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14 The Daily Sentinel

Area deaths
Agnes.Weesel
Agnes Wessel, 88, of Cedar Falls,
Iowa, died at a hospital thPre
Monday.
She Is survived by her husband of
68 years, Floyd Wessel, fotmerly of
Meigs County, a daughter and a
son. She was preceded In death by a
daull!lter and a son. Vernon NraSP
d. Meigs COOJnty Is a cousin.
Funeral services wlll be liPid at 10
a.m. Thursday at the Unit ed
Methodist Olurrh in New Hart fonl.
Iowa with burtal there.

A. F. Gainer
A. F. (Tug! Ga iner, 61, of
Reedsville, died Monday In
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospita l.
Mr. Gainer was born J une 4. 192i
In Callhoun Co., W. Va .. a son rJ Lee
and Edna Hartshom Gnlnl&gt;r. lie
was a U.S. Navv veTeran of World
War II, a membE-r of MI. Ullvel
Masonic Lodge No. 3, AF&amp;Al\1, and
was employed at the Gav in Power
Plant, Cheshire.
He Is suJ"VIved by hls wife. Phyllis
Rhodes Ga iner; twu sons. Lewis
Pulver ol Chester and LRI' Gainer.
at home; two daughTers. Robin
Eastman of Coolville and Jennifer
L. Hawk of Belpre; lhr!'e sisters,
Glorta Cunningham of Not1h CarolIna, Margt&gt;ry Hines of Pat·kersburg
and Martha Lee of Logan; and four
grandsons.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thur&lt;day
at Leavitt FUtl('ral Home, 403
Seventh St., Parkersburg. Evanw·
llst Joe Hoskins will officiate ilttd
burtal wUI be In Evergreen Cemetery South, also in Parkrrsbut~ .
Friends may call at the funeral
home all day Wednesday and on
Thursday unlil lhe time of thr
funeral.

Virgil Price
VIrgil Price, 86, formerly of llw
Chester-Long Bottom area of Meigs
County, died Tuesday in a Flotida
hospital.
He Is survived by his wife of !i.1
years, Mae Price of Lecanto. Fla.,
15 chlldren, 43 grandchlldrrn and 32
great-grandchildren. Among the
local survivors are a son. · Pau I
Price, Tuppers Plains; a daughTer.

IMeigs County area happenings... - - - - - -

Mrs. Clell (Paullnl'l LaBonte, Long
Boll om, and Mrs. Jack (Fiorena I
l.lniher, fmml'rly of Olester.
Set-viers wlll be held at 10 a.m.
Friday at the Wllder Funeral Home
at Homossas, Fla .. wllh burtal to be
In Memory Garden at Beverly
Hills, Fla. Cards may be sent to
Mrs. Price at P.O. Box 166,
Lecanto, Fla., 32661.

En~est

Hospital news
Ve&amp;e.._ Memoltal
Admissions - Mary Kennedy,
Middleport.
Discharges - Gladys Taylor,
Robert Snowden.

EMS makes 4 rul18

Ashley

Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports four calls
Ertl('SI Ellsworth Ashley, born
Tuesday; Middleport all: 16 p.m. to
Dec. 5, 1900 at Letan Falls, died at South Fourth Ave. for Mary
Ihe Hunon Nut-sing llome lnSalem,
Kennedy to Veterans Memorial
Ohio on May 18.
Hospital; Syracuse at 1: 25 p.m.
lfp was the son of lite late Elmer
EllsworTh and Sarah lzetta Roush transported' Doug Hemsley to
Ashlry. Hr was married on Oct. 16, Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland
at 2:09 p.m. to Larkins St. for
1922 lo th&lt;' late Dixie Kathleen
Raymond Moore to VeteransMemBenlz who died March 15, this year.
ortal
Hospital; Middleport at 6:07
Mr. Ashley operated an auto
p.m.
treated
but did not transport
cleelershlp In Alliance and Canton.
Mary
Hendricks.
He was a member fi Salem F&amp;AM
6!*1, The Salem Chapter R.A.M.
1a44; the ScoTtish Rite Consistory ct
Ca nton, The Tadmore Temple
Shrine Shrine. Akron, and the
Celllral Ohio:
Sa lem Co mm ercia l United
Soulbwt!ll&amp; Ohio:
Tl'avelet·s.
South Cal&amp;ral Oldo:
Besides his parents, he was
Variable clOudiness today with a
pt'PC'!'ded In death by hls brothers, chance of showers and thurxler·
Chauncey Murl and Ralph Dennis, storms. Highs wlll be In the upper
and a sister, Mattie May, In 70s. Mostly cloudy tonight with a
ch ildhood.
chanceof showers and a low near 00.
Sutvivlng are a son, Harold of
Variable cloudiness with a
Oak Harbor, Ohio; a daughter, chance of showers and thurxler·
Mildri'd Kladke of Winter Park, storms Thursday. Highs will be
Fla. , seven grandchlldren, one near !JJ.
great-grandchild, and a brother,
The probability of precipitation Is
Homer of Ha rtville.
40 percent today and 30 percent
Mr. Ashley'sgrealnephew, Keith tonight and Thursday.
Ashley, Rock Springs. attended the
Winds wUI be variable less than
funeral which was held at the Stark 10 mUes an hour today and tonlgltt.
Funera l Home with burial at the
Oldo Extended F._.
Highland Memorial Park, Beloit,
Frklay through Surxlay - Fair
Ohio, and Ashley served as a Friday and Sunday with a chance ot
pallbearer.
rain Saturday. Hlghswlll benear!JJ
Friday, In the upper 00s and low 'Ills
Projl'l't open for
Saturday and Sunday. Lowswllibe
public viewing June 2
In the 00s Friday and Saturday and
in
Ute upper 40s to low 50s Surxlay.
Thl' pmposal for expenditure of
Tit it' 6B federal money on special
education classes will be open for Llltery winners
public viewing at Southern High
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues·
School on June 2. Anyone interestday's
winning Ohio Lottery
ing in viewing the proposal Is
numbers:
invited to stop by the school. Joyce
Dally Number
Thoren, R. N.. school nurse, has
Pm.
had charge ol developing the
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
program.
$1,100,391.50, with a payd.f due of
$167,11!1.50.
PICK-4
3751.
and music was presented by Floyd
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
and Colleen Brickles, Robert White $157,(81.50, with a payoff due o!
and tlw Bissell Brothers. Rev. $'10,715.
Raymood Laudl'tmikt , pastor,
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
gave prayer. Organizations on $3,360. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$140.

Weather

Major Russell Burlingham speaker
Major Karl Russell, fomwrly of
the Racine area and now serving in
the U. S. Marine Corps, was
speaker for Ute annual Memorial
Day S&lt;'rvlces held Monday at the
Burllngham Church and Cemtery.
E. A. (Bud) Wing&lt;&gt;tt, whu
annually appears on Ute Memorial
Day program, presented the Gettysburg Address and anoTher rn:i
tatlon and Mark Grueser, .Jr. .
conducted the roll call of veterans.
Gold Star· Mothers were honor&lt;'d

Wednesday. May 28. 1986

Pomerov-Middlapoft. Ohio

Feeney-Bennett
hand to help withPost
the SPrvlce
128, Amert·
were
can Legion, Middleport; Burlingham Youth Camp, Modern
Woudman of America with Dale
C'olhum as master of ceremonies
and RoiX'rt Whltedlrectorof muslc.

Seek aetion in court

rummage

Ronald G. Davis and Lady D.
Davis, Rutland, have !lled an action
In Metga COOJnty Common Pleas
COOJrt ag~t Motorists Insurance
Cos., South &lt;llarleston, W.Va.,
requesting judgment r1 $6:2,001. The
action stems !rom the alleged
refusal of the Insurance agency to
pay for damages to the Davis home.
The damages were· caused by a
water leakage. PlaintUfs are asking
for $l2,tnl In compensatory dam·

Inside :

Plan pop can &lt;frive

Plan bake sale
A
and bake sale will bEheld by the Morse Olapel Surxlay
School Friday and Saturday at
Route 7, Forest Run Road. Proceeds will be used lo remodel Ute
church. In the even I of rain the sale
will be cancelled.

1\

By the Bend ...... PaKes fl. 7-8
Cla88111eds ..... Pages 12-1~14
Comk:&amp;-TV ............. Page 15
Deaths .. .................Page 10
Editorial ............ .. ... Page 2
Sports ............... Pages 34-5

Meigs Local Band Boosters wlll
have ·a pop can drive on Monday.
Cans may be brought to the high
school band room b!-tw~&gt;en 8:30
a.m . and 10 a. m. Ihal day, or call
992J1511 fnr pick up.

•

r~·-;··;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ages, $50,00! punitive damages and

fllllllllll!.

a trial by Jury.

~=·co~. ~=~ :.va~v::

·

~

flied an action against Everett L.
Crow Jr., ReE:dsvllle. et ai, requestIng Judgment o! $23,264.39.

STEREO
TELEVISION

Granaed license

at y

e
Vol.36. No .18
Copyrighted 1986

•

enttne
2 Sections, 1 6 Pages 25 Centl
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Th·ursday, May 29, 1986

County gets new asphalt distributor truck

A marrtage license has been
Issued in Meigs COOJnty Probate
COOJrt to Phlllp D. Moxley, 41, and
Francis Hooper Moxley, 33, both d.
Pomeroy.

YOUR
CHOICE

Seeks divorce
Judy Bieszk, Shade, has filed for
a divorce in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court from Uoyd James
Biexzk, Belleville, Mich., charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

RCA

-

26'~ooonol

Coloill'ak Stereo
Monitor-Receiver

Golf evenl Sunday

• Digih!l l Command rem ote conl! ot

An 18-hole scramble and pot luck
lorclubmembersandguestswilibe
held Surxlay, beglnning at 2 p.m., at
Jaymar Golt Course.

• Broadcast stereo :.ound sy5tem

$849
REGULAR 5929

• Dr reel ~ . eteo /IUCII O vrCieu r~ c ~ pan1•1
• Brlmgual audro channel H' (:epho n tS AP f

• Auto Prog r3 m scr~nnPr mP mor v

The Meigs County Highway Department wlll be
getting a new asphalt distributor truck for use In
applying dust control to rounty and township roads.
The Meigs Cou nty Commissioners Wednesday In
regular session authortzed Clerk Mary Hobstetter to
advertise for bids for The new truck as soon as
possible.
The new truck wlll replace the county's old
distrtbutor whlch Is becoming too expensive to r£pa lr
and maintain according to PhU Robert s, rounty
engineer, and Ted Warner, highway superintendent .
The commissioners agreed with Roberts and Warner
that It would be wise to purchase a new distribu10r,
since the townships are also depending on Ute truck
for dust control appllcation. The truck would he
purchased on a payment plan.
After speaking with the auditor and ll'!'asurer. the

board approprtated $!{OJ In revenue sharing rooney
to be used to pay for the typtngof transcrtptsfrom the
murder trtills of Joseph Taylor and Tracy HyselL
Both cases, and also the case of Lindsay Taylor, have
been appealed and the county Is responsible for
paying lor the transcripts. O:.;ts ..:J far have
amounted to $2900. ·
Notice has been received by the commission from
the Ohio Department of Liquor Conlrol that
objections, voiced In a recent hearing In Meigs
County, to the transfer of a Dl, 2 and 3 license to
TimoThy Charles Adams, "are not su!flclent to
suppor1 a deniaL" An appeal of the hearing officer's
decision may be filed within ll days.
The board approved a request from thl' Depart·
ment of Human Services for the 1ransfer of $23,163

from the rounty general fuod lnto public assistance .
The commlssloners noled that the transfer was
antiCipated from the flrsl of the year and t~ lurxls
were Included In this year's original certification for
public assistance.
The commissioners in other business:
Authortzed advertising for a contractor to Install
automatic and manual fire alarm systems in the
county Iall , along with appropriate exit signs &lt;Ner Ute
doors, as required by the state fire marshall's office;
Approved a request from Soli a nd Water
Conservation to transfer the balance of lqffi revenue
sharing funds alloted for soU and water, Into the soil
and water budget;
Approved an Interdepartmental 1ransfer of $ll89
within EMS;
Authorized use of a county dump truck on .Ju ne 10 10

haul outd ated materials !rom the old Ol&lt;•ster
l'OUr1house;
Authorized adding a SoU and. WaiPr Consen;ation
truck· to me county's Insurance policy, if soil and
water agrees 10 pay the Increase In Ihe premium;
Accepted biluminous bids for June from the
Koppers Co., Heath, for all mixin g gradrs, and from
Koppers, Aspha lt Materials. Mark'tta, and Ashland
Oil, Ashland, Ky ., for sea ling grades;
Authorized payment of an animal claim to Clarence
Holtman, Langsville, lor the loss of a 5-6 day old call,
In the amount of $.'JJ;
Canceled. at the request of .Judge PaTrick O'Brien,
lhe bond of Donna Powers as a county court deputy
for taking recognizance bonds.
Commissioners David Koblentz, Mannlng Roush
and Richard Jones were all presenT for the meeTing.

C~mposite

index advances
strong 1.5 percent in April

Trustees' meeting sel
Orangt&gt; Township Trustees wlll
meet In regular session Monday, 8
p.m.. at the home of the clerk,
Dorothy Calaway.

r.;::::::::::::::::::~~
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON

STEREO
TELEVISION

h111plttolint of Vogolllblo &amp; flow or
Plants - Hanging I•*•"· Gera"''""'· 1011 ludtts, Dogwoaol, lht4...llliron &amp; Shnr1olltry.

PI UN

SEASON SPECIAL
'750 PER FLAT
MIX OR MATCH

ELBERFELOS

OPEN DAlY 9-S; lUNDAY 1·5

Hubbard's GrHnhouse
SYRACUSE, OHIO
PH. 992-577.6

POMEROY

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

By T.R. EASTIIAM
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
govenunenl 's broadest gaugt&gt; of
future economic activity advanced
a slrong 1.5 percen T In AprU , the
biggest jump in 2'h years. thl:'
Commerce Department said today.
The composite Index of leading
economic indicators rose to 179.2
last month. on a sca le that began at
100 in 1967, the Bureau rJ El-ooomic
Analysis said In a report.
It was the largest month-tomonth gain since October 1983 when
thl' index alro rose by 1.5 pel'CI'nt. it
was last exceeded by a 1.9 percent
advance In June of 1983.
'The surge caps a strong three
months advance and ldcks the
Index up7.5 pel'CI'nt above the April
1985 level.
According 10 revised figures

conTa ined In the report, the Index
advanced by 0.8 percent in Febtru·
ary and 0.9 percent In March, after
falling 0.2 percent In January.
The Index has rooved up In 10 of
ihe last 12 months.
Seven of the 11 indicators shuwed
gains In April. led by a burst of
growtll In the money supply thai
added 0.49 percent ID the Index.
Stock prices, which led March
advanCl'rs with a revised 0.36
percent gain moved the Index up
0.16 percent last month.
A chan g~' In outstanding credit
patterns helped the Index by 0.24
percent.
Among the most encouraing
signs was a sharp turnaround In
new orders for manufacturers
consumers goods and materials.
The indicators added 0.2 percent to

the Index last month after declines
of 0.09 percent'ln February and 0.22
percent In March.
Recent gains In t ~ economic
baromeTer thai seeks to forecast
the nation's economic activiTy
three-to-six months In advance
have been centered in the financial
indicators.
Other advancers for the monTh
were net business formation, state
unemploymenT tn suranC!' claims
and building permits.
Among the decllners. the average
workweek shrank, pulling back the
Index by O.(f! percent. Contracts
and orders for ~ani equipment
knocked i1 back 0.00 percent and
sensitive materials prices were
do~m 0.00 percent.
Vl'ndor perfonnanCP remained
unchan g~?d In ApriL

Agents support indicted colleague
CLEVELAND (UPIJ - More
than 40 FBI agent s flew to
Washington today lo atlend lhe
arralgnment of a colleague accused
of making false statements tn
connection wllh a payroll padding
scheme allegedly sanctioned by
Teamsters President Ja ckie
Presser.
Robert Frledrick was indicted by
a federal grand jury in WashingTon
May 15 on five counTs of lying under
oa th last summer when he said he

'
-

LATEX ENAMEL - -

told Presser to · leave Presser's
uncle, Allen Friedman, on the
payroll of Teamsters Local '!1!1 tn
Cleveland.
The Indictment said Frledrick, as
the supeJ"Vlsor of the FBI's Organ·
!zed Crime Task t'orce in Cleveland, "coneealed and covered up
thai on several occasions" he met
wilh Presser and others to discu ss
how 10get FBI authorization for the
payroll scheme "to avert an
lndectmenl of Presser In

,~

Oeveland."
John Dunn, a spokesman tlr the
FBI's Oeveland office, said the trip
to Washington by Friedrlck's col·
leagues was "a personal exJI'esslon
of support" for Frledrlck.
Dunn said the trip was nol
sanctioned by their superior-s and
thai the agents were paying their
own way and traveling on their
days o!f.
Frledrlck, 30, of suburban Lakewood, was
for 30 days
he

,,

•

YOUR NEW CADILLAC DEALER ...
JIM COBB CHEVROLET,
OLDSMOBILE, CADILLAC.
WPieel hoih rro ucl and pri vil&lt;'gl'd to I ~· tilt' Itt'\\' ( .ulill ,u "''""" 111 1 " "I
st•rviring t1 ,, 1\nu •tw &lt;1 11 ""'llf l.u d It 11 l ltr · \ \ 't l t ll I
retl~ ir~s a uniqut• kind ol tl'"-POil"-ihi lit v .111d t &lt;lllH llltllll 'llt

commumty. Bl~ra ust • st-•ll ing ..md

A rcsron sihility for giving yrHI tlu • ('\( f rd prt ·h ·n ·H(tdl ( r~'.ltnwnl \'CH I dr '"(' I\ r ' " ". I
Cadi Ilac owner. An d o n Hlllllil1m 'II t t(J Co111pll'tt • Cuo;.tnnwr S11t 1' t.u 111 •11
begi nni ng the momen t you walk through our door.

• Long wearing trouble-free formul a
• Ideal for basemen ! fl oors, patios,
walks &amp; brick
• Quick drying sem i-gloss finish

A prime example of ou r dedirntion is C.1dlilo r's Gold Kl'\' lJ!'illl 'll '' ' I' ·111
whi ch is unique in the luxury car lil'ld . lt lt!'gins with .1 compr!'IH 'II ' III'
inspection of your vehiciP before you evl'n &gt;l't' it. That'' iollmlf •rl l11 .1 11
orientation drive with your sale&gt; "'presen t.l tlve . Two s1•ts of 2J- ko~ ro~ t g11lrl
plated keys. with a personalized Go ld Key idPntilica tinn Card a nrlt1111n·
It 's iust what you'd expect from a lnxmy l!'itdn Vi&gt;it nnr mw !l,•.do ·l, hip .mrl
take a demonstration driw in ;my gn·;IIIH 'W Ca d ilia&lt; . Unci' ,., II lin . w• · 1h 11 1~
you' ll agree : Bes t of all. .. it 's a Cadillac

•

Pickens Hardware
MASON, W. VA.

PAINT MAKER

LHIGIIII TOGlniER .. Blx:KLE UP

306 E. MAIN STREET • POMEROY
.,

CADILLAC

1M bike are Dick Owen, a Jaycees member, and
Edna Wil'llln, of Western Auto. The bike-a-thon will
begin 9 a.m. Saturday Ill the Meigs Jurior High
football field. ChainniUI for the event Is Bob F1nl.

Middleport man killed in accident
A Middleport man was killed In a
one-car accident Wednesday morn·
lng on Route 33 in Hartford,
according to a spokesman for the
Mason Co unty Sheriff's
Department.
Deputies Identified the viclim as
Glenn E . Vance. 47.
The spokesman said Vance was

westbound on Route 33 In his 198l
Ford pickup Truck when Ihe vehicle
left Ute roadway and slammed Into
a parked camper, owned by RobE-rt
Hickel of Hartford, at 8:30a.m.
VanCl' was found In hls plcku p
truck alll:03a.m., and transported
by the New Haven Emergency
Medical Service to Pleasan TValley

Hospital where he was pronounced
dead by Mason County Medical
Examinl'r Dr. John Grubb at 12:45
p.m., the spokesman said.
Hickel's camper was estimated
at a total klss.
The accldenl is sl ill under
Investigation by t~ s~rtff' s
deparrnent. ·

S~tes planning to fight waste dump

......

A DURABLE, LATEX
SEMI-GLOSS FINISH
FOR MASONRY
FLOORS AND
PATIOS.

NEW BIKE TO BE GIVEN AWAY - First prtr.e
winner In Saturday's Meigs County Jaycees'
Bike-a·lhon lor Cystic Fibrosis, will rlde home m a
brand new tm-speed bicycle. The bike was ptrchued
by the Jaycees from Middleport Western Auto. With

ILLEGAL PlANTS S11U GROWING - Pomeroy Police Chief Jerey Rought, left, and Patrolman
JeD Miller are pictured with a part of over 200
Individually potted marijuana plants which were
oon!iscaled In Pomeroy Tuesday and Wednesday.
Chief Rought said that ailout128 plants were found on
the roo! of an apartment occupied by Dan Haggy, 1044

Spring Ave. Jlaggy told pollee that he !mew nothing ol
the plants and an investigation is coriinulng. About
1110 niore plants were found In the back yard at m
Laurel St., the residence .. Vincent F. Stone. Chief
Rought said Stone admitted lmowledge of the plants
and will be charged with possession of a oomroDed
,.,bstance in the court of Mayor IUchard Seyler.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Offi·
cials in Nevada, Texas and Wa·
shlngton state, upset by PresidenT
Reagan's designation rJ their states
as likely hosts of the nation 's first
high-level nuclear waste dump, say
they'll challenge the decision in
court.
"11 should come as no surprtseto
the federal govenunent that wewlll
see them at the courtoouse as soon
as possible,". Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox said Wednesday,
shortly after the administration
announced three potential sites for
the first dump and rullng out 20
others proposed for a secood
faclilty.
"This is proving 10 be Ihe biggest
railroad job ever perpetuated by
the federal governmenT upon this
state, and 1 intend to light It tooth
and nail," he said.
The three sites uoder consldera-

tlon for the first nuclear waste Department said.
The dump. which will hold as
reposllory are In Yucca Mountain.
Nevada; Deaf Smith CounTy. much as 10.000 metric tons of
Texas, and the Hanford Reserva· radioactive gnrbage !rom nuclear
tlon In Washington state. EUrnJ- power fac ilil ies across the country,
nated from conslderailon for the is expected 10 be large enough 10
first dump were Davis Canyon, handle ail wa str genera ted "for the
forseeable future." The departmen r
Uta h, and Richton Dome. Miss.
" We have reached an lmportan I said. Initial estimates had for~as l
milestone and taken a significanT more wasTe and r~ommended The
step forward," Energy Secretary second dump.
The final site will be selected tn
John Herrington Told a news
1994 from thethrec oomtn alro sites.
conference.
"This Is not a popularity conies!, .. and t~ dump is scheduled 10 begin
he said, acknOwledging opposition operat lng in 19!*1.
BecauSP of progress in choosing
to the waste facUlty. "We're not
the first nuclear waste site, Her·
looking lor the popular way out."
Plans call for the three sites to be rington said, "I have posTponed
studied for six years to determine indefinitely plans for any sitP.
which Is most suitable for use. The speelflc work relaTed to a S('('Ond
studies are expected to cost S'78J repository."
Twenty sit&lt;'S In seven slaii'S mUllan at YuC!'a Mountain, $850
mUUon In Deaf Smith County and Mainl', New HampshirE:', Virginia ,
Continued on page 10
$970 million at Hanbrd, the Energy

Eastern graduation scheduled Sunday, June 8
The final high school graduation among Meigs
County schools has been SPI for 8 p.m., Sunday, June
8, at Eastern High SchooL .
The graduates will enter the auditorium 10 music
provided by .the Eastern High School Band directed
by James Wllhelm with Rev. Thomas Kelly giving the
invocation and the benediction. Directed by Mrs.
Valerie RansbOttom, the high school choir will sing
"Amazing Grace", "Battle Hymn of the Republic"
and "That's What Friends Are For". Valerie Lynn
Woods, a member of the graduating class wlll present
a voca l solo, "The Greatest Love .of All".
Rev. Wi!Uam Middleswarth wUI deliver Ute

baccalaureate address.
Lisa Marie Henderson, class president, will glvet~
welcome and James Terrance Caldwell, class vice
president, wlll introduce the speakers, Ronald Gene
Jacobs II, who will givl' the salutatortan address, and
John Wetzel Rice who wUI present the valedictorian
address.
High School Principal WUIIam L. Buckley wlll
recognize the top 10 scholars and he wUI present thl'
class of 1986 to Supt. Richard L. Roberts. Mrs.
Carolyn Susie Heines, president of the Eastern Local
Board of Education, wlli present diplomas. In cl!argt'
of the turning of the tassel wUI be Joseph GranvUie.

Runyan, class secretary, and Palrlcla Ann Sarm.
class treasurer.
Graduates are Kevin Lee Barber, Mellssa Ann
Barker, Linda Kay Bartimus, Kevin Nell Barton,
Ryan NeilBearhs, Royce Alan Bissell, Robert Lloyd
Brooks, Anthony Blaine Chapman, James Terran~
Caldwell , Paula Lee Cowdery, Kimberly Lynn Dent,
Tammy Lyn Brendez DU!on, Timothy Robert Dorst,
David Allen Edwards, Robert Shane Epling, Michael
Anthony Gillilan, Dawna Rae Grueser, Lisa Marte
Henderson, Joshua Paul Henry, Aleshla Lynn
Holsinger, Olaries Bradley Holsinger, PhUllp Wayne
Holsinger, Randal Lee Holsinger, Margaret II'Eile

Horner. Betty Jo Hunt, Ronald Gl'ne Jacobs 11.
Michael Lee Keney, Donald Howard Maxoon II,
Christopher Kevin Morris and Kelly Anne Morris.
Ceo~ Albert Parker. Angela Marte Pooll'r,
Veronica Marie Provo, Alan Robert Reed, John
Wetzel Rice, Joseph Granvilll' Runyoo, Patricia Ann
Sams, Kimberly Ann Schul. Mlchacl Anthony S!m,
'Jbomas Eugene Smith, Angellque STarcher, Terrie
Anne Starcher, Terri Ann StoUT, Tracy William
Taylor, David Eugene Wells, William Harrison
Whitlock Ill, Michelle Lee Wilson, Valerie Lynn
Woods, Amy Yvette Young and An~la Yvonne
Young.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Comment
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

llJ ~ Court

DEVOTED TO THE

I~RES'lll

OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslstlUII Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General ~lanager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER of Thf' UnitM PrE'Ss Internationa l. In land

Dall~·

PrPss ,\ ssocla -

tlon and tht&gt; Am('rlcan 1\' ewspaper Publishers i\ssodation.

m

LET'TERS OF OPINION ar(' welcom€'. Thev should lx&gt; less than
words
lon(!: . All letters ares ubj&lt;'ct to edlllng and must b~slgncd with name. address and
telephont&gt; number. No unsigned ll"llers u:UI be published . LettNs should bE&gt; In
good taS tE'. addrt'Ss ln g Issues. not IX'fSonalllies .

Renewed citadel
Some years back, WilliamS. White wrote a love song a! a lxJok about the
Senate called. "The CitE.dei."
White's book described a pantheon of statesmen , an Ivory tower where
the noblest Americans of them all forgathered to !lV'dltate, discourse and
sometimes even vote upon the most cosmic issues confronting mankind.
White's gioY.ing portrait of the Senate may have laid on true blue and
pristine white a bit heavUy, but It' did seem that there were oome real
heavyweights in the Senate immediately alter World War II.
Men Uke Harry Byrd Sr. a! Virginia, Richard Russell ri Georgia, Lister
Hill a! Alabama. Paul Douglas of Illinois, Herbert Lelunan d New York,
Robert A. Taft of Ohio and Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan comm'anded
respect and awe.
Bright newcomers abounded. Three of them - John Kennedy a!
Massachusetts. Lyndon JohnsOn of Texas and Richard Nixon d California
-occupying the presidency for 14 years starting In 1961.
The idea of working an Abscam sting against memiEn. ri the Senate In
those days probably would have been considered insane. In the late 1900s,
alter Sen. Francis Case of South Dakota declared that he had been
improperly approached by a lobbyist, President Eismoower vetoed the
measure with a stinging rebuke to the lobbying community.
Oh. how that little world atop Capitol Hill has changed.
Nowadays. many lobbyists don't bother to spmd years cultivating the
friendship and confidence d senators. They just form a political action
committee and threaten to put anyone woo wtes against their clients on a
hit list for the next election.
And it works . In the recent past, any tax bill that came befOre the Senate
was in grave danger of being converted into a "Christmas tree " festooned with amendments conferring benefits, shellers and fa vors on
this, that or the other special interest. Efforts to simplify reform the tax
system usually ended up making It rmre compUcated and manifestly
unfair.
It looked like it was going to be the same old story again this year when
the tax reform bill arrived at the Senate Finance Committee. Under the
prodding of the lObbies, the bill grew heavy with Christmas ornaments
hung oo the bill by sen aton. woo felt their pJilticailivesdependedonsaving
someone's tax break.
Finally, committee Chairman Bob Packwoodo!Oregon called a halt. He
made his colleagues tE.ke a good look at what they were creating and then
started over again. Working out of sight and hearing of the lobbyisis, the
committee members rebuU! a bill that, while far from perfect, actually
would move toward simplifying the tax Code and closing some o!its more
flagrant loopooles.
The Senate is to tE.ke up the bill next month. Unlike the House, which
operates under rules that permit very iltt.letE.mperingwlthataxbilloocelt
reaches the Door, the Senate measure is wide open to the same kind
statutory rape that was being committed on the committee legislation.
Now the question IS, can the Senate restrain Itself with the lobbyists
looking on from the galleries' The answer to the question wlli determine
whether the Senate can again ca ll Itself an old fashioned citadel or a
modern day massage parlor.

.Letter to the Editor
Church, cemetery records sought
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society would Uke to thank Olris·
tine Fruth and Dan Foilrod for all
the work they did in deaning up tbe
St. John's Luthern Church cemetery in Nayiors Run. The cemetery
·is located on the cllff near tbe
·corner of Spring Ave. and Rock St.
The vines. weeds and brian. had
taken over and paris of the
cemetery· were impenetrable. The
change is remarkable. Thanks
again Christine and Dan.
·· There are over 00 tombstone and
room for many rmre. Christine has
copied all of tbe Information from
· these stones and we are now trying
to lOCate the church and/or ceme·

Chicago blanks Cincinnati;
Mets top Dodgers again,·4-2

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, May 29, 1986

A few long thoughts _____.J_am_e_s1_.K_il...:._pa_tr_ick

The Daily Sentinel

tery records to complete tbe list of
burials in ·this cemetery, and
preserve pari of the history of the
church.
U anyone knows where these
records are, please contact Mrs.
James 'Karen' Werry at 3199J
Court St. Rd .• Racine, Ohio 45m.
Ph. 614-949-2936. We don't need tbe
actual records, just a copy.
Sincerely, Mrs. Karen Werry,
President, Meigs County Genealogical Society; Mrs. June Ashley,
Vice-Pres.; Mn.. Margaret Parker,
Treasurer; Mr. Keith Ashley,
Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. Sue
Hager. News Reporter and Mn..
Frances Roberts, Secretary.

:Today in history
Today Is Thursday. May 29, the !49th day of 1986 with 216 to follow.
The moon is approaching Its la st quarler.
The morning stars are Man. and Jupiter.
.
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus and Saturn .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
. patriot Patrick Henry in. l736: Ebenezer Butterick, Inventor oft he tissue
:paper dress pattern , In 1826: actress Beatrice Lillie in 1898: movie
·composer.Erich Wolfgang Korngold in 1897: .entertainer Bob Ho~ In 1903
: (age 83); boxer Tony zaJe in 1913 (age 73); and John F. Kennedy, 35th
:president of the United States, In 1917.
• On this date in history:
; In 1453, Constantinople (now IstanbJIJ, capital ri the Byzantine Empire,
was captun&gt;d by the Turks.
: In 1700, Rhode Island became the last ritheorlgjnal 13 states to ratify the
. U.S. Constitution.
· In 1003, Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand became tbe first person in
recorded history to reach the top of Mount Everest in Nepal.
In 1977, a flash fire swept through a nightclub In Southgate, Ky., kllUng
162 people and injuring :.J.
In 1985, British soccer fans attacked Italian fans preceding the European
Cup final in Brussels, Belgium. The resulting stadium stam)lede killed :ll
people, including 31Italians. and Injured 400.
A thought for the day: President John Kennedy said in his maugural
address, "Ask not wba't your country can do fur y!XJ; ask what you cando
for your country."

SCRABBLE, Va. - A postcard
came the other day from a
gentleman in Jacksonville, Fla. He
was writing in defense d teaching
secular humanism In the schoolsa controversy I have no intention fi
reopening '-- and I took his card to
the house when I .went over for
lunch. Out on the deck, just outside
the kitchen, two Caronna wrens
were hard at work.
"It is not Important to academic
curriculum to establish oow the
human was created," sald my
friend . "It is importE.nt to teach
what is known in scientific discovery." Then came the sentence that
stopped meshort: "Noonewiliever
prove there is a 'God,' but It is

possible to prove tbere lsn 't one."
The Carolina wrens were buDding a nest in a· Dowering basket of
begonias. You wUi never see a
busier pair of homemakers. They
were ali over the yard, picking up
pine needles, oak pollen, grass
clippings. The job took them only an
oouror so, butwben ll\eyweredone
they had a regular cottage. That
nest is a work of art. Who, or what, I
wondered, ever taught a pair of
wrens to butld a nest?

It has been a long, slow spring for
us . The crocuses that usually come
up in late February didn 't appear
untU mid-March. Has my· friend
evE!' looked intently at a crocus?
The wUiows came into leal a week
or oo later, then tbe redbuds,
belatedly the dogwoods . This Is
apple country. and the apple
blossoms. llke Easter bonnets,
turned our country lanes into a
glorious promenade. How Is Hthat
apples rorm• How come tbe acorn?
. The secular humanists, It seems
to me, have an unsunnountable
problem in their athelstic pi!Uosophy. Too many manifestations ri
nature conspire against them, I
wonder If my friend has looked at a
bumblebee, an ant or a frog. We
have lots of them around here. A
flock of purple finches dropped in
the other day, on their way !rom
somewhere to somewhere. How did
they get these pertectcomputers In
their tiny brains? I think of the
incredible oomplexlty of the bJman
· body. Who Invented the lymphatic
system? Who toought up the human
heart?
The May nights have teen mostly
cool and clear. Alter dinner we like
to sit on the deck bra little while
before bedtime. The stars are
Otrisimas lights In the massive
chPStnut oak. In the vastness of tbe
universeoun. is a puny planet, but it
revolves by a mllennlal clock that
never runs down . The tides, the
seasons, lbe bursting sreds in the
warming groun:l - did all this
;:::; happen by accident? I can't believe
'"' it.
On close examination, I discover
that my friend maUed his card from
Jacksonvllle but he Uves In Daytona
Beach. Those are pretty congesiE'(!
urban areas. He Is in the middle ri
the worksriman-con:lominlurns.
hi g hways, of!ice buildings,
bumper-to-bumper traffic. About
the only man-made contraption
around the farm now is the garden
tractor. and It doesn't work .·

a·

Enduring a nightmare_.J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;_D_al_e_Va_n_A_tt_a
WASHINGTON - This Is the
story of an American·businessman
wbo recently returned from a
Libyan nightmare and is now in
hiding from Moammar Khadafy's
kUlers. The story has been conftrmed by witnesses, wlxJ lear
retaliation. We have agreed, therelore, to withhold all names.
The businessman, tempted by a
multimillion-dollar dfer to sell
textUes to Libya, Dew to Khadafyiand, wbere be was cordially
received. Contracts were signed:
the profits rolled ln. All the while.
Libyan autooritles gave him the
red-carpet treatment.
But on his last trip to Libya·, he
was unaccountably arrested by
secret pollee woo questioned him
for 16 bours - from noon untU 4
a.m. He was taken to his ootei to
pick up his belongings: then he was
hauled back to secret police
headquarlers, which were was
located In a villa that had once b!en
a private resJdence.
He was stripped naked and
slammed into a narrow, cramped,
basement cell, "approximately 3-

by-7 feet, with no window, no tollet ,
no sanitary· facilities." His clothes
were returned, but he was provided
nothing else except water and "an
Inedible, spicy Libyan soup and
bread."

For 33 days, he was caged in this
tlny cell. "The temperature was
approximately 100 degrees Fahrenheit, alld there were no showers,
tooth brushes or other amenities,
nor any change of clothes," he said.
"The mosqultoesweresonumerous
that despite the Intense heat It was
necessary to slet&gt;p IEnea th tbe
scratchy sackcloth bedding."
Back home. the businessman's
Wife began to worry when she didn't
hear rrom him. "I called the
manager of my husband's office,"
she said. "He also had not received
any telexes. I then began to make
repeated telephone calls to my
husband's hotel room, but the
operator always stated that he was
out but had not checked out of the
mteL I then telephoned my husband's older brother. a lawyer In
New York."

Today's students
It Is frequently said of today's

college students that they have no
interest in public issues.
In contrast with the politicallyInvolved 1960s collegians, the current crop is thought to be so caught
up in the lust lor high·paylng jobs
after graduation - or lor admission
to prestlglous professional schools
- that they ,have no time lor, or
in terest in, public concerns.
I disagree, at least in part, with
this view of today's college .
students.
~college students are no
longer noc~ huge protest
parades or demonstrations. Nor Is
there any current · Issues that
arouses the passions stirred by the
Vietnam War.
But certain facts have to kept In
mind about the 1960s protest
movement and about today's alleged lethargy.
As one who · helped stir tbe
campuses in the 1960s and early
'70s, I was always aware that the
students actually involved were a
minority, Even at the height of the
anti-war movement. the students
playing an active role politically
never became a majority.

.

By RANDY MINKOFF

The lawyer and another brother
took of! for Libya to search for their
missing brother. They got as far as
Switzerland. "We were unable to
obtain visas to enter Libya," one
brother explained simply,
Meanl'lhile, the businessman was
taken "'t of his cell only for
questioning. "The hails were lined
w1th grim-faced , trenage guards
armed with rifles , woom I had to
pass on tbe way to inten-ogatlons,"
he said. "I was Interrogated on
approxbnately four occasions, always at night, and left in a
weakened emotional and physical
stale."
Though these sessions were
harsh, he was not physically
tortured. However, he saw other
prisoners brutally beaten with rifle
butts at the whim of the teenage
guards. A British prisoner, he saki.
"was badly beaten."
Not untO the end of the ordeal did
Ibe busineSsman figure out why he
had been arrested. The arrest was
intended to terrortze him, he
concluded, so he would do their

bidding. The carrot had been the
multimillion-dollar contracts; the
cruel bnprlsonment was the stick.
He was told to contribute 5
percent of his profits to the Libyan
A!rican Trading Co., he said. He
was also put in touch with a
mystery man woo went by the
name of Haji Ail: the American
was instructed to lure anti-Khadafy
leaders out Into the open by
trOmising !bern lucrative business
opportunities.
The businessman made discreet
inquiries and was told that the
Libyan African Trading Co. was a
front that !lnances Khadafy's
worldwide terrorist underground.
He also learned that other business·
men had been dragged into the
I:Bsement prison lor torture and
Intimidation.
The businessman agreed to
follow instructions . But as ooon as
be got out of Libya, he hurried back
to the United States and told his
story to the FBI, Now he lean. lor
hs life and constantly watches over
his sooulder.

care _ _ _ _ _
Ge_or-=-ge_M_cG_ove_r_n

Another pertinent observation
about this period is that once
President Nixon achieved an end to
tbe draft, much at the stEam in the
anti-war movement evaporated. As
one woo literally loathed thai
miserable war. I was shocked to see
tbe decline in youthful repugnanoe
to the war once young Americans
were assured that the kUling and
dying would be done only by
~Ui unteers - many of them poor
blacks woo saw no otber attractive
alternatives i:&gt;r employment. .
I do not think thatioday'scollege
students are much better or much
worse than those of aJ years ago, or
lor that matter, toose of 40 years
ago when I was in college.

On the positive side, today 's
collegians include a serious, Intelligent, committed minority woo have
real concerns about the nuclear
arms race, the deterioration of the
global environment, the painful
official racism d South Africa, the
enormous damage caused by tbe
criminal drug culture and the
relationship of the unresolved
Palestinian tragedy to terrorism.
Since leaving the U.S. Senate in
1981, I have !Fen heavUy in demand
Also, 19'12 marked the first as a visiting lecturer on oollege
presidential election year kl which campuses m the United States and
18-year-olds were allowed to vote. In Europe. I have proi:Bbly ~ken
Virtually the entire college student on a toousand or more campuses in
enrollment was afforded an oppor· the last ~ix years in addition to
!Unity vote at a time when the serving as a guest professor lor a
Vietnam War was supposedly term or more at eight major
dominating campus concerns · universities.
across America.
In ail of tbese appearanoes, .J
Sad to relate, despite tbe fact the have confronted large, keenly
Vietnam War Issue was sharply interested crowds eager to listen to
drawn by President Richard Nixon me, and question me, on the Issues
and by me as his Democratic ri our time as long as my energy
opponent, only a small peroentage would permit. I have spoken to
d the college students wmt to the packed auditoriums, arenas and
trouble d registering and wting in field oouses across this country
that fatdul election.
from my earlJesl days in the U.S.

Senate In 1963 uniU my most recent
weekly tour, which took me to
Colgate, Cornell and the University
ri Colorado.
I make tbese observations - not
to boast - but simply t&gt; say that I
Hnd today. as I did 3l years ago, a
sizable minority d our college
students vitally interested in the
great issues of &lt;&gt;Jr day.
Do not dismiss today' s college

students as self-centered dullards
disinterested in the world around
us.
If that Is your view, I Invite you to
accompany me Cl1 my next lecture
tour. You wUI learn as I have that
the colleges of America are stU!
turning out concerned citizens woo
care aho\11 this nation and about
this planet we In habit. I lEU eve In
them.

FINAL Otrr - Chicago shortstop Shaoon Dulllton
makes Onal putout on a !lrst inning rundown play on

Reds' Ed Milner in Wednesday's game aJ Chicago.
The Cubs won, :1-0. (UPI)

Pierson second in NAIA meet;
Miller places fourth in Nationals
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College now boasts 'tw o All Americans in track and!leld: Mark
Pierson, who finislll'd second at the
NAJA National Track Meet In the
steeplechase, and Darren Mill er,
who finished fourth In the 5000
meter run at Russellville. Arkan sas, site of the Nationals, last
Saturday.
Both athletes reached the finals
alter successfu I preliminary heal
perlormances on Thursday to
determlne the 12 fin ali sts.
Pierson, a Lynchburg citizen.
gained recognition as having the
fastest time In the steeplechase In
the NAJA duting tre 1986 track
season and finished fourth In his
preliminary heat.
Miller. a Georgetown product.
also placed fout1h in his preliminary heat Friday in tre 500Jrn run.
He had run oneofthe fastertlmes in
his event during the 1986 track
season.
In the !lnais, Pier·son ran with a
pack of six athletes through live and
a hail taps . Then he began to move
. up in the pack. On the ftnal lap
Pierson pushed to the front. Chris
Perrone a! Missouri's Park College
passed him on the !Ina! watcrjump
of the race, and the last L'iO meters
was a 1wo·man race . Perrone used
his superior hurdle form on the last
barrier to cross the fin ish line at
9:06.14 and win thP race . Pierson

crossed the line at 9:06.48, a new
personal test, only three-tenths of a
second behind th e nat ion al
champion.

will always remember," said
Mllier. "I oope to come back next
year and win the national cham·
plonship In the 5IDl."
Both athletes thanked head track
coach Willey after the event en
route to the dorm . Willey said,
"That meant It ail."
Both a thietes are members a! the
_Rio Grande College Army Rare
Program and the Alpha Lambda
Delta national honor society. Both
were Academic Ali-Americans in
the fall and "should have little
trouble in dupUcating that !eat this
year," according to Willey.
Ray Perry, the leading point
scorer for Rio lor the past two
years, qualified for the Nationals
this year in the triple jump. The
Wheelersburg resident just missed
an opportunity to qualify In the
decathlon, placing 19th in the nation
in his first attempt at the event.
Perry placed in the top 3l in the
triple jump at the Nationals.
Perry, a senior at RGC, is
majoring in marketing and is the
son d Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Perry d
Wheelersburg. MUier, a junior at
RGC, l,s a communications major
with a 3.79 grade point average and
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Mllier ot Georgetown. Pierson, a
junior at RGC, majors In mathe·
matlcs with a 3.82 GPA and Is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pierson of
Lynchburg.

" I knew I needed to pu sh really
hard between the barriers because
my hurd le form is not tbe greatest. I
gave it ali I had and !ell just a little
short a! winning, but it felt great to
become All-American again lhe
gained AU-American status in the
cross country Nationals held earlier
this year)." said Pierson. "I will
work on my hurd le form !or next
year and come back to bopefully
become the national champion ."
Miller, Pierson's teamate,
started in the sa me fashion,
running with an eight-man pack
through eight and a half laps of tbe
500m run. He then moved into
fourth place. Darren ran the last
hall mile of the 3.1 mile race In two
minutes and nine seconds . MOler
also broke his pernonai record.
ti!lV'd at 14:23, only three seconds
trom the national champion, to
finish fourth .
"I was pretty confident l could
finish In the top six and become an
All -American , but alter I had run
14:38 the night before to qu alify lor
the final. I was a little worried. I felt
really good in the final, however,
and ran my best race. Becoming an
All-American is one thing I'm sure I

"Indulge every whim while you can."

move."

Chicago responded by jumping
Inning toW the story of the series on ~ Gullickson, 4-4, whose
finale between the Chicago Cubs winn
streak was snapped at 4.
and the Cincinnati Reds .
Shaw n Dunston led off with a
The Cubs cashed In on tbeir single, stole second and went to
opportunity, scoring two runs en- third on catcher Bo Diaz' throwing
route to a 5-ll win Wednesday over error. Davey l.opes, wbo had two
tbe Reds. Cincinnati blew a golden RBI, lofted a sacrifice Dy to tight.
scoring opporlunlty in the first and scoring Dunston. Ryne Sandbberg
fell to the strong pitching of Rick · singled of! Bell's glove at third and
Sutcliffe, 3-6. Jody Davis also hit his scon&gt;d on Keith Moreland 's RBI
ninth homer of the season with two double to right.
out in the third for the Cubs,
''I'm not going to say that us not
winners of four of their last six.
scoring one run and them get tlng
Sutcliffe, 7-1 lifetime against two was the baligame," Rose said.
Cincinnati, hurled his 13th career "But I'd be pretty dumb to say he
shutout and first since June 6 d last didn't have great stuff when he
year when he blanked Pittsburgh stops us on lour hits."
1-0 alter weathering tbe first Inning
After the first, Cincinnati manjam.
aged a runner as far as second only
It was also his second complete once.
game in a row, marking the first
Chicago got Sutcliffe some Insutbne since May of last year that a rance in the second , loading the
Cub pitcher had accomplished that bases on a walk to Davis, a single by
feat. ·
Manny TrUio and a single by
"I was glad to see Rick get some Sutcliffe through a drawn-in infield.
early help and that enabled him not One out later, Lopes' Infield RBI
to worry about every pitch and single and Sandberg's sacrlilce fly
every at -bat like he had been doing made it 4-0,
earlier in the season,'' said Cubs '
"It just seemed when I got the
manager Jim Frey.
bali up they hlt it and when I got the
Eddie Milner led of! the game bali tow they didn't hit It good
with a triple to rlghtcenter. Pete enough," Gullickson said. "I didn 't
Rose then oounced a sharp think I pitched poorly. they just got
grounder that Sutcliffe snared and some breaks and It was their day."
got Milner out in a rundown.
NL Roundup
"Being 6-loot-7 certE.In ly helped In other National League games,
on that play. I was ready to concede Dwight Gooden woo suffered a 10-2
the run but one run wasn't going to loss and was knocked out In the
kill me today,'' said Sutcliffe, wbo fourth inning at San Francisco last
struck out five and walked two In week, returned to his Cy Young
pitching his 13th career shutout and Award-winning form Wednesday
his first since _June 6 of last year night, pitching a five-hitter, walk·
when he blanked PittsbJrgh 1-0.
lng two and striking out 10 to lead
Rose, the Reds' player-manager, the New York Mets to a 4-2 victory
said Sutcliffe's play helped turn the over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
game around.
"If he isn't a great athlete, he
doesn't make that play because I hit
It hard and It would have been a
CLEVELAND IUPI i - Former
hit," Rose said. "I don't blame
major-league
first baseman Mike
Milner lor trying to score on a play
been
named a coach
Hargrove
has
like that."
with
Cleveland
a!filiate
Batavia of
After Max Venable grounded out.
the
New
York-Penn
League.
the
the Cubs elected to intentionally
Indians
announced
Wednesday
.
walk Dave Parker, a decision that
Hargrove, 36, batted .291 with 8J
left Sutcliffe visibly upset. He then
homers
and 686RBI in 12 years with
walked Buddy Bell to load the bases
Texas,
San
Diego and Cleveland.
but got Dave Concepcion to ground
He
was
released
by the Indians
out to sbort.
alter
last
season
and
did not make
"I'm in the dughouse if Parker
the
final
Oakland
roster
duri ng
hits a two-run bomer," Sutcliffe
spring
training
this
year.
said. "If we walk him and It works
Hargrove, lbe 527th overall selec-

In other games, Houston edged
St. Louis 4-3 in 11 innings, Pittsburgh topped AtiantE. 4-.l, Philadelphia shut out San Francisco 40, and
San Diego crushed Montreal 10·1.
In the American League, It was:
Baltimore 9, Oakland 5; Boston 13,
Cleveland 7; Texas 6, Oticago 3;
Kansas City 4, Mllwaulree 3;
Toronto 14, Minnesota 8; Detroit 4,
California 1: and New York 6,
Seattle 5.
Astros 4, Cardinals 3
At St. Louis, pinch hitter Craig
Reynolds tripled with two out in the
lith innlng to score Glenn Davis,
who doubled down tbe right field
line off Todd Worrell , 33, and
scored on Reynolds' triple to
right-center. Charlie Kerleld, 5-1,
pltcbed tbe final two innings to earn
the \1Ctory.
Pirales 4, Braves 3
At Pittsburgh, Tony Pena hit a
solo borne run and Johnny Ray
went 2-for-4, drove in a run and
scored the game-winner on Craig
McMurtry's sixth-inningw·ud pitch.
enabling the Pirates to snap a
six-ga me losing streak. Larry
McWilliams, 1-3, picked up th win,
and .Jose DeLeon ea rned his first
save.

f'hi.Uies 4, Giants 0
At Philadelphia. Glenn Wilson
knocked in two runs, and Shane
Rawley threw a !our-hitter. Wilson
knocked in two runs In a lour-run
first Inning as Philadelphia chased
Giants starter and loser Scott
Garrelts, 4-5. Rawley, 6-4, struck
out six and walked two in earning
his first shutout of the season.
Padres 10, ExP&gt;S I
At Montreal, Terry Kennedyhlta
three-run oomer, and Jerry Royster added a two-run blast, pacing
the Padres.

Hargrove named Cleveland fann coach
tion in the 1972, rose from obscurity
to become the American League
rookie ri the year In 1974 when he
batted .323 with 12 homers and 82
RBI.
In seven years with Cleveland,
Hargrove batted .292 w1th 33
homers and 383 RBI in 11!8 games.
He ooids the Indians' all-time
record for walks In a season with
111 In 19fll.
The Class A Batavia Trojans,
managed by Tom Chandler. begin
their season on June 16.

Bird promises to work hard for
unprecedented fourth straight hoJtorl
B~

FREDERICK WA'fEII.MAN
UPI Sports 1\'rlter
BOSTON IUPI I - Boston Celt lcs
forward Larry Bird, named as th&lt;'
league's Most Va luable Player fur
the third consecu tive year Wednesday, promised to work on his game
In order to win the award an
unprecf'dented fourth strai ght
time.
Bird. a seven-year pro, joins
former centers Bill Russell and Witt
Chamtx&gt;rlaln as the only pla)'ers to.
be named rpgutar- season MVP
three years in a row .
"II hink I can win this some more
If I just go out and work hard this
summer and comP back in the right
frame a! mind," said Bird, woo was
among tre teag-ue leaders In live
sta tistical categories. "There's no
question that nex t year. if I !l-ei like
I do right now. I can win It again."
Bird easUy outdistanced forwa rd
Dominique Wilkins a! Atlanta by

you don't want to get knocked out of
it , you want to stay at that level and
you want your game to stay there,"
he said alter accepting t be Maurice
Podoio!f Trophy In a ceremony at
Boston Garden.
"Once I was considered arrong
the top players in the league. I
strived to be the No. 1 player, and
oncelgotmyfirstMVP. thereisno
question the desire was bJmlng
Inside to get another one.
"Like any otber year, I toought
there were two, three or four &lt;iller
players woo could have deserved
this. The fact our team was
superior in the regular season
probably made me the
frontrunner."

ll'Cl'iving 7ffJ of a possible 78J
points. Bird received 73 of 78
!irst-place votes in voting by media
memters around the league. Wil·
klns received the other live firstplace votes, with Bird second on all
five ballots. Wilkins had 407 points,
followed by Los Angeles Lakers
guard Magic Johnson with ~.
Celtics president Red Auerbach,
wbo picked Bird as a junior eligible
in the 1978 draft, said of the 6-!oot-9
Ind iana native, "Larry Bird be·
came great and then kept working
to get better."
·
Bird said that his desire to be tbe
best was equalled by his desire to
remain there.
"Once you're considered the best

NBA Mosl Valuable Plavers

Sciol o results
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! I Holiday F"alr, a two- ycar ~otd undefeated in two starts this season,
paced the fastest mile li'ednesday
night at Scioto Downs than any
horse that age has run on any !i-8
mile track In the nation this year.
Don irv ine .Jr. guided Holiday
Fair over the mile In 1:59 1-5,
bettering Ihe previlus national best
for a two-year-old of2:001 -5, set just
Monday at Scioto Downs · by
Mohican Pride.
Holiday Fair. sitting eighth in the
nine-bon.e field at the half- miiP
pole, barrelled thre!' wide around
tbe final turn and had a length-and·
a-half lead at the top of !he stretch.
He cltarged down the stretch to post
an eight-and -a-half len gth lead over
Pepper Way with Dark of Knight
llnlshing third .
In the fifth race. Anzlo handed
Sunny Bart his first loss in hi s last 12
starts and, Sllkle's Fancy finished
third to ret urn $1,881 on the 6-8-3
trliecta combination.
The crowd of 2,534 wagered
$244,228.

·as rau

All-Star Bird Wins 3rd Straight MVP
YEAR

Berry's World

I

out like It did, II looks like a good

UPI Sporis Wrller
CffiCAGO (UPI) - The flrnt

sal intelligence." Otbers speak of a
"divine pian." The Book a! Common Prayer speaks of '"one God,
Father Almighty, maker ri heaven
and earth and ali things visible and
Invisible." It is all tbe same. and the
existence d a supernatural power
has absorbed mankind from the
IEginning - whenever the beginning was.
The gentleman In JacksonvUie
sald that no one will ever prove that
God "is," I don't know about that.
Following the rules of evidence in
How could my friend go about most clvU proceedings, I would
"proving" that there is no "God"? I prove the point by a preponderance
think It would be a formidable task. at the evidence. Here in the Blue
Never mind the nomenclature. Ridge Mountains, such evidence
Henry Thoreau spoke ri "a univer- abounds.

KURT

The Daily Sentinei--'-Page-3

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. , _ , . . . . . . . . IIIWitlf ... .. .................... '

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"'IIIII

ALL STAR Forward larry Bird, who Jed the llollim Celtlcs to the
National BasketbaD AII!IOCiatlon champloallllp llaUI lhe pasl U..ee
years, was named the league's MC18i V•.,•ble ""er lor the IIU-d

SAVE

1,606**

8

~

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

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....................... ......,1.,_111,.... f~MbtHIHittlctltfltHtti• .......• Ciltftl .... llllltlc. . . l fiW HMII ,...,,_.,..

IUIIIIII'-'t ....lltfrtltll.,..tw ................................... l ..... t~~lllllllllilll ... llln

straiBftl year. (UPI)

tot I RAPID SPEC. P«C.

�Page-:-4-The Deily Sentinel

Thurldly, May 29, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiQ

Top seeds win early rounds
in $2.6 million French Open
when he plays Bruno Oresar.
Gra1, who will turn 17 just after

PARIS (UP! ) - The top tennis
players In the world have enjoyed
early success In the $2.6 million
French Open. ·
. Wednesday, all 19 men's and
women's seeds who took to the clay
courts at Roland Garms Stadium
won. After three days, only two
men's seeds have been ousted: No.
6 Joaklm Nystorm by Paul McNa·
mee, and No. l6 Heinz Gunthardt by
Damlr Keretlc.
Among the lead ing three
women 's players, top-seeded Mar·
tina NavratUova has dropped 10
games in two matches. However,
No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd has lost just
four, and thlrd·seeded rising star
Steffl Graf of West Germany has
lost three.
"I really haven't been tested yet
here," said the 31-year-old Evert
Lloyd , who Is going for a record
seventh French crown.
" The only way I can really tell
about my current form Is to play
someone with a bit better game
than I have so far."
SEO'S BE!iT WILL COMPEIE - Some of
Soulheaslem Oltlo's finest array of basketball talent
will compo&gt;je m~ AAU Junior Olympic basketball
toumamellt In Colulnbus, June 12. The 11&gt;-rnan roster,
pictured above, has a chance to advance to the
Washlnpon D. C. national tournament by winning tbe
~ tournament. Kneeling from tbe left ..., Doug
. Hultman (Warren Local); l\Dke Chapman (Alex·
llllderl: Gar:v Harnson (GalllpoUs) ; Scott Bragg

·•

(WeiWon): liuey Eason (Meip) and Kenny Turley
(Southern). Standing - Assistant coach RAln Drexler,
Tbn Adams (Athens); Mike Bartrurn (Meigs); Scott
GIWiand (Vinton Courty); Chris Cowell (Warren
Local); Roger White (Belpre); Scott Powell (Meigs)
and coach Rusty Bookman. Absent were Jeff
CaldweU (Eastem); Brent Bissell (Eastern) 1111d Bill
Brothers (Meigs).

Meigs, Gallip~lis cagers will
take part in AAU tournament
ROCK SPRfl\!GS - Led by
SEOAL co-player of the year,
GAHS's Gary Harrison, Southeast·
ern Ohio's finest high school
basketball players join forces to
compete in UJe state AAU Junior
Olympic basketball tournament
June 12 In Columbus.
The 5-11 Harrison, a third-team
class AA aU-Ohio selection, will lead
the Southeastern Ohio entry that
features seven players 6-3 or taller.
Schools represented are broken
down with four from Meigs, two
each from Warren Local and
Eastern, and one apiece from
Soutllem', Alexander, GAHS, Well·
ston, Vinton County, and Athens.
Other members Include 6-4 Mike
Bartrum, 6-4 Scott Powell, 5-11
Huey Eason, and 6-0 Bill Brothers
. from Meigs, 5·9 Jeff Caldwell and

6·1 Brent Bissell from Eastern, 5-9
Doug Huffman and 6-6 Otris Cowell
from Warren Local, second-team
ali-TVC pick 5·11 Scott Bragg of
Wellston, 6-4 Roge r WhiteofBelpre,
6-3 Tim Adams ol Athens, 6-4 Kenny
Turley of Southern, 6-0 Mike
Otapman of Alexander, and 6·3
Scott Gilliland of VInton County.
Coach Rusty Bookman's Sou·
theastern Ohio team will begin !iay
June 12 at the St. Stevens Common·
Ity Center In Columbus. Winner of
the three-day tournament, that
Includes AAU teams from all
around OhiO, advances to the
nationals In July at Washington Q,
C•

Southeastern Ohio will also represent an Intermediate division
team made of the area's younger
players.
Members of the Intermediate
division Include 6-2 Shawn Diddle of
Southern , 5·6 Tony Dicken and 6-3
Dave Warren of Alexander, 6-1
Kevin Oiler and 6-1 Todd Powell of
Meigs, 6-0 Toby Workman and 5-7
John Burdette of Federal·Hock ing,
6·6 Dan Jaycox of Wellston, 5-10
Tom Dutlel ct Mlller. 6-3 Troy
Stuckey of Belpre, and 6·2 Doug
Stewart and 5·9 Eddie Crooks of
Meigs.
Coach Bookman Is assisted by
Ron Drexler.

No. 14 Andrea Temesvari of
Hunga ry will face Mary Joe
the first match
today States
on the
Fernandez
of the United
In
red-clay Center Court. Tha t wlll be
followed by second-seeded Mats
Wilander of Sweden, the defending
cha mpion , meeting America n
Krtckstetn and lOth· seeded Thierry
Tulasre of France playing Italian
Claudio Panatta, whose older
brother Adr iano won the French a
decade ago.
Evert Lloyd will play fellow
American Anne Smith, and Wlmbl·
don champion Boris Becker ol West
Germany will sei his first action
since gaining the second round with
an opening-day victory Monday

•

ICK ELECTRA UMITED 4 DR.
This is one of Buick's finest. Well equipped, white &amp; blue with
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Scoreboard ...
Majors

-

WttWttdlf'l ReH.atl
llalllmort&gt; ' · Oaklancl !I
llo!itnn 13. Clf'vL~alld 7
Tf'JCBS G. C'hicas,:o J
Kansa ~ City l Mllv:au lw'•f• ~
Torontu 14, l\1 1nni'SUI&lt;I II
Nr.,.. Ytll·~ 6. St•arth• ~
l~trolt ~ . Ci1lllornia I
Tla&amp;ndAY'II Gtme~~ti\ U nno t: D'[)
l ~l ltlmon• 41)~on $.2t at Oakl;ml1 tCod l
roll :1 ~• . J· t ~ Jl.m
n,.r run il.a Pnlllt 1.11ill Cil~ fmnli1 1 Su t 1Ml
'l-!1. 10: .\~ IH'Tl
N1•w Y!)l"k I Hil.~nl USSI"'fl ·I I , at ~·a l lil'
t M ur~an .1 -~ol. JU:.l'i p.m .

NAmN.U JJ!.A(;Ut:
By tJnkd Pnw! I.VI'IIIIfloo.itl

1 -'lsbr~h

" ' L Pt.t. GB
11 .7?1 ~ Ill ..'oRl
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Ill ~ ~I 'J 121,;1
1; :M .u ~ 12 1•,
16 24 -~ ' IJ

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llooskln
Atlonla
San Fran

21; IIi

!!91

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21 ill

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Monln•&lt;JI

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Cncnntl

0.1 mlt at S(•LSttlf'. niQht
Nr"'· York Ill Oakland. ni~::hr
ll tltlmal' at Ca tll'ornla , nl~ht
Ti•xas at Kat~sa.~Cit y. nJ~ehr
lh;tnll 111 MlnrJ";;II.1. niRht
Milwuulu'•p ~ ~ ('~· rluntl . nlllht
l"lllr~ at Toroo to, n101t1t
·

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Kolultli
Sr . Lout~ l 11 lllnln~~
Cldrlij(U ~. Or•.: in nal \ 0
San Dtf'RO \fl. Mon ln•al 1
Ntw York t Los An~r~ ~
Ptllladtlpl\la t san ~- ran r i!'C'O (l
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l F M l! m
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Mlnn
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Sin'S RECORD - Chicago pitcher Joe· Cowley set a modem
American league record Wednesday night by strlldng out Ute first
seven Texas Rangers he laced, tbe most by anyone since 1891. (UPI)

SUPREME 1' push , •
wit hMow-N ·M111c:h •
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Ohi o.

Rutland plated three runs in the
seco nd Inning enroute to handily
defeating New Haven 13·0 here
recently In loca l Big Bend Utile
League action .
Young Terry McGutre pit ched
yet another no-hit shut -out, blank·
ing New Haven for no hit s and no
runs.
McGuire had 16 strikeouts an d
wa lked eight in six innings of work .
C. Zerkle wit h relief from Ba tey in
the fourth suffered the loss. They
gave up twelve hits, five walks, and
struck (J.Jt seven.
McGuire helped his cause with
two triples and a double, Jeremy
Rupe a double and a triple, Rusty
Edmonds two st~gles. J im Peter·
son and Kevin Musser each dou·
bles, Frank McGhee a dou ble and
single, and Adams a single.

SERVICE-··-

FlNAL ~"1'1\NIHNGS
SKYUNE BOWUNG LANES

CIB118 A Regional
ba8eball game belweeo Eastern's
Eagle&amp; and lhe Green Bollcals at
PorHnouth was po8ipooed, clue to
rain.
Lucasville v aJley lo8t 118 regional
epener to Clllllll Wlnchesler, 3-1.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Serond class postage paid at Pomeroy.

~

i

tA/u\,

POMEROY, OH .

me roy, Ohio, by lhP Ohio Valley Publishing Company JMulrlmedla , Inc.,

In other action R•tland defea ted
Mlddlepo•1's Cardinals 13.{} as
Terry McGuire hurled a no-hit
shut-out to pick up the big win. S.
Roush suffered the loss , but was
relieved by L. Mitch In the fifth.
They gave up 14 hits, 8 walks, and
had five strikeouts.
McGuire wa lked two and fanned
18.
McGuire recored all the ou ts on

strikeouts as well as hit four-for ·
bur at the plate Including a home
run.
Rupe ha s a triple and two singles,
Peterson a double, Rose and E.
Peterson two singles, McGhee and
McClintock each two singles.

/I.'Y .!Pis - l hmnr.~: IXK"k Nuu Faoola
agn'f'd to rontritrt ll'rm.o.: rPk'iL&lt;.i•l u·ltJo•
rl~ ' r]\' f'l" llirl' f,. •id"'l"l(lll5..'i i!tld tarkk•
David Dunham .

11'1

~1'1

W~'s

8)'

I ~·&lt;~~'U( '

Chev .-Oids.-Cad•

throu gh Friday, 111 Court St .. Po-

Host Rutland defeated the Mid·
dleport E'lre Dept. 13-4 as pitcher
Tim Peterson hurled the six Inning
victory . Peterson wa lked nine,
struck .(J.Jt 12, and allowed just two
hits.
Cremeans suffered the loss as he
and reliever Yeager gave up 12 hit s.
eight walks , and four strikeouts.
McGuire had two home runs and
Rupe one for the winners. McGuire
also doubled and singled. E.
Peterson had a triple, Rupe a
double, T. Peterson a single, Rose
two singles, Shoemaker a single
Md McGhee a single.
Stewart and Simpson had the lone
Mlddiepm1 hits.

while reliever Stt'\'e Ontiveros, 0.2,
took the loss. 'l'ige,.,. 4, Angels I
At Anaheim, Ca lif., Dan Petry,
44, scattered five hits over eight
innings and Lance Parrish, Har ry
Spilman and Lou Whita ker dell ·
vered RBI singles to help Detroit
win its fourth stra ight. Eric King
earned his first major league savr.
The loss went to Jim Slaton, 44. The
Angels' Bobby Grich extended ~is
hitting streak to J4 games.
Yankees 6, Mariners 5
At Seattle, Mike Easler a)ld
Rickey Henderson hit first· Inning
homers, and Don Mattingly adcted
two solo shots for New York.
Reliever Ed Whitson, 4·1, was the
winner and Dave Righetti got tiis
11th save: Mike Morgan, J.6, did not
survive the first inning for the
Marin ers, who got two homers
from Ken Phel ps.

Irl~iiiiiiliiiii~~~iiiii~~!i!iiiiiiiiiiiii!i!ii!i!ii~!liii!!!ii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

Summer league results

troa "2 )f'iH mntral'l

. P08lponed

Publlsht'(:l evt"ry afte rnoon. Monday

Baylor extended his American
League record In the seventh when
he was hit by a pitch fOr the nlth
time In his career. Ro n Hunt holds
the major-league record with 243.
Elsewhere In the American

1

ARLfl\!GTON , Tex. (UPI) Otlcago pitcher Joe Cow ley set an
American League record Wednes·
day evening for the most consecu·
tlve strikeouts to begin a game.
nie White Sox hurler whiffed
seven straight Texas Rangers.
However, Texas' Steve Buechele
hit a solo home run and Pete
O'Brien added a two- run double
during .a four-run Ranger fifth to
give the Rangers a 6-3 victory.
Ed Correa, 3-3, needed help from
Mitch \lllllams, who earned his
first' save.

The Daily Sentinel

"But our pitching's been awful.
Schulze stopped throwing his slider,
and that was it. "
The Indians, 22-2.1, are below .500
for UJe first time this season since
belng 7-8 on Apr\125 and have lost 11
of their last 16 contests.

ul tlw • Now YrorK Prnn I A'&lt;1j!Ut' 1,\ 1
Mllwaukl't' - Slgn-'d lt\'1' pta;•r11&gt; ~ · k&gt;l:·t('d
In lhl• ,January lr{'('-.1J,;I'nt ama rriJI dra ft·
r:ttrhrr l.lof) Sob:'/)'11: : pllt'lw•r D id~· t\m• ·r
&gt;on: f)Uifli•ldl'r .. 1unl h ll lif'ffi&lt;1n TrrrnN'
R!lM·n: ~hort slop j {)S(' Saman}·QO. and
uui! V·IIh William Habb, 8111tdl'lhUI
" •111and - Namrd Mlkf' Sl'hull'f '&gt;
rl'\)lal~' .lack ltarnsay a s trad CO.'K'h.
litah - SIJ.,'I\f'd trrf'·l-lj,!t'tll J[Uan:l Robby
ltanY'Il ro 11 multi ~1 ·&lt;tr ll)nlrart fdJev
S1 (bJ:I Sl&lt;~lr - Notmt-d I!Nb Brook.~
hr!il.l hock~""&gt;' roarh : rnlffif(J ,kJhn l'r rpl~ h an
a.o;slt;mt horkr-.· roach
Foothrdl
Gn'l'n li&lt;t)' - Sl$!1lf11 kk kf'1 AI I'd I ;rro::'O

.00 -

Ill fM
l"l .!no
)') J2,l

I
Ro, ald Han ing, R Ph

H.

through a drawn-In Infield to score
Frank White with one out In the
bottom d the ninth and give Kansas
City Its victory. Reliever Steve Farr
Improved to 3-1 by retiring all fou r
batters he faced. The loss went to
Ma rk Clear. 2·2.
Toronto 14, Minnesota 8
At Minneapolis, George Bell and
Jesse Bartleld each had solo
homers, Tony Fernandez a two·hln
triple, and Lloyd Moseby a three·
run double as Toronto ran up season
highs for runs and hits. Jim Clancy,
5-3, scattered 11 hits, struck (J.J t six
and walked two aver seven innings.
Berl Blyleven, 4-4, was the loser.
Orioles 9, A's 3
At Oakland, Ca lif.. pinch hitter
Jim Dwyer hit a thr&lt;r· run homer In
the ninth Inning to help the Orioles
defeat theA's.RelieverRichBordl,
the victory in relief

League, Texas downed Otlcago 6-3,
Kansas City nipped Milwaukee 4·3,
Toronto topped Minnesota 14-8,
Baltimore beat Oakland 9·5, Detroit
whipped California 4-1, and New
York edged Seattle 6-5.
Rangers 6, White Sox S
At Arlington, Texas, Steve Bue·
chele hit a solo home run and Pete
O'Brien added a two- run double
during a four-run Ranger flflh. Ed
Correa, 3-3, needed help from Mitch
Williams, who earned his first save.
Joe Cowley, 1·2, set a league record
by striking out seven batters In a
row to start the game.
Royals 4, Brewers 3
At Kansas City, Mo., pinch hitter
Hal McRae bounced a single

namr-d \I lk(' ll;tr ]..'llJ\'' ' a &lt;1-..:tch wlrh Rata,·~~

"'' I. 1\1 . Ci8

'l!t
..,;
'll
'!I

Cleveland.
"I knew we'd start hitting
tonight ," said Cleveland Manager
Pat Corrales. "I had a feellngahout

, ,\1\..\ r
('lf-.•rl;md - Sl•nt pltrhl'f" i(('llgl(' HIUf'r to

~ 'li fitll"lll'fo

Arlanta at Chlra~
San FranrL'\('(1 at ." ltw York. nl ~::h t
Sl . Lou!.ti at Cifk•\flnatl , nl~ht
I .OS Anlf'~"li a t Pt tt~ W!'Ril. night
San !)if•I'J HI P hUadl•l] ihlll. nl~ht
Monrn-al ill HousiOI\ niRhl
MltliiCAN I.ErU;UE

lb.lon
Nrw York

....""'

l'lnrrd ~·11!.,'1'1 Oonnk'
Moort•o n lh(' I:'KI&lt;~y dl\ahlrd 11~1. A"tmaoln•
10 Ma~· 24: r~ai.IC't.l ll'IK-.w Tr..O:l F'l....-hl•r
!mm Edmnntun oltllr rarllll: C1~t~l I ,('i!J(UI'

Cnlllnrnla -

I.a~ An~·k-5 1Valc&gt;rvlf•li.r 711 at Nrw York
1F'rrnandr.?. "-1 1. 7: :~. P m .
Sa n FranriSot'O \M ason 141 a r tJhll.adrlptua
1Tollwr621, i :l'i p.m

:
'

SYRACUSE
OI'EN 9·5 DAILY, 1·5 SUN.

Transactions

(1\'lnd
Tornnto

M&lt;Mough. R Ph

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Chicago
pitcher
sets ·m ark

three-run shot In the sixth, put
Boston ahead to stay. "But dr iving
UPI Sports Writer
Jbn Rice and Don Baylor are in runs make up for that .
"I'm really enjoying myself with
tonnlng a more powertul comblna·
tion than the kind to which the Boston. Coming to the Red Sox
(from the New York Yankees for
Boston Red Sox are accustomed.
"I know I hit Into a lot of double Mike Easler In the off-season) has
plays, but I think I make up for It renewed me. We have a good
with my runs batted In," said Rice, . team."
Dennis "0 11 Can" Boyd, 6-3, gav~
who has led the major leagues In
grounding Into double plays the up seven hits, struck out three and
, past .two years, Including a record walked one over seven Innings to
36 In 1984. "Sooner or later, 1 make notch his fourth straight triumph .
Steve Crawford pitched the eighth,
my critics eat their words."
Wednesday night In Cleveland, and Bob Stanley the ninth. Don
Rice provided hls detractors with a Schulze, J.2, was the loser.
"We're on a wonderful roll," said
feast, driving in five runs as the Red
Boston
Manager John McNamara,
Sox pounded the Indians 13·7.
whose
club
leads the major leagues
Baylor, who has homered in four of
with
31
victories.
"The key Is not
his past slx games, added four RBI
getting
cocky.
It'
s too soon to
to help Boston win Its fourth
celebrate."
straight and lOth In 11 games.
Cleveland got fou r homers, two
"Groundouts and strikeouts are
by
Mel Hall, in losing its fifth
part of a power-hitter's life," said
straight
game. Brook Jacoby a nd
Baylor, whose lOth homer, a
Joe Carter also homered for

Dlk'ago

VEGETABLE &amp; BEDDING
PLANTS
REG. 17.50 NOW $5 00 FLAT
HANGING BASKETS
NOW $300
REG. 15.50
4 IN. GERANIUMS
NOW

By BW.. WOIJ.E

Ste: J.D. Story, Jimmy Detm, Ed Bar!tls, Nana Nelson, Peggy El~
S.. us and you will see "WE HAVE THE MEYS TO ABETTER DEAL"

SMITH-NELS·ON MOTORS

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Ohio

Red Sox bomb Cleveland 13-7; Yankees down Mariners

PRICED AT OML1 S7 495

Cloteouf SpBcill

REG. 11.00

the tournament ends, meets Mar,

cella Mesker of Hoiland.

Pomaroy~ Middleport,

Thursday, May 29, 1986

STOP BY ONE OF OUR CONVENIENT
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CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.
LOBBY &amp; INSTALLMENT HOURS

Mondar thru Watlnaadar ................... 9100 a.m. To 3100 p.m.
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frlday........ .9100 a.m. To 3.00 p.m. - 5t30 p.m. To 7100 p.m.
Saturdar..................... .......................... 9100 a.m. To 1.00 p.m.
DRIVE-IN &amp; WALK.UP WINDOW HOURS
Mand~y thru Thunday ........................ ll30 a.m. To 5100 p.m.
Frlday ................................................... l130 a.m . To 7.00 p.m.
Saturday .............. .... ............................ 113D a.m. To 1100 p.m.

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�{

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
In the spotlight
By CINDY S. OUVERI

Couoay Exlaudon Agent

Home Economlcs/4-H
Bright red benies, bursting 111th
flavor, heaped oo shortcake or tee
cream. What a way to get your
dally dose of Vitamin C!
Strawbenies. the world's most
popular berry-type !rult, are a
nutritional "bargain". A cup 11
strawberries provides 100 percent
of the Recommended Dally Allo·
wance of VItamin C and only 55
calories. And that's not aU strawberlies are also good souroes
of fiber, potassium and Iron.
Whether you pick-your-own or
buy harvested berries, choose tuUy
ripe ones with bright color and
luster. Once picked, strawherlies
don't npen further. Keep the green
stem cap attached to prevent

Page-6·

moisture loss. Avoid mushy, over·
npe berries or those with lar!,'l'
uncolored or seedy areas.
Strawberlies are wry penshable
so keep them out of sun and heat,
take them home promptly, sort
them, spread on a Oat dish or pan to
store, then refrigerate them Do not
wash bernes untO just before using
-wet bernes w1ll spoil rapidly.
To clean, rtnse herlies with caps
and stems Intact under a gentle
stream of cold water. Drain well,
then remove caps. To remove
exoess!ve dtri or possible pesticide
residue, add ~ teaspoon deter!,'l'nt
to a gallon of cold water; add
berries, swis h gently, then quickly
11ft berlies from soapy water. Rinse
thoroughly several times with
clean, cold water.
Highlight this fruit's flavor and

color w1th simple preparation.
Serve lightly sweetened strawberrles "plain" or with milk or cream.
Serve them on shortcake, cereal,
Ice cream, waffles, crepes or
French toast. Or In pie, pudding,
milk shakes, gelatin salads, fruit
cup or fruit salad.
A quart - about 1 and ~ pounds
-of strawberries will yield 3 cups
capped herlies. It's easy to freeze
extra berries. Slice clean berries In
half- slicing helps preserve eolor
and flavor though small berries can
he frozen whole.
Gently mix berries with sugar1 pound sugar to 4 pounds berries.
Pack Into moisture-vapor proof
containers, seal and label. Freeze
at once as quickly as possible to
preserve quality.
For a special dessert, why not try

fresh strawberry pie.
Fresh Strawberry Pie
1 9-lnch baked pastry shell.
1~ quarts fresh strawherlies.
1 cup sugar.
3 tablespoons cornstarch.
2 tablespoons lemon juice.
1cup whipped cream, or whipped
topping, If desired.
Make pastcy shell; cool. wash
and cap berlies. Set aside half of
them (the best ones). Mash the
crher berries. Mix sugar and
cornstarch; add to mashed herlies.
Cook 5 to 6 minutes, or until clear
and very thick. Stir In lemon juice.
Cool.
Select a few of. remaining berries
for garn ish. Add the rest, whole or
cut, to cooled mixture. Pour Into
pastry shell.
Garnish w1th whipped cream, If

Malthew and talked oo Jesus'
Sermon on the Mount and Chris·
tians as the salt of the earth.
Refreshments were served by
Burton Smith and Lois Hawley to
those named and Phyllis Skinner,
George Skinner, Benny Skinner,
Clyda Michael, Herman Michael,
Ellen Cooch, Marla Foster, and
Margaret Batley.

Chester Council gathers
Fifty-year members, PauUne
Ridenour and Ethel Orr, and
charter members of Chester Coun·
cU, were lllnored at a recent
meeting r1 Chester Council 323.
Daughters of America.
Mrs. Ridenour and Mrs. Orr were
escorted to the altar where they
were presented with 00 year pins
and corsages. Charter members
recognized were Ada Bissell, Leona
Hensley, Zelda Weber, Elizabeth
Jiayes, and Ada Monis. Corsages
were presented to each one there
was a reading, "Each Day's End",
gilts for each one, and responses
from the charter members. Helen
Wolfe sang 'One Little Candle"
durtng a candiellghtlng service.
Jo Ann Baum, councilor, preskied at the meeting which opened

In a patliotlc Iituallstlc form.
Sclipture was from Psalms 26. A
thank you note was read from NeUe
Werner for a gift durtng her
hospitalization. It was noted that
Perry CouncU wit be having
lnspectkm June 2. Refreshments
were served.
Others attending were Laura
Damewood, Opal Hollon, Dons
Grueser, Ruth Smith, Erma Cleland, Thelma White, Esther Smith,
Helen Wolfe, Jean Frederick, Iva
Powell, Kathy PuU!ns, Everett
Grant, Betty Young, Margaret
Amhergl'r, Laura Mae Nice, Mar·
garet Tultle, Faye Kirkhart, Sadie
Trussell, Marcia Keller, Beulah
Maxey, DorothY Ritchie, Dons
Koenig, Genevieve Ward, Charlotte
Grant, Eva Robson, Mary Holter,
Betty Roush, and Mae McPeek.

Meigs property transfers
Grover Arnold, Carole Arnold to
Carl Rairden, Beatrice Rairden,
parrel, Salisbury.
Grover Arnold, Carole Arnold to
Carl Rairden , Beatrice Ralrden,
parrels, Salisbury.
William Fred Smith, Beatrice
Ellen Smith to Robert H. McCoy,
Pt. Lot 427, Mldd. VIII.
-Selma Cross, Clyde E. Cross to
J6seph Drasko, Jr., Sharon F.
Drasko, lots IJ, 14 &amp;15, Racine Vlll.
Lester D. Keaton, Frances I.
Keaton to Carl E. Smith Petr. Inc.,
ri8ht of way, Orange.
Ross Junior Stewart, Gertrude
M. Stewart to Columbus &amp; Southern
O~lo Elect. Co., light of way,

used, and whole strawberries.
Note; U strawberrtes are tart.
omit lemm juice.
Calories per serving; About 200
without whipped cream or whipped
topping.
If you'd like to enjoy your
strawbenies and fresh rhubarb
year round, this rhubarb ·
strawberry jam Is an alternative.
RJntlllrlJ.Sirawberry Jam
(wWt liquid peedn)
1 cup cooked red-stalked rhubarb
(about I pound rhubarb and Y, cup
water)
2~ cups crushed strawberries
(about l'h quart boxes).
6~ cups sugar.
~ bottle liquid pectin.
To prepare fruit ... Wash rhubarb
and slice thin or chop; do not peel.
Add water, cover, andslmmeruntl!
rhubarb Is tender (about 1 minute).

Sort and wash tully ripe strawberries; remove stems and caps.
Crush herrtes.
To make jam - Measure
prepared rhubarb and strawber·
rles Into a kettle. Add sugar and stir
well. Place on high heat and,
stlrrtng constantly, brlngq~lckly to
a full boll wlt)I bubbles over !he
entire surface. Boil bard for 1
minute, stirrtng constantly.
Remove from heat and stir In
p~tln. Skim.
Fill and seal containers using
standard canning jars. Process 5
minutes In boiling water bath. Cool
away from drafts before storing.
Makes 7 or 8 half-pint jars.
Did You Know That: You can
plan oo fresh strawherlies serving 5
or 6 people per pint, and recom·
mended storage time for highest
~allty Is 1·2 days.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club spon·
sor open dance at Royal Oak Park
Recreatlon Building Friday from 8
to 11 p.m. Caller Dale Eddy.

The Rock Springs United MetOO.
dlst Women met at the church
recently with Sharon Folmer open·
lng the meeting with prayer. The
group sang "Open My Eyes that I
May See:"
Tracy O'Dell read "Time" wlit·
ten by Thelma Jeffers for devotions, Mrs. Folmer had scripture
from Ephesians 5, Trecle Abbott
read "No Excuses this Suooay",
and the group sang "Leaning on the
Everlasting Arms."
Prayer request cards were
passed out to be used at each

Plano students of Mrs. Jennifer Kimberly Jenkins, "Holiday In
Machlr presented a recital at the Rio" and "Tarantella'; Kelly
Chester United Methodist Church Grueser, "The Passing Parade"
on May 18.
and "The Matador'; Jessica Cheva·
Special recognition was given to ller, "Waltzing Elephants" and
those students participating at the "Song of Joy"; Heather Farley,
Ohio Music Educator's Association "Sonatina Classlque"; Andrea DU·
Solo and Ensemble Contest held lard, "Christmas Parade" and
th_ls spring at Ohio University.
"Camptown Races"; Tom Hunter,
Those participating were Ma· "American Barn Dance"; Nichola
. ralyn Barton, "Sonatina, Op.13, No. Pickens, "Old Fashioned Waltz"
1" by Kabalevsky; Angle Sloan, and "Going Home"; Sara Machlr,
"Sonatina In Classic Style" by "Monday Momlng Blues" and
Bastien; Debbie Brooks, "Sonat. . ' "Lavender's Blue"; Lisa Hoffman,
Ina, Op. 36, No.3" by Clementi; and "Rock Ballad" and "The Persian
Susan Wolf, "The Little White Princess"; Carolyn Barton, "SoDonkey" by !bert. AU four students natina" by Clementi; Carrie Mor·
r~elved excellent ratings. Amy
rtssey, "Those Lonely Blues" and
Louks, former student of Mrs. "Tarantella"; Maralyn Barton, "I
Machlr, was guest jJ!'rformer for Need Thee Every Hour"; and a
the r~ltal playing "Suite Berga· plano duPt by Carne Monissey and
masque" by Debussy.
Sara Machir, "I Just Called to Say I
Other students performing were Love You."

OUTSTANDING S'ruDENT - Brian HoudasheM, son of Paul and
Marcia Hoodashelt was named student of the year bt DECA at Melp
High School. He Is presmted a plaque by teacher Jom Blaettnar.

DECA names top student

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman of Maryland spent several
days here visiting Stella Atkins and
Ruby D!Phl.
Mrs. Lola Clark was the Sunday
dinner guest of Mrs. Louise Dixon,
Pomeroy.
Robert Gibson, Columbus, was
the receqt guest of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mrs. Hazel Stanley entertained
the Lend·a-Hand Society at her

Scholarships given
Winners of the annual Paul H.
Carnahan Memorial Scholarships
presented at Saturday night's
banquet of the Racine-Southern
Alumni Association were Southern
graduating seniors, Lisa Parsons
and Kelly Clark.
The scholarships were $JX) each.
Kelly Is the daughter of the late
Pam Clark and the granddaughter

home recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Blackwood
visited her aunt In Portsmouth
recently.
Recent dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Duane Stanley were Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Townsend. Colum·
bus, and Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Stanley, Athens.
Mrs. Velma Long of Columbus
spent the week with Mr. and Mrs.
Millard Christian.

I

Wolf Pen community events

Speeial Gifts For The

Plans for an exhibit at the Meigs
County Fair and the Ohio State Fair
were discussed at the recent
meeting of Star Grange held
recently at the hall.
Patty Dyer, master, presided the
meeting. Members enjoyed a po·
!luck dinner and then worked on the
Grange yearbook. It was noted that
the Grange Youth are also planning
an exhibit at the Ohio State Fair.
Next meeting wUI be .June 7 at 8
p.m. at the hall.

GALLIPOLIS

· 8rt~uate

• •
SATURDAY
:sYRACUSE -Barbara's School SUNDAY
ot Dance, Syracuse, wtll present a . HARRISONVILLE - Scipio
spring recital "Rythym 11 the • Township Volunteer Fire DepartNight," Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at ment lssponsorlngagardentractor
Southern High School. Admission puU Sunday, starting at 1 p.m., at
$1.
the !Ire rouse In Hanisonvllle.
1'hree pulling classes - !MXI, 1&lt;0l
:Rt.m.AND - Hymn sing, RD· and llOO pounds. Entry fee $3. CouncD Ill meet
Rutland Village Councu wtll meet ·
tlluld Freewill Baptist Church; Admission at the gate Is :i&gt; cents.
June
3 at 7; 30 p.m. at the Rutland
Trcphles are being spo1110red by
saturday, 7 p.m.
Civic
Center.
Rutland Furniture.

meeting, and fulllre proj~ts were
discussed. Officers' reports were
given by Ann Mash and Mrs.
O'Dell. Mrs. Abbott took over the
card committee, It was anoounced.
Next meeting will beheldonJune
24 at 1 p.m at the church with Mrs.
O'Dell and Lenora Leifheit as
hosteses. Closing prayer was by
Mrs. Leifheit. Others attending
were Unda Foster, VIolet HyseU,
Dorothy Jeffers, and visitors, Ml·
chael Leifheit, Tamra and Mindy
O'Dell.

• Prescriptions fUled
• Over-the-counter drugs
• Health and beauty aids
• Cosmetics and perfumes
• Sickroom; surgical needs
• Vitam.inB and diet aids.

Pharmacists Who
Care About You

Plans for a picnic at Blenner·
hasset Island In June were made
of Ruth Canter, Syracuse.She plans when the Ml&lt;klleport Amateur
to attend Brauder Fashion College Gardeners met recently at the
where she will study fashion home of Elizabeth Lohse.
Gladys Cummings will obtain
merchandising.
Lisa, granddaughter of William more Information on Blennerbasse!
and Velma ParSJns, Racine, will before the tlip Is made. A letter was
attend Miami (Ohlol University read from Middleport Mayor Fred
where she will be a chemistry . Hoffman thanking the club lor a
donation to the Dave Diles Park.
major.
Marjolie Fetty presided at the

meeting which opened with the club
collect. For roll call members
commented
on out
flower
gardens.
Mrs. Lohse gave
pamphlets
on
"The Care 11 Ins and Home
Landscaping." Verse of the month
was given by Daisy Blakeslee and
was entltled "May Journey." Offic·
ers' reports were given and for the
program a plant auction was held.
Mrs. Lohse and Mrs. Blakeslee
served refreshments.

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~;~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~-

INGELS FURNITURE

!fE]'FISHER

Lulu Mae Hupp, Gary Hupp to
Leonard L. Bass, Ora P. Bass,
parcels, Sutton.
Pat E. MltcheU, Marcella Sue
Mitchell to WOlle L. Cook, bt 122,
Mldd. Vlll.
Diamond Sav. &amp; Loan Co., to
William B. Crane, Margaret J.
Crane, parcels, Porn. VUI.
Paul E. Hanis, Marylyn A.
Harris to Robert L. Smith, Carolyn
S. Smith, parcels, Chester.
Kenneth D. Cooke, Jean Cooke to
Hershel B. McClure, Rhojean V.
MeCiure, Pt. lots, Mldd. VUI.
DorothY L. Gilmore to Charles G.
Dill, Betty E . Dill, parcels,
Satlsbury.
Glen W. Thoma, Grace J. Thoma
to Glen W. Thoma, Grace J.
Thoma, parcels, Chester.
Donald W. Roach, Dec., Catlll·
rlne M. Roach, Alfld., M!dd. VIII.
Catheline M. Roach to Catherine
M. Roach, James F.D. Roach, Pt
lot 49, Mldd. VIII.
Neva R. Nicholson to Neva R.
NICholson, Ronald E. Nicholson,
parcels, Rutland.
Millord W. Leonard, Dec., Lois
aka Lois Katheryn aka Lois K. aka
Louis K. Leonard, Affld., Olive.
Eugene E. Underwood, Ruth M.
Underwood to Joseph. A. Loftis,
Cora A. Loftis. parcels, Porn. VIU.
Orvtlle W. Cunningham, Florence A. Cunningham to Ravm

Hocking Coal Corp., Lot 160, Sutton.
Carolyn L. Bradford, WUllam B.
Bradford to Carl E . Smith, Petr.
Inc., right of way, Orang~' .
Joseph R. Poole, Martha F. Poole
to Carl E. Smith Petr. Inc., light d.
way, Orange.
Carl Dorst, Ernest Dorst to Carl
E. Smith Petr. Inc., right of way,
Orange.
Robert Bolt, Halen Bolt to
Leading Creek Consv. Dlst., light 11
way, Scipio.
Paul L. Case! to Ronald P. Case!,
Cynthia A. Cascl, Jot 181, Mldd. VIII.
Guy Russell, Norma Russell to
Marcia E. Qualls. James E. Qualls,
lot 315, Satlsbury.
Verna Sturgeon to Kenneth W.
Rife, Donna M. Rife, parcels,
Rutland.
Maudle E. Wood', Ernest Wood to
Buckeye Rural Elect. Corp. Inc.,
light of way, ease, Bedford.
Earle L. Wood, Deborah L. Wood,
Ernest Wood, Maudle E. Wood to
Buckeye Rural Elect. Corp. Inc.,
light of way, ease, Bedford.
Roger Riggs, Helena Riggs to
Buckeye Rural Electric Corp. Inc. ,
light of way, Rutland .
John E. Moore, Patricia Ann
Moore to Buckeyp Rural Elect.
Corp. Inc., light of way, Rutland.
Gloria Malone to Buckeye Rural
Elect. Corp. Inc., right of way,
Rutland .

Loretta Douglas, Walter Dru·
Druglas G. Lambert, Shirley M.
LamherttoBuckeye Rura!Electric glas, Kenneth Sinclair, Shirley
Sinclair, Boyd Sinclair, Irene Sin·
Corp. Inc., light of way, Rutland.
Beatrice Kennedy, Robert clair, Paul Sinclair, Carolyn Sin·
Kennedy, Mary E . Kennedy, IJo. clair, Lyle Sinclair, Julia Sinclair,
rothy M. Davis, Robert Davis, VIckie Bolen, Kenneth Bolen, Dale
Lewis Kennedy, Allee Kennedy, Sinclair, Dean Allen Sinclair by
Edith ·Searles, Kenneth Searles, gdn., Joy Lynn Sinclair by gdn., to
Keith Kennedy, Irene Kennedy to Paul L. Sinclair, Carolyn S.
Herbert N. Elliott, Marcta F. Sinclair.
EUiott, parcels, Rutland Vlll.
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CHIPPEWA
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CHAPMAN SHOES
•11 YO IIIIIRLDS IN PO.IOY

TELEPHONE 992-6836

•

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CONNIE
FOOTWOIIS
NATURALIZER
son SPOTS
SHAWNH
STRIDE liTE

FRIDAY, MAY 30th
DINNER 5~9
DANCE 9-1
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ftt]FISHER

STO.REWIDE

MIDDLEPORT

342 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
46-2691

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ALl LIVIN [; IHJII rY1 Sl d I f S IN SIll CK

I
I
Mothers were rocognlzed at the and the oldest and youngest
grandmothers
there.
recent mother-daughter banquet ot
Mrs. Clarence Struble and family
the Pomeroy United Methodist
presented
a short comedy entitled
Women held at the church. Fifty·
NEW 2 PC. E.A.
'
"My
Mean
Mother and Her Rules."
plght members and guests attended
UVIIIG
1M.
WITH
EXTIA
IIGH
IAtl.
40
llt•s.
NO
PILOW
Aa
the dinner. Tables were decorated A quiz on women of the Bible was
with spring flowers and favors were held.
~s
FURNITUHf Op•·11 'J 10 •,oo
Music was presented by Debbie
created lor the occasion by Cathy
, 11 ·, ( 11 rHI
( l11' ··d T oitlr
and Elizabeth Downie, plano duet;
Workman.
',
1ll1jll!ll-..
rltJ 1l &gt;.!3
Mrs . Ted Downie used "Tribute Martha Hoover, who sa ng
to Mother" as her devol klnal "Mother" , accompanied by her
theme. Mrs. Wendell Hoover pre· daughter' Mrs. Laura Totten' 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
sided at the business. meeting Newark, and Mrs. Totten who sang 1
acknowledging seven members "The Spirit." The last number was
who quality lor the "four score" "Faith 11 Our Mothers" by the
class. Each was presented a potted group. Poems about mother were
plant. Gltts were also presmted to read by Elizabeth Cutler. Prayer
the oldest and yoongest mothers, concluded the program.

Ul GOLD

113 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2054

$14400

Syatem

sum

DIAMOND
NECKLACE

OIILY

•tot Pul Ran1ii lpaelrer

Pomeroy UMW honors
mothers during banquet

TOPS meets

Holler reunion
MORNING STAR - The fourth
annual George Holter, Jr., family
reunion has been set forSuooayat 1
p.m. at the home r1 J im and Karen
Holter Werry In the Morning Star
area, Court St. Road, phone
949·2936. AU tarnUy and trlends are
Invited to the IBsket dinner reunion.
Werry wUI prepare barbecued
chicken. Those attending are to
take family pictures, stories, or
other Items of Interest to share the
heritage o1 the Holter famUy.

publlc places, lear of being alone (acrophobia ) and fear of enclosed ·
away !rom home and fear 11 being places (claustrophobia ).
Question: How are phobias
In places or situations that have no
easy escape or source of help. Your treated?
Answer: The pan ic attacks
friend Is suffertng agoraphObia.
brougllt
on by phobias can often be
Social phobias Involve a debilltat·
controlled
by minor tranquilizers or
lng lear of emlBrrassment or
antidepressants
. PsychOtherapy,
humlllatlon before a large group.
on
the
ott-er
hand,
tries to discover
One example 11 a social phobia Is
the
underlying
cause
of the phobia.
lncapacltatlng dread of public
Psychotherapists
may
also "desen'
speaking.
,
their
patients
by
gradually
sttlze"
Simple phobias are dirocted at
relnlroductng
them
to
the
object or
objects, such as animals - snakes,
situation
that
brings
on
the
Intense
mice or spiders, for Instance. Other
anxiety.
simple phobias are fear of heights

Meigs County property transfers _ _ __

Brian Houdshelt. son of Paula students IIi becoming eommunity
and Marcia Houdashelt, 102 We he business leaders and It Is open to all
Terrace, Pomeroy, has been high schOol seniors In Meigs
named "Student 11 the Year" of the County. Teacher John Blaettnar,
Mother's Day"visltors of Mrs. iva Mr. and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson
Dlstlibutlve Education Clubs of. presented a traveling plaque to Johnson were Mrs. Joseph Evans, and Tammy.
Houdashelt and on the right is Nona Tyson and Jonathan, Mrs. Greg
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah
America at Meigs High School.
In the marketing education pro- Nelson. owner of Smith-Nelson Davis, AshU and Joshua, Mr. and Reth of Texas Road were recent
gram at Meigs High School, Motors. Theplaquewlllbeplacedln Mrs. Harley Johnson, Tammy, visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Houdashelt has been training for the DECA quarters at the high Mrs. Jerry Holley and Calvin Lee Haning.
the automotive business at Smith· school. A name Is added each year. and Mr. J.R. Mtirphey and Peggy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
Nelson Motors In Pomeroy since
Houdashelt's brother, Brent, was
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Holley, were Wednesday evening visitors
last fall. He has received his "Student of the Year" and his name Calvin Lee were Sunday visitors of 11 Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
salesman's license and will now was placed on the plaque In 1982.
Kan auga.
join the sales staff of Smith-Nelson
-:..__ _ __:__:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~:.___ __ _ _ _ __
1
Motors.
Marketing education Is a high
school program designed to help

Star Grange meets

remind him of the unpleasant
occurrence.
Question: Are there dlf!erent
kinds o! phobias?
Answer; There are three g?neral
classes of phobias - situation
phobias, social or !Unctlonal pho·
bias and simple or object-directed
phobias. Agoraphobia Is the most
common and severe of the situation
phobias. It Includes fear d. crowded

Middleport Amateur· Gardeners
conduct meeting, plan for picnic

Usa Parsons

KeUyC!ark

Harrisonville happenings

Salls bury.
Marcia D. Hendncks, William
Hendlicks, Edna Pearle Canaday
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elect.
Co., right of way, Rutland.
Argyle L. Deeter to Columbus &amp;
sbuthern Ohio Elect. Co., right of
An open house on June 17 In the
way, Lebanon.
cafeteria
at Veterans Memorial
K-0. River. Inc. to Roger Manley,
Hospital
was
planned at this week's
Sr., Pt. bt, Mldd. VIU.
meeting
of
TOPS
OH 570. Julia
Hedwig Cremeans aka Hedwig
Hysell
was
the
top
loser, with
Teresa to Laoma Cremeans, IJe.
Dreama
Pickens
as
runner-up.
borah Ann Whitlatch, Michael E.
,
Penny
GUUsple
won
the fruit
Cremeans, parcel, Mldd. VUI.
basket.
Llnnle
Belle
Aleshire
was
Pfaff &amp; Smith Builders Supply
honored
and
reinstated
as
a
KOPS.
Co. to Dallas Arthur HUI, Debra
Information on joining the group
Rae Hill, Minerals, Letart.
be obtained by calling 992-71&amp;.1,
may
VIrginia E. Bodlker, Dec., to
992·2'n1,
or 992-7532.
Charles E. Bodlker, A!f!d,, Meigs.

PAGEVILLE - A spaghetti
supper Saturday, 5 to 7 p.m.,
PagevWe town hall. Sponsored by
Scipio Senior Citizens and Scipio
Township Fire Department Ladles
Auxiliary, dinners wUI be $3.00 for
adults and $1.75 tor chtklren under
12·

phobias because o1 a complex
psychological problem. For exam·
pie, a traumatic event which
occurred In a crowded theater
could lead 511me people to associate
the trauma with the place. Each
succeeding exposure to a public
building overfiowlng with people
would trigger Intolerable anxiety.
Thus the victim of a phobia deals
with the trauma by obsessively
avoiding objects or places which

Illogical lear 11 a spect11c object or
situation. Phobias affect less than 1
percent of Amelicans and account
for about 5 percent o! neuroses In
peoRle over.lB. Phobias occur more
often In women than In men. Almost
a half million people In this country
are so severely phobic that their
lives are completely disrupted b)
the sickness.
Question; What causes phobias·,
Answer: Usually people develop

UMW conducts meeting

Community calendar I area happenings
•

Phobias.· What is the cause, treatment?

Recital is presented

Parker reported on the retreat at
Camp Otterbein. Secretary Martha
Poole read the year's events
rn lendar. Treasurer Oste Mae
Follrod reported $51l!.14 tn the
treasury. Motion was made and
passed to buy two tablecloths for
the church. Mr. Henderson will
check oo prices.
Mrs. Spencer had the prayer
ca lendar and chose Blythe Stanton,
Homer, Alaska. The society signed
a birthday card for her.
The hostess served Sloppy joes,
crackers, and cake to those menti·
oned and to Clara Follrod, Char·
lotte Van Meter, Nina Robinson,
Eleanor Boyles, and Gertrude
Robinson. She presented flowering
begonias to members and guests.
Next meeting will he June 17 at
the church. Mrs. Van Meter and
Gertrude Robinson will be hos·
tesses. Mrs. Spencer will lead the
program.

Baptist Class conducts meeting
Arrangl'ments to purchase a
dozen new Bibles for the church
were made when the One-Won-One
Class met recently at the Pomeroy
First Baptlst Church.
Audrey Young prslded at the
meeting which opened with group
singing of "He Keeps Me Singing"
and the Lord'~ayer In unison.
DPvot bns were given by Caryl
Cook who used scripture from

By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
A.lltant ProleMor
of Family Medlelne
Oldo Unlvenlty College
of O!ieopathlc Medicine
Question: A fliend of mine Is ~
afraid of crowded places, Uke
stoolums or busy shopping centers,
that he refuses to leave his home.
What IS wrong with him?
Answer: Your friend has a
phobia, or a persistent, abnonnal or

Have a berry goof time with fruit

Alfred UMW meets
Anna Thompson led the program
WoQ1en 11 All Ages Facing Changes
when Alfred UMW met at the home
of Florence Ann Spencer May :!1.
All present took part In reading
and discussion. They spoke of
mlsslonalies, past and present, of
the area who served In many
countries; Sierra Leone. and
Brazil.
Other topics discussed were the
position of women world-wide.
sexist changes being asked lor In
tli' Bible, UMW's mission In the
world. Program opened with group
singing of One Day and closed with
prayer by Thelma Henderson and
Lord's Prayer by the group.
Eleven members answered roll
call 111th 10 sick calls reported. Sara
Caldwell and Sandra Massar were
guests.
During the business meeting
Mrs. Henderson gave a report on
County Councll scholarships to
School of Missions. President Nellie

Family medicine .

Thursday, May 29, 1986

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 29, 1986

'

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.

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I

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MIDDLEPORT

�~omerov-Middleport,

~estivals

J118011 Shain

May Ia l'oacharn

Academic All-Americans
named in Meigs school
Jason Shain and Mayla Yoacham , Sou ttr:&gt;m Junior High School
students, have tr:&gt;en named Aca demic AU-Americans by the Na ·uonal Seco nd a ry Education
Council .
The award program has tr:&gt;en
est;~blished to olfer deserved rrogni!lon to superior students wbo
excel In Ute academic disciplines.
The Academic AU-American Scbo·
Iars must earn a 3.3 or lr:&gt;t:ter grade
point average. Only scholars selected by a secondary school

Instructor, counselor or &lt;ther quail·
fled sponsor are accepted.
Jason Is the son of Dave and
Terry Shain, Racine, and the
grandson of Ralph and Maxine
Shain, Racine, and Charles M. and
Ruth Hysell, Pomeroy. Mayla Is ttr:&gt;
daughter of Mark and Nancy
Yoacharn, and the granddaugher &lt;1
Wiley and Audrey Ours, Racine.
They are both seventh graders and
were recommended by Jennings
Beegle, principal.

KCHS names
co-salutatorian
J ulie Ann Ritter, daughter of
Richard Hiller of Gallipolis and
Carole Ritter of Gallipolis and
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Ledlie, formerly of Meigs
County, has been selected oosalutatorlan for graduation ceremonies at Kyger Creek High School
Friday at 7: ?ll p.m.
Miss Ritter's school activities
include: secretary of tlr:&gt; National
Honor Society, membership In the
Latin Club, French Club, varsity
che er lea dln g, senior board
member of the Keywanettes and
the Art Club. She is also an honor

Thursday. May 29,-1986

heading to the great outdoors

By SANDRA L lATIMER
UnMed Press IDtemallonal
Boating -

Ohio

whether for CQm·

merceorpleasure -isblgooslness&lt;In Ashtabula In extreme oortheast·
ern Ohio, and this forms the
background for the Blessing. of the
Fleet.
The festival begins Friday evenlng and runs through Sunday with a
variety of water-oriented activities
and an emphasis on safe boating.
Another Ashtabula County · attraction Is "They Came from
Ashtabula County" Exhibit at the
county's history museum located In
Geneva-On-the-Lake. This display
Is on exhibit through June :Jl.
June is Ohio Wine Month with
wtnerles, vineyards and vintners
throughout Ohio planning special
events. The Ohio Wine Producers
Association at Austinburg has a full
schedule (216-4664417).
Also on the Ohio agenda:
The Jaycees Spring Festival wlil
be held through Sunday In Columbiana with a five-kilometer run and
fireworks.
Lancaster's Old Oub Club Spring
Festival will be held Saturday and
Sunday at the Falrtield County
Fairgrounds.
The May Festival, one of the
world's most prestigious choral
music festivals, goes Into Its second
weekend Friday and Saturday at
Music Hall ln Cincinnati.
A Hawaiian Luau and Crafts
Show will be held Saturday at
Mohican State Park Lodge near
Loudonville In Ashland County.
The Lost Arts Festival Saturday
and Sunday at the Seven Eagles
Lodge Cultural Center south of
Grand Rapids in Wood County
focuses on the arts of the native

Americans and colonial settlers.
A Quilting Bee Is offered at the
Slate Run Living Historical Farm

vatory ln Columbus through
Sunday.
- Mother's Day Display at the

soth of Canal Winchester In Fair- Krohn Conservatory in the Eden
field County .
Park section or Cincinnati through
An lrls Show will be reid at
June 8.
Kingwood Center in Mansfield
-Patterns Wot1h Repeating is a
Saturday and Sunday.
Quilt Show at tre Dairy Barn In
Special Exhibits Include:
Athens through J une 15.
-"Neo-Classical Drawings" ex-Sprlng Show ·~ at tlr:&gt; Alma
hibltlon Is the display at the Allen Gallery at Memorial Hatl In Lima
Mernorlal Art Museum at Orerlln tlu·ough Sunday.
College through Saturday.
-Toledo Area Artist~ · Exhibition
-"High Gothic Structure: A at the Toledo Museum of Art
Technological Reinterpretation" Is through Sunday.
a display of medieval construction
-"Proflles: Memorable Black
at the Allen Memorial Art Museum . Women of Cleveland" Is a display
on the Olr:&gt;rlln College campus at the Hanna Gallery of the Western
through Saturday.
Reserve Historical Society in Cleve-A Sprtng Floral and Foliage land through Sunday.
Show at the Franklin Park Conser-"Recent 1\cqulsitlons: Contem·

The annual mother-daughter
dinner was held at the Forest Run
Church by tre United Methodist
Women with trem bers of the
Minersville group as guests. Attending from Mlnersvlile were
Dorothy Douglas, Carol Ault, Doris
Grueser, Mary Russell, June
Sayre, Helen Maag, Mary Pugh,
Marsha Russell and Renee:
Hilda Yeauger welcomed the
guests, and Evelyn Hollon presented a short program with skits. 'A
Farmer Applies for a Marriage
License" with Mary Nease also
taking part. There were also

readings on "Words of Wisdom
from Mom."
The group joined hands and sang
"Blest Be the Tie Tha t Binds."
Others attending were Faye Wig·
gins, Sandi Hawley, Ed it h Sisson,
Jane Sisson, Ann Sisson and
Brenna, May Holter, Clara Baer,
Mary K Roush. Kathleen Scott,
Erma Roush, Fran Weber, Christy
Nelson, Donna Nelson, Betty Black·
wood, Debbie Hauber, and Ullian
Napper. Flowers were presented to
May Holt er, Sandi Hawley. and
Fran Weber.

Jordan birth
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
(Kathy Gilkey) are anoouncing the
birth of a son, Joel Russell, May 16.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey, Albany, and Mr.
and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, Albany,
Route 3. Linooln Russell of Middleport is a great·grandfathe r. Mr. and
Mrs. Jordan have two other sons,
Joshua and Jeremy, and a daugh ter. Jessica .

Grange meets
Members of the Hemlock Grange
were guests and presented a
literary program at tlr:&gt; May
meeting of Columbia Grange.
A potluck supper precedlcd the
meeting with Eldon Barrows,
master, oonducting the meeting.
Legislative issues were discussed.
It was noted that Mr. and Mrs.
Ellkm Barrows, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, and Bertha
Crippen had attended Star Grange
with Crabtree presenting the literary program.
A garage sale was reported a
success. Rose Barrows, Patty
Manzey, Martha Jelfers and Carolyn Fraley were on the
oorrunlt:tee.
The grange voted to send contri·
buttons 10 CARE, ttr:&gt; State Grange
Deaf Fund, and Nati:&gt;nal Grange
Deaf Fund. The oven mitt contest
will be hi!ld at the June meeting.

SALT LAKE CITY (UP! ) State troopers became oowboys for
a day to round up steers let loose In
a cattle truck rollover on Interstate
15.
The overturned truck and Its
frightened cargo snarled Wednesday morning rush-hour traffic on
1-15 and the 1-llO Interchange. ·
Officers said the truck apparently
entered a . ramp too fas t and
smashed Into a guard rail.

Elephant misses cue
CHICAGO (UP! ) -Even 5,500pound elephants get stage fright.
Bozie, an 11-year-old Asian ele·
phant who makes her home at
Lincoln Park Zoo, pratlced for lour
weeks how to handle a shovel, but
when her big moment came she
froze.

Bozle was to tum the first
shovelful of dirt Wednesday at
ground-brl'aking ceremonies to

BASSm
FLEISTEEl
RIVERSIDE
KINCAID

BENCHCiln
IEliP
SPIINGA.E
ASHLEY

1• 1 II!

, JUNE m
TOM CRUISE in "TOP GUN"
Cil'&lt; ING S OON ~ "BACk TO SCHOOL"

OVER 100 LIVING ROOM SUITES
OVER 50 BEDROOM SUITES
OVER 50 DINING ROOM SUITES
&amp; DINmES
OVER 200 RECLINERS &amp; CH~IR5
OVER 1DO OCCASIONAL
OVER 25 SLEEP SOFAS

ENGlAND
CHAIISMA

COISAII
HARIIS

Charlie and Candy Van Meter &lt;1
Oilton, W.Va. announce the birth of
their second child, a son, Chad
Alan , on May 15 at the Holzer
Medical Center. The infant weighed
six pounds, seven ooncesand was 19
Inches long. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Jeffers, Clifton, W.Va., and the
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. A.L. Phelps d West Columbia,
W.Va. and Charles Van Meter Sr. ,
Mason, W.Va. The Van Meters
have a daugbter, Sommer Dawn.

Fernwood
club meets
Summer plantings at the Wolf
Pen sign and the Zion Church of
Christ will be made by the
Fernwood Garden Club. Meeting
recently at the home ollda Murphy,
plans for the plantings were made.
A trtp to Blennerhasset Island on
July 23 was discussed and reports
were given on the regional garden
club meet ing attended by four
members who assisted at the sales
table.
Mrs. Mllrphy pres ided at !he
meeting with the group repeating
the club collect. Members responded to roll call by namlng their
favortte butterfly. Marge Purtell
presented devotions using an article "Up, Up and Over." The article
was a trlbute to the Monarch
butterfly and Mrs. Purtell used a
comparison of flight to relationships to God.
Kathryn Johnson discussed the
flower of the month, the Illy of tlr:&gt;
valley. She noted that they grown
about nine Inches high and multiply
quickly In shady spots. They can be
used as cut flowers and for
continued blooming they need to be
divided every five to six years.
Mrs. Murphy had the program on
root cellars. She said the first root
cellar was nature's own leaving the
vegetables In the ground and raking
leaves over them. Parsnips, ru tabagas, and turnips can be kept In this
way, she ooted. Another type of
cellar is the man·made one ln the
side of a hW covered with earth,
straw and wood. 4cellarcanbedug
In the dirt with a wooden or sand
bottom and covered wlth earth or
straw. Baled hay can be arranged
to make an Insulation against the
cold. A part of a basement can be
Insulated against the heat. Wlld
game, smoked meats and cheeses
can also be kept safely as well as
vegetables ln cellars.
I

UNLI~IT:ED~1~;~:.r~~~~

BEDROOM SUITES

mark the $2.8 million expansion of
the Children's Zoo building.
As practiced, Bazle ploced the
shovel In her called trunk, but
Instead d digging Into the dirt she
dropped It several times and then
handed It back to Zoo Director
Lester Fisher.
Balle stepped out of the \lily, as If
to keep a low profile, and let Fisher
take over.

Almost the Monkees
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Hey, hey,
the 'Monkees - minus one - are
back.
Three of the fou r charter
members of the 1960s pop-rock
quartet announced Wednesday
they'll go on a nationwide oon:ert
tour to mark their 20th anniversary.
At a news conference. Davey
Jones, 40, Micky Dolenz. 41. and
Peter Tork, 44, joked with repor·
ters, obviously waitlng for the
· Inevitable question: Where's Mi·
chael Nesmith?
As soon as It was asked, a dummy
made up to look like the missing
former Monkee came flying out of a
baloony.

tr:&gt;yday as TV stars and is now a
music video producer, was.asked to

NAME BRANDS

Four CQWS were killed and at
least lour otlr:&gt;rs destroyed followIng tlr:&gt; accident The driver and his
passenger were hospitalized.
Porlable corrals were erECted to
hold ttr:&gt; nearly QJ steers rounded up
by troopers and otrers.
A highway patrol dispatcher said
one CQwescaped but was found four
hours later grazing along tre
highway.

BARGAIN I\IITif'l£ES SATURDAY
&amp; SUNDAY • Al l SEATS 12.50
ADMI SS ION

Dolenz said Nesmith, who was

Van meter
birth

Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Saiser
Sr., ttte former Kathl Lawson, are
announcing the March 26 birth of a
son, Man hew David, at the Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed six
pounds. eight ounces and was 19
lnchP&lt; long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Lawson Sr.,
Racine. Paternal grandparents are
Verna M. Salser, · Sheffield Lake
and Raymond B. Salser, Tupper;
Plains. The Infant has a brother,
Michael Salser Jr., three.

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT 3~ WEST
Phone 4413-4524

Roadside rawhide

the Monkees' guitarist during their

student and has been listed on the
bonor roll.
She plans to attend Rio Grande
College In the fall, majorlng in
comp u ter sc i e n ce and
mathematics.

Salser birth

31

"AirtDthroiiu!g~h~A~ug~-~~-~~-~-~~

Mother-daughter dinner
is conducted at church

Julie Ann Ritter

Matthew Davil Salser

porary Prints and Portfolio~"~ an
exhibition of graphic arts an on
display at the Toledo Museum of

Thursday, May 29, 1986

Starting At

join but declined because of prior
commitments.
,
"He wished us good luck but said
he was just too busy with other
things," said Tork.
,
The three, looking remarkably
unchan&amp;W from the zany charac·
ters they played years ago, said
they would perform tlr:&gt; group's
hits, Including "Last Train to
Clarksville," ''I'm a Believer" and
"Daydream Believer."
"We' ll add one or two new
songs," Tork said.
The Monkees were a manufac·
tured band put togetlr:&gt;r in 1966 after
Dolenz, Jones, Tork and Nesmi th
answered a newspaper advertisement for four male slng&lt;&gt;rs to act in
a televis ion sbow.
The show became a smash hit
and In 1967 won an Ernmy as the
ru tstanding comedy series.

Pleasant Valley plans health fair
Pleasan t Valley Hospital will
conduct its annual Health Fair
from 24 p.m. Jull(' 1, 1986 on the
third floor of the Medical Office
Building.
Subjec ls of the presentations will
Include diabetes, physical fitness,
dental care, pregnancy, aging,

home health care, the effects of
smoking, heart attack rtsks, nutrt·
lion, health education, outpatient
surgery, and anesthesia.
Froe blood pressure and blood
sugar examinations wUI be available to participants. Refreshments
and spec Ia I gifts will tv:&gt; provided.

behind them are, Susan ,\rcller, Nina Bush, Portia Hensley,

The l!l!li senior class of Ohio
Valley Christian School In Galllpo·
lis, traveled to Canada for the
senior trip, with Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Archer and school adminis·
trator Dr. Fred William s.
During the trtp, the class presented a fi rst for a groupfromOVCS,
according to WIUJarns. As a group,
the young people decided to begin a
ministry In song and testlmony,a nd
the presented It while on the trtp .
The Senior Ensemble presented
their program at J arvis Street
Baptist Church in Toronto. The
church holds a place In Canadian

COFFEE TABLES
END TABLES

CLOSE
OUTS

Starting At

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ON
WHITE OPEN STOCK
BEDROOMS
DISCOUNTINUED STYLES
ON COVERS
AS IS &amp;
ONE OF A KIND

-"zz

•

Denni~

ova; seniors present
history as having tr:&gt;en pastored by
T.T. Shields, an lntematlonaliyknown preacher. who staunchly
defended the Bible in the early
1900's. Jarvis Street Baptist Church
was bullt in 1875, and Shields spent
?ll years there, Williams sa id.
Aisc on the trlp, the group visited
Niagra Falls, Canada , with everyone weathering the mist next to
the falls on the "Maid of the Mist"
boat, and then walked underneath
the falls, experiencing the roar and
thunder of the fall ing water, only
live feet away.

ministry during trip
While in Toronto, they visited CN
Tower and ltv:&gt; reo;olvlng restaurant , "Top of Thronto." Williams
sa id the girls wore eo;ening gowns
and the boys wore tuxedos. "One
has to dress the ,part to feel good
about parting with $:Jl for a meal,"
he added .
They also visited tlr:&gt; Ontario
Science Centre and Royal Ontario
Museum. The inner-workings of
wwntown Toronto was experienced during a 3~ -hour walking
tour of the city. On this leg d the
trtp, they visited governmental
buildings. royal bandk and oourts.

While in the co urtroom, they
were witness to a Ca nadian ba rrister ilawyen cross-examined an
American police officer about a
kidnapping. While their curiolty
wanted to keep tlr:&gt;m there, Wllll·
arns said, the call of the mall and
Easton Centre for shopping were
too great.
While on the trip, the S€11iors kept
their privacy as tourists. Williams
said by wearing sunglasses in all
public places. "Did someone say,
'Don your goggles?'" Williams
noted.

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GRAND OPENING - GRAND OPENING - GRAND OPENING - GRAND

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Jamors, Talmee JohMon, D.R. Smith, 'l'lrn RoM, Randy Parsoll!l and
Mark Holley. Not pictured was Sharee Mahan. Not making I he Irip, but
pictured were Lahaie and Roush.

OV&lt;N SENIORS - Senior members of Ohio
Olrlstlan Sehool
who pre!Mlllted a mlnllitry during their class trip, were, seated, Kim
Black. Ruth Lahaie, Cheryl Taylor, Cindy Thomas and Hope Roush;

THURSDAY -FRIDAY· SATURDAY -SUNDAY

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308 E. MAIN STillY - POMEROY, OHIO
HOURS:

Mon ., Wed., Fri. 8:30-8:00
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 8:30-5:30

Cl

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�Pilge-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

I

Area deaths

Charles Hyer

POINT PLEASANT - Charles
Johnson "Ptt" Hyer, 74, a Pobtt
Ple!IS8Jlt lawyer sbtce ,1946, died
Wednesday afternoon at Pleasant
Valley Hospital after a long Ubtess.
Mr. Hyer practiced In Sutton and
Webster Sprbtgs before coming to
Point Pleasant to join the law firm
of SomervUle and Somerville,
wltlch subsequently became the
firm of Hyer and Littlepage.
He graduated from Buckhannon
High School and received ltls A.B.
degree !rom West Virginia Wes·
leyan and L.L .B. degree !rom West
Virginia University In 19.'Ji.
Born Sept. 11. 1911 In Braxton
County, he was The son of the late
Charles Jacob and Ada L. Johnson
Hyer.
· He served as a major In the U.S.
Army durbtg World War IL was a
member of the Mason County Bar
Association, West Virginia State
Bar, Klwanis, American Legion,
Loyal Order of the Moose and
Sigma Chi Fraternity. He was a
member of Trinity United Metho·

Lottery report
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Only one
of the more than 10 million tickets
sold for Wednesday night's Super
Lotto game had the same six
numbers as chosen In the drawing.
giving the holder of the ticket more
than $20 million.
Numbers drawn In the game
were 3, 8, 13, 25, 34 and 41. The
jackpot had grown to S:al,OOl,353
liecause there had been no sixof·slx winner for the past three
drawings.
The hokler of that wlnnbtg ticket
can redeem It at a LotteiY offlce
and soon receive the first pay men
t of Sl,OOJ,117.60, Lottery officials
said. The money is paid out In 20
annual btstallments.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -The
director of the Ohio Department of
Insurance says two out-at-state
Insurance companies are under
Investigation for falling to give
several counties and municipalities
discounts they should be receiving
on their base premium rates.
"This Is gobtg to be a major
Investigation," George Fa be, dlrec·
tor of !he state agency, . said
Wednesday of the lnqui!Y Into
Home Insurance Co. of New
Hampshire and National Union
Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh.
"When !he market was soft, a
buyer's market, the companies
would allow credit for safety
measures, such as special safety
training," Fabe said. "When the
market got tight, they started
Ignoring those and saying they
don't have to honor them. That's not
the proper way to do prtclng."

States planning...
North Carolina, Georgia, Wisconsin
and Minnesota - that had been
under review as possible locations
for the second dump are no longer
under consideration, he said.
Officials from the three Western
states on !he llst of finalists
ex!J"essed near-unanimous disap·
proval ol !he decision.
Texas Gov. Mark White said the
decision was a "terrlble mistake."

Weather

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

R.I. il 'Pli State Supzl'me Cour1 Chief .Justice
Joseph Bevilacqua's abrupt resig·
nat ion ends a decadr of rontroversy
that culminated wilh a historic
impeachment Inquiry into his !Irs to
IY'pUted mobs!Prs and a lleged
aduilcry.
Bev ilacqua , 67, said Wednesday
he will step down at the end of the
judicial term on June ."tl. after 10
years as the sta te's top judge and
one of Rhode Island 's most colorful
public officials.
"The current proceedings have
ca used a deterioration In my
health, to such a degreP, that I can
no longer continue in my present
capacity as chief jusllc('," flevilac·
qua said in a onl'-page letter
delivered to Gov. Edward UiPrete.
The chief justice, who had vowed
not 10 resign, was nol immrdlal('ly
ava llal&gt;lr tor comment.
Flevilac'Jua's r('signa tion t•ndcd
all imjl&lt;'ochmrnt proceedings
agai nst him, ·but Sprclal House
Counsel Hrnjamin l"lvilrtti would
no t ruk' out fuz1 hN criminal action .
Attorney G&lt;&gt;ncral Ariene Violet
said Cl vilrttl will tum ovrr all
" r&lt;'irvanl" lnfozmatiun and im·
peach men! documrnl s w shr could
decide whethf:&gt;r to puzsut• Ihi:' case.
PRO\~DEN CF:,

PHOTO SPECIAL
8X10
IN LIVING COLOR

FREE
No age limit
Limit 1 Per Person

'..J

'

One Special Per Family
Single or Groups Taken

DATE:
Fri. &amp; Sat., May 30 &amp; 31
PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS:

FRI. 11 A.M. TIL 7 P.M.
SAT. 10 A.M. TL 4:30 P.M.

The sudciC&gt;n ll'signil tion ('rtmr ~

millulrs bcfoz e llze House .Judicia ry
Comm it![(' was to r(•sum(~ it~ third
Wf'{'k of public hea rings in thr
impeachment probe.

PLACE:

115 E. MUIOIIll o•VE
PO.IOY, 01110 45769
PHONE 614-n2-2104

115 E. Mlmorlal Drive

Rhode Island
chief justice
•
• •
resigns position

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

CONTACT BETH STIVERS, R.N.
DIRECTOR OF AMBULATORY CARE

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

,JOSEPH BEVILACQUi\

See: J.D. Story, Jimmy Deem, Ed Bertels. Nona Ntlsun. P1911y EUis
See us ani you wil 1H "M HAVE TIIIIEYS TO A BETTER DEAl"
SOO East Main

Thr commit1rr was b aking into

judici al mi scu nducl charges
against fltovilacqua. including fre·
qurnt visit s with reputed mobster
Roln1 Barbato who was indicted
for loansharking. and the chief
justice's alh&gt;gt'ti acts of adultery
wilh his SI'Cretazy and a Ma ssarhu ·
sells woman a tlhr ,\ lplnP Mntd in
Smilhfield.
&amp;vllacqua also was aecusl'd of
ha vin g court employt'l's perform
work on statr lime Mhis two homes
and a family fazm and having an

Elberfelds Dept. Store
POMEROY, OHIO

, OH 45769

Equal Employment Opportunity

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

says carcinogen in snuff

tal carcbtogens that, at the' lowest
doses, give cancer to anima ls," he
said.
U.S Tobacco contends studies
that link nttrosamlnes to cancer In
animals cannot be applled to
humans. It claims the causes of
cancer are unknown and it cannot
be shown that Marsee's cancer was
caused by Its product.
Before Hoffman's videotaped
testimony was shown to the juzy
Wednesday, defense attorney Alston Jennings told Judge David
Russell the taped deposltkln of
another witness had been edited by
Marsee's lawyer, George Braly,
without his consent.
In the edited videotape, a re·
searcher from India testified that In
a stuey of Bombay, India, police
officers, pre· cancerous sores were
more persistent In the rrouths of
smokers than in people who chewed
tobacco.
Prakash Gupta testified bt a tape
shown Tuesay that It has been well
established since the late 1900s that
chewing tobacco causes mouth

cancer.
But durtng cross-examination
Wednesday, Gupta said research
on Bombay pollee officers showed
the pr~ancerous sores, known as

leukoplakia, went away during a JO.
.. I find now thai study had
year study among toose orncers changpd p&lt;'Dple quite a lot In terms
who chewed tobacco.
of their tobacco use," Gupta said.
Leukoplakia, found intiaily In 117
Earlier testimony showed that
of 1110re than 4,00J officers In the leukoplakia similar to those desstuey, persisted in many of the men cribed In the Indian study was .
who smoked tobacco, he said. One found In Sean Marsee's mouth
smoker, but no tobacco chewers, In be fore he developed cancer.
the studY developed rrouth cancer.
In the taped deposition shown to
The outcome of the studY could the federal court jury Wednesday,
have been affected by the fact !hat Jennillgs cited studies done by
researchers told the officers thai Gupta that sa id mouth ca ncer is ·
chewing tobacco could be danger· also associated wit h age and with
ous, Gupta said.
alcohol use.

Judge sentences man to wash hair
NAIROBI, Kenya iUPI 1 - A
man picked up by police for
apparent drunkeness looked so
scruffy and unkempt when brought
into court that the judge ordered
him jailed so he could wash and
comb his hair.
Magistrate Robert Mugo Mutitu
passed the unusual sentence Tuesday. He was told that Frances
. Mwangl Kirago, 20, was arrested
by pollee after being seen shouting,
staggering and apparently drunk in
the street In Klarnbl. just outside
Nairobi, Monday night.

Officials fear another crisis

1985 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC

I FII.L 01 PAn nME POSinONS AVAUBLII

RuilimdTownshipTrusteeswDI
meet at 6:30p.m. Thursday at !he
Rutland Fire Station. The public is
welcome.

comparing It to the Chernobyl
nuclear accident.
Nevada ANorney General Brian
McKay filed suit Wednesday In the
9th U.S. Circuit Court ol Appeals oo
behalf ol the state and Its congres.
sional delegation, accusing tJie
Energy Deparbnent of keeping
Nevada officials "In the dark"
about Its plans.

the commission is expected to act
on the employment of Dale E.
lman, 32, Frostburg, Md., as city
manager. Action setting !man's
salary at $34,(NXI per year will also
be acted upon.

NEW AMBULATORY
CARE CENTER

Trustees to meet

continue'&lt;~ from page 1

-

EMS has 4 calls

The Sunday School members of
Morse Chapel wUi stage an open
rummage sale from 9 to 5 a.m.
Friday and saturday on the
Intersection on Route 7 and the
Forest Run Road. Proceeds wUi go
towards remodeling of the church.
Rain wlll cancel the outdoor sale.

OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!)- A
suspected carcinogen is found In
Skoal and Co(lellhagen snuff In
concentrallons about 17 times
greater !han those allowed In meat
sold In the United States, a
researcher testified.
Dletrtch Hoffman, a biochemist
who has studied tobacco since 1957,
testified by videotape Wednesday
In the $147 million product liablllty
suit against U.S. Tobacco Co. of
Greenwich, Conn.
Hoffman said he found In a 1974
studY that U.S. Tobacco's Skoal
brand snuff contains nltrosambtes
at a ra tlo of 88,600 parts per bUllon.
The Deparlment of Agriculture
allows a maximum of 5 paris per
bi!Uon of the chemical In meat.
Hoffman cited a 1982 study In
which a total of 83,950 parts per
bllllon of nitrosamines were found
In the company's Copenhagen
snuff, the brand at Issue in the
federal court trtal.
Betty Ann Marsee alleges her son ·
Scan Marsee, 19, died from mouth
cancer after using snuff for six
years.
Nltrosamlnes have been shown to
be (XlWertul carcinogens in anlm·
ais, Holtman said.
"They belong to the environmen·

Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Gallipolis expected to name
new city manager tonight
The GallJpolis City Commission
wtll meet at 5 p.m. today In !he City
Building and is expected to ernploy
a new city manager.
Following an executive session,

Researc~er

should be recelvt'&lt;l wit hln a week, ro force lawmakers to pass protec·
said deparbnent spokesman Guy tlve legislation.
Home Insuranl'l' demand~.ed pre·
Ford.
miums
totallng$202,tlXla year from
Norwood, In suburban Clncin·
Norwood.
compared with $24,678 .
nail, filed a $4.5 million suit against
last
year.
Norwood
set up its own
Home Insurance In April, alleglng
$250,1XXllnsuranc'l'
pool
rather than
the company tried to Increase
pay
the
prPmlum
premium payments In an at1empt

Efforts to contact Home Insu·
ranee officials were unsuccessful
and National Union Fire officials
refused to comment.
Several OhiO communities Norwood, Findlay, NOes, Martins
Feny, Columbls Grove and Madl·
son 'Ibwnship among them - and
the oountles of Seneca, Trumbull
and Summit complained about
large IJ"emlum Increases issued by
Home Insurance.
Fabe said a list of communities
that complained about National
Union was unavailable.
Penalties could range !rom $100l
fines to revocation ot llcenses, Fa be
sald. "But I don't llke to think In
those terms. We want to get the
figures straightened rut 1110re than
. we're looking for punislunent," be
added.
The state subpoenaed records
!rom both oompanles, and they

Paul J. Knotts, former president
economy of Gallla County if !hey
c1
!he Gallipolis Area Olamber of
Southwest Ohio:
are utilized, she added.
Commerce,
has been serving as
South Central Ohio:
Holzer Clinic and Holzer Medical
Interim
city
manager
since March
Variable cloudiness today with a
Center combined are one of the
22,
when
!he
contract
of ihen.City
largest employers bt the area; chance of showers or thunder·
Manager
Albert
R.
Pierce
was
Boster noted, and she is glad to see storms. The highs wUI be near 8&gt;.
terminated
by
the
commission.
Partly
cloudy
tonight
with
a
low
the expansion.
The ordinance hiring !man said
"With so many (hospitals) cut· near 60.
his
employment becomes effective
Partly
cloudy
Frklay
with
a
high
ling baak and closing down, 1 think
July
1. The action repeals all
near
8&gt;.
it says something positive about
previous
ordlnanCI's now In effect
The probabillty of precipitation Is
this community," she said.
setting
the
city manager's salary.
30
percent
today
and
20
percent
Health care needs the commun·
The
city
commission's
action wUI
Friday.
tty have been growing, and several
result
in
Gallipolis'
fifth
city
Winds wUI be variable !Om lies an
years ago, clbtlc Jityslclans saw the
hour
or
less
today
and
light
and
need to expand their faclltity. The
Chris
Morris,
held
the job
manager
In a who
year.had
City
Manager
clinic was becoming too small for variable tonight.
since
J9T7,
resigned
last
August
was
Ohio Extended FOI'OOI!It
the needs c1 the Gallla, Mason,
replaced
by
Recreation
Director
Saturday through Monday Meigs and Jackson area.
Strafford ooted patient loads Chance of rain Saturday and Keven Wright, who also resigned
have IncrEased and even wtth the Sunday and fair Monday. Highs wUI his position on Dec. 3 to return to his
high concentration eli physicians In be In the 70s Saturday, and between native Colorado. Homer Pellethe area, people have been waiting 65 and 75 Sunday and Monday. grtnon. a member ot the Civil
far too long for ap(Xllntments. This, Lows wlll range between 55 and 60 Service Eligiblllty Board, was
along with service expansion in Saturday, 50 and 55 Sunday and 45 interim city manager untll Jan . 7,
when Pierre, a former city manareas llke cardiac rehabilitation and 50 Monday.
ager
and vUlage admbtistrator in
and evaluation emphasised the
Michigan
and New York, took !he
Funds
distributed
need for the clinic to grow.
posltim.
Pierce
was hired Dec. 3.
The addition of 31,00) square feet
State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Fergu·
wUI be a hoost to patient care. "We
Pierce sald in March his dismis·
have to care for patients the best we son's office reported the Aprtl, 19ll6,
sal
was poUtlcally motivated be··
distribution
of
state
motor
vehicle
know how, and make It affordable,"
cause
of his objectlomo to "the
registration
fees
totalin
g
Dr. Oscar W. Clarke, president of
involvement
of the members of the
$17,137,703.02
to
Ohio's
counties,
the clinic hoard of directors said.
cities, townships and villages. city commission ... in the admlnis·
Meigs County received $l2,Z79.41 ol tratlve affairs of the city
government."
the total.
Four calls were answered by r---------------------~
local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Scrvi·
ces reports.
At 4:19 p.m.. Middleport took
Patrtcla Spencer from VUlage
Manor Apartrnents to Holzer Medl·
cal Center; Pomeroy at 9:20 p.m.
took Brandy Fortune !rom VUlage
Green Apartments to O'Bleness
Hospital In Athens; Middleport at
9: 30 p.m. took Norma Hysell !rom
the lire station to Holzer Medical
EARN A COMPEnTIYE
Center; Rutland at 11:28 p.m. took
Ida White from White Hill Road to
SALARY
.
Holzer Medical Center.

Event this weekend

Pomaroy.... Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 29, 1986

Thursday, May 29, 1986

IOut-of-state insurance fir1ns under inve·stigation

dlst Church.
Mr. liyer was a director of
Qtizens Nallonal ol Point Pleasant
past presJdent of the board of
trustees of Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal, past presklent of !he Mason
County Chamber d Commerce and
a member of !he Board of Zoning
Appeals. He was also former city
attorney for Point Pleasant and
Henderson and was active In !he
formallon and continuous growth of
Hidden Valley CountiY Club.
Surviving are his wUe, LUllan G.
Hyer; two daughter, Sally Hyer
Davis of Vermillion, Ohio, and Jane
Hyer Pringle of Ketchikan, Alaska;
and three grandchildren.
A son, John Charles Hyer, and a
brother, Jacob Hyer, preceded him
In death.
Friends may call at the Crow·
Russell Funeral Home Friday !rom
2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
Funeral services wUI be Satur·
day at 11 a.m. at Trinity United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Tally Hanna officiating. Burtal wlll
follow In Kirkland Memorial
Gardens, Point Pleasant.

Groundbreaking held
for clinic addition
By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Stalf Wrler
GALLIPOLIS - It started out as
a dreary, dismal day, but the sun
peeked from behind the clouds just
In timeforgroundbreaklngceremonles Wednesday at Holzer Clinic.
. Groundbreaklng for the proposed
S;'l million, 3l.OOJ square foot
expansion was held with various
state and local dignataries oo hand,
lncludlog SecretaiY of State Sher·
rod Brown, State Sen. Oakley
Collins (R·lronton 1 and State Rep.
Jolynn Boster 1D·Galllwils 1.
. "This Is the end of a beginning,"
Qr. J . Craig Stratford said. Con·
struction is the next phase, and
Strafford said they expect to have
the facUlty completed In late 1987.
Strafford Is a member of the
7.-physlclan clinic board of dlrectprs. and chairman of the lJuUdlng
committee.
· The expansion, which Is estlmated to bring 100 temporary jobs
durbtg construction, five new physicians and at least 15 other
permanent po stlons after
completion.
: "Whenever possible, we would
!Ike to use local materials and local
labor, as loog as they are prtce
competitive," Straffonl told the
crowd gathered. He added that
when the clinic was looking at firms
for design and construction, Hospi·
tal Bulldbtg and Equipment was
chosen because of a wlllingness to
l)se local workers and materials,
Strafford said. HBE is a design·
!build firm out of St. Louis,
specializing in the health care field.
Many times construction firms
bring In crews and materials,
Boster said, adding she is glad to
see HBE willing to use the local
work force . "U nion tra de
(workers) here are capable (of the
jobs )" and It wUl do more for !he

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

PHOTOS 11 HONEY POROAIIS

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::~::::::~~~~·· ::::::~~

elt'Ctrica l firm doing business with
the court system perform free"-ork
on his three properties .
" The current proceedillgs have
rot only taxed myself, my family
and my friends, but have also
caused a substantial fina ncial
burden on the people of the state of
Rhode Island." Bevilacqua said In
his tetter of resignation .
CivUetti. a former U.S. attorney
general who led the committee's
impeac hment probe, cailed the
sufllrlse resignation "terrtflc."
"It" s the right thing to do under ail
the clrcumstan&lt;I's. II was just
laking a very hmvy loU rn the chief
just lcP," Civllett i said.

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (UP!)Western foreign ministers meet
today amid concern that new East
German bonier controls In Berlin
coukl crea te another International
crisis over the divided city.
oiflclals from the 16 NATO
countrtes scheduled two days of
private meetings expected to focus
on East-West relations and terrorism. A senior State Department
official said the mbtisters certainly
will discuss developments in Berlin
today and Friday at the semi·
annual meeting or the Western
alliance's governing council beleld
In this port city.
Secretary of State George Shultz
sa id Wednesday " we can't toler·
ate" East Germany making the line
dividing East and West Berlin an
international boundaiY.
By Insisting this week that some
Western diplomats show their
passports when crossing between
communist East and allied·
controlled West Berlin. the East
Germans instituted bonier controls
that the occupying allies fear

amount to turning the 25-year-old
Berlin Wall Into an International
honler. The West has steadfastly
refused to recognize the division of
the city 110 miles Inside East
Germany.
Foreign ministers of the United
Sta tes, Britain and France, wltlch
occupy West Berlin, agreed at a
dinner Wednesday night to chal·
ienge the Soviet Union over the
tightened controls .
Shultz said earlier the United
States already made Its objections
known to the Soviets, which with
three aUles have shared responsi·
b!iity for Berlin since the defeat of
Nazi Germany.
U.S.-Sovlet relations, of keen
illterest to America's alliance
partners, have been stalled for
months "1th no date set for the
second summit between President
Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev.
There have been some mixed
signals In recent days and Shultz
appeared q~tlmlstic In remarks to
reporters du rtng the flight to !he

Nova Scotian provincial capital for
the two· day NATO session. Shultz
ca lled for a return of "high· level
dialogue" with Moscow and a
"more constructive and predicta ·
bie relationship"' between the
superpowers.
The senior U.S. official. who
requested . anonymity. told r epor·
ters the Berlin con i roversy "' is a
ve!Y Important issue," and if it
were not settled, could spill over
into general East· West rela tions.
"It's exactly the kind of thing tha t
worries people for its (Xllential,"
said the aficiai. "'It's something we
haven't had ro wony about for
many many years. The officia l
cited "the !Diential for trouble th at
has an East·West Impact."
Before the controversy int ensl ·
fles, the offici al sa id , thcthrec alllrd
&amp;rUn (Xlwers, plus West Germany,
are demanding 1hat East G&lt;&gt;rmany
return to the terms of a 1974
Soviet·ailled agrt'l'ment [l('rmirting
free movement throughout the
divided city, a traditional hotbl'&lt;l of
superpower tension.

The Eastern-Franklin Furnace
Green class A regional tournament
game scheduled lor last night was
Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Marilyn Shamblin, postponed untO tonight. Eastern,
Hartford, W. Va.; WU!is Anthony, :&lt;U-5 on the year, and the Bobcats c1
Green, 13-11 for !he year, play at
Middleport.
Discharged - Clarence Dunbar, Portsmouth at 4:30 In the first
round regional contest.
. Jr., Paul Michael.

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1DRRANCE, Calli. (UP!)- A man's deformity had not been
man who spent his childhood and proven.
"I felt a great deal of sympathy
early teens believing he was a girl
for
the man and I know he went
lost his $9 mUllon suit against the
GOP recruting blacks
ttuuugh
a lot of han! times and
pharmaceutical firm that made the
adjustments,"
said juror Michael
CHARLES1DN . W.Va. iUPli- synthetic hormone he claims
Pepe.
"
If
there
had been another
Facrd with a 2·1 ha ndicap ill voter caused hls deformity.
piece
of
evklence
to show DES
~·rgis lrat ion , the Republican Party :
The Superior Court JulY of eight
caused
his
condltk&gt;n,
I could have
1n West Virginia is tryillg to sweii its men and four women voted 11 to l
gone
hLS
way."
ranks by rrcruiting blacks.
Wednesday after five weeks of
Thomas Mehesan, one of the
Lorna Robnett, midwestern testimony In favor of E.R . Squibb &amp;
man's
attorneys, said be had not
chairwoman of the National Black Sons Inc., one of the companies that
decided
whether to appeal the
Republica n Cou ncil appeared Wed· made the artificial female hormone
decision.
nesda.v in Charleston to announce a DES.
"We're stU! recovering from the
The man. whose Identify has been
S(lries of 5C'minars known as
shock,"
Mehesan said. "The tack r1
withheld to protect his privacy, is a
tk'W~st VIrginia Black Politica l
testing
of
this drug by the oompany
veterinarian who lives with his wife
Expo.
Is
wha
I
beat
us In this case."
In northern Calliomla.
Th~ idea is to Inform bliiCksahout
Mehesan
predicted
a string of
"I think justice has been done,"
the goals of the Republican Party.
lawsuits
against
the
makers of
The concept is being sponsored by Squibb attorney Debra Pole said
synthetic
hormones.
alter the verdict. "We had a veiY
thf:&gt; J:l·state regional organiza tion .
"His mother got this drug veiY
"W hat we are doing is to make intelligent JulY."
early
on (In her pregnancy) and he
thf:&gt; black community aware of Ihe
Is
just
the first of thousands of men
The
man
claimed
the
DES
his
Ri'publican Party and the lmpor·
(affected),"
Mehesan said. "You 're
mother
took
to
prevent
a
mlscar·
lance of a two· party system,"'
going
to
be
bearbtg
a lot 1110re about
riage
In
1947
stopped
the
IJ"oductlon
Hotrwtl explained .
of
!he
male
hormone
testosterone
this
In
the
future."
She sa id the sfate party will direct
The man testliied he spent his
its rffoz1s toward Ihe young - those and left him wtth the bodY of a
first
14 years as a girl named
female.
woo ar~ just learning about the
Kathleen,
a tomboy who felt
Oulslde
rourt
,
St'Veral
jurors
told
(Xllitlcal process.
Increasingly
awkward as adoles·
"We are 3)rt of zeroing In on the Squibb attorneys that they believed
cence
the
link
between
DES
and
the
approached.
youths, " Robrett said. "Let's face
it, they are going to be running the ,.----------------------~
counfly one of these days."

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Play tonight

H08pital news

Kirago's hair was very shaggy
and unkempt.
Asked by !he magistrate why he
was 3:&gt; scruffy, Kirago said he liked
his hair I hal way and did not want to
wash it.
Mulitu said the sentence would
give Kirago dme to spruce up his
unkempt locks.

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 29, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Store chain pulls aspirin .following poisoning
AUSTIN, Texas (UPI ) - Walgreen drugstores
nationwide pulled Anacln-3 capsules from tl~lr
shelves becau!ll' of the cyanide--poisoning death of a
chemlstn' student whose body was found nex t to an
Anacln bottle with a tainted capsule.
But the Food and Drug Administration and the
maker of the painkiller said Wednesday they had no
!'VIdence of a random killer and saw no reason to
order a recall. Authorities sa id they werf' lnvestlgat·
lng the possibility of suicide.
"It could be an Isolated Incident,' "said Kelly Norris.
a pollee spokeswoman. "Pollee aren't ruling out
anything."
Toxicological tests complf'ted Wednesday on
Kenneth Wayne Faries, 24, a chemistry major at the
University of Texas who was found dead In his
apartment May 22, Indicated that he died of "acute
cyanide poisoning," said Dr. RobertBayardo, Travis
County medical examiner.
Bayardo said FarieS died on either the night cl May
20 or the following morning. Faries" roommate.
Robert Whlttmeyer, reported him dead May 22, two

days aftf'r the unlvf!r~l~.'s fina l exam period ended.
Bayardo said Investigators found a bottle of
Anacln-3 In their apartment with "at least one more
capsule that appeared to have been tampered with''"
because It "was slightly larger than the others 1111d
looked diiJerent." He said rests showed the capsule
contained cyanide.
The sealed bottle, bearing lot number 6Bll, had
been bought In a Walgreen pharmacy In Austin.
Pollee urged people not to use Anacln capsules from
that lot number with an October 1988ex plration date.
FDA Commissioner Frank Young In Wash.lngton
said the agency had removed Anacln-3 from all 10
Walgreen stores in Austin and sent the capsu les to
Dallas for analysis "as an extra precaution."
FDA spokesman Jack Martin said the agency also
had sent the capsules found in Faries' apartment to Its
lab in Cincinnati for tests. He said preliminary resu Its
were expected today.
Walgreen, headquartered In Deerfield, Ill., Wed·
nesday night ordered Anacln capsules removed from
all its 941 stores In 30 states and Puerto RJco.

"We have pulled all Anacln Maximum Strength
capsules from all our stores around the United
States," said Walgreen spokesman Ed King. "We wUI
walt for Instruction from the FDA and Whitehall
!Laboratories, maker of Anacln)."
American Home Products Corp. r1 New York,
parent company of Whitehall Laboratories, sent an
investigator to Austin to test the capsules In Faries'
apartment, but did not Issue a recall.
''There Is no evidence ol any thlrd·party tampering
of the bottle or capsules," said Jack Wood, a company
spokesman.
Donald Healton, FDA regional director In Dallas,
said, "Until we know that It Is more than just one
bottle, there's certainly no reason to remove product
anywhere."
Faries' death was the fourth In the United States
linked to adulterated capsules · this year. Diane
Elsroth, 23, of Peekskill, N.Y., died Feb.8aftertaklng
two Extra-Strength Tylenol capsuleS laced with·
cyanide.
The Feb. 23 death of a NashvU!e, Tenn., man was

By ElAINE S. POVICH
WASHINGTON (U P)) - Spell·
lng words llke "thrombophlebitis,"
and "xyloglyphy," 115 champion
spellers, including a blind contest·
ant and a contestant from Young·
stown, Ohio, survived the first three
rounds Wednesday of the 59th
National Spelling Bee.
The blind competitor, Terra
Syslo, 12, of Fullerton, Neb., spelled
"acetylene" In the third round .
Monica Van Doren, 14, of Law·
rencevllle, N.J ., who had to read
lips to get her words, spelled
"cornhusking" In the first round but
stumbled over "quokka"' In the
second and was eliminated.
Thewords for the first two rounds
of the annual bee came from
"Words of the Champions," a
practice book distributed to com·
petltors that contains words from
pri.'Vious contests.
But words in the th.lrd round were
much harder and often the contest·
ants could spell the words but not
pronounce them. &amp;th Dionna
White of Youngstown and the
official pronouncer, Alex Cameron,
stumbled In pronouncing asphyx·
tant but Dianna spelled lt.
As the word difficulty Increased,
contestants spelled more hesitantly
and looked up worriedly hoping not
to hear the "ding" that signaled a
wrong word and elimination.
Wednesday's three grueling
rounds started at 8:30 a.m. EDT
and ended at 5p.m.In the first three
rounds, 59 contestants were ellml·
natoo from the record field of 174
champion spellers - nine in the
first round, liln the second and141n
the th.lrd.
A minor flap developed during
the second round when two contest·
ants charged the rlflcials provided
an tlcorrect definlti:m of the word

·The judges huddled for five
minutes and ruled the correct
definition was given and Lorne
RJchardson of ~way, Calif .. who
misspelled the word , was out of the
contest.
Many of the spellers, dressed in
everything from blue jeans to
obviously new dresses and u ncom·
fortable high·heel shoes, breathed
huge sighs of relief after correctly
spelling such words as "lambda,
" jo cular," "p ivotally" a nd
"rellgloso ...
But others tripped up on words
like "xeroplastlc" (misspelled as
"zeroplastic" ) and "rhodium"
!radium ).
Spellers who missed their words
got. a friendly arm around the
shoulders from Bee volunteers and
were escorted from the huge
ballroom.
The words get harder as the bee
eliminates contestants, culmlnat·
lng with a winner Thursday.
During the first round, Van Doren
stared Intently at pronouncer Alex
Cameron as he repeated "corn·
husker" several times, defined It
and used it in a sentence. Her
success was rewarded with applause from the usually restrained
audience of pan~ts. teachers and
journalists.
Prlya Karn!k, a seventh grader
from Upper Providence, Pa., was
the fir~t contestant eliminated.
misspelling "xeroplastlc,' ' with a z
instead of an x. Interviewed In the
"comfort room," which was
stocked with soda and snacks for
the klsers, Priya said sh!&gt; didn't
know what the word meant and
worried about the z vs. x problem.
" I feel sorry that I made the
wrong decision," said Karnik. still
red-eyed from crying.

--Ohio Briefs:---..
Appelate court overturns ruling
PHILADELPHIA iUPI I - A federal appeals court has
overturned a lower court decision that allowed the bankrupt
Wheellng·Plttsburgh Steel Corp. to reject Its collective bargaining
arrangements with the steelworkers' union.
The three-judge panel of the Th.lrd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
sent the case back the U.S. Bankruptcy Court In Pittsburgh for
further hearings, saying the lower court had "erred" and "laDed to
give any persuasive rationale for allowing the company to reject the
union contract."
The bankruptcy court had allowed Wheeling-Pittsburgh to annul
its contract with the United Steelworkers of America In an effort to
erase $000 mU!ion In long-term debt and huge operating losses. The
action preclptated a strike of several months.
In a 44-page opinion, appeals court Judge Delores Slavlter said the
steelworkers had been forced to accept a five-year contract with
substantial wage· losses "without any posslbUity for restoration or
share In the event of a better-than-anticipated recovery" by the
company.

Women Voters sponsoring debate
COLUMBUS (UP!)- TheOhlo League ofWoman Voters says it Is
planning a televised debate between Sen. John Glenn and hi s
Republican challenger Rep. Thomas Kindness.
Ohio League President Diana Winterhalter said the state
organization received $4,001 from the national League of Women
Voters to help pay for the debate. It will focus on global and national
security Issues such as the threat of nuclear was and U.S.-Soviet
relations, she said.
She said the location and date for the debate have not been set, but
both candidates have expressed either a written or verbal
commitment to participating.
Two Ohio local leagues, Akron and Toledo, have received money to
conduct debates between congressional candidates in respective
U.S. Hou se districts In their areas.

·Celeste tries new phone system
COLUMBUS (UP!)- UTe! Telecommunications Co. announced
the avallablllty of a fiher·optlcs netWork reaching six states and
fitting Into a larger system that uses.lasers to transmit Information.
On a strand o! glass smaller than a hair, Gov. Richard Celeste's
voice traveled to Nebraska Wednesday marking the first
"symbolic" use of the new Worthlngton·basl!d UTel's fiber-optics
connection.
The $115 mUllon underground ~able system connects the major
and secondary cities In six states and Is construct~ along railroads,
the Ohio Turnpike and other public rights of way.
Celeste phoned Nebraska Gov. Bob Kerrey, chairman o! the
Midwest Governors' Association, wh.lch wW hold discussions on the
development of fiber-optics when It meets next rronth In Columbus.
"It sounds !Ike you're right next door where yw will be sllorlly,''
Celeste told Kerrey. "It's crystal clear."

•

•

)

\ \--:.

15

()i \ ,' ., ,, '

16
.'

. •• ' r

TAKING A BREAK - Lome Richardson, 11,
Poway, Calli., appeared relaxed as the first round d
the 59th anooal National Spelling Bee was underway
In Washingron, D.C. Wednesday. i\11 174 oo...,.tants

have won local oontests as a prerequlslle to the
Washington competition and have bestEd an
estimated eight to nine rnWlon of their peers. (U 1'1)

· Many jiitery spellers wrung their second-timers.
hands and bit their Ups, but Marla
The participants, rangi ng in age
Regazzi, 13. of Berrien Springs, from 9 to 14, represent 171
Mich., sat calmly knitting a green newspaper sponsors from every
scarf. Other more relaxed spellers state and the District of Columbia,
included four making their th.lrd Guam, Mexico, Puerto RJco and the
appearance in the bee and 20 VIrgin Islands.

The winner gets $l,IDJ, a trophy
and several other prizes. The bee Is
sponsored by Scripps-Howard
Newspapers, wh.lch sent 13 candl·
dates from Its newspapers, and 158
&lt;ther dally, weekly and &amp;tnday
papers.

U.S. appeals court strikes
down anti-obscenity nieasure
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, citing
arguments for free speech made
300 years ago by Joho Milton, has
declared Paducah, Ky.'s. antJ.
obscenity law unconstitutional.
The court Wednesday upheld
U.S. District Court J udge Edward
Johostone' s finding that Paducah's
Jaw violated first amendment
freedom of speech right s.
Under the Paducah law. enacted
three yl'ars ago, any business
where an obscene film or publica·
tlon was found could have its
business license revoked.
"The main lssur,'' said the
appellate court, " Is whether Pa ·
ducah may use license revocation
as a tool to contro l obscenity. "
Revoking a business license is not
a proper tool, ruled the court.
"The ordinance violates first
amendment right of freedom of
expression," said "the court. "Ac·
cordingly, we hold the ordinance
invalid.''

The judges noted that what
Paducah lawmakers tried to do
three years ago had been attacked
by MOton In 1641.
" The problem of using licensing
to control dlstrthutlon of printed
ex(l"esslon by booksellers and
[:A!bllshers has a long history," said
the court. "Mllton's 'Areopagltica'
(wrttten in 16411n response loa law
that used llcensingtocontrolbooks)
remains the classic argument
against the licensing of speech."
The judges said that llcenslng
speech discourages new Ideas and
quoted Milton as writing, " I found
and visited the famous Ga tuec,
grown old, a prisoner to the
Inquisition, for thinking In astron·
omy otherwise than the Franciscan
and Dominican licensers thought."
The court also referred to an
example cited by .Johnstone when
he struck down the law.
Johnstone noted that the Pa·
ducah law could shut down an
entire place of tJJslness eventhough
not all the material there was

W.Va. leader pledges
completion of 1-77
conidor with Ohio
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (UPI)
- West VIrginia Gov. Arch Moore
said Wednesday his state wlll move
forward as quickly as possible with
complet ion of the long-delayed
Corridor D connecting Interstate 77
at ParkerstJ.Irg, W.Va.; wtth U.S. fil
In Ohio.
"I'm simply saying it' s going to
be bullt. You are looking at the guy
who Is going to build It," Moore
said.
The governor also used the
announcement to put in a plug for
the road bond amendment that wUJ
be on the general election ballot in
November, saying passage would
give him more fiexlbUity In how It
goes about financing Olrridor D·
and other hlghway·bulldlng efforts.
But he said the project would go
forward even If the amendment
falls.
Moore said It will take one year to
14 months just to complete the
h.lghway design and obtain bids on
the Orst phase of the project.
The first phase Is to cost $45
mU!Ion to $48 mi!Uon and wUJ take
the four-lane highway through
downtown Parkersoorg Into South
Parkersoorg and on to the ohio

RJver. The second phase, which
would cost about another $60
million, would take the highway
over the Ohio RJver Into Ohio.
The exact route has net been
determined, nor Is It known
whether the bridge wlll go over
Blennerhassett Island, as had been
proposed earlier.
Moore said attempts wUI be
made to find a route that will be the
" least objectjonable as possible" to
Parkersoorg residents. He said a
public hearing would be held to get
public reaction to the project, wh.lch
has been stalled since 1982.
Moore said West VIrginia would
be responsible for three-quarters of
the cost of the bridge spanning the
Ohio River. But he said he was
having some trouble getting Ohio
offtcials to commit to paying the
other 25 percent of llle bridge.
Moore said he wduld Uke to get
"total community agreement" on a
proposed route, but joked that he
had a "sneaking suspicion" that
would not be possible. Moore noted
that the location of a bridge oo the
historic Island, where In the lSX!s
Aaron Burr once plotted the
overthrow ri the federal govern·
ment, Is a "sensitive" Issue.

obscene.
"Under the ordinance, a movie
theatre could be closed for repeatedly showing an oll&gt;cene film on
weekends even though the theatre
showed 'The Ten Commandments,'
'Snow White' and 'Gone With the
Wind' on weekdays," he said.
The appellate court noted that ,
"No doubt, one of the purposes of
Paducah's llcense revocation ordl·
nance Is to deter the sale and
I'Xh.lbltlon of oh!cene material.
"But, the ordinance goes beyond
this [:A!rpose, as Judge Johnstone
found . Paducah's procedure of
revoking businesses licenses ...
essentially prevents the offending
business from engaging In future
distribution of protected. non·
oh!cene material.''
Lawsuits against the Paducah
law were ftled by Investment
Entertainment, Inc., and Beltllne
News and Arcade Club. City
offtclals had tried to use the law
against both businesses shOrtly
after the law was enacted.

Kanawha officials
return escapee
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP! )
- Security was tight when
authQritleS returned Anthony
Pfeffer to the Kanawha Coo nty
Jall from where he and another
Inmate escaped by using a
smuggled gun to take four
guards hostage.
At a hearing Wednesday In
Akron, Ohio, the 31-year-old
Huntington resident waived his
right to an Identification hearing
and signed a waiver d removal.
A few hours later, guards
returned him to Charleston.
"Right now, he's under fed·
era! custody,'' said Cpl. John
Ruther1ord of the .Kanawha
Crunty SherHf's . Department.
'We're golr\g to walt and present
cases to the (county) grand
jury .",
Rutherford said state char~s
against Pfeifer wlll IUkely in·
elude kidnapping and escape.
Pfeffer had been apprehended
on the federalcllar&amp;e of unlawful
fllght kl avoid proeECUtlon.
Pfeffer and WIDlam F. Sneed,
32, ri Nitro escaped by using a
smuggled han~n to take tlur
corrections officers hostage.
Sneed remains at large.
A third man lmpllca ted, RJ.
chard L. Dingess, 34, of Willow
Wood, Ohio, allegedly drove a
getaway car tor the 1110 In·
mates. He has been !reed on
$\Ji,OOl bond.

· Contractor

Bllildings

NEW HOMES ,
ROOFS , DECKS.
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

*Storare BuUdinfl

New Homes Built

01ll SIZ£$ AVAIIJBU

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

S·i4·1 lo.

89~3386

J/ 11 / tfn

FOil THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

'· 5·19-"86"· 1 mo.

YOUNG'S
- Concrete work

(Free Estimates)

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.
992-2772

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill
.

5· 20·'86' I mo .

farm Equipment
Parte &amp;SeNiee

Public Notice
LEGAL III'OTICE

Bids wit be received at tho
office o1 Bem11rd V. Fultz,
111 'h Woot Socond Street

Pomo..,y. Ohio 46769 lor tho
llle of tho rosidonoa of tho hrto
Neva M. Grimm. The real
Ollalo is situated at B32 E.
Mein Street Pomeroy, OMio
46769 . Tho root ostato con oiota of a ·one family dwelling
with three bedrooms. Clle
beth, Irving room, dini1g room.
kitch101 end e full basement.
The right ia reserved to reject

Bids Will be received tr~til
Moy 30 . t986 ot tO :OO
O'Ciodt A.M .
(5) 22. 23. 26. 26. 17. 26. 29.
30 Btc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Tupper~ Pla ins-C hester Water District is inviting
bids for the replacement of

the telemetering system
located at the Treatment
"Plant. well field and the Sue·

cess tank . All bidders are to
utilize the use of radio, give

detailed specifications to in·
stallation and provide new
wiring

diagrams to match

•SPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATIIUTE SALIS &amp; SERVICE

tfe Hen AFull Tl'"'
Shot hehnlelln
on Duty

Residential &amp; Commercial

Coli:
992-5875 Or
742-3195

WATER
WELLS

EUGENE LONG

DRILLED &amp;
SERVICED

5-19-" 86 -tln

24 'x28' Complete

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Service

CALL 667-3271
Co111p1u tht Que lily
Btlore ~:.t~n mo.

10·8-tfc

DON lOSE, Owner
Homt 843 -5340

2 CAR GARAGE

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

&amp; IN DUSTAIAL
ICenified Electrlclanl

5/1311 mo

4/ 1/ lln

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Systtm1, Heny Hauling,
Stone &amp; Gravtl Hauling

992-6173

Ph. 992-5006
or 742-3147

CHESTER - 985 ·3307

Land &lt;ltoring. Ponds, Septic

949-2493

FREE ESTIMATES

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

ll -14tlc

e•isting prints. The Distri ct

Oil Fitld S.nict,
landscaping, las em ants,

FREE ESTIMATES

Hobson Rd., Middleport

• ZEN ITH
•SYlVANIA

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

ony or all bido.

&amp;

UCINE, OHIO

Electrical Work
RESIDENTIAL, COMMER CIAL

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

5·15-"86 ·1 mo.

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

1·3·"86 tfc

4-15-'86-lc

ACROSS FIOM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W. VA.
304-773·5222

ROSE EXCAVA11NG

pda te Your Systems Now

Aulhoriud Jobn Deere,
New Hollorol, Bush Hog
Form lquipmen1
Dealer

- Plumbing and elee1ri cal
work

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

SATELLITE
SALES
REPAIRS

GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE

5·29-"86·1 mo .

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

- Roofing and gutter work

FREE ESTIMATES

PHONE
(614)/7 42-2070

SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Addons end remodeling

•'A" lnau .. ted Glass
•Tilt In To Clean
•Most Windows Priced
under •300

Rt. 1, Box 27-B
32933 Romine Rd.
Rutlond, Oh. 45775

BOG.GS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•Vinyl Replacements
Windows

ByBD..LWOOD
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.
1UP!) - A high speed rail project
that would link Florida's major
International airports, tourist at·
tractions and business districts wm
be the standard by which further
American development of the
system Is judged, a top U.S. transit
official said.
The Idea for high speed rail
service In Florida was born in 1981,
when Gov. Bob Graham visited
Japan and drove the Shinkansen
train. Convinced the system might
solve Florida's choking transporta.
tion problem, Graham formed the
High Speed Rail Committee the
following year with a $500,(0)
federal grant.
The 1!l84 Legis Ia tu re passed the
Florida High Speed Rail Tran!!pOr·
tattoo Commission Act, creating a
state corrunlsslon to work with the
prlva te sector to develop a for-profit
high speed rail line In Florida.
The commission wtl! Issue by this
fall requests for proposals from
suppliers, developers and vendors.
commission members said. Fran·
chlses are expected to be awarded
by 1987, with construction in
progress by 19ffi.
"Three years ago, I said high
speed rail In the United States
would become a reallty In our
!Hetinne,'' Federal Railroad AdminIstrator John Rlley said Wednesday
at the Third International Conven tion on High Speed Rail.
"The only questions were when
and where," RJ!ey said . "The when
Is still up in the air , tJJ t where is
pretty much certain. There ls no
doubt In my mind Florida Is golnl to
be the flagship for the nation.
"The ropes and asplratons d the
13 states Involved in high speed rail
are riding on thP success ol
Florida.''
The tentative proposal calls for a
rail tine - traveling at speeds
between 100 mph and 100 mph.
depending on the system- to llnk
South Fiortda In the Miami area
with Orlando and Tampa Bay at a
cost of up to $2.7 billion.
Counties, cttles and private lan·
downers already are offering up
land In hopes d luring the system to
their area.
Preliminary reports Indicate the
privately run rail would be rx·ofita·
ble due to heavy use by the state's
projected population of 17 mllllon
and annual tourist traffic of up to 90
million people by the year :!100, said
John Parke Wright, a member of
Florida 's high speed rail
commission.
Other domestic high speed rail
proposals would link Atlanta and
Savannah In Georgia; Pittsburgh,
Harrisburg and PhUadelph.la In
Pennsylvania; Chicago and De·
troll; Dallas, San Antonio and
Houston; Cincinnati, Coiumbusand
Cleveland In Ohio; Los Angeles and
Las Vegas; and Albuquerque and
Santa Fe in New Mexico.
Service of various , efficiency
already Is available from New York
City to Albany, N.Y ., Burlington,
Vt., and Montreat. from Los
Angeles to San Diego and from
Boston to New York City and
Washington , D.C
Saying failure of any one (l"oject
would doom high speed rail, Riley
urged loose di.'Veloplng and trying
lo innprove systems to put In place
Wllform standards of computing
projected ridership, providing In·
centlves to investors and bulldlng a
broad constituency of support for
the technology .
"The key to mak lng high speed
rail work Is bu ilding one successful
project that will open the door for
other projects," Riley said , again
with h.ls eye on Florida.

T· lll Sid ing . 1 Overhead
Wood Doors, I Entrance
Door. 5 Window s. Bu ilt on
Concrete Slab.

$6,495°0

J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.
James Keesee

992·2772

810 11 W. Main St.
Pomtro~ ,

a?:

~=:;:__~

'JJ .· ao GM Fenders .. $39
73 - BO G M
.
Rocker Peneta .......... .815
73 · 79 Ford Fender1 ..... $39
Truck Bed
Liners ... .. .. .. . Full &amp;176
M ini &amp;165
FREE INSTALLAT ION
2 YR WARRANTY
Satid1ction Guarlnt!MI(I
f riMI Dttllv.,-y Sam a W1111k

Complete Gutter Work
Co mple te R emode lin q
A&amp;ofing of el l Tynes
Worked in hom e .H .t''
20 y ea rs
"Free Esti mates "

CAll COLlECT:

Ph. (6141843· 5425

5-12."86·2 mo.

MANLEYS
TRASH
SERVICE
Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
'ocommer&lt;ial Conlainor

Service Available •

CALL 992·3194
5/ 8-1 mo .

5·20-" 86· 1 mo.

bond on the installltion;
warranty all hardware and
one yHr guarantee on parts
and llbor. Bid opening date
will be Monday. June 9 .
Noon.
Further informarion, if re·

· 12:00

quir4d. can be obtained from

the office of the District,
39581 Bar 30 Road, Roedl·
vilto. Ohio 46772. Tho Oil·
trict hu the rtgtlt to accept
or re}ect any or ell bids.

15)

29: 161 2. 9. 3tc

ALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Ftroltrs (73·10) .......... 1.40
Doors (73 ·85) ............. 180
Front lumpm .............S70

New lCKation:

168 North !t&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 457b0

FORD TRUCKS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ftndors (73·79) .......... 1.40
Doors (73·79) .......... SIOO
Rod. 5uppor1 ............. 111 0
Grill Shtll .................. 111 0

We Carry Fi1hing Supplie1

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Sitts Here
IUSINISS PHONE

WHAlEY'S AUTO PARTS
Darwin,

992· 7013

Ohio

992·5553

5· 16 -"86 ·1 mo .

Roger Hysell
Garage
Ill. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

-Ita Tru•tnlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•

ClC .~COINS
GOlD COINS
BASEBAU CARDS
MOTHiR'S DAY" &amp;
GRADUAnON
1 OZ. SILVER BARS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES
Buying Gold

ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulat ion
•Storm Doors
•S1orm Windows
•Replacement Win dows

Roofing
" FREE IITIMATEI"

•N ew

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

l / 5/ 86/ tln

flEW . If /II \1
Lo ca t ed in t he
S addlebrook Inn
Rt

&lt;12

)} Pl1!1rtS $t ,uUit&gt; l

l h&lt;· p ,,l''ll'I'V M 11~0t1 fl"tl!lll

Chooa hom 3 MfotsfllJm, {lu(hn or

h~td

StiKik

\e rvtd with 4 vtgttobiH,
ml od, dusrrt ond drint

SUNDAY BUFFET -'4.95

II ,30 o.m, lo MO p.m.
( hildrl!n 11 I Undtr -111 Priu
S &amp; Undu fRU

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes
•Washers •Dishwashers
•R anges
•A e tr igerat or s
•Dry ers •Freezers

992-7089

992-3525

3-14-tlc

ACCENT

"

742·2027

a:

?~RB~?

7552-Crochel clolh of
pineapples: 40"" in No .
30; sa· in bedspread.
759(}-Colorful owls to
embroider/color. Tissue
transfer of 24 motils.

~Tii"r~·

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

J ·~7

NEW - REPAIR

The Daily Sentinel
~noertnamoofyourpoper)

12·12 NorltMm Blvtl.. Wooclolde,
NY mn. Print 111... Addr!la,
Z4&gt;, SID, Plltom Number.

'86 Needlecraft Catalog
t 50 designs. $2 + 75¢.
Books $2.95 + 75e p&amp;h.

1SH--

Qu111ng
tlt-Tlrltty Crafty Ftowon
lot-Sow + Knit (TIIIUI lncl)
10:1-15 Quilt lor Toclly

ALICE BROOKS
. C.

R

A

F

T

B· lltfn

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

949-2263
.or 949·2168

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

Sp,lng Sps61•1

$9 5

INClUDES PAINT
&amp; LABOR

992-3361

2·1J.86·tfn

5-5.'86-tln

6 Lost and Found
Loat · Femala minia t ura
1chnauzer. Wearing red coll ar
with rabies tag. Geo rge• Ck . A d.
area . Ca ll 614 ·4·U · 46BO.
LOST Black dog l ong bod y. ahort
I8Qt. pudgy fece . Loat in vicintv
of Gallie Academy Htgh School.
4 -448 -2174 after 5PM .
Call

6,

LOST Black Kodak hnunt matic
camera . Ac ross from Millers
Funeral Home. Reward _ Call
614· 388 ·8796 .
LOST. small gray female Poodle
wearing brown collar and fl ea
collar . l ost from Green Houseon
Horse Lick Road . REWARD.
either re1Urn or ca ll 304 -675 -

6020

EXOTIC BIRDS .
TROPICAL FISH.
HAMSTERS.
KITIENS. BIRD
SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS

FOI All

r~ut

Ptlnllng N!!dl

PLUS, Olfico lul'l'liot &amp;
furniture, Wedding
and Grcxluation
Stationtry, Mognrf i&lt;

Signt, Rubb11 Stompt,
Businen Forms,

59 N. 2nd a...
Middleport

Sen·ictt, Er&lt;.
25 5 Mill Sl .. MiddltpDtl

(DJI~

5-10."86"1 mo.

3121 rtn

J&amp;F

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

CONTRACTING

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 · 2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13 -tfc

&amp; Vicinity

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

Gn rege Sale May 31st. Ge orges
Creek 8·5 Furni1 ure, p.an o .
dishes, clo th es, toy1 . po ol tabl e,
tools .
Yard Sale 'h m ile from Ra ccoon
CrHk Bridge on n5 . Fri. &amp; Set
614· 379-22 7 2 .
Yard Sale 55 Garfield. Oinin groom 1able. lflmps, stands.
books . clothes . etc . Mev 30 , 31
Juna 2,3.
4 Family Carport Sale. 49
Garfie ld Ave . Fri. &amp; Sat M ay 30 .

31 .
M oving Sale Twin . manren &amp;
springs . T11bles . gas stove. saw .
Come anytime. 60 Ch illicothe
Rd . Call 61 4· 446 -2378.

DOZER, BACKHOE .
"TRENCH Eli. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS . WATER .
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES .
RECLAMATION. PONDS .
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS .
DUMP TRUCK STON E
&amp; DIRT

6 Family Sale May 30. 31 . June
1. 9 to dark, rain or shine . Infant
to adult, toys. household iteml,
to ols . Pri c~ to selL New itema
each day. Across from Adda\lille
School 2 mi les off 7.

Jl MCll FFORD

Yard Sate Friday May 30th .
Georges Creek . Kelly Drive.
lawn mowers, bicycles , baby
clo th es. kitchen uova. mlac

PH. 992-7201

. ).

May 30th , 31s1 . Jun e 2nd . 3rd.
701 Cherry St . Vinton . Too
msny items to mention .

..... Pom.ero·.;. ········
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenching of Any Tvpe
Backhoe Service

Plumbing Service
Custom Welding

Garage sa le·Bill Wtnd on resi ·
dence . 1 'h miles fro m Chast er
on At . 248 . June 2nd and 3rd .

Septic Syst em s

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Bigy l!u d n le, M ay 30. 31 , &amp; 1st.
Jun e 6.7.8. Halfwav be tween
Pomeroy and Athens off Rt . l3
2 1h miiH on County Rd 37
follow 1igns . R id ing lawn
mower, anawering maChif1e .Tooll. lots of misc. items. truck
top Blue and White

WIWAMS 111ENCHt4G
SERVICE
Rt . 4 . Hy_sell Run Rd .
Ohio 46769
Ph (6t4 1 992·2834,

Pomeroy.

992-6704
FREE ESTIMIITES
5·7·2 110 .

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At RI!Dsonable Prim"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

M on . 11nd Tue1 . June 2nd &amp;Jrd .
Rain or sh ine. Children end adult
cloth ing. various sizes . alot ol
m isc . items , 462 South 5th. St.
Middleport, Ohio.

A/C

APPLIANCE REPAIR
Experienced Service in
Microwave Ovens,
Ranges, Air
Conditioners,
Refrige rato rs. Washers
&amp; Dryers. lVs &amp;

Satellite Systems.

24 Hr. (mergtney Slf'fKt

NO SUNDAY CALLS

949 · 2145
1· 12·1 mo .

4-16 ." 86 tfn

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

TOWN &amp; COUN'IIY

s

I

VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT, PLEAS~NT OFFICE
305 Jadrsan a•••

304-372-5709

10-14-rtc

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

······ Pfl'leiisiint ·····

~
..

Moving sale , bedroom set.
queen size waterbed , 251
Jafterson A ....e., Pt . Pit. Any day
1f18t'toon .

ti'' '

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH peid tor '83 model
and newer UIICI cart . Smith
Buidt -Pontlec, 19 11 Eutem
Av• .. Gallipot11. Cell 814 -446 -

2282
Tobacco pound~~ge . Cell 614·
266 · ,812
Cnll 814·

448 · 1437.

367-7560 - 367-7671
CHESHIRE, OHIO

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC) ·
RACINE, 01110
Offi&lt;1 949· 2431

Emtrgtn&lt;y 949-2516
l mo.

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK !
87 14 .00 per 100 . Ouarant e:OO
payment . No ules. Details Send stamped envelop11 : Elan ·
716 , 34 18 Enterpri s" . rt
Pierce , Fl. 33 482 .
-

Government Jobs 516.040 ·
S59.230 ·yr N ow Hiring Cell
1· 805 -687 · 6000 E•t R·98 05
for a;rrent fed&amp;rallist.
'

Wanted ·Temporary employt'tt
Dental Hygenist. to work i11
progreuive modern den te l pr ac
tice in Ja ckson Co . W .VIl
During summer . Excellenf ~a
lary. npp ly wi 1h resume awl
referen ces to P.O. B o~ JO 1
R1pley W .Va . 15271
E~per ienced carpenter. Stn rt in g
sa lary &amp;6 .00 p er hour . Sen d
resume to Bo~ 100 S. c· o Da•lv
Sentin~. Pomeroy. Ohio

leltd Guitarist for rtH:t&lt; met ;o.t
t.nd. Call 614 -99 2· 5381 A s~
for l ee .
Van driver· 20 htt. weejt . Must
be 55 years of age 'l f old et' an d
have valid Chauffeurs licanse.
For mo re i nformation call 614 ·
992 · 2161 between 8nnd4:30
AVON . 3 op~~n lflrti to riel .
304· 675 · 1429
REPS

C t~ .l l

NEEDE D. for business

a c~ unts . Full Tim e !S60 ,000·

'80,000. ParHime $ 12,000 '18,000; no selling , rep eat
businen Set your own houn
Training provided . Call : 1·612 ·
938 · 6B70, M ·F, Bam 10 ~ pm
(C entral Standard Timel.
N11Wspaper circulation manayer.
exce llent oppor1un ity . shhrp.
aggrestive. a.11penen ced OM
Take charge 13 .000 deil';'. great
placa to iva and worh . SM1d
utsume 10 Mr. Harlan Phill ips
GM. The News -VIrgin ian , P.0 .0 rawe r 1027. Waynesboro, Va
229080 or ca ll 703· 949-8213.
.
Newspaper pressmfln. exP erenced oH set pressman . 6 d11ys
PM publ ic o~~ tion. uc opportun ·
ity . Send resume to Mr H11rl au
Ph1llips . G M . The New ~o ·
Virginian , P.O. Drawer 1027.
Waynesboro , Va . 22980 .

Ma

BOOKKEEPER (part .time)
son Coo.Jilty Public library. M ature and reliab le person . Mutt be
experioenced in al l payroll pro cedures. Experiencfld only n"eed
apply. Pav $4 50 per hour .
ln tf!rviiiW~o by appointment on ly
June 2nd end June Jrd betwa~:~n
9 :00 a.m .and 6 :00 p.m Ca l1
304 - 675 - 2913 f or
app ointment .

18 Wanted to
M owmg &amp; odds
614 -446 · 6266

Do-jobs

Ca ll

Financial
3 family Oarege Sale, May 30
and 31 , 9:00 till ~ 110 Main St.
New Haven. golf bags . club•.
typewriter. TVs . drapM. cu·
shions . furniture, co al-wood
stove.

Tobacco poundage

IF NO ANSWER CALL:

11) Calf! MflniiQflr &amp; 111 Part ·
time Ca1e IYianag fH Pa rt · tim e
Clerk . 12 month s position s
qualifications:
BA dt;~gree •n
related field . &amp; able to meet Oh1o
Depa rt me n t of Men tal
Rat ardat ion - 0 evelo p m ental
Oisabilit ias OMRP c ertific11ti on ~
requ irement.. or w illing to oh
lain Salary as per salary sch P
dule &amp; experienCf!. (S 14 .000
$19.0001 . The Gall1a Coun1t
Boerd of MA -00 shall ensult!
the t on going &amp; consilt 'll''
appropriate training will b
.,-ovidided to Case Managem &amp;l · ·
perso nn el in specif ic sh ill ar e ~~
ta maximiza the effe ctiveness fl·
eff i ciency of theservic::edelive r ~
Tra ining &amp; experif!n ce in th•
rollowin g areas wi\1 he con~ ,
derBd helpful if not eu~mtial · A
Naturfl &amp; needs of MA -Dil
individuate : B. Counseling 'l
MR -0 0 indivi duals &amp; theirhm ·
lies : C. Behav ior Management I
individuals who have MR ·Df
0 . Delivery of services , •,
persons w ith MR -00; E Knov.. ·
edge reg ard '"g the av1ilability uf
resources &amp; how to " link up "
ind ividu els to thoae urvic.a: &amp;
F. Know ledge regarding int er·
Bgency cooperations clusters .
pt'Otective &amp; advo cacy service~
AU app lications AVtlilabla at .
Gellia Coonty Board of MR -O D
P.O. Box 14 Chesh iut. Oli
45620 or Call 614· 367 ·0102
Application deadline Jun&amp; 1 3.
1986 "An Equal Opportunit y
Employer "

&amp; Vicinity

We pay cath lor late model clean
used cars.
Jim M ink Ctle~o~ .· Oids Inc
Bill Gena Johnaon
814-446 -3672

•Residential
•Commercial
•I ndustrial

large Columbus homebuilder
needs subco ntr act framing
crews . Guaranteed full t 1me
work . Ca ll 1 · 614 · 888 · 4855
6:30 em · 9:00am only . M ond11y
· Friday

Eny A ssemb'Y Work ! t714.oo
p flr 100 . Gua rant&amp;ed Payment
No Sales . Det&amp;ils -· Send
stamped envelope . El an -684 7
3418 Enterpris&amp;. Ft. Pl&amp;r ce Ft
33482 .

Yard Sale

7

Yard Sale, 502 Holloway Street.
Henderson, May 30 and 32 from
9:00 till 6 :00.

PH. 304-67,5·2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
For Hours

.,

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

Gutters
Oownspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

SMALl ANIMAL NOUIS
Mon.·Wod.·fhurs. 3·5 pm
Tutt. 6:30·1; Fri. 1·! pm
Sa1urday 10·11:30 om
lAIGE ANIMAl &amp;
SUIGIIY IY APPT.

r,

-

4/ I n

tlood to:
Alloo 81110k1 Cralll,.t

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

Lowboy Hau ling

M. KOCH, M.S.
L5 LISA
:J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
z

"Frte istimates"
Installation Available

Send $3.25 plus 75e
postage, handling, lor
each panern.
-~~~~~

z

Co!l1luterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

2 large cats and 3 ki tt en s to good
homo 614 · 992· 7875 . 747
Oli\/O r St M1ddlepo rt .

·······Gallipolis

5/ 13/"86 / 1 mo .

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992-6931
Utwr 5 Call

992-5232

6 5 weeh old puopies . 1 male. 5
lomala Brown fuuy H11sk y.
Col lia miN . 614 · 992 · 74 58 .

PARTS and SE RVI CE
4 5 ttc

992-3345

FRH ESTIMATtS

-·

Puppies to gi11eaway at Porte r.
Call 614 · 388· 813 7

I&lt;UT OU1 FOR FUTURE USI)

104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

•limestone
•Water Line
• Basements
•Gas lin.e
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds

Cudd ly puppies . Call 61 d· 256 ·
1669 or 614 . 446 -2825

LOST Male short Beagl e dog on
Cora ·Cent erpoint Rd Belongs
to 2 smell boys . Reward . Call
614· 388· 8796 .

992-6784

Ba&lt;khoes, Bulldozers, End Laader, Dump
Tru&lt;ks, Self Lauding Pan, Heavy Hauling ond
Win&lt;h Tru&lt;ks

Giveaw•y

S-5.'16·1 mo.

WHOLE APPLE PIES- 14.!0

985-3937

POMEROY, OHIO

large Col u mbut hnmebuilder
n e ~ ds su bcontnct conc•et e
crews Guerante8d full timf!
work Cell 1 · 61 4- 988 · 4865
6: 30 lim · 9 :0 0 lim on ly _Mond!'ly
- Friday

FO.U NO in Ewington : male Pit
Bull, no collar. Wh ite with brown
tpo t•on u rs . Will begi .... en away
if not cl11imed . Caii3B8 ·8510 .

( lu r ~prtiu h ~

Nut Door To WHttrn A lifo

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

NOAH'S ARK ANIM Al PARK .
Schoolt, churchea, COf'Yl)any
picniet, birthday partin and
fami~ reuntons . Cell 614· 384·
2108 or 1· 800 · 282·2167

------·- - -

RlliDINCE PHON!
(6141 992 · 7154

5·5·1 mo. pd.

large Columbus homebuilder
needa IUbcontract blo ck crews .
Guaranteed full time work . Call
1 -614 -888 -4855 6:30 am -9 :00
am only . M onday - Friday .

VINYL &amp;

&amp; Silver

11~

SWEEPER and tii'INing m achine
repair, parta, and tupplin . Pick
up and deliv&amp;ry, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one 1'1111f mila up
G&amp;Orges Creek Rd . Ca ll 614 446 -9294.

4

(614) 997 -6550

I 78

Need a part time job1 Sell Avon.
•art up fM only t5 .00. Call
61 4-446· 2156

Cluiatian School Registration .
8 6-87 school year. Kindergarten
thru high school. 304 · 675 ·
7343 .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Help Wanted

CarMaker to live· in apanment
corro lex, Cell 304-876 -151 04.

3 Announcements

Ohio,

1-"0L \T-Il\

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

11

997-6778

512]/"86/ 1 mo.

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Servtees

Annnu ncP. mP. nls

3-D AUTO
CENTER
1

will require a performance

Officials arrested
COLUMBUS (UPI ) -The fire
chief and law director of SteubeD·
ville each posts! $10,001 per5011a!
bonds In U.S. District Court Wed·
nesday on federal extortion
charges, _following their arrests
earller In the day.
Fire Chief John L. Prays) and
Anthony DJCarlantonlo, the city's
law director, appeared before U.S.
Magiltra~ Norma McCann King
who BChedliled a probab~ause ·
hearing June 6.

tPo~

"Free Estimates"

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION
Milo B. Hutchison

*Metal Buildi\111

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Rall project
may promote
Fla. tourism

"inocu lator."

LIT'S IUILD Ill' JOGITHIRI
•lOCAllY·OWNEO •IOCALI.IBOR

VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULAnON
0

13

rIll pin vI! II! Ill

EYE THE
WANT ADS
FOR GREAT BUYS

Business Services

ruled a suicide, and the April 'IT death of a Pullman,
Wash .. woman was ruled a possible suicide.
Seven people died In 1982in the Ch.lcago area from
taking Extra-Strength Tylenol that apparently was
· randomly poisoned.
Pollee said they had no suspects and that suicide
had not been ruled out In the Faries case.
Whltlmeyer said neither he nor Farl~s kept cyanide
in the apartment and that Faries never mentioned
suicide. Bayardo, howi.'Ver, said Faries, as a
chemistry student , would have had access to cyanide.
Wayne Faries o! Garland, the victim's father.
would not answer qui'Stlons Wednesday night about
h.ls son's death.
Four o! the 50 capsules were missing from the
bottle, Bayardo said, but.he said It was Impossible to
say how much cyanide FarieS ingested.
"It doesn't take much to kU! a person, " Bayardo
said.
Pollee, the FBI, the FDA and state health olflclats
were Investigating.

Top U.S. spellers
sunrive 3 rounds
of national bee

The Daily Sentinel-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1986

Buying deity gold. allver coins,
rlngt , jewelry, tterllng ware. old
coins, large cunencv. Top ptlces . Ed. 8urken Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 814 ·

992· 3478.

21

Business
Opportunity
1

NOTI CE r

THE OH IO VAllEY PUBLIS II
lNG CO recommends that you
do bwuneu with people vou
kn ow . and NOT to se11d mon1'Y
through t he mail unr ll you have
inv esllgfltal t he offering .
W .. nt ed inwestor 01 liltmt ptHtner
for pro fitAble business . Call
614 · 256· 1772 .
- - - - - - - ·· lc
O~en y~ own b etlultful ~)11 8
PHCe •'V- s1ora. 813 99 ,fm
&amp;Yery pair of shoes. Ne11onallv
known brands: liz Claiborne.
Evan Picona , Cherokee, Fam o·
lare ~angaroos , Buster Brow n.
Shirt Tails , Chikl life, Rainbow
Bri te. Bau. Levi and many mor e.
• 19 . 900.00 includes beg inning
inven t o ry · trninlng · fixtures ·
grand optning promo1ion s 11nd
round trip air fare. Pr el1tiu n
Fuhiona S0 1-329· 2362
·
Priced to sa il. N ight club I'll R 1
7, 3 miles norlh o f Pomatov. 05
liquor lieensewnh carry-out beo1
and wine, newly remodeled. call
614· 992 -6891 , evenings only
WANTED : Oil and gas stripp er
wells and leaa.. to drill. Readv
ca1h . Write. P.O. Bo, 14B 1
ParkersbufQ, W . Va . 261 02

�Page-14-The D
21

Buaineaa

LAFF·A·DAY

Opportunity

44

Apartment
for Rant

64

Lendlorda, bulntltll. homeown.,., prof.. lionel m•t•
nancw m1n wltl do ,.,., wort.:.
...,.,..,U• and w.-endl. 304175-1721 oftM 5 :00PM.
Mapl.wood Lou"l• for •••·
e-.11304-175· 2259 .

orovldld. 814-812-5022.

Tobecco 1etter, tvtrgraena.
muld'l, flfi dirt, grnef, ltOnt,
used blodt, firewood, dellv•ed.
Oun't Landecape, 114·441·

27U.

Profaaional
Services

APARTMENTS. mobile hom11.
hou111 . Pt. Pl. .tm tnd Glllipo-

lio. 81•·441-8221 .
PIANO TUNINO AND REPAIR,

APARTMENT FOR RENT-Now

rtd61cov.ryoor piw.o't t..utitul
tone. cal today. Warda Key board. 304-8715 -HOO or 876-

3824 .

Real Estate

,_,.
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom houte. flreplece. 3
ml.aouthofGalllpolil, 129,900.
Call dl'fl 814-448-1815 or
evening~614 · 441·522:Z .

We build b6g 4 bdr ., E.ty
Americ.n hom• 118,995 on
your tat. SH our niiW model
home. Ctll114-881-7311 .

By
owntt·
2 bedroom
home
with 'h smd
tet•hiltsidelot
1nd

oulbuilding. 6 mil• south of

Galllpoltl. Krin• Ridge Rd . Firtt
hou11 on right from At. 218 .
t14,000. Pay M .OOOdownend
ownlf will help tlnence bel ~nee .
Ctll 814-448 -2817.
PINtllntty Jtledlld . lnaul.ted. 2
story houae wi1h atorm windows. garage, new NWtr Hdltion t25,000. Ctll 814-4U2026 or 614 -245 -9110.

Small 2 bdr. hOUII on At. 7,

t1 ,000 down •213

pet month,

owner fi.,.ncing . Cell tiU -268-

1218.
1 bedroom houu In city, nice,
mtny nM improvements. large
outbuikling, price reduud to

t12.000. Cell &amp;14-441 -3150.
3 bdr. 2·1tory hou1• in Vinton.
R.cMttly remodel«! . All nMV
wiring. lnauletlld . N8'N coal &amp;
wood turntce. For information
c:all614-388·9809.
Spring Vall..,, 3 bdr.. ranch. LR.
dlnlngroom. IQ . Fr. 2 bathl, 2
firtl)l.cn . NewlY remodeled kit·
chen. Ctll 814-448-2487.
for •le or tint 3 bdr. home In
country, Vinton arM. Stove,
refftgernor, trllh, wat• fur·
nlthed. UOO mo., t1SO dep. 2
children. ref'a. Call 814·388·

9886.

Cli. . K"''IIft-~ n:

fiiMI~ •t~""fG

"This is my husband

anytime I send him here

43088 or &lt;Ill 814-883·4114.

alone, remember that it's

46

really me .You're dealing
with!"

614-986·4392 .
3 Mdroom, newty red.c::oreted,
tluminum licling. l•ge carport,
g•IU•· on JA. acre lot inChlltar.
On•fourtt'l mile on 248 off Rt .

7. 814 -985 -4355.
3 bedroom, Lg. llitc:hM'I, heat
pu~ . 1ir cond. cneted. Qlf·
~ge. Syrecull. 814 -992-3402
tfttr 6 pm.
R~uctd

for quick ..... Cuta 3
bedroom nou ... vinyl aiding, 1
c.r garage. ~Cittd on 1 ac:t't,
,..... Tupper• Pleina . U9.500.
Cell 814 · 887 - 3378 attar
4:00pm.
Quality. Ierg• two bedroom
horM on chalet 1.-gt lot in
Syracull. Recentfy rwmodtlld,
new complete kitchen tnd

loundrt. 014-992 ·532•.

-leFor ule. ell •tctric. 2 bedroom.
garage, Itt butm.,t wi1h wood
bvrntr. lqe lot, IIWtgt tnd
C&amp;JitT.O. towutllh'-. Eu.e ..nt
condition. located on Yetlow
Bush Rd. Low 30't . Call lftlf

5:00 .... 514-948-2810.
7 room houM ior Mle or rant in
Rtcine. Cell &amp;14-247-3522 .
2 Story. 8 room• 1nd btth.
Gtrafi!e with loft. porch•. S•·
lem St. Rutl~tnd . Cell eft• 5:00

pm. 814-742-2758.
7 room houat. 1 Vt b.tht, 4
bedrooms. D•-ue. 770 Ash St.
in Middl.,rt. Ohio . Ctll 814·

992-6714.

41

Mobile Homes

32

46

14.?0 Ffttlvel, 2 bdr .. 2 full
baths. Iota of closets. utility
room. AC. Cell 114-445-1241
tnytime.
Shultz cover-t porch.
rurtl w.ter, mettlttorege bldg.,
with lot, Crown City. Cell
814· 258· 1.. 44 Of 814· 258 ·
1389 or 304·fl7!'i·1389.
12180 good cond., panly fur nished . nww carp•. nfiW fur·
nece. *5.000 or best offer. Call

Stle or r.nt· New H.-wen , 3
bedrooms, 2 bethe. firtplece.
u•IIQI. U8.500.00ort300.00
month plut depolit, 304·273-

6120.
1980 liberty 14d4, 2 bed·
room. unfurnished, vinyl undar·
pinning included. Mutt 1111. C1ll

304-nuen

~

Gen• Mobile Homes . Fr•
wtther end dryer with purchiM
ot tny new home In ttodt. 88
Skyline 14a70, 3 bedroom, 2
beths. onty t14.900 . Loceted
Junction I 77 end Rt. 2 Ravena·
wood. W.Ve , 1·304·273-11315.
sured. rNaoneble ret:ea. C1ll
304·578-2338
1973 Sllyllnf 12a80 2 br. all
.tee .. buih-ln kitchen. partlel;t,
fumlahed . NIW und..-pinnlng &amp;
ltiPI 14900. firm. 1977 Monte
Carlo nNds work. good body

••oo.304-882-2888.

576-8282 oil• 5 o00 PM.
1973 Holly Plfk wtth lot. chtin
Unll fence tnd out building,
ctntll
cond, ktctt• O•lllpo-

•r

llo Forr;. 304·875·2029 .
Mobile Home, 1211110 Hlllet•t,
PC cond, loeeted In Morgtn·
town, W . Ve. 304-875·4198 or

575-6781 .
12•t5 tr•iler whh oneea•lend
for •I• .12.000.00. 304-876151551 Of' 875-1178 .

Farms for Sale

2177 .
Lots

Ill

8H-885·3594 .

10~:10

rerMdeled t3.000. Cel

2 bdr. willuldeformotorhome.

CoM 814·445-1511 .
1974 FrHdom 12~:1&amp; . 3 bdr., 1

bllh.
'2725.

n.&amp;OO.

con 514-379·

1174 Kirkwood 1 2a80, two
bldroomt, MW carpet thrOUQh·
out. ntwtv r""od .. td, total
tlectric, excellent condition.
redWood pllio, on rented lot, or
can bt moved. Cell 114·441·

8010.

For lilt or rent 12~:80 mobil1
whh 1211:24 tdd on.
Appli~ncea includ«&lt;. 814-9925170 or 114-992 -3B57.

home

2 bedroom trtlllf, p1rtly fur·
nithed. Treil• 1ptc111. Stnd Hill
Road conv~~nltnt to school•.
1tor1 1nd hotpltel. City ,.,....,
IVIiltblt. Inquire Ro .. l•, 304·
876-4800 between 9 :00 tnd
4 :00wHk dtys.
3 bedroom p1111. fumilhtd trtll•
end 2 bedroom fumilh«l trail•
on Creb Creek Road. L•rg•yerd,
g.,.den plot. children welcome.
no Pitt, euo.oo P• month,

304·871·1208.
Two bedroom treilw remode{td.
coupl11 one tmell child eccepted, r.ttrencet 1nd &lt;Mposit.
At. 1 Locust Road , back of K &amp; K,
Everett Schwem.

Farms for Rant

34 1cre cropland. 60 tCtll.
paature &amp; tobtcco elotment.

Coli 304-575·5104.

44

Apartment
for Rant

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equll Houting Opportunity) monthtv rtnt '""' 11
IHI tor 1 bedroom end 1212
lor 2 bedroom, d..,oait t200,
loctted nMr Spring v•tev Plaze
end Foodland, poollnd Ct~e TV
IVIillble. office houri II PGIII·
bl1lO 1m to 4 pm 1nd 7 pm to 9
pm Mond..,.·Frldey, C1ll 814448 -2745 or INve m. .ege.

0338 .

Renlo ls

Rent, leut,ltf'ldcontrtct, lbr' tRodney Vlllegell; 2 br 't ·Eur.a;
3br Evtnl Htlghts; Deposit •
referenc. required. Bldburn
Reelty -814·44&amp; -0008.

Coli 814-445-3945 1111• 4PM.

Nice 3 bdr. tuN buement.
c.ntrel air. ftnced yard. on Rt

'*''

city. ldultl only. C1ll 81 4 ·4411·
2 bdr. utilhin pertitlty turn ..
t176 mo . Call 30'·876 ·6104
New 1 bedroom IPirtment. Cell
O.luu 1 bdr.. 2 car gweu• BOO
Blodl ht.. Olllipolit. No pets.
no children. ref. • dep. Ctll

Houses for Rant

141 . •325

Nicety fum6shed mobil• home,

114-448·0310.

- o k. Con

814·258· 1!29.

2 bdr. ept., downtown. 1210
without utllltill, I 330 with
utllhiee. Depo11t rtquired . C1ll
814-4-tl-2129 8:00am · !5pm.
Fum. apta. 1 &amp; 2 bdr. t220 &amp;
t2315 . utilhi• pd. 701 4th
Otlllpolis . Ctll 448 -4418 eft.,
7pm.
Fum. IPfl. 1 bdr. 1226 utilttln
pllid. 107 2nd. Avt. Gtlllpollt.
Cell .... ll·... 18 after 7pm.
2 bdr. unfurnithed with applitn·
Clllt 811 Tt'llrd Ave., Gtllipolit.
12150 mo. plus utlllti11. Ctll

814 ·852-2818 tfter 5 .

814·245-8595.

Nict1 3 bdr t'lome. Lg. yard . 314
Third St. K1neuge. C1ll 814-

Fum. efftci.ncy. 3 room• &amp;
blth. CI~Jtettd lc quiet. Single
working per10n only . Ctll 814·

32

61•-258·1710.

2 bedroom furnished . No pets.

81 4·949·2253.

875·•207.

HouM 4 rooma &amp; beth, loc.ttd
1928Y.! Ch ..tnut St. t110 mo.,
HI dop . Coll814·441·3870.

Mobi)e home end loti In Crown

843·6149.

.rt. apt., central •ir end heet In

304-896·3353 .

City. Coli 814-2&amp;8·144• or
304-676-1328.

For"'" on 20 acrtt. 14~:70 3
b«&lt;room. 1 Y, b11h. nice yerd,
tun deck, In Portlend eru.
1200. month plut depotit. 614-

Building lot• evelltblelocated on
Gru•er lene, Camp Conley, 111
utiliti", Elmer Gru. ..-. 304-

448·7473.

PHONE 514-.48-7214.

2 bdr. ,.., HMC , no pett, t1 85
mo .. water included, t1 00 d•p·
osit. Cell 814·448·3817 ,

Acreage

Ctmping lot In Big foot Perk,
12.000 will contidet trlde in.
Cell 814·4•8· 1294.

41

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parle,
Rout, 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lergelots. C11111 4 ·992-7479.
Trtlllr lou ttw'tr 1nd water
furnished, lf"lll children IC·
cept«&lt;. At. 1 Locust Rd .. back of
K &amp; K. 304·876·1076.

ATTN : MARSHALL COMMU ·
TEAS. blodc garage for rtnt, sub
compacts only. htllf block from
ClmDUI. 304-175-6383 efter

5:00.

Fumithed 2 bdr., AC. toc.tld K
6 K Mobil• Homt Perle on
httem lVI., 117&amp; mo .. 1100
dep . Celt 814-2158-1187.

43

For tele ~ ow"'r. 11 0 ecr• et
OeJtttr. Beabliful 8 room hom•.
bam, outbuilding, swimming
pool Alto 114 •cr•n--De•t•
3 bedroom modem home 2
bamt. vtllev eetting. 114-742·

36

Trei111 spiCe, ltrgetrea, private,
KC aret. t45. Ctll 114-387·
0400 or 814-448-3870.

Merch~nilise

51

Household Goode

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St., Gellipolis . Ntw &amp; used
wood·collttovea. 8 pc wood LR
IUite t399, bunk bedl '189,
entran rec:llntrt t99 , n.w &amp;
uaed bedroom IUitee, reng ...
wringtt Wllhtfl. S. st'lott. New
livlngroom tuilll t198 -ta89,
l1mps, alto buying coel ' wood
stoves. Call 814-448·3159 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

12M50. two bedroom Liberty
mobile home with 8a12 add on
tnd tcrMntd in porch. 304·

33

Space for Rant

446·7473 . .

928 Fint Ave .• 6 roomt • b1th.

WEST, OALUPQUS, RT 38 .

Fully furnithed, AC, til utihl•
peid, tdulta onty . Cell 81 • -448 4110 Of 814-4411·2003.

Furnished, nic. 2 bdr. Uvingroom txpando, lg, yerd . 3, 4
Third St. Kensuge. Ctll 814·

Houae, 4 bedroome. 2324 Lin·
coin Ave .. 304-875-2130 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL·s QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.

Mobile Homes
for Rant

1977 Hollllf Perk 12d0 with
CA. partly fum ., very good
cond. , 17, 500. Cell 814·248·

2H1 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

42

814-255· 5704 8AM-10PM.

Furnished hou11, 2 bdr., t195.
131 reer 4th Ave .• OIMipolis.
Ctii44B ·441B aftlf' 7pm .

Ltlll purcha• egr.emtnt pol·
tlbl•. Vrwy nice home with 3
bedrooma. INingroom with fir•
piece. 2YJ btthl. large country
lcitdttf'l, hobby room. IIUI'Idry
room. full b••emtnt, 2 car
geriUt, centrel v.cuum syttem,
elr oond, dedi . 5 wood lei ecret.

02.100.00. 304·576-4831 .

2 6 3 bdr mobile t1om11 . AC ,
cebla TV. Bultville Ad. Call
814-448-0527 etter lpm ..

814-992-5761 .

614-985 .. 279 .

Hou11 tr•ilw, •&amp;~:10 1988 Good
cond. nliWII' storm windows,

12d~O

Alhton building lots wtth pubUc
2 bedroomhoull, tullbatmlftl. Wlltr, mobilt hom• permitted,
new roof, ~uminum siding. 304-578-2336 .
porch tnd dKk . Lincoln Hill.
For lilt by owner: Urge 9 room
hamt with 1 'h batha, bii!Wef,
femlty roam. 5 bedroamt, for·
m11 dining room. located on
l~tge k31 with fruit trNt In
Aiggtcr•t Menor thr.. millt
from Tuppers PIMna. Clo.. to
achools, Pric.cl •53.500. C1ll

For rent Sleeping Rooms end
light houte ketping room•. Perk
Centrtl Hotel. Call 814·4415-

Hou1aa for Rant

for Sale

2 bMroom Duplu houH per· 1 to &amp; ecru. p1M1i ..ty wooded
titlty furnilhed . Low utititiM , in lots. Tupptr Pltinl ll'ld Chnttr,
PotMroy. Ctll devt. 614 -992· weter 1nd epprov.ct fOld to etch
2381 or · 814-992-2509 ..,.,.. lot. Reuontbty priced, will
ingt.
fintnce, 1 0 percent down. Ctll
2 bedroom houte in Pomny.
noo turnilhtd , t185 unfur·
nlth.cl. Pey own utllitl•. wood
burn•. ltrg• y11d . Clll diiY•
114-992-2381 or 814-992·
2609 eveningt.

Furniahad Rooms

I~::::::::::::::::====:-r;;~;::::::;::;;::;:-1
-0758.
- - - - - - - --

MOBILE HOMES MOVED o in·

4 bedroom ham• on 7 acres.
, UO.OOO Can negotiate. Call

tccepting ·IPI)Iicttiont for r1ntal
lpaftm.nta In M81on Apt1 Ll·
mit.ct. Two bedroom epts at
1199.00 p• month. Renttl
rttte miY be hlghtr diPtndlng
on lncoma. Houelng will be
llltllabl• to t.ch •ppllcent ,..
gwdlllt of thllir race. color,
religlolt, 1111 or neturtl origin .
'lnttrllt«l tppllctntl lhOUid Clll
304-773-801 1 or contact D•
nile Streib or Weher Juttlct1 et
the Main Offict. 18715 Brice
Road, Reynoldtburg , Ohio

441·4807 or 514·•46·2802.

For A•nt : 2 bedroom, 1 beth
home. completely redecorettd.
Hll meny tlllral. Optn HOUII
SundayJunt 1. 1·5 PM, tt 101515
2nd Avt., Gtlllpolil. Rtnt ..
epplicttionl wHI be t•en during
tho" houra. Cell 11•·288·
51 10 or further detail I .
Moderlnd country home,
o•d.... bucfu.. a• us. KC
.,... *275 plus depotit, m• .,.
cet. CtM 114-317·0400 or

814·441-3170.
5 roo,.,. • bath. tlto mobile
Jet: . • d• . no ,..• . can

home.

51·· 441· 1151.

Llrv• 3 bdr .• goodlocolion. 078
mo. Col 304-1175·510•.

1 blocll from tht city peril. 3
III'Geroomt• blth. wo hookup.

*175. Coii614-448-U72.

3 bdr. house, 2chlldren. no pets.
mu1t heve referencee. 55 Ger·
filld or call 114-448 -0321 .

Fum~hMI epertment. utilitl11
paid. 108 Vtne St. , 1236 . Ctll

814·448-8244 - - 8:00·
5:00,
2 bdr. ·fumlehed or unfumllhed
eplftrnent 6n quiet rttldtntili
tree, Oeregtandwut'ler•ctrv•r
hookup. Adutts onty. No pets.
U2B. p4u1 utllhitl. Cell 11o4·

448·7121 .
1 bedf'oom tpt . for rent. l11ic
rent ltlttt •an. • month th.t
lnduclet aft uti~•- Deposh
required of UOO. ContHt VM·
lilt Menor Apt. MlddltPOf't,

Walt'ten, dryer~ , refrigereton,
rengu . Sk.• gg• Applltncn.
Uppar River Rd . belidt Stone
Crett Mo1el. 814-446-739B .

Rll280, good
cond, t4150.00. I'N.IIt tee to
tppriette. 304-878·4090.

6:00 IJIIJ(])O(IJ~·IlJIIJIJ
NeIll Green Acres
l!l Mazda Sportsl.ook
Ill CD Dlff·rent Strokes
lll 3 -2 -1. Contact iCC)
(jj) Hatha Yoga
@Good Times
6:05 Cll Andy Griffith
6 :30 D 1IJ @ NBC News
Ill The Rifleman
l!l Tennis Magazine
(]) II llJl ABC News
Ill CD One Dey at a Time
D (I) ® CBS News
Ill Doctor Who
(jj) Body Electric
@ Jefferson• ICC)
·6:35 Cll Gunsmok~
7:00 D IIJ PM Magazine
Ill Alias Smith and Jonea
l!l SportsCenter
Ill Entertainmen1 Tonight
Ill CD Jeffersons
0 (I) Jeopardy
Ill Nigh11y Buslneu Re·
port
®I News
(jj)
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
lllllJI Divorce Court
@ Barney Miller
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 D CIJ (]) New Newlywed
Game
l!l Speedweek
Ill CD WKRP in Cincinnati
0 (I) ~ Wheel of Fortune
(I) Yes, Minister
Ill llJl Entertainment Tonight
@ Bob Newhart
@ Jeopardy
7:35 (I) Sanford end Son
8:00 D CIJ @ Cosby Show (CCI
lA). In S1ereo.
Ill Wackies1 Ship In 1he
Army
l!l AU1o Racing 'B6: World
Sports Car Championship·
Silveratone 1 000 From Sil·
verstone, England . ~60 min.)
(j) lll llJl Ripley's Believe
It or Not iCC)
fil CD Spearfield' s Daughter Part 1 of 3 A female re·
porter struggles for power in
the world of international
journalism . (2 hrs.}
0 CJJ ®I Simon &amp; Simon
(j)
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
Jll) Forum
@ MOVIE : 'Pleasure Pa -

Or~t~~ely tractor, lite. tttn, dual
wheels , 10 HP, mower. .,.y.
plow, cultvetor, llka naw .

045. Coli 514·446·4219.

75

614-448-7827.

10ft. Sun alurmJonBoerwlth

Air comprHtor 2 HP, Sean bell.

1200. Col1814-448-4219.

01r11, e~r:c oond. tt715 .00. Cell
evenlngt 304-87&amp;-2175 .

Ltfttlme concrete culvertt. 12
indl to 38 indl, In Ito ell. Larger
til" IYiiltblt. up IO I ft. Cell
814-892-2834 or 114· 992·

78

Newty painted N8 trector for
sel•. N_. tlr•. 1 ft. gr.der
bltde.
Trtlllt'
Nle.Truck.
Will trllde
for
Chevy
or for
GMC
Ctll P"
814·985·4392 .

'------------,..-----------i

- - -- --.,.--·1&lt;For 111•12.100 BTU' Air condl·
tion•. excellent condition. Oou·
gl11 H•maley 3rd St. Syrecu11.

Ntw WlnchMtlr 3030 Alfie. 7
mmwork:lwtr1 Muttter, Buck
Knlft Blcerntnlll, II ouncepure
sihter.toteotfore~ncolns . 1978
Chevy Ceprice WJtDn. 11800,
(2Va cubic ft. refrigerltor like
ntw larg11ter10, both fort12&amp; .)
814 ·949·2801 .

13.2 cubic ft . uprtght frHitr.
t175; Chill 1YPt frHur, t100;
self d•hostlng refrigerator,
t1 00 end enottl•r stlf defrosting
rrfr~. *1150; Wllhllf end dryer.
t125 ; 40 emp electric rtnge,
f85; gee ~lothte df'f'lt, U8.
Phone 114·7U· 2352 .

68

&amp;

71

Fruit
VBgatabla.s

Frllh picked 1trM'berrltt deli·
vwed within Pok'lt PINIIf'lt City
llmtta. Cel 304-1571·1748, no
week end calli.
HUHIII Strewbtrryfleld op .. for
pick your own, bring your own
contain~~n, 78 centt &lt;JJift,
clo11d Seturdey, 30•·87&amp;·
2817.
Free~er bnf, 9e cenll rtH
weight. 304·875-•1 82. Cert
Kinneil'd.

f .1r111 Suppl11:s
II LIVtSilir:k

Uted do1ers. lotdel'l, blckho•.
du~ trucks, 70 lntemetlontl
trector·traller, phone 304· 738·
7896 neer Huntington, Rt. 10.
- Army Cemou·
Denim - Rentel
SmsH Equipment.
Clmoufltuga. Over
t20,000 Inventory Merchen·
di11. Sem Somervlll•'s, since
1984, eest of Atvtnswood,
junction old Rt 21. lndep.-.d·
ence Aotd. {Fridey evtningl.
S1turdey, Sundey, 1-8 p.m.
OeUverv. 30'·1175-3334, Point
Pleattnt.
SURPLUS
fleuge Clothing Kids tiztl

Bell colleCtion, 304-875·81536.
White Orgen1a, off the shoulder
wedding dflll. till 6·8. 304·
6715·4198 or 875 -&amp;781 .
'79 Buick Electre. '83 OMC bus.
Panuonlc ttereo. 1 OK necklace
1nd rirtg . Ctll between 8:00 tnd

9:00 PM, 304·875-7180.
1ir cond, 15.000 btu,
phone 304·G76·4108.

New

81

Farm Equipment
CROSS I SONS

U.S . 38 W•t. Jtckson. Ohlo.

614·288-1451 .

MIIHy FtrguiOn, New HoiiMd,
luth Hog Stitt a Servl~ . Ov•
40 u..d trectors to choo11 from
8. COIJ1)1tte lint of new • ueed
equipment. Ltf9ee1: •lection in
6.E. Ohio.

Utility bldg . .. ~. , 30'•40'd',
15'd' 1liding door &amp; 3' terv.
door. *15.21&amp; erected . Iron
Hor11 lldgt. 114 -332-8741.

JIM•s FARM EOUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 31 W. Oelipolls,
Ohio. Ctll 814·448 -8777, ave.
1514-448-31512. Up front trtc ·
tors with wt"enty owr 715 uaed
trectors, 1000 toole.
Good heyl*'led for 111e. Ctl

814-245-1410.
730 Cut ditlel. wklefronl. PS.
live power, live hydrtuliCI ,
t2,950 . New 8ft. drum mower
tt ,.t95. NMV 1. 2 ft tedder
1819. NH 18 baler 1495 . Call

2173.

67

Now buying lhefl corn or ew
corn. Cell for l1111t quotll. Aiv•
Clty Ftrm Suppty, 114-... 8·

Musical
Instruments

83

livestock '

••

offer. 814·448 ·9689.
E~r:celllflt Hemp· gilt for btMfi·
ing. 200 lbs. Cell 814·4-tl·

2.11 .

Lowry org.1n A-1 condition new
12.896 ttll t896 . Antique Wll·
nut desk, fMM' 24 " mtrble w11h
b..in UO, nM" commode nat
126. C1ll BU-379-2774.

'For sale or ltMe: rttlltered

yeerllng polled h.erferd bull. Cell

814-742-2753

84

68

Fruit
Vagatablae

Ttylor ' t Bt~ Petch. You picll or
we pick. 9tm · 7pm. Mon . thru
s... Ctll 814-448 -8892 or

614·2·5-&amp;178.

Strewbtnlll fOr Nit. You pidt
75 cent I QUirt. Wt pi de •1 . 00
qt. C•ll 30"·468 -1987.

2237.

For Nl•niW Yerd· mtn mowers,
good used mowtn from 150 - 8trewbenl11 plcll your own. Ctll
•75. Echo trimmer• on 111e. Cltude Wlnttu, 114 - 24!1 ·
Childrtnl SIW Supply, Vinton, &amp;121 .

I:---:-------Strtwbenl•. Pick your own
b~innlng May 15th. 8orry 00
c:fltckt. 8 1m to 8 pm. Hippy
Hollow Fruh Ferm. G•II'Polll
Ferry, WV . 304 -&amp;78 · 2026 .
Ch)t.cl 8undty.

1883 Chevy Imp..• • dt., 1uto.
tlr, crulte, redia , ceah price.
t2.998. John't Auto S•ltt.
8ui1YIIIe Rd., Gtllipolls,

Hay

Ill

Grain

Tobacco poundtgt for l... t .

1984 Pontiac 8000 Speciel
Touring Edition e• . cond.
21.000 mll11. to.ted. Ctii814-

1978 Stercrtft foldout ctmper,
lleept 8, compllte with ltove.
lc. boK,Itghtl &amp; link. exc. cond ..
Ilk• new . Ctll 114-388·9766
eftlt' 8PM .

•nytlme eft• 5. s.turdey or
SundtY enytime.

•no. Coli 514-388-9532 otter

1871 1&amp; ft . Dream• trevel
trtlllf, gat ttove. furnace &amp;
rtfrlglt'ator. 1leep1 6-1. good
oond .. t1,250. Ctll &amp;1•·258-

1980 Falcon body good, runt,
neeclll lOrN medtanicel work. I
cyl., tuto.,ll715. Ctl1814-448·

1142.

1912.
84 VW fTI I IJid., 1ir cond.,
AM-FM, ctlt., fectorv magi,
niW' cond ., •11.100. Cel 814-

1171 Ford Must1ng 4 cyl .. new
rWuilt motor, low mlleegt. Cell

814-2111·8417.
Jeff 8Mtghl'ftln' t 1171 unffnlthed rtttord NOVA , 327
dtrome engine, no phone In-

qui••· Mlddltport larodburtl·

FRANK AND ERNIE

TtiAT":s" iHe LA$T

SAVINGS &amp; LOAN

/

OUR MONEY WORKS
A$ HARD AS VOU DO

PLAC~

245-11040.

MY SAVINGS!

3033.

1983 Bleck Tovote Supre

li;A,«S ~ - •9
Cl •• .. ••u ...

toadtd, electric eunroof, hooded

22 ft 1974 Monitor 11, telf
eonteln.t. air cond, awning,
13,200.00 . 30··175·1838.

cover, good cond. Call Brien,

814-448-2038 .
1983 Mercury Ztl)hlf Z-7, euto.
elr, AM·FM, IPOny. Cllh prtce.
t2,911 . John's Auto S1l".
Bullville Rd., OeiUpolle.

Services

Dune buggy with V.W. engint.
Aloo. 1151 Wlllyo 2 door, 8cyl ..
3spNd whh o.O. eo.415mll•.
Stored tnlklt for l•t 15 ye..-a.

81

Little rust . Coll51•·992·2478 .

Home
Improvements

1979• FtN"d Flet'ta. very ·good
condition. 83, 000 original
milt I . 11 4 -992 · 2028 after

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

8:00 .

1982 Dodge Cherg.- 2.2, 4 cyl.
4 apeed. A.C.. Low mileage.
good condhion. 614-982·5523.

UncondiUontl llt.time gutrtn·
tee. Local rtfertnctt fumllhed.
Fret Mtlmet•. C_.l ooltect
1·814·237-0488. dl¥' or n..ht .
Aogere Besement
Waterprooflng,

1978 Chevy lAI ton 12 pu1engtt
vtn, tuto, AC ., PS .• crullt, tilt, 2
.__..,., cepttinl chlinl, MOOO.

hterior etucco pladet ing l
pla1t11 Nptir. Low retM . Call

514-216· 1182.

81.·892-319 • .

RON ' &amp; T•lnltlon Service .
Houte cells on RCA, Ouezer.
GE . Sptcieling In Ztnith. Cell

1914 Chtvv Ctvtlltr, 4 door,
euto, PS ., PB .• Utrl cleen. Low
mil•. C•lll1 4-182-3703.

304· 578-2388 or 814·4U·
2454.

1913 Chevrolet Celebrity. PS.

Pl. M.985 .00. Phono
30"-875-7421 .

Fetty TrM Trimming, stump
removtl . Ctll 304·175-1331 .

1974 Orend Torino Elite, 304 ·

RINQLES'S SERVICE , 1Kpe·
rlenced cerptnler, •lectrlcien,
m110n. painter. roofing llnclud·
ing hot tlr tpplicttlon) 304·
575 ·2088 .. 875· 7388.

1&gt;1; ,

875·2278 boloro •:'00 PM.

1981 FOtd Felrroont. 4 door . •
cyl .• tu1om1tlc, PS, PB, AM ·FM.
low mllee. 11850 . 304·882 ·

3371 ,

ALLEY OOP

lace'

8:05 Cll MOVIE: 'The Gambler'
8 :30 IJ CIJ@ FamilyTies{RI.In
Stereo .
ill) Sneak Previews In
Stereo.
9 :00 D CD @ Cheero IAI. In
Stereo .

(J) 700 Club
(!) Au1o R..:lng '86: tMSA
Camel Grand Prix From
Lime Rock . CT. I90 min.) (A).
CIJ GJ llJl The Colbye iCC)
Jaaon, Jeff and Miles search
for Fallon, and Sable's plot·
ting against Constance
backfires . 160 min.IIRI.
0 (]) ® NBA Basketball
Final~: Game One
(I) Nove: Horsemen of
China (CC) The l~eslyle and
ancient traditions of the
Chinese Kazakh horsemen
are el8minad. {60 min .)(R).
(jj)
Mys1eryl:
Agotha
Chris1le's
Partners
in
Crime (CCI lnspec10r Mar·
riolt enlists the help of
Tommy and Tuppenc e in
tracking down a gang of forgers operating in high society circles. (60 min .)
9 :30 8 CD @ AH II Forgiven
10:00 D (I) 1J1J Hill Street Blues
LaRue becomes obsessed
wilh finding the killer of a fel·
low cop, while a cancer·

EEK&amp; MEEK

MY MOTHER lOLD Mt.
A!'aJT WCMEN UK£ '-rCXJ _......_

(~

Sttrkl Tr• end Lawn Service,
ltndtcaping. 304-578-2010 .

1980 Oodgt Omnl. good condi·
tion . eutometic. AM ·FM, tir
condhlon, t1400 or BHt Offer.
304-675-2714 or 304-875 -

Rotery or cebla tool drilling.
Most well• completed semed-v.
Pump Hln tnd 1.-vica. 304·

1677.

72

r·p Pur

1971 Chevron Sky Lounge, 26
ft . Sep•rete btdroom, telt conttln.t . Good condh:kJn wtth
lir. A•lng *4996. 814 -742-

885-3802

Economy Building, rtmod•ling,
rooting , b•throom, drywell,
electrlcel, m110nery, floorinQI.
plumb ing, ptintlng, freming,
certmic ln•t•llttion, 30'· 676·

Trucks for Sale

1985 Ford Atng•. 4 cyl., iuet
Injected, 5 tpd . ov.-drlvt, long
bed. 1 .900 mlltt. tKc . cond ..
with tomt t~r:u.. . Ctll tfter

2UO.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

1980 Chevy Luv. 4K4. 4 epd ..
rldio, IPOrty, Cllh price 12.499 .
John' a Auto Stitt, Bullville Rd .,

O.l!;poUo.

82

I HEARYCD'VE

~A

SIRTHt::I"-Y COMING

UPSCX)N, WINTHROP.

I

I WANTlO BE il-!E FIRST
TO WISH 'lU.J A HAPPY
GER'A- FREE BIRTHDAY.'

THAT5 &lt;SOT 10 BE THE MOOr
ANTISEPTIC BIRTHD'\Y
6-RE':ETIN6 I EVER GOT.

/

J

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

1985 S-10 4x4 lolded. auto.
110.&amp;00 firm . Ctll 814-441 -

1210 lftor 4:00PM.
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

1975 lntematlonet 1700 Series
truck. t3 ,1500.00. Phone 304·

Cor. Fourth •nd P ine
Gelllpoli1, Ohio
Phone 114· o&amp;48·3B88 or 814-

'75 Ford htlf ton truck . '79
Chillt'f 4 whNI drive SWB.
Commodor 128 computer til
ICCtltoflll. Ctll tftlt' 8:00,

445-4477

83

30.· 571-2010.
Vans

Ill 4 W.O.

Chevy ' Luv. C1ll after 5. 814-

448-2588.

86

1982 Oodge Conv•lion Vtn.
PS ., Pl., AC ., 4 c.pteint dltirt.
couch convlfts to btd, Iota of
utru, ..c... tnt condition ' e14-

WHA(S FER
SUPPER.

NOT THAT
OL' HEN

I(OU MEAN
A LA

MAW?

KING!!

1972 Ford Custom Vtn Econo·
lin•. Oood condhlon, loaded.

t3985. 814 -192-'71130.

Ken ' • Wiler Servic•. Wells,
ciltlfnt, pools 1nd weterbeds
filled. C1tl 814·317-0823 or
614· 367-7741 or 304· 575-

1973 Jeep CJ&amp;. va . 111 niW
tir•, tow mllttgl, phone 304-

875· 1388.

1247,

1881 Chevroltt Suburban, 1.41
ton, t Pllttnger, tB.IOO .OO.

Cotl, limtttone, grevel. etc.
Delivlt'td 1 ton tnd up . J im
lenl11. 304-878-1247 Of 676-

0

SZ9

WHAT WAS
IH~

GUY WHO

OISCOVEFCED
FIRE CAL.L..ED?

• - · taocond, 304·17&amp;-4230
dlya 871· 4813 weningl.

87

Upholatery
TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1183

Aw., Gtllipolls.

R • M Fumiturt Mtnuftcturing
St. Rt. 7. Crown City, Oh. Celi
81•·211· 1.a70, cell Eve. 8H448 - 3438 . Old &amp; ntw
Uphotttrtd.

.,oo

Suzuki OT 110 excellent condl·
lion. Coli 81 4·"1·0828.
1912 Hondt JCR- &amp;OOR ex.
cond .• t1.400. Coli 814-317-

0518 .

S•c.

61•·••8 · 7833 or 814 -4461833.
•.

1114 KR 200 pc. cond .• t750.
Coli 81•·448·1210 lflor
PM.

1

I

IHE PAll\ II..'(
CAP!: A~E iOO

5HOI'I:TTO I'OIH15 .
Now ;urange the circ led letl ef'3 to

form lhe surprise answer, as su ggested bV the above cartoon.

I XJ

XI J

THE (

(Answers tomorrow)
EMBRYO ROTATE
Answer: How croswxamNriOn Is sometimes
conducted-BY TRIAL &amp; TERROR

Jumbles: AVAIL TARRY

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Nimbly bidl
deftly played

NORTH
• 96

By James Jacoby

+A ~. B 4

i -!1-U

• A73

• K9 6 2
For those of you who are startled by
the two-club cue-bid made by West , let
me introduce you to the Michaels cuebid. a tournament convention describing a weak distribulional hand with
both majors. Armed with that information, North bid two hearts, which
said to partner: "I have a good hand,
plus a heart stopper for no-trump purposes. Please bid on." West bid two
spades at his next turn to indicate that
he had more length and strength in
that soil than in hearts. After North
had cue·bid the heart suit once more,
South, compelled to make a choice,
tried three no-trump. Can you blame
East for doubling?
The point of the deal is that the dedarer, Michael Kamil, made a fine
play at trick one. On West's lead of a
low spade, East put up the queen and
Kamil played low. When the spade
was returned. West could win the ace
and clear the suit, but declarer was in
control. He could give up a club to
Easl and make his nine tricks. What if
East should shift to a heart after win·
ning the queen of spades' South would
win tbe king and immediately play
back the king of spades. If West wins
and plays another heart, declarer can
bold up the ace for one round and then
play ace and another club. East wins
the king but has no more major suit

WEST

EAST

+Al0 75 43
• 10 9 6 4 2

+Q2
.Q J 5

• Q7

• J 10 54
• K76 2

...

SOUTH

+K J 8
•Ks

.ABJ

4J 10953
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
North

Wesl

2.

2+

39
Pass
Pass

28
Pass
Pass

East

South

Obi.
Pass
Obi.

Pass
3NT
Pass

Opening lead :

t+

+&gt;

cards lo play , and the doubled con·
tract makes.
On this last scenario. why wouldn't
declarer come to his hand with the diamond ace to try the club finesse ' if he
tries that. he might be set if East sim·
ply refuses to take his club king until
the fourth round . thus preventing declarer from gettmg back to h1s hand
lor the fifth club.

6L:w..
~t:rf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
I Relgian

I Oaks frull

to wn

2 Emulate

4 PotalO

thP Rrv
Peal e
3 Child
of L.oki
4 Squeal

8 Br sore

9 French
painter

II Earth
12 Rivul el

5

14 Sea t!a~l e
15 Thrice

6 Vasf•
7 Walch

(Lat.)

OUI !

~l o w

out
Yesterday's Answer

21 Shopping 28 A sren d~ ·d
placP
29 3 in dice
16 Give it a gu 8 Cruising
171'urklsh cily 10 Cylindrica l 22 Movabl ~· 31 Fanion
23 Celt
34 lie kisses
19i::nding for 13 Stringed
24 Boundary
and h•lls
rub or fih
215 Volc anic 35 Mak('
20 A Frosl
offering
~~~;....,~•!_r hoin•
21 Apportion
22 Trappi sl,

e.g.
23 Entrance way

is robbed and Hunter is

24 Posture
25 .. _ Nom e ~

double-crossed on a date.
160 min .) lA).
News Tonigh1
(I) John F. Kennedy's
Pathway to Puce
(]) GJ (jj) 20120 ICCI
f11 ffi Aetum to lwo Jimo
This documentary uncovers
the history of the first inva·
sion of Japanese territory .
160 min .l
Ill Fron111ne: Maner of the
Mind ICC) Tha residems of
a mental illness hatfway

26 Mother of

Ill CBN

H eze kiah

27 Rcpart•e
30 Illuminated
31 - volatile
32 Knighlly
title
33 Prompl
35 English

river
36 Shun
37 Victim
38 Gennan
river
39 Half
a score
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to 10·ork It:

""'

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
the 1!\ree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ail
hints. Each day the code letters ere diflerenl.
for

CRYPTOQUOTE
~ -29

treated by his two eldest

0 G

P G E C

G Q W

Z I

UG

fHNNZR C i f

rHNNZR C II

Gy

\

I' II K C

Z R

ur c

HR GOf'\ ' W

Q R S R G M R
I G Q W K l'
terday'o Cryptoquote: TilE SUN T i l Ill 'GI·I IT
PASSES 1l!ROUGH DIRTY PLACES. YET Rf:.II AINS AS
PURE AS BEFORE . - FRANCIS BACON

v..

CIJ Aue1in City Umlts:

Motorcycle•

1173 Sponlter niiW P•lnt, ,..
built .,glne an!;~ 1rantm1116on,
lot• ntw pert1. Muet IH to
eppreclatl. CaM 114·441·4017.

Yesterday's

D(])~Nows

7397.

iAL.I.. l!t-JOU6H 10

P~ IVI!

Print /lllswer here [

daughters and flees, ha~ in·
sane, to a moor. (60 min .)
~ WKRP in Cincinnati
t 1 :03 (I) SCTV
11 :30 U 1IJ 1J1J Tonight Show
Tonight's guesl is Tom Sol·
leek. (60 min.lln Stereo.
·(!) SportaCenter
CIJ WKRP In Clncltmati
effiTul

SNAKE!!

SOME I&lt;JPe WHO

j
JI r II

lila

o--_

II

tSUNDAI

·as:

General Hauling

James Boys Weter Servic1. Alto
pool• filled . Call814-256-1 141
or 814-441 -1115 or 614-4467911

0.9-2225.

IBOUTES t

filed. 160 min .l
(jj) Newswatch
@News
10:30 (I) Enterprise USA
l!l Auto Racing
For·
mulo One Grand Prix of
Belgium From Spa , Bel·
glum. {60 min.) lA).
ill MOVIE: 'Treaaure of
Sierra Madre·
Jll) Ton1_ Brown·a Joun111l
11:00 I I CD
(liJ li.ll Ntwa
(J) Man from U.N.C.L.E
fll CD Benny Hill Show
Jll) Tho Shakeo-e Hour
Holled by Walter Mat·
thau: King Lear lear is mis·

BARNEY

r)

I

house in Minnesota are pro-

Good-1 EKcevtting. b•aaments.
footers, driVIWIVI. teptic ttnkt.
lendseeping. C111 1nytime 614448 -4537. Jem• l. Oevilon,
Jr, owner .

Uti Chevy truck. nice. 1978

74

Excavating

GOUO

ridden cross-country runner

Ctrpentrv. remodeling. room
tddltlon , ell building rll)alrt
.cement and blodtwork. Peint·
ing end roofing. 304·875-61 &amp;2.

3PM, 814·255·8887.

Mbctd hiV llrgt IQUirt baltt,

Autos for Sale

'-CJ&lt;:"'-IW ~(l,(;;)XH ftfS

t1,200. Coll814-258-1447.

&amp;PM.

1883 Chovy 8· 10. ••4. V·l, 5

71

&lt;00 L'LL 61; mPA~eD If.!

1119 21 ft . cemp• ehower,
ttove, retrig., uc . cond .,

1978 Sulek Electra, fair cond ..

Hty, Timothy •1 .10 per bell•.

1r.1n spor 1.11111 11

· IT'? ~'1- wt::G, I
ALWALf3 DRIVG WITH IT
OJ ..

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

8U·441· 12.3.

Phone 30•·871· 7U1 .

t1 .25 . 30·· 875-5571.

IC:U~

Phon• 304-875· 1759.

1971 Or"" Contlnl'ttl mint
condition, tilly roof, only 25,000
mi.. t6 ,995. Call 814-448·

Coli 814·245-11023 111M 5.
Coli 814· 379·2•00.

I ?Mf:LL

350 Chevy tr1nsmiuion
tn .oo . Cerburtar •20.00 .
Heldt t50.00. AH ••c cond.

2728 .

Of

BORN LOSER

78 Plyrmuth Arrow for perta.
Cell 1514-992-71548 tfter 6 :00
pm.

1980 Chrysler LeBaron, 2 dr.,
auto , 11 .1000. CeH 814-379·

73

2986 .

Pl•tic clltem ltatt epproved.
Pestle MPtlc ttnkl, !)Iettie 1:---:--:----:--:---culverts. mettl culvertt. RON Strewberrlel we pick, you pldt
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jeck· Monday June 2 . RCMAth't et
eon. Oh. 114-288 -&amp;930.
Union Cempground, 304-882·

O!J.· 814-388·8884.

Wanted to Buy

4yr., oldg«~tlem.~rewlth4w11 .
dd mtle colt. t300, or bttt

Misc . Marchandiea

Coll61•·21&amp;·8251 .

62

Y, yeara

old, 026.00 . 304· 458 ·1920.

814·371·2220.
---------Rebulh tuto transnY11Ion C-4.
Fitl 74 Mustang II V-1 A1klng
•121.Ceii814-381-M»BOallk
tor Rex.

575-7421 .

Elkhound pups, reedy to go . c111

Siemeee. femtle cet, ,

tronomlolllon kilo •lorn convor·
.,tin• robulld ltlto. Coli

18n MOB . Coll814·445·4396
.. 814-448-9481 .

30•· 875· 1285 or 304· 529·
9200.

514·992-7201 .

Autos for Sale

445-M38 or 51 4-445·4883

bore tlahtlng, factory reO luling,
houn 9 :00 till derk. cell lOo4·

575-4831 .

All typee uted • rebuilt tfene·
m
.. llont Overdrln
• trent• ell•·
Will
deliver.
tTenamlt·
alont, front &amp; r11r wheel drive,

1919 Thunderbird blue whh
white vinyl top, good con d. Cell
lfttr 8 :00PM. 814· 448·9284 .

1815

TONY'S OUN REPAIRS. oc:opo

Ill

Calllh1n'1 Uttd Tire Shop . Ovttr
1 ,000 tirll, IIIH 12, 13, 14 , 15 ,
11. 18.5. 8 mil• out Rt. 211 .

Auto Partl
Ill Accauorie1

1704.

7181 or 575-3833.

54

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Fib•rglat trudt top with lerga
windowe. Fits 8 h . bed. CeN

Whirlpool dryer. white. used 9
months. •300.00. 304-875 -

Full tilt br111 b«t. compl1t1.
Cell 6U-441 -1171 Corbin &amp;
Snyd.,. Fum ,

EVENING

Air compr•eor tank and btee

Pic:bnl Uted Furnih.ne. Good
Qutlitv ustd furnhure. Open 9 to
8 or ctll for appointment.
304·878-6483 or 875· 1450.

Antiques

·

1971 SUiukJ

t1.800. Col18t4..'14LU1L:_

Two AICC regiltered femtle
Beegl• Puppltt, 10 week• old,
wormed 1nd hed all shots.
160 .00 eech cell 304 -15711·

{§
One bedroOm efficiency IDift· · 8tsck1ble w11her &amp; dryer ,
...,,, Fully lumllhld. Two brawn flowered couch, cheat
beckoom ept. recently r.,o. type ffeutr-11 cubic Inch. 2
«Wed. Above M.rogere In Pom• boyl blcycl•. Call 814· 378 ·
2320.
roy. Col IU-H2-12U.

Of

5/29/86

Coli &amp;14·915· 3555.

onoo. depqoll, phono 304·111·

house, clll 304-675·3•31
875-3030.

Oer-a• equipment for •le. Ctll
tfter 8 PM. &amp;14·441· 3243 .

AKC regittMed BauttHound, 1
wotlf old, 304-875-7318 .

63

THURSDAY

1911 Hondt CB cuttom 100.
mint cond . tultv driiMd. Cell
30•·875-1151 Iller 5:00PM.

For Mle: Nice INing room suit.

i14-H2· 7717. Equol Houllng
Opportunity.

4 bedroom houtttnd 2 bedroom

1174 K-••'*1 171 F7C. good

cond. MOO.OO. Phon• 304·

882-2483 or 30•·578-2213.

304·575-8873, 12:00 .. 4:00
PM .

Houte for rent 2122 Unooln
AvtnUe, UOO.OO month, ,.,.,.

303a by -lntmont.

tion. 0950 Coli 814-912·81••·

IHI48 .

Country otk furniture now in
1tock. CoffH tnd tnd teblet,
round ped11tel 1nd drop ltef
tebl•. corner' cupbowd. 2 pc.
cupbotrdl, dry links. tecrtiii'V
d11b, ch•t of drewert, chtlrt.
lerge selection . Conkle's, At. 7 ,
Tupp•npleint, Oh .

304-876-5651 .

Television
Viewing

81 Hond1 150 In good oondl·

S1t1llite dish, 10 ft bl1ck mHh 51•· 281-M22.
County Appliance, Inc. Good
uud •ppliencft end TV aets. dish , Unlden 8 ,000 receiver, 1947 Fotd trector high 6 low
Open BAM to BPM . Mon thru · great recaptlonl 304 -8715'· 80&amp;3 range, good rubblf, txtre nice.
Sot. 814·448 ·1599 , 527 3rd. lfttr &amp;:00.
P~w1. dltlt. cultlvatofl. boom
Ave. Gtlllpollt, OH .
polo. t2.385 . Con 514·281·
Cerd teedlf. 304· 895-3980 for 5522.
1ppolntment.
Valley Furniture, ni'N &amp; uaed .
Llr;e tection of QUtlity furni 15000 FOf'd mljor dlteel tractor.
12 ft good Uled Schlirlck plowt. dltll, 8 ft. buth hog,
lure . 1211 Ea11ern Ave. ,
cabin••·
top
~nd
botICithcen
Gallipolis.
u.ee8. CoM 814-285-8522 .
tom. 304·1715· 1115.
4010 JD dille! trec:tor cle~n
For 111e: whitt wooden table
125. yellow kitchen chine ct- Gun1 for "11. Model 37; d'lree cre~m purf, JO rake, JO 224T
16
geugt;
ona
20
geuge;
1.t
binet 150, ell in good condition.
bolor. CoM 814·211·8522,
model 141 ; rifln for 11le Of
See It 258 So. Fourth Ave.,
trade. Betwten 5 :00 tnd 9 :00
Middl-rl. Oh.
JNiden't Ftrm Equipment.
evening• 304·8715-5686.
Chedt our Nit prl011 on_Lono
U1ed eir oonditionefl, rehtgeretfiCtort • v... ,..., h8'f . . . ..
tora. deep frtetlfl. w~thera .
I'Tw.t wfth 4.4 perctnt flnendng
56
Building
Supplies
dryert . tlactrlc S. gu rengH,
evelltble. A co,..letellneot b•l•
hlndltng ICCIIIOfite, grinder
color TV 't , dtlhw11hert. tnd
MW' menree1 • boa spring•
·miqr-, _wegona, rottry till••·
complete 199.95 . Vlllty Fumi·
Building Mtteritll
rot•rv cuttlfl, bltdli, cutttv•
ture. Eettam Ave., Galllpolla .
Bloclt. bridl , ~erwer pip ... wln- tors, dl1ct, plow1. •edert, ~·t
dowt , linte4s. etc. Claude Win- drtvert, wood splitten, gettl.
e eutomttk: wtthert GE . Whirl· ttfl , Ate Gttnde. 0 . Ctll 81 4- heldgat:M. powtrwelhlrt a
pool, from 195 to t150 . til in tx .
245·1121 .
~ horN ltwn ' gardllft
cond . 3 elec1ric rang11 .eo in, 38
trectors. And sM ut for •
in. 26 in . 011 rengn 30 ln. 38 in .
Building mst•riels , cement, oompletellneolp.,..•• 1.,-vlcel
RtfrigerltOr Coldtpot like new
A variety of utld
Uted :
blodct tlltltn. ytrd or delivery.
• 250, rtfrigerttor frott frtt
G1lllpoli1 Block Co., U31fJ Pint a-ectors, uttd round btl«l.
1160. 5 aide by lidt rifrig•re·
St., Gtll lpolll, Ohio C•ll 11 4 · .,-lnder mlxtft, w.gon1, tprtY ·
.,., cultN110ra, wheel clilc.
tors whht, gotd, coppertone, 448·2783.
l)klwt. cullplcktrl. · rllM. ICI
avocado . Air conditkm• 15.000
BTU • 95, tir condittontf 8, 000
Block. briclt. mortar tnd m•- btlert, mowing mtchln•. end
BTU lill• n.w •125 . Air condi·
IOnry tupplitt. Mounttin Stitt tedd•l'l· Ctll814-441-1871.
tioner -11 .000 BTU t125 .
Bktck. At. 33, N.w Htven, W.
Slcagge Appllences Upper River v•. 304·882·2222 .
Johneon 2 haue tfeller, good
Rd , 814·448·7398, Cloud It
condhion. Coli 814-441·9483.
I"'IOn Sttufdly.
Cpe hey btler. modll 230
56
Pats for Sale
perfect con d., tt , 100. Fergueon
Self·cle1ning electric rangt ·
lharvMt gold)' whirlpool elect·
hey w-.on ntw btd. M21i. F ot"d
ric dryer. A1king 175 each. C1ll
1503 blue pickup Mde delivery
Oragonwvnd
Cattery
Kennel
.
814-448· 25'8 Of 114 -448 ·
CFA HlmeiJYtn. P1fli1n 'end nth. •8oo. c.u 614-9922828.
Sitm•t kitttnl. AKC Chow 7668 .
puppi ... Ntw' puppl• • kittens. For lilt or trlde· Large round
Seert Kenmore hii'IV duty
Call 448-3844 •ft• 7PM.
Wtlhtr -drytr . Ctl l 114-4411 ·
Heffton Stier end 2 axel equip3139.
ment trtillfl. Cell 814-992lebrador rttriiVer puppitl tor 7.01
.
"le
t35
etch.
Call
5U·
448·
Uted 8.000 BTU AC . full size
6884.
menrnt &amp; bo• tprlngl tK. firm .
Two row tobecco 1renll)lan11r
Corbin • $nyd11 Fumhure, 9515
like n-.N fl ,OOO.OO. 62 tobtcco
Siamese kitten• &amp; wlu . 136. lticb t115 .00 per 100. Mor·s,c::ond Av• .. O•llipolis. 814·
eech. Hvm•tv•n kintnt, teel g~ ' s Woodlawn Ft,m, At. 35.
448 -1171 .
point or li11c point, 160 etch.

Rtftfgerator for ule •100.00 .

. The Daily

-···-

Motorcycles

t711. Coli 814·441·

258a.

For rent; 2 bedroom furnllhed
tpt . Adultl only. Cell 814·992·

Ohio

74

se.,. filt't locallf. depth find.,..

UOO per month or UO plf
wt8 . Mttll and ltundry tervlct

2 bildroom unfumilhed epart·
ment. No petll. 2 bedroom
tuml1tted IPf. No Petl. 114949· 22U.

KIT 'N' CARLYL! ®by Llrry Wright .

MIIC . Merchandll8

ft .... or.

23

Thursday, May 29, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Mowrey '• Upholst.,ing ltrving
tri county erea21 yeen. Thtbnt
in furniture upholltlflng. c1 u
304 · 176 · 41154 tor tree
ettlmttM .

PEANUTS
'(OU SAY M'{ PICTURE IS
601N6 TO 6E ON 'mE FRONT
OF 'mE SWIMSUIT 155\JE?

WWt
NOT ?

--.

W~AT WILL 'mECAPTION
BE,''OURFMORITE ~UNK"?

"
I

I

I

Ro·
gar Miller end Ealf Thomaa.
Conley
·&lt;t' ·
ellJI ABC News Nlghttlno ·
~ Trapper Jphn, M .D.
12:00 (J) Bnt of Groucho
I]) French O~n Daily Rl·
cap
C1J Entertainment Tonight

em RIWhlde

D (]) Nigh! Heel O'Brien
and Giambone invostJga1o a
successful
businesaman
who is the prime suspec1 in

the disappearance of two
children . (70 min .) (R) .
(lll TIXI
1!1 llJl 9'• on Hollywood
12:30 D (]) (JIII..ato Niaht . ~
David Lottermon f onight 1
guos1s are David Steinberg,

Vanna White and Roy Orbi·
son. (60 min.) In Stereo .
(J) Bill Cooby Show
(J) Flshln• Hole
C1J ABC Nt- Viewpoint :
'Menlp~:_
.11!'"
Curtein•.Stone Wall·l'arty
Une
.•,
(jJ MOVIE: 'The Dogs of

War'

ellJI News

!HI MOVIE: 'The Greatest"

1:00 (J) Doble Clllllt
•
•

(!) Wild, WUd Wost
(JJ CNN News

1:1 D (]) MOVIE : ·1nherf1 the

Wind'

0 CIJ MOVIE : ' Lovely

But

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Deadly'
(J) Fa1her Knows Bes1
(J) Down the Streich
2:00 (J) 700 Club
(J) Mazda SportsLook
• ffi MOVIE : 'The Turn.
lng Point'
2:30 (!) SportsCenter
® CBS Newa Nightwa1ch
Joined in Progress
3:00 CD MOVIE: •Man From
Cairo'
(]) Auto Racing ' 86: IMSI&gt;
Camel Grand Prix Frorr
Lime Rock, CT. 12 hrs ., 3(
min .)(R) .
1 :30

''

�Page- 16-The Daily

Proc~ss

Second jail and
bail cancer event
scheduled June 5
The second annual jail and ball of patients and lifesaving educational
the ME'Igs Unit of thE' American program.
Residents Interested In having
Cancer Society has been set for
someone
arrested either June 5 or 6
June5, 9a.m. to5p.m .. and JulJ(&gt;6, 9
are to call992-7531 or drop a note to
a.m. to 8 p.m.
Las! year approximately 50 P.O. Box 2, Pomeroy, with the
business people of the county took name, address or business of tlre
pari In the jail and ball program IndividuaL Residents requesting
raising over $6,1XXJ to help In the arrests are to also send their name,
address and telephone number and
fight against cancer.
For a $15 fee, an authentic off the $15 check for the arrest fee can
duty pollee officer will go to the be sent In the letter or will be billed.
officE' or home or the person to be
arrested. Participation is strictly
voluhtar}' and If they agree those
arrested "ill he led away In
handcuffs to the American Cancer
The name of Mindy McDonald,
Society's jail at lhe medical Rutland, was unlntenllonally om it equipment building on Pomeroy's ted from the list '()f Meigs High
East Main St. After ball is sel, the School senior class members In
prisoner Is given one hour to raise Wednesday's Dally SentineL Bac·
bail by calling friends and family calaureate and commencement for
enlis ting pledges to the society. All this year's graduates wUI he held at
pmeeeds go towards funding 4: JO p.m. Sunday In the high school
cancer research, service to cancer auditorium.

Name omitted

38 ·cases Wednesday ·in Meigs Court

Thirty-eight cases were processed In the Wednesday session of
Meigs County Court Judge Patrlck
O'Brien.
Forfeltlng bonds were Allison
Gaddis, Columbus, $00, speeding;
Brian Buffington, Pomeroy, $45, ·
faUure to yield; Hattie Ridgway,
Pomeroy, $45, assured clear distance, and Mark Pfar, Charleston,
W. Va., $00, speeding.
Fined for speeding were Richard
Taylor, Gallipolis, $21 and costs;
James Richmond, Middleport. $29
and costs: John W. Jeffers, Albany.
$24 and costs; Gregory S. Duncan,
Gallipolis, $20 and costs; Perry
Ayoob, Ga!Upolls, $25 and costs;
Marcia Cole, Middleport, $21 and
costs; Rhonda Thompson, Moundsvllle, W. Va., Sal and C&lt;lSts; Jane
Hill, Beverly. $23 and costs;
Thomas E. Eslocker, Athens, $~
and costs; Judith Wolfe, Pomeroy,
$23 and costs; Christie Haley.
Pomeroy, $21 and costs.
Others fined In the court were
Ronald M!'l'k. Jr., Kentucky,defective exhaust, $5 and costs; James
Onrres, Anderson, Ind., fishing
without a valid non-resident license,
$25 and costs; Timothy Imboden,
Syracuse, driving while lntoxl·

E.O.M. SALE

Lorraine

LADIES' SLIPS

Special group of quality Lorraine gowns and robes. Po·
ly/ cotton permanent press.
Delicate floral prin1. Sizes S
thru XXL.
. .,
Reg . $18 to '20
GOWNS ............. ... $12 .88
Reg . '24 to '26
ROBES ................. '18.88

1

OUTFITS

7.
*4.00 Shorts .. *3.00
*6.00 Shorts .. *4.50
*8.00 Shorts .. *6.00
limE

Tennis shorts. campers, denims, jams, gym shorts, walk
shorts . Size 29 to 60 waist
Select yours now. SAVE 30%
Men's '8.95
Shorts .. .. ... :............. '6.27
Men's ' 11 .95
Shorts ................... . .
Men's '14.95

Shorts .. .... .. ..... ..... . •u•a•
Men's '16.95
Shorts ...... .......... .. . '11

S350 10Sll'O

SUMMER

E.O.M. SALE
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

TUBE SOCKS

Excellent quality by Hanes.
Boys' sizes 9 to 11. Men's
Sizes 9 to 16. Big selection of
colors.

'1.75Tube
Socks .................. •1.28
1 2.25 Tube
Socks .................. •1 .65
12.50 Tube
Socks .................. '1.88

Regular and extra large sizes,
too. Many, many styles In the
selection. Solida and stripes.
• Excellent quality by Wrangler,
Van Heusen, LeTigre, Campus.

REDUCED 30%
'6.96 Knit Shirts ....... .. '4.87
'9.96 Knit Shirts
'8.97
'11 .96 Knit Shirt .. ..... '8.37
•14.96 Knit Shirts ..... '1 0 .47

.. :....
1

no Dole· Packwood committee clean-up amendment.
There is no Rona ld Reagan amendment"
Packwood said he and Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J ..
had been contacting senators and received promises
I ha t 31 "will stand firm against any amendmen ts of
any kind ."
The senator again stressed that any major
alteration to the bill would cause a flood of other
amendment s thai could unravel overall suppo!1.
" I hope none of us falls lor any trap cr. one lt sy-bitsy
amendment ," he said, notlng thatwithpassageof any
substanlial change, "the bill will fall apart."
Bul Packwood noted that changes would likely he
made when the bill reached a conference with the
House, whose version of the bill Is. substantia lly
different.
The Senale measure would cunail a variety of
popular tax breaks in retu rn for t he lowest tax rates in
50 years: a two- bracket structu re of 15 percentand'n

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON (UPI I -Senate Finance Commit teeChalrman Bob PackwOod saysa lmostone-thirdol
the chamber has vowed to oppose any changes to the
panel's tax reform bill- including res loring IRA tax
breaks - when It reaches the floor next wee k.
While he promoted the "no amendment" promises
from 31 senators as a show of strength for his bill,
Packwood refused to say Thursday how many of the
chamber's 100 members had declined to line up with
him, or were still undecided .
Packwood, R-Ore. , also threw cold wa ter on
speculation, started by Republican leader Robert
Dole, that the GOP leadership would propose a
catchall amendment to change some of the most
controversial parts of the bill, such as dropping most
tax breaks for Individual Retirement Accounts.
"There Is no Packwood-Dole clean-up committee
amendment," he told a groupo! supporters. "There is

f~
.,
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.

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•

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'·-"'' \
. &gt; I

II

'

. Chu~ch· noti~

'··'

2 Sections. 14 Pages

w~~ .

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

percent.
The leglslallon Is supposed to cut Individual taxes
for most Americans and raise taxes oo businesses by
about $100 billion In five years.
Allbaugh the biU's Intent Is neither to raise nor
lower government revenues in five years, It is
estlmaled that It would cause substantial revenue
swings from year to year. In the first year, It would
raise revenue by more than $20 billion, but lose money
in the future.
Packwood noted Thursday tha i he would oppose
any move to use the first-year revenue increase to cui
the deflcll -an Idea thai had been floated In recent
~

Packwood 's comments were made at a staged
meeting of people representing groups supporting the
bilL With numerous reporters Invited to attend,
several people presented prepared remarks praising
Packwood and the bill.

As the school year draws to a
close, most students. are looking
ahead to summer plans. However,
a few are looking back at what
lhey'vc accomplished this year including members of the Future
Farmers of America of Southern
High School - who are just
finishing a 19!5-86 community
service project under the Building
Our American Communit ies
(BOAC) program.
Students In the Racine FFA
Chapter have constructed a 14 by 32
loot shelter house, along with picnic
tables and benches, for the Old
Ferry Landing Park at Racine,
explains Aaron Sayre. FFA
advisor.
Since 1m, more tllan 17,000

E.O.M. SALE

GIRLS'
SWIMWEAR

LlnLE GIRLS

SUMMER TOPS
Tank tops, blouses and
knit tops.

AI one polnl, Packwood, 10 the guffaws of his
backers. told a reporter she had posed "!he dumbest
question 1 have ever heard" when she asked bow he
could claim !he bill represented tax simplicity when il
was about 3,000 pages long.
Altbough the bill would exchange some of the tax
code's current complexities for others and kreps
some special tax breaks - Including those for 'the
timber indu stry Important to Packwood' s home state
- the senator contended it was unfair to ca ll it
complicated because It was long.
Packwood also boasted that the only Americans
who could count on their taxes being raised by the bill
"are tbose &lt;1. extraordinary wealth wbo have paid no
taxes to date, or very little." However, several
analyses have shown that numemus middle-income,
two-earner famili es would have tax hikes under the

measure.

1/4
SAVE
•s.oo ....... ....

Reg .
Sale ' 3 .75
Reg . '8.00 .. ......... Sale 1 6 .00
Reg. •11.00 ...... ... Sale '8 . 25
Reg . '15.00 .... ... Sale '11 . 25

D A D,

Reg .
Reg .
Reg .
Reg.

'6.00 .... ... Sale '4.17
..... .. Sale '6.27
'13 .00 ... .. Sale '9.07
'17.00 ... Sale •11.87

1 9 .00

~t

ale Prices
BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

By ANNA CHRISTENSEN
MOSCOW (UPI)-AnAmerlcan
surgeon treating victims of !he
Chemobyl nuclear disaster says he
wUI visit the slle of the accident ,
which has claimed at least 23 lives
and left 59 others In "acute methreatening danger."
Dr. Robert Gale, a bont&gt;- marmw
specialist leading an International
team of physicians, said Thursday
the Soviets have given him penn isslon to go to Chemobyl for an
"on-site Inspection" that will allow
him to assess the acc ldenl 's
long-term healtll affects on nearby
residents.
Chernobyl Is some 600 miles
southwest of Moscow.
"There are now a total of 23
casualties from Chernobyl, " Gale
said In a televhone Interview with

'4. 17
•6.27
1
7.67
19.07

~ E.O.M. SALE

CHAIRS

Huge savmgs on recliners. swivel rockers,
rocker I recliners and wallaway recliners.
Styles and fabrics to enhance any decor.

Buy Now For _Father's Day!

ALL CHAIRS

25°/o OFF

E.O.M. SALE

E.O.M. SALE!

STEREO
SPECIALS

SPORT .SHIRTS

Buy your favorite style in sizes 8 thru 18 and
save 30%. Our polyester gym shorts are in cluded .
Reg. $5.95 Shorts ... ...... .... .... '4.17

Save on quality shirts in size
S {14-14'hl, M {16·16%), L
{16·16'hl and XL {17·17'1&gt;) .
1 Only Sherwood
il'diilllii!HI~·
,
·
~
Plaids,
solid colora. stripes,
System .... .. ...... ... •4ei9"'' f
F
~
Y
regular
and
button down coi1 Only Sanyo Stereo
l/
rJ
lara.
Save
a
big 30% on our
System ............... '34~~oo 1\ }!lrt{li!liil
&lt;11
•
entire
nlaction
1 Only Magnavox
'9.96 Sport Shim .. .. .... '8.37
System ...... ........ . '199
'12.95
Sport Shirts ... ... '9.07
1 Only Magnavox
'16.96
Sport Shine .... ~ 11 . 17
Sterao ................ •1
'18.96 Sport Shirts .... ~13.27

.ELBERFELDS

Uniled Pr('Ss Tnternallonal. "Two
people died in the accident and 21
have sinCI' died In Moscow
hospitals."
Gale, an expert on radiation
diseases, said Ihe 21 were among Ell
Chemoby l-area residents examined afler the accldenl who received very high or "substantial"
doses of radiation.
"All Ell were considered to be In
acut e lifl'-threa lening danger,"
said Ga le, who returned to the
Soviet Union Sunday lor follow-up
care and health assessment s of
about ~.tXXJ people.
Aboul 300 Chernobyl vict ims
were hospitalized in Moscow, he
said.
Gale, based In Los ·Angeles, led a
team ol one Israeli and two

American physicians who worked
with Soviet doctors performing
oone-marrow transplants on 19
people. He declined to say how
many of the transplant patients had
died .
He denied a report by Soviet Dr.
Yevgeny Chazov that put the death
loll from the nuclear accident at 21,
including 11 of !he transplant
patienls.
The Kremlin has not offi cially
updaled casualty informal ion since
Sovlel leader Mikhail Gorbachev ,
In a nationally televised speech,
said lwo people· had been killed
during the April 26 ex plosion and
seven of 35 -people seriously Injured
by the accident had died. But
various officials have since raised
the death toll to 13 and then to 19.

Boys' •7.95 Shorts .. .... ........... '5.57
•9
Shorts ................ •6.97

SPECIAL

"l111ln"

MEN'S DRESS BELTS

All fine quality leather in a big selection of colon. popular
widths and sizes 30 to 46 . Western belts included.

$11 .00 to $12 . 00 Belts .... ..... .. .. Sale '6 .79
'12 .60 to '14.00 Belts ..... .. ........ Sale '9 .99
'14.60 to '16 .60 Belts ...... .... ... Sale '11 .99
'16.00 to ' 17.00 Belts ....... .. ... . Sale '13.19

End of Mo•th Sale
Men's &amp; Boys'
SUMMERWEIGHT

JACKETS

···. Boys' sizes 8 to 18. Men's S. M. l .
'I

'

I

J

JAYCEE TOURNEY PRE'lENTATION- 'Thursday's Meigs County Jaycees' GoU Tournament was
dedicated to ronner Meigs County educator, ~
McComM. During a presentation following the
tourney, McComas was given a plaque from the

Jaycees. A resident or Middleport, McComa5 was
also presented with a sUver plate from Middleport
VDlage ConncU. From left to right are Steve Bacmer
and Brian Conde of the Jaycees, McComAS, Bob
Gilmore of Middleport VDlage COuriCO, and Dick
Owen of the Jaycees.

President pays tribute to
·soldiers of 'twilight war'

Shnrte

MEN'S

providing galt'S and concrete pad
lor scales a: tlle fairgrounds;
helping to ooild the swine-sheep ·
building al the fairgrounds; build·
lng picnic tables lor the Syracuse
park; and plan ting trees at the
falrgrourvls.
Thirty -six members of Racine
FFA began volunteering to work on
their projects In May.
The Idea of Improving the small
park In Racine developed because
of the Increased recreational use of
the Ohio Rlver and because of the
boat launch ramp which is adjacent
to the park. Since this was I he site of
the old feny from Racine to
Graham Station, W.Va., the park
was named the Old Ferry Landing
Continued on page 14

Chemobyl death toll up to 23

~er ·

BOYS 0 5.95 KNITS .... .. ..........
BOYS *8.95 KNITS ........ ........
BOYS' '1 0.95 KNITS'""""""
BOYS' 1 12.95 KNITS .... .... .. ...

'FFAmerlca chapters across the
count ry have conducted va luable
communllty Improvement projects
as part of the BOAC program. The
program Is sponsored by R J .
Reynolds Nabisco, Inc.
The projects are designed to meet
individual community needs and to
aide participating youth In assumIng some of the responsibility for
improving their homet.owns.
Southern's BOAC committee is
comprised of Andy Rose, Brian
Freeman, Charlie Wolfe, Tim
Eynon, Mike Johnson and Harold
Roush, chairman.
Other BOAC projects completed
lri recent years by Racine FFA
Include providing livestock scales
for the Meigs County Falrgrourvls;

~llckey Eakins, 'llm (Bo) Wllli&lt;l, Joe Conley and Scott
Bickers. Second row - Aaron Sayre, advilor; CurtO;
Jones, Dave Amburgey, Jerry Grueser and Harvey
Martin. A lew olher FFA members were also
Involved In the project.

FFA OONS1RUCI'ION CREW - FFA members
of Southem lOgb School have constructed a new
shelte£ bouse a1 the Old Ferry LancUng Park In
RadDe. Ills hoped that Improvements to the park will
oonttnue. Workers were, front row, left to right,

You'll find the shirt you like in this fine selection . Sizes 8 to 18. Stripes, solid colors. Fine
quality by LeTigre, Wrangler and Campus.

!Sizeo 18. 19, 20)

SHIRTS

PARKING

E.O.M. SALE

WORK SHIRTS

No iron sanlorizad blue chambray. Both long and short
steeve stytea. Long tails, dou·
ble yoke back . Sizes S, M. L.
and XL. plus big sizes to 1e y,,
Rag . '8.95
Chambray Shirts ... .. . '6.70
Reg . 89.95
Chambray Shirts ...... '7.40
Reg . '10.95
Chambray Shirts ...... '8.20

E.O.M. SALE!
,. MEN'S KNIT

FREE

Round l

MEN'S BLUE CHAMBIAY

MEN'S SHORTS

I

Sale Prleed

HE V

SA~E!

Three Day Salel

Round3
Contestant Word MlsspeUing

Bridie O'Shaughnessy, Columbus. Impedance, lmpedence.
Carmen C. Wilson, Crooksvllle,
cerlman, cereman.
Linda Mullet, Middlefield, xyslus, zlstas.

Contestant, Word, MlsspeUing

Ona and two piece suits . Sizds
6 mos. thru Size 14.

Little boys pajamas. Little
girls' pajamas and gowns .
Reg. '6.00 to '17.00

ARE ON SAil,

Sale!

,....,111·.

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

Casual and dressy styles.
Jams included. Sizes 2 to

5''

.

,.

Southern FFA builds shelter
house at Racine Park site

E.O.M. SALE
CHILDREN'S

SHORTS

One and two piece outfits,
bibs. Most are machine
washable.
Reg . '9.00
Outfits .. ... ... .... ... .... . '6. 29
Reg. $12.00
Outfits .................... '8.39
~ag . '17 .00
Outfits .................. '11.89
Rag . '22 .00
Outfits ......... .... ..... '15 .39

0.\J\'i
~ : h·

eliminated from the 59th annual
National Spelling Bee. Listed Is the
order In which they were ellml·
nated, the round In which they
missed their word, lh&lt;:' correct
spelling of the word and the way
they misspelled It .

~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, May 30, 1986

L"

LlnLE BOYS'

1 00% Cotton sanlorized. Hi·
back style. Watch pocket.
tool and rule pocket. hammer
loop, excellent quality you'll
like. Sizes 32 to 50 waist.

Vot.36, No .19
CopyriGhted 1986

Thomas J . Kramer usurp, eu surp, Lorain.
Kanlka Bahl diminutive demlnutive, Beavercreek.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Here

.

at y en tine
e
Senators will fight tax bill changes

Ohioans are eliminated from contest
are the names of Ohio contestants

.

•

I

LlnLE BOYS' &amp; GIRLS'

BIB
OVERALLS

By lhe Bend ............ Page 6
Clllllllifteds ..... Pages 1~11-12
Comics-TV .............Page 13
l&gt;eaths ...................Page 14
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ............... Pages 3-4-5

I

E.O.M. SALE

S1995

Inside:

Half Slips, Full Slips and Cam·
isoles. Nylon or poly/ cotton
blend. Beige, white or black in
sizes S to XXXL. and 32 to 60.

E.O.M. SALE

MEN'S

.,...

Middleport, driving under suspen· 60 days IIC!'nS&lt;' suspension; left of
sion, costs; assault, 10 days In jail, cenler. cosls only; Roland Lansuspended, one year probation, daker. Pomeroy. driving vehicle
wilh plalcs belonging 10 anolher
restitution and c'Osts.
Michael Dill, Rutland, no motor- vehicle. S15 and t'Osls; Tommy
cycle license, $75 and costs, rive Boso. Pm11and, driving while lnloxdays i'n jall suspended, one year icaled. $llO and cosls. 10 days jaU,
probation; Melody R ' West, Ra· license suspended 120 days; Myrna
cine, perm itt lng an unlicensed l.ink&lt;•rs, Shade, disorderly conduct,
person to operale a motor vehicle, rosls only: Vincenl Slone, Pomt&gt;$00 and costs; David Talbott , :·oy. aggravaled and menacing
Racine, driving under suspension, llrreals and re~ istlng arresl, JOdays
$75 and costs, three days in jail, one in jail and costs on each offense;
year probation, stopped on road - Diana Slarcher. Rutland, disorway, costs only; Carl Stewart, derly conduct. $100 and costs,. $00
Cheshire, driving while Intoxicated, suspended; Ron Starcher, Ru !land.
$250and cosls, three days In jail and driving under suspension, $50 and
c'Osts, two years probation.

cated, $250 and costs, three days In
jail, 00 days license suspension and
failure to dim headlights, costs
only; Jack Conde, Ripley, W.Va.,
drlvlng while Intoxicated, $250 and
costs, three days l'n jail, 60 days
license suspension, and costs only,
unsafe vehicle; Emil Thompson,
Lakewood, driving while Intoxi cated, $250 and costs, three days In
jall and 610days license suspension,
lefl of center, costs only; Marvin
Tolliver, ~sville, driving wbUe
Intoxicated, $axJ and costs, lJ days
l'njall, license suspended one year;
Oeelng an officer, $50 and costs, JO
days In jail; no driver's license, $50
and costs, JO days In jail; lefl of
center, costs only; WllllamGeorge,
Cheshire, fallure to stop within
assured clear distance, $10 and
costs; Rlck Sellers, East Liverpool,
fishing without license, $25 and
costs; James Mackie, Beverly,
!allure to control, $aJ and costs;
Bruce Hysell, Middleport, assured
clean distance, $.llandcosts; Larry
Patterson, Pomeroy, driving wbUe
Intoxicated, $250 and costs, three
days In jail and 60 days license
suspension; Judith Rickman, Ra·
cine, fishing without valid license,
$25 and costs; MJchael Vance,

E.O.M. SALE

SLEEPWEAR

s

Thursday, May 29, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

XL and XXL. Entire selection both

man's and boys' styles included .
\ Come in and look 'em over. SAVE
' 36% .
BOYS '18 .96
JACKETS .... .. ..... ...... .... ... '12 . 32
j MEN'S &amp; BOYS '22 .95
JACKETS .............. .. ...... .. $14 .92
MEN'S &amp; BOYS '
'29.95 JACKETS ............. '19.47
MEN 'S '39 .95
JACKETS .. ..... ................. '26 .97

Elbstleldt
,DIIItJ'f. ottiO
''u~ lt2-JI7J

CHUCI CAID

II

PIAN FORF1JNRUN -Rhondalladdox,lert, and l21U!d under races and trophies and plaques wUl be
Kim Blower, chalnnan, look 0\Jer some of. the awarded. TherunlsspolliiOredbyVetennsMemorial
appllcailon81or the Ofth annual fun run lor heart to be Hospital with proceeds benefiting the Melp Branch
held Saturday, Jtme 7, heglnnlng at 9 a.m. from of lhe American Heart AMn. Appllcatlo118 can he
qeneralllartluger Park. There WOI be lOk, 5k, fun run . , secured fnlm either Haddox or Blower.
~~

~·

By IRA R. AUEN
WASHINGTON (UP11
President Reagan paid t.rtbute to
the men and women who fought
In the shadows of "a twilight
war" as America 's spies of a
generation ago and promised
Thursday night to continue
revitalizing t.he CIA:
Although he made no mention
of the Washington furor over
CIA Director WIU!am Casey's
threat to prosecute some news
media lor publishing secrets and
his caution against speculation
on what accused spy Ronald
Pelton sold the Soviet Union,
Reagan's schedule reflected his
own concern after a year of spy
scandals.
He addressed Veterans or the
OSS, tlle World-War-11-era Intelligence agency that preceded
the CIA and today was presentIng a posthumous medal to Navy
Capt. Joseph Rochberg, who
broke Japanese codes during
World War II.
White House spokesman Ed·
ward Djerejlan said Thursday

the White House appmved CIA
Director William Casey's warnIng to !he news media
Wednesday.
"Those reporting on the trial
should he cautioned against
speculation and reporting details beyond the . Information
actually released at trial," said
the unusual statement by Casey
and National Security Agency
Director Gen. William Odom.
They did not say what action
they might take against journalIsts who Ignore their sta tement,
but Casey has already recommended prosecuting news organizations !hat report Information considered damaging to
national security under a 19~
law prohibiting the reveatlng of
state secrets.
Djerejlan said the CaseyOdom statement was "nol"lntended as a threat. "
"We're all Americans," he

sa id In requesting media cooperation, though several foreign
correspondents w~n presmt.
Reagan, reiterating a favorite

.

theme In his speech, said
America's inl rlligcnce capa bil ity ''has S(X'n a renaissanct• "

under his admin islralio n.
Before his sjl('('Ch Reagan
received an award named -a fter
the late William "Wild Bill''
Dooovan, whom he called "a
one-man intellig&lt;'nce service In
the lls," and who !J t&lt;'r founded
the OSS, lhr forerunner of the
CIA. Casey "·as a highly regarded D:&gt;novan pmtrge.
"In saluting Bill Casey , we
salu te all those who carl)' on the
twilight war againsl totalitar·ian lsm," Reagan said.
"We are rightly rrgarded as a
candid and open people wbo
pride ourselves on our frC&lt;'
society, And yer our secret
services, our spies. and inlelllgence agencies - from Nathan
Hale to Midway - have not
written just a sinking, stirring "
chapter In our hlslory but have
oftrn provided 1tv' key to vtclory
In war and lhe preservation of
our freedom during an uneasy

peace-."

1. ~------------------~-----~-----------------~
y --------~
··.

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