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                  <text>Pomeroy- Middleport: Ohio

Monday,April27, 1987

Accidents on Ohio highways cause eight deaths
Wayne F. Matthews

172, Order ot Eastern Star. She
was a member of Omicron
Chapter 2f Delta Kappa GalT)ms
Sorority and the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association.
She Is survived by a half·
brother and his wife, Jack and
Elizabet h Hawley of Middleport :
a half-sister and her husband.
Joan and Joe Haas, Cincinnati: a
sister-In-law, Grace Hawley,
Middleport: a special friend,
Nan Moore of Middleport; six
nephews, James Hawley, Arca dia , Fla .: Richard Hawley , Columbus; Charles Haas, ·Callfornla : Tony, Jake and Jeff Haa s,
all of New Richmond, Ohio, a nd
two nieces, Jacqueline Patton,
St. Charles, Mo .. a nd Mildred
Wells of New Richmond. Several
great-nieces and great-nephews
also survive.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday a t the Rawli ngs-CoatsBlower Funeral Homr with Mr.
AI Hartson officiating. Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from .1-5 anci 7-9p.m. today .
Friends may make donations to
the Middleport Churc h of Chr is t
In hrr memory.

Wayne F: Matthews, 75, of
Cheshire Route 1, died Saturday
at Holzer Medical Center. Hew as
a retired employre of the Ga llla
County Highway Department.
Born Apri129, 1911 at Cheshire,
he was a son of the late David
Matthews and Mamie Fraser
Matthews.
Surviving is his wife. Kathryn
'Taylor Malthews, whom he married Oct. 17, 19.11, in Gall ipolis.
Also surviving are one daughter,
Mrs. Lee !Betty Jo) Clar k of
Ches hire; two sisters, Mrs. Fred
!VIrginia) Taylor of Ga llipolis,
and Mrs. Claud iWinnlfred)
Ridenour of Cheshire; one
broth!lr, David Matthews of
Rutland; six grandchildren and
eight great-gra ndchildren .
Two sons, .Jack L. Matthews
and Billy Lee Matthews, preceded him in death; also four
brothers, Ross, Merlin, Stanley
and Carroll Matthews . .
He was a member of Light·
house Assembly of God and was a
U.S. Army World War II veteran.
. Services will be Wednesday , 1
p.m., at the Willis F'unrral Home,
Ga llipolis, wll h Rev . James
Randls and Rev. C..J. Lemley
Hazd K. Qualls
offi cia ting. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends
Hazel K . Qualls, 76, 105 Kerr
may call a t the fun eral home St.. Pomeroy, died Sunday at
'tuesday from 6-9 p.m. Military Veterans Memorial Hospital.
graveside rites wil l be co nduct ed
A homemaker , Mrs . Qu&lt;)lls
by VF'W Pos t 4464 .
was born Aug. 4. 1910 at Oak Hill.
Gra ndso ns will serve as
She is survived by her huspallbea rers.
band, Oscar .1. Qual ls: a son and
daughter-In -law, William and
Jamt~M R. Phillips
Harrie t Qua ils, Gallipolis: . a
.James R. Phillips, 74, Nitro. daught er and son-In -law, Iris and
Bobby E. Payne of Middleport. a
W.Va ., formerl y of Har tford,
brother and a sister.
W.Va., died Saturday In St.
Mrs. Qualls was a member of
F'ra ncls Hospital. Charles ton,
W.Va .
the Naomi Baptist Church.
Services will be held al 1 p.m.
Born .Ju ne 28, 191:!, In Mason
Wed nesday at the Ewi ng F'uneral
W.Va ., he was th e son of the tat~
Home with Rev. Edwa rd BuffingJacob and Li llie Dale Robe
Phillips.
ton officia ting. Buria l will be In
Meigs Me mo ry Gardens .
He was retired from Monsanto
Friends may cal l at the fun era l
Chemical Co., Char les ton, was a
home from 2-4 and· 7-9 p.m.
·lJ.S. Navy veteran of World War
Tuesday.
Il and a memtx•r of St. Paul
United Methodist Churc·h, Ni tro.
He was also a member of John F. Cr~amt'r
American Legion Post 110of New
.John F'. Creamer, 80, Route I.
Haven.
Coolvil
le. di ed Monday' morning
Surviving ar~ his wife, Dorotha
at
Ca
mden-Clark
Memorial HosWcavcr Ph illips: one son and
pital
in
Parkcrsburg,
W.Va .
daughter-ln·law. Aaron R. and
He w'as born In AthPns County,
Laurie Phillip,, Victoria, Texas:
a
son .of th e late Renjam ln and
two gra ndd aught crs: six sisters,
Mattie
Reed Creamer. He was a
Myr l Purcell , Ke nsi ngton, Md ..
retired
farmer and a veteran of
Edi th Graf. Santa Rosa, Cal if.
Wor
ld
War
II.
·'
'
'
'
Mildred Stone, Parkersburg,
Surviving arc two sons and
W.Va .. Ru th Grinstead, Hart ·
daughters-In-law,
Donald and
ford, Lea h Litzinger. Westerville, and Doris Kraft. .Jackso n· Pat Creamer, Marietta . and
Russell and Iri s l.ltchfleld . and a
vil le. N.C.
daughter and son-in-law, Ru th
~rvlres will be Tuesday at 11
a.m. In Foglesong F·uncral a nd Robert Ca rroll. Parke rsHome, Mason, wi th Dr. Marvan burg ; lU gra ntlchlltlren. D great Prame offlc·latlng. Buria l will bc gra ndchildren ; lwo broth er. ,
in Gra ham C'e mNcry. F'rlends Kenneth and .Jim Cr·ca mer. bo th
may ra tl at the funera l home uf the Coolville area; four sisters.
from 7-9 tonig ht.
BPrnice Sculp. Co lum bu s:
Mildred Steadman. Athens: Mit·
Mildn•d E. Hawll'y
ford Hol ma n, Coolville; Gladv s
Rrown. Pa rkersburg . and scv.
Mildred E. Hawley. 84. a school era! nieces and nephews.
traehrr in Mrlgs Count y for over
Bt&gt;sidcs his par&lt;' nt s, he wa s
"II years. died Su nday at hrr preceded In dra t h by his wife.
r·r•s ldcncc at lliO N. Fourth i\ vr. In Gm' net !Mike l Heiney Creamer
Middleport.
in Marc h 198:;, a brother. tw~
Miss Haw if')' was horn at Long slstet's and a gra ndson:
Rott om, a dau ghter of the lair
Scrvlers will be held at I p.m.
W.F. a nd Rose Emma Hawl ey .
Thursday at the White Funeral
In addition to her tong career in Home In Coolville where friends
tru&lt;·hl ng. Miss HawiP.v wa s 1111 ma.v ra il after 6 p.m. on Tuesday
act lvc• mrm tl&lt;'r or the Mldd leport and from 2-9 p.m. Wednesda y.
C'ltu rrh of l'hrlst a nd was 11 Buri al wil l b&lt;' In the Stewart
mr mber of Eva ngr llnr Chapter Ce metery.

Meigs EMS units respond to 13 calls
M rlg~

C'ount .v Emerge ncy
Mcdlral Serv ices ri:oports 1:1C'al ls
over the wrrkcncl: e ight Snturdnv and flvr Su nd ay .
Sa turda y 111 :,:42 a.m.. Ra cine
to Bash:rn !load for Arvi l Holter
to St .. Joseph's H os ~it at. Parkers·
burg. W.Va .: Ru tland at 1: "'
~. m . to Meigs Min r No. 2 forGrrg
Ron&lt;•cutter to Pleasant Vullcy
l·lospltal; Ha&lt;'i ne at 2::12 p.m. to
Antiquity for .lune Hayman to
VNrrans Memoria l Hospital:
Tuppers Plain s at 2: :iii p.m.
transported llt' IPn Ca ldwell to St.
.losrph's Hospital : Pomerov at
:Utti p.m. to Plve Points' for
Walter M o bl e~ to Vetrrans Memorial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 7: 22
p.m. tu Kr rr S11·ert for Hazel
Quall s to Vc•teruns Memorial
Hospital : n ar lrto' at 11 :17 p.m.

transported Eff ie Norm11n to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital :
Reedsville at 11: :l6 p.m. treated
but did not tr:msport Frank
Kidwell.
Sunday at 1:58 a .m. tra nsported Mary Walla ce from the
pollee department to Vetera ns
Memorial Hospital : Rutl and at
:1:02 a.m. to Dew hu rst Lane for
Dan Enright to Holzer Medica 1
C'rnter: Pomrroyat 11 : 12a.m. to
Pomei'Oy Heallh Ca re Center for
Darl ene Hicks to Vetera ns Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plai ns at
12:08 p.m. to Ohfo 681 for
Ardward McMillian to Ca mden·
Clark Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 12:18 p.m. to North
Fourth for Mildred Hawley who
was dead on arrival.

One tickN may net .$12 million

By Unl!ed Press International
At least eight people died In
traffic accldepts In Ohio this
weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said today .

Trustees to meet
Rutland Township . Trustees
will meet Tuesday; 6:30p.m., at
the Rutland fire station.

Victims included :
Friday night
Celina: Rosemary C. Overman, 69, Marla Stein, killed when
hit by a car on a Mercer County
road .
West Unity: Orvy D. May, 10,'
Blue Creek, killed In a car-truck
accident on an Adams County
road.

•

~ ..

,
WUIC&amp;NDI, IOMi: HOLID,II'I'I AND
INCLEMENT WIATHIR CONDITIONS Alii IXCL'/DID.

Edith Reiser will be at 'the
Raci ne Department Store on
Friday, from 10 a. m. to 2 p.m., to
sign up applications fo r the
Golden Buckeye Card.
Buckeye Card applicants ma y
also sign up at the Pomeroy
Library and Senior Citizens
Ce nter.

Ohio weather
South Centrai ·Ohlo
Mostly cloudy tonight with a
cha nce of s howers and a low in
the mid 40s . _
Mos tly cloud y Tuesday with a
high near 60.
The probability of precipitation Is .30 percent tonight and near
zero Tuesday .
Winds will diminish to 10 to 20
miles an hour tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday
with a chance of showers Thurs·
day .

There will be a dance at the
Rulland Civic Center. Friday
from 8 to 11 p.m. with music by
Music Express. Admission will
be $2 single and $.1 couple.
Everyone welcome.

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WASHINGTON iUP ll- Rep . .
Richard Gephard t, D-Mo., complains he can't get an answer on
when President Reagan is "go'lng to sta nd up to our trading
partners and demand eq ual
treatment."
Gephard t, therefo.re, has set
out to provide his ow n answer,
supplying a hotly contested
amend ment to the trade legislation expected to spark heated
deba te on the House floor starting today. The get -tough amend·
l'(lent would force Reagan to do
just that - take tougher action
agains t certa in U.S. trading
partners. ,
Gephardt, a 1988 presidential
canctldalc, will be In th e area
Triurs&lt;laywhcn he addresses the
50th •annual banquet of the
Ga llipolis Area Chamber of Commerce at Rio Grande College and
communit y College.
The deba te has brewed for
some time OV&lt;'r tho legislation
Reagan considers "dangerous"
and protectionist, and lawmakers from both parties said on the
eve of today's Hou se action that a
vote on the bill Is unlikely before
Thursday.
That will carry the argu ments,
then, right into the middle of a
·state vls lf by Japanese Prime
Minister Yasuhlro Na kaso ne,
who arrives Wednesday to meet
with Reagan under the shadow of
a trade dispute between their
governments.
Nakasone is expe&lt;"ted to ask
Reagan to lift $300 million In
tariffs slapped on .Japanese com·
pulers, televisio ns and power
tools two weeks ago. but the
sanctions were Imposed In retail·
atlon for Ja pan's failure to abide
by a 1986 agreement on compu ter
chips and Reagan Is not expected
to .lift them yet.
"With that In mind, the Hou se
trade debate offered an oppor·
tu nity for plenty of "Japa n
}lashing" .:.... verba l out rage ove1
alleged unfair trade practices by ·
the .Japanese and their limits on
Imported American products.
The rhetoric carries potential
embarrassmen t for Nakasone.

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talking with police who were place along the street.
checking out the incident. Craig
"It is time for a ll laws to be
said. the group Including s he and enforced," Craig commented
her daughter, went to the police urgi ng offirlals to stop the
station and that pollee allowed arrogant takeover of North Sethe obscenities to continue until cond Street. by "a bunch of
·
she again voiced a complaint punks."
about them,
Born and reared in Middleport,
Craig said one of the officers Craig said that problems do exist
told her tha t It is not aga inst the and reported that she had talked
law anymore to be drunk and that · to resident s of the town about
"kicking her car was no big them and some had told her that
thing."
It does no. good to go to council
Craig charged that walking with the problems . She urged
either side of the street in the council members, however, to
lower business block Is unsafe talk to the people of the town and
and she alleged that loitering, s tat ed tha t she felt this will
drinking, drugs and sex take encourage residents to come

for th to disc uss matters with
coun cil.

Mrs . Custer reinforced her
mother' s story rep(Jrtin~ th at the
April 18 inciden t had been
ex tremely upsetting.
Mayor Fred Hoffman said that
he knows there is a problem on
North Second Avenue and tounril President Dewev Hor ton
thanked Mt·s. Cra ig 'and Mrs .
Custer for coming to council . He
assured them that the problems
on Nonh Second will be dis·
cussed. Cou ncilma n Bob Gi l·
more also assured th(' two
women that problems will be
tal ked over by vltlagc officials to

especially If the legislation In·
eluded th e G~phardt
amendment.
The House bill was written by
Democrats with improved relief
benefit s for Import-battered In-·
· dustrles, new job traini ng programs for displaced workers and
mandatory sanctions agai nst na tion s that vio lat e trade
agreements.
House Republica ns offered. an
alternative Monday th at eliminated some of the provisions
Reagan dislikes. They said the
president would sign their version and urged colleagues to
accept it.
House Republican leader Bob
Michel of Illinois ra iled Ge·
phardt's amendment "a recesslonary time bomb (t hat 1 will
blow up In our face." Other GOP
leaders
vowed to light hard to
TIME TO STAND UP Rep. Richard Gepha,rdt, D- defeat the amendm ent.
Mo., said Monday he wants to
For the benefit of television
cameras, the Republicans held
know when President Reagan
up a "Grphard t bomb" to IllusIs "going to stand up to our
trate th eir point - nine red flares
trading partners und demand
equal treatment." (UPI)
that looked like dynamite tied
together and wired to an · alarm
The legislation ca rries a potcn· clock with Gephardl's picture on
tlal mu ch more serio us.
the dial.
The trade bill pushed by
Democrats was written with a
variety of sa nctions, Including
mandatory U.S. retaliation when
Kindergarten and first grade
American trading partners are
found to have broken trade reglsfratlon for the 1987-88 school
agreeme nt s. The Ge ph ar dt year will get underway Friday In
amendmen t would force cou n- the Eastern Local School
tries such as Japa n, which have District.
Parents should register their
excessive trade surpluses with
the United States and engage In child for kindergarten or as new
uneven trade pract ices, to agree enrollees of the first grade (t hose
to mend their ways or face a 10 who did not attend kindergarten
percent reduction In U.S. trade In Eastern District) at the
following times and places:
fo r four consecutive years.
Tuppers Plains kind ergarten
"The president stands up to the
at
the Tuppers Plains ElemenRussians on arms control," Gephardt said In support of his tary School, F'rlday , May 1, 8:30
amendment. "When Is he going a.m . to ,1:30 p.m.
Chester kindergarten at the
to sta nd up· to our trading
Chester
. Element ary School,
partners and demand equal
Monday.
May 4, 8: :10 a.m. to 3: 30
protections?"
p.m
.
Reagan wants legislation that
New enrollees, first graders:
opens more markets to Amerl·
can products, but he opposes Tuppers Plains Elementary , Friefforts that would limit his day, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.:
options. He lhreatened a veto Riverview Elementa ry, Friday,

determine what ca n be done to
Improve th e situa tion.
Ron McDade and Ten·y Lloyd,
represe nta tives of the Columbus
&amp; So uthern Ohio Elec tr ic Co.,
also appeared before council and
council vo ted unanimously to
renew th(&gt; con trac t with the
compa ny fot• street lighting for
the next five yea r·s. The present
contracl expires on May 28.
McDade told cou ncil of the
lighting planned for the Dave
Diles park which wllllnchide live
colonial type pos t la mps conI rolled by photo cells plus flood
lighting for the horseshoe and
I Continued ?n Page 101

Weather
prompts
scattered
outages

NEW HOME - This will he the new
of City Loan Bank.
Located at the corner of East Main and Sycamore •treets, the
exterior of the building has undergone ex tensive exterior
redecoration by the Banks Construction Co. ol MlddlepGrt. The
Interior of the find lloor. Is how being prep11red lor occupancy hy u
llrm employed by the bank and olllces will he completely
relurhls'hed for the move of the llrm from 116 E. Main St. to tlte236
EIISt Main location. City Loan Bank hilS hecn localt•d In the
Elberfeld bulldlnr at 116 East Main since a lire gutted the Mel«•
Inn complex where the company has been located for a numhcr of
year•. The hank Is expecting to move Into th e newly r~novatcd
quarters ahout ,June 8 and an open house will he held later.

Eastern slates. registration schedule
9 a.m. until 11 a.m.; Chester.

Elementary. Monday, 8: :10 a.m.
to 3: 30p.m.
C'h lldren who are presently
enrolled In a kindergarten class
at Tuppers Plains or Chesler do
not need. to enroll for the first
grade.
Any child whose fifth birthday
fa lls on or before Sept. 30, this
year, may be regis tered for
ki ndergarten and any child
whose sixth birthday falls on or
before Sept. 30, this year, may be
registered for first grade.
At the time o! registration.
parents are to provide the ri'Cord
of Immunization for their child·
ren. These record should s ho~
four DPT; lour polio Sabin; one
measles. one mumps, one Ru·
bella and proof of a recent TB
skin test, within one year be lore

enterlnRschool. The child's birth
certi ficate also must be provided. The respective teacher
will request other Information
needed on thr reglstrallon form.
Superintenden t Richard L. Roberts states that It Is very
Important for all parents to
register their child accordi ng to
the above sc hedule so th at plans
ca n be completed for the fa ll
classes.
Parenl s can direct any ques·
lions to the following: Mrs. Ci ndy
Linton, kindergarten teacher at
Tuppers Plains, 667-.1310; Mrs.
Debbie Pratt , klnderliarten
teacher at Chester, 985-.'!304, of
the local superintendent , Rl·
chard L. Roberts, 985·4292. Ques·
!Ions concerning the ava it abf llly
of the reaulred Immunizations
(Contlnued on Page 101

By Unll!•d Press International :
Sentinel Staff Reports
Scattered power outages and
wind d~mages occured In Meigs
Count y during Monday night's
storm with accompanying high
winds. For the most part , damage from th e winds was minimal.
Ron Ash, manager of Ohio
Power Co.'s Pomeroy office. said
that 96 Ohio Power customers
were out of power from about 8
p.m. to 1 a.m, today .
·
Power to these customers was
restored at varyi ng times durin~
that five-hour period, with Bowles Road at Dexter the last area
to be res tored. Customers In the
Yel}owbush and Tanners Run
Road areas ol Racine were also
affected by the outa ges. Ash,.
attributed the problems to tree
limbs hittin g lines.
In Portland, .Jeff Harris ol
Harris' Greenh ouse, rep6r tcd
that winds flattened a storage
barn and sca ttered plants that
were on wagons In fields where
they were to have been planted.
Tree limbs were left lylnR on the
tops of greenhouses he ~ dded .
Harris said he did not see a funnel
cloud. He estimates wind dam·
ages tOhis Ohio 124 farm at about
$40.000.
· In Letart Falls, Max Hill, of the
Cliffo rd Hill farm, sa id lhl• wind
did not damage their farm. Hill
said he was not aware of wind
damages to any other Lelart
Falls farms either.
Meanwhile, high winds ripped
a portion of a roof from a nursln~
home In Stark Coun ty Monday
night as thunderstorms rumbled
across north ern Ohio.
Officia ls said no one was
Injured and several other pa·
tlents In the home were un aflected by the storm.

~-------::::

Southern Local issues teaching contracts
'

'

'

6 OZ. lAG

--------

t

.,

CAPSULES-

Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

, Relating aspects of the incident, Craig said she and her
daught er on April 18 were
stopped at the traffic light at
Race and North Second streets,
when a young man. holding a can
of beer ·and obviously intoxi·
cated, crossed the street near
their vehicle.
He kicked the rear of the
vehicle and shouted obscenities
at them, Craig said. She stated
that she reported the incident to
police and two officers in a
cruiser checked out the man.
Ne ither officer got out of the car
and Craig . charged that she
witnessed the man laughing and

amendment inspires
heated debate on trade issue

REGULAR OR MINT
6.4 OZ. TUBE OR 4.5 OZ. PUMP

(As of 10: 30 a.m.)

CALL (614)·992.&amp;21 04
(304) 675-1244

3 Soctlonl. 34 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap&amp;r

G~phardt

AIM
TOOTHPASTE

Daily stock prices

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

Pomeroy-Mi~dleport, Ohio, Tuesday. Aprii 28, 1987

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Get rid of th e "drunks and
punks" hanging out in the lower
b.lock of the Middleport's bustness section was the advice of
form er Middl eport Cou ncil
member Jean Craig when . she
appeared before Middleport Vlllilge Council Monday night.
. Craig, a former ' resident of
Midd leport, traveled over 60
miles from her, employment in
Beverly ..(o voice her complaints
and relate a personal incident
which happened to her and her
daughter, Mrs. Pat Custer. on
Aprll18.

Card sign-up set

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

enttne

Ex-resident pleads for enforcement in village

The third annual Forked Run
State Park Fishing Derby, open
to all ages, will be held Saturday,
May 9, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m .
Prizes will be awarded.

Saturday Admissions- Marie
Dudding, Middleport; Robert
Parsons, Pomeroy; Iris Baker,
S)·racuse: Vivian Powers, Mason. W.Va. : Walter Mobley,
Miami, Fl a.: .June Hayma n,
Pomero y: Ha ze l Quall s,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Ida
Pooler, Marie Robinson, Eva lcna Pauley. Rhonda Dickerson,
Bernard Stewart.
Sunday Admissions- Darlene
Hicks. Pomeroy; Chester Young,
Long Bottom .
Su nd av Discharges - Sus ie
Bess. Waller Mobley, Iris Baker.

Mostly, clear tonight, with a
low near 40. Varlable cloudl·
ness Wednesday, wllh highs
between 70 and 75. The pr.ol)ahlllty of predpltallon Is near
zero toniJ!hl and 20 percent
Wednesday.

•

at y

Vot.36, No.250
Copyrighted 1987

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In,. ·

set Friday

in baseball
---Page 3

Derby Saturday

Vt&gt;tt•rans Memorial

Daily, Number·
655
PJCK-4
5788

post victories

The 50th Alumni Banquet and
Dance of Chester High School
will be held Saturday, June 6, In
the Chester School Auditorium.
Banquet Is at 6:30p.m. and the
·dance Is at 9 p.m. Music by
Kountry Kustoms II from Glouster. Honor classes will be 1921,
1926, 1931, 1936, 1941, l946, 1951
and 1956.

CLEVELAND tUP i t - The drawing.
'
Ohio Lott o j11rkpot. a $12 million. There were 191 tickets sold
&amp;
prize, tx•longs to the player or with five ot the six winning
players holding the single lottery numbers. Those tickets are
lt Mlddleport-Pe-oy
ticket sold wi th lhl' numbers 9, 17, worth $1,000, while 8,929 tickets
City Ullllts
22. 24. 31 and :14.
wit h four of the six winning ·
992·6036
The winner wil l rece ive u r~n~um~·~be~rs:.:a~r~e~w~o~r~th~$6!9~----l~==========:J
before-tax pa yment of appt·oxlmately $600,000 every year for 20
years. Lottery officials say
S~.38.'i,236 was wagered since .
Wednesday on the Saturday

· ~ance

Area teams

. Dayton, killed when his motorcySaturday
Mt, Gilead: Charles M. Rum- cle crashed on a Kettering cltv
ple, 20, Gallon: and Scott G. street.
Cleveland: Ronald Sellers, 26,
Rlne~art, 19, Iberia, killed In a
Cleveland,
killed In a two-vehlcl~
car-train crash at a crossing In
accident on a Cleveland city.
northwestern Morrow County.
Georgetown: Heidi M. Mollett , street.
19, · Russellville, kil!e&lt;) In a
Sunday
one-vehicle accident on a Brown
Toledo: Gina Bowen, 19, hom~·
town not listed, killed in a two-car ;
County road.
Kettering: Dennis A. Yates, 25, accident on a· Toledo city street. '

Banquet June 6

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power .... ......... 26%
AT&amp;T ........ ... .... ...... .. ......... 23¥0
Ashland 011 ...... ................. ~8%
Bob Eva ns Farms ........... ... 24\1,
Charming Shoppes ... .......... 25%
Federal Mogul.. ................ .24%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ...... ........16
Heck' s lnr ...... .. ........... ...... ..... 4
Limi ted Inc ...... .. .... ....... .... .40 \);
Multi media Inc ................ ... 5Hi
Rax Restaurants .................. 5 \-)
Robbin s &amp; M.vrrs . .. ............ 11 \-)
Shonry's Inc........ .. .... ............ 28
Wendy's Inti. ........ .. ............ 10\-)
Worthington lnd .. ....... .. ...... .17\-)

OhiQ
Lottery
.
.

Hiring of teaching and non- Howard Caldwell Ill , high school ball ; Kimber ly Phillips, junior • Jansupka as substitute art
teaching perso nn el were the Englis h and speech.
high vo lleyball.
teacher.
main Items on Southern Board of
Janice Curry was hired as
Also hired were Roberta Maid·
Approv~ by the board were
Education's Friday agenda. The second grade 'teacher at Syra- eng,, marching and pep bands and motions that no more Sunday
board met In regular session cuse on a continuing contract.
variety show; June Buchanan, practices will be held during
Friday . eveni ng at the high
Two-year non -teaching con- assistant marching band: Do- 1987-88- lor any sports: and th at
tracts were given Lois Mugrage, nald Dudding, yearbook; Bar- junior high and high achool
school.
Hired on one-year co ntracts cook, Letart Falls; Florence bar a Bailey, Ec ho advisor: Do- students will now be permitted to
were teachers Linda Fisher, fi rst Thornton, cook, Racine: and nald Salmons, senior play: wear shorts to school, as long as
grade, Portland ; Jenny Michael, Milford Freder ick, bus driver.
Sandra Boothe, title and com- the shorts are at least mid-thi gh
Chapter I, Letart Falls and
Continuing contracts were pllance olflcer: Carla Shuler, length.
Syrac use: Martha Bartrug, given ' secret ary-aldes Barb DPPF coordinator; Jan Hill,
The board declared two hours
grades 4-5, Portland; Wanda Brown, Syracuse; Patricia Cir- Chapter I coordinator; Dennie on Jan. 22 and all day on Jan. 23
cle, Racine; Jane Ann Hill, Hill, DPPF and Chapter I treas- and Feb. 16, 17 and 18 as calamity
Shuler. LD, Portland.
' Given two-year contracts were Letart Falls; Vicky Northup, urers: Delores Griffin, Chapter I days, due to Ice and snow.
teachers J une Buchanan, music, Portland; and Mary Findley , as seeretary: ·Joyce Thoren. lunchThe 1987·88 school calenda r
dlstrlct-wlde: Kathryn Hill. DH, custodian at Letart Falls.
room supervisor, block grant, was adopted with Aug. 24 the first
Letart Falls; Roberta Maidens,
Hired as coaches were Howard now through and hand14'j!IL __day for teachers a nd Aug. 25 lor
~lgh school vocal music and
Caldwell, athletic director and · coordinator.
students; May 25 as last day lor
band; Deborah Greer, speech head boys basketball; William
Hired as a DH teacher, subj ect s1udents and May 26 lor students.
lherapy, district-wide; Brenda Hensler, head football and assist- to her receiving her professional
In other action the ·board
McGuire, DH, Por.tland.
ant baseball; Kimberly Phillips, certification, was Brenda approved the following:
Three-year teaching contracts , head girl5 basketball; Michael McGuire.
-Seventy-lour senlon lor
were given to Kimberly Phillips, Winebrenner, head baseball: SuHired as asubstitute Cllltodlan graduation.
high school science and biology , zanne Wolfe, head volleyball and was Joseph E . Drasko.
-Carla Shuler'sreslgnatlonas
and William Hensler, high school assistant volleyball:. Deborah
Peggy Hill was hired by the Chapter II coordinator and dis·
healt h aniJ'phy'stcal education.
Greer, assistant girls basket· board asa substitute secertary at trlct computer coordinator.
Flve-y.!ar teaching contracts ball: Sandra Baer, high school the high school replacing Lori
-A request from Deborah Hill
were gtven to Lawrence Wolfe, cheerleadlng advisor; Michael Brlnager now on maternity for maternity leave.
sixth grade, Racine; Sandra Winebrenner and James Law- leave.
-Ron Clark and Pam Johnson
Baer, fourth grade. Syracuse; rence, junior high boys basket·
(Conti nued on Page 10)
The board did notrenewOUnda
l

(

..

Cfiiijii,:;:: Ill Bead Clvllan Prelklnt Lee Miller presentA the
· club's Cltlzetl of the fear Award to Middleport Mayor Fred
liolfman at the ClvltaM In Ohio DJ•triet Area JJI dinner held
Saturday nlpi at Ohio Unlverally Inn to honor their c!tbens of the
year. Mayor of MlddlepGrlslnce 1174, Hoffman was h'onored lor his.
dedication and tenacity In leadenhlp which has helped to make
Middleport a progre&amp;slve vU1a1e.

�•

Commentary
ll I Cou rl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rh

rsm~ ~'--_,_. rrt::::!dt~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubllsiEr
PAT \\1fiTEHEt\D
Assistant Publl•IEr/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH

General Manager

A MEMRERof The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and I he American Newspaper Publi she r s AssocJatlon
LE'ITE RS OF OP lNION are welcome Th ey shoold be less Ihan lXJ words
long All lei ters a r e su hj('{'t l o cd ll!ng and rru s! bP signed with name. address and
ll'lephonl' numi&gt;f'r No unsigned letters will be Pl bll:, hed L Ptters should IX' In
goOO ta sw . addressl!lg !ssuefi , not persooalltles.

Backstairs at the White House

Is 11 posstble that Amy Carter,
Abbie Hollman and a '60s-style
march on Washington planned by
far out lefti sts can sta rt doing for
toe Nicaraguan contras what
neither Ronald Reagan nor the
co ntra s themselves have been
able to do explain the na\ure of
the Nicaraguan cause to the
American public and get a
wea kneed Congress to act wi\h
firmness?
The sttualton tn Nicar agua, l
believe, IS our most Important
for etgn poltcy tssue - and th at
Includes arms contro l There are
co mplextttes regardmg Nicaragua but from America's pomt of
vtt&gt;w there 1s an overndmg
proposttton at stake Th ts Is
there enough suppor\ at home to
prevent the consohdatlon of a
Sovtel surroga le state on the
mamland of No rth Amenca?

There are at least three lntrm
sic reasons why Congress has
been so hesitant regardmg Nicaragua Ftrst is that the ts sue has
nor really engaged \he minds of
the Amencan people Opmwn
polls have shown that about ha lf
of the Ii'UJhc doesn't even know
whelher our government ts supporti ng the rebel contras or the
go vernment Sandlntstas
Second ts what American Enterpnse lnshtute scholar Nor
man Ornstem calls "a congres
slonal mood of pos\ Vietnam
tsoialionlsm "
And third ts thw In a climate
of apathy and Isolationism, acti vist g roups wield exira leverage
on elected offlctals And so,
press ure groups have put the
heat on. Some of them are qutte
respectable Others are off-the
wall leftists who want American

library
interests Reagan.
By HELEN THOMAS
Uf'l While Hou se Reporter
W!ISHI NGTOI' !UP II- PrPst d ~n t Reagan appears to be heav ily
focused on th e Reagan ptestdontwl libra ry that wtll be built at
Stanford Unlverslly d!l er he leaves offtce.
In rc·ce nt weeks he ha s had severa l meetmgs wtth the foundation he
set up to drum up prtvat e money for the proJecl The goal Is $80
million, but the upket•p will be on the public tab, as !Its with all of the
preslden twl libraries
ThP time h'os come tn the Rcagans ' life when pres ident s and then·
wlvt•s beg in thlnkmg about thct r future. With two yeats 10 go, !he
Ptestde nl and Mrs n caga n know tha t ltmc ts ru nmng ou t and !hey
have 10 make !he most of thetr rPmamlng tenure
It was expected thai both would want their par tra ils pa mted m the
Wh ite House and Idle• to be offi cially hun g th ere.

muf'll ci S jJUSS !b]('

In f,lt' l he• Is vet v bu sv hlmst• llt ak mg pt r lut f's of the presldcnl a nd
his awesome new sutt ou ndlngs
Wil en H&lt; •,tg,,n tou,,.d a s('hoolln Cuiumllt ll Mo , t ccc ntly, .J tcdr het
usk1'd nnr· vo un giPt . · Whnl dors N,1ncv nea ga n do? "
'i hP dllSWC I \ro m the Chtlcl . 'Siw rued Don Regan '
i\n ,1 dv.tnu• tr .• m of Willi P \l o u"· .ud cs ts off 1o E 111 ope to make th e
fln.li ,11 rc~ltgL' I11f'n ls f111 I hi' Hr•dgd ns' .June 112 jour ncy with most of
l hPII S11 Y I!! lldl V

Tile atclrs wtl l mpf't wi th 11 ,1 \tdn offl c' tdls to tron out details on th e
prpsldr nt· s sial !' viSi t to 11om•• l'il cv c~ l sowl\ 1 go to til e Vatica n tose1
lhos t,Jge lot thr· r\rdgd ns' ,!Uilll •nc&lt;· \\ ilh Pop!' J ohn Pau ll! on J unefi
Tlw i(f'dg.t ns wt\1 stu• nd mos t of lho ll ttm e In Venice whr•tr tile
sew n n.llt nn I r o~omlt Summi t 11 Ill br held .June R 10
llc\Jllt' fl ytng honw to Wa shtn gton on .run e 12, tlw Reag&lt;J ns wil l
oil h·nd n ('f'lrbt "t ion of I hi' 7'r01 h "n nIV!' IS, II'Vof Iht•founding of Ber li n.
.and w ill slop olf

i11

Honn fot ,, nwPltn g bPIWC'l'n RC'a gan (.lncl West

GPt m,tn Clldnr·' lim lil' imut 1\ohl
Th• · pt&lt;•sui Pnt \\til mr&lt;•l ,,g.tm wi th Pope .John Pa ulrn Mwmt m
SC jllr mh&lt;'l Wh&lt;' lllhf' l'otlllffl olli S 1111• Unii Pd Si,l\t'S, stopp tng tn llln r
cit Irs
Tht pop&lt;·" til go tu M • c~mt dnd to Nrw Or lea ns. whose popu lation s
,u r IH'o~ v ll v Hom&lt;~ n ('.liholic ll r o~ l so will vlstt Btlly C1a ham' s
pt o\Pst.tnl stl onghnld 111 No t th C. u ol\na Ot llrr et.ltf'S on th e
Poli sh born Popr s 11\ nr tn l\ .ur San Antonio Los Angeles.
Mon\t'l&lt;'V.. 111&lt;1 S.m 1-'t. tnc\su wt th thr wtndup of hi s tour In De\rolt

'

' !'lungs &lt;iln ng&lt;' Wh&lt;•n I .tt IV Spc&gt;,tkrs occupi ed the White Housr
pt(•ss s!'crrtat v·s office the mrmo t ul&gt;llla Wds li&lt;' dVtly arcentln g
Mlsslsstpp t. ht s hOlll&lt;' st.tt r 11\tlt It s plodu() s and patnttngs
· Now th&lt;~t M.111in Fti ZIId l&lt;'t ihts ruke n ovct as presld enlt.tl
spo kr~ m L1 n ttu~ pt ctuH'"' gm ng ups t 1rss hi s 20 vt:a rs 1n govet nm cn t as
a bur f'.J IIt'l ,11 wlw sur VIVf\fl I li s ldst pos ition was s po ke~ m . w f01 V1rc
Prc•stci Pn t Cc•ot g!' \lush dlHIII! i1.t s .1num ber of pltotog t a phs to provo

It

·Advisory on letters
l.t•lt&lt;•rs hr 1111' t•ditor dt•,tiinJ( wllh l"ue, In tiw May 5 prlmnry
t•lPt·tion will not h&lt;· IH•hlisht•d afi&lt;•r F'rhlay's edition. lA.'Itcr' dt•allng
wlllt lht• i"'ll''' will h1• .1r1 l'lli&lt;•d un\11 111.111. Thursd.1y.

Today in history.
U~· Unih'd Prt'S:ooi lnh\r natlonul

Tod.t\ ts Tucsd,ty. flpttl 28 the 11 8111 da v of 1987 with 247\o follow
Tlw moon Is movin g .tll\ 1\ ft om tis nr w ph as .
Th&lt;' motnlng st.trs Mr~ Ml't !'u't y, Vrnu s. Jupltet and Sal urn
Til~ I'\ cn ing st!ll is Ma ts
Tho•r born on thi s dat r .11 r undrt th r sig n of Taut us. They inrlud e
J,tm l'S Mont ()(&gt;. ftfth pt esld•' n\ of the Unit ed Stales In 1758: actor
Lionel Ba tt vmore 111 187S. novrlls t Harper Lee ("To Iiiii a
~ork lngblt d ' l in 1926 (age 61), Treas ury Secretary James-Baker In
1910 1agr !i71 .•1nd .wtors Ca 1olyn.Jones In 19:!3, .lack Nicholson In 1937
(age c.Ol . a n(\ Ann -Ma rgret In 194 1 (,1ge 41i)
· Ort this datf' 111 his tory:
In 1788, Mat via nd ratified th Constitution, becornlng the sevenl h
slate of the Union
• In 194!i, fascist !cadet Benllo Mussollnl was execu1ed by Italian
parllsa ns
,
' In !975. the last American civilians were evacuated from South
Vietnam as North VINna mese forces tightened their noose around
Saigon.
•
In 1986, the Soviet gove t nment said the Chernobyl nuclear reactor
fire killed \wo people and hospitalized 197. Nine months later It
1eporled 31 had died and 2 n suffered radiation sickness.
fl though\ for \he day P t esldent James Monroe, author of The
"Monroe Doctrine." sa'ld. "National honor Is national property of the
h lg hesl value."

•

'

r,....,.

aren' t suffer mg nearly as much
as Congress mtendcd
At least 44 percen t of U S
go ld mining capacity ts owned by
forctgn ftrm s, according to the
Burea u of Mmes• most recen\
stat tstt cs. Canadian companies
own a Iota\ of 30 6 percent of US
go ld min e operallons. but Ang lo
American's 10 3 perc~n t IS the
largest share held bv a smgle
foreign corpora tion
Re p Frank Annunzw , D-Ill .
heads a House subcom mit tee on
co ns umer affairs and co tn age
that has been mvestt ga tm g the
gold Situ ation What parttcular ly
upsets Annunzto and his staff ts
the US Mtnt 's apparently re
\a xed atlitude toward mdustJ y
pt ac ll ces !hat allow gold from
any cou ntry - tncl udmg Sou\h
Afr ica a nd the Soviel Unwn- to
be used In the Eag le co m senes
Th e law trqutres " US new ly
mined gold ' to be the sout ce of
bullion for \he Eagle co ins
whencvet posstble In a ptnch,

\he mml can use old U.S gold or
gold purchased from certam
foreign countnes -not mcludmg
South Africa or tht&gt; Sovtet Union
But there IS no "apartheid"
poltcy m \he gold refining bustness. Ore fro m all a refiner's
suppliers IS mtxed logrt her and
melted down Int o bullion Thus
there's no wa y to tell the exac\
ongln of \he supposedly "US
newly mined gold" In 1a gtven
Amenca n Eagle coin made ou t of
bullion from a loretgn refinery
"There may or may not be any
US gold In \host&gt; coms," an
Annunzlo s\a ffer sa id "They
ca nnot prove that 11 doesn't comt&gt;
from South Afnca They cannot
provt&gt; that It doesn'\ come from
Ru ss ia "
Mint Director Donna Pope
confirmed \h is cha rge m re·
spo nse to mquln es by the con
gressman "All reftners ," she
wrote, " tndt caled that their
norma I product ton processes
precluded them from \ract ng the

m&lt;~n

Lee iacocca rece tvrd more
th,w $20 million In tota l compensa tion l,lst yea r Is on ly shghtly
st&lt;J t tltn g m a n eta of ou\ragr01t s ly ovrrputd corporate
rx£'1c u1 ivC's

Indeed, lacocca didn't even set
new record at a time wh en
busmcssme n (there ar&lt;' almost
no women In the category)
receive exi t avagant sa laries,
bonuses stoc k opllons. fr in ge
benefits. retire ment plans and
pr rqut sltes \hat Inspire legit!
mate public mdlg natlon
Thus It 's not surprising th at
sco res of executives rece ive
seven-figUt't&gt; \more !han $1 mtl llonl annual compensalion packages &lt;J nd a selec t few already are
Int o the e\g hl fi gu t e bracket ~
Wh,1t Is astounding Is the
selfish reslslance of !hose "cap
talns of Industry" a nd thei r
Republican ,1!1\es in Congress
and the White House to In creasing the federally mandated min Imum wage from $3 35 an hoUI
Th ~y clat m \hat requiring
employers to pay workers a
decent wage would place an
unbea rable strain on payrolls
a nd lead to reduced rather than
enhanced job opportunliies for
unskilled , low-Income workers.
But that and other specious
arguments - !hat an e nhanced
minimum wage would fuel lnfla1\on, cause bankruptcies or pro·
duce assorted other dire consequen ces - a li were rejected In
1981 by the Minimum Wage Study
Commi ssion
That panel, established by
Congress, concluded tbat an
Increase would have "no significant Impact on adult unemployment, youth unemployment, In·
fla tlon or the via bilit y of business
enterprises."
11

I

is the only thing the government
ca n do for \he working poor-."
Presldenl Reagan's reaction to
the plight of the working poor has
been no\ only \o res\s\ suggest tons for an Increase In the
minimum wage but to end orse a
"subminimum" wage of $2 50
pt&gt;r hour for young people employed during the summer
Recenlly Introduced in the
Democratic-controll ed Cong-ress

MCIIIIIN'MI

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Transaclions

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MlniM'I'itltll at Turonto nh;hl
llulllmurl • ul Kun...a,ro; ( U)' nl11hl

Bw·whull
Sll{tlt d pih ht•r Ot•unt ..
l..ump und a.~sl.:-n4•d 111m lo ,\,\1\ 'J'ui,,mu
flf !hi Pu1llit I nt»;l IA'll .. llf'
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pk1lwr Du' 1 l..aPulnt In l.uu~\lllt
sun f r..nt I!it n - Trud1•d ltofl hundl'd
pitt h•'f ( ulln l\w-d und lnll .. ldt r Stt•\t•
Mlllt'f hnth minor h•~tK\H'r!l lei ~han Dll·~n
htr inllt&gt;ldt·r ~1ar k U IIIIRKt r und ri~hl·
hu11do d pillht r T~tm Mt'LIIIht.' r holh

Nt&gt;'ll \ 11rk at Tt'JII&amp; ~o, ni~t:hl
lll'trnlt 1d ( 111ilorN~t , nl~hll

Uukhand -

oat Oakltll1d. •l•hl
ISOSiun ul ~·uUk• nl~ttll

Milll~tttktt•

Leaders
RalllnJ~

t Ralit•dun 3.1 plati'IIPrH Llrllnt't'S a; nu nf
lllllll!'li t' llt hI!· am bll!i pla,v• d )

NnllunaJJ... IIJlll'
xah rhpti
l)'o~ oJl-i 1 In
n Milt tfl 1!11
llal t h••r, Huu
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IA•Unllrd, l'IF
IK iifl I ~ '!!'! :tli!
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Ill :')1 II !I J.lti
Cov.JI'nl sn
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1118'1 "u :U!!
.rnn ~ho Chi
It II wn .:u;
Mt~rrbo"-PII
li U K i!:l JU
Murphv All
l&gt;t -:t 1 ~ u ~U
( llndat I, Mil
II M &amp; ll .:Uti
\n11 rh lUI Lt a~1
11;11hrhpil
H••ndl'!ln N\'
ttb~ ftn . .-~

go ld irom a particular mine to a
particular bar The Industry's
pract ice Is to combine gold from
all \heir sources .. m the process
of meltmg to form new bars "
Instslm g that refiners segregate their gold supplies and
identify the sources for each gold
bar would 1ft. prohtbillvely expen-.
stve, Pope ilatd, and would force
\he mint t o~lse other sources than·
"US newly mtned gold "
As It happens, \he New Jerseybased company thai has supplied
the mmt wtth 83 percent of the
gold "blanks" for the Eagle
coms Engelhard, has refineries
In London, where 11 isslilllt&gt;gal to
import South Africa n gold bullion A compa ny spokesman
dented any SoulhAfn can conn ection a\ first , bu\ then acknowledged \h at 30 percent of Engelhard' s s toc k ts owned by
Mlnorco, a Bermud a-based com
pany thai ts part of Anglo
Amer ican, \he South African
conglomera \e

:oitlUi•t, K(

li~7 1~~ .W(

Dt •l r Mil
Tflullt•r, Mil
flt1liU r Tx
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Tctlll"'on, N\

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li Hi I~ 2:Y. :M'~

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nl Sai urd~ niJ~:ht s tlllt.Vlllf llllnt'
l'tlot nix - N~tmt d f11hn "''~' I t'OIIdt.
Qu111H II\ f( 8/\ I ~ ,\nnlMIIM • d II •Ill
Itt f 1&amp;111-d liM ttuud ( ll y 'niUndt•r n1•Jit

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----Local bowling---Gra ham 17:1 Ol'bl H('n slcv 179· Tf'am
Scrlt'!l , J D DrllllnJ;::. 1971. Tt•am Gamf'

POMEROY BOWIJNG LANES
Early Wednesday Mhted
April!, lllll1
TeiUll
Shamm v

!l.

Sham m v ' s

Carrv·Out

s'avrp Small

.78

M

EnglnP Rt'palr

50
36

Tonv's Ca rry Out .
MIQdleport Lunch Room
.... . . .. 35
Htgh Srries· Rav Roaeh ~')6: Margar&lt;'l
Wvall. ~. 2nd Hll{h Sc&gt;rlf'ti Dannv Will
!i07. l!&lt;llv Smllh. 481 . Hl~h Gam• Rav
Roarh 211 Mar~al'f't Wvall. 204· 2nd
Hl~h Gam£'' KYit' Rupr 2M Pat Carson
178, Tl'am &amp;orif'S &amp; Gamf' J 0 Drilling,

710

P,OMEROY BOWIJNG LANES

Tewm

NITEOWLS
Skyline LanMt
•·11-111

59

lJ A R Construction

was leglslatwn !hat would require Increases- to $3.85 in 1988,
$4 25 In 1989 and $4.65 In 1990
Thereafter \he minimum wage
would be automatic ally adjustejl
annually to equal half of the
average hourly wage nationally,
which now stands at $8 88.
That sensible, compasslonale
proposal ought to be enacted over \he presidt&gt;nt 's vt&gt;to If
nect&gt;ssary

734

Pt!'l.

J D Drlll l n~

204~

Only s lightly more than half of
the na tion 's wot k for ce of 120
million people hold JObs covered
by the Fair Labor Standards Act,
which guaranteed a minimum
wage fo 25 cents per hour when It
first became law In 1938.
All hough the sla\ute has been
amended six limes. a decade ha s
passed sin ce the last revision In
1977, a four-stage phased Increase was authorized, culmi na\·
ing In a rise to $3.35 per hour at
th~ beg tnnlng of 1981.
Since then . the cost of ltvlng
has Increased 28 pt&gt;rcent while
\h e min imum wage has remained fixed at an appallingly
low r att&gt; equivalent 10 $134 per
40-hour week (before taxes and
other deduc\lons ) or JUSt unde r
$7,000 per year
The Chamber of Commerce of
the Uniled States, various trade
assoc iations and o\ her business
represenlatlves claim thai mos\
of those earning the minimum
wage are students holding part·
time jobs, 1eenagers JUSt e nter
lng the work force, housewives
supplementing their hu sba nds'
Incomes and other casua l
workers .
But \he Center for Social Polley
Stud ies at George Washington
University here has conducted
research that shows almost 30
percent of the country's 3 5
million workers paid only the
minimum wage are heads of
households.
!Another 1.8 million workersnot covered by the law - earn
less than the minimum wage,
whlit&gt; 4.4 million others are paid
less \han $4.00 per hour.)
Noting that millions of people
"are working full time and living
In poverty," economist Sar A.
Levitan, the center's director,
says "raising the minimum wage

Mlrti(,R
; 31U1 It It 3!1
I
" • He 11"1

S1'1!1 \urll

Rllllli BatiNI Ill

I

~ .. lunal ~llllW- IMw!OCin, (111, Dla~,
fin. ~ hmtdl Phlllllld SII"'J.v.bl•rn !IIi\

Ill

(hlr a~•

Minimum· wage too low_____Rf_Jb_er_l_W_al_te_r...
The new s that Chrys ler Chalr-

"'~

)oij l l.oub

Ignoring our own rule __J_a_ck_·A_n_d_e_r.~_·o_n_&amp;_·l_o_.w_'P_h_S_p_ea_r
WASH INGTON -South Afn
ca n gold might be findmg tis way
int o th e supposedly aii-Amet tcan
Eagle coms bemg tssued by the
US Mint , desp\lc \he clear
Intent of Congress to ba n the
ImportatiOn of go ld from that
coun\ry two :,ears ago
And (•vnn If the mini were a ble
to make Its Amc11ca n Eagles
Pn tlrrly h om go ld mtned m the
Unt ied States - as Co ngress
tntend crl 11t th e Gol d Bull ton !let
qf 1985- South Aft te a could st tll
benNtt Anglo !I met lea n Corp a
So uth Afnc a n conglo mera \e .
ow ns 111 3 pe t co ni of US go ld
mtmn g ca pdc ll y.
Wh e n Pr es td r nt Rcd ga n
stgnpd tho taw \hat banned
tm port.tllon of South Afrtca n
go ld 1&lt;1 ugcrrand co tn s . the tdea
wds to pun tsh the Pt rtmta
re gime far It s ta cta l ~p ,nihrtd
poltcv But l'v tclencrfound bvout
t(•portrr L1s.1 Sy lvester m a
Ru• r,1u of Min es report indtca\es
th ,11 So uth Afrtcd n mtrt rsts

Amfrk .. llllpf - lh'ff Mil I
Dowel•• r..l M ••, IIYiatiL Tn 7 Flu•
Pill)'t'l'll lk'd ~t-Mil.

N,\TIONAL LE,\Gl t:
B\' l nllt•d
hnrrlllllltiOillll

swn While there are many
legitimate groups involved, th~
steering committee in charge of
the show Is heavily Influenced by
radical lefl -wing organizations
\hat go beyond being against
American atd to the contras and
onto open support of the MarxistLenmlsl Sandlnlsla government,
and the com munist guerrillas m
El Salvador, as well as the
Palesttne Liberation
Organization
Therefore, what? These sorts
of demonstrations should rect&gt;lve
wide pub lic ity Even with an
attempt to put a moderate fact&gt;
on it, the truth of the ma(ter will
emerge People who are \galnst
American interests m the world
are also vigorously against any
American assertion of will in
Nicaragua .
Sometimes In politics you have
to know who all the players are
before forming an opinion. It Is
polillcallegend that "The enemy
of my e nemy Is my friend ." In
this case patriotic Americans,
Including those opposing aid to
tht&gt; contras, should be asking.
this: "Is the friend of my ·
adversary, my friend?"
When the demonstrators take
their masks off and start de·
nounclng American Imperial•
Ism, when we see Amy and Abbte
trash the CIA for "crimes" in;
Central America, when we know
that pro-Sovtet groups are aJ.'
ready savoring victory In Congress - that should help tell
Americans what a part of the
controversy IS really about
In politics, opportunity comes
in strange packages. Before this
IS over, \he contras may be
thankmg Amy Car\er and the
radical left for bringing the
reality of \heir case to the
American public. Then perhaps
even \he Congress wtll shake 1\s
tsolatt onlst 101 por, and listen

foretgn policy to fat! whenever 11
Is asserted.
And now 11 IS demonstration
season a Vietnam- style " Mobtli·
zatlon" march m Washmgton
and CIVil dtsobedtence demon
stratton at CIA headquarters,
starrin g \h al quast -loialitarian
du o of Amy and Abbie, who
believe that they can deny a U.S
government agency (the CIA )
the right to Interview prospechve
employees at a state university
(the University of Massachu·
sells), a school that Amy does not
even a !tend.
Who's really runmng \he dem onstral!ons? Because labor un
Ions have been asked to partie!·
pate, John Joyce, prestdent of the
Bricklayers Union and chairman
of !he AFL-C IO Executtve Cou ncil Defense Commiltee, mvesli
gated the matter Joyce'sconclu·

Pre~idential

Top While House aides have be~ n pushm g one message In recent
week s '"I hi' President Is In charge'
The Iact !hal I hi' prrsl dcnlt s In command should not be a surprise
!'hat's the wa y it usua ll y IS, but th e re has been a maJ or campatgn
undc• way to teasse rl H agan's a uthorily that has been somew hat
dim ini shed tn th e Ira n Mms-Co ntr,t &lt;l td scanda l
ThP prcs ldc•n t sa ttl hP tlld not know what wa s going on In the
Nal lona l Ser ulit v Cnu nctl m tefercnce to th e dlvNslon of money to
lhP N\c,11 agudn 1 ebels, 01 Co ntras, fro m the sale of weapo ns \o I ran
'I he mcS'agc Is br tng co nveyed tn many ways Reagan Is busier
thnn rvl'r and he ts mot r vtstblc• 1hnn he ha s bPen In many months He
also Is pausi ng to an swct quest tons tn a new s how of openness
Mu rh of thP rrr-rltt of lifting Reagan ou t of !he doldrums goes to new
Whtl&lt;' !l ouse&lt; ht c f of sta ff ll owa t·d Da kN, a low key smiling top aide
who knows It Is brs1 not to ral st• hi s profile too high to inv tte problems
from some qua 1tet s
Unlik e fOI mPr r h1rl nf st dlf f1onald Hrgan , who Incurred Nancy
!lr .• gan's wrc~th Bd kr t s \&lt;Jys out of thr limelight and off camc ta as

Bartrum blanks Trimble on one-hitter

~ontras ________B(_&gt;n.,.-W_a_ue_n_be_rg

Help the

The Daily Sentinel

Early WO&lt;Ioeoday Mixed
Aprll R, 11117

~~

Shammy's Garrv Out
J,D Dr hun~

80
6~

.. .

Savr&lt;' Small Englnf' R('pall .
5~
J\A R ConRtrucllon
52
Tonv's Carrv Out .. .
42
Mlddlrport Lunch Room .
.
. 41
H l~h Srrlro: Ray Ro•rh 499. [)pbl
Hf'n5lf':y . 539, 2nd H l~h SC'riPS' Davl"

T ea m

Whalw 's Us«&lt; Cars &amp; Part s
Kut N Kurl
Jim Mink's Chrv Olds
Payn£' TruekinA
Ouk(' !l'ruc kln .~Z
J 's EJuwn

St-ars. Pomrrov1Midd1£'port

ROCK SPRINGS - Junior
flame thrower Mike Bartrum
continued his domination over
opponents this year In a one-hit
7-0 win over Trimble Monday.
Bart rum, for the third consecutive game struck out 12 and
walked only one. Bartrum has
been so overpowering that In 31
Innings of pitching, he has struck
out 51 batters and has given up
only 8hits In golng4-0on the year
The Marauders scored twice In
the first. After one out, Donnie
Becker singled I his first of 4

straight singles), Brent Bissell
hit a long homerun over the
left-center field fence, his third In
two games : Meigs added two
more runs In the fourth. Charlie
Barrett singled, moved to second
on a walk and advanced to third
on a double play. He scored on a
double by Chris Hanning, w)lo
then scored on an RBI single by
Scott Williams
Bissell reached on a fielder 's
cholee In the fifth and scored on a
single by Barrett Meigs closed

•

ntne ll-0 for sixth loop wi.n
RACINE - The high flyi ng
Southern Tornadoes returned to
the win column In a big way Monday evening as they rolled to a
lopsided 11 -0 SVAC triumph over
\he Kyger Cret&gt;k Bobcats
Junior flreballer David Am·
burgey pitched a brilliant game,
scattering three hits along the
way. striking out 14 , and wal king

lhree
Kyger Creek's Bill Loveday
suffered the loss. giving up 11
hits , nine walks and striking out
four . Each pitcher hit one batler
Behind Al"(lburgey's flawless
pit ching, Kyyer Creek was II
mited to nothing but zeros across
the score card, while Southern

Eagles roll by
Vikings, 13 to 2
By Scott Wolle
WILLOW WOOD - Gnnding
their vlc\ory axes to a razor
sharp edge, !he Easlern Eagles
peunded out 12 hits -in a po1en1
offensive attack to defea t ho sl
Symmes Valley 13-2 here Mon
day evening In an lmporlant
~VAC baseball contest.
The win boosts Eastern to f1 -2
overall and 7-llnslde !he SVAC,
while Symmes Valley falls to
second plact&gt; at 6 2 1a lie with
Southern) and 10-4 overa ll
An earlier Easlern loss to
Kyger Creek was negated late
last week when It was reported
that Kyger Creek had used an
academically mellglble player,
resulting In a KC forfeit to
Eastern.
Senior hurler Ed Co llins picked
up his stxth pitching victory of
\he year, scattering two hit s
along the way and Iss uing just
two walks
Collins fanned seven and gave
up two unearn ed runs In a near
perfect performance
Eastern grabbed a 1-0 lead
early In !he first frame as "d
Collins ripped a single off
Symmes' flrt&gt;ball er Dallas
Tibbs. Jeff Johnson walkt&gt;d,
followed by a run scoring single
by Steve Horner, the score 1·0.
The leadoff batter of the seco nd
Inning, Woody Foster. drew a
walk for the Vikings, Mike
Patterson reached on a two base
error In left field scoring one run,
whitt&gt; another run came home on
an error at second, Symmes
leadin g 2·1.
Ea•tern's bats camt&gt; alive in
the fourth round as Jeremy
Barber singled, Kyle Davi s
walked. and sophomore first
baseman Mike Martin tted the
score with an Infi eld single

Pt8.

Davis the n stole lh!rd and ca me
hom e on an ovt&gt;rthrow \o give
EHS a 3-2 lt&gt;ad
EHS, however, was not fin Ished as Collins walked. Jeff
Johnson slammed a two run
double. and Bryan Durst had a
single. tht&gt; score now 5-2
Eastern added fiv e insu rance
runs In the sixth frame after
knocking Tibbs out of the box.
Tha i assault was led by an RBI
doublt&gt; by Barber and a two run
single by Davis, the score 10-2.
Eastern added three more In
the seve nlh for the 13-211nale.
Sieve Horner led EHS hittin g
with a double. single and three
RBI's, Jeremy Barber a nd
Bryan Durs\ had a double and
single; and Mike Martin two
singles
Jeff Johnson had a double, and
singles each by Kyle Davis.
Colli ns. and Jeff Ca idwt&gt;ll, whllt&gt;
Kenny Caldwell walked lwlct&gt;
and scored twice.
Dallas Tibbs s\a rl ed for
.Symmes, going three and twothirds Innings, Issuing six hils,
four walks and striking oul four
Tommy Robinson we nt two and
one-lhird Innings, giving up four
hits. one walk, and fanning three.
Shane Meadows finished the
ga me with one Inning, walkin g
two and giving up two hits Tibbs
was taggt&gt;d with the loss.
Eastern Is scheduled to travel
to Southwestern Tuesday. tli'en
host th e Highl a nd ers on
Wednesday
Llnescore:
Eastern
100 405 3-13 12 5
Symmes Val. 020 000 0- 2 2 3
Batteries: Collins iWPl and
Davis
Tlbbs, -Robinson 14), Meadows
\7) and Craft.

AA BASEBALL TOURNAMENT
Athens High School

14A

136
132
132

. l~J

FEB. HOCKING

124
123

Wlnnt'r advan&lt;'f'" to

THURS.
5·14

diolrlot at t lnloto
vi. Unloto wlnn~r
s121 ol.oo.

NEWLEY (2nd Seed)

SAT. 5/9 4:30
MILLER

Mt-mbPr. United Press International,

SVBI!CIIII'I10N RATES

1~

f

~'

JA,

o.. wl't'll . . ..
One Month

One Ym

.. 15 45

..... 165.00
81NGL&amp;OOPY
PUCE

25 C..nts

SUblcrlberl not dHirtn« to pay lhfocarrlt'l' may remit In advartef' direct to
Th• Dally Sentbtel 011a 3. 6 or 12 month
bull CmiU wtll be l(lwn carrl« each

-·.....,!=

~.J- \.

No oubocrlpllons by mall pmnlttrd In
arras wlterto home carrlfr service 11
avallablfo.

\ \,.. ___.). A.. ""

l3W..U~---···

2SW..U.. .... .
52W..U.. ....

'

"Try to get him to tell you about the time he

''

.

U721
.. ..
..13(01
............ JII!If

l3 W~.llo~.~ US.IO
2SW..U ..
.. . .
. ol3510
52W..U.
............... 11710

gollnto the PTL computer. IT'S TOO MUCH/"

r

No.
•3 .. .

s.-ctooloa

Pll D01111 PACI
$JSO Pll FLAT

FLOWEIING PLANTS

$1 Pll SQ. Pl.
$JSO Pll FLAT

Shrubbery or Fruit Trees,
many varieties;
Geraniums, Violets &amp;
Hanging Baskets.

..

15 .....

Dl!llrount Dl'alcr!l

It

16

...

11

.

...

.. .. .

..Pal

Woody's Rollflrs

. Pomtoroy HPath Cart' C'en t&lt;"r
SEoriPI TPam Pat Hill Ford 1M'!,

Pomtroy H.Pallh Carr Center. 1730,
Woody's Roolrrs. Jli24 Hl~tl Game Team·

SHERIDAN

5/114:30

MON. 5/4 4;30 1-II_O_N._
NELS.·YORK

LorryTu&lt;:k..-,!106,

WllbiNII , 513

MtkeNeo~t, S:U .

47 .95
51 95

55 95
56 95
59 95
64 95
67 .95
69 .95

7t .95

QEIRAIICf/

PI75/8(JRI3
~185/80ftl3

P195175RI4
P205175Rl4
P215175Rl5
P225175Rl5
P2351751H5

Terri Whl1mtn, 44G; Joan BanD 428,
H\Jh Go me Worn"' Terry Whitman. 170:
Judy MUJ~r. 163; Joan BankJ, 157,

wtth Handicap W111118· Joon Banks!.t\80;
Hlrt&gt; Camt' •lth Haodlcop Wom..· ...,I)'
Mdeln)fy, 255;
,
•
.
l!OOG.amn: Don Hysell, 210; Ron Smith,
223, Rod Wallt«, 1103: Cllarlft Smith, l1lO;
Lorry 1'lleUr, 21t; MJtuo Neue, 213, !100
Serlft: Ron Smith, !157: Rod Wotkor, 1130;

P175/80R 13
P165/60Rt3
in lladlalsl
PI6517SRI4
PI95175RI4
P205115R t4
P205/75R 15
AII-JeOion, •leet•belfed P215/75RI5
rodlol
P225/75R 15
More than 60 million P235/75R 15
&gt;Old I

PISS/80013

l tl9; Mlk• Neall'. 168:
Hl~h SeriH Women Judy "'"'"', 447.

m. Hllh !IOrtot W'OIIIt'O Terri Whltmon.
m : Hip !If- ""h Handicap Moo· Mike
Nollt, Ill: High CaiiiP wllh Hondlcap
Mon. Brian Hartmu, :m: High SOrlto

IAll

America's
No. I Name

Rain dates: 5/15, 5/16

_.

Pat Hill Ford, 627, 602. PumProy H.,.llh
Co11' C.nt&lt;r 602:
HJgh Series Men Ron Smith, 506, Terry
S.ldenobel 162 Don H!"tl· ~59; High

..,,. llllfii"M''I Man · ChariH Smith ,
Mosl Impr_.. Woman Judy Mu......
Hl«!t Gam. IIIII Serift Man, Ron Smith,
223.1107, Hl«!tCo,.Wome: tlP-~...

Sl''' fAMOUS 121~

SALE ENDS 5·3·17
. With hery Tire PurchaN We'll Mount Y011r Tires, Clean Slrltwalls,
ond Inspect lrak11 fiE£.

Team

Hill Ford
. . , Rod's Wreck« SfrviC'e

....

5/13 4:30
WED.

Camr Men Ron Smith 84 , Don HyK&gt;II,

Dally

A

\:.vtLA\." .-~

.

.n ~

..

BELPRE

MONDAY N1TE MIXED

Hl~h

Br Corrler or Moler .....

'

$1

A~EXANDER

Inland Dally Press As!iOCiatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
AdvPrtislntt: Representative, Branham

I'OS'IT.IASTER Send addn!ss chanRK
to Th• Dally Sonttlll'l, •Ill Court St ,
Pomer~. 01110 Ci7111

YEGn AILE. PLANTS

tone

Ohio

5.11es. 733 Third Avenue,

Bridge C\o1ing Specl•l

FRI., 5/8 4:30

afiE"rnoon Monday
throu~h Friday, 111 Court Sl.. Po
mrroy. Ohio. by !he Ohio Valley Publish In~ Company/ Multimedia, Inc .
Poml'foy. Ohio 45769. Ph 992 21:16 s.cond class poslagt" paid pt Pomeroy.

NewspaPf'r

SYRACUSE
992·5776
Now Open for Spring S.Oson

MEIGS (Top Seed)

PVPry

New York. New York 10017
'
I

WILLOW WOOD - It took a ll
of seven Innings to dectde a
winner, but when the dust had
finally settl~d the Symmes Val ·
ley Lady Vikings walked away
with a 7-6 SVAC triumph over the
Eastern Eagle\tes as Lisa How ard scored Michelle Ramey on an
RBI single In the final round.
Eas\ern Is now 10-3 overall and
6-2 In the SVAC.
Symmes Valley took a 1·0 lead
In the first as Lisa Howard
walked. stole second and third.
then ca me home on a 1·3 fielder's
choice at first, the score 1 0.
Eastern went ahead 2-1 In the
top of \he seco nd on two errors a
Bonnie Koenig single and a walk.
Symmes Valley fought back
for a 3-2 lead In their. half of the
fram e on two wal ks , an error , a
ficldet 's choice , and a two run
single by Mary Fuller. the score
3-2.
Eastern patiently ca me back
10 tie the score In lht&gt; sixth inning
a t fl-6 Arlene Ritchie walked,
stole second and third. then came
home on a sacrifice by Lee Ann
Robin so n.
This set the s1age for the
heroics of Lisa Howard and her
game winning hit for \he 7-6
SVHS win
Berkhlmer and Driggs combin&lt;'d for Eastern, fanning 3,
walking 9, an d giving up just lour
hits. DrlgJ&lt;s suffered the los~ as
the pllcher of record In the
seven\ h.
Eastern made 8 ~rrors and
Sym mes 6.
Mel anie Mankin had a single
for Eastern, Lesa Rucker a
double, Lisa Lance a singlt&gt;, and
Bonnie Koenig a single.
Howard, Rot h, Ramey. and
F uller all si nJ&lt;led for SV.
Eastern travels to Southweslern Tuesday then hosts Southwestern Wednesday
Llnescore:
Eastern
022 101 0-6 4 ,8
Sy mmes Val. 123 ()()() 1-7 4 6

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

5/12 4 30

A Dtv\oloa ol MoKimedla. loc.

Berry's World

hopped on the scorin g 'Merry-go·
round ' early with three fir st In ·
nln g runs.
In that firs\ Inning Barry
McCoy led off with a singl e, Am burgey reached on an error,
Shawn Cunnin gham walked, fol
lowed by lhree straighl singlrs
by .John Riffle , Todd Lisle, and
Mike Wolford ,' the score 3-0.
SHS warmed the basepaths
again In the second when Chris
Slout walked. Amburgey sin gled
each stol e a bast&gt; and Cunningham
ripped a two-run single, the score
5-0
'
Southern scored Insurance runs
In \he fourth I two ru ns) a nd four In
!he slxlh grame.
Coach Mlck Winebrenner s club
was led by 428 hitt er Barry McCoy
wl\h a doublr and si ngl e, Amburgey two singles, John Riffle two
singles. Cunningham a single, and
sin gles each by Lisle, Mike Wol
ford. and Mark Pot·ter
For Kyger Creek Bradbury
had a double and a single, a nd
Mike Reese a double.
Southern played errorless ball
while KC was near perfecl wl\h
just one error
Southern Is now a fine 7-3 overall
and 6 2 In the league Kyger Creek
Is 5·5 owrall Behind !he pl\chlng
of Mike Bradbury. Kyger defeated
league IPadlnf( Symmes Valley
last Wednesda y.
Cu rrt&gt;ntly Southern and Symmes
Valley are tied for second al 6-2 In
!he SVAC, while Eas tern Is leading
a\ 7·1.
Southern is Idle Tuesday, but
hos ts North Ga llla In a double
header on Wednesday
Llnescore:
K. Creek .. ... 000 000 0- 0 3 1
Southern . . . 320 204 X-11 II 0
Batteries Amburgey IWP\
a nd Riffle Loveday ILP I and
Reese ·

WED . 5/6 4:30
WARREN

t vsrs IIJ·Htl

Published

strike out seve n, walk five, and
give up 12 hit s. The Marauders,
now 7-3 overall. 7-1 in TVC, hosts
Alexander Tuesday at 4:30.
Linescore:
Meigs
200 212 - 7
000 000 0 - 0
Trimble
llamum (WP) and Barrett .
Wilson (LPl. Koons (3). Wilson
(6) and McMans

0(1111 •·S Daily, Sunday 1·5

Callrrv Hair Arts
.
117
Pharmarv No~t h
114
Jl'tff'rs Truckln~~: &amp; Exc
1111
l&lt;marl
101
QuiC'k Ricks
100
Rio Mini Mart
. ..
... .
R7
Tnd Gam&lt;'' Prg Houdastwlt, 192,
Dc&gt;bblt' ~ klnnf'r 18.'\, Sonya Rnu sh, 1g7
1nd St&gt;rtl'S SOnva RouRh, 449 Sandv
Folmer. 443 DPbbll' !;klnnrr 440. Tram
Gamf' Whalc-v's fil9 Kmart 602 J s
Euon 595 Tt'am S&lt;&gt;rl&lt;'5 Km arl, 1710.
Duk&lt;' TruC'kln~ 1694 .Jim Mink's t6.'ifl.

Gra ham. 492. 5(&gt;1tv Smith 4~. Hlith
Gam£' Rav Roach BobHrnslf'V 183: i)pbl
Hen"lf"\' 201· 2nd Hl!i!:h Gamr: Oav..

•

out the scori ng In the 6th when
Hanning singled. advanced on a
walk to Joey Snyder, both later
scoring on singles by Donnie
Hendricks and Donnie Becker
Becker led the Marauders with
a perfect 4 for 4 night . Bissell
added a single to go along with
his homer. Barrett 2 singles,
Hanning a double and a single
and Williams. a sln glt&gt;. Shust had
the only hit for \he Tomcats a
single.
Wilson and Koons combinPd to

Viking girls
Southern stops Kyger Creek nip EHS

The Daily Sentinel

f

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2'-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, April ~~ •.1987

COIIIIAnOfl
DIIIIG ROO I OIL

FOR JUST

StnM w1t11 wlllpped polla. cllicten

colt sllw, licit roll, btrlter 111!1 coif".
su~stltllu ea:lpt btWIIII wilh

S"'' $3~25
,
I·

CIOW'S FAMILY RESTAUIAIT

Pit. ttt-5412

fl9MIIIY, 011

•

$35 50
39.25
41.25
44.95
4600
5000
53 00
5591

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•FREE Mounting

&amp; Belanclng

1555113 Col11nlo ............ 2 for 160
195175111 AU ............... 2 lor 196
19517SII4 SIHitr-.... 2 for 198
235 17SIIS Supnmo ... 2 for 1120
SOQY - NO IAIIKHICIS ON
THIS ONI

•An-ttuon
•Low Prtctd
•Two ttrong ttetl
bo\11
BALANCED FREE

wa•s S·•·•7

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. •In St.

992·2094

Most Cars $14.50

FriM Cllictelt

Toni

LIMITED QUANTITIES
•Top of the line

•

Pomeroy, OH.
BRAKE SERVICE

�•

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Apil 28, 1987
'

Colts get Bennett;
Bucs choose QB
they badly need.
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK IUPII - The
Indianapolis Colts resisted offers
from around the league to trade
lh_elr second pick In the NFL
drart today· and used the selec·
lion to choose linebacker Cotnellus Bennett of 1\labama .
The 52nd annual NFL draft
began at 8:0.5 a. m. EDT when .
Tampa Bay selected quarterback VInny Testaverde of MIami. The Buccaneers signed
T es taverde April 2 to an S8.2
million contract ove~ six years .
The Colts needed 1.1: ll of their
allotted 15 minutes to announce
their pick of Bennett, who is
You jUst won't find a
considered by scout s a player in
better value tor your in·
the mold of New York Giants
surance premium dollar
outside linebacker Lawrence
than a Homeowners ·
Taylor. Indianapolis officials
said every NFL team spoke to
policy from the State
them In an effort to swing a deal
Auto Companies. As an
with the Colts, who tried and
independent agency re·
failed several weeks ago to sign
Bennett to a $4 million~ five-year
presenting State Auto,
contract.we offer truly outstand·
The Buffalo Bills traded the
ing protection packages
third pick to Hou ston in exchange
tor houses, apartments
for the eighth pick in the first
round and the eighth selection In
and condominium
the second round . The Oilers then
drafted Alonzo Highsmith of
Mi ami, considered the best fullback coming out of college.
battle at Anaheim, Calif. 1\ngels Doug DeCinces walts for lhe
The Green Bay P ackers
throw from first baseman Wally Joyner. (UPI)
drafted Auburn All -1\merlca run214 EAST MAIN I
POMEROY
ning back Brent Fullwood with.
IL players honored
the fourth pick. Fullwood, over·
~92 · 6687
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii -' shadowed during most of his
Rlghthanded pitcher John Ha- college career by Bo Jackson,
by an of Rochester and'Columbus averaged 8.3 yards per carry and
outfielder Henry Cotto have been1 gained 1,391 ya rd s as a senior.
se lec ted th e International The Packers went for Fullwood

'

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Sial! Writer
Something new for the Rutland
HIgh School
Alumni
Association.
The group Is
es tablishing a
scholarship program and guidelines and deadline dates have been es tabllshl'd.
Suzy Carpenter will contact the
school about the program, which
says basically that any student
whose parents or grandparents
gradualed from Rutland Hi gh
School will be eligible to apply.
The · Rutland Association has
sent invitations to out-of-county
graduat es and · those needing
reser va tion s can mall their
name, address. class a nd the
number of reservations to tht:&gt;
Rutland Alumni Association,
Box 12~. Rutland, Ohio 45775.
Those sending for reserva tions
should Include payment of $9 a
person. The date o.! Ihis year's
tianquel is Ma y 23 at the Rutland
Civic Center.
By the way, anyone needing a
reunion table should contact
Kimberly Willford at 742-2103.
. Clr~lcs o! Galllpoll&gt; w111 cater
the banquet and the Shady River
Shutf!ers will perform between
the met:'l lng- banquet and the
dance.

MONEY

..........
.........
ca....,•n•••

liheiiiiiiiih~elp~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

iiiilnisit
eaidioif

lly MIKE WEll..
Ul' l Sports Writer
Add Pau l Mirabella's name to
the list of obscure players who
havr eontrlbul ecl to the Mllwaukrr· RrPwrrs phrnomcnal sue·
t't 1SS

thi s season.

Ml rabrllil , a nlm•-yrm veteran
who had nol won a major- league
game si nce 1984 , joined such
wrll -kn own superstars as Glen n
l1r ~1 ggs. na ir Svc•um a nd B .. J.
Surhoff In hr. lplng the Brewers to
thc·l r 171 h vle tory In 18 ga mes.
Mi ra bella pit ched two Innin gs
ol hlllf'ss rr llcf and Braggs hit a
l&gt;a &gt;c•s-loaclrd double In thr 12t h
Inn ing to pow0r lhr· Brewers to a
1117 vietory over thr Ca lifornia
i\ngr ls.
Mira bella , making his flr sl
ap p!'ara ncr wllh Milwaukee,
wa s ca llrd up from Afl/\ Va ncou\'1'1' rrc•ently. He improvl'd his
c·a rc •&lt;'J' mark to 12· 24 .
.lim Ca ntn er opened thP 12th
wl lh a single off l os~ 1· Chu ck
f'l nl&lt;'v, 0-2. Paul Molitor then
dr£·w ·u w;l lk brforr Hobin Younl
;1dV; 1n f'Ptl both runnl'rs with a

s:J crlfic ·r hun I.
C :~llfo rnla
mana gt•r Ge nr
Mau el1Pi&lt;'&lt;'trli to pit ch to Braggs
with fi rs t basr oprn a nd lhe
lln •wprs righ t fie lder doubled for
his th ird hit of lilP game• to scan•
C: aniiH' r and Molit or.
" I co uld ha vP walkrd him bull
t·o tddn't bPsurPihat wt•wouldn' t
glvr up ano thc•r wa lk wllh lhe

loa liPd ," Mmu·h said .
Grc•g llrock's groundoul ad-

lJ.:J ~ J ·s

l'arl cc•li llraggs to third a nd Rob
llrrr. who hit his ninth homer of
tlw Y&lt;'U r mr llr t· In Ihf' game. wa s
walked lnl &lt;'nllona lly. Hick Manning loupl'll a sin gle 10 n •nt r r 10
~&lt;·o n\ Bra gg~ .

" WP wc•rc• ju st goi ng to stay out
IIH•rt' u nt II

WI '

won U," Brn~gs

sa lei. If's so &lt;'arly In thr .1'~&lt;11', but
1he wa y wr'vr bern goi ng, II frc ls
like our yri lt'. "
Mllwauk('C" sro rf'cl .:1 run In lhC'

ninth lo pu ll c•vrn at 7-7. C£'rl l
L'ooprr lrd off with a slngi'' of!
rellc•vrr Donnie• Moo rr and .'orhoff' s slnglr to lr fl movrd pin chrunner Mannin g to seco nd .
Svcum sanlflcrd to ad\'lHll't' lh&lt;'
runners and Gan t nr r was wa Iked
lnlrnllonnlly. Molll or' s lnflr ld hll
scored Mannlnl(.
J&lt;l sf'w hcn" In 1he American

L&lt;'al(ue. Sea lllr dclca tcd Dctroll
:1-2 and On kland bcul Boston

~'1. 2.

In th N~tlonu l Lt•ague. It was
Sa n Fratwlsro 7, Atlanta :1:
Mon ii'P:JI ti, Phlladl'lphl a 4 and
Houston 11 , Nrw York 1.
Mariners 5, Ti~:••rs 2
AI Sea ttle , M C~ rk Langston and
Edwi n Nu nrz c·o mllln&lt;'d on a

six -hitter to hand netrol t its
sevent h loss ln. Its last eighl
ga m~s . With the score lied 2-2.
the Mariners ra llied for three
ru ns In the eighth off Er ic Ki ng,
1-1. La ngs lon, ~-2 , worked elghl
Innings and Nunez pitched Ihe
nlnlh for his fourth save.
· 1\thl ellcs 5, Red Sox 2
AI Oakland , JoseCa nserowenl
4 for 4 to back the slx -hlt pitc hing
of Curt Young and hand the Red
Sox thei r rourth stra ight Joss.
Young, 3-1, struck out five a nd
walked none In recording his
sero nd complete game of the
season . Bos ton' s Don Baylor
•·ecorded his 2000 th ca reer hit. a
single In the seve nth.
Natlonall..eaguc
Wha t's wro ng wllh the Wor ld
S&lt;•rl rs champion New York
Mels'!
The Houston Aslros ripped the
homes tanding Me t ~ ll -1 Monday
night , sendin g New York to Its
third straight loss and sevc•nth In
10outings. TheMels,whofeasled
on th e opposition at Shea Stadl um a yea r ago, are j ust 4-5 at
home In 1987.
.
•
" I lhlnk we have hll rock
bollom ," said Mets Manager
Davr•y .Johnson. "This Is as far as
Wl' can go, to g~l routed like this
may bP good fo r us In lhr long
run ."
Thr sourer of New York' s woes
Is simple: pitc hing - the backllone of las t yea r's tea m - has
ll&lt;·c·omc a liabili ty. Entering play
Monday , the Mets had a 4.81
tea m earned-run average, the
worst In the Nationa l League. A
year al(o New York finished wit h
a spark ling 3.11 ERA.
The Mcts arc wllhou t ace
Dwlghl Gooden. In a drug rehabllltalion cen ter, and reliever
Roger Mc n owell , who had a
hl•rnla operation March :10. Of the
slllrters, on ly Sid Fer nandez has
pi tched co nsistently.
Houston pounded Da vid Cone,
who was makin g his first major-

league start, for 10 runs In the
Innings. Cone. 0·2, a lso walked ·s ix, threw two wild pitches and
was called for two balks.
" I feel bad for all my pi tchers
when they get roughed up,"
Jo hn son said . " Lately I've had a
lot of candida tes. "
On the other side, Houston
start er Jim Des haies, 2-0, allowed only fo ur hils over seven
In nings . He a lso struck out seven.
Glenn Davis a nd Billy Hatcher
earn homered In the fi rst meetlng between the teams si nce last
year's Na tional League Champlonshlp Series.
" You always wa nt to play well
aga lnsllhe World Champs," said
· Ha tcher. "You wa nt to get
respect from your peers and let
them know you ca n play ball.
Elsewhere In the Nationa l
League, San Francisco downed
Atla nt a 7-:l an d Montreal stopped
P hiladelph ia 6·4.
Giants 7, Braves 3
AI Atlanta. Chill Davis and
Chris Brown eac h hit homers to
pace the Gia nts and back the
combined six-hit pitching of
Kelly Dow ns and Scott Garrelts .
nowns, 2-0, yielded six hits over
s ix inninl(s. Garrell s did not
a ll ow a hit in the last th ree
Innings to ear n his fo urth save.
Rick Mah ler. 2-2. suffered the
loss.
Ex pos 6, Phillles 4
AI Philadelp hia, AndresGa larr ~ga knoc ked Ill lhree runs and
Milch Webster drove in two more
to snap the Expos' three-ga me
loslnl( slreak. Expos starter Nea l
Hraton, :1- J, yielded a run and
five hit s before being forc ed to
leave the game with no ou t In the
ninth Inning when he was str uck
In th e leg by a Juan Samuel line
drive. Ra ndv St. Claire finis hed
to ea rn his thi rd save. Mike
Schmidt hit a three-run homer,
his s ixth of th e year and the 501st
of Ills ca reer. Kev in Gross, 0-3,
took th e loss.

;:.,"PI~ I
~fig'") 'or

.' . . .

Her sc h e l M cC lu re o!
McClure's Dairy !sir In Middl eport and McClure's .~- in - 1, Pomeroy, announces that Dairy Isle
Corp. lhls year Wllll(lve away a
195.~ Kaiser Deluxe as grand
prize In th e co mpany's annually
held Collector Car SwE'£'pstakes.
The contest will gel underwa y
at the two local es tablishments
on May 3.
The car Is a brilliant turquoise,
four-door sedan wllh acct:&gt;nls
such as fog lights and special
wheel covers. Most recently, the
vehicle belonl(ed to a noted old
car historian of NPw England.
:Jo attempt to win this lillie
, gem, all you have to do Is to
complt:&gt;te an enlry form at either
the Pomeroy or Middleport
store. T~ ere's nothing to buy and
a ny licensed driver ca n enter.
Dairy Isle last year gave away
a· 19:i!i Wlllys. This year the
drawing will be held for the
Kaiser on .June 1&gt; a t th ero mpany
hea dqua riN~ In Utica, N.Y.

O'DELL Spring Catalog Sale,::Good
Thru May 16

999.88

......

11-HP, 36-ln. Vartable-Orlw Lawn Tntctor with

electrlc starting 8riOQI &amp; Strahan engine, more.
··-· _ ~•r·Mount Graaa Catcher ror modet above. 1-243:111 . .

114.88
3-HP, 19-ln. Rotary Mower
" " " " " -·

0~10-jl~ece -

dock, Btlggs '

Additional donations to the
fund for thr Senio r Clllzens
Center's new van, which will
have a whrelchalr lift . have been
rereived, Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
director. reports.
bf the nearly $20,1XIO pu rchase
price, over S4,00o or the total cost
had to come fr om local dona tions. That amount has alrPa dy '

$14i57

5-HP Chlln-DtM Tiller

159.88

CUll 14 10 25-ln. Pith. Adj.
dojlltl, SIUfdy hawr

3.5-HP, 20-ln, Rotary Mower has a saddlo-4ypt blade
stabMltefladapttf' lor smooth, tvtn mowing.

51

WID
IA1II

In other games. lhe Toledo
Mud Hens srored four runs In the
I hlrd In ning en rou te to trouncing
the Columbus Clippers . Paul
Gi bson. :l-0, earned the victory.
AI Leiter, 0-3, suffered the defeat ,
Maine edged Ri chmond o-3 and
Toledo blanked Columbus 11·0.
AI Ric hmond , Va ., KellhMIIIer
was htt by a Chuck Hensley pitch
wit h the bases loaded In-t he lop of
the lOth Inning to force In the
winning run and llfl the Guides.
Wally Ritchie, 2-l. earned the
victory and Hensley, 1-2. took the
loss.

and the professional approach
- that's
you need to help solve your hearing
and that's what you get at Diles. There is no
need to settle for less!
See us each
Wednesday P.M.
at Holzer Clinic
·in Gallipolis
CALL TOLL FlEE 1·100·237·7716

•• F McVey, M.A.

DILES
HEARING
AID
CENTER
326 W. Union
OH.
61C-S9C-3S71

-~-

Congratulations to Eileen and
Ha r ry Clark who will mark their
35th wedding anniversary on
Saturday. They are the parpnts
of Jimmy and Rollle HemsleY o!
Shade and Mary Donna Davis,
Minersville. The Clarks' address
Is 43519 State Route 124, Minersville, Ohio 45771.
If you don't want to cook
Saturday, _you might be inter·
ested in going to the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department's
Captain D's, a ll you ran eat fish
fry at the fir e station on Butternut Avenue, from 4 to 8 p.m.
Dinner will Include fish, french
fries, role slow, tossed salad and
a beverage. TbP price Is $4.25 lor
adults and $2.!i0 for children. Any
Pomeroy fireman will be glad to
sell you a ticket.

Homer and Irene Baxter were
In Nelsonville Friday whPre they
allended the capping and patchIng ceremony for the licensed
practical nurslnl( class of which
thei r daught er, Lisa, Is a
member. Li sa plans to co ntinue
with her tralnlnl( after ge111ng
her L.P.N. license and become a
registered nurse through trainIng at Hocking Tech. Incidentally, the Baxters' o,ther daughter, Anna, Is also In the nursin g
progr a m at the Nelsonville
school.
Ma r ie Steiner of Middleport
was pleased to have as her
weekend guest, her daught er-Inlaw, Mrs. Ea rl Steiner , who has
bern the director of the American Ca ncer SoclNy In Trimble
County for the past 10 years.
And out In Olive Township,
tru stees are . asking tha t all
!(round flowers be removed from
graves In all of the township's
cemeteries so that spring mowIng a nd cl ea nup can get
underway.
A fri end of minr Is weary of
the . promotions by mall. Sht:&gt;
received a letter advising that
'she had won 'a te levision set bu t
would have to send $12 before she
could get the SPI. My friend sent
the company $13 in play money
along wllh a nota tion that lhr
company owes her some cha nge.
f'il bel she got off or one mailing
list, don't you? You keep smlllng
now .

been contributed but the addl·
tlonal monies will be used to
purchase the rad io ana pay
Insurance on the va n which
amounts to about $1400 a year.
Latest contribut ors have been
Helen Wlllla ms, Eva Schrelfx.r,
Gaynell Clark, Harold and Eliza·
beth Lohse, and the PomeroyMlddleporl Lions Club.
·

Shower given for Werry
39.88

79.88

EIIC1tlc llimmer CtJts a

G11 Trimmer/Edger

14-ln. palh with Tap -N -Go ~

aU!o. line ~~Mince.

with dk8ct drive Cutl I 11-in.
path, 22.2-ce engine.
IR!t

12.-

Clippers bow 3-0 in IL action
By Unll ed PreNS International
Ellis Burks doubled In the
winning run In the sixth In ning
Monday night to lead the Pawtucket Red Sox 10 a 5·2 Interna tional League victory over the
Tidewater Tides at Nor folk. Va.
Steve Curry, 2·1, pllched ,7, 1-:i
lnnln~s for the victory. givi ng up
nine hil s and lwo run s. Hector
Sll'Warl earn&lt;'d his first save.
Tom Edens, 0-2, suffered the lo s.
Gary Miller-Jones cont ributed
two sing les. two stolen bases and
an RBI for the PawSox. Terry
Blocker went J for 5 fort he Tides.

Page-6.

Donations continue for van
329.88

Lawn f'ood With Weed
Control loll t)IIU -

LANDSCAPE
nMIERS

''''"

7.88

-5.DOO sq. ft.

.,.,

5.88
Lawn Food"" 5.DOO "''-ft.

50-R. VInyl H-. '""'

-

)IOiow ...... 2 ply.

niOoQOr)"" doop-

t,4,-4n. 1.0 hM 11n Nl) IQ 111
-

l
to Resist • 29

Treoted

Decay

I"·

7Q''

52.18

....,_

}'Wit p~~~-........ ....

...........
l'lllllp- -

O'DELL
111W_,YIM

,ow.

G ....

446·t61t

Drain

,......

W4 ., ,..,ortfloi,.:.tet-.lttl. '

~1995
100' ...

Mllllilfll ,......_

634L . .

,,•• ,.,. Ollie
. f9t·SSH

'.'

CLASS OF 1988- Students enrolled In lhe clus ofll88 of the Rio
Grande· College and Comrhunlty College - Holzer School of
Nursing were recognized on April 9. Class members are: First
row, left to right, Joetta Ritchie, Lynn Epple, Sharon Carmichael,
Cheryln Roberts, Sue Oths, Margo Dalton, Terri Halley. (Second

row) Angella Canterbury, Susan Taylor, Brenda Hoover, Chrlsll
Burns, Tamlra Scarberry, Carol Leedy and Michelle Peten.
(Third row) Barry Souders, Tahnee Johnson, Ann Carter, Ronda
Moore, Susan Shelton, Andrea Rlgga, Angela Smllh and Louneltla
Davis.

Nursing class at Rio Grande is recognized
RIO GRAN DE- A recognlllon
ceremony for student s In the
cla ss of 1988 of the Rio Grande
Coll e~e and Communlly College
- Holzer School of Nursing was
held Thursday, April 9.
~a lured spea ker al the eve nIng ceremony was Dr. Allee A.
Grlcoskl. of the Department of
Surgery of Holzer Clin ic In

Ga ll ipolis.
J anel M. Byers, dean of the
school of nursing, presented the
class of 1988, whil e faculty
members prt:&gt;sented caps and
chevrons to the students.
The evt:&gt;nl Included a ca ndlell ghllnl( ceremony and the ad mlnlstallon of the "Florence
Nightingale Pledge."

Members of the class of 1988
Include (by county 1:
Ga llla Count y stud ent s: Christi
Burns, Ang ell a Ca nt er bury,
Sharon Carml~hael, Ann Ca rter,
Lounetlla Davis, Terri Halley,
Cherr ln Roberts, Tamlra Scarberry and Susan Taylor.
Jackson Count y stud e nts:
Margo Dalton, Brenda Hoover,

~onduct

Organizations- meet to
i\ UXIL li\R Y
Plans for several spring al'llvllles were announced by Charlie
Barrell, presldenl of lht:&gt; Rutland
Fire Depart men t at a recent
meellng oil he Aulllllary.
Ht:&gt; noted that lumber lor the
picnic tables will be $35 per table
and Joann Stewart volunteered
to find someone to build the
tables. A second meeting to
discuss plans fo the .July 4
celebra tion was sci for Ma y 15
and anvone Interested In helping
Is asked to att end.
Officers' reports were given. It
was noted that James Birchfield
has checked Into ire cream
machines In Columbus and submiffed a list of prices to the
group. More cost figures will be
obtained before a decision Is
made. Reports on Ihe Easter egg
hunt and a fund raising project
were given.
II was announ ced th at Joan
Tl'wksbary. luberculosls nurse,
will be at the fire house on Ma y 4,
4:.'!0 to 6::!0 p.m. to do ski n
testing.
Refres hments were served.

Fi\ITIIFUI.. FOLI..OWERS
Wallace and Muriel Rradfo rd
hosted the rece nt meeting of the
Fa llh ful Follower s Su nd ay
Sc hool class of the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
Helen Qulvry presided al the
meeting with devotion s being
given by Mrs . Bradford and a
cont est with several members
winning pr izes being conducted
by Bradford.
Refreshm ents were served to
Ht:&gt; len and Hllber Qulvey, Margaret · a nd Harvey Haning,
George and .Jessie Whil e, Sylvia
and Zi lla Midkiff, Doral and
Beulah Hill. Bob and Golda Rel'd,
Ann Lambert, Mildred Ziegler,
Leota Smith , Sara Cullums,
Letchic Riggs, Ruth Frances and
three new members , Don and
Rulh Betzlng a nd Al ctha
n andolph.

business

Margarrt E:dw"rds as kc•d
about the club rurnlshlng flowers
for the Unit ed Methodist C' hurrh
moth er-daughler banquet on
Mav 4 wllh .Judv Snowd('n, Joan
Stewar t, Mrs. · Edwards , and
Sandy Tllus volunteerl n!l to
prov ide arrangement s. Lori
B".r nes read lh.c res ignation of
Mar ie Alrrhflrld as tr~as u rer
wllh Mrs. Edwards being uppointed to filii he term.
Mrs . ('arpc•nlerwon Ihe tru vr l
ln g prize brought by Kim Wil lford. Margie navis dls playl'd
the arrangrm cnl of the monlh .
Iva SL•son won Ihe door prlzr and
also gave gardening lips IncludIng th r sevr n rul es for planting
1rces . She sa id thai the hole
should be twlre 1he diameter of
the roots on lhr ball of the lrrc
and at least half agai n as deep us
wha l src•ms nec·essary: that lht•
~-' t ea rth sou ld br In lhr bottom
ol the hole. lhallhr• soli should br
r nrlched, !hal Injured roots
should be cut buck. and Ihat the
roots should he placPd In as
n&lt;t lural a posll lon as possl hl c
usi ng a cone In the holr for lht•
roots to sprl•a d over. She also
sa id that new trees shou ld be tied
to a stake or trunk ofanol hf·r t1·ec
to avoid moveme nt by th e wind.
Betty Dean had a program on
th e proper use of figurines and
Madona In arru ngrmcnl s. The
first urra n~ emcnt she used was a

ta ll mod er n mudonnu front ed by
orc hids, cra bapple and aspara gus tops, while ~ er second
arra nll£'ml'nls lcaturrd a traditioant madonna wllh eucallplus,
salmon rolored mlnl-ru rnallons
and asparagus tops. Sh&lt;' also
show&lt;'d flowers whil'h she had
madr from shells and other
figurines suitable lor usc In
arrangC'menls, and not~d thai all
fi gurines ne£•d a bu st:'.
R e fres hm ~ nl s wcrr SPI'VNI.
SI.INDEUEI..J,i\
Burbura Hudson lost the most
wc•lght and Cathy Hudson was
runn er-up 111 Monday night's
mi'Ctlng of the Flv~ Points Class
ol Sllndert.'lla . Mrs. l.lnda Foster
was aC'crptcd Into th e sllm-nlrlm program for rcar·hlnl! her
goa l wt•lg ht. MPigs dressed In
Eas ler fas hi ons for the meeting
a nd enjoyed " diet dinner at
rlass. f\rrndll Rc&lt;·d was runner·
up In the tee n's r lass.
AI thr FlvC' Point s Tuesday
class or Sllndercll a .Jud y Let• lost
the most weight, whll r at the
Mason Class that ni ght. Los Ann
Rcltm lrc lost the most Wt'ljthl.
Mrs. Drema Hudson and Marie
.Johnson have been conducting
1he dasses for lhr past few weeks
due to the lllnrss of .to Ann
Newsom&lt;'. lc•&lt;·turcr. who Is now
back as the· progra m IPader.

r;:;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;::;;;;::::::::::::::::::::;-

r;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;wl
THE IOIINSON LAUNHY &amp; DIY
CUANDS WIU BE CLOSING THEil
BUSINESS APIIL 30, 1917.
UP ANY OIDEIS
THEY MAY HAVE IY THAT TIME.
WE WISH TO SINCERELY THANI AU OF
OUIIIAIY VALUED CUSTOMERS.

1he RoiJinron ......., ·&amp; Dry Cleaners Co•

i.

Carol Leedy, Ronda Moore, Sue
Oths, Susan Shelton, Angela
Smith and Barry Souders.
·
Meigs County studPnls : LY.nn
Epple, Andrea Riggs and Tahnee
Johnson.
Vinton County stud ent: Ml·
chelle Peters.
Monroe County student: Joetta
Rllchh.•.

RUTLI\ND FRIENDU' GAltDENERS
Several rlvlc bea ull fir'utlo n
projects were discussed at th e
rrccnl meeti ng of the Ru llll nd
Friendl y Ga rd eners all he home
of Sundy Titus.
Joa n Stewart reporled on th e
statu s of Ihe benches and plen lr
tables, giving cost esti mat es
from several pla r&lt;'s. Howard
Birchfi eld and Bob Bishop have
agreed, s h~ reportl'd , to see tha t
the tables are made. Plan s werr
also made to put a bcnr h In front
of the post office In addl ti6n 10 the
tables and benches which will go
into lhr par k. l'ta nlers will also
I
b~ purchased and on May 1.1th
members are to begin work on
filling them.
'
I
A lour of the Glass House In
Stewart was planned for 2 p.m.
on Thu rsday, a nd the regional
meeting held Saturday In McAr·
thur was discussed. fl was noted
that Sandy Titus has received the
junior garden club papers a nd
that the lunlor ga rdeners will be
Involved In the therapy sess ion
IhIs month.
'-;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
The club voted to give $1 a I,
member for flowers for th e
tables at the Rut-land Alumni
Associat ion banquel. II was
noted that Janet Bolin has been
ptltJinl( specimens, pos ters a nd
arra ngements In the post office
TUESDAY, APIIL 21
.
window. Educat lanai posters di s·
SUNDAEL...................... Iuy ant and aet one FREEII
played there have been by Suzy
E•cludH P•rf.tls. Hoi Fudgt C.h nG"'runiH
Carpenter.

Debbie Werry, bride-elect of and Mrs ..Johnson. Tne hOnored CCI..
New officers were elec ted at
Jay Evans, was honored Satur· gues t was presented a corsage by
I
he
recent mretlng of the Middleday night wllh abr idal shower at - the hostesses.
pori
Child Conserva tion League
Attendlng the shower and
the Pom~1·oy Fire Station.
at the Skyline Bowling
held
Jamlt:&gt; Blaettnar, Ca thy .John- presenting gifts werl' Megan
Lanes
following a bowli ng party .
sap and .Jane Sisson hosted the Andrews, Pam Woodburn, U sa Elected
were Nancv Morris.
s~ower . Game prizes were won
Ashley, Rita and Larry Gibbs.
president
;
Li
nda Broderick, vice
b)( Sharon Manley and Beth Beth Cross, .Jodie Mllter, Bonn I ~ president: Susie
Abbott. treasHobstetter and Robin Southern Dillon, Janet Wlllamson, Diann
Williamson, Da rla Kennedyy, urer; Pel(gy Harris, secretaryy;
won the door prize.
· Cake, mints, linger sa nd- Ellie Blaellnar, Polly Legar, Becky Broderick, reporter; and
w('c hes. nul ~. hor d'oeuvres, Carolvn Thomas, Becky Depoy, Clarice Kennedy, historian.
On the nominating committee
cbffee and ra spberry punch were Fond a Thomas, Ann Evans. Jane
were
Helen Blacksdon, Lnda and
served. The burtel and gift tables and Edle Sisson.
Becky
Broderick.
Cathy and Rick Johnson,
were covered with yellow clothes
The
rraviLing prle was do·
with yellow gat hered net over- Jamie and Rick Blaettnar, Robin
lays accented with live daisies Southern, Keith Ann, Julie and nated by Mrs. Kcnnr•dy and won
and babv' s breath. Serving Ia· Jodie Sisson, Pam and Dennis by Mrs. Morris.
bles fea t.ured crystal vases with Wolfe, Mart y Struble, Sue and
-live white lloatl nl( carnations Danny Zirkle, Cindy and Steve TOPS
ackle .Justice ws the weekly
Hartenbach, Sher.ry Might ,
and yellow bows.
best
loser and VIcki Ferrell, the
The cake was decora ted wllh Chrlsl le Blackston, Sharon and
runner-up
at the weekly meetin g
ye') low umbrella and blue roses. Dena Manley, Susan and Joe of TOPS OH
1456, Rulland.
Favors of d9ub!e wedding bell Clark, Bel h Hobstetter and Judy
Joann
Eads
was welcomed
candles Inscribed "Deb and Jay"
Werry.
back as a renewal and Leona
w~re made by Mr!·. Blaettnar
Mills as a new member. VIckie
Ferrell made a diet drink fo r
members to sample. She was
also winner of the weekly l.rult
basket. 1\nyone Interested In
Rllchle, Dorothy Calaway, and joining the group may co ntact
~aster was obstrved at Alfred
UMC by Sun rile Service, Easter Osle Mae Follrod . Debbie Brooks 992-2612 tor Information.
breakfast,• Sunday School, egg sang a solo, Easter. Martha
Dillinger gave a reading, Easter It
hUDt, and worship lll!rvtce.
Sunrise service wu In charge Flowers. Todd Dillinger pres·
of Marilyn Robluon and Ruth ·ented Our Hope.
The choir sang "The Night
Btopkl. It openeil with lbe chOir
,11iqlq "Cbrllt thf Lord II Rllll!lt Before Eaater." Nelllr Parker
TOday" , Superllltendl!nl Lloyd gave a reading, Soarlle. The
DIU!qw pve the welcome and program doled wltb thf chOir
CmOIIIIS PUASI PICI
led the COIIIfel&amp;tlon ID Relpon- slngtag "One Day" and prayer
by Flomace Ann SpeaCI!J'.
slw re.cllal. • Rullll!ll Archer
Eulft' lftallfut wu attended
fii!Ye thf OP81Da prayer. The
WCI'drobe of 1 Killl wu pres- by U people. Uoyd and Randy
edted by Gertrude and Nllla DIDinpr 'lrl!l'e chief c:ookl wltb
RobiDma. lJo)'d Brookl. Flor- • all memberl contrtbuttq foodl,
Sunday Scbool atteadaace wu
Ami, Rtcbanl ind Tim
S!iellcer. Dor11 DIII)JIIer, Lori 63, cbun:b attendaace, 25.

Alfred UMC has Easter service

4111dt

-

T~~April28,1987

Rutland alumni planning
~o offer scholarships

yoUR

•
•
Brewers make it 17 WIOS
m
•
·
h
7
3
18 starts; Giants tnump ' , . • rL~e~ag~ue~'sip~la~ye~rs~o~fl~heiwieeiki:

The I)aily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

MORE
FOR

Tlllr!D - Milwaukee's Paul Molitor dives Into third
hasc afler a successful steal during Monday 's 1\merlcan l..eague

By The Bend

'.

•

-

STEI\ 1~'1

-

WE'RE OUT FOR BLOOD
WEDNESDAY APRIL 29
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

AT
POMEROY SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
1 P.M.-5:30 P.M.

30th ANNI~ERSARV SALE
IN APPRECIATION OF YOUR BUSINESS
HELP US CELEBRATE! --..
WEDNESDAY, APIIL 29
WHOPPER FISH .................................................... s1.19
TURTlES Oft solo for 841• (San so• I
THUISDAY, I Pill 30
SONNY IUIGEI ...................................................... 99'
HOT fUDGE CAKE............................only 19• (San SO• I

·da·iry :ste

�Page-6- The

Sentn1el

PIJbhc Notte&amp;

Social Security report released
The 1987 Social Security Trus
tees Report to Congress has
recently been released Accord
lng tq Ed Peterson Athens Social
Security office manager th e
annual report holds some good
news for area residents both
those who currently receive
be nefits and thos e youn ger
workers paying taxes Into the
system
The Trustees annual 75 year
projection of the Soc ia l Securit y
system has Indicated the Old
Age Survi vor a nd Disability

1987

Ohto

trust funds are In actuar ial
ba lance for the projection period
Peterson said that In simple
terms this means the tax Income
meets the benefit outgo for the 75
years The Medicare trust fu nd
has presented a steadily more
favorable picture In the report
too It has also been receiving
Incr e asing Co n gressional
attention
Peterson especially wanted to
note that the admi nistrative cost
of Social Security were very low
- 11 percent last year Out of

PUBLIC NOTICE
BE IT ORDERED BY THE
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF HEALTH Pomeroy
Ohoo that the following
rules and regulotlons be
enacted for tho public hoollh
wothln the general htllth
dootnct Meoga County u
defoned on Sectoon 3709 10
Ohio Rovioed Code and to

every Social Secun ty tax dollar
98 9 cents Is paid out In benefits
This ex lremely low overhead has
been maintained even In the
presence of more beneficia ries
with no comparable staff In
Cl eases a nd a greater complex
lty of field office workloads
Peterson said
He went on to mention th a t the
Athens office provides spea kers
lo discuss a ll aspects of Social
Security benefits a nd coverages
for ln! eres ted groups busl
nesses and organizations

read 11 follows

Notoce

Pubhc Nottce
with a lterHe initrument

tton frpm the heahh off car

Only petroleum )ePy In indicat ng tho Htabl shment
collopoible metal or plait c has been Inspected and 1110
tubn or ttl equiv•lent as

approved by tho health of
'""'' ahalt be uoed on the
aru to be tattooed and 11
ahall be applied with sterole
gau..
The uH of atypt1c pencils
alum blocks or other solid
styptics to check the flow of

ESTABLISHMENTS
blood Ia prohobited
(alit ahall be unlowlullor
Inquiry ahall be mode and

env penon to engage in the anyone giv ng a h11tory of
bus neaa of operating 1 recent Jaundice or hepatit s

tattoo Htabtoahment with may not be tattooed
out farst obtain ng a licen•
Single service or 1nd v d

to engage 1nsuchbulinessln ual containers of dye or 1nk
accordance w1th the prov
ahall be UHd tor each patron
1lon1 hereof
and the contamer therefor

(bl An appllcetoon for a aholl be dlacardod omme

license shall be accompan

d1ately after complet ng
work on a patron and any

led by a fee In the amount of
twenty love doltera provided dye in which the needles

howBVer that no application were d pped ahall not be
uted on another person

foe shall be received tor

renewel of an exlttmg 1 ExcHs dye or ink shall be
cenae Any change in owner removed from the sktn w th
ahip 1hall require a new an Individual sterile aponge
application and llconoo with or a d11ponble paper tlaaue

poymont of tees therefor

engaging In the bu11ne11 of

which shall be uaed only on

TOP HONORS - I wo m em~ers of the Kaclnt
Chapter of the Fulure Farmers of America ar e
pictured receiving top honors at th e chapters
annual banquet On the left Chapter President
Tom Willis presents the Star Green h ~nd award to
Kevin Grueso r while un the right Mlck Eakins

IIONORARV - Charles Bailey Is pictured
receiving an lion If lTV Cha pl&lt;r Farmers Ot grcc
from Tlrn Willis pres ldt nt 11 the 1nnu 11 banquet

ro cclves the Star Chapter Farmer award from
Chris Wolle Southeast Sectional vier pres ident
Grueser and Eakins also each received a $50
savings bond and a plaque provided lly Racine
Hom• National Rank and the Farmers Bank &amp;
Sav ings Co

olthr Racine Futurt Farmers of America In the
background arc Alma Johnson and Laura Circle
whu were also prese nted th e honorary degree

FFA presents Southern honors
Top honm s wen to M\ ck
Ea kins und Kc rn G ucsc1 ut the
annual banquet of the 11a clnc
F ut re 1 11 mel" of Am IIC 1 he d
at Sou the• n Htgh Sc i oo l
Eakins and C uese r 101c
p r scnt ed t he Sta r h l Jl c
Pa rmc 1 and the S (1 1 C cc nhand
twards at the banquet ui!Pnded
by mo r t l a n ll~t I" Oplc I om
Wolfe of hc Hue Inc \l ome
Nation II 11unk p1 est 1t ed F ukio s
wit ! a $~I s '11 gs lOnd ncl
plaquP In c ognlt on of his
r r omplls hmcn s mel 1 ccl 11cod
of lht F 1me s B nk &amp; Savings
Co p1 r~r nt rd G ursc t wl h 1$ 0
s lVIngs ha nd nd jl l q 10 rot his
wo k
rh&lt; r l ljl f' p rs ted Ito
u y I pill I 11n 1 Dcg 1 rs to
M1s I ali i 1 CI clr M1 s Aim
lohnsor
net ( I I
II
Bot I M s C t rl
Ms
t ccog nlzcd fo
lohn sm "
ht l helpv.o I lh&lt; b11quol so ct
th! p1st HIV! • 1 d 11li lev v s
ecogn lzrd f! i ls vo k 1 I h I
c hap tr on th e sl r l I o sc b1il
In R IC!nr I
pal l of I
cha ptc s BOAC 1 olrr t
Othr nwar d ~ p1rscnt Pd and
tltC'I sponso s vr c Gt PC nh md
degt c ShutJ Or \\llillm s
Bobbv S ilt sm 1n A1 on I 1udc

m1Jt C ndy Wolfe Gary F• ee
man Ch 1d Ta ylor a nd Hlrhard
G d1 c I tpt c• Farmer Deg1ee
Renn1 Dalley Kevin G1 uese1
liC'I b Rose La 1ry Sellers Chris
r lndl ey and Marvin Bicke rs
sw ine ptodur llon Kev n Clark
outd oo
•rr r r allon KC\in
Housh mec hanics Br) on Dailey
,md F. \c Stover spctlalty anlm
Is C• ai g Rt own soi l and wat e1
m 1n 1gc mcnt Scott Bickers fl o
1lculu e llmW IIIIs adM!tk
I ak ns di ve slflrd 11\cstork
Sco t R r krrs be ef p odurt ion
i(P\ in (; IPSCI Fa I pia n 11 ar
lo S1lrs pi 1rc ment In produ r
tl on Ml r k F.a klns J ohn IIIII
I "r I n 1\ lei Custr
Gcn{ ami
C'h lies Yos cxtC'mponneo us
Sh 1nnon Wlllltms Mr.M Fa1 m
CIt v p1 r p tl(l Cln s G lndl e~
Walcl C1oss llld So ns u ban so I
J• dgl g IC'am Scoll Blckc s
Sl mnon Wtl ll 1m s B yun Dal
lr1 /\ a t on I uudn mill a nd
ilr• nv n nley Rae nr PI mn lng
Mill r u1 11 soil judging team
Ml c k I tkh s Ch1 is Gilndlc~
llr b Hosr Kr' n G1uesC'l
D d Cusic
fluckP\P Gas
f1 11 and 'rgNabl rs Mirk F.t
k\ ns twin Ci lv Ma ch ne Shop
d i\C tslflcd cot Scoll Blckr 1s
lr del ship rim W Ills sc hola r

ship Gat Y Freeman
Following thr ptrsentatlon of
awards Chr s Wolfe Stale FFA
se&lt;tlonal \Ice pt es dent spoke
on FFA matt e s and Dan Sm tih
lUCtlonee au ctioned ham lef
tovc t fl om the dinner PreS iden t
Tom Willis presented Sm th wit h
a certificat e of apprecwtio n for
hi s help to the chapt&lt;:&gt;r ov er the
&gt;ea rs P\0\H:' I s donat ed b) Hal
1ts Pat mol s 1\rt Hills &lt;.reen
hOUSP mel Hubb ds Gt eenhou se
we t c a11 a1dcd as door pt lzes
r----:==~~~;==;:===---J
I
Pubhc Nottce

County

Probate

Court Case No 25496
Freda B each

Lang1v lie

dence of unheal t hy
conditions

pract1ce of tattoomg wh ch
become known to the opera

penetrated abraded or
treated weth chem•cala for
the purpose of removmg
camouflagmg or altar ng any
blemish blnhmark scar or

ported to the health off car
by the person owning or
operat ng the tat1oo1ng es
tabllahment and the m
fectad client shall be re
tarred to a phys c an

Safety razors w1th a new
ungla-serv ce blade for each
customer of patton or a
straight edge razor may be
used and shall be thorough ly
cleaned and sterilized before
use on each cuatomer or
patron
The area to be tattooed

Oh o

46741 wao appo nted Exe
c ulrhc

ong to tattoo thehandl8hall olfl~r
(~)No person customer or
be drlod with ondovoduel
patron hav1ng any akin infec
amgle use towels
No tattooing aholl bo done t1on or other dtteaae of the
on any ak n ourface that hu sk n or any commun cable
resh pimples bo Ia onfec d11eue shall bo tattooed All
tions or man tells any evo nfectiona resulting from the

tattoo

n / k Va Freda

Jacks Box 21 34221 Jacka
Road

of th e estate of

Richard J Jacko doce01ed
late ol 34221 Jacks Road

langsville Oh10 46741
Rober1 E Buck
Proate Judge
lana K Neue lroad Clerk

shall forst be thoroughly

washed for 1 penod of two
minut81 with Wlrm water to
wh1ch haa been added an

\4128 \61 6 12 3tc
5
Happy Ads

ontlsoptlc liquid soap A
sterile

single use aponge

shall be uoed to acrub the
are•

After •having and
betore tattooing 11 begun a
solut on of HYanty percent

Calendar/ happentngs

alcohol ahall be applied to

the area w•th a single use

sponge used ond appHod

TUESDn
MI DDLE POH 1
I he
Mlddlcpor t Po me ov t\ t r 1
Bn nr h of thf' Amr lc 111 As, or ll
tlon of Uni\C l sl ll Women nwct
Tuesday at the Mlddl epOI t M
sonlr Tc mplr fu• ' dlnnc1 o 10
p m Mcmbc 1s m' t k&lt;' gu ~s t s
Dues a•r payab r

I ltclll l\ C'lub will meet WC'dnes
ch l nfl l' noon at the home of
M• s Ronald Reynolds Mt s
J 1m es Clatw01 thy wi ll revle11
II r book F 1therhood by Bill
C'os b\ P01 roll call membets
11 f' to t espond with a memory of
thc1 fa the/ - - -

RUTLAND - Hut It n G 11 den
C'lub meet s 11 r sd tv 10 p m
home of M1 s M 1
Wilso n

POM E ROY
Wildwood
G uden Club me ets Wednesday
7 30 p m at the home of Ma ry
Nease The1 e will be a pig In a
poke sale

POMEROY - M e l~s Count y
Litter Gran t Ad' b01 y Boa1d
meets 7 30 p m I uesdal at he
Utter control office
POMEROY - Women s Aux\1
lary of Veterans Memo• i 11 Has
pltal meets 1 30 1 uesday In the
hospital co nfe1 rnce 1oom
Speaker Jackie S" nde1s Ca1c
Haven Nursing Home
RUTLAND - Hut\and 1 own
ship Trustees meet Tuesday 6 30
p m at the Rutland PlreStatlon
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport

POMEROY - Amet lean Red
C1oss Bloodmobile will be at the
Meigs Senior Citizens ('enter
Mulberry Heights Wednesday
afternoon Forest Run United
Methodist Women will serve the
ca nteen
other 01 ganizatlons
wishing to set ve the can teen for
future vlslt~ may call Thelma
Dill at 992 3470
LONG BOITOM - Long Bot
tom Community Association
meets Wednesday 7 30 p m a l
the community building

Alter

completing work on any
person the tattooed area
be twenty f ve dollare per shall be washed With stenia
year
gaure saturated with an
idl The term health of antiaapt c soap aolut on ap
fleer shall mean the County proved by tho health off cer
Heelth Commlss oner or h11 or a seventy percent alcohol
authorized representative
solution Tha tattooed area
The term carttficate of ahall be allowed to dry and
mspect on shall mean writ petroleum Jelly from a col
ten approval from the health laps ble or plastic tube shall
off car or h 1 authonzad be applied us ng stenia
representative that Uld tat gauze A stante gauze dren
tooing eatabl shment has lng thall then be fastened to
been Inspected and meets all the tattoed area with
of the terms of these rules adhBIIVe
end regulation•
(fl All clean and reedy to
The term operator shall ute nHdles and natruments
mean any lndlv dual f rm shall be kept n a closed glass
company corporat•on or or metal case or storage
aasoctatlon that owns or cabinet while not 1n use
operates an eatabhahmant Such cabmet shall be rna n
where tattoo ng Is per tamed m a san tary manner
formed and any individual at all t1mes
who performs or pract cas
A steam star I zer (auto
the art of tattoo ng on Ihe clave) shall be prov1ded for
person of another
sterlhzmg all needles and
The terma tattoo
tat sim lar instruments before
tooed or tattoo1ng refer use on any customer person
to any method of placmg or patron (Alternate sterillz
dealgns Ienart scrolls fig lng procedures may only be
ure1 tymbola or any other used when spec f1cally ap
marks upon or under the sk n proved by tho health off cor I
with Ink or any other sub Stenllzat1on of equipment
stance resulting n the colo wdl be accomplished by
ration of the skin by the a d exposure to hve steam for at
of needle• or any other least thirty minutes at a
instrument• designed to minimum pressure off fteen
poundt per square nch
touch or puncture the sk n
(ol Each person who oper temperature of two hundred
ates a tattoo1ng eltablsh forty degrees Fahrenhe t or
ment shall comply woth tho one .hundred ttxteen degrees
Cels us
following requirements
the needles and lnslru
The room in wh1ch tattooing is done shall have an area menta required to be sterll
of not less than Qne hundred zed shall be s o used
square teet The walls floors handled end temporar ly
and cell ng shall have an placed during tanoo ng so
Impervious smooth and that thoy w II not be
contaminated
washable surface
(gj Permanent records of
A toilet shall bolocated n each patron or cu11omer
the establishment and shall ahell be malnta nod by the
be accessible at all t1mes licensee or operator of the
that the tattoo1ng establish establishment Before the
ment is open for bua1neu tanoomg operat Qfl begins
The lavatory shall be aupp the patron or customer shall
lied with hot and cold be required per1onally to
running water soap and enter on a record form
unitary towels
provided for t uch estabhsh
All tables and other equip menta the date h1s or her
ment shall be constructed of name address age aerial
easily cleanable mater ala number if a member of the
shall be painted orf mshedm armed forces and h1a or her
a light color with a smooth signature Such records
wuhable finish and shall be shall be ma nta1ned n the
ooparated from watong cus tattoo establishment and
tomoro or observers by o shall be eva lable for exam•
panelotleast~txleethghor nation by the health off1cer
by a door
Recorda ahall be rata nod by
The entore pramlaoa and the operator or hcenaee for a
equipment shalt be moon pBfiOd of not leas than two
teined n a clean Nnotary veers In the event of a
condition ana In good repair change of ownerah1p or
The operator shall wash clos1ng of the busmass all
hie hands thoroughly with such records shall be made
soapondwatorbelorestert ava labia to the hea th

No skon araa ahall be tor shall promptly be re

NOTIC E OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Apr 122 1987 n the
Meigs

diatoly d11carded

(81 All pigment• dyeo or

colora used n tattoo ng shall
be sterile and frae from
bacteria virua partic&amp;es and
noxious agents and subslan
cea and the ptgmenla dyas
and colora used from stock
solutions for tach customer
or patron shall be placed m a
single service receptacle
end euch receptacle and
rtmllnlng solutiOn shall be
d1acardtd attar use on each
customer or patron

Ill All bandlgoa ond aurg

cal drtnlngs used 1ia con nee
t1on With the tattooing of a
person shalt be ater le

lkl An opplicont for a

llcenu to operete a tattoo
ing establishment shall first
obtain 1 certificate of tnapec

Paul

conduct period c mspec
t1ona of any tattoomg estab
hshment for the purpote of
determ nmg whether or not
Hid ettablishmant and the
persons perform na the art
of tattooing there n are tn
compliance wtth 111 1pphca
bkt hHith prOYIIIOOI Con
ta ned withm these rules and
regulations h shall be un
lawful for any perton or
operator of a tattooint~ ea
tablshment wlllfully to pre
vent or restrain the health
off1cer tr:om enter ng •nv
hcenaed aatabliahmant
where tattoomg 11 being
performed for the purpose of
1nspect1ng u d premises
after proper •dent flcation 11
presented to the operator
tattoo any IndiVIdual under
the nnuance of alcohol
and / or drugs and 1t shall be
unlawful to tattoo any
mnor

(nl yYhoever violates any
prov s on of th s sect1on is
gu lty of a meademeanor of
tfle fourth degree
That these rules and regu
let ons are hereby declared

to be an EMERGENCY

measure necessary for the
tmmed1ate presarvat on of
the pub! c peace heatth and
safe!) n the County of
Me gs Oh o and for the
further reason that 1mme
d1ate act on s necessary m
order to ltnsure the prevan
I on of the communication
of any mfect1oua d aeaaea
through the pract ce of

tottooong WHEREFORE

these rules and regulations

shall take elfactand be on lull
force Immediately upon
the r adopt1on and approval
by the Meigs County Board

of Health
ADDOPED AND AP
PROVED Aprol 14 1987
Marg e lawson 0 0 S
Health Comm ss1oner
Jon D Jacobs Secretary

to the Boord of Health
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF HEALTH
By

Gene Jeffers

Mary

Blrchfoeld R C H II lester
Hart James E Witherell M
D

(4128 \51 5 2tc
Pubhc Not1ce
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
STANLEY H PHILLIPS
P1amtff

- VSMARY E PHELPS
Defendants

CASE NO 87 CV 85
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Jean Ann Holt f I v ng

address unknown and 1f not
I v ng then the unknown
he~rs next of kin detcend
ants cred tors deviHeS
grantees I en holders auc
cenora In Interest admlnl•
trators ekecutors legal ra
prasentattves and an1gnaes
of sa d named defendant 11
have not been served with

Tu~y

thence east 63 rods thence
aouth 36 rods thence west

n

Pogo161 MeogsCounty

west 23 rods thence south
65 degrees welt 12 ~"• rodt
to a Sycamore tree 12
1nct1ea in d1ameter thence

north 84 Vz degrees wost19

rods thence south 64JA
degrees west 29 rods and 4

I nka thence South B de

The

tollowmg

prem11e1

situated In the Townahip of
Rutland County of MeogJ
and State of Oh10 to w t
Begmmng f1fty seven rods
north from the southwest
corner of Sect on No 26

Town 6 Range 14 Ohoo
Company s PurchasB

thence South 80 degrees
east Bight rode and fourteen
I nks thence north 16 de
graes east ttlght rods anp
four Inks thence north 27
degrees east four rods
thence north 37% degrees
eut e ght roda thence north
78 :!2 degrees ea1t ten rods
thence south 78 dagreaa
east sixteen rods and eigh(
ean hnks thence north ~2
degrees west twenty two
and a h&amp;lf rods thence north

v..

thorty o'ile and a ,half

ro~s

thence west twenty n ne
rtMis and ten I nks thence
south one hundred and thfft
rods to the place of beg,~
n ng contam ng twenty
acres and forty rods more or
leas save and except there
from the follow ng tract
beg1nn ng f1fty seven rods
north from the southw~at
corner of Sact1on 26 Town

6 Range 14

0~

o Com

pany s Purchase thancq
south 80 d~grees east e ght
rods and fourteen I nks
thence nortti 16 degrees
east e1ght rods and fo~r
I nks thence north 27 ~"•
degrees east four rods
thence north 37 V2 degrees
east a ght r~ds thence north
78 12 degrees ant SIX rods
thence west about twenty
three rods to lhe sect on I ne
thence south about a ghteen
rods to the place of beg n
nlng contam 1'\g one and on•
half acres more or less

Also the following real
estate s tuated 1n the Town

ship of Rutland County of
Me go and Stat~ of 0~10,

to wtt
Beglnn ng one hu(1dreil

and ten rods and twenty
I nka north of the southeall
corner of Section 32 Town

Company a Purchate

and four and half links

northwest corner of th11
above de1orlbed tract

thence In o aouthorly dirac

t1on twenty rods thence In
an easterly dwect on eigh\

roda thence In a norlhe~
Town B Range 14 thence direction and parallel with
east 73 rods and 18 links the f1r1t line twenty rods
thence north 60 rods
thence eaat 8 rods end 1 6
hnks thence north 23 rods
thence west 4!hodt thence

thence in a westerly d1rec

toone ght rodi totheplacool
begmn ng contammg on•
acra more or lesa and alto

south 32 degrees nat 16 Vz save and except the follow
rods thence south 1 V, de
ng real estate beginn ng at
groes east 36 roda and 21 the
aoutheast corner of the
I nks thence North 78 dt one acre exception already
griH welt 16 rods and 18 deacrlbed end extendi~g
I nks

thence 1outh 78Y:a
degrees west 4 rods thence
west 18 rodt thence south

24 rods and 11 links to the

place of beg•nn ng contain
mg 23 3 / 10 acres more or
leu
Reference Deed Volume

83 Pogo 343 Mo go County
Deed Recorda
PARCEL TWO
The follow ng real estate
Situated In Rutland Town

sh p Meogs County Ohoo

and beg1nmng 180 rodt

north end 29 rode and 11
tonka ooat from the Southw

est corner of Sect on 26

southeaat along the Marion

Phelpa tond f ftoen rOds and
eight feet to a mark thence

south and wnt lhcteen rods
thence northwest twenty
rods thence northeatt nine
rods and six feet to the place
of beg10n10g containing
about one and three tenths
acres
Also except ng a right of
way 18 Vt feet wtde to make
a conven11nt and ufe outlet
to the public h1ghway ax
tend1ng along the east 11de
of the abov8 trac1 and east
of one acre owned 1lY
Graham and contlnu ng
(Coni nued on Page 71

Cle k

Gun Show at Ruth1nd C 11 c
Cente May 9 f om 8 00
6 OOp m Tab a rentalS&amp; 00 Fo
nformat on o table enta call

Rutt•nd County of Meigs

Giganl c Ga age Sale sw m
blcyc es o d qu t
tops lays Itt eo lots of m st:
Apr 128 29 30 Th dhouseoff
Rt 87 l eon Baden Rd on ght

m ng pool

614 742 2233

Townahlp 16 Range 14 of
the Oh o Company s P1,.1r
chase and beg1nrung 1n the
Center of a small creek west
of Leading Creek alonJ the
Pomeroy and Wilkeavill'
Road thence runn ng east
twelve rods thence north
fourteen rods and n ne feet
thence 1n a southwesterly
d1rect on rwenty rods and
twelve feet to the place of
beg1nnmg containing one
half acre more or le11
Reference Deed Volume

PARCEL SIX

PARCEL FOUR

Yard Sale

and State of Ohio tow t
Being 1n Section 26

Deed Record•

thence south 32 V. degrfollowing des c robed eoot fihy four rodl to th'
prem1ses
place of bogonnong contalh
PARCEL ONE
mg five acres more or Ina.
The followong deocrobed save and except therefrom 1
real estate 11tuated in Ru
tract beginning at tha
tland Townsh p Me1gs
Countv Ohto and bounded
and descrebed as followa
Beg nn ng 60 rods and 1 1
links north of the southwest
corner of Sect on No 26

Meogs

PARCEL FIVE

1 59

thence north f tty seven rods
Aprol 1987 Stanley H and
SIX I nks thence west
Ph II ps folod a compte nt n twenty one rodt and tiktetn
The Court of Common links thence aouth 62 do
Pleas General Oiv11ion
grBBI west nine rods aod
Me gs County Oh o Can alxtaen l,nka thence south
No 87 CV 85 againot uch 51 degrna west nine r~
of you seekmg to part t1on
the fee estate '" and to the

Pogo 163

greet east 24 rods and 17
I nks to the place of beg1n
n ng conte n1ng 13 A acres
more or less
Reference Deed Volume

91 Page 6 Me gs County

w 1 not be espons b., fo any
debts contre cted fo by anyone
othe lhan mvse f Roger 0

Reference Deed Volume

118

The follow1ng real estate
11tuated n the Townshtp of

north 1B rods and 22 lonks
thence north ~5 degree,

7

1

606
County Deed Records

not ce of the f I ng of a ahlp 6 Range 14 Ohio

compla nt herem w II take
not ce that on the 8th day of

north to the state h1ghwey
See Deed Book 142 Page

real estate beg1nn1ng
twenty rods east of tbe
center of the wast line of
Sect on No 26 Town 6.
Purchase thence east 62
rodt and 22 hnka thence

A11 noun r. c111 r. nl s

3 Announceme nts

PARCEL THREE
The followong deacrobt\1

1

7

Business
Services
(Cont~utdfromPogo61 r;::::::::::::::::::~;::::::::::::::::::;r;::::::::::::::::~~r:::::~;:~;:::::;rr;:::::::::::::::::;l -------------------

Deed Records

Range 14 Ohoo Company

The

OhiO

Publtc Not1ce

49 rods thence north 23 Vz
degrua wett 6 rods thence
north 31 VJ rods to the piece
of begmmng conta ning
12 VJ acre• more or less
Reference Deed Volurn.

April28, 1987

Page 264

Me go

County Deed Records
The following real estate
1n the County of Me1gs end

State of Ohio and on the
Townah p ol Rutland e~d

bounded and descrbed as
follows
Reference Deed Volume
91 Page 6 Me1gs County
Deed
Beginning th rty
seven rods and f1ftnn hnks
east from the center of
Section 28 Town 6 Range
14 Ohio Company 1 Pur
chase thence east seventv
n1ne rods to the center of B1g
Leading Creek thence up
thL center of sa1d Creek as

follow a

North 42 1"2 degrees wnt
fourteen rods thence north
81 V1 degrees west four rods
thence south 79 degrees
Wut twenty e1ght rods
thence west twenty two
rods thence north 76 de
Qrees wast twelve rods
thence north 40 degrHt
welt thirty four roda thence
horth 50% degrees west
twenty seven rods thence
south 45 degrees West tour
rods leaving the center of
sad creek to the h1gh water
mark thence north 45 de
greet west twelve rods
thence north 77 degrees
west f fteen rods and four
teen links thence south

21 v. degreea west e ghteen

rods and 11ghteen hnks
thence aouth 'l9 !4 degrees
west eighteen rod• and
twenty two hnks thence
Iouth 691-2 east twenty one
and on' half rods to apoint
on the bank of a JmaU run
just above thespnng thence
south 67 V2 dagrees east
twenty eight rods thencas
south 27 d&amp;grHI nat aeven
rodt and mne hnks thence
south five rqda and twenty
one hnka to the place of
beginning conta mng n ne
and five etghtha acres more
or Ina Save and except a
road acroaa the •bove des
'Cribed land where the barn is
located and also a part of
the ebov411 described tract of

land aold

by

W P Stevena

and Zoe Stevena h 1 w1fe to
J C Van Zant and bounded
and descnbed as follows
Beglnmng thirty aeven rods
and fifteen links east from
the center of Section No

26 Town No 6 Range No
14 of tho Ohio Company a
Purchase thence east aev
entv nine rods to the center
of Big loading Creek thence
up the center ol the Hid

creek north 42

11&gt;

degroea

wert fourteen rodt thence

,..,rth 81 Vz degrees well
tour rods thence south 79

degrees woll twonty eight
rods thence west twenty
two roda thence north 75
degrees watt twentv eight
rods thence west twenty
two rods thence north 76
degrees welt Bight rods and

eight links thence aouth
484 degrees west eleven
rods and twelve and a halt

links to the place of begin
nlng contam ng thrH and a

8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

Cash n a day I he Aucl on way
Cl ck a Auc on Sa 11 ce 304
896 3430 l censa No 754 87

THE DITCHING
SERVICE
All Types of
Trench1ng
GAS WATER
ELECTRIC
DRAINS

Bus

Ph 985·3813
Home 985·3837
4 22 I mo

THE HAT RACK
(Supr Run Area )
HOURS Will Thurs fro
lOam

rosrm

Solurdoy I0 M
to 12 NOON

Other t mts b~ (hontt or
ooli 992 I !I lor
ntment

:::o

NANDC

nEO COUNTRY

ITEMS
Wood Crochet Outltong
Flowers S.wtng
lasketlods
COMPARE OUR Pf1C!!I

l4- l mo

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

EUGENE LONG
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Remodel ng

Roof ng ol oil Types

TVs, Antennas
Satell1te Sales
Installation

Serv1ce

Complete Gutter Work
Worked n home area
20 years

Electromc Organs
Mobtle servtce

Free Estimates
CALL COllECT

614-843-5248

Ph (6141 843 542
3 9 87 2

REASONABlE

REIIAIII
8 20- 86 tfn

9

Wanted To Buv

(CUT OUT FOR fUTURI U!ll

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

We pay cash fo lete model clean

uaed can

J m M nk Chev Olda Inc
8 I Gene Johnson

6,4 446 3672

Lott wallet at 0 0 Mc ln v e
Park Aicha d S Colley Ph
614 246 9637 Rewa d

All Makes

TOP CASH pad to 8 3 model
and new11 sed ca a S Tl th
Buck Pon ec 1911 Ease
Ave Ga ll pol s Cal 614 446
2282

•Wa shers •Dis hwashers
•Ranges
•R efr gerators
•Oryera •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

O c

e• &amp; 1 ugly puppy
6144463699

3 Cute Pupp

Ph

Stray puppy Shepherd mixed
came to my hou•• but can t slay
Hate to take to pound Call

Buy ng da ly god a lva co s
lngs jewel y ste ling we a old
co ns large cu eney Top p
cu Ed Bu kel Be bttr Shop
2nd Ave M dd epo 1 Oh 614
992

3478

614 992 6373

R1venne

49835 St Rt 124
RaCine, Oh1o 45771

949·3088 Bus
949-2606 Home
All Makes &amp; Models
24 HR SERVICE
3 17 2 mo pd

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP
S50 Page St Middlepart

Ph. 992-3537
48871mo
Pubhc Not1ce
Steven s land 1n Sect on No

26 Town No 6 Range No

14 th ence north 11ghteen
rods and twenty two I nka to
the southeast corner of the

Moll Lol thence north 26

Howar~ L Wr~tesel

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
Thts Week Ltve
Enlertamment
Wed Frt &amp; Sal Ntght
900PM tolOOAM
The
Band
12 00 Cover

R/iDIATOR
ERVICE

We can repair and re
core rad1alors and
heater cores We can
also actd botl and rod
out radtalors We also
repatr Gas Tanks

PAT HILL FORD
992 2196

Moddleport Ohto
1 13 tic

Anti~ues

11 24 Eost Maon I
Pomeroy
HOURS lues Wed Frt
1J am to 7 ~ m
Sunday I p m p m
by Chanlf or Appotnlment
RUSS MOORE

992 2526

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleanmg
Pamt~ng

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4228711n

mo

414

BOWLING!!
Pomero\ Bowh;"P. Co
382 2NO S
Brng lhs ad wth
rour lamly or grou~
o bowl 2 gamJS an~
gel one frHII
Good Fr1 &amp; Sat nt~hts
or anC open bow tng
t1me all us for part1es
for your group
992 3432 or 99jl403

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULBERRY AVE
POMEROY, OH

PH. 992-9949
lob Barton Owner

I I mo

24

Want o buy carry au b s nell
fo bae license fo Pomr1 oy

HOUR TOWING

&amp; ROAD SERVICE

USED TIRES
NEW BAITERIES

•

I 0 A 614 992 6662 0 614
992 7402 evenings

5

Happy Ad s
OLOq l ta lcfllhpald)6 14 246

9448

ACTION
TOWING

949-9070 or
949-2045

4 17 I mo

FREE LANCE

35M
PHOTOGRAPHER
VHS HOME RECORDER
Trand•rs 35mm &amp; 110 Po11

tort II diS Ia YH! Video Topo
•Weddmg s
•Graduatio ns
•Valuables
•Ins Cia ms
•Spec el Events

SOMEONE CARES R VIii 11 de
Chr s l a n Academy hu 19
pa tne • w ng to unda w Ul a

student for half th r~ IIJI on Be
one of the li st new o eh.1 ning
students 10 lake advantage ol
th 1 grea opponun ty C11ll nDw

304 743 8t07 o• 743 3823
6

Lost and Found

Found Medium bf'own short
h• ed dog w th red colla Found
at Hotze Hosp tal Ca 61 4
448 2888 or 814 448 2986
Found on co nt of Sh1 th and
Co &amp;ge St n Sv ecult New

after a 00

5131

7

~81mof

Galllpohs

deacrobed •• follow• Situ

ate n TownshiR of Rutland
County of Me1gs and 1n the
State of Ohio and 1n Sechon
No 26 Town No 6 Range
No 14 and begtnn~ng at the
northwest corner of John
Steen s land at the end ol a
board fence thence north
79 V1 degrees west 1wenty
one rods and seventeen
I nks thence aouth th rty s1x
rods and n ne links thence
north 83 V2 degrees east
n neteen rods and fifteen
Inks thence north th rty

half acres more or leaa
Also another tract of lend
bounded and descrbed as
follows Beg1nn ng at the rods and o ght llnko to the
northwest corner of John place of begmmng conta n
Steven 1 land thence north ng tour and one fourth
eighteen rods and twenty acres
Reference Deed Volume
two I nks to the southwnt
corner of the M•ll Lot thence t09 Page 119 Mag s
north 25 degrees west forty County Deed Recordt
Subject to anghtofwayor
rods to N J Ward a lot m
Langs" lie Oh o thence easement to Oh1o Telephone
north 60 degrees east seven and Telegraph Company
rods and fifteen I nh to recorded n Deed Book 21 2
McKn ght a lot thence Pogo 437 ol Meogs Counlv
aouth ltlong 111d McKn ght 1 Deed Records reference to
lot ten rods to the center of wh ch 11 hereby made
Lead1ng Creek thence south PARCEL SEVEN
The follow1ng deacr bed
63 v, degrtH "" twelve
rods to McKn ght seast lme reel estate a tuated 1n Ru
thence north along tland Townthlp Me ga
McKnight 1 east hne ten County Ohto and bounded
rod.: thence north 64 de and dncr bed as follows
Beg1nn1ng twentv rods
grN~ east thtrty four roda
and twenty lonko to Fronk ant of the center oft he west
Braley a lot thence s outh I neof Secttan No 21 Town
along u d Br•ev •lot to the No 6 Range No 14 ol the
Ohio Company 1 Purch81e
center of the creek four rods
thence foHow1ng the center thence east 11ght rods
of said Cfoek aouth 83 1• thence north 8lt.a degr881i
degr- BMt •ghteen rods wnt one rod thence aut
..,d lourt.- linka thence one rod and mneteen and
-tit 418% degt101 1011 ten two thuds hnks thence
rodl thence south 57 de north 1434 degrees west
three rods and one link
grMI . ., twenty rods
thence lOUth 12 degr- thence north 81 • degren
eat n101 roda •d twenty' west three rods and ftftetn
llnko thence oouth t 2 de link• thence south 8'A dl
II'IH orght- roda gr... 8Mt SIX rods and four
ond twonty linkl thence I nka to the ptoce of bet! n
aouth 41 dog•- woat four ntng contain ng three
rOdl 10 0 high Wltlr mn fourths ecre more or 1e11

CUSTOM
•pLANING
*JOINTING
*MOLDING
VARIOUS PATTERNS
AND WOOD SPECIES
985 4176 or 985 3564
36632 BAILEY RD
POMEROY
325lmo

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Rl 12 4 Pamtroy Ohoo

CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Traarlllllllu
PH. 992-5682
,, 992-7121
6 17 lfc

commerc~al

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

units

lnltollahon al dudwork &amp;

humutif*s furncKI heat
pumpt and oer co...tihon1ng.

•11 w«k -ontMd.
CALl (6141 985 4222
SPECIAL
HEll- Package • .,
conditioning for mob le
or modular homea 2 Vz
or 3 ton units nstallad
on pad &amp; ready to cool

Price $1069 96 pluatox

Addon1 and remodel ng
Roof ng and gun&amp;r wo k
Concrete work
Plumb ng and ehtelr cal
wok

(Free Estimates)

V C YOUNG Ill
992 6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy Ohto

POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

J&amp;N
CONSTRUCTION
Wtll Do
Carpentery - Vmyl
&amp; Alumtnum S1dmg
- Patntma Drywall
Free Estimates
Reliable
Guaranteed Work

PH. 992-2772

Driveway Sa a 1 276ga luel oll
t1nk 2 515gll o I d umt new
1 Ogtl I QUI um 6: ICCtiO In 2

4 28 17 i mo

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phone Billa Hore
r.'lr,.. IUSINIIS rHDNI
(6141 ' " mo
II!IDINCE '"ONI
(6141 "2 7714

992 7638

4-111 mo

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Authorlz.cl S.rwiCt
&amp; PDrts
Bngga • Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homel1te

Jacobson
VAWY LUMBD

&amp; SUPPLY
3

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
Af Reasonallle Pnces

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Ntght

2017

108

W. Matn, Pomeroy, Oh1o

992·3307
TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING
PH.

198 88

toll of evon

bo«les old oouctl end 2 chs a
portable w•sht d shes &amp; ulan
ware man a. women• c othet
6figll el1ct water heatet tank
AI 7 ChHtl re acrou f om the
bllon Stttlon Mev 1 sl 6 2nd
9 8pm Ph 6,. 367 7241
Gar~u• S.la 4 flm ly Apr 129
&amp; May 2 8mi be ow Gtlllpolls
Rt 7 Quit mete at ya n 1
vtrlaty of lema

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4 16 16 till

PSYCHOTHERAPY

ADOLESCENTS

One of ttllt t ltrgnt moe
oonprehansive mtnt•l l1111tl
programt offttlng ground flod
opportunity In 1 new Outpat en
AdoiiiC tnt prog 1m JCAM 1
c edited program offert ch•
enelng teem t ree 1m 11 1
app oechr,qulr ng lhe tollowll J

CHESTS

149 95 RECLINERS

DINETTE/4 CHAIRS

12

199 95
199 95

Months Free Ftnanctng
4 7 87 1 mo

STAINMASTER
WEAR DATED
5 10 AND LIFETIME WARRANTY
ON CARPET &amp; PADDING
E•pert lnstallatton
Up to 36 Months F1nanc1ng Avatlable

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

Hobson Dnve

Mtddleport Ohto
4 16 87 I mo

GHEEN'S PAINTING, INC.

ReSidential - Commerc al - lnduatnal
Free Eottmetes - Fully Insured
AOOFING - Shingln Rolled Roofing Guttoraond In

Aequitt M8W MA or Ml n
Datltvioral Sclencu Cllnlca
PlyChc.. ogy wllh It ..Itt 2 VII 1
post mllllfltllparleneeprlmtr
lly with adolllctntt n lndlvld
ua g oup and fem y 1 etlmenl
Pfeferab y wllh 1 bttan ceeb 11
nradefltl• •

PSYCHOLOGY ASSISTANT I

R.. qulre MA o MS n Clln ca
PsyehoiOIJY plut 2 yeats post
masters "'Pirienna ncludlng
c edenl • ' to tesling Ellperlenct to be w th en ado tlcent
popul11k&gt;n p t ftftbi"W In OUipe
I ant environment w 111 a sub

Pomeroy
Mtddleport

1110" tbUH C tdtntll
A po•H on• offer 1 comptt ttvt
u 1 y And camp ahtnllve b•
neflla A plea11n and potltlve
work envl onmtt1t witt! fulu e
opportun ty Send b let 11ume
In conf dtnce 10 A Wlnwood
Ment1l Haelth Sen,lt:tl 134!5

l!t Vtctntty

Oh o 45604 EEO

FULL MAnRESS/BOXSPRING .... ,....... I 148 88

21'

Mltllleport, Oh

992-6611

EMPIRE FURNITURE

MOHAWK CARPETS
We Carry F lh ng Supplltt

Mllfy 0 B en 0 ecto of Nur1
ng Seen c H • Nurs ng Canter
Monday thru Frld-v

fUll t me potiUon•

Fountain Blvd

lc-

PLUMIING &amp;
161 North Stcontl
Moddttporl Ohto 4S760

good benefits t vllllablt Contae1

CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKE
P8YCHOLOOV

FREE ESTIMATES

4 15861c

46871mo

Pan t me AN needed n 11 n ce

Manlger Traln ... Full Time tll
par encft da1lred Exea enl
wages Good fr nga b11nefi11
Mustben••t c un•llfl Send
reply 10 Boll T 802 C1re ot
Gallipolis Del v Tribune 825
Th d Avt Gallipolis 011

2025 2023 Chat hflm 20, 8 h
r1a Eastern Cerport &amp; yard te le
Ap I 28th &amp; 29th Clothing
houHwl •• furniture

old bath IUb t

HEATING &amp; COOLING
Rtli. .loal and omall

Pool

Nud someone to brulh hog 2
acr11 in Bldwe ar ta Ph
814 448 2101 afte 8pm

Yard Sale

l!t VtClnlty

Roger Hysell
Garage

REPS NEEt:lED

For bu1lnen accounts Full
I me I 60 000 180 000 P ~tt
tm e f 12000f18000No
Soiling repeal b a nl!lls Sel
you own hours T alning p a
v dad C1 ll 1 612 938 6870
M F Bam to 6pm !Ctnt a
Standard T me)

100 bed long 1arm care fie lhy

graes east seven rods and
fiftBBn lmks to McKn ght lot
thence south along
McKmght s lot ten rods to
the center of Lead1ng Creek
thence north 63 Va degrees
east twelve rods to
McKn1ght 1 east I ne thence
nonh along McKn ght s l•ne
ten rods thence north 64
degrees east. twenty three
rods and f heen l1nks thence
sooth 78 degrees and f1ftean
I nks thence west twenty
four rods and fourteen nks
to the place of beg1nn ng
con1a1n ng eleven acres
Save and except another
tract of land sold by Frank
Graham and wife to E M
Brown and bounded and

WOODWORK$

Help Wanted

Office

Oh o thence north 60 de

B&amp;B

11

LO ST Ca eo Cat nam1d C eo

bUnd In one t~ye 304 87&amp; 1 04 &amp;

CAll 7 DAYS A WEEK

2 5 86 ""

Servi~es

and pa k d l ector Middleport M nlclptl Pool App lea
Ilona 8\lallable et the Mayon

LOST in TNT 1 ea female black
1an dog right 111 tatooed
88801 Jeny Hooper 304 8711

992 7632

fiiiiiiOVIIWIII

hub cap Ca 814 992 7080

degrees wast forty rods to N
J Ward 1 lot n langsville

Reference Deed Volume
thence south 4&amp; degr104 Paga 690 Me ga
_ , tltirt- roda ond fif
linko thence IO&lt;Ith Coontv Doed Records
The object of the com
21 Y. •••- 1illttt twenty
pl•nt • to portlt- the
0111 n&gt;tll .... tltort- l01ka
thence north
dogr- Int-I in the t.e 01111o or
- thlrtfeniOdl .... _ ... order it sold to porthlon the
linko 10 the tnd of o boerd pr....- ond to pay lltor
Md COlli from ..d
IInce; then.,. lOUth thorty

Pete

Cocking
clothing TupptrwArfl dlshet
a ectr c u II &amp; ge tleavv a uml
num ltetllt tleclr c 1weep11
Chr 11ma1 eer•m e novtlt 111
va111 gluswtrat new qull11
Ve • Vtn Mt tf Cone 5th 1nd
College Sytacule OhiO M1y 1
Glgant c ns d1 •nd yard 11le er
ttle home ot Edllh W amtOtJ
Seltm St Rutltnd Oh o F
dl'f M•y 1 1nd Stt May 2
9 00 em 1 00 pm Twa bad
oom 1u 11 d nlng oom 1u te
T V ro cke 1 l l tnd leh 111
1mps t:flh mltflrilll me1arlal
for qu ts h lchen emt Call
&amp;14 742 2007 0
2490

614

742

May 1st 1nd 2nd 11 Don R..
et dan ce on Rt 12' M nera
v lie Spon tofld by M nartville
Church woman

sulat ng Roof Coet10g

CARPENTRY- Addot ona GaregH Sun Deck1
CONCRETE WORK- Sidowolko, Baaomenta and Onva
WI'/ I

SIDI,.G- VInyl Aluminum end Wood
PAINTING- All typos Including apace oge m1ulat ng
oelnt

SANDBLASTING- Dry Bloating Wet Bl11tong and
Vacuum Blast ng of ttructurel steel tanka

!HJIIdlngs tnd milcellaneous kems
FOR IIORE INFORMATION CAll 614/ 949 2686
1-lllmo pd

Sp ngf eld

Someone tu care fa elderly 1dy
111 no 1 davsaweek Cooking
&amp; light housekeep ng tqult'8d
C11ll 814 446 0868

ROUTE SALES
Locel food 111 11 ce comp•"v
needs pa 1on to 11 vice et le b
ttled oute1 u wei 11 deyalor.
new cus ome 1 Comptny vah
e e p &lt;tvid&amp;d Hnurty wage p u1
commlu on Mun be High
Schoo G 1duate tnd h1va good
m1th 11t • Send A11uma to Boll
T 829 Cs e of Ge pol 1 T hUnt
826 Third Ave Gall polls Oh

46&amp;3t

Gove nment Jobt •ll' 040
t59 230 yr Nuw h ng Call
aos 687 eooo Ell R 980 5 to
cu eru f&amp;dA a ll at

liey VQ • ht whtl a quallv
en hus es c ene get c pe ton
ke you s haer ng? W&amp;tl we
need peo ple who wtn 10 mall e
betwetn S400 to •1 000 pe
week No p e n lht tlty Th s 1
ee and 1 happen ny now
Whe 1 do you want to be 5 or 10
yu tfr omnow ?Wel a we ctn
Off91' you • opportunity upw1 d
mobil tV comp etet 1 n ng and a
chancelo htve fun while you a e
mall np money Oppo tunttv I•
llnock ng Cel 614 992 6488
a11t fo Mr An hony to Ike e•t
of you f•

n v.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

ney.....
Said delom..
1111111.,....liluthl4 •• , _ _,._
_ .. quired to -

"lmllll YOU TIIERE SAFELr·

rodl...,~linkotoo

lOWEST PRICES ON PASBGEI CAIS
AND liGHT ftUCI niES

-

"*'""
rodl ond

..... hlolf-

••"P'"•
flfl-.....: thence-

.nh

*ALIGIIMIITS *FIOIIT·INI WOII

*llnEIIIS *TIIIIIPAII

ond faur
lrtlao to the ploce of
lleglnn~ conulnong

twMty -

LOCATED MAIN ST RUTLAND OHIO
OPEN 8 8 MON SAT 8 8 FRI
PH 742 3088
Meater Cerci end Viti Welcome
I

(II The health officer may

Town 6 Ronge 14 of the
Ohoo Compony 1 Purchtot

Look who s 18
today
Happy Birthday,
M

compliance with the prov1
s•ona of th11 ordinance

(milt shall be unlawful to

(c) The licence see for one person and then mme

oplratlng a tattoo ettabhah
mont within the County ahall

Public NotiCe

I

rode

nto a_. rew~

28
...,. tho laot pubttca
tlon of thiiiiOioco
GERKEN. GERKEN CO
LPA
Rlohard C Gorlotn

An......,.. at Lt!w
II E-.t II CCI!"d ltflll
t;orlnly
.... - POIIoalll
. . "'"' lloopl the
login Oltlo 43131-0111
tan flll...._
.~u lhd trect
114-3111-2113
lylotJ Ill .... lido "'"'
• . _ . .... l'lelntlll
boundld lnd dal lib1d •
folowl Beginning II tho 141 14 21 28;
til I 12 111 ltc
norUM01t - - of John

SANDY'S
AUTO SAUS

,..............,,
&amp;Senlce

IUIIIUPS to 'IIAHSMISSIOH

W"I·740J&amp;ft

Sl It

u ,_.,

Olt

We'IWY•A

... c.., Fl•
,_OidO..

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR
All

types Carpentry

Plumbtnl and
Electncal Repair 25%
Off for Sentor
Ctt1zens Fr" Est

Call 992·69152
lave mnuae on
machme tf no answer
4-ti-1 mo

Computerized Heanna A1d Selectton
Cl Swim Molds lnterpretmg Servtces

-:i
z

a. 198 s •• two to mal gownt
and mit e F 1nd S11 40
8urd111a Addn

a: LISA M KOCH, MS

:z:
!

Licensed Chmcal AudtO)O&amp;JSt

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Galhpohs Ohto 45631
1-13 tfn

12
Glg~nic

G11age Sate awintmmg
bicyc:lel old quilt tope
IDYl rtlfeo lot• of ,.o Aorl
pool

28

2S 30 Th od

ho.st

ofUt

87 Leon Blden Ad on right

Sttuat1ons
Wanted

�"

Page- S The Daily Sentinei
12

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

S,ituations
Wanted

44

Apartmant
for Rent

54 MiiC. ·Merchandise
HALF PRICEI

Ellm Home 11 20 9 S outh 4th St
Middleport. Roo m and board tor

eldetl&lt;f and hend i·cap. RefMen,
ll&amp;l. 614-992·6873.

15

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now. Southea1 tern Bv s·
ine11 College. Call 6 14-44 6-

LEARN tiOW ··· You can ••nd
your c hild ·to a dlatinctive
Chr i1th1n Schoo l. R ive rside
Christian Academy , Milt on, WV
f()r halt th e normal COli. Call
now 304 -743-8107 or 743-

3823 .

J im ' s odd job• painting, driveway resealing, carpenter w ork &amp;
roo f repair . trees &amp; h&amp;d gl'lt
expe rien ced . Call 614 -379 -

2416.

Mature christi11n men grounds
ke• ping, handv m•n. lttwn care

Ph. 814· 446·2750.

minutes outllde of G1 1Hpolis.
Ca ll 614 -446 -5638 WOfk . or

446-7649 home.
Man to mow gran. Erneat
McKinney. 76 Court St. Call
814 ·446· 3668 .

Financial

• ely too ffiUCh time livm'g
entlf
"
in the past.

Homes for Sala

7 rooms. , 1 1/r bllh, house in
Chestar, Ohio, Pries reducad
hom .:27,000 to U5 ,000. C1tl
614· 98~· 3671 .

'

Middleport, refiniahed. intide, 8
rooms, b1th, large 'PQfch. ger·
1ge. work shop, good IOCitlon.

Coll814·992·2602.

35 Lots

Ashton ~"ding Iota, mobile
homes permitted, Clyde Bowen.

J•. 304·676·233&amp;.

Renlal s

Body Shop Garage fnr sate with
1 t11Her lot. Naed someone to
tllke O'll'er paymtnts Ph, 614·
448-3243 after 6 :00pm.
Grocft'y,end Carry Out Bu 1ineu
tor talf.l In CheSler. Ohio. l o·
c.rted adjacent to Stltl Route 7.
For more Informat ion, call 1·
814·867· 3933 1fter 8 :00 p.m.

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKING .
High profit dealenhlp Potential
IIJal!abe In 3 county are.. No
specific investment. Complate
line of proven energy 11vlng
producu tor the home end small
butine11. Cal! Danny Olb1on at
, ·404-962 ·6691 .

·22 Money to Loan
8500. 00 AVAILABLE FOR
It

you I re intere1ted in sending
vour chitd to an eJII ceptlon•l
sc hool for hall th et:osl . All oth&amp;r
btnetits tree. Cttll now collect
304 ·743-8107 or 743· 3823.
Mitton, WV

Profassional
Services

" A little Design". inter ior d.sign busi nen lor peo ple on
limited budget . In dependently
owned, 3 04-676· 6636 .

RIVERSIDE ACADEMY MAY
BE fOR YOU Apply now tor
1600.00 scholarship Ill Rlvllt·
s1de Ac edem y. Ct ll 304· 743·
9107 or 7 43· 38 23.

Real Eslalc
Homes for Sale

New 38R 2 cnr gerag e. brick
lr o nl , from po•ch, mce lot, 6
rru les

So u t h

ot

O n lll p o lil

047.&amp;00 Ph 614 446·8036,

Twn 11ice 2 BA homes with 2 car
nar age &amp; workshop. 4 .38 3 aeroa
on Rt , 2 18. Ph 614 · 446 ·9686.
• t QOO Down t2 1 3 por mo.
smAll 2 bedr oom house Car pet
&amp; ~t ir c orutil loner• 100' 111 60'
lo t. 6 mllo1 fr om town. 614 ·
446· 8598 9am to 5 pm
3 OR Hou te with 32 11Ct61 !() r
IIIIa. In Eurolla ac ross from th e
dMI . 53 1,900 Ph 6 14 ·448 ·
22 0 ~

4 YtHif olcl IHnl l tl in Marcttrvill e.
Has 3 bedr oo ms. 2 full b111t11 ,
CA. el11ctric holt pump, 2 car
gnrag tt c.mtt Vlllf old, in Henn an
Trece Sc hoo l Dl11tlct . P11Ce In
40's C811 6 14 446· 781 0 .
3 OR Oric ll. 1 '/) b11th1. CA, ll llll r
Hnltflt Medit:lll Cn rum Fenced
in lewn, $48,500, Ca ll 614256·6 26 5
3 Bedroom w1th 111 te c hed gar ·
ll ge, forced ll ir 911, fiiOI)IICD,
hllrdwo o ll fl oo r•. In tow n
U ? .OOO. Ph . 61-1 · 44 6 · 1 171 or

44e·4306.

Mnde rn 3 berfloo m ho mfl lrllme.
Lg. kitchen phmtv of cabin et , ,
ntfr igft'ator, olecHic r ~t ng e. dist1osal , dining room. 2 full bllths,
carpeted. full be1e ment tlnished.
CA . new gas lu rna ce. fen ced In
bad•v•rd. lg . r. arpon. Fhady 10
m0\18 In to . goo d location on
Sun a..e t Or. on Sec;:o nd Av e. Ph .
614 ..U8 · 2573 or U6· 1111 .
For 11le by own~tr : 2 story hou1e
In Middleport O\lertoo king p11rlt .
30 yr. guarnt11ftd vlnyl8 siding.
W•W carpet . , 111J bath, unique
woodwo•k. 614·99 2 -81 26.
Govemm..,t homn fro m t1 .
!U· ,.,.Irl Delinquent till prop·
erty. Atpostesidonl. C1ll 805·

3 bedrooms, 2 cer garage,
basement, 1 ICHIIOt. four milet
from Point Pleannt . priced In
mid·flftiet . Caii304·676·6B36.

32 Moblla Homas
for Sale

curr.m. repo list.
3 BR ., rtclrlldon room, kitchen,
dining room. laJge lron t and
b~ poroh. 8•10 wooden build·
ing. yard wlth chain link ftn ~e.
Rus1ic Hills. lyr1tu11, Oh•o.
01• -941 · 2910 bltWeen 9·
4p.m . 814·192· 5868 after 4:00
p.m ..
For sale IBA, country ho me 20
acrtl t3t . IOO.OO. Chetry
Alctot. ...loa County.
Call

t14 ·H2·7iiO

Llrge hOuu •~•• from Piua

Hut In Pameroy on Loculi St.
Wll ...1 on l1nd Contract.

114·888·3837.
Hou11 tor t~le or trade. M1y
con•id• IINld contr1et . 6 roomt
wttlt bath, 1 Y.! ecres . Call

11•-H2· 7•n.
Hou• tor Mia by owner. 4
bedroOm•. !lYing room. dlnlne
room. kitchen , waah room, bath,
screened porch. See on Fifth St.
in Syrecuta. Call 814 -992·

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. rinch, Rodney Villege lt.
1285 mo. plus deposit. Reteren·
CM required. C1ll Blackburn

Rultv 614-446·0008.

Unfurnished house, 3BR , Rod·
nev VIllage 11 . $275 . Ph , 446·
4416 aher 7PM .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALUPOLIS. RT 3~ .

3 lA r•nch. t300 per month
plus utllitiH. Dep. required. Cat!
&amp;U.J88-8824 after 4pm

PHONE 61 4 ·446· 7274.

Furnished Housa t185 , 2BR .
131 Rear4thA'II'e .. Gallipolil Ph .
448-4418 after 7j)m.

For 1tle by owner, 1979 Buddy
141170, 3 BR , 1 1h beth•. total
tltc. wood 1toraga •htd, wood
7 '1u8. porch. underpaneling,
some furnishings, located lot 4,
Park lene Mobile Court. Call
814 ·448· 3088 after 1 pm.
1984 1·h66 Mobile Home,
3 lots, Rt . 180 11
Evergreen Ph. 81 4·448-1339 or
448·1528.
ft~nced y~rd,

1980 Fairmont Bayview OeluJ:e
141170 turnilhtd, 28ft natural
gil heat, CA. on j)rivlte rented
lot On Rt. 3&amp; Rodney. Ph.
614·446· 7644 .

'

1978 Buddy Mobile Hom•
141165 with 121132 add on ,
wuher and dryer and wood·
burn&amp;r Included. Call 614-4488427 after Spm or 448· 1279,
1983 N11hua 3Dr. in good
cond ition. Caii614 -2S8. 1448 .
PUBLIC SALE
Sealed bids are now being
accepted on • 1983 Flel'twood
1 41116 Mobile Home Serlel
6779. Date &amp; time of Sale; M1y
8. 1987 · 12:00N oon. Bidsmust
be submiUed before date of ule.
Any and 111 bids can be rejected.
The home un be 1een by
appointment only 11 Rt. 1 Boa
lfi4·X, Bla:re r Rd .. Gallipolis.

Oh .

4~83 1.

Ph. 1·600-3&amp;2-

6646.
1976 . 12 .~t 80 mobile hom e lor
sale. t2200. C1ll 614-992 ·
5 9 41.
1974 1 2116~ Eagle. 2 bedroom,
total l!llectrlc. 1 bath. wood slO\II
tmd 2 da cks . C1ll 614-949·
2149.
1 2•60 mobile home with 12.124
addition, sitt ing on 100•200 lot .
• 18.600.00. 304·fi76-7669 .
1980 Windsor 1 4•70. 3 bed·
roomt , 1 •h baths, .tiiC cond,
man¥ euraa, mull move. 304·
89~ · 3048

o• 895·3883.

' 79 Mo bllf'!l Home, 14•70, un·
derpenning . 3 bedro om• .
17 .600 .00. Phone 304· 468·

1174

1978 Holly Plfk treiler. e.ltcellent
conditio n, to tal electr ic, central
air. 36•8 porCh, 2 small out
bu ild ings , 1 · 1611.20 building
with dog pen tttteched to back .
S8ulng on appro• VJ ecre ,
located on J im Hill Rd. 7 mites
from Henderson . Will t1h e used
CAr or truck tr ade ln. Call

Shoestring Ridgt Country
Home, 2BR, lg. li'll'lngroom,
new carpeting. fencad yard.
prefer 1dult1, relarenc" r•
qulrad t100 deposu, 1200 rent.
PlY own utilitlft. Ph . 814-448- .
1758 6pm to 1 Opm.
2 story house for rent. 17 acres,
Rutland area. 1226. per monlh.
Call Jo Ann Stewart et 614·

742·2421 .

Unturnl1hed, 2 bedrooms , all
new paint . Will accept 1 or 2
children. No lnsida pets. Deposit
required. Call614-992· 309().
HouHI and apartmentS far r&amp;nt
in Pomec:oy and Middleport. C1tl

610·992-2403.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Dr tre iler with add on room,
utllitv building, large yard and
garden. refet"ence requastad Ph.

810-446·0282 .

2 Bedroom 58JI14. AC . quiet
neighborhood. Reference a. dep·
o•it r$qulted. Close to Rio
Grandt. Adult• pr•terred. Ph.

51•·245·5B55 o• 4•6·0239.

2 B•droom Mobillt Home, Ref. &amp;
Oep. required. Cell &amp;14·258-

1922.

Treiler 1bove Krogen in Pome·
roy tor rent. Tot•l electric. Call
814 · 992 · 621~

2 bedroom trailer for rent in
A1cine. Cell 614 ·992-6039.
2 bedroom lrailtr, couples, 1
smell child, locust ~d . Rt . 1 ,
Point Plea11nt. 304-675· 1076 .

1986 Ch1mplnn mobile hom•.
Three bedrooms , ••trl ni ce,
I 18,900. Financing •vaileble.
304·676 ·4480

33

Farms for Sale

71 11cres Guy1n Creek 1t Olenwood has well1, springs. barns
Md buildings Ph. 304 ·622·

93 ~tere s . 7 miles on R1. 82 from
Point Plea11nt. Timber, miner·
al l , well, u ptl c. Owner finen c·
ing. t37.200. •4.200 down and
8242 .22 pe r month, 304 ·5215·
63157 .
110 ecras, Leon B1den Rd ..
HouM &amp; outbuilding. Str•em
through prop8rt'f. 304-458 ·

1066.

\'34

Business
Buildings

Commatcial buildings tor least.
Downtown Pt . Pl..unt. Stores,
offices. A-On• Reel Estat1.
Carol YeagM, &amp;role.-. Call 304-

Spaciout Mobile HOme lots for
rent. large reere1tion and picnic
eree, free 101 gi"'e away. 304·

e76 ·3073 ofte• 5:00PM.

304-e16·, 078.

•

47 Wanted to Rent
3 or 4 Bedroom house in Kyger
Creelr. School District. Ref8ren ces Ph. 614-441-8621 ,

Mer ch~nd i s e

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE 62
Olive &amp;1 ., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood· coelstov... 8 pc wood LR
suite 1399, bunk bed• t199.
recliners new &amp;. used bedroom
suitet. wringer W8thera, &amp;
shoes. N.w livingroom auites
1199· 15991 tamp1. Call 614·

446·3159.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appllanc.. and TV sets.
Open lAM to IPM . Man thru
Sat. 81•· 446· 1699, 827 3rd.
A\18. Gallipolis, OH .
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used.
large seellon of qu11lity furni ·
ture . 1211 E.. tern A\1&amp; ..
Gallipolis,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W~1hers,

dryers. refrigeratCHS.
ranges . Sh1ggs Appliance•.
Upplt' River Rd. beside Slone
Crest Motet . 814-448 -7398.

Sofas and chairs priced from
8396 1~ 1996 . Tebtes !1160 •nd
up 10 t126. Hid••·beds 8390
to f695 . Rtcllners t226 to
S376. lamps US to 8126.
Dinettes t109 and up to 1496.
Wood table w -8 chairs t286 to
1796. Desh *100 up to t376.
Mutches t400 and up. Dunlt
.beds, complete w-mattreuet
*295 and up to t396. Babv b1Jd1
t11 0 AI 5175 . Mattresses or bo.11
spring• full or twin t63 , lirm
173 , and t83 . Queenletat226.
King 8360. 4 drawer chest 166.
Drenan $89 . Gun cabinMs 8 ,
10. 12 gun . Gil otelectricrange
1375. 81by mattresses 136 S.
145 . Bed frames *20, 130 &amp;
King frame 860. Good selec11n
of bedroom suites, metal cabinet s. headboards 830 end up
to S66 .
Uud Furnl1ure: wood table &amp; 2
benches. b1ds, I. dre11er. 3
miles out Bulaville ~d . Open
9AM to &amp;PM. Mon . thru S1t.

Acreage

87.49 acr11 with mlnlrel1on At.
338, 1';1 mllot- Ro..ntwood Bridge;. 1515 HNt lwtl.
Good loeotlOn, h• a-t ~·

bllltloa. Coli 114-143,5188.

100 HPmotor, 1tonklad. tiOO.

2 bedr.o om furnllhed mobile
home. 1.t BurdeUt Addn , Pt. Pit.

Set

304·675.e372.

1179.95

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom baalc r•nt t176 .00
plus electri c. Also required 1
$200.00 s8curlty deposit. CON ·
TACT: Jackson Et iAies Dtpt . Ph
448 - 3997 Equal Mou1 ing
Dppot1unlty.
Furnished 6 unlurnishad apt s ..
8160.00 and up , references Ph .
304 · 676 -7738 or 304-676 ·
5104 A· 1 Real Estate,
New ap1rtment : completely
furn . A:ef. &amp; Dep . 1 or 2 11duln
o nly. Cell814· 446 ·0338 .
Spaclous2bdr. lj)t .. C . A.. water
paid. Nur Piu:a Hut Gettlpoli1.

Ph. 614·441·7025.

9• Loculi St. 1 Bit furnished,
ept . upsttirs. 1200 Utmu .. peid
UO dep. Ph. 446 -1340 or

448·3870.

poWer trim; 12 Tenne ..ee
trailar, good cond . 13200. See
belid~ Tri Cou~ Spom ShQp.

Ph. 304-67&amp;·28
76

Ave., G•lllpolis. U21 UtHitles ~
Pd. Ph. 4·8·4418 1fttr 7PM.

740 Second Ave. 1 BA .. t186.
per mo. Deposit r.caulrtd. Call
11.t-448-4222 ba~en 9· 5.

For .. le • Um"tont. 18nd,
gr11vel. till ·dirt, flreWood. Dtll·
\llrtd. 304 -875-4412 .

One lot ttorm windows and
windows. SimpUchy rota ttller 9
hp, 36" cut alec. IIWn mower.

304-676 ·2130.

Hemlock , &amp;' to 6' tightly
she11red. conical shape. ldial tor
landsC8ping. ,Sinta't Forest ."
Evan•. WV , 304-8911-3001 .
Air Conditiqner, 21 ,000 BPU .
3 j)itce m•ple bedroom outfit.
m1ttre11 and box tpring. Sears
sewing m1china. Caii304· 67532C4 after 5 :30.

Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer 1yr.
old '600 . heavy duty. Stove &amp;
ralrigtrator 1 yr. old 1500. Ph .
614-441· 8&amp;21 or 441-4778.
Gpod uHd floor model a.
ponable color TV 's Ph . 446·

1149.

19 Inch Motorole Quasar T.V.
with ttand t100. 8 pc. bedroom
suite with boll springs and
mattress UOO. Call 614·992·
2413 aher6 p.m.

.

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grande, 0 . C•ll 614246· 5121 '
Concr11te blocksellaitet yerd Of
deUvery. Me1on sand. Galllpotls
Block Co., 123'12 Pine Sl ..
Gallipolis, Ohio C1ll 8U·446·

2783.

Ready mix ~onc~ete 1nd 111
concrete suppliltl. Call us V811ey
Brook Cemont and Supplies.

304·n3-6234.

Rough lumber. Oak Ia Popler
• 1 50 per 1.000 by bundle; 20c
by boerd ft . 304-6715 ·4412.

Oallah1n's U1ed Tire Shop. 0'11'tr
1,000tirea. all .. 12. 13. 14. 15,
18, 18.15 . 8 miiH out Rt. 218.
Calll14-268-8251 .
Pintle clttem statt epproved.
plulic aeptic tanks. pluUc:
culvens. mlf•l· culwn1. RON
EVANS EN?ERPAISES. J•ek·
son, Oh. 814-281·1930.

300 gallon sprayer tlinlr. wilheart
and 20ft. booms •295. New

1981 OodQtOmnl•·dr. t1010.
1176 'II Dodge plck·up t1200
Ph. e1 ... 44&amp;-85&amp;8.

ltdg. Spl: 30"-' ldl".

18•8 OW.hud door, S11vlco

Door. t5333 ErectH. Iron

Holllllld 270 hoy -

. wllh

model 50 bsle kielr.•r .
t1 ,2815.00. John Oaera raika
taeo. John De•e Hay condl·
lion• 11380. Call 114-211·

e&amp;22.

MIIMY Ferguaon 65 tractor
with plowt, ditC • cultivator,
corn pl1nt•r. bulh hog tliOO.,
35 Mauey Ferguson DIIHI with
1ft. fin..,_ mower t311SO. Call.

e14·28&amp;.e522.

Vermttr&amp;o• Round Bllltr used
1 HIIOfl fl500 . Ph. 11.· 318·
4x4 Farm Tr1ctor with 500
~ours. PTO. fron1 load•. , Call

e14·446·8910.

19&amp;3 Ford JubiiH TractOr with
plows • diP. Good tunning
condi1ion, MW ptlnt, t2000

Finn. Ph. e14·192·1092.

C111 Mod.. DC·4 TraC1or In
good cond, Wide trontend, 3pt.

hitch t750. Con 2· 141n.

puU

typa plowt t71S.OO. 7ft. Dflg
Disk t78. H•v wagon with
fectory bed and •ld• ntce shap•

t250. Ph . 814·388· H91 oltw

8pm.

Moving: Sala of lr1nd New
Gravely T rector 19 hp. No .
8199-G, Purchaceprlca aeooo.
Aiking
Flexlbl• Call

•eooo

e1•·448·310• .2

Chain IIW ptrtl. supptiel 1nd
repatfs. Sidlft Equipment BalM.
H•ndettOn, w .v • . phone 3M·

D ragonwynd Cattery Kannel.
CFA Himalay1n, Persl1n .. d
Slameae lchtMs. AKC Chow
puppies. New Chow puppiet.

Colle14·446·3844 ofttr 7PM.

e76-7421 .
11 ·tt. 11mdem tilt top tralllf,
304-675·17e9
62 Wanted to Buy

Now buying shill com Of • •
&lt;:orn. C1il torlat ..tquot••· Riwr
City Farr:n Supply, 61 4 .......
AKC Regi1tered Rottwoller. Int.
Ch. Kestanien Baum bloodline

UOO. Mole 3mo. Ph . e14-388·

9364 .

AKC Registered mala Toy Oa·
chund, 11 wke. old. •II shots &amp;
wormed. 1200. Ph. 614-446-

056S.

614-44e·1393.

Registered Beagle Pups. 3mo.
old, 2 male, 1 femalt. t60. each.

Ohlo•5n1 . 814-198·5933.

Wented Rough • Grou• ·.,,,,

3()4.895·3972.
63

... .

ooinor t3000. Ph. '814·448·
UBI.
1914 Chevene42,000mi. Auto,
ok. AM • FM. block • wh~e

Ouroc Boara. lr.cl Jult like the
boare we '"ted 11 th Oh6o
Tllltlion that g~ntd owr 2 .1

Quality Rottweilaf pups, See
bOth parents and pup from l11t
litter. 614 ·693-8489 or &amp;U-

Harned Harliford Buttt.• HeiftrL
C•ttle •• lonv • tall. bc.tlant
mu1ding. Call Jay 114·2&amp;•

69&amp;·1317.

85111fltriPM . IuMrHtra~tord

Farm.

57

Musical
Instruments

PIANO FOR SALE, Wonted:
Responsible party to assume
amttll monthly paymantl on
piano. See locelly. Call m1nqer
11818·234-1308 anytime.

59 For Sale or Trade
Pl•ne ticket to San Diego for

0200.00 Ph. 614·448·0193.

Bently Pit 8tlt Wid. AprM 29.

II

514·379•28~2 .

198• Eicort • ·door. 4· speed.
new pal~tt &amp; tlrta. t2, 700. Ph.

614·379·2882.

1978 Oodgt Aopen, 2 door. VB
auto. Good overall condl1ion.
1 i64 Dodge Dirt COtWertible.
~omplete but ntede tot1l ruto·
rltion. Best offer. 114-949·

&amp;

SONS

19n Pfymouth Voltre. Runs
good. t200. Alto 2 trailer ue11.

UOO. OaO. Ctll 81•· 742·
2452.

1984 Z-28. low mllto, 6 apetd.
AC, PI, PI, CIIHtte plily•r.
18100. 1970. Mont• CarlO SS.

454. naoo. Coli 614-149·
300~.

1979 Tran1 Am t2850 FlAM .
Aabulh ngine, transmisllon,
~ Clutch, PNIIUfl plate,
1hrow Ol.lt b. .ing• .tOO cu. ln.
High Performance. Nelds P1lnt.

304-175·4819.

.1870 ChtrY•II•. 2 door hard lop,
PS, hod. . chrome. .tots whh
IO't on back. Chromt trbtt on
front, 307 tqur btrrell, good

'74 lmpolo.

Nnl good. AM ·FM
Clltltlt. aft•r 4:00 call 304-

e75·1381 .

1627.

S.E. Ohio.

72

"...'"""'"""

taoo.oo.

Trucks for Sale

1971 Chewrol.. 'h ton piclr.·up
truck Ph. 441·3243 attlf 8 :00
pm.

83 GMC hllftoo. 4 opd., 20,000
tctual

miiM. t51500. C.ll

814·379·22•e.
18n Chevroa.t Auto, PS, P8,

350 tnglnt. Call &amp;14·448·
112,.
1113 Dodgt pickup

%

ton.

Excellent condiUon . 187 3
Coachmen Clmper. 21 ft . Good

1 - 01.200.00. I hp Ro·
tlllll' utOd DftO month 0300.00.
304·67t·l123.
1178 Ford CltOO C.O'. elt2
O.trolt. .30 Ito. 13 .......
12,000 F 38.000 R. rB AC.
1t13fNth.,f 40ft. Flot Slid or.
304·112·3235.

4 W.O .

Vans &amp;

1988 Ford 160 Van with delu11e
Sta•cruitlf customiling. Dual
air • hNt. Cl. AM -FM stareo
c....n•. TV • power outt.ls.
hdl PGW'If tNns, bilkers, doors •
win-. 3&amp;1 hlfll outpu~ V·l
engine wtth .._. tlinb • trail•
ptcll-. luutlfvl two ton•
~~~tua1

•aoo ..... ..,.....

leiMIId lyr.

E•·

..,,.My.• Actual

o11,ooo. Ph . .,,..387·7554.

''"II
1Ill GMC Lu'""" C..,_.lon

v... l'luth~n~ortar,tlr.onoM.

Autos for Sele

1110 .c~~ryo~. Flftlt . - : =
.-lon. Ctll 114·441·

., . .,....32

, • .,. - d Pflol -

· Ph.

1112-., GL. .._Or., ........

"'· 11"'441·Ut7- .,_

1110 Ch-. Z·-· ••

2140.

:ti ~ ....,......
1184:1

lit. ....

a.- h....

12.000

.. u.. . o11.dOO. •U·III·
4411.

,... c.-··

toNed.

low - . .•.

ua n-.

Earl was too skinny for the
battleship latloo.

... AN' 1'\NO, AH BELIEVE A H' D RATHER
HAVE BOTH MAH FEET ON TH' GROUND
WHEN THAT GA1H ERIN ' SlORM HITS!

O~E. WE'VE DRIFTED BE -

HIND TH' CONFEDER A.TE

LII&gt;JES ....

'

Ph. 81.·448·9848.

EEK &amp; MEEK
I

ANY OF :t0U GU6 Kt-n.V
1Ht. MEA~!~ CF LIFE. .. .

IN Fa.JR
LE.TTtRS?

(RIC

GE. Spaclaling In Zenith. C111

304-571 .2398 o• e14-44e.
24U.

Fetty Trel Trimming, "ump
removal. Ctll 304 ·876-13331 ,
AINGLES 'S SERVICE , expe·
rl.ncad carpenler. ~tctrlcian ,
muon, N~nttr, roofing fins:lud ·
tng hat tar appUcationJ 30.·

878-2018

Of

875· 7147.

Rotery or cabl• tool driUing.
Moat w.lls comptet:ed ••me day.
Pump '"" 1nd a.mce. 304-

•

896·3802

Concrate finish. parktng loti.
b...mentl · any si1e Job. Santor
Citizen Dl1count, Riclr. Garfiftk:l.

! TH INK 60METHIN~S
WnHMYFROG-.

WRO~

HA5
HE BEEN LIKE'
TH AT";2

Cor. Fourth end Pine

Clollpolla. Ohio

448-4477
84

ot

114·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

•,

R~t a id P. nt htl !'lr co mm nr c•~ l w•r
lng New Sf"t \l ~t:" M rf'p lm , •
lt r:P.ns'lri ,.I J~rt n r.•af1 F•ttm ,,•• . •
frfiP. A•den o"1 f l pr r.. .. 11 1{1rl ' '
s1s 1.1e6 1
:

BARNEY
I'LL DROP BV
SOME aTHER
TIME, LOWEE1V

I'P INVITE

'IOU IN FOR
SUPPER, PARSON,

HAVE YOU •

HAD VORE

OESSERT
YET?

BUT. WE
JUST ET

:;;:::::;;;::::::;=:;;::;: ...
85

General Hauling

----liT.-... .,.,.
......., =" .... ...........
.,_,.
•• .,. ..

II -

-UOO. I'II. tt4tiiiiUI.

•

'YoU

NOfiFIE.D

THt= NEXT OF K IN ':il

ahead to tomorrow's news
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• &lt;IJ UIA T011lgfll
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McConnlck
• (%)

Dillard Wtter ser..,ice: Pools.
Ciltlf'nl. Wells. Otli~ery Anv·
ttme. C111 B14-441-740•· No '
,~
Sunday c:aUs.
'
fll &amp; A Watet Sll"''ice. Hom8 _,. .
cisterna. wellt. poofs filled.
Forn\erty Jem" 8oys Wiler. ' •
Same ret•s. Call lO.t-&amp;76 · _

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8370.

Cortlella'l man find King
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® Honeymooners

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a

e&lt;IJM'A'B'H

. 11:30D(%) l!ll Tonlght'Show
(!) 8pot11Ctnttr (L)
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packed sportt highlights with
Nick Cha~es and Jim Huber.
(0:30)

co...

eo 'T.J. HOOktr' cae LAte

~ -

_,

PEANUTS
87

Upholstery ·

"'

low to form four $lmp le word~.

TilE'!' JIJ5T 5ELECTEV A

WASN'TVOV .. i'M SORRI'...

Night Romano may faC&lt;I
perrna~nt btlndnan,_!'!d his
glrtlrltnd It killed. ~R)
18 M8gnuon, P.t. Holmes le
Where the Heart Is
• (l) LAte . _ 118ntng

"-RiveN
.12:00 III luma anct Allin
!]) lportal.ootc (R)

.e..

~ ~'t:'

Paoplt

(I) ICTV (0:30)

I!DillgnOff

~r

..,..3314.

10) NewaNight Live news
With Patrlcl&lt; Emory and

,

t! · MOO.OI.

Kirsten Lindquist. (1 :00)

~!.

r

. z A M.:....,=-.:;,;-1
EA .
' ,...

"'Remember:· advised tha
scholar, "If you sae ten troubles
.
.
.
.
down !he road, you can be sure
. - - - - - - - - - - , that nine will run into the ditch
p L E G HM
before they you."

I I I I

I

I0

f--T-~&lt;s.;l...::,l~.:;~r'TI--1

Complete the rh uc kle quoted
.
by filling in the mi!sing words
L._.L.-.l._.J_i-..J..-L,....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

e

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

.

A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS '
WI TO GET AI'ISWER

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM-lri'S .ANSWIIS
Craggy - LAbby - Unwed - Wooday - BODYGUARD
Femoua linger: "NoW that you've heard me 11ng, whom do
you aUIIQIIt to eooompany me?" lmpriiArlo: ''Better try a
BODYGOARD."

.

BRIDGE

NORTH
+Q 10
• K 10 S I 2
• 7 6 t3 2

Give it the old
college try

+J

By Jameo Jacoby
When I was a college student in the
1950s, one of the exci1ing events for
asoiri·l~~ bridge players was the Inter·

WEST

EAST

+H862

+H43

••18 3

UT6

• J 10 8 s
· +KS

+9 ·

+A Q 7 3

SOUTH
+AK
.AQ
.AKQ
+lot 8612

c~i'l~~.~~·

championships. This com·
pt
· ended in the late "60s, through
of interest. but it has been recent·
ly revived by the American Contract
Bridge League. Par deals are devel·
oped by a special committee of ex·
perts. and players competing are con·
fronted with the same set of problems
for either East-West or Nort~·South.
Today•s deal is from this par contest.
If you want to try your hand a8 declarer, cover the East· West han4s. After
I·winni·l1g the spade le.!ld, you play A·K
of diamonds. but West shows out on
the second diamond, pitching a club.
What now?
Since there is no time to knock out
three high clubs before the defenders
establish and run their spade tricks,
you must look elsewhere. And your
best chance is to hope for a favorable
heart split and a little something else.
So play A·Q of hearts, overtaking with
dummy"s king, and then play another
heart, discarding the other high spade
from your hand. West Is In with the
heart jack, but you will have nine

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

,.

w..1
Pass
Paa
P11s

Soo1b

2+

Pass

Pass

Paa
Pass

Opening lead:

z+

2 NT
3 NT

+6

tricks if he plays another spade. If he ;
plays a low club, the defenae can take ·
only three club tricks before having•to
surrender. ll's true that thiBIIne worka.only because Eut cannot gain the lead
twice to set ur a diamond trick. but as
a resourcefu declarer, you have to
take whatever you can get. This time '
you 'got a little lucky, but only if you ;
saw the play of three rounds of he.!lrll •
combined with unblocking the other,"
hlch spade.

tlci&amp;aww

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACIOSS DOWN
I Cloy
5 Fastener
9 Not at
home

I Dieterle
counte
2 Cognizant
8 Oaring to

10 Stringent

.

'

'

4 Watch
$ Gennan

12 Superior

or Huron
city
13 Bullet
6 One fanner
If Greek
Sinatra
YelterdaJ'a Auwer
nickname 7 They're
21 Delicate 27 Crewled
15 Good
subject to
color
28 ~endary
(Fr.)
- scrutiny
22 II Duce's
lng
16 The gums 8 Bishop or
movement
hone
17 Oral plate cardinal 23 For a 29 Climbing
19 Traitor 10 Accumulate (cheaply)
vine
20 Out.burllt 11 Poety muse 24 Fry gently 34 "My Gal - 1
21 Tenor
U M~orlty
211 American 35 Windsor
Schlpa 18 Verbalize
clergyman is one
22 He played

Columbo

'·

23 Location
24 Package
26 Shetland

26Powdered
lava
21 Middle
30 Fiddler

...

crab

31Teue
32 Son of HeUII·
33 Tree
.......+-+-decoration
35 RoUed tea h.r-+-+HQet away
37 Sacred
Image

38 Defrost
39 Feudal
laborer
.DAJLYCRYPTOQUOI ts- Hert'l bow to work It:

.filii

AXYDLBAAXR

liD TBA
01 Moneyllne Current

.•

e14·2..·9211.

Ill • (() ®I • 1121

IH)NeWI

•'MAY QUEEN," SIR .. IT

,.

HAVE

m

11n,......,..,4_ Hou•
lmwtona. and ,·
. . -. O.t-11Df1ondup. '
....... AM·I'II fino .11m Lonlor. 104-llB·12•7 or •
171· 1387.
.,..moor t7t·81...

74 Mulviclfclel

MONTI-i .

@I fll Q2l MOVIE: "The Other
Lover' CBS Tuooday Mpvle
(I :40) !;I
a21 Larry King Llvol In depth
interviews wlth top
nawsmakers and celebrities.
9:30 0 (%) i!1J Tho Tortlllla Nick
has problems practicing what
he preaches, and lands In
coun .
10:00 U (l) i!ll Fill Copy Ora wing
from the pages and editors
of America's laadlng
magazines. 1hls special
unlqu81y combines the story
telling techniques of video
and prlnl. Featured segments
Include anlcles from TV
Guide, Los Angeles , Time,
Travel and Leisure. and
Playboy magazln9s.
(l) BetwunGomeo
Ill
Mu H11droom A
power hungry ad executive
schemes 10 gain conlrol of
the network. 1;1
il]) @ Newl
01 Evening Ntwa A wrap up
of today·s news and a lOOk

a (()

110,700 or

''lt-.4--..-----.,...,...

ABOUT A

Plumbing

Phont 114· UI-3118

@I Wheel of Fortune
01 Croaoflre (0:30)
Ill 1!21 1m Jeopardyll;l
® Jaffara011a
. f11 &lt;Il Too Close for Comforl
8:00 (J) Young Robela
U (%) i!l) Madock A TV
cooking queen's ax husband
dies after sampling her
sauce. (R)
[j) 1!J (J] Growing Paino
Carol is ecstatic when she Is
assigned to tutor the school
hunk. (A) C
(!) tDl SHOAH Q
,
iiDJ Cll a21 Alabama ... My
Home•• In Alabama This
celebration of Alabama's hit
songs. lllmad intha
foursome 's hometown of
Fon Payne , re11ec1s the
values of work, love and
smell town America.
01 Prlmanaws Wrap ups of
the day 's woM naws and in
dapth feature repons. (l :00)
(g) MOVIE: The Hun1er (PGI
(1 :37)
fl) &lt;Il MOVIE: Thief (AI (2 :02)
8:30 (I) flJ (J] Sledge Hammer!
Sledge and Dorl are
prisoners of female
bodybuilding terrorlsls. 1;1
100 Club
It (%) l!ll Glmme a Broakl
Nell goes to Alabama to help
save church where her rath-er
was p6stor.
[j) Ill (J] Moonllgh11ng David
and Maddie act out a spoof
ot The Taming or lhe Shrew.

,,oo m

Spring Clunlng Special
l.8t us shampoo vour carpet and
give h that new took. Any size
room onty t1 9.915 per room.
a,... Amtttlcan Floor Care. ?60
First Ave.. GaHipolls, Oh. Ph.

W•tterton's W•ttr H•uling.
- - · 114·742·:1021.
rMtOnablei retn, lmrMdiate
117tChowyLuv.•--· 2.000 . - d.u-y, clottmo.
tt.ao.oo. 304-t75-44J7 or ..-. - · ric. ... 104-171·
171-3314.
2111.

~- ....... Dotl'

tl77 ......

US DOWN , "'1R. BRYAN!'

YES, M4 HAVE , MISTUH

OOP. .. FO' TWO RE ASONS!

Mowing, Prt1ning, tree &amp; slump '1
removal. mulch, 'ltone, till, Ill·
1111, evergreant, rododendron ,

-~-m.mo

1t7t~T·T-1177 ,.., P..IOO - ... w1111

HEY, WE1RE LOSING ALTITUDE~

HAVE YOU DECIDED TO SET

An typu carpenter 6 concrete
work: lntlf'lor, aJtttrior, remo·
dellreg. palntine. roofing, free
eatimatn. C1tl 814-4411 -8174.

--.
.
.
··-400
...... ·-·.....,...,.. -----w•h•.•.AM·I'II.M.-.

ALLEY OOP

114·448·7441 .

cot1 tll,040.70 will IIIII ID&lt;

I' 11"·1"'''

~ ··

44t-0294.

2y•. old P"" ThofGuallbrod Port

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

)HI E:t..P, ~Ui iHE:f?F
1.) A 1-lff:iiMt:'

SWEEPER end nwlng m.chine
rep1lr. parts, and sUpplies. Pick:
up and dalivery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgn Cr"k Ad: Call· 614·

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

K..-tov. 304·811·110e.

..

NO SAFETY

,.

Unconditional ' IHetime guaran·
tee. Local rtf•encM furnished.
Free estimates. C111 collect
1-A14·237-IMB8. dav 'or night.
Roger• Ba1ement
Wlterprooflng.

'10 Chovy tNCk 327. 4 .......

Sold ..., /"' ult. O.Ktlb ond

THe~~~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

thfM QUerter ton, t700.00. '84

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

....

1-:------:-Cutlan Salon. 4 RON·s Tele'll'ltion Serttice .
good, 280 v.a HouM c:tll• on RCA. Qunar.

1971 Olft
door, runt
uglne, 72.000 mil ...

Ill(() Judi~•

GLJA~ANTES.

&amp; Heatlpg

CENTER . SR 31S W. O.IHpolil,
Ohio. Call 114·448-1777, eva.
114--... 3612. Up front triCtofl wh:h ,.arf8ftlv owr 40 uM
tflctora. 1000 toola.

SNAFU®by Bruce Beattie

'

FRANk AND ERNEST·

Home
Improvements

B2

814·288·e451 .

M.. MY Farguaon. New Hollen d.
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; Service. 0vlf
40 usad tra;tors to chooll from
• compftlte line ot new • uM
tqulpment. Larg11t ,..actton in

81

2693.

73

CROSS

(!) NHL Hockey
(1) Major League Bueball

,.

point, t 1.410.00. 304 · &amp;71·
.181.

Registered Ouaner Horse Sorrel
Gtlding 18 h1nch. 8yrs. old.
IXCtflant for • ·H Ph . &amp;1 4-446·
42215 1ftar 5pm.

,

Stat off•· 814·149·2193.

Rtmamber the ChampiOn Iarrow at the Ohio ltat•
Fair Junior Show w11 purchiHd
II 1111 y.ar Mia.

c.n

ill &lt;Il M' A'S'H
7:30 U (%) (I) Newlywed Game

Serv i ces

1871 Chevy .,.ckup 380. 1uto,
PS. no rutt, nict ttuek, 2 lone

a•od• .,.,.. t100.
810·379·2110.

gB'amay Miller

•:
;
1
1
1

'79 Cougar XR7, ntw paint. ...
rebuilt engine no miles, nice car.
$~e,rns Garage, 304~ 875- 7719 ··~
or 675 ·1749.
·
t

""'"' Rog• hntlw Ph. 51 3·
884-2388. Ltroy Laorick. Rondy

Applloa11 Bucltlllift M8N ldd
to Re9. Artbitn ltaiNort t410.
Reg. pure bred ~ ltallon
Nndint at ltud, ...... Mlfll

•:
l

1986 Full size pop-up, slide in
truck umper Ph. 8 14-44&amp;86~~ aft., 7pm.

814·981·4484.

LIVI!.IIIII'&gt;

61 Farm Equipmant

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

condition. C.lll14-181·3353.

•~eo.

r 1rn1 SuDplil's

.- - - - - - . ' I

7 :30 PM. Fav-n• County Fairground• Waahinlton Court
Houot. Sllllntl 1 0 hltd of
Duroc'1, Hamp-Duroc. HempYork. 81rrow1. Gflt1. Con·
Qu~l..,. ,

l'Vt AlWA'I~ 1\IOUGHT
A.V.ERICA WA'; PRETI't'
GREAT.

lntll'lor. ShlfP 02,700.. Ph.

304·57e-2941 .

Live1tocl!

Ph. 814-245-9678.

2 bedroom apt. for rwnt in
Pomeroy, U.0V. Cit wesh. Ctn
e14·tl2•t211.

..~

Auto Piflrts

26 ft. nt•n motor home, completely telf· contalned, gen••·
1983 Dodge Coh eure good ' lor, slaeps 8. tB900. 'Cell
lh..,e. 2•.ooomi. For 1111 by 614·448·0008.

Wanted to buy granda logs
delivered to uwmlll. Paul
Mercer Sawmill, McArthur,

lbo. P11 doy. R011lr llontlty,
SobinL OH. 513·114·2311.

U15. lnehHflng uiiNtl". C.ll
81.·H2·nl7. EOH.

1---------1 hdroom .-.mant Middl• ,

1955 Chevy 17,000 actual
mil•. 100% OriginAl, excellent
condition. Ph. 11 4·448-7050
betare 8pm. ,

1981 01111 Otho 81, _.,

.....

Registered English Sprlng•r
Sp1niel Pups. Excellent hunting
stock. F. T. Championi Did &amp;
Grandparents from England Call

01'8eioua tfvlrlt. 1 and 2 hd·
room apartmentt It Yllegt
,._.,, lnd AioHfttdt Apert•
m. .u In MlddlatJDrt. From

----

.•.

Ph.• 81,..3a8-8886
offer I 6pm.
. '
.

selta. l)owlf' bt'lktl, power
ltllrlng, lilt,and crwl11. AM -FM
tape. Ctun. llka ntw lnter6or.
~on - •mokert car, 304-451 ·

Pd., 18A. 243JichonPikt. Ph.

..

'•.

Good condition f2196.

298S.

Fumlthod Apt. 0240. UtHhl•

--- ·- --

SOCI AL WOI'.I&lt;EI'.
5A IP A l-OT OF RlilolAWA'I5
l-IV e; IN THIS PLACE.

!~,?&amp; . lincoln To~n car neW
...,ng, ntw vinyl ~. new

cood, 0700.00. 30&gt;4-451·171 2.

U.S . 31 W•t. JICitton, Ohio.

54 Misc. Marchandise

HorH Bldgo. e14·332·97•5.

-o.

Utl~y

9832.

3 rooms ,&amp; bath, stow •
rtfrlgerltor tumlahl. U1llltl ..
Pl!id. No chitdren. no pets. Ph.

mDDth. Colll14·•t2·8713.

.

T~AT

304.n3·5397.

2 S. 3 BR . unfufnitNd IPirt·
m.,ts. 1nd 2 BR . furfalshtd
ap1rtmant. Call 114-44A-0284.

po&lt;t. til u - pold. f210 poo

s.

11

&amp; .A cceasorias

Fu•niahod Apl. 1BR. 701 Fourth I ==========:J,i;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;==~ 71

In

'

•

'78 lea 81er 90 h'p Mercury,

Sof1. coffte ' teblei •nd 2 fnd
tables. excellent condition:.
Phone 814·992-8111 .

··6·441&amp;.

&amp;

6:00 (J) Big Valley
u (%) (I) I!J (I) ®I Cll 1!21
1!1J News
(!) SporlsLook (T)
(1) Leave 11 To Beaver
(!) Squara One TV 1;1
t1]) Sacral City
1Bi Facts of Life
Ill &lt;Il Ollf'rent Strokes
6:30 U (%) i!l) NBC Nightly NtWI
(!) NiiA Ti&gt;d•y (T)
·
(1) Down to Earth Stereo .
(I) Cl (() ABC Newa£;1
(!) Nightly Buslnau Roporl
@I Cll a) CBS News
tDl Colorsounds
01 ShowBiz Today News of
tho entanalnmant world Is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
!BI WKRP In Cincinnati
fl) &lt;Il Hogan's Heroeo
7:00 (J) Hardcastle and
McCormick
U (%) PM Magazine
(!) SporltCentor (L)
(1) Sanford and Son
[j) Entet111nment Tonight
Ill(() People's Courl
lii t1]) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NowtHour (1 :00)
®I Nawa
01 Monoyllne Currant
reports on world economics
and flnancl61 news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill a21 1m Wheel of Fortune

·•

C.ll f14·378·1331.

61 4·445·0322 .

Bunk Bed whh Bunk•- 1199.96
New Ch•t· 848.00
Ntw li'll'lng Room Suite• ·

2535.

Furnlsh..t 8r, for rent whh
prlvlte bath Ph. 814· 441 ·2041 .

35 Lots

Bolton Wh..., Boat for ulil. 14

For 111e. Reilrold ties. Y.ou pick
up. 15.00 each. l14-t$2-24?8.

tiM
bt·

EVENING

7010 aft« 5:00p.m . or anytime
Sirnday.
·

8 Gun Solid Walnut GunCebinat

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Two b8d room 1raller. adult a,
dtposit required . 304 · 675 -

747 lnddutlrillltorqa 12 toot
O'll'ef head door. 3 ph••• of
electric. 18x48 steet building
614 - 4•1 · 2382 For
appointmant.

200 Mtln St. Pt, Pl., WV.

25 n. pontooo bOot w~h 25 HP
motor and 1rat1er. C.l' 514-992·

·Ctll 81.·448-2729.

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled wordo

TUES., APRIL 28 M

•

ft .• go.,nment 1pproved. !JP to • ""

55 Building Supplie•

Parsons Furniture
14Hii Eastern A'll'enue
Mattress &amp; Box Springs· 899 .96

614·448·2193.

Reataurant I TIV.,n for .. lt.
lntttiiNid parties wri1elox P23
In c•• of Pt . Plaaunt A:egi•ter,

1·0 . 110 hourt. One own..- tit:

7·9 PM Ph. 614-448-3538.

S450.00 Ph . 304·a75-7109.

304·e75·1900.

676·5104.

Viewing

N.;g--.J Rd. Ph, 614·
446-8291 ..... 5:00.

Comfort · Air •ir condi1ionlf'.
18.000 BTU. Utod 8 tlmea. Colt

Sp41ct tor small . trailers. All
hook·upt. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms , air and cable. Mnon.
w .va. Cel1304·n3-6861 .

1916 ,

20 acre ftum H1nnan Trace
Ro ad. Glenwood. W. Va. for
more informat ion call 304 ·773·
6118 or 773·6186 1fter 6:,0 0.

- - - - - - - Edl11d by CLAY l. POlLAN

1913 Thu-&lt;~ft . 17' 120 h.p.

1600. Ph. 814·448·714• .

Gun Repair~, hot rablu•
COUNTRYMOBILEHomeP•k. · Tony's
Route 33. North of PomlfQY· ing . Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM.
Coli 304·676-4e31 .
Rental treilers. Call 614-992·
7479.

Small house. located Rt. 36 near
Beech Hill. t160. per month.

44

Boats end
Motors for S•le

for Attorneys, Accountant, etc.
Close to Court Haute. Call
Wiseman Real. Ettl}e Agency.
614 -448 · 3644.
.

3 badroom trailer Plymale Road.
G•llipolls Ferry, 304-176· 3893.

304·&amp;75·4848.

687·5000 ht, GH .-9805 lo•

2239.

27' 1o...,... bycvcle good
'condition .t80.00 ·Can between

Spece for rant , uailer sp11ees,
Locust Ad, At. 1, Point Plea11nt.

458 · 1 875 . " No Realton
Pleue" .

I NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8ltSH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do butineu with peo ple vou
ltnow, end NO T to un1tl'honey
through the mel1 until you h811e
i n'll'tl~~etfld the offering.

31

&amp; Acreage

Portland mail rolltl!l, mineral•
with flee g11 , good building
sh,s . Hunters per•dite. t400 .
per •ere. C•ll614-s-3· 6186 .

St .. Pt . Pit 130.000.00. 304·

Business
Opportunity

'

•eras on Grimm Rd.,

100

-75

Offlc.e Space fo• Rent. hcellont

";;;:~;=~~;=~~~~~;:;==:;~~~~~~~

3 bedroom house. 2110 N. Main

23

45

Mobile Home lot t'llnt 5ubdiYi·
slon, wooded, concrete pad,
county waler aYIII•ble Ph . 814-'
246·5856 or 446·0239.

"My problem is, I · spend

Plano Le non• in my home, tive I 31

CHRISTIAN EDUCATION ...

Unlden IOQO SttfK Set..ltt.
System, fulty rwno11 control.
Bft. solid dish, 1yr. okl Priced

46 Space for Rent

18 Wanted to Do

21

APARTMENTS . mobile homea.
houtes. Pt. Ple111ntand Gallipo·
lis. ~14 - 446 - 8221 .

Furnished room. 5100. Utili1iet
paid. Shira ~ath . Single mala.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
448-44181fttr Jpm.

KIT 'If CAIILYU ~ lMr, Wright

onow

"gns t299f LightM. non·emM"
U891 Unlighted UUI F...
lt«tftl Ste'lociMy. Call t ....l
Factory:· 1 (8001 423·0113
an'(tlma.

Aooms for rent. day . week.
,m onth, Galli• Ho1al. Call 814446-9716. Rent II lOW II t120
month.

4361.

flo~

1 bedroom fumiahed apanmant.
Pri'll'eti enua-nce 1nd parki.ng.
Deposit and retlftnee. No pe1s.
Phone 614 -992 -6942 afler
6;00 p.tl) .

Furnished Rooms

·~~~~~~~8~,21~9~87~------------~------------~P~~~~o~y~M~i~dd~I~~~~~O~hi~o~~;---~r---~::::::;;~;=T~oo~~~s;ent~ioo~l;;~~~ ·:
BORN LosER
Television
'~~:t:~' S©~(llA-~~trs· ::::

Tuesday, April 28. 1987

II LONGFELLOW
· One letter standi for another.ln till&amp; sample A is used 1
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoltrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•
,

CJlYPTOQU&lt;YI'E

4·28

WB

NMXW

OS

XZQ
'N S

WR

NMXW

OSHBDS

XUS

OSHBDGZK

B Z VJ

XU S,

N S

szQ

HXEXOVS

GL
B T

BT
W M S

VGTS

''
"• •'
.'

''

-U . V .

LWSRSZLBZ
YeaterdaJ'• Cryptoqaote: THE MAN WHO WAITS

FOR SOMETIIING TO TURN UP FINDS HIS TOES DO IT
FIRST.- ANON.

''

�I.

-

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 28, 1987

,...--Local Briefs:-Horse.'. hoe tournament scheduled
.

The Meigs Cou nty Hor seshoe Cl ub Is sponsor ing a six- man
card tournament on M ay 9-10. $8 registrat ion fee. Contact Jeff
Ti llis at 742-2243 for informat ion.
•

Name unintentionally omitted
Th e Chester Elementary School announces that the name of
Amy Smith, a third grader, was u nintentionally om itted fr om
. Its fourt h six weeks gradi ng period honor roll .

Ambulances respond to 4 calls
Meigs Coun ty Emer gency Medical Ser vices reports four cal ls
Monday : Pomer oy at 11 :07 a. m. to Kerr St ree t for VIrgini a Will
to Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy at 1: 14 p.m . to w·el shtown
Hill for E leanor Redman to Holzer Medica l Center : Middleport
a! 6:56 p.m . to South Th i rd for Audrey Davenpor t to Holzer
Medical C&lt;;'n ler: Mlddleporl al 6: 59 p.m . to Watson Gr ove Roa d
fo r Carnell Va nce J r . to Veter ans Memor ial Hospital.

Honor class years corrected
Honor class es for the 50t h Al umni Ba nquPI and Dance of
Chester High School wil l 1922, 1927, 19.12, 1937-, 1942, 1947, 1952,
1957.
Th e banquet and dance wi ll be hel d Sa tu r day, J une 6, in th e
Chester School Audi tori um . Banquet Is at 6:.10 p. m . and th e
dance is at 9 p.m. Music by Kount ry Ku stoms I I from Glouster.

Free clothing day planned
F r£'e clot hing day at the Pomer oy Sal va t ion Army will be held
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. All ar ea residents in need of
clothin g are welco me to come.

Chapter plans inspection practice
Racine Cha pter 134, Order of Eas tern Star, wi ll hold
Inspec tion pract ice 2 p.m . Sunday. All officers urged to attend .

Entry deadline Wednesday
De&lt;J dllne Is Wedn esday for entering the Mens' A.S.A. Class
C&amp;D So ftball Tourn am ent lo be held Ma y 2-.1 at Middlepor t. The
lourn &lt;J ment Is being sponsored by Bra dbury PTO and all
proceeds w ill be used to pur chase a scoreboard for th e schoo l.
l"l r st. second and thi r d place tro phies wil l be awarded. For info
ca ll 992-6R90 or 992·267:1.

Organization to meet Thursday ·
Wil ling Workers Class of En terp r ise United M et hodi st Church
wil l meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at the chu rch.
'

Pomona Grange meets Friday
Meigs Count y Pomona Grange will meet for pot luck supper
F' rld ay, 6: :JO p.m .. at the Ror k Spri ngs Gra nge Hail. Athens .
Co un ty Gran ge members will be gues ts. Regular meeting w ill
follow the supper· at about 7::10.

Church plans yard sale
Hazel Communll y Church Is having a ya r d sa le Friday and
Sa turd ay . I n Rac ine, follow sig ns on Ohi o 124 from Southern
High Schoo l.

Fel lowship ChurTh of Rac ine Is hav ing a hy mn sing Sa turd ay,
7 p.m .. feat uri ng Ru ssell Spencer 's Victory Quartet. Pas tor
Char les Bush i nvit es the public.

·

Marriage l icenses have been issued in Meigs Count y Pr obate
Court to Randa ll Cr aig M att hews, 33, Mi ddleport. and Sa ndra
Sue Sargent , :17, Mi ddleport: T immy Rae H ood, 27, Pomer oy,
and E lizabet h .lean Welsh, 211, Mi cldleporl.

Divorce action.&lt;; filed
Divorce ac t ions have be&lt;• n fl ied In Meigs Coun ty Common
Pleas Cou rt by Pa mela M .•Jude, In care of Southeas tern Oh io
Lega l Servlcl's, Athens, from Ji mmle Jude, In ca r e of t he Meigs
Co unty .Jai l, Poml'rov: a nd by Phil ZedeKer . Ml ddleport, .from
Tammy Zecl rker. Mi ddl eport.

Boosters plan uniform

sail~

The Meigs .lutli or and Senior High School Band Boos ter s are
hav ing a sale of old band un iforms on May 8·9 a I the Middlepor t
Pa r k. Anyon&lt;' interested may purc hase an entire uniform for

$2o.

Darlene Hicks

She was employed by · the'
Pleasant Valley Hospital 'for 25
years, the past 19 as an LPN. She
was a member of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saint s, Gallipolis.
Pr eceding her in death was a
st ep so n, Cl are nce O ' D ell
Sturgeon.

Darlene Hicks, 52, 2i0 Maple
Apartment s, Pomeroy , died Sunday at Veter ans Memorial
Hospital.
Born June 29, 1934, a daughter
of Ruth Jackson Hughes, New
York City, N.Y., and the late
James Hughes. Mrs. Hicks was a
Surviving are her husband,
homem aker .
Geor ge M. Gill; a daughter , Mrs.
Surviv ing in addition to her
Ronnie (Betty) McCoy of Glen·
mother , are three sons, Montie A.
woood, W.Va.: fi ve stepdaugh·
Hughes, Char leston, W.Vq.; Carl
ters, Kat hy Boster of Mount
Hughes and Gregory Hlcks, both
Sterling, Linda Stanley. of South·
of Pomer oy: three sfepdaughside, W.va .. Ciqda Stalnaker of
ters and six stepsons. Also
Poin t Pleasaftf,' Tina Elkins of
surv ivi ng ar e 14 grandchildren
Ches hire, and Reba Mae Rogers
and two great -gr andchildren.
of Gar den Grove, Calif.; two
Bes ides her father, she was
sons, Harold Sturgeon of Nitro,
preceded in death by her hus·
W.V a., and Wi lliam Sturgeon of
band and a brother. She was
Poin t Pleasa nt : two stepsons,
a ffi liat ed w it h t he Baptist
Gale Richar d Gill of Point
Chu rch.
Pleasant , and Dor sal Stu r geon of
• Services will be held at I p.m . "Columbu s; three broth er s,
Sa turd ay at th e Ewin g Funer al
Henry L. Pierce of Point Pl ea·
Hom e wit h Rev. Edwa r d Buffing- , sa nt. William R. Pi erce of
ton off iciatin g, Burial will b&lt;? in
Geor gia, and Walsine Pierce of
M e i gs M e mor y Gard en s.
Bar bert on: 29 grandchildren and
F riends may call at the funer al
sever a l great -grandchildren.
home from 6-9 p.m . F r iday.
Services will be Thursda y at
1: 30 p.m. in the Wilcoxen F un·
Elizabeth Gill
era! Home, Point Plea sant, with
President E lder R.W. Keaton
Eliza beth t SturgJ Gill, 60,
offici ating. Burial will be in
Letart, W.Va., died Sunday in !he
For es t Hill Cemetery, Letart.
Univer si ty of Kentuck y Medica l
Friend s may ca ll at the funeral
Center, Lex ington, K y., after a
home after I p.m. Wednesday.
short ill ness.
Olden A: Thaxton
Born Sept. 26, 1926, at Point
Pleasant, she was th e daugh ter
Ol den A. Thax ton. 82. of
of the l ate William F. and Levi a
Racine, died Monday at Veterans
Maggie Elliott Pi er ce.
Memor ial Hos pit al.
A farmer and construction
worker . he was bo rn Sept. 29,
( i\s of' 10: 30 a.m.)
1904, in Char les ton . W .Va . He
Provided by
was a son of lhr late Edward
Bryce and Mark Smith
Scott and E liza beth Archibald
of Blunt .Ellis &amp; Loewl
Thax ton. He was a m &lt;?mb&lt;'r of
Apple Grove Methodis t Church
Firm
Pric e
and a veteran of World War II.
Am Elect ric Power .... ......... 27¥,.
Survivor s include hi s wife.
AT&amp; T ........................ ....... 24%
Ro
ber ta Sayr e Thaxt on; one
As hland Oil ... .:... ..... .. ... ..... 58!!,
sis
ter.
Leopha Wagner, Ci rcleBob Eva ns Farms .............. 24!!,
vi
lle;
one
nephew and his wi fe,
Charm ing Shoppes .. : ..............2!i
Mr. and Mrs .. EdwardJ . Wagnrr,
Feder al Mogul... .... .... ......... 41 ~
Ci
rc lev ille; anoth er neph ew,
Goodyea r T&amp;R ......... ........ ... 60
To
m Je f fr ies, of Quaker Cit.v:
Heck's Inc ....... ....................... 4
and
one niece, .Joan Goeglein, of
Limited Inc . ........... .. ......... .4 1'Y.;
Ci
r
clevil
le.
M ult imedia Inc . ..... 1............ 53~
Bes
id
es
his par ents. hr was
Rax Resta ura nt s.................. 5%
Robbins &amp; Myer s ......... ......... .12 preceded in dea th by one sister.
Blanche Jeffri es.
Shoney's Inc ................ .. ... 28\;,
Graves id e services will be :1
Wendy's fntl. .. ...... ..... ........ .lO Y.,
p.
m.
Wednesday at Letar t F'alls
Worthington Ind... ........ .. ... ..l7%
Cemetery with Rev . Roger
Grace officiating. Friends may
ca
ll 7-9 thi s evening tTuesdayJ at
A r umma ge sale w ill be held
Ewin g F unera l Home.
F'rlda)' and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4

Daily stock prices

shuffleboard areas. Wiring at the . hauled approximately : 20 tru~k~
loads lnlo the park A donation a(
park will be .under ground .
The park wiH be well lighted. flowers for beautification . of tilt,
Both.McDade and Lloyd r eported town from Don, Roger arid ThQ.' ·
lind the new contract , at the same mas HUI o! Letart was also aC:·
,
. rates as the previous contract, knowledged.
wlll Include the new park
Horton repor ted that the Mid:!
lighting.
dleport Chamber of CommerceHorton thanked the two repre· has been ver y cooperative
sentalives for the company's working t owards the develop-:
help In a st udy to determine the ment of the Diles Park. Fencing..
most effective lighting for the Is now being i nstalled, th~
park and for the Improved grounds ar e being leveled, light-:
lighting throughout the tow n.
rng has been planned and flower·
Mayor Hoffman was autho· beds w ill be featuredd in corner •
rlzed to advertise for proposals of the new park. Horton said tha'
from per sons Interes ted in secur · the im provement to the old trai~
fng the former Empire Furniture station and a jogging pat!C
lot on North Second Ave nue.
plann ed by the (own will tie In'
Middleport ha s an economic witb the park development pr~
development grant for the pro- gram . The goal is to have thC:
ject and proposal s ar e to be park completed by . the end of·
either In the direc tion of a tea r May.
:
down of the furniture building
Councilman Gilmore said that:
which was burned ou t or a Lor i K llnger, director, ha s au tho~
renovation of the remaining part rized the Meigs High SchooiBand:
of the str ucture. The property to appear in Mi ddlepor t at 1:t
cannot be sold since it is being noon on July 4th for a concert In·
secured th r ough an economic the park. Gilmore slated that he.
development grant. Council will is hoping to have evening enter-·
m ake a decision on who will tainment at the park precedlnR;:
receive the property on the basi s I he fireworks display. Middle-:
of the Impr ovem ents and help por t firemen have cqtnpleted the;
that would come to the commun· necessary school for setting off,
ll y through the , proposal they the fi rewor ks and the necessary=
deem best.
permit has been secured.
:
M ayor Hoffman r eported that
Coun cilman William Walters!
the Meigs Count y Commis sion· reported that new swings are;
er s have agreed to pay $3,500 needed at Hartinger Park wil hi
toward the 1988 operat ions of the Mayor Hoffman indicating that:
public transportation system attempt s are being made to:
which is the Blu e Streak Cab Co.
secure them.
Pom er oy Village did Rot agr ee to
Other s. aliending the meetlngi
pa y any thing on the 1988 cos ts wer e Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck;
and as a r esult a small incr ea se and Councilmen Jack Satterfielch
in th e cost of far es m ay be and James Cla tworthy.
·~
necessar y next year , the m ayor
stated.
A letter fr om Steve Powell of
I Con t jnued from Page 11
the Meigs County Economic
should be directed to the Meigs:
Development Of fice wa s read
Count y Hea lth Department, 992-:
Inviting Middleport representa·
6626, or the family doctor.
lives to attend a Southern Ohio
busin ess rel ent ion and expansion
meeting to be held in Marietta.
lt was reported t hat Lloyd
Bl ackwood and Dick Newell have
almost completed their survey
on the use of utilit y poles for the
Ohio Extended Forecast
development of a v illage·
Thursday through Saturday
oper at ed ca ble television system
Mostly cloudy in the northeast·:
and they will have all of the ern part of the sl al f' Thursd a y ~
Information available for council
with fair weather elsewhere
by the fi rst meet ing in May.
th rough the period. Highs wll(
Village offici al s hOP£' tp replace
ra nge from the mid 50s.to the mltJ.:
th e ca ble television ser v ice now
60s Thursday, in the 60s Frida:,&lt;o
provided by th e Consolidated
and from the mid 60s to the mit{
Communications Group of Point
70s Satur day. Overnight lows wilt
Pleasant.
r ange from the mid 30s to the mitt
The mayor acknowledged a do40s Thtirsday and Friday morn-"
nation of dirt for the DUes Park by
lngs, and in the 40s early
Jay Hall and Jerry Hall who
Satur day .

1n:

Veferans Memorial
Mond ay Admiss ions - John
Ash, Middleport: Bill Kennedy,
Pomeroy: Beat r ice Ralrd en,
Hartford , W.Va.: M ary Wallace,
Middlepor t: Ca rnell Vance,
Ches hire.
Monday Disc har ges - None.

Southem

u~$
ON EVERY NEW FORD TAURUS AND RANGER.
JII.IJ6~S. . .MIH
.,.,_,IIIGW'fGFF

10FTHE1'0P
10 CARS OF THE YEAR FOR 19871
ACCOAOINQ TO CAll &amp; OIINfll IIAGAZIIIE

FORD TAURUS ,

$1228~-·

$400 CASH BACK
•101 MORE .

OR

April 29th. 30th &amp; May 1st, 1987 ONLY!

Buv AReel At Regul•r Price And
Purchase A·Rod Of Equal Value
or Less For
1/2 Price
or Buv Anv Fishing .Rod At
I

.

25°/o Off!

Daily Number

206
PICK-4
9113

•

at y

Vot.36, No.251
'Copyrighted 1987

PLUS

SAVE

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

wntn you buy - ' " Equlpmonr - • Z(N.A

on T.urul GL.

·--· :

•l.fL..,_CU:,_It

• 11111111 ........

. Jtl . . . -

.....
_
...._
____ _
. ,._. . . . _ . . ,....,_ ...
• fllli'7W I M. . .

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

· ...... 111 ••.., ......... . , _ .........

~bt~Mdon~t~l'lltll prad,_.....

*· A ~IOihtpu of .....

FORD RANGER

$639~-~.

OR

ssoo·

CASH BACK

~V: Aa•
$1311

--

MORE

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 29, 1987~

• S&lt;IOng .... -

•Swi1g·.....,,....,.
• Tlftltd Gla$s

Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp. shar eholders approved by
a mar gin of more than 9 to I an
agreement with Al an E . Clore,
the company' s lar gest stock·
holder , that will r eor ganize the
corporate stru clure of Kaiser
Aluminum Into a holding com·
pany form of ow ner ship, accord·
ing to a news rel ease issued by
the company tod ay. Final closin g
of the transaction Is expected to
be accomplished with in the nex t
two days.
Kaiser Aluminum, which has a
plant In Ravenswood, W.Va.. will
continue as the operating com•

pany and will become a subs! diary of KaiserTech Limited, the
new holding company. Present
holder s of Kai ser Aluminum
common stock automatically
will become holders of Kaiser·
Te ch common stock. It Is not
necessary for shareholders to
surrend er the Kai ser Aluminum
stock certificat es they or their
broker s currently hold .
Effective at closing, Kaiser·
Tech will r eplace Kaiser Alum!num as the publicly listed com·
mon stock. As was the case with
Kaiser Alum inum , K qlserTech
common will be listed on the New

York, Midwest and Pacific stoc k
exchanges and will use the same
' KLU " ticket tape symbol that
has been used to identify K aiser
'Aluminum common stock.
Kaiser Aluminum 's variOIJ,'i
series of cumulative convertibl e
prefer ence stock, $100 par value,
will continue to b&lt;" out standin g
and will use KPF as the ticker
tape sy mbol.
In a separ ate vote, holders of
the variou s ser ies of K aiser
Alum inum cumulati ve converll·
ble prefer en ce stock approved
amendments that will permit
those shares to be conve rt ible

into the common stock of K aiser T ech in st ea d of K a lser
Aluminum.
Commenting on the sha rehold er vot &lt;?, Kaiser Al uminum
Chair man Cor nell C. Mal&lt;?r said,
"Our shar eholder s have agai n
demonstrat ed their suppor t for
this co mpany and their belief in
it s future. Th e agr ee ment that
will go into effec t as a resuli of
this vote protect s the Inter ests of
shar eholder s; retains the con·
cept of a board co mposed predomin antly of outside, In depend·
ent direc tors : prw ides for th e
inves tment of $140 million in

prefer red stock of KaiserTech by
president , and w!ll continue as
an entit y or en!Illes controll ed by
chairman and 'c hlef executive
Alan Clor e and incr eases opera! · o!ffrer of Kaiser Aluminum .
lng flexibility."
Shareholder approval ot the
Clore sa id, " I am pleased th at • agreement al so establishes a
so many shar eholder s joined 14-member board of directors for
with us in· votin g for thi s KalserTech, 10 of whom are
agr£"Cment. Kaiser Aluminum Is out side, Independent directors.
m aking good progr ess In Its cor&lt;? The operating subsidi ar y , Kaiser
busi nesses and we are commit · Aluminum&amp; Chemical, will have
ted to working together with a seven-member board of dlrec·
exist ing oper ating mana gement
tors, four of whom will be
to r etu rn Kaiser Aluminum to out sider s.
profit abilit y."
Kal serTech 's board, as part of
Clor e will ser ve as chairman of the ove rall agreement , will de·
the board of Kai serTech. Maler slgpat.e th,al $25 million ofthe $140
wil l serve as vice chairman and
(Continued on Page 1"41

Suspect
to face
jury trial
Monday

VQte on disputed trade action
may cloud visit by Nakasone
WASHINGTON I UP! r - With
Japan' s prime minister expected
in Washington today, the House
pu shed i ts trade concer ns right In
front of him by settin g up a vot e
on legi slation that would for ce
U.S. sanctions against some
foreign nations.
The House, considerin g a rna·
j or l r ade r eform bill, arr anged
for debate on an amendment by
Rep. R ichard Geph ardt , D-Mo. ,
ta rgeting nat ions like Japan
unless they change thei r practi·
res and r educe their surpluses
with the United Sl ates.
Gephardt called his prov ision a
" market -opening amendment "
that would force such count r ies
to negotiat e or face a 10 percent
cut in their exports lo the United
States for four eonsecutlve year s. President Rea!?,an called the
mpas u re 1 'd anger ou s" and
warned it would inv ite retaliation
against U. S. exports.
Against that backdrop, la wmakers predicted a close vote
toda y - the same day they
expC'ciro Nakasone to ar rive on
hi s awkwardly llm r d sta te vis it .
A final vote on the over all

COLUMBUS tUPI J - Th e
chairman of the Ohio Senatr
Fi nance Committ e~ says thp
H ouse- passeq S22 .1 billion state
budget has a "ho le" of at leas t
$300 million that mu st be plugged
before it is bala nced.
" We do have some ideas for
pickups wi thout taxes ." added
Srn. Sta nley J . Aronoff. R·
Cinclnnat i, follow ing Tu esday's
co mmittee mee ting. " We t hink
we, ra n pirk up w hatever's
necessar y."
nut Aronoff made It clear he
di sa pproves of House "gim·
micks' ' used to make the budget
appear bal anced. He said a j oint
House-Senat e conference com·
mittee may have to sri tr ig ger
mechanism s .for across-the·
boar d r ut s in 1988·89 if the budget
comes unglued.
" If we take all the additions
made In the House t$86 million to
t he governor 's reeommcilda·
t lon J and lake away some of the

legislation should come Thurs·
da y , they said .
Nakasone will m eet with Rea·
gan at the White House Thu rs·
day, wh er e he hopes to pers uade
the president to lift $300 million in
tariffs slapped on Japanese com·
puler s, televisions and power
tools April 17 In r etaliation for
Japan's failure to abide by a 1986
computer chip agreement.
Reagan has said he w ould likr
to lift the sanctions as soon as
poss ible but hot until Japan
proves it has stopped selling, or
dumping, the semiconductors at
below-market prices and has
opened It s markets to U.S.
compu ler chips.
On the eve of Nakasone's
arrival, White House spokesman
M arlin Fitzwater said theadmln ·
lstrallon had preliminar y "lndl· .
ca tions that (Japanese) dumping
patt erns have chan ged ... but we
don' t have hard evidence to
support it ."
As I he House began debat e on
it s tr ade reform pa ckage Tuesday, Speaker J lm Wright , D·
Texas, denied the legislation was
"anti-Japan" or protectionist.

" This Is a pr o-U.S. bill, " he
said. " It simpl y asks for
r ecipr ocit y."
Wright . noted the U.S. trade
deficit, which hit a record $170
bllllon last year. " robs our
American jobs and erodes our
American lnd·ustr lal base." He
added: "We are det erm ined lo
stop that erosion and this Is the
fir st step."
Wright urged his colleagues to
support the sweeping bill i n·
tended to crack down on unfair
foreign trade practices, expand
U.S. export promotion effort s.
r educe limits on low· tec hnology
shipments to friendly nation s and
Improve benefits for Import ·
battered American Industries.
"We are det ermined that
'Made In USA' will be a badge of
value and quality through the
world, " Wr ight sa id . "That 's
whallt has traditionally stood for
and that Is what we are deter·
mined to revive."
Opponents argued tha t provl·
slons £'11mlnatlng t raditlonal pre·
sldentlal option s by r equiring
r etalia tion would be devast atlnl(
to U .S. tradi ng r elationships.

UNUSUAL BIRD - In his 39 years ol huntlns turkey, Wllllrun C. ·
Bla.• of Lawrence County says he ha.• never ev~n seen a wild whitt•
lurkey In the woods . Tueoday morning he encountered this while
hird on the farm of Mr. and Mrs. Gene (;aleman ol near Rutland.
'

IM;'q.., . ,..,..0 ...... !W.e

____

.....,. ......,u.R.

I

' .... Slop.
•T... -Ilowo
• And CJlhlt Jllmt

al ~ . .OOI'tlplllld"

Spraying of the herbici des
Roundup and Oust In 14
southeas tern co unties have
b&lt;'en. sc heduled for May 4
th rough June 17, accordin.g to
the A ppa l ~c hl an Ohio Public
Inter es t Campaign.
Guar dra il s ~ l o n g stat e
r outrs and U.S. highways ar e
to be sprayed to co ntroLweed s
in Ga llla, Meigs, Hocking,
Monroe. Mor gan. Noble, Wa·
shi ngton. Lawrence, &amp;Iota,
Ad am s, Brow n, J acks on,
Pik e. Highland and . Ross

OR

'Wrltft . . . . . . . . - . . . .

........,.. .......... .U.Jt.

,,_, _ _ _ _ Pft_llr _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,..

. _....,_orp·--(llic

The

'

st all''s population to be covered
by th e progra m.
Bul !he House &lt;·ut these figures
to $5 million the first year and
$7.0 mi llion th e second year.
Chapple said unless Jh e ent ir e
$10 million is r es tored, any
amount above tho r ur renr $2
mil lion wil l go Into cou nties that
alrea dy haw• Passpor·t.
Stephen Rosedale or Communi·
Ca re, a ~roup ' of Cincinnati
nu rs ing homes , sa id he support s
the Passport progr am even
though It will reduce nursing
home admiss ions.
Roseda le asked the co mmi ttee
to rPsl ore the department 's
funds, but he also opposro Hny
red uct ton In state nursing home
payments on gr ounds th e qualit y
of C'are wo uld suffer.
" I am i n favoroffu!llund lngof
Pass port," he said.• " but don't
take It from long-term c·a r c."

iss.ues .advisory Congressional leaders bow to
on herbicide spraying plea fr~m arms prosecutor

oRtJ929 SA~s:'1811 $1950
____
,..,,.
____
,_"" .... ... __ ......... .., ...................,..
.......______.............
,.
..,.._..___-' .. ·-----.., __ ,... ____

• • ,_

rnd ependenlly.
exotic gimmicks, without dea l· lon g lines con stantly.
" We' r e goin g to keep people In
sa
id
"
th
er
e'
s
a
r
ea
l
Aro
noff
ing wit h the tax problem we 've
their
own homes, which will save
got a $.10() million hole," Ar onoff nausea In the Sena te" over th is
money,
' ' sa id Joyce Chapp le.
tax and a pr oposed tax amnesty
told his co mmitt ee .
department
director .
He also was address in g th e program raising $60 million.
Th
e
state
curr
ently Is spending
Ohio Department of Aging, ."Both ar e l ooked on as dread
$2 million a year on the progr am.
whlr h was seeking restoration of diseases," said the senator.
which provides services In 12
Aronoff
detailed
his
drflclt:
$10 million for a senior citizen
counties
represe nt i n~ 25 pe rcent
overinflated
In
co
me
from
the
tax
program excised by the House.
of
the
state's
po pulation.
"This bu&lt;)get is. built like a amnesty , S5B million: double .
Und
er
the
Passport
pr ogr,m,
house of car ds," sa id Aronoff. counting income from the Toled o
communit
y
servi
ces
such as
" I t' s going to topple. I don' t see Of fice Tower, $40 m ill ion :
any new taxes 110 make up the transfer r in g Interest from the shoppln !?,. cleaning, per sonal
difference!. I didn ' t sec It from state's rainy da y fund, $9 mil· care and tr anspo r ta tion, arr
the administration and I didn 't lion: t ransferr in ~; interest from provided to allow elderly peo ple,
ll'ho ot herw ise would be ron l ined
see it from the Housr·. Th ree su,rp lus ,rotary account s, $o9
to
nursing homes, to stay at
hundred million dollars Isn't million: : an,d underestimat ing
home.
!?,Oin &gt;: t o prop up th is bud get. Thi s ·welfare caseloa ds, $100 million.
Chapple sai d the cost of In ·
. If the Republ ica n se nators
chair man doesn't b&lt;'llcvc some
of the gimmicks that came over want to get rid of the teleph one home rare ca nnot exceed 60
t ax, they will have to lind another percent of the cost of nu rs ing
from th e House."
home care. Th e average Is 45
$](10
million.
Th e " l ax problem" referred to
p&lt;'rcent.
she sai d. •
Department
of
Agl
ng
trled
by Ar onoff Is a House-appr oved
The
Celeste
admini stra tion
to conv ince senator s II needs an
tax on Interstat e long distance
asked
that
$7.9
million
be proextra $10 million to expand Its
telephone calls, which would
v
ided
In
1988
and
$14.8
million
In
" Passport " progra m all owing
brln!?, In $100 m (lllon and tal(
1989,
enabling
50
percent
ol
the
fra il elderly peopl e lo live
computerized fir ms which use

~ Group

1Wpnatt6CIC*O'II~ .......

IUtheMd .........

3 Soctiono, 34 Pagn 25 Cents
A Mullirnedlt Inc. Newspeper

Kaiser shareholders OK reorganizatiori plan

Buy a FoRI
4x2 XLT Aogutar Cab with manual ~ans·
nislion, 2.3L engine and preferred equipiooflt paci&lt;age 86A8
ondaaYOSt311 1

' ... ,,.. Slotoo w..
c.-rorCia&lt;k
• .,.,_., SINnng
'SMitl _., (lfl

i\ chance ollhundersloima
early tonlrht aad clearln~
later toniKM, with a low
between 40 and 45. Consldera·
hie sunshine Thursday, with·
highs between 60 and 6~.

•

Panel chief detects $300 million 'hole' in budget

1/2 PRICE ROD

WEDNESDAYI 111URSDAY &amp; FRIDAY

'·

Ohio, area
weather scene~

p.m ., at the Grace E pis,copal
Church parish house In Pomer oy,
nex t to v il lage hall.

!Continu ed from Page 11
as vol untary assrsrant sonoall
coaches for 1987.
-A r eques t fro m Rac ine Ball
Assoc iation to use the sc hool ball
fields and build bl eacher s at the
junior high field .
-Giv ing $1, 000 to Syracuse
F. lcmentary to be co mbined with
PTO funds to t lie 1he school's
l(ym floor.

.,.

Ohio.Lottery

.Eastern
solidifies hold
on first place
-Page 5

~

.

Eastern slates ·

Rummage sale set

Hymn sing set for Saturday
Court issues marriage licenses

Ex-resident .pleads tt:ontinued trom Page 11.

.

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.
.
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-·--. -~~-~I.P.I .• ,_ . .. ..... . . . . . . -I . l.P.I.-, - ..........
,

......

rounties.
Athens and Vinton coun ties
ate not scheduled for herbi cide spr ay ing as a resull of
prot es t s by local clllz en
,l(l'oups and requests by their
county commissioners.
Prellminarv research by

•

AOPJC ha s Indica ted that
Roundup and Oust ar e not
ex tremely toxic to humans
and animals. However, both
are extremely hazardou s to
des ira ble plant s, lawns, food
and feed cr ops. Citizens who
do not want privat e property
sprayl'd should .wrll e to their
deputy district dire&lt;&gt;! or ol the
Ohio Department ofTr ansportatlon in Marlelta or Chilli·
cothe, or should post DO NOT
SPRAY . sig ns at r egular
lnlervals:
Complete fact sheets on
r outes to be sprayed, names
and addresses of persons to be
notified, and DO NOT SPRAY
signs are available from AO·
PIC, P.O. Box 2612; Athens ,
Ohio 45701, or call 593-7490.

J

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Con·
gr ess lonalleaders, responding to
a public plea from Independent
prosecutor Lawrence Walsh, sa y
they have no pl ans to grant l egal
Immunit y to any other major
fi gures In the Ira n-Contra
scand al.
But though tes timony without
such . legal protection is now
expected from at least two of the
major ligures, Robert McF ar lane and Richard Secord, la wmakers say they still plan to
question Rear Adm. John Poln·
dexter and Lt . Col. Oliver North
under tbe llml~ed lmmunlty
- timetable worked out earlier
with Walsh.
Walsh made his plea Tuesday
as he Issued his first public report
· on his Investigation, warning
that lurther grant s ol Immunity
already 15 witnesses have

been voted it by the congres·
slana! panel s probing the casecould jeopardize his attempt s to
prosecute U .S. officials In the
scan dal.
Walsh .said his gr and jury
probe Is "a·ccel er at lng" and has
turned up evidence that could
result In conspiracy char ges. He
added, however , It Is unlikely
there would be any Indictments
until art er the Senate and House
panels open joint public hearin gs
In the case Ma y 5.
" Most lines of Inquiry ar e
proving frui tfu l," he asserted In
il 17-page report. " Accordingly ,
thiS Is not the time to narrow or
conc lude t he gra nd ju ry
process."
At a news conference later.
Walsh said he hoped the congr es·
slonal committees would not
grant Immunity to Nor th, the

National Securit y Council aide
fired l or his centra l. role In the
scandal.
Limit ed lmmuni ry co mpels a
witness to lrs tlfy with the th rea t
of jail bu t protects ihe individual
from being prosecuted on any
evidence revealed under the
agr eement. Walsh would have to
base his case on !acts found
Independ en tly and placed under
court seal b&lt;'forehand .
Poin dex ter and North have
Invoked their F ifth A mendment
ri ghts aga inst sel!-1ncrlmlnatlon
in refusing to testify so f ar. But
alter strik ing a deal with Walsh,
the congressional pa~el s have
voted Poindexter limited lmmun·
Jty and expect him to talk
privately within a week or so to
their lawyer s. Public testimony
is expected later from the fo rmer
national security adviser .

A hearing to suppress evldenre
In the Stateo!Ohlo' s ca se against
.Jimmie .•Jude, .10, was held
Tu esday In Melgs County Common Pl eas Court before Judge
Charles Knight.
Jude is charged In Meigs
County with rape, !rom an
Incident .Jan . 5, 1986, and Is
scheduled to ~o to jury trial on
th at cha r ge 9 a.m. Monday.
. Jude. Is al so charged with two
count s of escBpe. Tri al on the
escape char~es Is set for,May 20. ·
In regard to requests from
defense rourl sel H amlin K"lng,
Gallipolis. to suppress lour state·
ments mad e by Judr In the
presence of Paul Gerard, Invest!·
~a tor for Meigs County Prosecut·
lng Attorney Fred Crow IJI, three
statement s were suppressed by
the court and one was nol.
The first statement to be
suppressed was madt' the day pi
!he alleged rape . The second
statement wa s made shortly
after counsel was appointed (?y
th e court to represent Jude and Is
being suppressed because Jude's
attorney wa s not pres ent when
tConllnu ed on Page 141

Affiliation
switchover
available
By Ni\NCV VOACHi\M
Sentinel Stall Writer
Pomeroy's May 5 prim ar y Is
.1omewhat dltferent this year
than In yea r s pas t It 's
Republican only. However, re·
por ts, .Jane Frymy£'r , director of
the Meigs County Board of
El ection s, Democra ts may vote
In the pr im ar y If they wish to sign
statement s to change their pa l't y.
" The St" tement of Par ty A! fill ·
'atlon may be signed only d u ri n ~
primary r lertlon s," Fry mt'Y&lt;'r
sa id. If a DemO&lt;' r at would chao" '
to chang&lt;' par·t.v In order to vot ~
this Tu csda.l', that pr rsori would
be considered a Republlru n until
another stat mr nt Is slg nrd at th r
nex t pr im ary.
,
Any De,morra t wishing to
ch a n~e party must sign the
statement at thr poll s and he or·
she would I hr n be glvrn a
Re publican ballot.
In the November general rl ec·
tlon however , that person co uld
vote either way, said Frymyrr.
If however. a Democr at who
changes pa rt)' In the prim ar y
would wi sh to run lor public
offi ce " duri ng th e next yrat·. "
that person "would have · to run
oh the Rc publkan ticket," sa id
Fry myeh or r ise change their
afllllatlon bar k t o Dema&lt; •rat
during the pr imary and then run
lor office the follow ing yea r.
The Pomeroy !'JIByor's ra ce
between Incumbent Richard
Seyler and Thomas "PeeWe&lt;•"
Werry will b&lt;" decided In the
pr imary.
.,
The race for Pomeroy VIllage
Council will be deelded In the fall
slnre one i:lt'mocrat. Rebecca
_(l'ontlnued on Page 14 )

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