<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12514" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12514?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-24T20:26:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43486">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/66c2a1a2c1c5674423b11487e9eaeced.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ef46cd5396bb4b1d39ef2d692bdb4c77</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39265">
                  <text>II

• Page- 0 -8- The Sunday Times-Sen1inel
Public Notice
NOTIC E TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

••

•
•'

Columbua. Ohio

May 29, 1987

Public Notice

Public Notice

nou1 aggregate bate and by
constructing :
Bridge No.

GAL-160·0475 - a pr...
lrened concrete box -bum
super1ttucture on cappad·
pile substructure {spent 3 at
JO feet • 9 inches c/ c bear-

legal Copy No. 87-411
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

ings. roadway 40 fe•t f/ f of
guardrail). over Tributary to
Chickamauga Creek.
Project .length - 200 .00

RS ·986(51

lin . feet or 0 .038 mile.
Work Langth - 793 .32

Contract Sale1

Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
DiFBctor of the Ohio Department of TransponaUon, Col·
umbua. Ohio, unti110:00 A.
M., Ohio Stendard Time .
Tue&amp;day, June 30, 1987. for

improvemenla in :

Gallla
on

County.

Section

Ohio,

GAL-160-

4-76. State Route 160 in
Springfield Township, by
grading and paving with as·
phelt concrete on a bitumi·

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

lin . ft;tet or 0 .148 mile.

Pavement Width feet .

20

Bidd ing on t~is project is
restricted to Oisedvamaged
Bu siness Enter.prises fOBEa)
Cftrtified as OBEa in accordance with the Surface Tran-

sportation Uniform Relocation Ani stance Act of 1987,
and 49 CFR, Part 23 ond
.qualified to bid with ODOT
under Chapter 5526 of the

Ohio Revised Code.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation h•rebv notiflel all bidder• thlt it will affirmatively insure that in any
contract entered into pur-

su•nt to thiladvertisement,
minority
busine11 enter·
prises will be afforded full
opportunity to 1ubmh bids
in response to thi1 invitation
and will not be diacriminatiJd
against on the grounda of
race, color, or national origin
in consideration for an

award .
" Minimum wage rates for
this project have been predete rmined as required by
law arid are sel forth in the
bid proposal. "
" The date set for completion of this work shall be set
forth in the bidding proposal."
·

w. Va.

_
Pub_lic_
Not_
ic~ - 1c.ont~nuing

&lt;;;\;"

Naval command£'r
warns of recruit
literacy problem
SPR INGF'l EL D, Ohio t UP I tHigh school graduurcs w ho ca nnot read well enough to under go
thr modN n ar my's sophi sticated
tntlning urr a nationa l sec urit .\'
concer n. sa id Rear Adm . Ben ja min T. Hacker Saturday In an
address to Wittenberg Un iversity graduat es.
Hacker, a 19o7 graduate of
Witt enberg and 1he hi ghes t r ank Ing bl ac k ofll cN i n the U.S.
Navy, Is l'Omm andcr of the
Nava l Training Ce nt er at San
Di ego whrrc :111,000 recrui ts arc
lralnPd earh Y&lt;'ar.
"Ninety percent of a1·med
forces n&gt;crult s arc high sc hoo l
gradual&lt;'s. and near ly 2!i percent
of them can not rea d at the ninlh
grade level and rC&lt;rulrc remedial
train ing, " Harker said . "They
ca nnot rven begin to undNstand
what they mu st lrarn without
r emedi ation."
Hackc•r sai d the Uni ted States
Is falling behind th&lt;' So\'ll'IS In
training engi neers and scient ·
lsts. He said 1he Sov il't s graduate
oO,!lOO tec hn ica lly trained sc ient ·
Isis each yea r·, whil e th e U.S.
graduat es only onr ·fourth that
number. a nd half of thc•m arc
foreign studmts who t'eturn to
their homelands to work .
Wltt enbNg conferred 47:\ und••r·graduate degrees In its 142 ncr
rommencemc·nt. Including an
hon oran· d~grec for Hackrr.

rca.lll i~s . ".

lhc United Stales has no
chotec to compete and be com ·
prl &lt;·d against " in an increa singly
tniNdqJcndcnt world eco nomy,"
hr.:'""':
.
. If v.c compete badly, tneptly.
r.n cfflclently, th en the United
Sl ;."rs - and you and your
chrldrcn -: will suffer a g r~~ual
dr?p In l1vlng standards, he
sa1d .
Whatcvpr their field s o f study ,
graduat es of 1987 " have to be
pari ol' l hcso lutlon lf thelJ_S.ls to
regain it s comprt itive edge."
Pease, an Ohio Uni versi ty
alumnus, has been a member of
Co ngress sin ce 1977 and is
currently a m ember of 1he House
Ways an d Means Committee's
Trade Subcommitt ee.
The former edllor and publlshPr of the Oberlin NewsTimes, Pease received an honor-

for all lawvrt''
. ··
" In an eni ol rupid chango and
dl
ex pan ng new areas of law, onI)•
lawyers who sta y on top or th~

latest d€'v£~lopm£'nts ca n provide

I

•
'!h th e Tl rs t ·ra t e 1ega 1
'r&gt;llenl
· " 1WI h
h
counse t 0 \' ave a right to
expect," Jacobs said.
"The'organlzrd bar has a ilur y
To enhan~e professional
'd
com pe-·
t
ence an uphold the hlgltest
standar ds of legal practice: and I

ofTransportetionandtheof-

consideration.

Tho Director reserves the
right to reject any and all
bids.

Jacobs not ed that most lawv - help accomplish those goals, .. he
e&gt;rs voluntarily attended rduca - added. In addition to requiring at
tiona! seminars and workshops .least :10. hours of approved
regularly to stay current in their coursework every two years, the
areas of practice. But he said t he proposrd new continuing lega l

~~:oc~~/he District Deputy

WARRENO~R~~{1HFi .

. believe- th ese proposed rules will

lime ha s come fo r the profession
to es tabli sh minimum standards

Grads must help regain edge ir::k,_~~~e:,~;;~ss
mcnt exercises Sat urday to
" fac.r up lo tht• new globa l

June 14, 1987

ed for lawyers proposed

Each bidder ohatr'be reCOLUMBUS. Ohio tUPII quirod to lito with his bid a The Ohto Stale Bar Associafion
certified chock or cashier's has proposed new rules that
check lor •n amount equal would require ever·\.· lawyrr 'tn
~o five per cent of hl1 bid, but
on no ovent more than fifty
the state to complere a! least 30
thousand dollora, or 1 bond hours of co nti nu ing legal educa for ten per cent of hi• bid.
tion courses ev('r)' two yea rs.
payable to the Director.
Sta te Bar Presr·d·cnt LesJI~~- '"·
Blctcter. mu11 apply. on the
n
proper forma, lor quallfica· Jacobs announced last week I hat
tionotteastttndayapriorlo the proposals, drawn up at .the
tho date setfor opening bids court's rt'ques l b.Y an OSBA
In accordance ~ith Chapter
Committ=, were su bmltr·•
6525 Ohio Revised Code.
1::'\.1 to
Plans and specifications Chi ef .Jus!lce Thoin'as J. Moyer
are on file in the Department on May 26 and are now under

JUNE 7. 14

ATHENS, Ohio I UP I t - US
!lep, Donald J . Pease. O· Lorarn.
challenged , . ~ ~.·~~ u at~s at Oh r?
University s 2.1.lrd co mm encr -

,_ • - - - - -

ary doctor of laws degree during
TOLEDO, Ohio tUPI I - A
the ceremony.
tru ck driver was undergoing
Others receivi ng honorary degrees were sopra no Kathleen surgery today for a bullet wound
In hi s leg afler being shot from an
Battle andOhioSenatePresldent
lntersta te-280 overpass. A 19Paul E . Glllmor, R-Porl Cli nton.
year-old m an and a juvenile were
A nati ve of Portsmouth, Ohio, anested for the Thursdav
R;Ht le, oneoftheworld 's leading incident.
·
sopranos , received a doctor of
Michael Reynolds of Toledo
mu sic degree. Gi llmor wa s
was charged with feloniou s as awarded a doctor of laws degree
sault, and charges against the
In recogniti on of his public
unidentified 15-ycar-old juvenile
sNvice and support of education . were pending, sa id LL David
In a graduate degree cerem - Rob&lt;'rts of th e Toledo Police
· ony Friday, an honoraty doctor Department .
of laws degree was awarded to
Ralph Schey, presldeht of the ~::::;:::;:::;:;:;;;;:;;;:::;:::;::;;::;;~
Scott Fe tzer Co. in Cleveland, It
and an honorary doctor of
science degree went to Dr. Gl enn
E. Brown, em eritu s regents
professor of chemistry at Kent
State University .
FOR WOMEN
Mor&lt;&gt; th an 2,000 undergradua te
and graduate degree recipients
participated In the two ccrcmonics.

IIl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Tr~~~~~;;;~~

PLANNING ON PUTTING ON A NEW
SUNDECK OR BUILDING A POLE
BUILDING THIS SUMMER?

l=tC!C!bok

TOTALLY NEW DESIGNED MEMORIAL

Firnt-~s Walker

No Need To Wait On A Sale.
Stop In and Check Out Our Every~ay
Low Prices on Treated Material.
ALL MATERIALS ARE TOP QUALITY GUARANTEED

We stock 6,x6r 4x6r 4x4 Posts
2x4 thru 2x 12 Fence Posts
Utility Poles, Deck Tongue &amp; Groove,
514 #1 Decking

THE
SHOE CAFE

BAUM lUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

300 SECOJID
GALLIPOUS

Write for free brochures showing memorials in full color
with sizes and prices nsted.

lust Arrived!

LOGAN MONUMENT CO. INC.
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge
Leo C. Vaughan, Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2588

W. Main St., Vfnton, Oh.
Jemee 0. Bush, Mgr.

388-8603

NBA

. .
_ . .
.
"
educatron rules •ould _
_
-E stabli sh a J7·member· Ohio
Commission on Artorn&lt;'Y Compett'nct• that. would apprqvr
courses: ~ss1gn l'rcdii ,hours and
mamta. 1n rPc=:ords on atrorne,y
ca mp1ra nc('.
-F:srablish sraggcrcd dead·
line dates for fili ng biennial
reports and pr·o~•i de for notifying
lawyers who mis s deadlin es,
appeal procedu res and t he sus·
pension from pract icc of lawyers
who fail to co mply with the rules .:
Jacobs sa id 27 or hcr states now
have some form of mandator~
continuing educat ion requirements for attorneys.
·

In Time for )'our ·Vacation Pleasure
'

25 reasons to shop

Pic-k 4
2046

at y

Vol.37, No.28
'Copyrighted 1987

1
\

' 2200

2
3
4

An 11rm11 · plaid sport shirt. ' 1750

s

A ll"elllhi&lt;'J' necktie.

An Oc''"" l'o~cific T Shirt. ' 1260
A R.dfd; l~ •ture ,l up0 Iott
shirt.
' 3500

A pair of
shorls,

' 1150

walking-

6
'2300
ol Florsbei111 shoes
7 Ay, pair
price.
'4250
A pair of cotton $hortie pa·
8 jamas,
'1500
A gift set of five colored
9 handkerchiefs.
10Alislepairsocks
of "Fo11r l ui' ' cotton
·
'400
11 Anment; lgoft
,.,.a"· cotton tourna shirt,
· '1700
] .mt ze11

ssoo

12 A pair of straighl leg jeans '1995
13 shirt.
An Arrow short sleeve dress
S2QOO

14 shorts,
A pair of Ocea11 Pacific walk
'2300
1Shis
A cotton ]alllze" shirt in
favorite color,
'2200

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporler
COLUMBUS- The spotlight will be on the state
budget. an in crease in !he gasoline tax and
elimination of deputy motor vehicl e registrars
this week as state lawmakers build up toward
anticipated summer adjournmen1 at the end of
this month.
Well, the li ght won't exac tly be on the budget. A
six- member House-Senate confer ence committee
has decided to negotiate in pri vate, so progress
report s will be second hand.
But the Senate will vote Wednes day on
legislal ion replacing Ohio 's 272 deputy mot or
vehicle registrars with 150 enlarged "one-stop
shopping" cen ters run by the Oh io Bureau of
Motor Vehicles .
The bill. aimed at ending a political patron age
sys tem and increas ing efficiency in issuing
regis tration plates and t ags, Is scheduled to be
voted out of 1he Senate Way s and Mea ns
Co mmitt ee Tuesday afternoon and reach the floor
the following day.
Me anw hile, a House Finance subcom mittee is
expected to in sert a 5.6-cent -a-ga llon gasolin e tax
Increase raising $297 million a year int o the $2.4

billion transportation bud get Tuesday and ready
the proposal for a floor vote lat er in the week .
Gov . Richard F . Celeste cleared t~ e way for
speedy act ion la st week when he endorsed the gas
tax hike for badly-needed road and bridge
improvements.
Th e six -member panel workingonlhe$22 billion
two-year budget is expectrd lo concentrate on the
terms of a tax pa ckage which will determ ine the
amount of revenue available for spending.
The House reconvenes Tues day at 11 a. m_and
the Senate at 1:30 p.m . the sa m e day_
The bill eliminating the deputy registrars wa s
the Senate Republicans ' No. 1 priority at t he start
of the year, but it became sidetracked_
Senate President Paul E. Glllmor, R-Port
Clinton, had the m easur e taken out of the
Highways and Transportation Co mmiee and put
Into Ways and Mea ns with the order to get It ont o
the floor quickly.
Sponsorro by Sen . Grace L. Drake. R -Soion. the
bill provides for at least one cen ter in every
county by January 1989 for m otorists to regi ster
their vehi cles, take driver tests, renew drivers'
licenses and even hav e access to titling services.

Eighteen Meigs residents
earn Rio Grande degrees
RIO GRANDE - " ! believe
Ohio 's best years arc yet robe in
the fu ture," Sen. Paul Gillmor
told the 2;3 members of the lllth
!(l'aduating cl ass of Rio Gra nde
College and Community College
Sunday aft ernoon.,
"With the right leaders hip and
the right poli cies, Ohio's prob·
!ems will ' be solved," Glllmor,
the president of the Ohio Senate,
continued.
Noting that Ohio ha s declined
economi cally over the last sev·
era! year s. Gillmor, R·Port Clln·
I on, sa id that input from govern·
m ent and the private sector wil
help make Ohio a l eader in the
Midwest again.
"I think I he major job of state

Dr. Ray Boggs. Vice Presi dent
for Academic Affairs during the
afternoon ceremonies. McGuire
received her Bachelor of Science
Degree from the School of
E udcatlon. Health and Physical
Education. She graduate summa
cum laude.
During a morning Baccal au -

rea te and Founders' Day Program, two former presidents of
thP Rio Grande Co ll ege. Board of
Tl'\lstees were presented honorary doctoral degrees .
In rece iving lhe honorary
degrees . Dr. Kelrh R. Bra ndeberry, Ga llipolis, and Robt'rt
Stewa rt Wood, Ca nal Winchester. were paid one of rhe grmtest
tribut es to the co nlribullons of
prominent individuals bestowed
by the co !leg('.
During a noon reception and
luncheon, engineer and Indu strialis t Max M orrow, Wellston,
was proclaimed " Fellow" by the
Ri o Grand e Board of Trustees.
The term "Fellow " is used In
aca demic circles to indicate full
membership In a particular

STOCK
•
NO. 378

..
Faaturs a low 7.000 miles. T·top, ·power won-1
dows, power locks, tilt, cruiH, AM-FM Cit• This car features a low 1,100 miles. loaded.
sette, rear defogger. The list goes on •nd on.
This car was $15.700 new .

WAS 114,900 This Sale

$12 9QO

1982 VOLVO DL

OUR SPECIAL
PRICE

$12,400

1986 BUICK SOMERSET LIMITED

22 A reversible leather belt, '1200
23Three pairs of jockey briefs, '1250
24 A classic navy blue blazer, '8250
2SA pair of O.P. lennis shoes, •asoo

1 Section. 10 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Ne wspap&amp;r

In addition . Drakp's bill provides !'or op tiona l
cpntralized mail -in renewal ol' vehicle registra ·
tions. which she cstimil ted will be used by :l!l
per·cent of motor·ists. There will be no handl ing
charge for ordering plates by mail.
The bill also provides for registration rpncwal
on a vrhlclc owner's dal(' of 1Jl r1h . wi th no! iC'('
from the state 4fi days ahead of 1i m~ . Currcnt11·.
l'('l·registra l ion is monthl y accordi ng 10 las! nanw
in alphabetical order.
Until the regis trars arP phasPd out atth cPnd of
19H8. they could not be so llcitetl for political
contribu tions. Drake and ot hrr supporters of lite
chan ge havr complained abou t the JO percent
kickback encour aged by th e political parr1· in
power from the registrar&gt;' $1. ~&gt;0 fe&lt;' on 11
tra nsact ion .
"Once and for all. we wa nt to r id our state of 1he
antiquated and politically corrupt sy stPm th at ha s
evolved over a period of man y years ." sa id
Gi llmor.
But the Drakt' bill may r un Into" roa dblock in
the Hou se where another proposal, kcPping Ill&lt;'
registrars but forbidd ing 1he so li cit at ion of
political contribut ions and co nvN iin g to elat e· of·

birth rrgistralion. has thr inside track.
Rep . William E . Hln ig. D· New Philadelphia,
chai rm an of the budgPI confer ence commltr ee.
said the confcrt't's will bP work ln~ on the r evenue
sido oft he equation In order to get a firm SjX'ndlng
figure.
"The kc.v to the revenues Is going to be on the tax
portion." said Hlnlg. referring to a pair of tax
proposa l s which have creat ed disagreement'
between the House and Sc natC'.
Onr is a tax on Int erstate long di stance
te!Pphone calls and the other Is a tax co llection
&lt;·nforcem&lt;'nt program whlrh t he Senate substl·
luted fo r an a mncs t~ program developed by lhe
Ce leste ad ministra tion and the House.
T he $107 million tolephonr tax Is complicated,
and It may take the co nferN's all wf'('k to Iron out
lhl' considera bl e difference~ between the Housr
and Sena te versions.
" I would think It 's going to take quite a lot of
lime," sa id Hlnlg.
Comm ltt cc heari ngs arc sc hrou lrd fo r Tuesday
afternoon In I he Senate and Wed nesday afternoon
in the Hou se on legislation raising lhe oo mph
speed limit to 6fi mph on rura l freeways.

Korean
pupils
end riot

•

t

I

ed ucational instit ution.
Sunday's graduation c&lt;•rcmonles co ncluded wlrh the tradl ·
Ilona! circl e on the green and the
sin ging of th e alma mater.
Rtu· ht•l••r of S4·1t•nt·f' Pt•ICrt't'S
(S,·hool ol Gt•nt'fal Sludlt'N and l.llwral
Ar1!iil

I

I

I

Tt,!dd Ltnt• 8~!-~N t•ll .
(Sc.•lteol of Edut·ulfolt. HraUh and PhrMif·ul

Eduallon )

'

An~t:l'lla

Ruynl•ll Rll k('l', Klmht•rly 1\nn
Rntl'y, Vh·kl •lttn(' Hul1•)', •IONI•ph H.otH'rl
Ht•msl fy, •lan11 Sut• lloltmun, .font• LA•t•
~111nut•l, Pam('llt S . Murph)',
(~it- hoof of Mulht'lllldll'!'i and Nuturul
Sdftll't• )

Rkhard 0 . Ash.
A""'oclutt· or 1\rts Dt•,; t'l'f':o;
lfompuier St•lt•nt:t•)
O.•hra Lynn Ph•rc·c•.
1\ssodatc• of
1\pplltod Buslnt'l'iN

i ,\ • · t~mnlinlt)
RotNn l .yn DumMn.
I Ru.odnt'SS ManaJ!:I'Ilu&gt;nll

Wudt• Hampton 1...:-s lh• IV.
(St'l'ft'lllfllll St'lencrl

Kotyn H . J•lt'l.l'r.Md Punwlul.ynn Wt':'ol.
AssotiutC' or
1\pplll'd Sdt'fH:t•
1Munulu11urlnK Tt•t•hnoiOR)' )
far! Mllfnrd ( 'lint•.
I Nur.dng )
('onnh• Stw Ht •ndrldt.,, Pum1•lu n u"'·n
Rlt-'h(ol ~d Kan•n Ll&gt;sllt• ~' t•rry .

RECEIVES ACADEMIC AWARD - Ochhlc Lynn McGuire,
Dexter, Sunday was pr.,cntcd tlu• " Oulstundlng Academic Award
for J9S'l" hy Or. Ray Boggs, VIce President lor Acadcmk Affairs of
Rio Grande C olleg&lt;~Community Collegr during afternoon
graduation ceremonies. M cGulrll r et l!lv cd her Bachelor of Science
Degree from lhe School of Eudcailon, Health and Physlcul
Edul!atlon. She graduated summa cum laude-

Reagan expected to order
conclusion of · agreement

1986 CAMARO Z-28

16 A calfskin wallet,
'1600
17slacks,
H"IUi"' poplin summer
reg. $28.00,
' 1890
18 socks.
A pair of ]a•uze r~ sport
reg. $5.00,
'375
19 A 24 hook tie rack
' 1 QOO
2Qset,
A travel case &amp; manicure
'2950
21 new
A bathing suit in one of the
bright patterns.
'2200

S14,900

enttne

Dexter's Debbie ·McGuire wins Award

Shop and Compare and you will aae why quality and price make it
the best buy on the market.

·Sale Price

percent .

Ohio legislators face busy schedule this week

Gillmor was present ed an
honorary doctoral degree In
public scn·lce during the com·
m encement exercises .
Debbie Lynn McGuire, Dexter,
was presented t he "Outstanding
Academic Award fo r 1987" by

WAS SJ Sr900

Tonight. partly doudy.
Chance of thundcrslorms .
Low near 'lO. Chance nl rain :10

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 15, 1987

America's .No. 1 Van Conversions
A pair of tennis shorts to
improve lhe look of his
game.

Numlwr

974

•

eco nomic climate to help create
jobs In Ohio." Cill m or said .

for Father's Day

llail~

champs
Page 3

government is to creatr· an

Thomas Clothiers

Ohio Lottt&gt;r\'•

Lakers

RIO GRANDE GRADUATION SPEAKER- Sen. Paul Glllmor
told ,lhe 253 memhers of the lllth graduating class of Rio Grande
Collese and Community College Sunday afternoon "With the rl1ht
leadership and the right policies, Ohio's problems will he solved."

By HELEN THOMAS
UPJ While House Reporter
WASHINGTON t UPil Pr·es ldent Reagan Is expected
to announce In a televised
address tonil'tht that he has
allied support In ordering U.S.
negotiators to wrap up an
agreement with th e Soviets
removing nuclear missil es
from E urope.
"We're there. " a t op pres!·
dential aide said before the
speech, referring to the arms
ta lks In Geneva that could
lead to a signing of a pact by
Reagan and Soviet lea der
Mikhail Gorbachev at a summit meeting In Wa shlngron
rhls fall.
Reagan spen t a quiet wee·
kend pollshinl( his speech. to
be delivered from the Oval
Office at 8 p.m. ED'I', after
NATO foreign ministers
Issued a communique Friday
from Reykjavik . Iceland, sup·

ponl ng the accord that would
climlnatr U.S . and Sovlcl
medium -and short -rang&lt; · nu ·
t"l!'ar miss il es from F:urope.
Before drllvcr lng his natlnn·
ally t&lt;'levlsed address . Rea:
gun arranged to brief Demo·
cratic a nd Republican
congress ional leaders today
aoout prospects for th e arm s
pa ct and abou t acco mpli sh·
ment s of la st week 's economic
summllln il al.v .
Reagan ha s t erm~d l hC'
meet lng_ in Venice among
leader s of seven allied na tions
a success despite the dearth of
concrete r csutr s, and his aides
sai d he wou ld hl~hlig ht result s
of th e summll again in hi s
speec h tonig ht.
But th ey sa id Reagan also
would bl end lni o the spccc·h
his domestic agenda , prlma r·
lly budge t reform, and one
Whit e Hou se official wh o
askrd to remain anonymous

cxplaint•d that the pt•t•s ldC'nt
f&lt;'Ci.s a need to proj r•ct that
:rgend a " Into th e future."
" Part of II Is to talk di rec tly
to th" i\l)lPrlc·an pro p I(' and til'
In tt h&lt;• summitt wit h what 's
go in g on In our country." thP
offi cial sa id .
Wilh I&lt; 'SS than 211month s to
go In office. Reagan Is in no

mood to rctn &lt;J I from his goal
1

ol press uring Congress for
hlgger cu t s in dom&lt;•Silt'
spending.
Aides said RPagan plans to
r•ampalgn ou tside Was hington
one day a wr£&gt;k In the coming
month s to stress hi s view thai
the budget needs ovcr haulln~
and to contl ouc hi s opposition
to a tax increase and cu ts In
the defense bud get.
ll&lt;•aga n al so pla ns to gi ve
Congr&lt;' ss this week illrngth y,
mos tl y cl assified Defense Dr partm c·n1 report about srcur·
ity In thr Persian Gu lf

SEOUL, South Korea I UP! I A handful of dlssldenis remalnro
toda y In thP , sanctuary of a
downtown church to ensure Ithe
sa fpt y of co mrades who ended a
six -day standoff aft er pollc(•
promised the protesters would
face no charges.
Lea ders of the opposition and
ruling parti es wcr·c to meellal er
toda y to plan a special session of
the National Assembly on the
political slluatlon In light of
anll-govc·rnment disturbances
that began Wednesday. Reports
said 1he sess ion could convene
Tuesday .
Most of I he 2211 dissidents holed
up In th r Myongdong Ca thedral
sin ce WednPsday left thl' church
In thrll&lt;' bus es and two vans
provided by the church .
Wav ing large nallonal nags
and shouting "dokje Iado" I down
with the dictatorship}. about
6 . 1~ people be!!an following the
buses In a largP dc&gt;monstrallon.
No vlolencP was reported .
Fillccn dissidents remained
be hind and con tinued a sit -In they
said would continu e until all the
orh~rs had returned home sa fely .
Pollee wit hdrPw from the area
laic Su nd ay lo allow dissident s to
leave sa fely . Seoul Pollee Chief
Kwon .long-sup sai d no cr iminal
chargt'S will be flied against
thosr dissident s who left
peacefully.
After th e bUS('S lrft , about1 ,111Kl
dcmonstralors poured ln! o the
ch urc h compound an d susla lnrd ·
a steady chant.
Th e crow d shouwd. "Nonvlok•nc&lt;•. non·vlolencc. Don t
shoal." when roc k throw in~
prompted groups of pollee lo
approac h.
Th e dlssldt•nt s. Including 1~~1
students, Parll£&gt;r acceplrd thr
pleas of Cardi nal Souhwa n "Sir·
phcn" Kim . hc•ad of South Ko·
rca's Roman Ca tholic Chu rrh.
and othcrt&gt;hurc hmcn rornd t hrlr
occ upation of rhe M yon~do n g
Cathedral. It too k lh t'Cl' rounds of
votin g. howr·,.,.,., before l hP
group final! )· d&lt;•('idcd to lcavr. a
spok es man fort h~ group said .
Three you ng di ss ldcn" cu t
their fln g&lt; •rs and scrawlc•cl
" down with th P dictatorship"
and "oust out th&lt;' Ameri ca ns " In
blood on a sign they dlspia )c&gt;d
ou tside the churc·h .

'

-ner.

One Ilocal doctor) owner. Only 32,000

actual m....

SH

·

one
Perlt Avenue trade,
;;;;, Hilt, windows, door locka. AM·FM ceslllttl, much more.

Savt

$4000 Compared To New

Buick~Pontiac
446-2282

Academy Award-winning actress Geraldine Page, 62, dies
NEW YORK IUPH - Geraldine Page, the Academy Awardwinning actress whOse passionate por trayal s of Te nnessee
Williams' heroines prompted the
playwright lo call her the "most
disciplined and drdlcated of
actresses," has died at 62.
Page was found dead of a heart
attack In her Manhaltan aparT·
ment Saturday night by her son,
AnthOny Torn, alter she !allrd to

show up lor her matinee perlor- was In very good health and
mance In Noel Coward's play .. certainly was not old," Allison
"Blit he Spirit."
said Sunday . "She gave a wandHer dearh was announced after er!ul, energetic performance
Saturday night' s performance by
Friday night . We're just trying to
"Blithe Spirit" producer Karl co ntinue and go on.
Allison, and a memorial service
"She would want nothing
was scheduled for Wednesday at
more, certainly."
lhe Nell Simon Theater. where
Nominated lor Oscars seven
Pa ge hll_d been playing I he role of
times, Page finally won one In
Madame Arcatl.
1986 for her performance In "The
"We're all just devastaTed. She
Trip to Bounllful " as Carrie ·

Watts , an elderl y widow who
fulfill s her longtime desi r e to
return to her childhood home In
,
Texa s.
After she plckc&gt;d up her Oscar
as best actress, Page said she did
not know why. she won this time,
but added: " I know what got me
nominated. I did a damn good
job."
Born Nov . 22, 1924. In Kirksvi ll e, Mo. , and raised In Chicago,

Page movrd to New York In the
late 1940s to work as an actress .
She wound up appearing in more
th an 500 play s and helping
pioneer th e off-B roa dway move·
men! of the 1950s.
But Page ooce sa id her car eer
was stalled for seve n years
during the McCart hy era because she had sl udled with Uta

Hagen, wh'o hud offended ro nsrr·
vatlves by oncl' star ring with
Paul Robeson In Othello.
Page first won cr itical accl aim
In "Summ er and Smoke." by
Williams, portray ing thr lovelorn Alma Wlnrmlller In u 19:,2
off· Broadway rev ival by director
.Jose Quintero that marked thr
sta rt of her io n ~ association with
Williams' work .

'

• -t

�'
Monday, June 15, 1987

Pomeroy~Middleport.

Commentary.-----------------~--------~~-~-~-2-~-~~~-~Y~-·o_~~~o
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON /\REI\

~'h

~m~
~v

rT""L.Jl-r, rr'EO:!

d,F=I

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllltanl Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Memos

~very

WASHINGTON - Vice President George Bush ha s become
deeply Implicated m the !ran / co ntra arms sca ndal because of
Internal memos descnbed as
"very damaging" by congre ssional sources famili ar wilh
them .
The way things work In Washington. Bu sh's national securIty adviser, Donald, Gregg, will
pay the Immediate price. Our
White House sources predict that
Gregg will be the next official

Lakers down Celtics for title

however, have urged Gregg to
leave ever since his dealings with
former CIA agent Felix Rodriguez came under Justice Department scrulmy late last year ..
Rodriguez was an integral part of
the White House's clandestine
aid program to the Nicaraguan

contras
Rodriguez testified at the co ngressional hearings about a
meeting with Gregg last Aug . 8 m
which the sec ret supply of arms
to Iran -was discu ssed. In his

A MEMBER ofT he Unlled Press lnternallonal, l nland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

are·

LETTERS OF' OPINION
welco me They shoukl be lt'11s than ».!words
long . All letters are subj ec t to f'l'ill lng and rrttst tlra stg ned wllh name, address and
telephOne nu mber . No WJ slgno:l letters will be pt•hll.!.hed . Lett ers should be In

good tas! e, add ress ing lssue:'i, nol pcrsooaHtlcs.

Celeste presidential
campaign on hold
COLUMBUS - Gov Richard F. Ce leste's 19R8 prestdenllal
campaign, If I herr is to be one, has been pul on the back burn er while
Celeste and pollllca l ai des assess the dama ge from a news paper
arllciP abou t hi s personal life
" I think there's golnl( to be a fair !~ long shakeout period," sa 1d
Democrallc Stall' Chairman James M Ruvolo. who was furious
about the story In the .June :1 Cleveland Plain Dealer alleging the
governor had affairs wllh three women, two of them 10 years ago
But Jerry Aus tin, Celcsil"s political captain still b&lt;:'heves lhe
governor will make a decision sometime between July 4 and Labo r
Day, probably closer to .July 4. " !don't know that 11's sel back that
much ." sa id Austin
Celeste first ha s to find oul if people will sl ill give· h1m mom·y to r un.
and If his support among the genera l populace has been damaged by
the nrwspa pe• dlsl'losure.
The governor ca nce led a schedu led fund -ra ising meellng last week.
Indicating he wants to lrl things cool down beforp continuing hi s
seart·h for dollars.
As far as popula• suppo11 goes . Huvolo believes some good cou ld
come out of Th e Plain Dra ier' s story, although "all in all, the story Is
not a posit lve faclor."
"We are gett ing som e sy mpathy for the governor from people who
think 11 was an unnrc&lt;:'ssarv &lt;~nd unwarranted Invasion of privacy ,"
sa id Ruvolo.
And Cel csl&lt;''s wife•. Dagmar. appea rin g on a radio ta lk show In
Columbu s last W&lt;'ek . wa s gr&lt;'&lt;'led wt lh ca lleiS t·ommend ing h&lt;'r lor
"standing by your man "
Austin said no public opinion pol ls hm r been commissioned to help
In the decision because "I hPre' s enough know about public opinion on
I his already . A jlOll is nol going to It'll you a nyt hing."
Austin sa id Celeste will be makin g up hi s mind by conllnuing to
meet with pollllca l pt'Ople It om ot ht•t slates "and sec how this washrd
around the eountry "
Ruvolo and Austin nol l'd I hal unlike forme r Colorado Sen Gary
Hart , Cel cs l&lt;' still holds publlt· olflcr. and thus has a chan ce for
recovery
" The last time I looked. litis guy Is stil l govNnor ol Ohio," said
A us lin, pointing ou II hal Celeste c.1n travel around I he coun 11 v wit h "
message about what hr ha s don&lt;' !01· the state.
Celes te sill I has to sir a lght&lt;'n things out with Sen . .John Glenn about
whi ch of them . If either, is going lo iJ&lt;' OhiO's ca ndidalt' fo1 president
Thry missrd a chance 10 meet whrn thr- governor was In
Washington a week ago. hut Celes t&lt;' may have pla-nned II that way.
Glenn could poke a pretty !at ge hoi&lt;· in C'eles le's ambitions rll(hl now.
But the senator has hi s own problem - rr ti 1ing a $1 !i million d&lt;:'bl
from th&lt;' 1!184 pl't•sldrnt lal ca mpai gn - so tht&gt; mrrting may be
delayed until lhlngs co mt• int o sharper l or us
"These lwo gu' s arr fr iends." said Hu volo. hopi ng he won't havc· lo
take sides. " Th ey' re goin g to talk ."
The chairman milv b!'Ov&lt;·rlv opllmlsltr Talk about monev an d sex
can ruin even the lhr clo~es l of fr iendships.

You GoT

BLGop

IN

MY OILI

Laker Jam es Worthy said. It's
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP]) Magic Johnson, who led the Los tough to be written off. !think w e
Angeles Lakers to their fourth did use that as fuel."
The Lakers responded by havNBA title of the 1980s. ~aid this
vear's success was sweetened Ing the best rel(ular-season reand' spurred by last year's cord and I hen del hronlng the
Ce lt ICS for the second lime In
failure .
The 6-foot-9 point guard paced three years.
Los Angeles 11 ailed !\6 !\1 al
the l.akers In scoring. rebounding and assists m the six-game halfl ime but Boston did not score
series against the defending on its first 10 possPssions of I he
champion Soston Celtlcs, who third quarter and the Lakr•·s
yielded the crown In Sunday's used an 18-2 surge to takeconlrol
of the game
106-93 finale.
Boston shot on ly 21) percPnl In
" This is the best, the most
the
third quart er, hilt ing only 5 of
sa tisfying by far because of what
19
shot
s as II was outscored .lO 12
t~e critics said about us." said
Johnson. the ser ies unanimous The total was on!;• one pomt sh)'
MVP, who scored 16 points and of the championship ser ies IO\\
for a quarter
had 19 point s In the finale.
After the game. 11 hen Bos ton
Last spring, Los Angeles lost
4-lto the Houston Rockets In the sta r La1 ry Bird was I old ol lht•
sconng dl ff c1 rn11al he reWestern Conference fmaL
"We were disappointed and we spo nded : "Tivelve poi nt s'! No
had to deal with It all summer," wondeJ \\'('got beat "

damaging'_A_nd_e_rs_on_a_n_d_Da_le_Va_n_A_tt~a,.

forced to resign as a result of the
Senate/ House sel ect commlt tee's Investigation of the arms
deal.
Gregg has gone on record
offering to resign, but Bu sh has
not taken him up on It . Sources
say that at least one Gregg offer
to quit was perfunctory, coupled
w1th his advice that !he resignation would do more harm than
good for Bush' s presidential
hopes
Several White House aides,

notes of the meeting, Gregg '
wrote: "A swap of weapons for$
was arranged to get aid for the

contras ''
Despite th 1s clear evidence,
Rodriguez swore that he had not
informed Gregg of any plan to
swap weapons for money to aid
the contras - even though he.
admitted discussing every other
matter alluded to In Gregg'~
notes.
Committee sources tell us a
still-secret Internal memo Implicates Gregg- and by extrapola·
tion Bush - to a much greater
degree In the secret contra aid
program.
Gregg denied last October that
he had ever spoken with Rodriguez about I he aid program, but·
recanted later and acknowl :
edged the Aug . 8 discussion.
.
The committee Is keeping a
tight lid on still another memo
discovered recently by liS Investigators. Sources tell us the
memo Involves Bush In till'
scandal much deeper than has
been es tablished so far. Bush has
claimed only peripheral Involvement In the arms-for-hostages ·
transaction with Iran, and has ·
Insisted that he knew nothing of
any diversion of funds to aid the
contras.

CELEBRATE - Los Angeles Lakers celebrate
with champagne In locker room following

staff.
I ' ll bel, however. thai you
mi ssed in our vigilant media . as l
did. the fasclnatinl( piece of
tmformat10n I gleaned recenlly
from London 's l ively publication
The Speclalor: "During the
hearings , Republican Bill McCollum reminded hi s colleagues of
the presiden t's 1981 executive
order 12333. 'done in concurrence
in consulla tion wit h thes Congress.· whi ch said the NSC was
not an int el ligence agency. ' That
was on the record at the lime this
Congress passed the Boland
Amendment "
Well , T gue ss there JUSt isn't
t1me or space to report everything, eh?
On the other hand. The New
Republic prelt y well gave the
game away in an arlicle in Its
.June 8 Issue. The authors,
Jeffrey C. Alexander. Is a professor of sociology a I UCLA. and
just aseagerasa nyotherheallhy
liberal to see Reagan impea ched.
Bul he apparently thinks. with
some justice , that the peasants
for whom these hearings arc
designed aren't likely to read The

CINCINNATI 1UP!\ - For a
so called "ulillty" player, Dave
Cqncepc1on is playing pretty
regu larly. And delivering with
regularity.
Concepcion, who turns 39 Wed nesda y and Is In his 18th straight
season with Cincinnati, snapped
a :1-3 tie Sundav with a two-out,
eighth inning RBI si ngle !o hit
the Reds to a 4-3 win over the
Allanta Braves.
: ·concepcion did toda y what
he's done a Joli n his career- get
a bighil fortheCmcinnallclub, "
said Atlanta manager Chuck
Tann er "Thev talk about all the
youngster s on the Reds, but th&lt;'y
ought to keep talking about guys
like Concepcion. loa "
Tied :1-3 going into the eigh th,
Buddy Bell opened the Inning
with a walk off Gene Garber, 8-4.

New Republic, for his article
explains the true state of play
with br utal candor:
"The hearings preseni themselves as a !actual investigation.
They should be seen, however, as
part of the scandal-generating
process itself. Scandals are not
discovered ; they are made ....
" Because the American
opinion -m aking elites are primarily hberal and Democratic,
only the deeds of rlgh-wlng
presidents can cause political
scandal "
Alexander co ncludes by
say mg, "We will know how this
scandal construction proceeds
by how ser iously the public
perceives the crlme .... At this
point, however. !he hearings
often seem more like an IRS
audll I han a wrenching morality
play Only when we see contrite
confessors rather than harassed
functionaries will we know that
we are on our way."
Our way to a gaudy Impeachment , th at Is. Seldom has so
cy nical a process been described
with such stomach-turning accu racy.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, June 15, the 166th day of 1987wlth 199 to follow .
The moon Is moving toward Its last quart er.
The morning stat'S are Venus and Jupiter.
The eve!llng stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
Those bor n on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
Prince Edward of England, known as tlie "Black Prince," In 1330;
Norwegian composer Edvard Grleg in 1843; silent film comedian
Harry Langdon In 1884; composer-conductor David Rose In 1910 (age
77); artist Saul Steinberg In 1914 (age 73\; Arizona Congressman
Morris Udall In 1922 (age 65); New York Gov. Mario Cuomo In 1932
(age 55). and singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson in 1941 (46) .
On this date In history :
Iii 1215, under pressure from rebellious barons, England's King
John signed the Magna Carta, a crucial first step toward creating
Britain's constitutional monarchy .
In 1752, Benjamin Franklin demonstrated In a dangerous
experiment Jhe relationship between lightning and electricity by
flying a kite during a storm In Philadelphia. An Iron key suspended
from the string attrac ted a lightning bolt,
In 1904, the excursion steamboat General Slocum caught fire on the
East River In New York, killing 1.021 people.
In 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valery Bykovsk,Y was launched on a
space mission In which he orbited Earth 81 ttmes.

executing it and before its futu(e
pol t cy implications were
rva lu ated.
On Ma)• 24. Weinberger sa id
that the American escort protection wou ld depend on the availa bility of air ba ses In the Gulf
sta tes plus ot her supporti ng
efforts by those states. The
problem wllh this arra ngement
Is that there Is no Indication th e
Arab sta tes of th e Gulf are
willing to r isk Iran' s Ire by
providing suc h support to U .S.
ships
New York Times journalist
Tom Wi cke r raised the k ey
quesllon "On what rea soned
military basis. then , did the
Reagan administration offer protection to the Kuw aiti vessels as
they pass through some of the
mo s l dangerous waters
anywhere?"
The answer seems to be that
little reasoning was done prior to
the commitment.
Do we go ahead With the escort
commitment to Kuwait If the
support bases on shore are not
available? Ifwedo sendoursh!ps
and the Iranians attack, do our
ships and planes shoot back? Do
we allack the Iranian bases from
which their planes fly? If so. are
we headed for war with Iran?
It would appear that these key
policy questions still remain
unresolved. Little wonder that
the Senate voted 91 to 51nstruct·
lng tht&gt; president to explain his
plans for defending our ships
before they start plying the
dangerous Persian Gulf waters.
The third foreign policy mistake In this matter Is Its unilateral character'.

Our allies In Western Europr
and Japan arc more dependent
than we arc on the oil of the
Persian Gulf. Yrl the Reagan
l&lt;:'am jumped ml o the Gulf
without consultin g either our
allies or Congress.
It shou ld not be surprisi ng I ha t
our allies. having been Ignored
when th e commitment to Kuwait
was made, are not enlhu slast lc
about coming In 10 support this
Ill -prepared vrnture now.

Once again the Reagan adminIstration has on Its hands a
precipitous action It, search of a
policy. The trouble Is that the
stakes Include not only our
intt&gt;rnational reputation for the
sound conduct of foreign policy,
but also the security of the nation
and the lives of young sailors,
like the 37 who died on the Stark.
The name of that Ill-fated frlgale
describes the prospects of the
Persian Gulf operation.

Berry's World
IJ

Barry Larkin, pinch-running for
Bell, moved to second on a
sac nflce bunt b)' Nick Esasky.
After Bo Diaz stru ck ou t for the
second out, Concepcion lined a
game-winning single to left center to easllv score Larkin.
"I'm still sw inging a good
bat," sa id Concepcio n "I hit .3S1
in wmter ball and .423 in sprmg
tramlng "
Concepcion, who atthr start of
I he season was expected to play
on ly sporadically In a utility role,
has played m 43 of the Reds' 62
games and Is hlttlnl( .311 .
"Davey has golten a lot of at bats because he deserves them. "
said C!ncm nall managet· Pete
Rose " ! can't lhmk of another
utility playN I 'd rather have.
Davey Is one of a very few
players I 've seen look nalural

Scoreboard ...
.\~U~ HU ' \N

Majors ..
s ,\TIO:'Ii \1.

u :,,fa •:

nlloill'r•"'"' lnhorn~~lhtn , d
ft ,\ I nllo•lll'r o.... 'nllorooUun .tl

M' J, 1'4•1 ft R
:ell :!1 ,it l ;"'
, :tl ~ :J.II li
:1! ·~ ~~1 fi1 1

l'il IAIIII.,

C'hl&lt; n1111
\lnnlro .tl
!1\:tv.\urk

:11 ·!11

m

':• ~

l'h lln

~

:til

~~~~

~~ /

I'Ut~hral•

.._'ti

.~ 1

lin&lt; lrtnul
:O.m · ·r,\n

·"·"

:;.

\1lanl 11

...... ·'""'' ..

S11n

~

Uh · ~:u

.~• · v.·

ll•~tsln•

... ,....

\

.i .r!

:1'!
;t;t

~I

~~ I

'

~ 'It ,ol

ll """'"n

n,.,.,,u ..

\tlhr,~ukl't '

I

•

ftitlllmurt •I Ue•ll l- I till :'trit•lll \ urk I l "hn
ft.!i .': Upm
lh~ian•l r\ niiOI Ko.lr 111 1\,UJ,.,,.. Ill\
r l.~o·lhrwull 7 I L ii •. l~ p.m.
\lilt'"''""~ I 81) ~" o n 1- illll Mil" n11lo•~ ·
' " ' 11111111 :i-:\1 . 11 1.1 p m

I ltll-.:11 (RI.tnni!!tt•r :hll .tl

~·.tllh•

tfim'41o'fmnn :J-Ill II: ~ p 111
T• \a" (lhtt•lh l--':!:1 ~~ t lllifnrlll il I l ~l
wr\;n

t•·tr niiiAII Tnrm'lllu. nl~t ..

tltl'itun :d fh•, tol.tlld. nl~thl
\llnno..;.nln 111 UN• nnko"' nl~thl
U.tli huul .tl K ~lll"ll" I II\ , nh::hl
T••\ ,to.IU f'ulllnrnl11. nhthl
Chh :11:11 ul So ill (It , nlr;h&amp;

1~

,11 l~ml'l'll\' .

1\d \l'r ti:-l n~ RI'/J' f'!'o(•nl :l th £'. Rranham
7:\.1 Third /\\('nUl\

York 10011.
Srnd ,Jddf'l"lot l'h.•nw•

HARRISON . N .Y . tUPil Despile the big mone:.; now
available on the Senior Tour. J.C.
Snead Isn't thrilled at the prospeel of joining the circuit .
"I'm not counting the days and
the )'ears and the weeks anli the
hours like some of these guys
do," Snead said. "When you get
finished with lhe Senior Tour,
they put you In a box, so I'm in no
hurry to get over there.

F\:&gt;mC'rov. OhiO 4~7f8.

Onl' \\'N''k .. . , . .• . .... •. .. !1 ~
Onl' Mont~ .. ..... ..• .. ... ., S!'l ~!l
Onl' Yl\ t r
.... ShS.M

SINGLE COPV
PRICE
0 .111'· ., ... ... ...... . , . .
Sutr-\ rlb(&gt;r.ll

Mt dMtlrln~ to pav lhN ·.tr ·

rlt•r rna\ rrmlt In :Jch·om &lt;·r cllrN'I to
Thl" Dall\' Sc-nl lnl'l on u 3. 6 or 12 month
ha,;l'l.. Crt'dil will br ai,·rn f'&lt;trrirr f'uch
IH•f'k ,

.

~o C:ub!l&lt;' rlptlons by m&lt;~ll pt:•rmltll'll In
Oln"all Wh('f'(' homf' C'llrrlrr l'Wn·lrr I"
,t\•,tll:tbl('

Mall S.bocrtpllofto
IMkll." Melp Co•MY
1lW1'C'k!t ., ................ ... ....... Sl7.29 ,
l&lt;l\\;l'&lt;'k.• .. '" ""'""" """"" ... 114.06

"Hey, listen, baby - I was punching out
photographfn and fiiiiS 1011(1 before Sean

Penn was EVEN BORN."

!'\2 W('('ks.. . ................ .... .... , .... 166.56

O.IAWrMrtpiMIIIJ
13 WN'k.lll .... ... . .. ....... .. .. .... I1R.20
26W('&lt;'k, , .......... ......... . . 11510

52 WM'k• .

J

.. ......... 101.611

.

Snead cops Westchester
Classic in 'sudden death'

C'ou11 St •

SUII!K'RIPTION RATE.~
Ry Carrlrr or Molnr Roulr

Atlanta. which had I railed :1-1
since the fourth, tied 11 :I- :lin the
seventh Dalr Murphv led off
with a homer to right , h1 s 19th of
the vear. off rookie Pal Parillo.
who had given uponlvo nehltlhP
first six lhnii\gs. Ken G rlffey
doubled to right , took th 1rd on a
ground out by Andre&gt; Thomas : rr('(' pa sses.
and scored thr tvlng 1'un on ,,
Line Scorr :
single by Ozzle V1rgl l off Bill Logan .. ....... . llJO 10(\ 1- ~
I
Landrum. ·
Meigs ... . ...... 000 004 -- 4 .I ~
Batteries: C. Matheny !LPl &amp;
Dave Parker singled in 111 0 Corey Welll.helmrr / Cralg Wolfe
runs In the t111rd 10 l(lv&lt;' Clncln· Dave Amburgry 1WPI &amp; Kvl e'
nat i a 2-l lead. True .Jones Davis
singled. stole srcond and took
.J~ff Ca ldwell plckPd up lh~ win
third on a wild pit ch by Zane In I he s~cond gam&lt;' fannin!( five.
Smith . Eric Davis walked. sto le walki ng five and a ll ow ln~ six hil s
second and he and .Jones scored as Meigs jumped on Logan
on Parker's 2-out single to righ t. pllchrr Scott Bunt hoff for II runs
The Reds upp&lt;'d 1heir lead to on 12 hils . Caldwrll l&lt;'d off the
3-1 In the fourth when Dt:Jz first with a slngll' to left adwalked . stoll' second - lh&lt;• first
vanced to second on a sto lrn base
stolen ba se of lh&lt;' ; &lt;'ur fo• the and lo third on a balk . Mike
and Bartrum r~achNI serond on a
slow running catchN scored on Concepcion' s slnFlc• off passed ball after a sw inging third
short stop And• cs Thomas ' glove. strlkP and bol~ runners scored on
Atlanta go! a run in th e first
Rob Young 's ba se knock . Thr
wh&lt;•n Dlon .James sl ngl&lt;•d. raced
loca ls addrd onr In the srcond as
to th1rd on first ba seman F.sas- Mark Jrnkln s wound up at third
kv' s throwing en·or on K r n on a base hit and two passC'd
ObNkfell 's ground b~ll . and balls . r idding home on Jocv
' scored on Cerald P&lt;:'rry 's ground Snydrr's, single. Logan must
out
have thought the sky wa s fallin g
Cl nci nnall stole srv!'n bases In In thr third !ramP as Bartrum
the fir st four Innings and up- doublrd Ia left and advanced on
pea~ ed to be closing m on the
Brent Blssrll 's sacrifice . Rob
modern tsln c&lt;' l!lil01 National
Young was hit bv a pltc·h thrn soh'
Lrague rrcord of 11 HowPwr,
the Reds didn ' t stra l anot her
base lhr r!'St of the ~a me
Cardinals 3, l'uhs 2
AI St. Louis . Danny Cox and
Todd Worrell romblnrd on a
five-hitter In 11M!- degree tcmp&lt;'ratures to help the Cardi nals
complete a thrPe-game sweep of
Chicago.

1 ::!1 . IIi,\ pIll
Tlto ..llll) ',. ( iullll"'

111 f nurt St

Thf" O&lt;tiiV SrntlnC'I . Ill

II

.li , 1110 Ill' ,

fktlllmuro•lll ~· ·· r nrll. 1111111.

l nl !l ml D,lll\ Pr ~~ A111i(l( l.1tlon ,tnd 1h"
flh to Nf'\\ :-p.tprt' A!II{OC'Ia11nn. N.11h•n.tl

PO~'TMA~F.R :

.,

~I) . ~ · ~ .i.tlll

MI'Otl}{'r: l'nltf'd p,r;:: .. ln t('rn ,lllon.ll .

to

I~&gt;M

li\1

'

,\l•tnfl;ll ' ~ (i:IUlt •o.
n.. trnll !Tt•rro•ll I til nl 'rurunln Ill••\

m1•rm. Ohln, b,\ lht • Ohln \".tilt •\ Pub
lls hlnJ! fomp.tnv Multlmc'llla l nt •.
Pnm1• '' Ohio .&amp;57fi~t Ph 9!fJ.2 1!itl ~

Nt•~o~.•

:a

1.1 .1.1

T•'"'" :t. nuklm•d I

P uhlishNI C"H'rv :tl!f•lnnon . Mn n1l.t\

Nf'\1.' York

~

llltklunlilll . Tn11"11

( l l S~ J.l~!tt;O )
A 01\ l!&gt;ilon ,I 'Multlmrdlu, ln4·

('S

Salltnla.\ •..
lloiruM li. Uo.,.lun I

3:\!J

l'l••\ol.lltd6 l"o•illlt.• l
l'iltndll,\ ·., Kl'"LIII~
:\lih\nnk•~ It,~''" \urk I
IJol'lruii !, llii'!Oiun I
llalllr unn II. Tnrotnlll :\
~IIIIIH~IIo:t li, I IIINllll .1
I :tlllornlll 1~. Kiln'"""' I 'll\ U
S. ulth I, f ,,., o•laad I. Ill lnninlt"

,.,.,..,,l:o ·.. ,..,n••"'

Nl'w s.p.tp!'r Su

. :n .ltil -

~I

St•v. rurk I ,

I

as.s posl,tfH' p:llrl

li 1 J

l 'urun\u II. 1\alllmun• 1
I ulllurnlll I Knn~lb f II\ II

The Daily Sentinel

cnnd
Ohh

.llil

1 hh ·•~:nli , :\1 lnnt'!&lt;nl.t1

IH

l'hll uoh•ljohl .o al t hh•lll(l!
' ' 11 \ urli &lt;LI \lnMro •:al. nl,;hl
l 'n c.. hurl!'h ,lll'i4 . I ~Nii., ni(IM
S:tn Fr.ano ho u :II ,\lhtnla. niRhl
I In• han 1tl .tl llnn,.un, riiJChl
I ~ ~'&gt; \n~t•i•"' .at San iJI • ~~~. nh:hl

F'll&lt;la' .

.~1

~llnnt"'lll

·"

~

1I \l .ollw• .... , ), II .Il l'·"'·

lht nuch

•_!'!

\\t"ol

~ · !IIIII ·

Muntl,t\ ·., {0.11111'"
1'1tlhul••ljtlllu (ltnllill 1- "•1 11 lhl oaa:u
t M .ttltlu ~ I ~I. l: fllp.m .
~~ 11 \ 'uri. tH'""It•n ·~til al Mnnln•al
.t \lou1huv II-II). I! !l 11 111
l 1111 .. hurJ:"h lllnnna I II ltl :oil ' ""''~

'

rl••,•·ln 1l

f. tllln rnl
1'• , ,~..
I hit Ultll

1111~

I !Ito inn.., I il•ul li&lt; li"""
; ,1), II :\,i p 111 ,

;c .U , 11! I'!

Rt~IUI

•• m '
.
~·

~ l.uu" '\, l'hlo ·lll(u '!
I ln•lnn.Ui I \llllnln :1
S1an Uh 11:" I Sa11 t• rnnd~t" I
ll••u..Cnn I, l.m• t \n~tt•k~ I

~ ·nil

·u

RaHimnr

Ill I!

nrk i l'llh.hurr;h :1
l'hllwidllhhlll Mnnlrt•al fi

I

'I'! '!j :m M'·
:!It
. I~·! I ! ·

11 1
~ •

l 0 hll a~Mrohla:;

~.nd.,\

~

.11 ~ . :i~:i
.tu .tt 111.1

~~ l.uuls 9, l'hl~ ~~~ 1
s,ua lll o•l(" II, San t rand'""'!
lint lnna&amp;ll \ll;~nlu !
l'llbhur.::la I No•• Ynr• .1

\na:;a•h•.. ;,

1

!ti .....,.!

j •!

Kan"" It~

!'\allll'4u,.\ ·., Ito .... 11,.

I~•"

1.\11 . :~Mi

:t! ::11

IH

Uunlrt tl ;

t.·~

Hnkh~~t1l

"'" ""
" ""

llnu~un

r;

:\III~ IUIIW
l~ ·lrolt

t:.li'd

I. I'd . ~~~~

"

'f!l '!1

re2ardless of where he plays ·
Concepcion has played all fo ur
infield pos ition s this season .
" I lik&lt;' lo pla y no matter who• r
the&gt;· put me ," sa1d Concepcion.
"I enjoy II every time I grl oul
th ere. I kno~&lt; my role this ye'"
was to be a ut11tty player. but
P~le Rose know s l want lo play as
much as I ca n."
Rob Murphy , ~ 2, thP third of
fo u1· Cincinnati pitc hers. worked
a pr1 feel ei!(hth inning to gPilhP
w in John F1anco pitched lh(•
ninth inning for his l :lth save

"Resides. I don 't feel like I'm
through with the rest of these
guys yet."
Snead. who becomes eligible
for the Sen lors when he turns 50
In a little more than lour years.
erased someofhlsowndoubt that
he still can play with the younger
set by defeat lng Seve Ballesteros
Sunday In a playofl for the
$600,000 ManufacJurers Haaover
Westchester Classic.
In something less than spectacular fashion, Snead earned his
first victory In six years, and the
eighth of his career, wllh paron
lhe lint sudden-death hole. the
par-4 lOth.
Ballesteros, a runner-up lor

a

J

By Jim Soulsby
Upping 1heir season record to 9
wins against 5 losses. the Meigs
Legion hardballers downed the
Logan nine 4 to 3 and II to 4 on
Saturday and came back on
Sunday to swe&lt;'p Wrllslon 7-5 and
4 zip
Three consecutive bunt sinl(les
by Dave Amburgey , J&lt;'ff Ca ld
well and Scott Miller followed by
.Jeff Jolinson's single and Brent
Bissell 's base on &lt;:'rrors gave
Me1gs four runs In the top of thr
sixth frame that enabled them to
post a come from behind wm OVI'r
Logan in Saturday's opener For
the first five Innings Chris
Malhenv had held the local lads
hitless allowing only two baserunners as Kyle Davis reached
on a third strike passed ball and
Brian Freeman dr&lt;'W a wa lk.
Logan was up 2 to 0 by virtue of
J Brown's single. a base on an
error and two walks In the second
and a walk, lwo passed balls and
another Meigs error In lh&lt;'
fourth . The l osers plated one
more score In their seven th again
on a Meigs mi scue and Brown' s
second hit of tho game.
For Meigs , Dave Amburgey
had an excellent dav on the
mound sca llerl ng three hils.
setli n~t dow n 13 batters via the
strikeout route whllr Iss uing 5

i!

U :,Uil •:

·~-

• Turulllu
St•.,., \urk.

H .~ t

No clear policy in Persian gulf George McGovern
Thr Reagan admin istration 's
decision to use American naval
vessels to escort Kuwaiti oil
tankers In th e Persian Gulf
point s to at least threr weaknesses In recent American
foreign policy
First. lhr decision to offer this
servlc&lt;' to the Kuwaitis. who arr
allied wllh Iraq . was made by
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger with the presiden t' s
approval on March 7. apparently
to head off a movr by Kuw ait to
secure na va l escort prot ection
from the Soviet Un ion
How many times In the l ast •10
years have our policy m aker s
assumed that anylhlng we do
that excl ud es the Russia ns must
be good for us ? This kind of
knee -jerk anii -Russlan reaction
does not mean the resulting
operations will be sound policy
for United States
One wonders If there was any
clear Indication that the Soviets
were anxious to risk their ships In
the Persian Gulf, where they
might meet the same fate as the
USS Stark - nexl time at the
hands of the Iranians.
True, the Russians have loaned
a few of their tankers to Kuwait ,
but It would be Interesting to
learn whether the Soviets think
we did them a disservice and
ourselves a favor ln .sendlng our
ships Into the Iraqi-Iranian war
zone Instead of theirs . Anticommunism or anti -Sovietism Is
an Increasingly uncertain basis
on which to construct U.S foreign
policy.
The second il&gt;eakness In the
new Persian Gulf operation Is
that It was decided upon before
any plan was deveiQped for

Sunday's chlllDpionshlp victory over the Boston
Celtics. I UP I)
'

Concepcion leads Reds p·ast
Braves 4-3; Hike West lead

William Rusher
The scandal schtick makers -------------------tary of Slate Elliott Abrams can
spend several whole days on the
stand , brilliantl y defending their
conduct agaln slthe worst that a
score of host tie congressmen can
do. and you and I will read or see
none of It But let ju st one
question elic it a rueful or apologelic or ambiguous response ano
thatlO -second excerpt Is the one
we'll see on lh&lt;' evening news,
devoid of its context and served
up with that patented Anchorman 's Smirk
for example. the media have
all but worn themselves out
reminding us that the Boland
Amendment, during one of its
several brief transit s across the
scene. forbade the CIA and the
Pentagon, or any ot her U S.
agency "Involved In Intelligence
actlvltfes" to support th e mil itary op&lt;:'ralions of the Nicaraguan contras. Since vanous staff
members of the Nallonal SecurIty Council did g1ve the contra s
useful Information at key moments. much depend s on whelher
the NSC Is an agency "involved
in Intelligence actlvllles" or is
simply a part of the pre sident's

•

Boston was seeking to be the
first team to rally from a 3-1
deficit m the finals. Instead It ;
became the 18th consecutive ;
•learn, smcc I he 1968-69 Celtlcs, to
fal l to repeat as til lists.
Lak crs Coac h Pal Riley explain ed that in thP f1r s1half "We
wanted 11 so much. we we1 e
pla ymg bevond ourselves. Then
we 1elaxed and settled down and
plavcd out sty le of ball"
Boston, whlrh had played
pai1Pnl half-court basketball In
the fit sl half, became hurried In
Its shot selectiOn and hll only 11 ot
:m shot s in the second half,
sco1 mg only 37 points after
Int er miss ion Their misses gave
lite· Lakrrs lht• opportunity to
1 un .
" The•;· c&lt;~plt &lt;11ized on everylh mg, · · sa1d Dennis ,Johnson, who
Jrd lhP('el liCS \\ ifh ,1 SNISOn-hJgh
:1 1 pOIIII S.

1

Meigs Legion tops Logan, Wellston

Bush has been content to let
President Reagan take It on the
chin for the scanda l , but the vice
president has a cred ibility pro\JIem about his own Involvement.
He either doesn't remember
certain th ings, or recalls them
far more favorably to himself
than others do.
For example, on Dec. 29, Bush
was disingenuous at best or
untruthful at worst In an Interview with the Tower Commission's general counsel. W. Clark
McFadden II.

The congressional investi ga tion Into the Iran/ contra affair
has now reached the int er mi ssion preceding Its th ird and final
act. That, of course, will fea ture
the long -awalled and artfully
delayed appearance of the two
star wllnes ses. Lt. Col. Oliver
North and Adm . John Poindexter, who could have answered all .
!he key questions In the case In a
single week of testimony back In
January .
In one way , the very Indifference of the American public to
the whole extravaganza has
played into the hands ol li s
Impresarios. Since almost Illerally nobody Is watching !he
entire proceedings (as millions
watched th e Army-McCarthy
hearing In 1954. or the Watergat e
hearings 20 years later\, the
print and electronic media have
largely been able to suppress the
disagreeable portions and feed
us tidbits carefully chosen to
leave p•eclsely the Impression
they want lo leave.
General Richard Secord or
former NSC Director Robert
McFarl ane or Assistant Serre-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
•

Monday, June 15, 1987

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

the third time In six American
appearances this year. was In
trouble from l he start on the
playoff hole. S!'ndlng his drive
behind a pine tree on the right
and then striking a lrPe branch
with his club on his second shol

'

seco nd as Scott Miller's s in~!~
plated Barlrum Youn g and
MIIIPI' both scored on wild
pitches . Mark Jenkins walked, as
did Joev Sn;•dN who promptl)'
stole second and third as Jenkin s
crosso•d the plate. Jrt! Ca lctwoll's
base rap lo center plated Snyd&lt;•r
Logan got a run In the fourth on
a ba s&lt;' on ball s and a di' PP si ngle
bv Mathen y, two morr In tho fifth
on a ba sf' on an &lt;' l'l'or. u slngl(' bv
Shawn Haning, a walk foll owed
by another Malhenv hit.
A Ire&lt;' pass, stolen bdse .md
Rick Rucker's hit plal!'d l.ng;m's
final run in fhf' srvrn th fr ,lmP
Jory Snyder's ba s!' hit. Ca l&lt;lwPII's triple•, Jetf McF:hov ·s
double and Jeff Durst 's si ng le
gave Meigs !hell· fi na l thrP&lt;'
lalll!'s.
Line score:
120 1- 4 6
Logan .. .. .... ....
Mt'lgs .. ..... 215 030 --11 12 :1
Ba llorles Sroll Bunt hoff 1LP 1
&amp; Chris Wolfe. Jeff Ca ldwell
i WPi &amp; Rob You ng/ Kyl&lt;' Duvls.

ooo

n

In Sunda y's opener against
Wt'll ston. Meigs jumped ou t 10 a
3-0 first Inning lr.td as R1 la n
Durst walkNI. Mlkr Bart rum hi t
to ll'ft and Brent Blsspll rlpp&lt;'d a
doubl &lt;' scor i ng Durst. Roh Youn g
hit bark to th r mou nd and
1eached first as lh&lt;• ball boum·pd
high Int o lh&lt;' a11· wllh Bar11·um
and Bissell s&lt;·orl ng. Wel lston
picked up an uncar n!'r! run In Ill&lt;'
second as did Meigs . Ba sr r"J"
by Sco11 Scharfanhe1·ger. Rob
Kuhn . .Jim Lanll. nn&lt;l Mark l.vlc.
wfrh a walk ~a ndwlrh f:\d bc11Wf'Cn .
lei Wellston knot lhP score al 4.
Meigs pi.JII'&lt;l a run In their thi rd
when Jdf John so n n 'Hrhed nn H
flrid&lt;'r 's cholee an&lt;! r&gt;onnlr
BPckrr singled him hOme and
another In the fifth when Rrla n
F'rPt'mHn walkC'tl, Oul'sl sntri ·
fired him to secon d and Bissell
drove him hom&lt;' with 11 hit to
C(:)n lrr.

In 1ho slxt h fru ml' , DursiiNI off
with a double. took third on a wild
pitch and rociC" hom£" on :~no1h ('r
Rlssrll hit to lt•ft. Although
Bartrum gol lnln a hoi&lt;' In !he·
sixth giving up ' ' hit ;tnd lwn
ron.srcullve trcrbl&lt;•s. h&lt;• put nul
lhC' fin• us 1hr• \(•ad runnl'l' wu~
cui down al lh(• pial&lt;· und h&lt;'
fanned the nexl 10 balll'r S.
Wellston J&gt;lckrd Ul&gt; their final
scon'. an u ncu rnl'd run . l n I hro
sf'vf'nlh o n ~-~ walk, pt~ssf1d hall.
wild pll h Hnd ~ M&lt;· l~s &lt;•tTnr.
Rarlrum rPmrd••d 11 slrlkrnul &lt;

Orioles snap losing streak

By I&gt;AVID AVITARILE
Ul'l Sports Writer
T he Toronto Blur .lays, who
bPal Seal lie, Ralllmore and Nrw
York dur lng an 11 -ga mc winning
st reak, fulled aJ(ul nsllheOrloles'
ora nge uniforms
" Tht• orangc uniform s'~ Maybe
It was the difference," sai d
Baltimore right fielder .Jim
Dwyer. whosr pinch-hit home
run In 1he el g hi h InnIng Sunday
helped lift the Orioles to an 8-5
v ictory over th&lt;' American
League Eas t-leadi ng Blue .Jays
and snap the orioles·
losi ng streak.

wgame

F:lsewhrre.DetrounrppedBos
ton 2-1, Milwauk e&lt;' beat New
York 6-4. California bombed
Kansas City 12-0. Mlnncspta beat
Chicago 6-.1, Seallle nipped
Cleveland 4-3 In 10 Innings and

" 1 felt , k!nd of lu cky on the'
playo ff hole when I drew No. 2 rto
hit second )," said Snead , who
will not be playing in next week's T&lt;·xas beat Oakland 5-l.
Tiger. 2, Red Sox I
U.S. Open. "I played that hole all
week by la y ing up and hitting to
At Detroit, Mike Heath si ngled
Jhe bottom of the hill. I felt If he hom earunlntheelghlhlnnlngto
hit a good drive, then!'~ have lo , snap a 1·1 d~adlock and Jack
take out the driver and hit 11 as Morris recorded his eighth
stral~ ht victory to lead Detroit
·hard as I could.

(AIRIER 'NEEDED
FOR· SYRACUSE
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
I

Lmc- seon'
Wells ton . . .. 0!3 000 1-5 6 0 '
Mei gs . . . . . . :nJ 101 --7 9 2
Ball&lt;· •lr s: Hammond. Kuhn
1I.P \. Ab r.t ms &amp; Abr&gt;.~ms/Henry.
Mik e Ban rum t WPl &amp; Kylr
Davi~; .

Rrenl BISsell nn I he mound for
M&lt;' igs wont he nlghlrap 5 zip on a, .
fine lwn hll shul oul while allow- ,
l ng onl y four walk s Wllh one out
In the Wellston seventh. Andy 1
Cra ham hit sharp lv to Dave . ,
Amburgey ill short who knocked
the ball down bul cou ld not make
tit&lt;· throw In lime In get the
r unner at fit st. Abrams fanned
and plnehhltiPr Kevin Hellman.
1uppr&lt;l a single to right fl&lt;:'ld.
Gt·altam il llPmpl r d 10 go to third
but 'i'!'n )' Fl ~l d' s "on lh~ monf'~'' ' th row cut him dow n 10 end
lhr ga mP. Bissell had plenty of
support !rom hi s tcummatt•s both
In lh ~ field ancl ul the plate.
Donn!&lt;• BI'OkPr opened tho
S&lt; ' o rln ~ In the seco nd when ht'
slammed " roundtrlpper. Three

..

~~~-~~~~~~~~"~n~ ~;!~~1~~~~lhP homr !Pam two In JhC'
third . Th('n In the flflh a walk to
C'aldwrll , who stole st•t·ond, followed bv Mark .Jenkins center·
field double and Rob Young's
b'"" un &lt;' l'l'ors pia kd M!'lgs !Ina I
S&lt;'O res . Dave Amburgey had the
sixth M eigs hi!.
g&lt;-~Vt"

I.i m· scor(':
Wellston ....... .0&lt;10 1\(M\ 1\-0 2 1,
Meigs ............ 012 02n --5 H 0 .·
Bat!&lt;·• Irs : Andy Gra ham (LPl
&amp; .lohn Waug h. Brent Bissell
iWPI &amp; ,J&lt;'ff McElroy.
Thl' Wl'Pk&lt;•n&lt;i SW!" ' P ha s Mrl~ s ,
at 4 and 2 In lhl' newly for med_- .
J·: l ~ hlh Di stri ct League anti
marked lh&lt;'lr &lt;'i~ht consecullw ,
win ~ lnl'e rl• oppl ng one at Glaus-' . •
ter . Coach Jack Wr lker had high,
pralst' ror his lf'ams mark(•d ,
improvt' ml'nl aHf'r a !&lt;;\ow F;lQrt : ' •
at the s&lt;•aso n's beJ&lt;Innlng.
M&lt;· l~s host s Chllllco thr In a
Thursduv rv&lt;•nlng contest begin·
ning at 6: oop.m .

-440·-

&amp;lt IACt&lt;SON

BARiiAI N IIATI!EES SAl /SUII I WED
ALL SEATS 12.50
AOHISS tON [i[ RY TUESDAY 12 50

L

JUNI '2 tllru ,.1
fRl~T thru THU RSDA': ~

ov&lt;'r Roston
llr1•W&lt;'~'&lt; 6, Yank•·•·• 4
AI Nrw York. Bill S&lt;· h rO&lt;~l er
went 4 for 4, Including a two- run
hom&lt;'r In t'hc ninth Inn ing.
hPJ ping MilwaukC'&lt;'
AI Arlington . Texa s, ( 'har llo
Hough pll ched " 1ht'l'C·hlll&lt;•r and
Pt•tc O' llrl&lt;' n clubbed a two-run
homer In the fl~Ntinnlng to !~ad
TPxas ovN thr Oakland.

.,

,...:=.:.::..::.:::.::...::::...:::::::.:::.:::::.:...___J...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-;•' ' ••~

JOHN A WADE1 MD
n(
• • I •
•

.

•~,,

··

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"Wf HAVE HEAR/Nit11 AffJt1"
.)
CALl (614) 992-21 04
(304) 675-1244

TUE$PAV NIQHT SPECIAL
COIBINAliON DINNER ONLY
DINING ROO II ONLY
Serwd wilh wllipped potatoes, chicken c•avy,
cole slaw hot roll , butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes excepl beverage with addi-

FOR JUST

$3.25

~~~------------------·

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEJOY, OH.

Fried Chicken

•

,- ,
' I'

�Page-4· The Daily Sentinel

...--~Local

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend; s ix Saturday and four Su nday.
Sa turda:&gt; a t 4:07a.m ., Pomeroy to an auto accident on Star e
Route 681 for Jane Slat er who was not tra nsported : Pomeroy at
10:29 a.m. to the Maples Apts . for Ailsa WarnPr to Veterans
Memori a l Hospi tal; Tuppers Plains a t 6:04 p.m . to Success
Road for Ada Ba ker who was dead on arrival: Racine at 6:04
p.m. to Front St. for Brian Justis to Vetera ns Mem or ia l
Hos pit a l: Syracuse at 10: 42 p.m toThlrd St. for Leo nard Bass to
Veterans Memorial Hos pit al: Racine at 11 :20 p.m. treated
Bria n Hun t at !he scene of a n auto accident at Apple Grove.
Su nday at 12:36 p.m .. Tuppers Plains to Success Road for
Marg ie Benedum to St . Joseph' s Hospital: Tuppers Plains at
8: 07 p.m . to Reedsv ille for Sue Rockhold to Ca mden·Ciark
Memorial Hospit al: Middleport at 9:08p. m . to Ru tland St . for
Pauline Russell : Lifefllght made an on -scene landing and at
9:51 p. m. transported Russell to Gra nt Hos pit al in Col umbu s:
Syracusf' at Y: 3:! p.m: to Min ersville for Ed na Edwards to
V&lt;&gt;terans Memoria l Hosp it a l.

Court action sought
An act Jon by David Hend r icks agai nst Mike Eb lin . doing
busi ness as M. &amp; .J . Garage, has been tra ns fer red from Meigs
Cou nty Comm on Pleas Court ro Go Ili a Count y Common P leos
Cou rt .
A mot ion for a nrw tria 1from th e defcnden t in the case of Anna
D. Clonc h, a lso known as Ann a D. Johnson . against .John S.
Thomas, has been denied by the cour1.
Th e cases of Della L. Wolfe agaslnt S herry L. Holtz. and
Dcldra Kay Cross agai nst Amos Boone Cross .Jr., have been
dismissed.

Woman taken to Grant Ho.~pital
Pauli ne Russell , 72, Midd leport , was ta ken to Grant Hos pit al
In Columbu s at approx im a te ly 9 : ~, 1 p. m. Sunday nig ht,
following an apparent se lf·infliet ed gun shot wound to the hea d,
accordi ng to the Middleport Pollee Department . AI HI a .m .
Monday, Mrs. Russell wa s listed In poor condition In the
Int ensive co re unit at Grant Hospit al.

.4.

',."' I

'

'
f'

"'·

: •,
.~

Patrol probes Sunday accident
In Sutton Township Sundo y, at 1;: 45 a. m ., Steven Randolph ,
2R, of Racine . was cit ed for failu re to co ntrol, acco rding to the
Ga llla·Me lgs Pos t of the State Hi ghwa y Patrol.
Randolph was tra veling wes t on Ohio 124 when his car wen t off
the right s ide of th e roa d a nd hit a sign.

Seven die on Ohio highways
By United PresH lnt ernallonal
At least seven people, includ·
lng three motorcyclis ts, wcrr
klllrd In traffic accident s around
the Buckeye State this weekend,
a spokes woman for the Ohio
,Highway Patro l sa id today .
At least two Ohioans died In
wPPkend acc ident s In other
s tat es, offi cia ls sai d.
Andy Wlldf'rmuth of flay Vii·
Jagr was kill ed when the ve hicle
in which he was ridi ng missed a
curve nor th of Altamont·. Tenn .,
a nd hit two t rcrs .
Dri'W A. Lauderllaugh , 21.
Utica. di ed when his motorcyc le
c rashed Into a utility pole In
Louisv ille, Ky.
Killed In Ohio wrr!'
Friday night
Warren: Fra ncis Lipka . :&gt;4,
Youngstown, In a tw o·car cras h
on Ohio 7 In Trumbull Count )'.

I

Rtl\mond E. Whale\'. \II. of
40i4~· Burlingham Road. ShadP.
dlf'd Sunday a t Grant Hosp it a l in
Columbu s follow ing an rx tl'nded
Illness.
Born .J uly 1i. 1R9~ In flur ·
llngham, hr was a son of Frank
Ma.\'wood a nd Cora Bar nhill
Whal r)'. H ~ was a r~tlrr'CI schoo l
trac hrr of 41 yrars, a nd was
a fflll at l'&lt;i wit h Hemlock Gro\'r
Chr istian Church. H~ II' as a U.S.
'Arm)' vr.ll•ra n of Wor ld War I,
hav in g sNvC'd In thr medical
corps. and a mPmber of Drew
Wrbstrr Post :1~1 of the ,\mrrlra n
i.C'glon. He was a formN
m cmbrr

or

Hf'mlock

Crovl'

Gra nge and during till' 1 9r~rs.
was a scout ma s ter for the Rock
Sp rin gs bov s.·ou ts.
Su r\'lvo rs Include hIs II' ifr.
Dorot h)· Winebrenner What~)' of
Shade: a daughter . Ph)·iiis
Shl r•lds of Broohi ltr. Fla. : two
ct a ughtl'rS and so ns·ln·taw . Mu ·
rid and Wa ll arc Rradfonl of
' Coo lv ille and 1':1·a and .Joseph
Nu nnall.1 at· Plrkrringtnn: onr
son a nd daught er·ln·law, Kei th
a nd Estrell a Whal e)· of Indoor ·
s la: 10 gra ndchildren a nd 1:1
gr&lt;'al gran dr hlidren.
ll r ll'aS prccrdrd In cll'ath b.l '
his parents, his firs t wlfr. Ada
Pie rre. In 19:17, a n infant brothr•r
a nd one sis ter.
Srrvlces will ix' Thursda)·. :1
p.m. a t Ewi ng Funeral Homr
with Hr'\', Ja m es QulscnbetT)'
offi cia ting. Bur ial will bP In
Cher ry Ridg&lt;' Crmrter)'. Calling
hours will be 2 to ~ and i to 9 on
Wrdnesda)'.

P!'arley Wl'aver. i7, Ga llipolis, died Sa turday e"enlng In
Pl!'asant Valley Hospit al
following a sudden Illness.
, Born June 2. 1910. at Grimms
Landing. he was th!' son of the
late Obed Weaver and Eva
Werner Weaver.
He was retired from th~ Mason
Furniture Factory, Point
Pleasant.
Surviving arl' his wife, The lma
Rei! mire Weaver; one daughter,
Jacqueline Sett le, Charleston;
·· one son, Thomas Lee Weaver.

•

Saturday
Painrsvllir: Micha el D. Willi ~
ams , 29, Madi son. whr n his
motorcycle struck a tree alo ng
Ohio :.2R in Lakr Count y.
Franklin : Kimber ly S. Wells,
24. Ca rlis le. In a one-ca r acc ident
on a Franklin cit y street.
Cleve la nd : Shelmalne D. Duff,
22. Lot hia n, Md .. In a one· vehic le
accident on the Ohio Turnpike in
Cuyahoga C.ounty .
Su nday
St r~rtsbo r o : Sa lly ,J. Dos tal.
49. In a motorcyclr acci dent on
Ohio 14 In the cit y of Strf'Ctsboro.
Carrollt on: Gregory S. Hess,
H , BrewstN, motorcyc li st
s truck by a n aut omobile on Ohio
Hi4 In Carro ll Count y.
Columbus: Clrmrn t C. Kno·
wlcs. 22. Co lumbu s. killrd in a
onr ·car acc ident on a ci t.1· street
in Col umbu s:

POINT PLEASANT - A man
and a woman a llegedly stole
three video cassette recorders
from Hecks on Second Avenue In
Point Pleasa nt at about 6:30p .m.
Friday and, while fl eeing, caused
an acci dent that injured a Jack·
son. Ohio woman and stole a ci t)·
pollee cruiser .. according to a
spokesperson for the Point Plra·
san! Pollee Department.
While the suspects remain at
large, the c ru iser has been
recovered. pol ice say.
T he suspects, driving a 197R
Chevrolet Cam ar a, appa rently
pulled onto Rout e 2 after leavi ng
Heck's parking lot a nd s truck a
1986 Ford Bronco driven by
Charlene K. Fultz, which flipped
over ont o it s top. accordin g to the
spokesperson .
Fultz was taken to Pleasa nt
Valley Hos pita l b)' the Point
Pleasa nt Emergency Squad a nd

Weather
South Central Ohio
Today, mos tly sunny a nd hot.
Hig h In the lower 90s. Winds light
a nd variable. Cha nce of rain 20
percent.
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of thunderstorms.
Low near 70. Winds light north·
er ly. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday, partly sunny. High in
the upper 80s. Chance of rain 20
per cent.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday with a cha ner
of thunders torms Thursda y a nd
Friday. Highs throughout the
period will range from the 80s to
near 90 with a low in the 60s.

flancroft : li\'l' step~ daughters.
.Julia Long. Ga lli po lis: Anna
Baird . .Jackson: Ka th)· Stewart,
l{ut land : Sue Pt•arson. Poi nt
Pi (•asan r: a nd Dianna Halle.v.
c;all lpolls: six s tep -sons, Howard
Elliott . Plains; Henry and Her·
man F: lllott. Point Pleasant :
l·ll'l'bet't E lli ot t, Rutla nd ,: Barry
El liott. ,\ drlan, Mic h.: and Ha ·
!'Old Elliott. Caylord, Mich .: four
s isters. Gracr Wolfe, Point Plea·
sant, Virgie Herdman, Point
Pl easa nt , Prg~')l Hedges . Col um ·
bu s. a nd Sy l\' 1" AlllndN, Buf·
lalo; three gra nd children. onr
great · gra nd c hild . :10 ,q ep ·
gra ndc hildren. r ight step-grea t
gra ndc hildren.
HP was prcce1lrd in dear h b)' a
brother. Wlnfrf'd Wravcr. a nd
thre&lt;' gra ndchlldrrn .
Srr\'lccs wi ll ix' Tursda)' ar
1::111 p.m. a t Wll roxl'n Funen1l
Hom&lt;' with Don Brow n offlclat ·
In~ . Burial 11'111 follow in Forest
Hills CPmf'IPr)', Lrtart .
Frirnds rna)· call at the funeral
homr tr·om i to 9 p.m. toda)·.

wa ... lrPO:jtf'd CJ nd t"f'IP&lt;.i sftd. ae ·

cording t o a hospital
spokrsp&lt;'rson.
Follow ing th&lt;' accid&lt;·nt. thr
SUSPf'C! S allrgf'dl)' di'O\'C t 0 I hr
Shadl e BrldgP whri·o th&lt;'ir \'Phi ~
cle sta lled and bl&lt;·ll' a 1ire.
according to th~ policr spr&gt;krs ·
person. The sus pects got ou t of
the Cam ara and began wa lking
over the bridge toward Hendcr ·
son, the spokesperson sai d.
Officer P. E. Watt erson . br~
lievlng the Cam ara may have
been Involved in the accident,
stopped the suspects. confirmed
the car belonged to ont' of them .
and asked both to sit in the
cruiser.

Acting on a tip from a h.n ·
tander. Watterson looked O\'er

Met&gt;ting st'l Thu!'!iday
Orange Towns hip Trustees will
hol.d a special mee ting on dust
control Thursday. 7: 30 p.m .. at
the flrehous&lt;' in Tuppers Plains.
Everyone is urged to attend .

Lihrary program
A program on " i t's O.K. to Say

No" wi ll be present ed W&lt;'dnes·
day. 2 p.m .. at the Pomero)·
Library.

CLEVELAND tUPII - Wed ~
n es d ~y·s Superlotto jackpot will
be worth $6 million because
Saturda)' night' s dra win g pro~
duce no major winner.
Ohio Lott ery officials said the)·
foun d no ticket s with all s ix
numbers- 6, 22, 23, 28, 37 a nd 39.
The 9~ t lcket s that had five
numbers are eac h work $1 ,000.
Another 4,624 tickets with four of
the numbers are ra ch wort h $84.
Lottery offi c ia ls said sa les for
the drawing were $3.376,239.

t hr bridgr l'aillnc ont o first Strrt
and obsrn·f'd t hrN• boxes. later
ronfir'med .to contain VCRs a nd
takr ·n· to thr polirr sta tion us
rvldcnl'r. according ro thr
spokpspf'rson .
A wrrckrr arf'i\'PO 10 r f'mO\'C'

the Camara . which was bloc king
traffic. and Wat r&lt;'rson lrft rhr
cru i,rr to d.irrrt tnilfic oriJunc,i
thl' IITCcker. accol'ding to thr
, pokr, pr rson. At that time. thr
~ U S JX'C"-

dro,,r off in th(l cruise r .

Churc-h meeting

sPI

Group II of the Presb~· tl'rian
Church of Midd leport will meet
'Tuesday . i :30 p.m. , at thr home
of Mrs .· Ca r l Hor kr1· Co-hostrss
will be Mrs Tom Rue . Book
stud\' and devol io ns wi II be
directed by Mrs . Eddie Burkett
and Mrs. Francis And erson,
respect lvely .

Marriage li censes ha ve been
issued in Mrigs Coun t)· Probate
Court to Gregor\' Joh n Mic har l.
20. S)Tacuse. and Pamela Lvnn
.Joh nson. 19. Hacine: Tro.1· Eu·
genr Warrl. n Po rt lan d. and
Aimee Sur Hubbard . 17,
Por tlancl.

RPvival slatl'd
A reviva l at Da nvil lt' Holin ess
Church. on Sta te Route 32!i, will
start Thur sday a nd cont inue
through .June 28 wit h Rev . .John
White. Services will be 7: :!0
nightly and featu re specia l sin g·
ing. E'&lt;'ryonr welcome.

Trnt rrusadl' heginl"

Ohio Jackpot now
worth $6 million

A Word of Li fe Ministri es' tent
crusade is underway through
June 30, 7 p.m. nightly, on Starr
Rout e 681 west or Daril' in.
E veryone welcome.

Filing for di vorces in Meigs
Count\' Common Picas Court arr
Paul Daniel Hens ley . Long Bot·
tom . from Brtt)· Lo u Hensll'y,
Long Bottom: Mar ion E . Snider .
Racine. from Patricia A. Snider.
Columbu s: Diane Caruso. also
known as Diane Su llivan . Ra ·
r inr . from Frank R. Caruso.
Sou th Plai nfie ld. N ..1.
Judith Lynn Gratr has ber n
g1anted a di\'Orcr fr om Ronald
Eugrnr Gr CJIC' and

ha s hrr n

restorNI b)' thr court ro hrr
former name Mora .

ihr spokt-spNson sa irl.
The cruiser was rr·cn\·rn'&lt;i
Ja iN Frida)' ni ght by thrGallipo.
lis Polier Drpart mrn t on Summerset Drive in GallipOJi,. ac·
rording to the spr&gt;krsperson.
Police describe the suspPe ts.
who are. still at large. as a man
and woma n. both fl lack, ta ll and
slim. according to the spokes per·
so n. Thr man is further dl's·
cribt&gt;d as bei ng fi' 1" tall a nd
weighing abo ut 170 ,pounds , accordi ng to thr spokesperson. The
coupl e was accompanied by a
child. believed to be about
:1-vcars-old , the spokesperson
added.
Thr Ca m ara has ix'en confis·
catf'd b.v thr. police department.
arro rding ro lh&lt;' spokespe!·son.

T Pnl revh·al

st'l

A miracle dellverencr tent
revival. at the Meigs Count)·
fai rgrounds. will ,begin Friday
a nd continu e through June 27
wit h Evangelis t Charles Spence
of Rainelle, W.Va . Services will
be 7: :10 nightly . Evl'ryone
H·r lromP.

'Trinity Chu rc h of Pomeroy will
have an icr cream social Thurs·
day and Fridav from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m . each da)·. Sa ndwiches of
slopp)' joes , ha m and hot dogs
wil l be avail a ble along with
potato salad. cole slaw, baked
beans. chi cken a nd noodles,
dinner roll, desser ts . Homemad e
ice crea m fla vo rs of choco late,
va nilla, peach, lemon, banan a,
s trawberry, pineapple and pe p·
permint will be ava ilable by the
dip or quart . Adva nced orders fo r
$2 quart s of ire c ream can be
made by cal ling!¥.12-5480, 992-.1777
or 992-3222.

Veterans Memorial
Sa turday Admissions - Chrs·
rer Youn~. Long Bottom: Mlna
Worner. Pomeroy .
Saturday Discharges- Robert
Burke, Ralph Webb. Pamllene
Pettit .
Sunday Admissions - None.
Sunda~· Dlsc ha r~es - Jeffre.1·
Werr)'.

I

Lovr Arrington: thre&lt;' sons,
M.1rshatl D. "Skip ," Appir
(;rove. Kei th .lor. Patriot .. and
Cra l ~ - Buck. r:al tlpolis Fr tT)':
one sls!N. Ruth L. 1\rrlngton.
Point Pleasant: ant' brother.
Garland, Ga ll ipo lis Ferry: thre&lt;'
gra ndchildren. two nieces and
two nephews.
He was preceded In dcath by
one strp~ daugh t er. 'Trrrl £ . Rai ·
ney , In 19~6.
Srrvlcrs will be Wrdnesda,l' at
1:.10 p.m . a t the Wilcoxe n Fun·
rral Home with thr Rev . Pa ul
Daggrtt officiati ng. Burial will
follow in Bruer Chapel CrmP.
l&lt;'r)', Ga llipolis FrtT)' where
mllltar)' gravrsldr ritcs will be
co nductf'd b\' American Legion
Post 2:1 .. Point Pleasant .
Pallix'arers will Frank Yrstcr,
Bob Baird , .lohn RPynolds . .la&lt;•k
Revnolds. Charlie Dea l. Bill
Ca rtrr. Ro nnlr Pay ne, Rick\'
Blain.
Friends rna)· call at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home Tuesda~· from 6 to
9 p.m .

WOOD RECEIVES HONORARY DEGREE Roher! S. Wood, second from left, is presented an
honorary doctoral degrel' hy President Dr. Paul
C. Hayes durinK Sunday morning's 8acc alau ·
reate und Founders Day Program at Rio Grand&lt;'
CollegE.'-Commu nity foll eg•'· He Is a former
colleg&lt;• hoard of truste&lt;•s pn-sldent. Others in

photo are Mite., Eplin~ and Dr. Ray Boggs, vlcl'
president for academi c affairs. Dr. Keith R.
Brandeherr~. Gal llpoll•, received a similar
award. He and Wood, of Canal Winchester, were
paid one of the greatest tributes to the
contributions of prominent Individuals bestowed
hy the colh•ge.

Lur·)· Sayre RlffiP. 94, Col umbu s. former!)' of Buffal o. died
Su ndH)' In thl' 1\ium Ct·rst Nurs.
lng Home. Columbu s, following a
long Illnes s.
Funeral arrH ngcments wil l be
an nounced l o t~t' bv Ra vnes Fun·
t•ra l Home. Buffalo. '

The Adult Educat ion Center at
Tri·County Vocational School
will be co nductin g an In forma ·
tiona! meeting on all adult
programs WPdnesda)', 2 p.m .. In
the Communit y Action Agency
Office. 117 West Second St ..
Pomeroy. Financial aid lnforma·
lion will be ~lven .

Mal'!ihall

Daily stock prices

Arrin!t'on

Mars hall N. " Mark" Al'l'ln~ ·
ton . ti4 . Ga llipolis Fer·ry , dlf'd
Su nday morning In Pleasant
Va ll ey Hospit al followln~ a lonjl
Illness.
Born Sept 10, 1922 In Hogsett.
hr was the son of Lill ian L. Moss
Arrington, Point Pleasant , and
the latl' Georgl' J. Arrington who
died In 1977.
He was a member of the Bruce
Cha pel Episcopal Church. Galli·
polls Ferry, a U.S. Navy veteran
of World War II, a member of
Ame rican Legion Post 23, Point
Pleasant. a member of the Loyal
Order of the Moose. 731. Point
Pleasant. and a retired riverboat
captain, having worked for the
Ohio Barge Line for 28 years.
Surviving are his wife Nancy

Tuesday andWednesday Night Specitis

J

.

'

.Recent dance recital f~atures jazz, tap and novelty numbers
· J~zz, .t ap a nd novelty numbers
by st udents three to adult were
included In the annual recital,
" That's Dancing" ·held at South·
ern High School by Barbara's
School of Dance, Barara Law ~
renee, lnstuctor.
A large crowd was on hand for

the show which opened with a
production number featuring
Lawrence to the theme song,
" That's Dancing." Six and seven
year olds, Jodi Roush, Lindsay
Smith, Beth Knight, Amber
Haynes, Michelle Caldwell, Cyn ~
thla Caldwell, Carrie Hartson,

•

Seven and eight year aids,
Mere dlih Crow, Tracl Heines.
Nathan Haines, J ason Lawrence,
Keri Caldw ell, and Stacie Reed
tapped to '' Hey. Look Me Over"
and then performed a novelty
jazz number to " Mr Touch~
down ." Alison Gerlach and Cindy
Rou s h did a jazz number, " The
Zone."
Roberta Ca ldwell performed Power of Love" and tapped to
"Nothing's Canna Stop Us Now '· "Songs ."
a jazz routine, and then tapped to
Dressed In rf'd costumes wrre
"A New York Medley." Pre· the s ix and seven yearolds, Molly
schoo lers charming their way Heines, Dena Say re, Shannon
Into the hearts of the a udi ence as . E nright, Atyson Patterson. Mel·
they tapped wllh 'their Ca re ody Lawrence, Bridget Cros s,
Bears to "We're the Care Bea rs" Co urtn ey H a in es . Ashlre
were Maggie Smith, early Crow, Vaughn, and Morgan Matthews,
Laura Costanzo, Clara Sanders, who danced to "Red, Red Robin"
Autumn Thom as, Cara Ash, E rin and " I Never Had It So Good ."
Sh!'rry J ohnson, Leann Cun ·
Struble, Andrea Krawsczyn, and
dill,
Cassie Nease. Kelly Sa tter·
Cass l Vaughn . They al so pres·
field, Anna Chapman, a nd Linda
ented a routin l' to "H ula Baby ."
Sisters ·Leigh Anne and Amy Chapman , In bl ack llght costum·
Beth Redovlan teamed up to lng, performed a jazz l'OUtlrte to
present a tap routin e. " Ml' and "Th e Fin al Countdown" and a
My Shadow" with Leigh Anne tap routine to "lt 's a Miracle."
later returnln!( to stage for a solo There were two solo dances by
Suza nn a Cla y, a tap routine to
tap number to "Marne."

and Heidi Legar tapped t.o "Lit tle
Old Shoemaker" and "Smile ~
Pass It On" with blaekllg ht
smiley faces. Valerie Conolly
tapped to 'The .Ent ertainer" and
then presented a jazz .routine to
"We Connect ."
Doing a jazz dance to"Wa lk
Like an Egyptian" a nd a tap

routine to "Friends" were Shannon Codney, Amy Moore,
Heather Harris and Katie Sand·
ers while Heather Franckowiak
Elisha Meadows, Christy Hawkins, Ma rcia Robinson, and Em·
lly Shain tapped out "Maniac"
and did a jazz dance to "Danger

WMFI lAurel Cliff has meeting

Recognition of mothers was a
featu re of the recent mother~
daught,er banquet of the
Women s Missionary Fellowship
. International, Laurel Cliff Fr~
Methodist Church, held at Dale s
m Gallipolis.
,·
. GJftswerepresentedbyBon~le
Friend to VIcki Bell. the newest
mother. Eva Robson, the old~st
mother, with Becky Eblin receiv ·
lng the friendship basket.
Japanese Christian Faith was

the thf'me for the bano ut't with Tammy and Sh,aron Wri ght
decorations In white and yellow Sandy · Wright , Hallie Eblin:
represnting purity a nd faith. Becky and Wanda Ebllq, Ka y
Bonnie Fnend had the prayer , ·Clark, BernicP swartz, Lind a
and readings on faith were given Bal l, J uli e, Ashley, and J anet
by Kay Clark. Wanda Eblin. Eblln. Aladine Baker, Norma
dressed as a Japanese mother. and Nane)' Ba ker. Shirlt&gt;y
Shirley Frl&lt;'nd, Brnda Haggy, Tippet .. Pam. Kim aild Brenda
Bonnie Friend. and Marge Fetty . Haggy , Kris ten &lt;llld Karrn Sta n·
Attending we re Janice , le)·, Evctyn Stanley, Donna Gil·
Deanna ad Alicia Haggy , Beck)· more, Kati Parker, Eva Robson.
and Eric Anderson ..Jenn)·, Mi ssy Genevieve Ward, Shlrlev Friend.
and Linda Friend, Mary Gibson, Bonnie a nd Arnie Friend

Past Councilors conduct meeting
New. officers were electf'd at
the Wednesday meeting or the
Past Councilors Club of Chester
Council 323,. Daughters of Amer·
· lea, held a t the hall.
· ' Elected for the six month term
were Elizabeth Hayes, · presl·
dent; Cora Beegle, vice presl·
· dent; · Margaret ~mbeq(er. se·
cretary; ' Ma e McPeek,
· treasurer; Laura Mae Nlel',
· flower committee , Marcia
Keller, sentin el, Mary K. Holte,
· news reporter.
~die Trussell presided at thl'
meeting which was hosted by
Jnzy Newell and Pauline Riden ~
our. Script ure, the Lord's
Prayt&gt;r, and the pledge to thr flag
opened thr meeting. Betty Roush
gave the secretary's report, and
Erma Cl!'land, thl' treasurer's
report. Portions of the by-laws
were, read . Mrs. Roush thanked
members who sent her card.,
during
h er
rece n t
hosplt allzatlon.
The an nual picnic a nd meeting
was announced for July Rat 6:30
l!.m . ai the hpme of Sadie
Trussell with Thelma Whit&lt;' and
Mary K. Holter as co-hostesses.
. Members may bring guests and
are also asked to take ltPms for
games. and a covrred dish, as
well as a lawn chair.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses , Ellzah&lt;'th Hayes
and Alta Ballard conducted
games. Laura Mae Nice won the
door prlz&lt;'.
Others attending were · .Jean
Frederick, Goldie Frederick,
Ada Bissell, Opal Hollon. Lora
Damewood. Ethel Orr. Charlotte
·arant
Tuttle.

"Copacabana" and a jazz dance
to "The Beach Boys Medley. "
" Into the Groove" was the jazz
dance presented by Rayan
Young, J ennifer Lawrence, Jes·
sica Radford, and Jessica Chap·
man. They also performed a
military tap with flag batons to
"The Spirit of America Medley."
Danlelle Crow, Tara Gerlach,
and Beth Roush performed a tap
dance with top hats and canes to
"Top Hat " and a novelty jazz to
"Fun, Fun, Fun. "
She lly Winebrenner did ad·
va nced tap solos, "Jump, Shout,
and Boogie" and "Thre's No
Business Like Show Business."
and the show concluded as all of
the performers returned to stage
for the song, ·"Somewhere Out
Ther e."

Ms. LawrencE' presented each
student with a 5ilk rose, and the
dancers then presented her with
a rose · and a gift certlfical:t-.
Dancers from the school will
per form on Au g. 22 at thl' Meigs
Cou nty Fair.
'

.

•
exemplary customer service. And our unique "White
Hat" Award, which goes to offices and departments who
keep BANK ONE facilities in clean, tip-top shape.

c•
TO THE
f'U c• TO YOI."

"IF YOU CAII'1'

That's what one BANK ONE
employee did to help an elderly cus·
tomer who was in the hospital for
surgery. Another drove over 150
miles to make sure a customer's
home loan closing would go
through the next day as planned.
One more started a fund for a poor
mu. N~:,r~~:. RA ~'~ 11 11 ~'~K
fami·1y's new baby. Stt'll another
A'I'II~: N.~. ;, ",,,,.,, .,.,.;,,,.
may have saved an entire business!
,..,, ,., •h•·"If',. r:.,... ,r,,,,.
I
ed
'l i1 llill ""' 'fllff' ami mmt ,v lihf•
0 Verthe Iast year, We Ve sa Ut .
/i/111 , ~ldn,lhni••.Wn••f{,.rl
hundreds of employees who have
'' ./"" ,,., "!'"'' Joh.
shown this kind of care and concern. And we plan to
keep rewarding them in the future.
J

-.·
·,•'

.

At BANK ONE, we think it 's so important to tlivt customen caring service that we
created a special award for employees who deliver it. .. the "We Care" Award.

•'

•

·l

:1 ,

ROY CARTER

fj !New pastor
' ' Roy WcCarler Is new pastor of
Rulland Church of Christ.
having moved here la st week
~ from Washington, N.C. when:• he
, has pastored the Unity Church of
~~ Christ forth~ past 13 years:
•l He and his wife, Jeannette,
:• reside In the parsonage which Is
:· located next door to tht' church.
•:. Carter. a native of New Marah·
: ' field In AthE-ns County, had
•.• pastorates at both th&lt;' Rulland
:~ church and the Bradbury Church
: • in Meigs County before moving to
·: North Carolina.
'
:: Currently Sunday school Is
:. being held at 9 a.m . and the
~ :~orshlp service at 10 a.m. Plans
· : are also being made to Include
:;evening services.

i: the

UR customers are our business. And that, of
course, is why caring employees mean so much
to us. It's because of them that BANK ONE has
become so widely recognized. So we think they deserve
some recognition of their own.

WE CAll AIOUI' EMOYDS.

We really do believe in the statement "Fifteen Thousand
People Who Care." That's why we say it so often. It's also
why we take special
care to constantly recognize performance
we know our cus·
tomers appreciate ...
with a "We Care"
Award for

~::c;ragan birth
:: : Mr. and Mrs. G. Patt·Jck
&lt; Gragan, the former Kristin And·
:·erson, Marietta. are announcing
:: the birth · of a son. Patrick
•:Andrl'W, on Ma~· n at St.
;: Joseph's Hospital. Parkersburg,
:-w.va. The Infant weighed eight
&gt; pounds, 12 ounces.
'~ Grandparents are Jennifer
' ~nderson, Pomeroy; William
:Aiiaerson, Athens, and Mr. and
"'rs. Aubrey Gragan, Bel Alton,
l'tld. Grt&gt;at-grandparnts are Mrs.
· )fer bert Hardie, Marietta, and
r the late Herbert Hardie. Lt. Col.
and Mn. George Morris. PomE.'roy; and the great -great ·
grandfather ts George Gragan,
~Alton. Md.

,,,

Then's a famtly feeling at Ponderosa!
.,

---~p=-=o=NDE·R~OS~A~~
l

.

Page-6 .

·~

'.
·:•

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Marlt SmUll
of Blunt Ellis .t Loewl
Ftrm
Price
Am E lectric Power ............. 27V,
AT&amp;T .... .... .......... ............ ... 26%
As hl and 011 ........................ 64 'Ji,
Bob Evans Farms .............. 26%
Charming Shoppes ....... .......... 30
Federal Mogul. .............. ... .. 42%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... frl
Heck's Inc... ..... .................. .4%
Limited Inc . .......,. ............. .45 %
Multlmedla Inc ................... 58%
Rax Restaurants .............. .... 5%
Robbins &amp; Myers .~ ................. ll
Shoney's Inc .. .. ...................... 27
Wendy's Inll ........ ............ .. .10%
Worthington Ind ................ ..19%

--····

Monday, June 15, 19~7 .

••

To mt&gt;t&gt;t Wt'!lnt'!!day

Luc·v Riffle·

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Plan it't' rrt'am sOC'ial

Hospital news

Area deaths

Raymond Whalt•y

.. ,

'

briefs.--.., Suspects in VCR, cruiser theft still at large

EMS ha.~ 10 weekend calls
··

Monday. June 15. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WBIT

TO._

WE STill' AT M TOP.

We know that a
good manager can
inspire a great per·
formance from oth·
ers. That's why we
send many of our
managers to a very
special school called
BANK ONE College.
Students there
learn the value of
teamwork and
excellence both
inside and outside
the classroom. But there's one thing we don't have to teach . .
And that's how to care.

-

BANK.=.ON£
Fifteen thousandpeople who care.

Arl- oi!WIC ONE COAPOIIATION, NA. Clllumllul. Ohio
-FDIC

'

'

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohi.o

In the spotlight:
By Cindy S. Oliver i
County Extension Agent

Home Economlcs(4·H
Clothing Care and Fabric
News - As you're shopping lor
summer clo.t hes some new sight s
'may awalt you. The fi r st Is the
use of ramie In clot hing and the
second, the use of new symbols
relating to garment care. This
week, "In The Spotlight " looks at
these two topics. This lnforma·
tlon was shared by Norma Pitts,
Extension Clothing Specialist.
The Ohio State Univers it y.
Ramie: The New Fiber On The
. Block - Don't be surpri sed if
your new "cotton" sweater has a
.strange word on the labeL
·Ramie, a bast fiber si mil ar to
· nax, appea r s . on many fiber
' content labels these days .
Thanks to Improved prod uction method s, a favorable Import
status, and today's curre nt Int er , est In natura l fiber s, manufactur·
ers are Increasing the use of
ramie In clothes fabrics.
Be aware or this fiber' s special
qualities as you buy and care for
. raml e·co nt al nln g fab r i cs.
Ramie, somell mes ca ll ed China
'grass, comes from a pl ant and
shares qualit ies with ot her cellu·
Josle llbers. Like cot ton and
linen, ramie Is absorbent but w ill
wrinkle and shr ink unless specJally treated or blended with
·wrlnkiP-reslstant fibers such as
JlOlyester.
' Ramie has more natural luster
than lln~n and Is stronger . Like
linen', ramie has poor !l ex abra ·
slon resistance. II l end s Jo crack
along !old lines, so you mi ght see
wear along sharp crease or pleat
lines.
Often, ramie fabrics will be
washable. bul follow label In·
structlons ca r efully to maintain
fabric appeara nce and gar ment
shape. For exa mple, label s on
ramie-cont ai nin g sweater knlls
may tell you to dry the garment
flat. If you don't foll ow these
lnstrucllons, the garment may

become permanently distorted.
While ramie ca n withsta nd hot
water, labels often suggest cool
wash water temperatures to
protect the fabric's color.
· When ramie care labels say
"dry-clean on ly," It's wise to
follow label direc tions. While thi s
fiber normally is washable, t he
co nstruc tion of the fabric In flu en·
ces washability . Some fabrics
not adequately preshrunk will
shrink a grea t deal If laundered.
Texture changes may occur
when wa shing r emoves t he sizi ng
applied to the fabric duri ng
processing,
Expect to s(&gt;(&gt; mor e ramie·
co ntain ing fabrics i n the future .
Ramie's similarity to linen and
Improved proc essi ng has I n·
creased demand.
Watch Those Wash Labels Inside those new slac ks Is a care
l abel with three sm all symbolsa wash t ub with a hand on it , a
square with a dark-mark and a
flatiron with a si ngle dot Inside.
How do you care for lhls
garment?
Many Imported garment s have
sy mbol s on their care labels to

help overcome language problems. Severa l sys tems are used.
but the Ca nadian, British and
Dut ch systems are tlie most
com mon.
Int erna tln &lt;~l labeling systems
use fiv e basic symbols:
Wash tub - refers to washing
or laundering. Specific require·
ments such as hand laundering
and water tempera tu re are indicated Inside the Jub symbol.
Triangle signals lnstruc·
lions for bleaching.

iron.
An "X" across any sy mbol
i ndicates that such a trea tment
shou ld be avoided.
To make it eas ier to " read '' the
care symbols. labeling rules
require that an E nglish explana·
tlo n appears when t hese symbols

Oonnu

Frank , f•frm t• r ownt•r lllURJIRCr of Gall&lt;•ry Hair (I rts,
,Is now mnploy&lt;•d ut Kuy 's
Reualy Sulon, Middh•port. Sh•·
will IK•Kin working I h&lt;•r•• T1uos·
day and will h•• :u·t i'Jlling
appolntm••nts :L' wo•IJ as wal·
klns. (I ~radnah• of Mt•lgs
HIKh School fosmt•tology in
1911:1. •h•• workt•d at flt'fi" Slht•
Slr&lt;'()l In (;uiJipolls hd11n•
purcha.•lng (Jallt•r,v II air !Iris
two yt!ars ago.

Mr. and Mrs. John Downs,
Adam, Er ic. and Dickie of
Trimble were Wednesday vis·
lt ors of Mrs. ,J. R Murphy and
Peggy .
Mr. and Mrs. Car l Bailey spent
SunditY with M r . and Mrs. Robert
Ba iley, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Fra nk ,
Sarah Beth and Matthew Ryan of
Texas Road were Sunday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning

'l'hr Rlclj:H' C rillf'r.~ 4·H f lub mt&gt;l on Ma y
21st at 1h1• S11U ~ bur v SchOQI wll h 12
mt' mlx'r s attt•mlln ~ . Ji wa s rrporU'() that
l'iln cly monf&gt;Y musl t:K&gt; turnrd In b,v thi s

Wl'rkrnd i.i nd th e&gt; mrmbl'fs dlsc•usst'CI

nH 'f' lln ~ In r ur h ot hN's hom NO Uf!N s(·hool

I!&gt;

out.

~·avr

Cli fford t•xplnlm'fl tht• pro~ ·r

prrwf'dur r lor jl howln~ a ra bbit uml otht 'l'

11f•monstr ullons on rabbtt s wrrt• I!IVI'n

brought an d identified wild
flowers.
A vo te of thanks was given to
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rice for
their work In planting fl ower s at
the Tup per s Plains Elempntary
'SchooL Ca rds were signed and
mailed to several sick mem bers.
Elsie Cull ey read I he verse oft he
month and Hazel Barnhill won
the dravelln g prize. Phy llis Rice
won the hostess prize.
Refres hment s wer e served by
the hos tess.

A nniP Jrsslf' nn11 Mf'l !.~sa Cli ffor d.
Ttw ru•.•\1 ml'1 'tlng w!ll hr .Junl' I I at 1: 110
1&gt; m. al lh(• homr of Ur sulu Har1. 1\1 !his
limp nwmbt•rs wlll rlu scu .~s r ld1 ~ In t·amp
anfl ('ass lc• Hubhctrd w\11 n •viN' 1h r ~a ft•l ~­

SJrt •aK 1ng

P SS!l ~'·

.

lll'a lhrr H utl srHt Rrpm'lt•t'

Ma,\' \ :I al
W\lh

l!i

N•\'r•n n w mht •r" V.'t' I'C' In allrnd anrf' ;1t
l ht• Mu,\· l ~! h lllt 'l'lln~ ol th r Ou l ~ kl t •p• -I·H
flub . Tht· l!l'nU p {\ is«· u ssln~ n l'a nnt• ln~ lt'lp
and a fl ~ hi n ~ drr iJy . Rt'f rl'~hmf'nl s wrrr
~Pl"\'t'fl h,\' Tlm m.v Trlp\M ;mtl Kl'\'ln
c:r ,trlv . Thr nt•x t n wr tln ~ of 1hrC'Iub will br
M :l\ 2tilh

Todd H:• rrlsun. Rl'pnrlf'r

.. _ ,

__ a-.:.:!::•
___ ....._
::O'n!:

Ttw M PI~ Hi Pl r m.;un · Rli1Ns mt•l on
l\.b ~· I ~ ~.~o' ilh ~l'\' t'n mc•mtM•rs and thn'('
m h· t~n rs ntt t• n clln ~ . Th l' ,Q"roup 11\sru~sNI
1\w (l qz:tnli.ntlnn af honor snows. thr 4·U
hntlt h nl lh•• MriJ!!' Cou nt y F'alr . and
11\lc."n m\n~ hOt'Sf' proli'r!s for tht• Plm~ u rl'
Hl!h •rs . ;\ cl tll l' w n~ srt for Mu\ 27t h 10
d lsrus:- I hi' t• lull mN'lln~ schC'duh., for l ht•
\"t '.t

r.

QU l'S!IOn!l- '''l"l'l' :~ skrd t o t hl' mNnbr"rs

ohnu r hi.W!ir

lral n l n ~

an (l

s aft·l~ .

Thf'

lr r. t s u rl' t''~&gt;

tT pon wa!l: fll\'f'n lndltalln~ n
b:thtnl't' or Slf\2.14 In th&lt;' b~lnk .
Thr nf'xt mf'l•t ln.'! of ! hr rl ub wllltx&gt;Junr
l ~ lh .

...

- I DO Oil

a df'monstra11on.

RoxAnne Williams. RE'portrr

'

REACH

Tht• Mt·l~s Counry Marvfll~ 4·H Club has
ht" ld two mt'PIInJlS l'('fffU iy, At thE' Ursl

M N'II n~ ofrlet?rs wrrr cl~ted as follows:

Pr·rs jdf'nt , Kr lst~:~n Hf'lnl"S; Vlt"e Prf.sldC'nl. Ci ndy Roush: Serr€'lary, T ammy
Kauf!; Tr£'asu~r. J()[IIE"n Crane: Nf'W!Il
Rc&gt;portE'r. Donia Crant; Heal th Oftl~r.
Bnrbara Colema n: SafPiy Otri('@l', Kf'lley
Grut"ser; Recreation L.rader. Cynthia

ColtNlll. '

At thr R('Xt m ~tlng the mrmbl&gt;rs
dlscussf"d candy bars, 4·H c amp. and thl'

M•~

m-=-"'
=
...
:tc: ....

·-

• -

H[

r.ct~ •

209

OS.CAL 500
CALCIUM

BIC

"' tt9r... at 'all times.

MINI
LIGHTERS

TABLETS

REGULAR OR
WITH D
BOTTLE 0(60

· ·

·' Furthormore. oKceptlng all
the coal. oil. gas and all other
minerals with the right ~to
... mine and remove the . .n'ie.
It is further underltood
and egreed that all pipe tine
or lines running through aald

89&lt;

property shall remoln the
_ property of C . •H. Williams ,
Trustee, his heirs. SUCCII·
aon and alligna, and the

.

..

.'.

CONTRACTING

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

Tr&gt;n mt•m bc' r~ ;t11f'mh~l thl'- M a~· :lr1l
mt~·t l n ~ of l hf' Alfrl'ri 1.1\'('stork Club ht'ltl
al lht• home• 1\f Rill u nci l.ln,Ja Schull'l..

,..
'

Mf' mtx&gt;r.-. dl ~cu :-~t '4! 1hr klt"k·Off 11fnnrr. n

CRimi, DIIID

·~.-,

'

'

•ROOFING •8101NG

I

""""'

•WINDOW REPLACEMENT
· '•REMODELING &amp;
ROOM AOOITIONS
4QAAAGES &amp; POLE
BUILDINGS
REFERENCES
" ' - Day or hNinp ·

f
'

•rnAiq

~r~:~~r·~·;,~-~~h.. ~~l"-i- ~h~a~~~~·th nf ('jt('h

HARD CANDY,

EXTRA STRENGTH

ENRICHED FORMULA
OR ORIGINAL FORMULA

WIIO CHERRY, LEMON DROPS

985-4141

ICE BlUE MINTS, STARliGH ~
MINTS FRUIT FILLED
BUITERSCOTCH. SbUR IIALIS O~!
HOSTESS MIX- 10 OZ. SIZE'

]99

GIIIIIAL COIIltACTDII
H ·'ITI mo. pd.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Tht• Cmtn t n · BM.~ 4-H Club mf'l IH'C'nlly
at thr Cotl'mt•l Churc·h w!lh II mf'mbt•rs
ttn el two udvlsm·s a11 rndl n)!:. Th f' ~ro up
d ls r u s.~ r'( l ml1 nC"o· In thl' trrasur\ . lhr•
~rllln .'! of r:mdy bars. 4-H {';~mp .
~·u
Cttmp. P:~tl\' C'irdt:• sc-rvrd rrl n·~ hmt'l11s.
Grant Ch·r \('. Rt•portrr

~·mi.

OHIO

•ROOFING •SIDING

,_rul

Tht' Counll'\' Crll trrs ha vt• hrlcl tw o

OR
HAIR SPRAY2
A!ROSOL OR NON·

!AI, DIET COlE
01 SPRITE
REG. 01 CAFFEINE FREE
YO~I CHOICE
UACI, 16 OZ.
,
NON·IfiUIINAILI IOTTL£! ,

2

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING t-.;
SUMMER SPECIAL! II'"'
L'EGGS '

AEROSOL- YOUR CHOICE
7 OZ. SIZE

AI lhrlr !-!('('O ntl m l'l'linJt HlP !i lK
ml"mbC'l'S: prrst'nt c1 i.~&lt;'uss('d l hf' drmonstr:ulon ron ll"!l: l, lh&lt;' b\k('oa·thon, and lh&lt;'

sn lf' of r andv bur.~ . Slh1l"s Wl'N' sho" '" on
how 10 tzh•r a ~ood spro{'('h :md a ~ood
d(' m onslru!lon . R r fr C'Il hm&lt;'n l ."i wl'rr
!'('f\'l'd by F'allh Varn~· und Mona Ervrn.
AI lhr nPJ!I mN~t l ng a (l('m OM!lrauon will
bt• ~lwn by Jf'nny an d Rr ld,QN Va r n,-,•.
J£' nny Vtt rnry. Rrportrr

$199

•WINDOW REPLACEMENT
•REMODELING &amp;
•
ROOM AOOITIONS

1

''
:I

•GARAGES &amp; POLE

BUILDINGS
REFERENCES

" ' - Day •r ........

985-4141
GDOil COIIIUCTOII
i ·lO-fl-1••· IJII,

'

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

HERR'S

POTATO

V..Yl &amp; AUIMIIUM

CHIPS

LOW PRICES

!:·.·

Chrslf'r Alumnl-.&amp;inquN .
Ste~nh'' sail'S proj l'C'I. Proj~l books Wf'rt&gt;

Compltto Guttar Worll
Complete Remodeling
Roofing 'Of all Types
Worhed in home area

S/S 1

20yearo
" frM EatJm.atea"

IUGIIO LOJIG

ctlstrlbutPd and Judj.1'l n~ datr!i: dlsruss4"CJ.
Th(' nrx 1m('('flnfo! will b(' Mn,Y 2fith a l 7: :JJ
p.m . a1 thf' Su!ian Pullins rrsld£'n('(' .
Stanlf'y ordf'rs arr to Jxo tu rnro In at this
tlmf'.
Robi n Whll(', Rt-porl ('f

CAll.:

Ph. (614) 143-5425
5·22·17·%'"· pd.

nte

YOUNG'S
liGHT lO LIMIT OUAHJinll • NtCIS l!ffiCTM IUHI IS THIU JUNE 21, 11Jt7 •

Nor

CARPENTER

IUPONSIIU FOil fYPOGIA'"tC.Al fUOIS

SERVICE

RITE

AID

dog. ·Well 240 IHt from the

on a rock; thence
southeasterly to the nor·
the11t corner of a tract of
land now or formerly owned
by Mayme HolmH; thane&amp;
southeasterly tO the northeest corner of 1 tract of
land now or formerly owned

by Mattie Alghlhouoe and
designated by a concrete
marker; thence north 30

- Addon• and ,...a daUnt

RITE. AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

- Roofiot end..,... -

-

- Conor.teWOf'k

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

- f'tum1Mn9 """ · tFrM Eltlmat•l

Y. C. YOUNG HI
I

Michele Lynn Sroll. Reponor

•

fft .. IU • "1·731·

,...ey,Ohle

4-15-'86-fc

\

sora and assigns, and the

right of woy lor these linoo

1&amp;1

a.

NOTICE TO BIDOERS
The Board of 1he Moigo
Local School District de..,es

to receive ooaled bido for tbe

2. FIHI tnourance
ducts

4 . BrHd end Bakory 'Pro1
1
ducta
.

6 . Milk and Oalry Products
fl. Tires and Tubes
In order to' be conaldered.
all sealed bida ahall be re·
ceived in the Treasurer.'• of-

flee, 621 S . Third Avenue,
Middleport, Ohio, on or be·
fore 12:00 o'clock noon

on

June t6, 1987.
The Board of Educlllon

Lena K. NaaHitotd, Clerk.

(811 , I. 16

'

4-16-86-tln

HEATING &amp; COOLING
ROiidtn1ial and small com·
mercia! units. Instillation of

duct wort. humidifiers, furnace. hut pumps, and Jireon·
ditionint-

AII work cuarontltll, Call:
(614) 985·4l22 (rtsidenco)
'Special: HEll pxkllt ceatrol
air condrtonin1 lor Mobile or
modultr ho•n. Instilled on
pad and rlldy to cool. Pritt:
Sll99.00 plus tu:
or a HEll 2~ ton Hltt hmp installed on your tlodric furnlco.

Pritt: 11199.00 ""' tax. s-21

Middle119ft, Oh .

992 -11811

asale and ~ offering this home
in Middleport at a reduced
price large lot all on one ftoor.
2 bedrooms, bath, porch. ASK·
INg $16,200.00.

POMEROY - SPRING AVE.
- Here is a really nice home
that is priced to sell- owners
have left area and need a
buyer. 3.bedrooms, usable ba·
sement Deck, even a small
garden area. Much more:
BARGAIN $27,500.00.

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window•

•Replacement Wlndow1
•New Roofing ·

"FHI ESRMATIS"

JAMES KEJSEE
PH. 992·2772

good bul approximately 80
acres with a nice3 bedroom
.house is belter. Secluded
and scenic make this the
best! Located near Rt. 33 in
Salisbury School District,
this home has been remo··
deled, insulaled, vinyl sid·
ing, modern kitchen, cenlral
air, 2 ponds. $53,000.00.

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sal11.
lnstalatlon

•Rangn
•Refrigeretora

•Drvert •FrHrera
PARTS and SEFIVIC:E

Howard L Wrltes•l

ROOFING.

Mobile service

4·22·17-lfn

1·13·tfc

L&amp;W CLEANING

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Truck, IUtO, &amp;
heavy equipment
repel,. and
welding.
(All m1k11 &amp; models)

PH. 949·2756
Johnl. ....h

Owtltr/Michanlc

"VINYL
0

Al~NUM

SIDING

"ILOWN IN

INSUlA nON

•. ._ ....
BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PH. 949·2860

or 949·2801

.. s-kiy

PEAt'S SHAIPIN UP

3 Announ~ementl

446-6323.-::•.
·. ~y u.... · -

Now 0pMI Ohio RNer Cam,_
grOUndll • Ful hook·up or tlflt
c~mi!Mna oon rt¥11', Hehmg. boat·
lfta, Aolilno, Ohlc.Colli 14·141·
2J21 .

&amp; Hall - 134.95
Any I looftit 11M1
Holl :... iU.95

1

Any 3 1._ IIMI
lloH- 159.95
Any 51._ IIMI
lloH- 19U5

Mllttrc.rlf.VItll ..... dt•t of

crldtt hi•Of'Y· Alto, new crldh

•d· No an• rlfuHIII 'or Info.,

coli 1· J11·7U · IDI2 o•t.

S/11/1110.

M2021 .

4

BOGGS

2 Dft&gt;fllll klhlftl. 1 yellow, 1
black, Mtttr trslned. Call 114-

SALE~ &amp; SEIYICE
U. Si IT. 50 EAST
• lfUYSVIW, OHIO

441·n2t .

......

I'll; k1tt......
....,_o.cort u .ue-7113
4

Authorbt&lt;l John Daoro,
·Naw......,.,WHot

'3
old fiUPfiY, port 0 -·
mlftft, Ploytul. 304·112·2fll.

far• E,lli~MI'It
Partt &amp; StM111

3olort
- .,.
3 · 118·38211.

WIIIIIAifS PAIJIIN
&amp;~co.

...._.. ,...

161 Norttl llcllltf
Midtl.,...t, Oltie •s760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Flthlfti SuppliM

3S 171 ....... 14.
............ 011. 41741

GEARY'S

,

Pay Your Ceble lo
Phone Billa Here
IUSIIIlll 1'11011£
t•t41 ttf.UJO
IIIIIIN&lt;I 1'110111
t•T41 ttJ.7714

•

THOMAS
BODY SHOP

n. 4, PO.IOY
992-3989
ELECTRIC &amp;
ECETYLENE
WELDING
FREE ESTIMATES

5·1·11·1 ....

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR REPAIR
IT. l, 101 271

32933 ROIIIIE ROAD
RUTLAND

742·2070
25 YEARS EXP.

IEwte$.All TYPIS
OFIOTOIS
~14-110.

Jill ;
IOUITIY CLUI

GOLF
LEI SON&amp;

Garage

Yard Sale

COIII1ructoro. No. I WttIUNC, p.,._aburg, W. Va. '
21101 .
&gt;

1100 lun . . Or. TUII., Wtd.
t 0 ·1 Or-. bodoproodo, glrlo
ctothlnt. mllc.

thl Armv Nltlonat GUird. »4- •
178·3110 or 1 ·IOO·M2 ·111t. ,

....... P'omaro·v..........

AppJicetlont now '*"I H • '
- lor • port limo ....... .
oHft poohloft lor ~ ... .

Middleport
8t Vicinity

offiOI ltta...m VII.,. H-..:

4 t-ty c•port ooto 1t RDI•
Kart rllktenoe nw CMtlef.
follow llgno. Cloltool all 111M,

Alu Tr••••lttl ..
PH. 992·5612
or 992·7121

Jewelry,

baaks, eaemttlct.

womlftt roll• tUIIt lila I.
Atlfl 2100 wm- clftricftll, Pac
Man.-.. lop ~lc* ,...,., June
tllh end 17th 1 :00.3 :00.

6· 17·tfc

Vt:TE.. ANI · I!Imntramon~lll

'

eontaat .....,... A

ttohnta~n.

VIII .. Orlvo, Polftl - · W. ,
~~

"'· 1·30ot-171-·340.

12

..

Sltu1tion1
W1nted

.'
- - -- - -·
I hiW't room tnd .._.d fOt

oldlfty. Ro•onll&gt;lo. Co" t14·

112·..,22.

.......PfPiiiiiliiii't ...... 18 'Wented to Do

ACCENT

&amp; Vicinity

RIKI COMPANY
L1t Ut
'ttt I•

1- - - - - Jlm'o odd Job• polnllng, ~

f••••

IJadtl 'llfd ..... 3314· 3311
How.rd Ave. June , I • 1 e.

FREE ESTIMATES

ftii.OlNTIAL I COMMIPICIAL

Senlc1

In plate and ttruahnf .....
flbtlctMion rtqulrtd. ln....,.•
vaoetlon, lnWtttva ptan. lOIII
~- lenf r..ume or.- • '
I .K, Utton Fallrla.ton Mlil ,

8t Vicinity

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

8

MIIILI11011, 01.

Public S.ie
&amp; Auction

WIY Jtttt\lng, C•plnllr WD,. Aj

root rtptlr, .,... • hedael
••ptrltnctd. C111 114·311 ·
2411 .
M &amp;: M Lawn Ciilft • Window

CIHIIIng. Coli lny dl'l ofte&lt; I

PM . It4·3 71-2171 .

PH. 992·3537

s-15-'17·1 ...

RICII Ptarton Avctlontlf' II·
cenNd In Ohk) and
t Vltgl·

w..

5/1 / Hn

'3.00
TROPHIES

nrc~anitlllla '!!s.W

r.,..r....,.
tlllltlcaton · Minimum ef I ,..,. IIP.-Ieftot

Pert~troy Ohio

NEW
GRIPS

.101111 TIAJOII
,., h•ll

7

5-11·1110.

•a.oo

~~~~s

P-12.1n OliO-~
Roalot•. 200 Mpln tt. 1'1. , .,
WVZII8D.
•

....... GiiiiTpolri··-··· ....

BODY SHOP
Cuttom Painting
Service, lusloratlon
&amp; Collsion Strvkt
Walh &amp; Dtt1il

Lo1t end Found

ltr1yed or ttDien, 2 Alredlitl. 1
m•. 1 ftm .. t from Portllnd
..... Coli 114-143-8271.

CAll 614-446-3021

112ttltn

pl!l'lor. ollc koyboord prw;or.

mutt ttiWt own tQUtpment, fir
lormlfttt
""""· .....
Wll10,.
..
plw;'"' 10'..
70'1
,
muttc. Pttona 1ft« 1:00 pm.
1· JD4 ·171· U7D or t · l14·
tiZ-1281.
Ptn tlmt booldt....- · one dli,

W'* GIIM.U111W/ ..I 111Win

n•.

WANTED food olld-VUIW

I* wttt. l.nd ,.,,. to I•

Ptmlllo I 1 AI lfoot
MASONRY
RESTORATION. SWIM
POOL&amp; , STEEL LAWN
FURNITURE, IAIINI ,
FARMING EQUIPMENT.
HOUlE&amp;. lTC.

at.

puppl•.

Old lntlltll lhoop dDf, fomoto,
retllttrld. 4~ ¥tlrs old, J04·
112·2020.

8

IIISIIIIII1A&amp;, 1111 Ultw.
CD"
n•L

PlU.NG I HEAnNG

'"'"""
The trolnlnt,
Wootd. 'Coli'"
~~~-ooiticl. 114-171-2812 .

m-

Doalar

Roger Hysell

PLANER 8LAOI8
ROUTER 81TI
CLIPPER ILAOES
K)TCH!N KNIVES ,
PRUNERS • lAND '
SAWS - CHA1N lAW
CHAINS

hoifod

114· 1tZ· I721 .

HAND • CIA. SAWS
CAABIDEnPI

SCISIOAS -'SNIPS

1ont1

bctll.nt opportunity! W~

now to Oooomllorlor Clwlot

0.. .... _ ,..,.. to glveaw1y.

I'Gr• E~ul(ltMnl

~

• (0111' . . . . . . . .

1~'1111111 lll'lllllth

CAIPif
UPMOLSRIY PLUS

•

"Fr11 Eetlm.tee"

949-2263

or 949·2168

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

992-2198

'I&amp; tin

Henry E. Clel1nd Jr.
992-6191
Jm Trussell .....9•9·2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5892
Tracy RIHie ....... 949·3010
Office ................ 992· 2259

Gutters
Down1pout1
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Tut.•W••··Fri.

IT o.m. to 7 P."'-

Middleport, Ohio

REASONAal • IIIIAIII

Also hi!ats with ~

NEW- IEPAII

~~

lundoy: I ,.m.• J p.m.
ly Chtn&lt;t or Appolot-1

614·1.43,-5241

England Colonial home OYer·
loo~lng Pomerovl Located' on
25 acres you'U have the luxury
r* an underground pool, dedi
off the master bedroom.
equipped k~chen, fireplace in
thl! family room.·OOter features
!hat wil want you to live in this
elipnt home ~ a titled baY
~ In the l;itdlen. 3 bed-,
rooms. french doof that leods
outo the bacll patio, satellite
dish, 2 car prage, lui basement. beaulilul woodw«k

5·12-ll·t ....

112 4 East Main St.
P01111roy

PAT HILL FORD

Electronic Organa

NEW LISTING - "BREATH
TAKING" doesn'l even begin to
describe lh~ front Ga~ New

915·4112 or .. 7... 54

llnrint AntlqUII

repair Gas Tanks.

Service

KEN'S
APPLIANCE .
•Weshers •Oiahwaahera

BUY OR SELL

5· 21· 7·11110.

Free gas plus royalties are

!15-3561
·All Mlku

ANTIQUES

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

6-2•17-1 1110.

tCUT OUT FDa FUTUH USII

SERVICE

RADIATOR
SERVIGE

. J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

MlbOLEPORT - Owner wants

This ~ alour star .... home.

Excepting a parcel of real

ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

1·13 tin

mo.

VALLEY LIMIER
&amp; SUPPLY

Uke a1lfBII movie, Itt~~ arare
"M" - wrth one great fealute
after an&lt;~her\ CaN for your apJl(intment TODAY.

County Deed Records.

Day

lc.. crafh. Othars. lnta. fl04)
141 ·00f1 EXT. 2117 0 - 1
Dtye. CALL NOW!

home lite
Jecob11n

!at energy and has central air.

DEED REFERENCE: Vo ·
fume 18B, Pego 55, Melgo

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

WAGES for IPIIO
Work: lleotron-

Welid Eeter

POME . ,0,
992·2259

lhrou~

hit heirs, IUCCIIIOrl and
anigns. With the right to
repair, replace and malntlin
the ume.

"At Rtas-ble Prices"

2

EXCE~LENT

tlmt asttmbty

TecumHh

NOW $44,900.00.

said C. H. Wllllamo, Trustee.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

E,M1i1~W

Public Notice

m e.

are hereby raaarvad by the

BISSELL
BUILDERS

417 Slcond Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

550. Plpl Sf.

$1i~~!YDAY
I

wt I!Sftvl

bounded 1nd described ••
follows: Beginning north 21

3E (614)' 446-7619 or (Sl4) 992-6601

Help Wanted

&amp;Parts

Howard E. Fronk,
Sheriff of
Malgs CountY. Ohio
15, 22, 29:
Stc

the appr1i1ed value.

olland.
PARCE~ NO . 2: Situated
In tho VIllage ol Syracuse.
County of Meigs, Sta!e of
Ohio, In 100 Aero lot NQ .
292, Town 2. Range 12,
Ohio Company's Purchue,

11

.Licensed Clinical Audittlogist

\r\r r

Briggs &amp; Slretton

RUTlAND - 10 yr. old bnck
ra~ch home ln a good location. Over I acre and 3 bed·
room~ 2 baths, full basement ·
large pabo, equipped kitchen,
many other nice leatures.

for Iris than two-thirds of

Bustness Services

·. ...---....
MARCUM

mN•Iinli{s rl'f't;ntly . Ar lhl' rtrsr m&lt;'('llns:

corner of the
herelnebove ducribed tract

nOrtheast

Terms of Sale: ·caah
Roai.Htato ..nnot ~ ootd

,·~ e•••

LIQUID

C'hrlsl !nt• SC'hult ;o, Rrpnrlf'r

tract of land oltueted in tho

praised·et: 15,600.00.
Said Perce! 2 wao opprololld
at: n ,600.00.

dig. 30' west 90 loot; reserve&amp; the right to •ccept
thence nonh 89 dog. oall or reject any end all bida.
249 feat to the place of
Jafte Fry, Treesurer
1
dlence
- the northeast
301'2 deg. beginning. containing 1 .7 Melgo ~ocal Scho~t Olo1rlct
90
feet to
: ~ corner of the John J . Hogan acres, more or IHI . .
621 S. Third Avenue
Reserving unto the former
, • lol; thence South 301'2 dog.
Middlopon, Ohio 45'760
"' · "Vtt elong the east line of the Grantor. Clifford H. Willi- 1611. 8. 16
• John J . Hog~~n lot a dittance ams, Trustee, his heira,
succeuors and aatigns. 1
~.of 150 feet to the aoutheut
,Public Notice
·~ corner of the John J , Hogan rlght·of·wey 26 feet wide
::/ • 1ot, the place of beginning, and known 11 tho preoent APPOINTMENT OF
containing 1.24 1cres. more . ro~dway through Hid p~o· FIDUCIARY
· the
••·• or leu, there ~ing 8B/ 100 mtaes heraen conveyed weth
0.n MIY 28 • I8S7" m
._., of an acre in 100 Acre Lot tho right of ingreoo and
, M11gs County
Probate ,
"' NO . 291 and about.Jil/ 100 egre 11 et all tlmtl .
Funhermore excepting on · Court, Coo~ No. 255~3,
of on ocre In 100 Acre Lot
No. 292. Rnerving unto tho tho coal, oil,' gao and othr Fredo B. lltvlng, 37 Hi!lh
Glo'-'ltlr. ot\io.
·" · former Grantor, Clifford H. minertll with the right to Street,
Wllllomo, TruiiH, his hoiro, mine and remove the ume. 45732 we• •ppolnted Exe·
It Is further understood cutrix of 'he Htate of Leona
~. ..,cc••-• and aulgno, a
• rlgllt· OI·way 2&amp; feat wl~e. ond ogreed that ott pipe llnoo llevin~. docu11d, late of
and known as the pment running through uid pre· 43012 State Route 124,
mloH oholl remain the prop· Mlnarovllle, 'Ohio.
A roadway through Hid pre·
A - &amp;. lu'*.
__c. mtiM herein conveyed. and orty of C. · H. Wlllloms,
Probate Judge
the ri9ht of ingress and Truatee, his hainr, 1uccea-

BISMOL

801.
SIZE

H. Willi1m1. Truatee, . to
Donald Ween for a smell

0t'

I '' I

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authorized Ser~ice

to Don1ld
WoeH by deed '"'"''dod in
Volume· 1114, Page 4~3,
Malgo County Deed

Tree

·&amp;an WHoa; thtncll North
' 2'1 deg. West ond following
the west line of the Ben
~ WHse lot a dlllance ol240
; 11et to a ateke; thence south
" "88 deg. west 249 IHt to a

PEPJO,

i.JUJk:- '

the ume ..

I t "I' ill I, "

Public Notice

tbaa1t corner of a lot now or

; )'tow or formerly owned by

19

trr&gt;nl !hC'm .
Thr ~ wln r prQj('('l mf'mht•rs will mt'f'l
a~ :t ln on .lun1• 1 al lhf' Kut h ~· Powf'll homt•
at 2:00p.m .: rhr stf'f'r pt'Ojf'("i mrmbc•rs
"'Ill lllt'f'l on .lum• i ar ~ : 00 p.m. ut th f'
MHn·ta C.ur- s~ honw. Mt•mb{'rs ar·r l fl wnrk
In unci hr ;tbl l" to dl s&lt;"u:-.~ lh t'lr proj('(·!

PH.

are h'rtby reserved bv. the
.. id C. H. WiiHomo, Truatee.

~

or

FREE ESnMATES

formerly owned by John J .

. Southwnt Corner of a lot

SIZE HEAD- GENTLE, FIRM.
SOFT OR MEDIUM

8 OZ. BOTTLE

~--

3 . Oaaolina and Oil Pro-

thence in a northNs·
tt~y direction following the
}fteandering.a of the Pome·
r(ly and Racine Road to the

REACH
TOOTHBRUSH
COMPACT OR FULL

=··-=·-

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.$.

priCII pakl for unua~al PtlttlmSCa\1 Marc at 114-112· 2101
d.,. or 1·882·2"1 wllllntll or
wttkendl.

z

POLE STYLE
CONVENTIONAL

thence north 21 dog. well
100 laet; thence oouth 69
dog. wut6251Httoan0ak

Hogan;

'

::-c::-.::

following:
1. School Accident lnauranee

•: Begi'n n.i ng at the sou·

':'

:::-~.

· Computerized lleari~t Aid Selection
0 Swim Molds • lnterpreti~t Sltvices

INSULA110N
GARAGtS

concrete merker In the
southwest comer of e lot
now or formerly owned by
Ben Weese and in th'e creek;

bounded and deacribed as
!ollowo:

R1n.: an" Will ia m s. R&lt;'portf'r

ne-xl lfK.It&gt;Ung will lx&gt; Junf&gt; 8th at Lou

t:"t..c-:t.

J&amp;L BLOWN
CUSTOM BUilT

Furthermore, this dood Ia
given subject to alene by C.

Company ' s Purchase,

:nt h at l hr hom1• nf Carnlyn Nlrhnl ~on•.
;~dvlso r . Six mt•mbrrs :tl lrn(lt'd.
Off! Cf't'S WN I' Pi('f'lf'(J , dU N\ Wf'rl' Sl'l :.11
rM)(' pf'l' mr l'tln,[!, ;.1nd lnll1:11 19n Qf t lub
mr mtx•rs was hf'ltl . Thr tnf'mtx&gt;r·s ~&lt;'!('(' ! Nl
lh!'lr pro]('('ls for I hi" yl'ar . Mr". Nl r hol!'on
srrvrd rr rrrshmrnt s to lht• mrmbf'rs. Th l'
R&lt;'X I M f't"l i n ~ will bf' Ma y l ~ th utlh&lt;•homc•
of Trr rl Wllllum s.

ShE'nE'fleld' s house. Mtombei's l hat ar('
taklnR Sf' M'Ing projHU will $t 1V(I
rk&gt;m onstratlons.

Cl• ified pap• eot~ er tM
J~lto~n; teleplwM ucMnpt ...

Bank, fl•cine. Ollio. Ploln·
tiff, against Dela Teaford
and Wando Teolord. et at.,

and State ol Ohio. and the
Ume being In 1 00 Acre Loti
No. 291 and 292 ollhtlOhlo

i. :,

-

- -

ontlquo

:::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::3::::::::::::::::::~ o~lquo. A~c~. H~•

IE. -

Recorda.
S1id Parc.l 1 wu

SyracuH. County of Meigt

]73

___.........._...,

ua.•
.....
__....
--···~""

·-·

'QUILTS
Coah pold for coltoctor

or pro 1110 qullo. P._ or

· ·~

case of The Home National

Ohio, on the 1Oth doy of
July, 1987, at10:00 o'clock
A.M. the following lando an~
tenements, to-wit:
PARCEL NO . 1: The fol·
lowing described real a.tat~
shuatod In the Villoge ol

REG., TARTAR CONTROL
OR TARTAR CONTROL GEL
8.2 OZ. TUBE

" ·•

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

hiS hairs, tWCCIIIOrl and
a11igns. with the right to
repeir. repl1ce and meintein

Court House in Pomeroy,

WEIIKINO$, SOMI. HOLIDAYS AND

••

••
til .•

011 _.

estate conveyed

ing Caoe ,No. 87-CV -71 In
said Court, I will offer lor
sale. at the front door of the

,

...,.

••

ou _.

rlght-of-wey for these lines

Defendants. upon a judgment therein rendered, be·

Thr• Rutland C:o- l.r 11rr~ ml"t On April

t'IRht mf:"mb(lrs and thr'ff advisors lttlt"nd·
lnJ!. Mt'mbf:ors dl scu.sstd plcklnJZ strawlx'r·
rlrs for resalf' , candy bar mon('y was
turned ln . and • discussion· was hrld on
rf'dolnji thf- flrf' hall yard and th&lt;' ~ -H
mMlbers will ("()()k dfhnPr for tht" adults
ht'lplnR. A r('I)Otl was given b:V Crystal
Vauf!:han on saf~IY In a camp.
A txuc gam e was played by all. MldiE'leScolt .M"rvt'd ca kE' nd lct'C'rf'am t o all. The-

W Doi\YI

RATEI

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue Of an Order of
Sale iuuod out of the
Common Ple11 Cburt of
Meigs County, Ohio, In the

.

Thr Satt"m Cl'nlf'r Co -C.f'IU'~rs mN on
May 11th ar Mlchf'h• Srolt's homr with

•o.t.n

JOolon
IOonl

Pubiic Notice

S('rvl n~ at lh&lt;'

~h'«'

III(IDl ~

• &gt;llll Otl ..... IO• T

Th f' AlfrNl AnJii:£'ls m('l on Ma_v ~ al the
hOMC' of ~usan Pullins, advisor. 1i
ml'mtM&gt;rs 11tt rndrd. Thf' ,llfOI.IP dlscus.o;f'd

Th(' Rut lu nd lrO·GNtC'I'S nwl on Mn,\ ' l R
at thr homr noxannf' Wllllum11 wllh !1.
nwmbt•rs and 1 ~1dvt sor In ai1€'MdKO('(l. A
dl' mon!l-l r:t tlo n em humstt."r r ar(' a nd
fi'NIIn.'! wn s ~lvf'n by Roxannr Willi am s.
F01· rffl"('~lt lon lhC' mf'm tx&gt;rs playf'd
sn ftba ll. RC'trrshmrnts Wflrl' s(lrvl'-'d bv
Trrrl Wlllia m !-t.
·
Tht' nrxt ml't'l I n~ of th l' club will br Junr
lst at Dtant'Sicward's homr. JayKarr~·tll

IIA IU~ DA'

_,,., """""'""'
•••on

Ht•ul th ami sarrty Con l t -t~l. Thr projc'('!
lfl!t~nn w;~ ~ on thl' R" roup pr oj f'CI Flrsl A id
and m f'mhrr dlsruss('(\ wa.vs to provC'nt
arrld1•nrs. fl. dC'momm atlon on how ro
rrmo\'r spllnl l.'l'!i wus ~h · f' n by Onnl u'
Cru nr and Krl ll'\' Gr ue•sN . Tht' rlu b's Rl'll!
mN'tln,[! w!ll hr .nn .l unt• 2nd, at i :OO p.m.
Don ia Cr an€'. Rcporlrr

OUIN"rs wrrt• t'h'l'!t'fl liS follow s: Pt·l' ~ l ­
d&lt;"nt. .Jovrf' Pkkrns: VIN.• PrNi lllrnr.
Brlct~N VHnr\' ; Sr&lt;"r&lt;'larv , Krlllt' Ervin :
TrrmtUt'N. JaSt1 n Er,·tn.: Nt' w ~ Rrporh•r ,
Jl"nny Vtn·n£'y.

.

·C.... ~
...........
'
''.:"rt'..;,;
.. .:;:•"""f
... _
·"·-i:::t.O:::::.-- ....,c_
.... - . . , _,,
___

.., I till Oil

and Ronald.
Mr. and M rs. Doyle Kpapp of
Langsville visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Char ley Sm ith and
Mrs. I va Johnson.
Mr. and M rs . H ar ley E . John·
son were visitors of I va John so n
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith.
Giadvs Tuck erman was th e
Su nday evenin g v isit ors of Do·
rothy Rreves and Bryan.

ClOSII s.llt

-

.,. -. ,. .... ··-·

·---...-. ----_U_ . . ., -......
.........._
--...----..--...--·-··

I'Ol-•

b~·

shh'ts for nl"w mrmbt•rs. ~lwrrl Ra msbur$!
lotll\'1' a ckmonstral lon on c•hickt•m . Thl'
O('XI ffil'l'tlll l! will tw .Junr 2. i :Xl p.m. al
th(• nw r homl'. O.•mrm.-.trntlons 11.'111 bf'
~ h: t• n ·h.\ ' Rl't' klt• Wllllums on rabblls a nrt
•lt•t'l'111 \' lmt(l(h•n on brt•r bn'{'(llnJ~; .
'
Shrn l Ru m sbut'_l;!, Rr pnrtt•r

HI' Is the grandso n of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Pom eroy,
and Mt'. and M rs . Paul Brll.
Racine, ad the great -grnadson of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jeffrrs,
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Dares
Arnold. Pomeroy. and Mrs.
H elen Philips, Coolville.

TO PU(I'" Q WI lft.J.,.
IIIIDNDAT ttn ~' I &amp;.a .. I PJL
• I A.a. W J110011 SATUIIAY

DA1~f01rf'UIUI:Af10fl

Rose Garden Club meets,
discusses. family picnic

1'ht• Hlll blll ll'"-l· lt Club lllf'l nnMil\' 12th
:tl lhr• honw nl OpHI D~·l'r , Ad\' IHH:. Till'
~ro u p t ll ~l · u ~st '( \ making a fl nu t IOI' Ihr 4th
ot .lui \' PurMh· In Rutland ·,md IJuvlng

.Joshua Brl l.ltlmonth oi&lt;I MIIHI!
Shaw n anrl Hhonda Bell. II'Ofl
srn' ral trop hies and gifts at thl'
rrrrnt 1hn'&lt;' da~· ro mp&lt;' I il on hl'ld
in Columbu s fo t· thr t ltlr of HIK7
Su nburst Bab~· Kin g.
In thr comprtltion. th&lt;' Infant
was rrownC'd l !lKi Muse!&lt;• Man
King dur i n~ swinnn·ar l'Ompt'lllon. the· 1!1H7 photqgrnir king.
rtr sl r unnrr ·up i n siN'P"''''"
com pr tll on, srco nd run nrr-up In
spo 1·tswcar . In thr top HI fin alis ts
in formal WPar. and wa:.o ti \\'Hl'dPd
the best Jl('rsonallt)· a\\·ard.
Among hi s gift s was u S!'holar·
ship for modrlln ~ sc hool and his
entry f(&gt;(&gt;s for thr 19g7 natio nal
compellton which will be held In
Atlanta . Ga .

means not to do whatever action
the symbol represents. Amber
means som e ca ution Is necessary
and green mea ns \o go ahea d no special preca ution Is needed.
Did You K now That : Rami/:&gt;
has been used for centuries In
Asia and Africa .

- IIOIAM

Square - refers to drying.
Specific Instructions such as drip
dry ing or dryer temperature are
placed within the square.
Flatiron - refers to press ing
or Ironing . Again, specific In·
str uctlons suc h as Iron tempera ·
ture placed Inside t he Iron
sy mbol.
Circle- refer s to dry cleaning.
Letters within the circle Indica te
which dry clea ning solvent Is
recommend ed .
The symbols on the label of
Jhose new slacks tell you to hand
wash them , dry them on a flat
surfa ce and press with a cool

9

Business Services

-'- lae O t i - U

A li f'mon.colt'ilt lon w a .~ ~1\'f' n nn pil!
rlls t•usr • - w hat thr ,v ra n Jl:C'f &lt;1nd htlw l o

tot title

•

Wolf Pen community happenings

mrmbrr' ~ mel 4 a d vl $: u r ~ allrnclln ~
Mt•mlwt·s ti L~ t'U "S«I t'U ntlv .~ iii&lt;'S, lucl~ \ ng
t lall's, ancl 1.ml n ~ In 4-H t.' amp. Thr prOj('{'l
h os.~n n wo1,. un outdm1r I'OOkf'l'\' an11 l ht•
nH•mbrr~ t'('IOkNI fnud un lht• grill . A r;1bblt
dPm" ""' ''ullnn II.' as :1\so ~lvrn .
81-rk\' Kauff. Rr•pnrll •r

Bell wins

•

INCt..I.MI.NT WIEATH&amp;A CONDITIONI '"'.
EXCL.UDI;D.

'f' hp(' n ll nlr~' numpkl ns nwt on
ttw honw nr Llnd~t Sc·hull .-

,JIISII UA liEU.

are used on cloJhfng so ld in the
United States. If shopping in
another count ry, you, may find
garment s with symbols only.
Color is part of some lnterna·
Ilona.! labeling sys tems though
th e Brllish system uses onlY
bl ack . When color is used. red

The Daily

Ohio

~--:-:::.~
, ..-::-:, e:::J!'.~.!::=:a
..-.__
-~-- ... Cio~

Meigs County 4-H
-

15, 1987

Labels tell story ·of ·care for 'clothing

A famil y picnic was plann ed
for June 17 at the ReedsvillE'
Locks and Dam Par k when the '
Rose Garden Club met at the
hom e of Mrs. Vercl a Stout.
Meal w ill be furni shed for. the
picnic wit h mem bers to tak!'
veget abies, sa lads. desserts and
bever ages . Mrs. Grace St out
pres ided at the m eeting with
Doris Koenig giving devotions
from Psalms 23 and members
praying the Lord ' s Prayer In
unison. For I'OII ca ll members

· EMI'I.O\' t; n

Monday, June

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
a.«c

r.E.CHIIIG IS OUI li.E
Tro~chlnr

of An, Typo
loelflot SlrfiCI
Plu•illlll Stmct

Cm•lhtdilc

Wt

•

Jlm'1 odd jobt, p.. n11ng, driv• .. _
way , ...allng, CltPentltf'.w ertta • ·

root

r~air .

tr-. I

h.......

nie. • • Esttte, tMiflue, fetm.
llqukletlon ••Ill. 304· 773·
8711orn3·11430.

2.,..

AUCTION, Mod cooh Ill 1 dl'l1
Gol Mtho ovctlo!t ww;. Coli Col.
Oooor ~ . Ctlcli, 304·181·3430
tor til your auctton nMdl.
UcenN No . 714·11.

Can do Nght haullno 11\4 roofintl.
Rt~tonablt nt••· Marlon ..
Sntdoo. l14·141· 2tZI.
J

9

CoUt4-lt2-11403.

Wented To Buy

Lowfley lltotio&amp;
s.,tlc s,siii!IS
Clny C-llt CuiYorts

t.IIPirltnctd. Ph. 114 -J")t. t
~

Qtva pi~no aftd otOtn 1t1110n1 .. ' '
bt91nnlt't, ldwMIOM tt..._.t ~ j
.nd ldultt In my home. 4leo .
taad'! cordi"Q ancl triM,IIOats+

Lawn IMW'tf ,.,..,, Wll 1M*.., •'
•nd dtHII'It. AIIO lklttt .........1\1

Colt 114-7'2-Uta or 114-

llcootiH. Bonded '

742· 3011 .

WIUIAMS

TRENCHING SERVICE
,II. 4. HrMII l111 lltd
' - " '· Ofllo 4575t
'"· (&amp;14) M2·2134 or

.

I

·

112·1104-fr• (slilll1ts
~11·1 ....

TO' CAIH potd f01 '13 model
lfWI

new..-

1111 ,Jil , I I

.uNCI c... lmlth

hklll· Pond.c:, 1111

luylnt dolly gold. olt•or colllo.

rin9L jowot.,., ltorliftg ..... old

- .. Iorio cu,..cy. TIJtl prloM. Ed urtron I a - Shop,
2nd. Aw. Mlddl-" Oh. 114·
112·3471.
...,.,...... obi rolrlforiiOf, Col
114·"2·3111 .

..

•

Eert•n

Avo., Qolllpollo, Col 114-441·
2212.

••

,.,,,

21

Busln11a

Opport111i1ty

�23

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Professional
Services

51 Household Goods

Sol• 1nd ~;htirl priced from
1396 to 1995 , Tabltl *50 and
up to *1215. Hidl-l·boedl t390
to *695. Aadiner• *2215 to
1376. UI'I'Jpt •28 to •126.
Dlnett" 1109 arwt up to 1496.
Wood ltble w. I chelra t286 to
*791 .· O..k t100 up to *375.
Hutchn *400 and up , Bunk
beda campltt• w-mlttr"tu
•2915 1nd up to t3915, Baby bedll
•110. Mattr ...ea orboxtprings
full or twin tea. tirm na. and
taB. Ou..n uta 122&amp;. 'tcing
t360. 4 drtwer ch11t f89 . Gun
c::lbineta I gun . a •• or elac::tric
r1n9t t371S . Bab'l ml1treaHS
t36 6 *46 / Bad fremll t20.
*30 &amp; King lrame f60. Good
selection ot bedroom 1uit11.
metal o1blnets. headboard• $.30
1nd up to l66.

Have vacency for eldtrty men
long term. If vou need • home tor
your perentt wh HI you ' re on
vtc:ation, gl'tlt me a call. H1ve
reference and pltnty ofTLC. Call

614-949-3014 .

Rea l Eslale
Homes for Sale

New 4BR . 2 beth, Cl.,k Dr
•52,000. Newty remodled Ha.
2BR , U2.000 in Addison. Call
446 -8898

90 Days same •• ca1h with

3 OR ; vinyl siding. rural water,

approved ere-cUt. 3 Miles out
Bulll!l'llille' Rd. Open 9em to 5pm
Mon . thru Sat . Ph. 8U-446·

nice neighborhood. t19.000.

Call614 -448-3249. 446-1l39.
448-1528 .

•soo

down. t213 / mo. Smal12
BR cottage. lower Rt . 7 . Cell
814 -448 -8598 6AM to 4:30

PM.

3 BR . 2 blltha. Qlfage. l•ge
kit chen. dining room . large
dining room. AC . 9 1fa% interest,
83 .000 down. tfke ·ovM pav·
mentt.
814· 446·2472 .

c.n

0322.

"Know what was really good
about the good old days? I
wasnlt good then and I
wasn't old."

~;:;::::;;:;;;::::::T;;;:::;;::::::;:::::::::::::1
'"for Sale or Le11e••
I
4 BR. 2 bill h.''II baoomtnl, wilh 34
Buaineas
44
Apartment
aboveground pool &amp; XL deck on
R
112 sere scron from Addl\lille
Buildings
for ent
grtde achool. Financing •v•ll•·
ble with small down ps..,ment.
Priced thouundt below apprsised value. Call Betz : 919·

791 ·2152.

Completely remodeled house. 1
rooms , 2 baths . 30 acre~
liJfOund. 10 1cre1 good bottom
Call 614-379-2780.

Garage building for ren1. Ideal
tor mechine. clean up shop. Call

814· 245·&amp;080.

35 lots &amp; Acreage
16 etrel for 11leln Autltnd. Gu
well, _ voery ncluded. •11 .200.
Call 614· 992·3801 .

lovefy new 3 BR home bulh thi1
spring. 2 c1r ~~rage. nice tret.
Cltv &amp; city tchooll. &amp; mil"
grom G•lllpoUa. Will conakler
mobile home u trtde - in .
U?.ISOO . Cal 814· 446 ·8038 .

One lol on AI. 2 near Goodyear
Pl1n1. zoned lor houn onl..,.
t10.000 firm , Alto 100x100
trailer or house lites on IJJm lantt
•a.ooo firm . 304·1578-2028 .

3 bdr,. 1 1cre. Htrriaonvllle area.
•18.600. Cell 814· 742-3168.

304-675·5889.

2 level lott, 6 milft from town ,

For 1111 by owner: 2 11ory house
In Mlddlepon overlooking park.
30 yr. guarnteed winylt siding,
w-w carpet, 1 1h btth, unique
woodwork. 814-992 -15126 .

27 seret lend M..on. city watttr
and sewer. 304- 773· 1515159.

Government Homes from •1 . lu
reptir). Delinquent til propeny.
Aapoaaa111ona. Cell 806-6878000 Ext. GH -9805 for currant
repo list.

41

Fulty lurnished 2 bedroom home
in Rscinewith equipped kitchen,
river view propeny. •cron from
Gener~l Store. E1ay ecce" to
Ohio Alver boat leunchlng and
nndy belch . *15.000. 614·
849-2188 or 614 -948-2218.
Hou11 lor lila In country .
Rutland arta. 1 acre. 2 bedr~om 1
1 bt1h. Call 114· 992-3!Ui0 .
3 bldroomhoma on 3.35 acr~a2
out bulldlnga.and cellar. Owner
will mongage. Call 814 ·742·
3149. After 5 p.m.
6 room housetnd btth. 1 1fJ acre,

025.000. f14·9S2·74&amp;3.

3 bedroom brick home, 2 btth.
b..ement, on 6 . 76 acr" . Fret
911. Ctll Hob. atett1r Realt'l
614· 742-3092
Ranch tlyle lppro• . 2 acres. 3
bedroom, 21h bllh, large klr·
chen. dish wuher. dlspo111,
living room with fireplace, family
room, dining room. utility room.
wtter softener, 2 ctr garage.
181138 In ground pool with
haMer. elao detelched building
appr011. 28"34. Choice location.
Call Dey 814-742· 2211 or
814·378-14215 night.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
•

NEW ANO USEO MOBILE
MOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE MOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GAlliPOliS. RT 3&amp; .
PHONE 814-448 ·7274 .

1984 141166 Mobile Home. 3
lot1, ell electric, fenc•d yerd .
Evergr11ttn. *18.600, Ctll 614·

44&amp;·1528. 448·1338.

197'( Shu1t 12aJ15 with elll·
pendo. Tekaover payments. Call
814· 266-1468 or 814 · 268·
8046.
1971 Fntival 14a70· 3 BRs, 2
baths, stove. relrig. , ceil ing fens,
som1 new c ~tpat. underpinning,
total electric. On rented lot·
n .tiOO. Ct ll 814·245· 5070
tnyt ime Thurs. Fri,, ott. en b&amp;tore 2 PM ,
Fer Sal.,.. 1974 12 "60 Holly
Park Trailer. 2 bedrocm. to tal
el~ttr ic . In excellent cond ition.
Pho ne l14 ·949· 2769.
Mo bil heme, 12 11 80, 2
bedroom, furnithed, 50 lll 200
lot, PRIME LOCATION, Middl•
port . Call 614 ·992 · 3838 .
1982 Mans ion. On be~Y llfu l
fron t lot In MiddltPo rt .
Tctel ehtctrlc. AC, 2 Larg e
bedroom•. and man.., e11 tre' 1
C11ll 614 -992-3348 .

Ren lals
Houses for Rent

Nicety furnilhed small houtt.
Adulta only . Aefer•ncea r•
Qulred·. Off street p1rklng. Ph.

814·4te·0338.

House 28ft !Nith llove &amp; retrlg.
Located 58 Mill Creek . t160 per
mo., •75 Oep . C1ll 814·448·
3870 or 4•8·1340
Two bdr. unfurnithtd house.
Worklhop. Qtrtge.
Mlffltd
coupt". Willtccept 2 children.
Ref. 1nd dep. Call 446·9888 .
House, 2BR , with stove &amp; refrlg.
locM:ad 58 Mill Cr&amp;ek . *1 80 per
mo. t715 dep . Call 814-448·
3870 or 614-446-1340.
Houte, 3 BR'1, located 881
Fourth Ave. *188 mo. t76 dap.
Cell 814-448-3870 or 614-

448·1340.

928 First Ave. 15 room house.
Clll814· 448-3945 tfter 4pm.
Unfurnished houte. 3 bdr. Rod ney VIllage II . t2715 . Ctll 44844,8 .tt ... eprn.
3 bedroom and blth In htlrt on
Muon, W. Va. large front
porch, 8x 10 outbuilding, ltOII'I
tnd rtfrlgeralor furnished. Call

304·6e2-2498 or 614·992·
73&amp;2.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2BR , AC . cabl1, Hud accepted.
Riverview In Ktn1ug1. Fosters
Mobile Home Park. Ph. 614 446· 1602.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home in
Crown City. Ph, 614· 268·6620
Two bedroom Utlter. Furnlahtd
or unfurnished. Ulillt itt plid.
Ctll 614 -448·1200 afttt 6pm.
Furn . 2 BR -Upper At . 7·
1200/ mo. Also. 2 BR . tpt.·
Cheshire. *200/ mo . C1U 814 245-5818.
3 bedroom mobile hom1. Large
ysrd. 314 Third St . Kan1ugs.
Call614 -448-7473.
10d0, 2 bedrooms. No pets.
Call 614-949-2424.
Two 2 Mdroom mobile homt~ ,
furn lshtd, vard wi1hchaln link
fence . t75.00 deposit, phOne
304 -875 -&amp;fiU tfter 15 :00 pm.
3 br traiiM. Pl'lmlle Ad. Gllllpo·
lis Farry. 304-875-3893 .
2 bedroom. elr cond. Wllherdryer , *180.00 plua utllllitt ,
G111ipoli• Ferry. one block from
po1t office. rei. 304-678-4874.

r l\l~tr

1 2 ~~;66 Mobill ho me. Alm o 1t
cnmphU I IV remod1led lncludea
underp inning. bloc k. fr o nt
poreh. elec pole •sooo Csll
614-667 6758

1982 Holly P•rlt. 14• 70. 3
bedrooms, all &amp;Ito. AC. underpennRd. mull sell, 114.500.0 0
or bn1t oHer, 304 -77 3-9 155
11ftet &amp;:00 PM

33

Farms for Sale

8 I CUI on Tri bbll Rd. oft Rt. 62 .
Plus slott building, Wlft houn.
3 BR hou11, b~r n , cell u . plut 2
othtf buildings. All b!Jck t op
rold. Cell 304· 468· 1818 . Call
after &amp;PM .
70 Acre Ftrm in Patriot. Ctll
8111· 379· 26•2 tftet 3.
153 Acn e Ftrm w ith 8 room
f10ute, lg. lhOP. btrn. Mldll
IJO's. Call 814 -251-1616 No
SundiV Calla.
20 tcre firm Htnnan l re ce
Road. GlenwOOd, W. V1. tor
mort Information ull90•· 773·
5118 or 773-6188 after &amp;:00.

34

Business
Buildings

Comm•ci•l building• for lt11e.
Downtown Pt. Pl ..~ent. Store1,
oHicn. A·Ont Rut Estate.
C~rol Veag1r, Broker. Call 304-

871·5104.

747 lnddullrialstor-ue 12 toot
&lt;Net hud door. 3 ph•n of
electric. 11x41 1t..t bultding
114 · 441 · 2312 For
1ppointment.

'

44

Apartment
for Rent

Aptrtmenu for the Elder!..,.
Frenchtown Apal1mltnll. 727
fo urth Ave. Opening soon 24
units designed tor Stnior Cltl·
zena j62 • olderl &amp; hendic1pped
PIIIOns. Rent including adjult·
mtt'tt for water. 18WI91 •
tlectric il based on ttnentl
Income. Equal hauling oppor·
tunit¥. AppUcttiona
be
picked up at Spring Vallt'¥ Pleu.
C1ll 441 ·4139. All eltdrlc hell
pump1.

m..,

Rlo Grande, Ntw 2 BR Apt.
Stove. rthlgtfttor • wettr
fvtnltf'l~ . 12215. ptf month. No
pets. Oapotlt. Call 814·"8·

8036.

Griclout living. 1 and 2 bid·
room tP41rtments 1t Villllt
Manor and Rlvlftktt A.,_..
mtntt ln MlddltPOM. ,rom
t211S. inctudlng utllltltl. Call

814-992· 7717. EOM.

1 bedroom 1p1. In Pamlf'Oy,
Totti alactric. Rtnt •no. per
month. plus depotit . 814-912·

8218.

1 b.droom 1pt. in Middleport.
t150 month plu1 utllhi•. 814·

1 tnd 2 bedroom apertmenta tor
rent. B11ic rent for 1 bdr.,
t1 83.00; 2 bdr., *219 ,00 . AIIO
required s *200.00 1ecuriw
deposit. CONTACT: Jaekton
En11es Dept. Ph 44Q-3997
Equal Houtlng Opportunity .
Furnished 6 unturni1hed IP"··
•1150.00 end up, references Ph.

304·871·773B or 304-675·

15104 A-1

At~l

Estate.

Furnished Efficiency *1415. Utili·
litte ptld. •hare bath. 807
Second Ave., Gallipolia, Ph.
448-4418 aftllf 7PM.
1 BR Apartmtnl. 740 Second
Ave. •185 per month. Oeposil
required. Call 814-448-4222
between 9 &amp; 5 .
Upttlltt unfurnished apartment
Utilities peid. Cerpeted. no child·
ren or pet1. Call&amp;14·441·1837
Furnished IP\· next door to
Llbrtry. One profeuional Adult
onl.., . Parking. Ph. 4415·0338.
Two 3 room apta. Dav• 4467672 after 15 446· 1980 .
Gtrage apt. 3 room• &amp; beth.
Furnished, including wl1her ..
dr;er &amp; tit . Clean . No pets .
Adults only. Ref. • dep required.
Ctll 814·448·11519.
Furnished• 1partment, • 22 6 .
utilities paid. 1 bdr. 920 Fourth,
G111ipol!s. C1ll 448-Ule 1fter
Bpm.
Furnished 1p1rtment, t226 .
utilities peld.
1 bdr. 939
Second, Galllpoll•. Cell 446·
4418 after 8pm.
2 BA ·apertment tor rtnt in
Crown City. Call 614 -266-

8495.

1 bedroom ground floor. priv•te
entrance, recenu.., remodeled.
Everything lurn., loe. our.klrts
Hellderson. UfiO. month. 304·

675-8730.

2 Piece living Room Sulte1326.
MoHohan Furniture. Upper River
Ad . Ph. 814 -446-7444 . Open
tilt ?PM on Week Days.

CARPET

Cerpet remnants· $6 .00 a yard
and up, Mollohan Furniturtt
Upper River Rd. Ph. 614-4467444. Open till ?PM on Week
Daya.
----~-----

CARPET

C~rpet

remntnta 16 .00 11 yard
and up. Mollohlil'l FurnitUre.
Upper River R~.. Ph. 814·446·
7444. Open till 7PM ·on Week

o•. , •.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, dey . week.
month. Gallle Hotel. Call 6U 446-9715. Rent •• low 11 *120
month.
Furnished room. *1 16. Utilities
Plid. Shirl bath. Single mtle.
919 Sac:ond. Gallipolis. Call
448· 4416 1fter 7pm.

814·448·3644.

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 8 pc: living room
suitM, t399 .96; New living
room sultu from 1179.96 to
t?OO.; Chnt of dr1wers. 4
drewer. t48 ., 5drtwer, *59,96;
End tabl .. from *69.8&amp; let .
Used Furniture: bedroom auhe1.
fuM elzed bede. twin bedl end
rockers . Recliners from *99. 96
end up

TME WQR~ING
MAN'S FRIEND

HeiV'I blach wrought Iron round
table ,with black magnolite gla11
top. 1nd 4 chairs. t175 . 614 -

992·2981 .

Hutch, table. 6 chaira. see and
make an offer. 304-882· 3638 ..

54 Misc. Merchandise

'

Call1htn'a Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000tlret, lltll12, 13, 14, 16 ,
18, 18.15. 8.mllu out Rt. 218 .

Call814·2611-6251 .

Pl•tlc cl..ern ltett tpprovtd ,
plastic •eptlc ttnk1, pl11tlc
culv.rta, metal culverts. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES,

Joe~·

IOn. Ot-t . 11114-288-15930.
le•• hst Compuuwizad refrig·
Al1o new
tretor, 11000.
motorilld 1r81d mill.
Call

Two ho1pitsl beds, welkllf, tv·
ptwriter, tnd two tewlng mt·
thh1H. Call614· 446· 1488.
Showc .. as·Ughttd. 5 ft. &amp; 8ft.
Excellent condition . *150, each.
CaU 81,· 448·9696 or 114246-91415 sfter 6pm.
Diamond men• rina· 1.2ct.·
Excellent clltity • qusllty. Apprtlted If 14800. will sell for

Rio Grtnde Nursing Uniformt &amp;
ltb coats. site 10. Excallent
co,ndhion. ns . C1ll 614·682·

7164.

Nice couch &amp; ch.Jr. Vinyl rocker
recliner. stove. table &amp; chaira.
Bunk beds, •ntertalnmtnt ten·
ter. dnk. Call 814-44e-3224.

415 caliber Ohio 175th Commtmorlttve pl1tol. Price r•
duced. Ctlll14·441-9471 ttter
I waekda'l•·

47 Wanted to Rent
3 or 4 Bedroom house In K¥Aet
Creek School Di11tlct. A•fer..-.·
en Ph. 814-U6 -8821 .
Profettlontl woman ri'H)ViftO 10
Jraa, needs 2 or 3 btdroom
hou11 In Of n11r PDint Pf ...ant
io rent. INse. Atferenct av•ll•
ble. C•lll -304-778·1288 aftet

1:00PM.

lart~e

sins &amp;

baby bed. Calle14-251·9333.

Tony's Gun Repaln, hat reblu ..
In;. Open 9 :00AM to 7:00PM .

Coii304·87B·4831 .

Surplus denim. rentll, trm¥.
Carhart elothlf\g. Sam Som ..
n~illa' 1 E11t Rlvtntwood, Fri.
Sat. Sun, 12:00 till 8:00 PM.

304·273·5885.

W~rm

Morning wood burl\lng
atova, very good cond. *1 t50.
Call before 8:00p.m . 30•·875·

2188.

Trl Star awnp•. 30-t·l?&amp;-

3893.

1071.

0231 .

Oragonwynd Catter; Kennel.
CFA HlmeiiiY'an. Penitn and
Siamne ktttans. AKC Chow
puppi .. . New kitten•: Siwn••
end Himalayans . Call 814-4463844 after ?PM .
Apricot poodle puppies, AKC.
tilled, wormed, tho1t. t126.
Also stud sttrvice. Calll14· 446AKC Chihuahul puppl• to go In
four weekt, Pair of love Birdl &amp;
Frenches. For informatin Cell

614·843·2780 . .

AKC Germ1n Shephet"d. Good
watch dov stock. wormed. 7
wks, *100. No c:heckt. Off
Woods Mill Ad. C1ll 114- 38B-

:,.,------•a.
fodtemp
Wanted: Stud Service for AKC
Reg. femaleAottweiler. Will give
Pick of litter. Call 614- 388·

992·2782.

AKC reghltred miniature
Schn1uur puppiu, ult l
pepptr color, male &amp; fem1l1,
shots t. wormed. 304-891 -

3951 .

304·882·3287 or 304·773· U - R'- Rd. ·8024.
C- M0101. 81,·441·731•.

1976 Mercury Montego 351
Cl1111eland. PB, PS, tutomatlc,
new plint. ·new btlltel. uao.

1981 Buick Skylark Limited. PB,
PS, good tim, beMJtifullnterlor,
outaide good. Cell 114-992-

Now buying shell corn or e•
corn. C1U forllt:nt quotn. River
City F8rm Supply, 614· 448·

57

leiter piano wfth bench.

Call 814-448· 3574.
58

5818. • 2145.

Str~wberrl11 :

Pick your own.
Bring contain61'1. Claud• Win ten. Rio Grtnde. Ohio. Call

814·245·5121 .

Quality Fruita tnd Vegettbl•
ratail 1nd whal..ale. I . • S .
Produce across ftom Pi1za Hut,
tQaHipoUa, Ohio.

I 1111' S11 11pll•'l

lr tiVi:ol111.h
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS lo SONS
U.S . 31 Wnt. Jedtson , Ohio.

114·218·11451 .

MttHy Ftrguaon, New Holl1nd,
lu1h Hog Sal• • larvtce. Over
40 ustd tractors to chooee from
a complttt line of new a usad
._....lpmtnl . Le,gtlt Hl-=tlon In

S.E. Qhlo.
273 -

Molllll&lt;l aq. Sol•
•1800. Ford 3pt. AM• U25.
Shevtr Pott Ortvw •100. 7ft.
loculi posh t1 .31 eKtl Ph.

814·311·1132.

MF 815 Tractor wM" btl.- a
mowing mltChlnt. t21001 Fonl
trtct:or wtth ~lhld ,.,ow..-.

02300. Coli 114·211·H22.

.

'

2e ft. Titan motor t~P,ma. corri· ;
pt.. ely lllf·con1aintCI. gener•··
tor, 1leep1 8. $8900. CaN

614·44fl·0008.

'

~~~~---------1988 Trevelm11t•-new cond.\'

Bf

Coechmen.

• 4-256·1287.

27

1977 Apache told down.lletpa ;
e. contelnt AC-OC convertM"; ··,
ttave. .tnk. ice box . Ph. 614·

Benson

8)

..

'

63

'84 C•velier wagon book price
u.aao.oo need to nil
n.aoo.oo. Loaded. 304-&amp;7&amp;-

1185 M11ter Tra.,ef'motor home ,
bV CoiChmenJ New conditton. , ·
loldltd. 10,000 ac::tuel mil... 1 •
Ctll 614·268- 1287.
.

2583.

Duroc Boars. Bred iull like the
bolrs we tllltecl at th• Ohio
T.. tltion lhlt gained over
lbl. per day. Roger Bentley,

2:.

Sabine. OH. 113·584·238B.

Eight holt hog f..t•, good

77 Mab. Convertible, 2609

Jtff«Mn Ave. t8&amp;0. 304·671·

5884.

Z·28 •utomatlc tr•n• .. *100 .;
'72 Monte C~rlo bodv t&amp;O .;
KIWI•.td 1000 LTD $300.

'

814·2Be·8&amp;22.

4 vaar old Morgtn gelding. with
IIddie &amp; brklle. '380. CeH

814·3BB·I889.

St:rvir.es

,,,oo

GI)OCI mlxtd ht¥.
1 b...
out of field, •1 . 2.15 out of bern,
t1 .40 delivered. C11t 114·441·

3120 or 81~·44t · 0373.

H•v fof ,.., •1 .oo "' bat•.
Firewood UO.OO pick up lotd

dlllvorod. 304·n3·1185.

NOO{)Lt:

LONG ENOUGH·

•

•' .

Hoine
Improvements

WHEW! ~HI&gt;.~'S r.. RELIEF~
t DOI.I'T THINK I'D WI&gt;.NT
T'BE ON HER HIT ·I.IST!

. -..

- - - - , - - - ''' --C.·_ _,·•
' ,

Truck&amp; for Sale

1185 Blnar, law mll .. ge,
loaded. Sharp. Call 8 14·448·
8281 befort 3. After 3 &amp;
wlft~d1, call 814 -441-8127
1173 Suburben 41l4. 350auto ..
niW pllin1, new tir•. 47.000
mM11 • • 2200 lit OffM, 8 14·941·

3038.

71 OMC tru~k. 350 tuto.. long
wh... bell, for. ule or trtda.

304·875·76C9.

Vans &amp;.4 W.O.

1178 Jell' CJ.B. Col1814-3870541 .
1187 VW cam,_ v1n. good
cOndftion t&amp;OO . 2910 SpNce

Avo. 1'1.

74

Pl .. WV. City.

Motorcycles

118, ·8110 Honda Cuttom. Exc .
Cond .• Low mll~~ge. •aoo. Call

WATERPROOFING
• ,.
Unconditionll lifl'llme guaran· '
1". Loc.t rlf•enctl furn~htd . ·
Fr" •tlmetn. Ctll collect -~ ,

H14·237·04B8. doy or night •

Roge~•B•ttment
Wsterprootlng.
~..

~·

,EEK &amp; MEEK

'•

MORt: MJD Ma&lt;E

-------------------- ~:I
ht.,&amp;or Stucco, Pl•t• a"f' ,
Pl11terllt•pair. Workbythehour ~ •
or by thajob. Frnntlmeta. Call ~ "
814-251-1182 .
• ~.

&amp;PUriFU... !AX)tvltiJ
SEEM AlWACTtD 10
FO..ITI&lt;IMJS LAW.Y.. .

--------------~ ·

RON'S T't leviaion Servicl. " ~
HouH calla on RCA. Ou111r. 1
OE . Speciliing in Zenith. CaD 1 •
304· 571· 2398 Of 614 ·448 • I ~

2454.

1112 Forti PU Trut:lt. Sh0111. 117t Kerley 'D' Cl••llc. tourr
U115.. 1171 ChiiVy C..tom
9.200 mil•. clean,
Van. n 191. Call 814·211· pecl~ge.
u .soo.oo. 080 , 304·175·
8522.
1117.
111S Chwolto. 7.000 mi. Take 1111 Hond•IX200. 4 wh .....
OVtf Pllf"'tntt, CaN t14·446·
•c cond. •1 ,100.00. 2121
4841 .
.,.... ,. .... 304-878·1108.
71 Cl 780 K HondL •c. cond.
Trlde fcM" ..,... c• with llr.

NOW WHW A MIW $PHS
HE'S L£AWJC rouncs
10 S!tf\0 ~t: llME.
Wml I-llS FAMILY.. .

when he Is arrested during a

protest. (R) r:;l
9:00 (]) TOO Club
1J (%) i1JJ MOVIE: 'Thlo Child
to Mint' NBC Mondoy Night
111ho Movllo
(!) Bu~or Mogozlno (T)
1!J Q] Amtrlcln Playhoun
Gertrude Stein Is Ill, but will
no11ell Allee, who suspects
trulh. D
1m) Ill liZ Newhort George
and Dick go on a mission of
mercy for 1h8 town . (Repeat)

.'
'

.

Fettv Trn Trimming, t1ump
rtmovtl . Call 304·671·1331 .

.
drilling. ,

1

~

_,_otary or cable tool
Molt wells compltltd stm• d-v. ,... ,
Pump tal" tnd servlct. 304· ti , \

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I'M TRYINEi A NEW
DIET.. I CAN ~T
ANYTHI~

IIICZJ Bolp

WHO TOLD YOU

I WAS DOWN
i~AR?

PAW'?

General Hauling ·' .

'.
I'
1 ,

limo. C.ll 814·441·740-t-No · •
~

Sundi'Y CIUt .

...

J04.17e-2981.
A • A W•• Strvlca. Hom• • •
1H2 Hondo ISO Nl!lllt Hawk, dlttma, weth:. poolt fflled t.-" . .
1.. ,_ 0100. 304·178· 7&amp;48. Formet"r' Jam• loyi WM:er. i; •
Same rites. Cell 304-875- ,. ·
=~ :
1118 Hondo 210 RXL 8370.
,.
n ,ooo.oo. 304-H2·3h7.
J • J Water S.vlce. Swimming
11n Kawoolkl LTO 1000 wMh pool1, cisterns, wtllt. Pt.. 114·
ZIR OftlllnO. .., &lt;Gnd, 304·112· 248·928&amp;.
==~------_.
2t87.•

11n ea.-•. r ....,.. u.ooo ... " - 200X. 3 ·
Good condiUon. ean -304-171-21118.
· 1171.00 1:30
Or - to
offo&lt;,
814-441-4311.
Watt1non'a Wet,ilr He-. ling , 1.. '
7:00.
fNIOnaltle r11", immtdiat• ' 1 •
2.000
dettv.-y, clttern•.. \' ' ..
1171 Oldo Delta II, oM - ·
nmo goaol. ooudlllott.
pooll. well . ..c. c .. 304-&amp;78--' ... .
2111.
.. -:.. ~:
c.- • • 1111.--. 715 Boeta end
Coiii14·Hf.117tlftorl.
""otor1 for Sela
=---~--~~~------·
Form.,ty Ken 's naW JOhn 't! 15 ;
Mttado 11ll·7. 1112. Cltotoooi
Wetet hm~. John Watenan ~ "
21 ft. ... 3 "'" Jr . Ownet. 1.000 or 2,000 g- ~'i. •
...... · -· flntl. Colll14· MMct, 304-171 ~2241 .
30.000
·
Lllto-.
n•aoo.
''Iii~
Cell .1..-..1001 ... ori14- ..... 11Za .. 114·4&lt;1 .. 1331.
2~11&lt;MIII• ..... .
11ft.._,._._. •

,.nan

.

41

,.

4* · tll2w...-..71

-Caiii14-Z· v...,...II11. -lon.

"' -

· 11000. - · · ...

ZO FL 1171 Fhhw;;r. Lllle
.....o.. ..... lawMwa.Call

114-ttz-an- I :OOp....

---------

'.

I

SUR6ER'f ON MONDAV ?

MW Uplwtwld.

U 1 - . 111:. AM.

lu-

Coii.14-UI-1111.
H.IOO I ... · -·
11n

-

Thert were 10 many to cure they hid to
work 20 hours 1 day, seven deys a - ' t.

•

ltnll'l Upholn.ry &amp;hap: Furni-- i

lAt MW •

I

.......

3114~ PorriOoh

-----~~·
01,000.
Cell I14-14Z·1414.
-Corio.
Coiii14--IIUI.

111111uw;c-.u.o.
, ... HoMo Cl1 • .., lUI. Coiii14-M7.-.

ture.c. .................c:

..__..,.........

11
,l

114·2118·8270. R - ' ·
-CoM .c._
city.

:i
u,_._,....._ ·: '
"- f4t:sCture ql ll •• ..+

--· .........

tm ,,........ a ......
.....
•
. u.200.
110 n
- · ~~~-=

PEANUTS

... A M C•om Couchel ""

Rovpholat...,, ••· At. 7, c_, .
City. Dh. &amp;14-2118·1470. e...
114-448-3431. 0 p . , - I IG
4:30. lot. 1:30 to 1:30. Old •

......... SUJIII . . . . . . ..

.. oeunty. . .

Celt' • , '
104 · t71·4,14 fpr tra•

1,·

~ ...

rn Wotor
am Colby
Skiing 1986

(!)

lntemallonal Waterski Tour
from Augusta. Georgia (R)
(!) Oolil &amp; Ruby Aging
hospital worker's 1hrown Into
toe to toe banta with
aupervlsor. r:;1
[]) Nowo
8) CZJ USA Tonight
11:00(]) Hordcaolllond
McCormlcll
ern CIJ • (]) ~mJ ma21
!Ill Nowl
[]) Oulo fi Ruby Thl&amp; one
womAn play deplc15 the lives
of 3 black women in the
South. Q
11J1 MoMyllno Current
report&amp; on world soonomtcs
and financial newa wl1h Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
lUI Honoy-rs
e CZJ Love Con11:30 ern ll5l a.11.o1 c.-

Wffl tic» wtter heuNng tor ...... '
poot1, etc. 'le..onlble ratM. •
1000 fallon. 114· 742· 2234. l "... :

-··-·· -·-

1o:30

(!)Sign Off

____ .,

ml•.

newamakers and catabrillas.
9:30 (!) Surflng A Day 81th&amp;
Beach from Huntington
Beach, California (A)
1m) Ill d2l Deolgnlng Women
Reese papa the quullon.
end he and Julia elope. (A)
10:00 1m) Ill a2) Cognoy ond laCIY
A bright, young sorori1}'_ girl
falls 10 her death. (R) Q
a21 Evontng Nowo Awrap up
of today'&amp;news and s look
stories. (1 :00)
!IJl Now•

HOW ARE
THINGS DOWN
fiT TH' SAWMILL,

ll '

D611•d Wet• Se(\lk:e: Poo4a,
Ci11trna, W.tls. Dtftltwy An..,.

C::CO.SICN5 .

8Interviews
l.arry King Uvll in depth
with 1op

BARNEY '

llcertHd eleetridan. E11iml'le
frH. Ridenour Electrical. 304 875· 1788.
1,..

85

I W.ANT. ..

YESTERCJ.\Y I CELEBRATEP
Nail's OOING: FIVE LOADS
OF WA6H ING.

BUTONLYID
CELEBI&lt;ATE SPECIAL

ahead 10 tomorrow 's news

'.

1:30 p.m . Anytime ...,..._ends.

depth feature report&amp;. (1:00)
MOVIE: 'Murder by
Dooth' Primo nmo{PG) (1 :34)
Ill CZJ MOVIE: Hoort Llkt a
WhHi(PGJ (1 :53)
·
8:05 ill MOVIE: El Cld INA) (3:04)
8:30 1J (%) 115) Volorio Valerie's
disagreaeble aunt
unsxpactedil.dies while
visiting. (A) 1;1
IIJl Ill 1121 My Sitler S.m
Jack tests Sam's friendship
!B)

Vlnyle &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Stcwm windows • doon. ovlf
hang Ftlers. Frn eatimet:n.

Ph. 814·448·5332.

7:05 ill Sanford ond Son
7:30 It &lt;%l Cil Newlywed Oame
(!) Malor Leeguo Btnblll'o
Oroaloot HHo Advent of the
Game (R)
II(J)Judge
1m) Wheel ol Fortune r:;l
l!)l Cro..flro (0:30)
Ill a21 il5l Jeopardy! 1;1
IBl Soop
7:35 ill Honeymooners
8:00 (]) Daktari
1J (%) 115) ALF ALF ge1s
carried sway with Valentine's
and plays Cupid for
Dorothy.(R)
(!) Trilthlon 1987 Bud Light
U.S. Triathlon Series from
Miami, Florida (T)
Cil II (]) ABC'o Monday
Nlghl Boooboll
(!) In S.ardl ol tho TIOjon
War The story ol Heinrich
Schilamann, who found gold
treasura at Troy , C
1m) 18 a21 Ktlte l l.lllo Kate's
mild fllrtaUon wHh her doctor
escalates. (R) C
[]) Wondorworfi.o Barnacle
Brown escapes wi1h a locket,
the tnapec1or In h01 pursuit.

8thsPrimonowt
Wrap ups of
day's world news and In

SWEEPER lnd aewlng machlnt~:
repW , part I, 1nd suppN... Pick
up and delivery, Oavl• V_
t euum r
Clttner. one half . mila up·n •
Georg" Creek Rd. Cell 61 4 · _;
.U8·0294.
I

;;::::::;;;:::::;::;::==::::: . '

.tl•?pm.

I

Off MY

B95·3802
.\
. ~
e14·388-S7&amp;8.
Sttrkl TrH 1nd lawn S1rvlce. ,
!1 diiSPili Liliilll
c•e. lendacaplng. atumdt 1
ATC 70« 3 whollor. 1325.00. lewn
rem0\111, 304 -678 ·2842 or.
Call 814·448·7387.
576·2903 . .
71
Auto• for Sale 1BU Hondo 280 Robel. Good
condhton. low miiMgt. Call 82
Plumbing
814-44a·8305.
l!t
Heating
1980 Chryaler Fifth A-•·
good candltlon. C111 114-441· 1112 Honds SilvltfWing. heel·
•• condltton. Call 114-441·
0008.
78CO.
CARTER'S PlUMIINO
AND HEATING
1984 lAter tllvlf. 5-ttt. ac.
1113 V.,lhl V210 dirt blkt.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
AM·FM ltOfea •1200. Ph. 448· Two
1878 Moptdo 1350 •
Golllpolla. Dhlo
9310 l'ltenlnga.
1850 mil•. Snere drum tor P~on• 114·441·3881 or 114·
btnd. •eo. Great shape. Ctll 448·4477
1171 Ford 2 TD.2. Ph. 814- 814·448·9379.
448·1332.
al:===;'· ·
11H Chw CevMer: 27, 000 82 450 Nighlhowk. 8,000 ;8;4=~E;,I:ec:t:ri~c:
mil•. burvundy wtth red Inte- mll11. Look• • run• good.
lit Refrigeration
11.000. C.II814·448·40SB.
rior. c.n 814·3'79-2348.
1114 CM¥ CovH• CS: 21,000 2 Honda 4 wllollora. 1114TRX
mM•. 1WO/ ton1 brawn. Ctll 200, 19M TRX 125. UCOO f0&lt; A.. ldentilrl Of comm•ci.J wir-.
bath. C.li 8U·992-8841 llttr fno. N.w MrYice . ar ,.,.Ira._..
8\4-371·2348.

1112 l'ly-Ch-. 47,000
Calll14-371·2721.
1171Dodgo0ttwol foomdrhto. PS. Pl. 4dr. AC, Hloh
..... 0100. C.ll .,. ......
4031 .
11 0....,. Chill ...... EKC..IItt
oondltlatt. PI, PI, AC. C'"'- 5
....... UIOO. C.l 114.....
- · I ·Spm. 814·448-1214

PA51fl. PIET· · ·
He- $AY$ :t'VE 9E-EN

'

Ottl tnd Alflll1 Hey - round and
squlfe bel• · MorgM'I Woqd· 1985 Honda ATC 200X 3
ltwn Ferm. Pliny. At. 35. ~ whiNI•. Call 448-1200.

miM. Ouol - · · 4 opel., 2 dr.

ON A

r

BASEMENT

72

Hay &amp; Grain

I

pur ft1E:

~c

2&amp;28.
- -. - - - ·' .

81

1988 Hondt CRX Sr exccond.
belt ofhr. 304·176·64U.

.

VW Yen Camper. Good condl- • ·
tion. SitePI five. Rebuilt engln1. 1 •
t2.&amp;00.00. Call 814 -949- ; :

1911 Cemaro 360 auto. 304·

&amp;71·37eB.

'

PHYSICIAN
=

- - - - - -- .·' ·..

cond. no. Co1181~ · 245 - 939B . 304·878·8697.
Rtg'ed. Quartar Horu Sorrell:
whit• mtrkinga. lorn 7/ 3/ 85.
Good confirmetlon. Aunt wn
World Halter Chempion . C•H

·- .

1873 Vellowetont CtmPe;. 21 ,

304·87&amp;·2207.

livestock

'-tters of

l

RAMUTE

m

i CZJ Star Trek

'

1978 Wllderneas, mint condi·
tHm, 18 fl:., sleeps e. Tandem·\ ~
ekle, •elf con~lned with hhch,.. " .
.wey control 1nd equeUzers." •

Call 814-248-9296.

I

•

and financial news w"h Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill a2l 115) Wheel of Fortune

:,.

.

GIMI

four scrombled word• be·

r

·~-~

. .....;.:...:;.,.:.:..;.:-:.;--ll
W0 N N K . ..

complained
lngGrsnny
a mouse
In her kHchen. seeShe
I
always kept her house at so
.I .I .I _
degrees so I deduced that the
...--------------, mouse hadn't coma Into the
I NNE 0 G
house !o - - .
hli,-'TI;_.;;-1"-'-TI:...:,I.....;;_Ir;7rl
Complete the chuckle quolod

s

l0

.I

by filling in the missing words
L.....l.--L--.L.-1--'---' you develop from step No. 3 below.

YESfEiiiY's scua.iiiitAfiiSWIIS
Spunky - Felly - Equal- Bounly - FOUL UP
Husband to wile while looking In deplrtment fltora window:
"The only way you'll get me to wear a pink shirt Is to FOUL ·
UP the laundry."

BRIDGE

reports on world economics

ft . Ca~t.

379·28BB.

O Rearrange

1:35 ill Leavo II To Beovor
7:00 ill HardcaoUe and
McConnlck
It (%) PM Magulno
(!) Spai'IICtnltr (L)
(!) Enltl'lllnmont Tonight
C1 (]) People'o Court
(!) []) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1:00)
1m) Now1
l!)l Moneyllne Current

•
'
"t.

79 Motors Homes
l!t Campers

WOlD

PIUUI

the entertainment world is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)

2965.

•eoo. 30,·171·1286 ..... iftll.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

•
' '

H.. equipped. aloopa 4.
U500. Co114411-3541.

Ad. ao.-e7S·i30S. .

Musical
Instruments

'.

1 - 3~•

1978 Dodve Cott. dependtble.

•a.

rene" - lbggt Applltnctt,

apd., 61,000 mi. 02,100. Coli
814·379·2tB2.

Call 814·9•9·20•5. 814·949·
2879 or 814·949·2124.

Sttndlng hiV ICN" life. Send HiU

814-992·5434 or 304·SI2·
2&amp;88.
Open .AM lo II'M. Mon thru
Sol. 114·448·1SII. 827 3rtl.
furnlahed. In Pomeroy, all uliN- A... Oolllpollo. OH.
tlea paid. t2215 Ptf month. Cell
814-949-2528.
VaH.,. ,Vf'I'Wtul'.. MW • utecL
Lorfe. -1211 af
-Hty fum&gt;
APARTMENTS, mobile hom... lure
E111arn Ave ..
housas. Pt . PIIMint lftd Gllllpo. ooltlpollo.
lla. 814·448·8221 .
OOOD USED APPUANCEI
2 Mdroom fumllld 1111. rtf tnd w.h... dfv... ,...._on.

depolh , N•w H1'41tn, W. 1/e.,

1984 Chevetle, 42,000 mlln .
Auto., tir. 2 dr. •2.200. 1983
Chwette, 4 dr .• 37,000 mi.
U.OOO. 1984 E1cort, • dr. , 4

.,.., 8pm.

Beagla pupa for ule. 9 wkt. old.
Call 114·192-2841 or 614-

w"'""

County Apphru-. •nc. Good
UMd .,Plano. end tv

14200. Cali 614-448·1967.

448·8003 or 814·241·8145 73

698·1317.

Olive St .. O.Uipolls .
NEW· I pc. wood poup- *399.
Living room •ult•· 1198-•189.
8Yt"tk bedt with bedd6ng- 8189.
Full tin matt,.. a foundltlotl
ttuting· •11 . Recliners
Jttrtfno· ....
USED· hdl. dr••--· bWroom
suites. •1tt· •211 . De• .. • ·
wringlf" WIIW, I oomplttalin1
of uMd fvrnllun.
NEW·
boots· no.
Wor~-a •11 • up. (IIHI &amp;

3 lnd4 room furnithtd tptl. Cett

304-273·4211.

64

SWAIN
I'IUCTION A FURNITURE 82

ooh loel. C.M 114·441·3181.

Buy one any sizechtln itw chein
and girl HCOnd chain hllf price.

Wanted: Stud Servlct for AKC
Reg. female Rottwalltr. Will give
Pick of litte, . Cell 814 ·
Mixed Hty -nevotr Wit· in the
to.fedtemp
Four AKC reglateted Ptkintte b•n.1 • *1 .215/blll. Call 614·
puppltl, *126. tech. Abo hwe . 388 8703.
two AKC reglatlf'td Beagle
AHalfe· Timothy Hey · 1887 new
pupplta. 135. each. Ctll 2156·
crop, v-v high qu1Uty, no rtln.
9391 .
Some 100 percent eHIIfa. C.n
A.tc .C. Rottwtiler puPJM•. We deliver. Call for pri- • .veUebNtt\'. 24 ttours; Hidden HIUs
hM'e too many female puppi•l
Farms, 433 hcklon Pika. GllliQuality dogs at half price. Now
polil, Ohto 4&amp;131 . Phone 114·
only t300. O .F.A. IIOctl. f,14 ·

61 Household Goods

992-5&amp;48 or 814·941·2218.

1982 Mezd• 628, luxury mod ...
• dr . , ekctllant condition .

62 Wanted to Buy
Groom end Supply Shop·Pet
Groomina . All breeds ... AII
ttylea. Julfe Webb Ph. 614· 446·

Unllmi1H frH Kodak Film. plut
hundrlch doll•• " " ljflftl. Toll
, .. 1 · 100· 433 · 6312 124
hours).

Vertic:.llouvlt blind1, mini wnl·
tlan bllndt• . Clllltom • .., • •
lnttallld. P, A. Seyre. 304·•18-

MmlwH1t st!

Bidgi. 814·332·8748.

track door It 3' walk dOor.
*4444 erected · Iron Horse

Autos for Sale

9354.

River Iotan ear Ciifton, W. Va. for
renl. Cell Charltta GriHith 614892 -5782 avenlnga.

lrallet Iota tl5.00 pet month,
304· 523·7149 cell before noon
or ahlf' 9:00 PM ,

1981 D1tsun 200 SX,.tJCcellen1
condition. Call614· 317·0641 .

Pets for Sale

B546.

R1trigentor· •so. 1 9" Zenith
color TV- t50. Both oood
condition. Tool box lor truck.
Cllll14·2156· 1982.

875·3073 aftor 5:00PM.

56

7372.

Space for 1m1ll trallen. All
hooll·ups, Cable. Alao effleitney
rooms. eir and cable. Muon,
W. Vs. Call 30•· 773-15651 .

PARK. At .. 2 aouth , Gtlllpolll
Ferry, WV. Now renting lou for
t85 .00 p.,. month. Call 304-

U1illty bldg: 27'•38'ldl' - 13'ill'

304·773·5234.

Women• clothing,

FAMILY PRIDE MOBILE MOME

71

Good uted color TV's.• Floor
modet and ponebte. For tale or
trede. Cell 614-448'·1149.
Two piece Early American liVIng
room aulte. Very good condl·
tlon.
Green rodl:61'· recliner.
leethtt . Cell 614-448-8761 .

CAPTAIN EASY

U1ed • Rebult Trantffiillion~ :
All lnterntll'fl intpecttd and ··
guarantetd. lnsttllllion arld
pick-up lveillble. ,Call 614·44f" ...
0966.
.. .. ..

61 F~rm Equipment

MON., JUNE 15

rn

Auto Parts
l!t Accessories

Ph. 81 4·379·2220 or
876·876B.

re! g11 h1atin~ stove. •&amp;o. 1978
GMC tryck, 3150 auto.. motor
and trensmiulon good. body
needt work *460 or t~ade for
car,. Call614 ·992·756~.

SentinHI--Page- 9

TilT DIIL1

EVENING
1:00 ill Big Volley
1t CIJ 11 (]) ~mJ
a21
115) Newo
(!) SpartoLook (T)
(!) Dr. Who Face of Evil, part
2
[]) Secret City
8) CZJ Buck Rogero
6:05 ill Down to Eorth Stereo.
6:30 It(%) 115) NBC Nlghdy Newo
(!) John Fox'o Outdoor
Adventuno(R)
Cil II(]) ABC New1 1;1
(!) Nlghdy Buotn11a Report
1m) Ill a21 CBS Nowo
[]) 1/oyoge ollhe Mimi
l!)l ShowBiz Today News of

BUDGET Transmissions: Uted'
Rebuilt. AI types. 'Guaranteed a
minumum of 30 days. will ·
dllivtr, c•h • ctrry or inatlll.l •·

Naw Holl1nd 7' h.yblne, Geh l
95 grinder·miKer, New Holl~nd
717torqe harvater . he. cond .

COUNTRV MOBILE Home P1rk.
Route 33. Nonh ot Pomero..,.
Rental tr1i1en. Ctll 614-992·

7479.

76

Bll!llutltul copper colored bird

Concret1 blockl all aizet yard or
delivar;. M11on find . GaUipollt
Bloat Co.. 123rn Pine St.,
Gallipolis. Ohio Cell 814-448-

•

' '

15ft. Glnatron. 85HP.Mtrcury.' ,
Exc. Cond. U ,OOO. C.ll 8U} •
379·2221 .
•.

ttge. 130. Complete Gi"rt Scout
uniform, liu 6. inctuding h.nd·
book. t30. Medlurn ab:ed natu -

245·5121 .

-

Daily

low tc form four slrnple words

14' Allumlnum fl.t1i09 Boat '
with Treillf, 2-new tir ... ellctl· 1
lent condition. Seeat 87VifltSt. •

Aeedy mix concrete and all
eonaet• 1uppli... cln u• viu..,
Brook Cement 1nd SuppNn.

5, or 814-246 ·9145 lfttf lpm,

Office Spaca for Ren1 . Elllcellent
for Anorneys, A4:eountant. et c.
Close to Court Hou11. Call
Wiaeman Rul Estate Aaenc..,

448·7028.

7 1fJ acre campground• for 1111.
21 full hook-ups;, Iota . tent
camping. 2 IPif'tl'l'lenta to rerit
out. Larve frontage on Ohio
River . Large Lock House. Re cine. Ohla. Call814-949-2628 .

Building Material•
Block, brick. IIWtr pipes, windows. lintels, ate. &lt;;l11.1de Wlfl·
ten, Rio Gffnde, 0 . Cell 514-

j

H.P. M.-curv 1·0 motor. ......
refurbishing • rt~~ainttflg. WIN
aeH or ttMie for livMtock. Pt\. • '

992·5292 or 814-992·2155.

..

'.

Boetland
Motors for Sale.

~

.
''
21ft. 'llliHaoaft. UHpS4&gt;-I. 120!

Ditmond ringa for 11ta. ladia
thfH diamond ring. total waight
.40 Cirlt, 141( white gold
mouftting, Will sell for t4&amp;0.
Apprtitld 11 •1 .021. bot lo~:~al
jeweler, aPI)failll ·eertlfiCitt to
go wllh ring. AWD 'A Cllet clutttr
ring in 1•K white gold mounting,
U2&amp;. Chertene Hoeflich, ,61 4·

55 Building Supplies

75

The

Qhio

Television
Viewing

Bf)RN LOSER

~-------~- )·

divDfced• . lonety I Oil·,
cr.., Introductions in youf arM
by t•ephont. C1ll: 1115) 292·
1100 bt. C2~7.
~

27B3.

446·9229.

•

Sl~gl1.

Dining room set· like new , heav..,
Beachwood. olk flni1h. ttble, 8
chairs. U75 firm . C1ll 614·

$2500. CaM 814·446·8003 9·

47 Space for Rent

Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYU

SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO ..
H'nd•ton. W~ Ve. 304-175·
7421 .

814·448·0871 .
46

Monday. Jun&amp;1s. 1981

64 Misc. Metchendiee

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

and women in my homt, ahortor

31

Pomeroy-Mjddl~rt.

MonJay, June 15, 1O!J7

Page- S- The Daily Sentinel

•
THAT 5\IRPRISES
ME, DOCTOR ..

CAN '(00 TELL I'N:

Wll'r'

'(00 ALWA'r'S

DO THIS?

~E

60LF COURSE 15
CLOSED ON MONDA'I'S ..

C!J BponaCinlel' (L)
Cil WAKP In Clnelnnl1l
• (]) Niglllllnl r:;l
ill Mtg1111111, P.l.
[]) Tllll Old HouM Q
iiJ 8portl Tonight M:llon
paclced sports hlghliglrta wi1h
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
e a21 'Simon 1nd Simon'
CBS 1.110 Night Rick and
A.J. ore double crossed by a
w..l1hy client. (R)
lUI TI'IJIPII John MD A Case
ot the CroziH

.AS
"J

NORTH

James Jacoby

1·15·17

53
t K 10 83

·K ·H 3
You should be familiar with the
EAST
WEST
. "sure trick" concept. It refers to situa· '•KQI092
.87643
lions in which you can absolutely •Ks 6 2
9Q97
guarantee making the required num· t72
tQ
· ber of tricks. Today's contract seems +97
• Q 10 8 I
unlucky. The club finesse does not
SOUTH
work and clubs don't split, so declarer
has to play the hearts for only one los·
9 A 10 4
er. He can't do it on his own. but there
tAJ9651
is a sure-trick approach.
.A62
Declarer takes dummy's ace of
Vulnerable: Neither
spades, then plays ace and kinK of dia Dealer:
South
monds. Next come the a.ce and king of
club9, followed by dummy's remain·
Soalb
North East
' ing spade, on whlcb South plays - not Well
I +
a trump, but his remaining club. Sup·
st
s•
pose West wins that trick. What migh.t Pau
~·
Pau Pau
he lead? If he plays a heart, declarer
' loses only one heart trick. If he plays",
Opening lead: + K
4 spade, declarer can ruff in his hano :
while discarding a heart from dummy. L--- - - ------J
·If he plays a club, It might be either
the queen, which declarer can rufl, sition as before. And if East wins lhe
setting up the jack in dummy, or a low spade and plays a low club? Declarer
club, which declarer can cover with will simply discard a heart. It West
dummy's jack. Regardless, if West has the club queen, the remaining club
·leads a club, South can establish a jack In dummy will be a winner to '
take care of declarer's other h art los·
winner.
What If East win9 that second spade er. If West shows out on the club, the
trick 7 If he leads a heart, declarer jack will win, aod that will be II tricks
, ducks and West will be In the same po· for South.

.J

I.

~W!d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

48 Bring
1 Gregorian,
to bear
e .g.
DOWN
6 Sailing
1 Selected
vessel
2 Wait
11 Four-bagger
close by
3 City
12 Famed
English
In Iraq
actress
4 Bottom
13 Egg-shape d
line
14 Building
amount
Yesterday'• An1wer
block ·
6 Fluttering,
U Indian
In music
23 Moray, e.g.a6 Eatinl(
weight
24 Diva role
place
8 Bear
16 Stag party.
7 Guided
28 Crash into 36 Means
members
8 Gold (Sp.) 27 Astalre
39 Roscoe
18 The Roaring 9 Eye
· daughter 40 Ms. Carter
28 Metal
Twe nties,
10 English
41 Summit
29 ~~tdoor 42 Radio's
e .g.
engraver
19 Ancient
17 Pipe joint
vmg
"- Man 's
24 Entire
20 Marine bird
area
Family"
«
C
I
I
21
Son
of
Bela
31
Iron
(Fr.)
2 " ana c ty
33 Overfill
44 Smoked
26 Proportion 22 Wire
0 h d
salmon
measure
• ver e_a"l'l"""'!!-,'1':'""=.,
29 Vocal
erfect
30 Greedy
II
31 Marsh ·
32 Dugout

a•

VIP
34 Dean
Martin
film
37 Hockey
great
38 Mammoth
39 Burt
Reynolds

mm

43 Peerless
46 In the
bunch
46 Witch
gathering
47 Melville
novel

DAILY CRYFI'OQU&lt;rrES- Here'• bow to work II:

611&amp;

AXYDLBAAXR

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

CRYPTOQUOTES
6 · 1/l

W M S
·J X G I S

KXJQSZ
X Z

Q

NXU

C SIW

X

Gl

S J J D J

WD

IRUH S JITRY

c u

W.JDN S Y

W G J S Ql

• CZJ Ll1ll IIIIOW

X J 0

11:3611) Wild, Wid WOIId of

:·K

AlllniOII
t2:00 (]) lklmlllld Alron

reeterday'• Cryptoquote: MARRIAGE IS mE ONLY
FORM OF GAMBUNG FAVORED BY ALL mE CLERGY.
'-SOURCE UNKNOWN

(!) lpor1ILooll (R)
(!)N_..D

S Z S J

.

,•

., '

�•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

~ ... and

Monday, June 15, 1987

thaes the news from Lake Wobegon.' .-[jeople in the news---

By .JACK WARNER
UPI National Editor
Th ere will be no more news
from Lake Wobegon, lhr town
that never wa s bu t should have

been. leaving a large hole In a lot
of SatunJa y ni ght s and a small
ach e i n a lo t of hearts.
The litt le town that tlme forgol ,
whiCh sprang from Garrison
Kei llor's ima gin ati on 10 captl ·
vate a liv&lt;' r adi o audience for 13
years. va nished back int o that
fcrt ilc brain with I he fi nal edit ion
of " /\ Prai rie Home Compan ion"
Sa tu rda y night .
II will go with Keillor and his
Danish wife to Denm ark. where
he ev id entl y in tends to wril e
abou t it .
It won ' I be the sa me.
" Lake Wobcgon Days," Kell ·
lor 's last book, ma y have spent
umpteen weeks on the bestseller
l is ts bu t wit hout a dozen years of
"Pra ir iP Homf'" behind II , II
likely wou ldn't even have been
pu blished.

For while Keillor Is a good
writer . he Is a great storyteller,
the greatest of our lime. It was
his voice I hat brou ght I he town to
life. his hu shed, dream y bar it one
that would fade away to a
whisper and force you to turn up
the volume so high that the
mu sic, when It ca m e, blew you
out the back door. He is an
abso llute master of a nearly lost
art, holdin g mill ions en thral led
with a recltalion of ima ginary
even ts which. analyzed In a co ld
light, were mostly triv ial . co m·
m o npla ce and t err ibl y
sen timental.
"Prairie Home" was a thro w·
ba ck. live radio in the tim e of
" Miami Vice;" a mela nge of
gentle, literate. self-mock ing
humor and wildly dispa r ate
music- from Que~n Ida and the
Bon Temps Zydeco Band to
Plnchas Zuckerman and the St.
Paul Chamber Orchestra- that
did not translate well to televl ·
slon. although In the final year

Grade school publishers
learn the news business
SA N .JOSE, Cal if, iUPII - Two
fledgl ing nr wspap&lt;'r publishers
who if'arnf'd to rea d and write
this vPar have put out just one
lss u1; ol thl'ir fell -pen produc t.
and al r eady they· rc hiking prlc~s
and raisi ng adver tising rates.
"We ju sI wa nt money , money,
money ." say s Candice Grady, 7.
Shl• and fellow fi rs t· grader
Dann y Haakm a. 7. are produ cln f'
a hondwritten journa l . Th e
News.
TheIr fi rst issup' s net profit. a
&lt;lisappoint in g $7 !rom advc rtls·
ing r0vrnue afHI a paid cir cula tion of :t:._ il'd Danny to double ad

Rocky Mottntain
'oyrter.r' / ea.rt

rates from .'iOcent s to $1. He wa s
loo king at $8 but Ca ndi ce. wa r y of
sca ring off bu siness. nego tiated
the more reasonable Increase.
The price per copy ha s r isen to a
quart er from l o cent s.
Caro lyn Crady . Ca ndice' s
mother, ca m e up with I he nrws·
paper Idea and thinks the project
is a good lea rn ing too l.
··She just learned her lett ers ...
Grady said . " And now she' s
reading and writing like craz.\ ·."
Mrs. Grady accompanies the
kids during bu siness I rips . While
they try to sell ads at local stores,
she shops.

th e show .appeared r egu lar ly on
I he Disney Chan nel.
Televis ion hamstrung lhr im'·
aglnatlon. and Keillor himself
loo ked vag u e ! ~ · like some great
wading bird, Adam' sappl ework·
ing nervously. wailing for dinner
10 swi m by on lhe fringe of a
Minnesota lake.
It wa s apparent. in 1he final
year or so. th ai Keillor was
beco ming bored with mu ch of
"Prair ie Hom e." He took to
sin ging more and more. wh ich
was r egrettable. and the class ic
mock -commercia ls thai supplied
much of I he show ' s humor began
to disappear .
On the final show- writt en. as
usual. by Emmanuel Tra nsm ission they lovi ngly wen t
throu gh severa l choru ses of I he
Powdermllk Blscuil j in gle that
was once part of every show. Oh,
has your famll~ tried 'emmm,
Powwwdermllllk ..."
They were m ade of whole
wheat grown by Norwegian
ba chelor farmers so you knew
they were pure. moslly, and of
course they m ade shy perso ns
get up and do what had to be
done. F'or a long l ime I hey were
th e show 's tradema rk. You slill
see pcopl ~ wearing Powdermilk
Biscuit T -shir ts. " Ohhh, has your
family tried 'em , Powd er ·
rrrmllllllllk ... "
But they werP just one of th e
sponsors . In the winter Bertha' s
Kilty Bo u ti qu e sol d t h o·
roughbr ed r acing m ice lo keep
your ca t in shape. and he.- bi g
sell er at Chr islmas tlme was the
. "Songs of the Ca t " songbook.
with such all -time favorit es as
" Hallel uja, I'm a Ca t," " .Just a
Boy and his Ca t," and "Old
Pu ff." They ac tu ally did sing
lhrm. "For If your family's tried
'emmmm ... ''
Th e co mm ercia ls - Ral ph's

Pretly Good Grocery . Bob 's
Bank. The Fearmongcr' s Shop
!"Cateri ng lo · .Your Phobia
Needs") - faded, but Keillbr
never lost his tou ch . with the
monologue. " Well, il was a quiet
week in Lake Wobegon , my old
hometown ... " look us off to
dreamland. to hear about lhe
midlife cri ses of Clarence
Bunsen. F'ath!'r Emil try ing
again to ret ire fro m Our La dy of
Perpetual Responsibility, or how
the region was first settl!'d by
Un it a rian miss ionaries sent west
to br in g the Gospel to the Indians
through the medium of lnlerpr!'·
rive dance. "You know you•vp
satisfi ed 'emmmm ... "
All his stories weren' t terribly
funny ; some were poignant and a
litt le sad, and some just ended.
leav ing you up in the air wilhoul a
conc lu sion, bul they always
sa t isfied because Lake Wobegon
was really the place a lot of us
we re fr om. and 1hal' s the way life
rea lly Is. Th e old guys up at the
Sons of Can ute club, the statu!' of
the Unknown Norwegian. I he day
the Gospel Bird s came to townthey were all real, or at lea st WE'
wan ted I hem l o be. "They' r e the
rrrreal
hot
llem.
Powwdcrmilllk!''
For 13 years "Pra1rie Home"
was t hE' real hot Item. Kl'lllor
probably described lhe process
best when he said he found. as
Lak e Wobegon and it s citizens
too k on fl es h and bl ood. thai "if I
ju st didn't g&lt;'l in the way of
people 's im agi nations. t hey
would g ive me all so rts of cr edit
as a story teller ."
Now the sto rytellf'r. th e best

we

m a~ ·

evt!r seP. is go in g

somewhere I hey don' t f'VE' n
sprak his language. But as Roy
Bloun t Jr. sa id on the last show.
"I t' s beltrr to be good and go nr
th an ro tt en and still go ing
strong."

recoup his losscs Mondav when
By WILLIAM f . TROTT
he rf'ceives the $83.000 GNman
United Press International
Music
Prize.
SHIRLEY POWERLESS
NO TO THE POPE:
SAYING
AGAINST THE DARK: Shirley
or
no pope, Maureen
Pope
1\lad.aim• tried the spiritual
McGovern
does
n't sing for free.
approach to a power blackout i n a
McGovern.
who
describes her·
Dallas hotel where she was
co nducting a sem inar but i t sd f as a lapsed Catholic, wa s
contacted by a committee organ·
didn't work.
T he met aphysical MacLaine !zing Pope ,John Paul ll's Sep.
was leading 1.000 people Satur · tember trip to I he United Slates
day at a seminar t itled " Conn ect· and asked if she would,llke to sing
in g wit h the Higher Self" when a al his Dodger Stadium appear 12-inch water line burst near the ance. But Peoplem~azin~ sa~s
hotel and flooded a power stat ion. McGovern declined when she
The hotel was blacked out and as found I hal she wasn't going to 'be '
candles were rushed to the pa id.
"When I asked about compen·
gues ts. M acLaln e asked her
sa
lion. they said they'd be glad lo
disciples to sil cross- lel(ged on
provide
me with a limo to and
the red-carpeted floor and m edi·
my
hotel ," she says. "The
from
tate to spiritually repair the
paycheck was supposed lo be
broken wat er main.
" lmagine the wa ter slow ing opening for him."
down," she told them. "Now
HEEEEERE'S ,JAY: Comepicture the workmen finding the
dian
Jay Leno says he was
broken pipe an d secur ing I hem
stunned
when he was inylled lo
together. Maybe this power out·
age Is lo show you 1that! you can become one of the regular guest
have your own grand silence hosts on the "Tonight" show !hi~ .
wilhout the sound effects." The fall when Johnny Carson begins
seven-hour seminar co ncluded his lhree·nlghl work week .
".Johnny never said one word
several minut es la ter - still In
to
me about doing 11." Lena says.
the dark.
of the executives on the
"None
NO BOMB, NO WATCH
EITHER: Thieves stole Leonard show ever mentioned' it or i'¥1!11 ·.
Bernst ein's S16.000 watch and sounded me out about it. I ihink '
so me cash from . his dress ing this is a great opportunity for
room while a Mu nich concert hall me."
Split ling the gu es t host job With
was being evacuat ed Saturday
Garry
Shandllng will give Lena
night beca use of a bomb threa t.
plenty
of
lime to pursue his other
Police searched the building bu t
found no explos ives and Bern- projects. such as playing the
stei n's performance wil h lhe Sands in Allanlic City, N .J . Lena
Bavar ian Rad io Sy mphony Or- sa id he found il interesting that
chestr a then began 45 minutes the Sands also had signed up
Vanna White and Don Johnson.
late.
" f seE' Vanna has written a
Bul the· &lt;'Omposer' s watch.
book
... he said. " And I underwh ich has an ivory face and a
brow n !izark skin wristband. and sta nd from people tha t Don
$427 from his wallet apparently .Johnson once read a book . What a
wC're taken wh ilr thr St'arch wa~ lineup. Who' s tli'Xt ? Saul BE'!· '
being condu cted. Bernstein will low'? "

u\ lv hull or shP( •p I P~ t \c\e!-1 , a nd

t hr .1· an• r onsldrr r d a df'i icacy
. bv.

mil n.v p(·Oplf' Jn ran ch counl r ,v .

Depa r tment .

fnr

;1 tr;ukrs night uml
(1 ; 1~ u t1 .!11 \.\ · II 11nd IH t~l ltlC'

fii•lcl
r lu b ll ou ~ t · \\' f'l 'f' mad&lt;• whl' n lhP
M('i J.!s &lt;'ou nl\ F o.x Chasr r s 1\ ss ot ' i&lt;~li u n n H'I :11 111l' club hou:-.r on

l&lt; a ~ lL · H id gt· rt ·c£'n1\y . Corhi tt
C\r(·k pn•s idrd ;ll till' mrfl fi ng.
M :1 r ~· I\
ll nlle' l' . Sf'r l'l'la r ~·­
J..:tl\' f ' 11w ndnull '." of tlw la s1
llll'f' l in g , ll nn g n ilh lht • tn·usur ·
t'r' s n ·p n l'l . ( 'Jpt•k l('; td ;1 thank
~ · o u nntt• !rom l h f' 1\ 1' \'il l-lolti'r
l mn ll.' .
T ht· .tnna l pit'll it' \rill bt' lwltl
.lui.\ 2:1 .11 1lh ' Club ll othf' .
1\kml wr ... d i'C 1.1king donation s
on ;1 hurtdn ·d doll.1r bill 10 I}('
;l war&lt;lt 'd ;tl tiH• p if'nit ·.
I t 1\'a :-. 11\ )H•d 111;11 l!w rl ub now
has : ~o nw rniJl'l :-.; with t ill' nwm·
ht' !' ~ lti p clr h ·t· l'! Hll inu ing. Torn
\\'olf1 •. l1 .1c i nt·. and C'C't ·il Fi r lcls.
Sta te Mil\ .;, \\'. \ ·a. arf'lh r nr w&lt;'S t

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Street maintena nce was discussed when
Pomeroy Village Cou neil met Monday night In a
br ief session.
Mayor Richard Seyler suggested that cracks in
all village street s should be sea led to prese rve the
streets a few years longer. Council agreed this
· would be a good idea. Seyler said village workers
are now in the process of patching potholes.
The m ayor said t he Ohio Department of
· Transportation will be paving U.S. 33 from
Darwin lo I he int er section of Eas t Main St. and
: Nye Avenue as part of their annu al pal'ing
program.
A nd it was reported th at a Union Ave. catch
· bas in is caving in and in need of repair as soon as
possible.
Councilman Bil l Young sugges ted thai council
consider building sidewalks in the area of th&lt;'
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge on Wes t M ain St. w hen
repair s to the bridge ar e completed.

Monday night in recessed session. Effective Jan .
1988, annual salari!'s will be as follows:
Mayor - $600: cl erk·lrea surer - $4,800;
marshall - $4,176; street commissioner -water
works supervisor - $11,000; fir!' chief - $150;
members of council and I he board of trustees $16 per month per meellng allend ed; billing and
collecf.lpg agent, $70 per month.
The ownership of pit bulls by v illage r esident s
was discussed and council will consider taking
legisla tion I a co ntrol pil bull ownership at the Ju ly
meeting.
Council Is also to take action in Ju ly on the
proposed village budget for next year.
The ,·iliage park commllte!' reported good
attendance at Saturday night' s free mu sic
program at the Shrine Park. Th ank s were
ex tended tal he people I hat performed as well as
those who attended I he program.
II was further reported I hat carpenters will be
working lo·complele I he roof of the lhesl ag&lt;' at the
park before t)le nex t free program which is
scheduled for June 27. The park committee also
that any volunteer musici ans wishing lo per for m
at the park should contact I va n Powell at 949·2485.
Parking on the beach at Racine is being

Racine Council Approves Ordinant'&lt;'
Racine Villa ge Cou ncil approved a third
r!'ading and adopted an ordinance esta blishin g
new sala ri es for village officers when they met

'

&lt;D

Partl~

doud~

Wednesday. Highs between 85
and 90.

•

enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages

26 Cents

A Multir11edia Inc . Newspaper

pro hibit ed b)• cou ncil sin ce parked vehicles are
creating problems for people wanling to launch
boat s.
It wa s reported that four-wheeler s have been
runn ing in Greenwood Cemetery and council
warns resident s thai anyone ca ught drivin g a
four-whee ler in the cr mete1·y will be prosec uted.
Clerk .lanf' Beegle reported t hai the Meigs
Litt er Contro l w ill advise her before the end of I he
month on the stat us of four permanent rra sh
con tainers for t he l'li la ge.
Coun cil app roved a third reading and adopted
an ordinan ce accepting a proposa l from Ohi o
Pow er Com pan y to provide v ill age s11·eet lighting
for 10 years. effective October of this year. Cosl
wi ll be $6.'l0 per li ght per month.
Glen n Riz er. street commiss ioner. reported
!.hat a new cl ut ch and pressure pla te w.rre lntalled
on the village truck las t week.
F ire Chief Robert .John son reported that
firemen will be cl ea nlng streets In prrparatlon for
the annu al 4th of Jui)' par ade.
Coun cil also tbok action on tho fo llowing
matters:
Approved Board of Public Affai rs' Prrsid&lt;'nl
Ben Petrel' s req ucs t to have addit ional work done
at the well house.

sev~r a l

class

no1·s were thl' Gertrude A ndrews
Honor Scholarship: thf' Merck.
Sharp and Dohmc Award lo the
ou tstanding third-year st udent;
the Ell Lilly Award which r ecog·
nlzes the graduating studen t who
best exemplifies scholastic and
professional achievements, lead·
ership abilily and elhlcal con·
duel ; the Bri stol Award which Is
present ed to the senior who ha s
exhibited all·round scholasti c
excellence; and the A.A.U. W.
tAmerlca n Association of Unl·
verslly Women I Award which Is
presented to .t he outslandlng
scholar of the gra du ating class .
Carson' s prof!'sslon al assaria·
lions include 1he Rho C'hi Society.

Phi Kappa Phi Honorary F rater ·
nity, American Pharmaceutica l
Assoclalion. Ohio Pharmaceu ti·
cal Associ ation. the Na tional
Associa11on of Retail Druggist s
and the Amet·ican SociPt~· of
Hospital Pharmael sl s.
Carson's profcssional goa ls
arc "to compr l r nlly and success·
full y engage In I he cont emporary
practIce of pharmacy In a
communitv retail selling." M a·
jor prioriiles Include "a high
degreE' of lnteracllon with
members of thE' community via
ex tcn&amp;lvc patle~t counseling.
health monllorlng clinics and
co mmunll y lectu res. present a·
tlons and publl ca11ons. "

million- 7.6 percent slow!'r th an
April' s pace.
Building permits are consi·
dered a sign of fu tu re building
plans, and thE' government sa id
May's rate was the worst since
Mar ch 1983.
All the annual r ates reflect
what a year's total of housing
start s or building permits would
be If every monlh performed like
th e one ell ed. The r ates also take
seasonal factors Into accoun t.
Housing Industry analysts expeeled today's r eported drop.
The Nallonal Assoela lion of

Rea ltors. for exa mple. now fo,·e·
casts hous ing start s will total
abou11 .68 million for all 19H7. or
7.8 percent fewer than I he totaI in
1986
For the f irst five months of thi s
year. the Commerce Depart·
m enl said co nstruction started
on a tot al of 670.200 houses about 10 percent fewrr than
1986's total for Janu ary thro~g h
Ma y .
Analyst s blame the downturn
In housing on sever al fac tors.
Including a sharp Increase In
lnleresl rates on loans.

accused Berry of growing 200 marijuana plants In
hi• hack yard and using four pit hulls. Including
the dog that attacked Solo, to guard the crop.
"If It wa.•n' t a pit hull.lnvolved, nohody would he
up for murder now," said the handculled and
chained Berry, 37. "I f eel I'm helng made an
example of.
''This wa• horrlhle, hut this was · an aculdent,"
the county malntenancr worker sai d. " My dog
Willie has never hit, growled or done anything to
hurt an~one. This do~ has heen with all ages of
kids except for children who can't walk. I had no
Indication that he would bite anyone."
Santa Clara County Deputy District Attorney
Alan Nudelman said he had not decided what
charges to file.

Autho r ized Street Commiss lone•· Glenn Rizer lo
pu rchase oil for the v ill age t ruck and gel prices on
pa rts for the bac khoe.
.
Authorized purchase of paint for the flrcliousi'.
Council adjourned until 7 p.m . July 6.
Issue Reminder to Racine Residents
•
Racl ne Vlllag&lt;' Board of Public AI fairs want s t&lt;i
remind r es ident s that " Quantit y User Pe.r mll s': '
arc required for res lcents thai have pools;
whether or nol the pools wcr~ flil!'d I his year . .•
An y res ident app lying for the mandatory
permit must furnish the village billing agent wlt·h
pool capacity all he lime the appllcallon Is made,
and pay l~ e appropria te fee according to th e
gallons of water needed to fill the pool.
Residents are also reminded I hat according lo
v illage ordinance. any person using excess water
wi thout a Quantlly User Permit Is subject to a fine
of up Ia $50 plu s cos ts.
Per mil s ar e ava ll ablefrom Jeaneltc Lawrence.
bllilng-collrcllng agent. at the Racine Depart ·
ment Store.
For fire pr otection meas ures. an~· resldcnl who
refuses to l'Urtall water usage during any water
emergency ma.v face shut -off by the village.

Proposal does
not give up much

Carol Carson new pharmacist

SAN ,JOSE, Calif. (UPI)- Thejalledownerofa
Gil-pound pit hull dog that killed a 2--year· old hoy
said the vicious atlack would have been avoided
had I he youngster's parents " kept lahs" on lh1•
child.
·
"If the child's parents would have kept lahs on
the boy this would never have happened," Patrick
Michael Herr~ said Monday at a news conference
at the jail whert• he was being held pending the
filing of formal charges. He was hooked lniUally
on suspicion of murder.
The hoy, .James Solo, ventur ed Into Berr~··
unlenct•d yard Saturday evening while playing,
and was "torn apart," authorities sal d. The Sotos
live behind Berry In a r esidential nelghhorhood ol
Morgan Hill, ahout 20 miles south ol San Jo•e.
Morgan Hill Pollee Chief John Abhey has

FATHER'S DAV
GIFT IDEAS

Clear tonight. Low between

65 and W.

Pomeroy Councilmen discuss street repairs •.

Dog owner blames parents in death of child

m l'lll iJt •rs

NEW PHARMACIST
Carol Nor&lt;'l•n Carson, of
Poml•roy, has het•n employed
'" a pharmacist with Fruth
Pharmac~ . Carso n ha• hce n
with Fruth 's fullllme since
,June I.

Cars sought
for event
Antique car buffs arc Invited to
tak e part In Heritage Werkl'nd .
The Meigs Count y Histor ical
Society and Myron Duffield,
operator of the ca ll iope co ming
fo1· the observance, have agreed
that the ca lliope w ill be Ia ken to
Court Sl . for a program from 1 to
3 p.m . Sa turday.
Anyone with an antique car to
display Is asked t o be at the
museum on Bultcrnut AvP .. at
I : :10 p.m . where a parade of car s
wlll br formed led by the cal liope
wagon. Ow ner s arc bei ng asked
to leave their cars on Court St. for
display aft er the cal lope returns
to the museum.
Vehicle owners wishing to take
part are asked to contact the
chamber office at 992-00!I!i or be
presenl at the asse mbly at l: .10
p.m . Saturday . There Is no
regist rat ion fee and cars wlll not
be jud ged .
The' Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce r eport s that a craft
show pl anned on Cou rt St. f rom~~
a.m . lo5p.m. Saturd ay lsrom ing
toget her . There are now 18
entlres. Latl' entries arc still
being accepted at the chamber
office. In cas&lt;' of rai n, the show
will be moved t o Pomeroy
Village Hall Audit orium .

WA SHI NC T ON tUPir
Under President Rea~a n 's luil' sl
arms cont rol proposal, the Unl·
ted Stat~ s gives up noth ing but
th e right to build a wea pon II
doesn' t ha vr.
Reagan' s new offer . an·
nounced In his tele,·Jsed speech
M onday night. Insist s on linking
deep reduct Ions In mediumrange nu clear missiles wllh a
"globa l &lt;'limlnation" of shOrt·
ran~e miss iles. a poinl
the
Sovll'ts may not wa nt to &lt;·oncede
and which cou ld bi' a m aj or
obs ta cle toward reaching an
ugrC&lt;'mrn t.
The United States does not
ha \'C shorter· ra ngr miss il es,
those wit h a range of :m
o l o IiilO
mil es . yet the proposal would
rr qulre thr Sovil'ts to eliminat e
all of lhcl r s horlcr- ran~r mls·
sllcs in Euro pe and Asia .
It ' s thr· latest tw ist In an effort
nearl y six years old to reach an
agrrl'mcnt on erasing nucll'ar
wf'apons from the m ap of E u·
rope. il not 1he world .
Soviet leader Mikhail Corba·
chc·v proposed to Srcrrtar.v of
State George Shullz In Moscow
April 1·1 t hat short er-range mls·
sll cs be scra pped from f.uropr.
but hr said nothing abou t remov Ing such Soviet mlssltes from
!I sla .
Shult z told Gorbarhrv any
cllm in at ion orshorter-range mls·
sllcs wou ld ha ve to bi' global - to
accou nt for those In Asia - and
the United States !Irs! wou ld
ha vf' to consult with Its NATO
al lies before rcpl .vlng to the
proposal.
According to Ri chard Perl e.
the Pent ago n's l orm er chief
urms control expert, I he Soviets
made their proposal to prevent
thl' Unll cd Sta tes from convert·
lng Its 108 Pcr shlng-2 mi ssiles which would be remoVed from
West Germ any In an agreem('nt
on ellm lnat lng medium· range
to shorter-range
missiles weapons.
The United States could make
shorter-range missiles quickly .
eas ily and cheap ly by unscrew·
lng one stage of the two-slall:e
Pershlng-2, which Is now lumped
with the medium-ra nge group at

6011 to I .:~KI miles.
"t l ll wou ld pr eve nt us from
converting Prrshlng· 2s to some·
thin g of a less&lt;•r runge. which we
could havr done." sa id Perle.
who still Is pr ivy to t~e arms
co ntrol negotiations as an ad·
vlscr to Defense Secret ary Cas·
par Weinberger.
" Wr weren't going l o build a
whole new missile" If 1here were
no agr('l!ment on shorter - range
~ys l em s. he said In a telephone
ln tcrv if'W . "We wou ld hayf' taken
one stag!' off the Pershlng·2."
Th e Soviets have hundreds or
s hor l e r- ran~e SS-12, SS-22 and
SS-2.1 miss iles and 140 launchers
for them targeted against Wes t·
ern E uropr, Perle sa id.
Wes t Gt'r many, whi ch wou ld
b1•on thr front line ora future war
In Europe. feared tha t srrappln~
near ly all nu clear wrapons
would ~ l vr thr Sovlrts an adva n·l
tage from their numerical superlorllv ovN N/\TO In convenllonal
weapons . The co ncern Is that the
Sol' lct bloc cou ld overrun Wrsl ·
l'fn Europe with lunks.
Wes t Germ any fina lly bow('(!
to prrssut·e from other members
of the Wrstl'rn alliance. lnclud·
lng lhr Unllcd States. and Perle
said th1• offer " wa s finally
wrappl:'d up" at the NATO
mlntsterla! mt.'&lt;'tlng las t wl.'&lt;'k In
Rc.v kjavl k. l crland.

PRESIDE!'.'T REAGAN

President Reagan links Soviet Union with Persian Gulf

POCKET KNIVES

992-5500

. ..

WAS HINGTON 1 UPl i
Hom!' bulld('rs worked In May at
the slowest pace in 3'h years and
madE' clear they plan to rase up
even more In com ing months. the
Commer ce Department sai d
today .
Th e gov!'rnment said builder s
start ed work on new homes last
month at an an nual rate of 1.62
million unlls - 2.7 percent below
April ' s 1.66!i million pace and the
worst ra te since December 1984.
in addition. Americans took
ou t bulldlng permlls for new
homes at an annu al rate o f 1.4~

Foxchasers
have meeting

634 E. Main, Pomeroy, Oh.

7366

.New home starts in May at
slowest pace in three years

ranc tU'r Melvi n Hlr hshaw . who

O'DELL LUMBER CO.

Pi(•k 4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 16, 1987

honors. Am ong her college ho·

eumr to thf' fu nrl·ra isPr sponsnr i'C I h ~• IIH' Eag\r F i n '

/20°/o OFF!

531

at y

Vol. 37. No. 29
. Copyrighled 1987

Carson received

Friend said they taste so mt'·
lhing Jikr tur k&lt;•.v gizzard. and
others havt• cornpu rf'd thf•ir t astC'
to tlwt of tJrrf longue.
" Th r ~· ·,.,, thr bc' t things you
can eat. I'XCf' jJl lng ra 1t lers. " said

Daily Numlwr

•

reen Carson

Ro e k ~ ' Moun l ain oysters, l.li:;o
cal lr d ranch o~· s h' r~ . al'f' ac1u·

l'l an ~

Junior
Olympics
Page 3

Pomeroy res ident Carol No·
r C'cently began her
car eer as a pharmacist with
Fr uth Pharmacy. Ca r son is
m ar r i!'d to Ed Carson. ownerm anag&lt;•r of the Carson Dair~
Farm in M ason. W.Va . Her
par!'nls arc Mr. and Mrs. George
Circle of New Have n, W.Va .
A 1973 graduate of Wahama
High School. Carson gr ad uated
from Rio Gr ande Co llege in 197o
wllh a degree in medi ca l Iabora·
lory tec hnology . She graduated
from Ohio Northern Unlv&lt;'l'sitv
In 1 9~7 w llh honors.
·
While In pha rm acy sc hool.

f:i\CLF: , i&lt;l &lt;~ h o ilJP i t - More
th an I. IMlll eonn oisseurs of a
Wt•slrrn deli cacy showed up at
t h~ annu al l{ ocky Mount ai n
Ovslf'r F't·c·&lt;l - though t to be thc
lar gest f'v rnt in the world at
which th&lt;' main dish is animal
tr st iclPs .
T hr l&lt;il gl1 · F irr' Drparlm('nl
scr vrd abou t i.(~M I pounds of
"oi'Stf'rs" at th&lt;• f'ven t Sa turda.v ,
I' in • Ch irlllun Friend said.

Ohio Lout-rv
.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes lung Cancer., Heart Disease .
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.

*Based on suggested retaW price versus tutt-price brands
with 200 cigarettes per carton.20 per pack.

FILTER: 15 mg."Ia( 1.1 mg. nicotine av. per cigarlllle by FTC method.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UP II - Pres·
ldent Reagan. clll ng possible
harmony with the Sov iet s In a
nuclear arm s agreement. Is
nonetheless sounding a loud nole
of discord In reasoning why an
Increased U.S. naval presence Is
needed In the Persian Gulf.
" If we don' t do the job, the
Soviets will." Reagan warned
tht' nation Monday night In a
2l·mlnut!' televised address from
1he White House that focused on
key domestic and lorelgn policy
Issues.
Disputing members of . ('on·
gress who have criticized his
decision to put ll Kuwaiti oil
tankers under U.S. nag protec·

lion In I he war-torn gulf, Rea Ran
said. " Our Immediate task In th e
gulf Is clear and should not be
exaggerated ."
To cease bein g a naval power
In the strategic waterway. he
asserled, "would open opportu nl·
lies for the Soviets to move Into
the chokepoint of the free world's
oil now." He thus vowed to
protect all vessels Hy ing the
American nag from " threats by
Iran or anyone else."
Before delivering his speech
from the Oval Office, the presl·
dent sent members of Congress a
classified Pentagon r eport on his
P.lans to increue a military
presence In the gulf.. An unclassl·
lied version was to be released
today after Defense Secretary

I

Caspar Weinberger and Joint
Chiefs ol Staff Chairman William
Crowe briefed the House Foreign
Affairs Committee.
In lhe lace of congressional
sk epticism , Wei nberger ha s
echoed Reagan In citing a Soviet
threat to gull shipping, noting the
Soviet decisio n to give Kuwait
protection for three of Its 22 ·oil
vessels under a lease
arrangement.
Reagan's portrayal of the
Soviets as regards the gulf,
however, sounded quite different
from the opllmlsllc tone he
struck In announcing Monday
night that he wants U.S. negotla·
tors to try wrapping up a
superpower nuclear arms
accord .

"A s most of you know , w&lt;· arc
currently engagt"d In highly
senslllve negotiations with the
Soviet s that could lead to a
historic arms reducllon treaty on
lntermedlale·range mi ssiles, or
I NF ," Reagan said.
Noting that NATO foreign
ministers In I celand last week
had backt"d th e U.S. poslllon on
medium-ran ge mi ssiles, he said,
" f am pleased to tell you thai we
and our allles ha ve reached lull
consensus on our negotiating
position." ..
The president then announced
his admlnlstrallon would propose "t he global elimination of
all U .S. and Soviet land-based,
shorter-ra nge I NF missil es,
along with the deep reductions In

- and we hope the ultimate
elimination of - longer-ra ng!'
JNF miss iles."
T he Soviets. however, have
balked at globa l elimination of
shorter· range missiles - those
capa bl e of cover ing 300 to 600
miles - In large part because
they ha ve hundreds of them and
the United States currenlly has
none. There was no Immediate
word on whether Reagan's new
proposal might be accepted.
And although U.S. and Soviet
officials are discussing dat es for
a third summit meet ing between
Reagan and Soviet leader Mlk·
hall Gorbachev. the president did
not touc h on thai subject In hi s
speech.
Nor did he mention the Iran·

Contra sca ndal. wh ich manv
members nf Congress sa~· h a~
pushed him fas ter Into laml:'
duck status. Instead. 11cagan
offered an upbeat assess men t of
the j ust·endcd economic summit
In llaly and demanded lhal
Congress begin u new proerss ol
budget refor m .
·
Saying'he will S('{'k widespread
public support . Reagan plans to
travel one day a week arou nd the
cou nt ry In the com ing months to
push his goals of llne- ll em veto
power and a bal anced bud~et
amendm ent to I he Constitution .
"I'm gol n~ to take my casP to
you, the A merican people." he
sa id. " If Congress won't sec the'
light , I know :JOU can make th em
feel the ht"al."

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="161">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2751">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39267">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39266">
              <text>June 15, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2400">
      <name>arrington</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="985">
      <name>riffle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="154">
      <name>weaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="921">
      <name>whaley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
