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                  <text>Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

I

I

Area deaths

Janealie Johnson

Janealle R. Johnson, 66, Route 2,
Pomeroy, dled Sunday morning at
her f'J'SidenCE' on the Peach Fork
Read.
Formerly of Buffalo, W. va ..
Mrs. Johnson was born May 17, l!!al
In Lincoln County. W. Va., a
daughter of the late Jane Young.
Surviving · ·are two daughters,
Hazel Anne Johnson, Columbia , S.
C., and Jeanette Bendula, Willow·
lck; a son·ln·law, Robert Bendula,
and a grandson, Robby Bendula:
both of W!Uowick.
Besides her parents. she was
preceded In death by her husband,
William Cecil Johnson on March~.
l!lfll.
Mrs. Johnson bperated a family
farming business. She was a
member of the Laurel Oifl Free
Methodist Church and the Meigs
County Senior Citizens.
Services wUI he held at 10 a. m.
Wednesrlay at the Laurel Olff Free
Methodist Church with Rev. Rebert
Miller officiating. Burial wlll be In
the Haven d. Rest Memory Garden
at Poca. W.Va . Friends may call at
the Johnson residence from 6 to 9
p.m. Tuesrlay. The Ewing Funeral
Home is In charge of arrangements
but there wHI be no calling hours at
the funeral home.

Wilmer Rice
Wilmer A. Rice, 90, 51429 Rice
Run Road, died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Rice was born Nov. 22,1875 in
Meigs County, a son of the late
William L. and Samaria Story Rice.
He was a retired school teacher
having taught for 35 years.
Surviving are his wife, Nora E.
Kincade Rice; two daughters, Mrs.
Rex (Wilma ) Robinson. Coolville,
and Mrs. Frank (Iris May) Car han,
Orrville; two sons, Harley and John
C. Rice, both of Reedsville; a sister,
Belva B. Willard, Pomeroy; 14
grandchildren, seven great·
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides his parents, Mr. Rice was

Monday. June 2. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

preceded In death by two sisters,
MjJia Hart and Alta Eastman, and a
brother, Homer Rice.
He was a member of the St. Paul
United Methodist Church In
Tuppers Plain$ and was a veteran
of World War I.
Services w!U be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Church 1\'ith Rev.
Don Archer officiating. Burial wlll
be In Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday. If they so desire,
friends may make a contribution to
their favorite charity In his
memory.

•

Lelia Brade belT)'
Leila C. Brandeberry, 92, Lot·
tridge, died Saturday at the Hickory Creek Nursing Home, The
Plains.
Mrs. Brandeberry was born In
Athens County, a daughter of tbe
Iate John and Mary Klingenberg
Barnhill. She was a retired school
teacher.
Surviving are a brother, Carl J.
Barnhill, Tuppers Plains; two
sisters, Nellie Swisher, Guysv Ule,
and Freda Morris, Athens, and
severa l nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband.
Esmond Brendeberry; two broth~
ers, Clarence and Winford Barnhill,
and a sister, Clara Johnson ~
Services will be held at 11 a~m.
Wednesday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with Rev. H. L.
McDaniel officiating. Burial wiU be
In the BarnhiU Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral homefrom 3
to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Hospital news

EM~ l!lqu~ds
recetve nme

weekend calls

Nine cails were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
At 12:42 a.m. Saturday the
Middleport Unit wenttoanaccldent
on County Road 5 and treated Patty
Boyles and Mike Tillis, but did not
transport;
went
to anPomeroyatU:M
accident on Routea.m.,
124
and took Kevin Thomas, John
Wolfe and Mike Roush to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
8: 59 a.m. took Hugh Leifheit from
Starcher Road to Veterans MemorIal Hospital; Syracuse at 3:07p.m.
treated Brent Hampton at London
Pool but dld not transport; P0111eroy at 7:34 p.m. again took Hugh
Lei!helt from Starcher Road to
Veterans Memorial; Tuppers
Plains at 7:36 p.m. went to State
Route 681 for Susan Baxter, to
Veterans Memorial.
On Sunday Pomeroy at 10;25
a.m. took Deetra Simms from an
accident on Route 33 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; RuUand at
U: 31 p.m. took Larry Rupe from
Beech Grove Road near Langsville
to Veterans Memorial; Middleport
at 8:21 p.m. took Pauline Russell
from Rutland St., to Holzer Medical
Center.

------Weather forecast---- Soulh Cenll'lll Ohio
Becoming mostly sunny today,
with highs In the low 71&amp; Oear
tonight, with a low between 45 and
50. Sunny Tuesday, with hlghs In tbe
mld 7nc;.
The probab!Uty of precipitation Is
near zero today through Tuesday.
Winds will be from the north at 10
to 15 mph today and light and
variable tonight.

Ohio Exlended Forecasl - Wed·
nesday through Friday: Fair Wed·
neseay and Friday, with a chance
of showers Thursday. Highs will be
In the In!; Wednesday and Thursday
and ranging from 75 to !() Friday.
Overnight lows wUI be In the 50s
Wednesday morning. climbing Into
the 60s early Thursday and ranging
from 55 to 00 Friday morning.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Two
players who picked all six winning
num))ers In the Ohio Lotto drawing
during the weekend will share a $1.3
mllllon jackpot.
More than 3.4million tickets were
sold for the Saturday drawing that
produced the numbers 4, 7, 8, 15, 23
and 24.
Lottery officials were t~ an·
nounce today the number d. players
who picked five and four of the
winning numbers.

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*:·
•

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

There was widespread destruc~
tion of mail boxes and newspaper
boxes in Meigs County over the
weekend, the office of Sheriff
Howard Frand reports. Anyone
having information Is asked to
please call the sherllfs office,
992·33'71.

CENTRUM
VITAMIN
TABLETS
BOTTLE
OF 100
PLUS
30 FREE

749

P~~~b Evans Farms natural

~~:'g !~~x:~e ~~ Kl~

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLE RG 1ST
"WE /lAVE 1/EAR/NC A/0$"

TABLETS

PKG. OF 30 OR

I

I

79
QT

SUNTAN

ALKA.SELnER

ANTACID TABLETS

~&amp;~~LtE~OR 189
FOIL WRAPPED

drive.

t:mftiTE AID

In regard to one of the more controversial Issues
before the 99th Congress, 50 percent of those
responding favored military and humanitarian aid to
the Contras currently fighting the Sandinista
government In Nicaragua, 36 percent were opposed to
providing such aid, and H percent were undecided.
On budget matters, 62 percent d. respondents were
In favoroftheGramm·RudmanBalanced Budget Act
which will require a balanced federal budget by 1991.
It appears that district residents favor spending cuts
rather than tax lncresases as a means of balancing
the budget.
When asked whether or not 12 federal programs

to bf• made as

soon as possible Include seeding the
banks, laying out bali fields and a
wa lking track, Installing basketball
goals and banking boards, and
possibly adding a tennis and
volleyball court s. Picnic tables and
playground equipment will also be
installed and the mayor hopes that
a storage building and concession
stand will be constructed .
Council extended a special
thanks to Jay and Buck Hall for
their donations of time and labor to
the Monkey Run project.
The property is being leasrn to
!he village by Hall IJr $1 a year.
Council also has plans to develop
parks on Mechanic St. and Naylor's
Run.
Councilman Bill Young reported
thai eight basketball goals and
banking boards, four swing sets and
two monkey bar beams are ready
for in stallation at the J:llrks.
With the exception of the monkey
bars, the playground equipment
was made by the Meigs High School
welding class under the supervision
of Instructors Ken Eblin and Dlck
Fetty.
Young also reported that he has
had Inquiries as to hOw donations
may be made to the vUiage 's
perpet ual care fund for cemetery
upkeep. Young said donations may

be brought -in or mailed to the
village, and should be designated
by donors for perpetual care. The
money then goes into a bond and
interest from the bond is used fo,r
cemetery upkeep.
Counci l noted that two village
employes work fulltime at Beech
Grove &lt;Pmetery rrowing and clea n·
ing. The vi llage employes also dig
graves.
Trustees to oversee cemetery
conditions are Ja ck Seidenabel,
Orville !Curly 1 Wiles and Treil
Schonleb.
MayorSc)•ler reported thai stre&lt;'l
crews are repairing potholes "one
area at a time" and will cover all
vi tt age streets as soon as possible.
Councilman John Anderson re·
ported briefly on the progress of tlr
Union Ave. repair project under·
way by the Ohio Deparnnent of
Transportal!on. stating that curb·
lng and grating have been installed.
A July completion date has been
sched uled for~ the Union Ave.
repair.
Present for Monday's meeting in
addition to the mayor . Young and
Anderson were Councilmembers
Betty Baronick, Bruce Reed . Henry
Werry and Larry Wehrung. Absent
was .Jane Walton. clerk·treasurer.

Et

"OU
MOR~·
s~'l£5,

GILLETTE

GOOD NEWS!

RAZORS

DISPOSABLE
REGULAR
OR PIVOT
PKG. OF 5

119

MAYBELLINE
NAIL COi.OR
ASSORTED
SHADES

99e
SURE

SOLID

No MoRE SuNbuRN! No HARMful RAys!

Gu dtE TAN You'vE AlwAys WANTEd!

REG. OR WIDE;
SCENTED OR
UNSCENTED
2 OZ. SIZE

JUNE

SPECI·ALI
10 SESSIONS
'

S2750

ASII ABOUT OUR

REDKEN THERMAL
BEAUTY FACIAL
SYSTEMS
IUNIC..ES Fro• n.
.

Offer Good
June 2nd thru
June 14th
Call For An
"
Appointme..t

UDIEFI.. GEIS
n
IIIIL SYSTW

••tvr~t~t

NAI. nrs

&amp; sro•-•IED. IIIIU
,...... ,. .

P~:ess.

· ·.HEADQUARTERS. BEAUTY

to meet

··

and

SALON

at~~:v::emi~~~=·; · :suN
&amp; SAND
TANNING SALON
f - t I• ltl.
. · ft2·U 11
,_,.

··chambers, Shrine Club Park bliD.d· .
tng. The public is 'welcome. · .

.liliiiiiliiiiliiiil•••itiiiliii-••••llliiiiiliil..

99
. llM

25 Cents

REG., FULL BODY OR
MOISTURE RICH·
8 OZ. BOTTlE OR
FINISHING RINSE·
8 OZ. BOTTlE OR
IE-MOISTURIZING CIEME
2 OZ. TUBE

·0
50 0
~

SUPER PLUS, SUPERil

ORIGINAl REGULA
OR SlENDER REGULAR
PKG. OF 40
OR WITH PLASTIC
APPLICATOR.REGULAR,
SUPER OR SUPER PLU&gt;
PKG. OF 32

199 139 329
~~-------=------~=-----

v:ouR
I"
PRESCRIPTION

FffiST LIVE TV SESSION - i\ technician checka
the operation of a remote camera from the control

Ohioans fear America may go

ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOil
COMPLETE DETAILS!

WI IES!M THE IIGitT 10 LIMIT QUANTITIES • PIUCES EFFECTIVE JUNE 2 THRU B, 1986 • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAl ERRORS

AID

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY. OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

·=======::::::!

room prior lo lhe airing of the first live televl&lt;;ed
session of the Senate on lhe CSpan TV network
Monday. (UPI)

to

war

CJNeiNNi\TI ( UPI) - Poilsters anoounced Mlnday lhal Ohioans
believe the chances of America going to war are lncreaslnc,
prlmarUy because of the reeent confrontation wtlh Ubya.
The t'Oncluslon was based on the most recent "Ohio PoU,"
conducted by lhe University of Cincinnati's Institute for PoUcy
~arch.
.
Tire poD found that 28 percent of Ohioans believe Ills "very likelY"
thai lhe U.S. will become Involved In a war within lhe nexl ltree
years. while another 34 percent feel a war Is at least "somewhat
likely."
"Nol sinc-e June 1982 have Ohioans been lhls concerned aboul US.
Involvement In a war," nolt'll poilslers.
bt June 1982, the eonccrns were OOsed on the Falklanlti War
belween Britain and Argentln a;-tlle-elvU war In El Salvador and
'I,
i\merlcan Involvement in Lebanon.
Now, the major concerns are Ubya and terroflsm.

THERE'S ALWAYS A SAVINGS AT RITE AID!·

RITE

goods.

An overwhelming 81 percent of th&lt;' rr-sr.&lt;mrlrnts
favorPd Medicare fundin g for hospice and home
health carr ser,, ir~ as an alternatiw• to long('r

hospital slays. One-sided support was abo reveaic{i
for the space shunte program with !U pcr&lt;Ynt in favor
of continuing the program. and for imfJQsinK an
income cap on guara nteed st udent loans with 62
percent fa voring the imposit io n of a ~'11.001 ceiling.
On the general question concern ing lhe f!Oiicy
course Ihis country is on, :\7 per!X'nl e.&lt; pressed their
appmvat of the curren l course, 29 percent their
disapproval and 14 per!X'nt were undecided .

Pi\RK DEVEWPMENT - Development of
Pomeroy's Monkey Run Park is continuing at a
steady pace. J\layor Richard Seyler supervised as
vlllage workers, left lo right, Terry Mayes, Boh Curry
and Donnie Ward, spenl Monday morning applying
holmlx lo d1e top portion of the new driveway at lbe
park. A large limestone parklng area has het'll added
and playround equipment is ready for Installation.

i\mong the many Improvements planned for the
large recreation facUlty are ballfield.• and a walking
track. Pomeroy Is leasb1g the proper!)' from .Jay HaU
for $1 a year. Hall and hLs brother Buck have mnated
much time and ellort to tlle project VIllage worker
Kenny Koehler spent Monday mo"ing grass a1 the
park.

it "a step that is as Irreversible as It
Is inexorable. "
Byrd said "a potential240 million
Americans may nm.v see and hear

the Senate's pf()('cedings."
Urging his coUmguPS to "resist
the temptation to exploit techno!·
ogy," Dole, of Kansas, said: " If
members play to !he cameras with
gimmicks, filibusters and endless
speeches. then we h av~ failed the
lest."
He promised his mlleagues and trlrvls ion virwcrs -

a bu!::ly

week. starting fi rs t with a bill that
would provide ~.6 billion for earh of
the next ftve years for higher
l"fluration .
Dolr sa id he also ex j.('Cted lo
bring up tax reform lcgislalion and
a controver sial \'ote on PrC"Sident

Reagan 's proposed miss ile sa le to
Saudi Arabia.
Nine senators wrrr on til:· floor as
the first televised Senate opening
look place. about half wearing blue
shu1 sand red ties- recommended
colors for the cameras.

The Rrv. Bfornard Hawlr)·, pas·
tor of th~ Fir." Pn,;hyterian
Church in Salina. l&lt;an. whoS&lt;·
astronaut son Stt'V(' l,!. marriE-d to
Sa lly Ride. !he first American
woman In space. dcliveroJ an
opening prayer which no!t'CI "this
historic momrnt."
Se\·era l senators

u~ro

t hf' televi·

si:Jn inaugural to highlight pet
proj&lt;'l'IS.
Assislan t Dl'mocral ic leader
Alan Cranston of Catifomia called
for 1he t'C'Irnlion of I!lA s in tlr lax
bill and rejC'Ction of arms 'ia les to

Saudi Arabia. Sen. Pete Wilson,
R·Ca tif .. argued against t&lt;IX ·paid
congressional nev.~ letters.
TI1e six·W!X'k mu ionwide broad·
casts fo llow a month of closed·
circu it, in·house testing. and thr
Senate votes July 29 on whether to
m;;~kl'

broadcasting

~rman r.nt .

or

extend \Psi C'OH'ragc anoltwr 30
davs trforr d final ~.·otP . St'natr
radio covenl~!l ' h;J~ lx'C'n liYr ancl
p.~blic \y a\·a ilabll' &lt;:; incC' \ ·l u\ 1

President meets with GOP leaders

UPTO

TAMPONS

proposed for elimination in the President's Fiscal
Year 1987 budget should be phased out, more than 50
percent responded in favor of the terminations except for the Waste Treatment Grants program and
the Small Business Ad ministration .
Forty-eight percent of constituents responding
favor maintaining defense spending at current levels,
21 percent favor an increase in defense spending, and
31 percent wei·e in favor of a den ease, according to
the questionnaire.
In regard to the trade balance, 51 percent favored
trade barriers to prolE&lt;'! American jobs even if thi s
means higher prices for domest ically·produced

By LEON DANIEL
WASHINGTON iU PI ) - Th e
Senate has gone live on nationwide
television with a warning from
Republica n leader Robert Dole !hal
la\\makers must resis t hamm ing it
up for the cameras iJ the hi storic
c h an~e is to become permanent.
Unfazed by th at advice, Sen.
Howell Heflin. D·Aia., t1'Cited a
"Sonnet to Senate TV." Sen. .Johr
Glenn , D.Qh io, du sted his bald pate
with powder In an on· tlle·a ir
demonstration for his colleagues
and Sen. Robert Stafford, RVt. ,
admitted to the nation that he had
searched his cloSI't in va in for a
"television blue" shirt.
Despite such shenanigans Mon·
day in what membe rs are fond of
r ailing "the world's greatest delib·
erative body." Democratic leader
Robert Byrd of Wes t Virginia said
telev ision has come 10 the Senate 10
stay .
Byrd. who had joined with Dole in
sponsoring the bipartisan tcgisla·
lion providing for Senate TV. called

ANTI....RIIIIUNT

Attending the 59th United High
School Press Conventlo~ at Mar·
shall University were Meigs High
School yearbook staffers, Tracy
McKinney, Will Molden. Tara
Clark and their advisor, Yonlece
Miller.
The groupatt.ended workahopson
photography, layout, sportswriting,
theme development and legal
liabilities of high school press.
Dr. Deryl R. Learning, director of
the W. Page Pitt School of
Journailsm, gave the Meigs stu·
dents both. a written and verbal
critique of the 1985 yearbook. Other
activities Included a tour of the
Marshall Campus and an awards
banquet.
More than :nlstuden ts from West
VIrginia, Eastern Kentucky and
Southern Ohio attended theoonven· .
tlon. Although It was their~ year
to attend Mckinney and Molder
were elected vice president secrefiUy, respecUvely, of tbe yearbook
dlv(slon.t~f. the linlled Hlgti School

1 Section, 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Senate allows live coverage

Q?

PKG. OF 36

CALL (614) 992-2104
304 675-1244

Attend workshop

eo~ncU

I

~~~ I

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

company'smarketlngareawlththe
exception
of Atlanta, Ga. Bob
Evans Farms Italian cooking
sausage was made available'" all
company markets. A distribution
route covering northern Alabama
was added , bringing to 84 the
number of Bob Evans Farms route
salesmen, serving 7,650 retail
stores.

Pomeroy Village Cou ncil ap ·
pruVL'd a contract In Monday
night 's regu lar meeting to lease the
downtown propcr·ty of Amy Kings~
land JonPS, Oldsmar , F la , for $100
a year,
Situated on West Main and Court
Sts .. the property has for some time
bem an eycso!t' In the vitlage.
The lease itself would be betwE&lt;'n
Edward K Jones, also of Fl a., who
has power·of·attorney for his
mother. and the village. ,Jones
would continue to pay lhe $400 a
year taxes on lh&lt;· property but the
prupcrty would be covered by
village liability in surance.
All hough rouncil ha s approwd
!he contract. Jones has nor yet
signed the agm-·ment. l)nt il he
dOC'S, plans by Pomeroy Area
Chamber of CommNce to develop
. a mlni·park on I ht• sitr are still up in
tllr air.
Ste•dy pro~:ress continues at the
Monkey Run Park in Pomeroy.
Mayor Richard Seyler reported
that excavation a t thr park has
heen completed . a limestone park
ing tot and driveway have been
added . and village workers spent
most ol Monday morning applying
hot mL' to th!• top portion of the
tmpm v~ment s

t:=======================;l

enttne

Plans to develop downtown
mini park still ,up in the air

PAIR

Campaign. "However, we think It
should be done on-site. Shipping It
thousands of miles through our
community and others creates
unacceptable threats to the 1'!1Viron~
ment and public health."
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D~
Gatllpoils, has proposed legislation
urging Congress and President
Reagan to Incinerate the gas at Its
Maryland site or choose a more
direct route to Incinerators In
Alabama.

at y

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, June 3. 1986

Can 11,000 southern Ohioans be wrong? Ronald
Reagan proba bly hopes not.
111e annual questionnaire distributed by lOth
District U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller among his
constituents revealed much general support for
President Reagan' s policies, according ID a M!Uer
spokesperson.
Most of the ll,!XXJ rep lies Mltter received supported
Reagan administ ration positions on education, healt h
care, defense, tmde, the budget, arms negotiations,
the space program and foreign policy. The only major
areas of dissent with the ad minist ration came in the
areas of trade policy and tax reform.

Probe incidents

continuing educatiOn units will be
awarded to participants. EJU'Ol~
lment wUI be limited to 14. The cost
Is $125, Including Instruction and
equipment use.
The seminar wUt be held In the
School of Business, Room 126.
Instructors are Larry Higgins and
Beverly Wilkins. To register, call
the college at 245-5353 or l ·ID282~
7~1 no later than Tuesrlay.

•

Miller poll reveals area support for Reagan

Rail route protest planned

I

e
Vol .36. No .21
1986

Lotus software seminar set

andwhen
will remaln
In
were
the !12evaluated
restaurants
It I; most

By llle Bend .... .... Pag"" :HJ
Classlfleds ......... Pages 6 7-8
Com irs-TV .............. Page 9
Deaths .................... Page 4
Edllorlal .. .. ............. Page 2
Sports ..................... Page 3

Copyrighted

Lodge meets Tuesday

COLUMBUS Bob Evans
Farms Inc. has reported net sales
of ~2,682,00! for the 1985-1l6 fiscal
RIO GRANDE - A six-hour
year ended April 25, a 15 percent
seminar
to Introduce Lotus 1·2·3
increase over net sales of
software
on the IBM Personal
$227,7Jl,OOO for tbe previous fiscal
Computer
wUI be offered at Rio
year.
Grande
College
and Community
Net income for tbe fiscal year
College
Wednesday
from 9 a.m.
was $al,575,00J, or $1.15 per share,
until
3::.1
p.m.
up 14 percent from $18,(8),000, or
"Hands-on" activities Include
$1.01 per share a year ago.
moving
the spread sheet, saving
A 75 cents per share dividend was
and
restoring
files and an Introducpaid today to shareholders of
tion
to
developing
an accounting
record May 9. The company's
Prol!fam.
A
certificate.
of 0.6
annual shareholders' meeting wlll
be 4 p.m. Monday , Aug. 11, at Bob
Evans Farms In Rio Grande.
During the past fiscal year, 22
new Bob Evans Restaurants
ATHENS - Objections to a
opened. Four others were also proposed shipment of mustard gas
acquired, bringing the total number through southern Ohio wiD be aired
of restaurants to 150 at year-end. Wednesday on the railroad tracks
Twenty-three additional restau~ on West Union Street In Athens.
rants are projected to begin
Meeting at 10 a.m., concerned
operating during the 19BG-87 fiscal cltlze!ls and Athens County officials
year, Including two restaurants wUI protest the proposed route.
~lng In St. Louis In 1986.
"We enthuslastlcaily support the
The charbroiled ml'llu , Intro- destruction of lethal chemical
duced In selected markets last weapons such as mustard gas,"
year, was expanded to au restau· said Claire Garfinkel, C&lt;Hltrector d.
rants . Meanwhile, 24-hour opera· Appalachian Ohio Public Interest
lions on Fridays and Saturdays

Inside :

r-------------------------------------------------------------------

Veterans Memorial HOilpllal
Saturday Admissions - John
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
Wolfe, Rutland; Walter Green, will meet at 7::.1 p.m. Tueseay at
Vinton; Hugh Leifheit, Pomeroy.
the temple with refrestunents to be
Saturday Discharges - Marilyn served following the meeting.
Shamblin, Ronald DUes, John
Wolfe.
Sunday AdmissiOns - Deetra
Simms, Pomeroy; Larry Rupe, Trustee8 to meet
Rutland; Eva Lawson, Racine.
Lebanon Township Trustees wlll
Sunday Discharges - Mary
meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the
Kennedy, Walter Green.
township buDding.

Bob Evans, Fanns
net sales up

Lottery winners

'

••

••

WASHINGTON iU Pil - Presi·
dent Reagan is expected to go all
out today to win passage of Inc
controversial $265 million arms sale
to Saudi Arabia in the first mE&lt;'tin!(
with Republican leaders sln!X' their
Memorial Day rf'Cess.
He also has invited the enllrr
Senate to breakfast Thursday to
lobby faCE'·to·face for passage of the

legislation.
Dl'puty prrss se&lt;.'rclary Edward
Djer'C'jian said thr arms sa le vote
will be "close." but showed some
optimism that the sa le will be
approved after strong ap;Jea ls.
An aide said Reagan has a "host
of Issues" to discuss with thP GOP
leaders. including a id to the
Nicaraguan Contra rebe ls.

Reagan al'-o pl.lflm'tJ rn ,.•, ,.il ' \ \ '
lh£' lf'adf'l ' rllf•ourlook lt&gt;r lh('

~rit h

tax rcfom1 bill

~~

hPn rt hit-.: tht•

Sflnatr fl oor I hi , wc't'k. Supportl•rs
hintrn Monda\ if may n{•t be&gt;
poss iule lo ""'.'' o f! &lt;~ II
amendments.

Thr prrsidr rll honored

1~

JXDpk

at a Whitt.} l-!ou"'f' lunchro n M o nd.1~ ·
Continut 'CI 1m p&lt;.~g P .J

House returns today for one-day session
By LEE LEONi\RD
UPI Slatebouse Reporter

COLUMBUS, Ohio I UPJ I - The
Ohio House of Representatives was
to meet today In a one-day session
dealing with legislation left over
from last month before caUing It
quits for the summer.
The HouSE' was to convene at 1:30
p.m.
.
At the top of the agenda was an
ethics and campaign financing bUI
which has cleared both the House
and Senate In different forms. The

House will bf' asked to concur In the
Senate changes.
The Senate has schedu lrn a
Wednesday se.ssion. tn case luther
negotla tions arc needed on the
ethics bill.
Th e ethics and campaign !inane·
lng reform bill specifies what public
officials and candidates may do
with campaign money, and what
cvnstltutes favorit ism to done"".
It pmhiblts conversion of cam·
palgn funds to personal use.
expands the jurisdictions of the

Ohio Ethics Commission and Ohio
Elections Commission. amends the
state bribery and contract laws.
and provides protection for ··whis·
Ueblowers" - government em·
ployees who report e thical mlscon·
duct under ttu~eat of job loss.
Among the hOUy.contested provi·
slons are a tightening of the
awarding of state contracts to
po litical benefactors , and a limit or
how much partnerships and profes·
si:Jnal associations may contribute
to candidates.
The Ohio Ethics Commission

announced it s una nrmous suppo rt

Monday for 11&gt;· Srnatc version of
the bill
•
The Hou s•· "lsu wilt bf' asked 10

concur in

fh( 1 ~ natr

VC'rsion of

legislation giv·ing temporary im·
munlty fi~om liability to municl·
pally opcratl'CI parks, playgrounds
and baseball fields.
The legis latio n. designed 10 side•·
tep an insu ranc{' problem tor th&lt;•
local govcr nml'nt units, clrar the
House earlier. but the Senatt•
declined to giw lmmunil)' to
municipa l swimming pools.

�'"'&lt;fl"" ' ' ...

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Strret
Pomeroy, Ohio
DE\'OTEIJ TO TilE ISTERES'Tll OF THE ~Jt;J(;s 'USOS AREA

ROBERT L. \\'1:-IGETT
Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH

PAT 1\'HITEHEAil
Assistant Puhlislwr/ Conlrollcr

General J\olan aJter

ll.UE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
:\ ,\I E~· l m :H of Thf' t' ni1t'll Pn&gt;ss I nt('rn a 1ion a I. I nb nO Dai l~ Pn·s~ ,-\ ssQI.' \a 1ion ,md !h t~ AmNi r an :--.;f·wspdpC'I' Publls hl'I'S ,\ ssocl.ni on
u:·n E:HS o r O Pl:-..' [ (}~

.!n' \'I-'IL'(\0)1.-' Th t'~' s hfluld tr ll'SS I han ;~ lij \I"Ord S
•\ 11 kilNS dl't' SU bjt'(' i1 0
[I ln~ :ln d tnU Sl \)(' S [~ Ofoc:i \\ ' [1 h 1\ ,ln lt', ad dr('S S .tnd
H' lrptwrw nu m bt•r ~ o unslgn('d lt'ttPr s will bf' publi~hl'&lt;l. L rt!rrs should bf' In
g11od ta ~ tt' .•Jddrf'Ssin g ~~su f's, not pl-'rsonal\ttt&gt;s

Jon~

ro

]ames ]. Kilpatrick

Poverty chic
WASHINGTON - Fifty year.;
ago this summer, a L'i-year-old left
home In Oklahoma City and started
hitchhiking to the west . He wound
up on a Saturday night as a guest In
the Albuquerque jail. On Sunday
morning the loca l Salvation Anny
gave him a good breakfast andsrnt
him on his way with an apple and a
prayer.
I thought about lhat scrawny kid
last Sunday. The television networks were having a great time
with that smarmy exercise In
poverty chic known as "Hands
Across America." Every politician
wbo could get in the act was vying
'\Jr a few seconds on the tube. The
crl'!'n was filled with celebrities.

Commentators gave us happy little
tldbils: Here in the line was a dog
named Pluto_ One participant was
ho lding hands with his parrot. One
contribution came In th!' form of
1,377 paper ~lis. The evrnt had
been preceded by a mini-marathon
described as a "fun run." In
California, organizer Jim Strong
suggested that hand-holders "bring
whatever It takes to create a party
out In the desert."
Ken Kragen, the Los Ange Ies
promoter who roncelvoo this P"bllclty stunt, remarked to th!' ]:l'ess
that Ideas are pebbles dropped In
water. Little Ideas make little
ripples. "This is a boulder we
dropped In the water," he said.

"Tidal waves will come from this ."
Hokum! Haven't we had about
enough of these extravaganzas•
Let it be acknowledged that several
hundred thousand participants maybe a million or so - wanted
sincerely to make a gesture of
concern about "hunliE'r" In America . Good for them. For the rest H
was a larky way to spend a Sunday
afternoon. It wi!l be Interesting to
have an auditor's fin al report on
how much money finally trickles
down to the poor. The sum will
amount to less than one day's
outlay for federal nu trit ion
li'Ograms.
Did the happy sponsors and the
smiling pJUUclans ever bother with

Lighting a candle
Twenty-th!W years ago, several hundred thousand prople demonstrated in Washington in support of civil rights legislation.
"They 'll just lrritate Congress," Ihe critics said. "They'll just make it
harder to pass civU tights."
Later in the 1960s and into the 1970s, many more thousands of prople
began coming lo Washington to proi!'St the U.S. lnvolvemenl in the
VIetnam War. ·
"They'll just make the president dig in his heels," the critics said. "This
just givi'S comfort to the Vi!'trong and Insults our own troops.-"
More recently, thousands of prople opposed to legalized abortion have
marched every year in Washington.
"They can't do anything," the crilics said. "The Supreme Court has
decided the issue."
Last week, something like 5 million people held hands across America to
raise money to relieve hunger and homelessness_
"Just a gimmick," the critics said. "It won't solve th!' bng- range
problem and just givi'S prople a way ID salve their conscience."
It can be argued that the demonstrations of the past cannot be compared
with "Hands Across America." To the exten t that they represented
movements that had specific goals, that can be conceded. There is no real
national movement or umbrella organization In lhl' hunger and homeless
area.
But it is both cynical and patronizing to suggest that the proplewho took
part in the May 25 event were simply on a lark and had no bng-term
commitment to the cause.
Some prople probably were just enjoying an afternoon outing. But even
if only one person in 100foilows through by joiningorfonnlngorganizatlons
to help the hungry or homeless, something worthwhile will have been
achieved. Furthermore, lhe event ra ised a lot of money. Again, If ooly a
lew days' meals or shelter lor the lll'edy were provided. it would be betler
than nothing_
As to the argument that Hands Across America simply gave
participants an opportunity Ia feel good about helping the unfortunate, it
can be asked: Does this mean that any individual effort ID help solve a
social problem is fruitless and hypJcritlcal? Does it mean a $5 or $10yearly
donation to a Untied Way campaign is a cop out?
There is another important element to criticism of Hands Across
America- the argument that the event seJVed to divert attention from the
welfare policies of the Reagan administration, which its critics contend
have made a bad problem worse by cutting whal were already Inadequate
funds.
It is easy to get into an argument that goes nowhere on this point, but the
presid!'nt's own rhetoric - that goverrunent should gel out If people's lives
and thai private charity should do more to help lhe needy- bolsters the
critics' case. So do the budgets he has submitted lor th!' past six years_
Reagan has junked Lyndon Johnson's declared War on Poverty, but
there is no way that Hands Across America can be put forward as a
substitute lor it. The sponsors didn't make such a claim and the
administration can't, inasmuch as Reagan didn't even embrace the
project until two days before it was conducted_
What this adds up to is the conclusion that Hands Across Am!' rica, for all
of its limitations, was a good thing, both for the hungry and homeless and
for lhe prople who took par1 in It . Adlai Stevenson said It more poetically
when he PUiogized Eleanor Roosevelt as a woman "who wouW rather light
a candle Ihan curse Ihe dark."

Letter to the Editor

Angels rally, nip Yanks, 8-7

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Milldleport, OhioTuesday, June 3, 1986

threshold definitions? What did
they mean by "hunger"? My
grandchildren seem to be hungry
all lhe time. We are not talking
about thai kind of hunger. Did the
sponsors equate hunger with "serious malnutrilion"? U so, last
Sunday' s ca use was vastly
overblown .
There is not a scintilla of valid
evidence to pt·ove that serious
malnutrition is a widespread problem In the United States today. Yes,
some well-publicized "studies"
have aroused concern; a notably
shoddy piece of scholarship· came
oot of HaJVard. The Conference of
Mayors produced a report that
v.uuld embarrass a freslunan
student of statistics. No one denies
that (X&gt;Ckets of severe poverty
exist; beyond question, oome small
number of people, largely through
ignorance, are gravely, regularly
"hungry ," but we have no Ethiopia
here.
For all the ridicule that was
heaped upJn President Reagan's
comment, the president was essentially right. Hundreds of food
programs . public and private, are
in place. They are operating every
day. Almost ooe-lhird of the people
who are eligible for food stamps do
nol apply for lh!'m. This may be
pm1ly oul of pride; it may reflect
bUI'l'aucratic red tape. The stamps
are available to families with
incomes up to Ill percent of
officially defln&lt;'&lt;l "poverty" about $l4,00J a year for a family of
four. A family al 125 percent may
not find Ihe effort worth pursuing.
The pJint is thai food Is there- $20
billion a year In federal programs
alone. All thai is required is th!'
minimum gumption to go get it
Let me go back to that troubled
15-year-old in 1936. I've known him
pretly well lor 50 years. The boy's
parrnt s were headed lor divorce.
His fathe r had lost just about
everything In "lhe Depress ion.

....
........ ' y. J,'
•.. ,,,.
- - 'I

oofinitely has contributed to the
success of the bi!l." said Public
Citizen attorney Prisci!la Budeiri.
In fact, this February the National Beer Wholesalers' Association singled out the majority leader
for special treatment. It hosted a
$1,000-a-head "Salute to Bob Dole"
at the Hyatt Regency Hole! here.
The clubby industry affair was
ck&gt;signed to raise $2i,OOJ for Dole.
Assocla lion officials declined to
say how much was raised, but an
internal rnerro preceding 1re affair
showed what Ihe beer barons had In
mind when t bey planned it. The
Jan . 24 !lll'rno, obtained by em
associate Stewart Harris, was
signed by the association's president and said In part :
"As majority leader, Sen. Dole is
responsible lor a Ulegislation reachIng the full Senate lor d!'bate.
... Dole wUI be playing a key role tn
any future (association) legislative
efforts. ... This will be a unique
oppJrtunity to discuss the industry's concerns with thl' majority
leader. We also will be pleased to

accept additiona l contributions
from those unable to a ttend ."
Dole's office scoffed a t the notion
that the wholesalers' fund -raiser
had any Influ ence on his pJsition on
the legislation. In any case, he's not
the on)y member of Congress
receiving donalions from the beer
industry's money bar. We repJrted
thrre years ago on the lawmakers
who were gelling dona tions from
th!' indu stry's quaintly named
politi ca l ac ti o n co mmitl ee,
S!XPAC.
Now a Public Citizen study shows
that the beer industry has shelled
out more than $700,(0) in lobbying
lees and campaign donations durIng the four-year fight lor the
antitrust exemplion. Among the
industry lobbyists are Christopher
O'Neill, son of Hou se Speaker
Thomas P . O'Ne ilL and former
staff aides to S!'ns. Orrin Hatch,
R·Utah, and Dennis DeCoocinl ,
D·Arlz., both suppJrters of the bilL
The top recipient of the beer
Industry's campaign donations was
Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Texas. lhe
legislation's chief sponsor ill the

On behalf oft he Meigs Co. EMS.!
would like 10 exprf'Ss our sincere
appreciation to you and your
newspaper for your media roverage of our evrnts over the past few
weeks.
II would 1:1' Impossible to lisI all of
the people and merchants that
donated and helped to make oor
EMS School an d Open House a
success . We certainly would not
want to miss anyone by a ltempting
to Ust all of those who assisted in

somewav

A special thanks to Dave Koblentz fa~ his efforts in securin g and
seeing completed the rounty's new
HelipJrt .
The cooperation we have received from the public over the past
yea rs has made our Volunteer EMS
System a success and our EMS
crews very proud to serve tl'e
citizens of Ml,&gt;lgs Cou nty _
Meigs COIJ nty Emergency
Medic~ ! Services
Rnbert E. Byer
Administrator

Today in history
Toda y is Tuesday, June 3, the 154th day oll986 with 211 Ia follow.
The moon is moving toward it s new pha se_
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are MercUJy, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
Jefferson Davis , president of the Confederacy during the Civil War, in lBG!;
automaker Ranson Olds in 1864: actors Maurice Evans in 1901 (age 851.
Paulette Goddard in 19ll (age 751, Tony Curtis In 19:.5 (age611 , and Colleen
Dewhurst In 1926 (age 601: and poet Allen Ginsberg in 19~ ;age OOt .
On this dale in history:
In 1937, the Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward Vlll, married
divorcee Wallis Wariield Simpson of Ba ltimore, after abdicating the
British throne.
In 1963, Pope John XXlll died at age 81 after .a long Illness.
In 1965, astronaut Ed While made the first American "walk " in ~ace.
In 1984. San Francisco cable cars began rolling again after a 21-month,
$58 mUllan overhaul.
In 191fi, an accord between Italy and the VatiCan, concluding nine years
of negotiations, ended Roman Catholicism's position as "sole religion lithe
Italian state."
A thought lor the day : President .Jimmy Carter, In restoring citizenship
to Jefferson Davis in 19'18 - 89 years after th!' Confederate president's
death - said, "Our nation needs to clear awa~ the gu Dts and enrnitil's and
recrimlnallons of the past."

WASHINGTON ( NEA) - In the
wake of the calamity at the nuclear
ixJwer plant in the Soviet Union,
defenders of commercial nuclear
energy in this c-ou ntry have
launched an elaborate "it-can'thappen -h e re " propaganda
campaign.
But proceedings on Capitol HUi
belle their assurances of "safe,
reliable operations" at the approxima tely 100 domestic nuclear pJwer
plants. At Issue is a federal law that
dates back almost three decades.
The Price-A{lderson Act of 1957
grants the operators d. commercial
nuclear pJwer plants immunity
from federal, state and loca l
liability laws - an exemption
injoyed by no otl:l'r Industry.
The original statute committed
the federal government to paying
damage claims of as much as ~
million in the evrnt of an accident
too sewre to be fully covered by the
opera lor's insurance.
The government no bnger provides that free insurance, but th!'
law still shields the Industry from
financial responslbUity lor dam- .
ages In excess of S640 million, th!'
amount of insurance the industry
row holds.
The law also contain s a clause
suggesting that federal officials
might stiii ooil out the Industry
loliowtng a catastrophe .
The potential Inadequacy of the
industry's insurance Is illustrated
by th!' results d. a 1982 study
commissioned by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to Wentlty
the worst conceivable accident ~
terms of flnanclalllahillty .
A disaster at Indian Point oo the
Hudson River :.5 mUes rorthol New
York City, the study found, couW
cause more than $300 billion worth
of damage.

Evrn if thai never happens,
countless other pJssibUities would
require victims to IJrgo lull compensation lor their injuries because
of inadequate Insurance rover age.
This issue is now being debated
oo Capitol 1-IUI because the Price·
Anck&gt;rson Act, renewed lor 10-year
terms In 1967 and 1977, wlllexplreln
1987 unless it is extended again.
There is genera I agreement in
Congress that the current liability
ceiling is far too low, but there is a
marked lack of any consensus
about how high It ought to be.
Competing proposals range lrom$2
bliiion to $10 blllion.
The industry lobbied aggressively to keep the figure at the low
end of that range - and Initially
appeared to have succeeded . The
Senate Energy Committee approved a bill with a $2.2 billion
ceiling, while a House Interior
subcommittee recommended a $2.5
bUUon cap.
This spring, however, produced a
fascinating chronology:
AIJ'il 23: The lull House Interior
Commltlee voted 22-21 to overturn
its sutrommittee's proposal and to
raise the liability celiing to $8.2
billion - but pro-industry forces
were confident of reversing that
decision.
April :Ji: The nuclear generating
station near Chernobyl in the Soviet
Union suffered what Is believed to
be tiP worst accident In the history
rl cnmmerclal nuclear power.
AIJ'U :IJ: The Interior Committee
met again , with supporters of
nuclear power insisting that they
had lined up th!' votes required to
overturn the decision of the previOus week. The committee, how·
l'o'er, adjourned without taiUng any
action.
Some observer.; believe the

,.
'

Industry may have lost its majority
In lhe days following Ihe Chemobyl
accident, while ethers suggest that
it would have been tawdry for the
Industry to press for a vote at thai
lime, even If Its majority remained
Intact.
The bill's final form is uncertain,
but there Is no doubt lhat il """
continu e to shift the responsibility
for negligent and reckless conduct

Shawn Baker to
play in state meet
Meigs High School senior Shawn
Baker qualified to paniclpaleln the
class A-AA Ohio state tennis
tourna ment June 6 and 7 at the Ohio
Slate University court s.
Baker recently became the Orst
MHS tennis player to dalm a
district cbampioi\ShiP and also the
·first to make the trip ID th!' state
tournament . Last Saturday, Baker
earned the regional runner-up
trophy, finishing second to the
nation's fourth -ranked llivid Kass
of Columbu• Bexley, 6-1. 6-2. Baker
had d!'foated George Skesto• of

House, with $10.750 over the past
four years. Leading the industry's
list in the Senate was Pete Wlison,
R-Ca liL, \\1lh $8,500 in the same
period. To date, Wilson has taken no
Sl and on the beer blil.
Current laws already allow exclu sive regional distribution tights lor
breweries' products, provided they
don't decrease compelition among
different brands of beer. Public
Citizen and other critics deride the
industry's claim that new legislation is needed to fend off nuisance
lawsuits thai periodically challenge
the distribution networks, pointing
out thai lhe only lawsuit cited at
Senate hearings Iasl fall was
thrown ool by the judge.

Columbus Academy: &amp;4, 3-6, &amp;3, for
his seventh stra ight tournament
match win earlier Saturday.
Wlth the second place regional
fin ish, Baker will have a number
lwo seed in one of four brackets and
wtll compete In the first round
against another region 's number
three seeded player on Friday,
June 6 at ll a.m.
ll Baker can wtn his opening '"Q
matches Friday, lhe Midd!l'port
native will return to action Saturday for the state semi -finals and
fin als _

CINCINN ATI (UPII - Many
players say they are b!'tler hillers
when they become aggressive at
the pla lc, but Rync Sandberg says
the oppJsile is true for him.
Sandberg. who has 14 hits in his
lasl '!7 at -ba ts, blasted a thre!'- ntn
oomor Monda y night to spark the
Chicago Cubs to an 8-6 victory over
the C'indnnati Reds. giving the
still -st Juggling Rick Sutcliffe his
third straight triumph .
''I' m swinging at strikes," SandbPrg said. "When l gel overaggrrssivC' and start s~A'inging at

ba lls I tend to have problems. When
I go up, I'm jusl looking lor a pit ch
in the strike zone. I'm keeping it
pretty simple."
In the last SPven games. Sandberg has three homers and nine
RBL

''I'll take it . but I sure don 't
deseJVe it," Sutcliffe said after
txiosl ing his record to 4-6. " The
eight runs was the oollgame; it had
nothing to do with my pitching."
Sutciilfe, 4-li, gave up five earned
runs, struck out three and walked
five.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

tCt·run l l l i. 7&lt;{1 pm
Tt•1(iJS ll 'onY';t :' :'1 ,,, I 'hlr.•IZO d

~

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12

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from the industry to the victims and
the 1ax payers.
The very ex istence of PriceAnderson pJses a crucial question
that never has been sa Uslactortly
answered : If nuclear pJwer Is as
safe as Its propJnents claim, why is
It necessary to have a special
federal law whose only ~rpose is to
protect the industry In the event of a
catastrophe'?

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--=:1~l~

Ohio Masons have, once again .
displayed their concern for tlnse
less fonunate. Over ~ Masonic
Lodges from all over the state have
joined together to send mentally
wtarded athl)'tes 10 the Ohio
Spe&lt;" ial Olympics Sta te &amp;!mmer
Games through the Sponsor-AnAthle te program. For the third
Shawn B:lker
consec utivP year lodges were challenged to sponsor athll'ti'S at th!'
cost of $ll each. -·ll!ey responded
overwhelmingly by sponsor in g
more than 1600 Special Olympians.
for a total donation of over $49,00J.
Locally, Masons from Middleport
Lodge o363, Pomeroy Lodge n164.
"They have got to br frustratc'll Harrisonv ille Lodge li411 and Ra over there," Sutcliffe said of th&lt;•
Rt'lls. "Tilev- hit a lot of ba lls hard
right at }llQplr. I told evr ryone to
play d('{'p . l didn't want an,·one to
gel hun ."
Reds playrr-managrr PetP Rose
agreed wit h Sutcliffe's assessment.
NEW CONCORD - The Meigs
but sa id, "It' s not alway s how ha rd boys and girls track tea ms had
you hit tbr ba li . it's where and ttv.•ir seasons come to an end
when."
Saturda y in the class AA regional
The Reds have lost ttu·('{' in a row track meet a t Muskingum College
and five of thf'ir last se\·en.
as all 10 MHS ent ries failed to
"! feel fonunatr tl'&lt;'y'rp nol quality fat· the state event next
opening mo re space on us. " Rose \\'eekend .
said of the fi ve teams ahrad d. the
In the girl s compelilion, sophoReds in II'&lt;' National !J'agur's more Stephanie Eng lish was sevwes tern division . "But l' vC' tota ll~·
enth in the ~ meter dash and
convincPd mysel f no one is going to eighth In the 100, Miss ie Howard
dominat e the di vision:·
was tenth in the fOO. Jenny Miller
Lee Smith pit ched the fi nal I J-:! nearly cleared a high jump to 5-4
inninws to tl'Cord his eighlh save.
thai would have ~t her in the stale
Rl'&lt;i~ starter Bill Gullickso n. 4-o,
fina ls, the 400 and !lXJ relay teams
took Ihe loss. Gullickson lasted five iS- English. Ta mmy Gardner,
innings, gave up fo ur tllllS and Tammy Cremeans, and Charmele
sttllCk out six.
TU rne~l were bot h ninE, and the
The C\Jbs took a 4 0 lrud in the 1600 relay tea m tGardner, Jodi
fourth . Davey Lopes. Sandberg. Taylo r. Jen nt 5'warlz, and Howard)
Keilh Moreland and Lron Durham was lOth. A fout1 h or betler was
singled in succession for lbe fit•st f('edrd to qualify for the state
two runs . When Eddie Milner lrt evelt .
Durham 's single gpt pas I him for an
The Meigs boys set two new
erro r. Moreland scored and Durham went to third Jody Da vL''
squE\'ZP bunt scored Durham.
Tho Reds closed to within 4-2 in
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPII the ~XIh . Nick Esasky opened the Genera l Cupid captured the $22.~
inning with a oouble and Buddy Bell Star Poin ter series fin ale Monday
followed with his second home tun night al Sc ioto Downs scoring a
of the season. The t'uns broke a romP-from- behind win over Wild siting of 221-3 sco relt'SS in nings for wood t\ ndrf'w.
Oakridge Almahutol finis hed
Sutcliffe.
Chicago e•trnded its lead to 8-2 in third.
ThP 3-vmr-old winner. driven bv
the seventh off reliever JOl' Price on
an RB I double by Shawon DwJSton Sam Noble Ill . chm·ged up from
and Sandberg's ' three -run homer. sLxth place in the final turn to win by
a hali length in a lifetime test
hi s si•t h of the season_
The Reds trimmed the Cubs' lead clocking of 1:06.
The Super 81'1 , a $2 wager that
10 8-5 In the botlom of Ihe S&lt;'Venth
requires
a bettor Ia pick the
when Nick Esasky hi I his fill hhome
perfect
a
in
the fifth and sLxth races
run of the season, wil h Rose and
and
the
lrifecla
In the seventh race
Dave Parker on ba se.
on
a
single
ticket.
moo e it s central
Cincinnali sco red its final mn in
Ohio
debut
at
the
u·ack Monday
the eighth on a two-out single by
night.
No
one
correctly
picked the
Ron Oester and a triple by Dave
winning
combination,
and the
Concepcion.
carryover
of
$1,92.
1
will
bP
added to
Cincinnati'• John Denny ..1-5, is
scheduled to oppose Olicago's tonight' s betting pool.
A cmwd of 3, 122 wagered
Steve Trout, 2-3, on the mound in Ihe
SI'Cond game of the ser ies tonight. $'.!80,213.

•

,.,

tJ-31 at Toronlo

AJll),llilfhlan Si&lt;Jh' - Namrfl Tom ,\pk• •
rrt'fl ·~ haskrtb/111 tU.: If h.

UPNtlll - f\Oa mf'd Gal'\ t~rrt'll SOn 'I'T
rutd fO il ronr ~ .
HOC'kl'f
Dl•tmil - Hrlrasrd riJZhl wlnl! lJi1nn1
Ciaw undRoallmd'r Ed Mlo. !i~li'ra nl
r;.,Jranr to a h ·rar mntmrt.
P hl ladriphl a -

srgnm goalk&gt; C'hiCO Hrsch

loa h 't'Cit rontrar l: arquii'NI ("('niPr M lkr
Murra ~· from uw• ll;lomck&gt; l"!i IJr a tlftll·rooOO
pj('k in lhl' 19!1i miry drall. Scl«.vr
CI('I'Piand iMISLl - Tl'lldt.'l1 ]l.&lt;i nlnlh
m·rrall dn1lt pkk tu C'hK'IIgQ tlr Us lclp dralt
dlOicf' In l!Rl, I t ~ thl rd·•'lll.m d Sl'lf'('llon in
!!Hi and ~tn undlsc\US~'!l Mlount d f8Sh:
lr adMI II:'J fourth ·mu nd \A&lt;:k in I~ t1
('h!rnoo for 'rt.~ llui'lh·rotmd pk: k In M .

1.411

An~~

! ML~I. I

-

Traded

11

llllrd·round pkk In $ 1o ChlcaJ~D for a
lhlrd· round pr k In 19!J1.
New Yor k tMISLJ - TradN:I IlS ~o nd · ,
third ... nd fourtl't· round pickS In the t!lf!6dral!
to Los Ar1Rrk&gt;s lor bn4'ard Am r Al l and Its
SR'Ond·round pl:k In 1~ .
SL Louis (M ISLi - 'frllded ll.'i t:mr1 h·
rou nd pk'k In IlL' 1987 drallto LosA nwoiM for
a fourth·rouOO pick In $ .

TM'Oma IMISLI - TradPd Its llur1h·
1'0\11\1 pick in tt-l&gt; l!Bi !Taft to MlnT'il'!IOia for

Mun&gt; oomldt•ratk&gt;M.

place In l.h&lt;· Wrsl. Tir ' WhiiP So.,
lo&gt;l for the eight h lirnr inlhrit last
nine

recipient &lt;i one of the raveled Good
Guy awards.
He' ll be joined all he Diles event
by former Ohio AP sports editor
Pritz Howell, who was such a
smash hi: \\1th the remarks he
ck&gt;iiveroo at the 198.'i event . Howell
was presrnted with a "Flowers Par
The Living" plaque al iasl yea r's
!'V{!I t.
The Diles chari ty has raised and
distributed more than $50.('0J to
area projects over the last seven
years . Tickets for th!' dinner and
golf ootlng J une 2'1 -26 are availal&gt;le
at $150 and registration forms can
1:1' secured rrt area golf clubs.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
"GETTING YOU THERE SAFELY"

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
*ALIGNMEII!ITS *FIONT END WORK
'*BAmRIES *TilE REPAIR
LOCATED : MAIN ST .. RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON .-SAT.; 8 -8 FRI.
PH . 742·3088
Muter Card and Visa Welcome

'

gam(· ~

dL' spitP ;1

si" hi I

10-strikeout JX'rfDimnnH· h." .1&lt;,1

Cowley. 1-3.
A's 7.

1'igcr~

I

At Oakland . C'JiiL !Ja1e V.im~ ­
man highlightc'll a "''' 'n run first
inning with a two-m n douhlf'. and

Bruce Boehle singtt'CI homr 1•.1n
more runs to lr ad thf&gt; A' ". ():1k land
starter Olris Cocliro ll. ·~fi, wrn t

seven innings. Detro!1 stal ·to· Dan

Petry, 4-5, wal ked tl11· first tluw
men he faced , and lrfl tlr game

with a sorr left elbow aft er fac ing
four bat1ers. Reliever Bill Scht•rrer
yielck:d Kingman 's dou ble, then
walked four consr:cullvr&gt; batkrs.

Vilas makes l5th
•
appearance m
French Open

cine Lodge ~461, have sponsored 8
PARIS iUP! t -C uiiiermuVilas.
Special Olympians fro m Meigs
makmg
his loth appeara n&lt;'&lt;' at the
County (Carleton School-Meigs InFrench
Open,
could ex tend his sta)
dustries ) to the 1986 State Summer
into
the
semifinals
with a ,-ic toty
Games being held the weekend of
today
against
Johan
Krick .
June 'l/-'1! at Ohio State University
The 33-year-old llr gentine played
in Columbus.
"Such outstanding support is a his fir st tourn ament at Rolaud
tremendou s help to oor program," Ga rros com plex back in 1972. ancl
said Patty Hays , bcal Special be has since bren bac k e1·el)' yea r:
Olympics coach. "We are very Vilas won Ihe title in 1977 , his best
gateful for their generous assist- year when hC' won thC' French and
U. S. Opens ami was a finalist at the
ance. " she added .
For more Information contact Au stralian .
Patty Hays al 992-4i6&amp;'l or Ohio . - - -- - - -- - - - Special Olympics at 614-471-!ll19.
The Daily Sentin e l
P.O. Box. :'IJI, John St., Syracuse.
(USf'S lt!'i·960 J
,\ llivls lnr1 of ~ 1ulth nr dt a, I nc.

MHS thinclads conclude '86
campaign in regional session

Scioto Downs

' 'ork rlt t ' rtlllnr nla. n!Aht

three-gam e los in g st.rf'ak antlJnc-Jvr·
back into sole posst&gt;Ssion of fi1 "1

Patty Hays Meigs County
1986 special olympics coach

Ryne Sandberg continues hot Streak

The Justice Depart ment and SEC
argue that lhe beer industry which now has four brewers
controlling TI-9 percent of the
market - is the last group that
lll'eds fut1her exempllon from
antitrust laws_ The feds fear the
new law could lead to price fixing
and other abuses.
-

..

Poothall's only two-time Heisman trophy winner is making a
retu rn trip to Southeastern Ohio
an d West Virginia _
Former all -American running
back Arc!1ie Griffin has announced
that he is coming back for the 81h
a nnual Dave Diles-i\ppalachia
semi -closed golf tournament and
hi 11 billy "-' pper
" I' ve always enjoyed myself
down the re," sa ict Griffin , " and
everyonE' makes me feel right at
tnmP. So I'm delighted to he
co ming back aga in."
Griffin has pl ayed in the tourna ment Sf'Veral times and is a past

~

•

Baker will open rompetllion Friday, JWI€ 6 at U a.m.
oolhe Ohio State University courts. In I he action shot
above, Baker ii retuming a .trong forehand while
practicing oo the MlddlepJrt courts with friend and
former MHS grad, Mike Sayre.

FlRST TO REACH STATE - Melp lennls ace
Shawn Baker displays !lOme rl talml thai recently
rumed the Marauoor oenior the first lennls player In
the school's hlsloJY to reach the .tate tournament.

A unique perk _________R_o_be_rt_~_a_lte_rs
Cooperation appreciated

Downing singled ho!lll' the winning
drove in two runs to lead thr• fted
run in the bottom of the ninth .
Sox. Steve Crawford pick"! up his
"I was trying to hit the ball hard
second save. Ck'Veland starter
to lhP outfield until l had two
Neal H~a ton , 2-o, gavP up thn'&lt;'
strikes," Downing said of the
runs and seven hits in fi 2-:l innin~s
ba ses- loaded one-oul sit uation
Blue .Jay• 3, 'l'wbts I
against reliever Dave Righetti, 4-.l
At Toront o, .Jim n ancy allowed
"lllen I just wanted to make
ooly three hits over Pight inn ings,
contact. The pitch he threw was a
and George Bell belted a two-run
slider, down and in. He's got me on
homer lo lead th&lt;' Biup .Ja ys.
that pitch before."
Clancy , 6-l carried a on&lt;' hittf'r into
Yankees third baseman Mike
the ninth. Tom Hr nkr gnt his fifth
Pagliarulo tied the score 6-6 when
save_ Bert Blyleven . 4 :, , l!nk th•·
he led off the ninth with a home run
loss.
Rrewers 7, Royals 2
off t'l'lieverT.R. Bryden lor his lllh
At
Milwauke&lt;!,
Rick Man ning hit
of the season. One out later, Ken
a
two-mn
homer,
and !'aut llou lf•
Griffey singled to chase Bryden in
holder
also
druvP
in tv:n runs .
favor of Doug Corbett. Rickey
helping
tilr
Rrewrrs
snap KJns.ts
Henderson greeted Corbett with a
City
's
four
-game
winning
stJ-r-nk .
double to right - center lo knock in
Ted
Higuera
,
7-4,
sca
lt
eml
nine
hil s
the go-ahead run .
in
his
sixth
complet
e
gamP uf tht·
Elsewhere, Toronto toppled Min n('Sota 3-1, and Oakland routed season. Danny .Jackson . 2-2, \o..:r·n' '',
1-2 innings.
Detroit 7-1.
Rangers I, White Sox 0
Red Sox 3, Indians I
At
Olicago. Char lie ii•JU glt Jl
AI Boston, Dennis "Oil Ca n"
lowed
only thrl&lt;' hit s ovr·r R I .1
Boyd, 7-3, sea tiered nine hils over 6
innings, and Prt c O'llri1·n douhlr;J
2 .1 innin gs to record his fift h
hom e a first inning ru n Mond ::\
straight victory, and Jim Rice
night to 1.-,lp lhe Ftang.:•rs •·nd a

Archie Griffin will take part
in Diles-Appalachia tourney

Bigger monopoly sought _A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;_J_os-=-ep_h--=-Sp_ea_r
WASHINGTON - As meml:l'rs
of tiP Senate return from their
fence-mending at home, a frothy
controversy Is bubbling 10 a head :
A bill to give the beer Industry
broad exemption from antitrust
laws is still sitting on th!' agenda
like sweat rings left on the oor by a
bottle of suds.
The beer bill, which would allow
wholesale distributors to stake out
regional marketing monopJlles, is
opposed by an odd coalition of
ronservativi'S, liberals, th!' Justice
Department, th!' Securities and
Exchange Commission and the
watchdog group Public Citizen.
Senate Majority Leader Rnbert
Dole, R·Kan., yanked the beer bill
back from its scheduled floor
debate May 15 alter being warned
of some pJientlally embarrassing
discussion by opponents _
Some critics of the antitrust
exel"ptlon claim the beer bill has
been kept afloat for the past lew
years only by th!' flow of industry
money into congressional campaign coffers. "The panern d.
spending by beer wholesalers

By GERRY MONillAN
UPI Sports Writer
The California Angels needed
help to keep paCt' with the Texas
Rangers in the American League
West. a nd the New York Yankt'es
supplied it.
The Angels blew a 6-1 seventhinning il'ad Monday night, but
rallied In the ninth to take an 8-7
victory over the Yankees. California remained a hail-ga me behind
Texas, which t·egained sole pJssession of first place. The Rangers
defeated the Chicago White Sox 1-0,
whiiP Ihe Kansas Clly Royals fell to
lhe Milwaukee Brewers 7-2. The
Yankees slipped lo 3Y, games
behind Bostnn in the American
League East. The Red Sox def&lt;'aled
Cleveland 3-1 iasl night.
"Tough • To come back from a 6-1
deficit. go ahead, and then lose in
thP ninth - sure il's tough,"
Yankees manager Lou Pinieila
sa id. "Doubly tough."
New York second basemaJ) Willie
l~ ndoiph made his second critical
error of tho game, and Brian

Pu bli'\hl'fl cvrn aftrrn oon. Monda\'
thrnugh Fl'ld ll,.,:. 111 Coun Sl , Po·
mrroy. Ohio. b~· lhf' fJhl n Vallry Pub
Hshi ng C o mpan ~ Mtllllrnrdi a. Inc ..
Poml'TOY. Oh io 1~~6B. Ph . 992·2l:)li. SP·
cood c1a'\'\ pos!a~ r paid ,, , PQrnrrn~' .
Ohio

school records as the 400 relay team
(Mike Chancey. Brad Robinson,
Wes Howard, and J.R. Kitchen) ran
the school's best ever time of 45.4
but failed to qualify and Rex Haggy
ran a 10:19 in Ihe 3200, breaking his
own school record by more than 10
seconds but mund up seventh,
finishing 34 seconds behind the
regio nal champion . School-record
pole vault holder (12-61 Bryan Korn
cleared 12-0 and placed in the top

Mt:'m b N · l ]nl1f'd Prr'\ s l ni C'rnational.
Inland Dal lv P rf'Ss Assocl allnn a ncl rhe
Ohio f'.:cwst):~ per t\ ssotl f1 11 on :\,I tiona!
Adve rti sing Rrp rr~r nl a ll\ 'C, Branham
Sf'\1/spaprr Sai&lt;'S. 73.1 Thll'd .\vPnue,
Nrw York . St"'\1' York t11U17 .
POSTM I\S1Trt : St"' nd o lLld!r'~ &lt;:. c h n ll~f'S
l o The O&lt;~i h · Srn!lnrl. 111 Courl ';1.,

Po nlf"ro~·. Oh'ln 45ilf.l.

SUBSCHII'TION RI\TF.S

By

ten .
Belpre had tv.u regional champions as Christl Williams won the
long jump with a 17-2 and Pat Wigal
cleared 14-3.75 In pJie vault
Hartley won tbe boys rompeti lion
with 68 followed by Bl'ltairl' with QJ _
Area teams placing high included
Fairland and Sheridan with 2'2
each, tied for fifth and Waverly had ·
18. tied lor eight h.
Steubenville v.un the girls competition with 54 points followed by
Wellsville wtth 47. Sheridan was
fourth with 44.
The class AA regional is rom pJsed of the 16 individuals from 71
schools ranging from Columbus to
Portsmouth 10 SI!'Ubenvill&lt;&gt;.

O url('r 11 r

:\fntor " ou tr

Onl' \\l ('(•k

.. SI.IO

OuP Mon 1h
On P Yt";ll

.$-1.80
. ~.'ii. 2U
SI:'\GLE ('OP\'

l'Rt CE

DaJI~ ·.

SubsC"rlbf't.~ no l drs trill(.( to f.M\ th('car ·
ricr m av 1rmil in .Hh·:.~ nt t ' dil·rcl to
Th(' Da ll\ St•nttn••l on a '1. to o)l 12 mnnth
OO~l s Cr:rdlr tl'illlX' gh·pr1 •:tr • 1•·r- n t ch

mon th
\o ~ uhsrriptwn &lt;:. tl\ mJII p.-n alllf'd in
IOII' IlS WiH'I'I' h Uilll" f .trtl H "' 1 I io I' IS

.tl·all;thlr

:\ll1ll ~ ~~b~cr lptl on-;
lusitil ' Ohl tl

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1.1 \Vrt•ks ..

2ti \\'rrk s

S:i!l- 2.J

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tlut ,.. ltl e CH1io
1.'\ Wrrk s
211 Wf'rk ~ ,
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STIHJ:.

Pomeroy

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 3, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

- - - Local briefs-. - --. Authorities continue search for clues
Assoeiation will meet June 12
Leading Creek 1\"alersh('(! Associut ion lnl'. 11ill hiiH' its annual
tht• offirl' of thr Leading

~c·eting on Thu rsdaY: .June 12. 1 p.m., at
( t'('('k C'ous~..~r\'anc:,- D1st net . All mc•ml:rrs

a rp invilt&gt;tllo a !lend. ThP

office is loratrd at the intrm,·tinn of Rt. 124 and Corn Hollow Rd.

Dissolutions fi_led in Meigs rourt
Filin g fnr d1.-:solutio n ~ of thf' ir marr iagps in Meigs County
Common PIPas Court an' Mich&lt;l('l J-1 . Clint• and Linda E tlin«'. both
of Pomf'I U~, Am y ~ : li~ltx'th Hil l. :\pw ll m·t"n, and Dalf' WaUacr

ll ill. R.1cinc.
Grantf'd disso lutions wprr

!....:1\Hf'HC\"'

M.

~~lbbitt

and Angela S.

Babbit t: H('gina Mat• Da\·js and Richard \r\ 'illiam DaYis. RPgina

Davi s W ll~ l't'S!Orf'(1b~· thr rou111o hrr maick·n name Rf'gina Nan«;'.
Trrrs.1 C. Carr. Middl&lt;•pol1. h ;~&gt; filr'!l fur" divan'!' from Ronald L.
(';11-r Middlrpo11. charging gross nL-g ic.:·t of dutv and ex treme
cru clt;.·. 1\ rr straining ordf'r hJs b&lt;'&lt;' ll issut'(i ag ;.dnSt the dd('ndanl.

Sq uads answer five ca lls

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON i UPI I - Senate
Republ ican leaders say It Is crucial
10 prevent major changes to the
F inance Committee's tax reform
bill, but hint It may not tx&gt; possible
to hold off all a mendments once the
bill goes to tlte Door this week.
Speaking to a grou p of suppor·
ters. Sen. Bob Packwood, chairman
of the panel, stressed his oft -stated
argument Monday that the radical
tax plan's broad base of support
hinged on whether It was kept free
of significant alterations.
But Packwood. R-Ore., appeared
to go out of his way to dislingu bh
tx&gt;tween what he termed major and
minor amendment s that might be
offered when the Senate begins
debate on Wednesday.
Packwood. who last week said 31
senators promised to "stand firm
against any amendments of any
kind, " Monday said he now has 32
senators "who Indicate they wUI
stand finn against any major .
amendments," and avoid the "trap

tr;mspo11 .

Bible School dates announced
The Churches of Chr ist of KPnu. l.ung Bullom. Orange and
Tuppers Plains a rr supporting a smnmPr vacal ion Bible school to tx&gt;
held at thr TupjX'rs Plains Church of Christ duting the WE'&lt;"k ci J unE'
~- 1 3 from~ to 11 : 4o a.m. All children arc invitrd to attend.

President .. , _c_on_ti_nu_ed_fro_m_p_ag_·,_·1_ _ _ _ __
ior their contributions to volun t('('r-

ism. In the " ·ening. he and F'irst
Lady Nancy Reagan went to dinner
alt ho homL• of George Stevens, Jr ..
son of Holl.vwood produe&lt;'r George
Stf'V{' Jl S.

'
touchy
subject, lett ing Secretary of
State Cmrge Shultz an d Defense
Secretat·y Caspar Weinberger
mny the ball .
Reagan 's SALT 2 crcision has
strained relalloru; with the Soviet
Umon, and critics fear it \vill lead to
an arms race. Bu t Reagan and his
top ad,•isrrs say the ll'l'alv has
oo Uived its usefuiness. and appear
ready to close the txJok on past arms
control treaties wit h the Kremlin.
Meanwhile. it appeared tha t the
president \\ill not receive a report
Friday - as had been expectedfrom the presidential commission
study ing the causes of the Challenger catastrophe. Aides indicated
that Monday is a more likely da le
for the anxiously awaited report.

RPag an will fl y to Parris Island.
N.C.. Wednesday to observe a
Marine C&lt;'remony. He then will
lrmel to Gr('('nsboro, S.C. to speak
at a fundraising lun cheon for Rrp.
.James Broyhill, R-S.C.. who is
running for the Sl'al of n•liringSen.
.John P. East.
The president Is expected to hit
the ca mpa ign trail more frequently
aft er Labor Day on behalf of GOP
candidates in the hope of win ning
more Republican sea ts in the
Senate.
So far, Reagan has not spoken
publicly on his anno une&lt;'ment that
All he sa me lime. aides ruled OUI
the United Slates will no longer br a· ck&gt;cision this week on whether the
bound by the oonstraints of the U.S. shou ld oo ild another space
SALT 2 arms lim ita tion treaty - a shunle . Reagan has all but decided
decision that caused consternat ion to go a head wllh a new shu ttle, but
ammg the nation 's allies. Aides he is awaiting answers to questions
Oally ru lrd oot a nPws confcrcna&gt; conct'rni ng money, a mong other
this week. and Reagan has man- things, tx&gt;fore formally announcing
aged to avoid questioni ng on the 1he go-a head.

govr rnrnen1 mediation in a strikP

that ha s shut down 12 factories and
strained the nation's largest longdistane&lt;' operation.
An AT&amp;T spokesman said Monday thai negotia tions wit h the
Communications Workers of America were suspended "v.ilh no
indicat ion" of progress.
The director of the Federal
Medi ation and Conciliation Service
met Monday with represent atives
of the company and Its largest
union. involved in the first narion-

111dr walkout since the breakup of
the Brll System in 1984 .
Thr rnrdiatio n servlrr would not
elahorate on the meeting and the
approach coincided wit h remarks
by Lahar Sccretar; William Brock
that go,·ernment interventio n in the
strike would not be nt'Crssary.
··we have not asked for fonn al
federal mediation." said AT&amp;T
spokesman Herb Linnen. "But
we're also not going to discu ss the
bargaining issues with the media at
this point."
CWA Prrsident Mot1on Ba hr.
who met privatf'ly with regional
leaders in Wash ington Monday.
assured the 155,000 workers Iha l the
un ion's strike fu nd would provide
for picketing members "as long as
orcrssa tY."
"Before this stri kl' is over, til(&gt;
company will back down . I'm very
sui'!' of thai." Bahr, using a
bu llhorn. told ahout 50 cheering
picketers outs fdc a work sileshared
by AT&amp;T and the local telephoor
company.

CAPE CANAVE RAL , Fla.
(UP! I - Shuttle Dlght controllers
monitoring the launch of Challenger wet&lt;' stunned by the spaceship's destruction and one englnt't'r
apparently thought t~e ship might
fly free of the explosion Intact, tape
recordings Indica te.
A tape of the mission control
aud io "loop" at the Johnson Space
Center in Houston was obiB!ned
Monday after a request was made
under the Freedom of Information
Act.
The tape shows that for some 13
seconds after Challenger was destroyed , flight controllers sat in
silence, apparently stunned as they
monitored their controls, but thev
continued to perform In a professional manner.
Challenger was destroyed 73
seconds after blas toff Jan. 28 when
a rupture In Its tight-side solid-fuel
booster rockettrtggered the explosion of the shuttle's giant external
tank.
Fl ight director Jay Greene's first
I'I'Sponse came abouI 13 seconds
later when he as ked Brian Perrythe flight dynamics officer, known
as the "FIDO" - for Information
from radar on the shuttle's flight
path.
" F!DO, trajectory," Greene
ca lled in a clipped voice about 86
seconds after blastoff.
"Go ahead," Perry responded .
"Trajectory, FJDO," Gret'nc
repeated.
"Flight, FIDO," Perry answered. "The filter's (radar ) got
dlscreeting sources. We're go."
Percy's response apparently meant the radar system was tracking
multiple coniBcts as the shuttle's
wreckage plummeted toward the
otean 8.9 miles below. Wha t he may
have meant by "we're go" Is not
clear.

Issued license
Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Brent Edward George, ll.
Middleport, and Terrace Ann Gil·
liam, 16, Pomeroy; Char les Mat ·
thew Clark, 21, Middleport. and
Tammy Marie Mcfarland , 16,
Pomeroy.

Blood pressure day
scheduled Wednesday
Scipio Senior Citizens will have
blood pressure day Wednesday, 2-4
p.m. , at. the Seipio flf(' siBllon.
Pu blic welcome.

Mat1in Hughes. the CWA
executive rommittee memtw:r rpprPsenting Michigan. Ohio, lndi·
ana. Illinois and Wiscons in , said his
locals rrported "en thusiasm" for
the strike and ex pancrdplcket lines
in many locations .
" I thi nk we've got a solid strike,"
said Ann Hoffman , a spokeswoman
for CWA Dlstrlc! 1, encompassi ng
New Jersrv. New York and New
England .' "Everybody we have is
striking. at dozens of locations from
IWO·JX'rson Phone Cen ter stores up
to Basking Ridge headquar ters
with 2,00&gt; clerical workers."
Li nnen denied Bahr's assertions
that talks collapsed as the CWA 's
three -year cont ract ex ):ired Satur·
day night because AT&amp;T sought
" unwarra nted concessions" in

eliminating cost-of-living adju st ·
menl s and c hangin g job
classifications.
AT&amp;T wa nts to rrplacc the
COLAs wit h Oat wage increases,
but LinlK'n said the move is
necessary and mmmon to many
newly deregulated industries.
"Thr COLA has been in our
cont rac t sinrr 1971," Bahr said.
"OnCI" it' s out of tll're we' ll never
gel it back."
Linnen said the compan.v. which
handles 3.1 mill ion long- distance
calls a wt't'k, entered the bu sy
oosi ness day Monday with an
unspecifird numtx&gt;r of 115,1XXl
available man agers working as
operators and in factories.
"We came through It in pretty
good shape; delays in operatorassisted ca lls were sometimes a
minute." he said . "As people lUling
in lx&gt;hi nd operators gain more
experlena&gt; at the consoles, delays
will begin to go down ."
He emphasized automation and
direct dialing keep ro percent of
long-distane&lt;' calls unaffected.

of one lt sy-bltsy amendment."
coniBining the sweepin g tax over"I have not tried to pin them down haul plan was made availabll• for
as to major-minor, but we have a ttl' first time Monday. Incl uding
common understanding when I call the langu age from til(• House
them that major amendments version that was stricken by lht'
mean rate changes or significant Senate panel, it totaled 2.847 pages.
variations in the major themeofthe
The bill would drastica lly ltim
bilL"
popular tax brea ks in rl•turn fo t
Packwood also conceded that, dropping tax ratrs to th&lt;'ir lowes t
while he had won support against level in about 50 years - a
major a mendments from 32 sena · two-bracket arrangement of 15
tors; almost as many lawmakers percent and Tl pera'nl.
refused to make that promise.
Sprinkled tlu·oughout Ill&lt;' mea·
He said he had contacted 55 to 00 sure were special tax breaks that
Senate offices- meaning that up to were reta ined for various busi·
··28· lawmakers had refused to nesses a nd project s. It is es timated
support his " no amendment " that in five years those special
stane&lt;'. "Anybody who doesn't say breaks would cost the I(OVcrnment
more than S5 billion. The sp&lt;.'&lt;:ia I
yes, I presume Is a no," he said.
Senate Republican leader Rotx&gt;rt "transition rules" includ('(l in the
Dole, meanwhile, also noted there House tax reform bill approved last
year would cost about $'!5 billion.
may be some changes.
Dole said Monday he hoped floor
"I oon't think yoo can lay down
the ga untlet and say no amend- aet ion can tx&gt; completed in fi\ 'C to
ments," the Kansas law maker se-;en il&gt;g islative clays. oot others
said . "There wUI tx&gt; some. )t's up to believe ti•: dPbale may last mueh
the chaif!l'an ."
lonl(er.
The actual piece of legislation
W'hl le the bill has gathered
significant support, the proposal to
elim inate rmst tax deductions for
Indiv idual Retirement Account
contrtbutions has prompte-d the

Shuttle tapes show shock

AT&amp;T .firm says it is not
seeking federal mediation
.JOHN VAUGHAN
WASHINGTON tUPI 1- [)('spite
til&lt;' ovcrtutc. American Telephone
&amp;Telegraph Co. dPnles it is si,'king

to .death In a van May 22.

By The Bend

Ca lil"ornla authorities are lll•a l·
ing the case as a homicide.
Bryant's eharg&gt;s, all l'l'peated ly
crni&lt;'d by the Krbhnas, Included
child abuse and drug dealings to
fl nane&lt;' con,truction of their pm·
pos&lt;'d "Kris hna lnn d" spiritual
themr park.
Alt hough F'BI offi cials say they
arr aware of many of thr chargesil'vPIIl\l primarily through B:yan t
b.•fotl' his death- FBI officials and
U.S. All ornPy Willia m Kollbas h in
Wheeling say the government is not
invrstiga ling.
KrL• hna offic ials a t NPw Vrindaba n have trrn cooperating with
bo th murder cases. Gruzinskas
said.

Over 400 alumni and gursts
a ttended the 58t h annual reu nion of
Rutland Htgh School graduates al
the Rutla nd Ctvtc Center held on
Memorial Day weekend .
Highlights of Ihe banquet ineluded establishing a scholarship
fund with donations· of over $:JXI,
and a collection to pay off the new
stage C'Ut1ain at the Civic Center.
Bill Willia mson, vice pres ident ,
handled the recognition of classes
with Ed ith WllllamSiln of the class
of 1921 bring the oldest one prc&gt;scnt,
and Janet P lum, class of 1961, of
Phoenix, AriZona, traveling til&lt;'
fart hest
The etght teachers of the old
Rutland High School prrst'lll and
int roduced were Margaret Parsons, .loan Cm'der, Dorothy Woodard, Anna Ogdln , Mabel Pickens,
Martha and Janes Venarrl. and
Beatrice Rinehart.
&amp;•tty Clark Van Maire, class of
1967, and president of the associa·
lion, welcomed those attending.
Devotions were given by Robert
Smith Catherine Shenefield ac ·

l.;iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Homecoming event
scheduled Friday

Faith fellowship Crusadl&gt; for
Chrbt will conduct a homecoming
Dismissed In Meigs County Com- Friday at 7 p.m. a t Antiquity on
mon Pleas Court were the cases of Route 338.
\llcky K Peckham against Jeffrey
The program will fea tu re theOid
0. Peckham; John C. Eblin against Time Rellglon Singers and Chrb·
Ellen K. Eblin.
tlan Believers.

r-------------------------1

Veterans Memorial
Admit ted - LaWJ'('nce Klein,
Pomeroy; William Young, Ru·
tland; Jennifer Friend, Syracuse:
Charles Beegle, Racine; Elsie
Westfall, Ravenswood; Bernard
Rairden, Hartford, W. Va.: F rank .
Wolford, Vinton.
Discharged- Hui!h Leifheit.

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companied the group on the piano
for singing of the Rutland High
School song, written by Martha
Bolton Agler, class of 1928, and
dedica ted to Mrs. C.O. Chaplli&amp;n.
Lori Snowden Ba rnes, MHS classof
19tll, gavr the secretary's report ,
and Kelly Brown Lambert, MHS
class of 1982, gave the treasurer's
report.
Officers elected for 1987 were
Joan Snowden May, president;
Ma rie Li ttle Birchfield. vice presiden t: Kimlx'rly Birchfield Wilford,
sec r etary; a nd Opa l Dyer,
treasurer.
Theme of the hanquet was "Up
Whef(' We Belong" using white
clouds, blue and silver stars
accented wit h three large stf('ame r
chandeliers hung from the C&lt;'lling.
Blue and white balloon arrangl'·
ments were used as centerpieces
for the banqu0t tables and a large
lighted star tx&gt;hind the speaker's
table was enhanced wit h balloons.
Th0 hallways and registra tion
tablPs werP decorated In the old

school colors, red and black, with
strea mers and large red and black
ba lloons accented the doorways.
Music was provided by Gary
Link of Ft. Myers, Fla. The
pmgram was printed on blue
placements underneath a picture of
the old Rutland High School drawn
by Ken Van Matre, 13 year old son
of Betty Clark Va n Maire and Sa m
Van Maire. Table favors were
provided by F rank Herald, Pizza
Dans, McClure's Dairy Isle, and
Pleasers.
Door prizes were awar crd to Tim
Leiving from Rutland Furniture
Co.. Wanda Cross from Dairy
Dellte. June Likens from Quality
Print Soop. Lou ise Johnson. Ru·
lland Depatmtent Store, Unda
Riffle from Millers Grocery, Judson P rice fm m Hunter's Fu neral
Home, Ca rol Woodruff from Bank
f, Allegra Will from the Rutland
Furnituf(' Store, Mary Tillis fmm
Hysells Garage, Edith Williamson
from the Sandy Smith Gift Shp, and
.Janet Plu m from the Rutland

Furniture.
Allen ding

Among the rut-of-&lt;:aunty alumni
and guests returning for the reunion
were Garnet and Leland Moore.
Canton: Russell Little, MUlersport
David Carson, Loveland: Thelm a
and Myron Halley. Wilmington;
Pauline Rife, Bidwell: Harry
Plummer , Carroll; James Hewitt .
Co!umrus; Bobby an d Rosemary
Pope, Newark; Karen Gilkey .
Athens; Reva Cox, Akron; Jack C.
Barton. Columbus; Lowel l and
Marga ret Vance, The Pla ins;
Virgil and Juor Likesn, Woodridge.

n.

Steve and Carol Brewer , Grove
City; David Mar tin. Westerville:
Arnold and Thelma Riggs, Rose·
ville; Edna German Wicker. Gal·
ion; Mr. an d Mrs. Dana Barton.
Rocky R.iver; Sa m Hicks, Jr..
Vinton; Ancil B. Cross. J ackson:
Barry and Frances Gmgan, Lon
oon: Cecil E. Rathburn , Col umbus;
Danny Holliday , Lebanon: Mr. and
Mrs. Dean K. Will , Columbus:

Roy and .Jane Cremeans, Bucy rus:
Ceorg-e White, Reynoldsburg: Dorot hy Emmons, Brookville; Bury!
and Evelyn White, Circleville; Noel
and Shi rley Hysell , Co lumoos;
lJdv id Shiflet, Pa taska la; Jim
i.lanctt. Marlon: Dena Hoffman .
Port Charlotte, F'la.; Kay Cadwal·
Iader. West Union: .John Brogan,
Hurrican.-. W.Va.: Bonnie Knapp,
Springfield: Sue Nel•on Grate,
Columoos: Georgia E. Ward, Columbu s; Melvin and Rose Cleland,
New Knoxville; Melanie Simons
Dudding. Athens: F'rank and Pam
Colwdl. Vinton; Dorothy Rath·
bum. Orient; Ronald and Marjorie
Rife. Alba ny; .J udy Stewart Herrmann, Frazcysrurg; Norman and
Marcella Hysell . Grand C'han, II .;
William and Dolores .Johnson,
Carroll: Lloyd and Pa tricia Nelson,
South Point. Hent}· and Grace
Haven, W.Va.·: Oorot h:'&lt;J and Mar - McKnight. Columbu s; Thomas and
shall Phil lips. Columbus; Eleanor Shir ley Brewer. Spr in gfield;
NP!son, Marion; AI! red and Eunice• r.eorge Rice. Dunl ap. 11.: Richard
and Nancy Haddox. At hens: Ro·
Du ff, Athens: Larry F'clly. Galion;
Dana and June Hysell , Grove City: bert and Evelyn Hi ll. Day ton.

Eleanor Wiliamson , Circleville;
Don and Rose Madden, Marysvllle.
Ka thy Yarbrough, Shade;
Sharon Bmscholl•r. Cygnet: Pall)
R.ife Hoffman McCort, Pu nta
C.orda, F'la .; .Jo hn and Elena
Thompson, Akron; .John IV .• Jeffl'rs.
Almny: Edna .lane Stanley F'avrean. Daytona Beach, F'la: Margarel Brewer Wess. Grovr City:
Paul and Etta Browni ng, Colu mbus; Robert and Hazel Romine.
Columbu s: F'ioyd and Glenna
Griffith, Galloway; Micha&lt;'l and
Bonnie Nicholson, ln dianapoli·
s,lnd.: Lucy HPss. Canal Winchi"S·
fer: Harold !leva Woodruff,
Colum oos.
Ernest and Huth NPlson. St.
Cloud . Fla .; Dwight M. Brown. St.
Almns, W.Va.: Mabe l W. PickPns.
Mason . W.Va .: Fk•tl)· Miller Levl&gt;.
Wesll ak c; Pa tty Young Clark. Nrw

Legislative
action for
•
semors set

Piano recital conducted at church
The plano student s of Vl'ra Jam•
Holliday presented a recital Sunday
afternoon bt Tr init y Chu rch ,
Pomeroy.
The pmgram opened wit h Bar·
bara and Sarah Ancrrson playing
duets, ".Japanese '!by Man" and
"Quk k Step March" followed by
Krbten Frederick, "Step Along
March. and "King's Ma rch." Va larie Connolly present('(! "Starlight
Waltz" and "llte Crea l es t Love of
All ", Cass Cleland. "Parade of the
Pu ppets": Jason Evans, 'Playful
Poodle" and "Evening Bells". and
Becky Meier, "Lollipop Waltz" and
"The Rose."
OthPr selections by Mrs. Holli·
day's stud&lt;•nts were "Dancing" and
"Sw.t ns oo Ill' Lake" by Anne
Brown; "The Sun is LLow" and
"Circus Parade" by .loy O'Brien":
"Pony Hick'" and "Bubble Blues"

214 fAST MAIN
POMEROY
992 -6687
State Auto
Insurance
Companies

r~mo~s:t~ou~t~ci~'Y-·---~---~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ground oontrol mgi neer N.R.
TaltxJII then told Greene that radio
contact with Challeng&gt; r had been
lost.
"OK, all operators, wa tch you r
daiB carefully," Greene said.
Su rprisingly, about 3J seconds
alter the expl osion, Perry told
Greene "untO we get stuff (com mu nica tions I back, he's on his cue
card for abort rrodes."
That ap pears to show Per ry
toought communicat ions might tx&gt;
rrstored and that Greene should be
advised commander F'ra ncls
"Dick" Scol:f'e and co- pilot Ml·
chill' I Smith had rue ca rds taped to
the cockpit mntrol panel for an
emerg&gt;ncy landing.
The early phases of Challenger 's
launching were normal and little
was sa id in mission control other
tban to confirm that the ship's three
liquid· fueled main engines were
perto rming properly.
When the main eng! nes reached
full power about 66 seconds aft er
lau nch, Grt't'ne told astrona ut
Richard Covey, the "capsule com·
munlcator," or "capcom." to ln·
fortn the crew that the control
center was "go" and all systems
looked normal .
The fa tal rupture in Challenger's
rtght·slcr rocket already had
begun, but the engineers had no Pt...,m ,.. : ~r 1•J 1 ·r -- .' "\ ·
way of knowing that and there •~ tn ttl€ Cc. - N~rl ·. ~ r _rc-·
would have been nothing til&gt;y could :J rCil CI 0 1 e1r ' '". t. ~r 11
have done to pre-;ent the disaster. a.,j ._. ~·rc c ~···e ~::.- r "
j !U ·~ · :a . :r,.-.! J•cr
"Capcom, go at throttle up," ri"I~OO' 'JI-.t&gt;t~ •·erv
,L..'' r . L r ~r&gt;
Greene said to Covey.
"Challenger, go a t throttle up,"
Covey then told Ire astronau ts.
Sco!J&gt;e responded about 70 se·
mnds a fter launch : "Roger, go at
throttle up."

Dismissed in court

Hospital news

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Page- 5

Rutland alurn!J.i, guests, gather for annual reunion

GOP leaders: 'Stand firm
against changes in tax bill'

Fin' calls wr rP answprcd by local units Monda;.·. tllf• Meigs Cou nt;.·

Emrrg{'nl';. M0dical &amp;' n· ic(-'~ reJXJrt s.
,\1 1: 3(1 p.m. Poml'ro~· t&lt;XJk Lawn•n"' Kldn from Wrb htown Hill to
\'rtPrans Mcmorinl Hospital: Rutland at 7:4o a.m. took Arthur
Musser from Main St. to Holzer Medica l rr ntcr: Hacinr at 7:54
am .. took C'li fford Rer!(le from Dorcas to Veterans Memorial
llospilnl; Racim• at 1: 54 p.m. took Mikl' \'anMetrr from the
Southet·n Junior High ballfield to Holzer MroicaJC'cnter: Midd leport
at 9: 14 p. m. trralrd Robert Krnnr&lt;J~· on South F'ounh St .. but did not

•

they acknowledgf.'d the two ownro
pmperty ncar Vrindaba n.
And while aut horities wou ld not
say If the Drescher case b
co nnected with last month' s
murder rl. dissident Krishn a fol·
lower Ste-;en Bryant in California.
Gruzinskas indicated a link Is
JXlSSible.
"It's stU! pretty confusing," he
said.
" We' re still working closely with
Ca liforni a tauthorit ies l. Wt•'d hate
to stick our · foot in il t.lhP
investigation! a nd hincrr it" by
commenting.
Bryan t. who advoca t&lt;'d assassl·
nation of Krishna gu 111s he claimed
had usurjrd JXl'M'r, was found shot

MOl!NDSVI LLE. W.Va. tUPI) community after Sa int Dcnnis, 30,
- Authortt les are quietly looking was reported missing eight months
into the munder of a Hal'(' KriShna earner. At the time of .the search,
devotee in West Virginia a nd the autoortt ies said they believed Saint
appaf('nl slay ing of a Krishna . Denis had been shot by another
malcontent in California, trying to Krishna devotee, bou nd In logging
determine If a connt'Ction can br chains, and dumped In Burrhes
fo und.
Run Lake near Limestone.
Last · week. sta te · [J(iu~ · at . At the time r:l. last year's search,
Moundsville a rres ted Thomas according to state pollee SJXlkesDrescher of Ravenna, Ohio, for Ihe man J.D. Gruzinskas, It was
1983 murder of devotee Charles believed Saint Denis was killed
Sa int IJ&lt;&gt;nis, after probable cause either over a dispute Involving child
was found to connect him with the a buS!' or over a personal financia l
slaying.
matter.
The victim 's body was never
No other details have been
recovered. But authorities tx&gt;lieve divulged.
he was slain J une 10, 19&amp;3.
Although Krishna officials said
Scuba divers probed a lake near neither man ever was a resident of
the Krishnas' New Vrindaban the Marshall County community,

Tuesday, June 3, 1986

by Aim£&lt;? Lemley; "The Chimes"
and "Sc hool Time Tu ne" by
Heather Knight : "Bubble Gum"
and 'Ttl' Rose" by Danielle Crow;
"Cou nlly Garcrns" and " thl'
Ca ndy Ma n" by Sarah Ancrrson;
"Space Walk " and "The Road
Runner" by Jered Hill; "Chop
Suey' and "The Stl'!'amliner" by
Nathan Brown .
Michelle Young played 'Taco
JIX'" and 'Cartwheels"; Amy
Searls. "Fairies' Harp and "Candy
Striped Caroust&gt;l": Carrie Willi·
arns. "Minuet" by Mozart and
"Spanis h F iesta": Brad Anderson.
"Pirate fsland" and "Theme from
Star Wars"; Tren ton C'leland.
"Ja7.z Band March"; and Robert
R.ichmond, " March Mll itaire" a nd
" Dublin Town ."
.Jennifer Cross play('(! "Minuet"
by Bach and "II Wa s Almost a

Song"; Marsha King, "Jocularit y"
and "Reunit ed"; Nikki Meier,
theme from " Ice Castles". and
"Scat Boogie"; Kelly Stewart .
"Dbtan t Bells"; and Nadia's
theme: Lisa Poul in , "Nightenga le
and the Cuckoo" and "Sunrise,
Sunset": Tricia BaPr. "You Light
Up My Life" and "Moths"; Carl
Williams. "Mu sette" a nd "The
Entertainer"; .John Evans, " Bal·
lade" an d ''Boy fmm New York
City", and .John Ancrrson. "Spinning Song"; an d Barbara Ancrr son, "Arabesque" and "Music Box
Da ncer. "
·.
Six of Mrs. Hollid ay's students
participated in the Ohio Music
Education Assoca tlon contest wit h
all m:eiving excellent ratings.
They were Robert Richmond wit h
"Dublin Town", Marsha King wit h
"Jocu larity", Kelly Stewart wit h
"Dis tan t Bells". Carl Williams wit h
" Mu sette", John Evans with "Ballade", and John Anderson wi th
"Spinning So ng "
A reception was held followin g
the recital for the st udents, their
paren ts and frie nds.

' Senior ..clt lz('f( S from Meigs and
Athens cou nties wUI tx&gt; plrtlclpa ting man OJX'n forum. "Legislative
Action and You" on Thu!5day, at
10: .10 a .m at the Meigs County
Senior Center in Pomeroy.
Following a brief presen tation on
stale and national issues a nd
legislation . alft'Cting olcr r people.
the partic ipants wil l be voicing their
m n&lt;I'rns on fu nds lor senior
centers. meal programs, and home
care. I3J&lt; reform. health care,
cri me prevent ion, housing a nd
Alzheimer's Dtsease.
Rrp. Jolynn Boster and Sen.
Oakley Collins \\ill participate in
tbr forum . Ideas raised at the
forum will also be discussed In
crtail with the sta le iegblators at
the 1986 Governor' s Conference m
Aging in Columbu s in June.
The meet ing is open to the pu blic
and is CO·SJXlnsored by Buckeye
Hills. Hocking Vall ey Regional
Dcvelopment District and I he )()('a!
Council on Aging.
Reserva tions for a lu ncheon to
follow the meeting are to br made
• hefol'l' Wednesday .

,'.';&gt;,'

Hoschar
birthdays

-·

··-.......-

'

-.:

Ju!ilin and Ashley lloschar

George a nd Rt'ne&lt;' Hoschar
en tertained recently with a party in
observance of the birthdays of
J ust in, thrl'l' on May 23. and Ashley.
two on May 26. Cake and Ice crea m
were scrvrd folowing a barbecue.
Attending were George and Allee
Hoschar, Beverly, Bradley, and
l )·av is Willford, Belinda and Bil ly
Souisby, Arnie and Travis F'rlend,
Rhonda, Jodi, and Dale Gibson.

Community calendar I area happenings
.I

~
j
I

line Chapt er 172, OES. Thursday at
7:30p.m. Officers are to wear tbrir
chapter dresses: slides will br
shor.om on the OES Home and a baby
shower will be held.

yard t·eunlon wUI he held Sunday at
Roya l Oak Park in the recreat ion
IllUding. There wil l tx&gt; a basket
dinner at noon. All relatives a nd
fi·iends are inv ll ed to attend.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fer ney·
Brnnell Post 12ll and Auxlliaty,
American Legion. wil l honor three
World War I veterans. Tom Tomer,
Wa lt N Rum:r. and Rodnt')' Downie.
and scvet·at old mc•mbrrs having
birthdays at a dinner, 6 p. m.
Wrdn rsda ~ at the hall.

HOCK SPR INGS - Sa !isbuty
To\\nship Trustl'&lt;'S will m£&lt;?1 at 7
p. m. Thursday at lhf' township hall
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.

Carleton Appllcatkms

POMEROY -A Social Sccutity
tc prcsentat ive wi ll br alt he Senior
Cit izens Center on the st'Cond and
fourth Wf.'dnesdays. June 11 and 25,
from 10 a. m to noon. This is a
change from the regularly scheduled visit s.

REESVILLE - Olive Township
Trustees meeting Thu rsday, 7:30
p.m. at Reedsville F ire Station

TUESDAY
RLJTLAI\TI - Rut land Villagf'
Coune il will meet .June :1 at 7:30
p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.

PAGEVILLE - A mlsslonaty
meeting wlll br held Wednesday a t
7:30 p.m at the Pagrv ille Town hoUSI' with Dorot hy Conrad as til&lt;'
speakPr. The RPv. David Farrell ,
pa stor. invites the public to attend.
TIRJRSDAV
POMEOHY - Meel

SYRACUSE- Meeting of Meigs
Assoc iation for Retarded Cit izens
will br held at 7 p.m. Thursday at
the Carleton School.

MIDDLEPORT - St01y hour for
pre-schoolers at the Middleport
Library Thursday at 2 p.m.
FRIDAY
POME ROY - Trad it iona l quilt
show an d sale wUI tx&gt; held Sat urday
and Sunday at the Senior Cit izens
Center, noon to 6 p.m each day.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The annual Vine·

All-American
Norman Matson has been named
an Academic All-American by the
National Secondary Education
CouncU.
Scholars must earn a 3.3 or tx&gt;tter
grade point average and be recommended by an instmctor, counselor, or other qualified sponsor. He
was recommended for the national
award by J ennings Beegle, E nglish
Teacher. His name wUI appear in
the Academic All-American Scholar Directory which Is published
nationally.
Norman Is the son ol Ken and
Donna Matson and the grandson of
Charles and Marie Bush and Eloise
Matson, Racine. 1

SYRAC'USE - Syracuse res i·
dents have until J une 19 to file
applica tions for the Ca riE'lon Scholarship Progra m. Applica tions for
scholarships may tx&gt; picked up at
the John Lisle residene&lt;'. Chu rch
St. , Syracuse.
Lllester Alumni
CHESTER - Th&lt;' annu al Ches·
IPr High School Alumni banquet
an d da na&gt; will be held Saturday at
the school with lhe banq uet at 6:30
and 1tr dan ce a t 9. Reunion classes
are 1921, 1926, 1931, 10.'1&gt;, 1941, 1946.
1951 and 1956. Reserva tions may tx&gt;
made wit h M ax in ~&gt; Whitehead,
378-6294 or with Nellie Parker,
985-~.

Quilt slt!w
POMEROY - Traditional quilt
show and sale will tx&gt; held Saturday
and Su nday at the Senior Cit lzens
Center, noon to 6 p.m.

ROCK SEMINAR - The nationaDy known Peters Brothers will
conduct a Trulh About Rock semin ar at the llejok ln g Ule Baptlst
Chureh beginning at 10 a.m. Su nduy morning. The ~'minar which
exposes the Ute styles of lhe rock !tars and t!Eir ly rics i; open to the
public and l• both for aduls and teen-agers.

Seminar on rock music planned
The nationally known Peters
Brothers will br conducting- a
semina r at the Rejoicing Lifl'
Bapt ist Church, 3.1.1 North St'Cond
Ave., in Middleport Sunday .
Known as some of r()('k music's
most articulate crit ics. the Prtrrs
Brot hers hard-hitting live seminars, conducted in 40 statesandrighl
count ries, have been experienced
by over l.lrn.OOO people world"ide .
Th£' Peters Brothers have madr
television appearances wi th Dan
Rather on CBS £'Vening news: Tr'!l
Koppel. ABC Night line; PM Maga zine and most recently with Pal
Robertson on the 700 C'lub.
The loca l Sl• minar is set up for

both Ir&lt;'ns and adu Its and is open to
th&lt;' public. HI'\' . Ylichael Pangia,
pastor of tht• local ehurc h rcpor1s.
11lf' I\\'O·hour prPSf'ntat lon which

lrg-ins at 10 a.m. Sunday will
consist of a sliclr pr~rnt a tio n on
rock co ncert ~ ancl album CCJ\'(' I'S
cmd a ~f'Cond Sr&lt;' lion which t\'i \1
cover thr goals and lifr ~ly le s of
many rock start s. A t hlrd sfXtion
will strrss thr dtkct ~ on tn:n-agrrs

and

JX'CT p rl'~su If'

Weekend guests
Mr. and Mrs. l.m nard Ru ~' of
Cl('' ·rland wrrl' ttl• Mr morla l Da~·
lr('('kf'nd guf'!i'!S of M ~·s . Ccnl '\'lf'\'f'

Mrinha rt and Mi.' s ErmH Sm ith .

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
SPRING CLEANING
SALE

10% to 50°/o
OFF
STOREWIDE SALE
TUESDAY thru SATURDAY
JUNE 3-JUNE 7

•Macrame Cord
•Yarn
•Needleport Kit
•String Art Kits
•Silk Flowers
128 MULBERRY AVE .
POMEROY, OHIO
992 -2312

Spaghetti dinner
REEDS VILLE - The Oliw
ToMlshlp Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment wUI oold a spag hell i supper
from noon.to 6:30p.m. on Sat urday
al the RredsviUe F'il'£' Stat ion. The
menu includes spaghett i, roll .
salad. crssert and drink. $3.50 lot·
adults and $1.50 for children. The
gospel-co untry s inging group,
"Blue Knob ExJress" will petiorm
from 7 to 10 p.m.

~::::::::::::::::::::======~

POSITIONS NOW
AVAILABLE FOR WALKING
CARRIERS IN MIDDLEPORT
GRANT STREET AREA AND
NORTH SECOND STREET AREA
IF INTERESTED IN DELIVERING
THE DAILY SENTINEL, PLEASE
CALL 992-2156.
•

OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKING
Are you in need of job skills? The
Adult Education Center at TriCounty Vocational School may
be able to start you on the way
to a rewarding job through one
of its 12 Adult Vocationcil Programs. There will be a meeting
at the Pomeroy Community Action Agency office, 117 West
Second St. on Wednesday, June
4th at 2:30 p.m., to explain the
programs as well as financial
aid available.

�Tuesday, June 3. 1986
-~The

Deily S..tinel

Pomeroy-Middjeport. Ohio

Wolf Pen notes

,.

• '•

Ray1111 Young

Birthdays celebrated together
Sa mantha Sisson and Rayan
Young ~njoyed a joint ~ ig hth
blr1hday party with th~ ir fr iends
Friday.
The honorres and their gu~ts
tra·,eled to Coolville where they
took a tour of the Middleton Doll
Factory. Each received an hooored
gu~t ribbon and a mlnlatull' Bibl ~.
From there they went to Parkersburg for a party at Show Biz Pizza.
A prize was awarded to Jennifer
Lawll'nCI'.
Attending were Pete. Sherry. and
Joyce Sisson. Billy and Rarnora
Young, Megan Clark .. Jennifer and
Jason Lawrence, Kelly Swisher,
Alicia Haggy, Rochelle Jenkins..
Mandy Mills, Kim Cornell and
Palma Wiles.
Unable to attend bur sending gi fts
were Jyl Matthews, Jonna Manuel.
Carolyn Richardson. Ketlcring:

Public Notice

Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Young.
Sidne~· ; Bill and Linda Lambert ,
Middlepmt Mrs. Elmotl' BoiCI',
Norm a and Myrtis Parker.
Pomeroy.

Grads named

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Meigs County FMr Hou ..
ing Progrwn proiTilt81 IICJIII
oppor~~Jnily ltouolng for a1
Moigl County -~~- The
progr.m seeb to:

1. Allure fun hauling opportun;ty for 1M ltome-saok. . in

Slinderella meets

Moigo County:

R.efr'e;hments

servfd

W£'r e

by Mindy

Spmcrr and AmUy Dixon.
'IlK:&gt; May 6 meellng was allendro by ll
rTK'1'11bers and 1 advisor. Members were
remlnUed ot ttk&gt; May 24 wel2h·ln whlchwUibr
bE'tween9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Th e clu b was told
r1 a JXW rule - each lamb has ro gain Zi

poonds from May ~ to August 12. and wor k
was dlne on project books.
Ja}'TE Ann RJtchle and Tracy Bee21c
served refreshmen ts. TilE' next meeting will
~at Lor1,Srot1, and RandyBW'k£''sonJune 3
wt.?re memlx&gt;n will contribute to work on
JXUject lx!oks.
Randy Burk€'
N('Ws FU&gt;porter
Eight Is Enough 4-H O ub mct May 16 at tiE
Chester Methodist Chw-ch with 7 membt&gt;rs
and 2 advisors ~esent . Memlx&gt;rs discussed
wOO would attend 4-H camp. Susan Wolre
gave a report oo reroMtructing a room.
For ll'freshrnellts. Sarah Harris served
p.lnch and trowru es. The next m('('tlng wlll

takf placf' m June 10 at 1::11 at Chest«.&gt;r
Meti'IOt.lbt ctrurch. Melissa Miller will bP Jn
dW'gt of retreshrrV&gt;nts and Carrie Morr\SSt'y
M.ll gtvl' a &amp;&gt;mMstraUon at thf' June 10
mf'E'flng.

Elizabeth Bn-·ant
N{WS

Repor1Pr

HarrlsOnvUJe Busy Beavt"rs met May 8 at
Carol Hamoo's homr wlth 9 members and .1
adv\sors artendlng.
Members c8:kSed on having a ya rd sale and
bake sale to raise money for thE' club and also
&lt;lscuSS&lt;d having a oka!lng pan y.

Advtsors

Yt1!11t

over mch puji;'Ct ttlattlx'lr

membt!n: are I aklng.
Atter f't'tTt'atkln , Ca rol Hamon served
relre!ihll1E'fats. Advisors will send a lf&gt;fter to
mch membl"r telling them about da l£&gt; for n£'XT
meeting.
Larry Faw
N("Vo's f«tport£-r
Better Livestock DairyOub met April29 at

the ExtE&gt;nSion crtlce; 1 advlsor and R
mtmbers aHendl'd.
'I'he club hec&gt;l.d memorials for Sandy Harden
and Bob Lef&gt;. l&gt;l..srussi&gt;ru; In cluded swt'l'P'
stakes for (alr and requlrpm('f'lts for the dairy

""'project ~'lemllf"rs voted to sf"! If('(' cream
and rniJk at ltv&gt; falr.
Next rm&gt;eting fi May L1 at Exl . DrfiCf':
evt'l'yCilt Is to aHI'Tid thf&gt; project clinic and lo
know lhf pledgt&gt; at that time.
J("ff Rosfo

News FU&gt;porter

Meigs Betlt&gt;r LlvE'Stock 4-H lAtlry Club had
a meeting on AprU 13 at the Extension Offlt'C
with 9 members and 1 advisor attm dl~ .
Me-morial trophif'S wert' clliicussed, a test
was given on the 4-H pledge, and memtx&gt;rs
wCfe ln.&lt;;tructed on the Judging of a dairy cow.
Jim Park(&gt;f ~ve a safety quiz. Chuck f)arker
~aV£&gt; a h(&gt;al!h tip . Jim Park(&gt;f servf.ld
retreshmenL'i. NPxt mff'ling Is May :9 at the
Fairground.
JeU Rose
News Reporter
May 10 was the date- The Pleasure Riden;
had a rJ'lt'('tlngwllh 3 adviSors and 2 members

attending. The club I'TlPI at Dee Cline's bJuse.
They dlscuss«l trips. taking hor-'E!S out to thf&gt;
falrgrounds to work out and having a hcrse
lk&gt;monslratton. Ilt'c' Cl inE' gaw a demonstration on Y.'Orldng with yoor foal and stnwlng
thE' parts of tb:&gt; hot'S(&gt;'S OOdy.
May 29 Is neX'! meeUng datr at Meigs
Fairgrounds where membl'rs wtll tl' worldng
with you r horses.
~ C iln f'

News Report«.&gt;r

Gang. met at the Carrrl(&gt;J Community
Bulldlng on May t9 wlth 2 aMsors and 1]
ml'mbers present. AOoat, 4th of JuJ y,andralr
parade WPre among_ the Items i:Uscussro .
Jimmy and David Deem gave fl1lOrtS CJl
wood Mlrldng and fishing. Games of Hot
Polalo and Musical Olalrs were playEII .
Rl'freshments were servt'd aher Uw JTJ&gt;etlng .
The next meeting will be hcldonJune16at ttlt'
Carrtll'l Community Building ~re !ur1h£1r
plans Y.111 bf" made on the&gt; 4th of July Parade.
Q.u-

Kellle ElVIn
News Reporter

"Dan's Bus Kids" met Ma y 19 with 5
members and 3 ac:tvtsors presl'tl t. OrrespondenCC' trom thr EX1. OfitCP was !'{&gt;ad. Th £&gt;
foiiO'W'ing- repon s ~rr giVf'n: Brtan Anderson
- 2'ardenlng: Ma rshaU Wolfe - glowf"'"
garden: John Chanry - V£1:elable ga rdenIng: M ary Chaney - sewtngbox; Randy Bing
-safety. The game of Hangman was pla~·ed
alter the mcetlng then thr ad\'\sors servf'd
rt'frrshtnt:'ll t.s. Next meeting is May 'II when a
(l('ld trip Is planned
John ChanPy
N£'\'.·s Reporter
Harrisonville ··Busy Beavers" held a
mroetlng on May 21 at the tw&gt;rrr ct Carol
Hamon. W mcmtxors and l advlsc;rs anrndcd
thf&gt; mt&gt;etlng. Members decided oo selling
stanley Producls to raise monpy for thl'rlub.
It was also dectdt'd to have a bake sale.
Advl'iOrs h&lt;'lped 111('mbers wi th projret books
and Shawn Hamon gave a n.&gt;port on
swimming and lxlatlng salety. R£'crmllon
wa~ playing a g-&lt;im e. followed by !l'frl'Shmf'nts which wen sm•ro by Carol Honnon
and MilliE' Gru~. Advlsors will ca U

Poet's corner!n~n,::,~=~~~=•,r=~,=~=oo:mo,:,:,p~.,ec
Spnlcllme llllhr Country
Keartng the SOilnds of Spr!ng!lme
As I Bland In the yard 'neath a tree:
Pausing lrom daytllll(' labors.

Great blessings come to me.

The fq calls out to his p:~rtnE'r
From thl' pc11d bekMr tilt&gt; spring;

Wh1Je the owl starts his evrnl ng jow-nf'y
Alii his ca ll through ttu.• valleys rlnfi:.

plum and crabapple blossoms
d tbelr swt'et perfume In the alr;

~eJ..wtJd

And I vl!.km thE" wild tJQ\l.'i'rs blooming
In woodk:lts and meadOw lands fair.

Awtr)' from I~ noiSe of the city.
In thiP toontry, at close of da y;
When the workl seems aT {ra('(' around mP
Mother Nature's sounds arf good pay.

ttw&gt; country,

Yes. It's Sprlngthnl' again in

Am the SJunds ring loud and cltar:
l.Mng near to God and HJs wondf'rs,
Is a prtvlleg(' I hoJd dear.

By Elizabeth R. Jordon

.. Mmlor)o

a the-ones who've gone before..
rnE'('t

the Savior ...

PredOUS Savior, I aOOrE'.

Yes, there's memor1es of our kwi'd ones
Some are happy, «hers sad ...
1bey are still precious memor1cs.
some of mother, !Kirne of dad.

«

We blve memories our trlends..
Brottwn. listen, others too
Wbo !live pe to meet our

maker,

Heavenly Home beyond !hr blue.

Tllere are memaies, special memories.
We recoU jus! wha! they did ..
Mill)' Urnes "" may rem...ber
Solll' sweet, oo1! ...-.1 !bey oald ..
And our eyes may shed a tear
n&gt;w1Jti slowly down our lace ..
Solll'dly
...
oar loYed onelllytJtder
M' wUI embrace.

''"'r

y ... lltere'l """""""""

8Wf1. •eet mertQ'Iel.
a the one1 for whom we care,
Alldwei... ICllltOIImeourbunleno
Aft rar more than WP can bear

Juoi_J_'""""

ous

m('fllor ('S

them

e.

Marthe

Lo\'t

ht'
Dyi ng to sM us all fre£'. .
Jts ooly wr Jt&gt;Sus
Only wr Lord
WOO loved us so unselflshJy.

granted should appMr and

Plaintiff,
- VI-

FLOYD GOULD. ot el. .

Ca11 No.

24708
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
To all pef'IOnt interested in
the estate of Ntartha Robin·
oon, doceeood, Iota of 49739
S.R. 884. Pomeroy. Mo;go
County, Ohk&gt;. Mo;gs County
Probete Court, Case No.
24,708.

tnctuding. but no1

in -

form the court at that time.
The court is loratad tn the
Meigs Coonty Probate Court,

Court House. Pomeroy. Ohio
46769. Each of you l!lrft required to answer this co mplaint within 28 days of tha

last date o1 publication . The
last date of publtcation is June
3. 19B6.
Robert E Buck.
Judge
t51 20. 27 ; 16) 3 3tc

Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
o(omm•r&lt;ial Container
Service Available•

CAll 992-3194
5/ 8· 1 ono .

54 Misc . Merchandise

WANT THE BEST
FERTILIZER AT
THE LOWEST
PRICES?
BLENDED TO
YOUR NEEDS
PLENTY OF
SPREADERS
BULK OR BAGG ED

MGM Form City
POMEROY

!Tl('mbers r~ardin£ the&gt; tlmf' and datrof nC'x!
mt'{'ting.

Lany Faw
Nf'\\'S

Rl-portl:'r

Tile- Starllghters &lt;1-H Club had 11 mrell n ~
May XI at t OO p.m. a t Jared SpencN's homf'
with 11 members and I ac:h 'lo;or. A bakr sale&gt;
was SE'I tor June 5 at Kroger's and a date will
be set later for going to Camden Park.
Greta Rittle brou~U b:lby chicks and ,/al't'd
Spenct&gt;r brou~ht tls h as part ct thr projl'CI
lesson. Jared gavr a htoalth report. Garv
Hollt&gt;r gavp a wat er safety reiX)rt. Gf£'tit
RUQe Jr.!Vl' a repon on V('tcrtna ry scl('nC'f'.
and Jar«t Spen('('r - rrpor1 on Aquatic

Science.

Mrs . Kathy Spenrcr scrved r('fr~hmm t s o!

sloppy joes, !llP. fX]tato chips, and cooklrs.

Next fTl('('tlnR is sch&lt;'duled for June 12 a t
1:00 p.m. at tht' homeofGa n •Holter at which
thTit" Tim Lawson will g\\'(1 demonstration.
HO\\.'Il' La wren ('(l
N&lt;ws Rfoport(&gt;r

a

Th f' Q\K'Pn BNos ht&gt;ld a mel'tlng al T('xanna
Well's homr on May 2 u:\!h 7 mernbt.&gt;f'S and 6

advisors attending.
Lisa Hottma n d!d a report on polson Ivy and
lns('('t bi t e;~ and Kim Mlcha!:'ls gavt• a r£'port
on for('!gn objects i n the:&gt; ('V('. e&gt;ar, and nOSt'
Aft«.&gt;r recrf&gt;atlon, Ambrr Well sf'!V~
refri'ShiTlf&gt;nts. Ma y ZJ Is the date fo r til!:' next

meeting.

Usa Hortman
Rf&gt;porter

New~

Glrls Plus O!'K' 4-H Oub mrl al
the lbompson home on May 12 wllh H
1l\{&gt; Golclf'n

members and I adv1sor prese nt. A saft-t y

rll'Of1 was given b).• Tammy Qu£'Cn.
Next m('('fln£ will br May 19 aiTOOmpson ·s

"'""·

TcrPSa Plr·rcr
Ncws Rf'IX)rt('r

"Dan's Bus Kids" met on May 12 .,.,1th fl
mcmbens and 3 advisors at thP horreor Marv
H}'S('II. A it'Sl&gt;on on Photowaphy was glvf:''n

and M(llody WC"avl.'r J{avfla r{'J)Oft on hl~hwa y

safety . Frtst:«&gt; and baseball wer(l playf:'d
afler thf" mretlng, thcn refreshments v.'t"rr
served by !lx&gt; advisors. NPX! m tvtl n ~ Is Ma v
!9.

Attending lhe 59th United High
School Pr~s Convention al Mar·
shall University were Meigs High
School yearbook staffers, Tracy
McKinney, Will Molden, Tara
Clark and their advisor, Yonlece
Miller.
The groupatten!Pd workshops on
photography, layout, spor1swriting,
theme development and legal
liabil ities of higlj school press.
DL Deryl R Learning, director of
the W. Page Pitt School of
Journallsm, gave 1he M~igs stu~

Evangeline
has meeting
Plans fm· a dinner to honor
fathers was planned during a
recent meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Group of lh&lt;' Pomeroy
Chur1:h of Christ held atthe home of
Mrs. Trudy Andrews.
Brenda Venoy had dl'votlons
using "Spiritual Harvest" as her
theme. Mrs. Andrews had prayer.
For roll ca ll mf'mhers commented
on "Mol hers. " Reports wer£' given
and cards sent to the sick were
noted. The next ml'&lt;'llnf; date was
changed duP to Bible school
meetings.
Mrs. Helen Miller had · the
mission study. Anna Lockhar1 , vice
president , conducted the meeting in
the absenCI' of the president. Mrs.
LaDonna Clark had the closing
prayer. Others a ttending were Mrs.
Janel Venoy, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
Mrs. Pa uline Kennedy, Mrs. Pat
Thoma, and Mrs. Charldlne Alkire.

lllC' May .1 mPI'tln~ of "Dan's Bus Kids "
had 511'lC'mbrrs and ]advisers andwashE'Id at
!he hOrn'O(ttf&gt; ad\isor, Mary M HysE'II. Th£'
main topic of 11'5san was " Explorlf\$!: thf'
Outdoors". Mary ChaN'y gave a report on
safety In ha ndling scissors. After rN:rratlon of
Fr1.siJ['(', advl&lt;tars Sf'f'Vrd rl'l'rf'ShmC'nt~ . Nt•xt
m({'tlng Is Ma y 12.
.John C h an&lt;'~'
N {"A.'S Reportrr

1

. ..

1

some, ts Il K' ro or,

Judy Mowet y. d&lt;oughl&lt;'r ot l'arol
and Dolly Mowery . Bradbwy
Road. MiddiPport. was awardrd lh&lt;•
Crawford -Gray-Lewis Sdto l ar~hip
in conjunction with the annual
Middleport High ~ hool · Alumni
fltounion.
Mowery, a memher of 1he M&lt;•igs
High School graduall!1g class. was

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

"

"

As thl• Purplc and While.

Makf'S the night really SJlf'('ial .

~ loo lghr,

wf' Sff' an

old Ja rr.

Whose nam r we don't know.
We'll try hard to smile.

So memory's)()ljS dor.sn 't show.
wr·umake a vrm to do tx'ltC'r.
On sonr ruturt:' ntght.

lmo•

Roger Hysell
Garage
Al$o Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

992 -5SS3

,...,, -

992-6784

5·20.'86'1 mo.

) /f

3-D AUTO
CENTER
1
Ohio,

992 -6171

All Yw P•l•li•l Nud1
PIUS: Office lupplit1 &amp;

~~~

73 -80 GM

Stationer~, Magne1 i(

Truck Bed

Signs, Rubber Stomps,
Businr1s Forms,

Rockl'lr Panala

... 815
73 -79 Ford Fendtnt . . S39

Copy Serricn,

. . Full S175
Mini $166

2SS M;Ust.,

Fn EE INSTALLATIO N
2 VR WARRANTY
Sa lilltc li on O u~r•niM d
Fret Dt1i~IWV S1me Week

104 Mulberry

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

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

Addons and remodeling
Root ing and gu tter work
Concrete work
Pl umbing an d electrical
wo rk

(free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PAT HILL FORD

992 -6215 or 992 -7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15.'86-lc

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutte r Cleaning
Painting
FREE EST IMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

$10 Gift Certificate to the
1st customer with all the
answers.

ROSE EXCAVAnNG
RACINE, OHIO
FREE ESTIM ATES

Oil field Service,

115 West
Second St.
Pomeroy
992· 2294

SINGER
APPROVED DEALER

' A l&lt;~mlrlt OI IIIH 5tnqf'r Cor!,IJ.l,~

be yourself.
Ukf'l yoo W('T'f' yea rs a~o
And for tbJst" W(' don't 5«',
Th('f'~ a rmson we know .
Thf' years lake thclr Toll .
Like a thlrf In the&gt; night
But for tho54' wtn ar&lt;' hf'l'l\
Its still Purplf' and White.
By Olin D. Harrison

1· 17·86·tln

londs(aping, Basements,
land ( lea fing. Pondt, Stpfi(

Systems, Heavy Hauling,
Stone &amp; Gravel Haul ing
£1t(lri( ol

Work

R ESIDENT IAL: CO MMERCIAL
&amp; INDUST RIA L

[C t1rt1fied Etectr ida n)
DON ROSE, Owner

USE THE U.S.
POSTMAN TO DO
YOUR BANKING!
We

Pay

949-2493
Home 843.·5340
)/2]/'86 / 1 mo.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

Postage

or 742-3147

5· 19.'86·tln

POMEROY, OHIO

Bo&lt;khoes, Bulldo1en, End louder, Dump
Trucks, Sell Looding Pan, Heuy Ho.Aing ond
Winch Trucks

"' ttw pol. . troth ""'

PEOPLES BANK
Member FDIC

fl l:! •JlM!k!tflfl r\ w ,

Polnt r•te~Allanl , \\'. Va ,
tn~- m 1

:.i!h :-l l ri~·l
~i'W lla\'1'11 , W.. \ :; 1 ,
KH2·t t:t.)

WANT ADS
FOR GREAT BUYS

5 kinl!lnt

•Washers •Dishwashers

4-5-Uc

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

•Vi ny l Replace ments
e ll•" Insulated Glass

•T ilt In To Clean
•Most Window s Priced
und er '300

FREE EST! MATES

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

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

5123/'86 / 1 mo .

5 · 19.' 86 ~ I

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

the Gu•lltt

Bahre V~~- ~~J mo.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8· 13 tfn

BOGGS

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

UNDERPINNING &amp; SnUP

Sptinj Special

Authorirod John Detro,
Now Hollond, 8Uih Hog ·

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

Form Equipment

$9 5

Dealer

Farm Equl.menl
Parts &amp; Serwllce

IN(lUDEI PAINT
&amp; lABOR

•H.AQUU
•MIDALS
tGAYILS

..,

"CHAlMS

ttOW LOCA!ID II
lQ S.C..4 .-.

•)

~~

Glllpsls, Ohil

LIT'S BUILD UP TOGHHER1
•LCc.4LLY O'NNIO

•lOCAl ~BOR

• M~al Buildings
Hole
Buildinr;
.. -·
wStorage Buildings

1f%J .,

FlEE ESnMATIS

2 CAR G..........

~ . H·l Mo

(304) 773-5517 m(304) 8953386

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION
NEW HOMES,
ROOFS , DECKS ,
ELECTRICAL &amp;
PLUMBING

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

5·19.'86'· 1 mo.

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

24'x28' Complete
T·lll Siding, 2 Overhead
Wood Ooors, I Entrance

RACINE, OHIO
Office 949-2438

Ja-IKHitt

Emergen&lt;y 949-2SI 6

•BULLDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLIIIJE

992-2772

SEWERS · BASEMENTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS • MOBILE
HOME SETUPS • ROAD
FOOl'ERS • LAND

SATELLITE
SALES
&amp;

REPAIRS

"VINYl SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING

*BLOWN IN

New Hames Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
1/11 / tln

Announc ements
3 Announcements

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

367-0317

Hobson Rd, Middloport

367-7560- 367-7671

IF NO ANSWER CALL:

CHESHIRE, OHIO

992-b 17

SWEEPER and uwing machin e
·repair, pert&amp;, and supplies. Pick
~and delivery. Da'olil Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mila up
Georg11 CrNk Rd . Call 814 ·

448·0294.

..

•

·· ·p·omerov ··

Tobacco j)Ound11ge
446 - 1437 .

Call 614 .

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

992·3476 .
~Wanted to Buy new or like new
6h "' 7ft garage door with
304 -675 · 5964

or

Couple would l ike to purchaea
property clou to town . Pr efer
large build ing lot or small
ecr11age Call 304 · 675 · 4054
eveningt .

Emp lovmenl

l ·whllflllw. fr~~&amp;zer . clothing . and
m ite. Tun Ad . Krautter res id ence
Two !amity yard sale . Rt . 143
M on day June 2 . 614 -992 7227 .
Jun e 2.3,4 at 623'12 Ruuell St
Gravel Hill. Beh ind Heinera
B ake r y . O i thes . drapu.
btanllets, spread e, clothes , toolt,
jelly glasses, jart . etc
4 family yard sale. June 2.3,4. :'
9 -4 rain or shin e_lnfl!lnl s l o adult
cloth l!ls. bab'l iti!IITit , toyt. queen
theets . electr ic blanllet bedt·
pruds. draped. curtainl . oak
doors . home interior. depreasion
gins, record player. furniture.
Turn lett 1 mite south of caution
on At .7 then follow signa .
61 4 -992 -7110 .

- - - - -- - - ·lc-

large garage ute . J une 6th {II
7th . Morn ing Star Sub Divieio n,
County Rd. 30 . 614 -949 -2537.

· P'CPiiiasaiif ·
&amp; Vicinity
Yl!lrd Sale, 3 m itee out Leon
Baden Road. Wed , Thu rt, Fri .
June 4 ,5,8. Some o+d dNhes,
bic ycl e, tires
·
Yard Sale. Mon and Tuet. 9 :00
to 7 K&amp;K Lot 42 , Point Plel!lsant.
Kids clothing , SO I I!I and chair.
table and chairt .
Yard Sl!lle. Mon and Tues . 2916
Spru ce Ave . Pt Pit. 6 :30 till
5 :00 PM . Boys and gi r.la
clothing.
Yard Sale, 2106 N . M ein St .,
M 01 1 and Tues. 9 :00 till 7 Baby
Items .

3 bedroom part . furnishl!ld trailer
and 2 bedroom furnis hed trailer
on Crab Creek Road. Larg e vard.
garden plot, chi ldren wetcom l!l.
no pets, s 150.00 per month.
304· 676 · 1206.

Yard Sale , Tnursday . Friday and
Saturday, June 5, 6 and 7. lrd
and Adamt Street Mason. W.
V a. Quiltt. lull bed .
Vard Sall!l. June J &amp; 4 . tive
femili11t. coml!lr 2nd &amp; Martin.
Ma1on . W. Va . C hil dren 's
clolhM l!lnd t0'/ 1-

, 4~,5~.:1~0~·4~.::~::::~~;:==~==~========~
~~J~u~n~o~3~
11 Help Wanted
12
Situations
Wanted

11

Interested in full time employ ·
mttnt. submin applicaTion to
M ·G TRANSPORT SERVICES
26 7 Upp&amp;r Rive1 Rd .. Gallipolis
O h . or 61.--446· 2161 .
Ell.p11rienoed ~rpenter . St arting
sala ry 66 .00 per hour. Send
resume to Boll 100 S. c-o Daily
Sentinel. Pomeroy , Ohio .
l ead Guitarist tor roctc. metal
bend . Call 614 · 992 -5381 . Ask
for lee.
Help wsnted . Dey or night in
private home caring for elderly.
Call 614 -992 -35 9 5.
Salesman Tl!llema!l,,et ing They
call you . E•cl!lllent earn ingt .
Perfe ct reti1eet -Anyone. Kay
Brown 1· 91 3-539 · 3367

Se rv~ce s

·

Contractor

"free Estimates"
Installation Availab,le

52 1 Hilda 01 . Wed . thru Sat .
So m e furnitur e, ctothjng ,
womens 116-201 misc.

Call 614 -

~7; ·

Mila B. Hutchison

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

Va rd Sale 1 mi. out 141 . Thurs .
&amp; Fri. 9 to 6 . M etal bed . clot hes
hamper. ptctu re. cha11 . clot hing
and m1sc.

Tobacco poundage
256 -1612 .

hardwar e.

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY

,,.J~.C.tron: (~
··A~Jr l&gt;-J~" !PJJ,A1

9

1 108 Sunset Dr . Wed . &amp; Thurs.,
4th &amp; 5th . Chtaned out attic of
1"10 yr . old housl'l. I tems too
rnun erous to l ist 50 baby
dresses 25 cAnt to 51

446-1841
304-89 5·3812.
'------'-'-=-=.:.;:...J,

992-3361

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Afhrr S Call
742-2027

6 family gar&amp;ge ule 2.3,4.

3 Fam ily Yard Sale 1 mi. out
141 June 3 &amp; 4. Clothing and
baby itemt .

Bu"ti ng daily gold, silver coins.
ringt. jewelry, starting ware. old
coin&amp;. larg e cu rren cy . Top pri·
ces. Ed. Burkett Ba rber Shop.
2nd. A'.le . Mid dleport . Oh . 614 -

•PINS
•JIATS

•All SIZES AVAILABLE

5· · ·tfn

--....:.-----,·rc-

Gl!l rage Sl!lle Cl!ln tenl!lry - corner
At 141 &amp; lincoln Pike. Thurs
Jun e 5 , 9·00 -4 :0 0 . Rain date Fri
6th.

Fou nd set o f keys May 16 th .
ident ify and pick up at Point
Pleasant Reg ister. 200 M ain ST .

We p ay cash tor lela mo del clean
usad can
Jim M ink Chev.-Oids Inc
Bill Gone Johnson

810 Sou1h Second , Middlaport.
June 2-7 . Furniture, bedding ,
linent, avon dith et, pots. pans.
toole, cloth in g, drapet , curtaint,
toyt, jew elry. tampa. t ilverware.
towels . figurin es

EXPE RIEN CE D DE CK HANDS

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

FENCE COMPANY
PH, 992·6931

Ga rage Sale Junction oi State
Route 7 &amp; 218 _ Thurs . &amp; Fri .
June 5th &amp; 6111 . 9 -?

Wanted To Buy

9-·1

In&amp; ide sale J un e 2,3, 4 from
a1 832 E. Main St. Pomeroy,
Childrens and adult clothes an4
much misc.

388-9303

Phone

ACCENT.

6

Wl!lnted junll aut os . Ca!l 614 -

:I: licensed Clinical Audiologist

CALL 667-3271

Kittens ro a good home, 304 675 -7242 .

Wanted Ia buy water proof utili ry
tui le1 Call 61 4 - 446 -4525 .

·i:5 LISA M, KOCH, M.S.

-z

Yard Sail!! Wed.- Thufl . If! mile
out Orchard Hilt Rd . Cano py bed
lull size and clothes

Ca rpo rt sa le: 918 S Third
M iddleport lu es ; Wed ; Thur.

-az:

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Custom Design
Service

Garage Sale Thun ., Fri . Bulavilte
Ad . H end . garden tools, king size
baffle water bed m attrefil.
cro cks. misc.

2 Fam ily Furniture , househo ld
good1, toys. mis c. June 5-7. 1
mil e out At. 141 oo lett

mo .

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
C!l Co1111uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

Yard Sale 506 Meple Or .. Spring
Valley Sub. Jun ~t5 th . 6th . Thun
&amp; Fri .. 9-5. Childrens thirl g s, etc .

M o vin g Sale 131 3rd . Ave
Every thing m ust go. Wed . June
4th . Cencel if rains.

Want lid to buy or rent lot with
mo bile home hook ·up . Call
614 -446 752 4 or 614 -446 ·
1785.

(614)/742-2070

Clothe• &amp; mit e. items. 387
LegrAnd e Blvd. Mon .. TuM .. &amp;

To a good home. 4 month ol d,
male, part Boxe r, hiS had shots.
30 4 · 675 -6353 .

TOP CASH paid lor '83 model
and newer used cars . Sm it h
Buick -Pontiac . 1911 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipo lis. Call 614 · 446 2282

PHONE

1075 Second Ave . 9· 4.

Refrig erator. needs so me re pairs. 304-6 75 -7429 .

614 -446 - 3672

Rt. 1, Box 27-B

3 family yard sa le. June5, 6. &amp; 7

Thura . Fri .. Sa t . LovMea t. 2
drMser &amp; minor. large size
clothet . fl owers. house h o ld
items . Rt . 1 60 fou r m iles past
Holzer l eft at Evergreen .

Lost and Found

At 238 Condor St. thl!l 5th . IJ1h
back of lAndmark, Pon'lftl'oy,
10 :00 to 5:00 el!lch day . Variety
of itemt .

Sale . Old furniture. cane hig h 3 tamity ya rd ute: June 3.• .
chair, floo r ll!lmps, old b:l!tlflt. TWP . Rd. 79 . Beh ind Ml!ligt
lila. look &amp; Sat. Eve. Postfi. ol d fl!l irground. Many·cheap itemt
Gl!lrman bookt . Rio Grenda
College books !1850· 1920' sJ. 3 tamily ganga sale. June4 .5.e
sick room equip ., fru it jarl , old 2 milet off Rt . 7 on 143 going
kitchen itemt . Mu ch more an - towa rd Harri10nville. At the
ttque&amp;r modern . 10 tit1 J une3 &amp; Paige Humphrey t Residen ce . 9
4, Rt . 180, Vinton .
till dark.

J black female kiltan s. 6 wfW!Iks
Old . 304 -45 8 - 1920.

LOST Bll!lck dog long bod'/. short
lttgt. pudgv fa r.e . l ost in vicinty
o l Gatlift Acad emv High SchooL
Call 614 -446 -2174 after 5PM .

Windows

Five Family Ysrd Sale Wed .,
Jun e 4, 6, 6. 9:00am. Chamber&amp;
gas ran ge, Westin ghouse re1rig .
2 gas grille, alectri c oven , mW!y
itemt . 51 Garfield AVe., Gallipolis. Ohio

3 Family Carport Sate. 202
Kineon Or . June 6th -6t h Friday
discount day .

Kittent . 304 -6 75 -3734 .

PARTS and SERVICE

6 Familiel . Baby, ch ildren t
clothing . LOcated' below J 's M ini
Mart on Rt . 35 . June 5, 6, 7.

double bow l wash vel lead tin ed.
full size bed springs. li11ing roo m
chair. 304-675 -2406.

3 cute kiUens, can be seen 603
First St., 304 -675 -3864 .

•R anges
•R e fr igerators
•Dry ers •Freezers

Rutland, Oh. 45775

992-5232

a good home.

304 -675 -2156 .

985-3561
All Makes

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3525

to

Small lot of sc rap metal, la rgl!l

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

EYE THE

2649.

Ph. (614) 843-S42S
5· 11.' 86 ·2 mo.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Wed. 9·5

Puppies: 6 weeks old . Part
Elkhound part Sheperd . Meka
QOOd WITCh dogl . 614 · 949 -

" Free Estimates "
ULL COllECT:

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

PH. 304-675-2441

3168.

20 years

SMAll ANIMAL HOURS
Mon.-Wocf..Thun. 3· 5 pm
ruos. 6:30-3; Fd. 1· 2 pm

Strt~t

\IUI40f" , \\'. Va .
rr.I -Mit

Greyl'female cat.AI Io Bll!lck JW~d
white female cat 614 -742 -

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

32933 Romine Rd.

'---------..::10;,;·1~4;::
·11::;,c,l JIUP&lt;Oale Your System• Now
Second

Complete Gutter Work

INSULA nON

For Hours
304-372-5709

lit your U.S. Postmln 40 ~~ biMrnc tor you ..~ Sl&lt;rp by
11111 of our tllret COOYII'I"nt locltilns 1o pick-up your
llnl·bJ·• II ~s. It's as simple u IN! and wee111n

Calla her 4 pm. 614 ·992 -7574

$6,49500

LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SURGERY BY APPT.

Adora bll!l flu ff -ball type, grey
And whill!l ki tten1 , long llairl!ld

•Water Line
•Basements
•Limestone
•Gas Line
•Land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
•Top Soil

992-7089

giv~Mray . litt ert rained .

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

Door. 5 Windows. Built oo
Coo crete Slab.

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office

r ... ho """'iumd deo!h,

FREE ESTIMATES

Mate dog. 7 veafl old Part Great
Tyrn et, part Hutky, blue eye1 .

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Paul E. Shockey, OVM
PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
30 5 Jack•Dn Ave.

loturdoy I0 · 11 :3 0 om

The

DRILLED &amp;
SERVICED

JEFFERS EXCAVATING

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Howard l. WriteHI

WATER
WELLS

614 ·992-6362 .

5·20.'86 '1 mo.

Neve AFull TittN

Catt~pm

992 -6704
FREE ESTIMATES
5-7-2 mo .

Ph. 992-5006

992 -2196
Middleport. Ohio
1·13 -tfc

on Daly

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Pomeroy

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Shop Tteh•lcl ..

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Rt. 4 . Hysell Run Ad .
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
Ph 1614) 992 · 2834 .

3/2/ rtn

We

"At Reasonable Prim"

Etc.

992-3345

•SPEED QUEEN IAUIIORY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE sms &amp; SERVICE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

WIWAMS TRENCHING
SERVICE

M;ddlrpo'l
Av.,

B o nde d

Kittens to giveaway. Black male
and female. P1rt Siamese. Ca ll

6 weeki old. 61 4 ·985 -3884 .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Septic Systems

446 -3454.

Kitten to

.......P.omerov ..........

·······Gampolii ..
&amp; Vicinity

Giveaway

614·992· ne4 .

Back hoe Service

licensed &amp;

2108o&lt;t8002822167 .

To good home 5 - 7 wk. otd pat
kinent. Part Angora, 3 bob tailed , litter broke. Cid! 614·

EUGENE LONG,

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USII

Lowboy Haulin g

~nd
picnics,
Scho
ols. birthday
churchl!lt,partin
comp eny
family reun ions . Ca ii614-JB4 -

6 nice kltt ent , littl!lr broka. m1111
&amp; femalet. Call 614 -245 -9492

5-fl.'86 ·1 mo.

Tre nchi ng of Any Type
Plumbing Service
Custom We ldin g

furniture, Wedding· '·
ond Groduation

'73 · '80 GM Fenders ... $39

Jl M CLIFFORD
PH . 992-7201
' IS OUR LINE
TRENCHING

fDI

~

lin ers ..

TI O

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

II 0 /1 W. Main St.

i

Here
BUSINESS PHON!
1614 ) 99HSSO
RESto EN(( PHONE
16141 992-7154

Phone Bills

• SYLVANIA

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DOZER . BACK HO E.
ffiEN CHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WAT ER.
GAS &amp; SEWER U NES .
RECLAMATION. PONDS ,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

Pay Your Cable &amp;

4/ lltln

LARGE SELECTION OF
WEDDING FABRIC AVAILABLE

Ne,w Localion:
168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICf

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

an 11onorarian of tlr dass.
" 'ii'Clion of Mowery lor the
schola rship was by a romm iltw
romposc'l of Na ncy BPavr•r. cha ir·
ma n: Meigs High Principal .James
MiiiPr: Kenneth l mho~n. First
Baptist Church board chairman,
and john Blake. pr&lt;'Sident of the
Middleport Alumni A:;sn. ·

CONTRACTING

Nut Door To Wstttl'n Avto

Pomero~ .

304-773-5222

5.s.t mo. pd .

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

We Carr y fishing Suppl ies

ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAL and
VARiETY ITEMS

985-3937

NOAH 'S ARI&lt; ANIMAL PAR K.

4

Sizes 4 Yrs and up

.
G ld
uyrng · o
&amp; Silver

J&amp;F

AQUARIUMS

173 -8S )........... .. •so

Ohio

1-1-'86·1 mo.

59 N; 2nd Avt.
Middleport

Rl . 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

WHOlE· ~;,;r;;·~~~·4so

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAM.OIJFLAGE

ACROSS FROM
POST OFFICE IN
MASON, W.VA.

8

&lt;hild,.,u,u..d" - '''Pr;"
1 &amp; !Jodo, rm

SEED, CAGES &amp;

ll -1411c

GRADUAnON
1 OZ. SilVER BARS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES

!UNDAV BUFFE1 - '4.9S
· tuo a.m. to Mo p.m

EXOTIC BIRDS.
TROPICAL FISH,
HAMSTERS,
KITTENS, BIRD

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

Choose lrom l Mto1&gt;-

THE BIRD CAGE
&amp; FISH POND
PET SHOP

Re,.dentia l &amp; Commercial

MOTHER'S DAY &amp;

"'"'·
&lt;hick" or lahod ltoah
1
:.:1:1 ;;;~..: ::~·~:t~:~·

5·12-1 mo

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

GII.D COINS
BASEBAU CARDS

our Porn l!rov -Mnrm s ... rl'"

949 - 2145

10-8-lfc

997-7013

Twas' Jove that raised hi m from the grave
Love tor the life thai he ,~tave,

llte ,.,..aotllloo 'lite Rl!d, White ond Blur&lt;

FILL DIRT

Dorwin,

Who else would gtve his U!e just br you?

By Barb&amp;ra Jams

Ex penence ervrce rn
Microwave Ovens ,

24 Hr. Emorgon&lt;y

WHALEY 'S AUTO PARTS

II wa.'i love when he died on thl" cress.
SIJenUy he died What a ltl'lS.
Yes, JI'Sus He lovl'd us,
· I know this Is true
.

~.move.

GRAVEL . SAND
TOP SOIL

Rod. Support............. Ill 0
Grill lh•ll .................. It 10

His love did !lave us from shame.

o1 autltoJ1ty

Ranges . Air
Conditioners ,
Refrigerators . Washers
&amp; Dryers. lVs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

Bumpers ............. 170
FORD TRUCKS
f•ndm 173 -79). ......... 140
Doors 173 -791. ......... 1 100

Its mw.• "-'tel we believe Jn Christ's name
1ls' lm,.,. !tell ~· elL
Thl.' purest ct love.

on the n,!tt hand
c1 our Father wilh love.
And Ill must believe
OU1st Jesus ·receive
To reach tltot g1ot1ou1 home

992 - 3410
ll MEST ONE

CLC COINS

1/F.W ill ' /! A.\i'f
Located in tho
Saddlebrook Inn
"' " ·'m"'"'""''

CHESTEA-915 -3307

There was victory o'l'r I.Fath
and hfoll OOwn be lour ..
1-i&gt; 8J'OSE' from U.:- grave,
HLo; love lost sinners wtll savt'.

~!Jt

APPLIANCE
REPAIR
· dS · ·

Scholarship awarded Mowery

God Is love. I know

Christ

WILL HAUl
JUST CALLI.

Doo r~
Front

CHESTER
The annuual
Pooler-Wolfe·King RPunlon has
!Pen S£'1 for Sunday at the Chester
Fire Sta tion. Dinner will be at 12: 45
p.m. Those altending are to lake
picnic food and their own tabiP
service.

Whrn again , we call Wck,
AB:IIly£- O\l('r once mort'.
\\'hat tin)(' sw('pl away,
Uke ~1nd tru-ouRh a door.
\'ct to all, !host' r,ast ITI('IllOrlt'!:i,
Are still In ours Rh t.
As we turn back the Timt&gt;,
To ttl.&gt; Purplr and Wh ltl'.

But as

He ascended to Heaven abOve

A/C

Fendm 173 -80). ......... '40

Reunion planned

A time
memories,
From out ci ttr past .
Thou~ shorl tx&gt; the YE'ars,
They re facUn~ too fast.
A tim£' to m(l(&gt;l classmates.
WP on('(' ht&gt;ld so dc&gt;ar
Brings a f(.('llng o( gladness,
JU!it knowing 1hl:'y' re near.
to look on a fa ce.
That mt•mor"· '4un 't dim.
Nor lim£' cari rraSP-

Was tr1ufl1&gt;hant o'er lt.!l sting.
Hosts of Heavenly ang&amp; did t11ke Wlng.

r~~~~:=::::~::llrr====:::=:===ilrr==;7,::7~~~==1]r;:::;::::::::;-r.::::::::::::-l
F()( '/V'fA/ t' '
DENNY CONGO

CHEV TRUCKS

.

John Chan.-.y
J:J!C'WS fWportf'r

To

dents both a written and verbal
critique r:l the 1985 yea rbook. Other
activities included a tour of the
Marshall Campus and an awards
banquet.
Motl' than llO students fi·om West
Virginia, Dlslern Kentucky and
Sout!Prn Ohio atten!Pd the convPn·
lion. Although it was their first yea r
to attend McKinney and Molder
were electro vice presid&lt;' nt and
&amp;'Cretary, r~pect ivel y. of !he
yearbook division of !he Un ited
High Sc hoo l Pr~s.

3 Announ cements

Business Services

3-24-tfc

.hlsl

love Is what life ls about
In our tcarts may W€' ncw~r dOubt.
Forever Is Jews• '
Th&lt;&gt; ~inning and end
Glr broken OOarts he v.111 mend..

Robinson ,

1he vigorous enforcement of

10 (·all

And we'll share our prt&gt;Clous m£&gt;morles
With thE' lov«t ones ~t' ado!'f'..
•·r a J am('S
By Mr' · Bar,..

~g u s ('1./ef did

limited to, Gladys Barker .
Dean Bricttleo. Ronald De·
long, Lloyd Hawk. and the
awareneaa of Individual's
hoollng rlghll.
unknown survhling spouse,
~~~ Opponunily Houolng ;,
htgetees. devisees. heirs. disthe IM. for more lnforrNtion, tributaes. next of kin end as·
signs, if eny, af Manha AObincoll992·2891.
so'n, deceaaed :
1813. 1tc
A eomplaii'lt has been filed
by Dena H. Raymond. Ad·
Public Notice
miniatrMOr. aaking the court
to Mil decedenfs real estate
IN THE COMMON PLEAS . to pay the debts of lhe estate.
COU AT OF MEIGS
A hearing on the complaint
COUNTY. OHIO
w;tr bo held on the 2nd day af
PROBATE DIVISION
Joly, 1986. at 1:30 O'clock
DENA H. RAYMOND
P.M. in the court. Persons
Administrator of the
knowing any reason why the
Ettate of
complaint lhould not be

3. Strongthan and mtoilllin
to;r ltouolng oppo.-.nlllol it ol
er•• of the county.
4. Encourage end 1uilt i1

While to others, II th!:' nl~ ht .

U we give our lives to Je!lu.'i

MANLEYS
TRASH
SERVICE

... ltouolng ....~ 111d
To lldtiava full pubtlc

~ !----~--,-h-e -P•U ~--~····oo--W•h•it•e .--------------W--hen....•.• .· ..·,h•e•r •a••a•!n•.-------------

We'll recall ar Heaven·.~ door..

Public Notice

Gcds sent love from alxlvt&gt;
To all men and WOI'I)(&gt;n hert&gt; on this t71irth ..
I worship and praise Him
/ trust Him today,
His lovl' will sln'ol: the way.

In Memory. lovtng memory
Yes, they've eone to

"""•·"

Public Notice

county;

. .l.... . .

We will ll1['('tft.-m on that shorr

'lbl' shadows lengthen w:lth twilight,
Arlll feel thE' ~\1mlng tt-eeze,
As il(f!ll11y blows around me,
Whlle thf whlp-poor-wUJ call from thl' tr{'l&gt;5.

.

Soo

PHONE
992-2156 ..
Dr W
Oa1lly Suhn~l Ctamt1t6 Drpt
Ill Coull $1 . Pomuc, _Otl10 4~/n

2. Alktviate dilcrinWiatuy
h:lusing Pt"acttc. withi1 lhe

At !he Tu~day night Mason class
one new member was welcomed
and Lois Pu rkey lost the most
weekly weight. Connie Goodnight
was mnn er~ up . In lhe kids class,
Kelly Holcomb lost the most
weigh t. Lois Ann Reitmire in·
stmctru the class in the absenCI' of
JoAnn Newsome. At the Wedn~·
dav class. Diana Herdman lost the
most weight and Charlotte Smith
was ruruter-up . Summer classes
are now !Ping organized.

3, 1988

11 tt

Defendantt.

Meigs County 4-H news _ __
Meigs County Shepherd's Club held two
Jnl&gt;('tinp re&lt;."ef'ltly .at Eric Thoren's horl1f'
'Ille first was en April I at 7:.lJ p.m. One
adviSor and 12 members attended. DuM d
li.OO an&gt; dUP. May 6. Pictur£' monfly L'l S7.:ll
eacb and I~ weigh-In lsschedu~ forMa~· 24
(Saturdayl .

The Daily Sentinel

Mr. and Mrs. William Russell of
Minersville and Mrs: William
BoyCI', Columbus. were recent
visitors of Iva .Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Ca rl McElroy of
Columbus spent the weekend here
Public Notice
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
and Mr. and Mrs. BIU McElroy,
NOTICE OF
Jeff. Joey and Jessica.
APPOINTMENT OF
Mrs. Pau l Darnell Is recuperat·
FIDUCIAllY
On May t5. t9B6. ;n lho
ing at home following treatment at
Meigs County Probllte Court,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Caoe No. 25137 , Kathy Am
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,Sarah Hy50!1, 16 Amo Stroot, Po·
Beth, of Texas Road were Memor· meroy, Ohto 46769, waaapial Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs. pointed Executrix of the ettate of Harry C . Watton, de:Eugene Haning and Ronald and ceeaed.
late of 3,1 0 Wetlgll
Gladys Tuckerman.
Stroot. Pomeroy,
Me;go
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp and Coontv. Oh;o, 46769 .
Robert E. Buclo .
Amy, ·Racine. spet n Wedn~day
Probllte Judge
with 1\'lr. and Mr. Charley Smith.
Lena K .. Ne11elroad ,
Other visitors were Charles Knapp,
~ Clerto
151 20 , 27; 161 3, 31c
DoylP Knapp, and Michelle
Peterson.

'

Samantha Sisson

Tuesday. June

Ohio

Help Wanted

Caret aker to li11e-in apartment
con.,tex. Call 30 4-675 -6104
bce!l«tnt In come for pen time
ho me assllmbly work . For info.
calt 312 · 741 -8400 e-1. 313 .
Need a pan t ime jo b1 Sell Awn.
stan up tee only $5 .00 . Ca l!
614-446 · 2156.
largl!l Colul'l"hus homeb uilde1
need1 subcontracT block crewt.
Ouerenteed full time wo 1k . Call
1 -614 -988 · 4865 6:30 am-9:00
l!lm only. M ond•v · Friday.
large Colurft&gt;us Mmebuitder
nee dt aubconlrect conc re te
crew 1. Guaranteed fu ll time
work . Ca ll 1-614 · 888 -4855
6:30 . , _ 9:00 em on ly . Manda'/
· Friday .
large Columb us homebuild er
needs subcontrac t framing
cutws. Guaranteed full time
work . Ca ll 1· 614 -888 -4865
6:30am · 9:00 1m only . M onday
- Friday .
Government jobs f16 .040 169. 230 yr . Now hiring . Cat!
806· 687-6000 ext . R· 466 2 for
ament fed1r1l list .
EASY AS SEMBLV WORK!
87 14.00 per 100. Guaranteed
pey,...nt. No 11111 . Delllll·
Send etamped .-.velope: Elen71 6 . 34 18 Enterprise, Ft .
Pierce. Fl. 33482 .
Government Jobt. S18 ,040 169, 230-yr . Now Hiring. Call
1- 805 -887 · 6000 Ert. R· 9806
for t1irrent t&amp;darallltt .
Euy A11embty Work/ t7 14.00
per 100 . Guaranteed Pevment.
No Sales . Details·- Send
stamped envelope: Elan-15847
, 3418 Enterprise, Ft. Pi erce Fl .

33482.
Wantld -Temporarv employee .
Dental Hyganlst, to w ork in
progreaaive modem dental practice In Jackson Co. W.Ve.,
During IU mmar. Excellent &amp;a·
larv. apply with IWSUme and
relarences to P.O. 8011 391

Rlptoy W.Vo. 26271 .

./

E ASY ASSEMBLY WORK !
$7 1.- .00 per 100. Guerantaed
payment . N ose!l!ls . Datails -Send
stam ped envelope : Elan -715.
3418 Enterprise. Ft . Pierce, Ft.
33 48 2 .
AVON. 3 open
:.J4-675 · 142 9

t emto~~es

Room and board for elderly .
Reasonab le ra tet . 614 -992 ·

6022
Private home ca re for tanior
citi 1ens. TLC and referen cet.
Cat! 614 · 992 · 3595 .

1 B Wanted to Do
Will babysit at anyt ime. Can
provide references . Call 614 256 -8662 .
E~perien oed
mother w ill do
baby sitting in my home . Resso nebll!l ratet . Call614 -446 · 3088 .

I will ~ odd jobt and mowing .
can sa -446 · 6266 .
Landlo rds . bu si neuet . ho meownert. profAttional maint enance man will do repl!lir work .
evenings and weekend t. 3&lt;LI 675 -1726 after 5:00P M.

Ca ll

Wilnted mll tUr l!l resp o nsible
adult to ca re for 2 school age
children durin g su mmer day
!ttih . Ref . R.,q . 304 -675 -78 79 .
Mature lady to IWe in and care for
eldarly man, rel erences. ca ll
304-468 · 17 2 1
Giovl!lnni 's Pizza. 2322 1/J Jack ·
son Ava .• Point Pl easant. seek ing pl!lrt time help, will lak e
ilpplicat kmt Wednet day 1:00 ti ll
3:00. NO PHON E CA LL S

0 I Cl!lse Manager &amp; (1) Part t ime Cau Manager-P•rt -time
Clerk , 12 months positions qualifications :
BA degree in
related field . &amp; able to meet Ohio
De pa r tm e nt o f M ental
Ret ardat io n - Oeve to p men ta l
Oisabi titiet Q MRP cenlficstiona
requirements, or willing to obtain . S1lary as pet salary scha·
dula S. ex per ience. (11 • . 000·
81 9 ,0001 . The Galli• County
B asrd of MR -00 shall ensure
that on going &amp; contittent
appropriate training will be
providided to Cue Maneg11ment
personnel in specifi c t llllt areat
to maaimize the eftl!lctiveness &amp;
effi ciency of thelervicadelivery.
Tra ining &amp; e:cpl!lri&amp;nCII in the
following area. will be con sidered helpful i f no t euential : A .
Natura &amp; needt of MA -00
individuals; 8 . Counst!lng of
MR ·OD W1dWiduats &amp;r their famltiea: C. 6ehavlor Management of
individuals who have MR -00;
0 . OeUverv of serv i ~s t o
personl Wl1h MR-00; E. Know I·
edgeragarditg the availability of
fetOUr~S • how to "link up "
lndividuala to thou &amp;ervi~&amp; ; •
F. Knowllldge regarding interagency oooperatlon&amp; cluster&amp;.
protl&lt;:tive &amp; ldvocaty leN ices.
All applic atio nt a'olallable at ·
Gallla County Board of MR ·DD
P.O. Box 14 Chethlre. OH
.-&amp;820 or Call 61,-387 · 0102 .
Applicatkm deadline June 13,
1988. " An Equal Opportunity
Employer''

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommends that you
do busin81s with people you
know . an d NOT to eend money
through the meil until vou hava
inv estog a1Bd the offe ring

Rut11 urant Busineu fo1 Sal e:
Del i sl y le 'estaurant to r sail!! with
D · S Bever age l1 cense. l outed
in Ga llipolis 11 is e11cellent
opportunity for aggressive oper ato'
Pr1ced To Se ll Nowl!
6H -446 0026 tor confident ial
data l IS
Tavern for sele in M id dl eport .

01. 02. 03 1icenu. Aeatonabte.
Call dey 614-992 -9915 even -ings 614 -992 · 287 3 .
Maplewood l ounge lor Ieese,
call 304 -675 -2269

23

Professional
Services

ptANO TUNI NG AN 0 REPAIR ,
radisco\ler your piano 't besutifut
tone. call today, Wards Keybo ard , 304 · 675 · 6600 or 675 -

3824 .

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

4 badroom houte, fireplace. 3
mi. south o tGallipoU1. *29,900 .
Call days 614 -4'6· 1615 or
evenln(;jl 6·1 •-4•6· 8222 .

�Page~B- The Daily Sentinel
31

LAFF·A·DAY

Homes for Sale

46 Space for Rent

1 ft story 4 or 5 bdr , 2 bathe, fuN
buement, fireplace . 1 4a20 .
building with Qlfllge on 8 1
acres , locttlld In Rio Grande
Call e14 -246 -5197 eft• 6

3 bdr houae witt't eluminum
sKiing , bam. orchard, &amp; JO
acre• 7 mil• from Gelllpoltt on
pawed Rd . Ca ll e1 4 256 -1 712

51 Household Goods

t1 acre1. 3 bdr , b"dl. home .
located tn Kyger Creek School
Otltrict, t49 ,000 Call 614- 367· 7238 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St. . Gelllpohs. New &amp; uaed
WOOd-COIIIt0\191, 6 PC wood lR

----------~---·

Gov&amp;rnmef11 homat from t 1
(U repa~r) Oellquent tax prop
erty Repo11•1ions Call 805
687-6000 ut . R-•562 for cur
rent repo !Itt

3 bedroom, Lg

k1tchen. hut

pu~. au cond urps1ed , garaga, Syracuse 614 -992 3&lt;102
after 5 pm
Quality home. MW"r remodei!Mt
cho ic111 loc.ttan on College Ad
Syracu1111. new completekttchllln
and laundry. atr conditioned.
la rgi!IIOt 614 · 992 5324

2 bedroom Duplex house per
ttally furntth!KI Low ut1ht1ee , tn
Po meroy Cal! dr,'l. 614-992·
2381 or 614 -992-2609 I'VIf'l

'""'
2 bedroom house tn Pomeroy
8200 turnllhed , t185 unfur niShed P av own utiliti", wood
burner. large yerd . Call days
614 992 2381 or 614 -992 2509 evenlngt
2 t&gt;Mlruom hou ... full basamer'lt.
nww roof, aluminum stding ,
porch and deck Lmcoln Hill
514 992 ·5761
For ule by owner Large 9 room
home wrth 1 1h baths. bileval.
tamtl'f room. 6 bedroom•. for mal dtning room . located on
lerga 'at witfl fruit treet in
R~gscrest Manor three mil111
hom Tuppers Plains Cion to
schoo lt , Priced !53,500 Call
61 .. · 986 -4279
1 only New lot model, All
Amencan Ranr::h . 3 bedroom.
reduced 13000 tor quicll sale.
61 4 992·6587
3 bedroom Secttonal Ranch on
1 00"200 lot Fronts on 3
Streets Excellent nttbot'hood.
Arbaugh Add1t1on , Tuppers
Plaint . May exr::ept mobile home
on trade . Frnencmg evailable to
qualifted parttes . 614 -992 5587.
House. Chetter vill~e. 7 rooms,
basement, gerage, 1 tenth ecre,
easy cere, nick neighborhood.
$26,600 614 -986 -3571 .
2 bedroom houte wtth 10 plut
acres of wood• . Mty condlider
rent with option to buy. 614787· 4273.
Houu, 4 bedroom11 2324 lincoln Ave . 30•· 675 -2130
Three bedroom houte. double
c orner lot, 2028 lincoln
Avenue Good neighborhood
Prtce reduced 304·876· 2012
Two ttory houu 3 years old, 3
bedrooms . 1 , 800 tq ft ,
163 . 000 00 304 -882 - 2999
evenings

\. ,,. . .... ..... . , 5,""' •• ••

,.. ,...,. ~

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST , GALLIPOLIS , RT 36
PHONE 61. · 446 -7274
1974 Kirkwood 12x&amp;O, two
bedrooms , n...,., carpet through ·
out, , n~PN"Iy remodeled . total
eler::trtc , ttxcallent condition.
redwood pet 'a on rented lot. or
can be moved Call 614 -446·
8010
12ll60 Sllultt covered patch,
rural water , metal storage bldg ,
with lot. Crown C1ty Call
614 - 266· 1••4 or 614 - 2561399 or 304· 675 -1389
Total alectr~ c mobile home,
1993 ea cond. Call 814 -367·
7438
1980 Liberty 14"54 2 bdr .. 111
gu . underp1nntng . Uape,
bloch Must be mo11ed. 16.500.
Call614·446 0963
Repoueued mobile home .
$500 down , teke over PlY·
mants Ex '81 Patriot 14tt68.
Three bedroom, gas heat . t167
per month No cllerga tor
delivery Mid Oh10 Finenctel
Services. 1 800 828-0762 .
1980 Ltberty 14x64 , 2 bedroom. unturntthed , vtnyl under·
ptnning Included Mutt nil Cell
304-773 6873 .
12x60 2 bedroom, furnished.
tet up , underpinning, ttaps .
Country Mobile Home Park

61092 ·7479 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED intured, reasonable ratn, Call
304-676 -2336
1973 Holly Park with lot. chtln
linlt fence and out bulldinu.
centel air cond, loctted Gellipo·
lit Fttrry. 304-675 -2029 .
12"66 trailer with one acral1nd
toru la 112 .000 00 304-675 5551 or 876-1178
1982 Cl1ylon 12x60 111 Mac
t10,600 304-f:i76· 2486 .
Two bed room house treiler on
h11f acre ground . call 304·468·
1517

33

Farms for Sale

r------------,-----------~
35

Lots

A

e.

01

42

Camp11te at 81g Foot Perk. No
money down , 150 mo. owner
fonance. will thow eve &amp;
weehnds Rt 7 · 6 mi , below
Galltpolil. turn right &amp; follow
Stgns
P 4 acr• with 1 2x60 mobile
home Rt 218. 10 mile~ from

Gallipolit
evening•

Call 61•· 246 -5049

2877

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 to 15 ac•"· pertlally wooded
k)tJ 'Tupper Plaine and Chett..-,
w.t18f' and epprov.ct road to e~eh
Jot Ae11onabty prlc-. will
fin enea. 10 percwrt down. Call

&amp;14·111f·3U4.
A~ton

buildlnt lot• wlt11 public

w.t•. mobHa ~m• Ptf'mfttld,
J04-1178·233f.

'

House trailer, 45x10 1966Good
cond. new norm window•.
t2 , 100 00. 304 876 4631

43 Farms for Rent
34 acre cropland, 60 acret,
petture
tobacco alotment .
Call 304-675 -6104.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Housasfor Rent

Rent. lean, land conlract. 3br' s·
Rodney Village II, 2 br's· Eureka.
3br Evens Heightt. Deposit A
refarencat required . 81.cllburn
Reatty-61 4 ·.U8-0008
Furn11hed houu, 2 bdr , 1196
131 rear 41h Ava , Gelhpoht
Call 448 -4416 efter 7pm.
928 Ftrtt Avo .. 5 rooms &amp; bath.
Call 614 448 -3945 after 4PM .
Nice 3 bdr Mme. Lg . yard. 314
Third St Kanauge Call 614

446 7473.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equal Housing Oppor·
tunity) monthly rent atartt at
1178 for 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 bedroom. depotit f200.
located n11r Spring Valley Pl&amp;za
tnd ~oodllnd . poolendCableTV
availabla, ofttce houri IS potsi·
bla10 em to4 pm and 7 pmto 9
pm Mondey-Friday. Call 814·
448 -2745 or leave mettage.
Nicely furn11hed mobile home,
Iff. apt , cantril air tnd hilt in
city, aduht only. Cell614 ·448·

033e.

House 4 roorm &amp; beth. located
1928'h Ct'teltnut St. t110 mo ..
t75 dep Call 614-446-3870.

2 bdr. utilitin partially furn .,
t175 mo . Call 304-675-6104

Mode11zed country home,
garden , budget g11 135, KC
a rae, t27!5 plut depolit, refMences
Call 614-367-0440 or

614-446-0390

614·446·37eo.
5 roomt &amp; bath, tlto mobile
home, ref &amp; dep , no pets. Call
614 -446· 1168
large 3 bdr . good location, 175
mo . CaU 304-675-5104
Large 2 bdr apt in duplu house.
Furn , conaniant locttion on
Main St . water paid. Call
814·246 · 681 B
3 bdr. home in country, Vinton
area. Stowe, refr~garltOf" , trath,
weter furnlthed. 1200 mo.,
1160 dep. 2 children, ref's Call

614·388·96e6
Houte for rent or 11le. Ntce, 2
fronttgt. Cell703-461 -2591 .
2 bedroom unturn . no l)etJ.
t16ti per month t100 depotit.
Call 61 •-446-3617
2 bdr homa in axcellent nltigh·
borhood, new well to wtll
cerpatlng &amp; cunelnt provtded.
Plut meny extrtl, low utiUl"' bMia
&amp; garden spot. Call 614 -286
51 10 for further dtttils.
3 bedroom house, Pretti Fork,
On Rt. 33. 18 acr•. houn•;mly,
with gardan. Fraa gas, Willi'
well, tppliancat. 12150 par
month Available immedietely
61•· 253-2323 Columbut.

2 bedroom furnished house in
Middleport
5304

Call 614 -992 -

Anractiva two bedroom houte in
Pomeroy. Fully carpated , drep111
and curtains. stove tnd refrigar·
ltor. full baument. lovely sun
porcfl Sorry no pet tor children
Home ideel tor single or coupla
12215 plus secufity deposit
Phon a 814 -992 -6292 after 6
Houteat Rolhnttown, 304-895·

343&amp;

New 1 bedroom epar1ment Call
2 bdr apt .. downtown , 1210
without utihtin. 1330 witll
utiliti11 Deposit raquired Call
6U·••&amp; -2129 8 OOam · 6pm
Fum. apt1 1 &amp; 2 bdr !220 &amp;
t235 , utilitin pd 701 4tll
Gallipolis Cell U6 · 4416 after
7pm.
Fum . aptt 1 bdr 1226 utilituts
paid, 607 2nd. Ave. Gallipolil.
Call 446·4416 after 7pm.
2 bdr unfurnished with appliance• at66i Th1rd Ave .. GaiUpolit.
1250 mo plut utllitttl. Call
614· 2415· 9596.
1 block from tht cny park , 3
lerge room• &amp; bath. WD hookup.
t176 Ctl1614 -446 -4672.
Furnitfltd apanment, utilltiee
pard. 108 VIne St .. t235 . Call
614 -446 -9244 between 9.00·
Etflctency apartment Suitable
tor 001 pll'ton. Privata bath and
entrance. Call 614·••8· 1232
Pomaroy 2 bdr, Naylors Run,
t175 mo . t1 00 depotit. yard.
patio. Cell aher 6 614 -992·
Pomeroy 2 bdr. Naylort Run.
I 176 mo S 100 dapottt. yard,
patio, Call •her 6pm 614 -992-

6886.
2 bdr upttairs apt , ••tra nice.
central air Call &amp;U -446-21 sa
Aper1ment lor rent Crown City,
1176 mo . plus depottt. Call
61 4 · 266 -649f:i
1 bedroom apt . for rent . Batie

rent ttarts 1216 . 1 month thet
includes all utilitlet. Deposit
rii!QUifad of t200 . Contlct Vii·
lage Menor Apt . Middleport.
614· 992· 7187. Equ11 Houttng
Opportunity
2 bedroom unfurnished tPirt·
ment. No pett. 1 bedroom
tum ilhed apt . No Petl. iS14 -

949·2263

Modem 3 badroom. Bredburv
Aold. nur Middlt90rt, Ohto.
R aterencee requtred . Phone
304-675·3834

2 bedroom apt . downtown Mid·
dletJOn . All utillt iel ptid 1226
month plut deposit 11•· 992·
6611 Day, 614 -992 -6763
even ing

2 bedroom, total alae apt In
Pomeroy. Acrost from Fne
Station. 81• ·992·6215 or 61ol·

992-7314.
Fully hwnithad, AC , all uttltiaa
paid , edults only Call 61 4· .t464110 Of 614 -446· 2003.

2 bedroom home in country near
Cflatter, ohio. 61•· 767· 4273

2 &amp; 3 bdr mobile homet . AC.
cable TV. Bul.ville Rd . Ctll
614-446 -0627 after 3pm ..

APARTMENTS , mobile hom•.
hous" Pt. Pluaant and Gallipolis. 614-448·8221 .

Furn11hed. nice 2 bdr. Lrv tn·
groom a11pando . IQ. yard~ ~ 14
Third St. Kaneug1. Call 114446 -7473.

Unturnithad apt, yard &amp; betement t160 . mo. 304 -8786·
7f:i41 evaningt.

Furntthed 2 bdr., AC , locettd K
&amp;. I&lt; Mobile Home Park on
Ea11ern eva , t175 mo .. t100
dep. Celt 814 -:ZISI-1187.
14"70 3 bdr., Y, bath. total
elect., CA, t250 mo .. t2150dep.
Call 614· 448 -3793.
For rent on 20 acr•. 141170 3
b«troom, 1 1/J b1th, nice ysrd,
aun dack, in Portl1nd area.
UOO. mon111 plus deposit. 614 2 bedroom furnished . No pett

614-949-2263
For rent 3 bedroom mobile
ho"'- Appro" - 5 miln from
Pomeroy or Mlddlaport 8142 bedroom lfliltr with upendo
living room on l•ge level lot In
Middleport. Nelf ltor ... Adult1
only Call 814-992-2101 Of

614·992-2319.
10di0. 2 btdtoorm. No pitt.
Call 61 4 ·949· 2424
2 bedroom mobile home ·
Racine. 614 -367-7148 .
Two bedroom trtihlf remodeled,
coupl.. one 1m1ll child eocaptad, referenc" end depotlt.
Rt. 1 Locuet Road, beckofK' K,
Everitt Schwal'tl.

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

r1ngu

Skaggs Appliancu ,

w........ d•w•.

'"""'"'"on.

Wright

75

UPP•• R;.., Ad

boo~o

1 or 2 bedroom aptt.' utilltl•
peld , t55 .00 week. partially
turnlthtd . 304-676 -3100 or

87&amp;.&amp;&amp;09.
Unfurniahed one badroom end
two bedroom apenmentt. 304·

882·2&amp;26 .

Good
usf.ld aPPliances and TV uta.
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 814 -446 -1699, 527 3rd
Ave Galhpolil, OH
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used
Large sect1on of quahty furni ture 1216 Eastern Ave .
Galltpoht
for tale· Harlequtn Romance
booke 210 for S76. while
wooden tlble f25. yellow kit ·
chen chma cabtnet !60 . all m
good conditton See It 256 So
Fourth Ave .. Middleport. Oh

......

Trailer tpaca for r.. t Gelllpollt
F•ry, cHy water. g~rbqe pldt
up furnlthed, 304·675-8331 or

87&amp;-3248.

ftai: LITTLE

I.AATMI~H~

fOR 1.'11

IF400'D~VE.~

~r&lt;c.TOR ...

Television
V~ewing

HIMAU-

~LVfi .

1978 17tt See Star. inboarrl·

TUESDAY
6/3/86

outboard, slltkl equipment. 30 5
V-8 motor . ttereo AM -FM
CISIIIttl, 111 g1ug111, Open bile,
fJnciiCk, Wtlh t1tt trailer, 304-

EVENING

773-&amp;337.

6:00
76

304-773·&amp;887.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, tcope
bora sighting, factory reb luting,
hours 9·00 till dark , call 304876· 4831
Forced 111 furnace, 111orm win ·
dows 304-676·6123

WMd barn type bwlding, 7x10,
304·675· 1584

61

McDaniel Cuttom Butchering
wil l be cloted until Aug . 15th for
vacatiOn .

730 C111 dltltl. w6de front PS.
live power. live hydraulict.
t2,9&amp;0. New 8 ft. drum mower
11.4915. New 8.2 ft tlddtr
t669 . NH 88 baler t49ti . Call

55 Building Supplies
Butldmg Matenalt
Block, brick, sewer ptpes, win dows . llntala, etc Claude Win ·
ten. Rto Grande. 0 Call 614·
245 6121 .

Utad 6,000 BTU AC, lull 1i.re
mattrMt &amp; boa tprings ex firm
Corb1n !o. Snvder Fumtture, 956
Second Ava Gall1polit 81 4
448· 1111

Dragonwynd Canery Kennel
CFA Himalayan , Per11an and
Siame1111 kinent . AKC Chow
puppiat. New puppin kitten I
Call 446-3844 eher 7PM.

Movtng Sale J pilltCft hvtngroom
tutte, burgand't color. ucallent
condition. 1 bedroom aut11 , 1
meple detk , 1 11de by 11da
refr~get"ator herve1t gold , 1 gas
ranga hll"'lett gold. 1 avocado
dlthwllhtr, coHee tlble and 2
end ttblel TV end many other
•mall 1tem1. all mutt go by Wftd
June 4 . Sale Wed . 4th all day.
1918 E11tem Ave., 614 446 -

Labrador retnever puppiet for
sale 1535 aacll Call 514· 245·
6884.

8334 .
Couch 8t cheir S75, 4 pc. bdr.
su!ttt t75, 7 pc. dinette S25,
G.E washar &amp; dryer t 1 50,
wheel chair 160 &amp; other Items.
Call 61 4-446 -7128 after 8·00
PM

Full size bed. dreuer &amp; chetJt .
t60 Call 614 -446· 1964 .
Country oat. furniture now in
1tor::k Coffee 11nd end table1,
round padesul and drop leaf
tabiM . corner cu pboard. 2 pc
cupboards. dry 11nkt, 1111cretary
dnkt , chMt of drawart, chairs
Large talectton . Conkle't, Rt 7.
Tuppeuplatns. Oh
Hootier llitchen cabinet with
flour end bread bin . Porcelam
work surface . t75 . 614 -992·

3079

Picken• Uaed Furniture Good
quality used furniture Open 9 to
6 or cell tor appointment .
304 · 675 -6483 or 675 -1450

53

Antiques

Full 11r:e bran bed , comp lete.
Cell 614 -446 · 1171 Corb1n &amp;
Snyder Furn .

54 Misc . Merchandise
Callahan'• Used Tire Shop o ... er
l ,OOOtires, aizts12 , 13 . 14 . 15 .
16 , 16 5. 8 mtles oot Rt 218
Call814 -266 -6261 .
Pl11tlc ciltern state approved ,
plastic 11ptic tankt, platttc
culvens. m1111 culvar1s RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jack ton , Ott 614 - 286 -6930 .
Tobtcco sattar, avergreent ,
mulch, filt dor1, gravel, Slone,
uud block, tinrwood , delivered .
Con's landscape. 614 -446 -

9646

Fiberglan trudc top with h11ge
window• Fits 8 tt bed Call
614 -446-7827
1000 gallon fuel oil tank Call
61 4 · 448·7026
10x12 saN ing tuuler apecial
bUilt lor profit Mak ing county
fain ate L1ka new , 11pplian cel
included . Cell614 · 446 -2233 or
304-676·5884.

New VCR , camere &amp; adapter
with tripod &amp;. extra COf'd t400

Call 814· 448 -4264 .
Ford riding mower 3200, 76
Starcreh tent camper 8.)! cond .
1900. practice piano $150 Call
61 4 -266-6496 .
3 block saw mill $2 ,800 Call

For 11111· 12,&amp;00 BTU Air oonditionar, excellent condition Dou glas Hemtley 3rd St. Syracuse

New Wincheater 3030 Rifle 7
mm world war 1 Mua111et, Buck
Knife Bicentenlal, 66 ounce pure
eitvar, totaofforelgn colnt. 1979
Chevy Ceprlce W-aon . 11600,
12 YI cubic .ft . refr~erator like
nfiN lergatt.-eo, both forl1 26 1

e14·949-2e01 .
Fibre ol•• cemp• top . B ft.
614 -985-4418 .

uoo.

SUtht Pllnt demage . Flatl'ling
trrow tlon f28tsl Light8d , non•rrow t2851 Nonllghted 12391
Fr•lmtrtl fM left. See locally
1 ·800· 423 -0163 anytlma .

814-288·8622 .
1947 fOfd tractor high • low
rtnge, good rubber, extra nice.
Plowe, dlslt, cuhivaton. boom
pole . *2 ,396 . Call 614 -288 ·

6622 .
15000 Ford m110r dle11l tr•ctor,
ft. bush hog.
plows, disk,

e

03.896 C•ll 814-2ee-e522.

71

Auto• for Sale

81 Plymouth Rtlient Speciel
Edition, AC . euto, AM · fM, mud
Mil. 11 ,995 will oontider trade
for llrge gardM'I tractor . Cell
814-446·1968 or 814· 388·

8837 .
19n Thunderbird axe. cond.
Cell 814-388-9333.
1984 Chevette 18.000 miln.
*2.900. Cell814 -379 -2682.
1972 Ptvmouth Duster good
condition, t600 . Cell anytime,

e14-3e7-0290.
1979 Chevv ~ 10n 12 pa11enger
van, auto, AC .• PS ., CNise, tilt, 2
he1ttr1, c1ptalnt chairs , MOOD

446 · 2783
Block, brtck, moner and mesonry tupplies Mountatn State
Block , At . 33, Nsw Haven . W
Va 304-882 · 2222 .

Allis Chalmer dine! trector with
plowe &amp; 4 row JD plentlf', also
Seers riding mower. Cell 81ol·

56

Bldwe! C11h feed Store June
Specl11'1. Golden Bow &amp; Cema·
11on tough twt1t bela twin .. now
only t17.60 1nd 48 In waldad
wire t32 .r,O . Ctll e14· 388·

1980 G Ptyrmuth Fury, AM ·
FM, air 1980 Oatson 210 6
apeed Call 614 -992 -7076
8:00am • 7 :00 pm

9688 .

1978 Datsun 200 SX 6 spMd ,
AC , other eatru. Nica condi·
tion . 12300. CAll 814· 949·
2693.

Pets for Sale

a.

Siameaa kittens 6 wks . t35
each Hymalvan kittens , su1
point or lilac point , $50 each.
61 4 -992· 7201
Regittered Mimatura Schnauzer
puppiet. Cesh only . No dlecks
Cell 614· 992 -2607
Male Cocker Spantel 1 year old
Black and Tan hcallenl Pede·
grae . Very good with children
1150 614· 992 -67.7
Black temela Labrador Retriever
pup. Pick of litter. 10 wMkt old
304-n3 -5839.
Stamett. female cat. 1 'h vears
old . S26 .00. 304 468 -1920.
Squmel dog, phone 304-678 2779.

57

Musical
Instruments

1970 6000 Ford di ..eltflctor
with 3 bottom plowt, t4 ,7150 .
340 lntemetlonel trKtor with
plows &amp; 8 ft sldde b¥ mower ,

01.960.

c.u 1-eU-288·8822.

66 N~ Holland baler. clean
*•95. 14 T JD bller ..96 MF
No 12 bllar 11,196 MF rake
1396 JO ralta f895 501 Ford
mower *460. 9 ft teddtr t8915
eft. drum mower 11 ,49&amp; Call

Hammond Orgon with Letha
speekart. 8500 . Come ' " at
409 4th St. Rac1ne. Ohio.
614 -949· 2477.
Baldwtn Piano. Uted '"'than 6
months E"cellent condition .
New t3000, wtlltetl tor 11600.
Call 304-n3 -6996.
Bus Guitar and 11mp, uc con d.
$360.00 . 12 string Fender GUI·
tar $160.00. 304-675 · 3376 or
675· 4077.

99&amp; ·383e .
1979 Camero Aelly Sport. PB.
AC . t1H Whlll. AM -FM Clllett
with equlliltr. chrome Cragars
Str11t Tricks. Eagle ST't, duel
e11h1u1t. exc cond. 304-882·

For sl!lle or trade· Large round
Haffton Baler and 2 lkel equip·
ment trailftfl Call 614· 992·
7401

Cul'lomAall8uggy 1986 modal,
lolded 'With ICCIISOrin, l"t
then 200 miln, 304-676 2605.

360 J .D dozer. 6 Wly blade,
wench . Excell.,t oondition. 300
ltemttlonel Tractor Loldlf. Naw
rebuilt hydreuUct . 700 Stnll
Ford Log Truck. 8ollters a11tra.
Cell 614· 949· 2825 or 614·
949-2828 tfttt' 4:00.
Two row -.bacco tflntplen111'
like new t1 .000.00. 52 tobacco
lticks 116 .00 per 100 Morgen' • Woodlewn Farm, Rt. 36.
304-1575- 1281 Of 304 ·529·
NM Holland round balltf', model
8152, )/11 like naw tf!I,OOO .OO.
Slderw Equipment Cn., 304-

876-7421 .
John DHre 700 grinder-mixer ,
t3,000.00 Siders Equipment
Co.. 30•·675· 7421

' 78 Chevy Caprice, 4 door,
*495.00. Saa at 2903 Perrl1h
Ave., Pt. Pit. 304·176· 32715 .
197• Monte Carlo, 304-896 ·

62 Wanted to Buy

'«llR SOH ~ &amp;6M
I'IAVIMG iH /1.1/

1989 21' h . cam per thower.
ttove , retrig , exc . cond ,
!1,200 . Call 614· 256 -1447

GAROEii AGliH!I

1978 slide-in true!. camper. ice
bo" , furnec11 , ttowe, good cond ,
good buy. 1750 Call 514 -388 ·
9780
1972 T~~g·A · Long travel tra1ler
Sleeps 6 Vnry good condtlion
!1900 614· 992 -2941 or 614 ·
992 -6461

773-&amp;238 .

72

Trucks for Sale

0394.

FLAVORS

In Stereo

(!)College Baseball: 1986
World Series From Omaha.
NE (3 hrs I Live .
(I) 0 (I] Who's the Boaal
ICCIIRI
@I (I) Strong Medicine
Part 2 ol2 A nsing pharma·

,.J
it-l,a.ve.~
Cli . . O'IIiU ...

Services
81

.

ceutical ettecutive finds her
husband's demands that
she g1ve up her career a bit·

ALLEY OOP

Home
Improvements

ter p11l to swatlow. (2 hrs.)

())
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
® Billy Graham Greater
Washington Crusade
® Nova: Antarctica:
Earth's Laat Frontier (CCI
The reg1on of Antarctica, a

... AND TH E M EN
WILL CONSTR UCT

OUR GETAWAY

RON ' S Tele ... ition Sendee .
Houtll callt on RCA , Ou.ua r,
GE . Specialing in Zenith Call
304 -676-2398 or 614 -446 2454
Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal Call304 -676 -1331
AINGLES ' S SERVICE , e•pe·
rienced carpantflr, el11ctricran .
m11on. painter. rooting [mclud·
ing hot , tar- IPPitcationl 304 676 -20BB or 675 -7388
Sterkt Tree and Lewn SerVice.
landtcapmg. 304-678· 2010.

1978 Chtv U\ldl, 4 wt'l ·drNe.

RotlrV or ceble tool drillmg.
Molt well• completed umeday .
Pump tale• and 1ervice. 304-

63

Strawbftrnet for Hla. You Pick
75 cents quart. We ptdl. t1 .00
qt Call 304 -468 -1997.
Strawberries we pick , you pick .
Monday June 2 . Rou1h '1 11
Union C11mpground. 304-8822237.
Strawbtmin pick your own. Call
Claude Wtnters , 614 - 2415 5121
Hutull Strawberry fiekl open for
pick vour own , bring your own
containers 76 cents quan,
closed Saturday, 304-87&amp; 2817
freeJer beef. 95 centt reU
weight , 304· 676 -4182 . Cllrt
Kinnaird

Livestock

hcellent Hemp -gilt for breed·
ing , 200 lbs. Call 814-448·

2411 .

Farm Equipment

AQHA Regi1t.,ed Quarter t'torst
stud stNica. Direct out of
"Cherlie Polite" Call614-446·

73 Dodge van new peint. t900 .
Cell 814-388-9717 tnVtim,e.

9379 .

1980 Ford wane cvl ., ••pd.,low
miiNge , tporty , cuh price.
U .999. John's Auto Saln,
Bulav111t Ad., Gallipolis.

Chicken end turkayt for ult

614-742-2460
Pigs *26 .00 aech. 30. -676 5492

1979 Jeep CJ -5. 6 cyl. good
cond., 73,000 mi., *2 ,860 Call

e14-448·U92

64

Hay &amp; Grain

1978 Dodge ,._4 318 aut o. 'h
ton, ftlr oondition, 11.800. Call

614-2&amp;8-1427
Hav, Timothy 11 10 per bale.
Cell 61•·379 -2400.
For ule conditioned hay 11 00
• bale in field Call 814·388·

9a32 .
01 25 . 304-e78-6679

Transpor I~ ~ 1on
71

Autos for Sale

CROSS &amp; SONS

U S 35 Wast. Jackton. Ohio
6 14-288-646 1
Massav Farguton. New Holland ,
Bush Hog Salat &amp; Service Over
40 used tr11ctort to choou from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; uted
aqutpment LArgest selection tn
S .E Ohio

1979 ConvefltOn v1n, 1966
Chevy trudt, nica 1978 Chevy
Luv. Ctll aft• 5 , 614 -446 ·

2U8 .

Mlxed hay II rue equara bales,

Farm Suppl1 r.s
&amp; Liv es tock

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

73

1979 Ford Mustang • cyl , new
l'ftbuilt molor, low mlluge Call
814· 266-6417

For sale. 1978 VW bus . 11700
Call 614· 899·6134 .

'Bot S-10, 4"4 Tahoe, auto, air,
cruit.e, tilt. AM -FM, much mora.
can be seen on Taylor Road,
Camp Conley

74

Motorcyclas

1982 Honda XR - ISOOR u .
cond., 11 , 400. Cell 614-367·

Oe19 .
1981 Honda CB -7&amp;0 custom.
t.IIC. cond Call 814-387·0397
1983 Honda Shldow 600 Celf
.tter 7PM 614· 448 -8273

Cerpentfy, remodeling , room
addition, all building repairs
.cement and blockwork Paint·
ing snd roofing . 304-676 5152.

APPARAT U S !

Wilderness of tee larger than
the Un1ted S1ates and Mex·

1co comb1ned, IS explored
160 min.) (RI
lil (fi) Body Human: Tho
Uving Code A boy s1rug·

'I

'

gles against leukemia. a
couple w•th po1en11ally lethal

EEK &amp; MEEK

/N:Sr t.mMf.IJ lOCtiY 1-\FW£
lD CP0::1.':f. E£TWWV 1-\00-'i£·
IVIF£ X CAREf.R lAX1v1AtJ

YEAH ... I HAD 10
00 114AT WE

8:30

RJUDWEOIN

R:JR SO.lTE'RED

THE AFTERNCCN

82

SHOIIIERS IN THE
MORNING ...

BYTHEENDOF

Plumbing

83

Excavating

85

Jt1mes Boya Water Sorvtce Al so
pootsftl1ed Ca ll614 2561 141
or 614 446 -1175 or 614 · 446 791 1.

1M VW GTI 6 tpd .. eir cond ..
AM · FM. cau , factory magt,
r.w cond .. 18.800. Cell 8142ol5 -5040

4010 JO diatal tractor clean
creem PJft JD raka, JD 224T
biller Cell 81 • -288·6622

814-448-2036 .

,,

01 .000. C•ll 814·44f· 71123.

19B5 Honda ATC 70. 3whHitr.
herdly ridtn te60 . 304·837·

26De .
1982 Plymouth Horizon. 4 dr .. 4
tPd.. air. AM -FM. 12.499.
John't Auto Still. BultvllleRd ..

Golllpoll•.
Jefl ltughmen' t 1871 untinlthtd retlortd NOVA. 327
chrome englnt. no pftont In·
~J~Ir., ,

Mldd'-n lerotfbury).

1977 Buick Ettl'tewegon t800 .

C•lle14·44f·31Z6 .
1971 Fot'd Thunderbk'd, goad
oond. C•ll 814·441·0924.

75

Boats and
Motqrs for Sale

21 ft. cabin cruiler Inboard·
outboard motor . Call 814-448·

7028.

BARNEY

General Hauling

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CE NTER SR 36 W. Glllipolis,
Oh1o Call 814· 446· 9777, eve.
£114·448· 3692 Up front tree ·
ton with warranty ovar 76 uted
trectort, 1000 tools

, 977 Imp ell 1tatlonwagan.

/

Tronchtng Sarvtce· WIIIOr {ja!,
and eiectrtc Fr ee es tunllt &amp;~
304· 773 5839

81 Honda 6150 in good condl· Ken '• Water SerwtM Wells.
tion. 19150 Cel 614-992 -8, 44 . claterns, pools and waterbede
· filled . Call 614 -367-0623 or
1984 V65 S.lue. 2500 miln . 614 - 367 -7741 or 304 675 ·
Full cov.,llile hetm•t. Honda line 1247.
cov..-, tame .. now. 12600 or
Coal. limettone. gravel, etc.
bett orter 814-992-5747.
Oeltvared 1 ton and up Jim
1983 XR 80. Motor Cycle. L1ke Lanter, 304 -676 -1247 or 675· •
7397.
niJW 81 • · 246·5177.

Jividen ' • Farm Equipment
Check oor 1111 prictt on long
tractors &amp; V~ttmeer hay equipment with 4 • perctnt financing
available. A complete line of bale
kindling acceteorl11, grlndltf
mixert , wagont , rotary tlll111,
rotary cutters, bladet, cultlva·
ton . ditet , plow1, .. lldere , poat
drivers, wood splitters, gat111,
headgatat , powarwuhert &amp;
wheal hortt lawn !Ia garden
tractors . And •• ua for a
COI"J'4)1ete lin eot pe111 It tervlcel
A variety of uted
Utad ·
ttectort, uud round baiera.
grinder mhtere . wagont. IPfiY·
art, cultiwetort. wheel dllc.
ptowt, culipecltan. ralc... .q
balert, mowing mechinll. end
taddert . Call 114-448 · Hl7&amp;.

I

Good· 1 E.IICIIvating. bt~sarnents ,
footer s. driveways, septi c tank s.
landa capmg. Cell nnylime 614 446-4537. James L Oavi5o n.
Jf. owner.

fU -248· 8177

1978 8uzuld RM250, good
cond, 1480.00. ' must 111 lo
epprlcate. 304-875-4090.

LISTEN INQ.

A&amp;H leptic tank pumping ser·
vice. Reatonable rates . C11ll
614 247 -2281

&amp;PM

1983 Mercury Zeph• Z-7, euto,
elr. AM-FM , sporty. cesh pric..
*2.999. John ' • Auto Salet,
Bultvllle Rd ., Galllpolil.

/

THt;: '1\CRLD.

JU6T WAN T ED
TO SEE IF
YOLI WERE

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Ptne
GallipohJ. Ohto
Phone 614 ·446 3888 or 614·
446 4477

1983 XR· BO . Like new . Call

Blacil Tottota Supra
loldiMI, electric tunraof, hoodad
MVIII', good cond . Call Brian,

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
THE FVRED \ST IS

1976 Buick Electra, feir cond.,
Mf:iO . Cell 614· 388-9832 aft..-

1983

••

Home repairs alltvpet. Carpen try, Roofing , Painting, frM ettl·
mat... J . Hall , 304 -675 -2906

&amp; Heating

UCilPM~ine

Cil Daktari

32 ft lflliler, salf contained,
awn ing , air, many e"trll. Mutt
sell, thit week only can be see n
Krodel Park, US 62 North .

1977 ChiYY 4tt4llfllon with8 pt.
U,OOO or but
offer Clll 614· 388-9886 .

304·87e-e7e9 .

\

22 ft 1974 Monnor 11 , 1elf
conteinacl, air cond, awmng,
t3 ,200 .00 . 304 -676 -1838 .

1189-4823.
1982 Dodge pidlup 2215 cu,bic
M'lgine. 3 tPd .. with overdnve.
ftbergltts topp.-. Cell614 -367

THIS \{ANILL.A
15 fi!ANGIC&gt; .'

1974 Prowler 28ft. 11111 conte ·
sined. etr. parked at B1g Foot
Camp Ground , Gallipoht
Shown by appomtment only
614 742 -2677

Ellterior &amp; intenor ttucco plat·
t•mg &amp; pletter rep1ir. Low
rat11 Call 614 - 258-1182 .

1968 Ford Muttang ,
13,000.00. good cond. 304

VEGtTA&amp;I£

J)\ vtR'i SCRRI'··l'tL
SPEAK TO 111M!

1971 16 ft Oream8f tra11el
trailer , gaa stove, furnaca &amp;
refrigerator , sleeps 5 -6. goo d
amd , !1 ,250 Call 614-256·
1 142

1977 Camero wtth electric
window e. new tir11, good con d.
~one 30•·882-269&amp;.

1981 Cheve"a auto. AC, phone

tr1ow b!Me.

Now buying lhell com or 11r
corn. Ctll forlatnt quotas . River
City Ferm Supply, 814-448·

after 6PM.

304-878 -1386

1981 Z28 Camero, PW, PB, PS ,
Air. 304-895-:M41.

ARLO Al\'D JASIS

Call 614-388 -9756

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional litaflme gu~trsn ·
tea. Local references lurmshed.
Free elttmlttl. Call collect
1-614 -237 -0488. day or ntght.
Rogert Basement
Waterproofing.

3480.

'1986 Ford Ranger. Call 8144 ft Roto Ttller fat tractor 3 pt
hitch . 1 sat 1 bottom plow 3 pt
hitch , 304·896· 3ot41 .

1976 Starcraft foldout camper,
sleep~ 8, complete with etove,
ICe boll , llghtl &amp; t ink , BIIC COnd ~.

\ljJI}f.\fl fi)1} @

genes attempt to have a
healthy child and doctors go
on a search-and-deslroy
m iSSIOn to res tore a man ' s
bram ro 1ts normal capectty.
(60 m&gt;n.)
(]) 0 (l) Growing Paino
(CCIIRI .

9:00 U CIJ@ Hunter Hun1or becomes the prtme suspect
when a government w itness
'' murderad. (60 mm 1 (RI . In
S1ereo .
Cil 700 Club
(I) 0 Cil Moonlighting
(CCI Despite David's ob)ectlons , Madd1e tnvest1gates
her own father when her
mother th1nks he ' s having an
affaiF /60 m&gt;n IIRI.
(I) Austin City Umils:
Me~e Haggard and Freddie Powers
®I li) (fi) NBA Basketball
Finals: Game Three At
press time. starting teams
had not yet been determined (2 hrs , 30 min.l
(jj) Frontline: Holy War,
Holy Terror jCC) The back ground of the Islamic Revolutton IS exam1ned. (60 m1n .)
1 0:00 U Cil @ NBC While
Paper: Divorce ls Changing America
lll IJ ())Spenser: For Hire
fCC~ Spenser's life is endangered and h1s apartment is
destroyed when he 1s h1red
to protect e key organtzed
cnme witness set to testify
lor 1he grand jury. (60 m&gt;n .)
IAI
1!11 aJ Shi~ey Maclaine:
Where Do We Go from
Here Songs . dances and
technical wizardry hght up
the stage as Sh~rley Maclaone performs 160 min.l
(I) Sandbaggers
(jj) Newswatch
I 0:20 Cil MOVIE: 'Who'o Minding the Mint1'
1 0 :30 (]) Celebrity Chefs
(jj) Great Outdoors
@ News
11 :00 U CD (I] 0 (I)@ News
Cil l Spy
C!J lnsida the PGA Tour
1!11 aJ Love Connection
(I)SCTV
(jj) Great Railway Journeys
of the World
t 1 :30 U (}) ®I Tonight Show
Guest host Garry Shandhng
welcomes Alan Thicke and
Beny White. 160 min .) In

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ •

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Uni!Ct'amble lheee four Jumblet,

Its Cf1lly

one letllt' to each square, to fOffil
lour ordinary words.

n

~we

I ZENOO I
,_,___
..
r
J
. .....1

W~l ...,.

J I I 1J
I POLEEPj

nr

(]

...

CAVi AI'I:T

l lir~&lt;'i !!IE A
I"~ I MIIIVE'
FO~Ifl OF.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprtse answer, as sug
gested by the above cartoon

-. K1 I I ] .. [ I I I I 1 )"

@ Welcome Back, Kone&lt;
Cil Gunomoko

(!) SporbContlf
(J) Entertainment Tonight
1!11 (I) Hogen' 1 Heroes
0 (]] Jeopardy
(J) Nightly Buolneoo Re·
port
00 News
(jj)
MacNeil-lehrer
Newshour
0 Gal Divorce Court
@ Private Benjamin
@ Wheel of Fortune
7 :30 U CD (I] New Newlywed
Game
Ill NBA Today
fJJ (I) Taxi
.
0 Cil ®I Wheel of Fortune
(]) Fawlty Towers
Iii CW Entenainmen1 To·
night
@Major League Baoeball:
Chicago Cubs at Cincin·
nati
@ Jeopardy
7:35 (J) Major League Baaeball:
Pillsburgh at Atlanta Live .
8:00 UCil @TheA-Team(CCI
Rtck James h1res the team to
protect
an
1mprtsoned
buddy marked for dea1h by
fellow inmates (60 min ) (R) ,

89&amp;·3802

Taylor ' s S eny Patch. You pick or
we ptc ll . 9am · 7pm. Mon . thru
Sat. Call 614 -446 -8692 or
614 -245 -6178

61

1976 Dodga Dart t450. 304·

2478 or 882·3e62 .

29e6 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

19715 G. Plymouth fury . 1976
Mercury Monarch Both 4 door,
air. Call 814· 992 -7075 . 8 ·00
am .· 7 .00 pm .

1-614-2ee -e&amp;22.

9200.

Ptano lenona g1van in the Clay
area . Call 614·446· 447&amp;.

58

38e-9688.

e14-992· 3194 .

' 6:35
7:00

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

like new

Johnson 2 t'torte trallll' , good
conditiOn Call 61 4· ... 1 -s.t93

Good used flo o r modal co lor
TV 't, and good rotollller Call
614· 446-1 149.
New Troy· built 6 hone tillflr.
telling to ae"le estate. Save
monty over new Call614 -245 ·
6131

Farm Equipment

u rn mom® 111 G2Hl11

News
I]) Green Acres
ffi Mazda Sportolook
fJ) CD Star Trol&lt;
(]) 3-2-1. Contact ICC)
(ll) Here's to Your Heatth
'HI One Day a1 a Time
6:05 (]) Gomer Pyle, USMC
6:30 U I]) @ NBC News
CD Wagon Train
(!) Revco's Wo~d Cia..
Women IRI.
(]) 0 ()) ABC News
(]] Doctor Who
® Iii (DI CBS News
(j]) Body Electric

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Rebuilt auto tran1mi1110n C-4
Fill 74 Musttng II V-6 A1k1ng
1125 Call614 -388· 9080&amp;a! lt
for Rex

Chnt freeter 20 cubic tt. Good
condition. Cell614 - ~9 - 2461 .

Bu tldtng metttllll , cement.
block• alltlt~l . yard or diiNary .
Galhpolta Block Co .. 123'/J Pine
St. , GalllpOhl, Ohio Call 614·

- - - - - - - - ·le-

Trailtf' tpec• Send Hilt Aoed
convenient to 1chool1, ttort 1nd
hosplt1l. City s.wer anillble.
Inquire RoNI•, 304-&amp;75-4800
between 9 :00 and 4 :00 week

#.VE. 1.1£ 12 ALLS

Seart Kenmore Wethltf' .,d
dryer. EllceKent condition . Call

8 eutomatic washert GE , Wlltrl pool , from f96to $160, alltn ex
cond 3 electric rangn 40 in , 36
in , 26 In G11 rangat30 tn , 36 •n
Retrigttrator Coldtpot like new
*250, refrigerator troll free
!160, 5 side by stde rehigera
tors whtte, gold, coppertone,
avocado Air conditioner 6,000
BTU $95 , air conditioner 8 ,000
BTU like new 1125 A1r condl ·
tionar 11 ,000 BTU $125 .
Skaggs Appliances Upper River
Ad , 614 -446 -7398, Closed at
noon Saturday.

with blower, like new. Call
For rent Sleeping Rooms and 614-446 ·1640 or see at 111
light t'toute k•plng rooms . Perk Kin eon Or .• Gallipolis.
Central Hotel. Cal! 61 4 -448·
Lifetime concrete culverts, 1 :z
0756.
incto to 38 inch , in sto ck Lsrger
tiJ81 aveilabla. up to 6 h Ca ll
614 ·992·2 B34 or 61 4 -992 ·
6704.
46 Space for Rent

Mobile home lot on At. 7 &amp;
luii\IIM•Addieon Ad Cell 8143f7·0232 or e14-44&amp;·4285 .

...?O~V~~

19 tt llti boet, 228 hp inboard·
outboard. aCCftiiOII" tncluded ,
asking t&amp; ,BOO.OO . 304· 7738081

Ntce electriC Tepp.., electric
ranue with salf·cleening oven
1 'h yr. old. Will s•l or trade tor
~· r•rtge. Call 814· 992·lri96.

County Appliancs. Inc

Furnished Rooms Stove, wood or cost. tt'termo11at

Traillf' tpace, largtii'M, private.
KC lrll, t•&amp; . Call 814· 3157·
0440 or 614-..a8-3760

B&lt;JRN LOSER

Stono

e14·388·8688 .

45

Tuesday, June

Boats and
Motors for. Sale

Ct111t Motl!ll 614 -446 -7398

68e6

Log cebm houte. 3 bedrooma
and beth. Go to the " Y" 4 mtln

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

eulte *399, bunk beds t1 99.
•ntron recliners $99, ne'N &amp;
used bedroom suites. rangat.
wringer wuhera. &amp; ehon . New
lrvingroom IUites $199 -$699,
Iampi , also buying coel &amp; wood
stoves Call814-44e -3159 .

&amp;.00.

For rent 2 bedroom furnished
ept. Adu lts only. Ctll61•· 992·
2749

992-6868.

Atil Esute for ula or ttade for
house, 160 a cre farm . phone
30•-578-2779

for Rent

e.

RBntal s
41

Mobile Homes

creage

843·6149.
For sale by owner 110 acre1 at
Outer Beautiful 8 room home,
bam. outbuilding, twlmming
pool Also 11••cretnear0utar
3 bedroom modern home 2
barns , valley utting 814· 742·

..

... ..... ... ,

"Wh addya mean th e c j erk
"
Wa5 rude, yOU fat SIQ b?.

bdr.. LowAr Rtvtr Rd.. river

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYU! ®bJ

Merc!1and1sB

3·4 bdr . carpeted. remodeled .
ba1em ent . ntce. VJ 1cra. ~~ mile
from crty. 122.600 Clll 614
446-2034 etter 15PM

3 bedroom , newly rlldecorated.
aluminum sidmg, large carport.
garage, oo J,&lt;, acre lot 111 Chester
One-fout1h m ile on 248 oH Rt
7 614 -985 4366

54 Misc. Merchandiae

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, Nor1h of Pomeroy.
tlu bed for ••••· Good
Larue lots. Celt 61•· 992 -7479 king
condition, Slem•efemllecltto
older petson . Celt 814-992·
Trailer Iota tawllr and water 388e.
turn11had , •mall children ac·
ctpted, Rt. 1 Locutl Rd , back' of Beautiful, Contempo Eighty,
K &amp; K. 304·675· 1076
Lowery Organ, good condition .
Electric lawn mow•. gr . .
teedar Betty lish 61 • · '713·
5223

COMPLAINTS

1

Tuesday, June 3, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(Answl!tf'S to l"r"'rrow)

I

Yesterday'!!

Jumblao: PANSY APRON BISECT HEAVEN
Answer: Anolher na-ne fa 'hOts d'oeuvres· "APPE·TEASERS"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

A great play
when it works

NORTH

0-S-81

•n

+A 10 3

• QJ 9 2

+K 6 ; I

By James Jacoby
Although East and Wesl were play·
mg weak jump-overcalls, East's hand
was rather mangy for his weak twoheart bid. In facl the bid propelled
North-South mto a thin game when
South decided to trade on his double
heart-stopper and carry on to three
no-trump. Overbidding is nothing new
to the game. Wilhout the overbid we'd
have no story, because against three
no· trump West had lo make an imagt·
nallve play to defeat that contract.
West led the jack of hearts, which
was allowed to hold lhe trick. The 10
of hearts was continued and declarer
won the queen. Next came a diamond
to dummy's queen and East's king.
East led a heart, and West now had his
opportunity to scuttle declarer's
chances Do you see the play' West
discarded the ace of diamonds. Now,
although declarer had one diamond
trick in the bank, there was no way for
htm to develop lwo tricks in the suit
without letting East on lead one more
time to run the hearts.
Is there a lesson to the deal' Yes. ll

EAST

WEST

+Q9 872

+J 4

• J 10

.K 9R753

t K 10 6

+A ~

I
+193

+Qa
SOUTH

+K 6 5

.AQ6
• 873

+A

10 7 2

Vulnerable· Neither
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

East

Soulb

Pass

1+

2'

Pass

Pass

3

Pass

Pass

+

I+

Pa ss

3 NT

Pass

Opening lead . ' J

you're going to make dramattc defen·
sive plays like thiS, it helps to be lucky
The last time I tned 11, declarer had
the 10 of diamonds and made more
tricks than anyone else m the room

~0-~t,
THOMAS

by

JOSEPH

42 Ireland
ACROSS
I Pitcher's 43 On naval
maneuvers
plate
5AgiUlt.e

DOWN

9 Rhode

1 Rumney and
Merm o

Island's
motto

2 11empsey.

10 NASA's
concern

II Catch
sight of
12 These days
14 Lamprey
15 Perched
16 Passing
grade

to Tunney

3

Neatnes.~;

(colloq.)

4 Turkt sh

Yesterday's Answer
21 Prom

titl e

6 Make Ja(f'

7 Frozen
treats

30 European
plant
32 Unfor-

pa~e

5 Torrent

hox

22 Wuud

gotten
33 News

sorrt&gt;l

8 Manumit
23 S uhstde
17 Prtor to
(pre!.)
10 Slope
24 Vrndt•tla
18 Walle1
13 An Arab
27 L1ke
bill
repuh li(·
somr
19 Sh&gt;p beak 15 Junior,
ha ms
20 Confined
to semor
28 Hire
22 Wire loop ,-,-,.-,.,23 Mrl
highligh t

SOUrt'f• s

38 As1an
r1v e r

:19 Gu1do's
hi~ht&gt;st

notr

25 t"rench

city
26 Grrman
rxport
27 Mullusk

29 T1mon•Sf'
COin

:JO Court
31 f.ngli sh
rivt•r
34 Thncf•
35 Museum
display
36 "- Buttf'r·
m1lk Sky"
37 Vege!ahll'
39 Okla. &lt;&gt;l)'

40 Icy
41 Pres.
att.-!(t&gt; n.

DAD.Y CRYPI'OQUOO'ES'AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letlersaredifferenl

CIYPTOQUO'I'E
&amp;-3

ou

PSCUL

XOB

GUJUYSQ

YUJ L

n1

F ll I

OS WL lJPY
Xll .ll'A

QOIJ

0 l'

X 0 lJ I

G U ILIYS\l

II I I' Z

.\ S I ' L

QUJQMPPSNl
Ytsterdoy'o Cryptoquote: IF A MAN WliU CA~NOT
COUNT FINDS A FOUR-LEAF CWVEK, ISm: Ll't 'K\" '
- STANISLAW LEC

Stereo .

C!l SportsCenter
87

(I) WKRP In Cincinnati
Ill aJ One Stop Bayond
OffiABC News
(]) Soundstage
® 1iJ CW News
rnl Trapper John. M.D.
12:00
Boit of Groucho
(JJ French Open Daily Re-

Upholstery

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERV ''SHOP
1163 Sec Ave .. Gallipolis
614 -446 -7B33 or 614 -446 1833.
R A M Furnttu,. Manuftl t:turmg ,
St Rt 7, Crown City, 01'1 Ca ll
614· 258· 1470, call Eve 614.
448 - 343B . Old &amp; now
Uphoatered

Mowtey' • Uplloltterm g !ervt n ~
21 h . Keyat Pontoon bolt, 60 trl countyaree21 years . Tl'l tt bn!ll
HP JohniOn motor, new 1rallar, m furniture upholttering Call
very good condlllon . U800 . 304 · 676 - 4154 for tr 1118
81.·992-15763.
estimates

PEANUTS
6ET BACK 1THIS 6Uv'5
,.\ GOOD. ~ ITTER ~

ffi

FMTHER 16ET BACK AS
FAR AS 'IOU CAN~~

cap

/.

Cil Entenainment Tonight
111 rn Rawhide
0 ()) Hawaii Five-0

6ET JJA'i BACK I

I
'I

J

(
1)

®Taxi
I I &lt;HI Simon &amp; Simon
When At ck and A .J . solve an
insuram.:e
case· worth

$120,000, 1hey beg&gt;n to
suspec1 foul play among the

benefictaries . PO mtn .) (R)
12:20 (J) MOVIE: ' No
to
Treat a Lady'
12:30 I I I]) ll1l Late Night with
David Letterman Tonighf s

1:00

guests are George Carlin ,

1:10

w,..,

male model JeH Aquilon and
early Girl Scou1 member
Marian Aslakson. (60 min.)
IHI. In ~1areo. .._
Cll8111CoobySIll Top Rank Boxing from

·1:30

2 :00

Atlantic Clly, NJ (R).

(J) ABC News Nightline
.
• CD Rawhide
® MOVIE: 'The Culpepper Cottle Company'

2:30

@ MOVIE: 'The long, Ho1
Summer'
Cil Dobie Gillis
(]] Archie Bunker's Place
• aJ Wild, Wild Wes1
(fi) MOVIE. ' Running
Scared'
(]) Father Knows Best
(]] Nowo
(])700 Club
C!l Muda Sportolook (R) .
Ill aJ MOVIE: 'The Am:
bas.,....· s Deughter'
(I) SportsCenter
® CBS News Nig~twatch

e

Joined in Progress

Iii (fi)

News

�T~sday.

Page-1 0-The Daily sentinel.

.Ohio Bar Association seeks .·
.i nput on discipline rules
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporler
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPII-·The
president of the Ohfo State Bar
Association has asked the justices
of the Ohio 'l;uprPmP Cou11 to
publish thP lull te" of proposed new
disciplinary rules and solicit comment from all intPtl'sled parli(•s
hefotl' the t'IIIPS arc adopted.
But a rou11 SJX&gt;kf'sm an sa ~·s thrre
has I:JN&gt;n pion I)' of publ ie discussion
and consideration of the subjPCt
ah'f'ad) . and thai the rules are in
tht• process of being assembl«l b)'
the high COUI1.
. "Nom• of the 'professional groups
\'il ;tll~·

intf'rPStl'd in disciplinary

rcfotm has had an opportunity to
or rommf'nt on th£&gt; actual ru.les
being di« •us.'Nl by the cout1 ." said

Ohio weather
forecast

Thomas said the association "ha s
not becl\ pennltted to appear before
the cou11 to explain or discuss the
merit s of those proposals despitr
rq:&gt;co led IUJUests to !11ff'l with the
just ices.
''The procise reason these I'Uies
are

Ohio fentr:d Ohio Highlands
Sunn.l' today , wit h highs betwPCn
70 and 75. Generally clea r tonight,
wit h a low in the mid 50s. Partly
cloud,\ WPdnesday, with highs near
00
Th e prohability of preripitat ion is
n ea r zero toda)' a nd tonight and 20
perC&lt;' nl Wednesday.
Wind s will be from the sou theast
at 10 to 15 mph tod ay a nd from the
soutr. at five to 10 mph tontght.
Inland East Central Ohio
Sunny today, with highs near 70.
Gen&lt;•rally clear tonight , with a low
hetwf&lt;'n 50 and 55. Pat11y cloudy
Wcdnesd,1)'. wit h highs between 75
and RO.
Th probability of precipitation is
near z.ero today a nd tonight and XI
percent Wednesday.
Winds wil l be light and variable
todav and light and southerly
tonight.
South Central Ohio
Sunny today, with highs in the
mid 70s. Generally clear tonight.
"ol h a low between 55 and 60.
Variable cloudiness Wednesday,
with a chanC&lt;' of showers and
thunderstmms and highs near 81
The probability of precipitation is
n••ar zero today and tonight and 30
percent Wednesday.
Wtnds will become southeast erly
atlO to 15 mph today and southerly
a t five to 10 mph tonight.

nreivorks remains Illegal k. OhiO,
but sparide~s are within the Jaw.
the law bans thesale.ot any kind of
fif'e\\'orks to anyolll' u.ridPr · lB.
Penalties for possessing or dis·
charging fireworks are Increased
by the law to up to SI,OOJ and six
months 1n jaiL Fire. Marsbal
WitHam Hennow
· .said .
·One senator, .however, said Ute
measure leaves a loophole for
buyers.

· Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, R- Parma
Helghts,saldthebilllsanimpmvement over the old law, but said a
House-Senate conferrnci&gt; commit·
tee left In a provision that allows
Ohio residents to buy Class C
fireworks ~ Utey say Utey wUI take
them out r1 the state within 48
hours.

By Unlled Press lnternallonal
A frost warning was In effect
overnight for the northeastern
.
comer of Ohio, and several record·
Burbank, where he died early &gt; low temperatures were expected
Monday.
. around the state by this morning.
Based on lnformatbn from witIII'SSes and Alvarado's actions
Weather forecasters said there
detectives believe the man may was a chan('(' of frost Utroughout
have been under the Influence of Ute rest of northern and eastern

under

rE'VIew

is

bPcause

lawyers, judges and many ot her
Ohioans have raised serious-questions about Ute fairness and integr ity of the c urren t discipline
system.'' wroiP 11lomas.
"If the justices of the Supreme
Court truly want to resolve those
questions and restore the confi·
dence ri judges, lawyers, the press
and the public in the wstem. Uten I
call on Utero to open up the
t'lliemaking process to all inter·
ested parties and to duly consider
comment on these important public
Issues before adopting any new or
amended rules."

GLENDALE. Cam. (UP! I - A
man pointing a television remote
control de\'iC&lt;' at a car was shot and
killed by thr('(' police officers who
saiJ they thought he was aiming a
gun, authorities said.

The officers. called shortly before drugs.
midnight Sunda y to investigate a
The three officers, who were not
repot1 of a man with a gun, found ldPntlfied, were removed from field
Javier (.i&lt;Jnzales Alvarado. 23,1n the duty under routine dPpartment
midd iP of the slrCI'I clutching an procedures petldlng an Internal
object in a two-handed combat investigation of the shooting Loop
pistol stance. officer Christopher said.
'
Loop said Monday.
S k
ed
"The officers repeatedly ordered
pea er nam
the suspect to drop the weapon and
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio (UPI)
he refu sed to comply," Loop said .
- Secretary 1of Defense Caspar
"When the suspect turned and Weinberger will address the ~th
pointed his weapon at an approac h- meeting of Buckeye Boys State In
ing car ... the officers shot the Bowling Green June 18, Rep.
suspect," Loop said.
Delbert Latta said Monday.
Loop said the three officers fired
Weinberger's appearance at the
almost simullanrously, st riklng the mock government excerlse will be
man several times. They la ter In response to Latta's Invitation, the
discovered that the silver and gray Bowling Green congressman said.
object Alvarado was holding was a
The week-long ev~nt , sponsored
TV contml device.
by the American Legion, Is exAlvarado, who lived about a block pected to draw 1,400 participants to
from the Intersection, was taken to the Bowling Green State University
St. Joseph 's Med ical Center in campus.

Call (6141992·7022
Equal Housing Opportunity

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Phone 446 · 4524
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7:1C &amp; 9. 1U P

Klngs

[,AI'
~.

ltATllJ

over ooe year's time. Shown at the bumln' oeremony
VIrgil {Bo) Brown, Jean Moore, and Ted Reed with
Bishop WIDiam Black and Father LAle Miller at the
back.

'~'fJ I

lion of the new Christian education
building. During the meeting Monday evening, the mortgage was
burned and the debt retired on the
building project which with arch!toctural fees, [!!,rn ishlngs. interest,
and building costs had exceeded

P"'l'.s

en tine
2 Sections. 16 Pages

~100.rro.

Regular&amp;' Menthol,
Kings&amp;' 1005

AT&amp;T walkout costing
finn $50 million a day
By DAN CARMICHAEL
UPJ Labor Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI I - The
walkout against American Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. Is costing
the international communications
giant $50 million a day In lost
revenues, said the striking Communications Workers of America.
As the strike entered its fourth
day, top negotiators for the company and the union held Informal
morning and afternoon meetings
Tuesday, but rocessed for the night
without announcement. The full
negotiating committees did not
meet.
Either side could initiate another
meeting, AT&amp;T said. The infonnal
meetings involved Robert Livingston. AT&amp;T's chief of labor relations, and John Carroll, the top
union negotiator.
AJthou gh'AT&amp;T had no comment
on the talks, union spokeswoman
Francine Zucker said, "At this
point. ove rall, no substantial progress has been made on the critical
issues:·
The strike by 155,(0) union
members fofPed AT&amp;T to close 100
long-distan ce operator centers, and

the union said it was costing the
company $50 million a day.
AT &amp;T spokesman Herb Llnnen
said the company could not !mme·
diatly determine the cost of the
strtke.
The strike also has closed 11 of
AT&amp;T' s 24 telecommunlca lions and
computer equipment factories in 17
sta tes, strained the company's
ability to handle operator-assisted
tong-distance calls, and crippled the
installation of complex phone sYS·
.terns malntv used bv businesses.
The company said 13 other AT&amp;T
plants were operating because of a
tentative agreement with the International Brotherhood of Eloctrlcal
Workers, the second -lar~st union
at 'AT&amp;T.
Highly visible, active picket lines
were established at AT&amp;T plants
and rifices from coast to coast.
Many IBEW members hooored
CWA picket lines at sites where
both were represented, particularly
in Ute Northeast.
The strike is the largest work
stoppage In the nation since the
CWA's three-week strike against
AT&amp;T in 1983, and is the fiJ·st
walkout since the cout1 -ordered
breakup of 1he Bell System in

J an ua ry 1984.
AT&amp;T bega n hirin g "temporary
employees" - the union ca ll ed
them "strikebreakers" - to help
handle long&lt;l lstance calls. About
ll,IXXl of the 155,1XXl striking employees are telephone ~rat ors .
AT&amp;T' s hiring of "strikebreakers, " Zucker said, "is an act of
desperation, because obviously
there aren 't enough managers to do
the work. Our strike is solid.
"In two weeks, 75 percent of all
AT&amp;T manufacturing and 75 percent of all AT&amp;T distlibuting will
grind to a hall . Theoompanycannot
afford a lengthy strtke in this
com petitive field."
Llnnen said AT&amp;T wou ld not S('('k
to pennanently replace It s unionized operators with "temporary
worke rs."
"We want our klng distance
opera tors back, " said Linnen.
"Every one who comes back will
have a job wailin g for him or her."
The strike was caused by dispu tes over wages, AT&amp;T's plan to
eliminate cost-of-living inflation
raises and its attem pt to create a
lower-paid category of skilled
tec hn icians.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WAArNING, Smoking

Causes lung Cancer. H.eart Disease.
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.

.

'

'

o PhiND Motrlslnc. 19118

12 mg "tat;' 0.9 mg nicotine av. par cigars"~ by FTC mel o . _ J

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...

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•

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•

Middleport man killed in 3-vehicle
accident Tuesday in Gallia County
troopen;. Brenda S. Wright , 2l,
Bidwell . was westbound preparing
to make a right-hand turn onto
Township Road 6.

struck the truck.
Halfhill avoided striking the
truck with his cycle. but ran over
Freeman's legs before veering into
the ditch off the rtght-hand side of
the road, Ute pat rol said.

Wright was driving a pi ckup
truck pulling a trailer and repon edly drifted left d center to attempt
the tum.
According to the repcrt, Freeman and his motorcycle went down
in the road to avoid tiE truck. After
being thrown off the cycle, he

F'reeman was taken to HMC by
the Gallla EMS. He was the only
lndJvldual injured In Ute accident.
His vehicle - also the only one
damaged - sustained moderate
damage .
Wright was ci ted lor left of
center.

Halfhill , 16, Bidwell. who was also

on a motorcycle, according to

11 was with regret and a vote of
thanks that Racine Village Council
accepted the resignation of Clerk·
Treasutw Cathy Carleton. effective June 11. Council accepted the
resignation Monday night in regu·
tar session.
Carleton advised council that her
position lnterterred with he r employment at J .D. Drillin g. She also
advised council she felt It would be
In the best interest of the village that
the clerk-treasurer be available
during the day hours to beller serve
the residents.
No action on her replacement
was taken. Council President
Frank Cleland noted that a special
meeting wUI probably be calk'(] to
discuss a replacement.
Park improvements continue at
the Shrine Club and Old Ferry
Landing Parks reported the park
committee.

According to the committ('(' , a
combination flag and light poit' has
been installl'd at the Shrine Park by
Carroll Teaford, Dick Wamsley and
Junior Neigler.
The committee has written State
Sen. Oakley Collins lor an Ohio
state flag to be used at the park. Mr.
and Mrs. Otis Knopp have donated
a United States flag which Is being
flown at this time.
The committee also reported the
"adopt a picn ic table" program Is
successfully underway. Mrs. Delores Cleland and grandson Todd
Taylor have already completed
sanding and painting a table.
Ta bles have also roen adopted by
Dick Lee, Jake Lee and Pete
Shields.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Teaford and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beegle have
donated a nat of flowers for the
Shrine Park It was reported .

OK funds for Syracuse
ramp and dock project
Utt.wgge~ed r~ail pnce.

25 Cents

A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

The new Christian educat.lon
buildJng at Grace Chtlrch, dedi ·
rated on June 2, 191fi, Includes
classrooms for Sunday school and
Christian edu cation, a conference
room , a new office i:lr Ute roctor
and restroom facilit ies for the
Continued on page 16

Racine clerk-treasurer resigns post

IACK50 N P1KE · RT J 5 WES T

"SWE ET Ll BERT Y"

"This Is a feat which has not been
equaled In the history of the Diocese
of Sou them Ohio."
These were the words of Bishop
William Black to congra tula te the
congregation of Grace Episcopal
Church. Pomeroy, at a meeting on
the first anniversa ry of the dedica -

GALL!POLL&lt;; - A thrt'&lt;'·vehlcle
accident Tuesday on Gallia County
Road 2 in Morgan Township
resulting in the dea th today of a
Mlddlepot1 man Is stil l under
investigat ion by the state highway
pntroL
Gary A. Freeman, 22. was
seriously injured In the accident at
5:05p.m. and was taken to Holl.er
Medical Center. He died at 12: OJ
a.m. of int ernal injuries suflered in
the accident. the palmi said.
Freeman was westbound . riding
a motorcvcle, along wit h Bradley

'*'&gt;~'

PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$4,41&gt;8. P ICK-4 $1 box bel pays $187.

0 ~1-' ;~:. J ' i t~

'

hne recently boon oxtendod. Lovely
apartments featuring wall to wall
carpoting, all appliances. All utilities
paid except cablo TV and telophone.
Stay cool this ~~Jmmer . Must be 62
years of age or hondicap pad.
FOR FURTHIR DETAILS

Cambridge

$~ $18.

'1/·l l'I[H

~·

Pomeroy, Ohio

ticket sales totaled
with a payoff due of

!: l.~ CJJ-!'1

.

Rates are computed according to
your income. Income guidelines

.J

Man·
Lottery

Daily Number
:i.i 2.
Ticket sa les totaled $1.222,538,
wit h a payoff due of $326, 7~ .
PICK4

~ ~U'H, f.l

Copyrighted 1986

100 Memorial DriYI East

number s:

') Jl

A ·fan\Dy affair

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, June 4. 1986

THE MAPLES

The generic pric dgarette
that. uts flavor first!

CLE\ 'E LAND I UPI1 -

P ICK-4

at y

62 OR OLDER? - STAY COOL
THIS SUMMER ....
CONSIDER •••

Lottery winners

$17h. ~:l8.

No.22

•

.· ·

Bum church mortgage on
first anniversary dedication

Ohio Extended Forecast
Thu rsda)' through Saturday:
A chance of showers each day,
with highs ranging from 75 to 85.
Overnight lows will range from the
uptx•r 50s to the 60s.

W7

Vo1.36 ,

Otureh In Pomeroy wa. burned Monday e•enlng
marking the paying off of a$100,000 debt injustaUttle

Extended forecast

Ohio

e

MORTGAGE PAID (}FF -The mortgage on the
new Christian education building rl Grace Eplsoopal

Ea st to soutlteast winds of 10 to 15
knots today , becoming sout herly at
fi ve to 15 knots tonight and
southwesterly at five to 15 knot s
Wednesday. Waves will average
between one and two feet today and
tonight. Sunny today, with clear
skies tonight and partly cloudy
Wednesday.
The Lake Erie water temperatu re ofl Cleveland is 62 degrees.

winning

By the Bend ..... Pages 8-9-11
Classllleds ..... Pages 12-13-14
C001lcs-TV .......... ...Page 15
Deaths ......... .... .. .... Page 16
Editorial ....... .... ...... Page %
Sports .............. ...Page 34-6

~Oh~l~o~an~d;t~ha~t~av~e~ml~gh~t~lo;ws;;~~W;edn~;esd~ay~.~~~~~~;;~

Lake Erie

day's

Paaeu

Class C fireworks are small
devi&lt;X's that [roduce sight · and
sound effects, but do not rocket Into
the all·.
Suhadolnik said although the bill
technically kills retail sales In Ohio,
many people who say they plan to
take the fireworks out of the state
probably will not do so ·

under clear skies - would range
from the mid 30s to middle 40s
statewide.
With suMy conditbns today,
highs were forECast from the mid
OOs to middle 70s. Lows tontght will
also be about 10 degrees warmer,
said forecasters.
Near-normal temperatures In the
~s and lower 80s are expected

.,:r.-i~itary elections

Inside:

Record low June temperatures

• TV
I
• k"ll
P IICe
man potnt
remote COnlro

Sf'('

DukC' \\' . Thomas in a lr ttrr srnt
M onda ~· to r ach of 1hr spven
justiers.
" I lx'lif'W' it would lx' 8 gr uvr

Fireworks law .updated in Buckeye State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ·:...AD
updated flrewoii&lt;s law that went ·
mistake. for Ute coqrt to adopt. any Iii to · effect lasi week outlaws
nPW ruleS b(.fon• they have roen
possession and sales of nios.t ry~·
Pxposed to fre&lt;&gt; and operi of fireworks and pmvldes for
discussion.'.'
'
toughen; fines.
TllP rules, Which apply io attar-·
Gov . Richard C&lt;'ll'ste Friday
11PYS and judges. have been. pmsigned lhP bill that tightens fireposed by the Bar Association in
works sales taws and putts mOre .
ck&gt;lail. The· c,ourt also I~ studying
~wrr int o local enforcei'I'IPnl of the
l'('('()mmrndatiJ;&gt;ns of an American
law.
Bar Association Task Fore&lt;' and a
Possession and discharge of
state commission headed bv Josiah
.
H BlarkmofP. dPari of the. Capital
Cnlversity Law School.
0
1

But John McGary. public information officer for the cou11. said
Thomas was a member of the
Blackmore eommitti'E' which made
rK ommenda1ions.

June 3, 1986

COWMBUS - The State QJntroDing llo81'11 hall released $%l,JJH
In state funds lor II.• share of a boollaundt ramp and doclllaclllty to
be constructed on the Ohio Rl•er In Melga C&lt;Mully at the VW111e of
Syracuse, St.ateSen. Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironlon)announcedloday.
The laciUiy will consl&lt;lt of a concrete launch ramp, adjacent
parking area and Ooatlng docks lilr approximately 00 hoals.
Esllm.red tolal cost for the project Is S88,7l6, with I he bal~mce of the
funds Ill come from local Wid federal !lluroes.
Sen. Collins said tile st.ate share was approprl.red In the stale
capital Improvements budget, passed during the last Sft!Sion ollhe
Olllo General Assembly.

LEADERSHIP MEETING - President ReagiUI,
joined by House Republican leader Bob Michel, right,
and Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, laughed
during a Tuesday meeting of Republican ll!aders In

the Cabinet Room. Reagan dell\&gt;ered an "lmpassl·
oned plea" to GOP leadership lor the Senate to uphold
his veto of the rejection rl a $265 mDilon anrut sale to
Saudi Arahla. (UPI)

Reagan says 'pride is back'

However. the park Is still in need of
addit ional flowers and the park
committee will accept flowers or
By IRA R. ALLEN
donations to purchase flowers .
PARRIS
ISLAND. S.C. (UP! I . On recomme ndation of the park
President
Reagan.
making his only
committee. council authorized Ute
commencement
spe&lt;&gt;eh
of the
purchase of 2S railroad ties to be
graduation
season,
addressed
perused to construct a small log cabin
haps
the
toughest
physical
educa
at the Shrine Park.
tion
school
In
the
world
today,
The shelter house at the Old
Ferry t;andin g Park Is nearly telling Marine recruits at the Panis
complete. Southern FF'A student s . Island, S.C., boot camp, "Pride Is
built the shelter house and stlll have back - patriotism Is fashionable
sOme roofing and bracing to add to once again ."
After watching a current class•of
the lac llit y.
shaved-headed
youths struggle
It was reported that wood from a
through
what
Is
euphemistically
tree on Third St. is available forthe
called
a
"confidence
course" in the
taking. Penn its to get the wood are
stifling,
flea-infested
swampland ,
available at the J .D. Dr UIIng offi('('.
the
commander
In
chief pro·
President Cleland was authonounced
Platoons
1044,
1M5, 1046
tll.ed by council to check Into prices
of trtmming and removing trees.
Councilman Robert Beegle Is to
contact Ohio Power Co. regarding
trees that have power lines as well
By JOSEPH MJANOWANV
as dead limbs.
WASH INGTON (UPI ) - The
Street Commiss ione r Glenn
Rizer reported that the village's Senate Is set to debate tax reform.
but the Republican strategy of
backhoe needs repair to the front
wheel. The board of public affairs trying to force the radical plan
will be asked to share In the costs through quickly and unscathed is
under heavy attack by senators
for repair.
In other ·matters, council dis- who want to save IRA tax breaks
and m~ke other changes.
cussed tots that need mowed within
Senate Republican leader Robert
the village and sent letters to Ute
Dole planned to bring the Finance
property owners advising them of
the problem; approved the pur- Committee bill to the floor today,
opening a debate he and other
chase of two fire extinguishers for
supporters would like to complete
the fire house annex; authorized the
rapidly, with few alterations to the
purchase of eight tons of hot mix to
massive measure.
be used in pa tchlng streets.
But, going Into the session, the
Council recessed until 7 p.m.
prospects that the battit' would lJe
Monday, June 16.

country is good and getting beller.
Pride Is back. Patriot ism L• fashionable once again ."
In another pit ch for Congress to
pass his defense bJdget intact,
Reagan said, "To all of those who
say we must always t'lll defense
first. that AmPrica can't afford a
strong mili tary . I have ju st one
thing today: 'Tell it to the
Marines."'
Railing against "shot1-sightcd
cuts in Congress," the presldnct
said It is ntwssal)' " to invest a
modest level of resources in
peacetime to det~r war In thP fi rst
place."

and 1047 "Marines." Until now they
had been the lowest fonn of life in
the proud Corps.
"The few and the proud ... often
the first int o battle, the first to fight
for right and freedom ... you 've
been there when your count ry
needed you," Reagan said.
"You and I are haslca lly In Ute
sa me business, " Reagan told the
Marines, "Each day of my presld·
ency, I work to keep out;, nation
strong and secure so tha t we may
always remain free and at peace.' '
He told the graduating recruits
who have spent the last several
weeks in isolation from the outside
world , "The news about our

Tax refonn debate on tap

'

and had litt le time to study it .
easy and fast appeafPd bl eak .
"This may be tht• most import ant
Dole was confident he had the
votes to force dehat e, but , uoder bill this Congress 1\111 pass an d I
Senate rules , tha t could not come think we ought to know what' s in
II ." he told Doll' in an exchan ~ m
before Friday.
In addition, Dole said Tuesday he the Senate floor .
But Dole and F inane&lt;' Committee
had already been notl1led of at least
30 possible amendments to the Chairman Bob Packwood of
1,490-page measure and both Re- Oregon said they wanted to takr
publicans and Democrats com- car e of any problem with tiE billplained about the GOP leader's such as th&lt;• battle over tax breaks
des ire to ra m the bill through the for Individual Retirement Accounts
- In a confrrf'nC\' wit h the House,
floor with few changes.
Democratic leader Robert Byrd which last year passed a signifiof West VIrginia unsuccesslully cantly different tax r eform
pressed for a delay In the dehate, measure.
The Senate bill wou ld chop a host
complaining that lawmakers had
only rocently received the measure
(Continued on page 16)
•

I
I

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              <text>June 3, 1986</text>
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