black prrslcll•ntial candidate.
,
Thrr(' arc another half dozen announ crd or potrnt it1 Democr atic
candldatc·s: hut nonc of them tan claim nat ional recognition or ma jor
power ba ses. It Is nothing more than wild gues swork to sugges t how
thl'.l' will affrct the contests.
Whli&lt;' It is l'nlirl'ly possibil' that dominant front -runers with
ctelega t e support t ha1ca n be rou nt cd II' Ill emerge In the nex I :i2 weeks.
It also eoulcl sf il l IX' a horsr I' JC'(' wl lhoul a r unaway leadPr whC'n J une
o(

!9AA a J'I'i\'('S .

Erosion still a
problem in Ohio

WASHINGTON- The CIA no
longer agrees with a line the
Reagan administration has been
pushing determinedly for the
past five years : that the Cuban
and Nicaraguan governments
are smuggling drugs Into the
United States.
Accusations of Involvement In
International drug traffic have
been a sta ndard fea lure of the
Ideo logical battles over the admln!strat!on 's Central American
policies. Since 1982, top administration officials have loudly and
emphatically proclaimed ·tha t
Cuban President Fidel Castro is
a dope smuggler - as were the
leaders of the Sandlnlsta government in Nicaragua. Administra tion cr!l!cs have responded with
charges that the Nicaraguan
co ntras are In the drug business
themselves.
In May 1983. Vice Presid ent

George Bush posed aramatlcally
surrounded by several hundred
pounds of cocaine and stacks of
greenbacks confiscated from
dope smugglers. He declared
rlnglngly that Castro was t.rylng
to destabilize the United States
by smuggling drugs Into Flor"Ida
and other points of entry. Other
Reagan offlclais staged similar
grandstand plays on the same
theme.
The trouble wlt)l this propaganda effort has always been
that the evidence was painfully
thin. Sometimes it boiled down to
a single Informant, who was paid
large sums of money and was
perfectly willing to earn !I by
lying.
"
Informants aren't stupid. They
ca n usually tell what the Drug
Enforcement Administration or
their other U.S. Intelligence

paymasters would !Ike to hear. so
they dish It up with enthusiasmbut take care that their colorful
Inventions are Impossible to
verify or discredit. When an
Informant's fable fits an admlnls·
trallon policy line, it Is promptly
·transformed Into leaks, official
statements and headlines.
Our Intelligence sources tell us
that there are a few grains of
truth In almost all the charges,
which naturally lends them some
credibility . For example, they
say there apparently are some
Cuban and Nicaraguan officials
mixed up In drug deals Individuals, not organized by the
government.
·
These same sources add. however. that there is stronger
evidence that pro-American Cubans !n Florida arid Nicaraguan
contras are Involved to a greater

degree than the anti-U.S. forces . .
The subject came up a1 the .
Feb. 19 meeting of a Cqblnet level board - and the commen1s
of the CIA representative were
astounding.
.
The panel, called the National .
Drug Enforcement Polley
Board, Is chaired l)y Attorney ,
General Edwin Meese. We have
obtained the .confidential min- '
utes of the February meeting;
the first participant to rE-port was
Richard Kerr, deputy director of
the C!A .He "delivered a worldwide
threa.t assessment o! the narcotics problem (which) emphasized
the negative." according to the
minutes. DEA Administrator
John C. Lawn and assistant
secrqtary of state Ann B. Wrobleski followed with some positive remarks on U .S.-supported
anti-drug programs in Latin
America.
This reminded ass!s1an1 Agriculture Secretary George Dunlop
of the longstanding administration claims of Cubtrit and Nicaraguan 'tnvolvemenl ffl drug traffic.
He asked: What's the story now?
Kerr, 1he CIA man, responded
In a way that sugges1s he never
dreamed his confidential remarks would be made public. He
contradicted the administration's line.
"Richard Kerr pointed out It
was hard to Identify a direct
Cuban government link to trafficking activities," the minutes
state. "There Is no solid evidence
to support this."
'
As for the Managua conspirators : "The Nicaraguan Sandln!sta role appears to have been
episodic," Kerr said, according
to the confidential minutes . Our
CIA sources transla1ed this as a
polite way of saying that much of
the hoopla about Sandlnlsta drug
smuggling was based on a DEA
Informant who has since been
discredited.

RECORD SET- Cleveland Indian pitcher Phil Niekro picked up his
3141h vldory Monday night to give him and his lrother Joe the all time
win reUJrd (530) for lrolher pllchlng tandems. The old record was 529
held by ,Jim and Gaylord Perry. (UP!) ·

that a segment of the National
Party had broken away. OrganizIng Itself as the Conservative
Party, !t commanded a oioc of16
MPs In the outgoing House of
Assembly and threatened the
Nationalists with further serious
defections on their right flank
during the elo::_ction .
Our liberal media, virtually
Ignoring these rightists , depleted
the election as a battle between
Botha and his Nationalists
(wearing black hats, 1for convenient Identification as the bad
guys) and the PFP, representing
the forces of Truth and Beauty.
But when the smoke blew
away. South Africa' s white vo ters had r educed the PFP and Its
minor-party allies to just 20 seats
!n the House of Assembly while
giving the Conservatives 23 rand
thus the role of the official
opposition). Our shocked liberal
m edia could only conclude that
South Africa ' s whites had
" lurched to the right."
But this was true only !n the
sense that , with the Conservatives on the scene as a separate

party, the election revealed the
true distribution of sentiment
among South Africa's whites.
Because the Conservatives'
strength Is heavily concentrated
In rural Afrikaner area of the
Transvaall, their actual support
(compared to the liberal PFP) Is
far greater than the 23-to-20
distribution of seats between
them would suggest. Out of 2
million votes cast, the rightists
won 600,!XXl, while the PFP won
less than half as many: only
290,000.
But Botha 's Nationalists won a
million votes In the threecornered race, and ,J!Ctually
Increased their representation In
the House of Assembly from 127
to 133 seats. This was a brilliant
vindication of Botha's policy of
proceeding cautiously bu1 firmly
down the road that leads away
from apartheid. The only problem Is that henceforth he will
have to contend with an organIzed opposition that threatens to
make Inroads on his right flank If
he reforms the country's politics
too rapidly .

COLUMOUS- Whl h• most of the stories about r •·opland erosion focu s on
problrm In Oh io.
F. m~ l011 strips about 27.;\ ton' of topsoil fi·om every acr e of America's
high!)· rrodl biP c·ropiand Parh _
, .,.;_u· In 011io. l ht' ratr is slightly lower around 20 tons an arre. And. acco rdin g to state eXJll'rl s. farmers and
landtJWnf'rs ix'llrr start paying all ontlon.
" If they·,{' losing 211 tons m1 at'r e a ycrn-. thr)'tl' going out of produetlon
anvwal', whrthc~ · thr 1· know It or not," ays HatTy W. Oneth. state
ronser.;.atlonl• t in Ohi(, for tl1r U . ~ . Soil Consr•vatlon Service.
" Most fm·mcrs will sav thc1·'"' in the business for life. If that's so, then
thc•v tX'tt!'t' stan considc;rlng ·their base rcsout~r and taking care of !t. "
Congn-.,;s also thinks fm·mN·s should pa;• more attention to their soil. The
I~&amp;&gt; Food Sl'curlty Act made ('OnSCI''atlon prartlccs mandatOI)' by 19!Xl If
farmers want to
ic!pate in most su~Jd,l· programs.
11 also Sl'l up the Conservation Hcs erw Program that pays fl'nt and
some management costs to farmN'S who take h! ~hly erodible land ou t of
pnx1uct ion.
.
By 1!190. thr pl'Of.~· mn is CXJX'Cicd to have l5 million acres of h1ghlv
l'rodtblr cr opland in the 10-yeat· r&lt;'Servr. Ohio's quota Is 5l2.!XXl acres.
Nationally, the CRP already hru; around 20 million acres. And Dennis
Henderson. agr icultuml policy s pec!&lt;~ Lit at Ohio Sta te University. says
that should mean a continuation of the prcgram.
" The CRP Is already meeting Its objectives," Henderson says. " It' s
helping mnsetw natural resources. removing highly erodible land from
crop production. and ultlmalt' lY rcdueing crop surpluses."
In Ohio. neru·ly Jl5.0CXl acres are in the program. wlthanotber sign-up set
for July 20- 31. Onef·h says that If left unmanaged, about 2.3 million tons of
soil would wash or blow off that land each year.
"A lot of our soils in Ohio arefragtleandshallow," Onethsays. " We can't
afford to be losing tbem. That's why T say many farmers on this hlgh\Y
erodible ground mav as weU take the guaranteed gQvernment money now
before both soll and.the prQgTam are gQne and they have no alternative."
Land that erodes by tlu·ee to five tons an acre each year may be eligible
ror the prow am. Landowners need. to contact their county Agricultural
Stablltzallon and Conservation Servk.'e to apply for the CRP.
The Soil Conservation Serv k.'e decides whether the landquaUfles, and the
owner can submit a yearlY rent bid. .
·
If accepted, tbe SCS helps develop a !().year conservation plan for Ute
land. Some of the costs of the conservation plan are paid by tbe
government, and other slate and federal agendes help with I he planning as
needed.
I•

part

.

I wonder whether there are val ues ." Janet Dltmman,
mothers around today like Leo- co-fo under of Mothers At Home.
nard St one's mother. She would
News Item : "The number of
wrap L eonard's lunch In the fulltlme mothers In the United
sports pages of the Cleveland States !s Increasing, although !t
Press every morning so I could may iake up to three years for
read them In the cafeteria at these new-breed Barbara BIIlunch time.
11 ngsley s and Donna Reeds to
We got on ly the Plain Dealer at show up on the TV sitcoms."
our house. and In those da ys I
"You can 1ake a few lessons
couldn ' t get enough sports to from Moslem women. Go back to
read. One day In the school being a good mother. You get so
ca feteria , 1 noticed Leonard's busy with your work that you
lunch was wrapped In the Press forget your basic role . You are
sports section. !devoured It more responsible for that child.' ' eagerly than my peanut butter Camella Sadat , daughter of the
and marshmallow whip sand- sla in Egyptian leader speaking
wich . 1 asked Leonard If his to a group of American
mother would mind packing his businesswomen.
lunch In the sports pages
"Of the 58 percent of mothers
everyday.
with children under 18 who are
Well. she packed 11 . It most categorized as 'employed' by the
have been a nuisance for her. Department of Labor, many
There wa s another kid In the work as little as one hour per
family to make a lunch lor. Not to week . A school-crossing guard Is
mention Mr. Stone. To hunt for a 'working mother' under this
yesterday's Press sports section labeL So Is a baby sitter caring
every morning, on top of every - for her own and other children.
thing else, had to be a pain.
So Is a farm wife who never
Do you know any mother today leaves the farm .
who would go to that bother for
"The majority of American
1he neighbor boy? Most mothers, mothers today are either at home
I bet. wouldn 't do It for their own full time with their children or
kid.
· working at their Jobs around
But I'm living In hope that the thetr children.'' - From the
old-fashioned mother Is coming book, " What 's a Smart Woman
back. And from what I read. Like You Doing At Home?" by
there are others like me. Some of Cheri Loveless.
the news Is hopeful. Read on. .
"The Japanese believe In
" Smart women do stay at 'quantity time' with their child·
hOme and love it. They are ren . Americans talk bravely o!
surprised lo find how much they 'qualiiy time.' In Japan, where
use their education and creatlvP nine out of 10 children graduate
ability raising children , working
from high school, it Is mandatory.
with them on thinking skills an~ for a motber to join the PTA.

When her child Is Ill , many a
Japanese mother shows up for
class and takes notes for her
child." - From the book, "The
Japanese Educallonal Chal lenge" by Merry White.
" ! am sitting In the big stuffed
chair In the living room sewing
sea ms and replacing lost but tons, feeling overcome with •

lo enable Ca lifornia 1o snap a

ni ne-game losing streak.
MlU' ln&lt;rs 2, Blue Jays 0
At Toronto. Scott Bankhead and
Blll Wilkinson combln ~ on a
four-hitter and Ken Phelps and Jll)1
Presley each drove home a run to
IE'ad Seattle to Its fou11h straight

victory.
'l'wlns 9, ·Red Sox 5
At Boston. Tom Bnmansky and
Gary Gaett i belted two- run homer s

Eagles qualify for
regjonal track me~t
The Eastern High Scbool A tlllct ie
Depm·tmcnt is annou ncing the
names of several studen ts who
qualified for the regiona l tl'&gt;Jrk
meet at Muskingum College In New
Concord.
· Mark Criffin qualified to the
regional by plaeing second In the
long jump with a jump of twenl)'
feet and three and one--half inch('S.
Mike Mart in qual if i~ by placi ng
SC&lt;.'O nd In 1he hi!th jump at a h''ight
of six feet. Jeff Sav1~ qualified to

regional b)' placing tou rth in the
discus tlu·ow. Ron Maxson won the
shot put with a tlu·ow of 35 feet. 11
inches andC'hrL• Lance won the 1600
meter run with a time of t49 and
also won the 3WOmeter run with a
time of 10;28 setting a new school
ra·m·d.
The following student s sOJred
point s In the distric t meet : Todd
Clav. lOOM dash 11.9, ~OM clas ~
24.i Todd Wilson, 400 meter run
lil.O. The Eastern High :t~IO meter
rela)' tea m, lli(lllM rel ay team and
the 4ll0 meter r·elay team finl, he&lt;l
lift h in all t lu·ee event s. MrmtX'rs of
these teams include Todd Wilson,
Todd Clal'. Ron Maxson. Clu·ls
Lance.. Jay Blackwood. Chad Sinclair, David Rice, .I . .J. l.awt'Cncr
and Terry Newsome.
The Eastern Eagles finl~ hed In
thu·d pl~cc In u field of II teams.

while Dan Gladden added a ·
t ie-breaking solo shot. Ill hlglllight a
six -tun seventh Inning.
Alhfetkli 9, Orloi.,. 6
At Baltimore, Tony Phillips and :
Mike Davis each drove in three ;
mtt&lt; to pace Oakland and ex1end ·
the Orioles' losing streak to four :
games.
B rowers a, Royals 2
At Milwaukee, Dale Sveum hit a .
solo home run and lllll Wegman ·
sca ttered seven hits over 7 1-:1 :
in nlngs to lead the Brewers.
Rangt'rs II, White Sox 9
AI Arlington. Texas. Oddlbe
McDowell belt ed his first career
gr a11d slam with one out In the
bottom of the 12th inning off Joe! .
Da\'!s. 1-5, to rally the RJmgers.
National I.en1:11e Ro01ndup
Jose Cruz. confined to the.
windl ess Ast rodome for 81 gam es
eveJy year . en joys the breeze at
Wrigl ey Field.
C1uz belt~ a wind-powered ·
homer in the top of the lOth Inning:
Monday off Frank DIPino tb giv e'
the ·Houston Astros a 6- 5 victory
· over the Chi cago Cut&gt;;.
In other games, New York
defeated Los Angeles :i-2, St , Louls
outlas ted Cin cinnati 8-61n 10 Innings
and San Francisco r ocked Phlladel:
phia 9-2.
Mcls ~. Dodgers 2
At Los Angeles. Teny Leach,
making his first stat·t !nee 19!!5.
allowed four hit s and no earned
runs in six Innings to help the Met~
to tiJelt sixth victory In seven
g UrT\Cj,

By Jim Soulsby
could not push a run across.
, . Neither mother nature or lady
In the disastrous sixth, Lanca sluck smiled on the Meigs Ameriter grabbed the lead for a 'good
ca n Legion baseballers this pa st picking up runs on singles by
weekend . Traveling io Chilli· Hoppe and Ruff with a base on
eothe for a doubleheader Satur- errors, two walks, three passed
.day, they found themselves on
balls and one wild pitch sandthe short end of a 6 to 4 score wiched between. They added an
when the rains came wiping out
Insurance run in the seventh as
1hree innings of play and cance!- Meigs left three more runners on
!lng the second ga me.
base in the fifth and ·one In the
. Then on Sunday it became sixth. Beck~ked u_p a single
another bad day at Black Rock and Dur st had hls~h!t oft he
: for the Meigs nine as Lancaster game In the sixth frame.
.s wept a twlnb!117to 2 and 6zip.ln
Lancaster' s Ruff and Meigs's
: the opener Lancaster w,as first on Bal-trum each struck out nine
-the scoreboard as lea doff batter. and gave up six freebies. Aubur.Eric Miller drew a base on balls,
gey !n relief of Bart rum In the
J·ahn Hooker advanced him on a seventh allowed one run giving
sacrifice and Dan Ruff bl asted a up a base on balls and hilling one
double up the middl e. After going batter. All of Lanca sters runs
down In order In the second were unearned as Meigs had nine
frame, Miller again , In the third miscues to the v is itors two.
· reached fi rst on an error, adLinescore:
vanced to second and third,
Lanca ster ......... ,.. .... .101 004 l · 7
scoring on a wild pit ch.
Meigs ...... .. .. ........ ... ..000 200 0-2
, Meigs managed to get four
(Ruff (WP) &amp; Rotkls ) (Bar·base runners In the first three trum iLP), Amburgey &amp; Young,
Innings as Brian Durst singled !n Bissell &amp; Davis).
the first, Casey and Fiel ds
Meigs fared no better In the
•walked In the second and Durst nightcap ,a!f" only four batters
. rjpped a double in the third, all to managed to reach base safely.
·no avail as all four runners were ·Caldwell and McElroy picked up
left stranded. Lancas1er was singles and Durst and Becker got
.scoreless In the fourth and fifth aboard via walks . Lancaster
as Metgs plated two runs on played errorless ball behind
-Bissell's leadoff single In 1he Brian Young who fanned nine
fourth, going to second on a batters In going the route. Young
·passed ball. Fields then sacrl- ljelped his own cause by banging
. !Iced and Casey walked as did out a single. triple and round Johnson. Durst's single to right
tripper and scoring three of hi s
·tied 1he game at 2-2. Meigs teams runs. For the winners Ruff
loaded the base i ~J he fifth but collected a home run, Miller a

Botha's vote ofconfidence ______wi_llm_m_R_~_M_r
A close look a I the returns in
the recent election for sea ts In the
white house - -the House of
Assembly - of South Africa's
Parliament strongly reinforces
the first Impression : Contrary to
almost everything you have
heard and read In the left -sla nted
medi a, the government of President P.W. Botha received a
resounding vote of confidence
from the wh!le electorate for It s
program of political reform, and
can be expected to continue
exploring, with all non -violent
se&gt;:ments of black opinion. new
ways of br inging the bl ack
majority deeper Into South Afri ca's pol!tlcat life.
Prior Ia the May 6 election ,
Botha's National Part y held 127
sea ts In the House of As sembly,
compared lb 22 for the Progressive Feder a I Party, which consti tut ed the official opposition. But
political changes already Institut ed by Botha- no tably hi s 1983
enfranchisemnt of South Africa 's
800,000 Indians and 2.8 million
coloureds 1a Wes ternized mulatto group) - had so deeply
antagonized right -wing opinion

blanked Toronto 1 0, Minnesota
beat Boston 9-5. Oakland out slugged Ball !more 9-6, Milwaukee
edged Kansas City 3-2. and Texas
outlas t~ Chicago 11-9 in l2 Innings.
Angels 9, Y lUlkees 2
AI New YOI'k, Doug D&lt;;Cinces
hom er~ fat' the third st ralght
game to ignite a two-run fifth inning
and Mike Witt pit ched a five-hitt~r

.Meigs Legion drops twin bill

If the major free nations of the
world have any sense at all, they
will give Botha belated credit for
the remarkable reforms he has
already achieved ~nd encourage
him (or his successor- perhaps
the Nationalists' Transvaal
leader, F. W. de Klerk) to con tinue bringing the country 's
blacks Into Its politics: not only
locally and regionally, which has
already largely been done, bu1 at
the national level as well. This
may ultimately Involve some
form of political partition, or
some complex polity based on
consensual processes one man,
one vote In a unitary state Is
almost certainly not In the card~ .
But 1he West should realize
that It has failed In It$ misguided
effort to bully white South
Africans into obedience to Its
wishes . They understand their
country's problems and necessities far better than the West does,
and In rejecting both political
fringes In favor of Botha and his
Nationalists they have voted for
common sense achievable progress and racial cooperation.

home run and single and McKee
two base knocks .
Collins worked two Innings
giving up one run on three hits.
two walks and had 1 K . Freeman
came on In relief In the third
worked 1 2/ 3 innings. all owed
three runs and on three hit s
behind two errors. He was
replaced by Haner who walked
three w!th Durst comin g on to
ret ire the side. Durst gave up two
home runs In relief.
Line score:
Lanca ster.. .... .. ...... ...010 300,2-6
Meigs ............. .... ...... 000 000 0-0
(Young (WP) &amp; DeFazio),
(Collins (LP), Freeman, Han er
&amp; Davis) .
Coach Jack Welk er com mented that he still feels this
years team wil jell Into a very
good club and again be a stron g
contender for the eighth district
crow n.
Meigs travels to Marietta for a
twinlgh t doublehe a der
Wednesday .

State pairings
1 \ 'nil ood l'n '!'o!'l lnh •r nat~uml
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Pomr· 1~·, Ohi Oo~ 57f19. Ph. 992 · 21~. SP.
JS!I. posta)Zr p~1td ~~ Pomrroy.
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L!AY at thru .IUNI ~
;RIDAY Wu THURSDAY!

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ALIGNMENT

We'll align
your vehicle' a
front wheela
aettlng ell
adjustable
angles to

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manufac·

I ~•nl u n lifo·

turer' a
orlginet
specifications,
American cars

t-'lnnl .~&gt; ;

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CMoott' !- II) a! Tnr l} ntO) IC'IIlflj "

,:n p.m.

PllOnlue-•52•

BARGAIN, MATINEES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY • All SEATS $1. SO
AOJ11 SS ION EVERY TUESDAY $2.50

AUTO

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0.-ltt_.d ISI:i•IUrt II-~ ) I I
!Roddhilrr ._,, , 7::J:i p.m.

631 JACKSON PM.E ·RT.l&amp;WEST

f"ridi(\·. Ill a.m.
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(),-troll (Morr.. &amp;-~ ) al f ll'\'oo!Wtd
1('~&amp;r llon 3-1\ , i:l5 p.m.
~MIIIr

POMERO HOME

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ffi(•rov
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Companv
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S..·"'l h• :!. Tur"'atu n

Jo' rwwl~ott

Publlshnl P\'1'1'\' altP'rn oon, Monday
thrnu gh F'rh.l ln;. 111 Court St.. Po,

23 '!I ..\111
:!'! '!IC .uo

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.\111nda_\ · .. u. ·.. ub

The Daily Sentinel

eerry's World

II

UHI.-.rl ........... .. .

!1, l'hll adl'lp,_n :!
St.l.o&gt;~~h- M
. nndnnaH li
·" ''" r nrli .\ ' ·"'' \n~rr•l ;~ ~

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l'alll ... ...... ....... .,

\1olntLty'., R t""II M"
ll uu,.jun li, t ' hlt lll(":). IU Inn in!':"

sweet smell of peace that I will
cal1 domestic tranquility. I am
recalling the lost luxury of
lingering over simmering pots
and child's play and talks with
friends and musk and mending
-domestic activities which offer
a balance and wholeness to our
lives.

~

~ ·~'

E. ichin~ cr,

adllevt'd high honors in Cia"
AAA solthalf fnr her IJi!ddng
ahUity. A sc11iur a! Columhu s'
Walnut Rldg~ High S.:hool, slw
has bef'nna.med Cent ml Dist rid
Ph~VL'f of the \ 'car wHh 9K
strikeouts and two n&lt;&gt;hlttL'fS 1o
her credit. She ha&lt; alsu l•·t•n
nrunc•l to the All-Ohio First
Tc:un and AU-Ohio Ccntr:lf
lll•tr!ct First 1'e:un. Sin• won
;lfl·clly league honors when she
wa' a !ugh scl1ool SOJJhomorc.
Ml's Eichinger '''""' to attc11d
Mount Union College In Allhwcc
and wlll he pitcltlng on the
school's ...,It hall te.am.

Nifth.all
l'alrl nr fur It~ · 1111 ha nrmal 1l rl' "lalt•
hltrh "' 'h\111! I;tool pkl'II "Uft hall l ull rnurno11t

2G '!I . llotll

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

WINS IIONORS - Su.:mnah
Elchlngur, dauglder of Ch:U'I(.'&lt;
and Susan Eichingt'f ol Columbus IUld gJ'lU1dd:Ul~hlr1' Of 0111lf

The Ens tct' n High School Girl''
softball team wrapped up an l f!.R
win over North Gailia rcct'll l iy to
wrap up Its scasott
The w in bi'Ought Eas tern to a 14-4
seaso n wit h a 10-2 league record
giving them second plat~· In lhl'
leagu e.
·
F.as ter n' s hillers were Mrfunlc
Mankin, a single and a double. two
for four; l.es a nucker. a single and
a double, two for · five; Lisa La11cc,
two singles, two for fivl'; Arlene
Rit chie. a single and Bonnie
Koenig, a double muklng right hits
fo r E:astern with theb' opponent s
racking up ttu ·ce hits - MathL~.
Hunt and Wil ey, all gett ing singlts.
Eas1crn mude seven errors and
st ole 28 bases with North Ga ll la
making 111 errors and steal !Jig nine
basc&lt;; .
Amy nerkhimcr was winning
pill'hcr for Eastern giving out nine
walks. tlu ·cc· hit s and gelling four
strlkt'Out s. Ll&lt;•v lng wa1 th&lt;' los ing
pit cher allowing Iii walk.1, right hits
and getting no strikt'Ouls.

IJ . "'·
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t\(Jo!oolun .... ...........

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Pirales in linalt•

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Eastc•rn !,-iris del't&gt;at

Cardbllll' ~. ll.cd&lt; 6
,
At Cincinnati. Tommy Herr
douiJied home two runs with two out
!n t h~ top of the lOth Inning to lift the
Cm·dinals.
Giants 9, Phllll&lt;&gt;&lt; 2
AI San Fr:~ndsco; Chris Speier
clubbed his lift h and six th home
nms and Atl€1' Hammaker combined with two relievers on a
tlu·ee-hltter to lift the Giants.

,.,-~II )' I

( Utbl.- t'ol· n ii'IUII" • 11111 ) ...
mlnt&lt;d l .
t' ln-.J.~ . .~uli&gt;rd lt,\·, !l ::lfl11.m .

A.\IF.R ifAN u ;,\Gllf&lt;:

Major.;

hl... l• h:&amp;ll IIIIUA:I.IUI'fll t' rld i~\
S:t.lurda ,\' 111 Hl1ill Stu lo·

(' h~r&lt;o~ i\,\i\
Mt•rllor l.ako· ('a ll•lli•· ,,.,..,,, .,~,Sta rt ,
f' rid~·. II: * t :t..m.

Scoreboard ...

Old-fashioned mothers ____G_eo--=-rg_eP_la_ge_nz

farms in lhr Misslo.; sippi ancl Missouri rlvf'r basins. rrosion is also c.t

\·

CIA says no_______...,:J..:.:.ac:...:..:k:....:A.:.:n.....:d.:....:e.....:rs_o_n_a_nd_D_a_le_~_a_n_A_t_ta

JOE ILLUZ2J
UPI Sports Writer
Baseball players usually confine
their scoreboard watching to SePtember and October, butJoeNiekro
had a special reason for eyeing the
out of town scores on June 1.
Niekrowas sitting on tbe bench at
Yankee Stadium ·Monday night
while his older t.-other Phil was
pitching ·in Cleveland against the
Detroit Tigers. When t.he scoreboard confirmed a 9· 6 victory for
Phil Nlekro and the Indians, Joe
Nlekro knew he and his brother had
just carved a niche for themselves
In baseball's ll'COrd book.
Phll N!ekro hurled a nine- hitter
over 5 2-31nnings togtv e the Niekro
brotbers their 5llth victory, allowing them to surpass Gaylord and
Jim Perry as the winningest
siblings in major-league history.
The Niekros' record has to rank
among those not likely to be bl'okert
-Lou Gehrig's consecutive-game
streak o( 2,130; Pete Rose's 4.256
hits, Joe DIMaggio's 56- game hit·
ling streak and Cy Young's 511
victories.
·
"It may nor be a recc rd thai
means much to some people, but It
means a lot to my brother and me."
Phil Nlekro said recently, ,"and It 's
more of a family thing.
ln other games. Califor nia
crushed New York 9-2, Seattle

TIRE
ROTATION

Plan tourney
There will be a softball tournament . June 6 and 7, at Point Pleasant, W. Va ., according to Joe
Roberts.
There wIll be three classes,
"B ", "C" and " D " Incolvedln th ~
tournament action.
For more Information cal l
1304) 675-6335 or 675-3631.

We'll rolate

Ohi o Nrw!'PJpc-r As!!ocl;~tlon. Natlnnal
Arh'rftl~lniZ RcprN(('nlaliv&lt;'. Branha m
Nrw~pal)f'r S&lt;tiN:. 733 Thlrrl
Nf'W York. N('W York 10017.

pre11ure.

Stenderd
wheeta .
Cuttom
wheel• 8Jt:tr8 . ·

~~~==========--------------1

Everyday
Low prict

HARRIS
FARMS
ST. IT. 124
PORTLAND, OHIO

~.

Avr-nuro,

POSTMMiTER: ~nd addre-s th&lt;lniZNI
to Thl' ~1llv &amp;ntlnrl. 111 Court St ..
Potnl'r~·. Ohln ~.1769.

Pick Your Own Strawberries

)1
~

MON.·WED.·SAT. 1·12: THUIS. 4 ·7

..

69C
APOUND
CAlTON$ F.NISHED

SUBSCRIPTION RATE.~
Ry Carrh•r or Motor IL:lute

On•' Wl o(&gt;k................................... .$1 . 2~
Onr Month ... ...... .... .... ................ ~5 . 4 5
Ont" 'i C'ill' ..... ............. r ........... .. $65.00
Dall~· .. ................................ 25 Ct'nls

r kr ma-.' r('mit In ad\•ancf' dlrOO to
Th(' Daliv Sentinel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
busl!i. lr'rdlt will bt&gt;fdv~ nC"arrttlrrach
,t ·I

No subscriptions by mall prrmltlf'd In
arPas whl:'re hom€' carrl£'r 5ervk'(• Is

availa ble.
Moll

s.bocrlc,

l•kl• Motp

11 w...ks .............---·--······--······· m.29

26 Weeks ......._ .......................... 1.14.116
52 Weeks ..... ·--··.·····--·····--···, ____ 111.:16
O.~Jielp~J

13 w..u ....... ,._ ........ ._ ... ._ ........_llliQ

2tl

•

w...................................--..

135-:

M w..u._ ............. --.. ---.. ----······ 117·

'

1917 SCHEDULE-FUA MAUET
.IGS COUNTY FAIIGIOUNDS
PO.IOY, OliO

Wl"f'k.

.._ 4·5·._7

hly I·S-4·5

Mt·

6~7·1·9

Slpt. J-4-S-6 Oct. 1-2·3·4 N.,, S-6·7·1
DEAUISWANTED - IUYDS WANIII
1

o-o.-o... AH

II&amp; lei.U, lit• lt.IIIS,..~I·III S,..

fw II kutltbn Clll

422-4169. (614) 741-2112

.

'

BRAKE
SERVICE

StNGJ.E COP\'
PRICE

Sub~·rlb&lt;' r~ not di"Sirln~ to Pf!Y therar ·

and

Inflate them
to proper air

cond

Ml"nlnf'r: L: nltr'd Pn-s~ lnh't natlonul.
In lan d Dull\' Prf'~~ A s~orla t lo n and t llc

tire~

your

600 East . .n

991..2094

We'll install Brake
Shoes and ~ads.
See us for an
estimate.

&amp; AUTO

p..,roy, Oh.

~:A~UO:N:M:E:N~T~(M:o:lt~=-~•1:4~.10.----·BR·A-KE SERVICE

�·-·
Ohio
1

OVAL Board of Directors ·disrnss funding

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Mhe Ohlo Valley Area Llbrar·

Page-4

I

Tuesday, June 2, 1987

339 Middleport alumni gather for annual reunion
Recognition o f r eunion cl asses
including the oldest gradua i t',
Rodney Downing o f the class of
191 5, highlight ed the 1987 Middl epor t Al umni Association held
recently at M eigs Junior High
Sc hooL
A total ot:l:l9 alumni and guests
att coded the banquet which was
dedicated to AI Scarberry , rlass
of 1946. Scarberry was not only a
grad uate of MH S bu t serv ed as
principa l 1960-61. He was pr&lt;'scnt ed a pl aque by Way ne Davis.
president .
A lso honored at the dinner was
M artin Essex, form er super intendent of Middl eport schoo ls,
and r et ired Ohio Su per intendent
of Schoo ls. E d Evans Jr. , of Los
Angeles, Ca lif. traveled the
farthest to at ten d the r eunion and
was r ecognized as havlng been
vo ted Detec tive of the Year by
th e L os Angele s P o li ce
Depa r tm ent .
Classes obser v in g reun ions
were 1917, J922, 19l7, 1 9~2 . 1937.
1942, Hl47 ! 952, 1957, 1962. and

1%7. Davis had th e welcome at
th&lt;' han.guet . wit h L W. McCom as giv in g th e invocat ion. K en
McElhinny wa s master of cerem onies. with Kathy McElhinny
McCrt•Pdy and Paul Haynes
gtving t h0 sec retary -treasurer
reports.
Mike Ge rl ach int r oduced the
1988 officers, Caro l King Brewer ,
pres ident; Bill H aptonsta ll and
K ar en Haw ley Tr iplett . co-v ice
president; Kar en F au lk Pooler.
scc r cw ry, and Charles Mull en,
t rr~as u (_er .

ThP dinner was prepared by
I he Evangeline Chapter , Order of
the Eas t er n Sta r and served by
Wahama and Meigs H igh Sc hoo l
.Junior Civitans. The E dward W.
W. Lew is and the Su sa n Pa rk
Memor ial Scholars hips present ed at th (• banq urt were
annou nced ea rlier .
Alu mn i and gues ts fro m out -oftown hen · for I he banquet inclu ded ,\ Jan Walla ce, Lithopolis;
Georg(• Sa uer. Virginia Beach.
Va.: Helen Fox. Marysv ill e;

Your Social Security

52nd anniversary
noted
.

Working and Social Security

A gol fer 's dream rome true. I 'm
told II happened for L arry Powell.
Pomeroy businessman . who did
succc-,;s fuliy get 1hat Pvas lvr haloin -one at the Ma,on Golf CourS&lt;'Robinson's Llu ndry anti Dry
Cleaning in Pomeroy dcflnit&lt;;y has
,closed Its doors and II Set'm s that al l
of the clothing left thel'l~ wiiSn't
picked up.
Now to plan B. If you ar&lt;• amo n ~
the people who didn't pick up your

gar men ts. you ran

~o

across thr

strf&gt;et to the Teaford Rea l!)' and
the.v will help you w ith the rescue.
You should leru' n 10 sw im!
Sw imming lessons will be offerrd
at London Pool suu·ting June 22.
There wll l tx- clas ses for beginners.
advaneed beginners and int crmrdiatc classt-,; . Lesson m·e $12 anti
w lll t:x• hl'id fi·om Ill a. m. to 12 noon.
Monda)· through Frida)', Inst ruct or
w ill be Zan&lt;' BPcgiC'.

H you nl'l"'CC morP i nforma 1ion.
call 9n2-!ID.l.
Among those of the M lddlrport
.'H igh Cl&lt;LsS •of \~t :rl who did such a
~ fant astle job in wor king wl!h lht•
:cl ass rt"'unlon O\'C'I' MC'morlal Da,\'
w&lt;'&lt;'k!'11d w·r Chm·Jclrn&lt;' Hanning
and E:d rw C:i llr n.
'I1w ci;.Jss had ;,:) mcm lx·r s whr n
Agr·aduarlon lOOk plar&lt;' in \9:1'7.
.Howrvt'l'. 1 ~1 ur(' now drcr&lt;IS(tl with
;the others scat trrr&lt;l ;111 OV&lt;'t' thr
w untn·. About '!i nlf'mix'rs did
~akc itt o thrt"N.mion. howrn'r . On
)land for thr gt&gt;ttogether ;\!so wer e
·~ ar t in W. 1-: !-'...;('X who w~L"' super in·
1't&gt;ndenr nf Middll'pMt Sch&lt;X&gt;Is in
; ~ :rr ancl wen t on th&lt;• l:x'('(Jnw
;up&lt;:&gt;rinh'nchmt of ~lrttf' lnstnwt!on

:0-tnd I.. W. MfComa.~ who was higll
j;r hool prlnci~al aml ·l&lt;~tPr monxl
~ n to thf' supf'r intrndf'nt' s position.

Dorot hy McDaniel. M iddleport .
i.&lt; the win ner of the Tim es-Sentinel
name the mystery far m contest of
May 24. Ther e '&gt;~&lt;ere six cor rec t
ent ries nam ing the far m pictured
as thai of Charles and Nita Yost. on
Oak Grove Road. Racine. Dorot hy
wa' sclt&gt;ctrd winner of the $5 cas h
pr'iz(' via lol tcry·.
And pleasant n&lt;ow s for Bonnie
Lemaster, Rou te 2, Pomeroy.
ilonnie n&gt;ccived a letter: fi·om
Harold E. Moses, .l r ., Lt . Col. ,
USAF. notifying her that her son.
Tim Lema~ter was selected Airm an of the Quart" · for the 19\i.';lh
Communlcat ionsSquadron, Norton
Air For('(&gt; Basr in Ca liforni a.
mmmunlcat ion reads :
"11m's ou tsta ndin g performance
as a telreommunlcation system s
control specialist is the reason thai
he was nominated for the award. To
t:x.• &gt;Cieeted for this honor . Tim had
to demonstrate his kno\\' ledgeof the
wilig &lt;md squadron mission. Air
F'orC'f' rust oms and courtf'SlC'S and
currr.nl rvcnt s.
" You r son is the IYJX' of person
f"V(liV commander wa nt ~ in his
squtidon. You ca n Jx• proud ofTim 's
accompl ishment s. as we In the
1965th area. It ls tn&gt;ly a pleasune to
tlilVl' your son in our squadro n."

·nw

drrrd wr rc disr us!o;cd. It wets

;
'

•'

'

~

•
••
,'
:,
•
•'•
;;
•:
::
•
•,
:•

~ otrd

that Mr. and M rs. Arthur
:'rabtrel'. Meigs Count)· DPpu·
-t ies. and Mr. and Mrs. Mrnd;rt
Jorda n. Past Drputlrs. attr nd&lt;'d
,t hC' 75 th ann lv£&gt;rsary or N('w
Pl y m outh G,·onge In VI n ton
Coun ty. whrrr Ohio St ate Gra n~r
M aster, Donald Elliott . W&lt;Js
spea ker for the rvrni ng. Tribute

:tflt}(\1

Fl;rlwcod" Hoad.

Ponwr o~·.

Ohio &lt;l :til~!-l.
. kmuar~·

ln April and
t\ u gu ~ t WC':J! hrr In M&lt;l,\' . I know
you' n• smili ng.
snO\\'S

·:

to Mothr rs was thr theme of the
lrc·t &lt;irrr )&gt;rogram pt'&lt;'Srnted by
l.rctu rr r . Arthur Crabtrrr. E ll tabr th .tord.1n . Women s Activl ·
ties Chairm a n. gave safety r ules
for farmers and also food safety
m easures to foll ow , as a part of
the Women's Activ ities rrport. A
bnk(' s~ l e w ilt be ht'id In Alba ny
on Junr 6th . A lr ller of thanks
fr'Om Sta te Grange Ma ster . Do·
nald Ellio tt . for the contribution
that was sent In April to help wit h
the upkreps of the Gr ang e homt•
i n Columbus . was read by the
10ecrrtary.

Temple UMW conducts meeting

Lois Brrklev was hos tess at
•
Temple Chu rch ror the M ay
m ee ting of the Temple U nltrd
Met~odl s t Wom e n' s Group .
M ade line Staneart , Presi dent .
was In charge of the business
sess ion. Plans wer e m ade for
members and g uests to atte nd
th e Mothe r- Daug ~t e r Banquet at
Albany Churc~ . It wa s a n·
nounced that RevNe nd M artin
·~ wlll substitute for Reverend
'•. )Jarold Benson while he and ~i s
family vaca tion lni'lorlda before

benefit s due for the year. H er e's highest th ree to fi ve yf'a r s.
an example. Marvin Is 63 and Tha t 's why a good year's earngets $500 m onthl y In Social ings later in li fe can have a
Security retirem ent benefits. He positi ve affect by adding to th e
decide s to take a job at the cyc le m ix of earnings on the ind ividu shop and will m ak e $8000 for the al's record and rep lacin g a lower
part tim e work thi s year. Since a m o un t i n th e benef i t
comput ation.
the exempt earnings amount fo r
No tn att er how old you are. you
his age Is $6000, he will be $2000
over th at limit . $1000, which is -st ill pay the Socia l Sec ur i ty tax
one-half of th e excess, will be on ea rnings . You nevC'r get too
withheld from his benefits, Two old to pa y in co me t ax on your
of his checks will be used to offset wages . either, That' s how your
earnings get credi ted.
those excess earning s,
Peo pl e w ho work and recei ve
M arvi n winds up with his
wages and ten Social Sec ur ity benefi ts are required to file an
checks In 1987. H e m ay al so lind annual earnings repor t by April
tha t those '87 earnings mi ght 15 each year. Changes during thl'
year should be reported as soon
Increase his m onthl y benefit s.
as
poss ible so adjustm ent s r an be
That happens for nearly two and
a half million beneficia r ies each m ade while the ea rned Income i s
yea r when current ear nings are st Ill brin g rrceiv edoIt 's si mple to
higher than th ose in an earli er report. All you need to do is gi ve
our office a ca ll at 992-6622 from
year.
8:
45-4: 30 Monda y· throu gh Fri·
To comput e a benefit am ou nt .
day.
We won't react like Ma y we use the beneficiary's entire
nard
did.
work his tory . nor j ust the last or

assumi ng full time duties as
Pa stor on the Albany Char ge.
Elizabeth Jordan , assisted by
several members paid tribute to
Mothers as devo tion s were
given; Telephone ca lls. cards
and letters sent and visit s m ade
were recorded . Twelve members
and a guest were present , A bak~
sal e In M ay, with proceed s to go
for B ible School expenses wa s
planned. Westl na Crabtree will
hos t th e_ J une m ee ting at ~er
hom e.
"'

ger. Za nesgill e; Ma dl y n Johnson
Deer ing, Columus; Adrienne
Mill s Munn s. L y nchburg, Va. ;
Richard and Lorreta Hanning
Roller, Belpre; Dougl as M .
Hoffer, T am pa. Fla.; Charles L.
Brooks . Mansfield ; .Jane Jane
Rou sh Ur y , Worthington; RI chard and E leanor Roush
Quelitle. Worthington ; Edward
C. E•·an s Jr.. Simi Valley. Cal if. ;
Jea n Smiart Siddell, Cincinn ati.
Zc na E . Fol an, Day ton ; John
K ir cher. Worthingto n: Jennifer
Dan iels Scott. Gallipoli s; Be tty
J. Alllenswoth, Groveport ; Hen rl ettt a Ewing Avery. Char lit esv ille, Va .; Charl es Pickens.
Newark ; Wi llard G. McMa ster.
Hudson; Pa ul W . Smith . M ansfield; Jean Fau lkner Johnson,
Waverly; L awrence Bradford.
Grove City; E llen .1. Young.
Pi nell as Park , Fla .; .John J .
Dixo n, South Charl es ton. W.Va.;
.Joe and Millard Oh lin ger Bailey ,
Lehigh F l a.; M ildred Moseley,
St. ·A lbans. W.Va.; and Tom
Miller. Ravenswood. W.Va .

NUTRITION - Mrs. Cindy Oliver.!, Meigs County Extension
Service, wa• featured al an assemhly of Riverview School
students. Mrs. Oliveri Is pictured during her presentation wlllr
students in th e background working on a nutrition _project.
Nutrilion 1indud!ng aspects ol snack . foods was the topk of ~Irs ,
Oliveri.

Kelly, Ann Bail ey. Jenell Barker, _
CheryL Bridgett , Malinda and
Danlelle Lam bert , Norm a and
Patty H ysell. JoAnn and Kim ber ly
Fetty, Agnes Jordan. Kimber ly and
Rachel Argabright. Mar garet
Johnson. .l o Ann Conkl e, Rita
Chapman. Christy Yeauger and
son, .Jeremy. Rachel Hutton, April

McGrath. M ar('(&gt;ll a Chapm an.
VIcki Payne. Dorothy Gore, Chru·main e Gore, Maxine .Jordan. Patty
Ca pehart. Cindy Aeiker . Shir leY,
Gina and llhonda Gibffi. Ethel
Priddy, Caroln: Kathy. and Ml, d)•
Van M eter. Karen Walker. and
Ilene Johnson. Group prayer with
hands joined closed the meeting.

TUESDAY

MORE
FOR

NAPA's

Con.rtdtant added
to Slinderella

,

__

.- '&gt;:ft!Niftlel

ed50°/o
price Iof .

Now through June 21, .,
you can get big savings when
you use NAPA parts for
automotive engine overhauls.

Private consultations on dieting
and exer cis ing are being added by
Slinderelia. JoAnn Newsome. local
representative, announced today.
Mrs. Newsome has been conduct ·
ln g group clas ses for the past 10
~cars . and this month wUI begin
private consultations. She advises
that she will be working with the
Individual' s doctor on diet programs. !I Indicated. and wUI be
teaching exercises according to
bod)• shape and lifes tyle. She: wUI
assist with menu plannin g. The
consultation service will be held at
~er home. Five Point s.

OVAL Is fortunate, as an
Institutional member of the Ohio
Library Association (OLA ), to
have a paid supporter In Columbus speak ln g for the r estoration
of the 1989 funds . Bonnie Beth
Mitchell, Executive Director of
OLA , Is also registered as a
lobbyi st . She Is making the face
to face contacts and providing
Infor m ation to the legislators;
she Is also keeping the OVAL
staff and Board Informed.
Harold Cooper, OVAL Board
Pr esident; ex pres sed his appreciation to th e other Boar d
members who were able to be In
Co lumbu s. H e also reminded the
m embers th at the effort to
sustain supp or t wa s to b e
continued.
"
The Senate Finance Commit tee Is sc heduled to repori,1Qn the
budget Thursda y, May "18. lf
OVAL' s funding Is Included,
efforts will be required to ensure
that during the Confer ence Com mitt ee of the House and Senate
the fundin g ls not del eted. If the
Senate does not r estore the
funding, a renewed effor t will be

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
E vangeline Chapter 172. Or der of
EastC'·n Star, will met't 7:ll p.m.
1ltursday . 50-year pins will -be
presented. A pot luck dinner w ilt be
served at 6 p.m. and m embers are
a. ked to bring a covered dish. Meat
will be provided.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees w ill m eet Thursday, 7
p.m .. at tow n halL

'
MIDDLEPORT Regula r
: · meetin g of Middleport Masonic
. L Odge 363 F&amp;AM will be 7 p.m.
Tuesday. Refr es hments fol.lowing
I he met•I in g.
RACI NE - Rev. Charl es Non·i,
will be S)X'aker at a revival to txheld at Morse Chapel Church.
located on County Road J5. the
Racin~ Portland Road. through
.June (i. Setvices at 7 p.m
TIIURSDA\'
RACINE '- Racin e Amer ica n
Legion Post 002 will have elect Ion of
officer s 6 p.m. Thursday. Refresh·
m ents will be served.
SYRACUSE - Meigs Associa·
lion for Retar ded Citizen' w ill meet
Thursday, 7 p.m ., at Carl eton
School in Symcuse.

•

FRIDA\'
R EEDSVILLE - Olive Township 1i-ustees w ill meet Frida.v, 7:30
p.m.. at the Reedsv ille fir e station.
SYRACUSE - Meigs Assocla·
lion for Retm'ded Cit izens is
sponsoring a flea mark et on Frid ay
at Carleton School in Sy mcuse.
POM.EROY ,- Vacation BiblP
School at Cal\·ary Pilgrm Chapel
wil l be held through Friday, at 6: ."1J
p.m. ea ch evening. Ca lvmy Pilgrim Chapel is locat ed on Ohio 143,
half a mile off the Route 7 bypass in
Pom eroy.
POMEROY A children 's
cru sade will -be held through
Su nday at Pomeroy Church of the'
Nazarene. 196Mulberry Ave. Rev.
and M rs. Don Du nn, of Bartlett, wUI

be the children's cru saders for the
week ,
HOBSON - Rev ival services at
Hoffion Church .of Christ in Chris·
tlan Union cant inues through Friday . Services, with special singing,
begin at 7:ll p.m. nightly with Rev .
Everett Delaney, pastor. Everyone
wrlrome.
POMEROY - Ballroom cl asses
will begin at Roya l ,Oak Resort
Friday. Gerald Powell, instructor.
The clas s for advanced dances will
be at 7 p.m. with the beginners class
to begin at 8: ll p.m. On Saturday
clogging classes will be held at 1
p.m. in the recr ea tion bu ildin g,

SATIJRDA\'
EAST ME1GS - The Eastern
Alumni Reunion wlll be held
Saturday at Eastern High School.
The banquet will be at 6: ll p.m.
followed by a dance at 8: ll p.m .
Mus!c 'w lll tx- by Staff Hou se Road
of Poi nt Pleasant. W.Va. All alumni
and the~- guests are Invited to
attend.
SUNDAY
R 10 GRANDE - Gallla Twirlers
Square Dance Club Is sponsoring a
" Spr!ngDance" fromJ :90 to 6p.m.
on Sunday, June 7, at Rio Grande,
wit h national caller Gary Kincade
and local call ers John Waugh and
Bill Bush. Everyone welcome.

Plans for an outing ill BlennC' ·ha~set Island on .June 26 were m ade
when the Wildwood Gar den Club
met recently at the Forest Run
·. Unit ed Method is t Chu rch.
- The meeting followed a noon
pot luck w II h Do rot h)' Sm!t h giving
gra('(&gt;. Marcia A mold. vice president, had char ge of the meeting
opening wit h devotions using two
poems. "Condemnation" and "I
Will Not Hu rry."
Faye Wiggin s gave a report on

1he lilv of lh(' vallev, noting 1hat it Is
a l ate bloom ing spring flower with
li ttle bell cups on a slem. She said it
Is a Bibli cal Oowpr which stands for·
purity.
For thr flower ar rangement of
t he money, Hilda Y eauger d l~ ­
played a patriotic rna'S arrang·
ment and used mock orange,
Japanese iris. red r oses. blue grass
and white Dl"nies.
Mrs. A rnold noted that a lett er·

Mrs. .ludv Coo m er and da.
aut hcr. Debb ie, of Illinois. Miss
~Gracie K ing. Mansflclcl . Cyndl
Bla ckwood . of Bycsl'll le. Mrs.

F lorida. Lol a Clark and F rances
A ll ki re. loca l, were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and M rs .
Cli nt on Gilk ey. 13alny.

Hah Hoffm an. F l a. Mrs. Gail
Wil cox . Indiana . were wrckend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
King
Miss Barbara Sieple, of I ntti ·
ana and M r . and Mrs. Dwight
Sieptr. Wil ming ton. Visil &lt;•d st•l'·
er al day' 1-er, ntl y " ·ith. M rs .
Frances Y oun g,
Mr. and M rs. Babt· Whal t•.l ",

Mrs. Est her Brandou..lar k·
son. was t h&lt;' weekend guest of
Mrs. Lola Clark.
Mrs. Jua nit a Richard s. Day·
ron . spe nt th e weekend wi th M rs.
\' irgll1ja Gibson.
M r. and Mrs , Crri l Blac kw ood
v i.&lt;iled Sunda)· wllh Mrs. F:llen
Rurgess . Ports mouth ,

'// haf1pentngs
•
Harrts' onvtue
r

sh&lt;' had writt en to Flower and
Garden Magz!ne concer ning paper
whit e narcissus was published !n i t
the last est Issue of the magazine.
DorL~ Grueer had a program on
honey beeS. She said that scient ists
have been fascinated by the study
of beeS . Worker beeS perform a
sequence of labors programmed by
hormone changes In their bodies.
·o ne of the worker beeS most
important function s is maintaining
the tl!ves at the constant 93 to 95
degrees necessary for surviva l. She
sai d that bees can ttl!nk and have a
sense of reasoning, with a life span
fort he fem aleofthree to five years.
,A in 1h
Breeding begins in t."' spr gw t a
f
1 1 1n
ometim~ $2(XX)
emaaeday.
ay she
g said,
s and described
=
·
eggs
the male bee. a drone, il5 useless.

Ronald and Margaret Nelson.
for merly of Dexter. wUI be preach·
ing at the IO :ll a.m. worship
service at th~ Dexter Church of
Christ on Sunday, June7. Nelson is
a senior at Johnson Bible College In
Knoxv ille. Tenn. A potluck dinner
and fellowship, will follow morning
serv ices.
Bible school
POMEROY - Br&amp;dford Church
of Christ, located at the corner of
Rout e 124 and County Road 5. will
hold Vacation Bible' School 'June
8-12, from 9-U ; lJ a.m. , with cliiSses
ror children nursery age tJu·ough
teenage. 1ltere will be Bible
lessons. singing with " Praise Pal"
the puppet and craft s. Ca ll 992-5844
for information.
Cub scouts
MIDDLEPORT - Th e MelgsGaUla·Mason DisI r!rt Cub Scou t
Oly mpics will be heldJunel3, atthe
Middleport Junior High football
fi eld' The event Is open to all 'cub
scout s In the M -G-M District and
registration Ls $2. Food and drinks
will be ava ilable for sa le, or scout s
may bring a sack lunch.

Check out the library
By Rulh Powt•rs
Sc hoo l' s almost out , and that
means before long kids will be
Jooklnl( for fun ways to flllthelr
days. ·
The libra ry would be a good
pla ce for them to look for their
fun thi s summer. Some or the
programs lined up so far thi s
summer Include story tellin g,
bas ket weaving, clowns. rerami cs. puppets and of cdut·se the
Summer Reading Program . Th e
them e this ;•ear is Summer
Splash, soslgnup ·andjump r lght
Int o fun reading.
The librar)' will begin their
summer hours starting Monday.
Jun e hi. Pom er oy library will be
open 9-:i Mond ay thru gh Satur-

day. Middleport will remain the
same, 12- ~ M onday, 10 ' 30-5Tu es day through Saturday .
Thellbrary ha s thenewW· 4ta)t
forms fo r any body needing them,
these are the r ev ised ones now
railed W-4A .
The ilbrary still has a lit eracy
rea ding prol(ram going on. rr
anybody needs help reading or
knows of someone needing such
help, please get In touch with us,
al992·51ll:lor!l92·5713. We can put
you In cont act with persons who
can help. and It Is free.
Your librar y tries to be all
things to all 'people but you' ll
neve r know If we are y our thing
unless you check us out !

Birth announcement being made
Jim and Ca r ol Mor ris Ander·
son, Roy . ar c an no unr ln~ the
birth of thei r seco nd son, Sunday.
Ma y 24, at the M edi cal Cent er
Hos pital. Chillicothe.
The Infant weig hed eight
pound s. one ounce and was 21
ln ch~s ion~ . He has been nam ed
Ross Mlclulrl . Mr. and Mrs.

Anderson's olher son Is James
Tyler. three. Maternal grandpar·
ents are Nan cy and Walter
Morr is, Pomeroy, and patermil .
gr andparent s ar e Frances and
Tom Ander son, Rutland. Maternal great -grandparents are Phyllis and Eldon Morris, Pomeroy.

Immunization times changed
The Meigs County..Depart menI of
Health has announced changes In
the lmmunlzat Ion program for
•June made nl'CCSsary due to other
seheduleQ cllnl~ The &amp;&gt;part ment according to the

new schedule wDI begtvlngshotson
June 16 and.1uneJJwlth hours from
9 to 11 a. m. and 1 to 3 p.m. both
days.
Anyone wi5h questions sMitld
contact the department o! 992-6626.

Eastern Tri-M Sanders to attend Huntington
a
has initiation
'
The Tri-M Music Honor Society of

EasternHigh Schoolheldltsformal
Initiation cer emony at St. Paul' s
United Met hodist Chu rch In
Tuppers Pl ains.

Dcl.cah L ynette Sanders. dau ghter of Mr . and Mrs. Rolx.'t't
Saunders. 51567 State Rout e 681.
Reedsville, ha5 been accepted for
admis siOn to Huntington. Coi!C'ge.
Huntington. Ind.. this fa ~l.

Sanck-rs was
menntJer ot this
year's senior class at Eastern High
School , Huntington College Is a
Ctu'L•tlan, coeducational · UlJeral
art s college offering 22 major fields
of study.

Members are Jeff Sayre, Todd rr:====:::::::::::;:iii=iir::=========il
Clay. Heather Flnlaw, Da vid Rice,
R
II K 11
Maraly n Barton, usse
e er,
Becky Kimes. Tara WoOO; , Jenny
Cowdery. L aura Hawthorne, Chrl•
Spencer, Sherr! Bissell, Kym Mc ln·
ty re. Amy Murphy, Rob Whit e and
Susa n Wolf.
Officer s have been named for \he
1987-Eil sehool year at!d Include
Mar aly n Barton. pres ident; Laura
Hawthorne. v i ce pre sid ent;
Heat her Finlaw. secretary; David
W If
Rice, t neasucr. and Susan

o '

Bees are particular about what r;h":st:o:rlan=.= = = = = = = = ; l
kind of fl owers they !Ike. A scout I
bee finds the flowers, then comes
J:iack t o get the r est ofthebel-s, Mrs.
Gt1Jcs er said, She suggested spray·
tngallttlesugarwaterontheleaves
of a plant which needs to be
polinated .
Ma1y Pugh, Mae Holter and Sara
Hawley w(•re guest s.

MIZWAJ
TAVERN

RON RIGSBY BAND
FIIDAY I

Ohio Eta Phi plans golf event

Per.ronal note

s&amp;TUIDAY NIGHTS

Pl ans for a co-ed scram ble gol f
tourname nt at th e .Ja 1•Mar C:o!f
Course WNe complried at the

Gai l Neal. Gallipolis. was the
Su nday guests of Lillian Napper ,

$2.00 Cover Chcirge
llult be 21

l-inda .Iones. one year. Rhonda
Dallev r~X·eived the pr lw for the
best cultu ral program during th e

This network will allow all users
to share a common data source.
Th e r es ult wlll be to reduce staff
time, allow for a more cost
efficient operation, and to im·
prove service. Fi scher reminded
the Board that the low cost of
es tablishing the net work Is pass!·
ble by exploiting the expert lse ol ,
Eric Anderson . OVAL Extension
Consultant.
Established In 1973 as the first
state-funded regional publi c II·
brary agency In Ohio today,
OVAL administer s through local
public libraries a · variety of
programs designed to Improve
and ex tend services to local
resident s. OVAL Is mad e up of
public libraries In the Ohio
counties of Athens. Hocking.
Jackson, Lawr ence, Meigs, Pi ckaway. Pike. Ross, Scioto and
Vlnt on. Th&lt;? OVAL Board of
Tru stees. wh ich consist of one
tr ustee from each member pub·
lie library board. determines
policy, control s fin ances. and
makes final dec ision s on what
sPrvlces wlll be offered.

Library lines

Tent o:rusade
DARWIN- A tent crusadewOI
be held at the Word of Life Church
buUd!ngsiteonStafe Rout e681wes t
of Darwin, beginning Monday and
continuing through Jun~ :~. Serv ices will be 7 p.m. nightly. Everyone
DE XTER- David Nelson: son of · welcome.

Wildwocxl Garden Club meets

made to the Confer en ce Commit ·
tee to Include It In the final budget
bill ,
The Board r eceived not ice o f a
supplement grant , $2,250 from
the S tate Library , Appropr la·
.lions were approved to m eet
Incr eased exp enses fo r equip·
ment maintenance contract s,
Insurance. and buildin g Improvement s I add !I lonal wIring for
microcomput ers).
Receivi ng approval fro m the
State Library of Ohio, the Board
aut horlzed the r eel ass lficat Jon of
staff I n the Extension Program .
A Grade 2 position will be
upgraded to a grade 3; this will
Involve curr ent staff. A grade 7
position requiring a M as ters In
Library Science will be r ec lassi fied to a Grade 6 requiring a
Bachelor of Science or a Bac ht•
lor of Arts. Hirin g Is to be
completed by June 1.
A proposa l from Fisc her t o
cr eate an In -house computer
network was approved . Techno! ·
ogy ex ists to co nnerr six of the
three types of mi crocomputer s
cur r ent ly bring used at OVAL .

DR •.MONTRIE CHAKSUPA
TO THE OBSTORICS/GYNECOLOGY
DEPARTMENT OF

HOLZER CLINIC
PARTICIPATING MEMBERS OF ADVACARE
ARE WELCOME TO SEEK SERVICES
THROUGH DR. MONTRIE'S OFFICE.

JUNE 5 &amp; 6

FOR AN APPOINTMENT
CALl

Ohio Et a Phi Chapt er ofofBeta
lng the one J~nson~rlv·
ror the best r~R~a~c~ln~e~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thes~fn~tmM~
the yNrwlthM~.

State deputy
directors visit
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
State Grange Deputies for M eigs
County, attended the Annual
State Grange Officer' s Conference at Friendly IIIIIs Grange
near Za nesv ille on Saturday,
Ma y 16.
·
This conference which was
held under the direction of Ohio
State Grange · Master, Donald
Elliott and ot~er Sta te Officers
helps them plan with the deputies
to carry out the Grange programs In the state. Special
emphasis this year is being given
to Junior Grange and the Deaf
program.
•

,.

Stele Auto

LONG BOTTOM - Flam e Fellowship Chapter meeting at Mt.
Olive Community Chu rch. Long
" Bottom , will be held Tu es day, 7:30
: p.m .. with speaker Sheila A mold of
: . the Sunrise gospel singing group.
~ .E\Ieryone welcome.

•

You just won't find a
better value for your in·
surance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
potiGy from the State
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency re·
presenting State Auto,
, we offer truly outstand·
ing protec - packages
lor houses, artments
and condomi
nits

992 -6687

REEDSVILLE: - Olive Township Tru stees w ill meet Friday, 7: ll
p.m .. at the Reedsville fir e station.

'

MONEY

POMEROY

RUTLAND _- Rutland V ill age
Council) wilf meet :ruesday, 7 p.m ..
at the civic cent er .

:
POMEROY - Pom eroy Chap! er
• Order of East er· n Star will m eet
: -Tuesday, 7:45p.m .. at the m iiSonlc
.:. temple.

yoUR

214 EAST MAIN I

les (OVAL) Board of Directors
monthly meeting agenda, T~rs·
day, Ma y 21, aga in Included the
question of state funding for 1989.
Shir ley Mills Fischer , Dlrec·
. tor , reported on the public
. heari ng of the Senate Finance
Committee, Wednesd ay, Ma y, 20.
Over 50 supporters were In
Columbus to express support for
the continued funding of the
regional library sys tem for 19~ .
In addition to att ending the
hearing. OVAL's friend s stopped
bv the offices of their legis lators
to register their support. Everyone w as readily identifi ed by
_thei r bright yellow buttons,
"OVAL is worth it."
State Sen . Jan Michael Long,
Jennifer Thompso n, Director,
C~lll lcothe and Ross County
Publi c Library, and Kathy East,
Presi dent-Elect of the Ohio LIbrary Associ at Jon pres~ nted tes·
tlmon y , Senator Charles L .
Butts, member of the Finan ce
Committee, was supportive of
OVAL dur ing the questioning
that followed.

Community calendar/area happenings

Full Gospel Lighthouse honors mothers

"'-"'1

:Columbia Grange meets
: A pol lu ck s up()(~r was t'nJO.\ '('d
; pri or to th(' M &lt;l)' meetin g of
Co lurnbl:r Gr a ng e N o. 2i .1o,
\.Vo r lh y Mastr r. Eldon Barrow s,
M-a s In char ge and legislati ve
fCS~io n ~ a nd bill s bl'ln~ ro nsi -

By Lou Ho~vab
Field Representative
Wor k . M ay nard G. Krebs had a
ra ther distin ct ive r eaction anytime Dobie mentioned tha t w ord.
But If you get Socia l Security
benefit s, then th e word "work"
doesn't have to br ing you any
such res pon se. You see, a person
ca n work and stil l receive all or
part of his or her Social Security
benefi ts.
Here's the wa y i t works. There
Is an allo wed earnings limit for
non -di sa bl ed Social Securit y
beneficia ries established each
yea r . Som eone who earns under
that f igure wi ll receive full
benefit s for the yea r . In 1987. the
allowed limit s are $6000 for those
under 65 and $8Hi0 for peop le
between 65 and 69. How about
folk s 70 and over? Well , they ca n
ea rn as mu ch as they want since
there Is no l imit at that age .
If a person ea rns over the
exempt amount . then half of the
excess is withheld from the

A mother-daughter banquet was
held recently at Dal e's Smor gasbord by thr women of the Full
Gospel Lighthouse Chu rch .
Pink and yellow floral arrangeIf .You'n' not a "s ports" person.
m ent s adorned the banquet tables.
perhaps. you missed a news note to
Each mother and daughter present
the effr&lt;'t that Jennifer Cou ch.
was given a corsage in their choice
honorabiP ment ion A ll-Ohio tlris
of color . Hanging basket of flow ers
\'('ar and a member of the 1987 •
were presented to the oldest mother
gradu ating class of Meigs High
attending, Marcell a Chapman. and
SchooL has bet:&gt;n sel•octrd a' a
the youngest, Christina Yeauger .
m ember of an Ali-Stw·t basketball
Mrs. Kar en Karen Walker. Cheslearn of l ht• Intrrnal!onu l S!JOrls
terhiiL was guest speaker for the
Exrhan gr.
She talked on thetoplrof
,\s a m em t]('r of the team. gathering.
"M ot her-Daught er Relatlonstl!ps"
.l• ·nnlfer wilt ~Ia;· in the Bas ketball
using scriptures from both the old
F(Xier ;illon or Hun gar;.· met'! wit h
and new testament s. Mrs. Walker
Ill Easter n Block European Nat ions
also ent ertain ed the group wit h the
in .lui;·.
song. " I May Not Always Be There,
Of courS('. there :1re costs in·
But I· Know Someone Who WilL"
I'OII'Ixl and Jennifer will
$1.99" Another guest. Mrs. Jleene Johnwhich inclu d.-,; all f('('!; with a $21Xl
son. who accompanied Mrs.
disrounr offet-r&lt;llf till' total amount
Walker, led the women in several
l.., paid .' ~ l da~· s bcfOr f' deparlurt' on
songs.
.lui\· 7.
Attendin g were Jean and L ori
Ii will be a g~·pa t l'XperienC&lt;' for
,Jr nni ft&gt;r II ;·ou want to hel~ .
donation~ ean J:x'o!';rn t toJr nnif~r a1

•

~

Michael Hackett, Fort Myers,
Eileen Blossar Kerny a. Charles
Fla.; Chester and Nina Haddox, B . Gordo n, Groveport; Gordon
Hollywood, Fla .; Mary M. Willi - and Mary Hen nesy Harr is. Coams Wallw!g, P owell ; Peter lumbu s; Charles E nt sminger.
Walburn , Jacobsburg; A lice - South Charleston, W_ Va .; Kat Darst L emley, Jackso nv tll e. N. hl een Brown Wlldermuth . Tiffin;
C,; Sara h H annigan Stewart, Willa Hll Bowers, Springfield;
Athens; John Stephenson. Dorothy Scott Walker. Ga llipoBeaver; Rick W. Little, Wonder lis; Mary H. Cooper Jackson,
L ak e, IlL ; PaulE . Wiley, Belpre;
Columbus.
Harold and Janet Frost Hinkl e.
Rlchrd Rawlings. Ma son.
Athens ; Gene and Cinda Morris W.Va .; Mrs. Owen Cantrell,
Abbott. Carroll; Clifford a nd Gal li po li s; Ja n ice Child s
M art ha Robso n Cunningham. Falkner. Birmingham ; Patr ici a
Lima; Doris Colem an, Jackson;
R, DeVol Kloes, Bidwell ; L eland
Bruce Bingham, Raven swoo&lt;\,
E . Bown, Wood br idge, Va.; John
' W.Va .; Jam es and Jean Wll son, w. Case. Wes t Jefferson; Cha ·
Sa ndusky; Walt er Clark . Galli - r les R . DeLa y , Wo ri hington;
polls Ferry. W.Va.; Ronald L
H arold and Carol Hudson Wolfe.
Fullz, Westerville.
Fort M yer s. Fla .; E .L. McCo·
Wall er Clark, Galliplls Ferr y, m as, St . Lou is. M o. C.G . KerW.Va.; Ronald L. Fult z. Wester- wood, Columbu s; Virgin ia Ru s·
ville; Diane Walk er Robert son, sell Wagner, Bryn M auer. Pa .;
Ravenswood , W.Va .; Charles W. M r. and Mrs. Char les P. Hosk in s.
Morris, Winder, Ga .; Doris Bai - Spencer v ille.
l ey Finni ga n , Huntin g t o n,
Sue Ru e Garner. Pampa,
W.Va.; Ed and Rut h Tewksb ary. Texajj; Ruth Ann Halley Carsey,
Wellston; Rober t and Hazel At heil's; Robert T . Henn esv.
Hawkins Guinth er. Columbus;
Gallipolis ; Colee n Wilson Oh l in·

Beat of the bend
By IIOB IIOEFLICII
Congratu lations to Char les and
Ell en Glbffi, well known Pom c~-oy
resident s.
'11rey officrved
I heir 52nd weddin g anniversary
Monday and they
were together for
the occas ion. It
j ust hiiSn't been
that way recently what with
lllnf' SCSM r . Glbt:r; was sujX'rintcndent of
Pomeroy schools for many years
and Mrs. Glbffi was a t cac h~r at the
Pomeroy f :lementary Sc hool.

•
•
•
'•
•
•

Evelyn Knapp Vogelsong, Wheelersbu rg; R obert L , Richards,
Pontlac, Mich.; Naom!Overturff
Durst , Gallipolis; William R
Grate. South Charleston, W . V.;
Roena Johnson, Columbus; Char les Burk, Brook Pa r k ; Patsy
Saunders Ha y, Columbus ; Phyllls Diles Jividen , Athens.
Beverly Perrin Dixon, L ake
Ori on, Mich.; John R. Kauff,
Point Pleasant , W.Va .; M r. and
Mrs. C. Asa Bradbury, Circlev ill e; Roger Leffingwell, Colum·
bu s: Michael Gar ten, Barnesv ille; Charles Win ebrenner.
Newbury; Ron Evans, Colum·
bus, E uidell Konkrlght , Springfi eld; Tom L . Miller. Ravenswood. W.Va.; Jeanette M c Kuy
Jarvls, Port Wa shin gton; Ja m es
F . Sisson, Pholenlx, Arizona;
H erschel J. Knapp, Salina; John
C. Bacon , Gahanna; L ois Diles
Bu sh. Columbu s; Buddy M oore,
Middletown . .
My ron and June Sei nes Duffield, Coshocton; J am es L. Bowles. Point Pleasa nt , W.Va.;

The

Here's just a sample:

List Price

Chevrolet 350
1967- 1979 1219·7

$124.24

Ford 351 · W
t9n-t983 41674 -7

$152.32

Sale Price

$62.12
$76.16

A typical NAPA engine kit consists of ring set, main bearing se_
l , rod bearing set and gasket set.
Many other combinations are available for etthE!r Amencan or rmpot1 cars.
NAPA pat1s mean assured dependability. And you'llgel the added be~efit of NAPA know-howprofessional expertise that always saves you ttme and money. Check tnlo your local NAPA
AUTO PARTS store where you'll fif1(! unsurpassed service and unbelievable savings!
OfterOildsJune2t , t967.

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.
Middleport. OH

162 Third Ave.
Gallipolis. OH

922-2131

446-2982

157 Walnut Sl

Sigma Phi Sororltv held at th e
home of Pam Vaughan. Prospect
H ill.
Perfect at tendance pins we re
presented to Cat hy Johnson.
thr et' vea r s. Pam Diddle. two
vears . and Joyce Dou~ l as and

refreshmen ts.
Th e group enjoyed a picnic and
oth Ns at t ending were Jan
Hay nes, Rand! Hill. Becky Trl ·
plett . Jud y Wi ll ia ms. :reresa
Kennedy. pres ident, Sherry WI I·
cox. M arty Fe r guson.

_,

LET THE HEART SPEAK
j

. 11' 1 such '" ••v word, yet when it
com• to contoling tomeont who hM lott • loved
. menv peoplt find it difflcutt to exprMI them·
Jv.... H~re ere some tugg•ttont:

r:..

Smith gets
scholarship
Mark R . Smi th. son of E ugene
and Shirley Smith. Middl eport.
hBs---been awarded the ~300
Crawford-Gray-Lewis · Scholar·
ship established several years
ago by D r. Edward W. W. Lewis.
Smith, who graduated Sund ay
from M ei gs High School, plans to
attend Ohio University. At Meigs
he wa s In the NatiOnal Honor
Society. editor or t he newspaper,
a member of the Spanish q ub.
and a member of DECA . He was
an Academic All-America and
al!ernate for Buckeye Boys
State.

/

I

Jl
·~

.) Don't worry about what to "Y· Jult speak
htert . Sometim• touching or hugging I•
C:O•nfortlng thin mtro wordl .
Don't w01rv 1bout Whit to brlng. Bring yourulf.
gtve of yoursatt, your time. your litttning e1r.
1

4 J If thoro oro children In tho ftmlly, Moton to thlm, ~
, ..;d don't hldo your tNro. A* ooch child II ho or oho
Wlnt• to attlll'ld the funetel. 111d accept each enawer
.. right for thlt child.

~-..k·~

4 .1 Don't etty ewey. Evon lfyou' ro olrotdyou'l IIV ott

ff,_,J *tHIU
(IJAI -

II 'I --

f!i'D•I t I ~ -

MARKIXSMD'H

3 .)8o thorolotor on, oftortho lnitlll ruohofvlokoro hlo
Birthdtvl. •nnNeraerlel end hohd1y1 1ft herd
to be .. one.
. :~&gt;~
·:·~--~:;~-.;.;;.~•t.- ·--·

thl wrong thing~, even If you're too up1et to ••v an·
ythlng. Grieving pooplo romomhor your J!l'•once tnd
' your touch, not your wordl. Jult 11'1 boing thoro. you
..., holp thorn tlwough thoir poln ond hotp thorn to Of·
_cept thllr lou.

5TH STREET

re141 887 -3110

COOLVILLE , OHIO

�'

•

,,

:_P..,:age::.-_6;;_The
__
o_ai.-ly_Se_nt_ine_
· _I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,;P;..;o;,;,;me;.;;,;.;roy;.:...
- .;,;M;.;,;idd;.;;,;;le;.:;P..;.ilt;.;;1·:..;0;.;hi.;;,:.!&gt;;,...._...-_ _ _
l _________...;T~u...;esda;......:y-.·..,Ju,_ne_2_._1_98_7

,......___Local briefs----.
f

Motorists should expect delays

'

.~ .

..

Lebanon Trustees m eet Thursday

•..

,Lebanon Town,hlp Trustees will meet at 7 p.m Thursday at the
township bu ilding.

Que.-;tion 2 on marijuana plants
Two adult s are bein g questioned on the cult ivatio n of mar ij uana
plants on Wyllls Hlll. Pomeroy Police report. Some three dozen
plants were confiscated by Chief of Police Jerry Rought and Officers .
Jim Webster and Tom Smith Monday evening.
·

Board to construct containers
Meeting in rej(Uiar session Monday night, the Meigs County Fa ir
Board agreed to const ruct 24 per manen t litt er contain ers for the
ROCk Spr ings Fairgrou nd,.
Steve Powell, direclor of the Meigs County Office ofLitt erConl rol.
met with the board to out lin e the co nt ainer progra m offered. The
office of Utter cont rol provides plans for the contain er s and the
mater ials with the board to see Ihat the containers are built at
straleglc spot s around lhe fairgrounds.
The board also discussed a~pects of featu rcs for the annual fair
which will be staged in AugusL

u

EMS has eight calls Monday
Meigs Cou nly Emergency Medical Ser vices reports eight cal ls
Monday; Rutland at .1: 10 a.m to Meigs Mine No, 1 for Larry
Campbell to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plains Fire
Department at .1::11 a .m. to an aut o fire on County Road :)9;
Mlddlepor1 at 12::39 p.m. to North Fourt h Ave. for Claren('(' Smit h to
Holzer Medical Cent er: Middl eport at :1:02 p.m. to Li tt le Kyger f~r
Marv el Spires to Holzer Mrxl lcal Ct•nt er: Pomeroy a l4 :22 p.m. to
·East Main St. for George Lyons to Veter ans Memorial Hospital:
Racine at 4::!7 p.m. to Dorea• forl.arry Roush to Vetera ns Memoria l
Hospital: Rutland at 9:24 p.m. to Meigs Min e No. 1 for Pa ul
Montgomery to Holzer Medical Cent er; Rutland at ll : 21 p. m. to an
aut o accldenl on Cou nty Road 10; IO:;u·J Phelps !'('fused treat men l.

"

,I

In Salem Towns hip Monday, at 11 :211 p.m.. a ma n tmveli ngea' l on
Coonty Road 4lost coni rol of his car and drove into a ditch. according
lo the Gall la-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Earl E: . Phelps. 3f&gt;, of Pomeroy, wa' charged wit h DW I and cit ed
for failu re lo co nt rol and nol wearing a seat ix'lt.
There was an accident Monday, at 9: 2:1a.m., in Olive Township. on
Town.&lt;hlp Road 114, near Ohio 24R
Calvin W. May ley, 34, of Long Boll om , was driving eas t when a car
driven by 13onn le S. Lascar, 3ii, also of Long Bott om. was tumin g
west to Tow nship Road 114 fro m Ohio ~48. l.oscrn-drove left of renter
and st ruck May ley'scar In the rear.
Lascar was cited for lallu rt' to yield.

:I

Area deaths

. Paul Baker
: Paul D. Baker, f«l. Rout e l.
·Fleming, died M9nday at Mar lctw
Memorial Hos pital.
Mr. Baker was born In Meigs
·County, a son or the late Wil liam
and LUlie Bell e New land Bak!•r. 1-Jr
was a rl~h·ed schoolteacher ha \' lng
·· taught in Ath('lls County, the
Ollve-Oran ~c . Local Dist rlct In
. Meigs County; Mrn·Jctt a G'lty
. Schools and Warren Local School,.
He was a gr adua l&lt;' of Ohio
• University and served a' a mlnl, tN"
·· at the Tunnel Mct hod l~ t ChUT'('h. HP
.·.was a member of the VlnCI"nt
unlled Methodist Chu rc h.
Surviving m·c a son. Thoma' .J .
' Bak!'r, Flcm lni(; a da u ~:h t!~·. He·
· ·tJecca Taba. Richmond. Ca lif.: a
-grandson. .Chad BakN', Frlmlnir.
:lwo granddaught ers. bot h of S&lt;'at·
tie, Was hln!t(on: a brothrr. Lro M .
. Baker . Mar iN Ia. and s&lt;'V~r ul niC"
~CES and nepht&gt;\I'S.
' .Bes Jdt.,; hl' paJ'l'nt s. hr was
' ~ preced&lt;'CI in cl~ut h b,1· Ill' wit•'.
Estelle, In 1977 . three sons. thn&lt;•
, ~lstr-.·s and live brother, .
·,. Services will IX' at 1 p.m.
,;Wednes day at the Whit t&gt; Funer:d
.. Home with Rev. Curl DeeH•r l
offld ating. Bur·ial wUI ix' in Cool·
vOle Ceml'l erv. Buria l w wbe in
.':Coolville reni ct&lt;lv. Frlenrn muv
call at the funeral home from 7 to'9
•p.m. thLHvenlng. Memorkt l cont t·i·
butlons mav be made to the Bm·Jow
Funeral ~iomc. In cm·r of ,Jan
• Seaman, Barlow. Ohio 4o7U.

. Harrv• Flowers
Harry Neal Flowers. 74. Lctw·t.
·"died Monday in Pleasan t Vallev
Hospital.
·
·

;Daily stock prices

..
,.

(As of 10::10 a.m. )
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Elll~ &amp; 1-ot•wl

Firm
Price
.Am Electr ic Power ............. 26 %
AT&amp;T .... ... .. ................ 25 jl
Ashland Oil .......... ............ .. 62 ~
_Bob Evans F a r·ms .. ........ .... 25')4
Charming Shoppes ......... ..... 25 ')4
~ Federal Mogu 1.. .... .. .. .......... 4 2~~
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ...... ........ &amp;4 14
Heck's Inc................ ........ .. . Hir
'Limited Inc.... ............. ....... 41 '6&lt;
Multimedia Inc.. .... ..... .. ..... 54 ~
' Rax Resta~rants .................. 5:h
Robbins &amp; MyerS.. .............. 10 ~
Shoney's Inc ......... .. ...... ...... 261\
Wendy's· Inti. ........ ................ .JO
Worthington Ind .. .. .v'........... 20 ~

. _ ---

"

Born J une 25. 1912 in CottaJ(&lt;'V Ule.
hew a~ 1he son oflhc late Martin W.

and Franc'&lt;'S Pullins Flowers.
Hf' was ret ired from Foot
Mi ncra l Company wherr he
work('(] in the production depart ment and was a member of Local
Unio n !il71 Steelworkers. He was a
member of theGuldln gStar Advent
Church In Letart.
Pr oe&lt;'Ciing hi m in deal h were two
sL&lt;Iers. Clara Hlfne and Aria
F"avvor, and a daughter-In·law,
Conn ie Andrrws Flowers.
Surviving W' f' his wife Mild!"('(]
Flowers: four sons. Ronny N.. E lk
Gruvc Vil lagl'. Ill .. Lowell C. ,
Maso n, IX&gt;n nls M.. L&lt;&gt;tw·t. a nd
Marvin L .. Lctw·t: two daught ers.
Mrs. Don ;~d "J an ice" Sims, Sl.
Albans. and Mrs. Pa trick "Can&gt;
li n&lt;'" O'Rrllly, Kansas City, Kan.;
S£'\'l'n grandchil dr('ll and 1.1 step
gnmdchlldJ·en.
S&lt;'rvlces wUI IX' at 1 P· m.
Th ur~''.l' at Foglc&lt;Song Funer al
Home wit h the Rev .• lames Loonev·
pr!'S !ding. Burial will follow In
i':V('I'green Cemetery, Le tw·r.
Frlendl rna)' call at the fun eral
hOme Wednesday fi ·om 6 to 9 p.m.

Gt-orgn• Lyons

rating excellent. 64 percent good. 15
The sca ttered natu re of last percent fair and 2 percent poor.
week's thunderstorms left widely
Insect act ivity Is as much as two
vary ing soU moistu re supplies weeks ahead of normal in most
throughout Ohio. and even vary ing areas, but has not yet reached the
readings within some counties, the level of economi c dam age. There
Ohio Agrlcu ituml Statistics Se.rv ice were only a few repor1s of stalk
reported today.
borer and cutworms. Slu g popu ia'·
As of Fl1day, soU moisture was tions Increased In wetter fields of
rated 16 percent sbort, 69 percent
no- tUJ·corn
adequate and 15 percent surplu s. ·
Soybean plant ing advanced to~
The shortages were most severe in percent complete, compared with
the southeast area of the state and 70 percent at this time last year and
the sut'pluses were found mostly in an average of 6.~ percent . for the
the northwest and non h cent raJ yeru·s 1982-!li. Some 73 percent of
areas, the agency said.
the crop was emerged, compar ed
Two lines of thunderstorms with 55 percenl las t year.
moved through Ohio late Friday
ard late Saturday. bringing subThere were reports of first
stantial amou nts of rain to many sightlngs of bean leaf beetles and
ar eas.
some drownouts In central Ohio.
There were 5.0 days suitable for Some 11 percent of the crop rated
fieldwork in the week ended excellm t. '67 percent good, 19
Friday, wit h · farmers spending percent fair and 3 percent poor.
week plant lng row crops, spraying
Winter wheat was headed on 80
pesticides and harvesting hay.
percent of the acr eage, slight ly
Corn~:plan t lng was 96 percent
behind last year's 85 percent bul
completed, compared with 92 per- well apead of Ihe live-year average
cent at this time last year. The crop of 61 percent.
rated good overall, with 19 percent
Some powdery mildew was

reported In the n9rtheast. while
far mers were prepar ing for harv·
est In the south. The crop was ratep
14 percent excellent, 6.'i percent
gooo, 18 percent fair and 3 percent
poor.
Oats also rated good, for the most
part . Oat heading was reported on
14 percent of the acreage, .com·
pared with 8 percent at this timelast year and 4 percm l for the
five-year average.
First-cutting alfalfa reached 50
percent complete,'well ahead ollast
yew's 31 percent: other hay
harvest sttood at 25 percent com·
plete, compared wit h J6 percent
last year.
Alfalfa weevil in fcs tations caused
some damage In the central and
north cent rat areas. Weather for
hay curing was not the best, wllh·
per iodic sbowcrs in some areas and
heavy dew- and fog In others
hampering this activity_ Overall,
though, hay and pastu re stands
rated good.
Most apples needed thinning this
year, while fire blight was reported

on some susceptible trees.
Strawberry picking advanced
northward and reached 15 percent
complete, compared with 10 per. cent at this time last year. The
picking s hould peak this week, if the
hot weather persists.
Transpiating of processing toma·
toes was 85 percent complete,
compared wit h 80 percent at this
time last year, while tobacco
trans planting was well ahead of last
year's pace, 00 percent compared
with 34 percenl.
Marion reported the highest
rain fall total for tile week ended
Monday morning, 2.45 Inches.
Several other point s exceeded 2
in ches: Cincinnati 12.51 inches),
Zanesv ille (2.34 inches) and Circleville t2. !Jl inches ).
At least seven other reporting
stations exceeded 1 inch.
Des pite this, nearly all stations
were reponing a growing- season
defi cit tmeas ured s ince April 1).
Wooster had a 3. 48-lnch deficit,
whil e Oxford's defi cil was 3.69
in ches.

4

We Are A Private Club

Roger Hysell
::. Garage

•ROOFING •SIDING
•WINDOW REPLACEMENT.
•REMODELING t!o
ROOM ADDITIONS
•GARAGES t!o POLE
BUILDINGS

•

George B. Lyons. Let ru·t, died
Monday In Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Pomcro.v.
Funeral arra ngements will be
announced later by the Foglesong
Fu neral Home.

Southern ...

SIDING CO.

The program began last summer
but was suspended within month~
after a federal court In Louisiana
declared it unconstitutional. The
&lt;list rict cour1 said the tests were
improper berau se they were con·
dueled on all applica nt s for specific
positions regardiess of whelher
they were suspected of drug use.

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday

CARPENTER
SERVICE

OB/GYN
Physician

The bow·d accepted the r·esigna·
1ion of Debbie Greer as girls
reserve bas ketball coach.
Guarantee Tr-ust Life lnsumnC'e·
Co., tJu·ough the 13rogan·Wru·ner
agency. Pomeroy. was app roved
by the board as the dl' t ri&lt;' t' scarrler
for student accident lnsumnee.

And lhe board a pproved agreement s between the district and
Educational Technology Services
lor provL1ion of educat ional television programming at a cost or $.55
per student. and Educational Media Resources Center for provis ion
of fi lms. records, cassettes, videos.
etc.
The board also voted to give $40
per high school cheerleader to
assist with cheerleadin g camp
Central Sooth Central
Variable cloudinESs today. A expepses, and agreed to purchase a
chance of thunderstorms this after- 41ew freezer for Port la nd
noon. High 80 to85. Southwest winds E lement81J1.
It was reported that the district's
5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain is 50
1968 Chevrolet pickup has been sold
percent.
Showers a nd thunders torms to Janet Hill.
likely tonight. Low 65 to 70. Light
southwest winds. Chance or rain Is
70 percent.
Veterans Memorial
Showers and thunderstorms
Monday
Admissions - David
likely Wednesday. High around 80.
W
olfe,
Reedsv
ille.
Chance of rain Is 70 percent.
Monday Discharges - Richard
Extt'llded Forecast
Warner. Marie Waldnlg. Paul
Thursday llrough Satunlay
Clear ing. cooler and less humid VanMeter, J ohn Kennedy.
Thursday. Lows60 to65andhlgbs In
the 70s to around 80. Fair Friday
and Saturday. Lows both days in
the 50s. Highs In the 70s to low 80s.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9n-621l or 992-7314

HEATING &amp; COOLING
· Residential and small commercial units. Insta llation of

Roy Jack "Jick" Neff, ~. of
Middleport. ruTest ed over the
WN:'kend following a high speed
ch1rse on Route 7 fi·om Mlddlepon
to nem· the Gai lla·Melgs line, had
his Initial ruTalgnment Monday In
Meigs Cou nty Common Pleas Cou n
on a char!l{' of treaklng a nd
entering. The chru·!l{' was made In
con necllon with an Incident on May
10 a t the old Valley Lum ber
building on Page St. in Middlepor1.
Neff. apperu·tng before J udge
Chru·Jes Knight , ente·ed a plea of
innocenl to Ihe B&amp;E chru·ge. He Is
currenlly bein g held in the Meigs
Cou nty Jail on a $10,(00 bond. Trial
Is lo be sel at a later date.

Revival underway-

'

Volunteers needed
Volunteers are needed to heJp
decorate at the Chester Elementruy &amp;hool for llhe annual alumni
banquet. Volunteers are asked lo
repon to the buildlng at 7 p.m.
Friday.

Applications available

A revival Is underway this week
through June 6 at the Morse Chapel
Church located on County Road 35,
the Racine-Por1.land Road, with
services at 7 each evening. The
Rev. Charles Norris Is evangelist
and there wW be special singing at
each service.

-

The

Edith Rels €1' will be at
RadneDepartment StoreF11dayto
wl11e applications for Golden Budt·
eye Cards. Applications also are
available at the Senior Citizens
Cent€!' In Pomeroy and the
UtrariEs.

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

MASONRY
RESTORATION. SWIM
POOLS, STEEL. LAWN
FURNITURE, BARNS,
FARMING EQUIPMENT,
HOUSES, ETC .

FREE ESTIMATES

5-19·1 mo.

6·1-87-1 mo.

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

AEASONAilE - IEUAIIE
8·ZO-' 86 tfn

.HUDNALL

SIZE 23X30X007

PlUMBING &amp;HEATING

'

EACH

168 North St&lt;ond

1

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We Ca rry Fishing Supplitl

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE·
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
,MAKING HA"1MERED LAW SHADES.

Pay Your Cable &amp;

-- ·--

44.95

1

Any Three Rooms and

'

'

•Range•

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
H Ue

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

!Eitii!NC£ PHONE
t6Ut n7-77l4
,

1 1 7~

4·16· 86-ttn

'lin

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY

ROOFING

Let Ut Fuee ~ou In

' NEW - REP AIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES
RES IDENTI A L/ COMM ERC IA L

1

Will do babuhtlng in my home.
12 yra. exp•lence. Ref•tn ctl
pro\llded. Aeaaonable rat .. .

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenchina of Any lype

REPAIR

Backhoe Service

Service
&amp;Parts

Briggs &amp; Stratton
homellte

'

J1cohsen

VALLEY lUMBEI
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, 0 h.

992·661 1

We Carry

C onm~te

Culverts

licensed &amp; Bonded

WILLIAMS

TRENCHING SERVICE
AI. 4. Hysell Run lud
Pomeroy. Oh io 45769

PH. (614 1 991-2134 or
992-6704 - f ree £rtlm11 es
s.tl-2 ....

&amp;

"AT'S SIAIPifl UP
&amp;C..,diW A
HAND CIR. lAW&amp;
CARitDE TIPS

f III&lt;IIII:I&lt;Ji

a.

SCISIORI · SNIPS
PlANER BlADES
ROUTER ItT&amp;
CLIPPER ILADES
KITCHEN KNIVES

•

PRUNERS · lAND
SAWI • CHAIN SAW

-~==::flr:.:lll:l•:t~-~-:"::!"+:-~·--~~

CHAINI
J1171 . . . . M.
'-a ...._, • 4S74J

tll•&lt;tllll .. ~.!:~,!14

,..-___._

SIDING
GUTIIIWOIIC ..
20 Yeera Exp.
EXCELLENT
REFERENCES
FREE ESTIMATES

JUIIS COl
CAU

614·367-0412

and newer und can . Smith
19, Eutern
Ave .. Galllpcllt. Call 6U · 440·

992-3989
5-1-'17-1?

2282.

'

Custom Painting
Servict, Rustoration
&amp; Collision Service
Wosh &amp; Detail
Service

colna,Edlarge
currency
. Top
pr iCM.
Burhett
BarblllShop,
2nd. Ave . Middleport. Oh. 614·

3&amp;. look for tlgna. Ph. 814-24&amp;·

I titllltrvllll'll l
St:t VII t:.

Yttd' Salt. Mill Cr..._ Rd,
wrlnt• wnhw. ttull
lotds
of htmt to chooae hom.' Ph.

J••·

1 1 Help Wanted

814·448·9&amp;18.

EXCELLENT WAGES tor IPWI

Moving: Refrlgtutor. ttove.
tr. .er. tote. ttc. Btglna Mon·
d-v June1 , 311 StndenOrtva.

time atllmbty wor iC eltc:tronlm , creha. Othw1. Info. (5041
641-0091 EXT. 2987 Opon 7
Oaya. CALL NOWI

QET PAID for reading bookl l
•100 .00 p• titl e. Writ e; ACE 33, 2 Pima. Ntp•vil e. ll

I

I

3 Anno11ncementt

h..,,

a..

.:r..•h

c~:~~~ F:h!'

Lent.

4 family yerd ule. Juna4th, 5th,
&amp; eth. 1 mtle outs-. Rt. 218.
Ona Moon r•ldenoa. Someth ing for ..-eryon t. 91m·4pm.

GARAGE SALE: Juno 2. 3. &amp; 4.
2·7PM l•a Ettet• off Rt. 7 in
Additon, lilt blu 1 hOule n1•
pond.
MOVING 8Al £, June 4. &amp;.
Cl&lt;11h11. furnttun. houuhold
itema. crth 11 ernt. miac., 9·&amp;
Cenunary .
ROAD YARD SAL E: WH t .nd of
Kerr Ad., Ju ne 4 &amp; 5 . Wat ch for

t ignt.

3·famlly Otrag• Sala. &amp;41
Fourth A .... 8 · 5, Junt 4 S. 5.
Ylld Stle1 mila on 218 . Wed . &amp;
Thura.

b n tlent lnoomt for pert time
home llttmbtv work. FOf info.

v.

OOVEANMEI'H JOBS .

•18.040 . tl59, 230 yr . Now

IO&amp;·e87-6000 Ell1.

Oe1 Paid for rNding boob l
•100.00 pw tltl6 Writ e:

Ac:•

milt BulwiU• Ad . Wed. &amp;
Thurt. 1 0 lamlli • · l ot of
gocdl11. Come &amp; See.
Mugt Cpmmun~ y S alt. Rio
Grande Eattt11. Jun• 4 &amp; 5.
9:00 to 1. Cloth•. hou i thold,
mile. gtlor1.
VAAO SALE, Jt~ne 3 .

1910

ll

Chlthtm Aw. CkJ1 hl ng. coff••
• tnd ttbl•. lots ofmltc:. ltems.

Wenttd: Som.,nt to bal l!l hl'f.
Colt oft• 9:00 p.m. 114-1149-

t ·Fam lty- Y1rd 8tlt. room aile
c.rptl Thuradl'f Ju ne &lt;4. 2 mi.

31. 2 PlmL Ntp• vll-.

10&amp;40.
2101 .

Trudl drlv•• nwdtd. Malt or
fomol ~ Coli 614·992·2378 or

1·100-247·•&amp;18,

coli riNndollla 1102]831·888&amp;

.... 1203.

Saol•ahlp fNtl.,.tfor qullifled
appUc:antl, call ERA, Town .tnd

Coumry Atol Eototo. 304-67&amp;1141.
8omt~hino

New Unct. Thalunl
AIIPI needed for lutln•• Ac countt P.t Time e11.000 Poterrtlll Full Time lto.OOO plut
pottntl•. Work own houra;

n-.. .

. Col 1·612·
ne -0011 M·f . I :OOom ·

Tr-g .... -

OU1 218. Hafftlt Res.
POACH SAL E, Thura.. Fr i .. Sat

80 Loe11tt lt . Limp•. dl•h• &amp;
glior• Some An·

vl•ew....

liqUII, jew .. ry .

HIRING! Oovll'nmtnt j(lt.•your
• .._ tU,OOO-tl8,000. Phone

,

on Llnooln Pik L

Ul·3828.

R· 980&amp; for current fedll'll Ult.

Bl:ir
(I 1111 II,'! f' I' I

M1n to work WI Sen lc:e Slelion,
mutt h..-e mtcfttnleal a~lhy .
Muat
refll'tncea. Ph. 614·

HI• Ing. Colt

1-3-'16 tie

June 4th tnd 5th. Ch•t• Aon
r•ldtnce on County Ad1 21.

8:00-4:30.

Starting Junt 1st. thtouah 7th.
•;. mile oft At. 7 on Rt . f43.on
left aide of road.

cofl312 ·741 -8400 Eft. 31 3.

Flr111 E,alt•••t
Parfl &amp; Servlee

924 Flnt A..... Mon.. TuM ..

hout e paet c~ureh In Ch•t•.

Mov ing Sell . Tutl ., Wed .,
Thufl,
•tove, hcuaehold.

and College Students for
t umm• employment. A lao h• •
permanent full-time poaftk)nt
open. M1ior mecllcll btntfi1 1
avahblt. I 1,200 to 12.000 P•
month. Call 448·148 1.

Dsalor

tO'(

Rummtge Sete 2, 3. Tu ... &amp;
Wed . 2801,1, Fourth Aw. Can ctl
If rein .

8tu• F1rm. 4 Vt mil• tromRl7
on County Rd .3 . 1 V. ml• Iouth
of Rutlend. Fr..atf, furniture.
houathcld lttmt , booU, 1HI
cw, and mu ch more. Fri. June I
Stt June 8. h .m. • &amp;p.m.

Now hiflng High School Grad•

Aurho.(iled Jo-n Dttrl,
New lloHand, lush Hog
form lquiprMnl

5 fn lty. Junt 4-1 . Fr. ..,,

dr•••· bolt aprlnga,I. eta.
m•u•e.
cloth•. dl•h•,
Fl'li

&amp;omMhlng for tv.-yon•. 01••
ware. blby lttmt. wood framtd
Unicorn Plctur•. tool•. throw
ruga. hair bows, furniture. bley·
cl•, tfh:ycl•, guna Piu1 lots
mara. Mon. June 1·Junt 7,
Centenll"f 1111 &amp;th !rail• on left

Roofing of ell Types

U. St RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

Moving 1111 June 2 -4. Toola,
pl.no. turnitura awning few
c tmp•. mu ch mile. CoUegt
Rd .. Syracuaa.

Mini ftta markll type yerd ula,

Worked in home erel

BOGGS

3 femlly . Acrou hom AutlJnd
Legion Htll . June ht. 2nd. lrd.

DA&lt;VEAS

wetll. Ph. 114-245 · 5504. Ah•

5·21-8J.1 mo. pd.

ahM•t•

I ftmlly , lnf ..tt tnd
clothing. 3 mil• out Leed u
CrMk Ad. 742-319•. Junt 11
through It h.
•

3 lemlly. Junt 2nd, 3rd. 4th.
Road under Pom•oy-Meton
bridge.
l

&amp;PM.

Ph. (6141 843-5425

n•t dey . 114·742· 2141. ,

Wed .. Houaegold, ohitdrlll'll clo·
thing, badtprllda, dr••· mlac,

home. Quail Cr..W. fCJJ 2 bov•
14mos a 5yu 3-4 d.ya P•

v••r•

Or coli et4-441-6331.'

V.rd ule: Norlh Main in
tl ..d. Jun•1 -3 . Rain

\18 c .. lon, lnaurance, protlt t h•·
lng &amp; mora. For inter'll lew, Call
114-716-1383 coll~~et .

m'(

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

······ 'Giilliiioliii_........ .
&amp; Vicinity
9293.

RHponaible P••on to btbyalt In

Complete Guner Work
Complete Remodeling

I

&amp;_- FamUy Yard Stle. Rodney At.

80&amp;40 .

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

---------+-------+

to buy goOd uud

600·527-TEAM.

· 5·19-' 87 -1 mo.

P&lt;

2 bedroom home Cemp

304·87!·2828.

'(ard sa\el

C11h p-'d for colltctor anHqua
or ptt 1960 quilta. Pitced Of
tppllque. Any condition. Hlgll•
prica pltid for unuaual pMttrnt.
Call Marc 1t 814-812-2101
di'{J or 1·592-2481 evenY,gs or

wva. loCI11onl04·757 -8118or

PH. 992-3537

614·992·8486.

Buying daily gold, 1llv er coln1,
ring~, jewtlry, lterllnu Wire, old

S1m Tankll.,. Trudl lng Inc. it
now hiring aIngle 1at • 2nd
Dl+.r••· Top miiMQe pay, excel·
lent btnBfltt. AI Peterbilt'Fieet.
mutt ht¥1 1yr. old T. A .
up•ltnct. O.O.T. qutlifltd,
dean M.\I .A.. be 23 at ol~ .
Slngl• muat hr.te 2yr. old T.R.
v erl~ a ble ••P•lenct. Call our

550 PAGE ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Auto pant, scrap mltsl. but lMluipment, atoc*. 8 ec:r•·
Loc.thd on 8tl1e Rou••· Call

n••

Man~g• n.-ded; Ftmlty be .. ty
Ilion-tanning «:tnt • · Galllpolll .
S.l.-y plus commiulon, peid

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

Buainen
Opportunity

Sulli:-Pontlac.

Want.:!

THOMAS
BODY SHOP

21

TOP CASH paid for '83 model

FREE ESTIMATES

WAIH,~DS

repo llat .

~roan IMsont to
beglnntn. 1dv1notd atudenta
and adulu In my home. Alao
teech cording and tranapotlng.

614·446-3672

doghouse. 304 ·2298 .

SALE$ &amp; SEIVICE

Plumbina Service
Cusrom Wtld lnt
Lowboy Htul ina
Septic Systems

Authorized

Tecumseh

511/tln

8000 Ell1. OH ·980&amp;

Cort 114·992-!403.

w"hnda.

CAll:

SMALL ENGIIIIE

Weed Eater

ELECTRIC &amp;
ACETYLENE
WELDING

EUGENE LONG

4-22- 87-tln

Go\letnmtnt Hom• from
repalrl . Delinquent tilt
RtpOIIHiklna. Call

814·992·7632.

Wanted To Buy

QUILTS

20

wetk, d~Vtlme only . C•ll

Will do .bebythtlng in Middleport. Call 614· 992· 3840.

Ri ck P8arson AucHoneer II·
centtd In Ohio and Wtat Vir~­
nla. Re81 Estate. antique. fwm.
liquidation 111 11, 304-773·

Hall - 194.95

"Free Estimates"

949·2263
or 949·21 t.8

.

Will do babyshtlng In mt homa6
dar•

614·742·2805.

982·3476.

IT. 4, POMEROY

•Refrigerators

Doy ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

l6t4t n:z-&amp;sso

Howard L. Wri•esel

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•Washers •Dishwas h e rs

t iUliNESS PHONE

·

.

AUCTIONEER. lUCK JIIARION
l'hant 773-1711
DICUTIIIX. Jf,AN I10NE
Cllll • Clllll . . I.O.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Hall - '59.95

1·2f·l mo.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Phone Bills Here

CAN BE PU.RCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAILY ~NTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

Dia111 F McVey, M.A.

Can do Nght h11.1llng •ndr oofing.
Ae11onable ratu . Mari o n
Snidlll'. 814-949-2829.

Jim Mink Ch1N .•Oid1 In c
Bitl Gen e Johnaon

Any Five Rooms and

0 rgans
Mobile service
614-843·5248

right f 114.000 Call

2917 .

lawn mowltf repair . Will pidl. up

We Plttl c•h for lltfl model cle~n
used

Any Livin&amp; Room and
Hall - 134.95
Any 2 Rooms and Hall

985-3561
. All M1ku

By Owner: Smlil 2
Houae. From St. Rt.
Krin• Rd. V. il• fint

ond. d!tlivlt'. Also light hauling.
Call 614-742 · Zt,93 or 814·
742-3091 .

Found: Sungl••• in tron\ oft he
Daily ~ntlnel office. in Pomeroy . 614-992-2155.

9

992-3410

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

45668.

6718 .

M S. M lawn Care &amp; Window
Cl.,.ning. Call any day aft« 6
PM . 614·379-2!71 .

875-4873. Witt pick up.

8-13 lfn

(CUT OUI FOR fUIUR£ USEI

&amp;

EltatM. 614 ·446· 2283 or 304- Give plano and

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

446·63 23 Day or he.

Electronic

2s(

~

To uttle an Eatate:
on 2 !ott. stove.
nM roof,

2416.

Needed donlted ltemt tor .an
auction on Juna18 at Middleton

CARPE.T
I:IPHOLSTERY PLUS

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lnstallatio n
Service

PH. 992-2772

CALL 614-446-3028

:I: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Aeal Eslale

Jim 's odd joba pointing. driveway rtaeallng, carpenter work~
rool repair. traea &amp; hedgf
e xperienced . Call 814-37 ·

6786 or 773-&amp;430.

JUST CAlL!

CaD For An Appointment - 675-3400 .

61.·594-3571

lNG CO . rtcOfTlrtltndl th• ·ou
do butln•• wh:h people ou
know, and NOT to und motw
through the mail untM you htWill
lnvnt~•ed theoH•Ir'U·
•

o•aoe

4367.

Middleport. Rewar d Ph. 446·

L&amp;N CLEANING

J.R.'s REPAIRS

\tedlcal Office Building

-

!

Hill. Of'!.

9732

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

10-8-tlc

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

WO«I GUAUNtHD i fl£1 lSTIMATn

Schoo1s
Instruction

Retrain Now. SoutheMtwnBUs·
In•• Colltge. Call 814-448-

LOST: Black &amp; whtte hunting
dog . Appro x. age 1 4mo .
An1wers to Bo. Vicinity of

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Suitell7
Pleasant VaUey Hospital

DILES HEAliNG AID CENTER

1

&lt;NOTICE I ·
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLT H·

lot• 50x1

6 lost and Found

8

LIMESTONE
GRAVEl · SAND

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

co.

15

Mnon, W. Va .

949-2748 '

WILL HAUl

stalled on your electric furnace.

USIDENnAl, INDUSTIIAI,
COMEICtll
I'll co• to you.
hrtablo Sandblasting

B

RACINE, OHIO

DENNY CONGO

Price: $1699.00 plus tu. 5-28

WEllMAN'S PAINIING

"'""'----:'"""'- 7 - - -

c••·

modular homos. Installed on
pad and ready to cool. Price:
$1199 .00 plus tax.
or a HE1l2~ ton Heat Pump in-

5-21 -87-1 mo.

a..utHul kittens to give away.
Sev•M colors. M•l• and f•
m~• · Col&lt; 614·992-3923.

Old b•n - tew down for
mtt•ill. s.. Doyle Ord fl.et'OII
from R lver1ide Golf Cour~e.

General Contractors

1-1·'17-3 mo.

air conditonina for mobile or

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

For
Women

CAU TOLL fill 1·100·237·7716

w.....

Owner .

All work guaranteed. Call:
(614) 985-4222 (midence]
'Special: HElL package central

contacted.

good watch dog. to good home. I ·~~~~~~~=
304·896-3935.
to

BELL CONSTRUCTION

John K. Benh
Owner/Mechanic

ditioning.

By (hance or Appointment

Experience,
, and
approach
- that's
you need to help solv, your hearing
and that's .what you get 11t Diles. There is no
need to settle for less!
Set us each
Wtclntsclay P.M.
at Holzer Clinic .
· in G•ipolis
326

FREE
ESTIMATES
ALLWORK
GUARANTEED

PH. 949·2756

duct work, humidifiers, fur· .
nace, heat pumps, and air con·

Ho8pital news

Neff arraigned

Busineas
._.ppportunity ~1

Box T·9922, PleMe include
telephone number or wey to be

Pratty color hi«ent. 304-8751314.

SUGAR RUN
.ASHLAND

Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and
welding.
(All makes &amp; modelsJ

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86·1C

11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Iunday' t p.m.-7 p.m.

Caring

Weather ·

Situations

4 hitten1 to give away . Tam• 7
wko. old. Cot1614·992·6281 .

8 month old Mtle Pitt Bull.
Brindle color. 614 ·742· 2450.

2 POOL

RUUILT &amp; REPAIRED

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

(Free Estimatesl

HOURI, Tue.-Wed.-fri.

ONLY

Non-Membe,r Cover
Charge $2.00

5-18-'87-tfn

- Plumbing and el eetricel
work

1124 Eost Main St.
Pomeroy

John 1\1. Grubb, 'I.D._

MEMBERSHIP $6 .00

- Con crete work

5-6-'87-1 mo pd·.

&amp; SAfeliWTING

Members

NEW HOMES
RESIDENTIAL
RENOVATIONS

Bob

r::L:lsNOw

Continued fi·om page 1

Giveaway

Spwytd full blo ndad Elkimo.

· PH. 992-9949

- Add ons and remodeling
- Ro ofing and gutler wtJrk

985-4141

I

992-9901

190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

YOUNG'S

Phone Day or Evenings

ANTIQUES
BUY OR. SELL
Riverine Antiques

Nltetlub

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

CHESTER, OHIO

users them selves," Von Raab said.
cal ling the program lair to new and
current employees.

e

BISSELL

6-17-tfc

POMEROY, OHIO
M•IRI Co.'r # t

IK TilE

INSUlATION

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Truclilluion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Now Accepting New

~

"VINYL SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN

At. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

WASHINGTON ii JPI) - The
U.S. Customs Service said it would
resu me drug test lng today of
applicants for new pos itions and
promotions, a day aft er the Supreme Court refuSed to hall the
cont roverslal program.
On an &amp;1 vote Monday, lihe court
denied a motion to stay a 5th U.S.
Circu it Cou r1 of Appeals rulin g that
upheld the use of urinalysis tests to
detect drug use by workers. .Justice
Will iam Brennan voted to grant the
slay.

Jer sey, felling abou t 40 student s ' , NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 6-2-87
attending a band concert In an
a udit or ium wi th out air ·
conditionin g a t Paramus Hi gh
School. About .10 students were
hospitalized, but mos t were released by mid-aft ernoon, Principal
Richard Zanella said
"It was the co mbin ation of the
heat, the emotion of the program
being over and a chain-react ion
hysteria setting in. " he said.
1n Arlington County , Va .. across
the Potomac River from the
nation's capital, nearly 2, (00 students were sent home from school
early Monday a' temperatu res in
classrooms reached R5 degrees.
The hi gh lemperatu re at Bait&gt;
more Inter national Ab·port was 93
degrees and Newark hit 94, both
matching 1986 records. Records
were also.set in Michigan, Main e
and California.
Midwest thunderstorms Monday
-RAIN
~SHOWERS
spawned a tornado ncar Danville,
FRONTS: WWarrn
"Cold - StaUc "Occluded
Ill. , and pelted Ott erbein, Ind. and
Map shows maximum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is pre&lt;lcted
Rice Lake, Wis .. with baseball-size
to
receive precipitation indcated.
UPI
hail. No damage or injuries. were
reported.
WEATHER MAP - Showers and tburrderslorms ar e forecast for
Win ds gusted to 81 mph at Albert
parts of the t'lllltml and Sjllllllefn plains, the guH coast, mid Mississippi
Lea, Minn.. while strong winds
\'alley, Ohio Valley, Greal Lake. as well as the north Atlantic Coast
downed trees near A sh&lt;'V We, N.C ..
stntt&gt;&lt; The&gt;day. (UPI)
Kingman, Ind .. and Walklll. N.Y.
Heavy mins triggered creek flood·
in g in Cow Creek. W.Va. and 1
southwest Pennsy lvania.
Most of the storms hammering
Texas and Oklahoma since J a~t
week mov&lt;'CI away Monday , leav·
lng behind only scat t ~r·f'd showers.

Ch,ittmll Around tht WOfld it
·back end bett• than t~~~tf'l Now
hiring ••a aupervilors tor party
plan. Frft trtining, no Wlvtst·
ment. n.o collecting. Fret kit and
suppli•. 304·486-6733.

12

Court decides drug testing may resume

By ALAN YONAN ,ffi,
United Pre;s International
A linger ing 90-degree heat wave
in the Eas l that sickened student s
and forced a school to close showed
signs of breaking up later this week
a~ a cold front moved slowly toward
the region from the Midwest,
forecasters sai d today.
"By the end of Ihe week the cold
front that Ls pushin g through Plains
wil l be Into Ihe East ernslates," and
br·ing cooJe- temperat ures, NWS
forecaster Bill Barlow said.
But a lift h day of 9(J.degree plus
readin gs wa' In Ihe forecas t today,
he said.
A shru· p cold front Slretchin g
from Minnesota across Nebras ka
Into northern New Mexlro was
mov !ng eas tward today, trigger ing
more st rong thunders torms.
Temperatures were in the 80s in
front of the storm and in the 00s
behind it.
Tornado warnings were posted
today lor much of Wisconsin and
Michigan and lhunder storm warn·
in gs were l~ sued for Iowa and
· Nclraska.
As thunderstorms raked the
Midw est wllh hall and winds of
more than 80 mph. record temperatu res baked the East for the fourth
day Monday. The heat crowded the
beaches over the WN:'kend as people
sought relief fi·om temperat ures 15
to ~ degrees above normal since
F1iday along the Atlantic Coast.
Temperatur'es soared above 90
degr ees Mo nday in northern New

21

3 Acn11 of Hr;: To cut '&amp; b-'e.nd
Wanted
It' I yours. Ph. 814-448-4486. , - - - - - - - -~
F.o.-ont-.,-u71n_m_o_
nt--eo_n_
to,. '
Men w ill share 38R Home with
Adorlble kittens, 2 whit&amp; 1 f emale. Freer~ in exchange for
biiCk, 3 'gra.t Striped, litt• light houttketPing, Will h~We
tr.lned. Call614·448-1793.
own room. 1 or 2 sman childr!!lf'
ok. Wrtteln e.-•ofTrlbune. 826
4 Klt.n1 to a good home Ph. Third Ave .. Gallipoli1. OH 46631
446·4614.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

The National Treasury Em- 5t h Circuit ruling.
ployees Union. representing 9.COO
"The statistics I'm aware of show
Customs Service workers, had the cour1 denies 90 percent of stay
a~ ked the court for a stay last week
requests," Tobias said.
after the service announced plans
Customs Commiss ioner William
to resume the physical tests, which Von Ra ab promptly hailed the
affect applicant s for jobs Involving coun 's decision and announced the
fir earms, lhe capture of dru g service would resume its drug tests
smugglers and access to classified starting today.
Information.
NTE U President Robert Tobi as
"Drug screening is necessary to
said he was discouraged by the ensure that the people we hire and
cour1 action but hopes the ju stices entrust with the enforcemen t or our
wil l hear his union's appeal of the nation' s drug laws are not dJ·ug

1 1 Help Wanted

3 Announcements

Heat forces some schools to close Monday

Man charged with DWI

The Daily

Ohio

Last week's rainfall spOtty ·aroun~ Ohio
By United Press International

Area motorists using Ohio 7 through Ga ll ipolis should be prepared
for long delays thls week.
·
Construction on Ohio 7 between the U.S. J.'i bypass and Mill Creek
Road will create delays for the next five days for motorists according
toGal)ipolls City Manager Dale Iman. The delayscou ld be as long as
15 toll minutes. The delay s will be tTe-dt ed when the road Is closed
down to one lane. A milling machine will be grinding up the existing
asphalt and later in the week the first layers of new asphalt will be .
put dow n.
The best way to avoid the delay is nor to use Ohio 7. The sugges ted
detoor ls to take Ohio Route 100 to U.S 35 and back onto Ohio 7 or
continue on across the !ridge depending on the dc~tination.

June 2, 1987

I :OOpmiC.I .T.]

Y•dleltt ·Ftm ity, Junt2 a 3 .
Sll· &amp;Ctonten.-yTownhouse. baby
11tmt • tou mor• R•ln or atWn•

.......P.om·arov·---·---·Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

'

·lb-

Rodtrldt Grimm r•ldenot. On
&amp;roadway. Aa clnt. June ' 3.
Thln91 selling chtlp.
,'
Junt 4

and 5. 8 :00-.,·00.
Rigpc:r•t. Oeryl Wtll' s, ~•n·

opy

bl dapr•ad.

undbox ,

chlldrena •adult cllthlng , ~tr
ltoolt. 11r• . g• grill. elr cb'njt'-

tlon•.

Thur. end r=rl . Juna4 end&amp;. 8 tift
7. Lot• of .. ,,. nlct }unlor
clct hlng, lilea 5· 1 1. Ma"Y j)l~tr
mit e. ittma. Arnoldi ' " · •or••
from For•t Run Church · on
Ccun1y Rd . 30.
'·
J une 5 and I . Tur n flttt ro.d tefl
from Mlddlepon hill. fl th hout e

on lett.
Jun t 6 and I . 8:00 tm until d•lt.
Crew Rd ., Pcmerov . Toys. c ~ikl­
r• n•

c loth e~ ,

61.4 -992 -2559 ,

Hoc.11e flotd u ft. June 2 for 1 4
dl'f• · Antiqu e furnit ure. lg.
frHZ et . children• clothing. 1} 2
E. 2nd St. Pomerov . 10:CIO.. t o
&amp;:00 p.m.
2 fam ily. Wed. tndThur. June 3
end •lh. Rt 33 . 1 mH 1 ,.-_PJ"
Beaco n Serv ice Sttl lon 11 Oprothv Longs r• idence.
3 pc. ou tdoor furnlluu. dlnMta
all sires, m la c . lt ~~n t.
Frld.., Ju·n• 6
Balli¥' .. at
Fl11woods.

1et , doth•

*'

4 hmily yard ul e. Jun e 4,5,8.
Racine. bnhind M11onlc l od9t.

Dennie Hm Res. 9:00 · 5:00 .
Mlllny ltfti'I'IJ.

Yartd u lfl Frid.., J une 5. Hart is,
-Br•dbury blllhlnd WMPO . Wat ch
for a~ n 1 .
·\

. -- PfPieiisiiiif"T'
· &amp; Vicinity .
....................... ....

~-------·lo-

DolhloryIn
p•ton. Vllege Pbzt tnn,' JOo4
Jeaklon A..... Point P1e•IM.

Rlin Cll"otll -

•

··· ~ ·y ·

Yerd Sale, Wed ltf'ldThurs. Junt
3 6 ' · 311 Firat St ., 9:00 ti"

3:00.
.t tern~ y.,d 111.. 21 Park &amp;t.
Midchport. J r.rne 1at. and 2ncl.
Kldl ototfMI. furnft:u, .. curt•n•.
IIWft mowetl.

laby CIIOth•. furrMturt. smtl
Girl dot'*· Atfrtd Fr1nU. T••
Aolld. June 3Jd. 4th and &amp;th.

)

'

Yord Sot ~ tOO Ninth
Wod, 9:00 till 8100.

'

Stt.,..

V•d IIIIa Thura tnd Frl, Jup~4
and I. 8 :00 am 11111 :00 pm, 1 1

tnd 133 lo. Ptrk Drive.

,.

'

�j.

Page - 8- The Daily Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A·DAY .

Tuesday, June 2, 1987·
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br L•ITJ Wright

54 Misc . Merchandise '5"6;--Pn-e:-:t~
s-.f-::or--...
S-,-;
al"e-

76

For sale 01 r8flt 3 BR , house.
attached .Qllft!lge, C A. depositS.
ruferltfl CI:! r equired. Ph. 6 14·

Carports, Jhelter !lou ses •and
Q1r1ge1; Carpor ts. 1 2x20 ,

446·2583 8 -5 .

t895 00; 201124 .
Ooragas, 16x20.
2•h.Z4; t 3695.00
Builderi. Athena;
692-2937.

32 Mobile Homes
for· Sale

MOBIL E HO ME SALES , 4 Ml
WES T, GALLIPOLIS . AT 36.
1 PHONE 614'- 446 -727 4.

AP 200 typfMt'rh:er.
condition. Us&amp;d 2
mOnths. 6,4 ·9 92 -32 6,4 or 61 4E~ellem

992-3905.
Go·ctrt. 6 HP . 21 in. ATV t ires
on r ear with Torque co nverter.
614 -742 - 2420 after
5 OOp.iT. .

,984 14.1165 M obile Mom eon 3
loh, all elect ., fenced y1H d. out
bur/dings. s 18.500 Ph. 446 324 9 or 446 1339 or 446·
15 28

•••

"Welcome to the '80s, Harold. It's an obscene phone
call - for you!"

Furnish ed 28R . Shultz Mo b1l e
Huma. Tak o over psvment s,
bal an ce 86,000. Call Eventngs
614-446 -4489 .

Ca ll 614 ·992-7479
1970 V1di en t. 12~~:66 . Good
con dition $46 00 or best oHet.
Coll614 -7 42-2578ahw 6;00

33

Farms for Sale

20 aer o f arm Hannan Tra ce
Road, Glenw ood, W Va . for
mor e informatiQ[I ca\1 304·773 5'11 8 or 773 -5186 after 6·00.

2 or 3 bedroom. furnilhed. AC .
Good clean condition. No pats.
New Haven. 304-8B2· 2466.

~4

7PM

747 lnddust rial st or age 12 foot
oVer haad door. 3 ph Maa ol
~Jectdc, 1 8~~:4B steel builcllng
6 14 - 44 6 - 2362 F o r

1 BR ApartmMt, 740 Second
Ave. a 186 p.- month. Oeposit
requ1red Call 814 -448 -4222
between 9 &amp; 5 ,

35 Lots &amp; A creage
1.8 AcrOB, ni oo buildm g sri e. 2
mi Nor! h QfHutcity limitson At
7 Can 614 ·44 6 -7627.
l 1md lor Salo. 75 acros Crah
Crook Ro11d. 30 4-676 -43 24.

Renlals

,.

1 BR . grou nd floor. All utilities
patd. Neer McOonalda. Call

41

446-7025.

Houses for Rent

J 8R , bllt h S. 'h. famity room.
l ocnt ed on 668 . Ref er en ce
rmwir od 832 5mo Call 6 1426 6-6789 Of 256 · 6205.

Futni3hed Apu Ne•t t o Rio
Grande College. Ph. 614 -446 8883.

Nir.otv furnished small house.
A dult , only. Referonct:~H re(jl,./1100 . Oft str oet parkin g. Ph .
614 -44 6-0338 .

3 BR. brick in Rio Grande. Sec
Dup N o pets. S235mo. Coli
6 14 245-54 39
N it.:c 3 bodroo m housll. Family
room , yftf/lgo, bHIIoment, foroed
111r hoal, 5 w oo ded acres S275
fill!' month. S100 depru&amp;it No
1nRidfl puts 10 East St. Pomerny 61 4-423·6289

6645 o' 6U-949-22 18.
2 bedroom furnished ap1. In
M iddi6Port, Allutllitl• paid. Call

614-992-50e4 .
FurniNtHIII. 2 bedroom house l or
rnnl in Addi son 1 blldtoo m
h1rm!1 hed HflDrlm enl in Middl epori . Call 61 4- 992 -630 4 Rh«
4 00 p.m.

APARTMENTS , mobile homes.
hou11M. Pl. Pl e•ent and Gallipolis, 614 -446 -8221

2 bt:uh oorn. furni11hod, AC . Good

1 bedroom grou nd HoOt , privat a
en tr ance. recenttv remodeled.
Every thing turn., loc. out1klrts
Hend.,..son. S260 month. 304-

cl mm co nd1tion N o pms. 8 160
IH• month Now H ~tvon 304
682· 2466

67~

3 18 7
2 h1 hnu sit, Mt Vernon A 'ole Will
nccupt 1 or 2 chllt.lr cn. Rottlf·
ltii CU &amp; dtii)OS•t 304-675 ·2651

Apart menta In H&amp;ndtttson. Par·
tialty fur nis h ed, 304 -676· 1972.
2 bedroom furniud apt, ref end
deposit, New H•v~n . W . •Va .,
30 4-882- 3267 or 30 4 -773 -

Ooatt t 1hrl t cnova t t'ld 3 br homo
un Mo1 pen ' s Woodlawn Form.
H1. 35 Pliny $400 por mont h.
304 675 1286.

2 Bedroom furnished. AC 1 BR
11p1 . hn n1s hed, Hud ~tccepted
Fosters M obile Home Park Pn

6730

Furnished upper hal f duple~t
Prater single w orking adult.
Reteren ce and d&amp;posit . 304675-266 1.

Nicu huuse 6 1oo m s omd bath.
Full bos cmont and lir opluce in
Pom 11r oy Phon e 614 -992 ·

42 M obil e Homes
for Rent ·

2B R. Mobile Ho me at Evergreen . Ph. 446 -7032 .
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile Homw
Ph. 6 14-44 6·0627.

.,

Washers, dryer s, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances ,
Uppar River Rd betide Stone
Creet Motel. 614-448 -7398.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sof• and chairs priced from
1396 to 8996. Tablea 650 and
up to 8126 Hide·a -beds 5390
to • 596 Recliners S226 to
8376 . Lampl S28 to 1125 .
D•nettes 1109 and up t o 1495.
Wood tab le w · 6 chairs UB&amp; to
t796 . Desk $100 up to 1376.
Hutch• 8400 and up Bunk
beds complete w-mattreues
U95 and up tol396.8aby bedt
1110. Mattrenes or box aprings
full or twin t6J, firm t73 , and
183 . Quean sets $225, King
1360. 4 drawer chest 169. Gun
e"ablnets 6, 12 gun. Gas or
electric range 8376. Baby mMtreues $35 &amp; 846. Bed fram.UO. 1 30 8r King fr'ame 850.
Good •election ot bedroom
suh:as. metal Clbinet1, headbo•d s $30 and up to 865.

CARPET

Carp~ remnantt S&amp;.OO a yard

and up. Mollohan Furniture
tJppw RN~tr Rd. Ph. 614 - 446 7444. Open till ?PM on Week
Dsy a.

CARPET
CarpM remnants 86.00 a yard
and up . Mollohan Furnjture,
Upper River Rd .. Ph. 614-446·
7444. Op.n till 7PM on Week

o•., •.

2783.

BUYOUTS - SECONDS CLOSEOUT'S
1.· Counter top s. Kitchen and
bar:h and bN' 52 .99 lin. Ft. (8) .
2 .· MarbleVanityTop' s( BJFrom
16- 19 to " 22 -48" $10.00 to
850 00. 3 .· 22·30 Almond
Vanity and Marble Top 579 .9 5.
4 .- 60 " Steel Bath Tub 's Aim ond
Md whit S89.95 ea. 5.· High
Gloss tub wall kits almond and
white. $29 .95 6 .- 1 pc. Fiber·
glass tub and shower combin &amp;
tion. White and colors 8169 .95
to S179.95 7 .• 2 pc. Fiber'gl ass
tub and showers combination
whit e and color s &amp;1 99.95 . 8 .
Deluxe acryli c tub and show ers
with t op Reg. S69 95 , N ow
299.95 9.- Color Commodes
869.96. 10.· Fiborglass R oof
shingles (B) 516 .95 sq.- 90wt.
roll r ott ing $9 .96 . 11 · Pin e
rough sa w T.· 1 · 11 si din g
(%114x9 ' 12 96) 25pc. up 1 .00
off pr. Pc 12 · % x4 ' x8'
Plywood-8.96 'h· 6 95 25 p c.
up. 81 .00 oH pr. pc. 13 .·
l.4 x411.81C tongue &amp; groo11e water
boerd. $9.95 or (%x4x8-8.9 5].
25pc , up 1 . 00 oft Pr
Pc .(7 . 16thsx4x8 -5.95) 14.- 4118
ce dll' or treated latti ce 12.95
and 10.96. 81 00 off 25pc. up.
16 .- 'l•x4x8 wood oak pttneltng
(B) 5 99ea. (A) grade 8.9 6eo.
16.· l!u4»~ 8 Bir ch Paneling Reg.
24.96 now 15.96. 17 · Pine and
cedar wood w.ings coat in g
166sq. tt. pr package $8.95 and
810.96 pk. 18.- 4»~8 Glaze tile
bllth panels (8)4 .99 and 5.99 ea
19.- Perm a (R)m sulaled s; heetmg foil one stde Pi1 »~4x9· 4 . 99 )
W• x4xB · 5 .99) (1 · 4 »~8 - 6 99)
20.- Thermo\ ply intulative she&amp;thing foil (2) 1ides 4x8 4 .96
25pc. up 1 .00 off Pr Pc .
21 .- lnauulated tempered glas s
panels . o/u 32x76· 29 .95 ea.
36pc up 25 .95 . 22 · Pine inside
\overed f'dju stabl e shutters. all
1i1es billow whol • ale cost.
23 -K -Lu 11. boneh mark bride
corners 60 cen1 s bo»~ . mortar 2
gal. 10.96 . 24.- Prlffinished
bru ce oak flooring lfo th ick 2 V•
w ide. 20sq. ft. ctn. 146.00 10
ct n. up. 39.95 ctn. 26 .-Prehung
interior doora prefini s h ~td an d
unfintshed all sizes (B) 29 .95ea.
26 -St eel ex t erior in sul a1&amp;d pr ~
hung doors (8} 69 95ea. 27.Exterior stMI door blanks fBI
26 ,00ea. 28 .-Pine louvOt"ed Bytold doors setl (24·29 .96) (3 0 -

35 .96) 132-39 .95) 135-44. 951

Mov ing Sale: 16 Oakwood Dr
Gallipolis. June 2 &amp; 3 9· 8.
EvetYthing must go .

(4B· 59 .90). 29 .· Ooublesideltte
enu anee door aels with decoreted gl•s lind aheel panel
Good ua&amp;d co lor ftoor model and doOJs. 350.00 ea. 30 .-B ron:r:e
por tabl e TV . Ph 614 -446 - &amp;lumlnum doubl e commerQ&amp;I
1149 .
entrance doors set s 699 .9 5 or
sin gels 399.96 with l'landels and
Dining room set, tlke neW he.,.y loeb. 3 1.-Single or double
beech wood. oak finish. table. leaded glas s steel insulated
11x c::heifs. 8376 firm. Ph. doors sets. reg. 699.00 t o
1BOO . OO now 3 49 95 t o
614-446-92 29
896 .00 . 32.-St eat doors and
2 pe INing toom suit a. very good ram b. prehung 1 'h hr fire rated .
t:ond. 304-67 5-48 77.
· 189.95 . 33.· Prehung steel
ln1ulstl!ld doors with 1/) gl ass
insulated 129.95et. 34.· Pr e-hung pin e panel doors all sites
54 Misc . Merchandise 89
.96ea. 36 .· Blank hollow cor e
0
doors trom 12 t o 20 wid e 80
long· 400ea. 36.- Prefln is hed
Callahan' ! Used TireS hop. Ovet prehung otk lagecy dQOrS end
1,000tlr•. slze112, 13. 14, 16,
jamb aH aCres 44 95ee.
16, 16 6 . 8 m ile~ out Rt. 218 . PENNS WAREHOUS E WEL L-

STON , OHIO 814-3U·3545.

45

PIMtic cistern state approved,
p!•tic septi c tf nks. piMti c
cufvert 1. mM:•I cutllerts, ~ON

Ready mi»~ co ncrete and all
conaete supplies. Can us V1ll8¥'
Brook Cemeot • nd Supplies.

EVANS ENTERPRISES. •Ja&lt;k·

304-n3-5234.

Aoomll for rent, diV- week.
month Gallta Hotel. Ca" &amp;1•·
4 46-97 16. Rent .. IOWII$120
monl h.
Furniah&amp;d room. 8116. Utilltl•
pard. Share bath. SlnlJie mal._
91 9 Second. Galllpolla . Call
44 6-441 6 aher7pm.

47 Space for Rent
Ortlce Sptce tor Rent. E:c..lent
for Anorn~s . Accounttnt. « e.
Cion to CouJt Hou1e. C:•ll
Wiseman Real Es11te AIJIII'IW·

614-446-3644.
Mobile Home sp.ca for rent .
With garden &amp; g•~ge. , mlleo~.~t
on &amp;88. Nice loutlon. Cell

614·446-4344.
CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Routa 33,
oi Pom•ov·
Rental ttailws. Call 814 -9927479.

No,,

Strawberries . Tay lors Berry
Pat ch
Kerr . Rd . Monday·
Saturday 8AM -8PM . Call 614 446-8692 or 614 - 245-6178.

son, Oh. 614·288-6930.
School modal uwlng machine

d•lgnod for ochool u ... New
wil:h 25 yr. warr1nty. Do•
tNerything saws on 111 macerili
l'itn IHI:her. Reg. 1489.96
Now t179 .95. Cal11 ·614· 385·
4535.

PAAK , Rt 2 south, Galllpalis
h"Y. WV. Now renting tota for
te&amp;.oo P• month. Calf 304-

576-3073 oftOI' 8:00PM.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Live slock

614-9e6-436&amp; .

Super .56 Oliller Tractor nice
with 3pt'. hhch rake. Equipment
10 good •hap e. All for $2895. Ph.

614-2ee-6622.,

576· 2498 ., 304-8e2-2415.

AC Tractor with belly mower &amp;
plows. 2 row planter. 11796. 6ft.
bush hog 1295 Ph. 614-286·

EQUIPMENT CO ..

7421 .

We1\,

614-286-645 ,·

Tobacco or tomato sticks 52".
15c each. Morgen' a Woodlawn
Farm. Rt. 35 PNny. 304-675-

Maney Fergu aon. New Holland.
Bu!lh Hog Sales 8. Service. Over
40 used trect ors to choose h-om
&amp; complete line of new &amp; u sed
oquipm"ent. larg BIS t selection in
S E Ohio .

'78 Datsun 8210, runs good.

bodt fair, $360.00. 304 -675 -

2183.

'
'72 Buidt leSabre. 360 au1o,

8200.00. 304-458-1712.

Services

' 82 Bonneville Pontitc. loaded,
S3,000.00 firm. 304-675- 2563
aher 5:00.

63

Livastock

$750. Coll614-742-2002.
1980 Ford 4x4 F150. XLT auto.
lair, tilt, AM ·FM , tool box t3800.
1981 Honda Accord $119&amp; .

614-949-2288 .
1960 Ford pick-up, 304-458 -

1727.

614,446·1675
Special Sale. Prices on our new 3 Acres ol Hay ; To cut&amp; baleand ·
Rioti Tractor ! V&amp;rmeer hay .it's vours Ph 614· 446· 4886.
equipment up to . $3000 off .
Mowers. mower conditioniJ'S. Clean. mixed hay . •1 .00 a bale
rakes. teddf!fs, &amp; round balers! A you pidc up in the fiMd. Call
campi me line of bale handling &amp; 614-441!5 -7803 or 446-2784.
feedin g accessories. grinder
mix ers, wagons, rotary - tillEr~ H•y for sale. 81 .30 per bale at
rotary cu1t0ts, bl ades. disccutH· barn. 304-676-2466.
vatora, ploWs. seeders, post
drl\lers. w ood!lplrtters. gaces.
hea dgm ee, truck racks, tru ck
beds, trailers. sprayers, teed
bunks, liv estock water ers, mtn·
enl feeders. Wheel Horu hrNn&amp;
ga rd en oqu ipm e nt . Used
71
Autos for Sale
Equipment· 8 round balers
(J omethat ta ke as low as e 36 HP
tnctor ) mowing' m achi neJ,
1980 Chrvst• Fifth Awnue,
rakes, drum mowOt", squere
balers. used tract ors. 3 7' good condition. Call 614-446·
haybines , cu tdi tion er, lime 0008 .
spreader. tob11cco sett ers, discs,
plows. harrow, grwh:y wagon . 1986 Chwy Chevette 4 - apeed
And !lee u s fore complete line of 82999. 1984 Chevy Ch.,ette
auto, 12999. Johns Auto Sal•.
parts &amp; sorvicA!
8UIIWilleRd.
International Cub lo-.Boy, plow
1984 Dodge, extra clean
disk. blade. 42 in woods, belly
82796. 1981 Chevy Malibu 1
fnower . $30 00 firm. Ph. 614·
Owner 58.000mL Like new
446-1602.

Tron sporl ation

02350. Ph. 814·286-6522 .

...

1973 Scout. 4- wheel drive,
6-cyl. ." auto, runs good 8650.
Call 614-379-2140.
1977 Ford Customized Van
81 , 800. Ph. 446-8249 or 446·
84' Chevv Window Van . top of
line. lo8ded, very sharp, Ph

Vinyle &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm windows &amp; doors, dver
hang gutters. Free SttlmMes.
RON ' S Television Service .
House calls on RCA. Quazar.
GE Specialing in Zenfth. Call
304-676- 2398 or 614· 446 -

245-6131
1984 C20 Cu•tomiud v•n l•m
th .. 30,000 mil•. like new
con d. Lots of extras. For sale or
trade on older model pick-up or
c.-. 304 -675- 1428 .
' 1979 Jeep Cheerokee. phone

304-458-1?27.

74

1974 Honda 760, loaded, excallem condition, new tun•uplr oil
change. t800 or b•t offer Ph.

576·29oa.
BUilding and r&amp;modeling. room ..,
•dditiona. roofing, lavout. lwei- ' \
ing, siding. bit hroom~, con- . ""
aele, electrical, drywall. plumb-

1984 V-30 M1gna exc ~ond.
Hke n.w, g•age kept, mu1t see
to apprici•e. 11,850.00 firm,

304-576-n62.

75

78' Ford LTD new tir•. new
batt., AC. cruila PS , P8.
01400. Ph. e14-246-5239.

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

81 · Corvenewlth51 ,000 ectutl
mil•. Ph. 261· 1774.
87 Dodge Omnl. nM con d.
15995. would consid• old•
wn. c• or t•ucl&lt; wMh not over
•1&amp;00 valua on lrld•in. C111
eU -388· 8706.

W1ttenon ' s Water H•uling.. •
r•••onllble rrtn. immediMIIl, ~
2,000 glltton deU••efY, cis.ern ..
poot1. Wllfl, etc. cell 304-671·

2919 .

87
IU DOET Trtnemia1ioftt: Used.
"•buiii •.AI types. OuaamMd.a
mfriUmum· of 30 diYt.

w•

Cootlnontol M•k

IV. Goof motor •nd traMm61-

'tion, 2 n. . r. . qulfttr P••· ' deflw•. c•h • cwrv or inltM
- · wrocltal. Coli 114-742-· Ph. ' 114-378-2220 .. 1-304171-17H.
2126.

1

•

Upholstery

A i M Cu'ltom Couch" and
Aeupholst..,, St. At. 7, Crown

PEANUTS

City, Oh. 514-251-1470, EYO.
114-441-3438. Opon d,;)y 9 to
4:30. Sot. 9:30 to 1 30. Old &amp;

'

---

eood.

AI lntomolly lnop""al ond
gulf'entlld. lnat•ll•ton •nd
Plclt-up ov""ll&gt;lo Coli 114-441-

wllh pistol grip thift • .

eo&amp;d trtnlportaUon.

uoo. 114-742-2102.

0tH.

••a.

Col 114-266-1270. Roddldc
~oad, Crown City .

'

1

I · 11•1 Unllug C - U M191

Mowr.,·• Upholstering serving
tricountyar1122v•••- The bell
0321.00. Ph. 114-44f-041t· in furrtilure upholltering. Callt1

wflh nuts and todll •d 2
1.10•11 i~a Aft In gMd -d.

work )Aik It&gt;&lt; P1lil) Ph. 44i-

7111 .... 5:00.

'
"'"'~·--·

SWALLOW A KITE IF IT
OOESN'T HAV~ ASTOMACH?

S1nt1's Upholstery Shop : Furniture, e•
bolf. t!Ntt. etc.

304- 17&amp; -4154

Hllm••·

for hot
~

•

1

'(OU RE JUST LEMIN6
UP TO CAAR61N6 ME

MORE.A~EN 'T '(OU ?

t7

+A 10 5

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Wet I

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

No rib

Ea11

Soolb

I NT
It

Pass

3+
4 NT
&amp;NT

5'

6t
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

7+

Pass

Opening lead:

+2

to dummy and led the club queen,
When East played low, declarer had a'
simple decision lo make. Had East put ,
up lhe jack of clubs on the first lead of that suit w.ilh J-4-21 Or was his orlg!J'
nal h~ Jding K·J·4·2? Declarer played
him lor the club king and brought ilr
his grand slam.

.. '

~.

...
.,
Happening 27 Type of
Newman ·
leather
film
28 Terminate
Even,
30 Estoc
to a
of yore
poet
32 Lasso
Wi sdom 33 Rose
symbol
extract
Brutal
38 Blue grass
39 Onecustomer

of bliss
.,

daughter

30 Heat

source

31 One of
David's
captains
34 D.C. group

.

'

(abbr.)

311 Espouse
36 Scheduled
37 Camera
stand
39 "All -

Jazz"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -

Here'show to work ll:

612

A.XYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample Ais used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
apostrophes the length and ronnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters ar~ different
CRYPTOQUOTE

.J

with PatriCk Emory and
Kirsten Undqolat (1:00)
12:05 (I) MOVIE: 'llllcll
Ll1e Theotni (AI (1 :38)
12:301J) IIHI of Qroucho
• (l) 1111 Ll1e Nlgf1t -

K

_F L G T Z V .

EV.JNGX
AW

. (I) lponll.oolc (R)
(1) Y-Tolerlalon
• (IJ Men IIHf Peoplt

M N .J

eo MOVIE: 'Cocalno ilnd

llfue !yae' CBS late MOVIe

!' K N T ;f' ,

C V B G A T

B N WJ

Dav111Le....,_,

P

"K 8 5

27 Deal in
29 Astairc 's

(!)ltjgnOif
Dl NewoNight Uve news

em .

SOUTH
+AKIUO

26 Place

6·2

~~NR) (1:33)

+KJ4 2

golf match

~=R~al Paopll

Ill MOVIE: The Plfflel .

'

23 Swiss ci ty
211 Plant type

(I) • ~ 1111

(1 :&gt;40)

t 10 9 6 I

22 Annual

Q-·

I

AND ~OW CAN ATREE

RuM•. · O.ld•dAebultTr . .,.llonli: . nM" Uphost•ed.

1173 Ply,_.h Rom
Foelory :Mel onvtno 4 opood

Six Day War.

at MllgiiUin, P.l.

.•

li

'J 7 3

+93

42 Zounds!
43·Sandarac
tree
12 Overturn
DOWN
14 Written
1 Resource
letter
2 Picked
Ill Jordanian 3 Weekend 13
mountain
chore
U
16 Ullmann
4 Bard's ·
of film s
adverb
21
17 Duffer's
5 Bit of
need
work
18 ~nglish
6 Chance · 22
nver
7 Sycop,hant
19 Woman
8 Get results 23
personified 10 Accumu·
20 Give up
late

Night Stacy goes undercover
os a saleaglri 10 lrap
shopping mall killer. (A)
1!11 Mlgnum, P.t. Mr. While
Oaolh
11 (l) Ll1e Bilow
t 2:00 ()) lluml end Allen
(I) 1117 French Open Tennll
Dally llecap {1,)

pools. cisterns. wells. Ph, 614- ~

EAST

+7!

in Greece

(0:30)

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

WEST
+6 2
"QI06 2
+J6; 32

40 Sleep
"soundly"
41 Mountain
chain

eii2J 'T.J. Hooker' CIS Late

245-9285.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

ACROSS
1 Hurt
11 African
lake
9 Oxford
is one
10 Contour
11 - grapes

pa()l(ed sports hlghllghta wilh
.Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

6370.

+Q 8 7 6

by THOMAS JOSEPH

a.IDJipoott Tonight Action

-:---:-~-:"'-:-- ,

"A 9 4
tAKQ

A~u•VJttl

Oobbl. 10:30)

General Hauling

14' Alluminum Fishing Bolt
with Tr~•. 2:-n.w tlr•. uc¥·
lent condition. Set • 87\llniSt.
31' fit.-• OuMn Houstbo.t.
fully oquOipal. Ph. 114-448-

Ohio. 1-100-143,3157.

RACIN'

8·1-87

~hl

(I) 8portaCenMf (L)
(1) WKAP In Clnctn ..u
11 (IJ NfOhtllne r:;l

R &amp; ~ W.,_er Serv ice. Home
cisterns. wells. pools filled.&lt;-.
Formerly J•m• Bon W.ter.
S•ma rates. C•ll 304 - 675 ~

76

WE WAS

NORTH

Alter South's jump to three spades,
North bid lour diamonds as a way of
raising to lour spades, alr the same
time announcing a maximum no·
trump opening with the ace of dla·
monds. The fact that he also had the
king and queen was frosting on the
cake. South jUstified his reputation as
an overbldder by bidding the grand
slam, after first checking for aces and
kings.
Plaxing this aggressively bid con·
tract involves discarding two clubs on
dummy's diamond winners and ruff·
ing a couple of clubs. If the king falls,
you make the grand slam. If not, maybe there is a squeeze, with the club
king in the same hand as the Q.J. JO of
hearts or any five hearts. Today's
South found the best way. He played
two rounds of spades ending in dummy. Then, putting on his most sinisler
countenance, he played a low club
from dummy. Place yourself in the Position of poor East, who thought he had
a certain club trick. Naturally he
played the jack. Declarer now won the
ace, played out dummy's A·K·Qof dla·
monds, shedding his clubs, and ruffed
a club. Needless lo say, he noted the
fall of the nine from West. He returned

e

1982 Baylln• Mutiny, u:eellartt
condition. 120 hp. 1·0 Mer·
t:ruil• engine Call 114·446-

8864.

Stllnl•tl'l ... •h&amp;lltiYICemt.
Now cuttom mldt for your
truc:k. motar homaordMiiee.-.
With Uf•time w1rr1nty. Mufft•
MM, 9 Sttmpson Aw .. A ......

YES'M··

I

•QH

James Jacoby

IDI Honey..-..ra
Cll Love Connoctton
11:30e(J) IUIIIHI of Carton

Ojll.-d Water Service: Pools,
Cisterns, Wells Delivay Any. #"
t im e. Cell 614-446· 7404-No ~
Sundarv c alls,
~•

2387.

triM....._

JUGHAID !! YO'RE
HOME FROM SCHOOL
EARLY: !~

Ra! idential ar comm•ct• wir·
ing. Ntw service or repairs.
· licensed eledrici ... EsUmate
free. Ridenour Elet1ri cal, 304·

85

BRIDGE

Newo
(I) fnelde 1ht PGA Tour (T)
(!)Sign Off
(!)I The Prelklency and lho
Conelttution Hypothetical
now pros/doni Is lnvned to
summll meeting with Sovilla.
1DJ Monoyllne Currant
reports on world economiCs
and financial news with Lou

BARNEY

I 1· I I I I I I (

Drivel - Aglow - Lower - Second - WRONG SIDE
" Today's my lucky daY,.' ' crowed lhe husband. "My muffin
landed buttered side up ·Disgruntled w11e replies, "You·mus: ·
have bulteroo lhe W'IONG SIDE "
·

cv

(1) (1) •

TO

YE51E'RDA Y'S SCUM-lETS ANSWERS--

)PGJ(1 :32)

676- 1786.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

I ~~ic:~~!~VETTERS

new president Is Invited 10
summll meeting with Sovlala.
(!)I IDI Now•
ID1 Evonlng Newl A wrap up
of today's news end a look
ahaed to 10morrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
10:05 (J) MOVIE: Thundor Road

•

Complete rhc chuckle quoled

.:!. PRINT NUMBERED !EllERS
~ IN 1HE SE SQUA RES

10:30 ())Celebrity Chilo
(!)I Moneymakera
11:00 Hardcnllti and
McCormiCk

Cor. Founh •nd Pine
Gallipolis. 0 hio
Phone 614-446· 3888 or 614-

84

3040.

lenny cared more abOut his train set
looking realistic than his toupee.

I CAN'T WAIT TO FIND
a.JTWH101 CATEIEiORY
TH6Y PUT ME IN .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

992-2604.

1977 Oldlmoblla Cutl•• Supreme. No rust, good •h,.uL .. 1
nuw radlafa. 364 b•ral. 1uto,
FM st«eo t760. Pf't. 441!5 -4325.

1171 l'lr,_.h T - •· 311
Mlgina Auto..
NfW

'COLOI'I6L BOSKOS
WILD ANIMAL AND
CH ILDREN!3 CA.MP."

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1982 Kawa..lri KDX 176 dirt
bike. Good oondhion. Call 614-

1982 Plymouth Champ .

ru,.
1100. 114· 7·2·2102.

THE NAM6 0:: THE
CAMPIMGOING
10THI5Y&amp;\.R 16, ..

446-4477

47,000ml. Ph. 8 14· 379-2726.

New duM •h•st, pd •••
good. Needll bodr work.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

446-6819 ohar 5PM .

0500. Coli el4-992 -5391 .

I

W
&amp; Preeldency and 1ht
CoriotHullon Hypothetical

•

After altendrng my lirst week of
lectu res I've co me lo lhe
conc1us1on lhat rl 's always ··--·
before lhe yawn .
b or~ng

I I . _ . 1 bv ftll 1ng 1n th e m1ssing words
L....I_..J.._L....JL.J......J you devel op from slep No. 3 b.e!ow

IIIIDl NBA Baekelbelt
Fronllne Explore the
private world of the Christian
right In Dallas, TX. C
ID1 ~IIY King Uvel [n deplh
Interviews wllh top
newsma1&lt;era and celebrities.
tO:OO (1) II (I) 8penoe" For Hire
Spenser Is forced 10 work,
wllh one of Rita's ex lovers.

Starks Tree and, lawn Service.
lawn c•a. lar}Etscaping. stump
removal. 3011.· 676 - 2842 or

82

I1 1
r-------::---,
I TDPICE
I; I I 0

(!)I

'·

Drv wall end repair work. 20 yrs
tn~p.-lence. free eatlmates, reasonable rltas, 304· 675-4462
aft• 6:00.

,-,,:;D_A'TI_. .:L:. _r~~Y~rl~
. _ _..~

i

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed aameday.
Pump a.tes and aervlce. 304-

;ng. 304·676-371 3 .

Motorcycles

~ars. after lhe

.

'

f.,

W
P.ondlne Fronlllne
examines !he nation Israel 20

I'V£ HAD E.m..JGH ... IM
GOIOOTI~ H€R

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 304-675 -1331 .

614-985-4464 .

1972 GT 550 Suzuki. Low
mileege, very good condition.

tr-.

EEK &amp; MEEK

2454.

Conaate finish. P•rldng lots,
buement• • •nv size job. Senior
Citiz8n Discount, Rick Garfietd.

1974 Nova 1-eyl, 43.000 actu ..
mil-. 11200. Ptt. 114· 448· .

t.,, Coli 114,448-3224.

Ace ConstruC1ion. Rooting, gut· •
ten, mesonry work. All work ,;
guer.,..teed. Call614· 388· 9786
or 388- 9792.

79 ' Chwv Panel Van, :iA ton. tow
mil•. very good shl!lle. Ph.

379-2726.

992.5941.

Electric 1tove. oompltllt bed,
ch•ter driW•a. bunk bed.
t•bl• ehlin, ent ..IMnmantcen-

IT?

Ph.614·446, 6332 .

895-3e02

614-446-3040.

Un-

News prlme11me magazine.
1DJ Prtmenewo Wrap ups of
lhe day's world news and In
dept~ featura ,reports. (1 :00)
IDI MOVIE: 'Steelyard Blull'
Prtme Movie (PGJ (1 :33)
•II (l) MOVIE: The Longaol
tray (GJ (2:59)
8:30 (1) 11 (I) Growing Palna
Mike is grounded for lying,
and demands the same for
his mom. (R) r:;1
1:011 ()) 700 Club
II (J) lUI MOVIE: 'The Long
Hill Summer, Pan 2' NBC
Tuelday Movll of tho Wnk
(1) II (I) Moonlighting David
covers himself with glory by
cracking an lmporlanl case.

WEll? HOW
DO~ LII&lt;E

Vinyle &amp; Aluminum Siding. ' :
Storm windows &amp; doors. over
hang gutters. Free estlmMes.

614-245-5131

1983 Plymouth Horiz on',
50.000mi., auto. AC . Ph. 614 -

1871

MAY NOT SS
A8oVe J&lt;epJ&lt;oACH,
gur PofS IT HE-Lf&gt;
IF 'I.'M B'ENr::Ait-1
(oNTE=Mrr?

rain.
11m
ID1 Waot 57th CBS

All types cll'penter &amp; conaete
work: lntertOr, exterior. remodeling. painting. roofing. free
11tiillat•. Call 614 -446· 6174.

1339 .. 446· 152a.

1979 HondaCR -260. 8600 Ph.

Real •h•p 1912 Cutl•a Supreme, 8rouah1m t(lp. V-1!5
englna. air, PI, Pl . C•ll 1!514-

tr .. ..-.

. -du"\

W~U, l:.

446-0294.

$1200. Coli 514-448-8643 .

6 14· 379-2726

3-,4 Ford Bottom plows $325.
Ford Btl . disk 1250 , Bah ic
seeder· spreader $260 , shwtr
post driver $700. 24ft. hiiV
elftl.lator nice S165. Ph. 614·

~'

Home
Improvements

SWEEPER •nd sewing machine 1
repair, partt, and auppli•. Pidt "
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614-

1982 Yamaha Visfon 660, wetl!f
cooled, gew drive. 6,000 mi.

19B3 Ptvmoutf't Horiron. 4-dr.;
4- sp., good work cltl'. Ph.

5944.

SNAFU®by Bruce Beattie

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1982 Yamaha 660 Vision ,
dr•sed. C•ll 614-367-0643.

1984 Plymouth CoH, 4 -•peed,
AM -FM tape. sun roof, wire rims
82499. 1983 Dodge Cott, 4·
lpeed, AM -FM t1pe. wire rims
S1999. Johns Auto Sal•. HulavillaRd .

Jo t-.n Deere hay raike $676.,
sq uare bal ors S700 and up. AC
roto baler $450 MF dyn•
balance mow er UOO. Hay condltionfl' $275, Oth er fi eld ready
equipment. Howe 's Ferm M•·
chinery, Rt. 124 &amp; Mayhew Rd.
Jack!on, Oh .. Ph. 614 -281!5 -

~ JOB COUN.SELOR

7:30 II (J) (i) Newlywed Game
(I) Goodli,. Dr. J
11(1) Judge
Wheel of Fonune r;J
ID1 Cro11ftre (0:30)
•IDl lUI J!Kiperdyl &amp;;I
IDI Jalltl'lone
·
7:35 (1) Major League BIHball
8:00 ()) Dakllri
11 (J) lUI Mattock
(I) Collage Baeeball
(1) 11(1) Who'llht Bo01?
Mona's new llmouslns
service regulates new
business for Angela. (A) r:;1
(!) (!)I Novo Examine Ilia
controversy surrounding lhe
growln debala over acid

a.

Ph- 614-446-6332.

64 ·Hay &amp; Grain

MF 50 Tract or. good rubber.
gas. Good condition. $2,800.
Ph. 245·9)09 or 245· 6239.

1.

1989 GMC one ton flat bed,
81200. 0 .8 .0 . 17 ft. cemper
with stove and refrigerator

Jividen 's Farm Eqwpmont

388-9832.

Trucks for Sale

1978 Ford F-100 'h ton. auto.,
good shape. $1900 No rust.
Call 614 -448- 3852 ah.- 5pm

73

801 For d Tractor wl1h plow s.
disc, mow ing machine. raka. hfl(
baler 83795. Ph 614 -286·
6622

81

FRANK AND ERNEST ·

,,

Now buying shell corn or ell'
corn. Call for lateat quotes. Rivar
City Farm Supply. 614 -446-

aft" 5'00 PM, 304-676-2729.

8509

(l)
Tl'llk
7:05 (J) Sln!Oid and Son

1978 Georgia Boy Class A , 28
ft , motor home. loaded. "
$11.500.00 . Call 304·882·
3237 after 5:00 PM .
t

304-675-1861 aft• 5:00.

1985 Dodge pidcup, 3 v. con,
21.000 mtl•. $6900. 1969
lntarnBiional 2 ton with winch

Regi•tered Umou1in bull, eatl

35 Fer guson Tractor, excellent
co nd., 2 bottom plow, pick-up
disc, bush hog. Ph. 614 -388-

iII !Iamay
Miller
Slar

1969 19 ft. Bonanza Trevel
Trail8f'. Self-contained. Sleeps
6 Single axel. New tin:•. $896 .

614-949-2288 .

72

Duroc Boars. Bred just like tha
boars we 1ested at the Ohio
Testation that gained o\l'er 2 6
lbs per d-v. Rogar Bentlev.
Sabina. OH . 513-684 - 2398.

273 New Holland sq. Baler
$1500. Ford' 3pt. Reke $326.
Shaver Post Driver S700 7ft.
locust posts $1 .35 each Ph.
614-3BB- 983 2.

21 h . rravel trailet". Self containod hcellont condition.
Call614-992·7215.

..;.1--IL

..;:.(:...:.;_j,::.
, R-r-(

a.

Ca11614-38e-937B.
,•

675-6597.

29e5.

.

24 ft. Golden Falcon travel
trail er. well equtpped. S1900

1978 Malibu Classic and Chtr.~v
SS Nova. Both run good.

c.11 e14-992-5468.

Jackson. Ohto.

1985 full size slide In truck
eampfl'. Call 61,4·446-8848
after 7PM .

'72 MonteCerlo$500 00. 1000
Kawuaki LTD $600.00 304·

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35

!

0884.

'84 Honda ~ l ito scooter lrke
nBW- 2,500 mllea. '.76 Dodge
wagon , good body , needs battery. 120,000 mil• . 304· 676·
'78 Camero auto. !JS, pb, loaded.
$2.300 price negotiable. 304·

26 h . Titan motor home,. com- "'
ptecefv self-contained, generator, sleeps 8 . S8900. ·. C•ll' ."614-446-0008.

Nomad 21ft. C~mper. Fu~
equipped 83600. Call614· 446-

1980 Datsun, reduced. Excel·
l ent t:ondicion. Owner took good
care of this one. :pt')4-676-5689.

5123.

62 Wanted to Buy

61 Farm ~quipment

2 c•a. pl1n0, difting teble.
tt•to. Wlltf't• 6 dry.,, ml1e.
homo. Coli 814, 378· 2213.

1-100·843· 3757.

614· 446-3065 .

Tobacco beci 304 -675 -5928.

246-5131 .

9 Stlmf&gt;oon A.... Ailll!lo. Ohio

For sale: 1971 Dodge Ch!l'ger
500.340 auto, slap stick. 61~
992-3342 . No Sundsv calls
please.

1286.

2· 3 ton self conte lned air
condttfon.-s, UOO. e•ch, 220
11101t 8110 1 window unit. Ph.

ClttlyUc Convertera. only
t l l.l l. Moll modlte. lnlt•N•
tton tleo ••II.Wt Mufrl• ~an.

7 Yz xB 60sq. ft. Wood Storage
Shed. Ready to move. Ph.

Henderson. W. Va. 304 -675-

For sal e or trade tor Convetsion
V8f\. 1967 CemaroS Sand1980
Cutlas Supreme. 8oth excellent
condit ion 614 -742 -2372 .
I

Autos for Sale

1980 Camero. V6, n•ce. 51900.
tJud lnternetional37 bal.-. n8'N
pans h&amp;tJe been added, been
kept in b•n at all tim•. Other
miscellaneous used equipment.
George Woodward. Call 614379-2597. Late eve. pleMe.

SIDERS

7739.

17 eo
ft . Generll Elktri~
Fr••· refrlg•ator with lc.
mlk•. di amond &amp; 11pphire
earrings. Cllll14 -258·9333.

Moving. Sol.,.• Mow.,,

66 MF Tractor U450. 7ft. Flail
mower $200. H1y wagon •~oo .
Post hoe ·digg.- S275. JD
hammw mill 1125. Ph. 614·

Buy one any tlzechaln saw chain
~tnd get second chain hali prjce.

~========:::;;==..L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;:;;:;;;.j
"" ~

71

3000 Ford Tractor. PS , $299&amp;.
6ft. finish mOwer 8796. JO 14
Ton Baier $895. JD 4 bar rake
$B50. Call 614-286-8522.

Sale or tr ade for WD -WO 46 A .
C Tractor. VW DunoBuggv with
fiber glMs body Ph. 614·446-

I

... ..

61 Farm j:quipment

THULCC

1 - 1

a.

&amp; Campers

6522.

59 For Sale or Trade

Space tor •men trtH••· AI SO&lt;lndolllgn !laO&lt; modol, AM ·
hook- Ulll· Cable. Also effidenc.y
FM riOio, c•sttt&amp; r.cord.
rooms, ai' and ~sbte. M••on. l · tra ~~nd pMno Ph. 31!57·
W.Va . Call304 -773· &amp;e151 .
0359.

FAMILY PRIDE MOilLE HOME
14•70. 3 bedroom. 1 \A ba1h,
cent ral err. Adult s oflfy , Deposit
end reterence required. Clll
61 4-992 -2357 after 6 :00p.m.

Valley Furniture, nE!W &amp; , used.
L1rg a section of quality furni ·
lure . 1216 Eastern Av e. ,
Gallipolis.

Conaete blocks ell silas yard or
delivery. Mas on sand. Gallipolis
Block Co . 12 3'h Pin e St ..
Gallipolill, Ohio Call 614· 446·

GUY7 ~AV5D M5
IN ONE DAY.

"'7"'9,....M"o-:t-o-rs--,-H;-o-m_e_s__ ·;

0 IN71'jNI.A, ""'

286-e522

245· 5121 .

Call 814-266-6251 .

Furnished Rooms

Roush' s Strawberriee, 2 mitm;
back o f New Haven, WVa at
Unipn Campground. Start May
25. You pick- 61 .00 . We pic:kS1 25 . SAM co 6PM . Ph.
304· 882.2237.

$1 .00 qt. 304-576-2676 .
Building Materials
Blodl:. brick. sew er pip es, w indows, hntols. etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Ca ll 614 ·

1D1 Facta of Ule
II (l) Buck Rogere
6:05 (1) Gllllgin'• leland
6:30 II (J) lUI NBC NlghUy Naw1
(I) NBA T.ocley (T)
· •
(1) a ·(l)' ABC Nftl !;I
(!) NlghUy Bullnell Report
IIIDl CBS Nawa .
(!)I Colollound1 ,
ID1 ShowBiz Todlly News of
lhe entertainment world Is
anchored !Iva from New
York. (0:30)
1D1 WKAP In Clnclnnad
8:35 (1) LHVI It to Belver
7:00 ()) Hanbiotla and
McCormiCk
II(]) PM Mag11lne'
(I) SiJoriiCtnter (Ll
(i) Ent-11\mant Tonight
II (I) People'• Court
(!) (!)I MacNeil/ Lollritr
NaweHour (1 :00)
NaWI
1DJ Money/me Current
reports on 'world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
•IDl OJ Wheel of Fortuna

..,

Utility trailer nf!N lights re'ady for
the road 9350.00. Butcfu•ing STRAWBERRIES - Piclc your
equipment. band saw, m em ·own - 5taning Thursdll¥, May
grindw, tenderi!or, cutting ta- 21st . 8 a.m • 8 p m already
ble. paper holder, must sell ell, p1cked -· 81 .25 qt. Campground
S1.000.00 304-882-3793.
field onty
·
Happy Hollow
White antique wicl4 er ca u ch and
Fruit Farm
' chair with new cushions. Two 30 4-576-2026
nice end cables , 1 foot stool and 1-::--:;:--::--::---::-2 ladder back chairs 304 -675 - Hussell 's Str awberries Ftelds
23136
open for pldting, off Sandhill Rd.
U-Pick, We Piclc:. Mon thru Fri 7
am to 8 pm. 304-675 -2817.

5024.

614· 446· 1602.
28A , wilt ~ &amp; truh paid, 1 mile
ftom hospital. f200 r ent plu :~.
dttposit . Ph 814 - 446· 1354.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appliances and 1\1 sets.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sat . 614-446-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .

Furnished apt ne~~t door t o
library. On e prolesstona' Adult
only , Parking. Ph. 446 -0338 .

1 bedroom unfurnis hed apt. In
M iddleport . •1 &amp;0. Pfll" month
plus utilit ies. Call 614-992-

Ho1111e with garttgtl and full
busoment . 2 m J BR , all
Qfe&lt;.1 nc. central 11ir Arbaugh
Adcl!t ion. Tuppws Pl11in11. C111 11
614 446 -7496.

House for rem H nrt ford. mc1.1,
very c le11n. clo11o to school,
&amp;200 00 ptK month, phone
304-882- 20 1S.

Oliv eSt., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood· coal stoves, 6 pcwood LR
suite $399, bunk beds $199.
ntcliners nuw &amp; used bedroom
suit ea. wringer wa.•h.en, &amp;
sho•. New IN~ngroom auh:es
8199 - $699. lampu. Call 614446· 3169.

2 Piece living Room Suite83 25.
Moll o h~~n Furnltun, Upper River
Rd . Ph 614·446 -1444. Open
t!ll 7F»M on Week Da Ys.

614 ·992· 7787. EOH .

304-676-6967

CAPTAIN EASY
THAT'7 TWICE YOU

Strawberrres : Pick~ your own.
Bring co ntainers. Claude Win·
tars. Rio Grande, Ohio. Call
614-245 -6121 .

I

•

Par11
(!)I Secl'lll City

\
!.:...

Strawberries all ready picked

Modern 18R apt . Cal\614 -446-

Gr11cioua living 1 and 2 bedroom apanments at Village
Manor and Rtventde Apartm&amp;nu In M iddleport . From
$2 15. Including utllit lee. Call

Arthrrtic lift Ch81t. S400.00
good cond, 2 yrs old. phone

0

77 Auto Repair .

Fruit

Rearrange leners of the
four scrambled words be·
low' to ldrm four simple wlf.lrds.

a.

16 tt. dump bed $660 .00, can
. 304-882·3237 .teet' 5:00_pm.

&amp; Vegetables

...

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

0

6:011()) Blgw.;;y
IIIDl
· II W (i) II (I)
lUI Nawa
(I) SponeLook (T)
(!) Dr. Who Hand of Fear,

Ab" 5,00 call 304-675-3073.

Struts. 8119.96 pair, installed.
Most models. Muffler Man . 9 "
Stimpson Aw ., Athens. Ohio fill
1-800-843•3767,
II~...

55 Buildihg Supplie s

614-44e-0322.

0390.

3 BA un furnis h ed. 2 r.hlldt en
No pflhi Call 614 · 446·0321

3 bedroom housf1. n ear schools
~t n d hu s st op, phon e 304 -895
3516

51 Household Goods

12 Months free financing wit:l'!
approved credit. 1300 minumum purctJ•e netllsary. 3
MUM ouc Bul.,ille Rd. Open
9am to 5pm Mon. thru Sat. Ph.

1BR fumi11ho. 1 sma ll child. No
peh CAII614 446 · 032 1,

Complet o houu co ndo C rnlttl
ftfl!'lt; h nonr Clel'rwator , Fin
Availltbl o Ju no6 lhw June 13
E.dra mctl, all club hou se lacilitl~ . pool. o•tlrcisc room, spa.
otc
3 hedroo rns. sloops-8,
$450 00 nego tinblo 304 -675 34 47 or 813 -441 1643

Merchandise

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

Furnished Efficiency 8145 . UtililiM paid, share bath. 807
Second Ave ., Gallipolis PI'!.
446 -4416 after7PM .

ap po ir.~t m en t .

·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished Apt. 1225. Utilit ies
Pd .. 1BR 607 Second Ave,
G ~tollipoli s Ph 446· 4416 after

676· 5104

House wanted. Re•onabl e rent ,
will repair If nectlsary- in Point
Plea~ ant or Gallipolfl Ferry ar&amp;a .

2 br mobile home furni shed.
Used lawn mowers for ule.
304 -875· 66 12 11ft• 15 p m. tin
12 p.m.

Furnished &amp; unturntshed apts..
8160.00 and up, referen ces Ph
304· 675 -7738 or 304-675 5104 A· 1 Real Estate.

CommOI'clol buildings lor lease.
Dow ntown Pt . Pleasant. Stor01.
o) IIOtl
A -One Re11l Estate.
Cnro l YoagM 8 rokar Ca ll 304·

3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creek School Oiatric:t. Referencea flh . 614-446· 8821 .

Call 304-458· 1712.

1 Bedroo m basic rent 8176.00
plus electr ic. Also required 1
8200.00 sec urity deposh:. CON TACT: Jacklon Estates Dept Ph
446 - 3997 Equal H o u si ng
Oppor1unity .

Business
'Buildings

Hospital bed and table, good
cond, 850.00. Phon e 304 -675-

2 bedro om tra1ler furn is hed. 14
Burdette Addn , 304-676 -6372.

44

11 0 acrM, loon Baden Rd ..
Hause &amp; outbuilding Sh eam
thr ou gh pr oporty 30 4-468 1066.

Used Birch kitchen cabin eta and
suinleu steel sink,
8350.00. 304-676 -2017

4396 ,

Mobile hom fll!l for r&amp;nt , 2 bed·
room fu rnjsfi&amp;d Phon e 304·
876 -651 2 or see Hugh Burris.

1

694-5006.

47 Wanted to Rent

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

304-675-2535

M1n1 farm, 9.6acH;I8. Ba ahan Rd.
Meigs Cou nty 6 room hou stt.
fu ll basement . smell bar n. one
OU! butlding, 92 6,000. 614378 ·6209

58

. TUES., JUNE 2

WDRP
GUll

- - - - - - - -· Ed;rod ·by CLAY ~ . POLLAN

EVENING

Baby Ra cooo na for sale. 304-

Tony' t Gun Repairs. hot reblueing. Open 9 :00AM to 7 :00PM .
Call 304-675-4631 .

T~~~:t~~~ S©~4UlA-~"BtfS®

·

1987 Ford NEW, dual tanka.
long bed. $9&amp;0.00;. One p•ir
B0 -87 truck doOrs t260.00.

For Sale: 5mo old Registered
Brown Pekingnas e for G100.00.
cau 6 1-4 -446 -7249.

•aoo.

Used J20 Ditch Wit ch trencher
and John Deer B skid steer
loader, 614 -694·7842 or 6 14 -

•

$125 . Call 304-675·6697 be-

Reg. English Springw Splkliat
pups. E Kcellenl huntlngtt()dl;, F.
T. Champions. Qed &amp; Grandparents from England. Ph. 4461393 .

The Daily Sentinei,.-Page-9

W Fef-IM IAAPPIN!i'SS~

:::-::--:::-:---::---..: -~
fore 10:00 p.m.

Ohio

Television
Viewing

OO'W ~ll6 1UAT UA~
HNALL'i ~ 180' H:!I.D,
Co 'ltv i:ltiW WHAT -ru lT•~

Oh;o 1-B00-843-3767.

and Himatayana. Call 614-4463844 aher 7PM .

89 5-3972.

~----------.,.----------~double

2 bedroom. you pay utilitis .
adults only, depout ri)IQuired,

8a ct OIIOr'l lr ibbleRd offRt.62.
Plu s store hu ilding. wareho1.ne.
3 BR house. bNn. coiiiW', plu s2
other buildin gs. AH bla c~ top
rud Ca ll 304 ·4 58-1818 Call
nft Itt' 6PM

73 Monte Carlo, body solid.

Cannon

1973 Arlington 2BR . 1 2.~~65 ,
porch, un ~erpinnmg, 8tC Good
cond•t 1on c:;a u 614 -379· 2898

1973 Freedom, 14~~:70 . 3 bed
roo m, part ly lurni!hed 87450.

Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
puppies New ki1tens; Siame.a

7216

14ll70 Buddy, 3BR. 1V1 blrlh.
tot al elect ric. ~dot of ex1r u. Will
cons idor reaso nabi P. off• Ca ll
61 4-446 -3065 afttY 5PM

,973 121165 Kirkw ood . Rem!)del ed Wll f co n!lidar off er 614·
992 245 4 nhar 6 OOp m

' Dual eXhaust kits. $99.96 in•t•lled. Most Fords, .Chevy
Trucks, V•ns, 4x4's. Muffl.M.an. 9 $ttmpaon Ave., Alhen1,

no, 6ft . wood ladder. $16, 8ft
aluminum leddeJ, 115. 3v, MP
~otatillar. 8160 Old rocking
chair, S20, sm aK beby bed,
86.00. Rees e H itch. &amp;200 All in
good condrtion Call 614-99 2·

AND USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEVS QUALIT Y

'
Pomeroy~Middlaport,

BORN LOSER

GJoom and Suppty Shop-Pet
t 1695 00; Groomtng . All breads .. All
1 2396 .00: •tv las. Jutie Webb Ph. 614 -446 P:oS1-Frame · 0231 .
.
Ohio 614Oragonwynd ' Cattery kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Persi., •nQ

30. ~0 B.TU air condltionet.
$150. 3 speed troUing motor.

NEW

Tuesday,
June 2. 1987
..

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1' K J

GT

LV

P K N

G

K X R

E V C L V C K

FGHENW

GXV H GTRVC
•

.I

K 1' V

T

Z

'"

f! G T·

M K P . FLGW . V

GET

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE PA8SlqN TO
AHEAD IS SOMETIMES BORN OF THic: FE1fl LEST WE
BE LEFT BEHIND . - ERIC H O~FER

.'
I

�•
•

.
r-~tytt-

Tuesday. June 2. 1987

1v - 111e uauy :sentinel

AI~IA

OF·0
PRICES
SPECIAIA PRICES .E R

•.

.

.

AY! ! !
Don't Be FOoled .By Other Grocery Ads.
I

'

Ohio Lottery

Ken
·
Anderson
•
·rettres

...

'

'

.

•

•
Daily Number
015
Pick 4
8097

Page7

.

•

WE HAVE QUALITY GROCERIES AT
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES.

aty

,,

201b. bag
Old Salem

Potato

Charcoal
Briquets

Chips

c

Ground
Beef

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Crackers &amp; Cookies

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Crackers

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Drink

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Baking Supplies

'Chunk
Pineapple

79c
69C
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Hu mu f1 u.:. pkt.

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Strawberry
Gelatin

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work·study may locate the job he from Foster and the oene!il of
or she would like to have.
learning a job, work-study pa rIdeally, to prepare students for ticipants earn at least minimum
the responsibilities of a job, Ihe wage for their fulltlme or part·
educational process should begin tim e efforts. '
at the elementary school level
Employers gain financia lly
with career education and then from tlie arrangement In area s
continue at the high school level such as tii'X credits, a nd student s
with occupational education.
gain pride t hrough achievement ,
Occupational education maturity through work respon·
teaches good work habits and slblilites, involvemenl In the
attitudes, how to t!hoose jobs and ·local community and sa tisfac·
develop appropriate job qu allfi· tion or becoming a wage earner .
ca tions, how to apply and inter·
Foster says studi es have
view for a job. and how to get and shown that w,ork·study programs
keep a job. Foster ls now work ing help a large percentage of
with Joa n Sedar. of the J.T.P.A. high-school graduates become
(Job Training Program Act) working, taxpayi ng cit izens. Stu·
program through the Gallia· dies hav e also s hown th at after
Me igs Communi ty Action graduation, most work-study
Agency. to develop additional participants tend to take and
occupation al training programs keep jobs In their loca l areas.
for work-study participants.
Work -s tudy now has "20 or
Once a work-s tudy participant more communit y employers" In
ha s been hired by an employer, It Meigs County, says Foster, a nd
is then up to the Individual each year other employers jo in
student to mai ntain hls or her the Ust and open the door for
work schedule a nd comply with more job-seekin g s tudents.
demands of the job. Foster
Work·s tudy mu st be effective
maintains regular follow·up con· In Meigs County , because, adds
tact with employers and students Foster. "When I meet eac h
In order to head off potential month with regional wor k-study
problems and to offer' words of directors. they are always sur·
guida nce and encouragement.
prised to learn how many place·
In ad dition to the assistance ments our program has mad e."

five feet of wa ter. and It took the
cars down in to the s tream ," a
Chester Township Pollee spokeswoman said.
"One of the cars Is s till out In
the field. J understand it 's tota led
because of the water and the way
it swirled (I he carl." she said.
No Injuries were reported.
Flooding was also reported'on

'

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~Ef,l ~~~~;~~Pie
Wt:~l Pt~t:

'i ;: ; ;. I Crinkle Fries

'

1000/o
MONEY-BACK

WE GLADLY ACCEPf
FOOD S1'A'W'S. W. V'\. WJC,
&amp; \&gt;fANUFACI'URER
COUPONS

GU~
Prices guaranteed thrru~h June.7,

1~

We..,.,. lhe ~to limil all q......W...

Rt. 62 Not lh

(304) 675-1155

to smoke," said Snyder. "It goes tha t far.' '
But Horn said the bill does not , require local
of!lclal to ban smoking. "This simply gives loca l
government the au thorily 10 follow the wishes of
their communi ry ,' · he sa id.
On the budget, House Speaker Ver nal G. Rlffe
Jr., D·New Boston, and Senate Pres ident Paul E .
Gillmor, R· Port Clinton, sa id unofflcla! la lks may
begin later th is wee k amo ng m embers of the joint
conference co mmittee.
Glllm or said the Se nate co nferees will be
Republica n Sens. Stanley J . Aronoff of Cincinnati
a nd Theodore M. Gray of Columbu s, and
Democratic Sen. William F . Bowen of Cin cinnati.
Ri ffe Indica ted two of the House conferees will
be Reps. Willi am E. Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia,
a nd Thomas W. J ohnso n, R·New Concord . He said
the th ird s lot Is undec ided .
Riffe said he Is mos t concerned about language
added in the Sena te which a ffec ts govfrnment
policy but has nothi ng to do with appropriations.
He said !hat has no place In the budget bliL
Glllmor said he agrees " in concept " with the
speaker, add ing "we'd be wil ling to take a look at
(t hat language) ,"

· OUTSTANDING EMPLOYER - Lois Moore,
owner of the Kountry Kitchen Restaurant in
Racine, has been recognized by Meigs County
Schools ' Work-Study Program as this year's
outstanding employer parllcl pant. Presenting
Moore's award Is John Foster , at left , program
coordinator, AI right Is Bill. Proffitt, work-study
parllclpunt from Southern High School. Foster
says Proffitt has been "accepte d as a member of

A M u!timedia Inc.

25 Cents

Newsp~per

Point Pleasant, W. Ya.

'

I

CHASED BY NEWS MEDIA- FreweiiiCielllllt Dulel Zlpey
11 cllllft by reponen ud pho&amp;oi"Phen after pre•••c•P~~~«

oa bll AID8 vaeclae &amp;o Ihe ftlrd llllenluloall Coalereace oaAIDII
Ia W11lllnpoa Tueeda)'. (UPI)

In other acllon, the House pa~Ject and sent to the
Senate a bill permitting county treasurers to
accept pre-payment of real estate taxes. Cur·
rently, that practice Is allowed only In Summit
County.
The Senate approved House- passed legislation
openin g up 125 additional nursing home beds for
Alzheime r's disease victims In Fran~lln County
a nd 45 more In Cuyahoga Count y. State law
cu rrently restricts such expansions.
The Senate also sent the House bills:
- Giving physicians and chiropractors civil
lmmunlly for s lgnln g a waiver for a patient to
avoid wearing a seat belt for phys ical reasons.
-Prohlblllng the manufacture and distribution
of "designe r" drugs - dru.gs · which are
molecularly altered to escape the technical
de linl!lon of an Illegal drug, but which have the
sa me chemical effect on the body.
-PermUting a person to tes U!y against his or
he r. spouse as a wllness to a crime commit!~ by
the s pouse.
Bot h chambers wer e to reconvene today at 1:30
p.m .
'

,

.

the Kountry Kitchens' family" aad hM already .
progrC88ed ·In job status al the reelauranl. In
addition to the outstanding employer award,
Foster rece nt~)~ presented an award to tile
outstanding student participant from each hllh
•c hool In the county. Recclvlnll the student
awards were William Smith of Eulern, Tim
Smith of Southern and Bryant Young of Meigs.

Elliott Abrams says .
'soliciting shameful'

a nd mad e a mistak e by not
WASHINGTON iUP II - M
s lstant Secretary of State Ell iott telling Congress lnllially th at he
Abrams testified today It Is solicited the SJO million from
shameful for America to be Brunei.
"rattling a t!n cup" but sa id It
On a day when an ABC News·
woul d have been Immoral for Wash lng1on Post survey show fd
him not to use hls lega l authority more than half of alt Americans
to gai n humanitar ian a id from now believe Presid ent Reagan
other nations for the starving has tri ed to cover up the fa cts in
hi s wors t political crls ls, Abrams
Nicaraguan rebels .
that If he and Secre1ary of
·said
Abrams, startin g a second day
before co ngressional commit· Stale George Sh ultz had know n
tees probi ng the Iran·Contra what was ~oln~ on, "We would
scandal. was asked by Rep. have stop (X'd It lns lan tly."
ELLIOTI' ABRAMS
Abram s, lhe hl ghes t·ranklng
Wltllam Broomfi el d. R·Mich., If
he believed It was proper to c urrent U.S. offi cia l to testify In
solicit $10 million !rom the s mall the hearings. said he wa s asked
Asia n nation of Brunei.
by Shultz In hiS ro le as assista nt
secretary ol state for lntqr·
The State Department olflclal American alfalrs to "monitor
made the solicitation las t August Olile" -Lt . Col. Oliver Northbut th e wealthy sultan of Bru ne! but the Marine at the hear t a! !he
was given th e wrong Swiss bank scandal assured him no laws
research .. . for products tna t
WASHINGTON (UP! )
account number and the money were bel ng broken .
Scientists are starting to under· offer promise for trea ting. curing
Abrams repeat edly denied any
never reached the a nti ·
a
nd
preventing
AIDS
a
nd
AIDS·
stand the basic tricks the AIDS
wrongdoing on hls ow n part, yet
Sandlnls ta rebels.
virus uses to cripple the Immune related diseases," Young said.
" I have to tell you I think It Is after a fu II day ol sharp question·
system and several discoveries
s hameful for the Uniled States to lng, lawmakfrs remained skepti· ·
Dr . Samuel Broder of the
hold promise for developing new
be go ing around ra ttling a tin c al about hls role In helpin g the
drugs to fight the disease, re- Nallonal Cancer Institute, recup," Abrams sa id . " I dld It Contras at a lime w hen Congress
searchers say.
viewing work with the drug AZT
because the Contras were, as far prohibited U.S. a id to the rebels.
and
s
imilar
drug
s
just
being
" I think It would be premat ure
At an international conference
as I kn ew, starving.
on acquIred immune deficiency developed, promised: "Some"They were In debt on buying for me to say that he lied to
syndrome attended by more than thing can be don e about the AIDS food. They were cuttin g back Congress," said Sen. Wllllam
6,000 researchers , top AIDS viru s , even in a dvan ced
ratio ns. I had It In my lega l power Cohen, R·Malne. " (But ) I do
scientists Tuesday profiled their disease."
... to get them food and medicine think he misrepresented facts
progress In understandin g the
"It Is true that we do not hav e a
and clothing. And It would have before the var ious committees ."
disease. Frank Young, Food and cure In hand," Broder sa id. "!tis
Sen. David Boren, D,Okla.,
been Immoral, in my view, to
Drug Administration commls· erroneous to conclude that ncr
have failed to use that authority. explained tha t Abrams leaned on
stoner, said the findings would ,be thing can be done and that we are
But lt Is a practice tha i I think Is teehnlcalit Jes In testifyi ng to
turned Into therapies as quickly . not well on the way to making awful.' · he said.
Congress about the ad ministraas possible.
extremely Important progress
Abrams admitted in a first tion's policies during the last two
"FDA will place special em· agains t this extremely serious . rou nd of questioning Tuesday he years, knowing he would give the
phasis on producing the most threat to American public misled the public about U.S. wrong Impress ion even though
timely. effective and effi cient health."
opera tions tn· Central Arntrlca he "techni ca lly tohl. the truth ."

several other roads In the
Geauga County, a nd one Chester·
land resident sa id hls hom e' s
basement wall was co llapsing
under pressure from water, th e
spokeswoman said.
Sout hwestern Ohio counties
were some or \he ha rdest. hit by
the storms. Roads were closed In
Darke County , and sca ttered
power outages were reported In
Ci nci nnati.
Ronald Chudowsky, a fo recas·
ter for the Nationa l Weather
Continued on page 16

T9P scientists gather,
research AIDS drugs

J lb. hfl«

Plastic
Cutlery

'.\I \l 'C"l l' l 1'1 1{ -;Cl:-J AI
t Hl · ll\ ~ l 0 1{ ·\\l(l l. :-.IT OF
I' URCHASl· ON! )

-

"I could Invite three people over to my back
yard for a cookout and it cou ld be against the law

: /;,:;;. Whipped Topping
E&gt;ttqlhl;

Tortilla Chips

Valoe

.
'

corners ."

.Flood warnings issued around
Ohio as heavy rains continue
By United Press International
As much as 2 Inches of rain fell
on parts of Ohl o la te Tuesda y and
early today , causing flooding In
some areas. Including Geauga
County, wher e two cars were
swept off a towns hip road .
" The creek swelled over the
road and the cars tried to make It
through. 1 guess there was Uke

Plastic Cups

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2.09 .

lfolld/JY lh;. JOn

.· £:;,~. 'I Food Storage Bags

'"" Cheez.Jis

~,e('i~X-Tra

They may not, however, place limits on private
.esta bllshmenl s, such as restaurant s, which are
exempted from the s tate's law on regulating
smoking.
Senate Minorit y Leader Har ry Mes hel, D·
Youngstown , a heavy smoker, led the attack on
the bill. He sa id th ere l£\nO need tor It; that local
governm ents already have the a blllty to make
such regt! latlons.
.
Furlher, Mes hel argued, the bill Is part of "a·
co ntinual movement . to Infr inge on people's
rights," a nd would be "limiting people's oppor·
tunlty to do what'! hey please," such as smoke
cigarettes.
"! would submit ," retorted Horn, "that those
people who are subj ected to tobacco smoke
against their will have a co ns lltutlonal right to
breathe clean alr."
Sen . H. Cooper Snyder, R· Hillsboro, who lives
in Ohio's tobacco belt , sa id Horn's bill might allow
local officials " lo regulate smo king on street

5

51b. pkg.
Holten

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Sea Maid 6 V2 oz. can In Oil or Water

sse

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Chunk light
Tuna .

Lucky Charms
(otrll'flol/ \fj//,

99~

1 /;,~;;. · Pickle Loaf

PIK"I' 1 1

Cooky Crisp

99e

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II::Vf'fJ riiiJ' I Sfill /} (/,, pA,.
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HoUfehold &amp; Laundry

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Eve~day

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Senllnel News Staff
Meigs County Board of Edu ca·
lion's work -study progra m Is
most often des cribed as "the
program that works for you,"
according to J ohn Foster, program coordinator. And even
when school s close fo r summer,
the working part of lhe work·
study program continues for
many participating students.
The main purpose of work·
s tudy, which began In Mei gs
County In 1962, expl ai ns Foster,
is to help stude nts develop
" poslllve attitudes toward pro·
ductive work and work·hablts."
• Key In gredients in achiev ing this
purpose, Foster says, are to
"match the person to the job and
then make sure !hey succeed ."
During the school year, work·
study has two main parts,
classroom stlldy in career educa·
tlon and occupational educa tion ,
and ' work experience eit her at
school or In the community.
Classroom education Is usually
the responsibility of one or more
teachers at each of the three hi gh
'schools ln the count y. The work
experience is Foster's responsl·
'bllity, a lthough a participant In

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2 Sections, 16 Pages

•

Foster says work-study projec~
success in Meigs County

7

Rice, Beans &amp; Pasta
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Ubby Sliced, CIU5hed or
E~reryday

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Indoor Fogger

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Fruit Valley 46 oz. can Orange or

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Vegetable Juice

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Juices &amp; Fruits

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Eve~da'l

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. June 3, 1987

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS; Ohio tUPI ) - Acceding to the
wishes of non· smokers, the Ohio Senate has
approved legislation giving local governments
authority to regulat e smokin g in places of public
assembly.
The legislation cleared the Senate Tuesday on a
24·8 vote and was sent to the House for furt her
consideration.
Meanwhil e, the House and Senate moved closer
to beginning negotiatio ns on the terms of the $22
billion state budget for 1988·89, passed by each
chamber In different for m.
. The Hou se today was to fo rm a lly reject las t
:week's Senate changes and ask for a conference
·committee. Most of the members of that six-man
panel have been chosen, an d informal talks ma y
' begin before the week Is over.
In the s moking debate, both sides cltedlt
Individu al right s in making theirr argu ments.
Th e legisla tion, sponsored by Sen. Charles F .
Horn, R · Kettering, all ows counties and townships
fo r the first time to designat e non-smoking a reas
In public places .

price'

'

/ '1111''

Napkins

enttne

Senate votes for local controls of smoking

39

140 ct. pkg.
Guest Ranch

•

'

7.5 oz. bag Assorted Aavors
Delite

Fresh, Lean
E.&gt;~el'lda'l
\.OW
p 0ce\·

vor. 37, No.20
Copvrighted 1987

Local heavy rains possible.
High near 80. Mostly cloudy
lonlght wllh slight chance of
showers. Low ·tn 60s.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39237">
            <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="39236">
              <text>June 2, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1459">
      <name>flowers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
