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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.

�The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

••
•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE,\

ROBERT L.. WINGETT
Puhllsher
BOBHOEFUCH
General Manage r

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher / Controller
DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of Thf' Unit l'd Prl'SS lmerna 1ional. In land Daily Press Assoda llon ond the Amerlran NE'Wspaper Publishers Associal!on
LEiiERS OF OPI NION arE&gt; welrome. Th ey shoukl lx&gt; l&lt;'SS tha n 300 words
1on51:. All INters ilr&lt;' subj N' tl o cd Ulng und mu st be signed "'lth nam(' , addr('ss a nd
t£&gt;lephonE&gt; number. No unsigned INt ers w il l i:H' publ! sh('d . Letters should IX' In
good tas te. addres s ing IssuE'S , not pt"rsonalilit's.

The Lighter Side

As we live, breathe _____w_i_llia_m-:--F_.B_uc_k_Ley_J_r.
The only redeeming thing about
Congress, a wag remarked a few
months ago, Is that sometimes it
does the unexpected. The rule, in
democratic situations. Is for parliamentary bodies to do that. which Is,
not that which is not. expected. But
the sclerosis in Congress has
become such that, a mere week or
so ago, the public wa s convinced
that nothing in the way of tax
reform would be forthcoming,
notw\thslanding 'the public clamor
for it.
For one thing, there were the
infernal complications. There was
the Regan proposal (back when he
was secretary of the Treasury I.
then there was the Reagan proposal, then there was the House of
Representatives proposal. You had

to stay tuned 24 hours a day, with
the appetite to do so, exactly to
remember which was the bill that
said this about the depreciation
schedule and which was the bill that
said that about state tax deductions.
What happened, reaDy, was a
lesion of public Interest. The
average American ftgured nothing
was going to happen. At that
moment, suddenly, under the leadership of Sen. Bob Packwood,
R-Ore., the Senate Finance Committee struck.
Twenty to nothing! It Is beyond
memory that any tax bill got that
kind of endorsement from a
committee. The only equivalent
sensation of recent memory Is the
Gramm-Rudman bill, which suddenly came before tile public, rtsing

like Venus from the sea, unbe·
raided. unclothed, and before you
knew It, you had Jesse Helms and
Ted Kennedy voting for a bill that
called tor scheduled reduction In
federal spending across the board
(excluding certain sacred categories) If the bUdget didn't match a
scheduled reduction In deficits.
Bang, bang, bang, and GrammRudman was the law of the land. So
It Is - as a starter - with the
Packwood bill.
Now II has a considerable way to
travel. Under Senate rules, any
modification can be entertained on
the floor, and many will be. But the
package has the reel of an artistic
creation, defying Improvisation.
Few of us would resist the
temptation, If we had the opportun-

HUI.~c.f'·C:.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON iUPI I - Let'ssheda tear todayforlmelda Ma r·cos. The
poor woman. wife of the deposed Philippines president. apparently was
down to her last 3,000 pairs of shoes when she and her husband decamped to
Hawaii.
For a governor of Metro Manila. which Mrs. Marcos says she was,
having only 3,000 pairs in the shoe closet was practically going barefoot.
As she explained in an interv iew p.ublisbed In New York, til're. were
about a thousand shoemakers in that jurisdiction.
"That's a major indu stry In our count ry," she said. "They make millions
of pairs of shoes. When I was seen in ournativeproducts, I promoted them.
If each maker over~ years sends three newrmdels to show off, It would be
3,&lt;XXJ r ' irs of shoes."
So .at accounts for her footwear inventory, which some of her
countt" men as well as critics in her~xiled land considered excessive. Let's
" mow about that.
bear no
.
Additionally, her arithmetic is Impeccable. Three times l,&lt;nl is Indeed
3,&lt;nl. She obviously was just trying to give a loca l indust ry a break.
If that meant breaking in 6,&lt;XXJ shoes- assuming she wore them on both
feet - Mrs. Marcos wa s willing. What I can't understand is why thoS&lt;'
Philippine shoemakers were such pikers.
If they only gave her three pairs of shoi'S over a ~-year span , the total
would be I50 a year. She and her hu sband must have gone rut more than
that.
.
As to how shoemak~rs 'in the Philippines go about earmarking a pair of
sample shoes, I'd rat her not guess.
Presumably, the price and brand name both were prominently
d)splayed somewhere, but I'll leave it to Mrs. Marcos to say how.
And what If the samples didn't match the gown sbe had chosen for the
occasion?
What If, say, the shoes were brown and the rest of ttl' outfit she planned
to wear was rhartrf'use?
Would civic pride, plus the threat of being written off as color blind,
compt&gt;l her to change dresses? Or would stl' have dlanged to a prE"&gt;! lou sly
worn, a lbeit color-coordinated, pair ci shoes and risked il'ing written c:ll a~
dowdy?
Moreover, alter two decades, some of those 3,&lt;XXJ pairs of shoes mu st
have been terribly out of style.
Mrs. Marcos couldn't very well wear sling pumps with high heels [
sturdy oxfords were fashionable, could she'?
For the sake of chicness. let's rule ou t her showing off any shoes that
were more than 10 years old . That m&gt;ans she only had about 1,500 pairs to
choose from when she was in a chartreuS&lt;• mood. which is hardly enoubh
lor high society.
Considering there are more than 3,000 E"&gt;lcn ings in a 10-year period. Mrs.
Marcos must have supplemented her shoe closet 9lmehow. Ot herwlse, she
might have worn the same pair twice.
My guess is that she bought about 1,500 pairs during that time using the
family credit card.

Letters to the Editor
Cruel humans
This letter is written to all ttl'
people along the Forest- Run Rnad
who have enjoyed watching ttl'
baby geese grow. No longer wUJ we
have this privilege. Sunday a
vehicle was driven Into that pond of
water and in a short time the
mother and 5 babies left, leaving
the maleandln the process, I of the

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio .
Wednesday; May 14, 1986

E'TTr., @191?6 I'® ~ ?VI~·T8EG!UIIIIf-.·-­

Turning the other foot

babies was lost. This morning I
have listened to him caU fOr hours
for a family that nl"&gt;ler comes.
Are human. beings born cruel and
thoughtless or Is It an acquired
taste•
Susie Grueser
Rt. 1, Racine

Today in history
Today Is Wednesday, May 14, the !34th day of 1986 with 231 to follow.
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 sign of Taurus. They Include
Prusslan physicist Gabriel Fahrenheit, who introduced the mercury
thennometer, In 16ffi; English portrait painter Thomas Galnsborough in
1727; conductor Otto Klemperer in JBgj; opera singer Patrice Munsel in
1925 (age 61); singer Bobby Darin in 1936, andfilm director George Lucas
In 1944 (age 42).
On this date In history:
In 1643, Louis XIV, "The Sun King," ascen&lt;Ed tli! throned Fnmce.
In 1904, the OlympJc Games were held In the United States•for the first
· - time, In St. [puis.

Expos stop Reds; Giants Win
Padres, Dodgers victorious

Page-2-The Dally s.ntinel

"'ell

"Each of our kiosks Is manned by a former administration aide and
equipped with a cool-line phone direct to you-know-who."

tty, to add just that Uttleextra touch
of blue, or to bend that bronze over
just a Utile more thataway, or to
change just slightly the shape of the
nostril, when given a piece of art
still maUeable, fresh from the
creator's nngers. And Ill doubt
senators will attempt their rmdlflcatlons c:1 the Packwood bill. And of
course even If they do not succeed,
It will need to go into conference to
get the collaborative acquiescence
of the House. ,But right now, the
Inertia of that bill is as strong as that
which has attached to any blll In
recent memory - which encourages the assessment of It, ho\W'Ver
premature.
What Is roost exciting about the
Packwood bill Is Jess Its economic
conflguratkm than Its Implied
philosophical premises. There are
American economists and American social philosophers who woold
argue for this provision or ttl' blll or ·
against It. engaging respectful
public attention. Does lt makesmse
to discontinue future IRAs at a time
when we are asking people to take
steps .to look after their own
retirement? Does It make sense to
discontinue the Jnvestment tax
credit at a time when we are
worried about our trad11lmtalanre,
and des ire more Industrial
development?
And- most Important - are we,
by building up the business tax
(Packwood calls for a no-nonsense'
minimum business tax or ~
percent, even though tiE maximum
rate Is reduced from 46 percent to 33
percent), subsidizing a sleight-«·
hand by which American taxpayers
dreamily assume that because
corporations are paying ttl' tax,
they are relieved d It?
There Is a fair amount c1 tlis kind
ci thing In the Packwood bill, llttle
sleights-of-hand, by which people's
attention Is diverted. For lnstanre;
the top rate of taxation would now
II' 'll percent, but an individual who
has a taxable Income $87,240 woold
be charged 27 percent reginnlng
with the first taxable dollar.

Nuclear
non-safety
___
J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;__;_Da_le_Va_n_A_tta_
.
.

WASHINGTON - The Soviet
government 's appallingly cavalier
attitude toward the dangers of
nuclear power came as no SU11Jrlse
to us. Two years ago this rmnth,
when we reported sec ret details of
earlier Soviet nuclea r accidents,
the Soviet Embassy here responded
with a smart-aleck letter rldicullng
our revelations.
The wisecracks of the embassy
Information offtcer, Eugene Zykov,
must have turned to ashes In his
mouth since the nuclear disaster at
Chemobyl last month. His letter's
tone of mingled sarcasm and
braggadocio was tragically Inappropriate in light of what is now
confirmed about the Soviets' shocking failure to build and maintain
nuclear reactors with a rudimentary concern for safety.
One grim disclosure we made
two years ago, citing secret and top
sec ret CIA reports, was that many
hairless sailors were In Soviet
veterans' homes, suggesting over exJX)sure to radiation leaking from
faulty nuclear submarine reactors.

This evidently tickled the

em-

bassy flack's funny bone. Our story
on the "radioactive nightmare" tn

the Soviet Union, he wrote, "could
cause even those 'hairless sailors'
supposedly In Soviet veterans'
homes tD have their hair stand on
end."

With the gall of a true propagandist, Zykov continued : "Being too
engrossed In his macabre narration, the author failed to mention
one more point. No organizations
such as 'National Campaign for
Radioactive Waste Energy,' 'SUpporters of Silkwood' or 'Musicians
United for Safe Energy' exist In the
USSR .. . They do not exist because
we have not had the same IJ'Oblem
that the nuclear power Industry tn
the U.S. seem to have had ."
Without trying to match Zykov's
sarcasm, we suggest that there
may be other reasons that antinuclear protest groups don't exist In
the Soviet Union. Ask Andrei
Sakharov cr the hapless monitors of
ttl' Helsinki Accords how the KGB
treats outspoken critics of the

Sovlet regime.
The embassy letter proceeded to
point out - correctly - that the.
world's first nuclear power plant
was completed in the city of
Obnlnsk, 00 nnlles from Moscow, In
1954. It claimed that all Soviet
nuclear power stations must have
"at least three or four !aU-safe
systems for protection against
radioactivity," and that about haH
ttl' construction costs go Into the
protection systems. The letter then
lists three government agencies
resJXlnslble for "overseeing the
strtctly required safety measures,''
and added:
"That's why It stands to reason
that Soviet expertence In nuclear
power engineering wins recognition
among many prominent foreign
experts."
The embassy Jetter then descends to a flat-out lle, stating that
"within the last ro years, the
prestige of the Soviet stations has
never been undermined by tragic
accidents like the one which
occurred at Three Mile Island In

Political meltdown
I exaggerate, but consider what Jarly It is feared that the Chernobyl
would happen If Ralph Nader and acci&lt;Ent may cause a significant
Jane Fonda were unleashed upon increase In cancer deaths. And the
the societies of Eastern Europe.
Polish government, unlike the
That will not happen. But when- Russian, has publicized some of tiE
literally and figura tively - all the dangers.
dust from the Chernobyl nuclea r
Now, the nations of Eastern
disaster settles, It Is plausible that Europe already have bad some
its most Important pollticallmpact nascent environmental and consumay occur In the Soviet satellite mer movements. For example, In
countrlesandwilltake theformci a East Germany there Is an antihuge boost for what In the West nuclear action group closely linked
would be called "the consumer- to the Lutheran-church. There Is s
environmental" movement. As pol- small anti-nuclear and antlltlclans all over the free world have pollution group active In Hungary.
come to understand, that is not a And,ofcourse,inPoland,Solidarity
movement to be trifled with, even If was always rrorethan just a union;
its claims are often exaggerated.
It was an umbrella for a variety of
Now, It Is true that the communist citizens' rights groups that Included
countries have been relatively labor, agriculture, academic and
successful In pulling down political consumer.
dissent. Most of their subjugated
Consider this situation against
peoples would surely like a free the backdrop of what Is now the
press, free labor unions and free current state of the global nuclear
JXllltlcs. Some courageous few In power Industry. No new plants are ,
totalitarian countries will stand up scheduled In the United States. We
and dissent publicly when such have 101 operating plants. Of tiE 'll
tights are denied. But, as we have plants still umer construction, the
learned, the number of dissidents great majority are close to comptewho will defy the states on these tlon, with billions d dollars· of
Issues is small. After all, the rate-payers' monies sunk into
punishment can be Imprisonment them. Chernobyl will activate the
or death. Most people wlll go along U.S. anti-nuke movement, butthere
to get along, even while hating their Is not much let to tight about (I
gcvernments.
hasten to add that In my judgment,
So for 40 years now, Western nuclear JXlwer on the U.S.-West
strategists have wondered how, European models Is still the"safest
when and If the peoples of the form d power generation there Is.)
captive nations of Eastern Europe
Roughly the same situation would ever break the yoke of completion or near-completion of
communism.
· nuclear plants - exists In Western
Comes now tlfe nuclear plant Europe and Japan.
disaster . This Is not a matter of
Interestingly, the next big expan"mere" free polltlcs, free press, slon of nuclear pO'wer had been
free unions. This concerns the scheduled for- where?- Eastern
health and swvlval d rrothel'8 and Europe and the Sovlet Union!
bibles ln countries adjacent to the
Will t!Ere be protests In these
Sovlet Union. In Poland parttcu- lands where protest can lead to jail

.,

May 1979."
As we had JXllnled out two years
ago and Is now widely known, the
Sovlets bad two serious reactor
shu !downs ln the early 19Sls, and a
near-bolocaust In ~. when carelessly stored nuclear wastes exploded at a plant near Chelyablnsk,
rendering an area of hundreds of
square nnlles unlnhabltable to this
day .
RefetTing to Three Mile Island,
Comrade Zykov wrote: "With the
proper safety measures the probability of such an accident, a Soviet
sdentist estimates, Is one every
lO,(U) years of the reactor's operation ." He then stated that people
living within two to three miles of
Sovlet nuclear plants get an annual
dose of radiation equivalent to "a
few hours on the coast of Miami
Beach," and addl'(l:
"That Is why the USSR plans to
construct more statiOns close to
major Industrial cities In the
European part of the country, to
provide heat and energy."
The frightening thing is that the
Sov1et leaders may oo just that.

Ben Wattenberg
or worse? I'll wager there will be.
Do not umerestlmate the power of
a mother who fears for her child's
hea lth - even In a !Dtalltarian
society.
Will the East European governments abandon the huge sums
already poured Into these plants?
Will they snub the Soviet Union?

Will they fight the trollErs In the
streets?
Stay runed. This may be a
situation without parallel.
There have been scenarios drawn
for the final stages of communism.
But I don't think anyone ever
figured It wouW come about
through the meltdown of the state.

Berry's World

MONTREAL (UPI) - The Montreal Expos didn't need their usual
heavy artnlery to defeat the
Cincinnati Reds TUesday.
Instead of using the long ball, the
Expos banged out 10 singles to
defeat lite Reds, 4·2, for their ninth
trtumph In their last 10 games.
"The Expos are leading the
league In doullles, triples and oome
runs bUt all they got today was a
bunch of singles," Reds' manager
Pete Rose said disgustedly."
Rose felt so powerless against the
eight-hit pitching of the Expos he
had someone else hit for him.
Andre Dawson's two-run single In
the fifth innJng proved to be the
most decisive hit for the Expos.
F1oyd Youmans, 2-3, pitched 51-J
Innings, allowing seven hits while
walking three and striking oot four
to gain the victory.
Jeff Reardon, the last of four
Montreal pitchers. earned his fifth
save by pitching the eighth and
ninth. Mario Soto, 2-5, lasted 7 1-3
Innings and took the loss.
With Montreal trailing 2-1 In the
fifth, Youmans singled and went to
third on a single by Mitch Webster.
Webster stole second and Dawson
delivered both runnerswlthaslngle
to center field .
The Expos added a run In the
eighth. Andres Galarraga singled
went to second on third baseman
Buddy Bell's throwing ermr and
scored on a single by Vance Law.
The Giants and Dodgers, because
of the fierce rivalry dating back to
their New York days, have rarely
traded with each other. The deal .
they made last winter Illustrates
why.
San Francisco obtained Candy ·
Maldonado from Los Angeles at the
winter meetings, and at the time It
seemed like a minor trade. Not any

career P,nch hits (150), and Morales, a former ~er, the record
for pinch hits In a season (25) .
Maldonado Is Hor-13 In the jinch
and needs three more pinch homers
to tie the major league record Is six
In a season, set In 1932 by Jotut
Frederick d the Brooklyn I&gt;oq:el'8.
His clutch pertlrmances df tiE
bench may cost him an everyday
job.
In other games, Montreal beat
Cincinnati 4-2, San Diego defeated
Pittsburgh 4-2, Atlanta t~ped New
York 6-3, Los Angeles outlaSted St.
Louis 6-5 In 13 innlngs and Houston
edged Philadelphia J.21n lllnnJngs.
Padres 4, Plrales 2
At Pittsburgh, Dane lorg had too
hits, Including his first home run of
the season, and three San Diego
pitchers scattered ftve hits to lead
the Padres. Iorg broke a scoreless
tie with a three-run homer off loser
Mike Bielecki, 3-1, In ttl' second
Inning, Eric Show, 2-2, was the
winner.

Braves 6, Mets 3
At New York, Claudell Washing·
ton hit a two-run, seventh-inning

homer off reliever Rick Aguilera,
then wubled home a run In ttl'
ninth tD Htt the Braves to victory.
Joey Jotutson, 4-3, allowed six hits
and three earned runs over six
lnnJngs rorthe victory . Bruce Sutter
pitched the final thrre Innings for
his second save.

Dodgen 6, Cardinals 5 ,
At St. Louis, Mike Marshall's
two-run homer with one out In the
13th Inning lifted the Dl~ers over
the Cardinals. With one out, Ken
Landreaux singled off loser Ken
Dayley, 0-2. Marshall followed with
his eighth borne run d tiE season to
help til' Dodgers snap a four-game
losing streak . Rick Honeycu tt, 2-2,
was the winner.

A..'ilros 3, Phlllles 2
At Houston, Denny Walling
singled home Phil Garner from
second base with one out In the 11th
lnnlng to lead the Astros. Walling's
first game-winning RBI of the year
made a winner of Juno Solano, 2-0.
who worked the lith.

more.

;

'

I

1t

BLAST S'I'OI'S STREAK - Pat Tahler, Cleveland
first baseman, watches the hall he hit off Texas reUef
pitcher Greg Harris sail into the leftfield seats for a
home run in the lOth Inning of Tuesday's game at

Municipal Stadium. The homer run gave the Jntlans
a ~2 vlcrory, thus snapping a four game losing streak.

.'\1 bottom, Tahler Is congratulated by his teanunates.
UPI.

Ailing Tarabullleads Seattle;
Yanks, Orioles,. Royals win
By Unlled Press lntematlotull
Danny Tartatiull should spend
more time in sick bay, judging by
his pet1ormance.
The Mariners' 23-year old rookie
has been fighting a mysterious
aliment that has caused him to lose
weight , but has managed to remai n
a productive part of Seattle's
lineup.
TanabuUdrlllrd a pair of trlpiPs
and scored three runs TUesday
night to help Seattle bC'at thl'
\1slting Mllwaukee Brewers B-:i in a
game highlighted by a biza rre
ttiple play.
In the meantime, Tartabull has
bC'en swinging strongly enough to
hr lp the Mar iners win four of their
five gamrs und&lt;•r new manager
Dick Witllams. So has teammate
Ken Phelps, who hit hi s fourth
homer of the season to Ignite a
three-run four1h Inn ing.
Defensively, Seattle surv ived a
five-run sixth highlighted by Bill
Schroeder's thre&lt;&gt;-run homer.
The Mar iners recorded the fir st
triple play of the Sf'ason. Milwau kee's Randy Rf'ady and Ernes t
Rlles led off the ga me by draw ing
walks. Cecil Cooper groundrd to
first baseman Alvin Da vis, who
threw to shortstop Domingo Ramcs
at second base, forcing Riles.
Morgan was la te covering first.on
th&lt;' relay and Cooper was saic as
Ready rounded third.
Morgan threw to catcher Bob
Kearney, who ran Rmdy back to
third before tagging him out.
Kearney then threw to second
baseman Tartabull, who ta!(ged
Cooper trying to advance from

first.
Mike Morgan, 3-J, who gave up
all five Milwaukee runs in his 5 2-3
innings, was the winner, and Pete
Ladd finished for his second save.
Tim Leary, 3-3, who failed to get ou t
of the mth, took the loss.
The Mar iners took a 1-0 lead in
the first when Ta11abull tripled and
scored one out later on Alvin Davis'
single.
Seattle added thrre nms In the
fourth on Phelps' homer. Jim
Prrslev's RBI double and a nm SCOti ng groundout by Domingo
Ramos. Ivan Calderon's two-run
single in the fift h gave the Mariners
a 1;.0 lead .
In the eighth, TartabuU smas hed
his second triple htgh c:lf the center
field wa ll to score Presley and
Henderson. Tartabull was gu nn ed
down attempti n~ an inside-the-pa rk
homr r.
Perhaps a heall hy Tartal Jil
would haVP made It home safely.
EIS&lt;'whr re in the America n
Lragu&lt;'. Cleveland topped Texas 3-1
in 10 innings. New York dumped
Minnesota 6-4. Baltinnore stopped
Chicago 3-1, Kansas City beat
Detroit 4-2 in 11 innings. Oakland
overcame Tonmto 6-3 In 10 innings
and Callfomla nipped Boston 5-4.
Van lu&gt;cs 6, Twins f

At Minneapolis, Tommy John
and Dave Righetti combined on a
seven -ltlttcr. and Ken Grlfft'y
doubled home Dave Winfield to
brrn k an eighth-Inning tie, lifting
New York. .Jotut , 2-0, who will be 43
next week, sca ttered five hits over
seven Innings in his second start
since r._, was signed as a free agent

May 2. Righetti earned his !Otll
s;tve. Bert Blyleven, 3-3, took the
Joss.
Orklles 3, m.Ite Sox I
At Baltimore, Jotut Shelby, who
earlier threw a runner out at the
plate, singled in the eigh th inning
and scored the game-winning run
for Ball lmore on a throwing error
by first baseman Bol:by Bonilla.
Don Aase, 2-2, was the winner In
relief. The loss went to Floyd
Bannister, 1-4.
Royals 4, Tlgeni 2
At Kansas City, Mo.. Hal McRae
hit a two-run homer run in the
bottom of the 11th Inning to cap
Kansas City's come- !rom-behind
triumph. Stl"&gt;le Balboni sent the
game into extra Innings with a
home run in the nlnt h. Rf'llever
Steve Farr Improved to 2-0. Willie
Hernandez, 1-2, was the victim of
both homers.
A's 6, Blue Jays 3
At Oakland , Ca lif, Dave Kingman slugged a thrre-run homer In
the bottom of the lOth lnnlng to
power Oakland as the A's halted a
four-game losing streak. Kingman
belted the first pitch from loser
Dennis Lamp, ().3, over the fence in
left -center for his seventh homer to
help Bill Mooneyham. 1-0, to
victory. Antll'ls 5, Red Sox f
At Anaheim, Call!., Wally Joyner
and Doug DeCinccs each homered
and drove In two runs for California. Ron Romanick , 3-1, scattered
five hits over seven innings, and
Doug Corbett earned his fourth
save. Mike Brown, 2-1, suffered the
loss. Joyner, a rookie. leads the
majors with IJ hornet-s.

Preakness field small, hut balanced
BALTIMORE tUPI) - The Brush, third in the Derby. Is 3-1.
Preakness Stakes field is too small
Handicappersexpectby postt lme
and too well balanced for any h01w ttl' PJmlico crowd will make the
-even :JJ.l Groovy - to bC' counted Lukas entry ttl' favorit e over
out, says the assistant Jralner of two Ferdinand, and shorten the odds on
of the seven 3-year-olds expected 10 ~-1 Mirac le Wood. who, like Broad
start In the I 3-16 mile Classic at Brush, is running on his home
Plmlico Race Course Sat urday.
tr ack.
Pimlico linemaker Jeff WeissOdds are likely to remain very
man agrees with Luka s - to a · long on Groovy. who set a torrid
point. The morning-line odds he ea rly pace before finishing last
posted on five of the horses Tuesday among the 16 Derby starters.
were very short, ranging fro m 9-5
Aloneo&lt;llld relaxed on the lead, a
on Kentucky Derby winner Fcrdl- SJ)€1'd horse could win wire-to-wire.
nand to4-1on Snow Chief, the Dt'rby as Spend a Buck did in last year's
favor;tte.
Derby.
·
Badger Land, who finished filth
A benefit to all memil'rs of a
in the Derby, and the late- smaller field Is lesser risk of the
developing Clear Choice. who kind of traffic jams that made the
earned a Prcakness start by Derby one of the roughest Runs for
winning Aqueduct's Withers Mile the Roses in recent years.
The speed horses who broke
last week, are 2-1 on the overnlght
line, and Marylan d- bred Broad outside with Groovy - Zabaleta,

Bachelor Beau and Snow Chief broke outside and created havoc
jockeying for position before burnIng ttl'mselves out.

Player of week
CLEVELAND iUPl) - Ohio
Wesleyan sophomore Scott Tedder
hit .500 during five games in being
chosen the North Coast Athletic
Conference player of the week,
lea gue offic ials announced
TUesday.
Tedder was 8 for 16 with 7 RBI
and five runs scored In leading the
Bisl\ops to a 3-2 record for the week
as they clinched the NCAC title.
Ohio Wesleyan and Wooster wUI
represent the NCAC In the NCAA
Division m basesball tournament,
which begins May 21. Location and
opponents are to be announced
later this week.

Malwnado, who played sparIngly as an outfielder with the
Do~ers , Is winnlng games for the
hated GlanJs.
Maldonado il'lted his third pinchhit home run of the season, a
two-run shot with two oot In the
ninth inning, to lift the Giants to a 6-5
victory Tuesday over the CUbs in
Wrigley Field.
The 25-year-old native of Puerto
Rico hit a 1-0 pitch from Chicago
reliever Lee Snnlth, 2-3, Into the lett
field bleachers, driving In pinch·
runner Luis Quinones from secom
and giving the Giants the 6-5 lead.
Malwnado, used mainly as a
pinch hitter and late-Inning defensive replacement with tiE ~ers ,
learned ttl' art of pinch hitting from
two of the best: Manny Mota and
Jose Morales. Mota, a coach with
tiE Dodgers, holds the record for

BElLY WHOOPER - BostGn Red So~'s Malty Barrett hul!l' the
base as he beats a throw from California Anti" Is second baseman Rob
WllfoOA' and gets a triple In the third klnlng of Tuesday's game at
Anaheim Barrett later scored on a hit by Wade Boggs. UPI.

Indians snap streak
CLEVELAND (UPI) -The role.
of a reliever Is new to Rich Yett, but
he's performing It with perfection.
Yen. who has started 128 games
in his minor and major league
career, hurled 2 1-3 Innings of
shutout ball TUesday night to help
the Cleveland Indians take a 3-2,
10-lnning victory over the Texas
Rangers.
The Indians took a 2-1 lead Into
the eighth behind the one- hll
pitching of starter Don Schulze and
a two-run homer by Joe Carter
beforP a pair of two-out walks
chased Schulze In the eighth.
Left -bander Scott Balles came In
but left quickly after Pete O'Brien
hit Balles' first pitch into center
field, scoring Oddibe McDowell to
tie the game at 2-2.
Yett was called In and ended the
ral ly. He fanned ttl' first two hitters
in the nJnth, the leadoff man In the
lOth and got Toby Harrah to hit into
a game-ending wuble play In the
lOth.
AslnglebyGaryWard leading off
the fifth was the only hit d!Schulze.
The Texas rutflelder moved to
second on an Infield out by Larry
Parrish, took third on a wild pitch
as Darrell Porter walked and
sccred when Steve Buechele

grounded ou l
Texas starter Ed Correa. al, went
seven innlngs and allowed five hits,
Including Carter's slx th-innlng ho·
mer. Correa fanned six and walked
fOur before giving way '&gt; Dwayne
Henry and loser Greg Harris, 2- 5.
"My ann reels good and I really
get JXlmped up with runners on
third base," said Correa, who
struck rut Brook Jacoby and Tabler
with the bases loaded In the first
lnnJng and fanned JuUo Franco and
Jacoby with Tony Bernazard on
third in the third Inning.
Harris took over In the eighth
after Henry walked leadoff batter
Andre Thornton. He struck out
three and allowed oniy one hit
il'fOre Tabler's homer ended the
Rangers ' tlrre-game winning
streak In the lOth.
Tabler fOuled off six pitches
before smashing his third homer
and fourth game-winnlng RBI to
help the Indians snap a four-game
losing streak.
"This win reaUy U!ted us up
· again ," said Tabler. "Yeti came in
· and really blew them away. He
gave us a chance to win."
' The Indians took off Immediately
after the contest tor a nine-game
road trtp with stops In Kansas City,
Toronto, and Milwaukee.

The Daily Sentinel
( l81'S 11 ~ 960 )
A Division of Mulllmedla, In c .
Published ever}! afternoon, Monday
Fr id ay, Ill Court St .. Po
m('roy, Ohio. by !he Ohi o Va l l{'y Publishing Co mpan y rMultimed!a, tne ..

! hr ou.~: h

Pomeroy, Oh io 45769, Ph . 992·21$6. S{'
cond class post ag p pa id at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Memb£&gt;r: United Press Internationa l,
Inland Da lly PrPss Association and th(l
Ohio Newspaper Associa ti on. National
Adver!lsing Repws£&gt;nlatlv£&gt;, Branham
Neo.vspapt&gt;r Sa il'S. 713 Th ird Avenue.
N€:W Yo rk. New York 10017

POOTMAS'TER: Send address rhanges
to The Dally Sentlnt"'l. Ill Court St ,
PoT!Y'roy , Ohio 45769.

SliBSCRIPTION RAT EN
By Carrie r or Mot or Roulf'
One Week ................................. Sl.I D
On r Month .
..... $4 .80
Onr Yf'ar .........
..... S.'i7 .20
SINGL E COP\'
PRI CE
Dally .............. .
....

2~

Cent s

Su bscr lbPrs no r des! rln.i to pay 1he car rl('r may remiT In adva n('(' dlr£'C t to
Thf' Da il y Sent in(&gt;\ on a 3. 6or 12 mon th
tn sls . Cr.Pdlt wililY&gt; givm rnrrler ro C'h
m onth .
No subscriptions by mail pPrmlttf'd i n
towns wh('n • homr C'arr ler sc rvlcf' is
a\"al lable

:\1all S u~t: rlptlon s
ln ~k1 e

Ohio

lJ W&lt;'eks ...

Sl4 l+i

26 W('('kS..
52 \\'fork s ..

5~11::!

.S!'Il'( N

Ollt-.ldt• Uhlo

13 W&lt;'C'k.S...
26 W{'('ks

~] :,

6V

11

~~

52 W('('k S

S:J!I K(]

THA
Passage of the Tuberculosis levy in Tuesday's
election is another example of the wonderful things
that are accomplished in Meigs County through com·
munity effort·.
Our most heartfelt thanks to all individuals, businesses, civic organizations and especially the voters
for· the geat support with the levy passing by a more
than 2-to-1 margin.
Michael Struble, President;
Members of Meigs County Tuberculosis Board
and Office Staff Members

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The Daily

'IMirtudr(, M!y 14, 1918 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sampson leads Rockets ~t
Lakers·
po-.

_

· •·

ALL IT TAKnl ~ A HOLE-IN-ONE Smlb-Nel!lon Motors of Pomeroy Ls again offering a
new Buick Skyhawk to lillY goler hlltmg a hole-In-one
on No. 9 cmrlng lhe Meigs Coumy Jayoees'IIIIIIWLI!Il H
toumament to be held Thursday a1 Jayrnar Golf
Course. Tee olf begins all p.m. and meet your team
will he held tonight (Wedneld!IY) 7:30 p.m. a1 the
ooune. Rain date lor the loomament plliY wUJ be next
1bul!lday. Proceeds from tid&lt;; year's toomey wUJ be
divided hall and hall between Pomeroy and

Middleport to be used to purchaseparkequlpment.ln
addlllon to the charity aspect of the toomey,
Middleport resident Lee McComas, retired superin·
tendent of Middleport SchooLs and lonner13' clerk of
tile Meigs Local Scbool District, will be · honored
following the tournament. Last year Pomeroy
Attomey Pat O'Brien hit a hole-Jn..one to win a car.
Shown with this year's vehicle are, Jell to right,
Jaycee member Brian Conde, behind the door, and
J.D. Story and Nona Nelson of Smith-Nelson Motors.

INGLEWOOD, Calli. (UP!) ~In
squaring the Western Conferena&gt;
championship series, Ralph Sampson and Akeem Olajuwon played
like Towers ol POwer - and made
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar look like an
aging superstructure.
The· 7-foot4 Sampson scored 24
points, collect«.'&lt;~ 16 rebounds and 5
blocked shots to spark the Houston
Rockets to a 112· 102 victory over
lhe Los Angeles Lakers. But this
was not a one-man show, hy any
means.
Olajuwon, Sampson's 250- pound
partner, added 22 points, )3 rebounds and 6 blocks. Together, they
humbled Abdul- Jabbar, just three
days alter lhe Lakers center
sparked the champions to victory In
Game 1.
Abdui.Jabbar, looking 39 years
old for.a change, did score21 points,
but he hit just 9-ol-26 shots and
managed only 4 rebounds and 1
block.
The Lakers were outrebounded
51-38, with their starting frontline
pounded 35-17 on the boards.
Not lor Rockets' off-guard Lewis
Lloyd, It wasn't.
Working mainly off the break, the

Unescorr:

Kyger ...... .. ...... . ........ ...:IX! t1X1 2- 4-H

Eastern .......... ... ........ ... ror 001 x-1.3-9-3

The Meigs-New Lexington Sec- •
tiona! Class AA game In Athens
scheduled for Tuesday has been
postponed untU today at 5 p.m.
The winner wUI meet top-seeded
Belpre In lhe finals Friday. Belpre
!Eat Alexander 14-2 on Monday.

Scioto DoWI18 resu Its
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Dan
Ater guided Angles Toy to a 3\1
length victory over Miss Famous
Sky In Tuesday night's featured
eighth race trot at Scioto Downs.
The gate to wire victory was the
6-year-&lt;Jid troller's third In lour
starts this season.
Star City May Won finished third.
CarWe Princ:ess won the first
race, kicking oil a 6-9-5 lrtlecla
combination that was worth
$1.~.40. Arold Macho was second
and Stormln Tar showed.
A crowd of 3,201 wagered

$257,860.

Lakers rally In the llru!l mlnutl!l.
The Rocket! will 11011 Ganie .3 ct.
the lEst-of-seven aei'IN Friday
night In the Summit, wlb Game f
Sunday attermon, alllo 1t Housllll.
Los An les, ~ trailed 14

lng, but teammate Bryon Srott then
~ a laY1!P and Jumper, and
Lloyd comected on a 20-footer.
S.. 811ft'warda, ~ey McCray ·
put Ill a twlstlnc one-llan*r from ·
tile llllf. . •

I:'()INT PLEASANT- The South
Division State Qualifier of the West
VJrglnla Bass Federation will held
at the Point Pleasant Boat Dock
Saturday, May 31, and Sunday,
June 1. according to Mayor J.J.
Wedge.
Events begin with a 7 a.m. ooze
olf and 4 p.m. weigh-In Saturday,
and on Sunday, OQZeofltsagain at7
a.m., weigh-In at 3 p.m. and an .
awards eeremony at 4p.m. Tournament headquarters are at the
Saddlebrook Inn.
· Sponsors of the event are the ell)'
ct Point Pleasant. the Loyal Order
of. the Moose, Saddlebrook Inn,
Slloney's and Price's Gull Station.
"·:wedge Invites area residents to
cQme out and watch tlr weighing-in
Of fish at about 3 p.m. each day and
the Sunday awards ceremony.
.. "It's a pleasure for the city of
Point Pleasant ahd other sponsors
to Ills! the South Division State
4uallller," Wedgp said. "This event
Will bring to Point Pleasant more
than 70 fishermen plus their
families wbo will be staying here In
oor city."
The top four qualifiers will
atlvana&gt; to the, Eastern Regional
Tournament at Catskill, N.Y.
For further information on the
West Virginia Bass Federation,
contact Public Relations Admlnls·
trator Brian BUiings at the Point
Pleasant City Building.

SUPER SALE
tft OFF -

THUISDAY, FIIIAY &amp; SATUnAY
LARGE srllcnON OF

45" and 60" FABRICS
(Pelyesttr ' .... ,

201/o OFF All PillOW PANELS
20% OFF Alll'lASTK &amp; EMIIOIDERY HOOPS
30% OFF All UN STOCK) PAnEINS
SINGER SPECIAL-. .1t257

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

NOW ONLY

$15900

SALE ENDS IUY .1fth

INSURANCE
111- Stc011d

1tiW•t

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

,_.,

'-1111 St.

· Appllcatlons are now IEing accepted lor the Jack Cook Baseball
Camp sheduled June 15-20 at Cedar
Lakes near Ripley, W.Va. C!X&gt;I for
the week's camp Is $163 which
Jnoludes room, board, a T-shlrt, and
insuranee. Campers Invited wiU be
from age 9-17.
. Aeeordlng to Marshall University's veteran baseball coach Cook,
basic fundamentals of baseball are
U!ught through Individual lnstruc- ·
tlon, lndlvludual and multi-player
drills, films, and game experience.
After the baseball day, campers
may fish, swim and play basketb~ll. voUeyball and tennis. For
further lrilorrnatlon contact Cook at
MarShall Unlverslly or call 1-DI696-~ or 1-304-525-:m5.

GENERALf/j ELECTRIC

SiliconeH
Caulk/Sealant
Weatherproofs and insulates glass. metal, rubber.
wood, ceramics. Won'tcrack, chip or peel. Stays
flexible from - 65°Fto 550°F. 10.3oz. Clear or

white. N5ooo, 5010

$~99

SPECIAL
PRICE
~
less mfr. mall·ln rebate .. $2.00

CostaHer
mfr. rebate

99C)

·153625.6

Woodlife Wood
Preservative
Prevents rot, decay, mildew. Excellent tor paint or
varnish. Gallonfclear. N00903

ru

Majors

....

$2.00

NATkJfliAL U'AGUE

New, fast·acting formula . Ready to use, with convenient
trigger applicator. Kills tough perennials. roots and all .
in 1·2 wks . #4367

$~6924oz.

Monlrt&gt;al

. St . Lw
Plsbq~;h

C&gt; l
Phlb

..

, Huuslon

""'"""'

Use indoors or out.to protect melllt llld beautify
wood, pla.,or, brick , mAsonry. P r - ~eng­

Cncn n1 1

SPECIAL PRICE

298 SECON 0 ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU S'ATURAY, MAY 17, 1986

b

I!C
13
11
1.1
12

11
16
15
17
IIi

.m 621

.-

&lt;H~

':1

.Ht

!f

.Ul
.U9

9• J
9' ~

Steak/Roast.••••'l. 1
FR~SH CHICKEN •
(
Drumst1cks •••••••'t.. 69
CHICKEN
(
Leg Quarters •••••&amp; •• 39

Sl
39
Lunch Meat ••••••l:.•.

SUPERIOR

Ground Beef ....l:-•• 99(
BUCKET
$
199
Cube Steak•••••••l:-.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$) 79
Round Steak ....l:-.
SUP~RIOR F~ANKIE
(
Wlene,rs ••••••••••••••• 99

."

-..HI-

~.

Dual Burner Gas Grill

12 OZ. PKG.

.OO'l -

1K CMs :l-:\f. 7:l"i p.m
san DllltO 1Drnwdn 2·3, ;tt l'lttshu fl!h
rKJ p~n IH t, 7:. .15 p.m
NN.· York 10jrdl ~Hl• ,,, •touslon
1K"'li!X'I' S 11 , H: 3"1 p.m.

·

YELLOW

3 lB. BAG

Nrw 'i ark a1 HOUJton . n~h l

......

hucla&lt;Dn,

EJt:»;ton
{1\·lnd
8omo
Ml..-·knt•

Bugwiset Sprayer
Rugged 2-gal. polyethylene tenk is easy to carry.
extra corro sion resistant. Nozzle adjusts from mist to
IS' spray. ~62t82

"

Non-corrosive aiiJI'ninum
frame w~h coKH'ful , weamer
resistanl designer st~ea

Water Works 3-Arm
Revolving Sprinkler

Deluxe Pistol Grip Noule
with Shower Attachment

up to 00' diameter.

Spr8y a(JjustseasiiV ll'om
. lint

to hard Automatic kick
IWO&lt;JH

. lfW330R

""61111

SPECIAL PRICE .,

1

SPECIAL PRICE

12.00
CAft

Lfllmlt. mall-lll"btlt

ColloNor
mtr. ,.batt

COIItfrlf

mfr. rtblft

. - . ,S3537

8" blade clearance- Ideal for low ceilings. Attracti'Je

cane insert tn blades . 3 speeds. Saves energy. N942 w

$AA99

SPECIAL PRICE . . . . o53639

Hardware Lumber

C"&lt;tllf

1!1 I f&gt; . ~ 141 H .\ 11 1
1j ] 'j ."ffl 'l

H 11\ .€.

Margarine •••••••••:-.. S9&lt;

.1

1\lt"P;djif'~ Kf&gt;f;ulbl

t'

Balltmon' l (llk'~ I

Kansas (11\ 4:-D •rrolt 'l. 11 in nml!"
Sra!!k•ll, M UwauM~ · ~
()a): lu nd 6. T cront1&gt;:1. Ill innlnJ..'!'
{'a llfornla 5, O.:a;lon 4
W~'" Glllffl"" !AI Timt1l f.IYfJ
Toronlo r~lli'h fl.4 ! ar Ollkland . voun~&lt;

$41/l.99
SPECIAL PRICE f iii 15.Qt

,

O.O t.:l: 1!!p.m
MH.,..aull&gt;•t' 1 Nif'\'1"!&lt; .l l , ut Sf'uttlr tMnot·i•
l:l t. -l:.'li pm .
Chlc11~ 1Da v b ].1 1 11 1 :"oil'"' York t~ h l r k•y

().21. 7:.'11 p.m .
Mln!W'!W'IIa t U~IriV'r
tDiliOil HI . 7:.'~ p.m

~AMES·

1~.11

STOKELy .

32

Ill lloilllrrlllrl'

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

i ::fi p.m .
Clrvrlu nd INII'kru 2·:l t ar K ;m~a s C"ll ~

Rustproof water iystem. 4' leader hose, wide track
wheel• and steel frame. Hotdl up to 150' ofS/8' hate.

IGUbk7.a 04 1, IU5 p.m.
Aoston tCI4· mm.~ ~·lh

011 C tllfornl .:'

1MrCuklll :l.:\1 , 10:1'&gt; p.m.

~23·890

'nllftld•i~

'15~o

o.......,.

C'hlt'fU!O at Nl '' York n l~ lll
Mlnr.'Mil&lt;l il l Ela ll lrnYf'. nl~t:hl
fl"))a l&gt; 11 1 J)l•troll . nl1£hl
{'l('l,r('\and at K~nw~ C"lt ~. nlJ!hl

Individual dealers may 11mit quantities l,ndividual dealers may not stock all items

MAXWELL HOUSE

.......

RPCalk&gt;d pttcht.•r AI

Holland trom Columbus of IlK&gt; lntl'rl\illl lonol
L&lt;'aJM' (AAA I; pla«&gt;d p ltcix'r RuJ !blrry
on Ihe l.'i-&lt;layd.lsab!OO llsl wllha knl'(' Inju ry :
MlO\I('d pitcher Ed Whltwn fl'(fll 1\w&gt; 1 ~ to

King Builders Supply
•

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I

... .lr

1

:n.ttav dlsa blftt lbt.
OakiiDid - R«alk&gt;d pll rhf&gt;r Tom Do2lcr
rrom II-' Tl'lpP·A Tacoma Rrlllal£' of IIll'
Paelfk• CoaJI Uqui'.

•

•

•

•

•

••

12

oz.

$599

Umil I Per Cusfomer
• Goad Onlly At Pow Ill's s-.ermorl&lt;ol
: OHtr Explrts Sat., Apr. 17, 191b S

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SUNSHINE

DOG FOOD

iNSTANT COFFEE

Transactions
New York I ALl -

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·····couPON·······
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At this local partlcl!llllng SERVISTAR®dealer:

$

FLAVORITE

oz. 79( Ice Cream •••••••t~:~L. 119
Catsup •••••••••••••••••
BAN ET

Tf'?laS IWII! 2-\ l Jl [~troll tT1•rn•ll ~· I I .

Poly Hose Reel

405 North Second Avenue

PARKAY

f\rv.• ~ · Irk ti, MiOili'SOilt ·I
('J.-,•r land .l , TI'Xa~ !. 1fl lnnirtw.

insulated chest holds 1812-oz. cans. has removable food
tray. Insulated wide mouth jug has In-handle pour spout.
• t38t-810

SPECIAL PRICE

f;
i1 ~

11 1!1 ..fti 'i
J:l 21 JR.! ti
10 w .n1 ,

Sranll'
(bl

MIDDLEPORT

We can help• .

H 1!1 ·124

KC

15-Qt. Playmate with FREE
· V2-Gal. Beverage Cooler

42" White Ceiling Fan

Toront o

MIM

iGloe.

C@@i§.i

Iii I ~ !i1 ~
H Iii

·""i

2°/o MILK ••••••••• ~Ai. 149

'l
I
-1' 1

f)'lrull

Tf?IBS
Cl.:tklllml

"'ebbing. l2411 1, 50111

1/iui I•»Ri.

Ill 12 .trn
It\ H .'\11

$

BROUGHTON'S

W L Pc1 . GH

21 11 .6.'16 a! 12 6l.i I

NY

·

0nI•0 ns ••••••••••••••••• 79(

Tt.mllafaG~

Atlanta ul Montn-a1
C'ii'IC'Innnll at PhUidrlphl ll. ll l ~thl

AAIDlK'AN lEAGUE

$1~!,3

~

San Fra.ncbro 6. Cll ir~ RO)
,\!Janta li. NN Yor~ .l
San Dl('£0 4. Pllt.\bu lll:h 2
Houston .1. Phlllrdl&gt;lphht 2. llinnlnll~
Los An~~ft ii, Sl. Loo L~ !'!. J.l lnnmglo
M-'~'1 Glfl'lft! IAI ,.,_ EIJTI
l..ai An~ IRc\1.'15 2 1• o.JI Sl Lou b
t("OIIf(J',· 2 11. 1:l':l p.m
San F'ranrLo;ro !LaCoss l--i/1 111 CllK·ItR(J
tSUrrlltr(• I ~I , 2:'1J j)m
/\11anla tS/TIIIh .l-~1 at Monn1'al •Smllh
. 22 1. 7: 1!'i p.m.
Cinl'ln1W11 I RrowninJ.: D-1 f :.r Pht la~k •lphl o~

17779. n92
Sft3fll:J oa.
SPECIAL PRICE ~If&amp;. 15:ll29.30

$79!!r

SPECIAL PRICE

$ 09

FRESH PORK BUTT

~ ' RJ!r.i . ...

Tap-N-Go,. automatic line feed. lightweight-only
10.51bs. 22 .2 cc. engine is operable in anyposilion.
Adjustable handles. lj t400

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Munll'f'al4 . Llrctnnall 2

-,...,., z--

14" Gas Trimmer

limit Quantities

-'i16
!;,
.50'1 \
_4..'12 l l.lr
1 ~ I~ 441
~
!1 !l .2M !I

Allanta
L&lt;

lasting decorative hnish. Glolay b611clll or whitt.

WEED EATER•

:.!1

1M 12
l!l 14
16 Jf;
14 17

S..nF'ran

Top·Coat

SPECIAL OFFER: Sl.llfl . . .

•s362s

M' L Prt. (i"'

"'

$.A8f

Costafter
mfr. rebate . . ~~7

RUST-OLIUM"

KLEENUP"
Grass &amp; Weed Killer
If&amp;.

Scoreboard

~99

L.,. mfr. mill-Itt,....,

•ORIHO.

SPECIAL PRICE

\

Waterproofs. retards swelling, warping, shrinking

SPECIAL
PRICE

We Reserve The Right To

Baseball camp
applications
being

12-2214

·

1 Circuli! panern providM aven
CO"llr&amp;ge ln droplel:a OJ m1111or

Game rescheduled

6-6 converted forWard scored 2C .,
wflh about 1f I!Uiutes left, ,
points- Including 8in the flnal3: !I· crept ,within lOO.t&amp; .on Abdlil•
- to help Hnustnn stave off a . Jabbar s layup with 4. 32 remain-

St~ Po•n~y

Seven run third inning gives
Eastern 13-4 SVAC victory
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles plated seven runs In the
thltd Inning enroute a 13-4 SVAC
victory over the Kyger Creek
Bobcats here Tuesday evening in
area high sehool baseball play.
The win boosts Eastern to'll-2 In
the SVAC and 17·5 overall. Eastern
Is now tied with Symmes Valley lor
the SVAC title at ll-2 as Symmes
must lace Kyger Cr&lt;Ek on Friday.
The Vikings are not finished with
SVAC play as earlier rt;ported.
Sophomore Bryan Durst picked
up the victory in relief of .Eddie
Collins who exiled In the third. They
combined for four walks, fanned
seven, and scattered seven hits.
Durst pitched lour frames.
Jay Wright suffered tlr klss in
two-plus Innings of work, while
· Riehle Gilmore came on to do a
good job In relief. They scattered
nine hits, walked six, and fanned
three.
Jeff Johnson led off the third
inning with a walk, Jimmy Cald·
well reached on a bunt single,
Bryan Durst walked to load tlr
bases. and Eddie Collins was hit
with a pitch to lOra&gt; home a run.
With one out Brent Bissell waiked
to foree home another run, setting
the stage for a three·run double bY
sophomore Steve Horner. Royee
Bissell followed up with an RBI
double, then came home on a Jeff
Caldwell single, the score now 7-2.
Earlier In the first frame, KC
scored when Riehle Gilmore
walked, Peck reached on an error,
Mike Edge singled, Hauldren
walked, and See singled for a 2-0
Bobcat lead.
A five run fifth Inning provided
EHS with some 'added insurana&gt; .
Steve Homer had two doubles
and three RBI's, Royee Bissell a
double and single and two RBI's,
and singles hy Bryan Durst, Eddie
Collins, Kevin Barber, Jeff Caldwell, and Jimmy Caldwell.
See bad three singles for Kyger
Creek, Gilmore two doubles, Mike
Bradbury a single, Edge a single.
Eastern wUI host North Gallla
this Thursday to det ermine
whether or not tlry will lllld at least
a share of the SVAC title. North
Galli a was supposed to play at
Eastern on Monday, but could not
play due to a lack or players.
Eastern next plays at Unloto
High School near Chillicothe next
Wednesday in the District Tournament beginning at 4 p.m. A$2 adult
admission and $1 student admission
will be charged.
Kyger Creek plays Oak Hill
tonight, then plays Symmes Valley
oo Friday.

Fishing
qualifier
event set

20 LB.

$249

Umll 1 Ptr Cu11omer
• Good Only AI PowsM's s-.ermarlctl
: Oller hpir11 Sal., .Apr. 17, 198b S

I

cou~

•

•• •

••
•

CRISCO

3 LB.CAN

\~

$219

Umil 2 Ptr Cu1tomtr
Goad Only AI Pawtll'• Stftrmarlctt
oiitr lxpirtl iaf. Apr. 17. 191b

..
•
•

.....
. ·•
.... . •···...··couM·.....
·
·
·
·
·
•
• •
'

•

FLAVORITE

SHORTENING

•
•
••

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

'

s '•
• ••••••••••••••••••••

SUGAR
•••
••

SLB.

$139

Umt 1 Per Cuslomer
• Good Only AI PowoM's S.C.oronorh t
: •. OHtr bpirt1 Sal., Apr. 17, l'lb

•
•
••

•
•

.-...................s .•
'

�/' ~

.edneeday, May 14, 1986

Racing schedule confinned
·at W.Va. Motor Speedway

CELTIC'&gt; TAKE LEAD - The CeHics' Dennb
Johnson Cleft) su«eS!!ully Inbounds a pass by Bucks'
Paul Mokesld (right) as he falh backwards out of

By SC01T WOLFE
MINERAL WELLS, w.vA.
Officials from West VIrginia Motor
Speedway In Mineral ·Wells recently conflrmoo their 1986 racing
sehooule, which hegins Sunday,
June 8 wltli the ruMing of the
"Second Annual Mountaineer Spectal Olympics 100", STARS sancttoned Late Modellnvltatklnal.
Following many weeks of negottat)ons and schedule revlsbns,
WVMS Promotional Director Dave
Ashley Is proud to announce that
the 1986 racing schedule Is oow
"complete" and provides a 1vtde
variety of quality motor racing
action for the speedway's second
season of operation.
West VIrginia Motor Speedway
actually opens tts doors for the first
time Saturday, May 31, when It
hosts a National Truck &amp; Tractor
Pull event sanctioned by the
National Truck Pullers Association
(N.T.P.A.). This non-racing event
will be a tw&lt;Kiay show with the
finals slated lor Sunday, June l
. Ortglnally the National Truck &amp;
Tractor Pull was slatoo for one
.- week earlier In a preliminary
schedule.
The "Mountalnrer Special Olympics" 100", ran last year as the
Hillbilly 100, drew the lar&amp;l'!st crowd
In WVMS history and hopes to be an
even bigger success In 1~. This
race Is held tn· conjunctiOn with
bounds diJrfng second quarter j!Ction at Bailon 7-eleven stores and West Virginia
Garden Tuesday night. The Celtlcs defeated
Special Olympics. J 1 .
MUwaukee, 126-96 and now lead the best-of-fieVen
Perhaps the most notable race on
Eutem Conference final series, 1-0. UPI.
the schedule Is the June 22

DLA·ND YOUR
••
'

INDEPENDENTLY OWNED LOW-PRICED

"Dirt-ROC" Race of Champklns, Mountain State Sluine National ::;
an event In dirt late rmdels.
Championship" for late models wUI
Already enteroo In the event are he run. This STARS sanctklned
David Pearson, Kyle Petty, Buddy elient wtll he sponsorm by the
Baker, Geoff Bodine, the 1986 Mountain State Shrlners throughDaytona 500 winner; Rusty Wal- oot West VIrginia.
lace; Joe Ruttman, Donnie Allison,
The West VIrginia Motor Speedand Morgan Shepherd. In addltkln way Champklnshlps wUI he Saturto Bodine, Wallace, Shepherd, and day and Sunday, September 20-21
Petty have already won Winston and In October, date pending, plans
Cup races In 1986.
lor the "First AMual Natbnal Dirt
July 4th and 5th WVMS wUI host Track Championship" are being
the "Firecracker Twin !I)'s", slatoo made.
to be run at night under an May
:n.June 1 - National Truck l Tractor
Pull-Sanction«!
by N.T.PA.
experiment al portable llgbttng sys- Jwte s - "'211d Annual Mountain...- Special
tern. A gigantic fireworks display, 0Jym\5Jco 100'" Sl"ARS sanctlooed. Ralndate
barheque, and other hoUday festlvl- ~:::;: 22 _ "'DIRT·ROC'" Raet'o!Champlons.
tles are also being planned.
NASCAR Wlnatoo CLq&gt; 1Jr1vers.
Saturday July 19 the "'u" July 4-5- Firecracker Twin OO's:
•
"''"' July l!l - AMA Camel Pro Serteo Nallooal
Camel Pro Series National Motor- Motorcycle CltamPionshlpo "'Thunder 1n the
cycle Championship, dubbed as Hllk"';
Raindate July :ll.
August 3 - "lit Annual Mountain State
"Thunde r In the HlUs" Is slatBI as Shrine National Championship"' STARS
the AMA superstars Invade the Sanctioned. RaJMate A1Ji115tlll.
hlgbbanklng of the 5/8 mlle clay =~~P;;~~~~t WJ!lnla lltltor
oval.
October - JDate l'l!rldlngJ First Annual
rr:A:ugu::s:tc:3:•::the:::"F:Ir:s:t::An:nu::a:l::N:at:lon:al:D:Irt::Tr:ac:k:Cha:m::plons::hl:p.::~;

SUPERMARKET
•Wetkly Specials
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choiee Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIC
•We Sell Money Orders

c

oz.

7

CAN

NOW OPEN

U. S. NO. 1

· 6;30 A.M. TIL 6:30 P.M.
MONDAY T..U SATURDAY
CrHIII •Ho111t11111dt Soup

lowest
Price In
lean!!

.....,..

I

a

12

Chuck Roast

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE .

SWEET &amp; EATPOMEROY OHIO

•HomeMade Plt1 •Hand DJt.td

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
BONEUSS .

range Juice

MON., MAY 26, 1986
10 AM· 10 PM

MIIY COATES
21' E. MAIN

FOODLAND FROZEN

OPEN
MEMORIAL DAY

NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

,.
•'

Idaho
Potatoes

"DAlY SPECIALS"

Celtics
defeat
Bucks
BOSTON (UPI) - As the
Milwaukee Bucks will attest, stra tegles that look good before a game
can prove embarrassing in
retrospect.
Despite Milwaukee's starting a
pair of 7-footers, the Boston Celtlcs
llrnttoo the Bucks to 12 points In the
first quarter Tuesday night and
went on to a 128-96 victory In the
opener of their Eastern Conference
final.
In the firSt quarter, Milwau~
shot just 17 percent as Boston rode a
22-6 surge to a 29-12 advantage. The
Bucks, whO missed 19 ot 23 shots
from the floor, tied stx other teams
tor the NBA playoff low of points
scored In an opening quarter.
Larry Bird scored a game- high
26 points to pace Boston's otfense,
includJng 10 points duling a 38-10
run that broke the game open.
Milwaukee, playing wltoout In·
jured All Star Sidney Moncrief.
scored the first points of the game
on a pair of Craig Hodges free
throws and tratled thereafter.
Boston led 7-6 at 7:30 when It
started the decisive run. which
included 10 points by Kevin
McHale. Reserve center Bill Wal·
tOn came In to score 9 during the
spree after Robert Parish was
whistled tor three fouls In the first
7:55.
The spun Included back-to- back
3-polnt plays by Jerry Sichtlng and
Watton, whose down-the-lane slam
over four"Bucks drew a standing
ovation from the sellout crowd of
14,!1!0. His free throw provided a
41·14 lead which a pair of McHale
jumpers extended to 45-16.
Mllwau~ drew to 60-38 at the
half, bu! was outscored by 33-ll in
the third quarter and Ja-28 In the
tourtll. Boston led by as many as :lJ
points In the final rnlnutes, when
both teams' lineup were composed
of reserves.
"You have these types of games
from time to time," philosophized
Bucks forward Terry Cummings ,
who missed 10 of 13 shots from the
Ooorand ftnishedwlth8polnts. "We
Just played terrible, and Boston
ylayed great."
, After six encounters with Boston
this season, Milwaukee is stUI
SEeklng Its first win.
The teams play again Thursday
night In Boston Garden. The
best-of-sE'I!en series shifts to Mil·
wau~ tor Games 3 and 4 this
weekend.
•
McHale said the Celtics' play on
Tuesday night was simply too good
for Milwaukee to match.
.
Bird potnted to Boston 's defense
as the primary reason for the
game's lo~J&gt;Ided outcome. .
In Its last playdf game May 4,
Boston Umltoo the Atlanta Hawks
to 6 points In the thlrd quarter, the
all-time playoff low for a quarter.
McHale finished with 17 points
against the Bucks, all 1n the first
hall, Walton bad 15 and Dennis
Johnoon 14.
Mttwau~. which shot 38 percent
overall, was led by Fields' 18 points
and Hodges added 14.
Boston, 8-1 In post-season play,
won Its 37th consecutive ~me
game. The Celtlcs_bave klst only
once In (I hOme contests this year.
In the subdued MJJwaukee locker
room, Alton Lister said his team
wtll forget Game 1 and oonoentrate
on Game 2.

BIG BEND

14.1986

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

10 LBS. BAG

tENDER

$139

FRESH

BUNCH

89&lt;

Broccoli

Carrots, l -Ib. bag
Grn. Peppers
Green Onions

3

~

1

CUBED BEEF
BUCKET STEAKS
LB.

S1 99

•

•

1ott'-'

BEND FOODLAND COUPON

VIVA
P~SEIMCES
.

-~·--

Routine office visits

.

ADYo\Co\RE COVERAGE

-- ----·-·- -------··- -----· --'
Covered 111 lull

----~------

Covered in full

Consu ltations

2°/o Milk

•

Covered in full

Within service area, care at AdvaCare tacility
provided for life-threatening emergencies or other
emergency reQuiring immediate medical attention

Covered in lull

Out of service area, care at any available medtcal

Covered in full

. A"!_n_~a_!_p~ysica~ eiCam _ _
_J_npatient phys~ia~ se~ices_

Covered in lu ll

facility. prollided for life-ttu..,tening emergencies

Covered in lull

or other emmgency requiring immediate
medical attention

. _Surge~~d ~el!te~ serv ic':_S _
Anesthesia

Cove red in lull
co~ered in lull

. -------...'!'!_ell·ba~t ~ re _

--

_

--

~IN!'ATIPT 8ER~8
_pays of _care _____ _
Semi-pri~a t e

co~e re d

Ambulance service In cases oflife-ttueatening
~er

---------·-'- -u
Unlimited

.

~ithin

service area, care at AdvaCare tedlity
Out of service area, care at any available medical faciWty

~--

co~ered

In ful l

.

[ MATEJIIf'IY ll!i"«&lt;tt
. Prenata~and postna=la:..lca
= r•'-:________

Co&gt;Jered 1n full
Co&gt;Jered 1n lull

Covered in lull
Coll&lt;!fed in full

AT BIG IEIID FOODLAND

..

•

••

Covered in lull
Covered in full

Co&gt;Jered 1n full

Compl icatlo~n;:c
s - - - --

Covered
In full
~-"'-'--"'-- - - - " ' 1

Consultations

Covered in full

Laboratory tests. EKG. EEG. etc

Co&gt;Jered in full
Covered in lull

Related anesrnes1a seNices
Covered In full
- - - - - - - -'--;-;-·
Laboratory exams and ultrasou~- ____ _
Covered in full

Co&gt;Jered in lull

Ph~s ician

serv1ces

~- ~iag no~t1~ _a nd_ ~~~ra_e~ti~ 11-ray serv1ces
Gene!al _nursin~ _ser~ices

Covered in lull

Sp ~~al ~u ty ~ur sing se.:_v~~es

co~e r ed

Short- term intervention physical therapy and
• i nh~l ation ther_apy __ ----· _
Short- term intervention phys•cal and occupat1onal
~_h_erapy r!1ab~ ital ion s!r_v~c~s

Consultations
- - --

I'Pileac:RiPnoN IIRIHII

Covered in full
Covered in full

Short-term intervention physical and occupational
therapy rehab ilitation serv1ces

Co&gt;Jered 1n full

......,..._;;;;:: -

--

,- ii!NTALH~u·W.:.~Ai •i:-n~- .--- ---·--------- ------ •
i
fMOJilm&lt;im coml!intd rotOl ol' 3j) dq~ .SubJOCtiO $100
,
l~atient

alcohol detox ificat~~!ogra~
Nervous and mental conditions

Covere~ in ~uti

_ Covere~f~
Covere d in fu ll

~_

-

'.

$3 co-payment

(Up to 30 day supply

Immunizations, allergy and che-motherap""
hy:----·
innoculations

Collefed in lull

c~
~
- =-~~
~
==~~====~.~~~.
. f hysician care.___
tOO days per calendar year skill~ n ur~ng facility

Covered in full
Covered in full

--I

_,

......
1

. L..1'1..:E"YIIIdlll; Ollt•OI;Potlrll ~ ""' ll&gt;.lli~ $6~1_~, ·-·-----~'--··- - - ----- .....J
_lnp~~~~rug detoxific ~tion prog ra~ __

__

Covered in full
Covered in lull

of prescription)

Covered in lull

Cardiovascular studies Pulmonary funct ion studies

~nnual hearing and eye e~ms

. Family planning and counseling
Health and education classes
.~!fition

se~ices

counsaing and edJcation

Covered in lull
Covered in lull

Covered in lull
Covered in full

--,

······-1

-j
·-

To assure understandlnP, ol the arrangements snd locations in which services are covered by
AdvaCare, applicants w1ll be offered a Statement of Understanding to sign that re~emp hasizes
the program's requirements.
·

See for yourself what a new and better
kind ofhealth insurance can do for you.
For more information contact us at:
Advacare
P0 Box 680,385 jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
614 / 446- 5283

4

----;-----;--:~----:""'~

Prescription drugs

Covered in lull

tests

·-- - - -

_ _ _ __ _ __

~ ~~~-_____.._~···--'-'--''~·-~---··"-'~..._ ..

Pftf/81

Labor~ory

-----

Newborn nursery care

•n lull

Covered in full
Covered in full

I
II

··------

l' oU1'i&gt;AneNi' s!RYicE$___ -- -- .....
.... - . - -jTtril is oMr •
Nsl Ql r..- and PIO'ftChJiu •~•"•lW.)
I
-"'=-- ...._
-·~·----~----- -------- ------- -~--· . -. _X-ray.:___EKG. EEG. ~ nd _?t~~r:__diagn os li c stud1es

I ··

'

Defivery in ho,!P_i_ta__!_:~ orma~a_nd caesarean

Oru_9~~edic1nes . a n'!___rel~~d suppl1es

---------· ·-

ciaarott•n ond tobocco. Coupon good thru Soturdoy._May 17. 1986

AdvaCare must be
notified within 72 hours

room; intensive care or p n ~ a te room

·- w__h~n medi~~~y_ne~es~~~L
. _Sur~er~_and rel! ted services
An esthesia

Plastic
Gallon
limit 1 with coupon plus 810 .00 addittonal purc::t"lase e~tcludlng beer. wine.

Covered in full

emergencies

c
~- ~ c,:--··J~''. ,' ·.:v:\ J&gt;/;;·-;P)f.i''&lt; .

in fu ll

911imI r:F!fW-Ii

AdvaCare must be
notified within 72 hoors

~.1

Advatare~
A dlflerent kind
.
ol health Insurance..;

I

30c OFF LABEL

BRIGHT &amp; EARLY

CRISCO

Chilled Juice

Vegetable Oil

64 Oz.
Ctn.

·~~?'· $199

89&lt;

OIANGE CRUSH
Din or REG.

6 VARIETIES
DINNER BELL

Seven Up

Lunch Meats

2 Uttr

ltl. 1

89C·

· •W• ReMrve The Right To limit Quantities .prl-

1-111.
Pkg.

1

$139

lliiJIII

Quick and ealy meal1.

-;~ ,_

.

-7
9
(
franks

I

ECKRICH
' ~ ,- KIELBASA

ECIIRj(H 12 01. Pkg.

Smoked Sausage

99
LB. S1

Beef franks
1·Lb.
Plcg.

ALL MEAT ECKRICH

$179

Franks ·

ECKRICH 12 Ozl Pkg.

SmorgasPac $199
ICKIIICH 1-Ut. Pkg.

·

Cheese Frcinks $119

-

~

Dmifll

ECKIKH All MEAT 1-111. Plrg

Bologna ·

TASTE THE DIFFERENCE'

Effective Wed .. May 14 thru Sat., May 17, 1986 •UDSA FOod Stamp• Gladly Accepted

$1 19

TASfE 'J'HE

Not Reep!Jnllble For Typogr11phlcel Errore
, ,

I

I

ECJIRj(H

\.

�I

Wednesday, May 14. 1988

POmel'oy-Middleport, Ohio

[The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, May 14, 1986

Page-9

•

In the spotlight
STATE CHAMPIONS - 'l1le
stylettes Twirling Colp, directed
by Peggy Gllle8ple In Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va., won 19811 re-

ponal champlollllhlps and the
1986 West VIrginia Slate Cham·
plonshlps. 1be &amp;Iris are from the
GaJJia, Meigs and Mason county
areas.

Family medicine:
By EDWARD SCiffiECK, D.O.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohlo University College
~ Osteopathic Medicine
Question: Lately. my grandmother has be€n more and rmre
forgetful and. has been acting
strangely. Could she have Alzhei-

mer's disease?
Answer: Alzheimer's disease is
responsible for 50 to 60 percent of
the cases of dementia In this
count ry. Dementia is lar~ ly a
disorder of the elderly (roughly
over age 50) and is characterized by

poor memory and difficulty In
making judgments, solving problems and communicating rationally. About 2 million Americans
have Alzheimer's disease.
Qu es ti o n : What c a us e s
dementia?
Answer: If the brain is damaged
by such conditions as stroke or
thyroid disease, dementia can
result As people age, their chanoes
of succumbing to dementia In·
crease. Indeed, dementia occurs
more frequently than heart attack
or stroke In people over 75.
Scientists are oot sure what

causes Alzheimer's disease, but
Intense research into this problem
continues. Researchers know that
certain visible changes In the brain
- the clumping of abnormal nffVe
cells - occur when the disease Is
present , but why this happens Is oot
completely known .
Many researchers think environ·
mental factors play a' part In
Alzhelrne.r's dise~se. Some head
injuries, for example, could In·
crease the risk of oontractlng
Alzheimer's disease.
Question: How Is Alzheimer' s
disease diagnosed?

'

..
WORKS JUDGED - Unda Bauer and PhyDis
Michael, from left, judged the Rio Gran de College and
Communtly College student art show. Winners
named were Mae Ring, Wellslon, Best of Show, oU
and acrylic; Susan Taylor, Jackson, first place,
pottery; Phil Hampton, Jakcson, second place,

Answer: A careful medical his·
tory is taken, with special attention
to conditions such as vascular
disease (hardening of the arteries),
thyroid disease and p;ychlatrtc
problems. All these disorders can
masquerade as Alzheimer's disease. There Is no specific test for
this condition, but x-raysolthe head
and brain or a brain biopsy can help
point to Alzheimer's disease. In
most cases, however, a medical
history and physical examination
are sufficient to diagnose this
illness.
There Is no cure for Alzheimer's
disease, but keeping the victim·
active and stimulated hy the people
around her as long as possible Is
recommended. Medication to calm
agitation or treat sleeping disorders
may be prescrlhed. The Alzhel·
mer's Disease and Related Dis·
orders Association can JrOVIde help
for both patients and families
coping with a member with the
Utness.

,

BARGAI N HATINEES SATURDAY
I SUNDAY • All SEATS 12.50
ADMISS ION EVERT TUES DAY 12.50

L MAY 9 tllru 18 _j
FRIDAY thru. THURSDAY :

sculpture; Terrance Hopkins, PatriOt, third place,
photography; Kyle Simpson, Kirtland, Elaine Klslds,
Gallipolis and Debbie McMlllan, Reynoldsburg
received honorable mentions. Curators for the exhibit
were Uly Goldslayn, picured, and Ed Roark, both
RGC staff members.

~~!:~:~ theCi~~~~'::ln~l~bde:!e~t~his'!~ently
antics cr the t.Jmming bird, nothing
that it ~ the only blrd which can fly
oockwards, and gave the recipe for
a feeder - one part sugar, lour
parts water , and red food coloring.
Mae Mora's paper was entitled
"Spring's Up" and included tips to
grow by. She gave several readings
on spring, and talked about the
zodiac signs for planting along with
poisonlous plants,concludlngwlth a
poem, "Through the Years."
Sunshine projects were discussed
a nditwas ootedthatMaeandMark
Mora had visited George Genhel·
mer taking to him a basket d. fruit ,
and that Ruth Erwin wUI take a
hanging basket to Wyatt Chadwell

-NOWONlY-

:7~~H

.,

If you're going from air·

are good for summer because they
allow the alr to clrculate and body
heat to escape. U possible, ellml·
nate belts. too.
A minimum ol clothilng Is best for
hOt, humid days. Usually only
people In the desert tribes need to
Insulate against extreme dry heat
with long, heavy robes.
Clothes made from flat, light·
weight: thiln fabrics with an open
weave are cool choices, particularly If they are made from cotton,
linen oc a blend that Is part natural
ftber, .such as cotton and polyester.
Absorbent fibers such as cotton,
linen, and rayon allow moisture to

Try to become accu stomed to

conditioned buildings to the outside, war mer .temperatures Inside and
dress In layers. Shedding a jacket adjust your clothilng instead d. the
and scarf or tie can help you feel air conditioner to keep cool. This
more comfortable when you go Into will help you be more oomfortable,
and also save rroney and energy In
the summer heat.
However, If you're striving to operating you home air conditioner.
keep cool all the time, try to omit all
White and light-colored clothes
the layers you can. Even If a man will keep you cooler In warmer
must wear a suit, there are some temper~ures because they reflect
cool choices. He will be most radiant heat. In direct suntlght, a
romfortable In short-sleeved shirts person wearing white has much
and unlined, Ughtwelght jackets Jess heat gain than someone
with noT-shirt or tie. Women will be wearing dark-colored clothes. Dark
more comfortable In skirts than In colors absorb heat.
Loose-lilting clothes with roomy
slacks and eliminate wearing nylon
openings for neck, arms and legs
bose.

escape withOut becoming clingy
annd cl ammy. A tightly knitted,
sUck polyester fa brtc will stay crisp
tu t tends to stick to the body In
warm weather.
This evaporation is the only way
your body can get rid of heat when
oulslde temperatures are higher
· than skin temperatures.
When you start matching accessories with your clothes to create
outfJts, remember that sandals wUJ
be cooler than closed-style shoes.
Tight scarves and ties wlll just
make you feel hotter, as wUJ lots of
necklaces and bracelets.
Uyou're going to be outside, wear

a hat. Too much direct sunlight on
your head may cause overheating.
And If It's raining, wear a water·
repellent raincOat rather than a
waterproof one. The water repellent one Jets your skin breathe;
waterproof ones made of plastic or
vinyl do not.
Basically, keep It light and loose
to keep cool. And you may find
you're using less energy and money
for air conditioning to fight the
summer heat.
Did You Know That: Some
research indicates !hat persons
wearing llght blues and greens the oool colors - not only think
rooler, but actually are cooler.

What is Alzeheimer's Disea~e?

531 JACKSON PIKE · AT.3&amp; WEST
Phone.WS· 4S24

Now yOIJ can get
super UIJIOQ&amp; oo an
Ar1Carved class rmg
backed by a Full llle·
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1986 an&lt;lts to be usea
only lor the pur·
chase of ArtCarved
S~ adt u m hiQh scroor
dass riOQs

By CINDY S. OUVERI
Coonly Extmsion Agent
Home Economlcs/4-H
As temperatures climb, so does
our Interest in "cool" clothes. As
you check or add to your warm
weather wardrobe select garments
that allow body heat and perspira·
tlon to escape.
Seventy-degree temperatures
may be IDt If you're running. But If
you're sitting quietly in the shade, It
may seem cool, so you'd dress
dl!ferently to be. comfortable.
This spring and summer, match
your clothilng to your activities and
the heat.

AM ClASS - Soulhem Klndergarteners will graduate FJ'I.
day evening In a 7:30 p.m.
ceremony at Southern Junior
High School. Graduating from
the morning clalls are, front row,
left to right, Matthew DID, Ml8ty

Han. Malinda

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It was r;,ported that the spririg

regional flower shOw was a winner
In competition of the Ohio Assocla·
lion of Garden Clubs ' and wUJ
receive an award at the convention
July 18-~. In Clnclnn~ti.
'
Mace! Barton did a table arrangement for the oond banquet at
Eastern . A plant exchange was
held . The June meeting will be
hosted by Edna Wood with Jean
Frederick as co-hostess
At that time BUI Frands will do a
workshop on photographing
flowers.

r--== - - - - - - - - - - l - - - - - -- -----1

Clark,

Core)

Wllllams, Regina Manuel, Ryan
Grace, Kristen Hill, Valerie
Cundlfl, Amy Varney and Sara
Ervin. Second row, Jennifer
Friend, Jody Hupp, Shaun J1ar..
rls, Pete Sls!ion, Alan McGuire,
Jerod Gilmore, Megan
Drummer, Zorah Hensley, Jessica Roosh, Mike Manley, Chris
lleltmlre and ADela Mulford.
'Third row, Cynthia Caldwell,
Tn!h Holman, Matt Hill, Chad
Clark, Adam Green, Amber
Heldreth. Mlck Barr, Robbie
Card, Nathan Hensler, Evan
Struble, Amanda Thelsll, Alan
Moore and Ryan Nease. Absent
from ' the morning class when
pictures were taken were Erica
Amott and Scott Brlnager.

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NaturP Preserve highlighted the
May meeting ofthe Chester Ga rden
Club.
Members of t IV' dub and several
guests viewed and Identified the
wUd flowers as Eleanor Knight and
Pauline Ridenour lead the way.
Following the tour the group went
to the home of Kathryn Mora lor a
meeting co·hos!.\-'(1 by Paula Mo.ra ,
whO gave the devotions, ~mg
"Nesting In the Wrong Places and
"What Is a Mother?" Kathryn
Mora gave a.~tory .. "What Is a
Grandmother? . wntten by a
grandmother.
Maurita Miller had a paper
mtltled " Birds that Keep You

Choose right clothing for·hot, humid dayS

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SWIFT'S PREMIUM
CANNED HAMS •••••••• ~.!!.~~.... S6. 95
1·ll. CRISPY SIIYE VACUUM PAN
SLICED BACON .....................
S1.09
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SHREDDED ....Ib. $2.39
BOILED HAM ................~!~!~.l!~ S2.19
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••~·~•••••••••• 99&lt;
2-11. SHEDD'S IOWL

MARGARINE ............. 51.29
16 OZ. KRAfT

VElVETTA
CHEESE ................~t 52.29
HIUANDAL!

MEDIUM
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30 CT. CALIF.

CElERY ............... !!~ ..... 69c
6

oz.

RED
RADISHES ..................... 29c
10-11. IDAHO

BAKING .
POTATOES ................ S1.59

6 OZ. DONALD DUCII

ORANGE JUICE •••••••••••• 2 CANS $1.15
ORE·IDA
GOLDEN FRIES .............~~~••••• S1.79

32

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MONEY ~AVING COUPON 4BOUNTY
TOWELS•••••••••~~••••• S1.29
ROll COnONElLE
TOILET
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22 OZ. JAR
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15 OZ. OEL MONTE
SEEDLESS RAISINS ................ S1.19
46 OZ. CAN HUNT'S
TOMATO JUICE ........................99&lt;
42 OZ. RINSO SOAP POWDER

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7t/4 OZ. CARNAnON
SPREADABLES
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16 OZ. CREAMY DELUXE CHERRY
RTS FROSTING ..................... S1.3
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8 OZ. FOLGER'S .
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INSTANT
COFFEE
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~~~ ..... S6.19
32 OZ. VlASIC KOSHER
DILL
PICKLES· ................~~t .... S1.49
12 OZ. ARMOUR
D BEEF
CAN
$1
•

PM CLASS - Graduating
!rom the Southern Kindergarten
aftemoon class are front row,
left to right, Jenny Sellers.
Amber AlldM, Mike JoiDJon,
Jayme Mlller, 11m Wickersham, Ashley McKinney, Uncisay Smllh, Melissa lAyne,
Jamie Terzopplous and Jennifer
Roush. Second row, Bobby
Rupe, Matthew RIUie, HUiary
Ttu1ey, Jonathan Dalley, Mary
Jane Francis, Marc Jones, Roy
Powell. Todd IUzer, J118011 Wrl'-land John Mlller. Third row, '
Stacy Warden, Ranetta
Wheeler, Anael llant8, John
Matson, Travis Ransom, Nicole
Davidson, Tyson Evans,
Amanda Smith, Dean Hill and
Amber Bird. Tile graduation
ceremony will be held Friday
evening, 7:!ll p.m., at Southern
Junior High School.

Community calendar/ area happenings

Beat of the bend

Middleport reunion planned
By BOB HOEFIJCH
Sentinel Stall Wrker
Yep! The Middleport HighSchool
Alumni Assocla·
tlon Is having Its
annual reunl&lt;p~ .
The even( Is
scheduled lor Saturday, May 24, at
6;30 p.m., and
everything will
be taking place at the present Meigs
Junior High School. The Middleport
Order of Eastern StarwUJ serve the
dinner on what former Middleport
High School students call "the
stage" and while that Is being
c!ea1·ed following dinner, there wlll
be an auction of Middleport High
School memorbilla with Dave
Ashley serving as auctioneer.
r hear they've got some great
stuff to auction and In the Vanna
White roles wUJ be Marllyn Meier
and Sue Baker wea ring their
orange and black cheerleadlng
out11ts from back when.
lncldentillly, there Is even a 1929
yearbook- among the items to be
auctioned:'
AI Scarberry, a graduate and a
former principal at the high school,
will be master of ceremonies and
there'll be the annual Susan Park
Scholarship award. For the
dancers - ya gotta choice. In the
cafeteria, Denver Rice, woo makes
IJI whole lot of music, will be playing

his guitar and In the auditorium
Jack O'Shea of Huntington will be
spinning the records.
Seems to me that many of the
alumni wtll gather with Denver
Rice, not only to dance, but to sing
some of those great old songs that
he comes up with - you know the
good ones with the words that you
can remember.
Reservations are to be made with
Freddie Houdashelt, 398 Grant St. ,
Mlddleport.
In the birthday comer, we have
Homer Baxter wiD wUJ mark his
anniversary on May 22 and his wife.
Irene, who chalks up another year
on May 24. The Baxters wUJ observe
their 35th wedding anniversary on
June 9. They reside m Mechanic St.

ing scholarly achievement In the
liberal arts and sciences and
candidates are selected on tl'E' basis
of scholastic performance, broad
cultural Interests and variety In
courses which must Include both
fo r eign la ng ua ges and
mathematics.
Jennifer Is a sociology major and
resides at Route 1, Box 13832,
'Jihom town, Ind.
Pomeroy Mayoc Dick Seyler was
all wound up after reading about all
of the Ohio Department of High·
ways rooney golngtocountlesother
than Meigs In the latest release of
planned projects. Shucks - don't
surprise me oone. i);cl keep smiling.

Wolf Pen notes

George Harris, Pomeroy, has
joined the sales staff at the Jim
Cobb Chevrole t-Oldsmobile ·
CadU!ac Agency In Pomeroy, for·
merly Simmons. George has be€n
in the business of selling trucks and
cars for some Ill years now.

Visiting Sunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith were Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Sarah Beth.
Mrs. Paul Darnell Sr., Middleport, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs.Paul Darnell, J eff and
Melissa.
You remember attractive Jen·
Mr. and Mrs. Leslle Frank and •
niter Crew Solomon!
Sarah Beth ol Texas Road, visited
Jennifer was one of 106 students Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Initiated this roonthlntothe Purdue Haning and Ronald.
University Chapter rl Phi Beta
Mr.. and Mrs. Terry Johnson of ·
Kappa, the nation' s eldest and most · Middleport were the Sunday guests
prestigious hooorary society.
of hls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
The society reco2111zes outstand· Jolmson and Tammy.

'

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Ellz.abeth
Lohse. Daisy Blakeslee, co-hostess;
plant exchange.
RACINE - Reviva l at Freedom
Gospel Mission Church through
Saturday at 7:30 night ly. Located
on CR 31, Bald Knob Stlversville
Road back of Pori land and Racine.
Rev. Clyde Ferrell. evangelist;
special singers.
muRSDAY
CHESTER - New Life Dra ma
Co. will be presenting the Word of
God in drama at the Chester
Church of God, 7 p.m. this evening;
public Invited.
POMEROY - Meigs Junior
High sports banquet. 6: 30Thu rsday
evening at the Meigs High School;
each athlete or parent to take two
sidle dishes, vegetabl e or dessert.
CHESTER - District 13, Daugh·
ters of Amer)ca, will meet at the
Chester Grade SchoolThursday at 7
p.m.
CLIFTON - Clifton Tabernacle,
Clifton, W.Va., wlll be In revival
Thursday through Sunda y with
services at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be B.T. Weston of
Columbus, Ohio. Singing ministry
will also be leatured.

POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Better Health Club wil meet at 1: 15
p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
MethOdist Chu rch. The program
wUJ be by Nancy Grueser, the
contest, Beuna Grueser. N~ offlc·
ers wUI be elected .
MIDDLEPORT - Child Conser·
vat ion League 6 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Helen Blackston for
hike and wiener roast; also white
elepbant sale.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Annual Southern
High School variety shOw, "Solid
Gold", 8 p.m. Saturday In the
Charles Hayman gymnasium.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Revival services
at the Pomeroy Church of Olrlst
will begin Sunday and continue
through Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .

· each evening. Art Bush of OperatiOn Evangeli7.e wU be the
evange Jist.
Spaghetti supper

A spaghet ti supper will be held
Saturday by the Lo ng &amp;lllom
Communit y Associaton Satu rday
with serving 10 be held from 4 to 7
p.m.at ll'E' communit y building.
The menu wil l be spaghett i and
meatballs, tossed salad , roll or
garlic bread . tea or coffee. and
dessert. Cost wil be S3.50 for adults
and $2 lor children.
Southern variety show
RACINE - Sout hern High Choir
will present their annual YariE'ty
siDw this Saturday £'VeQing at 8
p.m. Entitled "Solid Gold" and
under the direction of music
teacher Roberta Maidens, the show
wUI take place In the Charles
Hayman Gymnas ium . Everyone
welcome.

Catholic Church Council meets
A report on the May crowning
and first communion was given at
the Monday night meeting of the
Sacred Heart Church Council held
at the church .
Plans were made for a church
picnic to be held at the home of
Anna Blackwood and for a swim·
mlng party for the youth to he held
a t the London Pool, 7 to 9 p.m. on
June 29. Next meeting of the councU

will be hel~t the Hackett cottage
at umg Botti!m.
Attending were the Rev. AnthOny
Glannamore, George Hackett . Jodie Harris, Ca rrie Beegle, Wilma
Mansfield, Bernie Anderson, Carol
McCullough, Emerson Heighton,
Richard Poulln, Barbara Mullen ,
Kate Welsh, Ed Burkett, and Henrv
Wells.
·

�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

.

Ohio

--

.

----

you want it.. .
you ·ve got it .. .

N

MEN'S LEE· JE

mE BEAT GOES ON - The
llxUl grt!de cl888 of Ohio VaDey
Clu'lldan School rooenlly vl!llled
the Holler Clinic Dlapollllc
Teatmr: Center to leam aboutlhe
111e of!IOUIId waves In medlckle.
Roger Gilders, cJmlc exerelse 1
physiologist, explained tiM! ' I
heart's anatomy, BDd demonIt~ the ull1'11801111d technique. Jlere, Gilders UBe5 ultraIIOUIId on "pallent" Jamie Black.
Viewing the Inside of hl8 heari oo
a monitor are other sludenls In
the class. The class alllo learned
lbe advantages of echocardlography as a means to salel,y

lnsp&lt;.'Ction and initiatory work
was held at a recent m('('li.ng of t~
Pythian Sisters of Rockland Tern·
pic held at the Long Bot tom
Community Building.
Bt'lllah Maxey, most excellent
chlel, presided at the meeting with
Sheila Boren of Findley, grand
chief, serving as the Inspecting
officer . Initiatory work was con·
ductcd by Beverly Hammond,
Columbus. grand outer guard.
Oihcr visitors were Hazel Tho·
mas, Am anda. past representa tive
of l he Supreme Temple; Lorena

Pythian

S

Sisters
conduct
•
meetmg

$500 OFF
NOW $1499 • $16 99

The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 14, 1986

Wedneeday,

Wall. Nevada, District 7, Janet
Wagner, towell, District 16, district
deputies: Harlan Ballard, Knights
of Pythias, and. tilrl'e from the
Lowell Temple.
Alta Ballard, Dlstrlt 11 deputy ,
thanked those who took part In the
evening's program. Inspection of
WUkesvUie Temple was announced
for May ! 6, and Gallipolis Temple
for May 28. Potluck dessert was
served following the program.
Next meeting will he held on May
19 wit h an observance of Memor ial
Day and special enterta inment.

Preceptor Beta Beta meets
A donation to Hands Across
Amer ica through the Eastern High
School concern group was made by
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter d.
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at a recent
meeting held at the ' Rlverlx&gt;at
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
Several summer socials Include·
lng a trip to Blennerhasset Island
and an overnight at.Bardstown Ky.
to attend the mu sical, "My Old
Kentucky Home" were planned.

Next meeting will he OC&gt;Id on May 22
at 6 p.m. at t~ hom e of Janet
Theiss In Racine.
Attending the meeting were
Roherta O'Brien, Ruby Baer, Jane
Walton, June Van Vranken, Donna
Jones, Maidie IV1ra, Clarice Krautter, Teresa Swatzel, Vera Crow.
Ann Rupe, Rosie Slsoon, Norma
Custer, and Reva Vaughan and
V elm a R ue who served
refreshments.

PRICES GOOD THIU SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1986

ALL WEEK
290 SECOND AVf.

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

ou

.MIDDLEPORT. OH

Manuf.acturer's

Meigs County honor rolls ____,· _ __ Me111orial
Day·
l
.

d(', Jason Clrclt'. Jayson Codner, Shanoon
John Hoback. Tonya lngpls. Mka
es. Jenntfer Llslt&gt;. Colin Malli;ns, Norman
Matson, Clw:'ryl Papc. Jason Shain. Jennifer
~ nts ,

Smlth, Robin Stout. Andrea TIIE&gt;iss, Janelle
Wiliams. Michel It' Winebrenner. Mavla Yoa·
cham, Richard Deaver.
·
Eighth Grade: Kevin Burgess. Amy
~ - Kathy lhJ&lt;'. Otrls Murphv. Sheri
sh, Jane AM \\1llia·ms. Aim Wolfr,

Dodie Cleland, Sharla Coooer. Heather

Stacey Duncan, 'tara Gerlach.
Klm Hanning, Darin Logan. Chrissy Weavt'l'.

Dawnport,

Robbie Wyatt .

Thl&gt; fifth sL"&lt; weekS grading prr!od honor
rou at tht' Harrtsonvlllt" SChool has IJeoen
annoonced. Making a grade of B or above In
aU thflr subjects to be naiTIE.'d to the ni l wE!-e:
F'lrst GradE': Laura Arlx, Jessl.e Blackford,
J es~ Dtllon , Josl"lla Howard. Chery i .Tew~ll .

Allcta SIE"gaU . Andy Vance. Ttnuny St~ .
Second Grade: Amber Bennen , Gary
Stanley, PetroVa Stegall, Donald Yos!.

~ announced.· Making a gr.ide « B or
above In all their subjects to be named to the
roll were;

~~ Grade: Ryan Bareswtlt, J .R. Block·
wE'll. Amy Clonch. Jesslca Counts, Chad
J))dson , Anna Flnl&lt;. Ondy Hawkins, RJclcy
HOOVEr, Libby Kin.&lt;, David Rlggs, Caleb
Shuler, Darrick S1Cfalr, Stepi1anle Stewart,

Tara Warner, Misty Chanfy, Pltul Eppersoo,
Olad

~man,

Nathan Gocdw'ln, Kenny

Hoschar, Undy Kelly. Francine La.uder mllt,
Wesley McClure, Heather McLain, Brandl
Meadows, Shannon Pet rie, Andy Pickens
JE&gt;Sse Plantz, Amber Slave, Trish Thompson:

The

!Uth six wet'ks gradlng ~riOd honor
at thE.&gt; Bradbury &amp;hool has OOen
Moonct,.:l. Making a gradE" of B or aOOve in
all lhflr subjects to be na..rllf'd to thl&gt; J'oll werf'·

~

flf1h Crack': Abby BJallr. Linda Chapman".
Wendy Qark, Jay Crm1N ns, Hea ther
Franckawtak. Adam Uttlt&gt;, l...{le Luckydoo.
Kyla Sellers.
Sixth Gradf'' l 'rki il Bat&gt;r . Fra nk Blakf&gt;.

Foort h Grade: Mlsty Frum . Meron
Grueser. RhOnda Ra}mond. Jonathan Vance ,
Timmy Vance.
Fifth Gra&lt;M&gt;: Melissa Durham.
Sixth Grad£': J ames HOUier1on, Jeumy
Rupe, Paul Sharp, Anthony Slx, Eobby
\ 'aJlC('. Ronald Vanct'.

The flfth six wl'E'k.s grading pe-riod honor
roll at the Mkld1epor1 El mlentarv SChool l\a.s

•Cut Flowers
•Poned Plants
•Wreaths
•Sprays
•Arrangements

Foorth Grade: Terlda Cogar, Tom eremeans, Jason Eblin, Megan Evans, Jennifer

F ink, Ertn Harper, r...Ue Qualls . Cora ~.

Man Stew an. Belli Buskirk, DawnHockman
.El~ba Meadows, Jared Stl'Wart, Angel~
White.

Ptestic Flowert

Second Grade: ChriS Chapman Stacy
Davis, Todd DaVis. Travis Faremyer' A.Uson

Gerlach, Michael Unie, Mark

Mills; Nicky

Mills, Tanya PhaUn, Kenda Reynolds,

Sara

Roosh, Nau kuma Tyree, Elizabeth Wrtght,
Bernice Blake, Blitch Bra~haw Chad
Burton, Tara Fltchpatrtck. Michael FrancJro.
wlak, Donald Goh,.,, Apr U Halley, Brent
Hanson, Jeremy Hartscr1, Willie J ohnson.
Elleo Lewls , Alida Russell, Erin Smith,

Visit for day
Mr. and Mrs. William F . Smith
Sr. of Bradbury, spent Mother's
Day In Columbus visiting their SJn
and daughter ·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs.
W. F. Smith Jr., and famUy
memQers, Mr s. Kay Chesser , Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Conlslord, and
Mandy and Teresa.

each species beautifies
1ragrance, color, shape and size
The earth on mountatnsides or pla1ns

In floral grandeur. fed by rains:
Where petals. brilliant·hued. abound
On bushes. trees and on the ground.
In an~ Church ~ou may attend,
This beaut; helps you comprehend
The sptingtime lesson 11will giVe: .
God loves this world in which we live!

\jcycJe safety.
Missy CalaWay, Gay Ann Burke, and Tina

Carpenter notes
Mary Loudner has returned
home after spendi ng SJme time in
Cincinnati with a daugh ter and
family.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Dwallll' Jordan and
Sarah spent a week at Satsuma,
Fklrlda, with Mrs. Jordan parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William CulwelL Mrs.
Culwell has been Dl bi t was
somewhat Improved.

FINI!Iml OOURSE - AirmaD Joe Hmnphrey, son of Mr.
and Mrs. . Gene Hmnphrey,
Pomeroy, has !llccessluDy completed lbe refrigeration and
cryogenics specialist course condueled by the 3100 Technical
Tralnlnr: Wing, Sheppard Air
Force Base, Texas. He has
reported to the 366th ClvO
Engtneemg Squadron at Mountain Home Air F oree Base,
Idaho. Hls wife, Jamie Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Acree of Stale Route 1-L'I,
Pomeroy. Humphrey Is a 1985
graduate of Meigs High School.

l

•

Conolly sef''ed refreshmen ts.
Ash&gt;I1 meetlng wUI be heldon May Bat 1: ll
p.m. 10 distribute Stanley prcx'luct orders.·A
regular meetin g 'N'lll be held on May L1 al
which time Missy Calaway wt1l g1ve a
dermnstraHon on extraordinary eggs, MIchelle Donovan - report on bicycle safety,
Randy Burke- safety report and Scott BW"ke

- health report.
Rob White
News Reporter

Visits
Airman and Mrs. Joe Humphrey
spen t a recent Sunday with his
grandmother, Myrtle Grover , and
ott~r relatives while h:Jme on leave
from tOC&gt; Air For ce. He and his wife,
t~ former Jamie Acree are now
residing at Mountain Home Air
Force Base in Idaho.

TE~M'vJORK

AND .COMMUNICATION
·
SAVE LIVE.S ·

-·.-

AMERICAN, PIMENTO OR SWISS

·~

' "!

Kraft
ingles . . . . ........... . . .

•

,,.o ·a·

.,.

..

~J

FISH 'N' CHIPS

S1.19

•

••

n·

.... ----

oo+~••••o

•

•

us to effectively and safely
tr1111port patients to the hospital.
The communication betwoan the
EMS and the hospital is outstiWid·
ing. Many times patient treat·
mlll'lt can actually begin before
we arrive at the hospital. Then,
when we arrive at the Emergency
Care Clll'lter, they are out there to
meat us.
Because of the teamwork and
good communications with the
hospital, patient treatment is
effective and prompt - lives are
saved I
Thank You!

•

-·

....
·.•
•

••·~•

.....

'

til

Plcifodefplcio
Wednesday

Pick 0
Chix ......... . . . ......... .

..••..••••

Coca Cola . . . .

~

...
~

..

•

'

•

.••
,

••

..

. . ·-.-... .. - .. y--- - . -.. .......
~-

. ---

'·- -~-- ·--~-- -

__,._ ---... ................_' ..,___ -·---- ~---·---· --- ------- ~ ·-·-·--f

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT CAP-ON
9-11 -LB . AVG .

Whole Boneless
Sirloin Tip

Doz.

Pound

c
2-Ltr.

38
SLICED
FREE
I

,./

'

J

~.,·

.1·).·
•

ADWlRfiSIDITEM POUCY
'
Each ot tneu a a~,,,s~rl • r~ ..,soa reourrutlto be _•~atlllv av1u l ~ble for sare on e&amp;ch l(ro(lef Store. il• tt(Jlll! s pecollc ~ll~ noUttl tl\ thtS 8(1, tt .... e do run out ot an advll'nlled
otem ~~o e .,., ,,, otter vov ~our c Mrc~ ot ~ co moar~OI~ rHliTl , wnen I Y~•IaQie reltec11ng the ume Sll~lniJS or A''"rch&amp;ck wh.ch wlllentrtle ~ ou 10 outchese the adverl'1sDd
at l f"ll! t!fvP.fHsed oroce w•thoo JOdavs Onlv one
couooo wrll be occeoted per rtem put chased.
·

·t~m

o~ef'ldor

..
I

lb.

, J

Located al Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasart, WV

•

12- Ga llon

Diet Coke .or

~

~

"DEATH
WISH"lr

Kroger
2% Milk..........

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, SPRITE,

•

~

Game Time 7:~.PM

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

Grade A
Large Eggs . .

will always ba
yoo have coma

to apprecJate at Pleasant Valley Hospital.

HOMOGENIZED, SKIM OR

KROGER

Not~attar the degroa or nature of your emergency, you
treated ~th the courteous and professional, 24-hour service

{/£()$!

Nacho Chips

Nacho
Cheese
Sauce
AT THE REGULAR PRICE OF $2.99 . . .. , . . .. .... . FREE!

It is heartbreaking to sea a life
lost. especially if it happens
because troatmlll'lt is instituted
too little and too late. As the first
people treating a patient, we as
Emergency Madicai .Service per·
sonnel have a profound effect on
their condition.
We as EMS people, owe much
of the effectiveness of the
emergency medical services iys·
tern to the training and know!·
edge we receive from Pleasant
Valley Hospital. The excellent
staff of physicians and nurses at
Pleasant Valley Hospital have
made available to EMS personnel
the expert training that enables

"At the IIIII of the Pomtroy-Mason Bridge
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2556

GET
ONE
14-oz . Bag

BUY
ONE
1-LB. CTNR .

l.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

12-oz .

-~·-·

~·~+OL..
Speelal of ~he Weak .
'

~

16-oz.

·~

their pltl.es are Dur!!t, Cook, Taylor and Morris.

gave a repcr1 on bedding plants; Mtcheue
Donovan gave a report on polson.'lvy: Adam
Calaway - Health report en the hazards a
clgarettl' srmldng_; Scott Burke - report oo

White House
Applesauce . . . . ..

~

·Geo._e WrtcN took part In the derby. Pldurol with

County 4-H meeting notes
'

•

16-oz.

'

woo best car award. Cars were buD! by lb rub.oaluls

tnnr ot Gay Arm Burke on AprU 3). 15
memberS and 2 advisers attended. The
Stanley tll'ders Vo'Efe turned ln. and more
fund-raising P'OJedS ~~~ P8S,!Ed out. The

~

aad Ulelr parents. nwty-oae IIOOUIII and Cubllllllller

dates were glvc&gt;n tor judgtng. Hobble Whttl'

•

•
•

,._ 992-2039
106 luHifMI At~.
992-57.21
P-oy, OW.
Wt Accept All Mojot Ctotlit Cotth ontl W1 Wire flew1r1 Enrywloort .

SYRACUSE, OHIO
PH. 992-6776

Stokely
Green
Beans
.....
.
.....

..

- Gloria Nowak

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Hubbard's GrHrltouse

Altfed. Angels hekl a mel'ting at the

bringing forth the flowers,
adorns this land of ours;

1

OPEN DAlY 9·5; SUNDAY 1·5

The

Ma~ . by

In

MllC OR MATCH

~eigs

California
Strawberries

FLOWERS PROVIDE A YEARLY PROOF
OF GOD'S LOVE

Thi s week your manufacturered products "cents off" co upons are
worth double at Kroger with $10.00 or more purchase. Limit ed to
manufactured produ cts coupons w orth up to and including ~
Off . Coupons worth more than 50¢ are redeemed at face value
only . Limit one coupon for each product purchased. Lim it one
coffee coupon. No beer, wine or cigarette coupons will be double.
Not valid on free coupons, Kroger coupon s or retail food stor e
coupons. The amount refunded canno t exceed the price of the
item . You must pur cha se product in sizes spec ified on the co upon .
This offer applies only to manufactu red products "cents off "
coupon s for items we ca rry To assure product ava ilabi lity for all
our custom ers, only one coupon per shoppin g family . will be
dou bled on any brand item d ur~ng each store viSit.

STOKELY WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE
CORN, CUT, FRENCH STYLE OR SHELLIE

In Silk, Uve ond

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Complete Unt of Vtgttabll &amp; flower
Plants - HCII'Iing la*ets, Gtra·
nlums, R011 lush11, Dogwoo4, Rho·
dad1ntlron &amp; Shrubbery.
SEASON SPECIAL
•7 50 PER FLAT

DEBBY WINNERS - Jaam Taylor took flnt,
Alan Dur!lt, Seeond and Jared CookiNrdiD Cub Scout
Pack . -s Pinewood Derby 1986. Matthew Morris

ons

1986

Dodger Vaughan.
'l'hlrd Grado: Robby Baker, Keith Darst.
Usa Honaker, Kevin Logan, Jon Mattea,
llannv flees, Crockett Roush, Jlltlll\)' Wolle.
Davtd Eakins, Bed()! DUes. Chu&lt;k Legar,
Rebecca Meier. J a.sott Pango, Trlcla Roush,
Jacltle Swartz, Nloole Warner, Walt WUU·
ams, Tyler Wolfe, Adam Wyatt .
·

Michael WIIIonR:.

Third Grade: Dean Hankla, Melissa Vance.

Ida Wolfe. Brenda Zlrkle.

Mr. and Mrs, James Gaston
attended a horse sale at Dover and
then spen~ a lew days visiting with
relatives In that area.
Mr. and Mrs. Art lru r Crabtree
were In Parkersburg, W. Va.
recently for a vl~t with his au nt,
Elsie Davl~ .
Freda Smith spent severa l days
in Kettering w~re she cared for
her grand.&lt;;On, Theron Prather who
was ill with chicken pox.

REG. S19.99 to s21.99

heart without sura:ery.

f he fifth six wf'eks gradlng !):'rkld hooor
roll at thf' Southf'rn Junior High has heAl
annoui"'C'e'd. Making a grade orB or atxlve In
~all tht?lr subjE'Cts to tr namOO to the rollwE!'C':
Seventh Grade: Juri' Beegle. Jarrod

Personal notes

!

view the lnlra-Mruclure of the

•

11

~

COPYRIGHT 19M THE KROGER CO ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . MAY 11 , THAOUG~ SATU~QAV Mol.· ' I ' :186 1\

WE ftESEA\JE THE AICiHT TO liMIT OUANftTI£S NONE SOL O TO DEA LERS

�12-The

1Mi

Ohio

Sentinel

14,1986

Zoar Church of Welsh Congregationalists history outlined
By VlCI'OR L BROWN
to Ebenezer Williams. ·nus estabIn the cemetery o! the ~ lished for certain the house In
Church ol Welsh Congregational- question Mr. Hughes' ancestors
Ists In MlnersvUle, Sutton Town- had lived ln.
ship, Meigs Coonty, Ohio Is a
It Is from excerpts o! the
headstone Inscribed with the name a utobiography of this Henry
ol EUzabeth Evans Hughes died Hughes of their life In Minersville
Sept. 10, 1853.
.
1951-1855 that the following referenThis Is believed to be one of, it oot ces were obtained.
EUzabeth Evans Hughes was the
the oldest burtal IJI this cemetery.
She dled o! yellow lever or the second wife of Thomas Hughes
"bloody !lux" which, at that time 1!Dl-1845. They lived in Aberystwyth and Tredegar, Wales where
beslegt'd the Ohio Valley.
By means ot this stone came they were In the coal mining
lnlllrmatlon regarding the history business. Healing of a promising
future Iri America she sold her
o! the church and cemetery.
Up to the present time oo cne has belongings, alter her husbaQds
ever furnished the lnfonnatlon as to death, and with her step-son Henry
when this church and remetery Hughes they started for Mlnersvllle
came into existence. 1 have lived In the sprtng of 1851. After eleven
beside it aimost allll\Y 73 years and weeks on the road, seven of t hem on
asking many natives oot no one the oeean , they arrived here.
seems to have known.
Having had experience digging
One day In August, 1979 Thomas peat and breaking coal In Wales,
Hughes ol Chevy Chase, Md. came starting at the age of nine. now
to Minersville searching for the sixteen. Henry immediately I'!Jt a
descrthed stone. and if !DSSible the job in a coal mine working for Mr.
house she and her stepson, Henry V. L. Horton. (Where Brown's
Hughes lived in in Minersvtlle Trailer Park Is no w located). There
durtng 1851-1855. It was here In the were two coal mines and a sa lt
cemetery I met Hughes and furnace located here.
introduced myself to him.
"The roomy house we rented, of
Being fortunate to find the stone one Ebenezer Williams, was situhe then described the house they ate:! on the bank of the heauttlul,
lived In durtng that time and the broad Ohio River, where from its
name o! the owner - Ebenezer large front porch we could see the
Wllliams -they had rented from. 1 rafts and barges going up and down
then pointed the h:&gt;use on the comer the liver, also the fine beautiful and
of State Rllute 124 and Welshtown large mall and passenger boats.
hill road , next to the cemetery, I This house was close to the new
believed , to be the one he was church we built.
looking lor.
"This town was a small place on
r'told him I owned this house and the bank of the Ohio River near
to make certain this was the one In Pomeroy. I felt very much disapquestion he was Jooklng for, I would pointed and discontented the first
go to the recorders office and year I lived here, for It was much
search the ownership and let him different from the old country.
know.
There were plenty of saloons and
He said his grandfather, Henry liquor was sold in every grocery
Hughes, had kept an autobiography store and nearly every house had Its
of their activities while living In store of whiskey and when cal!!ng
MlnersvUle and in It tells how this you were always Invited to partake.
church and remetery came Into
Yet every one was klnd and
existence and how Ute was In this · accomodatlng when help was
community durtng those years. He needed. Here In Minersville, there
told me he would haye copies made was no church or organization of
and send them to me. After taking the Welsh or any other nationality .
pictures he departed for home with Thee were only a few Welsh here,
joy of the success of his search.
but not enough to have any religious
A few days after his departure I organization. This was a great
searched the title records ol this contrast from Wales where I came
house back to 1829. Randal Stivers from . There the church I attended
sold It to John and Isaac Carlton oo had IDl to l,oo:J members.
tbat date. They then sold It to
"The first winter after our arrtval
Valentine Horton In 1844, the a r8Juest was made to Mr. Horton,
pioneer industrtallst of this area the owner &lt;1 the mine, for the use of
durtng those years. In 1851 he sold it a house owned by him near his
1

cheap, $1.25 per acre, we had
churchs and day school for children
and In many ways the COl'll!'llUnlty
had become much better.
"It was at Minersville I met Eliza
Davies from Wales. We had
attended the same church in
Slrhowy, Wales. We fell in love and
were marrted on Nov, 4, 1853 by
Rev. Jones. We lived In the large
house I have descrtbed ah:&gt;ve and It
was In this house our !Irs! chlld was

bring about these activities.
Through the !!forts of Rev. Jones &lt;1

Pomeroy a nice and convenient
frame church was erected on land
oonated by Mr. Valentine B.
Horton , for both the church and
cemetery and it was dedicated as a
Congregational church. Soon after
we had the Rev. Rees Harris from
Uanllly, Wales as our pastor.
When I left M!nersvllle In Oct.
1855, lor Minnesota where land was

MARKER - 'Ibis Is the grave marklir of lillmbe&lt;h Evans Hughes
who died In lllinersvUle en Sept. 10, 18113 as the result ti yellow fever.."bloody Dux" which heavlly hit the Ohio Valley at that time.

holdings to be used lor prayer
meetlngs and other meetings. He
granted our request provided we
repaired and maintained this
house. It was here on my first
Christmas In America at a five
o'clock morning prayer meeting
that I was asked to lead the
services.
We had preachers now and then
from Coalport and Pomeroy to
come up and preach for us. Among
them were the Rev. J.T. Williams,
Rev. Peter Lloyd and Rev. L.H.
Jones. At that time th~reweree!ght
families In the community holding
membersntp In the Congregational
Church at Pomeroy.
"In the spring of 1852 there came
to Minersville, several families and
single persons of a religious mind,
and the feeling grew that we should
have a Welsh Church. In all these
endeavers I (Henry Hughes ) was
greatly responsible and helped to

OSP cites driver
following accident
Vicki A. Hanson, 30, Middleport ,
was cited Tuesday for Improper
passing by the state highway patrol
In a two-vehicle accident on Ohio
124, one mile west of Syracuse.
Troopers said Cookson was eastbound at !0:30a .m . and reportedly
attempted to pass a vehicle ahead
of him driven by Walter · R.
Cookson, 63, Belpre. Cookson made
a lett tum and was struck by
Hanson 's car.
Both cars were slightly damaged,
the patrol said .

Calling himself "a business information broker, " Leedy sa id , "We
a re not Into high techo!Ogy or !ow
technologgy, we're Into corr.'ct
technology ."
Leedy cited exa mples of how
O'ITO has helped area businesses
lind answers to hard questions, but
note:! that "confidentiality is of the
utmost Importance."
Leedy pointed out that business
taxes pay lor the OTIO service and
similar services around the state.
"You've already paid for the
advice," he told
chamber
members.
In ot her chamber bu siness, several possible dales for the dedica tion of the MJddleport Housing
Corporation's new single family
housin g project on Hartinger Park-

The Daily Sentinel

Police Chief Sid Lit lie reports.
During the month the depart ment investigated 12 accidents,
collected $1085.04 in parking meter
money, collected $48 for merchant
pol!ce work and wrote ~5 parking
tickets. All vehicles of the department were driven 4,823 miles
durtng the mont h.

Ill C0111l St ., PMtfOY . Oi~t-4$759

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
In The
Common Pleas Court

'

MARIE E. BISHOP,

By Her Anomay-ln-FM:t

est oomw of 1 t...ct of l111d
now or formerly ownod by
Arnold Grote (Seo Dood rooordod in Vol. 178, P111e 167
for nlferenco point!: thonco
South to the North right-of·
WIJIII ~e of State Route now

of Meigs County, Ohio.

Excepting a parcel of rwl

8, 1906, and recorded in Vol.

WINNER- Mrs. CarolynDeiJIOIIIcy, Middleport, wu the wmnerol a
microwave oven giVen away for. Mother's ~ by the Big Bend
Foodland. Here store manager, DeniM Hockmaa, presmts Mrs.
Demollky with her prize.

Excepting 1 1.11 1Crep.c:e4

of lhlhenltuforwcon...,. by
Mario Bilhop. lingle. ond

William C. Bilhop and Torry
Biohop. hu-.cl ond wHe, to
Bob C. llilhop and Ml'l!INI
Biohop, by daod dated July 14,

The olor11old rool 0114111 it

JUbjoct too right-of-way given
by Priocilo l.o&lt;t&lt;i1 onc1 0....
B. ulltln to t,. Ohio Full
SUI!Illy C-ony. dotod J.,.
27, 1114.ond,_,dodi..Vol.
1·, ot Pogo194; oftllo R-.1
of Righ--Woy o1 Meip
Ccaonty, Ohio.

-!lid

NOTIC£ OF SALE
By virtiJo of., Ordof of Sole
ioaood out of .,. Common
Coun of Moigo County.
Ohio, in ... cooe of Jon-.
S_..._ ""- P.M.A.
Entorp- Inc.. Doht.... ~
upon a Judgement t,.rotn
. . . -. bllntl C.. No. 15
Cl/ 118, in ltlid C:..rt, I wtl
offwrfbr.-... ttwflrDntdoor
Calnty, OIIID, ., ...
till c1oy ., Juno. • • "
10:30 a.m.. 111o flllowilg
.,d t.,omento. toW~;

'"'.,"!',

privitogoo in and undor

u.

~- tu!'0:."' ......
un- ~

. . . . . . . ~ . . ii·OQ •
---r--o
81 COEbwywt by Prilc:illl.Mkin Mid "**-~ ......
end Goorgo 8 . Lolltin to B. E. with ... right
Hyde by dtod dotod S.- -tho.......
tember 7 , 19()6, 11ftd hiCOE~
Seid .,. .. • ' en 1oc:at11111 • St
i-1 Vol. 94, 51 Pogo 1503 el tiN lit 124, Flutlollll ToMitlifj,
Rocordl of 0- of Motp
County, Ohio.
~c::v~~~
• I
• 8714
E•coptlng ... rightl ...t W
· -in-. ocquirt!l by W. F.
;a 1
n I A 5I
lJtoinvor In, under ond to., ci1
TWENTY-liVEN
THOUend gao modo 1J¥ Earl
Hoguoond- Hogue toW. IMO ntRR IIU-RI
F. lJtoinvor, doted Aufolil 7. DOUAIIS AND N0 / 110
1943, ond 10001dod In LMM fi27,3DO.CDI ~~~~- bo
lloolt No. 38, ot Psgo 475 ol ost.llor _ _ _

to-........

ra:..,

. . .

..

''"t"

I d ,_
~

~ot;"' '\"" ~~:
by ..... , .......,
lltl,
"""
I
dod In

-113... Piee113oftM
DoH ,._.. of Mtlgo
c:..Mr. Ololo.
DoM I I a a : Yotomt

_._

el tllo Moip
Cwnly 6sal Put Ill.

96, ot Page 444 of the
Records of Ooodo of Meigo
Cwnty, Ohio.
E•coptlng the lroct of l.,d
heretofore conwoyod by Pricila
l.o&lt;t&lt;i1 ond Gao'lll B. Lolltin to
Horoce J . Moynord, Su..., M.
Mavnard .,d B. E. Hvde. by
dood doted June 18, 1917, ·
ond riCOfdod i-1 Vol. 114, at
Page 1n. of 111o Record of
Doodo of Meigo County, Ohio.
E•coptlng the tract of t.,d
h11otolooe oonweyod by Eorl
Hogue and M!lbtt Hogue to
Amold Gr.. by &lt;1l!od detod
Octobor 16, 1953, 111d rooordodinVol. t78.otPego187
of ,.. Rocords of Otodo of
Meigo Cwnty, Ohio.
Elccoptlng thot parcel of ,.,d
horetolooe ooowOWO&lt;I by Eo~
Hogue .,d M!lbtt Hogue to
ll!r1zol Goegloln, Awory Googleln,

Alban Qoogllil

151 d

Chorloo Goegloln, by dood
doted November 9, 1948, end
rocordod in Yotumo162, PilOt
.4114 of '"'l)ecord of Doods of

The 1fortlllid f'811 flltltt i1

aobjoct too right-of-way given
by Guy end Fron001 Lolltin to
The Ohio , _ ~lily.
S t p t - 20, 1927,
and rocordod In Vol. 2, ot Pogo
413 of 1ho Flocordl o1 Rightoof-Woy of Moigo County,
OhiQ.
Tho-Nil-io
JUbioct to a r1!ht-of-- given
by Eaof Hogue to ... Ohio Fuot
Gao c~. ds1od Jonuory
11 , 1938, and ,..,dod in Yol.
3, It Pogo 388 oft.. R-.1
of F1~-Woy of Moill
Cwnty, Ohio.
The oforoolid Nit -

NOTICE OF

,

3-24 -tfc

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes

Built
"Free Estima1es"

PH. 949·280 I
or 949·2860
No Sunday Colis
l / 11 /tln

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Buth Hog
Farm Equipment

Deolor

Far111 Equl~111ent
Parts &amp; Service

1-3-'86 tfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or

Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

4-16 .' 116 tin

APPLIANCE REPAIR
Experienced Service in
Microwave Ovens,
Ranges, Air
Conditioners ,
Refrigerators . Washers
&amp; Dryers. TVs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

CONTACT TERESA COLLINS. R. N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
116 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 46769
CALL 614-992-2104
Equal Emp loym.,t Opportunity

r

t; :
rf

'

.._..Ohio

UTOMOTIVE

. SALES

ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING

II

JUbjoctto o r1!ht-of-waygiwln

'

'

-~

Prlacila l.o&lt;t&lt;i1 tnd GaoiVL
B. l.o&lt;t&lt;i1 to tho Ollio Fuel
Supply Cornpony, dsttd Ju,.
by

~

,.

17, 19 t4. ond rtcordalln Vol.
1, II Page 193, of1ho Fleoord
of Rlghto-of-Woy of Motp

DEALERSHIPS IS NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR THE
POSITION OF SALES

'.

REPRE~liVE.

•No nperience Necessary

SMALL

Call Mr. Gilmore For

&gt;

'

I

'

Appointment

''

WANT ADS

PAD&lt;
ABll PUM:HI

Bet'r'een 10 a.m.· 6 p.m.
Monday-Saturday Except Thul$llay

'

614-446-9800

.

992-.2 156

',

•

'

'

.

t

; .
~

RESIDENTIAL

COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURA~

Custom Design
Service

CALL 667-3271
Co111p1r1 the Outlltv

Befm Y~t~f mo .

'

Located in 1,.
Saddlebrook Inn

AI fl2 . 8miiiiiOUlhOt

!he Pomuoy·M•ton Brldg•

Choost from 1~11 S.r¥td with 4

(hildrln 12 I u..•r- 'h hice
5&amp;
fill
Our Sptt l1lly

u.•r

WHOLE AmE PIIS- '4.50

ACCENT

UKE
DIAMONDS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"Free Estimates"

Installation A¥a1ilab11t
Howard

l. Writesel

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addon s and remodeling
- Roo fing and gu1ter work

- Concrete work
- Plumbin g and elec11 ical
w orll

!Free Estim at es)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -621S" 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

SATEUITE
SALES
&amp;

REPAIRS
pdate Your Syltem• Now

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET
Hobson Rd., Middleport

992-6173

5/1311 mo.

CLASSIFIED ADS
asupermarket

for everything

SERVICE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Res idential &amp; Commercial

Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area

Call:

•Commercial Container

5/ 8-1 mo.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

2-17-86-tfn

z

- 417

GRADUAnON
1 OZ. SILVER BARS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES

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

Buying Gold

8-llttn

DOZER , BACKHOE.
T!IENCHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES.
RECLAMATION. PONOS,
SPRING OEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
l!o OIRT

Jl MCll FFORD

*Metal Bui~ints
tfo~

Buildinas

*Storage Btlil~np
•ALL SIZ£S liAilABL£

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
Phou

(304) 773-5527 or (304) 895-3386

Don't get stung by high prices!
Shop the classified section.

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SETUP
- ESTIMATES REASONABLE PRICES
CAU ANYTIME

992-3361

5-5-' 86-tln

LOADER
KING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES oORAGLINE
SEWERS - BASEMENTS
WATER UNES - SEPTIC
TANKS - CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS - IIOBIIE
HOME SETUPS - ROAD
BUILDING - LAND

We Hm I. Fall Tl1111
Uop Teohlol••
on Dull

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

!

CHESTER - 985 -3307

4/ 1/ ttn

367-7560 - 367-7671
CHESH.E, OHIO

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Backhoe Service

Plumbing SeNice

Custom Welding

Lowboy Hauling

6 Lost and Found

Lott: Man· , gltiHt In black
leethtr ctH. Bttween uppltl'
parking lot and Five Po inti . Ctll
614 -992-3785 .

2

H1va vacancy in our home to
cera lor elderly. Train.:l and
experienced. Phone 614 -9926683 .

Will do til typet masonry work .
Brick, blodc. , •tone and concrete.
Free estimatn. Call 614-7422290 or 304-nJ- 5971 .
Have \lacanr:y fo r elderly. Room.
Maret. and laundry. Ru1onable.
Call 614 -992· 6022 .

17 Miscellaneous
Dotson Tree Service. free nti304-6713 · 2897.

ml t l l,

18 Wanted to Do
Will do mowning, odd )ob1,
l)lintin trailer rooft, blbylitting.
Ctll 614 -446 -6266 .
Sand. gravel , till dirt, mulch , 3
cu . yards. delivered &amp; spread
848 .00 par load . Call Don
Waugh, 614-446 -9646.
Ltwn care, home and auto
painting. auto. r-.pair, houM·
clatning . Call anytime, 814·

245-9893.
Teacher wanting t o do painting
&amp; yard word this au mmet" tt

rutonable pr ice. C•ll 81ol-24t5 ·
6197 after 5.
Will blby tit in my home do .. to
Ordn.,oa School. RafM"encft
l\lailabla, 14 years llpet"ience,
phone JOol -875· 3774 .

hpi!Wienotd p1inter inside or
out. alto, odd jobl. raatonable
rates, 304-676 -6709.

found : mtn ' t watch . New Lima
Ad .• Rutland . Mu11 describe to
claim. Call 614· 742 ·2310.
'
Lost- Female Pit Bull. White and
8rinde\ . 8rind.t eye. and Brindel
ear. Ctll 614 -992 -3192 or

814-992-9939 .

"

Mlulng: German Short Hair Dog
(brown and white) In Pomeroy
area. Htl cut front thoulder . Call
John Costtngo at 814 -843·

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

5405 "'614-992 -3B83 .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

9

ING CO . recommend• that you
do butinell with people you
know , and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you hrve
in\lestig1tad the offering .

Wanted To Buv1

We p1y c .. h tor late modal clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oid• Inc .
Bill Gane Johnson
614 -446 -3672

Buying dtity gold. s ilver coins.
rings . jewelry. lterHng ware. old
coln1. llf'Qt currency. Top pricee. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd . Ave. Middleport. Ot't. 614992 -3476.

for tale local 1peclality ehop
owner haa othednter .. te. Reply
to P.O. box 749. Gallipo li1. Oh
46831 .
Ow n your

own

Jetn -

Sporuwear, Ladies appartl.
chlldranl, mttemitv. l~rgesizet .
Petka, dtncewatr ortCCIItori•
no re . Jordtctle , Chic, Lte. LIYi,
lz od , Gitano , Gue11. Catvln
Klein, SergkJ Vtl.,tt, Evan
Picone. Liz Clt lbornt, Mtmber1
onty , Gasoline, Hetlthtlll , Chtrokae , ovtr 1000 others.
S14,300 to 125.900 in\lllntorv.
training , fix turN , grand opening
81c. Can DPCIO 16 davt. Mr.
Lough lin (612) 888 -4228 .

'{afd sales

,8. 9-6. 168 Gerfitld Ext . Ho me
lntetlor. clothing til "ZII, lots
morel

------Pt Pleasiiiif ____ _
&amp; Vicinity

Oerage Salt May 11, 18, 17 at
2925 Mtple Ave, • little of
IYtrvtlng lnckldimng goodlivin;
room suite, drtpee, bedspread
tnd 15 ep.ed blc:ycle.

·······Pom-ero·v·--····--·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

l!o Bonded

WIUAMS TRENCHING

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)
RACINE, OHIO
Office 949-2U8

May 14th an d 16th, CollegaRd ..
Syrtcu ll. Shampooer, house
1huners. humidifier, fan . big

wheel . children tnd adult clo·
thing , 1oy1, mite. disk" and
other.

Lott of t\lerything . Flor.,oe

Slddlrt, Darwin. May 1Ith.
17th, 1nd 18th. Ra in etnce.,till
next day .
Off Rt . 124, 2 Ya mll11 on Hysell
Aun Rd. Chiktren and adult
cloth•. hou11hold goode . Rsln
cancels. M1y 14th, 15th, and

, 61h. 61 4-992 -&amp;27&amp;.

- - - - - - - - -lc-

4 f1m ily. M1y 11 · 18. C. B .. ttPI

Septic Systems

FREE ESTIMATES

May 16th. 17th. Antique furni ture, glanware. allaize )aana. air
co nditioner . 701 Cherry St .,
Vinton. Oh.

Frl IS, Sl!17, 304-882-2&amp;38 .

Trenching of Any Type

1182-6704

Happy Ads

·· ·········--··············· ······

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

SERVICE

Ba1111e Bauett, 1'h yean old.
male. to good home . 304-3660.

4 family Vlfd 111e, about 1 mil•
beyond Union Campground ,
beck of New Htvtn, Thurt 11th,

5·12-'86-2 mo.

Fit. 4, Hyooll Run Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph (6141 992-2834,

,

Yard Sale Four Families 14 -16 -

Ph. (614) 843 -5425

L~enoed

Airlln• now Airing. reservetion i•t. flight attendants. •nd ground
cra w po1it i on1 . Ctll
( refu ndtbleJl -61 8 · 469 -3636 1
ut.A -1980 for into 24 '"''·

Old scl'1ool bua for P..nk . Call
614 -446 -4697 .

....... Giilli'piillS" .... .... .
&amp; Vicinity

If NO ANSWER CAll:

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

CAll COllECT;

6 co mpartment rabbit cage. Call
614 -446-1364 .

Coming soon Wellpeper Outlet,
Pt. Pleasant WV now accepting
appli cetion for full time employ·
ment. Send resume along wHh
personal references to C.L.
Ferrall, 311 E. 7th St .. Chilli cothe , Oh 46601 . Pleuainclude
phone number.

f~~-"-"'f '. !Jihh~~~-~~~.~:\'l~·~,~~:~h

367-0317

Complete Guuer Work
Complete Remodeling
Worked in homo aree
20 years
" Free Estimates "

1 female 6 mo. old 1'1alf regl•·
ta red Boxe r. Call 614 -446 4472.

WantMI junk autos. Call 614 388-9303.

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Roofing of all Tvpes

Giveaway

TOP CASH paid fot '83 mo del
and newer u1ad car1 . Smith
Buick-Pontiac , 1911 Eutem
A\le .. Oallipolit . C1ll 614 -448 2282.

,

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

4

Help l I' m 1 Dropped Puppy,
about to be a Pound Puppy!
Mala. curly. teddy b81r. Come
quickl Call 61 4 · 742 -24&amp;4.

'

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

EUGENE lONG

Cleland Greenhou~e . Op1n lor
bu1ine11. Bedding ~anti , hang ·
ing ba1ke11. pot1 and vegate ·
blee . Vine St . Racine. Ohio

LOST Ou1rter karet Keep11ka
ring .
Holzer between parking lot &amp;
pediatrict ward . Rewerd . C1ll
614 -379-2268 .

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•SYLVANIA

446 -0294.

di am ond ang•gement

PH. 992-7201

•ZENITH

tl

LO ST Black Angu1. Hue! Ridge
aree . Cell814· 268- 1626 .

LfT'S BUILD UP TOCfTHfRI
•LOCAllY OWNI D •lOW LABOR

10-8-tfc

CONTRACTING

675 -1090.

Vard Sale Four Femiliet 14 · 16 ·
16, 9-5. 156 Gerliald E..t . Home
Interior, clothing all 1izet. lots
morel

::J:

J&amp;F

BRUSH COMPANY
earn tB .OO to 110.00 pet' hour
serving our cultornert. 304-

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

BASEBAll CARDS
MOTHER'S DAY &amp;

Government Jobl . 118,040 ·
S69.230·vr. Now Hiring . Ctll
1-806-687-6000 Ext . R-9805
for current federalli11 .

FULLER

5

-a:

EASY ASSEMBLY WOAK I
t714 .00 per 100. GuarantHCI
Paym., L No taln. Dttalle.
Send stamped envelope: Elan·
5847, 3418 Enttrpriu. Ft.
Pierce, fl. 33482.

AVON , 3 open tanHorift.

c:J Co111Julerized Hillring Air Selection
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

GOLD COINS

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

CALL 992-3194

11-14-llc

949·2263
or 949-2168

992-3410

Service Available•

992-5875 Or
742-3195

••I•

Temporary te4ephon•
peapit. Call 814-.U8 ·3730 H twaen &amp; a. 9 on Thurt.

•New Roofing

SWEEPER snd ~twing machine
repair, psrt1 , and 1uppliet. Pick
up and delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cl11ner , one htlf mile up
Georg• CraM Rd . Call 614 ·

MANLEYS
TRASH

•eo.ooo-

Part-Tim., t12.000·
t18,000. No ••lling. repMt
bu•in•• · S.t your own hourt.
Traloing PfOvided . Call 1 -812·
938 -8870, M·F, Stm to &amp;pm
ICtntral Standard Tima) .

814-992-6918 .

•Dryers •Freezers

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

uo ,ooo.

•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows

3 Announcements
ll·5·tiC

Rept NHded for bu1in•1 ac·

counts. Fuli·tlma,

•Storm Doors

Annou nc ements

PARTS and SERVICE

Caretlker to llvt· ln apanment
co"'tex. Call 304-&amp;71-11 04.

Somebody equipped to butchet".
cut and wrap 1 hog . C11ll

,\II M•h•
•Refrigerators

Help Wanted

•lntulation

•Washers •Oishwasherl

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

. JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

"fREE ESTIMATES"

•Ranges

ilM~g~
,.YI IJI#~

] I;IR/ I!n

985-3561

PH. 992·6931
742-2027

16141 992-6
.s
. so
RESilEN&lt;E ,HONE
16141992-7754

304-372-5709
10-14-tlc

!CUT OUT FOR FUTUH USE)

FENCE COMPANY
Aft.r S (oil

Pav Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE

For Hours

lusintn forms,

992-334

SAI£S &amp; SERVICE
We C11rv Flthlng Supplies

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

Signs, Aubbtr Slomps,

104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

Now LocaHon:

168 North Stcond
Middltporl, Ohio 45760

SMALl ANIMAL HOURS
Mon.-Wowi.-Thurt. 3-S pm
TuH. 6:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
Solurdoy 10-11 :30 am
LAIGI ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGIIY BY APPT.

SU NOA Y BUFFET - t4.95
1t :30 a.m. to 2;00 p.m

furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, MagnetK

Copy Smkn, El&lt;.
2SS Mill St., Middloporl

PlUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jacksen Ave.

Sttok

abl", ·

1aiCMI, dtnlfl tlld *ink.

PWS: Ofli&lt;1 Supplin &amp;

985- 937

992 -2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tlc

•ttt

PRINT SHOP

949 -2145

RADIATOR
SERVICE

~

Ham, Chichn or I

Fot All Vw P•l•lltl Nuir

&amp; Silver

S-12·1 mo .

TOWN &amp; COUNIRY
VETERINARIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

THE QUAUTY

5·7·2 mo.

\

FO UN TAIN
RESTAURANT

S-5-'16-1 ""·

, ..... lm•fi'KY s.......

PAT HILL FORD

REGISTERED NURSES

ELITE POLE~
BUILDINGS

CLC COINS

A/C

CALL 614·992-21 04

FULL &amp; PART nME

~~~~OF
...... f-.

,,

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

CONTACT IHOIIDA DAIUT, LN.
Or Apply At
VEniANS IEIOIIAl IIOSPIT Al
115'1• East llstttorlal Drin, P-roy

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

PICM:IAIIY
-f '
-~~y
On Moy • • 111S. -. . ~ .
On Moy '1.
tn ... 'j' . \·
~,._Court,
lllloip c-nty ........ ~ '
en. No. 21041, Atls - C.. Ha. 21. til, M-rll 1i .
R.0.. Long 11otto1t1.
lwri. 48Mt M__, Flood,
411743, - III'P Oil tool 1!..
411n1 . - LPcutrb .or "'" of e..., pointo;III- of t .. Oilllo
M•
spon-.
- ·Ohio,
..,. of~ E. luori, - -· .
of
FI .D,.
Lon1 Bottom,
1... ol 41181 Monuot Road,- : ·
45743.
Racine, Ohlo 0111n1.
·- -.
Robart E. ltldt
llobort E. 8ucto: ·.
ProbotoJHgo
Probate Judge· : ·
16114, 21, Z8 3to
.. 181 14, ·21 . 28 3tc
.: &lt;
I

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trane111luion

4-15 -'86-lc

•
AnOINTMENT Of'

At. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

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

I

Eltl lfoguo .,d M-

Hoguo ID Tho Ohio COifll.,Y dotoei Augull 1.
1939, and rooordttlln Yot. Ha.
4. ot Pogo 52, of tho llitlht-ol·
way Fl_,. of MoigoC:..nty,
Ohio.

Henty E. Cleland, Jr.
991-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-1660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692

Individual to serve the capacity as a full
time activities director I social service
diredor far a 25 bed SNF /ICF nursing
facility, Experien&lt;e is preferred. If
interested please pick up application at
Veterans Memorial Haspital, 115 117 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Oh.

,..!lf ....... - - ·-

by

level lot. Good piiCe al
$13.!il0 00

NEEDED

rVftt

Roger Hysell
Garage

storms,

Eoual Employment Qpportumtv

byJ-T.AmoldondH.... K.

t::•.....

an

t .. ooll undtr-

IOU . . wlllt thl

3!1, , _.•

mmum s1d1ng,

For 25 hd SNF·ICF Focillty

10 minttllo-. - -

""'*"' -1t ,

NEW LISTING - Cute IIHie
one bedroom home '" Racin e 1n good condition . alu-

mora or

...._t
~
•
...,.... .. -esc

. . . . .

NEW .LISTING - Here IS a
l'h story home w1th up to 4
bedrooms, full basement.
woodburnin g firep lace, patio. garage and In ex cellent
condiiion , w1th eq uipped
&lt;ilchen . Wants $44,!'il0.00.

Help Wanted

toot 10
tho .,, o1 · - Routt
No.7 : - - 3 1 dlgOO:
243 loot along IN lOUin
... of ost.l . _ floula 7 1D
tla , _ el I tol••'ll· oon·

'-·El&lt;Cipling II

LANGSVILLE - 6 35 acr e
countrv eslate - barn.
sheds, two ponds, and a n~ce
l'h story home 1n goed •epait. Eleclnc heat plus a
woodburn er lor cheap heal.
$4 3,000.00

REGISTERED NURSES

.,._~-

...,.. 0 ... -

MIDDLEPORT - Newe1 modular, nice levelloi in M~dle­
port. Woodburning !~repl ace ,
.porch and deck areas. Beautilul place. Owners must sawlice. $38.!il0.00.

FULL &amp; PAn Tl•

Ne. 7 ~ •lua=to tho
_
... ., . . _
.........
. . . . . a... lnd . . .
bury T._t14 lOot; lhtn..
1011111288- - ..
178

NEW LIST! NG - EASTERN
DISTRICT - A neat 2 bed
room newer home on over 2
acre lot w1th aboue ground
JXIOI plus satellite d1sh .
Beautiful lot with pine Irfl!s
and garden space. Slora ge'
bu ilding. $29.000.00 .

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!

oPurdl-.tns...
llu!y t I 114, Moflt Caunty,
Ohllt. ' z' aie; .r I . . . l .,

9

'

11

dlscriNd • tJiowa. ., wtt:
llolng in Soction 3, Town 2,
~ 13 of tht Ohio

87 dog. 30' -

NEW LIST NG- POMERO
- Acute 3 bedroom hom
newly remodeled , on 4 Ills.
New roof. basement. wood burner, F.A. gas heat. Owner
needs sale' $19 ,00 0.00.

'Headquarters

Situate in .,. Townohlp of
Soliollurv. ~aunty of Molgo,
.,d St.to of Ohio, .,d fullhor

lit--of . _. .

NEW LISTING - EASTERN
DISTRICT- Jusl right lor a
large family! 4-5 bed rooms,
I ~ baths, lull basemen!,
garage, carport. Gas F.A.
heat. New roof, large deck
Ouer 2 ac
land .
$35,000.

Housing

ofthoCou-•ln ,.,,_.,,

Moflt

numbered 124; then"' Eoot, . . . .. 123,110.00.
orly along StJite Route NO. llloFieoordof~aiMeip .... - 124 to the South line of County, Ohio.
. . II IUbject to
flf . . Caoh.
Section 8; thence E811 to tho
The - l d 1111! eototo io confLniOildott IPtJu~eCh.._ tor-. thlrttwo-~ 011 1M
place of beginning, atbiect 1D aobjoct to o right-of-way giwln H. tlnll;ht of ,.. Cwot ol 1"",_ ..._
1111
the exceptions hereinaft• m· by Guy end FIW!cos ~ 1D
- Plooo "" ...,..
._..E. ,..,"'
ferrod to; JUbjoct to the righu Tho Ohio ,.,_ ~any. c
c......,,
Ohio.
~
and int«llttiCquired byW. F. dotod Ootobor 1' 1128. llld
......... I . F.-,....
.
•
UtzW.ger in and to an oil gas rocordod tn right-of-way ,._
~· County. Ollfo•
..... c.unty, Ohio
14130: t517, 14, 3tc
r..... hereinattor ..terrod to: oord No. 2, ot Pogo :II of IN 14130: 1517. 14, 3tc
fullhermore, aobjoct to the Flocordl of ~~ County,
rights-of-way, heninaftor ,._ Ohio.
The ofoiWiid ,..., . . . . il
lotTed to; IIJbjoct "' the
Public Notice
Public Notice
•sements hereinlfter referred JUbjoct to 1 r1!ht-ot-_, glo.,

0114te COftYII\'od by I fllrrnoo
gr1111tor, Pril&lt;lllo t..lltin, .,d
George B. Lolltin to Moylllftl
Brothen. by deed dotlll Sopt.

Ohio lottery winnel"8

County, Ohio.

Meigs Cwntv. Ohio.

280, Pogo 957 oft,. Fl.,.,rdo
The 11o1 ' I .... 0114tt it
of Ooodl of Meigo Ccaonty,
a~bjegtto•••• ualtfor llll.e
WILUAM BISHOP.
Ohio.
E.copmg a1 .10acrep- .,d...,... '-togo given by Earl
Plaintiffs
of
land Nw eb:lfora con • 8')1d by Hoguo ond Mmot Hogue 10.
•••
BOB C. BISHOP
Mario Billlop, oinglo; Bob C. "'" s- of Ohio....... .-.
Oefmdont Biohop hi Margaret Biohop, 3, 193!, ond rcordod in Yal.
CASE NO. 85-CV-277
huobond and wHo, .,dWiiom 3, Jt Pogo 4n of IN A As Sheriff of Meigs Cwnty, C. Biohop .,d Torry Biohop, of E01omontt of Motvo
I hereby offer 1Dr sale at 10 :15 huobond and wHe, to Bud Jr. Cwnty, Ohio.
Tho
noat it
A.M. June 6. t986 A. 0 .. ot Oarot. by dtod doted July 14,
the Cwrthouoo otops. Porno- 1975, ond niCilfdod tn Vol. .,btect to an •• '*'' fbr
IIUIPO• given by Earl
my. Ohio, tho lolowing doo- 261. Pogo 159 oft.. R-.. of Ooods of Maigo Cwnty, Hoguo to
cribed parcel af real Bltata:
of Ohio,
Situated i1 the County of Ohio.
D
•
28, 1UI,
Meigs, in tho Slota of Ohio 111d
E•copting a 2.t8 ..,..,_ .,d -dod In Yot No. 1 ..
in tile Township of Rutland, of 1.-wf herltUfote CO.tuarld lillt' p....... el tht
and bounded .,d dotcri&gt;ed •
Mario E. Biohop, 1 widow: E •ota of Moilt C..,.
fottowo; • Boginnng ot 111o w•m Biohop """' Torry Olola.
Southall! comer of Soction Biohop, huobond ond wh, end
And fui'Nit04 .........
No. 8, Town No. 8, and Aon go Bob C. llilhop ond Ml'l!INI lllld_._ • ...._ ....
No. 14, of lllo Ohio Com- Biohop, hutllllnd and wHe, to
tlgh- -- ... pany's Pa.dlase; thenaa North Bob C. llilhop ond , . . _ 12B9 foot to F. L. McKnight'&amp; Blohop, by dtod c11t«1 F -- ~w ...,In• ~- , .
-...
·~
comer on the section line; 11'1 &amp;. 1182, and rcordod In Otlioo
ol Meip ~.Ohio,
thonoo South 83 dlgreoo Weot Votumo 285, Pogo 817 dl t11o hi IIOIIMIIU!i
l!ll!joctiD al
469 feet; thence North 39% Rocordl of Daodo of Maigo
iolol
llilth!LIL
.... - -dog. WEll 209.7 fool: than co Cwnty, Ohio.
. . _ l!ll!joot to al North 17 dog. Woot 264 fool:
Exa~Dtino the Poftlef'OV No.
lllr tM
thonoo Nonto 28 doQ. Wilt 8 mal an~ aU mining rights Wid irtoe- • -

Office

Meigs County Emergency Medi cal Service reports four calls
Thesday; Pomeroy at 7: 57 p.m. to
Second St. lor Christopher Triplett
to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Rutland at 8: '5I p.m. to Meigs Mine
No. 1 for Charlie Barrett to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine Fire Department at 9:46p.m. to Southern
High School where a heater was
smoking; Pomeroy at 10:49 p.m. to
Five Points for Earl Steven to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Public Notice

Public Notice

1976, and racordlld i1 Volune

LUCIUE DANFORTH

more SJbtect to all othllr
i1ter81ts, if any. as shown by
the records in the Recorder's

Four emergency runs

·679. PJCK-4
0612.

of

Meigs County. Ohio .

to all other rightJ-of-Wiy,
""""""'"" and hlghwovo, H
eny, as lhown by therecordl n
,the Recorder's OffiM of Meigo
Cwnty, Ohio, .,d fullhtr·

Admissions--Roger Smith, Pomeroy; Clorts Grimm, Racine; Christopher Triplett, Pomeroy.
Discharges--James Russell,
Howard Norrts.

CLEVElAND tUPli - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Nwnher

Public Notice

to . and furthermore subject

Veterans Memorial

PHONE
992-2156
OJ Wuh lbtllt SrnliMI Clmtlitd
Dept

way were discussed, however, a
defln!Ie date was not set.
Don Vaughn , MJddleport bu sinessman and member of Middleport PTO, suggested that Middleport businesses set aside a day
when a percentage of their profits
could he donated to a fund to
purchase computers lor Middleport
Elementary School. Vaughn noted
the ImportanCE' of computers In
today' s classrooms and encouraged oosinessmen to think about
the project. He pointed that bu sinesses often give a perrentage of
proflls to national charities and this
407 faet; thence North 66~
time the money would he used dog.
WEll I 64 foot thonoo
locally lor a good cause.
South 64'/:o dog . Weot 404
The annual Middleport Block feet: thonoo North 78 dog.
Party and an upcoming retail WEot 532 feet thonoo Swth
dog . Wilt 973 feet to Wm.
· business promotion were also · 82
P\omor's Eoot iino; thonoo
discussed by cham her.
South following Ptumor'aeaot
line 1280 l8ot to 111o northw-

Middleport firemen answer 3 7 calls
The Middleport Fire [)&lt;&gt;partment
answered a total of 37 calls during
the month of April Including 28
emergency runs and nine fire calls,
Chief Jeff Darst reports. All
vehicles of the department were
driven 1048.2 miles durtng the
month.
The Middleport PollCP Depart·
ment made 56 arrestsdurtng Aprll,

NEW LISTING -CHESHIRE
- 1986 Mans~n mobile
home on rentoo lot. Beautilul
un! with 3 bed rooms, el~.
lorCed '" heat w1th central
air. tnsulation package tor ~li­
c~ncy $17,!'il0.00.

r-------------------------.....---------

Chamber addr~ses business needs ·
Dwight Leedy o! the Ohio Technology Transfer Organization,
headquartered at Rio Grande
College-Community College, was
guest speaker at Tuesday's meet lng of the Middleport Chambeo' of
Commerce, held at the Lasalle
Restaurant .
Updating chamber on the progress of CYITO, Leedy reported that
since CYITO' s 1984 Introductory
period into the Ga!Ua, Jackson,
Meigs, Vinton areas, the state
funded business infonnatlon net work has addressed the needs of
many businessmen in the four
county area.
In Meigs Coonty, Leedy reported
that CYITO has assisted In answering business related questions in the
areas of management, zoning,
advertising, customer credit, loans,
energy audits, resumes and job
applications and much more.

POMERO·Y,O.
': 992-22~?-

216 E.
Phone
1-(8141 -992-3326
..,
NEW LISTING - One floor
reasonable 3 bedroom horne,
nat. gas FA. furnace, 2
JX)rches, panelin&amp; lull basement &amp; off street par~ng.
$34,000.
NEW LISTING - 3 BR
lrame home, nat. gas furnace, stoue, refrigerator and
workshop.
COUNTRY - 9 acres, more
ot less, barn, outbu ildings,
pond, 3 BR house w/ lull basement. Eastern schools.
$27,!':AJO.
20 TRAILER SPACES - Several aoeages wnh IIOOds, city
water in Minersuille. Excellmt
condnion, good opportunity
for bu~ness person, state approued. $70,000.
MINERSVlLE - Nice older
3 BR home in good condition . Good carpeting, new
furnace, new roof &amp; river
uiew . $29,000.
RIVERVIEW - One floor 3
BR Ira me home, near Pizza
Hut. $12,000.
Bt-LEVEL - 8 rm. modern
home in Baulfli SubdiV. 4
BRs, 1800 sq ft., more or
less. central air, garage and
lg. lot. $62,!'il0.
LG. 2 STORY- Handyman 's
special with 1acre lot. Lots of
room, lots ol space. See and
giue us an offer.
Rl. 7 BY-PASS- One flo o1,
3 BR home wl bath, rural
water, porches &amp; mce lot.
$22,000.
NEW CHESTER - Louely
ranch w/ 3 BRs, din 1ng, lg.
stone lireplace in the lamilv
rm., finiShed basement with
lots of storage cupboards.
lots of fruit and 2.47 acres.
Asking $75,000.
WANT TO SELL
CALL 992-3325

~~·rvlt.l::.

11

E·. Moinllll

-s

illiiJIIIy 1111'111

Business Services

3 Announcementa

lx&gt;rn on Sept. 23, 18M and we had · March :14, 1942. (The Trtbune
Thomas ~ptlz!!d when a month old Telegraph.) No ~rd IS obtained
at the church by the Rev. Rees as to when church SE!VIces were
Harrts. It was here In lhll cemetery dtsmntlnlllld. Fill' niany or Its latter
beside this new church I bu!Wd my years It 11!1 empty, bl!ln&amp; used by ,
step-mother in the month at Sept the c.trnrnuN!y tlr Ice cream
!0, 1853."
811$111. quOting parties and voting.
In searching old recQnls pertUI- M!lll al the Stones In the cemetory
!ng to this church I have a copy of lum! !ellen over and are rovered by
the original recorded deed. Thill yean of debriS. I, living beside it,
signed by V.B. Horton and dara 4- have mowed this church lot and
Horton his wife. In ronslderatton for kept It clean ·aver the yeal'l! s!naone dollar, and for other causes and 1944 and the township trustees have :
considerations pald hy Evan W. maintained the cemet~ througlla .
Williams, Joseph JeMJIII and t&amp;tllt!Yy voted by the people lor this ·
David R Lewis Trustees til ZOar putt-.
·
Church ol Welsh CongregationalAll the abuve that I ha~ wrtuen ·
lsts at MinersvUie, Meigs .County ~ r«onstructed referl!loes !rom
Ohio, for a church and lxlrln&amp; tile zerox copies · (10 pages) of
ground, dated Nov. 26, 1855. 'I1Ill Henry Hughes (1833-1912) autoblochurch was bull and the ce~ gr~phy leadlnl up to the coming to
used for several years before the MinerwUle ancl tllelr Ute hen! and
deed was recorded.
their departure to Minnesota.
W• see that, "It wu here ia lhll 'l'lllw ~ !lf!llt to me by Mr.
cemetery beside thlll new church I 1bornu· L. flu&amp;!!es, grandson of
burted my step-motlll!r In the Henry Huafles. The dates pertain- .
month of Sept. 10, 1853. Also It wu tna; ID the home u.y lived In, the
after the sprtng of 1852 that the dtoteolthechurchpupertytransfer
feeling grew lor a church''. From wtre searched from county records
these dates we can aSCI'I'taln that
andthetlmeofthechurch!lrelrom
transaction for the purchase rt this old
p!!IM!1'S at t~ Dally .
ground ancl the erecting or the
Sentiaf!l O!tlct&gt; and the Meigs
church occurred between the latter COWIIty Historical Museum. It was
part of 1852 and the early part of at a. mu~e~~m after many days I
1853. I measured the foundation and located the news Item of the church
the size ot this church was 32' x 26'
tlrr. The origin &lt;1 the fire was
with entranc-e facing east. This new wldetermined.
church was opened for worship at
Tlll8 history was completed Ap-11
the end of 1853 and was the first
5, 1981. All the above history was
complied and wrttten by:
church In Minersville.
This church no longer stands
VIctor L'Berger Brown
having been destroyed by fire
4MJSt. Rt. 124 Box 26
Tuesday evening ahout 7 o'clock
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

13

The

Ohio

Emergency 949-2516
I mo.

Ytrd Sale, May 16th, 17th,
2629 Mt. Vernon A'lt., Pt. Pit.
Atln or Shlna, 9 :00· 15:00.

recorder, 111reo . aki· boots, lots
more . Oh io River Camp
Grounds . Racine, Ohio.

4 famity garage N .. , 303
SIYtnlh St .. N.w Hann , 18th,

batem~nt 11i1 at Larry
O' Brien rnkiWica. Laten filii,
Frid1y end S.t. 18th and 17th
10 :00· 9 :00 . lots of nice
summer clothing. At lellt 100
pr. shorts. alto lott of knick·
knacks. Watch for atgns .

t7oh, I ;OOQ-4;00.

2 ftmity, Thurt 11nd Fri, 1 ;00·
8 :00. 2811 Mt . Vernon Ave .. Pt .
Pit., lots of everything .

6 family

'

�Page
21

14 The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

Busine11
Opportunity

46 Furnished Rooms
Furn lthed

[~1

51 4·3117·0488 .

Ger.ge Apinment tor tale end 2
mobile hont. G90d rttum on
your lnvNtm.nt Cl"' epproa: . 1'h
ecre1 with 235 ..., rolld front-a• 5 minutes from town . Will

consider lind contflct. Taklnil
ctllt between 4 -IPM 304-171-

-

(404)252 -4489

Profe11ional
Services

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .

•od•covO&lt;vou•poono'oboiU11ful

42 Mobile Homes

MOBILE HOMES MOVED tn·
aured . r11aonable rates. Call

304·676·2336
Homes for Sale

1972 Schulb, 12x70 tilt out,
stov• 1nd refrigerator, furnttura
4 bedroom hou11 , tireplece, 3 negotiable See by appointment
m• 10uthofGallipolls. e29,900 only. 304-676 -7117
Call dey• 814-446· 16115 or
1 973 Kirkwood double wide
~entngl 614 446 -6222
with land. e•c cond, nic. arM
We buih b1g 4 bdr ., Early Gallipolis Ferry. for more mfor·
American home• 11B 996 on matton 304-675 3087
your lot See our naw model
1983 ICnootwoocl, 3 bedroom
home Call8148867311
trllltf, aaauma loan wlttl a low
For 111e by owner. 2 atory ha down payment, 304-876-6206
w1th garage Green School Oil·
tnct Appro11 1 1cre 126 000 1970. 12~t50 tratler tnd half
Call 514 446-2026 or 614 acre lot, 1'h car garage and
building. Gtlhpol11 Feny. cloae
446 9160
to Stauffer, good cond, will •II
3 bdr houae. ftmtly room. aepeute. 304· 676 -61 71 or
baaemenl, newly rklecoretad 678-3704
Rt 35, near Holrer Medical
Center Call614 446 3376

33

Farms for Sale

114 rtory. 4·5 bdr , 2 baths, FP.
tull baaemMlt, 141120 bu1ld1ng,
w1th ger~ge, on 8 1 acres By owner. 1 10 acres It Outer.
Loe.ted tn Rio Grtndt Call Betuttful 8 room home, btm,
6U-!45-6197after 5 OOPM.
outbuildings, swimming pool.
POl. Alao 114 1cr• near DPt.r
Walk to town , school&amp; , with 3 bedroom modern homt, 2
churctuts. library, one atory, 2 bama, lo'elll'f 11tting. Call 814·
bdr . 1ttracttve bath, 1ormtl 742-2877 tor appointment
dtntnQroom, goocl ctrpettng,
large khchen , good gu furnace , Mini Firm on McCumbtf Rotd
atorm windows Cell 614-446· 6 ecr.. 3 bedroom houM. Reel
0630
nice Call 814·992-21 .t3. Aher
5 00 call814·992-8373
Houae &amp; 32 tcret Si11 milee fr
GtllipoUs. Only interested buyers pleeu Cell 61 ot -448-2460
after' pm

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

For Sale by Owner. 7 room
houae , 2 carg~n~ge, 1'14 A lot, Vt
A Mr11 puturt, garden tptct,
on Mitchell Ad Good location
for home or buaineu Sealed
btdt · Open May 23, 1986. May
refuM tnY or all bids. Send your
name, eddrna, phone no. &amp;
otter To MR Chtlnnw, At. 3,
Bo• 126A . G111ipoha. Oh

46631

Govtmment Hom11 from f1 IU
rep-'rl Al10 delinquent te•
property Cetl 1-8015-887-8000
Ed. GH -9805 for lnform1tion
6 room house on Nelson Rd ,
Rutltnd. Out of high water, quiet
trN, reedy to move into Celt
614· 742· 2007 after 4 30

Wooded lot - elactric-- water·
bathhouee- boat dock . Noth1ng
down tiOmo. BigFootPirk.Rt
7 . 6 mil• betowGtllipollt, crott
Raccoon CrM. roUow 1igns
Camping lot for nle in Big Foot
Campground, 12.000. Will con·
aid ... trade for pop-up camper,

C•ll 614 ·448 ·1294.

1 -15 tcr•.partillly wooded Iota
nNr IPProved IUb·dhliaton. T.P
end C wet• tnd tppro~~ecl road
to aech lot R..tonlbly priced,
Will financa with 10 pwcent
down Call 61.t-985·3594
1 3 ecflt 325 ft. frontage Rt
7 . cloae to town . U700. Call

9 room. 2 baths Cen be meets 614 ·992 ·6587
Into duplex. . Located on Founh
and Pal met' in Middleport Close For 1111. Garage apt and 2
to schools and shopping Aaklng mobile homu. good return on
price 12.t.OOO Owner wtll •H your investment on tpproxton ltnd contflct. Ct11814·692· mately 1'A •crea whh 235 ft
6618 ther 4 pm.
road frontage, 5 minutH from
town . Will conaider land con·
4bedroomhomeon7tcrll Can trtet. T•lng c1lla ~an 4-6
negotiate Cell 814·986-4392
p m. 304·875-3002.
,...

3 bedroom. newly red.eor~ttd .
tlumnum akhn;. ltrge ctr port,
garage, on 3 acre lot 1n Chitter
One-rourth mile on 248 oft Rt.

Renlol s

6 room houae In Middltport. 3
Mdroom. 1 'h batha, fully carpetltd , on laval lot. 114-992·

3610

Stvtfl room hou,. , co mpl.tely
rurnished. 12.600 00 Phone

304·876 7840

Gallipolis Ferry, 3 bedroom
rtndt . •II alec. 2 k:lta centrelttr,
large deck, stove, ref and
dlahwattler, •"ached garage, 8

'" old. 304-676-2932

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

41

Houses for Rent

Rsnt.tu... lartdcontrac1. Jbr' •
Rodney V1111gell; 2 br' s -Eureks;
3br Evarta Helghtt; Deposit II
referencn ..-qulred Bl•ckburn
Reelty ·614-U8 ·0001J
3 bedroom home unfurnished,
QM hell. KtniUgll 1200 I
month • t100 depoait Cell

61.·448-7437

Furn11hed houM. 2 bdr .. 11915
131 rear 4th AIHt . Gallipohs.
Call446-4416 tfter 7pm
Nice 3 bch . full baaement, CA.
fenced yard, Rt 141 , 132fiplus
dep Ctiii14-852-2B11Stfttr5 .
Ntce 3 bd,. full buement, CA,
fenced yard, At. 141 , 13215 plus
dep Ca1101•· 862-2811Seher6
928 Firat Ave , 5 room• a. bath.
Call e14 -441-3946 tfter 4PM

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI. Furnlahed hou• .t rooma •
WEST, GALUPOLIS. AT 38. bath, 3rd A.ve , Otllipolls. 1125
PHONE 81 • ·446·7274
mo . 1715 dap Call &amp;14·446·
3870 or 114-448·1340.
1.tll70 Festilo'al, 2 bdr .. 2 full
bettls. Iota o' clo .. ts. uttlity
room. AC Call 614 -446-8241
tnV11me

1983 M1n1ion \ 4XIo,fedtemp
1983 Manaton 14a:70. 3 bdr. 2
full bltha. hke new Setup. Outll
Creek Tr~ilor Park e13 ,900
Ctll 114 ·2·6-91.5
72 liberty 121150. 2 bdr with
woodburner. good cond. Priced
to Nil t41500 Ctll 114-245-

9264
Mobile homa 1111 Corner Patera
8rench ·lemon Hill off BladenMercerville Rd . Crown City, Oh .
72 FrHdom 14x70, 3 bdr ,
partly ,.modeled, equipped tor
woodbumM, porctl &amp; underpin·
nina. 14.600 Cell 114-379·
2808
74 Holly P1tk 3 bdr , 12x85,
ptic:e reduced Call 61•-•u4788 aher 5 30 waell.daya.
anytime on weetr.encla
1980 libeny 14.&amp;4 . 2 bedroom, unfumiahed, vtnyl under·
pinning Included Mu• t sel l Cell

304 -nl-8873

Gen• Mob~e Homn FrM
w11her and dryer Wtth purchMt
or any new home In atock 18
Skyline 14x70. 3 b.droom 2
b1tha, only 11 • .900 loca1ed
Junction 177 and Rt 2 Rf\IIAI•
woOd. w V• 1·304·273·6135.
Mobile home tor Nle. U~t70
1978 3 bedroom, 11h bdl. total
electric U&amp;OO Ca1181•-2.&amp;7.

3678
111• 10di0 Wolverine. 2 bedroom trall11. Kitchlfl furntthed.

c., eu-9116·410a.
•

Mobile homa in Henderson, call
after 5 00 PM. 304·875-1611
3 bedrooms, ready WednMdav.
pho,na 304· 875-2247
Mobile home on Crab CrNk
Road. t160 00 per month, no
Pita 304-176 1206

2 mob1lehomelot1. 1 on Rt 7 , 1
on Addison -Buln•lle Ad Cell
814 -367 0232 0 1 614 -448 -

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APART
MENTS (Equtl Houatng Oppor
runh'tl monthly rent atarta at
1178 ror 1 bedroom lnd *212
far 2 bedroom, dapoait •zoo.
located ntlr Spring Ytlley Plaze
and Foodtancl. pool and Cable TV
IVIillblt, Office hoUri as PGIII
ble 10 em to • pm 1nd 7 pm to 9
pm Mondii'Y·Friday, Call 614·
446·27415 or leave m•qge
Nicely fumished mobtle home,
eff apt . eentrtl tir and heat '"
city, eduits only Cell 614-446·

0338

Apartmant for rent. Outlity 2
BA , 2 bath apenmtnt 1n prtme
downtown loc1tlon with off·
atreet parking K•tchen fum11hed
with refrig .. Mlf·clean oven.
OW. gar dlsp.. hookup for
Wllhtr l dryer For non smoktng
single or couple No children or
p.. e Allelectric lnclud•wttar·
/ a.w llr.. h A one year leea111
requtred. Cell 814·448-169•
9AM to 6PM
Furntahed tpt ., 1 bdr., 701 4th
Ave , Gellipoha *235 mo utlh·
ti• pa1d Cell 4•6-4416 1fter

7pm

2 bclr. utllltl11 partltlfy turn .,
1176 mo Ctll 304-87&amp;-5288
or 304-8715-5104
New 1 bedroom 1partmtnt Call

614-446-0390

Furn effictency 1145 mo ,
utlllt•• paid, ahare bath 607
2nd Aloft Gtlltpolta Call 446·
4416 1f1er 7pm
Deluxe 1 bdr , gerege apart ·
mant , kttchen rurn11hed. no
pita. 110 ch1ldran. reference•.
BOO Block 11t Galhpoltt Cell

814 266 1529

2 bdr unfurn1ahed with eppliln·
cea II 881 Thtrd. Gallipolia
1250 mo. plus utlhti... Call

814·248-9696.

Furn efficiiMcy, 3 room • btth,
c trpetld &amp; quiet Smgleworking
person only Cel1614-446 -4607
or 614·440-2G02
2 bdr. unfurnlthed apt , e•cept
for rl'fr~ &amp; rtnge Sec dep req.

2 bedroom houN, located 104
Water St, 304-675-7163 e~lt
after 4 30
Middleport area. nice ciHn
home, rtuonable ren1, If Interested call 30•·882-3722
2 hou .... onetra•ler hookup, tor
rent. 304 -675 -1720

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr on 0 J White Rd . Ouilrt
coun1ry tltttng Ctll 814 448·
7157 tfter BPM.
Fully fumlahed. AC. all ut•hi•
peid. adulta only CIIIIS1 4-.t•&amp;·
4110 Of 614-446 -2003
In Eurakl Ntce, ciMn, part.
turn .. 1dul1a only, no pets, 1180
mo Dep req. Ctll 114·258·

1636 .. 814·268·1291

Mobtle home for rant on Uppllf
River Ad. Call614-448·0608.
2 bdr unfurn c1rp~ through·
out, AC. deck whh awning, 2'12
mlln on At 588 No children or
inelda pets PrNata lOt Cell

3 bdr unturn ilhed. 1 bdr
furnilhed . You PlY utrlltiea , no
peta. Call 114-4-41-0321
2 bdr apt , downtown, 1210
wtthout utilttlll, 1330 with
utillttea Oepotlt required . Ctll
814-446 -2129 8:00am · 5pm
1 bedroom apt for rent . Beaic
rent ltlrta 1216 11 month that
lncludn all utlllt111 Depo1tt
required of 1200 Conttet Vtl·
IIQt Mtnor Apt Mlcldlepon
614-992-nB? Equal Hou1ing
Opportunity
FOor rant 2 bedroom turntshed
tpt Aduits ontv Cttl614-992·

2749

.t room end bath Unfurntahed
No peta Call 614 -949-2253
Myrtle Beactl Condo Renttl. 2
bedroomt, 2 bttha, sleeps e
Furnished COff1)14rle wtth hnilna
Tennia courta, indoor-outdoor
pools. uuna , 1te1m room . 200 ·
yda. trom beech. No pets. Phon a

814·423 ·8817

Large 2 bedroom 1pt. . unfut·
nlahed Ground floor •1B6 plua
utHitl•. Syracu11 Call 814·

3 rooms, furnished No peu Call

APARTMENTS mobile homea.
hou111. Pt. PIIMinlandGtlhpo
"' 1614-441 -8221
APARTMENT FOR RENT· Now
accepting eppllcadona for rent1l
1Pir1mtnta '" M11on Apt1 li·
mittd Two bedroom apta at
1199 00 pet month Renttl
rat• may be higfl" depending
on Income Housing w1ll be
tvailllble to uch 1pplicent te·
garcl._s of their flee, color.
rel6glon, IP or netural origin.
lnternted tppUcantathould call
30·· n3 -6011 or contact o.
niu Streib or Welter Julltica at
the Mtin Offici, 1878 Brice
Road . 1 ~evnoldsburg . 0 hlo

43018 "' coli 814·863·4114 .

Middleport · 2 bf furnished apt
ror rent. 1110 2 room efficiency
apt 304-882·21551
Mt. Vsrnon Ave. new 3 room,
blth, ground floor apt . Prtvate
entrencltnd perking, 30•·675 ·

4580 "' 875·1982

Attention M1nhtll students
614·446·4807 ., 614 -448· now
renting 1 and 2 tHKtroom
2802
apertmentl for fall . . , ••., In
12x50 two bedrgom mobile
home, unfurnished 1135 plu1
utiUtill Syrecuae Call 114·

Huntlngton. lome/utt one block
from Marthlill toea ly owned and
op••ttd. 304-89!·3•so

992·6687
Two bedroom trailer with elt- 46 Furniehed Rooms
pando Irving room on targelt¥el
lot rn Mlddltpart Ne• etorH For rent SIIIPing Roome lfld
end achool1 No peta. Call light houM kMPing roomt. Park
814·992·2101 til 5:00pm and C1ntrtl Hotel. Cal G14··48·
814·992·2319 after &amp;·00 pm. one.

75

•
••

Uaed R65 Ditch Witch TtM'Id'ttr
and 450 John Deere dour.

Ji!I,l

!.

.."

Boata and
Motore for Sale

,I..
...

WEDNESDAY

5/14/86

I

e 14·44&amp;·0727.

1978 24 ft. Rienet cuddy cab,
221 Mtn:rui..... tun galley, dual
voltage fefrlgerator. tolllt: whh
sewagtsyatem, radlottltP'-one.
dtpth finder. pow.r trim, and
many extrM. Asking •1 3,100.
CoH e14· 448·1781 oft• BPM
114-381·8811

992 - ~73

446-2336

18 h lowaAiuminumbUsboat.
Trolling motor. diPth finder, 1 I
HP Enlnroda Motor. UOOOflrm.
Call 614 -742-2871 1Ytnlng1

61 4-694· 7842 or 694·6006

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS. 1eope
bore sighting. factory rtblulting,
houra 9 :00 till dtrk. ctli 304·

only.

876·4831

.

6:00 O alr.Il O ril ®l iD @@
News
(I) Green Acres

•

•,

6:05
6 .30

~ · ..

• J"

l

.""
.....·''
••
' .
,/

•

..

6· 35
7.00

----------51 Household Goods

Sofu and chaha pnctKt from
1285 to *8915. Teblll. t50 and
up to 8125 Hldl·a·beds,$390
and up to 1560 soft bed•
1146. Recliners. *226 to
t3715 , Lamps rrom f28 to
1125 pc dlnettll from e1 09 .
to436 7pc 8189andup Wood
table with •• cllaira 8286 to
1746 Deak t1215 up to $375
Hutchee. 8560 Bunk bed comptete with mtnresaea, 1275
and up to U95 Baby bMa.
t110 Mattrenn or boll
springa. full or twtn , t63 , firm,
t73 and 183 Quaen seta.
I 226 Bed trem11 , 120 and
125 , 10 gun · Gun cabin eta,
1360 Gaa or el&amp;ctric rang•
1376 Baby mattreuea, 836 6
'46. bed frame• no $26. &amp;
130, krng heme •so Good
selection of bedroom suites,
rocltera, metal cebtn.ta, hud boll'dl e38 &amp; up to 186

ltnde Star nng and necklace.

Plctltnt Und Furmru re Good
quality used furniture Open 9to
6 or cell for 11ppolntmen1

304·676·8483"' 876·1460

26 Inch color TV 180.00
304-676-2816 call atter 6 00

a, ...
2226

king aira bed, 304-88 a,.
~

54 Misc . Merchandise
Callahan ' s Used Tire Shop Over
1 OOOtirn.lir1112 . 13, 14 , 15 ,
18, 18 5. 8 mll11 out Rt 218
Call Blot -266·6261

Jeager 126 portebte air comPfeiiOr, trailer mounted, nc
cond , 304-488 -1031 .

514-288·6522 .

Sale or trade. T9 lntematlontl
bulldoJtr, Gil engine, nelds
work , call after 5 PM, 304 -675·

2010 John DMra tl'lctor, low
hour~, good rubber wide front,
power ateerlng, Uvepowar.John
Detfl plowa hke new, John
Deere d&amp;ek All for tl,996. Ctll

304· 676 1388

1620

814·285·1902.

CaM

Llf.tlme concrete culverta. 12
ind1 to 31 Wld'l , In atoclt larger
lizea a11aillble. up to 6 rt C1ll

814·1112·2834 ., 614 ·892·
11704.

I

.

Newt.,. painted N8 tractor for
1111. New tlr•. 5 h gr.tder
blade Trtilar for ult. Will trade
for Chtvv or GMC Truck Ctll

814-1185·4382 .

1979 Ford Mustang 4 cyl . new
rebuilt motor, low mllaage. Cell
1981 4 dr . Chwette, AC , tilt.

Bu1ld.,g Metartela
81ori; brick, IIWer pipl!ll, Win·
dows. hntela, etc Claude Wlntctu. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614-

disk t296 . new post holt digger
U76. 7ft greder blade *186

0296, 2-12 plowo *296. 3

245· 6121 .

8uild1ng metenal1, cemlnt ,
blocks all•iz••. yard or deli11ery
Galltpolls Block Co .. 123VJ Ptne
St., Galltpoha, Ohio Call &amp;14 -

446· 2783.

Stock, brick, mortar end me·
10nry .. ppli.. Mountain State
Block, At 33 . New Haven. W
Va 304 882-2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

- --------O reg onwynd Cattery Kenn~
CFA Htma leyan. Peraien end
Sitmeaa klttena AKC Chow
pupp ies. New pupptes &amp; klnant .
C1ll 448-3844 1fter 7PM.
Ckow·Chowpuppl11 silver blue.
AKC Reg Ch1mplon blood linn.
Ex pedigrees Cell 614· 266·
1271
5 AKC Regiatered Elkhound
pup1, 8 weelca, out of good tree
doga. goodpeta, t100 each Call

614 ·258-1253

pt

Cell 614·288·8522.

800 Ford tractor 1,200 houri
82 ,610 United Farm finllh
mower new f79fi . 3pt. Hld11&amp;
spreader new t296 Call 61•·

286·8522.

730 C••• dlnel tr1ctor w1de
front power 1teerlng. live power,
live hydraulics cream puff,
*2.860. 6 tt. drum mower r.w
*1 ,49&amp; No. 12 Mllll'f Fergu·
eon baler 11 ,196 Call614·281·

6622 .

JIVIDEN 'S FARM EQUIP ·
MENT. 814·448·1575 Ch...

Ctll 614·448·9320
1 91&amp; Corvelt Monra. good
bod'( •• · Interior, run a well H..
developed tranaulenoias, grtlt
tor ftltorttlon, eaoo Ce116U·

246· 5823

1978 Cutl111 Brougham. good
condition. Call 1114 448 2014
1987 Chevy CemlfO. ra. con·
11ertlble. rettoration attrtad.
have aH perta to complete.
ukrng n .ooo. Cttl 814-4411711 attar &amp;PM 814 -3881978 Lincoln Mark IV Good
cond 11 ,800 Call 814·448

0390.

apeed. AC. AM-FM attr«~ with
c•aette, red. turbine wheels
17000. Cell &amp;14·742·2177.

OeutJ triCtor. p1rt1 end aervictl
at tha bait JWICI, Siders Equipment Ca. 304·876 -7421 .

1977 Nova Auto., good g•
mileage, good tir• Fair condl·
tion *8150 . Calll1•·992-2848

Feunall Super A tractor, ex:c
cond, culttv1t0r1, tumln~ plow,
mowing machine. hwv duty, 2
wheel trail•. t1 ,475.00 Phone

1880 Chevy Monza. 4 cyl, 4
spHd, good cond, 11,200.00 or
make an offer, must Mil, 304-

IYARTTE t

W,_,AT THA'"t \SUY

W,_,O WASAL.WAYS
L.ET'TINS A ~MII..E
!3E ,_, 15 UMI!II!:EL.L.A
!!NI7Ec:&gt; UF" WITH •

JI K J
Prlnranswerhere:

Now arrange the circled letlet'S lo
form the s urprise answer, as
gasted by tne a bove cartoon .

suo-

r I I nI I I 1 ]
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterdays

I

Jumbles ACRID LOUSE BAUBLE EVOLVE
Answer. What too much champagne can mak.e a
single person do-SEE DOUBLE

387·0466
614-266-9391

61

CROSS
Us

lo

SONS

35 W•t. Jackson , Ohio

814-286·6461

1978 Chwron Executive 28 ft.
Treval Trtllar. like naw condl·
tlon •ndulldveryllttll HttMW'
20ft twnlng. Orlgintt coat over
•11.100. Atklng *1200 814·

Cil To 1he Manor

li) (jj) En1ertammen1 To
night Ally She edy talks
about her sta rnng role 1n the

742·3033

17 ft •" oontained. alwpa 8,
stove. rafngerator, toll .. area.
bettety. eMctrlc and gaa llght a.

gAC:::fc: IN 5MALL CLAIMS'

Serv1ces

couwr.

9486.

1984 Pontlec Fiero, 4 cyNnder. 4

896·3013

18715 ToyoUt Celiee. *100.
Good condition, 304·1715 ·

cond. n .eoo.oo . 304-575·
1553.
1978 Cl1ryt4er Newport, 4 door,
PW, stereo. ••tre nice. mu.t 11ll
3 dl't• onty *2.2815.00. 304-

676-5308

72

Trucks for Sele

1982 Deteun 4 apd.. AM-FM
tepa . wire rims. aporty, 12 ,889.
Jotln ' 1 Auto Sat•. BullVille Rd ..
Oeltipolla.

' 72 Dattun ptckup. runa good.

64

Hay

flOOd cond, *460.00. 304-578·
2223.

' 79

Cnovy

Mlud htYforsale. Squer•balel,
firat cutting, .......,., w•t • 75 per
bale Call 814-742-2007 affer

Luv.

•uoo.oo

Good shape, 304-ot5B·11511 .

73

a. Grain

37 round btl11 of hiY for aele

Ctll 814·742· 28.9

IqUiri

• , 25 . 304 175·5179.

belli,

Netd htycutandblledby.tl . . .
or by the bale, 304·175· 7283.

I r,)f)spurloillilll

Van1

8o 4 W.O.

-

••

1978 C·J 5 Jeep Good condition t2800 Call 304-773·

5378.

.

74 Motorcycle•
19115 Kaw•.. kl '6" Nlnga CeH
8t4-Ut-7.t14 art•

.,M.

750 K Holld• Chopper 8pocitl

pare thetr theorre s o f the a rt·

@ MOVIE. ' 10'

8 05 Cil NBA Baske1ball. Play·
off Game Teams to be

w.·,.

IUHAfS '10JR to..mCAL

814·448·0918 .

19S5 HondoV·U M•gn•. 1100
CC 81•ck. 3900 mil• . Still
und• warranty. 12880 . Extraa.

81.·941·2120

Utilfty bldg. apt.: 30'x.tO'x9',
115 ' ~t8' alidlno door a. 3' llfV
door, t5 ,256 erected. Iron
Hor• Bldga. 114·332 ·9745

1881 Ford Felrmont, auto, air.
rtdio, t1 .Ill . ohn't Auto
s..... Bulaville A dlpoila.

1811 KIW- KX 210. runo

Wa will do til typet of OJatom
ferm mtchinery work Ctll for
fltel, 814-251 ·11535.

tr1n1, AC, PS. AM·FM radio,
good cond., t1 .98B . Ctll 11•·

44f-1956.

KNEE- JERK

AffiL.IAllOIJ, M~k '1

Roofing. tktlng . remodeling.
pMning hou111 and rooft. tnd
en•tl rep•ir. El11matn, call

l 1··1185·4121

VJQ..L,

WIJAll( FRiliGE.

IT &amp;ATS

JCGGIIJG

by co

clashes w uh Sammy Jo ov er
Clay Fatlmon t a nd Ste ve n
ho pes to learn Ada m s s ec re t (60 m tn J

Mirror Image' iCC)
(j] Black Champions

ICC) An InqUi ry tnt o the
wo rld o f sp o rt s from the
p e rs pec tt ve of black c ha mp lan s who hav e p la yed s uc h
m onu ment al roles 1n ns de·
ve lo pme nt (60 mt n )

t; . r -l

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Sttrb TrH and Lewn Sttvice,
landactping 30•·1715· 2010

1

Aottry or clble tool drilling
MOlt wt .. CO""IItaclumedty
Pu"ll IIIII tnd llrYicl 304-

11

VQ.JR Clo'-ILVHOR05COPE :
IF 'rOLJ WERE BORN
ONTH15DATE ..

YOU S HOULD NOT

CONTE MPLATE A CA-REE R

AS A N ESKIM O ."

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

..

Cor. Fourth end Pile
GaiUpolls, Ohio
Phone 81'·'"8· 3888 or l14 -

Ctll 81 4· 7·2-2067.

1115 Hond• VT 700 Shodow,
tow miiHge. bougtlt new this
aprlng. E•cellant condition C•ll

lookl .. good, 1111.00 .

Phono 304·n3·8244.
ua• . _...,., KDxaoo din

.,.kt, likl new. I • 110 mH•.
tnswtr tlltnOir, t1 ,371.00.

Coil :104-875· 7181.

PSST.PIIW··

HERE COMES
ELVINEY AN' I
GOT A 21LLION

Excavating

THINGS
TOOO

GIT!!

SEE IFYOU

CAN GIT RID
OF HER, BUT
BE REAL

10 20 Cil MaJor league Baseball:
Atlanta at Montreal Tape
Delayed
10:30 @ Amencan Snapsho1s
f!) CD INN News
(j] Money Makers
@ News
11 .oo o mm o m®l m©®

SHE'S

'IOU OL'

GONE

HEIFER!!

HOME

BACK

PERLITE!!

News

@ Man from U.N.C.l.E
ffi Historic lndianpohs
500 Films
@) Cl) Benny Htll Show
Ill SCTV
ITil Nelson Mandela
11 :30 0 CD @ Tonigh1 Show

.....

General Hauling

-..-.

'

Ken 's Water Service W111lla, ·
Clltema, pools tnd waterbeda
filled Call 814·367·0623 or
814· 367-n.t1 or 304-876-

..•

T ontgh l s gue s ts a re l tnda

Ellerbee and the Oak Rtdge

SNAKE!!

Boys (6 0 mm ) In Ste reo

ffi SportsCen1er

;

Cl) WKAP 1n Cincinnati

••''

f!l CD@ Taxi
0 Cil T.J Hooker Hooker
battles a param1htary group
w ho have b ee n assasstnat·
tn g
va no us
CitiZens,
vtg lla nte · s ty le (70 mtn )

Coal, limestone, gravel et c
Dellltl'ered 1 ton and up J1m
Lanier 30•· 876 · 1247 or 676-

7397

/

® Aus1in City limi1s
Ill @ ABC News Nightline

\:

@ Trapper John. M.O
12 00 Cil Best of Groucho
ffi Fashion Ac1ion Report
(!) En1ertatnment Tonight
Ally Sheedy talks about her

Upholstery

&lt;-

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Seo. A11e , Gelhpoha.
814 446 -7833 Of 814 -44&amp; .

1633.

s ta mng role 1n the upcommg
fil m , "Sho rt Ctr cutt "
@) CD Rawhide

PEANUTS
JUST LOOK AT THE

R &amp; M Furniture tthnuftcturmg.
St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Oh . Cell
814·256-1470, cell E11e 814 441 - 3438 Old !. new
Uphostered

WORLD AROUND YOU ..

JUST Tl-liNK OF ALL
TI-lE WONDERFUL THINGS
OUT THERE FOR US
TO SEE .

McMillan and Wile:
The Deadly lnheri1ance
Ill @ Eye on Hollywood
12 30 0 CD @ la1e Night with
@

David Letterman T on1ght ' s
guests a re Cab Calloway
and Ron Stiver. (60 mtn.l In
S le reo

Mowrty' a Up11olatlring servtng
trl county area 21 ye1ra. Tha beat
in fumiture upholatering. All
work guaranteed visit wr modern ahop at Muon County
...-.
Ftlrgrounde. Phone 304-671·
.15.
. .. ~ ..

.

Ale x a nd Leon a rd a re called
1n 10 mves11gate when a
300 -yea r-o id s unken treas u re s h1p s ud denly appears

g o ry a nd Peter' s lo ng-lost
b rot her re appears , se rvmg
a s body g uard fo r a fe male
Ce ntral Am e nca n leade r
160 IT\In,j
® Amencan Caesar
{il) Newswatch

BARNEY

44&amp; -44n

7911 '

10·00 0 CD @ Blacke's Magic

10 satl away (60 mm I (R)
@ CON News 'Tomght
(I) Ill G::il Arthur Hailey's
Hotel (CCI Chns!lne de·
c tde s to leave 1he St Gre-

Man Power, Inc .. gen•al home
lmprovementt, trM trimming,
odda and lf'lde, 304·8111 ·2222

87

Am anda

®

871·2088 or 876 · 7388

83

tak eover,

0 (!) ®I MOVIE : 'Stark:

rlenl»d carplftter. aiiCtrlclln,
muon. painter. roofing (lnclud·
lng hot tar appllcttionl 304·

82

LIVC

e xts a nd Be n co mtn ue the tr
sche me to fo tl Blake s Col-

'

304·875·2398 ., 814 ·448
2454

an nounc ed (2 h rs . 15 m tn )

9 00 @ 700 Club
i]) li) @ Dynasty (CCI Al-

I

RON ·s Televieton Satvlce
Hou11 ctllt on RCA . Ouerer,
OE Spec:lallna Wt Zenhh Ctll

448·1711.

C•ll 814·448-3172.

5 Jl)d

locking the Universe Part
2 of 4 Several ex pens com-

Block &amp; concrete wotk, elao
pakUing &amp; carentry. g~r~gea ,
pallo'a, btsement . lidewtlkl. 5
'tiiFI expertenc. . Fr" 11t1
met•
on the Level Ce ll

Jtmn Boy1 Water Service Also
poola fJIIed C.tl 614 -256-1141
or 1514-448· 1175 or 614 446-

exc,

News hour
Great Space Race: Un -

®

gtn of I he un1verse (€0 m tn )

t7.500. C•ll 814·192-5954

1980 Dttaun 310 ·ox coupe. I
spd . mttnuel, AM-FM stereo
Cllllttl, AC, rtlr window d•
fogget. 12,300 ot btd oftw.

w-.

Championship

pnson 160 m1n I IRI
i]) (191 Wes1 57th
(!)
MacNeil -lehrer

Elderlor atucco pl ..tetlng &amp;
plasttt r~C~air Cell &amp;14-2561182

tfter fi:OO pm

Maney Ferguson, New- Holland,
Buth Hog Set• &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to choo11 from
&amp; complete tine of new It u•d
equipment. Larant Mlactlon In
S E Ohio

1110 Dotlv• Colt

Hockey: NHl

(I) Ill 0~ MacGyver iCC) In

85

75Gremlint350, 73,.tonFord

c.ne14 +15·33&amp;7.

blond woman 12 hrs ) (R)

fe re nce
Ltv c

1979 Ford Van with 1980
fiiCtory blovac cuatom conver·
1lon E~tclllant condition.

Honda XR 210 dirt b+ka 1981
modol price *1 .250. Coli I 1• ·

•eoo.

Jonathan

Wales or Campbell Con ·

Qood·1 Excevttlng, baaements.
footers. driveweya, aeptlc ttnka,
landactping . Cell anytime 114446 -4537, J1m11 l Dtvison.
Jr. owner

paint job, lott of chrome. Cell
514·448·7252 ofttr •PM.

88 Roadrunn• 440 eng .

(CC)

hands struggling quadn
plegtc lawye r Sco l ty h ts first
case--a d1 s ftgured artts l ac

(!) NHl

19715 cu.-omlztd Ford Vln
E-100. bay window. sunroof.
carpet, det.,·cau , weetem
magt, good l'ldlal1. no rult.
11,900. Cllll14·441·2847.

Jeff Beughmtn't 1871 unfln·
lahed r11tored NOVA , 327
chro,.,.. engine. no phone in·
Quir•. Middleport (BradburyJ.

pi&lt;kup •?so. c.n 614·3BB·
9950.

Heaven

(}] Born Free

Home
Improvements

1247

Autos for Sala

7 3 5 III Sanford and Son
B·OO 0 CD ~ Htghway to

cus ed of an ack tng a young

891·3802

Ch1tnine Bull, 3 .,,.,. old,
approx , . eoo lbs, 1700 00

304·773-1081

CUll

@ Bob Newhart
(1!] Jeopardy

0

78 Ford HrVIce tn.tck . Ctll for
more detaHe. 81.&amp;· .... 6·4412.

••eo

ANP J-IAVII\IG ib GE'i IT

Shor1 Ctr·

Rooting, painting, room additions, etc. Frea utimat•. 11
'tllf'l Pptri~ot. I • W Con·
.truction CaN 814·446·•18 or
IS 1• ·2•&amp;· N•a eve'a.

1977 Dnher VW attttonwagon,
uc . cond , ntW mo1or, new
tlrea, new battery 1450 1976
Butt* skylark V·6. runa good,
some rud •160 Call814·446·

7468 .

9 Ytlf old beautiful black riding
ho'"· grut for nell rldlnu.
oo
gentle but ap1rtied,

you~ L.IFS::f 5AVING5

upco mtng fil m

an eHort to o bt a tn a watch
comatnm g top se cret mforma tton . M acGyver attem pt s
to fl ee a band of g yp s y ptc k·
p oc ke ls from a Budapest

otBBL, PS, P 8 , U .OOO mil•. exc

304· 743·1091

1,)

SEING Ct-ff?Ai"t:D OUi" OF

~

304·875 -1141

1971 Z28 Ctm.,., T·tot&gt;. 3110

Two heH-reglatered poHed He,..
ford bulla 14 month• old. reldy
1or tlfVice. Phont 814·992·

WHAT) t)I,S'C:::OU,RAGIN6

TO
COURTROOM

1978 Wlldem .., Ctmper. 18 h
Self·conttlned. bctlltnt condl
tion. Ctll 114· 742·3137

63

814-742-3033.

Born

For qulckaal• 1974 Ch...,y No11e
l.t50 • 19715 PontiecOr1ndvWie
1510 Cell 814-319·2233

304·481·1121 '

One bull and onl atllf, both 14
mo old. StHr t\11 vm nlcelil:e.
1326 tncl U80 rMPecttvel\'.

ball C~ncmnati at Philadel·
phia

0 (!)®I Wheel of Fortune

RINGLES'S SERVICE , upo-

71

Farm Equipment

'

Unconditional Uf.time gueran tH Loeal rlferanc.. f\Jml•hed
Fr11 lltlmates. Calf oollee1
1·814 237-0488, day Of night
Rogers Basement
Weterproof1ng

Aegiatered Brittany (male) 304·

Fm11 Suppli es
&amp; LlV I~slur;k

Game

(!) NBA Today
fEI CD Major league Base

19111 Ch.velle 88, 327. 4
epaecl. fWr condhlon, t700, ctll

Regllterfld ult end pepper mala
Schnauur pupp lea . Castl only.
No Checks. Call614-992-2807.

1176·1651

7 .30 0 CD(!) New Newlywed

Alrstraam tr.vel trailer, older
model, but exc:. cond.. root•lr. 3
way rtfrig . Call 014-448 -01514.

Wanted to buy tobacco btu.

Coli 814·448·3888

Divorce Court

@ Wheel of Fortune

Coli 614-268·1112.

Bltck etamon stUd aervica e40.

MacNetl - Lehrer

IHl Barney Miller

Fetty Tree Trimmtng, stu~
removal. Celt 304175-1331 .

Mixed hey large

For ule 1 melt AI&lt;C Reg
Pelcen•e puppy 7 wk old. Call

m@

4014

684·2398.

James Jacoby

Newshour

1976 Stercreft foldout c•mp•.
aleep1 8. compJete with ltovt.
ice boll. Ughtl • sink. axe cond .,
like new C•ll 114 -388-9711
lfter IPM.

2986.

Pure bred Ouroc bo•ra. Roglf
Btntley. Sabina, Oh. Cell 513·

port

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

o1.900. C•ll 814·246·9502.

19n Ptymouth Yolll'e. gooo
cond. low mileage, ti71Si 00
Call efter !I 30. 30•·1711·4858.

Livestock

BRIDGE

1978 Dodge Aaptn 380. nktng

79 Pinto. good condttton 30•-

Now buymg afl~l corn or ear
corn. C•ll forlltutquotla. River
City Farm Supply, 614-4•8-

film ' 'Short Ctrcu11
(!) Jeffersons
[l) Jeopardy
(]) Nightly Busmess Re·

®

.,

81

fD
0

®I News

814-441·3231

~8~
76~·~347~8~
- ----------l

62 Wanted to Buy

Motore Homes
&amp; Campers

1981 Merda RX7 5 apd Cell

our ap1cl.t Mle pric• on Long
Tractor• &amp; VlfmMr hll'f equip·
mlflt. with financing 1\/lilableat
4.4% tnt.,..tl A complete line or
bste hlr'ldllng acce11orl• &amp;
teeding ec-ceuorl11, griflder
m1 ..ra. wagon1. rotary tillert.
rotlry cu«•r~. blldn. culti~l ·
tou, dilc. plowa. IHdlfl, poet
drivtra, woodaplflters. gatll •
heedgetll, pow.r wnhert &amp;
Wh•l Horse lawn II Otrdtn
trectortl And see ua for •
c:omplttellne of part a&amp; Hrvicel
USED A Ylri"V of used tractOr I.
5 round baltrt, grinder mixer,
weg0f11. .prayer, c-ultivators.
tob~eco aettera. wheel cite,
plowa. rek•. square bal••·
teddsrt. htrrow . mowtng m•·
chtne. cuhfptcker.

304 112-3793.

79

9811

4 30

on 614 -388· 8584

polta tor tale

1487

T030 Fergu1on tflctor, extr1
nice, 11.896 5 ft buah hog

For 1111 nfiN Ytrd·man mowera.
good used mower• from t60 ·
176 Echo trimmera on Ill&amp;
Chlldrena Sew Suppty, Vtnton ,

Locuat

1978 Fairmont 4 cyl , 4 apd ..
good cond. 1800 Ctl1614-2fil-

55 Building Supplies

_________,,_

2 ceaaa«e dacite •r d receiver
Ctll614-448 -2614 "

Ctll304-875·7117

814· 266 ·e.t17

9118"' 304-676·6799

For Nit good u1ad bargain
priced color TV Can 814· 446 ·
1149 .

85 Chevy Ceprlce 4 door. Can
be seen 11 1•04 Lewis St Lot.

614·266 8622

1 yr old Oulker parrlt, c•ge &amp;
ell accenorl.. . at the age to
learn tCJ talk . 1100 Cell 614·

Refrlger1t10n II Appliance Service All brtnda used sppl lences perta ltttle'a Aehlg. &amp; Appl ,
Cheahire, Oh 614·367-0440

4020 John DHre diesel trtctor,
extra cle.n, tow hours, with cab,
good rubber •1.960 4 row Ford
corn planttf good 1395 Cell

Riding lawn mower, 8 hp,
Oyn11merk, 38 In cut. uc cond,

Electrolu• vtccuu m cteeneu.
A-1 condltlon -auacl1me n t a
AW'tllllble at 872 .00 Caah or
ternw arran9ed . Call 814 -2415 Plutic ctatern rtete appro lo' ed.
plest1c aepti c tanks, plaat1c
culverta. metal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jac k·
M)n, Oh 614 · 288 ·6930

79 Mustang. N.w tlree, runa
good *1500 C•ll 614· 379·
21 fS2 eher I

0126 00 304·875·5996

••

614-949-2276 .

r rJ

II

Ally Sheedy ta lk s about her

Save Builders Supplies Surplue
Closeouta Salvage.
1 Prehung steel tnaultted 8 or 6
Uud fumtture ·- Dreuar &amp; bed, panel moral 89 .96.
ltrge ttble &amp; 2 btnctles, metal 2. Prlhung rteellnaul1ted door
office deakl 3 mtlea out Bull- and glen 91ite or 11he t125 96
ville Rd Open 9am to 6pm, 3 Double sidelhe entrance door
seta Yr glaaa 9hte t399 .
Mon thru Set
4 Single aldellte entrance door
614-448-0322
sen Yt thermel gl11a 1299.915
GOOO USED APPLIAN CES 5 Commercial doub4e tfltrences
Weehers, dryera, refrigerttora, aat brown ell aluminum *599
rengea Skagg• Applian c u . 8 Double aldtlitll entr~nce aet
Upper Rilo'er Rd beside Stone wood Va .,.nel 'h gltll wdecorauve trim 1299 H
Creal Motel 814-448 -7398.
1 Prehung i'ltenor door~ ell
County Appliance, Inc Good II Z81 and rtnl.hM 8 grades
used apphencea end TV 11111 $29 96 I I
OpWI BAM to 6PM Mon thru 8 Pehung mterlor 6 panel pine
Sat 81ot·448· 1699 , 627 3rd door 's Ill aires IBI gradea,
S89 95 tl
Aloft Gflhpolta. OH
9 Th ermal tnau leted glen pen·
els 76 " hgt 32 " wide e39 .95
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used
large • ction of ~ahtv furni ·
ture 1216 Eutern Ave , 10 Wood door panela w-full
gl111 78" hgt 34" wtde 1JA
Galhpolra.
thlclt $39 96
Bunkbeds COfT'I)Iere, 6000 BTU 11 Octag onal wtndow w·
AC , rocker-reclinw, queen aiJ'e 11a1ned I.!laded glau *69 96 aa
mattraaa aet Corbm &amp; Snyder 12 Clesr acrvhc thtett 080 end
Fumrture, 965 Seco nd Ave Cell 1 26 gage IIVIrll SiJ" btg
11ving1
814 446 1171
1 3 Plywood handy penala
For sale: Magic Ctter eltctrtc 62 " kmg 18 " wide 1rl.l thick t 76·
double oven range 1100, whtte 81 00 ••
wooden table 826. ye:llow lcrt· 14 M110n ita primed horizontal
chen chtnl cabinll $50, all 1n t•terior lidlf1g 16 ' ~t16 " •7 ~ 16
l20 .00tq .
'
good condition S11 at 266 So
15 B·grlde m.tlle vanity topa
Founh Ave., Middleport, Ott
choice alz .. i'l atock 120.00ee
Twi'l bad 2 d'l•ta. d•k. booth. 18 4'118' treated pine lattice
end table, 2 aleepM che1ra Call 114 .95 ..
17 K lua:buckandttonertdtnd
814-446· 119..
ten . reg . *6.99 ctn now 11 .50
Green carpet, 2 ptecea 12 ~t 14 and *1 99 ctn
each &amp;: 1 red nor1l rocker Cell 18 Elllerior key doorlock llumi·
nu m finish 12 99u
614-446-2643
19 Good uted 8·2 bulb Ught
Good uted refngerator. lid e bY co,..lete w-bu lbl e15 OOet.
side, IVOCidO C1ll 614 -388- 20 Wood-M•onlte· btthroom
peneUng 4 'd ' pc U 99 to
9891 lfter 4.30.
89 96 ell
Country oak fum1ture now m 21 Prtftniahed and unfinished
stock . Coff• 1nd and tabl11. door tnd Window tnd tlltyp•ot
round ped11t1l and drop leaf trim attrttng It 11 .00 for 8'pc.
22 Ak.lmnum mobilt home end
ttblll, corner cupboard. 2 pc
bam roof co.ting w·flb• 68gal
cupbo~rda . dry linka, aeerattry
deakll , ch•t of drawera, cherr a 123.96 100 gal 1nd up *20 96
Large aelectto n Conkle'a, Rt 7, 6golooll.
23 Wallboard ldhnhleqt. rubM
Tuppenplalf1s. Oh.
or 29oJ 11 39 at or by c••
Electric Hot Polrn range Not 81 26 ell
24 Paneling nalta • 79 bo•
cp~ite 2 yura old E11cellent
condition 1300 Call614· 742· PENN ' S WAREHOUSE ·
Wtllllton ,Ot'IIO 614· 384-3146
28411
2 good amall refrigerato rs S45
each Good gaa stove *160
Alao other itemaand can deli ... er

(!) Mazda Sportslook
fEI (!) Dilf'rent S1rokes
ill 3 ·2·1. Con1act !CCI
® Hatha Yoga
@ Good Times
ffi Andy Grilfi1h
0 CD@ NBC News
ill The Rifleman
(!) lnstde the PGA Tour
C!l li) (jj) ABC News
fEI C!J One Day 81 a Time
0 (!) ®) CBS News
ill Doctor Who
@ Body Electrtc
@ Jefferson&amp; (CCI
ffi Gunsmoke
0 CD PM Magazine
aJ Alias Smi1h and Jones
(!) SportsCenter
[l) En1ertainmen1 Tonigh1
starnng role tn the upc om tng

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oltlo'l St . Galltpolia New &amp; used
WOOd -coaltiOVH, 6 pc WOOd LA
.,ita U99, bunk beda *199,
entron recllnl!lft *99 , n...,.. 6
Uled bedroom suites, rangM.
wringer washers, a. shoes New
livlngroom sult11 t199 -ti99 ,
l1mpa, alto buying coal a. wood
ato11n Cell 814-446-3169

15

tJ

I•:-Jt-.-=I I ..

EVENING

. ._
....-.
I
'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-

Television
Viewing

·I

' ·· ~

20 rt c1iling cabin, 120 Mar·
Crulaer, 1·0 . IB,OOO ftrm Call

White Crou Buck Style 1t0rm
door. with acreen Brand new

Tratltr lots siWer and weter
furn ished, amell chtlclren accepted, Rt 1 Locullt Ad . back of
K &amp; K. 304-676-1076

A .SAUNA - "

·~

.JAMMED IT- WITH
A 'w EIGHT !liAR - ARNOLD
5GHWARZ ENEGGER
COULDN'T B END TttAT
BABYTH5 Y 1 ~E

~

742·28n

Trt Count¥ Sport Shop. Sprin;
Valley Plaza. Otlllpolla. Ohio
Guna, Archerv. Tackle. 114-

AH • THE 'I D IDN'T LOC:K
THE: D OORS- 'lOU
DON' T PUT A LOCKON

MY WEIGHT INTO THEM .. .

30.·875-1118 otter 5:00PM.

m11t grl'lder t3&amp;0 CeU 814-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parle.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
large Iota Call614-992 ·747 9

THESE 0001&lt;5 GiiVE
A LITTLE WHEN t PUT

1881 Honde Cl cuatom 900,
mint cond fully drlllld. Cell

1976 Hond11 motorcycle CB
1215$ , U26 40 lb punch ing
big. 130 1 pMr teblelempt, 37
mchea hiQh. 140 Call &amp;14-9923681
l

Paid 1100 wm t1ke teo. 114·
992·2143 After 1 :00 Cllll14 ·

892-&amp;687

81•·949·2263

TRACY
"

Office apace Upper Rt 7 Can be
3 prrlo'ate oHicn large waiting
room Call 61 4 ·446 0608 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Coli 814-448-4303

7. 814-966-4358

3 bedroom. Lg kitchen. heat
pu~. atr cone urpetect. o•·
tge, Syracuse 614 -992-3402
1fter 5 pm.

for Rent

74 Motorcycle•

Warde: 21 cu ft frott·frH
upright freeter . 1200. Hober1

Merchandise

for Sale

31

46 Space for Rent

watching The Young and the
Restless."
32 Mobile Homes

Real Eslale

mtle. 919 2nd. Aw , Gtll •pollt.
c.tl 446 -4416 efter 7pm

··"The
- old and the useless is
~==========r-~:;~;:;;::;:;::====i

54 Misc . Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br Larry Wright

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohin..

Wednesday, May 14, 1986

mo .

Spece for rent - now tak ing
eppltct1ions tor mobile home
fota, available In Pt. Ple111nt &amp;
Gellipolla 304-876-3000

tone
boltd,
, cell
Jo4 today,
e76 -s&amp;oo
Wtrdt
01" 8715
Kev · 1

38 24

1126

4288

3002

23

room

utUhl• INnd. there btth. tingle

Cerryout, loue-, St. highwty ,
good foe~~tion Serious lnqulr"
only Cell btltw.., hm A 9em,

Own your own Jlln · eport~tr .
ltd•• 1pp1rel, chtkiNna mtttr
nlty , IIIJQe alzea, petite, d~nc•
wetr on .CI»SIOflet store Jord ·
acha. Chic. Lee, LINi. bod
Oittno Guus. Ctlvin ICittn.
SergiO V1lente, Evtn Picone, bJ
Cltibome. Memblfl Only, Gil·
ohne, Heaithte•. CherokH. o..,.r
1 .000 other~ 114 .300 to
125.900 lnvttntory trtlntng.
h•turea. grand opening, etc C•n
ot:~en 15 days
Mr Sidn~

Wednesday, May 14, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

~

Cil Btll Cosby Show
(!) NFL Films
Cil ABC News Nightline

..

1-·- -- .. -....- ...- - - -·- ·- - - ------ .

• •

•- ·~ -

.... ... , ---• A_ ___ ......,. ···- ...~ -.....

-~

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•'·

How would you do
with East's hand?
By James Jacoby

NORTH

EAST

WEST

Why don't we have a qu tz today Stt·
tmg East, you hear North open one
club. What should you btd ' Try one dt·
amond Although your hand IS very
strong for a mere overcall, no other
bid IS satisfactory
The btddmg continues, endmg wtth
North's four hearts Should you dou·
ble? The answer IS, of course, a loud
"No." You have three aces and more.
but your partner must be broke The
best you can expect ts a one·tnck set
There IS not enough proftt In 11
On the opemng lead of the dtamond
deuce. a low card is played from dum·
my and you wm the jack. What should
you return? The answer to thts one lS
that tf you want to defeat this contract
for sure, you must quickly play your
ace of hearts and get off lead wtth a
s pade. That spade play 1s not too diffi ·
cult Obvtausly you cannot afford a
club or diamond lead. The play that 's
tougher to see IS gettmg rtd of that ace
of trumps hrst II you fat I to do thiS,
and declarer ts on hiS toes, he will run
three spade tncks and then throw you
on lead wtth that heart ace You wtll

i·t4·80

+A Q 10
• Q 10 9
t K 95
+K 8 6 J

.A

t

+6&gt;2

9B43
• 84
t 76 32
+Q 9 5

tAQJ84
10 2

+A J
SOUTH

+KJ

7
.KJ 76&amp;32

tlO

+74
Vulnerable North ·South
Dealer North

w...

Norlb

Pass

4.

I+

I

Pass

Pass

NT

,.
Souib

EaSI
I t

3.

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opemng lead· t 2

then have to lead away from one of
your mmor suit aces. and South wtll
make hiS game

~.~,,t
by THOMAS JOSEPH
7 Famll)'
ACROSS
I Clamm y
fi St" nd h ack

10 Olra.-tory
PpiJOO
II r&gt;edJ &lt;'a tP
pt'H

12 Aornt hy's

dog
13 "The -

me mh('r
8 (I I V£' -

wh1rl

9 Half
a SCOrt'
II Plummt'l
15 Ptsh
16 Condauon

Cometh"

14 To rn furf

17 Plulipptm•
1sland

18 Lengtl1

JJif' Ct'

16 MK 1ss o f
tlw -

WI Se

Yesterday's Answer
27 Scholas uc 34 Yale
award
:o;tudent

19 A&lt;.:c u mula l(' 28 "Mr an d
20 Saluhnou s
nohhy

Woma n "
18 Howan tn•t• 2 1 "Ca tt.: h a
21 Th(lafer
Fall i ng _~

35 Excavate

37 Dtstafl

M&lt;·-~

hunny

31 Encounter 38 Hour ( It )
22 Grr r k ' D" 23 "Prom H&lt;•rc 32 E&lt; ccp1
39 Celt1&lt;·
24 Afncan
In - "
33 Lush
sea deity
rlvt• r

25 lmple mt• nl

r7""T;--r;'-r::-

261ntlw
lt•ast

28 Style: knHI
29 Kong (Sp )
30 Appear
32 Du tch
pa mi Pr

33 Tranqutl
36 FaiSf' ~od
40 l 'o)h•grm Mwh

41 l..au ·ratt&gt;d
42 f)(&gt;fro tl pru
43 Ttrnl' utili

DOWN
I Sp('t k

2 (_ ornmotl nn
3 Word (f'r I
4 Squande nn g
5 Mak o• a t&lt;tpc

b-+-+- f-+-

6 Salarn a ndN

DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work il :
AXYDLBAAXR

is LONGFELLOW
One letl~r stands for another. In this sampl e A IS used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle le tters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls . Each day the code letters are different
C RYPTOQUOfE

5 14
W VI S Y
I0

s

M S EWIZWY

C A Z II S U

\\

V A W I'

M S II Z A S - C M S T C
Yesterday's Cryptoquute: A

f. Z A

I

&lt;

I S M

Y Z (; " T I ' W Y
I ,I ESS IS

WO MA ~ ~

MUCH MOR E ACCUHATE THAN A MAN'' I f :HT.IJNTY

- RlJDY ARIJ KIPLING

CiJ SCTV
li) (j}) News

@ MOVIE: 'The Seven
Year Itch'
t2 :40 U ffi MOVIE· 'My Kid·
napper, My Love'
1 00 aJ Doble Gillis
(]) Tennis Magazine
({) Puntn' on 1he Hits
Ill CD Wild. Wild West
G liil CNN News
t .OS ({) MOVIE : 'One More
Train to Rob'
1 · 30 Cil Father Knows Best
(!) NBA Today
({) News
2:00 aJ 700 Club
C!J Mllzdll Sportal.ook
&amp;I CD MOVIE: 'Horry and
Tonto'
®I CBS News Nlghtwatch

2 :30 (!) SportsCen1er
3 .00 aJ MOVIE · 'The Lone ·
some Tra11'

(!) AWA Wres11ong
® Comedy Break
3 :25 Cil MOVIE:. 'Charlie Bub
bles '

. 3 :30 @ INN News
4 :00
CD MOVIE 'Conques1
ol1he Planet of the Apes'
@ MOVIE· 'Suez'
4 :30 aJ MOVIE ' Death Valley'
ffi Au1o Racmg '86: IMSA
Los Angeles Times Grand

e

.Prix Fro m A1vers1de

(90 mm I /AI

"

CA

�Wednesday, May 14, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Hitler's personal photo album surfaces

HrrLER ARTIFACJ'S- These old photographs, two second1ldltlon
copies of "Meln Kampf", unHonns, etc., dallng back to World War I,
were part of Adolf Hitler's personal property, Theartlfactsweresoldby
a fonner U.S. Anny private to the Seven Acres Antique Village and
Museum at Union, W. UPI.

Mason County..••
(Continued from page 1l
McCausland of Southside. Magiste·
rial District IV, Committee District
7; and Goldie Powell and Sheldon
Starkey, both of Glenwood. Magis terial District IV. Committe!' District S.
Elected to the Republican Executive Committe&lt;' were Audrey
Young and Dayton Raynes, both of
Mason, Magisterial District I,
Committee District 1; Brenda
Merritt of New Haven, Magisterial
District 1. Committee District 2;
Tina Cotton, Magisterial District II,
Committ ee District 3; Diane Buxton Buck and All~n Hart, both of
Leon. Magisterial District II, Commiltee District 4; and Jean Warner
and Randy Filkins, both of Point
.Pleasant , Magisterial District III,
Committee District 5.
Susie Krebs and Brian Billings,
both or Point Pleasant. Magisterial
District lll, Committee District 6;
Dolly Dodson of Southside and
Rocky Sturgeon of Gallipolis Ferry,
Magisterial District IV, Committee
District 7; and Carolyn Tolliver and
Leslie Wray. Magisterial District
IV. Committee District S.
Complete results of the races for
state executive committe were

Effort underway
for grave sites
Efforts are ~ing made by the
Racine Post 002. American Legton,
to locate the graws.of veterans In
Letart and Sutton Townships so
that Oags can be placed on the
graves for Memorial Day.
Those with informatiOn on the
graves of veterans. particularly
those which are not marked, are
asked to contact either Pete
Bearhs. 9!19-ll74, or Ed Turley.
9!19-lllO, evenings. Permanent
markers can also be secured
through the Legion Post. A special
project of lhe legion is tn see that
flag s Oy on the graves of all
veterans for the hoUday.

UNION. Ill. (UPI) - What
appears to be Adolf Hitler's personal photo album from World War
I has surfaced In a collectlo,n sent
home from Germany by a young
World War II Army private in 1945.
Technical testing requested by
United Press International and the
opiniOns of two University of
Chicago scholars tend to support
the authenticity of the album, taken
as a war trophy from Hitler's
Munich, Germany, headquarters
during the Allled advance at the end
of World War II.
The former G.I., who asked to be
Identified only as "Bill," told UP!
he found the album and two
second-edition copies of "Meln
Kampf"~ In a small, sparsely
furnished room Hitler used as a
study . "Nobody (else) had been
Interested" In the album, he said.
He granted an Interview on the
condition that his last name not be
made public to protect his privacy.
The red leather-hound album
contains 68 yellowed black-andwhite photographs. some depleting
war-decbnated areas around Belgium and the northern horder of
France. There are several pictures
of a young Cpl. Hitler posing with
members of his regiment of tlv' 16th
B!.varlan Reserve infantry.
Randy Donley, owner of the
Seven Acres Antique Vlllage &amp;
Museum In tbe tiny nortlv'rn Illinois
town of Union, acquired the collection last year and plans to display it
during tlv' Memorial Day weekend.
At UPJ's request, Samuel "Skip"
Palenlk IU, of Chicago's Walter C.
McCrone Associates Inc.. conducted microscopic tests on samples of a photograph , mat. album

pages. binding fibers and leaf
dividers. McCrone Associates is a
re~pect e d
forensic tes tl ng
laboratory.
"There were no inconsistencies In
the materials," said Palenlk, a
senior research microscopist and
forensic specialist. ·~Everything I
found was available and In use
during this time period."
The pictures were Inserted In the
album some time after they were
taken, as Indicated by the swastika

on the the
frontNazi
cover.
Hitler
helped
found
party,
with
the

bumed- out buUdlngs as mem~rs
of Hitler's Infantry regiment.
In one attempt at humor, a
picture of a smllingsoldler sitting In
a latrine bears the caption, "druckpunkt nellmen," which roughly
means opening a military attack at
a central location, or to apply
pressure points.
'
Bushy mu!tache
In another picture, Hitler. sport·
lng a larg&lt;', bushy mustache

MEN'S LEVI JEANS
$500 FF
NOW

0

·War on drugs .

Kindergarten classes ·

Repcn; on Page '7

Pholo8 on Pap12

'

'
L.
·---~-". . . _. __.

e
Vol .36, No .8

Sl 599 • Sl 799
REG. $20.99 to $22.99

AVE.

Ohio House approves
workmen's comp bill

IDDLEPORT OH .

1--------....:.._____.:,_________

UNLOADING- Beth Stivers, R.N., reviews vital
of a patient in Wednesday night's mock
disaster as members of the Tuppers Plains

statistlc!l

fORM -FITTING OO'OSABl£ CW'ERS

Emergency Unit wtload the tornado vlctbn at
Veterans Memorial Hosphal ..

Extra Absorbent
Medium 40's

Mayors end ca~s
Three persons fotfeited bonds
and one was lined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Edwin K.
Cleland, Middleport, UiO, driving
while intoxicated; John Ratliff,
Middleport, ~. driving without
regard for safety; and Larry
Grueser. Pomeroy, S50 assured
clear distance. Lore! ta L. Atldns,
Pomern~, was fined $10 and costs
on a char~ cl expired tags.
Danny Robson, Pomeroy, fotfeited a $213 bond on an assaut
char~. and Leonard
Koenig,
Pomeroy, a $43 bond on a stop sign
vio latiOn In the court of Mayor
Richard Seyler.

$11900

Now!

with ElasticWaist

tOUO

11

(do

Absorbency to
help stop leaking
even better.

Dt.. • .. '
1

,,....
'-• r•
,.. 1111&amp;••==·
.. _..._.,_
lUI ot t.t'ro filoll IIIIo.

l1

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

,(;'i Kimberty·a..tc

COBB
MIL-S!,

-T.III.

-- - --

;'-;:.~··

EXAM - Dr. Phll Robbins assisted by Cathy
Baldwin examine a tornado victim In the emergency
room of Veterans Memorial Hospital Wednesday

night foDowlng the annual mock disaster drUI staged
for emergency unit.s Md hospital staff rnemhers.

Mock disaster staged here
Four1('('n Meigs Counllans wrr~ injured and one
was killed when a tornado touched down in !;('Vera!
communities Wednesday evening.
This was thr scenario of the annual mock dtsastrr
staged in tnr county to givr rmrrgrncy unit s and rhc
staff at V!'terans Memoria l Hospit al a glimpse of
what the situation would be if such a disaster actually

..,,.,

....... (6141 991-6614

.... WM., fri. 1:30-UO
I '11M" I :)O. S:llt
lot, 1:31·1.00: !om. 1.00-loOO

f••·

Introducing ...

Nestea®
Ice·Teasen·™

Tea Teasin' with Real Fruit Juice

occurred.
The first ca ll in last night's disaster was received at
8: 29p.m. with the last victim arriving at tne hospita l
at 9;12 p.m. Thert' were 45 emergency personnel
taking part; some of them playing the roles of victims
and other functioning with I he slx emergency stations

which took part in the training session.
Bob Byer. director of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service, reported one emergency squad
worker participating In the exercise actually became
ltl and was trea ted at the hospitaL Four of the victims
a fter arriving at I he hospital were transferred to other
facilit ies. two by Llfeliight and two by ground units.
Dr. David Price. emergency medical director and
head of emergencies at the hospital. took a role as a
vlclbn during Wednesday night s mock disaster.
Byer termed thr training session as successful and
wrll done.

Governor, representatives
will attend dam conference
POINTPLEASANT ~ · OhloGov.
Hogsett.
Richard Celeste, lOth District U.S.
Leaders will discuss the need for
Rep. Clarence Miller and West planned Improvements at the dam.
Virginia Third District U.S. Rep. according to Philip Columbus,
Bob Wise will join Assistant manager of membership of
Secretary of the U.S. Army for Civil DINAMO-OVIA, a towtng Industry
Works Robert Dawson and state advocacy orga n!7a tlon hased in
official s from West Virginia, Ken - Plttsbumh.
Unless Congress acts otherwise.
tucky and Pennsylvania Friday for
the
ca nal plan toa tlevlateproblems
a 11 a.m. press conference at the
caused
by tlv' presen t smaU locks.
Gallipolis Locks and Dam In

BULLETIN BOARD

plans.
will take place in August.
Sentinel staff writer
Ted Warner. highway superlri County Engineer Phil Roberts
Seeding of approxbnately 11 reported that the Hobson railroad tendent, reported his department Is
acres of Meigs County road banks is crossing on County Rd. 21 will ~ presently Involved In dust control
expected to ~gin lat e this summer closed from Monday to Wednesday application. Warner said the east·
according to Bob First of the Meigs for Conrail to make repairs. ern portion of the county has been
County SoU Conservation Service. Ro~rts said he was told by a completed and the western portkln
That information was presented at Conratl representative that only the is nearly completed. The county
Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs timbers in the tracks will ~ department has also applied dust
Cou nty Commission.
repaired, not the approaches to the control for Letart Township.
Seventy-five percent of the seed- crossing.
Warner satd he expects other
ing Is being funded by the federal
Several weeks ago, commission- townships will request dust control
government through SCS. The ers were asked to sign a consent also.
remaining 25 percent is to be paid form to allow the railroad company
Dog Warden Andrea Batey rl'by the county.
to perform the repairs, however, quested a phone line at the anbnal
Total costs for the seeding has commissioners do not Intend to sign slv'lter and a parttime lv'lper to
been estimated at $26,400. or that the consent because they feel "the assist her two days a week In
amount. about $6,600represents the work order is not extensive enough euthanlzation of l ar~r anbnaLs.
county's share. of which, $1.8X) Is to to cover what needs to ~done.
The rommlssion said it would
be paid by Salem Township.
Some time ago, Conrail super· consider her requests.
Approximately two acres of road elevated the tracks at Hobson to
Batey also reported two anbnal
banks will be seeded along Salem accomodate high speed trains. In clabns. one which was denied
Township roads.
doing so, the crossing became because the claimant owned an
The 11 acres involved in the danggerous for vehicles. "They wtlicensed dog. and the otrer from
seeding will be reviewed annually created a hazard on our road and Bill Eskew, of Clelan d Hill Rd .,
for the nrst three years fol!o~~oing left the county Uableforaccident s," Dexter. Eskew's claim was for a
the initial planting. Written reports commented Commissioner Rich one-hour old Hereford calf. On the
wUI then be prepared and any Jones. " I think that's unfair,'' he recommendation of Commissioner
damaged areas will be reseeded added.
David Koblentz, the board apexplained First.
Ro~rts was not sure if the proved a $40 payment to Eskew.
First said he hopes the project board's refusal to sign the consent
At the recommendation of Steve
wtll be bid In July and that planting form -will effect Cmrail's repair
Continued on

constructed In tre mid·l9lls, wtll ~
authorized today. Plans are to
replace tJx&gt; present 600-foot main
lock and 360-foot auxiliary lock with
a 1,mfoot main facility and
tro- foot auxiliary to accommodate
larg&lt;'r barg&lt;' traffic.
Officials of the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers say construction, to be
done on the West Virginia side, will
not start untlll9SS.
DINAMO-OVIA sponsored a
meeting In Septem~r 19S1 at the
dam that brought together Gov.
Richard Thornburgh cl Pennsylvania and tlv'n-Govs. James A.
Rhodes of Ohio and Jay Rockefeller
cl West Virginia to demonstrate
solidarity from the 1 three states
· most affected bY barge traffic along
the Ohio River to get the proposed
· new locking system funded and
under construction.

It Pays
To Advertise
CALL '
992-2156

compensation, but no more than $1 million. ·
A $5 million fund for such awards would ~
established from assessments of employers.
Corbin said the Intentional tort modification was the
single most important feature of the bill.
"This etlm !nates double-dipping," he said. "It takes
care of alllnjurles sustained on the job, but it does so
wtthln the framework of the workers' compensation
system and not In the courts."
The legislation also provides for a system ct fines of
up to $25,txXJ fO( each safety viOlation by a oompany .
The money would go into a special fund for making
low-Interest loans to firms wishing to upgrade safety.
Under the blil, occupational diseases 'NOU!d ~
compensable, but not conditions brought about as a
resutt of aging or that require psychiatric treatment.
A provision was included to cover exposure by
police officers and firefighters to respiratory diseases
and ailments caused by stress and heat.
The blll provides for alternative methods of
premium payment for employers, and discounts for
good satety records.
11 also increas€5 maximum ~neflts for workers
sustaining the loss of a limb, eye, or similar organ.
But Milan Marsh, president of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
said "this is not compomise legislation, and for them
to say that is an outright lie. Labor had no input In
this," he said.
Marsh conceded the bill would probably clear the
Republican-controlled Senate. He said his next line of
defense will be wtth Democratic Gov. Richard F.
Celeste, who has pledged to sign whatever the
General Assembly sends him In the way of workers'
compensation reform.

By NANCY YOACHAM

and Added

PII

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Beneath the silent
glares of some 180 union mem~rs, the Ohio House of
Representatives Wednesday approved and sent to the
Senate a negotiated workers' compensatim reform
bill abned at pacifying business groups which claim
the existing system Is too expensive.
The measure, which llmtts lawsuits for Injuries or
illnesses covered by workers' compensation and
imposes penaltieS for corporate safety violations,
cleared on a 74-22 vote after just 15 minutes of debate.
Senate President Paul E. Glllmor, RPort Clinton,
said the bill, negotiated over the last four rronths by
lahor-and business-oriented lawmakers, will proba·
bly reach the Senate noor Thursday.
Thirty-five Democrats, Including 94th House Rep.
Jolynn Boster, were joined by 39 Republicans In
supporting the bill, which denies workers' compensation to prisoners and to employees whose condition
wa s caused by abuse of drugs or alcohol.
"Workers' compensation is a hlghiy -emot!onal
issue," said Rep. Clifton Skeen, D-Akron, a fanner
labor negotiator who found himself in the tough
position of sponsoring legislation opposed by
organized lahor.
The bill defines an intentional tort- negligence on
the part of an employer deliberately calculated to
inju rl' an employee- andestablishesa procedure for
settling claims.
The Injured worker. while coilectlng workers'
compensation, would be able to bring a lawsuit in the
loca l county coun. A judge, not a jury , would
determine il the wrong was Intentional, and the Ohio
Industrial Comm ission would set the damage award.
The award wouid' be between 50 percent and :;m
percent the compensable a mount unrler workers'

Meigs seeding project
to begin this Summer

OWN A CHEVY S-1 0

FOI AS LOW IS

2 Sections, 16 Pages 26 Centl
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 15, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Plan free clinics
Free blood pressure clinics wm
be held Wednesday, May 14, and
Wednesay, May 28 from 8: .'ll to 11
a.m. and 12 tok 2:30 p.m. at the
Meigs County Health Department
In the Meigs Multi-Purpose Build·
lng, Muklberry Heights. May Is
National High Blood Pressure
Month and the clinics are being held
to emphasize the bnportance of
blood pressure controL

show

PhotoiJ on Papll

Village funds total $352,493

Showers and thunderstorms likoly today, wtth possible severe
storms and highs in the upper 70s. Showers and thunderstorms likely
again tonight and Thursday, with a low tonight In tlv' tow 60s and
highs Thu rsday near 8J.
Eldended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance or showers Friday and Saturday, with fair weather
Sunday. Highs will range from 75to 85 Friday and Saturday, falling
to between 65 and 75 Sunday. Overnight lows generally wUI be In the
50s.

'I"

Pace .a

PRICES GOOD THIU SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1986
11-------------....:,
___. .;,.___-1

unavailable. In Mason County,
however, leaders were Pa t White
and Debbie Phillips, and Bill Leport
All Middleport Village funds as of deficit; sanitary sewer escrow, no
and Charlie Damron for the April .'ll totaled $352,493.78, Village receipts, $3,500, $113,217.29; fire
Democrats, and Norma Jean Cope Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports. house bnprovement, $5.16, no disand Mary Henderson, and RG.
The receipts and expenditures bursements, $'41,506.96; water tank,
Greene and Roger Fisher for the during the month from e¥h fund no receipts, no disbursements,
Republicans.
and the month end balan~ of each, $130,977.58; water. $8,945.65,
On the Democratic ticket, Albert
respectively, include:
$9.270.79, $17,350.95; san itary
"Marty" Gilley bested Gregory
General: $10,732.44, $15,710.50, sewer, $6,779.53, $6.538 .63 ,
Barker in the race for Congres- $12,032.24; street maint enance: $28,216.51 ; swimming pool, no
sional Executive Committee in the $3.790.91, $5,1ll9.98, $1,588.81; fed· receipts, $18.65; $1,550.50; ceme3rd District and Senatorial Execu- era! revenue sharing, $4,362, tery, $1,034.57, $1,443.50, $392.38
tive Committee In the 4th District. $517""
., 812 .38 ; st ree t 1Jg
· ht , no deficit; water meter trusts, $315,
.uo, ...,,
Rog&lt;'r Hughart won over Gilley and receipts, $1,577.1ll, $2,367,87, deficit; $454.85, $11,&amp;16.~; 1. cont .. no
Barker for Delegate Executive street levy, no receipts,nodlsbll rse- receipts, no disbursements. $102.10
Committee in the 12th District.
ments, $2,343.56; fire equipment. no deficit; economic devel. : $1,100,
On the Republican ticket. P.E. receipts, $735.58, $39.1li deficit; fire $7,349.W, $7,006.49.
Receipts for the rronth totaled
"Red" McDermitt was unopposed truck, no receipts, no disbursefor Senatorial Executive Commit- ments, $7,466.91; public transporta - $41,921.15 while disbursements dur·
tee, 4th District. and Brenda Shirley tlon, $4,!!55.89, $5,460.53, $6,001.~ ing April arrounted to $57,6a;.8J.
was unopposed for IA&gt;Iegate Execu- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l
tive Comm ittee. 12th District.
r
All wte totals are unofficial until
the ballots are canvassed and the
results of the election certilied by
the Mason County Commission.

Weather forecast

The Stylettes Twirl inc Corps isaccoptin&amp; ""' students,
thr01 throu&amp;h
six yeats old. for spt1n1 baton twlrlin&amp;
&amp; pompon ' '"' " to be held each
Thursday at Rutland Civic Center.
Instructor. Peggy Gillespie
Re,ister It Rutland Civic Center on
Thursdavs 1fter 4:00P.M.

l'hoto, story Qll

r;~;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;~;;~~;;;;~~

broken-cross
swastika
symbol, In 19:ll after
the endasofItsWWJ.
One picture shows Hitler standIng among
a group
eight men,
some
with their
headsofbandaged.
A spotted dog, Identified as
Hitler's dog "Fuchs!" or "Foxy" bY
author John Toland In his book,
"Adolf Hitler," Is in several pic·
tures m the laps of various men and
In one sitting next to QJL Hitler.
All the photographs ~ave typed
captions underneath, many ~arlng the words "Graben-RJR-16,"
Identifying the men posed In
trenches and In front of rubble and

InStead of the familiar small
upper-Up brush, stands In front of a
burned-out wilding. The }icture Is
captioned "Foumes," German for
what ls .now Veume, Belgium.
1\vo history scholars from the
University of Chicago examined
the pictures In · Union at UPI's
request They said the pictures
appeared at least to ~ aut~ntic
records of Hitler's regbnent durtng
WWI.

Varie~

.Preakness .preview ·

TO THE DEALER: '1\Ju will be re1mtlurselllor
,:: thf loce value ol!hiS coul!(ln olus ae. rt sub·
~

S

mmoo in compriante wtth ~esu&amp; Foo!ls corJ)OI~IIOII R~demphCin Po~ty Incorpora ted

l'lefrrnby reference Good on~ 111 US A Consumer must pay Sales Ta• Votr:l where 1
Pro!'llbtl!dflmdiReslrtC1etl Casn Value
111~ FORRECEMPTION, MAIL TO·NESTLE

FOODS CORPORATION. PO BOX 2034()

EL PASO. TEXAS 71J99B.

Gov. Richard Celesie

Rep. Clarence Miller

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

The Corps of Engineers' Huntington District completed a four-year
st udy on locks replacement In 198J
and submitted the }ian to Congress
more than a year later. Authortza·
tlon legislation was approved by
Congress In the last hours of Its
summer 1985 session and area
lawmakers are C!Jtlmistlc the
project will continue to be funded.

'l1le lliCh auilaJ
INentalionai ChlckM l'lylnl; Meet w0J be held
Saturday at Bob Evans Fllml8 near Rio Grande.
CHICKEN FLYING MEET -

llarayllid avilton will be trying to break lhe record
rl D feet, ellflllnches lhat has stood since 1919. (FOe
pholo).

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