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By The Bend

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The · Daily Sentinel
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Eastern wins
first league
season game
-Page 3

Monday, March 23, 1987
Page-8

Community calendarj area happenin;gs
MONDAY
ADDISON - Revival serv ices
Monday through Marth 2R, Addi ·
son United Methodist Church
wit h RP\'. C.J. Lemley i MOn·
day 1. Rev. Char les L usher
t Tuesdavl. Rev. Kurt Cl in e
t Wednesdavl, Rev. Richard Gra ham tThu.rsda vt. Rev . Rick
Vi lardo 1Friday) and Rev. Wi lliam Prier !Saturday I . Services
7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Ken Amsbary
Chapter of l zaak Walton Lea gue
wh ite elepha nl sa l e Monday.
Club wi ll furnish ham for 7 p.m.
meal: member s bring covered
dish, table srr·vire and drink .

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NOTED- Right to Read Week was noled by Pomeroy
: ..Elementary School students. Her e. lwo students occupy the
: .· ~ reading cave."

:Right to Read Week
:observed at Pomeroy
•' ' 'Be E nthu siastic Abo ut Read·
irig" wa s the thPme carried out
. with various activities at the
fomeroy E lementary School.
'' Bulletins boards. poster , slo·
gens, door decorat ions and hallwa'ys were used to carryout th(•
theme. ActlvlfiPs included a
filvoritc bear day with about 200
fuzzy animals spend ing the day
near a "Reading Ca ve ". the
&amp;&gt;nter of the week's activi ti es .
· :: Continuing with daily act iv iTies on Tuesday th e students and
teachers ca m e drcss(•d as their
filvorlte storybook charac tNs.
Wednesday was book exchange
otay, Thursda;·. the students and
tt'acher s wore their orig inal
paJll'r t·shlrt reading slogans.
ahd the fifth gradPrS read tO the
primary student s. Friday the
sixth graders read and presented
books they had made to the
kindergart en ch ildren.
. , Ongoing dally act lvities in~IUded reading in the Reading
Qavc which was occ upied at all
Urnes during t hP school day.
.? rkognltlon and membership in
1the Bea r Club, and Trivia ques1,!0ns and bookmark awards.
Theree was classroom reading
'Cliinpetlt lon by thP first three
tatdes with bear paws tra cking
~gress along the hallways,
nOt her contest using the "book
W m" growing toward lhP
f!Jtobd apple" tree, and dall;·
~stained silent read ing tim e.
•• Thl' fourth ~radcrs proscnted
~lal reading commer·cia ls for

the students at Friday's as scm·
bly. Jhn Lisle, principal. was
m ade an honorarv Bear Club
member a nd awards were given
to winners in the cont ests for best
posters, slogan s, decorated
classroom doors, and read ing
competitlon.
Chapter I. rea ding students
were awardert--5j.ierjal Cl"!'ti fi cates and pencil s for particlpa tion in an effort to make reading
a family a ffair.

RUTLAND - Rutland Bible
Methodist Church in revival
Monday through March 29, at 7
p.m. Evangelist Rev. J .W. Vess:
singer Rev. Raymond Rice.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meel s Monday at
Burkett's Barber Shop. Social
hour and tra ding session with
dealers precedes 8 p.m. meeting.
POMEROY - Wom en 's Auxil iary of Veteran s Memorial Hos pital meet 1: 30 p.m. Tuesday at
the h~spita l.

CHESHIRE- Ches hire Chapter OES meeis Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., insp~tio n. B ring covered
dish and des sert.
MIDDLEPORT
The
M i ddleport · Pomeroy Area .
Branch of the Amer i0a n Associ a·
lion of University Women meet 7
p.m. Tu~sday at the Middleport
firehouse.

POMEROY - Meigs County's
Litter Advisory Boarq meets 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
OBES building.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Mayor Fred Hoffman was
authorized to ' proceed wilh filing
an application for a hou sing
rehabilitation gra nl through the
Ohio Department of Development . if it Is deemed feasible',
when Middleport Village Council ·
met In regular session Monday
night.
Mayor Hoffman pointed oat
that applications for grants must
be filed by Aprll15 and that the
applications are so co mplica ted
that professional help must be
secured In order to stand a

PAGEANT WINNER - Scventeen·month·old .Joseph Adam
(.Joey ) Holman, son of Ml'lani(' and .Joseph Holman. Racinl', was a
top winner at 'tlw Fashion Model U.S,,\, Pag('anl hdd in
Nelsonvilt&lt;• Sunday. H•· waL• photogenic lirsl In his age group:
overall phot ogenit winner and was named Mr. Fashion Model in
his ag1• group. His si,l&lt;•r , Crystal Holman wu.• runncrup in her agt•
grou p for lh(• title of Miss Fllshion Model.

By ,JEANNE REALL
CANTON (UPIJ Ohio's
mining regulatory program is
bei ng so roundly cr iticized that
groups that tend to be adversar Ies ha-'e surfaced on the same
side of an attempted reform .
Envii'Onmcntalists and coa l
mine operators often fight for
ver v different causes, but those
who attended a public heari ng
Monday agreed on at least one
co ntention : th ~ program Is no t
working. ·
Complainls from both sides
abou t Ohio's alleged lack of
enforcement prompled the hear·
lng before officials of the Depart ment of th(' Interior's Office of
Surface Mining Reclamation and
.
,,
E n'f orcrmenl,
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' i'\mong the' speakers at the
hearing were Rep. 'Ralph Regula
and former Rep. John Seiberling,
both Democrals from Ohio. They
called on the Division of Recla mation to make the improve ments needed to prevent federal
Intervention, and said thr OSM
shares some of the blame for the'
state's Inadequacies.
"! do think !lhc Offlcr of
Surface Minin g) has been too
· slow to react to Ohio's prob·
lems," Seiberling said. "Thi s
hearing could have been held a
year ago- and should have been
hPid a year ago."

Pl'1ll1p Morris Inc. 1987

25's

Jland, aro urgrd 10 attend n(.'Xt
:iJ!eeks' m ee tin g beca use thc
Jt.llnual elect ion of officers will be
IK&gt;ld.
.. Leader VIcki Ferrell pn•sidcd
ill ..this wcok's mretin~ and
fepor ts were l(iven and ap wovro. W~ckly best loser was
l'Ohfrlcy Turner with Vicki FN r cll
r unner-up.
:-irhc club m eets C\' N)' Tuesday
6 p.m. at the Rutland i\merioon Legion Building. An~·onr
:Wanting Information on TOPS
~y call 992·2612.

· Other critics Included I he Ohio
Environmental Council, the Citi zens M ining Projec t of the
Envlronmenlal Polley Institute
of Washington , D .C., Citize ns
Organized Against Longwalllng
(a l ype of underground mining),
the League of Women Voters and
severa l small-mine opera tors.
The· mos t frequently aired
complaint s were that mines are
not Inspected often enough, vio lations are observed but not cited,
cil izen complalrits are Ignored
and reclamation efforts are
painfully slow.
OS~ reporled that In 198:i. Ohio

as
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;}Missionary
group meet.r
&gt;.Plans for making a friendship
qiull along with other specia l
pi-ojects were discussed at the
rt{-l'nt meetlnl( of the Women's
Missionary Associat ion of the
~drn United Bret hren Ch urch
i{Vi~ at the hom•• of Forrct
Mams.
• For roll rail members ~ave a
~orse of scrlptur&lt;'. "Nrw. Lit~
Through Looking For Mlssro ns
was the theme for the rvenlng
st'udy period . Background scrip·
furc' wa s read from Matt. 2~ and
!;ph . 4. PrAyer requests wer·e
presented and each one present
)ed In pra yer. Sunday schOol at
ihe Eden u.s.Curch on March l o
was 65.

Auditor of State Thomas E .
Fergusori will be the featured
speaker al lheJelferson-Jackson
Day Dinner of the Meigs County
Democratic Party to be held
Salurday at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy . Dinner will
be at 6:30p.m. with the program
to start at 7 p.m .
Ferguson has been state audl·
tor for the past 12 years. He was
overw helmingly re·el ecled to his
f{) urth term of oftlc~ in last
November's elec tion. Tl\e audl·
tor Is responsible for auditing
state and local government s In
.Ohio and has a start of 600
examiners around the state to
'c arry out this duty .
· During his three terms, Fergu·
son has · devoted hlmselt to
,u pgrading the professionalism of
his staff of examiners, Increasing the qua lily of state an~ local
.audits, and providing education

Birthday party
held for Wilson
.. .
·:.A

surprlsr party honoring
'}iletty ' Wilson wa s held Tuesday
·rtl!l)lt al her home. Hosting the
~party were Walter Wilson and
Edllh Ross. Cake. Ice rr~am and
A hi_PS were served to the guests.

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio , Tuesday, March 24, 1987

chance of being approved.
Mayor Hoffman said t hat he
had talked to two professional
flrins which arc handling appll·
catio ns for other rom munilies.
Cost of a professional firm doing
the work for .the applica tions
runs between $3,500 and $5.500
and then· theree is no assura nce
th at the application will be
approved, the mayor sa id.
Mayor Hoffman repor ted tha t
the Gallla·Meigs Comm unity Ac·
tion Agency, through Sid Edwa rds. had ind ica ted that it
wou ld help with such an appllca·
lion for Middleport. but that the

mine inspectors cited only 58
percent of the violations they
observed. Nina Hatfield of the
OSM 's Co lumbu s field office,
sai d si g-nifica nt improvements
have been made in the past year
and more citations are being
issued.
The "improved" statis tics arc
misleading, however , Floyd
M ansfield and Jim Davis, two
coa l mi ne owners, sa id duri ng a
recess. ' 'I've been In business
four years at th e co mpany I have
now." said Mansfield, w.ho ow ns
Bask Coa l Inc. of Canton. "I n the
firs t three and a half years. I had
one v iol alion. I 've had 11 in the
pa st six month s.
" It's not th at there' s more
viol ations. It 's lu st . tha t t~ey'rr
nitpicking to satisfy OSM . '!'he
state and the feder&lt;J I officia ls are
having a battle among them selves. and they're coming back
and l akin~ it out on us."
Mansfield and Dav is agr·eed
tContlnued on Pag&lt;' 51

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
Mlr's. suggested pricing based ~n lull·price brands.

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agency co uld not hand le the
en lire process.
Th(' gra nt s will be for $800,000,
$400,000 a yea r for a two·yea r
period and funds ca n be used not
only for housing rehabilitation
but for sidewalks and stree ts in
targeted areas. the mayor
r eported.
Pa. firm may be drosen
Council · members indica ted
th at they werr willing to tak e a
chance on flling ·an applica tion
for a grant and voted unanimously in favor of Mayor Hoffman
proceed ing wllh that applica tion
if he deems it advlsa ble and It ra n

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

be filed on tim e.
in dicat ed that he briiPvrs the he Is to ld that a tel'h nlcl an is
Mavor Hoffman sa id 1hat Co m- cos ts will ll 'nd lo run m ore en rout e to Mlddl&lt;·pm·t but a
technician n&lt;•l·er appears a t his
munity Programs Inc .. Pennsy l- towards the $:1.'&gt;00 fl~ure homr. Cil rule charged that the
vania, one of th e two fi rms he had
p;,yment for I he costs wou ld be
con tact ed earlier in regard to fro m th e loan pa yback fund. · co mpany should be accountable
processing the app licatio n .
to someonP t~nd t hCJ t tlw roril pa ny
Rrian Conde who r('sides at :146
wou ld probabl y be selected to Syca more St. appNII'NI be lore should n ot be paid 1he price II has
handle the mattrr If a decision i s cou ncil and voired his di sappro- sci for th&lt;• servlcc.Mayor 1-iof.
fman indirall'd that h1• wil l
ve.~ ! of scrvicrs provid0d by llw
made to procl'cd.
co n1 ~t c t lhP company un C'o ndP~ s
Cou ncil Preside nt Dewe;' Hor · Cable Co mmun ica ti ons Croup,
ton indicated th ai he felt the cost s lnr .. whic h handl es the ca biP behalf.
J..of hid UITI'plcd
of getllnJ&lt; applications prepared
tf'IPvision for lhf' co mmun ity.
Counc il acccp tod the bid or
will r('duce the number of com Conde sai d I ha t his rwrptlon Is
Brady G ilm ore, $Ul~1 , for a lot
muni ties applying and hence wi ll ' ~ trocious " Jnd tha t thr com nrar the Gi!hrrr Srrvlcr Station
enhance Middleport's chances of pany pays no attrn tion to r om on Ohio 7 brlow Middl eport.
apprO\·ai.. If the appli c&lt;tt1on is plai nt s. H(• sta trd th a t wh1•n hr
fil ed - and Mayor Hoffman ra lls th e co mpany to comp lain,

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Captors
barter
ailing
hostage
BF:IRUT. Lebanon tUP ii --:
T he tea rful wife of America n
hostage Alan nSt ecn today ca ll ed
on the Mos lem (' Xtremlst kid·
nappcr s of her husband lo allowo
him t o seek medi ca l trea t ment.
The underground Islamic JIhad f or th&lt;· Liberation of Pales·
tine announced Monday tha t
Stern wa s gravel y Ill and could
die In 10 da ys. Thr pro-Iranian
group gave no details of Steen' s
ailment In a two-page sta tement
delivered to l hc Bl'irut newspaper An·Na har .
IN PREPARATION - Crew m emhers were
busy Monday preparing the Pomeroy levee for th&lt;•
ferry service whi ch will provide transportation
hack and forth across the Ohio River while the
Pomeroy·Mason hrldge is closed for repairs. A
m ec hanism which clamps onto th e prow of th e

ferry ~It lands Is being lnslalled at the Pomer oy
landing. Ohio Department of Transportanon
officials said Friday the tentatlvt• closing date for
the 60-year·old structur e Is still March 30, pending
deliVI'ry of materials.

Administration outlines acid rain a~tion
By GEORGE LOBSENZ
WASHINGTON iUPll -The
• Reagan M mlni stratlon, see king
to smooth the way for an
upcoming summi t with Ca nadian
leaders, has outlined a five-year,
$2.5 billion program to hel p
develop technoiogy that ca n
reduce acid raln · rela ted
emissions.
Ener gy Secretary John Herri ngton announced Monday his
agency would ask Congress for
$850 million this year as the first
Installment on a U .S. ·Canadlan
agreement to foster development
of "clean coal" technologies.
He said t he $850 million will be
used to help finance the most
promising industry proposals to
economically cut sulfur and
nitrogen emissions from older
coal-burning power plants and
boilers.

State
auditor
to speak
locally

Kings : 10 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine 100's: 12 mg " Ia( 0.9 mg nicotine ev. per cigarette by FTC method.

en tine

Critics blast Ohio
ffiine enforcement

:;Ali mcmbers of TOPS . Ru ·

..:Others attending were Eric
1\'{l~on, Andy, Betty and Lovr
·.J!atey, Danny and Roberta
,Ralrden. Tonja Hudnall , Sa lly
,Y'Ites, Charles and Jenny Leach,
•Floyd. Edith'and Floyd Jr. Ross,
'l['oi;n, Sheryl, Joshua. J~cob and
•.Abigail Wilson, Stormy Hart , and
,Gene Smith.

4090

Showers likely tonight, with
a low n car ~0. Variable cloudiness Wednesday, with a
chance of showers and highs
near &amp;5. The probability · of
precipitation Is 60 percenl
and 50 percent Wedlull

Middleport seeks housing rehabilitation grant

TOPS
meets
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Vol. 36, No. 225
Copyrighted 1987

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WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND
Rutland
Friendly Gardeners will meet
Wednesday at the homr of
Kimberly Wilford. A program on
roses will be presented by Robert
· Snowden.

TUESDAY
KYGER -Ches hire Township
T rustees meet Tuesday . 5::10

Progra m leade r Hilda
Yeauger was ill but hec program
was present ed by Kathleen Scott .
The titl e was "The Resurrection
Storv." Mrs. Nease r ea d a
Len ien prayer and the discussion
Cl•nt ered on the resurrection and
how it enables Christians to have
hope and peace. The program
leader called for th e members to
examine their roles as moi:lels of
peacemaking in relat ionship Ia
ot hers. As Mrs. Scott read the
program mat eria l, scripture rrsponses were given. The group
sa ng "C hrist the Lord is Ri sen
Today" and poems , "In His
Steps" and "E aster Bonnet "
closed the meting. Refreshment s
were served by the hostess.

Daily Number

p.m .. township building .

Forest Run United Methodist
Women conduct recent meeting
Severa l di strict meetings were
an nounced when the Fores t Run
Unitrd Met hodist Women met at
the church with Edith Sisson as
hostess.
Mary Nease presided at th e
meeting with a lettrr bei ng read
from E lizabeth .Je ffers. district
pres ident. an nounc ing the F.m maus Walk, April 2.1·26: th e
Women's Re treat, Ma y 1 and 2.
an d the Dis I r iel meeting lo be
held in Marietta on Sept. 24.
A th ank you card was read
from Mrs. Nease. The birthday of
Naomi Wyatt wa s observed. and
22 sick and shutin ca lls were
reported . It was noted that four
members att ended the Lenten
breakfast.

Ohio 1-oU(•rv•

Thomu E. Ferguson
and training in new ·Jaws and
accounting procedures for local
government officia ls.
Upgrading the audit staff has
always been one of Ferguson's
prime objectives. T here are
currently 27 certified public
accountant s on the auditor's
staff, a number of them becomIng ce~tl fled while working for
Ferguson.
Ferguson also has demonstra led how modern technology
ca n be used In the auditor's
office. In 1976, he Initiated a ,
!Conllnued on Page 5)

Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen
oxld!' em issions are believed to
combi ne with moisture In cloud s
to form acid rain , which scien t Ists have linked to sterile "dead"
lakes and st unted tree growth.
The$850 million, to be awarded
for demonstration projects In
early 1988, would be be the f irs I
part of a five·year plan that calls
for additional $500 mlllfon l ncrc·
ments In fiscal years 1990, 1991
and 1992.
Companies whose projects are
selecl ed for federal funding
would have to make, at min·
Imum, an eq uival ent Investment.
T he plan would grratly expand
the department 's current "clean
coa l " program, which attracted
139 proposals from Industry and
resu lted In governmen t funding
for nine project s.
Herrington told repor ter s the
expaa nded program would enable i ndu stry to Install by the
mld·l990s advanced pollution
control devices that wou ld
achieve high levels of emiss ions
reduc tion at an affordable cost.
"It would not lock us l nlo
soon-to -be-obsolete l echno logles
that some people would prefer,"
he added, In an apparen t reference to proponent s of acid rain
control legislation who say currenlly availabl e technologies can
do the job now .
Herrington's news co nference
was Intended to defuse an Issue
that might otherwise prove trou·
blesome for President Reagan at
his scheduled m eeting with Cana·
dian Prime Minister Brian Mul·
roney next month.
Reagan has upset the Ca nadl·
ans by resolutely opposing acid
rai n legislation, say ing there Is
not yel sufficient scientific data
to take effective action on the
problem .
A year ago, Reagan bowed to
Canadian pressure and endorsed
a report . by U.S. and Ca nadian
special envoys on acid rain that
recommended the United States
spend $5 billion on "clea n coa l"
projects, with half coming from
the government and half from
private Industry.
Since theri, some U.S. o!flcl~ls,
Including ' Herrington, have
waffled somewhat on the $2.5
billion federal com mitment.
prompting concern among Carra-

dian officials about whN her awarded to clean coa l proj ec ts
Rea~:an lniended to see k the fu ll that met guidelines co nta ined In
amount.
thr U.S .·Ca nadlan report on acid
La st week, Reagan Issued a rain control.
sta tement pledging to ask Con·
The rPport by U.S. Envoy Drew
gress for $2.5 billion and It was Lewis and his Ca nadian cou nterclear Herrington 's new s confer- part , William Davis, recomence was Intended to co mplelely
mended the project s funded
assuage Canadian concer ns be- should be eas ily adaptable to
fore Reaga n goes nor th to meet older. dir tier plan ts genera lly
with Mulronry.
co nsidl'red to be the bl~ges t
" I have communicated this pollution problems .
funding plan to the Canadian
Hen·ington said five or the nine
governm ent and we look for a · projects that received funding
positive reaction," Herrington under 1he $400 million solicit alion
sa id.
,
could be applied to older plants .
Part of Herr ington 's lundl ng
However. a r eport by the
plan m ay raise so me controversy Envlronmen t ul' Prot ec llon
In that It seeks to Incl ud e $150 Agency r eleased ear li er !his year
million already sprnt under the found only one of the nine had the
" new" $2.5 billion program .
potential for " retro-fitt ing" older
Herrington noted 1he govern- 'facilities. Herrington sa id his
m ent al ready was spe nding MOO department did not agree with
million this year on clean coal the EPA study.
projects solici ted from Industry
Reagan's new prog r·:r m would
un der the Clean Coa l Technology
tap the remaining $:150 mllllon •ln
Reserve Fund approved by ·Can· the original $750 million clean
two years ago.
·
coal r eserve fund to help pay for
no·._. _· $400 million, Herrlng- Ihe first $850 million solicitation
$150 million had been

TOP H()NOREES ~To p honorees lor the tvc,
sectional and district champion Melp Marau·
derette basketball team (26·1) that came wlthtn a
whblper of making lhc slate tournament are
pictured above. They Include, seated left to right,
Julie Miller (Most Rebounds), and ,fenny Miller
.j

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In It s statemP nt , handwritten
In i\rablc, the group offered to
free Steen In rxc hange for 111(1
Arab prisoners held In Isra el.
Hours aft er the captors' an noun cement, Stl'rn's wife. V lrgl ·
nl a, sa ld her husba nd was nol Ill
before he was takrn hos tage and
called o n th~ap tors to to allow
him to be tr ated for his undl s·
closed a limen .
Speaking at a n ews co nference
at the Beiru t University Colleg1•
In west Beirut from whPre her
hu stiand was abdu ctNI, Virginia
Steen sa id, "I will ask ... that they
they release my hu sband so he
C'an see a speclalbt and can be
trcat&lt;'d."
"I ask If they believe In the
word humanitarian lha t they
release him and g('t him Into the
besl possible ~ospltal at this
llmt•. 1 hope they know, and I am
su n' they know, how much
wonderfui work i\lann has
done," said Virginia Steen, her
voice break ing as she wept
th roughout the nf'ws con fer ence.
Steen 's wlfr sa id she fJilcd to
sleep through thr nigh! alter the
captors lssU&lt;'Il the statement
claimin g her husba nd was ill.
Asked whether her husba nd was
Ill before he wa s taken ho• tagc,
she sa id , "No.··

(Most Valuable Oflen~lve Player and Best Free
Throw Shooter). In bad arc Tammy Wrlrht
(Mosl AMIII18), Shelly Stohart (Most Improved)
Jennl8wartz (Moat Valuable DefenHlve Player):
and Jenni Couch (Coache&amp; Aw•rd). Sceslory and .
additional photos on Pace 4.

�March 24, 1
Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel ' ·
Pomeroy-'-Middleport, Oliio ·:
Tuesday, March 24. ·1987 l

Comme,.tary
End run by

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~m~ rn........._-,-.~c.~

'qlv
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A!!Sistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

The sound of swooshing hats is
heard across the land . The
Democratic Partv presldl'nlial
prlmarv race has ·begun. In lis
early configuration it's shaping
up as a conies! keyed to both
n ·cognition and ideological
posilion.
One well· recognized big name
- from the Ideologically liberal
wing of !he party ~ flipped his
fedora out of !he ring recently:
Gov. Mario Cuomo .
There have been lwo formal
announcemenl s of hats very

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Nunn~

much in the ring, both from ihe
neo·liberal wing: Gov. Bruce
Babblt and Rep. Richard Gephardt. Still expected is, another
nee-liberal Sen. Joseph Blden,
and Gov. Michael Dukakls and
Sen.' Dale Bumpers -who are
either liberals or neo-liberals. All
five are able. All five are
unknown nationally .
Extremely well-known is a
candidate from the very liberal
wing, Jesse Jackson. He surely
will r un . He has a recognition
problem: Voters know too much

_______Be...;_n_W_a_ue_n__.be_;,_rg'
about him and don't like him .
The front -runner Is retired Sen.
Gary Hart . He Is well -known. But
what kind of head Is beneath the
hat hi the ring• · Is he a
very-liberal: a 95 percent liberal
rating from the Americans for
Democratic Action, and former
ca mpaign manager for George
McGovern? Is he a neo·liberal?
He is not against a strong
military. Is he a liberal ? He
stresses that we shouldn't flex
our power. In Washington, political people still ask: Who is Gary

LE'M'ERS OF OPINlON are wei com.:- They should 1x&gt; less than l)() words
long. All letters are s ubjl'Ct to editing a nd rTllSI bP signed with name, addrl'Ss and
telephon e numb(&gt;r. No Wl slgnffi letters wUI be pt·bllshed . Lett ers should be In
good taste, addressing Issues , not personalltles.

Back.'ltairs at the White How•e .

New White House
crew learns a lot

Bak!'r Is surprised at how much lime he spends with the president.
monitoring meetings, walking by his side. counseling him. and
showing him the way to compromise in his last two years In office.
HI' Is used to being No. 1 and is now ina "support role." which he ha s
never played before, but observers say he is adjusting " pretty welL"
The former Tennessee senator also is not expected Job!' a stubborn
gatekeeper who will deny access Jo the president by Cabinet officials
and other top-ranking agency heads. In the past . some members of
the Cabinet, who have wanted to see the president, have had to walt
fQf weeks .
:But Bak!'r believes . an aide said. tha t PennSylvania Avenue is a
two-way street from !he White House to the Capitol and h!' wants the
p~sld ent to "reach out."
•
~ker's former crackerjack press secretary. Tom Griscom, is a
k~y player on the White House transition team. Griscom Is In a
dHPm.ma. He was about Jo become Presidmt of the Washington Office
of()gllvle Mather. a public relations firm. when something happened
tt!hlm on the way to the forum .
ofle Is torn between making a lucrative sa lary , with more time for
bl&amp; family. and ser vi ng in the White House. If he chooses to remain as
B~ker's key aide de cam p, hr wants to be involved In long range
policy planning.
0

:The White House has a new Cabinet secretary -tall, attractive
Nancy Risque - who is making her "courtesy calls" to all the
members of the Ca binet. She will beth~ highest ranking woman In a
~hlte House that is short on fema les In the top strata.
-Risqu!' previously worked in the Office of Legislative Li aison and
knows her way around Washington and Capitol HilL She had left to
work in thE' privale sec tor but was summonPd back to the White House
alter the Iran arms·Contra aid scandal broke.
;Maurren 11eagan held a luncheon In her honor at the Four Seasons
Hotel and invited several other women appointees and reporters to
celebrate the occasion.
·Balding White House spokes man Marlin Fitzwater came into the
piess room on St. Patrick's Day with a gleeful report : "The best news
y~sterday was thai they have found a cure for baldness."
·Fitzwater replaced the podium used by predecessor Larry Speakes
with a n!'W broader, stronger one that can hold more papers. The
sl!Jcky Fit zwa ter expla ined th at he was not happy to have to bend
down to pick up the papers that fell from the podium one da y with the
cameras rolling on his backside .

Letter to the Editor
'

Some history of river piers

1n recPnt weeks there have
been articles In the paper about
thePomeroyRiverBankWa ll . ln
a writing of mine to the Meigs
Soil &amp; Water Conserva tion Service tMay 1f&gt;, 19721 and again in
the paper 1March· 18, 19821 l
called attention to this deterio·
ratl~g wall.
I also mentioned a rock wall in
the west end of Mlnersvillr
extending from Welshtown
corner to the Pomeroy WaiN
Works. l would also like to state
that in addition to the wall therr
were lour large rock piers
Installed In the area .
This end of Mlner"'l lle "' one
time was on a slip. Thl'se piers
wE&gt;r" thew is(' engineers' solution
to ihe problem . Tim(' has proven
the success of their wisdom.
These piers wer!' nothing but
large piles of rocks. extending
from the top oft he river bank and
protruding out into thE' river. My
da"d told me the rocks used were
brought In by horse and wagon
and river barges. ThesE' piers
were known as the Rea !David),
Hartenbach t Alberti ; Dyke·
McCallum and the Nye tEd I, so
named because th('y wen' In
front of the above · residents.
Th'ese piers formed a buttress for
the road along the slipping area.
A ' little below the Hartenbach
pier. as a little boy. I witnessed
my, first drowning, H -0 -R -R·I -B-

L·E.
When the 1937 flood receded, a
fissure appearcd. revealing
parts ot this old slip. It ex lended
I

from the eas t corner of the late
water works, crossed the highway. running parallel to the
highway, Pastward to thP Jo!'
Withrow property , back across
the highwa y and over the river
bank. In 1945 the men and I, In
lower Minersville, extended the
Pomeroy water line , by pick and
shovel, Jo my residence. At this
time we hit this cr~l'lce In front of
the wall of the Nye property down
about .10 Inches deep. I almost
lost my pick In this crack. It Is In
this spot thai rocks were
dumped, last November 1986. by
the Highwa y Department to
prevent lhP road from caving ln .
Before the river pool In our
arpa was raised about 10 feet by
thP Installation of the Eureka
Dam, these piers were very
much exposed and by their
projPctlng out Into the river they
furnished very appropriate fishIng positions. About every evenIng In the summer time, there
would be fishermen and boys on
the piers fishing for !hat most
popular fish of those days,
"Skip-Jack ." Fishing 12 to 15
Inches deep for these fish there
was no danger ol snagging your
line. Fishermen don 'I know what
a fishing thrill Is, until you have
had the experience ' of pulling
those large red tailed ones out of
the water with a 20 to 25·loot cane
pole without the aid of a dip-net.
Victor L 'Berger Brown
42960 State Route 124
P,omeroy, Ohio 45769
\.o

Hart? His former congressional
colleagues do not hold hJm In high ·•
regard. He carries a hugh t..
financial debt from his 1984
ca mpaign.
So what have we? A plastic . ,
frontrunner. A maxi-vocal, near- ,..
radical super-star. And a taxi
squad of unknowns. All of them .. ,
will spend the . next months . ; ;
shaking hands, issuing position
papers, Inventing hokey photo · -;
opportunities. This traveling :
road show could be an :
•
embarrassment.
What's missing? A candidate ~
from the right wing . of the
left-wing party - an Ideological
spot called "moderate." And ,I
second, a candidate who make
news, rather than begs for it.
l
Am I Inching up toward :
another column about the pros· :
peels of Sen . Sam Nunn? I am. •
There have been some news j'
stories Indicating that Nunn has
laken himself out of the race. He 1
hasn't.
l
The media door Is open. As •
chairman of the Arml'd Services ~
Committee. hi' is.Mr. Democrat :
regarding the most Important •
1
land newsworthy) issue: arms
control negotiations. If that's not
the most newsworthy story, then :
the lran·contra scandal is. Nunn '
Is a memberoftheSenateSpeclal
Committee Investigating the af· •
fair . He's also chairman' of
, " PSI" the Permanent Subcom· I
mittee on Investigations. That's '·
a plum committee with a broad I
range. II draws the kind of j
headlines that Joe McCarthy got
Investigating communists and
John and Robert Kennedy got
Investigating Jimmy Hoffa. •

'..

THE PLAINS - Champion
Meigs dominated the aiJ.TVC
selections by the conference's
nine coaches In having three
selections each and collecting
three of the four special awards.
Meigs' 6-1 senior guard J.R.
Kitchen was ·chosen the boys
Player of the Year, Mick Childs
the boys Coach of the Year and
Ron Logan was picked the 'girl s
.Coach of the Year.

loan."
He was absolutely correct.
Here's how the SBA rules and
regulations allowed · a
RockefE-ller-owned business to
qualify for a loan intended for thE
needy:
A Small Business Administration offici at said the agency which no longer lends money to
farmers - subjects loan applicants to a "credit-elsewhere
test " that Is supposed to keep
"fat rats from taking advantage
of the government:"
The official. who Insisted on
anonymity, said he would h~ve a
hard time explaining the creditelsewhere test in laymen's
terms, because "I don'! speak
laymen's terms."
The complex test involves cash
flow, existing debts and the effect
a higher-Interest loan would have
on the prospective borrower's
business. But despite Its name.
the test has nothing to do with the
applicant's actual ability to find
credit elsewhere , as was demonstrated i,p the case of Rocke-

feller, who didn't even try.
Bob Alexander, the SBA's
Atlanta area counsel. said the
credit -elsewhere test was lmple- ·
men ted in the early 1980s In hopes
of encouraging borrowers who
could afford it to get their funds
from private lenders. He acknowledged , however, that there
Is no requirement that applicants
try the private sector before
seeki ng a governmentsubsidized loan .
In defense of the SEA's loan
methods, Alexander sa id.
"There are 10.000 things you
have to go through. and the
requirements are more stringent
than a bank's."
A couple of other citr us
farmers with SBA loans agreed
that the loan process Is painful. .
like picking your way through a
barbed -wire entanglement.
David Balles, whose nowretired father, Harry, got a
couple of SBA disaster-aid loans
In 1984, said his family "had to
mortgage everything." Includ Ing his grandmother's house, to
get the loans. Balles said the
family citrus grove Is still
struggling to recover from lhe
1983 freeze, and said: "A lot of
people applied for !he loans and
didn't get them. Many people

Defending cattle shows
NASHUA, N.H. !NEAl- Four notwithstanding all the hoopla
years ago, Republicans watched . and excitement they generate,
enviously as contenders for the produce an inordinate amount of
Democratic presidential nomi- grief for their organizers?
The recent event here Illusnation gathered frequently to
trated both the strengths and
appeal lor grass· roots support at
highly visible political meetings weaknesses of cattle shows.
Undoubtedly the most positive
throughout the country.
Although the weekend confer· aspect of the meeting was the
E'nces and conventions featuring facl that it brought seven conjoint appearances by the candi- tenders for the,party 's presidendatE'S were dubbed "cattle tial nomination together with
shows" by some cynics, Demo- hundreds of Republican loyalists
cratic activists enjoyed assess· from throughout the Northeast.
The participating politicians
lng the politicians and reveled In
were
Vice President Bush, Sen.
the publicity that the events
Robert Dole of . Kansas, Rep.
naturally produced.
Repubi1C9.ns were denied sim- Jack Kemp of New York. former
Ilar opportunities because there Delawre Gov. Pierre S. "Pete du
was no contest for their party's Pont IV, the Rev. Marlon "Pat"
presidential nomination. A very Robertson, former Secretary of
popular President Reagan was Defense Donald Rumsfeld and
completing a successful first former Secretary of State Alexterm In office and was certa in to ander Halg.
Perhaps the greatest contribube selected by the party without opposition - to seek a tion of cattle shows Is the unique
role they play In providing not
seco nd term.
Now. · however, the Republi- only a forum but also a substancans are acting with a vengeance tial audience for lesser known
to make u,p for that missed ca ndidates who otherwise might
opportunity. The party's first encounter dllflculty in attracting
cattle show of putative ·1988 sizable crowds of potential
presldentiaf nominees was ex - backers.
ceptionally premature, held last
year In Nashville, Tenn.
But the temporary equality of
Another was staged in Februall contenders is hardly appealary In Washington, D.C., while
Ing to the front-runners. As a
the most recent occurred In result , It's not uncommon for
Nashua, N.H., In mid-March.
leading candidates to decline to
Still others are scheduled for Des
appear at such events II they
Moines, Iowa, In May, Seattle, In
believe there Is any danger that
October, and New Orleans, early they will be upstaged, out next year.
classed, undercut or otherwise
The Democrats , however,
[
embarrassed.
have not conducted a single such · Front -runner Bush· agreed to
event for their ·would-be 1988
·atiend the recent meeting In New
presidential nominees and none Hampshire but reportedly InIs now scheduled.
sisted upon special arrangeHave the Democrats perhaps ments that allowed him to be the
cgncluded that cattle shows, only candldatf! to deliver a

.

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••••

•

COACH OF THE YEAR
Mlck Childs I Meigs I

1987 TVC GIRL'!
BASKETBALL ALL-LEAGUE TEAM
Player-School
Yr.
Lori Wllllams-Federai-Hocklng ....... oooo ...... oooooooo•···oo-·oo······10
Jenny Miller-Meigs ...... oo .... oo ....................... oo ...........
.12
Cassie Wright-Alexander .. ........... .. ...... ... ........... ... ... .... ..... .12
Audra Burke-Alexander .... . oo .... . oo······oo········oo•oo•• " ""''''' ' '.l2
Julie Miller-Mel!(s ........ oo ........... oo .................... .... ..... ... .. ..
Jennifer Cuckler-Federai-Hocking oo oo .................. ......... ..... 12
Michelle CrousE&gt;-VInton County ....... .. oo ..... ...... ....... ............ 10
Jennl Swartz-Meigs ........... . oo ....... ··oo········oo• •oo······ " """'' ' ''12
· Shannon Huston-Wellston ....... ... ........ ...... oo ............... oo ...... 12
Missy Runyon - Vinton County ... ... ....... ..... . oo ......... .. ... ......... ll

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HONORABLE MENTION
Player-School
Yr.
· Cheryl Doughty-Miller ........... oo .... oo .. oooooooooooooo .......... oo ...... Jl
Mia Burt-Nelsonville·York ............ oo ........ ..... oo ......... .. oo ...... 12
Shelly Shiflet-Trimble .... .. ... oo .. .... . oooo .. .. ..... oo .. oo ... . oo ........ oo.ll
Debbie Dixon-Wellston .oo .. oo .... .. ........................... ..... oo .... ooll
· Tiffany Rlchards-Nelsonvllle-York ... ................ oo. oo ... oo.oo••oo lO

•

PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Lori Williams IFederal-Hockingl
COACH OF THE YEAR
Ron Logan I Meigs)

'

..'•
••
.,

for attendance to an "OideTyme
Picnic," where his candidacy
was to be promoted by such
notables as Fuzzy the Kop and
Happy the Clown.
It's easy to understand why the
Democrats may be seeking a
respite from that political rnaneuverlng and general zaniness.
Nevertheless, cattle shows make
a real contribution to the lnformal process we rely upon to
select our presidents.

·

:
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'

MEIGS LOCAL CAGERS - MemherN ol the Meigs Local
Elemenlary 1fifth grade) tournament chtUIIplon haskethalllt•am
are, first row, left to right, .Jerry Grimm, J. D. Davis, Trent
(~ii&gt;Jand, Brian Walker and Shannon Nltz. Back row - Trevor
Bonds, ·Brud Ander•on, ,JaSfln Hysell, .Jack Stanley and.Jef!Trace.
Reur- ..ank Cleland.

NBA results

PomNov. Ohio 45769. Ph . 992 ·21~6. S£-.
co nd l'l i1ss poslaJ!:P paid a1 Poml'l'o,V .
Ohio.

Nf'W 'fork. Nf'W York 10017.

P'OS'IldA9TER: Send addrf'Ss rhan ~Z('S

Thf' Dally SrnllnN. 111 Cuurl S1..
PomC'rn:v. Ohio 45769.

lo

l'tilll!dlph
" '"hndn
:"rio'" l 't~rk
~··~ "' '' ""'

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'
One Wrok .. .... .............. .......... ..... $1.2~
()n(' Munth ... : .............. .. ............. $5.4~

On(' Yf:'ar .. ... ............... .. .... ....... o$65.CN
SJNGLECOPV
PRICE
Dally ........ .. ........ .... ............. 25 Cl'nts ·

Wl'('k ,

'

No subscrlp!lonll by mDII pE"rmiiiC'd In
.u.rws wh£'re hOme carrier svrvll.'f' Is
ava llabll'.

Milt Sottoc:rtpllons

IMide Melp Cou~y

,, '

•

"How did WE do today, dear? "

. '

t3 WePI&lt;o ..... .... ........ ............. ... . $17.29
26 Weeks ....... .. ............. ... ... ...... 134.06

~2

Weeks ...,.................. ............ $66.16
OUioldo Melp Caunly

t3 W ~eks oo ........................ .... .... ~:ffl

26 Weeks .............. .................... ·
12 WePI&lt;• .......... .... .... ............ .... $67.60

:!0

1M .'!Ill !Ill

n·ntnd Oh·M1•n
111 t'l

!1: ·.\lhUihl

ror .
Bryan Durst and Collins each
had a double and a si ngle, John·
son doubled. while Horner. Kyle

Davis , and Jeremy Barber each
singled.
The book on Co llins super
pitching effort read three walks ,
seven stri keouts, no hit s, and no
run s.
Welch, Hurt. and Sau nders
gave up 8 hits on tr n walks and
four strikeouts.
EHS pla yed super defense with
Mark Griffin making several
finr plays at third .
Ea stern Coac h Scott Wolfe
said. "II feels great to have a
team do such a good job so ea rl y
In th e season. Eddie Co llins was
super and got stronger as the
game went on. I was pleased with
our hitting and our defense. This
game should build your confi dence and erase any doubts
aboul how good we ca n polen '
tlally be."
Eastern hosts Hannan Tracf'
Wednesday and Federal Hock ing Thursday.
Lln escore:
Eastern
240 24x-12 8 I
N.G.
1100 000- 0 0 3
Batteries: Collins IWP) and
Davi s. Welch ILPI. Hurt . Sa unders and Glassburn .
Girls Whip Pirates
TUPPERS PLAIN - Defend·
lng District Champion Eastern
continued In their winning ways
with a 12-4 triumph over North
Ga ll Ia here Monday In the SVAC
season openf'r for girl s' softball .
Eastern took a 2-0 lead In the
bottom of the first. but NG tied
!he score at 2-2 1n the top of these·
cohd. EHS went ahead 3-2. ho·
wever. !he Pirates responded to
take a 0 lead In the third.
Eastern went on top ror good In
!he fourth, when tra ilin g by one
they plated two big runs to break
open the game. with one out and a
run ner on. senior Arlene Ritchie
poked a long home run for a $.4
EHS lead.
Lee Ann Robin so n had a two
run triple In a five run fifth Inning
that iced the game for the winners.

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r--------------------------l

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"tEniNO VOU THERE SAFELV"
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
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OPEN : B·S MON.-SAT.; 8·8 FRI .
PH. 742·3088
Master C1rd and Viti Welcome

.J~: NNI

Usa Lance went 2-4 to lead
EHS and round out thP hi fl ing a! ·
ta ck.
Wiley , Hunt and Ll!'vlng eac h
singled for NG .
The Ea glt•tt es of Coaeh Pam
Dough itt are now 1-0 and NG Is 01 both overall and In !he lea gue.
Junlqr hur ler Amy Berkhlmrr
picked up the win In going the dis·
lance, allowing just three hits
and keepi ng !he NG hitt ers off
st rid e throughout the evening .
Spencer suffereli the loss .
Eastern hosts Hannan Tra ce
Wednesday .
Llnescore
N.G.
022 000- 4 ~ 6
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PHONE

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CO I.UMI1U S. Ohio iUP I! - .
F rank l.uplca, who guided Stow . •
Wal &gt;h .h'suit lo a 211-CJ regu lar ,
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Lup ica, whose Warriors were
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th(• slil l&lt;' th!s past spason, J'P· .

&lt;'t' iw ·d I ~• of 1hi' 4!1 votes cast by
c·oaches fro m around the state.

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Nf'Wspaper SaiC'S. 7.13 Third Avrnur.

I

By Scott Wolle
EAST MEIGS -Senior hurler
Eddie Collins started the young
1987 baseball season on the right
foot as he pitched a no-hit shutout
In pacing the Eastern Eagles to a
season opening victory, 12-0,
over North Gall! a.
Eastern Is 1·0overall and In the
SVAC, while North Gallla Is 0-1.
Eastern took advantage of ten
NOrth Gallla waiks and three er·
rors, while pounding outS hits en·
route to the lopsided win. Over·
all, 17 Eagles saw action as did 14
Pirates.
After Collins had retired the
side In the top 'of the first, Eas·
tern rallied for two runs on a
Bryan Durst walk, a Collins sin·
gle, an error. and a run scoring
ground ball by Mark Griffin.
In the second canto EHS rallied
for four runs as Kyle Davis
reached on an error, Jeremy
Barber singled. Bryan Durst sin·
gled, Ed Collins delivered a two·
RBI double, and Steve Horner an
RBI single, the score now !&gt;0.
North Gallia put men on basr
In the first three innings on two
walks and an error, however,
EHS retired the side in th e third
after Kyle Davis gunned down
Pirate Steve George with a strike
to second .
Eastern plated two more runs
In the fourth when Jeff Johnson
doubled, Davis walked. senior
Brent Norton grounded home a
run, and another came home on a
passed ball.
Scoring four more runs In tht•
boitom of th e fifth, EHS widened
the lead to 12-0. the big blow of
the Inning being a bases loaded 2·
RBI singl e by Davis.
In that Inning Griffith. Howle
Lawrence. Scott Fitch. and Scott
McDonald each walked. while
Mike Martin reached on an cr·

NHL results

AlluniM· Dh l&gt;tlun

Ohio N~· spapf'r Association. N&lt;:~t lonal

'

MIKE Rt\Jt'l'llUM
lllonorahh• M•·ntlon)

,fl!UE MIU.F.It
I Fi r!&gt;il rl't•um )

Collins hurls no-hit, no-run
12-0 win for Eastern Eagles

1..\ l.akt-r.ollll'hm•nlx , lUll p.m.
l'urthuul 111 Sut.,IIIIU'ntu, 111::10

t:auoil•'fn ( 'nnh•rt•nt'4'

Mf'mbt'r: Unll f'd Prrss ln!rrnutlonal,
Inland Daii:V Prrss Assorlallon and thr

'

,JENNY MILLER
(First T1•am)

Scoreboard ...

Publl sh!&gt;d rvrrv afl(lrnoon. Monday
through Friday', 111 Courl SL , Pfl.
mf'rov. Ohln. by thC' Ohio V&lt;~llry Publ l~hln'g Compan~· /Multlrnf'dta. In&lt;'..

'

IP

•

., The Daily Sentinel
I USPS tU!HTI) .
1\ Dlvbilon of Multlrf1edla. In('.

Berry's World

a

BIIENT IIISSEI.I.
t First 'l'••am)

•

Robert Walters~

full -length speech to all of the
attendees . The vice president's
seething rivals were restrictE-d to
rt•marks of no longer than five
minutes and to appearances on
panels.
The furor over· Bush's special
status contributed to a clrcuslike
atmosphere that included every·
thing from a h'arangue by Robertson against hedonism, materialIsm, alcoholism and assorted
other evils to a pitch from Halg

RON LOGAN
(( 'oach-ol-Y Ntr)

PLAYER OF THE YEAR
J .R. Kitchen (Meigs)

were afraid to mortgage their •
••
homes."
Another citrus grower, Willi- :
amm C. Keebler. said an impor- ;
tant reason many farmers didn't •
!(et didn't get loans was because •
they didn't have "someone In
t~eir office" who could figure out
,
how to meet the credit-elsewhere 1
test. Keebler ·said he made it •
•
throu!(h the SBA maze because ,
an employee had a master's !
degree in business I
•
administration . .
I
CELEBRITY FILE: The FBI
never Investigated the late Cary •
Grant, but It dutifully kept •
details of his private life orr file ''
and dusted them off when the •
White House made routine In· ••
quirles about Hollywood guests.
Both presidents Johnson and
Nixon asked about Grant. and the
FBI responses noted that he had
never run afoul of the law, but
had used LSD for 10 years ~fler _
being treated with the mind- ·· ·
bending drug during psychother- ' ::
apy. The FBI pointed out that the , :
actor eventually kickPd the LSD · '":
habit. The bureau didn't give the ~·
White House anything from Its .•'
.~
House Un-Amerlcan Acllvllles ~
Committee files, though Grant -~
was mentioned In a 1951 hearing. :;.~
'

,J. R. KITCHEN
(First Team)
( Playt•r-of·Y car)

'

HONORABLE MENTION
Player-8chool
Yr.
Mike Bartrum-Melgs .oo. ·····oo····· ... ........................ oo•· ....... .11
Chad Savage-Nelsonville-York ....... . oo ........ ...... oo .... ........ oo .. 11
Craig Wilson-Miller ..... ........ .... ....... ..... , .... .... ............ ... .. ... 12
Dale Wheatley-WPllston ...... ... .............. ......... ........ ... ... ..... 11
Jamie Fee-VInton County oo········oo····oo ................ oo ............ .l2

'

Rockefeller readily acknowl·
edged that he had obtained the
disaster-relief loan, but said:
"We abided by all the rules and
regulations In applying for the

00 . . . . .

.t.

00000

00 • • •

••
•

WASH!f'IGTON - Despite a
"means test" for assistance to
borrowers, the Small Business
Administration gave a company
owned by the family of an
affluent businessman- a Rockefeller, no less - a low-Interest
loan subsidized by the taxpayers.
Godfrey A. Rockefeller, pres!·
den! of Acosta Groves, the family
citrus busines s In Florida, signed
for a $231,000 loan from the SBA
at 4 percent, the lowest Interest
rate the agency charges. When
our reporter Lisa Sylvester
asked Rockefeller , a distant
relative of world-class banker
David Rockefeller, If the company had been unable to get a
bank loan. he replied, "Frankly,
we didn't try."
The 10-year subsidized loan
was obtained in December 1984 ro
ball the Rockefeller citrus grove
out of hard limes stemming from
the 1983 Florida freeze.
Rockefeller lives In the exclu·
slve Maryland community of
Gibson I sland, on the Chesa·
peake Bay near Annapolis,
where guards man the gates to
keep out all but residents and
Invited guests. We reached him
in the resort area of Del Ray,
Fla .. where he was vacationing
and entertaining friends.

MlfK ( :lliLUS
( Coaeh-ul-\ ' t•ar I

BASKETBALL ALL-LEAGUE TEAM
Player-School
Yr.
J.R. Kitchen-Meigs .... .. oooo .. ... ....... oo ....... ... .... oooooo ..... .. ....... l2
Brent Bisseii-Melgs ... oo•
11
Mark Sanders-Vinton County ............... .......... ................... 12
Scott Gilliland-VInton County .... .............. .. .. ..... ..... . oo.oo .... ..l2
Scott Bragg-Wellston ...... oo ....... ...... ...... .... .. ..... .......... .... .... IO
Joe McLain-Alexander
oo .................. .... .... oo ..... .. ... ... .. ...12
Joe Anderson-Belpre
oo .............. .... .. .....
12
Chris Karns-Trimble ···· ······ ·'· ·· .... .. ...... ....... .... ... .. ............ .12
Mike Russ ell-Nelsonville-York ....... oo ...... .. ... oooooooo•· ............ 12
Eric Householder-Federai·Hocklng ....... .... .. .... oo .. oo ..... oo ..... 12
00 00 • • •

,,
14 t n·

-r! ~~

1987 TVC BOYS

!

Rich man gets richer __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_Jo_se.:._ph_S_p_ea_r

Also picked for the boys was 6-3
junior Brent Bissell tall·leaguel
and 6·5 junior Mike Bartrum
!honorable mention). The three
Meigs girls. collecting all-league
honors were 6·1 senior Jenny
Miller. 6-0 senior Julie Miller,
and 5·8 senior Jennl Swartz .
The lop 15 vote -getters wpre
the selectees with lhP top ten
making all-lea!(ue and remain·
ing five as honorable mention .

1986-87 TVC Dream Teants

j

Associa tion and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlon.

By HELEN THOMAS
U PI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UPI ! -The nrw Whit&lt;' House team try ing lo
resurrect President Reagan's once popular image is on a shakedown
cruise and learning a lot .
Howard Baker, lhr new White House ch ief of staff. is already
making his mark with an eas ier, looser style that is disarming and
evokes sighs of relief all uround .
He already ha s created a freer atmosphere than which prevailed
under some previou s chiefs of staff like H.R. Haldeman and others
who believed In building walls around the president.
Of course, the president should be the one to prevent those walls
from being built. Staffer s can write a scenario controlling every
moment from the time he steps into the Oval Office until he leaves
each day , and they do. but the president doesn't have to follow it.

,.,

Meigs dominates
·All League Teams

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - Accord ing to a review of custo~ers' files,
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Mr~. J.K., Giiirden Grove , California
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Mr. A.D ., Anadarko, Oklahoma

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Life btenllon Auehon
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•Copyright 1987.

1.-.s,_,.11 :II
II

''

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 24, 1987·

• ,Tuesday, March 24, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

·,...-......-Local Briefs:--- Board OKs funds for S&amp;L trial work

Meigs athletes are ·honored; .
awards 'highlight winter fete

WINNING special awards for the Meigs
wrestling team at the Meigs Winter Sports
Ban'U'et Monday Included from the left, Wes
Howard (Mo•l Tak••downs), Don Bunce (Mosl

Resersals), Denny WeiNh (Mosl Valuable
Wrestler), and Butch Stiles (Mosl lmpro•ed).
Welsh led the learn wilh 123 points and was Zll-5
enroute to a regional qualifying season.

NIT

play

to resume
tonight

,.

.(!Of,,.,,
. . ... ,
"' .....
~.

·~···

Thrc&lt;' mcmh&lt;•rs of the 19-3 Meigs Marauder 19K7 haskethall
teams were honor&lt;'d for tht•lr aii·TVC selections. They Include
from left, Mike Barlrum (honorable mention), ,J, R. Kitchen
( all·conf\'rence and TVC Most Valuahlt• Player) , and Brent BINSell
( all·confcrccnc) .

NEW YORK 1UPII - The
Nallonal Invitat ion Tournament
has offered a second chance and
crea ted some special problems
for the four remaining teams.
Each of the teams ended their
confcrenc&lt;' seasons on sour
notes, but have advanced with
three victories in the NIT. The
quarterfinals were decided last
Saturday night at regional sites
and that left coacho&gt;s scrambling
to find any information they
could on their next opponents.
The semifinals for the 50th NIT
are set for Tuesday night with
Arkansas-Little Rock meellng
LaSalle in the opening game and
Nebraska facing Southern Mls·
slsslppi In the late match In
Madison Square Garden. The
final will lx' played Thursday
night.
Arkansas-Little Rock, · which
beat Notre Dame In the NCAA
Tournament last year, · was
beaten by Georgia Southern at
home In the Trans America
Athletic Conference final. The
other three NIT semifinalists did
not advance past the second
round of their post-season confer·
enco&gt; tournaments.

By KJ!;ITH WISECUP
Sentinel Stall Writer
ROCK SPRINGS - The sec·
tiona!, district, and TVC cham·
pion Meigs Marauderette basket.
ball team was the •• toast of the
town" here Monday as the Meigs
High School winter sports partie·
!pants were honored.
The Meigs ladles posted a 26·1
mark, losing only to state class
AA runnerup Wellsville, 57·53, In
the regional championship two
weeks ago. The Marauderettes
have posted a 65·8 mark the past
three years.
Award Winners
Senior Jenny Miller received
the Most Valuable Offensive
Player award as the all·slate6·1
center scored over 1,000 points In
her four-year career and another
· 655 rebounds. Senior Jennl
Swartz was honored with the
Most Valuable Defensive Player
award.
Other top award-winners In·
eluded senior Jennl Couch with
the Coaches award, junior
Tammy Wright, Most Assists,
senior Jenny Miller, Mo~ t Re·
bounds and Best Free Throw
Shooter, and junior Shelly Sto·
bart, Most Improved. The
awards were presented by their
coach, TVC and district Coach of
the Year, Ron Logan.
Other varsity members ho·
nored Included Beth Ewing,
Wendy Fry, Dee Henderson,
Missy Woods, and Jody Taylor.
Managers were Amy Satterfield
and Wendy Kloes.
TVC Coach of the Year. Mlck

After scori ng a slngiP run In
the third frame . Southwestern
tied the score at lhree In the
fourth, 3-3. SHS had taken a 3·1
lead In the top of the Inning.
Southwestern grabbed 4-3 lea d
In the fifth ana base hit by Steve
Tarbell, another by Dan Patrick.
and a double by McDaniels.
Southern ca me right back \n
the sixth on a stou t single, Cun·
nlngham double, and a triple by
Amburgey.
Leading 5·4 SHS went ahead8·4
In the seventh with none out.
Other SHS hillers were Barry
McCoy, a double; Ken Turkey a
triple, and SHawn Arnott a sin·
gle.
Coach Mlck Winebrenner's Tor·
nadoes host Federal Hocking ton·
glht and travel to Oak Hlll Thursday. The conclusion of this game
would be finished If need be when
Southwestern travels to Southern.
Llnescore:
Southern... .. ...... 020 102 3-8 9 1
SWHS ........... .... 001 210 11-2 4 2
6atterles: Cunningham, Am·
burgey 6th, and Rlflle. Colley
and J. Hai slop .

and giving up j ust three hils.
In the first Inning SHS took a 4·
2 advantage, they widened that
margin to 6-2 before breaking the
game open with an 8-run third In·
nlng.
Southern hitters were led by
Ammle Franko with two s!ngles
and a doubi&lt;', Rachel Reiber a
single and home run , Tracy Bee·
gle a single and home run , and
Crystal Hill a home run .
Diana Stmps9n, Bridget Bing
and Carol Fisher each singled.
Rose, Bea hlron , and McFann
each singled for Southwestern.

CARRIER NEEDED

''

FOR LINCOLN HEIGHTS
POMEROY

'•

If INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL
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THE DAILY SENTINEL
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~L---....:'~'2:.·.::.21:.:5~6_ _ __
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·'

Smorgasbord dinner set April 4
The Long Bottom Community Association is sponsoring a
sprln!( smorgasbord dinnrr on Saturday, April 4, from 4· 7 p.m.,
at the community building.
The all-you -can-eat dinner will feature several mea ts and
entrees, homemade noodles, dessrr ts and drinks for one low
price. Everyone welcome.

RSVP plan.~ Maine trip
The areawld~ Retired Senior Volunteer Program of Rio
Grande College Is• sponsoring a trip to Maine·. The lour Is
scheduled 'for June 13·21. Round-trip transportation will be
provided by deluxr motor coach.
Trip highlight s will include Boothbay Harbor. Bar Harbor,
Acadia National Park. Camden/ Rockland area and Augusta.
The trip also includes a half-day tour of Boston, Mass .
The trip is open to the general publir as well as senior citizens.
Reservation deposit s are due by Aprlll. For more Information.
contact thr RSVP office, P.O. Box 711, .Jackson, Ohio 45640, or
ca ll 286-4918, Monday through Friday.

C-K variety shaw, dinner Friday
A dinnN and variety show sponsored by Cheshlr&lt;'· K.vger
Elementary School will be held Friday at thr sc~ ool.
Dinner will be 6-6: 30 p.m ., with good food prices charged.
according to a school spokesperson. Tile ml'nu Includes soup
beans and ham, be&lt;'f barbeque sa ndwiches, role slaw , corn
bread . pil', rake and coffee.
The variety show begins at 7:30p.m. Admission for the show
is 50 cents for students and $1 for adults.

Squad.~

SUNDAY • All SEATS $2 . SD
ADH!SSIDN EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

MARCH 20 lhru H
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY!
,.

Meigs County Emergl'ncy Medical Services reports 1~ ralls
Monday: Middleport at 1:25 a.m. to Hudson Street for Joyce
Still to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 11: 00 a.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Dess ie Pai!Nson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; · Bashan Fire Department at 12: .12 p.m : to a
brush fire on County Road3l; Syracuse Fire Department at 1:11
p.m . and Chester Fire Department at 1:20 p.m. to the same
brush fire; Middleport Fire Department at 3:21 p.m. to Little
Kyger for a structure fire on Turkey Run; Pomeroy tanker at '
3:31 p.m. to assist Middleport; Gallipolis Fire Department at
3: ;1 p.m. to Turkry Run; Bas han and Racine Fire Departments
at 4: ;7 p.m. to a brush lire on County Road .31: Rutland at :i : 08
p.m . to Pagrtown lor Louise Burbridge to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Pomeroy at 9: 19p.m. to the Maplrs Apartments for
Robert Bush to Veterans M&lt;'morlal Hospital ; Middleport Fire
Deparlm&lt;•nl at 9:46p.m. to a car fire at Riverside Apartments.

A meeting of the Racln~Ball
Ass tat ion coaehes will be hdd
Monday, March 30, 6 .m ..
uthern Kindergarten. All
coaches to brin!( equipme .

Community group schedules meeting
Long Bottom Community Association will meet Wednesday,
6: 30p.m .. to plan the smorgasbord dinner. The regular meeting
will follow lh&lt;' planning s~ssion.

SIXTH GRADERS - Members of Coach ,Jim Metzger's sl•th
grad&lt;• Chester Rl•ervlew basketball team are front row, ,Jeremy
Buckh·y, Eric Dillard, and Manager Malt Marlin. Rear - Karen
Morris, Misty Newell, Shelly ~letzger and Slephanle otto.

Cardinals snap Reds winning streak

Rutland couple seeks dissolution

TAMPA , Fla . (UPii - Jack
Clark belted a two-run homer
and Ozzle Smith and StC've Lake
each had I hree hits Monday to lift
the St. Louis Cardinals to a 9·2
exhibition victory over the Cln·
clnnati Reds.

Valerli' Lynn Hobbs and Paul Kenneth Strauss. both of
Rutland, have fllrd for a dissolution of marriage in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
.
. Divorces were granted in lh(' cases of Juanita Irene Whytsell
against Robert DalE' Whytsrll. and Evely n Hughes agai nst
Carle D. Hughrs.

Guy Hoffman and Scott Terry.
both battling for a spot on the
pitching staff, gave up a total of
13 hits as the Reds had a
s ix -game winning streak
snapped.
St. Louis had a total of 16 hits
off five Cincinnati pitch ers.
Shortstop Smith had a double and
two singles, catcher Lake
stroked three singles and left
field Curt Ford added two
singles .

Southern had eleven hils to just
three for SWHS.
SHS hosts Federal tonight and
travels to Oak Hill Thursday.
SHS Is 1·0 and SWHS 0·1.
Llnescore:
Southern ............ 428 50-19 11 3
SWHS ....... .... .... . 200 11- 4 3 7
Reiber (WP and
Battery:
Fisher.

Hoffman gave up four ru ns and
five hils In four innings and Terry
was wrapped for eight hits and
five runs, over two Innings. Clark
homered off Terry.

•'

•'·'
·'

.::'.:
'J

''
' ow tax reform will aflect you. Our new Tax
.•recaster"' serVice rrovides a written
alysis of how you d come out under the
·w laws so you'll know whether your tax

ould go up or down.

.
•'

::

At H&amp;.R Block wt know you're concerned

FILL A PAPER

MEIGS HUMANE
SOCIOY THRIFT SHOP

''

,:.' · Property sale confirmation filed

BAG SALE

STAllS WEDNESDAY
MilCH 25

'

'

1:

SHOPPING BAG
FOI $100

I

••

HIRBLOCK

PTO slates spring carnival

THE IHCOME TAX PEOPLE

IT'S AVAILABLE
WHETHER WE PREPARE YOUR RETURN OR NOT.
''

Sali'm Center F.iemrntary PTO Is sponsoring a Spring
Carnival to be held this Saturday at the schooL
The carnival will Include games, lood. prices, a king and
queen contest, an auction and lots more, and wlll get underway
at o p.m. and rontlnu&lt;' through 8 p.m. Proceeds from the event
will be used to purcha~e .playground equipment for the next
school year.

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.
Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Wukdays: 9 to 5 Sat.
APPOIN,MEN'S AVAILABLE

Long co-,.;pon.'iors extension
••

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

WHERE CAN ,PEOPLE GET HELPFUL
INFORMAnON ABOUT DEATH BENEFITS

.M4-::.

FlllfMIIII .ttOIII'

An entry confirming sale of propert y has been filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Cour t In a for&lt;'Ciosu re action by Frank
Puck~ll against H . Robert Beaver and Mary Allee Beaver, et al.
Plaintiff Is to r&lt;'covcr $180,043.2.1 from the defendants. A
deficiency judgment for the same amount was awarded.
A agr&lt;'ed entry of dismissal has been flied In the case of Keith
Adkins agalnsl Clifford Mantey, et al.
A restralnln!( order has been issued aga inst the defendant In
thE' case of Donald L . Dalley vi'rsus Christina Ann Dailey .

•

MIDDLIPOIT

1i~"'fd-

answer 13 calL&lt;i Monday

Racine Ball Association to meet

Girls Triumph, Too
PATRIOT - The Southern
Tornadoelles of Coach Kim Phil·
lips grabbed a 4-2 lead, then
never looked ba ck as they rolled
to a 19·4 SVAC triumph over the
Southwes tern Lady Highlanders
here Monday evening In the
SVAC opener .
Senior hurler Rachel Reiber
was the winning pitcher, tur ning In
a sparkling performance, compil·
lng lx strikeouts, walking just four

•

Fire of undetermined origin Monday d('stroyrd two small
buildings, a boat and caused damage to a house. all owned by ,
Howard Gruber, Rl. 1, Ches hire.
Middleport Fire Chief .Jeff Darst said his department
rPsponded to the ca ll at .3:21p.m. and was assisted at the scene
on Turkey Run Road. 21-:1 mil&lt;'s west of Cheshire, b&gt;· tanker s
from ~omeroy and Gallipolis.
Darst sa id Middleport remained on the seen&lt;' until 8:07 p.m.

BARGAIN---~
MATINEES SATURDAY I

· --------------~------~
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•'

·Fire destroys two small buildings

531 JACKSON PIKE·Rt3&amp;WEST

Darkness halts Southern,
SW tilt with SHS ahead, 8-4
PATR IOT - Pending an off!.
ci a! ruling from lh&lt;' stat e. lhi'
Southern Tornadoes held an 8·4
lead ovN the Southw&lt;'stern High ·
landers here Monday evening be·
fore the game was suspended be·
ca use of da rkness.
Southern led 5·4 goi ng Into the
seventh frame, but scored three
!lmrs bcforr th e ga me wa s
ca lled to make It 8·4. Southern
leading , w ith no ou ts In the top of
thl' srvr nth .
. UndPr• ru les adopted by the
Ohio High School Athletic Asso·
ela tion. the rule slates thai a
game shall be suspended If one of
the following situations prevail s:
The vi siting team has scored one
o'r mor e runs to tic the score. the
home t&lt;'am ha s not scored, or the
;, l.~ lting tea m has sco red one or
tnore run s to, take the lead , and
1hr home tea m has not tied the
scorr or retake the lead .
: Neither slluatlon applied due
IP the fact that Southern wa s al·
.rt-ady ahead 5·4.
; · At any rate. Shawn Cunning·
.flam and David Amburgey turned
Jn' strong pitching performances,
:romblnlng for 6 strlckout s ll hrer
each I and thr('(' walks. Cunnln·
~ham would stand l o be the win·
nlng pitcher.
, : Sean Co lley turned In a rela ·
Jlvely strong outing for Coac h
'Jack James, striking ou t six ,
walking 4, and hitting one. He
• would stand to be the loser.
·: After a scoreless first Inning
• second baseman/ shorts top, se·
: nlor Eric Milliron singled, Chris
~ S t ou t doubled, and Cunn ingham
' doubled for a 2·0 SHS lead .

Childs, presented the TVC cham· honored by coach Roger Foster
pion boys ' basketball team with included Audra Houdasheil,
awards, headed by all· TVC and Cat hy Hobstetter, Deanna
TVC MVP, J. R. Kitchen, and Haggy, Shannon Slavin, Nikki
all-TVC performers Brent Bls· Whitlatch. Marsha King, Shan·.
sell and Mike Bartrum. Meigs non Newsome, Lesley Carr,
posted a 19-3 mark Including a Kelly Douglas, and Kenda Kloes.
third straleht TVC title.
The Meigs girls reserves were
.
Other members Included Phil 14·6.
King, Scott Powell, Chris Smith,
The freshman boys team~
Scott Wllllams, Steve Musser, which posted a 4-10 mark, were
Don Becker, Huey Eason, Bill honored by coach Cliff Kennedy •
Brothers, and Joey Snyder. Man· and Included members John
a!(ers honored were Joe Parker, Anderson, Hank Cleland, Jay '
Joey Roush, Mike Parker. and Humphreys, Cary Betzlng, Ed·
Mike Kloes.
die Crooks, Rodney Brewer,
Randy Hawley , and Chris
Wrestlers Recognized
The Meigs varsity wrestlers Stewart.
honorees were headed by re·
Cheerleaders Awards .
glonal qualifier Denny Welsh,
Varsity cheerleaders honored
who posted a 28-5 mark, led the included Amy Radekln, Sherry
team In points with 12.1, and was Cooper, Krista Roush, Kim Cal·
voted th e Most Valuable vert, Jodie Ervin. Laura Cobb,
Wrestler. Other top awards went Dena Manley, and Susan Sandy.
to Don Bunce, Most Reverses, The awards were presented by
and Wes Howard, Most Take· advisor Kim c;otterlli and a gift
downs. The Meigs wrestlers were was presented to the group's lone
coached by Kevin Sheppard.
senior, Amy Radekln.
Other members included Do·
Reserve cheerleaders honored
nald Stein, Eric Wilson, Paul included Sherri Blair, Leah
Dalley. Tony Miller, Chris Storts, Doidge, Melodi Cark. Stacey
Paul Wolfe. Marc Howard, Jared Gibbs, Kim Chadwell, and Mindy
Sheets, and Jeff McElroy . Statts· Spencer. Freshman cheerlead·
tician was Brenda Sinclair.
ers honored included Aimee
Boys reserves honored in· Rupe, Vinda Biggs, Amy Epple,
eluded Scott Neigler, Chuck Jennifer Buck, and Heather
Pullins, Scott Barton, Brett Lit· Hovatter.
tie, Todd Pow.ell, Don Dorst,
Master of ceremonies was Jim
Matt Baker, Rob Harrison, and Soulsby, president of the Meigs
Kevin Oiler. The Meigs reserves Athletic Boosters, and the invo.·
won the TVC title enrouteto a 15·5 cation and benediction was given
season. They w~re coached by by the Rev . Earl Eden.
Rusty Bookman.
The girls reserve members ,

We have, been aslled often for information
about benefits from various agencies for our
·communty's citizens. We've soup! out mate.rial about social security, veterans claims, insurJnce processine, railroad retirement pub·
lie.employees retirement death benefits, etc.
We've become akind of information center
.f~om which.people can obtain the informa·
. tt.on needed or where to contact the aeen·
etas and how. As the benefits chance we
keep abreast of this knowledte so our ad·
vice won't bi misleading .
We sometimes spuk before adult and
schooleroups on these topics and others
.pertainine to funerals. We would be &amp;lad to
speak to your croup.
If you ha~ any questions on these or other
topics, we will try to answer them. Just call
or come in.

I
I

'

(~,

\/

•

~

Stat&lt;' Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Clrclevllle, announced his
co-sponsorship of the &lt;'X tenslon of thf' Urban Enterprls~ Zone
Program to 1992. Long was also a key supporter of an
amendment expanding the state's program to Include rural
areas.
"Hopefully, this am&lt;'ndnwnt wlll help to spur economic
d('velopment and job growth In southern Ohio," said Long.
The bill would grant tax lncenllves to businesses which locate
In counties with populations of less than 150,000 and also In
unincorporated areas such as townships.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI'Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS iUPII - The
sta t&lt;' of OhiQ has authorized
payment of another $555,101 to
special prosecutor Lawrence A.
Kane Jr .. Cincinnati, for crlml·
nal trial work In the Home State
Savin!(s Bank case.
Monday's authorization by the
state Controlling Board cam e
one day after the second anniver·
sary of Kan&lt;''s hiring by Attorney
General Anthony .!. Celebrez ze
.Jr .

State

COOLVILLE, OHIO

•

auditor_t_co_n_
ttn_u_ed_f_ro_m_P....;ag~e-1):......_ __

Kane has now been paid $4.5
million by the state for his work
through February.
Celebrezze said the money was
deserved because of the "lmpres·
slve" record of Kane and his
staff, who achieved nine conv lr·
lions In "one of the most complex
while collar cr imes In the history
of this state.
"The cost of obtaining justice
has been significant, " said the
attorney general, "but we had a
moral as well as legal obligation

to follow

ttw

&lt;'&lt;JS t' whPn 'VPr

it ant, turf-eo nsc ious. rxcPss ively

NEW YORK 1UPit -Former
Secretary of State Alexander
Haig .Jr . formally announced his
bid for the presldenc,v today with
tough words for lh&lt;' Soviet Union
and a reassurance for voters that
in s ld~
his "militant . turf·
conscious ... demeanor is a heart
as big as all outdoors. "
Th~ retired four -star i\rmy
grn&lt;:'ral ., aid at a Manhattan
news confrrenrr that he should
be the Republican to lead the
counlr&gt;· at the close or the
Reagan administration.
Haig prai sed the Reaga n go·
vcrnment for rebuilding Amerl·
&lt;·a's self ronfidenc&lt;' but critic·
izrd for som&lt;' foreign pollcv
initiatives. He had harsh word'
Monday night for the fran arms
drat.
Dressed In a steel gra.v suit and
flanked by rr lath·rs. Haig . ii2,
sought to rrassur&lt;' Americans
that. " lnsidr thi s &lt;'XI&lt;' rior. mil·

ambitious demea nor is a hea rt as
big as all outdoors ."
But he warned the Sov iet Union
that all arms talks must take into
consideration human right s.
"We Americans ha v&lt;' a right to
insist that therr ix' a ~rrat&lt;'r
accPplancc of lhr rules or law in
peaceful change," Hai~ said,
citing.Soviet aggression In Afgh·
anista n and sup port for trrrorist
nat ions worldwide.
"Linkage is not an option. but a
fac t of life." Halg said.
On Central Am&lt;•rica. Ha ig'said
he• nt1 ver suppor ted 1hf' C'OVPrt
warfarr but "now tha t wc &lt;.11'£'

there. I do support aid to the
Con1l'&lt;.i S

bccaus£'

thC'

ro nst'·

quenc&lt;' of suddenly IPr minatin g
that aid. on&lt;·rw&lt;'startrdll , wou ld
be Mvaslat ing. ·'

Turning to Pro nomic· issuPs .
Pr r~ idrn l Nixon's IormPr ehil'f
of staff said a balan&lt;'&lt;'d budg&lt;'l
must be the llrst order of the da y
and blamrd I he Reaga n admini s·

Hospital news

!ration and CongTf'ss for r('cord

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges March 23 - Mrs.
Robert Allen and daughter, Mrs.
Jonathan Durham and daughter ,
Mrs. William Edwards and son.
Barbara Jackson, Douglas Lam·
bert, Randall Lucas. Marla
Lyall, Mrs. Noah McLain and
son, Maxie Prace, Brandon Ran·
dolph, Joyce Robie, Mrs. Francis
Schafer and daughter, Rebecca
Smith, Mrs. Robert Stl'in and
daughter, Ronald Thompson.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barringer, daughter, Guysville:
Mr. and Mrs . Richard Bloom field, daughter, Oak Hill.

Vt&gt;lt&gt;rdns M.-morial
Monday Admissions - Mary
Laudermilt , Racine: Carnell
Vance Jr., Cheshire: Dessle
Patterson, Pomeroy; Charles
Craft , Reedsville; Louise Bur·
bridge, Albany ; Charles Price.
Long Bottom.
Monday Discharges - Fr"n·
res Bush, John Hunnell, Mary
Snyder. Ivory Bush, Emma
Milam , Charles Carr.

defici ts.
H&lt;.~ig sa id hr would nut ruh ' our
th e possihilily of a ta x in&lt;'I'P&lt;JSI'.
HP al so sa id the Rra gan
administration' s dri\'C to win
popularil)' has brcn al thr
rxpen se Of th r i\mcriran p&lt;'Oplc.
H!' sa id lhr administration has
placrd "lpo much rmph&lt;Js is on
popularlsm ... and not rnough
interest In substa nre and t hr brs1
interrs t of lhl' i\mr rican
pl'opl&lt;'."
Ha lg stole somr or his own
thunder an hour beforP his
formal nc•ws co nf&lt;'r&lt;·m·e whPn he
announred his candidacy on
NBC's "Todav " program after
prompting from thr show's ro·
hos t Jan!' Pauley.

Lott.-rv numh.-rs
CLEVELAND iUPI I - Mon·
day's winning Ohi o l.ottcrv
numbers with tickrl sa les and
pa youts:
'
llally NumiH'r ,

2ol.
Tick et sa les tot al ed $1.460.10:1.
wllh a payoff du&lt;' of $1.412.798.
PICK-I
411~ .

M i d d l e p o r t seeks c('onlinu r d from Pa gr 1 I
Council President Horton lndl ·
rated that the lot Is a swamp and
of no use to the village. Gilmore
wa s the highes t of two bid s
submitted on the propC'rty .
Mayor Hoffman presented a
letter from George Dougan of the
division office, Ohio Department
of Transportation, Marietta, In ·
dica&lt;l ng that a sign noting the
turnoff to Middleport for south ·
bound traffic on thr Route 7
bypass will be placed eilh&lt;'r at
County Road 3 or County Road 21,
wllh the village to make the
decision on the loca tion .
Officials appra red to favor t h&lt;'
County Road 21 turnoff which Is
the one taki ng traffic ov&lt;'r the
br idge and the railroad track s
Into Middleport . Dougan's com·
mun(pallon Indicated that the
turnoff does not qualify for
special lighting but II did state
that the village would be permit ·.
ted to safety light the .turnoff at
Its expense. Mayor Hoffman wlll
look Into the cos t of the village
assuming the lighting project .
Council approved an ordinance
for flood damages, gave a second
reading to a fireworks code to
conform to stale fire code stand·
ards and gave final approval to
· an ordinance which lncreas('S the
salarY. of the mayor to $6,000
annually and the clerk-treasurer
to $5,000 a year .
Alternate plans

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elect ·
ric Co. for 1 p.m. Friday to
discuss costs IIi th e vlllage In the
use of utility poles as officials
study alternate plans to the
services of Consolidated Com·
munlcatlons Group Inc. , for
cable lelevlslon In the town.
Appointed to serve on a com·
mlltee which wlll prepare a
brochure on tourism In Middleport were Councilmen Horton
and Bob Gilmore. Mayor Hoi·

•
findings for recovery were Issued
.program to detect welfare fraud
by using computers to cross· . against them.
Henry Hunter, chairman of the
;~= heck employment data against
local
Democratic Party, reports
the state welfare rolls . Compu ·
that
JoiyM
Boster, 94th district
, ters have been used to detect
•' ;welfare fraud In the public sector representative to the house, and
: since 1976, and In the private Sen. Jan Michael Long, 17th
senate district, are expected to
sector through a voluntary, coop·
erattve effor.t for the past two be on hand at the dinner.
The public Is Invited to attend
years .
This dual effort has resulted In andtlcketsmaybepurchasedfor l',;;an said that he had conferred
. the auditor's office Identifying $5 per person or $15per family , at wltb Bill Blower, chamber of
; over 4,000 persons who have the DavJs·Qulckel Insurance commerce president , on the
· · Illegally received over $6,4 mil· Agency, Seconl:l Street, Pome- brochure and the committee plan
roy , or at the dQjilr.
was decided upon. .
llo" In welfare benefits and
•

ge n(' ral 's offi r£• fan l'arry on,
"O ur goal once w&lt;·

undf•r Kan (•'.., cl in•rtio n,
to con\'lction or ro rm rr Homr
Sta te owner Marvin L Wt1rnrr
and two ol hPr offlcNs of lhr
lhrlft, piU StW OformPr Offi&lt;'C
' r SOf
ESM GovC'rnmrnt Sr('uril i( 'S
Inc., F'ort LaudPrd a iP. F lcL.
which preripl tatrd lhr Home
State collapse.
The two former ESM orri errs
are serv in g prison tf•rm s rangin g
from 20 to 24 yt' tlrs. WarnPr and
lhC' two othrrs ;H(' to h&lt;• s(•nl ·

enc&lt;'d March

Ex-secretary of state
plans presidential race

it

!~d . "
It l ~d.

:uJ and far&lt;' j oil

rrrrns ra ngi ng up ro

m~~fn~ ~~{~m~nr:;ng~~~:d ~

&amp;TH STREET
(81 41 887-31,0

Page 5

The Daily Sentinel

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.\'&lt;'ll r s,

plus rint's or rflst itution .

In asking fo r Kanr&gt;s pa ym&lt;'nl,
Ce !Pbri'ZZ&lt;' ro ntrustc&lt;l Ohio' s
rPcovery or dC'pos lt ors' rn o nr~'
with a ~ im!l a r savings sea nd t~ l in
Mar.vland. who•n' " lllousa nds of
IJI.'OPI&lt;' lost thrl r lif&lt;''s s&lt;Jv in gs"

~P I

Into the

&lt;-IPPf'&lt;.l l s is to mukr thC' prosr cu
tion ;1 nd co n viet!o n ~ stick," he
s~1id . " What(·\·rr wa.\ · is th P mos t
rro numical, that 's thr wa.v w0' ll

go.
l'I'I Pbn •nJ' :-; aid his o ffi CI' '".: ill
('otlcrntralt • on rC'&lt;'o\·er ing t hr

$ 12!1 million ~ pPnl hy· ttws tatca to
s tahiilZf' lht · fi nanci al institu t io ns &lt;lfi'Pf'lt •d h.v tht· l-l n m f' St arr

co llapsr•.

On anothrr matu •r. thr• board
vo lf'd :l-'1 to givt· ( 'p ll'bl'l'1'.7.&lt;'
$lii ,Wil in t'l1lf'J' ~ t'IH '.\' fum h tuSPI
up a nd tt )W l' &lt;l fL·· il /l{'WI _\. t' ll iH'If•d
O rgan izt•d Cr im l' lm·rst ig alifi n.-.

:m.

Ct1mmiss\o n lh ro ugh .Jut\('
Two hna rd lllPI11bPr s thoug- ht
!hal wa~ !on · mu eh mo rH'y .
f' dplm •z n• said lht· ('O mmi s~ ion
will n •qu i1 :e $1. :1 milliu n for llw
ll f'X1 two .\ '(•;t r s. hut (•vf'n tuall.\ ' i1

and lc~a l cos ts havf' ran grd up 1n

\\'ill bt' fundt •fl 1hrou gh 11w sal r o f
e~ssf'1 S sri;pd f l'( ltn o r~un i ;Pd

$1 million a month .

t'l'irrw

Cri(' brrzzr sald 1hfll'f' wi ll lw
additional cos ts todrf('nd agains t
antirip&lt;Hr d apppal s b.v Warnt •r
and throlhers. bul "in l&lt;'iat io n lo

wha t W(' 'V&lt;' had, f do n't l hl n).; il
wil l b£' H maj or rxpPmlilurf• ."
Thl' a 11orn r~' ~rnt • ra l, 1n
an swrr to board nwmhrrs' qups
lions . said ~i dt•rPrrnina1 ion h;1s
nor bfiPn madr how long t o n ·tain
KanP or wht' lhf'r thf' ai1 0 I'Ili'~ 1

O J)l'l ' ati o n :-~ .

Tht• board l't'lt&gt;aS(' cl $X·l. 7~ I in
( ' ffif'I'J.!Ctl ('~ ' rumh 10 pa y Er m ·~1
H. Holbroo k .l r. . nf Mrdi1101 !o r
wrnn~fu l impri snnnH •nl ,,~· tw o
.\' r ars and llu·,.,. m o n t h ~ . ll ol

bro ok ILH I I&gt;Pt •n ('O n\'ktPcl 11f
murd('l'. r apf• ancl kidn ;1pping in
Wa .v rw Cou nt ~· in I~! K:l bul n ·
l 'l'in•d d Tli ' \\' lri ~ll and w ;ts
iH'C)u ill r·d &lt;II I i ·r ru w 1., · itl1 ·n t'i · w &lt;I ~
Pl't'SI' tlll ·d .

Dc·morrats rut hudget hy $140 million
COI.UMilUS 1 UP I 1

-

Major

ot hN Pi ·m nc r a lif' h · ad(• r ~

W(

·rt ·

il .v Df' rnoc-r ul s in lh1 · Ol1io Hou s1·
nf
R P pi'P S £'tli CI1i\' l' "
ll .t \ 1'
lr immf'd ;~ boul ~ Hil m11lion fro m
Cov . H.if'h;u·ct F . Cdr~s tt'~ hudgt•l

abl e l o prnvif li ' [IJI' l'dtH'itlit~n
in &lt;' rt ' il ~ l·~ ill PIX)&gt;( illl cl 1 ~ 1 )\!1 . He"
s; lid !Ill' l!HTf' L I ~ I ' fo r I 'O li f'J.: I'"&gt; i.liH.I
uni\'l'l's illi '" is sma lh ·r !han 1'111·

for 19AA ~I and addl'd S:~ l milli&lt;HI
for schools in th• · fi rst ' '" ""
R&lt;'j). William I&lt;. II i nig. J). NI'W

sd wo l... .

Philadl'lphia . t'lwi r m an of !ht•
Hous£' F' in unc '!' ('ommi tll'l ', ~Hill
his rommi11Pt ' wou ld n •t•Pi\ '1' ltw
nr\.v budgd fi g un·~ a! I p.m.
l nda.\ ·.

Hutl gPl ()f fl t'i • lhal .~o m1 · pll.ln s to

" Wf' l hin k wt·\·, . grJ I ;r bal ·
anc&lt;'d budgt·l . " ~•ri d Hinig .
In addi linn 1fJ r utr in,r.: $711
mi ll ion a ~' f'&lt;H 10 hr in g 1hl'

Sjlo•nding pl an int oba l;lfl&lt; '&lt;•. lli nlg
sa id. l-l ousP Spc 'i.lkt ·r \ 't•rn ;d &lt;;.
Hi f[l' .J r .. ll ·No•w l!il&gt;ton . ;~ ntl

that

r• monPy

in I hi ·

a r Pa s

ul

wpl fan • a nd h('a llll r·w·t· w!ll
work . lhu s rr duel ng lhP appro ·
prial ion In lhosr ar f'as .

I

I

Area deaths

( •pal A. Mt•rrt•ll
Opa l i\ . M&lt;'l l'&lt;' ii. Coo lvliil'. dlrd
Tu psd;1\

morn i nJ:,: at fu mdf"n ra rkc • rs bur~ .

V.i . \'a . r\rrangt mf"n t s will br'
1

fr om Pug l' 1'

rl'gulat lons n&lt;'r d 10 bo •

Pnfon'rd m ore' st rl ngrntl,\' . Vlo l:1·

tors

Si.l \

('l ark Hos pital In

Critics hlast
~ C'onlinu(ld

lflnig ~ aid thrCi· h's lr&lt; tdminis
1ra 1i{) n con v Inc' ·(I t hP LP~ is Ia I IVt •

who gn unpunistw&lt;.l can

opet·a II' ehrapi,l ' and •·pmpc•l ,.
unfairly wllh l r~llim;rtr IJu' l
nessrs. · 'Wf' wc-rr vf'r.v proud or

annou no 'l'(l h\' I hi' Whll i' F'unrra l
11om&lt;'. ('ool vllll'.

Ohio weather
South ('o•ntrul Ohio

Ohio law," said ])a vis. of Hano

SIHm'f'rs l!kl'l.V !unl ghl. wi lh a
low m•u r
Var labi P t' loudlnC'ss

vC"r lon, an ownf' r o f C'oalhmok
Mining lnr. of Columhiana . " W&lt;'

showPrs and hi ghs nPw· fi~' -

wantl'd thl' crooks out ol
bu siness."
Mansfi eld add&lt;•d . "!l ui f&lt;'dcral
· regu lations o·ost us so much llmr
and m on1 •y th ul wr ec1n '1 tlfford

it. Thcrr n&lt;'rd to hr fr wN
rrgulal ions r nforr·P d morr
effect lvr ly
"I have pu t into thist'\'r ry lhlng
I 've ('V('r made' and C'vc r·y thlng
I 've rver own r d - and I' m about
to lose II all ix'eau sr of fr d&lt;•ral
regulation s," Mansfi &lt;'id said.

;,o.

Wt'dnrsday, with " dwnl'&lt;' of
Thl' probaill lity of

tm~· lplla

lion Is fiO PI 'I'CP nl to ni ght and
pPI'I'I'n1 Wr dnc.• day.

;,n

Winds wi ll hr fmm lhP sou.
al IIII o ~()m ph tonig ht.
Ohio t:•l••ndcd Foro•tast
Thursduy through Suturday

lill'llSI

1\ c·han er• of showc·rs Thursday,

wi th fair wcalhl'r F'rlda y and
Saturda y. Highs ma inl y will be In
lh" oils Thursda y and Frida y and
l'a nglng fl'om 4;, to;,:) S:.llu rduy ,
Ovl' rnlghl lows wii !IK· In thr .'lOs.

There will ix' another rhambrr
of commr;·cr member named In
additional to Blower: another
resld&lt;'nl familiar with history or
the town. thr two cou ncil
members and Mayor Hoffman
serving on the ro mmltter . Th e
I own has been given a gr;~n t to tl!'
used In publicat ion of the
brochure.
Mayor Hoffman sa id th at local
cos ts of the public transportation
system, the Blur Streak C'abCo ..
will lnc·rease In 19&amp;l and he has
ask&lt;'d both PomNoy and thr
Meigs Count.v Comn'll ss lon~&gt;rs
via lettrr to provide $:l,:ill1 &lt;'UCh
towards lh&lt;' lncrra.st'.
The ma \'or unnouncrd also
that rrpres&lt;'nta tt,·es of C&amp;SOE
will m&lt;'&lt;'t wllh coundl on i\prll27
to discuss the rl'ncwal of the
str&lt;'f't lighting co ntract which
expires In Ma y .
Councilman Gilmon• Inquired
as to lh&lt;' stat us of mater ials nC'I'd
for traffic control ut th&lt;'fall block
part y 'of the Middleport Chamber
of Commerce and wa s advl srd
by Mayor Hoffman that the town
Is In the prOC&lt;'SS of serurlng the
Items.
Attl'ndlng thr m&lt;'&lt;'ting
were' Ma yor Hoffman, Clerk ·
Trea surer .Jon fl uck, and C'oun·
cllmen Horton, Gll morr, .lark
Satterfield and William Walt ers.

Exper1ence,
,
dependab1'Iity, and the professional approach
that's what you need to help solve your hearing
problem, and that's what you et at Diles. There is no
need tO Setfle for ltSS!
5
h
II Ul IGC
Wtd d p M
ntl GJ • •
at Holzer Clinic
in Galliftolis
'g

CALL lOLL FlEE 1- 00-237-7716

Diane f. McVey, M.A.

DILES HEARING AID (ENTER
l26 W. Unlea Street, lthlnl, OH.

614-594-3571

•

tiOO•S:Ott, Sot. Mornl 9:00-12:00
ltl--------.iiiiiiiii.iitiil.i-ii.iiii*iilreiiiiiiliiiiiiriiiiill.iiiiiiiiririiiii_________..
......frl.

�•

I

Tuesday, March 24, 1987

By The Bend

Tuesday, March 24, 1987

--

Page-6

Donohue to travel with [!,roup
Kenda Donohur d.lllghtCJ of
Mr and Mrs Ravmond n,,
nohue and a 1986 gradual&lt; of
Meigs High School wi ll bf' go mg
on tour wtth two groups from thr
Mount Vernon Nazarenr Collrgr
where she 1s a freshman
Donohue wilt partiCipate m ,
two weekend tour m OhiO w•th
one ol the top choirs at th e ,
college The Treble Singers As a

Letart School
notes Week

concrn band partiCipant whe
"llllx mvolved In a one weekend
loU I m Oh10 and West Vu gmla
and a one week tour In Flonda
1 he Fl011da tr ip wi ll mclude a
pe1formancp at Wall fllsnev
wo.td
In Ma1 the (;olwrds a smalle•
choir at the college plan to
pPrlorm at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene

Dance Club visits with others
Sixteen memlxers of the Belles
and Beaus Wes tern Style Square
Dance Club traveled to Pleasants
County Middle School to attend a
dance sponsored by the Missing
Squares Club of Belmont V. Va
Tom Miller called lor the square
dancing and Charlie Hearn cued
the rounds The Bell&lt;'s and Beaus
returned home with their own
travellng banne1 which the Miss

mg SquarPs had stolen and
also a sh ut 1epresentlng the host
cl ub Couples makmg the trip
were Harold and Betty Newell
VIrgil and Katherme Windon
Mickey and Sue Burke Roy and
Pat Holter Ray and Susan
Oliver Jim Stewart and Sally
Savage Homer and Shirley Belt
an d Ray and Bermta Maxson

Riley birth being announced
Mr and Mrs John Pat Riley of
New Haven announce lht&gt; birth of
their second child a son on
M"arch 11 The Infant weighed
five pounds II ounces and
measured IR Inches He has bt&gt;t&gt;n
named Jamm Paul Mr and Mrs
Rllt&gt;y have another son Jason
Patrick six
Mat er nal grandparents are

Mr and M1 s Jack Needs of New
Haven
Maternal grea t
grandparents are Mr and Mrs
la y W Workman, Ceredo W Va
Paternal grandparents are Mr
and Mrs Ted Riley Jr Middle
po1 t
Pate1 n a l great
grandpa1ents are Mr and Mrs
Ted Rllev Sr alsool Middleport
Mrs R1ley 1s the former Judy
Needs

MHS alumni planning banquet
The Middleport High School
Alumni Association banquet and
dance will be held Ma y 23 m the
Meigs Junior High School Build
lng The banquet will be served at
6 30 p m wllh the dance to be
held from 9 p m to I a m
Letter to alumni will be gomg
out soon and persons with up

dated addresses are asked to call
9925064

The ofllcers are Wa ynt&gt; Davis
president, Michael Gerlach vice
president, Sandra Humphreys
Ht&gt;nderson second vice presl
Kathy McElhinney
dent
McCreedy secretary and Paul
Haynes treasurer

I

' I

'

NATION U HONOR SOCIETY- Ten Southern
HIKh School jumors and seniors were lnduch•d
mto th~ National Honor Society In a candlelight
ceremony Friday afternoon In addition Koste
EldahuJa, ,, science teacher was made an
honorary member The ceremony was conducted
hy NHS memhers, Tammy Theiss, Kim Adams,

~·"~i I

~· ,:; ~ . "
Diana Sl mpson and Rachel Reiher Inducted were
front !rom left, Scolt McPhail, Tammy Holler
,Joyce Foreman Heather Shuler, Mrs EldahaJa:
and Bruce Wolle, second row, Shawn Arnott, Pam
Ash, and Tr.lCie Hubbard, and th1rd row Pete
.Johnson and Matt Harris

Surprise party given minister, wife
A surprise party was held ca1 ds
recently at the home of Mr and
Attending the party were M1
Mrs Roger L Manley Sr
and Mrs Paul Knisley and
Rutland Street Middleport ho child• en James Philip Joseph
noring the Rev and M1 s Ivan Dav1d Joanna and Mi r iam Knl s
(Helen) Myers of New Haven on Ic) Letart W Va Mr and Mrs
their birthday anniversaries
Bernard Hudson and daughter
The congrega tion of the Wes
Kimberly Hudson M1 and Mrs
leya n Bible Holiness Chu rch of Arthur Barr M1 s Margaret
Middleport hosted tht&gt; party for Mc{)anlel Mrs ShaiOn Older
their new pastor and his Wife
a ndch1ldren Dmothy Rlckyand
The bu thd ay cake was m J•mmie Mr and MI s Roger L
sc nbed To Pasto1 and w1fe Manley Sr , Mr and Mrs Rogel
I\ an and Helen from The Flock
L Manley Jr Donna Manley,
on an open Bible in white and M1 and Mrs Paul L McDa01el
brown With vellow roses bemg ll Middleport and Mrs Juan
featured on each corner of the 1ta Roush Rutland
cake
Sending gift s were Mr and
Cake Ice cream punch tea Mrs Rich Roush of Middleport
coffee and chips were sened The couple received congratula
alter the couple opened gilts a nd

toi Y calls from Mr and Mrs
Robert Jeffers and a surpnst&gt;
VISitor m the evcnmg was John
Strader statwned at Norfolk
Va w1th the US Navy
The Knisley family provided
mus1c for the party
The Rev Mr MHrs was
PI esented the keys to the church
which he bega n past OJ mg on Jan
7 The mmlster and h1s wife have
a daughter and son m law Mr
and Mrs Curtiss Clonch and a
son and daughter m law Mr and
Mrs Gary W Myers both of
Gallipolis They also have four
grahddaughters Lon and Amy
Clonch Gallipolis and Janna
and Christi Myers of Point
Pleasant, W Va

Activities dt&gt;signed to promote
reading and motivate students
were the highlights ol the Right
to Read Week at Letart Elemen
tary School 'Sniffing Out a Good
Book ' was the overall theme
The entire week of activities
planned by staff was enjoyed by
the students Activities Included
on Monday Mr John Hunnell
reading !rom Where the Side
walk Ends ' a puppet show given
by the Chapter I Reading stu·
dents on Thursday, and a balloon
launch on Friday A Book Fair
was sponsored by the second and
third grade throughout the week
Other activities Included Ice
cream making, bookmarker con
tests news video, dally sustained
silent reading, posters and
dcesslng as a favorite character
and reading to others Rax
sponsored an activity In which
students who read five books
were given a free meal

Faulk birthday
Radley Faulk celebrated his
sixth birthday Saturday with a
party at the home of his parents,
Mr and Mrs Charles Faulk
W1pple Road, Pomeroy
Games were played with prizes
going to Beau Ballv, Elisha
McCoy, and Jason Mora Others
there were Angl Wolfe, Angle
Tay lor and Wesley Karr

Eden perronal.r
Mrs Lola Barlxer, Painesville
was the recent guest of Martha
Holsinger
Mrs Evelyn Barber has been
transferred from Veterans Mem
orlal Hosp1tal m Pomeroy to a
Columbus hospital
William Hosellon has returned
home after spendmg sometime m
Ca md e n Clark Hospital
Parkersburg

Meigs County organizations conduct meetings

'

BANQUET
lt was announced that the
The Syracuse filth and SIXth Me1gs County Women s Fellow
~trade basketball teams and
ship Will meet March 26 at the
cheerleaders were honored re
Dexter Chu1ch of Christ The
ccntlv with a carry m banquet at Churches of Christ hymn smg
th e Sy1 acuse Elementary will be held March 29 at the
School Tables were decorated In Middleport Church
green and white and pictures of
Hostesses were Dorothy
the cheerleaders and players Baker Maryln Wilcox Ella Mae
were used on the walls M1ke Daugher ty and Martha Hag
Swiger gave the prayer before ger ty with Mildred Hawley con
thE' dinner
trlbutlng Others at the meeting
After the dinner trophies were were Clyda Allensworth Bea
presented by the coaches and the Stewart Delcle Forth, Grace
cheerleadlng advisors Marvm Hawley I oulse McElhinney and
McKelvey llfth grade coach
Regina Sw 11t
gave trophies to Andy Grueser
Andrew Fields Michael McKel
CHESTER UNITED METRO
vey Corrlssa Mulford Bobby DJST
A program entitled ·The
Moore. Amber Ohlinger. Tucke1
Williams and Marshall Wolle
World Is At Our Doorstep' was
presented by Ruth Karr and
Ray Proffitt Sr presented tro
phles to Mark Allen Kevin Helen Wolf at the March meeting
Arnott John Bentley John Cha
of the Chester United Methodist
ney, Aaron Drummer Billy Women
Eakins, Heather McPhail and
The program opened with
group singing of the hym n 'The
Ray Proffitt Jr
Rednelth Miller filth grade Solid Rock' with Helen Woll as
cheerlead lng advisor gave pianist Ruth Karr read selected
trophlers to Daniele Hensler
scripture from Matthew Mark
Jody Hobbs Amy Mills Amy and Revelation, followed by
Moore and Joanne Quail and prayer
Lura Swiger sixth grade advl
Readings pertained to people
who are fleeing their homeland
sor presented trophies to Be
from El Salvador Nicaragua
thany Bass Valerie Connolly
Jennifer Cross Serena Davis
and Mexico leaving behind faml
Tamara Hayman. Klmbf'rly Jen
lies and friends They speak no
klns, Angle Mills and Angle English and have to 1xe careful to
Swiger
whom they talk lxecause they are
Illegal
About a hundred a tt ended the
The questions discussed were
banquet headed by Mrs Sw1ger
Ofcoratlng was handled by Jean who will help them is It the
province of the church what role
Allen. Phyllis Cross, Faith Hay
man. Jill Hobbs Rose Ann do Christians have In responding
to the cries or the people who
Jenkins Martha McPhail Red
come
to their doorsteps but are
nelth Mills Carolvn Ohlinger
not
legal
residents The answer
Sheila Prolfitt and Lura Swiger
to the questions It was pointed
out by the program leaders Is
PHfATHEA WOMEN
;Pfans were made lor the 'yes', there Is a responsibility
The leaders discussed the
Installation of olllcers at the
mission
program along the
April 9 meeting ol Phllathea
when the group met recently at border towns of the Southwest
where these people are given
the Middleport Chu1 ch of Christ
ThE' service will be preceded by a temporary shelter and food
Among those named were the
w11.11ck dinner at 6 30 p m
Casa
Romero In Tucson Ariz ,
' installation committee wllllxe
the
Good
Neighbor Settlement
Maryln Wilcox Nora Ri ce an
Joann Conant Officers to 1xe House in Brownsville, Texas and
Ca lexico Calif and urban
inStalled will lxe Phyllis Gilkey
president, Mildred Riley, vice churches In the big cities
The program closed with group
president Dorothy Roach se
singing
of Just a Closer Walk
cretary Bea Stewa1 t assistant
with
Thee
' Den lse Mora pre
secretary and Farle Cole
sided at the meeting with 12
trea~urer
members present Twenty six
vThe Phllathea song opened the
sick
calls were reported
ml!eting Officers' reports were
given by Mrs Roach and Mrs
Mrs Cole and a report on flowers D of A
Quarterly birthdays were ob811~ cards was given by Mildred
RHey Ella Mae Daugherty gave served at the recent meet lng of
devotions using scripture !rom Chester Council 323 Daughters
ol America, held at the hall
Proverbs and a reading, ' Amaz
Jo Ann Baum baked the
ide' Answers to Prayers ' On the
prayer list were Mildred Hawley, birthday cake which was served
as a part of the potluck Observ
Marte Pickens, Martha Childs
lng birthdays were Margaret
S.rah Wiles. Mr and Mrs
Tuttle
Opal Hollon, Sadie Trus
Marvin Kelly, Carrie Roush,
sell,
Fern
Morris, JoAnn Baum,
r.(jjrgaret Kincaid Helen Berk
Marcia
Keller,
Nelle Werner,
hart, Terri Hockman, Helen
Genevieve Ward, and Pauline
Milhoan, and Randy C1&gt;lgove

.

.

\

Ridenour
lt was reported that Edith
Spencer Is hospitalized and
Thelma White and Betty Roush
are Ill Marga ret Tuttle, councl
lor, presided at the meetmg
which opened in ritualistic form
AUXILIARY
A cont ribution 11 as made to the
Miles of Pennies for the POW
MIAS at a recent meeting ol the
American Legion Auxiliary Le
wls Manley Post 263 held at
Dale s Smorgasb01 d
Mrs Margaret Bowles prP
sided at the meeting which was
hosted by Mrs Annette Johnson
The news bulletin from Ca thP
rlne Curl Eighth D1stnct pres1
dent telling of upcoming events
In thedislrlct was read Officers'
reports were given Copies oft he
revised co nstitution we1 e or
dered lor membe1 s and annu al
dues were pa1d
Letters of endorsement for
Mar) Moose Junction City Unit
3Y6 and Ellen Rought , Pomeroy
Unit 39 as candidates for district
president were read Mrs John
son In the absence of Mrs Lucille
Saunders made the community
service report eommentmg on
safety cleanup week and spe
clal programs to be promoted by
the Auxiliary unit s
Mrs Arnold Richards read
from 1 he Firing Line about the
Immigration reform and control
act ofl986 noting that an all lime
recOI d of apprehensiOn of Illegal
aliens In the US was set in 1986
Round robin card was Signed
for M1s Hulda Gordon and
familY on the death of her
husband, Rudolph
Lula Hampton read from the
Natlnal Legislative Bulletin
about resolutions passed by the
American Legion at It s 68th
convention held In Cincinnat i
She said the resolutions sup
ported May 30 as the Memorial
Day observance the extension ol
the Veterans Job Training Act
military aid to Taiwan, South
Korea Turkey and El Salvador
National Family Week Voice of
America, and the Korean War
Memorial
By resolution the Legion op
posed dismantling of the VA
home loan program and transfer
of veterans programs from the
VA administration
Mrs Bowles asked the chair
men to prepared report forms A
prayer lor peace, singing ol
America, and remarks by the
president closed the meeting
Mrs Lorene Goggins wil lxe
hostess for the April meeting
GROUP II
A Lenten theme was carried
out In the program presented at
the recent meeting of Group II of
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church conducted by Mrs Harry
Moore

BON JOYI
TICKOS FOR SALE
IF INTERESTED
CALL 773 •911 6
BETWEEN 6 P,M, TO 9 P.M.

The Daily Sentinel

Lenten a1 IIcles were read from
the
Spirit Preparation lor
F.aster Umty devo tional boo
klet She also read an article
from thr Senior Citizens news let
ter and co ncluded with a bless
lng by Doris Heard en titled
'Chaplain s Corner
Mrs Carl Horky was devo
11onal leader and read an article
entitled St Patrick s Dededlca
lion to Act1vc Christianity She
read from Ideals magazine
Worshp lor the Young in Spirit
by Pau l N Ebl m Least Coin was
conducted by Mrs Jack Sorden
and Mrs Ow lgh t Wa liace con
dueled the Bible stud y !rom
Concern maga zine with Mrs
Pa ul Haptonstall and Mrs Do
nald Lowerv assisting
Mrs Francis Anderson an d
Mrs I ew 1s Sa uer served pie
nuts and coffee from a table
decmated 1n the St Patrick s
Day motif

LYDIA COUNCIL
Plans lor a mortgage burnmg
ceremony on Marc h 29 w£'re
discussed when the Lydia Coun
c1l of the Bradbury Chu rc h of
Chr ist met Monda y evening
It '-&lt;as noted that a potluck
dinner will follow that morning
service A youth rctrt&gt;at was
announced lor March 27 and 28
Wllh th e lht&gt;me I Am Up With
semmars to be co nducted by Bill
Rutan Debbie Pickens noted
that Apri19 will be Lad1es Day at
the Kentucky Christian College
Sherr! Se('vers presided at the
meeting with members enjoyi ng
a pound shower Offerings werp
taken and Madeline Painter and
Nancy Morris gave the secretary
and treasurer s reports
The annua l mother daughter
banquet was set for May 15 at
6 30 p m with The Spirit of
Christmas In May to be the
theme A men s prayer breakfast
was discussed and wllllxe held on
April 4 It was reported that the
church directory will be com
pleted and ready lor distribution
next month The prayer chair
man list was updated and vaca
tlon ~lble school discussed
Made ltne Painter and Carolyn
Nicholson will have charge ol
craft Instruction Carft articles
are needed they sa ld
Cathy Spencer had devotions
using ' Fins of the Tongue ' as
her theme Scripture was taken
from Proverbs 6 and James 3
and prayed closed devotions
Attendlng were Clara Mae
Morris Gerrl Lightfoot, Susie
Will Jan Koehler Cat hy
Spencer, Debbie Pickens Norma
Russell, Vicki Smith Sherrl
Williamson Sherr! Seevers,
Jackie Reed Carolyn Nicholson,
Tina McGuire, Frances Hysell,
Madeline Painter, Ashley Seev
ers and Nancy Morris
I

EVANGELINE
The E\ angeline Missionary
Group of the Pomeroy Church ol
Christ met Tuesday evmng at the
home of LaDonna Clark Pat
Thoma presided O\ er the meet
lng with Pauline Kennedy giving
prayer Roll ca ll was on winds of
spring Devotions were led by
Ger trude Andrew 1eadlng from
the Upper Room and Phllllplans
4.10 and 1!
Officers reports were g1ven
Eileen Bowe1s 1eported that
curtains had lxeen purchased for
thP nursery and that sunshine
boxes would be p1 epa red from
members A work day for the
comforts w"s planned Rnd a
remmder was given that Camp
bell s soup Ia lxels are bemg
co llected for Grundy Mts
MISSIOn
Cards and !lowers were sent to
Janet Venoy and Helen Miller
The Mother Daught er banquet
was discussed and letters read
from George and Debbie Pickens
and Richard and Betty L
Evanson
Laura Proudfoot announced
the youth group will help clea n
the church on March 28
Betty Spencer had mission
study on Shiloh Chris tian Child
ren s Ranch Clarena Mo
which the yout h group will help
support
Clos mg prayer was g11 en by
Thoma and reh eshments were
served
SYRACUSE PTO
•
New officers for Syracuse PTO
were elected at the March
meeting ElectPd to se1 ve the
organization durin g the 1987 88
school year were Joyce Sisson,
president Jea nie Buckley vice
president Elea nor McKelvey,
secretary, a nd H1lda Weaver
treasurer
The Ways and Means Commit
tee will be selected In April
A PTO sponsored craft sho1&lt;
that was scheduled fo r April4 has
lxeen canceled
In other business PTOdeclded
to reimburse parents of the
cheerleaders lor the cost of
uniforms Then starting next
year, cheer leading uniforms will
be stored at the school
It was noted that the spor ts
banquet on March 5 was
successful
It was decided that PTO funds
will be used to help purchase of a
new Thermofax machi ne for the
school
Putting In a new tile lloor In the
gymnasium was discussed, but
no decision was made
Remora Young reported that
46 220 Campbell s soup labels
have been collected for the school
this year with 25 000 labels being
won at Kroger and 10,000 won at
Foodland Through the Cam
pel! s program the school wllllxe
purchasing a VCR wllh remote

v

control a Bell and Howell
overhead projector a paper
cutter, Polaroid Sprint camera
two joy sticks lor the Apple
computers and a six Inch prism

EVANGELINE MISSIONARY
Evangeline Missionary Group
of the Pomeroy Church of Christ
met Tuesday evening at the
home of LaDonna Clark Pat
Thoma presided at the meeting
with Pauline Kennedy giving
prayer "Winds ol Spring" was
the roll call theme
Gertrude Andrews led In devo
lions reading from the Upper
Room and Philippians
Officers reports were given
Eileen Bowers reported that
curtains have lxeen purchased for
the nursery and that a sunshine
box has lxeen prepared for one of
the members A working day on
contorts was set Members were
asked to coiiPct Campbell soup
lalxels for the Grundy Mountain
Mission
Cards and !lowers were sent to
Janet Venoy and Helen Miller
The mother daughter banquet
was discussed and letters read
!rom George and Debbie Pickens
and Richard and Betty L
Evanson
Laura Proudfoot announced
that the youth group would help
clean the church on Ma1 ch 28
Betty Spencer had the mission
study on Shiloh Christian Child
rt&gt;n's Ranch In Missouri with the
youth group to support the ranch
The closing prayer was by Mrs
Thoma and refl eshments wcr!'
served to those named and
Brenda Venoy Charldine Alkire
and Eva Dessauer

METHODIST YOUTH
Ol!icers werp elected at the
recent reorgan ization ol the
Flatwood Un1ted Methodist
Church's youth group
Ell'cted were Rod Newsome
president, Chad Cook, v1ce pres I
dent, Laur~ Farley secretary
and Mike Parker treasurer Mr
and Mrs Bill Cook and the Rev
Mel Franklin are the leaders
with Mrs Annette Cook Patty
Parker Mrs Loretta Brown and
Mrs
Jo Ann Newsome
assistants
Others attending the )Outh
organlzaJion were Monica
Adams, Heather Farley, Aa1on
and Alex Brown and Chuck
Parker
The program Included medlta
lion and games and refresh
menls were served The youth
will have charge of the sunrise
service and Sunday school pro
gram on Easter morning Next
meeting will lxe on March 29 at
the church 4 to 5 30 p m All
youth are invited to attend

11

Pubhc Not1ce

----==::::::~~~~~.:..:.::::::J

for the preparation and sub

-.,.--i m1ss10n of a Comprehensrve

Pubhc Not1ce

No1ghborhood

R011~ahzollon

Program apphcallon at the

TO 'U(IlN lD CAll. .92 2156
MOtiDAW thnt FIIOAT"flllto S P.M.
I i Ill Until NOOft 5lTUiliiU
ClOSID SUNO.IY

RAT!I

oono

"""""

t~e

BE IT ORDAINED by the

SECTION 1 Thatthe ord1

nances of the VIllage of Po
merov Oh10 of a general
and permanent nature as re
vtsed codtfted rearranged
and consolidated 1nto com
ponent codes titles chapt
era and seettons ere hereby
approved adopted and
enacted as the Codtfted Or
dmances of the V1llage of

Pomeroy Oh1o 1987

One book form copy of the
Codtfled Ord.nances shall be
certifted as correct by the
Mavor and the Clerk Trea
surer attached to th1s Ordt
nance as a part hereof and
flied wnh the permanent records of the V•llage of Po
meroy Oh10

SECTION 2 That tho prov1

~ons of th1s Ord1nance '"
cludtng all provtsions of the
Codrf1ed Ordmances shall be
1n full force and effect as pro
t~~ded tn Sect1on 5 of thts Ord1
nance All ordtnances and re
solutions or parts thereof
enacted pnor to whtch are tn
cons•stent wtth any prov.s10n
of the Cod1f1ed Ordtnances
ore hereby repealed as of the
effecttve date of thts Ord1
nance except as follows
(a) The enactment of the
Cod1f1ed Ordmancas shall
not be construed to affect a
rtght or liabthty accrued or
mcurred under any leg1sla
t1ve prov•s1on pnor to the ef
fecttve date of such enact
ment or an action or pro
ceedmg for the enforcement
of such1 nght or habthty
Such enactment shall not be
construed to reheve any per
son frotn pumshment for an
act comm1tted m vtolat1on of
any such leg1slat•ve prov•
s1ons nor to affect an md1ct
ment or prosecution there

SECTION 4 That t~ls Ordl

nance 11 hereby declared to be
an emergency measuJB necessary for the Immediate
preservation of the pubhe
peace health safety and wei
fare of tho reSidenll of the VII
lage. the reason for the neces
sity being that there 8111.1111 an
tmperauve need for the earh
est pubhcat•on and d11tr1bu

''"" of the Codifted Ord1

nances to the offlc•ala and reSidenta of the VHiage so as to
faclllt81e admlf1iltratton and
da•ly operet•on and avoid
practtcal and legal entangle-

manti

SECTION 5 That th11 Or

d•nance thafl become effec
ttve at the earliest dale al

towed b'flaw
PASSED thll 18th day of
March I 987
Rtchard 0 Sayler
Mayor
APPROVED thll 18th dov
of March 19B7
Jane Walton
Clerk Treasurer

ACCEPTED thll 18th day
of March 1987
(31 24 31 2tc

=::.•,';:._

-·-·-.....
·." -·--·--··-

......
,,_,..__

lh~

~

~

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~ ::r=.:·:.~o;

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· - · - T\111:1-

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• ---

9-•lr
::.: :' ;!::;;"'

:-=:::"1•

•, -·--·-·
'

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.. _ ..,

Bus). ness Servi· ces

::.~:~~"~~:.~~;·:~~:.~i~~·.~,
·
hour
contn ct the
If mtor est~td

r;:=======::;r.=========:c=======:::;,;:=======::;;r-~:--:-:----~ -----c-::c-:- ·
Ltb ury 446 READ
;
Or Samuell Bossard MAmo n•l •

J.R.'s REPAIRS

C•JOputenzed Heanng Atd Selectton

Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

TVs,

~ Swtm Molds · Interpreting Setvtces

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

J: Ltcensed Chmcal Audiolog~st

Electrontc Organs
Mobile serv1ce
6005-For the new baby
crochet a super simple
bunting plus separate
hood and a blanket of
baby yam One s•ze f1ts
Infants up to s1x months
Each pattern $3 25 plus
75¢ postagelhandhng
(NY 1es«1en~ a&lt;tl sales !al l
Send lo

Reidel IIIII

The Datly Sent1nel
624 lto&lt;thlm fllvd •WGCidside
NY It 377 Print Nlmt Acldms
Zip Size Pattem Number

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8 85)
when you 01der one of the
' $2 95 books listed below
t t1-Halrpln Crochet
1t5-Easy R•(lllle Crochet
117-Art ot Needlepoint
13S-Oolls and Clothes
/o4IJ S1 05 to&lt; poolagehla""'ng

CRAFTS

P AT T E R NS

Pubhc Notice
Masgachusetts 02564 flied
m thts Court under Docket
M Page 648 an authent•
cated copy of a Letter of
Appointment issued to h1m
by the Probate Court of
Nantucket County Massa
schusetts Nottce ts further
gNen that all crechtors of satd
estate who desne to assert
the1r hans on the real estate
of the satd decedent located
m th1s estate shall present
thetr chums duly sworn to
to thts Court wtthtn 11x (6)
months after the f1hng of
sa1d Letter of Appotntment
tn this Court or satd hens
shall forever be deemed
barred and cancelled

Robart E Buck Judge

Approved by
Douglas W Little
Attorney for Applicant
13) 10 17 24 3tc

LEGAL NOTICE

Apr~

1987 19B8 tour door fiVe

passenger sedan wtth the
followmg added equipment
V B Engme - Not Over
305 Cubtc Inches
Wheel Base - Not to Ex

ceed 115 Inches
5 Black Ragular SIZe Ra
d1al T~res

Power Steenng

Spotlight On loft Hand
Stde
AutomatiC Tran smiSSIOn
Vtnyl Seats
A1r Condtttoner
Rear Wmdow Defrost
Rear Doors Open From

Outside Ontv

624 Not1tJom ~~d , Woodlldt
NY tt317 Print Nlme, Addllu,
l~ Size, Plttem Number

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8 85)
when you order one ol the
$2 95 bool&lt;s liSted below
It 9-Art ot Flower ClllChet
121-Piilow Show Offs
127-Afghans and Doilies
129-0IJJCk!Easy Transfers
/o4IJ SI 05 lor pqsfagohllndNng

8 13 tin

Back door W•ndows Re
mam Up
Adjustable Mtrrors On Both
Stdes
Calibrated speedometer and
~tee package opttons and
transfemng
radtoa
pen
flashtng segnats fire ext1n
gutahers and protectfve shtelds
from present car to new car
Each btd must conta10 the
full name of every person or
company mterested In th e
same and the bJd must be
accompamed by a check or
bond In tho sum of $1 00 00
to lha sat1sfacllon of the V1l
lage Council as a guaranty
that '' the b1d 11 accepted
conlract wdl be entered Into
and 1ts performance prop
arty secured
These checks or bonds w1ll
be returned at once to all e x
capt the successful b1dder
H1s checks or bond w1ll be
held unttl the contract or b1d
is properly executed by htm
The right IS reserved to re
Ject any or all btdl
Jane Walton Clark
V1llage of Pomeroy
13124 31 2tc

CRAFTS
PATTERNS
Pubhc Not1ce
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Estate of Sara E Brown
Deceased

Cue No 25 409
NOTICE

Not•ce Is hereby gtven that
on the 4th day of March

1987 Wtlham S Brown
Executor ot the Estate of
Sara E Brown late of 22
Mam Street S•asconset

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4l6861tn

RACINE

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

49835 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771

PH.

992-2772
311871mo

FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Fo,tory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
tO 8 lin

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and weldmg
!All makes &amp; models}

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wmdows
•Replacement Wmdows
•New Roof1ng

949-2893
or 949-2756

PH.

'FREE ESIIMATES '
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
3 ll 87 I mo

John K. Bentz
Owner/Mechanic
12'173mo

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remod eling
- Ro of1ng and gutter work
- Cilncret e work
- Plumb "9 and e lectncal
work

(free Esttmatesl

V. (,

YOUNG Ill
9n 621S or 992 73!4
Pomeroy, Oh1o
415 861 c

3 Announcements

Flattened Alum Cons
26' tb
Clean Sheet Cast Alum
25&lt; to 29&lt; lb
#1 COPPER
42'
#2 COPPER
.32&lt;
Irony Aluminum
StoiB'lb
SCIPIO RECYCLING

RE·OPENS
MARCH 20
Pottery and Gtfts
Bird Baths Outside
Yard Dolts Jesus

Ractne Gun

aponsored by
Aacme Gun Club E\lery Sunday
begmnmg at 1 00 p m Fact ory
Choke 12 guege aho1gu n1
Shoo~

If the tw o men wh o wttre stten
tAk ng my old fAshmn 1ron kotlle
from my front yMd on Glllr~dg11
Rd &amp; headtng tow11rd l e tatl
WV Wedn e1day evening March
18th aro und 6 p m w1ll return
Kettle thare wtll be noqueationt
111ked Otherw11e you w11l be
prosecuted P S R11mmnber you
werfl seen so waa your cnr
Signed Edith ~ Roy Hurlow
304 896 3821

MASTERCARO I VI S AI No
credit t:hec k Al10 new cr&amp;dlt
cerd No one refu aodl For Info
co li (rttfundable\ 1 315 73 3
6062 Bitt M673

Gtveaway

K1Uens All klnda &amp; colors Ap
pr OM 6 week i o ld Call 614
446 8642
Yard sale goods 81 ch1ldr flnl
clothes s•zea between 6 7 Ph

614 246 5286
2 car bod ea to g1ve awav Ph
614 446 7946
Freagardenplot 1612KIInllwh a
Sl Pomt Ple111111nt W VII

6 Lost and Found

Yard Sale

Middleport
&amp; Vtctntty

and Graves

Cotne In u• Su Belote
You Buy

mo

l 17 1 mo

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authomed John DHrt,
New Holland Bush Hog
Form EqUipment
Dealer
Far111 Equlp111e11t
Parts &amp; Sarvtee
I 3 '86 1ft

EUGENE LONG
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Remodelmg

Roofing of all Types
Complete Gutter Work
Worked '" home area
20 years
Free Esttmatas

CAll COllECT
Ph (6141 843-5425
3 9 87 2 mo pd

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Ma1n St
Pomeroy
HOURI, Tue Wtd Fr~
11amto7pm

Garage Sale Wedn&amp;sday and
Ttturaday March 25th and 26th
341 Rutland St Mld dlepon
Ohtq Ram or ahlne Ca r pe"•
clothmg and houuhold 1tem1

R/iDIATOR
ERVICE
We can r8patr and re
core radiators and
heater cores We can
also actd botl and rod
out radiators We also
repatr Gas Tanks

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Maku
•Washers IOtshwashers
•Ranges
•Retngeralon
•Dryers •Freezers

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Oh•o

PARTS and SERVICE

1 13 tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage

REPAIR
luthorlud S.rwiu
&amp; Parts
Brtg~t

Rt 124, Pomtray Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Aleo Tr1111111111o•

6 Strattbn

ecumseh
Weed Eater
Homellte
Jacob1en

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.

992·5682
or 992-7121

PH.

992-6611

6 17 tfc

3 20 87

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 Norlh

GOOD BENEFITS, DEMO VEHICLE
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
APPLY IN PERSON

PAT HILL FORD

461 S. 3RD AVE., MIDDLEPORT

Rn c ne

Ohi o

. ..'

Penun ur rmnr ud coupl e tOr J
me m o rml !fil ms w•tl ~~ 8ltnb
I! s hed rei a bitt sout h! rn Ohto

co mpany Good ~old
po t nnual sn nd rnsum11

rn c om~t
lfl Boll

~

146 Bra1nen OH 43107

MOM AND DAD Let u1 pay for
your ch ld 1 co lltrg B flducadoh
The Army N~ttto nal Guatd caR '
provtdfl up to $18 000 '!'"'
nducat lon asalltllnco Call 1
BOO 642 36 1 9 tor trne 1nfor~a
11011 pac~ fll or conf liCt your lcv: •l
Armv Nat lb nlll Gu!'l1tl rac •ullflr t
tor an nterv•aw
EXCELLENT WAG ES For spar8
llm fl nnemhly w o rk elect ron
1c• c r11h5 Other• Into 16041
641 0091 o11t 3667 7 days

Full

WANTED

01

:

.,~

Part Ttme l Nahonally

know 1 c•lendn• manulectulftr
Bnd speclelty ~tdverlltlng com
pany amce 1888 olfer l oppor ..
tunny f01 tndUIII iOUI .. If
Alllntng tllles ouanted penon tot

prfllllnl uc lu alvfl cal&amp;nd•rp.
bualne11 gifts and advertlai"O"
pr o mot on11 Utt ml auch at I ~ 1
pnntod pens key teg1 Ctpt
s twta etc to local bu1lne111t1
Everyone e pru1p11 cttve cutto 1
mor Not a Ft11n chlae l N o
lmuta tmant l Organue your o wn
t Ime In dete rmmA your oW"'
SUCCflll Wr ite Pll Murphy The
Th oa 0 Murphy Co Red Oak
lowe6 1566
. ..

•u•

tit

Rcupona hie t oen
wanted to baby11l 21 mont h' o
mlam pontbl n 3 evemngs .r.
wAek and 1ome S:..lf' Jurdays Camp
Co nley are11 Callo~~tw 6 00 PM
J04 e76 tJ66

:s:-,-,:-,,-.:- &amp;i.''

7
F.-d:::
.,-,,:-:s:-,.-~.-=c,:-.,::,
1o
"ow avall•ble In your srflll For
lnformet•on Ph 805 644 9633
Dept 43
"

15

Schools
lnstrtfc llon

992-2526

3 2 l mo

*VINYl SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes lullt
'Free Estimates
PH. 949·2860

or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls
3 II ttn

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES

949-9070 or
949-2045

3 4 I mo

WILL HAUL

s.,..,;

~UST CALL!

M•d•tpor1, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992·3410

We C1rry Fl1hlng 8uppliH

LIMESTONE

Pay Your Coble &amp;
Phone Blil1 Hete
1IUIINISS 'NONE
1614} 99J-6SSO
IISIIIN(II'IIONf
16141 "2·1714

GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10 I tfc

l / 28 /tf~

---

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULIERRY AYE.
POIIIOY I OH.
PH. 992·9949
lob lartan, Owner

}jf'(!/!!j!l!lilf..Jrl;aur!l!li(fJ.. /!/J;fJJJ/JS
•

'

1

\

------------------,
1 8 Wanted to Do

1- - - - - - - - --.
Rnhable older man mow l11wna 1
AAaaonabluatn• Call614 448 '

------------------·
Carft For Elderly In my ho mtt r
Good Aeferon cea 304 075 ,.
6832
IJ

Finan cial

'

21

Wa pay cath t or lat e mod11l clu n
Ulld cerl
Jim Mink Chev Olda In c
81ll Oene J ohnson
TOP CAS H paid .or 83 mod el
and newer uted car•\ Sm1th
Bu lch Pon111c 1911 Eu1orn
Ava Gallipolis Call GU 446
2282

20 26 It Pull lypl
Ca mpttr Ruaonably Priced Ph
$14 2e8 8522

Older

Toba cco lotment will pey 40
Cfllltl a pound Ph 614 388
8614
Call 814
268 1812 or448 1437

Tobac co poundaliJII

Good late modal uud ••lage
chopper Two row co•n he11d
Alto need good taed grlndtu
Both mu1t be In very good
c ondtttOn and r1110 nable price
Ph 814 493 2401 Of rf buly

814 493 2696
Buying dallv gold tllv•r coins
rlngt 1ewelry llttllnQ wtrt old
coma largt currtnc:v Top prl
caL Ed 81.1rkett Barbtf Shop
2nd Ave Mlddleporl Oh e14

992 3471

8usmess
Oppor1umty
----------------~~:
I NOTI CE I

i,

T HE OHIO VALlEY PUDUP.4 ,
lN G CO reeommendathat
dO bUI&amp;neU Wllh peopl t
•
know •od NOT to nnd mo :t,
through the ma ll until you h
"
j
lnvealigtled lhe olhHing

"'2"'3,...-,P"r'-o7f e-s-s""
•o-n'"'
a1:--...,.,.,
Services

'

'

PrNate lnvattlgat "Iii All type,,..
of mvrHII1iJA1tOnl Strictly tl o"fl
dttntial Call814 247 3281 ,

V~rglnl 1 1

p&amp;uonal Cite home 'J
Hu vaCIU'IC'I for elderly PIKiple 1 1
2 4 hou r cara 20 y..,, ••P• t
r~en c11 Rutonabllt ral iJI Cplf
•nvtlmtt 814 949 30 14
H
Ju h111 Personal Ca111 Home hat

openmg for 11ldarly pat le nu 24 •
h o ur c11re fam ily hullnttu tl nOII ~
t 969 304 773 6873

Rt!~ l Es l ~l t!

• 'I

"'

~~~--~--~~ ~
31 Homes for Sale •·

'•

ACTION
TOWING

4367

N

Sundo~ I pm 1 pm
ly (home or Appointment

RUSS MOORE

Retrain Now Sout heutern Bua
Colloge Ca ll 514 446

tnell

l!ti)llllylttl!!tl

St!fVJI;I!'

3 bdr 2 ba1hs gu haat cen 1~J 1
air 18a3fli lnground pool e 11 ,::,,1

Itnt nelghbo,hood Mar Holut 11"4
city I ChOOi t
1&amp;1 &amp;00 ~Ill

014 446 3961

1 1 Help Wanted

----------------~·(.
Mu1111ll newly remodttl ed 1 bdt~ l
hom e nnar nttw 1w1mmlng poo))h
Gallipolis

Sac r if ice prr cll

118 900 Call 8U 448 2638

DENNY CONGO

SALES PERSON
NEEDED

308

46711

flea market &amp; loti for rent Sl
Rt 326 between Southwettern
High School &amp;. Rio Grande

Shade, Ohto

1 1 Help Wanted

ta

I ClUI Onl 11 IAUflf

3 668

6t4 448 3872

(CUT OUT FOR FUrURE USE!

Bo~

Pomeroy

&amp; Angels lor Yards

614·992·3466

quill

SAlES AGENT

Statues V~rgm Mary

located 2 Ml E of Pagevllle
On Townshtp Road #142

On nta l Ani! I ani Chalrttdu.
Part ttmn EM per nnce bnn tt fl
ctal Maygrow t o fullumn Ropty
P0

lost 3 18 87 IBttJO Craftsman
tool box on Bnth el Rd 304 676
2817 or 876 3927

St Rt 12 4, Syra&lt;ult

J obs 816 040 ._
86 9 230 vr Now h•rtng C.U ..
805 687 6000 b. I A 9806 for 1
curuml hnlllr l'll h &amp;t

With

614 266 9333

JO'S
LlnLE RED BARN

SMALL ENGINE

HELEN MILHOAN

An nou nc emen Is

fl ewa rd For return of red dish
tan 1 Vf old male Chow Ph

mp mer

3

YOUNG'S

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
Thanks to all my rela ·
ltves, lnends and
netghbors lor prayers
and thoughts of concern For all vtsttors.
cards, flowers and
phone calls durtng my
home and hosprtal
conlmement

Go~,~ernmont

4

4 Sllc

1

949-2801
or 949-2860

REPAIR

All Makes &amp; Models
2 4 HR. SERVICE
3 17 2 mo pd

Tra11e1 Ag en t1 Me
chlii11 C! Cuatomer Servrcu llll;
1ngs Sala r 11s to SSOt&lt; Entry
lnv e l po ~lt ons CRII 806 681
6000 Ell A 9805

PH.

GUN SHOOT

FREE ESTIMATES

Attt~ndao t a

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"lt Reasonable Pmes"

G&amp;M TV

949-3088 Bus.
949-2606 Home

AIRLIN ES NOW HIRING Fhght

BISSELL
BUILDERS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

I 20th 1987 on the to!

lowing proposal
1 For the purchase by the
Vtllage of Pomeroy of a new

The Daily Sentmel

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Galltpolts Ohto 45631

REASONABlE RfUABIE
8 20 86 tfn

Sealed btds Will be re
CBIVed In the offiCe Of the VII
lege clerk Pomeroy Ohto
until 12 o clock (noon) on

6008-Master t 0 old
fashioned craHs lnstruc
t1ons for punched p1e t1n
and broom decorahon
plus e1ght other exc111ng
home and bazaar 1tems
Each pattern $3 25 plus
75e postagelhandhng
(NY •esklents add sa~s tao 1
Send to
Reader Mail

~ (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992 6601

614-843-5248

Pubhc Notice

{bl The repeal provtded
above shall not affect
(1) The grant or recreation
of a franchiSe ltcense rtght
easement or privilege
(2) The purchase sale
lease or transfer of prop

g11lat1on enacted subsa
quent to February 1 1987
whtch amended replaced or
otherw11e affected a mate
r1al prov1s1on of those ordt
nances extattng prt~r to Fe
bruary 1 19B7 shalt be
deemed to amend replace
or affect the analogous or
comparable sect1on of the
Cod1f1ed Ordmances at re
fleeted '" lhe Comparattve
Secuon Table of the same
or as otherw1se Indicated by
the content or purpose of
such subsequent legtslatton

:-=...· ...

:::;~
_,..:::,.

....~-­

~

_

" _...__

_ . . . _ .. hlo

Pharma cla l Pleaunt Valley
Hosp1tal Pmnt Pleasant WV 1
In need of o11 tull trme atatf
pharmaclat Th e ho1p1t11l has a
new m odern pharmacy whiY
up to dat e ptuumacy lutturll 8l~
servu::ea Pleua11t Valley Hosp1
tal IS a leadrn g hoapttal In the
artUJ 10 BIHVIC81 &amp; f!I C I 11•1
Growth opportumtttl ar e e.ceJ,. \
lttnt for 11 pherma c st looking to
tha tuture Call Rt ch!lrd EddY ! •
D~ro c tor of Pharmacy 111 304 r
675 4340 n111 280 lor ari '

--------~~~~~·&gt;
Junto! Pago S h oll Ae8der be
twa on tho ooe5 of 14 8o 18 to"''
:.:
:-L
.
.._..
...
13}20
work 9 houu per w ee k Mu11 be
11 _ . , .. ··~
~...
famthar wtt h the Dewey Oec;lmet
j---------...1 '-----------------L-----------------.....,L----------~::_:::.:_::~-----------_j, Sy stem be able to lllphabetite
nccuro~~toly &amp; have a general

tK&gt;n

1 1987
SECTION 3 That all lo

-•

011

•• ...e;...

V1llage of Middleport

For such purposes any
such leg•slattve proviSIOn shall
continue '" full force notw1th
standmg i1S repeal for the pur
pose of rev1s1on and codtftca

The appropnat1on or
expendtture of money or
promtse or guarantee ol pay
ment
{4) The assumpt1on of any
contract or obhgat1on
(6) The tssuance and deliv
ery of any bonds obhgatton s
or other 1nstrumenh of tn
debtedness
{61 The levy or tmposttlon
of taxes assessments or
charges
(7) The ft!tabhshment nam
~ng vacatmg or grade level of
any street or public way
{8) The dec:hcat1on of prop
arty or plat approval
(91 The annexatton or de
tachment of temtory
(1 0) Any leg1slat1on en
acted subsequent 10 Februarv

UIOO

oo

-C.""'
_c ....

Fred Hoffman Mayor

fo1

••tv{3)

J ,_. _ _ . . . _

• !•DII

111•

•

folloWintJ 'e!~phune e.u;hal'ltJ•U

phcatton to Otuo Dept of
Development

cod1ftca

Council of ttle vtllage of Po
meroy Oh1o

• 100

11011

ClaN &amp;/aed pa!el eviler

v1ces for submiSSIOn of ap

the V1llage of Pomeroy Oh1o
has twld the matter of cod1f1
cat•on and general revtston of
the orthnanoes before It for
some t1me and
WHEREAS 1t has hereto
fore enter1td Into a contract
wtth the Walter H Drane
Company to prepare and
publtsh such eodtftcatlon a

11on of such ordlnancas to
gather wtth the new matter
to be adopted the matters
to be amended and those to
be repealed are before the
Council

o••

ll.

~-

Proposals are to anclude
work plan and scope of ur

....

•n•

~OA\11

PM March 27

AP
PROVE
ADOPT AND
ENACT THE CODIFIED OR
DINANCE TO REPEAL OR
DtNANCES IN CONFLICT
THEREWITH TO PUBLISH
THE ENACTMENT OF NEW
MAliER AND DECLARING
AN EMERGENCY
WHEREAS tho Counctl of

...

-

I--·
.e - ..
·_........._._...._. .
"-. __

..........._
·-·
,__,_
....
·-.....
___
.......
_
.. _., ..........
·--··..
··-··--·-·
::· :=.=:-c
:=-71'
,
...........
..... ••··.... . _......
,,,
.........
......._. r::.t::&amp;
··,.,_
._,
·-·-·IDAYI

I C*IIOO-

I ••

,,._...... -o. ... - ...
...
...
u•

o•n

mayor 1 office 237 Race St
Middleport OhiO unnl 3 00

Ordmance No 565
Passed 3 16 87
AN ORDINANCE TO

Help Wanted

Htrtng l Gov~rnment JObs your
aree S16 000 S68 000 Phontt
call rttfund11blu &amp;02 838 8885

PUBLIC NOTICE
Proposals wtll be receiVed
bv the V1t1aga ot Mlddtepon

~==...,..

nd
WHEREAS

The Datly Sentmei - Page- 7

Mtddleport, Ohto

~

Whtl 11 Elarg1 lnl 2 ltory houae ' \:
Remodeled to ltlly 1twlrttd 1~ t •
AnENDANT NEEDED Will
lflln Sal•y • paid vtc.tlons
Live '" Ae1poftd to Cttt Men
agem.,1 In Denver !lOll 771

n23 Collect

Tour Gukt" Dtlf'land Aa1on

Pl...ant work ing condlllont

Many company Hnefh1 M1n
ag.m•nt potitlont avall1ble
t300 t4&amp;0 flll wttlcly For IP
pol!"tment ctll 114 281 1421
.. k for Fr1nkle

011 Frld~ Odd chores ptrl
11m• Bom• typing ucreterlal
work anaw•rlng phont funning
•r•nd1 V..-y fight houeework
Pref• eaperltnce tM.It mutt bt

rMpOntiblt lend retumt loa
T 10 ClrO of Golllpallo D!IIV
Trlbvnt 121 Third Aw O.lllpo.
!11 OH 4113t

1Uh1ted brtnd new hot w•ttr ~
heater 2 o r 3 BR slow he.w l.-,g.
billa v~rv nlcalot a•rage with 2:J '
nuthullctlnga All for o~ty
t20 000 Or bttt offer Pitt

814 246 9378

::-::---:-:::---,-'-'&lt;•1
By Owner 2 80 aarn 6 rqo~JN
hou1e w11h old uona flttplkt
furnacs wood burner builf. rl;. b
oven rangt l Rtnttl u.WW. 'T
rtn1td yur round Nice inq»npe •'
t27 900 00 And 2 315 acrft '.ftt
IPII e OverAifht or WHkf'f ~l
rooma 111 furniahtcl plut mObil_"
home lot whh .,tic tan\; • 5

•t780000 US 0 Motif \'
McArlhur Ohio Ph Ul ~~--~
JOOQoq It Zllol'fn-hou• f &gt;.

tCtll fuH baHmtnt 3 IR ~
skylight• dedi on " ' • • Qoqcl,
w.lllr aeptlc Ptrtty tln ..hedlid ~
live In Coli 114 379 2213 • 'l·ll

�.

Tuesday,
March 24, 1987
·an
BORN LOSER

~P~ag~e~~8~T~he~D~a~i1y~S~e~m~in~e~I--~-;~~~~~------~~~::~Po=m~er~o~y;~M,i:dd;l~eport~;·~O~hiio~.~~::::::::~:7~:::::-----~T:u:M1d~ay=·~M::an:;:h:2~4~·~1~9:87:'i
31

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

51

Walt carad for older hom e ln
Pomerolt 2 story, Lg room1 . 3
BR , beautiful oak k1tt hen, loti of
storage, new deck Good netgh·
borhood Roger Bl Suate Ab bott .
Call6 14 992 -6114

Sofa1 and cha irs priced from
139&amp; to 1996. Table• S60 and
up to 1126. Htde-a-beds $390
tD 1695 Recliners $22 &amp; to
S375 Lamps 128 to e U5
Dmettes S1 09 and up to t496
Wood table w -6 ehalra 8286 to
S795 Desk 1100 up to $376
Hutchu S400 and up. Bunk
bed• complete w-mattre1111
*29 6 and up to $395 BabyiJeds
S1 10 &amp; 8176. Mattre11es or box
springs ft~ll or twin 863, f1rm
$73. and $83 Queenaets $226,
King S360. 4 drawer cheat 186
Dre11en S89 Gun cabinet• 8 ,
10. 12 gun Gat orelectrtc rang•
$376 Baby mattrea•es e36 &amp;
84 5 Bed frames S20. eJO &amp;
King fram e S60. Good selectln
of bedroom suites, metal cablneu, headboards $30 and up
to 866

I~

l'lle w 3\JR house ~ 1h IJat h, 2 car
garage $46 000 00 Ph 61444 6 3617

I

48R , 2 bath s LR OFt utthty
room 2 -8x10 storage SLOGS
Fe nced bac kya rd 111 Gallipolis
S30 000 00 Ph 614 -44 6
6503.

1

l

For Sate by o wner 2 st(&gt;rlt house
Middleport ove rlook mg park
30 Y• guarnt eed lltn yl e sidtn g,
w-w carpet. 1 1!~ bath. untque
woodwork 6 14-992 6128

J
r

m

_________ , _

Gove rnment homes from $1
I U - r~p an) Delinquent tax prop-

Used Furn1ture wood table &amp; 2
benches , tleda &amp; dr esser 3
m1les out Bulavdle Ad Open
9AM to 6PM , Mon thru Sat
614 446-0322

i

•
"I often wish mother had
warned me about chocolate
eclairs instead of about
men. n

STOP-LOOK SAVE
Mollohan Furntture 8c Apphances Rt 7 Norttt Gall1poUs , Of1 1o
Ph 614-446-7444 6pc;: Wood
L1vmg Room Su1te $399.00.

arty ·6000
Re possess•ons
Call
Ex t GH -9
005805
for ~==========r;;::~::=.::::::::==-1
j
687
current repo hst
34
Business
44
Apartment
for Rent
2 bedroo m house m C lifton
Buildings
Pn ce redu ced from S16 ,000,to
s 14 00 0 Phone 1-304 77356 3 4
1 Bedroom bas1c rent $176 00
Commarc1BI butldtngs tor leue
plus electric Also requtred a
Downtown
PI
Pleasant
Stores,
Brtck hou se 1n Bradbury by
$200.00 security deposit CON ·
offtces A-One Real Esl•te
WMPO rad10 stattGn 614 992
TACT Jadtson Estates Dept. Ph
59 6 4 or 614-9 92 606 5 Ap · Ca rol Yeager, Broker Ca ll 304
44 6- 3997 Equ a l Housing
675-6106
pomtme nl only
Opportunity
8 room huuse with bat h 3 or 4
bedroom. 3 botn s 1 nnw veal
harn ready for operat1on. to·
bacco allotment, 3 000 IIJ s this
yf:ta r House has new he artng
system new carp al W1ll sell
wtt h or w tthout equipment
1985 MF trac tor w1th all equip
ment Muc tt more S 100.000
30 4 -67 5-68 51

4 bedroo m total electr ic, large
hvmg room. dtnmg room, kl1 ·
chen. ce11tng tens full SIZe
base me n! underground swimmmy pool. 1 acre ground
Located Grandview Heights
Pru::ed to sell m1d 50 's 304rt CBd to sell675 7537 anytime
For sale or rent 4 lledroo m
house 304 675 21 30
For sale or rent 2110 N. Mam
St 304-458 -1075

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NE W AND USED MOBILE
HO MES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOM E SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIPOLIS RT 36
PHON E 614-446-7274
19 66 Skyline 47x10 $2400
Call 614 446 ·0390
12.&gt;t 65 Nathu a 2 BR la rge batl'l
Must see &amp; make offer C11 ll
61 4-446-7 687

35

1984 Shultz 14 t~. 65 . 2 BR 1 v,
baths 11 \ce new Underp innmg &amp;
deck Asking &amp;14,500 Call
304 -&amp;7 5 66 51 e\18S ·304 675
5 950
2 4X62 doublew1de New counte r tops new c;:arpet &amp; wi ndows
Call 6 14 -266 9393
1989 Monarch 1 2xl0 w1tfl
stove &amp; refrig erator. See et Co
Ad 77 1 mile from Ce nte rvi lle.

Lots

&amp; Acreage

&amp;9 ,000 00 2 1h Acre s on R1o
Centerpoint Rd 1 m1le from R1o
Grande Clear level front,
WOOdl Pfl 61 4· 446 -3806 after
6pm
111, acre lot w•th new septiC tank
Installed 31/, mil81 down Rt 7
Call614 446 -4761
For sale 12 6 acres 59600
Sctpto TWP , Meig1 Co At 2,
Albany, Oh•o Phone 698·6427
aher 6 OOp m
S1xteen acres m Rutlend. Gas
well, very secluded $1 1,200
Call 614-992-3901

----~---------- ·

20 ae•es, H i mtle off Rt 62
Soutfl. Ambro111 5 acres meadow balance woodland , 304
676-6699 after 6·00 PM

Furn1afled effictency, prtvat e
balh. f 175 00 Utlllt1es pa1d,
920 4th a~t~e , Galllpolls Ph
446-4416 after 7pm

Renl als
41

Houses for Rent

1 982 Flee twood 14170 , 3 bed
rooms, 2 bat ht . 304 · 675· 3030
end 675-34 31
1 2x60 Shull 1973, 3 bed room•
2 baths wn h 1 6t~. 16 add -on ,
$7,200 - NegO tia ble. 304·
576 -2921 or 675-7744(work)
1.984 Skylme moiJIIe home
14x70, total electric, 2x6 exte
fiOr walls 2 bedroom• . 1 bat h
w1th garden tub. ft . den, 304 ·
676-6 367
12•55 , 2 bod roo m traile r.
S2.400 00 304-675-2 870 or
e76-661 3 .

33

Farms for Sale

Ewington - 68 acres. two atory
house, 11one fireplace, fuel oil
furnltce, large barn gfllnary.
wor kt hop a nd other outbuild·
1ngs
Rural wa te r
Ctll
388-8 510 for 1ppt,
106 acte flfm , 8 milel out
Trtbbll Aold In Muon CountY. 3
ge1 wells , well water. electric
end telephone. CJ II 304-8753999
84 A , 1 2 miles norlh of Pomt
Pleuant, .8 mllet off AI 2.
Good block barn, rural water,
fenced, all mlnernlright1, wtlhor
without equ ipment •nd MObJie
homa Willie Grln1tead, 180 N.
Rtfle Range Ad , .Bartow, Fl1.
3383 0 or call !813} 637· ,262.

78

Swimmtng Pools 1999 New
leflover 1986 model pool s
Huge 16•24 foot swim area, 4
feat deep Includes deck , fenc e,
ftlter and warranty Ftnanc1ng
arranged, Installation ave1leble
Call 24 hours 1-800-345-0946
New, leftover 1986 mod el
pools Huge 1 6x24 foot swim
area, 4 teet deep Includes deck,
fence. filter &amp; warranty. FinancIng arranged Ins tallation ava ila·
ble Call 24 hours. , -800-3460946
20 cubic ft freezer $176 AC
welder 175 250 Yamaha $226
weight bench w1th we1ghts. Ph
614-446-6764
NCR Cestt Reg1ster 10 department 2yrs. old S200 00 Ph
614-379-2 607
$5,000 00 ln ves1ment Ge ms 2
Diamond s , 1 Ruby Tekmg
$2.500.00 loss Ph 614 4463805 afte r 6pm

Spa e1ou• 2bdr apt . C A , water
pa1d Near Pizza Hut. Galhpolil.
Ph 614-446 7026

16 HPJaeo bsen lawn t ractor. 60
tnch mowtng de ck 83000 Call
614 446 2088 after 4pm

Unfurmshltd 1 bedroom apt hlce
new thru out Heat furn1shalt
1st floor prn.oete and qUiet.
S28! .00mo Call 814 448 4607 or 446-2602

Ftrewood· 100 perc;:ent hardwood Split delivered atack ed.
Call614-446-3120.
Good 90 day gra1n fed USDA
Inspected Quarters and halves
$1 26 Cut 1nd wrapped Ph
·937-2900

8 room hi on 50 ac res at Eureka
S250 a monttl 6 room h1 75
acre farm Maso n County Call
304-676· 6104

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Menor end Rl~~en l de Apartments m Middleport From
1216 tncludrng ut1llt1es Call
614-992-n67 EOH

M111.ed hardwood slabs 81 2. pe1
bundle. Contamtng approx 1 v,
tons FOB Ohto Pallet Co
Pomeroy, Oh1o. Call 61 4· 9926461 .

N1ce 2 BR housa in Middl eport
Full basement, AC . dishw81har.
garbage disposal, large yard,
Excellent locat1on. S260 montfl
Call 614-446-9206 after 6 .30

3 bedroo m unfurnl1hed hou1e
for rant. Se c:urity deposit and
references reqwred 614-9927701

For rent Sleepmg Rooms and
llgtt1 house keep1ng room1 Park
Central Hotel Call 614 4480766 .
Rooms for rent , dey wtJek
month. Gallta Hotel Cell 6144•&amp;- 97~ 5 Rent as low as t 120
month

2 yr old completely furnistted
Heat pump, wether &amp; dryer Ph
614 -446-8341

Fo r Rent . Efficiency sleeping
rooms Call 304 n3-5651

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdt , ell utiliti es p11d ••cept
alec. turn or unfurn , sec
depos it requ ired Con11enient
loc;:ation. can 614-446-8558 or
614-448-4778
2 bdr ffully furnithld adults
only util patd Cell 61 4· 44641 10.

Gas furna ce. 4 yean old ,
100,000 BTU's, w1tfl 80,000
output S460 . Call 614·9922611

Furnished Rooms

College 155. wk Ut11it1es paid
304 675 3100

42

Stack 3 HG Beams, 44 rotar,
CDE Otrecllon Box, rotar wire,
co.u el, RF te tter, osc::itlator,
other m11c. Be11 offer IBM
electric typewrtter, needs t mall
repttr S226. 080 Mount Re·
dio Clock, best offer See at 306
N Third S t !gr a y ap t J
Middleport

Lerge 2 bedroom aparlment m
Middleport, washer and dryer
hookup. parlially furnished . Pay
own ut11it1es. S186 per mont h
Call 614-992-2381 days or
614-992-2609 evenings

45

46

Ladtes diamond clust er r~ng 1
karat Best offer talcn 614992-6736.
Tony' s Gun Repatrt, hot re blueing Open 9 .00 AM to 7 .00 PM
Call 304 676 -4831
2 ttospital beds complete with
maure11 2 hospital beds Without maHrestes. Gu ccmk stove
304-773-6873

Space for Rent

Rough Lumber 8160.00 per
th ouund by the bundle or 20C 1
board foot. Walker WrB cker,
304-875-4412 8·30 to 5 00.
Mon thru Frl

Office Space for Rent. Excellent
for AttotnQ¥S , Ac countant, etc
Close to CoLtrt House Call
Wiseman Real E1tate Agen cy
614-446-3644

Antiques solid 18' walnut bar
$400 Wood &amp; coal cook stove.
uoo 304-676-2508

1 8' •48' Steel Blitg -7•7 Th ird
Ave nue 3 phase power, 12 ft
overhead door, concrete floor
Cell614-446-2382

Would hlce to buy good t~s ed 26
Inch bike, cell 304·676-57 92
ah er 4.00 PM.

In Eure ka excellenlshape 2 Bdr COUNTRY MOBILE Home P~rk.
w•t h ex pando Responc lble Route 33, Nor1h of Pomerov.
adu lts only No pels t225mo Rental trail lf'l C1ll 814 -9920 e potlt requ1red Ph 814 -245- l -:
7-4 7
_ 9__:--- - - - - - - - - -5863
Space for rent. tralfl!lr spaces.
Furntthed 2 bdr , AC , beaut 1ful Locust Rd , AI 1. Point Pleesant,
uver vi ew in t&lt;anauga. HUD l -30_ 4_-_6_7_5 -_1_0_78________
accepted Foster Mobile Home
Park Call 6U-446·1602

M m h ~ndise

House t ra iler for tent Ret 6
De p req'ed Ca ll 614 -367
7220
2 yr old eo mpletalv furnished
Heat pump. wa•her &amp; dryer Ph
614-448 8341
3 bedroom trt ller, furnithed,
washer snd drvt r, awning, a1r
co nd itioning. 1210 per month
S100 daposU 814-992·7479
Mobile ttome lor rent netr
Cfleshire. Caii6U· 307· 7148
2 bedroom traHer, eoupiH, 1
smell child, loculi Rd . At. 1.
Point Pleasant, 304-876-1078
Mob1le hom" for rent 1t1rling
1176 00 •nd up 114 -4480608
2 br. 58 Burdette Addn Serious
Inquiries, Uop In peuon. f150
month It utilltl.,, discount turplus uniforms 304· 273· 51115

44

Apartment
for Rent

APARTM ENTS. mobile hom ...
t.ou1e1 Pt. Plea11nt 1nd Gelllpo·
llo. 8 14· 441·8221
Two .,.droom turnlthed apt New
Haven, 304-882-3287 or 304·
773·5024.

51

56

Pets for Sale

79

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
S1ame1e \c1ttens. AKC Chow
puppies New Cttow puppies
Call614-446-3844 aftlt' 7PM

''·
.,

OK, 11&lt;NOW WHO
I&lt;IPWAPP~t&gt;

Fruit
Vegetables

--'----- - --- - - - ,,,
1972 Travel Trailer 21 It . "'~:·,' 1'
sleeps 6, e11.c.Uen1 cond1tion ~ .' •

Hay

&amp; Grain

72

large round bM• ofhay,.10 00
ea ch. Will dehvtf Call 614-4481062 atttlr 6pm.
Hay tor sale. Call 614-949·
2870

1981 Ford VI ton short bed, V-8,
PS. 66.000 miles, standard,
good condition Ph 814-2465077

Dned sflaHed corn 84.60 per
ewt Ground t5 00 per ewt.
Ground with molasltl $6 76 per
ewt 304-468 -1031
Seed

&amp;

Forlll S u pplie s
&amp; Li ves to ck

Fertilizer

OeKalb &amp; Kenwonhy Sttd
Corn, W L 312 alfalfa. Phone
304-&amp;?5-1606 aftiN' 7 p m

Tran sporloiiOil
Farm Equipment

2010 John Deerl!l diesel tractorplows, d1sc 13950. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower $496 late
model 224T Jotln Deere beler
81296. Hay wagon SJOO Call
614-286-6522 .
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 Wtlt, Jackson. Oh1o
614-286-6451 .
Massey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Serv1c;:e Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete hne of new &amp; u1ed
equ1pmanl La rgest selection tn
S E Ohio
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SR 35 W Ga1hpo hs,
Oh1o. Call 614 -446-9777, ~n~ e
614· 446 3692 Up front tractors with warranty over 40 used
tractors, 1000 tools
Uttht y Bldg, Spl. 3D' K40 'x9',
16x8 Overhead door, SeNiee
Door . $6 333 Erected Iron
Horse Bldg s 614-332-9746
6 Bottom Sem•·mounted plows
1460 00 300 gallon •prayer
outfit 8295 00. 6ft. pufl· type
bush hog 8460 00 8ft rotary
packer $150 00 Ph 614·2866622
Ohver .65 Tractor w1th mowing
machme 2 row ohvl!lr planter &amp;
new Idea manu re 1p reader
$2.860.00 ftrm Ph. 614-2866622
36 Massey Ferguson Diesel
Tractor S2860 New 6f1 Grader
Blade $176. New Po1t Hole
Digger 8276 Ph 814 -2866622
Field reedy used farm machinery. PTO manureaprel!lder. 2 row
corn picker, wheat drill on
rubber, Ford d11k, wheal dttlcs,
other equ1pment. Ralpfl Howe
Appalachten Highway &amp; Mayhew Rd . Jackson . OH Call
614-286·6944.

71

Autos for Sale

1976 Gremlin. good running
condition . Georgia car, 6cyl ,
auto, AC •goo oo Ph 614388-9950.

84 Es cort AM ·FM c111ette.
64,000 miles $2,400. C•ll
614-379-2742 lf111f 6
1981 Old Cutlau. PS, PB, tilt,
atr. cru11t. AM·FM. Good condi·
tlon 13700 Call 614-4461210

Livestock

2 riding horu s for 1111. Both
genlla Call 81 4 -446·048 1

56

Feeder b\ltls, Hereford &amp; Angut .
Cell 614-256 -185&amp; after e.
2- 3 year Old, thi• June 1987·
Reglltered Appaloo.. ponies for
sale 8600 fo r both Must take
both. Call 814 -2!8-15605 •Iter
lpm.

I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=::.l:::::::::::::::::::.J
~

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 82
Olive St , Gtlllpc.lla New &amp; uttd
wood·coal atovet, II pc wood LR
1ulte t399, bunk beds 1199,
recliners new • uatd bedroom
eutles, wringer wa1hers, &amp;
ahon New llvlngroom t ultts
t199· U99. lemps. Ctll 614·
4·8-3159.

74

1984 Honda Sh•dow motor
cycte. VT 700 ltrge cabin tent.
814-742-2686.
1980 KIWIIIki 126 KX dirt
btlc•. Greet all ape 1850 ormHe
oH" 814-742-2798 or 614·
992-7417.
Har~

Devldton motorcycles .
1878 Wide Glide. f3000 OBO
1972 Sportlttr, stock, 12000.
ftrm . Call 814· 698-70158.
'83 Hond• XR 1500 Pro Unk. exc
cond. 304-671.-3270 ahlll' 5 ·00
PM
1979 Suzuki GS 760, nice ro•d
blkt, 304-675·3000.

1981 Chii'VIttte. •uto, ••r. brand
new radial tire1, nice clean
interior, eac;: running cond. 304·
675-1804.

1972 Honda 4150. exc eond.
0500 00. 304-89&amp;· 3336

77 Chevy M1fibu, 4 door,
automatic. ae. p1, pb. 81500.
304-882-2281 .

76

1971 Ford Torino. 4 dr. t47&amp;.;
1972 Chny CamlrD 8176.;
1978 Flat 1800 Convertible
t ,IO .. 1978Tr~n•AmU9150 .
Ph 304·871-481 a

1111 Ford F-250 4•4r V-8. PI,
P8, AM· FM C.1sette. Low rnl·
lug• ••c .. tnt condtdon Pt.
814-379· 2441 lf1tr 5pm.

Norwtlk couch &amp; mrtchlne
chair. E1rty AmeriCM~ dillon.
be4ge with ffortl Plttlfn al10
matching green twlvel rocklf
t75.00 Ph. 514· 448-1854.

1981 Font R11119" v -8. t12oo.
Colll14·441-1420.
1975 Chevy plclo-up. c .. 814448-1831 or 114-448· 2203.

I

1

f

'•..,.

..,.
••

t
t

Service s
81

Auto Parts
Acceaaories

a

...n-.

IUOOET Tren1mleektn1: Ulld •
Rebuilt. AI typea torque conver..,,
trentfer CIMI. Enoine
OYtfhiUf ldt1. AHI10n Trentmlatton PIN'tt • OVC Jolnta 0UI·
rlnllod. Will dol'-. ,_, •
c.ry or lnNII C.H 114-378,2_2_2_o _or_ 2_e.,.8_-e.,.a_n_._ __
oAu1o PM'tl for Ale. Radio, A.C.,
91111, ond olio« porto for lin
.c
::o:.:.•=::·..:l.:..:.·.:.
l04 77::3-3:..::
118:.:1.:.
1 ·~-

a

I

I CAN 'i Affo~p
GRAPe t'A" \

f.l) (l) Too Close for Com·

~~~ How ABouT' A
Ci~,A.Pt:

&lt;;;:

"8" CHlC{Ct:N

WHO CHf=A'if:l&gt;
oN THe r?XAM?

CHICft:N.

fort

Ill (]) Judge

7:35
8 :00

,.,.
(

Home
Improvements

~

-'

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un conditional lifetime guaran- 1(1
tee. local references furntshed
Free estimates Call collect·
1-614·237-0488, dey or night
Rogers Baseml!lnt ,,
Weterproofmg
.......~,.

ALLEY OOP
ONE FEAlLJRE WI' INCORPORATED ENABLES THE

OPERATOR 10 P~E • PROGAAM THE UNIT! FOR INSTANCE,
IF 'tOU WANT THE MA.CHINE TO PICK UP 'lOUR FRIEND
ALLEYOOP,SAY, FIFTEEN MINUlES F1&lt;0M weN/ ...

-. -ALL WE HI'.VE TO
00 IS PUNCH IN THE
DATA , UKE THIS,

AND SET THE
TIMER.!

SWEEPER and IBWlng machine• _,., ,.'
repair. perta, a nd supplies Ptclc ·. : ·
up and dellvary, Oav1s Vacuum ~- .:. •
Clt•ner. one half mile up · ,·
Georgu Creek Ad C1ll 614'
446-0294
1,'
All typea catpenter Bl concrete
work: lnttrtor, exterior. remodeling, pamtmg. rooting, free
nt1mate1 Call614 -446-6174

,,'

,j '

•
.,,-.

. "·'·

TriH!I It stump removat. Chain
hnk feneea Stone. mulc:h, fill
lhadn, shrubs. auli"' Done · ~
Landscapes Ph 614·446-9646

EEK &amp; MEEK

8 :05

1 mJLW'T
lOVCH IT

,.·'

RON ' S Televiston S e rvice
House cells on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Spec1ahng In Zenith Call
304-678-2398 Of 6f4 -446 2464

·:

.,,,

8 :30

ta)lr'3 .9t!7AI.

'·

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump '
remov11. Call304· 876-1331 .

:;
1,

{;tiLt (r)N
R£·~

RINGLES 'S SERVICE , expe- ,•
rienced carpenter. electrician, 11
msson, J*nter, rooltng jinclud- " 1•
ing hoi tar application) 304- 11
676-2088 or 676-7147
-~·

9 :00

l\ I

;\~

Rotary or cable tool drilling ..
Mon wells aompt•ed Same day.
Pump utn and teNice 304·
896-3802

'\
.,:'
. .../

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Galvanized corrugeted culvert, ....,
$2 315ft , up All si res. Fittings.
Fabr•cation Day&amp; night delivery
within 160 miles Will not be
undersold 304-9215-6211

'·'·
·.

,,.'.
,.'

Concrete finish, perking lots,
b.. ement1 · any 1ize job Senio,
C1ttzen Discount, R1ck Garfield
614-985-4464.

82

Tl-116 ISA&lt;S'REAT

RER?RTCARD!

ANGELA RITTENHOUSE
LOST IT.

''

-

• ,1'

BARNEY

attorney offered him a
bnbe (60 mon.) (In Stereo)
Cil Hell Town
(J) NHL Hockey: Teams 10
Ba Announced (3 hrs J
(Love )
&lt;IJ llJ &lt;IJ Who"o tho 8011
(CCI Tony enrolls Jonothan m a gymnastics com·
pe1itoon (R)
f.l) (l) MOVIE : 'Oianr Part
1 of 2
{]) MacNe il-Lehrer Nowohour
®Cil (J}) Spill Be n falls on
love w ith a beautiful dou·
bla agent (60 mon I
lllJ Nova (CC) An o Kom ina·
tion of the mismanagemenl
of the world 's natural land
and water resources. (60
min )
@ Movie
CIJ NBA Booketball: At·
lente Howko al Wllhlngton Bullets (2 hrs , 16 mon J
(live)
(lJ llt (I) Growing Pains
(CC) Magg io arranges a
reunton of Ja son 's medical
s c hool band. (A)
U Cil (II) Nutcracke r: Monty, Madn111 and Murder
(CCJ A dangerous m istake
ma~ force Behrens Ia betray Frances to ttle police.
(2 hrs I Part 3 of 3. (In
Stereo)
Cil 700 Club
(lJ Ill (lJ Moonllghtl"ll
(CC) A clergyman searc hes
fo r a woman he's never
met. (60 min.) (R)
{]) Victory ot Soa
® (I) ii2) MOVIE: 'Differ·
ont AHalf (CCI
(ll) Frontline (CCI The s oc ial s tru cture ol postIndustrial
England
io
a &lt;plo red (60 min I
(f) MOVIE : 'Como on Mor-

Mov1es" film crtt• c• Au

VO'RE RIGHT, PAW !!
IT AIN'T A FIT

NIGHT OUT FER
MANNER
BEAST J:;~~ ...-,..-

Hauling ~
(~'•

.,

.,,,'

Houlfl co1l, lim estone. and 1t1 'I
gra~t~el Dehvtrld 1 ton Bnd up "~ .'
J im Llnilf, 304-1176 -1247 or
675-73 97
.........

}t

.'

.

Formerly Ken Wheaton• . Now •' o44,
Jofln's Water SINice . Same __ ~
Prtt el 1.000 or 2.000 gel. •••
1 11'
service 304-1576· 2248 ,

''

---------------- ''.'
'

R &amp; M Cuttom Couchet and ' 1
Reuptlolstery. St. Rt 7. Crown •
City, Oh 814-2156· 1470, Eve j
814-44&amp;-3438 Open daily 9to 1 _,.,
4.30. Stt. 9 30 to 1 30. Old &amp; t' ":f
new Uphosttrtd.

Read and Bill Harri1 com·
ment on th1s rear' s Academy Award nomtnees.
(60 min)
il1i Nowowatch
10:15 @ NIWI
10:20 ([) MOVIE : 'Tho Mountain
Men'
10:30 Cil Colobrlly Chela
lllJ Auror1
11
&lt;1:l
liD (j})
(II) Newt
(]) Herdc8otlo and McCor·
mlok
(I) lnoldo tho PGA Tour
fJI (l) M'A'S'H
(f) Tho Shekoopure Hour
Hoolld by Woltor Mstthou:
Me11uro for MtiiUrt Tho
Duke preteAd t to leave
town end p lace s hil de puty
in chorga. (60 min.)
1 1:30 D (]) (II) Tonight Show
Host
Johnny
Cerson.
Schedu led: octor Petrick
Duffy, c omoc o tho S moth·
ero Brother•- (60 min.) (In
S1oroo)
(I) SportsConter
(]) WKAP in Clnclnnlll
. (l) TIXI
8 ((J ABC Nowo Nlghtllne
iCC).
liD (fJ Mqnum. P.l.
lllJ Or~~t Dlollion1 '87
fll &lt;111 T.J. Hooker An on·
rogoc:l Hooker combo tho
streets in nerch oftht m1n
who ohot Stacy and loll hor
to die. (70 min.) (RJ
12:00 (I) lurne &amp; Allen
(I) MozUo llparULook
(I) ABC Now1 Nighlllno
iCC).
• C!J Rowhldl
• ((J Mart RHI Paopil

,oo o

•

Dillard Water Serv•ce: Pools, t
Cttte rnt , Wells. Othvery Any-...:.
time. Call 814-446-7404-No ,:. ~
Sunday calls
•
~ 1' 1'
·J i ll
---:-----------~--.
'
l
I
J 6 J Water Serv•ce &amp;11tern s,
•,
1
wellt, swimm ing pools, Pt. · _ ,
614 ·246-9286

Meev's Upholstering serv1ng
trl
mv tr•e 22 years Ttle beet
In urniture upholtterlng, C•ll
304 - 175 - 41&amp;4 for fr et
"tlm1t1s

(1) IDi Mallock M• ·
tlock 's tried for Jury tampering when a mildmannered JUror claimS the

D

10:00 (lJ llt (I) Jack end Mike
(CCJ Jac ki e attempts to onterview a man wno risked
hta life to save a small boy
from danger. while Jac k
gains adviea on commod it ies from a group of elderly
paopfa (80 min I
Iii) (l) Rox Rood &amp; Bill Horrlo 11 the Oocaro "At the

,.'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

General

SCW.EBODY' NAI-AED

1D Wheel of Fortune
Cll (j}) 1D1 Jeopardy
@ Jefferson•
CIJ Honoymooners

lnee'

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
- -:;
AND HEATING
:~ii;
Cor Founh and Pine
~
Gtllipolit, OhiO
M~
Phone 814· 448-3888 or 814- ~
446-4477
~--~ .

85

ITS FU L L. 0:: A 's
AND B- PL.LI55!:5.'

9 :30

Slar.. Tree and Lawn Service
GrMner lawna that i1 Weed 1nd
Pett Free. liqutd or grandular
application-tree end shrub too.
Stump remcwal anywhere Wltttoul lawn damage For completl!l
tree and lawn care call 304· 678·
2842 or 576-21103.

llt ([) People's Court
{]) MOVIE: 'Donovon's Kid'
Part 2.
®News
il1i MacNoii-Lohrer Neweh·
our
(I) (j}) (ll) Wheel of Fortune
@ Berney Miller
Cil Sanford and Son
D (1) (])Newlywed Game
(J) Major Loeguo Baaoball's Grootoot Hits: World
Sariea Momenta

'''

Watt e rson ' • Water Ha ulrn g . ._; :•
reaso nable rates, imme(Uate t 1'
2.000 gallon delivery, ciaterns, ' .~
pools. wall, ate call 304-576 - ·~ f.
2919
lo \

Ultd
Rebuilt ,Tr~nsmtlliGnl.
All lntemelty inspected &amp; guarantMd. lnnt11etlon 1nd pfci(·up
Ph . 814-441· 0911.

1

FRANK AND ERNEST·

!

1976 Starcraft told -down
camper, sleeps B, awning, portepott 304-773·6079 efeer 5
p.m.

7 :05
7 :30

-

1 971 Ctnttnnlel Sllr Craft aki
boat , 11 V. ft. 10 hp Mercury
motor, flut clu1 cond,
n .100.oo. 304-n3,1881 .

&amp;

1978 Pontile Tran• Am, fair
cond, 0900.00. CaM 304-171·
3882

0000 USED APPLIANCE&amp;
Wuhtrt, drytrt, rtfrlgii"IIOrl ,
ranges . Skaggs Appliancea,
Upptr Rlwr Ad b"lde Stone
C,.st Motel. 114-441-7318.

,,

Rich line Bass Boat 38 Johnson
out board. !II Mlncott trolling
motor, tw. well, traitor. t1400.
614-112-8190

76

'81 Ford E~eon 11 ,800.00
304-8715-2870 .. 175·8113.

'

"

R &amp; R W•ter Serv1ce. Home
Clllerns. weilt , pool t filled '
Formerly Jamet Boys Water, ~;
Same ra tes Cell 304-876 - ..
8370.
I,

Blot trail«, bOtt • mlni·Kote 31
troll motor far 12150. 304-15782133

'78 ChiVItte 1500 00. 304882· 2918

Trucks for Sale

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1989 111neh flbtrotaaa boat and
trailer. 1989 80 HP Merc;:ury
mot•r 814&amp;0. 30 HP Mercury
motor Qood eondhlon 1225.
814-742-2798 •• 814-892·
7487

1978 Kawa1\ci XE 100. t276.
1971 Volktw•gon . I 1 ,000 .
3
304 "1 7 •.,.. 1••
tit"' •
1980 R1bbit 1-e. eae body tnd
Interior , High milttge Good on
a••· 114-«S-8077.

72

Motorcycles

1981 Honda St1verwing lnteratate. Good cond. $1200 Call
614-448-9369.

1978 Ford Fl..... A· 1 mtehtni·
ulty, body needs work, 304875· 7442 oltor 8:00 AM

V•ll.rv Furniture. new &amp; u•IMI
L1rge l tct lon of Qutllty furniture . 1211 Eutern Ave ..
O•lllpotla .

W.O .

For ule or trade pickup of equal
ve1ut. 1978 lnttmetlonll Scout
4ll4, $800.00. 304-882-3237
after 6:00 PM.

1979 C•dlllec EIDarado, aharp
elf , low miiNge, I&lt;NMMd with
eKtrae. Cln be teen K. K Mobile
Home uiH, 304-171-3000.

County Applltnct. Inc. Qood
used eppll•nc• end TV 1ets
Op.n BAM to tPM . Mon thru
Sat 114-441-1818. 127 3rd.
Ave Oal,llpolls, OH

&amp;4

1988 Bronco II, Eddie Bluer
Edition. tolded. low mlle~v-.
glfaga kept . Excellent condition, t12.000 304-676· 6479

Fiat X19, needt tome engine
For aale Gravely Attacttments . rapatr 1700. Ph 814-4488869.
Tille r, rotary plow and •aulkey
Ph. 614-367-0149.
1986 Honda CRX-51 . Blk ,
Used R6 6 Dttc h W1tch Trenctler factory alloys, ele. AF. low prof
tires, 11 ,000 mi. 18000 firm
and used 360 Jonh Deere Dour
614-694-7842 or 614-694 - 814-992-3264- aftiN' &amp;·00 p.m
500 6
1978 Camaro Z28 3!0 auto,
International 444 40 H P 245 good condition U&amp;OO. firm
MBSse y Ferguson. Call 614- Call 814-742 2946.
742-2972 after 8 ·00 pm
1986 VW Golf. 6 opeod. AC. 4
doot, AM -FM ster110 Und81'
Whit e 16 hp 14 , 960 00
MARCH ONLV Siders Equip· warranty. 18 290 814-· 742 ment. Handarson, W Va 304- 3080
675 -7421
1985 Ponti•c Trani Am. 12,138
ml T-Top, AC, electric win·
dows. AM· FM tape. loaded 462 Wanted to Buy
speed. auto. $12,&amp;00. 114·
742-2798 •• 814·992-7487

1973 Chrysler NIIW' Yorker, 440
engine. 4 bamtll. Runt good.
1350 304-n3-15173 or 114·
742-2491 .

Vans

85 S-10 blazer, auto w-Od, air
cond., .,., pb, am-1m st•eo.
black &amp; red, 20,000 mil"
$10,600. 304· 882· 2187.

1972 Outler 6cyl auto. 1974
Dodge Cornet V-8 , au t o
1275.00 each Call 814-3889669.

on the set of h1s latest
mov1e . " Barfly",
f.l) (l) M'A'S'H

1 981 Dodge Ram Ch•rger
(look• ltlce Bluer) . Red and
whltl!l, low m1les , AM-FM
ce11ette radio, power windoWii
and door loekl. erulte. tilt, 4x4,
windsh11!1ld sun vtsor, lighted
running boards Must sell, new
cer ordered. C1U 814· 742· 2211
before 6 .00 •nd 614-992-67114
after 5 00 and e•k lor Oeve

' 73 Ch8Yy Bluer, 327 automatte, rally wheet1, 11,200 00,
phone 304· 468-1808.

1980 VW D•thlt' 4 dr .. 4 eyl,
dietel 6·1peed manual trtnlmillion. Approx. 45-60 Mpg.
11600 00 Cell Harold George
614-446-5345 8 30 to 6:00pm .

'

ET v1sitS With Mickey
Rourke behmd-the-scenes

Ap•che pop-up cnmpar, sle11ps
6, gnltove. 1cebox. porta-pote. ' ~.
awnmg, water hookup. $700. • •
304-882-2268
-'

1984 Chevy Conversion Van.
16.400 milea, heavy duty suspension, biiCk, 2 tone tilvergrly Power window, powJtr
door loc;:k, tilt and cruite, flt!l
steM ..att. gray interior. htgh
rtle roof, auto , with 3015 engine,
over dr+ve, burglar alarm, butlt in
radar dtteC1or. Cl, BOlt radio
syttem with equallz11r, AM-FM
Cettet1e, «:otor TV. and VCR.
front and rear fleater and AC.
Ughted running board1 Call
814· 742-2211 before 6.00 or
814-992-6764 after 5·00

1975 Chevy w1ndow van. AC.
PS / PB , AM / FM / C.,,., CB radio, good cond Asking 11700
Ca11814-44-6-4626

'

1985 GMC Sierra Cl1111c;: Y:z ton
pick up, with topper. Sflow roDm
condition 14,000 milet
$10,500 Contact John Lvona.
Racine, Ohio 814-949-2933

1983 Niaun 4x4. Excellent
condition. 5 speed, loeded. with
topper. 15200. 614-986-3833

1983 Plymouth Reli~nt. Auto.
'"· cruise, $2399. John's Auto
Sates, Bullville Rd., Galllpo11t,
OH.

Want to buy Ear corn . call
304-67 5-2146.

Motor Home. 1979 Dodge HohdiiV Rambler 35.869 miles
Good cond111on 26ft 304-6752316

1979 " Nomad " bunlctlouse , .o;'!
tra1ler 26' Jleeps 9, awning, ac, ·~
roll down stabthzer leeks, full 1 · o~
Reeae hltch Included. 304-675- , ;
1280
' l

1981 Chevy 4x4 o/• ton, maroon ,
3150 4--•peed. 66,000 milet Ph
614·446· 1627.

1980 Plymouth Ctlamp Auto
1399. John ' • Auto Salet. Bull·
v1lle Rd., Gallipolis, OH .

Mercury Capri Hatchback. 4
speed, excellent cond ition Aaking UOOO. Phone 114·9928583

'
1
1972 Terry 23' travel trailer
f3,DOO. 304-896-3038
.: :

197&amp; GMC 2 ton aepti c blnk
pumping truck Johns Auto
Sale•. Bulevllle Rd Oalltpolis.

1973Ford 1 TonVan. Newtnes,
brakes . Transmiuion com pletely rebuilt. Good runn1ng
vehicle $1 ,000.00 Ph 614388-9950

1981 Dett un 200 SX 827915
1973 Plymouth 1626. 1984
Honda Arrow 1225 Ph 614367-0541

1,

PEANUTS
OKAV, TEAM,LET'SHEAR

SOME CAATTER OOT TIIERE!

NOT IN

PLACE YET!

oo a m m

(f) ICTV

I

SIFTF

l-..1.1__._
1 _,__
I' --'---JI )

~ I' I I I
I
1--i-1;._:_;,1',...:..1:....:,1---,lr,G Q
I
-.,:V_,Ac-N"---TE:.....;I;-_,1.

"!.!

After
taking
nume ro u s
messages lor our popular son , my
husband greeted him by s aying .
" Please c all th e e nt ire ----·.------ - - - - - - - - - - , population of you r sch ool "
.

..

MAIDER

--i

Co mp lete ohe cho&lt;klo quooed
by l11l1 ng •n the m1s M g words
L---1---'-- '---'---'-----' you do11e lop h om ~lep No J below

_

_

_

_

.:!&gt; PRINT NUMBER ED lETTE RS IN

.:J

IHJ WKRP In Cincinnati
6 :35 ([) Andy Griffith
7 :00 U (1) PM Magazine
Cil Hardcastle and McCormick
(J) SportoCenter
(lJ Entertainment Tonight

"&lt;'

10'1:1 ft . camper truck 1l1de-m ~ :
camper, all self contamed, com- , 1
mode &amp;: shower Good cond ~ 1
8600. 304-882·2887
.,

73

1983 Pont tac Grand Pt'111 . PS,
PB, air, IJ8W tires 84,8!0 00
1981 Camaro RallywhHit. PS.
PB, $2,960.00 ltnn Ph 614286-6522

1

MALEEN

I I I I I'

I

Juliet

'~ ,1'
,t'

NomadCamoar 231t . oleeps8.
self-eontlinld, ltke ni!IW Phone"
614-742-2770

'86 GMC 2 ton, IJ cyi, IS- 2, runt
good. ti500.00. '49, Chev p1ck·
up 1115000. 304-675-7397 or
875-1247

1961 Ood,ge Lancer 4·dr. 6eyl ,
3-tpeed. t tandlfd attift on tloor
All factory equipment Rune
good $200 00 Ph 614· 3889960

Now buying •hell corn or ear
corn. Call tor latest quotes . River
City Farm Supply, 614-44629e6

Trucks for Sale

1976 Dat1un 820 pletc-up In
good running condition, fair
body condition. Call 814-3870683 efter 6pm
'

For Sale or Trade

Hospital bed complete, li ke new.
whael ehatr, 304-882· 28 14

DAUGHTER: ,
' CAPTAIN EA!!Y.

'I(.' I

66

63

MV

Camper and lot. Racoon Creek ' 1•;1
1971 GMC JAi ton truck. 454 "''~', 1
engine See by 1ppo1ntment :...:,
only 614· 742-2577
'~' ! '

64

2.

{]) Squore Ono TV (C C) _
(ll) Secret Clly
@ Facts of Lifo
6 :05 ffi Beverly Hillbillies
6:30 U (1) (II) NBC Nowa
(J) NBA Today
([) llt ([) ABC Newa
f.l) C!J H09an"s Horoeo
{]) Doctor Who
@I (I) (j}) CBS News
(ll)
Perkins
Family
Gra ndma tells e~t~eryone
that thi;!J weddtng IS off.
Chns conf1des m her
father; Tracy diSCOV&amp;I'J
how Jess1ca got the role of

'·

' 41 1 '

Little Beaver Greenhouse on St
At 3 25 South Back m butlnns.
bedd1ng plants home grown
READY

61

Cil Big Valley Part

1985 Pelamino full ttre Pop-Up " '
Trudl Camp81 Ptl 614~446· '"•, 1
8648 after 7 OOpm
'
:;:

1120af1er7pm.

I

(J) Mazda SportaLook
f.l) C!J Jofforaona

l

'-

D &lt;1:l ([) Ill ([) liD Cll (J})
(II) Newo

'''··

Call 614-742· 2331

I

EVENING

•'

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

WOlD
GAM I

3/24/87
6:00

L.;;;=;:;:=:;;::;:;:::::-r;::;;:::;:::;::;=:;::;:::-i - -'------------------,- ,.

59

HAVE All'ffll~ TO

Television
Viewing

(
I

--~-----~=--::- ·

Regllterd femateCoelcerSpaniel
J mo. old Hu tlad shots •nd
bee n wormad
a,d I
very
pleasant Buff
Ph collar
614·446-

&amp;

Fe*- STAim: liS, 'a! TALK
A I.C!I', l3lJr '10U 1-tVE~

wrrn

'lbJ

'
'

-I

AKC Regtstered Miniature Dob·
erman Had shotl, wormed. ears
cropped. Excellent bloodlma,
proud, \llgorous &amp; playful Call
614-423-8071 -

58

~M!i. LU~H

•

1978 mint motor home Dodge ·
Ch..sl. low mileage, 318 eng ... ~
Good eond1t1on Call 614-266- ·..,
6038.

Groom &amp; Supply shop Pet
grooming, all styles. all breeds
Julie Webb Call 614-446 023 1

8x1&amp; flat bed dual a!lle tra1ler,
SHOO DO 304-882-3237 after
5 :00PM

Building Supplies

!Dr ~ ~lO

~

Camparforsale Terry'78model
26' fully equtpped with a-c.
Clean 304·882-2291 .

;:,em~nei -Page-9
0

I

·:

, 976 Motor ~ome. Ford ch••·
tis low milea roof atr, 23 ft •
n :ooo cau' 304-896-3638
•fter 6 p.m.

Btg 2 BR Ru1tlc tlome built on
your lot $11 .996 &amp; up Cell
1-614-886-731 1'

Duroc Boars Bred just !Ike the
boars we tested at the Ot110
Testation that g•ined over 2 8
1bs per day. Roger Bentley,
Sebma. OH. 613· 684 -2398.

Con crete blocku ll alzes yard or
dell~t~ery Mal on sand Gallipolis
81 k c0
123 1" PI
s
'
J
ne t '
Galocli polis, Ohio
Call
614-4462783

Household Goods

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

Bulld1ng Materials
Block, bride, MW• pipes, windowt, lintels, etc. Claude Winter~ . Rio Grande. 0 . Call 114·
245-51 21

Callahan s Used Tire Shop Over
1 000 tires. sizes12, 13, 14, 16,
16. 16 5. 8 m1les out Ft t 218
Call 614 256-6261
Plaaltc ciste rn state eppro\led
plaauc septic tan ks, plastic
cul\lerta. metal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jack·
son, Oh 614·286-6930

Camping

Equipment

Misc . Merchandise

Ntee one bedroom garage apt
Central air, larga rooms, mea
location Depotif &amp; reference
required. Call614·446-4169

1 BR house in Galhpolis Clean,
storl!lge butld1ng WO hookup,
$140 month plus depos it Call
614-448-2143

198 1 Knox 12•60 total elec
$6995.00, 2 bedroom. front
kh c h ~m 1972 11myl 12• 70 tot al
elec 2 br front dlntng room. lot
of qu ahly here S6996. 1980
Fairmont 14.1160 total t:tlectric
57996., 2 bedroom, 8•C 1n
master bedroom fro nt ktlctten,
excell ent conditio n; 1973 Holly
Jla rk w 1 11. 12 rollouU8495., gas
heat. lront dining room. 14.&gt;t 70
Holl y Parle 's flne1t Pnce includes doli11ery, block level on
above un1tt 0 &amp; W Homes, Pt
Pleasa11 t. WV 304-676 · 4424

s350 Call 614-446-9780.
Parson'• Furnnure Outlet
1415 Eastern Ave Grand openmg sale Under new managemen t Living room sutte$179 95 &amp; up Chest drawttrs
S69 96 &amp; up Night stands·
S49 95 Mattress set- 899.95 &amp;
up. Bedroom s utte- 8460 00 &amp;
up Rechners - $119 96 &amp; up· 3
p1ece table sets- $79 96 It up
Dmnette sat - 899 96 8t up
Starts March 23

3 bdr renr:h. Rodnev Village II,
$285 mo plua deposit Reteren css requtred. Call Blackburn
Realty 614-446-0008.

198 2 Mant lo n 14x66. 2 lerge
8 R, all elec. Set up on Beautiful
ttvflrffont lot Ready to move
mto w1l h everyl hmg you need
61 4 -992-3340 a her 6 pm or
anytime on weekend I

1972 Kmgwood 1211 66. 2 bed
room mobile home with eenttal
an bu1ll tn wet bar, retng erator
510118, d1nnett e. new carpal
s1 tt1ng on rented lot can be leU or
moved Pricod t8,000 00 304773-6202

Berkhne wall·a- way reclmer
wtth electnc;: automeltc motmn
Almost new 5 months old

54

6 Court Street, large 3 BR. 1111
bath. complete kitchen, gas
heat perle in rear, overlook city
park &amp; nver. $250/ mo plul
utillti81 , depo s1t, references re
qutred No petl Gf8at for 213
smgles Call 614-446-4926

New epartment completelv
ft~rn Ref &amp; Oep 1 or 2 adults
only Cell614 -446-0338.

3 BR 10 City. AC. 1260 per
month Deposit required Call
614-446 -1134.

1971 Mobile Home 12x 65 Kirk
wood. pa rtly remodeled 30 4·
773 5 073

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®b~ Lllrry Wright

Building Supplies

Prom Ore n never worn srze 3-4
Ph. 614-367-03 3.);

15 Court Stree1, 2 BR , H'l
baths, w/ w carpel, complete
modern kitchen, gas heat, well
msuhtled. wired for phone &amp;
ca ble tv, spactous, JNirking tn
rear, patiO, $375 / mo plu s
utlltties , Depoa1t. Refere nces
required Nopets Call614-446
4926

LOT - 2 acre. dr~lled well,
l..Jrtart Call304-895-l664 after
4pm

211 r old completety furniSh ed
HeAt pump, wat her 8t dryer Ph
6 14-446· 8341

1 2• 60 two bedroom tra iler on
about 1 acre 5 m1le1 from town,
cou ntry S12,000 Call 814
992 -7020

Furmshed &amp;: unfurntshed apts.,
1160 00 and up, refarencea Ph
304-675-7738 or 304-675
5104 A-1 Real E11at e

A1hton building lots, mobile · FurR!shed Efhctency S1 50
homes permitted, Clyde Bowen. Uttlhies pd Single Share battt
Jr 304 576 2336
607 2nd, Galhpoli• Call 4484416 after 7pm.
RettuJment forces sale of 20
acres at Tuppers Plein fronting 740 2nd Ave , 1 8Ft, S185,
Rt 7 &amp; Htclcory Lake Road
Depo111 required. Call614-446
Primfl for development o r home 4222 between 9&amp;6.
111e Ftoyalt1es from prodtJCtn{l
011 gas well and free gas 304
1 8R . ground floor apartment
925 ·8650 after 6 p m Anyt 1me All ulilltltl pa1d. Near McDoweekends.
nalds Call 614 446-7026

1972 Canle 14•66 with 1982
h ptmdo 1 2x20 F1replace. centrlll a tr 2 baths, 2 , storage
butld tngs Must sell $13 ,800
Ph 246 6884 after 6pm
1 976 K1rkwood 1411.70. recond i·
uon throu ghou t, gas heat. 3 bdr,
2 batfls. see to apprectate.
&amp;8950 Cnll 614 446 ·0176

55

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Smalt ctt y hou se in qlll el ne•ghbo rh ood 3 BR bath. utilit y
room, ktt ctt e n w1th stove , WB .
fire place Hardwood lloon , 1 car
garage 114 Vi nton Court Call
61 4·44 G-4305 or 446 1 171

Ne w Loy Ho me and 7 acres on
M1le Hill Ad , Recme 3 bed
room ba th, basement garage.
lorced atr wood and coal fur
nate 90 petcent complete
Ask mg $50,000 See Yonme or
J 1m Persmger on M1le Htll Rd
Aacme or cal! 614-247 4 292

Household Goods

The Daily

Pomeroy--Middl.,rt. Ohio

THE SE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

YE51EIDAY'S SCIAM·LElS ANSW •••
Garble - Voile - Twang - Riches - RIGHT

~ doesn't take much to see that something Is wro ng, but
It does taka some eyesight to s ee what w ill meke it ArGHT

BRIDGE

NORTH
• K R4
• 10 7 4 2

James Jacoby

3 u K1

t 73

Weak no-trumps:
the minus side
By James Jacoby

• 65 32

WEST

EAST

.QJ6
• 63
t AK J 9
• Q 10 7 .

. AI 0 7 5 J
• 9 R5

t

SOUTil
• 92

A cornerstone of the fa mous K a plan-Sheonwold boddong syste m os th e
w eak no-trump On man y deals 11 IS
diffi c ult for o ppone nts to JUdge how
best to compete agaonstot , pa r ticul a r ly when their own h1gh-card s l rength
IS divided e ve nly . And competing on
less th an sound va lues c an be a dosas·
te r, partic ula r ly when pa rtn e r os
broke. Occasionally the wea k one -notrump bidde r must pa y a proce My
teammate from las t Se pte mber's
World Team Cha mp ions hip in Moamo,
Dr J1m Sternberg, has a wea k -no ·
trump anecdote that sure ly must have
its place in the world of bridge trovoa
When South bid one no-t rump, Dr
Ste rnberg. s ilting West . fe lt his ha nd
was JUSt a s good as the no-trump bid·
der 's, so he doubled. East was ha ppy to
pass, a nd one no-trump double d be·
came the !ma l co ntrac t Wh en the
openong le ad of th e dia mond a ce d rew
t he de uce from Eas t , West swi tche d lo
a low club E as t look the kmg a nd r e·
turned a diamond . Bac k came a c lub
and back a nother diam o nd West ha d
two more clubs a nd a good d ~a mond to

R 52

.AK

• A K QJ

• Q 10 6 4

•H a

Vu lnera ble Ne othcr
Dea le r South

Obi

North

East

Soulb

Pass

Pass

I NT
Pass

•

+A
L------- ~
O pe nong lea d -

cash, a nd on those three wmncrs Eas j1

d iScarde d a li three lillie hea r ts Nex ,
cam e t he qu ee n o f spad es , a nd you ca1
see w h at ha ppe ned Sad to say , lhc d e
fend e r s t ook a ll 13 tric ks
I'm the fo rst person Lo a dmolth a t
have ha d m y sh are of b ad r esults wh eo

confronled wt lh the weak no-trump, Sl
don 't th in k of thos piece as politl ca ll),
m olova ted I do advoca te st ro ng no
trump openon gs a nd ca n a bsolute !)
tes tif y th a t I ha ve never bee n d oubl e~
a t one no -trump a nd fa ile d to ta k e •1,
tr ic k

~~J-~ttl
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Jewel
weight
6 Skirt
feature
10 Mrs.
Kramden
11 Credo
13 Thick
· fabric
14 Surplus
Ill Meat cut
Ul Fright
18 Go wrong
19 Hot coal
21 Slum
problem
22 Isle (Fr.)
23 Glassy

411 Reddy
of song
DOWN
I Summon

2 African lily
3 El!Stwood's
"Heart·
break - "

4 Expert
II Defensible
6 Bullock
7 Law (Lat.)
8 Meantime
9 Outdoor
living
area
12 Fish sauce
17 lllly·bitsy
20 Catcher's

mineral

Yeeterday's Answer
23 Speck
of dust

31 Vigilant
32 Bucolic

24 Prepared 36 Deep mud
211 Get
37Hammer
well
26 Living

27 Baloney!
29 Color

24 Babble
27 Winslow -- 1:,.-1---+--l- 1-28 Budget
Item
29 "Some

part

39 -- Moines
41 Dutch
commune

Like

It --"

30 Here (Fr.)
31 Wood drill
33 Palin·
dromic
relative

34 -- Ayres
311 B85eball
arbiter
38 Dodge
40 Condor's

nest

42 Hinder
43 Bowling
score
44 Lie dow..n.IP1:Wc~~=-;:;
DAILY t1
- Here'sbowtoworklt:

3124

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

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 letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE
3·24

c u v
Y V .1 F'
E X H .J E

w 11

,J

KUX

WX .J VU
C X

RMHV ,JF' O

K X .I
II I J .J

('

c

U B Z V

W B .I &lt;:

X M

.I V V f

C U V W.
K H Y 0 X .J
W II I. .J V M
Yeeterday't Cryptoquote: NO ONE liAS ~;VER
WVEil ANYONE THE WAY EVERYONE WANTS TO BE
W VEil.-- MIGNON MC LAUC.HLIN

.,

'

�Pege-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 24,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the bend

life·begins at 90
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Clero M. Baker, 147 S. Sixth
Ave., Mid
gort, Is nh'"' rv.
lng his
birthday today,
March 24.
• · Last year
·
. his 91st birthday, he received
a clever poem written by his
aunt. Mrs. Gertrude Cossin who
Is almost 93. 1 know. Like me, you
probably believed that life begins
411 forty. Well. In her original
poem, Mrs. Cossin is pretty
convincing In her statements
thai Instead, life begins at nlnetv .
Here are her words:
'.'They say that life begins a t

I.

,

ninety,
That's when nc&gt;w life begins."

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

itlttlodlol11141 ..... .......

•E...,., ""-t IIIias.
• rltioo11 .., ,... • -

BIC

. UHn 11llo

lEW 14 DZ.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
$0rorlty will meet Thursday.
'7: SO p.in., at the Grace Episcopal
C~ur,ch Parish House.
. POMEROY - Meigs Count y
C)!ipter of Alcoholics Anonym'OUJ will meet Thursday, 7 p.m .,
at the Sacred Heart Church In
Pomeroy.
·
FRIDAY
'·"
; POMEROY - The Senior
Citizen's Dance Club Is having a
this Friday from 8 to 11
op:m. at the senior citizens center
,lit ' Pomeroy. Musl~ will be
by Larry Hubbard's
True Country Band. Admission

•e:e

·,rovk!fd

IUO. Elrlnasnacks.
~· ~ .

••

'

.

.' t

I

'

99

1

NOW
OUR REGULAR $2.34

,.

.

l • • ,.,

NOW

~,
3

REGULAR $3.99

Harris birth
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris,
IJI, the former Peggy O'Brien,
are annouclng the birth of thei r
second child, a daughter, Erin
Roberta, on March 18 at teToldeo
Hospital in Toledo .
The Infant weighed seven
pounds, eight ounces. Mr. and
Mrs. Harris have a son, Robbie,
two. Grandparents are Mr. and .
Mrs. Gene Harris, Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. James
rO'Brlen, Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.

4 Pllli

40110111

l !R!~LAR

NOW

32 oz.

SAFEGUARD

BODICE
$2.29

DAWI

79

NOW, ••

NOW1
OUR REGULAR $1.99

OUR HGIIIAJI $1.71

oz.
IAILOI PLUS
AITACID
OUR REGIIIAJI $2.H
12

10 OZ. JERIEIS

LOTION

REGULAR 01 Elm STRERGnt
OUR REGULAR $2.19

2

79-

NOW

FIBER
FULL
1111611

REGULAR, EX-BOD!, SOFT 100!

.

OUR REGUW $3.99

PRO·IE&amp;A

3DD IIDUir

FISK OIL CAPSULES
31110111

Q·TIPS

OUR REGULAR $2.39

OUIIEGUW$6.99

.'

2 Pllll

FUJU DISC FILM
~:5 EIPISIIRES

NOW

EX-LAX
UIFUIDRED PILLS

311

3aaaunSUI
OUR IIGUW

COLOR REPRINT- SPECIAL

FN
. DILl

Receive 6 Regular Size Color Reprints

8 oz.

NOW

CLAIRIIST
HAIR SPRAY
r--...,
AND EITRI

REGULAR, UNSCENI£0 EXTRA HOLD
HOLD.

Llu

Reb1te

379

100 _PLUS
2&amp; FREE

3D CDUIT II&amp;

BUFFER
IN
NOW

COUIH DROPS .

3~~12 -

NOW

00 :::t.

HILLS
NOW

J9c

LIIIT 1

OUR REGULAR

COYER IIRL
PRO COLORS
NEW! EYE
SHADOWS
8 COLORS
rcc;;,e,------- NOW

I IUITIFIL IFFEI
, F1• .DUIIIL

LOYIII CARE
C&amp;H LITIH
ROW

2~~N.H

COITR~X
CAPLETS TIILETS
11 COIIT 24 CIIIIT

I

DR CILOI

-3~!

299

· On FrH

IISS OPAL'S

PANTY HOSE
REGULAR
STYLE

ASST. SHADES

NOW

Hair
Dlyer

LIIIT 1

From Clairol

30 PLUS FREE

STAYFREE
1111-PADS

REGULAR,
DEODORANT,
SUPER

NOW.

399
"Special Purclulse!"

4 oz.
DIIETAPP
ELIXIR
NOW

See Stares For lltb1ils"

SPECIAL
OFFER!

OUR REGULAR

"Rural
grocery ·
•
remains
.
popular

develop a pro-business climate
that encourages local businesses
to stay and .expand in Meigs
County, he added.
'
To do that , teams of vo lunteers
will visit businesses in Meigs
Co unty to identify their needs ,
co ncerns and problems. Shields
sa id. The survey data, which
maintai ns the confidentiality of
each company. will be reviewed
by Shields and thl' local tas k
force. ·then sent on to the
Cooperative Extension Service
a t Ohio State University in
Columbus. whc&gt;re it will be
compiled and analyzed by compuler : George Morsse. exte nsion
economist at OSU, will prepare a
fi nal report and recommenda·
lions and send It back to Meigs
County for review a nd action.
If the visits unea r th an immedlate problem, an economic
solution may be sought by
Shields, such as the ava ilability
of low-interest sta te loans or
tra ining programs that compan·
ies might not be aware of. The R
&amp; E program could potentially
help local businesses lower their
costs. Shields said, by identify ing
and using state and federal
programs, by prov id ing help
with sta le a nd local govern ment
regulations, and by providing
train ing opportunities_tQr .,fi!i!l1· ,
agement and labor.
The val ue of the techn ical
grant to Me igs County is $15,000.
· "This program has a lot of
promise for Meigs County , but it
ts a tong-term project th at won't
br ing down high unemployment .
or distress. overnight ." Sh ields

·

I

SAVE 57c

·40 COUll

Taking care of good businesses
that are already In Meigs County
may be the best way to crea te
inore jobs, sa id Kimball Shields,
Meigs County devel op ment
director.
Meigs was one of only 10 Ohio
counties selected to be par t of the
Ohio Business Retention and
j':xpansion Program, cosponsored by the Ohio Departmenl of Development a nd the
Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service.
Shields willserveasconsuitant
to a task force that Includes
Steven Powell and Ron Ash as the
local R &amp; E project coordinators.
The program originally gai ned
heightened aware ness in Meigs
County in 1986 when County
Extension Ahcnt .John Rice
brought toget her communit y
leaders to ex tensively study and
work to find solut ions l&lt;j&gt; local
needs.
. Thcchancesofanycommunity
attracting a major fi rm with
hundreds of jobs Is slim. Shields
said. si nce there are thousands of
communities around the country
competing for those firms. The
majority of new jobs In a county
·come from the expansion of
existing successful businesses,
he explained. Historically . most
·fir-ms have expa nded wJihin 50
miles of their present location.
"Through R &amp; E. we'll ca pitallze on our strength, which is
small manufa cturing fir ms and
natural resource re!• ted Industry·," he said .
The main goal of R &amp; E Is to

.

-

. •'

'.

2 Soc1lons. 16 Pnges
25 Conl s
A Multimedia In c. New spaper

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
With busi nesses in busy traffic
rcnt c&gt;rs folding frequently, one
ra n' t help but wonder how the
sec&gt;mingly isolated Lawrence
Grocery on DeWitt Run ha s
s urv iv~d for the past 40 years .
Perhaps "one-stop shoppi ng"
has been the key for the store
!orated at th e foot of Smith
Ridge. just off Ohio 124 bC'Iween
Portland and Lo ng Bottom. The
s to r~ . owned and operatc&gt;d by
Howard M. Lawrence Sr .. for the
past 40 years, certai nly offers
"so mething for everyo ne."
BrsidC's groceries . can ned
goods. meats, and dairy products
one would exp~ct to bo offered,
the general store offers dt.v
goods, hardware. motor vchicl&lt;'
suppiiC'S. gasoline. fred for ll v~s ­
tock and pets - you name '' ·
Lawrence probabl)· has it.
Thc&gt; store had bee n In existence
si nce the early 1900s but was
closed and vacant when Howard
M. Lawrence returned from th e·
U.S. Navy at the end of World
War II.
With practically no money,

sa~.

Village levee
a busy place
AcLivity on the Pomeroy levee continued Tuesd~y as
· Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Company workers dr1lled a
hole for a "high water anchor." .1\t lar right in the top photo Is
Darrell Rodger, owner of the ferry whiJ:h will provldt•
transportation between Pomeroy and Mason, W.Va., while tht•
Pomeroy-Mason bridge Is closed for repairs. A crane owm·d hy
Malden-Jenkins Construction Co., the Nelsovillt• contractor
making the bridge r&lt;•palrs, was used to lift heavy metal plates+
off the ferry onto Pomeroy's and Mason·~ ·tandlngs . The platl!s
arc part of mechanisms helng installed at each landing, which
will lock onto the 'prow of the ferry as It lands and hold It straight
against th e rivt•r's current. The locking mechanism on the
Pomeroy side will normally be anchored ala point farther down
on lht• landing. 'fhr ferry Is seen In th•• photo at right at the
landing. However, if the river rises, the high water anchor will
he used to bring th e locking mechanism up with the level of the
river, thus enabling the ferry to co ntinue operation.

The project, including vlsita·
lion and the final report with it s
recommendations. could bo com·
plete

ISOLATED - This is th&lt;&gt; i~olated Lawrenc••
Stort• at DeWitt Run which Is still operating along

6 principals hired
by Southern board

general store lines after 40 years und er the
ownership and management or Howard M.
Lawrence Sr.

Lawrencr. who was born and

...iJt',Y . . . .

flU PII.IIE tiER.!

The Newest
Generati~n Of
Pain Reliever

H lltllf THiets

NOW

3

48
LIIIT

ILIA
SELTZER
. PLUS
hN llllltlll
11111111

NOW

••

reared In th&lt;' DeWitt Run area,
bought the store building which ac tually has more of a
home a~pcarance- and opened
for business. The business prospered an d Lawrence was able to
add ro his stock and expand
operations.
·
According to records: the flrsr
ow ner of the store was Pete
Anderson. who opened for bust·
ness before 1910. Then came .
Charles and Dolsy Smith. who
were the operators !rom 1910 to
l913. After Ihe 1913 flood, William
· Bentz became the store's owner
until his death In 1920 and the
business cont inued wllh his
widow and dau!!hters In charge.
About 1922 the store was sold to

The Sou ther n Local Board or
Education hired six princ-Ipals on
th ree-year contracts when it met
Monday night In regu lar sPss \on.
li lrcd -by the board wer('
principal s .lamt&gt;s Lawrenct'. f)('borah Rou sh, .la mes /\d a ms,
Oonna Norris, .i&lt;' nn lng&gt; Bet ·g le
and Mlchal'ia fl oba ck.
i\ contract with the MPi g&lt;
Coun ty Board of Mental Retarda ·
lion and 0&lt;'VI'Iopmental f)l.sa blli·
tics was appr oved. Th(• contract
provides for thr sN vices of "
spc&gt;I'Ch thC'raplsl for two hours
worklv and a specia l educa tion
tra chcr for one-half hour weekly.
Total cost for the cont rac- t
services wil l bl' $4U.!lli per wcr k.
Jilred as substltut&lt;• trac hers
for thc&gt; remainder of the school
year were Anglla Baker. Kim·
berlv Bat ey and Kau sa r Ahmad .
Not -renewed as a substitute was
Na ncy Fis her.
.
Noi renewed as ma rchin!( and
pep bands dlrcl·tor lor th(•I987-8H
school vea r was .Joh n VanReeth.
VanRc;., h will be l e&lt;~ c hlng instru·
menial music- at the elementary
school level.
Mat ernl tv leave for th e remainder of lhC' st·hool yea r .
effective from March 2. was
approved for Daisy Franz.
Hired as a substitute bus driver
was .Jose ph
Drasko.

t..

Two junior studC" nl s wC'n ·,c:lv&lt;' n

pNmlss lon to participat e In the
Regional Schola rs' Prog ram to
be held in !lpi'il at Ohio Unl vet"·
slt y. Cost ro partlclpuit•ls $2o prr
stud ent. This is the third yea r
Southern has bern part or lhl'
prognJm.
Per ml." lo n was also grant ed
for Suprr lnt cnd(' nl Bobby Ord to
attend a two-day sy mposium on
th e pollt ics of sd HJf&gt; l flnan ct' and
manu gemrnt. to br hl'itl April
~H- l'l In ('ul umhu s: and lor
Tn ·&lt;JsUIW f) r nnie Hill to att end a
four-da v m cetl n ~ of tiH• Oh io
!l ssoc f ~ tlon or St·hool ll uslnr"
Offldals to h&lt;' hr•td April I:l·lli In
Co lumi&gt;u s.
Approv al 11 :.IS glvrn lor a trip tfl
washington ll .l'. i\pr ll !1-111 tor
Southe1·n .Ju nior ltl gh'.s l'i ghth
grade.
And u J'('~o lut lo n ac!'Ppl ln(!
amount s a nd ra t Ps as ll r H•I'·

mined by 1h1• hudgl·l r·ommlss lon
and authorl ~ l n g nt•rc ssar)' tux
lev If'S and C'l'rt ll)·ing t hPm " ' t h• ·
county aud itor w:" pu s&gt;~·d
11

wu ~

rC' p!li 'H•U th a t old d' "' k"

and chairs ot v:oril'd sizPs wi ilhP
sold al $2 P:IC h on " first
come-first sr l'\·r has is. Th•••lt·s ks
and chai rs :11 I' stor&lt;·d :o t th r
junior high C~ nd klndt•rgartPn
bulldln ~s .

Thr nex t m• · r · l i n ~ of lhP ho. 11·d
will he 7 a.m. this Sa tu rda.v.

Meigs Local employs
new football coach
Run.· From the left are Lawrence, Theodore
wmrord, presenting the plaque, and four
r;eneratlons !10m one family who are customers
at the Lawrence Store lncludlnJ! Irene Hupp,
O'Dessa Proflltt, Danelle -tones holding Tabitha
Jones.
Clyde Lawrence In about 1932.
Hayward Miller. Miller enlarged story onto the struct ure.
(Continued on Page 10)
From Mi ller the store wen t to
the operar lon and built a second ·
appreciation for his
many klndneue~~ , Howard M. Lawrence Sr., left,
Is presented an engraved plaque by friends and
customers recognizing him for 40 years as owner
and oJierator or the Lawrence Store at DeWitt

Bob !Ishley, Middleport , a
physical education and hea lih
teacher at the Meigs Junior High
School, was give n a one-year
contract as coach of the Meigs
High School vars it y football
program when the Meigs Local
Board of Education mer In
special session Tuesday night.
Ashley serNes as golf team
coach and as asslsiMI varsity

,,

,.,

'

LIQUID
CHEER

DOWIY

REGULAR, SLUDER
REGULAR, SIIPER PLUS,
SUP!R

ent1ne

Retention
of business
program goal

8.11 ~:r·
3.00 ""! ....

14 oz.

TAIPAX
T

und :10 percent

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 25, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

~&amp;.99

BATH TISSUE

hlllly of preclpll01tlon is 60

Ullll-

OUR REGULAR $4.49

•
Reunion planned
RACINE - A 10-year reunion
for Southern HighSchool's Class
for 1977 Is being planned. Addresses are needed for the
fo llowing 1977 graduates, .Dwaln
Hall, Jim Imboden, Joe lmbodE&gt;n , Greg Lynch, Steve Nease,
Sue Riffle, Jake Schuler, Kathy
Shain, Robert Wilson. Danny
Wolfe, Denise Roberts. Jeff
Counts, Mike Dalley, Sharon
Baker. Anyone with Information
regarding these former classmales, or anyone wishing to
assist with the reunion, should
contact Bobbl Chapman Hill,
247-4681, or Ailsa Harris Findley,
992-5175.

•

llol.36. No.226

REGULAR OR
SENSITIVE

II&amp; 8 RDLL

hetween 50 and 55. Th e probu·
Jltr cc nlloni ~ht

a1 y

SHAVERS

Showers likely tonight. with
a low betw een 40 and 45.
Mostly do udy 'l'hursd;~y, with
a dlanct• of shower&lt; and highs

'l'hursday .

&amp;

HOlE PERIIIEITS

MIDDLEPORT - Th e public
Is Invited to attend a preachers'
shoot out to be held 7:30 p.m.
Friday through Sunday at Ash
· Street Freewill Baptist Church In
CHESHIRE -Cheshire Cha p- Middleport.
ter OES meets Tuesday, 7:30
.p.m., Inspection. Bring covered
SATURDAY
'dish and dessert.
CHESTER - Ken Amsbary
Chapter of lzaak Walton League
"'
•· ADDISON - Revival services
will have annual judging for the
through March 28. Addison Unl· larges t white tall buck and
'ted Methodist Church with Rev.
g~ouse tall contest on Saturday
·Charles Lus her !TUesday), Rev . evening at 7 p.m.
Kurt Cline 1Wednesday I , Rev.
SUNDAY
·Richard Graham (Thursday),
RUTLAND - Faith Taberna:Rev. Rick VIlardo (Friday ) and cle Chu rch on Ba iley Run Road
:RA!v. William Price !Saturday).
will be In revival Sunday through
Services 7: 30p.m.
April 5 with serv ices at 7:30 p.m.
•'·
eac h evening . Everyone
MIDDLEPORT
The
welcome.
'Middleport -Pom eroy Area
Branch of the American AssociaRACINE- Public Is Invited to
tion ol University Women meet 7 attend Sunday 11 a. m. services at
p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport Racine Unit ed Met hodi st
firehouse.
Church. Dr. Paul Hayes, president of Rio Grande College, will
POMEROY- Meigs Count y's be guest speaker.
Liller Advisory Board meets 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
MASON- Meigs-Mason Girls'
ODES building.
Softball Association will meet
Sunday, 2 p.m., In the Middleport
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu Masonic Temple basement. All
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Interested, please att end.
'Sorority will meet Tuesday. 7: 30
p.m.. at the home of Annie Horseshow club
Chapman .
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Horseshoe Club will meet Sunday, 2
POMEROY - Joint meeting p.m.. at the new horses hoe
junior and senior auxiliary, pitching courts on South Front
Drew Webster Unit 39, will meet St., Middleport. All horseshoe
Tuesday , 7: 30p.m., at the post pitchers welcome.
•·
.- home.
Free clothing
POMEROY - A meeting of the
POMEROY - Free clothing
Melp High Alumni will be held day will be held Thursday, 10
Tuesday, 7 p.m., a t Main Street ·a.m. to 12 noon, at the Salvation
Pizza. Anyone Interes ted In help- Army on Butternut Ave., PomeIng with a reunion this spr ing roy. All area res idents In need of
should attend.
clothing are welcome to come.

Daily Number
928
PICK.4
1250

SALE PRICES' IOOD THRU lARCH 21, 1111

OGILVIE

TUESDAY
KYGER- Cheshire Township
Tru&amp;tees meet Tuesday, 5: 30
p.m., to~nshlp building.

Ohio Lottery

-Page 3

..., " his • "" fii'ICIIptioo.

TOi IIITLEY R. PH.

Bri an D. Houdashell, salesman at Smith-Nelson Motors,
was recently awarded his dl·
ploma for having completed a
profess ional selling skills seminar held at the Buick Universit y of Automotive Management.
Here to present the diploma was
Paul M. Arata, Buick district
manager.

CalendarI happenings

·'

boys, girls
split games

••r•

Jllilliii•IIM,_,._,.,.........
I' 'J .._.. II • ,....;,._ hr nc

• TIM _,.. wl

Speaking of the nineties, that
will be Bill Lowen who will mark
his 95t h birthday this Thursday.
Hc&gt; resides atl.17 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. I erroneou sly gave the
las t nam e of "Lohn" earlier.

Many schools must have had
balloon launches as a part of
right to read week .
The remnants of three have
been found so far.
Virgie Ours found one In the
. , When you once reach that ripe back yard of her Racine home
old age.
from the Hanby Elementary
Your troubled times are past;
School In Westerville and Thur, •Your carefree days are start- man Carsey found one In a tree
,lng now,
nea r his home In Bradbury and
his granddaughter, Mary Ann,
,. You're worry free at last.
found a second one in the yard.
All mankind wants to help yo u, The Carsey balloons came from
They love to be your friend ;
different schools -one from the
They sm11e at you so tenderly, Park Layne School In New
Their kindness knows no end. Carlisle and one from the Gettysburg School in Gettysburg, Ohio.
... They carry all your lu~gage,
: _ They help you cross the street;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Steiner and
If you can't hear the words they their son. James, of Cleveland,
lipeak,
.
enjoyed spending th e weekend In
,'. They'lllaugh and just repeat . Middleport with Ray 's mother,
Mrs. Marte Steiner. It seems that
If you forget appointments.
the Stelners had six Inches of
If you can't recall their names; snow In Cleveland last week and
Just tell them that you are were delighted with the pleasant
, ninety,
weather here In Southeastern
And you're absolved of all the Ohio.
blame.
That strange feeling you have.
When you're sixty-five or could be spring fever - and that
seventy,
should mark the end of cabin
They don't forgive yo ur sins;
fever for another year. Do keep
. When when you arrive at smiling.

POMEROY
Wildwood
Garden Club meet s Wednesday,
7:30p.m. , Fores t Run Church.

I MElT P'llll Tl . . D FIUT
•I J"tiwtftllt

, •.. But I'm here to state they're
. wrong;
;.·It really starts at ninety,
. ,\ " Ask me! I've lived that long.

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND
Rutland
Friendly Gardeners will meet
W.ednesday at the home of
Kimberly Wilford. A program on
'roses will be presented by Robert
Snbwden.

All-TVC

''F•mLI WilDLY

., !arty.

•'

THE PHIRIICI

basketbal l ro:o ch.
He was ont• of two final
applicants intt ·rvlrwcd b,v thr,
board Tuesll ii ,Y night for the postrecently vacatr1t by lonwttmc.
Meigs Loca l footb&lt;lil coach. Cha-.
rlcs Chancey. who res igned. ThC'
other ttn al applicant Is formerly
from Nrw \I aven, W.Va ., and Is
present ly with th rG IImcrCounty
Schools In Wr st VIrginia .

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