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                  <text>Pomeroy~ Middleport-Gallipolis,

18, 1986:

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Colony Theatre covers area· which Warth called swamp
By JAMJ!li SANDS

from the east. The rurial relics

Special C&lt;lrrespondenl

111E COLONY . 111EATRE and

!llrroundbtg

buDdlnp In

Gallipolis oooup.v an area that .. om 1'790 to 1810 was a swampy pond
which bred all kinds &lt;I disease genm, Including yellow tever.ln 1'7113
and 111M; Gallipolis was hard hit by the yellow fe\&lt;er epidemic. 11le

fact that """"'ns could not agree mlhe cause of yellow lever slowed
&lt;mwn effolts 1o rombat L

Lake Erie offers
• • •
many actiVIties
By SANDRA L lATIMER
By UnHed Press lnlernallonal
Lake Erie offers activities for
people other than those have access
to boats.
Neuman Boat Une of Sandu sky
introduced day cruises five years
ago as a way to acquaint people
with the lake and let them know
they don't have to have their own
boat. And the Toledo River Cruise
Lines has been doing much the
same thing since 1976.
Both businesses operate regu lar
cruises to islands in the lake as well
as shorter trips around tile home
port.
Virginia Neuman, charter agent
for the Neuman, said the speciality
cruises are an extension of the ferry
service the line was running to the
islands.
"The boat was well suited to do
group group tours and It was sit ting
at the dock, oo we went into the tour
cruising business,"she said.
Today, the Neuman Boat Line
offers afternoon cruises tD Kelleys
Island and to Middle Bass Island, a
sunset dinner crutse, a lunch break
mini- cruise and field trips for
schools.
Neuman uses the 70.1oot Challenger, a two-deck boat. Cruises to
the island begin shortly after noon.
Passengers are served a catered
luncheon and treated to Neuman's
narration about the lake, tile shore
and destination.
A tour tram shuttles passengers
to sites on the island.
At Kelleys Island, passengers
visit glacial grooves, Inscription
Rock, the Kelleys Mansion with Its
famed spiral staircase and see the
vineyards and state park. Passengers are then dropped off
downtown for shopping before
being taken back to the boat lor the
return trip to Sandusky.

The trip to Middle Bass Island
also featu res the catered luncheon
and passengers get to tour the
winery "that they otherwise
wouldn't get to SR£," said Neuman.
The sunset dinner cru ise takes
passengers to the Showboat Restaurant at Huron.
The mini-cruise that goes around
Sandusky Bay and Lake Erie's
south shore is what Neuman calls a
ooontlme getaway or a way to
entertain at lunch. This 90-mtnute
cruise includes lunch and a narration about the local srenery.
Cruises are offered Tuesday
through Thursday, when lake
travel is light . For oomething
different , passengers can create a
cruise. Neuman says this offers
groups of p&lt;!Jple the q&gt;JXH1unity to
hold fundraisers or spec ialized
gro~p
tou rs for up to 1&amp;1
passengers.
In case the weather turns bad.
rather than cancel the tour, Neu man plans a shorter cruise, often
around the bay "because it is
protected" and offers a refund in
the difference in prtce.
Neuman said since oo many of
their passengers are from out of
town, 11 is difficult to try to notify
them of a canreled trip.
In Toledo, Tom Bourdo, president
c:i the Toledo River Cruise Une,
says his firm operates three boats
- the 49- passenger Arawanna II,
the 164-passenger paddlehwee I
Arawanna Princess and the threedeck 400-passenger Arawanna
Queen, which joined the fleet just
last year.
He said Arawanna comes from a
song popular b'1 the 1800s about an
Indian princess Arrah Wanna.
The Arawanna Queen makes the
trip to Put·ln·Bay Sundays, Mondays and Wednesdays, leaving at 9
a.m. and returning at 9 p.m.

workers who began to fell trees and
move earth to begin the process of
lllling In the swamps. But in a short

the

GALLIPOLIS - When the were presumably removed In
French~ carne to what is row first decade of the 1800s. The dirt
Gallipolis In 1790, the area covered from the mound was then used toflll
in the swamp that was klcated In
by the Colony
Theatre was a
this block ·
swamp, at least
The swamp located It! the 400
block of Second Avenue was
:K!eordlng to Nat
ed in
Warth, whose
perhaps the swamp mention
the early history of Gallipolis as
gran d par
being the breeding grounds for the
were among
Yellow fever germs that almost
early settlers.
Wrote Warth In the Gallipolis wiped out the town in 1793. ·
Df\lly Tribune In 1937: "What is now
A large number of the towns~
the theatre and post offlee block pie came do.wn with the ye ow
was once a swamp. It was fiUed to fever which was blamed bY most
residents on the Spanish settlers
an approximate level of adj:K!ent
territory, probably a spot here an d wbo had stopped for a few days at
a spot there, as the demand tor Gallipolis earlier in -1793 on thetr
~·ndln
So
I the way to the Mississippi River.
""
g spaces grew. me o
ONLY ONE doctor, whose name
filling material came from a big
Indian mound ."
has been lost to history, was able to
'l1IE INDIAN mound tn question determine that the real culprit for
the fever was the swamps in and
was located about where the
ll
Bandstan din t he Ga Illpo lisP ar k Is near thetown . Hesuggestedthata
theThe
swamps
fllled in.a handful of
now. The mound was excava ted
doctorbe
eonvinced
and examined by archaeoklglsts

Researcher t 0 spend
h
k
ays.
Wit
sna
es
100 d
e

GULF BREEZE, F1a. IUPJ) -A two timber rattlers, one diamondsma ll glass cage full of writhing back and two black mambas
poisonous snakes awaited the arri- • ranging from 2 feet to 4 feet in
val today of a German researcher length.
who hopes to keep the vipers
The puff
adders
are athespokesmost
rut Eric
Visser,
eompany for 100 days, after being deadly,
man ilr The Zoo, said the spitting
blessed by a priest.
Jurgen Hergert, 43, a herpetolo- eobra can squirt venom Into a
victim's eye and is accurate up to 24
gist from Schladen, West Germany,
will eat, · sleep, conduct experi· feet.
"It's a nice eollection, " Visser
ments, lecture and write a book
while confined with the snakes in a said when Hergert released the
20.foot-by-l:l-loot glass cage at The snakes in the cage Thursday.
"They're poisonous - that just
zoo.
happens
to be one of their
"The snakes is love," Hergert
drawbacks."
said Thursday. "That's what I want
Hergert said the snakes are the
to show the people. I don't want that
same
ones he used In 1983, when he
the people klll the snakes."
stayed
with the deadly reptiles for
Hergert will be blessed by a
93
days
to break a 68-day ro:ord set
priest before entering the glass
by
a
South
African.
cage today . He plans to emerge
The
cage
has double panes of
Aug. 24.
glass
on
three
sides and a 10.
Hergert, who raises snakes at his
toot-by-10.foot
bathroom
attachfarm in Schladen and supplies
ment.
Anti-venom
wlll
be
kept
on
venom to pharmacies for use in
hand
and
zoo
c:lficials
said
Hergert
medications, handles 4,CXXl snakes a
could be at a hospital in 10 minutes
year and said he has been bitten
if necessary. Someone wlll be
only once in W years.
standing watch outside the cage at
During "Reptile Eneounter '86," ali times.
Hergert said one research proHergert's eompanions will be two
ject
he wlll undertake during his
puff adders, eight Indian eobras,
confinement
is the mating habits of
one spitting eo bra, twocapeeobras,
snakes.
He
said
llt de Is known a bout
two sand vipers, two Ru ssell's
it.
vipers. two western rattlesnakes,

time the few workers lost heart
from the magnitude &lt;I the job and
the derision leveled on them by
otl~r townsfolk who belleved that
the swamps bad oothing whatsoever to do with yellow fever .
Others reasoned that 11 yellow
feverwasbredintheswampwater
all they needed to do would have
beentorefralnfromdrinklngwater
near the swamp.
How many died from the yellow
lever epidemic in 1793 and the one
in 1796 are facts that will never be
known 'or sure. Warth estimated
'' are
that there
2000 burial records
fr
th
settl that
1
om e ear Y . ers
are_no1
rreonled on tombstones anywhere.
W.\Rm ES11MATED ihatthere
G 1
were ZiOO persons burled in allpoIts' tlrst cemetery on State Street
and when that one was closed In
rnened only 250
1849 and Pine St-t
·~ ""
·todles were moved
along with their
respective tombstones. Without
these records It is Impossible to
document how many died In 1793.
Theyellowfeverepidemlcofl796
hit only those persons who lived
below what Is now the Colony
Theatre. Thosewhoiivedabove the
spot were not nearly oo affected. It
was soon reasoned that yeiiow
fever germs traveled through the
air as the winds In
and

toward State Street
A U.S. ArmY garrison was
statklned near the pond on the :
LocustStreetsideandnoneofthe25
soldiers came down with the (ever. ·
Major Prior, who was in charge d .
the garrison, and the French doctor
who had made the heroic effort In
!e
tdeml
1793 to stave off the ver ep
c
got together to do oomething about
the 'hi h had pu t over 100
·~ver, w c
Ide
ts
1n
bed
res n
• with 17 dying·
THE T·•CTJC
"
used by the pair
was to rulld a long trench from
where the Colony Is out to the Ohio
River so that water from the pond
eould be ronveyed along the trench
in to the river. After the water was
rernoved , the n treesand dirt couid
he J11Shed into the pond.
The area was stllllower than the
surrounding areas until as has been
ment ioned the Indian mound dirt
was moved ln. From this point on It
would IP some 82 years before
Gallipoiis had another severe ye1· ·.
1ow fever scare that one eoming In
1878 brougllt here by the crew off of
a steamboat.
As tD the Colony Theatre, it was
built In 1937 and showed Its first
movie on Nov. :M, 193'7. The theatre
name was given by W.O. Atkinson
and Cora Withers, who had won a
contest sponsored by the theatre's
owners-the Wheeler family.
You maywritetoJamesSandsat
11 North Buckeye, Crooksviiie,

r~::==·:1:;796~=~;;~=~~0~h:lo:4~37~31~.;:;:;:;::..:;::;

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DANCE 8:00 p.m.-12:00 Midnight

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CMMII CMO

1

at y en tine
e
Boster-sponsored bills go to Senate
llot.36. No .1 0
topyrightod 1988

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 19, 1986

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) - Legislation dealing
with a scourge of senior citizens - Alzheimer's
disease - eomes up for a vote in the Ohio House of
Representatives this week.
:nte House is to vote Tuesday on SenatE'-passed
legislation awarding state funding tor the first time
for research on the progressive, irreversible nerve
disorder affecting mainly older adults.
The House meets at ll a.m. Tuesday and the Senate
at 1:ll p.m.
House-passed ethics legislation and a btu creating
an Office of Applachian Ohio will be under discu ssion
Tuesday evening in the Senate State and Loca I
Government Committee.
The ethics biii, sponsored by Rep. Jolynn Boster,
D-Galllpolis, tightens the law on the use of campaign
funds and payment of supplemental eompensation to

pubic officials .. It also strictly prohibits job- related
retaliation against sUite employees who report
violations of the law or misuse of public fund s.
The Office of Applachian Ohio, also proposed by
Bnster, Is aimed at focusing a spotlight on
southeastern Ohio counties, which a rea lawmakers
say have been Ignored.
State lawmakers, anxious lor a summer vacation,
are hoping to dispose of unfinished rosiness by the end
of the week and adjourn until autumn.
They cleared a major hurdle last week, passing and
sending to Gov. Richard Celeste .a workers'
compensation reform bill requested by the business
community but vigorously opposed by organized
labor.
The Alzheimer's disease btu, sponsored by Sen.
David L. Hobson, R-Springfieid. may go to the

governor alter House approva L
It appropriates $1.85 million to the Ohio Department of Aging lor grants to schools of medicine or
hospitals operating diagnostic and research centers
for the disease.
The legislation also directs the department to
develop training programs for the care of victims;
develop and evaluate education and training
programs, home care programs and respite care
programs: and administer pilot programs in respite
care and support services tor victims and their
famili es.
Alzheimer's virtlms require 24-hour ca re, and
"respite" or short-term care provides relief to family
members from the strtosses and responsibilities.
Also up lor a House vote Tuesday is a bill creating a
task force to study the need for increasing coverage in

health insurance plans for menl&lt;ll or emotional
disorders, and alcohol and drug dependency.
The House may act this week on legislation ,
recommended by a special investigating eommittee,
reorganizing the agencies regulating financial
institutions and stiffening the requirements for
savings and loan associa tions.
The bill crea tes a Department of Financial
Institutions separate from the Depanment of
Commerce. and requires Independent financial
audits and greatl'r coopera tion with federal
regulators.
Legislation provldillg lor tile use r:i eorporal
punishment (spanking! in the classroom at the
discretion of loca I school boards eomes up for a
hearing Tuesday afternoon in the House Education
Committee.
!Continued on page 10)

Pentagon budget
• •
gets top pnonty
WASHINGTON iUPl i - President Reagan, who relaxed this
weekend at the White House, will
l&lt;lp his persuasive powers In
coming weeks to try to restore
biillons in Pentagon budget cuts
and overcome Congress's opposi tion to an arms sale to Saudi
Arabia.
His advisers have told him an
ail-out lobbying campaign ts
needed on both scores.
There were Indications, mean while, that the administration may
reply today to Syrian President
Hafez Assad, who claimed In a
Washington Post interview that the
U.S. bombing of Libya had "won a
lot of hatred" for the United States
in Arab countries.
So far the White Hou se has
declined to eomment on Assad's
charges !hat "the United S!&lt;ltes
administration Is carrying the
hammer of war."
The Arab leader said U.S. policy
had frozen Syria's attempts to help
the tour American hostal(('s In
Lebanon.
Meanwhile, legislative sources
Indicated a compromise Is possible
on military spending, but the
outlook for the Saudi missile
package was fading.
Reagan had planned to meet wil h
the Conference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish Organiza tion, but aides said the death of the
group's executive director, Yehuda
Heilman, forced a ca ncellation.
Hellman died Saturday of a heart
attack.
Reagan intends to veto by
mid-week the oongressional reso tutlon reject lng his plan tD sell $354
million in missiles and related
hardware to the Saudis. For the
sale to go through over lawmakers'
objectklns, Reagan must eonvlnce

'

sale.

Tax refonn bill
means windfall
for state coffers

Aceordlng to an analysis prE'pared by the department, the Hou se
version would mean an extra $159.8
million annually to the state.
Karen M. Benker of the National
Asooclatlon of State Budget Offic·

Metzenbaum
reports his
outside income

a dozen or so senato rs to change
their votes - to head off any
Congressiona l att empt to override
his veto.
Sen. Richard Lugar, IH nd.,
Foreign Rel ations Committee
chairman and leader of the arms
sale effort , sa id Sunday on the CBS
News show "Face the Nation" that
Reagan mu st be given "the cred ibility that eomes fro m making a
major recommendation to the
Congress and having at least the
perceived clout tD get the job done
on a very rrndest sale to a moderate
Arab state."
Israel has not taken a stand on the
"This is a decision the leaders ol
the Jewish eommunity must make
for themselves," Israeli Prime
Minister Shimon Peres said on the
same CBS show. "We don't object
to the sales of arms to a eountry
simply because it is an Arab
eount ry."
Reagan has urged approval of the
sale on grounds Saudi Arabia needs
the weapons to defend itself against
potential attack from Iran or other
threats to the Persian Gulf.
He also bases his arguments on
the need tor regional security in the
area , because the United States has
J:ledged to keep open the Straits of
Hormuz in the Gulf.
Opposition to the sale stems from
stagnatkln in the Middle East peace
process, pereeived In Congress as
due In large part to lack of Saudi
In it iatlve, and to Saudi ties to LibYa,
a supporter of int er natio nal
terror ism.
Reagan has described as "wholly
Inadequate" defense appropriations passed bY the House and
Senate that fall short Dl the $3W
billion he sought for 1he 11l87 ftsca I
year.

ers said the Senate version would
produce even more money because
It eliminates more deductions,
increasing the federa l adjusted
gross income, on which the state
ineome tax is based.
Department analysts figure the
state would get an ex tra $70 million
a year from repeal of tbe federal
deduction tor families with two
wage earners.
Taxing ali unemployment benefIts." instead of exempting the first
$12,1XXl in adjusted gross ineome for
single people and $lB,CXXl for
married couples, would ne t the
state $11 mllllon, they said.
The sl&lt;lte stands to net $10 million
from modUication of IRA deductions, aceordlng to the analysis.
Reducing the amount of capital
gains subject to tax from 00 peroent
to 42 pen~~nt would net the state$22
million, and repealing the exclusion
from taxation on the first $100 to
$200 In dividends would mean $5
million.
Reducing the number of quasigovernmental municipal bonds
free from taxation would mean $4
million, and a change In calculating
the oost of production for rnanufac·
turers would mean an extra $41
million for the state.

25 Centl

A Multimedia Inc. Newll)lper

KICKOFF PROGRAM - A new school minigrants is kicked off as David P. Baker (left),
personnel manager for Soothem Ohio Coal Com·
pany's Melp Division, presents Dan Morris,
superintendent for lhe Meigs Local Sdlool District,
appllcalfon matet1als for ~hers at Meigs Local
lllgh School and Salem Center Elementary Schoool.

The mini-grants program encourages teachen; to
submit ideas for speclnl projects to a review board
consisting of representatives from Soolhem Ohio
Coal and other local bmme.ses. Winning projects will
be awarded grants averaging W it llle laD. '1lle
program will be available to teachen; at four schools
in Alhens and Vinton counties as weD.

13 killed on Ohio highways
By United Press International
Thirteen people were killed in
tralfic accidents across Ohioduring
the weekend, the State Highway
Patrol reported today.
The victims died in 13 separate
accidents, including six Sunday and
seven Saturday , a patrol spokeswoman -said. Three of 1he victims were
wearing seat belts.
One of the victims was Logan
athlete Owen R Pa lmerton II, 18,
Rockbridge, who died in a one car
accident on SR l&amp;l in Hocking
County . Palmerton won several
events in the SEOAL track meet at
Athens earlier in the day.
The patrol counts fatalities result tng from accidents on the state's
public roadways each weekend
between 6 p.m. Friday and mid night Sunday.
The victims:
Sunday
Cleveland: Ruth_A. Ruscin . 24 ,

Cleveland, in two-car collision on a
Cleveland street.
Dayton: Gregory J. Powell , W,
Huber Heights, in a one- vehicle
accident on a suburban Huber
Heights street.
New Lexington: Garland P.
Morgan Jr.. 33. Crooksville, in a
ooe-car crash on a P!'rry Cou nty
road .
Xenia: Ronald E . Fulk, 39. New
Carlisle. in a two-car accident on
Ohio 444 In Greene County.
Bowling Green: Kay Bock·
brader. 46, Wayne, in a two- vehicle
collision on a Wood County road.
Cleveland: Charles L. Holley, '!7,
Cleveland, in a two-car accident on
a Cleveland street.

ton, in a one-car crash on a Greene
Cou nty road .
Toledo: Herman Delhauser, 64,
1biedo. in a two-car accident on a
Toledo street.
Delaware: Timothy R. White, 25,
Ashley, in a two-car collision on
U.S. 42 in De laware Cou nty.
Spriingfleld: Lelia M. Colvin, 59,
North Hampton, in a onE'- car crash
on Ohio 41 In Oark Coun ty .
Youngstown: Todd E. Slagle. 16,
Sa lem, in a one-car mishap on a
Mahoning County road .
Logan: Owen R. Palmerton In .
18, Rockbridge, in a onE'-car
collision on Ohio l&amp;l in Hocking
Coo nty.

WASHINGTON iUPII - Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, received S2i4,!ro in outside ineome
last year and he hold property
worth at least $625,CXXl, his financial
disclosure report showed today.
The report also listed liabilities ill
the range of $«)(),lXX) to sooo.cm.
Senators are required to ftle the
disclosure reports each spring,
They are allowed to report their
dealings within broad categories
and do not have to report some
items. such as their personal
residences.
Ohio's other senator, Democrat
John Glenn , last week released his
report, showing . $6.3 million In
property, liabilities that may exceed $1 million and $IDJ,OOl from
investments and outside lnmme.
Metzenbaum's largest pieces of
property arc in Cleveland. One is a
lot listed in 1he top category for
property - more than S250,CXXl and the other is described as office
buildings at East Ninth Street and
Chester Avenue. It also is listed as
being worth more than $250,CXXl.
The liabilities are three loans
fro m insu ranre. companies, covered by the cash value c:i
lnsuran&lt;F policies. ··The loans are
renewed an nually, " the report said.
Metzenbaum a lso repor ted
$l20,1XXl In a distribution from
Investment Plaza Co. and at least
$131,!0&gt; from trusts, rent, Interest
and dividends.
He also reported being reimbursed lor five trips, all Within the
United States and apparently related to speaking engagements.
The longest trip was from
Washington to Los Angeles and
Kansas City, Mo., and then back to
Washington. It included lodging for
two nights and was sponsored by
the Ca lifornia Western School of
Law, San
Cailf.

Saturday
Defiance: Kenneth R. Pa hl. 18.
Holgate, in a one car mishap on a
[)('fiance Cou nty road .
Xenia : Jimmy Wright , 24, Day-

Sunrivor loses legs
PORTLAND, Ore. !UP! 1 Doctors said they amputated both
legs of a teenage boy who survived
the Mount Hood mountain climbing
tragedy that killed nine people
because "it was either a mpu tation
or his life."
Orthopedic physicians at Provi dence Medical Center said thPy
performed the below-the- knees
amputation Sunday on Giles
Thompson, 16, of Longview. Was h.,
because of the threat posed by
bleeding and tissue damage.
" It was a difiJcult decision to
make," said Dr. Leo Marx, " but it
was either amputation or his life."
Thompoon Is one of two teenagers
from the high school climbing party
who survived the ordeal in a snow
cave, which they were forced to dig
when they were caught in a sudden
blizzard near the summit of t.he
mountain last Monday.

Clark remained on a respirator at
Emanuel Hospi!al but was able to
communicate by pointing to letters
on an a lphabet board. She used It to
spell out "mainly personal care
needs. such as 'thirsty."' hospital
spo keswoman Lori Callister said.
Thompson was returned to the
coronary care unit at Providence
Medical Center around 8 p.m. and
began showing signs of lmprovE'ment , Marx said.

. Grayish, dead muscle tissue in
Thompson·s legs had been removed
in surgery Saturday night. " He's a
strong kid ," said Dr. Peter Fisher.
"We were tellin g him sec res on the
basketball games last night, and he
actually nodded."
But the need for amputation
became evident. "Any bleeding
debilitates the system, so lf the legs
were a site of continued bleeding, It
would be draining his ability to
The other survivor from the cave, . recover," said Providence spokesBrinton Clark of Portland, who woman Sister Margarita.
turned 16Thursday, the day she and
"Also, if tissue damage Is
Thompson were rescued, was listed eontlnuing, the tissue as It dies
in critical but s!Bbie condition and sends toxins into the bloodstream,
showed eontlnued Improvement , and that Is also a debtlitating
. doctors said.
factor," she said.

TRIES TO GET CHICKEN GOING - A conlestant it Saturday's
Chicken Run contest alll1e lntemallonal Chicken Flying meet at Bob
Evans Fanns lries to enrourage his bird to ro avull. Dale Am8tulz of
Yellow Sprtnp won that phase of the meet. Garnishing top hooono was
"Uncia" from Galloway, Ohio, who ftew 216 feet, six inches. 'l'housan~
of chicken-cheerers Docked to the 'fowl festival' to witness chlckell!
tweak their beaks In the face of Darwinian theory. The meet's pnnacle,
though, was the induction of IUo Grande councUman Bemard Murphy
Into the prestJP!us Coop of Fame.
·
~I

(

'

•

By UnHed Press International
The state of Ohio could reap a
financial windfall of millions of
dollars from passage of either of
two major tax-reform bills pending
in Congress.
·
Because some federal tax deductions would be eliminated, increasIng taxable ineome, Ohio's rusl nesses and taxpayers would end up
paying less federal tax but more
state tax.
Taxpayers with capital gains,
people who have individual retirement accounts and families with
two wage earners could have to pay
more state taxes because federal
tax benefits for them would be
eliminated or reduced under the
two bills, said the Ohio Department
of Taxation's Ronald A. Mucha.
GeneraiiZIItions cannot be made,
however, as to whether most
Ohioans wUI pay more state taxes,
said Mucha, the department's tax
analysis and local government
distribution administrator.

MODEL mi40AN

~t&amp;S

'

'

�Monday. May 19, 1986

Page-2-The Daily Sentiri~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohib
Monday, May 19, 1986

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON &lt;\RE,\

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

..

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher / Controller

Genera.l Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR .

News Edllor
,\MEMBER ofTh r Uni!E'd Press ln tt-rnatlonal. Inl and Dally Prf'ss Associa tion and lhP Amertran N£&gt;Y,·spaper Publlsh&lt;'rs Assoclalion.

Mayor Koch perfomts ___~___ill_iam_F._Buc_k_ley_J_r.
The case mounts.
Hear now !rom Edward Koch,
mayor of New York, who as a
relatively unknown congressman
wrestled with his colleagues 15
years ago to urge them to Inquire
Into the efforts of marijuana
legislation with the view to recommending a reasonable code. That
was back when some states were
sending half-grown children to jail
lor 10 or 15 years for smoking a
weed, while others all but guaranteed police protection lor smokers
at such outings as Woodstock. What
Mr. Koch now wants Is a federal

law that would execute everyone
caught trading .ln heroin or cocaine.
In what quantity did you have In
mind, Your Honor?
Oh, he hadn't given the matter
much tllought. "The amount that
comes readlly to mind Is the
distribution of a kilo."
A good round figure. Sell one kilo
of coke, occupy one electric chair
for one minute.
Now here are the two points to
bear In mind In considering Mayor
Koch's proposal.
The first Is that It would work.
The second Is that It won't happen.

Some months ago, when I first
used this space to recommend that
we surrender, and do away with the
anti -narcotic laws, I observed that
there are In fact ways to keep drugs
out of the United States. I cited the
way in which this Is done in
Singapore, with quite extraordi·
nary success. A drug user, detected
In !lagrante, Is seized. sentenced
and hanged. There Is no question In
my mind that lfthlsweretobecome
law In the United States, cocaine
and heroin would all but disappear
from the marketplace. And there Is
no question In my mind that no such

LEiTERS OF' OP INIO N arE" welrome. Tht&gt;y should Jx&gt; less than 300 words
lon.z. Alll£'11€"rs ar&lt;'subj('('t to Editing an d mu st be signed wlth name, addr £'SS and
tt&gt;lephonr numbPr . No unsigned IPitf'rs will b£' published . Lf' II Prs should be In

good ta stC', add r£'SslnR

l ssu~.

not pPrsonalltles .

GOP on warpath
Ohio Republicans are on the warpath, trying to plaster all elected
Democratic state officials with the same sticky mixture of COIT)lptlon,
over-spending and Ignorance of the law that they've used to tar Gov.
RJchard Celeste.
: ~ &lt; -The Republicans set up shop in their new headquarters last week, put up
- two flags flanking a desk and chair In front of a blue backdrop, and Invited
- _the press In to see a pair of their candidates for statewide clfice perform. 1
,.,.. Sure, It was alter the primary election, but what better tlmetoget some
· ·•. attenllon and put some points on the board early In preparation for the
:,;; autumn battles?
- .. _ The first up was Barry Levey, a corporate lawyer from MI!XIletown, who
:.: ::WOn the Republican nomination for attorney general by default -nobody
··.else wanted the thankless job of running against Democrat Antoony
O::·Celebrezze Jr., whOse campaign has a $1 mllllon warchest.
,Levey didn't seem quite sure wbat was wrong with the way Celebre12e
has handled the Home State Savings Bank prosecution, but something was,
so he termed It "mismanagement and lack of management."
Levey was disturbed that Celebrezze has hired cxnslde lawyers instead
of using the ones in his office.
The attorney general's office pointed rut that the General Assembly,
which ordered the Investigation, demanded outside spec ialists.
"There's no way we could do it in-house," said Rbbert Ten€flbaum,
Celebrezze~s press secretary.
Levey co~plained that Cell&gt;brezze has not teen visible, running the
show, but has left It up to special prosecutor Lawl't!llce Kane of Cincinnati.
This was done deliberately so there would be no charges of partisanship,
coverups or whitewashes. Kane Is a Republican.
Levey's only valid complaint was about the cost, which has reached $4.6
: mllllon for attorneys. That's expensive. But II must be rememhered they
_ are trying to put away crooks In a scam of at least $144 mUllan.
Tenenbaum pointed out the Legislature wanted nothing but the best in
-~ lhe way !Jf an investigation, and that oo celllng can be put on the
·~_prosecution cost because the lawyers have to "leave no stone Wlturned."
Waldo Bennett Rose, the GOP's nominee br state auditor. was next.
Rose was Incensed over use of the slate's aircraft for non-governmental
purposes by elected state officials.
CelesiJ' and others sometimes travel to political events on the state plane,
and their campaign committees relrnoorse the state for the cost.
-. "To put It plainly, Ohio tax money is being wasted and the state auditor Is
'":' doing nothing to stop It," said Rose. "For political or personal travel, state
· or party ol!lclats can rent a private plane or take the bus."
Rose conceded he could find only a handful of examples out of all the
" state plane logs where such trips were taken, and only one case where the
. state was not reimbursed.
But he said it "is typical oft he Washington, D.C., mentality oft he Celeste
administration," and that Celeste regards h~lf as "a little president. "
State Auditor Thomas Ferguson, Rose's Democratic opponent,
naturally took another point of view. He said one needs only to look at
President Reagan and the governors of other states to see the same travel
practices.
Ferguson said his office audits the Division of Aviation every two years
and singles out abuses.

·&lt;

~tiers to editor

5£ "

Very worthwhile program

"~~
'• Recently the fifth grade students
~

Southern Local attended the
:;"' "Traveling Yesteryear" program
, . provide&lt;! by the Meigs Cwnty
: Senior Citizens Outreach Program
and the Meigs Museum. Each
student was given the q&gt;portunlty
:m learn about and to actually work
with some craft from our heritage.
')'he senior citizens working with
oor students were very patient and
; understanding in dermnstratlng
•: their crafts. The students and
; : cliaperones taking part in this
, . program feel that this was one d.
' the most worthwhile experiences

any fifth grader could ever have.
We wish to ext€fld a big thank you
to everyone Involved In this program; we hope that this program
becomes a tradition between the
senior citizens and Meigs County
schools just as many of the crafts
studied have become traditions.
Also, we would like to thank the
Pomeroy Library in helping the
students research these crafts
before attending the workshop.
Sandra Baer
Mickey Hoback
Donna Sayre
Debbie Roush

Support appreciated
:. •The residents and staff d. Pome; · roy Health Care Center would like
• · to thank everyone for your support
: of oor newspaper ad for National

Nursing Home Week of May 11 to
May 17. Please feel free to visit us at
anytime.
Juanita Spencer
Activities Director

It's a major start
Ken Kragen Is a name that may
be fa mlllar to you. It shOuld be; A
year ago about this time Kragen
': was working with "U.S.A. For
Africa". Since then, many people
·,. have asked him "why don't you do
something at hOme?" so today he Is
• · the organizer of "Hands Across

:: America".
, · Kragen hopes to raise $50 to $100
.- mtlllon dollars to alleviate hunger
:in America. He was Inspired by an
• ABC news story from World News
-Tonight called "The Children of
Poverty", One in every six white
children and one in every two
blacks are poor.
With the help of the Coca Cola
..bOttHng company and Cltibank
:•. (only two of the many sponsors)
:; Kragen began dividing up a map of
;; the rountry and selling the 'mlles.'
"· The singer Prince bought the first

; 11111e.

:ff:

·

I

' Other mtles have teen 'sold' or
to "Route Directors" who
··have tak€fl responslblllty to try to
~ lind the people to fill them.
The music of Hands Across
~:giVBI

America was not written by famous
musicians - It was wrl nen by tlle
same TV jingle writers who wrote
"The Pride Is Back". The theme
!Dng Itself Is done by a group of
unknowns calling themselves "The
Voices of America".
At 3 on May 25th America's
voices wut be raised in song. The
three songs to be done are:
'America the Beautiful', 'We Are
the World', and 'Hands Across
America'. There wUI be a special
episode of 'American Bandstand' to
be hosted by Dick Clark on tbatday.
The Eastern Student Counctl bas
copies d. the words to 'America the
Beautiful' and 'We Are the World'.
The wor(ls for 'Hands Across
America' are on their way. Contact
Hands Info at !ll!i-3329.
Hey Meigs County, (or even
Mason County, or Athens or Gallla,
or anyone else who happens ID he
tlst€fllng), let's let them hear our
voice too.
We all know that one evmtls not
going to change the world, but Its a
start.
M. J . Coleman
I

law wlll be passed In America
unless it evolves into the kind of
society we really do not wish to live
in.
We know, moreover, that , 95
percent (that Is the o!!lclal estimate) of the drugs being Imported
are done so via organized crime,
via the Mafia, which becomes here
a generic tenn. The remaining five
percent Is stuff brought in by
foreign travelers (most usually
students ) of the ldnd dramatized In
the movie "Midnight Exp-ess."
Now Mayor Koch began his press
conferenCE with an interesting
admission. The New York Times
account reports, "He said he had
concluded that ileal drug en!orcem€flt efforts had had little effect m
the city's growing drug problem."
Others of us have been saying the
same thing for a while now, and
have been stressingthatasthe drug
problem grows, so does the
. str!Jigth of the under~~AJrld grow,
and so does corruption grow.
Indeed, the same day's news
headHnes the blunt charge by
American olftclals that til' Mexican government ts not merely just
plain corrupt - that news would
qualify kl run on Ire obituary page
d. the paper - bit Is specifically
corrupt in the matter d. druggrowing. It Is 1'1/en charged that
memhers of the famlly of the
president of Mexico are engaged In
growing drugs and selling them for
consumption In the United States,
and that they are protected by what
goes by the name of taw enforcement officers In Mexico.
And of course there are the
counterparts In the United States.
Corrupt policemen, who are bought
off by drug merchants; corrupt
prison guards, woo are pild to look
the other way when the stuff Is
brought In; and, one supposes,
corrupt ;tdges.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Browning gets first victory; Reds hammer three homers
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Tom
Browning's words belled the tact he
had just won his n~st game 1n
nearly eight months.
"Sure, I'm glad I won, butT really
don't get too excited," Browning
saki Sunday after pitching the
Cincinnati Reds to a 7-Jvtctory over
the Pittsburgh Pirates. "This was
the day I needed ."
Browning, who has lost four
games this season, had not won a
game since Sept. 28, a victory that
made him baseball's first rookie
20-game winner since 1954. BrownIng's losses, however, were not solo
efforts ; the Reds scored only five
runs in those four games.
"It's hard to start thinking about
that (his losing streak) too much
because you start putting more
pressure on yourself," he said. "I

went out today wlthonethingon my
mind - sltut·them down for five or
sIx innings."
Browning, 1-4, scattered six hits,
gave up two runs, struck out five
and walked lour over six innings.
Ron Robinson pitched three Innings
to earn his second save.
BroWning nearly put himself in a
hole In the first Inning. After
recording two easy outs, he Issued
walks to Johnny Ray and Sid
Bream sandwiched around a single
by Mike Brown, loading the bases.
But Browning snared Tony Pena's
grounder up the middle to escape
the inning unscathed.
"He.hit the ball hard," Browning
said. "I happened to have my glove
there. That really helped my
conlldenCE. I was able to get rut of a

"One big hit from us might break what he did to It."
jam I put my self ln."
ThePiratesclosedtowlthln3-2ln
Browning's day was made con- It open, but we didn't get It,"
the filth. R.J . Reymlds singled and
slderably easter In the lx&gt;tiom d. the Leyland added.
first when Dave Parlo&gt;r smasred a
Pirate starter and loser Mike scored on Ray's double, his second
home run with Eddie MHner, who Bielecki, 3-2, did not survive tlle of the game. Two outs later, first
had walked, and Max Venable, who first Inning.
baseman Nick Esasky mishandled
had singled, on base to give the
"!didn't get a chance to establish Kurt StUiwetl's throw on Pena's
Reds a W lead.
my pitches," Bielicki said. "I ground ball, allowing Ray .to score
"BroWning's heen having some wasn't rut there long enough . I from second.
problems in too first Innlng,!D It felt don't have any excuses. I couldn't
The Reds made It 4-2 in the sixth.
good to put thrre runs on the board
throw a strike and I was hehind Esasky walked and moved to
for him," Parker said.
every hitter. I threw a ball up In the second on Lan-y McWllllams' wild
Pirate manager Jim Leyland strike wne to Parker and you saw pitch . Buddy Bell's single to center
said the Reds' early lead was the r-------~~------....:.
dltrerenre in the game.
"You've got to do a tot when you
gei hehlnd," Leyland said . "You
can't walk people and you've got to
keep them In the park."
Plrate pitchers failed to do that,
as Mllner and Ron Oester connected for late-inning hOme runs.

knocked in Esasky.
Mllnerledof!theseventhinnlng
with his second oome run, giving
the Reds a 5-2 lead.
Jim Morrison countered wltll a
home run to lead off the eigl\ih,
trimming the 'Reds' lead to 5-3.' It
was Morrison's seventh oomer of
the season.
Cincinnati padded Its lead to7-31n
the eighth when Oester hit a
t~ro-run tnmer to right field , his
third oomer of the seasoo.

___.::_-:---------------------

lmiiiCOLOR FILM

fJPDEVELOPING

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15 EXPS. DISC. I 2. 99
L--'__. 24 EXPS. ROLL •• 3~ 99
36 EXPS. ROLL •• 5. 99
C-41 COLOR PROCESS PAINT FILMS ONLY . GOOD ON

FILMS DROPPED OFF FOR PROCESSING
BETWEEN MAY 19 THAU 2 5,1986

POLAROID

TIME·ZERO OR
600 HIGH SPEED

COLOR
FILM

SINGLE

PACK

escape into the environment from In open containers. And both plant
the disposal method, but insist that and statf health agency documents
the emissions wlll he at such a low Indicated a problem with radioaclevel that they pose oo health threat tive ruooff Into nearby streams.
to the community.
-The River. One plant Is In the
But possible radiation in the past middle of J\pollo, less than half a
has residents just as worried about mlle from two schools and silting on
future emissions. The original a river that i!eds Into the Allegheny
owners, Nuclear Materials and a few miles upstream from PittsEqu lpment Corp., sold the plants to burgh. Radioactive material and
Atlantic Richfield in the late l!lros; ca ncer-causing pJisonous wastes
Babcock and Wilcox • purchased have teen discharged into the river
them in the early 1970s. Federal by the plants. Incredibly, one
officials claim the plants have teen regulatory commission report In
operated safely over the years1but the mld-1970ssaldthe high pJllutant
federal documents obtai ned levels were nothing to get excited
through Freedom of Information about because the river was
Act by our associate Corky Johnson already "dead" from pollution.
tell a different story. Here are just a
In ooe 12-month period, from
lew of Apollo's problems, culled June 1975 to May 1976, therewereJO
from hundreds of reports:
occasions when high-level mdloac-The Ptt. In the 1900s, radioac- tlve material was dumped into the
tive material was dumped in a sewage system. A former plant
15-acre site only a lew yards from employee charged that toousands
several barnes. The dumping was of gallons d. radioactive wastes per
then legal, toough federal law day were dumped into the river In
stopped such burials in 1970. The pit the 1900s.
remains, and tests have shown
When the plant hegan dumping
dozens of "hot spots" In It, with chemical and radioactive polluradiation readings far above accep- tants In to the river a hove the legal
table llmlts.
limit, the regulatory agency raised
Some discarded uranium was left the limit.

-Emissions. Throughout most of
the 19ros, the plant released
unfiltered radioactive particles into
the air; they were cited by federal
inspectors for broken air· rmnltors
and faulty emissions equipment. A
1973 w-anlum leak was al,OOO times
greater than acceptable limits.
More than 60 cases of workers'
overexJXlsure to radiation have
been reported.
In 1976, a state inspector wrote:
"There seems ID he some posslblllty the small amount s of radioactive dust arc helng emitted to the
atmosphere, which disturbs (us.) .
There are homes very close to this
plant ."
When the pants started emitting
radloacllve dust at higher levels
than regulations allowed, they were
granted exemptions It 1009, allowIng new levels 100 times higher tban
the old ones. The plants even
exceed the new levels.
Footnote: Citing a recent state
cancer st udy, a Babcock and
Wtlcox official said: "The study
clearly sho..,; m higher cancer
rates. I don't know how anyone
could conc lude there has been a
health hazard."

Setting Buckley straight ___G_eo_rge_M_cG_ove_rn
In a recent column William
Buckley suggests that I visit the
Strategic Air Command in Omaha,
Neb., so that I will appreciate just
how dangerous the Russians are
and how urgently we need to keep
bulldtng more and more nuclear
bombs.
Mr. Buckley, my occasional
debate opponent, has a sense of
humor more Impressive than hts
judgment on pollf!cal Issues. As a
part-tlrnme novelist he Is also
hetter at writing fiction than he Is at
grasping the realities of contemporary affairs.
Mr. Buckley's reservations about
me seem to cen ter on three areas:
as a graduate student at Northwest.
ern University in 1948 I supported
form er Secretary of Agriculture
and VIce President Henry Wallace
for president instead of Strom
Thunnond, Thomas E. Dewey or
Harry Truman; after winning the
Democratic presidential nomination in 1972, I then lost overwhelm Ingly to Richard Nixon; my belief
that we have enough nuclear
weapons and should now negotiate
a verifiable arms control treaty
with the Soviet Union.
Let me take these concerns In
order. First, Buckley says that In
1948 "Henry Wallace was heing run
by theCommunlstParty." Actually
Wallace was a highly respected
Iowa farmer and businessman who
believed devoutly In American
capitalism. After his service as
Secretary of Agriculture and VIce
President , he was na med in a 1940s
survey of American historians as
the contemporary American statesman whose philosophy most closely
followed that of Thomas Jel!erson.
Second, as far as my landslide
defeat by RJchard Nixon and Spiro
Agnew in 1972, there are worse

things that can happen to a
JXlltliclan than losing an election.
I wpuld rather have been In my
shoes lor the past 14 years than to
have traded places with Mr. Nixon
- the btg winner of 1972. I would
remind Mr. Buckley that soortly
alter that elecllon VIce President
Agnew was forced to resign In
disgrace to avoid a prison sentenCE,
and Prest dent Nixon then resigned
in even greater dlsgr~re to avoid
the full Ignominy of Impeachment.
Buckley remembers my deleat In
1972, but while painting me as a
radical he forgets that br nearly a
quarter of a century the people d.
conservative South Dakota consistently voted for me to represent
them In Congress.
Third, Blll Buckle} believes that
If I would just do what he has done
recently - spend thrO' hours being
briefed at Strategic Air Command
in Omaha - I would understand
that the people who work there are
"indlspenslble to oor frredom." He
writes, "It Is only for ro long as the
Soviet Union knows that .. an trder
from the p-esldent would result In
SAC's destruction of the Soviet
Union's leadership and military
targets that we have the selfIndulgence to listen relatively undisturbed to such as George
McGovern ... "
U I did rot know how misguided
Buckley Is, I ~rould he woonded by
his mnsenslcal distortion of my
views.
Let me putlt simply: For :Jl years
I have believed in and voted lor a
reliable IUlCiear deterrent as a vltal
part of America's defense.
I do mt, however, belleve in
wasting billions of dollars on sllly
boondoggles such as the MXmlsslle
and Star Wars. As tor visiting
Omaha, I wmt there for a thorough
I

briefing years ago as a U.S. senator
and have long appreciated the
dedlca tIon, thP skJJI and the lmportance of the personnel who serve
our rountry In the Strategic Air
Command.
I don't know how close to the
action Blll Buckley's patriotism
carried· him In World War II, but I
would have teen pleased to him
along as part of hi s. military
education while I was piloting a

B-24 bomber on 35 missions against
heavtly defended Nazi targets. If he
had that experience, he might
appreciate the Strategic Air Command at Omaha even more now
than he does. He might also be a
llttll' tess careless about Impugning
the dedlca lion of the defense and
well-being d. this countJ11 or a
citizen whose government long ago
awarded him a Dlstlngu !shed
Flying Cross.

Berry's World

--

DUnACELL

.........

DURACELL
BAnERIES
"AA" CELL

Radiation worries town Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - The United
States has criticized the Soviet
government's failure to give Its
people timely Information on the
Chernobyl nuclear disaster . But lor
25 years the residents of Apollo, Pa.,
a small town about 20 miles
northeast of Pittsburgh, have been
wondering if their government has
withheld infonnatlon on radiation
exposure they might have teen
subjected to from a pair of nuclear
materials plants.
The plants. which process radioactive material lor mllltary and
other use, made headlines In the
1960s when several hundred pounds
of its weapons-grade uranium
disappeared. Speculation was tllat
it wound up in Israel.
But the missing uranium might
have teen dumped into a huge pit
behind one of the plants. The
trouble is, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission doesn't know .
Now the commission is considering a plan by the facility's current
owners to make one plant tlle first
commercial incinera tor lor ra diOljcttve wastes. The owners.
Babcock and Wilcox, acknowledge
that some radioactive particles wit!

799

GOOD START - Dave Parker of the C..clnnall
Reds receives conp-alulallons lrom third base coach
Billy DeMIII'!I alter he slammed a IIB'ee run homer In

49

the first btnlng of Sunday's game against the
Pittsburgh Pirates. The Reds wmt oo lor a 7-3
victory. UPI.

BARBASOL

Toronto inflicts fifth s-traight
defeat on sl~mping Indians
TORONTO (UP! ) - Alter soarIng to the top of the American
League East on the wings of a
10-game win streak, tlle Cleveland
Indians appear to be flying back
down to more accustomed levels.
The Indians were drubbed 10- 2on
Sunday by the Toronto Blue Jays,
suffering their fifth consecutive
defeat and lOth In their past 11
games.
•
"You can't get too up on yourself
or too down on yourself, " said Tribe
manager Pat Corrales, suggesting
that his club's streaks should he
viewed phllosophlcally. "II you fly
too high, there tsno alr. llyou fly too
low, you hit a mountain.
"What do they say? The sun
doesn't shine on the same dog's
rear end every day."
"All I know is that their record Is
stW better than ours," said Toronto
manager Jlmy Williams. after
watching Jim Clancy, 4-2, hold the
Indians to two runs ori seven hits In

eight Innings, and Damaso Garda
rip a pair of two-run singles.
"Our club Is still trying to get
untracked."
Toronto made quick work of Don
Schulze, chasing him wlth !ourruns
on lour hits in 1 13 innings.
The Blue Jays opened a 2-0iead in
the first, on run-scoring back-toback doubles by Willie Upshaw and
George Belt.
Toronto stretched Its lead to 4-0 In
the sEcond. With runners at second
and third and one rut, Garcia, who
earlier in ttl' week set fire to his
tmm jersey and cap after two of his
errors led to a pair of losses In
Oakland, lashed a slngle past the
OIJtstretched glove of diving third
baseman Brook Jacoby, giving
Toronto a 4-0 lead.
"I don't care what anybody says
or anybody writes," said Garcia,
who In the last few days has been
roasted by the Toronto media and
lustlly booed by Blue Jay fan s. "I'm

here to do a job and I think I'm
doing It. Otrer than that I have
oothing to say.
Cleveland got on the scoreboard
with a run In the third on Mel Halt's
third homer. but Toronto blew the
game open with lour runs in the
third on Olff Johnson's basesloaded double play groundout, Tony
Fernan&lt;rz' RBI single and Garcia's two-run single oil reliever Jim
Kern.
The Indians made it 8-2 in the
fourth on Jacoby's RBI single, but
Toronto took a 10-2 lead in the fift h
on Ernie Whitt's third homer, a shot
off Kern.
Phil Nlekro, 2-3, was scheduled to
start lor the Indians against
Toronto's Dave Stleb, 0- 5, In the
series finale this alterman.

THICK AND RICH

SHAVING
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REG., MENTHOL
LIME OR SKIN
CONDITIONER
WITH LANOLIN
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WANT ADS bring
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I Uli'S I 411-IHW I
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Published 1•vrry afll'rnoon. Monda y
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What a difference
a BDco Door makesl

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month.

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PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

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'

�Monday, May 19, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

T~e ·Alfalfa

Mets rip Dodgers

•

.,

MAJOR COUJSION - lklston Red Sox first baseman BID Buckner
(lett) bowls over Rangers' catcher Darrell Porter (righl) but was out a1

the plate bt the sixth Inning ol Sunday's game al Fen way Park.lklston
won 5-4 In 10 Innings. UPI.

Boston's pitching depth faces test after injury
By !\liKE TIJU..y
UPI National Baseball Writer
The Boston Red Sox, the surprise
league ERA leader early .in the
season, will bavl' their pitching
depth tested now.
. In a 54, 10-innlng victory over
TeKas Sunday. the Red Sox lost
right-hander AI Nlppl'r for six
weeks.
The injury occurred in the sixth
Inning when Nippl'r rovered the
plate on a tag play after a wUd
pitch. Catcher Rlch Gedman fired
to NlppPr, who blockro the plate on
Larcy Parrtsh attempting to score
from third.
.
The pitcher left the field on a
strercher and underwent surgery at
the University of Massachusetts
Mroical Center in Worcester. He is
expected lo make a complete
rerovecy.
"The doctor said it would be
approximately sometime in July
when he wUI be able to pitch a game
again," said team spokesman Jim
Samla. "We're looking at six weeks
or more for rerovecy."
Nlppl'r, 9-12 with tbe Red Sox last
year, was J.4 this season with a 3.68
ERA in 51 1-3 Innings before
Sunday's game.
Texas, one game out of first placE

in the AL West, took leads Into the
bottom of both the ninth and lOth,
but could not hold either one. Bob
Stanley, H, was the winner. Greg
Harris, 2-6, tock the loss.
The winnJng runs scorl'd when
Texas light fielder Gear!!" Wright's
throwing error allowed Steve Lyons
and Marty Barrett toscorewithone
out In the bottom a the lOth.
Wrlght attempted a shoe- string
catch, missed, then threw the ball
into the dugout, allowing too runs to
score. Boston nearly botched the
play with a base-running mlstake.
"When I went toward second, I
saw Steve coming back and yellro
at him, 'What areyoudolngbere•'"
said Barrett, "and he started to
head towards third ."
Wrlght lriro to rnpltallze, but
failm.
In other gamES, Cl!icago beat

Kansas City 5-1, New York !X&gt;Undm

Seattle 11·3, Minnesota topped
Milwaukee 5-3, Baltimore routed
Oakland 8-2 and Toronto crushl'd
Cleveland 1().2. California at Detroit
was rained rut.
While Sox 5, Royals 1
At Chicago, Carlton Fisk hit a
three-run homer, and Floyd Bannister, 2-4, scattered seven hits In
seven Innings to give the White Sox
their flfth straight vlctocy. Cl!lcago
has oon eight of 10 games since
Manager Tony LaRussa r~reivm a
reprieve from club management
May 9. Bret Saberhagen !ell to 2-4.
Yanlr.ees U, Mariners 3
At New York, BObby Meacham
had three hits and two RBI. and
Gacy Roenlcke belted a two-run
oomer to hlghltght a 16-hit Yankees
anack. DennJs Rasmussen, 4-1,

went seven Innings lor the victory.
Mike Morgan, H lastm 3 J-3
Innings, giving up seven hits and
three runs.
Twins 5, Brewers 3
At Milwaukee, Bert Blyleven
threw a four-hitter. and Kirby
Puckett hit a too-run double to lift
the Twins. Blyleven, 4-3, notched
his third complete game and the
12th of the season for Minnesota
stat!. Tim Leary, 3-4, took the loss.
Orioles 8, A's 2
At Baltimor·e, Eddie Murray
drove in seven runs, fou r with his
14th career grand slam, to !X&gt;Wer
. the Orioles. Murray highlighted a
six-run seventh with his seventh
homer. He is tlm with Gil Hodges
for eighth place on the all-time
grand slam list. Rich Bordi im·
proved to 2-0 and Cl!ris Codiroli fell
to 3-4.

' In other games, Cinclnnall de·
feated Pittsburgh 7-3, New York
slammed Los Angeles 8-4. Montreal
clouted San Diego 8-.1, Atlanta

Pohl breaks string, wins tOUffiarnent isi~:~e
FORT WORTH , Texas (UP!)Dan Pohl, regarded as one of the
best players on the PGA tour never
to have won a tournament, lost the
latter half of that distinction
Sunday.
The hard-luck reputation of
Payne Stewart, meanwhile. was
greatly enhanced.
Pohl beat Stewart on the first hole
of sudden death In the Colonial
National Invitation Sunday to end a
tournament plagued by rain but
blessed by a wild finish .
Soon after the final round began,
theN' were 16 players gatt.erm
within two shots at the top, and
before the day was over, Bernhard
Langer and Tom Watson threa tenm to slip into the winner'scl rciP.
It finally was left to Pohl and

Stewart to decide the event,
soortenm to 54 lxlles by Saturday's
~ay-long rains.
Both players made scrambling
pars at the 18th hole Sunday to IX&gt;St
5-under al5 totals, and they went to
the par-3 16th to begin their sudden
death playaf.
Stewart hit first and knockm it
over the green In the deep rough .
Pohl p,Jt his tee shot eight feet from
the stick. Stewart made a great
chip shot to set up what would have
been a soort par putt. but Pohl
mdEd the playdf by making his
birdie.
"I rould have jumped over the
clubhouse," said Pohl. " I almost
fell In the bunker and made a
complete fool d myself."
Pohl's $108,000 first-place check

boosted his 1986 total to $292,357 and
his career earnings to $1,099,632. He
becomes the 62nd player to win
more than $1 million on tbe PGA
tour.
Watson. Langl'r and and BUI
Rogers sharro third place at 3·
under 'JIJI. Watson shot the day's
best round, a G-under 64. It was
Roger.;' best tournament in three
years, his career having gone into a
dramatic slide after a 1981 season in
which he won the Brttish Open.
"f'm vecy happy to finish where 1
did ." said Rogers, who shot a
l-under 69 In chilly, windy condl·
tlons Sunday. "!feel like I won my
own little tournament. This Is a big
StEP for me. A lot of good things
should start happening now."

downed St. Louis 5-2 and San
Francisco beat Philadelphia 4-1 . •
In the American League, It was:
Boston 5, Texas 41n lOinnings; New
York 11, Seattle 3; Toronto 10,
Cleveland 2; Baltimore 13, Oakland
4; Cl!lcago 5, Kansas City 1; and
Minnesota 5, MUwaukee 3. California at Detroit was rained out.
Mels 8, Doclgers 4

At Los Angeles, George Foster
oomered In his first hmat -bats, and
Tim Teufel addl'd a t~m -run single
to back Randy Niemann's llrst
major-league vlctocy since 1982.
· Niemann, 1- 2, pitched 3 2-Jinnings
a scoreless retief. Foster's homers
made a loser of starter Jercy
Reuss, 2-2.
Expos 8, Padres 3
AI San Diego, National League
home run leader Huble Brooks
hlghllghtm a seven-run first
Inning with a grar.d slam thai
carrlm the Expos. Floyd
Youmans, 3-3, pitched seven
Innings for the victory. San Diego
starter Mark Thumxmd, 2-3,
falle!l- to-retire any of the six
batt~rs he faced.
· Braves 5, Ca rdlnals 2
At Atlanta, Bob Homer crackm
two home runs for the Zilh time In
his career, backing thl' romblned
six-hit pitching of Zane Smlth and
Paul Assenmacher. Smith improved to 4-3 and Assenmacher
picked up his third save. John
Tudor, 3-3, took the loss.
Giants 4, Phlllles I
At San Francisco, Jelf Robinson
pitched 32-31nnings c1 onf'-hit relief,
and the Giants took advantage of
five Philadelphia errors. Robinson
enterm with the bases baded and
one out In the sixt h and Induced
Glenn Wilson to ground Into a
double play. Robmson struck out
six for his t&gt;urt h save.

Celtics claim title
Mll.WAUKEE (UP!) - The
Boston Ceitics have brushed aside
the Milwaukee Bucks, and await
the winner of the Houston RocketsLos Angeles Lakers series to decide
the NBA champ ionship.
"The Celtics were able to play at
a different level than we were
throughout the series," Bucks
coach Don Nelson said Sunday after
the Celtics' fourth straight victory,
lll-!18, claiming the Eastern Dlv-

Bird scorl'd 17 of his
game-high 30 points in the fourth
quarter, taking rontrol early In the
period when Boston ran off · 10
straight ~X&gt;ints In a 2:42 stretch to
turn an 84-79 deficit Into an 89-84
lead It never relinquished.
Milwaukee closed to 95-92, but
Bird swishm 4 3-point field goals in
a row to put Boston In theNBAiinal
for the third stra ight year. Boston
won three seasons ago, but lost Its
title last year to Los Angeles, which
trails Houston three games toone In
the Western final.

Boston is easily the most physical
team In basketball. The addition of
Bill Walton makl'S It perhaps the
most physical team ever.
Bird added 8 rebounds and 5
assists to his ll ~X&gt;ints . Kevin
McHale scorl'd 20 and had 11

rebounds, and center Robert ParIsh had 12 ~X&gt;Ints and 9 rebounds.
Danny Alnge scorl'd Zi !Xllnts, 22
in the nnJddle two pertods, with 5
assists. Dennis Johnson addl'd 13
~X&gt;ints.

Milwaukee countered wllh a
Zl ·~X&gt;Int game from a player who
wasn't even SUPIX&gt;Sed to play
because of an Injured left heel,
Sidney Moncrief, and a 2'l· point
game from Paul Pressey. Terry
Cummings was held to 15 points,
and Craig H~es had 13.
It was when Johnson fouled out
thai Ba;ton went to Its "Lumberjack Uneup" - Inserting Walton
alonslde Palish and McHale. That
swung Bird to si'ootlng guard
beside playmaker Ainge.
Only 36 seconds after Jolmson
fouled out with 4:42 to play, Bird
launched his first 3-polnter !rom
beyond the top a the key to make It
!18-92. Then he hit &lt;Jle from left wing
with 3: Z7 to go to hike the score to
101-92, and made another from
nearly the same S!Xlt for a 106-94
lead with 1:40 left . He closed the
game with a 3-~X&gt;inter from the left
baseline at the buzzer.
Bird had a free throw. a basket,
and passed to Parish for a jam
during the 10-0 spurt that gave
Ba;ton command during the early
fourth quarter.

Mllwaulft t Mtnnrsotal n
BalllrnarB. Oakland 2
Surda)''a Rftwb

MEMBER OF PIONEERSDall'lbomas, a 19811 graduate of
Melp !Ugh School, was a
member of the Malone College
Baseball team tbJis spring. In tO
Jnnlnp, Tbomas compUed a 4-3
reconl with an 8.03 ERA. Tbe
Malone Pioneers completed the
-season with a 24-20-3 reconl.

...

~ATIOSAL

LF.r\Gl' t:

Monln' .ll
Phtla

1.1 Jill! .1
11i n~ 91,1
1.1 I~ 419 ~ Y:
u ~~ m 10
11 20 .!14 10 ~

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SIJiunl~·· ~ ~ub

:lOumaments
.
'set at Unioto

l,o;; An~tr&gt;S 1!. i'i f'll' ' 'ork 2
S.an f r1111rl•,...ro 12. PhU;uiPlphli!
Plrr'ilxll'lih 4. Chri n!'kl tl ft
Al lanl ~ 2. Sl Louis 11
Houston .\ f'hi-aRO l
San Dl!Wl ~ . Moni JT'a] .1
Sordii.,V'~ Kn!ultJI
[JnrlnM1 17, P ilt.'&lt;I:J.ulfh .1
rhlrag[}fl, Hnuslon

: CHILLICOTHE - The annual
boYS' Class "A" District baseball
loW11ament to be playm this week
will be playm at Unioto Hlgh School
near Chillicothe. ·
TWo Meigs County teams, East ern 18-5 and Sou them 14:ll·l, will
play In the District Wednesday and
Friday respectively.
For lans lnterestm In attending
the game, the easiest route Is to
take Route 35 around downtown
Chllllcotbe past the Route 7J north
exchange. Continue on Route 35
untU reaching SR 104. Thm light
onto Route 104, traveling less than a
balf-mlle belore taking the first
road to the left.
This township road will lead to
UntolD High School which Is aboul
two. miles off SR 104. This service
road will be markm with a slgn to
Unloto High School.
Eastern plays Manchester (12-2)
Wednesday at 4 p.m., wblle South·
em plays Lucasville Valley (21-4)
on Friday at 4 p.m.

•

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23 11 .639 ZJ u .6'll
~
j} 15 571 2'h

Dl&gt;trolt

Ca iH.

1916

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16 HI .ofTJ

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20 17
ll! 17
0.1kl;1 n&lt;.1
19 19
KC
16 19
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H 23
St•:Ui k'
14 24
Sahrda,r'&amp; R.tMib
Dos1on !1. Tf'xaJ 2
Dttroll to, California 4
Tm~a s

Toronto U . Orvfland ~
(111tago 7, Kansaa Clly li
New York U, St&gt;artle 6

I

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t'h
6

w,

.Ml !114 1
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.37ll
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Toronto !S tit-h

years ol planning, will Improve tbe
Clinic's ablltty to see patients In a
manner that Is both more convenient and faster. I. believe our
elderly patients wUI particularly
appreciate being able to receive
their laboratory testing, x-rays, and
EKGs only a few steps from tbeh'
doctor's otflce" .
Daniel also commented on the
fact that the new x-ray department
resulted In the addition of 3 new jobs
In the Clinic, bringing to 10 tbe total
number employm In the Diagnostic
Test ing Center. aU of whom are
certified in their respective fields.

Files for divorce
Debbie F. Corfee, ReedsvUie, has
film for a di vorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Cou rt from Greg
Cartee. Fon Myers, Fla., charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

1 -----------

Applicants
now sought
IN FULL OPERATION - Hober Clnlc's Diagnostic Testing Center
Is In fuD operation.

ASCS office gets
additional allocation
The Meigs County ASCS office
has just recelvm an addltlona I
allocation for the Agricultural
Conservation Plogram for . costsharing on conservation practices
with farmeres. Slgnup lor these
practices will run through June 13.
Sign up for long term agreements

Story hour set
There will be a story hour for
preschoolers, Thursday, 2 p.m., at
the Middleport Llbracy.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Wilmer
Rice, Rel'dsville.
Sat urday Discharges--Charles
Hawk, Chlorus Grimm, Herman
Kinca id.
Sunday Admissions--Jessica
Wright , Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--Manning
Roush, Burl Blevins.

also runs through June 13. The long
term agreements arE' three to five
years rontracs to pl'rtorm conser·
vatton practloces over the term of
the contract as per a conservation
plan designed for the farm.
Both programs require that the
land on which the pracllcs are to be
perlorrned must · be eroding at or
above the soU loss tolerance for the
area. This does not mean that th e
areas must have gullies, but If it
rains and you see muddy water
coming from the field , II could meet
the erosion factor.
To sign up, Meigs Countians
should rome to the ASCS office on
the second Door of the Farmers
Bank Building. For the annual
progranns, all progranns involving a
seeding or a top-dressing require a
soU testing be done by the Exten·
skln Service before applying for
cost-sharing.

Applicants for the positions of
work-study coordinator, talentm
and gifted coordinator and speech
therapist, which are Opl'n, were
discussed when the Meigs County
Board of Education met In regular
session Tuesday night.
The board made plans to till these
staff vacancies at Its June mel'ting.
Bus driver certlflcates were
issued to Danny Grueser and
Tammy Chapman and transfers
were approved to balance accounts. New textbook adoptions for
the next four years were approved
and Dr. John H. Ridgway and the
Meigs Health Services, Inc., were
approved to give school bus drivers
mmlcal examinations.

531 IACKSON PIKE · RT. J5 WEST

Phone 446-4524
BARGA!~

MATINEES SATURDAY

&amp;SU NDAY · All SEATS 52 50
ACt\ ISS!ON [VERY TU ESDA Y

L MAY 16 thru 22 _j
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

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M!MIIay'J Game~ (AU 111llf111 EDT )

Clc.&gt;Ytland rNIPkro
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LOBBY &amp; INSTALLMENT HOURS

1BaSt'd on J. J pLatl" apjraranCf'5 x oo. rJ
Rarl"K'S rach lf'am has playrd l
NMioul l.elfiiU'
1 all r II pet.
Ray, PIU
~ 1 641 .367
Brooka, Mtl
:rz l.'Vl2.1 46 .:fl4
Gwynn, SO
J~ 141 M 49 .348
Knlatl!. NY
291(1.1 15 37 .3.l}
Hrnndl:. NY
32 171 23 o&amp;3 .339

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Miwlf&gt;r

·.

GALUPOLJS -A new Diagnostic Testing Center bas recently been
lormed at Holzer Clinic reports
Robert E. Daniel, Clinic Admlnls·
Ira tor. Development of the Center
brought together In one location
several diagnostic testing luncttons
of · the Clinic and addm a new
2-room x-ray department. This
change allows Holzer Clln.lc patients to get rrost d. their outpatient
diagnostic testing done at one
location ronvenient to the patient's
d:lctor's office.
The Diagnostic Testing Center
brings together In one department
the lollowlng testing services:
x-ray, laboratory, electrocardiography (EKG) Including regular,
treadmlU stress, and Holter monitortng, cardiac ultrasound (IncludIng echocardlocardlography and
carotld), and pulmonacy !unction
testing (Including spirometry and
blood gas studies) .
Mr. Daniel rontlnum, "this
change, culmlnatlng over two

To Serve You!

Ca llfOmlaat DPtrolt . .~usp_, raln
BB llln'xn' U. Oakland 4
Clllca,iC ~. Kansas City I
MIN'Il'iola 5. MUwaukPfo :l

Leaders

Clllragoat A l llillla , niJ{hl
Clnrlnr.all a1 S1 Lw ls, niJ&lt;hl
P1ttm. flf h a1 Houston, nlljht
Phllil~lphla at San Dlt&gt;gQ, nll!;ht
Monlll'lll allu\ An~••k,;, nil(hl
Nf""'' \'ork ill San Fr,mctsco, night

l:hston

lnnln~ t

Cli'Yf'land at MllwaulcA:•. ri~~:!lt
Sl&gt;anll- at Dr:&gt;trolt. nght
Ca iHornla at Ra lllmort'. rljth1
Mlnrftlta ot Boston, riW!t
O&amp;Jr.Wid al Nf'W York. nlj'hl

j

Nf"t'.· Ynrk R. Los Ani\'{'IP!i 4
Monlll'al R. San IJII'RU 3
At!anlil ~. S1 IJJtds 2
San f'rancl'I('O 4. Philadl•l phl ll 1
,\londay'!l G~
~nGilmf"5 Sc h!-dull•d

NY

Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports seven calls over
the weekend; four Saturday and
three Sunday.
Saturday at 12: mp.m.' Pomeroy
to I Mechanic St. for Christopher
Triplett to Veterans Memortal
Hospital; Middleport at 4:09p.m. to
539 Bcyan Place tor Linda Keesee to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
ThppPrs Plains at 4:42p.m. to Rice
Run Rd. for Wilmer Rice to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy Fire Department at 10:44
p.m. to an auto lire on Pomeroy
Pike; no lnjurtes.
Suooay at 11:20 a.m., Pomeroy
Fire Department to Veterans Memortal Hospital for a minor electrical
fire; no Injuries; Racine Fire
Department at 2:52p-.m. to a minor
structure lire at the Jim Spangler
residence on ftt. 338; Middleport at
8:03 p.m. to South Fourth In
Cl!eshlre for Bud Darst to Holzer
Medical Center.

damage. Apply an Insecticide such
as Sevin, Malathion, Dlazlnon,
Orthene, or Lindane at the first sign
of needle fel'dlng.
Large Round Hay Bates- Large
round bales have become a com·
mon, method or harvesting and
storing hay because of the Increased labor efficiency and the
resulting lower labor cost. Bales d
this lypl' do present several problems to the dalcy farmer. One being
a fel'dlng problem. There Is oo
readlly available or Inexpensive
system to control hay Intake when
lerolng lactatlng dally cows. A
second major concern Is the
storage and feeding losses normally associated with large round
hales. Previous studies haves oown
losses of 35 to 50 percent fur large
round bales storm outside wittllut
cover - a common method of
storage.

We Are Open 49 Hours
A Week

Toronto 10. Cltvf'lund 2

2

......

Emergency squads
answer seven calls

Holzer Clinic installs
new diagnostic center

weevil

Researchers at the University of
Missouri harvested alfalfa In large
round bales and storl'd these bales
by several methods. Hay was
storm outside without cover,
stackm 2 or 3 high and covered with
plastic or storro Inside a hay barn.
Hay stored outside and unrovered
resultm In 15\'1 storage loss and 25\l
feeding loss. Hay storl'd outside but
covered, exhibited a 6%storage loss
and a 14% leming loss. Alfalfa hay
storm within the barn had a 3'7.
storage loss and a fel'dlng loss of
12%. Total losses for hay uncovered
and outside were 40'!: compared to
2ll% for alfalfa hay stackm and
stored under plasllc cover and 15'Jf
for bam storm hay.
The alfalfa hay storm by the
vartous metbods was fed to dairy
heifers. Intake was lowest for hay
storm outside without rover. Dry
forage Intake tlb/100 lb. body
welghll -was 2.llb. for large round
bales storm without rover, 2.3 lb.
for hay storm under plastic, and2.4
lb. for alfalfa hay storl'd within the
bam. The Mlssourt researchers
!Xlinled out that detertorated hay
and low quality resulted In low
Intake of alfalfa hay storl'd outside
without rover.
Upon examlnlng the economics
of hay storage methods. the
researchers statm that plastic
covering should be ronslderm
marginally feasible unless reused
several times or hay value Increases beyone the $70 price used in
their calculations. It was reportm
that reduced losses with bam
storl'd alfalfa hay rould be expected
to cover barn building expense,
Including Interest, In 5 to 6 years.

Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Nrw York 11. Sl&gt;attil' .1

W L P.t. GB

2.1

Apiculture

Alfalfa Weevil - Have you
checkm your alfalfa lleld? Chan ces are the alfalfa weevil has. U
50-75% of. lbe leaves soow fel'dlng
damage - cut. Treatment of the
secOnd cutting stubble may be
required. Stubble sprays are gener·
ally not rerommended as benellclal
parasites are rrost acllve at this
Ume. However, ·If regrowth after
the first cutting Is retarded lor 7 to
10 days, treatment with an Insect!·
clde Is rerommendl'd.
Control ol Groundhogs - U you
are botherm by groundhogs In your
lleld and would 11ke some help in
ellmlnatlng them, we may have
something to help you. W~ now
have available at our olflce wood·
chuck rnrtrldges which can be usl'd
to controllhe rodent. Cost fur these
gas cartridges Is 501! and they can
be plckm up at or office.
Pine Nel'dles Disappearing? Are your pine needles dlsappPar·
lng? The pine sawfly Is bad this
year. The larva of the pine sawfly
does the damage. The larvae wlll
have vacylng patterns of spots or
stripes depending U!Xln the spec ies.
Full-growth larval' are about '~ to J
Inch long. Control measures are
directed at the larval stage since
they are the ones that cause the

Jan Michael Long, Democratic
candidate for the 17th Ohio Senate
District, has received the endorsement of the Ohio Education Association's Educators Political Action
Committee.
The endorsement was made over
Incumbent Sen. Oakley C. Collins,
R-lronton.
Long. a Meigs County native and
ClrclevUie attorney, said he was
"pleasl'd to learn that the rommlt·
tee has boldly chosen to endorse
and suppori my candidacy over my
DP!Xlnent.
"We nero to find new ways on the
state level to support and Improve
our educa tklnal system." he addm.

Boston~. TrKBs 4. 10 l nnln!!~

8)' Unik'd Pmi.!i lnlemalkKui.l

By JOHN C. RICE
Counly Extension Agent

Receives endonJement

Scoreboard ...
Majors

The

County Agent's Corner

Cubs.· stop Astros;
By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago Cubs pitcher Scott Sand·
er.son won a game at the plale
Instead of from the mound.
Sanderson was hit by a pitch with
lhe bases loaded In the second
Inning Sunday and received crl'dll
for the gamf'- winning RBI In
Chicago's 5-2 victory over the
Houston Astros.
The left-bander, however, had to
leave tbe game with a bruised right
knee. and Guy Hoffman took over
for Sanderoon to record his first
major- league vlctucy since 1983.
Cubs pitchers have four of
Chicago's last 13 gamf'-wlnning
RBI.
The Cubs also turned to the
sacrttlce in an effort to boost their
offense, getting a total of five
successful sacrifices !rom Jody
Davis, Ryne Sandberg and IE&gt;adoff
hitter Bob Dernler.
The Cubs took a 4-0 lead In the
second. Ron Cey drew a leadoff
walk, and Gacy Matthews legged
out an Infield hlt. Davis sacrlllced,
and Bob Kneppl'r lnlentlonally
walked Shawon Dunston to load the
bases before Sanderson was hit by a
pitch.
Dernler squeezed home Matthews, making the score 2.(). Davey ·
Lopes doubled off the wall in center
to score Dunston and Sanderson.
Hoffman, H, pitched 51-Jinnlngs
of four-hit relief, and Lee Smlth
worked 2 1-3 Innings to record his
fifth save.
Knepper, 7-2, fallm In hls bld to
berome the majors' first eightga me winner.

~M~~~da-(.~·-M~a~y-19~·~1-98_6--~~------------~=:~~~Po~mero¥
;; -M~d~rt.Ohio

l lf.t

II
4
6
li~

34 131 21 43 .331
31117 17 38 ..3Z1
J2 l!tl 13 33 ,m
:W L!I2H4 .31'1
11 181628
..\n'Mrlc... ~.tpl!

.n,

~

\ 'oo nt. MH

Puckll, MM
Boggs, Bot!
PtiUJ •. Ok
O' Br1cn , Tx
Mtt~ . N
Tabler. Cit
F1ctdlr. Tx
Crllfln. Oak
BarrtH. Bo8

Monday thru Wednesday ...................9:00 a.m. To
Thursday ............................................ .. 9:00 a.m. To
Frlday......... 9:00 a.m. To 3:00 p.m. - 5:30p.m. To
Saturday................................................ 9:00 a.m. To
DRIVE-IN &amp; WALK-UP WINDOW HOURS
Monday thru Thursday........................ 8:30 a.m. To
Frldlay ................................................... 8:30 a.m. To
Saturday ......... .............................. ....... 8:30a.m. To

1(12.152 .371
.'W 156 .\ H7 .:£!
35 132 25 48 .364
:r7 146 32 00 .3f2
,\a ~ 'll ~~ .3t2
31 !53 23 ~2 .:U0
15 11118 .f3 .323
2!t 10018.12 .3X1
llll5 19 113 .319
36 132 21 «2 .318

---·

National ~ajilllr -

Brook.!, Mil 10:

Monison, Pitt .md Parkl?r, On 7,

•

AmPrtcan 1-t&gt;que - Jo}'lll'r, Cal m:
P'Uduott, Mlnn 13; C.llll'l'O, Oalt U:
Barfie-ld, Tor and G8('ttl, Mlnn f.
Natbna1 i.kqut! -

Broolls, MU J:l:
AU lUid Manlwll, LA :11: Leonard,
SF and SdmUdt, PhD J;,

5:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
1:00 p.m.

24 Hour Deposl~ory &amp; Free Bank By Mall.

Dawson. Mtl and Marshall, LA 8; DavLot
Hou . Garvey. SO, Horm and Mull)hy, All ,

H(l"~.

3:00 p.m.
12 noon
7:00p.m.
1:00 p.m.

BATit.E FOR BAU. - Mllwaulree Bud!s TeiTY
Ounmlnp and lklston Celtlcl' BW Wlllllon (5) baltle
lor a loose ball durbtg the Bucb-Celtlcs playolf game ·

Sunday altemoon. The Celtlcs won lll.flllto sweep the
Bucks lourlllralpt to win lhe NBA's Eastern Division
lleml·llnals. UPL

PEOPLES BANK
Member F.D.I.C.
Second Street
Mason, W.Va.
'm·$14

221.2 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, W, va.
675-1121

5th Street
New Haven, W.Va.
882-2135

1987 Horizon America is sticker priced less than
virtually any cor built in America or Japan - even with

oil this extra equipment, • 2.2 liter engine • 5-speed
transmission • 13" Rallye wheels • Rollye cluster • Rear
window defroster • Rear window wiper • Highline
door trim

5 ISO Protection Plan
Coven engine and power train and against outer body
rust-through for 5 years or 50,000 miles, whichever
comes first. See limited warranty al dealer. Excludes
leases. Restrictions apply.

You can drive Horizon
America for only

$112~~onth.

lkaed on Manu fact urer '~ Sugge~led Re•aol Pr,,e of $5807
including destination chorge~ . With 15°'o down omount fononced
is $.4QJ6 ot 13 Annual Per(entoge Rote for 60 month~
• Sticker price os shown, indudmg d e~ !tno tt on cha r ge~ lo ti~ .
to~~:e ~ e~~:tro

·

See Horizon America at your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer.

COOPER CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH-DODGE
MIDDLEPORT
399 SO. THIRD Avt.
614-992-6421

•

UBER'IY
.t886·1&lt;l86
...., .....

�Monday, May 19, 1986

The Daily Sentinel _

By The Bend

Real Estate General

Huge Dut&lt;h stylo bam,
tmlltnt lake sidt and
lurmland pasturt and
woods. Asking $400 poo
a&lt;re. For quick salt. Ad,
jacont Pomeroy.

Page- 6

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
54,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES-56,000

AFfERNOON CLASS Jeanette 'lbomas and Donna
Grueser, her aide, will award
· bachelor of riQ'mes to these
afternoon class children at

, 1S acres wooded land
huge poplars, molltn
timber, netic . Wrigh1
· St., Pomeroy.

f'rlday night's graduation. 11aey
i.re, left to rlghl, front, Michael
Wyatt, Cindy Lewis, RusseD

BoJnson, Jason NelsJer, Jlllllln
Seymour, 'lbnmy McClure, and

MONTGONiRY
REALTY.

Heidi Legar; second row, CGI't-

ney Haley, Todd May, Clay
Crow, Amber Hayes, Jeremy
Rowe, stephanie Burton, and
Lauren Andel'!illn; third row,
Trenton Davis, Jayme Hudson,

m.38S·7419 .
(oiled (ails Autpttd

David Anderson, Ginger Darst,
Colin Rollfll, Brad Davenport,
and Raenl Wood; and fourlh
row David Grimm, Jeremy
Jbn~n, Mariana staats. Mat·
thew SeUers, Nancy Whaley,
Tracy CoHee, and Chad HM8111L

64 Misc. Merchandise

-,

JIIS()II Boggess was absent.

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZlR AT
THE lOWEST
PRICES?
BlENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS
BULK OR BAGG ED

MGM Farm City
POMEROY
992-2181

' MORNING CLASS - Middle-

1

-p\rt Klndel'pl1en ·IJ'IIduatlon
wUIIake place Friday even~ at
7:311 p.m. at lhe Middleport

'

'

IN THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT.
PROBATE OIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT , MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

Elementary School Children m
the momlllc class to receive the
buhelor of rhymes are left to
rtsW, lronl, NlmD Bing, Jeremy
llo88, David Tiemeyer, Jeremy
'lbomas, Jerudfer Vln!ng, lleclcy
Karr, and Pamela Neece; second row, Tory Swartz, Tan

Accounta and vouchers of

the following named fidudar·
ies have been filed in the Pro·

beta Court, Meigs County.

Davis, Michael Honaker,

Ohio. for approval and settle·

Jeremy Wai!Dn, Lynn Kennedy,
~.es~er Lowery, JWitm Facemyer, 8lld Carrie Wells; llllrd
_., Carrie Hartsnn, Brandon
Smllh, Patrick Gerard, Jellery,
Fowler, ScoCtle SeDers, Heather
Wille, Jolin Owens, and Maithew
Williams; fourth row, Sally

Real E1tate General

·=·=i=c=,e=srr::::::=::=:;::;i
t;===:::::c=B=u=s=i::::;r.ne=s=s=:=S=e:::r:rv=

130 ACRES

Monday, May 19, 1986

ment:
CASE NO . 24897 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Amber Lohn, Executrix of
the Estate of Margaret E.
Houdeohelt. Deceased .
CASE NO . 24767 - Final

of the Ertete of RaymondW .

Beaver, Joe Davis, Ryu Cozart, Daniel Kulm, Ryan Bll'lldril, Sbaun Imboden, James
lllld!lon, and Aaron PanP,. J .K.
Deem was ~ when the

Larkins, Deceaaed.

CASE NO . 24422 - Final

••

and Distributive Account of

Bemerd V. Fultz, Executor

608
E . M•in

POMERO-Y, 0 .
992 -.22~0

NEW USTING - HARRISONVILLE - One and four lmths
acre wrth a 1973 mobi~ home
wrth room additXin. Comes -"th
lurntulf. Nice at $11,500.

plclure was taken.

and Distributive Account of
Frank W. Porter. Executor of
the Estate of Lois G. Bailey.

CASE NO . 26031 - Final
and Distributive Account of
Mary E. S~owalter, Admin·

Quilt club planning show May 22
plique" from 9 to noon, and
" Pictorial Quill s: Painting with
Fabric" from I to 4 p.m.
Barbara Caron will teach classes
on Sunday and Monday. Barbara is
an NQA certified teacher and thr
au tho r of "The Embellished Log
Ca bin." Barbara will teach her
machine method for " The Embellished Log Ca bin" on Sunday, from
I to 4 p.m . at the Pleasants County
Middle &amp; hooL Monday's classes
will b&lt;' " An Amish Wallhanglng"
also using a sewing machine. This
will be at the Middl e School from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Ali-day workshops are $~. Sunday's half-day workshop Is $10.
Prr-register to get the li st of
materials needed. Quilt show hours
are: Saturday. 9:30 a. m.-8 p.m .;
Sunday.
1-8 p.m. ; and Monday, 9:.10
posit lve reactor. should have a skin ·
a.m.4
p.m.
To register or for
IPSI at least every three or four
lnfonnatlon
and
tickets contact:
years forthelrpmtectlon, the Meigs
Zepora'
s
Quilt
Shop,
:l25 Set'Ond
County Tuberculosis Office rEpOrts.
Street
,
St.
Marys,
W.Va.
26170.
Joan Tewksbary, RN. county
tuberculosis nurse, will be giving
the skin tests and urged the
community residents Jo take adA picnic was planned for May 'l1
vantage of the free service.
at 6::.&gt; p.m. at the home of Kay
Walker when the Oho Eta Phi
Chapter cl'Bet a Sigma Phi Sorority
met Tuesday night at the Senior
Tuesday ra t~e r than the fourth Cltil_en s Center.
Thank yoo not es were !'E'ad from
Tuesday. The hours will remain the
same. nw. lmmunl7a tions are fm• Muriel Bradford for work on the
Meigs County fair premium adver of charge.
Another clinic on May Zl led tot he tl&lt;lng program, and from the XI
changP In this month 's srh!'l lule. Gamma Epsilon Chapter for gift s
Health Deparlrn&lt;•nt official' re- presented to them . It was noted that
commend that plll'r nt s prepare Lori Warner , Injured in an automotheir children for school well in bile accident, is now home from the
advance by gett ing the shot s now hospital.
rather than wailin g until later when · New pledges were nominated for
thf're will be bng walling periods the upcoming yea r. Refreshment s
due to I he numlx-r nEl'ding shors.
were served following the meeting.

CASE NO . 24782 - Fine!

living with an old order Amish
family In northern Indiana. " The
Old Order Amish" will be the
subj ect of a slldE"lecture Thursday
evening at 7: 30 p.m. at the
PIPasants Count y Middle &amp;hooL
Admission Is $2.50 at the doors. $2in
advance, and $1.50 for children .
Friday. Simms wUI teach a workshop from 9-3 p.m. on " Improving
Your Quilt Stitch : Say No to
Toe-Hookers!" This class wUI be at
Zepora's QuUt Shop In St. Marys.
She will be back at Pleasants
County Middle School on Saturday
morning teaching " Invisible Ap-

and Oit tributive Accou nt of
Janet E. Theiss. E•ecutrix of
t he Estete of E. J . Hill, De·
c eased.

CASE NO . 23966 - Finol
11nd Distributive Account of
Maty Lu Boggs. Administre·
trilt of the E1t11te of Violet
Ha rtinger , Deceased .
Unleu exceptions are filed
thereto, said accounts will be
for hearing before taid Coun
on the 27th dllly of J una.
1986. at whtch time said ac·
ooo nu will be eonlide red and
continued from day to dey un ·
til finalty disposed of.
Any person interested may
file writtfln exceptions to said
accou nts or to matters pet·
teining to the exacution of the
tru 111. not leu than five davs
prM&gt;r to the dllte set for hear·

Skin testing announced at station

Sorority meets

Immunization clinic slated
Parents and school officials are
advised that the usual ImmunizatiOn day of the Meigs Cclmty
Department of Health has been
changt'd from May 27 to May ~.
Usually "shot" days are held
every second and fourth Tuesday cl
tbe month from 9 to 11 a.m . and
from Ito 3 p.m. butthls monthonly,
shots wUI he gtven on the third

Book-it contest
•

in g.

Judge

AERIAL ACI'S - Hlgh above the sawdu"'t ring tiE
aerial Casadys Olrt wMh death In a daring display of
dangerous tricks without the use of any safety
devices. They arc one of 17 acts appearing in the all

new 19IMI edition of the Franzen Brotllln Cirrus which
will appear at General Hartinger Park on May23 with
performances at 2 and 4:30 p.m. The Middleport
Olamber ol Coounerce Is sporto;orlng tiE circus.

Common Pleas Court,
Probate Divitton,

Meigs County , Ohio

16!19 11c

MONDAY
Rl!l'LAND - Ru tland Garden
Club mN'ts Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Albert Woodard.

day. th mugh May 24; services 7:30
p.m . night ly; Merlin Teet s,
evangelist.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
Club m£'('1ing Monday at Riverboat
ltoom of Diamond Sav ings and
Loan Co., W. Main , Pomemy.
Soc ial hour, tradin g session, 7 p.m.
preceeds meeting. Following. coin
auction , refreshment s folloWing
meeting; anyone int erested Is
invilrd.

POMEROY - II Past Ma sters
nigh! observance Tuesday 7 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple; all past
masters and master ma sons Invited. Work In master mason
degree.
Alumni SJught
RAONE -

Racine Alumni

Mrs.JanlceCW'ry's second grade

was treated to a plZ7.a

party by

Pizza Hut as winners of the
"Book·lt" contest. The students
won the party by reading their
quota of four out of five months in
lhe contest. For each month those
who read their quota received a
free pel'90nal pan pizza. Cups,
plates and pop were donated for the
party by Mrs. Barbara Lawrenre,
Mrs. RocheUe Jenkins, and Mrs.
Laura Green.
I

Office 949·2438

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Complete Line of Vegotoblo &amp; Rower
Plant• -· Hariging Ba.ell, Gera ni..,s, Rose lushes, Dogwoo&lt;f, Rho·
dodendran &amp; Shrubbery.
SEASON SPECIAL
*7 50 PER FLAT

•BUUDOZJNG •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLJNE

SEWERS - BASEMENTS
WATER UNES - SEPTIC
TANKS - CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
BUILDING ·
- LAND

m
L£!

IF NO ANSWIR &lt;All:

367-7560 .

MIX OR MATCH

OPIN DAILY 9. 5; SUNDAY 1· S

Hubbard's Greemouse
SYRACUSE,

OHIO

PH . 992· 5776

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Carteton College Tru1tee1 ill
available for inspection any
time by any citizen who nt·
quflltl intpectton within 180

305 Jackson Au.
SMAU AlltMAL HOURI
Mon.·l'lod.·Thurs. l · l pm
TuH. 6:30-1; Fri. I -2 pm

Building. Third Streol. Syracue, or at the home of George

E. Holmen, Tr••urer; princi-

Soturdor

pal Manager. College Road.
Syracuse, Ohio.

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

Public Notice

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
304 675-1244

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On May t6, 1988. in tho
Meigt County Probate Court.
Case No. 26137, Kothy Am
Hysell. 16 Anne Street. Po·
meroy, Ohjg 45789 , waa IP·
pointed EJiecutriJC of the n·
tete of Harry C. Watlon, de·
ceased, late of 310 WetzgeU
Pomeroy.

Ohio Bands are free of state
income taxes for Ohio resident·.

Larry
Investment Broker

593·8805

SWENEY CARTWRIGHT &amp; CO.
INVESTMENT SECURITIES

MEMBER OF MIDWEST STOCK EXCHANGE

304-372-5i7_09

Roger Hysell
Garage . .

Meigs

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Coun1V. Ohio. 46789.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K . Nestelroad,

161 19, 26 , 16) 2 3tc

Cieri!

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED
Tronl T'- Ealttm
Unittd Statts
Need young depend·
able, energetic pao·
pie with truck driving
experience (chauffer
license helpful).

CONTACT: Fran111n ..os.
Circus At Gen. Hartinger
Park in Middleport on

Silt,"""'"'-

Fresh
fashions
in
SPRING • SUMMER
CATALOG .

Free panern oft eo. Send
$2 + 75¢ postage.
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.
1:14-14 Qulc:llltctinl OUitll
t!IJ.S- Fulllont&amp; :JI.5II

10-11 :30 am

LAIGI ANIMAL &amp;,
SUIGEIY BY APPT.

19

62.olllarttltmlltvd., Woocllldt,
NY 11317. Print ...... Addrlu,

1

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trusrntulon
PH. 992-5682

985-3561
All M1ku

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

992· 7013

992 ·5SS3
5-16-' 86-1 mo.

Individual to serv• the capacity as a full
time activities director I social service
dir_ector for a 25 bed SNF /ICF nursing
facility . Experience is preferred. If
intertsled please pick up application at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 11 Slf2 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Oh.
Equal Employment Opportunity

9

2lS Mill St., Middloporl
104 Mulberry A'f., Pomeroy

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Jim Mink ChtN .·Oicfllnc .
Bill Gene John10n
6,4-44&amp; -3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer u..d carl . Smhh
Buick -Ponti.c, 1911 Eestem

TOGETHER!

Ave .. Gallipolis. C1ll 61 •·4ol6·

•LOCAI LA80R

2282

*Metal lktildings

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

•Pole

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Typea
Worked in home area

*Storage illil~np

20 years
" Free Estimates"

W1nted junk autos . Cell 814·
388-9303 .

W1nted to buy female toy bl.ck
poodle. Call afttf 5, 81•· 2&amp;6·

Buil~ll(l

1989.

Buying d1ity gold , lilv• coins,
rings, jewelry, llteJiing were , old
coins, lug• cunenc;y. Top pricn . Ed . Burket1 Barber Shop,
2nd. A111. Middl11p0rt, Oh. 814f

•AU SillS IVAILABL£

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

&lt;AU COllECT:

16141 843·5425

5-t2-' 86-2 mo.

TREN&lt;H~G

SERVICE

Rt. 4, Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

Ph 1614) 992 -2834.
992-8704
FREE ESTIMATES
5·7·2 mo.

WATER
WELLS

992 -347! .

Phone

Em~ l oyme111

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

11

Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING.
SURVIVAL and
VARIETY ITEMS

NEW HOMES ,
ROOFS, DECKS ,
ELECTRICAL 8o
PLUMBING

PH. 742-2306

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W.VA.

or 742-3171

304-773-5222

R1pa Needed for busln ... ac..
counts. Full -time , UO.OOO . o
180. 000· Part · Time. •12,000·'
118,000. No selling. r~a(
buain•s. Set your own hours.'TJiin ing prov'ded . Cell 1 ·812 · ~
938 -6870. M ·F. 81m to !Spm
(Centfll St111d1rd Timel.
Temporery telephone ni• peo · ·
P•· Cell 614·468· 3730 be·
tween 6 &amp;. 9 on Thura.
:

5-15-'86-1 mo.

5-19-'86'- 1 mo.

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Telephone 10licitors. Call 8t444e -8280. EOE -M -F-H .

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

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window s
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

ACCENT

Ntw LCKati.m:
1bl North lee ot1d
Middl•port, Ohio 45160

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C1rry Fi1h ing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

"FREI ISTtMATEI"

IUltNill PHONE
(o141 992-0llO
RISIOINCI PHON!
(0141 992 -7754

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 99n772

In

Retell Security in Local Store. ··
Store D1tecdve, Start at 13.15 : .
p• hour, Trelning Program a..
Equlprr.nt lnctuded . Stnd blc6t· ~
ground informetion w -pnone • .
No. ToFtahersligWhMINo. 47 , • 1
1135 U.S. 23 Soutn. Delaware, : :
On 43015, Ann : Mille Froncko· ,,
Willi , Dist. L.P. Mgt . No phone .
calli pte111.

FENCE COMPANY

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

I'H. '992-6931
5 Call
742·2027

After

~1lgQ~

--=------ ·

~-~;r/JJM~y -

EXPERIENCED DECK HANDS •

lntlf'etted in full time employ- •
ment, IUbmitt appJicetlon to
M· G TRANSPORT SERVICES

"Free Eslimates"

287 Upper Rr.ter Rd .. Gallipolil,
on . 01' &amp;1.4· 448 -21 e1 .

Installation Available
4/ 1 n

11n

FOI \T.·f 1\
/if.'' T- Il R.·l \ T

Lady to llay with elderly IMt,
weekends. Call B1o6· 4·18· 109•
or 81 4 · 448· 3870 .

located in the
Saddtobrook Inn
Rt 62 .

e m oiM IOI.llh O!

Hoe PomMov · M uon Bndg e

Ctloon hom 3 Meah-

H~~m ,

RESIDENTIAL

COMMERCIAL

AGRICULTURAL

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

SUNDAY BUFFET - '4. 9S
I hlD o.m. Ia 2,00 p.m
Childrtn 12 I Undu -1!1 Pri'f

Service

5 &amp; Undtr fi £I
Our

"' II W'hh~

WltOU ArPll Plll- '4.50

5-5-' 86-1 ...

•Commercial Container

CALL 667-3271
Co111p111 the Quality

CALL 992·3194

Y~-~ -'6Uf mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

REPAIRS
PJpdata Your Syttema Now

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

992-6

518- t mo.

3 Announcements

SWEEPER and Iewing mach ine

repeir. perts. and suppli81 . Picll
up 1nd ct.livery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one nelf mile up
Qeorget Creek Rd . C~ll 614·
448 -0294.
NOAH'S ARK ANIMAL PARK .
scnooli. churcn... C0!111111Y

EASY

446 - 1600.

picn ics. birthd•y p.t~rties ~nd
family reunions. Csll 81 4 · 384·
2108 or 1·800· 282 · 2187.

4

Giveaway

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrlc•l
work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 ·b21S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
~ 15 -'86-lc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authoriud Jolin Dttre,
Ntw Holland, lu1h Hog
farm Equipment

Dtalt;

F1r111 Equlp1111111

Put• &amp; Serwlee

1-3-'86 tic

Mother cat with 4 lllnent,
Neignborhood Rd . Cell 814·

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We 'Hert It Fill Tl11t
Sh•~ Ttthllelu
•• Dvtr

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985·3307
4/1/ tfn

•viNYL SIDING

"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BlOWN IN
INSUlA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-280 I
or 949-2860
No Sunday Colis
3/11 / tfn

Howard

L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
ar 949-2168

2-17 -B6-tln

448-7027

7 cute kittens, mala • t.malt.
tong heirld . Call 814 · 268·

Experienced Service in
Microwave Ovens.
Ra11es. Air
Conditioners,

Refrigerators, Washers
&amp; Dryers. TVs &amp;

Satellite Systems.
24 Hr. lmwgon&lt;y Servk1

949-2145
5-tl-lmo.

WORKI

Government Jobs. 116,0.0 t59. 2JO·yf . Now Hiring. Cell
t -906· 687·6000 Ext R-9806
for a.mtnt t.deralllat .
~
In Middleport . Submit retumeof

w.-

pest ,iob t ltperience . .. ,.,. hi,ltory . education. and r.terencea .
Send to P.O Box 729 S. A .H :
D•Uev Sentinel 111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Otlio.

FrM ldtten, tit0t1 haired , grey &amp;
whhe femtle, 7 weeks old. Ctll

General office cleaning for to cat
physicien ' s office. Send fMUI'M
to the Da ily S811tinel box 129 SC
Po meroy, OH.

1793.

F.,,,,

10
old puppy,
brown • b4tck, thon haired . CaM
6t4·448·8080 ......

814 -448 -2393.

Elgnt GHSe to gtllei'Wey . Call
e14-985-3818 .

2 c:ute pttvful kitt1n1 . Black with
long heir. Cell 814· 742 · 31715 .

Blut-wnitepetM.IIt, caga, some
food &amp; acc•sori ... 30•· 8715 1433 atter 1 p. m.

APPLIANCE REP AIR

ASSEMBLY

17t4 .00 per 100. Ou1r1nte,d..
l)tyrr.nt . No 111... DetdtSend ltltmp.t .,nfope: Elen·
715 . 3418 Entlfprise, Ft .
Plefce. Fl. 33482 .
'

Position 1\'eillblelor retail clertc

Tamt blleiberry plants to givll·
way. Call 814-9"9· 2272 .

A/C

1

Vending Hoat•s· We ara ..,
pending our 81fYICM. Appllc•
tklns are being · accapud for '
pert· time, full·tlm• emplo.y .
ment . Apply in person between
2·15 p.m. Monday or Tuetdey at
Laughlin Vanding · 44 Stata St,
Galllpollt , OH .
.
Mature non -amoldng adult to
care for to ddllf' 6 Intent in our
home. Afternoon• &amp; ev~nlngs .
Must be dependable. Call &amp;U- ,

10-8-tlc

- Addons and remodeling
- RGOfing end gutter work

T1nni1 Instructor nMded, 19
hrs . per week. Juna end July,
Apply in perwon G•llipolla R'e · .
crNtKm Dept., 1518 Second
Ave .• Glllipolis before May 23.
E.O .E .

Service Available•

=--=--------:--

&amp;

CARPENTER
SERVICE

No experilflte- necMSiry . Mua\
be available for lmmedi1te emt
ployment. Comp'"'Y ben.titt,'
major medicel ben.fit1. C1R
Mon . &amp; Tu111 . 101m· 3pm . Ctlt,
614-446 -3687 .

Announce me nIs

SATELLITE
SALES

YOUNG'S

HELP WANTED

Servicing Middleport.
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area

Custom Design

BeFore

Blbylit1er full to p1rt time. 2
children. fureka Sllf Rl. erN.
Plea11 call W.:ln•day May 21
after 10 :00AM , 814·258 -t?a.·.'

MANLEYS
TRASH
SERVICE

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

Chicken ot loktd Sttak
Stmd with ~ ngttobln,
10lad, dtuut an4 drink .

1114-tlc

Help Wanted

Caret•ker to live-in 1p1rtmen(
CD"lll•x . Ca ll 304-67&amp; -510•. ,

MILLER
SERVICE

•

H4 · 1111o

1304) 71:1-5517 01 (304) 89).3)86

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUal ON
Milo B. Huhhhon
Contractor

J/ 5/ 86/ lln

EL~CTRIC

.·-

Uled Cllfl

3/2/ rtn

•LOCAllY OWNEO

Wanted To Buy

W1 pay cash for late mod•l cl ..n

992-3345

UT'S BUILD UP

4 5-llc

ftndm 173·101..........140
Doors (7l·IS ) ............. 110
Frot1t lumptrs .............170
FOIID TRUCKS
fendm (73·791 ......... .140
Doors 173·791 .......... S100
Rod. Suppors ............. 11 I 0
Grill Shtll .................. l1t0
WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

Stationery, Magnetic

Sign1, Rubber ltampo,
lusiness Forms,
Copy SenKes, ftc.

Serv1ce s

PARTS and SERVICE

ow o 1g pte t
CHEY TRUCKS

Gallipoli1 Flea Market. loc.t;a
Atl. 35 &amp; 180 . Our Third y..,l
0pltf'l WednMdey, Friday, Sa1liJ'•
day, Sundey .
~ ~

Wedding
and Graduation

furniture,

EUGENE LONG

&lt;

&amp; Vicinity

.. ..............................,..!•

Pws, Offi&lt;e lupp6n &amp;

992· 2196
Middleport Ohio
1-13-lfc

....

Yard Sale

- ---- GiiiiTporrs - --·:

FOI All y, ... PIIIIHrl Nllil

PAT HILL FORD

Ph.

7

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

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

-7-

Hobson Rd., Middleport

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Rengea
•Rflfrigerators
•Dr;ers •Freezers

NEEDED

$3.25 lor each patteon.
Add 75e each paMern lor
postage, handling.

WIJJAMS

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

P A T T E R N S J!:::::::;::~~:;:;.:..:::::;,a
11 Help Wanted

4948-So« bloused top
and pull-on pants are the
most comfortable combinatjpn any day. Two
steeve versions. Misses
Sizes 6 to 20.

OOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER , SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMEI'IT,
HOME FOOTERS ,
OUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

Ph. 992-5006
or 742-3147

Trench ing of Any Type
Backhoe Serv ice
Plumbing Service
Custom We lding
Lowboy Hauling
Saptic Svstems
licensed &amp; Bonded

3-14-tfc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

5·5-1 mo. pd .

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

or 992-7121

Darwin, Ohio

Exempt From
Federal Taxes

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

FREE ESTIMATES

367 ·7671

CHESHIRE, OHIO

TOWN &amp; CC)IINJRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual retum of the

PATTERN

tfn

5-19·'86·tfn

Public Notice

lip.

Day or Night

DRILLED &amp;
SERVICED

IEIIIOI

ANNE ADAMS

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

- Emergency 949·2516

Jean Trussell ..... 949-1660
Dottie Turner .. ... 991-5691

The Dailv Sentinel

MUNICIPAL BONDS

d the Syracuse Elemetnary School

RACINE, OHIO

991-6191

-IIIII ."., .-

PAGEVILLE - Revival, Pageville F'reewll l Baptl' t Church Mon-

NO SUNDAY CAllS

Henry E. Cleland , Jr.

Send to:
Anne Mn• Plftef'ftl,

Banquet and Da nee Is May 24, 6
p.m . at South&lt;'rn High SchooL
Honored cl asses arr 1921. 1926, 19:!1.
1936, 1941,1946, 1951, 19:&gt;), 1961, 19t&lt;i,
1971, 1976, 198t and 191'16.
Mu sic by C'ro.,swinds. tickets
ava ilable from Home Nat iona l
Bank, Raein Village Cut Rate. New
York Clo t hi n~ . Tickets ca n be
reserved at tlx· door by calling
&amp;&gt;tty Wagnrr. '11!1·2870; Dale Hart,
949-2656; Tim Thoren, !!49-22.'i0; or
Joyce Quillen. !&gt;t9-2695. Tickets ar c
$7 for dinner and $.'i for danc"C.

•Industrial

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

MIDDLEPORT - N1ce~ 1em1&gt;
deled ~ ~ ~oryoome o naqUiet
street Many leatures must be
seen $24.900

Sat. May 24.

Community calendar/ area happenings

wmners

'

Robert E. Suck

•Commercial

or 949-2860
4-16 -' ~

REEDSVILLE - Country estate
and a rabM hunte1 paradse
Nice 3 bedroom ranch type
rome wrth a full basement
Over 26 acres ot ground pt.ls
'1ree" gas. $54,900.

11

CUSTOM BUILT
, HOMES &amp; GARAG£S

p.,lot•lca word. Aow.,d . Coli

lott. Puppy, bltck labldor .. .,
wM1t1 old. Lak in Are•, 304 -871;
2088.
-

985-3937

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PH. 949-2801

•Residential

SlATE ROUTE 7 - Appio1 2
ac1es w1th a mce b~ yard,
garden a~ea , lrurt hees and a
I 1\ st~ home .,th 3
bedrooms, fam 1iy room, pretty
f irep~ce, full basement,and an
eqUipped krtchen. $27,900.

Street.

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

"At Reasonable Prices"

CASE NO. 16606 - Twonty.Sixth Current Account of
The
Huntington
NetKlnal
Bank, Fiduciary for the Estate
of Thom11 A . May, Deceeed

-z

8-tl tin

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

RACINE - Have you been
looking lor aCieage wrth a ni:e
house? Th~ 3-4 bedroom ranch
is r~ht for you and your tamily.
4.66 aCie lot, lull basement,
fin5hed family room. mce
YoOrksrop. eiectr~ 00 !'eat
$37,!XXJ.

(6)

USA M. KOCH, M.S.

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

Holzer lwtween periling lot &amp;

814-378-2288.

GOlD COINS
BASEBAll CAIDS
MOTHER'S DAY &amp;
GRADUAnON
I 01. SILVER BAIS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES
Buying Gold
&amp; Silver

:z: licensed Clinical Audiologist

'JN&lt;LUDIS PAINT
&amp; LABOR

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC,-Inc.

Beautdul brick ranch style
home w1th lull basemmt All in
great condrt~n . 3 bedrooms, 2
baths. You must see tl'e cherry
klchen cabinets and other
features, like tl'e woodbumilg
firep~ce '" the rec. 1oom.
Garage and nice lot $59,!ll0.

.

~

992-3361

RT. 7BAUM SUB. -!'lire~~.

&amp;

-a:

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - One lklor plan ranch
wrth 3 bedrooms, ~rge liv~g
room, ga1age, carpm1, and
othe~ tealures. Plus a 3 room
rental wrth a $200 monthly
rent $55,!XXJ.

istratrix of the Estate of
P~ilip Powell, Deceased.

The Olive Township Fire Depart menl's Ladles Auxiliary is sponsorIng a community skin testing clinic
to be held from 4:30 to 6::.&gt; p.m.
Monday at the fire station.
All those needing skln tests for
food service or for kindergarten
should report to the lire station.
Everyone, unless they are a known

$9 5

CLC COINS

FREE HEARING T£STS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

of 1he E11110 of Ellt L. Ebero- days after the dlte of this no·
bech, Deceased.
tice at the SyrKuM Municiplll

CASE NO . 24809 - Final

Pleasant County QuUt Club wUJ
have It's eighth annual quilt show
and sale May 22·26. at the Pleasants
County Middle School, &amp;&gt;lrnont ,
W.Va. The public Is invited to enter
quilts by bringing them to the
school Friday evening between 5
and 8. Quilts can be picked up
Monday at 5 p.m.
A sUver tray will be awarded for
thi&gt; quUt voted " People's Choice".
This year's theme is scrap quilts.
Workshops wUI be held Friday
through Monday. Teachers will be
Ami Simms, from Flint, Mich.. and
Barbara Caron from Morgantown.
Ami Simms learnro to quut while

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNI~G &amp; .SETUP
.. Sp,ltrg Sp1~lel

and Distributive Account of
Nancy J . Lark ins, Executri•

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

0111 Plents. 304·87&amp; · 3020.
Fem•le ctt speyed and de·
clawed , long heir, grey color.
Must be kept Inside. 304· 8715 ·

. . 42.

Beegle btn.tt, male, t 'h VHrt.
to good home. 304· 882· 36150.
Khtena, 2 meiMII'Id 2 '*maltl. 3
wtth lone nelr, 71 &amp; McCoUou(lfl

Rood , 304-87&amp;- 1312.

Kltttnt. tong and lhort hlr,
....... 304-17&amp;-71&gt;4&amp; '

AVON , 3 ~en ttnltorln. Call
304-876 -1429 .
' '

·-

20 people nMded . Summer
••'• promotions. Gu~tant~
•vaillble. Worklboolc Ch!ld crlft.t
304-882 -24 8! .
•
E xp.,ien01d eltclronic In llhop
repairman, full btn.tita, day
lhlft, Mondey -Fridey, kJcttad in
Potnt Pl1111nt 1111. Write Box
S · Hi , Pt. Ph. R1glater. Box.
237,Point PIMSint. W. Va .•
2&amp;&amp;60.
REPS NEEDED. for busln ...
tccountt. Full Time IBD.OOO·

1

180.000: Plrt·tlme •12,000 118.000; no selling. repeat '
busln•s. Sfl'l your own

twlur'1. 1 ~.

Tr1ln lng provided. Call: 1 · 612 1 '
938· 6870, M-F, 8am to !Spm ~
(Centr•l Standard Time).

1

ftd•ll. State .net CMI llfViol - •
Jobt now lvalllbleln your ~r-....

'

FOJ lnform~~tlon cell !80111&lt;14, :•
9&amp;33 Copt . 1201 .
•'

•

�Page
11

8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

H elp Wanted

Someone to st•v w•th and care
for elderly lady 304-676 -3470
01' 675 5243

12

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Apartment
for Rent

Mlddltpor1 2 br furnilhed apt
for rent, alao 2 room tfftclencv
apt 304 -882 -2&amp;8&amp;

Situations
Wanted

45

Wtll do All types masonry wortt
Bnck, block , stone and concrete
Free e1111mates Ca ll 614 7 42
2290 or 304 773 597 1

Monday, May 19. 1986

Middleport, Ohio
54

0158.

pu,.

Fe 11 ce swmgs toys pl eyiTUih ts

hot meals Cllll 6, 4 446 747 5
to r t he bost cerevour ctuld could
For Sllle-bleck mushroom dt rt
se nd &amp; {1ravel stone , fill dt r1
DeliVered Don s lends cepe Ser
~t~ ce

Call 514 445 9646

Wtll do baby atttlng tn my ho me

c11ll 304-675 -3580 after 6 00

"Well, we've made a lot of

money ... uh ... PROGRESS the
last three hours!"

Trailer lott aewer and water·
furntthed. amall children accepted, At 1 LocuatRd , back of
K &amp; K, 304-876-1076

PM

Financial
21

Busmess
Opportumty

• NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO '" commends t~utt you
do bustness wnh people you
know, end NOT to send mon8'(
through the met/ unttl you hBVe
mvesflgatfld the o Henng
Gar ryout, lounge , St h1gt1wey ,
good locatton Senout mqUIU!II
tidy C11tl b8tw8en Bam &amp; 9am
614 367 0488
Stat10n ful ly equ1pped Beauty
Shop Georoes Creek Rd Op portunity to be your OONn bost
Cell eventng 6 14-446 -7478
Estebhs h&amp;d and growmg flor11t
ahop for sale m Mason , W V
Re ason for IBII1ng II III hBIIIth If
genUinely 1nter8sted call. 304·
773 -5576 o r 304 n3 6631
atter 5 30 pm

31

s, .... Middleport. Oh•o Call

41

Hous8 tor 1111 1n Ch ..tlll' Oh10
7 roo ma , ba1ement. g&amp;rege, on
one-tenth of an ecre Wllk.ng
d11tance of school. sto re f~re
house e26 600 Cell 614 986
3671

Rent lease, land contrect, 3br't·
Rodney Village II , 2 br' a-Eureke;
3bf Ev1ns H11ghte, Depoah &amp;
referencn requtred Blackburn
Realty 81 4-•48-0008

614 992 5714

Galltpohs Ferry 3 b&amp;droom
ranch . all alec . 2 loti. cantril a1r
large deck . stove, rff and
dllhwaaher, •"•chad gerage. 8
yrs old , 304-675 -2932

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 M1
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35
PHONE 614 -446 7274
14lll 70 FestiVe! 2 bdr 2 full
bethl, km of closets. uttlltV
ruom. AC Call 614 -446 -6241
111nyt1me

For s.!lle or leall 1n Middleport.
Oh•o Bar wrth 0 5 l rcenu.
Rest wnh 0 -3 hcense rental
property bu11nau front Buy 0t MobHe home sale Comer Peters
Jaue 2 or mo re o r all of above Bran ch·lemon H1ll off BladenTerms ava~lab l e Phone 614 - MercervllleRd CrownCity, Oh
992-62 17 Olf 6~ 4-992 -7521 for
RppOintment No 1n fo grven 72 Frtedom 1 4lll70, 3 bdr ,
partly r~~~modeled , eqUipped for
ovet phon e
woodburner. porch &amp; undMpln
ntng, 84,600 Cell 614 379

23

Professiona l
Services

PIANO TUNING AN D REPAIR .
red • ~covet your p1ano' s beautiful
to ne. cell today Wards Key
board. 304 -675 -5500 01 675 3824

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

2808

1977 Holley P1rk 12lll80 ~~try
good cond Pertly turnt1hed, CA
8t other extraa. t7.500 Call

Government Homes from $1 (U
Also delinquent tax
1 opa1r)
property Ca ll 1-806-687 6000
EICt GH -9806 far mfor mation
9 room. 2 baths Ca n be made
rnt o duplex Located on Founh
and Palmer in M1ddleport Close
to schools and 1hoppmg Asktng
price s24 000 Own• w1ll sell
on 11nd contract Call 614 -6925668 atter 4 pm
412 Sprtng Ave 3 4 bdrm . 2
be , built 1n kuchen w yr round
g rlll. mtcrowave end dts ·
!'!washer WBFP 1n l.v rm. gar
and bsmt f-43 ,000 Very n•ca!
Call collect to see 1 61 4-866070 1 Slane Rulty
4 bed room home on 7 acr&amp;a Can
nogot11te Call 614 -986 -4392
3 bedroom. nBWiy redecorated.
alummum !lldtng, large carport
geraga , on lA ecre lot in Ch11ter
One fourth m•le on 248 off Rt
1 814 - ~85 · 4368
3 bedroom , lg kitchen, heat
pump a~r con d carpeted gar age Syrac ulfl 614 992 3402
aflfll 5 pm
6 roo m ~ousfl'" M1ddleport 3
bedroom, 1 'h baths fully carpet ltd , on level lo t 614 992

3510
By owner 493 Grent St.
Mid dlepo rt
3 bedrooms , 2
betht, end central Iff 6 years
old Extra mea w1 th I.IJrge lot
814 423 9181
Roduced fo r qu1 ck ule Cute 3
bedroom ho use viny ltt l tdmg 1
car gara ge lo t eted on 1 acre,
near Tuppers Plams S39,600
can 614 - 667 - 3378 efter
4 OOpm
Ou ahty , large two bedroom
home on ct10tce lerge lot in
Sv racuJB Recently remodeled,
new complete ~ltchen end
laundry 614 -992 -632 4

F~rat

Ave . 5 rooms &amp; bath.

Call 614-448 -39415 after 4PM
New Haven arae, 3 bedroom
home If interested cell304-8822945

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Fully furm1hed. AC . all utlltiiJI
pe1d , edults only Cell 814 4484110 or 614-448 -2003
Unfurnished 1 2K50, Wlth&amp;r·
dryer hook up 1 mi . on Gtorgee
CrNk Ad Call 614-448-4369
or J0• -876 -9760

2 bedroom trailer. partly furntthed Trailer spac" Send H1ll
Road convllftlll'lt to schools,
1tore and ho1p1tal Chy aewer
evtlllble Inquire Routae, 3048715-4800 betwten 9 00 end
4 00 week days

1980 liberty 1 4JII64, 2 bedroom, unfum1ahed, v1nyl under·
pinning mcluded Must ull Call

By owner- small 2 b&amp;droom
h()me wtt~ 'h acre h•ll••delot and
outbui ld ing 5 m1111 south of
Galllpohs Kuner R•dge Rd Fir1t
house on ng ht ftom At 219
81 4000 Peyt4,000downend
ower w1ll help finance balan ce
Call 614 446 2917

928

For tela 1974 Freedom mobile
home 12.1185. re'fng . atov1, new
c&amp;rpeting underpinning. ICerrHarrllburg Rd.. 86.600. Cell
614 -446 -4410 or 614 -286 -

We bUi lt b•g 4 bdr , Eerly
Ameucan ho mes ~ 18 995 on
your lot See our new model
home Ca ll6148867311

3-4 bdr carpMed . remodeled,
n1ce. nfi'W 11dmg bnement 'h
acre S22 500 Call 614-446
20 3 4 after BPM

Nu:e 3 bdr , full bMement, CA,
fenced yard Rt 141 , •32&amp; plua
dep Cell 614-852-2818 eftar6

Two bedroom trlller wtth ell
pendo lrvlnlil room on large ltvel
lot 1n Middleport Near ator•
and achoota No pets Call
1514· 992-2101 t115 ·oo pm and
614 -992-2319 •ft• 5 00 pm

Vmdale 12~~t63 completely fur
n11hed , t!i ,OOO Ctll eve 614·
446-1437 or 614· 446 -9286

30 acre, 3 bedroom house.
tobacco bue. Mercerv•lle Call
614 256 -9350

Nice 3 bdr , full bMemertt, CA,
fenced yard, Rt 141 , 132&amp; plut
dep Ceii614-B62· 2818 efter&amp;

l•ke new, 1983 14x70 Manlson
Mob1le home, 3 bdr , 2 full bath,
tot1l ~ec com11 with ltorage
bldg pnvtcv fence, AC, unfurmshed . completely set up,
S1 3.400 Cllll14-24&amp;-9145

m• sou th of GalltpOIIS, S29 900
Call days 6 14-446 -1615 or
evanmgs 614 446 -6222

One yur o ld 3 bdr ranch 1n
country very pnvate No credit
checks , no clos•ng costa Simply
pu t S5 000 down &amp; 1111uma
payment s of 139B 80 Pet' month
at 10% f•~~tedAPR Ca llafter5pm
614 367 -7507

Fum11hed houll, 2 bdr., t195
131 rear 4th Ave, Gellipolll
Call .\46-441&amp; after 7pm

81 4·245·5120

4 bAd room house. hrf!J)Iace, 3

Walk to tow n , schoo ls,
c hurches . library, one t tory, 2
attr!IC! IvB bll th formal
bdr
dmmgroom good carpeting ,
larg e kttchen , good gas furnace,
st orm wm dows Call 614 -446
0530

Houses for Rent

2 It 3 bdr mob•le hom11 AC ,
cebla TV BullVille Rd Cell
614-446 -0527 after 3pm

8878

1 ,,, story 4-5 bdf , 2 b111th1 FP
full buement 14 ~e20 butld~ng,
w•t h garage on 8 1 acres
Located •n A10 Grande Call
614 245 51971!ftfK500PM

Rent als

Homes for Sale

1 room house 1 1/t bath. 4
b&amp;droo m garage 770 Ath

44

304· 773-5873
Mobile home for aele 14:c70
1 970 3 bfw:troom, 11!J bath. total
electrrc 18500 Call 814 247
367 6
1968 Schuh 2 bedroom tre•l•.
exceptlonelly good condtt•on,
furn11hed, ptus miCfOWIVI, a~r
cond•tionltf', storm windows,
metal outbuilding. priced to sell

14500 Coli 814·992·6587
MOBILE HOMES MO\IED m aurad, ruson8ble f'lltet. Call

304·578· 2338
1972 Schultz, 121170 lilt out.
stove and refrlljJetetor. furn iture
negotiable See bV IPPOintment
only . 304-876· 71 17

1973 KlfkwOOd dOuble Wld8
w1th 11nd, exc cond, ntct erte
Gelhpolia Ferry, for more Infor mation, 30•-676 -3087
1983 Knoolwood. 3 bedroom
tralh!t'. assume loan w1th e low
dOWin payment, 304-875-5208
1970 12•50 treiler and htlf
acre lot. 11h car garava 111nd
buildmljJ Gtll1polis Ferry , clo111
to Stauf1tt, good cond, will tell
sepertte. 304 676 -6 171 or
876 - 370~

1973 Skyline 12•80 2 br. ell
fllec , built in •ltchen penltUy
turn11hed N..,., undttptnn1ng It
stepa 14900 firm 1977 Monte
Carlo needs work. good body

0400 304·882·2888

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equel Houetng Opportumtv) monthly ret'lt 1t1rta It
t176 for 1 bedroom and t212
lor 2 bedroom, depoak t200,
located near Sprtng Valley Plaza
end Foodland. pool and Cable TV
evaileble. OffiCI hourt II PDIII
ble 10 am to 4 pm and 7 pm to 9
pm Monday-Fridey, Cell 814448 2745 or l..ve m..1101N•cely furn11ned mobile home.
eff ept . central air end heet in
c1ty, adults only Call814 446·

0338

2 bdr ut1ht1H p1rtialty furn .
S175 mo Call 304 676 -&amp;288
or 304-676 -6104
New 1 bedroom apertment Cell

614 448 0390
Delu11 1 bdr , 2 car ljJirage 800
Block 1st , Gallipolll No peia.
no Children. ref
614· 268 -1629

Farms for Sale

68 Acrel Two ttory rettored
ho me fuel 011 furnace wood·
burner. •tone flreplw:t. large
bam gra1n1ry , m1lk houu, work
shop and other buildings Rurel
water Betutlful tethng overlooking ReccoonCrtH At 160
1n E wlngton Shown by appointment only Caii&amp;U-388-851 0
M1ni Farm on McCumber Rold
6 ecr• 3 bedroom house Reel
n1 ca Call 814-992 -2143 After
6 00 cell 614 -992 6373
7 acrea , 2 bedroom 12~~t85 tot1l
alectric mobile home. b1rn,
pesture. TPC water. Quiet location '" Chester area Only
815,000 Wi!lnllteprat~ Call

61 4·986·3926

2 bdr unfurnithad apt , except
for re1ng a. range Sec. dtp rtQ

Coli 614 -448-4303

2 bdr ept , downtown , 1210
Without ut1ht111. 8330 with
utll •t•ll Deposit required . Clll
614 -446 -2129 8 OOam · 8pm
Furn . aptt 1 &amp; 2 bdr 1236 &amp;
1260, Ulllltl" pd 701 4th
Gtll•poha Call 446-4416 aftll'
Furn apts 1 bdr 12215 utilhiN
p11d 607 2nd Ave Gallipolis
Cell 448 -4416 1fler 7pm
1 bedroom ept for rent B111c
rent starts 8218 1 month that
lnclud.. ell uttl•tlet Depoalt
required of 8200 Contact VII lege Menor AP1 Middleport
61 · -992-ns7 Equal Housing
Opportunity
F.Jt rent 2 bedroom furni1hld
apt Adults only Cell 614 -992-

2749
4 room end bath Unfurnish.ct.
No peta Cell 614 -949-22153
Myrtle Beach Condo Rente! 2
bedrooma, 2 baths, sleept 8
Furniahed complete wtth lln1111
Tennts courte, indoor-outdoor
pools. Hun .. Jttam room 200
yds hom beach No plrta Phone

8t4· 423·8817

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

3 rooms, furnished No pets Call

814·948·2263
Wooded lot · electr ic- water
bathhoute· boat dod&amp; Nothing
down t60 rno Big Foot Park, Rt..
7, 6 mil II belowGtlllpolia, crou
Raccoo n Cr•k follow ligns
Farm &amp; peature lend for rent

Ctll 814·448 ·0061
1-6 acrH,partially wooded Iota
near approved eub-dNition T P.
end C. weter end epproved ro8d
to each lot Reuonabty priced.
will finance wfth 10 percent
down Clll 814 985 3694
16'h acr11, ~t . 2. PointP11111nt,
6 miles from town , 116.000.00

304·876·3424

20 acras wooded lend, fi to 1
ecret meadow. 304-87&amp;·8899,

9 00 to 10 00 PM

4 room ~ 'h beth 1n country Clll

814·892·3312
APARTMENTS. mobile homu.
houe• . P1. PINientend Glll lpolis 114-441 -8221
APARTM~NT

FOR RENT Now

1ccepting eppliceUons for rental
epertmenta In M..on Apt• Limfted Two bedroom epta et
8198.00 p• month. Atntll
ret" ml'f' be h!Qh• depending
on Income Houalng will be
evelleble to each eppllcent ,..
gwctt•• of tht+r rece. color.
religion. 11111 or nltUrel origin,
lnt~r.. ted eppUcentt ahoukt cell
30•· 773·101 1 or cont1ct De·
n111 StrtMb or Wltttt Jultlcset
tha Meln Office, 1171 Brice
Aoed, Aeynoldtburg , Ohio

43089

01' """

Merchandise
51

Hous11hold Goods

814-983·4514.

Log house16~~t20 with ef..,., log1
tn111ing . Call614·448·4344
Good used b~rgein colorTV 't for
ule Cell814· t48-1149
- - - - -- - - - Refrigerator, wasl1er a. drver.
twinbed, ch•t. dreaaer, ba·
bybed. car tMI, Teppan blult-ln
dlshWIIher Call 814· 4•8·
3224
2 horsepower Hobert grindlf.
nM head assembly. eM . cond .
Call 814-387-0493 efter 6.
Lifetime concrete culver11, 12
mdl to 36 Inch, 1n stock Larger
sizn avallebla. up 10 6 ft Cell
614-992 - 2834 or 614-992·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ol111e St, Gelhpoht . New &amp; used 8704
wood-COIIItov•. 8 pc wood LR
sulla 1399, bunk beds t199. Newly painted N8 tractor for
antron rechnen t99 , new &amp; eala New tlfes 6 ft grader
ueld bedroom IUitll, ranges. blade Tre1ler for tale. Will trade
wringer weahere. &amp;. lhoH . New for Chevy or GMC Trudl Call
hvingroom au•t•• t199-tl599. 1 _
e_t4_·_9_8_5_·4_3_9_2_ _ _ __
lamps, alto buying coal &amp; WDod
Wards 21 cu tt frost free
stove• Cell 114-446 -3169
upr~ght freerer UOO Hobart
meet gMder t350 Call 81ol742 2877
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofaa and chllrt pr1ced from I - - - - , . . - - - - - ,285 to 1896 Tables, S60 and Half Price! Flaatlmg enow algna
~ to •1 26 H•de-a -beda.t390
$299lltghted. non -arrow t2791
and up to Ui60 , sofa beda Non -lighted t239 ! Free lett.-el
Only few left, See locally
t146, Recllnen, t2 25 10 1-800-423-0163 anytime
t376 lampe from *28 to
1126. pc, dlnettu from • 109
For nle Avon doll decanter
to 436 7 pe 11 891Nld up Wood
table with stx chairs t286 10 collect•on W1ll sell by group or
t746 DHit t125 up to tJ75
by Unit 614· 992· 3228
Hutches. 1560 Bunk bed com
8 h spun alum Htelhte d1ah .
plata w1th mettre11ea. 8276
100 percent LNA, Ducel11 00
end up to 1396 Baby bed1
$110 Mattreuet or box racelver-ttereo M'ld remote. len
than year okl W1ll trlde for
apnngs. full or tw1n. f63 . ftrm
t73 end $83 . Queen sets, ca!;nper 614 -nJ -6847
8226 Bed frames. 120 and
Rllilroadtiea Bln~e10•nx9tt 8
$25 . , 0 gun - Gun cabinets
t360 Gil or electriC rangH tn 18 00 per 111 delrvered Call
8111 Slack at 992 -2269.
t376 Baby mattresses, 836 •
t45, bed fram .. 120. &amp;25 , &amp;
t30, ~ing frame t60 Good 1981 Monte Carlo 83.000
selectton of bedroom suttes. mllll, V6 $3600 080 Of trade
rod!.ers , metel cabinet•. head - 10ft trenapon dtsc. fair condit•on 8400 or trade 304-773board• 138 &amp; up to 866

5428

Used Furntture -- Dresser, &amp; bed ,
large teble &amp; 2 benchtt, mettl
off•ce dtt~ka 3 mi111 out Bulavtllt Ad Open 9am to 6pm
Mon 1hru S1t.
814-446-0322

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Wnhtrs. d~ert , re1ngerators,
ranges Skagg• Appliances ,
Upper Rrvar Rd bMide Stone
Creat Motel 614- 446-739B
County Appliance, Inc Good'
used eppllancu and TV aets
Open SAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat . 814-448· 11599. 627 3rd
Ave G111ipolia. OH
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used
large section of quahty furnt ture 1216 Eutern Ave
Gelllpolla

For sale wh1te wooden table
S25. yellow kitcl&gt;on cl&gt;ina
cabinot 850, both in good
See at 256 So
Fourth Ave . Middleport. Oh
condition

Uaad air conditioners refngerators. deep freeua , wuhers
dryers, electriC It gas rangea,
color TV'•· dishwashers , and
new- meMreu &amp; box tprings
complete 199 96 Valley Fumt·
ture, Eattem Ave , G1lhpol1s
Country oak furniture now m
ltOclt CoHN end end tables
round pedntel end drop leal
t1b!es , corner cupboard, 2 pc
cupboerda, dry tin••· aectetary
deaka, chHt of drewera cl1ut
largelelectlon Conkle 's, Rt. 7,
Tuppertplalna, Oh
Maytag Wringer w1111er. 11da by
aide refrig 2 door refr;g , GE
auto w111sher~ . gas renun. 25 in
color T.V 1 Electric r•ng• All
gaurant&amp;ed - F~r•toneln Middlepo~

&amp; dep . Call

7pm

33

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33, North of Pomerov
large lots. Call 814 992 7479

Four· 40 in window awninga

080 Call 814 ·992· 8234
PN=kent Used Fumitura Good
queltty uted furniture Open 9 to
e or c:all for 1ppoin1ment

304-87&amp; -8483 or 875 ·1450

Magic Chef get range for tale,
onty used twice. 1300 F1rm

304 876· 7363 .

54

Misc. Merchandise

Sale or trlde. T9 lntemttionet
bulldorer, gil engine, needa
work, eall after 15 PM. 30• ·676-

1820
1984 200S Hondl 3 WhMier
with front • rear reckt , h1tch'.
rifla acabberd , same 11 new .
304-678 -2508 ef1er 6 p m
Aultrelien blue hMier 1 year old
t40 8 HP Keen cutter rid1ng
mower t100 . 304-882- 2011
Sanye 8at1· max \/CR . wued
remote t176 30•· 676 1433
efter 7 00 p. m
HALF PRICE! Flashmg arrow
signa t2991 lighted. non-arrow
82791 Nonllghted t2391; Free
lettet'll Only few left See
locelly . 1(800 )423 - 01 83 .
anytime
2 11r cond , one 8 ,000 btu
t715 00 , one 16 , 000 but

U26 00 304·876·8504
Cat 07E dour, power ahlh, gas
etert , new under cerrl1ge.

U6 000 00 304·87&amp;· 2072
HOT TANK BLUEING · All typ"
of ¥un rep1ira , checlt•ing, etod!.
refinishing. Rlvtrlldl Gun Shop,
Rt 7, Athelia. Ohio, 614 -8885194. Aon McClintock owner
4 tlclctts for the Charolene
Motor SpHdWIY World 600,

coll304·458· 1558

TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS , tcope
bore tlahting , f.ctory rabluetnu.
houn 9.00 till dirk. eell 304-

Jeager 126 portable atr compreuor, trailer mounted , exc
cond . 30,· 468 -1031

55

Building Supplies

Butlding Materiels
Block br~~ . sewer pipes Win-

dows. lintels etc Claude Wmtert, Rto Grande, 0 Call 614-

246·512t

Bulld•ng matanals. cement.
blocks allllzes, vard or delivery
Oa!llpo l•s Blocll Co. 123'4 Pine
St , GallipoliS Oh10 Call 614-

448 2783.
Seve Bu•lders Suppliee Surplus
Cloteouta Satvege
1 Pretlung ateel•nsulated 8 or 6
panel doors• 89 .95
2 Prehung steel lntuleted door
and glau 91 1te or 11tte t126 96
3 Double sideliteentrlnce door
sets 1!2 glass 91ite t399
4 s.ngle aldalite entrence door
set• 1il th~tmal glen 8299.96.
6 Co mmercial doubleenuancn
set brown ell aluminum 1899
6 Double sidellt" entrance set
wood 'h panel 'h gleas wdecont•ve lftm 8299 .96
7 Prehung mterior doors ell
11zea and f1n11he1 8 gradM
t29 96 ea
8 Peh ung Interior IS panel ptne
door 's all tizes (B) grades.
$89 96 ea
9 Thermal lntulated glass p1n
els 76 · hgt 32" wida t39 96

••10

Wood door panels w·full
glets 78 · hgl 34" wide 1-%
thick $39 915
11 Octagonal w1ndow w atetned letcled glua •69 96 ee
12 Clear ec~hc sheets 080 and
125 gage severe! sirn big
livings
13 Plywood handy penela
62 '"1ong 1 a · wide 112 thick' 76 $1 00 ea
14 Ma1omte prim«t homontal
exter~or siding 16'x 18" JI7 -18

no oo..,

15 B-grade marble vanity tops
choice aires In stock. t20 OOee
16 4'lll8 ' truted pine !•nice
.,, 95 ..
17 IC - Iu~ebr~ckandttonertdlnd
tan reg 16 99 ctn now 111 50
andt1 99ctn
18 h'lerior kev doorlodl. alum num finish 12 99ee
19 Good used 8 -2 bulb l~ght
complete w-bulbs t1 6.00ea
20 Wood·Mitonite-blthroom
paneling 4'x8 ' pc U 99 to
89.95 ea
21 Pre11nlshld and unftnlahed
door and window and aU typ" of
tri m atarting at 11 00 for 8' pc
22 Alumlnummobilahomaand
b1m roof coat•ng w -tlber &amp;egtl
U3 915 100 gal and up f20 98
6gal p11l
23. Wallboard edhetNeqt tubea
or 29oz 81 39 11. or by c ase
t1 25 ea
2• Paneling natls t 79 box

PENN ' S WAREHOUSE ·
Welltton.Ohlo 614 -384 3646
Block brick, morter 1nd ma eonry suppliH Mountain State
Stock. Rt 33 . New Heven W

0 1,

•
Cl••IIIIC-'.IrtC

~~~~~:;~~~~~:;==========1
58
F •
rUit
&amp; Vegetables

Teytor ' a Ber~ P1tch Cell •or
picking tim11. Cell 114-441Strtwberrl• Pick your own
blljJinning Mey 115th. Sorry no
chaclce. 8 am to 8 pm Happy
Hollow Fruit Ferm. Gell!polla
Ferry, WV. 30•· 571-2026

1980 Plyrmuth Champ 4 spd .
front wheel drive, 37.000 miles.
t1 ,600 or belt offer Call

Fmn Supp t11 ~ s
&amp; LIVI!Stuck
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp;SONS
U S 315 Wilt, Jtcklon, Ohio
., • . 288·&amp;11&amp;1
Mille'( Fervu10n. NIIW Holl11nd,
Bush Hog Selee &amp; Senlice Over
40 1.11ed creciOrt to chooae ft'om
&amp; complete line of nM &amp; uaed
equipment lerg11t aelection 1n
S E OhiO.

Utility bldg spl 30'~e40'lll9',
16' 118' sliding door &amp; 3' strv.
door, 86, 286 trecud Iron
Hor~e Bldg• 814-332· 97•8

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENT~R . SR 35 W. GoNipoHo.

- - - - - - - ·lcReglttered selt tnd pepptr male
Schneuzer puppl ... C11h only ,
No Cttecka Call614· 992· 2807

67

Musical
Instruments

Baldw6n OrgeniFun Mtchlnl)
Ltke ntw". Asktng 81800 (Paid

678 ·4831

03.8001 Call 614-379· 2102 .

Utad dorltfs, to eden, beckhoM,
dump truc:kl. 70 lntemationel
trtctOr·trliltr, phone 304· 738 7898 near Huntington, Rt 10

Puccio Lowrey Mint condition
L-6 Genie orgtn with btnch-200
piecn ahMt mualc. Call 814992 -2882 3pm to 8pm

News
(J) Green Acres
(!) Mazda Sportslook
fl) CD Dill' rent Strokes
® 3 2 · 1, Contact (CCI
rtll Hatha Yoga
@ Good T1mes
11) Down to Earth In S1ereo
0 CD @ NBC News
(J) The Rifleman
(!) Fly Fishing With Joe
Humphreys
[1) Ill Gal ABC News
fl) CD One Day at a Time
0 (I] ®I CBS News
Cil Doc1or Who
(jj) Body Eloct11c
@ Jeffersons (CCI
11) Gunsmoke
0 CII PM Mogazme
(J) Alias Smith and Jones
(!) SportsCenter

6 .05

61 4· 258·6704
71 ltnooln Continental Mark Ill
,...toneble. Cell avemng 614-

448·7478

1981 Datsun 310 Q)( 5 apd .
good cond , good tir•. exc gat
mtl .. ge Cell 114· 440· 3006
Jeff Baughman'• 1971 unfin ·
ithed reetord NOVA . 327
chrome engine. no phone •n CJI!r81 Mlddlepon (Bredbury)

814·448 ·4482
81 Plyi'T'Outh Reliant SE 4 dr .

AM·FMAC.PS . P8. 70,000 ml .
good condition, u.eoo or best
offf• May take am.ll tractor on
trade Cell 614 388-8837 or
814-448 ·1988

Mutt eell· 1980 gray Bu•cll Skv lark Ex cond 12400 Call
814-256 -6682 etter 4 pm

JIVIDEN'S FARM ~QUIP ·
M~NT 8t4 448 1875. Check
our ap .:lei 11le pricn on Long

1984 Pontile F1ero. 4 cyltnder. 4
IPMd, AC , AM FM stereo wnh
caaslfta, red, turb1ne wheel•
87000 Call 81 • -7t2-2877

lnternetiontl 811 mowtr condi1ioner Oaod working con·
drt10n . Celll14·387·0493 eft«

8
Ford 2 row mounted corn plclter
10 clay farrowing hog critH
w1th tutometic wattn tnd feed .,._ Set of ~ala 1811!4.1138 wi1h
brend new BF Goodrich liree
A C 2 row com pltrner No ttl!.
Used Cell814-992-7301
7000 JD 4 row mtnlmum ttl! .
Can bl made No till . Used Cell

61 4·992· 7301

184 IH Cub low Boy end
mower. Cell 814-992-7301 .
New ldaa lerge round bater Cell

814·992-7301 .
6 HP Tru T•t Rotottller 304-

876·2374

Now buytn; the!l corn or ear
corn. Call for let•tquotes R•v•
Crty Farm Supply, 114-441-

2985.

~3

19n Nove Auto, good gaa
mileage, good t1ra Fe1r cond•don 8860 Clll814-992 -2848
1970 Chevy Novt 55, 3 b•g
block Chevy motore end other
Chevy paris Phone 614 -992 -

61 19
19n Chevy Concoura AC ,
Good conditton. 1 owner 1971
Chivy Nov1 48,000 ICtutl
milee 1 owner 814-698 -6898
1980FordLTD Goodcond1t1on .
intidl end out. Runs good. needs
e~ehaust l'f'ltam t1000 61 • -

949· 2008

19815 Con~.ner:onvertible Both
10ps 1,000 miles on rebuilt 327
• - speed Good condltton
t8100 or belt offer Phone

814· 247·4881
1978 Oklsmobilt Delta Royal .
Good bOdy end good condition
t800 Ce1181• -593-7390 after

6P .M
19115 Corvetttconvtnlble Both
tops 1,000milnonrebuilt327
4 -speed Good condition
t81500 or but offer Phone

114·247·4881 .

1979 P~nto ttation wagon
Elrlctllent conditiOn. AT • PS ,
AC.. rult Hll and lots more

11500 814·992·2278
1979 Ftirmont SW. ps, pb , tc,
•lll cyl • wry 900d cond 11 500

304·895 ·3008

For ule 69 Edsel, 88.000 ect
m•ln. 159 Edsel atat1on wagen
good ahtpe, runs . 83,800 both

304·875·3289
1981 Z28 Cemero, PS , PB.
tuto, 380 1ng1ne, 11r, phone

72

ford bulla. 14 monthl old, ready
tor tervlce Phone 81 4 · 992-

7468

76

Call Rhonda ot 114·992·8031

1982 Dodge pickup 2215 cubic
engine, 3 apd , with ov8fdrlve ,
fibergl111 topper Ce1181 4 -387-

half ton International
1971 t
dump t;:k , 7ft lll 1• tt bMI , nc

73

V

ans

&amp; 4W0

• ·

For 1111 two grlin fld black with 82 Chevy C 20. ClrQO ven, AT,
white face beeft w.tgh eppro111 PS , PB, AM-FM can . AC Call
, 000 lbt uch 56 cents on foot, 114- 441· t014 before 2PM
t1 20 hlng6ng wt. Ructy now.
Jemn Rey P~raona , 47598 79 CJ -15 whh 63 ,000 miles.
Carmel Rd Rt 1, Recine. Ohio. 13.000. Coli 814·246·9824
North 11 IIW nil I

Hay

&amp; Grein

1979 FOfd Vtn With 1980
f tory blovec cullom conver·
1 on . Excellent condition ,

17.1100
Mtxed hey Llrgt aquere bllll,

., 26 304·178·6179.

Call

814·992·&amp;954

lfttr 15 00 pm .
'84 Dodgl window van, 0
pauenljJer toed ad, 22.000 mlltl

110.1100. 304·875· 1839

74

Motorcvcles

Autos for Sale
198&amp; HondeV· O&amp; Megna 1100
CC Bl•c•. 3900 milee Still
under werrsnty. 82950. Extras

1970 Fairmont 4 cvt , 4 apd ,
good cond. l800 Ctll 1114·216-

Call 814·742·20&amp;7

1979 Ford Muateng 4 cyl , new
rebu•h motor. tow mileage. Cell

1985 Honda VT 700 Shadow,
low miiNGI. bought new this
tprlng . Excellent condition Cell

1487

81 4·268·8417

1987 Chevy Cemaro, re, con·
vertibll. rlltOrtlion et1rted,
heve ell pens to complet•.
aaklng 13,000 Call 114·446·
1781 efter &amp;PM 814· 388-

9811 .

81 4·949·2820
1981 Honde 860, CB cuttom
Excelent condition. 81200 or
blot qlf ... 814·898·7106
1814 KIWIIIki KDX200 dirt
bike. Mke new . I•• 1150 rniiH ,
enaw., silencer, 11 ,376 00

1971 lincoln Mark IV Good
oond 11 ,BOO. Cell 81.· 4.tl·

Call 304·878·7869.

0380.

1181 Honda CB custom 900,
mint cond. fully dreased Cell

1981 Merda R)(7 5 epd Cali

304· 878 · 1168 lllllf &amp; 00 PM

61 4·448· 3231
1878 Dodge AIPitl 380, liking
11 .900 Coli 61 ~ - 245 · 9802

Auto Parts
Accessories

BORN LOSER
1\l~

Men of Tv··
fi)
Jefferson•
0 (I] Jeopardy
Cil Nightly Busmess Re
port
®I News

814-379 ·2220

!1:E5UL\S OF 4C!J~

AND I'M Pl.(;A?ED
TOF!E~"!HAT

@
MacNeil-lehrer
Newshour
(W DIVOrce Court
@ Barney Miller

4ES.. :m.t. HJ:R
lHAT fiER

AI..L FRO~ED,..,.-;.:~
~~TIVE:!

m

Ft:RICOIG ~T­

/r.:C...:'-!r

flil
0

7 .30

FUI..W E'5? I'S

For Sale H!Qh performe11 ce 302
Chevv eng1ne C11ll 614 -992-

I]J inside Baseball
fll (iJ WKRP 1n Ctncmnatl
0 (I] @ Wheel of Fortune
Cil Buner11ios
1iJ @1 Entertamment To-

AbE .

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

FRANK AND ERNIE
1976 Starcrah foldout ca mp er,
tleeps 8 comp lete w1th ttov~
1ce box hghts &amp; 11nk exc cond
hke new Cell 614 388 9766
etter EJPM
1978 Terry , 24ft . 111r COnd,
awmng. lots of extru uc con d.

304·875·3818

11 ft pickup truclt camp8f, fully
contained, Mountaine er,
$2,600 00 l1ke new 304 -6 75

2072 .

night "Colbys ' star Emma
Samm s beg•ns a s1x -pan

E~NIE',

you'\IE
SEEN E:L..EcfEO
PRE~ID~N'r

THE'

:t WA)
/AfRAID Of
Tt-IAr!

oF

LOCAL.

7·35
B·OO

Home
Improvements

he arnves for a VISit In
Stereo
(J) Fa1her Murphy
(!)
College
Baseball.

ASSOCIATION.

Teams to be Announced

1971 Honda )(L350, ll:rMt and
trell. exc ehepe, phone 3D4· B7fi·

1703.

f

-

L1v e

· &lt;4 .. ••

Cil 1!1

(j}) Hardcastle and
McCorm•ck (CCI Hardcas·
tie and McCorm1ck pose as
pro wrestlers to solve the
murder of a female gr appler
160 m•n IIRI
fJl CD MOVIE '1 0 '
0 CIJ ®I Kate &amp; Allie Jon ·
me ts f~red from her part ·
t1me wamessmg JOb when
she re fuses to da1 e her
boss (RI
CJ)
MacNeii· Lehrer
Newshour
® In Search of the TroJan
War· The Age of tho Her·
oes (CCI He~nnc h Schlie
mann's d1scoverv of gold
treasure 1n Trov 1s exam mad (60 m1n)
@ Dempsey and Meke·

ALLEY OOP
WELL, 1 DON'T LIKE IT 1
THERE M~E ROCKS
OUT THERE WITH BETTER
OUI&gt;.L1FIC~TIONS THII.N

BASEMEN T
WATERPROOFING
Uncond•ttonel hfet1 me guerantee Locet referen ces furn •s had
Free etllmatet Call collect
1-814-237 -0488 day or nrght
Roger• B 111ement
Waterproofing

HE'S GOT'

Roofmg , pe•ntmg , room add1
tiona . etc Free eshmates. 17
years e~~tper~ence B &amp; W Con
atruct•on Cell61 4 446 8668 or
OU -246 -9448 fi'Va s
EX1erlor stucco plestermg &amp;
pl1ster repa1r l ow rates Cal!

814 256 1182

H£~ WAAT D'YA

CALL n-IlS 1

~
~

ITHALIG
j
I KI
Saturday 's

By

MORTY MEEKLE 1\ND WINTHROP
THERE f-IAVE BEEN
50Mi= GR&amp;\T 501-65
WRITr!iN ABa.JT
PARROf5 .

LIKE

II

I LOVE

PARRmS IN THE
6PRINGTIME ~

Fa&lt;

LOOK5 Ll KE HE qOTE:OME
FERMENTED 6UNFLOWER
GEF-PS AE&lt;AIN .

INSTANCE .

contract

ACROSS
~ f'aport

85

.9

SOUTH

" AKJ9 7 6
K95

+

. J6 4
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer South

Wt&gt;st

North

East

Pass
Pass

3Pass'

Pa ss
Pa ss

Open mg lead • 4

South would have looked f ooh sh 1f
West held t he K-Q of spades. and East
the ace of d1amonds But South had a
few clues In the first place, West
would probably have led a spade if he
held the kmg and queen. m t he second
place. the odds are three to one
agamst two out of t wo cards appear·
mg m a spec1fic defender's hand

~ • J tn tn UJl ('

12 Fana11 t .tl
13 Le~~wn

17 SCI"U lar
20 Rt·trayt•d
21 N1ght

14 Worship
15 Wrt lt' r

h e fon•
22 VPn lv'

Sr rltn ~

Yeste rday's Answer
3 1 F:lhttr

16 Spn lf'

23 Go V:.r, H1~ 33 T1•rry

18 SumrnN

24 H('ap

26 Sntl tnod

39 Radrm nt on
rar krt
40 Wn orlf'n

Soulht&lt;rn
novel

tO rt'
19 1f prn~ r onr 27 (io ld ( Sp ) 34 En~('nrlNI'fl 4 l l ndt'r st,md
24 Rt·
28 Mtm·•~
35 Wt n){~ d
4211 u~tt&gt;!ry
c-umpt.&gt;nst'
or M .•~lw 36 H .~llro,l(l
44 Moslf'm

25 11eyon d

29

',:.:..:::::;....,.,....,.,.......,.....

26 Po stulalt'

29 l.1mp•d
30 Rus~ilan sra
31
32
34
37
38

house . Paintmg Churches

(CCI A daughler and her old ·

Mnw ,thoul
Skunk

- Ems
Nmm
s.mHH'I -.
t•··t•h1 r

:)9 "itn'l'l

ertv paren ts come to t erm s
w11h changmg fam•ly rela -

111

'\ r v. c trl1 • . t n~
-t:J llt• ,tltll'll

45 HPvt-.t ·
-16 l' l,t\ Ill)!
m. trhh
471 ' ndc ·r-.IZ••d

4H

(III UI•

DOWN
I 1\t'lln\\

for
America.
Women for the World

2 Aul c,ln, ll111l
:J Shun

ffi

INN News
(JJ Reumon Chuck Ellington
i;lnd Bronka Kohn were re cen tly re un1t ed after firs t

4 Mak• I.L"&gt;I

' '"

mee llng 40 years ago m the
German conce ntrat ton camp
Ma ulhausen

AXYDLBAAXR
1sLONGFELLOW

@ Newswatch

11 00 O C!J® O IIHJ9l l!l ®@

One letter slands for another In llus sample A IS used
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc Single leiters.
apostrophes, the length and lonnalton of the words ar e a ll
hints. Each day the code letters are different

News

U.N.C L.E
lndlanpohs

500 Films
Gunsmoke

CRYPTOQUOTES

fJl CD Benny H1ll Show

General Hauling

+K 9 8 2

• Q 10 7 ;

Va.'!;ahond 10 Outch

(!J @ MOVIE : "On
Wing of Eagles' (CCI Part
2 of 2 In Stereo
(]] 700 Club
(!) 1!1 @ MOVIE 'Johnny
Bull' (CCI
[I) ® Amer~can Play·

·ffi

• Q J 10 4

t A 86

6 lrntalf'
~apo rt
11 wr m Ju o; t a 9 Dougla.s -

(!J The edge·of your·
seat climax to movte
'On Wings Of Eagles ' '
NBC Ad v

CD Man from
C!l Historic

•a

" 54

6 C unmng
1 Pos.s t•ssP d
8 F'mn

I F'renrh

Women

Bulldoter work and dump truclt
work Danny Chapman 304676 -3336

EAST
• Q6 51

JOSEPH

@ News
10 30 IIl Workin' W1th Wood
ffi Better World Society

COME IN AN' SEE TATER- ·
I GOT HIM ALL DRESSED UP
FOR HIS COSTUME PARTY

WEST

ti~M"ttr
by THOMAS

1 O·OO IIl CBN News Tonigh1

BARNEY

• II II

AJ 10 8
Q 103 2
732
A3

• K 73 2

However. because the spade sun was

r Fr 1

fj)

to act like a tough

NORTH

sohd except for the kmg and queen . he
rejected the d1amond finesse and 1n·
stead played a spade to the ace and led
the Jack from dummy . When East
played low, he shed a d1amond West
won the k1ng and played a club De·
clarer took the ace 1mmed1atel y and
led another spade When East played
the queen. South ruffed. returned to
dummy with a trump and shed one
more d1amond on dummy's rema1n1ng
good spade He still had to lose a d1a·
mond and a club, but he made hiS

Hero

CARTER 'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth end Pme
Gell ipo l11, Ottio
Phone 614 -446 3888 or 614 446-4477

wes

•
"
•
.

Afraid of makmg the wrong openmg
lead, t1m1d br1dge players sometimes
hedge by l eadmg a trump Although a
trump lead 1s occasiOnally nght, an at·
tacking lead is usually better On to·
day's deal West t1m1dly led a low
heart. Now the contract IS assured
w1th correct play , smce only a club
lead could have beaten It The reason
for choosmg a club 1s Simple - 11 part·
ner has as much as the ace. kmg or
Jack, you have probably not lost a
tnck and may well be on the road to
the best defense.
On seeing dummy, declarer knew he
could make hiS contrac1 1f a finesse
against the d1amond ace succee ded

tionships (90 mm J
@) Greatest Amertcan

Plumbing
&amp; Heatmg

Oood -1 E11cavatmg, baaements.
footers dnvewflys septic tanks
landacapm g Call anytime 614
446 -4537 James L DaviSon
Jr owner

What a man who

cook•e allen does when push comes to

James Jacoby

0

5 19

(Answers tomorrow)
BUTLER SCURVY

AXIOM

Fainthearted
opening lead

9:00

*

form the su rpr1se answer as sug
gested by the abOve c artoon

James Jacoby

(!)®I MOVIE 'Samari ·
tan · The Mnch Snyder
Story' (CCI

Sttr•• Tree end Lawn Servtce
landacap •ng 304 57~ 2010

Excavating

II

Jumbles FROZE

I Ans wer

Now arr ange lhe c ircled tellers to

BRIDGE

0

Fetty Tree T11mm ing stump
remove! Cell304 -675 -1331

83

iYP'E OF A GUY.

s hove -CR UM BLES

accepts a promotion at
the auct1on house. s he f1nds
l1ttle t1 m e to spen d wtth her
fam tly In Stereo

0

896-3802

5HE AC.C.EP'Tct:' H I ~
I"FWI"OSAL !!EC.A U~E

He WA'5TH I'5

er~e

RON ' S Tele111110 n ServfCe
Hou11 c1111 on RCA , Oueur,
OE Spectal1ng '" Ze01t h Call
304-576 -2398 01 614 446

Rotery or cable too l dfillmg
Moat well a comp leted Sftmeday
Pump sales and leN•ce 304

IHUNGOE~

peace
8 05 (!) MOVIE· ' Duffy'
8·30 O C!l@ ValerieWhenVel·

EEK&amp; MEEK

Bloclt &amp; concrete work. also
p1111nt•ng 8t carentry gareges
patio' s balflm!H'II , s•dew11lk s
26 veert e~~tper~ence Free estl
mstea We re on tha level Ctlll
614 -446 0916

RINGLES'S SERVICE . upe
nenced carpenter atectuclan
mason. painter. roofing fmclud
mg hot tar appllc&amp;t iOnl 304
8715-2088 or 675 -7368

senes on The New Macho
M en of TV ""
@ Bob Newhart
@ Jeopardy
11) Sanford and Son
0 (!J@ You Again? Hen·
ry s free -w heeltng brother

Randy overJOYS Matt when

PHOgiA

Services
81

Wheel of Fortune
(!J CIJ New Newlywed

Game

ME!&lt;E:I.H DJE
10 ADVAHGf' D

6974

79

"'

m

1\JIF~'&lt;; ~$ ~I~
All types used &amp; rebuilt trans
mlsslone &amp; tranfer c"es W11l
del•ver Overdnve t tan am iS
11ons front &amp; raer wheel drtve.
trentmllslon kits &amp; torn con vertera , ene~ne reb Uild lt1t s Ca ll

I DAAGE
I I I

([) Entertamment Tonigh1
Colbys
star
Emma
Samms beg1ns a SIK-pa rl
senes on 'The New Macho

Trucks for Sale

I cond. 304·1112· 2887.

9 ye~r old 81tck TtnniiM
Welle..- hor11 Oueldlng 8&amp;150

71

14ft alu rm V bottom boat With
7¥1 game f1shar engme oar1
anchor and 2 hf e J&amp;Ckflt s
e?OO 00 304-882 2606

82

3 yr. old regllttred Apptlooll 0394.
gelding UOO Call 81 4-2U·
19815 Ford R•nuer. exc cond .
1386
21 .000 ml , 15,900 Call 814·
Two hllf rtQiettrtd polled Her• 387·7115.

64

Cell 614 446 1761 eher 6PM
614-388-9811

--------:--~

Livestock

0493 after 6

7 00

2454

304·895·3441

Purebred, reg. Arebttn gelding
Will trlined . Call IU -3157-

6 35

1·312·7•2 1142 Ert 4089

1980 ChiYmo. 304·875 ·1828

62 Wanted to Buy

1979 24 fl R1enal cuddy cab,
228 Mercru11er. full galley. dual
voltage refrigerator. toliet with
sewagetyttem radio telephone
depth finder, power tnm. and
many extras Asking t 13,600

1986 Chevy Super Sport, convet1tble. mtny new perts Call

It it true you can buy Jeep• for
M4 . 1hrough the U S go..-ern ment' Get the fiC11 todiYI C1ll

Tractors &amp; Vermeer heyo equtp·
ment with ttnanc:Jnll•vallebleet
4 .4% ~nterlltl A C0"1'1ettlineof
bela handling ICCISIOrl• &amp;
feeding acc11eoriea, grinder
mh1ers wagona. ro1ery Ulltrt.
rotary cuttert, blld11, cultivltora, d•ak, plow1, •ederw, post
driv••· woodaplitten. gatu &amp;
tteldgtt•. power WIShers 6
Wheel H011t Lewn &amp;: Gtrden
trectortl And •• ua for a
co~letelineof plrta &amp; tlf'Wicel
USED A variety of used triC1ors,
ei round bellfl, grinder mixer.
w1gona, tpreytr, cultlvetort,
tobecco setters. whHI disk,
plows, rakll, square btlers,
tedderw, herruw , rnowk1g machme. cultipecker

Boats and
Motors for Sale

&amp;

Ohto Cell 81.-448· 9777, noe
61•·441-3&amp;92 . Up ffDnt treetors wtth werrenty ovtr 7&amp; uaed
tractors, 1000 tools

Tra nspurtilt ion

Dobermtn. red male, reo , 18
moa old Call 814- 446 -9315

1984 Ford Tempo 4 dr. •uto.
air, stlt'IO. caah price U .999
John'sAuto Stl... Buleville Rd ,
Galllpol~

Pets for Sale

Drag onwynd Cattery Kannel
CFA .• ~lm•layen Per111n and
Siam11e khtena AKC cnow
puppiet New pupp•es a. kitten•
Cell 448-3844 after 7PM

Autos for Sale

8692

Va 304-882-2222 .

56

71

___
---

I. . . KI ..

&amp;·oo O CDCil O Cil®l lll (i}J r»J

6 30
75

lour ord1nary WOfds

EVENING

$1 000

1983 Honda Shadow 500
e1 200 Celt eve 614 -446
1437 or 614 446 9266

0159

Unscramble theSe fout Jumbles,

one lettet' to each square, to form

5/19/86

1 978 760 Triumph motorcycle
UOO 1971 Datsun PU S400
Call 614 448 -0899

Mu.u:leloading Speciality Shop .
Bilek powder 85 96 , capt
2 mob1le home loti, 1 on Rt 7, 1 t2 00 , leather itema, used 50
on Addi1on-Bulevllle Rd Call c1l CVA, 410 Moll berg
814-367-0232 or 614- 446 - 1hotgun li~e n~JN Koebel'•
4285
MlllcreHRd Hn. M· F 6·8p m
Sat. 1-5. C•ll614 441 - 2316.
OH•cespace Upper Rt 7 Can be
3 private offices larg11 wetting For ule garage equtpment Cell
room Call614-446 -0508.
614 446-3243 8VW'!Ings

W an ted to Do

""

Space for Rent

1978 Kewasak• 900
C11! 614 -446 -2647

~j"}jiN} fi}lJ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD DAME
~ ~ ~~ *'
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

1 973 Sporuter and 1971
Sportater New pelnt new t.rea,
ucellent condition Ca ll 614 441-4007 before 8PM

For sale new Yard-man mow••·
good uted mowers from tl50t75 Ec11o trimmer• on nle
Childrena Sew Supply, VInton,

46

Motorcycles

1467

Plattlc ciatem state lppi'O\Ied,
pllltlc
cutvens, mttel cutvertt RON
E\IANS ENTERPRISES, Jeck ·
ton. Oh. 814-281 -8930

me tes 304 576 2897

.

1 994 Honda Tw•nstarC M200T
very low mileage Cal1614 -268

Ctll 81 4,258 8261

Dot son Tree Serv1ce free estt

18

74

Furnished Rooms plestic septic: tanka.

For rent Sleeptng Roomt and
hght house kMping rooms Park
Cantral Holtl. Call 814-448-

M iscellaneous

'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Calleh., 's Ulld Tire Shop. Ovtr
1,000 tlrM , slz .. 12 13. 1•. 15.
18. 18 5 8 mil• out Rt 218

Furnlthed room 1126 mo .
util•tlea P~Jkt, ttl lire bath, amgle Oh 814·388·8684
male, 919 2nd Ave. Gelllpolla
Call "6-4416 after 7pm
Good milking milk goat. Cell
614 -388-9688 or 614· "8-

17

KIT

Misc. Merchandise

The Daily Sentinei- Page...:..9

Pomeroy. Middlepo~: Q~.!~

Monday, May 19, 1986

5-19

[I) SCTV
This Old House (CCI
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
11 ·30 0 CD @ Best of Carson
Tontght ·s guests are How1e

®

James Boys Water Serv•ce O.l so
poolsf•lled Catl6 14 256 1141
or 814 446 1175 or 614 446
7911
Ken's Water Serv•ce Well s
cisterns pools and waterbeds
tilted Ca ll 614 367 0623 or
814 -367-7741 or 304 675
1247

Ted Danson 160 m1n IIRI . In
Stereo
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fJl CD ®l Tax1
0 (!) Remington Steele
Laura and Remmgton mfll
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7397

Upholstery

TRISTAT E
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave , Gall•po li s
8U - 446 -7833 or 614 446

1833

R &amp; M FurnttureM anu tflcturm 11
St At 1. Crown City, Oh CAll
614-256 1470 Clllll Eve 614
446 - 3438
Old &amp; new
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Mowrev's Upholt ten ng survlng
trl county aree21 veers fha biJ'st
in furmture upholster ing All
work guAranteed vrtit our mod
ern thop at M111aon County
Fairgrounds Phone 304-67 6-

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1

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Coal. l, mestone g rBvel, et c
Delive red 1 ton and up J •m
Lenior. 304 675 124 7 or 675

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@ MOVIE: ' Wild Rovers'
Gl (l}l Eye on Hollywood
0 CIJ@ Late Night with
Davtd Letterman Tontght s
guests are Alan Aida and
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fi)

12 :30

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CD ABC News Nightline
1!1 (j}) News
@ MOVIE: 'Boy on a Dol·
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t 2 ·40 II Cil MOVIE: 'Carny'
t :00 CIJ Doble Gillis
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qu1e1 town t o a bus11tng me

1 THOU6~T WE WERE
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T E • • ;•

Yesterday's Cryptoquote. WHAT A F• II II llllr:s ~~ ·
THE END. THE WI SE MAN DUES IN Till : 1\1 1.!\~ I N&lt;.

of Washtngton , D.C. from a

PEANUTS

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I' A H W S N

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ton Amenca s e ntry 1n1o
World War II altered the c•ty

tropohs
Gl ® ABC News Nightline
@ Trapper John. M.D.
12 :00 [I) Beat of Groucho
CD Auto Racing '86: IMSA
Monterey Tripla Crown
From Laguna Seca CA (90
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(J) National Geographic
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[I) Entertainment Tonight
"Colbys"
star
Emma

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1 30

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2 00 ffi 700 Club
ffi M az da Sportslook
ffi MOVIE "Godzilla vs

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2 30 Cil SportsCenter
3 00 ffi MOVIE 'The Black
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�'• '&lt;

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

f

Recognition, awards p~ogram;
held at Veterans Memorial

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

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

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

•

Monday, May 19, 1986 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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

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

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

~ ~

i\

Curse the puddle

Show your colors

Editorial on Page 2

Beat of Bend on Page 6

Rio
Grand·e

All District

'Show Stoppers'
Grande Chorale on Page 10

See Marauderettes on Page 4

e
Vol.36. No . It

•

at y

•

enttne
1 Section , 10 Pages

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

Copyrighted 1986

26 Cants

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

G-J-M 648 board
seeks levy again

•

.

•

f

'

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

)

'

I "

I

__

/

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

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

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

.,...
F~

lie&lt;.

pro

lbr
ter'
111'8

mo

rra

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

William A. Connolly

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

Two hurt
one cited
• ~
following accident

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

Weather forecast

Fanenvour
with awant 1\d .

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

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

Sen.

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

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

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

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

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

fl2 . ~$3J. 75;

Sprtngcr

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

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

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

SllJ.$51

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

CARRIER NEEDED
IN MIDDLEPORT
CALL
992-2156

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

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

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

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

Sponaorod by tho Middleport
Chamber ol Commerce

GEN.

Dr. Romola Hopkins,

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

'Farmhand' ·Celeste undecided about bill

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

Roster-sponsored
(Continued from page 11

LEVY UL5CUSSION -

PARK

SAT., MAY 24
TWO PEIFOIMANCES

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

90 students welcome 'COSI on Wheels'

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

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

Shop

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

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

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

world of sporls .
Lasl vrar's program

wa~;

on

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

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

Insurance
coverage
discussed

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

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

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

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

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

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

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