<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12832" 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/12832?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T02:47:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43804">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c06ebd0f5bddf83733fb652c177bc832.pdf</src>
      <authentication>62ef9975e3aa06f241eb81fb8ed83195</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40271">
                  <text>Paga 10-The Deily Sentinel

Carpenter community happening
Mrs. Oma Starkey accompanied and Cammie, Altany, visited his
brother-Haw and sister, Mr: and
and Mrs. Roy Wiseman of Altany Mrs. Walter Jordan and chUdren,
to ChllllcothE' where they visited recently.
Mrs. Starkey's brother·ln·law and
Freda Smith and Madge Dyt&gt;
sister, Forrest and Enid Harper. went to Old Man's Cave State Park
Mrs. Beulah McComas, Middle· lodge where they joined the Smith
JX)rt, also accompanied tll!'m.
family In a celebration of the 48th
Mr. and Mrs. Tad GUkey, Crystal wedding anniversary ol. Mr. and
her son·ln·law and daughter, Mr.

Mrs. John Whittington of Lancas·
ter. M!'$. Whittington Is a sister of
the late Lewis Smith.
Keith Jordan woo will graduate
from Hocking Technical College In
ceramics engineertng In June,
attended a four day ceramics
conference with a group of students
In Chicago, Ill.

•

W. resent tiN
richt to

Iiiii~

qu1ntitill.

Moving cautiously

Sectional champs

Edltorl!ll on Page 2

See Soulhem ... Page 4

Reds win, Tribe loses

Nursing Home Week

Repoi'ia on Page 3

ELBERFELDS

BUY 1, GET 1 FREE
EXTRA STRENGTH

DOVE

VITUIItil ens
CNJ£11E FifE 20'S

.. 78'

·vol.341, No.&amp;

IIA!Uil'S 111U11TY

program ea•'lts praise

whit'r.;;{'ol Roo~ !'ir
(/
Cond1t1oners

Room Air
Conditioners

IIATUif'S 1011m

IILn-IAJ
PLUS IROI

IITAIII E

11

99
NOW
11170 · US YAW£

1

NOW

11
IIOW
14.11 YIIUE

CUICOIL
LIIITER
FLUII
~z;
I.SIVIIUE

•lnsta-Mount ·· lor fast installation • Adjustable

Thermoslat • COMFORT GUARO• Conlrol

10

SPECIAL

help mainta1n the comfort lfWel you select

LOIE IY
CIRPO

BlnEIIES

14 Ill.

oz.,a

ROOM DEOOORIZER •

$279

SPECIAlS ON ALL AJR CONDITIONERS

"Wbwr.Z1 Room Air
(/

~I

Conditioners

NOW

Electric
Range
RF3165XP

-

CIIRCIAL
Ull'!fS
II 1M

ii

111

11
IIOW 1
141 YIIWE

CZ.PKI

1''

IIOW

JIIIT. II I DRII

Model
featuring
automatic

IJOO • 5.75

ggc

8

11
2VU

IIOW

SUWE-Cl.O

IEOIUII llfGUUI
AISOIII 41'S

•116 VOlTS , 7 .6AMPS

1.CII'WS

2

PAIPERS

•&amp;.000 ITU/ HA COOU NG
*2 SPEED FAN
•AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT

LECITIII

1.1:.1PS

11580 . us VAlUE

W...OOI. All COMNnONEI

IIAIUI£'S 111U11TY

4tii ·IU

liltS

.:~=-

ltlll

t-it~ NOW

99°

52 oz.

MEALTIMER '"

clock

WICIER PUlE
IOUEIS

IUUil atDtCE. 1MM1.
WS. Slftl WI WT

4I'S 01 SIPU
'!'O"'IT JI'S

IIOW

ggc

• Two a:· IWO 6" high-speed, plug-in su~ace units
• High Efficiency Operalion lo help reduce en·

ergy costs • lnsta·Mounl' ~ for fast installation •
2-way Air Direction • Exhaust Control

• Custom Broil Control• Chrome reflector bowls •
Oven window and oven light• Full-width storage
drawer with ~iterature Pac • Balanced Cootc:ing

1.05

VIlli£

2.51

IIOW

VAlliE

a••

lUI Yllllt

By NANCY YOACIIAM

&amp;!allnel staff wrller
"Why shouldn't all people have

the joy of success?"
Robert E. Brown, director of the
Ohio Department of Mental Retar·
datiOn and Developmental Dlsablli·
ties, asked that question as bespoke
at Monday night's annual dinner of
the Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
DlaabUitles held at Carleton School
In Syracuse.
Brown's question was In refer·
ence to people with rnentaireiardatton and physical handicaps.
Appointed state director In November 1985, Brown Is the father d
·a mentally retarded son and was an
early advocate of state funding for
clasaes provided by county boards
rt mental retardation on an equal
,level with special education classes
•provided by local school dlstrtcts.
: Brown conunended the Meigs
Board for Its strong program and
the strong community support
shown for the program.
He also conunended · Meigs
County Commissioners Manning
Roush, David Koblentz and RJ.
chard Jones for having "courage"
to place on the ballot, rt'quests for
mWage to operate the program.
He noted the differences In the
amounts of millage raised In small
counties such as Meigs. where a
rnm produces about SI90,(XX), and
larger Industrial counties In the
state where a mUI may produce as
much as a mWiondollaTs to be used
.f~~
Oi£.1'!tton u~m.~.a~-.

tered workshops and developmental centers for chUdren and adults
with mental retardation.

good now as' they ever will be" for
retardation and handicap
programs.
"Next year," he said, "we're
going to use $400 million out of the
state surplus to fund our current
level r1 programrnbtg" throughOut
Ohio. "After Ju~ 30, 1987, when
that money Is gone, our programs
will operate on current Income and
"any Increase In programming wUI
come out d. wrownabilltytohetter
utlllze resources."

But no matter how many dollars
you have to work with, "It's money
oot wasted," Brown said, "because
we're financing futures."
Brown recounted some of the
goals set by his department since he
took CNer as state director, and
pledged that the depilrtrnent would
be In support of an equitable
funding base "so that small coun·
ties are not deprived of services
Also speaking briefly at the
because they don't have local dinner were State Rep. Jolynn
wealth."
BOster, Lee Wedemeyer, superln·
He added, "If you're wUltng to tendent of Carleton School-Meigs
pass millage to support your own Industrtes, and Attorney Douglas
programs. then It Is the state's Little, president of the Meigs
ob!lgatlontoasststyou tndotngjust County Board of Mental
that."
Retard at lon-Developmenta I
Brown also recounted some of the Dtsa bUllies.
problems of adults with mental
David Mlllken, director of Meigs
retardation by telling the story of a Industries, narrated a slide show
young woman who was told by "the presentation ol the growth of the
professionals" that she reaDy didn't programs proVIded through Ca·
have any problems. "She had no rleton School·Meigs Industries and
oome, oo job and no friends wttll . certificates ol. appreciation were
which to rocla!lze- yet she had oo presented to volunteer workers by
problems," Brown said Carletlln staff memll!r. Bette
Incredulously.
Krawsczyn.
tie noted the need for soclaUza·
A hlghUght of the evening was a
tlon: employment education and tribute to the late Manning Webster
developmental centers .tor people by Commissioner Rich Jones.
with retardation and handicaps.
Mary Webster received a stand·
And r1 the 14 developmental lng CNation as she accepted a
centers tn Ohio he singled wt the plaque In honor of her late
Gallipolis Dev~lopental Center as husband's many years of dedica·
lion and leadership which led to the
"one r1 the finest."
He also warned that financially, eventual establtshment of Carlton
"tlllluiS are ptobibly !l;!Bt aboUt as • School·Meigs Industries ..

Syslem.

Convertible
Dishwasher

Electric
Range

Model
DP3880XM
Eallly converts
to unclercounterl

HOT SHOT

IURPIY
IlL SOIP

.....
·---

SIITU

FWIII nCI
UTEIIIUTII

12Dl.

un•

15.5 Ill.

Model
RF3020XP

NOW

featuring

258

111M

341

cooktop

ILWIYS
PIITUIEIS

IOU 01 UTI·

'EIISPIIMl, SU:NIEII,
UlscmtD, I'OIItiEJ
ts Ill.
• 3 Automatic Cycles • Energy-Saving Air Dry
Opl1on • Handsome Butcher Block wood -look
Fiberestn Top • Porcetain -Enamei-On-Steet Tub
• DUAAPEAM' Sound-Conditioned Door liner
• More !
· Tmk

• One 8~ three 6~ plUg-in surface units • Custom
Broil Control • Chrome reflector bowls • Two adjustable oven ractc:s • Fu ll-width storage drawer
with Literature Pac • Removable oven door • Bal-

anced Cook1ng System.

2.l5

~ol

Model
LA5400XP
Large
Capacity ...but
only 24" wide!

CILTRITE
illll

-

~-

Automatic
Dryer

.-

AIIDIIOI~

NOW

Ullll CIRE
Fill
311
NOW
i .ll! Wil iE

ws nus

649
liS YIIUE

NOW

171

m-no:

IISS IIECI
IIIR SPIIY
IZ Ill. IIUULU 1'I
.
IIOW
z.n VIIWE

Model
LE/G5650XM
Timed Dry
System

WISI

lllUD
nSSIES

LI"IIIETUIUT
lllll.

'Ill. 1M:

NOW

l9°

1.01 ¥AWE

CLDRDX

ElliiA tltQI GO.

wh&amp;J

Drying Cycles • 3 Drying Temperatures •
"No-Iron" Cool-Down Care • teo• Sido-Swing
Door • Tough DURAWHITE" lnlerior • More.

• 4

QJPICIL

U"IIIIE'II

7 Ill. IECUW, SliiSITift,

i4 Ill.

Ill NCOIIDtTIOIIIIIG,
FWIWICE Fl£1

NOW

IICiillltlllslllllll.

IIJTll(

89C

1101'1

311

5.5, VAlUE

1.21 VIlli£

Refrigerator
IS\ IIIII£ liEf

ll's
liD "MilT
Ulll.

FUJI FILl
IIOW

2••
APPLIANCES
• Extra ThicK Urethane Insulation

CARESS
BATH BIR

ergy cosls • Etegent Tempered Glass
No·lingerprinl Te•lured Sleet Doors
lor opllonai iCEMAGIC • Aulomalic
Adjuslable Rollers • Ourable Por,oelain·on-sleell
InteriOr Liner

FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
SERVICE

Todd Adams

KeDey Grueser

Co-valedictorian

Salutalorian

Adams, Oliver, Grueser top
graduating class at Southern
Male students of Southern High
He was named the most valuable
School's graduating class have player of the SVAC In 1981·85 and
swept top honors this year.
1985-86 In basketball, was named
The senior class has a tie lor the Hooorable Mention AU-State In
valedictorian oonors of the class 1984-85 and 1985-lli. He participated
and serving as co-valedictorians In the quiz bowl this year. He Is a
are Todd Adams, son of Carol and member r1 the National Honor
Jim Adams, ~yracuse, and Ryan Society and was a wln~r d. a Meigs
Craig Oliver, son of Ray and Susan County Academic Award. Adams
Oliver, Route I, Racine. Both have wUI attend Ohio State Unlve1 slty In
a four point average.
the fa U, majoring In electrical
Named salutatorian Is Kelley englneertng.
Grueser, son of Don and Susie
Oliver was a school paper staff
Grueser, Forest Run Road .
member and a yearbook staff
memberdurlnghls freshman year.
Adams was president ol the He played basketball as a !reslunan
!reslunan class, treasurer of Stu· and sophomore and baseball for
dent Council his junior year, second four years. He Is a niemher of the
place in the State Future Problem pep club, the computer club and
Solvers durtng his junior year and took part In the show choir his
tills year has served as Student senior year and was a senior play
CouncU VIce President. He was In cast member. Oliver was a
the senior play and took part In the member d. the scholarship team for
choir durtng his senior year. Durtng four years and Is a member of the
his senior year he placed flfl h In the National Hooor Society. He Is listed
Ohio University chemistry contest. among "Who's Who Among Amert·
He served on the scholastic team can High School Students". He was
tor all four years of his high school a winner of a Meigs Cwnty
work and was on the baseball and Academic Award and was winner
of the D.A.R. Good Citizenship
basketball teams for four years.

Award.
Besides serving on the qu lz bowl
team, he has been an Ohio
University McGuffey Scholar,
played· American Legion baseball
and is a member of the Meigs
Crunty Karate Club. He will attend
Ohio University In the fall, major·
tng In electrical engineertng.
A winner ol. a Meigs County
Academic Award, Grueser played
football and basketball for four
years at Southern High and was a
taseball team member for two
years. He received hooors in
football two years. An oooor roll
student for every grading period
during his high school career,
Grueser Is a member of the
National Honor Society. He was a
memher of the scholastic team for
four years and the problem solVIng
team fortm years. He also took the
scholastic mathematics test for
four years. He was a memher d. the
choir for one year. Grueser wUI
attend Musktngum College in the
taU where he wUI he a business
major and will play football .

Village seeks C&amp;O property

H COUIII, 011'"-f

U~E1"

YAUIE

11011

Automatic
Washer

Combinalions • Easy-Clean Removable Lint
Fifter • SURGILATOR• Agitator • More.

Ryan Oliver

Co-valedictorian

Lift-up

SPILLGUARO'"

• 4 Automatic Wash Cycles • 3 Wash / Rinse

1 Sectior:t, 12 P1ges 26 Cents
A Muftlmedi1 Inc. NIWIPIPir

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 13, 1986

•

'

..!.·~-

en tine

Meigs' ·Mental Health

JOUR SUIDRY STORE

iiiiiiW-

at y

·Copyrighted 1986

1.19 VMUE
UIIT2

To celebrate its 75th Anniversary, Whirlpool Corporation has
lowered Its prices on special models so we can pass the savings on
to you. Get these low Anniversary sale prices now while they last!

S&amp;ory, photos ... Page 12

•

e

~ DEIATRII

DISH LIQUID 22 oz.

·

ELBERFELDS
POMIIOY

992-3671

FREE
PARKING

WITH BODY OIL

40 COUIIT

NOW

flOW

59c , ••

ODMR chief

•
proses
area

MAKES P~ENTATION­
On behalf of the Melp Ill Board
of Mental Relartlallon and Developrnenllll Dlaablllle8, Meigs
County Cornm11181oner Rlchanl
Jont!8 pn!tlellled Mary Webster,
widow of the 1a1e Mannmg
Webtlter, wllh a plaque bt bonor
ol her hulband's years of service
whlcb Jed to the eventual
erlalrllr!lunea ol lhe present
CarlSon Schooi-Melp lndu8lriea. Mrs. Webtlter received a
ltandlna: ovllfon as 8he accepted
a larle plllque, which wiD bang
at CarlSon School. and a
smaller plaque which wu hen
to keep. AI bollom left, Robert
E. Brown, dlnlclor of lhe Ohio
DeparlrnetR of Mental Jletanla.
lion IIIII Developmt!JUI Dlaabllllee, prtWed tobeanmH.....,Ing

11tJ811ker at
8111111111

M~

nllbt's

tiiDner al CarlSon
Schoti-Melp lndullrles. Brown,
wbo II lhe Iaiiier of a menlall,r
relardecl 1011, lhares lhe oonCt!l'lll of local plll'l!llll IIIII was
1111 earb' advocate of !!late
fuDdiD&amp; for c'R'P' for childn!D
. and adulll wllh JlleiiYI rtiardalloa IIIII piQ'IIfcal bandlcapti.

By BOB HOEflJCH

Employee remembered

Sentinel staff wliler
Middleport VIllage will make an
offer on Chesapeake and Ohio
RaUroad property In an attempt to
secure the land for a bike path.
This was the decision when
Middleport Vlllage CouncU met In
regular session Monday night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman read a
letter from a railroad company
official indicating that the land
cannot be donated to Middleport,
but noted the company would
consider the best offer that Middle·
port VIllage can make and that
offer would Include all of the
Incidental costs involved In the
transfer of the property . The 10 foot
right-of-way owned by the railroad
company along Front St. extends
from Beech St. , to Railroad St.
Acquiring the land would tie In with
plans of village officials to establish
a bike path along the Ohio River.
Mayor Hoffman was autllortzed
to make an offer of $10,(XX) for the
land.

Officials held a moment of silent
prayer in memory of Miss Martha
Howell, long-time vUlage employee, first as a dispatcher and
then as secretary to the mayor.
Officials praised Miss Howell, woo
died over the weekend, highly for
her work with the village over the
years. Employed as a resident
dispatcher was Mrs. Roberta Dai·
ley, a sister d. the late Miss Howell.
Mrs. Dalley has been tlll1ng In at
VIllage hall tlurtng her sister's
Ulness. Officials said Mrs. Dalley
had taken hold her duties at vUlage
haD whUe fllUng In forherslsterand
It was the consensus that she wUl
make an excellent employee.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
Opal Kauff wUl serve fi:lr the time
being as cemetery clerk and
secretary to the mayor In addition
to her other duties at village hall.
Council approved the report of
Mayor Hollman siDwing receipts
of $5,361.54 In fines and fees for the
month of Aprll. Mayor Hoffman

announced that plans are helng
made to hold an open bouse at the
Hartinger . subdivision reporting
that a date wUl be set wheQ
represmtatlves of the Ohio Depart\
men! of Development can attend.
He cptned thai this wUJ be near the
md of May or the first part o1. June.
Flrsii'E8dlng held
A first reading was given an
ordinance to abandon an alley near
property owned by Jay Hall on
Page St. The alley no longer exists
and Is oow a right-of -way and Is
located on Page St. to Broadway
St., If Broadway St. was extended.
TWo more readings are required on
the aband&gt;nment.
The next llftttng of council was
set for Tuesday, May 27, since the
regular Monday meeting faits on
Memortal Day.
Council President Dewey Horton
report«! he has received com plaints on pit bulls In the communIty and stated !bat maO Is not being
delivered to some oomes where the
(Continued on page 121

Wheels of justice "turning
slow for concerned parents
The wheels of justO,e In Meigs
County are turning too slowly for
parents of a five-year·old who has
allegedly been sexually abused.
The parents have Issued strong
complaints concerning the han·
dltng of the charge - sexual abuse
of their then four-year-old son,
allegedly by a 15-year-old boy.
The mother ot the · alleged
violated child says she reported the
abuse on January 24 to the
Children's Services In Meigs
County. She has statements from
two doctors which verifY that
examinations disclose that the child
was exJX)sed to sexual abuse.
The mother reports that even
though the Incidents occurred CNer
a four to five month period, she was
oot aware of It until January, this
year, when the youngster's behav·

~-r.----~---------"'1!""1"""-----:o----------' ~IDr led to questioning and he then

related stortes reganlng the aJ. Incidents took place in Meigs
teged awse. The chUd Is now five County. Paul Gerard , Investigator
for the Meigs County Prosecuting
years old.
The alleged abuse was reporled Attorney, reports the youth Is In the
In January, but no heartngwashetd custody rt Children's Services In
untll Aprll 14. At that time, the Athens County. However, the
15-year-old alleged offender ap- mother of the small child says that
peared In the Meigs Juvenlle Court the boy bas been returned to his
and entered a plea of tnnorent to home by the Athens Children's
sexual gross Imposition ell~. Services.
An oltlclat of the Meigs Coonty
Judge Robert Buck apJX)Inted
Attorney Robert Stewart, Athens, Department r1 Human Services
to serve as attorney for the accUsed asked about the case said .he Is
youth. The mother complains that forbidden by law to discuss the
the delay In getting the matter btto matter.
Meantime, the parrots of the
court was too long and that too
mucll Ume Is lapsing. However, allegmiy abused chUd ex(J'esS
yesterday, Judge Buck set another concern for the ermttonal tunnoll
hearing date for his court, May 23 at that their son has suffered and
concern CNer further offenses that ·
tO a.m.
The 15-year-old boy accused of . could be Incurred by the 15-year·old
the olfenses has since rmved Into . If he Is guilty ol the offenses
Athens County, but the alleged charged.

••

�•

Tuesday. May 13, 1986

Commenta•-y.
The Daily Sentinel
lJ.I Court Street

~ Local

Reds snap Expos'

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEHEAD
AssiStant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Tht&gt; Un! tt'd Press International, lnland Dally Press Assocla·
tion and the Amer ica n Newspaper PubllshNs Association.

l.ETIERS OF OPIN ION ar&lt;' wclronx&lt; Thcy should be less than 300 words
long. Alllt&gt;tters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
tei£1Ptlooe number. No unsigned le-tters will be published . Len ers should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persooal!lles.

WASHINGTON - How many
jobs that might be fiBed by U.S.
citizens are being taken by Illegal
aliens? It Is a question of poignant
social and economic meaning, but
to judge from a recent report ol the
General Accounting Otflce, no one
knows the answer.
Any lnquby Into Illegal aliens Is
an Inquiry Into a shadow world. The
best guess of the Immigration and
NaturaUzatlon Service Is that between 6.5 mliUon and 7 million
Illegal aliens have gained permanent re$1dent status within the
Unlted States. The numiFr Is
thought to be growing at hall a
million a year.
Who are these people? They are
still predominantly Mexicans, but
INS ligures show an Increasing

number of "lllegals" from all over matter. It Is beyond question, a
the world- Chinese, Poles, natives press spokesman says, that !Uegals
of Bangladesh, refugees from take a "significant" number c1 jobs
Central America. In 1985 the IJIS away from U.S. citizens. One
apprehended 1.2 million persons scholar, Donald L. Huddle ol Rice
attempting illegally to cross the University, has estimated that In
Mexican border. This year an some occupations the rate of
estimated 1.8 mllllon will IF caught, displacement may approach 00
but the fiood goes on.
percent - that Is, for every 10
In Its April 21 report, the GAO Illegal aliens who establish residetermined 51 studies that have dence, six jobs for U.S. workl'rs
been made on the question ol may disappear. Th~t factor has not
"displacement" of American been confirmed by other studies,
workers. The data were woefully but II the rate of displacement Is
Inconclusive. After sifting all the even 10 percent, the aliens have
studies, the GAO could only con· pushed hall a million legal workers
elude that the literature "suggests ooto the unemployment rolls.
the posslblllty of widespread disOle or the surprising aspects of
placement" As for actual dlsplacP. the GAO report, confirmed by the
ment, lheGAOsimplycouldn'tsay. INS, Is that lllegal aliens are
The INS has no doubts on the Invading not only !IF agricultural

Talking tough,
taking precautions
Secretary of State George Shultz says the terroriSts "are scared to
death."
He has told Libyan leader Moammar Khadaty: "You've had it pal."
But If that Is the case, the administration Is going to great lengthS Ill
spend bUllons on concrete barriers throughout the world for American
facilities and millions more to protect U.S. o!flclals.
It also Is ordering oil companies oo tot Libya and U.S. foreign Investment
Is In jeopardy.
Americans have become a prime target.
Shultz hlmsell moves with a human cordon of agents, almost as many as
President Reagan.
More and more, the White Hoose is IFing blocked off with concrete
barners. There Is a move to put a fl&gt;nce around the 68-acre U.S. Capitol.
Tourism has been severely curtailed, particularly to Europe and the
Middle East. There were Incidents, sluotlngs of Americans and British
citizens In the aftermath of the U.S. air strikes against Libya.
The time may come when terroriSts have oo ~ac e to hide under Shultz's
edict. but for the time IFing the Cabinet otrlc lal Is kldulglng In wlshlul
thlnkJng.
The president scored a big victory at the Ecooomic Summit, winning the
support ol the richest Western democracies. British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, who had already established her credentials by
permitting U.S. jet fighters to Dy from a NATO base In Britain to bomb
Libya, carried the baD for the United States demanding that the summit
statement on terrorism be tougher.
By winning backing for a stronger stand, Thatcher was able to protect
her own left Dank after taking the heat from the opposition for her role In
the Libyan raids. She could now point to the unanimous support of the
summit partners.
In a paper with talking points, released by the White House, one ol the
reasons for doing something was "so that the crazy Americans won't take
matters Into their own hands again."
The paper, prepared by State Department and national security
advisers, said that Americans must exercise "civic valor and stand up to
the terroriSts no matter how painful the consEquences."
For that reason, the admlnlstratton prefers that the families of the six
American hostages In Lebanon remain silent. But other officials In the
State Depariment have said that If the famllles do not go public and start
demanding more action, there wUIIF oo rcessure on tiF government to do
something. So the dilemma for them Is whether Ill be good soldiers and
~tand mute or to express their frustrations and fears .
· The spread of terroriSm In so many parts d the world Is t~lE'
0
pre-emlnent challenge of this era," the government paper said,
It also contended that progre;s In terms of Middle East peace would
Increase terroriSm on grounds, It declared that "terror·lsts do not want to
see a solution to theplightof the Palestinians and the right c1 Israel tollveln
peace."
The paper also asserts that "we must recognize that just people with just
grievances do not use terrorism as a weapon."
Shultz was ecstatic over the action taken by the summit leaders. "It's
wonderful," he said.
He has adamantly Insisted In one Interview after another that there Is oo
reason for terroriSm. The only reason. he said Is the lack of courage to
CQnfront It.
·In so saying, Shultz can dismiss the grievances that lead to such
desperate and unacceptable acts.
In Washington, Shultz Is known as the man "ready to shoot" while
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger Is urging caution.

Berry's World

'

'

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, May 13, the 133rd day of J.9a&gt; with 232 to tlllow.
The moon Is moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening star Is Venus.
Those born on this date are under the slgn of Taurus. They Include
composer Sir Arthur Sullivan, of GUIFrt and SUllivan, In 1842; novelist
Daphne Du Maurler In 1907; heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louts In
1914; actress Beatnce Arthur In 1926 (age 00) , and singer Stev le Wonder In
1950 (age 36) .
On thls date In history:
'In 1607, English colonists landed near the James River In VIrginia to
establish Jamestown, their first permanent colony In the New World.
In 1846, the United States declared war on Mexico.
In 1912, Britain established the Royal Ftvlng Corps.
·
In 1981, Turkish gurunan Mehmet AU Agca wounded Pope Jom Paul nIn
an assassination attempt In St. Peter's Square..

'

On

WASHINGTON - The !llbllc
may IF contused about GrammRudman cuts 'n defense spending,
but tt's really simple enoogh ilr a
first-grader to underntand - H the
kid happens to IF ooe of tiF 156,000
students wi'D attend schools tlr U.S.
military famllles overseas.
The $26.8 million lopped from the
military schools' current oodget
amounts to a 4.9 peroent cut. This
translates Into a whole catalog of
persoMel, equipment and activities
reductions that affect every school·
age military depmdent oversms.
Here aresomeottheresuits ol tiF
cutback In funds, culled by rur
associate Stewart Harris from
ooples c1 recent (l'ders Issued by the
Pentagon:
- Canoellation of 1986 summer
schools.
- Cancellation of an field trips.
-A moratorium m purchases d
new textbooks and mlscellanoous
equipment.
- Drastic reduction of the
teaching staff by attntkln. One oot
of three teachers who leave the

SChOOlS ___Ja_ck_A_n_de_r_so_n_&amp;_D--.ale_Va_n_A_tt_a

system will not be replaced.
- Afreeze on hiring of art, music,
physical educatkln and other "spe·
clalty" teachers.
- A 2'i percent reductton In
purchases of audio-visual
equipment.
One program canoeted as too
costly - the annual Paclllc region
basketball tournament - was
rescued by Northwest Orient Airlines. When the Pentagon canceled
the toomament by cutting back m
extracurricular travel, the airline
Dew the oompellng school teams to
Japan from South Korea, till
Philippines and other U.S. military
bases.
The decision not · to replace
one-third of till teachers who quit (I'
retire means that the military
classrooms will IF packed even
tighter than they have been.
Already the mllltary's classes are
more crowded than their clvlllan
counterparts: Currently there are
24.3 students lor every teacher In
Ill! military system; the average

for civilian classes Is about 23
children nationwide, according to
National Education Association
ligures.
And even before the cuts, the
military spent much less on Its
p.1plls than the U.S. average. Jack
Rollins, president of the overseas
Education Association, said the
Pentagon's expenditure this year
per pupil was $2,998.40, compared
with the national average of $3,814.
The Pentagon "Is In essence
ruMing one of the poorest school
systems In the United States,"
Rollins saki.
In a letter to military school
administrators, Joseph Larkin, dira:tor r1 the system's Atlantic
region, made this pointed observa·
~on: "As yoo become aware of the
cuts we have already made, you
wlll think they are harsh. You will
be right."
Footnote: In a wntten response
to our Inquiries, the Defense
Department confirmed the $26.8
mOllon , 4.9 percent budget cut. It
also disclosed that the opmlng of

the 1986-87 school year wtJJ be
delayed until Sept. 5 as an economy
measure. The Pentagon claimed
tllat students In the military school
system have exceeded the national
average on college entrance examinations for the last 10 years.
SUPERNEW NIXON: If nlce
guys finish last, do not-so-nice guys
at last finish nice? Former President Richard Nixon, who built his
carrer oo being mean and rellshlng
It, turned Into Mr. Chartsma the
otll!r day on a New York Air flight
from the Big Apple to Washington.
He signed autographs for the flight
attendants, swapped stories with
the crew, chatted amiably with
passengers who came over to talk
and !!J!nerally made himself the
most popular pa.sseng&lt;er aboard.
Learning that the captain was a
woman, Nixon stopped by the
rod&lt;plt on his way out and
commended her for the smooth
night. He told her It was the first
time he'd ever flown with a woman

Majors
NAnONi\L lEAGUE

By BILL WOIJ..E
Montreal tied the score 3-3 1n the
UPJ Sports Writer
eighth. John Denny hit 'llm Wall·
The Cincinnati Reds, who seem ach with a pitch. and walked
unable to wtn· at home, finally have Andres Gallaraga and Vance Law
found success In the least likely of to load the bases. Joe Price relieved
places, New York and Montreal.
and gave up a sacrifice fly to AI
Losers of 12 of 14 home games Newman.
and 16 of their last 1B overall, the
The Reds broke a 1·1 tie with two
Reds have recorded back-to-hack runs In the fifth . Ron Oester was
victories over the two hottest teams wi'lked by Andy McGafflgan and
In the league. Monday night at sacrificed to second by [X,nny.
Montreal, the Reds snapped the Oester moved to third when
Expos' eight· game winning streak McGaffigan was charged with his
with a ~-J triumph on Eddie second balk of the game, and
Milner's homer with two out In the Milner delivered an RBI single. _
top of the ninth. Milner's first
Rose bounced Into a fielder's
homer, off a 2·2 pitch from loser choice, but the Reds loaded the
Bert Roberge, 0-1, cleared the bases on a single by Dave Parker
right-field fence.
and a walk to Nick Esasky.
Sunday, the Reds stopped the McGafflgan then walked Dave
sizzling Mets, 3·2 at New York.
Concepcion to force In another run.
Ted Power, the last t:L three Reds
The Expos narrowed the Reds'
pitchers, went 12-3 Innings Monday lead to 3-2 In the fifth. Tim Raines,
to raise his recoi'd to 1-3.
extending his hilling streak to 16
"There Is nothing like two wins to games, singled and stole second. He
put you back In the race," said went to third and and scored on
Cincinnati manager Pete Rose, consecutive ground out s by Milch
"but we had good pitching Sunday · Webster and Andre Dawson.
and Monday. Jiovewlnntngtwoina
Montreal tied tiF score 1·1 in the
row. And we beat two teams that
third. With two out. Ralnes walked
were on streaks, New York and and scored on singles by Webster
Montreal, so this has to build our and Dawson.
confidence."
A balk by McGaffigan led to the
first Cincinnati run In the second
Inning. Concepcion walked with one
out, Buddy Bell singled and Bo Dlaz
walked to load tiF bases. ConcepCLEVELAND (UP!) - The cion was thrown out at!heplaleon a
Cleveland Indians Monday anforce. but McGafflgan was called
nounced the signing of right· for a balk on the nex t batter and
handed pitcher Jeff Shaw, the Bell scored the first run .
overall top pick In the January
" It Is not a good sign when your
draft .
starting
pitcher walks six and gives
Shaw, a 19-year-old native of
up two balks," Montreal manager
Washington Court Hou se, Ohio, and Buck Rodgers stated . "We got our
a product of Rio Grande College share of hits. Roberg~' jusl go! a
and Cuyahogo Community College
forkball up to Milner, and he hit it
In Cleveland, agreed to a contract pretty good."
·
with Batavia of the New York-Penn
League (Class A).
Term s of the conl ract WNC nol

Indians sign rookie

annoui'!Cffl.

....

By Unked f&gt;not!,. lnWrNUiorW
" " L Pt1 . m~
21 S .lfl! Ji J1 .f{fl ~I
1.1 J:o .464 (t
1 ~ 1·1 .41\2 !I
1:! 16 .4411 !t'-'1
l:l 1:'1 .#4 9 • ~

NY
Mon!IT'itl

St. Loo

J&gt;tsbq,:h
Chil"l'l{O
Phlla

....

llw~ ton

1~

li

Sant"ran
SllnDJ.(O

rHi -

U• 14 .56.1 '·"
I~ Jij """" .! .
1.1 I~ .4.1:1 ·1' 1

A l lan lit
L\

14 1!1 .•lz.l

Cncnntl

M 1!1 .2!lft M

,,

Montby 'i'! ~ult!i

1\'llfiS (C'om:-il 2.21 at Oev11land ISchulzto
2-(h , '1::\5 p.m .
(l Jit.•iJ.KQ 1BannJ ster 1 · ~1 a t B.lhlmorf'
of'I:III&lt;Jgan l4 t, ?:lJ pm
Or•troil tMorrh J-.4 1 111 Kan!!a.&lt;. Oty
•S.ohrrha~n 2-.11. !t 1'1 p.m
Mllwauki'r 11 i' lol)' 3·21 ill Sea It if' 1M organ
2·:1&gt; , l!l:3Spm
1;Jrun1o ii\rkror· 1'1-'21 at Oaklillld ICodlroU
'\..1, IO:l'ovm
I\Jsto 11 1Bt uwn 2·0t a t CaUiurnla rRnman ·
k:kll• . I0:35pm.
"'eth~••b,y'• G&amp;f11ol)ll
Mllwaukf'(o at ~attlf'
Tomntu at O&lt;tkland
rh lr-;~u ;~t Nt• York . night
M!lllll'SOiil '' ' &amp;ltlmorP. lllto:ht
To•1111~ a• J)(•tro!t, nJght
Clo'VPiaml at l&lt;ansas City. n'lhl
liNtm at Cit!ilurnla. nljO:hl

r.;"fw York I , Atlama 0

Clndnn;ul t Montrt•al .l

Phllit!i'lptlln ~. How,.TOn I
TuNda,y'!i G'IIJlelrl (AU
EIJT )
Clnel nro!l tSolO 'l-41 :.t r Mon1r1•al 1You
rnans l.Jt, 1. .1') p.m.
San Franelsro rGarR'Its 3J t at Oli&lt;'ai=!O
tS:Indcnon Ht , 4:00p.m
Atlanta rJohnson ll1 a t Nf'W ' 'ork
tBl&gt;fl.'ll}'I I·OI. 7 :~ p.m. ~
~,a n ~ tSh(w.l 1·21 ,. , Plltsbl.lr}(h
IBirlk:ki .J.() t, 7:35p.m
Los i\n¥,'eii:'S tHOfll'YC\IIt 121 at St . l .utJl~
11\ldor J.2t , A::fi p.m
Phll.aOOipN&lt;t !Toll\·rr 1~0 , at Hou~ ton
rseon.l 2l. 8:11p .m .

Leaders

nfYlel\

~·~IU' ' S G11m&amp;1
Loi 1\n.lef'i~ at St. LOLli~
~ n F'rnnelsro at Chica~o~:n

NY

lJ111i4~-

1

Mlwkt~ '

17 12 ,511.6
16 1•1 \'lJ

ll nnr
IA&gt;trolt
Toronto

1!1 H !"&gt;17
J.l 1~ ~1
14 Ill {18

•I
'•

fJ:IS -

.l•,,
lit ,

w~

KC
MIM
Sl&gt;atTk•
Chlraj&lt;o

Mt l
I.A
llrl1nll7 .
K11~h1 .

l~

1!1') 14 ~-126

OIJikfll

2fj

Kl

Bfl,l.'n . SF
Smth. St i.
.' ,hph) . A

2f,

l.l

~-M

-

l 'l
17
16
lX

.~;,

­

~I!+

·;
4

t! 21
ill 19

:1&gt;1

I)

:11~

I,

«&gt;
41il

19. (lrvl'land 2

ro;(.,..' York 9. Mln!V' ~W M
Kansas C l!~· D. !Xtroil ~
Toron1o ~- Oallland :1
Ca ll1ornla "i , HcJt:ilon 1
Sra!til' ti, Mllwnukl-r II
Thetid-.·(a Gat.rne~o ~ A.IIllrre. EIYf t
1\rw York fJohn l·Ot 011 Mlnr....rJI.o
It:llylr\'rn .1-21 . 1: 1 ~1 p.m.

w

WAS!flNGTON (NEA) - AJ.
though one of every seven poople In
this country Uves In poverty,
President Reagan persists In sl~hlng federal programs to aid till
destitute - wbUe simultaneously
planning to trade In Alr Foroe One
tor a newer model.
That's not quite true because the
White House wouldn't think of
buying a single presidential alr·
craft. They have to buy two because
a backup Is required. The deluxe
version Reagan favors costs $150
million per plane.
What about the lmpoverlsll!d?
The president displays no partlcutar Interest In their plight even
thougb a greater percentage ol tiF
natkln's population has been poor
throughout his tenure than In the
years before he was elected.
There's more. Under Reagan's
leadership, the federal government
has aU but aban&lt;klned its rommlt·
ment to racial equality. As a result,
racism Is becoming fashionable
again.
The president's laissez falre
approach to l'EKUlatlon ol ruslness
has allowed corporation! to substl·
lute anti-competitive mergers for
productive Investment In the
future.

The two most striking characl.e!'·
lstlcs cJ Reagan's economic policy
have been hugh budget deficits to
sustain a shaky r1r011ery and
massive trade deficits to dampen
Inflationary ll!ndencies.
The prosperity the reesldent says
has arrived Ia accompanied by an
unemployment rate tha! oonslst·
ently remains above 7 percent.
More than 8.~ mlllfon W(B'kefs are
joblestl and countless olhera have
had their wages slaJited In recent
years.
The "safety net" the president
p-omtsed would protect the most

vulnerable and defenseless
memiFrs of rur society Is shredded
and !altered. Government pro·
grams that once assisted )heyoong,
the old, the disabled and the poor
have been decimated w· not
destroyed.
In an attempt to fashion an
alternative vision lor the future,
more than l,OOJ grass·roots political
activists, trade union leaders and
rEPresentatives of Uberal organtzatlons met here recently at a "New
Dlra:tlons" conference.
Michael Harrington, the prlncipal organizer of the tW!Hlay
meeting and co-chair of the Democratlc Soclallsts of America, acknowledged that the left as well as
tiF right Is In need of a fresh
approach. "Our values In the 'lis
and the 'OOs were terrific," he said,
"rut oor solutklns didn' t work."
Conference leaders reserved
their harshest rhetoric for the
president and for Democrats fear·
lui of criticizing Reagan: "When
recession masquerades as rcospertty, when Imagery passes for
leadership, when Democrats sound
like Republicans , It's time lor new
directions."
Barbara Ehrenreich, also a DSA
oo-chalr, Insisted that "the twoparty system should mean ... more
than a choice between ~ lesser
evo and some other evO, more than
a choice between a bad oold and the
nu."
In an especlatly compelling
speech, Ehrenreich argued that "a
pollcy of starving the poor tn feed
the war machine Is not only
misguided ... It ts ghoulish."
Crltlctzlng the president's "unparalleled, unilateral belligerence
on a global scale," she called tor a
fresh approach to foreign policy
"that Isn't borrowed from the
'- pornographic Imagery of Rambo

I

~

movies."
Public opinion surveys uniformly
show that (a) Reagan has always
been a personally popular (l"esldent
rut (b) he has not produced any
profound Ideological reorientation
among the electorate.
Many of the same people who
profess to be conservative when
asked about their Ideology conslstenuy en&lt;klrse liberal positions on
specific poUtlcal, social and eco-

9 'l7 ..ll"'

% 1.1 .) ] J'23
2fi !ll II 2!:1 .322
.l J 109 17 l"J .3'21
l..1 •~e

mtl!'h\' . T1

.) 1 131 32
]Jj 19
.11 J1'j 22
2'i 1!4 17
~ 101 23
·12 m J J

Tahlt•l . C'l

~

:YJ

112

2'i R2

Col in ~. (')I

:u no

IS&lt;un ;. B.&lt;.
.ltl\ ru (lf

~~
j.J

16

3.1 1313 li

~ ~ ..HI
41 .376
41 .m
'J9 .:W5

:l4 .137
41

.m

&lt;l~

.J26

:n .m
27 .329
l'i .m

IIOIIle IWM

... :ulona l l.1 · a~'\Jf'- BrookS and Dawi'.Oil.
:'1111. DJ\ ts. Hou. Marsll:lii.I.A and Murphy,

By ,JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Wrlwr
After winning 10 straight and
occupying first place, the Cleveland
Indians appear to have revert('() to
their old ways. The Texas Rangers,
however, have yet to slow down .
Toby Harrah drove In fo ur run.,,
and Larry Parrish pounded a
three-run homer Monday nigh! to
highllghl a 22-hit attack thai paced
!he Rangers loa clubrecord-sl'tting
19-2 drubbing of lhe slumping
Indians.
Things goi.&lt;;O bad for Ihe Indians,
reliever

Jim

Kern

narrowly

avoided a thrown bottle after he
was touched for eight runs in 1 1·3
Innings.
The loss dropped the Indi ans to
17-12, while the Rangers, who
finished last in the AL West the
previous two seasons, won their
third straight to Improve to 16- 13,
good for first place.
The 19 runs are the most ever in a
game for Texas, which had scored
16 runs fiv~ times. The Z2 hil s tic a
team l'f'COrd , and are thr most by a

Orioles ·1, White So" 3
At Baltimore, pinch hitter Jim .
Dwyer tied the scorewlt h aone-oot
home run in the ninth, and Lee Lacy
singled home the winning run with
two o•JI in the Inning, giving the
Orioles a victory. Rich Bordii!J)t the
final out In the top of the Inning to
Improve to 1-0. Bob James, 1-3, took
the loss.
RoyaL• 5, Tigers 3
At Kansas Ci ty, Mo., .Jim Sundberg hit a three -run homer to
support left ·han&lt;Er Danny Jack·
son 's first start of the season and
give lhe Royals their victory.
Jackson, who qxoned lhe season on
the disabled list, improved to 1-0
with a six -hitter CJ.1er seven innings.
The Tigers scored both of their run.s
In the first Inning before Jackson
settled down.

Rangers team in a nine-inning

game.
Elsewhrre in thP Amf'rican
League, Baltimore nipped Ch icago
4-3, Kansas City topped [X,troit 65.
New York edged Minnesota 9-8,
Toronto topped Oakland 5·.3, Califomia clubbed Boston 7·1. and
Seattle blanked Milwaukee 60.

lill j

OWN A CHEVY S-1 0
FOR AS LOW AS

Moodit.y'H Ke!run.~
Balllmon· l ll1k'&lt;UOo J
TcJia~

N

1\J~"' · n~

Ch·lml

(dl if
Oakland

Brit.~ .

~ax ,

f·1 tdtr, Tx
(l'Brn. Tx

:KJ II

IIi
\)'1
lb
1.\
1.1

2'1 110 12 41 .373
.l l ~ 19 4.1 .lo!-t
27 Ul 19 3'1 .331
~ 100 IIi 36 .l:ll
26 100 19 .'\.1 .llJ

1'111
C.wynn. S

Yuu 111 . Ml

\\' L l't l. GR

~ r10 ol

~ahrhpc.1 .
H.a~

f'l'k11 . M

lb;fl.jn

Troxa ~

on 1.1 plait' apfJ"'&lt;tr;mr·•-s
~iliTIP!. f'i!Ch !Pam ha~ play1·do
Nat~ li"'llt

Anw.'ricwt

l'in&lt;'!nnall a1 Ph1 ~1lt'lphla. nl~ht
at Montrr·u l. n l~thl
&amp;!11 Dil?J at Pll tstmgh, rn ~ hr
:'\ r "&gt;~· Yurk il l HousTon, night
AMDU&lt;.:A!IILEAGL"E
Allan~&lt;~

....

nattJnl{
rl3a~

$1190°
PER
MONTH

•1100.00 co;, Down • It.
Tretdt·irl Jlo~~r~~•· taos I TiHt
fill htrL 60 tlonlh Poywntl II
t'-00 vt U'lo find .,to.

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

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Sltaw, a 6foot -2. ®pounder. was
4-3 with a 3.52 ERA in 1986, and
struck out 43 In 38 1-J Innings. He

"GETTING YOU TIIERE SAFELY"

will report to the 1l'ojans after
completing his degree r&lt;'JUirements on June 11 .
" This is another step in the
committment to building the franchise." said .left Scolt, Cleveland's
director of player development and
scouting. "Jeff Shaw has a lot of
potential, ind we fl'el he can help
the Indians In future years."

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK nRES

214 EAST MAIN

*

POMEROY
992 -6687

*ALIGNMENTS FIONT END WORII
*BAmRIES *TilE REPAIR
LOCATED : MAIN ST .. RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON.-SAT.; 8 -8 FR) .
PH. 742-3088

Phono (6141992-6614

HOUR ~

Mon ., Wtd., Fn. 1:30·1:00
&amp; Thur1. 1:30· S:3n
Sol. 1:30 ·4:00 ; ~~n . 1:00· S:DO

,\if,.

Master Card and Visa Welcome

J!J

Stare Auto
Insurance
Companies

~lot.

Possible cure __________R_ob_er_t_~_al_ter_s

"You 're as sound as a - er - Swiss franc."

\

Ax falls

realm but tiF lnwstnal realm as
well. Only 11 percent r1 perSons
arrested In IJIS "sweeps" last year
were In agriculture. All the rest
were In miDtufacturlng, construction or seiVIce occupatlons.ln some
cases the aUens are being treated
lawtlllly: Their wages are subject
to withholding tlr Income tax and
Social Secunty, and they get the
same frln&amp;" benefits accorded to
lawtlll employees.
In the far more typical case,
illegal aliens are patently exploited.
In Houston, for one example cited
by by the INS, a U.S. cltlze!l
lawtlllly hired m a oonstructlonjob
may be paid $11 an hour. An illegal
allen, hired by a dummy subcon·
tractor, may work for $8 an hour or
less. This allen pays oo Income tax
or SoctaJ Securtty tax; he has no
hospitalization IFneflts. But when
he Is rut It work, hemayquaUfy lor
unemployment compensatkln; his
chlldrm are educated at public
expense; his family may get food
stamps. An El Paso hospital has
bOJed the government for $13
mllllon In treatment given to
lllegals.
The GAO report reviewed a
couple of studies that dealt with
employers' preferences for Illegal
aliens. Ole study si'Dwed that
restaurant owners In San Otego,
Interviewed In confidence, "highly
preferred" undocumented aliens as
kltcllen helpers. Another study, this
one dealing with the citrus lnwstry
In Ventura County, Calli., found
that at least me oontractor actively
recrults Illegal W(B'kers frcn~ a
Mexican "sending" region. These
workers, through a kind of buddy
system, bring In friends who Inherit
job openings creatEd by alt11tlon.
Uke most stories, this story has
at least two sides. It takes a heart c1
stme oot to empat!Ue with the
allen family desperate tor a better
life In the United States. The
temptatk!M c1 well-paying jobs and
personal freedom are irreslstably
alluring.

Rangers blast Indians

Scoreboard ...

s~game win streak

jobs, alien WOrkers ___Ja_m_es_J._K_:_ilpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

nomic Issues.
"The American people think that
Reagan Is a marvelous, wonderful
president -but they disagree with
him m everything else," noted
Harrington. "The American people
have oot turned to the right."
Indeed, there Is hope In the long
term for Improved leadership In the
White House - but not until after
the Reagan era comes to a close.

MAY 14, 15, 16, 17
WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY

4 DAYS ONLY!
TWO LOCATIONS

New Haven, W. Va.l Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Main Street • Formerly

The Fashion

Jackson Ave. Across From

Point Pleasant High School

MADE

SHORTS

r::~
Sizes
8 . 16

$6.

BLAZERS
Asst. Colors

Berry's World
no need tod~
deep for these bUys

Sizes

6 . 22

&amp;
OVER

HOURS:
10to'7

.f•l f)1 1MilyNU., lnr..

"It's just th§ n9W American Embassy!"

.

HOURS:
10fo7

II

U.S.A.

�r

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

,.

., •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Tuesday, May 13, 1986

,.

Marauderettes post
12-3 tourney victory

Six SVAC
players earn
district honors

'

..

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs' Marta Musser drove in tour runs with
two long doubles and a single as the
Marauderettes advanced to the
class AA sectional finals with a
second round 12·3 win CNer Jackson
In ll)ftball action here Monday.
Meigs, now 25-1 on the year. wUI
play South Point at Meigs Thursday
at 4:30 p.m. The winner will
advance Into district play. South
Point, who sports a fine 16·5 mark
and have fielded strong teams In
the past few years, defeated
Fairland, 13-5, to advan&lt;.e to the

'

•

JACKSON - Six players from
the SVAC were r~ently chosm as
All·Disirlct selections at Jackson
High School where memlrrs of the
southeastern Ohio Base ba ll
Coaches Assoclatk&gt;n met for their
regular meeting.
Selected from the SVAC were
Eastern High School seniors Royce
Bissell, Kevin Barber, and Jimmy
Caldwell; Deke Barnes and PWI
Batley of Hannan Trace; and Larry
Adkins of Oak Hill.
Those 1986 All·Siar Selections
from Class "A" w!ll join their Class

•
•·

A SALUTE TO VETERANS MEMO

'

from the East Division to play the
Wes t Division In the District
All-Star game on Sunday, May 25at
Ohio University beginning at 12
noon . Each squad consists of 33
players divided equally among
Ohio's three classifications.
Kevin Barber, one of the many
sparkplugs for Secllonal champion
Eastern, was hitting .418 atthetlme
of nominations. Hard-hitting first
baseman Rnyce Bissell batting .388
was :;elected as an All-District
selecUon and named first alternate
AU-State.
Jimmy Caldwell , playing right ·
field without any errors, Is hitting

"

·•

.) )
LET'S FACE IT••••

AT VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
AND ITS
You'll find well qualified and experienced professionals delivering service in the fully
equipped intensive, acute and extended care units with a genuine concern and compassion.

VISIT YOUR LOCAL HO.SPITAL Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Co.

POMEROY

OhKJ • Pom ..roy, Uhio Rroorh

992-2136

POMEROY, OH.

992-2039

992-2556

Gravely Tractor
Sales &amp; Service 992-2975

Home
Notional
Bonk
RACINE
SYRACUSE
992-6333

Bryan Peck pitched well for
Kyger Creek . but suffered the loss
aft er st ruggling through a rocky
second inning. Peck fanned 12, the
most strikeou ts this season against
a hard ·hit!lng SHS squad, and
walked five.
Coach Mick Winebrenner had

•

Village Pharmacy

Bike race
sponsored
by hank
Eight countries are expectl'!l to
be represented in the Athens, Ohio
Criterium, a bicycle race presented
by BANK ONE, ATI!ENS, NA, on
Saturday, May 17 on the cobblestone st reets of downtown Athens
Individual riders expected to
comp&lt;'te include, according to
Lundberg, John Eustice, a two·
time U.S. Pro Champion; Gregor
Braun. Germany, the only cyclist to
win two gold medals in the
Olympics (1976); Maurtzo Bloinost,
Ita ly, thrre-tlme world pursuit
champion 1track 1: Martin Gral,
Switzerland, former Swiss National
Team member and Alan Hunter of
Australia.
Seven races are scheduled be·
tween 10;45 a.m. and 6 p.m. Only
U.S. Cycling Federation licensed
riders can compete but the public Is
welcome to attend. Sponsoring
clubs for the Athens, Ohio Crlte·
rium are Hocking Valley Wheel·
man and Rainbow Racing V!&gt;io
Club.

531 JACKSON ptKE · Rf.J!5 WEST
Phone 446-4524

992-6669

Kingsbury Home
Sales,
Inc.
992-7034
POMEROY

Adolph's Dairy Valley

949-2210

•

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home 992-5141
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT

season.

Dean Schuler of Lucasvil le Val·
ley was nominated as the Southeast
representative to the AU-State
all-star game to be pl ayed in
Columbus.
Two members of Coach Cliff
Kennedy's Meigs Marauders were
selected as all -star selections, Rocld
Harrison and Chris Kennedy . These
talented athletes have helped keep
Meigs among the leaders In the
tough TVC conferenre as well as
boost the Marauders in the Sec·
Ilona I Toumey.

•

11th-16th

Pomeroy Flower Shop New York Clothing House

POMEROY

By SCOT!' WOLFE
GALLIPOLIS - A seven-run
second inning, sparked by back-to·
back home runs by senlbr Jay
Bostick and sophomore John RifOe
lifted the Southern Tornadoes to a
convincing 134 Sectional Championship victory over Kyger Creek
here Monday in the Gallipolis Class
"A" Sectional.
The newly crowned Class "A"
Sectional Champions will play the
winner of the Minford Sectional in
the District Tournament on Friday,
May 1 at 4 p.m. at Unldto High
School.
Sophomore standout David Am·
burgey hurled the Southerners to
\1ctory, striking out 9 and walking
just one. Amburgey is now9-2on the

"AAA" schools.

SKILLED NURSING FACILITY /INTERMEDIATE CARE FACILITY

POMEROY

Baum Lumber Co.
CHESTER

baseman Kevin Barher. The District all-star game
wUI be played at Ohio University, Sonday, May 25 at
mon. AD-District selections are opEn tn seniors only
due to eHglbillty requirements. Bissell a three years
lettennan at Eastern, was selected as first alternate,
i\11-state behind Mike Alley of Lucasville Valley and
Deke Barnes of Hannan Trace.

•.

985-3301

nothing, but pral&amp;' for his Torna does after cl inching the tournament
crown, saying "Tonight we finally
get some hit s when we needed
them. This was a great win for us."
After Amburgey sat the Bobcats
oown in order in the first frame, the
Tornado bats quickly went to work.
Senior leftflelder Kelley Grueser
ripped a leadoff single, stole second
and came home on an Amburgey
single. The fi eetfooted sophomore
went to second on an attempted
steal as the ball rolled into center,
al lowing him to advance to third .
Amburgey then rode home on
Jay Boo!lck's sacrifice Oy.
After Kyger was retired in Iht'
second , Ryan Oliver reached on an
error to ignit ing a seven-run ra lly.
Grueser walked, Todd Adams
singled, an error followed, and
Amlllrgcy walked. Scott Wickline
sin gled to put runners on the

The Daily Sentinel
!lS I'S 14~960)
.\ Dlvl!o!lon of Multimedia, In c.

Publlshf'd r vrrv ai!Nn oon. Monday
throu)l.h Frlda v. 111 Coun St.. Pom rro~· . Ohi o. bY th (' Oh io Va ii Py Pub·
ll5hln~ Co mpan_
v ·MullirTlf:'dla . In('.,
PomNoy. Ohio 45i69, Ph. 992-2156. S("·
cond da!is J..IOsla.QI' pctld at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.
Mr mbN UnirNI PrM s lni Pr na!io n a l.
Inland Oallv Prf'!ls As .~oclall a n and lhf'
Ohio N!'w sr}apN A s~or l a tlon . Nut ional
,\d vf'rll s ln~ Rr pr£&gt;scnl ath't'. Branha m
N ~· spaper Sale,., 733 T hird Avcnu r .
1\"l'\\' York. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Srnd addrrss changf'S

to Thr Da ily Scnt ln£'1. 111 Cour1 Sl.,
Po mrr o~·- Oh io 45i~.
SUBSCRIPTIO N RATE);
Bl' farrltr or Motor Rout t'
Onf' Wf'C'k .

.. ..... $1.10

Onr Month .. ..

.. ..... $4 .HO

Onf' Yrar . ... .. .. ...
... $57.20
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
........ 25 Cent s
D ail~· .
Subscr lbrn not dC'S irlnR to pa y ThP car Mr r mav rr mil tn advanre dlf(&gt;C'l 10
Th C' Dali.v Sr n!ln('l on a 3, 6or 12 month
!:mls. Crf'dll wlll hP gl\'rn carriN mrh
mon1h.

175/80113

1'\o subsalplions b\ m alll)('r m lu cd In
!owns whN(' ho mC' carrlrr S('f\' iCf' Is
a\'al lablr .
~t al l

SubMcripthm!oi

lrulid e Ohlu
J:l W1•Pk.-. .. ... ......... .......... $14 56
26 \V('('k.-. . . . ......................... $'29 I ~
:,2 Wf'('k!' .
S~8 . 24
Out!oilde Ohio
ll W('('k S ..
..... .m .m
. $.11.20
26 WcC"ks ..
.. S59 .HO
52 W('f'kS ..

SHOE PLACE : :'1

POMEROY

POMEROY

992-5627

MIDDLEPORT

Pot Hill Ford

K&amp;C Jewelers
POMEROY

•Interior &amp; Exterior
•Remodeling
•Kitchens
•Roofing

992-6687

992-3785

Downing-Childs
Mullen Insurance 992-2342
POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

-COMING lOO N: "WISE GUYS" &amp; "S WEET LIBERTY"

992-2196

Smith Nelson Motors
POMEROY

992-2174

POMEROY

GALliPOLIS

992-2054

446-2691

•Siding
•General Carpentry
•Repair Work

All WORK GUARANTEED- REFERENCES- FREE ESTIMATES

•ALL SEASON TREAD

$46 66

If ~ou have been thinkin1about consult ina a funeral director for
the purpose of pre· pl~nnina a funeral or pert\lps just aettin&amp;
answers to some questions. you may be baffled as to how to de·
cide whom to consult.
Because of the nature of our bu siness.' funeral homes don't
u~ually adverti se in the same fiShion as say an automobile de·
leafS hiP miaht. fherefore. It's alittle llarder.for the ineJ:Dtrienced

Ewing Funeral Home
992-2644

POMEROY

POMEROY

Sugar Run Mills

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
POMEROY

992-2955
\

992-2121

992-3345

FIRESTONE ATX

cunsuR'Or to know wltom to approoch. We hope those lillie pi·

POMEROY

.•

.
••

'

_ ble terms.

•

f!ltarDb~J- YiJMt.l·-~r]l«c~i!

lOB &amp; JEAN GILMOIE

ffu~ .ffome

992-2115

992-6128

CHOOSE FROM
BLACKWALL, WHITEWALL
ALL-SEASON AND
CONVENTIONAL
TREAD DESIGNS.
(NOT AU SIZES IN AU TREAD DESIGNS!

$4950

175/75114 MITCH LIN

13 ONLY )

ALL-SEASON

195/75115

DLC

$3995

$4995

215/7511 5

DLC

$4500
(2 ONlY!

his services.
3. He should stand ready to provide quality servicos on reason•·

Middleport Trophies
MIDDLEPORT

"

community IS well as 1 trustwort!f; businessll'lln.
2. He should be sensitive to all of hiS clients' needs as indi·
viduals, reco&amp;nizin&amp;t he many intricate needs ofthoses"kina

Fruth Pharmacy·
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

215/70114
WHITE SIDIWAii

195/75114

delines will b1 helpful to you m cnoDsln&amp;: a runera1 au ector.
I. Afuneral director should be a vibront visible mombor of the

Francis Florist

BLACKWAii

WHAT QUALITIES DO I LOOK FOR IN A FUNERAL DIRECTOR?

The Quality Print Shop
MIDDLEPORT

$3966

155/80R13 ........... $39.95
165/80R13 ........... $42.66
185/80R13 ••••.••..•. $44.95
185/75R14 ••••••••••• $46.50
195/75R14 ••••••••••• S47.50
205/7 5R14 ........... S48. 95
215/75R15 ........... $52.00
225/75R15 ........... S55.00
235/75R15 ........... $57.50

CHESTEI, OHIO
HOME BUILDING

992-5432

•STEEL BELTED
•BUILT FOR ORIGINAL .
EQUIPMENT
DESIGN

PHONE 614-985-4141

Crow's Family Restaurant

i•

Musser, who relieved winning
pitcher Barb Hatfield In the fifth r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
and hurled the fin al three innings,
was retired only once, and that was
\Vood\ond (cnlcr5: Inc
on a line shot to center. in her lbur
trips.
The Marauderettes jumped out of
the gates quickly with four runs In
the first as Tammy Wright walked
and two outs later smred when
Hatfield was safe on an error.
corners, setting the stage for
Musser followed with a run .
Elo;tlck who promptly blasted a scoring double, Carol Smit h drove
three-run home run over the left in another with an infield single.
RAINY DAYS
cent er field fent-e, making the score Jenni Couch walked, and Shannon
Many
peo pl e find rainy days
ll-0.
Hindy had the first of her three
de pressing. It is true that our
John Riffle was n'l sa tisfied so he REI's with a single.
bodies respond to li ght , and
launched a oome run tot he opposite
that
the ge neral gloom of the
field.
Meigs, who is the defending
rainy day may physically al·
Southern added insurance In the sectional and district champions,
fe et some peo pl e who are es·
third when Wickline broke the made It 7-0 in the second as Wright
pecially attuned to li ght. But if
inning open with a two-ru n double. again started it off with a one out
you find that rainy days make
Kyger Cree k plated a single run walk, Gina Folirod and Jodi
you blue, here are so me of
in the third \\Oihout the benefit of a Harrison roth layed oown bunts for
other issues to consider:
hi t as Richie Gilmore walked, stole infield singles to load the bases,
Are you afrai d? Some peo·
second and came home as the ball Hatfield drove in one run with a
pie
gel nervous driving In had
deflected int o center field.
sacrifice Oy, and Musser cracked a
weathl"r and so r es trict t~i r
Kyger threatened with two runs two -run single.
movements on rainy days. II
in the fifth as Mike Bradbuiy
By ti'e third , Meigs had made it
this becomes a pattern, just
singled, an error followed, Peck 9·0 as Cindy Riffle singled leading
seeing rain can trigger feel·
singled , and Abshire tripled.
off and scored \\Oth two outs on
lngs of isnl atlo n, eve n II .vou
Southern hitters were lro by Harri son's triple down the lefthand
really don't need to go out.
Wickline wtth a single and two line. Hatfield drove her in with a
Are you frustrt ed? ~lan y
doubles, Amburgey two singles. single.
peo ple feel a need to he in conAdams two singles, Bos tick and
Jackson plated its first run in the
trol and bad weather, par ticu·
Riffle home runs, and singles each
larly if a spec ial activity is
by Grueser, Barr)' McCay and
" rained out, 11 ma.J.Ies them
Ryan Oliver.
•-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-1 realize that here are some th·
KC hitters were Gilmore with a 11
ln gs over which they have no
double. Abshire a triple, Wright a
NOW OPEN FOR THE
control.
double, and singles by Bradbury
SPRING SEASON
Are you sad '~ Doffi a rainy
and Peck .
Complete line of Vegetabje &amp; Rower
day remind you of a had time
Southern is now 14-lJ.l overall Plant• - Hanging Boliceh, GeraIn Ufe, or of a good lime that
and finished the league with a 10-4 niums, Rose Bushes, Dogwood, Rho·
cannot he .recaptured".'
dodendron &amp; Shrubbery.
mark.
Such reactions are normal
SEASON SPECIAL
L~ORE :
to
a certain ex te~ t . but if you
Kyger Crrek.. 001 oal 1- 4- 5·3
$JSO PER FLAT
find
that rain-linked depresSouthern ..... .. 274 IOl x-13-12-5
MIX OR MATCH
sion
Is becoming a pattern,
Ba tteries: Amburgey and Riffle,
OPIN DAILY 9-5: SUNDAY 1· 5
co,.;ider
see kin~ prof essional
Sean Grueser 5th, Peck (LP t and
Int
ervention
to help you deal
Wright.
SYRACUSE, OHIO
wllh the und er lytn ~ issues.
PH . 992-5776

.Hubbard's Greenhouse

MARCUM CONTRACTING
~ifa_gt _house

drove In two more runs .

Southern wins sectional title

Hannan Trace's Deke Barnes
gained the District's top honor as he
and Lucasville Valley' s Mike Alley
were selected as All-Slate selec·
!Ions from the Southeast District.
Barnes, a versat ile athlete and
excellent all-around player. Is
batting .500 at the current time (31
for 62) . Teammate and cousin Phil
Bailey is batting .379.
Oak HUI Catcher Larry Adkins is
batting .422 and was a team leader
for the Oaks .
Selected as Coaches of Ihe Year
in the Class "A"'s Wester n and
Eastern di vis ions were Dean
Schuk'r of Lucasville Valley and
Scott Wolfe of Eastern. These
Coaches were selected to coach in
the district all-star game on May 25
with coaches from "AA" and

'

Athrn~

These ttree
Eastern smlors were selected to the Southeast
i\11-District team Sunday alternoon when &amp;I district
coaches assembled to select the all-district teams.
Pictured are, l·r, Eastern rlghlflelder Jimmy
Caldwell, llrst baseman Royce BisseU, and third
ALL-DISTRicr SEIEcriONS -

.:m.

NO ONE EVER ENJOYS GOING TO
HO PITAL,
YET IT'S SURE NICE TO KNOW IT'S THERE
WHEN YOU NEED IT!!!

Membe! FDIC

Musser sparked the Marau derettes at the plate as she cleared
the head of .Jackson' s leftflelder
twice, driving In a run roth times In
each of the first and sixth Innings
while her second innin g sin gle

"AA" and "AAA" counterparts

,..

BANK!!ONE.

finals .

slxt·h on a walk, single. and fielder' s
choice.
,
Meigs made It 12-lln the sixth as
Hamson was safe on an error,
Musser doubled her home, Couch
singled, and Hlndy drove in two
more with a single to right . Jackson
scored twice in the seventh on two
wa lks, a single, and a .sacriflce fly .
Hatfield hurled the first four
innings· to pick up her &amp;'ith career
win. The Meigs ace fanned seven,
walked one, and scatl€red three
sin gles. Musser went the final three
frames, fanning two, walking four ,
and giv ing up two hits.
Jackson's lanky Becky Rnss went
the distanre, fanning four annd
walking five whi le allowing 12 hits.
The Iron women, who wtnd up their
season at 12·12, were led at the plate
l1y Julie Yerian with three sin gles.

'

!6141 M2·514t
MIDDLII'ORT, OHIO

'

WE'RE REPEATING

4. Afuneral director should be wittinl to do evetythinl in his
power to make sure thlt your wishes 111 carried out implicitly .
5. His most important responsibility should be to see to the men·
tal, physical and emotJonolwoll·beincof yoo , your family and
lrien&lt;ls in the time of nel&lt;i.
At our f_uneral home. we try to lin up totheststlndlrds . Wewel·
co ... you visit oar fiCili!ies and we wei co me your questions
throuch this column.

OUR POPULAR

Brake Special
$2566 - ......

600 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY
992-2094
Servieg Maigs County
For 20 Vms

•nl ,.,.f,.,.,t,Hil:

"$mies Plut... Affsntion to Dst1ll"
BRUCE FISHER

, . . llffl,

FRONT DISC IRAKIS INSTAiiiD ON
JltiPST AMERICAN MADE CARS.

BILL BLOWER

~

'

V/54

�;r- -

PomeroY-:-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 13, 1986

J

I ,

Tuesday, May 13, 1986

Where does Advacareprovideh~spi~- ~?

What's Advacare? AdvaCare is a health maintenance

Holzer Medical Center or in any area hospttafparttctpa~mg
in the plan.The Holzer Medic~! Center is a 270-b_
ed reg~onal
hospital that serves as the pnmary_referr~l hospttal ~hroug~­
out this area. It also has full obstetnc servtces, a sur~cal su1te
including five operating rooms, ~mergency room swt~,
intensive and coronary care umts, and comprehensive
radiology facilities.

organization (HMO).Through it, your employer can offer you
a system of health care to protect you and your family with
almost every medical and surgical benefit you'll ever need.
For this, you pay only a monthly premium. No hidden
costs and very few out-of-pocket expenses.
AdvaCare is a program operated by Holzer Clinic and
Blue Cross of Central Ohio.All four Holzer Clinic locations
are AdvaCare treatment centers. Chances are, your own
family doctor's office is, too.

What about urgent or emergency care?

Urgent care is available at the ~olzer Main ~linic (see hour~
above). Emergency care-for hfe-threatemng problems-Is
available around the clock,seven days aweek at Holzer
Medical Center.
Where can 1find outJilore about Advacare?
Ask your physician about it. Or st~p ~y the Advacare o~ce at
Holzer Clinic and pick up a chart hstmg all of Advacare s
many benefits. At 385 jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio.Phone
446-5283.

.'

What's the advantage to Advacare? You get all
the treatment you need wlien you need it- not when your
budget will allow it. AdvaCare helps keep you healthy. That's
one of the basic advantages of an HMO.
.
Also, you get all the lab tests, scans, consultations you
need for the best diagnosis.
Finally,you know in advance that the monthly premium
covers just about everything. And you know what any minor
out-of-pocket expenses will cost you.
But 1already have a famlly d~or. No p_roblem.1f
your doctor is a member of Holzer Chmc,_he or ~he ts already
participating in Advacare.Ifyour doctor ISn't With Holzer, he
or she may still be participating in Advacare.
Who says which physician to use? You do.lf you
have a kriown problem a specialist can handle best, you can
call the AdvaCare doctor of your choice.That's one more
Advacare.advantage.

- '

What does Advacare pay for?

.i

The Dally Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

All this and more.
That's why Advacare is a different kind ofhealth insurance.
• Doctor office visits, including specialists you need.
• Physical exams.
• Doctor visits and surgery in the hospital.
• Anesthesia.
• Diagnostic tests and procedures, including lab tests
x-rays, nuclear medicine, and a lot more.
• Hospital room and board in a semi-private room.
• Annual hearing &amp; eye e~ams.
• All injections,immunizations, etc.
• Prescriptions (you pay $3).
• Prescribed short-term therapy such as occupational,
inhalation,physical, speech, cardiac and pulmonary
rehabilitation, and more.
• Extended care in a skilled nursing facility up to l 00 days
per year.
• Home health careas necessary.
• Maternity care.
• Ambulance service.
• Health education and counseling.
• Alcoholism and drug abuse treatment.

Where is AdvaCare available? At any Holzer Clinic
facility.Or from any participating doctor. And you'll find a
Holzer Clinic not far from your home:

D

Main Clinic:

385 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,Ohio 446-5411
Hours: 8-5 Mon-Fri
Urgent Care: 5-9 Mon-Fri,
1-9 weekends &amp; holidays

Ill Sycamore Branch:

U

Fourth &amp; Sycamore, Gallipolis,Ohio 446-513 7
Hours: 8-5 Mon- Fri

1!1 jackson Comtty Branch:
g 25 E. South St., jackson, Ohio 286-6417
Hours: 8:30-5 Mon-Fri

R

.'
-

Meigs Comtty Branch:

Iii 150 Mill St., Middleport, Ohio 992- 7271

'.,....... ,;.' ./

,..~ . .

.

. .• ot"

•.

). ...-~

... ·· .. ~t_.

f \

Hours: 8:30-5 Mon-Fri,
8:30- 11:30 Sat. morning

A different kind
of health insurance.

Stlj A Holzer Clmic/Biue Cross ol Cenlral Ohio Health Maintenance OrganizatiOn.

I

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

13,1986

Tuesday, May 13. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

Community calendar 1 area happenings
'l'lJEIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Special meet.
lng,MiddleportLodge363,F&amp;AM, 7
p.m. tonight; work In EA Ilegree
with refreshments following.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR INCREASES AND ADJUSTMENTS IN RATES AND CHARGES
AND FOR CHANGES IN REGULATIONS AND PRACTICES
THE WESTERN RESERVE TELEPHONE COMPANY
Pursuant to the requirements of sec lion 4909. 19 of the Ohio
ReYised Code. The Wsstam Reserve Telephone Company (the
"Company") hereby gives notice that on February 12, 1986. it
fited with the Public Utilities Commission or Ohio (the "Com·

mission") an Application (PUCO Docket No. &amp;S-1973-TP·AIR)
for authority to increase and adjust its rates and charges for
telephone services to the public through ita forty-one telephone
exchanges located at and known as Ashtabula, Aurora , Aust inburg , Bainbridge, Bloomingdale, Centef\1111&amp;. Chardon, Chester.
CooMIIe, Cumberland, Dorset. East Claridon, Fairview. Geneva.
Hinckley, Hiram, Hopedale, Hudson , Huntsburg, Kingsville, Littte

addition. the proposed tariffs were mailed on December 27. 1985.
A!l part of the Company's notification of its intent to file the
Application to thP. mayors 11nd legislative authorities of all municipalities throughout the territory in which the Company operates.
This Application affects rates and charg es for telephone
services to all customers of the Company, except those services
governed by con currences with other tetepf'lone companies. and
affects the Company's General ExcM nge Tariff and its local
Exchange Tariff.

Hocking, Madison. Mesopotamia. Middlefield. Mon~il le. Morristown. Newbury. Northfield , Old Washington. Parkman. Peninsula, Perry, Pklrpont, Powhatan Point, Ou111ker City, Flichfield,
Rock Creek. Russell, Thompson, Trumbull. and Twinsburg, and
to change certain at Its regulations and practices relating to s~ch
service and to file appropriate tariff sheets reflecting sUch
Increases and changes.
This nottce contains the substance and prayer at tne Application. However. any interested party desiring complete detailed
information with respect to ·all affected rates, charges, regulations and practices should inspect a copy of the Application and
all attached schedules at ttle office of tM Commission. 160 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573, or during normal
business hours at the public business olfices of the Company
located at 245 North Main Street, Hudson. Ohio44236; 4616 Park
Avenue, Ashtabula, Ohio 44004; 205 Hambden Street. Chardon.
Ohio «024; and 66 North Fourth Street, Newark , Ohio 43055. In

The Company's Application states that existing rates and
charges are inadequate end cannot produ ce th e revenues
required to meet the ongoing costs of providing service and do
not provide a just and reasonab le return on the value of th e
Compa ny's used and useful property as of September 30. 1985 ..

SCHEDULE OF PRESENT AND PROPOSED RATES AND CHARGES
MONTHLY ACCESS LINE RATES ·

Bu....,..S.I"flc:e
TWo

Four

Multi

Un•

~

~

~

Bend 1
jQ- t2 .000 Me.n
Stations)

88se Rate Area
lone A'
Zone

$1080

s g 20

$ 81 0

a·

13.50

1190

16.20

t4.60

tO.eo
t 3.50

Band 2
t t2,001-2•.ooo
Main Stations)

Base Rate Area

870

Zone A'
Zone B'

""'•o

9.85

1450

12 75

11

15.65

Band 3

Base Rate Area

(24 .001 ~ 36. 000

Main Station!!)

lone;.,·
lone

12.20
1525

BanO 4

Base Rate Area

!36.001-64.000

a·

Main StationS)
Band 5
(64.CI00-128.000
Me1n Slat1ons)

18.30

Trunk

Trunk

$2 1 60

21 .60

27.00

24 30
2700

23 20

2320

26.10

2.,0

3770

49.30

2900

408C

5220

9.15

""'

29.00

10 40

""'
""'

1740
2030

tl45

12.20

21 35

24.40
27 45

2440
2T 45

48.80
5 1 85

''"'

15 25

2UO

3050

3050

36.60
3965
.112 70

t055

9.40

''ac

2510
28 25
3 1 40

25 tO
28 25
31 40

37 65

5020
53 35

"'"

2700

2100

4050

2160

2800

1695

15 70

Base Rate Area

13.50

1150

10 15

1475

Lint

2430

12.55

Base Rate Area

PBM

$2160

IJSC

Band 7

·KTS

1690

lone;.,·
lone a·

14.110

I 7 00
970
2140

tndtw

$1620

12 55
15 70
IB.BO

Band 6
Base Rate Area
(128.001 -256.000
Main Stat1o ns)

PBX
Trunk

ICTS
Tnri.

t2 20

1255

1630

2195
25 10

1075

1105

26 80

29 so

2!150

22 15

$32 40
3510

C~ t

5650
5400

.11395

43 20

57 60

.114 25

59 00

(256.001·512 .000
1 510

Band 9

16.00

Base Rll.te Area

1285

13.60

3020

1135

24.00

12 00

32 00

32 00

6040

4530

48 00

64 00

(1.024.00t · up

M1m Slalionsl
' Zoned rate! apply to Bloomingdale, Centervtlle. Che!ter. Coolville , Cumberland , Dorset. East Ctandon . Fa1rvtew. Hopedale. K•ngsvrlle.
Li111e Hocking Me$0potania. M1 ddlelield. Momstown. Old Watnington. Parkman, POwfla tan Point . and Quaker Ct ty IIIICttanges only

--·

PropoMd AcceM Line Rate Banda
Alllktlnca s.r..

. . . lind
L0C11

........

..........

Two

..... !!!L

Blind 1
$15.35
t0. 19:HO:l Mau'l StJIIOnst ,

Bar'ldi!

Tnri

St3 10

S14.50

1570

2950

1840

(192.001 ·384.000 Marn Stat rons)
BlndJ
1915
1620
t ~.001 ·up Mau'l Sllll•ons)

I:Jiltinglbnd1 ·
Chardon

62 IS

-........
........

U60

t350

Pll

35.10

4590

3780

4860

Cenlerv~lle

1A

2R

$1180

SUS
1275
1565

1450
1140

zones

1160
14 50

flfOpote4l AMI:
_

I_A_
$15 3S

~

Tnril
$24 SO

$13 10

l•llllnl ..,. 3:
ASI111bu11
Geneva
AutlrnbYfg
Krngsvrlle
"-'fA...:
Atlldlnce leMCI

'"

'"

.

11

KTI

,,. so T""'
loOO&lt;O
T....

3710

'"'
.....,......,..

49.30

52.20

11
530 55

S t040

S g tS

13 4!)

"20

t5 so

--,..

2fl

$t535

t525

Trri
S245ll

$1310

Trri
$40 80

Asntlbull
Austrnburg

land

_!L

1A
BRA
$1 255
ZoneA
15 70
ZoneS
18110
PnlpoMf Rell:

$t 0 55
1380

TNrlll

Dnc!!pi!O!!
Lu'l&amp; Rale
Telephone

Pr090Se(l

Utl60
51 55

3050

42'0

~~

15 3~

,

II

T....

13065

Tolll Proposed Rate
Comparable Pr0$Gf\l
~llttll)

"- rncre11e

KTI

Tfri

1255

$25 tO
2f! 25

15 70

3140

$37115
40 80
4395

$50 20
53 35
5650

$1 3 10

S24 50

$3065

Trunlr.
$4980

-- --- --

£ ...... lend I:
Hud10n (650. 6551
Pr...,.RIM:

1A
StHo
PrapoeMII•:

Pel'lrnsula

2A
411
s1 220 ' st o7s

lA
21111
Tnri
- --$2950
$1 640
$1 HO

II:TI

~

nn

S28 80

$4:1 20

....

BeN
4

..,.
~
I
Proposed Acc.en
Lrne Rate
Proposed Ra1e One
Telephone
PrOJ)OMd Rate
One Outlel
To tal Proposeo R11e
Comparable Present
Rat e 111
c, rncrease

225

N/C
$17 60

NIC
$32 90

Sl 2 7S

12435

JB~

$ t~

t!

Comptrl!o!! Comp!r'liCII:'
S1535

l.'I0&amp;5

225

225

NIC
$1 760

NIC
$3290

s13 35

$25 55

3 t11'-

28 81!ir

--

lA
18
c~~
$1 535

225

S30 65

225

NIC

NIC

51160

$32 90

Elchlfttt:

Hudson 1650

........

~

.!!!!!_

fl

2

Pill
Trvnll
$5760

'""'*

11

$36 BS

225

HtJdSon !65l)

Pll

Trri

18

$3065

behlnp:

--·

II

Tf\lltk

$1 535

Rate

One Oulf&amp;l

TMIII

$3660
J965

2R

18

Pro posed Acceu

---

·-- ·-t6 95

-s - - tA

4R
S 940

Thompson
TIUmbull

tR

SS9f!5

6~!1)

Penrns&lt;~ta

1R

Dttcription

Proposed

18

c.m,.rioon Cotrtlfl!IINI

Acc:es•

Lrne Aile
PrOPOM&lt;J Rate One
Telephone
PrO()OIId Rate
OntOutle'!

SHI40

NIC

NIC

TOIII Proposeo Rata
Comparable Presenl
Ratem
' lncraase

S~65

$3910

St 555

$2995

l26'11

XI~

725

S36e5

2 25

,..._ ..... I;

Hrncktey
Northl•eiC

AyfOrl
Bainbndge
Ct11rdon

Rlcnl~t~4

--- ·- - ---·
(487 . 468. 65111

Runell
Twinsburg

cnarcton (Ofle way

Cle'oellnd E A S )

P.....nlft•:

_J!_

~

~

$1 5.10

$12.85

$1135

11

ii20

ICTI

Nl

Tf\IM

Trft

s.45.3D

lf!C.I.«l •

Propoo1M RMt:

ftlalfiiCol . . . .
1A

2R

S"i'9i5 S1i20

TNM.

II

Trri

130 60

$38.30

$621 5

If the proposed rate 1ncreuea 811! granted ·m lull. a repreaen t8U ~ residential customer and a repreSo8f'ltaliwe business

customer. each w itn an indlviduel accet~~ line. one standard
telephone. and one outlet would e•perience the percentage
cnangtt snown for I he appropriate e-chtnge area In whlcn the
customer resk:les.

,

E1cMnp:
Aurora

•

"*

Hrnckley
Barntmdge
Norttllield toil67
468.656)

Aocht•eld
Au nell
Twmsl:lurg

ftalrt
1R
11
laftcl
Dfte1*"
Co!!p!lon Comp!ltiOII
3
Propoeed Acceu
ltr.tRI Ie
$t91~
Slf!JO
PTopoll!d Ra1e One
Telephone
225
2:15
Pr()I)OIII&lt;I Rate
One Outlet
NIC
NfC
To!al ProPosed Rate
S2140
S40 55
ComPIIIDIII Pfetenl
Rltt( 11
StB25
Slt35
'lit !ncre&amp;M
31 ~
29 3'11t
(1/ The comperable present rate .ncludfis 1~ access line rate,
tei!Jt)hone let ra1e. and station outlet rate.

hni
8

.......

Ullr1sonrc
llllr1red Beam
Magne1rc Sw , l cne~
Step ·Oil· ~!ll

Tamper
Panrc Butlon
Ooor-WrnOOw Con1liC1
lonrzallon
Temperature Contr ol
Smoke
HI! a!
Combrn1t•on frre
Aad•o Remote Aece•~e r

Mlo&lt;-.
---Contr ol Panel

Newbury
Perry

..!!!!!

3

P8X

$2440
27 4 ~

Hl.tC!son IMJJ
PrtMfll ,....:
AHI..-.ce lerYic:t

$.22,5
U61!ir

Proposeo Rile One

KT8

EU1ttnta..tld4:

NIC
$3290

behlftp:

...
....,,.,.,.
11

One Oullet

-- --.. .. ---

BR.tr
S12.20
zone A
15 25
Zone B
16 30
PropoNCIR-.

NIC

Ht

Total Propotted Rale
Comparable Present
Rile Ill
l!lr tncruse

2900

225

O..Crlpllon

Line Rile
Proposed Rate One
retttPtH&gt;ne
Propowa Rile

SJOSO

$2320

t8

PraposedAccel5

II

TnompSOf1
TrumDtJII

4R
$ 670

Mldrson
Prerponl

a-1

Pr..-R•:

BRA
Zone.tr

Draier : ~ Trac~

22S

4731!1r

COde-A-Phon e 200
Cooe-A-Phone ua
Code-A·Phone S60 or 5~5
Code-A-Phone !00
Electronrc SecretiJY
E•lra Pocket Coder 560
M&amp;m o r~ PhOne
Record·A·Call
Recorder CoMector
E•tra Poc~e l Coaer uo
Recorder Connector
BICk Space S'1ro1tch
Fool Sw!ICh
Ear Phone
Multl·line Tel!phln s.mc.:
Two- Ltne TeleOf\Ofle
Tnree-Lme Tetepnone
Thr1116·lrne Power S uppl~
and Intercom lor Mull•·
•
line Sets

Bells. Horns. Gongs
Etectr onrc Sentry

SJ06~

$tt~

BS5

655

""

65&gt;

85

,.,
'20

'"
"''
150

375

330

' 95

"

1630
1630

2"

.

390
"'
350
,

920

"0
810

'"'
"'
"5
2500
2500

tHS
85

38 ' 0

,. ..

J625
J6 25

"sc
t185

1140
t 740

.

,2020
32 95
3995
18 ~0

370
14 05
12 60

690
185
VIIIIIDie

"'c

,.,
""
'""'
49' 45
7l90
60 70
97 BS

.,.,
,.,
,..,
""'
J065

03
Vlrrable '

"'"
'"'
''"
""

722

610

16 40

'"

367
360

765

Reporlnp Dftlcet

11 5 35

$t 760

30
NJA

Alarmlp114N:

c.m,.rioon c.m,.rioon

........

......

[liltlne IIMd 2::

Madrwn
P.erpont

Powhatan Pornt
Quaker Crty
Rock Creek

1R

Elct.nte:
Bloomrngdale
Cenlet\lolle

2

Bloomingdale

Lrnte Hocktno
MtiOpolll'ua
Mtddlefreld
Mont ..tle

One Oullel
To!al Proposed Rate
ComP!Iratlle Present
Rate rI)
-'llr lnCr811se

Pr~A-:

lA
2A
Tnri
--SHi35
St 3t0
S2Hl0

P!lr~man

'"""'""'

11 -TNM
- -'""*
S2 t 50 $3240 $43 XI

21-40

Hunl~burg

f&gt;rCIPOM!d Rate

om

24 30
2700

Momstown
Old Washongton

Lrne Rate
PrOPOSed Rate One

Pown111n Porn!
Ou1ker Crty
Rock Creel!

..!!L~

Hrram
Hopedale

Proposea AcCKJ

.........

......

..!!!...

1620

ZoneB

""

eon..

East Cl1n00n
FaiNIOW

Montville
Momstown
Old Wastuog1on

S1080 S 920 $! 10 $ 7 00
1350
It 90 tO 110
9 70

Zooe A

3685

-- --- --- ---.... ...
........
--~

BAA

Trunll

S49.80

3630

3060

H1,am
Hopedale
HuntsbYrg
Lrttlt HOCIII~
Mesopo1amr1
Mrddltlreld

c""'"'
Cootvrlle
Curnbetlancl
Do••"
East Clandon

lint

53065

Eldlefttll:
Chardon
Ch&amp;star
Cool•olle
Cumberland

I

355

Cr1dle
Conl rnen taf
Sp1cem1l er
Pay Statron
Cornleu Paystahon
E•plosoon·Prool Telephone
PBX A~arance Busmess
Automatic DWng l:qlliflment:
MagtC811400
Mag•call tOOO
Card Ooaler
Logrc Draier
AulomBIFC Oraloo

54.90

4060

St.ndard Outletw:

SlandefC! Telellhone
Compact Sf! w10 1a1Lrghl
ContempoB
Dlll ·rn·hllndsat
Errcolon
P11neJ
Candlestick

45 90
48.50
4640

M!!lin Stations)
Band 8
Base Rate Area
(512.(1J1-t .02&lt;4.IlX:I
Main Slationsl

-· ........

PAGEVILLE- Rev. Mtke Store
and the Point Pleasant Choir wtll
conduct services at 7::.1 p.m.
Thursday at t11e Pagevllle Town
Hall. Publtc Invited.
CHESTER - Past counclors
club, Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, meeting 8 p.m.
Wednesday at hall with Lora
Damewood and Marcia Keller.
hostesses.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants meet 8 a.m. Tuesday at
Bank One.

MIDDLEPORT - The mother·
daughter banquet sponsored by
Wolll€11'sAssoclatlon of the Middle·
port First Presbyterian Church,
Tuesday 6: 30 p.m. Meat, rolls and
beverages furnished.
RACINE - Class of 1966 meeting

7::.&gt;

Monthlr A... Monthly n ...

K•r sytt.m tnatrwMfttt

OUTLI!TS

Ttlephooe Seta:

$43 20

37SC
34SC

..........

AKunt"!! Chirp
Station Outlet
ProttcliOn PluS
NottAtcuntng Charw
Non-Stllroo Outlet
Slauon Oullet
EQUIPMf:NT

Preaent Accus Line Rate Bends
lndl•.

Key systems. and Mut11-line systems has been eliminated.
• The charge for ca lls made to directory assistance has been
increased.
• The five (5! call allowance to directo ry assistance lor both
business and residence has been eliminated.
• The price of local calls initiated from coin telephones has
been increased.
• The monthl'l rate lor Tel· Touch calling for residence and
business customers has been Increased .
• Monthly ch arges lor station outlets nave been eliminated.
and a one time charge lor new stat io n oullets has been
established.
• The monthly rate for a non-oublished number has been
increased and an emergency non-published listing has been
established.
·• Th e monthly rate tor residential additional listings. extra listings. and foreign listings has been increased.
• A provision to limit th e use of e~tended area service to loca l
calls only has been establistled.
• The monthly rate for PBX equipment not co 11ered by provisions of a contract has been increased.
• The monthly rate lor all customer premises equipment nas
been increased.
• The basis of charges for ca ble pairs wilt be changed from
bi lling lor off-premises mileage on a monthly charge per
quaner mile to billing amonthly ch1uge for each pair ut ilized
The schedule of present and proposed rates requested in the
Company's Appl1cation is listed below.

OTHER SERVICE AND EQUIPMENT RATES WHICH ARE IN ADDITION TO ACCESS LINE RATES

For the purposes of determining exchange se l"\fiCe monthly access line rates. exchanges are classi fied in rate
band s according to the total main stat ions In a local calling area. Th e local calling area is the area within which
customers make calls without the payment ot message toll charges and may include one or more e~~:change ar£tas.

........

The Company slates that It needs the proposed increase in
revenues to enable it to maintain quality service and to enable it
to maintsin credit snd attract ca p ltt~ l for the expansion and
improvement of its plant in accordance with the public demand.
As set forth In the Application. the Company anticipates that the
rates and ctlarges propo sed in tile Application will increase total
annual revenues by $T0.732.000and that such addil1onal re11enue
will provide a return and will not provide more than a lair and
reasonable rate of return on the va lue of the Company's property.
New regulations pr oposed in the Application include the
following:
• Monthly rates tor local access service have been determined
by classification ol exchanges Into rate bands. The rate
bands are based on the total access lines with in the local
calling area of the exchange involved , i.e.. the area within
whi ch customers may make calls without ttle payment of
message toll charges. The proposed monthly rates tor local
access service reduce the current nine !9) band structure to
th ree (3) bands.
• All zone charges used fo r determining the monthly local
access line rate have been eliminated. Customers currently
in Zone A and Zone 8 would become part of the base rate
area.
• All mulli·party access line service has been eliminated
• Two~party access line service has been limited to existing
two-party customers and multi-party customers affected by
the elimination of multi-party service.
• The rate differential between trunks pro11ided to PB X systems.

Contr ol Swrlth
Shun! L oc~
Telepl'l()ne Lrne
s ._.pe,.,rsor Unol
Power Fltlure Detector
Re11y

~!...~'

Pag1ng System · Vorce P1oe
Pagtn; SySTem · Cooe Calt
P~gmg System · Tone Page
P1gtng System · Pager
Pagrng _-.diPIOI
Pagrog Mrcrophone
Payrllg Ampl1her
Pag1ng 1nooor Spelker
P1grr'lg Loud Sl)ftll~e'
Pagtng Outdoor Speaker
Pagmg Wrde Area Speaker
Add •honat Benery Charg!l
Ttl!!ype Mel DN Sets:
Teletypewnter 43 KSR
Data Se1 O· tiXXl BPS
Data Set tOOt·HIOO BPS
01t8 Set over 1000 BPS
Te1e1 ypewruer J3 ASR
. Coupl!n - tnlem:lftMC!td SenolcH:
Al11m Coupler
0111 Coupler
Oa1a Access Arrangement
Vorce Connec11ng
AttlnQtrnent · I&lt;T S
\Ioree Connechng
Arrangement · PBM
Stauon Coupler
Recoroer Coupler
ll'to.IIJ tout:
setec h~e Gall Sc reenrng
Spec•l l A ssembl~
Tel· Touch P8d
Sr ngte Lrne Hold
~onuonng Spea•er
Secre11rr1l Answeung Turret
Two-Lrne PBX Unrt
Two-lone PBIC Conlool
Specral Eawpmenl
Btrdgt(l Service
Four· Wne Key Set
116-But!On)
Four-Wrre Key Sel
(12·Bultont
Four-Wire Key Set
[24·BI.II!On)
Atlendan ls Console
Freedom Phone
Specr11 Relay Swrtcn
Lrne Adp.~ler

Slpntl E!U'f"M"':
Burton
Buuer
Cnrmes
Standa rll Bell
Go ng
Horn/Howler
Aetaw
Loud Hom
Spec•al Gong
"LrgrJU
Vtsual Srgna l
Translormer
E•pl011on Pmot Horn
Busy Lamp
Commoo Aucllble

Ker Tl!!p!IOM

•r•'"":

I ,I. Type Key TelephoneSyslem
4·L•ne Key Telephone System

1260

Yarnable
11 tO

""
""
"75

960

75

370
'50

'"0
2350

"5
'"

'"
.,
'"
"5

3 10
.,0

"
445

910
W90

) 10

6ti&gt;

"75
2 &gt;0
Varrable
V1rr1ble
Vlrrablfl
Vllrrable
Yarrable
'1'a11able

370
310
690
260
Varreble

...
330
335

va11aDie
Varrable

"'

""'
"'
'"

5 &lt;0
Varrable '
Vl rrlble '

115~

""

665

1630

"'.,

295

""
430
'"'
"5

1030

&lt;20

"'
'"75
"'

..."

"00

125

171!)

2020

"

.tH5

t5 40

3770

710

i

l8blef

rablet
Varrablef
5000

5000

5000

300
300

I SO
300
' 50

Detentionto.

lltllill

5000

600

VAUGHN M. SWAIN.
otal.,

4385
""'

4l !l5

"''

_,._

,."

25 85

3 00

1325

""

.

210

,

"'"

Frvt. DortoY., Swain. Juno
Swain L-. ·Ronald Mila&lt;.

N/ A

L~

300

Robort M... l..oufl Alit,
Bou,_, H""'-'n, Blanm Hoi·
fmon, ctalrmonl Foggln. Bottv
Ceoto, Sheron Well, Gory
Fovt~ln~ ond tho ......,_,

'"'

ou!VIving

600
300
JOO

,;o

915

13 75

I ll 33

.,

.

"'

Varr1ble
Vaneble

"

V;mable
Varrabltt

2"'

..",

Van1ble

Varrablf!

..,
'50

18 ~0
Vlrrable

"
,20
50

55

2&lt;00

Non·Publrshed Number
Eml!rgoncy Non·PublrsMd
Numbet
AO!Jrll(lnai Lrstrny • Busrness
Ackloi101111Lrslrng · A!Srderrce
bua Lrne
Fore1gn listmg • AtJ!oness
Forergn LISIII'l!l - Aesoclence

50

""100•o

..

100
, 00

Otl* Ustlrlt liMen:
EnlerprrM!
Specral Opet"alo• tnlelcept
Jornl U5-e•

600
500

"'
350
'"'
&lt;30
"
""
370
320

SfAWICI: CONNECTION CHAAOU
Serrice Connection Charpt

~

""

,00

600
500

NJA.

NI A

N/A

30
2!1
40

2(J

40

100
V1roable'
Varrable'

725

"
"'"'
""'

190
OS

lllllrll Serv.ce Oroer
Sutl!.eQuftnt Servrce Order
Central Otftce Charge
Vrsrtrnton Charg e
P1em•sfl Wrrrno Cnarge
Stat ron Har'ldl1ng Charga
Prewue Cn.rge - puo ouHel
S.,.,lct COMtCllon Char!ll! • R"ldltMe·
lllllral Ser'ltee Order
SubstQuen1 Servoce
Order Cnarye
Central ou.ce c nar ~
Vrsrtatton Charge
Premr se WrrrllQ Cha•ge
Stat ron Handlrng Charge
~ew lre CI'Uirge • per ou11e1

2195
740
170

""

300
1.50

505

OCPU

520

b CIUSrOn Manual
A. utomauc ExtlutrOI'I
lntefCOm Sy~tem
Musrc-on·Hold
Intercom Li/18

1.50
1 50

740
75
150

Variable'

367
Varoable'

""'
25

'"

2 08

5315

t810

...
.,5

"'

365
12 35
t 2 75

"'

.

360
t8.10

Monday-Saturday Except ThuiSday

30 00

Xl 00

28 45

28 45
28 4~

tJ 001

13 001

11 001
7 )0

j t 00 1
7 SO

22

pdttt Your &amp;yotemo Now

LARRY'S
SOUTIIRN MI.LLS
CARPET OUTLET
Hob1011 ld., Middltport

992-6173

985-3937

5·H mo. pd.

YOUNG'S
CARP£NTER
SERVICE

- Addont and rtmodtllng
- Roofing 1nd gutter worll
-Concr1t• work
- Plumbing 1nd J~i.ctri cal
work
(Free Estimetesl

RADIATOR
SER~CE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1 -13 ·tfe

A/C

APPLIANCE REP AIR
Experienced SetVice in
Microwave Ovens.
RatWes, Air
Conditioners,

•ZENITH

992-6931
u .., 5 Call

PH.

742-2027

33 •o

7"

41

6~

FULL• &amp; PART TIME

7 95

?0 50
r860
1:14 5

2050
t860
IJ 4 ~

"'"'

13 45

13 4 !)

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!

16 75

F" All y,., P~""l N"''
PWS: Offiro luf'PNII &amp;

furniture, Wtdding
and Groduatton
Stationory, Mognotit
Si!Jns, Rubbor 5tconps,
lusin11s Forms,
Copy Soniros, Elc.
255 MiN 51., Mitldloport

Shot TtehRiolll

REGISTERED NURSES

,.,.

For 25 ltttl SNF·ICF Facllily

14' 15'. Cords
500
5 00
g· Corc:ls
&lt; 00
•oo
·Tne proposed monthly ra1e lor tnese ~EwaDie ra ted •toms was tncrcaScd
144 89% to the presem momhly rate
t The !'fOPOSCO m ontnty rate tor PBXsyste ms represents a 111 16'% rncreasc
to the present rate tor those PBX systems not under conl ract
The prayer Ol the Applical10f1 requel&gt;ts the Public Uhlrtros Commlssron or Ohro to do the tortow1ng·
A A pprove the proposed r.!l:1es and chllr9es rmd the regulatrons and
p1aCi ices alt&amp;ctrng the !l.llme.
B. ApproYe the lrl ing ol the schedules cofll amed m Schedule E·t ot 1ne
Application (General h change Tentr. PUC 0 No 8 ana t:.ocat
E~~:c nange Tarlll . PU.C.O No 9) moelrlred to reflect sucn re~ r S!ons
thereo f as may become eftecti~e . pursuant 10 oroers o l your Com m1s·
slon . durrng the 1nter1m between !he f1trng of tne Applicatron and the
date upon wnich saio propo5ed schedules Decome e!lect1vfl
Establish an ellective dale lor saod propose d sched ules . an d
D. Grant such other and further rclle t to wh1ch Applicant may be ent1t1ed
to In the premises
The lorm of th is notice has been appro~e d by The Publrc Utrhtl€1s
Commiulon of Ohio

c.

THE WESTERN RESE RVE TELEPHONE COMPANY

••

CONTACT IHONDA OAUY, LN.
Or Apply At
VERIANS MIIOIIAL HOSPITAL
1151/1 last Mtmerial Orive, Po1111roy

CALL 614-992·21 04
Equal Employment Opportunity

NEEDED IMEDIATELY
FU~L

&amp; PART TIME

REGISTERED NURSES
CONTACT TERESA COLLINS, R.N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
116 EAS'r MEMORIAL 'ORI\IE
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
CAU 814. 992·2104
Opportunity
Equal

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-16-'86 lin

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILI£, OHIO
A•thorizotl John Dtoro,
New Hol.,lld, illlsh Hog
Farm Equipment
Dtal(r

Ftr111 E••'~•..t
Ptrtt &amp; SeNiu

1-3-'86 tfc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"Daly

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER- 985-3307

985-3561
All M1ku

4/ t/tfn

Trenching of Any Typo
'
Backhoe Service

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

WWAMS TRENCHING
SERVICE

--~...,...,;~,....,...•..,

WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commercial

•--------t
MANLEYS

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11·14·tfC

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New LO&lt;otion: .
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Commercial Container

Service Available•
CALL 992·3194
5/ 8-lmo.

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

We Cerry Fist-ling

Supplies

Pay Your Cable 8r
Phone Bills Here

ll

iUifNESS PlfDNE
(~141 992·~SSO

RESIOIN(E PHONE
(6UJ 992-7754

CALL ANYTIME

992-3361

l/ ?8/lfll

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
ALUMINUM SIDING

JAMES KEESEE

S.S.'86-tfn

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
C!l Cot11)uterized Heari)i Air Selec.tion
z Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

a:

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ licensed
Clinical Audiologist

::t

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

PH. 992·2712

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

tin

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
RACINE, OHIO

3·24·tfc

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ntw Hornts Built
"Fret Estimates''

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
No SIN!day Calls

3111 / lro

~,:
..

Emergency 949·2516

•BULLDOZING •END
LOAOER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEP.TIC
.TANKS • CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOllE SETUPS · ROAD
· LAND

Call 30·· 875· 610..

Rtpa Needed fDr bualn•a ecooun1t. Full·tlmt. ..0.000180,000· Pan-Time, tU.000118,000. No selling, repe11
buain••- S•t your own hourt.
Tr•ining provMtld . Call 1·812938·8870, M-F. Bam to 6pm
(Central Standard Time).
AppUcationa
Swimming Pool
Mtn~t~~er being ICCIP!Id by City
of Gallipolis, 618 SIICOnd AYt.
8· 10 weekt. •&amp;.00 p11r t-our, 40
hours week . fl•ibitity required .
Apply in peraon to Recreetkm
office by M1y 18 . 1988 . E.O.E.
Mnure lady tO live in and care for
elderly l.ty. in GalllpoMa. N01
badf..t. reftrfitcel requlrtd .Calt

614·448·21 83 or 814-

4411·:1617 .

EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI
t714 .00 Plf 100. Guarenteed

Ptymtnt.

nl...

No

Details.

Send stamp_. •nnlope: Elan68,7. 3418 Enterprft1, Ft.
Pierce. Fl. 3:MB2.

Government Jobt. 116 .040 .
e&amp;9,230·vr. Now Hiring. Call
1· 805-· 7·eGOO E.11 . R-9805
for curr.. l ltdtrallilt.
Somebody equipped to bulcher.

cut 1nd wrarp a hog . Call

675· 1090 .

WaUpap• Out!.-:,
Pt. Pleasant. YN now accepting
application for fuM time '""loy ·
ment. S8nd resume aionv wi"lh
pertonal ,., •
to C.L
Ferrell, 311 E. 7th St .• Chilli·
cothe, Oh 46601 . Pleue inckjde
phone nu mblr.

Coming toon

.,c.

AirlinM now hiring. ret.-vationist, flight atttndtn1t, tnd ground
crew positions . Call
fre fu ndable)1 · B18 · 4&amp;9 -3636
e~~:t . A · 1980 to tlnfo 2• hrs .

3 Announcements

Situations
Wanted

12
SWEEPER and •ewi'lg machin e

repair, partt, and auppliet. Pic:k
up aMd delivery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner , one naif mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614 ·
448-0294.

Cletend Greenhouse. Open br
butinau . Bedding plenta. hanging b11ket1, pots end vegetablu. VIne St. Racint. Ohio.

Giveaway

Heve vacancy in our home to
care for eMerly. Tflined and
Ppet"itnced . Phone 814·992-

11583 .
Wilt do all types maonry work.
Brick. blot*, atone and concrete.
Free ntlmates. Cal 114-"2 ·
2290 01 304- nJ-15971 .

H1wevecancy for elderly. Room.
IJ)•d, 1nd l.,ndry. ANIOnlbll.
Call

814-992-8022.

Young. bl11ek Llbrtdor mala,
very

gentle .

Ca ll 61&lt;1·379 ·

2ol00 .

Female dog , brown &amp; white.
lovelbta, 9 mot. old, to good
home . Call 814· 388· 8589 .

•ResidBntial
•Commercial
•Industrial

Help Wanted

11

Want someone t o ~v• in with
elderly *ly. 30'· 676-52.&amp;3.

Annou nee 111 ents

4

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.

Employ men!

Hrving our cultomera. 304·

1 f11male 5 mo. old half r11gi1·
tered Bour. Call 614· .... 6·
U72 .

3 black kittenl. 2 females , 1
male. 'II Siamese. Call61 4 -992·
6382.
Ouclts and Rooaters lo give
I'Way. 8U·843-6257 .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tllltllllnle•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Buying deity gatd, tilvlf COfnl.
rings, jewelry, nerling w .... old
coins, llrge curr.,cv. Top priC81. Ed. Burkett 8aJbtr Shop,
2nd . Ave . Middleport, Oh. 814 ·
992-3478 .

RJLLEn BRUSH COIW'ANY
11m 18 .00 10 UO.OO per hOur

VINYL &amp;

I

Office 949·2438

W!ltlted junk autos. Call 814 ·
3118-9303.

AVON . 3 ~'" tel"ritorlll.

" FREE ESTIMATES"

Service

Rf. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and nawer used - can. Smith
Buidc-Pontlac, 1911 E11tem
Ave., G1lllpolia. C1ll 8,4 -448 2282.

61.·992·69 18.

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Raplacemen1 Windows
•New Rooting

AGRICULTURAL

Roger Hysell
Garage

Bill Gene Johnson
61··"'48-3872

tor

Call:

Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area

5-1-'86·1 mo.

Jim Mink Chev .·Oidslnc.

00111)'-ti .

FOR ALL YOUR

SERVICE

Befort Yo• Bar

Uted Clfl.

Caretaker 10 lve·in ap1rtrn1n1

TRASH

Co111p1re the Q11Hty

We pay cuh tor Iat• rrDdel ct..,

Serv tees

4-5·tlc

SaptH: Synama
licented &amp; Bondad

3/ 2/ ffn

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

Wanted To Buy

•Dryers •Freezen

PARTS dnd SERVICE

Plumbing Service

Rt. 4, Hyaall Run Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Ph 1814) 992-2834.
992 ·6704
FREE ESTiua·r.o

man ' t watch . Ntw Lit:M

lOST metal hammer, Sttc:Ond
Stt8111t Pt . Ph. Rav•t• Office,
please return to office end
riJCelve REWARD.

•Ranges
•Reirigerators

TR(NCHING IS OUR LINE

asupermarket
lor everything

-z

loft : ,...,.. gflll" In blM:k
leather cne . &amp;.twMn upplf
p•rlllng lot and Five Po i'ltt. Call

•Washers •Dishwashers

CLASSIFIED ADS

992-3345

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

mo.

(CUT OUI FOR FU!IIIIf USE!

Lowboy Hauling

104 Mttlbtrry a,,, Pomeroy

CALL 667-3271

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

5- ~ · 16- 1

We Hert ,_ Fall Tl•

- ESTIMATES REASONABLE PRICES

Satellite Systems.

BIS$ELL
BUILDERS

IUD a.m. 1o HID p.m
Oi..tll 12 I ~r -Vt Price
S I Undu JIEI
Our ~ P"'I s h y

UNDERPINJING &amp; SETUP

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP

Milt. curty. teddy Mar. Come
quick! Call 814-742-2454 .

9

WHOII APPLE PIIS-'4.!0

4 1 85

4 1 11!1

Choose from l Mlats-

Custom Welding

"free Estimales"
Installation Availobll

Htlpl I'm a Drapped Puppy.
about to be a Pound Puppy!

Hwn, Dlicbn or IH:ad Std!

.

FENCE COMPANY

Lost : Nlnli month old shlphlrd·
like dog . Pomeroy Pillt·
Fl1twoodl arM . t14-982-7119
aftlf 5:30 pm .

Rd ., ALI11end . Mun d"critl• to
cf1im . C•ll 814 ·742 ·2310.

At . 82 . 8 mil• •OtJth of
tM Pomtroo;·MUOrl 8riclg 1

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

10-8-tfc

§ Lost and Found

Found :

located in the
Saddlobrook Inn

•SYLVANIA

2-17-86·1111

Custom Design

949 -2145
5·12·1 ...

"'
,.,

24 tO

FOUNTAIN
RESTAURANT

5UNOAY IUFfEl-14.95

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Be~gle luHtt, 1 ~ .,..,., old,
malt, to good home, 304· 3180 .

814·992·3786 .

Sttrtd with 4 Jt9flfiiiH,
tOtot dtutrt aflll *ink.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

949-2263
or 949-2168

Refrigerators, Washers
&amp; Dryers, lVs &amp;
Stm&lt;o

5-i2-'86·2 mo.

304.-372-5709
I0·14·tlC

992-3410

FREE ESTIMATES

ACCENT

CAU COllECT:

Ph. 16141 843-5425

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
For Hours

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Gutte11
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

5/131! mo.

24 Hr. fno•-

4~

,

365

Call Mr. Gilmore For
Appointment
letween 10 a.m. • 6 p.m.

1000

?8 .t S

'~

4530

...'"

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

lerrlce COMtetiOn CMI9!! • 8ualne11:

Va rreblf! '

,.,
"'.,

tOOO

NEW -IEPAII

REPAIRS

• No Experience Necessary

Propoted

&amp; Silver

ROOFING

V. C. YOUNG Ill

SALES

""
,00

i'O

P....,t

TtouOie Ana1ys1s Ch11ge •
TestCnarge
1 rOul:lle Analysts Charge ·
P~em• se IJrsrt Ch11rge
Reconnecl ( N on · P!!I~menn
ReconnecT(IJtcatoont
Telephone Rel urn · l•ln~chon
Cred•l
Telf!pftone Rewrn •
Each Telephone
tnsu!IICtent Fund Check Charge

var•al:lle '
Varr.llbhe'

6 00
NIA

1t111 Bloom, Rllitcn

UTOMOTIVE

"'
,00

JO

&amp;

4·15 '86·fc

,00

NtA

.·,w.,,,..•,.u.,,.o.,out:

520

765
1030

laM on 3.7ltfll mil.
Rvttw 592-45&amp;21592·

,.00

112 A.s!IQCI81!!d 112 Assocr11ec1
Servot.e
SeN •Ce

Ouec1ory Assrstance !Bus
!u. Sc ali illltowanceJ
Ouectory Assrstance !Bus
rn 0 cau Jllowancet
Directory A$srslance ( R e~udenc tr
'" Se~llaltowancel
DuectOI) AU IStance (RGStOOnco
r, 0 cllllllllowHnce)
Com Telephone cans
Dll'!doly AM61t.nct · ()perMOf A..w.d

Vrt r r~blt~ '

295
' 30
430

3131.

Howanl L Write•l

992 ·6215 or 992.7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

DIRECTORY IERYIC£
Dlr!Ctory Utll~

Varreble '
23 70

legotholro. - "any.

!192-5263.

620

Var1able '
varral:lle·

rru
Don

SATEUITE
SALES

Completa Gutter Wor1c
Complete Rem&lt;&gt;clellng
Roofing of all Typoo
Worked in home area
20 'f'Nrl
"Free Eatimotea "

SMAll ANIMAL IIOUIS
Mon,·WIII.·Thurs. 3-S pm
T..,. 6:30·1; Fri. I· 2 pm
Saturday 10·11 :30 am
LUGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY BY APPT.

Buying Gold

Giveaway

SIDING CO.

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

305 Jackson An.

-··

OPIII IIOIJS(: Slmdly, 1111i 1J
It J1QI6 KirwSIMY l4 Zbodrootn, Cldlr sidl4 3 ytS. old.

NON-RECURR jNQPIMQEJ

Vane !:lie
Vanabll
Varrablrt

54 Misc. Merchandise

1765

N/ A

GIADUAnON

1 OZ. SILVER BARS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES

4

SUPERIOR

Paul E. ShOtkty, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFKE

the oaurt. Penon•
_,y fMIOf1 wily the COf1llioint
lhould not bo grantod llhould
_ r . , d Inform tho murtot

_.of'*' end...,._

cte.l

:n •o

1---------.1..---------i

11111the
timo.
ThoCounty
CI&gt;Urt II l'lobato
locotad r
In
Moigo
Court Court Houoo. Pomeroy.
Ohio 46789 . Eadt ol you ...
required to enawer 1hia complaint within 28 dayaollholllt
T. R. 1011. Boo&lt; 144. Roedl' d.ro of 101bllcatlon. The lilt
.... Malgo County. Ohio doto of l"'bllcatian II May 20,
4&amp;n2, Meigs Couroy Probo111 1986.
COII!I. Colo No. 26,061 .
Robert E. Bur:l&lt;
Incii.W.g. but not lnitod II;&gt;,
Judge
Mildrid Swain Foggln. Dolle (5) 6, 13, 20 3tc
Town1end., Orallne Swain

CUNIC

PH.

Business
'""'"""a
Services
'----------....,----------1

S- Buddoy. Oolclen S!NIIin

•oo

12 35
12 35

N' A

Mobrla Ora l Ser-~rce ·
Normal Are•

020

Yar1able'
V1r1ab!e'
Var1ab1e·

-·

A IX&gt;f1lllaint h• _ , lied
bv Poort H, Swain. Jr., odniniolrltOf. lilting Ita court to
- · t h e pononl ..titled
todoc.t.,t'oprut&gt;Wtloobvtho
l•n of lntlltl1e Su
+n.
A h...,g on thocof1lllaintwill
be held on tho 8th day ol Ju)V,
1986, It 1:30 O'clocll P.M. in

BASEBAll CARDS
MOTHER'S DAY &amp;

EUGENE LONG

VEIERINAIIAN

GOlD COINS

JIM CLIFFO

of Florence Aftna Bay,

tntpro.d Mob! .. T•phone Service:

"90
635
Vllrrlbll! '
' 0 90

Vanal:lle
VBrriDit
Varrllble

c-No. 25051
PUBUCATION OF
NOTICE
To ol - · lntorootod In
the EIIN Dl AoNnco Anna
Bay, dl+ r 1. l8te of 66481

Public Notice

3 Announcements

Forergn Centr1l Ollrce
Specrll RecQ.fOtng Trunks
OI!·Premrse M r le~
(1&amp;1114 Mrlfl )
OI!·Premtn Mrteage
/Add'! 1/4 Mrle)
ServtC.!I 10 Anothf!f LOCitron ·
tntr1oflrce
Cable Patr • lntrao!l•ce
ln1erothce 1n1rae~c M nge
Prrvale Lrne Termrnatroo~
MOillE SEAYICt:

.,.,

Viitral:lte
Varrable

IN THE
COMMON PLEASE COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OliO
P£NIL H. SWAIN. JR .
Ad"*'iltralor of tho Ellato
of
Fiof81CO Ama Bay,
DaoeMod.

Plaintiff.

200

N'A

WOO

PHONE
992-2156
Dr Wfttt

WA

Public Notice

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY

DOZER. BACKHOE.
111ENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES ,
RECLAMATION. PONOS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS. ··
DUMP lRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

DatHy St11t111tl Clmtf1ttl Dept .
Ill C0111t St.. PollttfGJ . 0~10 U769

24 t O
1[1 95
21 55

CLC COINS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

4J 25

860

750

mtJRSDAY
CLIF"J'ON - Clifton Tabernacle,
CUlton , W.Va., will be In r€'1/Jva l

30 50

"'

200

SpagheUI !IIpper
A spaghetti supper wt1l be held
Saturday by the Long Bottom
Community As.soclaton Saturday
wtth serving to be held from 4 to 7
p.m.at the rommunlty buDding.
The menu wUl ll' spaghetti and
meatballs, tossed salad, roll or
garllc bread, tea or ooffee, and
&lt;rssert. Coot wn be $3.00 for adults
and $2 for children.

RACINE - Revival at Freedom
Gospel Mission Church through
Saturday at 7::.1 nightly. Located
on CR 31, Bald Knob Stlversvllle
Road back r1 Portland and Racine.
Rev. Clyde Ferrell, evangelist;
special singers.

J l 20

985

500

~----------~----------~------------~

MIDD!.EPORT - Child Conser·
vatlon League 6 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Helen Blackston lor
hike and wiener roast; also whlte
elephant sale.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gar&lt;Fners meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, home of EUzabeth
Lohse. Daisy Blakeslee, co-hostess;
plant exchange.

23 25

1?. 7S
1l 45
1775
16 70

varral:llc
Vlrreb141
varrabte
vauabtc

Thufflday through SulKiay with
services at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist wlll be B.T. Weston of
ColumbJs,
Ohio. Singing ministry
POMEROY - Planned Parent·
hood. Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, wtll also be i&gt;atured.
clinics Tuesday and Thursday. Call
POMEROY - The Rock Sprtngs
992-5912. Office closed Friday for
Better Health Oub wtl meet at 1: 15
staff meetlng,
p.m. Thursday at the Rock Sprlngs
MetOOdtst
Church. The program
COOLVILLE - Public games
wtll
be
by
Nancy Grueser, the
party at VFW 3478 Hall. CoolvUie,
contest,
Beuna
Grueser. New offic·
Tuesday; doors open, 6 p.m. party
ers will be elected .
at 7.

C. . . P.tr.end ....... :

Va rrable '
varrable'
V11rr1ble'
Varrable·

Varrable'
Va11eble'
Va r1t1ble'
varrabte'
Vlr•able '

V~rrabte

"0

Business Services

School to discuss activities for
I'D-year reunion.

The Daily Sentinel

fi 35
Hil S
17 65

2 60
660
720

PBXQ-100Lrnes
PBX t01 ·200Lines
PBX 20t ·400 Lrnes
PBX ~Ot an!t 011er lines
DID Semce r 1 sl 100
Telf!pnone Nbrs 1
OlD 5e r~rce {Add! I 100
Telephonlt Nbrs )
T_!4· Touch c.tNng ~:
TT L•ne · Res1denee . per liM
TT Lone • Busrnen. per line
TT l rno • KTS Trun~ . each
TT Lrne - PBIC Trunll each
TT Lrne • Trunk. per 11ne
&lt;:ustom Calll"' $wWCtt:
Call Wlrhng - Busrness
Call W111rng - Resr&lt;Jencc
Three·wayc•ll•og • Bu'f!nMs
Tnree·way caltr~ · Aesrdence
Cat~F o rwar arng · Bu!il'le$1
Call Forwarding • Res.dence
Combtnation ol two t2) or more
cuSiom CJ~ i n.gleltures fe&lt;IUCM
the cullOm callrng monthly
rental by S SO per line
MISCELLANEOUS

IB tO

310

. Opt!ontl Strrlott
Addr!lorral CO/ F)(!WATS
L1ne Card
9-Statron ln!trCOt'l'l E•PIII'Isron
Doll Intercom S11tron
Manual lnle rcom
Tel· Toucn Intercom

JOBS
Vanlble'

Srrigrer line Telephone
6-Bullon Tetepnone
IQ-Bulton Telephone
12-Bunon Telepnone
IB ·Bunon Telepnone
20.8utl on t elephone
24-Bunon Telep hone
JO.eun on Telephone
Opttonlf EqUpnMnt
Busy Number Drspl1y
Companron 2 Handslree
Complnron J Hanaslree
Handslr1!!9 38
Addflior\111 Tttl!ptlon! App-1tus:
Speak&amp;rphone {Hanl1sltee1
Sla noard Heads.el E•ua
Combrnall on Headset/Handsel
Lrghtwerght Operator Headset
Headsel Jacll
Heeur'IQ lmparred Hal'ldsel
Noose Cancelling TransmrtterOuldoor Housmgs
Lrgh lwerght S uper~o sor t-teadsel
Switch or Cut-Oil Keys
Toll Reslrretoo (Poemrset
Toll Rest roctor (Central O!hce)
Push·to-1al11
Call Oi~etter
~ttt:lon Booths
Hat! Booth · Will moun!
H all Bootn - Pede~ tal mount
Fui1Boo111
PRIVATE BRANCH I:XCHANGE SYSTEMS

The

Ohio

8 weO old a puppln. ptrt Collie
lftd Glfman Shepherd, 304675 ·798&amp; .

17 Miscellaneous
Dotson Tree Service, free etti·

ma1as. 304-578·2897 .

18 Wanted to Do
Will do mowning , odd job•.
ptintin !railer rooh, babysitting.
Call &amp;U -446 ·6268 .
Sand, grfl\ltl. f ill dirt, mulch . 3
cu. vardt . deliwered &amp; ~pread
S48 .00 per foad . Call Don
Waugh , 6,4 · 446 -9e46 .

....... GiillTpons···· ····· ······ p·oni'eroV"····· ....
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Moving Sale. Van. refrigerator.
furniture. baby hem1, antique
chaat . c lothes women•

11 ,12 ,13,14. miCI. Call 11 4·
387·7885 .

Yerd Sale Four hmlll• 14 ~ 15 ·
11. 9-5. 188 G1rfield Ext . Horn~
Interior. clothing all liz•. tott
morel

&amp; Vicinity
Mav 13th and 141ft, College Rd .,
Svracun. Shempoo•. houM
1hu1teu. humidifier. ftn , big
whefll. childrWI and ~ult clo ·
thing. toys. mite. dlatlu and
o ther.
of evtrvthtng. Florance
Skldefl. D1rwin. M1y 18th,
17th, and 18th. Rain canoall till

Lots

naJit day .

Off Rt. 124. 2'11: mil• Cll Hytell
Run Rd. ChitdrMI end adult

clothes. houHtlold goods. Rain
cance!t. May 14th, 11th, and
16th. 8U-992-5276.

�i l

10-lhe

Senti lei '

-·

it- Wanted to Do

44

LAFF-A-DAY

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

'I.Ma -

.... llld -

.

- - - - - -----,..!' ~ ~-::.:.~::::.::.:

·-·a-nd-.

··-~-

l""lna by poll ..... Col 114• • 1111.

0-·

~

a my holM, lud
Chetltl #lot~~ , hwe ,....,._,

li04-111·3UI.
Wlllblbylhln mr hon da"to
0..,.,,.
lohool. R--

.,._0

- l t. " uporionoo,
ll04-171·3774.

46

Bualne11
Opportunity

--cit

lljOTjCE I

1HE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO.
thM "'"

do - - with _

.. you

tlnow
_..d
mon..,.
t
' : :•(.,d
theNOT
mall tountil
you
hew
In
.,., tho offorln8.

Fot oe1o looot tpOCltllty GWnlf ... ather lrU.ettt:. Rt~~ly
• ,,0. bo•· 748, Go l lpolt, Oh
4111131 .

po...,...t

lougo. St. hlghwoy.
eood lo•tlon . Striou• lnquiNI

bntr. CaN .......

., ol-317· 0411.

Bam. 8-.n.

blrt~~tAPir'IINI'It fora ..elftd 2
MObile IDIMI. Good riiUm an
your ll'lv.trnent on lppro ~~t. 1 ~
;..- 2!1 fool .....
*'lo. I mlnutoo ""mtown. Will
foMid• lllnd contrKt. Tlklng
- - 4 - 8 P M. 304-17&amp;-

""n·

)Il02.

·:Z3

Profe11lonel
Servlcea

PIANO lUNING AND REPAIR.
1'111 llcover yaur pl.,o '1 bMul:tful
lOtio, co1 IOdoy.
bv-

w-

llo•cL 304-171-1100 .. 171-

3124.

;i1

Homea for Sale

• bedroom houll, flrtpl.c., 3

... .,.thatGolllpolil. 128.1100.
Col lloys 114·. .1 ·1111 ot
- " ' " 114---1-1222.
Wt llulh bit 4 btlr.. Etrlv
Am- honu 118,881 on
.,...,. IDI. ... our niliiiiW mocW
holM.
Colll14-811·7311 .
.

.

~

FOr· itlo by - 2 .....-y ho
wllh ..,..._ g,.. School Dil·
..... APII""'· 1 ..... 121.000.
Ctl t14-441-2021 or t14-

44t-flto.

Far ... by own• Moru• Twp.,

3 btlr.. 2 both• ..,., 1o.,.., nloo
lot. . . or tred•. Tom L..h.
114-211-1413.

"They won't move until you
'BUCKLE-UP/ Your Highness!"

~;.~;:;,;:::;;:::;;:;:;==lr.;;::;;;:~:;:;::~::=l
32

Mobile Homes

for Rant

1910 Liberty 14•14. 2 bed· Fully fumlahed. AC. Ill utlttl•
room, unfumlahlld, vinyl unci•· pMd, ldulta only. Ct11114·441plnnlng lncludod. Muot ooll. CoM i -4•_•_o_,._I_14_-_- _.1_·_200
_ 3_._ _
304-773-1173.
In Eurtkt. Nice, clean. p1r1 .
Otn11 Mobile HDIMI. FrM fum ., acluhs only, no pet., 1180
wesher end dryer witt\ purch111 mo. Dep. req. CeH 114-251·
of eny nM home In nodi.. 81 1131 .. 814-218-1211.
Skytlnt 14•70. 3 -..om. 2
bltht, only 1.1 4 ,100. Localld MobMe home for' rent on Uppw
Junctk»n I "17 Md Rt. 2 Rwen•· River Rd. Cllll14·441·0108.
w.v • . 1-304-273-&amp;131.
2 bdr. unf\.tm. ctrp• throughMobile home for ..le. 1olx70 out. AC. dtck.wtth twnlng, 2YI
1978 3 t.droom. 1'h beth, tot.! mll11 on R1. 1518. No chNdr., or
11-lc. ti&amp;OO. Ctll 114-247- lntkle pm, Prtvete lot. C•ll
114-441 -4t07 or 814~ 448 ·
3171.
2102.
1184 10111110 Wotverkle. 2 bed·
room tfllller. Kitch• fumllhH . 1 2xl0 two bedroom mobile
home, unfumilhed. 11315. plut
Coli 114-MI-4103.
utllitl • . 8VI'IIOUII. Call e14·
73 Fl•twood 14•70 3 bedroom 912·111187.
trell•. 14000. Cell 114-992·
Two bedroom 1. .1er whh ex·
7184.
Plndo living room on ""''.,..
MOilLE HOMES MOVED: ln- lot .-. Mlddteport:. Ne• etofll
.,_., f'MIOntble n~t•. Cell end schooiL No palL Cltl
114·992-2101 1H 11:00 pm. end
304-1171·2331
114-912-2311- 1:00pm.
1872 Schuttr. 12x70 tilt out.
ltove •d refrig•ator, fumlture Mobile honw In H~dlftOn, c.U
negotllbll. SH by eppcMntrn.nt tftlf &amp;:00 PM, 304-871-1111 .
only. 304-171-7117.

1873 Kirkwood doubtt Wldt
whh l•d. uc oond, nloe ,,..,
Oellipoltt Ferry, for more lnfor·
motion. 304-171-3087.
1883 Knoolwood, 3 bedroom
trlilll', IUUrM 1o1ft whh I low
dawn p.ym•t. 304·875·&amp;201.

33

W1lk

10

town ,

IChOOII,

•c•

ly own•. 1 10
It DeJner.
le-..tlful 8 tvom home, b1m,
outbulldingo, •whnrnlng pool.
POI . Aioo114--D.,.,
with 3 -..ommodomhome. 2
blms. vaN.,. tettlna. C.H 11 4·
742-2877 tor •ppoWdrMnt.

lot· illectrio- wetw·
blthttou• boe1 doc*. Nothing
doMt IIOmo . BigFootPM'k, At.
7, I ml• bllowclellpolia, crou
Recooon C,..., follow ttgne.
Wooded

Cemplng Lot for Ale In Bit Foot
c""Hoound, 12.000. Will con·
lidw trede for pop-up
Ctlt 114--.1-1214.

c..,.,.,.

I room hou• on N-.on Ad..
Rutltnd. Outolhlghwttor, "'lot
.... ructy ., maw Into. Cll
114-742-:!007 ""• 4:30.

8 100m. 2 botht. Ctn be mtdo , ;::,.---;-;--- --;--;::---,-lfltt&gt; du.,... L-tod on Fourth 4 1 Housas for Rent
llld , .. _In M=rt- Clooo
Rent,l. .e, lind contract, lbr' •
..
-124.000.
· ond •hot&gt;P
Aoldn8
prfoo
Ownw .wiH
ooll Rodney VIII~• II; 2 bf't-Eureka;
on l.,d oontrtd. Ctl 114·892- 3"' Evon• -hto: D.pook l

ref-ooo roqukod. Blootd&gt;um

4 llfll ·

412 lprin8 Avt. 3-4 btlrm .. 2
ba., bull-in ldtchen w yr. round

Roolty-114--.1·0001.

3 bedroom home untumllh.t,

trill, microwl'te and dll · a• hilt. K.neuga! 1200 •
- bt,..
· WIFP
in llvv..,
""" nlcol
8•· month • 1100 olopoolt. Ctll
llld
143,000.
114·441-7437.
Coli cohct • - 1-114-111·
0701 IJ.!o Roolty.
Fumt.hed hou11, 2 bdr., 11t8.
"'"'ooforooltlnChootorOhlo. 7
roorN. be

ww.

~..

on

one t111th of 111 acre. Wilking

clllt.MCI Df tchool. nort, flft

131 ,.., 4th Aw.. Oatlipotit.
Coli 441-4418 oftor 7pm.
Pt. pt......n ,,.., 3 bclr.. ftnn
houM. for rnorelntornwtlonclll

houoo. 121.100. 114-111 - . . .,.... 114---1-1122. ..• .
3171 .
114-44&amp;-4102.
4 bldroomhonwon7Kfll, C.n
........... Colll14-. .l -4312.

hou•.
-lrod.
..nt, make otler. 304-1713 Mdfoom
n.,., root,
High St.. Point , _

1.31.

Nlco 3 btlr .. fuR bloom•~ C~.
f'"ced ylfd, Rt . 141 . 1321 plut
clop. Coiii14-812·2B18oftor5.
Nicl 3 bdr., full btlum•t. CA,
f.,ced y1rd, Rt. 1•1 . 1321 plus
clop. CoU14-812-2111tftorl.

a

lwen room houte, complltefy
lumltlled, 12.100.00. Phono
304-171-7140.

121 First Ave .• 1 room. bath.
Ctlll14--.l-3141 oft• 4PM.

32

Fumlltl«&lt; hou• 4 .voms l
both. 3rd. Avo .. Golllpollt, 1121
mo .. 171 dof. Col 114-4413170 or 814·4oll· 1340.

Mobile Homes
for S1le

...... 304-171·1201.

44

Apertment
for Rent

JAPKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (Equtt Houolng Oppor-

"'"'""'•· lltlrory, ono .....-y, 2
btlr., both. ......1
dinlngroom, good carplltlng, 1 ·15 ICNI,Pirtl..ly wood. . lott
ltotlt kltchon, good goo fum-. nwepprovtd eub-dMtion. T.P.
ttonn windows. Caii114·UI· end C. wn• and IPPI'0'.-:1 roed
ouo.
to 1Kfa lot. R•IIOnablv priced,
wll fln•ce wllh 10 pwcent
Hau• • 32 ecn~. Sil mil• fr down. Coll114-811·3114.
GtlllpOIIt. Only lnt_... buy·
... pltMI. Ctll ., 4-441·2410 1.3 .c.... 321 ft. from.ge. Rt.
7 . cioN to town . U700. Ctfl
""• 4 llfll·
114-912-111187.
Govom"*" Homoo fn&gt;m 11 (U
ropolrl . Aloo dollnqutnt tox .fOf 1111. Gtrlgl ept. end 2
_....,. Col 1-10&amp;-117-1000 mobile homM, good return on
EJrt: GM·•OI for lnform1tlon.
your lnYW1men1 on tpproxi·
mtqly 1~ lcr.t whtl 2315 ft.
1 y. . . o6d. 2ttory. Z blclroomt. ro8d from.ge, B mlnu* from
· wolnut ponollng, on prlvtto town. WIM coneid• lend con- · R-vtllo trtct. hking calli betwe• ..I
- · T.P.C.
.,,_CoM
114-371-1412.
p.m. 304-17&amp;-3002.

1111 -

Mobile holM on Crsb C,...
Roed, 11110.00 per month. no

For rwn1 Sl...,ing Roomt and

3 bdl'll.. 2 bethl. g•age. On
PerkwiY In Mldcll•
UIEO MOBILE . Htrtln:ll'
port. 200 mo. Ctl 114-N2'I OUAUTY 71U.
4 MI.
3&amp;. Nice hou• for ,.,t, quiM
neiGhborhood, MlnlfiYINe. 114·
912· 3871.
14•70 Flltlvtl, 2 btlr .. 2 flol
2 IMidf'OOf111 hou... located ao•
-room.· AC.
loto Colll14---1·1241
at · - utility W.ter
St .. 304-875·7183 ell!
"""' 4:30.
12• 10 Vlndolo_, good condi.,... nice c1111n
tion. One taU pul out on LR, Mlddltpon
home, ,...,neble rtn1, If IMtr·
bow ...._
• t - n. .......1304-112-3722
Front lind portlll, t1 1,000.
Ctll ,14-317-7113.
2
one triM• ho.kup, for
1N3 · 14XIo,flllt- ,..t, 304-171-1720.
1113 · 14•70, 3 btlr, 2 .
~!..~":".;.'':1;,=:' 42 Mobile Hom11
Ctl 114-241-1141.
for Rent

tunllyl monthtv rent awu 1'1
.,,. for 1 bedroom tnd 1212

lor 2 boolroorn, " - h 1:!00,
toated ,.... Spring VIII_, Pl11.1
tnd Foochncl, Po of.-.etC.bit TV
IVtltble, otfioe houl'll 11
bfe 10 sm to 4 pm .nd 7 pmto I
pm MondtY·frid.y, Clll 114~
448-2741 ar 1.-ve m~UAQe.

pos"'

Nlcoly lurnlollecl rnoblt homt.
Iff, tpt., clf'l1nlf elf and Ml'lln
city. odulh only. Colll14-441-

0338.
Ap.rtrrwnt tor rent. Outltty 2
IR , 2 b.t:h ll*fiNirt In prime
downrown locJtion wlttt ott·
otrtn Ptrtdnt. Khchonlurnlthtd
wtth rtfria., ... f.clllr'l oven.
ow, ... dlop .. hoollup for
wt~h.-J dryer. For non·tmOidng
tingle or couple. No chlktt'lll or
pets. All•ltctric. Includ11 wttw·
/ uw./ treth. A oneytlf leiMlt
required. Call at•-.we.tea•
9AM to &amp;PM.
Fwnittled ..,.., 1 bdr., 701 4th
Ave .• Gtlllpollt. 1231 mo. Ut:llll• ptld. Ctll 441-4411 1fter
7pm .
·
8 Court St. 3 bdr. 1'1t'beth. 1250
mo. , ptua utHttl•. ,.ftrence~ •
no petl. Ctl114-448-4921.

2 bdr. utlllliM PIU1111ty fum ..
1171 mo. Coli 304-175·5288
or 30•·171·1104.
New 1 btdroom lpllrtment. C•ll
114-441-0390.
fum . lfficl•cy 114&amp; mo.,
uttlh l• paid. thiN blth. 807
2nd. Avo. GtNipollo. Ctll 4414411 lfter 7pm.
Oehnte 1 bdr., garttgt
ment, kitchen
pet~ ,

,,.n~

fuml1h.e. no

no child,..., refertnCII.

100 Block ht., Otlllpollt.. C1il

1171!1 Honde motorcycle CB
1258. 1221. 40 lb. punohlng
Ng, 130. 1 plir ttblel-.npt, 37
'-'~• high, •~- Ctll 814-112·

Centrtl
ltght houM
Hotel.
keeplne
c 1uroo8 me.
14-441·
Pwk
071151.

3181.
Wlf• 21 cu. tt. froat·fr•
. uprlgh1 fi'Mier. 1200. Hobll"'
Fumilh.t room 1121 mo., mut grinder 1310. Ctl 114utll- peld, - t both, ointlo 742-2177.
mol~ t18 2nd. Aw.. G•Hipolo. 1 =~..,------Cal\441-4411 tftlf 7pm.
Trl COunty Sport Shop, Spring
VtHey Plaz1. O.lllpoHa, Ohkl.
Guns. Arch...,, Tec:kle. t1•·
448-2335.
48 Space for Rant
Used RIB Ditch Witch Trtnctl•
2mobflthomelots.1onAt. 7. 1 and 410 John DHN c1D11r.
on AddiMin-Bultvtlle Rd. Cll et•·et4· 7142 or 114· 1008.
814-387-0232 or 114-441· Tony'• Gun Repelr•. teope bore
.UtD.
lighting, fectory rebluelng,
OHicnpaoe Upp•Rt. 7. Can be houet 8 :00 till dlrll, etll 3043 prlvltl offiCII. uTa w•ttlng _1_7 &amp;
_ -_41_3_1_._ _ __ _ _
room. CtU I 1 4·4otl· IOI.
Crlfttmtn 10 Inch radial trm
COUNTRY MOilLE Home Pll'k. IIW , llll tr l AC Clltorlll .
Route 33, North of P - y. 1200.00. 304·811-3183.
Larg•lots. CtH 114·882 ·7•78 . Antlqut Iron f.,cing, 100 ft.
TreMw loti IIWW and w 11., with comw pott snd g1t1. 2101
fumlthed, smell chlklnn tc- Jeffwson Ave. 304·878· 2119.
c-.ned. Rt. 1 Locutt:Rd .. btckof Ulld doaWI, lolden, bKkho-.
K • K, 304-171-1071.
'du,.. I'Uckt. 70 lnt. .ttlonll
Sptee for ren1 ~ now taking triCtOr·triN~. Phone 304-731·
ISPPilcationt for mobil• home· 78H nur Huntlnglon. Rt. 10 .
kJtl, tvlillllltln Pt. PIIMinl • . Portable Roysl EIIC1rlc typ.wff·
tw lib nM'. Pica andEih•print
OaiBpolll. 304·1715·3000.
t140. Coli 304-112· 2312.
Linde Stir ring tnd ntckltce,

112&amp;.00. 304-171-1181

61

Household Goode

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Ollw St . Golllpolo. Now • uHd
wood·c:oll ttovll, e pc wood LA
., .. , 1318, bunk bed• t119,
antron Ndlnn til. r-.v •
UMd bedroom •H•. nn.-.
wringer wuhen. • lho11. Ntw
Mvlngroom Mlhto 1198-1111.
t.mpt, 1110 buyita ooll&amp; wood
ttav•. Coll14-441-311t .

66

Building Suppliea

Building Mtterltll
Block. brick, HWet' pip•. window., llnt•l•. etc. Cleude Win ·
tlfa, Rio Grende, 0 . C1ll 814 ·
2415 ~ &amp;1 21 .
BuildinG mtterltls. ctment .
blo'*s til IIIII. yerd or dllvery.
GtH'"IIIIIocll Co .. 123~ Pint
8t.. Gol:rllo, Ohio Ctll 114·
441-271 .
Save lulld.,. Suppllee Surplus.
CloMOUtl. Sthlt~Qe .
1. Prlhung 1tM1 lnMilatld 8 Gr I
p.neldDor. . U .II.
. 2. PNhung tte11 intuiMed door
..d 81-lllto or Uht •uu&amp; .
3. Doubtuklelltewnrenctdoor

Farms for Sele

t

1\1 otory. 4-1 btlr.. 2 botho. FP.
ful blti"Mftt, 14ll20 building.
wflh . . . . . on 8 .1 Hrll.
. _ _ In Rlo GfMdo. Ctl
114-241-1117- 1:00PM.

Mobile Homea

for Sele

3 bdr. hou•, f1mity room.
I 1 Flll'lt, MWtJ rediOOrltld,

ftt. 31, . . . H - Modioli
Ctntor. Coli t14--M8-U71.

42

Fumlahed Rooms

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sot• lftd chtlrs priced tom
e211. to ••••· Tlbl• . 110 tnd
up to •121 . Hld•t·bodt.l310.
end · up to tHO .. tote bldl
t141, Reollntfl , e221 . 10 Nt•~gleulhet311:
e371., LamPl from 121. 10 4. Single sldlltl enu.,.,. cktor
eua. pc. dtntn• tram 1101.. • • ~ th•mal 111. . 1211.• .
tot\31. 7pc. •111tndup. Wood 11. Comm.dtldOubleentranOII
table with II• chtlrs 12811 lo · · Mt brown tlllllumlnum 11591.
e7.a. o..k 1121 up to 1378 . .e. Double tidtlltal.,tranos•tt
Hutch•. ee110 . Bunk bed co~ wood 1h pentl 'n: 1 ,. . wpleta with mntrHMI. 12715. drtooflltlve trim 1211.• •
ll'ld 1.4) to 13115. llby bed1, 7. PrWiung _,t.,tor doors 11
1110. Menre1111 or box lb• ~d fln ..hw a or8d•
epringt, fuM or twin, 183., fifm, 121.81 N .
173. tnd . ., . Qu.., ..... ' 1. Plhung Interior I panel pine
1221. led frem11, UO.II'Id . door' a ell til.. !B) gradll,
128., 10 gun • Gun ctblnttt, 181.8lli ...
1380. Ou or electric ran111 · 8. Thl"ntl lntullltld giUI:"'1371. ltby
1311 • oil 71" hgt. 32 " Wldt 13 .•
141. bed """· 120. 1215. • ..
e30. king fnmt 1110. Good tO. Wood door ""' ... w-f\11
Nltctlon of bedteom ...... gleu 71" hgt. 34' ' wkl1 1 ~
........ rnettl ctblnot~ · thldo 139.91.
b01rda 131 • \4' to fll .
11 . Octegontl window W·
.... .. .. .... .... .
lllln .. INded glau 159.91 ••·
Uood Fumlturo -bod. 12 . Cloorocrytlc •hooto 080 .,d
Trund~ bed. mltll office O..b. 121 gage tevertl liz• big
3 mllae out Bulewllte Ad. Open IIAYi1QII.
to Bpm. Mon. thN Stt.
13 . Plywood hlndy penels
114-441-0322
U " lont 18" wldo ~ thlcll o.71 tt .OO oo.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 14. M11110nhe primed horlz ontsl
W•t.en, dry. ., refrig•etDrt, exterior tiding 18'x11 " K7· 11
rtngtl . lkagg1 AppiiiRCII, .20.00oq.
Uppw River Ad . beelde Ston• 1 I . B·liJf*le m.,bl, v.nity 1Dp1
Cr•t Motel. et•·441· 7398.
chalet 11111 In dock. t20.00ts.
11 . 4'118' 1rAted pine ltnlct
County AppH1nce, Inc. Oood 114.111 ...
Ulld 1ppllen011 Md TV lltl. 11. K·lu• brick tndatoner.t tnd
Op., lAM to IPM . Mon thN ttn. r.g. tl .ll ctn now 11 .150
Sot. 114--.l· tiN, 127 3rd. 8nd ., _. . ctn.
Aw. Golllpollo, OH.
18 . E111terior key doortock llluml·
num finllh 12 .18es.
Vllll-r Fumhure, n• • uttd . 19. Oood 8·2 '"'lb light
fuml· co~l.te W·bulbs 1111 .00et.
Lergt teetfon ot
tu rt. 12 1 8 Eutern Ave., 20. Wood-Muontte· bl1hroom
Otlllpollt.
penlllng 4 ' •1' pc 14.88 to

mtttr•-·

o-.•

•am

.-•Hty

lunkbtdt co.,..tt11. 1000 BTU
AC , rocker-recliner, quMn lilt
mitt,. . ..-t. Cot'bin • Snyder
Fumltur., IBB Second An. C1ll
114·448-1171 .

114-251-1529 .

U .llloo.

21 . Prefinithed end unfinillhed
door.,d wlndowtndtlltypes ot
trim atlrtlng tt 11 .00 for l 'pe.
22 . Alumlnummobllehomtend
btm root coltino w·ftb• Mgel.
•23.111 100 ttl ond up 120.911
&amp;gal ptll.
23 . Welbollrdedhlliveqt. tubll
or 28oz. 11 .38 11. or by Clll
. ., .21 ...
24 . Paneling Mila 1.71 bo•.
pENN ' S W A A E H 0 U BEWolloton,Ohlo 114-384-3141.

c."

••v•

c..

~ 'l-IC.: i-low~ l&lt;:of.~y.,.,· \qttell

ni·

off-

M- homo oe~oc..... ,_,

e:oo eCIJ Cll •

Boeteand
Moton~ for Sale

~
- ' "
I

76

'

D
S'·IJ

I]) Mozdl &amp;pm.Look
(I) Andy Grlfllth

61

Farm Equipment

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 31 W. Gtlllpolil,
Oh6o. Call 11ol·448·9777. eve.
114·441· 3592 . Up front tree·
tort wfth wtrranty over 7&amp; uNd
tracto,..., 1GOO tools.
..020 John DHrt diMti tractor.
Ptre ciMn, tow houri. with ceb.
good rubbw ...810 . 4 rowFOfd
oom pltnter rod 1395. Call
11.~288· te2 ·
2010 John o. ... trector, low
hllul'll, good rubber wkte front,
pow• at• ring, llvt powtr. John
Dtere ptow1 like ntw , John
DHfl cllok. All for 13.911. CtN
114-281-1122.
T030 FetguiOn tntctor, u:trt
nice, 11,811. 8 ft. buth hog
1295. 2-12 plo- t29&amp;. 3 pt
dllk 1288.
pott hole d6gger
1211. 7ft grMI• bllde 1181 .
Col 114-211·1122.

n-..

eoo Ford trectOr 1.200 hou,.
U,IIO. Unhld Ferm ftnilh
mower new 1791. lpt. IMder•
tpreed•
1295. Ctll 114211-1122.

n•

c...

diHtl tractor wide
front pow. dMring. Uvapow.r,
730

live ttydrtullct cr11m puff.
12,850. eft:. drum mower new
t1,4915. No. 12 Milley Ft rguton t.ler •1 , 191. Ctlll14·211·

1122

JIVIOEN 'S FARM EQUIP ·
MENT. 114· MB· 11715. Cheoll
our tptcl-' Nle prk:ea on Long
Trec10rt • V.-nwer hty equipmint wlthflnanclngtvallable•t
4.4% nt ...tl A CO"'IIM•Iineof
btle hlndllnv ICCIIIItorl• •
f•ding ICt:eltori", grinder
mlxert, wtgon1, rotlry tlltw•.
rotary cunets,
culdw·
ton1, dille. plows, ..ten, poll

l*d•.

cttv•1,. wooaplltt.,., gt1e1 •
hlldglt•. power weth•• •
Horae Llwn &amp; G1rden
triCtOI'III And Ill Ul for 1
oo,..,ltteline of p1rt1 • ..Mcel
USED A wr~ of ulld tractor~.
I 10und btlen:, grinder mixer,
wegon., -.mryer, cultivttoft,
tobecco
wheel cite.

Wh...

Mtt••·

btl••·

plena, • • • · ~quare

t.tden, hlrrow, mewing mech.-.1, cuhil)ldllf.
O.Utz'trtctar, parta tnd IIIVIct
at the bftt ..-loe, IIden Equip·
mWit Co. 30ol· 8711·7421 .

••c

hrmsl Super A tr~etor,
aand, culttvttofS, tuming fMow,
mowing midline. hl'i'f duty, 2
whHI trill•. 11 ,47&amp;.00. Phon•
304-·2-3793 .

62

Wanted to

B

uy

1-------- -Now buying thlll com or ear
com. Ctll fo• let11t quotn. R l.,.r
Ctty Farm Suppty, &amp;1•·448·
2995.

71

Autos for Sale

Gil Halha v"""
8:30 G (I) (JIJ NBC News
(]) The Riflomon

n

79 Mu•tang. New tirel. runt

vood.

11100. Coli 114·3792112 ttter 8.

IS Chevy Ceprice 4·door. Can
be ..en • 14o.tL.wltSt . lot4.

C•ll 304-17&amp;-7117
1978 Fairmont 4 cyl., • ~pd : ,
good cand . tBOO . Clll81 4 ·2151·
1487 .
1879 Ford Muttang 4 cyl .• new
l'llbullt motor, low mileage. Call
114-211-1417.
1981 4 dr. ChiVett t . AC , tilt.
C•ll 114-441-9:1l0 .

19M Cornlr Monza. good
body. 1111. Interior. run• wtll. H11
developed ••en• 111111 nolle, arest
tar rt110rs1ion, •aoo. Caiii14:MI-1123 .
1978 Cutlata Broughtrn. ,ood
condhion. Call 114·441·2 1•.

1980 Chevy Mo,nz•. • cyl. ol
aplld . good cond, 11 ,200.00 or
mike sn oft.r, mu•t Mil. 304·
118&amp;-3013.

79 Pinto, good oondltion. 304·
17&amp;· 3471.
1977 ptymouth V.o lare, good
oond, low mlleeg" 1971.00.
C•ll roftor &amp;:30. 304-171-4181.
' 71 Vag• QT, 30•· 811· 3331 .

1871 Toyott C•Mca. 1700.
Good condition, 304-171 ·
4014 .

1911 Ch..oll•

sa.

327. 4

spMd , felr condttlon, 1700, cell
30~411 · 1121.

Trucke

72

for Sele

1979 DIIMin IIi .d.. topptf,
r.tlo, 11.788. 1878 Dauun 4
JPd., r8dio, e1 ,411. John' tAuto
s.l11, lul...,l le Rd , O•llipolit,
DH .
1912 Dlttun 4 JPd., AM· FM
tspe. wW. rim•. IIPortv. 12.999.
John's AU1o Still. Bulavl\le Rd .,

63

Livestock

Pur• bred Duroc bolrt. RovBentley, Sllblne. Oh. C1ll 11 3·
• .. 239B.
· Bl.ck 1t11Uon stud service 140.
Ctiii14·441-318B.

One bull .. d ont ltHr, both ,4
mo. old. ltMI' t'WII VtfY niCI Iill.
1325 end 1380 r•pecttvely.
114·742·3033 .
1 Pony,snd whit• fece caH 1100
lor both . C•III14·182-131B.

'- - -- - -- - -

e

ms~
(I) EnttorUinment Tonlght
E. T. begins its coverage of
the excitement surrounding

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1971 Stercrsft foldout cemper,
..... 8, CO"l)iet• wit h t tov•.
ice bo11, llghtt&amp; tlnk.•• c. cond.,
like n8W. C1ll 111 4·388-9755
otter II'M.

1978 D~e ~ ~n 41114 PU, 8 h .
bod. tuto. PS. Pl. AM-FM.
18.000 on 380 engin e. wkle
rlr• l JPOke whllll. N.w pllnt,
lltemttor, •Hrlng pu,., cerb,
brtkll, • lin•. E111c. cond.,
14,11!10. Tr.-11, Clmp., or belt
otter. Al so hydreullctnow pkJw,
•eo. c.n at 4 -MS-2745.
1879 Dodge 110 truck . EIIICII·
IWitcondttton. PS .. PB .. AC . C1ll
evtnlngs Chester 814· 8815 ..
3B41 .

1\:ltJ ~D 11).0

1/(J\lC&gt;A'-1,

SfloJS, ~LL

1\1~

HA~~ 'D~

Le:b CA1J

I'Oft

TJ?.A~!&gt;L

'72

Dsta~n

pickup, run• good,

vood cond. 1410.00. 304-&amp;712223.

'79

Chovy Luv. • 1 ,100.00.

Vans&amp;

4

live .

GOING~

!'ILL Mt:!

meo•.

1971 lnttmetlonll Scout4 WD .
Ctll 814 ---1-4778 .
1979 Ford Vsn w tth 1980
fsc:tory bk»v.c custom conv.r·
tion . Exc t llent condit ion ,
r7.1500. Colt 114-882-1914
lftii'I:OO pm.

l I

--

-~
--

CD Championship Roller

(!) MOVIE: "Young
Frankonotein'
D ()) 00 Orphan Animolo
of TIIIVO The struggles of
Daphne Sheldrick to raise an
assortment of wild animals

are eaplored. 160 min.)
Moe Neil-Lehrer
Newshour
Gil Nova: The Magic of
Special Etfectl (CCI The
making of Hollywood illusions is .,plored thrO&lt;IQh
scenes from three blockbus·

EEK&amp;'MEEK
Wf-\t;T'S 11-\t R:)IIJT 1
t.~ Kf..XXIJS
VJf-'0 DaJE. fT I

2 btlr. on O.J . Whlto Rd. Ouiot

•

lor films . (60 min .) (R[.
1M! MOVIE: 'Vertigo'
8 :30 (I) D (i)) Growing Pains
iCC) Mike hes 1rouble accep1ing 1he death of his
practical-joking um:le.
9 :00 U (I) (JIJ Hunter An ambitious reponer using an in·
side contact on a series of
skid-row murders becomes

Hunter and McCall's prime
suspect in the crimes . (60
min.) In Stereo.
m 700 Club
(!) AWA Wreotllng
(I) •
(i)) Moonlighting
(CCI David persuades Maddie to hire a female con artist

I

RINGLE&amp; ' &amp; SERVICE. u p•

as the

rienOICI CII'PIR11f. t leculclen.

I REALLY 5f-'CO(
WP MY PARENT5

Y E6 TERDA.Y.

company· s new de·

tective. 160 min.)

Ill (I) (!II MOVIE: 'Socortd

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Serve'
(I) Auotln City Umitl:

I A6KEDA LOr OF
QUE5na-.15 A 60WT
MARR!AeE .. .

Plumbing
Heating

BARNEY
I SHORE DID, SHERIFF --

DID YOU CLEAN ALL TH'
TOo&gt;CU

.--·
"""
~-~~~

(J

J KJ
Answer here: (
1'est8fday's

I

Now arrange lhe Clrded letters to
form tMI surprise enawer, as

suo-

geote&lt;lb'l lhe allo'lt! cartoon.

...

I I Jt :t :t I I I ]
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: BRAWL THYME FINITE PAUNCH
Answer: That eecentrlc tten sal on an ax so she could
do thl a-" HATCH·ET"
.

BRIDGE
.

James Jacoby

Touch-and-go
heart contract

'AK

By Jomea Jacoby

tQ8 76&gt;

NORTH
tQ8 7 4

'•

tQ6

-"

EAST
Just to give you an idea of how Bra- · WEST
+
5
zil came so close to defeating the Unit- I +K J 10 9 6
'Q 8 6 2
ed States in the semiflnals of the
'e 42
tJ109 753
World Championship match last fall, + A9
+42
here is Brazilian declarer Marcello '
SOUTH
Branco in action. It was aggressive of ·
+A ! 2
North to bid game after Branco's
10 9 0
overcall, but the final contract had
tA
merit.
t K J 10 3
West for the U.S. team got off to the
Vulnerable: North-South
best lead - a low diamond. Branco
Dealer: West
won the ace and immediately sbot
back the club king. West grabbed the
Sotttlo
Nortb Eaot
ace and continued with the diamond West
Pass 1 NT
t+
king. Declarer's prospects now looked Pass
Pass .. .,
Pass
dim. He could trump, play A-K of Pass
hearts and return via his club jack to
play the jack of hearts. East would
Opening lead: t 2
win and continue diamonds, getting
ahead ol declarer in trumps to give L--- -- - - - - ---.J
South a terrible result. But Branco
knew what to do. On the diam.ond king
he simply discarded a low spade, letting West have.the trick. Now what '
There was really nothing to he done. West could see through the backa ,of
West tried another diamond, ruffed in the cards, he would let the club kina
dummy. South cashed dummy's other win at trick two. II the play then foilhigh heart, came to bis hand with the tinued as before, West could swi~b Ill
club jack and forced out the b•.art a spade after declarer discarded ·ott
queen. He still bad plenty of trumps to the king of diamonds, and South woiila
take care of the small ones remaining not be able to return to bis baud·JQ
draw trumps without allowing East~
in East's hand.
: ·
Could the band have been bealen' II ruff in with a small heart.

ln

'J

·~

,,

z' --

I GOT IT ALL!!

OUT Of SIIIUffV'S

,,_"''" .. , LOWEEZY ?

Excavating

~CIMCDf:af
ACROSS
1 Art

dom. (60 min.)
10:00 D CD illl Stingray Stingray
dons the garb of a part-time
evenge tis t to invesrtgate a
series of a• murders. 160
min.) In Stereo.
(I) CBN News Tonight
(I) • Gil Joe Piocopo New
Jenev Special (CCI Eddie
Murphy and Danny DeV ito
join Joe Piscopo for a comedy speciaL which in·

cludes spoofs of 'The Flint·
stones' and 'Miami Vice'.
(I) Sandbaggers

(jj) Newowotch
10:16 (I) NBA Baoketbllli: Playoff Game Teams to be announced. 12 hrs .. 30 min.l

II Visionary

10:30 ())Celebrity Chell
(]) Bobby Rlhal Explains
Indy Cer Reclng
(!)INN Nowo
Gil Grell! Outdoorl
@ News
1t :OO D ffi(J) D ())® D illl&lt;lll
Nowo
(D Mon from U.N.C.l.E
(]) lnoldo the PGA Tour

e

SNAKE!!
160T
1"HEMFOR
MY
BIR1i-IDAY II

GEE, I L-OVE. YOUR
~AU1"1FUL., 61G,
61.-UE'. EYE-S!!

()) SCTV ·

. ·.:.

donnant

..

'\ . ~ .

8 Generation

12 Forward
13 Laid
14 Skin
problem
15 Lingerie
trim
17 Mother

...
. . ..'"..

9 OanuiM'

tributary
10 Not
cooked
16 Macaw
17 Dawd le

18 "I Only

(Fr.)

_ Eyes

18 Chimpanfor You"
19 Yemen
zee in
o rbit
seaport
21 Haywire 20 Brewery
24 Spain's
need
fleet
21 Zhivago's
( 1588)

love

Yesterday 's Answer
22 European 35 Poker hand

.

~

....

36 Watson's

riwe r

23 Shore

warning

recess

37 Nervous

25 Birthmark 38 1t.sy - bit.s~
27 Foot
39 Fall guy·
lever
40 Gardner
30 Road
41 Youth
cove ring

•

43 Ending

34 Actor

r:---,.,..-..-..,.,...

•

' I

-.

for rub

Te rence

or fib

..•- "'

..

29 Chan~ u~'" b~~~--~

•

..

.. •,

.

~

.. '

-

"'

',.

. ...,.,•
."

DOWN

I Small
valley
2 English

..,
-. . '.
..
- •'1,

rive r

DAILY CRYPTOQUOO'ES - Here's bow to worlllt:

.

AXYDLBAAXR
iiLONGFELLOW

.

- -'

One letler slands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and foiTI18ti on of lhe words arc all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

.•

- ·-

CRYPTOQUOTE

5-13

N

JHQ ND ' X

L P Z X X

R X

(jj) Grell! RaiiWII'f Joumeya

of t11o World
11 :30 G (D (jJ) Tonight Show

-~

of view

5 Australian 5 Understand
wild dog 6 Unemployed
10 Plunder
7 Born (f'r.)

Live .
General Hauling

.

3 Snuggery
4 Point

movemenL

.."'

.. •'&lt;.

by JHOMAS JOSEPH

31 Church
season
32 "RieSS&lt;'d
- the
33 Assu&gt;~~e
35 S&lt;l(ltlent
36 Not many
39 Wardorf
or Caesar
42 Dwelling
44 Use
45 Amalgamate
46 Chaplain
47 Victim

i60min.J
Cil Odd Couple

Oood· 1 b ciY•tlng, benm_,t ..
footen, drNiwiYI. aeptlctanka,
lendac.plng . C1ll snytime 814·
Wl·4837. Jemet L. Davllon,
Jr. own•.

. .'

behind-the-scene s look a1 a

e

Q PA M

Q H ilZ

NA A PfiN I Z

.......
••
."

Tonight's guests are Jenni~
Q N D . X
A ZB I N RIJI MND
N
fer Holiday and Steven
Wri~~~,:&gt; min .)ln Stereo.
(D
Center
IW . BP O W N B O
Yl!f: K R D L
()) WKRP In Clnclnnoti
Yeet.enlay'a Cl')'ptoquote: TODAY I HAVF. GROWN
(Ill» Tui
TALLER FROM WALKING WITH TH E TREES - MRS
D ()) Simon a Simon f":
THOMAS EWS
~ ::-!
aurgeonfaci!'Qamalpractlce ...._....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
suit hires the Simona 10 •
ing semi-autobiog raphical
prove that the paiient suing
'. ', '•
Ill Bill Cooby Show
film , "Jo Jo Dancer, Your
him ia faking his injuries. (70
(I) ABC Newo NightMne
• •·
L~e Is CeiNng".
min.) (RI.
D
W
Nowo
··• Cil Rawhide
CIJJ!~!.I!'IIIatle . .
@ MOVIE: 'Wild River' - "" •
ClD MOVIE: 'The Grell!
D&lt;I!ABCNews Nlghtline
12:40 D ()) MOVIE: ( T~U~ureOf -~ .
Train Aollbery'
the Amazon'
. '
(IJ TI'IPPIJ John, M.D.
e
1B Eye on Hollywood
12:45 ([) MOVIE: 'The Proud and..·;:_
12:00 (]) Dl Clnlucho
12:30 a m ® 1.111e Night wtth
Top Rri
the llemned*
"'·''t
Devld l..etterrnln Tonight's
Lat Vag~~, 'IV (R).
guesll ere Joan Rivers and
1:oo ())
m Archltr
~~~~~·
. ·"
()) Entertoirtrtlent Tonight
Bunicer"o Place. •-"·
Anthony Edwards. (60 min.)
Comedlan/octor
Richerd
(!) WUd, Wild Wnt • """'
In S1oreo.
Pryor tolka about his,upcomD (j) CNN News

..

Motorcycles

87

CAt-J MAl&lt;:! A

26 Appropriate
28 Literary
work

struggling for movie star·

&amp;

Jamtt Boyt Water Servl~. Alto
poolo fllod . Coll114-2&amp;1-1 141
or 814·448· 117&amp; or 114 ·4487811 .

WHAT TOO MU'CH
CHAMF"A5t-JE
61NSL! f"E~SON (;70,

Gemge Jones I Vom Goodin
Gil Frontline: Hollywood
Dream• ICC) Take a
group of young hopefuls

Men Pow .... Inc., gener~l home
lmpi"'V'tment t , trM trlmmlng,
oddo end ondo. 304-171·2222.

8&amp;

'

(I)

Tr.. TrimrNng, •tump
remove!. Cell 304·175· 1331 .

Upholaterv

Hondt XR 210 dilt bike 1981 R • M Fumtturt MenufiC'Iurlng,
rm&lt;t.l prlc• .11 ,210. C•M 8a. . St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Oh. CtR
114-211-1470, coli Evt. 114441-1711.
·441 - 3438 . Old • now
1811 Hondo Y-11 Mt~~nt . 1100 Upholtertd.
CC Block. 3900 rnlloo. ltll
undtr w1rr.nty. 12110. E.111trt1. Mowrey'• Upholtteflng •Mng
trl countyar. . 21 .,.,,., Thtbllt
Colll14-742 ·2017.
In fumlture upholaterlng. All
1885 Hond1 VT 700 Shldaw, wortc gu1r1ntttd v6t lt ou r modlow miiMga, bought niW tflla ,em thoP It M11o n County
. IP•Ing. Excellent condition. Csll . Folrgroundt. Phont 304·1714114 .
114-948-2120.

-all-~ Hll
_....,-~ - Col 114·-.1·
-oto•ilo Rd., c-CitV.Oh. 7117-IPM.

(i)) Who"o tho Bon?

e

Fetty

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY 9HOP
7&amp;0 K Hondt Choppor Spoclol 1113 S.c. A~. . Otlllpollt.
ptlnt jg b, lots of chro,... C•l 81. ~ 4•U · 7833 or IU-441·
' 1133.
S1•·441-7312 ottor 4PM.

· Ctl

team is tricked into returning
10 Vietnam in order 10 rescue the illegitimate child of
arch-enemy General Ful·

=

•

ALLEY OOP

RON ' S hlewls ion Service .
Houte ctlll on RCA, Ouu1r,
GE. SpteltlllnD In Zonhh. CtU
304 -171·2391 or 114-441 ·
241 • .

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
COt. Fourth tnd Pin•
OtNipollt, Ohio
PhOne e14·448-3888 or 814·
441-44n

behind-the~scenes

look at "Star Trek IV : The
Voyage Home".
@ Bob Newhart
illl J..,.,...dy
B:OO G ffi ®A·TNm (CCI The

brigh1 . (60 min.)

..

e

19815 Ktwellki 414·Ninge. Clll
114-441-7414 oftlf 4PM.

Few ... or rent 1••70. 3 bdf.,

II())® Wheel of Fortune
()) Fewtty Towers
D (i)) Entertainment Tonight E.T. takes an e xclu·

m Dlktari

Home
lmprovemenu

Ken' s Water llf'VICI. WilL
1978 C-JI JOif. Good oondl- citlam1. pool• end wttlrbldl
tlon. 12100 Ctll 304· n3 . flltd. C•ll 114-317-0123 or
1371.
114·317-7741 or 304-175·
. 1247.
19M CJ5 , • • tr• good lhtp•.
rebuilt .,gin e. • cyl , 11 .000.00. Cot~. llm111one. grtvel. ate.
'73 Toyotl CeiiCI 1300.00. Dellvlt'ed 1 10n tnd up . Jim
:114-175-7419.
Ltnlw. 304-171-1247 or 17&amp;7387.
..

74

e (!) WKAP in Cincinnati
siva.

W .O .

197&amp; Cultomiled FOfd Vtn
E-100, bly w~dow, tunroof,
carpet, •eNO· GMI., w11tem
good r8dill•. no rust,
11 .900. Ctll 114-441-2847.

Newshour
D (jj} Oivcrco Coun
@ llomey Miller
(JIJ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 G (I) ()) New Newlywed

([) Major League Baaeball:
Atlanta Ill New Yorlt Mota

Good 1htpe, 304-418 · 11S9, .

73

llJI News
Gil
MacNeil-lehrer

Game

Roofing, t iding, remod•llng.
ptindng hou111 snd roofs, end
general rsp1k. Estlm•te•. csll
81•·985-4121 .

83

eCilJefferoon•
II Cll Jeopardy
(I) Nightly 8uoine11 Re-

I]) 1 9B6 SuperCitllt Special

Eattdor ttucco plllterlng •
pltrtll' rep-'r · Ctll 114·211·
I 182.

82

t

tALBBUE

Moments'.

port

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncooditkJn1l lifetime gu•r•n·
tee. Loetl rlf.,...,cet fumillhed .
Free tltlmate•. Call collect
1-814·237-0488, dty or night.
Roger• 8ttemenl
Waterproofing.

'811 Chovy plcltup. oorlto C-10,
PUnning botrdt tnd slid in g bad!:
gleu, 9, 5 95 mlle1, pric •

19,1500. 304-178-21B9.

l.COK 1 1tJH4 OOil'T,~~~~'"

~pons

(CCI

Rottry or clbl• tool drilling.
Mott well• complttedllm t dey .
Pump teltt and ltfVIce , 304981-3802

I I I

ute

Scernpw truck campw. 8 ft .
pop·up fo r llgttt truckt. Alto
Hobtlrt Meat Grinder. Call 11 • ·
742-28n.

Starb Tree tnd l ewn Servi ce.
IMdiCsplng. 30'·1578 ·i 010 .

~-

.

Abdui-Jabbar begins a sa~
to 'T.. V.'s Greatest

BORN LOSER

1'42-3033 .

maeon, ptlnter, roofing (I ncludIng hot tlf IPPIICI11on) 304·
171-2088 Of 171· 7388.

... ...

Film Festival, and Kareem

19711 Chevron E.lecutl\11 26 ft. •
Travel Trsller. Like nMN condi·
tlon •duiK very little. He• new
20 ft. IWnlng. Original COI10Wir
111.100. Aoklng n 2oo. 814-

Roofing, Plinttng, room eddl·
tlont. .tc. Fr• .-tlmlt•. 17
.,..,. .. perl.nce. a a W Con·
etructk)n . Ceiii1•·••8-BB88or
111.·245-8448 ~e· •· .

.'

...

the 39th Annual Cannes

21 ft. Clau A Mcnorhome.
E1111CU1Ne. Fully-equipped, ex.
cond. 31,000 mil•. 112 ,000.
c.u 814·441 -4897.

81

.

. ..-

I ELUSO

7:00 G (I) PM Mogarine
(I) AI'- Smith ond Jonn

t'M ~ A&amp;XJI" '1tW.' 06r, B.!\ I

79

..
'-

·.:t..~-

Gil Body Electric

•lona,
•llnrfron
. Overdrive
t • rNr WhHI
trantml
drtve.
a·
tren•mlsslon kltt • tom conwr·
ten. Wlginl rebuild kltt •. C1ll
814· 37&amp;·2220 .

Serv1ces

1814 Pontile FllfO, 4 cylinder. 4
aplld , AC, AM-FM Itt..., whh
Cllllfttl, red, turbine whHit.
t7000. Co11814·742-2177.

• NIIUI't 4x4 King Cab deiUIIII,
llh MW, I spd .• PS . AM· FM
cs ..ette. 1 1 . 000 mllee 17.100.
C•ll114 -388-11738 .

c.u

PO\'i!R.

1978 Uncoln M1rk IV. GODd
r.ond. 11 .al0. Ctl 814-448· 1978 Wllderne.. C•mp•. 18ft.
0390.
Self·conttln ld . Exclllent cond l·
tlon. Cllll1• ·742-3137 .
Ctn you buy Jtep~, Clnl, 4"4'1
Mb.t In dNg reid• for und• 17 ft •If cont1lnld, IIHPI 6,
1100.001 C1ll for facu today! stove. rtfr'uer•tor, toilet trll,
(115)3B3· 3338 E•t. 19B.
bs nery. electric snd Qlll l'uhtl,
:114-1171- It 41 .
1971 PW!to Runlbout. Law
mll... e. runs goad. ntedt work.
1100. Ctlll14-912-1181.

GtNipolll.

~ buy tob•cc:o bell.
Colll14-211-1112.

r

(]) Revco'o World Claao
Womon
(I) Gunomoke
(I) D &lt;I! ABC News
(!) Oqe 0.V Ill 1 Time
G ClliB CBS News

AH typet uted &amp; rebuilt tr•n•·
million• S. tranfer c ..... Will

Csmsro . Good motor II
t r•nsmhslo n. 13150. Cell 11•·
""1~ 2990 or 814·448-3118.

Wanted

lot·-·•

LO~E

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce11ories

Wrocktd ' 71 Novo ...bulh ongne, 10,000 mil•. u c cond.
nsw ttudd•d snow t h u ,
1800.00 . 30•· 875-G8 5.

I I I

.. .
-"

loor ordinary ......_

Cil Dlffrent SlnJkeo
(1)3-2· 1, Contect (CCI

IF WATER
GST!HO THl'
EN61NE7, WE'1-~

J""-.

one letter to NCh square, to form

e

(I) Doctor Who

~~~:·:•:":""::·"'=====~;::========~

UoiiCIIFT'I&gt;It t'*olour

Cll llJie &lt;I! illl

News
()) Green Acres

only .

n

111 - · &lt;*&gt;to to 114-441-7141.

7&amp;

~fliJN} fj}\1 ~THAT ICIWIIILED WORD_.
171 Hen&lt;l Arnold tnd Bob lee

~ ~ ~~ ~

MNINQ

1 I ft.LOWI Alu rrinumbttl boat.
Trolling motot, depth finder, 1e
HP EnlnrodeMoto•. 12000flrm.
Ctll 114 ·7•2· 2971 even~g1

:;;;:::;;:::;::;;:::;:;::===

. Col 114-241·

1 I lil t

The Daily

DRAIC

5/13/86

20 ft . ctillng cabin. l20 MerCrul ..r, 1·0 , 1&amp;.000 fttm. Cell
It 4-448·0727 .

hail-.

to ttl.
1214.

TRACY

1914 Ktwtttld KOX200 dirt
bike. lice MW, ' " ' 110 mll11,
antwlf' tlllrlcef, 11 .371.00 .
Ctll 304-1171-7119.

-S&lt;:~ubb'&lt;~ ~ t'loo&gt;.

...,......

Uhrty 12xl0. 2 btlr. with
DUDCnfn-::e·orad ooncl. Prlold

Motorcyclea

:Phone 304· 773-8244.

&lt;lOt oli t~.. lc:1W....r. wk.\&lt;. Ycu'Roo

For Nit: Mtglc Chef electric
1100, white
double oven
Two hlilf·regilttrld polled Hert·
'NOOCien table 1215, yellow kit·
ford buJII. 14 months ~d . re~
chtn chine cabinet 1&amp;0. til in
12150 mo. .,..,, u111hMe .
lor ~Ice . Phono 1.14-912, ood condition. 811 1t 251 So . .
114-241-11111.
1'418. '
ourth Avt., Mlddi'I'Ort. Oh.
Upltaln unfum . 1pt: for rlll'lt. 4 Twin bod. c:h•t• dMir, booth,
2
Chl•ln• Bull, 3 .,..,. old,
roonw • both. Coli 114-441•d table. 2 .....,. cheln.
Block, brick, morter end me· epprox 1.100 lbs, 1700.00.
3111 .. 114---1-0410.
114·441-1184.
;114-743·15091 .
~anry &amp;~ppll• . Mountlin State
fum . efficiency, 3 room a bath,
llodt, At. 33, NM' HIWII, W.
Orten cerpllt, 2 plecee. 12•1• Vt. 304-882·2222.
c.plttd a quiet. Single working
64 Hey lit Grain
p...., onlv. Ctlll14--.l-4107 MCh &amp; 1 rat florsl rocker. C1ll
114-441·2143 .
or 114-441·2102.
Pete for Sele
68
2 bd•. unfumlehed tj7t.. excep1 Good Ulld refrigwttor, lkfe by ·
Mixed hlyfor1111. Squtrebtlll,
lido, ovocodo. CtN 11 4-311flfft cunlng. niYtr wet. I .71 per
rongo. lee. doproq.
Coli 1"·441-4303.
8881 """' 4:30.
Dregonwynd C1nii'Y K.. nll. btlt. Ctn 114·742-2007 """'
CFA Hlrnelty.,, P.-lltn .. d 4:30.
3 bdr. untumlah.t, 1 bdr. Country 01111. fumlture now In BIMn.. kktena. AKC Chow
ttDdl. Coff• r.nd •d tlblet,
fumllhld . Vou PlY utllttl•. no
H-v for 1111 100 btln. UIO.
round paded-' 1nd drop, leaf puppl11. New pupp-. • kment. Ctlllt4-992-131B.
poto. Colll14---l-0321 .
tlbiM. comlf' cupbaltd, 2 pc. Call 461·38._. after 7PM.
1 Mdroom 1pt. for rtnt . Bille Qtlllbolfdt. dry llnllt. IICrttory
Plfllllloo •ltvorblut. Mllllld h•r ...ge ~utre bsl•.
,_, 1Wi1 1211. 1 month thlt delict, ctt• of drlwers. cheit'a. Chow-Chow
11 .35. 30~117I!HMS78 .
AKC
A
fl.
ChornplonbloodllnM.
lndudoo ttl utll-. D-h LMt• -.cdon. Cankle' t , At. 7. . E•. ptdigrtM. Ctll 114-211·
roqulrod of 1200. Contoct Yll· Tuppftpl..,., Oh.
1271 .
ltgo M1n0• Apt. Mlddloport.
1,: n, porLIII on
r.,g,,
Not
Electric
Hot
Pomt
114-912· 7787. Equol Houoln8
I AKC R~g .. l•.t Elkhound
·quite
:Z
yMrt
old.
bo.llent
Opportunity.
condHion. 1300. 0111114-742- pup1. I ~. out of good'"'
. dogo. good poto, 1100 ·
FDor rtnt: 2 bedroom tumlthed 2141.
114-ZIII· 1ZI3.
71
Autos for Sale
tpt . Aduho only. Coli 114-SI2Pickens Ulld Furniture. Good
2741 .
quetlty ullld fumlture. Op• 9 m 1 yr. old Qullc• p1rrll. ctge •
Al*lrMn1 for ,..t, Utltl• . I or cMt tor eppoint1Mft1. ell acctuorl•. et the 101 to
... ttiiL 1100. Ctll 114lndudod. 'umlohod. CtU 114- 304-171-1413 Of 171-1410.
. 317-0411.
882-1217.
4 cuolllon oolo. 1110.00. Wing
c:holt. bluo, 188.00. loth
• room and beth. Unfumlthed. A-1
I IIIII :\ii iJiilll' '
aond. 1209 8.,d Hll Rotd,
No pot•. Ct11114-141-22U
Point Pltooont.
&lt;\ IIVI' :. IIIi.k

2 bdr. 111fumlahed with applltn001 It 111 Third. GoH'"IIo.

Television
Viewing
Ohio
......

Tuesday, May 13, 1986

1181 Kowtookt KlC ~10. ouno

"::!"';' ::!:

.,.."*"'

May 13, 1988

··•c. lookl , good. 1111.00 .

=

:s ....... turnlilhod. Nopoto.Ctl , r,~~
114·11.. 2213.
.chld..,o IIW lupolv. Yln.,n,
APAATM!NT*, mollltt hornoo. '0h. l14·:11!1·1114.
Pt. P-ond
for good uool borgein
Ill. 114-441·1221.
aolor TV. Coli 114-4411148.
Mlddltporl ~ 2 bf.fuma.hed IPl
fur ""t 1110 2 room effldf!IIC'I 2 CMHttl deok• tnd ~It' .
..,t. 304-112·2111.
Colll14·448-2114.
Mt. Vemon Aw. MW 3 room. Ufetlme oonc:rete culverts, 1 :z
- · ...,nd floor tpt. Prtvtto lndl1o 31 lnrlt. in ttocll. Lltflt
........ ond lllftdnl, 30.4 -171- Nil IVIHible. up 10 8 ft . Csl
4110 Of 1171-1112.
114 -882-2134 or 114-M2·
Anen,.On · Marlhlll ttudent• 11704.
now ..mlng 1 •d Z bedroam 'N~~Wiy ptlnt.t N8 · tr1010r for
r,r 1111 ~~~~~-- ~ ule. New tl,.., e ft . !lflldtr
Huntington. &amp;omeju• onablook
bl.te. Trail• for .. 1.. Wllftr8de
from r.fanhlllooe~ owned end for
Cttovy 01 GMC Trucll. Col
op. .t... 304-111-MIO.
114·81&amp;-4312.

hou-.

21

74

Mlac. Mll'diendlae IKIT'N'CARLYLE ®byLirryWrlght
.
1

...... 2 - m .... unfu~ !WiL Uttlt't Rofilo. • APIII ..
nu. p~uo ,c _ Oh 114-317-0440
·utlltill. lwru .,., Clff 114- ·
·
1
111·1117.
• For ... niW Ylrd-m111 mawera.

- · · Coli _..... .. ..

Wll

,M

Apertmlllt
for .R ent

TUIIdl'(,

Ohio

M

PEANUTS
A GOOD OUTDOORS
PERSON LEARNS TO
PREDICT Ti-lE WEAT~ER

''FAIR ANDWARMER'.'

CAN ANI/ONE TELL ME

AMAZING! TELL

W~ATT~ E

WEAl).(EJC: IS
GOING TO 6E TODAY?

us ~ow '(Ou

KNEW l).(AT...

rn

- ~ '((?

·- _---

-~ --

lloJdnu ""'"

e

�"

Ohio

VMH celebration
kicks off obsenrance
The 25 residents of Veterans Memorial Hospital Skllled

Nur.llng-lntennedlcatl' Care Facility joined til:&gt; nation Monday In a
klckttf Cl'll'bratlon of National Nursing Hol!ll' Wl'l'k.
Corsages and boutonnieres were presentro to till' residents and
· each one l'eCI'lvlng a colorful lap robe !rom till' Retired Senior
Voluntel'r Program of the Ml'lgs County Cru.rll on Aging.
On behalf or l'ornl'roy VIUage Council, Broo&gt; Hero, president,
taikl'd on till' nero to reflect on the llfl'tlrne contributions and
achievement of till' residents, and of till' Impact which thl'y have
made on the lives of olhers.
As a conclusion to the program planned by Carolyn Brown,
activities chairman, several of the residents rrovro to the patkl to '
watch a balloon laqnch.

&lt;

•

_Village seeks land
(Contll1uro !rom page 1)
animals are located because ol. the
alleged dangers lnvolvro. He suggestro that some legislation be
adopted In ihl' tllwn regarding pit
hull$. Mayoc Holtman will secure
such legislation !rom the Ohio
Municipal League. Durtng ihl'
discussion, CouJ¥:llman Bob Gil·
more questlonl'd bow the council
could legislate against one partlcular breed of dogs.
Council again volcl'd complaints
against Consolklatro Communlcatlons which serves the town with
cable television service. Complaints were aired against ihl'
"rolling schroule" and the fact that
a representative of the company
does notattenda council meeting to
discuss the service with council.
"

Councilman Hortoo vowed that
olllclals will not fo~t till' lack or
response by till' company to the
wishes of subscribers.
Councilman Gilmore suagested
that the town employ an attorney to
handle the necessary paper work
lnvolvro In a plannl'd annexation o1.
property below Middleport tt the
village solicitor, Steven Story, Is too
busy 1o handle the matter.
Mayoc Hoffman Indicated that he
will get In ilucll with Stocy on the
matter. The may&lt;r announced the
opening of the pool ror May 24.
Attending ihl' session were
Mayor Holtman, Clerk-Treasurer
Jon &amp;de, and councilmen. Horton,
GUmore, Jack Satterfield, William
Walters, Allen Ll'l' King and James
Clatworthy.

I

Racine council accepts resignation
Racine VIUage CouJ¥:11 met
Monday night In special session and
accepted ihl' resignation of ClerkTreasurer Shirley Evans, effective
last Saturday, May 10.
Council passed a resoluUon auth·
orlzlng CoUJ¥:il President Pro-Tern
Frank Cleland, in absen&lt;J&gt; d Mayor
Charles Pyles, and In necesslty of
continuing village operation, to
assume the authortty of ihl' mayor
and appoint a person to ftll Evans'
unexplrl'd term.

Upon COIICUITence d COUJ¥:0
members, Cathy L. Carleton was
named to flU the clerk-treasurer
position, which expires March 31,
198l.
Oeland administered till' ooth of
office to Carll'tDn.
Council reminds residents of
clean-up days on Wronesdays, May
14 and 21, and Thursdays, May 15
and 22. The village truck wilt haul
itl'mS for tree If placro at till' curb.
The next ml'l'tlng or council wUI
be 7 p.m., Monday, May 19.

Gallian found guilty to three
counts of not filing tax

OOLORFlJLIAPROBE!! -Hand p6eced and lied, a cololfullaprobe
.,.. J11 !led lo each rl.lhe 25 reoldenlllrl. Veterans Memorial H08pllal
ExteDde4 Care Fadllty Mooday as a part d the oblervanoe fl. National
Nllnlinl Rome Week. Melmda ~. Jell, and Mae Weber, second
from llshl. of lhe Rellred Senior Volumeer Program, p11881ld Cllllhe
Japrobea ., lhe reoldenls.

CINCINNATI- A Gallla County
man has pleadl'd no contest to three
charges of falling to file federal tax
Income tax returns In U.S. Dlsbict
Court.
Kenneth 1. Wise, 55, entered ihl'
pleas Monday and was found gullty
by U.S. Magistrate Robert A.
Steinberg, according to Anthony W.
Nyktas, U.S. attorney for ihl'
Southern Dlstrtct of Ohio, and
William R. Britt. chief ~ the
Internal Revenue Service Criminal
Investigation Dlvlskln.

wood, W.Va .. and a former Cheshire village councilman, Wise was
Indicted Feb. 6 by a federal grand
jucy with !allure to ftle Income tax
returns for 1979, 1981 and 1981. The
lndlclrnent asserted that Wise
eaml'd gross income d $'1.8,976.38 bt
1979, $00,243.441n 198) and ~.!81. '18
In 1981.

13.

Area deaths
Janet E. Gatkie

Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home:

Janet Ewing Reuter Gatkle, 78,
Pontiac, Mich., formerly of Pomeroy , dlro Sunday In Rochester,
Mich.
She was a dau!!hter or ihl' late
Ben and Allee Ewing, Pomeroy.
Among the survivors are two
sons, Lawrence Reuter, Springfield
Township, Mich., and Roger
Reuter, Drayton Plains, Mich., and
two sisters, ·Mrs. Macy Buck and
Mrs. Helen Norris, Pomeroy.
Services were held at 2 p.m:
tDday at ihl' Lewis E. Wlnt and Son
Funeral Horne In Oarkston, Mich.,
with Rev. Doug R. Trebilcock
dftclatll1g. Burial was In Stiles
Cemetery, Lapeer, Mich.

Mildred Phillip!!
t'Uneral services for Mrs.
Mildred C. PhllUps, 75, 4Jl38 State
Route 124, Pomeroy, woo dlro
Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hogpltal, have been set for 1 p.m.

Born April 3, 1911 bt Gallipolis,

Mrs. PhUllps was a daughter r1 thl
late John and Ada Davis McClas·
key. She was a retlrl'd postmlstresl&gt;
d the MlnersvUle Post OffiCI' and
was a member of the Minersville
United Metbodlst Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Barbara L. Nease, Orlando, Fla.; five
grandchildren, Richard Nease,
James Nease and Cynthia Elliott,
all of Bell!ontalne; Sondra Winter
and David Nease, Orlando, Fla.; a
brother, James McClaskey, Indus-_
try, Pa., and seven great·
grandchildren.
Beskles her parents, she was
precl'dl'd In death by her husband,
WUllam C. Phllilps on Feb. 1,198i,
and a brother.
Officiating at Thursday's servl·
ces will be Rev. Steve Nelson and
hurtal will be In Meigs Memocy
Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m . Wronesday.

Meigs cheese distribution set
A surplus chi'I'Se and ooney
dlstrtbuUon has been set at eight
locations In Gallla and Meigs
counties for Wednesday, according
to Gallla-Melgs Community Action
Agency.
There Is no set tlrne for til:&gt;
dlstrthuUon, but the agency said
giveaways wiU begin as soon as the
food Is unloadro at the sites.
Dlstrtbutton will end at 3 p.m. or
when the supply runs out, whl·
chever comes first.
Required documentation In·
eludes a food distribution card.
Those wbo do not have tll:&gt;ir ca~
but have applled for ann been

Emergency squads
answer four calls

Four caUs were answered by
local units Monday, tbe Meigs
County Emergency Mrolcal Services reports.
Nyktas said Wise faces a maxi·
At 3:53 p.m., the Salem Fire
mum penalty of one year In prtson
Department
went to the highway
and a $10,100 fine for each of the
The stall' highway patrol cltro
counts. Under existing law, a Charlene E. Nutter, 27, Rt. 1, : near Meigs Mine 1 to clean up and
person convlctro of criminal tax GuysvWe, for assured clear dis- remoVe gas !rom the road woore a
o!fen.ses, In addition to whatever tance In a two-vehicle collision on truck had overturned; Racine at
sentenoe Is Imposed, Is also re- Ohio 7 In Chester Township 5:30 p.m. took Kay Roberts to
quired to pay the tax determinro to Monday.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
be due as well as Interest and civil
Troopers said Nutter was south· Thppers Plains at 9:07 took Floyd
penalties that may be assessl'd.
bound, five-tenths d a mile south c1 Barrtnger to Route 681 to Pleasant
Wise entered the plea after Ohio 248, at 2: 13 p.m. and was Valley Hospllal and at 10:17 p.m.,
reiterating ail earUer claim he. unable to stop for a slowing vehicle Racine went to Long Bottom for
made before the magistrate that he ahead drtven by Paul R. Dunfee, 56, Elza Larkins wbo was treatro but
not transported.
walvro his U.S. citizenship and was Rt. 1, Guysville.
an Independent sovereign, and
Nutter's vehicle struck the rearcl
therefore was no longer subject to the Dunfee vehicle, ownl'd by Veterans Memorial
taxation. Steinberg rejected Wise's Thppers Plains-Chester Water DlsAdmltted .. Truman Priddy,
claim iJ amotion for dismissal on trtct, trooperssald. Nutter'sv
le Pomeroy; Beulah Hay es,
March 21.
was moderately damaged
An employee of Kaiser Alumi- there was no damage to the Dunfee
Dlscha
..Frances Luikart,
num &amp; Chemical Corp. In Ravens, .. vehicle.
Gladys Walburn, Arlene Taylor.

Motorist cited
following accident

approvro for them can pick up the
cards at the distribution sltes.
Food can be picked up for senilr
citizens, the Ul or the handlcappl'd If
those perSons send their food
commodity card and a signed oote
granting permission to another
person tD pick up the Items.
Food distribution sites In Meigs
County are Tuppers Plains fire
station, Racine Amertcan Legion
Hall, Meigs County Fairgrounds
and PagevWe Town Hail. In Gallla
County, sites are Guyan Township
Volunteer Fire Department at
Mercerville, GaUia County Fair·
grounds, Guiding Hand School and
Mount Carmel Baptist Church at
Bidwell.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVElAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Nwnher
lm.
Ticket sales totaled $1,19S,m,
with a payoff due of 5328,!187.00.
PICK-4
9187.

i,---SAVE
-------------------------_THIS COUPON I

1

1

1

I1

1
1

IS

-ANY SIZE ROOM

S22 95 011111

Health department sponsors clinics

I'LOWEIIS FOR EVERYONE - RSVP pen10nnel ..-ovlded
'::::~-:::
each resident. Here Melinda Christy pins
I COIII!Ie on ~:::s~
Mrs. Grace Colwell

-Weather forecast
. Showers and thunderstorms likely today, with highs In the low 'ills.
f:-,Ciollldy tonight, with a chance~ soowers and a low In the upper OOs.
;Cloudy Wednesday, with a chance of showers and thunderstorms
·and highs In ihl' upper 7&amp;.
Extended Forecasl
'l'llunday through Sa&amp;unlay
· · .. A chance of showers each da,y, with hlghs ranpng !rGm too 'lOs to
llle low 888.. Ovemi«hl lows cenerall;y wlll be In the 50s.

'·

Banquet set Thul'llday

• The Meigs Junior !Ugh School
.sports banquet will be held at 6: 3IJ
Thursday at Meigs !Ugh

School. Each athlete ond-or parent
Is to take two side dishes, vegeta bles or dessert.

BULLETIN

ARD

n.

Two free blood pressure clinics
will be conductro by the Meigs
County Department of Health In
observance of national high blood
pressure month being observro In
May.
The clinics wlll be held at
Wednesday; May 14, and Wednesday, May 21, from 8:311 to 11 a.m.
and from 12 noon to 2:30p.m. at the
department's quarters In the mult ipurpose building on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
According to Jon Jacot.;, county
deputy health commissioner, high
blood pressure or hyptertension Is
til:&gt; permanent tightening up of
arteries because something has
gone wrong with lhe system that
regulates ihl'ir size. Ten percent of
people with high blood pressure
have an underlying disease that Is
causing the rtse In blood pressure.
For people over 45 a somewhat
higher blood pressure Is conslderro
a normal range.

r}JJL'

675-2295

Hyperll'nslon, Jacobs says, usu- trollro. Treatment inCludes weight
PLEASANT, WV.
ally begins to be a problem from reduction, exercise, avadlng salt,
SERVING MIDDLEPOFIT,
ages II to 00 but It can occur In any fatty meats and cholestral Jich
POMEROY &amp; GALLIPOLIS
age group. It Is most Ukely to occur foods, relaxation techniques, con·
AS~ ABOUT
In more men than women, people tlnulng the medication prescribed
woo are soort and heavy or those by the doctor.
woo are overweight, womendurtng
The public Is lnvltro to visit the
pregnancy &lt;r while taking birth ll:&gt;alth departl!li'Dt durtng ihl'
control pills, people woose blood designated time perlom for the
pressure varies from normal to · blood pressure clinics.
11. .15 51:111/16
high, and relatives of people who
6------------~-~
have hypertension.
r;-----------..L.----------Altbough till' cause ri hypertension Is unknown, Jacot.; reports,
thl're are several theories cl Its
origin Including rontlnual frustra ·
lion and stress, heredlty,excesssalt
and fat In ihl' diet, minerals In food
and water. Usually there are no
symptoms of high blood pressure
but It may manifest breathlessness,
nose bleeds for no apparent reason,
severe headache with nausea and
dizziness.
Altoough high blood pressure
cannot be cured, It can be con·
.

~l!g~~·

Waiting In Line

Doesn't Have To Be

~,

FREE HEARING TEST
$50°0 Value
FACTORY·TRAINED BELTONE HEARING
AID SPECIALISTS WILL BE ON HANOI

FIOM 9:00-2:30 P.M.

Come In with thla coupon tor 1..1.

1 Little

SMIIIIIG tmAliON TAU(
Sp lnltflll ly
"-•nt , ..., llllpilol

TONIGHT AT 7:30 P.M.
In 11M llotpital Dining loom

2 Little

3 Little

It ~ays

election full
of big upsets

CALL

Mason County Tuesday.
County commission candidates
It was a night for upsets Tuesday
on the Democratic ticket, in
In Mason County .
addition to Mayes, with 1,529 votes,
Losing his seat In addition to and Whalen, with 1,073, were Keith
Incumbent county Commissioner Biggs of Point Pleasant, 342 votes,
Michael E. Whalen, who was Roger Hughart of Polnl Pleasant,
defeatro in his bid for tbe Demo- 284, and Donna Greene of Letart,
cratic nomination by Thomas 236.
'1'ucker" Mayes, was Incumbent
Earl Kl'l'fer of Letart, who Is the
school board member Blll Witll:&gt;rs Republican nominee for county
of Ashton. Mason County voters, commission, garnerro 1,452 votes,
e lecting two sc hool board while his opponent, Wayne Austin
members, chose Chester Pyatt of of Point Pleasant, recelvro 810
Mason and Incumbent Harty Siders votes.
of Galllpolls Fercy.
Republicans and Democrats also
Pyatt was the leading wtp-getter electro members of their county
In the school board race, receiving executive committees Thesday.
Electro to'tlllfDemocratlc Exec·
2,763 votes. Siders receivro 2,303,
Withers, 2,371. Olston 0. "Nick" utlve Committee were Cathy
Wright of Mason, 2,288, and Ron Mayes and Ross Roush, both of
Mason, in Magisterial District I,
Devrlck of Gallipolis Ferry, 1,506.
Pyatt and Siders will take office Committee District I; Sarah K.
Elias and James E. Ellas. both of
July I.
Other party nominees include Letart, In Magisterial District I,
Josephine "Tommy" Hanes, the Committee Dlsbict 2: Audrey
Incumbent county clerk who was Hoffman and Ernest Grimm, both
unopposl'd In the primary election. of Letart, in Magisterial District II,
Hanes, who recelvro 3.104 votes. Committee District 3; Garnet
second In numbers only to Con- Herdman and Wade Rollins. both of
gressman Bob Wise on the Denno· Letart, Magisterial District II,
cratlc ticket In Mason County, will Committee District 4; Dorothy
face Point Pleasant Mayor Jimmy Mitchell and Bill Leport. both of
Joe Wedge, who was also unop- Point Pleasant, Magisterial Dis'
(Xl~ In the 'prtmary. Republican -- trict I U, Committl'l' District 5.
Qara Powers and Dick Thomas.
voters gave him 1,867 votes.
Incumbent Circuit Clerk Miles Magisterial Dlstrtct 111, Committee
Epling, running unopposro In the District 6; Irene Gardner of
primacy, recelvro 2.210, the highest Gallipolis Ferry and George
number g1ven a Republican In
1Continued on page 161

992-2156

Be4mu Hearing Aid Center
Walk-Ins Welcome!
'(

...

By NANCY YOACHAM

,.
J

Skipp reportro that the faclllty
"will be totally prtvate by the end of
til:&gt; year" and alt)Klugh !Orne local
residents have already joinro the
resort, he Is in hopes ri many more
local memberships.

DRILUNG UNDERWAY -AmasslverotarydriU
Is helnp; used by wOrkers for the Alan Slone Co. of
CheSerblll 10 drll 41 holes, each 25 ft. deep, In the
hlllslde along a 700 ft. sUppage on Union Ave. The
huge holes are helnp; !IUro with relnfor&lt;J&gt;d cor&gt;:&gt;retelo
repair til:&gt; slippage and prev&lt;'flt furlll:&gt;r erosion oo the
hlllslde. The $298,000 project Is being SUJlf"'lvlsed for

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI I - The
Ohio House of Representatives was
to vote tnday on a compromiSE'
workers' compensation reform bill
negotlatro durtng the last month by
business -and labor -orient ed
lawmakers.
The House was to convene all: .10
p.m., but It was bellevro party
caucuses might be necessary to
furnish a vole- count on the
controversial legislation. HouSE'
Speaker Vernal Riffe, D-New Bas·
ton, said the bill Is bipartisan and
will require Democratic and Republ ican votes.
The Senate was to convene It s
Initial post -primary elcction session
at 1:30 p.m.
Riffe acknowledgro "nervous·
ness" on til:&gt; part of some of his

Democratic members, woo may
face labor opposition II they support

the workers' comp bill. Labor
prefers the status quo, while
busilless groups have complalnro
the existing system Is too costly.
Riffe lndlcatro he would back his
members with campaign financia l
asslstancc If necessary to gain their
votes for the compromise biJIIn the
face of union threats.
" ! suppon this bill because ... it's
a lair bill to Industry and a fair bill
to the Injured worker," said the
speaker.
Riffe had to do a little negotiating
of his own in the privacy of his office
late Tuesday after two of his
members helpl'd push through an
amendment that would have sabotaged the settlement.

After the vote on the amendment
was reversed, the Commerce and
Labor Committl'l' adoplro the
comproml&gt;;e bill 11-6 and sent II to
the floor.
Moret han axJ rank-and -file union
members. most of them from the
Unit ed Autoworkers Union ,
jammro tre ll:&gt;arlng room to watch
the action on the bill, which places
limits on lawsuits lilro by injurl'd
workers collecting compensation.
and imposes fines d. up to $25,lXXI for
each safety violation by a company.
The ll:&gt;aring was to ratlfy an

GALLIPOLIS - Callla County
sheriff' s Investigators are proceed·
ing with a probe stemming from the
seizure of 944 marijuana plants
from sewage treatment plants
ownro or opera tro by the count y.
The plants were confiscatro from
facilities at the intersection of Ohio
7 and Raccoon Road, on Bulaville·
Addison Road at Addison and at
Rodney Village II. a sherllf's
spokesman said.
Agents from the Bureau of
Crlrninal lnvestlgatlon particlpatro
In the Investigation, the spokesman
said. The Investigation was made
public Thesday by Sheriff James
M. Montgomery. Montgomery
notro there have been no arrests In
coitnectlon with the raids, con-

Qtolltl .

llllllrwt

-~~·

agreement reachro last week
between R,Pp. Clifton Skeen. DAkron, the committee chairman,
and Sen. Richard Finan, R·
Cincinnati, after weeks of private
talks.
Finan was the autoor of a bill
preferrl'd by the business commun·
ity. Skeen represented the viewpoint of orga nized labor, which
wantro no changoes at all in the
existing system that Insures Injured
workers.
AI; the union mem!Frs cheerro
their leaders' ex pressro opposition

to the agreement, the commit tee by
a surprise vote of 9-8 adopted an
amendment liberalizing the provl·
sions for !Uing a lawsuit against a
company's "Intentional tort" - a
deliberate attempt to cau:;e illness
or injuty to a worker.
Alter an hour-long recess, Riffe
convin&lt;J&gt;d Reps. Ike Thompson,
0-Cieveland, and John Shivers,
0-Salem, to reverse their votes,
defeating the amendment, 10-7.
"I hadn't really understood it as
well as I toought I did, " said
Thomp&lt;;on. ac knowlroging he
talk!'d to the Speaker.

dueled primarily on Monday.
The department spokesman said
the investigation ha s been under
way for some tlrn c. He addl'd that
the probe would continue today. He
said "good poliae work" lro the
depanment to invest igate til:&gt; sites.
Deputies and BO investigated
several other county ownro or
controlled sewage plains. but found
no marijuana .
Callla County commissioners
were lnformro marijuana plants
were being grown at the sites
Monday when Commissioners'
President KaiJ Burleson signed
au thor12at ion allowing depul iesand
BCI onto the property .
"We were unaware any of this
was going on," Burleson said. " We
want this thing cleared up and we

are cooperating 100 percent with
the sheriff's department."
The department brlefro Commissioners J.E. " Dick" Cremeens and
Verlin Swain on til:&gt; Investigation
during Tuesday's commissioners'
meeting.
"The only thing I can say is, we
will continue to Investigate, and we
will continue to bum 1marijuana
plantsl," Montgomety said. "The
more we oold It down , the retter it Is
for the children."
Altoough It was not a factor In this
investigation, Montgo:Jmety cltro
the use of ihl' sheriff's hotllne for
d11Jg Information. The hotllne
allows people with knowledge of
drug orothercrlme-related activity
to share Information anonymously
with til:&gt; department.

House passes Boster~sponsored bill

EASim WAY TO RECIIVI
YOUR OOVIRNMINT CHICK.

Nowtt.-w.v•.

the Ohio Department of Transportation by syracuse
resident Kenny Buckley. A water lne has already
been movro I&lt;J til:&gt; opposite side ofthe slreetandanew
storm sewer, curbing, gutter and pavem&lt;'fll wDl be
Installed as soon as repairs are complete. ODOT has
until July 31 I&lt;J finish repairing the site.

Gallia lawmen find marijuana
plants on county properties

IT'S THI QUICKEST AND

21tl JICIIIM A '-lllfi'JN·nt, w. v•.

Open just one month, Royal Oak
Resort at Five Points already has
51 members and expects to have600
to 700members by the end of a year.
"It's an excellent program,"
comi'Tlentro Stephen Skipp, general
manager of the park, as he spoke at
Thesday's meeting of the Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commer&lt;J&gt;, held
at the Trinity Church.
Skipp updated chamber
members on recent Improvements
to the facility , including the purchase of a number of recreational
coaches which will sleep nine and
are available on a ren:al basis for
use at the resort.
Skipp also lnformro the group
that a pool, sauna, whirlpool and
nautilus complex will be addl'd In
til:&gt; near future.
Later development Includes a 250
foot llghtro boat dock , a llghtro
fishing pier and a watersllde.
Nearly all the money the park
generates will stay in the local area
Skipp explalnl'd, and all employees
are being hired locally.

House votes on workman's compensation bill

Ask About Our
Direct Deposit.

.._.. FDIC

Royal Oak
program
updated _

~

By JUDY MORGAN
OVP staff wrtter

ES BANK

To Advertise

2 Sections, 18 Pages 26 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Mason County

Dl. IANIIN PICIENS
509 SOUTH TIIID AVENUE
TH..DAY, MAY 15

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 14, 1986

Part Of Your Life.
.

COUPON

at y

e
Vo1.3• • No.7
Copyr'Shtod 1986

•

•

PLAN'I'S CONFISCATED - Capt. Carl Langfonl of the GaJUa
Courtly Sherl!l's Department examlai'S some of the 944 marijuana
plallts deputies and Bureau of Criminal Invt'Sifgallon staff seized from
oewqe tre~l plants owned or operaled by GaiDa County. The
plallts were taken ahhree slim, Ill:&gt; llherifrs department said. An
lnvellti«atlon oontbrui'S today, but no arrests have been made yet il
OOIIIectloD wllh the confllcaled plants.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Legislation creating the Office of
Appalachian Ohio has been ap·
provro by the House of Representatives and moves on to the Senate for
consideration.
Th e office would he placl'd under
Gov. Richard Celeste's direct authority, said Rep. Jolynn Boster,
D-Galllpolls, the bill's sponsor. The
main function of the office would be
to represent the nel'ds of the mostly
rural, 2S-county reglon In southeast
Ohio. The House passed the blll
Tuesday.

Breter said because federal
funding for the region Is not being
renewro, the sta te should continue
drawing attention to the nel'ds of
the depressed area.
Currently, federal funds for the
arPa are handled by til:&gt; state's
Department of Development.
Breter said because the bill
transfers duties from another
department, no appropriation Is
nel'dro to establish the rtflce.
"It would be a greater autholity
than ihl' current office," sll:&gt; said.
" It would also ms)le up lor the

phasing out of the federa l ARC. "
Breier said the bill would require
the governor to appoint a director,
woo would represent the state on
ihl' federal Appalachian Regional
Commission.
The director would distribute any
fOttlrornlng ARC funds, suggest
people from the regio n for government appointments, present the
nel'ds of the region to state
agencies, act as an ombudsman for
the region and Issue reports on the
region's progress.

•

The resort wUl be ope11 year
round with features lor aU ages and
around til:&gt; dock security to ensure
the protection of resort
participants.
Individuals tourtng the resort are
never pressured to join he said, "we
elthl'r make sense or we don't."
Thousands of dollars are being
spent on malloutstoenticelndlvldu·
als to visit til:&gt; resort and take a
tour.
He notro that memberships will
go higher as improvements are
completro.
He also notro that resort
members are entitled to prtvileges
at the 500 otll:&gt;r resorts throughout
the United States. with which Royal
Oak Resort Is connectro.
Skipp quotro a recent report In
Parent's Magazine saying that the
private resort industcy is til:&gt; 19th
fastest growing In the country.
"Location has a lot to do 111tt
success," he sal d. "and we Intend lc
make this resort the best In
Southern Ohio." There are presently 28 resorts In Ohio.
In other matters, several
chamber members expressed concern over plans by the Ohio
Department of Transportation to
close tre Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
for repairs. It was notro that plans
for the closing are Indefinite at this
time, and that ODar intends to oold
a public meeting when plans are
confirmed.
Said fumeroy businessman Joe
Clark, "We don 't question the
safety factor involved in repairing
the bridge, what we want to address
with 0001' is the time schroule In
makin g the- repairs ."
SUI Nease, charrber pr('Sident.
reportro that chamrer now has G.i
members, including Hartley's
Shoes, Chapman's Shoes, J.D.
Drilling, Royal Oak Resort,
Fisher's Big Wheel and the Pomeroy Flower Shop. which joined in
the past rronth.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="150">
    <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="2740">
                <text>05. May</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="40273">
            <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="40272">
              <text>May 13, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1129">
      <name>ewing</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7023">
      <name>gatkie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3074">
      <name>mcclaskey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="318">
      <name>phillips</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1741">
      <name>reuter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
