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The
Auto Parts
11o Accessories

76

Pomeroy- Middleport-

Times- Sentinel
81

81

Home
Improvements

81

Home
Improvements

Home
Improvements

Ohio'-Point Pleasant. W.Va.
82

11. 1986

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

~----

All 'YI* UHd a rebult trau·
ntitl6oftt • trwtftr CIIM. Will
delivet . O.werdrlve trensmls·
aion1. ftont a ,.., wheet drive,
· •IRUnlhlon w.. • tom conwr1tlrL. ln-e .... uld •rts. Call

RINOLES'S SERVICE , e ll pe -

rienced cerpenter, eleetriden.
m•on. pelnter. roofing (in clud
lng hot tlr tpplicadon) 304 -

815 -2088

Of

Elfll tio r stuc co plutflring &amp;.
planer repat r. C11 ll 61 4 -256
1182 .
Roo fing . sidin g, rem odeling.

875-7388 .

painting houses end roo fs, and

1-614 -237 -0488 . flay or night .

114·171-2220.

Sterb Tree And hwn

cO,.~ew R.... ·towing hitch,

lendacaping. 304 -576 -2010.

614-986-4121 .

R oge rs Ba!emen t
WaterproolilliJ

ROtlfV or cllble too l drlllinij
Mo1t wetlt complet~dumftdlly

RON ' S T8hn.lisio n Service
House calls on RCA . 0uftr8r.
GE . Sp &amp;ciflli ng in Zftl'l ith . Call
304 -576 · 2398 (ll 614 -446
2464

RoOfi ng . p&amp;inting . ro om a ddi ·
tlons . etc. Fr ee estimates. 17
y~uus expllfien ca B &amp; W Con·
stru ction . Cell6 14 -446 -8568 or
614 · 245 9448 eve ' s

edjl•.... bd mount. Load
ttY._. Md IW8Y control bar
MOO.OO. 304-171·4879.
,

S~tnrice.

Pu"ll ulea 11nd stuvice. :104
895 -3802

Wrecklll '71 Nova, !'Huitt en·
~~ .. tO,OOO milt~, exc cond.
new studded tnow Hre•
MOO.OO. 304-171 ·4881 .
'

Estlmt~tes .

QMHIUII repair.

&lt;:!Ill

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -3888 or 814·
446 ·4477

83

EKcavating

Good· 1 E IICIVating. bat•mtnta.
footers. drlvawayt, .. puc tanh.
landiUping , Call anytime 814·
446 -4537 , JamM l. D•'lilon

J1 . owner

85

79 Motors Homes
llo Campers
197• Starcraft llklout e~mper .
,,...,. 8. co~ttt1 with lto'oll.
ice box, Mghtt• sitk. exc . cond .,
ltkt n.w. Ctl 114-388-97155
lift..- &amp;PM.

CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fowth end Pine

BASEMENT
WATERPRO OFING
Un conditional lifetime guarsntee . l oc al refaren c l!l furnish ed.
Free estimatel . Call co llect

TUTES REAL ESTA1E

'

'

General Hauling

Jemn Boys Wa1er Service. Alao
pools filled . Call 614 -251 -1141
or 614-648-1 176 or 814-448-

•BUUDOZING •END
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE
SEWERS • BASEMENTS
WATER UNES • SEPTIC
TANKS· CIIEEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS · MOBILE
HOME SETUPS - ROAD
BUILDING·
· LAND

Cal

.n

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCTION

~.
~·

s,,,,, $f"l•l

latmlliNG NOW FOI:
•Roofing •Siding

367
..031
IF NO ANSWII UU:

Col today ••.

(H£SIIa£. 01110

IIU .'I.\11' S1VT£.'i - BIWK£11
/111 ." rt /'ES - IIFA/. 1UR

,lclb-420(,

21 ft. CIMt A Moto rt1o me .
hecutfvl. FuMy -equipped , ex.
cond. 31,000 mites. 112 .000.
CoiiiU-446·4817.

J' II'/. S.-11 ' \ 'llF/lS -

.!~9 -2 1 52

1977 Dodge 22' motor home.
axtehnt condition, 498 Maple
Drive. Gllllpollit. Call 814·448·
0711 .

Coal, lima~tone . gravel. etc.
Oelillared 1 ton and up. Jim
lanie., 304-875-1247 or 6715·
7397.

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Tr.-asury Secretary
James Baker, giving unqualified approval of thl'
radical tax reform plan before the Senate, predicts
that President Reagan will spearhead efforts to
pass the controversial package.
Baker, a k~y administration figure In tax policy,
said the plan represents "a trade-of!," apparen Uy
referring to one item that has raised concern- sharp
curbs on Individual Retirement Account s.
" The trade-off here Is lower rates and gre-. tler
simplicity," hr said.
Saying Reagan has given the legislation ··about as
strong support as anybody could ask." Baker
predicted the president will " lead the chargP" for
passage.
Asked what is wrong with the Packwood plan.

Bulldozer end dump truck work,
Dannv Chapman. 304-875 -

3336.
i:IO&lt;l, H

PIIHnpt bus con·

_,ld hiO ......... Equipped
with bed. rtfflgtrltor, ttovt,
16nk. lib'-. hot water t.,k, 1nd
couch. Aeking •1200. C1M
G14-•2-•t7 after 5:00 pm.

87

Upholstery

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. G•llipolit .
114-448 -7833 or 814 -448 1933

1971 Ch.won Executive 28 ft.
TriNe! Tr1Htr. Lill:e new condition .,.du..d very tittle. H• new
20ft. awning. Original cost over

111.11110. Aoldng 1&amp;200. 61•·
1'42-3033.

R &amp; M Furniture Manufacturing.
St. At. 7. Crown Cit'/. Oh. Clll
614 -258 -1470, call Eve. 114·
446 -3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphoatered .

1978 WWdtm•• Camper. 18
ft .. Mtf-conttintd . hcellent
condition. CaH 814 -742 -3137 .

Mowrey ' s Uphol1tering serving
tri county area 21 years. Htebett
in furn iture upholltering. All
work guaranteed \lilil our mod ·
ern shop at Muon County
Fairgrounds. Phone 304-675 -

1974 Champian Cla11 A Motor
Home . Vlf'f good condhion .
37.000 ICNII miiM . CaH 61 4·

. 992-2303.

SCin'lp• truck camp•. 8 ft.
pop-up lor light trucks . Also
Hobart Mtlt Grinder. CaH 61 C·

1'42-28n.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

:1!4-171-1141 .

For Mit - lx30 Hou" tfliler.

a....,.

Call :1!4·488-1618.

Truck ctmpw wrth llove, ice
box, portlpOtti • in Jl)od condi·

don. t480. 304·171·2949 .

94 Sits down to a
1 Staid
7 Shore

Scrv1ces

81

12 Dashing lellow
17 Baker"s products
21 Figures of speech

Home
Improvements

fttty Trtt Trimming. stump
femo¥11. Catl 304·175·1331 .

Man Power. Inc., genertl home

RNI E1tate General

POMEROY,O.

NEW LISTIIIG - CHESIIRE
- 1986 · Mansion 100bt~
home on renled lot. Beatrtilul
unl wilh 3 bedrooms." eloc.
lorted air heat dh cenlral
air. Insulation rackage for ~fi­
tiency. $17,:ol.OO.

comb at

59 Antlered an1mal
61 Heed
62 Tropi cal fru1t
63 Plug ot gauze
64 Tantalum symbol
66 Sched. abbr
67 Withered
68 Car leature
69 Spanish abbr.
71 Suffi x me aning a
person th at
72 Liquor variety

II£WliSTING - POMEROY
-A cule 3 bedroom hornf,
newly remodeled, on 4 ~Is.
New roof, basement, woodburner, FA. gas heal. Owner
needs sale! $19,000.00.

74 Rain and hail
76 Ode
77 The u1ial

78 K1ng : 11.
79 Ta lk gl•bly
BI Sea eagle
82 Pr ovides crew

NEW LISTING - EASTERN
DISTRICT - A neal 2 bed ·
room newer home oo om 2
acre lot wilh above ground
PJ01 plus salelhle dish.
lleaulilul lot wilh pine lrees
ttnd garden space. Slorage
boiding. $29,000.00.
IIDOLEPORT - Newer modular, nice level lot ~ Middleport. Woodburning fireplace,
porch and deck areas. Beautilul place. Owners musl sacn-

fice. $38,500.00
LAIGSYILLE - 6.35 acr e
country estate - barn ,
sheds, lwo ponds, and anice
I I+ story home in good re·
pair. Eleclric heat plus a
woodburner for cheap heat

purpose
4 Simian

102 Evergreen trees

56 Opposes l1,mty

$35,000.00.

Durocher

25 Ott. ot the Guard:

57 Places for

NEW LISTING - EASTERN
DISTRICT - Jusl righ I lor a
large lamily! 4·5 bedrooms,
HI balhs, lull basement.
garage, carport. Gas f.A.
heal. New rool. latge deck.
Over 2 acres of land.

1 To staunch (a
wound)
2 Therefore
3 Serve the

101 Dregs

48 Se lec1
49 Type of wave
52 Pier ce
54 Fame

992-lli,

Wing-tooted
Declares
Seesaw
Baseball's

24 Preposition

41 Compass poin t
43 Top of house
45 Stared openmou thed
47 Prefi x tor down

E.M.i•,l.

95
96
97
99

100 Something that

26 Heraldry: gral1ed
28 Following second
30 Retract
32 Bro1her of Odin
33 Hawaiian rood
35 Depression
37 To start upon
39 Location
40 By way of

· lmprovtmtntt, tr• trimming.
odds •nd endt. 30'·875·2222 .

meal

22 Macaroni.
spagbetti. e1c.
23 Badgerlike animal
abbr.

83
84
85
87
89
90

Aslral body
Surfeit
C leaning utensil
Performers
Heating dev• ce

Negated

92 Conspiracy

DOWN

confines

103 Cut
105 Pries abou1
sneakingly
107 Glucinium symbol

109 Sin
110 Knocks
11 1 Lance
113 Transgressions
114 Period of time
1t5 Saint: abbr.
116 Edges
117 Unit or Siamese
currency
118 Crimson
120 French article
12 1 Hold ten aciously

122 Bind
123 Region
124 Profound

126 Sabers
128 Talk idly
130 Folds
132 Den
134 Worn away

135
136
137
139

Underdone
Place: abbr.
Cuttings
Adroit

14 1 Teutonic deity
142 River island

143 Insect
145 Pain ful spots
14 7 Hindu peasant

149 Health resort
152 AI home
153 Washes
155 Pertaining 10 the
navy
157 Portico
159 Negative prefix

160 Bristle
162 Showy flower
164 A1 no time
166 Out -and-out
168 Redact
169 Chairs
170 Snowless
17 1 Rents

5 Care lor
6 Chemical
compound

7 Candle power:
abbr.
8 Grain
9 Fprmer

Wimbledon
champion

75
76
77
79

80 Parts in play

82 Specks
83 Pigpens
84 Scott
86 Kilty: colloq.
88 Hindu cymbal
89 Inserts quickly
90 Small valleys
9t Chris - Lloyd
93 lure
95 Make amends
97 Gratuities
98 Fish eggs
102 Renown
104 Hospital section

12 Bromine symbol

106
107
108
110

17 On the contrary

18 Above
19 Beginner
20 Moves about
furtively

27
29
31
34

Son of Seth
Reliance
Neon symbol
Set in from the
margin

36
38
40
42
44
46
48
49
50
51

Small children
Rumor
Moral failing
Need
Doom
Obligation
Top of head
Turkic tribesman
Goddess of peace
Los Angeles:
abbr.
53 Plaster disks lor

Lubricate
Gratings
Fall in1o disuse
Mature

111 Takes unlawfully
112 Lawn mower
feature
114 Mistakes

123 Indian mulberry
127 The two of us

128 Laud
129 Showered
130 Gratify
131 leaped tor-.,ard
133 Beams
136 Entreaties

138 Cut
140 Sum
143 Fluorine symbol
144 Pilaster

55 Tellurium symbol

15 1 Academic

58 Declared
60 Strong wind
62 - lrae
65 In music , high
68 Measure ol

weight : pi
69 Graze
70 Peeled
72 Partners

73 Assuages

COLUMBUS, Ohio I UP! l Columbus, ranked as the fil1h - best
city nationwide of business. has
jumped II spot s since a news
magazine surveyed 75 metropoll·
tan areas lasl November.
U.S. News and World Report, in
an article In issues on newsstands
starting today, says Columoos Js
the fifth besl city for business In the
nation and tops in the Midwest.
The anlcle quotes Chase Econometrics as predicting that Columbus will be the fa stest· growing citY
In the North this decade.
ln the last su!Vey done by the
magazine In November Columbus
ranked 16th In lhe nation.
"This recent rating will just do
nolhing but add tremendous credl·
billty to 111&lt;' facts we're telilng

125 Dock

56 Cultivated land

been a blow 10 us and has
emphasized our own conC€rn 1hat
we need to get to know this new
market better before assuming
such a large loan burden," he said.
He said the company, which
negotia ted for the loan to stay in
Ohio Instead of moving to West
Virginiam is no real danger and
production will forward when the
molds are delivered .
"Prudent llscal management
requires that we do not go lbrward
wlth the loans at this time,"
Ml&lt;ldleton said.
The ban package submitted to
the state In January called ror more
than M10.1XD to be spent on
acquiring the facUI1)' , renovating II
and buying fixtures and equipment.
Middleton said lv.&gt; ropes to be abiP
to renegotiate for !he purchase or
th&lt;' building so he can acquire it on
such terms that he will oot have to

subjects
153 Household oet
154 Stage need
156 Shelter
158 Macaw
161 Agave plan!
163 Rupees: abbr
165 Hospit al asst
167 Ancient Rom an

people," JohnS. Christie, president
of the Columbu s Area Chamber ol
Commerce. saJd.
Manchester, N.H., is ranked first
nationally for bJslness. Ahead of
ColumbJs are AlbJquerque, N.M .:
Atlanta: B!rmlngham, Ala . Othl'rs
In the lop 10 are Pm1 1and, Malne:
Washington; Charlotte. N.C.: Bos·
ton: and Norlolk. Va .
Christie cited ttr&gt; 2 million square
ffft ol new ColumbJs- area ware·
rouse space occupied In thP last 12
months as a reason for the high
ranking.
He said bu siness is amacted 10
th&lt;' area because of high worker
productivity, a reasonable cost of
living and thl' city's location.
The article says Columoos' suc·
cess as a cenler lor senices.

di stribution and transportation
makes th&lt;' city " unusually r ecessl onproof" for a Midwest city.
"'JY pica l of the gr!'&lt;'ning of
Columbus: Chemlav.11's lawn -care
sa les will top $3:'1.) million this yea r,
up from $142 million In 1~1. "
The report in cludes a chart
showing th&lt;' average Columbus·
area factory worker 's annual salary at $23.622. up 10.7 per cent from

1985.
The magazine's ranklngs are
ba sed on a weigh too average of four
variables: chan~ In employme~t
from the prf"'ilus year, the latest
employmem ratio compared with
111&lt;' national average, chan ~ in
non-farm employment and changP
In weekly earnings of fac tory
workers.

I() M£ '" thP Hannan Trace Scl1ool 01sh~t l) &lt;ert '"I he n11d
about 3txlim, I '' batl!i. ca1pet. woodburnet! much mme all on OJP .-re lui'

YOU lOOKING FOR ANIC£

NEW liSTING - Cule little
ooe bedroom home in Racine in good condiltoo , aluminum siding, all storms,
level lot Good price al

$13,50000

E. Clel111d, Jr.
992-6191
Jon Trussell.. ... 919-2660
Dottit Turtttr ..... 992-5692
Henry

NEW LISTING - 1 53 am s. moteot less. tn Kyger Creek School O' sh1Ciwtlll2 - 19 73
bile home s. Ow n e~ lives tn alf 111d rt&lt;tls the othe r lor $250 00 pet month. Excell ent 1
r

1

Formal t&lt;th y LR. dtnmg, mod k1lchen R&gt;&lt;•mo&gt;n tl

LAND CONTRA~T - 4bed tooms, LR, FR. modetn kttchcn. 2 111eptaces Mostly
floot s, 6 acres, 11101e 01 less. Good croplan d lar ge ba rn. slo,ge shed. gta n
tobacco bouse. smokehou se and .cellat. 800 lbs loba cco base.
ACRES MORE

OR LESS -

Vacant land

GRANT RECIPIENT - Portland Elementary
School has been awarded a S800 (ll'llllt from the Ohio

Located tn ctfy school

FARM - R1o Grande area . Mostly ttllable land 2 slory counlry home Just like ""'""·J
lmn.th•r use lo have. l g. shadelrees tn yard Hot!&gt;! ha s been tet mtle mspected. Hmse01
. Citv schools. Pnced in 50's.
561\ N::RE FARM wrth atarw. work gatage,tobacco tlltn , carpo~. 5wllnntlltgpool and a
lxtuse llith a lurnBI"ed krtthen &amp; alull basement

I

I

® 1986 United Fea ture Syndicate

IN GOOD srmrrs - Treasurer Secretary James
Baker (left) and Senate Republican Leader Rober1

Dole appear In good spirits as they dlsruss tax refonn

on NBC's "Meet lbe Press". UPI.

Nine die on Ohio highways
By United Press International
A Union County accident tha1
claimed three lives boosted Ohio's
weekend traffic deat h toll to nine,
the state Highway Patrol reponed
today.
There were six people kUied
Sunday, two Saturday and one
Fr iday nigh1 , a pa trol spokeswo·
man said. One of the victims was a
motorcycl isI. None of 1he vic1 ims of
car crashes was wearing a seat
belt. the spokesman sa id.
The patrol counts ratalllles result lng from accidents on 111&lt;' state's
public roadways each w!'&lt;'kend

trtwcen 6 p.m. Friday and mid·
nigh1 Sunday.
Killed were :
Sunday
Lebanon: Stf"/en R. Reffitt, 'lr,
Franklin, In a one-car cras h on Ohio
122 In Wanen County .
Marysville: Rick L. Wells, 25:
Manha R. Hullinger, IS: and
Chauncv K. Wat kin&gt;, 11: all of
Springfield, In a one-car accident on
U.S. 33 In Union Count y.
Middletown: Carl Fultz, 28.
Carlisle, in a two-vehicle collision
on Ohio 73 in Middletown.

Akron: Sande.&gt; rs Lowel l lll, 21,
Akron, ln a two-car accident on an
Akron street.

Saturday
Cincinnall : M ark A. Letang, 19,
Cincinnati, In a one-car crash on
Ohio ~ In Hamilton County.
Ravenna: Robert C. Ruggles, 44,
Kent , when his rmtor cycle crashed
on a Portage County road .
Friday night
London: Charles Richtmyer, 17,
Mount Sterling, in a one-ca r
accidenf on Ohio 3Zl in Madison
Crunty.

Patrol cites pair following accidents

weight

OOUBLEWIDE - Ownet need s In sel l I ~0 ems. mniP 01lm 3 ~dt oom ra nch , 2
formal hvmgroom. formal dH1mg rl'O m. fam1l y ruom . l.920 S(l It of ltVInR ~ pi!ce 2 1r~rge
ered pattos. Ctty \Chools Pw •d at $38 000

. G1ve us a lall for mo re

33 percent, but it wipes out scores of shelters and
loopholes and institutes a tough minimum tax to
assul'(' corporations and th&lt;' very rich could oot avoid
taxes altogther.
The Finance Committee plan differs in several
respects from a similar measure passed by th&lt;' House
last year and from the tax simplification plan Reagan
espoused as his top domestic priority .
On the issue of elimlnaling the deduction for
contribu tions Ia IRAs for all wagf.'-earners covered by
corporate pension plans, Baker and Dole said thl'y
would oppose effons on the Senate floor to preserve
the popular middle-class 1m&lt; break.
Told the House measure does rmre for average
citi71'nS than the Packwood plan, Baker said, " You
don't want to help average clti71'ns at thl' cost of
ecoomic growth."

rely on much oot side finan cing.
He said some S16.00J In cleaning
and pa inting and electrical work
needs to tx&gt; done before til&lt;'
manufac1Uring opera tion can move
into the building.
The low-inter s1 loan ws made
available through thl' help of Gov.
Richard Celeste, the Ohio Depart·
ment of Development and local
officials after it became known !hal
thl' Coolville manufactur&lt;'r might
move to West VIrgini a to take
advantan gP or loans that state
olfered to aMract oosinesses Inter·
ested in expanding operations.
"We want to thank ('lleryone
Involved for being oo supportive thl' governor, the Department of
Development and the Athens
Coo nty commissions have been
terrific,'" Middleton sa id. "The
local community has been behi nd
us 100 percent."

$43,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Here ts a
I I+ slory home wtth up to 4
bedrooms, Jull basement,
woodburning fireplace , palio, garage and in excellenl
condilion, wilh equipped
kitchen. Wants $44 .500.00.

Baker appearul Sunday on NBC's " Meet the
Press" along with Senate Republican lea der RDbert
Dole of Kansas, who heaped praise on Packwood.
chairman or th&lt;' Finance Committee that passed thl'
massive tax plan la st week.
Dole vowed tha1 when floor deba1e begins, ··we're
going to stand with the chairman of the committee.
We're golng to fight off amendments.
Packwood and Rostenkowskl appeared on ABC's
"This Week with David Brinkley."
The Packwood plan cuts Individual income tax
rates to just two brackets of 15 percent and 'lr percent
- a formula Baker said means "80 percent of all
Americans will have a top tax rate of 15 percent or
lower. "
II also cuts th&lt;' top corporate tax from 46 percent to

st

Columbus rates high for business

116 Chide
117 War god
119 College ottic1at
121 Blood
122 Sour

146 Rescue
148 Ripped
150 Evergreen tree

ceramics

ATHENS, Ohio iUPl t - The
Middleton Doll Co. of Coolville,
unable to get molds for lts doll
production. will not be able to
accept a low·lnterest loan to
purrhase the building II is leasing
for Its production process.
The firm, whlch two years ago
added vinyl dolls to Its porcelain
collectible doll production, still
plans to buy a facility at Ohio
University and hopes to renegotiate
for lt s purchase.
Company president Lloyd Mid·
dlelon says three molds he bought
for the 1986 line were to have been
delivered In February, but are no1
expected until sometime thl s
month.
Middleton. who with his wife Lee
have designed their line of dolls,
said tlv.&gt; delay In getting the molds
from New York has reduced the
company 's income this year.
"Receiving th&lt;' molds lale has

Was: 11
Clergymen
Halts
Couples

10 Smart
11 lntractible person
13 Malay gibbOn
14 The sweetsop
15 Determine
16 Raise the spiri1 of

Baker replied, " I don't think anything is wrong with
It."
But, apparently alluding to some of thl' oo ntrover sial elements, he said, " Thr president is not in a
position to endorse ewry jo1 and tittle, every tiny little
line of a pice of legislation this comprehensive. "
Looking ahead , Sen. Rob&lt;'rt Packwood, father of
the plan before the Senate, and Rep. Dan
Rostenkowski, D-IlL , head of the Hou se tax-writing
panel , predicted the chambers' difference on th&lt;' issue
will be resolved .
Rostenkowski, however, said the top individual tax
rate will likely be above the 'lr percent set In the
Packwood plan , but regardless, tax &lt;1Jerhaul will lead
10 " a boom In the economy" because Investors will
concemrate on how best to US(' their rmney, not on
"hiding it from the gowrnment. "

I I I

Coolville doll industry
fails to get financing

4164

17 ft Jlllf conttlned , lleept 8,
stowe, rlfrig..-ator, toilet arM.
batt.-y. tlectric end gas lights.

1 Section. 10 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 12. 1986

Vol.36, No.6
Copvrigh1ed 1986

367·7560- 367·7671

446-4514
or 446-4841

.
enttne
""

at y
e
New tax refom1 package gets

~

*Continuous
Guttering
•Fencing
•Remodeling

7911 '

•

t

Arts CouncU's Artists In Education Program. 11le
granl wiU be malched ~ with S400 to provide
students with a two-week pml!1'llJJI In danre and
movement durtng tbe 111$.87 school year. A danee
professional wiU conduct the special program and will
be hou8ed 1n the area durtng the t~W-week duration.
Of the 157 grant appUcatlons recetved by the AlE
Committee, only about baH were funded. This Is lhe
ftl'li Ume a Melp Coonty scltool has received AlE

money. At Ponlud Elementary last week to present
ofllclal notification of lhe grant were Bobby Ord,
Southem Local superintendent, at k!ft, and John
Costanzo of the County Board of Education, at right.
At lhe time the grant application WliB written,
Costanzo wrote a letter It recommendation to liE AlE
Committee. Left to rlglt center, Mickey Hoback,
Portland prtnclpal, and VIcki Hill, the Portland

teacher who wrote the grant, review the mtlflcallon
letter.

Two men were cited In weekmd
acciden1s Investigated by the
Ga!Ha-Melgs post of the state
highway patrol.
Troopers sa id they ticketed Gary
E. Snouffer , 29, Pomeroy, for
failure to yield half of the roadway
in a two-vehicle collision Satu rday
on County Road 32.
Snouffer was westbound, four
and eight-tenths or a mile east of
Ohio 7, al l2:50 p.m. whl'n his
vehicle reportedly slid across the
road on a cu!Veand collided with an
eastbound vehicle driven by Roger
A. Eblin. 36, Rt. l, Rutland .
Both vehicles - were severely
damaged, the patrol said.
Troopers cited Mark L. Farley,
19, Pittsburgh, Pa, for assured
clear distance In a two-vehicle
crash on U.S. 3J Sunday.
Farley was eastbound, three·
tenths of a mllc west of Ohio 7, at
1:15 p.m. wren a vehicle ahead of
him driven by Allen 0 . Maynard,
17, Racine, slopped to allow another
car to make a left lurn. Farley was
unable to stop and struck the rear of
Maynard 's car, causing slight
damage.
Two people received minor lnjur·

ies in separa te accidents investigated over thl' weekend In Gallia
County.
Nelth&lt;'r were trealed, thl' patrol
said.
Troopers said a car driven by
Julia L. Pasquale, 24, 103 Cedar St ..
stopped oo Ohio 160at County Rooo
3 a1 7:50 p.m. Saturday il make a
left turn and was struck In the rear
by a car driven by Stephanie R.
Fillinger, 28, Rl. I, Gallipolis.
FllllngPr was unable to stop In time.
the patrol said.
Pasquale rE.YOrted an Injury and

Weather forecast
Cloudy today, with a sca ttered
showers and thunderstorms and
highs In tlv.&gt; mid 70s. Mostly cloudy
tonight, with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms and a low
trtw!'&lt;'n 55 and 60. Mostly cloudy
Thesday, with a chanre of showers
and thu nderstorms and highs In the
mtd 70s.

Enendeii Forecast
Wednesday throop Friday
Fair each day, wlthhlghsranglng
from lhe mid 70s to the mid Ills.
Ovemlght lows wiU be ln the iiOs.

FU!lnger was cited for assured
clear distance. a·oopers said .
A pickup truck driven by Eric E.
Earhan. 24. Greenville, Va .. was
eastbound on U.S. 35 at 12: 15 p.m.
Sunday and was unable to stop in
time for a stopped car ahead driven
by Charlene L. .Johnoon, 35. Rt. I.
GaUipolls. Earhart struck llx' rear
of Johnson's vehicle, whlch forced
Johnoon's car into a car ahead of
hl'rs driven by John A McGraw IV,
33. Gallipolis.
Johnson 's an d McGraw's vehl·
cles were rrioderately damaged In
the crash and Jolmson reported an
Injury. Earhart was cited for
assured clear distanre.

Chamber to meet
The Middleport Chamber ol
Commerce will meet at I p.m.
Tuesday at the LaSalle Restaurant
with Dwight Leedy and Cat hy
Riggs as speakers. Leedy will
speak on the 0.1' .T.O. progra m and
Mrs. Riggs, .presiden I of the
Middleport PTO. wlll speak on a
fund raising project for compulers
to be placed In the elementary
school.
,

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,Page-2-The Daily Sentinel;:
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Commentary
The ·Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street

Monday, May 12, 1986

Divestment on the cheap __W_ill_iam_F_._Bu_ck_ley::..._J_r.

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH
General Mana~~:er

PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEM BER of The Uni ted Press International. Inland Da!ly Press Association and \h(' Am(&gt;rlca n Newspaper Publishe rs Association
LETTERS OF OPINION are welrome. The)' should br le-ss than :m words
long. AlllettE'r s an• subject to editing and must be signed ~~~lth namt- , add ress and
telephonl' numbt'r . No un sig nEd leners will be published. Leners should be In
good taste. addressing lssu~ . not persooalltles.

A weak showing
Lots ol people are wondering whether Jim Rhodes has bst tt, since he
received only 48 percent of the Republican vote last week and his
adversaries received 52 percent.
The answer Is yes, and no .
The primary electlon results clearly demonstrated that more
Republicans than ever are looking lor an alternative to the 76-year old
Rhodes, whom theY believe has had his day with lour terms In the
governor's oUice.
It was Rhodes' poorest showing In a primary slnoe he began ru nnlng lor
statewide office 36 years ago.
The day after election Rhodes was hard at work trying to nip In the bud
the idea that he Is weakening. "My only, only job in this is to win·," he told
reporters.
He said Gov. Richard Celeste got only 37 percent of the Democratic vote
(typical Rhodes exaggeration, It was 42 percent) in the 1982 primary before
winning bY a landslide in the general electkm. "You think he's a weak
candidate?" asked Rhodes.
On this point, Rhodes is correct. When the gate opens lor the start of the
race In September, Rhodes ' 48 peroent will not matter. It will be him
against Celeste. Most Republicans will choose Rhodes . It will be up to him
to convince the rest not to stay horne or vote lor Celeste or Independent
Dennis Kuclnich.
Rhodes has been through these campaigns before. Hewlli try to seize the
issues and dictate the nature and the tempo ol the campaign. In fact, he's
already started.
The day after the primary, Rhodes told reporters that "corruption" In
the Celeste administration will be the major Issue. "He's got the money to
do anything he wants to do except buy honesty and integrity," said RlxxEs.
There was little honesty or Integrity the last week of the c:n:npalgn when
Rhodes' publicists leaked a "poll" purporting tosoowhe would attract ffi to
60 percent of the vote.
That was designed to throweveryoneoUthescentthatSen. Pau!Gillmor
of Port Clinton was gaining, to make people tlllnk the race was over and
discourage them from voting. It may have worked.
"That wasn't my poll," Rhodes disclaimed the day alter the election
when asked about it He finally conceded, "I think the (llll was a little bit
off."

Gillmor attrtbuted his loss to a lack of morey to run more televiSion
advertising and "the confusion factor" over two Republican senators
named Paul. He said II Sen. Paul Pfeifer of Bucyrus hadn't been In the
race, he mlght have won.
"A lot of people sat It out who would have been active in a two-way race
(against Rhodes)," said Glllmor.
A!; lor Rhodes' polls, he said, "there's a great temptation to Jimmy the
figures," though he wouldn't come right out and accuse Rhodes of dirty
tricks. "I'm supporting him now," grinned GUlmor.
The Senate president had reason to smile In the face ol defeat because
fellow Sen. Richard Schalrath of Wooster had repelled a challenge bY
lo1111er Sen. Tbornas A. Van Meter ol Ashland in the Republican p-lmary
In the 19th District.
Van Meter's re-entry Into the Senate GOP caucus would have spelled all
kinds of trouble lor Glllmor and other leaders, woo went to extraordinary
lengths to save Schafrath.
Rep. Thomas Kindness, R-Ohio, lauoched a series of (llst-eiection TV
commercials criticizing Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, as a "sidellne senator"
and urging his replacement.
Kindness, who is the senator's &lt;lJ(Ilnent for the fall, was taking
advantage of the challenge to Glenn by St. Paris la1111er Don E. Scott.
Scott, a disciple of radical economist-politician Lyn:lon LaRouche,
polled 12 percent of the vote, demonstrating some disaHection lor Glenn.
. "Twelve percent ol the vote Is nothing," sald Democratic State
Chairman James M. Ruvolo. "Any election has people that don't vote lor
the Incumbents."

Letter to editor
Your help needed
The student councll of Eastern
High School Is sponsoring an area

wide eUort to encourage participa-

tion In Hands Across America. We
are aware that 24 million Amerl·
cans,14 million of them dtlldren , go
lungry every month. Hands Across
America is a tundraislng event
scheduled lor May 25, 19!li.
More than 6 million Americans
wlli link hands from Los Angeles to
Ne.w York in an eUort tomrnhatthe
devastating problems of hunger
and oomelessness in America. The
rouncil would like to emphasize
that this is a National event We call
upon not only Meigs County but also
neighboring counties lor help.
Alt rough tIE line runs through
Ohio, our neighbors, West VIrginia,
need to play a vital role in the events
success.
All types ol lndlvlduais and
groups are needed. Individuals who
are unable to participate themeselves, may be willing to sponsor
another person. As ol last week, the
Columbus district oUice, which Is
organizing the event fo r oor area,
has filled only half of Its 75 mile
responsiblll ty. It is the hope of the
Eastern Council Members that a
rnlle or approximately 1,400indlvld·
uals from Meigs County alone, will

take pari in the event.

Individuals choose their level ol
participation by paying $10. to $:fi.
to take part In the event They will
receive, depending on the amount
ol their donation, a cOmmemorative Participants Certificate, an
official T-shiri, a visor, and a lapel
pin. Eastern students are very
fortunate as many people in the
district are heipil1g sponsor stu·
dents to make It possible for them to
be a part ol the historic event
The student council has organ·
!zed an Information service at
Eastern High SchooL Anyone wish·
ing additional Information concern·
lng the event can feel free to call
005-3392 from 8:45-3: 15 and request
"Hands Info.". Any individual, or
preferably an Individual represent·
lng a group, wishing to make final
arrangements, may do so bY
contacting: Kathy Sellers, 177 High
Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215 (614·
224-Hand).
Lisa Hencl&gt;rson, President; Veronica Provo, Vice-President; Mi·
chelle Wilson , Secretary; Patricia
Sams, Treasurer; Aleshla. L. Hoi·
singer, Sergeant at Arms.
Eastern Student Cnuncil
Offtcers 1986

We all know that the cause make little room lnr perspectlve. lf
mllitant In the college world these on Tuesday we discover that what
days Is divestment Sell the stocks we did on Monday was disho nora·
in the college portfolio in any ble, we pronounce It dlshooorable
companies that are doing business everywhere In the world. That
in South Africa. To hold on to these generality should be silghlly modi·
stocks (the reasoning ~;Pes) is to fled : We pronounce it disoooorabie
acquiesce In doing commerce with everywhere In the world where we
a rountry whose domestic !XJiicles can agitate without ruMing any
are abominable. The students risk to ourselves. There are vast
clamoring for divestment are regions in the world, the capital ct
saying, In effect, that they do not which is Moscow, where they have
wish to touch pitch, lest they be yet to discover any of the Bill of
defiled.
Rights, which we have enjoyed tor
The !XJSition Is not automatically about :00 years. Built Is onetlingto
to be scoUed at The civil disabili- criticize Johannesburg, which can
ties of blacks In South Africa areas do oothlng at aU to hurt the students
Indefensible as Jim Crow was at Columbia University In New
Indefensible in the United States, York, quite another to agitate
where we practiced It until about !J against Mosrow, which can drop
years ago. But the nervous system little atom bombs on the campus of
of the United States Is such that we Columbia University II it chose.

'

I

that people woo work at Johnson &amp;
Jobnson are moral Idiots. That In
effect 6 what has been said of them
by studenls at Rutgers, who
clamored lor, and got, divestment
of Johnson &amp; Johnson stock. J&amp;J
has been grand about It and
recently pledged $2 million to
Rutgers, which sits adjacent to J&amp;J
headquarters.
Bit we walk now Into a residual
subtlety. II the students at Rutgers
so disdain J&amp;J as to refuse to own
any of Its stock, does tt not follow
that they soould feel a correlative
reluclana! to accept money earned
by J&amp;J? The reasoning Is surely as
obvbus as this: J&amp;J does business
in South Africa. Doing business in,
South Africa is evll. Therefore any
wrnlngs made bY companies that
do business In South Atrlca are
tainted. We decline to use tainted
money.
George Schreck of General Motors put It quite bluntly: II students
"on the one hand are advocating
divestment of GM stock and on the
other hand are perfectly willing to
accept llnancial support that might
be forthcoming, (they) are cer· .
talnly engaging In a sort of selective
morality. It doesn't Indicate much
ct&gt;pth of conviction."

''I think we have a problem. The city dump has started leaving garbage by
the curb for pickup."

~rustrated
WASHINGTON - The use of
sophisticated eectronic gadgets by
criminals is no surprisetowatdters
of such TV cop soows as "Miami
VIce." But to law enforcement
people, the ability of the under~rld
to obtain state-of-the-art high tech·
nology is oo joke; it has cost them
too much money and frustration.
The Drug Enforcement Admin Is·
tratlon has been especially plagued
by electronic countermeasures em·
ployed bY dope smugglers, whO
have millions to spend oo the
fanciest equipment available. An
agency report listing sev!J"ai exam·
pies ol the problem, prepared more
than a year ago but never released,
was obtained by our IISSOCiate
Donald Goldberg. Here are some of
the cases It describes:
,.
- Operation &amp;luthern Comfort
was conducted In 1983 with
members of the Gamtino Malia
fam ily In Flortda and Georgia as
the targets. Federal agents ~;PI a
court order allowing them to "bug"
a residence in Fort Lauderdale. But
Gambino gang members had hired

The_ more one contemplates the
real purpose of the bombing mis~ion
against Libya a few weeks ago, the
more puzzling it seems.
If the point ol the raid was to discourage future terrorist acts by CoL
Khadaly, why has the Reagan admin·
istration sharply increased its protec·
ti¥e measures and warned against in·
creased terrorist activity following
the raid?
Presumably the administration
should have been able to relax its security measures alter "putting Kha·
daly back in his box," to quote Secre·
tary ol State George Shultz. Yet,
around the globe and especially in the
Middle East, American embassies
have been alerted to new post·raid
danger. And U.S. tourists have been
urged to see America - or the Orient
- instead ol risking stepped-up ter·
rorist dangers in Europe and the Mediterranean this summer.

And the Jl"l)blem Is not quantlta·
tlvely trivial. Last year, tor tlr first
time, corporate gifts to colleges and
universities exceeded private gifts.
At Cornell, 41 percent of all
corporate gifts came from rompanles that do business In South Africa.
What then ought we to expect
high-minded Cornell students to
do? Reject the $6 million they
receive from corporations that do
IJ.Jslness in South Africa, and vote
lnr a tuition increase ol (to use
round figures ) $1,000 per student?
That wooid certainly be living up to
ooe's prtncipies, and certainly will
not happen.

feds __________k_ck_A_~_e_n_o_n_&amp;_D_ak__~_n_A_u_a

a retired New York City cl&gt;tective
to "electronically sweep their
homes for electronic eavesdropplngequlpment oo a weekly basis."
The federal tap was discovered,
and the drug agency had to buy
additional equipment to pursue the
Investigation. which ultimately led
to at least one arrest
- In Chicago, otrlclals blame
sophisticated electronic gear lnr
hindering two recent Investigations, the report states. In one, "an
lndlvldual known to have organized
crime connections has been monitoring DEA radio communications
and contacting the violators, advisIng them that they are targets of a
DEA Investigation."
The agency has some taped
conversations between uncl&gt;rcover
agents and this underworld "Paul
Revere," which confirmed hls
activities.
- In a 1981 New York case, the
lawmen lucked out "One Willard
Williams, a notorious repetitive
drug offender linked with the major

drug organiza lion ol Frank Ma ·
thews and Louis Curlllo" was
monitored bY a court-sanctioned
telepoone tap In two rooms of his
apartment. Based oo the informa·
tion obtained, drug agents got a
search warrant and dlsrovered a
telephone analyzer capable of
detecting phone taps, as welt as a
radio frequency detector that could
spot body transmitters.
"Fortunately," the report noted,
"the defendant ... approached a
DEA undercover oHicer to check
his telephone." And presumably
the agent wasn't wearing a body
transmitter.
- In !Rtrolt In 1984, DEA agents
arrested several suspects In the
v&lt;ry act of monitoring the agency's
Internal radio communications on a
Bearcat 210 scanner.
- In a Florida investigation that
Is still continuing, suspected drug
smugglers used a device enabling
them to compose messages In a
"digital data lo1111at," which are
then transmitted over telephone
lines In "bursts" that are difficult to

Why we bombed Libya

Although public-opinion pollsters
report that a clear majority ol Ameri·
cans support Mr. Reagan's bombing
mission against Libya, Americans in
large numbers are canceling their
overseas travel plans.
What is the explanation ol all this'
II the administration and the public
really believed that bombing Libya
would reduce international terrorism,
why the sharply increased anxiety
about terrorist dangers following
what has been advertised as a successful "surgical strike" against Khadaly's kingdom ?
ls it not likely that both the public
Today is Monday, May 12, the 132nd day of J9!li with 233 to illlow.
and the administration really feel a
The moon Is moving toward its first quarter.
heavy bombing attack is not a very
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
reliable method ol reducing terror·
The evening star Is Venus.
ism? Ail evidence points to 1he conThose hom on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They include clusion that the administration exnursing pioneer Florence Nightingale in l82l, lawmaker and author Henry . peels more rather than less terrorism
Cabot Lodge in IB50, novelist Philip Wylie In 1902, newscaster Howard K
as a consequence of the raid.
II these assumptions are true, what
Smith in 1914 (age 72).

Today in history

Accordingly, high moral dudgeon Is
exercised with some discretion.
But along comes a report from
the Investor Responslbllity Re·
seardt Center, which Jeeps track ct
corporate policies In America, and
certain questions slowly emer!J!,
some of them lucidly dlscu ssed bY
Matthew L. Wald In The New York
Times of May 6. In a sense, these
questions haveto do with retaliation
in another lo1111.
People don't like to be thought of
as less moral than other people
because they arrive at d!Uerent
conclusions about bow to deal with
certain p-obiems. Thus, lor in·
slana!, the Johnson &amp; Johnson Co.,
which makes things like Band·Aids,
and has a factory In South Africa
that makes things Uke Band-Aids,
doesn't like to be told by students

was the real function and purp&lt;Jse ol
the bombing attack?
Doubtless there were multiple rea·
sons hehind the raid , including the
hope - notwithstanding the immedi·
a1te danger ol retaliation by Khad afy
and ·his supporters - that the bombing attack and the threat ol its repeti·
tion just might, in the long run, give
terrorists pause.
I believe, however, that the raid
would not have taken place save lor
another more compelling reason - it
was a tempting opportunity to punish
Khadaly by meeting terrorism with
terrorism.
The trouble with all ol this is that
white attacking- Libya from the air
provided some sense ol reven2e lor

detect. The equipment can also be
used from an aircraft, and has a
12-dlglt access code that effectively
prevents the oops from listening ln.
"This system is being utilized by
a drug &lt;rganlzation to ensure
security over phone lines and radio
communicatbn links when conducting various narcotics transac·
lions," the report explains.
The drug agency report takes a
siam at the press, stating that
"Incidents ol the monitoring ol
DEA's radlo!requencieshY the new
media have been a cause of alarm."
The report complains that "In their
quest 1D gather the news, the press
has Interfered with ongoing Invest!·
gatbns, risking injury toagentsand
the news media."
Bit sometimes the feds ask lor
trouble bY making eavesdropping
bY outsiders too easy. In 1984, a Los
Angeles area professor and a
graduate student listened In and
taped sensitive radio rommunlcatlons of several agencies, Including
the DEA. They used a $.lXl scanner
from Radio Shack.

George McGovern

What better strategy to inflate the
already inflated ego of CoL Khadaly'
And what tactic could more ellective·
ly fan the flames of fanaticism. fury
and fru stration that mark the Arab
world than a night bombing attack by
American bombers ba sed in Britain'
I raise these questions not as a paci-

list, but as a World War II heavy
bomber pilot with an appreciation for
both the possibilities and the limita·
lions ol aerial bombardment. The F111 is a marvelous plane, but it is too
indelicate an instrument to remove
the cancer of terrorism in the Medi·
terranean world .

Berry's World

frustrated and ·angry Am eric ans.
feed ing a delicious macho inst inct

found to some e&gt;tcnt in all ol us, it
also put us into the game of terrorism
on a grand sca le. Is this m the Amen·
can interest?
No, answered near ly every go\lcrn ·
ment in the world. It is difficult to
avoid the conclusion thal, however
much the bombing attack did to lilt

the spirits of Americans , it weakened
the standing and prestige of the Unit·
ed ~tates in the eyes ol Arabs, Afn·
cans, Asians, Latin Americans and

most Europeans.
Conversely. the raid has probably
enhanced the international standin~
ol Khadafy . A man who had arouseo
the contempt of many of his fellow
Arabs is now publicly backed
throughout the Arab world. Although
most informed peop le know that Iran
and Syria are more important in the
world ol terrorism than little Libya,
the world's number-one power direct·
ed its most heated rhetoric and its
swiftest bombers not at Teheran or
Damascus - to say nothing of Mos·
cow, Peking or Havana - but rather
at Tripoli.

"All in favor of keeping our hip, happy Image,

say •aye. "'

,

Monday. May 12. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

•

Reds' players wanted: shape up or ship out
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds took oU for Mont·
real Sunday with a win over the best
tea m In baseball, but also the
warning to show signs of improvement In the next three games or
changes will be made.
The warning was issued before
Saturday's game with the New
York Mets, and after splitting the
next two games, the Reds made one
roster change.
They sent outfielder Ka! Daniels
to Denver In the American Association, and told Infielder Tom Run·
reUs to meet the team in Montreal
today .
Reds General Manager Bill

Bergesch said Saturday II tlr club
didn't show signs ol turning things
around, changes would he made.
But he didn't say what pe and
player manager Pete Rose had in
store.
"By the t !me we get home from
this road trip, I hope we have seen
some sign that we are going to turn
this thing around," Bergesch said.
"II we haven't, therearego ingto be
a whole lot ol people out of patience,
chief ol whom Is going to be me ."
The Reds have a 7-!l record and
the Mets !J-5, putting the two teams
at the opposite end of the standings
in the National League.
Runnells was batting .238 going

Reds defeat Gooden;
Expos stop Dodgers
By ED BURNS
UPI Sports Wrler .
He's human.
Dwight Gooden, with his 5-0
record and his UW ERA entering
Sunday's game, hadn't lost a
decision since last August, and
looked as II he might never drop one
again. Gooden may stili be the best
pitcher In baseball, but the C!ncln·
nat! Reds proved Sunday the
22-yrar-old is at least mortal.
The Reds banged eight hits and
three runs in five Innings oH
Gooden, and went on to defeat the
New York Mets 3-2.
The loss. Gooden's first, was ooly
the fifth lor tile Mets In Zi games.
'I1te Reds, 7-19, broke a three-game
losing streak. They stU! have the
worst record in the Nationa l
League.
The live-Inning stint was Good·
en's shortest since Aug. 15 against
Philadelphia, when he also lasted
live.
The Reds got two hits in the first ,
and In tile second loaded the bases
on sIngles by Bo Diaz and Ron
Oester and a two-out walk by Eddie
Milner. With the runnersmovingon
a 3-2 pitch, Rose hit a ilneroH the tip
ol second baseman Tim Teufel's
glove to clear the bases.
Bill GuiUckson, 2·3, and three
relievers combined to limit the
Mets to.live hits. John Franco went
rwo innings to earn his fourth save.
The victory marked the second
consecu live t !me GuiUckson halted
a Reds losing streak. Last Tuesday
he beat Atlanta to halt a nine- game
slide.
In other games, Chicago defeated
San Diego 9-5, Philadelphia edged
Atlanta 2-1, Pittsburgh nipped
Houston 4-3 in 12 innings, St. umls
topped San Francisco 4-3, and
Montreal heat Los Angeles 4-3.
Cubs 9, Padres $

At Chicago, pitcher Steve Trout
singled home two runs , and Bob
Demler added a t~· run double in
the seventh inning to give Chicago
the victory. Trout, 2·0, pitched five
Innings lor the triumph. Lee Smith
threw one pitch lor his l&gt;w1h save.
San DlegostarterMarkThurmond.
2·2, took the loss.
Phlllies 2, Braves I
At Atlanta, Ron Roe1lcke singled
home Von Hayes with two out in the
ninth inning to lilt Philadelphia.
Roenicke ripped a 32 pitch to right
field oH Craig McMurtry, 1-2, to
make a winrer of Steve Bedrosian,
2·1. PhiUies starter Steve Carlton
was forced to leave the game with
lower back spasms.
Pirates 4. Astros 3

At Pittsburgh, Bill Almon hit an
Inside-the-park home run with one
oot in the 12th Inning. Almon 's hit
off · loser Otarlle Kerfeld, 3·1,
short -hopped past right fielder
Terry Puhi, who slipped and fell
racing to retrieve the hall. Jose
DeLeori, 1·0, worked 32-31nnings &lt;1
one· hit relief to earn the victory.
Cardinals 4. Glanls 3
AI St. Louis, Wlliie McGee
capitalized on an outfield mistake to
score the winning run on Tito
Landrum's eighth· inning sacrifice
fly . A sliding Candy Maldonado
tripped center fielder l);n Gladden,
allowing McGee to scored without a
throw. Todd Worrell , 3·2, got the
victory. while Mike Krukow, 4·3,
lost. Expos t, Dodgers 3
At Montreal, Mike Fitzgerald
drove in two runs, and Tim Raines
threw out the tying run at the plate
to end the game, helping Montreat
exte1d Its winning streak to eight
games. Us longest since 1982. Joe
Hesketh, 1·3, pitched six Innings
and Jell Reardon ~;PI hfs fourth
save. The loss wrnt ID Bob Weich,
3-2.

Jackson's blast leads
Angels over Brewers
By MIKE TUlLY
UPI National BasebaD Writer
Reggie Jackson brought Cooper·
stown and the sandlots into Ana heim Stadium Sunday.
With the energy and enthusiasm
ol a youngster swinging a stickball
bat , .Jackson, 39. tied Hall of Farner
Mickey Mantle lor sixth place on
the a il-time home run list.
"Mantle, Hank Aaron, Willie
Mays, theyweretheguysllmltated
when I played st lckball.'' Jackson
said. "And my mom was here. II
was just a perfect Mother's Day
present. "
Rob Wilfong and Wally Joyner
also homered to lead the Ca lifornia
Angels to a 5-l victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers, but tile enter·
tainment came from Jackson.
" I've got a lot of respect lor him,'"
Milwaukee manager George Bam·
berger said. "All the young kids
should watch him play. They say
they feel tired, but look at him; he's
always hustling."
Jackson needs 37 homers to catch
Harmon KUiebrew for fifth place.
"He'll hit 600 If he wants to stay
around that long," said Bam·
berger. "He's got a young man's
body, and he puts a lot of effort Into
the game."
The milestone homer came in the
fifth Inning off rookie Bill Wegman,
and landed In the filth row of the
rlght·lleid stands.
"It's an emotional moment lor
me," Jackson said. "I don't gl't
excited about home runs because I
guess I've hit so many of them, but
I'm proud to be tled with the man
synonymous with baseball, Ameri·
ca 's pastime, when I was a kid ."
Jim Staton, 4-1, hurted six
Innings, scanered nine hits and
walked none. Doug Corbett finished
for his · third save. Wegman , a
6-foot -5 right· hamEr, lasted live
innings In tumbling to 0-3.
Jackson was 2-!or-3 after entering the game with just three i\lts in
his last 31 at-bats. The homer was
his OOth against the Brewers - the
most he has hit against one club.
In other games, Chicago nipped
Cleveland 5-4, Detroit handled
Minnesota 4-1, Boston edged Oak·
land &amp;-5, Tex~s ~ept New York 6-3
and 9-1, Baltimore do~med Kansas
City 4-3. and Toronto shaded Seattle
4-3.

White Sox 5, lnllans 4
At Cleveland, Tim Hulett 's
Baltimore-chop single scored Julio
Cruz from third base in the eighth,
helping the White Sox complete a
three-game series sweep. Rookie
Joe McKeon, called up Monday.
earned his first major-league victory in relief. Bob .James got his
fifth saY!'. Tom Cantliot tl, 2· 3, took
the toss.

Tigers 4. Twins I
At Minneapolis, Lance Parrish
and Pat Sheridan hit second-Inning
IDme runs to support the lour-hit
pitching of Dan Petry, and help the
Tigers snap a lour-game losing
streak. Petry, 3-2, walked five and
struck oot seven in his first
complete game ol the season. Mike
Smithson, 4-3, was the loser.

Into !Rover's game Sunday. Da niels was batting .283 with two
home runs an!) five runs batted ln.
Sending Daniels to the minors
might have been part ol Bergesch's
plan, but although his hitting wasn't
bad, It was his fielding that
bothered Bergesch.
Another possibility was sending
Eric Davis woo has not been hitting
to the minors. He's had six hits In 31
trips to the plate for a .183 average.
Altoough he's e.mong the leaders in
stolen bases with 11, but has struck
out 17 times In 71 at bats.
Another possibility could be
sending Nick Esasky Ill the minors.
Esasky Is hitting .161, getting just

ooe hit In his last II trips to the plate.
Altoough Rose says Esasky has
looked "totally confused" at the
plate at times, he said lr would
fight sending him to the minors.
"He doesn't deserve that," Rose
said. " There are guys hitting less
Ihan he Is woo haven't dore wllat he
has in the big leagues."
Bergesch doesn't think Esasky
belongs at the minor· league·level.
"I've seen him put on awesome
displays in batting practice," Ber·
gesch said. "I've sren them have to
go get more halls because he's
hltting so many into the green seals.
But then he gets In a game and he
looks awful, absolu tely terrible."

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ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs' Marauderettes, winners ol 24 ol 25
games this season, oost Jackson
(12·10) here tonight at 4 p.m. in
second round class AA sectional

Bostu tl ~ - Oaklilnd 2, 10 lnnltlJ!S

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Bucks eliminate 76ers
M~WA U KEE

iUPi i - Milwau-

kee Bucks coach Don Nelson has

reached a peak. The summit stilt
lies ahead.
"This is the best win I've ever had
as a coach," Nelson said Sunday
alter thr Bucks heat the Philadelphia 76&lt;'rs 1I.J. 112 to win their
Eastern Conference semifinal ser·
ies. "You can say what you want
about no Moses Malone or Andrew
Toney tout with in juries), but this
series came down to the last point
on a last· second play."
The Bucks won II beca use
Charles Barkley was called for
goaltending on a layup by Craig
Hodges with 29 seconds to play, and
because Julius Erving misfired oo
a 12·foot jumper. Left wide open
with eight seconds left , Erving
missed , and the Bucks advanced to
the semifinals against the Celt lcs,
beginning Tuesday night at Boston.
"The shot was too hard and hit the
back ol the rim and bounced out. "
said Erving. "You're not goin g to
get a roil on a shot like that. You can
call that shot good or bad; a tot of
things . I call it a miss."
For Nelson, the victory also
&lt;&gt;nded a double-string of failures. II
was the first time he had won tlx&gt;
seventh and deciding game ol a
series alter lour tries in thr past,
and II was Nelson's first playoll win
over the Sixers, a !&lt;&gt;am that had
ousted the Bucks from the ptayolls
lour ol the last live years.

Bucks won it on key ptays do~mthe
stretch .
Barki~y had 18 points In cluding 9
in the fi nal period. Sedate Threatt
led a u scorers with 28 points, and
Erving and Clemon Johnson each
had 17.
Terry Cummings led the Bucks
with Tl !XJinls, Ho~es hild 24,
Including 10 In the final quarter. and
Sidney Moncrief added 23 while
playing cl&gt;splte a painful Injured
heeL

kind of a judgment."
He's been to the plate just 17
times.
Bergesch said he has not consi·
dered Rose's retlremen I as an
active player or dismissing him as
a manager.
Bergesch and Reds catcher Sal
Butera share the sa me feeli ng "The way we are going. Houdini
muldn't manage this club."

Lady Bobcats clinch
SVAC, sectional titles
The defending SVAC champion
Kyger Creek girls' softball team
clinched the SVAC title Saturday bY
defeating Eastern following a
Friday night's Sect!nai Tourna·
ment victory over Symmes Valley.
Kyger Creek finished atop the loop
standings with a perfect 11.0 record.
The Lady Bobcats now mter to

Scoreboard ...
Majors

EsaskY and Davis have cleared
waivers and rould he sent to the
minors and recalled wltoout the
risk of losing them.
Remote at this time Is releasing
veteran Tony Perez.
"At no time have we discussed
releasing Tony," Bergesch said.
"My gosh, he hit .348 last season.
And, to be honest he hasn't really
had enough at-bats to make any

tournament
action 1n high school
softball
action.
The Meigs-Jackson winner will
advanoe to the sec tional finals
against number rwo seeded South
Point (16-5) on Thursday, May 15 at
4 p.m. &amp;luth Point defeated Fair·
· land 13·5 in first round action. Meigs
cracked Ironton 15·2 while Jackson
drew the first round bye.
During the tou rnament's draw,
the number one seeded Marau derettes elected to take the home
field advantage instead ol a first
round bye. U Meigs wins against
J ackson, the sectional finals will be
at Meigs but if J ackson soould win ,
the finals will be held at South Point.
Coac h John Arnott' s Marau cl&gt;rettes, who rode through their
TVC schedule with a 13-0 mark,
have one of Ohio's premier pitchers
In two-time TVC MVP and all -Ohio
Barb Hatfield. The Meigs ace
rtghthander combines the ran·
talent ol speed and control on the
mound. In rolling to a perfect 20-0
mark thi s year, Hatfield has only
one time walked more than two
batters. When an opponent does
make solid co ntact, the Meigs
defense, led bY soortstop Jodi
Harrison, has backed her up welL
In Hatfield 's lour-year prep career
at MHS. she has piled up an
excellent 64 -6 mark.
Meigs is the defendin g Sff' tional
and district champions. having
advanoed to within ooe game ol the
state tournament last year, losing
3·1 to Brookville In the regional
fina ls.

the Class A dist rict mmpet ition
May 22 at Athens High SchooL
In the Saturday game, .!ill
Drummond and Stcvhanic Pennington combined lor two hits to
best the Eaglettes, 13-7. Renee
Ward, the winning hurl er, allowed
eight hits, while Eastern's Amy
Young also permittE'd eight hits.
Friday's rna tch a~ain st Symmes
Valley, a 9-.1 win lor KC. saw the
Lady Bobcats take the lead alter
scortng fiv e runs in the fourth
Inning. Drummond struck ou t live
and allowed one hit during her
lour-Inning stand on the mound,
while SV's Donna Wilson struck out ·
eight, walked nine and allowed
three hits.
With the two victories, KC's
overall season record goes Ill 17-3.

fjfD~~~~~~~EJ~

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"When I saw Doc soootlng. I just heari ng aid. but it will show
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�Monday, May 12, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

: Page- 4-lhe Daily Sentinel

Rio ·math professor receives award

( Eighth annual Diles
:T~ golf event June

25-26

- ROCK SPRINGS - The eight h causes In the Immediate area. A
; •: annual Dave DUes-Appalachia golf steering committee composed of
: : tournament and dinner is set for !loca l sportsmen and businessmen
handles all the arrangements for
• • J une 25-26.
.: _: _ The charity event, which has the annual event.
One of tlx' recipients of the
· ·- {!isbursed some S&amp;l,OOJ to area
'charities In Its seven year history, charity dollars Is the Ohio Univerwill follow the same format as in sity Scholarship Fund . Grants are
past years. The hUJbilly supper wU I available through the Dave DUes
kick off the twCH!ay festivities and Scholarship for deserving and
again this year wUJ be held at the needy yoong people from· the
Meigs High School at 6 p.m. on Meigs-Mason-Gallia-Athens county
Wednesday, June 25. The golf, an areas pt'Ovlded they want to attend
IS-hole shotgun start, will be lx'ld at Ohio University and study In the
10 a.m. Thursday June 26 at the co mmu ni catio ns depar tment.
Riverside Golf Club in Mason, West Each yea r, a portion of the
proceeds Is earmarked for that
Virginia.
Once again, entry fee for the fund, which Is administered by the
charity event is $150 and that scholarship office at Ohio Univerincludes dinner for the golfer and sity under guidelines set up by the
his spouse or friend. and the golf local golf committee.
Invitations are going out this
outing.
"We' rP holding the line. even week to various celebrities around
though our costs on everything the country. Each year some 35 to
have gone up," said John T. Wolfe, 40 celebrities take part In the local
pll'sldent of the Racine Home event, along with many sportsmen
National Bank and chalnnan of the from the local area.
fin ance committee. "We'll' deligh·
Entry blanks for the 1986 event
ted with what we have been able to are available (or soon wlll be
do with our charity dollars, particu· ava ilable! through area golf clubs
la rly with tlx' young people who and businesses. Since the field Is
have received scholarship aid at likely to fill up In short order,
Ohio Un iversity. Lastyearwehad a preference wlll lx' gtven to those
good turnout of golfers and good who participated In earlier events.
support from the business comTwo area businessmen have been
munity. and all that enabled us todo added to the committee. They are
a gll'at deal for the less fort unate. DE&gt;an Harris and Bill Blower of
We hope to be able to equal or Middleport. "They've brought a lot
exceed that performance this of enthusiasm to our area and we
wan ted I hem to serve with us on the
year."
committee to bring fresh Input Into
The tournament was started In our event," said Bob Freed, who Is
1979 for the purpose of raising chairman of IlK' promotion
money for needy and worthwhile committee.

Dr. T. Michael Rllodes

Meets Wednesday
The Past Counctlors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, will be held at 8 p.m ..
Wednesday at the b&lt;lge hall with
Lora Damewood and Marcia Keller
as hostesses.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admiss ions--Ru th
Hawkins, Pomeroy ; Frances Lui·
kart, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges--Lev Story,
&amp;&gt;tty Massie, Ida Young.
Sunday Admissions--Mildred
Phillips, Pomeroy; Herman Kin·
cald, Middleport; Robert Pa r~ns.
Racine.
Sunday Discharges--None.

RIO GRANDE - A 15-year
veteran mathematics professor at
Rio Grande College has been
selected as the 1986 recipient of the
Edwin A. Jones Excellence In
Teaching Award .
During a ceremony set for
Friday, Dr. T. Michael Rhodes,
. assistant pt'Ofes~r of mathemat-Ics, will be honored with the award ,
presented to a faculty member who
has attained an exceptional level ri.
teaching excellence.
"This award recognizes a faculty
member with moll' !han the abili ty
to teach." said Dr. Clodus R. Smith,
president of the college. " It acknowledges an educator who motivilles the student.
"Mike Rhodes Is an outstanding
faculty member and mathematician, committed to the mission and
goals of Rio Grande College,"
Smith added. "He's a great resource on this campus. Rio Grande
recognized his long-term value and
merit several years ago by encou ·
raging and supporting his continuIng development. "

Martha Howell, 60. 2'l7 Race
St., Middleport, long-time vlllage
employee, died Saturday at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Howell was born in Middleport Nov. 24, 192'i, a daughter of the
late Worley and Ella Carroll
Howell. She was a graduate of
Middleport High School and worked
as a dispatcher at Middleport
Village Hall for 13 years. For the
past eight years she had been
secretary In IlK' office of the
Middleport Mayor. She was a
rnemlx'r of Sacred Heart Church.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Howard (Rolx'rta) Dalley, Middleport, and Mrs. Uoyd lAnna!
Blackwood. Pomeroy; two nephews. Kevin Dailey and Jay
Blackwood; a nk&gt;ce, Bronwyn
Wllliams. Middleport, and several
gceat nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at IO a.m.
Tuesday at the Sacred Heart
Church with Mongsignor Anthony
Giannamore officiating. Burial will
be ln Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral home today from 2to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. A wake service will be
held at 7 p. m. !his evening at the
. funeral home. Friends maycontrib·
· ute to IlK' American Heart Associa~ fion In her memory.

: Sylvia E. Carpenter
Sylvia E. Carpenter. 93, died
. Sunday at her residence. 324 E.
·· Main St., Pomeroy.
• Mrs. Carpenter was born Jan . 12,
: !893 in Meigs County a daughter of
: the late Jonathan and Margaret
· PowellJohnson.Shewasa member
· and co-founder of the Bald Knob
Gospel Mission.
Surviving are two daughters,
Neva Curtis, Chester, and Anna
Haines, Pomeroy; a son, Eugene
Carpenter, St(versvl lle; three
grandc hildren, Sandra Schuffie.
Olympia, Wash.; Sheila Fisher,
Indianapolis, Ind ., and Dana
. Haines, Syracuse. Six great • grandchildren also !l.lrvive.
: Besides lx'r parents, she was
: pll'Ceded in death by her husband.
· Dana Carpenter on May 7, 1966, six
: brothers, a sister and two sons.
Services will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Bald Knob
: Gospel Mission with Rev. Law: ~ence Gluesencamp officiating.
• Burial wlll be In Bald Knob
: Cemetery. Friends may call at the
: fu neral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
· p.m. TUesday. The body will lie in
state at the church one IDur prior to
the service.

: Mildred Phillips
. Mrs. Cllffordd !Mildred ) Phillips.
· Minersville. died Sunda y at Vete: rans Memorial Hospit al where she
··was taken at 3:06 a.m. bY the
Syracuse Emergency Squad. The
· Ewing Funeral Home is In charge
. of arrangements.

: Alva D. Tulloh
Alva D. Tulloh, 59, Middleport,
:died Sunday in the Holzer Medica l
:center.
He was born May 12, I9~ . in
Mabscott to the late FrankJin and
· Ruby Atkins Tulloh.
· He was preceded in death by two
sisters, Mary Ruttencutter and
:Jean Goff.

A SALUTE TO
.

THE PO EROY HEALTH CARE CENTER
Pomeroy Health Care Ctnttr is celebrating National Nursing Home
W11k May 11-May 16th. the Center is owned by lmericare Corpora·
tion with home offices In Columbus, Ohio. Pomeroy's facility was one
of the first built by lmericare. Gro.,11nd breaking ceremonies were
held on June 17, 1978, with the full support of our county commis·
sioners and community. On Nov•ber 11, 1979, open house and
dedication ceremonies were held at the facility. After many licensure
requirements were met, the first resident was admitted on January
7, 1980.

Kaiser directors given big plurality
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp. shareholders have elected the
company's slatl' of dill'Ctors by a
4~· 10· 1 margin over. the ca ndidates
proposed by Oklahoma Investor
J.A . Frates and two associates.

County A 0u.ent's Corner

FarmIand VaIUes

Farm Science Review, Thursday
through
Saturday, September23-25.
Courty Extension Agent
at
the
Molly
Caren Agricultural
Agriculture
Center
near
LIJndon.
This Is one of
Cash Rents - Land Prices Cash rents for Ohio farmland tlx' Midwest's largest agricultural
continue rmvlng downward with machinery exhibits.
Alfalfa Weev il Activity Is Up- If
tlx' value of that land, ru t at a
00% to 70%of the leaves show some
veteran or tlx' United States Navy, slower rate.
WWTI . a member of the StewartA recent report from the Ohio feeding damage, make your first
Johnson Post !J.l~ v'FW In Mason, a Crop Report ing Service Indicate; cuttlng of hay.
memlx'r of the Smlth-Capehart Ohio farmland has 1'1'9ched its
CCC Loans - How should
Post 140 American Legion In New lowest value In 10 years, and cash Commodity Credit Corporatio n \
Haven. and a member of the ren ts are lower than any year since loan transactions be handled or
reported In regards to Income tax•
Marine Officers Association in 1978.
Pillsburgh. Penn .
It usually takes two to three years I have detailed Information if you
Surviving are his wife Elizabeth for rent rates to react to decreased are Interested.
&amp;&gt; Ca refu l Out There - Long
"Libby" of Middleport: two sons, farmland values bu t thi s year's
David D. Tu lloh of New Haven and slower decline in rents could IDurs and hu rry leads to accidents.
DE&gt;nnis F. TuUoh or Cross Lanes;
Indicate some stabil ization of land Rollovers, ru novers and unguarded
power takeoffs on tractors are the
two step~ns. Step~n M. Oiler of values.
Atlanta. Ga. and H. Richard Oiler
Ohio farmland Is valued at an main causes of farm accidents.
of Southport, Conn .: two brotlx'rs, average of $1,013 an acre I his year. Farming leads all Ohio jobs In
Frank Tulloh of SanMatro, Calif. This is a 10 pet cent decrease from oocupational fatalities.
All loads pulled by a tractor
and Jack Tu lloh of Texas: four 1985 and marks five eonsecutlve
sisters. Virginia Savis of Tickfaw, years of declining va lues. Ohio should be attached to the hitch.
La .. Carol Sargent and Gall Ingels, farms reached an all-time high Pu tt lng a chain around the axle and
both of California, Alma Simms of value of $1,831 an acre In 1981 but pulling can be very dangerous.
The ~era tor should never get off
Huntington: seven grandc hildren.
have dropped 45 percent since tren.
tlx'
D'actor without shutting It off,·
Funeral services will be WednesThe state's cropland is rented lor
day at 1: :ll p.m. at the Foglesong an average of $70.32 an acre, do wn because the machine will continue
Funeral Home wit h IlK' Rev. &amp;&gt;nny ft'Om $72.64 last year. Cropland to run even alter you are caught.
Stevens officiating.
rents are down 21 percent from Never try to grease, check or adjust
Burial wtll follow in the Sunrise 1983's peak levels. Pasture showed a PTO driven machine while it Is
Memorial Gardens In Letart.
a 3. 9 percent drop from $25.87 per running because It takes only one to
Friends may call at the funeral acre In 1985 to $211.87 this year. thrre seconds for your clothing to
home on Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 Whole farm rents declined 8.7 become eompletely tangled In it.
p.m.
percent to $65.88 an acre for a total according to AI Pugh, safety
Military rites will be conducted at of 19 percent below 1!1!2 peak !l'nt specialist.
The majority of accld~nts happen
the cemetery.
rates.
when
people tend to push themFor Southeastern Ohio, farmland
GarTetl Cole
saves
to
gel things done. Stress and
Is renting for $40.00 per acre,
fatigue
Interfere and result In
Garrett Cole, 54. Akron, formerly cropland for $50, and pasture for accidents.
$ll.OO per acre.
of Coolville, died Sunday at his
CRP Reopened- The Secretary
home.
of Agriculture has announced a
He was a son of Viola Chute Cole,
The Daily Sentinel
second ConservatiOn Reserve Proa resident of tlx' Pomeroy Health gra m (CRPI sign-up. The closing
I LSI'S B l-OW)
Care Center and the late Elmer
date
for
bids
wlll
be
Friday,
May
A
DlvL
"'Ion
of Mul ti media, Inc.
Cote.
23rd
.
Otll!'r survivors are a son and
Published f'Vrr~ aftf'rn oon. Monday
Field Days Set - The Ohio
through Friday, 111 Cou rt Sl.. Podaught er-in -law, Timothy and
Agriculture
Research
and
Developmeroy , Ohio, by 1h(' Ohio Va iiC'y PubLaura Cole, Talmadge; a son,
llsh ln~~: Company / MultlmNI Ia. Inc ..
Lloyd Co le, at home; five sisters, ment Center Field Days for1986 are
PomNoy, Oh io 45769. Ph . 002·2156. Sc·
as
follows;
cond class postug e paid at Po mer oy ,
Mrs. Robert !Sylvia I Martin, UtUe
Sheep Day and Ram Test Sale,
Ohio.
Rock, Ca lif.; Mrs. John (Allce)
Cordray, Fullerton, Calli.; Mrs. Saturday, J uly 19, at tbe Eastern
Memb!?r: United Press lnt ernall onal,
In land Dall y Pr(&gt;Ss Assoda tion and th r
Gate (Ann) Price, Athens: Mrs. Ohio Resource Development CenOhio Newspaper Associat ion . National
Clarence (Garnet) Hammersmith , ter, Caldwell . The sheep program
Adver tising Repr!!S(&gt;nlatlve. Branham
"111 be in the morning and the sale
Newspaper Sales, 733 Th ird Aw•nu&lt;',
&amp;&gt;llevue: Mrs. Harry (Mytle)
In the afternoon.
New York. NN· York 10017 .
Moorehead, Cuyahoga Falls; !our
Field Crops Day, Thurs{!ay. July
brotlx'rs. Floyd and Herman Cole,
POSTMASTER: S4:&gt;nd addr('Ss c han~es
to Tht' Dally Sentln£&gt;1, 111 Court St .
24, at tre OARDC Northwestern
Akron: Russell Cole, Lakemore:
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Lawrence Colr, No rton. and an Branch, near Custar. Tours wlll
aunt and unclde. Worthy and Anna siDw research results with row
SUBSCR IP'{lO N RAT El
By Carri er or Motor Rou te
crops, mainly com and soybeans.
Cole. Coolville .
One We&lt;'k ................... ................ $1 .10
Muck Crops Day, Thursday, July
Mr. Cole was a memlx'r of the
One Month ....... ...... ...
. .$4.Pll
On f.&gt; YE&gt;ar . .
............ $.17 .20
Lakemore Country Baptist Church. 21, at tre OARDC Muck Crops
SINGLE COP\ '
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Branch !Oulh of WUlard. Research
PRICE
Wednesday at tlx' Whi te Funeral efforts there with vegetable crops In
Dally ............................... .. 25 Cents
Homo in Coolvllle where friends muck !Oil will be shown.
Subscrlb('f!'; not destr ln ~ to pay th('car ·
Processing Toma to Day, Wedmay ca ll alter 6 p.m. TUesday.
T1N may r£&gt;mlt In advance direct to
Burial will be in Fairview nesday, July ~. at the OARDC
ThC' Dally Senlln l•l on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basis . Cied lt wllllx&gt; ~ivf•n carrif'r oo ch
Vegetable Crops Branch southwest
Cemetery.
month.
of Fll'mont. This event Is for
No su~crlpttons by mall )X'rmltwd In
growers and processors of fieldtowns whcrf' hom(' ca r rier scrviC&lt;' Is
CLEVELAND tUPli - There grown tomatoes.
avai labl e.
Fruit Crops Day, Thursday, July
were no jackpot winners in Satur·
Mail Suh8crlptlon!i
day's OhloLotto drawing, a state 31, at the OARDC main campus and
l mkle Ohio
13 Weeks ..... ....... ... ... ........ ... $14 . ~
Lottery Commission spokesman orchar&lt;E near Wooster, !or growers
26 Week s.. ........ ........... ........ $29.12
or small fruits and orchard crops.
said Sunday.
52 Weeks ........... .......... ... ... .. ..... S.i8.21
Dairy Day, Friday, August 8, at
No tickets listing all six of the
Outsld e Ohio
13 Weeks .................................. $15.60
numbers drawn were found among OARDC, Wooster. Producers and
26 Wl'&lt;kS .
................... $.11.20
thP $3,608,018 worth sold. the otlx'rs In the dairy business wlll
52 Weeks ............................ ... $59.80
spokesman said. The numbers hear updated dairy research.
were 2. 6, 24. 25, 33 and 34.
The number of five-of-six and
!our-of-six winners was to be
announced today.
By JOHN C. RICE

Area deaths
Martha Howell

Praise for RhQdes was et:hoed by · back to Jackson, where he headed
the college's vice presiden t !or Globe Iron Co. He &lt;rganlzed other
academic affairs.
,
companies In nearby communities
"Mike's reputation as a teacher and compiled a lengt ~ record of
. and his service to the college makes civic and philanthropic activities.
him an appt'Opriate selection for
His endowmmt to Rio Grande
this distinguished award," said Dr. College and Community College
Ray Boggs.
allows tre Institution to recognize
" Ce rtainly , I' m honored," annually a faculty member who has
Rhodes said of the award. "There Is shown excellence In teaching.
no grea ter honor In teaching than to
Rhodes received his bachelor's
be selected by your colleagues."
degree in secondary education,
Both nominations and selections with a major In math, from RGC ln
for the award were made bY faculty 1967. He ea rned his master's degree
comm ittees.
In mathematics at the University of
Rhodes said his overall phllo- Notre Dame In 1971 and completed
sophy in teaching is, "To be able to his doctoral degree In matrematlcs
have students appreciate the true education at Ohio State University
nature of ma thematics, as well as In 1983.
equip them with speeclflc skills.'.'
Prior to joining the RGC faculty
Another goal In teaching, Rhodes In 1971, Rhodes taught at Zane
said, "Is to help students develop Trace High School In Ross County
the ablllty to think ror tlx'mselves." from 1967-19'70. He and his wife,
The award was made possible by Debra, reside at R.lo Grande.
a donation from Edwin A Jones, a
This year' s award Is the second
Jackson native wiD gr~duat ed time the honor has been grantEd.
from Yale University and began tis Merlyn Ross, associate pt'Ofessor of
Industrial career at a blast furn ace mu sic, was till' first recipient in
In Birmingham, Ala. That !I'd him
19&amp;'i.

Kaiser Chalnn~.n Cornell C:
Maler, who sa id at the annual
sha reholders' meeting that the
company sla te had been "overwhelmingly" elected, said he was
"very appll'Ciative of the strong
show of confidence by the share·
holders. When I used the word
'overwhelm ingly' I did not expect
that It would tum out to be an
understatement and that the vote
would be so lopsided."
Official election result s were
provided by Corporation Trust Co.,
the Independe nt judges who
counted and verliied the votes.
Approximately 34.4 mi llion shares
were voted out of IlK' 45.3 million
eligi ble to vote.
"The election judges have advised us that each director on the
company's slate received at least
27,732,34i votes." Maier said. "Not-

withstanding the fact that the
Frates-Clore-Holmes group's latesl
Securit ies and Exchange Commlssion Htings Indicate th at tt had the
power to vote ln excess of 9.9 mllllon
Kaiser Aluminum sha res , the
group's nominees each ll'Celved
only 6,004,435 votes. Inexplicably,
not all of the shares controlled by
the group vote d fo r their
nominees."
The election judges ' fo rmal
report wlll be formally !l.lbmltted to
IlK' company Tuesday when the
adjourned shareholders' meeting Is
reconvened for that ~le purpose.

Located on Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy Health Care Center is
situated on ten acres of lovely country land, and is able to care for
one hundred rtsi.nts. Professional nursing care provided around
the clock and rehabilitation swvlces to help the residents return to
their own homes are only part of the services provided at the facil·
ity.

Meets Tuesday

FOLLOWING IS A SCHEDULE OF EVENTS TO TAKE PLACE DURING NATIONAL NURSING HOME WEEK:

A special meeting of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wlll be
held at 7 p.m. Tuesday al the
temple. Work wil l be in the E.A.
degree and refreshments will follow the meeting.

Mother's Day - "Open House"
lev. Hides, Church Service
Carnation Corsage to every female resident
Refreshments - Cooking and Punch
Choraliers from Meigs High School
Refreshments - Cookies and Punch

SUNDAY, MAY 11

2:00 P.M.

NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
MARY COATES

MONDAY, MAY 12

2:00 P.M.

SWEET
&amp;
EAT
POMEROY, OHIO
216 E. MAIN

TUESDAY, MAY 13

1:30 P.M.

Arthritis Discussion with Steve Dueley
Senior Citizens Group, Tour of Facility
Refreshments - Coolli11 and Punch

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14

2:00 P.M.

"The Local Yokels"
Clowns from Rutland Nazarene Church
Refreshments - Calle and Punch

THURSDAY, MAY 15

10:30 A.M.

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;==::;

NOW OPEN

6; 30 A.M. TIL 6:30 P.M.
MONDAY T..U SATURDAY
•Homemade Pits •Hand Dipped let Cream •Homttmade Soup

"DAILY SPECIALS"

GOOD CLEAN
USED CARS

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
Complete Lint of Vogttablo &amp; Rower

Planh - Ho~ ing ••••h, Gt111·
nium1, Rolf lulhos, Dogwood, Rho ·
dodondron &amp; Shrubbery.
SE ASON SPECIAL
57 50 PER FLAT

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Sernd with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
• no substitutes except beverage with add i-

OPEN DAllY ' -S; SUNDAY l ·S

Hubbard's Greemouse
SYRACUSE, OHIO
PH. 992-5776

3 Dr.

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

85 Plymouth Horizon ••.S689S

Auto., air.

PH. 992·5432

POMEROY, OH.

Fritd Chicken

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT,· OH.

OH.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

BANK"E£JNE..

83 Chev. Chevette ........ S319S

Farmers Bank

79 Chev. Impala........... S2495

TWIN CITY
MACHINE &amp; WELDING

Fruth Pharmacy

Valley Lumber and Supply

Ewing Funeral Home

Marguerite Shoes

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

Pat Hill Ford

Francis Florist

. MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

Low miles .

POMEROY, OHIO

4 Dr.

81
84
79
82
80

Dodge Aries ............. S3995
Dodge Aries ............. S519 5
Chrysler Newport.... S1995
Pontiac J 6000 •...... S419 S
Chev. Caprice Wgn•.••• S3495

~IDDLEPOIT,

POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY,OH.

DEMOS
86 Chrysler N.Y ......... S16,000
86 Chrysler GTS ......... Sll,OOO
86 Dodse ·Shelby •••••••. s1 o,ooo

.\'inelhoWIInd rrcnrr/P u•hn call?.
t.Aembe1

FOir.

Vaughan's Cardinal
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

OH.

K&amp;C Jewelers

Middleport Plastic Arts

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY,OH.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEROY, OH.

Kingbury Homes

ACE Hardware

POMEROY, OH.

Home
National
Bank
RACINE, OH.
SYRACUSE, OH.

"THE DO IT ALL DEA LER"

Baum Lumber

Fabric Shop

WE SEIVICE WHAT WE SELL!

CHESTER, OH.

POMEROY, OH•

King Builders

DOUGLAS ·W. llnLE

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

POMEIOY, OH.

CHEST&amp;, OH.

Quality Print Shop

New York Clothing House

COOPER
$3•25
Chrysler•Plymouth•Dodge, Inc.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
Featuring

Fruth Pharmacy

FOR JUST

MIX OR MATCH

"Picnic" in Courtyard - "Haddie May" and "the Clown"
Balloon Lift-off
Hot Dogs &amp; Buns with Sauce, llamburgen &amp; Bun w/tomato, onions, ketchup,
mustard; Potato Salad, Balled 1111111, Potato Clipt, lWon Ws, bel Tea

FRIDAY, MAY 16

7S Ford T-Bird ................59995
84 Dodge 0100 Pickup .•• S6595
r;:==========11 86 Dodge Colt ............... S629 5

No jackpot winners

'
Unity Singen from CoolviHe with Sue Matheny-Director
Refreshments .._ Cooldes and Punch
Mn. Lynn Crane, C.P.l.-Worbhop on "Taxes" and Estate Planning"

..
(HRISlER

· 399 S. Third Street
Middleport, Oh io 45760
(614)992·6421

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
·AND MULLEN INSURANCE
r

POMEROY OH.

AnORNEY·AT·LAW

MIDDLEPORT

PO.ROY

POMEROY, OH.

Ridenour$ Supply
POMEROY, OH.

�By
Revival services

T~e

Bend

',.

BookmobUe servl"" In Meigs
Coonty Is brought to yru lly the
Meigs Coonty Public Library under
COJ!Il:act with Ohio Valley Area
Ubraries .
Bookmoblle Schedule lor Mon·
day, May 12: Burlingham (County
Mobile Home Park), 3:J5.4:05:
Hirrtsonvme (Church), 4:35-5:05:
New Uma Road (1 mi. !lluthof Fort
Meigs), 5:15-6:00: Rutland (Depot
St.), 6:4().7:10.
Bookmoblle Schedule for Wed·
nesday, May 14: Thwer's Plains
(Lodwick's), 7:25-8: 10; Rlggscrest
Addition, 8: 25-8: 55.

Davis
birth
Wayne and DE'bble Davis are

C\'STIC FmR~l!l BIKE-A-THON - Jamie Branmn, 12-year-old
daughter of .lim and Jodie Brnnmn, ReedsvWe, rode «&lt; miles mlhe
Cystic Fibrosis Blke-a·tbon held al the ReecsiUe Lod!s and Dams
Saturday to be "inner. She was sponsored by the CoolvWe VFW Post
347lr and i.s pictured here with Conun1111~r Roy Fry or, Conunan~r
Edward Vigal, and her mother.

Jaycees help sponsor bike-a-thon
, Saturday May 31, is !he olllclal
date of the Meigs County Jaycees
and '.WMPO Radio Cystic Fibrosis
Blke·Mhon according to RobE'rt
Flr$t, Chalmlan &lt;1 the event.
1'be l'Vent is being held In
Miik!leport, and will start and finish
at the Meigs Junior High Stadium .
AcCording to First, lhe l'Vent
inCludes riders who wUI !Dilclt
pledges for each mUe they rtde their
like. Riders wUI oompete for prizes
based on the am&gt;unt &lt;1 pledges they
collect.
"The l'Vent Includes more than
IXkl&gt; riders. It also Involves spon·

sors and even spectators. The day
\\ill be aiot of fun for everyone
involved," first said .
First said the money raised from
tbe evrnt ,.,;u help fund research
that Is S('archlng for a treatment to
prolong the Uves of chUdrrn v.1t h
cyst ic fibrosis. Cystic fibrosis ts the
numbE'r one genetic killer of young
people, but tremenoous advanres
In resE'arch in the past year have
brought the treatment for cystic
fibrosis within sight.
This year's PVent IY&gt;nors Alex
DE'ford, wmse story was told on
ABC-Televisio n movie this past

AprU . Her smrt, oourageous llfe
has inspired riders across the
nation to take part In blke·a·tiY&gt;n to
be nefit the Cys ti c Fibrosis
Foundation.
"This Is a chan&lt;P for everyone In
Meigs County to take part In a
nationwide effort that can help wipe
out a disease," First said.
To register for the bike·a·lhon,
pick up an applicatim at your loca l
school's office, WMPO RadiO Sta·
tlon, Locker 219, or contact First at
992·6356 or Rev. Lowell Ford at
742·2202.

Meigs County property transfers
Charles E. Lane, Margaret L.
Ulne to Calvin Lane, Mabel Lane,
pt I;.ot, Midd. V.
Carl R. Lynch, Carole L. Lynch to
Calvin Lane, Mabel Lane, Pt . Lot ,
MW. V.
Roland E. Morris, Shirley Morris
to Herald 011 &amp; Gas Co., Right of
Way, Rutland.
Leo D. Davidson, Mary E.
Davidson to Herald Oil &amp; Gas Co.,
RJah.l of Way, Rutland.
Howard Thoma, Evelyn Thoma
to Herald OU &amp; Gas Co .. Right of
Wi.Y, Salisrury.
Jay Hall Jr., Lillian Marlene Hall
to James Keesee, Linda E. Keesee.
Lit m, Midd. v.
Carl Vlnrent Gheen Sr. to Unda
F . Gheen, 1.8A, Salisoory.
. Victor E. Nelson, Dec., Bernice
Nelson, Alfld., Rolland.
Charles D. Frye, Dec., Joyce E.
F,ye, Attid., Rutland V.
Jessie L. Saunders to Harold
Blackston. Helen Blackston, par·
eels,· Chester.
Graci' Holter, David Huddleston,
Mary Ann Huddleston to David
Hut1dleston, Mary Ann Huddleston,
Loi #32, Racine V.

I{;

Dwight D. Ashley, Wanda L.
Ashley, Johnny H. Nelson, Jackie S.
Wagner to Johnny R. Nelson, lots
:m &amp; m. Salis wry .
DE'I L. Ogdin . Carol Ogdln to
Francis N. Cottrill , EIE'anor M .
Cott rill , part'!' is, Sa l ~m.
E thel M. Hughes to Michael R.
Swiger, lot, Mldd. V.
Larry Harr is, Shirley J . Harris to
St at~ of Ohio, Dept. of Natural
Resources. part'I'L,, O ii v~.
State of Ohio to Larry Harrts,
Shirley .J. Hanis, parcels, Olive.
Magnr·t Bank, FSB to Willi am E.
Mlldren, Jr., parcels, Orang'!'.
Halll~ RllbE'11son to David R.
Stout, Peggy Stout, Lot 299, Syracuse VIII.
James H. Cunni ngham, lrrogene
Cunningham to Buckeye Rural
Electlc Coop .. l.nc., Right of Way,
Bedford.
Paul Alan Childs, Joyce F. Childs
to Millard R. Aurke, parceis,
Columbi a.
William D. Bryant to C. Melvin
LawreiH&gt;', f'atty Gluesrncamp,
parcP]S, [ R lJi:IIHJn .

Dun Fitch. Linda F"ilch to Carl E.

Smit h Prtr.

In~ ..

Right of Way,

Orange.
Robert B. Baker. Karen S. Baker
to Carl E. Smith Petr., Inc.. Right of
Way, Orang!'.
Garland Caldwell, Sarah E.
Ca ldwell to Carl E. Smlth Petr.
Inc., Right of Way, Orang'!'.
Nellie E. Russell. Dec .. to LUlie
Cottrell , Gertrude Lechene, Cha·
rtes E. Lane, Carl Lynch, Walter
LVO('I\, Donald Lynch, Calvin La ne,
Ct'rt . of Trans .. Midd. V.
Lillie Cottrell to Calvin Lane,
MallE'! Lane. Pt . lot. Midd. V.
Donald E. Lynch, Barbara L.
Lynch to Ca lvin Lane, MabE'I Lane,
Pl . lot. Midd. V.
Gertrude E. Lec hene, Louts V.
Lec hene to Ca lvin Lane, MabE'I
Lane, Pt. bt, Mldd. V.
Walter Lynch, RllbE'rta M. Ly nch
to Ca lvin Lane, Mabel Lane, Pt. lot,
Mldd . V.
Arthur Spence r, Margar et
Spencror to Carl E. Smith Petr. lnc.,
Right of Way, Orange.
Joseph R. Poole, Mart ha F. Poole
to Carl E. Smith Petr. Inc., Right of
Way, Orange.

Community calendar I area happenings
MONDAY
POMEROY - Disabled Arnert·
can . Veterans Chapter 53 meets,
MOrulay, 6: :ll p.m.
RACINE -Revival at Freedom
GOspel Mission Church through
Saturday at 7:-Xl nightly. Located
m CR 31, Bald Knob Stlversvllir
Road back &lt;1 Portland and Racine.
Rev. Clyde FPrreii, evangPIIsl:
~ial.slngPrs.

JjEDFORD TOWNSHIP.- Bf.'d.

ford Township Trustees meet Monday, 7 p.m., town hall.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area

Mr1d1ants mr'&lt;'t 8 a.m. Tuesday at
Bank t&gt;nr.
HAHRISON VILLE - Senior Ci·
tizens hlrxxJ pr&lt;·sure clinic. town
hall Tuesday.
MIDDI.E P011T - lllc mother·
da u ght ~ r ba nquet sponsorf.'d by
Women's A.'sociation of the Middle·
po11 First Presbyterian Chu rch,
Tuesday G: 30 p.m." Meat, rolls and
bE'veragcs furnished.
RAC'INE- Class of l9iji meeting
Tuf5day i :.xl p.m.. Soul bem High

School to dlst\J&lt;c' actlv lt k•s fur
~- yl'ar

A donation

was rna~ to the
Meigs County Councllrn Aging for
Its program of assiSting the nredy
elclfrly at a recent meeting &lt;1
Colitmbla Grange 24li.
Action to make a donation
i!Uowed 8 recornrne~~datfon from
the women's Activities Committee
• memllers, Elizabeth Jordan, ea.
rol)rn Fraley, and Rose Barrows.

ll was reported that In the
national sewing co ntest, Ruth
Birchfield t!XJk first placP In Class
A, Patty Manzey, second place. In
Class C, garments for childrrn ,
Jane Llewellyn took first place a nd
Rllse Barrows, second place. Jane
L,iewellyn also took J!llrd place In
l1ass C In the Pomona m ntes t.

Sunday the troop went to Show
Biz Pizza in Parkersburg and
afterward enjoyed a carnival on the
parking lot.
Traveling with the girls w~re
Winnie Waldnlg, grandmot her of
Crystal Holman and AM a l.ea·
mond, mother of Tina Barnes,
along with leaders, Fred ScarbE'rl)'
and Nora Martin.
On May 18, an awards ceremony
will bE' held on t~ Ohio River
Campgmunds in Racine. A potluck
pirnic will pl'l'ff'de the ceremony.
Syraucse Brownies 1120
1111d Junior 1201
A mother·daughiPr po tluck
dinner was held recen t1y at the
A.~bu rv Unitf.'d Met hodist Church in
Sy rac~se by Syracus...• Brownies

"Clouds of Witness" was the
program topic d Helen Teaford at
the recent meeting of the Asbury
United Methodist Women held at
the home of Mrs. Opal fGoes,
SyracuS('.
Mrs. Teaford had readings about
the women who startI'd and devoted
much time, talent and enPrgy
launching tbe Women's &amp;Jciety of
Christian Service, forerunner of the
UMW. She spoke &lt;i their true faith
and trust In God as bE'Ingthe key to
success. Taking part in the program were April Harmon. Beulah

Wan:!. Mary Lisle, Opal Kloes,
IrrnP Parker, and Mary Cundiff.
Prayer closf.'d the program. Ca rds
were signed for membE'rs unable lo
attend the meeting.
Mrs. Lisle opened the meeting
with a reading on llXliherhood and a
poem, "It 's Me Again Lord" by
Helen Steiner Rice. DE'votbns by
Beulah Ward includro the poem,
"The World is Mine." Officers'
reports were given and :W shutin
ca lls reportf.'d. Freewill offering
was taken and Ihe birthday of Aprtl
Harmon was noted .

GutteR
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

2·11-86-lfn

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
PH. 992·6931
After 5 Call
742·2027

and Juniors. About 60 motlx.•rs,
daughters, grandmothers, span·
""' and members of th~ Unit ed
Methodist Women attenck&gt;d the
dinner. Thirty-two wer&lt;' scout s.
The Browni&lt;'s put on a puppet
show with puppets madr In troop
m('('fings. and skits were presenl l&gt;d
b)' th~ juniors. Cookir patchrs,
cookie marketing patch&lt;'S and
hcljX'r badgrs wcw awarded to the
brov.rnlrs.

Plans wcrr madr for a mot ~r·
m!'Pting on May 15at!Oa .m.
a t till' Asbury Church.
l ~adrr

A day ca mp m""l ing has lx•n s~l

"Free Estimates"
lnslailatian Availabla
4 I n

·Honor roll

Jasm Shuler.
Third Grad(': Sabrina Congo, Tracy
Plckf'tt , ShaM an Staats.

Fifth Grade: Nicki Beegle. DaiTt'll Sayre,
Kelly SnJder, Ml&lt;nette Slobart, Kyle Wlcklrnc.
. Sixth Grad e : Kelly Bailie. Ca rrie
Jodl

the followin g as a re residents
of the State of Ohio , viz : - tl"e
aurvivilg spouse. the next of
kin. the beneficiaries lllder the
will; and to the attorney or
attorneys

represmting any

A/C

APPLIANCE REPAIR
Ellperienced Service in
Microwaw Ovens,
Ra~es.

Air

Conditioners.
Refrigerators . Washers
&amp; Dryers. TVs &amp;
Satellite Systems .
lm•gency SerwKt

949 ·2145
S· t2·1mo.

the aforementioned persons:
In the Matter of the Estate of
Rer.o Und. Oeceasflt . 254
Condo r Street. Pomeroy ,

Ohio, 46769 .
You are hereby notified that
the Inventory and AAJraise·
ment of the estate of th3
aforementioned. decea·s ed ,
late of said County, were filed
in th is C01.1 rt . Said lnva11ory
and Appraisemen t will be for
hearing before this Court 0r1
tho 23rd day of May, t 986, et

1:30 o"clod&lt;

P.M.
Affl person desiring

to file
exceptions thereto rTl.lst file
them at least five days IJ'iorto

HIU, Jeremy

Rou!;h, Dawn Shuler, Heidi Snider, Ja:mes
Walls, Olad Wise.
DH·Prlmary : Peggy Caru lbl!'s.
Dfi.JnlerllBilate: Melissa Teaford.

Given under my han'd and

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trtntmlulon

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992 -7314'
Pomeroy,

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SETUP
-E STIMATES REASONABLE PRICES
CALL ANYTIME

992-3361

3·14-tfc

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

Ftr All Vw Ptl•lltt N11it

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

PlUS: Offiu !upplies &amp;
furniture, Wedding

and G•aduation
Stationery, Magnltit
Signs, Rubbo&lt; Stomps,
lu1intn for nil,

Copy Strvi&lt;es, Etc.
255 Mill 51 ., Middltporl

992-2 196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13·tfc

104 Mulberry b ., Pomeroy

992·3345312/Nn

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
AGRICULTURAL

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

Custom Design
Service

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

CALL 667-3271

Compare the QUI lily
Before v:.~ ~~y mo .

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

.

4-16 .' 116 tfn

Real Estate General

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•vtNYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

Cl

z

Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Servtces

-a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~

-z

"Free Estimates"

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

&amp; Vicinity

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

B-13 tfn

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

Moving Sale. Van, refr tQerator,
furniture, baby item1, .,tique
c he st. clot h es women•
11 , 12 ,13 , 14 . mics. Catl 6 14 ·
387 -7695

Guage 111a Mev 12, 13th, t-.(. ·,
Brown's residence. North Meirt ~
St. Rutland . Ohia. 111 4· 742· )
2777.
. . ...

··p·ame ro·y-·.. ····..

Verd S•le. Gellipotit Ferry, tllf" .,
right et Beale Scl-ool. lrdleneon·
right at end . Saturday, 9' 1ft J ~
Tlble and cftlairaend mort, ..

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Ya rd sa le: 260 M ulberry, Poma·
roy . 10 :00 -3:00 .

May 13th and 14th, College Rd .,
SyracUia . Shampooer, houae
ahuttara. hunldi1iet, fan , big
whee l. ch ildren end adult ciO thing. toys, miac, dishes end
other

J.3. '86 tfc

41

Houses for Rent

E'. M•i••WIIIi
POMEROY, O.
992·2259

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)

WILL HAUL

RACINE, OHIO
Office 949 -2438
Emergency 949-25 I 6

Giveaway

KittiW'Is to a good home . Ca ll
6 14·446 ·2329
black Labrad o r me le,
ve ry gen tle . Cal l 614 - 379 ·
2400.

acre lol wilh above ground
fXJOI plus satellite d1sh .
Beautifullol wilh pine trees
and garden space. Storage
buildin g. S29 .roo 00.
MIDDLEPORT - Newe1 mo·
dular. nice levcllot in Middle·
JXJrt. Woodburnmg fireplace,
porch and deck a1eas. Beaut!·
lui place. Owners must sacn·
lice. $38,500.00.
LANGSVILLE - 6.35 acre
country estate - barn,
sheds, two ponds, and a mce
l'h story home m good re·
pall. ElectriC heal plus a
woodburner lor cheap heat
$4 3.900.00
NEW LISTINI1 - Here rs a
)'.1 story home w1th up to 4
bedrooms, loll basement
woodburning lueplace, pa·
lio, garage and 1n mellen!
condition, w1th equ1pped
kitch en. Wants $44.!110.00.
NEW LISTING - Cute lillie
one bedroom home 1n Ra·
cine '" good condition , alu·
mmum Sidin g, all storms.
~vel lot. Good pnce al
$13,500.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
991-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949·2660
Dottie Turner ..... 991-5691

A

t:::;l..

(H'
UKE

SEWERS · BAS EME NTS
WATER UNES · SEPTIC
TANKS · CREEK &amp; FIELD
DRAINAGE PONDS· MOBILE
HOME SETUPS · ROAD
· LAND

GOLD COINS
BASEBALL CARDS
MOTHER'S DAY &amp;
GRADUAnON

IF NO ANSWER CALL:
CHESHIRE, OHIO

RESTA lRA ,'I/T

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Ssddlebrook Inn

CAU COllECT:

Ph. (6 I 4) 843· 5425

{CUT

Rt . 62 . 8 mil81 sou t h o l
the Pomet"oy ·M IIIIort Elridge

Choose from 3 Meats Hen, (lti(ktn ot laktd Sttok
S1n tcl with 4 vtg~tables,
' oi!Jd, 6enert and drink .

985-3S61

All Maku

SUNDAY

Children ll &amp; Urultr - 117 Price
S &amp; ~dt r Fllll
Our Sp•'t'ial l ~

WHO lE APPlE PIEI- 'UO
5·5-"86·1 mo.

UlEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

located in the

BUffET-•4. qS
11 ,30 a.m. ro MO p.m

our FOR FUTliRE

•Washers

•Dishwashers

•Ranges
•R e frig erators
•Dryers •Freerers

PARTS and SERVICE

4-S·tfr

1·11·2 mo.

11

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!
FULL &amp; PART TIME

REGISTERED NURSES
For 25 Bed SNF-ICF Facility

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN 0 SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•HNITH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE
Itt Hen II Full Tit~~~

CONUCJ INONOA DAILEY, I.N.

Shop Tech•lclen
o• O.ly

Or Apply At

RIDENOUR

VETERANS MEMOIIAl HOSPITAL
115 112 East Mtlmoriat Driwt, Pom~~roy

CALL 614-992-2104

TY &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER - 985-3307
411/tfn

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR

WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commerc ial

Call:
992-5875 Or
742-3195

T renching of Any Type

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
FULL &amp; PART TIME

REGISTERED NURSES
CONTACT TERESA COLLINS, R.N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 46769
CALL 614 -992 -2104
Equal Employment Opportunity

Backhoe Service
Plumbing SeNice
Custom Welding

Lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems
licensed &amp; Bonded

WWAMS TRENC~G

SERVICE

At. 4, Hyooll Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4.6769
Ph {6 14) 992· 2834,

992·6704

FREE ESTIMATES

PHARMACIST
THE KROGER CO.

We're seeking registered pharmacists for posi·
lions in Proctorville, Ohio and Htmlington. WV.
We offer mellen~ salaries, stock ownership ,
educational subsi~y. annual salary merit re·
views. elllensive benefits, retirement plan, pretax savings plan. pure pharmacy setting.
if interested please call Ted Mangel at 1-800233·7018 or send resume to:
The Kroger Co.
Attention Personnel
P.O. Box 14002
Ronoake VA. 24038

DIAMONDS ,L.-_ _ _ _

E;;.;;
·0 ;;;;.
·E ....
. _ _ _......

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
New location:

168 North Set:ond
Middleport, Ohio 4576D

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Ca n y Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSINI55 PHONE
{6141 q92 .6550
REIIOENH PHONE

{614) q92-7714

117ft ' rtn

S·1·l mo.

MANLEYS

TRASH
SERVICE
Servicing Middleport,
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
•Commercial Container

Service Available•
CALL 992·3194
5/ 8-1 mo.

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

weeks old .

LOST Black Angu•. Hazel Ridge
Call 614 · 266 ·1526 .

ar~:~a

Lou : Da rk brown male cat.
wearing flu collar. Answau to
Jerry . l ost in Rust ic Hill. Syra cuse aree . Reward . Call 614992 -7636 after 4:00 .
lost: Nine month old sheQhtrdli ke dog . Pome roy P ike ·
Flatwoods area . 614 · 992· 7'659
aher 6 :30 pm

54 Misc . Merchandise

Cereer Opportunity ,. 1 toif171
repr•erttltkle for one of 1ha :
nl1kma lerge 1t lnur~nCII a:un·
panU••· No p-evious ax.,.ntJt.ce
necesury . Co~late .trtinlnt:.

Eam while you

I' m a Dropped Puppy,
to be a Pound Puppy !
curly. teddy beer. Come
Ca ll614 -742 -2454.

JAM£ S KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

31 /86/tfn

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Avt.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Mon.·Wed.·Thurs. 3-S pm
run. 6:30-8; Fr i. 1·2 pm
Saturday 10 -11 :30 am
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;
SURGERY IT APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Offite
For Hours
304-372-5709

10-14·1fc

Annou ncemenls
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing machine

repa ir, part s, and tupp liet. Pick
up and delivert . Oa~tlt Vacuum
Cle1ner. one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 8 14 ·

c:-:--:----:-:-:--:--"":""' ".
Rep1 Needed Jor busin•• .if;·•

co unts . Full -t ime, 160,0/JO·
$80,000· Part -Time, IU ,OOG- "
118.000 . No aelting. repf!IC.,..
business. Se1 your own hoUn. r
Training provtded . Call 1·112- '
938·6870, M ·F, Sam 10 15pm
(Central Standard Time) .
-:--:----:--:-::-:--:--~ '·
Applications for Swimming Pqol,
Manegtr being eccepted by City ''
of Gallipolis , 618 Second Ave.•
8 -10weeks, 86.00 pertmur., 4Q .~
hours w86k, fl11x ibiltty requ ~ MI_. ,
Apply in per.an to hecrNtiOn '',
oHice by May 111 . 1981. E.O.E.

Metura lady to llveln endcn;ctr '"'
elderly lldy, in Gailipolit. Not&lt;
badl11t. references requir~ · . •
.Ca ll 614 -446· 2183 o r 81'4· ·
446 -3617 .
• ..
EASY ASSEMBLY WOHI I .'
1714.00 per 100. GutrentMd
Payment No s altl . Det.tll •. •

Sen d stamped envelope: Elan.· ,
5847, 3418 EntflrpfiM, Ft. '
Pierce, Fl. 33482 .

..

..

12

Situations
Wanted

Have vacancy in oor no,. to ,....
ca11 for elderly. Trained 1nd
ex peri11nced . Phone 114-992.\ •~
6683.
' .•

""
w""in'""d'""
a -, ::11 :t.,.- ..
-

m
-,-:-,.:-:.-.,-w
:-:o7rti .. ·:

Brick, block, atontand concrete.
Free estimate~ . Call 614· 742·
2290 or 304 -173-5971 .
•· •·

----::--:-:--:-::--

...

Have v acen cy for elderly . ROOft!., •.•
board. and laundry . Reason .. lt. ,.
·
Call 614 · 992· 6022 .

--------------~-- · ·

.

'

17 Miscellaneous ·

- - - - - - , - ·'·
Dotson Tree Service, tr.. tllti·
mates. 304 -676· 2897 .
•. ,,.

18 Wanted to Do

•• •

Will do mownlng, odd job·l:"'
peintin trailer roofl, blbytltting.
Cell 614· 446-8288.

lawn c.re. he,_ and ;ytp ;'
Plinting, auto , repair. ~ · ~
ctunlng . Ctll lf'lvtlrne , l't4·

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for l&amp;te model clean
used cars.
Jim Mi nk Chev . ·Oids In c.
Bill Gene Johnson
814· 446 -3672
TOP CASH paid for "8 3 model
and n...ver used cafl _ Smith
Buick -Pontiac. 19 11 Eutem
AVil ., ·Gallipolis . Call 614 ·446-

228 2.

Wanted junk autos . Call 614 ·
388 · 9303 .
Buying dally gold , silv11r coins.
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins, large currency. Top pri·
ces. Ed. Burkan Barber Shop,
2nd . Ave . Midd leport, Oh. 814 ·

:146-9U3.

Employ men!
Se rvice s

·

'--t

.... ..

Sewing by pattern. Call CS14._ ,.,
266- t686 .
•

Tuch• w•nting to do PlinllnQ,:
&amp; yard word lhis summer It ..
ra11onable price . Call 81 4·245- ·
5197 after 5.
•

..

.

Will baby sit i'l my horne. Bud ,
Chtnin Roed , h1v1 referen'*'a.""
l:l 4-895· 3335 .
'

Will baby lit in my home cloM.to' ·
Ordnance School. Aeftrtnc•· •
available, 14 yelfl exp•i.,Cif,
.'.
phone 304-875 · 3774

Finan cia I

992 · 3476 .

21

Busineu
Opportunity

.'
•
.. ,

----------·

Roofing

" FREE ESTIMATES"

Accident lnaurance CofT1)1n~ . ~ ~
Call local office in Ollllpolfl ·
61 4 -448 -2273 if no lrllwtrciiiF ...
collect 304-52 9-6231 bef'NW'I
8AM·4:t5PM . EOE·M· f ·H·V.

9

•S1orm Windows
•Replaceme nt Wi ndows

446·0294.

M·f . Cl 1514-38S.. ·
.

Sand, gravel, f ill dirt , muld!, ~ - ·
ru. yerdl , delivflred &amp; epr,IC( ..
f48 .00 per load . Cell Don ..
WI\Jgh , 814· 448· 9648 . ·• •

•Insu lation

•N ew

r~~qu ired .

87 94.

Street at Pt. Pit. Reg ister Office.
pl&amp;ase return to office and
IIC8iva REWA A D.

•Storm D oors

11 ·14-tlc

Equal Employment Opportunliy
TRENCHING IS OUR LINE

Ffle puppies 8
304-675 -3056.

LOST metal ham mflr, Sec:ond

EUGENE LONG

Comple te Remodeling
Rooiing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 vears
" Free Es1imates "

Ducks and Roosters to give
IJWay . 614 · 843· 5267 .

lost: Men ' s gl11ses in b'ec:k
leather case. Between upper
parking lot end Five Points. Call
814 -992 -3785 .

367.7560 - 367· 7671

FOL'JV TA / iii

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

3 black kittfln ! . 2 femai8S, 1
male. '11 SiamMe. Ca ll61 4 -992 6362 .

H111lp !
about
Male.
Quick !

1 OZ. SILVER BARS

5·5· 1 mo. pd.

IEIIIOR

ADS GET

•BULLDOZING oEND
LOADER •TRUCKING
•TRENCHING
•CRANES •DRAGLINE

CLC COINS

Complete Guner Work

5 kin en &amp; to give away . Mos tly
b'ack. 3 with loll{! hair. Call
614 -742-3176 .

6 Lost and Found

985-3937

FOR RENT - SOUTHERN OIST, RACINE - TANNERS
RUN ROAD . 3 Bedroom houso, full basement, 2 barns,
olh" build .. garden &amp; meadows . Ideal tor raising
sheep cattle or could be developed fo r housing or mo·
bile home lots. Will sell surface. Somj timber. 190
acres, $110,000, no minerals.
Call for information 401·723·4747 after 6 p.m. or send
inquiry c/ o
Daily
i . P.O. Bo• 729D.

Female dog, brown &amp; white,
loveab le, 9 mos . old . to g ood
ho me. Call6 14 -3a8 · 8659 .

8 week olds p.rppias , pert Collie
and German Sheph8rd , :ll4·
675-7966 .

COINS &amp; SUPPLIES
Buying Gold
&amp; Silver

NEW LISTING - CHESIIRE
- 1986 Mansion mob1le
home on rentoo lot. Beautiful
un ~ w1th 3 bedrooms, ~ec.
lorced a1r heat w1th central
a1r lnsutat1on package lor ~fi·
ciency. Sl7,!illl.OO

room newer home on over 2

:;;(_I_:_:,Sif~Tg ·

I0-8·tfc

HOME FOR SALE: Very nice. three bedroom with rec .
room, living room , kitchen/ dining and bath. Two
covered porches 10ll6 and 6x8, on hall acre . lot
with chain Iink fence. lOx 12 wood storage butldmg.
In town. but has privacy. Syracuse, Oh . - Ph.: 614·
992·5866 after 5

NEW LISTING - EASTERN
OISTRICT - A neat 2 bed·

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

992-3410

Far111 Equlp111ent
Parll &amp; Sa nrlee

Reliab le blbysitter rw~edecl . Ff~ .

S1i181, Amer ie.~n Gen•M ut~r, ~:

4

German Shepherd mixed male
puppy to give aw ay l'h months
old . Had shots. Call 614 -992 ·
2628 .

DENNY CONGO

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

.'

""'
1""'
1 -. "'Ho:e-:lp,...
W-:-a-n~te:-:d.-.-. -~

1 female 5 mo. old 1\811 regis ·
tared Boxer. Ce ll 614 · 448 4472 .

PH. 992-7201

Authariud John D11ro,
Now Hoiland, lush Hog
Farm Equipmtnt
Dtalar

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
-A cute 3 bedroom home .
newly •emodeled. on 4 lots.
New root, basemen). wood·
burn er, FA. gas heat Owner
needs sale' $19,900.00.

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

JIM CLIFFORD

JUST CALL!

NEW LISTING - EASTERN
DISTRICT - Just nghllor a
large lam1iy 14 5 bedrooms.
l'lr balhs. lu ll basement.
garage, carport Gas F.A.
heal. New 1001. large deck .
Over 2 acres of land
sJs.roo oo

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

DOZER , BACKHOE,
TllENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER UNES ,
RECLAMATION. PONDS ,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

&amp; Vicinity

1Hm' 1)
opportunity
for advancement . Catl M.C'. ; •

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

3/ 11 / tfn

·······Pt:'Piiiiiiiii.i if ..,·.,i_

'~.:========~program.
Benllfita pack~g e,

J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

New Homes Built

....... Giillfiiolis......... .

5-S.' 86·tfn

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

seal of said Court, this 1st day

of May, 1986,
Robert E. Bud&lt;, Judge
By Lena K. Nessolroad,
Deputy Cieri&lt;
{616. 13 2tc

Rt. l24,Pomoroy Ohio

Addont end remodeling
Roofing end gutter work
Concrete work
Piumblflg end electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

BOGGS

of

the date set t:lr hea ring .

Fourth Grade: Sam Shain.

Gklcckner. Jody Hayes,

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INV ENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State &lt;Jf Ohio, Meigs
County Crurt of Co mmon
Pleas. Probate ONision
To the E"ecutor or Adminis·
b'ator of the estate. to !llch of

CARPENTER
SERVICE

'{ard Sales

Young,

for Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the
Asbu1y Unitr'!l MethoL.r Chuwh ln
SyracuS&lt;'. Anyone int ~res t ed ln
helping wit h day camp is encouraged to attend th~ m('{'t in g.

It was roted that the bleslng
boxes will be collected at the next
meeting in June. A discussion on
how to get new mcm bers to join till'
group foliowro. A lett~r was read
by Mrs. List~ from Nellie Parker,
districl secretary, and ont• from
Dorothy and Daryl Santee, mission·
aries in BrazU. by Helen Teaford .
Bible readings for J une arc from
Daniel. Thr spiritual life closing
was by Mary Cundiff on "Memora ·
bl e Mot~rs" of the Bible. Miss
Marcia Karr also att('!l ded the
m('('ting. Ref res hmrnts were
served by the hostl'ss.

-

Roger Hysell .
Garage

PAT HILL FORD

24 Hr.

This year, an es tlmatro 1.293 trE'atmenl. In the 1940's It was one main focu s in rese;lrdl now Is on
people a day - about one every Iii lour, and in the 19!1J's it was one in prevention of cancer. parti cularly
in the ar&lt;&gt;a of nu trition , stress, and
seconds, will die ri canrer. By the t tu-ee.
end of 1986, an additbnal 9.l'l,lll0
Today , there are over 5 million the environment . The Meigs County
new cases of canrer wUl bE' America ns alive who have a hi story Unit would like to tha nk all t.IY&gt;se
detected, according to the Amerl· of cancer, 3 million of them wit h who already gavr durtng Cancer
Crusade but if you were mi ssed and
can Ca ncer Society, which prf.'dlcts diagnosis five or rrore years ago.
that over the years, cancer wUI
Much of the erect II for this would like to give In the fight
strike in about three out of four progress can bE' attrtooted 10 the against cancer. smd your contrloo ·
families, said S. Michael. Public efforts of the Arnerkan Cancer lion to American Cancer Society,
Information of the Meigs County Society, the larll"st and oldest ri thc Meigs Cou nty Chapter, P.O. Box
Unit.
prtvat€ nonprofit cancer orga niza· W2.' Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
If you would like free litEJ"atureon
There Is encouraging news, lions . Funded entirely by private
however. Cancer research has contributions, the Society has In· the Importance of nutrition, diets or
result~ In treatment met hoi}; and
vested mo re than ~ billion dollars etc. call992-75.11 from 1-4:30 p.m. rn
programs that have dram at leally in ca ncer resE'a rch in the past 40 Tuesda y and Thu rsdays or stop at
Increased the surv ival rate of years, and also leads the fi eld in Its the office in the Old Masonic
cancer patients, Michael said. In patient services and roucatlon Temple Building.
the 19ll's less than one In fi ve was programs.
,------------alive at least five years aftEJ"
The American Cancer Society's
Public Notice

Revival services to be held a t the Order." MembE'rs used the good
Pomeroy Church of Christ, May eart h tor a roll ca ll rsesporu;e.
18-21, were noted at the recent LaDoMa Clark had devotions mlng
meeting of the Evangeline Mission- "Hands of Jesus" as her theme.
ary group held at the home &lt;1 Mrs. Several reports were given and
Brenda Venoy.
cards were sent to tmse who are iU.
The mother-dau ghter dinner held
Arl Blish of Opera lion Evangelize
wUI conduct the services. Mrs. Thursday night was discussed. It
Betty Spencer opened the meeting was noted that vacation Bible
with "I Give Thanks lor Divine school will bE' held in June. Mrs.
Pauline Kennedy had lhP mission
study and Mrs . •Janet Venoy read a
note from Kim and Denny Allen,
the group's mlssion lor 1986. Others
The fltth six weeks grading periOd honor
attending were Mrs. Pat ThOma,
rol l at the Letart Falls Elernen!ary has bt'Cn
annooiiCl'd. Making a grade of B or above In
Mrs. Gertrude Andrews, Mrs.
aUt ~lr subjects to renamed to the rol l were:
Charidlne
Alkire, Mrs. Anna Lock·
Ftrst Grade: Nohonorroll given for tht•flrst
hart,
Mrs.
Helen Miller, Mrs. Eva
grade.
Second Grade: Jason BarTl(&gt;lt, Elobbi Kin g,
DE'ssauer , and Mrs. Eileen Bowers.

TIIURSDAY
CLIFTON -Clifton Tabernacle,
CUlton, W.Va., will bE' In revival
Thursday through Sunday with
services at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be B.T. Weston of
Columrus, Ohio. Singing ministry
wUI also be ~atured.

In Meigs County, 6 squads, all
directed by Robert Byer, will be
Involved and transpo rt from the
unannounced site to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Keeping 1he tlmP and place
unknown to the EMS squads and
the hospit al is to more accurately
test lhe ability of both to respond in
a real emergency, according to
Byer.
Coordinating the disaster at
Veterans Memorial Hospital are
Rhonda Dailey, RN, director of
rursing for lhe skilled nu rsin g
Facllltyllnlermedlate Care Facil ·
lty and Bet h Stivers, RN. emer·
gency room supervisor of VMH .

Cancer Society notes its history

POMEROY -Area Chamber ri
Commerce meeting noon Tuesday,
Pomeroy Tr inity 01Urch . Steve
Skipp, general manager, Rllyal
Oak Resort Club speaking;
lu nchron.

WE DNF.'iDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Elizabeth
Lohse. Daisy Blakeslee, co-hostess:
plant exchange.

NEW- REPAIR

UMW of.Asbury Church has meeting

Missionary meeting notes
revival service in Meigs

reunion .

Columbia Grange conducts meet

Racine Brownie Troop 1259

POMEROY - Piannf.'d Parent hood, Mulberry Height s, Pomeroy,
clinics Thesday and Thursday. Ca ll
992-&amp;!12. Ofllce closed Friday for
staff meetin g.

COOLVILLE - Public games
party at VFW :W78 Hall , CoolvUie,
Tuesday: doors open, 6 p.m. party
at 7.

ROOFING

Girl Scout Diary: Fun for all
Big Bend East Service Unit he ld a
skating party at the Chester
Skale-a-way Rink Saturday .
More than a hundred scouts,
leaders and parents attended the
ska ting party. Troops .represented
Syracuse Brownies 1120 and Juniors 1204; Racine Brownies, 12'i9
and Junior 10142: Chester Brownies
1067: Juniors 100, and CadPtteS..niors llBO and 1200; Thppers
Plains Brownies 1135 and Junior
1272; and Reedsville Brownie 10'19
and J unior 1015.
At the skating party a limbo
contest and comer skate were held .
Winning In the limbo contest was
AngPia Young of Troop 1135, and
winner of the comer skate was
Patsy Aeiker of Brownie Troop
1067.

YOUNG'S

Howard L. WrittMI

communities.
Providing assistance wtth ground
an d air communications, as well as
securi ty, will be Ihe Mason County
Civil Air Pa trol. Approximately 23
victims wUI be transported to the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The 11·1-County Disaster Drtll Is
tEing coordinated In Mason County
by F"red Taylor, Mason County
Emergency Services Coordinator.
and Inez Howes, R.N., Pleasant
Valley Hos p i t al disas t er
rnordinator.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-:-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

·Page- 6

The AMual Simulated Disaster College/ Community College Holzer
Exercise In Gallla and Meigs School of Nursing.
counties In Ohio and Mason County
in West Virginia wUI bE' Thursday.
At the Gallipolis Developmental
Hospitals Involved Include Holzer Cent&lt;:!', their plan calls for the
Medical &lt;£nter, Pleasant Valley tornado to hit two buildings at the
Hospital, and Veteran Memorial facUlty at an unannounced time.
Hospital.
Middleton Estates will also have a
Also participat ing are the Ga lli· tornado touch down at the ap·
polls Developmental Center, Wood· pointed time.
land &lt;£nters, and Middleton Elates
Woodland &lt;£nters wUI be able to
In Gallipolis: Lakin Hospital In dispatch staff therapists to actively
West Virginia; emergency medical participate In the exercise. Coord!·
services and law enforcement natlng the disaster plan at Holzer
agencies In all three counties, along Medical &lt;£nter Is Kevin Hawk,
with fire departments and the Civil administrative assistant support
Air PatJ:ol In Mason County: and sEJ"vlces.
membE'rs of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Mason County disaster sites will
IndustJ:lal Emergency Planning bE' Lakin Hospital, oown town Pt.
Council iMOVIEPC).
Pleasant, Route 87 near Flatrock,
In Mason and Ga llla Counties, it Pleasant Valley Hospital Nursing
tornado wUI supposedly occur at Care Unit, and Philip Sporn at New
6:30 p.m. on Thursday. In Meigs Haven and Goodyear at Apple
County, the exact tlmP, date and Grove. Five EMS squads Including
location of ·the storm wUI not be New Haven , Mason, Pt. Pleasant,
pobliclzed In advance, for a more Mt. Flower and Valley will partlcl·
realistic tes t of emergPncy pate, In addition to the fire
preparedness.
departments in Mason, New
In GaUia County, Holzer Medical Haven , Pt. Pleasant, Valley, FlaCent£!' wUI have their exercise take trock and Leon, and the West
place on the Junior Fair Grounds Virginia State Police, Mason
and wUllnvolvevlctlms, wbo wUI bE' County Shertff's Deparbnent and
nursing students from Rio Grande poli ce from th P various

Bookmobile routed

Monday, May 12, 1986

Monday, May 12, 1986

Disaster drills set in tri-county

Revival serviCes wiD bE' held at
the· Freedom Gospel Mission
Cburch, tMonday through May 17,
7:110'f'IICII PVenlng. The Rev. Clyde
Ferrell wUI he the evangelist and
there wUI he special singers each
E'Yt'lllng. The church ts locatf.'d on
County Road 31, Bald Knob,
SttversvUle Road, back of Portland
and Racine.

announcing the April 19 lirt h of
their third child, a daughter, Jayne
Ruth, born at lhe Holzer Medical
&lt;£nter. The Infant weighed nine
pounds, two ounces.
Maternal grandparrnts ar~ Bill
and l))Ma OhUngPr, Pomeroy, and
the maternal great-grandmother Is
MrS. MOdred OhlingPr, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandmother Is Mrs.
Dorothy Davis, Mlddleporl.
.Mr. and Mrs. Davis have two
other children, Andrew, Jhr('('. and
Kayle, 18 rmnthss.

The Daily Sentinel

11

Help Wanted

Federal, rute and cNiel tGNice
jo bs now available in your erea .
For nto . call !805 ) 644·9633
Dept. 1201 .
Tra inees · Aircraft Repair . Train
with pay. LC~~arn to repair ·
main tain aircraft pert•. ~&amp;qUip ·
ment. walding, riveting . 18· 26
veer old high schoo l diploma
greduet .. willing to relocate. To
11art your fJture In avition ca ll
toll free il Oh io , 1· 800· 282·
1288 , Mon.-Th lJrs. 9em -2p m.
Caretaker to live -In apenment
o:Hrple• . Cell 304-675 -5104 .
M iddle aged gentlemen need s
l'louselleep• to INe -in. One
small ch ild wek:o me . Call 614·

44 6· 34t9 .
Govtnnrt'lftnt J o bs. 1 16 ,040 ·
159 , 230·yr. Now Hiring . Call
1 -806· 687· 6000 Ext . R-9806
lor current fed8ra l list .
America 's Newest Party Plan
.. Chrinmas Around the World '.
is hiring area superviaou. Pre vious~ pany pl1n helpM. No
in veetmen t, no collecting, no
delivering . Call collecl30 4·48 5 ·
117 33.
AVON . 3 qten territorln.

RJ LLEA BRUSH COMP ANY
etm te .OO to $10.00 per hour
11rvtng our customtn. 304·
1176-1090.
Coming .con Wallpaper Outlet,
Pt. Pleasant, WY now accepting
applicatton for full time employ·
.,.nt. Send r•u me along w ith
peraonal rlfflrencas to C .l.
Ferrell. 31 1 E. 7th St .. Chilli·
co the. Oh 46601 . Please include
phone number .

Clelend Greenhou11 . 0p., br
butlnvn . Bedding pants, hang · 1 ~-----::-::---:-:­
mg ba1kets. pots and vegetl · Want SOm&amp;One to live In with
bles. Vine St. Re cine, Ohio.
16derty IMiy , 304-6715· 6243 .

I NOTICE 1
• '
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIJf.H ••:
lN G CO . recommendl thl1 you- ,.,
do butln•s wtth ptaple rou·
know . and NOT to send maniiY '
throultl t,.,e mail until you heve
Investigated the offering.

cF-.,-,-.:-,.-:-.,-co.,..l-,,.-ci'""•t'rtv
""""""ih-::
oP ..ownBr ha• other ntlffttS. fhpty
to P.O. boa 749 , G1llipoWs, Oh
46fl 3 1.

MOORSMAN

FEEDBUSrNESS

OPPORTUNITY

Nationally · known menulac:tuJ•
needs loc. l 111" and s.,....fce
rlllretootltNe for Muon Co ••• '.,
Wou ld .prefer person who hu, ,
raised lives tock or been in own ·
busin•s . Must hl\'1 good repu tation Wld credit rating . ,For
confidentia l intlluview. Write
David Wheeler. 189 Clinton Ref.•, ~
Chillicothe . Oh io 45601 . ,, -...:'::
C1rryout. louge , St . highway; :"'
good location . Serious lnqul....,. ;,;,
onfy . Call between Bem &amp; 9arq,, ...
614 · 367· 0488 .
. '
~--~--~--::-:7·~

Garage Apat1meru for sale and 2
mobile t'Q mes. Goo d ratum oo
you r investnwn t on appro II , '111\
ICfll with 235 feet rQ.:f fr0n· 1 ~ l 1
t~~ge . 6 mlnut• from town. Will •
oo naid&amp;r land contract Taking'..._..
calla b11tween 4-8 PM . 304-675·

J)02 .

23

Profe111ional
Services

_;.._

__________

~

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
rllld is cover your plano's beeutrful
tone. ca ll today, W1rdl Kl'¥·
bowd, 304·87&amp;·5100 or e~

'\

•

. .-

-• '-',.··

3824 .

Real Eslalr.

...'"

...
.

" • .~.

31

Holll&amp;l for Sale • ;;
1 •• - .. .,

SINGLES . Meet that 'f)8cla1
hiring, ""'""ion·
p1W1on l Frae application. Perett.,dentt, tndground
tonal touch introduction•. box e re
positiona . Call
8536 . Charleston , W. Ve . !rtfundebltl1 · &amp;1 8 · 459; 35 315
26302, 1·304·727-8434.
ext.A· 1980 for Info 24 hn .

,,..

'

:i"

4 bedroom hou•. flrepl•.
mi. south ofGIIIIpolil, 128.1e0t .i •
Cali diVS 814·441-1115 or
evenings 1514·441·1222 .

,

�Page-S-The uaity Sentinel
31

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

Monday. May 12. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
44

big 4 bdr., Elrly
A.merrcan horMt •18,995 on
'/OUr lot SM our nM model

Apartment
for Rent

We bulh

Attention Marahall ltudanu'
now rttttlng 1 1nd 2 btclroom
apartfMftll for fill 11m•ter In
Huntington Somejuatontblock
ftom Merahalllocalty owned and
op•atecl. 304 -8915-3450.

home Call 814·8815 -7311 .

For Hie by own", 2 atory hi
wrth ;~r•o• - Green School Oit·
trict. AP$:1fOJI . 1 ICrt f2&amp; ,000
Call &amp;14 446 -2025 or 114·
446 -9180.

45

House for ule 3 bdr , U6.000
Cell 614 -446 -3178

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room• and
light hOUII kMplng rooma Park
Ctntral Hotel. Call 114·441·

2 bdr home. rural watlf, ni01
lot, 117,000, will tl'alda for van.

64 Misc . Merchandise
Cal\ahan' aU11d Tire Shop Ov1tr
1.000 tirll.li18112. 13 . 14 , 15.
11, 11 .5 . I miiM OU1 Rt. 211.

Call 814-216-U51 . '

EVANS

ENTE~PRISES,

Refrlgtretkm &amp; AppliiiRet Ser·
vice. All branda used appllanCII·
parta. Little'a Refrij . a Appl .
Chnhirt. Oh 114 -387-0440.

46 Space for Rent

Motor ized treadmill. excellent
condltk&gt;n. 1600 C11111 4 -448-

Rt

36

near Holrer Medical

Center Call 614 ·44&amp; -3375
1'h story 4 -5 bdr. 2 baths. FP
full basement. 1 4x20 buildmg,
wrth garage, on 8 1 acres
located ., Rio Grande Call
614 -246 ·5197 afttf 6·00PM.

"Doctor, that creep who
thinks nobody likes him 1s

Trailar loti IIWir lnd Wltlr
furnished, small children accepted. Rt. 1 Locust Ad •• btckof
K llo K, 304-876-1076.

here."

Senle estate 3 bdr. ran ch, 2
Space fot rent . now taking
bath. fi replace, ga rage, dNirable
application a for mobile home
Ga ll\poha area Walk to IChools ' - - - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - - - - i l o t•, available in Pt. Pl .... nt&amp;
or downtown Hilltopv•ew. Csll r
Gallipolis 304·876-3000
&amp;14 -446 -038B ahar ePM
tow n , s c hools
churches, hbrary , one story 2
bdr , attractive bath, for mal
dmmgroom good carpeting ,
large kit chen good gas furnace ,
s torm win do ws Call 614 -446 0530
Walk

to

Hoose &amp; 32 acrM Sue m1111s tr

G alllpolis. Only inleretted buy
er.s please Call 614 -446 -2460
after 4 pm
Government Homes from Sl1 IU
repair\ Also dahnqutnt 1111
property Call 1-805 ·687 -6000
.E111 GH -9805 for informat ion
6 years old. 2 story, 2 bedrooms,

bl!h. w1lnut ptnellng, on pnvate
road . T P C water. Reedsville
area Call 61 4-378 ·6452 .

33

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Farms for Sale

By owner. 1 10 acres at Dexter
Beautliul 8 room htma, bam,
outbulldlnga, swimming pool
POl . Also 114 acr• near Opt.r
with 3 bedroommodamhoma, 2
barns, valley aenlng. Call 114·
742-2877 for appo intmtnt.
0

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Building lsnd for Ale 2 3 acr•
beautiful flat land, country living , city conventencu. Located
off Upper Rt 7 Cell 814-4 .. 8·

.3

Wooded lot- electric- water·
bathhOUII· boat dodt . Nothing
down 160 mo. Big Foot Perk, Rt.
7. 6 mil• below Gallipolis, croa1
R1ccoon CrMk, follow stgna

6 rooms. 3 \ots 314 Condor St ,
Pomeroy. Call614-669 -6291
9 room, 2 batha Can be made
tnto duplell Located on Fourth
and Palmer in Middleport. Close
to schools and ahopping Askmg
price 824,000 Owner wlll Mil
on land contract. Ca11814 -692·
65,68 after 4 pm
Older home. Vina St Racine 3
bedr o om~ . bath. new kitchen.
dming room, liv ing room
836.000 614 -949 -2640
412 Spring Ave. 3-4 bdrm.. 2
ba .. built-In kltChtn w vr round
grill . m1crowave and dis ·
hwuher WBFP in liv rm ., g.-.
and bamt: $43,000. VfJfV rlcel
Call collect to ... 1-614 ·888·
070 1 Slene Realty
House for aala .n ChetlarOhio. 7
rooms. ba•ement. garage, on
one tenth of an acre . Walk1ng
d•st•nce of IChool. atore. lire
h ou sa 826.600 . 614 -986-

_3_57_1_·____ _~---: ·1
3 bedroom hou 11 , new roof,
rewired . tllgh St , Point ptea1ant. make offer, 304· 876·
6939

4265

Camp ing lot for ule in Big Foot
Campground, 12,000. Will con·
••dar trade for pop·up camper

Coll614-448-1294

1-5 acrea,p.artially wooded lots
near approved aub·divillon. T P
and C. water and approved road
to each lot. Reasonably pricMI.
Wlll rinance wi1h 10 p..cent
down . Ca ll 614-985-3694.
1.3 acree. 325 ft. frontage. Rt.
7 . c\011 to town . 13700 Call

614-992-5587.

For r4111t · P•sture land with bem
off Rt . 87 . Call 304-418-1111.
For nla. Garage apt end 2
mobile hornn. good retum on
your inv"t~t on approxl ·
mataly 1 'h acr" wtth 235 ft.
road front.ge. 6 mlnutet from
town . Will con•id..- ilnd con·
tract. T111t1ng cell• betwe.., 4-1
p.m. 304-875-3002 .

Renlols

Apartment
for Rent

..

•.

Houses for Rent

Rent.leua. landcontract. 3br',_
Rodnev Village II: 2 bf's-Eurekt;
3br Evtnl Heightl, Oepoah &amp;
reftrencn required. Blackburn
Aealtv-814-446·0008.

"3"'2" M
= o"'b'"il"e"'
H-:o-:m=-e=-s= -- l IT;.~:. 7;j~ 0 • ..,.~, Call
for Sale
Furntshad houH. 2 bdr , 1195
rear 4th Ave , G1llipoll1
Cell 441· 4411 after 7pm

- - - - - - - - - - -1 ,31

14•70 Festival , 2 bdr., 2 tull Nice 3 bdr., full b11ement, CA.
blths, lots of closeta, utiUty fenced yard, Rt. 141 , U25plua
room, AC . Cell 614·4"8·8241 dep. Call81 4·862-2816 efter 5
anvtlme.
Nice 3 bdr , full baaement, CA.
1979 Greenbna r mobile home fenced yard, Rt 141 . 1326 plus
14.&amp;0, frezer. dryer, livmgroom dep CeH 614 -862-2818 after S
111t. much mora Call 614-388·
9787
3 bdr~ .. 2 batht, gertge On
Harting..- Parkway in Mlddl•
1981 Happv Houae 14x52, all port. 1200 mo C1ll 614·992electuc, good cond . untur · 7883.
m1hed , 18.900. Can ba IIM'I at
John1on '1 Mob1la Home Park. Nice houH for rent, quiet
lot 29 after 4 :30
neighborhood, MlnMIVIill 814·

992 -3675.

12x60 Vmdale Vlf'Y good condl·
t10n . One 8a12 pull out on LA . Houat and apartment •or ,.nt.
two bay w•ndow e11ten aion . Call Clel1nd Realty. 814·992Front and back porch. 111 .000. 2269
Ca\1614 -367·7813
2 bedroom houH, located 604
79 Windsor 14x70 all electnc. Walar St , 304 -875· 7183 Clll
CA . ca. rpet, good cond. Call after 4 30
614 -379-26"1 after 6.
Middleport area, nice cl11n
1983 Mansion. 14XIo,fadtemp horM , rtnonllble rent, if inter·
1983 Manaion 14A70. 3 bdr. 2 nted call 304-BU-3722
full beths. like new Setup Ousil
Croak Tr1ilor Park. 113.900 2 hou .... one trailer hookup, tor
Ca\1614 -245· 9146
rent , 304·876.8720

9284

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1980 libtrtv 141154. 2 bedroom. unfu rni Shed , vinyl under·
p1nn ing mcluded Must sell Call

Fully fum lshed. ,I,C, all utllli•
paid. adults only. Call &amp;14-448·

304 n3-5B73.

4110"' 114-446 -2003.

GenM Mobile Homes Free
waaher and dry1r with purcha11
of any n.w home in stock 86
Skyl ine 141170, 3 bedroom, 2
baths, on ly 8 14,900 located
Junction 177 and At 2 Ravens·
wood. W Va 1 ·304-273 -5136

In EtKeka Nice. clun, part
turn . adults onty, no pet•. *1 80
mo Dep raq C1ll 814-256·
1638 or 114· 266· 1291 .
Mobile home for rent on Upper
R1ver Rd . Call 814-448·0508

Mob ile home fo r •ale 14x70
1978 3 bedroom. 1'h bath, total
electric 18 500 Call 614 -247-

mobila home~ on
Bultvill• Rd .. 1200 mo plut
deposit. Call 814 ·441 ·920C

3575

1964 101160 Wo lver~ne 2 bed·
roo m trailer Kitcf'len furn tlhed
Call 6 14-986-41 03
73 Fleetwood 14x70 3 bedroom
trailllf. UOOO Call 814-992 7684
MOBILE .HOM ES MOVED: in·
st.ued. re.. onlble ra111, Call

304-576'2336

1974 Buddy trail•. 12xl52 .
good cond, 84,600.00. 304-

MENTS !Equal Hou1ing Oppor
tunlty) monthly rent a11n1 11
I 178 for 1 bedroom end 1212
for 2 bedroom, depoeit 1200,
located near Spring Valley Plu1
and Foodland, pool and Cable TV
avellabla, office houra 11 poaaible 10 am to 4 pm end7 pm to9
pm Monday· Frid-v. Call 814·
448· 2745 or l•v• m••ae•
Nicety fumiahed mobile home,
eff. apt . CM"'tral air and heat 1n
city. edultl only. Call &amp;1 4 -446

0338.

Apanment for rent QUIIity 2
IR , 2 bath apanmant in prime
downtoVIII'I locatton with offatreetperldng. Khchen fumilhed
whh r.trig ., Mlf·ciNO o.,.n,
DW, gM. diap ., hookup for
Wllhlf/ dryer . For non -smoking
lingle or couple No children or
peta Allalactr lc. lnclud• water·
/ MW./truh Aoneyurl ... lil
requir.:l Call 614-441-1894
BAM to !PM.
Fumlsh.:l apt .. 1 bclr .. 701 4th
Ave .. Gell lpo\11. 1235 mo . utMi tiM paid. Call 446 -4418 after
7pm.

6 Court St. 3 bdr. 1 V. beth, U50
mo .• plus utllidn, ref•enc• •
no pets. C•ll 814-441 -4921.

614 -446-0390.

.

Furn. lfflciency n 46 mo ..
uttliti• paid. 1hare blth. 107
2nd. Ave. Gallipol11 . Call 4414416 after 7pm.
Deluxe 1 bclr , garage apanment, kitchen fumiahad , no
pet•. no children. r.feranc.a
BOO Bloc* 1•t , Gallipolis Call

814-256·1629.

Nice clean efficiency apt Private
entrance. private parking, all
utiliti• peid. niQI for •lngla
person or aenior cltilen, an
ground floor. 11715 mo. plu1
deposit . Call 614-448 -7&amp;16.

3&amp;81 "'814-441-0410

Furn efficiency, 3 room &amp; bath.
Clrpeted I quiet S inglaworking
p•~an anty . Call81 4 · 441·4607
or 814-448 -2602 .
1 bedroom apt . for rent . Ba11c
r..,t starts U16 1 month thet
Includes ell utllit1n Depoait
reQuired of 1200 Contact VII
l~ge Manor Apt
Middlepon.

114-982· n87 . Equol H.. ~ng

Opponun1ty.

1 tMdroomfumllhad tpanment
Ideal for work ing couple. No
Pl11 Oapoah raqulred. CaM

114·992·2937.

FDor rent 2 bedroom furnished
apt Adult. only Ctll 814-992 -

2749.

For rent, 4 room. 2 bedfoom
furnished •P•rtment. Util itiea
included in the rent. R•centlv
remodeled. Call81 4-992-2676.
Apartment for rent . Utllti•
incklded . Fumlahld Ctll 614 -

992-&amp;217.

4 room and bath. Unfumiahed.
No pet1. Call 614 -949· 2263.
Myn~

Bnch Condo Rental. 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, s l-.p1 6 .
Furnished complete whh llnans.
Tennia couru, indoor-outdoor
pools, uuna. ate1m room 200
yd• from beach. No pets. Phone

114-423-8817

2 bedroom apt • unfur·
nl1hed . Ground floor 1185 plus
utilit l• Syr1cu11 Call 11 4·

992-5587

2 · 2 bd r

2 bdr. unlum carpet through·
out , AC, deck with awning. 2'h
mil• on Rt . f88 . No ctllldrtn or
m1ide pet1. Private lot. Call

614 -446-4607 or 614-441·
2102.
- : : - - - - - - - -lcDovtlle wide, 3 or 4 bldrooma.
1100. deposit. In M lddl~.
U!O. PM' month. Pay own
utillti•. C•ll 814· 992~384 .

12111110 two tMdroom mobile
home. unfurnished . *1 38 _pk.la
utilltl•. SyracuH. Ctll 114·

992·5687.

1973 Kirkwood double wide
with land , e11c cond, nice area,
Gallipolis Ferry. c•ll for more
infOrmation, 304-8715-3087

Mobile honw on Crtb Cr.Road, 1150.00 PI' month. no

only, 304-67&amp;-7117

Upst•irs unfum. apt for rent 4
roo~ 6 bath. Call &amp;H ·U8 ·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St . Gallipol1• New &amp; u1ed
wood-coalatovu, 8 pc wood lR
aui1e 1399, bunk beds 1199,
antron recliner• 199. new &amp;
uMd bedroom auiiM. rangea,
wringer wuhers. &amp; shoee. NM
livingroom tuitu t 199- t599.
Iampi. also buying coal &amp; wood
stovn . Call 114 446 -3159
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa• 1nd chllr1 priced from
*28&amp; to 1896 Tabl•. *50 and
up to 1125 Hlde·•·beds ,l390
and up to 15!50., sofa beds
11•&amp; . Atclinen , 1226 to
1376.. Lamp a from 128 . to
1126. pc dintttea from 1109 ,
to4315i . 7pc 1189endup. Wood
table with lix chairs 8286 to
1746. D11k 11 215i up to 1375.
Hutch•. S550. Bunk bed oomptete with manr11111 , U75
and up to 1395 . hby beda,
I 110 . Manreue1 or bo11
apring1, full or twin, 163 ., firm,
173 . and 183 Ouetn 11'11,
U215 . Bed fram•. 820 and
126 .. 10 gun · Oun cabinets.
1350 Gas or alactric rangn
I 376. Baby mattr•181. S36 6
U&amp;, bed framn *20, 126, &amp;
130, king frama 150 Good
selection of bedroom .,itu,
rockers. metal cabinet•. t'tlld ·
boerda 138 &amp; up to t66
U1ed Fumitura -- Dr111er, &amp; Met.
Ttundle bad, metal offi ce dealll.
3 mM• out ltJ\aville Rd Op~
9am to 6pm, Mon. thN Su

814-446-0322

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W•hau, dryera. refrig~tatOrl ,
rangu . Sklggs Applian ce•.
Upper River Ad bealde Stone
Creat Motel. 614· 446·7398.
County Appliance. Inc. Good
uHCI appliencn and TV 1111
Open BAM to 6PM. Mon thru
Set. 614· 446· 1699. 827 3rd
Ave. Gelllpolil, OH
Vall.,- Fumiture, ntw &amp; uaed .
Large Hction of quality furn iture . 1218 Eaatern Ave ,
Gallipoll•.
Bunkb.ts COJ11)1eta, 8000 BTU
AC , rock~t · reclin.-. quean lire
mattreaa At. Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture. 966 Second Ave . Call

114-441-1171

Twin bed. 2 cheats. deek. booth.
end table. 2 aleeper chain Call

614-44S-1194.

Country oak furn iture now 1n
ttoci . Coffee and end table1.
round Pedlltal and drop leaf
tebl11, corner cupboard, 2 pc.
cupbotrds, dry 1lnka, aecretarv
deaks, ch•t of drewer1, cf'laira.
large ulact10n . Conkle'a, At . 7.'
Tupperapl•ins, Oh.
Plcll;ens U1ed Furniture Good
quality used furniture. Op., 910
I or call for appo intment.
304-876-&amp;483 Of 876-1460
4 cushion sofa, 1160 00 Wing
beck chair. blue, e&amp;6 00 Both
A· 1 cond. 1209 Sand H1ll Raid .
Po~nt Pleaaant.

palo, 304·175-1206.

MobHe homt In HtndlfiOn, cal
1fter 5:00PM. 30,._871· 1111 .
3 btdrooma. ready Wedn.t..,.
phone 304·8715·2247.

APARTMENTS. mobile home•
houtH . Pt. Pl ... antendGall lpo·
lia 814-44&amp; -822, .

APARTMENT FOR RENT-Now

acctpting appliNtlona for ,.ntel
IPirtmtnta in Maaon Apu Limited . Two Hdroom tpts at
1188.00 J* month . A.ntal
rtttl may be h•h• deptndlng
on Income. Hou1ing will M
ava"-blt to eacfl tpplicent ,..
glldl•a of their race, color,
r..iglon, au or n.turel origkl
lnt.,..ted applicanta shoukt call
304-n3-15011 or contact D•
nlee ltretb or Watter Juetlca at
the Main Offlct. 1878 Brice
Aotd . lhynoldaburg, Ohio
43018 or oalll14·183·4&amp;14

Mldd'-rt - 2 br fumllllad apt
for ,.,t; tlto 2 room effldencv

apt. 304-882-2166.

Mt. Vemon

Awe. ntw 3 room.
bath. gtO&lt;And floor apt. PriYIIO

176 each . Call 814· 448· 1771
11
.000
Oakwood
potch swings
.
after
3 :30

For nlo good uiOd borgaln

priced color TV. Call 814-448·
1149
Lifetime concrete cutvens, 12
inch to 38 inch, In atock. Larger
lirn av•llabll, up to 8 It Call
614 -992-2834 or 614 -992-

6704

56 Building Supplies
Building Material•
Block , bnck. sewer PIP•· Win dows. lintela. etc. Claude Win·
ter1. Rio Grande. 0 . Ctll 814·

245-5121 .

Building mtttfllll, cement,
blockl all 11111, yerd or delivery
Gallipolis Block Co., 123V~ Pin•
St , Galllpoll1 , Ohio Cell 114·

441·2783.

Save Builder• Supplin Surplu1
Closeouts Salvage
1 Prehung still fnau lated 8 or 8
panel dooul 89 95
2 Prahung steal insulated door
end glau 911te or 11ite 1126.96
3 Double side lite entrance door
1111 'h glass 91lte t399 .
4 Single sidelite entrance door
11t1 'h thermalglaa• 1299.96
6 Commerc111 doubltentrencn
Nt brown all aluminum 1599 .
6 Double aidelltH tntr1nce Itt
wood 'Ia panel lh gleu wdecorative trim 1299 .96
7 Prahung r.terku doora • II
1ires and fi nishu B vr.t•
129 96 ..
8 Pehung interku 8 j:Mnal p1ne
door's all 1i:les (8 ) grtdet,
189 95 ••
9 Thermal 1naulatad gf111 pan·
ell 78 " Jlgt. 32 " wide S39 96

..

10. Wood door panel• w·full
glaaa 78" hgt. 34" wide 1%
thick 139.95 .
11 Ocugon11 window wnained INded gt111 t69 .96 H
12. Clear acrylic 1heets 080 and
125 gega ltvlfll .... big
saving1.
13 Plywood handy pane Ia
62" 1ong 18" wide 1h thick • · 75·

uoo ..

14 Masomte primed horlrontal
exterior aidtng 18 '11 18"11 7· 16
120.00aq.
15. 8 -greda merble vanity tops
choice alin tn 1tock 120 OOaa.
16 . 4'1t8 ' treated p1ne little•
S14 .96 ea.
17. K-luJC brick endatonered ll'ld
tan . reg . ta.99 ctn now 11 .60
and 11 99 ctn.
18. E1terior kay Ooorlodl aluminum finish 12 99ea.
19 Good used 8 -2 bulb light
leta w-bulbl 116 OOea.
20. Woo d- M~tonlte-btthroom
paneling 4' x8 ' pc 14.99 to
19.95 ••
21 . Preflnished and unfin is hed
door and window end all types of
tr1m 1tart1ng at t1 .00 tor B'pc.
22 . Aluminum mobllehamaand
b1m root coating w -fiber tifigal
123.96 100 gal and up t20.98
5gal ..il .
23. Wallboard ldhHIYIQt. tubal
or 29oz. S1 .39 111. Of by CMI

co,..,

11 .25 ...

24 P1neling naila 1.79 box.

PENN ' S WAREHOUSE -

Wallston.Ohio 614 -384-38415.
Block. brick. mort1r and ma·
tonry ._.ppli11 Mountain Sttte
Block. Rt . 33 , New Haven. W
v•. 304-882-2222

Pets for Sale

Dregonwynd C1t1ery Kennel.
CF A Himalayan. Penian and
S1am•e khtens AKC Chow
puppies. New pupgi• &amp; k1tten1.
Catl 448 -3844 1ft1r 7PM.

4-46-2335

So lid wh ite mala houM cat, 1 yr.
old Playful, tlas had all ahou,
neutered Call 614 -446-00815 .
6 AK C Aeg l1tered Elkhound
pups, 8 weeka. out of good tr"
doga. good pets. S100 tKh . Cell
614-258-1263

Fmn

Suppl11~s

('1, LiV t:SifH:k

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS 11o SONS

Uaed A66 Ditch Witch Trendier
and 460 John Oeere dcuer
814·194·7842 or 69•·6006

U S . 36 Weat, Jackson. Ohio

614-288-6451 .

Tony 's Oun Rapt II acope bore
sighting. fact ory reblueing ,
t10uaa 9 00 till dark . call 30•·

Malley Ferguson. New Holland,
Bulh Hog SliM&amp; SeNice Ovtr
40 used trtctora to c:hooat from
&amp; corrplete lin e of new &amp; uaed
equipment . Largnt Mltctlon In

875-4631 .

S.E. Ohio .

Half Price II Flashing snow sign•
1289.0011 Lighted , non -1rrow
*271iLOO I I Nonllghted
1229.0011 FrM lettlt'l l Onty few

Utility bldg spl.: 30' x40 ' 119',
16 '118' slkt lng door &amp; 3' 1erv.
door , 15 ,256 erected. Iron
HorQ Bidga . 814-332-1745.

loft. SH

locolly.

118001423-

0113. lnvtlme.
Craftaman 10 lndl rldial arm
••w. extra ac c tlaor iel,

0200 00 304-SSI-3883.

Antique Iron fencing . 100 tt .
whh corn• post and gate 21 05
J.rtaraon Avt . 304-875 · 2919
Few Nl•ehMp· 12 a.k framed
wlndowa. 3 picture windows.
atorm wlndowa plua 3 storm
d&amp;)ora. Call aft~r 6 304· 875-

3280.

Dr•••· Hf'PMtlne front, claw"
fMt.ltvellecl edge mirror t226.

RoOker •eo. 304-17&amp;-211&amp;.

UHd dollfl, kalden. bactmo•.
du"1' wuckl, 70 lnttmltionel
tractor-trail•, phont 304-138·
7111 nnr Huntington, Rt . 10.,

,We will do all typw of cullom
farm machlnary work. C•ll for
rat n , 814-268 -85315 .

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SR 36 W. Gallipolis,
Oh io Call 614·441-9777, eva.
814· 448 ·3692 Up front lrac·
tora with wanenty over 7!5 uaed
trectora. 1000 toolt.
BldweiiCuh Ftad Btora'1Fenet
IUPPiy Sptcllll on til '(OUt"

fonclng noodo. Cal 114-3&amp;18688.

4020 John DMtediNeltractor.
Ptra cllld, low hourt. whh cab,
g:Jod tubber ti ,HO. 4 row Ford
corn pl .. ter good *385. Call

614-281·81122.

2010 John o..,e trector, low
houf'l, good rubblf wkle front,
'"pow• et•rlng, tve power. John
Porteblt Royal Electric typewri· beer• plowe 1•• n•, John
new. Plea and Elheprlnt, o..,. diak. Ail for 13,8915. Cd

•Mk•

Oftt,........ porklng. 304-178t140. Call 304-112·2312.
4610 or 17&amp;-1912.

Farm Equipment

TOlD Ferguton tractor, extra
nice. 11.186. 6 ft. bulh hog
029&amp;. 2-12 plows U85. 3 pt
disk 1286. ntw polt hole digger
127&amp;. 7ft greclw bllde 1181.

71

Autoe for Sale

n

Camaro . Good motor &amp;
tranamia1ion. 13150. Call 814·

441-2990 ... 114-441-J&amp;IS.

Call 114-28&amp;-81122.

100 Ford tractor 1,200 hours
1:z,eeo. Unlttd Farm finiah
mower rww 1795. 3 pt. Htcl.- I
aprNdet new 1298 Call 61 4·

281-81122.

730 C1at dl"ll tr1ctor wkte
front power ltllflng, live power,
live hydraulics crNm puff.
12.9fi0. 8 ft . drum mower new
11.4915 No . 12 Muaey Fergu·
mn baler 11 .196. Cal\614-28&amp;-

86 ChiY"f Ctprice 4-door Cen
be aaen at 1404lewla St Lot 4

C.ll304-675-7117.

'83 Gr111d Pri•W. 2B ,OOOmliel.
V-8, AC. II". cruiae. llero Cell

614-992-71573 .

11522.

It It true you cen buy Jeep1 tor
144. mrou_, the U.S . govern·
ment1 Get the facta today I C•ll
1 -312-742-1142bt 4069.

JIVIDEN 'S FARM EQUIP MENT. 614-44&amp;-1675. Chadl
our .-eciat 1111 Pf'lcll on Long

'84 Chevy Cavell..-. PS, PB. AT.
e11tr1 clean. low miln Muat see
to appraclate Call 814-992-

Tractorl &amp; Vttmaer hey equipment, wilhfinendng lvtilabltat
4.4% lnter•tl A C0"1'•tellneol
bale handlmg tcctlaori• l
fMding accaaaorle•. grinder
mill•·· wagon• . rotary un.....
rotary cutters. blad•. culdva·
tors. disc, ptown. aeed.,. , post
ctivers, WOO~IpNttera , gat• &amp;
haedgatea, po..wrer wuh•• &amp;
Wh11l Hone Lawn &amp; Gard.-a
tractors ! And IN us tor a
COfr1111ite line of ptrta &amp; 11nrictl
USED A wrltty ofuHdtractora,
6 tound blllrl. grinder mbter.
wtgona. IPriYtr. cuhivetorl.
wheel cifc.
tobacco
plows, riiiM, IqUiri biWI,
tedder1, harrow, mowing mt·
chine, cuhipecklf.

aett•.

1 att mttal llide-in cattle rac:b
for B ft . pickup btd 4 fl. double
dlac •d 12 Inch plow for
Catagory 0 Tractor 2 row FOfd
Culdvater Gibson S HP riding
mower, like new 300. Cal
614-949 -2013 .
Deutz tractor. part• tnd a.,...iQI

at the bell prlca, Siders EquiP·
ment Co. 304-176-7421.
Farmal SuptJr A tractor. tltC
oond. cuhiYators. t.lmlng plow,
mowing mechina, hiVY duty, 2
whHitraller, 11 ,476.00 . Phone

304·8U-3793.

62 Wanted to Buy

2li8S.

Wanted to buy tobacco b111.
Ca\1114· 218-1112.

63

3703.

1976 Pinto Runabout lbw
m1luge, runagood, needa wark.
1500. Call 614 -992-6188.

514-285-111122 .

6:00 D IIJ CIJ II Cll

Livestock

Pure bred Duroc boars. Roger
a.,tley. Slbi'la, Oh. Call 1513·

11114-2398.

78 Ford Falrrrunt atatton wagtn

a1700. 304·S75-2192

Trucks for Sale

IPM. 114-3117-7115.

1979 Dtlam 6 .d .. topper.
radio, t1 .799. 1978 DltiUn 4
spd., rldlo, 11 .499. John ' • Auto
SeiH, Bultvlle Rd. Gtl1lpolll,

OH

1982 Dauun 4 spd., AM -FM
t..,e , wtre rims, IPOrty, U ,999.
John' aAutoSM• . Bulavill1 Rd .,
Gallipolla.

C.llf14-3118-9731.

1878 Dodge~ ton 4x4 PU, B ft.
bod, Mlto, PS, PI, AM-FM,
11 ,000 Cll 380 engln•. wiclt
tir•&amp;IPOkewhaela. N...., pak'tt,
lhtrnator, ll•rlng pu"1J , cerb,
brak... • lin•. £xc. c:ond ..
14,910. Trad11. camp..- or best
offer. Alao hydriUIIc•now pkJw.
teliO. Call614-448·2745.
1979 Dodgt 1150 truck. Exctl·
lant condition. PS .. PB .• AC Call
avanlnga Ch11ter 814 · 985 ·

~ ton

plckup, tuto tranemlaaion.
powar stewerlng. 304· 882 ·

gins . 9, 1588 mile• . price

Hty tor 111• 500 btln. 1250.

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1976 Cuatomized Ford van
E-100, bey window, 11.1nroof,
carpet. Slefeo·c•• • wettern
good radials. no nut,
11 ,900. CaK 814· 448· 2847

mag•.

1971 lntemlllonat Scout 4 WO .

71

Autos for Sale

Jeff Bau~ rNn' a 197 1 unfin·
lshed r11tored NOVA , 327
chrome engine. no phone In·
Cf.ilr•. Mkldleport (Bradbury!

79 Tr111o AM T-top. AC. AM-FM
8 track. ex cond Call 814· "1·

4283.

-lc1879 Jeep Cherokee. 4x4. 310
thrM lpted . Good conditton .

11700. Call 114-742-2944.

1878 C·J&amp; J,eep. Good condi·
tion , t2800 Ca ll 304-773-

6371

1986 CJI5, ••tre good shape,
rtbuUt angina. 4 cyl, 11 ,000 00
'73 Toyot1 Celie• 1300 00

304-175-7459.

74

Motorcycles

1----------18BI5 Kawaukl 454 Ninga. CaM

19n Ford Thund.-bkd AC , PS,
PB, good cond. Call 614-448 -

614-441-7414 aftor 4PM

1980 DOdga Mirada. 318 2

750 K Honda Chopplf Special
pMnt job, lot1 of chrome C1ll
&amp;1 .. -441·72152 after 4PM

0924.

barrel!, PS , PB, auto , tilL crufla.
air, AM ·FM ltlfiO ~ CIII ., fiCUiry
poliahed, aluminum whtMI.
44,000 ICtutl miiH, t3,&amp;00.

Honda KR 2&amp;0 d irt bike 1986
ffl)del pr ice 11 . 2!50 Call 814-

Calll14-2111-1144.

448-1756.

78 Gremlin Ul50 , 73 '-'ton FCHd
pickup 17&amp;0. C•ll 114-388·

1984 Honda 700 Saber. 1h1tt
drtve, weter cooled. 4.000
mil... oc cond. 304-676 -

8850

11164.

88 Roldrunn• 440 ang , 1900.

C.lllt4-44&amp;·3397.

1980 Dataln 310 OX coupe, 15
apd.. manuel , AM-FM ll.r.o
ca1aette, AC. rur window d•
fogglf, U .300 or belt off1r.

44&amp;-196&amp;.

eu.

'711 Yago GT, 304-885-3335.
18715 Toyota Cellce. t700.
Oood condition, 304- 871·
«)14 .

Boats and
Motort for Sale

81

niversary Celebration Over

ALLEY OOP

Home
Improvements

100 NBC s1ars pay tribu1eto
EVERYTHING'S SET,
WHI LE "LLEY
OOP. KING GUZ,
AND THEIR
RESCUERS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFIN G
Unconditional lifetime guaran
tee Local references furnl1h1d
Free estimate• Call coll ect
1·614 -237 -0488, day or night
Roge ra Ba •emen t
Waterproofing

Eltterlor •tucco plllterlng a
plu1er repair Ca ll 814-2661182
Roofing , aiding , remodeling,
painting houats and roofl , and
g.,wel repal' htim•t••· call
614-986-4121
RON ' S Talevlaion Se rvi ce
Houae calla on RCA . Ouarar,
GE SpaclaHng ln Zenith Call
304-578-2398 ar 61 4 -446 ·
2464 .

20 h. coiling cabin. 120 Mer·
Cruia8f, 1·0 , tl5 ,000 firm C111

114-441·0727.

1977. 17 ft. Starcraft trlhult 10
with VB. In good condltk&gt;n

A-g ISOOO. Cal 114·982. . .7 aft• 15:00 pm.

11 ft.LoweAiuminumballboat.

1968 Chavalla 88. :127. 4 HP Enlnroda Motor. l2000flrm
Call 114·742-28711 ..,..,lngo
304-411S-1121 .
Cllly.

KOOGIE! ARE 'IOU READY
TO BECOME THE NEW
KING Of' MOO?

THE RETURN

JOURNEY TO
MOO. AN LINEX·
P!OCTEP EVENT

IS

TO
TAJ(E PLACE IN
-mE CAPITAL.

TI-1~

ARf. SO MMH
LA\AMRS 1'-l JAIL IJO\U ..

CAIJ GET &amp;mR
/&gt;DJI(E. l"-!1111\rJ OJT

t,QJ

l::::!__~_lJ.,:::__L!j~~===:::!::J 9 r-' ,_

Starks Tree and Lawn SefVIcl,
ltndscaping 304-576 -2010

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

82

:

o-

THAT'S DR . PRESCOIT,
THE DENTIST.

83

Excavating

Good 1 Eltcavatlng. ba1ements.
rooters . drivewev1. tept ic tan ka.
landscaping Callanvtime 8 14448-4537, J1mes l DaVISOn.
Jr. owner

85

SEVENTY·FIVE CENT

3336.

playwnght's new play. (60
mm)
(I)
MacNaii-Lehrer

(j) ® American Playho&lt;Jse: A Caoe of Ubel
(CC) A former World War II
correspondem is c harged

Mowrey' I (Jpholltlfing serving
tr l county area21 yeer1 . Theb11t
In furniture upholstering. All
work guaranteed vilh our mod
ern ahop at Mtson County
Fairgrounda. Ptlone 304-676 -

41 54.

7 lnd1an

DOES

E~ER~ONE ~AVE

YOU CAN'T 60 ON A
LON6 ~IKE LIKE THIS

WITHOUT WATER

ALWAI'5

REMEMBER ...

WATER IS OUR FRIEND.

-

-:5'

~

b ~~

~~~~t

I+

Pass

Pass

Opening lead. • K

led the nme of diamonds. it would be
covered by the I 0 and queen, and once
agam a finesse agamst the d~amond
jack would succeed. Are you getting
there, dear readers• Wolff placed the
jack of diamonds on the table. There
was now no way for South to avoid the
loss or a diamond trick , and four
spades bad to go down one.

34 llormou:w
35 Prima
do nn a

O'No•ll

)

I ll;uvesl

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES - He..,•s how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sampk A IS used
for the three L's, X !or the two O's, etc. S1ngle letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of thr words are all
tunis. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES
5-12

v

YRE

Stereo.

K G

(!) SportaCentor
liJ WKRP in Cincinnati
Sl aJ®I Taxi
0 CIJ Remington Steele

KR ZZUF

WllA (I

\

KWU

KWGXRi

~l rfll'

II ll Z &lt;I

H F G X

DVKW

k1dnappers

E T begins tts coverage of

+

Pass
Pass

must•
DOWN

liJ Entertainment Tonlght

Pass

vmt•

ton (CC) Amenca·s emrv

Explorer

Pass

f'~ll'nlll,l(

into World War II altered the

@ Trapper John, M.D.
12:00 Ill Boat of Groucho
(!) Soccer: Federation Cup
Final From Wembly , England 12 hrs .l IR).
(I) NRional Geographic

Pass
4

45 LovP
ww try

Kr' 1J (' I

I' \

\ F I

UZZV I

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IN ORIJE H Til I II E 'lf'F A

GARDEN YOU PRAcnCALL Y IIAVE TO 1.1\ E
KIN HUBBARD

~ll an (70 min IIRI
CU Na1hville Skyline
(jj) Courage to Care The

HIS CANTEEN FI LLED ?

It

Soutb

holl
44 ('I i mhmg

46 VtC'Um

end protect Jews during the
Holocaust is 1old
Ill (j) ABC Newa Nighttino

East

(sl I

43

(!) Wartime in Washing-

story of non-J e ws who
risked thelf l1ves to rescue

Nortll

37 Satnr
(Pon l
40 Throw
a fi~hl

who don 't want !herr fat her
to testify in a federallnvesti -

TR I STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave .. Gallipoli s
114 -446 -7833 or 614 · 446 ·

Wesl

Georg1a

t0 .15 Cil MOVIE : 'Gun Belt'
t 0 ·30 CIJ Jack Benny
fJ) (D INN Newa

fro m

Vulnerable: East-Wesl
Dealer· South

33 Anctf'nl
36 lla.seball
great

Laure and Re mington must
protec t two precocious

U pholstary

R &amp; M Furn iture Manufacturi ng.
St . Rt. 7. Crown City. Oh. Call
114-266· 1470, Clll Eve. 814446 - 3438 Old &amp; n ew
Uphostered .

film

bird
30 l'eAAY Le&lt;·
das.sit'
31 Univ 10

flounsh1ng fn e nds htp (A)

c hildren

87

6 Attention

Sonnenberg (60 mon IIA) , In

.

+J

25 Color
37 European
20 Goad
14 Endure
Z6 Guido's no te
river
JOke (sf l 18 Famed
23 Morsel
28 Inter38 ~ mger
mezzoMurray
27 To ptecf':o;
soprano
28 Sea or
39
It's a deal'
19 llark wood
s nakr
41 Fina l
20 Fedora
29 Maram•
42 Speaker
21 Unclose

Tonight ' s guests are James
Stewart and Nad1a Salerno·

MAFI:FI:If'D HER BU"T" FOR
SHE SAID'

+K9864
.9 8 4 3
t A84

'''IJ'

500 Films
1!11 (D Benny Hill Show
(!) SClV
(ij) Thia Old House
11 :30 D ill @ Best of Carson

6NAI&lt;.E, I WOULD HAVE

SOUTH

13 In truub lf'
seaport
15 Ap1ecf'
R Russ1an
16 Chmese
nv(&gt;r
9 Cole
22 Srulor
17 O' l\ie1ll
Pnn.er's
play
alma mattor 24 Irish rebel
group
18 QUibbl&lt;• II Jeremiad

News
(l) Man from U.N.C.l .E
(!) Historic lndianpolis

I PROPOSED 1"0 LADY

tJ96
+A K 10 4

lani(Uage

Tterney

1 t :00 D IIJCIJ O liJ®I G &lt;Wilil

SNAKE!!

.KQ7

2 ' Honey"

12 G••rw

City of Wa shmgton, O.C
from a qu1e1 tow n 10 a bustling metropoliS
(ij) Newswatch
10:40 (B) N-•

James Boys Water Serv1ce Also
pools filled . Cal\8 14 256 1141
or 614 448 -1175 or 614 44&amp;.
7911

EAST
+ 2
• J 10
• Q 52
+Q98 7652

of a pla('f'
5 l nd tan
3 Asseveratf'
soldier
4 Ave ragf&gt;
10 Adve rsary 5 Street

CISt' s car (60 mtn )

General Haulinq

Ken·a Water Serv1ce. Wells.
cistern s, pool1 and w ete rbeds
filled Ca ll 814-367-0623 or
614 -367 -77 41 or 30 4 -6751247

ACROSS
J F'ellnw

deadly when a vial of plutonium IS stol~n fr om a physi-

THREE DOLLERS AN'

WEST
• J 10 5

~-~·If
by lHOMAS JOSEPH

umnis1. 190 mm I
9:30 0 I!J ®I Newhart (CCI
10:00 I]] CBN Newa Tonight
0 liJ @ Cagney &amp; Uoc:oy

HOW MUCH
HAVE YOU LOST
50 FAR?

t-11-K

+l

Last October the Umted States won
the World Team Championship, defeating Austria by a wide margm in
the finals. Reaching the finals was the
toughest part, since tbe U.S. team won
their match against Brazil in the semifinals by a very slim margin. In today's deal, taken from that semifinal
squeaker, Bobby Wolff, sittmg Wesl,
bad to come up with the nghl defenstve play to set declarer m four
spades.
Wolff was compelled to open one diamond since a one-club opening in his
system shows at least 16 high-card
points. Since one diamond promised
minimum h1gh cards, East could pass
with comfort. That did allow South
easy access into lhe b1ddmg , so he
tried one spade. North now came to
life and bid four .
After leading the king of clubs,
Wolff switched to a small spade. Declarer drew trumps in two more
rounds and played ace and a heart.
West won the queen, cashed the k1ng
and found h1mself at the crossroads .
Another club would allow declarer to
trump in dummy while shedding a low
diamond from his hand. Playing a low
diamond would draw East's queen,
and later South would successfully finesse dummy's d1amond 10. If West

(CC) An average 1heft turns

I BOUGHT THIS HERE
DIET BOOK LAST WEEK
SO'S I COULD LOSE
SOME WEIGHT

NORTH
+A Q7 J
• A 6 52
• K to 1 3

By James Jacoby

w1th be1ng a commun1s t

B.\RJiiEY

Answer Whal gell ing 10 a picnic o ften Is nolA PICNIC

Only one card
can do it

sympathizer bv a powerful
nght-wmg newspaper col·

..

I

Jumbles: JULEP FAVOR INDICT CORNER

James Jacoby

ts torn between wanting
Emma t o get along with her
elt·hu sband's new g1rtfrtend
and betng jealous over their

WHOS THATOTHER6UY
\M-10 KEEP5 YELL ING
' HIT HIM INIHEMOI.JTH! "'?

HEY, LOOK: THOSE
'NO E;UY5 ARE
FIGHTING !

I I I )- (I]"

BRIDGE

@ MOVIE: 'The Sting'
9:00 (l) 700 Club
CIJ II (j) MOVIE : 'Convic'led' (CCI
0 liJ ®I Kate &amp; Allie Ka1e

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipoli1. OMo
Phone 814 -448 3888 or 614
448 -4477

Saturday's

The tec;hmque of gnddtng
land for real es tat e developmom is eJeam1ned. {60 min .)

1

rI

Now arrange the ClrCieclletters 10
lorm IM sur pr1se answer. as suo
cested by !he above canoon

(Anawera tomorroW l

Garden and the Grid (CCI

I

COULl:' DO THI~,

Prlnlllllswer he18; ..

Newshour
(jj) Pride of Place: Building
the American Dreem : The

•

II

I I I IJ

and
Mrs King Amanda and lee
tn,fillrate the a\lant-garde
theatre to tnvesttga1e the tn ·
terest of Ru ss tan agents'" a

REAGAIJ \U\S RIGHT .
LfGAL AID 1D lH£ R:OR lS
1\kl LCIJGER l!E-£DW..

•

i HAT EC C:5NTI':IC:
H!N 5ATON
AloJ AX '50 'SHE

IHAPUNCt

lA) .

EEK &amp;MEEK

.

f:- ~---,,

II

INTIEF

0 CIJ ®I Scarecrow

SERVICE . e11p11
r1en ced carpenter, aloctr1clan,
maaon, pa inter, roofing {In clu ding hot tar eppllca1ion) 304876-2088 or 875· nee.

Man Pow er. Inc .. general home
1mprovemen11. tfee tr1mm1ng.
odda and endl, 304-676·2222

KIJ

I

'

II

I EMYTH

Hardcas tle ts unfa1rly Jatled
by a crooked shertff. McCormick poses as a bum to at·
tempt an escape 160 mtn I

ABOUT

Fetty Tree Trimming. atump
removal. Call 304 -876 1331 .

Rotary or cable tool drilhng
Mo•t w11111 comp lll'led lame day
Pump IIIH and service 304·
895-3802

the most m e morable moments from NBC' s 60 years
on the a1r (3 hrs )In S tereo
(l) Father Murphy
(!) NHL Hockey . NHL

Playoffs-Campbell Conference Championship. ltve.
liJ Ill (jj) Hardcoatte and
McCormick (CCI When

SLOWLY MAKE

Roofing, pauntlng, room addition•. etc Frte estimates, 17
year• np..-lence B B. W Conatruction. Caii814-448-866B or
614· 245-9448 ave' •·

1833.

Tro.lng motor, depth flnd1r, 15

tplld, fair cond"lon, t700. call

Kareem Abdui-Jebbar begms a salute to · T.V s Grea·
@ Jeopardy
B:OO D I]) (lJJ NBC'a 60th An-

Bulldozer and du mp tru ck work,
Danny Chap ma n. 304 -675-

76

0 liJ ®I Whul of Fortune
CIJ Butterfliea
Gl IJ;J Entertainment Tonight
E T. bep1ns ets
coverage of the OliCttement
surround1ng the 39th Annual
Cannes F1lm Festtv el, and

Services

Honda SprH lor •ale, 50 cc
acoottf 13150. Very good cond

1981 Ktwlllke KX 250. n~n•
uc. looka good , 16815 00
Phone 304· 773-5244.

1980 Dodg•Cokwtgon.&amp;lpd.
trana, AC , PS. AM· FM r..:tio,
good cond., 11 .9915. Cell

Tb STAfi!i TtfiNG.)
J: CAWT FINISH·

treal

test Spons Moments'

llhor 5:00 PM.

1SB1 FOtd fllrmont. tU1o. air.
radio. 11,.8. John' • Auto
Saln, Bulevlllt Rd., GelllpoHs.

DON'T LlfC.E-

•-- ;t

f.ll (D Major League Base·
ball: Cincinnati at Mon-

(B) Bob Newhart

1882 Hondt lnternate. tully
drMMd, phone 304-773 -91154

304-175-2842.

vood • cl.... U,t&amp;o. Call
114-2111-1142.

ltve .

Truck Clmpllf with IIOVII, ice
boll. portapottl - in ~od condt·
tton . 1460 304-876-2949 .

Coal. limestone, gravel "to
Del ivered 1 ton end up J im
Lan ier, 304-676 -1247 0 1 6 757397

Call614-441·3172.

81 Plymouth lapparo 2. I L.
aninge, IS apd. &amp;o,ooo mMn ,

Atlanta at New York Meta

742-2an

Call 614 -441-4779

Tro nspori ali on

Game
(!) Inside Baseball
(I) Major league Baoeball:

FRANK AND ERNIE

----------------1
1880 ChwY Cuatom DIIU11120. RINGLE$ ' $

69.1100. 304-576-2889.

C.ll614·882-15358.

'
• · W-.1~-tW..WI._,..'r

lin•.

'8&amp; Chwy pickup, sari• C- 10,
Nnning boarch and sliding badt

4.30.

Scamper truck campet 8 It
pop -up for light 1ruck1 . Al1o
Hobart M•at Grmder. Call 61 4 ·

16 F01d R111get long bad with
!ltand whh overdrive, a•c
cond.. 21 ,000 mi. Call attet

1 Pony,and whiteface calll100
for both. Call 81 4-992-&amp;3158.

Mixed hay tor sale. Squara bal...
fird cutting, never wet. t 71 per
bAle. Call 614 -742-2007 ettlf

882-2343.

Call""" &amp;30. 304-876-4859.

2137.

Hay &amp; Grain

19 74 Champion Cla11 A Motor
Home Very good condition
37 ,000 actual mlln. Call 614

liJ Nightly Buoinoss Report
®I Newa
(ij)
MacNoii-Lehror
Newahour
Gl (j) Divorce Court
@ Bomey Miller
@ Wheel of Fortune
7:30 D I]) CIJ New Nolwlywed

-

)

1978 Wilderneu Camper 18
ft . ••If-contained Excellent
condi110n. Call 614 -742 · 31 37

1977 Plymouth Vola11 good
cond. low miletge. 1976 00

72

81 mJefferson•
0 rn Jeopardy

1978 Chevron E~ecutNI 26 ft .
Travel Trailer. Like niMI condi·
tion.,dusadverylinle Haanew
20 ft . awning , Orig1nal cost over
*18.600 Asking 86200 614 742-3033

78 Pinto, good condition. 304·

875-3471.

E.T begtns tt s coverage of
the tt)Ccitement surrounding
the 39th Annual Cannes
Film Festtval , and Kareem
Abdui-Jabbar begms a sal· .,
ute to 'T V _·s Grearest
Spons Moments' .

1962. 68 Pll lerlger bu1 COR ·
vened nto campllf Equipped
wi1h bad , rehlgerator, stove.
sink, tlble. hot water tank. and
couch . Alk lng *1200 . Call
814·992 -6941after 5:00pm

For sale - BxJO House t rail er.
Cf'leap. Call 304-458-1618.

1115-3013.

814-742-3033.

64

26 ft Cl••• A Motorho me
Executive Fully-equ ipped , • •
oond 36.000 miln 112 .000
Call 814· 448 -4897

1 980 Chevy Mon11. 4 cyl. 4
IPHd. goodcond. 11.200 OOor
mtkt an otier. muat •II, 304-

3641 .

One bull ~done st..r, both 14
mo oed. St•r .... v-v nic• • •
1325 and *380 r•ptctively.

1974 Starcreft foldout camper,
lleapa 8, COfY1'1eta w~h 110\11,
ice boA, Ughta&amp; sink, 111c cond ..
like n.w Call 614 -388-9755
after &amp;PM

r

I I

®1. (lJ)(lJJ

(!) Mazda Sponoi.Dok
ffi Down to Earth In Stereo
Sl CD Dill' rent Sttol&lt;ea
liJ 3-2-1. Contact !CCI
(ij) Hatha Yoga
(B) Good TimH
6:30 0 II) (lJJ NBC Newa
liJ The Rifleman
(!) Out- Ufe Magazine
Hosted by Wilham Conrad
ffi Gunomoko
liJ G (W ABC Newa
• (D One Day R a Time
D liJ ®I CBS Newo
liJ Doctor Who
(ij) Body Electric
(B) Jofleroona (CCI
7:00 D I]) PM Magazine
I]] Aliao Smith ond Jones
(!) SponsCenter
liJ Entertainment Tonigltt

CAPTAIN EASY

byHenri Arnolda.ndBoblee

~~~-

New a
I]] Green Acrea

Complete A••• towing hitch.
adjustable bell mount. l oad
level•re and .way control bar.

17 ft Mlf conta•nad , sleeps 6.
flove, refr igerator, to1let erea.
battery, electric lfld 9111 lig hts,
:1)4-875-1145

86 Nlann 4x4 King Cab dalu111.
Nile new , 5 apd . PS . AM · FM
CMieltl. 1 1.000 mllea t7,800.

Now buying shall com or eer
oom . Call forlat ..tquotn. River
City Farm Supply, 614 -441·

Chow-Chow pupp lu s ilwer blue.
AKC Reg. Champion bkJod lin•.
h . ped igreea. Call 114-261 1271

Ford car. Ford Rldiator. Rota ·
Tiller. Strawberfi" for 1111. 2
billy go1t1. Call814-867-3379
Trl County Sport Shop, Spring
Valley Plaza, Gallipolis , Ohio.
Gun•, Archery, Tackle 814 ·

61

73
66

EVENING

114-379-2220.

&amp; Campers

~~~:;~;;:;;;;=r;~=~~~~~;~1

~ ~ ~~·

5!12/86

79 Motors Homes

For ule new Yard-man mowtra.
good u•MI mowera from *10•715 . Echo trimfMI'a on aale .
Children• Saw Supply, Vinton,
Oh 814-38S·B584.
1976 Chevy wagon all pow•

All types used &amp; rebuilt tren•·
miaakJn• &amp; tranfer cuM. Wjll
deliver. Overdr ive trer~~mie ·
tiona. front &amp; rter wheel drNe,
lran1mi11lon ldt1 &amp; tom conver·
tera. entint rebuild khe. Call

Wrecked '75 Nova , rebuilt eri gine, 10,000 miles. exc co nd ,
new studded snow tlre1.
1600 00 304-6715-4586

\lj"Jg1.\fl fii)\l j'il THAT SCIIAMII.ED WORD GAME

Television
Viewing

Auto Parts

MOO 00 . 304-675-4579 .

31174.

54 Misc . Merchandise

la~e

175-5327.

1972 Schultz. 12x70 tilt out.
acove and r..trigwator. furniture
negotiable. SH br appointment

For tAla . Magic Chef elac1rlc
double oven range $100.
white wooden tab'-t •26.
yellow ki1d\an chine cabinet
•&amp;o, ell in good condition.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY Pt. Pltllant area, 3 bdr .. farm 2 bdr unturnlahed wi1h appliln ·
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 MI. houae For moralnlormatton call cee at 661 Third. Gal\lpoh.
WEST GALLIPOLIS. RT 35. davt1me
814-446 -15822. eve. *260 mo. plus utihtlea. Call
114-246-9595.
PHONE 614 -446·7274.
114-446-4602.
'

72 l•berty 1 2 •50 2 bdr with
woodburner good cond. Priced
to .all 84500 Cell 614-246 -

51 Household Goods

Sea at 266 So. Fourth Avo ..

New 1 bedroom apartment. CaN

3 bedroom home unfumiehed,
ga heat, K1naugal UOO a

NEW AND USED MOBILE

44

2 bdr utiliti• partially fum .,
*1715 mo Call 304-876-5288
or 304-675-5104

41

Merchondi se

Middleport, Oh

2 mobile home lots. 1 on Rt. 7, 1
on Addlson -Bulavilla Rd . Call
614-367 -0232 or 814·446·

2 bedroom house situated on 9
acral on St At 33 Completely
carpeted and a newly ramodaiMI
bathroom Hu outbuilding and
satellite system Must 1ee the
lns1de to appreciate If Interested , call 614 -992 -5947 afler
5 00 pm.

Mobile \'w)IT'II on Crab ere ..
Road , 8150 .00 per month . no
peta 304-676-1208.

For Lease

Cow peature for lelle. 40 acr11,
excellent. Call 614 -441 -4094

2 bdr on 0 J . White Rd Quiet
country llthng. Call 814-4487167 after 8PM.

-'042

6 room house on Nelson Rd ,
Rulland . Out of high water. Quiet
area, ready to move 1nto Call
614 742 2007 aher 4·30
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
equ ipped kllchttn . aluminum aid·
ing , st orm wmdows, 2 car
t arpon Ca\1614 -992 -7286 af·
ter 4.00

For Nle or rent, 141170, 3 bdr .
1Y, b.th, cion to town Call
814-448-7545

49

IIJRill; IT!

JKk·

Fuml•had room 1126 mo .
utillti• pa1d , lhare bath, slngle
malt. 919 2nd. Ave , Gallipolia
Call ~8 -4416 aher 7pm

3 bdr hou... ftm ily room,
b11ement , newty redecorated

Cl!1' IUOIII.I&gt;

Plutic ciatem flate epprovtd.
plalttc IIPIIC tenltt, piiiiiC
culverta. metal cutvene. RON

Oh , 614 ·256-6813

lot. t aht or trade. Tom L.eslle,

ACOMMISIIUAL
ft\ll' JJ».¥ A

9115 "' 304-171-8788.

07&amp;6 .

614 266-641 3

Ar t.~o.'if,

Electrolux vaccuum detn••·
A- 1 conditio n•tttachmenta ,
Avsllable at 172.00 Cuh or
terma auengtd . Call 814 · 246-

motor home. trucll &amp; truck
csmper, Vrne St Cr.own City,

3 bdr ., 2 beth, IPih foyer, nice

76

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 9

-···-

&amp; Accessories

10n, Oh. 8 14-288·5830

For .. Ia by owner M org1n Twp ,

KIT 'Nr CARLYLE ®bJ

Ohio

12, 1986

lhe exc11emen1 ,surrounding

the 391h Annual Cannas
F1lm ·FestiVal, and Kareem

Abdui-Jabbar begins a salute

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G llll CNN Headline News
l

'.

�Paga 10-The Deily Sentinel

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

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

•

W. resent tiN
richt to

Iiiii~

qu1ntitill.

Moving cautiously

Sectional champs

Edltorl!ll on Page 2

See Soulhem ... Page 4

Reds win, Tribe loses

Nursing Home Week

Repoi'ia on Page 3

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By NANCY YOACIIAM

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

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

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

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

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

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Todd Adams

KeDey Grueser

Co-valedictorian

Salutalorian

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

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

Village seeks C&amp;O property

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

•

'

..!.·~-

en tine

Meigs' ·Mental Health

JOUR SUIDRY STORE

iiiiiiW-

at y

·Copyrighted 1986

1.19 VMUE
UIIT2

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ODMR chief

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proses
area

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

11tJ811ker at
8111111111

M~

nllbt's

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

By BOB HOEflJCH

Employee remembered

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

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

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

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

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

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

••

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  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="6852">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6851">
              <text>May 12, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="566">
      <name>carpenter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="106">
      <name>cole</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="198">
      <name>howell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="318">
      <name>phillips</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2552">
      <name>tulloh</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
