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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 21, 1988

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..--Local news briefs'Faces B &amp; E charge in court
Johnnie K. Harrison, Pomeroy, Is scheduled to appear In
Meigs County Court today (Tuesday) on a charge of breaking
and entering, a felony of the fourth degree.
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department reported that
overnight Sunday, Harrison allegedly broke Into a Foreman
and Abbott van parked on the store lot In Middleport. The
Incident was discovered at 8:42 a,m. Monday and reported to
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Little who contacted the Sheriffs
office for assistance In the Investigation.
Sheriff deputies , Jlmmer Soulsby, Kenny Klein, and Mark
Boyd, along with Lit tie and Middleport officer, Rick Johnson,
reportedly recovered about $2,000 worth of tools and supplies
from Har~ison. Paul Gerard, special Investigator for the
prosecutors office, assisted In the Investigation which resulted
In the charges being filed against Harrison.

"A larger number of A!hens,
Meigs, and Vinton County resk
dents will now be eligible for
home ownership assistance from
Farmers Home Admnlnlstra·
lion," announced Carol Cos·
Ianzo, assistant county supervisor for the FMHA local office In
Pomeroy.
"Our maximum Income limits
have been raised substantially
which will allow us to serve many
more local people with home
financing than were before,"
stated Mrs. Costanzo.
FmHA rural housing loans are
Intended for people of limited
Income who are unable to obtain

The State Highway Patrol investigated an Injury accident at
7: 05 a :m. Monday In Bedford Township of Meigs County on CR.
40 at the Intersection of Jones Road.
Troopers said a car driven by Michael B. Braun, 31, Rt. 2,
Albany, Ohio, turned left In front of another vehicle driven by
Christina J. Estep, 21, Shade, Ohio. Estep was Injured and taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Braun was cited for failure to
Yield the right of way .
Two persons were Injured In a motorcycle·carcolllslon at 3:25
p.m . Monday on SR. 7 at the Intersection of Texas Road, In
Chester Township. Troopers said Ronald B. Hill, 33, Pomeroy,
stopped for a left turn and his car was hit from behind by a 1982
Kawasaki 400, motorcycle ridden by a man Identified by the
patrol only as Michael Hoffman, no age or address. Hoffman
and a passenger, Tom N. Carter, 19, Pomeroy, claimed Injury.
The accident Is still under investigation.

conventional credit at rates and
terms they can afford. FmHA
financed dwellings must be In
good condition, efficient to heat
and maintain and be modest in
size, quality and design.
The new maximum adjusted
Income limits for Athens, Meigs
and Vinton Counties, according
to family size are $16,350 for one
person; $18,700 for two; $21,000
for three, $23,350 for four; $24,800
for five; and $26,250 for six.
Additional Information may be
obtalned'by contacting FmHA at
105 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
992·6644.

-----Announcements---Weekend meetings
Special weekend meetings at
• Red Brush Church of Chr-ISt will
be held Saturday evening at 7
p.m., Sunday morning at 10a.m.,
and Sunday evening at 6 p.m.
Denver Hill of Foster, W. '-'a. will
be the speaker. Everyone
welcome.

Patrol probes injury accidents

Free

More residents eligible for assistance

A special meeting for all liFW
members and their wives, for the
purpose of forming a ladles
auxiliary at '-'FW Post 9053,
Tuppers Plains, will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the post
home.
Ice cream social
The Salem Township Volun·
leer Fire Department in Salem

Center will be having its annual
Ice Cream Socl~l on Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. The menu
will consist · of homemade Ice
cream, roast beef sandwlches,
hot dogs, potato salad, macaroni
salad, baked beans. pie and
beverages. Prize giveaways will
be featured and ' the Midnight
Cloggers will perform In the
evening.

Plan dinner
A dinner at 'Trinity Church
scheduled for this Sunday to
welcome the new minister and
his family has been postponed
until July 3. It will follow the
regular church services.

Enterprise.c:~ttnuedrrompage 1

With recent revelations of
scandal In the defense Industry,
Sommerfeld said America's eco·
nomic system Is healthy and
must withstand the "external
threats and challenges" that
cause corruption.
"I don't know what the
answers are, and I wouldn't
presume to know what they are.
butlfthe system Is to survive, It's
up to you and I to res tore a sense
of morals and ethics -to the
system," he said.
Following his address, Som·
merfeld presented a full year's
scholarship from Martin Marietta to Susan A. Miller, a Rio
Grande student. Miller, a junior
from Greenfield, is majoring in
business management.
•
Sommerfeld joined Union Carbide Corp. In 1958 and was
employed in various management capacities with the com·
pany's nuclear enrichment !aclll·

Will take applications
A Buckeye C:ard Program'
representative will be at the
Racine Department Store on
Thursday, from 10a.m. to2p.m.,
to take applications for Buckeye
Cards. Those persons 60 years of
age must have proof of age and
those under 60 and disabled must
have two documents as proof of
disability. Applications may also
be obtained at the Pomeroy
Library and the Senior Citizens
Center.

ties at Oak Ridge, Tenn. He
joined Martin Martella In 1984.
Martin Marietta oversees opera!Ions at the Piketon gaseous
diffusion plant.
His address officially kiCked
off the Free Enterprise Work·
shop, In which high school
students and their teachers are
exposed to the Inner workings of
the American economic system
through projects and contact
with business leaders. The work·
shop Is being supervised by
William S. Medley Jr. and Nita
Dalley, advisers of the Students
In Free Enterprise chapter at Rio
Grande.

Fishing derby

Ohio Lottery
repeat as
.champions

Daily Number

470
Pick 4
8633

Page 4

at

e

set

The annual children's fishing
derby of the Meigs County Fish
and Game Association will be
held Saturday from 8:30 to 2 p.m
at the club house on Shade River,
Chester.
Children, 16 and under, are
Invited to participate In the
derby. Those taking part are to
take their own pole and bait, but
no minnows. There will be a
luncheon at noon, numerous door
prizes, as well as ' prizes for
catches of the day. Everything
Including the luncheon is free for
the children.
In the evening the annual
chicken barbeque will be held. It
Is for members only and those
attending are asked to take a
covered dish.

•

Vol.39, No.32
Copyriv~tod 1988

_..,

\

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•

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4

·'

·"

Halar names committee for drug
free grant curriculum at Meigs
A Meigs Local School District
Drug Free Grant Curriculum
Committee has been announced
by Wendy Halar, coordinator.
Making up the committee are
Mlck Childs, junior high teacher,
John Redovian high school coun·
.selor; Dale Harrison, high school'
,vocational teacher; Saundra Til-

Weather
South Central Ohio
Today: Mostly -sunny, with
highs In the mid 90s. Southwest
winds 10 mph or less.
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a
low near 70. Southwest winds 10
mph or less.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny,
with high temperatures between
90 and 95. Chance of rain ·Is 20
percent.

lis, special education teacher;
Sharon Birch. school nurse;
Jeannie Taylor, high school
teacher, and Karen Walker,
elementary teacher.
According to Mrs. Halar. the
committee has ,been working to
develop a drug free currlcu !urn
for the Meigs Local Schools in

conjunction with representatives
from the residential treatment
program staff. They will be
working throughou t the summer
and next school year In order to
Implement the curriculum.
Questions concerning the pro·
gram should be directed to Mrs.
Halar, 992-2153.

Mississippi is closed .for dredging
including the Missouri, Ohio, .
. MEMPHIS, Tenn. tUPI) Tennessee,
Cumberland, ArkanMore than 800 barges headed up
sas
and
Red
rivers.
and down the Mississippi River
face delays of two days for
Coast Guard Cmdr. Mike Dono·
emergency dredging, which
some fear may fail to keep the hoe asked towboat operators to
nation's largest river open agree on res trlctions on barge
sizes and :oads to ease t raffle
through the drought.
The Coast Guard closed the problems on the river, which at 9
river 6 miles north of Memphis feet was already more than a foot
Tuesday night for an expected shallower than previous record·
two to three days to dredge a low water levels.
"What we're trying to do Is
deeper and wider channel. But
towboat operators who met with work with the Industry to keep
the Coast Guard wondered what commercial traffic moving on
will happen later on, with no end the lower Mississippi as long as
possible," Donohoe said.
of the drought In sight.
'&lt;
"If the river continues to fall, I
The Army Corps of Engineers
think you're going to see the end began dredging near Memphis at
of navigation. Dredging Is going 8:15 p.m. Tuesday , 2 minutes
to ·be futile," said Dan Brock, after the last barge passed and
marine superintendent of In· the river was closed for what is
expected to be two or three days
gram Barge Co. in Nashville.
"It's going to be an economic until the work Is through, offl·
disaster, not only to the towing clals said.
"Some BOO to 1,200 barges will
Industry, but to the many thou·
ultimately
be detained here,"
sands of people who rely on this
Industry. People are going to be . DonohOe said.
Brock said delays further
affected that you cannot Imupstream
and downstream have
agine, " ·he said.
already
taken
a huge toll on the
The Mississippi River handles
tow
industry.
some400mlllion tons of cargo per
"Each barge you leave behind ,
year from Minneapolis to the
you
figure Is $10,000 in revenue,''
Gulf of Mexico, 1985 Army Corps
he
s~ld. "Their · (the Corp's)
of Engineers statistics show.
Mllllons of tons more move on the efforts are limited. The good
Mlsslsslppls' major tributaries, Lord's going to have to help us on

Fire damage minor
Minor damage was Incurred In
an electrical fire at Shammy's,
West Main St., Pomeroy, Man·
day . )'. he Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment was called at 12:54 p.m. and
was on the scene for an hour.

Area deaths
Esther Kissel
Esther F. Kissel, 77, Powell St.,
Middleport. died Monday even·
ing at the '-'eterans Medical
Center In Dayton.
Born In Middleport, she was
the daughter of the late Eben and
Amy Bls hop Bowen. She retired
from Kroger wliere she was an
accountant. During World War
II, she was a Navy WA'-'E.
She Is survived by a niece and
her husband, Sandra and Roger
Luckeydoo, Richmond, '-'a., two
nephews and their wives , Cha·
rles and Dee Vroman, Belpre,
and John and Judy Vroman,
Westerville; four great-nieces,
Mary Hapney, Coolville. Amy
and Lee Luckeydoo, Richmond,
Va. and Julie Vroman, Wester·
ville; three great-nephews, Mark
'-'roman, California; John How·
ard Vroman, Columbus, and
Jimmy '-'roman, Westerville;
two brothers·ln·law, James Brewington. Middleport. and John
Vroman, Middleport, and a
great·great -nlece, Melissa Hap·
ney, Coolville.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Herman Bud Kls·
sel, In 1964; two siSters, Frances
Bowen Brewington and Gladys
Bowen '-'roman.
Graveside services will be held
Thursday morning at 10 a.m. at
Beech Grove Cemetery, Pome·
roy. The Rev. Sonny Zuniga will
officiate. Arrangements are beIng handled by Rawllngs·Coats·
Blower Funeral Home. There are
no calling hours.

.
'
At BANK 'ONE, we have nearly 3,000 tellers
and customer service representatives across the
Midwest like the ones our customer wanted to
thank in his ad. And we're proud to have th~m as
p~rt of our cari_ng Jearn in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana
Kentucky and Wisconsin.
'
That's why in our advertising__at BANK ONE
we feel comfortable saying we're "Eighteen
Thousand People Who Care".
.
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'

. No action was taken by Racine Village Councll.ln a Monday
evening recessed session, due to a lack of a quorum of council
members.
'
However, Mayor Frank Cleland reported that copies of the
1989 village budget will be available for public viewing on July
22 at the Racine Department Store and at the residence of Clerk
Jane Beegle.
A public beaming on the 1988 budget will be held at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, July 5, at the council chambers at the Shrine Park.
Couhclimen Bob Beegle and Carroll Teaford were the only
members present for Monday's meeting.
··

Gallla·Melgs Community Action 'A gency's free clothing day
for low Income persons wil be held Friday morning, 9 to 12, at
the agency's clothing bank In the old high school building at
Cheshire. ,

BANK. .ON£

Eighteen Thousand Pe(Jp/e Who Care.

Stolen car recovered

Veteraae Memorial
Monday Admissions - Marie
Michael, Racine.
Monday Discharges -Thelma
Chase, Mary Murray, Emma
Searls.

BANK ONE. ATHENS. OHIO, NAIONE I'ARr OF THE CAlliNG TEAM

Moml&gt;erFDIC

,Meigs Deputy Sheriff Kenny Klein recovered a car which had
been stolen Sunday from Dannie W. Jacks, of Shade. The car
Continued on page 5
I

·--·-- ____ ,.,_,----;----------- -..- - · - - - - -.... _____ ___:___, ___ __.._ l ___ ,_,_ _ _ .J~._ _ _ __:__

this."
Barge operators have raised
average bulk commodity rates
about $14 a ton from $7 a ton since
the drought began taking Its toll,
said Robert Gardner, general
manager of Conti Carriers and
Terminals, a unit of Chicago's
Continental Grain Co.
Corps and Coast Guard off(.
cials _conceded that dredging was
limited, and that only plentiful
rainfall would ease the situation
In the long run.
"The river's going to outrun
dredge capability and we don't
know when that's going to
occur," Donohoe said.
Asked if river traffic may have
to be completely shut down, he
said, "Mother Nature's going to
do that to us. We're doing
everything we can to keep the
river flowing."
Maj. Gen. Thomas Sands said
along with the Mississippi, the
greatest Impact Is being felt felt
on the Ohio River -another key
shipping lane· for the nation's
heartland.
Sands said that, even though no
significant rainfall is forecast for
the near future, corps officials
remained confident they can
anticipate problems and prevent
any extended blockages on the
Mississippi and Ohio.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Senate was to meet briefly tod ay to
ratifY a House-approved confer·
ence committee report on leglsla·
tlon regulating the transportation of hazardous ma terials in
Ohio.
The Senate was to convene at
11 a.m. ·
Senate President Paul Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, said the
Senate also may vote on a
resolution asking Attorney Gen·
era! Anthony Celebrezze to lnves·
ligate allegations of political
misuse of federal job training
funds by the admlnistratlonof
Gov. Rjchard Celeste.
Gilimor said he would not know
whether the Senate would take up
the resolution until he talkS to his
fellow Republican senat.ors and
to the Democratic leadership.

SEO invites
Meigs to
rejoin loop
Officials of the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League have
extended an invitation to
Meip High School to rejoin
the SEOAL at a league meeting Tuesday In Athens.
Meigs, a member of the
Tri·Valley Conference since
1983, was a member ol the
SEOAL from 1967 untU 1983.
The Meigs Local School Dlstrici was formed by the
consolidation of Pomeroy,
Middleport and Rutland
school districts. Pomeroy and
Middleport had been longtime
members of the SEOAL.
Meigs voted in March, 1982
to leave the SEOAL and was
accepted as a member of the
TVC the followlng month.
However, Meigs did not have
full membership in ~heir pres·
ent conference until the 1983·
84 school year.

Hay hotline
is busy with
requests
By United Press International
A hot line to match drought·
stricken Ohio farmers needing
hay with those who had some to
donate was busy in Its first day of
operations.
"People just need hay ," said
J .R. McCullough. who helped
staff the toll-free telephone lin e
(800-686-7246) for the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
By Tuesday afternoon, the
Continued on page 5

The hazardous materials bill,
The Plain Dealer of Cleveland
adopted in final form by the reported in a series of articles
House two weeks ago. is the las t that 12 of 270federal Job Training
remaining Item standing in the Partnership Act grants in 1984
way of summer adjournment for and 1985 had been awarded to
the Senate.
Democrats with connections to
Drafted following a 1986 phos- the governor or the Ohio Demo·
phorus leak from a railroad tank cratic Party.
car near Miamisburg, Ohio, the
Celeste already has ordered
bill sets guidelines for carrying auditors into the Ohio Bureau of
dangerous chemicals , including Employment Services, which
prior notification to the proper adminis ters the federally funded
authorities, and funding for fire- gran ts .
fighting training.
The OBES announced Tuesday
Sl&gt;n. Paul Pfeifer. R-Bucyrus, that 12 accounting firms had
called for Celebrezze to act on the been hired for $121,953 to speed
job training grant scandal, and the audits of the grants, which
Introduced a bill establishing a are behind sc hedu le.
special prosecutor, simila r to the
A spokesman for Celebrezze
one which investi gated the Ohio said the attorney general's office
savings and loan scandal of 1985. is conducting legal "research"
Gillmor said Pfeifer's bill on Celebrezze's authority to
would be referred to the Senate investigate the job training
Judiciary Committee, which grants.
Pfeifer chairs.

Aid expanded to
nation's farmers
WASHlNGTON CUP! ) - Agrl·
culture Secretary Richard Lyng
greatly expanded the drought fighting Conservation Reserve
hay program Tuesday while
pressure built on Capitol Hill for
Congress to write a !arm-relief
bill.' .
Chairman Pat rick Leahy, D·
\it ., of the Senate Agriculture
Committee called the drought a
national crisis and to ld his
colleagues. "More must be done
and it must be done quickly."
Leahy said the drought is likely
to force up food prices - and
maybe even add to inflation. He
joined others in the agricultural
community in worrying that the
drought could trigger a new
round of financial stress on
farmers just now recovering
from recession.
Lyng ga"e permission last
week for farmers in the' hardesthit drought areas to harvest hay
on Conservation Reserve land.
On Tuesday, he said fi)rmers
could make hay on Conservation
Reserve land in any county
where emergency haying and
grazing is allowed on crop
setaside land.
The announcement added 754
counties to the list eligible fo r
Conservation Reserve haying.
· Until Tuesday, only 309 counties
were cleared for the haying.
"The extreme severity of the
drought and the remote possibilIty of any relief in sight makes
this decision necessary, " Lyng
said.
Farm-state congressmen and
governors have said the Conservation Reserve could be a valuable source of forage for hungry
livestock. The reserve was

.----Local news .. ------. Gallia County to accept New Haven,
No action taken by council
Point Pleasant garbage for 60 days

Free clothing day Friday

Hospital news

-· ·-

grant committee to work with Wendy Halar,
coordinator of the Drug Free Curriculum
'
Committee.

DRUG FREE COMMmEE - Mlck Childs,
John Redovlan, Dale Harrison, seated, and
Saundra Tillis, Sharon Birch, Jeannie Taylor, and
Karen Walker, standing, left to right, make up the

'

2 Sections, 12 Pag~
· A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Senate reconvenes.on
hazardous waste bill

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

·"

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 22. 1988

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 281&lt;4
AT&amp;T ........................... ... ... 26%
Ashland Oil ........................ 68~
Bob Evans ........................... 17
Charming Shoppes .............. llii,
City Holding Co ................... 33
Federal Mogul.. .................. 38%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ..... ......65%
Heck's Inc ............... ............ 1J&lt;4
Key Centurion .................... 37~
Lands' End ...................... , .. 27%
Limited Inc ........................ 21~
Multimedia Inc ................... 69~
Rax Restaurants .................. 4\jj
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ,............. 11~
Shoney's Inc ....................... 26~
Wendy's Intl ..........................6
Worthington lnd ................. 21~

Partly cloudy , lows In mid
70s. Thursday, partly cloudy,
chance of thunderstorms.
Highs In mid 80s.

Dy Mary J. Lewis
Garbage from bolh Point
Pleasant and New Haven will now
be taken to a Gallia County landfiU
after a weight limit was imposed at
the West Columbia landfill.
The Gallia County Commission
decided to accept lhc ~arbage on a
60-day temporary basts at a meet·
ing with both city's attorneys ibis
morning.
A letter sent from A.O. Powers,
operator of llie West Columbia
landfill, to both cities, neither of
which had a written contract wiib
Powers, stated that because of a
newly imposed 2,900 ton-J,lC!'·
month limit from the West Virgmia
Department of Resources, he would
no longer be able to take either
city's garbage. In an earlier interview with ibe "Point Pleasant
Register" he stated he received
between 6,000 and 7,000 tOns per

month. "I can't interpret that lcuer
any other way," said R9n Stein, city
auomey for New Haven.
Stein cited two reasons for going
to the Gallia County landfill:
cheaper prices and a $1 increase in
the West Virginia tipping fee which
will take effect July I. This in·
crease makes ibe cost per ton
$2.25. Garbage taken to Ohio will
not be subJect to ibis fee.
Accordmg to Carroll Casto, city
attorney for Point Pleasant, the
Ohio landfill charges $30 per 20
cubic yards.
Commissioner Dan C. Nolter,
however, said this fcc is subject to
change because of improvements to
be made at ibe landfill. Notter said
prices were going up everywhere
for everyone. The new rates arc not
available at this time. "We ask to be
troatcd equally," Casto said. "We
will pay the rate as long as it is
reasonable."

Casto added tnat ne was 1m pressed wilh the cleanliness of the
landfill and the people running iL
New Haven has already taken
garbage to the landfill on two
previous occasions, according to
Stein.
The route now taken from New
Haven to ibe Morgan township
landfill is approximately · 60 miles.
Trucks are unable to travel lhrough
Middlepcr~ Stein said, because of
weight limits placed on streets and
now take the Middlepon bypass.
"We're willing to liv~ with it,"
Stein said. "It is not insurmountable."
Casto said !he distance did not
bother him. "lt is close enough for
us to be customers for a long time."
The temporary agreement will be
re-evaluated in 60 days. Stein
agreed that this is a suitable amount
of time, especially because a new
city council and mayor will take
office on June I in New Haven.

created in 1985 to take highly
erodible land out of crop produc·
lion for 10 years . .The government pays annual rent on the
land.
In other drought ·related
developme.nts:
-Trade Ambassa dor Clayton
Yeutter and Lyng said there will
be no grain embargoes due to the
drought. In a telephone news
conference. Lyng pointed to
Reagan's 1982 decision against
embargoes and laws that ba'r
selective embargoes on agricui·
tural goods.
.,;.An Agriculture Department
weekly crop cond ilion report said
hot weather has caused soybean
plants to wilt in some parts of the
Corn Belt.

Ohio will
require cash
match in '89
COLUMBUS - Local com·
munities participating In Ohio's
Comprehensive Litter Prevention Grants Program will, alter
1988, be required to provide a
20-percent cash match, accord·
ing to State Rep. Jolynn Boster
tD-Ga llipolisl .
The match requirement, according to a letter addressed to
Boster from the Division of Litter
Prevention and Recycling, was
required to stretch limited funding available for grants.
Though Gallia County has
received S291.563 in grants in the
last seven ye-ars, Boster ex·
pressed a difference of opinion
with the Division on the mat1er.
"Communities In southea ster n
Ohio operatE'-on severely limited
budgets," she said . "This match
requiremenl may effec1i\'el~·
preclude commun ilies in our

region from receiving 1hesc
grant_s." she added.
In May, Boster stated in a
letter to the Division that she
opposed the match requiremenl
and urged it to consider waivers
for Appalachian Ohio counties or
at least a s liding scale match
requirement. In Its response thP
Division supported the require·
ment, citing the recently enacted
solid waste legislation as another
resrictlon on funding for the
grants. The legislation, House
Bill 592. requl!·es half of all litter
control grants to be used for
recycling. The Division has sche·
duled a series of meetings across
the state to discuss the new
regulations with local recipients.
The Dlvison has scheduled a
meeting In Athens on Tuesdav.
June 28 at the Athens Couniv
Health Department from 10:30
a.m. until noon , to discuss the
changes In the pro~ram.

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�Wednesday, June 22. 1988

Commentary
~~~~1~~ E~~~o~~~~n ~:: e~~

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press Internallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and t he American Newspaper Publishers Association
LE'M'ERS OF OPJNION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues , not personaliti es

2405 Jackson
Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

SUMMER CASUAL COORDINATES

2 50

PHARMACY

786 North Second
Street
Middleport, Ohio

WITH THESE COOL BUYS!
"We RISII'YI The Right To Limit Ou1ntltlee"
Not Responsible ForTypogrlphlcal Erroral

'

CLOSEOUT ON

MATERNITY JEANS

Reagan finds new way to
stir Capitol Hill members

50°/o

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Reagan, whose relations with
Senate Democrats is touchy at best, has found a new way to stir the
members on Capitol Hill. To put it as harshly as possible, he reneged
on a deal.
As the Moscow summit neared, Reagan wanted to have the INF
treaty approved by the Senate so he and Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev could sign the paperwork ratifyi ng the flrst-ever
elimination of a class of nuclear weapons.
Slmlllarly, the Senate, with the exception of a small band of
conserv•tlves, was anxious for Reagan to have a pproval in time for
the superpower meeting In the Kremlin.
One of the problems, however, was the Senate's insistence on
adding language that, in effect, said that a president of the· United
States, in the near or far future, could not unilaterally reinterpret a
treaty.
There was good reason for the Senate's determination to attach a
condition to the INF's resolution of ratification, having been put in
exactly the same spot by Reagan on the anti-ballistic missile treaty.
Reagan, without involving the Senate, gave the ABM treaty the
so-called broad intepretatlon, decreeing that it permitted testl ng and
deyelopment of the "Star Wars" space defense system.
Senate Democrats, unethusiastic about the SDI anyway, said the
narrow or correct interpretation permitted no tes ting outside the
laboratory.
With this dispute very much alive, Senate Democrats held up the
INF treaty, pending what they thought was an Ironclad agreement
with the White House.
Working In collaboration with White House chief of staff Howard
Baker and national security adviser Colin Powell, Senate leaders
drafted a condition that does not allow a president to relntepret a
treaty without the consent of the Senate.
They thought- and had every reason to assume- that this was an
Ironclad agreement, worked out In conjuctlon with the White House,
and It was offered to the Senate on that basis. It passed easily 72-27.
With great acclaim on all sides, the Senate approved the treaty and
Reagan had It In hand when he 'came to the KremUn gates. In fact,
there was such a great spirit of comity, that Senate leaders Robert
Byrd and Robert Dole were flown to Moscow so they could witness the
historic moment.
But a week after Reagan returned from the summit, he sent a
message to Congress that, In Its flowery words, simply said: The deal
Is off.
In hls message, Reagan said, "I am compelled to state that I cannot
accept the proposition that a condition in a resolution of ratlficatJon
can alter the allocation of rights and duties under theConsitutlon; nor
could I, consistent with my oath of office, accept any diminution
claimed to be affected by such a condition In the constltitutional
powers and res ponslbilllles of the presidency. "
Whether Reagan's position under the Constitution or mterna tional
law Is the correct one Is not the Issue. That will have to be resolved ,
should a dispute occur.
The question is whether the White House was deallng from the
bottom of the deck In drafting the language of the provision. If It
conflicts with international law and Supreme Court "jurisprudence,"
as Reagan claims, how could the White House In good conscience
enter Into the contract it did with the Senate?
As expected, Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd dismissed the
message, saying: "That fight Is over, and apparently the president
just woke up to find outwhowon. The president accepted the condition
when he exchanged the Instruments of ratification."
Sam Nunn, D-Ga. , another major architect of the agreement, said
simply that "it Is the law of the land."
Reagan said the dispute will not have any "practical effect on
Implementation of the treaty" and any question on Interpretation will
be handled "In the spirit of accommodation and respect."
The Senate, however, felt that this Issue had already been disposed
of "In
the spirit
of accommodation
and
respect"
towhlchReagan
now
seems to have assigned
nebulous value.

WASHINGTON -The future is
01
bearing down on the United States like an onrushing express
tend our reach and expand our
hope to
111 f.Izz1e. And WJ"th · double time 1f they
.
prosper 11 y w
h·Tec h Ag e ·
train. It will catapult Americans
knowIedge Into the In II mte.
it
th
.
b
less
compete
in
the
Hlg
from the Industrial Age into the
Fantastic discoveries - that
ou 1 prosper y, ere WJ 11 e
The sc hoolsmustimproveeduca·
High·Tech Age, where they will could range from the opening of money f~r the other programs lion the workers must Jmprove
face a changing, complex, bewilew worlds to the acquisition of that pohtlcans hold so dear.
' ·
.
d the plants
•Fmally Americans must speed productJv 1ty, an
n
dering world.
new vistas of knowledge- await
th 1 '
f
ti t
must improve their products.
1
The city of tomorrow will be a
us on these limit ies s Iron tiers. Pu;p;;e;;r;p;a;;
ce;;;r;o;;;m;s;;;o;;w;;m;o;;;;;o;n;o;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~;;,
techno-metropolis. The pace will The
nation tha t leads there will II
be fast, with Information and
likely develop a superior techno!BOYS AND GIRLS
services at the consumer's fin· ogy, and the nation that leads in
gertlps. The work force of
tomorrow WJll be highly skilled ~~~~~~~~gywllldomlnatethe2lst
and competitive.
Yet, even as space exploration
~
For most Americans, the tech· opens up future worlds, it will
no logical transformation will be continue to advance science and
0 OFF
a wrenching experience. Their
our
lives m the
heremoon
and II~~-----------------------"1
status quo will be upset , their enrich
now. The
exploration
of the
comfortable routines shattered.
created many times more wealth
their lndlvldua 1 worlds turned than it cost - new jobs, new
upside down.
products, new Indus tries. Studies
The key to tomorrow is techno!· show 9 to 1 return on every dollar
ogy. It will open the door to the the government has Invested In
21st cen tury . The United States the space program.
hasn't lost the key. but it seems to
The federal government now
OFF
have forgotten how to turn 11.
spends $300 billion annually on
New technologies are stili human programs, $500 billion for
coming out of America, but transfer payments, but less than
they're being developed, pack· $10 billion on space exploration.
aged and marketed by Japan. Yet, the space program is
Unless present trends are rev- developing cutting-edge techno!·
ersed, Japan will surpass the ogy that will determine the
OFF
UnitedStatesas the world's No 1 country's future progress and
· technological power.
prosperity.
By apt diagnosis and timely
The United States cannot raise
treatment. a calamJtycan still be Its level of prosperity by merely
averted. American has no t yet shifting its assets around, taking
lost Its greatness; Its decline from some, giving to others. Nor
OFF
does not have to happen.
is America likely to discover new
The United States still leads oil fields or generate another
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 25
the world In technological re· gold rush that will increase the
search. High·tech regions have national wealth.
sprung up across the nation, with
If American hopes to raise
umverslt les at their hubs. From living standards, It must excel In
these centers are coming the technology. New technologies
tech nologies of tomorrow, the can Increase prosperity by re·
Ideas tha t can keep America duclng the time and effort It
ahead.
takes, to produce goods and
290 N. 2ND
992-3684
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
Yet, all too often, the discover· services. Technological im·
ies are developed and produced provements can also save on
in far away foreign factories
valuable national resources.
Then, the products of U.S. New technologies might make It
research are sold back to Amerl· possible, for example, to draw
can consumers, with foreign more oil from abandoned wells or
interests raking In the profits.
to increase the mileage a car can
As a beginning, the United get from a gallon of gas.
States must protect and promote
It takes research, of course, to
American mventlons Congress develop technological break·
must pass laws to stop the throughs. Yet, less than 2 percent
pirating of U.S. discover ies, to of America's gross national
allow US. firms to patent product goes Into research and
government-financed research, development. The United States
to punish foreign patent violators has fallen shamefully to fourth
with reprisals.
am9ng nations in research. With·
But mostimportant, the United out research, progress will
States must keep ahead In the founder. Without progress,
development of space. The tech·

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio.

l"age-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 22, 1988

Now is the time to develop space

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publl.sher/ Cootroller

Pomet'oy- Middleport, Ohio

REVERSES TO BECOME ROAD
EMERGENCY SIGN

DENIM SKIRTS

NEED HELP.
PLEASE

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~~;,.-_ ?SK~L ..L_....;..:,_....:.;;;;........;.;._...;._~

40°/o

,

LADIES SUMMER SOCKS

30°/o

HARTLEY SHOES

210 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

992-5272
.

MATT VANVRANKEN, OWNER

.i l

.,
~
~.

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·.

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cant1ca ·

CHAPMAN SHOES

S I ANNUAL 112 PRICE
CLEARANCE
STARTS 8 A.M. THURSDAY, JUNE 23RD

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Published every afternoon. Monday
through Frtday , 111 Court St., Po·
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"

. -·

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. June 22. 1988
Wednesday, June 22, 1988

--Local news briefs -C~o""nt~ln--ue~d":'fr-om-pa_g_e

1:-----------------.

was found 5 p.m. Mond ay, wrecked over a n e mbankment on
Route 33 betwee n the roa dside parks. The car was taken early
Sunday from The Athens Messenger pa r king lot. Hig hway
workers in Me igs County discovered the ve hicle.
•

SEC,OND PLACE TIE- Tying for second place
in Tuesday's golf play were Mary Adkins, Mary

GUEST DAY GOLF WINNERS- This team
took firs tin the JayMar Ladies Golf Association's
Guest Day golf play at the JayMar Course
Tuesday . More than 50 women from JayMar,
Riverside at Mason, and Hidden Valley at Point

Froendt, Donna Jean and Sue Burnette, who had
the longest drive for the day.

Liquor stores will close
•

~ker advances in

Lakers
WIDlbledon tournament
repeat.

WIMBL E DON, England
(UP! ) - BorlsBecke rbe atKarei
Nova c ek In the first round of
Wimbledon In 1987 and the West
German· must defea t the Czechoslovak this year in the second
round to keep his bid for a third
· Wimbledon title alive.
Top seed Ivan Lend! takes on
Australian Darren Cahill In the
second round .
~
Lendl, born in Czechoslovakia
but seeking American citizenship, had little trouble in the first
round against British wild card
David Felgate, but C~hill, 23,
could give him a toughe~ time on
the lush grass of center fOurt.
Defending champion Pat Cash
of Australia, seeded foutth, was
to face Argentine Javier ·Frana
on court No. L
ln women's second round actlon, top seed Steffl Gra~ was to
play Frenchwoman Karine
Quentrec, less than 24 hours after
she opened with a 6-0, &amp;-0 pasting
of Chinese-born American Hu Na
In the first round.
Cash , Lend! and Becl\er returned to play after a · day's
break, during which secondseeded Swede Mats Wllander
downed Argentine Eduardo
Masso 6-3, 6-4, 7-6.
'
Wilander, who already h'a s the
Australian and French I Open
titles to hls credit this year, said
being halfway to a Grand Slam
•hadn 't improved his confidence.
''The grass Is certainly not the
best s urface for me, and It never
will become so, either. But I feel
much more confident in my
game. I feel I can come back If
I 'm down.
" It has nothing to do with the
fact that I won the first two
I

Baseball

Texas i. SuUie D
Wednetw~Q'llo Game~~~

GH

f'alllorNa { Fr.. t!r &lt;1-1) at Mln~so&amp;a
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.su

10 1-2

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(f'enltl J.l ), '7 : !5 p.m .
Bo!!t011 (Boyd t ·S) al Cle \·e land tFa r nell '7--1) , '7: 35 p.m.

,....

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fLonxt-3 !, K:30 p.m.
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( GUtmlln fi.~) . ~ : 35 p.m .

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thing like
," saidonReynolds
whose
theftthat
of home
lhe back,
end of a double steal was the
As tros' fourth this season, setting a club record. "It's not going
to work all the time but the other
team is a ware that we will try It,
and t hi s time we were
fortuna te. ''
Lanier a lso got 8 1-3 Innings of
three-hit relief from his bullpen
after Mike Scott was forced to
leave the game with a tight left
hamstring.
"You've got to give Joaquin
(Anduja r ) a lotofcredlt,"Lanler
said. "Larry Andersen pitched
well, and so did Juan Agosto, and
then Smitty fDave Smith) closed
them out. You've got to be happy
with that."
Andersen, Agosto, and Smith
each worked a perfect Inning

with Smith recording his 14th
save .
With the Astros trailing 1-0,
Alan Ashby walked with one out
off Jack Armstrong, 0-1, who was
making his major league debut.
Pinch -hitter Louis Meadows
stole second before Buddy Bell,
who was traded from the Reds to
Houston last weekend, hit a
ground-rule double to tie the
game.

· DEBORAH &amp; J{INATHAN

~ '4f.HUTCHINSON
"-~11/j
IN

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

Hay ...
Continued from page 1
hotllne had received about 150
calls, mostly from farmers appealing for hay. About 20 callers
offered donations, ranging from
1 16 acres of unharvested hay to
80 ready-to-ship bales, McCullough said.

'_.CONCERT

--"---

....,..:;-

~

.

FRIDAY
NIGHT
JUNE 24
'

r---------.

-sue

O...ludal Mll't'n • • t:J5 p.m.
New Y..-k at Del rok. 1: II p.m.
Ball Pore M TerGMo. 1: 1111-m.
BottoaM Clf'Yei_... , . .,:JI p.m .

£111rraco, 8: Sf p.m.

Se.Uie al Tou, l :ll p.111.

!1/etlo. . Le..-

O.Iuco at Phl••el•a. It: ts p.m.
PNc•l'l• at New Yerk.l:ll p.m.
SIUI Dleao M Su Frudllce, t : IS p.m.
81 . l.ollll at Mlontl'\l! ... l : IS p.m.
O•ti••ll IIi H....... I : S$ p.m.
A.lluta at Loll .lapl•, lt:ll p.m .

.

I

II

BARGAIN NIGHT

TU E ~OAY

I

Nationally
Known Christian
Recording Artists
"A Blend of Folk,
Gospel, Rolk &amp;

may call at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville after 2 p.m.,
Thursday and until! p.m. before
the Friday service. Contributions In hi s memory may be
made to the Little Hocking
Church of Christ Library Fund
and the Helmlick Institute.Foundation, Inc., P.O. Box 8858,
.Cincinnati, Ohio 45208.

. Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Jerry
Lawson, Portland; Mildred Fry,
New Haven; Hugh Thompson,
Langsville; Jack Reltmlre, Letart, W. \1 a.; Charles Cook,
Pomeroy; Charles Curfman,
Racine.
Tuesday Discharges - Colter
Hayman, John Greenaway .

A divorce has been gra nted to
both parties in an action by
Teresa Canterbury agains t Gary
Canterbury.

The annual Smith RNnion will
be held Sunday, star ting at 12: 30
p.m., at the Senior Citizens
Center in Po meroy .

Special of the Week!

7t

l~'...

CHUCK WAGON

$1.14
WITH FRIES ............. $1 .6 9

'

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

...
'I

'tJ

-.

"At the End of tht Pomtloy·Mason B1idge"

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992·25511

PHone

maRT

Maybe you want to know how
to make your phone service more

FREE flOG DIP

pt'Oductille. Perltaps you're rNdy
to rent. Or • piece of equipment
is on the blinlc. Sometimes it's
....... to
over
phone. Wltldt is why we're here.

Friday .
June 24

We're committed to IMIVIII!lr

so whafewr questions you

9 AM til

know the one

3 PM
RID YOUR DOG
OF FLEAS • TICKS

DIP YOUR DOG
FREE

This will be held on Friday and
not Saturday that was printed
in Sunday's ad.

Come dressed to help dip your own dog. Please
bring your own towel.
Just Another Service From The Area's Largest
Pet Food and Pet Supply Store

WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF PET SUPPLIES

MGM FARM CITY

EAST MAIN ST.

238 W. Main Street

POMEROY

992-2181

Terms of the GTE exchange policy available at Phone Mart.

.'

FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALIST ON HAND: AUTO TECH HEARING INSTRUMENTS Ia providing factory trained elq)erta for thle epeclal event.
Th... hlahly ,..pected epeclallm heve gained outltlndlng reputetlone In
helplrlg tlioH who have Hneorl-neural hearing lnPIIrment (nerve cleefneu).
and have many yeare of experience In the pi'Oithetlc ellletance of

...n"

NERVE DEAFNESS. If you or 1 friend ere one of thoH who HEAR BUT DO
NOT UNDERSTAND ..•. worde run togetluir ... you have to 1111 people toreput ..• you have trouble when more then one pereon le talking ... then thll
IPICIII ev.nt le for youl
·

.'

'

*eo *find•ReiMIIIber.
IIIII wfllle no....,... aid lllllnl••• •• hllp a• r ldnd of loll, JOU ... It ID JOUf'Mif
out If 1M II.I.L Aau••llo _,be able eo 1111p you or iom1DM ,.... know IDINtttr 1a111ng. * * *

GRACE CHURCH
326 "AIN ST.

II

E EISlER Till EYER

No Volume Control To Ad)uatll No Conventional Batteries To Buy!
·•Just Put It In Your Ear And Hear Automatically! .

88 (

Better Hearing Makes Life Easier For You
And More Enjoyable For Those You Live With

..'
•

•

'

'

I

'

MIDDLEPORt, OHIO

Millview Cltntc

J1n1 Ann

Klrr, II.A.

Audlolo;st, CCC-A

603 W. Union
Athens. Ohio 45701
Phone (614) 592-2863

•

'•

Friday, June 24th
INN

!I

L--------------------------J
•

Hospital news

Divorces sought

Smith re union

..

:.•' •
•

•

Four defendants were fined and three others forfeited bonds
In the court of Pomeroy M'yor Richard Seyler Tuesday night .
. Fined were William Aelklns, Pomeroy , $113 and cos ts,
Intoxication; James Michael, Pomeroy , $375 and costs, driving
while intoxicated; Nancy Boyko, Pomeroy, violation of the
lease law, $38 and costs; DarrellJ enklns, Jr., Pomeroy, expired
tags, $63 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Herbert L. Gra te, II, Pomeroy, $53,
speeding; Kenneth Bruhl, Co lumbu s, $63, traffic light viola tion,
and Randall Might, Middleport, $43, stop sign violation.

Announcem.-nts

·,

Limit 2 With Coupon- Expire• 8/26/88

992-3481

Defendants fined in court

Fair lhrough the period, with
highs ranging from the upper 70s
to the m id 80s Friday a nd
between 80 and 90 Sat urday a nd
Sunday . Overnight lows will be
bet ween 55 and 65 Friday antl In
the 60s Saturd ay and Sunday
mornings.

$2 . 50

I (an hear iust
fine, but some
people seem
to mumble •••

.

COKE PRODUCTS

Four defendan ts forfe ited bonds and three others wer e fi ned
In the court of Middlepor t Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night .
Forle ltlng were Larry L . Gilmore, Middleport, $50, squea ling
tires; Brent E . Henry, Chillicothe, $50 wrong wa y on a one way
street; Gas Plus, Middlepor t, $200, s~iling fireworks.
F ined were Kenneth L. Clemons, Radcllff, $10 and cos ts, s top
sign violation; John D. Hill, New Haven, W. Va. , $425 and costs ,
three days in jail, driving while Intoxicated; Ke ith Mohler,
Middleort , $10 and costs ,accumulation of garbage a nd trash;
Rod Ebersbach, Middleport, $100 and costs, pet ty theft.

Sou 1ft Central Ohio
Today : Sunny and hot , with a
' reco rd high temperature near
100 degrees . Southwes t winds 10
to 20 mph .
Tonig ht: Partly cloudy, with
lows between 70 and 75. Southwes t wi nds ar ound 10 mph, becomIng wester ly .
Thursday: Partly cloudy , with
a cha nce of th understorms.
Highs will be between 85 and 90 .
Chance of rain Is 40 percent.
Extended Forecast·
Friday through Sunday

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT/SUN &amp; WED
ALL SEATS \ 2.50

'

COUPON
. - - - - - - - - - - - ·1

2 LITER

Four forfeit bonds

------Weather------

flEE

JOHNSONS

American lA!
Callfllrnla al Minnesota, 1: IS p.m .

The Ga iUa-Meigs Post, State Highway Patrol investigated a
hltskip accident at 3 p.m. Tuesda y on SR. 7, abou t two miles
north of the Gallia-Meigs County line.
Troopers said a n unidentified vehicle went left of center
forc ing Olin D. Boothe, 64, Pomer oy, off the roa d. Booth e's ca r
struck a highway marker , doing moderate da mage to the
veh icle. No one was injured.

Page-5

ADMISSION

MEMBERSHIP DUES ARE DUE FOR 1988
ON OR BEFORE JUNE 30TH

7-ll a1 Los Anjp!IH

Patrol probes hit-skip mishap

The Daily Sentinel

7:00P.M.

FRATERNAL ORDER OF
EAGLES AERIE 21 71

Su

Calendar

a.,. u

HOUSTON tUPI) - The }Jouston Astros have been having
difficulties· hitting in their series
against the Cincinnati Reds, so
manager Hal Lanier used the
team 's speed to s teal a victory
Tuesday night.
'The Astros had three of their
record-tying seven stolen bases
In a three-run seventh Inning,
Including a s teal of home by
Craig Reynolds in a 3-1 triumph
over Cincinnati.
"There's a time to try some-

OF ·

(Su.t\ortl-4 ), II : IS p.m.
Thul'lll.tr'IIG&amp;mM
New York at Chlca.A:o
P1Uihu ~hat Mnlno.al, nllht
PlllladelpNaM St. LoU!, nlpt

K.. •

Bell's blast drops Reds, 3-1

NOnCE TO PATIENTS
I will be retiring from actiwe practice and closing my
office effective June 30,
1988.
Jolin M. Grubb M. D.

AITENTION MEMBERS

Clndnlllll (.lacluloa 1·1 ) a&amp; Houllon
A.tlMca1Matl~

the ct.-st to pin award. o.ior prizes were won by
Letha Bumgardner, Donna Jean, and Betty
Blackwood.

'

(ICnqper l ·l ) , II:SS p.m.

N.,... \'ork

OM.IMd

Dltp (WIIill!tOn 'J.S)

TIE FOR SECOND PLACE - Eva Whitlatch,
Jane Brown, Mary Bur lAin, and Karen Facemyer,
left to right, were on the team which tied lor
second In the play Tuesday. Facemyer also got

Billy L. (Mike) McKnight, 59 ,
Coolville, died Tuesday at the St .
Joseph Hospital In Parker sburg,
W. V a., fo Uowing an extended
illness.
Mr. McKnight was bern Oct. 5,
1928 at Lepanto, Ariz ., a son of
Mary Fuller McKnight , Merigold , Md. •. and the late Ozie
Ellison McKnight. He wa s a
member of the Little Hocking
Church of Christ having served
as an ordained elder with the
church until 1987. He retired to
Coolville in 1976 after 24 and one
half years as supervising sergeant for the Metropolitan Pollee
Department In Washington, D. C.
He spent four years in the U. S.
Air Fqrce and was discharged as
a sergeant in 1952.
In addition to his mother, Mr.
McKnight Is survived by his wife,
Evajean F .; a son, Dean Leon
McKnight, Silver Springs, Md.; a
son and daughter-in·law , Kevin
Lamar and Eileen Frances
McKnight, Damascus, Md.; a
half sister, Allean Ussery, six
brothers, Albert Lamar of Hartford City, Ind.; J. B. McKnight,
Mountain View, Ariz.; Buster
Robert, Las Vegas, Nev.; .James
Howard, Angola, Ind.; Jimmie
Lee of Tucson, Ariz.; Cecil Le roy
of Huffman, Tex .
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Little Hoc king
Church of Christ-with Mr. Roger
A.' Rush and Mr. Stephen Fuchs
of!lcatlng. Burial will be In the
Coolville Cemetery . Friends

PQI\,1 f

81. l.o•ll (Mapue I· I ) at Moltt~lll
(Smllh 4·1), l : IS p.m .

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eut

\lo'~t

.till li ~'t
.-llR fi ~
.4S'7 1\-t
.343 1$ \t

r\nlfleH:I, Alblni.a I

SMI

Omaha at Rncheruer
Iowa 11 8JNt:t~!ll'

lleiiOI'I

2Yt

FranCIAco tHamlh&amp;lll!l' J.l ) , -t : OSp. m.

Rlclamond

Mllwaukttr

.5)-t _ .
. ~31

CLE\IELAND IUPI) -Bos ton
Red Sox pitcher Jeff Sellers
suffered a broken right hand
when struck by a line drive in the
second inning of Tuesday night 's
game against the Cleveland
Indians.
Sellers was taken to t.he Cleveland Clinic, where X-rays revealed a fracture of the thi rd
metacarpal. Red Sox spokesman
Josh Spofford said Seller s would
return to Boston today to be
further examined by team physician Dr. Arthur, Pappas.
Cleveland had the bases loaded
In the third when Joe Carter hit a
sharp liner up the middle, and the
ball struck Sellers. The pitcher
fell to the ground grimacing In
obvious pain, and was taken to
the clubhouse.
Sellers has an 0-6 record in 12
games this season, Including 11
starts. He was chose by Boston In
the eighth round of the June 1982
draft .

Wlf'~IIIJ ' !t G&amp;ITIBII

BuiiJUo 1M 'ndr.wl.ll!f
M1.IM Ill Lou"'wUh&gt;
Pawt~kfl at Nuhvllle
Columbu• at Ok .. homa Cit)·

Terenlo
n.lllmn"'

S\tt

.S2tlt
.-193 IG Yz
.-t!IS 11
.UR 13 \1:

BiJiy McKnight

Sellers injured

Oll(lap (Sutcliffe 5-4) at Philadelphia
( Maddu~~: 1·0), 1! ;3$ p.m .
Ptlt.bo rah { Dvnne HI M Nt w York
(Gooden WJ.I : JI!'-m,

O..nwr a&amp; Syracu~e
Thurldll,Y 'II Gan1 ~

..

GB

-

Karen L. Nowak, director of th e Ohio Department of Liquor
Control, announced that a ll s tate liquor stores, a gencies and
departmental offices will be closed on July 4 in observance of
lndependence Day.

Area deaths

INGLEWOOD , Calif. rUPI)More than 370 days and 100
gam es after he "guaranteed" the
Los Angeles Lakers would repeat
as league champions, Coach Pat
Riley proved that he is, Indeed, a
man of his word.
The Lakers halted the NBA 's
18-year streak of deposed cnampions and emerged as a team for
the ages Tuesday night, capturlng their second consecutive t itle
and fifth of the decade with a
108-105 victory over the Detroit
Pistons.
Playing In an NBA record third
Game 7 this postseason, Los
Angeles outscored the Pistons
36-21ln the third quarter to turn a
52-47 halftime deficit Into a 83-73
lead entering the final period.
The champions then held off a
desperate Detroit rally in the
final two minutes.
Byron Scott had 14 of his 21
points In the third quarter as the
Lakers sank their first 10 shots
and 75 percent of their attempts
(15 of 20) In the quarter.
After the victory, Riley offered
yet another guarantee.
"I guarantee this - we ' re
going to enjoy .this all summer
long," he said as champagne
swirled about the Lakers' locker
room. "It's a great bunch of
guys. But it took 115 games ;
you've got to give them credit."
Receiving much of the credit
was James Worthy, who was
selected the Most valuable
Player of the series after his first
career triple-double.

San Dt e p II, San t 'randM:o 3

IRilaMpoll" 11.1 Mai..BIIffaln at Pl.wtu; kl'i
Ot .. homa Clty at Ro t• he~uer

•••
,..,

w...

JIU
34 35
33 JS
38 S7

3t tt
37 n
33 3i
Clnt.i aMII
33 38
S an DlekQ
Sl 44
t\Uani.a
ZJ u
n .u•11d11,Y '" Re.uM"
Montrel&amp;l 7, St . LoU 0
N~tW York&amp;, Pll~l'lh 0
Phlladet,hla 8, Dllc...-• 1
HouMoa 3, Onct niiU II
Loll Arl~ e!l
HoiUilon
S an Franci !ICO

Columhu 11 11111owa
Rkhmu..t at Loul.~ vlll c
'Md!o~aier at N~h\'111 ('

l•••••plllll~t at

J.l }, =: 31 p.m .

!Tanana!·4) , l :S5 p.m .

:rt 31 .5S7 - '
:1-1 " .-166
6 1 -~

Omnh a
Oklllhomll

Tld!.-watf'r
I"Mwluckf'l

majors. Iwillne verthinkgra ss is
the natural surface for my game.
American John McEnroe
made his return to Wimbledon
after a three- year absence with a
6-1, 7-5, 6-1 victory over Austrian
Horst Skoff.
However, Tuesday was domlnated by the women.
Graf served notice of her
Intention to unseat defending
champion Martina NavratUova
with her 46-mlnute triumph over
Hu.
Navratllova, seeking a record
ninth Wimbledon singles champlonshlp, defeated Yugoslav sabrlna Gales 6-1, 6-2, In another
match that lasted less than an
hour.
It was the Czechoslovak-born
American's 42nd consecutive
match victory at Wimbledon
beating the post-war record of 4l
held by five-time champion
Bjorn Borg of Sweden.
A string of seeds followed Graf
and Navratllova Into the second •
round.
Third seed Pam Shriver just
squeaked through as she downed
South African Dinky van Rensburg 6-2, 4-6, 8-6. The lanky
American was down 4-1 In the
final set before she fought her
way back for the win.
American veteran Chris
Evert, seeded fourth and playing
heD 100th Wimbledon singles
match, showed no sign of favorlng her Injured foot as she swept
to a 6-1, 6-2 victory over Frenchwoman Alexia Dechaume, while
tilth seed Gabriela Sabatini of
Argentina, No. 6 Helena Sukova
of Czechoslovakia , eight-seeded
Soviet Natalia Zvereva and
American Lori McNeil, the lOth
seed, all advanced.

Pomeroy releases financial data
A balance of $193,523.69 is reported In the P omeroy VIllage
Treasu ry, as of May 31, accord ing to Jane Wa lton,
.
cler k-I rea surer .
Rece ipts, disburseme nts a nd balances, res pectively,' In each
fund making up the tota l budget are as follows.
Safety, $38,974.11, $37, 488:01 , $23,162.50; s treet', $200, $387.75,
$8,833.43; state highway, $255.51, no disbursements, $2,331.39;
fire, $4,925.09, $2,213.82, $2,217.35; cemetery, $1 ,379.44, $692.13,
$691.27; water, $20,973.99, $26,337.87. $49;751 .85; sewer,
$7,834.08, $2,039.16, $42.40; guaranty meter , $575, $500,
$13 ,429.87; utility , $13,836 .77, $6,746.57, $11,549,98; sale of
butldmg, $382.45, $382.45, $.19; perpetual care, no receipts, no
disbursements, $4,969.77; cemetery endowment , no receipts, no
disbursements, $17,825.11; pollee pension, $2,257.72, $2,519 .03,
no balance; building fund, $117.55, no disbursements , $759.60;
recreation, no receipts, no disbursements, $1,310.40; permi&amp;slve ta x, ·no receipts, $830.05, $818.43; bond retirement,
· $2, 257.72, $76.65, $6,052.44; fire truck, $13,966.02, $468.42,
$43,332. 65.
Total receipts for th e month a mounted to $121 474.69 while
total disbursements were $90,484.43.
'

Pleasant played golf and then enjoyed a salad
luncheon. On the winning team were left to right,
· Rita Slaven, Louise Roush, Tee Teaford, and
Nellie Brown.

•

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

•

••

.tn.·

.'.•
•

t

�Wednesday, June 22, 1988

Community calendar

.The Daily Sentinel

By The Be-n d

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, and Its Auxiliary will meet
for a dinner at 6: 30 Wednesday
night at the legion annex . MeetIngs of both groups wlll follow the
dinner. At theAuxillarymeeting,
Mrs. Florence Richards will
Install new officers. Honor
guards will be presented to those

Wednesday, ,June 22, 1988

.

Page-6

Chester Council meeting held
Initiatory work for Marlene leg: Both would anprec!ate
Hemsley in the Guiding Star cards , lt was noted.
Council of Syrauce was conThelma White, councilor, preducted at the recent meeting of sided at the meeting with the
Chester Council 323, Daughters pledge to the Christian and
of America, held at the Chester American flags being given In
hall.
unison. Psalm 124 was read.
Erma Cleland reported on the Officers' reports were given. The
recent rally at Portsmouth. Eli- quarterly birthday observance
za beth Hayes thanked those who was announced for the next
participated ln th~ Memorial meeting.
Day parade. -It was noted that
Guests from Guidlrig Star
Ada Morris Is now In Amerlcare Council were Margaret Cotterill,
Nursing Center, and that Mary Bob Harden, Esther Harden,
Holter Is home with a fractured Eileen Clark, and Janice

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Lawson.
Members of Chester Council at
the meeting were Betty Roush,
Sandy White, Alta Ballard, Jo
Ann Baum, Zeda Ritchie, Masry
Hayes, Betty Young, Sadie Trussell, DDorothy Ritchie, Faye
Kirkhart. Laura Nice, Marcie
Keller, Charlotte Grant, Doris
Grueser, Opal Hollon, Lora
Damewood, Mae McPeek, Erma
Cleland, Thelma White, Ethel
Orr, Darlene Baum, Elizabeth
Hayes, Beulah Maxey , and Keith
Ashley.

with over 25 years membership.
THURSDAY
DEXTER - Ladies Fellow ship of Meigs County Churches of
Christ will m eet a t 7:30 p.m .
Thu rsday at the Dexter Church
of Chris t.
- ~-

SYRACUSE - The annual
meeting of the Ca r leton College

The Oaily Sentinei- Page-7

Trustees wil l be held at 7 p.m. raise needed montes to support tournament.
Thu rsday at the Syracuse munic- extra-curricular activities for
ipal building.
next school yea r. Chicken barAPPLEGROVE - A hymn
bec ue, begi nning at noon Sat ur- sing will be held Saturday, 7
SALEM TOWNSHIP - Salem day, pee wee and tee ball · p.m .. at the Apple Crave United
Township Tr ustees will hold a tournaments startin g a( 9 a.m.; Methodist Church, 10 miles
pu blic heari ng on the 1989 budget yard sal e, bazaar, bazaar booth , above Raci ne on Route 338. Dan
at thei r regular monthly m eeting games for kids, speedball, bal- Hay man and the Fa ith Trio will
on F r iday, J une 24, 9:30 a. m ., at loon games, hole-In-one contes t, be featured.
the Sa lem fire house .
bake sale and hot dog booth a nd
at 9 p.m., an outdoor da nce while
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
on Sunday, yard sale and games
RAC INE - Desce ndants of
EAST MEIGS - Summer will continue as Well as cham- late Al bert and Llza Hili will hold
Celebra tion at Eas te rn High pio n s hip ga mes of t he a reunion Sunday at th e Racine
Sc hool Sa turday and Sund ay to
.Shri ne P ar k with a bas ke t dinner

conference room. Lefl to right, Betty Sayre and
Helen Hill received 1,000 hour pins, with Mildred
Wells and Robyn Smith, 100 hours pins, from Scott
Lucas, hospital administrator.

VOLUNTEERS RECOGNIZED , Pins for
hours of volunteer work at Veterans Memorial
Hospital were presented at the Women's Auxll·
lary meeting held Tuesday afternoon ln the

Northwest

•

·~

Awards given
Awards day was held at the
Salisbury Elementary School
with six students being presented
the Presidential Academic Fitness certificates .
They were Charles Parker,
Jason Morris, Mitch Jacks, Brad
Knotts, and Ryan Conde. The
awards are given on the criteria
of the overall B plus average
composed of all years In the
school. It Is equivalent to a 3.3 on
a 4 point scale or 85 on a 100 point
scale and a score of 80th
percentile or above on t~e three
R's test.
Spelling bee awards went to
Mitch Jacks, school champ, and
Angie Johnson , runner -up. Reclevlng awrds for all A's for the
year were Rebecca Johnson and .
Tr!cla Davis.
Presented perfect attendance
awards were Chad Folmer, second grade; Greg Ramey, fifth
grade; Karen Blessing and
Heath Hudson, sixth grade.
In the first grade, those recognized for being on the honor rall
aU year were Lacy Banks, Carrie
Lambert, Crystal Salser and
Bobbl Jo Stewart. Rebecca Johnson and Tr!cla Davis got awards
for having all A's for the year
with Johnson also receiving a
special award for straight A's In_
spelling.
Those In the second grade
receiving awards for being on the
honor roll all year were Bllli
· Bentley, Jason Frecker, James
Geiger, Myca Haynes and MIchael Leifheit who also received
an award for completing the SRA
lab.
In the third grade, Tim Peavley and Chris Roush were recognized for all A's, while In the
fourth grade Dorothy Leifheit
received an award for being on
the honor roll all year, and
certUicates of honor were given
to Nikki Bentley, Autumn Conde,
Mindy Pat terson. Petrova Stegall and Kayrn Thompson.
In the fifth grade awards went
to Jarrod Folmer and Shilo
Moore for being on the honor roll
all year, Heidi Huffman recleved
an award for achieving the
highest score 98.92 on the 50
states and their capitals. Jason
Witherell, a sixth grader was
recorgnized for his honor roll
work all year, and special
awards for academic achievement went to Ryan Conde,
Jarrod Douglas , Heather Hud son, Mitch Jacks, Brad Knott,
Jason Morris and Jason
Witherell.
The Chapter 1 students receivIng awards for high achievement
were Tanya Dill, Amanda Ralph ,
Cory Colly, Jonathan Dickens ,
Josh Witherell, Travis Curtis,
Robby Jones, and Tony King.
Dorothy Leifheit and Jason
Witherell were given special
academic excellence awards and
dictionaries.

~~~s~~~m~ustcard
haveIssued
a yellow
by food
the

~

Action Agency.
Food will be distributed at the
locations: Tuppers
Statton, Racine
AmPrl•'•n Legion, Meigs County
F•llr01rnunn• and the Pagevllle
Food commodities may be
p!cl&lt;ed up by others for senior

.

302

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

Past,

and

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
14-17-LB . A\IG. WHOLE

Future- Gives Advice
on Love, Marriage and
Business.
' If You Art Unhappy and
Don't Know Which Way To
Turn Co- In For Advice Ont Visit Will Convince You
Thtrt Is A lttttr Way.
$500 OFF With This Ad

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams
Pound

-

COPYRIGHT 1988 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JUNE 19. THROUGH
SA.TUROAY, JUNE 25, 1988, IN GAlUPOUS AID PO•tO'I STORES.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .
NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

MAKE IT ARULE...

•

)":'I

WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE
CORN. FRENCH STYLE OR CUT GREEN
BEANS OR EARLY GARDEN SWEET PEAS

USE WANT ADS

IS IT TIME TO
REPLACE THOSE
WORN OUT
PIPES?
-SEE US•GALVANIZED
•PLASTIC
•B~ACK IRON
PIPE AND PIPE
FlniNGS

PICKENS

ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT- Recipients of the Presidential
Academic Fitness certificates at the Salisbury Elementary
School's awards day program were lefl to right, front, Ryan Conde
and Brad Knotts, and back, Jason Morris, Charles Parker, Mitch
Jacks, and Jason Witherell.

HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY~Each of these advertised items
is required to be readily available tor sale in. ~ch Kroger
Store, e"kcept as specifically noted in this ad. If we do
run out of an advertised itern. we will offer you your
choice of a comparable item, wt\en available , refle.:::ting
the same savtngs or a raincheck which will entitle ypu to
purchase the advert ised item at the advertised price
within 30 days. Onlv one vendor coupon will be
accepted per item purchased.

SLICE.D FREE

.....

Del Monte
Vegetables

SUPERIOR

BIG RED BOLOGNA ••••••• w•.... 99(

16-17·0L

AMISH OLD FASHION

U.S. GRADE A
COUNTRY STYLE, CUT UP OR

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers
Pound

·

LOAF LUNCH MEAT •••••••• !.~. S2.29

HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••••••!.Lia•••• 89&lt;
SWin ECKRICH

For

VA. BR·AND HAM ••• ~ ••••••• !.LI. S2 .19
'

BROUGHTON'$ QUART

72 CT.

CHOCOLATE
MILK ............................. 79C

GOLD DELICIOUS
APPLES ................. 2/69&lt;

QUARTERS

COUNTRY CROCK
MARGARINE ..........\L .. 79c

CANTALOUPES ..tt~r....99&lt;

KRAn 16 SLICE PROCESS

"NEW" WHITE
POTATOES .......!9.\f, S1.89

•

AMERICAN
CHEESE .................... s1.89

•

MTN . DEW, DIET MTN . DEW,

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola
12-Pak 12-oL Cans

88

U.S. GO\I' T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
Round Steak
Pound

88
~.

Used furniture Sale
AT RUTLAND FURNITURE

Gold Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer lpalrl
Washer &amp; Dryer (pairI (washer has been overttauledl
1 Maytag Gold Dryer
3 White Maytag Dryers
2 Maytag Wringer Washer
40 in. Frigidaire Gold Electric Range .
30 in. Frigidpin Gold Ceramic Top Self (lean Range
Almond Self Clean Electric Range
White Frigidaire Electric Range
Portable Green Maytag Dryer
1 Used Loveseat
3 pc. Living Room Suite m•e new I

ASHLAND, Ohio !UPl )
Sumalee Gunanukorn of Worthington Tuesday -was elected
governor of Buckeye Girls State,
a mock government exercise
sponsored by the Ohio American
Legion Auxiliary.
Gunanukorn. 16, who will be a
senior at Worthington High
School near Columbus this comIng fail, ran on the Nationalist
ticket.
··

•

Pound

LADY RACHEL'S
PALM READING

clllzenso,r ~~sl~~~w~rek ~~~h~~~
627 3rd An., Gallipo!is
PH. 446-1699
persons send their food commodIty card and a signed note
HOURS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.
g~~;~~~n~ permission for another .
o
to pick up their Items.
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-ij
Persons receiving commodl- I
ties are asked to take paper bags
or small boxes .

SPECIAL RECOGNITION - Jessie White has volunteered
more than 8,000 hours of service ln the past 20 years at Veterans
Memorial Hospital through her work with the Women's Auxiliary . .
She wu presented her pin and COOiratulaled by hospital
administrator Scott Lucas at Tuesday's meeting of the Auxiliary.

Worthington
student heads
Girls State

Her running mate was Stacy
Muth, 17, of Field High School in
Portage County. Muth will serve
as lieutenant governor.

Art and Fannie Mlller and Tony,
Danny, Linda and Daniel Young,
Pat and Rose Patterson , Mr. and
Mrs . Doyle Hudson; Orville
Hogue, Nellle Hatfield, Mildred
Grate, Ann Baxter and daughter,
and June Gray.

G:nnmodity
distribution
in Meigs

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

742·2211
UTLAND
HOME OF T.. GIATE BUYS, WHilE YOU GO GIEAT BUYS.

.

•

--

II'

•

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___ _

TROPICANA

''

TRIM

ORANGE JUICE •••••••••••• n.q!. S1.8 7

FOX DRUXE

PEPPERONI PIZZA •••••••2.q!·•• S1.09

90 SHEETS PER ROLL 2-PLY .

BANQUO lEG.

Viva Designer
Paper Towels

10 oz: $1 49
••••••••••••••••••••••
•

TV
TIOPICANA

Siuyl11 Roll

.PUNCH DRINKS ••••••••••• ~~.q~.. 2I 69(
VAC. PACK

FOLGER'S COFFEE •••••••• !~.q!·. S2.89
REG. JELLO ••••••••••••••••••~.q~.• 2I 79(
AUNI JEMIMA

SYRUP ••••••••••••••••••••••••••!~.~~·. S2 .4 9

SWinNING

SHORTENING •••••••••••••••w... S1.69
REYNOLD .FOIL •••••••••••••n.s.~.~'•.. 79&lt;
AIMOUI

POSt NATURAL

BRAN FLAKES .............. !~.~!·. S1.99

STOKELY

PEAR HALVES •••••••••••••• l!.~l·•••• ~89&lt;
BOUNTY TOWELS •••••w~~~f~l. S1.59

'

FROZEN
I EXCEPT LASAGNA OR SUCED BEEFI

•

VIENNA SAUSAGE .... 1.~I.2 IS1.19

•

:

.. . ·'

Card shower
Fr iends of Mrs. Ada Van
Meter , longtime resident of the
Ches ter commu nity , have
planned a card shower for her.
Mrs. van Meter, who Is now
resid ing in a nursing home at
Clifton, W. Va. will celebrate her
78th birthday on Su nday . Cards
may be sent to her at Box 38 ,
Clifton , W. Va .

First Of The Season

Father's Day· observed.by church
The Rutland Church of The • church attired as little boys and
Nazarene honored fathers with a girls presented the program.
picnic at the Rutland Park on Holly Williams read a Father's
Day poem written tly Sharon
Friday .
A large cake Inscribed "Happy Wise.
Father's Day " was served folSpecial ties were presented to
lowing the dinner. Women of the three of the fathers to be worn to
Sunday School. Those presented
ties were Charles Barrett, Sunday school super!ntendnet; Keith
Kennedy, song leader, and Rev.
Sam Basye, pastor. .
Attending the picnic were the
pla~ed
Rev. Sam Basye and Nan, Adrian
Carson, Raymond and Lydia
The Meigs County Cooperative Smith, Wendell and Donna
will be giving out cheese, Grate, Keith and Irene Kennedy,
, and rice on Tuesday, June Angela Griffith, Robert and Judy
from 10 a.m to 2 p.m. or until Miller, Allen , Mar llyn and Holly
supply Is exhausted, whi· Wllllams, Hanna Queen,' Sharon
"h••vPr comes first.
and Gene Wise, Eva McKinney,
Persons receiving food com-

at· noon; relatives and friend s
invited.

Banquet
Family Entrees
21-32·DL

88

KROGER

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream
~-Gallon

�Wednesday, June 22, 1988

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 22, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Son, widowed mother lack lines of communtcatton
•

Dear Ann !Jlnders: I am a recent
widow and mother of a grown son.
43. He has never been much of a
communicator, but now when I
nml to talk, these are the com·
ments I (let from him:
"I'm in a hurry."
"Get to the point."
"jUS( say yes or no."
"let's discuss this another time."
"You are too negative about
everything."
"Why do you have to make it
such a long story?"
"I have to be somewhere in 15
minutes."
He sends me cards and expensive
gifts on special occasions. ·1 don't
need these things. I nml someone
to talk to now that I am alone.
li this normal or am I expecting
too much? .. JACKSONVILLE
MOllfER
DEAR MOniER: I'm afraid you
lost this battle several years ago. A
43·year-old son who was "never
much of a communicator" is not
about to open up to his mother
simply because she needs to talk to
someone.
I hope you will consult a grief
therapist soon. Professional help
would be useful. You can't count
on your son to fill this void in your
life. nor should you expect it.
Dear Ann Landers; I am In total
agreement with "Sour Note," the
band leader who was sick and tired
of being pe&lt;tered by amateurs who
came up and asked if they could do
a number with the band.
A few years ago, a drunk asked if
he could sing "When .Irish Eyes Are
Smiling." He seemed like a pleasant
sort so I said, "OK." On his way to
the mike the drunk stumbled over
the drums, fell on a SS,IXXl violin
and splintered it like toothpicks. He
said. "Gee, I'm sorry ... No offer to
pay for the damage.
That was the last time I let
anyone sing with the band. ..
CHATTANOOGA CHARLIE
.
DEAR CHARLIE: Sorry about
that. Here's another story with a
happier ending:
Dear Ann Landers: Years ago I
had a five-piece band. My biggest
problem was patrons who wanted
to sing with us. They were always
lousy. One night I had a bright idea.
"Did you bring your music?" I
asked. Of course. no one ever brings
music. That was the end of it. I
recommend this solution. It works
and nobody c.er gets mad. -JACK

Stinderella

mee~s

Melissa Foster was the top
loser In last week's teen class of
the Five Points Slinderella Class
while Cathy Hudson was the
runner-up In the adult class. At
the Tuesday morning Five PoInts
class, Texanna Well lost the most
weight and Charlotte Smith was
runner-up while in the kids class,
Crystal Smith lost the most
weight and Amy Smith was
runner-up. Brenda Roush lost the
most weight In the Tuesday night
Mason class.

IN OAK BROOK
DEAR JACK: Thanks for a bright
idea. Here's the l;tst word from New
jersey:
Dear Ann Landers: I enjoyed
reading all those letters from band
leaders, having spent the last 38
years on the road. I know exactly
what they arc talking about. Those
inexperienced would·be singers can

BIG BEND

be a nuisance. but our band leader
never failed to give an aspiring
young singer a chance.
One· night when we were playing
Hoboken. a skinny kid came up to
the bandstand and asked if he could
do a number. As always. jimmy
said, " OK." Well , the kid had a
voice that was dynamite. Untrained
but terrific. He got a big hand and

sang five encores. The boss signed
him up for weekends and that was
his start. The kid 's name was Frank
Sinatra . .. BORSHT BELT BENNY
(P.S. This story isn' t true, but it
could have happened.)
DEAR BENNY: It's a good thing
you tacked on that P.S. Good griefl!
Phiase don't write me any l)lore
letters about things that "could

What are the stgns of alooholism'
How can you tell if someom•you lov&lt;•
is an alcoholic' "Alcoholism: How to
Racogni~e ft. How to Deal With lr.
How ro Conqu&lt;·r It " will give you.rhe
answ&lt;n. To receive a copy, send $3
and n No. 10, srlf.iJddressed, stamped
el i &gt;U •&gt;pe (45 cenrs postage) to Ann

Your Independently·Owned
Low·Priced Supermarket

Attend funeral

NOTICE OF SALE
The real estate of the late
Manning D . Webster, lo cated at 131 Ebenezer
Street , Pomeroy , Ohio .
45769 will be offered for
sa'le on the 24th day of June,
1988, at10 :00 a .m .. at the
offices of Porter. little.
Sheets &amp; Lentes, 211 - 213
East Second Street , Pome~
roy. Ohio. The estate reserves the right to reject any
and all bids . Inquiries can be
made at 1614) 992-6689
(61 17. 22. 2tc
'

Ann
Landers
Landl'TS, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 6(Y,JJ.()56J

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?
CLASSIFIED
ADS

JUMBO TREAT

Vanilla
Ice Cream

ODLAND

992-2156

HOT WEATHER SA~INGS •••

Public Notice
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
TO ALL PERSONS IN TERESTED IN THE ESTATE
OF Edward Newton Humph-

rey, deceased. late of 34331
Crew Road. Pomeroy, OH .

46769. Meigs County Probate

Court.

been filed asking to relieve

FULL
GALLON
CTN.

the estate from administration. saying that the assets
do not exceed $25,000.00
and the creditors will not be
prejudiced thereby. A hearing on the applicat.i on will be

held June 30,

SPRITE,
NEW COKE,
DIET OR
REGULAR

.4Q

} ----·---:

HOLLY FARMS
GRADE 'A'

-J

Whole
Fryers

WEST VIRGINIA BRAND

' ,'

DAIRY LANE

\
\

LOW

FAT
MILK

·sliced Hygrade

8

Bacon

$

16 oz
BTLS.

CocaCola

49

Plus

1-LB.
PKG.

......... :.... lb.S11'

Deposit

PunhaSt

CHICKEN

Grillmaster
Franks

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

T-Bone Steak

Public Notice

PUBLIC HEARING
Scipio Township Trustees
will hold a public hearing on
the 1989 budget at their regular monthly meeting on
Friday. July L 1988, 8 :30
P.M . at Pageville Township
Building.
(6)221tc

. INVITATION
FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Village of
Syracuse. Ohio, at the office
of the Clerk-Treasurer. Syracuse Municipal Building,
Syracuse, Ohio, until 12 :00
noon ESDT. July 7. 1988.
and at that time opened by
the Clerk· Traasurer. as provided by law. foralllaborand
material necessary for construction of a boat launch
and dock facility on the Ohio
River at Syracuse Municipal
Park according to the drawings and specifications.
dated April 14, 1988, prepared by Philip M . Roberts,
registered professional engi·
·near. Estimated cost of the
project is $80,000.
Contract documents. inReal Estate General

cond and Mulberry, PomRobert E. Buck,

Probate Judge

lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
(6) 22. 29 : (71 6
Public Notice
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
TO ALL PERSONS IN ·
TERESTEO IN THE ESTATE
OF Weld Cross Humphrey,

deceased. late of 34331
Crew Road, PomeroY. OH .
45769. Meigs County Probate Coun.
Case No..
25883. An application has
been filed asking to relieve
the estate from administration, saying that the assets
do not exceed $25,000.00
and the creditors will not be
prejudiced thereby . A hearing on the application will be
held June 30, 1988, at
10:30 o'clock A.M . Persons
knowing any reason why the
application should not be
·granted should appear and
inform the Cour1 . The Court
is located on the 1st Floor of
the Meigs County Court
House, Court Street at Second and Mulberry, Pom·
eroy, OH . 45769 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
161 22. 29 : (71 6

608
Moln ...~:;:.:.=.~.;.•

E.

POMEROY. OH.

992-2259
LOOK AT THIS -CHESTER
- Newer 3 bedroom ranch
with
lull
basement.
equipped kitchen , garage. it
als o lealures central air.
elec. heat pump, well ins ulate&lt;! and sits on approx l
acre ol ground. PRICED REDUCED - $3~ .900.00 .
LONG BOTTOM - St. Rt.
~ 2 acres olland with
all hook· ups available. Elec.,
septic tank, water (welll and
phone. ONLY $7:300.00

248

MIN ERSVIltE- Small house
at small price! Good rental
property or l~e'" lor yoors~l.
Elec B.B. heal, 1 be!ioom.
equrppoo klchen, ltont deck
overlooking t ~ rwer. NOW

$7.500.00
SYRACUSE- It a neal home
with a nice lot ~ what you are
lookrng lor lhiS ~ rtr 3 bedrooms, elec. heat, 1 car gar·
ag~ rear deck. all the com·
forts of hom&amp; $35,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom 2 story home in Mrddleport. Nice kitchen, W.B.F.
P., has many possibi litres.
MAKE OFFER REDUCED TO

$16,500 00

PACK

ABIG PUNCH!

CHESTER AREA - Vacant
land - Approx. 20 acr" of
wooded land . Great hunting
site or building srte. ONLY

992-21 S6

Paper Towels

Pork &amp; Beans

FOODLAND FROZEN

Armour Treet

Orange Juice

5 ·

Happy Ads

oz.

8um who's
fotttl ·
My, how time
filet I

Meeting slated
The annual meeting of the
Carleton College Trustees will be
held at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Syracuse municipal building.

11·

SOFT FRUIT SALE!

GOLDEN RIPE

Bananas

JUMBO

Southern
Peaches

RED RIPE

Watermelon

LB.

69C lb.

NECTARINES ..............

99C lb.

WHITE

GRAPES.. ........

99

AJB

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR PART TIME
AND FU~L TIME REGISTERED NURSES TO
WORK IN ICU/CCU.
SALARY COMMENSURATE WITH EXPERIENCE
EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS
Send Resume to:
Rhonda Dailey, R.N.
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hoapital
115 Ealt Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
or Call or Visit the Nuraing Service Office
at V.M . H .. 614·992·2104 Eat . 213.
E.O.E.

EACH
UIMIU

We need properties to sell
in MeifiS Co. area. We may
have a buyer lor your
home. Call Today!

REGISTERED NURSES

DiMolutions soup.&amp;

PLUMS ........................

acres of vacant ground,
close to Pomeroy. Beaulilul
buildmg site lor a special
home. $16.500.00.

Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692
Tracy Riffle........ 949·2807
Jo Hill .............. 985-4466
Ofli ce ...... ... ....... 992·2159

I'

The annual Norris Family
Reunion will be held at the
Shriner's Park In Racine at 12
noon on Saturday. Friends and
relatives are Invited.

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Mark Timothy Gilkey,
26, C)ltlon, W.Va., and Angel Ia
Raynell Baker, 24, Middleport.

Approx . 27

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191

CANS

NATURE'S BEST
PRODUCE ...... .

POMEROY -

RUTlAND- Ni ce trrck ranch
home in a good ~cat~n Over 1
acre of ground wrth 3 bedrn~.•
2 baths, lull basement large
patio, equrpped kichen and
ma:ty other ni~t leatures.

$

16

(

inuruct1ons to
drawings and speci ·

to
be paid toemployed
laborers and
mechanics
on
public imp'rovements, in ·
eluding this project.
Each bidder shall here·
quired to file with his bid a
certiI ied check or cashier's
check for an amount equal to
live percent of his bid. A
performance bond in the full
amount of the contract shall
be required to be furnished
bv the su ccessful bidder
prior to execution of the
contract .
The date for completion of
the project, for which a 401
permit has been obtained by
the Village of Syracuse. shall
be within 60 days aher the
execution of said contract .
The Village of Syracuse
reserves the right to reject
any and all bids .
Janice Lawson.
Clerk-Treasurer
(6115, 22 , 29; (7 1 6 , 4tc

tications for this work are on
file at the office of the
Syracuse Village clerk treasurer.
A check made payable to
Village of Syracuse in the
amount of $50.00 is re·
quired as a deposit for the
documents. The deposit will
be rofu nded to unsuccessful
bidders.
The Village of S yrac use
herfi1by notifies all bidders
that minority busines s enter prises will be afforded full
opportunity to submit bids in
response to this invitation
and will not be discriminated
against on grounds of race,
color. or national origin in
considerations for an award.
Attention is directed tot he
spec;:ial statutory provisions
IO.R.C . 4116) gpverning
the prevailing rate of wages

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CAll!
992 - 3410
ll MEST ON [
GRAV [ l - SAND
TOp S0IL
FILL DIRT

•CUSTOM KITCHENS 8o BATHS
•EKTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING l!o APT PROJECTS

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE

•OoJer S. Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busineu - ·

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•RefrigerAtors
"Must Be Repairable"

WANT TO IUY WRECKID OR
JUNI CARl OR TRUCII
- FREE !STIMA lEIFor any of thtst stnic:es c:all
Betw- 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

992·7583

M~~?-~.tfn

INSULATION

.............

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

~

c.F. scon
Midol.ort
614-9q2-3711

1-28- '88-tln

6-1 I r110 pd

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

TUNE-UPS, BRAKE
JOBS, BUMP and
PAINT WORK
We Buy and Sell Used

324 I . Main St.
Pom•oy
Wlind {ity- Hall

ANN'S

PH. 949-2969
Dealer For

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
located Halfway Be·
tween Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWIRS
8. 7 Financing On
Yardman
Service On All Makes
We Hooor MC/Disr / Viso

FULL AUTO
SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-698-71 s7

ROOFING

Tells Past, Present and
Future - Gives Advice
on Love. Marriage and
Business.
If You An Unhappy and
, Don't Know Whidl Way To
Turn CDme In For Advice
- Ont Vitit Will Convince
You Th•tls A letter Way.
ssoa OFF With This Ad

~

z
-

302 W01t Union St.

Athens
6/ 21 / 1&amp;/ 1 mo.

Announcemenls

one Bx10 free when you buy
one at rueguhtr price. As many
persons in portrai'l as desired. 2
weeks special. Precious Memory
Studio, Dorothy Bentz.

Get

Control your weight · take "New
Shape Diet Plan" and Hydrelt
Wat8f' Pills, avallabe at Fruth
Ph.-fTllllcy .

S149S

Call 614-446-845g.

~energetic

Small btaek female dog. 'h
Dachshund. Yz Cock-a -poo. 1
.,.. old, loves kids. CAll 614992-1789.
81oWek oldkltteru . 4goldmales.
1 black ferNie. 614-843-5445.
Kittens need a home please call
304-675-3776.
long haired kittens need loving
home. 304-175-67 20.
Free female 6 months old full
blooded German Shepherd.
304-676-3116.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Two cute kittens. Phone 304875-3486.

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

7 week old male garmen shepherd &amp; Huskie. call aft~r 5 pm
304-875-3848 or 304-895·
3480.

8-13 tfn

SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII

CALL

Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Brigs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Elttt
Homelitt
Jacobsen

B&amp;C DRILLING CO.
B. H. INgle, Owner
Rl. 1, Box 74-A, Riply, W.Va. 25271

Call Collect (3041 372-4331

VALLEY LUMBEI
&amp; SUPPLY

Most Walls Drilled In One Day.
Air and Mud Rotary Drilling
We Also lnltall &amp;. Service All Types
Water Pumps
6-1-'88-1 mo.

Middle~rt, Oh.

992-881,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

OH.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614·662-3121
Authoriud John Oteri,
Now Hallort&lt;l, ltGh H11
Farm lquipmont
D•lor

CUSTOM
INTEIIOR DESIGN

Far• E••IPM••t
P1rta &amp; Servl••
t -3-16 lfc

PH. 742-2463
IS/ 31 / 1 mo.

Help Wanted

Avon needs 71 ediee to siMI Avon. • -.
814-446-3358.
•

Call

We •re looldng fot 5QfTleo ne to
work part-time in our children' s
dottin g store evening:t and
we eken ds 11 vou are a mature ,
Indiv idual 'Nho hu h•d sales · ..
e ~~:per l ence or pnl ct ical Mpe- . ;
rienoe (wfth y ou r c;hildr.n or

11rendch ildrenl and are Inter- • .
ested in w orki ng par1· 1ime, .. ..
pl~~to~~.se send r~sume 1o Fr iends •
Fo rever 40 0 2nd twe Gallipo- · ·,.
l•s. OH 46631
Pa_rt-time babysitter needed in
home for 3 children Can
614-446-44 3 1.

mv

Hair Stvlists Acr oss Th e Street ·
stvllng ~;&amp;i o n i ~; seMing one
additional stvlist who is looking - ..
for more than just another job.
Call TeHi at 814·446-9510 for
dtrtails.
- -~.
Job hunting? Need a skill? w~
traip people for jobs as Aute . ~·
Meehi!M"I ict. Carpent en. E.lectri·
ci ., s, Food Service Workers.:
Electronla Techn icians. Indu s- .' trial Ma inte nance Workers . .
Nursing Assistant&amp; and Order· ·~ ..
lies, Machinists, and Welders. · ...· ~
Reg lstet' now to r cl asses begin.
ning Jutv . 5th. Call Tr i-County
Voc!tlonal Adutt Canter at 614- .....
753-3511 eKt 1 4. A vari ~y of funding sources to . pay for ·•·
training are avai!able for those •
eligibl e

--------.:. .· ...
Go the wav oft he hi· tech fut ure.

The Electronics Servicing pro- '
gram at the Adult Educ ation -'·-·
Cent'lr-·Tri·Countv Vocatione.l ....
School will train you for jobs in
servicinq and maintenance of •·
electronic eQuipment . We hav&amp; •.
monies availab'e Ia pay for ,
training for eligible applicitnts.
Cftl! 614-75 3-3511 ext. 14 tp ·,.··
reg•ster for clau es beginning
July 6th,
• ·•
Gowtrnment JObs. S1 6, 040 . ··::
859.230 yr. Now hiring. Your ." ..
area, 80S.687-6000 EJCt. R· •
9805 for current Federal list...
LIISalle Gallery , Middleport. Sa: ,..,
lesperson expMienced in floral ' '
design, crafts. weddings CaH ._.
614-992-7521 for appointment ~.
or application.

-looldng
- --for -----·· ..
a high salary j'ob.,
without the high sal•yhaas es?

Th8f1 join the winning team ... ,

Housa of lloyd now training for
demonstrators in your area. ~n " •
614 ·949 - 2256 for more ..._•.
information.
·
· ,

AVON , All areas . Call Maritvn ,
WefNIJr 304-882-2645.
•. :

.··

13

Insurance

..

Call us for your mobile home
insurance : Miller Insurance.' : ..
304-882 -2145. Also: ~ uto ,
home. lite. health,
'

Sibreian Husky, J years old.
spayed female. place n good
country home. phone 304-6754210.

-.

Lost and Found
., •....,

FOU~D : Sme~ grev Poodte.
duck •II, mele. No color Dt' •as.
Colt 814-446-9228.
lOST : Frid-v~lovs 20 in. blue le
white bicycle on fh. 160 between Ewington • VInton. Call
814-388-9939.

lOST:Watller CoonHound weering or~~na- coflar. Vicinity of
Uneoln Pike. ThurediiV- Call
814-258-8739.

8

·10-11 ""

BOGGS

11

Page 9

LPN. Pleasant Vall.,- Nursing , ,
Caru Center seeking licensed ,_
Echoing Meadows Residental lPNs for port 'time employment,' f ·
Center. Athens. Ohio hasimme- medical and dental insurance
diete openingt for fuU-time Be , avail.,le. If interested call Kathv
pert-time RNs and LPNs . For Thornton. Director of Nursing. ' ··
further infornwtion I applic• 13041675·5236, EOE· AAE.
:.
tion call 614-593-8074.
!\low hiring demonstrators - •
EXCELLENT WAGES for spere Christmas Around The World· . ·
time a11embly work electron- receive weeklv comniuion, no · •
ics. crafts. Others. Info 11504) collecling. delivery, receive free . ;·
641-0091 Ext. 2987. Open 7 TV. VCR or even trip to Hawaii _.·
days. CAll.NOW1
Supervisor Pat Greenlee 304675-2885.
• ·:,
Full / part time in mtail / wholesale •les. MUst be ambitioua· "HIRING ! Government jobs -~· "~
/ well groomed, good with pub- your area, $15.000 . 568,000.. .. ~
He. bperience helpful but not Call 16021838 -8885. Ext .
n&amp;ees•rv - Gretrt advantages, 1203."
high income/ bonu.as. Send r•
sume to: Bolt Cia 1 56, c/ oGalliHOMEMAKERS
,
polis Deily Tribune, 825 Third local employer seek individuals ·· ·•
A\M ., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
for part-time WDI'k in dients' .;horns . Must have valid driver's
Gallipolis. Pt. Pleasant. Riplay license and vehiele. Dut ies in- •..
area. Advertising aalee in TV. elude p..-sonal c•e. cleaning," ~ ,
Call for an appointment . Moun- cooking and errands. Previous
tain Media. 1304) 727· 7885.
nurse aide experience a plu1.. ~
Reply to Box P-17. Point Pie• ,
GET PAID for reading books l sant Register. 200 Main St .. ' ~
$100.00 per title. Writa : PAS E- Point Pleasant. W.Va . 255550.
33P, 161 S. Uncoln way, N .
Aurora, II 80542.
Real es•tesaiMmanwantedfull . ,,
time. send resume to So• C-17,
Person with lilt IIIIMt 6 years in care Point PleHint Register. ·'' ·
Ptumbing end/ or heeting and air 200 Main St., Point Ple~nt~ ,
cond. experience. Apply at Car- W.Va . 25550.
ter's Plumbing and Htg., Inc.,
Fourth and Pine. Gallipolis, Ohio Help Wantad Village Pi:r:z:a Inn is
45831 . An Equal Employflfent accepting applications for deliv·
Opportunity employer.
fllfV . cooks 111nd waitresses at our
new location 529 Jackson Pike
POSITION AVAILABLE
apply thru Gallipolis, Ohio Job
Director for Adult Sheltered Sei-vice.
Workcenter-Gallia Countv
Board of MR / DO. Oualificati· Wanted pilots with Mon. River • ·,.
ons :Bechlors Degree. Mastert el'l:perien~. inquire 1-412-483- •
...
preferred; lnEducatiareiAdmin· 665~
istretion. Busineas Administrtt·
tion. RehabllttaUon Administnt·
tlon. Habil;tetion Programming. Lady to sit with 7year old iWld his
or related field. n.'" ye.ars grandmother, 2:30 tNI ,1 :30
PM. Mondr( thru FridB\' . call
e,t~porience in sup&amp;n~ilion and
financial management of bet Men 12:00 and 2 :00 PM. ~ ,
MR/ DD Programs. two years 304-675-4688.
eltperience In direct service
.·· ,
preferred. Must meet certlfic•
tion mquirements of the Ohio GET PAID for ntading books!,
IM'ft:e:
Department of Ment1l Raterda· 8100.00 per trUe.
tion andOellelopmentel Diubill- PASE -517P . 161 S.Unrofnw&amp;'f. ,..,)
. ,
tiea. Sahwv range; t24,000- N . Aurora. II 60542.
S28,000. Retumes with cover
181ter ahould include per~onal. Babvsitter needed for care of 1 .•· '
ed.Jcational, and prior employ- year old boy in our nice Point .
•
ment informatMm 1long wtth Pleasant home, downtown area.
three profeuional referwnCIII. 4-5 days week: must have refer- · ''
Deadline: July 22, 1988. Send ences and own transpo. and be , ,
information to: Dr. John D. mature. depeodabl e&amp; enl'lrgetic. . ,..
No -' Rifle. Superlnten&lt;*lt, Gallia Lt. houllltkeeping req 'd.
County Board MR/ 00. P.O, slnera with other kids or outside'
8ol'l: 14, Cheshire, Ohio 45620. our heme piNS&amp;. S•larv -benefit. .... ,
negotiable. Call 304-675-3999
"
d-vs. 675-6037 eve,

Three grey, white and black
ttripped klttanS 6 weeks old.
304-675·6224 after 5 PM.

6

NEED WATER?

Giveaway

LUBE-OIL-FILTER

SALES &amp; SERVICE

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Dabble Shop. Going oul of
business sale. June - July 2. 50 ·
75 percent off.

ki'ltens &amp; one
b'lkative mother Cllt. Call 61444&amp;1010.

We Carrv Fishing Supplies
Pay Your Phone
end Cable Bills Hero
IUSIN!SI PHON£
16141 992-6550
II!IOENC! PHONE
(6141 9q2.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 ~ond Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

You can afford to look great all
the time at FIESTA HAIR
FASHIONS! A shampoo &amp; set i1
juat S3.99, Monday through
Wednetdav. and you never need
M't appointment ! 322 Second
Aw .. across from the park.
448·g152.

Brindle-large dog. Moving !
Must give awev. Call614-448·
3479.

5-25-1 mo.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Announcements

5-19-'88-1 mo.

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3350

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop
5-25·1 ma. pd.

Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Servic
Heaiing Evaluations For All Ages

FEATURING:
Riviera
Cabinets
Rollyson Vinyl
Replacement
Window•
Peachtree Doors
and Windows

resume 1o: P.O. Bolt 784,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

I&gt; 14-594-331 0

2 Long haired blaek kittens to
give away. Femllle. 9 wks. old.

NEWELL'S
SUNOCO

CALL 992·6756

Custom Building
Products W. MAIN, RUTLAND,

&gt;Nell groomed. IMponsl~e male
in retail sates. Experience helpful
but not necessary. Benefh package available. for de1•ils send

Open 10 AM . to 4 P.M .
Mon . thru Fri. or by

Muffler, Air
Condition Checked
and Refill.
Min or Repairs.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

Full-time cereer opportunity for

LADY RACHEL'S
PALM READING

Kittens to giveawav .. Litter boK
trained. Call 614-446-93t9.

Brakes .

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic::

. 6·10· 88-1 mo.

Bored! Broke! And Bluet Sell
Christm.a Around the World
decorations until Dec. Fun jobl
Party plan. Free t 300 kit. No
collection or delivery! Work your
own hours. Now hiring Demonstrators. Call Bettv C.rpen1er.
614-245-5383 Today I

4

With 4 Ott. Oil

Most Foreign and

949-2263
or 949-2168

on the job. Relocation required
High .school grads age , 7-30.
c..n 1·800-28.2-1384. Monday ·
ThursdfiV, 9 AM -2 PM.

Collectors Items , Clowns
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes

4-18·'88 tfn

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

METAL WORKER TRAINEES

Gift Shop &amp; Tay Store

Appointment
Coli (6t41 992-7204
Whole:ale &amp; Retail

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Writesel

&lt;.:1

992-6282

*'~
.~...

Middleport, Ohio
1·13·tfc

Cars
ALBANY AREA

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

ottef good 6 1 , _7 130.

992-2196

Haward L.

CARTER'S
.,

yrs .
Church·H orne-School
Free Gift..."Water Me
Please" batt. operated
House Plant Alert light,
with tuning.

PAT HILL FORD

TourGuidt~· Male&amp; female. Our
top people earn $800. S.1 200
per ~~ Salary to start plus
comm•u•on . Ple••nt working
conditions. A ruellv fun pi ~tee to
work. Frittndly. neat &amp; dependa·
ble are the requirements Call
1-614-286-6422. ask for Sue .

1122188/lfn

18

Help Wanted

No experience required, Training

We Service All Makos

PIANO TUNING

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

11

•FREE ESTIMATES•
TIRED OF PAINTING
Cover your home with
beautiful MASTICorCER TAINTEED vinyl siding.
Best Prices Anywhere!
Roofing and Seamless
Gutters
Phone 992-2772
6-13· I mo.

3

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Emp lovm enl
Servtces

J&amp;L

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

614-742-2617

O..ilts
Cash paid for antique or new
quitts. Applique, pi&amp;eed, any
condit ion. Call614-992-5657.

6-17-tfc

New Homts Built
"Free Estimates"

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

or Leave

Alto Tran111iulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

3-11-tfn

Buying dailv gold. sliver co in s.
rings, jewelry, l!ltMiing w.ar e, old
coins, large ·currency. Top pri·
ces. Ed SurkBtt Barber Shop,
2nd . Ave. Middlt~port . Oh. 614992-3476,

AUTO &amp; TRtJCK
REPAIR

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

NO SUNOA Y CALIS

Buying furniture an d ap pliancos
me pi&amp;ce or·bv the lo1. f-ait
priceS . Call 61 4- 446·31 58

by

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

or

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

Junk Can with Of without
mo1ors. Call· larry LNetv-614388-9303

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

4-16-86-lfn

e

.... t,u-: t'1Mo•

JJ / 2/ II ·IIt

Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Day

SSO PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

· DUSIIY St., lliiACUSE
992·711 11 or

4 u . 7!qo

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

II nil

•

CALL AMY CARTEl

or IOI'S ELECTRONICS

"At Reasonable Priles"

~

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

lt t uu~Yf'rt frNH
L . _
old MIJyies
&amp; Slo'do owor t'o oooy VH'o~ .

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

6-2-88 -1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNER: GREG B. ROUSH
••h
GENERAL
,,..
CONTRACTORS

Wanted To Buy

coal heatet"s Sw.11in' sFurnlt urw
&amp; Auct ion. Third &amp; Olive,
814-446-3159.
- - - - -----Want to buv: Uaed furniture and
.ant iqun. Will buv Dntire household furnishing. Matlin we•
mey.,, 6t4-245-5152.

YHS TAPE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

GEARY
BODY SHOP

EAGLES CWI-I'OIIIEROY, OH.
· 7 PM-EB 6:45

lmm MOVIU &amp; SLIDES to

10·8-tfc

us1ness
SerVices
BINGO

9

Complete
hou8itholds
furni&amp;1rr:::::::~=.:::=::::::::::=rr;;::=;;:;:;:~:;;;;=::;~ ture'
ft. antlquea.
Also of
w-ood

•

NEW- REPAIR

MIDDLEPORT - Here rs a
cute lrttle log house wrth a
cute lrtt!e price. Up lo 3 bed·
rooms wrth a beautilul view of
the rrver. WANT $17,900.00

20¢ OFF LABEL

bi~ders,

The Daily Sentinel

Business Services

Public Notice

5·26-'11·1 mo.

$10,000.00.

CAMPBELL'S

eluding

eroy. OH . 45769 .

SMALL
WANT ADS

BRAWNY

Public Notice

Public Notice

the Meigs County Court
House, Court Street at Se-

Reunion planned

Dissolutions of marriage are
being sought In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Hazel
Maxine Hetzer, Reedsville, and
Wayne A. Hetzer, Reedsvl_lle;
Carl Caster, Pomeroy, and
Golden F. Caster. Pomeroy.

1988, at

11:00 o'clock A .M . Persons
knowiftg any reason whv the
application should not be
granted should Jippear and
inform"'the Court . The Court
is Located on the1 st Floor of

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO . LI~IT QUANTITIES • PRICES EFFECTIYETHAU SATURDAY, JUNE 25. 1988 •USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

Mrs . Lisa Roush, Mrs. Geral·
dine Parsons, and Mrs . Velsla
Roush were ln Stone, Ky. recently to attend the funeral
services of Mrs. Lawrence Coleman, aunt of Lisa Roush.

Licences iMued

Case No,

25882 . An application has

Bible school
is conducted
The deadline for registering
for vacation Bible school at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church has been extended to
Friday. Anyone Interesting In
attending the school Is asked to
call either Lenora Leifheit at
992-5836 or Susie Abbott, 992-6114.
The Bible school will be held
from July 1l through July 15,6:30
to 8:30p.m. each evening. Theme
will be "Champions for Jesus"
and all children, preschool
through high school. are Invited
to attend.

Public Notice

•

have happened ." Stick to the facts.
mister.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Public Sale
lit Auction

Rick Pe.-son Auctfoneer, II·

c.Md Ohio and W•t VIrginia.

Eatate, antique, f•m. llqulda·
tlon .-... 304-773-&amp;785.

9

Wanted To

Buy

We plY c• h for lite model dean
u.ed WI.
Jim Mink Chtw -Oids Inc .
Ill Geoe Johnson
814-448-3872
TOP CASH pold lor '83 modo!

end ....., ....:1 can . Smith
Bulotc-Pontlae. 1911 Eo-n
Avo .. tlalllpotll. Coli 8 I 4-4462282.

lb.

....

.......Giillipoliii.......... .......PfPTeiisiiiiC .....
&amp; Vicinity
&amp; Vicinity
... -· ·-- ...-. --·· ·--. ---· .' -· --.-- ... -· ....... .. ~-- -~· ... ~ ....---. -· ......
Yard Sale. Centenary Townhou• . 1 dayl Set. June 25. 8
famifv, 9-4 Everything very
re•ontble.
Momg Sole. Fri . • Sat. 9-5.
Ferm equipnwnt &amp; eome ..,uque
furniture. Rt . 775. 8mi. out.
Ne• Mudsock. Cell 814-258·
8790.

.......Po.merov·---·······
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
More's FMm. St. Rt. 7, 1 r'nlle
from Ftve Pblnls. June 13th·
17th. , 1 :00-7 :00. Clothing,
boob. COI'tli. ! j...try, ..dio,

-··

Y•d•I•M•gleGrutMr'sMain
St.. Rutt.nd. Wed. Thur.an dFri.

..

Big Y11rrl Sale 10:00 till 1, Wed
Thurs Fri. cross R R tricks from
Beale school follow signs . "
Clothes, dishes. some furniture • .. •
Iota mise items.
·
Yard Ssie, Burdette Adctn 9'00' ·,,
till 7, Fhtln or ltllne, some.h.i na --,
for everyone, frld.y end Slltur·
d ~June 24 end 26.
.. '

..

Yerd S.le,Thur.t~ . Friday, Sat- · ~
urdfV , 9·5. June 23. 24, 25.
Junct•on Rt 2 6. Jenicho Road
FornituAt. clothing • Mise.
·
::
Y::-A=R=D-:S:"CA
"':l-:E-:8::-ml:.l_•_ou_t_S_an
_ d• •.::
Hill Road, Wed., Thurs.. Fri.,
Sat., Rain Ceneels.
,

YARO SALE. 2001 M•qUitte
Aw Twin Bed, 10 Sp . like.. Chest, Stereo, Thurtd~-Saturd• .,;
Waterbad sheets, misc . 8:00:
4 :00.
._,.

..
.

r

i

•

I . 2

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinol
18

Wanted to

46

LAFF-A-DAY

Do

availa~:~t._

Call 614-

COUNTRV MOBILE Home Perk.
Rou• 33, North of Pbmeroy.
Rerital trailert. Call 614-9927479.

Will work for S2.00 1 hour. Odd
jobs. Celt 614 -256-1398.

Privtte home c•• .... d board for
Seniors end handicapped. Elem
Home t!i14o992-6873. , ·

store. stto·pping, errands or jus1
too busy- L9t rne do it f!)r -,.,u.
Call 304--675-6126. Pt. F'tea-sant area.

Have vaeencv ~or elderly pauon
in mv home, excell.-.t c-.,e.
Phone 304-675-164t.

Financial
Business
Opportunity

~'This

is one ·drawback of

being married to a macho

man,

I NOTICE I
''
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO, .ocommendo that yo4 L.,.;;,;;_;,;;...,;.;______""'l'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
do bu1in•• with people you I"
know. and NOT to 111nd money
t hrough the mall untH you have
44 Apartment
inve1tigated the offering.
33 · Fimns for Sale
for Rent
s 9. 99 one price shoe s:tor&amp; or
S 10.- UO." fahhm rto,.l Open a 101 acre hill farm ne.- Tuppers
non-franchise store with the
Plains . 7 .room older home.
complet81y furnished
Uberty Fa~hions adl.lantage.
hook-up for mobile home. 2 New
apartment
mobile home In
Over 1,300 brend names. On&amp;
septic systems. g• v..ll. 3water city . Aduhs&amp;only.
rima fee. Inventory, fixtures.
wells, lot of timber. Phone 614-446-0338. Parking. can
Wying trip, suppll•. lnrtore
8t4-63&amp;-98t4.
t1111lnlng and mOl"!. Call any dme.
BEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
Olin Kottacky 501-327-8031 .
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK35 Lots l!o Acreage
SON ESTATES, 538 Jackson
Pika from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movia:s. 814-44640 acres- 2 mobile homet. 258~- E.O.H.
RacCoon Rd. 1000 ft. fronmge.
BrookSide Apanmanta: Located
• 38,000, negotiable. Call 304oft
BulayilleRd.· 1 BR . specious
5
22-7279.
31 Honnes for Sale
ep artmants with modern kitch80
Fo'r Sal•davelopment proper1y and waaher-dryar hookups, ca19 85 Merlane Mocl.lar Home. located 'A mile from Rio Grande ble tei~Wision · avelhtbfe. Cali
80x28. All alec., CA. ' 3 BR .. 2 on St. Rt. 325. 140aerMtotal.
8t4-44fl.2t27.
bMiw. great rOOm, dining room. ·25 ac:r'.n wooded bord.-ed ~
To many extras to Hst. Must see Rio Grande College and Bob Upa11ira unfurnished apt; Car·
to appreciate. 1_4 5,000, Call Ewns Farms. City and County pated. utilities Pilei. No children.
6t4-446-t408.
water, sewer and natural gas No pets. Call 814-446-16 37.
availa.,.e. Lots of road frontags.
Rio Grend&amp;--Ranch styta. 3 BR .• Propertywouldbewellauited for Downtown-Modern 1 BR .. com2 baths, family room, dining housing developmen~. gotf plate kftchen, AC. carpet. Cell
room. e11t-in kitchen. Ce. fire - course. etc . Call 814--449·
8t4-44fl.Ot39.
place. Assumable. Call 614- 3006,
248-9848.
11 Court St.-2 BR .. 2 bM:hs.
1 acre and up builclng lots and klhchen furnished, w / w c•pet-'
2 story home-Flatwoods are• modular home sites. Tuppers No PftS. Off streat parking,
Pomeroy. New kitchen. ba- Plains-O.atter water. roedwey • 326 a mo. plus utiUtla.. Oep . &amp;
throom. e!Miings &amp; c•peting. to each lot. 814-986-3594.
ref. Coli 6t4-441!-4921.
Coli 6t4-44fl.2369.
Furnished uPJteira 3 roOm apt.
Ashton. large buMdlng lots.
For Sale or Rent- 3 8r. hQull8 mobile homes permitted, public Utllhleo paid. 94 Locuot. UtO
with ettlch.:l g.,..ge. Ca. Nq water. also river Iota. Clyde per month. *75 dep. Cell
pa~s . Oep. I. ref. required. 39
614-448-1340 or 446-~870 .
8o'N8n, Jr. 304-678-2336.
Otillloothe Rd. Call 814-4462583. 9-6 doily.
Furnished efficiency. 701 4th,
TWo building lott with County
Galllpoli1. $176. UtiUties p11id.
water. on Jerry's Run Road It
Tuppers Pfains-3 8R., eat-In Apple Grow, W. Va. 304-676Call 446-44t8 ill1&lt; 7 PM.
kitchen. i•rge living room, full 23B3.
baMment, garage. all electric.
Furnished- 3 rooms It bath,
cent•l air. Call after 5 PM , Beautiful river lots oneacntplus, Clean. No pelt. Ret. &amp; dapoatt
6t4-44fl.7496.
public water, C1yde Bowen, Jr. required. Utilities furnished.
Adults -only . Call 614--448·
304-578-2338.
e2t ,900
16t9.
Will HelpF.tlghtPartvwith Down LOTS, one acn, llYel wooded.
Payment
city wat•. Jericho Road, owner One BR unfurnished apt. New
financing, good terms, 304cwpet. Range &amp; ntfrig. furOn a bedroom starter or "'tire- 372-8405 •• 372-2678.
nlsh.ed. w-.•• g•b~e paid.
menthoma. Central gas heat and
Depollt ~Wqulred . Call 8t4-44fl.
alrcondhtoning, new winylsidlng
4345.
.
.
&amp; windows. Located 88 Mill Building lots 5 mil111 from Point
Creek Dr., 614446-7037.
Pleasant on Rt. 2. callafter8:00.
1 8R . apt. nearHMC . 1 adull. No
pats. Call 814-446-4782.
304-676-664t.
Big 3 BR. O.koe t.-m home
buitt on your lot. $21.996 &amp; up. Lots tor sale. conwnercial, House
Furnished apt. Utiltliel paid Call
Ca111 -6t4-88fl.7311 .
and mobile ,horM lots, Happy between 9&amp; 5, 614-446-9244.
.
0
Hollow Ftult Farm. PhoM 30~
Gowrnment Hom" from •1 . (u 678-20~6 .
Furnished apartn-ent In town.
repair) . Delinquent •• property.
Call 8t4-44fl.t423.
Repouusions. Call 805-6871000 E•t. GH-9805forcurrent
Nice 2 HR . apt. 41/z mil• from
repo lat.
G•llipolia. Refrig., ltove S.wllter
furnished. No pett. t226. Cell
Hou•. 1871 Uncoln Heights.
6t4-448-8038.
Pomeroy. Call after 4 :30 weekHomes for Rent
dirt' I. anytime weekends; 614- 41
2 BR .. &amp;. also1 roomeffeclencv.
98&amp;-4t03.
all utifitl• with cable paid. Call
Nicety fu rniahed smsll hou.e. oller 8 PM. 8 t&lt;l-446-8723.
108 State St., Pomeroy. 2 or 3 Aduhs
only. R11t. required. No
b•drooma, carpeted. No reallo- pets. Call 61~448-0338.
Furnished efficiency apartment :
nable offer refu~ed . Phone 8143 rmt. &amp; bath. c•petthrough992-3726.
out private &amp; qui&amp;t, single
Un furnia had- 6 room house. 1Vii
blll:h, u• furNce. storm win- working person onty. Call 8145 rooms. bath. Large beck porch, dowa. g . .ge. adults. No pet1. 448-4807 or 6t4-44fl.2602.
11x14. partly endostd. Re- Dep, &amp; '"'- Call 8t4-44&amp;-2643.
dueed tor quick •I e. make offer.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedCo116t4-992-7244.
3 BR .. 1Vz bMh home for ftlnt. room apartments at Village
Manor and Rivarside Apart·
Call 614-446-7208.
3 bedrooms. 2 batht. brick
mants in Middleport. From
home, McNeil Ave., Pt. Pit. 3 BR wllh baaement. 6 mil•
$1 8 2 . Call 614-992-7787.
Priced on inspection. Cali 304north from Holzer Hotprtal. EOH.
876-5870 or 578-2463.
Available July ht. Raf~~renca &amp;.
2 bedroom A ptl. tor rent.
depotit. Call 814-446-0695.
4 bedroom ranch style, total
Carpeted. Nice setting. Lauldrv
electric home. located In New 2 bedroom hou•. Fully c•- facilltiM evallable. Call 81 4-Haven. WVa. Ellcellent loc1tlon, peted, refrigerator, lf0)8 . lin· 992-37t1. EOH .
large lsvel lot. Owner will coin Hill, Pornaroy. 8190. per
consld• financing. Cell 304- month. 8t4-992-8272 boforo Apartment , for rent. $22;6 a
8 82-3888 or 876-6300.
month. Deposit J8Qulred. 6145:DO.
9 92· lS 724. Aher lpm or 992·
3 BR .. 2 baths. full finished Spacious. n 8Wiy redecorated 5119.
b..,ment, new furnace &amp; can· r"ldence In Middleport. Avail•
traleir, garage. fenced yard. Low bla l:rr' July 1st. Large living Newly redecorated apartments
60's. 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave., Pt. room, •*-in kttchen with lots of waileble. Utillti81 paid •226.
Pl..,.nt. CAll 304-875-1774.
per month. deposil required. Call
cabineu, leundry room, three
814-992-5724 IIIIer 8:00 or
bedrooms, one with bultt-ln
Jerry• Run. 5 rooms and beth. featuret . Shutters end drape• 992-5tt9.
out building 30x36, one at:re tunta. es, some \WII to well
ground. rural Wlltar, $2, 000.00 e•pating. air concltionlng. nice 2 bedroom 1pts. Middleport.
down. balance like rent to bit h. Working e~ftt or alngl•. $18&amp;-•185.per month. 2 and 4
responsile party, 304-d 75- No pets. •2110. a month plus bedroom hou.ea In Pomeroy
768t .
• ... $200.'225 per month. All
..curity depotlt. For informe ·
tlon, call tfter 5-:00p.m. or on ptrtly lurnbhed. Raf.-.naJ r•
Two or more bedroom fu II tie weekends, 8t4-992-5292.
qulred. Day 814-992-238111V·
bHement, nice lot. exceflent
enings 814-992-8723.
condition, located Rt. 2 , Apple
Grove. •3B ,600.00. Pt-one 42 Mobile Homes
2 bedrooma. Rentlnetud•cebte
304-576-2466.
TV, yard melntentnee. IMAndry
for Rent
facilttiee, t1111sh collection. tal•
Two bedroom hou.e, goodlo&lt;:•
phone. equipped kitchen, work·
tion. shown by appointment.
lng utR~Ioo. tt&lt;l-992-8639.
Phone 30~875 · 6639 or 304- 2 &amp;. 3 BR . All utilitlet paid lllltcept
675-1563.
electricity . Conwnient location. APAATM ENTS. mobile homes.
hou .... Pt. PIRSantandGallipoCell 814-448--8668 or 448lls. 614-448-8221 .
4006.
32 Mobile Homes
2 SA . mobile home In Crown 2 bedroom furnished -.rt New
for Sale
Havan, ref.-ence and aerurlty
City. Call 6t4-25fl.6620.
d..,oalt required, 304-882·
2 8r., al' elee. *250 • month . 3287 or 304-773-5024.
1986 Redman Sectional home. Oep. requir-ed. No pits. Pref.28x&amp;8. 3 BR .• central 1ir. Move edutts. Cell 814-3B8-B319 or
to your lot. Call 814-448-8594 446-9004.
aher 6 PM.
2 8r unturrlshed mobile horne,
For Sale-1977 Rosemont AC. prlvtte lot, Rt. 58&amp; AduHt
14.~~;70, 3 bedroom, 2 full batht.
only. Call 8t4-448-4807 "'
C1ll 6t4-44&amp;-t 807 or 843- 614-446-2802.
2973.
14 ft. wide. 2 lr, pr!Y.tel~t on
14•70 mobile home. CA. under218. Just 8 mi. from Gllllipolil.
pinned, metel storage building.
$200 per month. Call 814-256Call 814-448-0234 1ft"' 8:30
t393.

Real Eslal e

Renl als

pm .

,

'

1973 Champion. 1411110, total
eleetrlc, underpenning and hook
..,, 304-676-2383.

2 bedroom. tvrnhlhed (washer,
dryer, air) . •210. p8t' monthpk.ls
utlhloo ond •1oo. d111oait.
8t4-992-7479.

1970 Wlnd1or. 12111.85 with
10•12 edd on, woodllurner.
washer end
•ir eoncl. mull
be mO\Itd, 304-895--3802 .

12x10. 2 bedroom, ••Racine.
Call 8t4-992-5858.

..,.r.

&amp;clflent condition. 14 X 10
1 986 Aernlng, 2 bedroom,
ventJdan blinds, block. under·
pinning. lot of • trtl. must MR.
Qood Price I call 304-175-5841
evening~ .

OUR LOSS YOUR OAI~
198'7011twood Mobh Home,
14 X 10. 2 bedroom. hc.. lent
concltlon. comoi.-Y fur . . hed
kllehon, whh O.E. Applion . .
...., 1359.50 do- ond • •
ower .-ymM1te of t179.,1 a
month. Mull Sell Phone 3041711-2044.

33 . ,Fai'T'8

2 bedroom mobHehomll Mlddl•
port. Ohio. ret . .noelnd •cur·
~y d... !Wqulted. 304-B823217 or 304-773-5024.
MobMe Homes. will •ccept two
cltlldren or worldng CQU!HPhono 8 t4-44fl.OII08.
1978t4X70whht.03811o•M
II vi ng spec e . 3 bedrooM
UOO.OO month Phone 3048711-3044.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Mise- Merchandise

76

KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

l!o

CAt Efl Ql/€1"~

C•llahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1. OOP tlrea. tiz11.1 12, 1 3. 1 4 , 1 5.
~:il1~t2 ;~JI~fut Rt. ~18.

Alr.Drt/d. CA~ IT I'&gt; Coll'.ibl:~ Q'tllEMay
~ ~~&gt; 'fo ~~liE~ A~
A tf,IO~~ S€~ \liE O.T IW&gt; +lAD ,
ftla'.&gt;T t:&gt;IBS .
.

Whealchairs· nllt!N or t.i ..d. 3

wt.Bted etitctric ecooters. Clll

Rogers Mobllty collect. 1 · 614870-9861 .

~

Falcon Cradle Snatetler Wreck•
bed, good eond .. $1560. 1987
Chewtte, 8, 000 miles, damaged but mpairable, S1 176. Call
Spacious mobile home lots for · 8t4-28fl.6522.
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home - - - - , - - - , - - - , - -. P•k. Gallipolis F1Hrv. W. Va. You never need an appolntmen_t
for: profeuional helrcarl' IIII'Vi·
304-676--3073.
ces at FIESTA HAIR FATrai18r s paces for ""'nt, locust SHIONS. 322 Second A~ott .,
Reed. Route One. 304·875- aero 51 from the park. 441-9152.
1076.
UniqUit rolltopantique desk. Call
Large Mobile Home Lot. Sewer. 6t4-446-2235 .
water. electric hook-ups. Call'
Electro• lux with pO'N8r nozle.
304-578-29 42.
Cleens Ike new. Cali 814-388·
Trailer space for n:tnt at Y Rt. 62 9993.
a 2, New Management. Phone
Universal gym paek . 2000
304-876-38t8 .
weight Mt. Mint condition. Call
&amp;t4-245-9t73.
47 Wanted to Rent
- - - - - - - -- - - Motorized WhMI Chair. Cott
Golf Pro at Cllffiide Golf Club
v.t~nti nice 3 BA . home to ftlnl in
Gellipolli. Prefer in town or
do•·ln. ,.;ce location. Call
6t4-446-4663 .. 446-7905,
ave's.

over
new,
will5 sell
'for
$800.$1800.
Hat leu
r.an
miles.
8 t4- 992' 7479 .
2 children• b8droom suites . 1
light wood and 1 dark\."ood. boll
springs and mettress . 1 year old.
$400 each. 614-986-4338.

Wednesday, Junet2:2:·:1:9:s~s=======:-=::-::==---:Po~m=ero~y::M:irdd~l;epo~rt;·~O~h~io~-;-:-:~-r-======:::;:::The~~o~a~il~y~~~::;~~!1~ ·,
Television
T::~:t:~y S©R4tllA-~£tfS® won
u~ 10 5t4.v~
..

Auto Parts
Accessories

BUDGET TRANSMISSION Used &amp; rebuilt all tvpea. Gu• rantea 30 dava minimum. Prices
$99 &amp; up. Re built torques
conwnad u low as 139.
St11ndard clutches. pre11ure
plates &amp; throw·out bearings. All
typal 12 mus. warranty. We buy
junk tranamlsslo,ns. Call 304876·•2·30 or 61+379-2220.

2 lA . •tt. I closett. khchen-oppl. fumlahld. W•hor-Drjor
hopk-up. ww c•pet. n•tv
poln•d. dock. Aog.,oy. !no.
Apto. Call 304-87S.5t04, 87fl.
78t3"' 876-8388.

GAMl

IT...~~ Llt:£S

VIeWing
a

10~~1T.

CAPTAIN EASY
NOW HO)'I. PO YOU PlAN
ON ~ET TIN 6 PA~T THAT DUDe

WITHOUT U71N'

3

VIOleNCe~

mI]] Happy Days

till ShowBiz Today
0]1 Good Tlmao
d) Cartoon Expraoo
· Qll Fandango
8:05 (I) Father Knows S.tt
8:30 0 (}) I!]) NBC Nlghtiy Newt

NeW grill fits '73 to '79 Chevy
pic!&lt; up $26.00. 304-676-t325.

1972 Nova. 307 engine, m•
chanlcally tnd Interior axeatlent
condit-ion. Call814-992-2278.

Truck Utility bed. Orman Hall

~ NBA. Today

Inc. $200.00
Phone 304-6762888
or 304-675-2877.
_.:__ _ _ _ _ __ _

79

Motors Homes
l!o campers

(I) NlghHy Bualneoa Report
®I 411 021 ces Newo
Ill I]] Hogano Heroes
till Inside Polhlco '88
® Jetteraona
Qll You Can Be a Star
8:3G CD Carol Burnett
7:00 (}) Ramlng!on Steele Red
Holt Steele
0 (}) PM Magazine
(]) SportoCamer (L}
(]) Enterialnman1 Tonight
11) (I) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewtHour (1 :00)
Ill Cll People's Court
®I Newt
m I]] Star Trek
I!1J Moneyllne
111112l IUl Wheel o1 Fortune

Merchandi se

I

Services

•

i

FRANK AND ERNEST
ME{ .. J.: THOUGHT

You

.suppoffP 1b FEED

Tl-f~

WE~e

DINoSAURS!

Cl Cll Judge
till

Cro11flre
I!]) Jeopardy! E;1
0]1 Benson
·
® VldeoCountry .

ill 021
, ... ,

•

..,_,

7:35 CD Andy Griffith
8:00 Ill Crazy Uke a Fox Fox at
the Races
. 0 (}) I!]) Highway to

ALLEY OOP
...OR HE AND l,IMPA

Heaven After Jonathan loses

MAY HI'.VE ~UST HAD
AN I'.RGUMENTI ':l:&gt;
.
Ol&gt;.. ... ?rG

his wings, he finds mortal
love. (Rl Q
(])Pro Rodeo t987 National
Finals Rodeo HighHghts from
Las Vegas, NV (T)
ill Cl Cll Growing Palna
·There's trouble In paradise
wtJen Maggie and kids
threaten mutiny . (R} C
l1l { !) Martt Ru ..ell Comedy
Spacial The master of
·
polhical satire· uses his
unique brand of humor and
devastating musical parodies
to deliver the day 's news as
only he can .
®I 111112l Jake and the
Fetmen An elusive serial
rapist is trapped because of
his allergy to cats.(R)
mil] TBA

... ,,_

2

EEK
HEY, L1'5T£1J 10 11-\IS ...
1H£R£'S A BILL CCMI"-JG

UP lf.J

(~R£SS ..

lt\AT CLAIMS 10 EJ.I f..IIIIJPilt:
(ooaJPTI()J

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IT LEQAL

till

-~~

'

P~meNews

0]1 MOVIE: Dune, Partt
!PG13) (1 :t0}
d) Riptide Echoes
® Naahvn!e Now
8:05 CD MOVIE: The Man Who
Sho1 Liberty Valance INRI
(2:02}
8:30 (I) Cl Cll Head of the Cla11
Darlene pre1ends to like Alan
!O soothe his bruised, frague

dlo~Rb2.r Comrades: A

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
THI~ 15 ei'REO~
FINDLAY,

i&lt;E pORTING FR::M
THE COf./VENTION

Channel 3 Moacow Spacial
Follow Vladimir Dounaev,
chief Washingion
correspondent for the Sovie1
evening newscast Vremya . to
the Iowa caucus as he
covers the Presidenti81 Race.

WHEN 'YOW

YO!J'R&lt;: ReALLY

WATCH RERWN5
OFA FtlL-ITICAL
CONVENTION.

5CRAPING-

BOTTCMOF

THEIMRREL ...

5l

'"'...

(J] Major League
S.teb81
9:00 (}) 700 Club
(!) Lighter Side of Sporta (R)
ill Ill Cll Hooperman Susan
tells Harry she's quitting and
moving out of town . (A) C
l1l MOVIE: The Compleal
lreau. . (NRI (2:30)
(I) American Plllyhouae
Typical American family tries

:o

.
BUT

1------.:...____

l COLLARED

to survive nuclear holocaust.

HIS DAD8URN

jNA)Q

Ill II]) The Equalizer
McCall and Kostmayer's
fishing trip turns into race to
save a life .(A}
till Larry King Uvel
liJJ MOVIE: Daddy'a Gone
A-Hunting (PG) (t :48}

LOOKOUT!!

®I

Tra nsp ortalion

w .•

THE GRIZZWELLS®
\-10'1&lt;1'~

'l'tJt.IR

-reAM
$1-lA?\14'

UP?

WA!4T M~
TO ~a~'

em wrn-1
11-\S

WU.PEN?

''
'·

..

,,.

''

.

®I Wheal of Forlune E;l

Farm SliU Pii es
&amp;

1----------

Barney Miller
d) Alrwolf The X Virus
Stereo .
13 Crook and Chose
7:05 CD Andy Griffith
7:30 0 (}) ill Hollywood
Square•
(!)Beat of Scholastic Sport•
America (L}

PEANUTS
I SEE WE'RE 601NG IN T~E
SAME DIRECTION .. DO 'I'OU
MIND IF I WALK WITH 'I'OU'

UNLESS,

OF

COURSE,
TI41NK I 'M

14A I-lA, 'I'OU
OLt:' FOR '{OU .

AREN

GLIB

1

T '{OU TOO

FOR

ME?

9:30 0 (}) I!]) Day• end Nlgh1a
ol M9tly Dodd Fred and
Molly have a late-night
conlrontation on New York
Street. C
(]) PBA llowllng
ill D Cll Slap Maxwell
Story The newspaper
replaces him on the
sportsbeat and limits his
topiCS./R) E;l
9 New Country
10:00 Ill Straight Talk
D (}) IUl The Bron• Zoo
Promising student decides to
drop out of school and join
the Marines. E;1
(ll 8 Cll Spen•or: For Hire
Spenser's torn when an
ex-c:op appeare to be
delivering dirty money.(R) E;1
1111 •112l WIMguy Ambitious
spacial prosecutor
unwittingly endangers
Vlnnle'a cover. (R}
till Evanlng Newt
lRI Newa
Qll USO c.tebrlty Tour Lee
Greenjllood &amp; Lana Brody
10:30 (]) AIMrlcon S!tlplhOta
()) Molor League llaiiiNIII
(I) lfo Up 10 Ua: The Cllrelll
Pf'Oiecl Featured are
honorees of The GlraHe
PrOject. an organization who
promotll cntzan activism
and honors thoae,wtoo stick
their neck out lor commort
good. (NRl: E;l

8

VldiD1UIIbt

11:00 (]) Romlng!On 1 - Steele

•

'·

.

(]) Ill Cll ABC N.wt E;l
l1l Body Elect~.c

Tak,ing depoalt for AKC reg'is2 NCR cash registeres, 2 adding tered Cock• Spaniel pup~•.
1973 Prowler 23 ft . trevel
1978 Chrv•er LeBaron. 4 door,
machines. All for nso. 814- - silver blond buff colon, had
new palrit, new tlras, new trailer. Full length care free
742-242t .
. shots. wormed amd health reawning, tully .:~H oontainad. Call
cottl, 0200.00. Ready June
bot....,, loaded. Call 6t4-992aher 6 p.m . 614-843-6240..
72t4"' 8t4-992-3224.
SURPLUS. DENIM. ARMY, 30th. 30 ... 876-2193.
51 Household Goods RENTAL CLOTHING. C.mou·
1987 model B~ck Somertet.
flage green. black whtte Metro198,6 Elite 27 h . traveltrailer
Peak a Poo, tlad thots and PS. PB, E)ou ster110 system. awning,
politan clothing'. Political. busi·
111lf cun111ined, e.~~;cal­
wormed
also
health
record,
perfet;f
condh:iOrlNeed
to
sell.
ness, tdYertising 11n d specialties,
lent
eo
ndition
88,600.00 Phone
SWAIN
$150.00 ooch. 304-87e-2t93. 1974 Opat Manta . Great echool
Novelty T-ahlrts. caps. whole304-675-t658.
.
AUCTION !!&lt; FURNITURE 82 sal;t, and retail. Sam .S omec.-. Gall 814--949-2268 for
Olive St.• Gallipolis. ·
more Information.
rville's, At. 21 R&amp;Yen's wood,
NEW- 1$ pc. wOod group- 8399. Fri .. Sat .. Sun .. Noon -8:00PM. 57
Musical
LiYing room suites- $199-81599. Call 304-27~5855.
19.76 Ford Station Wagon.
Instruments
Bunk bade: wkh bedding- $199.
75,000 mll81. Good conditton.
Full sire mattreM ~ foundation 4~e8 ft. utility .trailer. CAll 304StOOO. Calll!t4-992·88il4.
ster'ting : $99 . Recliners H6-2t69.
81
Home
·
staning ~ t99.
Wurl~r piano. E.lllcellentcondl·
1979 Chrvaler CorciOb• ' Le
Improvements
USED- Bedi, dressers, bedrOom Portable lighted sign / letters. · tion. •aoo. Caii814-446·174B. Baron. Super thape,lmmaculate
suites, t199-t299. Oaaks . 8299. Free delivery . WV 1-BOO..
Clll' . Full power, 380Y8 . 82096.
'-Nrlnger washer, a complete line 842-2434. Ohio t -800-633Coll6t4-992-87t9.
~ASEMENT
of u•d furniture . .
3453.
58 ' Fruit
WATERPROOFING
NEW- Western boots- • 30 .
1'9n
Buick
Regal
.
PS,
PB.
l!o Vegetables
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Staat &amp; 1979 City tri axle aluminum
PO\Wr •Ills. VMV good condi· Unconditional lifetime guaransoft toe) . Call 614-448-3159. · dump trailer. 32 ft bo.~~;, good
tion, mutt•atoappreeiate. Call tee. Local references furnished.
Frfle estimates. Call co ll&amp;ct
6t4-992-8587.
cond, ca11814-448-9379.
1-814-237-0488, day or night.
For •I e. STAAWBER RIES , Free
County ApplianCit. Inc. Good
boll8s for picking. TAYLOR'S 1988 Pontlec LaMant. 2 door RogersBasemant
used appliances and TV 18111. 2 wheat utiltty trei.ler $50.00, 21
BERRY PATCH. Kerr Rd. Mon- hardtop, ah11rp, last. S1600. Call WateJproofing.
Open 8AM to 8PM. Mon W.ru CU ft ChCIIIt type fr~Jr $76.00.
day ~ru Saturd-v. 8AM-8PM. 6t4-742-2373 llllor 4:00p.m.
Sat. 814-446-1699. 627 3rd. Ferran cage 825.00. 304-876SWEEPER and sewing machine
Call 814-446-8692 or 614Aw. Gallipolis, 0 H.
7438.
245-6t78.
1987 Mustang, • cyl., euto., repair, parts, and supplies. Pick
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Air eonds. 15,000 and 10,000
good oondh:kln, low mileage. up and delivery, Davis VaC~.~...n
Cleener, one half mila up
Dan's P.roduce M11rket. Now t2000. Call 8~4-99,2-7103.
Washers, dryers, n:tfrigeftltors. btu, 304-576-7t87.
George~ Creek Rd. Cell 614open for business. Loca1ed on
ranges . Skaggs Appliencas.
St. At. 315 . Call 814-448-4060. 1983 Oldsmobile, 4doorSedan. 448-0294.
Upper ~lver Rd. beside Stone
c,..t Mottl. 8t4-448-7398.
Delt• 88 Royale Brougham, V-8
Seers 23.2 cu It cheSt freezer
v..., good condition. 8t4-992- Concrete Septic Tanks · 1000
flt~sh defrost $86.00. Warm
gal.. 150Dgal.andJet Aeration
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
3307 or 614-992-3784.
morning wood bu rnar S 1 00.00.
system. Factory trained repair
304-458-t763.
Sofas and cheirs pri'ced fr0111
t987 Pondoc 8000. 27.000 shop. RON EVANS -ENTER L t ves lo c k
e 3951fJ ~995. Tabt• $50 and
mil•. new ~res, fully equipped, PRISES, Jackson, Ohio. 1·80().
up to $126. Hide-a-badt $390 HeiWy duty Snap On Mechanic
including AC. AM-FM castette, 637-9528.
tQ 8595. Recliners 8225 . to tools, top and bottom box, iron
tBSOO. 614-992-2881 after 5
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES $375. l.ompa t28 to •t25. Work bench with vice end
p.m.
61 Fatm Equipment
Septic tank., pumping- t90 per
Dlnette1 t109 and up to $495. grinder, phOne 304-875-3118.
Wood table w-8 chairs 8286 to
'81 Ford Escort rtation wagon. load. Callt -80D-637-9528.
$795. Deak •100 up to $375.
rebuilt transn)iaalon,
CROSS&amp; SONS
Painting; Interior 8t Exterior.
Hutches _$ 400 and up. Bunk 20 inch girls bike. like nM.
$t,250.00. 304-675-t828,
Free estimates. Call 61~448beds compl~e w-mattrn•• $30.00. 3x21 % ft runner nM ~isoi- ~8&amp;-~%~ . Joc~~~Dn. Ohio.
8344.
•295and up to *396. Bilby beds $20.00. phone 304-876-2213.
Massey Ferguson, New Holllind,
1110. Mettrettes Qrboll springs
.
t070 Bush Hog lei• &amp; Service. Over 19 78 Pontiac Grand Prix.
full or twin $88, firm $78, and Four eo r-cert tickets,lron Maiden 40 used tractors to choose from -loaded!, 304-875--3306 or 676- Ganges: 24x24•8- t3995 ...
24K32x8· $4595. lncludet (2) ·
188. Queen seta t22S, King &amp; Guns and Aosas. June 28th. &amp;: complete line of new S. u•d 3848.
9x7 steel overhead doors. 111 3
$350. 4 drawer cl'l•t.889. Gun Ohio Canter, CotumWs. Ohio, 8 equipment. Largatt Mlectlon In
cabineta 6 gun. Baby mattresses P.M. sao. coli 304-8B2-2639 .
S.E. Ohio.
· 1978 Dodge 380 Auto, air ft. steal ent ..nce door. painted . ~
•36 8. $46. Bed frames t20,
condition $4150.00 Phone 304- steal roofing and sidin!:J, {2) 2Jt3
windows, construction and •x
$30 &amp; King frame tGO. Good
AC 014 tractor. Sharp, with 876-7270.
· included. Post-Frame Builders,
selection of bedroom suites, 55 Building Supplies
moVYing machine, raike, baler,
meMI c•blnets, headboards $30
1982 Ford EICOrt dltionwegen, Atheno. Oh;o 8t4-592-2937plows. cultivator, •3800.
and up to $86.
Owner will finance. Call 814PS.PB, Good Conl:ftion $1,500.
286-8622.
Phone· 304-875--2967 aher 5 RON'S "felavl1lon Service.
House calls on RCA. Quazar.
90 Days •me ae cash with Building Materials
PM.
GE. Specialing in Z8ntth. Call
approved credit. 3 Milas out B!oc:k, brick, 18VII'Br pipea, ytln· 800 Ford tn~ctor with mowing
Bulavllle Ad. Open 9am tp Spm dows. llnrels. etc. Claude Win- m.::hina, r11ika, N H baler. plowe, 84 Caveli• wagon 58,000 304-576-2398 or 614· 446·
Mon . thru Set. Ph . 614-446- ters, Rio Granda, 0 . Call 814- cuhlvator. manure lpl'l!!ladar,
miles. $2.600.00 Phona 304- 2484 . .
246-5t2t.
0322.
bush· hog, 14650. Owner wili 676-3044.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stl.lllp
Concrete blocks- all sizee- yird finance. Call 8t4-28fl.5522.
remo~.e~l. Call 304-67&amp;-1331.
Valley Furniture
New and uaed furniture end or delivery. Mason sand. Gallipo- Late . model AC 190 •rln-3 72
Trucks for Sale
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
applic1ncea . Call 814-446· lit Block Co., 123Va Pine St., tractor wll:h plow., tl'lnaport
Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Call
614-446Most walls complmed same dav.
7672. Hours 9-6.
disc.
model-2400.
lntarnationlll
19B2
Dodge
Ram
Y.!:
ton.
6
cyl
..
2783.
.
round baler. ••eeo. Owner will 4 tpd .. topper. air. Call 614- Fump 1ales and service. 304896-3802
J 1!. S FURNITURE
finance. Call 814-288-8622.
387-7476.
WESTERN REO CEDAR
1416 Eastern Aw.
. • Channel Ru,tic
4 drawer chatt, $48. 5 drawer
lnt~rnetloMI cub tractor wh:h 1977 Ford, 4~4. lA ton. 4 speed S1arks Lawn and Shnb Service.
and Bevet.:l Lap Siding
cheat, S54.95. 5 pc. wooden
Plow.
cultlvltor, diiiC end syeie trans. , 480 cubic inch engine, 304,675-3956 or 304-678* Deck Materials
dlnnette sets. 1199. 95.
81,600.00. Phone 304- new 8 ply tires. V&amp;fV good 2903.
mower,
~uaranteed Quality
875-2806 between 12:00 and condition. 81 .. 949-2237.
C ETIDE. INC. , Athono-6t4· 7:.0 0 PM.
Mich~~al's Residential air condiPICKENS
594-3678
tion and refrigeration, re charge
FURNITURE
1980 GMC. 4-63T Detroit Die- and repelr •rvlce. Leon. W.Va.
sel. AIUton AutO(nlltic. 20 ft.
Dlneun. beds , bedding,
315 Ma..ey Fer~ton irector bo• . Good condh !on. t6600. 304-468-17 65.
dreslflfs. chest. couches., chairs,
whh
axtraa,
newly
overhauled.
304-882-3480.
Pets for Sale
Trea trimming and ttump ram~
lamps, coffee-end tables:. Every 56
axe cond, 30 ..895-3856.
val, free estimate, 304-67&amp;day Specials. V: mile out Jerri1983 Ford Ranger 4 cyl., 4 a pd.,
cho. 304-676-1450.
36 Massey Ferguson trectoi' hf#N motor. 82996. 304-676- 7t2t .
Groom end Supply Shop-Pet with e~~:tres . New IV over hauled. 8t87
RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE,
CORBIN!!&lt; SNYDER
Grooming . All breeds ... AII E.~~;cal . cond. Call 304-B95haute call servicing G E. Hot
FURNITURE CO .
stytas. lam!l Pat. Food Dealer. 3855.
Point. weahen, dryen end
966 Seoond A....
Julie Webb Ph . 614-446-023t .
73 Vans l!o 4 W.O.
at&lt;Mto. 304-576-2398.
Gallipolis, Ohio-814-446· 1 171
Used sofas end chairs.
Oragonwynd Cattery Kannel. 63
Livestock
Experienced painter, intarlor1nd
G MC Surban Sierra Cl•asic. 3rd
P&amp;rsian and Siemeee kit·
High prices got you down~~ CFA
se.t, front&amp;. re• air, full povwer. exterior. Free estimates. TMturtens . AKC Chow puppin. New
Oleck us out for Low Prices &amp;
Aboolu\tllv like now . *9800. Coli ing calling, Th•o BBel base·
Himala.,..n kittan,. Call 614menta. Call 304-875-4301 or
Quality Furniture &amp; Carpet. E-Z
446-3844 11fter 7PM.
Ve,. old Appaloo• Stallion. 8 6t4-44fl.29 67.
•
after 6 PM-875-7413.
credit Wilh approved credit.
year old Palimino M.-e. Will sell
Mollohan Furnlture-814-448~.
1972 Econotine 300\oW'I. StandHappy Jack Flea Trep : Control togettt. or .. par1te. Call lifter I
7444.
ard thlft with rebuilt 302. 3A ton.
•
n.s in your home without PM. 8t4-258-t482.
Plumbing
•••
Sea ft 88 Mill Creek Or. or Flea 82
· pesticides or exterminators. ReRAY'S USED FURNITURE,
sults overnight. Money back Regittared Slrnrn.1•1 Hei""'1&amp; Market w&amp;llk ends, d14-446l!o Heating
8t4-387-0837
ft
guarantee. 8idvvai1Caah Feed/ J cows. Registered PDI'-:t Here- 7037.
· .;
10,000 BTU Air Conditioner·
0 North Produce.
ford cows • celvet. Call 614$86, POrtable dryer-$45. tide387-0493ollor 5 PM.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
by-side retrig-e145, chest of
19715 vtn equipped for fishing.
AKC Rag. German Shepherd
AND HEAriNG
drawers-*15, coffer •ble-$10.
puppies. $160. Cell 614-246· For Sal•3 ve• old Simmental hunting. camping. New brake~~.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
kitehen ca.,.net· $25, worerobe5126 or 245·5644.
Herd Bull. top quality. Call paint job, 318 motor. headers.
Gallipolis. Ohio
$20,. rocking chair-$25, brellk*700. 6t4-992-888t.
8t4-25fl.8740.
Phone 814-446-3888 or 614hatoet-$35.
Full Blooded, 2 female Pomeran446-4477
ian puppies. $126 each. Call
DAIRY FARM~RS
Sofll. chair &amp; r.ocker-solld wood
814-379-2103after 5 PM.
Veal Ptoducora . .ulng "Form 74 Motorcycles
frame.eomeculhlonaworn -$60
Fresh" calves 90-1 1 !i lbl. ·Hoi83 Excavating
or best offer. Queen size wooden
AKC Cocker Spaniel pups. Shots ttelna. 3-7 d8tfs old. Call 814bed-UO, full si• wooden bedatarted, wormed. n 50 each. 246-6688.
. .
1982 Night Haw-k 460 Honda.
$20. Call 814-448-3045 or
Call 6t4-38B-8890.
8. 000mile~. Goodoond .. seso.
448-884t .
ln~atrial 10" augar on truck.
t97S Cltovette, tt25. Coli
Happy Jack Aea Trap : Control 64 Hay l!o Grain
drills 40 ft . tor core drainage,
5t4-44fl.4096.
Announcing Electrolux Grand
flees in your home without
septic &amp; ate. Sale/ trade. Call
Opening euthorized factory
peaticidas or extermiMtors. R•
8t4-886-73t1.
outlet •lea end HMce, Buffalo,
aults overnight. Money back Hay tor Sale. • 1 per bale. C.ll 1914 XT 210 Yamth&amp; dual
purpo811. Looks greet &amp; runs
W.Va, 304-937·2272.
guar11ntaa. A &amp;G Faed 8i Supply, 304-458-1947.
go~. •aso. Call 8t4-448399 W. Main St., Pomeroy.
84
Electricsl
3t99.
l!o
Refrigeration
53
Antiques
AKC Registered Golden R&amp;t987 Hondo Odyooey 350. Like
triever puppl•. 8 ..weks old,
new . 12000firm. Call814-245Have had all shots. 304-8B2·
5854.
Residential or commercial wir - '
2B54.
Buy or Sell. AiY•Ine Antiques.
ing. New iarviee or repairs.
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
71
Auto's
For
Sale
Rt. 35 C.,cte Sal•. Speclllllling
Ucented electrician . Estimate
Hours: M,T,W 10e.m. to 8p.m .. · Full blooded Beoglo pupo. t20.
Honda. Suz, Ku, Yamaha.
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304each. Cell 814-99.2-7280 after
S4nday t to 8p.m. lt4- 992'-ts-Senllce- Aep~ln. We buy
875-,1 786.
4 ,30 pm ,
2826.
left and t,.de uMd blkM. 304576-4t30.
85 General Hauling
1979 Hondl Treil90, 1owmiles.
Ilk• n-. use. ea11 304-87fl.
t73t.
R
Dillard Water Service ~ Pools.
46 Furnished ooms
Cl1terns. Wells. DeiNery Any t9H Hondo troll blko)(A 20011.
time. Call 814-448-7404-No
aa cond. 1750.00. 304-876Fur. . hed room-919 Second
Sunday calls.
"
2498.
A~ .• (Jalllpolle. •1215 t mo.
Utllh:lw pilei. Slnalemllle. Share
J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
bath. Call448--4418after7PM.
pools. cisterns, wells. Ph. 614.,
75
Boats and
246-9,285.
..
;
t984 P!vmouth Turlomo, 2.2
ftoomt for ..m· welk • month.
Motors for Sale
IUtO~ , air. 32,000 ml May eh;e
9tllf'tlng .. 1120 e mo. Qallll
14
R &amp; R Water Service. Pools, • ;
cer-truck on ttede. Call 114Hotol-5t4-44fl.9580.
cisterns. wells . lmrned,ate - •: ~
448-0382.
1,000 or 2.000glllon•dellvery. • 1 ~
21 fl. llrryNnor oruloor. t981
DtY • ._lk. monttt. Good rates.
Cell 304-675-8370.
wide
be.-n,
llllelectronlc.
glllll'f,
.· :"
t973 FOomloc. a cyl .. 4 do...
Mlddl-. Tol..,llllon. prJvoto
camee.
..c.
310
V~ l eng.,
'
bath-tho"'*. elr concltionad,Good work o•. Ru "' good. ,....,_ I. Vrwy IDW 1\ours.
Paul Aupe, Jr. Water Service.
U40. COI~5t4-44e.4t52.
514-992-782t , 8t4-992-2181
Pbols. elsterna. wells. Call 814*27.500.
Call
304-727-8880.
or lt4-H2-2353.
448-317t .
tt88at ...... cs . 2dr.. 4cyl ..
MAIO., AM· FM·C.II., ,... win- t 8 II. Cru!Hr Inc/troll or &amp; 22
Housekeeping roomsWatterson's Water Hauling,
oompllloly furMhld. Dhola.
dow dolrooto•. 11.000 mil•. HP motor. 1&amp;00. Cell 814-446fE!Atonable rat... immediate
9188.
nn-. to..ta. ., 2. •d 118.
U385. Coli 8t4-44&amp;-1897.
2. 000 gallon deUvery. cisterna.
per nlgh1. Alto by wtoek. ,Ohio
pools. well, etc. call 30~576For
•1•71
Cllmtro,
Good
oon28.
ft,
Pontoo"bo"&amp;t
..
ller.
All
A - Campgroundo 114-14829t9.
dhlon. COli 8t4-441-3848.
oqulp...,t. . . , offor. lt42828.
448-7t09.
. '
Rod HOIIrarglinal D"'ll dool..87 Upholstery
1978 Cabin Crulaer, 305 Mer46 Sp~ for Rer!t
bo .... pltn• flrpo"d. Sur· cruiMr, low hours. full c1nwe
plu" Your Area. a..,.,. Guide.
~
(tiiOU87-1000 En. 8-8805. top, toilet, ltow. Sleeps tbl. Call
304-87fl. 7288.
Mowrey's UphOlstering •rving
Store corner of S.aond • Pine.
t977 Cor.ottt. ·N-. orlglnol
tri countyeree 23ve••· Thebtlt
t400 aq. ft. Off c•ldng.
motor: full option c•: n. . . 11 lnc:h 8eetn.1 boat wtth In turnhurv upholnarin9l Call
•310 e mo. llue utllt . C.U
304 · 675 · 4164 for free
polntondoorpat.
COII514-247- nil.-. no motor. 304-875-71141
"You'd
betler
run
fast.
Your
owner's
a
8t4-448-23211. 441-4249.
erentngs.
estimates .
4881.
dOQ food tycoon ."

\

•

(]) SportsLook
l1l Degraosl Jijnlor High L. D.
is terrified When her d·ad
. goes Into the hosphal. Q
(I) Dr. Who Tha Chase, Part

Automotive parts tor J8le.
Door,, fenders. hood, 4tlreund ·
rima for FOrd Pinto Wagon.
$75.for all. Call 614-446-2045

t~~=~=~=~~=i~~===::::;::;:::=-1
56
Pets for Sale
71 Auto's For Sale

WED., JUNE 22

0 (}) ill llJ Cll ®I ., Q2)
IUl Newo

· 1979 Chevy Love body c;ompleto. Call 614-245-5495.

c ..uo.Mu.. .....

OReo.ronoe

8:00 Ill Big Valley Lady from
Mesa

500good .usedtires· ·T akean- s~
a piece. 13, 14. 15 ln. or will
trade for car or pickup-, Call
8t4-258-8251 .

I

ldifl .. lty CLAY I . POLLAP_It

EVENING

4LT, 235 / 86R-16E radialtite.s.
8 .lug w,hite spoke whaals !Ford
truck) . Asking 8395. can 614245-9667.

I

e

·

•

*'·

for Sale

11ecref...m, 1Dbecoo•llotm.-.t,
cky _.,_ nil• hooll-. .. 2'-1
mii .. ·Crlb Ck . Rd. , W.Va.
•t 5•000_ea11 5t4-37t-222t .

64

Space for small trailllrll. All
ho ok·upl. Cable. AJso efficiency
rooms. air and eebla. Mason.
W.Va, Call 304-77~5651 .

Unable to get out? NeedtDgo to

21

Space for Rent

PtMne 101. Preferably older
couple. Centenary. Call 81 4446-4534.

Will do bJtJvtining in ,.,., hon-..

Aef•enon
367-7598.

Wednesday, June 22, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

J

Spawning
1
(ll l1l D Cll ®I
IU) NIWI

8 CJl
.112J

l•tt•n ol the
four Krombled words be·
low to lorm lov• s;rnp le wo •ds

I

DARIH N

I P1· I I
PREE . C

I

Ii

1---,.!,--1
J ~I
I ~~

)

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I

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• 1 15 1 1

.

.

.

.

.

"If good behavior were simply
following , rules." e•plalnad lhe
professor to his philosophy class,
"we could program a computer -

..;:;

.

L 0 J EST

..

I

be-."

1--T~G;:,_~~~~~.=--..:_;,,,,..:_TI--l G)
"-.1---'----L-_,L__.l__.J
-

8

Comp.lete the chuckle quoted
by Id ling !n the mlssmg wor d;
yo u develop from srep No. 3 bel ow.

PRINJ NUMBER E.D LETTERS I
IN THE SE SQ UARES

LETTERS
1 UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER
1
FOR

I' I, ' I' I' I'
IBEl

..

I. I I I I
..

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS r
Srieal&lt;y - Brier - Nudge - VIctim - INSURANCE
Lightning is said never to strike the same place twica, unless,
of course , your INSURANCE hars;___;,
la:::.P•;..e~
d. ----------,
•

NORTH

BRIDGE

+A!tQ
9Q9
tA!t t073
+K54

By Jom'es Jacoby

.

Many psychological forces are at
EAST
work during a bridge game. Today
South was properly willing to play in , 9 4 3 2
9AKJl08765
four spades, but then the nasty oppo- t 6 5
tQJ92
nents pushed higher. So, when North + Q J 10 9 8
+2
bid one more, South did him one better
SOUTH
and bid the slam. Maybe he decided
+10987432
that all the North cards would work
well for him, or maybe he just got mad
.84
at the opponents aild decided to show
+A 763
them some stuff. Who knows ?
Vulnerable: North-South .
Declarer won the ace of clubs and
Dealer: North
played a spade to dummji's ace. With
West holding three spades to the jack,
Nortb E.ul
declarer had to go after the diamond ~·•
j9
2 NT
suit before picking up trumps, so he 59 •
Pass
played A-K and ruffed a diamond. PaS&gt;
Pass Pass
When West overruffed, declarer also
had to lose a club lor down one. Ap'parOpening lead: + Q
enlly South should not have been so
pushy in the bidding.
.
L...,.,..--:----:--:--:--:-..,..-J
In fact, ·the slam can come home if ruffs, plays ace of diamonds and ruffs
declarer avails himself of an unusual a small diamond. Then he plays two
play to prevent West from getting a more high trumps from dummy and
trick with the jack of trumps. After ruffs another small diamond. He can
playing the first round of trumps, he now return to dummy with the king of
should lead the queen of hearls from clubs. The king of diamonds will take
dummy. When East plays the king, de- the last diamond from East and tile re- ..
clarer should. shed a diamond. Since maining diamond ,10 will be cashed,
East has no club to return, he wlli con- South shedding both club loeers on·
tinue with another heart Declarer those diamonds and
·

:Ws

-.

•..

s•

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Anecdotal
collection
3 Agreed!
4 Postpubescent
5 Lobster claw~~
6 Macaw
7 Split
8 "-the
Rainbow"
14 Resident of 9 Miss Horne
13 Across 11 Cronkite's 24 Excellent
16- of
"You
buy
Are -"
25 Like
Good
Feeling
15 Shocked
a day
17 Michael
sound
in
Jackson
17 Great party
June
hit
IS Aleutian · 26Jewish
19 Jordanian,
island
month
e.g.
20 Storage
28 Tennis
21 Relaxed
building
great
23 Indian
22 Swedish
30 Camille
city
wine
- -Saens
27 Actor
measure
32 Expunge
Terence
28 Extensive
29 Wahine's
dance
30 Mexican
state
31 Kind of
admiral
33 Gennan
ACROSS
1 Canter, e.g.
5 Joyce
-Oates
10 Prefix for
"diluvian"
11 Prosper
12 Sordid
13 Seventh

Anawer
34 Dalai
or Teshu
35 Footless
animal
36 Chinese
' wax
38Run in
neutral
40 Actress
Ryan
42 A ·
Gardner
43 Rooter

article

34 Disappearing seat
37 Strict
39 Missing
link?

41 Unheeding
44 Bother
45 Magma
46 Maxim
47 Spirit

DOWN

1 Chatter

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

6122

•
••

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

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

DSM

p I J

NMAIVM
YI N

ZRGG

PIJ

FI

C D L V D

CSIVDMW

..

L

DSM

'•
'•

•

p I J

D R E M
C K M W F

0 I

Z I

'

IW

RD . - VIP

G
CERDS
Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: IT IS EASY ENOUGH TO
HOLD AN OPINION{: BUT· HARD WORK TO AC11JALLY

KNOW WHAT ONE STALKING ABOUT. - PAUL FORD
~~- K'"IJ FlllUN• Syndella, Inc.

1
'

•

�The

June 22. 1988

Ohio

TRIPLE
VENDOR
COUPONS

..

THURSDAY

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

Ohio Lottery

Wimbledon
play resumes

Daily Number
971
Pick 4
3707
Super Lotto
ll-13-15-25-33-37

Page 3

JUNE 23

FRIDAY

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10. PM

JUNE 24

SATURDAY

e

JUNE 25

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

~-------------.,

PRICES EFFE(nVE SUN., JUNE 19 THRU SAT., JUNE 2 S

·
n

0
0

c.

Ohio Senate adopts
hazardous waste biJJ ·

"'C

-4

..c:c. . 0 rm
w
::r

:I
CD

N

Ul

c: &lt;
"'C m

I»

,._,'$
~

.,

Q)

:I.

c.
c. I»
&lt;
N

:I

FlAVORITE

Lunch Meats ••••••~.

$

BAR S BULK

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

129

Chopped Ham ••••~... $)29

Sandwich' Spread.~~. 99(

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Bacon •••••••••••••••••~•• 69(·

$ 99
1

.

.

Round Steak •••••.L:~
Ground Chuck •••L:~ $1.39

$l 69
Rump Roast •••••••L:. . ·
(
9
7
W'•eners....._
•••••••••••••••••
...........

c

..c.

0

1:

:a

I»

&lt;

WE WILL REDEEM
UP TO
S VENDOR· COUPONS
(Max. soc Value)
(No Cigarettes)
WITH THE
TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPON ABOVE.

(

BLOOD RUN MADE - Area motorcycll•ts
made a blood run Wednesday to conlrlbule blood
• to Meigs County's American Red Cross bloodmo·
bile helping with the shortage of blood In the

·-·-·-------------·
I
COUPON

I
I
I

MAXWELL HOUSE

TANT COFF

.

12

&lt;-· ...
Q)

Your Must Bring The
Vendor Coupon Above
(One coupon per Family)

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
KY. BORDER

2

120
0 rn
:I

~--------------~

HOMEMADE

SAVORY

0 2

(J1

$2 79

8 oz.

oz. PKG.

Umit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powoll's Supermarket
Good June 23, 24, 25 Only

··-·---------------·
------------·--··
COUPON

CASE OF 24

Lettue ••••••••••••••••••• 59(
HEAD

BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk •••••••••• :~·•• $1 ~9

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
With two weeks to go before the
July 6 deadline, parents ln
Eastern Local School District
working to raise money to fund
next school year's e~tra­
currlcular activities, are still
several thousand dollars short of
their $17,212 goal.
The parents, most of whom are
affiliated with either the athletic
or band boosters organizations,
."are over the $10,000 mark," .

$4 79

JUMBO SPREAD

Par kay ••••••••••••••••••
.
99(
3 LB. TUB

Ice Cream ••••••••••••• 99&lt;

Toilet .Tissue ••••••••• 89&lt;

112

4 ROLL PKG.

Sherbet •••••••••••••••••'-99(

Cider Yin

lf2 GAL.

•••••• COUP&lt;W •••••• • ••••
·c ouf(fi •.
• ••• ••
••••
• • •••

BOUNTY TOWELS

J~~~1/S2
limit 3 Por (ustomer
Good Only At Powoll's Supermarktt
Good Sun, J,... 19 thru Sot.. J,..o 25

- - --•

.'

CAMPBELL'S

•

•

PORK &amp; BEANS
1

~A~z·4 f$1
Limit 4 Per Customer

Good Only At Powoll's Supormorkot
Good S101., liMit 19 lhru Sat., },.., 25 •

. . ..

-'-·--·----

I

•• •

e e

•

•

PURE SWEET

e •

•

99C

~

, ,

•• ••
•

GRANULATED SUGAR:

•

CAMPBELL'S

••
•

CHICKEN NOODLE SOU

•
••

3/ $1' ~
2' .• ·-·.... .............. .
•••••••••••••••••••••
4 LB.
BAG

0

COUPON
'

SUNSHINE

DOG FOOD

$2 99

limit I Por Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Good June 23, 24, 25 Only

ATTY. C. MICHAEL MULLEN

-----------COUPON

10i~:z.

•

limit 1 Por Cust-r
:
Good Only AI Powoll's Supermarket •
Good s,..., J- 19 thru Sot~ June

•
•
•

ANT SOFT DRI

GAL.

KEMP

ELF

------

FLA-VOR AID

DAIRY LANE

CHARMIN

limit I Per (uslomor
I
Good Only At Powell's Supormorktl I
Good June 23, 24:...2.:~~-J

~~NL~~.

,
limit 3 Por (ust-r
•
Good Only At Powell's Supormorbt ~
Good ~. 1-. 19 thtu Sal.. June 2~•

-

QT1

0/ 49&lt;!

limit 12 Por Customer
I
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Good,_,
J,...
23, 24,
Only · ..J
._ ____
_________

II

25

HOMEMADE

SANDWICH SPREAD

69C

LB.

GROUND BEEF

9

(

LB.

tri-state area. Frank Musser and Jo Frye are
pictured as they gave blood as only two of the
numerous motorcycle enthusiasts giving to the
program Wednesday.

sent to the governor for signa·
such as the toxicity of the
ture, but the AIDS bill requires
chemical shipment, the accessl ·
House concuJTence In a Senate
blllty of emergency forces and
amendment.
equipment. the relative safely of
The hazardous materials
the route, and the location of
transportation bill, sponsored by
people and water supplies.
Rep. C.J . McLin, 0 -Dayton, was
If pre-notification ls required.
drafted In response to the 1986 a company or shIpper would have
train derailment near Miamis· to notify the state Emergency
burg, Ohio. where clouds of toxic Management Agency, which In
white phosphorus gas forced the lurn would notify the affected
evacuation of 35,000 residents.
communities.
The bill became hung up on
Emergency shipments, where
how communities could be prop- less than 24 hours notice Is given
erly warned of hazardous cheml· the shipper, are exempl. alcal shipments coming through though a writ ten explanation Is
their areas without alarming the required as a followup.
public or hamstringing shippers
Sen. Robert Burch. D-Dover.
and chemical companies with who helped write the comprom·
paperwork .
ise language, said the pre·
The House, backed by Celeste, notification will apply only to
called for a strong pre- about 20 shipments a month of
notification system run by the the most dangerous. poisonous
Public Utilities Commission of and explosive materials .
Ohio. The Senate, heeding Indus"This Is a strong, effective,
fry, wanted a more flexible ·workable pre-notification syssystem without so much PUCO tem," said Burch.
power.
"This Is sort of a limited
compromise." said Sen. Ben
Gaeth, R-Deflance.
Under the . final version, the
PUCO wlll write rules allowing
several factors to trigger the
pre-notification requirement,

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The state Senate has adjourned for the
summer after adopting and forwarding to Gov. Richard Celeste
a bill regula ling the transportation of hazardous materials on
Ohio roads and ralls .
A compromise version of the
blll, ratified by the House two
weeks ago. was adopted 32·1 by
the Senate Wednesday after a
15-mlnute discussion.
Celeste's office said he would
sign the bill, which Is part of a
package the governor supports
for dealing with toxic materials
In Ohio communities.
Before joining the House In
adjournment until after the November elections, the Senate
acted on a pair of bills:
-Tightening regulations for
grain warehouses and protecting
farmers from the frequent bank·
ruptcles o! elevators where they
take their grain for storage and
sale.
-Making lt a felony for anyone
who knows lle or she has the
acqi,ilred Immune deficiency syn·
drome virus to donate or Sell
blood.
The grain warehousing bill was

Program
discussed
by groups

Eastern parents working to raise
funds for extra-curricular activities ·

R. C. CANS

~!N~z.

entine
2 Sections, 12 Pages
A Multlmedl•lnc. Newl!lpaper

:a

G'l
1:

aty

Vol.39, No.33
Copyrighted 1988

-f

(,.

•

Clear tonight, lows on mid
60s. Friday, partly cloudy,
highs In mid 80s.

Atty. Mullen
files petition
for judge post
Pomeroy Attorney C. Michael
Mullen, lifelong resident of
Meigs County, has flied his
petition of candidacy to run for
Meigs County Court Judge In the
November election.
Currently Mullen Is engaged In
the general practice of law In
Meigs County and Is serving as
assistant prosecuting attorney In
Athens County. He Is a member
of the Meigs County Bar Associ a·
tion, the Ohio Bar Association,
the Association of Trial Lawyers
of America, the American Bar
Association and the National
Association of District Attor·
neys. He became a member of
the Ohio Bar College In 1986 and
Is a lJ.year member of the Meigs
County Jaycees. He Is a son of
Don and Barbara Mullen.
Middleport.
,.

,.....

-

reports Jill Holter, president of
the Eastern Athletic Boosters.
"But we still need at least $4,000
more. We've decided If we can
come within $2.000 of the needed
amount , we'll borrow the rest,"
she added, since a local bank has
offered a low interest loan.
Altogether, according to est!·
mates by the Eastern Board of
Education, total personnel costs
for athletics and all other extra·
curricular activltes In the dis·
trlct amount to just over $30,000.
In late May, when the board
approved the request by band
and athletic boosters to allow
them to try to fund "all" of the
extracuJTlcular activities for the
coming school year, funding
deadlines of July 6 and Sept. 30 of
this year, and Feb. 1 of next year
were established.
By July 6, the booster clubs
must have the $17,212 needed for
an athletic director, four football
coaches, two volleyball coaches,
a marching band director, two
cheerleadlng advisors (varsity
and junior high), four class
advisors (grades 9-12), one year·
book staff advisor and two choir
directors (one high school and
one elementary) .

By Sept. 30, the boosters must
have $8,204 for five basketball
coaches for both !Jc?YS and girls
programs .
By Feb. 1, 1989, $4, 935ls needed
for two track coaches, one for
boys and one for girls track. one
softball and one baseball coach.
If any one of the funding
deadlines cannot be met, then the
extracurricular acllvllles In the
district are to come to an
immediate halt, according to ·
school board resolution. The
school board retains control of
staffing and managing the extracurrlcular positions, and all
activities must apply equally to
boys and girls programs.
Holter says the parents have a
good shot at meeting their flrsl
and largest
financial goal.
Before the board of educallon
eliminated the extracurricular
activities, the athletic boosters
already had approximately
$6,000 In their treasury, the band
boosters had $1,700 and the
cheerleaders had a bout half of
their needed money. "And now
we're all really working together," said Holter, "and that's
what's making the difference."
Contlnued on page 12

Big Bend area residents
donate I 0 I pints of blood
Big Bend area residentS re·
sponded to the summer blood
shortage In the tri-state area by
contributing 101 pints of blood
when an Amerlcgn Red Cross
Bloodmobile visited the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center In Pome·
roy Wednesday.
A total of 115 res ldents re·
ported to the unit to contribute
the 101 pb1ts of blood with 25 of
them giving blood to replace
blood used by friends or
relatives.
First time donors were Lisa
Gibbs, Pear lie F. Jewell, Jack B .
Sheline, Larry H. Pauley, Mary
Ann Davis, Nancy Freeman,
Ronald Holter and Kathy Lehew.
Be.coming multiple donors durIng the visit were were Donnie R.
Laudermllt, Robert H. Sisson,
Bruce Hawley, Laura L. Hawley,
David F. La...,son, Edward M.
Cozart, one gallon; James R.
Hill, two gallons; Wilma A.
Mansfield. Gloria K. IQoes. three
gallons; VIrgil K. Windon, WI!·
llam H. Hoback, eight gallons. ·
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the at·

•

tending physicians for the visit
and nurses were Lenora Leifheit,
Beulah Ward, Joyce Kearqs,
Naomi London while Mary
Nease, Peggy Harris, Ed Cozart
and Roger Holter were clerical
workers with Dorothy Long,
Marion Ebersbach, Esther
Harden, Gertrude Robinson,
Jack and Joan Sorden, Mary
Buck, W!!llam and Joyce Ho·
back, Betty Sayre, Evelyn Gil·
more, Florence Richards, Ge·
raid Wildermuth, Mary Loudner,
Lula Hampton and Norma Jewell
of the county's RSVP also work·
lng In clerical capacities. The
United Methodist Church Women
of Racine served the canteen ..
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy- Penny L. Brinker,
John S. Foster, William L.
Buckley, MarJorie Caton, Lenora
J. McKnight, Phyllis M. Bearhs,
Janet K. Peavley, Bryan S.
Shank, Brenda Hayes, Howard
P. Logan, Mary K. Spencer, Billy
J. Spencer, Brenda S. Cun·
nlngham, Reva L. Musser,
Frank V. Musser, Jenny Thabet,
Continued on paae 12

,A
:r_. ""

/

i'

\

THOR 0. CARSEY

Carsey receives Bronze .·
Star medal - 40 years later
Thor 0 . Carsey of the Rock
Springs community, who served
In the U.S. Army for three years,
three months and 20 days during
the 1940's, has been awarded the
bronze star medal. more than 40
years after being discharged
from the service.
Carsey's medal and certificate
cite meritorious achl~vement In
connection with muttary opera tions against the enemy on Leyte,
Philippine Islands from Dec. 29,
1944 to AprU 15, 1945.
It states, "Sergeant ·Carsey
displayed great skill and me-

chanica! ability In his capacity as
Motor Sergeant with Philippine
Civil Affairs Unit No. 14. With
limited personnel and equipment, he maintained the unit's
vehicles ln good working order
and, due to his untiring efforts,
all transportation needs were
met. The devotion to duty which
Sergeant Carsey displayed re·
fleets great credit on himself and
the military service."
Carsey retired from McBee
Industries In Athens In 1982 after
having worked there for 31 years.

The Meigs County Comm Isstoners met Wednesday with
Beverly Grimshaw, a representative of State Auditor Thomas
Ferguson's office, lo discuss a
new program being Initiated In
the state.
Grimshaw reported thai she
and other auditor's representatives have been assigned to areas
of the state and will visit counties
ln those areas on a periodic basis
"to address possible problems"
prior to the annual state audit In
each county.
The program ls expected to
"save money and prevent head·
aches" Grimshaw said, by "handling problems before they
snowball."
Grimshaw also said she would
be contacting all townships,
villages and school districts In
her area ln the same manner. She
pointed out that the state audl·
tor's o!flce Is available via toll
free number to offer assistance .
"for any reason," especially to
township or village clerks who
might be new to their positions
and un!amutar with proper fl.
nanclal procedures .
The commissioners told Grim·
shaw they welcome this new
program.
County Engineer Philip Ro·
berts discussed with the commls·
sloners a request from Columbia
Gas to Install a four·lnch lrans·
mission line across and under
County Road 34 at the junction of
Sutton Township Road 119. Based
upon the recommendation of
Roberts , the request was
approved.
Ted Warner, county highway
superintendent. reported that the
bridge over Strong's Run on
Salem Township Road 33 should
be finished by Monday and
possibly by the end of this week.
The comm lssloners ended
Wednesday's meeting In recessed session. They were to
reconvene 10 a.m. this morning
to finalize a medical Insurance
package for county eemployees.

Man arrested after incidents
Edward F. Rhodes of Reeds·
ville Is lodged In the Meigs
County Jail on a charge of
burglarizing a home on Eagle
Ridge Road and another In the
Darwin area Wednesday. A Juvenile Involved In both incidents
has been referred to Juvenue
Court.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff Howard Frank, the first
burglary was reported at 3: 22
p.m. Mrs. Allee Jacobs of 46520
Eagle Ridge Road, Racine, returned to her residence and
surprised two men tn the process
of goln11 through the house.

She advised officials that she
was told she would be shot If she
did not leave. She fled the
residence Immediately and
sought help from passing motorIsts, according to officials.
Several Meigs Countians re·
portedly gave Immediate chase
to tbe two men In a blue and white
pickup truck and were able to get
the license number. Sherllrs
officials joined ln the search for
the men and departments of
surrounding counties were
notified.
At 10: 28 the second burglary
was reported by Art Shumway of

the Darwin area . A scanner was
removed from the home.
The Investlgatlon took Meigs
County deputies Into Parkersburg.and then back to Reedsville
where Sheriff Frank, Chief Dep·
uty Levingston. Sgt. Kenny Klein
and Sgt. Don Snyder were
dispatched.
Rhodes was taken Into custody
at 11:30 p.m.
The scanner taken from the
Shumway residence was reco·
vered. The only llem missing
from the Jacobs residence was a
shotaun and recovery of that Is
anticipated, officials report.

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