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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

f

Recognition, awards p~ogram;
held at Veterans Memorial

RECOGNIZED - Five year servia! pins were
presented to Veterans Memorial Hospllal employes
In an awards program In ol&gt;!en'anre of National
Hospital Week Friday allemoon. Left lo right, pins
were awarded lo Uncia Holter, VIctoria Imboden, and
Teresa Wilson, sealed; and Geol'll" Hoffman.

VIrginia Michael, Charles Brown, Sharon Pratt, and
Laura Harrison, stranding. Eligible lo receive Dve

year pins but not present were Cathy Baldwin, R. N.,
Ernest Imboden, and BusseD Davw. Sharon Stewart.
R. N. was eligible lor a 10 year pin.

•

Monday, May 19, 1986 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

POMEROY - A recognition and
awards program was held Friday
afternoon at Veterans Memorial
Hospital In observance .of National
Hospital Week.
Pins were presented to five, ten
and 20 year employes by Scott
Lucas, hospital administrator. Aux·
lllary members were recognized
and the officers were presented
corsages, and refreshments were
served to hospital staff and guests
during tbe afteroon.
A resume on personnel, activities
and services of the hospital was
presented by Lucas who noted that
lbe nine Board of Trustree
members who set the hospital
policies serve without pay. They
Include John Rice, chalnnan,
Steven Story, vice chairman, David
Fox. SECretary-treasurer; Gary
Norris, Harold Rice, Paul Beegle,
David Weber, Wayne Roush and
Orion Roush .

The hospital has 120 full and
part-lime employes with an annual
payroll of $1,459,428.3lln 1985.
In 1985, a total of I,'r/4 parlents
were admitted to the hospital. and
8,172 patients were seen through the
emergencyroom depart menI.
Medical staff members are
James E. Witherell, M. D.. chief of
staff; Wilma A. Mansfield, M. D.
v1ce chief of staff; Zinnia Dayo, M.
D. secretary; Esberdado Vlllanu·
eva, M. D., treasurer; Rogello
Averlon. M. D. radiology; Malcolm
W. Lol'ntz, M. D. Ortho and general
surgery; Rankln R.Pickens. D. 0.,
John H. Ridgway, D. 0., family
practice; Mel P . Simon. M. D .•
urology; Carl W. Thompson, M. D.
radiology; John A. Wade, M. D ..
Ent-allergy specialist; Laura E .
Krlster, M. D.. family practice.
The consulting stall consists of
Gene H. Abels. M. D. cardiology,
internist; Elalne Beed. M. D.

oncology; Edward Berklch, M. D.
surgery; Harold Brown , D.D.S.,
dentistry; Darryl Cherdron, M. D.,
pathology; Horace B. Davidson, M. ·
D., pathology; VIctor H . Hinrichs,
M. D. pathology; · J . Mongkollug-~
sana. D.D.S .. dentistry and oral '
surgery; Larry Kennedy , D.D.S,
Margie Lawson, D.D.S. Ketti)
Riggs, D.D.S., dentistry; Lol'slle R,
Laufman, M. D. oncology; Howard
Linder, M. D.• pulmonary S!X'Cial•
!st. Internist; Thomas Price, Jr., M.
D., OB-Gyn.; Manhendrakumar C.
Shah, M. D.. Internist; Antonio
Sola, M. D.• radiology; Balusamy
lsubblah, M. D.. cardiology and
Internist; Gerald Vallee, M. D.;
cardiology and Internist.
Emergency room physicians are
contracted through Acute Care
America of Huntington, W. Va.wlth
Paul Brizendine, M. D., being the
president. and David Price, D. 0.
regional director.

~ ~

i\

Curse the puddle

Show your colors

Editorial on Page 2

Beat of Bend on Page 6

Rio
Grand·e

All District

'Show Stoppers'
Grande Chorale on Page 10

See Marauderettes on Page 4

e
Vol.36. No . It

•

at y

•

enttne
1 Section , 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, May 20, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

26 Cants

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

G-J-M 648 board
seeks levy again

•

.

•

f

'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP staff writer
Pledging to keep " hammering
•way," the Pxecutlvedlrectorof the
Gallla-Jackson -Melgs 648 Mental
Healt h Board said !"be one-mllllevy
for mental hea lth operations de·
fea ted In the May 6 primary will be
un lhe hallot again.
Dr. Romola Hopkins added that
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown 's
office is Investigating what she
called "a big discrepancy" in the
vote ta llies in Gallia and Jackson
counties, whPI'e the levy was
defea ted.
"My assumpt ion is that we're
going again," Hopkins told the &amp;18
Board Monday . The board will
rosslbly put the issue 10 voters in
November.
The levy was to have raised local
funding to assist Woodland Centl•rs

)

'

I "

I

__

/

:a! YEAR SERVICE PINS -Scott Lucas, Veterans
Memorial Hospital administrator. presents a 00 year

service pin to Doris Woodyard, R.N. Others receiving
tbe pins were Slella Slone, left, and Marjorie Smith.

London Pool opens
season on Saturday
Levinah Coy
Lol'vlnah Coy. 81. Rt.l . VInton ,
died Saiurday In Mansfield General
Hospital following an ex tended
Illness. She was born May 'r/,1901 in
Smith County, Va ., daughter of the
late John Dollinger and Fannie
Shupe Perry.
She was rreceded In death by her
husband Clyde Coy in 1981, a
daughter, a step-daughter. severa l
half brothers and half sisters.
&amp;lrvlvors Include two sons. Car·
roll Coy of Mt. Gllean, William Coy,
The Plains; a daughter. Mrs. Ivan
(Reva ) Cardwell, The Plains, a
step-daughter. Lucille Foy of Pam·
ona. Calif., 14 granochUdren, and
several great great grandhildren,
and several half-brothel'S and
half-sisters.
She was a member of the
DanvUk' Holiness Pilgrim Church
where funeral services wUI be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday with Rev.
Wayne Friday and Rev. Isaac
Shupe officiating. Burial will be in
Morgan Center Cemetery. Vlslta·
tlon will be held at the McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home In Vinton
from 24 and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday.

.,...
F~

lie&lt;.

pro

lbr
ter'
111'8

mo

rra

He Is survived by his wife Mazy J .
Cooke. of New Haven: son Phil L.
Cooke and daughter-in-law Claudia
K. Cooke, of Newark, Ohio; grand·
son Brandon Cooke. of Newark.
Ohio; brothers Kenneth D. Cooke.
of Middleport ; Donald C. Cooke. of
Flagler Beach. Fla.: J onas E.
"Bill" Cooke, of Pomeroy; sister
Mrs. Danny (Charlotte I Yonker. of
Mason and several nieces and
nephews. He was preceded by
brothers John C. Cooke and James
Bernard Cooke.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Tuesday at New Haven United
Methodist Chu rch with Rev . John
Campbell officiating. There will be
no calling hours. but the hody will
Ue In sta te at the church from noon
until 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers. the
family requests that donations be
made to the New Haven Library
Fund . Arrangements are being
made by F'olglesong F'urv'ral
Home.

William A. Connolly

London Pool at Syracuse will
open for season this Satu rday, May
24. Hours May 24·26 will be 1 to 6
p.m. Hours May 27-30 will be 4 to 8
p.m.
Beginning May 31 and continuing
for the remainder of the season.
pool hours will be I to 6 p.m. daily
except Wednesdays when it will be
open from 12 to 5 p.m. and from 6 to
8 p.m. for evening swimming.
Pool passes will be on sale at the
pool Wednesday and Thursday
from 12 to 5 p.m. On Friday. Jean
hall will be at Krogers seiling the
passes. Aft er Friday, passes will be
on sale at the pool durtng regular
hours.
Pool parties may be booked by
calling 992-9900 during regular
hours .
Thert&gt; will be a meeting for
lifeguards (full and parttimel
Wednesday. 5:30p.m.. at the pool.

Two hurt
one cited
• ~
following accident

Hattie L. Ridgway, 51, Pomeroy.
William A. Connolly. 76. Route I.
was
cited for assured clear dista nce
Reedsville, died Saturda y at Plea·
by the state highway pat rol Satu r·
sant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Com\ouy was born at Smith· day in a two-vehicle accident on
ville, W. Va .. a son of the lat e County Road 34 .
Troopers said Ridgway was
Anderson and Alice Ca mpbell
Freda L Lewis
northbound,
one mile north of Ohio
Connolly.
124,
at
11
a.
m.
when she was unoble
Freda Laurene Lol'wis, 76, Clifton,
He was a retired electrician and
.
to
stop
for
a
vehicle
ahead of her
died Monday morning In Pleasan t was a member of the International
driven
by
David
M.
Talbott, 21.
Valk'y HospitaL
Brotherhood of Elect rical Workers
She was born March 8. 1910 in 972. Marietta . He was a member d Racine. and struck the rear of
Clifton to the late Frank and Mlna the Shade River Masonic Lodge453. Talbott's vehicle.
Talbott had stopped his vehicle to
McDaniel Harris.
F&amp;AM. Chester. He served as a
ask
the operator of a southbound
She was preceded in death by her central commiteeman for 24 years
tractor
if he needed help, troopers
husband Dana Lol'wls In 1963, two and as an Olive Township Trustee
said.
Reporting
minor injurtes were
for 16 years.
sisters and one brother.
Talhott
and
a
passenger.
James H.
She was a member of the Clifton
&amp;lrvlving are his wiie of 54 years.
Smith,
24,
Rt
.
1.
Racine.
They
were
United Methodist Church and Erma Sloter Connolly; three
not
treated,
troopers
said.
belonged to tbe Mason Homemak· daughters. Mrs. Glen (Doris J
Damage to both vehicles was
er's Club and was a member of the Deeter. Long Bottom; Mrs. Ken·
United Methodist Women.
neth (Betty) Barber. Hebron; Mrs. moderate.
Surviving are two daughters, Robert tCaroleJ Barber. Ret-&lt;ls·
Mrs. Charles iMargleJ Cartwright ville; four sons. Kenneth. Newark;
d Clifton and Mrs. Donald IMina I Theodore. Tuppers P la in s;
Smith of Clifton; four grandchild· Warren. Reedsville. and Dale of
Showers and thunderstorms toren and four great·granochildren.
Raiford, Fla.; a brother, Joe of day, with highs between 65 and 70.
Funeral services will be Wednes· Reedsville; three sis ters, Ellen Showers lll«ily tonight, with a low
day at l :ll p.m. at the Foglesong Wells and Lol'ttie McCa in. hoth of between riJ and 55. Cloudy Tuesday,
Funeral Home with the Rev. Terry Long Bottom. and Mart ha Marks. with scattered showers and highs
Alvarez officiating.
Belpre. Twenty-six granochildren near 60.
Burial will follow in the Kirkland and 30 great-grandchildren also
Extended Forecast
survive.
Memorial Gardens.
Wednesday throoRh Friday
Friends may call the funeral
Besides his parents, he was
A chance of showers each day,
home on Tuesday from 5-9 p.m.
proceded in death by two brothers, with highs mainly In lbe 60s each
Homer fllld Everett. and a sister. day. Ovemlghllows generalcy wUI
Robert M. Cooke
Ermaline Johnson.
be In tbe 40s.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m.
Robert M. Cooke. 66 of New Wednesday at the White Funeral
Haven was dead Saturday on Home in Coolv Uie with Rev . Edsel
arrival at Veterans Memorial Hart officiating. Burial will be In
Hospital In Pomeroy.
Sand Hill Cemetery. Frtends may
Born September 23, 1919, In call at the. funeral home anytime
Graham Station he was the son of Tuesday. Masonic rites will be
lbe late John Cliff and Hattie May conducted at the funeral home at
Roush Cook.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
He was a retired performance
supervisOr at Phlillp Sporn Power
Plant, he was a World War 11 Army
Air Corps veteran , he belonged to
J.O.U .A.M., he attended the New
Haven United Methodist Chul'(:h, a
member rt the , Clifton MasonJc
L.&lt;xlle Zl and the American Legion.

Weather forecast

Fanenvour
with awant 1\d .

HOSPITAL AUXILIARY OFF1CERS - Specllll
recognition was given to the offtcers of the Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital at the
National Hospllal Week recognlllon program held

Inc. and, several other mental us," Hopkins said. "I don't want to
health-related serv ices In the trl · sound like a broken record, but
county area, Including senior cltl· folks. it's lime for us to begin
zens and children's se1vices, coun · again."
Board members felt that senti·
seling for Rio Grande College and
Community College students and ment . of corroctlng public ccincep·
three alcohol treatment programs. tlons and contusion over the roles of
Hopkins sa id that when the the 648 Board and the Woodland
federal government Issued funds Io ho•rd. would be a key Issue In the
next election.
mental health hoards 10 years agn.
GaUia County representative Dr.
It was done with the understanding
that funding would be reduced and James Altho! said t1.1 tbacks in
rural boards would have to develop ocllvery of services at Woodland.
local sources of revenue to continue dlsaprointmcnts with service rm ·
· dered and long waiting lists have
operations.
llte 648 Board Is separa te fmm damaged Woodland's standing with
the board governing Woodland the ~blic .
"We have to convin ce peoplr
Centers. It also processes federa l
and state fund s for the ment al we're going to do things differently
health facility and other related out there next year. If possible."
Altho! said.
agencies.
Hopkins said the loss of federal
"The pot Is drying up. and people
!Continued on pa~ e 101
don't seem to be hearing that from

Sen.

The bUI, sponsored by
Oliver
Ocasek. D·Northfield . sets strict
procedures for administering the
discipline. complrte with witness·
lng, reponing It to the superintend·
ent, and detailed record·keeplng to
be furnished to the state Board of

Guilty plea given
in Meigs Court
Timothy T. Thomas. Pomeroy.
has entered a voluntary plea of
guilty In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to breaking and
entering Sw isher and Lohse Phar·
macy on or ahou t May 3. Thomas
will be sentenced on June ~- The
defendant faces a possible penalty
of 6 to 18 months In prison and a fine
up to $2'100. He was released on a
$1000 recognizance hond.
In other court matters, Downing·
Childs Agency Inc. was granted a
$3249.40 judgment from Lester and
VIola Shoemaker. doing business as
Shoemaker Excavating, and the
cases of Mary Ann VanMeter
against John Fletcher VanMeter
and Brenda Deeter against Edna
Harmon, have been dismissed.

MaJTiage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Cou rt to Lawrence Ellsworth Gil·
llan. 34. Clrclevllle, and Joy Lydia
Hansen. 33, Rutland; Larry Wayne
Parsons, 19, Pomeroy . and Cynthia
Dawn Fetty, 17, Langsville; Ben·
jamin Cruz, 28, and Newatha
Taylor. 25, both of Pomeroy;
Douglas Dean Hunter. 28, Colum·
bu s. and Tonja Lee Salser, 21,
Racine.
ATHENS IJVESTOCK S.\LEN
May 1), IJII6
Ca1t1e PrlCl'S: Feeder Steers : good&amp;cholce
ID:ill lbo,IS.'&gt;$&amp;1; :00.100Jbo.SI6-158; Fl'edet"
Hollers: J&lt;QOd &amp; choiC&lt;' ID!iOO lbo. KJ.:iJ.IOO;
500 71lllbo, $38-$48.00; Fl.'&lt;'der Bulls: 1\0011 &amp;
choiC&lt;' ID500 !JJ;, $51.50-162.00; OOJJ.:I)f} lbo.
S12-Sffl.75; Sla ughter Bulls: (over 1)00 Its ~ .

$40.-k;: Slaughter Cows: utUI Ues, $il!U}~:

CMnf'I"S &amp; CUt1('f'S,

fl2 . ~$3J. 75;

Sprtngcr

Cows: Jb)lth&lt;' head&gt;. Sl00-1300; Cow &amp; CaU
Pairs: (by the unlt ), fll).$375; Veals: (choice
&amp; Prtrne).I58.00Slii.:&gt;J; Baby Calve;: Jby Jhe
~~-m.fn ; Baby Calves: (b)llhepoond ),

Hog Price;: Hog. 1111 , barrows &amp; J&lt;ilts),

:ro:m lbo. 144.75. Butcher Boars. $28-$29.00;
Fl'f!dl'f Pl119: !by the head ),

SllJ.$51

ShC!!p Price;: Staughler L.,bo, 162 •
167 50. Feeder Lamb!.. $49.50-sm.

CARRIER NEEDED
IN MIDDLEPORT
CALL
992-2156

Education on the number of
instances broken down by Infraction, a~;e, sex and grade level.
The House Judiciary Committee
will meet Wednesday morning to
consider Senate- passed legislation
toughening Ohio's drunk driver
law.
The biil, sponsored by Hobson ,
eliminates pre-trtal diversion pro·
grams for first-time drunk driving
suspects and lengthens the driver
license suspen sions for second a nd
third offenses.
II also expands to non· chartered
cities the provisions of the st~ te' s
drunk driving law. which provides
for a three- day jail term or an
alcohol rehabilitation program on
first offense. Currently the law only
affects arrests on state highways.

Four share jackpot
CLEVELAND (UPI )- An Ohio
Lottery spokeswoman Sunday said
four tickets were sold bearing all six
numbers in th is weekend' s Lotto
drawing for a jackpot of $3,ffil,l04.
The winning numbers were 10,17,
21, 25. 28 and 30.
The jackpot for next Satu rday's
Lotto drawing starts off at an
estimated $1 million .

flanked by Meigs County represenL:lllves Jay
Cn .-mt&gt;ens, left , Wld ,Jim l\1nnnlin g, discusses u~
failu re ol the Gallla.Jack...,n·Meigs 648 Mental Health
Board levy in th e May fi primary. llot&gt;kins oald the
IK&gt;:u-d will try to put th" ll'; .1' on the haUot again,

U11CA. Ohio !UPi i - Worklng Holstrin and Jersey rl ai1.1 n 1tk·.
as a farmhand Monda y. Gov. fed silagl' to calvPS with a skid
Richard F . Celeste milked cows. load er, and then climbed a board n
fed calves and plan ted com on an tractor pullin g a gra in dril l loadrcl
800-acrc dairy farm owned by " wi th srt'd corn and fert il izer.
promin ent Lick i ng Co un ty
By lJ a.m. Cclesle. clad in dirty
Democrat.
blue jeans. rubber hoots . a nanll£'1
The governor also milked some shirt, scarlet and .gray suspende rs
more Suspense from a controver- and a blue "I&lt;elleys Island" hat.
sial workers' compen sation reform had seeded about half the ll ·acre
bill on Its way to his desk, and field and stopped to meet wi th
planted his feet firm ly on the fence reporters in Jlw field under threJ I·
as to whether he'll sign 11.
en Jng sklrs.
'Til study the bill." he told
Thr governor sides tepped most
reportrrs during a late morning questions about thr workers' com·
break in a cornfield on the Shipley pensation bill. fa1·ot1'd by fa nners
Jersey Farm. ''I've been doing my and busi nrss groups but oppoot'!l by
"homework over the weekend and organ ize'(! Iaber.
I'll continue to participate in somr
discussions and ask questions to the
Shipley said hl• has a few
point where I'm satisfied I have a part -time work£'rs in thP summer
sufficient perspective to make a that arecov!'n'd by workers · camp.
decision."
but he Is not overly l'Xci ll'd about
Arriving at the farm shm1 ly aft er the legislation. " It's prubabJ)· "
6 a.m., Celeste used a milking good th ing." hi' so 1icl .
machine on a few of the 83 head ol
"A farm li ke !his rrum is very

Sponaorod by tho Middleport
Chamber ol Commerce

GEN.

Dr. Romola Hopkins,

possibly In November, and "a big dlserepwlt'y" In the
voting In Gallla and Jackson oowttles over people who
did not vole lor or against the levy is being
investigated by S~ocn.&gt;lary of Stale Sherrod Brown's
of fire.

'Farmhand' ·Celeste undecided about bill

Friday afternoon. They were left t.o right, Juanita
Nonnan, president, l.oolse Bearl!s, vice president,
Clara Burris, secretary, and Mary Fobner,
treasurer.

Roster-sponsored
(Continued from page 11

LEVY UL5CUSSION -

PARK

SAT., MAY 24
TWO PEIFOIMANCES

typical of what Ohio Is like." said advice he would gtvr to someone
Cries!&lt;'. who works at a different
who wants to go into farming.
job each month to gain insight into ·
"I think ... you obviously need to
va rious endeavors.
be
willing to work hard," he said.
"I think it gives me a lot better
You
need to be wUiingtotakealot ri
appreciation for the kinds of Issues
risks
because you plant a crop
that we face. " he said.
today
and
you don't know what the
"Agriculture r~resents the big·
price
l'l
going
to be for sure when
gest indust1y In the state of Ohio,"
you
harvest
it.
You
'relnvolved wilh
said I he governor. "The IJ'odUCtion
and processing of food Is st U! our a lot expense at tlr front end In
No. I Industry. I think It's easy to terms of your equipment and your
assume it all comes In a box at the land. It's a very demanding
supermarket and not rea lize where business and you have to respect
anybody who 's farming today."
iJ all begin s. which Is rtght here.
Celeste refused to comment on a
statement
by his Republican oppo"It's a demanding job," Celeste
nent.
James
A. Rhodes, whosaid he
said. "There's a lot d variety to the
would
sign
the
workers' compensa.
work. It's something families can
tlo
n
till
immediately
if he were
do together. It's hard work. It starts
governor.
ca rly and goes on, and no maner
Ohio Senate President Paul E.
whal the wea ther. there's alway s a
Glllmor.
R·Port CUnton. said Cejob to be done."
would
be reneging on a public
leste
Celeste. whose only pr"'ious
promise
made
last March 12 If he
expertence on a tractor was
falls
to
sign
the
bill.
mowing lawns, was asked what

90 students welcome 'COSI on Wheels'

2 PM I 4:30PM
Advanctd Tickets Available
thru Friday, May 23
$3.00 (hitdrtn &amp; Sr. (ilium
$4.00 Adults, lges 14 -64

FAMILY PRICE - SIS
(2 Adults &amp; 4 (hitdrenl
TICKET OUTLETS : tngola Fuml·
ture, Fruth Pharmacy. Dan 's Boot

Shop

POPPY DAYS - · Pomeroy Mayor Rlcltanl Seyler h1111 designated
Thursday !hroogh Saturday as Poppy Days In Pomeroy. Memhers of
the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster f'ost :II ol the American Legion
wUI be out and about during those lltree days laking donalloD!I and
distributing poppies. With Mayor Seyler Is Drew Webster's poP{&gt;y
royalty, left lo right In front, Ashley Hannahs and Kay Ia PuDlns; poppy
princesses; and In hock left to right, lllretta Tiemeyer, poppy queen;
.Jennifer Cross, little miss poppy; and Marge Fetty, poppy chairman.

Ninety fourth. fifth and sixth
graders from thmughout Meigs
Local School District were at
HarrisonvUie Elementary Mond ay
to welcome "COS! On Wheels" to
the Harri sonvUi e schooL
COSI On Wheels Is an outreach
program from the Center of Science
and Industry In Columbu s. and
consists of a variety of energetic
science activit ies for students. 1\
large array of equipment . supplies
and tabletop activities Is used

duli ng lhl' progra m by a COS Jstaff
demonstrator. Ea ch year 1he pro·
gram theme changes so tha t a
student seeing lhl' progra m three
years in a row a lw;~ ys lea rn s
somet hhlf.! new .
'Th is year's program. "Sc ienc1' of
Sports" explores the applicalion of
phy sical scien('(' pr indplf's in lhr

world of sporls .
Lasl vrar's program

wa~;

on

r hcmi slf) · and drrnonsl r&lt;l !or Jrnni

nu ~s l is already looki ng forward to
next year's pmgram "Toward the
21st Century." She encourages all
youngsters to visit COSI in Colum·
bus and bring articles from the
twentieth century to be Included in
a spec ia l COS! time capsu le which
is now !x'ing prepared and which
will txo opened on Jan . 1, 2000.
COS I ·On Wheels was In Meigs
CounJ y earlier In the yea r at
Portland Elementary In the South·
ern Local District. Portland played

Insurance
coverage
discussed

Rhodes, opponents
push united front
enemies. In this business. this goes
By Unlled Press International
Republican gubernatorial candi- on every day."
In Cincinnati. Pfeifer sa id It Is
date James Rhodes and the two
opponent s hr defea ted to gain the possible for the candida Ies to unite
nomination appeared toget her In after waging a three-way battle for
seven Ohio cities Monday In a the nomination .
"Dick Celeste came through a
display of party solidarity.
Jl hodes and state Sens. Paul three-way prim ary in 1982, and the
Gillmor of P011 Clin ton and Paul moment the prlmruy was over the
Pfeifer of Bucyrus stopped brteny Democrats united ," Pfeifer said.
in Cinclnnali, Dayton, Toledo, "They had no probl ems. I think we
Clcwland. Youngstown, Akton and Republicans will be the sa me way."
Also participating In the tour
Columbus to meet with local
Republican officials and also to were state GOP Chairman Michael
show they are presenting a united Colley, and a handful of statewide
front in an effort to topple Gov. candidates. Including state Rep.
Richard Celeste in this November's Ben Rose of Uma, wbo Is running
against Thomas Ferguson for
election.
"We'1e het1' to Indicate that the auditor, and state Rep. Jeff Jacobs
bailc st 111cture of the Republican of Bay VUiage who Is running
Party Is Intact," Pfeifer said during against Mary Ellen Withrow for
a 2.'i -minule stop at Toledo Express treasurer:
In addltkm to pnmound ng their
Alrpon .
Rhodes brushed aside sugges· unity, Rhodes, Pfeifer and GUimor
lions that criticism from Gllltnor also took lbe ~portunlty to attac k
and Pfeifer during the primary had Celeste.
created hard feelings among the
Rhodes labeled the Celeste ad·
three GOP primary opponents.
mlnlstratbn one of "scanda l" and
·'ThIs Is minor compared to some mismanagement," while Pfeifer
of the campaigns," the fo rmer said, "lt will take more than
four;.te1m governor said. "Thl'l Is suspenders to kee~ him from being
notl{ing new. We're not mortal exrosed."

host to st udents from the Easter n
Local elementaries.
Nex t year. the program wUJ be in
Eastern Local which will host the
Southern students; and again in
Meigs LocaL
This Is the second year lor COSI
On Wheels in Meigs Count y. The
Tri -County Vocational Career Development Program In NrlsonvUie
supplies the funds to bring COS! to
Meigs Count y.

Insuran('(' rovf'r~gr fo r r·m·
ployees was the · main Jopic at
Monday night "s meeting of 1-'onlf'·
roy Village Council.
Bill Quickel. of Quickel Insurance. Pomeroy. explained a Blue
Cross·Blue Shield Community Mut ·
ua l package including dental and
vision cov£'rag(' which he savs is

HANDS ON LEARNING -Ninety fourth, firth Md
sixth grade students from lhrougbout Meigs Local
School District enjoyed a-.-.varlely of 11CIIvltles
presented Monda.v at Jlruorisonv~ Elementary by

COSI On Wheels' ·demonstrator, ,Jennl Rm11l. Trybtg
out some of the activities are, from left lo rl&amp;bt, Bobhy
Vance, Larry Faw and Mark Stanley, JlarrtaonvUie
students, Demonstrator Rwlll, 117111 Mike Vuce, also
11 Jlarri..'IOnvUle student.

cheaper than the village's pr;•sr nt
Blue Cross-lllur Shielrl /\.&lt;surf'
package. l"lnal decision on o new
Insurance plan will be made by the
employees.
Patch ing ot vil lage st reets, which
was underway before the rain
started . was di scussed brleny. It
was noted tha t tlr patch ing. will
continue as soon as the weather
clears.
In other matters:
A request from the Blue Strea k
Cab Co. for an additional frre
parklng meter near the company's
offlce was denied . The company
already has two free meters It was
pointed oot.
In &lt;rder to correct a parking
problem, rouncil agreed to paint
the curbing on a section of Lasley
St . yellow.
And It was reported thai swings
will be Installed as ooon as posslple
at the Naylo\l's Run and Monkey
Run Parks.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Page-2-The Daily Sel1tinel
Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Tuesday. May 20,

ROBERT L. WING ET'l'
Publisher
Pi\T WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFU CH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Th r United Pr£'Ss ln trr nat ional. Inlan d Dally Pri'SS Assocla ·
tlon and tht&gt; America n ;.,'f'w spapN Publishers 1\ ssociatton.

WASHINGTON - Sulllrise! In· U.N.'s DPI stay busy, busy, rosy.
terests of the United States are They publish more than two million
being systematically trashed by documents annually; they put out
J1lb!lc Information programs of the two periodicals; they operate 66
United Natklns. Who would have U.N. lnfonnatlon centers worldever Imagined such a thing?
wide; and of particular Interest,
Pennsylvania's Sen. Arlen Spec· they produce programs, known as
ter, no dummy, has long suspected Radio Perspective, tllat go w t In 25
something fishy In the output of the languages to 167 countries. Most of
U.N.'s Department of Public Rl&gt;la· the world's people have no access to
tlons (DPI). Last year he asked the the U.N.'s glossy monthly maga·
General Accounting Off1ce to lnves· zlne; few common citizens ever
tlgate. A few weeks ago the GAO read a summary of a committee or
filed its report. Specter's skeptl· of a conference. Radio Perspective
cism was abuooantly suworted.
Is by far the most influential
The 162 professiOnals In the medium for telling the world what

Is going on In the United Nations.
The United Nations bas laid down
guidelines for its DPI. In theory,
publications and broadcasts are to
be scrupulOusly balanced and
objective. To measure til' degree of
neutrality, the GAO assigned three
evaluators to undertake a s£Parate,
Independent analysis of publlc
Information materials. They examIned items in four areas of
particular Interest to til' United
States: apartheid, dtsannament,
Palestine, and the rights of journalIsts and exiXJrlers around the
world. Taking one paragraph at a

LE'ITERS OF OPI NIOJ\' are weiCOTTl(&gt;. Th('\' should bE' less than 300 words
Jon ~ . Alll f't t('fs are subjf'C' t to 00 itin g and mu st bf. slgn&lt;'d w llh name. addr€'S s and
tPIPphone number . No un signed INters w!ll be pub llshf'd . L PII(IfS should bP In
g:ood tas tP.

_

Trashing the U.S. _ _____Ja_m_es_J._K_ilpa_t-:-ric_k

Pomeroy, Ohio
DE VOTED TO THE IJI.'TERESTS OF THE MEIGS- MASON AREA

1~88.

ad dressln!i!_issues. not persomill tles.

Cui-se the puddle

time, the evaluators methodically
tested 90 items on a seven-point
scale ranging from "very supportive" of U.S. Interests to "very
opJJ9sed" to U.S. Interests.
The State Departml'!lt defined
those interests- for example, that ·
the United States doeS not endorse ·
violent overthrow of the South
African government, that the United States thinks it useless to have
an arms agreement witlvut verltl·
cation, and that Israel has a right to ·
exist.
On 19 d the 90 ttems. the
evaluators came to Identical con·
elusions. On the other ll they were
rarely far apart. They looked for
such terms as "racist," "lnnperlal·
1st" and "tBrbarlc" to klendfy
emotional language. They checked
lor evidence of patent bias. They
found, as they siDuld have found ,
that much of the DP!'s material
was In fact balanced or neutral in
terms d U.S. Interests. But much d
It was not.
01 the 79 items &lt;11 which the
evaluators unanimously agree, 38
were neutral; 15 were judged
slightly opposed to U.S. Intereslli,l5
were moderately opposed and 10
were very opposed . Only one Item
- a TV Interview dealing with
environmental questio!IS - was·
sUghtly supportive. Not a single
item was eitll'rrmderately suppor·
tlve or very supportive.
Radio Perspective was the worst
offender. Producers regularly
Western spokesmen diSproportiOnately short time on the air.
Sometlnnes Radio Perspective
"featured U.S. public ligures q~pos­
lng u.s. policies rather than
featuring official U.S. delegates or
SIXJkesmen." Remari&lt;Bbly, "Dissi·
dent spokesmen from the Soviet
bloc were rot featured In any of the
items In our study." In two cases,
speakers selected to lllustrate
polltlcal positkms "were exclu·
sively from til' Soviet bloc and
ron·aligned states."

There is, and should be. a rule ri journalism that says the mechanics ol
news reporting are not news. "Nobocly cares how hard it was to get the
story ," the old city editor told the young reporter. "Just tell the news."
This, with apologies, is an exception to til' rule.It is about reporting news
in Washington, and It may help you understand some of til' stories you read
or hear on radio and television.
Most newg stories are not eyewitness accounts, but are based on what
someone said- a pollee dispatcher, a nuclear scientist or a president. The
person who spoke to the reporter usually Is identified by name and title.
But In some stories, especially from Washington, til' Information is
attributed to "an Informed source" or some other phrase todisguise who is
speaking.
Reporters and editors tio not like these stories, oot sometlnnes it is
Impossible to get the news without agreeing to conceal the source. Most
agree to do so only lf the information is very Important to the J1lblic and
there is no way to get it on the record.
But this device can be abused, both by journalists and their sources.
Reporters have fabricated information and attributed anonymous
sourees. And some news sources have used anonymity to SPread lies or
reveal secrets.
This last abuse is an issue in Washington. lt has become the habit of
many officials to insist that they not be identlfied when they talk about
important matters of national policy.
An example was Henry Kissinger, who often would allow himself to be
quoted only as "a seniOr official" when he talked to reporters. When
Kissinger left, the "senior official" do~e was hungrlly embraced by · "One of the advantages of Star Wars is that we'll be able to shoot down
officials In the Democratic and Revubllcan administrations that followed.
The most extreme example of the device Is the "leak," the disclosure of
our own rockets."
Information, sometlnnes Involving national security, that Is supposed to be
secret. Many leaks come from people angry about losing some
bureaucratic battle to embarass their enemies. But they also come !rom
high ranking officials or their aides who want to Influence (1lbllc opinion
without taking responsibtllty for their statements.
When that happens, reporters can find tll'mselves In a t:md. They know
WASIDNGTON -The nation's initiative called Proposition 51, lng the tBttie to change the system. story or take some other actiOn
they are being used. but they also believe til' Information is lnnportanl to trial lawyers are raising rushels d which the California Trial Lawyers Coyne contends that U.S. courts, based on tbe merits. The first
the (1lblic. If they use the lnfonnation, they may be denounced in (1lbiic by money to block legal reforms and Association is rushing to head ri.f.
"with limited exceptions," held lor question they must now ask Is,
the same perron who gave it to them In private.
save their Pikes Peak fees. Here
Its IJ"esident, Peter J. Hinton, has 200years that "apersonsulngcould "What's the chance J'U get sued?" .
As Coyne (1lt it, "In this stltllng
One could say, with Willie Lohman, that kind of heat "comes with the are the details:
sent an urgent dispatch to ali rt'Cover only it he proved that the
climate
of anxiety over unknown
territory."
Prollferating lawsuits have members entitled "A Report from defendant was at fault ... that one
But what does one say when one hlgh·ranklng official ri. til' government caused such havoc across America the Front." Without mincing words, only obtained redress lor cases of · risk, our economic growth, perhaps
proposes to prosecute news organizationS that IJ"int oc broadcast news that that voters are demanding re· he notifies them that "trial lawyers true negiigene, not for the personal even our spirit of advl'!lture and
pioneering, wUI be reduced."
was given them on the sly by another hlgh·ranking official of the same forms. MilliOns d organizations, wtil be called upon to make major rtsks d everyday Ule.''
government• This Is not a rhetorical, question. It IS a queStion that might be ranging from the American Medl· contributions to defeat this
WATCH ON WASTE: What did
All this changed, according to
put to CIA Director Wtlllam Casey, who has proposed prosecuting five cal Association to the Boy Scouts d Initiative."
Environmental
Protection Agency
C~ne . In the 1960s. "The tort
newspapers that disclosed how the United States got evidence that Ubya America, have joined forces to stop
l:lg
shots
do
when
the inspector
What constitutes a "major contrt· system we have today," he told us,
was involved In a terrorist bombing of a Berlin discotheque before the U.S. the lawsuits that have dlsruptoo rutJon" for a trial lawyer ? Hinton "is vastly different. Our generation ~neral told them the agency's ll
air strtke against Libya.
their activities.
makes that clear. "Over a dozen has overturned 200 years of legal dlauffeured cars were underused?
It Is a question that might lead Mr. Casey tot he conclusion that when you
Cut down on the number of cars?
This has forced many state firmS and indlvlduais In California traditiOn.' '
have water In your basement, it's smarter to look for the leaky pipe than to legislatures, dominated though have already committed more than
The result has been an explosion Don't be silly. They just made 120
curse the puddle.
they are by Ia wyers, to review the
$100,00) to the fight against Proposi- of lawsuits. This has raised the risk rmre bureaucrats eligible to be
civll justice system. Any restrlc· tion 51," he states. "Some have for those who make decisions; dlauffeured around town, for a
many oo longer wlll serve on grand total of 150. The auditors
lions that might hamper lawsuits, contributed as much as $300,000."
corporate boards, school boards, learned that the cars were used
of course, would hit the bial
Hinton claims that the reforme rs town councns, athletic leagues or mainly during lunch hours, and
lawyers right in their oonk accounts. So the American Trial are trying to reverse "centuries of other buslness·civ·lc·vo!unteer calculated that the average trip
cost w;, Including the drivers'
Lawyers Association has mountoo Jaw which state that the first groups.
WELL,YES, WE'vE HAD To
Those who are still willing to take salaries. The inspec!or general
a counterattack to save the system consideration In the tort system is to
MAKE A F£W coNc£avtoN&amp;
make the Innocent injured party the risk have been forced to change suggested phasing out most of the
that enriches them.
the way they make decisiOns. They chauffeured cars and using laldc·
In California, for example, a wmle."
To T£RRoRI~t-'1 .
He is disputed by James Coyne, don't dare decide whether to abs at probably $5 tops per bip. It
drive is gaining momentum to
president rt. the American Tort market a new product, approve an would save the taxpayers about
revise the civU justice system. This
has taken the fonn of a voter Reform Association, which Is lead· Innovation, (1lblish an Important nxi.OOl a year.

Niekro stops Toronto
•

TORON:t'O (UP! ) - Attheageof
47, the old, gray Nlekro readily

admits he ain't what he used to be.
But that doesn't mean that the
v_eteran knuckleballer still can't
rome up with a win when It' s
ooeded.
Phil Niekro al lowed Toronto to
score fou r runs on 10 hits in eight
Innings, Monday, but still pitched
well enough to help Cleveland snap
a five-game losing streak with a &amp;4
win.
"I can still, win, I may not be able
·to win as effectively as I oncecould,
but I can still make a contrtbuUon,"
said ('llekro.
"I can sttll keepa team In a game
long enough to win it. I may be
surplislng a lot of people, but I'm
not one of them ."
Another person not surprised by
Niekro's performance Is Cleveland
manager Pat Corrales.
"When we got hlnn, we ligu red ll'
could stUI win 50 percent of his
games , and that'a what he' s done
for us."
Dave Stieb, ().6, who worked
seven innings and allowed five runs
on 10 hits while walking live, took
the loss. Stleb, the American
League's ERA leader last season,
had his ERA soar to 6.33.
The victory also ended Toronto's
three·game winning streak;
1 In his previous outing, the 28year·oid right·hander surrendered

I

eight runs in 6 2..3 Innings, stopping ' out tour and walked three before ,
a two·garne Toronto winning allowing a leadoff double toTony
Fernan!Ez In the ninth. Scott {!a lies
streak.
"He's not as sharp as he·usually came on to notch his third ~ve. ·
is, that was ev klent by the way we
;I'ralllng 2-1, til' Indians struck
swung the bat against hlnn," said for three runs lil the third. With one
Corrales. "We'd heard that his out, Julio Franco and Andre
location hasn't been as good as it ThOrnton singled off Stleb, an~
was 1n the past."
Franco scored' o.n Hall 's wind·
Whlle Stieb admitted to not doing assisted double off the center·fleld
his )lb. he preferred toasitgn most fence. After Stleb hit Pat Tabler
of tlle blame for the k&gt;ss to the with a pitch _, klad the bases, Joe
Toronto· defense and home· plate Carter b!ooped a single to center to
umpire Rich Garcia.
srore Thornton and Hall and give
"I don't know what kind of Cleveland a 4-2 lea&lt;!.
defense we're playing against these .. Toronto closed to 4-3 In the fourth
teams butitsure as hellwasn't been on Darnaso ·Garcla's RBI single.
working," said Stieb, who last won Cleveland r~tored a two·run le~d
on Sept. 27 of last season. "If you In the fifth on Cbrls Bando s
pitch a guy' outside and they play run·sroring single.
(him) to puU - I don't know what
The Blue Jays made it 54 In the
they're doing, they can see the eighth oo Olff Johnsoil's fifth
signs.''
homer, a blast over the ·right-lleld
AS for Garcia , Stieb observed, fence. Tabler's ninth· inning RBI
"l'm not getting the calls. I don't single IHted the Indians to a &amp;4
want to be given anything. I just advantage.
want what's tll're. ·I wasn't tha!
Tort:mto took a 2·0 lead in the first
wild. I pitched Hve or six lnnlrigs on Gem~ Bell's twO·n,tn double to
and didn't complain. l'm oot trying right. Cleveland rmved within 2·lln
to show him up, but I can ooiy take the second when Ban&lt;;lo drew a
so much."
w~ik with the bases loaded.
.
Cleveland was sparked by Mel
·The Indians are scheduled to
Hall, who went 4-for·4 with a triple, open a three·game series against
an RBI double two singles and a t~ Brewers In' Mllwaukee tonight,
walk
'
with Cleveland's Ken Schrom, H,
Nl~kro. 3·3, won his ll3rd career set to oppose Milwau kee's Juan
TAG&lt;lED our - The Indians' Tony Bernazard
game by allowin g four runs on 10 Nieves, also 3-1, on the mound in t~e
tags
out.Toronto' s George Bell at second bvase as Bell
hits over eight Innings. He struck ~er.
was b-ylng to stretch a hit orr of the centerfield wall

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, May :;n, the 140\h day of 1986 with 225 to follow.
The moon is moving toward Its fu ll phase.
.
The morn ing stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star is Venus.
ThOse born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include first
lady Doily Madison, wife of the fourth U.S. president, in 1768; French
novelist Honore de Balzac in 1799; philosopher and economist John Stuart
MJII in ~; Israeli mtlltary comrnan!Fr and politician Moshe Dayan In
1915; actor J ames Stewart in 191l! (age 78) ; comedian George Gobel In 1919
(age 67); singer Peggy Lee in 19al; singer·actress Cher In 1946 (age «l),
and Ronald Prescot Reagan, son of President Reagan, 1958.
On this date In history:
In 1500, Christopher Columbus died in Spain.
J n 1927, Charles Lindbergh took off from New York In the Spirit of St.
Lou Is. He landed near Paris 33 ~ hou rs later, completing the first sokl, non·
stop trans·Atlantic flight.
In 1939, Pan American World Allways began regular commercial flights
between the United States and Europe.
In 1974, Judge John Slrlca ordered President Richard Nlxoo to tum CNer
tapes and other records d 64 White House conversatiOns m the Watergate
attalr.

In 19115, a stock market surge sent the D:&gt;w Jones Industrial average
above 1,300 for the !lrst time. Also, Israel !reed 1,150 prisoners - rmstly
Palestinians, Including some known terrorists - In exchange br three
Israelis.
1
A thought for the d~: French oovelist Honore de Balza9 wrote In " Le
Pere Goriot," "TemptatiOns can be got rid d. How? By yielding to them."

WASHINGTON- By mid·Aprll.
the senate Finance Committee relying upon the public meetings
mandated by "sunshine" laws had thoroughly botched the task of
fashioning an omnibus tax reform
measure.
During U days of open markup
sessions under the constant surveil·
lance of lObbyists, the committee
had given the oil and gas, tlnnber,
aerospace, banking and other
Industries $29 billion worth of tax
credits, deductions, deferrals and
preferences over the next five
years.
That figure was well on Its way to
exceeding $50 billion when the
committee chalnnan, Sen. Robert
W. Packwood, R-Ore., abruptly
shut down the public proceedings
and declared that the committee
would resume its work In "private
consultations ...ln a room with no
windows and no doors.' '
Only a lew years ago, that
proclamation would have inspired
protests. CritiCs would have
charged that Packwood was under·
mining the "open government"
reforms that gave the public
unprecedented access to meetings
In the executive and legislative
branches of th e fed eral
government.
But this time there was no such
clamor. Indeed, there is growing
rECOgnition among sa"IOus practl·
tloners and obliervB"s d goveni·
ment that, while many of the
refoJTils of til' 1900s and 1970s were
well conceived and executed, a
substanttal number produced Wlin·
tended results. In other mstances,
meanwhile, JlreiEd refonns were
never enacted. _
That's the central theme of an
lnnportant new book, "Ret~nklng
Cmeresstonal Reform," by Wa-

shlngton lawyer and political
scientist Burton D. Sheppard. He
asks, "Wbo are the main benefl·
claries of all til' infonnat!on
gathered by open meetings, hear·
lng and disclosure?"
Publlc·splrited citizens aren 't
prowling the halls of Congress· In
search of committee markup ses·
sJons on tax core reviSions, Shep·
pard notes. Instead, It's the lawy·
ers, lobbyists and others retained
by the wealthy and powerful who
hover over the lawmakers.
The current experience with tax
reform vivklly illustrates Sheppard's point. The House Ways and
Means Committee was making
little progress on the issue last
autumn untU Its chairman, Rep.
Dan Rostenkowskl, D-Ill., ordered
the meetings closed .
Those secret sessions led to a bill
widely praised as a model ol
reform. SlnnUarly, after four days
of closed meetings m late April or
early May, Packwood's committee
produced legislation l avi~hl y
praised for Its slnnpllclty and
· fairness.
Sheppard's book cites numerous
other examples of flawed reforms.
The changes designed to diminish
the power of autocratic committee
chairmen produced a fragmented
power structure. In It, subeomrnlt·
tee chairmen preside over the
flefdoms and are generally unres·
ponstve to party leaders' attempts
to Impose any fonn cA discipline.
SlnnUariy, changes In the method&lt;! d financing pllittcal cam·
()ai«nsellmlnated many abuses but
fostered others. The post-reform
use d. poll!tcal action committees ~
"Inherently corrosive of the ideals
of underlying American govern·
ment" and " may ultlnnately des·
1troy the legitimacy of the IXJlltical

system," Sheppard warns.
Perhaps Sheppard's m&gt;st telling
criticism Is what he describes as
"the biggest scandal d all" Congress' penchant for iurehlng
from crisis to crisiS rather than
coll'rently addressing crucial
Issues of iong·term lnnportance.
"We are the only major Industrial
count ry without a national energy

policy, national health Insurance
(and ) a coll'rent federal welfare
system," Sheppard notes.
"We have been chronically Incapable of revising our federal criminal code, rewrltlngourcommuntca·
!Ions act, modernizing our
immigration law and facing up to
til' constraints of our entitlement
burdens," he adds. "There ha s to be
a better' system."

Berry's World
'

..

nGHT ERUPTS - Kansas City liEd base wach
Mike Ferraro rushes In to separate Ranger tijrd
baseman Steve Buechele (center) and Royals'
ba.erunner Rudy Law (rlgilt ) who preparl!l to throw

a punch at Buechele as tempers'DIIired In the aghth
Inning ol Monday's pme. The scume resulted In both
henches emplylng to cabn the combatants. The
Royals went on to post a &amp;4 victory. UPI.

Stieb's ego, ERA baloons
Sept. 'n of last season. "11 you pitch
Tony
a guy outside and they play 1hlm ) to allowing
Fernan!Eza Inleadoff
the nindouble
th. ScotttoBailes
pull ... I don't know what they're came on to notch hiS third save:
doing. They can see the signs."
Elsewhere In the American
Stieb was even less char itable League, Bos ton edged Minnesota
8-7, and Kansas City topped Texas
with Garcia.
"I'm not gett ing the ca lls.'' Stieb 64 . Ca llfornla at Bait iinore was
squawked. "I don't want tobe given rained w t.
anything.! just wa nt what's there.!
There were no games schedu led
wasn't that wUd. I pitched live or six in the Nat!onhl League.
Innings and didn't complain. I'm
Ked So• 8, Twins 7
not trying to show him up, but I can
At Boston, relief pitcher Ron
DaviS walked home the ty ing run
only take so much."
Stiebwon the American League's with two outs In the ninth Inning,
ERA title last year, but has been then hit Marc Sullivan with a pitch
wild this season and hit hard on to foree borne the winning run ,
giving til' Red Sox their vic tory.
seve_ral occasions.
Mel Hall pummeled Stieb Mon· Joe Sambi to, 1·0, pitched one inning
day with a 4-lo r·4 performance that in relief to pick up the triumph.
Included a triple, an RBI double, Kl'nt Hrbek and Tbm Brunansky
homered fo r Minnesota, and Bill
two singles an d a wa lk.
Buckner
connected for Boston.
"He's not as sharp as he usually
Royals
6, Rangers 4
is, that was eviden t by the way we
At
Arlington,
Texas,
run· scoring
swung the bat against him," said
singles
by
Rudy
Law
and
George,.
Indians man ager Pa t Corrales.
Brett
In
the
eighth
inning
broke
"We'd heard that his klcatlon hasn't
open
a
tight
game
and
boosted
the
been as good as It was In the past."
Royals
to
victory
.
Mark
Gublcza,
Phil Nlekro, 3-3, won his 303rd
PITTSBURGH iUPI ) - The career game by allowing four runs 24 , was the winner while Bobby
"Hands·Across·America" line will on 10 hits over eight innings. The Witt , 2· 3, took the loss. Pete
weave through Three Rivers Sta- veteran knuckiebailer struck out lncaviglla and Gary Ward homered
dium during a Pittsrurgh' Pirates· four and walked three before for Texas.
Cincinnati Reds baseball game, but
won't Include the players.
The human chain being Conned
62 OR OLDER? - STAY COOL
from coast to coast to raise money
for the homeless and hungry will
THIS SUMMER....
stretch through the stan cis and over
CONSIDER ...
the tops of the dugout s at 3 p.m.
while Ill' game Is In progress, a
Pirates spokesman said.
It will be up to til' umpires on the
100 Memorial Drive East
field wll' ther to halt tbe game
Pomeroy, Ohio
briefly while the line Is Conning ,
Rate• ire computed according to
across Jhe stadium, the spokesman i
your income. Income guidelines
said.
have recently been ex ten dad. Lovely
Members of the two teams have
epertmenta featuring wall to wall
said they would not participate In ,
carpeting, all IPPiiencea. Ali uti!ltieo
the line because it would hold up the
peid except able TV and telephone.
game too klng.
Stay cool thio 111mmer. Muat ba 62
i\iso, a "symbolic line': ol 150
year• of age or hendicapped.
Little League ballplayers will be
FOR FUITHER DETAILS
formed on the field between the lett
Calll614)992
-7022
and right Held foul lines at 1: 35
Equal
Houalng
Opportunity
p.m.. prior to the game, the
spokesman said.
•...

By FRED McMANE
UPI Assistant Sports Editor
Dave Slieb's ego has gotten as big
as his earned run average.
The Toronto Blue Jays right·
hamler was qu ick to place the
blame on everybody but himself
Monday after he lost for the sixth
straight time and had his ERA soar
to 6.33.
Aller the Cleveland Indians
pounded Stleb for five runs on 10
hits in seven innings en route toa 64
triumph, the Toronto pitcher
blamed plate umpire Rich Garcia
and his own fielders for his latest
setback that left hlnn with an 0.6
record.
"I don't know what kind of
de fense we're playing against these
teams. but It sure as hell wasn't
working,' ' sa id Stleb, who last won

I

NEW YORK (UP! I - National
League owners unan lnnously ap·
proved a proposal to have the
Ch icago Cubs play postseason
home games at Busch Stadium In
St. Lou is because of the prohibition
of night baseball at Wrigley Field,
the league an nounced Monday.
The action. taken May 13 at a
meeting in New York, was In tended
toluHW the majorieague'scontrac·
tual obligations for night telecasts
of postseason games. City and state
laws currently prohibit night baseball in Wrigley Field. the on ly
major·league stadium without
lights.
"Th is is an unfortunate situation
but given the lack of light s at
Wrigley Field the best alterna tive is
to have the Cubs play in the nearest
N.L. Eastern Divis ion city," leagu e
president Chub Feeney said.
Cubs pres ident-general manager
Dallas Green, who warned oppo·
nents of lights at the stadium last
year thai the cl ub wou ld be forced
to move to another ball park. said
he was not surprised by the
decision.
"I've been saying this for four
years that it was going to happen
unless something would be worked
ou t," Green sa id.
Asked if he thought the Cubs
could install lights by the rnd oft he
regu lar season. Green said: "No,
the deadline wa s May 1. I don't
think it can be rune. It would take a
small miracle ...
Two years ago. the Illinois
legislature enac ted an ordinance
prohi biting lights at the NL's oldest
ballpark. as a result of opposition
from lOcal resident s. Green asked
that lights be Installed lor use in 18
games a year to guaran tee .that [
the club made the pl aydfs, it would

'

...
into a double. It took a perfect throw !rom
centerfielder Otis Nixon to gel Bell during the sixth
·Inning of Mondav's game at Toronto. UP I.

rot have to move to anottw&gt;r site.
In 1981, when the Cubs won the
Eastern Division title, til' maj or
leagues agreed to switch the order
of the World Series games so thaI
the team ro uld play the third, fourth
and fifth games at home on ttw'
weekend, instead of the night
games. The Cubs were eli minat ed
by the San Diego Pad res in the

National League Championship
Series.

Sponsored by the Middl eport
Chamber of Commerce

GEN.

PARK

SAT., MAY 24

TWO PERFORMANCES
2 PM &amp; 4:30PM
Advan(ed Ti,kets Available
thru Friday, May 23
$3.00 Children &amp; Sr. Citinn•
$4.00 Adulh, Ages 14-64
FAMILY PRICE - IJS
12 Aduih &amp; 4 Children)

TICKET OUTLETS : Simon 's
Pick· A-Pa ir, Piea sers, Dairy
Queen

If you have a safe driving record, you merit
something special when
it comes to your Auto
Insurance . ..top-night
coverage, low preferred
rates and service you
can depend on. That's
exac~y the combination
of benefits you'll receive
as a policyholder of our
. agency and the State
Auto Companies.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992 -6687
State Auto
fnaurence
Companies

I'l~;ii;iililililiiiil;ii~===:=:~~~~~=~==;:::~------,

A QUALITY TIRE FOR THE BUDGET CONSCIOUS DRIVER

RETREADS
AX 13 ••••••••••••••••••••• s16.30
BX13 ••••••••••••••••••••• 516.30

Little leaguers will
form human chain

THE MAPLES

.. .so get involved in politics. Do some t/meln
Washington. THEN mfc8 your BUNDLE."

•

Cubs would play at Busch Stadium

Legal reform attacked _J_ac_k_A_nde_r_so_n~&amp;_J_os_ep_h_Sp_e-'--ar

Underside of reform ______Ro_be_rt_~_al_te_rs

~~LL

EX14 ••.•••.••••••..••••••. 519.50
FX 14 ••••••••••••••••••••.• S20.50 ·
.: GX14 •••••••••••••.••••••• S21.50
,,A(,. ,

&lt;J••,. ....

HX 14 ..................... S21.50
GX15 ••••••••••••••••••••• S21.50
HX 15 ..................... S21.50

LX 1s ...................... s22;so

RADIAL RETREADS SLIGHTLY HIGHER
PLUS CASING CHARGE

ROY III!!!!P1
&amp; ~
0

1966-1986

600 EAST MAIN ST. ~
POMEROY
~
992·2094

SERVING MEIGS CO. FOR 20 YEARS
•••

�Tuetday.

Ohio

BuDs fire Albeck

Ewing chosen as
NBA's top rookie
despite injuries
!\L'W VOPJ&lt; II.:Pl 1 - S&lt;&gt;• Yort
KakU a.'lllk'r Pat net E~·:~~:.g: ~n-,
rnll;oei! 32 ganx;r. in ., Ul . r.
plaeued tin1 S&lt;':it.YJil. ,..... """~
~ l"BA ' • P~ d ilL- Yeat u.· •
"1dl!' !Tllll'g!Jl Mmxlll''.
·
~ " 'as lbe Wp 1&gt;00rn and
~ a100ng all flr!:i y.-.o r
playen aJiff being lX' !'a. J prl. in
In' June c~ drd!l. ·lbe ; ·1001
IOITTlf'r Cirol"gi'W"•-n All·ArrlE'rica
"'""' the on!)· rook:IP LV play in !h&gt;
1\l!A All sw Gam;
E"1ng nu•rvl'd 36 &lt;i a p:~SSible 7a
..-..Jeo !rom 'VJ&lt;1JI ·• ·riten and
~ ac.TCI!U thf OJI:Jr.!r.'
fen-arch: Xavlf'r McDan ir,l ;J
Sea le and Kar-l Malunf ot LW,

fllll.siiOO " lth 161', and
reo;pK1rvc-l\
Atlanta ''

Spud

J4!~ P'Jllll.!,.

IL1"1 1 - Forrnt&gt;r
NBA guard Dcr.ig Cbll.im is in line to
!J.&gt;ame \h&gt; r:inlh coaclJ In the last
lG yp.an fll1 1h' ClOCago Bulls.
~ S1an AlbPc'll. ~-ro ~'aS
tired MCI!llla; .
Cdll!ls and me &amp;Us oope to
~ re.-'Otia ins by ,.'A'I&lt; ·s
e!ld. Bulls' OI''Der J,.,· P..l'll'.900rl
(]{J('.AG()

llJ'I&gt;(S ~1~ I'T'.lss~

3'2 games
&gt;&lt;1th krlll{, ana t'ltrJw llljuries.
·~Thn riJeit.ll!- an av-~J l. a'ilt.u l itA
tV rr&gt;: " E·•·mg !.i!ld M; goal a 1 ttR

said

ta· T'(l. ;r.lf a., cad a.~d I .acoompl!&gt;.lx-&lt;l ll
"It ~"' a d&amp;~ppowting year in
""'w "-'P&lt;"C t&gt; W!Jrion l !11&lt;1 play l

•

tm 11 v.·as ·.fl')·

t"'rll t:mg :rere m• pl.a:·ing ·•·hen

J 'Ahl htH1..
Ewl!'.g r.al&lt;l. r, w&lt;.&gt;Jld w"'i oo tus
r'f}(/\'!.5 gozm; w·•·•rd ·n. baskl?t and
h:..~ ! f:b "J1J00UU:'
H&lt;JPC-1\; Il~. I ·•iJ oc able lfJ play
rnon: g:anol-"!. JY..' Y., :··f--a: and ti:x:'
y...am ·.r.ill Or; d 11· bE:'l r er : · l:F said.

"'Th: ~.Y...o(: i(4..~ ;;H~ i. iJ:Jl I'm llOl
r u.n·.u Ju~ I &lt;.an sb:lot
l:aiYRl'' ''" I I CdJl 'l P'JOJ nd 011 it. 'The
&amp;'A'VJ!''\ d'Jn·· ·.r.cml an~1hing l.ike
hbt yt--t
' Hk .l ;, J
Y.n lCl&lt; c:uactr Hub!£;
~.mm.'"« 'Jfl

Wc.t;.i"J ,

~· ~

I ll":

ol.am&lt;iunl&lt; dlampion at
&gt;- 7, n«&gt;ived lour vo .,;. Washilll(·
IOD'I 7-7 Maoute Bv! and Chic~
kH'ward Clla.r1es Oaklf.'V •nn· P"Mh
na1Tll.'ll oo 1our baUau.. ·u,~ Ang~:lr...,
Clippl-n o:nwr Beooil &amp;-ri)amin
jJJt th! Mnainlng vote
Ewing. wlr; • v.....-...g«l 'KJ p-Jlll '
ifld 9 rttl&lt;JUOO. a garn&lt;c. srored 111
oouble figure. in ~ r1 tl.&gt; :JJ garr.c..,
HI' went CNl'f t1x&gt; l J·point mark r.

B!&lt;Jv.-n '&gt;&lt;Jxl &lt;Jl Ewing "HP's going
VJ ~ d ~ldr tn :·~!:'~and) ean and
:· l"ari

I{) ("fJ fr;~

·"11V4nkt-, itJE: f{Ju nr~ Sl.:'iK'tlDn in
th&lt;c draJt "'''" a¥F&lt;l l7 p-Jints and 8
M;,kJ"" .

·r;-

15 IJ(Jlll ts

n

Ohio I t.:Pl I - The pat Ed last year.
Wi!ander. ranl&lt;l'd No. 2 In the
Swedish ront ingPnt is 1"1'11l ming to
world
b!'hlnd Ivan Lendl, won the
tt'o&gt; Associatlon ot Teonis Proles·
tournament
In I~ and 1984. Last
sima! Champmsrup thi.s August .
11&lt;&gt;
lost
to
reigning Wimbledon
year.
Tournamen1 director Paul f1ol!·
champion
Boris
Becker tn the llnal.
Mon:lay sa id Mats 1'11!an~F r. Stefan
The
ATP
Championship.
which
Edb!'rg. .Joak im \ 'ystrom and
ctlers
$375,00l
In
prtze
Jroney,
will
Andf&gt;rs Jal'!)·d- aU S~&lt;'l'des and all
b!'
played
at
th!
Jack
Nicklaus
ranked ln the Top 10 - have
alr!'ady signro 10 compete in thiS Sports Q&gt;n ter nwr thl&gt; Klngs Island
war's tournament . All four rertici- Amusement Park Aug. 16-21.
MASO~ .

JiUL

Hatfield chosen
Player of Year
JACK.&lt;;()!'- Meigs' S{'flYJr pitcher Barh Hatt.la·ld wa &gt;' tlrs'llttlo
cla!s AA district 'Player ct the Yt&gt;ar' and yJi!l(~ thi~ &lt;;lh&lt;cr
Maraud(orot te5, Jodi Harrison, "~;,ria Mu!&gt;.&gt;e'f , and Tamm) 11 ngh
aJIII'Irctlon.s lor the aJI-dis1ric1 soltball team by • m(&lt;:l ing ;,roong llx·
dlstrlt.1's ooaches here Sur.lay.
Hatfield, who hal; an PXU'IIent ~ ca n&lt;:·r p11chi11~ rru,rd a1
Meigs, was also cbosrn to til&gt; tin;t-twm o.U-0h&gt;.'J U:;.m wtule
short.ll~ Harrison wa.s a serond -tc&gt;am choiC&lt;' f~ h are S{'fliJr
members on lhJs year's S('ctional dtamp!r.n ~ - J ~ araud(· reltc.,
Hatrlt.&gt;ld Ls undef&lt;'aoc'll thl&lt; yt&gt;ar and hur1r~ l hrc~· straJght
tourna ment wtn.• tn t1x&gt; pa.•t Wt'l'k includ ln~ 15-2 win O\W lrontoo .
12-3 CN!•r Jackoon . and 16-1 (Jil'f South Putnt U1 tlxc nn.oL' fridaY .
Harri.'iCJ!I pl;j ys a tlne shortstop "1th surPhand&lt;; and a !l'JOO arm whUe
carrying one &lt;A he Mardudl'n1te5 1&gt;&lt;-n~r stick.' ;,roong oome gocd
hitters.
MuMt'r and Wright wl'rl' both hooor• ble ru;nlic.n p1ck.•. Musst'f is
a junior catcher and compliments Hatfield's mound talents as a
reliable backstop. Musser had a three-hit . lour HBI game agaJnsl
Jackoon tn . tournament pilly last Wl'l'k. Wright, a sopl'omor!'
wtheiOC'f, Ls thl.· Maraudl'r!'lles' lvdd-Qft hitter and readli'S base
often. Alo;o a bas&lt;-sl£&gt;altng lhr•-at , Wright can Oag dov.n Iine drh•es in
her oormal rlghtlleld posit &gt;:ln.
Meigs conrlnues lntodlstri&lt;1 lournai!Wnt play Wedne-sday at 4 p.m .
agawt Pons mouth W&lt;-st ot th&lt;' lronton JunJor High nt&gt;Jd . Winner
advances to regional play ;, I Logan. M&lt; · i~ . woo h"-' out.o;{med 1heir
three toumamc1lt tOPS 4JJi lhus far , L' th&lt;• &lt;t-tendlng district
champion.

KC's Gilmore blanks Oaks
Sen&gt;:Jr righthandl'r Richie Gil·
more tanned Hand fir'l'd a six hiner
!&gt;londay night in leading tt'o&gt; Kyger
C'rrek Botx:ats to a HhictOI!' over
Oak Hill in the Bobcats' season
finale. Gilmore did oot walk a
ba Iter Kygrr Cr€'C'k won tt'o&gt;
' co ntPSI in th!' tilth inning wfo&gt;n
It ., - ~like Edge walk£&lt;!. stole serond
and r am&lt;' home on a two rut single

. ..

Scoreboard ...
~

Majors

oa.t.~nd

,...

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M'; f i /J ..,

]1

\1. L P(1. GB

w

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J 11114df~ptid 11 \oln /III'»"J rwvn •
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Il l. Rv m
kJin~.t'

.-elet11onH for lhe all-district HOftball team by a meeting among the
dlarlct'HOOlll!heH Sunday.

CARRIER NEEDED
IN MIDDLEPORT
CALL
992-2156

lh 'IJ• mo.ord
l ~il ... m JIJJ. 11: '1'1 ~ m.
f

1 lo ,,, T•·)(;l•

1'!l-.·t·land • ~hrt;m 11 1 a1 ~I J !w.au iG ·•
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~ · ,.u ~ · 1Moon• 2... 1 ai i.Jt' trojl ,·r f'rro ·ll ~ 1,
""'f•p m
w~ ·,. G~~JWJ~

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a t Mllv.·aull#..-· r1 ghl
at IJr~mll , ,. ~,
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St•;.nlf•

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l'll i J ZIU
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\lrN'-tJ\ T r

Craig birthday
SJru Jean Cril ig celebratoo her
sixth hi11tx1ay wilh a rerty a t the
honw of her parent s, Steven and
F' il~
Craig , Ple&lt;~sa nt Ridge,
Pomemy.
1\(o l &lt;~llvcs and friends allending
w~ re Sara's maternal grandparents. Mr. an&lt;l Mrs. Donley Relb!'l;
hrr great -grea t aunt. EmmaOgdin .
Mr. and Mrs. Ro1Et1 Bowles.
Deloris Hawk and Robbie, Bud
!\dams, Debbie and Kel ly Phelps.
Sending gUt s were Sara's paternal
grandmot hrr. .Jean o ·alg; her
great -aunt. i\l llra Situng, Wilkesvi lle; and Mr. ilnd Mrs. Ga rry
Hothwell an d Evi n, Glouster .

' jt r.ona t ' " 'ai!IH' - Brr~ ; r,, Mr l 10
Mtl ~nd M o~rWU LA~ Dif\i.\
flCAT ( o~~.n.'t&lt;\ Sli. Hum'l" i111d ~u~~ . All
,~Jrn..oo
dJld ?drlr.n nn~
N'rY·nt:'iltl ll-&gt;al'UP ~ rr·r
Cat t'o
f'udo.1•11
\l inn IJ ( .IFl.'" 'ul. (J..Jt 11
O;ul'llid Tor il!ld r •M'tll M111n '1
RoM flatLM Ill
'"t~n;J t Vii~ · Orv; lt\ Yi rJ ·o
!kur r All olfld .\lal"\~1 I..\ ~ J.f'ONo rd
q and !'i:hmklt . PIUI ;t;
lo\ IW'I I 411 1 C
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11n~
:•;y .,,, M~ rra~ Ra!r ;,nd PuckNI
'.linn 3'

( ;n'g and Becky Parsons. Hip ley.
W.\' a. announce the birth of a son.
May 14 at thP Char leston Memorial
Huspilal.l11arlcston, W.Va . The six
pound , fi ve uunc:.c infant has 1:«-n

na m&lt;d Bernard Andrew.
:vlatf'r nat granclparr nt s arc Ber·

nmd and B&lt;'IIY Fu ltz. Middlepon.
anrli iH· J:.l lcntal gra ndparrnts arc
F~' ll y :md Ha ny Parsons. Hipley.
W. Va.

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Doesn't Have To Be

Ask About Our
Direct Deposit.

II Ur'll. llrll 71,

f3o-J'I ffi, IIIK1J&lt;•r&lt;t , MUfi3. ft ljo O;~k
"fl. Mcnh !Jl•l '11
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Gai!'o&lt;~Jtt', SD and H~·ardJn . Mil 7. Orr*u.

NY!i: Borllf'r Etfld!fll llh, ('hl, lirdMlan . Phll

.

Urnes for 111&lt;&gt; programs will b!'
announcoo later. Registration for
all programs can be done at either
the Pom eroy or Middleport
Libraries.
There wlll be children's films
shown on Saturdays at both librarIes. There Is more to come but some
plans have not been finalized yet.
The library staff and trustees are
real excited about a new project
tlx&gt;y are about to embark on.
Starting May ll,llbrary servlce wlll
be available at R.eedsvU!e and the
surrounding a!l'a. Dohrman Reed,
of Reed's Grocery, tn R.eedsvllle,

~·s consented to let lite library put
,.,
1n a "Book Station".
This station w11J be stockoo with
IIctlon, romance, western, mys-

tery, science fiction and juventle
.~Ue
..
bookS. Also adult and
magazines wlll be avaUable. Requests wUI be taken for particular
booksandsubjectsnotonthesh&lt;&gt;lf.
u this endeavor proves to be
successful, you w1ll see more "Book

luv

Stations" in the county.
The video cassette program
starting In July wlll be set up ln club
Corm. An Initial fee of $15 to join will
allow you tree rental of the
cassettes. A remlnllf?r though ...
anyone woo does not have a clear
library record cannot paniclpate ln
t1x&gt; club. So oow Is thl&gt; time to check
and see If your record Is clear.
These all' exciting times at your

Curtis birthday
John Denver Curtis recently
celebrated his first blrtlxlay with a
party a\ ~is home on Eagle Ridge
Ro.ad. Atlendl:ng the party were
Denver Curtis, Neva Curtis, Cindy,
David and Michelle Smllh, John
and Mary Rose, Mandie and Lacey
Vulgamore, Kathy Johnson, Archie, Debbie, Tyson and Alison
Rose. Also presenting gifts to the
youngster were Mary Look ,'
ion , a nd Christin e Kessler.
Pomeroy.

THE GINGERBREAD lOY

SAYS'"

See Us
For Your
Memorial
Day

-,·--··

....·-~·~-···-­
..

Mar·

msm

Flowers.
MiiiOII, W. VI.

lib r artes an d If you are oot co mlng
In, you don't know what you are
mlsstng.
I have one bit of sad news ... the
lovely ladles of til&lt;&gt; RSVP program
ct the Senor
1 Cllze
t ns Cen ter, has
hadtostophavingthestoryooursat
the library, at leastforthe summer.
They are llke all the rest of us,
Summer can get to be hectic. we
are looking forward to having tto&gt;m

~

HiW!f•!U. 1\'Y 11:
Att'if', Aal1 ~ Jatnr"', ( hl7: Camit&lt;"IJJ ('If'.
Jl;uT\.~. T•·.ll . flf'rnandl'1 , Dr'! and MO(lf"l" Cal
Aml'r11'11n U:•aJ'!UI' -

'

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YOUR GOVERNMENT CHECK.

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675·1111

5th llrHI

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Ill'· IUS

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Complete line of Vegotablo &amp; Flower
Plants
- Ha1'9ing
••••"· Gtra·
niums, Rost
lushes, Dogwood , Rhododendron &amp; lhlllbbory.
SEASON SPECIAL
1 50 PER FLAT
$
MIX OR MATCH
OPEN DAILY 9-5: SUNDAY 1-5

Hubbard'5 Greemouse
SYRACUSE. 0 HIO

r:tB:c~k~tn~th:.e~F:al~l._ _ _ _ _j~::::::PH:·:9:9:2:·5:7:7:6===

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Professional Brokerage Seroices

CENTRAL TRUST
Cincinnati: 513/651-8760 Ohio: 800/582-7391
Outside Ohio: 800/543-7331

Jot.. Deliver Qn118

•

A-vacare.
T e eat an
es
wort
wit a vanta
•
1 Into.

Andy lly,., u

Hysell birthday
A parr;· was held recently in
obsc•n a nee of the fir s\ bit1hday of
.John Andrew Hysdl. son of DavP
and AIIJ&lt;•rla Hyse ll, Micldlepon .
Cake. deCOI'at!'d by his grandfather . ire cream. and rdrt'sh·
mrnt s were served. i\ II ending were
Milford. Polly and Joe Hysell, Faye
and Al!Jcrl Schu ltz. Viole\ li ysc ll .
St&lt;·lla Thomas. Margaret Corsi.
Christine and Betty Srhultz, and
Dave Thomas.
; Srnd ing gifts were J .T. Humph·
)'c;·. Bill an d Linda Schultz. Teny ,
&lt;Julia .. Jason and Phillip Murdock.

health of your employees. So, you'lllike AdvaCare,
a health maintenance organization (HMO) with
almost every medical and surgical benefit
for one monthly premium.
Advacare gives its members some very
important advantages.
First. they can get all of the treatment they
need- when they need it. Not when their budget
might allow it. And AdvaCare can catch things
early to keep them healthy That's the advantage
of an HMO.

Second, they get everything they need for
the most accurate diagnosis of their problem lab teSts, x-rays and scans, consultations with
specialists.
Third, they know in advance that one
monthly premium will cover just about everything. They also know in advance what any
minor out-of-pocket expenses will cost
Call your Advacare representative at
446- 5283 in Gallipolis. Then take advantage
of the AdvaCare advantages for you and
your employees.
Advacare A different kind of health insurance.

.

Part Of Your Life.

Cif'fJJI'fll&gt; ,

and Franro. Ctn

By Rum POWERS
A fun summer .... that Is what the
Meigs County Public Library Is
pi annlng lor the children of Meigs
County.
Registration for the Summer
Reading Program will begin Monday, May. 19. The th&lt;&gt;me this year
Is, "Reading: The Heart Of It AU."
The kids wUI be able to keep !rack of
tto&gt; bookS they read wtth very
colorful stickers.
Cindy Ollverl, Extension Agent .
will have 2 children's workshops
this summer. One on bread mak ·
ing, will b!' held June 25 at the
Middleport Library and til&lt;&gt; other
ooe wlll be on Chlldren Taking Care
of Themselves In the Home, held
July 16 at the Pomeroy Library.
Shirley Huston, will have a
basket making workshop at the
Pomeroy Library July 9. Exact

.lotvtvJn All IDd

Krukr.M· SF "1-.1
Mnf't1•"itll IJ lli!\1' ' - IUa.' (laio: '71
Cll•fTII'ft." IY" fHt t! il(ur'l~ . MD •, l mn-•uo·n
p!!r hrro. llftl"'"lth ' vk: IDf"h.
F.al"'l!d Ku n '"'""'~"

Nl uonal

Waiting In Line

Summertime is fun time at the library

As an employer. you're interested i~ the good

Gary Link
Friday, May 23rd

P"'

Page-B

Birth announced

Music·by

$2 5 PEl COUPLE
DINNER 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
DAN(E 8:00 p.m.-12:00 Midnight

Tuesday. May 20, 1986

]('(' crra m a nd cakr were sf'rvrd.

Buffet Dinner
&amp; Dance

'"'"'Yin.

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li&lt;I'IIUn II ,\ f ln JW "'o()f;l 'j

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.lli

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.l"l Ul 24 49
:!!liB ~~ r:
T.! Jr.!HJ
"W 111 ?1 43
11 11':" j; ~

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HOWY"&gt; MIIU , I.Udri , IICIUll(..-..ll•ma.n .St!.
:md D\'k.~tra . , 'Y 12

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ALL DBTRICT - Melp' Menklr pitcher Barh Jlatlleld was chosen
lhe claM AA dWrlcl 'Player of the Year' and joined throo other
Manwderetleri, ·lodl Harri!oon, Marla M!l.'lOet', and Tanuny Wright as

Sam ,Je!Ul Craig

Presents

•' SN 'l rrl: rhhl

Ha,'o((l (,fl

.., r......

Tammy Wright

Library lines

Ohio University. Inn

ll BrA101t. tUN

Laders
......

'.\TJ)'\AJ , U:'.AGt E
8) l rWod ... ,.,...

r~u,,..,.

Barb Halfleld

off tto&gt; bat of J .R. Wright.
Larry Adkins had i.hrl'e hits for
the Oaks and Crabtree added two.
Adkw was the losing pitcher. He
and Copas combined for four
strtkrouts and walked two. With til&gt;
victory . Kyger Creek finished with
a 5-9 league mark. Overall. the
Bobcats postoo a 5-15sprtngrecord.

By The Bend

BOW HUN'IER- Glenn Crisp cj Salem Center made 1986the founJl

year l:n a row to ldU a turl&lt;ey with a bow and arrow. An avid hunter.
Crt.p used a Danon MX 1000 bow and wore Camo lmvfti as a
camouOage so he could move cioMJ' to the bird bet~ maklnc the 1110.

l'hl.o

•

bl&gt;tter one.
"We' re looking at tiOI'IIEOne
cooil b!' a coach in tile next 10 years
for us," Retnsdorf said. "We still
have 5Cfi1P thingS to worit out. but
wt&gt; oope to have It concluded by the
end of t1x&gt; week."
Alb!'ck Insisted he wasn't bitter,
but firEd a parting salvo at ~nernl
manager Jerry Krause and
ReiruOOrt.
"It 's rot blllerness, l:lJt all you
have to do Is i&gt;ok and see what has
happened tn tllls qantz.atlon,"
AI bed&lt; said . "I'm just SJrry I didn't
get a chance to bring Stan Albecksryle basketball here."
Albed&lt;, wbo has one year
!l'malning oo a two-year pact
PStlmated at S:!ii).(Dl a year,
likened his plight to that ci the
White Sox.
"1b&gt; way trey handled It was
~&lt;1 th .a lack of dlgnlty. respect or
much sensitivity. The parallels to
t1x&gt; LaRussa· Harrelson thing are
uncanny."
Colllru, currenUy a CBS-TV rotor
commentator. was a stanwut
guard with the Phlladelphla 76ers.
HI? llll'l with Rein.-OOrf In Arizona
last week. CollJns was hired to smut
the team wtthout Alb!'ck's know!·
oo~ earlier In the year. He has no
read coac tttng ex perlence.

Swedes return to ATP event

~arne !r,r ~anle .
~
pu:k. c\'PragOO
«nd ~ 1'-&lt;nml.s lor th&lt;c

rf'tYJunds ;,

Mcrm,·

..o.Jl:led&lt; ,.•.., di.&lt;m!S.'ll'd ~&lt;'!' the
injury -plagued Bulls WE'!I1 .JJ-52 In
lhP f'ell'Ular !&amp;..&lt;or.. and were
eUmina too ill t:llm&gt; stra!gl!t gamE'S
b)• the Bosll:lll C'&lt;l'lties.
Ran.&lt;OOrl . ,..bo n'j)(lrledly was
!i€'1 m fin&gt; Albrok erarlif'T this m:mth.
had jXJS!p&lt;&gt;ned t1x&gt; dPcision an er 1to&gt;
flap CO!n"f'llir-.g reuining Tony
LaP..ussa a&gt; managf'l' ot the
Olicago " 'hi1e
"- Reirudorl i.s
cbainnan ~ the txJard ci the
Aml'ril:'.an League d ub
"When "'l' hired !:lim, "'"" bought
~ had an urrlf&gt;rWlnding as Ill the
way "'l' ·•-anted basi&lt;Ptball to b!'
pla~· ed . bu1 during lhP ~"Par i1
llecame otrc):)us 1t'Pll' wa.J;n't, .. said
Rein.&lt;dorl. ~·oo said 11&lt;&gt; wanted to
ge~ av.·a~· trun " DflE'-«1-oo!'.. and
' 'i!olation .. basl&lt;t&gt;tba.lL "I v.·ant us to
play like tto&gt; C&lt;l'llics and LakPrs."
Rrinsdort said he still h&lt;&gt;lie".·es
Albrok is a "oompe~ent " :O.'BA
roach. but added COllins wrukl 11&lt;&gt; a

tk-glMII''!; r.&gt;! tr.J: "'-'"-"'-"' ""' ID will

"''"e 11 llll p&lt;'fU'Ilt

The Daily Sentinel

5J1 IACKSON PII'IE · AT. 35 WEST
PhOne 446 · 4524,
BARGA!~

tiATJN£[5 SATUP:O.AY

I SUJIOAI · All SEATS 11.50
AOHI SS !ON EVERl TUESOAl $2.50

16 lhru 22]
L MAY
FRIDAY tnru
THURSDA ~ ~

WISE

IUYI

lr&gt;r't DANNY OeVIlO

JOHJ~m l!!l

re~

�. Page-6 The Daily Sentinel

Show your colors!
Sentme~

w..-er

the annual Southern High School
variety sl'ow staged Saturday
night.
Quite a success. I'm told , and of
course. the show was under the
direction of Roberta Maldl&gt;ns who
is creative and knows about
teaching studl&gt;nts how to ent~rtain.

&amp;aft
Pu11&gt;le and white flags
of
particularlY slg·
nlflcance to grad·
· uates of Pomeroy
· High School who
will be returning
for their annual
A while back, I mentioned that a
reunion Saturday
yearbook
was being complied at tbe
night - will be
flying high in Pomeroy this week.
Portland Elementary School.
The Fabric Shop has been
Well·lt was compUed and now
making the flags for alumni orders are being taken. Anyone
· wt'!'kend and as of Monday had wishing a copy may plllne !be
tnken orders lor 38 of them.
school at 81J.5Z71 or Dixie Smith at
Incidentally, the original price was 843·5439.
expected 10 be $10. However, Ann
The yearbook sells for $10. Thl'
Lumbert rl'ports that the price Is deadline for placing orders Is this
just to cover the cost or making thl' Friday and the yearbook will be
' llngs and after hl'r first venture distributed next faU.
· round that the flags can be sold for
· $5 each.
The wild turkey sea son ended In
u you want to get into the act or Meigs County t11 May 17. There
showing tbe alumni they are more
were no hunting accidl&gt;nts during
than welcome just call tbe Fabric the season which began t11 April 28
Shop.
and across the state 1900 wild
Incidentally, Evelyn Gilmore of turkeys were bagged. Last year In
1hr Pomeroy Class of 1941 has been
Meigs Coonty, hunters killed 66
nctlvr In planning Spi'Cial actlvilll's turkeys dutiing tbe season while the
for the 45th reunion of her class count this year was up to 84.
&lt;llong with Rogl'r Morgan and
Helen Saul'r.
Conrad Ohlinger, 75, Jl4 West
· The group will hOld an afternoon
Locust St., in Pomeroy's Monkey
reunion h·om 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday Run, Is a patient at University
before the big reunion of au the Hospital in Columbus where he has
grads on Saturday night. The undergone brain surgery. He is
aJternoon affair will be held at the doing well but still needs your
Eagles Club In Pomeroy andpuf1&gt;le prayers. Sunday, he was able to sit
and white flags made by Evelyn up in bed for the first time since the
surgery, Conrad's address If 974
will be used to mark the location.
Some members of reunion Rhodes Hall, Ninth Floor, Unlverrlasses are working hard this year . sity Hospital, Columbus.
planning special events to precede
in the birthday conner, we have
the annual evening banquet and
dance. And - once again - color John Dill, Meigs resident, who wlll
photos of reunion classes will be mark an anniversary on Wednes·
taken in the Meigs High Auditorium day. His address Is Box 143,
during the period between the Riverview Nuring Home, West
Columbia, W.Va. Also Ralph Swan
banquet and thl' dance.
Both Pomeroy and Middleport Jr., will chalk up another year this
merchants are planning special year. He is confined to the
Extended Care Unit of Veterans
alumni weekend sales.
Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy.
Dorothy Louise Jenks, daughter
Elsie Gerlach Fowler who Is
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brown of
Syracuse, and a former Meigs recuperating at the Holzer Medical
.County resident now living in Center following hlp surgery asks
Luuisa, Ky ., is having some health that I advise you that the annual
problems and has been at the Sloan Gerlaeh family reunlon, normally
Kettering Cancer Center In N~w held around Memorial Day, has
been canQ'lled this year. So York City und~rgoing tests.
She has been retu med to her you're advised .
llome and will awalt word from the
It might have been a good idl&gt;a to
center as to when her surgery will
take place. Mr. and Mrs. Brown are put a calendar on watches, but not
in Louisa to be with their daughter as far as 1'm concerned. Mine
always have tbe wrong day, the .
until she hears from the center.
wrong month or Is in foreign
Shirley Quickel, well known In language of some descrtpt - my
our county lor a number of years fingers grow sore and weary from
now for her work with young trying to get II all corrected. I've
dancers. did the choreagraphy for given up but look, I'm stUI smiling.

Wiseman anniversary set Sunday
Rev. David and Mrs. Jane
Wiseman will observe their 25th
wedding anniversary on Sunday,
May 25.
They married May 28, 196! in
Athens, Rev. Claude Sandlin at the
First Church of God ofliclatin£.
Rev. and Mrs. Wiseman have
three children, a daughter, Mrs.
Jana Bowersock of Mansfield. and

two sons, Evan and Owen, both of
Rutland . They have two grand·
children, Aaron Rodd and Joanna

Renee Bowersoek, Mansfield.
The couple's children wUI host a
reception in honor of their parents'
anniversary on Sunday from 2 p.m.
to 6 p.m. at the Wiseman lllme,
Long St.. Rutland. The couplr
requests that gifts be omitted .

Pageant
announced
Dream World presents a 1~
Ohio Preliminary Pageant to be
held on June 15 at the Holiday Inn,
GaUipolls.
The Dream Wortd Baby Mister
and Miss group wUI begin at 1 p.m.
with age groups, 0 to .1,13 months to
2• 25 months to 3 years, and 4 and 5
year okls.
Miss Drl'am World group will
begin at 3 p.m. wlh age groups, 6
'l!ld 7, 8 to 10,1lto 12,14 to 16 and 17
to 24 years, with a winner and four
ruMers-up to be selected In each
age lffilUP·
There will be a Dream World
Grand Baby and Dream World
Grand Queen crowned with all
wtnnl'rs to advance to a state
pageant. In observance of Father's
Day the fathers of the Grand Baby
and the Grand Queen will receive a
watch.
Appllcattons or further lnforma·
tlon may be obtained from the State
Dlrctor, Route 1, Box 155, Bar·
boursvllle, W.Va. 25504, or by
calling 304-743-9963.
'I

students In tbelr sl'op. F.F.A.
Arts Nlgllt
TUESDAY
students
gradualing this year arc
RACINE - Fine Night for the
POMEROY -A Past Masters
Betty
Jo
Hunt , Larry Hoschar,
enUre Southern Local School Dis·
night observance Tuesday 7 p.m.,
trlct will be held tlis evening In the Robert Sisson, Dave Lambert,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple; all past
Southl'rn High School Gymnasium. Doug Jenkins, Jeff Brown, Brian
masters and master masons In·
THURSDAY
The art show wUI begin at 7 p.m. Holman, Lonnie Lemaster, Jimmy
vtted. Work in master mason
POMEROY
The
Women's
and mu sic wUl begin at 7:30p.m. McDaniels, Kevin Thoma and
degree.
Fellowship of the Meigs County There wut be displays by art George Parker.
Churches of Christ will meet· students across the district and all
WEDNESDAY
Thursday
at 7:30p.m. at the Zion choirs and band students will be on Alumni ~ugllt
POMEROY- Xi Gamma Mu
Church
of
Christ.
Mrs. Dan Arnold hand to present music. Admission
RACINE - Racine Alumni
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will
have
the
program,
"Color Me is free d. chargl' but donations will Banquet and Dance Is May 24, 6
wlli meet at 6:30 Wednesday night
p.m. at Southern Hi gh School.
at the home of Johanna Shuler for a Beautiful " with the Zion women to be accepted.
have
skits.
Hom
red classes arc 1921, 1926.1931,
picnic. Members are to take a lawn
1936,
1941,1946,
1951, 1956,1961, 19ffi,
FFA
cookout
chair.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
POMEORY -The Meigs Chap· 1971, 1976, 1981 and 1986.
Music by Crosswinds, tickets
CHESTER - Spi'Cial services a story hour for preschoolers, ter of the Future Farmers of
..
at
U1c
Middlepori
Thursday,
2
p.m
ava
ilable from Home National
America
will
hold
a
cookout
for
the
are being held at the Chester
.
Llbraty
.
Bank,
Rae in Village Cut Rate. New
chapter
tllls
evening
.
Church of God through Wednesday
York
Clothing. Tick ets can be
Larry
Parsons,
his
new
wife
and
at 7 p.m. each evening. Angel Percy
POMEROY
Catered
picnic
reserved
at the door by calling
his
family
have
been
Invited
to
will be the Bible teacher. Gilbert
when
Preceptor
Beta
Beta
C)lapter,
attend
Ire
event
which
wlll
featu
re
Betty
Wagner,
9&lt;!9·2B'i1l; Da le Hart.
Spencer, pastor, Invites the public.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, meets a t 6 meat butchered by junlor and 949-2656; Tim Thoren , 949·22Sl; or
TUPPERS PLAINS - Meigs p.m. Thursday at home of Janet senklr Vo·Ag students cooked on a Joyce Quillen, 949·:ai95. Tickets arc
Theiss, Racine.
wood fired cooker bull! by F.F.A. $7 fo r dinner and $5 lor dan&lt;l'.

Youth director
named

Nurse honored

Billy Christian has accepted thP
position of youth director at the
First Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike.
A sophomon&gt; at Marshall Unlvcr·
s lty, he Is studying for the medical
profession. He is a native of
Lawrence County having gradu ·
ated from Ironton High School in
1984.

At Marshall, he has beenactive in
Campus Crusade lor Christ and is
pianist for the Lordsmen Quartet of
Ironton. As a member of Campus
Crusade, hC has traveled exten·
slvely during the past two yea rs as
well as playing for the quartet.
Numerous summer act lv It les arc
being planned for the youth at First
Southern Bapllst with Christian as
youth director to enhance t h~
program. Youth Sunday school Is
held each Sunday at 9:30 a.m.,
youth activities at 6:30 p.m. ~ach

Hilly Christian

Sundav evening vouth l:liblc st udy
at 7: :!0 p.m. on · Wednesdays. All
young prople in grades 7 through 12
arr inv ited to join in lhr activities.

Forest Run UMW meets
Readings, special music and Ill&lt;'
presentation of flowers to lhc
mothl'rs highlighted a progra m at
the Forest Run United Methodist
church honoring motbers on Moth·
ers Day.
"Bless Be the Tie That Binds"
was sung by the co ngrEgation with
opening remarks by Dan Nease,
Sunday school superintendent.
Readings f1. "Happy Mother' s
Day" by Jenny Varney, and
"Mother's" bY BUlle Wells preced·
ing the primary class readings of
scriptures concernJng mothers and
families with Mary Chaney, Dell a
Pugh, Phillip and Chris Hamm.
Bridget Varney, Rachelle Jenkins.
and Jason Ervin.
Otber readings were 'What is a
Mothl'r" by Kellle Ervin , "Motber"
by Chris Baer: "Softness" by
Amanda Wells, " The Mother' s

Hymn " by Terry Varney, "Renee ·
lions" by Tanya lng&lt;'ls , "Mother's
Love" by Renee Russell, "A
Moth&lt;'r's Low" by Jo hn Chaney,
"Love" by Kimlx'rly Jenkins.
"Motber Love" by Andy Bacr.
"Mothers Are round Everywhere"
by Jennifer Arnold. and "What A
Home Is" by Michael Russell.
Special music was provided by
Roy Jenkins and Rick Hauber,
"Motber's Bible". and Jean nie
Nease and Kellee Burdette, "Sweet
Hour or Prayer" and "Whispering
How"
Af1·ican violets W&lt;'I'C' pr(&gt;Scnted to

Virginia Davis, Mary K. Rou sh and
Leah NeaS!', with petunias and
marigolds to all other women
attending. In closing Dan Nease
read "The Masterpiec!'" loUowed
bY all men present singi ng "Pre·
cious Memories. "

MASON- Deadline lor reserva ·
lions for the annua l Waham a
Alumni Association banquet and
dance Is Wednesday, May 21.
The banquet and dance will be
held at thl' high school this
Saturday. The banquet will be
served by the athletic boosters and
the dance will begin at 9 with music
by ltomic Sounds.
Reservatklns may be made at
Fruth's In Middleport; B&amp;B
Market, Mason: Riggs' Key
Market, New Haven , and D&amp;W

Brown, D.D.S. Special guests at·
tending were Dan Morris, Supertn·
tendent of Meigs Local Schools,
James Miller, Prtnclpal of Meigs
High School, and Terry Gardner,
Assistant Juvenlle Officer.
Ron Logan Is lhe teacher of thE
O.W.E. Class and the studl&gt;nls of
the class are: Corey Carnahan. Tim
Colmer, Danny Dalton, Isabel Dtll,
Marty Hart. Duane Howell , Dale
Lillie, Catena Mowery, Cathy
Neutzling, Mike Patterson, Ml·
chelle Peterson, Scott Polcyn,
Darin Roach, Terri a:&gt;ush, ~ny
Shoemaker, Linda Sml\h, and John
WoUe.

Homes. Point Pleasant. Reserva ·
lions may also be made by calling
Ka ren Broadwaler, 882·3335: Phyl·
lis Scott, 882·2202, or Margie
Grinstead. 773·9131.
All alu mni arc asked to m€&lt;'1 at
the high school at 7 p.m. Friday
evening to decorate lor the event.
This yea r' s officers are Jim
Stewart. president; Karen Staats
Broadwater. viC&lt;' prrsidcnt: Mar·
joe .Johnson Gr instead, secretary,
and Phyllis Van Matre Scott ,

COLUMBUS - Donna .Joann
Roush has been selected as Nurse of
the Month at Riverside Hospit al,
Col umbus , in the Intensive cardiac
care unit.
Roush, a 1974 graduate of Meigs
High School, was a Candy Striper at
Veterans Memorial Hospital dur·
ing her high school yea1~ and was
awarded a $500 nursing scholarship
by tbe Women's Auxiliary of the
hospital in 1974.
She attendl&gt;d the Holzer School of
Nursing and received her RN In
19TI. She was employed at Veterans
Memorial and thl' Holzer Medical
Cent er before joining tbe starr at
Riverside Hospital.
She is the daughter of Dallas and
Josephine Blevins of Middlepo11
and is manied to Rogl'r Ro ush, also
fo rmerly of Middleport.

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
DENA H. RAYMOND
Admlniotntor of 1 he
Etttta of

P.M . In tho court. f'llr10n1
knowing ony ,..1011 why lflo
co...,totnt lhould not be
unnted •'-ld lf&gt;PIIr ll'ld In·

M1rthll Roblnaon,

Pllolntlff,

-VI-

FLO YO GOULD. et ol .,
Oefondonto.
Coao No. 24708
PUBUCATION OF NOTICE
• • To .. - · lntorwtod In
the 111"" of Mortho Robin ·
.,n, ..,._od, Iota of 48739
S.R . 884, Pomeroy, Molgo
County, Ohio, Molgo County
Plvbtta Court. Cuo No.
24.708, ln..,dlng, bul not
Nmllod to, GtedVI Borbr,
o- Brldd11, Ronlfd D•

Donna ,Joann Roush

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
Pn SHOP
EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS.
KlnENS , BIRO
SEED, CAGES t1o
AQUARIUMS

Robert E. Bud&lt;,
Judge
(6) 20. 27; t61 3 Jtc

59 II. 2nd be.
Middleport
.... , DNr ,. " · · · ....

992-6784

5-20.'86' I mo .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Moy 16, 1986. In tile
Molgo County Proboto Court,
Cao No. 26137, Kathy Am
Hyoelt, 18 Anile Streo~ Po·
moroy, Ohio 4&amp;718, Wll IJl'
pointed ExOCUirix of tho • ·
tole of Horry C. Wotson, do·
cooled, toto of 310 WotogaM
Slftel. Pomeroy,
Melgo
County. Ohio, 4&amp;789.
Robert E. Bud&lt;,
Proboto Judge

CLC COINS
GOLD COINS
BASEBAll CAIDS
MOTHEI'S DAY &amp;
GIADUA110N
I OZ. SILVER BARS
COINS

&amp; Silver

985-3937

4 IN. BLOOMING GERANIUMS....... ~·... 75(
61f2 IN. COMBINATION POTS......... ~.,.$300
·BEDDING PLANTS.......................... .r!~!. $7 SO
HANGING BASKETS ........................ ~~.$ 5SO
&amp; MONDAY,

9·5 -

MEMORIAL WEEKEND
SUNDAY 1·5

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh.
Ph.

992 ·S 77 6

treasurer.

VAUGHN M. SWAIN,
ot at .,
Dttendonll.

C110NO. 26061
PUBUCATION OF
NOTICE

To tl-•~&gt;••-tn
tho Elllto of Flo"""' Anno

p..,-

Coun. Cooo No. 26.061 ,
ln ... dlng. bul not lnitod to,
Mildred SWiin FQtlllh, Oolil
Swoin Buckley, Golden SWiin

=--=~

Frye, o..-.n - · Jurw
Swoin Lomko. Romold Miller,
Robert
Lauro Alii.
Boutoh Hoffmann, Bt•ltl Hoi·
fmtn, Cillnl1ont Foggh, 11o1ty
Caito. Sharon Wtlo, O.IY

M....

Fogglno, one! tho unknown
.,ovivlng - ·· tegc*i'n '· heln. diltnbU'tlll.
.-t of kln 111&lt;1 Mllgno. Kony,

of Ftoronco Anno 8oy,
deceMM.
A oon..,toint hoi boon lied

Poorl H. SWiin, Jr., odnin·
illrllor. liking tho court to
by

det~e

thl pii"'Inl entitled
"' _ . , , •• proportioo by tho
,,..,. of ln-.te
A h-gonthoco~tointwill
be hold on tt. 8th doy al July,

s..........

Pmt-.-

iUI-IIWd.. Wcod11do,
flY n:m.
~. Sill.--.

Fresh tashions in
SPRING · SUMMER
PATTERN CATALOG.
Free panem offer. Send
$2 + 7~ postage.
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.
t3t.ilcfd Altodl Gulttl

t~ 'n' EllfT""""'

r-

1988, 11 1:30 O'dod&lt; P.M. In
tho court. Plt'IOI'II lcnowing
.,Y
why tho co...,loinl

ohoutd not bo gr•tod ohould
-•dlnlonnthocourtll
lhlllimo. The

Court, Court Hou11, Pomon&gt;y,
Ohio 46769. Each of you ...
requira:t to lf1awer thil comploint .wilhln 28 doVIoflhol_,
d... of ... bllcttlon. The loll
dote of ...il May 20,
19B6 .
Robort E. Bud&lt;

Judge

UTOMOTIVE

SALES

ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
DEALERSHIPS IS NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR THE
POSITION OF SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Dally , ..... ...... .................... ... 25 Cents
Subscribers not desh1n g to pay the car·
rter may remit il advanc. direct to
Tht Dally Sent inel on aJ, 6 or 12 month .

•No Experience Necessary

ba l ls. Cred it will bf given carrl~ each
•

Call Mr. Gilmore For
Appointment

No subscriptions by mall permUted In

towns where home ca rrier serv ice Is
available.
Malt 8ubo&lt;l'fplloa1
lnlldl! Oldo

Between 10 a.m. ~ 6

13 Weeks ................... .... ...... ... .. 114.56
26 Wccl&lt;s ............. ... .. ..... .. ...... ... Slll.12

p~.

. Monday-Saturday Except ThuiSday

w....................................... $.l8.24

-------------

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRI CES7
BLENDED TO

YOUR NEEDS

MGM Farm City

Opportunity

Month ................. ....... .... ... ..$4.80
Year ........... ...................... 157.20

54 Misc . Merchandise

BULK OR BAGGED

Individual to serve lhe capacity as a full
time activities director I social service
director far a 2S bed SNF /ICF nursing
facilily. Experience is preferred. If
interested please pick up application at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 11 Stfr E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Oh.

One Week ...... ............................. $1.10

ANTIQUE SAL£
This is 1 person11 collet·
tion . lily 21. 4·9 p.m., 22.
9·9; 23, 9-9. One mile south
of tile Ritchie Bridlt on
Route 2, R1venswood. First
tumolf aoina south p1st the
scenic overtook. Ed Kells
res. W.tch for sips. Wall
telephone. chine. aim·
ware. stonew1re, coffee
mills, butt11 molds, ctoch,
sllip bells. key collection,
toblcco cullers &amp; much,
· much more.

PLENTY OF
SPREADERS

Help Wanted

NEEDED

SUJISCRIP110N RAT I'll
By Carrll!r or Motor Rout.e

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

court illoooltd

In tho Meigs County Probllo

!51 6. tl. 20 3tc

667-3271
Cutptre the O•tllty
Before Y!.~.·tur mo .

CALL

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTON.E
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
Howanl

POMEROY
992 · 2181

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and ramod~!lling
- Rooting and gu11e r work

'-Concrete work
- Plumbing and ttlactrical
w ork

!Free Estimates)

V. C. .YOUNG Ill
992 -621S or 992·73 14
Pomeroy, Ohio

2

CAR GARAGE
24'x28' Complete
T·ll 1 Sidina. 1 Overhead
Wood Doors, I Entrance
Door, S Windows. Built on
Concrete Slab.

7

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reo1anoble Prices"

949-2801
or 949-2860

PH.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16 ·' 86 tfn

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

1-17·llHfn

RADIATOR
SERVICE

A/C
APPliANCE REPAIR
Experienced Service in
Microwaw Ovens ,
Ranges, Air
Conditioners ,
Refrigerators , Washers
&amp; Dryers , 1Vs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

24 Hr. !mwgoncy S"'"'
949·2145
Hll ...

MANLEYS
TRASH
SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD
992·2 196

Middleport, Ohio

1·13·tfc
FOR IHE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
•VInyl Replacementl

Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
•Commercial Container
Service Available•
CALL 992-3194
5/ 8·1 mo .

Windowa
•JA " lnsula1ed Glass
•l ilt In To Clean

•Moat W indows Priced

under '300

FREE ESTIMATES
J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.

992-2772

5·10.'86 ' I mo .

ACCENT

EUGENE t ONG

FENCE COMPANY

SUPERIOR

After 5 Ccoll

SIDING CO.
VINJL &amp; AWMINUM

PH. 992·6931
742·2027

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remode ling

Bg~

~FiFWf -

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years

"Free Estimates "

.. ,," Estimates"
Installation Availoble

4/ I n

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

CAll COlliCT:
Ph. (614) 843-S425
s.t2 .'86·2 mo .

Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARiETY ITEMS

K•••

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W; VA.

304·773-5222

5·15.'86·1 mo.

5·19.'86'· 1 mo .

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
Sp,lna

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING
IN(IUOIS PltNT
&amp; IAIOI

$9 5

FREE ESTIMATES

Ph. 992-5006
or 742-3147

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1916

992-3361

5·19.'86-ttn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992·5875 Or
742-3195

ll ·I4·11C

FOUNTA I N
HESTAURA"T
Located in the

Saddtebrook Inn

Rt 62 , 8 mit" 10~1h ol
thtt Pomeraw ·Muon Bridgt~

Choose from 3 Meats-

~

&amp;
REPAIRS

Ham, Chidctn or laktd Sttok
S.rnd with 4 'pgttobln,
solod, duurl and drink.

SUNDAY BUFFIT- 4.95
I UO a.m. lo 2:00 p.m.

SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET
Hob10n Rd., Middleport

Childrtn 11 &amp; !Jrld.r - 'IJ rriu
! &amp; Undtr fi[E
ll11r 'ipH"iah ~

WHO!£ IPPI£

LARRY'S

992-6173

PIIS- '4.50

5/ 13/ 1 mo

5·1.'86· 1 1110.

'VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Roger Hysell
Garage

BISSELL
SIDING
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trans•lulon

PH. 949-280 I
or 949-286D

PH.

CO.

No Sunday Calls

Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24·tfc

3/11 /tl,

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEID QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wt Hue Afull TIMt
Shop Ttchllclu
oa Duly
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985·3307
4/ l/tfn

•Insulation

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replace m ent Windows
•New Roofin g

" FREE ISTIMATIS"
JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
J/

/ 86/ tfn

!CUI OUT FOR FU1URE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
S~RVICE
985-3561

FOR SALE
We aro olferin&amp; for sale
one 1976 Estate Mobile
Home, siztl2•65. toaether
with contents, in FOd con·
dition with new 1001.
This mobile lllme and
contents are appr1islll It
$9,000.00 in the [stilt of
lllry E. Furbee. Decusead.
The mobile Ill me is
loc.lted on the re11 estate
owned by Rlymond Furbee
in Grut Bend, Ohio, on
St1te Route 124. sl1 (6)
miles mt of RKine, Ohio ,
or four (4) miles west of
the R1venswood Bridae on
State Route 124.
Immediate Possession.
Mobile Home 1111 st be moved
11om present locatiOn.
Slle subject to the ap·
prml of the.Meics County
Probltt Court.
More lnform1tion can be
obllined by contactina:
Raymond Furbee It
614) 843-5331
52795 Slate Route 124
R1cine. OH 45n1
or
• Ju1nit1 Sayre et
(614) 843-5491
~3380 State Route 338
Portland, Olt. 45770 ,
Co·Fiducilries of the
Estate of Mary E. Furbee,
Deceued.

•LOCALLY OWNIO

•LOCAL~BOR
New LO&lt;otion:

debl Buildittj!

. I61 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

•role

Bui~Gncs

SALES

*SIOIIII Buil~n11

&amp; SERVICE

We CerTV Fishing Supplies

Pay VDur Cable tlo
Phone Bills Here

iAU. SIZES AiAILABll

BUSIN£11 PHONE

All Makes

•Washers •Dist'lwuhars
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

4-5-lfC

Dn

,

lg

,~

CHEV TRUCKS
Ftndm (73-80) .......... 140
Doors 173·85 1............. 110
Front Bumpers ............. 170
FORD TRUCKS
Fenden (73-791 .......... 140
Doors (73 ·7'1 .......... 1100
Rad. Support ............. 1110
Grill Shell .................. 1 110
WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
Darwin, Ohio

992-7013

992 -5!53
5-16."86·1 mo.

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

16141 992-6550
RISII£11(£ PHON£

16141 992-7754

112! ·nn

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authoriud John DH re,
Naw Holland , 8uth Hog
Form Equipment

Plumbing Service

·

Farm Equipment
Parle &amp; Setvlce

1· 3·'86 tic

Trenching of Any Type
Backhoe Service

•

Giveaway

Frea kitt..,, lhort haired , gr_,- &amp;
whitl flmAII, 7 w.... a old. C11\
614·446·2383.
Black male a...bldor co good
homtl. S.rthe Frecttet. C1ll
61 4·379·2408.

2 eute playful klttll'la . Bl.ck with
long h1ir . Call 014 ·742 -3175.
Tame biKkb.,. plan1a to glv ...
way . Ctll 814 ·941· 2272 .
Garm1n Shepherd puppin to
givaaway to good ho,. . Mi11..t
breed, h111thy. bllartlful . Call
61 4·992·to92 .

Btu •wtt itt p lrlfi:Ml. c-u a, 10 1n1
food • KC . .IOrill. 304· t'71·
1•33 •ft.,. 7 p .m.

Kitten1 . 2 mal• and 2 femtMn. 3
with long t'tair. 719 McCoUouth
Rood, 304·675· t3t2 .
Kitt•u . long 1nd lhor1 hllr.

lilon• ~-176- 7&amp;41 .

6 Lost and Found
LOST Quarter k111t Keap1M1
di1mond engagement r ing .
Holzer bltw... p~rktng lot &amp;
pldillrict Wlrd. Atward . C1ll
61 4·379·2268.
FOUND, m .. , Cock« Sp~nltl,
Champagne color. vicinity Htcii OIY Hll Eltate, pllon1 ~- 875 1989.

LOST OR STOLEN, bloclllob11·
dor pup 7 monthl old , childs Ptt.
REWARD, 304·175·53t0.

Yard Sale

.. .... Giiffiiiolrs..........
&amp; Vicinity
Gtllipo lil Flea Market. bcettd
Atl. 35 • 180 . Our Third yelt.

9

Wanted To Buy

We PI'¥ euh for late model el••n
uaed cars.
Jim Mink Chw.-Ok:IJ Inc.
8111 Gene Jotlnton
114·446·31172
TOP CASH plOd fol ' 83 modtl
1nd n.wer used ean . Smittt
Buick- Pontile, 1911 Entam
Ave .. G111ipolil . C1ll 614· 4411 -

2292.

Wane.:! to buy Milt toy blldl
poodle. Call tftlf 5 , 614-26111989.
Buying daily gold , lilver coN11,
rtngs, jewelry, .titling ware , old
coinl. llrge currlrtey. Top pri·
ctt. Ed . Burken Btrber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Midd lepo rt, Oh. 114·
992·:J.t76

EmploymP.nl
ServtGI!S

Septic Systems
Ucenaed &amp; Bonded

WIWAMS TRENCHING
SERVICE

11

Help Wanted

Rt . 4 , Hysell Run Rd .

Pomoroy, Ohio 45769
Ph t6141 992· 2834.
992·8704
FREE ESTIMATES

5·7·1 mo.

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Carelaller to live-in ap1rtment
eorf'C)iu. Call 304-e7Pi-5104.
R•p• Needed fur bus;n"' ac coun ts. Fulf ·tim• . 180.000180,000· Pert· Tim1, 112 .000·
t18,000 . No selling, repe1t
buti'INI. Set your own hour•
Tr~lning JJI'OYkltcl . C•ll 1-512·
938·6870. M ·F, Btm 10 6pm
(Centr•l Standerd Time) .

Temporary telephone ul• p.o .
~a .

Call 114· . .5· 3730

tween 5 &amp; 9
Telephone

or'l ThUr~ .

solicitor~ .

be·

Call 514 -

446-IUO. EOE·M ·f ·H .

•Residential
•Commercial

•Industrial

367-0317

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)

367·7560- 367-7671

RACINE, OHIO
Dlfico 949 -2438
lmtrgency 949-2516

. CHISHIRI, OHIO

2108 or 1·800 -282· 2117 .

Lowboy Hauling

~
If NO ANSWIR CAll:

NOAH'S ARK ANIMAL PARK.
School•. church• . complf'ly
picnics, birthd1y Ptrt'- .,d
ftmily reunions. Call 51 4· 384·

Custom Welding

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
• BULLDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •ORAGLINE
SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
· LAND

SWEEPER 1nd ,.,..ing m.:htne
rep1ir. p1rtl, 1nd 11.1ppti... Pidl
up 1nd deliv.ry . 0.-vl• V.cuum
Cleaner. one htff mil• up
Georg• Creek Rd. C1ll &amp;14·
441·0294 .

OpenWedn .. day, Frid-v, Seandey, Sundty.

BOGGS

Dealer

3 Announcemenu

7

Real Estate General
LIT'S BUILD UP TOCITHfRI

Announ ce 111enIs

4
SATElliTE
SALES

pdate Your Syl'lema Now

1

&amp; SOUP
Spe~l•l

UNDERPINNING

DRILLED &amp;
SERVICED

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

742-2306
or 742-3171

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
l ·ll tfn

WATER
WELLS

Mila B. Hutchison
Contractor

PH.

Clinical Audiologist

5·20· '86·1 mo .

CONSTRUCTION

NEW HOMES.
ROOFS, DECKS ,
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

-z

992-2772

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

HUTCHISON

~

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.
James

CONTRACTING
DOZER , BACKHOE,
'mENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS llo SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMEIIIT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DU.MP TRUCK STONE
llo DIRT
Jl MCll FFORO
PH . 992· 7201

ROOFING

-az: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
:I: Licensed

J&amp;F

L. Writesel

FREE HEARING TESIS WEDNESDAYS
Col11)uterized
Hearirt Air Selection
c:J
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

$6,495°0

4·15·'86·\C

BISSELL
BUILDERS

10·8·ttC

10·14·tlc

Towna.,d. Orlline Swain

Two piece dress
wilh easy top and elastic
waist ski~ . Comes in
sho~. three· qua~er and
tong sleeves . Misses
Sizes 12 to 20.
$3.25 lor each paHem.
Add 7~ each panem for
postage, handling.
!lend to:

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL ·
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEl CAU
lipley Office
Far Hours
304-372-57D9

t. tote of 56481

T. R. 1016. BOK 144, Rood•
ville, Molgt County, Cillo
4ll772, Molgt County

11

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, lU Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457!'B.

SIUU ANIMAl,HOUIS
Mon.·Wod.·Thurs. 3·5 pm
Tuos. 6:30·1: Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10· 11:30 om
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;
5111GIIJ IY APPT.

- Ill-

PATTERNS

Nev.r York, New York 10017.

PT. PLIASANT OFFICE
305 Jackaon An.

Ptolntlff.

ANNE ADAMS

1

IOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VETEI1NAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

YOUNG'S

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

5·5·1 mo . pd.

o--m.

Boy, doc

&amp; SUPPLIES

Buying Gold

Lena K. Nelletrowd,

Ftorenc::e Ame Bey.

'1134

Po1111roy
J/1/rtn

CJII'ed to enawer thil comploint within 28 dtya of tho
.... clote of ... bllcotion. Tho
loll dote of publication II Juno
3, 1988.

Public Notice

h.,

992-3345

form the court 11 IIlii time.

Sun ::;hine collect ion wa~ tak&lt;'n

MEMORIAL WEEK SPECIALS

OPEN DAILY

t04 Mulbony

The court II loootod in lflo
Moigo County Probelo Coun.
Court Hou11, Pomeroy. Ohio
4&amp;789. Eoc:h of you .,. , .

IN THE
COMMON PLEASE COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, 0 ..0
PEARL H. SWAIN, JR .
Admlniotrotor of tho E•oto
of

of his March bn'lhd ay . A thank you
no tr ·was read for flowL'rs spnt 10
Ca nie King. Mrs. St!'lla Atkins anc\
Mrs. PauU n~ Atkins gav~ rrpo 11s
on th~lr trip 10 rl01ida for lh(•
Grand Chapter insj)f('tion

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue ,

OOiold e Ohio
1J Wccl&lt;a ........ ... ............ ........... $15.60
26 Wccl&lt;s, ....... .......................... $.!1.211
·52 Wccl&lt;a ......... ...... ................. .. S59.811

Public Notice

lusinns Forrnt,
(opy SonitH, fOe.
255 Mill !1., Middltport

Public Notice

Member: Unltl'd Press Internallonal.
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nationa l
Advt&gt;rtlslng RepresentativE&gt;, Branh am

52

992-2156

161 20. 27: tBI 4 , 3tc

r-;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::========:;
I

CLOSED SUNDAY

!tation11y, Magnllit
Sigm, lubll11 Stamp1,

Clerk

cond class postage paid at Pornt'roy,
O hio.

month.

ond Graduation

M&gt;n. -ood:
A co""'lolnt hoi boon tlod
by D.,o H. Roymond, Ad·
mlnltlrotor, liking tho court
to 111 - . n t:o root Illite
to poy t h o - of the ootato.
A heoring on the co""'totnt
wit be hold on tho 2nd doy of
JW¥. 1988, t1 1:30 O'dod&lt;

and will be donat ed to the CanCf'r
Fund. Mrs. George talked on lh&lt;'
observance of Moth&lt;'r's Day. II
poem ent itled "Mother Lovl'" was
read by Bernice Hollman. and
another. "Unfinished Task" by
Donna Nelson . Gracie Wilson reported that Lois Pau l~~· · s hPallh is
improved.
Bob Reed gave the blessing and
refreshments wer~ setved by the
committe&lt;'. Helen .Johnson , Lois
Thompson , Marjmie Warn!'r. and
J ack and Grac~ Warner.

y,., Pil•l'-1 NHit

PW!: OffiCI !u11111oi I
furnlt•ro, Wedding

dtv . . . . heiro, dlo·
trloute., ntlll of kln ond • ·
ligna, H lftY, of Morthe Robin·

lishing Company/Mulllmedla. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·

On~

Ftt All

~.

lUll'S Hl-lt8 1
.4. Dlvlflktn of Multimedia. Inc.

On~

QUAUIY
PRINT SHOP

Long. Uoyd twwk. ll'ld ""'
unt.nown .,,.lvtnu IPOUH.

The Daily Sentinel
Published e-very afternoon. Monda)l
through Friday. Ill Cour t St .. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub-

liE

OES conducts meeting
A yard and bake sa le was
planned for.June6and7 at the home
of Joan Kaldor when the Harrison·
vi lle Chapter, Order of the Eastern
Star, mrt recently at the Masonic
Temple.
Avanelle George, associate rna ·
Iron, and Larry Well, worthy
patron, presided at the meeting.
Presented were Stella Atkin s,
grand representative to Florida lor
District 25, all past matrons, past
patrons, honored Masons, those
hav ing grand appo intments and 00
year member, Ruby Diehl.
It was noted taht the Past
Matrons Club will meet J une 'Zl at
the home of Pearl Canaday.
Birthdays observed at the meeting
were Clara Mae Hysell, Bernice
HofCf!lan and Betty Bishop, and
Norman Will who was lil a! the time

The Daily

Ohio

Business Services

County Firemen's Association
meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
Orang!' Township Fire Statton,
Tuppers Plal~s.

Wahama alumni set event

OWE honors employers
The Occupational Work Expe·
rience Class of Meigs High School
held an Employee·Employer Appreciation Breakfast at Pleasers
Restaurant. This informal break·
last replaced the banquet held in
previous years.
The students presented certifl·
ca tes to their employers to smw
their appreciation for allowing
them to be a part of thl'lr business
establishment.
Employers that allf!!ded were:
Bill Haptonstall, Sears; Kelly Lee,
Rite Ald Pharmacy; Carmel Sisson
and Jennie UtUe, Dollar General
Store; Dick Van Gundy, Pleasers;
Bob McClure, McClure's Dairy
Isle; Dennis Saelens, Dairy Valley;
Anita Jacobs. Pomeroy Sundry
Store; Peat Carnahan, Peat's
Sharpen Up: and Dr. Harold

Pomeroy-

Community calendar I area happenings

Beat of the bend

By BOB HOEFUCH

Tuesday. May 20, 1986

Pomeroy . Middleport. Ohio

Aet1il Seeurfty in Loe•l Store,
Store Datecthle. St1rt at U .$5
per t'tour, Training Progr.n &amp;
Equipment inc luded. Sud beckgrounc:l lnfOrmanon w -phone
No . ToFIIhen BigWh..INo. 47.
1135 U.S . 23 South, DeiiWirt.
Oh 4301&amp; , An11 : Mike Froncko wlak. Dlat. l. P. MQr . No phone
ctlla please.
EXPERIENCED DECK HANDS

lntlt'atecl In Ml time employ.
mtnt. JUbmin eppllcation to
M·G TRANSPORT SERVICES
267 UPI&gt;If RNif Ad, Golli!M&gt;IIo.
Oh, or 114-448· 2161 .

�11

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

51

Apartment
for Rent

coll312-741 -8400 oat. 313.

Fum . apts. 1 • 2 bdr. U315 •

Babylttttr full to pert time. 2
chlldr•1, Ewlka SIM At. ar...
PIHH Clll WtdnlldiY Mey 21

Gtlllpolil. Call 446· 441 6 attar

oltlf 10:00AM, I14-211·1781.

Fum . opto. 1 bel•. 1228 utHnlo0

U80. utllltloo pd. 701 4111

2 bdr. apt. utllti11 furnlthed,

v..,ding Hott•• We era ••·
pandlng aur Mrvlcet. Applicetiont are being tcttptld for
pan-tlmt, full -time tmptoy·
m•t- ApPty In penon betwMn
2 -5 p .m . Mondey or Tueadey at
LIUQhUn Vendlng -44 State St.

UOO par month . No children, no

pelt,

utiUtiH . Call614-446·7729.
1 bedroom apt . for rent. Baak)
rltlt 1tart1 t215 . a month thlt
includ• al utllitl•. Dapoelt
required of t200 . Corrtlct VUIIQI Manor Apt. Middleport.
8U-192·7787. Equ1 l Hou1lng
0 pportunlty .

MUit be ct.pendtble . Cell 814·

448-1600.

A d nOW a man who
• •• n
possibly stepped On some
tOeS On hiS way Up ... "

"

For rent: 2 bedroom f\lmilhN
apt. Adutta only. Call 814-992·

2749.

·i;-;;::~~:;:;:;:;:::;;:;:=:,~;:;,;:;:;::;~===::1

Govemment
Jobs . Hiring.
.t18,040
189,230-yr. Now
Call

31

Homes for Sale

for o.m.. t 19d.,al \let .

denenl otfica dtaning for 1oe11
phvtlclln's offic:e. Send resume
11 theDalty Sen1lnel box 729 SC
~rnero,.. OH.
Easy AaSimbtv Workl f714.00

per 100. Guartnteed Peyment.

No Stlet . Dattllt ·· Sand
Jtamped envelope: Elen-6847
~ 18

Enterpriu. Ft . Pierce Fl.
334B2.
AVON , 3 open terrltori M. Call

304-876-1429.
EJCPMienoed electronic In ahop
rep.trm~n, full benefitt, day
tMft. Monday·fridaoy, located in
f:olnt Pleasant 1r11. Wri1e Box
S -1&amp;. Pt. Pit. Regluer. Box
237,Point PINsent, W. Va.

26550
REPS NEEDED, for bu1ine11
a'c countt. Full Time teO.OOO·
*80.000; Part-time eu.ooot1B,OOO; no aelling, repeat
butlnMt. Set your own houra.
Tfalnlng provided. Call: 1-612 938-8870. M-F, Bam to Spm
(Central Standard Time) .
Sonwoneto nay with and can
for eldertv lady. 304-675-3470
or 87&amp;-5243
federal. State Md Civil Service
JObl now available in your trea.
For i'lformadon c1ll (806)844·

9533 Dept. 1201 .
Situations
Wanted

Will do aH typ• muonry work.
Brick, block, ltoneand concrete.
Free e~tlm1ttt1 . Call 814-7422290 Of 304-773-6971 .

18 Wanted to Do
Fence, twingt. toyt, playmates,

hot meal1. Call 614 -446-7476
for the best cere your child could

got.
For 11la-bleck muthroom dirt,
und &amp; gravel. t1one. fill dirt.
Delivered . Don 'alAndacapeStr·

Coli 61 4· 448·9148 ..

Will babytit all hour~, IICpttti.,ced , in Addlton area. Call

614· 387-n57.
Will do baby sining in my home.
call 304-&amp;76 -31580 after 6 :00

PM.

Ftnanml

We built big 4 bdr.. Early
Am...-ican homu 118. 996 on
your lot . Sae our new model
home. C•ll614-886-7311 .
30 ICfl, 3 bedroom hou 11,
tobacco base, Mercerville. Call
6U-266-93SO.
3-4 bdr. carpeted. ramodeled,
nice, new tiding, bailment. YJ
acre. 122.500. Call 614-448·
2034 after 6PM .
By ownar- amall 2 bedroom
home with YJ acrahilllldelotand
outbuilding. 6 mll11 south of
Gallipolis. Kriner Ridge Rd . Firlt
houu on right from Rt. 218.
'14,000. Pay 14,000 down and
ower will help fln~~nce balence.
Call 614 · 446-2917.
Plnaantty aheded. Insulated, 2
atory house with storm windowt. garage. niW' sewer addl·
lion 125 .000. Call 61 4 -4482026 or eH-245 -9180.

C1rryout. bunge, St. highway,
good locatton. Sarious lnqulr•
a~ty . Call bltwHn lam 6 91m.

814· 387·048B .
Stotlon fully oqulppod Boouty
Shop, Gtorgu CrHk Rd. OpporNnltv to be your own bou.
Cell evenk'lg 614 -446 -7478.
Elltlblilhed and growing florist
•hop for tale In Maaon. w.v.
Re110n for telling Ia Ill health. If
genuinely nt•••tld e~ll. 304·

773·15117&amp; o• 30' ·773·&amp;831
"'"' 5o30 pm.

:___ _::.____ _,cFor ule Of' lea11 In Middleport,
Oh)o. Bar whh D-15 Licente,
ANt. with D-3 llcanaa, rental
property. buain ... front. Buy or
1...1 1 or mora or all of above.
Termi avallllble. Phone 114·
ae2-8217.,.. 114-992· 7521 1o.
~olntmln'l. No Info. given

ower phone.

Profeuional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
red llcover your pleno't beautiful
tone, caM tpday, Wttdl Kev-

bo•d. 304-87&amp;·5500 "' 175·
3B24.

- - - - - - - - -3 rooms. fumlahtd. Nopett. Call

33

514-949-2253.
4 room 1 'h bath in country. Call

Farms for Sale

81 4·892-3312.
88 Acr• . Two ttory raetored
home, fuel oM f\lrnec:e, wooctburner. ~one fireplace. large
bam, gram..,, milk house, worlc
ahop ..,d other bulldinp. Rural
wat..-. Buutiful Jilting over~oklngRaccoonCI"Hk . Rt.160
N'l Ewinglon. Shown by tppoinl ment only. Call 114· 388-8610.
Mini Farm on McCumber Road .
6 ac:r• . 3 bedroom
Real
nice. Call814-992-2143. Aft•
5:00 call 814·992-8373.

hou••·

1-:;;:;;::::;:::=:::;:::;:::::::==..
I
36 Lots &amp; Acreage

APARTMENTS, moblta hom•,
houa•. Pt. PI 1M ant end Oalllpo-

Television
Viewing

1978 Honda XL350, ttrNt tnd
trail. txcshape, phont304 -57B·

3158.

1703,

64 Misc .

Suzuki 650 QT,

Merchandise

46

3 bldroom, newly redecorated, 1 to 6 1crea. partially wooded
aluminum afding , l1r~1 carport, Iota. Tupper Pt11na 1nd Chetter,
g•r•g•. on IAiacrelot 1nChnter. water and approved road to ..ch
On•fourth mile on 248 off At. "lot. Reaaonably priced, will
7. 814-986-4356.
finance. 10 percent down . Call

814-986-3694.

3 bedroom. lg. kitchen, he.t
pu.,..,, air cond. carpeted, gar·
Syrac::ute. 614-992-3402
after 5 pm.

•o•.

1 S'h a ern, At. 2 . Point Pleeunt.
6 mil•homtown, e15,000.00.

6 room house in Middleport. 3
bedroom. 1 Vt baths. fully car•
petld, on level kJt. 814-992-

20 acraa wooded lend, 5 to 7
1Cr81 meadow. 304-176-5699.
8:00 to 10:00 PM.

3610.
Reduced far quick 11le. Cute 3
bedroom hou11. vlnyletlding. 1
c:ar u•-o•. located on 1 we,
near Tupplt's Plaint. U9,500.
Call 614 -187 - 3378 after
4:00pm.
Quality, large two bedroom
home on choice i.-ge lot in
Syracute. Recently remodlled,
new complete kitchen and
laundry. 614-992-5324.
7 room house 111:3 bath, 4
bedroom, garage. 770 Aah
sn..t, Middlapon, Ohkl. Ctll

114-992·871,.

Hou11 for ula in Ch•1er, Ohio.
7 roomt, batement, garage, on
on•tenth of an acre. Walking
dlttence of tehool, atore, fire
houn. U8,500. Call 614·986·

3671 .
Gallipolia Ferry, . 3 bedroom
r1nch . ailelec. 21otl, central air,
large deck, ltove, rl'f end
dilhwethlt', an1c:htd gerage , a

Y" old, 304-175-2932.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT 36.
PHONE 114-4'S· 7274
1 4x 70 Feattvel. 2 bdr.. 2 full
bathl, Iota of clo ..ts, utility
room, AC . Call 814·448-8241
anytime.
72 Freedom 14~~:70. 3 bdr.,
PlrtiV remodeled, equipped for
woodbumer, porch &amp; underpinning. 14,600. Call 814-379-

280B.
1977 Holley Park 12d0. Vllf'V
good con d. Partly furnished, CA
&amp; other eiCiraa, 17,600 . Call

114-245·6120,
For aale 1974 Freedom mobile
home 12x65, rehig ., stove, new
carpeting, undtrplnning. Kaf,rHanilburg Rd .. 18.600. Call
614-448· 4410 Of $14-288 -

6878.
Vindlll 12~~:83 completely fur·
nithed, 16,000. Cell eve. 814-

448-1U7 o• 114-U&amp;-92&amp;6 .
1977 12x60 Nashua mobile
home. 2 btdroom, all eltc:trlc.

Coli &amp;14-448-2251 .
1977 mobile homa 14x70, all
electric. central air. othlf t~~tru
•9,000. Rio Grande, OH, 814-

245 ·SB01
1980 Liberty 14x54'"' 2 bedroom, unfurnished. vinyl underpinning Included. Mutt aell. Call

304· 773-6673.
Mobfla home for aele. 14x70
1'878 3 bedroom, 1 Yt bath, total
electric. 18500. Call 814-2471918 Schult 2 bedroom trailer.
excaptfonllly good condition,
furnlthed, plua mlcrowiYI, air
c:onditlontr, storm wlndowa.
metll outbuilding. prlc.d to tell.

41

Rant, laue. land contract, 3br' •
Rodney Village II; 2 br'a-Eureka:
3br Evan• Maighta; Deposit &amp;
referencet required . Blackburn

Furniahed room •us mo .,
utlllti• psld, there bath. lingle
mala. 919 2nd. Ava .. Gallipollt.
Clll441-4416 after 7pm.

46

10n, Oh. 814-218-5930.
For 1111
n•mowara
Vtrd· man
mowart,
good
uaed
from
150t76. Echo trimmen on ute.
Chltd,ena Saw Suppty, Vinton.
Oh. 614-381-8114 .

S·;t.

5

=====:;==========!.!

~.:"':•:•:"::...._::"':·
66

Pet1 for Sale

Space for Rent

0169 .
For 11le g..-~ga equipment. Call
614-448-3243 ev.,lngt.
Good uatd bargain cotorlV't for
ula. Call 614· 448-1149.
Refrigerator. wather a dryer.
twlnbld. ch•t. dr•••· blbvbed. car s ..t. Tapp.n l:alilt-ln
dlthwasher . Call 814· 4•8 ·

Nice 3 bdr .. full buernent. CA.
tenc:sdyard. Rt. 141 , e325plut
dep. Cell 814-852-2816 after&amp; .
Nice 3 bdr., full b•ament. CA.
fancsd yard. At. 141 . t325 plua
dap. Ce ll 814-852-2816 aftwl5.
928 First Ave., 6 roomt &amp; b•th.
Call 614·"8-3945 aft..- 4PM.
Hou11 4 rooms • ~h . loe~~t«&lt;
1928'h Cht~tnut St. t160 mo .,
175 dep. Call 814· 446·3870.
New Haven ar11, 3 bedroom
home it internted ca11304· 8B2·

2946.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Fulty furnithed, AC. 111 utiltl•
paid. adult• ontv . Call814-448·
4110 or 814-446 -2003.
Unfurniahlld 12x150, Wllhlr·
dryer hoOk-up . 1 ml , on Oaoro•

C•Hk Rd. Coli 814·441-4389
.. 304-576·9780.
2 6 3 bdr mobila hom•. AC,
cable TV. Bulavillt Rd. Call
814-446-06271ft• 3pm..
2 bedroom tralllf. partly furnlthed. Traillf" IPICtl. Sand Hill
Rotd convenllflt to tctloolt,
ltort and holpltal. City aewar
avtllable. Inquire Ao11lee, 304-

175·4500 botween 9:00 ond
4:00 weetc dlya .
3 bedroom part . furnished trail•
and 2 bedroom fumilhecl trait•
on Crab Creek Rold. Large yard.
gerden plot, chlldran welcome.
no Pett, 1160.00 Pit' month,

304-175-1201.

For sale: Avon doll dacanter
collactkln . Will tell by group or
by unit . 114-992-3228.
8 ft . apun alum . 11telllte dlth .
100 perc ant LN A. Dexcel 11 00
recelvar·ttltfeo and remote, le11
then year old . Will trlda for
camper. 614-n3-5847 .

1981 Monte Carlo 63,000
milu, ve t3500 080 or trade.
10ft. transport dllc. fair condition. 1400 or trlda. 304-713-

Reglsterld alit and peppar male
Schnaaer puppies. C11h only.
No Checks. Call 814· 992-2807 .
AKC rl(litttrtd Beagle puppl•.

304·372-4120.

67

Wedding QOWn 111:16. viii. other
ICCIIIOrltl. AltO bridllrl\lid

Mer c llatHi tse

51

Household Goods

1----------SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., OtiHpolia. NM &amp; ut«&lt;
WOOd·C:Oii SIOVH, 8 pc WOOd LA
aulte e399, bmk beda 11 99.
antron rec:Unara e99, ntiW &amp;
uted bedroom auit11. ranges.
wringer w11hen, &amp; thOII. New
llvlngroom ault11 1199 · *&amp;99 ,
lamp•. alao buying coal &amp; wood
atovea. Ca\1614 -441·3169 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu and chairs priced from
12815. to 1895. Tab Ill, 450 .,d
!4) to t125 . Hide-a-btdt,l390.
and up to 1550., eofa bed•
•145 , Recllnen , 1226 . to
U75.. Lamps from t2B . to
1126. pc. dlnettll from no&amp; .. '
to 435. 7 pc. 4189 and up . Wood
table with •I• duti11 .UB&amp; to
e745. Detk 1125 up to 1375 .
Hutchll, 11550. Bunk bed complete !flth mlttflll•. t275 .
and up to 1396. Baby bedl,
t1 10. Mattre11e1 or boJC
apringl . full or twin, e63 .. firm,
t73 . and •ea. Outen alts,
1225. Bad fram•. UO .M"td
t25 ., 10 gun • Gun c:ablnet1,
e350. a .. or electric rang•
1375. Baby mattr•••· 135 &amp;

- · ·· 814·742-2301 .
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.

ICO!&gt;O

bore aigtulng, fae1ory reb luting,
hourt 9:00 till dark, call 304·

676 ·4831 .
Uaad dottll, loaders, backhoes,
du~ truck•. 70 International
tr~ctor-traller, phon a 304-7367896 near Huntington. Rt. 10.
Jeager 128 portable tir c;:om·
pressor. trailer mounted , exc
cond .. 304· 458 · 1031 .
S1l1 or trldt, T9 lnlemltional
bulldozer, g11 engine, needs
work. call after !S PM . 304-676-

MENTS (Equll Housing Opportuni('l) monthty rent 1t1t11 at
1176 for 1 bedroom and t212
for 2 bedroom, depolit
IOCI1td nw Spring VIUII\' Piau
and Foodland, pool and C1bt1 TV
available, oHica hours 11 poulble10 am to 4 pmend7 pmto 1
pm MondiY· Frkfay, Call 114·
448 -2741 or IMYI m...ege.

noo.

•P'··

2 bdr. utllttill penlally furn ..

Deluxe 1 bdr., 2 car lil•-o• 800
Btodc 11t .• Chlllpolla. No pitt.
no chltdren. ref.
dap. Call

1870. 1 2xl50 tnNw ond holt

814· 288 ·112• .

I 175 rM . Coli 304-178·5288
.. 304·175-110,,
New 1 bedroom ep.tment. Call

11 4-448·0310.

a

2 bdr. apt., downtown, 8210
whhout utllill•. 1330 with

utiiRI•. Dopo1~ riQulrod. CoM
81 4-448·212t B:OOom • 8pm.

Valley Furniture, nww • uaed .
Lllrg• taction of quality furniture . 1218 hatlrn Ava ..

Oolllpollo.
For ule: white wooden able
1215. yallow kitchen chtne ca·
IHnlt
all in good c:ondltk)n .
' " at 256 So . Fourth Ava .•

•eo.

Mlddl1p0rt, Oh.

68
8r.

AM·FMAC. PS . P8,10,000ml ..

Fruit
Vegetables

~od condltk»n, t2 ,600 or best
offfer. May telle small tractor on
tr~a. Call 114-388 -8637 or

Taylor's Berry Patch. You pfckor
pick. 9am · ?pm, Mon . thru
Sat. Call 814·446·8192 .

w•

Strewbenln. Pldl; your own
beginning May 15th. Sony no
checka. B am to 8 pm. Happy
Hollow Fruit Farm. Gallipolis
Feny, WV . 304 -678 -2028 .
CkJs.t Sund1y.
Fr•h pickld atrewbenla dell·
verfld within Point PIIIUnt City
limits. Call 304-876· 1741 , no
wHk«~dcalla.

Must teii -19BO gray Buidl Sky ·
llfk. h . cond. t2400 Call
814 -268-8582 after 4 pm.
1981 BonnwHie 2 dr. loaded,
die1el. Call 814-446·3044 .
1984 Chevent 2 dr. auto , new
tirM . 25 ,000 mi., U ,800. Call

61 4-379-21B2
1979 Thunderbird blue with
white vinyl top, good con d. Call
after 8:00PM . 114-448-9284 .

Ltvestock

Can you buy Jaeps, cart, 4x4 ' •
seized tn dNQ ratda for undlt
•100 .001 Call tor flctl todtVI

Farm Equipment

U.S . 315 W..t, Jackaon, Ohio.

1977 Nova. Auto .. good ga
mileage, good Ure1. flif condi tion. •&amp;50. Call614-992-2848 .

S .E. Ohio.

Utility bldg . apl.: 30' x40'•9',
16'xB' allding door &amp; 3' aerv.
door. S5.265 eracted. Iron
Horae Bldga. 614-332-97415.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

CENTER . SR 36 W. Galllpollt,
Ohkl. Csll 614-446-97n, eva.
814-448-3892 . Up hvnt tractora with warranty over 75 u11d
tractors . 1000 toola .
International 818 mower conditioner. Oood working con·
didon. Call814-367-0493 aft..8.

1970 Chevy Ncntl SS. 3 big
bkJdt Chavy moton and othar
Chevy pant . Phon• 814 -992 -

1119
1988 Corvette convertible. Bolh
tops . 1,000 miiH onrebulh 327
4-tpeed . Good condition .
t8500 or bn1 oHar. Phone

114·247-48B1 .
1911 OldsmobMe Delta Royal.
Good body end good condition.
1600. Call 814-S93-7390 after

New ldN l1rge round

~tar .

6 P.M.
1985 Corvettaeonvertlbla. Both
topt . 1 ,000 mMa on rebulh 327
4 - apeed . Good condition .
18600 or beat offer. Phone

114-247-4881 .
1979 Pinto alation wagon.
EJictllant condition. AT .. PS ..
AC ., Nit ltll and loti more.

11 tiOO. 114·992· 2278

Coli 114·11B·8898.

7343.
1980 Ptvmouth Horozlon , neiMis
aomt body work. drive and
rtv~rtl ~d In trantmilllon,

1900.00. 304·871·8078.

62 Wanted to Buy

of gun repairs, checkering, stodl

Rt. 7. Athllil, Ohio, 814·S86·
15194, Ron McCtlntodl owner.
4 tidlett for tha Ch.alett•
Mo1or SpH&lt;tway World 100.

Now buytng shell corn or " '
com. Catlior-letlltquotn. River
City Farm Supply, 814-4-tl·

29B5.

coli 304-458· 1568.
New air cond. 11.000 btu .
Zenith VCR wkel••· Phone

dioh, 11,500.00 . 304· 575·
1712 after 7 :00.
Crafumen tabla sew t100.00.
10 n. wood llddtr UO.OO. New
van tront lilt luckakin tao.oo.
Round oN table, I ft round.
claw J*fettel, nltlda.reflnilhing
f400.00. Magnavox console.
rldio andtttreo. 460 .00. ASM u
end 1ttilitv trailer 1300.00.

Phon• 304-882· 2B04 .
19,000 btu 1lr cond, call after

1:00PM. 30,· 871· 11 39.
'84 Plyroouth Bac:c:uda, living
room auite, ref end stove,
bedroom tulle, 114· 246-9657.

'78 Cutllll wagon. 280 V-B,
19built, AT, PB, PS . 304-458-

1530.

refinishing. Alveraldt Oun Shop.

63

Livestock

Purebrld, reg. Arabian gelding.
Well train.:! . Call 614-31170493 attar e.
3 yr. old registered Appaloou

goldlng. 1300 Coli 6 14·251·
13B5

72

0394.

1971 two hltf ton lntametlonal
dUIY"C) tNck, 7ft X 14ft b.lf. UC
oond. 304-882-2887 . ·

73

Grain

Chevy

Luv

pickup

11,000.00 . 304·175·1288.
Vans

&amp; 4

W.O.

82 Chl'l'f C-20, CIFQO van, AT,

PS . PB. AM·FM c011 .. AC . Coli
11 4-448-.ta 14 before 2PM.

78 CJ -8 wnh 13,000 mllll,
13.000. Coli 114·241 ·9e24.
19715 Jaap CJ 15 good ccmd. Call

814-387-n67.

66

Building Supplies

Mixed hay •rae square balea.

11 .21. 304·175· 8678.

Building MetariH
Slocll, brick, - • plp01, win·
dowa. llnteb, etc:. Claude Winters, Rio Grandt. 0 . Call 114·

rr"m;p ort at11111

Building materlala, cement,
bloc:b allslln, '(lrd or delivery .
GalllpoUt Block Co .• 123Yt Pine
St .. Oa\lipollt. Ohto C1ll 114-

&amp;6

moo old. Coli 114·211·831 5,

' M Dodg• window van, 8
puaengtr toldlcl. 22.000 mlln.

110.1500. 304-875· 113B.

74

248-1121 .

71

Motorcycles

1984 Honda Twln11arCM200T,
VflfY low miiHge. Calll14·258·

814· 266 ·1417.

1417.
1973 Sportater and 1971
Sportster. New paint, ntw tlrft,
axcellent condldon. Call 614-·

1987 Chevy C•m•ro. ra, con·
vartlblt, restoration tttrtecl. 448·4087 bolo" IPM.
hwa all parta to compllte,

ooklng 13,000. Coli 81 4 -441· 1978 K.Wuokl 900, 11 .000.
1711 oft" &amp;PM 814· 388 · Coll814-441·2147.
9811 .

1818 110 Trlun'flh motorcycle

1878 Lincoln Mtrk IV . Good UOO. 1971 Dotoun PU 1400.

oond. 11 .100. Coli 81 4·441· Coli 814·441-01199.
0390 .
1983 Hondo · Shodow 500.
1881 Mazda RX7 5 spd. Call

•

MOL~GULE'.

THe'"~lf~

t1 ,200 . Call eva. 814· "6·

11 4-448·3231.

1437 or 814·441-9211 .

1178. Dode• Atpen 310. 11klng

1981 Honda 710 KZ like nfW'.

11.100. Colll14·241·8802.

Coli 814· 441·1428.

1

Live.
B:OO
(l) Gil The A· T_ , (CCI
The team must Slop B mad
Russian general leading a
group of terrorists in a plot
to destroy a 'Star Wars· instrumen1 and 1rigger World
War Ill. (60 min .) (R) .
Ill DekUrl

&gt;o
-I'VIU&lt;:H
-

Cup Finals Live.
(IJ • (jj) Wllo'athe Bou7

(CCI Pan 1 of 2 Tony frolics
but Angela tights when the
gang travels to CaliforniB for

the marriage of Angela 's ex·
husband. (RJ
(!)To Be Announced
II Cll ®I Flintnonea' 25th
Anni¥-ry Celebrlllion

e

Tim Conway and Harvey
Korman host the 25th anniversary ·ot television·s finn
animated situation comedy.
(60 min .)

(JJ
MacNeil· Lehrer
News hour
(j]) Novo: Tomadol iCC)

ALLEYOOP

Observation

1echniques
used to forecast the arrival

of a tornado are examined.

160 min.) IRJ.
8 :30 Cll • (Jil Growing Peln1
(CC) While on a weekend
trip. Maggie and Jason panic
when they call home and
none of the kids answer the
phone. (R] .
(!) Major IMgue BeN·
1*1: Clnclnnllli 11 St. Loula
9:00 D (J) (jl) Hunter Hunter ig·

connec1ed with

EEK&amp;MEEK

Brown
(j]) F10t1dine: Tho Bloods of

HOI !OF TO!AD.Y.

HOLLER

ex-

then drew the. last trump and conceded
a trick to the king of clubs. Making
lour spades doubled was a great result, but even down one would have
been OK. since East-West were al·
ways going to make lour hearts.
"liM NEWSPAPER l!:ft1'DP'IUIZ ASVI.

piece
a(lf'rtUrl'

Yesterday'• AMwer

24 Having

31 FragmenL

onl)' •

32 Invigorate

6 ck"
m••niuod&lt;&gt;
38 ·w~·
""
v2~ Passerine
compo5&lt;'r
bird
37 ~ nowing
26 "Arabian
aDout
Nights" hero 39 Aaseball
27 Confed·
throw
erat.e roe
41 Asian
29 Riddy
river

sum,.;
36 Nigerian
38 Wide open
40 Torn apart
42 Early

DA~I~in~CI\~~~=x~~:1~~~~~;.;tt~~~~
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints . Each day the code lel1ersare differenl.
CIYPTOQUOTE
6-20
LOJTX

case. (70 min.IIRJ.
Soundatage
• (jj) ABC Newt Nigh~ine
@ Trapper John. M.D.
12:00 ()) Beat of Groucloo
(!) Top RMk Boxi1111 fTorn
Merrillville. IN (RJ .
()) Entortairwnent Tonlght ·
Angelalonsbury talks about

rn

SNAKE!!
() 6AU5 etJ!lY- Iq17

I WISH I COUI...D

01ttr•ll11led,.. Nt.A,IIIc

DANO:: L-1 KE::

F~ISD A5f'AI~IS'

MOFMW
Xf'PPGQ

n

R f' P ·

C VT X V

G U

&lt;~

QVW

TJ

Tp

F

.I F I

JF'AXF'JQTX

P

&lt;; n

!.WFI'

QVTPM

ll

t:

II A

WRJZTPW
Yeoterday'o Cryptoqaote : THE N"Tit lN 'S HONOR IS
DEARER THAN THE NATION'S COMFORT: YES, TIIAN
TilE NATION'S UFE ITSELF. - WOOOI!OW Wli.'!ON

her role in the upcoming se·

quel, " Sidney Sheldon 's
Rage of Angels: The Story

e

(!J Rawhide
ID MoviE: 'Bma TIJ981'
• !B Eye on Hollywaod
12:111 (IJ MOVIE: 'I Love My

Cl 111111 ~ FINIIk.rll Sf'"llr.*. Inc:

... Wife'

Avt~. ,

Gallipolis .
114· 446· 7833 or 114-448-

446 - 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphostertd.
· ·

A

for short

selves in a cloak-and-dagger
game when theV take on a
routine missing persons

TRISTATE
• UPHOLSTERY SHOP

R • M Fumhure Manufacturing

t

Opening lead:

34 Co mmo n

Continues'' .

St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Oh. Coli
114-211-1470. col Evo. 114·

Pass

room,

(JJ Simon l!o Simon Rick
and A.J . quickly find them·

Upholstery

1B33.

2+
4+

Pass
Pass
Pass

fr&lt;!J(mPnt

eg

General Hauling

. 1163 Sec.

Pass
DbI.

Lucy lee Flippin . 160 min.) In

Jamet Boys W'attt Service. Also
pool• filled . Call 114-268-1141
or 114-448-11715 or 614·4467911.

87

Soelil

Nortlo

33 Re,.,arch

(!) Sport.Center
(IJ WKRP in Cincinnati
(!J ®Taxi

Co~l. llm•tona. gravel. ate.
Delivered 1 ton and up. Jim
Lanier, 304· 67&amp; -1247 or 1 715.

w...

31 Flower

Stereo.

12'7.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

2 Dermal

Tontgh1's guest is actress

676-3336.

Ken't Water SMWice. Weill,
cltltml, poola and w 1terbectt
tilled. Coli 114· 317·0623 JW
814 -317-7741 or 304-8 75 _

t763
tA 9 7 2

ur Lok i

arn

NEEDS R SIGGER
SCHOOL BUS. MAW

.2

30 Cuckoo

espionage agent . (60 min.l
(JJ Sandbaggers
(j]) Reclaiming the Future
10:20 (IJ MOVIE: 'The Sheep·
man'
10:30 ill Celebrity Chet.
@Newt
1 1:oo
CIJD(JJ®.!lll ®
Newt
ill Man fTorn U.N.C.l.E
(!) Inside the PGA Tour
(JJ SCTV
® Grell Railway Joumeys
of the World
11 :30 D (1) (lll Tonigh1 Show

BARNEY

SOUTH
tQ9613

29 Child

(JJ • Gil Spen1er: For Hire
(CCI Spenser is asked to

''

+&amp;

for lime
270em
featurt'
28 Colomhian
dt)'

ill CBN News Tonight
beautiful

"QJ 10
t K Q 10 9 4 2

24 Play

tween blacks and whites
serving in Vietnam are ex·
amined. (60 min.l
10:00 IJ (l) (jl) Sti1111ray In
Stereo .

a

• K 9 703
t A8 &gt;
• K8s 4

nativP

'Nam (CCI The conflicts be·

~E

EAST
tAJ2

3 Wrinkh•
spearean
4 Wrath
5 Well-bred
forest
14 Pyramidal 6 Irascible
7 High
roof
mountain
15 Seek alms.
8
Stupid
16 Tyke
9 Earthly
18 Marine
12 fla('k down
animaJ
19 Abrasive 17 Ho&lt;'kry
gr~at
21 Oolong,
20
African
e.g.
repuhlk
22 Chalice
23 ffiR '• dog
ve il
23 Helsinki

Fl. (2 hrs.)
(JJ Auatin City Umito:
Tanya Tucker I Sowyar

Bulldour work and dump truck
work. Danny Chapman. 30•·

86

river

II Church
dignitary
IS Shake-

tion, featured from Miami.

COt". Fourth and Pine
Oalllpolla. Ohio
Phone 814·448- 3888 or 814·

Good-1 Excavating, bllemtntl,
footart. drlvewl'(a, 1eptlc tank•.
landscaping. Call anytimt 81444&amp;·4637, J1m11 L. Davison.
Jr. owner.

a deadly

banquet. (60 min.) (R).
II Cll 00 t 986 Mill USA
Pageant Bob Barker and
Mary Frann hos1 the 35th
annual Miss USA competi-

SCMETHIN&amp; lOLDME
I 6Ha-lL-DN'T LEAVE

WEST

+8

by THOMAS JOSEPH
43 Watchful
ACROSS
44 Fury
I Small
branch
45 .fargnn
6 Possum
DOWN
10 French
1 Thick

life in danger after she meets
a handsome stranger at a

.-...---------.:--;

+Q J 10 3

~ea~tJW'Hd'

CBl Moonli{jhti1111
(CCI Ms . Dipeslo finds her

MORTY MEEKLE AND WIN,...T:.;H;:.:.R.:..O:..:.P_ _ _ _~1

i-11-M

K 10 7 4
• A 8 64

North didn't have a lull-fledged
bid, but 4-4·4-1 shape lends it·
action, and tbe vul·
was favorable . So at his
to bid, he made a takeout .
I doo•ble alter East and West had each
bid a suit. South tben competed with
two spades, but the bidding was at the
lour-heart level when it was his tum
again. He didn't know that the opponents could make lour hearts, and he
certainly didn't think he could make
lour spades, but the price was right.
He would receive non-vulnerable pen·
allies, even doubled; on the other hand,
the East-West bonus lor making a vul·
nerable game was large. So be bid tour
spades. When East doubled, declarer
drew the right conclusions.
West opened the ace of diamonds
and continued the suit. South rulled in
dummy and played the king of spades.
East won witb the ace and led his sin·
gleton club, but declarer was on the
right track. He went right up with the
club ace, rulled his last diamond with
dummy's 10 of spades, and led dum·
my's last spade, finessing against the
jack of trumps in tbe East hand. He

()) •

protect

Excavating

NORTH

t

Jamea Jacoby

Stereo.

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING

JunibleooBANAL AOAGE ENO~GH ALIGHT
Answer. She accepted hie proposal because he waa
thla typo ol a guy-AN "ENGAGING" ONE

tJ

(l) 700 Club

a=

I

Major

1ewelth1ef. 160 min.) IR), In

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

Yestllfday's

beautiful moc;tel who may be

I'M KEEPINGTVO
THS'II WARM
UNDER MY HAT.

form the surprise an""', a suggested by the · - cartoon.

{Answefs tOillOfrow)

nores McCall's warnings
and beomes involved with a

WOLJLD'!U.J LIKE
A NICE:, HOT'
ONION ROLL ':I

Now Mange lhe Clrcted letters to

IJ
- [ I I J.) A [ I 111[ I l )

e

PEANUTS
WELL,SORT OF MAYBE

li!ROW IT IN
11-IERE, PITCHER 1

PRETTI(

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

Mowrey' • Upholtterlng serv 1ng
trl countyar1121 yeara. Thab 81t
In tumlhure uphQiatlrlng. Call
304 - 8711 · 4114 for frae
lltimMtl.

"'
1--------_;.
T;;
· ':;0;.1

FAR BACK

SEfiiND 't'OU ...

·lc-

'I

A

7397.

Autos for Sale

1979 Ford Multang 4 cyl .. new
I"M:Iullt motor. low mil11g1. Call

PNA

~f=ING

895·3802

416B .

For aala: two graln t.d black with
white faca btefl weigh approx.
1000 lba. 11ch. N centaon foot,
•1 .20 hanging wt . Reidy now.
J~• Ray Partons, 471598
Catmel Rd. Rt.1 , Racine, Ohio,
North at IIWnill.

&amp;

J: HATE?

304 -671 · 2396 o• 814 ·446 ·
2454.

82

Atlanta

ffi NHL Hockey: Stanley

441-4477

1977 Ford F-100, copper rear
step bufl1Jif, good condition.
sell reasonable. Ctll 814· 441·

1978

Hay

FRANK AND ERNIE

Trucks for Sale

1982 Dodga pldl:up 225 cubic
engine, 3 spd., with overdrlva,
fibergla11 topper . Call 114-387-

9 Y•lr old 81ac:k TenniiH
WaNcer hor11 . Gutlding. 1660.
Call Ahond1 It 114-992-1031 .

64

.. 'W,

RON ' S Teinlalon Servi ce .\
Houae calls on RCA. Ouuer,
GE. Sptcllllng in Zenith. C1ll

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Mott w.lls completed ume day.
Pump Hilt and s.-vica. 304-

111

e

Bloc* a. conc:rete work. also
painting a. carantry, g•agM ,
patio'a, baaarnent. sidiW'alks,
26 year~ exparl.,-.ce. Frte nt l·
metes. Wa're on 1ht Level. C1ll

Starkl Tr11 and Llwn StrYica.
landscaping. 304-175-2010.

I
I tJ

tl..UFUES

James Jacoby

Chicago Cubt

Roofing. p.,nting. room addl·
tiont, etc. Fr" ettimatll, 17
yean e•pwlence. B &amp;. W Construction. Ct\1114-448-8668 Of
114·245·9448 eve's.

876·2088 .. 175· 7318.

tj

Chicago Cubt Ill Atlanta

removal. Call304-615-1331 .

Chrittlen Scho'oi Regiatratlon,
111-ffl ldloolyear. Jtindtrgarten
thru high school, 304-675 -

Wt-~AT TH!.
iOW "i~UCI&lt; W.A5
"T~YI Ne 10 1:'0
AT "iHE AUiO ~ACE.

nlght Angelslan6bury talks

(ji)Jeopardy
7 :35 (I) Major I.AIIIgue llueball:

Unconditional lifetime guarentM. Local r.t...-enc• furnished.
Fr.. estlmat•. Call collect
1·614· 237-0488. day or nltht.
Rogers Baaemant
Watttproofing.

814-258·1182 .

FLATURj

BRIDGE

Story Continues··.
@ Major league Baseball:

~~~

114·448·091 5.

Call

Ford 2 row mountld corn pldcer.
10 Cley farrowing hog cratn.
with eutornstic water~ and feed·
1r1. Set of dulll 1h4x38 with
br'and new BF Goodrich tlrll.

If.! !{A! WH~ lH~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

htarlor stucco plmerlng &amp;
plaster repair . Low rat• . Call

I I KX

Ill Fawlty Towen
8 CBl Entenainment To-

ing sequel. "Sidney Shel·
don·s Rage of Angels: The

1115} 313 -3336 ht 596.

814·281·1461 .
Malley Farguaon. New Holland.
Bush Hog Saln 6 Servlct. Over
.40 used tractort to choo11 from
&amp; COfT1Jiete line of n.w &amp; uted
equipmenl. L1rgMt selection In

l'V!J.!'I'r:&lt;,, t Dlt:ll'T ~IN!:: ,.-11.10 IT

Ser v1 r,r.s

Home
Improvements

[I I

about her role in the upcom-

Road King , 1973 camplr ,
11 ,000.00 firm. Celt 304-17515297 evening• after 4:00.

114-892-7301 .

HOT TANK BLUEING . All typ01

rn rn

Game
(!) Historic ln&lt;Hnpolls
500 Films
• (!) WKRP In Clnclltlllti
D Cll GDJ WhHI of Fortune

2072 .

anytim..

1226.00. 304-175·6504 .

@ ll8mey MIHer
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 •
New Newtvwod

11 ft pickup trudt cemp.-. fulty
contained . Mountllnetr.
82,500.00. like new. 304 -675-

RINGLES ' S SERVICE , •~P• ·
rilflced carplntar. alactrldan,
m110n. painttr. rooting (lnclud·
lng hot ter .appllcetlon) ·304-

but

• CBl Divon:e Court

304·178· 381B.

81

MacNeil-Lehrer

Newahour

1978 Teny. 24ft. air cond.
awning, loti of extrll, exc cond,

1983 Olda Cutla11 e~e . cond ..
tow mites. Call for more informa tion, 814 · 448 ·4989.

Forttt S UIJil lte s

&amp;

61 4·448·1988.

1978 Starer aft foldout c~~mper,
aleepl 8, complete with ttova,
Ice boll, Ughts &amp;. alnk. u.c . cond ..
like new . can 614 -388-9755
after 8PM.

1978 Olds 88, good oond. uc
"NDrk ctt, 304-875-1727 morn·
lng or evening.

Vo. 304·882·2222 .

8'78·1410.

81 4-448 -4462.

184 IH Cub Low Boy and
nDwer. Call614-992 -7301.

175.00, one 1 e.ooo

(jj)

Motors Homes
&amp; Campara

HALF PRICE! Fl11hing anow
tiant t2991 Ughted, non· anow
12791 Nonllghted 12391 Free
leneral Ontv few left. See

Country oak furniture now In
llocll. CottH lftd lnd IoblN,
round Pld11t1l tnd drop leaf
Peta for Sale
Wti•. com• cupboard. 2 pc: .
cupbo.-dl, dty llnka, 11eret:..-y
dalka. ch.at ot drawere. chalra. Drtgonwynd Catt.., Ktnnet.
Ltrga IIINtlon . Conlclt'l, R1. 7, · CFA Hlmaleyan. Ptnlan and
Tupp•~plalnt, Oh.
Slam•• klttenl. AKC Chow
puppiM. New puppl11. kltt1n1.
Pickens Uttd Fumib.ne. Good
qualttv utldfumtture. Open' Ito Coil 441·3144 ott" 7PM.
I or cell for appointment . DObtrman. rid male. reg., 18
00'

1985 Chevy Super Sport, convertible. many new parta. Cell

79

304-895-3441 .

Uttd air condltlonlt't. refrlgaretort, deep ffltiM, Wllhll"',
dry•rs. electric • g• rang ... 441-2783.
color TV 'a, d~waah.-1 . and
nM mattreu • bo~e tprtno• Blodl, brick, mort1r and m•
complltl 18&amp;.88 . Valley Fuml- -IOnry .. PPIIM. Mountain Slate
ture, Eatttm Ave .. pallipollt.
Bloclrl, At. 33, Ntw Haven , W.

304-1711-8413

For Sala: High p.-forma.nca302 ' :
Chevy .-.gk-le. Call 114-892- .
5974 .

81 4-992· 7301 .

2 air cond, one 8 .000 bru

port

OONewa

THI: RADIO.

11 4· 379· 22 20.

Fetty Tr" Trimming. 11ump

'

I HOPI: THE ONLY THIN6
BROKJ:N IN THA1 SU&amp; I~

Auto Parts
Accessories

Jeff Baugh msn' 1 1971 unfln·
lahad reatord NOVA , 327
chrome engine, no phon• In·
q.~irtl . Middleport (Bradbury).

91 Plymouth Rallant SE 4 dr ..

Avo. Golllpolll. OH .

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

All typ81 uaed a. rebuilt trantmlttionl a tranfer ca111 . Will
deliver . Ovardrlve trantmit·
Ilona, front &amp; r11r wh11l drlvt,
tranamlttkln ldta &amp; tom convtr·
tars. angina rebuild kits. Call

&amp;

1981 Z28 Cam.-a , PS . P8.
auto, 360 tnglnl, air, phone

Unlden-UST 730 Actuator Controller. UST 1000 rec:tiv..- and

44

71 ltncoln Continental Mark Ill
reatonabla. Call tYen lng 8141981 OaiMJn 310 GX 6 apd.,
good con d .. good tir•. ax c. g•
mileage. Call 814· 441 -3005.

13.8001 Coli 814 -379 · 2102 .

61

76

7000 JD 4 row minimum till.
Can be mede. No till. Uttd . Call

locolly . IIBOOI423 -0163

THeY'LL llf CHfCKIN6 WITHI&gt;J
A 10 MIJ.f RAPIU!Io FROM THI!P
POINT HERE, ~Ill.. ,.._,;:f._-1

D(JJJ_...,
Ill Ni{jhtly Butlneu Re·

onc:ho• ond 2 lito tocketoo

1984 Ford Tampo 4 dr., euto,
air. lf:ereo. c11h price 13,999.
John' 1 Auto Sal11, Bulavllte Ad ..
Gallipolis

(!J .Je~Mnona

•

CAPTAIN E.\SY

Call 614-441 -1781
attar 5PM
814-388-9811
.
- - - -- - - - -..,.,14ft. aturmV-bottomboatwtth
7Yr geme fisher •nglnl, olllt,

Sanya Beta-maJC VCR, wired
remote t171S . 30•· 676 -1433
aftw 7 :00p.m.

304-17&amp;-410B.

Treller, 3 btdrooomt, 1176.00
month . water Included, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
•1 00.00 dapotit, 30• · 815· WQhera, drytra, refrigll'ltort.
rangea . Skaggt Appliance~.
2247.
Upper Rivar Ad . bnida Stone
Crnt Motel. 114·448-7398
'
Apartment
County Appliance, · Inc. Oood
for Rent
used appllencn and TV seta .
Opan BAM to IPM. Mon thru
S1t. 814· 446 -1899, 827 lrd .

1979 24 fl. Alene! cuddy ceb.
228 Mercrui••· full galley, dual
voltage refrigerator. tolllt with
SIW'aQttYitlm. radiO tllfl)hOIII,
depth ftndar. powar trim, and
many extra•. A•klng e13,500.

A.C. 2 row com plant.-. No tlli.
Uaed. Ca11814-992-7301 .

130, king fflml 150. Qood
11lectkm of bedroom IU It•.
rockers. metal cablnett, head boards 138 &amp; up lo te.5.

814-448-0322

Con1inues ' ·.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1620.

146, bed t.om" no. t25. 6

Uatd Furniture ·· Dre11er, &amp; bed ,
larg• table &amp; 2 bani:::tlM, metal
offiCI detkl. 3 mH11 out Bulavlll Rd . Open tam to &amp;pm.
Mon. thru Sat.

Autos for Sale

448-7471.
Musical
Instruments

CROSS 6 SONS '

19111 Ford Pickup, 8 cyl .. 4
apMd. utility bed. 1860 . 1975
Yameha 7150. Fully dr ... ed.

Angelalansbury talks about
her role in 1he upcoming IB·
quel. " Sidney Sloeldon's
Rage of Angels: The Story

1100.00 . 304-882-2606.

Railroad tiM . 8in.IC 10 in.x 9ft. e
in. t8 .00 per tie detiver8d . Call
Bill Sleek It 992-2269.

1800. Coli 814· 992·31'0.

Trailer Iota sewer and water
fumishad. amall childr.-. e~
cepttd. Rt. 1 Locust Rd .. bade o1
K lo K, 304·17&amp; ·1071.

71

Good millling milk goat. Call
114-388-9881 or 014-448 ·

11428.

Fumlahed houll. 2 bdr .. 1196.
131 r11i" 4th Ave., Gallipolis.
Call446-4416 af1ar 7pm.

trail•. IllUme loan with 1 low
down peyment, 304·175·5201.

871· 370,,

0768.

ROIIty·l14-441·0009.

01130.

acre lot, 1 ~ car ,.age and
building, G1lllpolls erry. clote
to St11uH11, good cond, wll 1111
teparatl. 304-871-1111 or

For rent Sleep/rig Rooms and
light houu keeplng rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614-446-

Houses for Rent

0338.

1913 Knoolwood. 3 bodnHim

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock·

Furnished Rooms

3940.

turad , raason1ble rat11. Call

304·171· 7117.

304·BB2-2511.

Mobile home lot on Neighborhood Road . Qu iet with big yard .
•as month . Call 614 -448-

MOBILE HOMES MOVED o In·

!MIIy.

Plutlc cistern state approved,
plutlc septic tanka:. plutlc
c:ufYiftt. metal cuhiMtt. RON

msporgeen~~r

exc cond,

Coll114-211·8281 .

oall 114·883·4514 .

304-876· 3424.

Nlc•ly tum .. hld mo!Hte homa.
eff.
central air and heat In
city, adults only. Call 614-441·

304-678·2336

Callahlfl'l Uaed Tire Shop . Over
1.000 tlr•. •iz•12. 13, 14 . 18.
18, 16.5. 8 mit• out Rt. 218.

':L,..'-z.::- ..

Ill Entert.olnment Tonight

0

76

J

I KJ

7:00 81]}PM M8glzme
(I) Allea Smith end Jones

304·176 -4437 or 875-3354.

0

5/20/86
EYE NINO

304-178 · 11 6B "'" &amp;oOO PM . .

Stlfeo syatem 48 watt per
channel receiver. c111ette deck,
tumtable. SPMklfl, edjultlble
atand, aher 4 :00 PM 304-876-

acceptlng _appNcatlon• for rental Llfttime conctttl CUIVIRI, 12
apartmenta In Maton Apt• Ll· Inch to 36 inch, In stock. brg•
mhad . Two bedroom apta tt tizn available, up to e ft . Call
1199.00 p.- month. R•nt.. 614·992-2a34 o• 814· 9B2··
rat• mev be higher dep~nding 6704 .
Of1 lnc:o'f'•· Housing will btl
av1ilable to etch applicant r• Nawly paint.:! NB tractor for
gardl ... of their raca, · color. aale. New tir•. 6 ft. grtder
rellgfon, lilt or natural or...ln. blade. Trail• for 1111. Will trldt
tntw•tld appllcentt should call · far Chevy or GMC TNc:k . Call
304-773-5011 or cont1ct o .. 614·98&amp; -,392.
nl11 Streib or Wahar Jut1ics at
th1 Main Office. 1671 Brice
Roed, Reynoldsburg , Ohio

lp1 .

·~

1810. Coli 81 4·11112 ·87B7.

Puccio Lowrey Mint condition
L-15 Genlaorgan whh bench-200
plec:n sheet mutlc. Ctll 614·
992-2682. 3pm, to 8pm.

00'

•.

1981 Honds CB custom 800, .
mint cond. fulty dr••ed . Call •

APARTMENT FOR RENT-Now

43088

· 114-188•71011.

1978 710 Honda Mo1or cycle . .
Nl Htldtr.

B11dwln Organ(Fun Machine)
Like .......,_ Alking t1 eoo (Paid

llo. 814·441·8221.

-

LOW miiNUI · 4

2 hor11powar Hobart grlndtt,
nM had a11embly, •• · cond .
Call tU4· 387·0493 eft• 15.

Farm &amp; Pllturt land for rent .

1972 Schu ltz, 12x70 ~lit out,
1tove and r~ffigarator. furniture
·neuotlabla. s .. by appointment

814· 317·7507.

I;6;2;:::;C;B;,::;TV~.=R~ad:;;:10:.=:

3224 .

Walk to town , schools ,
churchll, llbr1ry, ona ltDrf, 2
bdr., ettracttwe bath, formal
dfnlngroom. good ClrJtting.
large,kttotltn. good gM furnace,
ttorm wfndowa. Call 814-448· ·
One ya• old 3 bdr. ranch In
coillii'Y....,. pnvoto. No orod~
check~. no dolkta cosu. Simply
put U,OOO down • uaume
paymentl of *388.80 p• month
at 1~ fJJ:edAPR . Callaft~rlpm

.

Coli 614·446-0061 .

14500. Coli 114· 982·5697.

4 bedroom hou11. fireplace, 3
mi. 10uth ofG•IIIpolll, 829,900.
Cell days 814-446-11115 or
evening• 614-441 -8222.

1973 Skyline 12~~:60 2 br. all
elec. , built-in kitchen, partillty
furnished. NIW' underpinning •
lltpt 14900. firm . 1977Monte
Cerlo nllda work. good body
t400 . 304 · 8 82-2688.

4 bedroomhomeon 7acrn. Can
negotiate. Call 614 -985-4392.

3&amp;7&amp;.

Homes for Sale

Myrtl• Beach Condo Rental. 2
bedrooms, 2 bathL IIIIPS $.
Furnished compltte with linenl.
Ttnnil court•. Indoor-outdoor
pools, uune. ttMm room. 200
Ydt. fromblach. Nopetl. Phone
814-423-8817..

Middleport · 2 br furnlahtd apt
for rent; also 2 room efficiency

Business
Opportunity

lNG CO . recommends that you
do busin . . with people you
know. and NOT to send monev
through tha mail until you have
lnvettlgl1ed the offering .

No peto. Coiii14·949·22B3.

Wooded lot· alectri c- wetar·
blthhouse- bon docK. Nothing
down ~50 mo. BigFootPtrk. At.
7 . e mil• below Gstlipolit. Croll
Raccoon Creelt. follow •tun•. ,

for Sale

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

4 room and bath. Unfurnllhtd.

412 Spring Ave. 3 -4 bdrm., 2
ba .. built-In kitchen w yr. round
grill, microwav• and dil ·
hwash•. WBFP In llv rm ., ger.
and btmt. t43,000. Very nlcel
Call colr.ct to aee 1-814-888·
0701 Slane Rnltv.

32 Mobile Homes

31

Call

Adulto only. No poto, 1225 pluo

Position evaillble for retail clerk
it Mkldleport. Submit reeumeof
Pll1 Job experience. salary hia·
tory. educitlon, ~nd raterencee.
Send to P.O Box 729 S. A.H.
Dailey Sentinel 111 Coun St.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

-

ar• a.,.,. 1- - - - - - -- -- -

care. for toddler a. Intent In our
horne . Atlemoont • evtningt.

23

required.

2 belt. fumllhtd apartment In
quiet r•idantlll
•nd we•her a dryer hookup.

Mature non-amoldng adull to

21

depolit

Avac.do /'"" ttove and rtf.

Coli 304· 75-8374.

114·441-3793 .

GolllpoWo, OH.

1·106-187·1000 EX1. R-9808

Ohio
_.....,

1 981 Honda 8150. CB Custom.;
Excell•t condition. 11200 or.

Equipment

Twin duplu: apt for rani, 1250
mo. Call 814-448·4&amp;70 or
814-448-7024 Mk tor Karen .

E.O.E.

~ ...

Znd. Ava. oampoua.

Coli 441 ·4418 .,.., 7pm.

o..,t..

12

eo7

paid.

hrt. per wMk. June 1nd July.
Appty h person Qelllpotis A•
cr•tion
518 811t:0nd
Ave .• Oalllpolit before Mey 23 .

715. 3418 Ent.,p•ln. Ft.
Ple•co. Fl. 33482 '

Motorcycle•

20, 1988

30'·175·7383.

7pm.

TMnil; ln1tn.u:tar needed. 1 S

pr;rl*'t. No sal81. DatalaSend damp.:! ~nvelope: Elan·

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

ontv uild twice. f300. Firm.

horN . ..nbty wort.:. For lntc;..

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
1714.00 P" 100. Guwontood

Houaehold Good•

Magic Chaf g11 rang• for tala.

Exoellent lnoom1 for .,.n time

•

TUIICiav. May 20. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

12:30 D (l) (lll Late Night with
David Lett""""" tonight 's
guests oro John Phillips and
garden editor C.Z. Guest.
(60 min.) In Stereo.
()) Bill Colby Show
()) ABC News

e

(!J Wild, Wild Weal
News

• Uil CNN

(l Ulel l..tnltM Ft-""1 S)'I'Oiel ...lnc.

Nlghdlne

•!lllNews
@MOVIE: 'A New leo!'
12:40 D (JJ MOVIE: 'l.ookln' to
Get Out'
1 :00 ()) Doble Gillis
Cll Archie Bunker't Piece

1:30 (])Father Knows Bett
(JJ News
2:00 (I) 700 Club
ffi Mazde Sportllook
(!J MOVIE: 'Foreign In·

e

trigue'
2 :t0

Cit CBS No- Nlghtwetc:h
Ill MOVIE: 'Chit111 Gille'

2:30 (!) SportsCenter
3:00 (1) MOVIE: 'Acrot~ tho
Slemlt'
(Jl NHL Hockey: l!tanlev

·,

Cup Finals IRJ .
@ Comedy Break
3:30 @INN No4:00 Ill MOVIE: 'North of the
Lone Star'
• (!J MOVIE: 'The Flying
Deuces'

@ MOVIE: ' Down To The
Sea In Shipa'
4:10 (JJ WOrld II 1.111111
, ,;4:30 (IJ Get Smart

�Ohio

Sentinel

Local briefs

Roos stdp ~

Input sought for federal programs
A ntle 68 program Is being written In the Southern Local Schol
District. The federal money to come Into the p-ogram Is designated
for programs In special education. Residents are Invited to give lnpu t
to the writing r1 the program by calling Joyce Thoren, R.N., school
nurse, betW!'ell May 29 and May 29.

•
"
C
· IrCUS
.'
... .

Veterans Memorial information
Admissions--Robert Snowden, Rutland; Charles Elllot, Ewlngton:
Patrick Gerard, Middleport.
Discharges--None.

Emergency squads kept busy
Meigs CountY Emergency Medical Service reports seven caDs
Monday; Rutland 44 at 11:02 a. m. transported Wanda Sloane from
an auto accident on Rt. 32 to O'Bienness Memorial Hospital;
Columbia ToWnship Fire Department at 11: 03 a.m. was caUed to the
same accident; Rutland 40 at11: 10 a.m. transports! Drana Perry to
O'Bienness Memorial Hospital; Racine Fire Department at 5:40
p.m. transported Doo Hendricks from an auto accident on Rt. 124 to
Veterans Mernonal Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:01 p.m. transported
Michael Norris to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland 4!1 at 9:21
p.m. transported Anita Estep and JuUe Lewis to Holzer Medical
Center from an auto accident on Rt. 325; Rutland40at the same time
transported Charles Sterling to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
Fire Department at 11:39 p.m. was called to N011fi Third Ave. for a
minor gas spUI.

Coolville couple seeks divorce
John C. Eblin, Coolville, has filed for a divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from EDen K. Eblin, Coolville, charging gross
neglect of duty.

Driver charged following accident
Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank reports a one car accident
about 5::xl p.m. Monday evening on Rt.l24 near Racine. The driver, .
Donald E. Hendricks, 52, of Syracuse, went In the ditch on the left
side ct the road, puUed out, and then went off the rlght side r1 the
road. Hendricks sustained a head Injury and was taken from the
soene by Racine EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital where be was
treated and released. Hendricks was cited ilr DWI and failure to
control. He wlll appear Wednesday In Meigs County Court..

Weather forecast
Cloudy today, with a chance of rain ordrizzleand hlghsbetweenOO
and 65. Cloudy tonight, with a low between 00 and !ii. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs between 60 and 65.
Exlmded Foroollllt
'Dianday lllrou[!h Salllnlay
A dlance of smwers 'Dianday, wkh fair wealher Friday and
Saturday. Hltlhs Wlll'lll&amp;e lrom the ..,per illlllto theWs Thursday,
cHmblnr lniD the at&amp; Frll!aJ and ranslng lrom the mld Ills to the low
Saturday. Overal[!hllows wiD be In the lis.

*

The revised first quarter economic growth rate was the largest
since the first quarter &lt;t 1985, when
GNP also expanded by 3.7 percent .
It was last exceeded by the 5.1
percent pace of growth recorded in
the second quarter of 1984.
lnOation for the perlnd was at an
annual rate of 2.5 percent, accordIng to the GNP Implicit price
deOator, the report said. an upward
revision from 2.3 percent.
Even with the revision, the
implicit deflator is smaller than It
has been since 1967.

The positive changes wrere

partly offset by a downward
revision In residential fixed lnvesment and net exports, the analysts
• llald.
I

Pholo,lioey on Pace 16
',

•

Vot.36. No.12
Copyrighted 1986

.
enttne
'

at y

e

2 Sections, 16 Pages

• Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 21, 1986

2 5 Cants

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Nation's retail prices drop in April
PRODUUI'ION SATURDAY- "Show stoppers." a program by the
Rio Grande CoDege and Conununlly Grande Chorale, wDI be presented
at 8 p.m. May 24 In the college's Flne and Performing Aris BuDding.
Members oflhe cast Include (row 1) Rebekah Wright II Jackson (row 2)
Debbie Sallee of VInton, diD Crewey of McArthur, 1\ngela Beans of

Tuscarawas, Te~ Hadley of Greenfield, Jean AIUl Vanre of Rio
Grande, Rhonda Leach of Wellston, Ell1abeth Gee of Rkl Grande (row
3) Marty Glassburn of BldweU, Kent Walker of 'l'hunnan, Thomus
Savage of Patriot, Robert Gordon of GaWpoUs, Dan Shipley of Grove
City, Scott Wilson of I.JIUe Hocking, md Hiroshi Uehara.

Insurance meeting for senior citizens
Meigs County senior cit izens
having difficulty on what to do
about a Medicare supplemental
Insurance policy will be enlightened
at a meeting to be held at !2:45 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, Mullx&gt;rry Heights,
Pomeroy.
Seniors over 65 who qualify for
Medicare realize that Medicare
only covers a percentage of their
medical costs. Much of the balance
may be covered by a Medicare

Beulah F. Hayes
Beulah Francis Hayes, 90, longtime Middleport resident , died
Monday at Veterans Memortal
Hospital.
Mrs. HayeswasbornJan.l5.1896
near Charleston, W. Va .. a daughter of the late Ca lvin a nd Elizabeth
Todd Burlord. She moved to
Middleport when she was fiveyeaJ-s
of age.
Mrs. Hayes was the elck&gt;st
member of Heath United Metoodlst
Cllurch In Middleport and was a 70
year memher of Evangeline Chapter 112; Order of Eastern Star. She
was a past matron of that organ17,atlon. She was a member of White
Rose Lodge and the Middleport
Garden Club. Before her m'l,lli age,
she taught school In Columbus.
Pomeroy and Middleport .
Surviving are a daughter, E.
Maxine Coats Gaskill. Middleport :
a grandson and his wife, Dr.
Stephen and Elizabeth Coats, West
Plains, Mo.; a granddaughter and
IEr hu sband, Christine Coats Mcfn~
lyre and Dr. Russell Mcintyre,
Morristown; N. J.; eight grand·
children and Sl'Veral nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the RawUngs-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with Rev. C.

Residential Investment, thought
by government economists to tx&gt;
among the strongest areos of thl'
economy because of a trlsk paCI' of
housing starts, Increased only $2.3
biiUon last quarter, compared with
$4.1 In the early report.
Net eXjDrtS of goods and servi·
ces, buoyed by a sharp decline In
the value of the dollar, Increased
$10.5 billion for the period, compared with $14.8 billion in the
preliminary report.
Trade Qgures still lag behind the
GNP report by about two months

TIJESOA YNISHT

mental policy is extremely Important to anyone who can afford it.
"I have seen the right policy bl&gt; a
savior for many people who were
presented with medical emergencies. I have also seen the wrong
policy leave clients with medical
bills they could not afford."
Wlrtshalter, as a result, has
organized a program that will teach
senior dtl1.ens the techniques of
comparing the vartous policies that
are offered. Lou Horvath, claims
representative from the Athens
Social Security Office, will be at the
meeting on Thursday also to
discuss basic Medicare eligl.bllty.
Featured speaker will be Jack
Montaney, Investigator ilr t be Ohio
Department of Insurance. Additional topics will Include how to
collect on policies when needed and

supplement. SenioJ-s are being
bombarded with advertisements
for competing policies and each
policy Is unique but yet It is difficult
to compare their various terms.
Anorney Donald Wirtshafter of
A-thens specializes in representing
the concerns of senior citizens and
be visits klcal senllr citizens
centers as part of a program
administered by Southeastern Ohio
Legal Services. He feels that
obtaining a good Medicare supple·

I

SolUly Zuniga officiating. Burial
will he In Riverview Cemetery,
Middleport. Friends may call at tbe
funeral home from 2to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m. today.

W a ham a sets concert
Wahama High School's band
concert has been set for Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. and will fcatun' the
sixth grade band, the junior band
and thE' S('nior band. Admission Is
free.

William A. Connolly
·Preceding William A. Connolly,
76, Route I, Reedsvllle, In death In
addition to his parents, two brothers
and a sister. were a son. Darrell,

and state doll ars at Woodland have
also led to layoffs and resignations,
worsening the situation. She revealed the 648 Board had to make
an emergency appropriation durIng the last pay period to mvcr
salaries for Woodland staff.
" I apologize for having tocali you
to pass out Sll.!XXJ or $10.000. but at
the same time, I felt I11' professional staff we have left there
deserve their paychecks," she told
the iloard.
WOodland has since received its
state subsidy and is being paid for
delivery of services from the
federal title progra ms, Hopkins
added.
The levy. which would have
raised more than $1300,!XXJ from the
three rounties, lost In Ga Uia County
1,8;6-1,076 and In Jackson, 3,273·
1,876. It passed In Meigs County,
1,753·1,632.
Hopkins said she was concerned
that out of approximately 5,&amp;Xlwho
voted In Galli a County, · roughly
2,000 did not vote on the levy. In
Jackson County, nearly l ,llXJ failed
to vote on the levy.
"I felt it wa s wonh an Inquiry to
the secretary of state," she said.

Riner hosts special
HOL.L YWOOD (U P! 1 -John
Ritter will host "Teenager
America - Glory Years," a
May 23 CBS-TV special telling
the story of the teen rites of
passage as an American
tradit ion.
Included In the hour-long show
will be film clips from hit movies
based on American youth:
"Andy Hardy, " "Rebel Without
a Cause. " "The Wild One."
"King C r e o I e," "Grease,"
"American Graffiti,'' "The
Breakfast Clu b," "16 Candles."
"Fast Times at Ridgemont
High,'' "The Flamingo Kid" and
"Gidget. "
Among the stars appearing In
the films will be teen Idols oft he
past and present, among them
Elvis Presley, John Travolta,
.James Dean, Ann· Margret,
Olivia Newton-John, Sa ndra
[J('e and Molly Ringwald.

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Served witH whipped potatou. chicken aravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes era:ept beYerage with addi-

PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OH.

frittl Cltkbn

CLEVELAND !UPII - Monday's winning Ohio Loll&lt;'ry
numlx&gt;rs: Daily Number
576.
Ticket sales totaled $1,235,732.00,
wit h a payoff due of $1,182.665.
PICK-4
17!ll.
PICK-4 ticket sa il'S totaled
$173,664.50, wi th a payoff due of
$78.222.
!Contin ued
from page II

Michelle Jenkins. Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown's represenla ·
live for this area. Is rev iewing the
primary returns for the past seven
years to see how far off voting has
been on issues.
Also. Hopkins sa id word in g of thf.'
levy was not identical In all three
count ies. That l' also being investigated by Jenkins. sl•· said.
The election cost the 648 Board
$5,ffil.l7 and was financed primar·
lly through a sale of surplu s
furniture, the board learned. Hopkins hailed the efforts of volunt eers
who ass isted In the campaign,
noting 9.000 postcard' and 9'Vcral
thousand lettei'S were mailed to
tri-county residents.
"We're plea sed til:•levy passed In
Meigs County," sl!c said. ''I'm not
saying Meigs WOI'ked harder than
anyone else, but they really did tlX'
job."
Hopkins said she will present the
case for mental healll! se1v iccs

Saudi anns deal puts
President under gun
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Presi·
dent Reagan Is making a last-ditch
lobbying effort to overcome Senate
opposition to the sale of a whittled·
down arms package to Saudi
Arabia.
Reagan has until midnight tonight to veto the congressional
resolution rejecting tbe $354 mUtton
arms sale.
At Reagan's suggestion, the
Saudis withdrew their request for
S89 mUilon worth of Stinger anti•
aircraft missiles
contained In the
$:fi4 mllllon arms deal. hoping to
make the sale more palatable to the
Senate.
The admlnlstrdtion. with help
from Senate Republican leader
Rolx&gt;rt Dole and Sen. Richard
Lugar, chairman of the Foreign
Relations Commlltee, lobbied Into
the evening Tuesday In a drive to
line up enough votes to survive an
override attempt by Congress.
"We're very, very close," said
White House spokesman Larry
Speakt'S. "We've made gOod pro-

gress, but there's more work to be current fight , concluded "of their
own volition" that "it was Impordone."
If Reagan still lacks the votes to tant to remove as much controv·
uphold his veto, White House ersy as they could " from an arms
officials said the action could come sale that has assumed political as
so late In the day as to postpone the well as military Importance.
override attempt untO alter the
The Saudis dropped their request
Senate returns from the Memorial for the Stingers In a message from
Day recess June 2, giving Reagan King Fahd delivered to Reagan by
more time to work his wUI on Prince Bandar. the Saudi ambassaCongress.
dor, wiD said the Saudis "have
After tre Senate reces\ied for the more Immediate requirement .. lor
evening. Dole predicted t.he over· the Sidewinder air-to-air missiles
ride vote would "very likely" come and Harpoon anti-lp missiles con·
by this afternoon.
tained in the arms package.
Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., who
Responding to questions , Bandar
led the charge against the missile said domestic politics, particularly
sale, said removal &lt;t the Stingers, a pressure on GOP senators up for
shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missile. r!'i'lection In the fail , and the jDWer
"will make the task of ov!'rrldlng of the pro-Israel lobby had thwarted
the veto more difficult."
the Stlngt&gt;r sale and jeopardized thf.&gt;
" The White House knew it was entire arms deal.
going to lx&gt; licked on tlr original
The orlgtnal House and ~na t e
package," Cranston said. " They votes to reject the sa le were well in
had to find some way to try to excess of the two· thirds majorities
retrieve something."
needed to nullify Reagan' s action
Lugar. R-Ind., said the Saud is, and kill the deal.
who have kept a low profile In the

Southern High Future Farmers

reported at Monday's meeting of
Racine V!Uage Council that the
FFA submitted an application for
the project and will be reimbursed
for part of the costs. The park Is
located by the old Hayman Hardware building.
An "Adopt A Picnic Table
Program" was announced In an
effort to get picnic tables cleaned
and repainted at the Shrine Club

Park. Any local resident or family
wishing to clean and paint a table is
asked to call Frank Cleland at
949-2071.
Thanks were extended to councUman Carroll Teaford and his wlic,
Eva, for planting flowers around
the flagpole at the Shrine Club
Park, and to Robert and Junlor
Johnson of the fire department for
waterlngtbepark'srecently seeded
lawn durin!! the drv soeU.
It was reported that a 4-H Club Is
going to plant additional Dowers at
tiE park.

A response plan for Rae inc
Emergency Medical Service -"as
presented to council by representa·
tives of the emerge ncy squad. The
plan was agreed upon by squad
members and council . Basically.
squad 24 will remain as a backup
squad.
Greenwood Cemetery Trustces
reported they have purchased a
new (X!Sh mower for use at the
cemetery. The trustees also reported that donations for the care of
lots at tbl&gt; cemetery are being
solicited and cards will bl&gt; mailed

MIDDLI'ORT, OHIO

•

"Smlce Plut ... Attenfion fo Defql/"
BRUCE FISHER

· BILL BLOWER

SroDENTS ERECf· F,ENCE - Ea8tern llilh
School fre8lunan 111d !IDphomore vocalloaal agrlcul·
lure otudenl8 bad a hard da.Y'• wot11 Tuesday, buill
wasn't !IChool wor!L Under the supervlllon of tltel!'
teaeher, Brian ~~ the boys ll*lt the day
buDding fence around the playground at Chester
ooDdlnlt: proJect was

Elementary. 'l'he fence

undertaken by the VG-81 boys lo heip OUt ihe school
and the Chesler PrO. Windon operates the tractor
and drDl as he dlp the holes lor the poa. Asslslmg
Windon, from left to right, are VlciAir Otevaller,
holding the pole, Mark Grlfftn, holding the tape, and
Chr1!i Lance. t1111ng In holes were, Jell to right, RoiUlle
Putman, shoveling, Jeft Parker and Gary Holler.

Pn : 1ac~ l ;:n 1

Cnampargn/U roana
Deca!u ~

Spr roglreld
51
Tucumcan Amarillo

Albuquerq ue

P&lt;ttsbur&lt;;h" , "-- r wdm ngton
'/l;,h : ngto~e 1
a t • r:'IO'~·
Crnc .nnatr
DC

L

lna.ana;&gt;oi1S

LOU ·S

--

l 1tt!e Roc k

rWtcMa Falls

I/J 1 C~ ll fle

Dyers bu rg

Phoemx
Fort Wortn

UP!

RECRUITING CONTINUES - Convicts, baseball
teams. and entire classes tuB of sdlool d!Udren
vohmteered for tbe Hands Across America tundraJs.
lng project Tuesday md the organizers hoped to get a
few good elephants signed up too. The Rln&amp;llnl

out shortly. Anyone wishing to
make a donatiOn to help maintain
Greenwood Cemetery is asked to
mall it to Racine VIllage, P.O. Box
J75, Racine.
Council discussed underpinning
of severa l trailers in the village and
elected to refer the matter to Mayor
Charles Pyles, as provided by
village ordinan&lt;I', for enforcement.
Another reminder was Issued
that property owners are to mow
their lots. At the June meeting,
letters will be sent to wners of lots
!Continued on page _l2)

Sen. Glenn
opposes plan

to the public .
"You havt' to stay out there and
tell your story of th&lt;' cu ts .vou'n'
fac ing," she• S&lt;Jid.

and any religious practices, feel free to contact us .

(61.) ltMI•I

Some of the major cities along the route

Southern FFA works on shelter house
of America have begun construe·
tion of a shelter house at the Ferry
Landing Park in Racine. It was

0.8 percent, but the cost of consumer goods overall
edged up 0.1 percent. Excluding fOod and energy
costs, wholesale prices rose 0.6 percent In April.
Analysts agree that the deflationary effects of the
oU price drop will have just about played themselves
out by the end of this month, and most forecast a
return to Inflation in the second quarter of the year.
Oil prices plunged from around $27 a barrel In
January to aoout $10 April I because of a glut on the
world market, but they have since leveled Ott around
$12 to $15 a barrel.
The inflation rate for calendar 1985 was 3.6 percent,
and economists generally relieve It will return to
about that level in the coming months as oil prices
stabUize.

HANDS ACROSS AMERICA ·May 25, 198

again to coun1 y cunun L-;sionr l's and

If you have any questions about the funeral service

Plar~J- TOoa~·-[j,
~~Jtme

FOod costs overall Increased 0.3 percent In April. A
1.2 percent drop in meat, poultry, fish and egg costs
and a 0.6 percent dip In the price of cooking oi was
offset by a 3.6 percent gain In fruit and vegetable
costs.
Costs of apparel and upkeep Increased 0.3 percent
while household furnishings fell back 0.4 percent.
Transportation costs, pulled back by the ooliapse In
oil prices, were down 2.5 percent In AprU.
Wholesale prices for April, announced last week,
fell 0.6 percent in a fourlh straight monthly decline
credited largely to a 10.4 percent dip In the price of
gasoline. Wholesale gas prices sank a record 21.9
percent in March.
Producer fOod prices also declined last month. by

Janual)' 1949 period, according to ooreau analy st
Patrick Jackman.
Consumer costs dropped 0.4 percent in lxlth
Februal)' and March following a 0.3 percent Increase
In January. The AprU decline adjusted for seasonal
variations and extended for 12 months translates Into
a 3.3 percent annual deflation rate.
"I hesitate to call attention to that because one
knows very well the situation Is going to turn around
next month" after energy priers boJ.tom out,
Jackman said.
"While we're not going to see runaway Inflation,
we're definitely going to see some positive numbers,''
he said.
Excluding energy costs, prices rose 0.4 percent
overall.

The answer is "Yfis" for most experienced funeral directors. We have acquainted.ourselves with most of Ute local religious customs and can advise you about them .
From the time we and the clergyman are called. we are
in close touch with each other so as to pay strict heed
to the family's wishes for any and all religious services.
It is important for you to contact your own pastor. pri est orrabbi EARlY so he can help you - and us. If )I)U
don1 happen to be active in any church. we can suggest
an appropriate clergy person.
During the timA of the funeral plan and service. your
religious faith can be strong support and sourc e of
comfort to you. To include meaningful portions of
your faith in the funeral service can render addi ·
tiona I comfort to those attending the funeral.

FOR JUST

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Ohio lottery winners

WASHINGTON (UP! I- Retail prices dropped a
healthy 0.3 percent In Aprtl, thanks to a another sharp
drop In energy costs, the third consecutive monthly
decline, the Labor Department said today.
The February-March-April decline was the first
three· month drop In consumer costs since 1952 and
the largest since 1949.
GasoUne pump prices fell 5.8 percent In AprU and
tuel oil and other energy goods fell back 4 percent to
lead the decllners on the seasonally adjusted
Consumer Price Index released by the Bureau of
Lailor Statistics.
PriCes have fallen 4.3 percent at an adjusted annual
rate over the last thr('(' months, the largest
three-month decline since the November 1948·

CAN A FUNERAL DIRECTOR CONDUCT FUNERALS OF ANY FAITH?

'

$3.25

how to file complaints with the Ohio
Departmen t of Insurance when the
lnsuran&lt;I' company will not honor n
claim.
The program is sponsored by tllP
Ohio Department of Insurance and
the Southeastern Ohio Lega l Se•vlces which is funded in pa rt rtu·ough
Title Ill of tre Older Americans
Act. the Ohio Department on Aging
and the Buckeye Hills -Hocking
Valley Heglonal Developement District Area Agency on Aging.
Senior eltl1.ens who wish to make
a lunch reservation must call
002-2161 at leas t one day in advance
of the program.

G•J•M 648 board ·

and lwo infant sons.

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

federal government purchases.

Miss USA

"

Nation's 'growth rate increases
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
nation's otltpUt of goods and
services Increased at a brisk annual
rate of 3.7 percent In the first
quarter of 1!116, the Commerce
Department said today, the result
of revised figures that boosted the
GNP to Its best three-months period
In a year.
The real Gross Natklnal Product,
adjusted for seasonal variations
and expressed In constant 1982
doDars at an annual rate,grew$32.7
billion In the first. three months of
this year to $3.623 trlUion, according
to a revised report prepared by the
Bureau of Economic Analysts.
A preliminary report last month
bad set OrstquarterGNP growth at
3.2 pen:ent, a $28.4 btuion advance
over the final quarter of 1985.
Department analysts said tlr
upward revision, which came as a
surprise to most private economists, was attriootable to a larger
!ban expected Increase In rosiness
lnventcries - $33 billion compared
with $31 billion In the preliminary
report - and a $3 btulon smaller
decreaae - $29.3 billion - In

.

.

, '·· ··~·,

Thompson named to board
Spring Ave. resident Robert Thompson has been appointed by
Mayor Richard Seyler as a member r1 the Pomeroy Board of Public
Affairs. 1be board meets the second and fourth Thursday of every
month at 12 noon at Pomeroy Vlllage HaD. Thompson will serve on
the board with Tom Reed and Chester Knight.

.:·;

PlioCo, !'e(llllt OD Pa(e 6

Due to the tnereased numtx&gt;r of Incidents arising from dogo;
runnlng unleashed through nelghoorhood streets, Middleport
Postnnaster Joe Struble urges village residents to ensure their dogo;
are property secured to prevent attacks upon mail carrlersandother
people.
The postmaster Is empowered to take action where It Is needed to
satisfy the safety of postal employees by either rev~g mall
· dellvecy to an address or a numlx&gt;r r1 other houses tt the need arises.
There are 7,(00 carrters who receive dog bites each ~ar In the
United States and the medical bills plus hst work time amounts to
more than $1 mUUon annually, Struble reports. Letter carrters are
now able to brtng suits against dog owners to seek damages t&gt;r dog
bites.
Some letter carriers have been awarded hefty sums of money In
court actions they have taken against !llme dog owners.ln Lorain, a
maO carrtercoUected $15,&lt;XXKI from an wner after the pit buD bit r11
the tlpr1 !be earlier's nose. In Hollywood, Fla., a female carrier was
awarded UX),(ID after she was attacked by a pit buD; In California a
letter carrier coUected $100,!XXJ alter being bitten In the tace and
receiving a wound requiring 100 stitches. The post &lt;tftce In Columoos
has recovered $7.1ffl from dog owners !ll far this year.
"The Postal Service will take action If and when the need arises to
seek redress legaUy on behalf of Its employees. We can retrain from
this If common sense Is used In providing proper safeguards In
restraining dogo; !ll they will not lx&gt; running loose In the oommuntlty.
The Post Services and the employees wish to thank those responsible
citizens who support us In this endeavor." Struble concluded.

Scipio SeniOr Citizens will have their regular monthly meeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m .. at the fb·e department. All members urged to
attend. VIsitors welcome.

In tbe Spotllpt 011 Page 10
(
.

Phtto, ~ cia Page 3

Postmaster wants animaLs secured

Scipio Senior Citizens to meet

:Companion shopping,

WASHINGTON iUPli - Sen.
John Glenn says tbe Army's plan to
ship deadly mustard gas across
Ohio and ot her states by rai l
"makes no sense" and shouldn 't bl&gt;
"even seriously considered."
The Ohio Democrat said Tuesday
he would use his seat on the Senate
Armed Services Committee in an
attempt to derail the plan.
The proposal. one of three under
consideration by the Army, caDs for
transporting the mustard gas In
train cars from Aberdeen, Md ., to
Anniston, Ala., where It would be
destroyed .
"Transporting lethal gas to Its
destruction site by unnecessarily
circuitous routes through OhiO and
other states makes no sense at all,''
said Glenn. " ... Transportation
through Ohio by this round-aoout
routing Is not an option to bl&gt; even
seriously -considered.
"By far, the best way to destroy
these out-of-date stockpUes Is to
Incinerate them on-site, where they
are now, which would require no
transportatkln," be said.
"I have asked the Army for cost
estimates for this approach and
hope that wUl 1x&gt; the nnal resolu-

lllolllers Circus Is In New Yot11 and orpnlzers II the
project hope thai the circus will iet some II Its
elepbaals into whal they expect will be a 4,1li21nlle
human cllaln spanning the nation. UPI.

students
chosen at EHS
John Rice has been named
valedictorian and Ronald Jacobs, Il. salutatorian of the l986
seniOr class of Eastern High
School.
The son of John and Anna
Rice. Route I. Reedsville, Rice Is
a member &lt;t the National Honor
Society and won a U. · s.
Matbematlcs award. He has
been In 4-H work for 10 years. He
played football for four years,
lettering three of them. He made
the SVAC team his junior year
and the second team defense on
. the all district team.
During his senklr year. he was
named honorable mention for
defense on the Class A All State
Team and was named to the
SVAC team as well as being
named the most valuable payer
for Eastern. He was In track for
four years, lettering all four
years and compiling the most
field points 6Jr the track team In
the lOth grade and du rlng his
junlor year won the total points
award liJr track. He played
basketball t&gt;r one year and was
a member of the qJiz ball team.
Rice Is enroUed at Ohio Unlversl·
ty's College d Engineering.
The son of Ronald and AUce
Jacobs, Eagle Ridge Road,
Racine, Jacobs Is pm&gt;ldent of
the NatiOnal Honor Society. He
has been a summer scholar at
Ohio University and a McGuffy
Scholar at that school. He has
served as a membl&gt;r ct the
Eastern quiz ilowi team and was
winner d the Holzer Science
Award. He bas been awarded
the Ohio Board r1 Regents
Scholarship. Jacob; has been In
4-H work and served as president of his club for one year. He
Is also enrolled I'n Ohio Unlversl·
ty's College of Electrical Engineering. Graduation exrrcJses

for the Eastern class of 1986 will
be held on Sunday, June 8.

Ronald Jarobs,O
Salutatorian

tion."

,.

'

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