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                  <text>Plge-D·B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Re~l

June 1. 1986 ·

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Eatate General

Services Offered

Real Estate General

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTIUC.TION
,,,l•t $fUltf

83

Excavating

Good-1 Exc.,ltlng, buemenu.

SOIIDUIIIG NOW 101•
'Roofing 'Siding
•contin.uous
·
1Guttering
·
'Fencing
'Remodeling

Call today ....

446-4514
or 446-4841

foot«1 , drivllwnyt, 11ptic tenka,
la.ndlctplng. Ctll •nytim• 814·
448-41§37, Jtm• L. Otvilon.
Jr. owner.

304·773·5839.

85

OIIIIIIIFCial &amp;

losiclontial

Call SPECIAL TOUCH Cleaning
Services for all our cleaning jobs No job too big or too small.

(614) 446-8015 24 Hour Answering
tTr~~ined

•

at y

e

111iformtd ptr•

sonnel
tlblrough "tap·f'D bellcwn"

dtaring
eGnt~timt oc:r:asi111l, or •Tri·Statt aroa •nictt
long·t""' opd1111

General Hauling

By the Bend ..... ..... .. Page 4
Classllleds ......... Pages oi-IHI
ComlclrTV .............. Page 7
lleath8 .................... Page 8
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ..................... Page 3

SPECIAL
TOUCH (Inning Strwlces

•FA EE Estimates
e(ompttltlvt prict1
•!trior canl d\SCOIIII
e&lt;antra&lt;l ralls

Trencklng StfVice: wtttr, gH,
end al.ctrlc. Fr• t1tlmet11 .

Inside:

Voi.Je, No.20
COjlyrlghted 1981

814·387· 7741 or 304·876·

Cotl. lim•tone, grawel, etc.
Dei!'J•ed 1 lon and up. Jim
LtmM', · 304 -8715 -1247 or 6715-

87

Upholstery
TRISTATE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., GaHipolil.

814·448 -7833 or 814·448·
1833.

HOMES . FARMS llo COMMEROAL PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45621

~::~rft.
~:~~~·oJNI(RES.
more 1J ess,
of
w
CREEK FRONTr.GE
&amp;boat
.
I

3 redroom horre lealures a

br~!thf.1,kin! view. overooking the creek lr!Jn acootempo~ary

room. l4xl6 klrmai \Mng room, 2 lllths, den.
modern
comp~te wi h stove. rei , utility room
w/lreezer, washer. dryer. can a~o be purchasal ..th an
addrtilna\ 2 acres on 200 M.morecreek lrontage wrtha28&lt;48
garage. Th ~ ~ a very un ~ue and secluced property.ll yllJ hke
!Jivacy and boatinglho 5 a must lo see. ReaSOilab ~ Priced'

R • M Furniture MtnufKturing.
St. Rt. 7, Crown City, Oh. Cd
114-261-1470, Clll Eve. 814448-3438 . Old • new
Uphosterld.

Mowrey's Upholstering swving
trl county •na 21 years. The but
In furnitUre upholsteting. Call
304 -176 - 4154 for free
estimtt ...

SUNDAY PUZZL·ER
1Bfl9
6 Fastener
11 Rabbits
16 lo falsity
evidence: colloq .

21
22
23
24
25
26

Prepared
Repulse
White poplar
Artisf's stand
Choose
Decree

28 Partners

30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
DUlY su•EIIIEI£! SO!EENfD SID£ ~D BACK fUR(}IES.
LOTS OF SHADE TREES. lWO STORY I()~ ~ 3 BEDROOMS.
FltUPliCE IN lMt«l ROOf~. tJil(I COUNTRY KIT(}IEN, ·
GAAIGE PlUS CARI'ORT LOrJ.TfD JUST Off LOWER I{)UlE I.
OTY SOlOOL SYSTEM. $32.~.

Paper measure
Et - . Brutel
Brother of Odin
Old name lor
Tokyo
Wager
Twisted
Spread lor drying
NOW
desideralum

40 Depart
42 Mournful

NlW liSTING - look ~g lor a lrxed -up horre. 1h• trorre
needs a lit~ T.l.C 3 bedroomranch. I&amp; k rtr~en. d rn~g room
w/sl~rng doors. Pr ( ed low Jl's. Southwestern schoo~.
wlrRUISbTr
)()( JICe3r BDRM. HOME wrth hand burrt rnbmts
111 . wrap·arllJnd sundeck. garage and
locatal on U S oc. Priced rn Ire so·s.

43 Tie
44 Addition al

45 Deposil
47 Citrus lruits
49 Arrived al
50 Joint
51 Declare
54 Ceremony

IDIIG fOR ASIMll FARIIJI - THIS ONE HAS 8 ACRES.

IWIN. !111!1(00 BASE. NICE GI\RDEN !IlEA. 4BEDROOM f()ME
I'RtED RIGHT AT $32,000.

MODERN RAIICH HOME - Features LR. wrth stooe
acr!liS ooe wall. Lar~ lam i~ room 22x'l2
3bedrooms. l'h balhs. comp~le klchen. Very
lot lar~ covered paoo. '22 &lt;17. Crty ~~:hook
OR OOUBlEWIDES - rere are 2 hcrnes a~eady
up w/ some small acreage.

55 Declares
56 Strike out
59 Couple
60 Lamprey
62 Cultivators

64 Peel
65 Printer' s measure

66 - and lro
67 Calch: colloq,·
69 Coagulales
70 Frigid
71 Headgear
72 Part of circle
74 Pertaining to the

navy
76 Drunkard
77 Medicinal plant
78 Spar
79 Fair-minded

lit£ PlACE IN THE COUTITRY!- 6 BEAUTifUL /ICRES NEARlY
NEW f()ME ~ 4 BEDROOMS. 3 BATHS. 2 KITCHENS. TM11LY

ROOM, SlOE AND RfAR 0£0\S, ABOVE GlOUNC POO~ AND TOR
NEXT WINTER AFIREPLACE WITH BUO\ STOVEINSERT. KYGER
CREEK S(}IOOLS.
GET READY FOR SUMMER! THI S HOME fiAS A BEAUTif UL
•IR:OO~ISI.N ·GROUND POOL NICE FENCED BACKYARD. 3 BED·
"'
FAMilY ROOM . 2',\ CAR GARAGE . 10' 0\ SH SA TEL·
. GREAT LOCAliON. KYGER CR EEK AREA.

~:~~:.IRI -

VERY OJW'ORTABLE 3 Bf.DROOII. 2 STORY
..~ , ~"··~ DINtiG ROOM. HAR11rYOOD flOORS tl UVING
StMll DEN.GIJlf(;E H~ 11.001\SI{)P AREA. EXCELLENT
AT $32,000.
IEAunFULIIVEA VIEW! - KC SOlOOL DISTRICT. BRICK &amp;
IRIME TRIEVEL 3 BRS. 1\\ BATH. fR WllH WOOil3URNER
IWIUP, CIA, CAROOT &amp; LOTS Of STDRI'(;E. JUST USTEO K:EO FOR ~I()( SAlE AT $45.000.
lOCATION - lOCATION - lOCATION! ClOSE TO
TOWN, GROCERY, SCHOOL &amp; HOSPITAL ON RT. 588.
VERY NICE IAR!l LEVEL LOT WITH FRAME RANCH. 3
BRS, I I? BATH. BIG FR WITH FP. POSSIBLE OWNER I I
NANCING DON'T WAIT - rJ.ll NOW! ASK\ NG $42,000.

TO HOSPITAl - lois ol llowers. shrubs. ~· pne trees.
. very "''ll desrgned home. Fealures alorrnallivingroom,
r room. 3-4 bedrooms. I 'h baths, co mp ~le krtchen v.;th
sllNe and refrigerator. Frn ~ red basem"'t
w/Clrrn•t 2 car garage and separate woodshop. A lar~
back IXI'th. gas real, Wash~gt011 Elem"'lary. Prted
low 70 s.

m

A HONEY FOR THE IIONEY! 2 BEDROOM FRAME HOME
HAS BEEN REMODELED. ONE OF lHE NICEST HOME S
WE HAVE SEEN ON THE MARKET AT $20 000 FEW Ml
NUTES FROM CITY ON RT. 218.
' .
FIRST TIME ON IIAAK£T! 24X44 OOUBLE WIDE ON NI CE
LEVEL I ACRE LOT. 3 BRS, BAH~ RAN !I &amp; REFRIG 2
OUTBUILDINGS. OJUNTRY SETTING. OWNERS BUVI.NG
.f()USE AND HAVE PRICED FOR QUICK SALE AT $25,000

Tff HI·WAY IIIN IS FOR SAlE! THS RESTAURANT HAS
llEN A KANAUGA IANIJ.IARK FOR MANY.YEARS GREAT
LOCATION ON THE CORNER OF RT. 7 AND BURNED
ROAD, WITH GOOD ACCESS 10 ROUTE 35 . LAR!l 10 r
WITH AMPLE PN!KING. HOME AVAILABLE WITH RES ·
'
AtlllfY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
MAIY FlOYD, IIALTOR, 446-3313
25 lOCUST Sllfn, GAUIPOIIS, OHIO

88 Space
89 Origin
90 Drawing room
92 Nut
94 Monstrous

98 Allowance tor
waste

99 Entreaty
100 Audience
102 Growing out ol
103 Music: as written

104 Cincinnati player
104 Skidded
106 Liquid
108 Prefix lor lhree
109 Agave plant
110 Near
111 Scheme
112 Compared to
114 Compass point
1t6 Babylonian god
1t7 Punctuallon mark
119 Church service

120 Sour
122 Hates
124 Tavern beverage

125 Pulverize
126 Leave
128 Son ol: Hebrew
129 Seed coating
131 Miller
132 Sleeping need

ACRES. moreor less ..rn Kyger Creek School D~lrK:t v.;th
1973 motN ~ homes Owner l•es 11 oneand rents Ihe other
$250 00 per rrronth Excellent 11vesl n-enl pr(llerty.G•e
call lor m01e detarls'
ESTATES - Beautilul bnrk oon-e formal etllry
mod. k!chen. Basement.
lAND OJNTRACT - 4 !Edroom, LR, FR. modern
Mostlyallcarpeled \oors, 6acres,moreor
cropland Large barn, storage shed. grannery,
. lobacco
house. smoke house and ce l~r . """
ba~
ow lbs.
ACRES MORE OR l!SS - Vacant ~nd local"" in c"'
district.
.
'"
.,

84 Term ol
endearment

Hansen' s disease

3 Devour
4 Paid nolice
5 Change color ol
6 Pertaining to the
bride
7 Relrieve
8 Suitable
9 Cerium symbol
10 Shade tree
11 Delesfed
12 Encourage
13 Legal mailers
14 Spanish article
15 Calm
16 Exploit
17 Male sheep
18 While
t9 Measuring device
20 Escape
27 River in Scolland
29 Arabian garments
31 lineman
36 Propositions

37 Orlnk heavily
39 In addillon
40 Old musical
Instrument

41 Send lor1h
42 Paris of fishing
l ines

43 Bodies ol water

t35
138
139
140

44 Distance measure

Speck
Young boy
Cushions
Anglo-Saxon
money

46 Diphlhong
48 Auricular

49 Red planet
50 Flock

141 According to

51 Essence

142 Sun god
143 Roman gods
144 Fashion
145 Pope's scarf
147 Lazy person
149 Cut ol meat
150 Finished
152 Kind ollabric
154 Shoulder wrap
156 Angry
158 Hindu peasants
159 Small fish
160 More rallonal

52 Affirmed
solemnly
53 Occupant
55 Hunling dog
56 Small valley
57 Plague
58 Vacant
61 Volcanic

161 Exterior

DOWN

85 Boor
86 Containers

2 Suflerer from

133 Heavy mammal s

82 Fragile
YOU lOOKING FOR A NICE HOME rn 11-e Hannan Trace
Ol.llr~l prt ed lll lillrn(i 20's' How about 3 ll1rm. I I?
. wpel, woorlburner &amp; much more aUon ooe ace lot?

.

.

en tine
1 SecHon, 8 Pages

26 Cents

A MultimAdie Inc . Newspaper

By NANCY YOACJIAM
Sentinel News Staff

7397.

Realty
446-3636

.

Meigs graduates 140
despite ·power outage

1247.

~.

' '

Pomerov:-lllliddleport, Ohio, ll/londay, June 2, 1986

Ken's Wttw Senti~ . W..la,
c_lnerns, pools and wtttrbedl
filled. Ctll 114-317-0123 or

Reel Estate General

Paees

1 Demonstrate

emanation

63 Booty
64 lndlgenl
68 Talked foolishly
70 Lenlenf
71 Divisions ol a
poem

73 Hailed
74 Substantive
75 South American
animal

77 Worship

78
80
81
83
84
87

Frame of mind
Chimney carbon
The self
In no manner
Sharpen
Moves aboul
furtively
89 Part of eye
90 Strip of leather
91 Rugged "'!Ountaln
cresl
92 Landed
93 Tropical fruil
95 Female horse
96 Complete
97 Goes by water
99 Walk wearily
101 Leased
105 Wild plum
106 Fond desire
107 Harvest
111 Pellet
112 Whip
113 Colorless
115 Recedes
116 Tie
118 Foray
119 Small rugs
12 t Foot lever
123 Helium symbol
125 Pallerns
126 Transaction
127 Higher
129 Tree of birch
Iemily
130 Showery
131 Insane
132 Small wild goo;e
134 Charlofte 136 Speechify
137 More
domesticated
139 Seed containers
140 City In Russia
144 Encountered
145 Individual
146 Curve
14 7 Electrified
particle
148 River, to Juan

149 Chapeau
151 Serve the
purpose
153 I am: conlr.
155 Tantalum symbol
157 Rufhenium
symbol

OONGRATUIATIONS- Sunday attemoon mgbl
have ' - ! the last time !Klme of the gnuluates of
Melp IDKh wUJ see each other. Graduallon Is an

mrllng to 12 years of han! woril and achievement, and
gra4tates Jim Smith, Jell, and Tom \\hlte, took the
opportunity to oongratulale each otrer on a job well

done.

~!:~.! ~~~i~. ~~~~~,..

WASHINGTON (UP!)_ Amerl·
can Tel ho &amp; T
. h C
1
denying
ts";:ushm: r.fr~ntra~i
"glveba ks" fro It
c
m s 1arges1un 1on,
Insists a pact with a smaller union
would prevent a nationwide strike
from closing many of its manufac·
luting CJI&gt;Crations today.
But with pickets up at AT&amp;T
!actllttes since the Communications
Workers of America walked oul
early Sunday the non·strlkln
International Brotherhood of El ~
ttical Workers may honor ~
lines at sites where both are
employed
"We're 'a good union and If our
employees choose to ho~r a strike
line, that 's something we would
encouragp," IBEW officer Art

tentative agreement.
.
factories to begin manufacturing
AT&amp;T said It began drawmgfrom again. There' s already a backlog of
a force of 115,001 managers and orders."
organizing 12· hour shifts six days a
The mosf compel \t lve as""'ts of
d
t
~·
·
· --.
week to han le ong-ulstance AT&amp;T s business since dlvestttur£'
service.
.
Involve telecommunications manuAT&amp;T spokesman Herb Llnnen facturlng , and Bahr noled the
said informal talks resumed briefly filTTI's admitted concern that a
Sunday, but the CWA rejected an strike could halt production al 25
offer - an 8 percent pay raise over
plants in 17 states.
threeyears-thatwas acceptedfor
Unnen Insisted the IBEW agree·
fUrther action by IBEW negotlalors ment would assure operations in
In New Jersey on behalf of 40,!0) "at least 13 plan ts that are all
workers.
IBEW."
The company offer was in·
Bahr sald the bargaining broke
creased from proposals ct5percent up because the oompany c;emanded
and 7 percent, and Llnnen sald "unwarranted concessions" such
pension benefits would rise by 4 as eliminating cost of Uving allo·
percent In the first year of I he wance, changing s:Jme job classlfl ·
~racl and another 4 percenlln catlonsand cancellng lncentlvepay

Pl&gt;rry said Sunday. But he con·
ceded that "AT&amp;T may be able 10
open some plants because all
workers there are ~urs" - alter
separate talks with IBEW
ttators produced a tentative ; : '
The strtke began after CWA 's
three-year pact for 155 000 l'ffi·
pioyees with the nation'~ largest
long-distance operation expired at
11:59 p.m. Saturday, and negotla ·

·
CWA President Morton Bahr, al
a news con!erence Sunday, clalmed
IBEW leaders "have rECom·
mended rejECtion" of the package
when It goes to a rank· and-file vote,
but Perry said union officials would
not act untlllocallssues ar£' settled
by..indivldlual IBEW chapters.
We can afford to s.~ay out a lol
~?nger Ulan
can, Bahr sald.
The business oommunuty, espe·

ft

ther

plans.
"There are abs:Jiutely no givebacks In our offer." Linr\Cn said.
"We mad e every efforl to avoid a
s1rlke with Ule CWA wllh an offer
that was bOth fatr and r eas:Jnable."
Bahr satd particularly offensive
to his unlon was a company plan to
reclasstly s:Jme systems techni·
clans Into a job tltle that would
reduce their average $616 weekly
pay by some $.Ul.

State ODI director orders
delay of high risk screening
•

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UP!) -The
director of the Ohto Department of
Insurance has ordered a delay of
Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield of
Northern Ohio's proposed screen·
ing of hlgh-rlsk subscribers un W
after a June~ public hearing and a
revieW of the company's proposal.
The hearing w!ll examine
whether Blue Cross should exclude
persons .who are converting from
group plans or who are renewing
existing non· group coverage,
Insurance Director George Fabe
sald.
"I want to see It in an open
hearing and ln an open forum ."
Fabe said. "I want to lake no
chances Ulat there' s anything
amiss."
Blue Cross announced May 6 that
It planned to begin denying cover·
age June 1 to selected hlgh·tisk
persons under 65 who are not In
group plans. Those screened ln·
elude people dependent on lnsuUq,.
people with kidney disease. alcohol·
ics and pegple with acquired
Immune de!lclency syndrome, or
AIDS, virus.
People with asthma, tubercula·
sis, emphysema, back or spinal
disonlers, blackouts, loss of con·
sclousness or who have attempted
suicide also would be screened.
Fabe said existing Insurance
regulatlon would aUow Blue Cross
to scrren lor health reasons and to
plw:e limits oo people wiUl preexisting conditions . The hearing
wW determine whether Blue CJOSS
has satisfied department criteria
with its scr!ll!nlng proposal, he satd.
. The hearing also will look at
whether Blue Croos savings from
the screening will be reflected In Its
rates, be said:
William A. Silverman, a spokes·
man for Blue
said rrore than
!iXl other Insurance companies in

cross,

,,

Ohio. including Blue Cross plans tn
Cotumrus and Cincinnati , have
been allowed to screen hlgh·tisk
applicants.
•

"We feel lt ts slgnlflcant to know
that this ts Ule ftrsl public hea ring
ever held on heallh screening In tl'M'
slate of Ohio, " Silverman said.

" Seniors, this will be a graduation
you'll never forget," said Pr incipal
James E . Miller durtng Sunday
afternoon's baccalaureate and
commencement ceremonies at
Meigs High School.
And he was right, as approxl·
mately 140 Meigs seniors gradu·
ated In Ule dark - or at the very
least - In subdued lighting.
A power outage at 4: 15 p.m . left
the high school totally without
electricity just 15 minutes before
graduation exercises were set to
begin.
According to Fred Des kins, of
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
rtc Company's Athens office, the
power !aUure stemmed from a
lransfolTTier which went oul at Ule
Pomeroy Health Care Center on
Old Rl. 33. Whether or not the
lransfo!TTier was struck by lighling
during Sunday afTernoon's r ain is
still uncertain Deskins sa id . It was
9:30 p.m. Sunday night before
power was restored to the school
and the 110}1800 o1her C&amp;S custo·
mers affected by the outage he
added.
Despite Ule elecl rical problems,
graduation went off virtually as it
had been rehearsed. Through the
efforts of the Pomeroy and Middle·
port Fire Departments, the seniors
were able to march into the
gymnasium to receive their dlplo·
mas at about 5:15 p.m.
At about 4:45 p.m.. volunteer
firemen arrived at Ule high school
with portable generators, portable
Ughts, 1001 feet of electrical cord
and smoke ejector fans. Firemen
worked quickly as they taped cord
to the Doors throughout Ule school.
hooked up tlle portable lights and
turned on the generalors.
When the electr icity went off.
four exhaust fans In Ule ceillng of
the gymnasium went off also and
the crowded room soon became
exceedingly warm. Smok~ ejector
fans were set up by firemen to keep
atr circulating In the stuffy gymna·
slum, and programs became hand
held fan s for the people in the
audience.

FAST WORK - Robert Byer, dlnlctor " the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service WJd a member of the Middleport Fire
Department, was one of mWJy volunleel'li who worked "'lckly Sunday
afternoon to book up portable generator.! al Meigs IUglr School. Meigs
High's gradual ion ceremonies began about W1 hour late we to a poww
outage which left the school without electricity.

gave the official welcome. Senior
class tr easurer, Jutie Siss:Jn \ntro·
duced memhers of the Meigs Local
School Board !\lld administr ation,
followed by Monsignor Gianna·
more 's baccalaurea te sC!TTlon.
Joked the Monsignor, " the Lord
took mercy upon his people and l'rn
going to do the same for you," as he
summarized a 12 minute sermon in
two minutes because of the heat.
Referring to one of today's popular
television commercials , he told
graduates to "be all you can be by
being you r better self."
The Meigs High Band, aided by
fl ashltghl s, presented " Exaltation"
!\lld l he Meigs High Choir sang
" Take These Wings."
In his salutatory address, Chris
Kennedy discussed "The spirit of
86." He commended the graduates
d.1986 for bringing Increased school
spirt to the school, and cited many
accomplistunents
by his class·
Remains On Standby
males
In
the
areas
of athletics,
Squad 1 of Pomeroy EMS
vocational
training
and
music.
remained on standby at the school
academics
.
"
Now
our
spirt
bas
because of the posstbll!ty of s:Jme·
turned
to
pride,"
he
sa
id.
"
like
an
one being overcome by the heat.
eagle.
While
in
school
we
were
With the school's public address
sy stem also powered by a portable developing our wings. Now we are
generator, the acttvlf!es began and ready tn soar. "
Kenda Donahue In her vatedlc·
went off pretty much as had been
tory
address noted the fr lendshlps
rehearsed.
that
have developed betwren the
Monsignor Anthony Glannamore
classma1es
over the years. She
presmted thelnvocationand Mlssle
pointed
out
that
graduation is "the
Howard, senior class pres!denl,

Ume for the final lastin g lmpr&lt;'S~
slon, !or some of us may never see
each other again." She advrsed her
classmates to remember their old
friendships as they make new ones.
to se1 their goals high and Ia "shool
for the stars and fly."
Both Donahue and Kennedy were
presented trophies In honor of their
academic achievements.
Before presenting lhe cl ass,
Meigs High Principal James E.
Miller ac knowledged faculty
members and the many proud
mothers and falhers in the
audlenre.
Metgs High Superintendent Dan
E . Morris accepted the class and
Rotert Snowden, president of the
board of education, presented
diplomas as Carol Smith, sen ior
class secretary, read the class roll .
After all graduates were back In
1heir seats with diplomas in hand,
Darren Hayes. senior vice pres!·
dent, led the class in the traditional
transfer of the tassel. the symbol of
graduation.
Meigs High Band I hen played the
school's alma mater " Maroon and
Gold " and commencement was
over.
The jubilan1 graduates left rhe
gymnasium to Ule recessional and
gatil'red on the front lawn of the
school for another tradition
throwing their hats in the air.

Pomeroy woman hurt
in.Sunday accident
A Pomeroy woman was rushed to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Sun·
day morning when a car she was
driving went off Route 33, heavUy
damaging her car according to the
state highway patrol.
Dedra Simms, 24, was westbOund
on 33 at 10: 30a.m . when shewenl off
the left slde of the road, traveled
over a culvert and overtu med. She
was taken to the hospital by lhe
Metgs County Emergpncy Medical
Squad.
Mautice Chevaller, 23, Reeds·
ville, was cited by the patrol !or
falling to control the vehicle he was
driving, driving while under the
lnfiuence or alcohol and without a
license.
Chevalier was eastbound on Ohto

681 al7:40 p.m. when he lost control,
went off the righl side d. the road
and struck a power pole, according
to the l'l'\)Ori . His car was heav ily
damaged .
John M . Wolfe, 18, RuUand, was
cited for falling to control a vehicle
11e was driving In a one-car accident
resulting In three people being
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal Saturday.
Wolfe, along with passen gers
Kevin Towns, 18. Ru Uand, and Jolm
Roush, 15, Rutland . ~r e taken to
the hospital by the Meigs County
EMS. The car driven by Wolfe was
westbound on Ohlo 124 at !2: 40a.m.
when If went off the left side ct the
road and struck a parked semi·
trailer. The car was heavily
damaged .

Meigs board member suffers injury
One ~ber of the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
was missing when board mt'!Tlbers
were seated on the high school
stage lor the annual commencement Sulllay evening.
Missing was Larry Rupe who as a
new board member was going to be
with the board lor the first time at a
commencement.
Earlier Sunday Rupc was mowing at his borne near Langsville
when he fell and In !all)ngpulled the

power mowerontohls foot . He lost a
blg toe, fractured another toe and
received a·laceration on a thlrd toe.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hosptt'al where he Is
confined following treatment.
f1upe' s fatlll'r, Lawrence Rupe,
Langsville, was wit h his son when
Ule accident occurred Sunday.
Twenty-two years ago the senior
Rupe received a foot injury in a
slmllar power mower accident.

HUGS -Amid lbe laughter and happy smiles were
al8o lean and lol8 of hup. Melp graduate Regina

,,

Wallfl &amp;ets a rug !rem Iva Sisson as member.! of Ire
(lass ot 1986 share their final moments together as a
group.

�The

Ohio

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB IIOEFUCH
Gent:' raJ Manager

DALE ROTHGEB. JR .
~ e ws Editor
A ME\1BEH ofTh r t..: niH'(I PrPSs lnt er na!! onal , In land Dail\ P r t&gt;SS c\ ssoc la ·
I ton and Thr American :\c•wsp ,lprr· Publis hers Associ arl on.

LETIERS or OPI:'\' 101\" ar r weiC'Q mr . Thf'~ · should bt' IC'Ss than

)XI

words

lonj? All l€'t1f'fs; arrsubj&lt;'&lt;'t to L-dttlng and mu!'t bt"slgned &lt;rlih name. addre&gt;ss and
tr lrptwnr numb&lt;'r :"\o unsignro lr!INS wilt lx' publi shC&lt;I Lr!!C'r~ should be In

12ood taste . addrl"Ssing b sut"S . not

pf'r~onali!i rs

Less expense needed
Wilh one notable exception, future presidential libmries - tmse
multimill ion-dollar monuments to former presidents - will be less of a
burden to U.S taxpayers.
A bill that recenlly won congressional approval requires that such
libraries possess a private endowment IarS"' enough to pay at leastll
P&lt;'rcenr of tbeir operat ing costs.
Altmugh built with private funds, these libraries are maintained by the
taxpayers, currently at a COS! ri about$14 million a year. That is In additiOn
to otber costs associated with former presidents, such as Secret SeJVIce
protection and office expenses.
Many members of Congress and ttFir constituents long have beUevro
that tbe libraries impose an excessive drain on the 'ITeasury. The
Gramm-Rudman budget-cutting frenzy helped bring tbe issue to a bead
this year, producing the bill to mid down costs of operating whatever future
libraries are bu ilt.
The seven exist ing librark's house the papers of Presidents Hoover,
Roosevelt , Truman, Eisenhower. Johnson, Kennroy, and Ford: the Carter
library is under construction.
Friends of former President Nixon are planning to build a library In
California, but It is uncerta in what they will have to put In it. Congress,
during the Watergate InvestigatiOn, passed a law placing Nixon 's White
House papers in the custody of a U.S. District Court.
President Reagan's friends will build a $15 million librarv to hold his
papers, but !hat Ubrary wUI be exempt from the new rtquirement lor an
endowment to help pay operating costs.
Duling the brief debate on tbe libraries bill, Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla.,
said Reagan aides had insistro !be Reagan Ubrary "be exempt from this
cost-saving, deficit reduction effort ."
By agreeing to come under terms cJ. tbe bill, Reagan could have "set an
example lor the American taxpayer by committing his library foundation
to the establishment of tbe qx&gt;rating cost endowment-type envisioned by
both the House and Senate, " said English, chairman of a House
Government Operations subcommittee.
According to a congressional staff member, While House aides resistro
any changes in tbe law covering presidential Ubraries.
"The administration wanrro oo chan5"'s for nobody, ever," tbe staffer
said. Gradually, that att itude changed, hOWI"'er. and the White House later
said, "'as long as you don't cover us we don't care."
The Reagan library did oot get off tbe hook entirely . The bill includes a
provision setting architectural and archival standards intrnded to ensure
that all future presidential libraries are run properly.
U a library is to be larger than 71J,!XXJ square leer, tbe endowment wil l
have to be proportionately larger to cover tt.&gt; higher operating costs.
"When you're puning a lot of documents In a building, it's important to
meet a number of conditions, such as floor strength, certa in reiling height s,
temperature and humidity controls, " the congressional stafferexpainro.
The standards are intended to make presidential limries "functional ,
not. just a plain. old monument to a former president."

Letter to the Editor
Thanks for job well done!
We feel we are speaking for most
oft be parents of our school childrrn
wben we say we would like to
extend our thanks and appreciation
to the teachers and staff of !he
Racine Elementary School.
As tbe school year has just ended
and we attemFd the awards
ceremonies toda y lor oor children ,
we again realize mw fortunate we
are to have such dedlcarro and
caring teachers and staff at oor
school.
We have spent s:Jme time at the
school this past year and have
obseJVOO some of tbe everyday
activities. It is a good feeling to
know that tbe environment In which
our children spend most of their
time l.s a good, wholesome one. In
addition to this we feel tbey are also
receiving a very good education.

Those of us wiD had students in
tbe sixth grade this year know what
a really extraordinary yoor it has
been lor them. One ttFy will never
forget. Thanks again to:
Larry Wolfe - sixth grade
teacher: Donna Sayre- fifth grade
teacher: Donna Norris - Principal
and fou rth grade teacher; Jan
Norris - third grade teacher:
Karen Davidson - second grade
teacher: Mary Hill - first grade
teacher; Cindy Winebrenner aide to first grade teacher: Joyce
Ritchie - remedial reader
teacher: Secretary- Patty Circle:
Custodian - Ruth Smith and Cook
- RubY Congo.
Thanks again lor the lovely
plants. Three gratffill mottters,
Donna !hie, Helen Holter and
Maxine Rose.

Poem dedicated to friends
What am I going to do? What wUI
life be like without them? How can I
stop this from happening? Why
does II have to be like this and so

soon?
These are a lew of tbe quest ions
I've been asking myself concerning
groouatlon. I know that ll'sbound to
happen but why does It have to be
mw? Just when you're really
g&lt;&gt;tllng to know them graduation
day arrives and you are abruptly
separated from them . It doesn't
seem lair but I linow that it Is
something I've got to accept .
You see, I am a junior and this
year Soutbem High School Is
graduating many of my friends . I
reallze that they are the ones that
smuld be scared and worried about
their new lives, but I'm scared and
oorrled tor them too. I care a great
deal ft:&gt;r each of them and I don't
want to "miss out" on anything in
their lives · but I know thl.s will
happen as they each go their
separate ways and I am still going
to be In high school.
· What upsets me tbe most l.s that
just lhts year I have become very
close triends with !hem and especially two ct tbem ... two that are so
mucb alike but yet so dl!terent. I
have known tlrm lor several years,
but really got to know them this

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 2, 1986

II should not surprise that yet

DE\'OTED TO THE INTERESTS Of THE )IEIGS-MAS0:'-1 AREA

PAT 1\'HITEIIEAD
As.,lstant Publlsh&lt;•r, Controller

Cox 'regains' fonn; Cards
hand Cincinnati 2-l setback

Page-2-The Daily ·Sentinal

Another AIDS proposal.__...:..;_W=illia.;:,:,_m_F_;B_uc_kley~Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

year.
No matter what I say or do,
nothing eases the pain of losing
!bern to tiE world . I wUI really miss
· !hem but I wish them all success In
whatever they do and to !hem I
dedica te this poem; Ryan OUver,
Kelley Grueser, Sean Grueser,
Jack Justis, Lisa Parsons, Jodie
Harris, Teresa Shuler, Becky Van
Meter, Kerr! Beegle, Theresa Bing,
Robin Savage, Randy Roush, Paula
Winebrenner and Eric Thoren.
Walking through tbe forest, With
no one al my side,
I keep having these feelings, That
are troubling me Inside.
I do nor understand them, So
p ease, don't ask me why ,
I simply just accept them, and
forget them with a sigh'
But, still, tbey wlll not leave,
Though I try, Oh, how I do:
But w!En I start to think and
dream, r always think of you.
I don 'I know what I'll do, Without
· you at my side,
But I know that I will cry, When
we have to say "goodbye".
But there Is just one thing , That I
have to say to you;
"Don 't you dare forget me, 'Cuz
I'll always care for you."
Bruce Wolfe
Class of "87"

organization &lt;1 members- the top
health officials of every state have the authority to implement
most public health pollcy In their
Individual states," the Times reports. And the proposal oft be bealth
officers Is to encourage blood tests
"on a voluntary basis" in order to
Identify "those persons woo are
Infected and thus potentially irdec·
tlous." And !hen having done this,
the association would "discreetly
inlorm ...persons who may have
been recently exposed, eltber sexually or bY sharing needles, to
someone woo is IITLV.J antlbody
positive;"
While oot imjXlgning tbe maUves
of tbe Association of. State and
Territorial Health Oft1clals - the
group has not (yet) been accused of
being an anti-gay front lor the
Moral Majority - It does not seem
unreasonable to suppose that any
such thing as It envisions could

another suggestion is being made
on the matter of how to control tbe
spread of AIDS, which disease Is
estimated by The Economist of
J._ondon to claim 250,0)) American
lives in the next eight years if II
continues to spread at the current
rate. But the very latest proposal,
bY the Association of State and
Territorial Health Officials, raises
questions that give one pause,
never mind how intensive tbe
concern lorcontalning tbespread of
the disease.
What the as10Ciation wUl propose. it is learned, Is not only to
record the names of Infected
individuals but to notify, to quote
Marlene Cimons of !be Los Angeles
Times. " their sexual contacts."
News of this execu live proposal
having leakro, the furor begins.
"Although Its recommendations do
not have tbe Ioree of law, the

possibly be done "discreetly." U what is me then to say to tmse with
John IS tEsted, John having volun- whom ,lohn has had mntact? It they
teered, and Is found to be "Infected have already been infected, then
and possibly Infectious," he would tbere. . Is oothlng oow known in
be asked with whom he had (since science that can belp tbem . The
when 1 ) shared a needle or had sex. association documents (as yet
We know from the ligures that unpublished ) might argue that such
homosexual contacts tend to be persons might be warned that tbey
vaslly more lrtquenr !han hetero- have had contact with an infected
sexual contacts, among those gays person. One understands the impll·
who continue In tradltkmalllfestyie. cations of this, the association l.s
To begin to ask with wmm John saying; We can tell Jim, Joe, Gus
might have had contact Is in the and Adam, your pal John has got
first place a questkln to which a the inlectkm: You may also have it.
reliable answer is by oo means U you do, better take a blood test
predictable; He' might not even and find out. U you tEst negative,
know tbe names c1 tmse with whom tben beware in !he filture such as
he had such contact. And then to John.
That sounds to me like a pretty
track down such a list as he
roundabout
way of going after the
volunteered is a most awfUlly
desired
results,
whlch is to limit tbe
messy assignment, certainly not
infection.
A
spokesman
for the
one that could, with any plausible
association
says,
pre-emptively,
mpe of success, be und&gt;rtaken
that much too much Is already
confidentially.
Moreover. one reasonably asks, being made of tbe projected report,
and that, after all, JXIblic bealth
officials have a "longtime history"
of keeping records confidential, and
that It has been a standard practice
to try to track down possible
victims. U a grocery store has been
Isolated thai sold a hundred cans of
salmon of !be kind In which
botulism has been detected, one
routinely expects nationwide manhunts. True, but the primary
JXIrpose of th@se Is to warn against
tmse cans of salmon. Does that
metapoor extend to the friends of
John?
A while ago! suggested that those
infected with the virus be tattooed,
intending what the association
intends, namely to guard against
inadvertent contamination. Mine
was not so much a proposal as an
exploration: What does soc iety do
to (rotect those who are not inlectro
from those who are?
Rep. RDbert Dornan . R-Ca!~ .. on
a recent television program, acknowledged that tbe tattoo, mwever discreetly situated, would be
more effective than any a.llernatlve
recently proposed, but that tbe Idea
suffers fatally from it s apparently
inseparable connec tion with tbe
concentrat ion camps.

SELECI'ED FOR AAU PIA Y - Southeastern
Ohio wUl he represented In the AAU Junior Olympic
basketball tournament (lnlennrolide tUvlslon) beginning June 12 In Columbus by the !~man roster
pictured above. Kneeling' (first row) from left Todd
PoweU (Meigs); Eddie Crooks (Meigs): .Johit
Burdette (Federal-Hocking); Troy Dicken (Alex·

'"'

:

dangl'r pay by stat ing that "tt.&gt;
presence of non-essential personnel
or depeod&gt;nts shall not prec lude
payment." This was done, Con.
gress explainro, "in recognllkln of
the current epidemic d worldwide
terrorist activity and the courage
and sacrifice of employees of
Unitro States agencies bverseas,
civilian as well as military."
-Government musing. Foreign
Service personnel stationed abroad
"may be furnished without cost"
quarters In U.S.-owned or rented
buildings. Furniture, equipment
and maintenanre arev provided.
When government quarters aren't
available, th&gt; employees receive a
housing allowanre.
According to the GAO 's legisla tive history, this practice began in
1901, in a deUberate attempt to
make Foreign Service careers
possible to "men cJ. merit who were
not wealthy." II recounted congressklnal visitors woo were dismayed
to lind American diplomats llving
in "dingy rooms" or "in places
where an American vl.sitor would

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Transactions

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COLUMBUS - Meigs senior
Shawn Baker brought home tt.&gt;

The Daily Sentinel
( lJ.iolf"S l·l :'i·HGIIJ
,\ [)h•l.'llon of Mul11nwdlu , In(' .

Publ lshrd f'\' t' r~ · ll llC't'tHJon. M ond~l .\
throu gh Friday 111 Coun ~L. P o
mNn,, ·. Ohtn. b~· th r Oh io \'&lt;Jih•v Pub

ll s hln g Cn mpan ~· Mu lllmf'tliii, InC' ..
Pom f' ro.l·. Ohi o o~ r, 71i~l . Ph . ~2 - 2 1 :11 ; , Sf'
cond cla.o;s pos t ;~gf' p;titl c~t l'o nwro.\'.
Ohi o.
M£'mbi'r : Uni!('( l Prf'!'" l nif'rn, tt ional.
Inl a nd D;tllv Prf'Ss A.»soc !a ti on and lh f'

Ohio N (•w ~Pa p{'r 1\ ss oehtl lon . Nit ll on t~ l
Adv(• J'IIsl n~

Rrpn •spnt&lt;tt ln•. Branham
Sai C'S. il1 Thi rd Av t•nuC'.
Nf'\.1' York. Nrw York 10017.

NP'J,· ~ p ap f'r

POST.\1AST E!1: Srnd addr&lt;'ss rh;mgt~
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Baker beaten in finals of
Class A-AA regional meet

Broder says of White, "Quile
II was that book which first
literally, he taught a generati:Jn of started to stir in my SJul the
politicians how ro become tmughrs and the pattern that led
president."
me a decade later to seek and win
I rememtx&gt;r d&gt;vouring ooe of the Democratic pres idential nomlTheodore White's remarkable ~ation. Pe~haps if I had stayed a
books on a presidential campaign, lrttle more m tune wit h !be Insights
"The Making of the President : of Teddy White, I might have done
llMiJ."
better against Richard Nixon in the
At least in my case, Broder is taUcampaign .
right.

I

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be humiliated to find his counttjl's
representative. ··
-Layette shipment. When a
Foreign Sertvice employee has a
baby overseas, "shipment d a
newbom's clothing, equipment and
furniture may be authorized in an
amount not to exceed 250 pounds ... if
American &lt;r ctber ruitablc layettes
are unavailable at !he post assignro ." Lacking specific congressklnal authorization lor thls allowance. lhe State Department
"believes such shipments may be
made under its general autmrity to
ship musehold effects," the GAO
report notes.
Footnote; Informed of tbe GAO
fact sheet, Gerald Lamberty, ,presldent or tbe American Foreign
Service Association, pointed out
that " in spit e of tbese supposed
benefits, tbe department still has to
pu I pressure on Foreign SeJVIce
Officers to serve overseas these
days." Before tbe rise of terrorism ,
he said, most Foreign Service
people preferred foreign duly to a
Washington posting.

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must offer the masses of Asia !he
same things that the Russian
revolution promises !hem- bread
and equality in their daily Ufe. But
we can offer them more than that,
lor we are nourished by a tradition
of an earlier revolution, a revolution
that promtsro the world not only
equality and security but liberty.
We can offer oot only bread and
land In the future but brood oow, in
present, from the granaries of our
surplus. Tbe allles we seek must be
those governments that (rOmlse
and give th&gt;ir people what tbey
need and want; we canoot have
strong allies or a strong policy II our
allies block the desires of their own
people or if we ourselves remain
obdurate to tbe misery of millions.
"To adopt the concept of chan5"'
as our course in Asia Is not only in
tbe best Interests of Asla but in the
best Interests of America."
If American policy makers had
carefully digested "Thunder Out of
China" andsuchotberworksci.that
period as Owen Lanimore's "The
Situation in Asia," we could have
been sparro a series of costly
mistakes in our deallngs with
Oiina, Korea, Vietnam and otber
Asian trouble spots.
Teddy White attempted to cover
my 1972 bid for the (residency. I do
not helleve he fully grasped the
dymanics ct my campaign. But this
Is partly my fault and the fault of
my campaign aid&gt;s. We did not
give him as much time 311d access
as he deservro .
David Broder has described
White as "tbe (re-eminent poutlcal
wrlter of his time." That ;; a great
tribute- especially coming from a
writer woo may very well have
earned that position himself.

('!'" "'""'

.:

......

Teddy White's wisdom.____Ge_or.!;;__ge_M_cG_ove_rn
Theodore White, tbe brUIIant
poUtical reporter and historian,
died recently, ending what must
surely tie a matchless Ufe of
reporting on political developments
as widely separated as the Chinese
revolution and the Wisconsin
primary.
The news olhisdeathreached me
In Taipei, where I was accompanlro by Professor Arthur Schlesinger and our wives after we had
lectured at Taiwan's Academia
Sinlca.
!first met White at Schlesinger's
home in Georgetown in 1961 during
the early days of tbe Kennedy
administration. I couldn't wait to
tell him mw much I enjoyed
reading "Thunder Out of China," a
great book he co-authored with
Annalee JacobY in 1946.
"Thunder Out of China" was not
only poJXIlar at the time of
publication lit was a Book of the
Month Club selection and a best
seller). It also proved to tx&gt; a
propbetic book that forecast with
amazing accuracy tbe revolutionI ary currents that were even then
convulsing Asia.
Consider these concluding Ones
wrltten by White and Jacoby 40
years ago; "We cannot defend
democracy by defending it where
democracy does oot exist. We
canoot defend a system of oppresslon, feudalism and corruption
anywhere In the world and tell
people we are doing so in defense of
their democratic rights. No peasant, be be Chinese, Iranian, or
Indian, will believe that the system
that makes him a IDndslave to
hunger Is democratic CJ' tree.
"We ourselves must become the
sponsors of revolutkln. 'Our poUcy

I

N.\TIONAI . IJo~ua r t;
Ry t 1n1Wd Pn,.,; ln«·muUonal

Overseas senrice benefits._____
senator. Our as&gt;Oeiate Lucette
Lagnado got an advance look at the
report.
Altmugh the auditors scrupulously avoided judgments, one way
or the other, on tbe various benefits
and allowances, !hey presented a
" legislative history" of most of
them that explained when and why
Congresses dating back to l!m had
seen fit to provide the various
perequlsltes. Here Is a sampling of
the more than 100 allowances,
which tbe GAO broke down into 65
categories;
-Dan5"'r pay. This is granted to
"employees serving at a post wbere
civil insurrection, clvU war or
warlike conditions exist" and may
not exceed 25 J)E!'cent of the
employee's base pay. At present,
dan5"'r pay is being given to
Foreign Service personnel In only
five countries: Afghanistan (where
tbe American amhassador was
kUied in 1979), Colombia, Ei
Salvador, Lebanon and Uganda .
The GAO notes that in 1983,
Congress broadened the scope of

ander) and Tom Dutlel (Miller). Slanting .&lt;\.o;.•lstant coach Ron Drexler, Toby Wot1unan
(Federal-Hocking); Shawn Diddle (Southern); Dan
Jaycox (Wellston) ; DaveWarrm (Alexander); Troy
Stuckey (Belpre); Kevin OUer (Meigs) and coach
Rosly Bookman. Doug Stewart (Meigs) wasabsmt.

Scoreboard ...

Jack Anderson
&amp;_D_a_Le_va_n-----'At_ta

WASHINGTON - There has
never been a time in the history of
the republic when American diplomats overseas have been In greater
personal danger. In the last three
years, 21 members of tbe U.S.
Foreign SeJVice have been killed in
the line of duty. Otbers have been
shol at, bombed. kidnapped and
otherwise terrorized while serving
!heir government.
Bur this is also a time of fiscal
restraint, wben Congress is looking
lor any means to cur the budgets of
federal agencies. So Sen. Edward
ZDrinksy, D-Neb., asked the Gen eral Accounting Office to compile a
comprehensive list of of the "bene!·
it s and allowances" that Foreign
Service personnel are entitled to .
ZDrinsky, a member of tbe Foreign
Relations Committee, wanted to
know II some of the inducements
authorized by Congress over tbe
years were a waste of money.
11te GAO auditors s~ted through
legislation, State Department regulations and other documents lor
months, and have finally completed
an 86-page "fact sheet" for tbe

Sentinel- Page- 3

Mall

ca r r l~ ·r .&lt;;~•rvll' t•

Is

S uhH c rlpllom~

lnsldt• Ohio
JJ Wf'eks ..................... .. ......... $1&lt;1 .56
26 Wt"'ek s ~ ................... .. .......... S2fl.1 2
52 Wef'ks ................... ............. $.18.24

Oul!&lt;!ldt Ohio

13 Wc£&gt;ks ......... .. ....................... $1 5.60
26 Wccks ..................... .... .. ....... . $31 .20
52 Weeks ....... .
.. ............ $.19.80

By MICHAEL BURNS
CINCINNATI (UP!) - II took
nearly eight months to tbe day, but
Danny Cox finally won another
game.
Cox yielded one run and six hit s
over Ove Innings and singlro mme
the game-w\Dning run Sunday as
tbe St. Loul.s Cardinals edged tbe
Cincinnati Reds 2-1, giving Cox his
first vletory since be beat the Mets
Oct. 3.
"All my llngernalis are gone,"
Cox said alter Todd Worrell pitched
oot of bases loaded jams in both tbe
seventh and eighth Innings to
preserve his victory. "We've been
losing a lot of games by one run. It
feels good to win one by one."
Worrell, who retired the Reds in
order in tbe ninth, earned hls
seventh save.
Cox, 14, was forced to leave !be
game when his right elbow
tlghtenro.
"It feels kind of sri!!, but It wlll be
all right before my next start," Cox
said of his elbow. "Getting the win
makes It feel a little better."
Cox, who began the season on tbe
21-day disabled list due to a chip
fracture ct his right ankle, drove in
the gamP-winner with a second inning single.

"That was a breat ht aking adven · Pl'le f«Jse's thi'OW to sc~·o nd . Afti'r
tureout there," Cardinals manager Tprry Pend leton "'11rk out , Cox
Whitey Herzog said of tile Reds' slngi"-J to right field to s&lt;xm· Smith
late scoring chances. "That 's tbe lor a 2-1 &lt;·ad .
"When I litr c'J rm k•g I sa w him
kind wP've been losing all year. 1
bet there have been fi ve gam&lt;•s go in g, so I tried to gpt th&lt;' ball to
where, with two outs, we gave up a Pete as quick as I could . hull took a
hit or a home run in the late little morr time than I could
afford, " Wels·h said ()[ the picko ff
Innings."
St. Loulsis 6-llinonPrungames. all&lt;'mpl . " I di dn't bu st it over to
Loser Otrls Welsh, 0-J. ;1 rur k aut him . PPII' not gellin g ti'f' ball nut of
three and walked three In seven hi s g]ovP clean toD k a lit l iP \ongPr .
innings. Welsh, woo grew up in too."
The Cardina ls took a 1-11 lead in
Cincinnati, was making his debut
tbe first. Vince Coi,.man O!X'n&lt;~
with the Reds.
"I kept the team in the game, but wit h a walk and stoit• spcond ~nd
I felt I gave IliD runs away tin tl11' third. Willie Mc&lt;:ct· walked. and
first two lnnlngsr," We ish sa id. AndY Van Siykr !lie'(( out. Coleman
"They're a good defensive team ragged on the play hut wa s caught
and yoo can't give them any runs. in a ru ndown, with :vtc{;c(• mo,·ing
especially wben it looks like you r to SfC'ond. After Jack Clark was hit
.team Is scuffling for runs the same by a pitch. Tom Hrr r single~ mm r·
Mc{;rc.
day."
The l{eds li e~ tt.&gt; sco re 1·1 in thC'
Welsh said that he though t ti'f'
bottom
of It•• inning. Eddi&lt;• Mi lnc•r
Reds hit tbe ball harder than till'
singled
In
!Pad off. WC'ntto second on
Cardinals .
a
OOlk
by
Cox.
and scorc1J on RO S ('' ~
"They squibbed a •few through to
single.
gl't tbe win ," he said. "If you would
The Reus o;x·n a thrwgam&lt;·
have told me in the third innin g that
series
against the Chicago Cuhs at
Cox's hit would be ttF gameRiverfront
Stadium tonight . \\.'i lh
winner, I'd have laughed ."
flick
Sutcl
iffe.
:~fi. scheduled to
In tbe second , Ozzie Smith
start
for
the
Cubs and Bill
singled , and Welsh had him ptcked
Gu
llickson.
4-4.
for
the Re-ds.
off, but Smith beat first ba smr man

Nonnan
Kemper
Houston nips Boston
champion
By WILL DUNHAM
UPI Sports Writer
BETHESDA. Md. iUPI! - A
pair of wa ter traps helped one of
golf's big fi sh caplur••lhl' Kemper
Open in the PGA Tour's longest
playoff in rhree yea rs.
Greg Norman, Australia 's
"Grrat While Shark," won the
Kemper Sunda y with a two-foot
purr for par on the sixth playoff hole
after watching Larry Mizedrop his
ball into two different ponds.
Mize sent an approach shot
bouncing off the green. ovrr a
bunker a nd Into !he water, took a
penalty stroke and then skidded IiY'
ball back over the green and int o a
po nd on the other side.
Mize's misfortune on Congrcs·
siona i Count ry Club's No. 18 hole
wasn't limil&lt;:&lt;i to thP playoff finale.
He bogeyed thr 18th in regu lation to
torre the playoff .and ml.ssed a
12-loot putt on the 18th that would
have won the tournament on the
third playoff hole.
Norman, who won $90,!XXJ 1111 h
the triumph, is now No. I on the
PGA's money list wilh $447,109. He
recorded pars on each of the six
playoff holes alter he lirt~ a
6-under-par 66ro finish r('gtllatlon at
11-under 27i. Norman posted his
second Kemper title in three years.
Mize, who ent ered tbe fourth
rou nd three strokPs ahead of
Norman , wasted a five-stroke final
round lead last year and finished In
a seco nd place tie with Corey
Pa vin, one stroke behind Bill
Classon.
"It' s second place again here,"
said Mize. woo shot a 3- under ffi in
regulation . "It's once again very
disappointing. I !eel like I pl ayed a
pretty good round , but not go&lt;Xl
mough ."
Norman IaUro to convert pu ns
for birdie on lour oft be six playoff
holes, while Mize ml.ssed closeput1s
for birdie on three sudden dea th
holes.
"Neither of us cou ld s£€m to gel a
pull in lor birdie, " Mize said , who
earned $54 ,o:xJ.
" It' s sad to win like this. ll 's nice
to win, but I would ral tier have won
with a birdie. ! feel sorry lor Larry.
He played ttF last 18 ooles !Of
regulation I just rtghl ,aggresslveiy.
Then I ended up having tile last
(playoff ) hole given to fll',"
Norman said,
John Cook shot a 5-under 61 to lie
Mlkr Reid (70) lor third place at
9-un•-r
Wadkins
"" ""9.
• ' whil e ""bby
n&gt;
firro a &amp;-under Q; for fourth place at
s-under""".
"""
Reid, a 10-year Tour veteran,
collected $29,o:xJ lor tbe third place
tie, pushing him ro within less than
SH.!XXJ of becoming rre first player
in PGA history to eam $1 million
witmut having won a tournament.
Norman trailed Mize bY one
stroke enterina• the 18th hole of
regulalion,bulforcedtbeplayoflby
hittin g a two-looter lor par rnoments before Mlzc bo""'yed tbe
hole.
.,..

By RICIIARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON (UPIJ -The Houston
Rockets clawed tbelr way back Into
the NBA Championship scrk's.
Houston erased an 8-point deficit
in the linai3; 19 Sunday to pull out a
106-104 victory. Boston leads !be
best-of-seven series 2·1 wlthGame4
set lor Tuesday at the Summit in
Houston.
"We had to scratch and fight,"
sa id Rockets forward Ralph Sampson. who spearheaded the victory
with 24 points and 22 rebounds. "We
didn't play the game well. They are
still up. But this is one we had to
wi n."

Thr Rockets arc 8-0 at home in
the playoffs while Boston'sstreak of
seven-straight playo!f victories was
snapped.
"We really had a lousy sldrt ,"
said Rockets coach Bill Filch.
"Everything was so bad that we
had to change everyt hing to get
startro . We had to get out of tbe spot
we were in. We playro a good
second hall. We can still improve."
"!!bought we had It won before it
startro," said Boston star Larry
Bird. "We had out · shot tbem.
out·rebounded !bern and had more
assists. They got lucky, awfully
lucky to beat us."
The Rockets were indeed lortu·
nate. They got a timely tlp-in from
Mitchell Wiggins, clutch tree
throws from Akeem OlajuiVO!I, an
inadverillnt whistle that Iro to a

jump bali controlled by Houston.
and a Boston miscue on a last ·shot
attempt.
But all that matterro lor Houston
was the vic tory.
"We have co nf idcnC'C again ,"
said Robert Reid. "ll'&lt;''ve got too
much (ride toler them walk in herr·

,and win it away from us. WewiJnt to

be !be charnpions.Wr want tt"&lt;• ring
and rtf&gt; banner."
Houston led for most of the first
haU , holding a 62-59 edge at
haUiime. Bu t Boston ran off II
straight points to start the third
quart er and kept turning th&lt;·
Rockets away. The Ccit ics upped
its advantage ro i G-6.1 a t 5: 44 of' '"'
third period.
Kevin McH ale, wm led Boston
withto7Sgive
points,
hit aics
follow
withlead
3: 19.
left
the Ceit
a 102-94
The Rockers ba ttled bac k, sco ring
10 straight points to take a 103- 102
advantage with 1:07to go.
Danny Ainge gave rbe lmd back
to Boston with an 18- footer . bur
Wiggins rapped in a mi ssed effort
by Olajuwon to put the Rockets
ahead 105-104 wit h 30 Sff'O nds k&gt;ft .
Boston's Robert Paris h missed
an ilside shot and in tbe batt le for
t.be rebound, an inadvertant whisUc
resulted in a jump ball. The Hoot -4
Sampson outjumped rtF 7-0 Parish.
Oiajuwon was lou too and gave tbe
Rockets a 106-104 cushion with five
seconds left.
Boston mulled its final chance
from ''"' field when ParL'h caugh t

I 06-l 02

Drn nis .Johnson's in)")Junds pass.

bur str•ppl'd our ot hou nds.
" When .vou losf' a ninr'{Jr 10· point

lrad on 1wo oct·asiom; in lh(' St'('ond
ha lf. thrn "" hav(' not donr" job of
tak ing ca r(' of OO sinrss." said
Boo; ton roach K C. .Jones. "\\'e too k

bad shots &lt;Jnd mad•• bad turno v('rs
10 let Houston e·om&lt;• back. \l't' did
not handle Ihe b a II w·rv well "
Houst on's gamf' 1,.1.·as anchored by

Rl'id. wm sm rc-d ~~ poonts and shut
do"n Bird in th&lt; • se&lt;·ond half.
Bird srorrd 19 points in tht' first
hali and finishc•d with 2'i after Hetd
took

O\T'I'

lor Rodney McC ray

midwa) rlu ·o u~h tt"&lt;· third period.
Bird st ill fini shc•d with a tripledouble- 21 points. t'1 rr'hound s and
11 assist s.

ri~j~~~g~~~~~i

~3• I&amp;.CKSON PikE · RT 35 WEST

PhOne 4 46 · 4524

BJ.RGA!'I 'IATJ 'IEES SATU RO.G.r
5 SU ~IOAV · ALL SUTS S2 SO
AtlMJS SlON EVER ~ TUESDA'r $2.50

l_!AY 30 lhru JUNE~
FRIDAY th ru THURS DAl' :

Ankle InJUry
• • • orces
'J
Noah from tourney
.
~

.

By BD.L SCOT!'
PARIS (UPI)- Henri Leconte is
the only remaining hope for
hometown fans at the S2.6 million
F r en c h 0 p en T e n n 1s
Championship.
NatiOnal hero Yannick Noah who skipped town three years ago
to avoid the pressure alter becoming tbe first Frenchman to win this
Grand Slam event in aimostlour
decades - withdrew Sunday because of an ankle injury.
And Casa bl a nca -born Guy
Forget, 21, was knockro out in a
matchlastingmorethanlourhours
by Argentina's patient, 33-year-oid
Gulllerrno Vilas, the winner here In
1977.
U&gt;conte,theelghthsff'd,lsrntbe
rise after shrugging off mononu.
cleosis over the winter.
He moved out to the quarterfinals
rwo weeks ago in Rome, his best
outing alter poor showings earlier
this spring in Brussels and
Rotterdam.
On Monday, he's paired against
baselinP.bound Horacia De La
Pena, an Argentine player wiD is
content to stay out there aU day .
OttFr matches today featured
No.2 seed Chris Evert Lloyd, going
to
rd
h
r a reco seven! IItle bere,

class A-AA regional runner-up
rennL• honors at Westland High
~h~ Saturd~y, ~oslng in the finals
o
nat ton s our-ranked high
school
tennis
ace, David Ka ss of
c1
o urn bus &amp;-xirv.
Baker, who had already earned a
spot In the slate tou mament with
two wins in !liP regional's first and
second round last weekend, defea red George Skestos of Columbus
Academy, 6-4,2-6. &amp;-3, in Sa turday's
first round for the right to meet
Kass and his eighth straight win rn
the toumamenr trai l.
Jn the
I hi P match ,
· champons
Baker fell to !be highly-ran ked
Kass, !i-1. 6-2. Kass had defeated
Sieve Mudre, 6-2, &amp;-2, of Big Walnut
in the first match . All !bur oft be 'i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a;g;a;in;st;;13;th;·;ran;;ked;;;;;C;a;rli;ln~giii8a~s;-j
­
piayers will participate In tbe state I
tourna ment at Ohio State's courts
In Columbus June 6 and 7.
Tbe Middleport native Baker
ea rned his way to tbe regional's
final lour by rolling past Walter of
Academy, 6-1, 6-2, and Ramsey of
Bloom-Carroll , 5-7, &amp;-3, 5-2 (disquail
!be (revious weekend.
In live district matches, Baker
rolled to straight-set wins and
outscored his opponents 00-6 In the
ten games. The district champion
Baker had blisterro eight straight
tournament opponents by a comblnro 88-21 before the Kass loss
Saturday.
Bexley also brought mme the
doubles title as the Uons' Keith
Oieses and Steve Seigel won the
regional title, also played bere
Saturday.

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

sell of Canada.
The No.3 mmen's and women 's
seeds - West Germans Boris
Becker and Stelli Graf and Boris
Becker- will face Emilio Sanchez
of Spain and No . 5 Hana Mandlik ·
ova of Czechoslovakia respectively.
Noah's pullout left Gallic mouths
agape at tbe Roland Garros tennis
complex on the western end of tbe
city.
" I have a second.&lt;Jrgrce bum on
tbe ankle, " Noah said. " Tbe oorer
layer of ski n has fallen off and the
second Is about to fall . The tendon
itself is close to In fection ."

~ EO NES OA V ,

JUNE 4th

TOf1 CRU ISE in " TOP GUI'I' '
C ~ING SOON: "BAC&lt; fO SCHOOL"

r-....:..___..:.________.______________

�Monday, June 2, 1986

·usiness Services

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
Legion Auxiliary makes donations to several groups

4

A $50 cont ribution to Middlepo11
Villag~ Council on the fireworks
display was made when the
American i.Rgion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, met
Wednesday night at the hall.
Other highlight s of the mwt ing
included the installation of new
offiC&lt;"rs by Florence Richards. past
eighth district president. and plans
for community sen -ice and nu1~ ing
hom e pmjeers.
New officers installed were Jean
Gilmot&lt;'. PI&lt;'Sident; Ren&lt;'&lt;' Stone.
first \'i('(' pi&lt;'Sident: Velsia Roush.
secretary: Ger ry P arsons, trPas-

urpr; Preda Edwards, historian:
and Kalh&lt;'ryn Metzger. chap lain.
CommiltPrs apJX)intrd Wf'f' Ka tie

Gilmot1'. sergeant at arms. Ga tl
Frrry and .Jan ie(' Gibbs. color
guard: Ba rbara Hudson . assistant :
Frf'da Edwards. historian : RPnc&lt;'

Stont'. membership. Pauline Grca thouSf:', Americanism : Sonya Way land, communi!\' s r'('IViCI\ VC'Isia

Roush. V&lt;'l&lt;'ran·s affairs; Beck\
'!)Tee. children and .vouth : Gall
Fen:v and l'yt"('{', junor arth· itiPs;

Mrs. Roush, communicat ions and
public reltions: Etta \\'ill. leg isla-

ti\·c:

Mrs. Grrat houS&lt;', poppy

t•hainnan; Jan icP Gibbs, mu sic;

lol'ny Parsons. Arcad ia. Freda
Edwards. Plum Street. Phyllis
Ellakr. Rlwrvir\1'. and EIIB Will.
V r t f'ran ~

Mrmotilll PX tC'ndC'd carr.
nu rsi ng home cha ilmr n.

Also appointed \\'ere Mrs. Roush.
ki tchen . Mrs. Metzger, cleanup .
and Mrs. Parsons. games. Becky
1\ 1&lt;'&lt;' presided at the meet ing
which opened in ritualistic form .
Gilmore gave a report on the
Buckeye Girls Stale tea held in
Gallipolis with J:l of the delegates

Delegates set
Brian Gibbs and Jay Proffitt
were among the 33 contestants
selected at the state conference to
represent Ohio as V1CA 's na tional
voting delegates.
Delegates attended a conference
at Canters Cave to prepar&lt;' for the
nat ional in Phoenix. July 21-28.
There. they will campaign to gPt
Ohio candidates &lt;'lected to office.
Gibbs is a welding senior at Meigs
High School and currently VICA
Southeast Ohio regional sergPant at
arms. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
i.Rslie Gibbs, Pomeroy.
Jay is also a senior in electronics
at Mei~ and the VICA Southeast
Ohio regional vice president . He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Proffitt.
Racine.

Your SocSec:

and alternates att ending, along
with Mrs. Gilmore and Mrs.
Greathouse of the unit and S&lt;'Veral
parents.
It was noted that S-115.ll was
collected on Poppy Days and
assisting with the sa le and food
preparation for workers were
Eileen Snyder, i.Re Reed, Phyllis
Blake, Carol Rose. Mrs. Greatoouse, Mrs. Metzger, Grace Welch,
Katie Gilmore, Dov.nie Kennedy,
Diana Jatvis, Shelly Fox , Renee
Stone, Erma Hendricks, Mary
Clark, Kim Kennedy, and Fred
Gibbs. Prizes will be presented to
Mrs. Grmtoouse, the senior seiling
the most. and Kim Kennedy, tbe
junior selling the rmst.
·
Mrs . Will gave a report on tbe
party held at the Extended Care
Facility at Veterans Memotial at a
cost of $91.93. Assisting were Preda

Homebuilders conduct meeting

Brinn Gibbs

Jay Proffitt

A weiner roast on July 15 was
planned when tbe Homebuilders
Class met at the MJ&lt;tlleport Chu rch
of Christ Tuesday night .
The class voted to purchase a 24
cup coffee pot. Kathryn !::vans
presided at the meeting with Vesta
Tunie, Lewis Harris. Herman
Kincaid, and Conrad Ohling&lt;&gt;r
being reported ill. Dorothy Roach
had devotions using "Time to
Rememb&lt;&gt;r" with recordings of
"God Bless America", "Eternal

Determining amounts

By lilu Horvath
Field Representative
How about sonne numbers? Over
37 million people receive Slclal
Security benefits and another 4
million get supplemental Security
Income ISS[) payments. Social
Security also processes nearly 6
mUllan benefit applications.
What happens wben an applicant
or heneflclary is disallowed ilr a
benefit or disagrees with a determination of eUgibility or payment ?
Does that person Immediately have
to hire an attorney and go to court?
In a word, no.
There is an appeal structure rullt
into the Social Security determination process that is easy to follow
and, like aU Social Security setvl·
ces, costs nothing. When a person
receives an adverse decision on a
claim or after payment has been
m·ade, the first step ri the appeals
proeess is called a reconsideration.

A reconsideration ca n be filed up to
60 days after the date on tbe notice
of Social Security's decision .
A person ca n appeal all or part ci
the determination bycont act ing til'
local Social Security office and also
produce new evidence Jo support
the position. All information regarding the claim will bP reconsidered and a decision n&gt;ndered .
U you disagree with tbe reconsideration determinatlon , there is a Ill
day pertod to file the next appelate
step. This stage is a heartng befot·e
an administrative law judge. The
hearing is not held in a formal coun
mom situation. The judge reviews
all the evidence, requests testimony, and will have you explain your
claim in your own terms.
If the judge's determination is
still no! satisfactory, then a r!'View
by the Appeals Council of Social
Securi ty is next. The request mu st
also he fUed within sixty days of til'

notice. The council will review the
la w judge's decision for compliance
v.ith the law . Unlike the hearing,
the person making the appeal is not
present for the review.
The review is the last of tbe
ad min istrative appea l stages. If a
person Is stili dissatisfied with
Social Security's decision. then the
next step would be a civil suit tn
federal cou r1 . For this. an anorney
Is advisable .
The key to remember is tha 1
there is a spcctllc amount of time
available to protest an adverse
Social Security determination and
tha t you can appea l just about any
determtnallon. All your appeal
rights will be explained on !he
notice of · decision or notice of
change concerning your claim. And
don 't forget that these sctvices are
free and be sure to cont act your
Social Security office for an expia·
nation of the action and for
assistance.

Community calendar I area happenings

CHESHIRE - Vacation Bible
School scheduled J une 2-6, &amp;-8 p.m.,
Silver Run BaptiSt Church . Program on June 8, 7:ll p.m.: picnic
June 9.
POMEORY - The Meigs !.Deal
Band Boosters will have a pop can
collection drive Monday. Cans can
be taken to the Meigs High School
band room between 8:30 and 10
a.m. Monday or residents may call
!J.!2-3158 for pickup.
ORANGE 1WP- Orange Town ship trustees meet 8 p.m .. Monday,
home of Clerk Dorothy Calaway.
POMEORY- Meigs Local Band
Boosters meet 7 p.m. Monday at the
high school band mom.
POMEROY -

Vacation Bible

School begin Monday through Ju""
13, 6:30 p.m. at First Southem
Baptist Chu rch. Classes for ages
three through high school.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star. meets 7:30
p.m. Monday; refreshment s.

WED!I.'ESDAY
MIDDLE PORT
FeeneyBennett Post 128 and Auxiliary,
American Legion. will honor lhr&lt;'&lt;'
World War I veterans, Tom Turner.
Waller Bunce. and Rodney Down ie,
and severa l old memb&lt;&gt;rs having
birthdays at a dinner. 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club meet s 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY -A Social Security
Monday, rose garden of Al1hur and reprcsmta live will he at the Senior
Beulah St rau ss. Following garden Cit izens Cen ter on the second and
tour, bu siness meeting, rEfresh- fo urt h Wednesdays. June 11 and Zi.
ments. a t Middleport Presbyterian from 10 a. m to noon. This is a
Church .
chanll" from thr regu larly scheduled visits.
MIDDLEPORT - Middl eport
Garden Club meets Monday 7:30 Buckeye •·ards
p.m., Presbyterian Church. Hos POMEROY - Persons Ill years
tesses Mrs. Paul Haplonstail. Mrs. of age and over, or disa bled , who
Dorothy Roller and Mrs. John wan I Golden Buckeye or Silver
Davis.
Passpon Canis, may obtain them
at the PomerO)' Libra1y. Proof of
agr. such as a birth certifica te,
driver's license or other docu ment ,
TUESDAY
is required . Disabled mu st have
Rl!J'LAND - Rutland Village pmof of di sa bility. such as an award
Council wlll meet June :1 at 7::«1 lett er fi·om SocialSecu rity, and also
p.m. at thl' Ru tland Clv ic Center.
a letter from a doctor.

Father,StrongtoSave", "Annerica,
the Beautiful", and "God of Our
Father" by prominent vocalists.
Coleen Van Meier gave 'sketches"
and Glen Evans had prayer.
Marie Curd and Flo Gruescr
setved refreshments to toosc
named and Dorothy and Raymond
Baker, Delsie Forth, Bill Grueser.
Raymond and Farie Cole, Thelma
Boyer, Bud and Hal&gt;'l Wil son, and
Nettie Boyer.

reponed . Going there were Roscoe
Roush. Virgil Parsons, Fred Hanel.
Pred Gibbs. Mrs. Greathouse,
NNiie Hayes, Reva Beach, Mrs.
Weich, Shelly Fox, Elsie Rou sh,
Eileen Snyder. Etta Will , G&lt;&gt;rry
Parsons, Gail FNlJI and Jean
Gilmore. llobby Dye, "adopted"
grandfather. will have a bi rhd ay on
July 4.
The unit has srlee ted J&lt;&gt;nnifpr
Geary as Jhr handi capped child of
the year.
A Veteran s Day dinner was held
at the hall prepared by the kltchen
committ ee. Auxilia1y mcmb&lt;&gt;rs
joining post members for obst'l'vances were Gerry Hannl'l, · .Iran
Gilmore. Mrs. Snyder . Mrs.
Metzger. .Janice Gibbs. Mrs.
Welch , and Mrs. Parson&gt;.
A bowling IPam will hespJnson'll
by thr group again lhis yea r. A
brmklast wil l bl' hrld 1Dno1ing
thoSI' who ..:J id poppies rn 1hr st 1'11'1.
It was voted to buy nrw file
ca bin&lt;'IS, a camera and film , and to
present outgo ing presidents with
life membership cards and pin s.
Tht• door prize bought by Mrs.
R"'ll wa s won by Mrs. C1ark. Du!'S
Lin' payabi(' now. srniOr lTl(' mf:xlrs.
$i, and junior membl• rs. S4, to be
Sf'nl ro Mrs. Roush or Mrs. Parsons.
Srv.. ral mrmbl'rs plan tn attf'nd
thr summri' Cimn•nrion (.I I .Junclion
City on .Junf' ~&gt;.

A dinnrr was

Sl 'rVI'&lt;I

PHONE 992-2156
Or W11h O~rl l y SrnMtl CIJs\r ! rt~ Depl
Ill Cau rl Sl . Pomt~oy . Ohro 4 ~ 1&amp;'1

Lodge announced

Gilmore, treasurer: Wanda Eblin ,
stewardship; Jean Wright , out reach, Janice Haggy, CYM director, and Iva Powell , mission&gt;
education director.
Mrs. Friend presented the pm·
gram, " i.Rt the Son Shine Through
Your Committed Lile." Brenda
Haggy and Kay Clark read "Im pression of Mexico." A quiz on

Mex ico wa s given with Wanda
Eblin winning a gift for answering
the most quest ions.
Plan ning the mother-daught er
banquet whi ch was held c\l riier this
month were Brenda Haggy, Donna
Gilmore, Wanda Eblin , Jean
Wright . and llonnie Prien d. Shirley
Friend had the bl ~slng. Also
attending was Becky Eblin .

•viNYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

UT'S BUILD UP TOGfTHERI

HUTCHISON
CONSTRUCTION

•lOCAllYOWN ID

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

tro~

PH. 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

•All SIZES IVIILABLE

WAMSLEY &amp; GRAY
(304) 173-5527 ~ (304) 89~3386

Public Notice

Middlepon Lodge 363, P&amp;AM,
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the temple with refreslunents to be
sem !!l following ihe meeting.

,

Card of Thanks

L&amp;ading Creek
Cooservancy Dittrict will accept
sealed bids at its office
located at 34481 Corn Hollow Road, Rutland, Ohio

46775, lor purchue by

The family of William
Connolly wishes to
thank everyone for their
prayers, flowers, food
and kindness shown at
the time of his death .
Special thanks to the
White Funeral Home ,
Rev. Edsel Hart , Dr.
Slack, all the kind
nurses at Pleasant Valley Hospital. members
of the Tuppers Plains
Emergency Squad who
'M!re not only efficient.
but caring .
He was dearly loved and
will be missed by family
and friends . We must remember that the ones
we love are never gone ,
they live within our
hearts.

The William
Connolly Family

Lading Creek Conservancy
District of one new motor
wehic le as follows :
SPECIFICATIONS : 1987
Y2 ton Styleside 4x4 pickup.
302 engine or equivalent, automatic transmlllion, limi1ed slip rear axle, rear step
bumper. bright low mount
weatem mirrors , H.O. front
and "'ar shocks, awe . rear
1111ringa. (51 7:00•15 mud
.,d anow tires and wheels,
B·ply, transmiaaion cooler.
gauges, ammeter and oil. H.
0 . knined winy I seal, awe .
~~tank , H.D. battery, cargo
hght, candy apple red , trailer
towing
package, receiw~t~
type hhch .
All bids must be filed at
the office of Leading Creek
Conservancy District on the
t 7th day of Juno, t 986, by
twelwe o'clock noon . All bids
wilt be opanod on the tBth
day of Juno, 1986, ettwelve
o 'clock noon , 11 the office of
Leading Creek Conaervancy
Oinrict.

TERMS : Cosh. Copiea

of

specifications can be ob tained at the Leading Creek
Conservancy District Of·
fica .
(8J 2. 9, 16, 3tc

Lebanon township
trustees to meet
Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the
township bulldlng.

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
SPRING CLEANING
SALE

STOREWIDE SALE

Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy ,
cole slaw, hot roll. butter and coffee . Sorry,
no substitutes except beverage wilh addi ·

TUESDAY thru SATURDAY
JUNE 3-JUNE 7

FOR JUST

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OH •.
FriMI Chicken

5/ 8-1 mo .

ROSE EXCAVAnNG
IAC1NI, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

Oil Field S.nic:e,
Landscaping, lastments,
land Clearing, Ponds, Stptic
Sy1t1ms, Htowy Hauling,
St11n1 &amp; Gro"l Hauling
El~etrical Work
RES IDENTIAL. COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL
(Certified Electrician)

DON ROSE, Owner

949-2493

Home 843 -5340
5/ 23/'86/ 1 "'·

ter Water District is inviting

bids for the repl1 cement of
the

telemetering system
located at the Treatment
Plant, wall fte ld and the Suc cess tank . All bidders are to
utilize the use of radtn , give
detailed specifiCIItions to in -

stallation and provide new

•PLAOUIS
•MID&amp;Li
-GAYU$

wiring diagrams to match
existing prints . The District
will require a performance
bond on the installation;
warranty all hardware and

',

•.1

~

•Mauame Cord
•Yarn
•NHdleport Kit
•String Art Kits
•Silk Flowers
128 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OHIO
992·2312

..,NI
•fiATS
&lt;HAIMI

IGI UlCAIID It
!11Sacoo4 ....

~- Otol

CHEV TRUCKS
Ftllltrs (73-80).. ....... .140
O.on 173 -ISI ............ .sao
Front Bumpers ............. 170
FORO TRUCKS
felllm (73 -791 .......... 140
Doon 173 -791 .......... 1100
Rod. Support ............. S11 0
Grill Shell .................. sn 0
WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
Darwin, Ohio

992-SSS3

Further information. if required, can be obtained hom

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Call:
I I -14-tlc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENtlH
•In VANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAlElltT£ SALES &amp; SERVICE
W• Hlfl AFull Tlt~~t
Shop Tuh•lclu

o• Daly

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER - 985 -3307
411/ lln

60e

E. Ma i nloal.aliillti:..ol
POMEROY, 0 .

Public Notice

Foir

1tc

OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKING
Are you in need of job skills? The
Adult Education Center at TriCounty Vocational School may
be able to start you on the way
to a rewarding job through one
of its 12 Adult Vocational Programs. There will be a meeting
at the Pomeroy Community Action Agency office, 11 7 West
Second St. on Wednesday, June
4th at 2:30 p.m., to expklin the
programs as well as finl'nxial
aid available.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16 -' 86 tin

APPLIANCE REPAIR
Experienced Service in
Microwave Ovens.
Ranges, Air
Conditidners.
Refrigerators, Washers
&amp; Dryers, TVs &amp;
Satellite Systems.

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

l4 Hr. Emwgenry StrlfKt

949 -2145

5·12 ·1 mo .

·

IF NO AN!WIR CAll:

EXOTIC BIRDS,
TROPICAL FISH,

HAMSTERS,

CLC COINS

KmENS , BIRD

SEED, CAGES &amp;
AQUARIUMS
59 N. 2nd Avt.
Middleport

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New LO&lt;afion:

168 NorSh Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 4!7 60

Nut Door To Westttl'l Auto

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992·

We

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trant111lulon

a?:

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

YOUNG'S

NEW USTING - HARRISONVILLE - Aneal two bedroom
home "'th garage. l n su~tro ,
good tool. level ~t. On~

CHESTER - Move mto a n~e
home th~ summe&lt;! Th ~ 3
bedroom home with lu l
basemrol, central air. heat
pump on a I acre lol ~ ready
lor you . New Chester.
$40,1XXlOO
ANEAT 12165 SCHULU mo~le home, on a 501120' ~t.
Chain link froctng. Equtpjlffl
klchen, 2 bedrooms. all
electr~. storage buildin&amp; MID·
IUPORT. $16,500.00.
NICE 10 year okl br~k ranch
home in a good locat~n. Ove&lt; I
acre and 3 bedrooms, 2 tlllhs.
lull basemen~ lar!S pat~.
equippOO krtchen, many lealure s. HY SELL RUN .
$49,500.00.
POMEROY - I ~ ~ory lrame
home wrth new vmyl ~dlt~
three bed rooms, some new
carpetin~ and palio. Neally
remodeled and decoratro. The
ups1airs woukl make an
excellent bunk room for
chiklren. $29,m .oo.

.

Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner .. ... 992-5692

16141 992 -71S4

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15·'86-fc

THJ QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

•

·eo

'73 ·
GM Fenders ... 139
73 ·80 GM
Rocker Panels .......... S15

'"All Yw Ptl•li•g N"d'
PLUS: Office S..ppliM &amp;

13 ·19 Ford Fenders .... 539
Trude Bed

Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

Liners ................ Ful l $175
Mini S165

Stationery, Magnef i(
Signs, Rubbtf Stomps,

FREE IN STAL LATION
2 VA WARRANTY
s.tillactio" GtJIIIfiiH~
Free D&amp;liverv Same Weell

Busintu forms,

Copy Services, Et,,
211 Mill It ., Middlopo' t
104 Mulberry Aw .• Pomeroy

FOI' NT!I f.\'
fiESTA l'fiA \T

992-3345

RES_IDENTIAL
COMMERCIAl
AGRICULTURAl
· Custom Design
Service

CALL 667·3271

Co111pue the Q11llty
Befort V~tfn mo.

3/ 2/ tln

Saddlebrook Inn

R1 fl 2 . 8 miiH

1 011 1 ~

RADIATOR

ot

11\a Pomeroy -M uon 811tiQe

SER~ICE

Choose from 3 Meoh Hom, Chicktn or loktd Sttok

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

with .t ugetobltt,
10lad, dum! and dr in• .

~ rvtd

lUNDAY BUFFET - 14.95 ·
11 :lO a.m. to 1:00 p.m
(hildun 12 &amp; Undu - 1/1 Price
~ &amp; Undtr flU
Hur "lwf'iM II ~

WltOll

APPII

Pfl!- '4.10

PAT HILL FORD

5·5·'86· I ma

992-2196
Middl eport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

TRENCHING IS OUR LINE
Trenching of Any Type
Backhoe Service
Plumbing Serv ice
Custom Weld ing
Lowboy Hauling
Septic Systems
Licanaed &amp; Bonded

WATER
WELLS
DRILLED &amp;
SERVICED

WRJJAMS TRENCH~G
SERVICE
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

FREE ESTIMATES

992 ·2834.
992-6704

Ph (614)

Ph. 992-5006
or 742-3147

FREE ESTIMATES
5·J.2 mo .

5-19-'86-tfn

DON'S MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE
UNDERPINNING &amp; SOUP

Sp,inR Speeisl

MOBILE HOME ROOF PAINTING

.$9 5

1NCLUDII PAIN!
&amp; LABDR

24'x28' Complete
T-Ill Sidina. 2 Overhead
Wood Doors, I Entrance
Door, 5 Windows. Built on
Concrete Slab.

$6,495°0
J&amp;L INSULAnON
&amp; SIDING CO.
James

IIHMI

992-2772

Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

a:

-z (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-1

JEFFERS EXCAVATING
POMEROY, OHIO

Backhoes, Bulldoters, End loader, D\Jmp
Trucks, Self loading Pon, Heavy Hauling and
\¥iiKh Trucks
•Water line
•Basements
•limestone
•Gas line
•land Clearing •Fill Dirt
•Top Soil
•Septic Tanks •Ponds
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7019

992-3525

992-5232

5/ 23 /'86/ 1

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.
N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

&amp;'

REPAIRS
pdate YOur Syltema Now

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC) 1
RACINE,

Hobson Rd., Middloporl
5113/ 1 mo.

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

ARMY SURPLUS
&amp; CAMOUFLAGE
Sizes 4 Yrs and up
ALSO HUNTING,
SURVIVAl and
VARIETY ITEMS

ACROSS FROM
OFFICE IN
MASON, W.VA.
304-773-5222
POST

5-15-'86-1 mo.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYl &amp; AWMJNUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Roofing of all Typea
Wo rked in home arM
20 yeRrs
" Free Estimates "

CAU &lt;OLLECT:

Ph. (6141843-5425

5-11' 86-2 mo .

(CUT OUT fOR FUTURI USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Maku

FOR THE BEST IN
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

•Vinyl Replacements

Kit1en1 to giveeway. Black mele
and female. Pan Siam••· C1U
614-992 -8382 .
Male dog. 7yaanold. PartGr..t
Tymea. pert Husky. blue eyes,
&amp;14-992-n84 .
Kitt~~n

Adorable fluff -ball type, grey
and white kittens. long h.lirl!d .
Callefttf 4 pm. 814-992 -7674 .
Grey female cat.Aiso Black end
wtlite ,....,,,. cat. 814· 7423t6B.
4 mixed breed. fama la puppiaa.
208 Locust St. Hender~on .

Mile. clottling, must take all .
304· 675·6804.
6 kineru to 1 good home.
304-876-2158.

Small lol of sc rap metal, large
double bowl wutl vat IHCI lined.
full s tu bed aprings. living room
chair. 304-e76 -2408.
3 blac:k tamale kitten1 . 6 Weeki
okl . 304-468· 1920.

Refrigerator. nlleds tome
peirt, 304-876 · 7429.

rto·

To 1 good home, 4 month old,
male, part Boxer, hu had Shott,
304- 876-6363 .
3 cute kittena , can be s•n 603
Firat St .. 304·676·3864.

Kittens , 304 ·876·3734 .

6 Lost and Found
LOST Black dog long bodv; shon
legs , pudgv face. Lost in wlcintv
of Gallia Ac.temv Htgtl Sdlool.
Call 8U-... 8 -21 74 after 5PM.
L01t -Female Walk• and Mal•
Blue Tick dog . Loll in Kygar
Creek area . 814-992 -3041 or
814-992·7107.
Found set ol keys May 16th,
identify and pick up at Point
Ple..ant Reg ister. 200 Me in St.

TOP CASH patd for '83 model
end n8W'er u1td cera. Smith
Bu ick· Ponliac. 1911 Etltem
Ave .. Gallipol ia. Call 1514· 446·
2282 .
Tobacco poundaga Call 1514·
266 -1612 .

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VETERINARIAN
CliNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE

305 Jackson Art.
SMALL ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon.-Wed.-1hurs. 3·S pm
Tu". 6:30-8; Fri. t -2 pm
Soturda, 10-11 :30 om
lARGE ANIMAl I
SUI GilT IT APPT.

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

Oflico 949-2438

OHIO
Emtr•Qenc:v

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and Iewing mtchlne
fiiPiir, Plnl. and IUppliM. Pldc
up tnd delivery. 01~11 Vacuum
ct.. ner. one htlf mile up
G1org" CrHk Ad . Ctll 814-

'-'B-029• .

NOAH ' S ARK ANIMAL PARK.

School1. churM•. compaty
ptcnlct. birthday JMrf• 1nd
fernltv ~niont . Call 114· 384·
2108 or t -800-282 -2117.

Ch~rl•

v~getebl"

&amp; Fam i lia~ . Beby, children•
clothing. Located belowJ ' I Mini
M1n on Rt . 36, June 6,8,7.

Elgtlt F..-nity Yard S1ie. Tunday
and Wedn•day. June 3 &amp; 4 . 11.
mile out Georges Creek Roa:t
from Buleville Roed . If rain , 111e
will be in g.ereoe.
Yerd Sale Monday·Tundey.
June 2 -3 . 24 Henkle Ave., 9· 4.
Seers AC welder , sctlool
clothes. ba111ball c leats. polo reid
instent camert. lot of
everything.
G;gantic Carport Yard Sale,
June 2 -3. Furniture. toys, ktds
Sand·
clothes. dish ea. misc.
en OrNe. 1st rolld oft Neigtlbor·
tlood out Rt. 141 .

28,

2 Femily Yard Sale. Koona
Sailor Rd. Vinton oft 325. Stove.
furniture, 2 bike&amp;. 2 bed1. size 12
women• dre&amp;le&amp; (n8W'), tlous•
hold items. etc. May 31 · 2 to 9,
June 1 &amp; 2- 9 to 9 . 814-38_8·
9311 '
3 Family Yard Sale Monday end
Tuftldey on Johnson 's Ridge oft
GeorgM Creek Rd . Second
kouse Of! left. Maternity, beby,
mena. women• and chiklren
clothes, all sizes. LOta of misc.
Garege Sale June 3rd. &amp; 4th,
9am· 4pm. Fourth Ave. in Bid ·
well . Infant swing, carrier &amp;
clothing.
Yard Sele 46 &amp; 60 Lincoln St.
Clothing, lg. sizeJ, sweeper, TV ,
Iota misc. June 3· ? 9 to 5.
Garage Sale 2 milftl out Bidw eiiRodn..,. Rd . tum on Fairview Rd .
June 2. 3, .4 .
Y1rd nle 4 fJmlty 218 3rd . Ave .
Mondey &amp; Tueadey. 9 to 4 .
Clottling. dishes. etc
Large Yard Se le Mon . 2nd, lues
3rd. on Deenie Dr. ecro11 f10m
OOfl Minkl Auto Still, Rt 35 .
Ex•cl.. equipment, children
dothea. to much to list. 9-6.

Cer10n r•idenct . One
mila up Hy1ell Run Road.
Monday June 2.

lntide aela June 2.3 .4 from 9-4
at 832 E. M1in St. Pomeroy.

Cmldrena end adutt cloth• end
m.Jch mlac.
Rummage Nle: June 3&amp;4 9:00
to 5 :00 pm. Pomeroy f iu t
Baptlat Church . Sponsored by
Mara.
ClfJ)ort 11le: 918 S. Third
Middleport. Tu ..; Wed: Thur.
JW!e 3 ,4 , &amp;. 10· 4 .
3 femity yard 11le: June 3.4.
TWP. Ad . 79 . Behind Metg1
fairground. Many cheep items
3 t~mily g~r~ge 11le. June4 ,5,8.
2 mil• oft Rt. 7 on 143 going
toward Ha"itonville. At ttle
Paige Humphreva RMidtnce . 9
till dark.

810 South Second. Middl.,rt.
June 2·7. Furniture, bedding.
linans. evon dish•. pots, pans,
tools. clothing. drepe~ , curtains.
toys, jewelry, lamps, silverware.
toweiJ, figurin ...

-,-----'-------lc-

6 f.mily gerage .. ,, 2 ,3,4 .
3·wheeler, tr ..zer. clothing. and
misc. Taxa• Rd . Kreutter re•i·
dence .
Two famiiV ysrd ule . Rt . 143
Monday June 2 . 614 -992 ·
7227
June 2 .3, 4 at 823'h Ruasell St.
Gravel Hil l. Beh ind Heiner~
Bakery . Oishll . drapu .
bienklr'IJ, apruds , clothll, tools.
jslly giUift, jart. etc .
4 family yard 11le. June 2.3. 4 .
9· 4 rain or shine. Infants to Muh
clothe~ . baby item1. toya. qu•n
lheeta, etectric blenktt, bedl·
pre.ds. draped , cunainJ , oak
doors, home Interior, d•pr ... ion
gl ..s , recOJd pteyer, furniture,.
Tum left 1 mile south of caution
on Rt .7 thin follow signa.
614-992· 7110.

Large gJrege ule. Morning Star
Sub Division, County Ad . 30.
814-11'9-2637.

Five Family Yerd S1le Wed ..
Jll"'t4. 5. 6. 9:00am. Ctlambert
gu renga, Wutingtlouae refrig .
2 gas grills, elecuic oven. many
ittml . 61 Garfield AVe ., Gallipo ·
lis, Ohio .

2 f1miiy ylfd sale. Baby clothn.
high chair. walker. carrier Htt.
111.erciae bike, loti more . Tun.
June 3rd 9 am .· 4 pm. Sale will
be in b11amsn1 H rain. 1839
Lincoln Ht. Pomeroy .

Sale. Old furniture, cane higtl
cfleir. floor lamp•. old bottles.
Life. Look a. Sat. Eve. Posta. oM
Germ•n books, Rio Grande
College books (1860· 1920 ' 1).
sick room equip., fruit Jtrt , old
kitch~~n items . Much more .,..
tiqueS.modllfn . 10 tii7Juna3&amp;
4 . Rt . 160, Vinton .

·----- PfPieiisiinf·--··

Clothes a. misc. items. 387
Legrande Blvd. Mon ., Tun., a.
Wed . 9-6.

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sele. 3 mil• out Leon
B.ten Road. Wed. Thurs , Fri,
June 4 .5,6. Some old dishes,
bicycle. tira .
V.rd Sale, Mon and Tu", 9:00
to 1 K&amp;K Lot 42 , Point Plauant ,
Kids clottling , sofa and dlair ,
table and ctlairs.
3-family. 2110 Medison Ave.
MOf\ . I. Tue. Bird tagll. misc.
ittms.

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sal• . Mon 8f1d Tu11, 2915
Spruce Ave. Pt. Pit. 8:30 tiM
!5 :00 PM . Boys and girls
cloth M-Ig .

6 f.,ily ·Juna 2 ,3 .&amp; 4th 11
Emerson John1on1 r111dence ,
Ponland. Fireplace in•-"· clo·
thing , ruga, toys, ottlsr items .

Y1rd Sale, 2106 N . Main St ..
Mon and Tuas. 9:00 till 1 Baby
hems.

1111 : Libby
Fisher' s-YellOw Bush Rd . At·

R'8in ~ a..- ·Stline. four femily yll'd
"le. Monday 1nd Tullday, 9· 1,
Main Street. L110n . W. V1.

cine. Mon. end Tues . June 2, 3,
9·4pm. Air condition.,, ttble
and 2 chalr1. furnace. humidi·
fier, CB tndtntenne. pool table ,

Ytrd Sale, June 3 &amp; 4, fNe
famili"· cornet' 2nd &amp; Man.in ,
Muon , W. V1 . Children's

6

hmily

yerd

poundegt. 6~4· ~~mo~p~od~.to~';';·d~r~•P;';'~'"~d~,..=··=··=tc;lo;th:":;:'"~d~to:y~•~~~:::

448 -1437.
Tob.cco

Call

:~:~~ '~::' ·~~':'-~~ot 7;~~ 1 1 Help Wanted
61•· "6· 7524 or 614 · 448 1786.
WANTED TO BUY used wood !1.
coal hilt. .. SWAIN 'S FURNI·
TURE, 3rd. &amp; OINe St. Gallipo·
lis. Call 814-446 -31159.

Large Columbus homebu lldlf
needs .,bcontract blodl crMs.
Guar1ntted full time 'Mlrk. Call
1-IU -888-4865 8 :30 am ·9 :00
am only . Monday · Friday

Buying daily gold. silver coifll,
rings. jewelry, J!Miing ware. old
colnl. large am.,cy. Top pri·
cu. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Av1 . Middleport, Oh. 614·
992-3470.

llrge Columbus homebuilder
needs su bcontract concrete
crews. Guaranteed full . tima
wortc. Cell 1 · 614·888 -4865
8:30am · 9:00am only . Mondey
· Friday.

Wanted to Buy new or like new
6ft • 7ft gerage door w ith
tlerdwere. 304-676 -6964 or
30·-896-38 12.

Large Coluni:lus homebuilder
needs subcontract framing
crews. Guaranteed ful l time
work . Ctll 1 -614 -888 · 48615
8:30am· 9:00am only . Mondey
· Fridey.

111

EJll llloym enl
Ser vi ces

FREE ESTIMATES

5-20-'86'1 mo .

3 Family S1cond h0un. acro11
bfldga in Northup . TuMday )rd.
flowert. light flx turn, dishM.

Wanted To Buy

Wa pay c.. tl tor lata model cl..n
used carl.
J im Mink Ct!~ .· 0~1 Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
81,· 448 -3872

under '300

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

June 1 ,2 ,3. 412 Spring Awe.
Adult and childr..,, dothn,
bedding. baby toys. odds and
ends. kM' prius.

... ---Prim"iiro-v ········-·
9

At 238 Condor St. the 5th, 8ttl
beck of landmark, Pomerov.
10 :00 to 6:00 eech day . Variety
af ittml .

Yard Sale Mary L.yne'• Cha·
lhire. Otlio. June 2 -3-4-6.

to giveway. littet trained .

6 weeks old . 614·986-38B4.

elA" Insulated Glen
•Tilt In To Clean
•Mos1 Windows Pric ed

Annou 11 ce 1111! 11 ts

SATELLITE
SALES

992-6173

CONTRACTING

10-14-tlc

5-20-'86-1 mo.

LARRY'S
SOUTHERN MILLS
CARPET OUTLET

Giveewey to good nome 1- 9
month old white female kitten,
declewed . 5 kltt.,, six weftds
ok:l . Call 114-388· 9370.

Windows

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
J: licensed Clinical Audiologist

Allor 5 Call
742-2027

2 CAR GARAGE

5-5-'86-tln

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

z

fOf' cat Ioven only l 2 female
kltten1. 1 oray striped, 1 yellow .
7 weeks old. Call e14 -260t793 .

Part Beaglepuppl•. female, r111l
cute. 304-676-4e31 .

992-3361

-

"Free Es~i~:~tii;:~·le
Installation

J&amp;F

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tk

Farm Equipment
Parte &amp; Service

,,RR~
"~J trtJf'f

985-3937

OFFER GOOD THRU JUNE 5, 1986

(!) CoR1Juterized Hearing Air Selection

ACCENT

&amp; Silver

•W u h a rs •D is hwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Fraezera

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Aulhorizod John Daero,
New Holland, lush Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

FENCE COMPANY
PN. 992-6931

Buying Gold

located in the

Rt . 4, Hysell Run Rd .

ELITE POLE
BUILDINGS

COINS
BASEBAlL CARDS
MOTH£1'5 DAY &amp;
GRADUA110N
1 OZ. SILVER BARS
COINS &amp; SUPPLIES
GOLD

l ' i'B t! n

- Addona and re modeling

S IJ,:i~O.OO

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Wooded tot of 2.46 acres.
Kin(l!ibury Rd. Water 8 electttc
avatbble. Beau1nul b.Ji~tn g
Site. $6,:il0.00.

RI!IDENU PHONE

SERVICE

- Plumbing and elecuical
work
(F ree Eltimetes)

Fishing Suppl ies

16141 992 -6110

992-6778

CARPENTER
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

Ca rr ~

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
8U!INEIS PHONE

3-D8101/t
AUTO
CENTER
W. Main St.

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Dhio

8S4-4l6-0068 .

B kittena. Litter trtintd . Givta·
way to good home with lots af
TLC. Ca ll Mon. Thur . or Sst.
6S4-992·2090.

CHISHIRI, 01110

&amp; Vicinity

ce.t. h11 been neuterld . C1ll

Ooga to give away. Small,
medium, and large. Call 81 4·
742-2889.

367-7560- 367-7671

·· ·· -·GaHTiiotis---·--·· --

To wood home. whhlmalahoull

8 nicellitten1, ltn:er blOke , mal11
&amp; femaln. Cell 6U·2"6 ·9492 -

THE BIRD CAGE
"' FISH POND
PET SHOP

Pomtroy, Ohio,

so EAST

99~ · 225?

PUBLIC NOTICE
Equot Opportunity Houoing
is the low. It you foel you hove
been aubjoctod to unlawful
discrimination in your et·
temptt to ~ecure or maintain
tho housing of your choice.
Colt: The Moiga Coonty
Houolng f'logrom - 9922896. Remember: Equol OpportUntty Housing ia the l.w.
(81 2

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

U. S. RT. •

39561 Bar 30 Roed. Reeda-

3tc

CUSTOM BUILT

SALES &amp; SERVICE

the office of the District ,

!5) 29; (6) 2. 9.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Turing down ofd houN, met•
riels to glweaw-v Including mt·
tontry. Call 814- 441-0208 .

A/C

1· 17-86-tln

BOGGS

54 Misc. Merchandise

ville. Ohio 46772 . The District ha11 the right to accept
or rejec t any or all bids.

949-2263
or 949-2168

10-8-tlc

and labor. Bid opening date
will be Monday, June 9.

12:00 Noon.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

3-24-tlc

446-11141

one year guarantH on parts

NEW- REPAIR

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

992·5875 Or
742-3195

The Tuppers Plains-Ches-

ROOFING

Garage

PHONE
(614)/742-2070

5·29.'86-t mo .

Howard L. Wrlte11l

Roger Hysell

Residential &amp; Commercial

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE

OFF

· COMBINATION DINNER ONlY
DINING ROOM ONlY

CALL 992-3194

It. 1, Box 27 ·B
32933 Romine Rd.
Rutland, Oh. 45775

Public Notice

Thing&gt; ..0 buzzll!" in the

WANT ADS

~ · JH M
o

Phone

5-19-'86'·I mo.

3/11 / tf"

~?i
11 1

*Stlllllt Builtlinp

PH. 742-2306
or 742-3171

or 949-2860

•IDCA! LIHDR

Buildin15 . - ~

NEW HOMES,
ROOFS, DECKS ,
ElECTRICAl &amp;
PlUMBING

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

RUSS
ELECTRIC
MOTOR
REPAIR

*M~al Buildinp

Milo B. Hutchison
Contractor

10°/o to 50°/o

meeting Tuesday

Servicing Middleport.
Pomeroy &amp; Five
Points Area
o(ommer&lt;iol Container
Service Available•

992-7013

WMFI at Laurel Cliff has meeting
New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Lau rel Cliff
Free Met oodis t WMF1 held at the
oome of Shirley Meadom, Mason ,
W.Va .
Elected were llonnie Friend ,
presldnt; Mary Miller, vice president ; Kay Cla rk, secretary; Donna

prrcPding

the m('('t ing.

The Daily Sentinel

CARD OF THANKS
MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Rev ival bPgins
Monday, Campaign FreewUI Baptist Churc h, continuing through
June 6, 7 p.m ., nightly. Special
singing, evangelist Rev . Bill Price.

Edwa rds, Katheryn Met zger,
Grace Welch, Nettle Hayes and
Sonja Wayland. Twenty-five patients attetlded.
At Rive1vlew, Phyllis Blake
reported that sbe. Mr. and Mrs.
Alb&lt;&gt;rl Roush, and Mr. and Mrs.
Vitgll Parsons of the unit , joined by
Doris Priddy, employe, took Mary
Patterson, Ge11rude Corless, Eva
Stout and .John Dill to Cmw's Steak
House for dinner. Dill's birhday
was obsetved with a decorated
cake, ice cream and g1ft s. The cost
was $%.28.
Preda Edwards and Lee Reed
visited lbe Plum Street nursing
home with gifts and food at a cost of
$42.75. Mildred Daines, "adopted"
grandmot her wUI obse1ve her
blrtiiiay on June 5.
At tbe CoolvUe party a total of
$328.25 was spent , Mrs. Parsons

MANLEYS
TRASH
SERVICE

Giveaway

Oood .ttndlng hl'ltO bt cut . Ctll
as•-2&amp;o-t291 .
.

Monday, June 2. 1986

Page-4

The

Ohio

1 1 Help Wanted
Carlltektt to live-in apartment
co,.,lt.l . Call 304-6715 -!5104.
E ~ PERIENCE

0 DECK HANDS

lnter•ted In full tim1 employm~~nt , 11Jbmit1 application to

M-G TRANSPORT SERVICES
287 Upp• River Ad., Gallipolis
Oh. or 1514· 448·2181 .
Govemmtnt tobl •18,040 ·
f51 ,230 yr. Now hiring . Call
808· 687-eooo ext . A-4182 for
current federelllll .
EASY

ASSEMBLY

WORK !

1714 .00 per 100. Guerant..ct
paymtnt. No uln. Details·
Send 111mped '"velopt: Elan·
7115 . 3418 Enterprlu , Ft.
Pt.re~ , Fl. 33482.
Government: Jobs. f1 tL ~O ·
1159,230-yr. Now Hiring. Call
S-80!-887-11000 EMt. R-9808
for o.m~nt fldertll61t.
Euy A11embty Workl f714.00
p• 100. Ouarant•d Payrr.nt.
No Salu . O•tell•- · Send
11-.npld env.tope: Elan· 5147
3418 Entel'1)rlae, Ft. .PI•ce fl.
33.S2.
FedMII, Stitt, and CMI Jobl
now I'Yaillble in lour ar•.
n 8,400.00 to 0 7,800.00.
lmmedlateop1nlngs. For updat1
job list eel 1!11 &amp;·859·81 55 Ext.
J209.

WanCid· Ttmporarv 1mplov11.
Dental Hvgenin, to work tn
progr••iv• modern dental practice In J1ckson Co. W.Va .,
During aummer. E.cell•t II·
lery. epply wlttl ,...,.,.. and
rlftrenCII to P.O. Box 38t
Rlplf'l W.Vo. 28271 .

Ca.. Manager &amp; PI Ptrt·
time C111 Mtnegar·Pert· tima
Clerk. 12 months posi1ions·
qualificttions: BA degrM in
related fiald, &amp; ablate mettOhkl
Department of Mental
R etardation - 0 evelopmenta l
Diubllltl• OMAP csrtificetions
requirements. or w llilng to obtain . Selary 11 per ulsry ach•
dule a. e~~~perienoe . (1,4,000·
•19.000). The GalUs County
Bo1rd of MR ·OO shall ensure
that on going &amp; consistent
appropriate training will be
providlded to C aae ManagemMlt
personnel In tpecltic aklll .,...
to muimil• the ertecttven•• &amp;
lfficitncv of theaervlcedtlivlfV.
Training a. 1xperienct In the
following arMt will be consi·
dered helpful If not •nntlel: A.
N1tur1 &amp; needa of MA -00
lndivldu1la; B. Counalflng of
MR · DD i'ldividualllll theit' flf'n l·
u..: c. Bthavlor Manegemtnt of
indlviduels who hiNI MA -00;
0 . Oltlvlry of llf'Vicea to
.,.nons with MR ·DO; E. Know ledge r-earding ttle availablllty of
r11ourcn &amp; how tD ., link up "
lndivlduels tD tholl 11rvicet: 6
F. Knowlldge regtrdlng lnttr·
egency cooperation• clusttu,
JWOIICtivl &amp; ldWOCICV llfY ICII.
All applic1tlons avail.-,.• at:
Gallia Cwnty Board of MA -00
P.O . Box 1• Ch•tllre, OH
45820 01 Call &amp;14·317·0102.
Application deadline June 13,
1988. " An Equ•l Opponunily
Employer ''
The South1m L'o eil B01rd of
Education lstlking IPCJIIcadons
tor tht foltowlng non-tNC:hlng
sltlons; Varsity AniJtant

r. Junior High Footbll
co•.
co ech , Ruervt Buketball
ootbllllc:olcll . A••~"~tFootbll

coech. FrsshmM Btaketball
co.-:h. Qlrl's junior H'oh Btlktt·
ball coiCh. Junior High Chtef'·
IHdlng achtltor. Southern Loctl
School District lndlvidu1l will be
JMPonalble for th1 coeching end
training of . the playen for ttle
NPOn . Contect Bobby J . Ord.
Sup•lnt•dant, loa 171!1. Rtdne. OtliD 46771 for po1ttlo,n
r~k'emll'ltl . On• must tllvt 1
vaUd Ohio tNchinO ctnlflcattto
opp!y.

11

Help Wantad

Naed a pen time job1 Sell Awn.
start up fee ontv 16.00 . Cell
1514-446-2156.
Exp•ienosd carpenter. Sttrting
..lery te.OO per hour. Send
resume to Boa 100 S. c·o Deily
Sentinel. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Leed Guitarist for 10dl metM
~nd . Cell 1514· 992 ·6381 . Ask
fo r Lee.
AVON , 3 open territoriM. Call
304-876 -1429 .
Wanted m•ture re1pon1ible
adult 10 care for 2 school 11ge
chikhMl Wring summer d.y
shift. Ref. Req . 304-1576· 7879.
Med ical 111istant. open ing im·
med iatetv . raf. req. Send rMUma
to Bolt P. 30 care Pt. Pl . Register,
200 Main St. Pt. Pl.

12

Situations
Wanted

Room and bo •rd lor elderly.
Rt~a o nebl a ratea . 614 ·992 ·
8022 .
LPN wilt do private duty nursing .
Ally Hour~ . 304-675·7571 .

18 Wanted to Do
Will babysit at anytime. Can
pro wide retarence1 . Call 61 4 ·
2!8-118!2 .
Swim lnto nl private or group,
Red Cmu Llf"aving and W S .l
certified. 7 yNrl expetiMlce.
Call 814 -448-3011 .
EKP•Ienoed mothar will do
bebyaitting in my home. Rauonable rat11. Ca1181•· 446·3088.
lendlo rdl , bus inuu s . ho ·
maowner~. prof•aional m•inta·
nance man will do replir work.
IYtninga and wHIItnds. 304875- t7261ftor ! :00 PM ,

Fma nw l

21

Buainen
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

lNG CO . recommends that you
dO busin•• with people you
know, 1nd NOT to 'und monlfl¥
through ttle meil until yoo hwa
inw .. tigat.t ttle offering .
,

coli

Maplewood Lounve for \use,
304-&amp;75-22&amp;9.

�e-6- The Daily Sentinel
21

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Busineu
Opportunity

44

LAFF-A-DAY

RMteurMt BuUn•• For Sale:

A partmlint
for Rent

64 Misc. Merchandisa

Unfurnished apt, yard &amp; ~-•
m.,t t11SO . rna . 304·878&amp;·
7541 8'111nlngs.

Deli ttylil r ..t1urtnt lar 1111 with
D·&amp; Bevlf'llge Llcen... Lo~td
in Oellipollt it ll excellent
opportunity for liDO,..• tv• op•·
etor. Priced To Sell Nowll

46 Furnlahed Rooms

814·448-0028 tor confidential
de11ill .

For rent Sleeping Roome end
light houte kaepirig roome. P•rlt
Central Hotel. Cell 111ol·o141-

23

0758.

Professional
Services

46 Space for Rent

PIANO nJNING AND REPAIR ,
redleoovtr your pi..-.o' 1 bltuliful
tone, ~II tod-v. Werdt Key-

botrd, 304-67&amp;· &amp;600

3824.

Of

Trail., IPICI, large ar11, prtvate.
kC erea, 145. Call 114· 387-

0440 .. 814-448-3780.

676 -

8"·

31

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
large lots. Clll 114-992-7479.

Homes for Sale
•" "* " ""~'·· ·---·~ · "'-'•"•

"Y OUr hUSban d

4 bedroom house, firepleca. 3

mi. touthoiGtllipolit, 129.900.

Call d•Y• 614·44t-1615 or
IIY.,ing• 614 -4411 -6222 .
1 1h 11ory 4 or 6 bdr .. 2 baths . full
baument.withfireplece.
14.1120.
building
gsrage on
B.1
1cr111. k)catad in Rio Grande.

change a di·aper •"

3-4 bdr., carpeted, remodeled,
ba~ament. nice, '1.1: acre. '!J mile
from city. 122.500. Call 814446 -2034 after &amp;PM.
6 acres, 3 bdr ., bride home.

located in Kyger Creek S chool
Oittrict. 149,000. Call 81-4-

367-7238.
l bedroom , newty redecoretH,
aluminum siding, llfge cerpon,
garage, on s~ acre lot in Chnter.
On• fourth mile on 248 off R1.

7. 614-986-4366.

3 bedroom, lg . kitchen, h. .t

pul'rft. air cond. c..-peted, gartge, Syracute. 81•·992· 3•02
ahlf 6 pm.
Quality ,

largt two

Hdroom

home on choice l•ge tot in
Syrtcuae. Recen11y rtrnOdelld.
new complete kitchen and
laundry . 614·992-5324.

2 bedroom Cuplax houte par·
ti.tlty turnithed. Low utilili•. in
Pomeroy. C1ll diYI. 614·992·
2381 or 6U-992-2509 IWIIf'l·
ingl.
2 bedroom houae in Pom•ov.
t200 furniahed. 1186 unfur·
niahed. PlY own utili1i•. wood
burner. l•ge yard . Call d-v"•
614 -992- 2381 or 6U ·992 ·
2609 ewaningt.
2 bedroom houaa, full ba..rn.,t.
nM roof. 1luminum 1iding.
porch 1nd deck . Lincoln Hill.

&amp;14-992-&amp;761.

For nle by own..-: Llrge9 room
home with 1 'f.! blthl, bUavel.
famity room. 5 bedrooma. formal dining room, located on
larga kit with hutt tr ..a in
Aiggtcr•t Manor three mil•
from Tuppers Plaint. Close to
schools, Priced 163.500. Cell

&amp;14·985-4279.

Rn,ored oldtr home, Vine St.
Racine. Ohio. Living room, din ing room . Rtc room. kitchen
with oak cabinets, stove · and
refrig . included. 3 bedroom,
batt-., pantry, laundry room. All
dr1paa and blinck Included. Vinyl
t iding. Prlctd 836,000. Phone

&amp;14-949-2640.

1 onty. New lot model. All
AmeriCin Ranch , 3 bedroom,
reduced 13000. for quick llle.
614 -992-6587.
3 bedroom Secttonal Atnch on
10011200 lot Front1 on 3
Streets. Excellent neiborhood.
Arbaugh Additio n, Tuppan
Pleina . May except mobHe home
on trade. Financing M~allable to
Qualified partifl . 614· 9925687 .
House. ChHtat village, 7 rooma .
b11ement. g•ag•. 1 tenth •ere,
e11y care, nick neighborhood.
t26.600. SU-986-3671 .

2 bedroom houn with 10 plus
acres of woods. MIV condaid..rent wi1h opHon to buy. 614 ·

787-4273.

for Sale
NEW ANC USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY

MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 35.
PHONE 814·«8-7274.
1974 Kirkwood 121160, two
bedroome. new ClfPM through·
out. ntwiV remodtled. total
electric . excellant condition ,
redwood p.t.io, on rlr'lted lot. or
e1n be moved . Cell 1514·4415·

6010.

12MI0 Shultl covered porch.
Wllfi, metal IIDrage bhfg.,
lot, Crown City. Cel
614· 258- 1444 Of 814-251fi.IJII

32 Mobile Homes

42 Mobile Homes

12•80 2 bedroom. furntehld.
1.t up, underpinning.
Country Mobile Home Park.
614· 992·7479.

If••·

1974 12.11H 2 bed!toom at.C.ric
mobile ~me. A.C., underpin ·
ning. good condttion. fiiOO.
Will eetl with 7 acr• tor
11G.OOO.or rent land. Call 814-

985-3925.

for Sale

for Rent

1973 Skyline 12d0 2 br , all
elec .. built-in kitchen, Plrtilllv
furnished . NM I.Widerpinning &amp;
steps 84900. firm. 1977 Monte
Carlo needs work. good body

1400. 304-882-2888.

1973 Holly Park with lot. chin
link fence end out building,
eant1l air cond, locat_. Gallipolis Ferry, 30•·676·2029.
12x6S trtitlf with one acre land
for Ale 112.000 .00. 304· 175515151 or 675 -1178 .
1973 Kirkwood mobile hom•
(ldd on room) 1 tcrel~nd. nict.
Need Oft1r. 304-875-3030 or
675 -3431 .
19711 Elcona 14x70 with Ill trill.
Mutt s.. to 1ppreci.te. 304-

675 ·1965.

1982 Cl-vton 12d0 all .. ec .

110.&amp;00. 304-&amp;76-2485.

1918 12x60 2 br mobile home.
13. 000. lOol-882-2888.

33

Farms for Sale

For Hie by own•. 110 tcr• 1t
DeJittr. Beautiful I room home.
bam, CMJtbullding. awlmming
nNrDa.11ter
pool. Alao 114
3 bedroom modem home 2
bema, velley •tting . 814-7o12-

.a•

2877.

I

51 Household Goods

Fumieh..t, mce 2 bdr. Llv ingroom e111pendo, lg. yard . 3 1 4 1 - - - - - - - - - -Thlrd St. Kentuga. Call 814SWAIN
448-7473.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St.. Gtllipolis. NIIIW &amp; uted
Fumithl!ld 2 bdi-., AC , loctted K wood -coelatov•. 8 pc wood LR
&amp; K Mobile Home Park on auHe 1399, book bed• 11 99.
Eutem ave., t176 mo .. t100 antron recllnen 899, n.w &amp;
clop. Ctll &amp;14-258-1187.
used bedroom suitn, ranges,
wringer wt~shen , &amp; lho•. New
For rent on 20 acr11. 14x70 3 INingroom suh• 8199· 1599,
bedroom, 11f.! batt!, nice yard, ltmpa, elso buying coal&amp; wood
tun deck. in Portl1nd 1r11. 11ov-. C•ll 614-441-3159.
UOO. month plus depoart. 814-

843-6149.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

2 bedroom furnithed . No pets.
1114· 949-2263.

W11her1, drylrt, refrlgeraton,
ranges . Skaggs Applieneaa,
Upp• Riv.- Rd . bulda Ston1
CNit Motel. 61 4-448· 7398 .

For rent: 3 bedroom mobile
home. Approx. 5 mil• from
Potn.roy or Middleport. 814-

992·68&amp;8.

Campsite at Big Foot Perk. No
money down, 150 mo . own.fin~n~ . will ahow we. · &amp;
WM'kands . At. 7· 8 mi., below
Gellipotia, tum right &amp; foltow
ligna.
1,_.. acr• wtth 12.1160 mobile
home. 10 mit• fTom G111ipolia.
C111 11 oi -2'11·15«M9 evenings.

2 bedroom tr1Her with exp-.ndo
living room on t.-ga lavel lot In
Middltpan. Near ttor•. Adults
onty. C111 614 -992·2101 Of
111ol-992-2319.
3 bedroom part. furn ..hed trail•
end 2 bedroom furnlthed trail.on Creb C,_ Ao..t. L1rge yard,
g.-d.-. plot, children welcome,
no Pill, t11SO.OO P• month,

304-876-1208.

Two bMiroom traller remodeled.
coupl• one smlll child IC·
c..,ted, references and deposit.
Rt. 1lodblt Roed, beckofK&amp; 1( ,
Everen Schw1rtz.

1 to 6 acr•. parti..ly wooded
Iota. Tupper Plains and Ch..ter,
w1t8f end approved roed to etch
lot. Auaonlbly priced, will
fintnce, 10 J*cent down. Call

814-986-3694.

30 ICrel for Nlll. 614·992·
7015 efter 1!5:00 pm.
Alhton building Iota with public
wet.-. mobile hom• p•mkted,

304-578·2338.

Re nta ls

12.100.00. 304 -875-4831 .

43 Farms for Rent
M ecre croplend, 150 acr11,
pu1ure &amp; tobacco elotment .
Call 304·8715-15104.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Houses for Rent

Rent, le•e. landcontrlt:t, 3br'•
Rodney Vlll~e II; 2 br'a-Eu,•a:
3br Evana Helghta; Oepoeil &amp;
referencM ,.qulrld. Blackburn
Atahy -614 -441-0008.

«&amp;-7473.

Hou .. 4 rooms &amp; tNth, located
1928¥1 Cheetnut St. 1100 mo.,
175 dep . C•lll14-448-3170.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equel Houaing Oppor·
tunity l monthty r'"t atlrtl It
1178 for 1 bedroom and 1212
for 2 bedroom, deposit 1200,
loctted n•r Spring V.tl..,. Plu1
1nd Foodlend, poolandCibleTV
evalllble. office houra u poaalble 10 am to" pm end 7'pm 10 9
pm Mondr;- -Frid-v". C .. l 1514-446-2746 or IMY• m•... ge.
Nic.ly furnished mobile home,
eff. apt ., central eir end heat in
city. aduhs only. Cell 814-446·

Moderlud country home.
oerden. budget 011 Ul. KC
trll. t2715 plua diPOth. referenc•. Call 1514-3&amp;7-0440 or
114-441-3710.
6 roome &amp; bath, alto mobile
home, ref . a dep, no ptte. Celt

814·«8-11&amp;8 .

Urge 3 bdr ., good loc8tlon, f75
mo. Call 304-875· 5104.
3 bdr. ~UII , 2chlldr.-., nopMII,
muet heve ref.-enc., 55 Garfield or call 114-448-0321 .

2 bdr. utllhlel pe,iatty turn ..

1175 mo. Clll304-875-6104.

New 1 bedroom epartment . CaiJ

114-UI -0390.
2 bdr . apt ., downtown, 1210
without utiliti• , 8330 wi1h
utlliti•. Deposit required . Call
814-448-2129 8:001m · lpm.
fum . IPfl. 1 &amp; 2 bclr. t220 &amp;
12315. utUitill pd. 701 4th
GallipoUs. Call 446 -4416
7pm.

•ft•

Fum. 1pta. 1 bclr . 1225 utilttl•
plid, 807 2nd. Ave. G11fipolia.
Call ""8·4-t 18 efter 7pm.
2 bdr.
CIII1

~Mtfumilhed

log ctbin hou.., 3 btdroom1
and bath . Oototht "Y".4mh•,

Modem 3 bedroom. lrldbury
Rotd. n...- Mktdleport. Ohk:t.
Aeferenc.. requirld . Phone
304-fi76 -38M.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent '

4110 .. 114-«8-2003.

Ave. Gallipollt, OH .

Vllley fumtture. new &amp; Uled.
Llrge ltctlon of qyality furniture . 1216 Eutern Ave ..
Gallipolis.
For ule: HerllqUin Romenca
boob 270 for 175, white
wooden table 121. yellow kitchen china cabinet ttiO. all in
good condition. SnIt 256 So.
Founh Avt .. Middlaport, Oh.

I eutometlc wuhera GE , Whirlpool, from t91i to t1 60, ell in ex.
cond. 3 electric rang• .tO in, 38
ln. 2tl in. Gee ring• 30 ln. 38 in.
Refrig•ator Coklspot like new
t250, refrigeretor froat free
•1 150, 5 side by tide refrlgtrl·
tors w~he, gold, copptrtone.
IYocedo. Air conditktnar &amp;.000
BTU f96, air conditioner 8.000
BTU like new 1125 . Air condi·
tion1r 11 .000 BTU t126 .
Skaggs Applience• Upper Rivllf
Rd. &amp;1"·"8·7398. cto ... 11
noon S1turday.
Used 1.000 BTU AC , full siz e
m1ttr"' &amp; box springs ex. firm .
Corbin &amp; Snyder Fumltura, 956
Second Ave., Gallipolis. 814-

«8·1171 .

0338.

41

CCMJnty Appli1nce. Inc. Good
uaed appltenca end TV •••·
Open lAM to SPM . Mon thru

Stt. 814-448-1899. 827 3rd.

Hou" tr1lllf, 4511101988 Good
cond, n.w etorm windowe.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Mercha ndise

with eppllen-

H 1 Third Avo .. GolllpoNo.

12150 mo. plus utiliti... Call
814-246-959&amp;.

1 block from t~a city plfk, 3
I1J9e roo rna &amp; beth, WO hookup.

Couch. lovelht, ch1ir. gold
floret penem. tradltlonel style,
1150 cuh onty. Call 814· 446·
1937 after 5:00.
Moving Sele 3 pi~ Uvingroom
suite, burgendy color, excellent
condition. 1 bedroom .,itt, 1
meple dMk, 1 side by akle
refrlgere1or hlfY•I gold . 1 gat
rena• hiN•t gold. 1 1vocedo
dilhw11her. coffee tabl1 1nd 2
end tabln. TV end many other
smell nama, •II mutt go by Wed.
June 4 . Sale Wad . olth ell dav.
1918 Eastern Ava .. 81ol-446·

8334.

PM.

Full size bed, drM,., &amp; che1t.
150 Cel1&amp;1•·446·19&amp;•.
Country oak furniture now in
stock. CoffM end and tlbiH,
round ped•ttl end drop .. ,,
tabl• , corner cupboard. 2 pc.
cupboard•. dry alnkl. 11cratery
d•kl. chlft of drawers. chain.
Large ultctlon. Canida's, Rt. 7,
Tupp•splalnt, Oh.
Hooaltt kitchen cabinet with
fk)ur end bread bin . Porcelain
work lllrfe~ . 175. 814· 992·

3079.

Picken• Used Furniture. Good
qualitY uaed fumiture. Op., 9to
I or ctll for appointment .
304-1176· U83 or 675· 1460.

117&amp;. Ctll814·448-4872.

Furnhlhed el)llrtment, utilitl•
paid, 1 08 Vine St., t23&amp;. C1ll
814-448-9244 between 9:00·

&amp;:00.

Efficl.,cy aplltmenl. Suillble
for one p•eon. Privete bath and
.ntranca. C1ll 81ol·44&amp; -1232 .

2 bedroom lpt. dowmown Mld&lt;lopon. An U1llhl• pold. t225

month l)lua depoeH:. 814-192·
1111 bay. 114 - IS2-1783
everdng.
2 bedroom. toUI .. eo. apt. k1
Pomeroy. A01011 from Fire

53

Antiques

Full tir:e breiS bed. complete.
Call 814·448· 1171 Corbin •
Snyder Furn.

11on•. exc~ent condltion. Dou·
glu Hemalty 3rd St. Syrecuaa.

NEW LOCATION : N- lteol

N.w Wlnchaet• 3030 Rill~. 7
mm world war 1 Mu•.-r. Buck
Knife Bic.ntenl ... U ounce pure
eitver.lo1aof"for*gncolna. 1978
Chevy Caprice WlfiJOn . 11100,
12'h cuiHc ft. retrlgaretor like
ntw largeet•eo. both forl128 .)
814-849-2801 .
Fibre gl• camper top. 8 ft.

CrNm colored twln canopy bed
with metching chllt. •150. Call

814-241-9249.

1000 gallon full oil tank . Call
814-448-7025 .
~ 10x12

N~Ying trail..- spleltl
built for proflt. Making GOUntv
fM etc. Like MW, applllf1CII
lnctudld. Colll14·«1-2233 or

304-178·5814.

Good Uled fkK&gt;r modll ~or TV ,
and tood rototlller. Call fl1 4·

441-1141.

ltltlon. 114-812-1211 O&lt;l14N.w Troy· built 8 hor" tllllf,
lt2·7314.

2bedroom horne in ooumry nw

Hlllnt to Mltle ..tate. Save
money over n., , Ce11&amp;14-248-

Chelter, ohio. 11•· 717-4273.

5131 .

APA.. TMENTI. mo_,.M hom•.
houHI. 1'1. P'-.,.- Gllllpc&gt;

New VCR , e1m1n • edlltt•
wtth tripod • ellltrl oard. "'00

Ill. 814·441-8221 .

Clll814·448-4284.

..,

Bnutlful, Contempo Eighty.
Lowery Org.,, good condition.
Electric lawn mower. graaa
Hilder. •Betty Lillh 81•· 773·

-·-··

Farm Equipment

.tO 10 JD dl•tl trector cleen
cr•m puff. JD rllke, JD 22•T
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS. 10ope 1111... Ctll 114-285-8522.
bore sighting, fec:tory reblueing.
hours 9 :00 till derk, call 304Jtv'lclen'a Ferm Equipment.
675-4631 .
Chedl our •I• pricee on Long
b'lctOrl • V•mNr hey equipForced air hlmace. etorm wkl- ment with '·4 J*OIItt financing
dowa. 304-676· 15123.
IYIII.able. A tofi'C)Ietelinaofbale
h1r1dNng acceeeorlee, grindar
For esle2•' aboveground pool in mix..-.. wegona. rotlry Ull...
good th~e (no lin.-) 1360. rot1ry cun.ra. ~... culdve·
30.·882·2734.
tors. dletll, f;lowe. •edert, poll:
drivere. wvod IPittere, gn-.
Flower end G1rd1n plenta 50 headg•••· powerw11hen 6
cente doz . 1 1h mll11 out Gun ville wheel horH llwn • garden
Ridge off Rt. 87, 304-896- b'ICtofl. And 1 • Ul for a
3926.
COft1111te Una of parb &amp; •ervlcel
UHd:
A variety of uaed
trac101'1 , .._._. round b1lert.
55 Building Supplies grinder mixere, w.gona. aprav·
era, cuhiYators, whNI dilc.
plows. culip1eken. rlk•. aq
belen, mowln¥ machtn•, and
Building Materilll
Blodc., brick, eewer pip•. win - Iedden. Cell 8 4-441-1176.
dows, llntell, etc. Cl1ude Winters, Rio Grende, 0 . Cell 814- Johnaon 2 hor.. treller, good

246-5121 .

oondhlon. Coli 814-448-8493.

Building materi1l1. cemen1,
blocks alltizel, yard or delivery.
G1llipolil Blodc Co., 123'h Pine
St.. Gelllpolit. Ohio C1il 81ol-

Alllt Ctlelmer cM•el tractor wilh
ptowe 8t 4 row JD plsnt•. also
Sear1 ridi'lg mower. Call 814-

Block, bflck, mortar and mt·
aonry a~ppli• . Mountain St1t1
Block, Rt . 33. New Heven. W.
v•. 304-882-2222 .

66

Pets for Sale

Oragonwynd Cen..-y Kunat .
CF A Himelayan, Penian and
Slam•• kittens. AICC Chow
puppln . New pupp111 &amp; kltt.., • .
Cell 448·38ol._ eft..- 7PM.
Labredor retriever puppl• for
ule f36 each. Call 61•· 2•1·

6884.

Siam•• kitten• I wkl. •35.
eech. Hymatyen klnena. Hll
poJnt or lilac point, tiSO uch.

&amp;14-992-7201 .

Excellent Family dogs .
Elkhound -Collia mix. 8 wMka
old . 18 .00 male, ltli .OO t.mala.
614·985·4312 .
Regiateted Mlnl1ture Schnauzer
pupp6n. C11h only. No cflecltt.

c,n &amp;14-992-2807.

Melt Cock• SpMIII. 1 Ytlr old.
Black and T1n. bceltent Pedagrei. V8ftY flOOd with dlildren.
t150 . 614-992-6747.

388-9888.

For Nle or trllde· Large round
Heffton Baler end 2 uel equip-

m.-.t tr1H..-.. C1ll 114-992·

7401 .

Cub C1d11. 10 l'eJ, wl1h cultlvl·
tort. MOO. Call814-247 -4292.
Two rOw tDbecco tranaplent•
like nM 11,000.00. 52 tobacco
ll:ickt 115.00 P81f 100 . Mor·
gan' e Woodlawn f1rm, At. 35.
30• · 87&amp;-1288 or 304-829-

9200.

1979 Chevy._. ton 12 pae11nger
van. euto, AC., PS., cruise, tilt, 2
heatere, c1ptalne cheirt, t4000 .

6:05
6:30

CAPTAIN EASY

1978 Starcratt foldout cemper,
sleeps B. complete with ttove.
ice box, lights I a_lnk. exc. cond ..
like nM . C1ll 61,·388-9756
eftar 6PM.

6:35
7:00

old .

12&amp;.00. 304-468 -1920.
Musical
ln1truments

Piano le11one given In the Clay
area . Call81•· 448·4478.
Hammond Orgon with L.. lle
speakers. •500. Coma sM 1t
co• 4th St. A1cine, Ohio.

814-9'0-2477.

1980 G. Ptymouth Fury, AMFM. air. 1980 Oet.on 210, &amp;
speed . C1ll 614- 992 -70715
8:00!"'.· 7:00 pm ,

187&amp; FO&lt;d LTO. 2 door. lookl
and Nnt good. •450. 1975
Cuetom 500 Ford, with dual
exhtutt, 311 modified, 1750 or
Vade for plclcup ot INJ.III v11ue.
814-247-4292 .
1976 Dodg• Dert U60. 30•·
1915-3838 .

77 Okh Oette 81 Royall ec.
cruiea. tlh, pb, Pl. MOO mil•.

U2&amp;0. 304-875-1867.

1978 Mun1ng. exc. cond.
12500 firm. 304-875-6635.

Teytor' a Berry Petc:h. You pidc or
we pick. 9em · 7pm, Mon. thru
Set. Call 814-446-81192 or
814-245-11178.
Strewberri• tor ule. You pldl
75 cents quart . We pick t1 .00
qt.

Co11304·468-1997.

Strewberrl• we plctt, you pick.
Mond1y June 2 . Roulh't et
Unton Campground. 304-882-

Ntw Hofland round bailer, model
862, just Ukt n...v 115 .000.00.
Slden E~ipfhlnt Co., 30ol·

875-7421 .

John o..,. 700 grinder·miur,
13,000.00 . Sid. . E~ipment

Co .. 304-675· 7421 .

4 ft Roto Tilllt' for trector 3 Pt
hitch. 1 111 1 bottom plow 3 P1
hlldl. 304·885-3441 .

82 Wanted to Buy

1981 Z28 Camaro. PW. PB, PS,

Trucks for Sale

1981 Ford Ranger. Call 61•·

63

Excellent Hamp.gih for breed·
ing. 200 lba. C1ll &amp;14-448-

197&amp; Ford pickup &amp; traillfhitch.
304-875-2149 .

;;;:;;:=:::=:::;:::::;::::::;;::::
Vans 6 4 W.O .

2689.

1979 Jeep CJ·!. 6 cyl.. good
oond .. 73.000 mi .. 12.850. C1ll

814·445-4292.

Hutsell StrriWberry field open for
pick your own, bring your own
containers. 7S Hnte quan.
clo .. d Saturday, 304- 075 ·

Freeaer bH1. 9IS cents rail
weight , 30oi-B7&amp;-•182, Cart
Klnnelrd .

fc~rn1 Supp l11!s

&amp;
61

LIVI!S IIIi:k

Farm Equipment
CROSS llo SONS

U.S. 36 Wnt. J1dleon, Ohio.

814-288-6451 .

MIINV ftJVUIOn, Ntw Holland,
Buah Hog 811• 6 Sar~ice . Over
40 used trectora to choota from
line of new a ueed
aquipmsnt. Lerg•t selection in
S .E. Ohio.

• co,..,,...

1879 Ford Cuttom Vtn Econo·
lin•- Good condhlon. toldtd.

13996. 814-992-71530.

72 lntem1tklnal school bus.
Hey. Timothy t1 . 10 par bale. Very good condition. 5 epeed
Cell 1114-379-2400.
forward. :Z apaed retr fHld.
a bile In leld. Cell 114-311·
9832 .

For nle. 1978 VW bua. 11700.

Ctlll14-688-8134.

~ay

Trons prJr 1.11 1on

71

Autos for Sale

'84 S -10. 4x4 T1hoe, euto, 1ir,
cruil•. tlh. AM·FM, much mofl,
can be ..., on TIVk)r Aoed,
Camp Conley.

74

Motorcycles

1979 Ford Must~n~~4 cyl., MW 1- - -- - - - - - - rebuitt motor, low mlleiQI. Call

614-258-6417.

E~ra.

fair cond.,

1982 Hond1 XR-ISOOR t.ll .
cond .. •1 .400. Cell ISU -387-

1850. Clll814-388-9832 lfl1r 0&amp;19.
&amp;PM.

84 VW OTI 15 apd., 1lr cond.,
AM·FM, ctll., fiCtory mage,
n~~~~~t eond., •e.eoo. Call 814·

245-11040.

1883 Bleck Toyota Supra
toad lid. electric aunroof, hooded
..,.,, good cond. Cell Brian,

814-448-2113&amp;.

1981 Honda CB· 7150 custom.
IXC. cond . Ce/1814· 387-0397.

oh" 7PM 114-448-8273.

814-2415·51 n

81 Honda 850 in good condl·
lion. 1950 Cell814·992·6144.

1981 Plymouth Tur•mo. 1 1pd.,
1.1100 miloo. Mklng 1&amp;, 996.
Call fl1 4·-M8·1552.

1984 'vll5 Blbre. 2500 mll•.
FuiiCOYerlllhalmet. Honda line
covw. eame 111 new~t . *2800 or
belt offer. 114·912·&amp;747.

mH• UOOO. 814-742-2880.

1878 Suzuki RM250. good

•1 .000. CtH 114-MI-7523.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 35 W. Otllpollt. 1982 Pl'lmoU1h Hotllon. 4 dr.. 4
Ohio. Ctll 814-448-9777. 1111. epd., elr. AM· FM, t2,489.

cond, 1450.00, mu1t ' " to
eppricat•- 304·1115 ·4090.

114·448·3882 . Up front tracton whh werrantv over 7&amp; ullfd
tflctorl, 1000 tools.

O~lllpoll.

cond. 304-1575-1988.

Jeff BeughrMn' t 1t71 unfln-

19815 Hondl ATC 70, 3whael•.
hardly rlden 1660. 304·8372501.

730 C••• dl•el. wide front, PS,
live pow...-. live hydreullce,
t2 ,9&amp;0. NIW' &amp; h . dNm mower
11.485. N- 8.2 It locld"'

MH. NH 88 btl" U95 . Col

814-281-&amp;122.

John 'a Auto SliM, 8.,.1vllle Ad.•

ithed rntortd NOVA, 327
chrome .-.glrle, no phone In·
qulrw. Middlepon llredbt.try),
1177 lui~E•tt•wegonl800.

Coll814-448-3125.

1847 Ford 1recmr high a. low
range, good Nbber. eJitra nice.
Plowe. diak. cultlvetora. boom
pole. 12,3915 . C1ll fl1oi· 2BI·
1122.

11 Plymoutfl Roll... lplolll
Edition, AC, outo, AM-,M, muot

8000 Ford metor dl•el trector,

Mfl. t1 ·•• wltl DOn lid If trlde
fDr llfle gerden ••actor.

1877 Foret ThundertHrd, good

cond. CtM 814-441·0124.

c.n

plowt. d~k. 8 ft. buth hog. 11 4-«1·1911 or 114-318•3.685. CoM 814·285-8522.
H37.

basketball point-shaving o~
eration . (60 min.I

Part. 1 of 2 A rising pharmashe give up her career 11 bitter pill to swallow. (2 hrs.)

Home
Improvements

(1)

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

®J Billy Graham Greater
Washington Crusade
(jj) In Search of !he Trojan
War: The Singer of Toles
ICC) In Ireland. a Gaelic tale-

lifetime gulran t... Loc11 referent• hlrnilhed.
Free "'imat:es. Call collect
1 -814-237 -0488. dev or nlg~t .
Roger• Baaement
Waterproofing.

teller demonstrates the oral
tradition of telling stories
over 10 or more genera-

htlrior stucco ptntering &amp;
pl11t1r repeir. low rat ... Call

I KI

HANEEV

Salurday's

IT$

I

Jumbles . COCOA LATCH WATERY PUNDIT
Ans we r: When dinnel's are qutekly lhOughl out these days.
they 're oft en lh!S- THAW ED OUT

AA£.. &amp;coAl~ L£ADWS

67&amp;-2088 "' 875-7388.

lD fl'.t.T

CJr 11-lt;lR GO..IrnVMENTS

Stark• TrN and Ltwn Service.
landaceping. 304-678-2010.

1Ht.5£ Ci\~

1973 Hondl. 8&amp;0 4 cyl. ••c.

Carp .. try . remodeling. room
1ddition, 111 building repairs
.cement 1nd blockwork. Pelnt·
ing and roofing . 304-675-&amp;162.

81 Honde Gold Wing lntentate.

lull dr•Hd. 13500. 304-8751857.

YCXJ HAVE A HAI&lt;DTIME
IN 6CHOOL E'&gt;EOIU5E
YCU !XlN'r LISTEN.

'lOU CANT LEARN IF YOlJ
DON 'r PAY ATTENTION
AND LISTEN, RIGHr:?

T WONDER IF ITS

val VI Tito Puente, Merce r
Ellington and Ross Tompki ns .are among the musical

HOT ENOWGH IDGO

artists performing from the

SWIMMIN5 YEIT.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANC HEATING
Cor . Fourth 1nd Pln1
Gallipolis, Ohto
Phone 814 ·448-3888 or 114-

'

44&amp;-4477

814-247-2281 .

BARNEY

Excavating

SKIN OUT

THEM
BRITCHES,
OF

Good·1 Excevttlng, b11ement1,
footafl . driveways, septic tanlu.
lalldtcaping. Call anytime 61•446 -4637, Jim" L. Deviaon,
Jr. owner.

76

Boat• and
Motora for Sale

21 ft. cabin cruiser Inboard·
outboerd motor. Call 814-441·

70215.

'

THEV NEED
A GOOD
BOlLIN'--

JUGHAID

Tren ching Service: Wltllf, gat.
and electric. Fr1111 111timates.

304-773-6839 .

General Hauling
11 :30

Jam•• Boya Water Service. A lao ·
pool• filled . Call 814-266-1141
or 614 -448-1175 or 614-448-

Ken '• Water Service. Welle ,
cilterna, pools 1nd wat1rbtd1
filled. C1ll 614-387-0823 or
614-367-7741 or 304·1751247.

G00DNE6S

HAD NO-n-tiNe 'TO

DO

Coel, tim.,.tone, gravel. etc.
Dalivertd 1 ton end up. Jim
Lenier, 304-676-1247 or 875-

WI'T'H 11".~

7397.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 63 Sec. Ave.. Gall ipolis.
114· U6 -7933 or 614-446 -

PEANUTS

1833.

Mowrey'e Upholetering terving" ·
trl county.,.. 21 Ylltt. The beat ·
In furnltufl upholstering. Call
304 · 675-4154 for free
"tlm1tn.

I LI KE '(OUR NEW

'·

A .•,

PONniiiL , SIR ..

IN FACT, ITS LOOKING
BETTER 6V TI-lE MINUTE ..

T~ANKS,

MARCIE

ACROSS

2 Wood co re

I Too th
coveri ng

3 Thoughtful
4 Location

4 Buddy
7 Dwe-lling

5 Indian
mu lberry

8 Put down

6 Verbatim

North

Ea st

J"
Pass

It
Pass

Pass

I"5+

Opemng lea d: + J

clubs . Should n't he be void ;n the diamond suit ' Decla rer thought so.
He played the four of diamond s out
of his hand . West unthinkmgly fo llowed with a small card and dec larer
called for the diamond fi ve from dummy . When that won the trick. East

;bow ing out, declarer not only mad e
nis contract but scored an overtrick to
boot.

30 Ha\'e a
yPn f4 )f
31 St•t•&lt;l
l'O&lt;t l ill).(

:J2 M ana)!;1•d
37 Slit·ky
suhslan rf'
39 Al"tor
\ ' i)!odu

rut

27 SLudy
28 Son of llt•la
29 Mixed dn nll
33 Signature

(abbr.)

injured a boy . (60 min.)IR).

42 · - Ton i~hl .

(jj) Newswatch

JosPphint&gt;"
43 .._ tht'
SunshiiH' In"

6-+-+-

35 Now (ILl
36 Tropical
fnJil
38 See k pn•y
40 Ringo•
41 l'hild of Ew

!r.-+---+-

DOWN

1 Meet a lwt

DAR.Y CRYPTOQUOTFS- Here 's how lo work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample i\ is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sm gle letters ,
apostrophes , the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTES
6-2

France
Gl (jj) To Be Announced
D I]) (jJ) Tonight Show
Tonight's guest hosr is

RA

r

B M WPS
D T t' A

CD WKRP in Cincinnati
Ill CD One Step Beyond
U Cil ABC News

y F p

II

C Z M
f

A R P V K

® Ta•i

~

f' I' .\1 ;..;

·\ \l \\

f:

ADMLTE

DWB O H '?- K S Fi'RKDf' (

I1 T ll

Y. .terday's Cryptoquote: A PO l l ~\ II t If' I 'Ll!' ~ IS
WORTH A TON Of LUCK. - .JAMES A. ; ; _~lifiU .II

81 (!)J News
CHI Trapper John, M.O.

Columbus Zoo . IBO min.JIRI.
In Stereo.
(]) Bill Cotby Show
(!) Australian Rules Foolball '86 IR).
Cil ABC News Nightllne
• (!) Rawhide
CHI MOVIE: 'House of
Cards'

Wes t

26 Spullcr

34 C'olleKI'
in Iowa

guests are Clarence Clemons, comedian Uya Baskin
and Jack Hanna from the

+9
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

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

Florida National Pavilion in
Jacksonville . FL. (60 mi0 .) In
Stereo.
GID 18 (jj) Cagney &amp; Lacey
Cagney and Lacey attempt
to convince a woman totes·
tify against a hit-and-run
drunk driver who seriously

t2:00 (]) Best of Groucho
(!) French Open Oaily Recap
CD National Geographic
Explorer
·
()) En1ertainmen1 Tonigh1
1111 (!) Rawhide
0 ()) Hawaii Five-0
® MOVIE: 'Claudine'
' 12:30 IJ CiliBl Late Nigh! with
Oavld Lertennan Tonighfs

SOUTH
. AKQ i53
"10 5
t K 9 BI

7 Israeli
da m." P
9 Dediratt'
10 Enghsh
rivf'r
12 Moro('(: an
23 VatJUf'ro 's
rit)'
rop.15 Ending
24 f'rt•lwh
for hf'ro
dly
18 Recent
25 Civil War
rope
21 Rreak
:-oo ldi1•r
19 f'ilch
hread
27 God ( ltal l
20 Blvd.
22 Light-ray
29 "Pan on "
21 dispenst' r
star
proces.o;Ul!{
,......,......,.22 Denture
25 Tenderloi n

Garry Shandling. 160 min )In
Stereo.
C!J SportsCenter

7911 .

---

+K 10 5 4 2

10 Ass(•mhly
or Witfhes
11 UIPst:ylf'
13 "When• thf'
Roys _ ~
14 So (Lat.)
16 FTi end
of Topsy
17 Nauti&lt;·al

1 0:30 (]) Jock Benny
CD Preventing Nuclear
War
fl) 11J INN News
(jj) This Old House ICC)
lBJ News
11 :000 Cil (I) 0 ([) ®!@
News
(]) I Spy
(!) Au1o Racing: Nikki
Lauda Explains Fonnula
One
CD Gunsmol&lt;e
t1J (!) Love Connection
CIJ On 1he Air: Uni1ed
States Senate
(j]) 0 -Day: Liberation of

A&amp;H septic tank pumping service. Reasonable rete~ . C.IN

A 6 M Furniture Manufacturing.
$1. Rt . 7, Crown City, Oh. Cell
814·261· 1470 . eell Eve. 614·
446 - 3438 . Old Ill new
Uphoatered.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

9:30 ® ID @ Newhart (CC)IRJ
10:00. (!) Soap
CIJ Jackaonville Jezz Fes1i-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Home replin all typ•. Carpentry, Roofing, Painting, fTM et1i·
matee. J . Hell. 304-175-2908 .

87

rules when he sets out alone

settlement remains a depen dent m ilitary garrison. (60
min.)
® • (fi) Kate 8o Allie IAI .

2440

85

t?JS~_,-

2 of 3 As sickness spread5
umong the Aoanoaks, the

Economy Building. remodeling,
roofing , bathroom, drywell.
electricel, m11onatY. floor ing,
plumbing, pelnting, fr1ming,
ceramic lnatallation, 304·676-

83

vulnerable. he sacrificed agamst four
spades, but he did so by bidding live
clubs, his second suit. on the theory
that he might find partner with better
support for clubs than he had for
hearts. The unfortunate result of all
this was that dedarer South. who bid
five spades, suddenly had a blueprint
for the best way to play the hand.
South won the opening lead of the
jack of clubs with dummy's ace and
came right back with the dub queen,
covered by East's king as declarer
ruffed . (Note the fall of West's club
eight. ) Next came three rounds of
spades, ending in Ihe South hand. Declarer, of course , intended to cross tr
dummy's diamond queen to punch th&lt;
club seven through East. Then back to
dummy's diamond ace to ditch a losing heart on · the good six of clubs.
However, East had followed suit on
three rounds of spades. had opened the
bidding with one heart and had bid fiv e

swallow. 12 hrs.)
0 Cil MOVIE: 'S!arting
Over' iCCIIRI .
()) (jj) American Playhouse: Roanoak (CCI Part

Rotery or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells completed .. medav.
Pump uln end urvice. J04 B95-3802

.

EAST
+ 9 64
" A K 973

six-card suit. Because East was not

a

i-2-86

t AQ65
+ AQ76 3

WEST
East had a miserable opening bid . +8 2
but his prime cards (A-K and a second "Q 862
king) plus two five-card suits tempted •.1 10 732
him to open. South's two-spade bid +JB
was intermediate, showing a hand of
opening-bid strength with at least a

A rising pharmaceutical executive finds h&amp;r husband 's
' demands that she give up
her career a bitter pill to

~

NORTII

+ .! 10
"J4

By James Jacoby

(I) 700 Club
(I) Sttong Medicine Part 2

AGRfAT PIJI(t.

Now arrange lhe CIICied le l!er s to
form the surpnse answer. as sug-

Bidding one suit
too many

Announced'

MJD M~\.lCMEN

ANOi'ME~

NAIAE FOF!
" HOI'I:S Cl ' OE IJV RE~ .''

James Jacoby

Stereo.

EEK&amp;MEEK

t

rJ

BRIDGE

9:00 0 Cil IBl MOVIE: 'To Be

~

O o

(Answers tomorrow)

to find his friend ' s murderer .
160 min.I(R) .
B:30 0 I]) (jJ) Valerie lA). In

RlNGLES'S SERVICE, axpa·
rlenced cerpent•. alectricien.
m~son , p1inter. roofing (includ·
ing hot tar 1pplicttionl 304·

J

gested t&gt;y tne aoove canoon

lions. 160 min.)
(fi) Scarecrow and Mrw.
King Billy breaks Agency

24&amp;4.

82

MacNeil-Lehrer

News hour

1983 XR -80 . Uke new. Call

1981 CX cuatom Honde. Sh1ft
drive, w•ter QOOied, eh1rp. 8000

1977 Impale etatlonwegon.

fll 11J Strong Medicine

1983 Hond1 Sh..tow 100. C1ll

1983 Mercury Zeph• Z-7, 1uto,
air, AM·FM, IJiorty. caeh price.
t2,HI. John'a Auto 8el•.

Bulovllo Rd .. OoMipolll.

AlOCJ'T' IEII'Iei AWA.jcJ!o.

end Mackey investigate a
movie queen with ties to a

814-992-3893.

llrga lqU.,I bll.., 73 Ctlwy Suburban. pa, pb, a c.
4x•. 3 IMta, luggege rack,
11.215. 304·675-M79.
pow• t1llg1ta 12600. 3041715·1857.

Mixed

81

Fetty Tree Trimming. stu'mp
remov11. Ctll304-676-1331 .

1980 Fordven 8cyl.. 4tpd., low
mileage, IPO"V, cash price.
t2 ,9t9. John 's Auto Ssl...
Bul.villa Ad .. Oallipo*.

For nle conditioned hey. 11 .00

of c:ov~St: I.'M t'tAPPY
T'O fiE: ALIVE:.
I'M s.Ju..S'1" N01" SO HAPPY

(!)Collage Baseball: 1986
World Series From Omaha.
NE. (3 hrs.J Live.
(I) 0 (I) Insiders ICC) N&gt;Ck

ceutical executive finds her
husband 's demands that

1977 Chevy4x4 ~ton with I pt.
.,ow bllde, 13,000 or belt
off..-. Cell 814-388-9886 .

AQHA Aegilttred Querterhorae
atud aeiYice. DiriCt out of
"Cherlie Polite" . Call 814-448·

64 Hay &amp; Grain

Cll Fa1her Murphy

Ser v1ces

RON'S Televlelon Service .
House calla on RCA, Ouar:er.
GE. Specllling In Zentth. Call
304- 57t-2398 or 814 -4ol8 -

73 Dodge ven new ptlnt. 1900.
Calll14-388-9767 ~nytlme .

C~idl:en 1nd turkeys for Nla.
1514·7oi2· 2"BO.

Stereo.

13.200.00 . 304-675-1838.

1982 Dodgelidlup 221S cubic
engine. 3 "' .. wtth ov•drfve,
flb.,..luetopp..-. Cell61 4 -3670314.

2411 .

9379.

22 ft 1974 Monitor 11. self
cont1lnld, air cond, awning,

614-258-1182.

1979 Convlf"tion ven, 1965
Chevy truck . nice. 1978 Ch...,y
Lw. Call efter 6 , 51ol-446 -

Liveatock

(!) Inside Baseball
Ill CD Taxi
0 ()) ®J Wheel of Fortune
([) Bunerlliea
Gl (jj) En1ertainmon1 Tonigh!
CHI Major League Baseball:
Chicago Cuba at Cincinnati
(jJ) Jeopardy
7:35 (1) Major League Baseball:
Pittsbur.9._h at Atlanta live.
8:00 0 Cil (l§l You Again7 In

614-742-2&amp;77 .

819-.a23 .

1978 Che\1'. truck, 4 wh-drive.

Now buying lheU com Df • •
com . Call for lt1•t quot... River

Game

Uncondltion~

Air. 304-896-3441 .

72

(jJ) Wheel of Fortune

1974 Prowler 28 ft. Mit conta·
tined , elr, p1rked at Bit Foot
Camp Ground . G1ilipolis .
Shown by 1ppolntment only.

1974 Monte Ctrlo, 30ol·895·

304-875-8769.

2237.

StTawbettlet pick your own. Call
Cleude Winteu . 814 - 245 5121 '

I TIBESC j

MacNeil-Lehrer

0 (])())New Newlywed

7:30

32 tt trtiler , aelt conteined.
awning. 1ir. m1ny extfll. Mutt
1811, thi1 week onty cen be seen
Krodel Park. US 62 North.

Now rm reaJiy hUf19ry

rI

Newshour

1972 Ttg·A· Long travel trailer.
Sleep1 6. VlfY good condition.
11900. 114-992-2941 or 814992-5481.

'71 Chevy Caprice. 4 door.
1495.00 . 8H at 2903 P1rrish
A'lle .. Pt. Pit. 304-875·3276 .

2903.

Pige t28i .OO each. 304·875·

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

I

Gl CHI Divorce Coun
CHI Private Benjamin

814·849-2234 .

1979 Cama.o Rally Sport, PB,
AC . tilt wh•l. AM-FM catlett
wllh equalll:ar, chroma Crager•
Street Tricks, Eagle ST'a, dull
exhautt. ••c cond, 30ol-882·
2HI or aU-3182 .
Custom Rail Buggy 1981 model,
loedad whh ICCHIOrf., 1..1
than 200 mil .. , 304-578 -2506.

(jj)

••If· ·

1970 Winnlbago. Sllf contained, very good condHion. 22
feet long, 318 Dodge engine.
Ntw tlr•. 20 ft . ewnlng,
eutomatic tr~nsmhlaion . Phone

3480.

M11qy Ferguaon ilwn·gtrdlf'l
rmwer wlth anow plow 7 hp for
111a. Good cond. 304-882-

1978 CheYTOn Sky lounge, 28
ft. Separate bedi-oom,
contein«t . Good condition with
air. Alking 14996. 614·742-

11715 G. Plymouth Fury. 19711
Marcury Mon~rd! . Both" door.
elr. C1ll 81ol·992· 7076 . 8:00
am .· 7:00pm .

6492 .

58

1142.

3033.

by Henri Arnol d a nd Bob Lee

---

(]) Green Acroa
C!J Mazda Sporttlook
8 I1J Star Troll
()) 3-2-1, Contac1 (CCI
{jj) Bodywotch !CCI
CHI One Oay ot a Time
([) Oown to Eanh
1J (]) IBl NBC Newa
()) Wagon Train
(!) John Fox Ou1doors
([) U (I) ABC News
()) Doctor Who
®J [jj) CBS Nowa
{jj) Body Electric
CHI Welcome Back. Kotter
(1) Gunsmoke
IJI]) PM Magazine
C!J Sport.Center
(I) En1ertainmen1 Tonlgh1
Sl CD Hovan'• Heroes
0 ()) Jeopardy
([) Nigh11y Buaineaa Report

e

1971 16 ft . Dreamer travel
treller, 1111 stove. furnace •
refrigerator. sleep• &amp;-6, good
oond .. 11 ,260. Call 814-266-

&amp;14-992-3194.

Black temele Labr..tor Retriever City Ferm Supply, fi14 ·W8· 1
I·
pup. Pick of litter. 10 weeks old. 2985.
73
304-773·5839.
Siam••· femllt Cit, 1 Vt Yllrt

Autos for Sale

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

· -· - --. ..

News

(jj)Newa

6223.

446-2783.

71

rn11

Unscramble the~ lour J umbles,
one letter to each square, lo form
lour ordinary words.

E'JENINQ
6:00 IJI]) ([) . . (I)®!. (ft)(ilJ

1969 21 ft. camper shower,
nove, retrlg ., e.11c . cond ..

61

\1\l~N}

~ ~ ~~ ~

6/2/86

11.200. Coll614-268·1447.

I
.

~~~

&amp; Campers

3&amp; mm •lkle projector. VIIIIWinO
ICrHn, 2 matel slide holdtr1, 8
allele holden lor viewing. 1715
firm. Phone 114-892· 7200 •fter 7 pm.

Plutic clltem "•t• epproved,
piMtic aeptlc tlnkl, plllltic
culveru. metal eut'lerta. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
eon, Oh. 814· 288·6930.

Fibergl111 trudl top with large
wtndows. Fits 8 ft. bed . Call
81ol·4415-7827.

sup"fi$\Af.

F
_

Coli 814-258·8251 .

IHI48.

"rni&lt;~'S A

79 Motors Home•

Slight paint d..-n~. lllhlng
arrow 1lan 12851 L httd, non arrow •2111 Nontig ted 12391
Fr•lenenl Fl'lllet1. IN locally
1· 800·423·0113 anytime.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Television
Viewing

body psnell. 1873-1880 G.M . .
and Ford P.U. fenden 831 .00.
73·8&amp; G.M. dOOfl 178. CheYV
tell geta t59 . Ford 1111 gate f75.
1985-1868 Muatang fendtn
f99. Over USOO dlflarent ttamt
evellel:lle. C&amp;M Auta P1rt1,
Bidwell, Ohio 814·441-8227.
Authorilad DUnd" Oe,..er.

1978 Buick

Tobacco utter, evargraena,
mulch. fill dirt, gravel, none.
uud block, firewood , dlllverld.
Oon ' a Landscepe, 014 -448 -

--·

C-· ·

=-------leFor ul•12,100 BTU Air oondl·

54 Misc. Merchendise 2817.
C1llahll'l't U11d Tire Shop . Over
1 ,000 tir•, alzn 12, 13, 14. 15,
18. 18.6. 8 mil• out At. 218.

·-·- -

81.1UN I.OSER

Rebuih auto trllltmliektn
Fits 74 Muet1ng II V-6 Aaklng
112!. Cllii14· 388·80BO &amp;. a1k
forRI.II.

57

Couch &amp; cheir 175, 4 pc. bdr.
a~he 175, 7 pc, dinette 825,
G.E. w11her &amp; dryar 11ti0.
wheel chair fiSO &amp; other item a.
Ctll 814--446 -7128 .tter 8 :00

....

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

814·892-2834 o• 814·8128704.

Rood

d•••·

2 &amp; 3 bdr mobile hom•. AC,
clble TV. Bulavllle Ad. C1ll
i1 4-448·0527 aft• 3pm ..

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: inturtd, reaeonlble r1t11. Ctll
304-676-2338

141170 FllttwOOd Mobile Home
front porch. back lqe deck.
expenelve cerpM:Ing, VflfY llttrao- Fulty furniehld, AC , Ill utlttl•
tlve int.-lor. Wwm Morning pold. ldu111only. Cllll14·«1·

h...... 814-992-8508 . .

Stnd Hill

between 9:00 end 4 :00 weelt

Po,...oy 2 bdr, N1VIot• Run,
1175 mo. 1100 dapoeit, ylfd.
patio, Call eft" e 114·992·
1389 or 304-175-1369.
Ltrge2 bdr. epi. in dupla ttou ... 1888 .
Fum .. con'"IWII k»Wion on Pomeroy 2 bdr, Navtora Run.
1977 Holley Park 12•80 with Msin St. , weter peld. Cell 1175 mo. t1 00 d~11t. ysrd.
CA. pertty fum., very good 814·245·5111.
petio, Cell eftlf lpm IU.ol-992cond .. 17,500. C1ll 61ol·2ol5·
-68811.
8120.
3 bctr. home In oountry, Vinton 2 bdr. upstairl apt, • tra nice.
er11. Stove. refrlg•etor . tr11h. centralafr. Call 814-U8·2151.
Total eltctric mobile home, Wltar fumiahed. t200 mo.,
1913 ex. cond. Call 81 ol -387· 11150 dtp . 2 chlklr..,, rei' s. C1ll 1 bedroom apt . for rent . Buic
7438.
814· 388-1688.
rent 11ana 12115 . 1 month Hilt
includM Ill utllltiM. Oepoah
1980 Liberty 14JI64. 2 bdr .. all Hoo" for rent or ..,._ Nice, 2 requ ired of f200. Contect Vii·
gu . underp inn i ng , 1t1p1 . bdJ., Lower Alvar Rd., rtv• lege Minor Apt. M iddleport.
blocke. Must be moved, t8,600. frontage. Caii703· •&amp;1 ·21S91 .
814·992·n87 . Equ1t Hooting
Caiii1•·.W6·0963.
Opportunity.
2 bedroom unfum . no pMe.
Repo11auld mobile home. t188i per month 1100 depo1H. 2 bedroom unfumtahed IPM"t·
•soo down, take over P-v· Call 614·441·3817.
m.,t. No p.... 1 bedroom
mente. Ex: '81 P1trlot 14x88.
furnilhed apt . No pett. 814ThrM bedroom, gM heat. 1187 3 bedroom house. Pratts Fork. 949-22&amp;3.
per month. No charge fot On Rt. 33 . 18 acr•. M&gt;un onty,
delivery. Mid O~io Fln.ncial with garden. fr• g•. wet• For Nnt; 2 bedroom fumilhad
Servlcet. 1·800·8215-071S2 .
well, eppllancn. 1210 per apt. AduHa only. Cell 81 4 -992·
month. Avelllbll imi'Mdlatlly. 2749.
1980 Liberty 1olx8ol, 2 bed· 514-253-2323 Columll"'room. unfurnished. vinyl undar·
2 btdroom furnished ept. for
pinning Included . Muel eall. Call HouH 8t Rollinatown. 30-t-898· rent In Middleport. All utiMtl•
=~~4~-~
77~3--5~·7~
3 -_ ________ ._3_
43_5_. ______________ pold. 114-992-6014. with

IPICII .

Lifetime concrata ~Ivens, 1 2
In ct. to 3~ Inch, In t1oek. Lergu11r
-'r:M 1vallable. up to I ft. C1M

t-;;;:;;~;:;,====l';;:;~~;;:;:;~~~:=l Inquire
hoapitetRoniM,
City s.wer
IYiilable.
304·875·4100

House. 4 bedrooma. 2324 Lin - Fumilhad hou11, 2 bdr., 1196.
coln Ave., 304-176-2130.
131 rear 4th 'Ave .. Gellipolle.
Cell4olll ·"115 after 7pm.
Thr.. bedro om hou ... double
corner lot, 2028 lincoln 928 Firat Aw., 6 rooms &amp; bsth.
Avenue. Good neighborhood. Call114 ·446·3941 eft.- 4PM.
Price reduced. 304-876-2012 .
Nice 3 bdr home. Lg. yard. 314
Third St. K1nauga. Cell 81ol·

32 Mobile Home•

Trailer lots aewer and water
fumithtd. tmlll children eecepted, Rt. 1 Locust Rd ., back of
K 8t K. 304-1176·1071 .

T"il•

76

conventent to schoole, ltoreand

Coli 614-246-6197 '"" 6.
bdr. hou111 with aluminum
ding, bem. orch•d. &amp; 30
acr111. 7 mil .. from Gallipolie on
paved Rd . C1ll 814 -266-1772 .

-'
WantS YOU tO

. . . ..... . . .-9".. ,...... ...,

Pomeroy-MiddleJ)O~ Qhio

Monday, June 2. 1986
KIT '"' CARLYLI ®bJ Larry

1300. 814·985·«11.

Mobile home lot on At. 7 6
BulaviN•Addlton Rd. Call
3157-0232 or 814-4"1-4285 .

Rea l Es tat e

Monday, June 2, 1986

,,

1:00 (]) Oobio Gillis

1:30

Cil Archie Bunker'• Place
e CD Wild, Wild West

CD F - Knows Best

(!) Inside Batebaii(R)

Cil News

2:00 (]) 700 Club
(!) Mazda Sporttlool&lt; (R) .
Cil MOVIE : 'The Strange
_Love of Martha lverw'
• (!) MOVIE: 'Cuonova
Brown'

!» CBS Nowo Nlghtwatch
•

[jj) New8

2 :30 CII SponsCenter
3 :00 (I) MDVI E 'Affair in Havana ·
(!) Top Rank Boxing from

Atlantic City. NJ IRJ
Comedy Break
3 :30
INN News
4 :00 ID (fJ MOVI E: 'A Bull el 1or
Joey ·
(jj) MOVIE: 'The Lonely
(jj)
(jj)

Trail '

4 :30 (I) MOVIE : .The Come On
ffi Get Smart

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

I

I

Area deaths

Janealie Johnson

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

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

Monday. June 2. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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

•

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

Hospital news

EM~ l!lqu~ds
recetve nme

weekend calls

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

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

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

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

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*:·
•

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

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

CENTRUM
VITAMIN
TABLETS
BOTTLE
OF 100
PLUS
30 FREE

749

P~~~b Evans Farms natural

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

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

TABLETS

PKG. OF 30 OR

I

I

79
QT

SUNTAN

ALKA.SELnER

ANTACID TABLETS

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

drive.

t:mftiTE AID

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

to bf• made as

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

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

Et

"OU
MOR~·
s~'l£5,

GILLETTE

GOOD NEWS!

RAZORS

DISPOSABLE
REGULAR
OR PIVOT
PKG. OF 5

119

MAYBELLINE
NAIL COi.OR
ASSORTED
SHADES

99e
SURE

SOLID

No MoRE SuNbuRN! No HARMful RAys!

Gu dtE TAN You'vE AlwAys WANTEd!

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

JUNE

SPECI·ALI
10 SESSIONS
'

S2750

ASII ABOUT OUR

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

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

UDIEFI.. GEIS
n
IIIIL SYSTW

••tvr~t~t

NAI. nrs

&amp; sro•-•IED. IIIIU
,...... ,. .

P~:ess.

· ·.HEADQUARTERS. BEAUTY

to meet

··

and

SALON

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

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

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

99
. llM

25 Cents

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

·0
50 0
~

SUPER PLUS, SUPERil

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

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

v:ouR
I"
PRESCRIPTION

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

Ohioans fear America may go

ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOil
COMPLETE DETAILS!

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

AID

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

·=======::::::!

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

to

war

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

THERE'S ALWAYS A SAVINGS AT RITE AID!·

RITE

goods.

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

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

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

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

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

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

a bu!::ly

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

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

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

u~ro

t hf' televi·

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

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

broadcasting

~rman r.nt .

or

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

President meets with GOP leaders

UPTO

TAMPONS

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

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

ANTI....RIIIIUNT

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

1 Section, 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Senate allows live coverage

Q?

PKG. OF 36

CALL (614) 992-2104
304 675-1244

Attend workshop

eo~ncU

I

~~~ I

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

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

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

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

enttne

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

PAIR

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

at y

•

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

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

Probe incidents

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

•

Miller poll reveals area support for Reagan

Rail route protest planned

I

e
Vol .36. No .21
1986

Lotus software seminar set

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

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

Copyrighted

Lodge meets Tuesday

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

Inside :

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

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

Bob Evans, Fanns
net sales up

Lottery winners

'

••

••

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

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

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

~rit h

tax rcfom1 bill

~~

hPn rt hit-.: tht•

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

Thr prrsidr rll honored

1~

JXDpk

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

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

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

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

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

announced it s una nrmous suppo rt

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

concur in

fh( 1 ~ natr

VC'rsion of

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

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