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                  <text>Page- 16- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. June 15, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Reds make
it four in

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S
·~Ofu DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( g:c;~=:)
I

Daily Number
427
Pick 4
3497
Super Lotto

a row, 5-3

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER'S LICENSE

I

Ohio Lottery

Pag~3

I

-

9-18-29-30-38-43
•

e

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Pearl St.•992-3471

A CARDINAL-AFFILIATED SUPERMARKET

•

at

Cloudy, low near 65 tonight.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
F riday, cloudy, high in lower
80s. Chance of rai n 20 percent.

en tine

Vol.39, No.28

Your local Cardinal
Affiliated Supermarket supports "Buy
Ohio Food Week'.
"Buy Ohio" logos
throughout this ad
highlight
quality
products from right
here in Ohio. When
you place Ohio
products on your
shelf, Ohio's economy
helps itself.

BUY OHIO

MADEJNOIDO
IYOIDOANS

r:---:~
201

Valuable Coupon

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Regular or Light

202

KRAFT
WHIP
32 ounce jar

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Condensed

CAMPBELCS
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Valuable Coupon

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Assorted Varieties

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•BUY
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Ltmtl one wtln coupon &amp; •10 00 pyrctlu e. Eacl~j&lt;ling oeer. wtne a nd
ctgareue s. One co ypon per lamtly. GoOCl at Cardinal Supermarktls
weeil of June 13, 1988
000- 00- 00

Ltmtl three wtl h coopon &amp; •10.00 purchase. Excluding beer. wtne and

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1 ctgarettes.
One coupon per lamt ly. Good at Cardinal Supermarkel9 J

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.week ol June IJ. 1968.
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l.mtl one w•lh coupon &amp;. 110.00 purchase. E~ludi ng beer, w1ne and
c rgarettea One coupon pe-r tarnily Good at Cilld inal Supermar-.ta

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Ltmn one '' " w11r. COUPOn I •10.00 0\II'CfiiM EIICllllltng bnr. wine Wid
t •9•'-''-1· N01v.1ltll witn anw Olhlf c~ otlef. one coupon per '-lly.
Good _. Cal&lt;ltnil Superm11 ...1 WHk 01 .NM 13, 1918 • 000-00-00

-----------------------J

LARGE EGGS
dozen carton

' ;j

J.

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~-

"

:I

Kraft•Quarters

PARKAY MARGARINE

own Porsche as a guinea pig for Michael's new
designs. Their car Is being oudllled right now with
a brand new "and very secrel" design, which
won't be unveiled undl August. That meant .:.. no
olctures ·oflhe car for lhe newspaper.

BUSINESS OWNERS- Michael and Darlene
Warner own one of three companies In the United
States which builds customized fiberglass body
parts for Porsches. The Warners' growing
business, Inflnlle Flberworks Co., Is located near
Racine on Stale Roule 124. The Warners use tbelr

•

right now, they plan to move to
Meigs County as soon a s they find
time to locate a home.
Their business, Infinite Fiberworks Co., officially went Into
operation ,Jan. 1, 1987. It Is
located in a large building on the
State Route 124 property of
Michael's parents. a few miles
out of Racine.•
But the large building Is no
longer adequate and expansion
of the building, along with
expa nsion of the labor force. Is
already in the works. The
Warners currently have three
fulltime and two parttlme employees. If they count th'emselv~ s . they have· five fulltlme
. employees. "We're supe r fulltlme." jokes Micha el.
Infinite F!berworks adve rtises
nationally in three specialized
magazines and all sales a re
strictly mail order. " But we just
can' t keep up with the demand."

, · 1 pound package

Meigs haulers
won't be affected·

KAHN'S

HOT DOGS

99(
LB.

REGUUI 01 8 IN. SIZE

REGISTER AT
VAUGHAN'S TO WIN
THIS NEW CAR!
DRAWING TO BE HELD

JULY 30, 1988
AS PART OF
VAUGHAN'S GRAND
OPENING CELEBRATION!

jected a t half to one·thlrd of
normal.
Th e U.S. Departmen t of Agricu lture has a uthorized farmers
In 71 co unties to use set·aside
land under governm ent cr.op
programs lor emergency haying
a nd gra zing.
Mu ch of the southern half of the
sta te received a bout a quar ter·
inch of ra in last week, but It was
too little to do much good a nd
high tempe ratures by the weekend caused mos t of the soil
moisture to evapora te anyway.
The NWS' Pa lmer Drought
Index. Which meas ures long·
term abnorma lities In soil moisture. shows south cen tral Ohiothe counties of · Ross, Pike,
J ackson, Ad ams, Scioto , Lawre nce, Gallia and Meigs gr ipped by an extreme drought .
At least 9.3 Inches of rain is
needed to return soil moisture to
normal levels.
The drought Is classified as
severe In 36 other counties In
northwest, west central, central
and soulhwest Ohio. with 7.7

Inches to 8.5Jnches of rain needed
lo alleviate the problem.
An Ohio University professor
who has stud ied droughts around
the world said Ohio farmers must
inves t extensively In irriga tion
systems if they wish to stay Jn
business the next several years.
Mold Ahmad. a professor of
hyd rology at OU, said most areas
of Ohio have enough ground
water to support irrigat lon.
''If the farmers wan t to stay In
business. they ca n't depend on
the rain," he said. "Th!!Y must
drill wells a nd set up Irriga tion
systems. ''

But J ohn Stevenson, a P!ckaway County farmer a nd director
of the Oh!oofflce oftheAgrlcultu·
ral Stabilization and Co nciliation
Ser vice, said only about 20
percent of Ohio's farmers could
afford to Irrigate.
F or those with h!gh·value
cr ops. such as frui ts and cer ta in
vegetables. Irrigation may pay
off, but the pr !c~-cost margin Is
so close on grains, It would hot be
financially feasible In the long

Racine couple making body
parts . jor Por:sche . vehicles
By NANCY YOACHAM
OVP Staff
RACINE - Th~r~ ar~ three
companies In th~ United States
that design and bu lid customized
body parts for the German-made
Porsche automobiles. Two of
those compan!~ s are In California . The third Is In Racine. Ohio.
After researching the Porsche
body part business for about four
years. husband and wife team,
MMichael and Darlene Warner.
both graduates of Southern High
SchOol in Racine. returned to the
Racine area when they finally
decided to give the business a go.
Technically. the couple still
lives .In Columbus, returning to
th~ city on weekends after
spending Monday through Friday overseeing their growing
business operation and sta ying
with Michael's par~nts. Arthur
and Janet Warner. But although
they are r~sldents of Columbu s

t--------------------~
~
ThorOfare•Grade "/\'
.
~

By Unlled Press lnlernallonal
The drought plaguing much of
the United Sta tes has reached or
passed the sever e sta ge ln 460hio
counties, lnclud! ng eight counties In south central Ohio wh er~
it's classified as extreme, says
the National Weather Service.
Meanwhile, Gov. Richard Celeste has pu t the fed era l government on notice tha t Ohio may
have to reques t emergency as·
s lstance for Its fa rmers if the
drought continues.
The governor wrote Tuesday to
Richard Lyng, secretar y of agr iculture. pointing out that many
Ohio farmers do not have federal
crop Insurance and might not
quality for emergency loans.
"I strongly urge you to consider provis ions that will ma ke
all affected fa rmers eligible for
emergency loans II this drought
continues, " Celeste wrote.
State farm officials say no area
of the state has received more
.:1an 75 percent of normal rainfall
In the last two months. Yields of
corn and other grains are pro- '

-----,

! MOUNTAIN TOP

1

Drought said ~vere in
46 of 88 Ohio counties

Frozen

• 20 4

c

2 Sections, H Pages
A Multi media Inc. Newspaper

Copyrighlod 1988

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sendnel News Slaff
Meigs County trash· haulers
going to th~ private solid waste
landfill. ERO Inc., In West
Columbia. W.Va., won't be affeeted by the 2,900-ton weight
limit which has been placed on
the landfill by the West VIrginia
Deparlment of Natural Resour·
ces. This Information came vi a
telephone Wednesday to the
Meigs County Commissioners
from John Wiseman, a represen·
tatlve of ERO.
Mary Hobstetter, clerk. reporll!d to the commissioners that
Wiseman told her tfie weight
limit will not affect areas surrounding lhe landfill - such as
Meigs County and the towns of
Mason, New Haven and Point
Pleasant In WeSI VIrginia.
The commissioners recelveq
calls Wednesday from Meigs
County trash haulers whO said
they were told by ERO landfill
workers lhat Meigs County lrash
haulers might not be per milled lo
use the facility much longer. The
commissioners called Wiseman's statement lo Hobstelll!r
"a piece of good news. "
Some Meigs County trash
haulers have been using the West
Columbia landfill since \ Meigs
Counly's own landfill was closed
by lhe health deparunen ton May
15.

.·----·~ -

·-

Th~

news of the load limit on
ERO became public knowledge
at Monday night's meeting of the
Point Pleasant , W.Va. City Counc il. The load limit Is quite a
decrease from the 10,000 tons a
month the facUlt y wa s reported
to have been acceptlng.
In other business. Meigs
County Engineer J,&gt;hlllp Roberts
reported that Ru !land Township
"has" put down · dust control.
Roberts mistakenly reported last
week that Rutland Township had
not purchased dust control. He
said the township purchased the
dust control material while he
was on vacation and he was
unaware that the purchase had
taken place. Ru !land Township
purchased the high quality dust
control product, Roberts· added.
Roberts reported lhat counly
highway department workers
are replacing a bridge over
Strong's Run on Salem Township
Road 33. One a bulment of this
bridge Is In Vinton County and
the other In Meigs.
He also reported that two or
three employees have been hired
on the highway deparlmenl's
summer program, ·and " a few
more will be hired nexl week. "
Roberts said he was not sure
exactly how many summer
workers he would need this year.
The commissioners reported
Conllnued on Pl&amp;e U

Michael says.
But that's the way successful
entrepreneurshlps work. If you
have a truly marketable Item,
your business usually takes off
by Itself.
In an Interview with The Dally
Sendnel just a few weeks ago,
Kim Shields, Meigs County director of development , pointed ou t
that small businesses In this
country, many which started In
garages or buildings In the
backyard. are providing more
new jobs than the big Industries
which for so long have been
considered the job providers.
Shields has been working recently with the Warners to
develop a low· interest loan package to present to the governing
board of the Meigs County
Revolving Loan Fund . This revolving loan fund was developed
a short tim e ago through the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Resource Development Council.
Through the fund. local money Is
matched with federal Economic
Development Administration
money to help small businesses
expanc! or Improve . The revolv·
lng loan fund Is already at work
helping small businesses In
Meigs County and the Warners
hope theirs will be the next
business to benefit from the fund .
With orders coming In to
Infinite Flberworks !rom allover
the U.S. (especially California,
New York and Florida) , Canada
and the Virgin Islands . the
Warner s must add to their work
Ioree In the near future or begin
turning down orders . "As It Is,
we' re always behind," says
Micha el.
The company's two Califor nia
competitors, one employing
about 60 and the other employing
about 25, are also unable to meet
the demands of proud and
Impatient Porsche owners . And
although competition among the
companies sometimes reaches
fever pitch, the three often work
together via telphone and will
exchange products In order lo
keep up with customer orders.
Bul what exaclly does It mean
to produce customized car body
paris?
Well, In a wa y, It means
turning a sow's ear (I! you can
call an old Porsche a sow's ear) ,
Into a sllk purse.
Michael has designed fiberglass body parts such as a
European slyle hatch for the 924
and 944 Porsches, custom spoil·
ers, wheel adaptors and more.
With these cusiDmlzed pariS, an
old car. oosstbly one purchased
Conllnued on paJe 14

.

!

FINISHED PRODUCT - This Is what a
finished cusiOmlzed fender looks like when II
comes out of lhe mold. John Merlcal, ·at left,
production super.v lsor for Inflnlle Flberworks,
and Michael Warner, Infinite Flberworks coowner, hold up a finished cusiOmlzed Porsche
fender. When body pieces are taken out of the

molds, lhey're sanded down by hand to a smooth
s urface. The Racine company Is one of three such
companies In the country and the only one of the
three that does lhe finish sanding. Two partdme
and lwo olher fullllme employees, Kevin McGuire
and Spencer Hunt, are also employed at lnllnlte
Flberworks.

~~------------.

Eastern to
have one
kindergarten
class in fall
The severe financial crunch In
Eastern Local School District
will have a great effect upon this
coming school year's kinder·
garten students.
Meeting Monday nigh t In special session, the school boar d
decided that because of the
financial situatiOn and projected
enrollment figures. only one.
Instead of two, kindergarten
classes will be held this coming
year . The class will be located at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School.
It was decided by lhe bOard In
Its regular May meeting lhat, In
an effort to make financial
cu !backs, the klndergarlen program, beginning this fall, would
revert to a fu U day, every other
day program.
The board hired Ron Hill,
special education teacher at
Chesler Elementary, as head
leacher at lhe school !or the
1988-89 year. The position of head
teacher became necessary when
the prlnclpalshlp position at lhe
Continued on page 14

X

RETIRING - Elltller Lowery who h11 been a cook at the
Middleport Elemeatary School lor lhe paal 31 years was honored
apoa her retirement on lhe flaal day of claaaes at lhe school on
Wedaelday. Mrs. Lowery 1tarted coolllq at lhe school when Ihe
bulldlnr waa opened In 1817 1111d hu been lhere ever !IInce. On
behalf of the atafl, a&amp;udenla ud lhe Middleport PTO, Mrs. Lowery
was presented a plaqlll!, a cake and auneroua gills Wednesday.
Mlklne the lilt praealatloas wu tile school's principal, Don
Haaalnr.

�'

·comment

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Page-2-:-The Daily Senti':*
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Learning from Gorbachev's example.

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - I hav e
reached a startling co nclusion
gleaned from 40 years at the
Washington ringside and access

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

to countless classified docu·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

t.~~ ~'-'"T"'I~d..=.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manage'r

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Associat ion.
LEITERS OF OP INIO N are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subjec-t tof&gt;&lt;Hi in g and must be sig ned wit h name, addre5s and
telephone number. No unsigned letters w ill be publ!shed. L etlers shou ld be In

good taste. addressing Iss ues, not

~rsonalltl es.

Letters to the editor
Greenwood Cemetery response
• Ed itor:
Pear
· ,. Wea r~ writting in regards to
G,REENWOOD CE METER Y,
Racine, Ohio, to answer so me
questions about the cemetery.
, - The Greenwood Cemetery is
. owned by the Village ol Racine,
: but the a nnua l lot·care fee ($10
· for each 4-grave lot) is used to
: fund the mowing of the grass.
: THERE IS NO CEMETE RY
T.;\X FOR MAINTAINING
GREENWOOD CEMETERY.
Fact Is, Racine residents do not
even pay the township cemetary
:I tax•'

The cemetery fund 1as all
! y.lllage fund s) are In a Super Now
: Account at the Hom e Nat iona l
· Blink and each month the inter' est from the various funds are
; apportlonately credited ·to the
: accounts.
, Several parties have opened
· Savings Accounts In the name of
: the Greenwood Cemetery Trus: tees. Each yearthe bank pays the
: lp(erest to the Trustees for
; lot·care.
There are also severa l certlfi·
: cates of deposit for perpetua l
; care at the Home National Bank.
·! T!le Interest each year Is used for
i&amp;metery maintenan ce.
' The village does not have all of
. the names and addresses of the
:persons responsible for paying
·

Davis paces 5-3 Cincinnati
victory; Dodgers top Braves

Thursday. June 16, 1988

the annual lot·ca re fee. We are
requesting your hel p to assist us
in getting our records In order so
tha t everyone shares In the
cemetery upkeep. If you have not
received a notice and you own a
lot or are responsible for the
upkeep, please contact the Ra·
ci ne VIllage Clerk so that your
name and address ca n be placed
in the records.
Mowing of the cemetery has
been con tra~~lt~ Meigs
lndust.rles, b t youjh~t realize
that Meigs In Ustrles has other
clients and must mow on a
schedule - not just when the
ce metery needs mowing. We
would like to keep the cemetery
mowed like many of you keep
your lawns , but tha t would be too
much of a cost
The Trustees would like to
make improve ment s at the
cemetery , but with the yearly
struggle to get the annual lot·
care fee collected, there Is not
much t lme or mon ey left.
By the way , the Trustees of
Gree nw ood Cemetery serve
without pay!
Trus tees
Glenn Rizer,
Bobble Roy,
Ben Petrel ,
and Village Clerk,
Ja ne Beegle

ments never Intended for outside
eyes: What the United States
needs Is a Mikhail G,arbachev.
No, I don't want to adopt
Gorbachev' s totaliiarian sys1
tern; I want to prevent a
demagogue in crusader's armor
from seizing power and Imposing
totalitarian rule on the landofthe
free. This could happe n If the
federal government doesn' t stop
the pell·mell rush to a runaway
deficit, reverse to the erosion of
the American economy and get
off the downhill slide.
At least Gorbachev recognizes
that the cumJ:&gt;ersome Soviet
system Is failing and needs a
drastic overhauL He Is trying to
revamp the that structure and
transform the Soviet nation from
a backyard industrial power Into
the foremost technological
power.
Certainly the United States Is
ripe to be overtaken as the No. 1
technological power by someone,
if not by the Soviet Union, then by
Japan. Unless present treads are
dramatically reversed, our children will inherit a bankrupt
na tion , trillions of dollars In
debt., ravaged by drugs, ridden

with crime, its Industrial base
eroded. its schools medlocare.
So what the United States
needs Is an American Gorbachev
who will revamp a nd restructure
our economic system. Better
s till. we need to learn !rom the
Japanese who have adopted so
much from us, I recently visited
J apan, an Island nation without
natural resources except for the
fish that swim in the ocean
surrounding it. Yet Japan, lifting
Itself up by Its bootstraps after
the devastation of World War II,
today has surpassed the United
States as a producer of quality
consumer goods and is challeng·
lng the us In high technology.
How In the world have the
Japanese managed this spectac·
ular achievement? Their me·
!hods have Peen simple enough.
Here are the ess ential dlfferen·
ces between the Japanese and
American systems:
- In the United States, free
enterprise has become less a nd
less free. It has J:&gt;ecome en·
tangled In government red tape,
been hobbled by bureaucratic
encumbrances, been deluged
with forms to !Ill out. Small
businesses are inhibited. As the
backbone of the American free
enterplse economy, they ought to
be helped, not hindered, by the
government.

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Manager Pete Rose says when
Eric Davis is hitting , the Reds
are a good tea m .
And Davis, who 's had a subpar
season so far, especially coming
off last year's 50· RBI binge 0 ver
April a nd May, "Is star ting to
hit ,'' Rose sa id.
The power· laden center fielder
blasted perhaps his )lest shot of
the season Wednesday night , a
tape m easure home run to help
Cincinnati win it s season·hl gh
fourth straight game. 5·3 over the
Houston Astros.
Davis' ninth homer of the
season came on a changeup from
Jim Deshaies, and when it landed
deep In the upper left·fleld sta nds
at Riverfront Stadium, a 3·2
deficit became a 4·3 Reds' lead.

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
- In the United States, the
authorities raise obstacles that
discourage private enterprises
fro m producing anything new or
Innovative. Federal agencies ob·
struct efficient business opera·
tlons, such as the telephone
system, that served the public
better before govenrment
Interference.
- In Japan, the governm ent
supports and subsidizes Its Indus·
tries. This cooperative effort Is
directed by the Ministry of
International Trade and Indus·
try , known as MIT!. Its opera·
!Ions are described by Industrial·
1st Harry E . Flggle Jr. In a report
to the U . S. Taxpaper s
·Commission :
MITI "guides Japan's Indus·
trial organization and trade
policies. It plots economic stra·
tegy, controls Investment and
supplies access to technology. It
nurtures Its Industries and pro·
tects them from foreign competi·
lion whenever necessary ... MIT!
also helps Industries like steel,
rubber, petrochemials and ship·
building during times of reces·
sian by creating legal cartels to
allocate ma rket shares, even

esta blishing funds for paying
firms to scrap excess facilities
and to reduce capacity."
- J apan has imported whole
Industries. · usually from the
United States, and nurtured
them until they are strong
enough to enter t he world
marketplace.
Flggle's report explains that,
" The fledgling Industry Is protected to any extent necessary
until It gains know ledge, size,
experience, critical mass and
costs parity ... All thJs · takes
place In Its own marketplace the world' s second largest totally protected from foreign
incursion.''

Our adversarial system gover nmen vs. private enterprise, workers vs. management,
sm all business vs. big businessIs no longer competitive to the
wor ld marketplace. We should
follow the exa~ppl e of Mikhail
Gorbachev, who Is attempting
drastic changes to make the
Soviet Union more productive,
and adopt Japanese methods,
which have t.ranslormed a defeated and devastated Japan into
an economic superpower.

,.

CINCINNATI IUPI ) - Vete·
ran Cincinnati Benga ls line·
backer Reggie William s has been
appointed to Cincinnati City
Council.
Williams, who's hea ding Into
his 13th season in the N·F ·L, won
the 1987 Sports Illustrated sports·
man of the year award . He will
succeed council member Arn
Bortz, who resi gned.
"Reggie' s independ ent spirit
and genuine interest in the
community mak e him an obvious
choice," Bortz said . "He's a
natural leader a nd will be an
excellent council membe r. "
William s was th e NFL man of
the year in 1986, and was named
one of the United States Jaycees
10 outstanding young Americans
In 1987. He also has received a

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On this da te In history:
In 1904 , Jam es Joyce met his future wife, Nora, for the second time
and fell in love. He later chose the date as the single-day setting for his
novel , "Ulysses ."
In 1917, the first Congress of Soviets was convened In Russia .
In 1963, the Soviet Union put the first woman into spac e
cosmonaut Valentina Teres hkova.
In 1983, Yuri Andropov, form er chief of the Soviet secret pollee,
a!i'!umed the title of president of the Soviet Union a lter the death of
=· Ll"onld Brezhnev.
'
.
;. In 1986, South African blacks marked the lOth anniversary of the
•: Soweto upris ing with a one·day strike; 11 blacks were killed In

W Oakland

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WILL PLAY EXHWITION MATCH IN GALLIA -Junior tennis star Mary Carol Liberatore
and tennis professional Brian Bagley have
organized a public tennis exhibition S&lt;Jheduled for
Saturday, June 18 at 7 p.m. on Forest Mullins

Bll-~e h~l

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Torollio at Urtrotl , 7: 3$ p .m .
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Chl c..,;o at MllwauiP e, A:35 p.m.
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Hou!don at ClndntalL 7:25 p.m.

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Mary Carol Liberatore,
junior tennis star and
professional to play
exhibition match in Gallia
Junior tennis star Mary Carol
Liberatore and tennis professional Brian Bagley have organIzed a public tennis exhibition
scheduled for Saturday, June 18
at 7p.m. onForestMulllnsCourt,
45 Henkle Avenue in Gallipolis.
Liberatore, 16·year·old daugh·
ter ofMarloandJudle Liberatore
vi Pt. Pleasant, W.Va ., finds
herself competing for a spot In
the National Sweet Sixteens
Tournament In Charleston.
Having already qualified In the
districts and finishing In the top
12 In the Ohio Valley, Liberatore
will leave for Indianapolis In two
weeks for the Westerns qualifier.
With a successful attempt In the
Westerns , Liberatore could at·
tal n her goal for 19138 · berth In the
Sweet Sixteens Nationals.
Previously, Libera tore defeated number one seed, Shan·
non Dean 'of Colvmbus, 6·4, 6·2, In
the first round of the Greater

The Daily

Sentinel ~

(USPS 145-_,.,l

A Division of Multlmetlla.· Inc. ..
Publlsh!?(i every afternoon , Mon day
lhrough Friday, 111 Court St. , Ppmeroy , Ohio, by th e Ohio Valley Publ
llshlrig Company/ Multimedia, lnc.1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. second class postage paid at PomerO)' ,

1 Ohio.

Cincinnati's 18's tournament.
She finished secood In this Grand
Prix event.
Her credentials include:
-12·under West VIrginia State
Champion.
-Winner 1987 Gra nd Prix In
Cincinnati.
-Runner·up 19138 Greater Cin·
clnnatll8's.
-Ranked 133 nationally 33rd
Westerns.
-Played in 11 nation a l
tournaments.
Liberatore started playing ten·
nls when she was eight and
played her first tournament
when she was nine. Liberatore
plans to attend college on a tennis
scholarship.
Liberatore' s partner for the
exhibition, Bagley, works as a
tennis instructor at the Queen
City Racquet Club In Cincinnati.
He fs a form er Illinois state
tennis stand out and Is USPTA
!United States Professional Tennis Association) certified.

Redman and Queen
post Speedway wins

1

Member ; United Press lnternailonal 1
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ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP &amp; PARTS

. Harold Redman of Tyler MounIn the Mini Stock Division, the
tain, WV won his third straight excitement never stops as Mike
Late Model feature win at Collins took his first win of the
Jackson County Speedway on season. Collins was followed over
Saturday night, June 11th.
the finish line by Danny Reed ,
Eslle Bills jumped to an early Dale Kessel, David McCutch eon,
lead, but not for long as Redman and John V~nWy c k .
passed him In the eighth lap to
During the Intermission a
take over the lead. He was Beauty Pagaent was held to elect
followed across the finish line by a Speedway Queen. Out of twelve
Eslle Bills, Steve Daniels, Roger contestants, the winner was Miss
Diana Parsons of Charleston,
Wireman and Don Clark.
The Fastest Late Model Quail· WV. She was presented a rhinesller of the evening was Roger tone tiara , a monogrammed sash
Wireman of Proctorville, Ohio and a $100 check from Ed's All
with a time of 14.13.
Clean Disposal, Inc. of CharlesIn the Hobby Stock Division, ton, W.V. Ed Snodgrass is the
the winner on the white flag lap, President.
Coming up Saturday night,
was Jack Queen of Ripley, WV.
Queen was followed by Rick June 18, a regular racing proLucas, Jay Jenkins, Steve Lucas gram will be held. The Late
and J .C. Rose to round out the top Models will be paid to $800 to wtn
with $125 to start -Hobby's will
five.
The Street Stock Division lea· J:&gt;e paid $400 to win - Pure Street
ture was won by Bob Barley of Stock ~ $200 to win - and Mini
Maple Fork, W.V., a newcomer Stocks $100 to win.
For additional Information,
to the track. Following him
across the finish tine was Doug call Herman Staats, Promoter at
(304) 863-8930 or the track phone
Hall, Roy Parks, Roger Garnes,
and Wayne Long.
at (304) 372-4600.

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Court, 45 Henkle Avenue inGalUpolls. Liberatore,
IS-year-old daughter of Marlo and Judie Libera·
tore of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., finds herself
competing for a spot in the National Sweef
Sixteens Tournament in Charleston.

4

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Cincinnati moved within 3 'h
games of second-place Houston,
wit!\ the series finale tonight.
Davis' homer In the fifth
followed a double by Chris Sabo
and gave Cincinnati the lead for
good.
Rose was pleased to say " when
Davis hils, we're a good c lub , and
he's starting to hit now. Our guys
are playing very confident,
they're very loose now and wed id
a lot of positive things tonight."
The Reds added a run In the
seventh. Barry Larkin, who had
three hits, singled , and eventually scored on a single by Sabo,
who also had three hits.
Cincinnati took a 2·0 lead in the
second against Deshaies, 4·4.
Larkin's single and Dave Collins '
sacrifice fly delivered the runs.
Jim Pankovlts hit his first
homer of the season to cut the
deficit to 2-1 In the third . The
Astros moved ahead 3·2 In the
fourth when Bill Doran hit his
first home run and Rafael
Ramirez stroked an RBI single.
Elsewhere In the National
League, New York bes ted St.
Louis 6·4, Philadelphia downed
Montreal 6·2, Los Angeles defeated Atlanta 7·5, Chicago
topped Pittsburgh 74 and San
Francisco got by San Diego 4·2 .
In the American League, It
was: Toronto 15, Cleveland 3;
Milwaukee 5, Seattle 1; Boston 8,
NewYork3; Detroit1, Baltimore
0; Minnesota 5, Chicago 1;
Kansas City 2, Oakland 0; anct
Texas 6 California 31n 10 Innings.
Mets 6, Cardinals 4
At New York, Darryl Straw·
berry clubbed a pair of homers,
giving him 15 on the season, to
help New York sweep the three·
game ser les from St. Louis. Ron
Darling, 7·4, benefited from the
power surge. Randy Myers
earned his lOth save. Crls Car·
penter, 2·2, took the loss.
'PhiUies 6, Expos 2
At Philadelphia, David Palmer
permitted three hits over eight
Innlngs and Philadelphia scored
three Insurance runs In the
eighth. Palmer , 2·6, was bidding
for his first complete game since
July 1986. Steve Bedrosian got
one out for his ninth save. Floyd
Youmans, 2-6, was the loser.
Dodgers 7, Braves 5
At Atlanta, Ore! Hershlser, 9·3,
sc attered four hits over seven
Innings and a'dded a two·run
single to pace Los Angeles. John
Shelby banged out three hits and
Kirk Gibson launched his 12th
homer for the Dodgers. Tom
Glavine fell to 3·7 for Atlanta,
which received a two-run horner
from Dale Murphy .

Ka••~

Toronto at Detroit, nll';tlt
Boston at Balllmol't'. ni«IM

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By United Press International
' . Today is Thursday, June 16, the )68th day of1988 with 198 to follow .
' · 'The moon is waxing, moving toward It s first quarter.
. The morning stars a re Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter a nd Saturn.
. _ 'fhere are no evening stars .
.~~ Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
: film comedian Stan Laurel in 1890, publisher Katharine Graham in
, 1917 (age 71) , autho rs Erich Segal in 1937 (age 51) and Joyce Carol
; Oates In 1938 (age 501, and actress Joan Van Ark In 1946 (age 42) .

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pres idential appointment to the
White House Conference for a
Durg-Free America.
His community activities includ e the Reggie Williams Fund
for youth leadership, the United
Way and the Just Say No
Foundation.
A Dartmouth graduate, Williams feels that serving on council
as a ·Charterlte affords him a
unique opportunity.
·'My chief concern is Inclusivenes s," he said . " I'll continue to
communicate the power of the
vote so that every person has a
voice and feels a part of city
governn'lent. I'm at home with
charter's emphasis on independent thinking and representative
local government."
Williams is to be sworn in next
Wednesday.

Th•l'ld..,. ' ll Oamli"
fUchmond Ill Bultalo
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''I wasn' t In a good groove
tonight." said Browning, who
gave up three runs on seven hits.
''I was getting my pitches up and
I didn't have very good controL
Maybe I got a little tired running
the bases lin the second), but I
wasn't very sharp. It was ugly,
but it was a win.
" This was a team effort and It
makes everyone !eel good about
themselves, " said Rose after

Scoreboard ...

Oakar.nd

SALE

seventh save .

Williams named to
Cincinnati Council

;Today in history

lEG.

" I never think home run,"
Davis said. "I was just trying to
hit the ball hard somewhere and
he' threw me something down
tha t I hit pretty good."
The homer made a wi nner of
Tom Browning, 5·3, who pitched
five Innings J:&gt;efore getting help
from three relievers, Including
John Franco, who notched his

•

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47169 Eag'1t Ridge Road
949-2969
••

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�By SUSAN BALSTER
"catch and release." The fi sh are
OVP News Staff
caught, pu t in a treatment ta nk at
Gallipolis will ha,•e 40 co ntest· the park front a nd released,
ants and 20 boats added to its Belville said.
river traffic J une 18-19 as well as
Because of the increase In
increased sales for its businesses tra ffi c along the waterfront ,
when the cliy hosts the Wes t First Avenue wtlt be closed from
Virginia BAS.S. (Bass Angler State to Cour t streets from 6 a.m.
Sportsmen.) Chapter Federation Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday.
qualifying tournament.
Bel\ille sa id reside nts should
·a
lso
be aware of the increase In
For the fir st time, the Ohio
tra
ffic
at the park front between 4
Valley Visitors Center and the
p.m.
Saturday a nd 3 p.m.
Gallipolis Retai I Me rchan ts As'
Sunday
.
soc iation will host a quallfying
The
visitors
center
will
al
so
tourna men t for the federation .
sponsor a fish fry fo r the
The federation is part of a
contestants a nd the tournam ent
n·auonal organization and is the
staff
Saturday night . '
largest in its state. The tournament 'is one s tep on the road to the
g rand tournament in the spring.
Th e vis itors center and the
retail merc han ts bid to host the
tourname nt in order to stimulate
interes t in the area and use of its
nat ural resources. said Terri
Belville, director of the center.
79e - qt. ••'• price
She sa id the group was at - 30c mfr'l on·pack rebate
tracted to the Gallipolis location
wMn you buy 12
because of its rating of the
frequency of catch by the Ohio
Department of Nat ural Resources . The 42 miles between Racine
¢ql.yourcosl
and Eurel&lt;a , the "Gallipolis
after rebate
Pool. " was rated number one by
Quaker
State
ODNR out of Ohio's 451 river
10W30 Motor Oil
miles.
Limit 12.
The co ntes tants in the tourna ment are basically trying to
Bk qt. aale price
- 30c mtr'a on-pack rebate
advance to the next tournament
when you buy 12
round, but there may be cash
awards as well, . s he said. The
co ntestan·ts are judged by the
total weight of their catches for
the day.
eyourco•l
The tournament, however , is
after rebate
Quaker State
10W40&amp;5W30
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STEWART - Racine Ohio's
Bob Adams. Jr. battled side-byside with Marietta 's Bruce Den·
nis before Adams ' Black Bandit'
Ca mara powered ahead on the
18th lap to take the victory in the
25 lap lat e model feature race at
Skyline Speedwa y.
Skyline Speedway promoter
Danell Willie made a surprise
an nou ncement that his speed·
way , beg!nn'tng this Friday June
Ji, will move to regular Friday
night racing. Willie Is making the
change and hopes to have the
races off and running on schedule
to allow anyone who works
Saturdays to get home at a
decent hour.
No other area tracks operate
on Fridays as opposed to four a nd
sometimes five operating within
75 miles on Saturdays.
Following Adams across the
finish line was , Larry Bond of
Albany, Paul Garvin, .Jeff
Houser and Mark French of
Middleport.
Paul Garvin won the Helmet
Dash over Racine 's Scott Wolfe
In second place and Ken Patrick
third. The second heat went to
Larry Bond .
Also on the new Friday night
ca rd will be Street Stocks and
Hobby Stocks.
All area fans are asked to kick
off the Friday night Grand
Opening to see your favorite
drivers In action .
Racing Is at 8 with warm-ups at
6:30 and time Trial s at 7 p.m.

Medina has two strikes against
him , though. The ou !fielder Is
right-handed and Indians President Hank Peters believes he
Isn 't yet ready for the majors.

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BROOKLINE, Mass. (UP!)America's oldest and most
tradition-bound golf tournament
begins Thursday with all the
Ingredients In place to create a
memorable championship.
The leading competitors In the
game, many seemingly playing
~ at their peak, will be tested on a
• historic ple~e of ground In the
; 88th U.S. Open.
, "A course like this," said
' Australian superstar Greg Nor; man, "provides the biggest char' acter test you can have."
: The Open will be contested
: over the 7,010-yard course at The
• Country Club, which joined with
; four other clubs In 1894 to form
: the United States Golf
i Association.
i In 1913, the course was the site
: of the turning point In American
, golf - the victory by 20-year-old
,: ;~mateur Francis Ouimet .over
•. English legends Harry \!ardon
; and Ted Ray .
';.. "There Is magic associated
· with this course, " said USGA
i senior executive director Frank
· Hanigan. "It's a fine, old, rolling
' golf course with a lot of variety. It
.: has these wonderful New Eng; land rock outcropplngs which
·v will get your attention. It has
, little, old greens. It has quirky
; ' holes. It Is a wonderful place."
The Countryy Club, Indeed,
~· ~ppears to have been retrieved
from a time capsule, bu tit will be
·; besieged starting Thursday by
; an assau It of top players armed
: with the best equipment space, age technology can provide.
~ Seve Ballesteros, without a
l major title since his 1984 British
~ Open triumph, Is coming off his
,; victory last week at the West' chester Classic.
: . Norman Is oozing confiden~e
~ after shooting a 64 last Sunday
· and fighting his way Into a
~ sudden
death playoff at
Westchester.
•' Sandy Lyle Is .In the. midst of a
,, super year which has Included
: his dramatic victory at the
· Masters. Curtis Strange has won
~ twice this year and Is being
:. touted by many as the best player
, In the world. Tom Kite almost
:: won two weeks ago at the
·:· Kemper Open.
, Ben Crenshaw has been In the
,; running at one event after
·;· another. Mark Calcavecchla Is a
, potential challenger, having lost
:by a shot to Lyle In Augusta.
: Raymond Floyd, Bernhard
, Langer, Lanny Wadkins, Larry
Nelson, Tom Watson, Larry Mlze
and Craig Stadler all have the
savvy to win a major.

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And then there Is Jack Nick' laus, who when he hits his first
tee shot at 1:07 p.m. EDT
' Thursday will set a record by
playing In his 32nd straight Open.
He currently shares the record of
31 consecutive Opens with Arnold
Palmer and Gene Sarazen.
' If NicklaUS· should make the
cut this week, It would mark the
28th time he has done so In an
Open - another record. And It .
-Nicklaus makes the cut, he would
become the first player to win
more than $5 million In a career.
"We try to go to the best tests of
golf we can," said USGA execu·
live director P.J. Boatwright.
"The one who plays the best
ihrough 72 holes of U.S. Open
pressure on the kind or golf
course we select, well, I think
that person Is a great golfer, no
matter what his name Is."
James J . Moodie, 26, a 1984
graduate of AlabamaBirmingham and one of 47
first-time players In the Open,
will strike the tournament's first
ball at 6: t5 a.m. EDT. He will be
rouowed by 155 other players, the
last or whom will leave the first
tee almost nine houra later.

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Sunday

Temperatures In the 90s were
forecast for the openlnll round
with a chance of a late afternoon
'thunderstorm.
The Country Club course,
,c arved out of steep hills and wild
look!ni lancllcape, has drawn
almost unlverul praise from the
players.
"The rouah Ia not as Ions as at
other Opena," Ballelteros said.
"That Ia .aood becauae I ao very
ofteJ.I Into tile n~~~~h."

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209 Upper River Road

(614) 446 4103

Sate prlcosln effect June t6 through June 22,1988.

'

·'·

caused him to leave two gaii)es
early, miss one start and need
another start pushed back.
"The back ts a little tight, but
the hot weather Is good for me,"
said Higuera, who threw just 84
pitches.
Balboni, who was signed June 1
after being released by Ka nsa s
City, drove a 1-0 pitch over the
left-field walL It was Balboni's
third home run of the season and
first with Seattle.
"It was a fastball, a little
high," said Higuera, adding that
he knew It was a home run when
it was hit . "But I'm happy. The
team won, so everybody's
happy. "
Higuera, 6-4, allowed only one

other base runner, walking Bal·
bon! In the fifth inning . The
fourth-year left-bander struck
out four .
Mark Langston, 5-7, took the
loss, giving up five runs on seven
hits In two innings. It was
Langston's earliest exi t since
May 21, 1985 whe n he lasted
one-third of an Inning against the
New York Yankees.
In other games, Kansas City
blanked Oakland 2-0, Texas
stopped California 6-3 In 10
innings, Toronto blasted Cleve·
land 15-3, Detroit edged Baltl·
more 1-0, Boston pounded New
York 8-3, and Minnesota downed
.
Chicago 5- L
In the National League, It was:

Chicago 7, Pitt5burgh 4: San
Francisco 4, Sa n Diego 2; Clnctnnatl5 , Houston 3: New York 6, St.
Louts 4; Philadelphia 6, Montreal
2; a nd Los Angeles 7, Atlanta 5.
Royals 2, Athletics 0
At Oakland, Calif., Charlie
Leibrandt flmd a two-hitter to
lead the Royal s to their fifth
straight victory . Kansas City
improved Its 1988 record against
Oakland to 5-0 and pulled within
five games of the first-place A's
In the American League West .
The Royal s tra iled by 13 games
as recently as June 1.
Rangers 6, Angels 3
At Ana heim, Call!. , Larry
Parrish singled home Scott
Fletcher with one out in the 10th

inn ing and Jeff Russell retired 24
of the las t 27 batters he faced.
Ru ssell. 6-0, won his fourth
straight start and has won five of
his stx starts this season. DeWayne Buice, 2-4, suffered the
loss.
Blue ,Jays 15, Indians 3
At Toronto, Fred McGriff and
Cec il Fielder eac h hit two home
runs and Tony Ferna nd ez went 3
for 4 with four RBL Dave Stieb,
9-3, allowed three hits over seven
Innlngs and was never in trouble
as he posted his seventh victory
in his last eight starts. The Blue ·
Jays pounded Greg Swindell,
10-4 , for four straight hits and f1
4-0 lead in the second Inning.

,
.
,;
:
•
'

99

3.49 sale price

5-L "And when you 're talking
about a franchise playe r, we got
somebody else ready,"
A~ it turned out, Milwaukee
needed three relievers to coin·
plete the one-hitter. Mark Clear
walked the only two batters he
faced in the ninth and was
followed by Chuck Crlm and Dan
Plesac, who earned his 15th sa ve.
Higuera, who h~d a one-hitter
against Kansas City last September, is 3-1 In his last four
starts, with the lone defeat in that
span a 1·0, 10-lnnlng loss to
Chicago . ~ During the stret.:h, he
has allowed three earned runs In
33 1-3 innings, dropping his ERA
to 2.03.
Previously, his back problems

play hegins

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The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

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llyJOEILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Once Steve Balboni broke up
Ted Higuera's bid for a no-hitter
with a leadoff homer in the eighth
inning Wednesday, the Milwau kee Brewers decided to protect
their star left-bander.
Higuera, the. wtnnlngest left·
hander In the majors over the
past three seasons with 53
victories, has been bothered by a
bad back this year. Rather than
risk a serious Injury, the Brewers
pulled him after eight Innings.
"He told me his arm was
getting a little tired," Brewers
pitching coach Chuck Hartenstein said after the Brewers
defeated the Seattle Mariners

Clark sticks with Cleveland
because he is left-handed , and
the Indians need left-handed
hitters. That is why Luis Medina,
who had three homers in a game
for Colorado Springs over the
weekend and leads the Pacific
Coast League in round-trippers,
s tays in the minors.

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Brewers defeat Seattle ·5-l; Indians drop 15-3 decision

StIll. the Tigers wanted Clark
to perhaps spell Darrell Evans at
designated hitter. They offered
23-year-old right-hander Eric
King, but the Indians nixed the
deaL

IVATE~

Llmlt12.

GROI!E CITY. Ohio JUPI) Jeff Junk of Washington Court
Hou se defeated John Tolerton of
Allia nce in a one-hole playoff
Wednesday to capture lhe 49th
a nnual Ohio Juniors golf
championship.
Junk and Tolerton. the leader
a ft er the firs t round of the 36·hole
tournament , were tied at 146 at
the 'e nd of Wednesday 's second
round . Junk parred the first
extra hole to claim the title.

Adams cops
Speedway win

Greg Swindell the ignominy of a
17-hlt attack In Detroit. That
criticism was unfair. Swindell
stayed In because he had to- the
bullpen was tired from balling
out the starters the previous two
games.)
Next under the microscope is
Dave Clark. He's lucky somebody like Dave Bresnahan Isn' t
any opposing pitcher. Bresnahan
Is the minor-leaguer released by
the Indians after he threw a
potato during a game In an
attempt to fool a baserunner.
If It's round and white, Clark
will swing at lt. He ha s virtually
no knowledge of the strike zone, a
s hame since he has strength.
Batting coach Charlie Manuel
has not been able to help Clark
just yet.

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5g

WCH golfer cops
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has lhe stuff to become a
cons istent s tarter In the major
league. He's· got fairly good
control and a good array of
pitches.
Yet Edwards knows Ba lles
doesn't have tor at least he has
has to demonstrate) the confl·
dence, the ar rogance, the bravado that a sta rter needs to
succeed . Bailes simply doesn ' t
think like a winner at times and
when a star tin g pitche r doesn 't,
he won 't throw strikes.
That 's l.he Edwards th~ry. He
would rather see a home run,
mea ning the batter had to do
someth ing to beat you, than see
walk after walk. Oh, those bases
on balls.
(By the way , Edwards was
blasted recently for allowing

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - Losing a
fo ur·game series to the Detroit
Tigers has forced to the s utiace a
discipline problem for the Clevela nd Indians.
No, it's not one concerning
Manager Doc Edwards's ability
to di rect the club. Edwards is in
co ntrol. someti mes angrily so.
When he removed pitcher Scott
Bailes from Sum,!ay's game, he
gave the left-fi elde r some color·
ful advice that clear ly demonstrated his disgust.
The problems a re ones of
self-discipline within th e roster
Itself.
Ta ke Bailes, lor he is a good
example. Edwards and pitching
coach Mark Wiley believe Balles

THI
49

Yanks Win
The Middleport Yankees
pounded the Middleport A's 17-0
behind the fl ne plthcl ng of
Jeremy Phalin and the hard hitting of his Yankee
Teammates.
Jeremy Phalin pitched a s uper
game to hurl a one-hitter with 17
strikeouts and three walks.
McCloud, Brewer, and Phalin
each had home runs while
Herman had two doubles. Yankee si ngles were by Stewart ,
Herman, Cremeans, Partlow ,
Mitch,Phalin, and Whobrey.
Mike Still had the lone A's
si ngle. Mike Vance pitched four
inning sfor the Middleport A's
with relief from Jason Yeager (2
Innings), and Abbie Welch 11
inning ). They combined to strike
out ten and walked 14 .

Thursday, June 16, 1988

Cleveland ,Indians have a·. problem with self-discipline

Gallia to host BASS
tourney this weekend

Summer
league
results ••.

Thursday, June 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

i

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Beat of the bend

A legal eagle...
By BOB HOEFLICH
Congratulatio ns to Di a na Ruth
Baer McCu ne.
of Me igs
Co unty , who re. ce ived her juris
doctorate,
cum laude, from
the Captial Un i,·ers lty La w
School on May
16.
Mrs. McC une a tte nded law
sc hool on a full academic sc holarsh ip gra nt ed by the sc hool
based on her LSAT sco re a nd
undergra d uate g r a d e po in t
average.
Mrs. McC une who is a gra du·
ate of Eas tern lli gh School a nd Is
a da ughter of P a ul H. Baer,
Ches ter, is e mployed as associate counsel with United M. Gill
Col·porat ion, a nationwide m a nu·
facturi ng co ncern. She and her
husba nd. Den nis McCune res ide
in Wo rthington.
How a bou t doi ng so m e
enter ta ining?
Talented people are be ing
asked to he lp liven up the a nnua l
Ju ly 4th celebra tio n of the
Ru tla nd Fire Depar tm ent by
presenting t heir acts--and variety is the s pice of life--du ring the
obser va nce. Normally a ta lent
s how is held at the celebra tion
and proba bl y will be aga in thi s
yea r. However', you don't ha ve to
compete. lh e fi re d epa rtment
would just like you to enter tain.
To get in volved-,call Joan Stewart a t 742-2421.

una ble to furnish dus t co nt rol for
near ly 150 residences in the
township.
T he trus tees as k res idents of
Bedford to be ar with t hem as
they a re doing the bes t. they can
on a shoes trlng budget, there
be ing no Indu str y or or&lt;&gt;ratlng
le vy to p rovid e a ny extr a opera t-

-

Sund ay, June 19, Is the final
d ay for Sy racuse residents to file
a pplications for consi de ration on
sc holar ships to be a warded by
the Ca rleton Memorial Scholars hip Board of Trus tees. Those
a pplica tions a re to be turned
ovezr to J o hn Li s le.
Motor cyclis ts will be m aking a
" blood run " on Wednesd ay.
The gr oup will meet at the
Wa tering Ho le on Route 7 at I
p.m . and will leave the re at 2
rid ing thei r bikes to the Meigs
Se nior Citizens Center in Pomeroy where many of them will give
blood to an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile. Incidentally, there
Is a blood s hortage In the tri -state
area and the bloodmobile will be
at the cente r , Mulberry Helhgts ,
fr om 1 to 6 p .m. , an extra -h alf
hour In the evening, In order to
accommod a te more donors.
,

WINNER - The Ohioana
Library Association has
chosen an essay written by
Amy Jo Taylor as the fourth
pace winner In the Lucille Loy ·
Kuck creative writing contest.
Amy's entry, "Growing ·o ld,
Growing Up" was selected
from over 300 entries statewide. All winners were recog·
nlzed at the May meeting of
the Ohio State Board of
Education. Amy Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. DnnTaylor
of Coolville, and the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Merrill Taylor, ' Pomeroy.

))us; Mr. and Mrs . vav10 Cline,
Waterford; Mr . and Mrs. Hilton
Wolfe, Jr . Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
West, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. David Hill , Mr . and
Mrs . Joe Thoren , Harold Circle.

AUTUMN REED

Reed birthday
Jaunlta Frederick and Wade
Connolly hosted a birthday party'
recently in observance of the
bir.thday of her daughter, Autumn Reed .
The party was held at the home
of her grandparents, Milford and
Romaine Frederick of Racine.
Autumn observed her second
birthday on June 9.
A Cabbage Patch theme was
carried out . Attending the party
were Autumn's grandparents .
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick, her
aun t, Sherr!, uncles, Scott and
Ton y, great-grandmother, Lizzie
Wood , gr ea t-aun t, Laura Ci rcle,
Godpa rents , Cliff a nd Barbara
Connolly, Wade and Jeff Con noily , Tammy Boggess, Darlene
Baum, Chad Clark, Brittany
Ri ffle , and Angela Roberts .
Sending gift s were Kim Rapozo

AIR

Reg ion II tour of Ble nnerhas-se t Island will be held on June
23..There will be a basket dinner
at "12: 30 at the Lions Shelter
House followed by t he Island
tou r. The ferry wllleave at noon
from the par k at First and
Julianne Str eet In Parkersburg.

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;

-

Better with or without
husband who's changed
desperately to have his children. I
Dear Ann Landers: Two years
ago I married a man I really loved . don't want our marriage to end,
We went together lor four years
but I just can 't stand his coldness.
and had great fun . · His parents
He seems to enjoy me when we are
adored me. My parents' tolerated
with friends and family, but he
rebuffs me when we are alone. Have
him. Mom and Dad both told me
you ever heard of anything like
that they doubted his ability to
sustain a loving relationship.
this? What should I do? - TEAR·
I should have listened. What was
DROPS IN SHREVEPORT
DEAR SHREVEPORT: Obvious·
once a warm and intimate love
ly something has gone haywire and
affair has become a col&lt;! war. There
you need to understand why. Some
is no longer any hugging, cuddling
possibilities worth exploring: (I) He
or kissing.
is afraid of intimacy and is trying to
We never talk about the interest·
ing things that happen during the distance himself or (2) there is
day. We don't argue, playfully,
another woman.
joint counseling would be ideal.
about politics anymore. He never
If he refuses, go alone. You are sure
calls me at work to say, "Hi. I'm
to gain some insight. Ultimately
thinking about you."
I still try to do these things, but
you may have to ask yourself that
well-known Ann Landers question,
he has started to ignore me. Ann, it
breaks my heart to admit this, but
"Are you better off with him or
without him?"
he turns his back when I'm talking
Dear Ann Landers: Last night, I
to him.
Two days ago, I wrote him a ,. was invited by friends to a Chinese
IQ-page letter about my feelings of restaurant. The meal was excellent,
but there was barely enough food
frustration. I begged him to consid·
for the four of us.
er marriage counseling. In the last
When it was time to leave, my
paragraph, I said, "My heart is so
hostess handed her son $50 and sent
heavy with sadness at what"we have
him to pay the bill. When, the boy
become. Don 't you miss the love we
returned with only $1 she assumed
shared when we first married? The
that
the tip had been deducted from
closeness we felt when we dated?
the $50 and we left.
Let's go to see a priest together, or
just as we were getting into the
perhaps a marriage counselor. We
must turn this around before it's car, our waiter came out and asked
if something were wrong with the
too late." He did not respond.
Ann. I love this man and want service. My hostess replied, "No, it

By Ed Peterson
Branch Manager
Social Security Adminstratlon

Honored

TriP planned

CASH BACK ON RANGERS
4X2 &amp; 4X4
$300.00 ON 5 MODELS

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ann
Landers

"TEST THE BEST"
SEE PAT HILL, JA Y HILL or RICK TOLLIVER

How much do you know about
Social Security ? Probably not
very much. Recent surveys Indicated Ihat only 41 percent of the
public consid ers Itself fairly well
Informed about Social Security,
according to Ed Peterson, Manager of the Athens Soci)!l Security office.
Social Security is doing something about it. A nationwide,
mutlmedia campaign is being
launched to educate the public
about how the Social Security
program provides protection for
workers of all ages and their
families now and In the future.
The theme of the campaign is,
" Many people know only hal rthe
story" and the underlying message Is, " Social Security .. .It
Never Stops Working." It is
being conducted in cooperation
with the Adve rtising Council, a
private, nonprofit organization

that conducts public service
advertising in the public Int erest.
Telling the whole story about
Social Security involves three
basic messages :
Social Security is financially
stable and will remain that way
into the foreseeable future:
Social Security provides a
package of protection which
Includes r etirement, ~lisabllily,
and surylvors Insurance
benefits;
Social Security was never
intended to be the sole source of
retirement Income, so all
workers should plan fortheirown
financial future by supplement·
lng their anticipated Social Security benefits.
Currently some 38 million
people, 1 out of 6 Americans,
receive some sort of monthly
benefit from the Social Security
Administration. But people still
think of Social Security as a
program for older people despite
the fact that 40 percent of our
beneficiaries are non-retirees .

_
---

was fine."

He then sa id, " I didn't find
anything left for me on the table."
My hostess was embarrassed and
reached into her purse and gave
him a $5 bill. which I noticed was
all she had.
Instead of saying, "Thank you,"
the waiter said, "The bill was $49!"
I always thought a tip was given
at the discretion of the customer.
Please comment. .. NONPLUSSED
IN CALIF.
DEAR N.P.: Today a tip of 1,5 or
20 percent is considered appropri·
ate, but no patron is obligated to tip
if he doesn't feel like it.
In this case, there was clearly a
misunderstanding, but under no
circumstances is it acceptable for a
waiter to follow a customer outside
and ask for a tip. That move was
definitely "boo·how." (Ask a Chi·
nese person for translation .)

"In addition , more than 126
million workers - about 95
percent of tod ay's workforce are paying Into Social Security
and will one day reap its
benefits," Peterson said.
People who are now enjoying a
stable retirement are those who
incorporated Soc ial Security and
other pensions, savings and
investments In their financial
planning early in their careers.
They were able to intelligently
and effectively build upon the
financial base that Social SecurIty provides. This is one aspect of
the educational campaign that
Social Security hopes to com·
munlcate to the public.
Peterson · said people who
would like to know the " whole
story" about Social Security can
order a free copy of the booklet
"Social Securlty ... How It Works
For You" by calling a toll -free
number, 1-800-937-2000, or by
writing to Social Security,
Pueblo, Colorado 81009.

Job's Daughters plan installation
,

Installation of new officers was
announced for June 27 at 7: 30
p.m. when Bethel 62, International Order of Job's Daughters,
met recently at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Carol Hendrix wll be Installed
a s honored queen. She announced ·a practice session for 2
p.m on June 26, and asked that
members take the ir gowns home
and prepare them for in s talla -

tlon. She also announced that
there will be a car wash this
summer with prO&lt;:eeds to go
towards the promotion and edu cation fund.
A challenge was issued to the
members by the guardian coun·
ell. The Bethel will be treated to a
dinner by the council if they
exceed the number o! new
member s brought in by the
council.

By WlLUAM C. TROTT
world will b~ r~ady for me.·· ho ' 'a id. " When I go
United Press International
out on th at pa 1io. I'm going to clap m~ hands ~ nd
PAVAROTI'I HEATS U P AUDIENCE: A heat
prai se God ."
wave didn' I stop opera superstar Luciano
Hudson ha s been working on a telephone hot li ne
Pavarottl from paying back a debt to lh(' people of helping people with addictions to food, dr ugs 0 1
Chicago. Unda u nted bY the near-90-degree hea t . a alco hol. "Ove r an eight -month period . I helped
form ally att ired Pavaro1ti performed for two one woma n lose 230 pounds," he said proudly . ''I
hours Tuesd ay night. accom pa n led only by a hope to wri te a book but I'm most in tere.s tcd in
piano at a n open-a ir theater .
helping people ."
The crowd of 17,000 refu sed to let Pavarotti go.
Hudson Is In th e care of psychOlogist Barbara
calling him back for four e ncores a nd the tenor Roseri and is on a liquid diet. " He is making good
even fulfilled the req uest of a fan who shoutcdJor progress. " s he sa id. " He ha s talked a lot about his
him to do "0 Sole Mia."
,
feelings and has be('n able to get rid of a lot of
P avarotti ha d to ca ncel two previous a p pearan- ma terial bottled up Inside him , whic h co ntributed
ces In Chicago a nd he was glad to m ake a mends. to his a nxietv a nd led him to overeat."
"Now I mu st come bac k one m ore t im e to make up
ZSAZSA SUES: Zs a Zsa Gabor savs lhp New
fo r the other cancella ti on," he sa id.
.
Y11rk Post libe led her a nd invaded her privacy a nd
A STANDING UGH: Wh en Tiny Tim fir st has filed a $60 millio n suit agains t theta bl oid . T he
tiptoed through the tulips - a nd ont o the pop suit stems from an April Post story t hat sa id
c ha r ts - In 1968, people asked the false t to-voiced Gabor " look a pul l on a bott le of vodka as soo n as
e nte r tai ner "A re you for rea l'~ " Now. as he tip toes she got in to a I imo provided by Channe l 7 1in New
into the country mu sic sce ne. he says they're York ) and th en launc hed'intoa dia l rlbe, the gist of
asking, " Are you s till aro und ?"
· wh ich was that Hitler had his good poin ts."
Ind eed he Is, with a sing le th at m ade a r ecent
She says s he' s especia lly upset a bout how the
five·w('ek s tint on th e co unt ry c har ts a nd a n repor t so unds to Jewish people .
album , " Le ave Me Sa tisfi ed," soon to fo llow. In
ABBA EBAN OUT: Israeli states m an Abba
Woonsoc ket, R.I. , this week for a ser ies of count ry Eban s tep pe d out of politics Wed nesd ay , wit h·
s hows. T iny T im , now 66, r ecalled that a t his pea k, drawin g as a ca ndid ate for parl iamen t aft er
he got th e sam e kind of c r owd r eaction in air po rts fa iling to m a ke the Labor Party's li s t of 27 top
as Elvis and Frank Sinatra did in the ir prime. candidates.
"Only when people saw them, they said , 'Aah, ·•
Eb an. 73. who helped create Israel. had an aid e
Tiny· said. " And when they saw m e, they sa id a nnounce his withdrawa l an d wen t home.
'Ug h."'
refu sin g to comm e nt on the actl_on. In a let ter to
THE DISAPPEARING MAN: Walter Hudson Is F'oreign Minis ter Shimon P eres. Eban said: " It 's
· on ly half the man he once was. Hudson, 43, the clea r tha t 1 a m incapa ble of bea ring t the party's )
He mps tea d, N.Y., man who has n'l been out of his fl ag as f have in the pas 1for t he simple reason that
house in 18 yea r s because he was too fa t, has los t the party 's Institu tio ns have taken the a utJto rlt y
half the 1,200 pounds he weig hed only nine months from me and have deci ded others will bea r the
a go and by Septe mb e r ·he should be ready to get res ponslblll!y from now on. According to the rules
outs id e.
of democracy. l mus t ho nor th eir will. "
"I 'm getting ready for the wor ld a nd I hope th e

ANNLANDERM

How much do you know about pot,
cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
downers ? Think you can handle
them? For Ufl'to-the minute information on drugs, write for Ann Landers'
newly ri!Vised booklet, "The Lowdown
on Dope. " Send $3 plus a self-addressed, stamped No. 10 envelope (45
cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 606/J-(}562.

It was no tea that any girl with a
Masonic relationship, agell to 20
Is eligible for membership.
Lori Redman presided at the
meeting. Grand session was
announced for June 24 at 7: 30
p.m. at Battelle Hall South at the
Ohio Center. Columbus. At that
time Kathy Johnson will receive
the Royal Purple degree.
Members wer e remind ed to
turn in money fr om sal e Item s.

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 7

--People in the news------...

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

SocSec education underway nationwide

L

Hrlen a nd 'v ernon Ne ase will
observe I he ir 65th wedd ing anni \'ersa r y on Sa turday.
No ce le b r a t ion Is being .
p la nned althOugh t he couple
would enjoy c a rds .
Ml'. a nd Mrs. Nease, the
form e r He len Hayes, have live d
In th e sa me house all of the years
of the ir marria ge. In fact , ltls the
house wher e \&lt;ernon was born.
They wer e married on June 18,
1923 at the Pomeroy Methodist
Chu rch. Nease farmed and drove
a sc hool bus until hls retirement.
They have four children, Ruth
P ower s of Grove Clt uy; Carl of
Wes terville, Arthur of Pomeroy,
and Stanley at horne; seven
gra ndchildre n. and four great·
grandchildre n.

APR VARIABLE RATE
UP TO 60 MONTHS

'PLUS

afte rnoon following t he Racine ra;:n;:d;;;L;;;lb;;;b:y:D=id:d:le::F:is:h:er: .:::::::::a:n:d:T:o:n:y:C:o:n:n:ol:ly: ·====::;i
Alumni ba nque t.
I,
Atte nding we re John and Ei·
lee n Wickline Hamlin , Kirkwood,
N. Y.; George Theiss, Belpre;
Char les and Phy llis Roush
Kn ightln g. Bidwe ll: Bill and
Joa nn Brewe r Dan iel, Colum-

to be noted

9.25°/o S7 5 0 00

__ _

Reun";On held Memoria/ Da11
'J

John Wr ig ht who ha s paslore d
th(' Bradbu ry Churc h of Christ.
his wife. Martha and daughter s,
E liza be th a nd Jes si ca . were
honored a t a recent golng awa y
par ty al th e c hurch . The fa mily
has moved t o Glouster.
During the Sunday school they
were presented wlt.h an anniversary cloc k. A dinne r followed and
a tte nding wer e Wilbur a nd Edith
Wrig ht , La r ry a nd Paula
Haynes, Kristi and Matt , Gary
and Li nda Ba tes, Kare n, Les,
Travis a nd Ju s tin Fa c emyer, !Ia
Dar nell, Pa uline Hudson , Chari•dL·nP Ha nning, Bob a nd Bessie
King. Wal ly Ru ssell. Bill and
t'aomi King , and Ka thy . Jessica
and Derek Jo hsnon.

,,~

ing revenue.

Any old photos of Middleport
around?
Dr. Harold Brown has come up
with the Idea of enlarging older
pictures of scenes in Middlepor t
Village and using them In the
decor for the new Middleport
nursing home facility.
There were some items left
If you have photos you would
over from la s t Saturday ' s Meigs
like to see enlarged and placed In
Loca l School Di s trict a uction
the new nursing home, please
held In the fo rm E:r Pomeroy
contact Dr. Brown or Middleport
J un io r Hi gil Sc hool a rea . If you'd
like to purc hase something-- · Mayor Fred Hof!ma n. The original photos will be returned to
there are d esks on hand besides
you .
other things--you can do so on
Fr iday a t the same 'prlce as the
ite m sold for during the action. · Recently , In this column there
was an announcement of a new
There will be someone on hand at
the junior high building all day . business in Rutland. It Is Custom
Building Products, Main St..
Fr iday beginning at 9 a .m .
owned by Larry Haynes. Forgot
Bedford Township Trus te es
to pass along the phone number
are also having the ir equipment
sinceit , ofcourse, is not yet listed
probl ems.
In your phone dlrectory,-lt's
T heir 30 year old grader ha s
742-2463.
been broke n downfortwomonths
a nd getting the necessar y parts
A bit of a reprieve--Meigs
is turning Into a real struggle.
Treasurer George Collins has
Trustees also have been waiting
extended the deadline for pay for new blades for their road drag
rnent of real estate taxes from
fora couple of weeks . Alsodueto
June 20 to .l'uly 8·,now will that
the la ck of fund s, tru s tees will be
helper what? Do keep smlllng.

The cla ss of 1953 of Racine
Hi g h Sc hool held its 35th reunion
Mem orial Day weekend at the
hom e of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Thore n. Plans wer e made to
meet ever y ye ar on t he Sunday

Thursday, June 16, 1988

Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

..

Galaxy may be older than thought
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - AsRichard Gr een. a n astroph ysitronomers s tud y ing wh at ci st at the Kitt 'Pea k Na tio na l
amounts to a " cosmic old age Obser vatory in Arizona . sa id
hom e" - ancie nt stars called · as tronom ers at the ln s tituto d e
whi te dwar fs - say our galaxy, As trofisica in Andalu sia , Spain ,
the Milky Way , m ay be 6 bi) lion used one . of the most prec ise
year s old er than previously sci entific tec hniques known to
thought. .
dete rmine th e a ge of the
A team of European a s trono- universe.
m ers reported Wednesda y tha t
" Th ey are calcula ting how
studies suc h as th eirs ma y fo rce long it takes for heat to leak out o f
sci ence to revise it s estimates of the stars ," he explained. ' 'Th ese
the galaxy's age and ultimately stars are leaking ou t heat at a
tne age of the entire universe.
constant ra te - cooling off. And
Span ish and French scientists if you · mea sure the surface
w r iting In the curre nt issue of the temperature you can determine
British jou rnal Nature s ugges t for how many billions . of years
that ins tead of curren t estimat es
that process ha s been going on."
that place the age of the Milky
Suc h estimat es can br ing
Wav at 9 billion yea rs. the gal axy sc ientist s within range of pin·
may be as old as 15 billion ye a r s.
pointing the moment univer se
The observations s upport a
wa s born. he said .
similar study by U.S. scientis ts
"The story a t the mom ent is
from th e Univer sity of Te xas in
that you can find some wh ite
Austin who mea s ure d the cooling dwarfs down to very cool temper rates of white dwarfs last yea r.
atures. So the coolest ones yo u
. and also suggested that the
see are the oldest ones. It 's like
galaxy and universe ma y be going to a cosmic old age home
thought.
much older than previously
While dwarfs comprise a class
of stars found throughout the
universe that contain only about
60 percent of the mass found In
the sun, but are pa cked into a
body about the size of the Earth .
Because the relati vely small
stars are among the old est
obj ec ts in the unive rse . they can
be used to determine the age of
th e universe.

beca use these stars g ive you a n
idea of whe n the ear lies t stars
were form ed.· ·
As tro physicist J. lsern of t he
insti l ute In Spain wh ere the la tes t
whi te dwar f .s tudi es we re conducted looked a t th e re lations hip
between the br ig htness of the
dwar fs and the ra tes a t whi ch
they cool.

CLOG &amp; SQUARE
DANCE
OlD TOWN CAMPGROUUND

5 mi . from Pt. Pleasant on
Sand Hil Rd.

Musit by
Liberty Mountaineers

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Admission $3 la&lt;h ..-

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Laser removes tspider·veins'
painlessly, researchers saing
BOSTON 1UP)) -A new laser
technique appear s safe and effective for removing unsightly
"s pider veins " without the pain
a nd scarring caused by exis ting
method s. dermatologi s ts reported today .
"These little blood vessels can
be made to go away In a safe and
effective way," said Or. John A.
Parri s h of the Massachusett s
General Hos pital. " lt is pretty
exciting to a large part of the
population."
"Spider veins ." known technl·
cally as telangiectasia, are red
and purple lines caused by
swollen blood vessels . They are
usually painless and harmless,
but are extremely common,
especially among fair -skinned
people over age 30. They are
caused by a variety of !actors,
Including sunlight exposure.
"Just as a teenager may be
affected psychologically as well
as physically by a moderate case
of acne, so many middle-aged
adults are bothered by these
spider veins and seek treat·
rnent," said Dr. Ernesto Gonzalez, an assistant professor of
dermatology at Harvard l\lledlcal
School who Is testing the new
technique.
The veins are currently re·
moved with an electric needle
technique or with an argon laser.
But those treatments can cause
scarring and require anesthesia
because they are painful.
The new technique Involves the
use of another type of laser known as a tunable dye laser /.

which produces very short pulses
of Intense light instead of a
s teady stream of energy. causing
less damage to tissue surround Ing the Inflamed veins . Gonzalez
said.
"Our tunable dye laser pa tients have described the pain a s
the equivalent of stretching a
rubber band about halfway and
striking your skin," said Gon zalez, who presented hls findings
at a meeting of the American
Academy of Dermatology In New
York.
The researchers have used the
new method on 92 patients and
pr~X~IIced successful results in 95
percent of cases. In up to two
years of followup, only two
patients have had recurrences ,
which appears to be a lower rate
than exlsdng methods.
Because ofthe color of the light
produced by the laser. the energy
from the light Is primarily
absorbed by the blood Inside the
veins and not the surrounding
tissue, Parrish said.
The heal from the energy
coagulates the blood Inside the
veins and damages the veins,
causing them to die and be
absorbed Into the skin, he said.
The dead veins are then replaced
by healthier veins, he said.

JIOftCIIO PA1111nS
I wll .. retlr... ,,.. ac·
tlvt practkt ollll doling •Y
oHict tfftetlvt • - 30,
1911.

M.D.

Most of the patients treated so
far have had spider veins removed from their faces. The
researche rs are also testing the
approach on leg veins, they said.
The trea tment costs about $200
and takes less than an hour.
Some health Insurance policies
will cover the treatment , the
researchers said.
A similar technique is gaining
popularity for removing portwine stains, which are
unsightly birthmarks .

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Mr . and .Mrs . Arnold Thordson
of Cedarville spent a recent
weekend with Lula Circle and
Dixie.
Mrs . Richard Young and son,
Eric, and daughter, AliCia and
son, Sidney, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush.
Mrs: Ethel Orr of Chester were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lee.

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�Page- S- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. June 16. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Trial of church for su-icide .violaies constitution, lawyer says
LOS ANGELES !U P!)- Tr)•·
ing a church for the suicide of"
you ng man who was counseled b)'
church officials would violate
First Amendment rights of free·
dom of religion and have a
·'chilling e ffect'· on counselors. a
lawyer says.
Rex Lee. an a ttorne)' for the
church. sai d Wednesday if the
coun allows the suit to proceed
towa rd a full trial, it would be
pushing current state law on civil
liability beyond its present llmlts
and po ssibly violate . First

Amendment right ' of frPedom of
n:ligion.
" It will have a chtlling effect on
1c hurch) counselors· willingness
to enter the uncertain thicket s of
tort liability for his or her
cou nseling that will lead all but
the most courageous and fool·
hardy to the s;tfest and most
obvious course to avoid
counseling altogether," Lee told
the state Supreme Court.
The parents of Ke nneth Nally,
w ho kllll'd him self after he had

undergone co unseling at Grace
Communit y Church of Su n Val·
ley. !lied a $1 million suit In 1980,
accusing the churc h of negli·
gence, outrageous conduct and
clergy matpract ice.
The suit, which is bel ieved to be
the first of its kind In the nation
and is being closely watched by
religious groups, was dismissed
In m id-tri al by the Glendale
Superior Co urt, but reinstated by
the 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Under the law, the only time

co nslltutional rights can be infringed is If the court find s there
was a· 'co mpelling interest." L ee
said.
The l"~ilys contend the com pelllng Interest is to prevent
suicides , but Lee said there is no
evidence that Na lly's suic ide
could have been prevented.
L awyers for the Nallys argued
In the crowded courtroom th at
licensed chu rch counselors have
a duty to refer severely mentally
til people to professional s and
th at church counselors should be
held for negligence if they do not .
The co urt. which heard an hour
of ar guments, cou ld issue a
decision wit hin a month.
_
T he Nallys' attorney. Edward
Barker, said he expects the case
wil l be appealed to the U.S.
Su preme Court, no matter which
side wins.
a pharmacy in Mont rea I,
"I 'm very optimistic," Walter
Quebec.
Nally said, sta nd i ng beside hi s
" They are also ex tremely
wife ou tside the courtroom . " I
interested in the circumstances
th i nk ju stice will prevai l. It 's
i nvolving M s. Dann's obtaining
been a very long f ight."
of exper imental dr ugs via the
Kenneth Nally was 24 wheri he
United States mail across inter· fat ally shot himself April! , 1979.

co un se lors In 1976.
Bark~r contends the c hu rc h
failed to te ll Nally's parents that
he had previously atlempted
suicide several times and when
hospitalized for a drug overdose.
sai d he would try to kill himself
when he was released.
The family deci ded not to have
Na lly involuntarily co mmitted to
a p syc hiatri c hospital wh en they
were assured by church counselors that their so n was getting
better, Barker said.
The Nallys, he said, were not
_seek ing to hold all church counse·
lors liable for sui c ides, only those
who hold themselves out as
capa bl e of cou nse ling suicidal
individu al s wit h serio us mental
problems. Ba r ker co ntended
Grace Com munity church off!·
clals did that.
But Lee argued there was no
evidence church officials r epres'
ented themselves as experts in
psychiatry and had urged Nally
to co mpl y wi th the advice of
doct ors he wa s seeing.
Barker contended church
counselors wtthheld information

Police complete Dann probe
but ·motive remains a myst ery
'NTNNETKA, IlL tUP[) - A
26·day investtgation has un·
earthed mu ch about th e troub led
life of the woman who k illed a
schoolbo.v and wounded six ot her
peo ple during a s pree of violence.
but police may never know t he
motive behind her actions .
A tas k force of officials from
the Wi nnetka Police Departmen t
and 10 oth er law enforce ment
agencies r uled out accomplices
and the i nfluence of prescripti on
pyschtatric drugs and sa id the
May 20 shooting spree in the
affl uen t Ch icago suburb was not
the result of an imbalance in her
body chemistry .
" In all instances, Laurie Dann
acted independently after a period of significant premedit ation," said the report. is sued
Wednesday night.
· It was ea rly thi s year t hat
Da nn, 30, bega n planning her
x lolent binge in which she also
sent 26 packages of arsenic·
tal nted food and j uice to locations
in three states, police sa id . At
leas t five people were hospi ta lized after consuming the spiked
trea t s but none was ser iously
i nju t·ed.
. Shortly before ll a.m . on May
20. Dann, armed with three guns,
entered th e Hubbard Woods
J';lementary School and shot
Nicholas Corwin , 8, to deat h.
T hen. In a spray of pis tol fire. she
wou nded five other childr en I.indsay Fi sher. Kathryn Miller .
Mark Teborek and Peter M unro,
all age 8, and Robert Trossm a n,

6.
A ft er fl eeing the sc hool , she
shot Philip Andrew, 20 , before
holing up in hi s home, where she
was found dead of a self-inflicted
gunsh&lt;¥ wou nd eight hours later.
Alt hough authorit ies piled up
ma terial evid ence in the case,
Dann 's precise m o tive for shoot ing the children and leavi ng t he
po isoned food t rPa ts was no I
di scovered in t he co urse of th e
26·day probe. Winnetka Police
Chief Herbert Timm conceded
the entir e story ma y never be
known .
" We ' ve learned in thi s case
that finalit y is somet hing that
escapes us," T imm sa id. "W e're
frustrated at a ll the missed
opportunities. bu t I'm optimistic
tha t some of the thmgs we've
tPar ned co uld be beneficia l to the
state of Illinois. We just hope
som e positive aspect can camP
out of this nig htm are ."
Key findings of the report
Include:
-Although Dann had obtained
experimental drugs b_v mail from
Ca nada and had been prescribed
drugs b_v a Chicago area psyc hia·
trist.
" neither
c it drug
usage
nor aberra
nt illi
body
chemistry
played a sign ili ca nt role i n
La uri c Dann's actions of M ay

tion and prepa r ations by prosec·
tuors to bring an indict m ent
agai nst Dann, the doctor wilhdrew his complaint.
-Dann·s Madison pysc hiat r lst
and het· father, Nor man Wasser·
ma n, m ade subseq uent appeal s
to her to voluntar ily commit
herself for treatment . but were
ignored .
-Dann left M ad ison for the
last time on Ma)· 16. Her
w hereabo uts on May 16-17 are not
k nown. but she stayed with her
parents at their Gl encoe home
from May 18 until her shooting
spree on May 20.
Timm said investigators were
pursu ing troublesom e questions
about how Dann wa s able to
receive experimental drugs from

national j urisdictions," the r e·
port sta ted.
Agencies probing the Canadian
pr·escrlptlon m atter include the
Illinois Departm ent of Professional Regula tion 's Medica l Di s·
ciplinary Board and the U.S.
Department of Health and Hu man Services' Office of the
Inspector GeneraL
Dann had been taking the
prescrip tion drug Anafranil,
which had been filled at the
Can adian pharmacy , pollee sai d.

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YOU'RE M'f 6ROTilER ...

I

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6AME5 I-lAVE 6EEN MOVED
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LISTENING?!

Night

.,

_

L..- ' - - - ' - - ' - - - ' - - ' ' - - - '

..:!.
~

•

0

Complete the chuckle quoted

by fdlmg in the missing words
you develop fro m sfep .No. 3 below.

P~INT NUMBE~ED lETTE~S

IN

·-.
0

~

THESE SQUARE S
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETlERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Varied - Daily - Month - Hungry - LAUGHTER

When all else failed to cheer us up, granny would tell a joke.
She says lhat nothing can withstand the assault of
LAUGHTER.

BRIDGE

NORTH

l-tl-11

.K 81
.K 9 3

James Jacoby

tAJI03
.A 10 5

Beating par
by a mile

EAST

.2.Q3

+AJ 9765

...

By James Jacoby
Houston expert Cindy Bernstein has
many strengths as a bridge player.
Not the least of these is the unwilling·
ness to accept a sub-par result. Com·
peting in the late stages of the Texas
District Grand National Teams last
April, Cmdy would not accept what
she thought would be a penalty of only
500 when her side could make a vul·
nerable game. So she bid a slam. Then
her declarer play had to match her ag·
gressive bid.
She played low on the opening lead
and ruffed East's jack of spades. Next
came a heart to dummy's king (guard·
ing against all four hearts being in the
East hand) and back to her ace and
queen. She was not sure how to play
the clubs, but that decision could wail.
She played a diamond to dummy's!O
and East won the queen. East could
not play a spade and did not feel like
leading away from the club queen, so
he played back a diamond. Cindy took
two diamond tricks , noting that West
had started with five diamonds. H~
had already shown three hearts and
surely had at least four spades for his

+Q 8 7 6

SOUTH

.AQ8 765

• 81
+KJ43 2

Vulnerable· Both
Dealer: North
Wesl

Nortb
I NT

••
5.

Pass
Obi.
Pass

Pass

2. ••5+
East

Soulb

Pass
Pass
Pass

s•

Opening lead: • 2

bids of four and five spades. She ruffeq
a spade and cashed her la~t trump.
That brought East down to only four
cards. He certainly had to hold t~e
spade ace, since the king was still i~
dummy, so he had to release a club.
Declarer now played to dummy's club
ace and back with her 10. East could
co»er or not, but South would take the
rest of the tricks with the K-J· 4 of
clubs.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 43 Go along
1 Misspeak 44 Metal
5 Cute
dimple
9 Jewish

DOWN

festival
1 Barbecue
11 Contend
rod
12 Foolish
2 Kind
13 Pontifical
of module
15 Make lace 3 In a stew
16 Comedian 4 Brooch
Louis_ 5 One kind
18 Father's
of tiger
Day
6 Miss Saint
standby
7 Crawler
19 Church8 Apprentice
man
10 Guru
21 "Three
14 No-no for
men Mrs Sprat
tub ...•
17 Ove~
22 Mayor's
there,
title
old style .
(abbr.)
20 Fellow
23 Valley
24 European
river

Yesterday's Answer

23 Pleased
30 Combine
24 Not deep 31 Deem
211 TV 3;dVer- 32 Claw
tiser s buy 36 PrefiX
26 "A Child's
meaning
- of
"five"
Verses"
38 Hideaway
27 Doe's beau
28 Sigma
40 In the
follower
center

26 Mirth

27 Argosy
28 Chinese
pagoda
29 Coal
product
30 Brigitte
33 Delegate's
sub (abbr.)
34 Legendary
British
king
35 Soft food
37Move
smoothly
39 Zola
41 Augury
42 Curtain
fabric
DAILy CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

6116

'

.'

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGF.ELLOW

...

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

·'·'

•

CKYPTOQUOTE

(I) ChHra

HOG PRICI!S: Hop: t•l , Barrows and
GllloJ 280-~ lbo. 41.lltl: Bulch.., Sow•:
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SHEEP PRICI!S: Old Sllcep: 17.1»
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l

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SOUVENIRS AT T14E OLYMPIC

Per Monlh•

Monertln•

tho

I

(!)flltnOII

® Twtllahl z-

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1UJ Newe

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four scromb!ed words be-

r:;J

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(I) ABC News

(!) Body Electric
(!) Nightly Buotneu Report

i

IN Tiff .

-Da nn 's c riminal activity be·
ga n wit h a string of burglaries at
a U niversit y of Wisconsin Hospi tal laboratory In M ad ison be·
tw('en March 12 and 15 In whic h
'he stole quantities of arsenic,
lead and incendiary materials.
- Da nn had been treated for
appa r ent pyschologlcal di S·
orders early in 1988 by at least
lhree psychiatrists in the Chi·
cago ar ea and in Madison. butt he
full exte nt of her co nditi on wa s
not diagnosed . She termninated
her th&lt;&gt;rapy in Madison March

,\THENS I.IVESTOCK SALE.'
June II, 19&amp;

D

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20."

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THURS., JUNE 16 •
EVENINQ

FLORIST

Duplicated "

Q

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t!J) Moneyllna
Ill tl2l IIJ) Wheel of Fortune

.:·:: .

I

•

~t.t..
""0/tett lmilah•d -

- , - - - - - - ldhod br CLU I . ,OlLAN

Viewing

from those doct ors. who he sa id
were recommended by the
c hurch and were not licenced
professionals.
Lee said t here ts no evidence
thai psychiatrists do a bette r job
than church co unselors in preventing suicides.
Barker argued tha t Nally's
suicide was broug ht on when
church counselors gave up on
him, refused to counsel him any
longer and fa !led to refer him to
licenced profess ional s or to in·
form his parents the counseling
had end ed.

r~H~e~h~a~d~s~o~u~g~h~t~he~l~p~f~r~om~c~h~u~r~ch~~a~bo~u~t~N~a~l~lyC'~s::su~i~c~id~a~l~te~n~d~e~nc~i~e~s_l::::=========~

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'i:'MOOMM'-AA~~ASAs'CS~mU-~~ Television
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11 :31(]) MDVI!: Joumer to lila
Fer lllclo of 1110 Sun (G) (1 :39)

TN EM

11:45. (I) . . . . . . Q
12:00 (J) Piper Clllee Once More
w1t11 FMIIng
t1J lnlliMIIo.'lll Cup ltrlee
· From LokevUte, CT (T)

YIMH .-DZF JJFDH
QOYYUH
Yeetenlay'a Cryptofluote: SHE CAN HOLD A TUNE
Btrr SHE HAS TO USE BOTif HANDS. - DAVID
HINCKLEY.CRmC

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'

,,

�- - -- ... Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. June 16. 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, June 16, 1988

--------------~~~~~~~~--------~~
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Reg.

DRESS SHIRTS

• CHIPPEWA • SHEBOYGAN • RED WING
• DINGO

Nt&lt;k sins 14 111 to 11. Short tiHYO

styl11 In whitt, soNd colon ond nut
patterns. foil cut and fittttl rtyl11.

Chapman Shoes

Reg. SJ7 Shirts ....... S13.60
Reg. S21 Shirts ....... S16.80
Reg. S22 Shirts ....... S17.60

NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SOFTSPOT SANDALS

111.95

..

1 GROUP WOMEN'S TENNIS

716

KNIT
SHIRTS

~HI

S M, I and XI plus big
sizes and tofts. Dreuy looks,
casual dylt~ ond novelties. Wtct

our faworltts and sawe.
Regularly 16.95 ta 126.00

S&amp;le Prlut
St&amp;rt At 0•1~

$556

1/2 PRICE

AUTRY, ADIDAS, CONVERSE

0

324 Second Ave., Gallipolis 1-448-2891 ~
113 Court St. , Pomeroy 1-992-2054

210 EAST MAIN

HARTLEY
SHOES
MAn VAN VRANIEN, OWNER
992-5272
;

POMEROY

MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS
Sins S, M. I ond II itt o goot1 A·
lection of colors aiNf paHttM
your Dad will ike ~ ~y Voo Htu·
Hn, ltTigre and J.J. Cochrant.

112.95
Shirts ......... Sale s 10.3 6
515.95
Shirts ......... Sale 112.76
'19.95

I

'
;

SUMMER FURNITURE

WILUWAY RECUNERS

Buy it tor yourself. '\bu are the boss. Right?
Otherwl•fl you"ll get sox &amp; a tie ... if you·re lucky.

'86.00 LOW BACK SPRING BASE CHAIR ........ .... ... ... .. ?6.00
1 99.00 HIGH BACK SPRING BASE CHAIR ................... 86.00
'188.00 SPRING BASE LOUNGER ...... ...... ........ ......... '1 89:00

· ~.

FOR THAT EORA

20°/o OFF

OIFT

MEN'S
DRESS SOCKS

In Addition To Our Fine
Selection of Diamond and
Stone Rings, Save 20% on
These Father's Day Gifts~

•Tie Tacks
•Pen and
•Zippo Lighters Pencil Sets
•Watches
•Money Clips

ly Honos - " ' - bulty kllit
arlen or banlon panol. Ono siao
fits 10 to 13.

lEG.
..
. ..... leg. 1229.00 It 1259.00

fiiTIIIR'IDIIYIPIOIIIL
:

I

SAU

Contfort and 41Wablllty 1ft tfttH lrlldlll-1 twlwtl
llost ullars oro orllla~lo In 1ft orror of colors to

YOU

Those

_,

CHOICE_

Sl 8 800

25°/o OFF
ALL BERKLINE
CHAIRS

l.Loyci'/Fbsd&amp;IJ

'

ONE GROUP MEN'S SHOES
l/2 PRICE

Swim Trunks ........... 19.56
112.95
Swim Trunks ........ ,110.36
114.95
Swim Trunks •..••...•l11.96

Shirts .••....•• Salt s 11.36

40°/o OFF

20°/o OFF

19.95

Shirts ......... Sale 11 5.96

WESTERN BOOTS

IHUSHPUPPY l!o NATURALIZER)
ALL WOMEN'S

·-•11oM -

122.95

ALL MEN'S DINGO

30°/o OFF

L

(36· 311 """ XL 140·42 ).
Sollll colon and _ , color
Father's Day
Gift Salo •

MEN'S .

• REEBOK • CONVERSE • NIKE

FLORSHEIM. HUSHPUPPY, SEBAGO, JARMAN

20°/o OFF

SWIM
TRUNKS
121·301, M 132·34),

Swim Trunks ........... 17.96

pie•••

Salo Prkos loain At

TENNIS

•K&amp;C Jewelry
•Chapmans
•Eiberfelds
•Empire
•Marguerites
•Clark's
Jewelry
•Hartley's
•Top of the
Stairs

.......

MEN'S SHORTS

• REGAL • PARK ROW • DEXTER • HUSH
PUPPIES • SOFT SPOTS FOR MEN

•
'

5

Sizes 30 to 46 waltt in ttylel to
your Dad on hil day.
Sunday. Coordinate 1h0rt1 with knit ahirt1 on sale now .
Pri~ Range from •&amp;.95 to •1 9.96

DRESS AND CASUAL.

J

-

BIG SAVINGS

$

'

..a..od

-·fold. Gootl

....... of ......... """ ..

. . ....., $1.10
•• $1150.

Sale

...... jud

IWO·felol ani

...... .... n.. -·

...,...,

MEN'S .

MEN'S

MEN'S
NECKTIES
ww-... • .,,..._

MEN'S

ALL MEN'S DRESS SHOES

1

POMEROY, OHIO

FIITIIER'S ~111 SALEI

FATHER'S DAV
SAl!

SALE I

lectMn of solid colors. You'll lib
thl MIKtion - "' popular Hub·
toard pcmts are ilK~.
. . . .,Prices SU.95

MEN'S
FATHER'S DAY
SPECIALS

SUMMER CLEARANCE

_

992-3307

SALE

~·

=:P~· ~'h"

SHOP WITH
THESE ·
MERCHANTS

MEN'S

DON1 FORGET FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY

$9995

EMPIRE OF POMEROY ·

$1275

30°/o OFF

1'""''·.roy.
Ohoo

ST~~TI"G

.SIILE PRICES
STIIRT liT

DRESS SHOES and
CASUALS, DRESS
BOOTS &amp; WORK SHOES

Galliroli• &amp;

PRICES

Dress Trousers
SitM from 29 waist to SO. lig t•·

992-6720

.

fJ:

OVER 70 IN STOCK

MAKE ELBERFELDS YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
FOR GIFfS FOR YOUR DAD THIS SUNDAY. YOU'LL FIND GREAT
SELECTIONS - MANY GIFf IDEAS - AND BEST OF ALL EXCELLENT
SAVINGS. . .

Save On All -Men's Dress,
Casual, Work and ·Tennis Shoes,
House Slippers and Socks

•

111

.

You 'II Find Supet
Savingg On Reclinet1.

FATHER'S DAY
WEEKEND SALE

. TOP
OF
THE
STAIRS
WEST SECOND
POMEROY
'

IS JUNE 19th

&amp; SATURDAY, JUNE 18th

'

FATHER'S
DAY
SUNDAY·
:JUNE 19TH

•RECLINERS
•RECLINERS
•RECLINERS

fATHER'S DAY

THIS WEEKEND YOU'LL F D SUPER BUYS· AND SAVINGS
· TO HELP MAKE THIS:: E BEST FATHER'S DAY!
•Selection
This Fathers Day
•Savings
Update His Irriage
•Super
Specials
HAIRCUT

.

.

''DAD"
ON HIS DAY!

ere ants

FRIDAY, JUNE 17th
.

The Daily Seminei - Page- 11 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•us

$219 pr.

suo
. sauS159,...
IIG.

START AT ONLY

S19900

FREE DEUVERY

What a treat gift
idea for Dad on
father's Day!

A Sportsman's Showcase."
Hunter • Outdooraman • Morko·
men - al ars uproattl 1ft tftt genui•
wood crafr-ltip of """ fl• &lt;oloct«s
,... ...... light..t 4isplay Wtintl giall
oil Hils led&lt;,
Ina plos..t ha,.ro, fumltt... fiobh iot Oali.

-.,_....,,.,.,.INlow,

Reg. S239
6 Gun Cabinet ....... Sale
Reg. 5339
8 Gun Cabinet .... Sale
Reg. 5499
8 Gun Cabinet ....... Sale
Reg. 5629
10 Gun Cabinet.... Sale

s179
5254
5374
5471

'

�Thursday. June 16, 1988
11

Business Services
~AU

TO

AN AI) UU U t 21U
MONDAY ltwy FltlllT l l M. ' ' S PM

---. "'·----····
-·----.......
....
..
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-.............._. ·----·_··--....
I AM. Unlll NOON SATUIIOl'f
ClCSlO WHOAr

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....

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····~·~ ·~

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• ...
, .........•-ooo
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•
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IOMI

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I 00011 111

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'".
011111

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-·

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fo llow!AK l !!lep hc,u!!

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••u"'oe ,•,... "'""'o••
u''""D"'
l 0C 0 .. UUP&amp; O

... I D ~IIII &amp; OO&amp;O"l"

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···· ~
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-·

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CALL

__ _

·-..__-,_- ...
·-

B&amp;C DRILLING CO •

·-·__ _
70--···
n-_
-•-·
__ ...
··-·--·
l'f---·"·--

rl'l-•••-"..,_

Rt.

,

Call Collect (3041 372-4331

"~···­

Moat Wells Drilled In One Day.

....... _

Racme VIllag e
Board of Public Atfa1rs

~~ --··-

J&amp;L

INSULATION

Roger Hysell
Garage

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alu Transmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

lmm M0¥1!5 &amp; SUD!S to
VHS TAP!
let us c~v..-t those old Mowtts
&amp; Slides over to easy VHS.
Ull AMY CARTER
or BOB'S !l!CTRONICS
446 · 7390

FEATURING ·
Rtviera ,
Cabinets

GEARY
550 PAG! STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OPEN 8:30·6:00 P.M.
6288lmo

WANTED

168 North S.tond
Moddleporl, Ohoo 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

a.
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

We Carry F1sh1ng Supphe &amp;

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bolls Here

BUSINESS PHONr
(614) 992· 6550
1178/lln

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Doaler For

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway Between Rt 7&amp; Bashan

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Yardman
S.note On All Makes
We Honor MC/Dou/Vosa
4· 18· 88 tfn

NO PHONE CALLS -

JIM COBB CHEVROLET
POMEROY. OHIO

FUU TIME POSITION FOR REGISTERED MEDICAL
LABORATORY TECHNICIAN ON ROTATING SHIFTS
Requires independent worker woth capabilities in all areas of cllmcallaboratory Ex·
cellent fnnge benefits
Please Contact ·
Cecelia G . Lisle
Veterans Memonal Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

or Res. 949-2860

614-992 ·21 04
EOE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168
RIO

"'Free Estomatet ' •

•Makes Garden &amp;:• Yard
Care a Snap!

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

FOR MORE INFORMATION

PH. 949·2801

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

or Rn. 949-2860

742·2466

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3·ll·tfn

FILL DIRT

RUTLANO, OHIO
• 2 ,

v.w.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

TAYLORED TANS
That Fit Your Body

OWN!I: GREG I . ROUSH

FEATURING
SUNTANA
WOLFE SYSTEMS

"'~•

GENERAL

"..

CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

•
COMMERCIAl
-•CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS

135

-£)(T£NSIVE PIEMODEUNG

u~~~-~ 949-2414

•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOANO
·~UTAt.

~1\ Cf

ANGIE TAYLOR

1969

DUSIII' ST. SIIACUSI

992·,.11 or
992-7513

St.,

lacine
S·IZ-'88-1 mo

e,

•Oozor • Bock- Work
•Will Do Houlng With
Dump Truck
•Wreckor Borvlce
•Junk Yerd Bu1ln•••

PARTS
BEETLE-BUS
RABin
NEW AND USED

IUilDINOS

HOUSING. NT PROJECTS

OWNED &amp; OPERAT!O 1Y

I

PAm

742-2315
5·2· 11110

WANT TO IUY WIICIED o•
JUNI UIS
TIUCIS
-FilE llllMAm-

o•

:

z

-

Foronyof thoNsorYicoscol

614-742·2617
p.Jtt.
f!

3 ICtee af tt.y, Bidwell You cut.
bale, and takeiWiy Call 81~

388 9883

8wook oldkltteno. 4goldmeloo.
1 block rorrwlo. &amp;14-843-5445
Port ShWihold, p., CoRia clog.
115 monlha old. While lnd tan

Gentle wKh chllcnn 814-742
2863

Ev11~111ons For

All Aps

Licensed Clinlcaf Audiologist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
m Second Awnue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, OhiO 45631
or 11
Veterans Memorial Hospilll
Mulberry HJts, PORieroy,

Job hunting? Need • sktll? We
train people for jobs •• Auto
Mech•nlca. Carpenters. Electrl·
clans Food Service Workers
Electronics Techmdans lndu•
triel Melntenance Workers
Nurstng A11lstants ., d Orderhell, Machln11ts, and Welders
Register now for ciMIII beginntng Juty 5th. Cell Tri-County
vocattonll Adult Center at 614753-3511 etet 14 A variety of
fund1ng sources to PlY for
training are avellable for those

eligible
Be In demand

Food Service
workers make up one of the
largest and fMtelt growing
occupational groups in the labor
force Enr~l now for summer
quarter in the Adu tt Food
Management and Cetwtng Pro·
gram at The Aduh Educa11on
Center·-Trt-County Vocational
School We have a varurty of
funding source~ available for
thoee who quality Call 814753-3511 8kt 14

Federal, Stete, •ndCivil Service
Jobol18 OOQ.I79.150yr Now
htringl C•ll Job Cntr 1·819·
585-81513 ext J4710H 24 hrs
Free sign up with Awn Sell to
friends, relatives ore territory
Call814-992·7180
Frlendty Home P_,les has openings in thia area for menagers
and dealll'l Comminion up to
26 percent hlghert hosteaa
IINBrdl, no delivering or collect·
lng, no hendtlno or service
chll'ge. Over 800etynemlclteme
of toys. glfta. home deoor and
Chrlstmla decor. Former pany
plan deal~n·be awe ., d check
ourgre• programs c.ll forfr"

catolog 1-B00-227-1510

AVON • All are• Call Manlyn

5 Mlked breed puppi• to good
home, 8 weeks old Call 304675-8141

13041875 6236. EOE AAE

Rodnev erea

Public Sele
l!t. Auction

Rick PtlfiOn Auctione., II·
cenaH Ohio and West Virginia
E~tate, antique f•m. llquide·

9

Buy

Wanted To

We PIV CMhfor late model clean
used Clrt
Jim Mink Chw.-Oida Inc
Bill Gene Johnson

814-446-3872
TOP CASH poid Ia&lt; "83 model
and new'er used c.,. Smtth
Butck-Pontlac, 1911 E•stern
A"" Gelllpollo Call 814-4482282.
COmplete houMholdl of furnJ.
ture &amp; .ntiquM Also wood &amp;
001:1 hlltlfs Swain' 1 Furniture
&amp; AUCIIon Third llo Olive
Want to buyf Used furnhure .,d
antiquet. WIU buy entire hou~ehold furnishing Mlrltn w•._..

ml'/or, 814·2411152.
motoro Clll Lorry Uvefy-51+
Junk Can with or without
3B6-9303
Buying furniture and

Call

814-24 ~

for home HMmbly work Info

cell 504 8481700 dept
2303

P

Blbvaitting·Jim HUI Rd •r•
Wil pick up from school Call

304-875-8077 alter 8
Re•sonable rat•

PM

Now hiring demonstrttora·
Chriltmls Around The Workt·
receive weekly co rrrnlulon no
colecttng, delivery ntceive free
TV VCR or even trip to Hww•lt
Supervisor Pat Greettlee 304-

875-28B6

Immediate opening for a cabte
TV eervioe-wchanlcan in Ripley,
Raven1wood aree Sllarv com
men a urate with ex perienca Be·
nafha av•lable 1ftw probatkm
•rv period Willing to trlln proper
candid.ce. EOE Send resume to
attn ptant M.nag•. P 0 Bok
, 08. F\:tlnt ,. . . . n.. w Va
25660

12

Situations
Wanted

Will do odd jobs

•

9173
Ceder and tog home ••lor _
treatments. Tr~•eiii · Thompson ,,
Wlter 1881 or lln... d oil Expe- rlencad. Call we"dev• 1fter 4 -

PM 304-87!;.7162

Private home c•• and bo•rd tor
Seniors and h.,dlcapped Elem
Home 814-992-8873

rem""'l Clll Bill Slack. 514-

~=~ry. eoc Clll 814-992·

•r,u.,...

'{ ard

P"ICIO Caiii14-448·315B

S

to r S al&amp;-1 lf4 ac;raa 5
tnul fll hook up Ca ll 304- 3-

FinanCial
21

Business
Opportunity

Own your own apparel or shoe
store. choo.e from Jean / sportav.•. ladiM, men's chlldren l materntty large atzea petite, dancawear/ eerobic. bridll.
lingerte or ecce~aoriM store Add color anelyaia Brand
names Liz Clairborne. Health.o
twte, Chats, Lee. St Michele.
Fora-tza, Bugle Boy, Lavi, Camp
Beverly Hills, Org1nlcally
Grown, lucia. owr 2000others
Or S 13 99 one price designer. multi tier prrcmg dt~oount or
famify thoe store ReteH prlc• ,
unbtlllevable for top quality ."
ahoee no.,.lfy priced from a 19 •
to 880 over 260 brands 2800
stvl• 817,900 to 129 900
Inventory. trllntng ,fixtures atrf•e grand op.,lng etc Can
open 16 dav• Mr McComb

40+92+0010

..

1973 Champion, 14x70, to11!11
electnc underpennlngand hook
1986 14te70 Mob1le Home,
W'htrlpool washer &amp; dryer 304-

675 79BB
1986 mobile two me 14k60 total
electrtc, S13,500 or •11urne
loan, pey dttference Rt 1
Grueser Lane. Camp Conley, Pt
A
3 BR 66k1 2 stow and rBfr1ger
ator washer &amp; dryer C.ll

304-675-7519
1978 1 2x85 Governor. 2 beO.
room total electric. central air
fuly carpeted. 2 porch• Ekcel

cond Clll 304-882 2944

Farms for Sale

11 ecreferm tobaccoallo1ment
C1ty Vllllt&amp;r, trader hook-up 211.!
m1las Crab Ck Ad , W V•

$ 15.000 Coli 614-379-2221

Homes for Sele

Smal houae Gallipolis- One
bedroom plus l"l..rsery new :
wtndowa &amp; vinyl Siding, new g11
furnace&amp; central elrcond &amp;mel
lot Located 18 Mill Creek Drive
All lor 121.900 Drive by ll&gt;on
calt814-445-7037 to oea
Rench ll't'4e 3 BA • Hi b.e:ha,
dln1ng room, living room, 1 c•
gerage. 314 •ere lot V-v nice
slAJdtvilion Rio Gqnde ~ehool

~

Lots

l!t.

Acreage

rlnga.Jewelry, •erllnu w•e. old
colna, l•p ourrency Top prlEd lwk«t Barber Shop,

c•
2nd

Ave Mlddl.,on Oh 114-

992·3478

17th

antt.... -

O.lto
C.h plld for
qulta. Apolique,

condlclon. Coil 81

-lc

Good UIOd
992·7813

w.-..d

Mora•a Farm St Rt 7, 1 mile
from Five F\:tlnts June 13th-

wet.-.

eced any

992-8857 •
Call 814-

to buy, young while

hon ..,.,. Clll 11+
742-2813

1 1 0().7 00 Cloth In g.

boob, coats. jewelry. fiNikJ,

•""•

Moving Sale June 17th and
181h Down DlpotSI , Rutland,

ftrst

~gin

Carrol" o

June 17th. Sllem St . Rutlend.
W•t., dryw, motorcvcte. toy&amp;
bed •Piin,.. deek. clothes. ate
I 00.1 A•ln or lhlne

U.go Porch Solo. June 15 18
Three and one tantlw mile on It
111 143 off St AI 7

il!qdoyrllr:nl
Si:l vI 1.1::.

11 Help

Wanted

TourOUI...._MIIe6 female. Our
top PIOJtll ••n *800-*1200
por "'""· lei~ 10 owt plu1
oomnol-.. P I - -ldng
ooncltlone. A rellty fain pleo1 to

·······Gallipolis· ·······

for Rent

37 acres wrth tobacco basa
Ne• Crown C1ty L•nd contntct
conds1dered C•ll 814-256-

6406
Tobacco Base for Sel&amp;-858
lbs 26 cents per pound Green
townshtp. Gallte Co Oh1o Call

1 354-2547

d ..trict Call 614-445-2297

For Rent or Sal&amp;- 2 Mobile
Homes 3 bedroom. 2 bedroom,
1 garage building 4 miles south
of Rio Granda Call 814-574-

Aah1on. large building lot1,
mobtla homes permitted pubhc
W8ter, also river lots Clyde
Bowen, Jr 304-57S.2336

Government Homjtl from t1 lu
repair) Delinquent ete property
Rep0H1as1ons can aos 187eooo E11t, GH-9805 for current #
repo list

sttes near county weter, 200
yds off black top road even1ng1

For •le rantlll property, 3 uni'ts,
all preaentty rented Call 614- ~

Two bu1ld1ng lots with County
water on Jerry's R1.1n Road at
Apple Grove. W V• 304-578-

3 bedroom ,., ch· style. 1 89 t
Beech St , M1ddleport.

"

2 story-3 bedroom excellent
corw:lition Full b•ement Park
Orrve area Pt Plea W V

304-675-6633

9 acres wry pr1vete good houll

304-575-2349

2 room furni1hed apt, prfvata

44

bllh. Ulllltios pe•d 117 N 4th
Aw M•ddho•ort 1 -304-8B2·
2568

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR aptl 8 clotets, kitchenappl furr11hed Washer Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet newly
p•mted, deck Regency In c.
Apts Ca1130~875-5104, 875-

7613 ... 876-5386
New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobtle homa '"
city AduHs onty Parking Cell

614-446-0338
BEAUnFUL APARlMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jocks'"'

Pike from 11831 mo Walk to
shop and movies 8t4-446Brookside Apartment• located
off Bulavlle Rd - 1 BR specious
apartments Wtt h modern Ieitch en
and washer-dryer hookups c•
ble televiSion available. Call

61 4-446-21 27
Upsllltrs unfurnished apt Cer
p atBd utiltties .. ul. No children

One BR apt • 2nd floor fac1ng
P•k on Second Aw App AC
Mu cx.:cu~ncv 2 aclJtts t175a
mo plus utilttl• Refer It MC

dop required Clll 614-4462 325. 445-4249
Ulll~l-

pel d. 94 Loatol 1210
175 dep Call
614-446-1340 .. 446-3870
month

Houae 16n Uncoln He1W1ta. ..
F\:tmeroy Calltfter 4 30 'NIIk
dfrt'l, anylime weekends, 814- •

•

ByOwner-L.ovety •ndt Hweon •
20 •c. 2 c• u••ge. 2 stone
flrepl.:• Barn. 887,500 Pos- ..
albia owner finence Call 304- •
3 BR , 2 baths rancha...,e~u ..
H·~W
.,.
.rllUrd
v on 1%acrea
Total
llec A 1 condition 2 c•

~ro~• 037 900 C111304-BB2· .

Mter furniJhed No petl 8225

Homes for Rent

15 Family Yard S1le- 123 Park Dr
June 15. 18. 17 8 00 till 1 Clothing what nott. beby hema,
furnhurw

Gerogo Sol• 801 Joy Drive. Fri.
&amp; Sot I 00.8~0 llby !urniture, u• grit, girt. clothing, Me.

Yord &amp;ei•Buldono Add~lon
Juno 18 .,d 17. Rein ar Shine 9:00 til 1 Smell oppll......

Cantlin., Townhou•· 3 Fam-

aome entlqun, child .. ectrlc •
...I..

lly Wod .• -Thur 8 30-8 30 .
Lompo dlohoo. clothM bodo- .8 Fomlly Y•d llolo-"lhurodll'
pr•d. t.wn chitin
ond Frldt¥. All ,._ dothM• •
!urn11u... dryor. homo 1-'cu, •
worto.
nlll &amp; clopondobl1 ••Frillldlv.
liMo Nqu._,_,.,
Call ~·~~~~j"Oj~i;;;;;;;;j;A.;
Sei•10tl8 locond A,.
rnlac Onat.mhmlleoutAahton
1.. 14-286-8422. ook 1o&lt; Suo
ond frl 8·1
Uplond llood Conoollod H roln

2 BR &amp;also1 room efficiency all
ut1Utiel with c•ble paul Clll
after 8pm 814-448-8723

45

-.:::;

Un d &amp; rabJ 1h 1M tyP" Guar~~n­
tee 30 d., s m1mmum Prlc.
• 99 &amp; up Rabu lh torques
co nverted • • klw •
139
Standard clutehH pressure
plates &amp; throw-outbetrlngs All
types 12 mos werl'lnty. We buy
JUnk uensm11tfons Call 304-

--

Pets for Sale

1 BR apt niHtf'HMC 1 ackltt No

742-2421 ... 614-662-4403

pats Call 814-448 4782

2 b•droom hou• Fulty cer
peted, refrigerator ltow Lin
coin Hill, Pomeroy 1190 per
month 614-992-5272 before

apt with range.
refrig. c•pal, w &amp; d hook-up In
town 1190amo Clll814-446Ntct 1 BR

9510
Furnished apt UtHhM pa1d. Call

Two room cotlllge furnished,
utilities p11d 158 week Single

bot,.on 9&amp; B. 814-446-9244

Gr1ciou1 liv1ng 1 •nd 2 bedroom ep~rtments et Village
Manor and Riverside Apart
menu In Middlaport From

1182
EOH

Coot 614· B92 77B7

2

bedroom Apta for rent
Carpoted. Nice -In g. Lau Nlry

foclt"ios ovalloblo Clll 814992 3711 EOH

Mobile Homes
for Rent

614-446 0508
14x70 2 BR mobile home
Beeu tlfu I co u nlry shaded Mt

tlng Ct.., CA 1250 pluodop.
Call 814·381J.9835 01 3Bfl.
9B62
2 &amp; 3 BR All utNiliea paid eccept
electrk:ity Conwnient loCIICion

446-

2 BR Un!umlohodprlvoooi ... RO
588 All electric with air condi·
tionlng Aduha ontv Call 814-

1 bedroom furnished effectency
apt 1 ur:-talrs •pt wtth 2
bedrooms Kitchen furnished E
Main Pomeroy 81~992·8216

"'814-992-3823

sc1nner w / weather also mobile
antenna cig lighter plug Cell
304-875-2823 efter 5 PM

53

Call814-446·6384

1956 W1lleya wagon Good
cond Clll aft ow 6 PM·814 446

AKC Reg Gorman Shopl!erd
puppleo 1150 Clll 014 245
6126 "' 246-6544

Buv or SeU Riverine
1 124 E Main Street
Hours M,T,W 10. m
SundiV 1 to 8p m

Happy Jack Flea Trap Control
fl•• In your home without
pesticides or ektermln~tora R&amp;•uhs overnight Mon"Y back
gu•rantee R &amp;G Feed&amp;Supply,
399 W M•in St . Pomeroy

9348

2526

Antiques,
Pomeroy

to 8p m ,
814-992·

Misc. Merchandise

2582

9 weeM old' Beagle PliPI

Routa 33 North of Pomerov
Rental tretlers C.ll 614-992

2B54

BIQ 5 BR

Coli 1·81 4-886-7311

AC OC 1600 Clll 814 448
0247
Falcon Cr1dleSnatcherWracker

bad. good cond. $15150 1987

Chevette, &amp;,000 mil• dam-

814-367 7123

wide Coli 814-448-189B

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Olive St , Gallipolis
NEW- 8 pc wood group- t 399
Living room suites- 1199-t699
Bunk beda whh beddtng- S 199
Full size mlttrea &amp; foundetton
starting · 199 Recltners
stllrttng· 199
USE[). Beds dr•llrs bedroom
1u1t11 •199 t299 Oelks.
wringer washer, a complete hne
of uaed furniture
NEW Wnwrn boots t 30
Workboots 118 &amp; up 1Steet &amp;

salt loe) Call 614-446 3169

County Appliance. Inc Good
used appHencea and TV aets
Open lAM to 8PM Mon 1hru

Wnhers, dryers refrlg.,.tors,
ranges Skaggs Appltences.
Upper River Rd betide Stone
CrHt Motel 81 ... 448-7398

LAYNE "S FURNITURE
Sofia and chairs priced from

$395 to t9915 Tabl• t50 and
up to $126 Hide-a bodo 0390
to 1191 Aecllnet'l U21 to
0375 Lompo 028 to 11 28
Din.,... t109 and up to •495
Wood table w-8 chlirs t28&amp; to
to

1376

Hutch• t400 and up Bunk
beda complete w-mattres181
t296endupto1395 Bll'fbeds
t1 10 M•nrea111 orboxspr1ngs
fuH or twin t88, firm 178 and
188 Queen sets 1226. King
1350 4 driWir chfllt •es Gun
caiMneta &amp;gun BlbV mattrea...
035 a. 0 45 Bod lltom• I 20.

030

a.

Kimball Arltst Console Pieno tor
I Ia. Like nB'N Call 614-742-

King lltome 050 Good

"lectlon of be*oom tuhea ,
m . .l Clblnltl, headboards t30
end up to tl5
90 O.ya •me n c•h with
appi'O\IIId credit 3 Miles ou1
Bulwl"• Rd Open 9em to 5pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 814·448·

0322
Velley Furnilul'l
New and uMd furniture and
applicencea Cell 814 - 448~

9 92·8724 Alt01 8pm or 992
5119
ap~rtrTWnta

IVIIIblo. UIINtlll peld. 12211.

pormonth.dopooltoeqund Clll
514-912-5724 altor 8:00 or
992 8119

2 be*oom apta Mlddaport

t18S..t185 per month 2 ancl4
bedroom hou•• II\ Pameroy

J llo 8 RIRNITURE

3 yr old Reg Ou•rter hor•
Mere Good blood line Call
81 ... 446-7621

6 vr old Double Reg11•red
TenneaiM Welldng Hortt mare

Phone 614-742-2339 0700

•I•

Palomino gelding hofll for
G1ited, 11
old, 'Netl broke

ve••
Coll614-742· 2234

Plgs•nd Ponysfor•le. All sizes

Call 304-875-2038

64

Hay

l!t.

King size etr bed Thidt padded
rails. 8 drawer pldeltll 3 M11
....... 1250 Call 81 • · 949·

2969

2wood lathes. 2 float model drill
pres111 .,.u deep freeze Clll

Good olean h&amp;¥. •1 25 on

Oat HI'/· $1 28 a bolo In .eld.
Call 304-576-2107 "' 5762017
Hoy 800 boloo Alloll" 1500
bel• grtu •nd LHpedeu Call

H8V for S .. a. t1 per bale. Cell
304-458-1947

Jeff Wamsi"Y 1n11ructor, 814441-B077. wmm• operungs

For •le. STRAWBERRIES Frae

bo•o lor oiclclng TAVLOR"S

SEA RY PAtCH .Cerr Rd Mon·
dav lhru Saturday, 8AM-8PM

Coli 614-446-B892 or 814246-517B
Qllllburn'• Farm Mil" kit Ia now
open forthea ... on Located SR
1 eo near Porter c.u 814-388·

9027

~t1r111

&amp;

Suwpl1es

LIVP.,Iock

City irl·•xle dump trail• 32ft
box Call 614·44~9379

Farm Equipment

politan cloohlng Polhlcol. bu o~
n ....dvertiaingendapecialtl•.

Nowlty T·shirts, CIIJI, whol•
Hl1, •nd retail Stm Somervillels R1 21 R.,•nsvwood,
Fri, Sat Sun Noon·l OOPM
Coli 304-273-5885
Wesher .. d dryer , 1100 Wood
burner Phone 30._458· 1 B21
10 HPriding la¥nmov.er. Etecel

coNI Cell 304-875-2834
Electrtc typewriter tel. Console G E colored TV. workl

good 075 Call 304-,75 4038
lrlgga • Stratton 3.1 HP
rota-tiller 1919 Ford tvvo door
custom 500 w 302 eng Call

30+875-3084
New Elite Salon ntrelte bed.
e"ceHent opportunity T•ke o\181'
1.... low payment• Call 304773-6888 or 48 .. 4911

4•B It utHity •Ill• Clll 304875-2159
Poi'Uible lighted ·~" / let11rl,

0299 Free delivery WV 1·800.
842 2434. Ohio 1 ·800.833-

1810 Oliwr di-1 trwctor Big
lnterrwtlonal round bll• 9 ft
hov bind. Big 898 Model J o
ralke. 81350 Ownar will fl·
nance Call 114-28&amp;-8&amp;22
AC 01• tt'lctor Sharp with
moVIIIing machine Nika, baler
plows cu Hivator. • 3800
Orw ..r wdl finance C.ll 814-

286-8522
BOO Ford ,,... ., wHh mowing
mechine. "'Ike. NH beler, plow1.

cultivator. menure spreader,
buah hog. 14810 OwMr will
11 ..nco. Coli 814-285-8822

we model AC 190 •ri•·3
tl'letor whh plows. t ..naport
cH.c. t2400 lnternatlo,.l round
bel•. 011110 Ow- wll ft.

n.. --

Call"!•
v ,.. 28"8522
v1 OHP MaaiiiV Ferguaon Garden
Tractor V•iabl• drhle mGY~~tr.
dolltt' blade. aide moWII'. many

receipts. many extfa p•rt• new
~..-y. 1972 Op•l engine
1971 body hawe both tftl•
12500 Firm See at 2212
Madlo•n Awe Pt Ple. .nt

up and delivery. O.Vis V•a~urn
Cle•ner. one halt mile up
Georges Creek Ad C.ll 814-

197001dl

614· 992·

a. •• 88. S300 Call

304-875-3542

814-246-5097 oft• 6 PM
1981 Dodge Arioo

PS. PB

AM· FM-Call 11800 Call 61 ._

446-9700
Nta•n l o.taun 1982. 280 ZX
2+2 Sllortac• 5 1pd T topa

looded. V.-y good cand 05200
Cell 814-446-7438

1985 ford Eocort. 4 lod .
,.,..,. ·~99 1984 Ford Eo·
cort StatkJn W190n. -..to • ste-

446-0294
Concrete 5tp110 Tenka - 1000

gti 1800 gel ond.tot AerOIIon

ohop RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES Jockoon. Ohio 1-80().
537-9628

Trudcs for Sale

1979 GMC truCk. 427 ongiM
1 :JIJ ft dump. 81r brak • · 4 beg

~

1982 Dodge R1m 1/J ton 8 cyl .

4 opd. too&gt;por. oO. 03000 Coli
514-367-7471

1 980 Nlaam DataOf'l truck with
tOPPI! 5 spnd. grelt condt10n

&amp; E Xllrior
Cllll 814-441-

B344

0850

19B2Cam•oZ28 8800moloo

T-top, , . , tireJ PAlIt

•e

to

op,..dlll Clll814-387· 0594
1887 Ford Tempo P., balance

due Cell 514-445-8199
1971 Ford Mllf'Ctlry ~qUia
AC. PS. P8 83,000 orgonol

Cell 814-543-

1977 Fl,.bild- 16150 Call 304896-3002
AM conVIr1ible. AM FM· C.aa
•llrior • lnt•tor ekceHent

cond Low mlle~go. Clll 81 +
446-1980 olter 5 PM. or 4467572.
1971 C.m1r0, brown

1988 M.....,g. 0300080 Clll
814-446-B2150
1987 Buiclc LoSabre Umltod· 4
dr Sedan, ful ~.cru .... tilt.
air ,.., wintDw defogg•. AMFM·Call rodlo 20.000 mil•
V.-y cl- Alldng 012.100
Colli 814-448-1119.

1111•. 11100 Cell 814-U&amp;1112
Rod Hot bolvolnol Drug ........

oera. boatt. plan• fiPO'd Sur·
plu1 Your Area luyw. Guide.
(11106-817-1000 Eltt 8·9801

1113 Oldlmoblo 1111.,111' 18
lour ...... LoiNiod. "Coil 8 , ...
247·2402.
1979 Cordobo 11200. Clood
oondltlon Altr oondltlonlng. Call
114-Ha-2384.
1117 Mu-g. t oyl • IUIO.
10,000 mil• Good co-n.
12000. Aloe - o d 1179

Dodae Clo- lletoult motor
•400. CIII114-H2-7101

remO\el Call 304-876-1331

1972 Ford 4•4 Good running
condition. n.- ...... bM:teryand

73 Vans l!t. 4 W . D .
---------1987Ford 1 ISO Con"'rsionVan
14.000 mil• l0111dad t1le,
crutll, power wfndowt &amp; locks,
AM ~FM - Cau 351-HP engine,
clJ8I tMks R• lt8ela le.th•
Interior Cell 814-258-8327.
8-5 Mon Frl

Plymouth 1988 Vo,ogor LE
Mlnlvln Ewrv tvalllble option
32.000 ml Excellent concftlon

Gerogoct Shorpl .. o.8oo Call
•1+448-7438

74

-----·-·
ondJIIIII.GII•,-.zNatto.--or.. d l h -

11104 Ceiii14-MI-3041

896-3802

Starkslawn•ndShr~

Service.

304-876-3955 .. 304-8762903
Mlch1181'1 Reeidentlal air co .....
t10n and rlfriQ..atlon. ,.ch. . .
and reptlr eervlce. Leon. W V1

304-456-17 85
Tree trimming and stump .-no-

val. lrH • 1 - •. 304-1787121
RON"S APPUANCE SERVICE
hou• cllll erarvtcing GE Hot
Pomt w•at.rs. dr,...s •n d

...... 304-876-2398.

Ekr-lencedpainter intW6orMd
•ter1or FrH Mtir'Mtlll T•turIng cetltng Th•o IHI bile-

monO&amp; Clll 304-875-4301 or
oltor 6 PM 8711-7413

Juno lftd July pointing lnoldo
and out Roof repairs, plumbing,
c•penter work. nil• .-lntlna.
cl.-ntng, und•plnnklg. t3.&amp;0
por hf Coli 304-1711-8709

Motorcycles

•

82

Plumbing
Haating

l!t.
Harley Davidson 1980 Low
Rider, 80 cl., bl~ek. 8800 org~

ml Loooloor bogo Very Shlfpl
047150 CIIII14-446-743B

CARTER"$ PLU~81NO
AND HEATING

1971 Herley Oevidton Super

Cor Fourth •nd Pine
G•lliDOIIa. Ohio
"-ol'llt 8tlr441-3888 or 814-

Glide CIIICieryHood.814-446391Q-Ooy 446-7786 altor 6
PM
19B4 Hondo VT 1100 Aocot
Eoocol. coNI 01280 Firm 2100
mH11. Cell 814-311-8801

4.a.4477

84
l!t.

Electrical
Refrigeration

1Bti8Honde700Shodow 3200
mil•· &amp;eel cond Gar•gtd
k-sn Chrome gee twtk Call

814-446-2478
1984 K-ooicl KK 80 Very

good cond
~keto

New chain &amp;

1121 Call 814-446-

Rt 38 CycloSel• Speclllilllng
Honda. Sur. KIZ . Y1m1h1

P..t•llnlice-Repelrs. We buy

'"" .,d troole UIOd ~~~~- 30+
1711-4130
K8wa•W toO, rMnV U IN I ,

304-871-3247
1112 Hondl Into..- Goldw·
lng '"dlo • C I •1011
30+171-8017 oltel 8 p.m

of...,...,.

1180 Hondl cuotom 900 with
eat•a N101 nOOO CIH 3041711-40118
1 979 Hondo Troll 9U. Iow mloo.
Ill• nM • 3811. Coli 304-87111731
1911 Honcl.l 4 whMI• 210 R
,..,_ oond. 11100. Caii304179·Uia.

715

Boatl end
Motors for Sale

2a II lll'ln• . , _ ltH
wldo-- .. --goloy,

-•oiiOV·Iong..

. . _ • • """ low ho....
117.1100. Caii304-7Z7·1110

'

AnM:Ient1el or commerclll wir·
•ng New ~CI or repatta
Ucenllld elactridan Estimate
free. Ridenour Ehtcttk:al 30 ...
876·1718

86

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service Paola.
Cisterns w•l• OeUv•v Arty-

Call a1 4-448- 7404-No
Sundl'/ cello

limo

J a. J

w- S.vloa Swimming

pools. ci111rna.

1177 f ...... 111 ..... good.

liDO.
, ••
380
- ""
·· Hondo
,...
loll

2454

Aotlry or ceble tool drtlllng.
Moat'MIIscompletedaamed.t.
Pump Mt• end service. 304-

Good

ccnd 1800 Call 514-248·
8171

304-676-239B .. 814, 448·

1977 Ford. 4x4 l,4 ton. 4 speed
trens 480 cubic lnd'l engine
new 8 ply tires VetY good
condition 81 ~949-2237

1980 OMC +53T Oat roil 0••
eel, Allioon AUiomoOic. 20 II
box Good condh.on U&amp;OO
304-BU-3480

1978 Mellbu
Colli 814-245-5B32

RON'S Television Service
Hou• calls on RCA. Ou•ar,
GE Specrallng In Zanltti Clll

Fetty TrM Trimming. •ump

1981 Chwrolet Blacll;'re 2 dr
11000. 1982 Z-28, low m1l81

0800

&amp;~tlnwttl

304-6711-5533

duel"'""" .. Alldng 0800 Call
814-992 5505 "' 51 4-992·
5778

mlloo
0101

~tertor

P'lintmg

514-256-1451

roo 02899 Car coddy. 012150
John' 1 Auto Sel-. Rt 7 below
HoUd.,·lnn, K.n-.•

o-.

aee

SWEEPER and sewing machine

1978 Chevy 14 ton Utllttybed

1171 Monte Carlo, auto
Moving-Mull 0111. lluM llo looltl

"Still 'em till It's dark 10 1~ can't
the dent 1put on thalr car."

1-814-237-0488. dey or night

304-878· 8999
7881

0600 Cell 814-246-5584

won 1poe1tn Cell &amp;14-3861248

onlngo 114-192 8721

UnoondiUonet IHclme guaranhte. Local l'lf.,..c. fumilhed.
Free ntlm.tn Call colect

repatr parts •nd suppli• Pick

Maple dmtne set, $600 Call

PS. Pl. nM point job. Eoocoi

"'"o 0200. 0221por month AI l":.:"":.:.:..:.30.:.+.:...:.8.:.711-.:...:.1.;.4.:.150
.:.·_ __

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

1977 ott• cuot.... st...p.
11100 Sooell~o dish. 17150

Don't rNaa tHa one-1980Tutbo
Trens AM EIICIII cond Fully
loaded T·topl louVIfs Call

oond 12700 Tecllni• oompi,..I!O . .
4woyl&lt;280

3bedroommoblahomefor •nt parttv furNMad Raf.ence re
1 'It blth, nice Nice neighbor* qulrod. O.V 814 982· 2381 .,.

Home
Improvements

RogersB•••ment
Waterproofing.

11ir 1ft ule. 80% rlA:lb• Call

1eao Camaro 310, atto. AC.

Dinattes beds , bedding. ·
«•ears. ch•t. couch" chlllrs.
IM'Ipe, cofiN-and •bl• Every
dl'f Spllcllla "h mile out Jerri·

81

30+773-8038

•c.
Colt814-387 7B91

1978 ChtiVrolot plct up tnock.
0800 1172 Plymouth Ou-.
Whllo"oTrocun.28to180HP. ~~~- lnoldo a. out. 35.200
ablatu• dMin ooat plue I per mH-. 11000 Call 814-258c.nt eom.-reourprk:llbefore -4240
you buy, Sidon i!Qu.,._~
Hondoroon. w Yo. ~04-8711- 1973 O.ovrolot. outo. olr.

PICKENS
FURNITURE

Serv 1ces

Free

htrlo 814-742 2372.

Beattie

1 979 Dodge Holld.., motor·
home, 25 rr Haa eYWY1hlng
Low m1leage. Price reduced for
quick sale Csll 1-304-8752315

engln• &amp; Clf'b rebuHt . h•e all

72

Call 814-448-2148
tho Firm
PM
I1-~3=4=8=3========i:';:42:1::::::::::::::::~ - -k.In
0200

SNAFU® by B,.r.e

altar 6 p m 01 4-B43-5240

Camero 3150ongino. good body.

Auto's For Sele

17000

Meuey Fergueon NWI Hollend.
Buah Hog Sal•&amp; Service. Over
.tO l.Ud tract ora to chooee from
&amp; compllltll line of new &amp; u•d
equipment L11"0111 •lection In
s E Oh1o

1973 Pro-.4er 23 rr travel
trail« Full length ewe fret
awrwng. fulty •If oont81necl Clll

lood Call 1· BDQ.Ii37-9528

68

Fruit
Vegetables

446-4989

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES·

1973 Nova. Custom pelnl. 350
.,glne. a~ to , shift kft. heedws.
lots of cttrome.
•taOOFirm

l!t.

Slide-In truck Clmper A-1 cond
Uke new For infor. call 814-

1978 Dodge v., 311i ~ ton
new pe1nt $1296 1980
runa good, new 'dNI $2460
1986 Big Red 3 wheel• low
mil•, good shape 1900 C1ll
oft., 5pm, 304-875-2929

Coli 514-446-

SeptiC tank pumping- 190

71

CAOSS&amp;SONS
U S 35 W"t Jackson. Ohio
814-286-1461

flage gNen, biiiCk white Metro-

AM FM

........ 19,500 Clll304-6755995 ·

Tr ansportalion

Melodlca 136 Cell 304-8753542

61

SURPLUS. DENIM. ARMY.
RENTAL CLOTIIINO Camou·

Good condtt lon

ado $2600
1638

ay. .m Factory tntlned r•lr

Omnlchord, new $160 Ham·
monel organ w l l•lie •soo

New Elhe Slllon &amp;clfCiae Bed
EttCellent opportunity Take over
lease low paym""t' 30~773-

Clll30+675-2178

13.300 miles

cardlo Muoic. 614-448 06B7

Motorized Wheel Chair Coli
over •1100 niW, will aetl for
SBOO. H11 lesa then I mil•
B14-992-7479

7 grave lots Su ncrnt Cemetery

Colabr~y

1988Nta•n Pul•r NX. black. 6
speed. Take over .-vmenta Call

Grain

Individual guhlr l•sons. beginners, •riouaguit8rlat Bruni

614-992 8229olter 5:00

58B8"' 30+•6+4911

1987

19n Nomad camPif 19'h ft ..
selt-con111ned air awning, dull

1972 Opol GT. 213 roalorod.

2773

1418 E11tern Ave
4 drawer ohll1. 148 5 drawer
ch.,. f54 95 8 pc: wooden
dlnMtta nta. *119 15

0 E Huvy duty WOihor
mlnlwnh 0371 Whirlpool
hnvy duty dryor 078. CIH
58158
t bedroom oponmont In Mlddl• I-"-'+
+_44_&amp;-_o_•_••_o~~er
__5..:""'--Syrac:u• •110 permonth_ph.tl pon 1110 '"' month oluo
u,.Hioo. a1+192-8141 or 1114- 2 cln- - · l.,po. llo oth•
utiltl• dopoolt Colll14-992· 948·2211
rurn11uro eon 814·445-alll
8 732 ltll• 5 00
aft• 4 PM
2 bedrooms Rentlncludeacable
2 - - · rurnlohod (wlohor.
CORBIN a. 8NYDER
dryor. olrl 0210. por montl1 pluo TV. ,.,d molntononoo. laondoy
FURNITURE CO
Ullllll• Mid 0100 dopooll lociNioo. tnooh oo-lon. Ill•
pho ... oqulpood _.._ ·
981S.cond Aw
814-9927479
lng utlhlll 1114-112·18•
llalllpollo. Ohlo-114-446-1171
UlOid ool• ond all""
2bedroom mobile home Mlddl•
port. Ohio. rat.-noe .nd IIGir- 2 bedroom • - 1148
lllgto pol- DOl you down?
Ky dopoell .-quiNd. 304-112· month pluo utlllllll. dopooll
814·192-8732 ollor l :ao a..- uo 0t11 for Low l'rl- a.
3 287"' 304-773-1024
Awlloble.,d.ol mllllth.
O.lllty 1'\ornlt,.. • C..plll E.Z
wNh opp..-d oroclt
3 BA t•ll•. 1200. per mllllth. 2
Ma11o1Mon Furnltu1W·I1 +448·
BR ''""•· 11aa,., momh Call
7444
30 .... 76-40118

1982 Chtwl'ttl, 2 door. stick.

good "'"" 304-876-3640

304-575-2028

J C Penney Smith Corona
electric cattlage typewriter.

Porch ownlngs~Alumlnum ·
front·24 1h fHt wtde 2 sld•8 f1

Household Goods

1795 Oook 1100 up

Musical
Instruments

175 Cell 814 445-8250

Merchandise

86 Oldsmobile, 1 owner

wogon. 304-875-5579

Gntvaly 10 ph.Ja some equipment Dune buggy-Will-v• Convarttbla. wood splitter Cell

Bunk beds-good cond I 76
Shlk•pe8111 elac hoNing motor 1 5 It 1hrust with se .... Ole
Hard Marine bettery Sa cue C.ll

51

Clll 304-675-330B

57

Trail• spec• for rent Locust
Road. Route One. 304-8761076
for rent in town

14.000 mRoo 304-876-8719

While Eak1mo Spitz pupptes

Oekota f•m home

4861

63

ltud

b.utt on vour tot *31 996 &amp; up

1 9n Corwtte NIIW ortgtnal
motar, full opttan c• needs
paint and c•pet C•ll 814-2471 982 FordEscortstatloniAI8gon
PI pb good cond $1800
304-876-2967 after 6 p m

Uvestodc

Motors
Homes
l!t. Campers

Auto's For Sele

grader blade. tumlng
plow. end potato plow 12.300

304-8B2·2BB8

304-875-3073

apace~

1 2 HP Economy ••ctor. 48 in

mo~r.

AKC Registered Pomeranian for
llrvtce. C•ll 304-8758393 after 6 PM

ogod buo...,oiroblo 11175 Call
614-285-8622

Water Included Call 30+8783783altor 5 PM

typo Good '"""" 1275 Cell
304-458·1691

Industrial HydriUiic Auger drill
mounted on truck Will trade for
good wale&lt; -'1 oig Clll 814-

Hoban elect:nc welder whh tlg,

Trailer

Dnlg

992·7008 or 814-992·8349

Space for smell tl"'llen All
hook upa Cable Alsoeff1ciency
rooms, atr •nd c•ble Maon.
Sp.aclous mobile home lots for
rent F•mily Pnde Mobile Home
Park. Gatlipolis Ferry W Va

King cun.r brulh hog

Rogero Moblltv coiloct. 1-814·
670.9801

61 +448 8752 or 992 30 34

Va Call 30+ 773-6861

71

Farm Equipment

Billy Ro.,el Show .. ddle 8 yr
old Sorrwl Mare 2 registered
Ye..tlng COtta 1 Filii\' Pure
bred Border Collte puppill Cell

7479

W

61

H•d
shots •nd warmed •35 814-

886 7311

wheels (Ford

•tMo.••u ""'

~~~~~~~;;;~~;;~~~~~;;~~ 79

Purabred white Ger.-n Shepherd pupt 8 weeks old 2
males 1 femala 814· 992·

Wheelch•ra·new ar ueed 3
wheeled eleceric ecootera Call

Store corner of Second &amp; Ane
1 400 sq tt Off street ,.rldng
t 350 • mo plus utlittM Call
614-448-2325, 44~4249

~

Coli 304-875-44 35 olter 5 PM

Rooms for l'lnt-week ar month
Starting 1!11: 1120 a mo Gellra

s~e

8 lug white

lj.

t&gt;uck) Asking 1395 Call 814245-9887

AOBA Reg Pit Bull pups $50

7572 lloun 9 5

Ap•rtment for rent 1225 a
month Dapo•t required. 814-

Newtv red100181ed

P'OQ

Call814·256-8251

Space for Rent

4 LT 235/ 88R· 15E rodlel tlroo

{

Happy Jack Flee Trap Control
fl- m your home wtthout
pastlcld• or e~~:termtnators Resuhs overmght Money b1clc
guar•ntae Bi!Mell Cuh Feed/ J
0 North Produce

bllh Call448-4418alt..-7 PM

46

876 4230 ... 614-379-2220

Groom •nd Supply Shop--Pit
Groomtng All breeds All
styles lams Pat Food Dealer

pupplao
Homall'/on alter
kh·
tono
Clll New
61+445-3B44
7PM

Equipment

Auto Parts
Accessories

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·

594-357B

AKC Reg1atered Golden Re
triever pupptM 6 weeks old
Have heel all shots 304-882

GOOD USED APPliANCES

2 story 3 bedroom Depot St .
Rutland, Oh1o No pets 614-

01

l!t.

and Beveled L.., Siding
• Deck Materltll
Guaranteed Quality
CETIOE, INC
Athens-614·

Callehan's Used Tire Shop Over
1 OOOttrllll su:e1112 13,14 15
16 18 5 8 mil• outRt 218

room 919 Seoond
11 26 a mo
Utllhl• ~ld Singlem•le Sh•e

Gallipolis

3 rooms 6 blfth furntshed All
Utllittea pelcl. Nice Clo• to
downtown 1220 111 mo Call

Oopooh oequilod Call 814 4464345

Call 81 +446-8118
4006

76

• Channel Aul1ic

Dr•gonwynd C.ttery Kennel
CFA Hlmelayan, Par•lan and
Siam8111 kittens AKC Chow

Clll 304-875-4485 lor

lnforYNt iOn

WESTERN REO CEDAR

Furntthed

Ave

Sat 814-446·1899. 527 3rd
AYO Gollipollo OH

Oop &amp; ref Clll614-446-2543

600

CB,TV, Radio

Furnished Rooms

Adu~oonly Call614 448-4807
or 614-446 2502

One BR unfurnished apt NI!IW'
c•plt Range &amp; refrtg fu,..
ntshed Weter &amp; garbage peul.

hood In Mlddlaport 814-992·

&amp; Vicinity
........ .................. .... ·-

Call &amp;14-U&amp;-8038

Unfurnished- 6 room hou• 1Vt
balh gas furnace. storm wmdows, g . .ge. aduha No pets

446-4507 .. 81+44&amp;-2102

.

&amp;

pels Caii614-446-033B

Mobile Homes for Rent Cell

P1"Praasani······ •

so-

614-446-7516"' 446-6B98

42

4 Famrty-Sat ooly Honey1uckle
H1ll1 IPt• Ouldrens clot .. ng, •
furniture &amp; much more

Rolrlg

Shady Lewn Apta Furnished 3
rooms &amp; beth Pr...,.te &amp; quiet

Small 2 bedroom hou• with
basement 8t gar~ge , unfurnished N1ceyard 1 child 6260

Apostollo Daurch Verd Sal•
Clay town house Fn - 9-5 S•t • •
9 1 Jeans appll•nces mise

or 448·4927

Gtlllpollo

Call 304-676 3100 or
304-675-6509

Yard Sal., Friday, June 17th at •
709 Th1rd A.,. From 9 to 4 •
Cabbage Petch toys. clothes end
mise

remodalod Cell 614-445-B519

LOTS. one acre, level wooded.
ctty weter, Jencho Road, owner
ftnanong, good terms. 304-

,_.on

Church Benefit Garage Sal•
Debby Orrve June 18-18 9·5
ReuoMble prtces Mtscellaneous clothing 81 00 b•g

1519

Nice 2 BR •pt 4'h mtiM from

Ntcelv turrished small houll
Adults onty Ref required No

Schoola Call 814-992 6363

Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean No pets Ref &amp; deposit
reqUired Utilities furn11hld.
Adu Its only Call 614-448

304-675-23311

41

Specious 3 bedroom two story
home on S1 At 33 Lots of
dol8t space n8'N furnece end
heat pump, close to Meigs

52

54

Golllpolio $175 UIIHioa peld.

9575

Ren Ials

Used Whtrpool w•sher •nd

d"'"r Call 304-875-79BB

2441

Cell 448·441 8 •f1er 7 PM

Baa~tlful rtver lots one acre plus,
public water. Clyde Bowen Jr

1816) B22· 2770. E•t 675

''

ret Coli 61 4-446·49 2B

Rio Grande ltl'el·2 BR apart·
m.,ts for •nt Call 61~245-

"9

·· ····· · ·· · ··· -~- --···-~---~······

1 1 Court St -2 BR, 2 baths
ldhchen furn11hed, w / w c•pet
No pets Off ttreet parking.
S 325 a m o J)tu• llt;11itiM: Dep &amp;

23B3

Governmftnt tl!lized homes fr.om
81 00 you 18palr Also proper-.
tl• for back taxes For complete :
details end torecloswe list csll ..

&amp; Vicinity

Apt Convan1.,tty located 3
rooms furnished C•ll 304-675-

CO lJIITRY MOBILE Home Park.

ploto kitchen AC. carPal Clll
814-445-0139

per

2 bedroom furn~shed apt New
Haven ref•ence and 18curtty
depoSit requtred 304-882·
3267or 304-773-5024

Hooel-61 +446-95BO

1 BR upstairs furnished. new tv

372-6405 .. 372-2576

986-4103

ill 614-446-B221

Furnished effloency 701 4th.

446-140B

liB 500 Call 814-992-2B08

APARTMENTS mobile homes.
houaea Pt PleuanundGatltpo-

6718

Furrnhed upnalrs 3 room apt

1 acre and up building loti •nd
modular home atte• Tuppers
Platnt Chestet' weter. rCNtdw•v
to each kJt. 81~985-3694

For Sale by 0w1Wt'·1985 Ma·
rllltte Modular Home,IOte28 AD
elec . CA. 3 BR • 2 batlw, great
room, drning room To many
e~~t,.. to ll•l
Must see to
appncate 145,000 Call 814-

hro

Juho Webb Ph 814-446-0231

Cob'" SR·900 16 Ch

for Rent

Dowmown Modern1 BA , com

40 acres- 2 mobile homes
Raccoon Ad 1000 ft frontage.
S 38,000 negotiable Call 3045 22· 7279

Electrtc drver·l1ke n4PN ISO 00

Clll 30+ 77 3-5944

~:;;:::;:;;::;:::~~====-r.:;::::;::::;::::::::::-1
I
42 Mobile Homes
44 Apartment

2568 Eo H

Rei &amp; dop Clll304-875-2651

9uylnv doily gold. oliver colno.

' .•
"I don't suppose you have a
NO TIPPING section?"

up 304-578-2383

33

1 985 Rinker 17 1-0 1 20 HP,
fulty equipped 1811 than 100

Gtlllpollo. Oh io Colli 614 448
27B3 .

56

good condition 190 Clll 30+
875-1988

1970 Skylina. 12k60, 3 bedrooms atr conditiOner Good
condltton Call 614-949 3090
or 814-247 3644

35

lei

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

2660

Boats and
Motors for Sale

St•rcrtft 17' ap., Bow Au,..
bout w / ttall flf &amp; llk tr. . 1115 HP
M .,cury 08 Fes t. 119715 CaU
6 1 4-44&amp;7438

Concrete blocks- 111 . . .. yt~rd
ordeltvery M•onaand Gel llpolls Block Co , 1231/r Pine S1

Admtt"'l Wsher and Dryer, heavy
duty Used 1 year New 1950
w1ll •ke 8450 Call 614-742-

No.,.., Call 814-448-1637

Real Eslate
31

Uncoln Plk•514-446-315B

Good co ndit•on Call 614-367·

Cue 5808 backhoe end loader
941 Cat track loader Ch811rolet:
C66 c'a.lmp 12 ton Low Boy •
trail• Call 304-458-1642

75

Wright

Mater!••
Block brick sewer ,Mp81, wtDdowa. lintels. etc Cl..,de Wfn..... Rio Gr.,_de 0 Call 814245-5121

All 140 814-992-3079

Mobile Homes
for Sale

7420

do buaineea with people you
know, and NOT to •nd moMY
through the m1ll untl you hwe ·
..,
lnvestlglltad the offering

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Building Supplies

8~1ding

Double meal bed whh box
springs 1nd men,.aa Good
condition Ornnr with mirror

1981 so.1o Schu~z 2 OR
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO recommends lh• you

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

14 cu f1 Admtral refrlgertltor In

61+445- 1245"' 44&amp;-2300

B

·······po·merov···········

•

4 bedroom rendt atyte total

Homn Call 814-448·0175
condition. Top cooh poid Call
814-2411-9412

SMOKING

3 bedr ooms 2 baths brick
nome. McNall Ave Pt Pit
Pm:ed o n Inspect ion Cell 3046 75-5870 or 576-2463

32

55

Compl.te line of u.-d furniture·
Sof• ..arting a t •24 95 &amp; up
Twin beds with mettreu
149 95 Dryers *75 &amp; up
VIRA•S FURNITURE
Rt 141 Cen..nry -•,-. mile on

NO

5 30 PM

Mobile
to G•llipolts
&amp;
DamHome
on eta•
old Rt
7 0111

Wari"ted To Buy-Uaed Mo bHe
Buebal cerde-eny veer. any

• 69 98 Solo a. choir. 1249
Dinner Boll. 039 15

n

1988 Radman Sect{onal home
28k58 3 8A , centntl tlr Move
to vour 1o1 Call 814-448-8694
after 6 PM

~.:=:::===~r==:.l==:~s:~~===

by the pioco Ot by ol&gt;o Ol Fo"

~~u •

992 2269 even ings.

4511-1542.

Painting.

FATH ER'S DAY SPECIALS

Giant size rectlnll" $179 reg
price • 249 Drop leaf table,

8 82 3686 or 876-8300

Yard ewe brullh QJning. light heultng sometreetrimmlngand

Household Goods

Call

electriC home. loCMad 1n New
Haven WVa Excellent k&gt;catlon
t8 rga l..,el 101 Owner Will
consider fln1ndng Call 304-

949-2BOO ... 614-949-2228

ATTENTION. Elccolelontlncomo

Home for llllle or rent

51

LAFF·A·DAY

614-992-5 B48

3 11cres fo r sale wrth 5 room
hou,.,, 2 c arg~r• g e. outbutldigs,
Chendten Ridge Glenwood
W Va Call 304-576-2230aftar

wn do b•b;'Jrtttng in I'I'IY home

Government joba 116 040
$!59,230 vr Now hiring Your
ern 806-8B7·8000 Ellt R
9805 for current Fadenllliat

LPN Pl .... nt Vafley Nursing
Care Center aeelung llcentld
LPN• for t:ert time employment.
medica4 and dental msurenat
avallllble H Interested call Kathy
Thornton. Director of Nuratng

8

Do

Cafe lor elderly 209 S 4th
Middlopon 01'/ lhllt

Slod Oog Call 814·949·2998

Three - 8 to 8 wkl old
puppiea-need good home Cell
304-876-52B9

Wanted to

Help needed In prtvete home

we...r 30+BB2-2645

Devices
Hearin1 Aid Sties &amp; Servi~

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

:i

friendly Good wHh kldo Call
814-245-5497 Of 245-6231

814-448 3159.

System

EXCAVAnNG

,

NEW- IEPAII

MANTIS
Precision
Gardenmg
• Uglltweoghl
•Toller/ Cullovator
•Easy to Operate

Itt•., Lll••9

ROOFING

Call (6141 992-7204
Wlool•al• &amp; Rotorl
5 19 '88 I ma

p

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.
JUDY DeWITI, BROKER
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERI~S CALL:
CHERYL LEMLEY SALES AGENT

Howard L. Writ•nl

Mon thru Fr1 or by
AppOintment

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Smell black furry chow Very

tlon Olin. 304-773-57B6

Open 10 AM to 4 P M

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Real Estate General

1-13-tfc

Gift Shop &amp; lay Store
Collectors Items. Clowns
Actoon Toys, Mus1cal
Toys &amp; Tnnket Boxes

5 25 I mo

Vine

Middleport, Ohoo

ANN'S

985·3350

Med •bed black dog-MIIIeahon

heir Good-tch Cal1814-4452203"' 446-18311

992-2196

324 E Moon St.
Pomwoy
Bth1nd C11y Hall

CHESTER, OHIO

Ginger Cell 814-446-3951

PAT HILL FORD

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

NEWELL'S
SUNOCO

Call

8 puppies Mixed breed, pert

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

1·28·"88-tfn

Brakes, Muffler, A1r
Condition Checked
and Ref1ll ,
Mmor Repa1rs.

811

RADIATOR
SERVICE

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

$149S

20 SESSIONS

"DOC" VAUGHN

Certtfled l1censed Shop
5 15-1 mo pd

992-6282

PH. 949-2801

Now Homosluilt

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

CALL 992-6756

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATIN(j

"At Reasonable Prices"

Woth 4 Qts. Oil

-

Moat Fonugn and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Servtce
All Major 8t Mmor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mech.,oc

CARTER'S

LUBE-OIL-FILTER

MUST BE A.S.C. CERTIFIED
2 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
MUST APPLY IN PERSON

SYRACUSE. OHIO

1386ttc

4·16·86-tfn

MECHANIC WANTED

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Farm Eqalpmut
P1rtc &amp; Servlee

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Giveaway

Want•· Good home for beautl·
ful 1 yr old long heir. female
Calico c.t Good health Named

Authomed John Deere,
New Holland, luJh Hog
Farm Equopment
Dealer

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Get one 8te10 free when you buy
one •t .-egul• price As many
penona In ponrwtt •• detlred 2
weeks epeclal. Precious Memory
Studio, Dorothy Bentz

comboo Cell 814 255-1793

614-662-3821

Phone 949-•!202

75-tolf

6 Cute kittens Utter trained. 8·7
wkl old Molllvblack &amp;whHe&amp;

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

45771

Announcements

Long Haired kittens Call 814445-889B aft or 5 PM

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Racme,

3

Free to good home- Cute 8 wk

BOGGS

SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY

Armou nce 111 enls

old klttono Call814-379·2435

992·6611l 30 17 till

HELPING YOU RECOVER
YOUR INV!STMENT

Clll Terri at 614-446 9510 lor

014-446-3870

Moddleport, Oh

Hetr Stylists Acrou The Street
styttng salon Is Mektng one
additional stylist who fa looking
for more thin JUst another .lOb
details

Rrewood to give away

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

8 7 Fonancing On

PH. 742-2463
51 31 / 1 mo

4

Authorozed Servoce
&amp; Parts
Broggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homellte
Jacobsen

PH. 949-2969

CUSTOM
INTERIOR DESIGN

Dabble Shop Going out of
bualneu llle June- July 2 50 ~

c.F. scon
Midd.ort

1122/88/tfn

Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Help Wanted

~12

We Service All Makes

16141 992- 7754

Ech01ng Me.clowa Resld•ntal
Center, Athena. Oh1o hlslmm•
dillte opening• for ful dme &amp;
part-time RNs end LPNs For
further mformat1on &amp; eppllc•
tton c ell 614-593-8074

Offer good 61 1· 7 / 30

985-3561

RESIDENCE PHONE

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-698-7157

11

'18 yrs.
Church-Home-School
Free G1fl... "Water Me
Please" batt. operated
House Plant Alert Light.
w1th tumng.

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
" Must
Ropaorable"

WANTEO -Expenenced Hair Stylist for b:aishop perferably with
a following Top p8'( Send
resumeto BoxCI•164 c / oGel
llpol11 D•Uy Trlburw , 825 Third

18

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Homes for Sale

5083

replies kept confidential

PIANO TUNING

DEAD OR ALIVE

Full time c•eer opponunlw for
Mil groomed. reapanalble male
in reul t~l• Experience helpful
but not nec11•rv S.neftt pack·
ege .vallable. For d.mlls •nd
retume to P 0 Bok 784,
Gelllpollo. Ohio 46631

31

Insurance

Call u1 f or your m obile home •
in 1 ur•n c e MIIJer l n aur~nce,
304· 882 2145 AI I O IUtO, ,
home lite heehh

Ave . Gtlhpolot. Ohio 46631 All

Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
Peachtree Doors
and Windows

BODY SHOP

11 121 11 tic

Avon needs 71adi• to s eiiAvon
Cell 814-446-3358

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND, OH.

NOTICE
Lead Notificat ion
.. The Un1ted States Env1r
onmental Prote c ti o n
Age.,cy !EPA! sets drtnk1ng
water standards and has
•FREE ESTIMATES•
determmed that le ad IS a
health concern at cenam
TIRED OF PAINTING
levels of exposure There 1s
Cover
your home w1th
currently a standard o f
beautiful
MASTIC or CER·
0 060 parts per m1lhon
TAINTEED Vinyl Siding.
(ppm) Basad on new health
mformat1on, EPA is hkefy to
Best Pnces Anywhere!
lower th1s standard
Roof1ng and Seamless
s1gnlf1cantly
Gutters
'"Part of the purpose of
this notice 111 to 1nform you of
Phone 992 -2772
the potenttal adverse health
6 13 I mo
effects of lead Th1s is bemg
done evan though our VIllage
water auply ts not m vtola·
t1on of the current standard
"EPA and others are concerned about lead 1n drmkmg
water Too much lead m the
hum1n bodv can cause seRl 124, Pomeroy Ohoo
r.oua damage to the bram,
kidneys nervous system,
and red blood cells The
greatest r1sk, even w1th
ahort· term eJtposure, ts to
young children and pregnant
women
"Lead levels 1n your drink
eng water 1s hkely to be
heghest
- if your home or water
6 17-tfc
syltem has lead p1pes , o r
- If your home has copper
p1pes wnh lead solder. and
TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
- tf the home IS les s than
feve years old, or
JOBS , ~· . ~P and
- If you have soft or acldt c
water or
PAl· •• .-oJRK
- if water &amp;Its 1n the p1pes
We Buy and Sell Used
tor several hours "
The potent1al sources of
Curs
lead '" your drenkmg water
AlBANY
ARIA
could be from lead p1pes,
corroaton of lead from
solder. flux copper · p1p1ng
end plumbtng fixtures
If you have lead pipes. etc
you can m1t1gate known or
potent1allead content 1n the
drinktng water by flushtng
5-26-" 81·1 mo
tapa and dnnktng only from
the cold water taps
At a r&amp;~ult of no stgntft
Public Notice
cant tracea of lead 1n our
system, the Vllage water laundry w1th cold water,
syl1ern Is taking no steps to flushmg the p1pes may take
mtltg~~te lead content
6 to 30 seconds, tf not
There 11 no necessity for flushtng the p1pes could take
the VIllage to seek alterna- as long as se~Jeral mtnutes
trve water supplies
Re!udents should check t o
To m1nim1ze exposure t o see 1f lead ptpes solder or
water likely to contam htgh
flux have been used m
levels of lead, pers o ns
plumbmg th at provtdes tap
should use only the cold
water and to ensure that
water faucet for drtnking
ne w plumbmg repa~rs w111
and for use m cooktng or
u se le ad-free matenals
preparing baby formula and
For add1t1onal
to run the water unt1l1t gets 1nfo rmatton
as cold as 1t 11 gomg to get
R Rc1n e V1llage Water Su·
before e-.ch use If there has pervtsors Glen n Rtzer recently been maJor water
949 2920 or
u'" 1n the household. s uc h
Southeast Dtstnct Office
as thowertng or bath1ng
EPA - 16141 386 8501
flushing toilets or domg
(61 16 23. 30 3tc

Ohio 46831

6·1 -'81-1 mo

, _

Business Services

Public Notice

'Part time Dent• I Hygien 111
needed Send resumeto BoJtCII
155. c / oG111ipolls Dally Tn~
une. 8215 Third Ave Galhpol11

Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also Install l!t. Serv1ce All Types
Water Pumps

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

D

014-245-6383 Today I

I. H. INgle, Owner
1, lox 74-A, Riply, W. Ya. 25271

,.._,

1'11 _ 0 _

. ,~

''""'

., _
...__._
___.........__,.

"...__
·-·-"
·.... _-_ _._
_

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::-~~':1.

C t:JroOO ODIIN I
MDIOO&amp;o ' ' " ' "
IUII ~ IO U'f~

uao

••

Bored ! Brokef And Bluel Sell
Chtllt11'111 Around the Workt
decoration~ until Dec. Fun job!
Party plltl'l Free 1300 kit
collecbon « deUveryl Work your
owtt hours Now hiring Demon
Jtl8tora Call Betty carpenter,

WATER?

·---·-·._.......___
-............. ,_.....-.......... . -··-"·--· Q
__-....._. .. . . ._
.:- -:t::r::..
'":. .......
.....
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.
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,, _ .... _ .·.-·-··--.······....·. . _,· .,.,_.
....'" ·..........
.
.._. . -· ··-100•1

J6UI

13

Help Wanted

Thursday. June 16, 1988

.._.I, Ph 814-

245-g215
II S. R W- ........ Poolo,
cisterns , welle lmmedlate1.000 or 2.0001olonodellwery
Call 304-876-8370
P.,l Rupe, Jr w .... llrvk:e
Fbola, cletll'na. Wille Call 81.t-

446-3171
Watttraon' a Wlter H1uling.
,...onablt rlt• tmrnedl•t

2. 000 gellon delivery. o1owno.
pools. won. ""' col 30+1712919

87

Upholstery

'

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 16, 1988

-Local news briefs---. Pomeroy
court news

Swim lessons start Monday
Swimming lessons at the Middleport Pool will start Monday
with La.ura McCullough serving as instructor.
Lessons offered and t he schedule Include: beginners,ll a.m.
to 12 noon; advanced beginners, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.;
Intermediate, 9 to 10 a .m.; swimmers. 8 to 9 a.m.; junior life
saving, 5 to 6 p.m.; adult beginners, 6 to 7 p.m.
Lessons will last for two weeks. The cost is $12 for the first
person in a family a nd $10 for the second. The pool will be open
from J2 noon to 5 p.m. starting next Monda y. All fathers can
swim free on Su nday, June 19, In observa nce of fathers day .
Those interested in swimming lessons can pre-register by
calli ng 992-5322.

Riebel named representative
Meigs County Super intendent of Schools John Riebel was
named to serve as representative for several programs when
the Meigs County Board of Education met Tuesday evening.
Supt. Riebel will serve as the representative for the
Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional Resource
Center program, the Southeastern Ohio \;olunta ry Education
Cooperative, Council of Gover nment program and the
Tri-County Career Development Program.
The board contracted with Eric Chambers to operate the sPa t
belt safety center on two Saturdays of each month for.the fiscal'
year of 1988-89 and sever ance pay was approved for Jim Rogers,
retired school psychologist. The board employed Kathy L.
Baker, Athens, an Ohio University graduate, as a speech
therapist for th e upcoming school year. A tentative budget for
the next school year was adopted along with a base teachers
salary schedule for $15,700 for certified staff members. The
board approved a 10-cent per hour increase for non-certificated
employees. Board member. Harold Roush , was appointed to
serve as the legislative liason person for the county board .
A calendar was adopted for the 1988-89 school yea r for the
county offi ce sta ff, bills were approved for pa yment and a
discussion was held on the employees' health lnsuyrance plans.

'Meigs haulers...
·that barring further trouble, the
courthouse air conditioning will
be working by Friday. The air
conditioning broke down last
)"eek and repairmen have been
working on the four teen-year-old
unit ever since.
Workers for Danny's UnIted
-Roofing, Columbus and Athens,
began this week replacing the
courthouse roof and the job is
" progressing nicely." said Commissioner Manning Roush.

I

F'lnally, the commissioners
heard revisions of two Insurance
proposals, one from Gregg RI chard, of Klais and Company
lnc., Akron, and the other from
Rick Pat rick, of McNellyPatrick Associates, Jackson.
The commissioners are hoping to
make a final decision on an
insurance package for co unty
employees next Wednesday. The
county's current Blue Cross-Blue
Sh ield policy must be renewed by
July I, or replaced by another.

. Alma O'Brien, 94, of Lake
Placid, Fla .. died Tuesday at
Lake Placid .
_. Mrs. O'Brien was the widow of
the late Charles O'Brien, for·
lnerly of Meigs County who di ed
on May 29, 1988. She was a retired
musician and belonged to the
,Eastern Stars in Miami, Fla .
She is survived by a son and
daughter-in -law, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis · Meier of Lake Placid,
Fla .; a sister, Lola Stage of Lake
Placid, Fla., two grandchildren
11nd five great-grandchildren.
Local survivors are a brother-Inlaw , Rex O'Brien, and a sister-i n·
taw, Etta Cullums·. both of
Pomeroy.
Besides her husband . Mrs.
O'Brien was preceded in dea th
by her parents, a sister, Ruth
J&lt;ostoff, and two brothers, Stan·
ley· and Ray Thrash.
: Services will be held at 1: 30
p.m . Saturday at the Spence
Funeral Home in Canal Winchester with Dr. Dan S. Grant
officiating Burial will be In the
Lithopolis Cemetery .
· Friends may call at the funeral
home from noon until l: 30 p.m.
on Saturday

Rita Lemp
Mrs. Bernard L. tRita Rose)
Lemp, 77. Sun Cit y, Cal if.,
former Meigs County resident,

Eastern ...

Continued from page 1

:~c hool

was abo lished for linan-

cial reasons .

. The board also heard" report
from Superintendent Dan Apllng
that steps are being taken to
ensure that two "pre-1977"
school bu ses have !heir Iuel tanks
'properly protected. Although the
l&gt;uses have always passed their
annual inspections, these add!·
ilona! steps are being taken in
light of the recent fatal crash
Involvlng a school bus In Kenl ucky, In which several children
;.vere killed as a result of an
unprotected f~el tank on an oil!

Armouncements

I

died Tuesdaay at the Glendale
-Adventist Hospital in California.
Mrs , Lemp was born Nov . 8,
1910 in Long Bottom, a daughter
of the late Ulysses and Bess
Lawrence Rose. She was a
homemaker and worked as a
secreta ry . She was a member of
the St. Andrew Episcopal Church
at York, Pa .
Surviving are a stepson, Ber·
nard L. Lemp III, Sun valley,
and, a sister, Mrs. Wallace
(Myrtle) Damewood, Long
Bottom.
Graveside rites will bP held at
Sand Hill Cemetery , Long Bot.
tom , at 2 p.m. Sunday with the
Rev. Don Archer officiating. The
White Funeral Home, Coolville,
is In cha rge of arrangements.
There are no calling hours.

Louis McMurray

Five defendants were fined Ill ·
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
They include Cheryl Hysell,
Pomeroy, failure to pay old fines,
$63 and costs; Charles Knapp,
Middleport, intoxication, $113
and costs; $375 and costs, driving
while intoxicated; $63 and costs,
operating while under suspension, and $63 and costs, expired
plates; Robert Thorla, Zanes·
ville, $63 and costs, operating
while under suspension; Ches·
tesr Young, Mason, W. \;a. , $63
and costs, failure to display
license plate; Earl Roush, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, open burning.
Forfeiting bonds were David
Harpster, South Gate, Mich., $53,
speeding; Ca thy Baldwin, Ra·
cine. $47, speeding; Carrie Fabbro, Columbus, · $48, speeding;
Iris Bailey, Pomeroy, $47, speed·
ing; Chrisi Lynch, Logan, $43,
assured clear distance, and $63,
to Canada and the , Virgin Islands. Infinite
no operator's license; Lora L.
FINAL STEP - Infinite Flherworks' ProducF1herworks owners, Michael and Darlene
tion Supervisor John Merica!, does some finish
Roach, Mason, $63, speeding;
Warner, say that ~omen employees are espe·
work, touching up and sanding, to a fiberglass
Charles Kearns, Clifton, $63,
clally "persnickety" when It comes to getdng
expired plates; Adolph Stamm,
body part. Employees need patience to perfect
things just right.
·
Chico, Calif .. $63, improper passbody parts before shipment all across the country,
ing; Sheila Taylor, Pomeroy, .
$46, speeding; Robin Dugan,
Co ntinued from page l
Pomeroy, $63, expired plates,
•
and· $52, speeding; Cecil Throck·
for $5,000 to $10,000, will look like loan proposal Is accepted. With Now that they have a salvage
morton ,' Dayton. $63, failure to
the gel-coat system, a one-step license, the Warners can purtoday's $40,000 model.
control; Eileen Smith, Pomeroy.
With the price of some Porsche molding of parts will be possible. chase damaged Porsches at
$43, Improper backing; Donald
models go ing up from 12 to 22 Now, in a s tep-by-s tep process, it auctions, refit them with their
Pierce, Pomeroy, $43, failure to
percent each year, the new cars takes the company a bout eight customized parts, and sell the
yield; Curtis Jones, Racine, $48,
are out of the price range of most hours to make one piece. With the vehicl es through the 944 Store.
speeding; Deborah Hatfield, Ru - sports car lovers. Infinite Fiber- proper equipment, that time will
But with or without the loan,
tland, $46, speeding; Edward
works provides an affordable be cutin half and overhead costs the Warners will be expanding in
Laudermllt , Middleport , $43, lm·
alternative.
will also be reduced.
lh e near furture. " We have no
proper backing.
And even wealthy Porshe
The loan would also provide the choice,'' says Darlene, who
owners do a tremendous business Warners with the needed capital lea rned while . dating Michael
with Infinite Fiberworks, simply to install adequate hea ting and th at she better develop a liking
because they like the look that cooling systems (as molds should for cars and motorcycles or she'd
Homecoming Sunday
Michael, with his mail order be kept a constant 65 to 70 never see him.
Homecoming will be held Sun- parts, can give their cars.
degrees), an office and other
" If Meigs County Is willing to
day at the Mt. Union Baptist
And he's always working on needed additions.
help us get started, and if there
Church, located two miles south
new designs. (Other local small
They are also developing a are willing workers in the area,
of Carpenter , oft Route 143 on business owners, such as carpen- branch-off business from infinite then we're here to stay," they
Co unty Road 10.
ters and machinists, are involved Fiberworks called the 944 Store. state.
A potluck dinner at 12 noon will
throughout the design process.)
be foll!'wed by a 1 p.m. program
Successful designs are adverfeatur.ng the True Gospel Sounds
tised nationally under the "Our
Quartet of Portsmouth and the
Own Designline" name. One
duet tea m of Jan and Kathy of d'!sign which Is currently in the
:vteigs County. The public Is
works won't be unveiled until
invi ted.
· August. Infinite Fiberworks'
competitors would like nothing
Offer swim lessons
better than to discover the secret
London Pool In Syracuse will before. the August unveiling.
be offering swimming lessons
"It's like any other business ,"
starting June 20. Lessons are $12
the Warners explain. '' the first to
per person for a two-week get to market makes the most
course. Beginning lessons start
money."
at 11 a .m. Advanced beginning,
And the Warners are always
Intermediate and swimmer lesthinking ahead. Right now
sons start at 10 a.m. For they're looking for someone,
information call the pool at
hopefully someone from the local
992-9909 or Heidi Cobb at992-3402.
area, to help design a 959 body
kit.
After making a design , th en
Women plan event
comes
the task of building the
Plans for holding guest day
mold.
Once
the mold is comnext Tuesday were made when
pleted,
then
begins
the process of
the Jaymar Ladies Tuesday Golf
turning
out
the
fiberglass
body
League met Tuesday at the
course. A scramble was played parts. And although the techno!·
ADULTS $8.00, CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE
and after 18 holes of play , a team ogy has changed little in 20years,
there is better tooling and equipcomposed of Norma Custer,
Located 3 miles off Rt. 50 at Stewart on County
ment
available, in particular, a
Garen Schneider, Clarice Kraut·
Rd. 53.
ter and Roberta O'Brien was gel-coat system . . which the
Warners hope to purchase if their
named the winning group.

Racine couple ...

co ntinued from page 1

Area deaths

Abna O'Brien

Ohio Lottery

Judgment sought
• A Meigs County Common
Pleas Court action toi a judg·
ment of $4,100.39 has been flied
by Central Insurance CompanIes, Van Wert, and Rutland
Furniture Inc., Rutland , against
Donnie E Stone and Marjorie
Stone, Middleport.
A reciprocal action for child
support has been filed by Janice
J . Clay against Carl E . Clay.
And an action by Esther Ward,
now known as Esther Frecker,
against James T. Wa rd, has been
dismissed.
•

598
.Pick 4-

Page 6

6096

e
Vot.39, No.29
CopyriJhted 1988

•

at

By United Press Internallonal
Rainfall averaged about a
quarter of an Inch across Ohio
Thursday, not enough to significantly relieve the drought condl·
tlo.ns aff~ting much of the state.
And forecasters said the state
was on the verge of another dry
spell.
National Weather Service offl·
clals said some areas of the state
that were hit with thunderstorms
received up to an Inch of rain
Thursday while others, mainly
the northwestern section, got
little or no precipitation.
PredominantlY dry weather is
expected today through Tuesday, with a few showers possible
In northwestern Ohio on Saturday, NWS forecasters said.
A cool front that triggered
Thursday's rainfall also brought

much lower temperatures to the
state.. Following three days of
temperatures In the 90s, Thursday's highs were mostly In the
70s and low 80s.
Similar high temperatures
were forecast for today and
Saturday, with readings climb·
lng Into the 80s and low 90s
Sunday through Tuesday.
Around the Natlon
By JEFF BATER
United Press IDternational
A Canadian cold front and
Atlantic seaboard rain took the
steam out of an eastern U.S. heat
wave blamed In at least 21
deaths, but a relentless drought
dogged Midwestern farmers wilting crops, pushing up commodity prices, and driving one
desperate florist to hire an Indian

rain dancer.
The hot, dry spell has scorched
crops In the northern Plains,
parts of the Corn Belt, Texas,
California and the South. Corn
leaves are twisting and curling, a
sign of stress, in Kentucky. North
Dakota had record heat In the
last week and soli moisture Is the
lowest since record-keeping began 30 years ago.
''There's not much relief In
sight," National Weather Service forecaster Lyle Alexander
said. "Most of the Midwest is
go lng to remal n dry."
But the heat wave that has
scorched the East and Midwes t
will abate today, he said, as
temperatures dip some 10 de·
grees. He said highs would reach
the 70s and 80s - compared to
record 90-degree temperatures

NAMED WINNER - Rob Barriloa, Meip
Hirh School bulaeu marketlq and manqement student at Melp Hlp School, center, Is
pictured receiving the Distributive Education
Clubs of America "Student of the Year'' Award
from John Blaettnar, left, colll'lle l111tructor at
Melp High. Harrllon has ~~erved as assistant
manager ol Main Street Pizza In Pomeroy and has

Canada may be able to sell
much more electric power to the
United States If stringent acid
rain control legislation Is passed
by Congress even before scientific evidence Is in showing such
controls are needed, a senior
American Electric Power offl·
cia! says.
"If acid rain legislation Is
enacted, the cost of coal fired
electricity In this country would
be Increased somewhere between 15 and 20 perent," said A.
Joseph Dowd, senior vice pres!·

West Columbia landfill operator
A.O. Powers said Wednesday he
will continue 10 actept II'IISb from
Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties
and appeal a West Virginia
Department of Natural Resources
order limiting the landfill 10 2,900
IIlilS a month.
However, should the landfill be
~a~uired 10 meet the tonnaac limit
after the appeal process with the
state is Clllhausted, Powers said he
wiD be hard-pressed 10 accept all
the IIISh he acceptS now whether it be Jelidenlial, illdUSirial
or commercial. Tho landfill accepts
6,000 10 7,000 tonS • monlh.
"We have an impendinJ problem
and it will not ~y until the
state nwli"CCIit,"
said.

Colognes, After Shave, etc.

25°/o OFF!

Powers has been accepting IIBSh
from out-of-state haulers Since last
summer. He said the out-of-state
II3Sh represents less than 2 percent
of his net profit. Tho out-of-state
II3Sh reven1111 has subsidized his
opellllional costs, such as pun:hase
or seven monitoing weDs.
It is the first lime a IOM&amp;ge limit
has been placed on the landfill.
''Our engineen are talking 10 the
DNR 10 see if they can work somethin' out," Powers said. He
ICCelved notification of the tonnage.
limit from the DNR Monday morning llld immcdlately- ootilied his
customers.He said his commiunent
10 ~ IIISh from
the
municipalities will . continue "as

lonC:S'ble."
, millzing that his pennit
was 10 Clllpiro this month, applied

ne landfill oo MIAion Rldae is for a new permit in Man:h. Pan I of

run under ERO, Inc. Powers•

Village Pharmacy
loans SUbject

IIIDDliPOIT, OHIO

dent and general counsel of AEP.
"Now that means that the
Canadians, who have a very
large surplus of electllty to sell
and only one market In which to
sell It, the United States, would
have their competitive position
greatly enhanced."
DOwd made the comments In
an NBC News interview at AEP
headquarters In Columbus. The
Interview was to have aired this
mnmtng (Friday) on the Today
Show, three days before the
Western Economic Summit

Powers to appeal DNR order
By Charla A. MISOII

992-6669

been employed at Main Street Pizza lor the past
year and a half In conjunction with his studies. AI
the right Is Rod PuUins, owner of the pizza
establishment. Harrison, who plans to further his
education In restaurant manarement at Hocking
Technical Coiie1e In Nelsonville, Is the son ol
Janice and Charles VanCooney, Bailey Run Road.

AEP official comments on
acid rain control legislation

GIFTS FOR DAD.... "·

To Qualification
Of Borrower

throughout the week.
NWS meteorologist Bud Dorr
said Northeastern · thunderstorms battered several communities north of Boston between
5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thu rsday and
left about 10,000 electric customers without power.
Winds estimated up to 80 mph
blew across a marsh at Salis·
bury, Mass., State Park, knockIng over 16 trailers and mobi le
homes and leaving one elderly
man hospitalized.
At Barryville in southeastern
New York state, thunderstorms
dumped more than 2 inches of
rain in just a half-hour.
"As far as the East in con'
·cerned, there won't be much of a
heat wave anymore," Alexander
said. "The combination of the

cold front and rain has pretty
much dampened it out."
In Boston Thursday, at least 14
people, Including an elderly
woman and her daughter, were
found dead In their homes, the
apparent victims of the broiling
heat. Two Boston deaths reported Wednesday a nd four others in Suffolk County Sunday
were also thought to be heat
related, authorities said.
In Indianapolis, Clara Rardon,
71, walked away from her nursing home Tuesday and her body
was found a da y later in the back
yard of a nearby home. An
au tops y Thursday showed she
died from exposure to heat.
While the cold front sweeping
in from south Ca nada carried
relief to the eastern half of the
nation. parts of the West braced

The baccalaureate sermon will
The 20th annual Meigs High
School 8acalaureate and Com· also be presented by Hartson.
The Meigs High School Band,
mencement exercises will be
held Sunday , 4: 30 p.m., at the the combined choirs, and the
Madrigals will each present a
school.
special number during the comAI Hartson, senior minister at
the Middleport Church of Christ mencement portion of the exerwill offer the invocation followed cises. The band will perform
by the traditional welcome by the " Overture For A Coronation,"
senior class president, Deeanna followed by the choirs' presenta·
lion of "Tear Them Down" and
Henderson.
Introductions of members of the Madrigals' presentation of
the school board and admlnistra· ~ 'Friends."
tlon will be made by Audra .
The salutatory address will be
Houdashelt, treasurer of the made by Donlta Pooler and the
valedictory address by David
senior cl.a ss.

Skyline Speedway has moved from
Saturday Night racing to Fridays,
starting this week. Enioy an
evening of family entertainment
at Skyline Speedway.

STOP IN TODAY AND SEE
OUR SELECTION OF
FATHER'S DAY CARDS.

2 se'cttons, H Pages
.4. 1\lultirnedia In c. Nt&gt;wspaper

for more sweltering weather
today. Alexander said tempera:
lures In the desert Southwest
would climb into the llOs. and
that a new heat wave would crop
up farther north, simmering over
eastern Montana and the Dako·
tas during the weekend.
Showers and thunderstorms
dampened parts of the dry
Midwest and Great Plains Thursday, but the rain in Wiscons in
and North Dakota was light .
Showers from Ohio across Kentucky to the southern Appalachians were widely scattered.
The Ohio Agricultural Stallslies Service said 7 to 10 inches of
rai n is needed to alleviate the
drought. In the northwes t clt)ol of
Sandusky, a florist paid $2,000 to
summon a Sioux medicine man
to perform a rain dance.

Meigs High school graduation
to be held Sunday afternoon

SKYLINE SPEEDWAY

SURPRISE DAD WITH A Gin
FROM VILLAGE PHARMACY.
FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY. JUNE 19TH

80s.

Thursday rain fails to help drought areas

RACES 8 P.M. ·

Stocks

Clear tonight , low in 60s.
Saturday, sunny, highs in mid

en tine

Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio. Friday, June 17, 1988

FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1988

Louis A. McMurray, 84, died
Wednesday at his residence,
33105 Dewitt 's Run, Long
Bottom.
A farmer, Mr. McMurray was
born June 6. 1904 In Meigs Dally stock prices
County, a son of the late Charles (As of 10:30 a.m.)
and Blanche Miller McMurray . Bryce and Mark Smith
He wa s a member of th e Hazel of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Community Church.
Surviving a re two step- Am Electric Power ............. 28%
granddaughters , Sue Cavot and AT&amp;T ...... .......... .................. 27
Lorra in McMurray, both of Es- Ashland Oil ........ ......... .. ..... 69'h
ca ndida , Calif., and a step- Bob Evans .......................... l7'h
daughter, Marie Beaver of Long Charming Shoppes .... ........... 12
Bottom.
City Holding Co ................... 33
Besides his parents, he was Federal Mogul... ................. 383,4
preceded in death by ' his wife Goodyear T&amp;R ...................66%
Bertie McMurray, and two broth: Heck's Inc .. ...... ..... .... .. ........ 1%
ers. Ha yes and Roy McMurray. Key Cen turton .............. ....... 38
Services will be held at 1:30 Lands' End ................. ...... .. 263,4
p.m . Sunday al theEwingErunal Limited Inc ........................ 20%
Home with th e Rev. Edsel Hart Multimedia Inc ................... 67'h
officiating. Burial will be in Sand Rax Restaurants ......... ......... 4%
Hil Cemetery . Friends may call Robbins &amp; Myers ................ ll'h
at the funer a{ home from 7 to 9 Shoney's Inc ....................... 2611.
p.m. Friday and from 2 to4 and 7 Wendy 's Inti ..... ................... 5'A
to 9 p.m. Saturda'y.
Worthington lnd ................. 21 'A

2 71 NORTH SECOND

Daily Number

GRAND RE-OPENING

~us.

' Eastern Board resolved in Its
May meeting that no replacement school buses would be
purchased for this coming year
due to the severe financ ial
problems .
.

Church
•
notices

Sanilation Service Co. l&amp;'o'eS upper
Mason CO:~ai AD Slllllation
Co. I&amp;'IU
Calny IIIII RW'III
Sanilation Co. 11M1 die IOUlhem
of Mllllll CouniY. SIDco tho
County landftll - clolecl,

.
=
taiUoa

from 11&amp;:1011 die river ue

their !rail .. die ltt!dl!ll

tho now permit has been approved
for approval from the
MaiOII County Cclmmiaion. 1111t
IJllli'OVII is not requiled under the
lllllll'a new solid wute disposal setup whklh ... aiJ'cct 1uly 1 if
Pilaus' lancUI!I ICCeJIII under
10,000 tOIIUIIIOndl.

e-..

Contllluecl on paae 10

Meeting at Toronto.
"I am not suggesting that their
concerns about acid rain are not
genuine. But the Canadians are
well aware that by forcing
further environmental controls
on U.S. Industry, they are going
to be able to sell an awfullotmore
electricity to the United States."
Canada is presently a major
supller of electric power to New
York state, the Northeast, the
Northwest and Is actively pursu·
lng energy markets In the Mldw·
est. Canadian electric energy
sales to the U.S. have Increased
by 81 percent In the past seven
years, amounting to$1 .5 billion In
revenues to
Canada inl987 alone. Canadian
utilities have built many new
high-voltage transmission lines
to the U.S., Increasing their
capacity to sell to U.S. electricity
markets by 180 percent to
11,400,000 kilowatts since 1969.
"Our plants would be shut
down (due to Jack of a market for
their power) and In many cases
the coal mines would be closed,''
Dowd said.
"Economic dislocation and hu·
man misery for the United States
and economic prosperity for
Canada: I hope that the people
who are watching In Washington
keep that In mind ."
He said 146'emlsslon scrubbers
are In operation and 11nother 44
are either under construction or
planned on U.S. generating
plants but none are operating or
being built on Canadian power
plants.
Dowel said a fundamental fact
being Ignored In the acid rain
debate Is that there Is no
scientific evidence that clearly
shows Midwestern
Industrial and power plants to be
Continued on page 10

Beegle.
Presentation of the Class of
1988 will be made by Pr lncipal
F'enton Taylor and Robert
Snowden, pres ident of the Meigs
Local Board of Educat ion, will
present diplomas as Margaret
Rhodes , senior class secretary,
reads the class roll.
Kevin \; . King. vice-president
of the Class of 1988, will present
the symbol of gradua lion.
The exercises will concl ud e
with the MHS alma mater
"Maroon and Gold," and the
Continued on page 10

GTE North Inc., Pomeroy
village are working together
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
About a year ago, GTE North
Inc. built a conduit project down
the south lane of Main St. In
Pomeroy . Construction Of this
project required excavation of
pavement, and although the
pavement was patched once the
project was finished, local res idents were not pleased with the
restoration of the street.
One local resident, Ted Reed,
president of Farmers Bank and

Lawsuit
dismissed
A $100,000 lawsuit filed In
February by James B. Scott
against Pomeroy Attorney Dan
Michael Mullen has been dismissed In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Judge Charles H. Knight has
signed an entry stating that all
allegations contained In Scott's
complaint are "untrue, frivolous
and without merit".
Scott had charged negligence·
on the part of Mullen, whom he
said he paid a retainer and other
fees, to have· Mullen represent
him In regard to alleged harass·
ing pollee techniques used on him ·
by certain members of the
Middleport Pollee Department.
Scott alleged that Middleport
Solicitor Steven L. Story was
authorized to present two out of
court settlements to Scott but
that he (Scott) was not advised
by his counsel on one of the
settlement offerings until the
statute or limitations had ex·
plred. Scott alleged that the
village no longer wanted to pay
the $500· settlement, allegedly
offered, after the statute of
limitations had expired.
In his suit, Scott had asked for
the $500 settlement, $49,000 In
punitive damages and $50,000 for
mental anguish and emotional
distress.
lJI his decision on the case,
Judge Knight ordered that a
swnmary judgment be entered
for the defendant, Mullen, and
that the cause be dismissed with
1
prejqdtce.

Savings Company, Initiated contact with GTE North, explaining
that the paving restoration was
not satisfactory.
Thus began a combined eftort
by the telephone company and
Pomeroy \;lllage to work out -an
arrangement whereby Main St.
through Pomeroy's business section would be repaved.
Originally, says Phil Van Meter, manager-facilities engineerIng, out of GTE North's Marlc;m
office, the telephone company
planned to bring In a stripping
machine to plane the south lane
of Main St. only, and then repave
the lane.
However, while working
closely with Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler, GTE realized

tha t If the telephone company
and Pomeroy Village would just
combine their financial capa bilities, planing of the street could
take pla ce, bo th sides of the
street could be paved a nd everyone would benefit.
GTE North had originally
pledged $17,000 to the repaving
project. But when the company
and the mayor learned that fo r a
few thousand dollars more, a
better repaving could be undertaken , new plans were
developed.
Through funding from the
Community Development Block
Grant Program, Pomeroy will be
building new sidewalks In the
business section later this year.
Continued on page 10

Gallia highway project
placed on "standby'
By SUSAN BALSTER
OVP News Staff
The Highway Users Commit·
tee of the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council announced that
the U.S. 35 four-lane proposal has
been made a "standby' : project
by the state, said Charles I.
Adkins, president of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce,
at the chamber's June monthly
meeting.
The "standby" designation
means the 35 four-lane will be
funded If the money becomes
available, Adkins said.
Adkins reported that the state
also purchased additional rightof-way from property owners for
the project, and that more
rigb.t·of·way would have to be
purchased for proposed exits.
Adkins assured chamber
members that the project would
remain the number one, priority
Item out Of the 18 counties served
by the SEORC, and that the
highway users committee would
continue to get the project under
way.
The highway users committee
met June 6 at the Meigs County
Gun Club.
Adkins said Sljpport for the
I

U.S. four-lanP project reaches as
far north as Lancaster. but
funding from gover nmental sources Is just not there.
The committee plans to have
fu rther meetings In Chillicothe
and Lancaster , but no action has
been taken to get the project
under way. Even If the monev
were available. it would be at
least a year before the project
could be started. Adkins said.
During that year, an environ·
mental impact ~tudy would have
to be conducted. Adkins said the
study would take six to seven
months.
According to Adkins, U.S . 35 is
a heavy traffic area, and the
four-lane Is essential to the
community as well as to travelers passing through.
"It (the four-lane ) Is Integral to
the economic interest here," he
said. ''The four-lane would give a
better economic base here."
The committee discussed a
possible solution lo the project
funding Issue - an Increase in
the gas tax, Adkins said. He
added that a tax increase of five
cents would raise about $50
million In West \; lrglnla, and an
Continued on paee 10
~

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